Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-08-28 - Orange Coast Pilot.. ----------·····- • rIO · • tm om .. I ' 8400,000 Drug .. Niguel Bank· Daul Seized in Deist's Fhtal Fountaht Valley Suspeet Guilty DAILY PILOT * * * 25c * * * . THURSDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 28, 1980 VOL. TJ, N0.141, J SECTIONS, 40 l'AGES ' 1-Iran Me ssage I - Bomb Trio Sought FBI Sa ys Exp erts Made Weapon Dr. Jotm F. Dwyer and son, Ben, 14, show letter received this week from wife and mother, Cynthia, under arrest in Iran since early May. The letter, received this week , is the first communication the Dwyers in Buffalo, N .Y. have received from the woman who told them she is well. She went to Iran in April as a free lance writer and was ar· rested later by revolutionary guards on spy charges. STATELINE. Nev. <AP>-The FBI is hunting two men and a woman wanted fo r questioning in a bombing that blew the side out of a Lake Tahoe hotel·casino during a botched attempt to ex- tort $3 million in $100 bills from the gambling house. The FBI also sa id the sophisticated design of the com· plex bomb, which sent plumes of smoke skyward and showered debris over several blocks when it was accidentally detonated by a robot, may offer clues to who built it. Late Wednesday. at the request of the FBI , an aU·points bulletin was issued for three men. d e sc ribed by Ca lifo rnia Hig hway Patrol s pokesman Judd Strong as in their early 20s. I le said they reportedly were driving a black 1975 Ford and we re headed west out of Lake Tahoe when last seen. But today the alert was canceled and the description changed to two men and the woman. Agents tried to meet the ransom de mand to save the posh resort. but the bomb exploded Wednes- day during a ttempts to dismantle it. The blast made rubble of the $20 million casino's bottom floors and blew out most or the windows in the 12-story building. No one was injured. Thousands of people had been evacuated T-SHIRTS PROVE POPULAR AT TAHOE-A3 earlier from a four-block area a round the casino. There was no imme diate es ti mate of damage. The blast came more than 30 hours after the bomb. encased in a blue steel box inside an IBM com- puter carton, was discovered at Harvey's Resort Hotel-Casino. State and federal officials, some of them experts from nuclear laboratories. rushed to the scene as gamblers in t his re· sort city tried to make bets on whether the device was phony. A fire briefly raged in the casino five hours later. Jerry Yablonsky. FBI special agent. said the sophisticated de- sign of the bomb might provide clues on who made it. ··I don't know of another Carter Unveils Economy Plan .. WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Carter called today ror 117 ,e billion in 1981 tax cuts for ladhiduals and business~ as part of an election-ye8T eeoaomic proposal that also alma co create a million jobs witbln two years. But be said, "I will not accept. a pre-election bill to cut taxes." Tbe president also ri!Quested CODI~ authority l.o spend an additlooal $3.8 billion in 1981 to retrain workers, weatberiu bome1. maintain hishways. build ports, boost research and deYelopment and b e lp eeodomleally dJ1tressed coun- UM llDll eitles. la ldltltion, he ur1ed Con1ress e. npidly extend unemployment Fm1tel8 Barmleae DEL REY (AP>. -'sulfur dloxtde leUecl from • soo-1a11on tank at La Salle Winel")' in thia Fresno County town Wednelday, but WOl'llera wulMd tb• spill away wtu.oat .., meidellu. No one wu overcome by toxic rum-. ..-w.. •aid. benefits by 13 weeks to help wo rkers laid off by the re- cession. Benefits currently ex- pire after 39 weeks. This would cost $1.35 billion over two years. Carter unveiled what he called a "responsible" economic Mee,-v •• ..., blueprint to an audience of busi- ness, labor, consumer and con- gressional leaders gathered in t he East Room of the White House. The president drew a sharp contrast between his economic plans and those or Rona ld Reagan, although he did not mention the Republican pres· idential nominee by name. "Now -in the heat of.an elec- tion year -is not the time to (See CARTER, Page A%) Drug Ha~l Seized in FV Cocaine valued at $400,000 was seiled by police at a Fountain Valley home Tuesday afternooa, and three men and a woman , were arrested on various drug char1e1, accordln1 to WeatminaterpoUce. Oftlcer Earl Graham Hid the al'Telta came u tbe re1ult of a month· Ions inveatl1at1on. Weatmluter police were aaalat· eel ln the arrest by drus enforce. ment ottlciala and ffuntinaton Beach and Fountain Valley police, he said. Undercover nartotlca offtcen arrested Euaene Dwltbt Silman, 30, and llichael Duane Walker, 37, both ol Huntinston Beach, after allesedly makin1 a cocaine purcliue from them at 10933 La Terrua Ave., Graham 1ald. Police later returned to the res-idence with a warrant, Graham said, and arrested Rlcbard Avalos Ma1ana, 31, and biJ wtte Michele LouiH Ma1ana, 15, ol Fountain Valley. Graham said a pound of the dru1 was con· fiacated. Police are swt seeking a fifth penon in connection wltb the case, Graham said. Tbe four were charged with conspiracy, sale of cocaine, poalellioo of cocaine for sale, and poe1e11lon of QuaaJudea, Orahamsald. Tbey were taken to Oraqe County Jail, where ball for the three mel'I WU Ht It $15,000 each. Ball for llln. lla&ana wu let It $101000. s imi lar device being used," Yablonsky said. "I have not seen anything like 1t in my 28 years of ser vice." "As far as the FBI is con cerncd. all the s tops are out to bring t h e pe rpetrators to justice." Some or the n ation ·s most highly trained electronics anti explosives experts failed in cf· forts to crack the design. Scientists and bomb experts from the Lawrence Livermore nuclear weapons laboratory. the Army, the De partment of Energy and the FBI worked with the device more than 24 hours before the ill-fated at· tempt to disarm the mechanism . The attempt was approved by casino-Owner Harvey Gross. 75. The box. which m easured 2-by· 2-by·4-feet. had another s ma ll d evice o n top where 28 mechanical switches were locat· ed . Two of the switches were de· signed lo monitor tilt and mo- tion. authorities said. The bomb r eportedly con- tained 1,000 sticks of dynamite. There was no word on how the <See TAHOE, Page A2> Bank Heist's U,S t Suspect Convicted By FREDERICK ~OEMEHL Ol tlle o.11, l"ffet Staff The sixth and last suspect in the "Mission: Impossible" multi-million burgf'ary at the Laguna Niguel branch of United California bank in 1972 was con- victed Wednes day of bank larceny and conspiracy charges in U .S. District Court in Los Angeles. Harry James Barber, 38, who was a fugitive for more than eight years prior to his arrest in Pennsylvania in May, will be sentenced Sept. 15 for his role in what record keepers have called the world's lar1est bank burglary. Official estimates of the losa to the bank and the holden ol 458 safety deposit boxes that were systematically rifled was placed at $4 milllon. But knowled1eable inveaU••tlve sources said the loss actually may have exceeded '6 million. Cash, rare coins, Jewelry, negollable HCurltlea and other valuablea were taken durtna the wee1rend·lon1 crime that e>e· curred between March 24·27. lf72. ' Drown Trial Outburs t By DAVIDKUT'ZMANN Oft ... Dallyl'llotS~H A Santa Ana man. standing trial for the drowning death of his 4- yea r ·old nephew last April. was call e d a "cold -blood e d murde rer" bv h is m other Wednesday during an emotional outburs t in Orange County Superior Court. Later in the day. Superior Court Judge Richard BP.acorn, who is presiding over the non-jury trial. heard murder defendant Emmett Mitchell's taped confession to po lice April 21 in which he described first strangling and then drowning his nephew in a bathtub. ··somethin g s napped ." Mitchell said to detective Gail Clark. "I just snapped." Mitchell has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to the mui:derchar~es against him. Has nephew .. John Lewis Jr .. died al Children's Hospital of Orange County aft\!r spending a week and a half on life support systems. · The courtroom outbursts began Wednes day mo rnin g when Mitchell rose to his feet during questioning of his s iste r. the child's mother. and cried out, "That's a <expletive) lie. You'rea <See SNAPPED, Page A2) Coast ·~ Weath er Sunny Friday afternoon following morning cloudi- ness. Slightly warmer . Lows tonight 60 at the beaches, 65 inland. Highs Friday mid 70s to upper 80s . INSIDE T ODA" David and Dorothy Die- 1ing were ordered to aur .. render their dcwghtn after at.ethonttu /Otmd 11ae· child left alone afkr the parent• went to the dnti•f. The D•e1ling1 wont t~r child back -tlwfl q thol jult MCGUN tlwfl both o~ mn- tally rtt<m:kd doen't mean thetl can't &ab~ core o/ Mr. Sft """· PotJe .416. l•tlex .,..,_....,... • ., ,._....,. a ,,..._.....a _.... •••• l..M • ...,. ,..,_...._. M ........ 111•9 ............. M C.... M I =~ AU ~ ~" ...... C..C. CU AU,.,,a Qcwa•• CH ..,.........., M .... ....... ,.= .,., ......... ,.., ......... .............. "......... . .. ..... ~ ... ,. ::.-c:: ~ =---: ....,w, 111 •n I • • PSA Pilots Balking Won't Fly DC-9 With ~-person Crew 81 l!lTEVE MAaBL cw•~,..... .... PHOU for PSA. lh Sa~ baaed airline-~t'kln11 to operat.-ou\ of Jo n Wa.>-ne Airport. <'hum th.iy won't llY ~ oewly certified ·u.,.r 80 J u Bryun ('onn. s~ .. mll'l for South West Fhaht crew AMOda· tion. Said paJoL'l ""'Qn'l 10 Mar .. the nt'w OC·» Su~r 80 untesa • three pcr$00 crew "tte t:S us~ to Oy th~ jet H~ sald the p1lolb · refusal u WASHINGTON <AP) -~ecretary or Defense Harold Brown has been called before a Bouse s ubcommittee to answer finder oath whether the new 41Stealth" m easures to hide bombers from enemy radar ~ere deliberately leaked , a JOember said today. ... Rer. Robin L. Beard, R-Tenn . (bid the House that Brown has been called to testify next Thurs- d ay before the House Armed Services investigations subcom· O'ljtt ee. Beard. a Murine Reserve lieutenant colonel. ealled public disclosure of the measures "an irresponsible compromise of one of our most sensitive projects " l It' s aid that ·1f the House in "estiJ?;al1on finds s ecret informa- tion was iflegallv disclosed "I -.hall demand crimtnal prosecu- tion .. Rep Jame!> A. Courter . R- N .J .. said he i~ tntroducmg a res- • ·01ut10n or inquiry that would de· m and Defe nSC' De partment information on whether the meas ures were delibe rately leaked. # f Courter noted Brown said on Friday he was d1s clos 1ng the breakthrough partly tieN1use it llad bet•n publicly ll'aked Cou1·tcr si,11d he wants to know 1r Hro\\ n or other offtc1als leaked th e information to prompt Orown's public confirmation of IL The leak Brown referred to was a story in the Armed Forces .Journal. The magazine's editor. R<'n 1amin Schemmer. told the HouM' :-ubcom mittee Wednesday he hC'lieves 1t was "a directed leak for political purposes because I t•an think of no reason why this .,tory should be made known at this time " Schemmer said the story was leaked to him by a high-level Defense Department official a nd he ealled the action "totally ir- responsible ... Adm. Daniel Murphy, a Pen· tagon official. told the subcom- mittee that Pentagon research ''hief Willia m Perry had given Sche mme r the information Before Perry met with Sche m- mer. the decision was made to "declassify" the fact that the project existed, Murphy was QuOtl.'d as saying. Actu al ly s t o ri e s a bout ·stealth" have been published periodically s ince 1976. Lt. Gi:!n. Kelly Burke. an Air force deputy ch ief of staff. desc ribed d e t ai l s or the \eChnology. without using the word "Stealth," in a speectr Jan. 21. "Stealth'' is a combination of m easures that can be taken to l\ide bombers from radar. , They include use or material 'hat absorbs radar beams so Chey do not bounce back as well, Shaping the bombers to scatter rada r beams \nstead of bouncing Jhem back. and reducing engine ~eat so infrared radar cannot 1ee it as easily. • DAILY PILOT omc.. C•I• Mtw DI W.A k• SI-. l--"*'""c .... ~ --l!oo«ll ,,.,. 8Hcll ......... T1l1 .. Mf"t)~ Qe ...... u..tttlll•MNl?t "-~c-.... ... kin' WMHI • • "buaalnln& toot' ln • n&M"C!nt C'Clfltnrt dlJ· put. Th ~ auortat lnn . wMrh reprHtnt.'I onh• l~A pilot•. haa vott"d to RO nn •lrUt~ In latl' Sep tembn uni a nt<11111 contra('l 11' l\JlDf'd. "And I don't think U will be!,", aaJd Conn, "ao, I lut' s you r1n Htllme that wt• won't bt· Oyln1e tht• Super 80 .. The m~ont y of t•ommcrrhtl p1 lot In lht' tountry. tt•prt111t-nt UquorTax Equity J)ue? SACRAMENTO <AP > 'th~ Assembly has i.«mt lo the gov ernor a bill that would hulve lax- es for high-power ed liquor such as Wild Turkey bourbon. The bill SB1311 by Sen J ohn Foran. D-San Francisco. was approved Wednesday by a 44·14 vote L iquor that is 100 proof. or 50 percent alcohol, or less is taxed at $2 a gallon, while that which as more than 100 proof is $4 a gallon. Wild Turkey is one of the rew brands at the more potent level. The bill would make the rate $2 a ga11on for all Jiquor. Fro• Pap A I SNAPPED • • (expletive) liar.·· The witness. OJanne Lewis, had bee9 answering questions about her a nd her brother's upbringing. At this point. Mitchell's mother. Dorothy Mitchell . stood at the rear of the small. fourth-floor courtroom in Santa Ana and yelled, "Emmett. you're a cold- blooded murderer. You killed an mnoeent child " As sheriff's deputies restrained him. Mitchell shot back at his mother. "You caused me to have a nervous breakdown." Re sponded his mother. "You did it yourself with a ll that dope you were taking ... "You're gonna pay, Emmett." Mrs Lewis said from the witness stand. Defense attorney Ron Butler asked for a recess but when the trial resumed in the afternoon. there was one more small out· burst. this again by Mitchell's mother when she was asked by Judge Beacom to w ait outside the courtroom while the tape was played. This was done because s he is a potential future witness. However. Mrs. Mitc helJ pro- tes ted . s aying. "This is m y grandson we're talking about." Sbe then left the courtroom. loud- ly banging open a door on the way out. During the playing of the tapes, which were made s hortly after. Mitchell's arrest, Mrs. Lewis wept quietly at the rear of the cou rtroom as the de fendant described how he killed her child. Al several points in the tape, Mitchell laughed heartily while describing what he had done. He told detective Clark he was a "suicidal nut" and a "masochist" as well as being homosexual. M 1tchell said he a ttacked }he child for breaking his stereo head· phones while baby sitting the boy. Mrs . Lewis atte nded night classes. However . he later said he killed the child as a m eans of killing himself. W e dn esday 's dramatic courtroom action was not the first such occurr ence in Mitchell's trial. On Tuesday, as proceedings were beginning, Mitchell shouted out. "l don't wanllhls in the press ... I don't know where they (lhe reporteTS) ·are, but I don't want them in here... · Fire Deaths Charge Set LONDON <AP>. -A market trader in the Hackney diltrlct of east London will be charged to- day with the murder of one of the 37 victims of a fire that s we pt through two after·hourS drinking clubs in central London . Aug. 16, police announced. The announcement Wednes- day identifted the man u Jobn thompeon, a . 1t aald he wouk1 be charged wtth the murder ol "a man, na111e unknown." Bodies~ the vtctlsn• were so badly burned authoritl• ban been wiable to determlne lden· titles. Most were believed to be Spanlll'dl or Latln Americans. MdewnenSet BERLIN <AP>' -So•l•t troopa. bleluctm&. an eUt. tank unit, took p011tton1 bl Bast Germany oa Wednesday and ..... pnparaUom fOr • .,..,. Pac.t manauveraJ th• Bast GermaQJ MW11 qeney AON re- ported. ----------...-... ed by "'' Llne PilOllS AsM>Cla· tlon. alrtady have ~lated they won'\ fly the new McDonnell Dou1la1t jet WlleRs a third penion '* tdded to lht> rock pit crew Tht• n~ Jl'l. billed as the c1ull'lt''lt und most fuel efficient l'Oromcrrlul jet to come off the ll1flle-mbJyl111e, was 'n·rtified this wet>k by the t•ederal Avialaon Admhlistratlon and wall tw al· low1•'1 to wo Into 01!4'rtltion with 1 wo ml·mbf>r crew:. Th•· Alr Lane Ptlot.s Ass<x1a- liun ha~ Call'tl u complaint in U s l>lslrll't Court asking for a re· view of the FAA 's procedures for cer1.lfyang the new jet. Rut a spokesm an for the pilot assoraal ion said thl' eourt action 1s not t111 attempt to. block the Supc•r 80 from going into service l~SA hui. 20 of Hll' $16 million jets on ordl'r and exp(!cts de· livery 111 Seplember Offi cials for PSA claim they will use the Super 80 al John Wayne Airport 1f Orangf' County ocric1als give lhl•m permission to operate out ·of the county facility. Conn. a PSA pilot. said his personal feclang is that two- person t'rews can fly the jet but that "tha t third pc-rl>on JUSt m akes it that much sa fer The s k y is congested and in an emergency situation. you'd need that third person." He said the Super 80 is the first an a new generation or Jets and that pilots want to clear up the c rew size dispute before other ne w jets. sut'h as the planned Boeing 757 and 767 , com e on the mark<•t . .. Fifteen years ago ... Conn ex- plained. ·•two people we>rc okay But nol anymore ... Pilots from Air California. the Newport Beach-based airline which has four of the Super 80 jets on order. have not entered into the crew size dispute. Fr .. Pap Al CARTER •.. sN·k \'Otes with ill-considered lax cuL-; that would steal back in inflation the few dollars the average American taxpayer would get," Carter said "America needs to build mus· ck. not add fat.'' he s aid. "I will not accept a pre-eleetion bill to cul taxes .. Reagan proposed an 1m· m ediate $30 billion tax cut to s timulate the economy as part of an even larger tax cut plan. Carter saad his proposals will begin a "journey toward a more productive. more competitive. and more prosperous American e conomy. "They wi II put people back to work. reduce t axes. increase public and private investment. and eonstrain inflation ... he s aid. The president ~aid there a rc no easy solulaons to the prob· lems racing the economy. .. But there arc responsible ways to create produetive jobs without reigniting inflation.·· he s aid. He said his program will create up to 500,000 jobs in 1981 and a total of a million jobs by the end of 1982 in addition to those which normal recovery a nd other new programs arc ex· peeled to provide. "We expect to add 2 percent growth to the gross national prod· uct. increase real in vestment by 10 percent a nd help to hold d own inflation at the same time ... he said. Treasur y Secreta r y G . William Miller told a news brief· ing earlier that all the tax in· itialives and virtually all the spending proposals would not be proposed as legislation until January. The t ax reductions would go into effect Jan. 1. retroactively if necessary. .. All of these things will con· tribute to reinforcing the re· covery, but it's not a stimulus package," Miller said . T he wide -r anging package would increase the proposed federal deficit by from $8 billion to $10 blltion in the fiscal year that begins Oct. 1, bringing the projected budget shortage to nearly $40 billion. AD Pl!l' WIND IN BOAT SAILS "The Oally t'llot really reaches boat buyers aJona the OrangeCoasl. "I sold m y Windsurfer the firsl day to the first caller reply- 11'g to the ad 1 placed in the Dai- ly Pilot cluaified section." Thal'• the advertialng success 'story of the Laauna Beach man who placed this ad in the Daily Pilot: Wtnd•urltr: Worka tx· cell~nt. Lota ol fun, aood cond. llOO XU·XXXX ir YoU want to nach boat buyers aJI alon& the Oran1~ Co~tft an ad in \be Daily Pilot ift.cl aeetion. Call lite frl4!ndly ad·viMrl •l 8Q..M71. • .............. SMOKE ANO DEBRIS EXPLODE FROM HARVEY'S RESORT HOTEL AS BOMB GOES OFF FBI Hunting Three People for Questioning In Blast Which Rocked Stateline Area 3Attackers Sought in Cop Shooting Anahe im poli ee had no sus· peels in cus tody today <ifter patrolman Paul Lee was at tacked Wednesday by three m f.'n . Let' was s hot in the th1~h with his own police re vol vcr Lee 1s r ecovering 1n th• An a heim M<•morial llosp1t :.il . ::i nd a po!icC' ~pokcsmiin ~<11d Ill' proba bl) wall be n •leai.1:d :.uon The !>hooting ot'curred Jbou1 7 ·35 a .m . Wcdnesda v. 0 1o"<1n Grose. Anaheim publtl· -1nforma tion officer. s aid L N' was pat rol ing Manzanita park whl·n h1· hea rd sounds of Jo:l.1 :-.., boHh·' breaking across the fem·l' l)O tht· Riverside F'rce"'a' L('<' <'lirn~d tht· fo ncv. Gro'\t' :-aid . and \\:&:-. Jumpl1c1 1n V HTI1· !->hr11bs b\ lh1..· trio or <t llackc·r ... Onl• of lhe men grabhcd LN"li gun etnd pointcct 1t al thl' uf fi tl'r's face. Grww sa1<l Lee tht•n fort't.'d thl' man's arm down and the gun fired . h1ltmR the patrolman in the le g . Grose said. The bullet passed throuRh the leg and didn't hit the bon'" he addt'd · The attacker s fled and LN· c alled for help on a walkie· talkie He mana~ed lo climh thl' fence and was found bv frllo"' offt eers collupsed on iJ sidewalk tn the park. ft was the firs t time an /\nahe1m pohce officer has been shot while on duty. Grose said Soon. 34 other Anaheim poliel• officers had set up roadblocks in the rundown ne ighborhood west of the p<.irk Grose s aid cars leaving the area we re stopped and checked for sus pecls who matc hed Lee's description of tht.• three Latin men who he s aid 1umped him. Fullerton poli ce and California Highway Patrol officers also al.· s is ted, and two tracking dogs from the Huntington Beach Police Department were set on the s uspects' trail, said Grose The dogs followed a scent from the shooting scene that passed through a hole in the fence along the freeway. but the canines lost the trail when it went into the back of one of many high-dens ity apartment buildings on Ch evy Ch as e A venue. next to the freeway ,..,..,. Page BJ TAHOE BLAST • • • device might have been set off, hut officials speculated it might have been disarmed by flipping the switches in a specific se· q uence. After thl' bl<.1st. tht• f'RJ r<' 't'a led that agents tried to mt·t·l u $3 million ransom <lC'ma nd. but th(• cxtoruoni!'>l~ fa1l<.'d to show JI a prearranged hd1copu•r n •n <lczvoill> point. "Th<' reques t.., of lht· l'Xtnr 1 1onisl~ we: r t-mvt Yahlrin..,k' ""'d ··11owc:\''''. lhl') d11J not -.how up ut a ~l'cond loc:atwn .i fter a phone contact ha<l lx!c11 01 ad<· lO ~Pt Up the fHJ~ Off • lie, s:11d a hel1C'o ptt•r pilot \\1lh S:J million put up by Gro~s wa ... ~upposed t o m eet thC' extor t1onisL'i "within a 15-malt:: r<Jd1u:-. ol lhe c lub. but they ncvN :-howed " The moncv was r<.• turned lo Gross. a r~nchcr and l'<trly settler m the T a hot' rC'g1on The pilot h:.td bet'n cont;~cted h~ the C'xt o rt1 o n1 ~t !> a l a -;pec1fied location <i bout 12· 10 a m Wcdne!>dav anrl told In flv to a second site." wh en · hc wa:; to ·r ct'e1ve a ~1g n a l fr om Lhl' ,.:round" that never came. The purpose of the extortion attempt was "solely for profit.'' 'r' ablonsky said . a:, the ransom Fl8hing Boat Crew Rescued SAN FRANCISCO CAP> Firemen rescued the captain and three crewmen of a 76-foot fishing boat that went aground in heavv s urf on San Francisco's Ocl'an Beach B ;.it tal1o n Cl.a c f F rank Blackburn said four firefighters. s pe cially trained for s urf rescues. went out to the Modem Relle with a rC'scue line, placed a ladder on the side of the vessel a nd brought the crewme n off the ship. Crash Cause Told MEXICALI, Mexcico CAP> - A switching er ror by two track repairmen caused a passenger train derailment that killed 15 persons and injured 70, includ· ing five Americans . Mexican authorities s ay The 10-car tram. bound for Guadalajara and Mex i co City. hit the open switch Tuesday on t he outskirts of Mex- ic ali was to be paid in $100 bills. The bomb was wheeled into the casino at about 5·30 a.m. Tuesday by two men pos ing as computer technicians. s aid FBI agent Bill .Ja nsen While the me n ··delivered " the homh to the ras1no·., =-~t.·1md floor office•'>. .1 woman driv1 nJ! a whit e v<1n ".11lt·c1 out-.111<' .J an't'n .,aid Minute:-. later, lht· oomh Wali f 11 u n <I .d I h .1 t h n· 1· pa V, t• tqw\\rtl t•·n l(•llt·r .1tt<lf'h1·rl ''" pl:11n111c tlw 1·\1 111 I11>0 d1:man1i... E \pL"rb '>lud11·d Lh1· bomh :1ft t·r 11 wa:-paC'kr·d m 2<i0.000 ,,incl h.1~'> for h11ur,., l1durt.• dt· ,. I tl I n c.: I II 11" '. a s ,. n 'i 1 l 1 \' l' mechan1<'.tl robot lo <h!'i<1rm 1t Tht.• 3 .t:; JI m vx plosinn in t hl' 250-room far1lltv shook nearbv l'J:;1no:-. "ilkl' a SOOIC boom."" :-a 1<1 o n'· hyst andl•r . r a llltng gla!>., and dra wing c:hee r., from l>l'Op lt• ('rowdt>d 111to near by <·a:,1no!'i 1\!'i tht• bomb exploded. the sceond a nd third rl!l(Jrs on I h <' ·bu1ldtng's south o.;1de bulged Pol1c·l' !>atd thl' bl ast v1 cin1tv wa:-. t'XfX.'Clt'd lo IJl' elthecl to Ir .i ffl e fo r I \\.Oday:-. TmkShow Warmed Up NEW YORK CAP> - N Il C TV's "Thl· Dav id Letterman Show." strug- gling ... with vie we r ratings s inc:e 1t ftrst appl'ared m .June. fina lly c<1 u~hl on fire m a telt>east The sho" hlo'ated up - l11erallv at thl' end of Wl'dnesda ~ !'> liVl' hroad· t ast at Rockefeller Center when co nfrtt1 tossed by g uesL<i celebratan~ the 30th wedding a nnivers ary of Sam and Betty Cottenoff of Red Bank. N.J . ignited on the stage. A surprised Letterman ran about the stage, at- tempting to put out the fire with hls feet before a stage hand came to his as- s ist ance with a fire ex- l 1n g uis her No injuries wer e reported and NBC of· fidals said there was no damage to the stage . ONDS (,~.~ --{\ __...__ ·~ \ J r;;-- .. 0 0 0 0Pange Coast E0 11'10N Today .. N Cletdn.C N. Y: S to~kH N TWENTY·FIVE CENTS 1 ' I -M to Seek Handicapped-School Aid ' Dr. Normiin Loats. deputy superintendent. was authorb.ed by the board of trustees this week to request that Newport· Mesa be designated a region un· der new 1'tate law• creauna • Ca lifornia Matter Plan for ·~chat Education. • The new s yatem ties more state control• to the larger al- locallons California 1s making to handicapped educ ation pro· grams. uid Superintendent J ohn Nicoll U nder t be m aste r 1llan system, local regions will con· trol funding. T ·SHIRT MAKERS GET ON THE BALL EARLY B•rry •nd Sue Brown Bombing Survivors .. ,. ........... ··FBI Seeking Trio 1 ' In Talwe Bombing STATELINE, Nev. <AP) - The FBI today hunted two men and a woman believed involved in a bombing that blew the side out of a Lake Tahoe hotel-casino during a botched attempt to ex· tort $3 million in SlOO bills from the gambling house. The FBI also said t h e sophisticated design of the com- plex bomb. which sent plumes or s moke skyward and showered debris over several blocks when it was accidentally detonated by a robot, may offer clues to who built it Authorities Wednesday night , issued an all.points bulletin for ~ three men in their early 20s drtv- ~ ing a black Ford, but cancelled • the alert this morning after the { lead was ch e cked out and 1 proved fal se. s aid FBI , spokesman Bill Jansen, adding of ( the trio: "It was just some kids "talking." j He s~d the ~BI has little to go • on in tt.6 conUnuing search for t the two men, both said to be in , their 30s, 8JWI the woman. i "We do pot have any suspects ~ or what their names a re," ' Jansen said. "We 're working on t ~~~s majnly from people calling Agents tried to meet the ransom demand to save the poab resort, but the bomb ez;ploded Wednes- day during attempts to dlsmanUe • it. The blast made rubble of the $20 million cuino'a bottom noors and blew out mos( of the windows lD the 12..aory builcliQg. No one wu lajured. Thousands of people bad been evacuated earlier from a four-block area around the casino. There was no immediate estimateor damage. The blast came more than 30 hoursafterthebomb,encasedina blue steel box inside an IBM com- puter carton, was discovered at Ha r vey's ResortHotel·Casino. State and fede ral officials , some of them experts from nuclear laboratories. rushed to the scene as gamblers in this re- sort 'city tried to make · bets on T ..sHIRTS PROVE POPUlAR AT TAHOE--A3 whether the device was phony. A fire briefly raged in the casino five hours later. J erry Yablonsky, FBI special agent, said the sophisticated de· sign of the bomb might provide clues on who made it. "I don't know or a nother similar device being used," Yablonsky said. "I have not seen anytbina like it in my 2.8 years of servfce." "As far as tbe FBI is con· cemed. all the stops are out to bring the perpetrators to justice." Some or the nation's most highly trained electronics anci explosives experts failed in er. forts to crack the design. Scientists and bomb experts from the Lawrence Livermore nuclear weapons laboratory. the Army, the Department of Energy and the FBI worked with the device more than 24 hours before the ill-fated at· tempt to disarm the mecbani8m. The attempt was approved by casino-owner Harvey Groes, 7S. Retrlons must contain at least 30.000 students, Nicoll explained. Newport-Mesa District has rewer lban 19.SOO students. Smaller districts. such as Newport-Mesa, must develop a plan to educate handicapped stu- d en ts with other districts in creating a committee.operated s pecial education region. Nicoll noted. Newport-Mesa offi cials have been wo rking with ad - ministrators from the nearby Irvine United School District, which has about 10,000 students. in drafting plans that might qualify for regional funding, he said. However. the two districts' ad. ministrators decided recently It would be best for the mentally and physically handicapped stu· dents in both districts if each of the entities s ubmitted waivers from the law and independent requests ror funding. Nicoll told trustees Tuesday that in addition to opportunities tor the handicapped, the issue in volves local control of pro- grams. However. the superintendent said, that the county superinten- dent of education will have jurisdiction over regions created in Orange Countv. Th e county .. he indicated, might opt for funding regions even larger than 30.000 student population and could combine ~ Newport·Mesa with ~evera l other school districts Administrators said a fundin g r eg ion composed o r j us t Newport-Mesa and Irvine -a~ originally studied -would be s uperior to such a plan. Newport-Mesa s chooled l.632 students under special education programs last year at a budget· ed $1.5 million. Irvine spent about Sl.8 million In educating 1,252 handicapped youngsters. officials said. uiet ·Jets Pushed Ri'ley Asks County to Clear New Planes By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ,,. Oally PHoC Su tt Orange County 5th District Supervisor Thomas F. Riley: urged immedi a te a ction by county officials today to clear the new -and demonstrably q uieter -McDonnell Douglas "~'Shaking' Building Evacuated Employees at the Daon Corp. 's Newport Beach head- quarters are back at work to- day, but wondering wh at caused the five-story structure to start shaking Wednesday. Officials !rom the Daoo Corp., which built ·the stru~re two years ago, and Prudential Corp .. which owns the building, aren't sure what the trouble is. • "Somehow." s aid F e rn C ri s l er . a Pr ud e ntial spokes man, .. a main column moved a nd a s upport beam twisted." He said about 100 workers in the structure at 4041 MacArthur Blvd. we re evacuated while crews bange d down sever a l walls and part of a ceiling to locate the problem. "It happened last week, too, but we assumed it was just norma l settling," explained Crisler. He said workers welded s everal temporary s upport beams onto the column, a llowing employees to return to work this morning. Prudential does not house any or its employees at the building. Daon officials initially dls - m is sed th e moveme nt as "normal settling" and called the evacuation "an overreaction." Prudential's Crisler said that, when the problem is clearly un· derstood, the building may again be emptied so workers can make repairs. liquor Tax Equity Due? SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Assembly has sent to the gov- ernor a bill that would halve tax· es for high-powered liquor such as Wild Turkey bourbon. The bill SB1311 by Sen. John Foran, D-San Francisco, was approved Wednesday by a 41-14 vote. Llquor that is 100 proof. or SJ percent alcohol, or leas is taxed at S2 a gallon, while (bat whJch 1& more than 100 proof ls $4 a gallon. DC-9 Super 80 for use at John Wayne Airport. In a letter circulated to fellow s upervisors, Riley termed the new craft ·astonishingly quiet"' and "even quieter than my most optimistic expectations ." Air California , one or two jet NoneFo•nd carriers now authorized to use John Wayne Airport. expects to take delivery or the first of four of the S16 million planes in January. However. the airline cannot use the plane at John Wayne Airpo rt unle ss county Bomb Calh Clear Coast Night Spois A series of bomb threats Wednesday evening in Newport. Beach sent hundreds of people hustling for safety. but ended up spawning more jokes than con- cern. .... "It caused me to lose a tennis malt h," laughed Don Porter. director of the Newport Harbor AreaCbamberofCommerce. Another guest at a chamber get· together at the John Wayne Ten· nis Club, said the bomb scare prompted her to seek reruse at the nearby Neporter Inn. Others did the same only to be ale rted to a bomb threat at the Newporter. Seconds later. guestc; a t t he Ma rriott Hotel were notified or a bomb threat there. No bombs were found , police said, adding that one caller, who demanded $1 million in cash. but forgot to say where he wanted it delivered, probably made all three threats. Porter said about 500 chamber guests were moved from the ten· nis club.to the parking lot when the bombthreat camein at abouts p.m. '•All of a sudden we were told to get out -I honestly thought someone wai> objecting lo the way we were playing." said Porter. He said he stood in the parking lot for about half an hour and then •ost his tennis match when he was allowed back oa the court. Police said the bomb threats at the Newporter Inn and Marriott wer e madeatabout9p.m. And the evacuating didn't stop t here. One of the Irvine Company towers In Newport Center was partially evacuated this morning when a fire alarm was accidental· ly triggered. "It's not so unus ua l ." responded one policeman when asked about series of evacua- tions. "and everyone is getting plenty or exercise." Authorities reasoned that it was only a coincidence that the series of threats in Newport followed the bomb incident at a Lake Tahoe hote l Wednesday. They said bomb threats aren't uncommon. '· 'Rnpoad•~ Plaa President Unveils Economic Strategy WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Carter called today for $27 .6 billion in 1981 tax cuts for Individuals and businesses as p a rt of a n e lection -yea r economic proposal that also aims to create a miJlion jobs within two years. But be said, "I will not accept a pre-election bill to cut taxes." The president also requested coogressional authority to spend an additional $3.8 billion ln 1981 to retrain workers, weatherize homes, maintain highways, build ports, boost research and Clevelopment and hel p . economically distressed coun- ties and cities. In addition, he urged Congress to rapidly extend unemployment benefits by 13 weeks to help worker s laid orr b y the re- cession. Benefits currently ex- pire after 39 weeks. This would cost $1.35 billion over two years. Carter WlVeiled what he called a "res ponsible" economic blueprint to an audience or busi- ness, labor. consumer and con· gressional leaders gathered in the Eut Room of the White House. (See CUTE&, Page AU supe rvisors ease current runway weight restrictions. · Airplanes now must we igh les:-. than 95,000 pounds on takeoff Air California has 1>roposcd in c r C'asi ng the r est riction t(• 128.000 to ac·commodate the• <See SUPE R, Page A2• * * * PSA Pilots Won't Fly Super 80s By STEVE MARBLI:: Of U1e O.,lly P ilot \utt Pilots for PSA. the San DieJ?o· based airline seeking permission to operate out of John Wayne Air port. claim they won't Oy the newly certified Super 80 jets . Bryan Cono. ~pokt>sm an for South West FliKht Crew As:-.oc1a tion , said pilots "won't go near" the new OC-9 Super 80 unless a three-person crew size 1s used to fly the jet.. He. said the pilots' refusal 1s being used as a ··bargaining tool" In a curr ent contract dis· pute. The a ssoc i at io n . which represents only PSA pilots. ha!-. voted to go on strike in late Sep· tember unless a new contract is signed. "And I don't think il will be. said Conn. "so. I guess you can assume that we won't be Oying the Super 80 '' The maJority of commercial pi lots in the country. represent· ed by Air Line Pilots Associa- tion. already have stated they won't fl y the new Mc Donnell Douglas jet unless a third person is added to the cockpit crew. The new Jet. billed as the quietest and most fuel-efficient commercial jet to come off the assemblyline. was certified this week by the Federal Aviation Administration and will be al· lowed to go into operation with two-member crews. The Air Line Pilots Associa- tion has filed a complaint m U.S. District Colirt asking for a re· C~ PILOTS, Page .U> Or:.J;;4 _~oas1 ---~ Weathe r Sunny Friday afternoon following morning cloudi· ness. Slightly warmer . Lows tonight 60 at the beaches, 65 inland. Highs Friday mid 70s to upper 80s. AD PUl' WIND ~ IN Ba4T SULS Skipper Blamed for Collision INSIDE TODA~ David end Dorothy Dk · sinQ wue order ed to .sur-. render thtrir dm.lghler a~eT outhoritie• fotlftd the child left oloM aftn the pamat• went to the defttbt. The DW1Uftg1 wcmt their child bock -titer/ q that ;u.t becGUN t#wtl both ore mn- toll11 rdarded doml't fMOft tlwfl con't tab proptt core of Ian. See ltory. Po(le Alf. W ASHJNGTON (AP> -The National Transportation Safety Board bu blamed the colliaion Jan. • ol a Coast Guard cutter and an oil tanker ln Tampa B•Y. Fla .. on the f a.ijure of the cutter's commander to adequate ly 1upervile a .. novice" at the 1bi_p'1 belm. Th• board ... u to Mopt • report pladnl moet of the blame for u.e accident, which tWed 23 Coast Guards men in the 1entce•1 1WOl'lt peuetim• dil· aster. on u . Cmdr. Georse J . Sepel. 1kipper of tbe cutter Btac~. and Enslen Jobn f\yan, 29, who wu ln control of the veaael. The Blackthorn, a tab-foot buoy tender, crashed nearly bead -on into the· 805.foot otl tanker Capricorn on a moonllt nltht in Tampa Bay. No one oa the Caprtcom was hurt but 31 of the 50 men aboard the Blackthorn died. Many of thelP bad been below deck. The veuel auk so rut none sot to Uterefta. Coast Guard headq111rten here la ccmlde~ poulblU-ty of court·marti Sepel and Ryan. The NTSB l't'POrt noted daat Ryan testified be aaw only a 1 de1ree c.han8e In the bearing of tbe tanker and concluded there wu no riM ol a collilion. That te1tlrnon7, the board aald, "dramatically IUaatrated that tbe connln1 of the Blackthorn had been left to a novice." In ita report, the board said that "contrtbutlnl to the high lou of Jtre waa tbe sudden captldq or Blackthom due to the Capncortl'• anchor ~ C•!if.'-l In the cutter'• sllelJ plaf. ~e board ur1ed the Coast Guard to blre pilots who know the waters when large cutters travel through pllotage waters that are unfamiliar to ..be cut· ter's commander. Tbat wu the caae with the Blacklhom. Sepel had been U · signed to shore duty for live years before ta.ttn1 command ot tbe veuel alx montbl before the accident. Ryan reported to duty on the Blaclttbom aeven months before the accident and for three of thole months tbe 1hlp bad been in drydock. An officer who htd been Cl'ee lllAMB, Pap tU» l•tlex AtY-....... AU .... UMllft C:t .,_-.ca a *"'" .,.,, L .M. ~ M MMNl~--• ......... ,.. .............. ... ~ M ·~ .... =Alt C.....-.. UM ~I ~ C'U Al .. .,,C:J ~ C1t E ...... .... ..._.. AU eto/ ........... , ~ .. ... ,..... "......... .,. ....... ·~ :.= ... l! ....,,,m.-a ..,...,.. ... .................. ,, • • U DAA. Y ptLOT N !'hur!d!!· ""''* .. ,., laraeli Ai~ Strike Hits Lebanon Coast BEIRUT, Lebanon CAP) -hndi plJm and btlleopte.ni alr\lck Pal UnlH tara ln liOutbtm Lebanon O\·eml1ht. and an lar•l aunboal exchanced ftre wtlh 1uernllu on the lAbaJMlle l'OUI., a U N 1poka man reported loci.a)' A mWtary tpok man In T9l Avl v tonnreecl ltrHll forces •Uuked "t.m>rlt\ tartetl U>q lM Lebanese coast .. bul save n~ rurthet' detall There were no reports of 1nJunes. the U N spoke man said, . Israel htts .,_-en stepping up Ill w1tr on Palestinian outpos!Jj In suutlwm Lt•bunon. and sent i.oldt~rs and wupl,ancs Derosa the border Aug. l9 \n a m jor raid al(ainst uerrllla positions that aett as many a 60 auct ll wH tht largf'st military operation since the Marc:h tm lsraell tm ai.1on of the south ·•••••' -.c ... ••nl .. Otiltt-n VALENCIA CAP> The shentr& bomb quad detonated ' what u thought was a bnefcaise rull of ex plosives today 1tf\er a $50.000 bomb extortion lhrcnt wu!-. re<'etved by a mold. but said lhe bomb tuml'<i out to b(> a hoax T~ Rurwh House Io n Motel, acn»:i tht frcewuy from Mog1c Mountain umui.omenl purk. received the tele~ho~ed bomb threat ut 8 u m . said Lo:. Angelei. County sheriff s Sgt. George Oalt..oen~r. One wing or the motel wus tvacuatt.-d as the bomb squad ex umim.'<i the bnercuse. which was du.covered m a trash t•an, Galeener st11d The can was moved J bafe dii;tancc rrom the building and the briefcase wai:. exploded by the bomb squad. he said Trai• Dn-alWd; Ne Ihle. Bun OUNSMU lR GP l 'rhe f>O ut hbound Coast Starlight passenger train was derailed on a side track near here today. but none oflhe306 passengers was hurt, a railroad spokesman said T ht' 'Portland-to-San Diego Amtrak train pulled on the side track at Gi bson at 2 :55 a .m. lo allow a northbound passenger trai n to go by, said Charles Kennedy, a Southern Pacific dispatcher in Roseville . .tie said the baggage car derailed and pulled nine other cars off the tricks The cars remained upright and the main line was not blocked. CMl»im11• ProC~•• at Barrack. FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa <AP> -About 20 Cubans climbed on a barr acks roof in this refugee resettlement center Lod ay and threw rocks and other objects. the fourt h such dis· turbance here this month, state police said Twelve slate troopers. a state police he licopter and U S Border Patrol police surrounded the are~. "We don't w<1nt to alarm anybody. It is confined to the area.·· said Stat<' Trooper Scott Houser "We JUSL don't want anyone lo gel out .. Fro•P~AI • CARTER ... The president drew a !'harp t'ont rast betwt.•en his economic pl <1ns a nd t hose or Ronald Reagan. althoujlh he did not mention I he Republican pres 1denttal nominee by name "Now -10 •he heal or an eleC'· t1on year -1: not the time Lo seek votes with ill -considered tax cuts that would steal back 10 inflation the few dollars the average American taxp<iyt•r would get." Carter said "America needs to build mus t•le. not add rat. .. ht.• said .. , will not accept a prc-t.•lect1on bill lo eut taxes " Rt•agan proposed an 1m· mediate S37 billion tax cul to stimulate the economy a s part or an even larger tax cut plan. Carter said his propo!-.als will begm a ·•journey toward a more vroducti ve. mon• <'Oqlpelitive, and mor<' prosperous American tconomy .. BLAME ... ashore as long as Sepel "should not have been selected for com· mand without first having bet?n subJected to a com prehensive refresher course." the board said Be/,sito Says Mandie Case BroughL Firing ll untmgton Beach City Ad· ministrator Floyd "Bud" Belsito said today he was fired by the City Council this week because he wouldn't participate in what he says is a cover -up of a con· Oict or interest involvi ng Coun- cilman Bob Mandie Belsito also complained that unproven charges that the city violated federal 'nepotism reg- u lalions because three of his relatives were employed by the city's federally funded job pro- gra m also contributed to his downfall. flt> said the nepotism nllega· lions by Bob Nelson, director of the Orange County Manpower Commission, were based on an unofficial document and should not have been released last month Belsito was fired by the City Council Tuesday on a 5 to 2 vote. The action occurred in a closed session after mi<fnight. He must vacate hb office by Oct. l . under the council order. Belsito said Mandie should not be allowed to remain on the City Council because he is president of M andic Motors. which bas a business arrangement lo handle police-related towing business .. M andic can 'l stay on the council i£ he has a financial in- terest in the business." Belsito said. "It's either that or the city faces an anti-trust lawsuit." ... r• ··~fa &M ...... Rl.., aaid the _.., -M& Mr CelUonia - 1 taoald ~pan a eo•pltte anal,... Of &M tHHt of tbe Super•'• entry to the atrport. Th1t 1naly1la, Riley said , would · 'neceaurily conside r lbe po11l\)le reduced lire expectancy or the runw•Y lteelf, and any ad· d tlonal lmpaotl Lhal mtthl be lJlcurrtd by lncreased paasenger tratr l ~ brou1ht on by the somuwhat lattenaircrart. •• A nlley aide aald lt l1 more rea- 'sonuble for thu countY. ihu.n Air Ca ttronah• to conduct the assess· mtint due lo the current prob- 1 e m B 1>urro undln g o ther airlines' n.iquests to serve John W ayoc Airport. OnP or those airline11, PSA. for t•xamplc . hti.S ordered 2i> of the Super 80S. S upervisor s will cons ider Kiley's proposed plan of action T uesday Riley said the Super 80 - shown during a recent dem- onstration fli((ht watched by a host or offi cials. airport critics a nd news representatives -"of· fcrs Lhc first i;erious opportunity to reduce noise generated by use or the airport." The Super 80. according to noise measurements taken dur- ing the demonstr ation flights. ~us a n average of 7.2 decibels quieter than Boeing 737s now flown . "I have heard much about the noise reduction achieved by this new aircraft. but experienci ng it myself made me a believer. and confirmed my f('eling that the Board of Supervisors should do all it can. and as q ui ckly as possible. to clear the Super 80 fo r landing at J ohn Wayne Airport." Riley said In a letter sent to Riley Mon- d ay. Robert W. Clifford. Air California president. said "1l was a thrill to hear applause and cheers when the Super 80 passed. ov~rhead ... " Clifford ter med the plane "en- vi ronmcntally desirabk ... Fro.a Page Al PILOTS ... view of the FAA's procedures ror certifying the new jct. But a spokesman for the pilot association said the court action is not an attempt to block the St•per 80 from going into service . PSA has 20 of the $16 million jets on order and expects de- 1 i ve ry in Septe mber. Officials for PSA claim tl}ey will use the Super 80 at John Wayne Airport if Orange County officials give the m permission to operate out of the county facility. Conn. a PSA pilot. said his personal feeling is that two· person crews can fly the jet but that "that third pe rson just makes it that much safer. The sk y is congested and in an e mergency situation, you'd need that third person ... He said the Super 80 is the first in a n('w generation of jets and that pilots want to clear up the crew size dis pute before oth('r new jet s, s uch as the planned Boeing 757 and 767. come on the market. .. Fifteen years ago, .. Conn ex· plained. "two people were okay. But not ahymore." PiloLc; rrom Air California. the Newport Be ach-based airline which has four or the Super 80 jets on order. have not entered into the crew size dispute. Fmnes Harmless DEL REY <AP ) -S ulfur dioxide leaked from a 500-gallon tank at La Salle Winery in thIB Fresno County town Wednesday. but workers washed the spill away without any incidents. The Blackthorn h ad JUSt passed below the Sunshine Skyway Bridge over Tampa Bay and was bound for its home port of Galveston. Texas. when the collision occurred . By coin- t•1dence four months later. a I .40<Hoot stretch of the bndgc collapsed into the bay after it was struck by a freighter. send- ing 35 people plunging from the br idge to their deaths The NTSB board's report can- :not be entered into court pro· ceedings in civil or criminal ·cases arising from the collision. 'according lo Arthur B. Dunbar Jr .. spokesman for the board. Nixon Niece Named To Irvine Panel • OAANOE COAST ,. DAILY PILOT ''""'·~ Vl(•Pf--0.-,ol~ ,_._ ...... ~·--­MoJMtl11tl 4!10r. 0--.lt.'--'""'IUIM ~· ....... • By RICHARD GREEN Ol lllt D•llY ~llet SIMI Irvine Mayor Art Anthorty has angered the city's liberal faction by appointing the niece of former President Richard Nixon t o the Irvine Community Services Commission. Lawrene Anfinson. 37, a six· year city resjdent, will replace Lee Stewart on the fi ve-member commission. ' Community Services· Com· missioner David Kidd, appoint- ed to the commission by Coun- cilman La rry Agran. said he "was shocked and saddened .. by Anthony's move. Anthony's ac· tlon was caused by a com- miesion vote 1n which Stewart aided with Kidd. accordlng to Kidd. ''You do serve at the pleuure of lbe councilman who appointed you,•• Mrs. A.nflnaon said. "t don't UDderat.ud what Kidd is upto.0 Asked lf her polltlcal aftllla· tiooa would hiDcSer her, caner ln ctty IO"l'D~t, lln. Anftmon aald, "You JMU u far u UDele Dlck CMxon>' a•m a IT·JM1'4kt human beADI bl my OW. not. 1·11 be ...,.. " a·u be ~t· ed with anybody ln my famllY. "I respect my uncle V.!'f much and for what he stands for -but he's 3,000 miles away and I don't kowtow to anybody ... The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mixon s aid that her political involvement to date has been limited to fund-raising ac- tivities. but she looks forward to ser ving on the city commission. Meanwhile. the m an s he replaces said he has no hard feelings. ·'Kidd ls trying to make something out or nothing,,. Stewart said. "I serve at An· thony's pleasure and will abide by his desires with no Ill fee.l- ings. Kidd ls ju.st trying to sur up a hornet's nest.'' Anthony uld he replaced Stewart tn order to llthten the workload of the public Nlatlons man for Avco Development Co. • • AboUt a month a10 I began talklnl with Stewart aboUt his removal because of hl1 bil ":rk load -ll had nothina to do th Kidd~ t just don't ~~· to ovel'· load my ap-polntees. Kidd. a treela.nce writ.er. bu been a foe of Antbon)' for Mvtral yean. About a year .,o. Anthony want..s Kidd kleqd out of a pabllc comdl _...,..,for yawn~• wbne be (AntbooY> talked, (. Auto Missing Miataken Tow Tums Tables Jobn ~. UC Irvine's assistant director of parking and trwwportation systems. had the tables turned on him l11t week HE WAS PREPARING TO LEAVE his apartment in Santa Ana when he diacovu ed he was m1ssmg something Important: his cur. The man who presides over the ticketing and tow-away or vehicles at UCl learned what lt feela like to have one's car hauled away. "I couldn't believe it -I went out to my car and it just wasn't there," he recalls. "Vie got it a ll st~aightened out later. It was towed Crom my apartment by mistake and it was all made good lo me. "BUT I MISSED MY APPOINTMENT that morning with some offi cials at Harbor Municipal Court (where UCI truffic tickets are processed >. ··And when I told the story to the person I had an appointment with. he couldn't siop laughing I didn't think it was very runny at the time ... Dana Benefit Plan Called Incentive By DON CHAPMAN Of Ille Oallw ,Ito! S~tt The Dana Point Sanitary Dis t r ict board <Jppears to stand alone among Orange Coast gov ernmental agencies voling ltseU a $500-a-month reti rement plan. The pension. wh ich became er fcctive in April . amounts to S50C per month for board me mber!> who have attended 10 mt?elln£s per year for eight consccuti vt years and have reached the a~c· of 65. Board members are paid S50 per mt!<.'tmg The law pr ovidci. for the pension through v<irious ~ect1on~ of the state Government Codt and the dislnct cun a fford 1l. uc cording to board member Angus Smith Smith noted that officials from othl•r districts had been conta<'l ing him to sec h<1w the Dun;.i Point board establis hed the• plan. "They're all confronted with the some problem <of getting and keeping qualified board members>." he said. The district's fi ve board mem· ber s don't pay into the fund, which is provided through the district's general fund . No board members are eligi- ble for the pension now. said Smith. He expla ined that the plan would provide incentive fo r service "The purpose behind it Cthe plun 1 is to encourage people to stay on the board and con- tribute ... he said. He suid there has been rcluc lance on the part or the public lll become invol\'ed on such boards since Proposition 13 and finan c1al disclosure la\.\s. came into vffect Board members meel month ly . but Smith said the lime they spend dur~g the month on district businei6 flu ctuates. "A board member cc;iuld easily put in 80 hours a month ... he SlJid Smith is 50 years old and ha~ served on the board for nme years . Defense Chief Set For House Grilling WASHINGTON <AP I - Secretar y of Derense Harold Brown has been called before a House subcommittee to answer under oath whether the new "Stealth" measures to hide bom bers from ene my radar were deliber ately leaked. a member said today. Rep. Robin L. Beard. R-Tenn .. told the House that Brown has been called to testify next Thurs- day before the House Armed Ser vices investigations subcom millec. Beard . a Ma rine Reserve lie utenant colonel. called public disclosure of the measures "an irresponsible compromise of one of our most sensitive projects." He said that if the House in· vestigation finds secret informa- tion was ille~ally disclosed "I shall demand crimina l prosecu tion." Rep. J ames A. Courter . R N .J .. said he is introducing a res· olution of inquiry that would de· mand Defense Departmen t • 1nformat10n on whether lht· mt>asurcs wen· deli berate ly leaked. Co urter noted Brown said on rriday he wab d1selosin~ tht.• breakthrough partly because 1l had b('en publi c l y lea ke d Courter said he wants to know 1r Uro" n or other officials leaked t he informa tion to prompt Brown's public confi rmation or II T he leak Brown referred to ·,.ia s a storv in the Armed Force!-. Journal. - The magazine's editor. Ben jam in Schemmer . told the House subcommittee Wednesday he believes it was "a direct.cd leuk for political purposes because I can think of no reason why this story should be made known at this time·· Schemmer said the story was leaked to him by a high-level Defense Department offi cial and he called the action "totally 1r· responsible " Mother Cal/,s Son A Killer " I By DA VlD KUT'ZMANN Oltllto.ll•'U.."•" A Santa Ana man. atandlng trial for the drowning death or his 4- yeu r-old nephe w last Apnl. was ca ll ed a "cold -blood e d murde rer" b y his m other Wednesday during an emottonal ou t burs t in Or a nge County Superior Court. I Later in the day. Superior Court Judge Ric hard Beacom. who is presiding over the non-jury trial. heard murder defendant Emmett Mitchell's taped confession to police Apr il 21 in which he described first stra ngling and then drowning his nephew m a bathtub. ··somet hing s n ap ped,'' Mitchell said to detective Gail Clark. "fJuslsnapped .. Mitchell has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to the murder charges against him llis nephew. John Lewis Jr . died at Children's Hospital or Orange County after spending a week and a hair on life support systems. The courtroom outbursts began We dnesday morning whe n Mitchell rose to his feet during questioning of his sister . the child's mother. and cried out. "That'sa~expleti ve> lie. You're a <expletive 1 har .. The witness, Dianne Lewis. had been answe ring questions about her and her brother's upbringing. Atthis point. Mitchell's mother. Dorolhv Mitchell. stood at the rcur of the ~mall. fou rth-floor courtroom in Santa Ana and yelled. "Emmett. you're a cold blooded murderer You killed an innocent child ... As shenff's deputies restrained him . Mitchell shot back at tus mother. "You caused me to have a nervous breakdown."' Responded his mother. ''Yoo did it yourself with all that do!>( vou were taking." "You're gonna pay. Emmett." Mrs. Lewis sa id from the witness stand. Def('nsc attorney Hon Buller asked for a recess but when the trial resumed in the artemoon. thl'rl' wa~ ont• more small out - bur:.t, this again by Mitchell':- mothcr when shr was asked hy Jud~e Beacom to wail outs id e the courtroom while the lape wru. played. This was done because she 1s ... potential future witness. However. Mrs. Mitchell pro- t<.•:-.ted. sayi n~. "Th is is my j!ra ndson we're talking about.·· She then left the courtroom. loud- !~ ban~ingopen a door on the way out Dunn~ tht• playing of the tape~. which were made shortly after Mitchell's arrest. Mrs . Lewis wept quietly at the rear of the cour troom as the derendanl d('scribed how he killed herchi'rl At several points in the tape, Mitchell laughed heartily while descr ibing what he had done. He told detective Clark he was a "suicidal nut" and a "masochist" as well as being homosexual. However. he later said he killed the child as a means of ki1Jing himself. Wedn esd ay 's dra matic courtroom action was not the first s uch occurrence in Mitchell's tria l. On Tuesday. as proceedings were beginning, Mitchell s houted out. "I don't want this in the press . I don't know where they (the reporters> are. but I don't want them in here.·· , Thursday Augus1 28 1980 DAILY PILOT \;J t Bom'1? GarnfJlers lJndounted •1 STATEUNE. Nev <AP> -No mere bomb blaat la iotna lo dampen UM actJoa for ioa. el I.be 1aad"" ._ Of Lake T.i.o.. 1A11 than t.o boun after a bomb nearly dea&royed • lake1'4e cuino. T·ablrU w.l on sale --~ "l sot 8o11lbed at Lake'l'aboe. • lnalde the 1amblln1 rooma, wltb the l'xeeptlon or bomb· w,_led Karvey'a Ruort Hotel· CuJ.no. U. caria ..,. nlpPn,s. U.• diC'9 l'OlJ1na aod lhe lloU Toe Hold For Real In Yukon · DAWSON CITY. Yukon (AP> -The Sluice Box Lounge is frantically searching for one large toe to kffp customers hap- py and maintain the "Sourtoe" tradition. C apt Dick Stevens on . operato" of a local riverboat tour. is scouring t.he Yukon for the digit so the · 'Sourtoe Cocktail" won't go the way or the gold rush. Stevenson gives this explana lion : For nearly a decade, the cocktail -a glass of champagne with a pickled human toe float- ing in it -has tested the mettle of many a man. and attracted the metal of many a tourist in this former gold rush town. Many have thought of sampling it but only 725 havt> bad the nerve. · Anyone who managed to down the whole drink -and keep it down -won a n orante certificate testifying the .bearer was "a person capable of doing a lmost anything. .at a ny drunken moment." The drink was cr-eated eighl years ago when a bunch of the boys were whooping il up in the l o unge of Dawson City's Eldorado Holel and Stevenson told them about the pickled big toe on the mantel in his log cabin It was left there by a trapper and rum.runner who had frozen his root and had to cut off a toe to prevent gangrene. Isolated in his cabin for the winter, the trapper bated to part with the toe. so be pickled it in a jar of 'Ugh-proof rum The others decided that this fellow e mbodies the old sourdbugh s pirit and should be honored. The jar with the toe was brought to the bar and the Sourtoe Cocktail was born Since then 'tourists have been lining up in the har to watch anyone who had the nerve try the drink Until seven weeks ago. thal is That's when an unidentified con struction worker from Ladner. B.C., decided to sample the cocktail He downed the drink, prompt ly feJI off his bar stool and ac cideolally swallowed the toe When the green color left his face. friends dragged him out of t he bar That momentary bout with imbalance has created a quan dary for the creators of the cocktail, and the bar that served it. T -shirts are sold a ll over town advertising the drink. and the tourists are demanding it. So Stevenson is scouring the Yukon for another toe. "I've got a couple of un dertakers working on it,"' he said. "They're looking for a toe in Whitehorse right now." Duck Soup For 'Goose' SACRAMENTO (AP) - Environmental paperwork for the proposed Spruce Goose museum facility at the Port or Long Beach may be swept aside under a bill signed We<lnesday by Gov. FAmw\d Brown Jr. The a uthor or AB1023, Assemblyman Dave Elder, D-Long Beach, said it eliminates the review unde r the California En· vironmental Quality Act that woWd normally be re· quired for such a project . The 5pnace Goose is the late Howard Hqhes' H·• Seaplane -be diallked the nickname Spruce Goose. Still the world's larsest aircraft. the lar1ely laminated birch plane new. once in te.7 and bu tince been l n p rivate storap at Loft& Beach. Elder who called the plane the Hughes Fl1tn1 Boat, baued a atatement HJiDI it ''will join tbe QaeeD Mary la the port tn time to aeclOIDmodate tbe ..,.. ............. of Yilitort antlelpated next 1um· mer." 1obbl&q up the cotns aa uaual. In rect, curtelled Os>eretlon.s a\ all the caalftOll Mar Haney'11 continued n1ht thl"OUlh the ••· 1>l01ion A repc>rtef' at C1eaar'1 Palace aald players at the OM· armed bandJLI dld pal.lie for an lutaat at lbe mom nt ol lb~ blut to exclaim thln11 Ukf. "Oh, Wow I" before 1lvinJ t.helr money away ••aln One ut.rernt11y relieved man was Bob Oe'rvey of Palmdale ltf' wu 1e(li.n1 ready lo bt'l •nybody ~ at S· 1 odds that the bomb taJk wu~ 3 hoax He had no taken. an eplc event in ltselr around her~ ll was a Jolly crowd tbat wit· nesaed the smoky blast. cheer· Ina and yt.11Hng as the detonation t-cbo~d o (( the High Sierra backdrop Ooe guy, apparently a loser, c·rled J<leefully, "Take t~at, Harvey• .. Within minutes after the i.moke cleared, m ost of the O.tlly '11et Sutt PltOle BLAMES GOVERNMENT SPENDING FOR U.S. WOES Lt. Gov. Mike Curb Speak• In Coate Meaa Curb Flays Spending At Mesa CofC Talk Orange County businessmen listened Wednesday afternoon as Lt. Gov. Mike Curb told them what many already know, "The economy gets worse every day.·· C urb blamed the bl eak economic outlook on govern ment regulations and steep federal spending that he says has increased 10 limes since 1946 Speaking al an Orange Count.} Chamber of Commerce luncheon in Costa Mesa. Curb s aid that government intervention ard lack or energy resources is caus ing many large businesses to re locate to other states "The best way lo solve our economic problems is to get the fed e r al governme nt off our backs and cut taxes across the board," he said The chairman of the State Economic Development Com· mission added that failure to re· peal the inheritance tax law Utls year could put many family farms out of business In what has become a stan dard speech opener. the lieute nanl governor reminded the au- dience that his boss' frequent a bsences from the slate have left Curb in charge one or every three days. "His administration shocked Fishing Reef . Being Built Off Onofre SAN ONOFRE <AP) -An artificial fishing reef is being built with three·ton quarry rocks a mile offshore and three miles south of the San Onofre nuclear generating station. The California Fish and Game Department a.aid beds or giant kelp are bein& attached to the rocky reef on which thousands of all of us with his small-is· be autiful concept." he said. .. And I can tell you that the only thing we've got' less of is his time."' Gov. Jerry Brown was not the only official to be criticized by Curb . H e blam e d t h e Legislature's failure this week to :lpprO\'C a separate Cal Trans district for Orange County on Transportation Director Adriana Gianturco. ··she reminds me or a mar· r iage counselor who's never been marne.d . · · Curb s aid . "She's never had a business and she's probably never owned a car . Orange County lawmakers. led by Sen. J ohn Briggs, R· Fullerton. failed in their efforts to pass SB 512. which. if passed. could bring the county $10 million a year. 'A' Train Canceled WASHINGTON (APl -John B. Anderson's presidential cam· paign today canceled a planned five-day whistlestop train tour acro~s Illinois, Michigan, In· diana, Ohio and Pennsylvania. Anderson spokesman Michael Rosenbaum attributed the can· cellalion to "a large number of complicated problems," includ· ing cost, the logistics or arrang· ing network television coverage and problems with assembling enough cars for the train.1 Originally. the trip had been scheduled to begin Sunday in Anderson's home town of Rockford, lll. Drugs Blamed For Death baby abalones will be planted. A Drug overdose has been listed biologist said it will be .. com· as the cause or death for a still pletely out of range" of dis· unidentified man whose body cbarse from the p<>wer plant. was fOWMl July 28 on Santiago Twenty other man·made reefs Canyoo Road. hav~ been bui)t for the slate Or ange County S herlrf't alon1 the Southern California Department Lt. Wyatt Hart said cout atnce 1958. tox\coloetcal tests s howed the Wben the reef ii completed presence of alcohol, the lran· late next month, there wUJ be quiliser Valium and am· etcbt separ_a&e rock pUea about phetamine. 10 feet bltb and about eo feet Tbe body, that or a man ln h11 apart. early 281, wu clad only in a pair A 1rant from South ern of blue jeant when it wu slahted California Edboo Co. ii ftnanc· by a peaelna rnotorilt. Inc tbe ..,,000 project. AlGnl lnvesUgatioo abowed that the dealen;, noor men and change· m akers were back at work at the nearby hotels. servicing the thousands who flock to this re- sort. Two youths from this town of 900. on the California-Nevada ~border at the southern end of Lake Tahoe. set up a sidewallc s tand se ll ing T ·shi r ts memoriaJizlng the explosion Oreg Davis. 18. and Rocky Young, 14, charged $9 each and said they were working for a gilt Attorney Seeking Damages A Westminst er attorney. arrested by Newport Beach police last June on suspicion of robbery, has filed a claim against the City or Newport Beach seel<ing SlS0,000 in damages. Tom F l\f anisca lco. 35. contends police arrested him on 43rd Stref't. Nh e r e he was atte mpting t o pry into his Cadillac after locking his keys in the car. He s aid he later suffered personal injuries while being arrested and contends he was falsely imprisoned. Police claim they arrested Maniscalco and his 34-year-old companion. Thomas Floyd Pugh. after they spotted several guns in the car s back seat. They said also they believed the men resembled "obbery s uspects bem~ sought oy authorities. Formal charges we re never filed by the District Attorney's office. At the time. Maniscalco was representing John Edward Brown. the ma n accused of s laying a Garden Grove policeman in a bar brawl last June 7 P ugh, police said. is a murder s us pect in a separate incident involving t h e m y s terious disappearanc e or tw o Huntington Beach men. He 1s scheduled to stand trial next month. (;aruJhi Flays Nehru Story NEW DELH(. India (AP > t'rime M nister Indira Gandhi has descri bed as "ridiculous" allegations in a biography of Earl Mountbatten that claim her father. the late J awaha1 I Nehru. had a love affair wtth Lady Mountbatten. ·'There was a warm friendship oetween him (Nehru) and both the Mountbalte ns," a s pol<esman for Mrs . Gandhi quoted the prime minister as saying. .. It is a ridiculous story ... the 62 ·year-old ~rs. Gandhi was quoted as sa;ing after reading n e ws r eports of the book. .. Mountbatten : Hero of Our Times" by Richard Hough. The book was published Wednesday in London. s hop that ordered the shirts hours before the bomb went off The T-shirts said. "f Survived the Bomb. Lak e T<Jh oe , Aug. '80," Elsewhere along the glittering strip .that lines the lake, others sold T·shirts that proclaimed. "I Got Bombed in Lake Tahoe" and ··1 Had a Dynamite Time at Lake Tahoe." HOJl eymooners Jam and Barbara Malaro of New Jersey. guests at Harrah's across the • stree t rrom HarvC'y · .... hdV(' theif1 own grudge against the bomb~ ers. Hotel offic1ab knocked ort lh<-' door Wednesddy before tht( explosion and told them to leavt>: ·'It was a hell or " ltme 10'4 that to happen." he said : A woman who wouldn't ~1\1~ he r name said :.he wa:. kick~ out of hc·r room at Harvey ·.., Tuesday night and had l<> spend\ the night in <J rest room She'"l thinking about -;umg. she ~aid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~--; ' 0.tily Ptlot Pllolo DY Ch.orle• 51,rr Here's Looking At l'ou This ostrich at L H>n Countn Sa fa ri in lrvtnl' belong ... 1n the who '~ watching who c·utegor~· The :rn 1m~a! kPl'1J!' :tn ('Yl' un \'t!-itlor~ driving through· thl' \\Jld ;,intm:a! pr l''''I'\ 1· and does n't keep to the old clichc· of st1ck1ni:: tl "' h1·:icl 111 th<.· san Cult Deprogranimer Faces Jury Vote SAN DIEGO 1AP 1 ,\nolht•r jury 1s dehbcralln~ con~p1rac) cha rges against cult deprogram me r Ted Patrick. thts time in the alleged kidnapping or a 26 year-old Tucson. Artz . wa1tres~ Patrick. 46. was accused or conspiring with the fa mily of Roberta Mc Elrish to "depro. gram.. her out of association with acqua1nta ncc.s known as '"the Thomas Fa mily." Prosecutors said sht• was ab ducted on a Tucson street by her pare nts. two s iste rs and a brother·in-law but escaped when th<.'y passed through El Centro en route to meet Pa trt('k in .San Di ego P atr1ck allegedly agreed to deprogram her for S7 .500 in a motel an Chula Vi sta 'The~ wanted to sub1ect th•~ yo ung mother to v1g1tantl' justi ce. put her through a proc e ss o f mind co ntr ol . brainwas hing." the JUry w a~ told by Richard D Huffman chief deputy district attorney In closing arguments. defense attorney Patrick Wall said th<' McElfish f::im1 ly, not Patrick was involved m a conspiracy Th1•\ h..1,1·n11l ti1·t·n1·har)!1·c Th1.• l rtal wa:-the lilt> fw Patrick tn re<.·l'nt year ..... He ",J, conviclc<.i lw1 c1.•, of m1...,d1• meanors m Orange County amt lh•nver He wa~ (.t<.'QUlllcd Aug '> or c·onsp1r .. t·y 111 tht· altcmpte<t La~una RC:ll'h d(•progr am min:. of P.iul .. Dam. a m1.·mbcr of 1h1 Church or SCll'ntolog v "nw.1· family hvl.'s in f"ullerton Legislators WfC Guests J\<;!-cmbhwom..1n l\la r1,1n Bl•rgt·~on. Senator John Schmit / and Orange Count~ Supervisor Thomas Rile\ w11! t<Jk t• part an ;m informal d1scuss1on Sept q at thP Halboa Hay Club tn Newport. Beach The 7 :w .1 m breakfast ,, :-ponsorcd l> .. the Nt•wp1•r1 Harbor Arca Chamber or COO" mercc and 1" opl'n 10 the pubh1· for SS For I urthC'r mformat1on. call 644·8211 3ShortDays -It's the wind-up of our g reat furniture event Later 1s too late, to take advantage of this opportunity! Only hours left, lo select upholstery from our Drexel® and Heritage® collections at significa nt savings. Dining room, bedroom and occasional selections, too, at excellent reductions. But hurry, please! Drexel and Heritage Summer Your Fdvor11c Designer Will Be Happ.,. To Ass1sr You H.J.GAR~lT fU~NITtJ~E PROHSSIONAl. 221S HARIOR llVO. wlU. Sm 0..., Ou A m.ctr1c body b8d been dumped at the Co., BdilOD owm tbe SU Onolre tocatioD rrom a .. hlcle, Ran · IN rER10 A OES10NER$ COST A MlSA 646·0~~5 plant. . said. '-"--------""""'!'------------------------ > v ,, ... ' . r , 1ltutwdly. ~. ,., ~ ...•. ~ T-~~··' 11..,.•l•e Let 'em Eat Gas VNGM ftftJL warrara • SCCR: l>llquletl~ newa came to our Ofu .. ~t,y tranaportaUon oom· mlaaklnera recenUy that the ~ar cllilena out t.bere are lettln1 U..m down. People juat aren't buytn1 a1 much l .. Ollne M lhey UMd to. Sudl eeoooaalc news ls particularly unoervln1 to t.be public tramportatJon brua because when 1uollne aalea ao down, 10 dc)ft the lu take paid on each talion. Thus t.bere la leas Lone Green available for the aov· emmental transportation lMaen to toy around with in novel new,maaa transit notions. Wby, t.be harried motorists ol our region bne an un· mitigated gall doinl that. We've cut our own gasoline con- sumption and our tans at lbe same time. It's shameful . Foa DF.C.\0£8 NOW. lbe worting sWfs and hapless commuters, who deJ>eDd on the motor car for t.beir llle'a blood, have been puIUns up to the gas pumps like so many lambs being led to slaqbter. 'All thoM who U)' 1W low« the Pl*» of oil to h#p the wodd. ,... ,,,.,, hand/. Once parked there. the citizenry meekly submitted to pump prices with concealed truces that seemed to escalate at a maddening pace each week. Then came long lines and "shortages." Then the new waves of price increases. Thus repeatedly fleeced, the populace finally got fed up to their gas gauges in absorbing those blows to their pocketbooks. Meanwhile the gas tax coffers were happily bulging. But what did the motorists who were filling those coffers see? They saw the lights go out on their freeways. Invisi- ble signs at night. Potholed pavement. lncompleted freeways AND ALMOST DAILY, the word came from some transportation officials who were announcing a grand new a nd expensive transit study or some scheme to create diamond lanes and further harass the working stiffs trying to gel to the job. Slowly but surely, our battered motorists began to re- taliate. They sold their powerful Bk>atmobile V-8s that gulped fuel and coukl roar by everything along the road but a gas station. People replaced them with little Peanut Puttersthatsqueezedeacbgallonwithoutmercy. The younger generation got wise too. It used to be that as soon as a kid got his driver's license he charged down to Honest Sam's dirt used car lot wilb the d im ligfitbulb strmg out front and plunked down cash for some tired old heap that got six miles to the gallon. But not so much any more. MOST YOUNGSTERS TODAY have environmental concerns. They're riding bikes more. Even walking or roller skating. Some are riding gas-saving mo-peds. The little cars are in vogue with the younger set too. Thus it is that the people have done dirt to the gov- ernmental transportation bureaucracy. Gasoline sales have slumped some. That old seven cents per gallon tax take just isn't bringing the bucks as in yesteryear. WHY, rrs BECOME SUCH an agonizing situation that the government people figure t hey may have to come up with a new gas tax formula to keep the people's money rolling in. Your heart really has to bleed for the bureaucracy. Ir the people keel' economizing like this, they might be out or business. WORLD I NATION Halt Asked to Poland Strike ,. ODANSK, Poland (AP> -Pollah strike leader Leszek Walesa called today for a temporary halt to the spread of strikes to give the communlat IOV•nameot Ume to Mttle the labor crisis. His ap- peal, made at the 1ovemment'1 request, came aft.er proiress was reported ln lalU to end the two-week-old strikes. Tbert wer_, widesprud ~mors, meanwhile, that Communist Part)' leader Ectward tlerek had stepped down in favor of former Forelan Minister Stefan Olssowakl. currently Poland's ambassador to East Oermllny. or that be had agreed to resign. The official Polish news agency, lnterpreas, sa.id both rumors were untrue. . 8DDLAa LABOa Dl8CONTENT over rising prices forced Glerek 's predecessor. Wladyslaw Gomulka, to resign in 1970. Walesa, perched a_top the gates or the strike-idled Lenin shipyards here, told bis fellow workers: "It Is not good to have Pola6d terrorized. The people must have food. Ir we don't get re- aulta 1n three to four days, then let the strikes spread." Walesa, chairman or the Gdansk area Joint strike Committee. said he would go on radio and television to urge workers not to begin new work stoppages. An estimated 300,000 workers are already on strike. According to the communist regime's top negotiator,.Deputy Premier Mie<:zyslaw Jagielski. the government has agreed to most of the s~ers' demands, but progress has yet to be made on the key questio~ or free trade unions, Jagielski announced over Gdansk radio that the regime had made concesaiona to the strikers, but he did not elaborate. The b.ro$dcast followed an announcement to reporters by An· drzeJ Gwta.zda. one or the strikers' negotiators, that "there is ~eneral agr~ment between strikers and the government on rorm· mg free and mdependent trade unions." Gwiaida made the statement Wednesday after he and other strike leaders held their second bargaining session with govern· ment negotiators at the Lenin Shipyards, where the mass walkout began Aug. 14. JAGIELSKI REPLIED ON Gdansk radio and television Wednesday night that "these demands have to be discussed within the present trade union" setup, which is controlled by the state. He resumed talks al the shipyard today with Wales a. and s triking workers greeted the premier with polite "good mornings" in con- trast to their previous stony silences. Informed sources reported fresh striltes in Poman, Krakow. Lodz. Torun and Wroclaw. Worker groups in several areas issued statements of solidarity with.the Baltic area strikers. APW~ $30,000 Won lnMoonie Clue Lau:suit CONCORD, N.H. CAP> -A rather who fought for five years to see his daughter -only to see her speak against him in court has been awarded $30,000 after contending the Unification Church violated his rights as a parent in recruiting her. A church official called the award unprecedented, but Don Kieffer said he would "give up everything" to get his daughter Jana back. Kieffer had asked Sl million in da mages. contending the church "deprived him of his natural parental right" by recruiting his daughter when she was a minor. He also contended the church "continued to exercise its mind con\rol techniques" over Jana after recruiting her. You Can't Pit!k Very 1'1uda ••• David Hager. legal director of the church -whose members a re sometimes called Moonies - said the church had never before lost a suit over its recruitment or retention of members. Hager said he believed the ll .S. District Court jury found the church responsible for violating the father's rights as a parent, no~ with controlling the young woman's mind. A lone worker picks what little cotton re · ma~ps after mechanical stripper made .its round through fields near Seaton. Texas . Lack of rain in t he area contributed to 65 percent decrease in the cotton crop, a('· cording to agricultural officials. Gov. Bill Clements has been asked to declare the re gion a disaster area. • Ethiopians Driven Back Fighting Reported Heavy Awng Somtdi Border NAIROBI, Kenya CAP> - Somali forces have driven Et.h.io· pian inv~ders back across the border after a day of heavy fighting along a 27-mile stretch or Somalia's northwestern fron. tier. foreign diplomats said to- day. quoting reports on Somali government radio. The diplomats. contacted by telephone in the Som ali capital of Mogadishu. quoted the radio as saying the Wednesday in- vasion had been thwarted. There has been no indepen- dent confirmation of t.be Somali invasion claim or of the reported victory. · "The Somali government said that Ethiopian forces had at- tacked across the border and were driven back," said a Western diplomat. who request-the semi-arid wilderness from ed anonymity ... We really don't Ethiopia because its populallon know anything else and don't 1s primarily ethnic Somalis. have e:-.ough information at this Somalia ,·ebels. natives or point to speculate on what is the Ogaden. backed by Somali happening." troops and arms. made im- Somalia s aid the Ethio· pressive gains throu~h two pians suffered heavy casualties years of fi ghting. But Ethiopia in the fighting but it gave no emerged the victor in 1978 with figu res. a nd issued no state-the aid or Cuban and Soviet ments on Somali casualties. . military advisers and an airlift of sophisticated Soviet weapons THE DIPLOMATS quoted the to Ethiopia. State Depa rtment radio as saying fleeing Ethio· , sources estimated the cost or the pian troops abandoned large airlift at S1 billion. quantities of equipment during their retreat. Ethiopia bas not THE DESERT feud has con- commented on Somalia's claim tinued to simmer since the war, that an Ethiopian invasion force with g uerrillas or the gov-Lebanese mi Ii ta r y or Infantry and warplanes struck ernment-backed Somali Libera-a uthorities in Beirut a re along the frontie r. with the tion Front staging hit-and-run at· questioning two Lebanese planes reportedly bombing at tacks on Ethiopian positions . men in connection with at- least five Somali frontier towns. Ethiopia has accused Somalia of tempted assassin ation of The East African nations are continuing to infiltrate regular U.S. Ambassador John Gun- 1 traditional rivals in the strategic armytroopsintotheregion. De his f mil S kin R • c e Horn of Africa. They fought a In a warning earlier this ther Dean. an, · a · Y till f h E h. · 'd · and bodyguards escaped un-0 a g a1n8 On Ue bloody war two years ago or mont . l iop1 a .a1 its pa-harmed from the Wednes-control of the Ogaden Desert. tience was wearing thin and it • _w_i_th_So_m_a_u_· a_se_e_k_in_g_to __ ann_e_x __ t_h_r_e_at_e_n_ed_pos_sible_r_e_ta_l_ia_u_·o_n_. __ d_a_y_ru_·_gh_t_ki_·llin_·_g_t_ry_. __ _ Shtn.oon Pelt Most Sections of America c ...... tt'ftltller Low cloucts 1111111 tllnM19ll mlO ..-fl!,. llOun, °"*""' .. IWW\y and s•••v--Friclayatwr-. C:-tal ...... mid~ IOwto. lflla!MI fll9't-IOl.IOwU.Wntr, 10. r1 .. ....,., llollf _, ... wlflclt f1'9111 and momine ~ ""°"'"" ~ .. -,. .. ,..-.lfltlle after-. Ofle .. I-.... Wlflel ..................... ...,.,, .. ~ .-... c;.....,-. low <-..............._......_ c.111 ..... 1. T~.,._. -. •lltlK ... to creep up Slltlllly lfl S.411Mrll c:.lltot1lla • ,.,....,, ..... 19t'W .. c1...-twoc.Mt fer ...... ._.. <1Nf 9«tt ..... _..... SWW 11¥_.. ....... .._ ts-• ...... -~-.. 01•11111 .......... ........ .._ ............... ... ... ._. ... 0 , ...... ... -......... . ' ,. ... ...,.... .................. 2 .... .... eow.• ..... RP''''"' v...,_.._we...._ ...... ............. ·---~ ... ,. ..... ........ Olllf Clmlt. ,,. ... _____ .__ ......... .......................... ....... ,. ................ 111 .. ....,. ........ -ftPICtM .. ,_ .. ...._ ..... , ......... Iler, ...... ... Le ... . .. " ,. .... .... ft .. ,. .. .. " •n . .. .. n " .. .. .. . .. ... ,. •• "~ .. 6S n .. .os .. 11 B•tersllelcl Blythe Fresno Moni.rey <>41111-Paso llotlles "" llluff sacr-Saftta llartlefa Sto<llton Tllermal Barstow 11'9 llffr CatallNI !I Centro UI Arrow!INd LOftl 8Mctl Newport llNttl Ofttat"le Palm 5tlrlf9 San e.n-dlllO San~ senta .... Seftta ow ~Marla T ..... V....., ,. .. 110 ... .. 60 .s s. .. S1 ,, .50 " '2 .. S3 10 ,. " u 101 62 100 10 ,. .. 7S ., IOS It 7' u IS U 10 60 '° .. IOI 71 .. SS 7S SS • 62 " " 111 SS 71 " ...., ••• .., twe. TI)DAY .. 11 ... .. .. • n .oz Socefld tow f1 ., s.c....,,.... S:O a.m, G.I 11:..,a.m, s.s .... 11 .. n . " .... t1 .,. to 11 '1 " .. '2 P•tOAY ll'lr.Jt i.w •:eh.m. .ci.• ll'lnt fll9't tt:• "'"'· u SocCIM low •: .. a.m, G,t IKOMl\tlll ta; .. ,m. 4.1 Sufi rt-•:Me.fll,. MU J1M p.m. Mtml ,.._,1Jtp,lfl., .... •110 o.m. . 8fwl•••" .. 61 ...... .. " Mft .................. -" .. lfll•fll .......... r..t. ,., ... lfl .. .,, '"""" . .. .. ,. z-. ,. ..... .... -" ... _...,,.. ... .. .. ,. .. .,.... °"""' ,. .... It IP .. .. .. ,. .. ,. tt • ,. .. .... .. . ... ,. " n :r-..... --. NeaNOUIU I .. .. .,.... °"""' ' S M I 4 M • • u * s ., , . . ' . . r • ' t • • HEY. MOM! Frtt Boe* 8oq W ot+. ~2~ P.,cha•~ HEY. MOM' Frtt Boe* 8oq Wott. S2 ~ Pure ha•• Newport Surf and Sport 5th Annual Back to School Sale 25%-50% OFF Now Thru Sun., September 7th On MEN'S, WOMEN'S, AND BOYS' Shirts. Shorts. Swimwear, Pants. Dresses & Nae MEii AND IOYS OP, Offshore, Stubbles, Pua, Kennington, Merona, Fred Pe rry WOMEN Balinese Dresses. Beach Pants. Running Shorts, Noheo, • A-Smile, Offshore, &pit d-Corp and more ACCESSORIES Wet Suits, stas, Thongs. Towels. etc. -10%-~ Off And Nae ...... ....... ,.,..Nd. ... ,., ... edl 111-7174 ... .,.., Store 2 21CM Merine Ave • .......... nd 173-7128 N Delf ltofe3 South Coeat Plaza """""' Coet8MeH ._. 141..0523 ........... .,.., ... . Wnt1111ftlter .... 191-1144 ... ..... o.lly • • - CALIFORNIA Deatla~ap Tom McGuire, 29. a temporary clerical worker for the Veterans Administration, kicks out glass on 14th floor of the VA building in San Francisco (right} before leaping to his death (left). Police tried for more t han three hours to talk him out of j umping. Attack by Acid Fatal SYLMAR <API -Burned. blinded and disfigured after mysterious as- sailanis threw acid in her face Patricia Worrell vowed from he~ bos pilal bed to continue attending law classes which started this week. "That's what reaJly surprised me, but she has always been a two-fisted woman," said Steven Mill er, a close friend of Ms . Worrell. "She started law school knowing she was going to finish and th.is wasn't going to stand in her way." But Ms. Worrell. president of the student bar association at San Fernando Valley College of Law, never returned to those classes. She died Sunday, 10 days after the attack. The 34-year-old law student could not identify her attackers and police have no suspects in the case which has left them and th~ victim's friends barned. ............ l/plaeld SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Los Angeles Board of Education appears headed for the nation's highest court after the California Supreme Court refused to bar mandatory busing and pupil assignment this fall in the city school district's e lementary aod junior high schools. Saying she was "not at au sur- prised" by the high court's decision Wednesday, city school board Presi- dent Roberta Weintraub sought to ar- range an e mergency session of the board tonight. Defidt Note S•rplu SACRAMENTO <AP l -New pro- jections by the legislative analyst say the stale s hould have a $60.4 million surpJus on Jtme 30, 1981, instead of a $12.6 million deficit as previously thought. But the report said Wednesday that if all pending legislation is enacted, the deficit could widen to as much as ( STATE ) $1.37 billion by the same date a year later. 1982. Filla Crete SollfllU SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A movie c rew that apparently filmed a West German stuntman's fatal leap from the Golden Gate Bridge is the object of a so-far fruitless search by the California Highway Patrol. "We're kind or at a dead end. We can't find the film company." CHP Officer Roland Miller said Wednes· day, a day after Wolfgang Hans Gun- ther Kopke died while reportedly try- ing to set a world high-diving record. The 34-year-old Kopke -1979 European high-dive champion -feU 250 feet, landing on his back as he hit the San Francisco Bay water at more than 100 mph. Sala,,, BHb Sig•n SACRAMENTO <AP) -Two bills designed to equalize judges' salaries that were made unequal by a state Supreme Court ruling were signed in-I to law Wednesday by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. One of the measures. AB3274 by Assemblyman Walte r Ingalls. D· Riverside. places a proposed con· s titulional amendment. SCA37 by Sen. John Garamendi, 0 -Walnut Grove, on the November ballot. Under the other bill. 582060 by Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Van Nuys, municipal and superior court judges would get raises in January. The s alary le vels wouJd be the same as a verage salaries now paid to the judges. A 1976 law froze judges· salaries for l 1t"l years and limited future an· nual increases lo 5 percent, rather than an increase geared to inflation. Donavan & Seamans on the Rolex setting crown. Thl• serung crown is oft en the weak link in other watches. but no t in a Rolex The Rolex c rown is a patented construc tion which, like a submarin~ hdtch. screws down onto the watch cas~. sealing the movement from all wat<.'r. du">t a nd sand. Thirty manufacturing st ep~ are required in its construction , Our full \Clt.>rtlon of mt:"n<. and womt:tns Role'< '>tvle<i" ava1ldhlt.• in t1 wide price rangt• Illustra ted 0 Date Rolex for men or woml'n in all siecl. !ltet•I ,. and gold, o r all gold. With strap or brclcelet. ~"rpfMmmH Soutlwrn Callfomle\ ~lot Roltx At(tnc\' i;7b0 Wilshlrt Blvd .. Los Anaell.!~ • 21.PU9-2l21 11 fath1on l~land. Nt>Wport ~h 0 n~·57&-4 M.tstl"f Card. v.,.. c1nd Anwrican EliPft>S\ accepted Thut'lday. Auoust 28. 1980 DAIL y PILOT A.i Trapped Crews Evae•ated .• Blaze Rages Up San ]acin(1 PALM SPRINGS. cam. (AP> - F ir righters planned lo use the closed Palm Springs Aerial Tramway to transport personnel and equipment to· duy Ul their effort to slop an out-of· rontrol 6,000·acre brush and timber fire raging up the side of Mount San Jacinto. Although officials closed the tramway to the public after the fire burned within half a nule of the sightseeing attraction. California Department of Forestry s pokesman Dave Hillman said the firefighters wouJd use it to reach the top of the 10.786-foot peak. THE SAME HOT, dry weather which had plagued firefighters since the blaze began Tuesday continued to hamper ef- forts at containment as the fire reached the 7.000-foot level and rushed on into forested areas. "The fire has progressed from heavy brush to tlmber and we have a crown fire now." Hillman said. "It s ure looks hke the rire could reach the top of Mount San J acinto." Firm ·to Mine Le/ tover \Ore SAN FRANCISCO <AP l A ~an Francisco company s ays it plans to mine gold from a deposit missed in the Gold Rush davs. Homestake· Mining Co. said Wednes· da y that the ··sig n ificant gold mineralization" in a remote area of Na pa County 70 miles northwest of Sa('ramento is in fine pa rticles that can· not be panned or seen by the naked eye The deposit will yield more than one n11llion ounces or gold. estimated Harrv M. Conger . pres ident and chief ex·· ecutlve officer of Homestake Pure gold has been s elling for about $630 an ounc~ oo various world markets recently. Surface mining of the shallow s1x- m i Ilion-ton ore deposit and an on·site mill are expected to be in operation by 1984. Conger said. Prospectors during the 1849 California gold rush bypassed the area along the Knoxville Creek in northern Napa Coun- ty because the gold was not visible. Conger said. Meantime . an air tanker on Its way to fight the blaze accidentally dumped 500 gallons of fire retardant on a major Palm Springs thoroughfare Wednesday. There were no reports of injuries. but the gooey red liquid splattered streets. buildings. cars. sidewalks and a few people. Several locaJ rire department trucks had to be called in lo hose down streets and cars blanketed by the substance. which usually leaves a permanent stain on clothing and paint. authorities said. · FIREFIGHTERS AT the blaze suf· rered a setback Wednesday afternoon. Hillman said. when the blaze outflanked some 450 crew me mbers who had to be evacuated with the help o{ helicopters ·'The fire ran around them and got behind them and we quit fighting the fire and JUSt made sure we got everyone out alive," Hillman -;aid "By doing that we probably loi.t a n add1t1onal several hundred acres " f'our firefighter~ suffered manor tn· JUrtel>. he ~aid. and another 45 crew members who could not be evacu before dark were forced lo spend night in a burned-out area of the m ta ins. " Chino. Tachevah a nd Tahquitz c,~. yons were all engulfed by the nam he said. • OFFICIAL.'\ SAID the only damal from the Dr y~a lls fire was ~ watershed and ti ber, although nearlt 100 e xpensive h mes were brie fly threatened Tuesday evening. • • The fire started about noon Tuesda~. a pparently when four boys -ages 8 tf> 11 -we re playing with matches in i flood control debris basin, a uthorititi said. They were released to the custod)' of theif' parents. · · The blaze, burning in a southwesterlt direction. has never directly threatenec, t his reside ntial resort city which ii nestled against the mountain's easte" s lope about 11 0 miles e ast of Lo~ Angeles " New Mortgage Plan Eye~· SACRAMENTO (AP I A varwble rate home mortgage: bill was sent to Gov . Edmund Rr own Jr by th e Lq~i s l a turc· Wt•dnc s du y a·s an alternallvt-to a blll ht· vetoed A 72 0 Asst·ro bly vote completed p<1:-.sa i;it· of J\B3142 by Assemblyman All:-;ter M<'Al1ster. O·San Jose Mc Alistt'r said t he bill was backed by t ht• savings and loan induslry. con s umer group~ and the governor. and that tht.'n· \\a:. no kno\\n oppos1t1on But ~a ,·in g:-. and loans preferred another bill S H t!J:H b\ Sen John Foran. 0 San F'ran('1s<·o, ·wh1<'h Brown 't•tOl'd ~·oran cl bandoned cfforll> lo O\ t•rr1de the veto th1:-. '-"<'t:k M <'Ahster·~ ball allows state savings and loan in~l1tu1 iow .. to offer the sa m<: van abk• rali: mo rt i,:agt.· \~ h1ch federal!} licensed firms ha\ 1..· offered :-.mce last s pring The new federal law has been little used so far I l allow:. mtl•rest ral<'s to var!' by up to one·half• per('ent a year lo a ma~· imum or 5 percent over the 30-year Ji~ of the loan : I ntercst rates arc hovering at abolb 13 percent They fell to 11 1 2 percent afte r rising as high as 20 percent earlltlt this )ear • l'nder McAhster's bill. the borrower could choose lo have monthly paymenG- rl'mam constant for three. four or rive ~ t•a rs At tht.· end of the chosen period. tht' rate would be reset up or down b)• as much as one·ha lf percent depcndJng on what happened to the market. ~ .The borrowe r <'Ou ld the n c hoose another pl'nod of three. four or five ~ears for tht.• monthly payments to r~ main constant under the new inte re$ ratt' The M<'Ah:-.ter bill dot's not have the ··negal1\c umort1zation " feature ol Foran·s ball . which could resuJt in tht borrower owing mort' after five years ot steadily rising intl'rest r ates than at th~ start of the mortga~l'. '1 ~ p t . . .. . ;; " r PROMONTORY PONT A PARTMENTS. BECAUSE YOJ BELIEVE 'rOUR APARTMENT SHOULD BE AS DISTJNCTIVE AS YOUR LIFESTY~E Promontory Point 1s npt for everyone. It's for the person who appreoates the exceptional. who understands and requires a unique lifestyle. and who is willing to pay for 1t. Simply stated, Promontory POJnt 1s luxury A luxury lifestyle chac 1s unmatched 1n Southern California. Promontory Point is spectacular ocean views. Twenty-six variations of floor plans with skylights, lofts. decks, patios. And a// the quality extras you· d expect. It's a mil/ion dollar rec center with pools. health spa. sauna. lounge. game rooms. banquet and cpnference rooms an~ library. a permanent tennis pro and lighted tennis courts. Promontory Point 1s an award winner. It has won recognition for design excellence from the American Institute of Architects. Architectural Record. Sunset Magazine and the National Assooation of Home Builders. And it's touted as one of the most beautiful apartment projects 1n the country by residents and industry leaders alike. The Point 1s unique. it 1~ understated luxlJry for some very special people. Promontory Point ... A place for people who enjoy and can afford an affluent lifestyle. Rents from S665 -Sl 500 675-8000 G:r Promontory Point in Newport Beach I }; . . .. . ! . ~ • '. . " ~· .. .. .. ./' ( ,. # :-~ ' ~ .. Orange Coast Daily P11ot Edltm-lal Page ---------------------------------------- • ROberl N. Weed/Publisher T~s KeeYil /Editor Barbara Krelblch1£dltorlal Pao-Editor Traffic Island Teaches Le880n A nuc:er·ahaped N"i>O" ti taht tralt'lt' illand , In stalled onl.Y lv.'O month o~o at a t'Ollt In t'JCt' sot S20.000. fa beln& removed -by popular Mmand Re1idenll ask~ City Coundl membN·• thi!J Wt'ek lo pJow up the l roffic d1vidl'r at the lntrrsectlon of Cl!(( Drive 1md t r vine A \'enue. cullln.a lhr <-lrcular ii.land ''In sune.·• "dumb'' and •·a wa~<' of monc-y .. 1lle~ ar9u<'d thal the •~lend conflbes motorist:; who often halt In the middle of th~ treet. un<-eruln v.•hcthcr to drive uround t or In front of It Lonee <.>Qulpment surh as fire rtgi. hu\•t.• l roublt• moneu\'erin..: the circle. the.>' sa ht. Counl'il mt>mbers ~ot the mt', sogt.' They ord r~d lhtt 1s luJld's removal nd thw p~t an end to plans or 1nst~lhng six other Islands in the same nelt:hborhood But before all th(' blame 1 · heu(Wd on elected orfir1als or the city's pubhl' works <'l"l'Yt , ll ~hould be rem~mbt!rcd that the Island wus ~ugg~ tt'd by the rtts1dents scvt'ral years ago. The tra!Clc dt\'1der Yt:lS not the r11y'.:. 1dt.>a and it wu~ designed only after the residents damort.>d for some de vice to slow traffir The is land apparently w<isn 't tl good idea and prob ably wu:. a waste of money But tht' residents should b<• falr about who started the whole than~ Instant Ordinances The rickshaw-like pedicabs may not be the answer to Newport Beach's traffic woes. It may even be that the tricycle taxis will create problems. But a pair of Costa Mesa brothers who've spent months plannin{! out a l'ommercial pedicab business won permiss ion this week to ~ive it a shot. The brothe rs. Steve and Craig Nelson. put together ::i well-planned presentation that persuaded al least four council m embers not to close the door on the innovative transportation ronce pt. But had the Nelsons not been s nooping around cit~· halJ asking about a pedicab business. they would not have caught wind of the proposed ordinance to outlaw com- mercial pedicabs . The ordinance .popped up a fter the brothers began tat,ing up their plans with city employees : Although there was no pr~blem in this case. the con- cct'Jl is that prospective business men not be s hut out before they at least get the chance to present the mertt. of the ir cases. ~The council on Monday also approved an e mergency ordinanre that outlaws adult bookstores and X-ratcd movie theaters . The matte r surfaced after one busi· neSsman took out a license to open such a bookstore. We agrct• that such X-rated estabUshmcnts are not what ss needed or des ired m Newport Beach. But in Lot<1l fairness we do wonder whether this businessman even knQws his dulv li ('t'nsed bookstore will never be. Twisting 'th~ ll•g1slativ(• process to hit individual largeL-; is just not the way thl' !-tyslem is supposed to work Poor Tinllng Newport l\fr~w s dwul trustees have been telling con ::;tit ue nts and employees for a year that it's time to bite th(' bullel . that cxpttnses h~1vc to give in the once affluent district. The scH•n-membcr board this year trimmed teachers. nursei-. and psyl'hologists from the payroll. along.with many non·teaching e mployees. Parents were told the district no longer could afford lo bus childn.•n to and from school without charging up to $15 a month per child And the district t ut allocations for busing athlet1r teams to a fter-school events. laying much of the trnnspQrtation burden on student fund-raising events and udull booster organizations. Then last Thursday and Friday the board s pent $3.500 • on a board-administration workshop at a hotel in San Cle mente. Reason for the out-of-town workshop. officials said. was to assure participants' full attention to business. Last year. said board President Ken Wayman, a similar workshop suffered interruptions because it was held at Newport I la rbor Hig h School. There's little doubt that getting away from the office and its problems can be of benefit lo such endeavors. And the S3.500 budgeted for the session. including hotel rooms for a night. really isn't big money But the limes make the timing bad. • Opinions expressed 1n lhe space above are those ol the Daily P1101 Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invited Address The Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 642-4321 Boyd/Fears By L. M. BOYD Some people are deeply afraid of heights, you knew that. And some are a fraid of closed in places. And some ar e afraid of giving control or themselves t.o others. Each of these three fears can become intense phobias. And there are those who surfer from au three. Little wonder then. is it not, that an esti~aled 25 million ciiliens are afraict of f\ylng, an act whleh tats all three of thae lear1! ltem No. 93C ln our Love and War man'• rue wu the ex· Dea .. Gloomy J.R.T planation by Henry Ford of how lo achieve a happy mar- riage: "Stick to the first model." Do you recall dur ing World War JI when the U.S. gov· e rnmenl wanted to find a s ubstance for car license plates to replace the needed metal? A soybean compound was tried. But given up. Cows kept eating the license plat.es. No two tlgera have the • same print pattern! on tbelr · ru n . • Q. When did the tractltlon of the U.S. PreskJentt •end· inl oatctal Chrl1tmaa cards be1in? A. Preaident Dwl1hl D. Ellen.bower IW1ed lt. Q. What•• tbe ratio of men to women a mon1 SealODld ctal-? A. ~ ... M!•mato 100 w-. 0.-M : • mea to 100 --· Q. How mudt money do the a... O• Bride• toll bootllll wa •...,,.day! A. Aboul•.00011typleal. Jack And raon Mob Silences Crime Witnesses w AStUNOTON -Be1hmtna four ycurai aj.Cu. the FBI w1u1 111.1nned by u H.:rl~s or neaarly 30 Mob·atyle executions 1&cross the country Wh ut disturbed the C· fllt.'n wa~ the unmistakable ~at l rn or lh .. killing:.· The vlcl1m1> w(1rl' lnformunts or witnesses it'hcdu1 ~ to ll'isllry against Mob figures. and all were murdered with s ilcn('l'f l'quipped .22 rullber rcvolvt'rs 'r'hl11 IX'<'ttme ~ l:ricvous con· l'ern o f org Jn1 7.e d criroe flJ(htt-rs. who h•1Ht>d lhl'Y <'Ould get no more convic t Ions 1f lhc1r w ltnessc!'. c-ould not be vrotectcd Luw enfor<'l' m t' n 1 a u I h (I r I I I l' S bl•j!an an ur~l·nt 1nvcs t1gut1on. using at-tents in 20 f'DI field Orri('es and the federal llurc<iu of Alcohol. TobuCl'O and Fire.irms . Their findin~s havl.' not bt•l.'n disclosed to thi" dny A ~ECRET Nffo' <inalysis of thc killin.:s in the New York and t . '1/· New Jersey urou concludes that all the victims were s lain on contract. and that a ll were members or ussocia lc~ or the Vito Genovese organlzt>d crime family. tlere is a partlul list o. the targeti;: Vincent D. Capone. a .:umble1 and Mob business associate. who ra!lhly bragued about skimming money from Genovese en- terprises. lfc was s hol with a .22 on July I, 1976 Frank Chin. a w1tnf•ss 1n a redcral l!Xlortion trial lie was gunned down on Jan. 24, 1977, with the sam<· 22 used t.o kill Caponi! Thomas P<tlermo. ro und stuffed in the trunk of a car parked at Kennedy International Airport in Murch 1977 The same .22 pistol did the job James J oseph Qucli Jr . slain on Nov I, 197R Ag;un. the hit was madl' with the ~amc 22 handgun. ''TH E ACTS arc bellevt·d lo have been planned und l'Xt•cutcd l>y \'arious members of thl· <;cnovc:o;c Crim e Family, .. the ATF rt1p<>rl slates. It adds thut 1n addition to ga mbli~J.! narcotics uml hij<u:k Ing activities. "this Family is particularly active in contract killing a nd acquisition or Ci rearms ror this purpose ... THE ATF TRACED the con- nection between the 750-man Genovese family a nd t he smaller "Purple Gang" of New York City. Between August and December or 1975, members of the Purple Ga n g t r aveled through F lorida buying handguns. Of the 86 pistols they bought, more than half were 22-c~liber revolvers. The gun cache was transport.· ed to the New York-New J ersey area. where "these weapons wlll continue to be utilized as the need arises." the report states. It concludes that "handguns and silencers are being made availa- ble to members of the Genovese F'amily by the Purple Gang. and there is a certain amount of ·contract swapping.' " What that means is explained this way · "In essence. when pcopk of 'little respect' are to be ·whacked.' the contract will be given to the Purple Gang. When ·more respect' is demanded. the ~~E.tGof 'ltSA.MC. i~. ,~&, 'P\CK A CARD-~ CARD ! I Mailbox contract will '° lo Hoboken· Genovese." One Genovese hit ma n. the re· port states, ls a shrewd and suc- cessful businessman. "It Is a.i;- sumed." notes the report. "that he doea contract work for status and prestige and not money." • Footnote: The alleged leader of the Genovese Family. Frank "Funii" Tieri, was recently in- dicted for racketeering. Law en- forcement authorities told my associa te Tony Capaccio that. with only two or the 86 pistols re- covered so far. there is the possibility of another rash of .22 ~allber slayinJ(s . CUBAN CIULDREN: Rapes, as- saults a nd s uicide a tte mpts mark the daily life or the 900 Cuban refugu children who are without parents in the hastily set·up refugee camps. But legal technicalities prevent the youngsters' release to relatives or foster-care groups. "It is a real crime that this l('Ra l issue has not been re· solv<'d." said a n orficial of the U S. Catholic Confere nce. the largest of lhl' volunteer resellll'· mcnt agencies involved in the C ub a n r efugee prog ram "Tll l!re·s violence being done to these minors in the camps, and Wl' are angry as hell about il " Thl' triiuhle 1s that before Cuban ctuldren can be resettled permanently, the states to which they are ~oing must accept long· ll•rm legal custody Thil-. is a s afeguard an cast• individual l>ponsorship breaks down. But so far. only two s tatel-. -Nl'w J e rsey and Florida --hav(' agreed to take lei.ta I custody on a lon~·lerm bas1~. l!NTIL THE red lapc can be untangk-d. lhl' k1dl-. slay 1n the refugee camvs . And as a Catholic wclfarl.' worker nolL'd lo m y report.er Jutta Hennig, " ... a t•amp with a 11rison-like at- mosphere be hind a 12·fool barbed-wire fcnt'I.' is no place for mmors .. Several su1c1dt• alll'mµls have bl'Cn reported 1n lht• camps Uut thl• Stal<' Department tends lo pooh-pooh thl' st•riousncs~ of lht• reporL-. ·· nt1I all these ca)\1.'S a rc examined.·· a s pokes man s aid. "'>'«' cannot sav which arto> attl'mptcd suil'ldl'S ·and wh1th are attention grabbers ... Car Industry Woe· Pinned on Government To lh~ Ed1lvr Daily Pilot columist Gt..'Orgt: Mair has. in JUSt a few short paral(raphs in his July 3 column. s hown his complete ignorance in understanding the problems ph1Ruing the <1utomnbile in· dustry. The Amem :an public dictates to dealers and manufacturers what they will, or will not. buy And. the public is about as fickle as a t6·year-old beauty queen trying to make up her mind bet ween a dozen prom in vita· t1ons. Ours is a nation of rad followe r s . What 's "in " o r "fashionable" al the moment counts far more than what is logical or s ensi ble .. or necessary. By in large people reel this way about their clothing, their homes. household extras. entertainment and the cars they drive IF THE POWE RS that be would see fil to roll the price of gasoline back lo unde r one dollar a gallon, l ~m convinced you'd be ama zed at how quickly the automobile business would recover. Drop credit restrictions and interest rates a long with gasoline prices and the auto in- dustry would thrive and the en- tire nation would prosper. 1'he aver age dome stic auto mobile gets almost double the mileage il got three years ago . . . so apparently progress is being made In Detroit. If you could get Joan Claybrook off the backs of t he aut o mobile manufacturers. get California to be more realistic in their EPA ratln11 and correct all lhe out· aide influences alf ecttng our in· du1tr)'. then I believe Mr. Carter would find that he has more than enoup lime on hla hands to deal wlth preaing luues like over· hauling the welfare system, In· come tax, foreign policy and, oh yes, curbln1 rampant tnnatJon. The auto m obile buslneu would not need aulatance from "Bil Brother,'' lf "Bll Brother" would bult•out and leave ua · alone to do what we do best • • • bulld quality, enerty·efllelent automobllH. Oh, and wblle you 're at It, you mlJ,bt abo c:on- vlnc. 0 Blc Brother • to N-aliln t.be balance ol trade. That woUld help U. automobile bullnw too . . . not to lllfttloo eouatJ .. tboutmdl ol ~ Amerio• la- du1tri•. • JACK ROCKWELL Genetal a.tan.,.... Beach Cl1)' Chevrolet Co. t Airporr ~eed• To the Editor It seems to me·. u~ a taxpayer. that om govl•rnml•nts have .now wasted millions of dollars mak ing vanous studic!-., and fighting the Oran~e County Airport. We will always have with us those peopk who hvc under the flil(hl paths to comph11n about the plan es lmprov<'d low -noise aircraft will never s;itisfy their complaints However. the ··silent mliJOri· ty" will tell you that the airport is necessary to our economic life. and that we should c"pand t he number of daily flights. rather than freeze them at <11 per day IT HAS alway:-umu&cd m<' that less than 5 percent of the aircraft flying out ure com mercial, yet we never hear any complaints about private aircr aft which can be just as noisy. The hard facts arC' that in the pas t 20 years, ~realer Los Angeles has lost 30 percent of its airports. yet need for air travel and a ir r ecreation h a s in- creased. It is time for the politicians to be honest about this matter. get the a irport rebuilt and ex - panded. and get on with the busl· ness of satisfying the needs of the entire populace. R.M WOLFF ot1u"9C .... To the Editor: In the Mailbox. Aug. 17 you printed a letter entitled ''Monkey Suit. Time," in which Warren Althorr recalled bis days of youth. attending church, as scratchy suits, hard looks from mother. and long sermons. I am s ure there were beautiful songs and times of victory ln that church bul these are forgot- ten. WatTen has observed that the forces of good are losing. An observer at Ol$neyland ml1ht observe people waltlng .. in lon1 lines. An oblerver at • flab· ln1 trip or picnic rnlaht observe lbe lmecta and the uneomrorta· ble plac!el • penon muatait. A penoa mipt oblerve that at tbe 8la "A", after 11ttlng a 1001 Ume. l.M home t.am Mems to m..,. to k>M, but we pay our mcJae)' and to. Al A 90Y I played checkers wlth an old rellow who bad ob- served a battle between the ., Umon and the Confederacy. He observed a Union soldier drop a repeating rifle in the creek after being s hot on the bridge. As an observer . he left his cellar the next day and retrieved the lever action rifle. These rifles were the new secret weapon of the Union. The Con- federates had single action rifles and muzzle loaders . As an observer . my old friend never tried to get this rifle to the Confederacy. but saved it for a squirrel rifle. He was an Arkansas boy, and he obser ved that t h e Con- federacy was losing, but as an observer and not a participant, he collected a squirrel rifle. As an obser ver , Wa rren wore a monkey suit. he listened lO long sermons and r eceived hard looks. Now he observes that the forces or righl are losing. l wonder if he got a good squirrel rinc out of it all. JIM BOLDING Oil RJ911 To the Editor: It was incredible to read In your Aug. 20 edition, "Oil Rigs Blocked," that the Coastal Com· mission is blocking oil produc· lion off our shores when our country is staggering under the economic burden of foreign oil blackmail. They save every feather. on every bird. while they fleece the people . When do we gel Cree from that monster bureaucracy? GOLDIE JOSEPH ,flooring E'er• To the Editor: Your editorial tilled Mooring F'ee Needs Explanation. and your article advertising the Newport City Council meeting Aug. 7, and your article titled Skippers Couldn't Scuttle Fee lncrease were au appreciated. A s you explained, the City Council did indeed boost the on· and olr-s hore mooring r ates d espite objection from a somatbnes hostile audlence. The council, after listening to the Quotes "He ••YB we Just wanl money. He doee not aay anytbln1 about bow we say we want ow rtlhta." -One ot the ,.._ IUlsen who want free tnde Wllou. an end to cen.orehlp, polllleaJ reform• and ware increaMa. pleas of mooring r enters con- ceded that too few of the council "ere prepared to St!nd the ques· lion of fees back to the Tidelands Committee where it originated al': s uggested by M;tyor Jackie llcathe r . Councilman Maurer and Councilman Hummell. and too few were prepared lo accept no incr ease in fees as supported by Councilman Hummell and Mayor Heather. Consequently. the Tidelands Committee l>ro- posal to increase the mooring fees was adopted. The hearings were fair . and lhe decision. although unpopular and abrupt. was decisive and permanent. P E RSONAi.LY, I was not sur- prised by the council vole to in- crease the fees. It was hardly likely that anyone other than a mooring renter would be op- posed lo the hike. Those not knowing the circumstances. whi<'h would include a ll non- mooring renters. would be likely to believe that mooring renters in actual fact had one hell of a deal. The hearings explained the fact \hat re nters of moorings share with other harbor users such as s mall sailboat owners. fi shermen and swimmers. the lack or basic facilities such as harbor access, dinghy launching a reas, boat storage. public toilets and s howers. overnjght parking , boat cleaning <1 nd small boat repalr areas. The City Ma nager explained that the Newport Beac h tidelands wefe owned <belong to the citizens) and were held by the city in publlc trust. The moorlna lees, lt was explained. were established in 1974 to help defray the coet of the tidelands oper atioo. and lo demonstrate to the state auditors that Newport was acting in good faith by charg· ing mooring renters a use fee. l left the meeting feeling good. I waa a better informed citiien, and fell I had received A fair hearing. I am happy to, pay my $150 plus or minus extra for my mooring, IC nol for the t1ervlces I have recelved, or the services I will reeelve, hut for the knowledce and lnrormation that wu lba(ed at this gathering. TONY A. TURNER • 1'1Mt Deity""'....._.,_.. ... ,_ ..,.,.._~~ ......... .......... te:l.._.~ ......... ,. ... c....-... CA "6lt. wttln ~ l9f ,...iu.-............... ._.. ..... ,. .,.._, .. ............................ ...,_,.... .. .......... _, ........... _ .... cwa.1..._ MORE OPINION Thursday, August 28 1980 DAILY PILOT "' 1. --------------------~----------------------~--------~~~----~----~------~----~--------~----~------~~--~--~~~~~~~~~~ ..... # Von llolfmen ID.:vestor With a Conscience Can Still Profit A few ct.QI .,._ .. W... Centrfl Otall ;freil'I trat• Jump.a ....... ra llli:ti lty. Faur LMlr .... c vlayl chklride = ftli the whole comm tr ol ..,_. 7,500 peraona bad to be evaciuMed. Wrecks of thla aor& la••• become ao trequeat U.•1 an o ften no Joopr treat· ed .. impor. taut oews , thoQb the n. llnob c.atral meu wu so bad it made lroat pa&ell. A lOT ·c ar Bostoa • Maine train weal df Its tracks in Gardner. Maas., ~t luckily the propane tank cars It wu carrying were empty, or there mjght have been a terrible explosion such as the one that killed 15 people near Waverly, Tenn., in 1978. lnciden\.ally, it was only last 4 April &Mt uother loltOf' • Malaew•ramm .. auucaria. lom••rwlll•. Mui. The f.~~ lri•CbJoridl ln l\a ...... to tor. • doud oftr t.M commu.atr ~t· Ina the evttuaUon of 13,000 PtO· pie. WITHOUT accu1ln1 •n)' part.leuJar railroad. UM a1111N· cf• ailU tMt totne an d. llberately runnlQ1 unaale lines. They ~nly have every in· c..u .. aot \o malDtaln their tracb m • c.dlUcm auJtable foe either tbe ufety of their worken or the people who Uve near where trains loaded with dan1eroua cbem.ical1 roll. The Federal Railroad Adminlatra- lioe will lmld money at 2 percent interest to repair the rltht-of· waya after they've deteriorated enough, so why should a railroad spend its own money to keep itself in working order? A railroad ian't like a cat which bu an innate need to keep itself cleaned and groomed. Wt're&old \\'•overly 1trlctrea· ulalion •hlch 11 a1phyxlaUng American industry. StlU there mt1ht be 1ome 1lon1 the railroad tracks wbo think lt'a American induatr)' that's 11physlatin1 ua, and that ln some areas. the much com- plained ot reeulatory and in· apectlon system ia more a theoretical draa on profits than a real one. EVEN WITH it.li trains killin& people and terrorizing com· munities. a railroad can •till be a decent investment. Illinois Central Industries, the pro- prietor of the Muldraugh, Ky., a ccident, has been pay ing around 8 percent on its stock. But should one ·invest in a company that bas accidents of this IOrt? Can you make money wit~out making injury? Some people have. and have actually gotten rich al it. For example. we have the Rodale Press in Emmaus, Pa., the publishers of PrevenUoo, Organic Gardening, New Farm. Bicycling and New Shelter macaainet. Rodale also publishes boob. all devoted to healthy living and other ac· llvities of uns urpa ssed ecological purity. It i• also estimated that gross rev~ues were about $65 million lu t year so sometimes at least in addition to being lt.li own reward, virtue can bring in a few outside shekels. Unbapptly for the investor with a conaclence, interested in making an honorable buck. Rodale is a private concern whose stock is not for saJe to the Quotes "Now we reporters won't have to cover trials by peering through the crack in the courthouse doors." -Kevin McCarthy, a re· porter who bad been ousted from a Virginia murder trial, com- menting on the Supreme Court's ruling that the public and press have a constitutional right to at- tend criminal trials. even when defendantswanttoexcludethem. public. Nevertheless. there is hope for the high minded. The Continental Savings and Loan Association of San Fran· cisco offers a choice or what it call& Solar T·Bllls or Solar T· Notes or Solar Certificates of de- posit. In interest yield to you, these fully govemmenl·insured fo rms of deposit don't differ Cro m what's being offered around the come'r at your local S&L. What's diff~rent is that this money will only be lent to help people insta ll sola r heating equipment. AFl'ER THEY'VE taxed the. interest on a Savings and Loan account and you figure in the ra vages of inflation, any kind of deposit in a thrift institution, solar or non-solar. is a money Jos e r . But there a r e OP· portunities for the investor who would prefer to make his money without poisoning his neighbor. Barron's recently did a study of three socially conscious mutual funds. <A mutual fund i ..... pools your money with otbe people's to buy shares or stoc from a number or companies.> The Dreyfus Third Century Fund decides which company's stock to buy, not only after de· clding it's a good business de cisioo, but also after checking,. the company's environmental record and its employee safety a nd hiring policies. T hat you can do good for yourself by doing good for others is exemplified by the Third Cen· tury's profit record. In the past five years, the value of Trurd Century stock has risen 169 per· cent. Whlch is not to say that virtue will be equally well re· ' warded in the next five years, so · be warned. Investing in the goodly and godly will not change corporate 1 behavior. Most investors will make their decisions on profit considerations alone, but they can console themselves with the adage that there is no such thing as dirty money, only dirty hands to pass it to you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~- .. .. 4 •• LABOR DAY WEEKEND SALE . Exciting values throughout the store. Shop Fri. 10-9:30, Sat. 10-7, Sun. 11-6, Mon. 10-9:30 25" otl •elected Levi'•~~ /ean• Jeans 1or men, women, boys and girls, jrs., young men. Limit 4-pair. Cords, denims. stretch, brushed, M ovin ·onr". 52, 77, 133, 175, 177, 418, 419, 560 Soucie Jacket• Soft, nubby, casual cardigans in colorful acrylics. S-M-L. women's sportswear 62, 29.99 we,. $40-$42 113 to 112 otl rain eot1I• Rain or shine costs In tailored, trench and loose styles. Petites 6 -16. women's coats 426 39.99 were $60-$80 30% to 35% off Ecco Bay Interchangeable jackets, shirts, skirts, pants in solids, and prints. 8-18. blvd. sportswear 187 S.99-21.99 reg. 115-133 Flutter •IHve ladltl•' top• Save 25% on a beautiful array of polyester prints in sizes 10-18. teddi 178 14.99 reg. $21 Sa~e 25" on girl•' •WNt.f• Plush pullovers, and cardigan$. 4-6X. Justklds56 11.99 ,.,,. 111 't~~r-1 i. ' Float• special Perfect pool-side coverups and at-home loungers. Long polyester florals. S-M-L. loungewear 53. 115 19.99 •peclal Pl•retld ••"Ing• Large selection of s tuds, hoops, bands w,ith 14K gold filled posts. fashion jewelry 22 4.99 special -S.V• so" on •ungla .... Tropic-Cal and Riviera ladies plastic and rimless styles. fashion acces- sorles 3 3.50-7.50 reg. $7-$15 Cord pant• for boys 1Tom Sawyer I Elderado polyester I cotton cords in 8-14, reg.ls/Im, 26-30. mike's for boys 14 9.99-11.99 •PfJC/•I Save40% on boy•' knit• Kennington short sleeve knits and terries In polyester/ totton. S-XL. m ike's for boys 164 8.99 were $15-$16 • Young men'• cord pant• By Eldorado. Waist 29-36. mike's place 191 12.99 •,,.cl•/ . Young men's plaid shirt• Lightweight polyester/ cotton with short sleeves. Blues or browns. S-M-L-XL. mike's place 196 9.99 wtire $18-$19 Save $45 to $106 men's suits Vested, 2 and 4-pc. and T's by famous makers. In neat p atterns and textures. men's suits 21 S!J9-'149 reg. $145-$255 Save 25% on Qiana® •hlrt• Short and long sleeves in subtle patterns. solids. By Van Heusen. men ·s furnishings 492 9.99-11.99 reg. $14-$16 Wamsutta sheet •ets Ultracale '!I polyester and cotton percale. Fitted bottom, flat top, pr. cases•. linens and domestics 34 29.95 special "Twin set. one case only Queen/king comforter• Wamsutta patterns in polyester/ cotton with polyester fiberfill. linens and domestics 41 39.99 special Sam•onlt•® Sonera II Save 20% to 30% on soft-side luggage. Everything from totes to garment bags. luggage 402 -rep. set. all stores 31.50-'83 reg. $f5.$110 Queen-size sofa sleeper Fruitwood-finish wood framed. Tweedy/ .. beige/ brown Herculon olefm. furniture 140 s499 reg. $650 Frultwood recliners Head-to-toe relaxation! Upholstered in tweedy beige/brown Hercu/on • olefin. furniture 147 1349 reg. $400 Burl-look finish 3-pc. wall system Has drop/eaf desk. open shelves, door cabinets. 30X 1 lX 7 4". furniture 465 '699 set reg. $1,000 Five-piece game set Four comfortable armchairs up~/ stered in vinyl. Octa-gonal pedestal table. furniture 142 SS95 sel after sale $1,400 Today's 1980 Hoover upright Full time powered agitator wi th 4 carpet pile height adjust-men ts and dust bag. home economics 73 49.99 •pee/al Big •weep women's •hlfts Long. Shorts. Airy light polyester! cotton by Mistique. S-M-L. budget/oungewear815 7.99-9.99 were 9.99-11.99 ~ ,.. . . .. •' .. -. ' . . .·· . .• . ..... • . ·' t.. ~ o' ~:,, t • . ... . .. I ,I • . . . ~ ,.,. ----~----------.................................................................................................... ____ ... _ ~ ~­~ .~ a company costa mesa -soum coast plaza -3333 so. bristol -546·9321 westmlnster -westminster mall -goldenwest at san d1ego fwy. -898-2521 mllelon vie)o -mission viejo mall -crown valley at san dlego fwy. -495~2800 ··1: , I ' .. ' A > .r : • .. ti I : ·~ ! . ~ ,. \ . . ~ •'• . -· .. ·----· ' J l'--~~---,.__~------~--------------------------------------------------------------'J ..... . To really see -. the ehanges JD your eoDllD~ity .you need a newspaper ~ --everyday 1 . I l • 1 •!°> .. ' . .. , . ' . ' .. • .._., . Here's 7 Reasons. • • , ;. , Why you s-otdd take the Dally Pilot · .) ;; ~Save with Saturday TKeep an eye on W Di1ne·A·IJnes 1:!.f loeal gover111nent Shop the Orange Coast's amazing No other newspaper brings you more news of your newspaper ad supermarket for bargains city council, planning commission, school and -all priced under $35 . Every Saturday college districts and county government. in Dime-A-Lines -Only in the Daily Pilot. W Enjoy your Sunday Family Weekly, color comics, TV Week , the latest news and features about your community, your money. and· you highpght the interesting reading packaged in youi'·Sunday Daily. Pilot. Enough to read -and enjoy. W Follow · your team The sports action at 15 Orange Coast high schools, three community colleges, UC Irvine and Cal State campuses is regularly reported by the Daily Pilot sports staff. Keep up with nationally ranked college and pro teams, too ! . . ,, ,. Laugh,ery . . or get ·smart Ii? Buy or sell in the .. People's Marketplaee ·: Advice from Ann Landers, humor from Erma Bombe-ck, interesting features on people, opinions , informative columns and comics brighten your world. Daily Pilot classifieds are the Orange Coast's most effective advertising medium for sales and rentals of real estate, for finding or offering jobs and for exchange of autos, home furnishings or even yachts. W Read all TODA.Y'S news, ·EVERY d~y . \ Local, county, state, national and internati~nal events come to your doorstep in the bright, light and lively Daily Pilot. · · "1 ' . 4 , . , i '# . \ \i: '. Get into the Daily· Pilot · ·~~·~ ' Complete the coupon below and mail·it with the . prepaid label, or, call 642-4321. Ask for Circulation. . . ·" 1 Pdli~t;:Ojo~the·c~;;;;rt~~ta·ho;-;·-------------------1 -11 -11 -1 -~---:·:,:·1 f~r only $3.~5 per ·.~; 1 delivered Daily Pilot every day. ":~~ 1 A .,, I Enclosed is $3.75 for one month. u•m~o':rcms : 1nonth. we deliver : ~~ t . BUSINESS AEPL Y MAIL I I , .. ,,(\A\S~lll••tNO 11,,CMTA•I.,_ U\t,.Oll'ft•A I Name ... 4: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._.. .................. pOlgflllQIEwu•,...,.tiODflll._, 1 I · I 1 Address . • • • . • . • . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Orainge Coast D•llY Piiot 1 I Box 15'0 1 • City • · · · · · · · "t '_._ ""· ... • •• ·•• •·Phone ···· ·1 • • • • • • • • • • Cost• Mew, CA. 92626 I I , I I Slflnature ............. - . . • .. .................. ·.·• CIRCULATION OE PT. i cPW0tt1a u..1Dlstrlct. . • • . . . . . • . • . • • • . Rate . • . . . . . . . • . . . . . 1 ··------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~-.) -seven days a week • I • ' ' J I ~t-n lfwna Mil I r"'ID ... ., .......... Cou· dlaau i.oo. ltrasau after be ....... .a fourdl "wbettu" I.a ... reeotuUoo. n ned: "the increase is not M1 jultJfted particularly due to tM fact Paclftc Telephone does 9tQt provide a fully adequate level ohervlce." CoundlYt'Oman Evelyn Hart ... the meuqe waa her idea. She sa"9 she bu trouble phooing city ball, for example. TBB COUNCIL agreed to ~roes out the message and, upon fW'tber reflection, decided to kill the ~tire resolution. Tbef indicated they might re- eomldier the resolution , minus the fourth "whereas," after the Public Utilities Commission llOlda a series of public bearings sebecluled lhil fall. S&ddleback's CJ-owJhRate ' . 1, S6nFastest S.ddleback College figures to remain California's fastest- ~ community college in 1*11, baaed on a 14 percent in· ereue in enrollment on the first dn"Gf classes Officials said 19,200 students wer.e registered at the college's Miltion Viejo and Irvine cam- ,._ Monday, compared with ta.tl8 on the first day of classes last year. However. the total enrollment f~ire 'is expected to rise to bl-.lween 2s,ooo a nd 27 ,ooo by ~. '12, the last day of reetstra· ~ • 'f'9e school had an enrollment of 11,644 after registration was cpllPkUd .fast year. · \ ~mtnistrators .have hired 10 new. teac.bers to meet the needs al de ll'OWinl student body. kucb ol the enr41lllaeat in· erea1e is in voca&aal pro· ...-... said Public Information Drrector Bill Schreiber .. · H.lat.orically, be said , as the eee.,omy falters. the school's enr0Ument bboms. ~LiomSet Pancake Breakfast ' Tb~ Laguna Beach Lions tiub will bold its annual Labor bu . J>.8DCake breakfast Smlday \Jichlloaday from 7 a .m . to 1 p1'>. at Heisler Park. D.c>aation for the breakfast. \*~ p~akes, s~usage, onase juice, and ml~. lS $2.50. to feholarsbips for School stu- • ::!f!s sight con- servation projects. ~~Violat~? LOS ANGELES <AP> -A S•perlor Court Judge says ~Ute Chi.4 Daryl Gates and .... la U.. department'• chain . GI.-..... bave not violated a 1 t•mporary restraining order aaatnst an alleted quota system 'fO[ fr~C µctets. A II Together Nau.· Conductor Henry Brandon shows off form he"ll put to work Monday evening when he leads Newport Pops Orchestra in first an- nual "Pie and Pop" at Eastbluff Park in Newport Beach. Shown behind Brandon (from left) are: Paige Van Rensselaer. Heidi Van Rensselaer and city Art Com- miss ioner Wally Ziglar. Concert will follow 5 p.m. picnic. Both are open to public at no cost. Guests are requested to park in Corona de! Mar High School lot. SJC Sign Impasse Heade.d to Court SaJl Juan Capistran o merchants and the City Council are trying to ha mmer out new rules govemjng the height and de· sign ol signs for easier reading by passing motorists. However, the discussion proc- ess is not moving fast enough for one restaurant owner who ts tak· ing the city to court over a citation he received Aug. 9 for alleged ii· legal signs. MIKE MADIGAN, owner of Steamer Lane's Restaurant, s aid by taking the city to court be hopes to move the busi.ne3s comm~ty up on the City Coun- cil's list of priorities. "Many cities have ·sign prob- lems," Madigan said. "But San Juan has no sign problem because San Juan has no signs ... Madigan will appear in South Orange County Municipal Court. early next month to argue his case against' what he says is the city's att~mpt to "violate his constitu- tiortal rights.·• .. My.primary goal in taking this matter to court is not to win or lose, but to fmally bring this issue to tbe City Council," be said. .LOCAL ME&CHANTS have voiced concern to the council tllltt 'eiistina city s ign or- d~a.nces alldw only wooden sisns and a m~mum height of aia-leet..Beca~ these signs are bard tp see, they hurt business, tb'ey said. · ·'I'd like lo think this signals progress," Madigan said. "I'd hke to think the council is going to do something, but I'm anticipat- ing nothing.'' BUT MAYOR GA R Y Hausdorfer said council mem- bers have yet to hear a specific proposal from the business com- munity to rectify the alleged sign problem. He said the council had told merchants to work with the Chamber of Commerce lo come up with a plan that the City Coun- cil could act on. "We are perfectly willing and entirely open to working with the chamber to better the situation." Hausdorfer said. HE .SAID BECAUSE no s pecific plan s have been forthcoming, changes in the cit y's sign ordinances are stalled in the discussion stage. Hausdorfer also said the de· cision to serve Madigan with a citation was stmply because the restaurant owner was out of com- pliance with city sign ordinances. Council Opposes House Size Review Requests from Newport Beach residents to once again review an ordinance that restricts the size of houses in Corona del Mar are K,el· ting an icy reception from City Council members. WWJtyBacks HBBikeiooy An operating agreement for a proposed bikeway to run along the beach from Main to Golden Wes t s treets in Huntington Beach was ratified Tuesday by the county Board of Supervisors. The bikeway is expected to cost about S260,000 to build. Almost all of the cost will be covered by a state grant. The county's H arbo rs. Beaches and Parks Department is coordinating operation and maintenance of the bike way with the city of Huntington Beach and the state Parks and Recreation Department. , DAIL y Pll01' A. c -.. Want 'O•tsider' HB Seeks New Administrator The Huntineton Beach City Council will not select a current city eptployee to replace ousted City Administrator Floyd "Bud" · Belsito. Contained in the council mo- tion to fare Belsito by Oct. t was the stipulation that the new city administrator be chosen from outside city ball. Mayor Ruth Bailey said. This removes speculation that Belsito's repl~cement will be one or three top officials current- ly working for the city . VINCE MOORHOUSE, com- munity services director; Frank Arguello. finance director ; and Ray Picard. fire chief, have been mentioned in the past as possible replaceme,nts for Belsito. Arguello was selected by the coun.cil to be interim city ad- ministrator after Belsito vacates his office. When that will occur is uncer- tain, however. The council voted 5 to 2 Tuesday to dismiss Belsito, but asked him to resign before the action was officially announced at the Sept. 2 council meeting. The firing occurred in a closed session after midnight. BUT BELSITO NOTIFIED the press of his dismissal the next day and has so far not resigned. At a press conference Tues· day. Mayor Bailey would only say Belsito was fired for poor leadershio. But Cotincilman John Thomas said Belsito was accused of poor handling of the city's Com- prehensive Employment Train- ing Act <CETA) program and was criticized for nepotism charges filed against the city because of the emolovment of three of Belsito's relatives in the CETA program. The corporation that handled the city's CETA program was dis mantled by the county in February for alleged misuse of funds. Last month, the Orange County Manpower Commission said the city owes the federal government $5,743 allegedly earned by Belsito's daughter. nephew and d a ughter ·in-law .. '"'• . ' . while they were employed by the city's CETA procram for vary- ing periods of the past year and a half. "It was a kangaroo court." Thomas said. ''He was bung before the trial.'' Belsito has been under fire from city council for the past nine monthB. On three separate occasions. council has voted to dismiss the city administrator. Tuesday's action was the result of an annual evaluat ion, Mayor Bailey said. Belsito blamed press coverage of his ongoing ll'Ojlbles with city council as a major factor in his downfall. HE WOULDN'T SAY if be planned to resign or request a hearing before city coun.cil to de· fend his administrative record. According to the city charter. the council may suspend Belsito from office upon giving him bis walking papers. He cannot be cut from the city payroll for 30 days, however. Laguna Plans Labor Day . Tennis Meet The a nnual Laguna Beach Labor Day Tennis Tournament will begin Saturday at 8 a.m. at five locations in the city. More than 400 entries have been received by the Laguna Be ach TeMis Association and L aguna Beach Recreation Department, co-sponsors of the event. The top level of the touma- m e n t will be played al the Laguna Beach High School ten- nis courts and all other levels will be held at Irvine Bowl, Bluebird Canyon. Thurston In- term ediate School a nd Moss Pbinl courts. Singles matches will be held Saturday, doubles on Sunday, and mixed doubles on Monday. Finals in all events will be held Sept. 6 and 7. Hours of play will be 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. each day of the tourna- m ent. City eoUn~il members have ex- pressed willingness to discuss possible·changes in the sign or- dtnances. Councilman Larry Jiuc~m me( with a group or about 20merc~ants last week, a nteeting wbitb Madigan at- teneted · · • 1 Council members, who did not vote on the requests. suggested the c4rrent law is adequate. Builders now are allowed to con- struct up to 1.5 limes the allowa- ble building size. 1. Turn air Conditioning ther· mostats up to 78. 4. Insulate your home. . l •I .. f:acelift JO ~ Restaurant Style Theme bme ·-or Clemente Pier Site ' ••.'Raclfora arcuect ~t the dty demantit. developers to follow ~ set up by tbe ~board, •ddtna the city , 1bould I ollow its own pddelines. . ~ A spokesman for Richardson Cbue said the company already bas completed maritime-style plans for the project. Jim aiase said architectural renderlntl could be modified to reflect a Spanisb-atyle motif, but said be doesn't know bow the renovated restaurant would fit in with the existtng New Entland· •I.fie baltsbop. But be as.reed the city should renect ill own codes when or· derlq a f acellft of the existing N1taurant. 118. UDl'OBD SAID that "1lnae the· pier 11 the m01t vis· ullJ ob¥toul structure ln the area, lt only 1t.ndl to reason that you would want this to be an ou&ltaadlDI example ol Mediter· ....... arebtteeture .•• ClliaM Hid bis firm could modify u.e completed render-mp "tbe C'Omlcll IO dell.rel . • a 2. Turn heat down to 65. 5. Shop the ads in the Daily Pilot. Combine your shopping trips, going for just exactly the merchandise you need and the stores selling it at a price you • can afford. Remember, the advertisements in the Daily Pilot are placed by firms and individuals in your community -the Orange Coast. Shop thole ads and save time, and ~nergy. 3. Drive your car u If there •• ,.,,JI were an egg between your foot • ••-u - and· the gas pedal. I • t ' , • • ,. . l· • I ~· ~LYPl\.OT . Cig~tte's Risk to Heart Debated 80ITON (AP) -TM Svt .. G.....a'I ... NpOrt diet ..-. •moiltal ._. to • 1reatw n.k ol beart dlMue bu never bMl'l clHrly aubet&nUat.ed by adtnUlk arch. a l\MIM ~ writer clmma ln t.M S.pte....,. lllue ol tM Acaimc•n Heart Jowul. But a promlnfl\t heart researther rejected lbe claJm. 1ayln1 It lpored l htdlea t1'at abow a direct 11n• between cl1arette' and htart dis· ..... Dr. C.rl C Seltaer of Boston wrote lbat hli ~umlnaUon of the data used ln t.he, urn report abowa, "It is reaaonable to bellf've that atoppln& ....... .. 90l ndutt the rtR "' f!Oronary IMart lfiHaae and that tbeN la no 11tabH1bed proof that amoklnllaca&»ally related." Seltter. wbo hold• a Ph.U In b!oloOcal and m-41caJ anlhn>Pololy. baa t:a• at Manard UnlV.nlty ... Mr"9 u a vl11Un1 prollllOC' o1 nutrition at Tuf\a University. Hla artJcle wu publlahed thl• w k 1n lbe Journal, en 11 .000·clrcutatlon monlhly ma1uln~ In St. Louls. The editortal waa Immediately al· tacked by Or. William Caatellt, dlrec· tor or t.hf' fiamlnaham, Ma13 .. Heart Study. ft.elM!archera at Fram1n1bam h"'ve be4.'0 tllam1nin1 heart. attacb and tJM1.r CIUMe for 30 = lD tbt naUOD'I ..... t·nmalnl atudy. C....W accUMd Seiber ol "belni funded by tbt tobacco lndmtry'' ana aald the tditorl .. 1 lanona evidence that amoken are twice u 11.kely to aulf er bean attackl. Selller, a etcar amolter 40 yean. utd ln an Interview be received fundtq for hi• retearcb from a variety ot lfOUpe, but derued slanUni his research ln any.way. Studle. that show ex-smokers are healthier than sniokers are unrella· ble, Selt.Jer said, since ex-amokers u a sroup are healtbler to begin with. Ex·amokera ••ntrally have le11 cheat pal.n, le• pain. btMWeuneu and a bluer lunt capacity'. be aaid. Seltzer. who aaJd he Mned u an advlaer to the Sur1eon Geoeral'a UIM report oo 4.1.CareUe 1mot1n1. said the federal aovernment aboukl not have 1one beyond that report 'a conchwon that there was not a clear causal re- lationship between cl1arettes and heart dlsease. Castelli disagreed. "All of the data is very striking," he said. ''Smoking, independent of every other risk rac· tor, is related to coronary heart dis· ease." NATION • • MERCURY SAVIN~S and /()an oaociation ( ) I' I· '\, \ 1 ()' ... H I 'I A '1 t; I ' M . "-,'\I I H J>J\Y 10 A .M . ·l l'.M . nge Huntington Beach. CA 92647 &out'*" C.Hfomta Reg/CH1tl Otlic.t: 5877 E. LI Palma AYe., Anaheim, CA 92807 8966 Valley View St .. Buena Park, CA 90620 te68 Ament Ad .• C1m1rt110, CA 93010 FSLIC ... ._ .. _ ..... - 20715 S. Avalon Blvd., Carson CA 90746 23021 Like Cente1 Dr .. (Lake Foteetl. Et Toro, CA 92e30 1001 E. tmpe1l1I Hwy., U Habft, CA 90631 Gt • 1.0 Long Beach Blvd .. Long Beach. CA 90807 • n939 Hawtho1ne Blvd . Tonance. CA 9050!i t~ Irvine Blvd .. Tuaton, CA 92680 2~ N. CltNI Ave . West Covina, CA 91793 ''M#cury Room" 11v11/1b/1on1 reseMd t>asis IOUAl "0USIN(; UN0(9 QUEENIE FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY -rsclCPenney ''RED HOT SALE'' Hurry Quantities are Limited B ·ZS "Look how grut we're doing. Who says there's no business like show business?'" PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ~CTITIOUS IUSINES_S __ FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT T~ lollowinci PHson Is OOIM Du!il Ttw> lotlOWino PHson b 00.nq Dusi ftf'\\ ., neis as THe HAPPY ~SECLEANEA, ARC. 113S7 E"1er11<i'l4' u ..... HUllt· U1 Rlvt•r• Orlve. CoU• M•s•, l"91on S..-.ch,C;ihlorn•d'l'7~ C•lilorni<1 mn 0<11"0 Wayne Tubm.en. ll:U W. K111111...-Erin Reily. 3'7 Rlvler• ~r•. Sam• Ana. •lllornf11 91101 0•1ve. COil!• Mn<!. C•lllo.-noa "'11 This l)uMness ts cOl'IOUC1t'O by •n 1n. This bu'llrwss Is COllClueled bl' .., In dlvldu.et cNwldu.I Oavld W•-T-..11n K ........ Reill' Tiiis SW!emetlt w~ 111«1 wltll 1M Tiiis sut-was flied wltll tht Cout1tl' CIHk of Or~ C-ty on Countl' Clfflc of Or<119 C-ll' Oft AUOlflt S, 1-. AU9V\I S, ,_, l'Hnft FltiSa Put>llshfod Or"'"VP C~st O•lll' P iiot. PutlllSlled OrlltlQt CNst O.elty Piiot, Auo. 1, 14, 11, 28, t• lZSf..80 Auo. 1, 14, 11, 11. 1'80 310.40 • PUBLIC NO'nCE PUBLIC NOTICE ----NOTICE Off . NOTICE Off Af'f'LICATIOlll PO• t lNITtNO •IDS CHANGE INOWNEllSMIP OI' NOTICE IS HEllEBY GIVEN l'llet ALCOttOLIC llEYl!ltAGI! LICENW !fie 80M11 all EdUUtlon of tN t..W.. To wi.om llMwf COl'l<9NI• UnlllMI Scllool District of Ot'•tiOe CYNTHIA CARO\. .end J OSE LUIS C-ty, Cllllfoml•, wtll l'WClll,.. M•lecl BARRAGAN, ••• •pp1yln9 to IM blck Ill) tD 2:• p.m. Oft !fie -Of*" Oe~r1meftt Of Al<oflotlc Bewr-oe ~ ,_ .t wN<ll time w1<1 !lids Control to~ •l<-1< lleve<A99S •I wlll 119 P!Allk ll' _..., -,...., tor "•I" Oft !>ALE GENEAAI. (PUBLIC Lene/Pur<""M of Nerrow Ahl• EATING PUICEl RNC'.h TNCi ~ condltloM lftd .... Publlllled Or•ftfe Cont Piiot. 1tructloM .,.. bid tanns ,,...,, 119 -~uoust n. ,.., 3nt• t..1Md .-.. Clffb of Fltc:M 5'Wof1 PUBLIC NOTICE ~~· .. ~ =~~":: -.--_..., nw rilM to r9iKt Ml' Of' •H f'ICTtTtOVSIUSINESS l>lch OI to_.,,...., ""9wlwltlft w NAMe STATEMENT lllfonMlltlft In_., tllcls Of' In U.. *° Tiie tmlowl119 ~ ll dOlft9 dltlQ neu •s. lltVINE UNIFIED T & L WElOING, 110 Cot1Qrns SCHOOl. DISTRICT Street. C:~• ~. C.llloml• tlt.11 0..-H¥tllne. Ton.,, J. l •rQe, 110 Con11reu _.nd"'9etlt Street, C~t• Mes.e, C•llloml• "7627 PuOll\hed Or ... C.0.st Deity Piiot This ~' os conouc1ec1 by..., In· Auo. 11. a.,_ ,..., OlvldY.el T°""J ~ PUBUC NOTICE This SI.el""-! WM Ill~ Wiii! '"" ---------County Clert of Or•n~ C°"nty °" AUQUSt IS. t• FICTITIOUS llUSINESS FIQlM NAME STATEMENT Published Or-COAst O.lly Piiot, lll• followl119 ~rsons are 001"9 AUQ. n . a. Seoe. 4, 11, "'° ~ tiusltwn..s1 PUBLIC NOTICE STEARNS ACACIA GAAOEN$ DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, 207' Ou•ll Str•el. N•wpor t Be•cll, c.tllomla 92660 f'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS Slur"" O.veloi>mt'nl Company, NAMESTATEMIENT tnc .. 20U Quall Strut, Newport Tiie totlowlng Pff'SOft 11 001119 busl· Beath, Calllornia'1M>O neu H . This business is conduc.tecl by a cor- VAN WIE ENTERPRISES. "' p0ratlotl. 17th Sir"', Apt. 0 , HuntlnQ10tl BNcll, S'-0.wt~t Cat1lort1la.,.. ~nv. Inc ThomH A. V•n Wit, 11• 17th PhlllpA SIHrM. !>lrHI. Apt. o. HUt1tl"91on 8HCll, ~1.,..,1 C•lllorni..,... Tiiis stat-I wM filed wllll lhfo This buSIMu Is cOtldlK1oed Ill' .en In-Cout11Y Clerk of Ore119e County on Olvl<N.el Auoust s. 1• ,,..,..,_A. Ven Wle 1'1"*3 This 51.e-•n fli.d wltll the P\Jlll1stled Or~ Co.SI 0<1lly Potot. County Clerfl °' Or9n91 C-y °" Auo. 7, 1._ 11, U. 1• IDHO Auovst IS, 1-. P14DU P""41!Nd ()rMgt Coetl o.11'1' Pilot, PUBLIC NOTICE AUCJ. 11. 21. 5eot. •.ti, tteO J4».tD 1----------- f'ICTITIOUS IUSINEU NAME STATEMaNT PUBUC NOTICE Tiie IOI~ ,.._, Is dotnQ IMl- f'ICTITIOUS IUSINEU neu .::CICSON COMPANY, 79ll·J NAME STATEMENT Gr.ct l.Mw, OosU Mrs.e. C•lilomi• T,.. toll0wln9 penon •• OOlng blnl-'2'2• MU as· Rlcllenl L J«kSOtl J r ltK • PACIFIC RENTALS. 517 tlh C•litomle coriior•tlon, mi:J Gr~ StrMt. Hwlllnvtoft lie.Ch, C..llloml• Lene. Costa Mew, C.htoml• 91626 .,... Tiiis ~Is COtlduclecl t>y. (O<'· Jolln A. M•uersmlth, 01 por•tlon ~nrocl, eor-dtl Mar. Callloml.e Rl<llenl l.. Tiii ... _.__.1 --.....~~ J•OSOflJr .. Inc. s _,.... '_,,_..., by •11 Ill· ll a Cetltomla corp OM dull. • JolwlA. Mettenmlth ~~ JKk50t'I J r This stlltelNnt was filed •1111 tile This Sia'-'« wM flled with tt1e County Cl91'1l Of Or9n91 Cou111Y 0t1 Counll' Cieri< of Or•nve C-1'1' on AU9USt 26, ,.. Auoust,., '"°· Pt""'7 Pt.-. Publl"*' 0r""9t Co.est O•lly P iiot, ""°4lllttd OrM!ll CCNlst o.lly Piiot, J A1>9. 2t, Sept.•. 11, II, lteO ~ A1>9. 21, Sept.•. 11, 11, ,_, ,...... c: 1 DAY ONLY-Starts 10 A.M. Fri., Aug. 29th BEDDING Reflections Rugs. Blue & Brown only, 24x36 · a 99 Now 4.50 orig .. HOUSEWARES Small Ceramic Bedroom lamps. Red floral design. orig. sis Now8.99 Siik Floral Arrangements. orig. 9.95-19 95 Now8.99 Save 50% Mikasa Dinnerware Accessories. orig s12..s43 · Now s&-21.50 FASHION FABRIC Spring & Summer Yardage. Print Terry. orig. 3.99 yd. Surllne orig. 3.50 yd. Burlington. orig. 3.39 yd. Now1.99 yd. Now1.99 yd. Now1.99 yd. HARDWARE One and Only. low Luster Interior Paint. reg. 13.99 gal. Now 9.99 gal. Scenic Wall Murals Covers 9'x12' wall orig. 34.95-09.95 Now 18.88 SPORTING GOODS Special 39.99 Morey Boogie Board with Leash attached. Ouant1t1es Limited. Special 39 .99 PATIO FURNITURE Adjustable 4 position chaise. Lemon straps/Lemon Finish. #4448 orig. s159 Now ss9 42" Glass Top Table with umbreta. hole. Lemon finish # ~s. (4 only) orig. $113 TV-STEREO MCS Modular Component System Stereo Receiver 75 watts. Nows&9 orig. 599.95 (3 only) Now 399.9~ GARDEN SHOP Special 4.99 2 Gel. size • Aucuba "Variegata" . • Philodendron Selloum 5 Oal. llze • Aralla Selboldl Special 8.99 • Variegated Mirror Plant • Gardenia Veitch! • Juniper "Tam" • Juniper "Blue Pacific" • Juniper "Sea Green" Soll Prep Potting Mix. 1 cu. ft. reg. 3.50 Now 2.44 I" Indoor Ptenta.1 Asst. Varieties Special 2.91 C.OF.FEE SHOP Red Hot Mextc.n"Plate "lftcttl ..... Cllll Qu110" Two chili eno cneeee encn11adas •rved wtth refried beans and spanllh rtce. 8pecl•t 1.~ Two great ways tocharge~ ' MENS Terry Shirts Special 7 .99 30% off Waves Shirts. orig. s12.s19 Now 8.40-'15 50% off Wallets orig. 4.S0.'18 Now 2.2s-s9 Sport Shirts. 100°/o cotton 1n fashion stnpes. orig. s15 Now 10.50 Men's Striped Pocket Polo. reg. S6 Now 4.50 Men's Pocket Polo Shirt. Solid colors orig. 4 so ·Now 3 .37 Men's Fashion Ties. orig. a.so Now 4 .99 Men's ptaln Pocket Cord Jeana •. orig. 13.50 Now 10.80 BOYS' Boys' Crewneck Shirt. Asst. styles. orig. 3.50-ss Now 1.99 Boys' V-Neck Shirt. Sizes 8-16. orig S9 Now 4.99 Boys' Denim Jeans Fashion styles. waist 26-31. orig. s14-S16 Now 4 .99 50% off Boys'Athletlc Wear Various shorts and tops. orig. 5.S0-8.50 Now 2. 75-4.25 GIRLS' Girls' Fashion Tops. Many styles. fabrics and colors. orig. 3.~9.50 Glrls' Terry Shag Top. Various colors. Sizes 7-14. orig. sa 50% off Now1.99 Now3.99 Girts' Dress Closeout. Summer tropicals. Jumpers and sundresses. orig. sa-s14 Now s4-17 Girts' Back-to-Schoof Dresses. Various fabrics and colors. orig. s12-'16 Now 9.99 50% off Girts' Swim Sult Closeout. Various tank and bikini styles. orig. 6.SO..S1 o Now 4.99-6.99 INFANTS' Toddlers Terry Top Sizes 2T, 3T, 4T. orig. ~ Now 2.99 Infants' Sleeveless Terry Shirt. Schren print design. 1000/o cotton. orig. 1.89 Now 99- FINE JEWELRY 17J Name llr8ndWatchea. Waltham. Ou Fonte, Lucien Picard and Arnex. orig. 185-1150 Now 42.81 50% off Men'• ..,.ng Sher Mo-r Clpe end Key Chalne. ortg. 32.50-37.50 Now 18.25-11.75 -rsclCPenney -~ISlANl SPORTWEAR 25% off Ditto's Tops and Pants. Jr .. ms and full figure. orig. ss-s27 Now 4.50-20.25 Special Buy 2.99 Jr. Size T-Shirt 100% cotton. so ltd colors. Jr. long Sleepe Plush Pulk>ver Sweater. Orig. S16 Now9.99 Jr. Long Sleeve Poorboy Pull-over Sweater orig '16 Now9.99 Jr. long Sleeve Leno Shirt. orig. '13 Now5.99 Jr. Betted Stretch Poly Pant. orig. s1s Now9.99 Jr. Pleat Front Jeans orig. s19 Now 10.99 Misses Patch Pocket Jean orig. S18 Misses Herring Bone Poly Pant Now9.99 Ofig. $16 Now9.99 Misses Long Sleeve Acrytic ptush Sweater. orig. s14 Now9.99 LINGERIE Hafter 8'a, white or nude. Special 1.99 Camleoles, white or nude. assorted sytles. Special 2.99 Half Slips, white or nude assorted styles. Special 3.99 Full Slips. Assorted styles and colors. Special 3.99 P•ntUners White or Nude Special 2.99 Cotton Shaper Bikini, white nude. pink and blue. S-M·L. orig. s2 Now 891 WOMEN 'S ACCESSORl.~S Women'• Vlnyt Handbags · 399 Now 1.99 ong .. 30% off Women's Fashion Belts. orig. 15-18 Now 3.25-5.20 SHOES Speetal Buy '·" Women'• Sporty Heel Sandal. Tan and wine. whole sizes only 5-10 Special 8.99 Women's Vlnyt Low Hffl Stlde1. Red. white. blue and tan. reg. 6.99 Now 2.99 lnf•nts' Nylon/suede Joggen. SizeH. reg. 9.99 FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY 1 644-2313 r .. ~COUNTY , DAILY PMAl A~I Bicycle Trails Funded Orange Countys most beautiful glrls have a chance W, Irvine Project.s Given Money P'O\Lntaln Valley and lrvlne b.av• been suaranteed money to aitlp ftaanc• re1toaal blcyrte lralla Other f\IDdl ~ere approved to bulld ~hat eventually la planm-d to be a 1•mtl• trail llnklna the Cleveland National f'ore1t to AJlto 'Beub ln South Lat\ll\a Tbe handl•I ta part of a pUhl'e approved OU. week by tbt Oran,e County Transport• \Ion Commt11lon . A \Ot •I of $433,000 wu set a11lde for con- struction of trails this year to Unk communities. AN EQUAL RUM already has been divided among com- munitJes for their local bike trails. The money comes from state guoline taxes. The commission funded six trails for the fiscal year. S.U,000 the e tlmMted cost of Che ptQJect whlcb shouJd be completed by November lrvlne rec~lved $36,000 to pay part of &n estimated '86.000 c<MSt of crt'atln(( » trail along Unlvenmr Av nue from cam· pu s Or ve to MacArthur 8oulcv1mi Tht! tr&ll wall con· ncct t.o MQOll Re1lonal Purk ABOUT $125,ote was approved for the Aliso Creek Trail. The money is t-0 bwld a lhree-m1le path from Second Street north. If finished, the planned trail would rea~h 19 miles. according to a comntiss1on s pokesman. Other funding was $7,750 for part of the SSS.000 cost to firu sh the Wanda Road Trail m Villa Park. S117 .000 to build un· derpasses for the Coyote Creek bike path near the San Gabriel Raver and $102.000 to begin ac· quis itlon and en g ineering studies for the El Cajon Tra.il In Yorba Linda I THE TRAIL IN Irvine .was not reco mmended b y the com · mission's advisory committees or the planning staff. They said it wa~ nearly a duplication of a tra1ra1ong San Diego Creek. But the commission, citing the need to keep bicycle·ridiog stu· d <>nt s off bu sy s t r e~ts, unanimously approved the fund · ing on a motion by Bill Vardoulis, a commission member and Irvine City councilman. llCf'lllf ,..,..,Cl Dl'CW-o.. VflCO COrol• -·-~'°""'- to be Hollywood's next actresses. The turning point of your career con begin at Turning Point Modeling Agency. Because right now we're holding an extensive search for Orange County's most raVing beauties. Whether you're a model, actress, dancer, or just a plain knockout, we wont to see ~u. Holl'yWOod's top photographer, Vince Conti, will shoot a free video interview of qualified gir1s, which will be submitted to the top executives of MGM, Columbia, Paramount and Universal Studios. All you hove to qo IS give us a call and set up an interview. We hope you're wh~t we're looking for, as much as you do. ~ollege Honors UCI Prof In Fountain Valley, a trail will run aroWld Mlle Square Park and tie to other trails that stop there . The commission allocated ( REU CIO!'i ) Helps you out of THIS world The Turning Point Marsh all Houts of J:merald Bay bas been named a Dis tinguished Graduat e of the University of Minnesot a . • Houts. a clinical pro- fessor of pathology at UC Irvine since 1972, acts as a private consul· .tant in f orensic m edic ine. toxicology and varied matters of proof. He is the founder a nd the editor-in-chief of Tra uma. the larges t circula tion m edical- ' legal publication for , lawyers in the world, and also is president and part-owner of Emerald Ba y Publis h e r s in Laguna Beach. 'Hotline' Needs Aid T h e R a p e Cr 1s 1s Hotline of Orange Coun· ty is asking for volun- teers t o maintain telephone lines. Train- ing is to be conducted Monday and Thursday even ings, beginn ing Sept. 8, at the R a pe Crisis Network Unit, 7571 Westminster Ave .. Westminster. More information is available by. c alling 891-5733. I Touris~ Slices ~County Jobless ,) . The unemployment rate in Orange County for • July dipped slightly, lo 4.7 percent from 4.8 per- cent in June, according to figures released by the state Employme.nt Development Department. Analysts attributed UV? decrease to summer , hirings in tourist-related industries. The Wlemployment rate for July compared to , a 4.1 percent unemployment rate in July 1979. I j THE NUMBER OF unemployed rose in July to 42.SOO -300 more than in June -but the un· employment rate dipped because the labor force also increased in size. The total civilian labor force, according to the 1 stale report, now stands at 1,108,100, an increase of ' 2.8 percent from the year-ago level. It was noted in tbe report that 2,900 construe· lion industry workers were idled in July because of labor disputes, wbilefarm labor dropped 2,lOOdueto theendofthecountystrawberrybarvest. JOBS IN THE TOURIST industry rose between June and July to 84.700 positions. Amuse· ment parks added 600 worke.rs, restaurants 400, and hotels. 500. The unemployme nt r ate is "expected lo worsen during the next three months." according to the report. * * * * ·Task Force Eyes OC Labor Scene Formation of a task force to find ways to re- duce unemployment in Orange County has been authorized by the county Board of Supervisors. Such a body, said lst District Supervisor ' Philip Ant.bony, should recommend incentives to encourage businesses to locate in areas of high un- employment in the county and to recruit jobless persons from t.ho6e areas. THE T.Ult Foatt: will be made up of representatives of the county AdminiltJ'ative Of. ftce, county Auditor-Controller's Office, Economic Development Corp.. League of Cities and tbe PJivate Industry Council. It will make its recommendations to the. board within 90 days. Anthony. who recently conducted two "fact· finding" hearings on unemployment in Orange County, said be is particularly concerned about netgbborbood "pockets" where unemployment ts greater than average . AT THE URGING of Supervt10rs Harriett Wieder and Thomas Riley, Antbooy withdrew a proposal to direct the county Environmental Management Alency to streamline it.a procedures for proceu1nl construction permits. Anthony, however, maintained that tbe county's repJator)' proceues were "aetiDg as a deterrent to ltrOGfel' activity in tbe CODltnlcUon in· ct.try.•• • DmlliVad1r 11 ladd in the DAILY PILOT 1869 Nevvpon Blvd. Costa Mesa. CA 92627 Telephone 645-9293 .. MISSION VIEJO SOUTH COAST PLAZA Intro. price.49.99 Famous-maker bomber jackets. Reg. $65 • The hottest style to hit the streets. Real emphasis on fashion: knit cuffs and waist, inside pockets. Nylon. Black. red, grey. copper. S, M, L. Men's Outerwear, 507 'Regular pr/Ce will oecome etlecl•~ O(I Sept. B. 1980 , Van Heusen Supersilk · shirts. Reg _114 Casual elegc1nce:: .. ind easy l!vmg m our most com I or table spor tshirt. Tan. brown white. rose. wme, yellow polyester. S. M. L. XL Men's Sportsh1rts. 502. Bullock's Mission Viejo, Mission Viejo Mall, (714) 495-3111 Bullock's South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bristol, C.M. (714) 558·0611 . • t STARTS TODAY 19.99 Classic long-sleeve velour V-necks. Specml What you'll be weanng alone, over shirts nnd under Jackets. Cotton! polyester m navy. brown. teal. royal reCJ. blacl,, wme. plum camel or grey S. M. L. XL Men s Knm, 1101 ~.~ .. ,- For Trivia B11ffs franklin'• Tmvell Pinpointed PHILAOgLPtuA (AP) -School kid.I, already up lo \Mb' ..,. m dates. may have 1 new one to memorise wbea llliU Ntwn • (' ... ahe 1.W. rud: "Bay Tueld. l Oct." Aft#tbllltM Mq\MftC. ran: "Amboy Wed. 2 • ...,.. . ''PUMIThursd :t A•b" • • "8rowa'a f'riday 4" "Rlul' D !let I " . "Ptdla. Sund ... PUBLIC NOTICE .. t(TITIOUS IUllHUS NAMW ITAT•M ... T T ... 10llo0wl"9 --11 ~"O W\I ., .. , HARCO, iS. Ro", Co\la ~ .. , •• C•tlfornl• .,.11 8tltY -·•• Harcl'\10 •5& Roch, («Kt• MeMI, C•lilD<nl~ 91611 Tlllt MJMU I\ Condu<lf!CI l>V •II In e11"1c1u.1 Bf>llY M. H•rcNI< k Tnt\ •lat-I w•• lltf!CI wit" llw COUlllY ci..11 ot ()r~ eo.imty on NATION PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS NAMI IT~TIMl!NT ~ fM tOl"-"'O ..,_, 16 CllM ... l><l'M·• ... ".' 8AL80A P'°'CIFIC, ~I!. 8•1110i1' Blvd , N--1 BffCll, C.lltoml•.,..I ... ,. M¥iln R-, "°' !,, 11•100. &Ivel., N-1 S.a<ll, CAlltonll•~t l Tiii• ~' 16 CondUC-Dy .. lin,. ell•~· -Row Auou•I S. 1'.,. Tiiis •l~-t w•• tli.o with IN!, C-ty Cleflr of Or ..... County"" Jul., U, 1'IO Fl•mt 1'14t9K' P\ll>tl~ Or-'""'' D•••y Piiot Puo11.-Or-co .. 1 o .. ty PllOV A acholar clalma to have cll1·. ~vertd the tuct dA1 a. P'rlMUn arrl vfd twre trom Bolton at ace n . BISTOUAN GENEaALLY ha aareM that it wu a Sunday monun1 .. , 1123. aa ..stated ln rranklln'a autoblotraplly. written many ean af\tr hla arrival Dul. pray tell. whlch Sund~ momin& • Ht hadn't uld . so lhe hlltortana wtN! stumped Ah. \hat wN It • Sb aecUJ'td o copy or franklin '• a utobto1r11phy. malchln1 the dates wllh Franklin 'i; Bonon-to-Mslladelphla ltlncrury. Nt w York Bay lhe Oral day th~ Amboys in New JerHy. where. Franklin wrote. be drank 1~at c1uun· titles ot water to fl1ht off a fever on the stc'Ond day. a trip through tht: pln4' land11 of llOuthem New Jers~y on the third day. an overnight 11tuy at an inn run by a Dr. John Brown on the fourth day ; proctttidlng down the De laware on the rtllh dtty, anti reaching PhHadelph!a on Ot~. 6. Corne Celebrate Our New Store zn Fashion I sland Auq 1, U, JI, 11. 1'90 3107.to A119. 1t, Seclc. •, 11, lt, ,_, UM..0 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINHS HAMt! STATEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE .. ICTITIOUS IUSIHIESS NAMI! STATt!Ml!NT Then W s week Claude·Anne ~·· a history 1cholu from ·the city 's t"rankford section who la res~archinti Franklin at Yale University. toki lbe American Phlloee>phlcal So(,ety heNI that she had come across 11 startling discovery. Free Charnpagne from 7 PM-9 PM Thursday Nights before the Concerts lllf fol'-•"!! l)tr\o()(I l• C)Qln<;i bvtl ""'•• L AOV BUG. l"t tCt~Qs Ao•d. NewPOrt llea<ch, C.lllorl\I& '17M>J Doris M ..... _.. tt11 ICl"ll• ,__ Ntwp0<I 8H<:tl. Calltoml• ~1~ Tiii\ l>\l~MS> I~ (ond\lcted by tin on dtV1du•I Tiie 1011owlnq 119''°"' .,. dolt1a ll\ls1'WU M ,~ PRO AIR. llCM l-n A,_.l'.,. a c;, C«KI• ~•. Olllor111am11> JOdy Eawarct How911, )003 .._... Strfft, •8, Co\111 Mesa. Cetllor,,.• .,,,. . Doti\ M NtlM>n Thi• slal-1'11 w~• filed w11n H..e County Citric o l Or•-County on AUQU\l 7'. I. ,.,_l Publl~ Oranve eo,,,, O•••• P1101. AUQ Jt. Sepl •. 11 It, •oec> ~IO Eelellt Joe Runell, '°°3 AUt>ff Street. .s 8 Cost• Nie~. C.lllOfll .. '17Uf> Arthur Cl~• Pe<><oclt Jr 1)18 Ptu-tt1c .. ven\W. :tA . Cost• Me~ c .. 1.1ornla .,,.,, Tt"' t)y,,,,,.,, '' conduct .. d bv a o-anrr•I PAf"t~tV.1c> Ec!O•~ J 11U"Pll Sbe said that while examining some photocopies of Franklin papers s he had noticed a letter written to him by a Paris bank Direc tly beneath the text or the letter was a ser•es of consecutive dates. begin· ntng with Monday. Sept. 23. MRS. LOPEZ checked her find with Dr Whitfield Bell Jr .. executive offi cer of the American Philosophical Society, and himself a Franklin SC'holar. RAFF jewelry PUBLIC NOTICE F ICTITIOUS 8UStNESS NAME: STATl!Ml!NT r,.. '°"'°"'"'1Q PH1CH"I I\ do1nq t>u\1 nf'\\ "'' Thi'\ 1if"'~nt Wf\'l!i fltt'(f With tf'wo Co"""' c•~r• ol Or•nqoo (Oullh' .,, "'"°"" s ,., Fl'1$M Pubh\""" Or..._ C:O.sl 0.lly PllOI. Auo 1 I• 21,,. IW l710«1 ·' l am convinced that I.he find i11 authentic and that Mrs. Lopez' in· terpretat1on •s correct." Bell said. ~ :J? F:1:-h1c>o hl;inlf ,. ft formerly A H Weinert f'tne J ewels S ~OPPE ANTIOUFS 10601 >'O•bf\ Ao.t<I :: 11 u. ]8 l ~OUM N lqutl C"lllOrl\1~ M/HI,. R Moot1Y 111?1 'ia""b'•' M•\,1on \11,.ttt (41l1torn1" ~,6..,_ PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINE:SS '• Tbe first entry ror October, RO LEX ~ ao•·•raa~ns Y9U'd lleftl9 expec• ft find ~na s-.e: Master MECHANIC ® WET/DRY VACS ~ ~ 6gal. $39.99 Aeg.59.M 10gal. $ 49 • 9CJ Reg.II.II 181/1'' BLACK .... 42.88 COLORS ........ 49 .88 22'12'' BLACK .... 53.88 COLORS ........ 59.88 SMOKEYJ OE .. 21.88 TABLETOP BLACK .......... 29.88 COLORS ........ 34.88 limited supply of some colors HIGH BACK BEACH CHAIR • Adjust from upright to flat position • Wooden arms 24.88 9 ........ 9 .......... ".'' CARVAC $15.88 Crown HAIDWAll Jll7 I. c.-!Ny. IC ta ..... MeJ.. .. ~-..... 673-2100 - CAR LITE s 1 s.88 OPEN SUNDA. YS Limited to suppty on hand Prk" OooCI Thru Ubor Day \. e ..... /Jw/tw.. INFLATOR Rllon ~WAii w ....... ..... .... .. ..... ,., ....................... ..... 642-1133 • PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS EUSINESS NAME: STATEMENT The IOllOwlnQ ~r<on• "" do1nQ l>\lt1nenH FtNOERSSE EtCEQS IH 8ro•d••Y Co\ta M~sa. C•lfforn•• .,.,, Oil•t l P~o•hPP• 9707 8otsd A'ltf\U«. "'to ,, W t1otm1n\ter Calltorn•.t 'l?OIJ Aulh F C•rttr lfoOlll F"nt .. o" Ulne. M\lfttH'Q10t" 8-t.C:h. C.11tttotrH• 92M• llll\ b<l\lnt~\ '' conduc1ed l>y A qen.or•I ~rt~'"''P Autll E C•rlt< Th•\ \Utt9'me-nt wa\ Ulf!O with '""° County (lerlr ot Ora~ CO\llllY on AUQUS1 \l, 1'80 FUJH9 Pubhs·hf'O Or.tncw Coa\t D••I• Pilot. Auq 11 11 S.-o< • II 19'0 lA»-_, PUB LIC NOTICE Thi\ ~I~\ 1'\ (~1 .. 0 Ov .tn 1ri dlYlOut't Oovl" A Moodv J• t ru, \Mlt nfl1"\I w.-,-. t1tf'ld w 11n '"'" (OYf"lh (IPf .. of Or~n~ (OUl'\h Of' AU(IU\t ~. 1.., Ft4JStl Publl~f'Wlod 0rdf'tQf• (.CM\t 0d•lv P1101 AUQ I IO 11 18 ,., )166-30 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT th~ 1011ow•nq Of"f '°" i\ CIOfnG bu'\• ntt\~ d' C'MFS<; AO\lf o 11<;1Nr. A PV8LIS~ING 117'1 f GM"" 'i.tnl~ And, (allf0t'n1a9?10\ J NPttl~ Burn-. 1U() W tMtf\ "''"""' {O\f.t Mf>"'11 CatstornM•1t>1-' Jn1\ bu\.lnfl'\' I\ (Qtt<ftJ<tf'il b¥ dn lft TnP t:~:~n!T:.l,~~Nd~f> dOt~b bu"""''"'" SAN JUAN 11ANC~ 3121' c._. .. C'rrJH'ld,. Of't\H"' San Jl.kln CacustrM4 C~lo1nrno;> 'l'/US Jolln 01" J~n,on• 3•11? C •U Gr.Jr\Of OrtYP Sttn Ju•n C.t0•str4no. C.thlD<n•" <nol\ Jam ... , Cl'""° J•n• 1~< )1117 ~lot MtHQU"'"'" San Ju•n C ao1\tr•ro. C.thtornoA 'l?o/S Jov Cot0I O&w'°" 11111 Sttn, ~A,.Q.tritd '"'" J\Hjrt Cao1\hat10 ("l1torni;1 Q?f,IS (lvd<> J0\"1)11 J~nh1n<. 11771 Ce .... (';.rAn0" Of"t..,_ ~ Juan (~Ot~tr•N. C..tlltorr'tt• tr1,..I\ u,,, bu,•tw•'' 1c co"ouc tect by n a11N"r.a1 Odrt,....,,",o ltJihnOt1,JPn• ,,.., ff\1'-\fAtN"Nlnl w .. \ tllp(1 Wlf'1 th-ft Counh (l,.rlt nt OrdnOf' (ountv OI'\ A llOU\I S 1'181) dt¥1dultl FUt.Ot J N4!'·d1• Ru'"' Pu1>l1\twad Or~ C.OJt\I CM•l'I PHol TtH' \tlll~fU w~\ f 1lt"(t w 111't lh~ A\IO 1 14 7l 1" tQ80 J1~·IO (ountv Cl,..rll( ot OrdnQ .. CO\Jf"lf"I on •VQu\t \ ,.., ~ .. J ... PubftVW"d ()-;tno-" (0.t'f 0<'•'v Pt!Of A1oq I •• 11 711 149() )?II~ PUBLIC NOTICt: PUBLJC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USINESS NA""E STATEMENT Tt.~ toUow•uno prrW)n~ ~re d Offt,Q bu\IM\\.l"f FICTITIOUS8 USINEU F IP ST IMPRfSStO N. J71A1 NAME STATEMENT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS C"m1no C"Pl\lrdno Sdn Ju<11\ l'°'P loflow1no Oflr\.On\ dr~ do1"Q frrfAME ~TATEMENT Ctt01\1r,lno,C1111torn1,,tJ?tiJ\ b-.i\•'*'\A'\ T~ fOUOWl"O Ot"•\On .... <k)1nQ bU'\I• Af\n4t p [nql'1nct . 7~1 .. s JONES BPOWN tN\lfSTMENfS """'" M•n1.,n11 ... 0""" Pcunl. C.tlilor,,1a 7333 N ll•OddWdy Sdnld And F JAV'<, ANflOUf '> •SS\ M•Vt ,,61'1 C•l1lorn1<197100 llt"•d" Ori.,. £•\I. a ~O C""l4 Mu a (ynth1<> l Joh nsoo. 2'01 Howarel 8 JonM. Ill SU E"'••.id C•t1torn1a "'6211> l v,. "" ••" Po ad. "" n Ju• n 8ay, La~ &ea<h. C.OlllD<n•• '17UI Mr\ E J f'"" •SS\ Ml'\d .. ,.,.,,.. C•O•\trdno. Cdhlo<l'•• 9761\ 8•rU•1t K 8ro•n. ~3' """'"'• D''""' f.t,t. =~ .. D. (O\tdi M~\ct lh" bU\ln,.,\ 1\ tonduc,eo ov • Terr•<•. L~• 8eacll, C.lllorni. c.>11lo•n"• 91621> 9"ne<•I 1)¥11'W'<""P .,. '1'7'SI 111,, bu,.,.,," t-lt<I ,,. "" 1n C.,..11\oa l . JOIW\'°" Tiiis b<l'•ntt' " col\duct~d by a dov1<1ua1 T,.,, •l~lem<'f\1 wa\ lllf'd "'''" •~~ ~neral PM'ftwr9ooo F J e ..... q (OUl\ly (lf'•k ol o •• ...,. County 0" HOWMd8 JO,.._\ IU l '"' '\ldf~ w'•\ t 1tfli0 w 1tf\ lf'teo Auigv\11•. \'9) Tl\!\ sta~...,..,t ••\ tole<! w•lll tnf' County (IP•• 01 Or.tnQt> Count., on FU.- Co..nty Cl•rll ol O<•nqe Cou11ty on Auqu\I S. 1'90 P"""'"°° Ot-COilst 0 .. 1., P11c>t AuQU•I IS, 1480 FU1* Aug 71, ~I •.ti, II t'lllO )}18 IO PAUL F•IEDERICMARX. ESO Pul>4"t.<1 OrftnQP '°"" Oa11y PtlQI • -- AGHIEW, MtLLElt a CAltUON t Auq 1 ••. n 111. ,., 3161-l!O PUBLIC NOTICE -Ma<A,,_ 9 t•d • !~'!·.,:'~ ... c.o..,,,, ... _ J PUBLIC NOTICE FtCTtT-iou-s 8~11~-ns FIU26l ----- -NAME STATE MENT Pul>h\l.ed Ol'<t"9t Coast O.toty P110I. FICTITIOUS 8USINIESS Tllf' lollO••"'> .,.,..,", ..... do1no AllQ 21. Jt.s.p! 4, 11. 19'0 ~ NAME S.,ATE:MIENT P>u\1nf'•\as PUBLIC NOTICE f flf' IOllOW•MI .,.,..,," arf' do.nq CO'\lA MfSA flOl'llSl . lll DUi1rwtt\\ ~ 8ro.itd••Y. CO\ta ##s•. (ahttH''fhf' TRANS WOAlO TAAOING CO""-"2676 PANV. ''" """"°"" ··-· Co.ta W•Hace V . Nl'Con.tl't V. t0377 #•W,(4Jltf0t"4d'f7&71 Ct.r t'tma\. MunthtQton 81""-'<h. Antta tnvft"tm .. nt Comoi\nv. t1' C•litotn1a..,,..,., CattlOrnoa C°'110fdloon. 1011 Pomon• A ulh A NlcC'ona he¥ ttJ77 /4.tHnlH'.C«Jll\tA~'-d (dl1f0fn,~•1&n <l\r'''""d\., Mvnt•nQto" B~ach Tho\ D<Wne\\ '' conou<.tl'O b y., cq< C"litorn•d ,_ pe>r.Jt~I'\ Thi~ ~1nP\'\ •.SCondUC.led by ttf\ '" AnttA tnYP4iitrN-nt Co d1v10u1tl Euqr•.,.. Gro""'an. <;.,...,.,... (utJple Pr~\t<JP('lt Attorney tQf Tf't1\ c..1.-tflf'1Htt """' f1lflld w1tn '~ A1fl'Qt\tr~n1 Cou,,tv (IPrk ot Oran0t Countv on Tt't1\ \t.lt~1 Wfl'\ f tf"CI with ""' .AUQU\I ~. t'lllO Countv CIPrk ol Or.tnl.H' County n .. FIO~ AUCIU\I \ 1'!80 PuOlov.<1 OrMIQO' Coa\t o •• ,,. P1101 SAMUl!LCU8E:TIE Auo I. U,71,78 1"90 3'6l·M> An-y .i &.Aw P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USIN(SS NAME: STATEMENT l ,..,. f0Uow1nci .,..,,on I\ d0tna f>v'f •ll Sl•l~A....,w Su•I~ 10 H\ffthll!!llOOI a..c11, CA '1?'41 F14U '1 Publ1"""1 ()r,..-Co.t" O•hy Piiot ,lluo. J ••. n . 711. ,.., l7t0-llD PUBLIC NOTICE A-s•.•oo a,m,c!o L • &15 W@Ml? ~@lr\Y/11©@ 9&Aa a EADSU: A .... ,. ......... ••ftat ..... I .... A...a DlYWCe!" la avana~ frtt ............. C .................... l.OH• &M lll&rteaclea lav•IYH I• 4Hvldl•I ... dil'lll•'I ~ • ..._ P••pMd -.............. C'Ml•mk)' pn.perty. wlllda a a....-......_ Ha llaare, end 11eparate "'''':t. ................ ~ .. ly. ' It ..... n ~1ae q9Htlau oa aaHlmenta. llpl ............ aM CaUforala'1 .ew "1ummat) ............. law. •Mela allewa IOllte eo.,pl~ to gf't ................... CM.rt. Tiie _,, pampMe& le ttle llillU. l• a stale ba r ..... wrtl&etl fet eM.a•men ol le1aJ services. .... emau1111&ty aveUeble are pampllJe&s on s mall clal.. ee.r&a. wllla, auto accldeats, land.lord· teau& reladeu, bayla1 a bo~. bankruptcy, ..aa1e ,._ .. , ud eoelrac&.11. ........ &laat &eU bow to fand and hire a lawyer Md wtaat lo do lf you are arrested are teMWed fol' pabUeeUon ln the coming months. A allllle copy ot Ute pamphlet may be obtained 'J ••*'I a aumped, self-addressed envelope to die Dlvilioa ot Comauulicatioas, State Bar or Callfenda, 565 Fl'utlia S& .•• an Francisco 94102. •.a&1p1e copies may be ordered at cost by sending • died or IDOlleY onler ($7.SO per 100 and SSO per I,• ~) to S&ete Bar Pamphlets, 651 Brannan S&., San Frudseo 94107. DEAR PAT: Aside from recording your car's license and serial number and keeping il in a safe place at home, do you or your readers know of any ways a person could m ake sure his' car could be identified if it were st olen? This would seem almost impossible because cars can be painted and serial numbers and license plales r emoved. B.L., Irvine Ome ol tbe simples& and l'QOSt effective means et COMealed Identification is to drop a business eerd, or similar identification, down a door window dlalllld. Yoa also could etch your liceJ1se number 1.8 ltanl-to-ftad spots. One investigating agency romd -owner's car because be had scratched his license namber ander the gas cap. Maybe A YS re•ders have some othe r tips. . DEAR PAT: A few years ago there was a lol ol publicity about rust on the rear windows or cars. How were these prGblems resolved? I am now con· hooted with the same thing and would like to know what to do about it. So far. I can't get any reasona· ble answers J.M., Ba lboa Gellenl Metors bandied eadl complaint in· ..Wully la 1176 when It encoun&ered a lot of rast ·ee•pl•W1 Mileage, age ud appearance ot tbe ...wet. were ewldered lo 41e&ermille If aayUlhag ..... Ille pUl fer repahltlng a car. Penl lau a 0 secrd warranty" program called ,..., for body rust on 1969·1972 model cars and tncb. ,Altlloagb coosamen were not l.Dformed 8hllt It, Ford permitted regional aad district •nacen t.e eempeasate owners • u .ladtvldaal Mais wtdl 1• percnt eovenge ol repair cost ........,.. &M ftnt Z4 mOIKM ud 75 perceat from tile zaa. to CM _.. ••das witllout regft'd tG •Ueage, depeadlag on the auto's CGDdltloa. You ftnt meve sboald be to contact the deale1 frem ...._ yoa pardlesed )'OU car. If yoa don't 1et U&llfactloe at tbat level, get la toacb with the fel'-1 lleedqaerters of yoa.r car's manufacturer. M•t laave oftleetl IB tbe Los Angeles area. It. also womld be • good Idea to contact AUTOCAP (Aatometlve Couamer Action Pro 1ram> by plloalng (8") Z5Z·M88. Sponsored b) • .._ CU Dealers ot Soat.bera Callforala, prob· '-•• M retelved at tlle dealer level are beDdlecl bJ a pa.el of car dealen ucl coasamer represea &aUvn. Two ..-.. eemplaiJ)t sources are the Center fOI' Atdo Safety, 12%3 Dupont Circle Building, Waah....,., D.C. Zlt3&, and Automobile Owners 4'ctl• Conell, 1411 K St. N.W., Suite 800, Wv'h ..... D.C. ztllS. m a . ' · Cot o probleim" Th~n wntr to Pol Duma. Pol waU cul rrd taf)f!. um inu the annuf'r..Y and actaon I/OU need. ro 1ol1Jt' 11W'QUlllH '" uovtrnmettt ond buaM11. Mau 11our qwltwna to Pat Dunn. Al Your Setvtc•. Ora• Coast D<ul11 Pal.Of. PO IJo.r 151/J, Cotto Mua. CfA g212e A• mon.11 ,,.,,..,, °" poudu will br o"""'1'fd. "111 phoMd tnqu1nf1 ur t~tt~• nol including the rNdtT'I luU namr. oddreu CJftd ~JS "®rs' phoM • ttu mbfr cormot be ron.tldcrftl Th.U column appeor".kU· . 111 ncrpt Stntdo111 " .......... •••Gll'ftl••A..U• DEAR l'AT My Spanish·apeaking neighbors n <.>d Mlp with some Internal Re venue Service rorma lh~y recclvt.>d. Does lhe IRS provide as· sastlltlce tn Sp~nisb ? L.P .• Huntington Beach YH . Taxpayers can co•tact,...a Spanish· •S>e•klna IRS repre.entMJve by pltioalll1 <8"> zsz.zm. ID the Loe A•1eie. area. tile ••mber ls <2131 MS-1Z57. Tbla aiervlce bH been ewaUable \Ince January l9'19. Olttk D~tor 8 e fore Cldd• DEAR PAT. I am considering having some pJasli<' surgery done. but I've heard a lot of stories uboul how some people are operated on by un· qualified doctors. Someone told me there's a refer· ral phone number for qualified plastic surgeons, but she didn'l know what it was. Do you? K. E .. Newport Beach Referrals for plastic and recomtructlve sur· geons experienced in a variety of specialties are a vailable through the PlastJc Sargery Kefe rrat Center at (312)641 ·0935 in Chicago. Dr. Richard Dakin, president of the California Society of Plastic Surgeons, warns, "Most people believe that unqualified physicians cannot openly practice medicine. The fact Is that any medical doctor can legally practice any specialty that he or she wishes without any prior experience." He added that although favorable surgical re· s uits can never be guaranteed. the odds are in· cre ased tre mendously H a patient seJects a physi· clan who has been Board Certified in bis or her a rea of speclallzatlon . Board cer&ifl catlon in· dicates &hat the physician bas undergone years or ~ddiliooal specialized tralnl.Dg. AP Wlrepflolo .loin11 f'iglat Rep . PauJ McCloskey has joined several a t · torneys in arg uing before the state ap· pea ls court that Black Panther Elmer "'Geronimo" Pratt should be granted a new m u rder trial. M cCloskey, R -San Mateo. and Pratt's attorneys said that FBI informants per- jured themselves at Pratt's prev ious trial. ThUrsdaf, August 28. 1980 DAILY PILOT A I :J Fired TV Staffers Rehired ATLANTA CAP> -A local television station 1s re h iring l h rt:e employees dis missed l ast month for 1nad· vertently broadcasting a picture of a nude woman during Saturday morn . THE SENSIBLE ANSWER TO FUNERAL COSTS Funeral prices at Pierce Brothers neigh· borhood mortuaries range from $385 for imm ediate cremation and burial to more t han $1 ,000 fo r complet e tradition al funerals with alternative choices o t services in between. For Information call or write ... Pierce Brothers Smiths' Mortuary 627 Main Street Huntington Beach ca 92648 536-6539 in~ ctuldren's program-..,..-- -• - -......_ m ing . ......-(coupon! ~ ,.~: • .:~ ~~, v d~c;~;~~ t FRIDAY/SATURDAY 1 ~~d~e~ef~ ~~e~~e :::C,~\~ I COUPON" SPECIAL have Wlth the t'Ompany. SERVED no P.M. 10 s PM. I w c have re In!> la l e d AT SPIRES/IRVINE-SPIRESICOSTA MESA ONLY t h e m . " w s B . T v I , .... ,. s.,, • •uo .... , ,.,, < ....... s,. .. , ..... '''o• •«M••• Ii•" '" s ... °"" I General Manager Fred ~:~~'~' ~:;:.!:~~~."O~!, ~;:~,,,"~;~H~'-~..;:: ~ .~:: ~": ~~::.:-;:~:.::;~~',' Bar ber saad . .1112 FRIED CHICKEN ....• '2.29 Th l' s l a t 1 on was · .. ·~ .,.....,. _,.,. ..... ,... .. , , ........ c "' I flooded by complaints ~BROCHE ~:~~-~~~a~1tc:~rcw~~t~~ . , ... :: .T!~~'"~'~N«~~~~.~:~:·~~·~! I flas ht.•d on television - - -Ccoupon). - -;..m :>c reens between Salur I SUND·AV I d<1)o morning t'CJrtoon MW · :.~;;; ~.~~:~n~~~arent. I COUPON . SPECIAL I .• c .. me from iJ mov1E' I SERVE012NOONT08P M I th:.tl was betng watched AT SPIRESllRVINE-SPI RESICOSTAMESAONLY by control room lcchnt-.... ,, ..... , 1 1<1aa •·,..~··· u • .-•• s ... .,,.,.,,,. ""'"'"'""··~•d ... ~ •• o.~ • • · ff h I '•• ·0·•,. '~''* ,., . ., 11J' "•'• ~e f"CM s,l'I o.t .. S1111y 1 l"d, ,., , C9f'l'pl~t~ .----------c-•a_n_s_o_t _c·_a_ir___ ROAST~TURKEY c..DINNEif:-Ao~"s2':69 I I . Tells you how to fix it or how to plant it Saturdays ..... ; ' • SplJb :::::::~;'.:: .. ,~:: .. :·::. ,1 l.ive Ones . -------1ii1111~1t.n•-.·· .. ••t•"·-. _ ~·~·'• - Needed On Panel MODESTO <AP> Stanislaus Coun ty supervisors are hur ried· ly trying to fa ll vacan· 4!ies on the county's Building Code Board of Appeals after discover- ing that only two of the board's five m embers are alive After learning that the I problem was holding up construction or the big· gest building in the county, s upe rvisors a g r e ed to appoint a boa rd as quickly as al· lowed under law -Sept. 16. It's be.en nine years since anyone has been SJppointed to the board and ju.st about that long I since the board met. County officials dis-I cover ed the proble m I whe n E&J Gallo Winery 1 aske d for a varian ce fro m a county code 1 which says there must be an exit within 200 feet of any point within a building. The proposed Gallo building would be the s ize of n ine football fi elds. To meet the code, the winery would either have to reduce its width from 560 feet to under I 400 feel or build a fire. rated corridor down the · m iddle I 0 Seethe Bill Blass Fall Collection shown by a special representative in South Coast Plaza on Thursday and Friday, August 28 and 29. Informal modeling Noon to 3:00. BILL BLASS FOR FALL. HE'LL TEMPT YOU, TOO/ ' Lu>eurious fabrics: stenciled calfskin, velvet, satin, richly textured tweeds. And color: bristlt red, yellow, pink and green this year. Oveme1rd at nJstit: rustling bled< tafftt• pouff· flounce from • bleok crepe thelth. Fine Oma Salon ---~.-·- . ' .. l . I • ,,,,.,. ... ... 2 ways to save whenyoufty to Canada on Top Ba11ana: 1. 35%of£ 5104 one-wayto ~ry on our non-stop flight S1Q9 one-way to Edmonton on our one-stop flight You qualify for this low fare automaticafly if your trip originates in the U.S. And you fly on eur non·stop to Calgary or our one·stop to F.dmonton. The fare will also apply to your return flight, provided you buy a round-trip ticket before leaving the tJ. S. 2. Uo to 53% oiTwith a Tew restrictions. SJlf1S1 each way to Calgary SJS®-each way to Edmonton when you buy a round-trip ticket Kids 2·5 tJyto either city for $40.50 each~ Nobody otfen a lower fan I •Just make your reservations at least 30 days in advance. and buy your tickets no more than 7 days .after making your rese~tioos. Ay anytime after Septem ber 15 and complete your return Oight by midnight. Decem ber 10. • A few other restrictions apply, and seats are limited. • Some Oights m ay already be sold o ut. so call today ! Prices are based on adult coach fares, and do not include tax. just call a Travel Agent, your Corporate Travel Arranger. or Hughes Ailwest; Los Ange.Jes (213) 772-5 100 Ontario (714) 988-8585 Burbank (213) 247~8333 Orange County (714) 540·2060 . AJ .. DAILY l'tLOT Aides Young, Diverse AnJersor1 s Wife Pin.vs e11tral Role (~la•Seriet) WAS!UNG'n,) (AP> Jnhn 8 .. Andt'T'llOl'l 's CIO:St' l adVlffl"! a N a_s d1 v~rae aa th ft vottora be hoS>('s to at\ract to his lndt'Pen• dent pr'E'l\ldenl1•l candlduy. His "Inner clr<'I ·• Is <'Om pos~d malnb ol mt-n ln their 30 . duwn from Anderson·" R epublican tOn;t 1onal tan or from an odd as ortmcnt of llc publlt'an and Demo('rutl<· campai_.. of lhe ttTOs bt•ron1 ll1 ' fl1rur 111 »n An d\"t on al1m1n1,\1 a111111, hut l\ll de•rt.on !',I\" llnll \\11Ultl nut tw ""eretan of 'lli•I•• A nnt.••ON Al.") lll('t•k ... 1111 \'ICC\ trom t-\•11' ttohul "'· lht• in \' e t m 1• n t h 11 n I. 1• r " h 11 "" ttrmlnl1N1 fh1• dfort lo mll(hl till lnwortant posts. SU) .. 111.i ht mwn " t make prospec.· tlv•• nomln\'t'• btllieve he can w\11 Amon" a ll the candida tes, An· d.-r on J>robably relies more on hla Jud.cment than those around hi 111 Ald\!lt fJMY he listens to ad· ""°l' und :-.ometlmeis tukeR It, but mon· oftt>n makes up his mind u' ht• 61C>e:J uloni;: MOST AIE UNKNOWN lO th\' public and few buv~ more than a httle ex.,erl~tt In nauonal pre· . s idential campiugns ta\~ off NC\\ \t11k nt '01rtu •ion with b~nlt.ruptn hH• \N•n- aao Tht' l'Oll~I l'' mun <1uolc'!' Ro hul' 11 ~ '11·w~ on 'urmu~ l'<'OnomH• 1:-Mtl'i. A 1111.m lo t-h1ft ~omc tax wNalth >:t.tnl·rat\•d 111 011 produ(.'111~ :,lah·s lo dt• terioratin.: Inner c1 t1t'1> of lh1· Northt'1.1!>t and M1d\\l'!>l 15 k11o"n to ha\le ongmutt•d with Rohatyn t"ormt'r ussoc l a t es i n Cllnatrt>~li suy Anderson's office ,uff1•rt'c1 from organizational J)roblt•mi. during his 20 years rt'prl'M'nlinj.! a conservative nortlwm tllino1s district. 1'o prov1dl' i.trong direction from the top. Anderson hired c;..irth. "ho hos pulled off upsets for i,urh politicians as New York ~1uvor Edwurd Koch. and Ne-.•. York Gov llugh Carey The m ost p ov.erful starr person in the campaign 1s David Gart h, a vola t ile, cigor c homping Nt!w Yo rk polit1ral consultant hired to plan national strategy when the congressman a nnounced his iridf!pcndent cam- paign April 24. Ga rth has engineer ed some major political upsets, m ainJy through im· a gin a t i v e televi's1on ad· ve rlising. but few others in Ande r son 's ca mp a i g n have had a role in a pre· vious national campaign. "'These arc amateurs and a mateurs will make mlstakE>s, but they are refreshing and completely de- dicated to electing John An- d e rson." said one senior An· derson campaign figure with an intimate knowledge of the or- ganization BECAUSE ANDERSON has yet to establish hi mself as a significant threat lo either President Carter or Ronald Reagan. some of those who have advised him on issues have been r e luctant to become publicly identifiP.d An exception is George Ball. undersecretary of s tate under former President Lyndon R. J ohnson. who dropped a s urprise endorsement of Anderson during a nationally televised inte rview show Although a heavyweight a m ong foreign policy experts. Ball is controversial because of his generally pro-Ara b views on Middle Eastern peace questions. There has been continuous speculation that Ball would Anderson a lso li stens to Cllf ford Brown , 37 . tl arvard graduate and .poht1cul science professor iit Union College in Schc-nectady. N. Y. Bot h Nan cy R t•u1-:ar) a nd Rosalynn Carter are known to have 1mportunt places along side their husband's advisers. Even so, it is doubtful their roles a re as central as that of Keke An derson, the congressman's wire . She is credited among many aides with persuading An· derson to run as an independent wh en it became apparent he could not win the Republican nomination. COLUMN IST WILLJAM Safi re has written half in jest tha t wh ilc M n . Ca rt e r sometimes attends Cabinet meetings, Mrs. Anderson pro. bably would run them A number of senior staff mem· bers a re knoWn to have left the campaign bccause t hey fell into disfavor with Mrs. Anderson. Anderson 1s a strong propo- nent or the Equal Rights Amend- ment, but his staff is dominated by men . With the exception of Mrs. Ande rson, deputy press secretary Joana Johnston and Dee Frankfourth, who monitors the fight to get on state ballots, the re are no women in key staff positions. Anderson has s a id his ad- ministration would be composed or the best talent he can rind am ong Democrats, Republicans and independents. B EVOND THAT, Anderson declines lo na m e t hose who (;ARTll HAS ALSO headed winning cam paigns for New Jersey Gov. Brendan Byrne. Sen John llemz. R-Pa .. Sen Adlai Stevenson Jll, D-111 .. and Los An gel cs Mayo r Tom Bradley. Garth's rolc in Koch's cam· paign so infuriated his opponent. M ario C uomo, that Cuomo declared Koch to be l\Othing more than a Garth puppet. But after losing. Cuomo r an for lieutenant gover nor of New York. His campaign manager was Garth. Garth. who usually works only on behalf of liberal Democrats. h as s a i d h e wi ll h elp Republicans. but only those he considers progressive Among other key Anderson staff members a rc. -Mike MacLeod, campaijln manager. had been Anderson'::. a dmin istrative as!.1s t ant . Mac Leod. 37. worked as an aide to former Sm. Robert Grif· fin . R-Mich .. and as director of the Ripon ~iety. an oq~aniza­ tion of moderate a nd libera l R e publica ns who urged An· derson not to run as an indepen- dent. -Edward Coyle, 32, deputy campaign manager . wo rked for the 1972 presidential campaign of Edmund Muskie. After brief· ly working for vice presidential candidate Sargent Shriver. Coyle joined Rep. Morris Udall, D-Ariz .• and became staff direc- tor for his 1976 presidential cam· paign. NEXT: Hi3Gome Plan GOOD•BUYSU ·. 112 OFF Ollt lllROGUCIORY PROGRAM Say goodbye to summer with this summer's good-buy spe- cials. 50% off the price of HoTiday Spa Health Club's two-week introductory program. You'll enjoy a personalized sampler exercise program to tit your needs. You'll also have complete use of all facilities. And what facilities! Hot hydro-massage whirlpools. Finnish rock saunas, steam rooms, sun rooms, and at most clubs, in- door swimming pools and jogging. Plus progressive physical ' "" Wlrepl>Oto NATION Man's Drownin~ Li/ esp ring Faces Suit SEATILE <AP> -A multi-milllon dollar damage suit has been riled against the Lifespring Foundation fo trowing the death or a man who drowned while pa rticipating in a Lifespring self-a wa reness program. It is the second major suit filed aga ins t the San Rafa el -based foundation resulting from the death o~ som~ne in the pro~ram. A pre- vious s wt w.as settled out of court. RICHARD STANISLAW, a Seattle la wyer, said he filed the s uit in U.S. District Court in Portland. Ore .. in- volving the death of Arlie Barnett more than a year ago. St~nisla"'. said the Stayton, Ore .. man s family is seeking Sl.6 million from Lifespring in general damages. plus another SJ million in punitive damages . ty Superio r Cour t. involved an asthmatic woman Jn her 20s who went into a coma and died after a Li fespring training session. Thal suit claim ed Lifespring pe rsonnel had told her s he didn't need her asthma medicine. BARNETT DROWNED in the Willa mette River on Aug. 19, 1979. Stanisla w said Barnett was told lO swim the approximately quarter-mile stretch between John's Landing and Tow Island by Lifesprlng personnel. Stanislaw also represented the parents of the late Gail Renick of --:-=============:::::--Bellevue, Wash.. in a s uit which Lifes pnng settled recently for $450.000 KEKE ANDERSON Plays Central Role The lawyer says Barnett had taken several self-awa reness courses from the organization and was asked to name his fears. T he suit says Barnett had been afraid or s wimming since he nearly drowned in an accide nt when he was 8. The suit claims Barnett was told he should prove to himselfhecouldswim. T he la ws uit goes o n to say. Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work tor ou. That case. filed in K ing Coun- "L1fespring d id not investigate or ascert ain th e n ature o r Artie Barnett's swimming deficiency:· , l 1 J J Old fashioned , romantic dinner-dancing is back in style. Jml 1ht < .rJnd l'urt.igl· 1111\' 11llt·r--\0 11 Jn C.:\c.:n1ng 10 tompc.:tc: \\Ith '"ur fJ\11rt1t· mt·1111 '~" ~111 tinJJing llmm:r n111,1t t lq.:.1m t.mllldu lJhlc: ~·111ng,, lht· grJrnkur ol llJrning 1.1hlc....,1<k l""'-'" TI11: ull1ma1dv llanu:Jhk l>1llo.. l'o\\dl Trio i~ k"ltun:ll Th11r ... day lhrou~h Salurda' i tu l I. .1nll ~ih p1:.tllo othc.:r t'\'l.'nm~' SEAFOOD CONNOISSEURS ·1 hur-.da\'. l·ml:l~: ~a1urd1y a..,1,. tor our ··1-1\'IO).! Loh-.11-r · d1nlll"I lrt ,h .\l.110l' l11h,1c.·r-. rn 'It'"· d:im,.110\\ n 111 trum l~"h>n. 1)1,plJu·u l:J.'ll'mc.·r, rqoic .. t ' ~REGISTRY IN«Kl ~l.u..:Anhur tloull"\-:iJ<l ('"'1-t) -r;2.x--- RSPECI conditioning equipment like Dynamics: Nautilus; Paramount; and Universal.~ And that's not all! SAVE ON OTHER-PS TOO We offer different membership programs, all at a discount. So once you start getting in shape, you can stay in shape. Call or stop by for a free tour of a Holiday Spa Health Club. --rake advantage of your best opportunity to give Holiday Spa a try. These specials ar~ not available at our Torrance & West Los Angeles locations. · Al .. •-Clftt ...... ,.... ........ ,_ ..... . •f ............. a... .......... . , ......... ,., .......... __ ., 1 ......... . 1?11 W.tlMIMt., Ave, •t OotMft ... ,, C?to•l l ... N97 ' ... •: OBITUARIES ' .... M.8CI -''8"ak a a.•• la a COO· tl'ary.ICMlftdln1 wiab ol IOOdhack UMd ln the entertainment in4u1try. Pl1t• belonp to film producer BW Sacha. For the R~rd •re .. M0A0 M&MOltlAL. MO&l"tTAL NIMYTl!lttt.lt ....... ,.. Mr •ncl M" Oat• "'•"cescon, Huntl"910119Hcll. Doy M r ancl Mo Mk -I V•u911•n. Cost• MeY. llO't Mr •no Mrs O•nlet Mericle . Hun11n91.,.. BNcll. Doy ,.....It.-Mr •no Mrs Cra19 C0<-••n•. ....... , lnQton &..ct\, Doy Mf. -Mrs. ~ Gellli, Cottit Mes.. -llOyS Mr. -Mrs. Don.Md Ou1n1. Cottit MeM,llO'I IN. -Mf'L Mic,.... Hit-lrvlne .in ...... ,.- A Good Try Amputee's Ranch Fails PASO ROBLES (AP> -A lripJe amputee hu been forced to •Ive up a ranch M ettablisbed here to help ct.her handicapped people five yean a10. Jim 8nanott., 33, who won naUooal attenUon whe n he wu n•med "Mr. Handicapped Am.rica" lut year by Prel.ldent Carter, saJd tlnantlaJ conaJderatlona forced him to llhut Rancho K.imbaya. ··we helped about 200 handicapped persons here. but we jut1t couldn't mue It. It was strictly flnanclaJ," Brunotte 1ald. "It'• iou,Jt, but I've got to look f()f'Ward to aomettun1 bluer and better. Whatever the Lord wanu of me ... The Viet Nam vet. who lost both legs, an eye and part of hJJI arm when be drove over a land mine ln 1988. later proved he could still Jide horses and water skt ab well as anyone Brunot.le said he wlll continue to speak and perform before handJcapped audiences to convince them they can do almost a nything a non- handicapped person can do Freelnader Oust.ed M ACKINAC ISLAND. Mich. (APl -The keepers of a Madtinac Island inn have turned out a freeloading heron which prefers imported Per· tier water to lake waler and which squawked in displeasure if his fresh·caught whitefish dinner was served late. Amelia Musser. wife or the owner or the Grand Hotel. said she took the heron in when she saw the bird on the hotel's boardwalk. She thought it bad an injured wing and couldn't Oy. But her sympathy faded as the fink ky heron settled in and started hopping from chair to chair in the hotel. Thursday. August 28. 1980 DAIL y PILOT A 15 GOURMET MARKET fired of traffic jams? DGD't forget to check •llh as a._bout oar free home delivery service. MORNING FRESH PRODUCE Vine.Ripe Jumbo Honeydews : ..... lk lb. Ranch-fresh Beefsteak Tomatoes .. 39c lb. Xtra Fancy Lg. Pink Grapefruit .. 3 for 1.00 PRIME & TOP CHOICE BEEF aied al lea.st 30 days lo the peak of perfedion Delaney's Oven·Ready Meatloaf .... 1.69 lb. London Broll <Thick & Delicious> ....•. 2.98 lb. 8reat to marinate & barbeque Rath Cello Pak Bacon tone lb 1 •••••• 89c lb. We are happy to announce that Delaney's now has a gourmet catering department . From party plat~rs to a complete slt·down dinner. Call 673·5520. ask for Tom )lartin Closed Labor Day. Sept. l This ad efleclive Wed .. 8/27 Thru Tues. 9/Z DELANEY'S DELANEY BROS. SEAFOOD FRESH LOCAL SWORDRSH ...... 4.98 lb: Lg. Fresh Alaskan Salmon Flown in Fresh for Delaney's Whole or Half .................... 3.98 lb. Center Cut Steaks ................ 4.98 lb. LIQUOR DEPARTMENT Delaney's Private Label Chablis or Vin Rose <750 mm . . . . . 1.69 Bel Arbres Vineyards <750 mill Cabernet Sauvignon or Olardonnay 3.95 Early Times 0 .75 liter> •••••••••••.••.. 12.75 Bolla Wmes Soave or Trebbiano .................. 4.25 Scoresby Scotch <liter> 5.55 .......... qt 6.85 <,\II liquor prict•s do not includf' taxi Open Daily 9·7, Closed Sunday 2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 673-5520 Mr. -Mrs. l(ellfl MMihl. 8'"4bw ---------------------~~================~==================================!':==':° tsland, lloy ............ IN. •lld ~ W..,_r 2191.,. Coron.t def Ml!r. 91t1 ........ u.- Br•rr•riftlHes Sam Levinson, humorist and writer who appeared on several TV talk shows in the 1950s and 60s, is dead ot a heart attack at 68. Mr.-Mrs,~ynnv ... c11rw ..... ~ ............... fll~llllllllllllllllllllllll!!!lll!ll!!!!!l!!!!!!I!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~ Cost• MeMI. 9ir1 Mr -Mrs. _,_ Gr...C. lnrlne Deaths Elsewhere Qlrt IN. eftCI Mn. Aotlitoll tt.rle\f. Cosi. Mes.. Oirt Mr. •ncl Mn . Sttl)lten Feldm-.i Irvine. bo¥ ,..... . ., .... Mr. ol"CI Nin. Te.-ry ~ Cost.a Mew. 9lrt Mr. •nd INs. O•vlCI' Pln-erton ..__, BNcfl.""' ,..,...., .. -Mf. •ftCI Mu. R-rt W•rt>urlOtl, Irvine, 91'1 IN. end MA..-Al\fMH, CorON ' Gel M•r, lloY Mr. and Mrs. St~ Ry~. eosi. MeW, llO't Mr. -~Ten'\'~.Hvnt· l"910n Bffcll, lloV Mr. and Mr$. JOHPll LUP•~•. Hunt11>91on 8Nc?I, girt Mr. •nd Mn. o.niel Dru, Cos'- .. Mffe.llO'f G RAND RAPIDS , Mich. (AP> -: Jimmy Forrffl, 80, jazi sax · ophonist and composer best known for his 1950s rhythm-and-blues bit ·•Night Train," died Tuesday • BURBANK <AP> Animation master Fred ·•Tes" AYery, 72, creator of Daffy Duck a nd other famous car- toon characters. died T uesday of cancer. CULVER CITY <AP> -Polish soprano MUiu Korjas, 73, who• a ban· doned opera to make a single motion picture, died of a heart attaclr .. The star of "The Great Waltz was cast as Johann Strauss' mistress in Metro.Goldwyn-Mayer's 1938 mm based on the waltz composer's life. SAlttK*S JAMES R. BARR<>ffS. o.uMd _.., on AU9U5t n . "'° • 111e eosi. Mes. ~~1.i ~. He wn ll«n in Can.o• on Mllnll s, ,.,._ Hew-.• conlr.c·tor Mid Mfi.tn1>1ol'9d '"' • Y••rs .... iS MWYI..., by hh .. , .. Ellr"99'~ 1~en M.non B•rrons Of UfllN llffcll, CL _,.. Rutfl lt~tt of ...., Yon. f'rln• ,.,vlcet -r• field •t Ille B••lr Ber"'~'" & Tutlllll Westcllff Mort»MYof Cost.a~.......,,,, ••aoc LUCIEN P. BRACK. resident of ,_CllaOT ... S 1&1.llOAOWAT MOltTUAaT 110 8fo.dway eo.ta Mesa 642-9150 w:n• .. °" SMmtATUTMU ~CMAJlll 427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa 6*9371 Mr. •l'ICI INs. RlcMrd ScllolltK, HU..C ....... 8Nc?I. Doy .......... "" Mr. Md Mn. ~·'900' B<itkovk ll, Irvine. 911"1 Mr. •nd MrL ,,_ Cle•. HuflllllQIOll Be.te:ll, llOf Mr -MrL Nell $ftyder, lrvlfte, boy Ml. 9M ~ IC ..... Oout&itls.. Celi. MHlt.tlft Mr. Mid """-Oevlcl Corllett, GorON de1MM,tlo¥ ___.,,,"" Mr. ltfld -.. Akllotrd Sllepo~d '#fft"*"*'. olf1 Mr • ..,._,.,...,.,, Jur'411rs.. Colt.a Mew,...., ......... "" M r. •nO Mr~. Oou41l•s Glynn, FOUftlitln II.....,, Doy Mr. •nd MrL T ....... 8M-nH, CorON ClfJt Mar,~ IN. M>d ~ ~Ofm Grlttitll, C~ta Mew,9'f1 ....... .,.-Mr . ...nc! Mrs. O.v•dSltm, HuM~ Bee<ll, Doy Mr. •nd M o Wayne Mofftlt, Hullt lnQbl 8Ncll. Doy Mr. •nd Mrs. Rlcll•rd H.,vev. Irvine, 9'rt ...... a."" Mr. end Mrs. 0.rrell 0 ..,iets,on, ""nt'"-' 8Mtll. Doy SANTA ANA.-TIISTIM CO-UNITY HOll'tTAL AltllllltJ,1- M r •• ..., Mrs TltomH S••n90r, lr111ne, lloJ ......... "'"" Mr. eflCI Mn. JOM>Vlt•, lrYIM, Ql•I Mr ol"CI Mn. Bn.ce a.les. Founl.,n Velley, 91rl L..,na 8Ncll. C.. ,._ -o on AUCJUSI n . ,.., HI ~ A,.+.s. c.. Know n a \ '"" a ccomptlslled rest•ur•t~ur .,.., _, of Ille Otd 8rvuets ~-..,t In lAQUN BHc:ll, C•. from ~s to tfl'S. He Nd Ileen CIW4 Oe CU01olne lo\ Fr...c:e, ~. Los AnQe~. N.-.pwt BeKll, -~~-· Bffeh. tte Is _..._ by Ms wife Hel«I Md IOft ~ _,. of l~ 8-:h. Ca. ~of Owbli.. Burl•I wlll be ctlelltattd on s.t..,...y, A"llU\I JI, 1'90 at 10:00AM •I St. c:.t-IN of S.. c..tNltk Olurcll, L~ BeKtl, Ca. •ltll MoMl9N' H•«y T,_ offk~lft9. M<Con'nkk Mortl6a,..,, Ugune &Hell, Cllncton. CltOU CHA ALES ELBERT C.-OSS, eot •• resident of Huntlntton Be.tell, Ce. Pested _.,on TUMCSey, ~ 2'. ltlO •t tllt """'lfl9kwl Velley GM· H lescent Hos.plt.i. Mr. cross II.ad 11e8 a c..._w for !tie City of Hllllt· .....,. 8Mcft for in.,. -..._ f-of "'*'It• ~ ef HW!to ....... BMcft, Ca., Me4CNI H~k of Hemet, Ca., W\"lt HVWt!«k of R'-'t .. _.ea.. ........... ~ Te-Meteft.,....,. et lf'Vlftl, Teaer.. . Ir-lt"*-ef......,... TH .. Md C.ntt er-et Slolle ~ CL, MIO SWYIYlfll _.. 1l ll'MKlll~. 44 erut1Jl'9*Hl*wft ... , .,...1"Mt- ., ............ t sis-C.llle ... , ~ of Misabl, TtUL Fritftds "'9Y U11 fnlnl 12 -to t :OOPM ., ,....._,,..._._._ .. Pierce 8retflen ~· ~. ,,_ .. tenkes Md~ wlll t• '"-IA ...,....,. T-Piette ...,_rs Mtttllt' ~ .... .,.... dlrec"· '°"" SJMSlf, TATUM JOSE"" T. TATUM, -.~dent flf C•st• MeM. c.. PHMCI ••• ., on """''' tt. '9. ~ by Ills wife Oeretfl.,, Mii Peter T •lvm. t .,....._ TMI ... Oeft Telllm, I tl•P·•••elltert end S ttep • ... ~ .......... -"""'-Jetk TeMll. ,___. ..... fletd on Prt. .... ,,_.... ... ,. .. 2:0WM .... Peclflc v._ Menuu, Clle~t. Private ...._... .. Pecttk View MtM•rl•I Perk. Pacific VI•• Mwtllery, ....... '-".-..cwt. vtOl\UI FltANOSC.A VID.\LES, egt "· ,.._ ................ c... p--...., .... _ ......... n •..... -........... ,._ .. """'" ... ........ .._. .................. ............. WEIEJI CllAICOAL KEm.E Model 171001. Blaek. Reg. 54.99 45.88 31E.F STDM8E UlllT • Model fl1JA.33. 9.88 S01 lo. lfO.OOIO Opett: "'°"· mru Ftl. 9 to 9 Sal. a to e sun. 9 to s ,. Y8lll CHGICE SIP IOI Of UPOU ... D -A 8UI OISEWLf 18 oz. ooum_. Reg. 3.99 3'1C6'8". 2.98 Reg. SUB to 78.88. 48.88 llKE BACK PACK Model~. Reg. 7.99 4.88 ·PEPSI. DIET PEPSI OR MOlllTAIN DEW 2 lrtrebOnle 98Cea. KINGSFORD CHARCOAL BRIQUETS 101b.bag Reg. 2.29 l.88 SALE DATES: Aug. 29 thru Sept. 1 1101 Garden Grove lfvd. 137.1171 or IN •n Ot#I: Mon, tl1r11 Ft/. 8 to 9 Sit. 8 to 8 Sun. I to 4 f 0 Q 324 Welt Kat.Ila 917-1224 Open: Mon. thru Fri. 1:30 to 6 Sat. and Sun. 9 to 8 • Al• DAILY PU.OT . . -.. ., .. AWAIT JUDGE'S DECISION David and Dorothy Dlealng -· . . . . .... NAT ION Retarded Parents Want Baby Back ~ EAST DETROIT. Mlch CAP> - Stephanie Di•ln1 waa three monlha old when pc>Uce found her, UoDI in an Eaat De\roll houae ••HPl for • watchful dot Her parenu. both mer>· tally retarded. had •on• toad nUat ap. polntment Tht ch.lid. 1ulferln1 from malnutrl· Uon, wu ordered placed In tho care of btr pat~rn•l 1randmother That WH 11 tnontl'IJ 110. ON WEDNE8DA Y, David and Dorothy Dll'liln" kC&lt unother ap· polntmcnl They went to court to ask • Judie to l(lvc them back their dauahter 1lon1 with • chance to prove themtcel vea us purenlS Beforo the hearing. their attorney. John Devera Jr .. told a reporter · 'They'r drald that Stephanie d<>t'tcn 't know them. that they will be 1ilran1e~ an h~r Ille They have become very c ncerned about the time Stt.>phame as been out of their home ·· In a l$-mlnute Juvenile court meet· ang, Macomb County Probate Judge Robert Spi er extended the hearing an additional 90 days. He said a decision on Stephanie's custody would be is· sued when the Dlesangs have com· pleted an Ame rican Red Cross chlld 'I care couru and resolve a diApute with tbeir landJord. DEVEL" ~A.ID THE Dlealngs have been withholding rent because of the landlord's alleged refusal to make re· pairs on their rented house. ·'The court and the Dlealn.cs are very happy that somebody finally has come up with {l program to serve their needs." Devers said. Last October. Spier removed the child from the Oiesings' care on a negligence charge . Officers foWld the child after the Dieslngs' deptiat. 'Wor· ried when he saw his patients arrive together but without their baby. in· quired of her whereabouts. Told she was home.· freshly diapered and guarded by the family dog, he alert· ed police. THE DIESINGS'CASE has tii ghlighted the issue of the rights of retarded citizens. who are entering everyday society in ever increasing numbers: Michigan's '"Mainstream· ing" of developme ntally disabled persons has caused a drop in popula· lion at institutions from 12.515 in June L966 to 4.887 in June 1980. ·'There's a -genera l assumption that retarded people can't raise a .. HAR&Oll 8lV0 COSTA MES A ramily. I think that's simply not true." said Terry Hunt, assistant ex· ecutive director of the Michigan As· sociation for R~tarded Citizens. Ne vertheless. the experts also agree that r,tarded people need help to learn proper c hild care pro- cedures. And Devers said that help was hard to find -the available classes don't address the most or· dinary procedures which retarded in· dlviduals must master. "We're talking about getting <Rlwn to basic parenting skills." said Bob Slaine of Life Consultants Inc.. a Macomb County agency that pro·. vides services to the mentally re- tarded. "There's no type of cur- riculum or prog ram to educate the developmentally disabled on parent-ing." A SOLUTION WAS fo und with a R e d Cross babysi t ting course normally aimed at youngsters aged 9· 11. It covers such matters as nutn· lion. hygiene. cooking end home safe· ty. says Red Cross spokeswoman Jane Reschke . Both David. 30. and Dorothy, 37 , spent much of their lives in state in· stit utions and other supervised facilities for the mentally retarded. They left state supervlslon In 1976. On Christmas Eve of that year they married. Each bu held jobs in the past but they are on public assistance now. s1'ys Devers. The Dlesings declined to be interviewed. STEPH AN I E RECENTLY celebrated her first birthday. Her latest checkup indicated she was growing normally and was ahead or her age group mentally. Since Oc- tober, she has been living two miles away from her parents -at the home of David's mother , Bernice Ferry. . In March, Spier ordered the Dies· mgs to take pa renting classes and r uled that they could visit Stephanie "as often as can be worked out" to re-establish family bonds. . :"~cording . to Devers. Mrs. Ferry m1t1ally resisted working with the couple he said the Diesings told him she had opposed their decision to have a child but that their visits with Stephanie are now averaging abo ut one a week. "They've begun to re-establish con· t~ct wtth the child ~nd there's begin- ning to be a meanmgful interplay." he said. ~~SE.~~ L.cdi~ CAtoKfS 89 ' I · NSI DE: •Movies •Stocks s ~--··-T.·1ev~•s•~·-·~·•.u•~•niss ................... ~ ........ ~------....... ._.;;::;~'DD. _,.. __ i __ s ________ ... .. llU'lday,AUQuet28, 1te0 OAIL'T PILOT r.= .- ·Pop Q-Gives Insight to QBs ..... •il•'8A••••n 1. TN blll 11 on tht »YMd llM. Whet ll yeur fevort .. cell on third end seven with tN score tied in the tout9'. cauert«? 12. If I tNtd a chOlce, f'd be at my fa¥Orlte vacation site right rta#~es b) no • Cr) ...... s lb.tie._ 13. Does twwtng two c..,..,.. quartertaKICs cause a split in teem &a11tv? a) yes b) no 9,.,..W~ . ~7. 1 would hate to be In coach R•Y Mal=~·s s~ next Monday when he has to decide betwieen one of us :~es b) no It's Sink Or SwiID ~For Surf It's sink or swim time for the California Surf. After blowing a late-season le ad to finish second in the American Conference West Division, the Surf now finds itsell faced with the problem of defeating a team that has twice won decisions over it during the regular season. The Surf l\osts the Fort Lauderdale StrOcers in the first leg of the American Conference (NASL) quarterfmals tonight at Anaheim Stadium beginning at 7:30. BUT THE TASK is a tough one. Fort Lauderdale bolds a 3-2 victory over tbe Surf early in the se.uon and a 2· 1 decision early ~ tb.i.a montb in the Florida city. r A Jou at home tonight could 1 be eo.t1)' to Coach Peter Wall's ' Hade~ Ferraganw Take Pen in Hand By JORN SEYANO Of ... ,,. ......... Pat Haden vs. Vince Ferragamo. If you're Uke every°(Jne else, including the two partici· pant.a. you're tired or bearing about their battle by DOW. Thelr story is like a scratch on a record. BADEN. THE INCUMBENT. i.a the current leader or tbe quarterback derby solely because it's Coach Ray Malavul's policy to return injured starters to their pre- vious status, or at least keep them there untll they work themselves out of a starting spot -which Haden hasn't done yet. Ferragamo, on the other band, has become the darling of Anaheim fans since be led tbe Rams to their first Super Bowl in history in 1979. Although the final evaluation for these two will come Saturday night against San Diego, another test was taken by ~e two combatants earlier in the week. Tt>e test was provided by tbe Dally Pilot and it offered the quarte__libacks an alternative to what bas been an end· less stream of one boring interview after another during training camp, with virtually the same questions asked each time. THE TEST, ALTHOUGH it featured many repetitious questions often asked by reporters. gave the two parties an opportunity to display their personalities .. andtbeydld. they d.Jd. Both demonstrated a humorous side to what has been a serious battle in camp. There's really no need to get into the exam itself. as it's pretty self explanatory. What the test does provide. however, is a chance for the fans to see Haden and Ferragamo in a different light, one removed from the usual stereotype interview. Just to update. so you'll have the numbers in front of you. Haden. in his six quarters or work, has completed 32 of 60 passes (53.3 percent> for 474 yards and one touchdown. He has yet to be intercepted. FERRAGAMO, DUR~G the same length of time, has tossed 26 completions in 45 attempts for 434 yards and five TDs. He has been intercepted once. or course. with almost every written test these days there is also an oral exam, too -and this one was no excep· lion. "I sure hope I pass." Haden said with a s mile. with an obvious allusion to the double meaning of his statement. "Seriously, all I want to do is play my best and let the cards fall as they may," he added. "I feel in a good posi- tion right now and I don't want to make any mistakes.'' One mistake Haden admitted he baa...made is putting too much emphasis on the battle over who's No. 1. .. WHEN YOU DO THAT you tend to lose sight: of the other 10 players on offense." he says. ·'The nature of the game is team oriented and this type of thing makes you lose sight of that. · .. If I complete 10 of lS passes, people say 'Gee, that's great.' But they don't realize the reason l did that is because I bad people blocking well for me. or my receivers ran the right routes or they made great catches." Ferragamo. who has been cast as the underdog, feels he's more than proven his worth. "I've proven that I can play," says the Italian. "I knew this thing would be competitive. Whatever evalua- tion is left will be done by Malavasi and the Rams." ~- OK. Quiet please. The test will now begin. t'lleee E'er1 .... _,.A..._,• 1. The ball Is on the SO-yard line. What is your favor:•e call on third and •~ with the score tied In the fourth quarter? ~r "'Sll>s Decp ZQJU ··i-" 2.;NY ~k. as som~nd, lead this team to tM WHtem OMslcwt tltle? a> ye~ 3. TI. ~k controversy l~nsettllng bl un. ..healthy 4. If you wer. to~ up the~~hl~~le woo Id vou be: a) happy b> ref~ d upeiet d ) blttec::Y'appy for the other guy f} all of the~· s. : woald like rnv children to grow up to be: a> lawyers b) doctors c > quarterbacks d) none of the above A~1'ittar, 1'~•.:t 11J: la. 7. Wauld . .!M.!! I:; only fOgfcal alternative for the No, 2 flnlsher~es b> no I. If I c.outd start all over again. I mloht have forgotten tootbllff And played -r-.e.. lnste~. That way I wouldn't belnlhJtmMS. 7 9 . The quarterback I've s1udied and admired most is: T•Mf!f ~ 10. In terms of crowd approval, Is It_~-being the Quarterback of the Los A~ Rams? a).y~ 11 . The~erback conb'OVersy has creat.ct undue pres· sure: al y'C../'o 12. If 1~ a choice, I'd be at mv favorite vacation site right nowC)Nes bl no 13. Does ~g two capable quarterbacks c.use a split 1n team unity C/'s bl no 14 . Will there be sec~si~ the players and the media regardless of who's No. 't/"'es b) no ls. The present quarterback sltua~~_the touohest ob-s tac le of my professl9ftcJI career: a> ye(./" 16. My favorite TV show Is: 11tAfl'EB ;5'4'AJ. 17. I would hate to be In Coech Rev Malavasl's~ next Monday when he has to deelde betwHn one of us· a> es b) no 18. My main goal fOf' the 1980 season Is: =-to WttJ -fk $.st.cA. ~ 19. In 2S words or less, e)Cplain why ~ Mould be the Rams• .start~uarterback: IM ~:!,T fi,c.. Tb.~ .. Cy Young (Carlton) Nips LA Dell¥ "" ...... .., lttdl9rll ic.... P HILADELPHIA (AP) - Philadelphia Phillies Manager Dallas Green isn't sure whether his team will beat Pittsburgh and Moot.real for the National League East title, but he's already awarded his league's Cy Young Award to Steve Carlton. Carlton beat the Dodgers, 4-3. Wednesday night for his 20th victory against seven losses, t.be first NL pitcher to reach t.be 20·victory plateau. Steve Stone already bas won 21 in the American League. "I DON'T think there is any qu~tioo of Carlton winning the Cy Young." said Green. "Just look at bis innings pitched (238); his strikeouts (232): what he's meant to this team. I don't think there is anybody close.•• claarces. Tbe two teams will gseet apin Sunday night in Fort Lauderdale and ii a split ensues, a 30-mbmte mini-game will be pla1ed after tbe aecond C90t.eat. LAGUNA 8UCH'8 RICK lalTHER INSPECTS HIS RACE CAR BEFORE QUALIFYING AT ONTARIO FOR CAL 500. I The closest pursuers are Jim Bibby of the Pirates and Jerey Reuss of the Dodgers, each ~ 15-4 records. Wall wlll be sending bis hitbelt searing trio of Laurie i Abralllama, Craig Allen and Stne lloJers to tbe front line for .......... outing. Abrahams -fba'alllMI IM regular aeuoo with • 17 1cm. and 15 assilta. for 49 pabu. AU• MANAGED 25 polnts oa u. .-. • se.• aullta wldle ..,..., • Alnerican., bas u ........ tbree uatata for 19 ........ ...,,.. ... tbe 8leGDd IMdlll .... 'IDOlll tbe D.tive ~A• R'kW ID tbe NAIL. 'fte aawa are led br Teaftlo =---= .:-:...:: .............. . c..... tbe .. adtnc ..... wt11aw,... .. 1 ...... ,.. ............ tbe .... .. ..................... •UINlladll= n....-..a1ao ~-.... Weller from tM ..._ ...,ca fit ... neMlr tD = ................. ... ~ , ., ....... ... M•ther Eseapes Shoestring Dream of_ Winning <Auld, IJerome a Rea/,ity tbe belt owners around. Re llD't afraid to spend money to win. .. I've driven for A. J. Foyt and for Jim Wright in top..Alpt opera&m but moat of the otben have been rua oa a aboeltriq. •'Tbll Ume. I have a C!U' tbat tbe1 will Jet me nee all day. J'oyt•1 erew called me in and tbat wu it after a fn lapl." •tnma WILL BB &1JNJQNG ln the California SOO at Ontario Motor Speed-., oa SUnda.Y ad ii 1oNtn1 for a IOOd atart-bal spot GD tbe pid. ' ••we w tbe ear out there IMt week to teat tt ad bit m .t mu. per bour, .. 11..U.. ..,.. 11We oaly ru U tape. tblD IMcled It up md came home. I'm boplDt to aet la tbe ftnt t1ne·rows but NdatlceO.y, tb•t ~llotr 1ubmarlae CJola11a1 Jlat.bll d'• cm') WW be bani IO beat. 110ap De lllm aad tbe u ....... otben ot tbat caliber ruD\ quallt~• moton 1DC1 __,. for UM r.aee. We'U do tbe ......... bat our CU' is cml1 a Mml lroaad .._..machine ... Muther'• best ftDiab was eighth place at lndJeupoUa. Tben two years qo, he quit racln1 to wort ID eomtruc:tion. .. , ~didn't have uy cboice in the matter," be says ... Tbe youac drivers we.re emntnc ..., and buytq their rides. I WU ~ to drive .t Ontario that rut and two ween after I aiped, a young 1u.y came aloa1 and 1ave tbe owner $'10.000 md tllie ride WU bis. Tbat'I wbell I weat to wort u a labonr." •Vl"BE& DIDN'T l'OaGBT about rac· IDI ud turned to bel&>lnl ID tbe 1....,e at nilbt wbm be WU thl'OQlb with bia COD• ttructlla job. ''I wat ......... wortial cm tbe cw oae Dlcbt wbm Jack Lana came alGD8 and uked ti I .-.cl to drive it. You lmow wbat 1 Nici and here we are ... Tbe ear llutber wW drive at Ontario la a new oae to blm, a PC7. "I loft tbia car and I tblDk we have It all IOl'ted out and r.edY <lee WltJ'l'lda, •• Bl> Carlton never talks with ta.e reporters wbo crowd the ~ ing room aft.er the game, but be did 10 on a post-game radio show Wednelda.y night. • ''I bad some problems with my lower back tonilht. but 1 .. able to crank it up ... be said. • · CAaLTON. WBO didn't elaborate on the back problel9. was asked to compare thla HUGG with 1112. tbe year le posted • %1-10 record for tile .. place PbWlel and woa hJa ft.II& of two c; Y-s Awardl, liviD ~;.·:--=·~~·,. •••• " .lolt IOIDfJtblq oil .., futball," ltdmttted &be .. ,.... old left-bander. "But . N say l'mn,bt tberewtua 11'12. ~ ··1 wmt tbrwlh that wbote aea•on wltb tbree pltcbea. ·I doD't M"8 ta. ...... coatrol, ... I'm nat M emwlstat to apalt. But 1111 ,...... Md curve aie ript tbere, .. Carttoa •aid. .. Carttoa pMcbed elabt lDD1n& lifted for a pADeb bltter ID tie wbmtq ellbth·bmbla rally. ,.. McGraw ftD1IW for Illa 16 save. r DAil Y P\L.OT A Cap1ute ~ '""" Hie Wond of lport1 Ovett Shatters Hi1 Own Mile Record -3:32.l ,.,.._AP.,....._ uln•a<ly hohb th.-world n"COl'd for the mile, ha BONN. Wtst Germany • ue Ov U , who m brokt>n the metric mile f'f'cord ht 1'hared prev10UI· ly wnh fttllo• Briton Seba Uan Coe Ovett led 11 succt-s f\11 lhrt.'t mun assault b re Monday Ofl the t.50C>-meter m11rk of 3 nunul~. 32.l aecondl that hC' 11nd Coe held Jolnlly Ovett. aided by a 'btlsttr1na early p1ce. wu clocked m ' 3 31 4 West German Thomas Wt sln•hage 1od llarold Hudak also were under the previous muk lo 3 31 6 un<1 3. 32. 0. respect! vely. The 24-year old Ovett let Wenlnthage set \he f8St pace. went ahead with about 500 meters to 10 and hel4 olt the West Germans in the race to the tape. Afterwards. Ovetl credited Wesslnghage for the record. saying he "is the best pacesetter for me." Ovett. who rarely spew to report.en, had said in ad· vance that he intended to io tor a record. and the absence d Coe apparentlr helped his effort. ··1 could start here without any stress," he said. Wessingbage and Hudak both missed the 1980 Olympics because West Germany boycotted lhe Moacow Games. and Coe beat Ovell in the l,500-meter final ln 3:38,4, breaking Ovett 's winning streak at 43. ,.....------q..,., et dw Da11 ------. Joe Morgaa of the Houston Astroe In a telegra m lo WilJle Stargell when the Pittsburgh s lugger was honored with a "day" at 'three Rivers Stadium: "Some peopl e are only superstars statistically. but you are a .400 hiller as a person. When I grow up, 1 want to be just like you." .,...., f Si~ ~,.,,. at Eifllat SI raiglal Kansas City's Wlllle Alllea• knocked in two Iii runs with a double and a sacrifice fly and Geor1e Brett bed a s ingle in three times at bat, dropping his average ooe point to .406. as the Royals defeat- ed Milwaukee, 5-4, in A.merlcan League baseball action Wed- nesday. "Brett wu hlt by a pitch by loser Paul Mltcbell in the rirst inning, then singled In the third ror hia eighth hit in his last eight official appearances. The streak ended in the fifth whe n he reac hed first on an error AIKENS . . Lamar Johnson, who earlier drove in two runs with a single, stn1Jed home the winning run in the 14th inning as the Chicago White Sox be.at Detroit. 3-2 ... Alfredo Grtma's two-run triple keyed a three·r un fourth inning that carried Toronto past Texas, 6-4 ... AJaa Ban- nister knocked in two runs with a single and a double to power Cleveland to a 4-1 victory over Minnesota ... In the Na- tional League, John Martin pitched seven strong iMings in relief during his major league debut and Ken Reitz slammed a three-run double lo cap a fi ve-run rally as St. Louis defeated Houston. 10-2 ... Bob Homer drove in fi ve runs with a homer and a dou· ble as Atlanta extended its winning streak to five games with a 7-4 triumph over Pillsburgh . . Darrell Evans singled home a fourt:h·inning run and Ed Whitson combined with re· liever Gret Minton on a two.hitter as San Francisco stopped Montreal. l·O in a game delayed almost two hours by rain . . Jeny Mwnphrey had three hits and scored the go·ahead run and Dave Winfield contributed a home run to help San Diego to a 4·1 victory over the New York Mets . . Ri ght· hander David Palmer, on the disabled list since July 21. was reinstated by Montreal . Slugger Jack Clark was placed on the l~day disabled list by san Francisco after new X·rays confirmed be has a fractured left hand. .-------Bcu~ball Toda11 ------.. On this date in baseball in 1951 : The New York Giants lost to the Pittsburgh Pirates 2-0. It broke a 16-game Giant winning streak that enabled Leo Durocher's club to reduce Brooklyn's NL lead from 131h to 6 games, en route to the "Miracle of Coogan's Bluff." · Today's Birthdays New York Yank ees outfielder Lou PinieUa is 37 . Boston Red Sox pitcher Mike Torrez is 34 . Yankees pitcher Ron Guidry is 30. New York Mets outfield er Joel Youngblood is 29. George Brett tor Prnfdnat? l\ANSAS CITY Mo. -Jimmy Carter, Ronald • Reagan and John Anderson have a new competitor for the nation's top office -~rge Brett of the Kansas City Royals. Thousands of "George Brett for President" bumper stickers are circulating the Kansas City area, with more roll· iDg off the press. Brett, the Royals third baseman who was hitting .407 as of Wednesday, approved the stickers to raise money for a baseball scholarship fund at a local junior college. Some 12,000 bumper stickers were distributed to depart- ment stores, sporting goods shops and other retailers last weel. Another 7,000 were set for distribution Friday. • "It's just unbelievable," said Ron Mears, a speciality ad- vertising salesman who got tbe brain.storm. "I'm just com· pletely overwhelmed the way this tb1na bas taken off." About 25 cent.a or each sticker safe will go to a baseball scholarship in Brett's name at Kans as City, Kan., Communi- ty College. Mean ii the chairman of the college's board or trustees. The stickers carry a suggested retail price of $1.50. Eleven $250 scholarships have been set up, with two to be awarded each year. .,eedc,• c .. t1lfle 11 l s l•procl119 Bill Veeck, president of the Chicago White • Sox, bM been moved out or the intensive care unll and ia listed ln &ood condition at an llUnoia boepltal, wbere be 1a receiving inhalation therapy for respirator>"Problema ... Place-kicker llm Tuner, the aeeond-•••tin1 seorer in National Football League hiltory bu cleared waivers, and Denver aaya it will attempt to re: alp blm. By clearin1 walven, Turner bu become a free aaent. • • Veteran PittabW'lb Steelen KUaJ'd GerrJ II.WU. pJaffd GD waivers earlier tii1a week, bas been claimed by Clfte1-l ... Tbe Bdalo Billa battle tbe Houston Oilen tn tbe Altaadome tmdPt la tbe final ublbitlon tune-..p for both teama ••• Nineteen three-year-old colt.a are entered in . S.turdQ'• HambJetonlan, the premier troWnc cluaJc 1n the eouatr)', at Du Quoin, Ill .... The Southern California ..... cl tM IActies Prol•kleal Basketball Aaaoclatloll 1lped tu MeOGd player. C..1 •eGeltee Bld1, a 5-9 forward out of die University of Arbnua. She join1 former coll•I• teamm•t• Bele• H•1•H on the Breese ..._ .•. 11le Major Indoor Soccw IMlue completed tta npensl1m for tbe ...._ •• tbtrd Muon witb the addttkln of die Claleqe ..,...__ . NeeW•~•Nle 'l "1,....-u.s.o,...-...u_:•p.• .. Cb...aa. M19t 811...U -Mlell at Baltlmon, •:• p.m., UPC(ftl): SPORTS BRE~K I BASEBALL I MOTOR ~PORTS H ead F irst Di1,~e to Saft•t !I Phil adelpttia's Lonnie Smith dives head first back into first base to beat a pickoff throw attempt to the Dodgers' Steve Garvey. The Phillies won. 4·3. See story on Page Bl The Sto~y Veeck Wanted Bushed White Sox Ou;ne.r Weill Out on Limb for a Strange r ~~~.~!,~~ .. ~ By now it's old news that Bill Veeck has lost the Chicago White Sox: his team wa!) sold last week. and a lreadv the oaoer!-. have been filWd with tributes written &bout Vecck bysporlswriters who know him well I have never met Bill Veeek. Like everY. one else. I was aware of his impeccable reputation for decency and class. but l have never had the chance to shake his hand . Last May. though, something h<1p- pened. I didn't write about it at the time. because Veeck didn't want me to. But now -because it looks as if Veeck will be disappearing from the nation al scene -I want to do it. It w~ May Z7. a Tuesday. I had written a column about a 35-year-0ld man who had four children -boys 15. 14 and 10, and a girl seven. His wife had left rum. and eight months earlier he had lost his fob. Every day since then. he had looked ro~ wo rk. There were no jobs. The gas had been shut off in hls apartment: he and his children had no bot waler. and could not bathe. The man told me. in the fl attest and sad- dest of voices. that he had decided to start committing crimes to feed his family. "l never committed a criminal act in my life." he sald. "I never even thought about it. But now I'm starting to see it in a dif· ferent light. I'm starting to think that most people out there robbing are probably peo- ple just like you and me. They just can't see any other way out. "God knows that I don't want to hurt anyone. I wouldn't take money from an in- nocent person on the street. Uke those thugs and bums. But now I can understand what goes through a man's mind when he goes into a grocery store or a bank and s ays. 'This is a stickup.• That pe rson knows that he doesn't have anything to look forward to. He's doing it because he has to." It was a story that belonged in another country. in another century. But it was lwppcmng in the ceonom1c environment of th\.' United ~tales in 1980. Tlrnl morning. the phone didn't ')lop ringing PC'oplc had read the column, and wa nted lo help. t-:n·n cu ller offe rl•d to send moncv. J\nd t11 1·vcr·y c·allcr. I (•xplained the.it the man COMMENTARY \\as not looking for <1 handout. The gift!> wou ld be gone in a few weeks . Wh at he wanted was a JOb Could the calle r a~k around and !-.l'C 1f there was a JOb for the man" That took .the callers by surprise. There '"ere no JObs I became resigned to 1l as I answered the phone all morning: This was another case of a newspaper column that would stir people's emotions for a few hours. and result in absolutely no change in lhc li fe of a man m trouble Around noon. the phone ran~ again ''This is 8111 Vcc<'k ." the caJler said We harl never ,;pokcn before. Vecck got Lo the point immediate ly. Jenkins Hot BRAMPTON. Ontar io <AP> -Ferguson .Jenkins of the Texas Rangers; who ap. peared in court Wednesday charged with possession of drugs. said the club took the easy way out when it removed him from the pitching rotation Tuesday. Jenkins said he had wanted to pitch and was ready. "I know so." he replied when asked if he would have been able to give his best ef. fort. "I've been pitching all my life -I know what pressure is." Bob Fishel. assistant to the American League President Lee MacPhail. had said MacPhai l recommended that Jenkins not be used Tuesday against the Blue Jays because it was felt he would have been facing enormous pressure in view or the situation. .. Is this ll'lla \\tlltn~ to work'!" he ~aid l said I bd11.:v1·d he"'<•:-. • • "Well. l'H• l!ol a b1~ old ballpark out here-." \'('p('k SJHi. "I ('OUld probably U!'>l' anothf'r han<l 111 help kCl'P thing!> up. It·.., JUSt mu1111.d l.1bor out 1f \\i.lllb \\ork "h~ don 't ~ou ..,t·nd him oul her(' an1I let us talk to him · 1 said I woulll l·all th1· m.m right away. Hut I \\t111d1·r1·cl :-.oml·tl11111.! t\11 lh1· uth<«r callers h.1d bl·c·n full of :-.) mp:1lh )', hut nu nnc had b<'<'n "'illtng to giv<' the man a t ham•t• .11 ,1 111h \\ h' ",1.., \'('1·ek drnng 11 ·• "Oh, I \.\.t'nl through lhl· Dl·p n.•-.s1on ." Veeck s:iul "l 'n· :-.1·1·n thl'> hdorl' Somet1mc•s wlwn .1 fl'llow 1!-. m t rouhle you wanllo)!oouton41 hmhforh1m." I called the m:Jn. I told him not to get his '1opcs up. but the.it 1f hl' \H•nt out to Comis key Park. there might be the .. possibility of a 1ob for him. The n ''>l of \ hl· wt>ck v.enl b:,. 1 work every !::>Unda~ . .ind so on lht• following Sun- day I was m 111~· oflll'1'. writing a column I got a 1·all frum tht· Sl·tun\y dc·o.;k The man \\as dnwnst:urs. he• wanted to SC'C me Ht• 1·;rnw up Hl' v. .1~ n1.:r vous and ..ipologl'lll. about taking my time. 111• w<1~ J big man \\tlh thl' :-.oftest of voices. "I )USI \\<IO\l'l\ tu lhank )OU." he :.aid 'I "antt'll 111 do 1t in person. I would hLivc been h1·r t· '>l>Oncr. but when I got out to Com1s k•·\ P;1rk they hired me n ghl away, a nd 1·,1' lw1·11 \\ ork1ng 1 ht•n· cvt•r smt·e." I saul th;1 \ I \\as glad tn hear the news. but th.11 I wasn 't lhf• person to thank. 1 write nt•w:;papl•r columns all the time and nothinJ.! happen!\. The person who mat· tcred W<l!-. Hill V<•cck. The man beg.Jn tu cry. "I'm sorry to be ltke tht!-. ... he said. "But l was Just out of hope. und 1l looked like nobody in the world c:Jr<.'d, and then this happened. It's saved my life and the life of my family. I'll never forget that somebody was willing to give ml• a chance. I didn't know that peo- p le li ke Mr. Vee c k really existed anymorl.'." Neither did J. I said. Neither did I. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ F ro111 P age B I MUTHER ... to go. I feel we will be real com· petitive. The year hasn't been the best for the Laguna Beach resident and in his last outing at Watkins Glen, he was leading the race when he went orr the course and ~rashed. At Indy, he was on the third ap of his qualllying run when a :ront roll bar broke and be went spinning 31h times down the track and didn't get another chance. FOa AN OWNE• like Lang, it is impossible to meet expenses but he enjoys racing and ts pay- ing Muther a salary in adWtion to the customary 40 percent or the prize money he wins. "This guy (Lang)· bas put in close to a million dollars ln rac· ing this year." Muther says. "He paid $75,000 for tile PC1 and another $45,000 for the motor plus $15,000 'to make it a good en1tne. That's a total of $135,000 for the one car." ' One big reason why Muther iJ so enthusiasUc about the Ontario race la \be fact that be baa a new mechanic. John Barn•. "He bu tbe car wo~ real well. He's cban1ed tt arOund and hu tt set l1lbt for &be track at Ontario. 'lbat will really belp." Wlfe MU"lba la a timer ill t.M Pltl for the Lani operation and admlta sbe la very, very aervouadurf.DI a r8Ce. ••J ICON to Qep m'I aWad otf of other Udllo," lbe H)'I. "At Mld-Oblo, I didn't Me tbe wreck wlaen be and Ille' Meara t.aqled. But I did ... bbD I'll out of tbe ear oa • mall TV Ill and be looked plenl1 Glad. HI Juta~otf. Bmeball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division w L Pd. KnnsasCily 83 44 .654 Oakland 65 62 .512 Texas 62 64 .492 Chicago 53 70 .431 Minnesota 55 73 .430 Aagels 49 75 .ns Seattle 46 79 .368 East Division New York 75 50 .600 Baltimore 74 50 .597 Boston 66 56 .541 Detroit 65 59 .524 Cleveland 65 6-0 .520 Milwaukee 67 62 .519 Toronto 52 73 .416 ........y··~ TorDnto6, Tuu• C .. wl•rod •. Mlnnel01& 1 Cllk -oc> l. OetroU 2 (14 ln"lfl9l I K ... sa, Cltv s. Mllw.UlcM. Only~KM<IUled T.Uy'I~ GB 18 201,it 28 281,it 32~ 36 Ma 71,it 91,it 10 10 23 A ..... ILAAodll M l •I 8•111~ ll'fll,_ 1Ml,n MllllllSOI• ( J«kton 1_. I •1 ToniMO I l(ucw H I 0.1<.-CMcc.ltylO.ll)ellkKto<\IR......,),n MC~ CSorenlOll ,_., •t o.trolt IF'ldrtdl O.tl ·" s .. 11 .. (8Nltt.•-111 •t NtwYorlt (Mayll·Sl.n TeusCFl9U9f'oeJ.7) MIC-City COM•>-71, ft O!tly..,..tc!IMUltd NA'nONAL LEAGUE West Division w L Pct. GB Houston 71 55 .563 Dodcen 61 57 .5'8 2 Cincinnati 67 59 .532 4 Atlanta 63 63 .500 8 San Francisco 63 63 .500 8 Sau Diego 53 74 .417 181~ Eut Division Pittsburgh 70 57 .551 Montreal 69 57 .548 1,; Philadelphia 66 58 .532 2'-'l New York 58 58 .46-0 ll'h St.Louis 55 69 .444 13Ma Chicago 50 74 .403 181h T....,.10- Houftoft CNllllll.,.1-41-1 Clliugo (LA"'P ICMI CIMlfwltl (~•SI •I Pltuouro11 IAl'!Odffl 4-11.n All ..... (Ale ..... U•I •I SI. LoulJ IVu00<11<t\ 10.tl," O!lty ,_ SCNduled. IT'S I AIWICK DATSUN'S 8th ANNIVERSARY C OME &SH OUITAG SPICIALS TESTDRIVI A DATSUN I A.IWICllWU GIYEYOU THI SHIU .OFF .. $ IACI ... -. • hL 1.29' FOR HAPPY MOTORING SMP ·Fix-a-Flat ... " ... ""'*' ............... Mrta. u ... 1.29 •Oil TREATMENT (15 oz.) •GAS TREATMENT (12 oz.) for 1 Beller Running Automobile YOUI CHOICE MOTOR OIL 30WT. 79c QT. E=m MOTOR OIL CARBURETOR CLEANER Regular cluning wlll keep_ lht PCV vllve funclionlng - properly al all llmes. LEE Oil FILTERS MAXI-FILTERS Popular Sizes To Fii Most Cars And Trucks. ~~MULTI-PURPOSE PRESSURE WASHER and SPRAYER 6.99 2.99 ... n·s Nkl lllvlftt 111 1e1t...itc Cir wash In YoVr twn driveway_ only bettlt. ••• JET X SUDS Super concentrated all purpose cluner 1 QT. DURO MUFFLER & TAILPIPE BANDAGE Permanently repairs holn and Iuka In 111 exllauat ,,,,..... .... ASSE~= TV "GLASS COTE" ONE STEP POLYMER SEALANT CAR FINISH M1kn car w111 & polllll ottulett. Ratores show· rOM shine. 611111MMlllllW ·MI.. 1.29 llWI 111111111. ci.a .... , .... ,... 12& SIZE di?> RAIN DANCE 14 ez. PISTE CAI WAI• 11 oz. ... CAIWAX WORLD FAMOUS BAR DAHL OIL 2 TREATMENT Add to 011 lo reduce 011 burntnq and blow • by ISOL 1.69 TOP Oil . Luci lrte v1lve lubrlant. •G.17• ._. •PIOTICTI ................ II& 3.49 _ ...... __ .., •r u • .....,_ ....... _. --¥M&.1W-•1 121 ...... ~ _....., - ENGINE TUNE• UP FREE Slicky v1lves & QUIET noisy litters lSoz. CARBURETOR CLEANER A clun carburetor means euy starting• Ho llJll!ng• Better m1teage1 111 • oz. '-'SPIT ARE" -..---- GA$ TREATMENT Formulated 10 prevent ~ 1ng1ne -alter run · 15 oz. -YOUR CHOICE ~ 1.59 EA. ;:::~~~';E AIR COMPRESSOR "=!:· "" "' 12 ,., ~"'""''"' a ..... ~ 12.95 "STARUTE" HAND HELD CAR CUSHION SPOTLIGHT by AMERCEP All Foam wilh Simulated QUARTZ POWERED Sheep Skin. Plugs into 12 volt cigmlle hghter. ·-7.99 _,, 9.95 0 1' \ SIMDNIZ LIQUID CAR WAX 2.99 ''ARMOR ALL'' WITH PUMP SPRAYER • Protects I ••tifies VINYL, PLASTIC, RU88Elt & LUTHER Penelntes 10 protect 1g11nsl 01one sun & Olygen 4oz. 99C FIGHT BOIL-OVER "Prestone II" WINTER/ SUMMER Anti Freeze -Anti Boil Presbl! ij'ii: !W ff'!!.! '. ttl A11Tir11111 &11111111'! • _, .... -.. ··:: .. -"' --· .. ALL-YEAR PROTECTION 1 GAL. 3.99 PRESTONE® "SUPER FLUSH" Bet ore you till with Anti Freeze • lle-•n •Ht.tor nnl • lle-•n 0tly rn1dM r-------1 22 oz. 2.79 BRAKE FLUID For disc or drum brakes. Presbise I ~· ···~ 12oz.1.59 S1MDN1Z. tr4KITS Shines 'ICISun PASTE WAX hit•• yet .......... i.11,. "*""'· 12ez. UQUI) CAR WAX a CLEANER ...... ,..,.,..Cl,.. ..... tlez. UQUmCARWA~ 8"rtl llrlgtller. lllft brlglller ltf I lilaultllll 1111•. 11 .... Pam CAR WAX ftr I lellg ..... lllrd flllllll .... 14 .... • .. DAI&. Y PtLOT FOOTBALL Transplanted ~a•ns Will Breeze to Title . • • NEW YORK CAP) -You'~ t>IpttUQI Ule There. the Tampa B•y Buccaneers will slallt" to CENTRAL DIVlSION -Detroit Llons. Chicago DtUu Cowbo11 l0 cave tn. aren't you? medh>erity or worse whUt tbe Oetroil Llons roar Bears, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Minnesota Vik-heavily on Just two oHcnsive sters -runnans bdck Wilbert Montgomery and \\'•de (and tc1 ll 1 re- ceiver Harold Carmichael. Without d bit more balance, the Eagles will likely lose d game or two that they couJd hav<' won. Forwet tt. 'nley may not ~ quite the um~ from the bottom of the d ivision to the top lngs. Green Bay Packers. without Ro1er StHbacb. but lhtJ'll be lood Here, then, Is how the NFC 11tandln1s wtll pro-Granted. Staut)ach was in many ways the souJ enou•h to ride herd OD the rest of the East Dtvlalon of the Cowboys (everybody knows they don't have ln lM N&Uonal CCll\ttrence this aeuon. aqu i lni fllf'lrtrrn~',. poPtnE'lr/ a heart: just a computer). But Danny White is no paat Nladelphla for u,. crown. tJtJ• ~ AC.I,.. •CJW fuzzy.faced kid. And with Ron Springs probably Over an th• We t. w a.ms. a few m1IH tea ming with Tony Dorsett. he's got two very po- The only new NFC head coach is Jim Hanifan . returning to St. Louis where he was an a~s1stant. lfe 's got the players all revved up. Now 1f he Cdn keep owner Billy Bidwill from tinkenng 1n thing:-. about which he knows nothing. Hanifa n will motivate the Cardinals back to respectabllily. fartber south in Anabe•m Uua year. will atv~ batiJy look JOSI bt•fore th<' start of the playoffs tent runners when he's not passing lo Tony Hill &btir nt"w hometown fans plmty to cheer about ar. EAST l>I v l ti l ON Dallas Cowboys. and Drew Pearson. tbey roll \0 anoth•r dlvlskMl OUe. •hlle New Phtlade lphta E11t:hi8. St. Louis Ca rdinals. The decimated defense of a year ago will Orleans and San fo'rant'l co bMtle It out for accond Wuhlnaton Kedskin11. New York Giants. become the Doomsday Defense once more as the place. W~'T OIVlSlON -l..os Angeles Rams. New John Dutton signing begins to pay otr and Charlie The bll lunuu·ou.nd -two of \Mm. at a mat· Orleans Salnb. sun Francisco 49ers, Atlanta Waters returns. Washington. which displayed Clashes of brilliance in '79, will f1<.1me out this year as J oe (Continued on P•ge 85) ter of act -will lakt place \n the C.mral Dlvlaion Falcons. Philadelohia's Ron Jaworski relies a bit too PUBUCNOTICE -.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiillllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!~~~!!~~~i!!· -----... n1nous 1u.11t•• ~'1'ATl. .... NT Tiie tollowl1>9 .,.,_, ••·• cte•fl• ll<IMMU6' T E$ ASSOCIATU, o10 N .. _1 Celll•• C>nn. S11ll• .01 New..-.1 ._ .. c.t1iorn..•1-0 Jotlft T CN11. 0 N __ , t "''°" Orlvt S1111e 401 N•woort leec11 ( e\ltol IAI ti..D W•rolcl s No.,.y .. " POU..cl• " ......... -nler. Celltorn•• 'OtOJ Tiii• -"*" ,, <onclUCt.0 l>y ... "' 01~kluel JOIWtT.Clllu Thh tilt-I Wff 1119<1 will\ tf'oe Co1"'1~ C .. '11 Of Or9119e COlll'IY Of' A11911st u. t• NAl.LUEl.Y A-........ ,..s. .. .,...0rt .... N ....... C... N"'"'1 IHdl. CA f2W l'IUIM lful>fl\-OrM>Qt Co.st O•lly Pltot I Au• 11. 1'. S.OI •. 11. ,_, :M,._ PUBLIC NOTICE l"!CTITIOOS 8USINEU NAME STATEMENT The lollow1119 per'°"' •rt 00111• 1Ns1ne\~ a-s D ANA POINT F A R M E R S MARKET, J«Jt1 Co.oft Hi9flw•v 0..-• P0tM, Celifornl4m7' Aooert l . WllllMnl, 1'01 B•yt./lo(e Orht. Nt .. oorf Be.cl\. Calllornl• '16'3 M•flnd• l Wlfll•m1. 2101 Ba~\nore Oflvt. Newport B••<h. cofllorn1•~ Tl\" t>us1nen '' conOuct•O Ov • hmileo ,,.,..1,....\1111> A_.r1 L W1ll1-\ Thi\ 51a>-I w•s hlecl ''""' 1M Covntv Cltr-of Oun~ COllntY on Auqu>1 t•. l'llO l"IU474 Pvlll~ 0.-Co.SI D•lly P iiot A1191Ut.StPt•.ll.f'90 ~ PUBLIC NOTICE 1"1CTIT!OUS 8US1NEU NAME STATEMENT Tt>-IOllOW•l\CI ~''°" I\ Ooin9 ....... M"•S ,.,. J p ENTEAPA!SES n s E 1JrO Slrffl. CO\!• Mtw C•lllorn1a "1•11 M1t'-I Jolln Per-ff, l1S E Jlfd SfrM1. (mt. Mtw. C•lifOt"llla ,,.,, Thi• llllSl~s" conOllCled by •n In· divlOu•I Michatl J Pa(tl., Thi\ sletement WH toed wHh ll>t County Cler-ot Or.•~ COllnty °" AUQllSI IS, l'llO l"IWS. Pul>h"'°" °'""9" Coast O•llv P•fot "'119 11 29 S.ot •. II. 1'llO J.O~ PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 8USIMESS NAME STATEMENT Th• fOllOWl"ll persons ... OO•nQ t>llMl'H••> SU N L ANOSC APIN (; M"fHTENANCE COMP ... NY, 16'11 S•m• Slrttl.,.., 8. Hunf1l'lljlt0t'I ~a<ll, Calltornle~ Al0.t1 E-HaUO.. 1'f71 Sim• ,tret1. No 8. Hunh119ton Bt•<>I. C•llforn1•'16l9 . Stewart Satorv T•akl 1''71 Sims Strut. No 8, Hunll1>9IOn Buell, Calllornla'I?.., Tho\ bu"""" " conduef•d Oy " 9t!nerat p.ilf°tntr"'it\'o AIDPrt E N•-o9da lll•\ .. tal .......... t WA\ fUfd Wllh l"" County Clor• Of Or•n~ COi.iniy on Jl119U•I ,. l'llO l"t4Jolff Pubh\llfd o...._ c""" Oa11y Pilot A119 1• 21. S.PI 40 II, 1'«) 3411-«1 'PUBLIC NOTICE FfCTfTlOOSiUsTNi!ss- NAME STATEMENT n o IOll-inQ pe~loOI\ IS 001n9 l>U\I MU<!\ J M SYSTE MS, l•~S-E Sou111 F•lrvltw Sir~. s,,,,,., .t.n•. C•hlo1I'•• "'°' JoM J -·-· 1'/S)·E South Fair view Sll'ffl. Santa""•· C•hforn1a .,,°" lll•• ~ '' <ondU<lecl Oy .,, on· d1v1du•f JoM J Meers"""' Tho\ ii.•-nt was toled '"''" I~ County Cler-of Or&nQt Co..nly °" Auqusf II, 1980. Fl42'Q PuOll\tw<I Or-co."1 Oally Pliol. AUQ 21. 21. Stpe. •.II, 1'90 341- PVBUC NOTICE ---"'CTITIOUS 8USINESS NAME STATEMINT lhe too-1119 ~ I\ OOlflQ Ou\i· nen as • JULIAN'S SANDWICHES, l•Sll 8ta'n Blvd . Hu,,llnQfon Beach. C•llfornla '2l>.t8 Donald Steffen Gordon. ••121 Oel•w•re. No 14. HunliftlllOn 8"ch C•lfforn!Ao ~ • T111s bus~s •s <OflCIU<:led l>y en In· 01v1du•f. Ooflald~ This "·-· WH hied with the Counly Cler-of °'•~ covnly on Auoust IS, 1•. "'4Hlt P11l>li•hed Or-. C..51 Dally Piiot. ~ ... n. a. s.ot. •. 11. 1990 ~ . PUBUC NOTICE "ICTlTIOUsaUMMllS NAMIESTAT•MaWT ..,.. ,.......,..._., ....... Wll--•s: Ml a. ED'S TOWING. ftSS\'t 801M A.-.WellNllRr.C•lllomlatMl E~ HuklllM, ""9 awtill\lre L-, HIHlll""°" llNc.fl, CAlllhlml• ~ ~.., Huk._., ,.,. lletUIWr• l -, Wwltl ..... INdl, C•ltonllAI .,.. Tfll1 llutl-11 ~lff .,, Al ..-... , ....... ......._ ......... Tiii' _...... -"'" """' tfle C-ty Clef1! flf Or ..... c-ty Of\ ...... stlS.,_ flt....a • 11111Wll._. Or ... C.. DIMiy Pl ... , Aue.21 ... 5ellt.4, "· '-,... ' ·-~-----........ -... - SA\'INOS. . . . . . . . ~. , , .. .. ~· .. AT DORMAN'S WE'RE HELPING YOU DO IT RIGHT GUMOUT DEGREASER '"" 'P'Or on & ho-.e oO lot o \pot•l·"'ll clt'on enQ•nc-17 01 ~r~o, z IH7 149 EA BERRYMAN BAnERY FILLER BULB U\• t Mt bot1fl'fV t+o"'Cfv f0t *'01"\ '"",, Jo"O# Ot°"• hv·d '·' ·"'9 torg.r. o " • IMl·O :: 0•81/0B -" ' . AUTO GEM 15,000 MILE Oil FllJER ''t)t'-• t t "'"·,t nr""'""""' w• = GfM 100 ~ (,! M )JOI' • (",[M 4900 : c,1 ,.,. 1.oc 179 EA CARB CLEANER lbpto"'~'• <Leo,,, <O,bu't 'O' & ty"I ,o,rrm 10 tu ~PRA'f ;: 8 1008 Q R PINI CAN : 8• 100 RAIN DANCE UQUIDOR PASTE WAX t~ 0t•m-v""\ cwoM., <or /#0• Pro ., ct\ \o!'\9e1 tho" O"Y otl,,., '"ud+nQ , •• , .. 1'1. HUFFMAN 12" JACK ST~NDS ,.---. SPARK-0-MATIC DIGITAL CLOCK 149 ,,., I llOUI0°: }4 IN ~9 II t PJl~lf : l•)N , .,,.. • • H.~IJ• l .,.-00 Ol)OC o I "" I• I I f4•' IO r•I ... :.,.299 I ; ' ·;? ',. ....... ~ • 1~0 r' " ~'"' h u ,• , , ,,. i • ll 1a, .. •o• .:. ::· ~·::. ···: 14sa I I EA EA ' . EA .. .,0.11-. ,,., ••• ···, •• ' [A RUBBERQUEEN 6 PllCl • OPEN END ALTUS ARMOR-ALL PROTECTANT ftto•et•\ & ~ou•1t1e" •l""'· t.other. plo"oe 6 •ubbo• 8 Ol :: 11080 MAT SET 5!? ,, / / /\ WRENCH .: SET - o~ ... ,. ....,,__ ... .. .. ..... 499 (00£?1~ f~!lfi 8-TRACK W/ AM·fM CASSETTC W/ AM·fM ,,, .. J •• ,,,.., • ~s6~ LIMITED 90-DAY WARRANTY ,_ ... '"'"'°°"'"""··-· ,,..,..," ... (3'..,..,_ ......... _,~,,..,.... • ,1 ,. -· ~··Y '"'' .. , .. ,.' t.""'P~-~~ ... , ....... -··i W-.•Ol"""t ......... ) 0<•,1 ~ lrt.JI~ ... r - ·~·-·~·-"••hi"'!>···· ....... ~ •• • ... j J .... j '' t .,.,,,. ,. • '' "I• I -~•· " l '"' ... ~ ........... ., ,·~·•Ql..'"'''"'''"• .. , ..... '"""'"'"'" .. '"°""'""'• .., .. ~.,,. .... _....l ... W'(l"'tl"'Pof KASCO MAINTENANCE-FREE BAnERIES ltw bont•, t-ho• tolr\ rnr~ of ·11 w-tf ~"~' ne•d' -orer ""'""°"" <O•'O"•on ••f"e ,.,,.,,.,01 .. Mo": tronl •nq powe' for mo,, <Ott Ptt<f'\ l'ft('udr ... ,~ 60 MOl'<IH !31), 31>). J90 "'4"" •IO<c AM.Pl 6, EK One of the Nation'• L•rCJfft Aetre9def• ... Wf h.ht ClllOOu<fd ....UoC)fl~ OI foe> O"''''' ''"''d\ ••lh tlW Df-(1 itlft.ithn; tQv1ptntnf n••~lllo •-v• Ontv •~ll ou~~ly fllO<OuQl!lv ''""~'"° cn.ng-. .• ut ~''° '°' r-.H •t flfold<f\O O<OCtS~ GET YOURS AT OOMIAH'SI PRO·TECH · 21 PIECE SOCKOSO 7e PH"(• l M '' .-.· '"l " -· •• "°''~' \ti O'OD I .. ~..... 10, fWJOI "~& """" •••• ,.,..--.. ' 1'•0 'OU• C "°" L !)Al '-"'' = 8 \4 899 ~1· '('I -11(1)414 ~El KASCO R,EBUILT STAITEI MOTOR fo• ftOO'\t f) ,.;)It (tl•\ • •t•C' I ''"V • ... c ...... o•od '" 131s '"" ••~' Ot"I yo• 0"'1 \ l•t\ • t~ bv I ,,. (-J( '4._"0-d,t • " ~'\t t J ~·(.ho'\'-" Qlodrr,lc"I\ ... , ... _ RED CAP FIRE EXTINGUISHER SET "'" l'"' .• ,,,., '" \.:) .... ~ .. ~..,.,. •J' 4n.)I-> ~··~<f09(.W~ •• ,~ lJO' ,,.,..,.r ............ , l-<.•' .r l.,_, "•"' k)qo .. q t"I .., I 1 • "' ' .... ,.., gl P • •rra .. v•• ..,,.ll 1 ·•,."'•698 t1. '" ,..., ... , ,.. , J ·' w EA USMC • S GALLON GAS CAN "'°"' .. d & rvqrd hfl'O•• 9ovqt ,, .. ,., qo'\ rOft MO'\• PopulO• COf'I 'O•"• • ~u• h.H I \tO•o9e Jo, mow 1·f\ I 1f l'"'-tqt,_•n( I = •HJ•O Donnan'S Radial· l<U& t. WHCH N01 INCIUOlO OO«MAN S PitSSuRC IUSlO ~AOIAI •ttifAO Retread . --"""J §}® 1~!> f I l9 FE T WHITEWALLS lb 5lA1E:, f,d···•·nocr llffJ Ir• • comroi!ittJ ,. • ,, r N(' 110. 't::' 1 2 ply f>Olyt•'\11 r ,~,,,, d!tl t I I ' .• t ftcll tread Of ~ Jnt• 1 r r "' 'Jt > A '• 01~0'd' em~r1 FOXCRAn CAR RAMPS .. .,,.... ... ' .. ~.1.~1it..t .. ""Of1t• •'1 • ....... - I " ..... 1'4 •o t'>''' f_J,. " .. , .. o.uc•on-_s.,,._.....,. ·' ·· 14~ REBUILT ALTERNATOR I _,,,, , .. •<•O' t..,.,-•ocr" ,-.,., _. .. , ··-""'·~·· 15'5 4.)n .....,. •""' Ao\o~ ".,,""-... £IC ...... ,,-.q jl ~-. ~Ol'I NIOIQI' -'"',.,,. ,, ....... , ,\-... '"'°'' .~.,~ ·~11 , ~ ' ·~jl\\> ""'"'· -.... .-....;· 1995 ,,, h • "' -.n • l"i) •""P f tfl•I ll"llt!IGN O JI$ £ • aLACICWAUI WHITIWALU 9,.rteod on \Ound •00101 '0"•"'1' &v.h ~ ~nt~ ""Old'"'''° "'')II' l""~°" iaa.o& ply •1te\ ledvt,., fut I tOfhU"npr'C>" Wl(ff> fk>t fteod fot IO,,Q•' lift ModP'" htod de ••Qn fOf bttte1 trochon WHITIWAUI WMITIWAU.S SIZE PRICE FET 0 78x14 16.00 .36 E 70xl4 17.50 50 F70x14 23.00 55 A78x13 15.00 32 •C78x13 17.00 .33 SIZE PRICE FET 078x14 E78x14 560x15 •685x15 •G78x15 "l78x15 17.00 17.50 17.50 17.50 24.00 26.00 .36 .38 31 31 .45 .so SIZE 165 13 165115 185114 BR78113 • 175113 PRICE FET SIZE PRICE FET SIZE PRICE OR78t 14 " 29.50 38 878JIC13 30.50 C78x13 31.50 32 ER78t 14 29.50 38 34 GR78t15 30.50 45 23.50 28.50 B78x14 30.50 C78xl4 31.50 E78x1 4 33.50 38 FR78 14 31.50 38 33 165 15 32.50 34 33 29.50 27.50 29.50 •Whitewalls Whitewall F78x14 36.50 DORMAN'S Lllet1me limited warranty agamsr defect 1n workmansn1p RETREAD and mate11a1s tree reelacement up 10 5/32"", after 5132" there WARRANTY will be a charge of 50 Vo of list price down to 2132" No ad Just ment will be allowed alter 2132·· TIR• MOUNTING a ROTATION, ·•RAK• a ALIGNM•NT CHaCK. few ,.._ "-'lean • ICW919n cars Mltl dlte type lweltn on h"Oftl • ~ e,,. 111r-.. on,.., ·MAGNUM· '60'· SHOCKS I. 11 ..... UmltedWln'tnty• .9S Rept1ce front 01sc P•Os w ith premium ped1 Fill l'lyOt&ullc system w1tl'I disk 1>111ke t1u10 lnapecl m1•ter cyhnoer •no roao tesl car t\~g' 2. ....... UnllH Wln•nty" 60 1nciuoe1 ell ot fOO • 1. plus m1c11tn1 rotors " t1bv11d d11c cahpeft. reoec• front wnMf bMnnp. end ble4td l'l)'oreul4C t>rellt •Y•· tem, ptvt 1nap.ct ~"'' cyhn<ter • I ............... ,..,. 1nc1uo11 •II 01 1ot>1 • 1 and • 2. plu~ rtpleCI tllt IUMQt, tnlCl'ltftl rNt Or11111e. 11t>u110 rear w"'8f cyknoers clMn Ind lu· brtceta rH r bac111n9 platll. 1nS1all Pf•· arcect bfalle atto" on ra1r. 1na ectjvtt ..._. 1nctudfn9 em.gei1er -FET SIZE PRICE FE G78X14 37.50 2.54 I 85 H78x14 39.50 2 79 1 96 G78xl5 38.50 2 62 2 05 H78x15 40.50 284 2 03 J781C l5 41.50 3 Oi 2 21 L78ll'5 42.50 313 2 37 .. .FOOTBALL Thursday. Augu9t 28. 1980 OAJL Y PILOT 8:; •• .An~ Don't Count Out the Cowboys Just Yet (C•allll.-. "'°"' ~ M) Theilm&M tall lO dupUute htJ floe performance Tbe Redlkinl wlll apead much of the . ason ll'ylp& to 1tay ahead ol New York The Giants are simply too thln ln lOO many •~u The Uona ot a YHr •ao luktd t•o mljor &n 1redlMtt: a lood qu1rttrback and a tood runner Now they've 1ot ·em both Quarterback Gary Danlelson la bat"ll 11\tr m1.11lnc the entire 19'11 ae..on wtth an Injury. •Jtd rookie Diiiy Sims. this reu'a venion of Earl Cacn~ll or Oma Ande1'110n. la about to t-xplode out or the blocks Cblta&o'& Mike Ptuppa OlAO' be tb moat un derraled quarterback In the NFL. partly beeause of a reU&Me on auper·r un.ner W•llcr Payton. But Phipps' paulhg <look for mor1> of 1t this year > and a typically ound ddentie will have the Bears arow'lln1 fiorcely The Buccan er had by tar the softest acheduj ot 1979 Thla yHr's asn 't quite as soft and wlU be th Ir undoina unJeh they fi nd u way to put to1ethtlr un oUenae c<>ru1i11tent enough to war r•nl bein1 mentioned 1n the "ame breath with that m11anlrlcent emd overworked defense llot &tJ\d cold Tommy Kramer. quurterbacktng MlnneMta, hu11 no tc round "umc lo turn to. und the def~niw 1• ln "11U.tt: of fluit. Green 88y lost ils No I drllfl cbolc~. dofenslve tackle Bruce Clark. flee to Canada That hurt -as did the injuries to quarterbacks David Whitehurst and Lynn Dickey lt 's difficult to remember a time when the Rams weren't considered the best of the west. and it's dl!icuJt to view them as anything else this year . too Look for Vince Ferragamo to entrench h1msell as the No. l quarter back before the season is too rar gone. And lhe Rams are no longer a plodding team . They'll come up with lots of big plays. The defe nse, so reliant on the line In past years. is more balanced. too. Not even the contract dispute of several regulars can keep the Ram s from finishing on top. Archie Manrung is one of those quarterback~ who lurks somewhere Just short of greatnes~ H<: Wes Chandler. Chuck Muncie and others g1u Ne:Y. Orleans a sometimes devastating attack tf lhl· Saints can establish a defen.~e that doesr. •t col lapse. they could make things tough for the Ram ... San Francisco. having somehow s urvived tht- Joe Thomas era. 1s about to show some sign:; th1.1t all is not lost. Rookie Earl Cooper gives Sil·\ 1 DeBerg power on the ground and a good passin~ target downfield. and Hollywood Henderson can t help but bolster the defense Offenst· hit!-. never been Atlanta':-. strong suit. And the once-tern() ini; defense is no more. ----~---·-----------~ ---------------- MOTOR OIL IOW 40, X)W 50 19~ 97!. WD-40 lt-.pt. cc:w• ~.new ,. • .,..,n rv•t & ccwrOMOft h .. , •lod.~ <-• .. Woeo• SloCK ,..-, Wbtoc-• lex~•., '-llo• 9 0 1 ....,o>ol IJ •0011 PRESTONE COOLANT ,~, ~Ol't .,1'1h•rl')r'll f 1111 A"f•Ut.c.,.t .. i t1 ,.. Qo .. ,_,, r,, -Jt>l 4 1 l1~0Ll\\m~@BRING OUT THE SPORT IN YOUR &DarVft& ~IMPORT AT DORMAN'S ••• NGK SPARK PLUGS fo, rno'' Ootun\, Hondo\. loro•o'-F.,,d c""" 89C et\ & Ch."Y lvo !> 1,4N0ARO EA llfSl!>IOI!> IASCO HlAVY·DUTY BRAKE SHOES for mot• 001>«,..-<Oft Gel ,...,. •tooo-"4) po•t'f' bv reoloc."'9 worn V"•<r4• btolf' 'hot:' •odo1 ~'of ' "-• '"' ) ...... els 3~ DUPREE-ELECTRIC FUEL PUMPS ·-- .. ~ .,.,.,Mehdi The neweet tire lft our la... to ......... out pur IMport. ... WI NII ..;' _,llUIU ':;/' ... \. ,.:...-.... BLACKWALLS The llrt Otllgned to combme oe>llmum nanc11rng cllarKte<1sta wtth comfortable rlCle Trsad !tie lreQUenlly exceeds 30 000 mileJ under normal drMnt condlltons This rayon betted radial is more llexlble on tile road than steel. stronr ancl llU I wide •ncl highly stable cornerm9 capabdrty _.§IZE PRICE FET SIZE -----145X10 28.50 1 08 155X14 t 55X 12 30.50 1 39 165X14 145X13 28.50 1.32 175X14 155X13 31.50 1 47 185X14 165X1 3 32.50 1.61 155X15 175X13 35.50 1 83 165X15 PRICE FET 32.50 1 54 35.50 1 69 37.50 1.91 39.50 2.09 35.50 1.63 37.50 1.78 DOllllll'S [)o.rMoft 'WOt•~~'-" pon~• '"".,. ,.,~ '°""'""'' v.., °" ••ft\oef cw• 01 ttohon WOQO"~ M '"-' '""• "°" pvrC~-M ~tit~ W. too ~ot,.lofll' u.llDTIIE 1•'9c• '•·~~ ~ h•~ toOl'lr °'°'""-' 't'OI• wrttt......, 0t"9"'01 f!'WOIC• Al hi! GP9*' 1W _.. t.c.•._. ~ o cM rtttWfMt or ~· w4 ••<..._.. f~ o ·---_,....._ ,_..,.., ............ " .............. -.... WllUllTY """..,,.,.,.,. COtif •• fhe Of.,... tllfCe ,.._poet tot fheo .... ~ ,.., .. ···-... ·--.. .... .._... _ ._,.. _ .... -- PETERSEN TUNE-UP·& IEPAll BOOKS KASCO DISC BRAKE PADS MOdfo tti ~-~· \' Q"WOM" •Ir' "" 1 •fl~!(• 1•"1\ !k.l•l••I lfl '"" v "''""'' •OC><I & 11uffo onf11•1c.r\ I " A~•'""' ·' '"" ~"499 tUI\ 'ill t0 1 J WHlll~ SH BOSCH SPARK PLUGS Se• 1.>f 4 Vol~, _l'Jffl ,. 196l /Q t t(t'~1 D·t•\1 I ••o 11>10 10 ,,, v Oat' '' l'f'\,..,.., vo''" l'JtJ/ II 298 ~fl DISTRIBUTOR CAPS & ROTORS THRUSH· TURBO MUFFLER loo P•·•torm1t1<1 f1o11bcl mv01, 1 t" q ru•t ,,..d •u d••f •t"' mo11 ""O''I• ?0""' I tC> f fJIJ' 1•,.1iJ1f11 to1 ~O\I 0 111 !.UN!> HO N Diil> & IOVOIA!> 1ft88 7 lA BRAND NEW FUEL PUMPS •OrOt" 110) 11 < ••c.·" ( "'~" M' I ... ' o .. ,If 1~ «:jll 1 "!J ,_., !?// ·'• '1 I ••N.,1/ '" . " ~ ... ....::~· ~ GMB U-JOINTS 1'"'"''9'" ~ ... tln.d '' vt Ii Ou•\1.1" 1,.,,t,•n Vo!.c. 429 tA ( .... , t • ' J '-.... 5~! MOTORCAR IGNfTrOH WIRE SET MOTORCAR MUFFLER BRAND NEW WATER PUMPS 1~ AOQtftSllY~ r.10181 ""~ ~hWt't'\ ••:t(PI ..... l~nl rO-O Qrtpptng acl•O" 1n "'"'°S' •"• w&athet P Mftlf•C ,~1f1CdllO'H• .. 11ows .. 41~ 4·Ply Poly WHITEWALLS 3JllJ00 IOf' mote till' Pl"SSUf" como1ned w11" radial conauucllon_ m••n!t lf!S!t rot11no reiantl•nc .. -ano gr&~le• futtl s.,.-vtno~ Two pOlyftaler bOc:ly Pitt!'\ /\ t~o J1Der No !hump polye\ter cord re \t\I\ 1101 \polltng ond onnoy1n9 cold \1011 •hump ~'!!>~· oian oe11s comb•M ro 11·•~ u smoot~ SIZE PRICE FE T .. oe & ~11ono 1oro t>o<1v load King 30,000 v • ., .. tiQJ-11 l6 00 ' A~ ''1 • • • Mile Nationwide Plb' ··~1 • J6 00 1 ~· 1HRl6.1 • • Limited Warranty ~ . ..,. , ..... , 000 • ill 10P,'ij.I(! a ~·Ip l!>FI Id 44 00 • tit Rood Ktf\Q Oktu Rod1ul '' -°''°""·d H.1 ,f "'l/HX 14 ' QIVt> YO\i J0,000 m1ln Of ft•od W¥0' tn r>.?0'1 t"tR '4 ., 00 ••I notmol pou~t1g1• to• u•~ on th.r \om.-11 n 'j,, i • cot If 1t dot:• no•, tot.• Y°'" 11111 to '>"Y f I ' ,.,~,<l ., 00 . "' Rood KtnQ df!Ole< lh<ry II ••Plot• ·' '"''h 1t-R~H1'J • "=':'"· ;!,iii•a ~? 00 •l(J o new one fte• dut~9 th~ 111 '' 1 31 mth d·•A/8kH ~ ot fteod Wft()t CK. (hofg1rtg yov Onl'J" • .>()'-;~·) '· 000 . '. SIZE PRICE FET SIZE PRICE FE r C78xt3 29.00 I 94 H78x 14 36.00 2 60 E78xt4 29.00 2 12 G78x15 35.00 2 46 F78xt4 32.00 2 23 H78)(1!> 37.00 2 66 G78xt4 34.00 2 38 L78xl5 39.00 2 96 B78xl3 29.00 1 77 •or rh• m•lt~ received plut fedetol tt• 1r P "bA1 ,,.,. IO• boHtd on tit,.'"'"•"' odtv\fment t.1;•1 •\ ·"·· ! ptl<t ~ ''•od weor '" tHCHt. ot I 31 t•1R ·~· on<JI l'tool Of~ '"IV"td 4 ""Oii P,!7' '<-'•''• Mr•<• ch0tgie '"Or be odded At._ •o• ~-iR •HA\ •ttllert •OFfOnlr fot ••Clut1ont orid P~J~ 15M\, •!Ooh. <LRl8Jtl~I sooo ,,I>, uoo ~" S7 00 J(J.' DOIMAN'S UMmDTIRE WAllANTY Q<Jt ... >' •0!'0"'·•"' >'4 pO>\i ""q.t'I f lo • Pf"I~~ fO""'ll• ''" IJ' ,. ~,., ut\ 1,,1 oo-•090"\ t f"'• •·•1 '""" Pvrc "'O""' h9"' "' 'o '' 4IJo '"" ""°""''-'' '"' ""w...._ ... • "'¥" ,.._.,,_,.., .,.,(k.,.,.,, • ·'O-• ••" """"..,o~e11 "•"'''" •• ""'' 11• 0"' f°"" •I', ..... ,.,,.._ r ot\.,1 ... Qt"' o '"'""" ~ _..,. • tl•C"'41"'9f It.• I """'°°'atliP"t-l".,.;.,Of9'1'0rf,O..,\ll"it'~ .. l)o•O!"h l.OttlO'H'o• OCOOCf\f\'"'CI ,..,. -«•Of'lt>f\.O\t \f'heUl'9"dPo'tt" f°"pood 10I ~··•• ,._~9 ht0r10! .... ~ 90• do~ b• ... Qt~ 1'••00 °""~"" "'"""' """Ol"IOvil'lf _,.,... .. ~-~ FRONT WHEEL PACK Ameftclfl 6 McKt Fotelgn C81W e1cludlftt FfOflt W""4 Ori.e c.,. We pack inner and outer bearings. inspect seals. S!! .. ~4~E IAAKll lftAKES faW~~~..,,;::: · ~~b ~.x·~ .. "·~rt COMPLa1'8 AUTO ca..,...a ..,._, Tiree a .. ""-) et ...._ .......... , Open dally 9-9. Saturday 9-6. Sunday 9.5 AMllalM P ........ V.... &.a-.. 0 ,,.E YEAR LIMITED WARRANTY FRONT WHEEL ALIGNMENT "lfMn l:D Oo',,_.111"' ''Ol'\I tu J f'!ll. "' •J • •" w•, ,.•,1 • AllONM(Nt • -c;ri..,...,., .o ~ r .. o 1 ti"! rri• o11v.~1 ''°'14' ' •-. WAl'lfltANf' ti~ ~t'111,.., ""'' '" ctt,.n. "ttt'l,J-4) ·~' , .... ' 'J .Jt \l"W '""'' he,,r ,.,.,. J.o;!t' VI ~"''J A• f, ......... 1280 N. Euclid 9880 warn« Ave 15081 1m~a1 Hlohway (S ot Hwy lllJ (7t•> ........ , C9t8J M74Mt 10.-03 Magn<>11a Ave t~•tto0-1 C7'•> .... '4Mt ... c .......... 1113 S El Camino Real 4H·MIO • TYi..... hlllaftarR ....._ ..... ..._ lft8rti 1•1 E trnoerial 2•510 N1c1a Pancw1y 52M leech Blvd. CM.Kt IO oimco; fOll a-co IOfJ (llf ~ K-,,_ 1<4if.n) , ..... ,t Nf4fN (7t4f ........ hlllaftarR ..... .... 2978 YOfbe Linda 1739~ Alie ..... .,., ,. .......... 2eo.-S Gr11t01 St (---$ ., ~.,,,., .ll•t I , ...... ,. Dally 8-6. Sat 8·4 30. Sun 8-5 PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU$ 8US•NEU Mi1U1H STAT£¥1ENT '"e tonowtnq pet""~ .~ do1nn bv"i !'le\\ •s l\l~OAO Of S•C.~ ~ J;7 ol•o ')H~tt Nttvrrport 8f'4't l" C•••fOt.,•e .,...i tC.tUtl'°~" At'lneH_. l-..n"'dfV J';,· •1nd '\lr to•t Nf"WDOt I ., • .,,,. C•htotnte 9MJ · • T PU~ °'1\1~~'\ '" f onou<:leO ov ... n ,,, '"'" "'~l~t Wd~ t1lt"d w 11n '"'r County Cl~t"-ot O.-•nqe C.~nh on AUQU\I I). I'll> Fl4J1U Puo11\hftd °' M\CJf" (Or.I,, o •••• P•IOf Auq 71 18 ~OI • II I~ Jl71>-t!U PUBLIC' NOTICE FICTITIOUS eus•NESS NAME STATEMENT T ",.. to11ow1no ~,-'°" , ... do1Nl bu\' Ml"\' .. , •VTO Pfl Q f c. 1N ( 1• Fi ldClll '""'' St r,.~I (Httden C.rnw .. C.•11tor nit\ .,ti.A~ Ott v1d £ Cl•d'"0 Schmdu' 17•· p l,.t •mer C,trf"t'f C.drden c'"" .. Cttl1torn1A .,6-i\ f~1\ OU'iO'W>'" '" condurtf'd bv d i\ •ri Oht•OUdl OitYl !><"""'"U' ,,,,.., '\\dt_.~, w~ fllf'il w1f,.. '""' (Ounly (j,..r~ o• 0 •1Jf'\Q .. (OVf"lh "" AuQU\I I~ 1"80 F t4lh' Put>ltVWl'G 0t !~ (n.-,,1 0,..11 / "'• r.1 A."Q JI id S.-ot 4 II 1980 ~ ,., ' Pl'BLK NOTICE FICllTIOI,~ 6 VS1Pn:S<- NAME SlATEMtNT '('H4\H1Nt &.r,rt-Rf.-,..,.yf •. t.OM P A.N'r •c.4. w .. ,t tffU\ 'h • c '"' N~~ , ...... ,.,"'""' "71i11 I ..,, .. ~ J.tm••i-. w,.1-. • r ~""' l't• • t(;IP't '''·"""' (.O"I" M f', .. (til•fV'' \tj,_,,, t ..,,,. ""'"~,,_... ... rnoitc ~ ... o n., .:tn " f ,., ,,,.,,..,..... ,., ........ ' ....., "" ,,,, ,,., (tt•.;nh (f .. rlll nt 0,,.,,,,. <o"""' i1t· AvO•J' f t \ 1'90 Pun11 •l\llllO <> .tn<>-(l).ot• t Ott•I" i;. • AvQ J' 1@ ~DI J I" '• jJ1 Pt;BUC :'liOTICt: "CTITIOUS f>l)<;INES!> HAMf HATEMEHT A 0 II AN C I D ( 0 .V I' 0 •, I I I PPOouc T<, ANO 1 r c ><NOLOC.,. 7800 '-i Md1f"I c,,,....,., Su•t., l Sont ... An" C.o.ht0fn1u 'f1~01 1ctmP\ C Lt '"' 1"i0• Munt•f"U'fl' 'ltr11 .. 1 NO ti Hunt noion 8"'""4.. • (~ .. torn1A~ r "''' bv,1~\ '' c; onouc. tPO t>v tJn 1n Ju~( l•"'I" f P'll' ""t~f _,,:. .. f1Uilll0 Wiii°' ,,.., C <'l~n·, r '' '" ot 01 ·N>• < cx.n'" ol'\ AUQM°"t tf.r tQ!fK) FU . .).tSI P~Oh"'hPooa Ornl"IOI Co.• t OihlY P .. ('1 •uo ?• 1t ~ • " •• i.-11.., Pl'BLIC ~OTICE FICTITIOU' 8USINIES!> NAME STATEMEN~ r ,,._ touow1no Pfl'f"'\On .. d'" d Olf'"'I bY\U'HI~~\. •' 0 VNAM£111•( Nf W PQlll \7f S• -t•drO flo~o ~ororor <JP ~,..• c .. 1ororn1• '26)~ QVNAME f P f( IN( d ( •lt'Of'f'•.,.. 1 or po, At1on. '1 NOt'tf\ Sd1n1 Jo,.,_ P"\OOfl'M Ca11rornid "'' 10J Thi\ °"",..'"" , .. <OOOu<'l..-d Ov d • ur Po'""''ron OvrdANltt•' '"~ Sl"'""n '3c. hC.W'nOduf'rl VtC• Pt""t~rl T"•' \Cottte~t Wft .. hlcO WH,.. '"" Counlv (l•·•f'll o• Ordf"IC)(' Courtv U" AU<lu\I I \ f'lllO F ""~' Pu1>11.:.~ Ofd"°"' (°"'' Oa11v J..11•0• •uo II 1M So•pt • 1' •"80 JJ~?-<>l Pl'hll(" l"OTlt't: FICTITIOOS tlUSINES~ NAMIE STAlEM E"T 1 n~ to11ow1nq ~''0"' d''" a<Hf"O bV .. lf'lf!"'' d' l ABVRINT,.. l36 71.,, C-,•rrt•1 (0\1tl M tt'-J C•lltm "''"' 9'1t1i. f:J•Cf'MUJ lPP v n•no 1Jf) ~ .. -•. • S1rttt (0\\4' Ml>\..t Ctt11•orr1e O?tJ' Mar\ Amtk.11••"' •36 '''' Strr• 1 Co'\la M~ Cahtorr•tt 01&1• JOftl'\ l '"I,.. •Qf;8 Fullf't"1on ~.,,...., Co,I • M~Y C.ahtor n1a 41f)7"' D•v•<S Boal~ -Jn<S Dea,. Altoor,. 136 1' \I Sft't"fl't CO\t4 ._.t-\d c.u ,•or"•• •1&11 T I'll' DV'"~"" '"" r O*"dult~d 0• .., ~Mr at Ottr1nf"'"•P q•<f'l.trd V·n•nc ff\1\ \l.tlffT'f'nt Wd\ hff"O "1111;1trt I"'• Count• (I~"" ot OrdnQI' Counh o,, A11QU\l I~ l"l!Q f•.0:;1 Publi\f'WlrriO ()rAnq.-(N '\t Oc111~ J.11 01 Auq 1' 211. S.Ool • 'I 1"90 JJ0 "·llC Pl "BLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS eus1 .. ess NAME STATEMENT T hf' tollow1n9 per!tOn\ cH~ dotr•g bu\lnft'\\ •\ S TIEP UP GALL~Rv JI• N P&( 1t•c Cott\t H1onw.,v Lctqur.t B~•cn, C•lllOtn•• '76)' ><P•cM 0 8rl~n 1808 W91ru• Fount•ln V•llPy C•"'°'"'" •noe Ct•ir~ P•wuento 1-.SO W •lri\11 Founttt1rt V•lt,.v. C•litOf'"n•" •?708 8•rber• Flebl'rQ. ~ CIM• (11 c IP W•slm.Mt~r. C•lt1Gm•ct •11Mn 1-r.tf' BioQOod. S481 St Muy 'C" ti• Wttst,,...~• ca11tONHd ~ S•nar.t Attwr•o" :rn:i e r •v.u,, Ortv~ ... Uf"tlnQ1on et-«". C•ll•ornto ,,...., Jt\~ A~u. ''°' A1P1nt l""" Hu"11nqtOn BM<". C·•'''°'"'• ,,... Mltl-• """" tM6ll W•lllems-Q Pl.ct Af~\« C•hlOt"n.• ~SO­ S.ndu ~Q"ron IA1' -110.0• C.1rde: • .,_.~1ngtori a..ch C•tlfornt• ,, ... Oo'""• 8'•"'•" ·a~'' c.,.-"•.t fom•\• Ctrcle f0Mnt•1n v .u i,, .. C•Ulorn .. ., IOI Tiii\ -!Nu•\ c-.c1"' D• ,.,. ..,. IMOrpor-!ISSO<f•llof\ ot!wr Ill,.,. 1 ",.,,,.,.,,,.o .i-A~u Tllo\ \ ... ..,..._. "'"' flied wrl" I,... County Clff1' o4 Ortn~ Couf'nt .,. A119utt n. '"'° 1'341'-ll Pub••-0r-. Co.ii ~v P•rc11 Auq n. n. SeOI •. 1..c 3•1~ P UBLIC' NOTICE l'tCTITIOUS •U,INfSS MAMR n ATtMENT , ... loOowtnq --" CIOU\Q bu" nen•' l EAMIGH l~VESTMfl'ITS •t•• l •t:W•rct l•ne1 Nf'WOOrt @,e e Cr\ c.,,..,.,. .. .,..., Jotwl Sf!\11'1 Ktrr '"~ ~ttrO lone . ........_, llffcll. c.il!or11w '1Mll' Tlllt bullrlft\ I\ <oncllKl9d ov ""' '" CllVIOUll Joh!\ S Ktf'f '"'' \l•l-1 .... 111-.t ....... ..... C....,h et .. , ol o.~ COUflh 0.- AllOV\t S. 1.., ,.,.~ Putlth"-0 Or-(O<l\I O•ily Pt'OI AUQ I 14, 11. 19, l.o Y.'ll« -twl v "'"'°' A,.WI~ AUSTRALIA SAILS INTO THE FINALS OF AMERIC.C'S CUP FOREIGN TRIALS. Harbor .Jammed Holiday R egattas Abound Labor Day weekend, marking -UM lr~ior...from the s ummer to the ran season of boating in Southern California, will find the yachting fraternity about equal- ly divided betwee n offshore cruisers a nd stay-at-homes racing around the buoys . Virtually every cove a l Catalina Island is expected to be jammed gunwale-to-gunwale with the "cruisin', boozin' and snoozin' " crowd this weekend. For the eager racing types the calendar is loaded with Labor Day regattas , plus several off· shore regattas climaxing a busy summer. One of the traditional Labor Day regattas wrucb draws up- ward of 100 boats racing inside and outside the bay is that host- ed by Balboa Yacht Club. The event is ~cbeduled Saturday and Sunday Dana Point Yacht Club ex- pects about 100 boats to show up on the starting line Saturday for t he annual 134-mile race to Silver Gate Yacht Club, San Diego, by way of San Clemente Island. Another Labor Day r egatta which traditionally draws a large turnout will be staged by Alamitos Bay Yacht Club, Long Beach. - Los Angeles Yacht Club bas s cheduled two major trophy . events at Catalina Island -The Wrigley Trophy r ace for tn· ternalional Offshore Rule yachts and the McNeil Trophy for the Performance Handicap Racin~ Fleet, both on Sunday out of Howland's Landing . LAYC's leased island sanctuary. Al.mltos s..., Yacht CIUO L-D•v A@9oll• ta, SaturO.y, Sunday. Los Anoe•~ Yacllt Club WrlCJ'*"'·McNt ll Troe>hY r.ces, s..ncMy at C•t•llM t sl•nd. N•VV Yacht Club of Lonq Beacll -S80AA CM mPlonWP, Satvroo. Sunoav w-. Hull awn." "'-""on -H"""""""o 8ovnO r.tta l<lasso< yacnul -.o.tv. ~-···· w111e11-.. Yacht Clllb PHAF Ton CUii ·~ CJ•tt•. S.tur41y, ~y; 1'-llou< !>.!DOI rac•. SaturOty. South Coltlt Cortntlllltn Yacllt Club -Ouoooi. Troplly (~ Nndl<60~~y. ICl"I) H..-Y«'llt Club -H-•rll 8ounC1 race llsllwNa to Klnll H-1 Moftelay s..o,... Co~~ y-CIUO -C••uoc Serie'o NO 2. !,41turo.ty. M••~lon Say Yacrrt Club -LAllOr Day A99o1n•. Saturoay, SUnclrf. Moncl<ty. O<e.~IOot YacM Club -Cruise to. !>an OleclO Ya<"' Club. s.tu<Oay, SuncSay San Oie91) Yacht Club IC.JI. Soll"I). Star Sfflo. $111\lt'dav. S<lndav Sil~•· Gorle Y«llt Club -Ftnl•ll o ..... Point IO San D•f!90 San C .. ~ tsl•nd ••<•. Sul'<!ay Sanlt Clar• Aaclnq •~••llon -Latx>< D<I• Aejlall•. MonOey ...,. ........... Pl••POlnt tla y Yacht Club -S.n Ml9u<1I s~-. S.tunl<lv. Suno.v WttllMl• Yacl!C CJoA> -Bluot W•tN" Ser~ No 4,Mo..0.y Sanl• Bar-a Yk nt CtUO -Wymafl T,_,y r&<e. Monon. • Island Race Crowded Dana Point Yacht Club is ex- pecting nearly 100 sailboats to show up on the starting line Saturday ror the 10 a.m . start of the eighth annual San Clemente Island race to Silver Gate Yacht Club. San Diego. NH Skipper Wins . Newport Harbor skipper s were among the first five in the Santana-20 national c ham- pionship regatta at Coronado Yacht Club, San Diego. The winner in a field of 38 was Harry Pattison, Newport Harbor Yacht Club. Second was Bob Kennenhofen. Balboa Yacht Club; third was John Norman, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club; fourth was Lee Wessen, Marina del Rey. and filth was Ralph Rodbeim, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. "'-1Jll I 0.rATIMO --...-. SI LtC 1116'17 &<H-1-s, ........... Ooot (C"*SIOre-1 't""' A•HI CO.YA ..... 141-1289 , . ..._. .... ---~1 -c....~ ......... ,..., .. ._, """'·' RFLE WIDEWALE CORDUROY PANTS IN STOCK lOCOLORS BOYSOl!PT Last year 65 boats started the 134-mile race and 51 finished. The race typicaUy consists of a beat to windward in medium to fresh winds as far as the west end of San Clemente Island, a reach down the back side of the island and a run to San Diego. The race is open to all yachts whose owners are members of Southern California yacht clubs and have International Offshore Rule, Performance Handicap Racing Fleet and San Diego H a ndicap Fleet handicap certificates. All yachts must be 23 feet overall or longer and must comply with all safety re- quirements for offshore racing. The race is managed by a joint race committee of the DPYC and SGYC. Moorings and s lips at San Diego will be as, siened by SFYC. Clipper CreWmen Nervous NEWPORT, R.I. <A P I - "Well, we'v e waite d long enough," one or the crew aboard the 12·meter yacht Clippe r shouted. "Let's go." "You sUll got a JOb?" another of the crew members called out. Suddenly, coming out of the haze from Goat Island across Newport Harbor, there came a motor laWlch. It looked blue in the distance. "I S T HAT I T? Are we through?" "No," the answer came. "Too s mall. This isn't a surprise at· tack." The crewman remained atop the flviniz brad~e of the motor B0.41JNG ~ yacht Eagle, Clipper's tender. has binoculars rajsed. The crew and skipper Russell Long of New York waited impatiently for the New York Yacht Club's harb· Inger of bad tidings, the blue launch. 11ley expected to be "ex- cused" from the America's Cup defense finals. They had just lost to Freedom. skippered by Dennis Conner of San Diego, by the rather large margin of two minute s, 20 seconds over a 24.3 nautical mile. Olympic-style course. Clipper's record in the defense finals stood at 2-7; Freedom was 9·1. "We might come back from the dead," said Long, 24-year- old son of millionaire oilman Huey Long. "defeat Freedom the next 10 races and defend the America's Cup." THE DREADED blue launch never arrived al Bannister's Wharf. where Clippe r was berthed. The fellow on the bridge holstered his binoculars and the crew relaxed. "Looks like there's more rac· ing for us," he s a id . the binoculars now safely s towed. "That'd be a pretty flashy comeback, wouldn't it?" Long asked. "Lose by 2:20 and then win the Cup." BOATING I OUTDOORS Jim Niemiec Dove Bunt Opens esp te cooling night temperatures along coa&tal slopet and inland valleys, the ouUook for the 1980 dove aeuon, w~tch geta underway Mon· day. ia good. Molt •boot.era will be beading for the warm spots around the Salton Sea and on out to Blythe and Arbooa, where shooting is expected to be on par with the lut few openlnp. On the north end of the Salton Sea the good population of both mourning and wrutewing dove that were around a couple of weeks ago has dropped by about 25 percent According to local resident Larry Saleba. who manages St. Anthony's Flsh Fann and Trailer court in Mecca, when the temperatures dropped to the high sixties at night earlier this week it sent the dove packina out to Mexico. TllEllE SHOULD BE GOOD SHOOTING on the south end of the sea. where crop conditions seem w be holding the dove in larger numbers. Tho.se who plan to hunt private property in Orange County should enjoy a fair opening morn- OUIDOORS ell. ing shoot, but the evening shooting should be good to excellent. Dove just don't seem to move under cloudy, damp skies. Coto de Caza bas a very poor dove population and will produce only scattered shooting for its members and guests. Desert areas will usually give up some good hunting for those hunters who seek out a watering hole or grain field w shoot near. The key to open area hunting for dove is to stay well hidden until the dove get into shotgun range. Early season dove are smart and get very gun shy after the first half hour of shooting. ARIZONA HAS CUT ITS LIMITS on both mourning and whitewing dove. and there probably won't be a lot of California bunters heading out of state to shoot for a ooe-day-Off.work shoot. The opening weekend of California's antelope season went well with a number of permit holders bagging trophy heads. This writer's wife, Tona , en- JOyed a good hunt in the Clear Lake area of Zone l and came horne with a nice trophy pronghorn. Bus v Weekend? • Marlin Bite Takes a Dip Bv nM NIEMIEC-- 0.lly ,. .... ~-~ Marlin fishing took a dip during the week after a strong showing last Saturday according to sources at Bisbee's on Balboa Island. There was an exceUent bite on spitebills on the 277 spot. but it lasted only one day before the marlin spread out all over the ocean. Currently some fish are being spotted and hooked on the 277, 14-mile Bank, 209 aod off the slide. There will ~ an entire navy of boats out searching for both marlin and broadbill over Labor Day weekend and this writer's advice is to head out to your own spot to get away from the fleet. THER E ARE GOING to be some smart sportfishermen that wiU be beading to the western end of Catalina and San Clemente islands in search or new billfish. and some might even make the treck a bit farther north. Fast boats might be heading out to the 43 spot as well. There is some good marlin action off the Coronado Islands and if past patterns hold, these fish might move off Del Mar and Oceanside and be fisbable just a few miles off the beach. Those big yellowfin tuna have shown up, and many anglers are taking these hard fighters, especially those fishing off San Diego. Local big game angler Bue Bucannan of Hunt- ington Beach was trolling a Sevenstrand mackerel colored Clone on the 277 Spot on Sunday and after a two hour and 10 minute battle on 20-pound tackle, boated a 95-pound yellowfin. The fish was weighed ln al the Tuna Club on Avalon and will be submitted as a potential record catch on light tackle. BUCANNAN NOT ONLY developed the Clone/Kena type lures for all big game fishing, but is perhaps one of the better anglers along the South Coast. Other anglers report getting completely spooled on blind strikes and this usually means that a yellowfin hit the jig. A big tuna can run to wei'gbts in excess of 300 pounds and there is no way an angler can stop a big rtsh like that on anything less than a 6/0 filled with 80-pound line and matched to the right rod. Also, Bob Robb o~ Huntineton Beach bagged a nice antelope on bis first bunt after spending four days in the field . .,Ihe antelope season, for permit holders, runs through Sept. 1 and more than 80 percent of the bunters should bag trophy game. WATERFOWL BUNTELC\ should circle Sept. 25 on their calender. since this Is the night of the 11th Annual Orange County Ducks Unlimited Fund Raising Dinner Party. This gatherlng of thtck and goose hunte~ has always been a highlight of the hWlting season. since this is where many stories or past bunts are exchanged, and those who are new to the hunting fraternity can learn where they can hunt ducks a nd other waterfowl successfully in Southern California. For ticket information on attending contact Dennis Baird at (714 ) 540-6080 or write Ducks Umlimiled, P.O. Box 658. Tustin, California, 92680. Race Invitations Newport Ocean Sailing Association has issued invitations for the annual Argosy race, Sept. 13-14. The Saturday race starts off the Balboa Pier and finishes one-half mile north of the Los Angeles Harbor breakwater. The boats wi ll then proceed to Cabrillo Beach Yacht Club where they will raft up for a night of partying before the race back lo Newport Sunday. At' in all NOSA races. the event is open to yachts rated under the International Offshore Rule, Performance Handicap Racing Fleet, Ocean Racing Catamaran <multi-hull) and Southern Ocean Racing Divisions (SORO>. Se a Mag azine Sold Sea Magazine, the oldest ple asure boat magazine on the West Coast. has been sold to Peterson Publishing Co. of Los Angeles by CBS Publications. Officials of the two companies said the sale was consumated for a sum in excess of St million. Peterson is also the publisher of Pacific Skip· per, published in Newport Beach, and Lakeland Boating, a mjdwest magazine, aod several other specialty magai ines. Orange Coast College Community Service Office RIVER RAFTING Shoot th• t•pid• on th• f•m•d Stanialaua River/ Friday Morning -Sunday, Sept 12 -14 LAST CHANCE TO REGISTER! Fee -$180, Inc. transportation, meals on river Credit C•rda Welcome -Trip Info. fi&l-6880 TIGHT MONEY? RECESSION? RECORD HIGH INTEREST RATES? NOT AT DesiCJll Lenders! w • ...,._,.._. • .,.,,.._.'" o ,.._ .... tto........, io-. • IO"l'o .,,...,_ .... C1••1rdllproperly· .. lilMI 714Ko ....... 1 ..... aewt.t1111111 ~ oc~. '°""' ...,..,., .... AC)ri » wawp~-7.,.,._7.,_..,. ... , .. .. ... ..... ~ ......... ..... lWrdhwt ... 75% ......... ..., ..... , ........... 3,..., ._.._ ........ ,s'"" For .acts •p1da6h .. +lu c•JolllaWlsoll, 530..7681 We're .... rwwlttlc. i... c__.,..,,,. • te wW c•lflt8'u • ~ .... 12112 .... ._ .... ,.., .... ..... CA. Lo•• eon SS,000.00 _. MCwecl by • COM~··· of Real la ht sGMI Plopll"ty. spcz.rry top-sidar with nzeist.<zrOO. en ti-slip sch. @)~o@@)~~ 44 IUIUon lt land• Newport Beo.clt0 7J4/tU.f·ts070 1001 "ttea.ood BWd.0 -.IMH>od V&Uaec•2J3/47P-7727 • • .· -.... SPORTS I BUSINESS r 'Y' .. " MA11DUL ....... ...-..4.lt:hrrtl ~-T;':. ~lt..AM'-"'IA •r•• '--",. . ' 1. "-·'· •• ) t ._...,, .. \ 0 ) 1 w.,...,,, \, , . ........ , ' , . kModt. '. , . ~·· , ... LPl .. I " •• 00 cw. . ' , ' o,_" •• • 0 .. ,......c .. '. , ........ J I •• ~-11 •Ot t ....-.n • I I I 1-~' )0 0 0 -···· J ' I 0 W.10•,I J OOO _.._,, ,. '' ...... , 0000 C"*'· I 1 ' I 0 .......... ' •• 0 MM ..... llft I 0 , 0 0 . • 0 ~···"' lllAtGt1w.• 0 0 t 0 ,. ...... ti J ' J T4"-'' J I 4 t0 ) ~ .. I ....... \.ft .... 100 !fl .,._,. "911~ OIO COO 01• • £ -~.OP -l °' Aftft~ J L08 "" ....... lltllledllplli• 10. '" -l ..... lt .... 1. l.-l!W. It-H" -C.., (Jtl. sa _ ...... ._., .... ........... IP N It £It ea SO llllltk ll •••• J t ~ • *-IL .... I tt1 I 1 I I I ........ •... CM1tofl CW.21).71 t I l J 1 I M<Gr-S.M I 0 0 0 0 t WP -~ l -? 01 A -'9.ti.. ~ .......... tt<NSIOll 110 000 000 1 0 SI LOlllS 1~ 001 Ob 10 1• 0 tt Fon~"· "-''" U>. Pl.cl.on en. uicort• (11 Mid Ainoy, F~m. ~n m. Llnlefteld "l -T. K.-.fv W Mettlfl. HLL-Foncll. 10-11. A-tQ.02$. W-7,Pir ...... All..,1• 001 130 ta0-1 • 0 P ltt$1>ur91\ 000 Ito ~ t O Malule. llrtdfonl Ill, Celftp Ill. l'lr.-v "I -8eMdld: O. Robinson,~ Ill. T.ic .. 1ve ,., -on.~ .... u. 1.--0. RoblnlOft. 5-7. 5---Hf~V Ol Hlh- Ali.nt.e, _.,... 1211; Pl~. lkrr• "' A-12,3'3. ........ ,.... S... Fr a11eba> 000 100 006-1 4 0 Nlofll rul 000 000 006-0 , 0 Wt\11-1, ~ m ..., ¥rt; Sanden ••· $0\I Cl), Frymatl l'I ..,d C.rler W- WllllSOfl, .... L-S.,_non, n ... Sa Minion 1141. A-1•"'4 ,._.,Mets, SM! OlfOO 000 000 3111-4 IS o New Vort. 000 001 000-1 " I wise. Fl19<• 0 1 -h f>t<e , 8 urrk , R J.cll\on 111, Mii.., Ill -Tre..,lno. w Wl\e, S·S L Burris. ,.. sa .... -Flf'<ler\ I 111 HR-S•n O•eoo, W1nlleld 1111 ,.-1',611. Amerlc•n Leegu• --~., ........ ". TU H 0o:t 020 ~· \ I Toronto on JOO oox • •• o M•d•~ ... LYI• 10, D•••in • ., •nd ~; O...Cy, a.-"'· ~ C'l •"" Wllltt. W-Clency, IMO. L~ 10.•. HR-Tellft. Wiiis UI. ,411-1~,ML ..,.._4.TwlMl Mi-504• 000 000 010-1 IO 0 Cle\lel-111 000 IOx-4 11 0 ltOOSITWlll. v...-..,.n (7) and Suter•; .. ,..,, v. ow m Md oi.z. w_..,._, ...._ L--. ll·lt,,.-7,512. ......... ...__. I( •nMS OIY 103 001 000-S 9 Mll•aullee 000 110 OIC>-4 I I Siilllt«fl. ~ C.l erld Porter; M1tdlell, HoldsworUI 141 <tftd 8 . ,,..rtlM 1. -SPtlttorlt, 10.•. L-Mltcllell, 44. s a .. - llN<tlt\ Cll. HA\o-Milw ... llee, TlootNS 111), Yount UOI; IC-•s Cit'f, Hwrcll• UOI •-1u 1s.. ....... J, n.-1 o.11'.tt .. -010 .. 00-2 ' 0 (lli<llVO Oo:t ODO 000 000 01-J l'J 0 M«rh, Poieme Ill) atld Parrllft: twms. "•r,,,.r Ill. Proty 1111 end eor ....... KlrnM 1101. W-P rOIY, l ·1. L-ROH,.._, 6.0. A-lt,511'. T~10 ,..-.m .. .-> -TM*AL LaAOUll G U II M fin ... ndrklt, SI. LouK m ... 62 UI .324 f .n>plelOfl, SI. Louts 103 4" n 10 .:m ... , ... nc1u. SI. Louis m ..i " 14' .323 8 uckner. OllU90 Ill ol3S S2 uo .m f rillo, P1111..-tphla !OS lit 50 11S .321 Crur.H-on 123 ... '2 147 .J1S M<8rlde. Pllll 104 m S3 13' .JU 0.w50tl,Mot'lt•ffl 116 432 70 Ill .llO Slmmon1,Sl.l.ouK u s 3'17 73 1n .3ll1 Qetwy,~ ,,. SIS e.J 19 .. -·-SC"'"k!I, Ptllladelptlla, U ; HOnMr, Atl- ta. 11; 9alllr, ~ 2S; ""'""'°''A~ n : c e11er. -·••I. n ; Hefldrld1, 51. Lo.its. n; o.ney, ~ n : c1ar11. s... Fran<iKO. n. .... ..-1. S<""''"'· r 111t•delph••· U ; Oerwy, o.qors, '2: H•ndrlcll. St. Louis , 91; He.--Z. 54. LOlllS. e1; 91i1i1er,.,......,, "· ,....,,.~, 8M*Y. Plmllunlll, ·~; "-· °""'"" u.-1 Walk, J'tlillftlpfli., ,.l; Carllon, ........... 'J0.1; JackSOn, Pltt1bllr!lfl, W ; l .tCon•, Hwlton ... l ; s.mblto, HO\lllon, •3; 111<.....,, Houslon, 10-.. AMEltlCAMLEAOU• G Ae It erett. IC-CllY ., 3S1 n c:oo.-r,Ml..._• 120 '111 ., Dl-.Clew411ftd ·100 -43 C.-,A,...n 114 4V H WlllOft,ICMClty 1,. ~ 104 Rl'lefs. Te11M ns m 11 8oll, Taus 107 ~ ., ~. INttin..123 ., • Ollwt', 1'-1• Sii 1S Wea.ti. Nlw Yortl '°' m 50 " PU. 14$ •• 111 -'53 1lJ ·"" ,., .m 190 .. os .m 140 .32t Ill 3ll WO ·'°' llS .- c:..-1111 ..... L.11119 .-..ra '· ........ •·•·• '-~ ~ ~ °"' ... ~ U.LO.... ue•t...1 .... _ ............. 01-' Ot,,,... ~ 0-W ,,..,., , .... I .. I •• •, n4 V IC ...... CCI ... Or•t ~yi.c-. t4. W ... • I llw M••- Nl•,.O•T IOt'Ht'• Lo<h r l -~ •"9\e<I ) ..... <KW.. •I bell. -i) -Ito, I M llN I ,.1¥\M.11-1 ,_,,., .......... -~ •flVl•n U I .... II. • b•tt•<uO•. IOO m.Ck•fw,., ...._ 1 "'-~''· It roo . <Od OAMA ... ,.._,. 1• tl'Ql.,, S &.et\ llt •t ..... ~· ~. "'· ...... . M141o ............ Ok._1'11', , ... , .. .... ,,_ ,. .... -9111 Men ..... w . ..., >4 11onllO, I llellllu1. O• ro<' fl~ll . t.00) ma<Uf-' PAltAC>tH COVI t)J _ .. ,. H o-u , w. ,_.., ,,.._ -,_ ~ .. 1. ~t. .... , MIN Ottlll ... •k_,. V<- 1 I, .. I ,._ CE"91 T•lft<._r •t l<t1et o.ls, W .... M , Mllllw WI ............ M<N•-· • 1,.,,, t S S 1 1-t, l ri.n GM flrlof cNrt 0.VICI ~ • I • I. • I, .,_, "'-• 11_.i def Miil• GMIOotto, I t. H . .. 1, ~--.-.-, .... ,.....,, 1 .. , 6 t ....... Vic A-n 091 '-tff1 0.•lftel\, ....... ,,, ... ~ .. ~-.-v.,.11. .t·t , .... "'; Cllris .-.yott• ,,., ""-" Mlllllell, ... i_ .. ,, ... t. H«OM ~ -JfH' _,..., ............... (:Np ....,,., ... ult $fllfM. .. ,, "'· W . s.n-1 G~ del. "k ll, A"'9t, t4. .. I, .. 2 ... 2. •k ll Ft911 de4 (.My ........ t-1, .. 2. •.O; Ao" C-dt4 .y,_ ..., ...... ~· ........ , .• J • ._,, WellJ _. tlfld Of"~ M •.. 1 •...... 2. Tl,., G"'IMlson dot T-Gr .......... ,_ ..... M , e.rM ¥1.-OM • .io..Luls Clen, 6-l. .. 1 ..... 1 .. , •·i : Tlrn Wllkttot> Clef T- GulllUOfl, .... "4, "'· 1·). Rk k 111\e~r de' Trey w.itv, M , .. 2. u . W ; ,..,.., L.ellCll oef TI,., IM'l'«10, .... 6-l. I ... Frlb 8- l"IJ de4 ~ _.,lntt, .. 1. l-6, .... M . •~ Ru\sell $ln'4llMn ... Ml•• LH <ll. 6-l. ..:I. , .. ,, ... WOMI N "'"' """' si.fle• P•ul• 5mllll ... Carollflct SIOll, .... 1•; s .. ...,, J...., Otf Glynis eoi.i.. "'· .. ,. FrederlQue Tlllb•ull d •I. Cllrhll•n• Jolluant. ,.._Ml: tt_s-n..,<Mf. t.....,• Har1ord, U. .. 2 ...... llel~Y ".ttelwn °"· Oeboull Je¥eM. "°· .. ,. L1nd$jtv Mone 0.1 Mtrlana S1m1-s.cu eoro ... 1. "': Sylvie Henlk• def. Merv Lou Plele+., M . J.!, J•-Ou'llell doll. H•na SlrK-•. 4·2, •·I: ltotler1' Mt C.Hum def. N•ncv v .. rQln, w . 1•. •-Rl<N4'ds det zencs. L leu, u. ... ,. W . CendV RoYflOldl def Diane ~. "l. .,1; Sl<KY MM9olln de• Le le F orooel, •·'· 5·1. •·'= Merline Navrt1Uov1det. L-Sandln, ""· ...... 1. _.... ..... ,,""" 'lllN)lnla RUllCI def Nina Botlm. ~ ... 3, tleltln• 8 unoe def. Ol•l'nt MOr· r lson, .. 2 ... 2; S.-lflO def. Ellw 8Uf'9ln. •·l , •·4; Pe"' T"9\'MCIMI otl. LH A~ tonociolls, ........ M ; OIMWW FromhOltz otl. z,,,. c;.rl"°", W . 2•, M. Def Mer WDN•IOo\"l''S 111511\.TS ,,, .... 04e't ......... ,,......., Finl rau -Prolftl.....e 18.n•te•I, 7.IO. l 40, 3.00. __,IV Belle (H-lrtl. J..00, J 00; ~lor Atth<llOn IV.ienzu.l•I, 6.00. So<Oftd race -IN. e«wa ll'l•ltl. 1• oo, 1 00, 4.40; p...,_. LOU IAarnl,.11. lt.00, l ,60; Della TetTOr IJGMS), 0.40 U dally _..... (2..,l paid ~1.40. Tlllrd race -f!llelaine CC•U•nedal, 2• 20, •.:zo, 4.20; Sumrn9f'lalt (JonHI, S.80. 3.IO; D~k Tf"\Kt CC>e4~.,.I. 1.10. ,_,,, ,... -e -1 S.Wlftll cw-.1. 1 60, 4.MI, l.40; ttettt> -ILIOl\aml, SAO. J.•: Awrr 'H' GGl'le ccas~•. :uo. "'~~ -Atw~ 8'"t lo.tatiouswre>. IUO, s.20. 4.00: Plreta <MtGurnl, U O. l.tO; Abyss (Hewtoy), .&.20. S.S •LKU CNI ~ '''°·'°· S4Jrtll r.ce -unrec...,oe IH-i.yl. 1u o. S 60, U O; o.t'QlftQ $ta< IM<arl"Oftl, 3M. 1.90; Lot's 8e w_., IPlnuvl. 4.10. Sevenlll r •<• -Doub le 0 •<•11 C0.1........,.1. U O, UO. 2.40; Couftl_,.S T•rresto (Mon•l, •.60. 1.10: Parsln ISlloelftMl.erl, 2.40. SS exact• 13·11 pelO '"'·'°· '2 Pkk $111 C .. H ·M -31 Paid SIOS,t.13 with -•lntlinO ll<ket Isl• llor~I. U Plc:lt SI• con~llon plllcl Sl~.111 •Ill\ 1' w-s 111¥9 hones). E IQhlll rac.e -&old and Gold t Ham, • "'°· 11>.00, 4AO; Splendkl SC>'UGe CSllOem•lcet), s.10. J .<IO; Sir o.ncM l~C..l"Oftl. U O. Nlnttl race -H .. a Adel C'llelt<INel•l, 'I 80, 6..10, •AO: MerSl>el'' Flrl l 10llva1'951. 1 60, 4.40; Rlqfllly Hobie IPlflCO I. 3 60 U e.et i. n .. 1pekl\11•50 Attendance · 11,414 Hoftvwood Pane Wl!l*llSoAY'S ltHU'-TS n• .. ,.._.. .._,"'"'"°'' Flnt rac9 -IClflo\ Ooullle f ~l. S.60, :U O, U O; Sout:ll VlltlnQ CToddl. 10.60. S.60; L-pop (Wllli..MI . 4.40. U .,._,. !Ml peld"3.30. S.Cond ·--PotnpenO ~Ince I L..onQIOI • . .O, lo.CO. •.20: NO Bel CIMe<l, ,,60, 4AO; C•m-~ 1$/lt'rrMI, 3.00 TlllrO race -Wll!IOI' Forty T-CPerllerl. 12 IO, 1.:IO, S 20; HowdV Guy IVell.- l"QM,.,I, 1A . 3.60: GedM t~I. S.00. SS ew.ct• Ct-II pjllCI SIJ0,00 • OOINKlleffl,)llftO<OO •H rou.1"" UMT• MONICA lit ~" nt ~ o.u. ,,. ma<Mrel, '°'-•lo, • •O<• 1>6•'-• .,.111M1t, 1 wrocuo. vun uu -* """ "'"· >00 mecu-... ,,. roe• cod, 1ecow cod. s 111\Q <od. MA\.llM.I -~ .,,....., 1 ... 1111;11, 11 u ll<O 0e"• UO lfttKkH'91, Ill rotk II"' U M OICGO CNAM, P\. l-. - , ..... •••a•'• l•Hl"t•I , .. •l'el•" •S n l-'lr• '-• I) ,.1_,.ll, S OolONfl. I ""l<lln •~to.ob.us.• roo 11111 Cl•._. 111•> 1$7 anel•" 111 bonllo I ••S m•O•rtl, IS <•ll<o "'''· • ,_ oau . I bt!r re<ud•. IS roctt Hsi. SEAL e&ACH "_,.,, Ol roU. "'"· IOOrnec:-.1.0wr>CllMU· LOMO eUCH (°"""'' '#Mrll -UO •not•••· 41) ro<k ll"'. s blwefln '"""· ' IM<· ""ucM' S bOftlto, -<•ll<O llAU . .. -o•n. ,...,,,.... ,.~• -50 •1191en. )()() m&ei.erel. IOSwndtl&s\ . 11eDOMOO-''° _ .. ,, 1venowtell.1 11411bul, 15 send beU. _. <•h<!> bU>. • 1*'· ra<ud•. 11' tJonllo. m mectterel, 1 11no cod, ttS rocll ""'· ._ -tJ1 enolers 1,410 mackerel. •I• roo. llsh, tS -\lo SANTA aAR .. •A -9'I enqle" 11 cahco b<I\\, 2fo llnQ cod.• cow cod. II• red ,,,._.. I ... llbut.133 ro<i. ti"', S90 ma<ll•rel. SAM .. l!OllO In... St. Unoll"ll -l•I •noler' 1 tl#\t, 404 <•ll<o !Nu . 1 11no cod. J1 bonito,• sand OHS, I ~llo•tall I~ O' ~Ill ~ ~ .,.s bonito, )1 c•llco .,.,,, 2'1 mecure•. 1 <&lleo t>a\S. 14' roo "~ Thi• Week'• Trout Plants LOS ANOl!L~S -81Q Rock Creek, eou. outl C•nyon Crui.. Upi>e• P1<y Cr«t• (Fr«n(1>man's Fl&ll, Sen Gabriel !llw r IE•tl. west 111"1 Horii! Forlls> SAN el!llNARDlltO -Grun V~lln L•U ~ La•• L'fll~ Cret • IMl<l<llf' ~nd Nortl> Forill>, !.llvtrwood Rt lolt<VOlr SAN OIEG0-5.&n LUI\ Rev River lllVEltSIOE -FulrnO• La~e. H•rn•I L••e TULARE -80nf' Cre.-.. Orv Me- Crt«k. K«,.,. Al1rer IFaor..,lt w O•m In V.Al Powernou\•. Jonn\onddl~ Br 1dO,. to F•lrvltw Dami. K•m River !Soul" FOO.I. NO~ Vouno Crtth, r>eooerm1nl Cree h. !1>1• p,v,.r tNorth AnO S,outn ~or-.~ 01 M dln F0<\) llE•N tit "'" Jh,,..t \Sott)'t PQ..,t'rn<>u\e to o..moc.rat Odm KRl POwttrhou~ 10 Ltlk* 1~w11a1 INVO --et CrMll, BIQ Plnot Creflt<, BISllOP C ....... 1 LOWrr. MtOdll', Sovtll and In .,_., 11 1, CollOf'wood Crel'll. Good•'" c ........ 1nde11411<1enc.e Cree•. LOM Pint' Cr•P•, Norlll U kt , O•k Cr••k IHo rlll Fork), SabrlNI I.Me.~'~ Cretlt. Sovlll L.lkl', !;ymffteS er-. T•-Cteefl, Tlnt1n- Cf'Mk. Tuttle Creel<. MOttO -BriOQtPOrl Rne'"'°"• eucuve Cf'ffk, Conlik.I Crffl<, Coovkl L•ht, 0.dd man Creek. Ellery Leke. G.orQf' L11~e. Glen Cl"Mll. Grant Ltlle, Green Creek GYll L•Ut ... lnqi Creek. Ju.. Lake, Lee llonong C'"k, Lw '.llnlnO Cf'ff4< ISOUt" Fork>. Lil· lie Wlllkef' LAil•. Ll"W, Wal\et River. Lundv Lu e. M.tm<• I.Aloe. MerfllftOI" Cr~•k. MM L•llt , McGff Creo. Miii Cre.k, °"""'s Rl..,•r (Benion Cr<>MlnQ and 8 111 SPtlno~>. Pine Creel<. Aewrw Creek, Robin.on''"""· Ao<ll Cr~ll IP•r<1dl'° C•mP 10 tom·• Pl6<t!. Tom'\ Pl«• uPSt<Hm 10 Rock '"""" \.eke. RocJ< °"" I.Aloe lo tile encl of I~ roHI. R~ll Cf'HI! Lake. Rusi. Crff\, SoJdo. dlebao er-..,., L•i.e. S.rdlnt Cr«t4<. SMrwln Cteett. Sii,., L-'le. Swll<IQe• C,....., TloQ• Ulke, T""'°'DVll L.M<e. Twin L<lk..S 8rl6QePort llJJJC>e' end Lowe<l. Twin Lak6 CMemmotlll. 'lllroon1• CrHll. v1ro1nla u kes (l)pper....., i.-1. Walker Rivi'• C~l>rl• Flel C~ lo 1-n of W•lller. Le""'lll Mtl.OOWS '-'°""" 10 Sonon Brl<lee I. PGA Statistic• ,,.,,,..,... ,. ... ,., ......... Dnvlftt OhtMt<• I. Oan P ohl. ,,,.S yards . 7 8V<ldY GllrdM<, 711 • 3 FUUY l Ol'ller 710 I •. Jc. SMad.110. s Tomrnv V•lent•N . 110 '· °""""-~.,.._ "' falrw•Y 1. Mille Aeicl. .aoo , . c;.1..,1n """'"· .188 J. 8111 A09e0 .na •. JoM Mahaffey .fYt s. "-" """" 1 S3 ~, .. ._..,.....1 ... '·).Ck Nl<klll\I\, n1. 2. Ml~e Reid, llS. J. ~vif'I Peile •• 104 •. Curtis Slr&nQe 10S S Jol>n Maf\aftev, 10) ,._... l"llttt -11.-14 I. Ga<Y Player. 19 S2 1 Jerrv Pale, 21.81 l . George 8urM. 18.90. •·Tom Welson. 78 ti, s. Don Jlll'U¥'!. 1'.~. Fourth race -Mr N.M IVell<Wld• 111911am1, s.eo. J,00, 2.40: Pl•llnum G1<1 CGoudf'HUI, J.ID, 2.10; Wol'nMI IBeyteSll, u o. Flffll race -Reven'• "" CGoudf'HU), 6.60. 4.60, UO. \ACtf Eddy (S6Mtfll. •.IO. •AO: J~ (Longo), 4.00. U •~ c ,.,, .,.id "7.00. Sl•lh r~lerev Ct\ltrlle (Vallan- dlnQllerlll. 1.60, 3.20. J.60: Rerun lllck IAtl- ,.1.i. 3.•0, '·'°' A-Monte rey Bn•ae C""leoenl. S 60, J.20, UO. A~ Scw"'9\.1Men 1 Tom Wat'°", •• 94. 2. U e lrt'v1no. 10.00. ). ArdV Bean. 10.n . • ~,,., Pale, 71).74. s. ttelltl Fef'QUS. 10."6. Seventh rec• -Smoolh Cll••les CWllllemsl, '1.•. st.20, n to; Orll!Oln (L19"tflllll, H.10. e,40; A~ Red Clllte"'-1, 3 ••. IS eUC\a 1 ... 1 pelcl SU ... 00. ~--olS..b-tNN'Holft 1. Andy Beal\ •. 71• 2, Tom W•''°"· .710 J Ctle l, Jerrv Pa1t and L.ee Trn•nO. JOI s. Kell!\ ,,..9\A. 201 E..-Uaden t O.ve Eld>elbef'ger, 13. 1. eruct Llt'lft•, It. J. Ille.I 8uddY o.-. &In ttreu..-1, Bob Mvrtf/'IY, Mid Kellh k l'9US. 10. lllf-. u.-.n Vote Ple a ses Kaiser Stee l OAKLAND <A P l -Kaiser Steel Corp. says It Na& "very p leased" with a decision by workers al its st.eel mill ln Fontana t.o for go part of their pay ralses in an effort to sidetrack a possible shut- down. But the Oakland-based company declined to m:ike any commitment to keep the financially troubled facility open. MEANTIME. TWO TOP aides to Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown J r met with union and company officials in Fontana to see what -if any -s teps could betaken by the state to keep the facility operat- ing and save jobs . The state officials are Don Vial, director of the Department of Industrial Relations. and Melinda Leudlke. director of the Department of Economic and Business Development. The Fontana plant -Kaiser's only basic steel· producing operation -has been losing money for several years . "We can't be sure that the cost savings from the union's offer to give up part of future COLA (cost -of-living adjustment) increases and to help us improve productivity will be enough .to make the difference," a company spokesman said. However . the company did say the agreements "will be very important factors when the board of directors meets to consider the future course for Kaiser Steel.·· THE BOARD IS f'CHE OULED to meet nei<t on Sept. 5, at which time it m ay have available studies be ing prepared by outsic¥ consultants on the economic feasibility of continuing operation of the plant versus liquidation. The Fontana m ill now employs about 4,000 workers. down from 6.500 several months ago because of radical cost-cutting programs institut· ed by the company. Union members voted Tuesday by a 3·t0·2 ma rgin to forgo $1 in pay raises over the next three years . The workers were scheduled to re· ceive qua rterly raises based on the cost .of hving . They will continue to receive any COLA increases m excess of the $1 figure. Workers at the Fontana plant now earn an average of about $10 a n hour. Kaise r reportedly had been seeking more sob· stantial pay reductions, as well as union Mn cessions on the size or work crew~ West Co ast's Trade lncreQ,Ses SAN F RANCISCO <A Pl -Foreign trade through the West Coast for the first six months of 1980 was up 28 percent from a year ago. Security National Bank of San Francisro has reported. The bank's international trade databank de· partment said imports totaled $24 billion while ex ports totaled $22.3 billion for a $1.7 billion trade de· ficit. The $46.3 billion in trade to and from foreign countries increased 28 percent from the $36.3 billion in trade duMng the first six months of 1979. the bank said. J apan led the West Coast's list of major trad· ing partners during the first six months of this year. Canada was a distant second. .CALL TOM MARSTON ABOUT A SECOND TRUST DEED LOAN UP TO 5500,000 Newpor~!~~!tr!.~.~'!;,}.nc G I ] \4 I ] {fJ {fJtfJ P UBLIC NO'l'ICE ,,..,,._. ,,_ "9..,..-t 9Ndl. CA- DAILY PILOT 87 P\JBUC NOTICE NOflCC Of' ,llP .... ICAT"IC* 10 H LL AL~IC ••v••t.o•• To Wllorn II Mey ceMHfl CLUB OHRATIONS INC k Hllf" 1"' to I'-o.o-t-of Atc~I< a. ... , ... Comro4 ~ '40'' ON SALi! 8£ E It Ml \<tll •l<ollolk -·"~" al ltOO Ad•'"' •"•flue, Costa Mow. C•lllornle Put>llslleCIOf~ C:O.st O•Ov Pllol, AUO ti, ltlO 3SJUO Fl-ST Put>l•~hfel Or-(;o.lsl OdilV P•lot Auq 11. SeP1 4, 11, 18, 1490 lS3HIO ----P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOOS BUSINESS MAME ST•TEMENT l "e IOI-)IMM>'I •~ dO<nQ O\l~I M\SH O .E c. E N TERPRISES, ,, 8 arun • Court, Mt wporl 8••<11, Calltomla 9Ml Oavkl e. Olrl11-. 1' e .. una Cour1, N~ Buell, C•lltornla fM6J This ~~ "conclUCleO t>Y ... in- \2 P\C.k Sia pjllCI u.o.J.10 Wiii\ nine wlf>o nlnt tlekets Cflw llor'MS). P Pk t. Sia <~ J0611110n ,_ t-eS.JD wtlh -•1""'"9 11c:lletS ._. .,....,, u tcfatdl ~ .... PllCI SISM .... ftw ...... llclwts !_...._ enll tcrMcll). EleMll r--I• Mefllle l~l I .•.'-"· l.OI; ICend.cla ..., !Todd), 3AO, U Ol C>ale'I lfMll CSclfonWltlel, J .•• 1. /11,rwty 9Nft. lS7 2. Curtll Sir-. 3'1. 3 . ~ 8urm, 314. 4. Jefrt P•I•, JO'I. i. ~d~J01. """ MNleT LHllen 1. t om Wetton, 1Sl0,2SI. 2. Lee Trevino, L======================='l "'v~I. 0.""' E Clw~'"'5efl Tiii\ S1~emtnl w•s llled wllll the County Clerk ol Or•-COUf'IY Oft MIMI! r--Vanity llldl IP..WI, UID, U O, tA; ,......., 0.... IL~llll, UO, 1A ; GnM Ole OllrY C~I. U.. SS u-.n. , .. 11 ..-sas.a T--r--SilnmK~N~l. I.•. ••• <IAO; OllOD Ht COMld't'I. ._., s.•; "°""' tllllMI' CT_.,, 11.oe u euc ta (t~l.-.'4•· _....,.._,,,... .. ,. .......... Ci _....,.. ...... ,, • • 0 .... . "T ..... ..,, .......... . == ........... . ....... , .,.....,, . IMNll. W II 1 t, COTl ........ a..., ....,.. ... '-tlA ·=-~· C-.ll II '324.51'. S. Cur11• 5'•1ft98, '261 A1S. 4. Arwty a.on, ~. S. ,Jerry Pelt, Ul0,501. 6.. C••19 SUll!er, •1W,"1. 7 o-99 Bum., S1'4.1S3. I. R.., f'lovd, Siii) ..... •· Jack Nl<lllaus, SUS.7 ... 10. L•rrY Nelson. 1111"20· Misc. WedltJ I r:z:::-Dtbftl .._. ...... COteltMATI llllOS -~ CE_.. MltMr • ........,, ........ CAfllae .... ~...-9-Ml•. '4tcllen, ~-I• .......... ,,.,,...\.-cl ...... ~ ~-'°'-~ °"'41 1ta1...-r, ..-Ci.ff. o.t.._. t4tl Dwa.. ......... OMWolr .. tlie~A--"':A.. ~CMNITS-.._.._. ~ ............... ,,.., ....... , .. ,...wc.,...-..11. U.STML.L --· a RllNU&ll .. LOJ ANOILH LAICIH -Welftd .,....., .................. ........ ....... ._..."- CUVl\.MO ....... -~ °"' ............... .,_ ..... Ole'9 a-.ntwa •• .... _..,.c......_ ..-caaY ....... ......,"""" NIWYOM~ .......... .. &M""9t .... Mll'f.,.... ..... ... '"'~"' fJLV«ltl-....... .. ....... _.. ....... .............. "- ..... MAVWM M!Ot4TMAWKI -...... ... ...., .... cieecA. ... •••••••••••••••••• : "QTM CHALLENGE" • • • • • • • • • • • • • Discover the improvement caring makes in superior quality and service . IBM COMPATIBLE You have to feel and see it for yourself! ... .-,119ust , •. "'0 ~,..., Publllh!d ()r-Coe,. Daily PilOC, """·,.,Seal • u . , •. ,. :141.eo P UBU C NOTICE \ ' or-- • Business FOOTHILL SMALL BUSINESS INDEX ,_ •• ., l"lll .... ., Small Finns '"' ... , f Feel Pinch " • • . Smull busin in Califomaa haa been t~~c1al ly hard hU b>· th!! t-urr~nl re<'(. ion and hlah tn tereat r•te . accordlna to lhe flnt Foothill Small Bwiiness lndex s.1 were down three lnde .. pio!nt.s ln Jµne and havt.' dropp(.-d 18 point ~•n~ the prime rate hat 20 pereent In Aprtl 1'hts equala a 16 ~ Pt-rcenl drop in s u.les in th last two month~ or the ser ond Quarter Tht• tndl,X u e Junuary 1980 a5 thl' basE' m o nth of lOOpo1nts "Both Industrial a nd coosume r r.all'~ suffer~l an the second quarter. a lthough lhc con•urnt•r M•t• tor fared JW.l 1t llttl~ ~ttcr.' acrorda.n g to Rusi.ell B Faucett. C'<ttUll' ... vie,. !)resident of the Foothill Group, Inf . nd dtrt>ctor of th<' newly for mt"d F oothiJI SmalJ Eiusanesb lnlormat1on Centt-r wh11'h }!lsues the tndc\ "IT IS c-u :AK. HOWEVER. that the tight m o ney policy p urs ued by Washington ha~ hurt small business dtspropQrtaonately ··The sales Lrenct for small businei.s closely follows the d1rect1on of the fina l s ales t•omponenl of real gross nut1onal product. except for the even more dramala l' drop in the second qua rter This is due to sm all business' more precario us access Lo capital When credit rcstnctaons are increased and bunks raise the cost of money, s malle r companies WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD · Jewels by Jo-.epn purrn"""" u1.imono~ Qrln !>Ion~ qo10 .. no "''""' ••om ''"•-11 .. •ncJ•v•ou,il'> of'IO ti'llttle:. L<t•Olu t'•r1m1n,1t11'r d11fl 1•v,1l11.1 lion bv our ll•Ptln!• H1qr.ei.t Pf•(.!'' n.11<1 tu 4 d.J•lv '-at t(J I> C 1 ,.,,.C '>unc.•¥ P1" •r • tvfl,1~ A!>k IOI Bf'll'y 1..>•,;1 t' O• lk111t, "' l•fo<1y . '•· .... JEW LS by JOSEPH South Coasl Plaza. Costa Mesa • S4G-9066 .. ••• tlllAMtt llU'Mll .... ..... ...._, ..... , .. .Ht' lht' fln.t t.o bt• tk111ed t1nanc1ng. ror cing them to l"Ul hiiek on 1n vl'nlo ry purchues and sales.'' b81d Fuuc'ell Further eVlderw ... of the impact or tight money h<.1 11 bl'l'n a slow1 n ~ of accounts r eceiv able lurnO\t-r, the ltin~lh o r lim t! at lakes a com pany lo l'Oll('1·1 This measure has slowed 10 percent since J Jnuary . from 51.33 days to 56.75 da ys. Footh11J e xpec ts !>ales to remain depressed un- ll I the fourth quarter or 1980 whe n the e ntire l·conomy :.hould begin to recover Tl .. : INDEX INDICAT E..'\ however that the :.mallest firms. those with monthly sales less than SI00.000. performed the bes t during the first six month~ of 1980 The s ales tnde x for these com p:rnaes stood at 149 :1l the e nd of June For compa nies with monthly sales between $100.000 and $500.000 the index reu lo 103 in June after a hig h of 114 in April. The largest companies 1n th(• index, lhose with sales greater than $500.000.' droppt.'Cl 24 poinl.., s ince January 1980. the'"basc monlh. T he smaller firms ' s uperior performance is al· tributed to the fact that firm s of that size often havf> their own "ma rke t nic he" and are less s us· c(•ptible to recessionary pressures. ! $50,000 to $500,000 J INCOME PROPEllTY SECONDS Talk Merger I • Inter-• 0 1L111 1119V-nl .,_ .. • w-kl11 commitment• • Mo nrhly fundl199s Valencia Bank and American State Ban.k. both headquartered in Orange County, have entered in· to preliminary me rge r discussions. •Com-rd •I • Rulde"t'-1 • ~ .. onth• to 3 yct•r• • Southern C.llfoml1 I •• •' 1 I 1t11I lo•n infon••tlon service t ., , u 1111o1ru. 1t11~ , ... -cl ... (714) 759·1515 AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE ;>JO Nt:wPf>•I CPnre• Clf1ve {)p,.gn Phl1a "t->wl u11 Be.tt.n tJhtorn,a ':12-o T he joint announcem ent was made by Gene W. Hobday. Valencia president, and Raymond W. Haas. board chairma n of American State. Should the m erger be completed, the com· bined bank will be one of the largest independents headquartered in Ora nge County. Both str essed that merger discussions a l this time are in the initial stages and will require further study. Con summation of the merger will be s ubJect to. a mong other things, approval by both boards of diredors. approval by shareholders or both banks. regulatory approval and a d efinitive merger agreem ent containing customary terms and conditions. Vale ncia. with a ssets o f more than $100 milUon. is headquartered in Fullerton. American State of Newport. Beach. bas assets of m ore than$67 million. Merc·ury Rf"JJorfs Dlridnad Dur Merc ury Savings & Loan Association has d eclared the next regular quarterly 12""2 cent cash dividend. payable to stockholders of record Oct L Payment date will be Oct. 15 or as soon thereafter a s practicable. Me rcury Savings has 14 offices in Orange. Los Angeles. Santa Clara and Ventura counties. r------------------------------------~ COLLECTORS CORNER *W1 paint 'tound ths elook ••. JI n1~1111ty to u111p/1t1 yo11' Joh on time. • We'U w.e every minute of every day, if necessary. to 3ssure your jobs completion on schedule. Quality and rehab1hty are our stock in trade. Call for an estimate. .I. P. CARROi L 1:11\tti\\\ . ~ I I I f Rent Coins & Stamp• QOLD & SILVER Prtce9 for a.28-IO 0..C--~tH,'7 ...., -IC,,.err-SMS. s.51. ~Pk I.HR S64S. S6JI. 100Coronlls M11. Ml'. 50~ S171. S7t1. to"Jl.SUver~ lttt'!f. 115$'!1. CMlfw~..-... (714) 5511150 ScKrth Coeet Ptua VIiiage ..........-1\. , ___ c:-..... , r·~========~==~ I ~.-----~TE~ ILLEGITIMA BIRTHS I ANO GONORRHEA OtlAllGl COUllTY I TIED FOR FIRST 2704 South Grand Avenue, Santa Ana · (714) 540-33t3 I lOS ••CHES I 310 Norill Mad•so" A~enue • 12131 660-9230 I BL~ "Painting th• Town Sine• 1930" I \ J R. Ph. " .. ·. ~--------------------------------------~ --:.~!!!Bi!~~~~~~ A Golden Opportunity let Inflation Work For You QUICK CASH (ueoalty ln 7.to 10 WOOtlng Deya) MOOILOW MONTHLY PA~ '-.. ..,,..,..... ,., .,..""'*" ~TOMllACM , ...... ~I IMOlhdlc ..... ......, W.Jlt.f.164t 114/'46-IN7 • 2 tJ/HWll7, .....,.,IMCM '1,000 to '200,000 CALL TODAY! Ml......,. c.t.-......... Available for uo to one year .. 1onQt1• #iH ofat4t-714/644-IHJ terms available with lnter"t only payments omc.t and afflllat" eltO In Sen Bernardino. RMlnide. Palm Spnngs.. San Dteoo. ~Sin Frenci9CO. OcNnllde. Century Qty • ., ......... It Ille• It .. . lnllle DAILY PILOT I Gonorr hea and il- legitimate births are tied ror first place a mong teenager hazards, a c· cording t.o a study recent· ly released. Gonorrhea will hit more than 250,000 15· 19 year olds during Ul80 and it is predicted that more than 240.000 ou t-of-wedlock babies will be born t.o the same a1e group. Among older adults. seu1ally trana mltted veneral lnfectiona alao a r e on the rlae . . . trl c homonlaala , ameblcaala and Herpe9 II lead the II.It. All are dif· flcult t.o trqt auttealul· ly. YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you nee4 a medicine. Ptck up your prescrlptlon It ahof pjng nearby. or we wit deliver promptly without extra charge. A great m a ny p eople entrust us with their · prescriptions. May we comp()Und you,..." PAR UIO PHAltMACY ,,_....., ,., ............ ............. I Pension Plans Eyed Benefits Of ten Go to Wrong Panicipanls Ky f'VLVl.A PORTER Maureen Sparrow, a SS-year old legal sccretury. has s pent the past 20 years working for tt $1Uccession of attorneys Although many had retire· ment plans to which they have contributed on her be half. she as now nea r ing retire m ent ag e without 1.1 ~in~l e penny in benefits Why" Beca use Maureen re pe atedly sw it ched JObs to follow he r en gineer husband from city to c ity As a res ull . she never stayed long enough for a single employer to qualify ror their re - llre ment benefits WHAT HAPPEN E D to the money that her e mployers put in pl ans in her name" Jn many cases 1t boosted the b e n e fi ts o f the l a w yer s the ms1:lves the o nly pla n m embers who have re mained on the JOb long enough to qualify No w the Internal Re ve nue Servic~· has flashed a warning tbal planl' which make 1t virtual· ly amp()ssible for most cove red workers to receive benefits are an danger or losing their ta x exempt status. The I RS con le nds the tax breaks wtuch e mployers r eceive for setting up pension plans are JUStifted only w a ll worke rs are tr~aled the sa~w an fact. not JUSt on paper. T he IRS intends to look closely al penb10n plan!> of corporations set up by lawyers. docto rs and Money's Worth dentists to see whether they dis· criminate against workers who. I 1 k e Mrs . S parrow . forfeit be nefits becaus e of ch anging JObS UNDER MANY or the plan!> now in question. an em ployee must s tay at least four years to become entitled to a ny benefits. T his qualifying, or "vesting sc h edule" is known a s "4-40 vesting,'" because employees at· tain the right to receive 40 per- cent of their benefiL'\ after rour years . This percentage rises an· nually until. afte r 1 J years , e mployees are entitled to the full amount of their pensions . The "4·40 vesting" is not dis· c r i minator y pe r se. the IRS a gr ees. but it does t hink that many plans which follow this schedule may end up benefiting the em ployer and leaving the vast majority out in the cold . IN PROFESSIONAL office:.. t he rank and file consists la rgely o f w o m e n emp l o ye d a s secretaries. hygienist s. nurse:.. r eceptionis ts and clerks. Their average time on the job is on ly a bout two and one -half year~. according _to a Congressiona1 Ovt~r The Count .. r NASO Ustiftc)s Research Service report. Since 1974 changes in the private pension law. e mployers ii:en erally have belie ved that the ir plans we re s afe from the prying eyes of the I RS as long as they followed the 4·4-0 vesti11g s chedule. Their pension cons ul- tants and ins urance a gents fre- q ue ntly have assured them that the schedule guaranteed them a "sa fe harbor " THERE HAS been little a udit· ing of these retirement plans in the past, the I RS admits, but 1t now plans to step up its scrutiny. The mere possibility of tht' closer examinations has ign.ilcd a blaze of protest from relevant pro fessional org anizations. pension consultants and life in· s urance trade a ssociations With the 1980 elections only a c ouple of mo nths away . CongrC$s is listening seriously to these objections even though basically a ll the IRS wants to l('arn is how pe nsion plans ac tua lly function unde r the 4-40 rule If its pension plan fairly treat,.., a ll participating members. a company has nothing to fear whatsoever . If a plan is unfair. s hould it be a llo wed to continue as a lax s helte r for professionals? Meanwhile. if you want tn know tf you'r e -build ing ur benefits. look into your statW> under the plan' If you don't un dcrst and it ask an a uthority you t rust to explain at to you IJp• a11d Dou.ms UPS ~' .• ?"?.. •'· , 1 ICl-'• • 1'"1 7'• ""' J • ', ].J.• • ~ •• ,.., • 1 13'. • 1 ... . "-1 • • ... . . "' ,,,. . , .. '11 • J•. 61 I • "4 •• ' t "'· J 13 16 • / 16 9 • , 1•. • •• s • \1 ,.,, • t . ~ . ,,, l'• • ~ l'• +S-tf> o-._ • ...,. s•' • ... , S1 I + 11> 1.1... .. '• DOWNS ... ~;.. .C"'t,. s ... 9 71/• 10 &V. IS n..a. , .. , ... • J·i. I ,.,. J'• •Va 111/t l"' J'IJ .,.,, 2tllo , ..... 1JV. • • 6V. -'• I -.,. -1 "' -1'11 "'• '• -"• ~ -... -~ -... -.,, -''--'• -1. -3 -1 -I -·~ '·• •• -.. Po U9 ~o Up I Up 4.0 Up 20U Up lO U UP 20-0 Up 18.1 Up 18.0 Up IS I Up ISO VP h _J Up U O VP l:U Up IJO Up IJ_O Vo ll.O Up I?\ Up 17 ~ Up 111 Up 11 t Up 11' UP 10 I Up •O• Up I04 Vo -Ou VP IO Q Uo IOO PU OH 14.J 0 11 121 Ott I0,0 Oii 10.0 Otf 4 t Oti 4,1 011 9,t Oii 8.'I Ott 8.J Off IU Ott 8.? Otf 81 OH I~ Oft '-' Ott 1.1 Oft 1.0 OH '-' OH ._, Ott ,. Oii .... Ott 6.~ Ott .. o OH S.9 OH S.9 Ott 5.1 MUTUAL FUNDS NEW YORK (API c-to.cw 10.'7 G'<ll SK t.50 NL JP GtU1 12..sf ll.4J MIAI* Of ern.i..· ""')II' IJ.1' U.2.S c..ci Op 20.92 NI. -The fOl-"9 -· Otvla 1 '1 J.2S HI Yid 11.19 NL J P rnco a..u l.'7 ~ I0.2S NL ""'-F-: SllKll 1U4 NI. '1~~1 IUllCllieO by -II 10.41 11.ll LI ~ l.Jt NL -'-21M NL Gnltll 4.IS S 11 Gonv 1S.4S 1+.tt ~-.• 'jsj j tb t' l1't ..... IONl Auocl· NI ws '·'° lOA' f'Vltn I0.19 NL Jdttt H91c'«lt: ._ 1.... t .7.1 '"' Eq ,.,.. 11.97 T•• 16.47 11.00 ... °" OI SK"'lll"' TxFre 10.0' 10.S• s.lem 7.37 NL Bond 14.M 1S.$t l • Fre , 1.ll '2.21 Georo ll.71 U.06 Tmpl 7 2' 7 •n Ot.ien. lllC , •re g:v. 11.Sl 12.43 TIWlll t.SS NL ~ IO.Jt 11.2' NM Sfw 43.12 NL Gno41t t3 2A 14A7 Tmpl W 11M 19:30 Ille prfCH •I wtli<ll d 10.4S ZLJS Trtlld 2'.lO NL a.&lr! 1.41 9.21 ...... T 42.n NL HI Yid IS.If ,.,.. Oil) 9:21 -io_o, thHe wturltlK Olp r 11.SO NL Fl"*'C!M Proa: Tu Eli I0.21 '1.11 NM IWI• 9,61 NL 11~ ~·~ 10•.1011 Tms hw I.I• t.S7 could Niie bffn O.m Fd • • .st lO... OrN 7.16 NL ~ ~~ NL NM lfld ,..,, NI. ~ ,;·~ 1s·-Tr.,, EQ U .00 lt.3' :'1C:..11': ..... ~ ~:::' F~~ NL :: :~ =t Im tLC2 I... ""'eJ:"\,~i I0.'3 TU Es ,,:Ji 20:iS ~== ~ J·t =t (v•I.. P41.t1 ~ Fl#ld 10.ll 11.M kl 1"""1°"': ~ 11 ... U.o7 9"'d l.•7 J... Vlst• 17.63 1t.27 TllllllC 594 1;i31 NI. <IWQll w.cl.. Gnwlll 7.SS l .2S 8"d ~ 14.44 1S.S7' HI Yid tA to.l4 Dlwtd U:t S.IO = 1UI 17.C» USAA(',( 10 .. 7 NL Sell ..... HI Yield 7.41 1.10 OllCO 1.91 t.74 ~ 8 .~ .... ltl.6•7 GtWltl 1.1' 1 ... ~~ 3.35 NL USAA tnt •.9' NI. Al;om F 2S.IS NL lllCOl'll 7.C» 1.n °"""" 1134 12.•1 .......... -¥.. Prtofd 6.0 •.93 --7.67 NL ~ Accu S.10 NL ADV 13. .. NL °""' ll.01 12.m lllC.Oln 7.IO 7.76, ~ 11.JO I .. lllCGm • u Ml s..co Secur· Un" Mui 1047 NI. AM.,,.. 16.1' NL Tu Mg 1U7 16.25 Oiltll .... 7.21 Tedi l:UO 1J'.» S4octi t'.7l 10.At Eqult 11A.. NL Union Svc c;ip· ·AIM FWldl: Colu Gal 22.Sl NL Sfoclt 7.41 1.17 Tot Rt 12.23 u.J1 TH Es ~9101 t .6S ~ 15.91 NL &raeo 12A 13.41> CvYld 1U3 1f,47 Cwllll AB 1.16 1.25 Tu Es 9.00 9.10 11 ~ NEUfe F-: ltKo 11.2' NL Hiit trw 1A6 t.34 Edlao't 1U2 IA ... c;w1111 c;o 1,61 1.74 44 Well lO.CW NL H.11 !U S ~ IUl 21.JO 5thul Invest: u Gap 20..sf n IS HIYtd t.7• 10.42 ComP 8d .... lO.IS Fnd GC'1 S.31 SJ! 11.a 11.19 GrMrl 14A 15.14 c.pil 14.27 1S.11 Un Inc 11 $) 12AJ Al~ F 16.22 NL =d t.79 10.Sl ~ 0.-: 7.SJ 1.21' I-10.61 IUO ~n 1U7 IS 11 Uft1!we1 FontS A 81rtllT 1l.M 1f,'1 19,41 NL Gnitn 7.14 NL 7 .... l .tt RilC Eq lO.CM 21.71 5"ci 23.J:J NL A<un I j7 t IS Amtrlun F-: lc;>A (ienl: lllCQm IUS NL Cla la 6.J9 7.21 To•Elt U3 .... ~ Fwnds: Bond SA f099 A &.t 1.60 t.40 P'\11111 14. lt 1t.3f Mulel •.J2 IO. It 0a ti 1U'2 21.n ........ r Berm: Goin 5l 14 .• 17 NL Con ~ 11 II 1i <n Amql 12.JI 11.Sl I"'*'! .. 71 1.25 5-<f IUO NL 0. · 10.'3 1U2 E1wft ?Ml NL 0.wl 0.CM NL c;o, tllC IO. to 11.CW A Mull 12.11 lUI MYt .. 1.1' 1.42 ~alllllln ~: , Cla 1.6' t.A6 Ololrd ;M..A4 NL lllCOm 11.63 NI: Flduc :3''.sl 21'11 All ~ 1.17 tArt lrw 1UO 12.17 AGE 3.M l.91 ~ U4 •.IS Utll\I 4.07 NL Incl Fd 17.61 NL HI lllC MAii M 8ord 1245 IMI G 17.tO NL ~ s.21 S,t.2 .... .,..._OB: MA>ltll 4.GO NI. """' It U t NL lnutn hi ID.SO Fd llW 1.11 I. ,Mu SIM NL DNTC 1"3 14.,. C» Ulr 1J.SJ WR hrtn '"-" NL MM8 1.10 NL Mo.flt 7°1.• 7 44 ~II 12.2A I ... 1.45 NL ~II 7.0 I.Of (lfew ll.02 NI. SclU 14.11 NL $tlMJ 47.77 NL S<len t:O' 9:93 1...:om 1.00 1.74 C. t4.SS 1S.7l Utlls U • •M '-MS Ml. NN Mtt un..,.U Security Fwtdl; v~ 10.0. IO 99 ICA tll te.411 Qr--· lll<Alm 2 1+ U I --19, 12 NL ..... G4 lt,74 NL 8Dnd I.CID 1.23 Uld 5'ics 7 41 NL H Ptn .:o t,• -.ii US c;o,, 7.J2 1M I.Me IM •.• n 11.11 ,.__ Inc 7.'2 NL E4!1A.-••1' 7.C2 Value Line f'd· Vllltll NI. 7.J1 7. -•II ~ I0.7t llM ~ t.ft NL NkllN 16.lS NL lftwolt t .39 10.2' ~ 1s..i 16.01 AINrG9nw .. : Ol4dl -Wiii SM ............. 51:. ..,._ 11.tS NL Ultr• 17M tt.n '-' •t0 7.ol C..., Id 6.ll 7.. T• Ff'e -veil Inc: c.I . '1 *° Pf'( WM 11.21 1Ll9 S..ted FWOCll: ~v Ge 17M 17.lt Efter1) lt.07 1J.lt 01ttA -•II cmrc. t.11 N&. Mii NL ..,_ US l.01 Am SN 7.44 NL 5p1 Sit 1007 10.33 HI Yid t.a 10.)t ~ 2.IJ NL ifld Tr 12 ... lut ..... .--.: ~7.G 17... ~ Slw 17.%2 NL Y.ot s...o.n-,,.,, 8 II.IS 1t.4' • 11.'1 NL ~ 11.0. N\. AMIW t• 9.44 te.65 NL tentllllf ~: ,_, 11.01· 12AQ Vtntr 21.• U.Jt • ... NL OPK 12.97 NL .... • ?·?! !!-!! Fd· "'-J.• 4.26 ....... 7" ~ ONa 11.97 UM a ,,_. HL 1M4 NL 0... GI '~. Trz . 10.4' tO." .._ .H! 1.1' ~ d.» NL lo*".-::: 11~ °'f~ ,._., 1:1 Ml ,ii ::.: u: ._ ! ~ ~ '::~ £! ti.W lt1' Qi'iM1 ··~ '-'S Grew aAll Hl. ~ 14.lt .... IK -1Ul H\. ..... !1 ... u.11 22.J2 14.Jt !! NL 10 71 .. L t49N 11j lffll/l N .... "i NL IM '6.to NL ti;" l.Jt t .17 ttM 21.25 tJ.2S 0..Wf • ,._. D. ~Int 7.. N\. ...,,,...., 1. Ml 7.IJS a 7. ,41 NL : 41.12 NL ~ I 4.1 ub 11. NL .,.~ SAO SA °""LG U0 M lt.,tl ll.40 "'-9 ..... bll&t sit,u NL A GC=s t.47 MA ~ NL Gfwlfl t0.77 11.77 A'~ C»: ~ ti.A M.IO I-'7"4 1tJI b ffd r 7i.l2 HL A H1r Ml' NL · IO ... tl.4' !tarn 7.62 N\. ,....... J:R••••• CSK -..0 31.71 lf!Wlt l4.» 1SM F10E t a . .s NI. A lllM IM U 4 S.'5 I Hirt Giii ... NL ...... .11.~~·· M 10.a 1U .4 Tr!l 11.Slt tt.• $cFldf ,u.77 NI. A~-11.J7 NL ' ...... i , ... ~&.ev 21..0 NL M9& tt.9'1 M.W m UO NL ~ ls.GI NL 5c19ct tJA.S t&.IO A 11¥11!t ti.ID H\. ,,_.. t. lfL ._.. NL lllClft tUI. •••• . I.AO NL U t N\. ~ ~oue>· A Gel 4.n 4.61 Ot.ef1 t7. If,~ MM 10.JO 22.17 .... ~: U' Hl. ..,_! fJilllr ~4.. Nt A Inc '4, '6.22 1-4,D S. INA HIY t .74 IMS Mii tut tMO. .. PM1 lo.79 11.19 ii• U.11 i!1111 Tr .... i. N , """-" I, t,• g 11. 12 tSI OrouP: lt.74 !t.74 ......... 0..: lllCO 7.'2 l.tt Raine t NL Allt .......,., '"' u,• Gnliell '·" .... "·" ,..u y 11.fS ,,,.. 1 ....... 11a 12.... lwtl tt. NL ,.,. • u 1 '·ll 10.01..... t!Qm 1.n •.• !H:! o.n "" t.Tt 111." TMt t.11 10~ MDr'9 '°'" NL S ,tfi ~ m i;J·f,··~~.~ ,~ 1~-~~~ ..,. u ii...• It;.::.~ nr& n:ft ~ = .:; =t · ·IM.C •r: tt '3fl.: Wft"i'o JI •.JO ltc;ail HY ":U "j ··~~~ ~ ,. '°?7,;j :,..:n ltS ~;: i l!H et • a.a lit ,' H"' .._ 1_., !S!!J""-"·.J,1 °'11 '•os _._ .,.. o_.. I w.; L. t ; L itiCn H "•K lilr~ .U U .. IUf ~ I: ti c .;ti ii ~M.11 .1t: ( '· ::t ~ 11-s lL'fl ~ U:J: l!:l 1':ct:< i:= .. •:-.... 1 • ~. ;"';"' 9!!· ..ii , .M == --1llJ =t r.1" ""?! UA "" .. 1u• ~U7 t*..Jt.! t• I "" u mt 09 ti = I t!'-... ::: ..... , tJi at '' ":7·.n i;;;i., J:'i =.:-It" ... \SI ... = .i:t ..... -......... 1 ...... L' I: 1' Et : ,w-'i'l:I fd;-rt:.j ~Hit!,,.:~ -~4i ;,~~.i ll'l~ltt,11 11.»L "'-U. 'ii ~ ~ m: ,..._ ~~ I..... ~J11o~ti 'II ... ~~ •• .. •!J 41 t • IHwu '' =t: .... 'Mr: !!!- :t) ~t '"' JU: == •j: 'ill ~'# "·. M ~ ' :1. = ~. ~ ~ itt ~J~. NL ~ .. ~ =,.. ::. atu "'-ti •: ~ ~ ~ ..-.. c-e~ .-., .J .. t, .,.,... ;;;.• """ •t ivy,.,. ·us .._ f.I t[u C:. HI ct ,,,;. ""-.-. -y &TOCKS I BUSINESS Tbunday'ta Cloaing Pric ---------- NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 1J'--•• S7-"' .. _,..., 111/o ,,,, \• 11 .. l7'~· ~ S•1 • 20'-~. )\, 10 .... •'· .. '• ,,,,,,_ "• •s •• • .,~. '' ,,,__ '" 24 " 11' • ,. 73• ,_ .... 'l'-'• "'· 18 -'• ll~ '· 1:.. ~ •• .. . . . .. Thu!Sday. August 28. 1960 DAILY PILOT Bf .... Dow Jones Final Down 12.71 CLOSING FIGURE 930 .38 We·K11ow Better Statistics Don't· Give Picture By JOHN C NNI FF AP IW.,...• 111'.elY•f NEW YORK Statistics havt> their obv1ous uses . especially to those who deal with the m professional ly. but when served to the public they often become a mumbo-Jumbo ritualistic g umbo that is gobbled up. Thf'y :ire so r1t ua lisltcally accepted, in r act. that we honc11 them even when we know better And the perfect ex- am pie of that came last Friday when we were told. accord· in~ tu thl' :-.Latts llcs, that inflation ceased THAT i\ T LEA~T JS whut the mos t recent consumer p1·1c, 111d1"~ tried to t('ll u:-Overall, 1t didn't rise a single 1nflat1·d dollar U\Cr June. even if you did leave a lot mon• of vour rash ut the grocery c;heckout counter The l h1ef rc•ason for th1:-. was a 5 7 percent decline in homt• mortgage 1·ost:-. lh:.it lendect lo oHset a 0.9 pe rcent tn· l r ._ Jst· 1n prtc-es al grOC'ery stores. You arc· corn·<'l tn pointinR out, of course. that ~ou drc1 11 ·1 h11\ a housC' tn J unt' and that your home mortgJ gc r .1tt· 11e1thl•r rosl• l1flr frll l>l'taust• it 1::. fixed by contract at 1111' .... :1m<: r:tll' tor lhc next 25 y('ars • \'fill most Cl'rf :only did huy food. hnWl·\ 1•r, and ~OIJ I.now that the prt('es 111 lll•t•f pork ancl poultr~ rns1· sharply .tltt•r· thn:l· month.,. <if lh:d1m·" And that Ir 111ts. \t'J.!1•1:1hlc·'-antJ da1n producb ;dso r11w substantwlh So \\h, df1t•:; 1h'c· gO\t•mmcnt in clU(lt• tnlll11!i.t ~~ l'O'>l::. as ti l'llCryQOC IS ,1rf£>1•kc.t hr thc•m ' Wt~ll . that·-. wh;n tht.· prnft..,,1on<ds huve l)('(•n ~r'iking for ~ l0.1r:-. 1\111 ~l'llmg .in.\ <.i<'t111n they ' • 1mp1\ :HIJllSl tlwtr allal)SI'" CUNNIFF THE\"\'E Bl-:f:,, t\SKl :'lrG v.hy !lie index should tx· ll'1·<l in c·akul,1t 1ng 1nrr1•Js1•s 1n Social Secunl\ benefit!-. . .. 1nc·1· 11 ,, dc·.ir 111 eH·r~om· thc.11 peopll' on Sorial Sec·urit~ J r1·n t ai.:gt•''>Sl\t' hu~('rs of hr>m~!-1 Sonw µrm• a l!-.•> won1ler about that dl'v1Cl' l·allM st'<t!>onal adJu:-.tini.:. which \.\as applied to those July l'<t?l· ... umt-r pr11•1· f1J,!urt•s It 1s iJ nice concept . everyone agrel'S, hut t h~)' tfo.,;sgn.·~ un whether 1l works. In 01•1·t•mbt•r for £•xample . retail sales always rise ht'taus1· ul lhl' holuhn-s If one 1s to discover the underlY· •ni.: nst1 111 'Jlt·., that holiday season bulge has to ~ E'l1m1m11l'rl 11 1:-. do1w :-.tat1s tically S•\m1· \I. 1th 1 he c·m ployment a nd unemployment f1,i.:ures Thl' 1ohlt·s:-. rJtc you s ee is not in any sense an a'" tu:.il count from wh1c·h extrapolations are made lt ts :.,1•asonall)' adJU!-.led in order to eliminate the s trictly short- ' "rm 10fht1•01'l•S. !>lll'h aS the nood O( g rad uates 10 June On1• of the• fJrnblems with seasonal adjus ting is that the "norm•· for any pe riod as bast>d on what happened over the previous f1v(' year-; But anyone knows that practically oothin)! has ~en normal m recent years. Stat1~11cs. rt is often said, arc for statis ticians. and ma ny ix'<>pk· in government and m the private sector worr~ Jbout their use as popula r indicators Ttw poss1l>1htll'" of m1slead1n1? are ;ust too g reat. FOR EXJUf PLE· IF YOU l'heck certain economit• growth 11erw<l!> durrng the.· pa:.t decade you will find lh<.11 stat1st1rs on retail sales showed them rism g month after month Was America on a prolonged buying spree·t Not nt•t·essarily II ~ou examined the s tatistics you would haH· lound that the old month's fi gures werl' lowc·n'd 1ust be-lore· the new month's figures were released Revisions ure l'C1m mon in ~ales statis tics. · S•••c·k." In T h.- .~pollighr NEW YO~IC I.AP! '><ti~'· noon prit~ 4t\O 1¥1 tnMQll• ct f'W '•Ht'f>n MO'I •th~ Nitw YOf\ \UJf Ji. f-•tt'l;inQ" •'\.UJ>' tr.-c:11ng Nf1on.tlty ut mor,. th\olt• \I le.o<oP..I I 1870()(; lt C.0..St61C< •"&. !00 J: • I• M.tllel 1,-. Al) IUll I I > • • IBM Jl~.llW b> '• f.;l'~'&f ~ ~~ ~~ .• ~IECI JOO,.,;)O 1• ~ .. ~ Tetu Co<l' 2"7, 100 ) ScOlt P.ip.or 11q.100 I~ • '• 1-~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~ NotSem• ' //&,thl JQ 8'>61 FooO ,,, oOO 11 • P!11tt 1)/ MIO • • • '. l'i>ONdl MIQ ISA,l>OO 14' Homl!Sll<~ 7St IOC llO' l\llOr IVluO 131 JOO h U-.•fob NfW YOPIC IAPI "'<'161 pro<'' IOO;ty SPOI nonf•rrou Co-• ~ .... , 01'' "oouna. us d~SflN ~~~-~~~-~~-~~-~-~ ''°"' ~ l•l llQI ~he -ww- Pel Up lb UP It 2 Up I0.8 Uo IOJ UP !03 Vo IS Up It VII 80 Up 7 1 Up 6 9 Vo &.& uo •.J uo l>J lJp & 7 Up 4 I UP 60 Up S,<I Up l• Up U Up S.4 VO SJ Up SJ Up H Up s.o Up 49 Pel Off 14.7 OH 11 Ott 7.5 Olt 1,4 Off 1 4 Ott ... Off U Oft U Off • 1 011 so Oil H Ott u Olf u Of! s .. O!t SS Off S.• ()ff u Otl H Off u g:: tl <tt' u Ofi r. LOd 40 0 ctnt5 a OOUnd Zlrt< JS' J&• f...,,lsd OOU'l<I dNl•~r!'d Tln \8."3'1'1a~ Mercurt s«IS OOper Ila'~ Plallnum \bS'I \Olio ltov or N Y Silt· .. r NEW 'l'ORIC; (API H-'t a. H•rm'" s•lvf'r lodaV. SI& ISO, upS0.13 • e "Q''"'"o \llVH \I& 100 , uo so 13 Mor1ca1eo ~11ver Sl&.~S8. upO 131 ~Id quo1atio1111 ly TtwAue<MI'"' l"rftt 54!1ectec:t ""°"'<IQOld pri<H tooav, L.•-= mornl"O fl•lno S6l3 1Soff so. 10 L.e"'90tl. alll!rnoon llwlr>Q UlS.JO up SIAS l".erfs: .,.,..,.,..,.,..flJfl1>9'6olt OS, UPO u Fr111.,_: liwlnos.uJ ..... ott so.s.s Zurte1t: IAlt.OObld, upst.00; '631 oo anto Ne• Yn · H--, & HMmMI l•lt "'ll'llt"O '63S.JO, up Sl.4S. Ne• 'I'-~ Eft9811\erd Mlllnq ~Ice l<Jlf' rnort\UIO~.Jll. up Sl.4$ Nt • V-: finlltll\¥0 fetlrk •tt<I Q01c11•1• rnornlno S6S1 So, up" SI. ~., ... be# .. o "'•'w • .,,.r1y •ow v ,_."w ..,,...,,,, n1ort u"''''" 01"'"'""''~ notf'ld ,,.,,, ot "'"'"'""' .trr-~nnw41 d•\r.Jt\('lftWnt\ tMt.t"O on ttw l"'t QU(1tl~''• nr '\tm1 6f\n1i11•t ct•tl•~•l•On S4>t( 1•1 Of' •xtr• thvtderwh Of CM'fmr>nl\ "°' Of\tQf'li•lf!CJ "" ttQUI.,. •'t '°"nt1t1N1 11\ I~ to1tow 1r.o tootnolt'\ •At~ w.atr• OI t'•t'•' O Annuot r4t,. OIV' •IO<• O•Yldtnd C llquod•hll9 O•Vl~t\O 8:!::~:: Of i:~ct·".r.:~~ ·~·=th~~ ''"'' UP I ': ... a '"'' ~·· "'V•dtnO O~\IHJ o.••rrt>G Of no •ct-l•'MI '' '"'' oiv10tno ~~~·r",.:., ~~·:,: ~:~~~ ~·~,;t:.~ ~, ,.~:;.:~~~ o:~1·:::0 :.t:~" r::~ •to<• 1n o•t<"4•nv '' mo"'"' .-1om•1eo <•"' ••'~ °" f'~ Ot••diftond or •• O•''' •bvttOf\ tU•• At\~ ~'~~".·~ ~ s:.·.:·.~.':11' EI, 0••1tttno <Id (•llf'O w0 #Mft 0 .. lfll>l/lf'CI w• W-~;~ ... ~ ..... ;:.',~'\i,':i~~b.7''~ ,_,. WttflOUI ,. E •fl'O '"' P'"'" ot • ••O<• •• A fl'\utllplf O! P"' """'• tMnol'Q\ O.••Yl'<I b;o d•••d•nQ I,,. I"'"'' tt INltllh '••nol\Q• llQU•~ IN ll ••~l ...... 0"(' ..... (1 I "~' ..... I> l I""• I ioo-IN -w w-- .. l I 81• DM.YflLOT -.. , .. -............ ....... ._.. •*M "'"" ............. _. •ore teHltJlftl Nut ........ L--=.,.,. .... ........ _... ...... Vi"-m..•ll&UOM-.-.. .......... '° ........ ...................... ~fY~M81AM9' Al Muftd)' bacOlllH ...... Olld wletl Iha ~ ~--ll'IQ•"*­~. • &IOT'NO 00/W#tf .,.. e HIM"ITOYo.M HIM.TH •flle SUn And y Olll 611111 '' le~ .... MCNIW8 UO (I) TIC TAC DOUOH C*le<CAWTT a-.. I 8 S""9" (PIW1 1 oUI • STUDIOI& "CfawWIO" s..m.-. ar- LMi• Cf.-P'9Pllf• tor • rte•. • young ec1or explain• whet he oi-and gall lfom Iha Ii.gt! llll ME1'V ONmH 7:00. C88 NIEW8 .. N8CNIEW8 0 KUNQFU Caine teachM a golO hunt- er th11 • good turn r-'ved lndet>ll a man to preform •en for 01~. D MCNEW& G Cll JOKER'S WILD • NATIONAL GEOOAAPHIC SPECIAL "Winged World"~­ ed from~. bird& or _., aae and deacrlpllon 11>ha1>11 ~com« of 1he world 9) 8TAEET8 OF SAN FAANCl8CO Ike and Manaie Andrew Duggan a nd Barbara Barrie play President and Mrs. Eisenhower in the conclusion of "Backstairs at the White House" tonight at 9 on NBC, Channel 4. AUOAT '1!) HIEWSCHECt< (I) P.M. MAGAZINE Meet hand~ Jacl< Aol>tlt1&on. whO swam ltl6 Englllh Channel 8!008 THIEWALTONS An elderly Walton COIJ&ln arrives on the mountain, and the family suspects he has come lhefe to die. (R) D GAMES PEOPLE Pl.AV Hoal Bryant Oumt>el ~ sent1 unusual and en1er- 1a1n1ng competitive endMllOr'S and Iha pao(>le whO panoclpate In 111em. D MOVIE • •'h "81r1h Of A legend" ( 1973) Oocu,,_,tary A coyote pop wh>Ch hU ~ Sam.to The top ~n 1n Ille crome ayndleate waleh6S his pro1ege rlM •n po- (2 tus ) m P.M. MAGAZINE M8ry Hart vlslll Audrev Scoll. a 79-year-old 11un1 woman from Canlll, Call- lorn1a, a Loch Ness Mon· s1er huoter: Donna Ruth on setting up a home work- shOP. suiy Kalter with men s cosma11C1 Q) MOVIE • •'A> • Johnny Cool" ( 19631 Henry Sliva. EIWl- beth Mont~ An ft ... 1an t>oy ,.,Md by• Sldllan guemlla 11 IMt 10 New Yon to wreak \'9fl08811Ce on lhe ~-of an Amer1Can expe1r1a1a (2 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS ..._ f'lllll 11N11 hllft 1n old• '"IATM ...,_..~gin. "Lllli9: Ametlet " Fr°'" • a.L..,.,_. Lillie'• _..t d*I !ft Amertce JOIMAI. Iha .. ~90 ....,._ "Dramatlo ••1<11ng" ana oo-, bu1 d!Mtter .i-..,. Jol'9I ,..,. cloudol the operllng of '* lfom ' No ,.., Wiii To pity"' ..... York. (PM g of fteedOnl" by Souttl AJri.. .t3)0(AI can eutMt Neleorl ~ MST!AN i.(A) ~ ..... ~ "W... lntO 8'1dgat" A "~ Altd P11ta" portrllt Of Ang96a Devi• t:OO. Cl) ~ JONd to<Sey. u IN lectur" at A ~ llw ttuclent of San FranclloO Stele Unl- J A ·a ,.... Illa IOerla ot • vewty and the San FrM- murder. "8Wlng IMJ tie .i11 cl900 Ar1 lnetltuta, l!!) NIW\.YWEO GAME be llOCMMd of the c:rm.. 1t:CIOI D. Cl) III NEW8 D uac.tTAIM AT THI THe IA&. T WMT'I~ ~ fi.. end of the war bflngl A 10011 at wnare the Unit.ct Cl< .. lk: chanQe& tor Ulllan, St•tM 1tand1 mllllttlly Hlfl'Y T"""81\ ,_ OVI cornp9l'ed Jo. tile .So.Itel OI Iha White Hoo-. and Union and how SALT M WIU 6he II dl1n111MO, but all9c;1 the netlon'a MCU<lly , •• ""'9 With the .iectlon of ,, ~led Owognt ~. (Part • n.EOOOOOUPLE 4101AI FlllJt recounta how he Ind 8 111 IAANEY MIU.EA Osc1W met wt111e --..1ng 8•rney wait• 10 llear ~duty whell>er he'a receM9d his ., THE 1ENNY HILL long-awelted promotion SHOW while a fllNltk: carrleS out Benny doel an '"'9e<son•· a one-man vendetta loon ot a popular 5'>0<11 11galnst mk:rowa-. Q (R) commentator tD MERV OAlff1N m EXTEN8K>HS OuaatL Gabriel Kaplan, 11:30 8 (I) U.S. OPEN Mal Torma. Lenore O'Mal-TtNN&Sa.AMPtONSHtPS ley. Tom Or_,, Kris Hlghllgnts Of Iha day's Krtm0 acuon are pr-lied from '1!> OlD HOU8EWOAIC8 Flushing Meadow Park 1n Bob Cel1811an convetls a Corona.N Y. pu11-cna1n oelling'hJttU<e to D TONIOHT a wall 1wttcto: Robert Gib-Host. Johnny Corson. son den\onatrates the art Ouesw Jim Stafford. Syd· or "marbl111ng"; and 8111 ney Oold1m1th. Sy Kramer. Pac>lan dlscu-plumb· David Steinberg . Ing problems. " DATIHG GAME t'.30 D ®l NOBOOY'S 8 @) ABC NEWS PEAfECT 0 MOVIE Hart has homsell jailed to • * '"' "A11as11nation" learn whefe a prlsone< h8S ( tll671 Henry Sliva, Fred hidden Iha IOot from a 8elr. A Secret Service benlt robbery. agent supposedly dead &ii THIE AIOH'nOUS dltCOYllfS that his Wile IS APPl.£8 plonnlng 10 nuwr; the d0u- .. A.S A P " J T Bonham Is bte tgenl he must axpow forced onto a heecl-lo-head (2 hrs I battle wtth the son of the m HOGAN'S HEROES tetlder of I white ~ Hogan and 1111 ,,_, d•ICOY· cy group. (R) er a German apy on lhelr m U.S. CHAONICl.E midst "God's Country. US.A." Cl) GET SMART • TUBE TOPPERS NBC 8 8:00 -Games People Play . A sport-variety series focusing on un- usua l and competitive activities with Bryant Gumbel, Cyndy Garvey and Johnny Bench. KCOP ti) 8:00 -"Johnny Coot." Henry Silva stars as a hit man for the syndicate in this movie with Elizabeth Montgomery. KCET @ 10:00 -Camera Three. Ballroom dance teams re-create famous routines from Broadway and the movies of the 1930s and 40s. zler wno M9 martted the AAgel for mutder (R) _;MDIGHT- 12:00 6 (I) THE JEFFE.RSOHS A lotll strange< aNIW$ at "" apartment and declates 1het louoae 1s her mother (R) 0 TWIUOHT ZONE On their way from England to Ameroea. a jethner and •Is C•-l<llVel b8Ckwards 1n time CD MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE The IMF must stop a mas- sive spy ring 1ha1 threatens to cripple lhe country w•lh u deedty pneumon•c plague Q) THE GOODIES T 1\8 GOOOl&S start a veterl- nary dlnoc 1~8 (1) C88LATEMOVIE • • 'h "Tho Ullo mate Chese" c 19741 Eroc Breeden, 81HI Eklanct A we11ttoy busonenman·s deep-rooted parano1& leads htm 10 klll one man and enter onto a deadly S lruggle Wltn BnOI roer. 0 DATING GAME Alaskan Klon011<e ( f hf , SSmon) D ®l BAAETTA Barella mes to loc••e " young murder wotneu before •hi! kilter dOM (RI CD MOVIE ••'la "Bes1 Foot Forward" ( 1943) lucolle Ball, W1H1am Gax1on A movie star becomes onvoNeO 1n a Mlt0ndl scan- dal when Iha u1tends a prep schOOI dance ( 1 rv • 45mon) Q) MOVIE • • • "Sanctuory" (19611 Lee Remick. Yves Mon1and Whon her Creole lover 1e1urns to cau5'J lur- 11\ef 1rou1:>le, ft Southern girt reon11lns lltent ( 1 hr , 30m•n ) 1:10 0 THE LONE RANGER 2:00 0 NEWS 0 MOVIE • * '" "SulC1de Commw.. dos" (19671 Aldo Ray, Hugh Fangar-Smlth Oo lhe eve o4 0-0ay. a grouo ol Bntllh commandO:> 111 ~ to sal>otaoe a Nall air t>ase IOC4!1eo deep ... thin Ge<man 1ermory (2 hrs.) dNg rlnO (2 hnL) 2-M. MO\M *'It "t Cover The UodeiWOfld" (1964) a-; Mc:Clory, Joanne Jorodan • A theology atudent 811Um41e the Identity of Illa gangster twin llrottler Just balore the latter'• Pf\eoft rlieaM.(1hr.,301'111n.) 1!658 NIEW8 a:G08 MOVIE • • •'It "The !pct-. Fiie'' ( 1965) Michael Caine, Nigel Green A 111rl1onar aaslgned to lfltlth Anny lnlt!lllgence la comm1 .. llO<>ad to retrieve• delec:t· ad IOlentlal. (2 In., \() min) D MOVIE * * 'h "MIN'le90ta Cir(' ( t9651 c-on MHcnell, Ethel RojO. '!00 0 MOVIE a a• "The Dartt Corner" C 1946) luc:-lle Ball. Mini Stevens •:15 CD MOVIE **'""A G11me Of 06ath" ( 1946) John LO<ler. Audtey Long •:30Q) HEWS 4:46 0 HEWS 4.60 0 MOVIE * * "Escape 8y Nlgtlt" c t937) William Ha11. Anna Naegle •'ridofl'• Doy I iMe .t10.,ie11 11:00 Q) *'+"In The Money"• ( 1958) Bo~ Boys, Patrl- CHI Oonllh\16. -AFTERHOON---- 12:00 0 * '1> "Spa<oe Monster"' (1964) FrilflCIM York,~ my Bracon. m •• * "love Crazy" ( 19411 Wllllam Powett, Myf• na Loy m • * • 'It "The Bells Of SI Mary'1" ( 111451 8i119 Crosoy, lngr1d Bergman S~ 0 • *'A> "Flying Leallter· •111ck s" (19'1 I Joh" W11yne. Robert Ryan. Thraa nuped ~· go on a UOISllC rampeoe of tenor. murder 81\d r'C)e. e OVEREASY GUMt· Or' Joyce 8rother'a. Q IRI -~~~Into----the Wide, wondfou. wonci. .Jl!A.1-. - --m 21tONGff Jom Lehrer repor1s on a Sman must tllke a payrOll ~Sl.111~--·-to CONTROL ~ peKefvl and uMun1ed -behind the tron Cun111n. Q) NATIONAL NEWS ~0 TOMOAAOW D MOYIE 2:10 0 NEWS ~8-MWS -·-- Q) MOVIE C! 0 ••• 'h "Come Badl. Liiiie Sttooa·· ( '953l Shit· ---tny 1'001rl. ·0011 Lanca9ter • 3:30 D * •• "Buck And The Preactoer" (t9n) Sidney P0ttiec, Harry Belafonte 5:00 m * •• "liOnoe In Indiana" ( 1944) lOft McCa111S1er. Wll1er a.-- (2 h~) W MACHEL / LEHRER $IEPOAT 7:30 II THIE OONO SHOW 0 IH SEARCH OF.- "0 B Cooper" D (!I MOAK & MIHOY Mort. comes up against a groop ot hooded bigots ~tend to make Mondy tlleir'neJtt tatget. (R) 8 MATCH GAME 0 MOVIE 0 9 FACE THE MUSIC 9 MACNeL I L.1EHRE1' • • 'h "Crime Bosa" ( 1g721 Telly Savalea, Tony Oaa1111el Lbflng• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles D KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles D KABC·lV (ABC) Los Angeles (J) KFMB (CBS) San Otego 8 KHJ-lV(lnd.) Los Angeles ({I KCST (ABC) San Otego e KTIV (Ind.) Los Angeles • KCOP·lV (Ind) Los Angeles • KCET· lV (PBS) Los Angeles • KOCE·lV(PBS) Huntrngcon Beach .J.B. Mum 'D<dlas ' Mi1U1S Endings ~ NASHVILLE, (AP) -Actor Larry Hagman says it's going to be a while before anyone knows who shot ornery J .R. Ewing, the character be • IJ.lays on the television show "Dallas." • · .. It doesn't look like •Dallas' will be on until October or November due to the actors' strike," Hagman said during weekend appearances on the Grand Ole Opry and at the Opryland U.S.A. enter- tainment park. "The real ending may be shot the day before it goes oo the air," be said while answering ques- tions from fans during Texas-style 95-degree beat at an outdoor theater. BE 8AID PARTS OF 10 fall shows have been fslmed but endings to these shows have not been done. .. l think there a re about three different possibilities," Hagman 48, said without elabora- tion about bis assailant. Ewing was shot by an unknown assailant on the show last spring, triggering a world-wide guessing game about who did it. "I'm going to be in an iron lung for four or five shows," the terrible Texan said. Comedienne Minnie Pearl gave Hagman one of her famous straw bonnets Saturday and be wore it during an appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. He received spirited applause when be walked out on stage with it on instead of bis usual giant cow- boy bat. lllSS PEAJU.., WHO WENT to school with Hagman'& mother, actress Mary Martin, called him .. a charming, deligbUul fellow" and presented , him with a gold record comparable to the key to the city. • Hagman said the "DallU" cast gets along well despite reports to the cootrary. "We're a family," be said. Asked by a fan bow it feels to be a cult figure, be said, "It happened so fut. I've spent 31 yean in the business and it's nice to have this much ac-claim ... He said he really ls not mean in real life like iwing. "'I WINI I BAD JIY kids here to let you know bow Dice I am. Tbat lady bu been married to me far •years," be said, gesturing to bis wile. ~ •"lbere's no way I'd treat my wife like J do SUe .aweD," be Mid, referrin1 to Mrs. J.R. Ewtn1 on ~·oa11a1 ... '1!) MAGIC METHOD OF OIL PAIHTINO "Roses" Holl: Wiiham Ate1ander (I) MS. PHOTOOEHIC U.S.A. PAGEANT Host Robert ur1en 11 jOjned by The Vlu.ge People. Nip- My Rusaell and Marterie Ried 81 Iha Dunet Holel In UIS Vegas for lhll llr1t annual pageant featuring 50 eonteatant1 wno will ba judged on their pnotogeruc quality, polae. beauty and cnarm. e:ao D l!I ANGii Angie'& temperature rt.. wtMln a .,..,tltul blonde take& "'* Bracft pr8Ctloe alter hcl bat* go. OVI on htm. • TltE 000 COUl'U Whe" OKar't mottler ..... tor '* -·· aoalll God's Country, US.A.. -fS CAPTIONED A8C also known as the deer· NEWS hunting capital of Ille 11:f50 D @) CHARUE'S natlor\. ' ANGEL.$ 10:00 6 (I) l<HOTS LAHOINO Ketty's best friend falls "' Reformed alcoholle Gary IOve with a suave 6m~-1 llnd• himeelf unable to cope witt'I Ill• IUdden SU(> cea and embark• on a dnnklng spree. (Part 1) (R) ea NEWS D ®J 20120 e NATIONAL NEWS fD CAMERA THREE "From The Ballroom To Broad wey And Back" Mernberl of the Ainenc:.i Dance Machine and thnla ballroom t-demon- sir.te how aodel dancing Oewik>p• lnte tMalrical -~ 10:80 •• NEWS • MMIW IC. JOHN DARLING a a 'The Griuty And The Tr-re" (1974) Docu- mentary In lhe late t800s, a family laces severe obstacltts In lhtm reklnl· tes1 hunt tor gotd "' tM CBS Has 7 of Top IO * * "Underco~r Gori" (1951) Alexis Sm11h Gla- dys Oeor9e A pol.cewon>- an snuggles 10 cac>ture oor lather's murdoirtlf ana beCOme$ ifwOfvecJ Wllh d I ndn. by Armstrong & Batiuk ABC Squeezes Victory NEW YORK <AP) -CBS bad seven of the week's 10 most-watched shows, including No. 1 "Circus of the Stars" and back-to-back episodes of "Dukes of Hazzard," but ABC won the prime-time competition for the third week in a month, accord- ing to figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. ABC's triumph was by the narrowest of margins -one-tenth of one point. Limited to three of the week 's Top 10 shows, including the premiere episode of "Those Amatlng Animals" in second place, ABC bounced back with seven of the next 10. ABC's rating for the week ending Aug. 24 was 15, to 14.9 for CBS and 11.3 for NBC. The networks say that means in an average prime-time minute during the week, 15 percent of the country's TV· equipped homes were tuned to ABC . .......... .. THOSE AMAZING ANIMALS" was one of two new prime-time series unveiled during the week. The ABC show finished second to CBS's re- peat of "Circus of the Stars," which registered a LARRY HAGMAN wmt MINNIE PEARL Della•' J.A. OoeaonGrandOteOpry Cronkite Aiming for Kids LOS ANGELES (AP) -Veteran CBS newscast.er Walter Cronkite baa unveiled plans for a new pilot television program that will be broad- cast on a local Public Broadcasting Service station in October in an attempt to I.ink classroom education with currentnewsevents. Speaking to rePorten at PBS station KCET by telephone from Cape Cod, where be is vacationiae. DocUJDentary ffit SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A television documentary on Sbanehal. the Chinese sister city of San Francisco, wu previewed for an audience of about 100 people, including Xie Henc. the eomul of Cbineaeculturebere. Xie Heng told the ll'OUP after .. Sha.nlbal Shadows" wu sbown that abe did not feel all of tbe bour-kml pr'Oll'am wu reprl!leatadve of her COUD· try. Cron.kite said the new ball-hour show. "Why in the World," will run for a week on KOET as a showcase to help ralae money for possible na- tionwide broadcasting over PBS in fall 1981. The program wlll feature top-ranked educators discussing cu.rre.nt news events in a way that high school students may apply to their studies of literature, hi.story. geography and other subjects. Cronkite said. ..Our purpoee is to really broaden this field of .. contemporary, relevant education," said the newscater. who will supervise, but not appear on. the new show. Cronkite is chairman of Satellite F.ducation Services. Al•,....... UNlld ...... OUlpoet ............ .................... ... .,....., """"' --......... .... ---.a.. ... ......, -~ .......... -. ........ --.......... L.1911a ....... WUI IF l .~ ...._ _. .......... ....._ .. -.,,. -.. .., --.... ---.. -- rating or 22.2. Nielsen says that means at all the homes in the country with teJevision, 2!.2 percent saw at least part or the show. The other new show, NBC's "Games People Play." finiahed the week in 30th place. As is common this time of the year, the weet was dominated by rerwta, and only a bandfuJ of originaJ shows were even moderately successful in the r atings. •'That's My Line" on CBS was No. 3S, "Nobody's Perfect" OD ABC fani.sbed 42.Dd, NBC's "Speak Up Ameriu" was No. 4S and "Frida1 Nigbt Fights," also on NBC. finished 47th. TWO MOVIES, .. FINAL Cbapter-Walklllg Tall," No. 11 for the week, and "Heroes of Rock'o'Roll " to 13th place, scored for ABC. Two CBS movies did not do as well -.. Perfect Gentlemen" in 36th place, and a flJ'St-nm screoi-ing of "l.llands in the Stream" No. 39 . NBC listed three of the week's five lowest.- rated shows, including "Here's Boomer" ia 58th place, "Man's Greatest Sports" 61.st and "Duct Rogers in the 25th Century." No. 62. A "CBS Reports" preseotaUoo, "The Baby Makers." was No. 59, and an "ABC News Closeup" called .. ,. ... Killing Ground: An Update," was No. 60. Here are the week's Top 10 shows: "Circus of the Stars," with a rating of 22.2 representing 16.9 million homes, CBS; ''Those Amazing Animals," 20.9 or 15.9 million, ABC: "I(. A·S-H," 20.6 or 15.7 million, CBS; "Alice .. and "Th• Jeffersons," both 20.1 or 15.3 millioa, both CBS; "Dukes of Haizanl," 9 p.m ., 19.8 or 15.1 million, CBS; "Dukes of Hazzard," 10 p.m.1 ciJs. and ''Three's Company," ABC, both 19.2 or 14.8 million; "60 Minutes." 19 or 14.S million, CBS. and "Vega$," 18.9or 14.4 million, ABC. \ THE KEST OP THE Top 20: Movie -"Final Cbapter-Walkinc Tall.•• .. Charlie's Ange ls ,•• Movie -.. He ... es of Rock'n'RoU," all ABC: "House Calla:• .. Loa Grant" and "Trapper Jobn, M.D.:• all CBS: "Taxi .. and "Hart to Hart," both ABC, and .. Love Boat" and ''That's Incredible," both ABC, tie. llllotlSINffl OM'I' Ill MOP MAnltl ....,,.._....,_IOI~ ........ ENTERTAINMENT I INTERMISSION Bail, Co•rade #Comedians Shecky Greene Cleft ) and Mel Brooks shake hands, Roman style. on the set of "Mel Brooks' History of the World. Part 1." Greene plays the role of Marcus Vindic· tus. head of Caesar's guard. Tl'lursday. August 28. 1980 DAILY PILOT 8 f f SCR Set for New Year South ('001n tteperlvr). whirh still had several question mllrk11 on lt11 1980 RI s.-ai.on when local theuter 11rou1li. wurt' 11urvt•ycd la llt month. has put. lhc fln.li<hln.c tom·hcll on its plum. for the third year In the Fourth Stt:p 1'hf>alcr Prtv1ou!fly unnounet-d by the Costa Mesa com- pany w('rc• the 01wn1nu produl'lton. the Frenc" (arrE> "Hokl rurudl110." which bows SCpt. 23. ancl two othf't' mulnistal(i.' orferlnE(s. 1'ennes se .. w 1111 um i. • ·Th 1• G I a ss Me n age r 1 e · · an ,. Shakespcmrt•'i1 ·"rhf' Merchant of Venice · JOINING TllE UN•:UP will be a ~pec 1al 'ult-lldt• 'lJ~1r1.: or I ht> Cha rles U1ck<'nS classic ... A Christmas Carol." adapted by SCR's Jerry Patc h . the award wannin~ drama "The Elephant Man." the West Coast premiere of ''Childe Byron" and the vantage Cole Porter musical "Anything Goes " On the Second Stag<.'. SC R's s maller theater earmarked ror new and l•,perimental works. the season will open Oct. 29 "1th "American Buffalo" by David Mamet. whose "A Lire in the Theater" inaugurated the s maller facility la st year . David Rudkan's "As hes" and John Guare's "Bosoms and Neglect" will follow "Buffalo" with a pair of as·Y<'l ·unannounccd world pre miere pro· ductions complctin~ the fi ve.show lineup. _ .. TIUNKING /\BOUT G ETrlNG into communi· ty theater'' If you live in the South Coast area. there's an even ing class tailored to preparing you for this inter esting avocation Beginning Sept 8, the Capistrano Adult School will offer a course in community theater acting un- der the tul<'legc of local thes-• pian Bil Gekas It'll b1.• given Mondays from 7 to lO p m . a t San Clemcnk llagh School's lit· lie theater "This is lhl' first tame. to m y knowlcdg1.'. a cours e aimed directly al th<.' community thcall:r actor ha~ h('<'ll offered." Gekas nolC'l-. "Tht•rc arc• two jypcs of actor~ who can bc•n<'f1l ~ from }hlS C lass bc-gmnC'rS GEICAS - who ar<' tryinf.! lh<.•1r \\ 1ngs and :-C'asoned veterans who ha\e had htlk or no traintng ore stage· "T.US CLASS IS FOR both \\'<.• hopt• lo install d1sc1plinc a nd dc•pth 10 ~o with beginner~· ambi- tion and also to 1-(Cnt I y break som<' of the bad habits and improve lc<'hn1quc of the veteran." Gcka!-l, a graduate of UC Irvine's dram <.1 school. has performed lcuding roles in nearly 40 plays, hosted a te levision interview program. ap· peared in TV comme rcials and performed in sum· mer s tock compa nies . His production of "Guys and Dolls" at San Clemente 1-ligh won 12 awards in competition. Tht'rc is no fee for the class. though it will be limited in size. To e nroll. simply attend the class . call Gekus al 673·5H40 or the adult school office. 493·0658 BRUBAKER (R) 121 .. 2:4'-&·U 7 "'"10:1& URBAN COWBOY (PG) 1:i:-oo.2:»a.oo 7:»10:00 NO NUKES (PG) 12·2 ........ 10 "II ~SAT. Mll)fjlQHT "AIRPLANE" IN I "XANADU " (PG) "ILUES IROTHERS" 111 "'1HI IMPllE 1,.1 SlldllS IACK .. __ ......_ I MOllT a THI IAt9IT' ,,., ..... The Bandit, Frog and Justice 111t at it again in the all new adventutes of ... ~~ ~· .. JU Ut•MfJWl~td EDWAllDI ' HDDlEIACJl 1 1010 !>81·!>880 EDWARDS' CINEMA CENHR COSld MeSd 919 41~ 1 EDWARDS' CINEMA WEST wes1min~1er 891 Jfll'> CINE DOME Or.n4, h 1 I , '', 1 ••(II"' ~ KARIOll BLVD. DRIV(·lll san1a Ana !>31 12' I Intermission Tom Titus * CALLBOARO The Newport Harbor Actors The at<'r wi ll hold auditions Tuesday and for its first two productions of 1980·81. "Ma jor Barbara" a nd "Amahl and the Night Visitors" .... the tn outs are scheduled for 7 1> m bc>ttf evenings at th'e Monte Vista School the ater . 390 Monte Vist a St.. Costa Mesa . . for additional info. call 549-7946 or 673·51 15 • The Westminster Community Theater will have readings for "Count Dracula." a lighter \Cr s1on of the vampire lhnller. on Monday. Sept. 8. al 7 pm. 1n the theate r. 7272 Maple St . Wes tminster director Clark Burson will· be s eeking seven men and two women for the pla ) which opens. appropriately, on Halloween. . . 'Fiendish Plot' O utrages Asians NEW YORK (AP> A group disdaining stereotypes ha~ clcmandcd :i public apolog:;, to Chanes t' i\mcriC'an., for what 1t s:Jys arc insults in the Peter Sellers film "The Fiendish Plot of Dr Fu Manchu " Som(' 100 pt'O~rom un organrzat1on called .. Asian Americans Ag ainst Ster eotypes" de- m o nstrate d ugaanst the film Friday a l the Rockefeller Ccnt<'r olf1ces o f Warner Brothers. the film's d1.,tribulor The dC'monstr<1 t1on was d1r<'c tcd against botJl the stercot~ ping of Chinese and use of occidental actors. d<·n~ mg e mplo)'mcnl opportunities for orientals Ga bt· Sumrll'I \ ll'l' pre-.1dent ror ad vcrl1s1ng a nd pubhl·1ty of th<· indt•p<.•ndcnt Ryan P l'clures. which fma nc<'d a nd d1.,tributC'd th<' Zev Braun & Le land Nolan production. -.aid he met with <1 s mall delegation of p1('kl'ls a nd a !:>!:>ured the m that "any off<'n:-c \\a-. w11nl t'nt1onal ·· "I told 1111.·rn that we rt·gr<'lt<'d 11 vt·n much 1f anythmg in lhl' fllm offl'mkct i\:-ian ArrwriC'an!-.." he said P1cket111g has occurrl'd 1n ~an Franc1:-t o C1nd Los Angeles as part of the protest Protes tt'rs we're organ izing a de monstration al noon today al the Waverly Thcall'r in Grt.•t·nwll·h Villuge , one of 29 movil' hous('s whl'rt' ·Fu ManC'hu" as playing Advert1st·m<'nls for the film call 1t "lht· most delectablv da ffv comcdv of the year. irresistibly wacky. a'Petcr .Scllcrs c ias sic." "A BETTER -FILM THAN 'STAR WARS' ••• ''-TIMEMAGAZINE. ..:=::::::::~:=.lj STARTSTOMORR~Wt ~f ..o;-....~----.-­ cm1•sa nme ~um ~IUCI im•E Harbor Twin Saddleback Westbrook Edwards Twin Woodb11d11e 63l-3SOI 581·5880 S30·U01 848·0388 551 -0655 -Stadium Onvt-ln 639-7860 WUlMnlSU. H1·Way 39 Onve·ln 891 -3693 OIMC£ Villa Park Twin 639 0066 ... R CHARO THOMAS 1t08ERT VAUSHM JOHii , GEORGE PEPPARD ....... , • .. , llARl.Mle( FUl£&ft. fPG --n'AKTa TOMOUOW-- CYPllfSS lWlll ~()18$$ 8 1660 FOOM'AIN VALLEY fQon•oon Volley 839-1500 FOX Fulll!floo 57b-4147 LA MIRADA Olllvt·IN Sonto I e Spung~ ~73 9310 LINCOLN DRIVI IN Bueno Pork 821-4070 LOGE UACllYCINEMA ~m m 6446 Olo~e 634 911 NIGUEL UA MOVIES L~ Ntg\164 lltoJO ~'I 4 2377 ~)II 0AAHGE OR1VE·IN UA !'MN Oro~ Wl">irt.r IH MOI b5& 8<.IJIJth ORANGE MAU CINEMA W0008RIOGE CINEMA 0•0"8'' t~v r '~ IW 340 'l:JI Oti'l"' SADOlEBACK PLAZA CINEMA MAJIN[I~ OMV Al fl TOIO ~I !>880 MOSI lHlAIRtS ---- """'• O."' e AA ...... ,...., MIDOll AOI cun ,., 11 >C>-J.>O-• ~ JCH >C).10'~ t•M 094 ,,.., 0..4p A -.1. All,UNI tf'Ot I oo..i ., •1 ••·00-11-00 °""' ......,, • 1-"'•(I_, no oa Ao.::>N 1• 1 IJ 0 l .,,_. 4S-6t•M 0 ·10.0 n.., ,.. °" .......... , ...... 0.. THI llUU BIOTMllS 1•1 ,., •• , ..... ,_ """'""'"'->1S·&.• l'IOM NIGHT t•l •"l i...MA-U t..•-.,.. ~ 1 ll l U.l•JO n. ,,..., .. ., ......... . . '.. l aosu NCOHTI IS Of 1lll TlltO (IC> f POI '•" '" t~l l H••11•,_._,._,llo<»l0 •-'194 1400 flNAl COUNTOOWN 1001 .... .. c......,.._ 111011 q~80 ·~ \\»4,4.M .. '-•""" "-'" ........ -.-.... THI lllUl lAOOOflft•I l.oo..i.•t.00-7 00-•-1 t:OO n .... o..t •~• o..ft • -.1. All,LANE ll'OI 11 4).l.•M.•..._AM •s,.10,0 t .... ~- THf HUNTll Cll'OJ . ._ ISC.Uf flOM AlCATUZ(PO) _...,_, -12,~ ----.. "MIDDLE AGE CRAZY" (R) . .. .. " ,.. ........ 494 1!>14 ' ..... .. I ...... .. 494 1!>14 WKDAYS-7-10-.S SATl5UH-l ... 10 "NORMA RAE" (PG) ~~ "AIRPLANE" (PG) ~'11>-10 •5 s..,__.., . .s.,..,~10:0 "MEATBALLS" -.,-.00 s..is--~s »t-OO __ ;;;;;;;:::::::::::::::~-;5URFING THRILLS! .~~:.:,: •·SEA FLIGHT,. (G) 496 I 753 SOfUl't, NO PAllfl ==::::;:=----~o·~·u 7:.)0 . t :JO ,_,... ... HT l"ffllT TUISOAY ...... ,, . ., ...... ,, 819 98!>0 ou., • .........._..._ XANADU <ll'OJ ..... THI NUOI M>MI !ll'OJ , . ' • . . f • . Dudley Moore and Liza Minnelli take a break from the s h oot mg of the movie .. Arthur" at New York's St. Bartholomew's Churl'h where Moore Jtlts his fiancee at the altar and takes a beating in the process. Seven Samurai Soar in Space By ROBERTOSBORNE TlleHeltt'weN•-- ftoger Corman has sent ''Seven Samurai" into outer space via New World 's "Battle Beyond the Stars," a rework in~ of Ak1ra Kurosawa's 1954 dapanese classic, wh ich has also had a few outings in westem garb <UA 's "The Magnificent Seven" series). The latest version is an ambitious entry -at least by New World standards -in the current sci·fi avalanche, and will li kely find its most re· ceptive a udience among those willing 'to regard it ,,_ _____ __. __ as 4 .deriYatiYe valentine ( MOYIE J to 1 he s-:-fgenre, rather t han as a spaced·out REnEW .tra ilblaier . R ichard ..___ ____ . __ __.. T homas. Geor ge Pep- oa rd. John Saxon a nd Robert Va ughn head the cast. a nd man the"' celestial ships. ACTUALLY. "BA1TLE" OWES far less lo Kurosawa and his "Samurai" than it does to "Star Wars," "Zardoz," "The Wi zard of Oz." eATTl£ e£YOHOTHESTAllS H-Worlf E ncUllW prodllcer. . • .. . .. . . . . .. .. .. .. . . • .. • R09er Corman Producer ................................... , ....... Ed CMlln Olrut0< ............................ JlmrnvT.M uraka!T'1 &cre1>npley... .. • .. • • • • • • • . • . ................ JOIWI Say~ . c~ ca~: R l<hMo TI1omn. ROCllrt v •llOhn, JOIWI suan, ~ ~rd. Oarlanne FIUget, S'(IMI Dannlnq, 5-m ~. -_. ~ard, Sten~. Earl eo.n, Jeek McGowan~ Jatf ConV. Dick Oavaios. Cvol<eOftly:I L-C.rlln R UIWIKtQ I !me -10. "'ltlutft M .. AA ..... :f'O "Westworld," "Lost Horizon" and a half-dozen other earlier film adventures, including "2001" <with a chatty computer named Neil replacing Hal) and "The Creature from the Black Lagoon" (Morgan Woodward, In extensive makeup as a cbaractef' named Cayman, looks much like our old oal Gillman> But assuming imitation is nattery, etc .. the story by John Sayles and Anne Dyer, with final screenplay by Sayles, has enough directional turns and flights of bizarre fantasy to keep "Battle" bristling, if not innovative. In the story, there's trouble fac_ing the peaceful ' planet of Akir, and Richard Thomas heads into space aboard a craft resembling an old moose's skull, hopefully to enlist some intergalactic mercenaries and soldiers of fortune to help Akir fight off a conqueror named Sador (Saxon) who's threatening everyone with extinction. T HE ROUNDUP ULTIMATELY produces seven ships in all composed or a misplaced cow· boy (Peppard) who loves scotch and old movies; a tight-jawed outlaw (Vaughn) wbo wants a place to rest bis bones; a lizardlike alien named Cayman (Woodward): a few clones (including Earl Boen, John McGowa ns>. plus one fragile computer specialist <Darlanne Flugel> and a horny Viking ,, <Sybil Danning). Then the space war begins, and ultimately com~ to a fiesta conclusion. Corman and producer Ed Carlin have ex· pended considerable ene rgy <and money) on the film, and it's far from a throwaway item, despite a title which indicates a cookie-pattern personality. Miniature photographic effects, supervised by C. Comisky and executed by a long list of techni· cians, are extremely good, especially when judged on their own. although it's difficult nowadays not to compare everything to the "Star Wars" -''The Empire Strikes Back" yardstick. In that context, it suffers. ACTING BY THOMAS, Peppard, Saxon, Vaughn and the well-stocked supporting cast (in· eluding Sam Jaffe, Jeff -Corey and others) is pro- \ \. perly int.eme, sly and jaunty, as the script and Hirector Jimmy T. Murakami require. Only the appearance -straight out of a lum· berjack'1 f antaay -of Danning as the lmocken-up Valkyrie warrior adds an unintentlonally hilarious note. U anything, sbe seems a misplaced remnant ol the eld Corma.o days, when be was mating thole tlr.a potbollera for American-International. "Battle" lbould get some good play, especial· ly by exbibiton who can't get their bands oo Darth Vader tbil 1WD1Der unholy~ tea aor. Only one man can-stop them. CHUCI NOlllS LEEN Cl£EF A,. ,_ ..... 0-. ....... lllC.•M __ O-..._ ~~, ,, .......... ...... -----PLAYml-------•• -91111 UAMo"9$ IMO-. ~ , ...... ¥...., 990.4022 ~ •••• •. ., . ---.. , .. 0...Dntt.fl 0...M tMCllyO... IMC- S5f.102% U7.o.140 634·3'11 193.0546 c ,, Be Clipped the ·Stars HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Harry lblrley hu the perfect title ror tl.rt~~~c:i~.r : ··How , or • yeana, Shirley wu lhe barber to t0me of TlnH ltown's brt~hteal 1tu1. lr\fludln1 Clark G1blt-. W.C. t"'lelda 11nd Red SlloltA>n "Sid Grauman wH my fl n;t cu1tom r," rculls Shirley, who atarted as a temporary barber at thci pr~U,Sous R001evelt I lotcl on Dec. 26, t928. ··11e owned the hotel as well as the ChlnHe The ater then." Shirley •&¥11. "I guess he must have liked me, because a week later I aot a run-time job ... Shirley, now 81, stayed al the Roosevelt ror 26 years until mov· Ing his shop to suburban Stud.lo City. A native of Osage. Kan .. who as a y0W1g man had worked in Oklahoma's oil fi elds, Shfrley w as quick to strike up a friendship with another onetime Ok lahoma oil worker, Clark Ga· ble. ''He came In one da y and said, 'Harry, I've got a chance lo do that part in "Gone With the Wind," but I don't know if I should take it.· I said, ·well , why not ? What have you got to lose?'" the barber recalled. ~-~-~-~-~~~~~-~~~ I I I: I heat It hotter Energy-saving gas waler heater with glass-lined tank, hot water recovery, high. temperature shut-ott and other safety features. 30-gal. Reg. 119.95 10995 ......... ,... uus ..... 119.95 ~. ,.._ 1SUS ..... 149.95 roll over and talle cov• Smooth-rolling heavy-duty roller frame end 9" cover let you glide through painting projects. 2•• make contact with duro Ouro Contect Cement Instantly bonds for metal, wood, tile, leather. rubber. etc. No clamP9 needed. 3 oz. #CC-8. Reg. 1. 79 99° D D Shirley say1 he frequent.Jy vis- ited Gable and his wife, actress Carole Lombard. on their ranch. "He'd call up and say, 'Come on. Harry. Bring your scissors over and we'll do some shooting too,' " Shirley recalls. ' Red Skelton, one of Shirley's regular customers, clowned around even while he was not on camera, the barber recalled. "He used to come in and get a grip (suitcase) in each hand and put on a bellboy's cap," Shirley says. "He'd carry them upstairs and people would say to him, 'Did anyone ever tell you you look like Red Skelton?' He'd come back down laughing.•• I behind closed drawers propane .., .. "'* UMfut energy In a bottle. For ~mp. Ing appllance9, tOfches, etc. By Tru· TMt. SANTA ANA : Keep children -.Y, from the fMnY hazards lurking In Y°"' *-•• by tn- atalllng Klnd«guaro dr..., I door latches. Easy to Ute, ...... tof you. Pack of 3. #103. ENTERTAINMENT I MO'/IES een ~rangt'n. e\lt'r~ thin1.t j, ~hie. DE~ME \VI!\ ~10~'1;\'I> llOM\ \(.11~1-Jl>t-.R 'tll ~ .. , (;(>!\.IA.< :A\'flAli \ a on Ille,,_.. There la no reason to let your gar. ,. ", ., . ''"· ' , ., . ' . ~ .. ... ! ) ' . " .. . . ..... 1• • .: .. ~ .. den hose tangle up! Caddy hose • ·~ ~-wsyo<C1'8f!tc• mfiCnantsffi:·~ ~ '3100 Reg. 35.99 21 88 . even plants need vitamins Vlgoro Vlleml" l::i·1 Plus will promote sturdy root growth and prevent transplant shock. 1·P•nt size. Reg. 1.79 99° built basically for bulbs VIiiage Blacksmith bulb planter makes planting and trans· planting easy and last Reg. 1.99 99° YigoroUsly mix 'n lftltcll Your choice fcom Vlgoro: Rose Food, All·Purpoae, Tomato Food, or Evefgreen Food. FOf all your fall planting. Reg. 1.99 99° .... .. kl ... ....., G«maln'a Spot GrMa & Weed Kiiier deeM up unde91rable WMde & grauea from _ drlveweyt. Mike and tence.. 20-oz. aeroeol. Reg. 2.49 99° ~ weeder KllS llOAllllAf WEEDS ,. ~ =~ ' '\1 . . . ;.:, .... . ·. . ;t ..... ~ .:,.:1: ... ·:. .... ~ -·-------.......... . . . -....... . - INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Horoscope •Erma Bombeek , DAil Y PIL.OT • • Cl DULL MEN AND WOMEN ARE (FROM LEFT) ALLAN FAINBARG, NICK PASTOR, STEPHEN FREEMAN, FRANK CLENDENEN AND PAUL SUTTON (STANDING), KAROLYN SMULL, MILES LARSON, CORT FOX, TED SERVAIS, BRUCE BENDER, M. DADURKA r ; By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ray Arca membership CS3.50> has climbed to more than 300 ---~--~ ... -·-~Jli~ ..... :a., ... ~--............ _..__. ,._ ----..Jttt~ ... ~---.... ~~., ... ---~--- Because membership in th<' club 1s pretty much a closed is- .-~~r!BD4Jltt~'\Jtgg.P~S.OD..ba>M-'O.be dull.hJ!'.~--....ia ~ ourseU m y_our spare time The somewhat faceless group of folks g;tlher for coffee and blunt-edged conv{•rsat1on most mornings at an undistingu1!-ihed Newport Beach N1fC' NOTIDNG rf'<.11 exciting Pretty dull. in fact. but these fli'O- ple are proud of being boring by today's quick·living s tandards · How dull"' Well. the typical member of this newly-formed club thinks menage a trois i!. <.1 French pastry. "Gucci" is something you say when you tickle a baby under the chin. NONF. Ot, the memb('rS owns a hot tub. wears gold chains or goes hang-,:?liding for·rccreation. They have marriages. not "relationships." drink beer not Perrier. and wouldn't thmk of taking scm;itiv1ty training or roller disco lessons. Ladies and gentlemen. here they are. let's give ·em a big yawn: The founding members of the Dull Men's Club of Newport ·Beach SJTJ'ING in a downright dingy office overlooking 32nd Street -no high r ise luxury offices or sexy secretaries for this bunch -lumber dealer Stephen Freeman explains the basis on which the group was rounded "We're squares ... essentially guys that aren't lrymg to put on a bi~ s how." s ays Freeman, who lists his age as. "mid· die· aged and then some." /s there a bright future for dullne~? ·1 think 11 ·11 catc h o n .· s ays Stephen Freeman a vice p resident fo r n0w Dull M en's Cluh .. WE HAVE a meeting every morning (at Eli Greene·~> but • we have no dues or plans. We 're incapable of planning." t Freeman declares. "E very member is a vice president." Fittingly, the idea for the formation of the local club was not ·original. Inspiration came in an article published in the Wall Street Journal about a Dull Men's Club opening in San Fran·· cisco A TAVERN conversation in which reportedly an Australian claimed. "Americans are like inverted pyramids -the deeper ' you go the less there is" prompted Joseph Troise to take out an ad in a local weekly news paper. The gist read: "Oare To Be Dull." Responses poured in from men tired of being interesting. ..... FREEMAN and company havl' a Newport Bc•ach mem bersh1p of 23 people. rangmg from "m1lhona1res to bums." he says However. unlike the San Francisco ch;.i ptt•r. the local group does not exclude women START carrying a row of well-c;harpened colored pencils m 'our shirt pockC't Au g ment the effect by protecting the pocket Y. Ith :.i celluloid s hield Keep those !-.1clcburns long. Wear suits with wide lapels . "The Newport Beach Chapter will accept fem ale mem bersh1p despite the apparent trendy ERA 1mpl1C'at1on." reads the first a nd only a mendment to the group's chartt•r '\; l'VC'r JOJ!. If boating. stand<.1 rd clothing 1~ a white T-shirt, mechanic:. pants and Red Rall shoes . Whe n you gl'l sick. don't bother with antibiotics. Whisky 1n The reasoning is that any woman dull 1.>nough to met•t en trance requirements won 't mess things up "Moreover ." the umt•ndmt•nt slalt's. "Our dull m alC' mt·mhc•rsh1n h<•ini: so lethargically unaware. would hardly even consider ext ramarital relations hips." .. Resides." says Freeman. they (the women) were With us to begin with." I NTERESTED in joining the elub? Don't hold your breath. (Applications can be sent to Box 1445 m Newport B~ach. 92663 > "We'll entertain your application. but probably never answer." says Freeman. "Our people don't really correspond." Don't even bother to apply if you wear a three-piece suit. are a member of "Friends of <anything)" or are considered <t go-g~tter or interesting person. Same goes for peo~le who s hop on Rodeo Drive or get S75 hair s tyles. "Our guys usually get a short trim al Evelyn's Barber Shop on 32nd Street where they read old issues of Police Gazette.·· Freeman claims THE DULL set buys its clothes at places like Pcnney'i, or Brooks Brothers. For those rare big occasion:.. ma le club mcm bcrs dig mto the clc;>set for a 25-year;S>ld tuxedo with baggy pleated pants and "boiled shirt." ' Working hard at being dull - Bruce Bender I I . A member wouldn't be caught dead in a rented powder blue t ux with nuffy frilled shirt, Freeman stresses Not that they go out often. Parading with the veterans on the 4th of July is a biggie. and a secret love of bowling is a mem· bershiptrait. hot water, cod liver 011 and mentholated chest rub will knock out anything. "One of our guys." says Freeman, ''thinks a migraine is the name of a new cereal." AT HOME, dull people sleep on white sheets and use non. patterned. white toilet paper. "We send a guy weekly to Bellflower in a pickup for a load." notes Freeman. JS THERE A bright future for dullness? "I think it will catch on quickly." says Freeman. The San Francisco chapter already has plans for a DuJI Men's Hall of Fa me. ~far, the club's nominees include Milton Friedman. Robert Young. Oz:ii~ Nelson and Walter Mondale. And forget about health food and talk of cholesterol·and sug- ar substitutes. Breakfast is com flakes and cream and s ugar, eggs over easy and bacon. Lunch can be a problem. Freeman admits. "We don't want Beef WellinJ!ton. vichysoisse or French wine. To J!Ct our ha m or cheese sandwich and bean soup we must go at times as far as El Mod eno. And the Muscatel there is J!ood." Freeman's eyes almost bnghten at the s uggestion or a na· tion·wide convention of dull people. "Yes, l can see 1t," he says. "There'd be no program and no speakers." Plays for Living By J UDITH OL..~N Of tM Dally ~!Mt Statt There's no curtain a nd the stage is almost bare. Props are almost nonexistent and the cos· turning isn't much to shout about. But as the play unfolds at the Balboa Bay Club. it's obvious that it's a significant ex· perience for members of the audience. Tears well up in many eyes, and one pe~on even has to leave the room to deal with her emotions. "Boxed In," the drama being sponsored by Las Marineras Auxiliary of Family Service As· sociation or Orange County, shows bow television has impinged on American families and made some or them sickly dependent on it. "The box," the play aays, has interrupted communication between husbands and wives and made robots out of children. "BOXED IN" is the newest in a series of dramas which ar~ staged by Family Service As· sociation cha~rs throughout the U.S. Most have the same impact as· the play about television and they all deal with social is· sues s uch as teenage violence ("My Enemy. The World"), separation and divorce ("Divide and Multiply"), s uicide ("Quiet Cries"), equal opportunity ("Adam and Eve"> and loneliness ("The Boltom Line"). · They are all 30 minutes long and usually are given by professional actors, using FSA scripts, and who receive a small sum of money for their work. · Plays for Living are staged occasionally in Orange County but not enough to satisfy FSA of Orange County director John Von Glahn. . At $150, they cost too much for mostorganlza· lions to request them on a frequent baall, he ex· plained. "You become a part of the play." he said. "Almost every time a play is presented it hits someone diredly. It takes an awfully good speaker ti> create the same affect." There usually is a discussion period follow· ing the play so the viewers can talk about their feelings after seeing the performance. "Audience members gain more understand· iQg from the plays," Von Glahn said. "Some get counseling later on and most people get some insight. "TBE PLAYS enable you to see your life from a different angle." Plays for Living were started during World War II when the American Theater Wing . . the p/ay's the thing, not only to catch the conscience of the king, but the public as well.' -Katharine Come/I established a speakers' bureau to fulfill 4,000 wartime request& for information. Most calls were for st.an such as Helen Hayes and Kathartne Hepburn. and the theater group decided, at the suueation ol drama crttlc Brook.a Atkinaon, to give plays lnatead of trying to meet the growt.na demand for lndlviduala. ./ TBVS WEaE BOaN .. Victory Plays•• about s uch subjecla u war bonds. the wartime fears or children Bl\d the problems of returning veterans. IN A IOI -Actors portray situation in which television rules a home. Husband and wtfe both have eyes glued to set, precluding communication between them. They are part of Plays for Living. a Family Service Association offering. V01" GLAHN WOULD like to see a local theater group take on the task of giving the plays as a community service. The plays often become vehicles for personal counseling and Von Glahn believes they are more eflecUve than a speaker. Many govemment agendel commluloned plays, and by 1915 the U.S. Treuury bad dis· tributed nearly 100,000 eopl• ol tbe acripta. ,(See PIA Y8. Nut Pap) , II (Z DM.YPtLOT .. s~u S.t..r<:,-/ 1 t-' Po~ ~~Sandal Dr'llll6lr end ~-Uca..O 11 the fuhton fOrlCUt Black °' Ne9I Uurd ~ HALF-SIZES Ella ftor's HALF-SIZE SHO JIRUlfOI U• o...,..1.1r MeM <OHA MUA 1101...,.., ..... •UllTll<TOll llACll •• ·-·i...1 ... , ...... l"WIA lllUS MW loo Ltl1w• WttW ~L"i~ SHOES .~.~ 99 Fashion 1 sland ... Newport Beach 759-9551 t our vzry ()\llfl straight 1<aj cuft'<Z.d corduroyB ... -· · ~~bf:ept:i-lar-· ~t.13 fbr F~k to ochool" and fall . al I µmt.a enz. &t% cotton and. 16% dacn::m fOr mBXJ.mum 'Mlar. <Z..ight groat oolora of tan,~~, fbrast, nzd) 9ro.y, oogz artl ml ly. @J~o@@J~@ · 44 fbshion Island• Newport Beach•7l4!644·5070 1001 ~stwood Blud.·~stwood Village•213!419·1727 FINAL REDUCTIONS It's a rare savings opportunity you have to take adVantage of! Save now on your favorite shoes: styles for work, leisure and dressy occasions ... styles for &very place you go end f!Jtl9rf place you're going. Hurry In for the best selection in your size! ·=:.°""00 joyce·selby shoes South Coast Ptozo I --=a =DMay Co, (7M) M6·•791 Westwood VIiiage t0S7 Weetwood llvd. Lot Angetea (213) 477 ·196' ' Miiiion VleJo Moll Lower Levet, Center Court MIMlon Vlejo (714) '95·6381 .. Aaaaaa--aa-aaaa! DEAR ANN LANDERS: Regardlna the "half ·s h eep, hall·human" letter that appeared in your col· umn recently, I really don't believe It either - but listen to this: some time ago I met a young man. and during our brief conversation he told me his father was a sheepherder out W est. I asked him. ··where out West ?" He r ep I ied. "Montaaaa· aaaa·aaaa-aaana.·· It kinda shook me. - CH UCK FROM NEW ORLEANS. NOT N.EW HAVEN DEAR CHUCK, You Rascal : Not ba - aaaaaa·d. Here's another letter with a llt&le differeo& twist for ewe. DEAR ANN LANDERS : Human males have been having sex with just about any animal that would hold s till long e no ugh. or could be beaten into sub· mission As you said, animal genes and human genes will not "mix" -and it's a good thing. ff they did. h a lf th e worl d population would consist or half goat. half fish. half horse. half cow. half pig, half dog, a nd prob· ably half fe ncePost J A R . PARIS. IL L DEAR PARl 8 : Several readers were aaconvtaced wben I aald lt WHD'l poHlble. So here's a tlatemenl from an authority, Dr. MU&on Wuler, president of tbe Hereditary Dlaeau Foundation, Beverly um •. CaJll.: "Tbe number and types of chromosomes lo the aperm and eggs of bamaaa do not match ap wltb the number and types of chromosomes of any other form of life. So II they should get together, no fertilization could possibly occur." DEAR ANN LANDERS : Reading about the 15·year-old girl who was beaten up by her father moved me to write this letter. I wish all parents could envision the day when their children get big enough to hit them back. My husband abused our four children and me. In my ignorance I took the frustrations of my un- happy marriage out on the kids When the boys got big enough lo flatte n out their Cather'. they di<.. The girls escaped a i. soon as possible by get ting Jobs after school and on weekends . Today they ar e al l married and have children Wt• are nol welcome in their home!> The only knowledge I A nn Landers have about my grandchildren Is what I hear from relatives . I am grateful when they bring snapshots so I can see how much the kids have grown. I beg all parents to keep in m ind that your actions today may have a big impact on what happens tomorrow. - MELLOWED TOO LATE DEAR MELLOWED: What • tragJc story! In sucb situations I strong. ly ad vlse coa.uellng for the e n tire family . Although cblldren who are mistreated ofte n fi nd ll difficu lt to fo r give, lt can be achieved with skillful counseling. Parenls who bea& their cbildreo are often alcoholics or men· tally Ill and almost a l wa ys, they w e r e beaten b y T H EIR parents. Some abused children live for the day to ··~et ('ven." But this desire for revenge is destrur- tl ve and needs to bt- rooted out with pro· feaaloaaJ help. DEAR ANl'i LANDERS : I am a grown woman who de· clded to take my .. pro- blem" to you, like so many other s ha ve Promise not to la ugh at me. I have a terrible tame accepting a compliment gracefully. Whenever someone says, "That·!> a pretty dress." I reply . "It 's an old one." or. "I wore it because 1t ·~ so comfortable." It's a bad habit and I'd love to break it. Please tell me how. -MI NN IE I N MEOI C INI:: ll AT . ALBERTA DEAR M I NNIE : Welcome to the club. I had the same i.roblem until I learned a few canned r~spon~es : "Thank yOfl for s ayinl( that. I like this dress. &oo. ·· OT, "How nice of you to notice. You made my day." After a whilt>, it will come natural! v. J ,,. ~~ Op~~ons In Graphics FRIDAY. AUG. 29 BySYONEYOMARR ARI ES (Mar 2l·Apr. 19> Clas!>ify material . get files mordcr. Family members attempt to pull you in two dlrections s1muJtaneously Accent on personal possessions. income Potential and locat· ing articles that had been misplaced. lost or stolen. Cancer, Capricorn natives fi gure prom· inently TAURUS <Apr. 20·May 20> Populanty in· creases; circumstances turn in your favor You'll be celebrating as result of cash windfall Ge mint. Sagittarius persons play significant roles. Ac cent on personality. special appearances and ac celerated social activity. Avoid scattering your forces. GEMINJ.( May 21·June 20): A friend 1s s teer ing you in right direction -know it and don't at· tempt to block progress. Take a chance on own capabilities. Clandestine meeting could be on agenda. Display ability to be discreet. Aquarius. Taurus persons play key roles. CANCER (June2J.July 22): Obtain hintrrom Gemini message. EmphaslS on fnends. hopes. wis hes and s pecial investment opportunity In· dividual "in the know" wiU provide you with con· fidential data. Be ready for a variety of sensa tions. unusual call and a "confession" from memberofopPos1tesex. LEO (July 23·Aug 22): You establish self on more solid base. Emphasis on home. secunty. ob· taming .. green light" from employer or those in positions of authority. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio natives figure prominently. In rnattersofspecula tion. slick with number6. VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22): Good lunar aspect coincides now with travel. published material. defining terms and separating fact from fancy . Pisces and another Virgo play imPortant roles. You could experience a "spiritual revelation." You will perfect special technique. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Emphasis on financial status of one close to you, including partner or mate. Priorities come into sharp, clear focus. You'll have more responsibility and greater chance for reward. Relationshlp in· tensifies, you a re involved. whelherornot youare immediatelyawareofit. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Finish rather than irutiate project. Tie loose ends. Take nothing for granted. especially where legal affairs are concerned. One who is currently an adversary could do an about.face and become a valuable al· ly. Knowitanddon'tsell yourself short. SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Job gets done: you'll be more Independent in thought, ac· lion. A "dependent" will show gratitude in mean· ingful manner. Check medical·dental appoint· ments. Take care of yourself -you deserve it. Leo, Aquarius natives figure in your personal scenario. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Emotional rest>onses tend to blur logic. Know it and protect self in clinches. Family member makes special request. Be receptive, but make clear t hat you do have a life of your own to live. Cancer and another Capricorn figure prominently. An important change is due. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Overcome temptation to select flimsy material. Stick to quality. You'll be asked to review. revise and re· build-all of this eventually works to your ad van· tage. Gemini, Sagittarius persons figure prom· inently. You'll be putting money in the bank. PISCES (Feb." 19·Mar. 20): You need not adhere to ritual. Establish your own policy and proceed with confidence. Whal begins as a "serious situation" could become a source of humor. Know it and remain nellible. Long. distance message may resultinchangeofplans. Doll Show Puppet Show \ Golden West College Wlll open another phase of iLl. visual commumcallon pro- g rain this fall by offering a ··sign graphics" option to prepare students for employment or advancement. Instruction will inc lude graphics s pecialties s uch as commercial silk screen printing. window signs, show cards and large exten or displays. Other options include graphic design. graphic technology, media production and technical illustr tion Registration for the fa ll semester 1:-. now under way by appointment through Sept. 2. Registration on a walk·in basis will be held from Sept. 4 to Sept. 12. Baldwin Pianos and Organs ll',•,(Jfll<" · IN'>TRlJMlNT I A Pl S RLCOflO".> y-~~~i~R +\ • '• ·r -... ,,., r · \.~ ••· • F a•hlon Island 640-9020 0 All¥ tO ti SUlll t1 !t YO'-fHUAS '"' •O. --~ FREE BLKE BAG WITH ANY SCHOOL PURCHASE Al.JG lSTI-i TO S!:PT lffil ""-6'2 "106I --I02'l IMM Ne-8"<h C.Ll<mlo• ~ Just in Time for Baek to Sehoorl.~·r-·~~= . ' . 50°/o AND MOii Off AU SALi MB CHAMDISI .· Hurry! Sale ettds AUCJ. 30 T~ LAST~IL • . speciolitinq in tlie f~t sculptured noils, this one-mon shop hos been established in Newport I • Beoch for four years. /~,.. Coll me about my #({ ]' _.J end·of-the -summer ~ s~ specials 00 new sets. 206 1 Riverside in Newport Sale & frff Info dlnlc thia Sat & Sun. Aug. 30 a 31. Collectors a AntlQue ctealera preeent unusual dolt•.~" and hou .... HuntlnQ10n Center Mall. ~8 Fwy & Beech Blvd .. H.B. Brt~ the kldt \ to Huntington Center mell for \ ~ 1/i,._, Be och, 642. 451 2. ~V Tuesday 1hr ouqh ~ Saturday. fun with c.na·a Puppeta. F'" ShOWI Frt. at 1·2 30-4 and Sat-Sun·Mon et 1·2-3-4 I ·--,, I • • • Thut'lday. Auoust 28. 1980 OAlLV ptLOT I PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE lllCTITIOUt aus1N•H--·--,-1-CT_l_Tl_OUi __ •_u_t _l .. -.-,-,-- ,..,,_. ITAUMINT MAM11 ITATIMl•T Tll• IOllOwlnQ IM"Oflt ere dotn9 fllt ~ __, It ckllft(I llvtl• bu\!""''., ,...,, ••1 HIC Ol!Vl!LOPMEHT COM ST ltlCT\.V WH EELl. OU PAHV •t ~ p..,_ I.Ant. H.,wll0'1 H-llMft A...-, Hunltnt!Ofl a..<11. e..,11 c;.i1iom1ef'llMO c.illor"le._ Sln.,. A -. 3113 AWflkM lto ... lre S a.tlu1. 10tt2 Metew• Ce,,ttCK . ...._, 8ee<ll. C•lllornle Ori••· t4Ul'lllnqton e..tll, c.tlfo<11I• ..,~ .,... T•rreno E B•lln \•Ot E Tllll ~I\ tOlldu<ted by •" In· 0.~tllOIW. -'111 H 20ll. AN~m. Olvklvel. C•tllornl• 92907 "-""" s. Gell•• J•m•• ~Oii C•mphlt. HO I Tlllt "---WM 111.0 wltll .... Ourwooo l •ne. Hewporl 8t•Ch. Covntv Cieri< ot O<•-C:O..nty on Celttorn•• 9'660 AU9Ult IS, t4'D. Tlllt l>U•IMU " conducted bv • 1'10264 Qtne••I pertner\lllP PvDlllr.d 0<•"9" CoA\t Oetly ll'llot. J-~o1t C•m-11 Auq 11, 29, Sep!,•. 11, 1• :Mls-80 Thi• ""ternenl WA\ lttld wtlh ttw Count• Cler~ of 0'9nQe CounlY on --------Auqult llo, 1'90 P UBLIC NOTICE '14*' Pubtl•l"«I Or•nqe Coetl O•llv Piiot. ----------~ Auv n. s.ot. •. '" , •. 1..0 )'°6-IC) lllCTITIOUI •u•INISS NAME ITATIMIMT The lott-lno """'"'' .,.. dol"9 PUBLIC NOTICE b<ltlneu~· CAROtFF OIL COMPAHV, 16111 H...m GfMnvlew ~. HIHltlnQlon Beech, NOTICI TO Cltl DITOllS 01' •ULK C.lltornl• '°'"" TltANSlllll AHD 01' IMTINTIOH TO C.r4t0t G Ar96btlQlll, 1'111 C.rttn TllA NS l'•lt ALC OHOLIC •lew L•n•>. HUnttnolon Be•<ll, alYIUIAOIE LI CIENSl[ltl !Seu. Celllomi•9'"' Hlt1-61f7 U.C.C. .,.,,,., Hl7J a&lll. F•" P-. S 5e•faro1>9. Corene NOTICE IS HERE IV CIVE H to tll• Ott Mar. Celilo.rnoe~lS Cr.Ollors of FRANK VtTETTA .ind Sl•nn Kemp J210t Ea\I Non• AOI LIS VITE TT A So<"" Se<Urlly Ort•• L-Hlo~• C•ltlorn1• 91•11 Ho\. 113·'1·'111, OU·••·••11 . (h•fltt B i>nd P•uWtte S B•ll•y Tral\Sl tror\ ..... l•<•nuo ......... to•o Kiidow.in o .. wt. ClenO•ff'. bu\11\Ut eoo-.n ,, ttJS-U VI< IOf'I• C•hlorn•• 91101 Sir.el. 1n ""' Clly 01 Co•I• Mu• J•-' Lano.ion 11011 lU<v•• Covnly of 0<61\91!', Slit• of C•lltornt• l•n•. H""hnQlon A».Kll. C.hlorn•• 9'Ul, lhlll • bulk Ir an>ltr " •bOUI to 9'1>46 be m-IOJOSEPHK 0AMA T0•M Cll•rte\ F ano MaOPlf'1nP 1 SHtRlEV A OAMATO. Sot1•I lUJ-r.10121 EverQ~\l<llW Hwnt S•t1HllY No• 111 ., 1931 •nd lnQton S.e<ll.C•ltlom1•9'""6 J6.l-U 1'1'1G, Tr..,sttrft\ •"" ont•t\ded C•rt F c;,.,_ .Ot Bavs1df' O"•~ Tr•nsfe,_l. ..-b<l\IM" aocsre\\ NewPOrt BH<ll, C<tlttom1" <nf>OO ,, 112S-U Vk:to,.. Street '"'""(tty ol (h•rn e (Oftlpy dnO I( M•n CO\ta Mew, Counly of Ora~. St•tt of Wlt\Of\ ConlPy 19'5 5c>rU< .. •~"".,.. C•hlOrnoe '1101 Or•nQe. C<tlllomta 926&1 TM prooertv ,._ dfMt<rtM<' •n C)f'fYr•t ftil\ bu\tnelis ·~ conouc te-d bv rl a!. A.ti '\lOC:ll '" 1r4df' llJctutf'\ ~Quip Qtner•I Ot)rtl"MH\l'UP m "" n t • n d Q o o o w • I I o f • Gt 6"1 E Ar04bt •ant <f'r-1a1n detlcalP'\~ bu'•"•'\•"°"""..,-; Tht'\ state~• wa\ 111e<i <Ntth thf' FRANIC'S tTALIAN OEll '""' lout•d Counlv Cl••-ol Orange County on •t 117).U Vk:tor1a In'"" (1tv Of (O\l<I AUIJU\t a.,.., ,Mesa County ot Oran11•. Statt ot FtUOOS C•tltorn1a. """ '"""''"' '"" fotlow•no Pulllt\hed O.anqo coa't Od11v P1•ot latcot>oti< b•v•,.o• '" ""'• (or Auo 18, ~pt •. tt, •a. t'llO Hl'l·IO A SCENE FROM 'BOXED IN' llcen>esL OH SALE OEER &. WINE. ' Numb•r •t·Olq5q1. now l\Wed to - fFrom Page Ct> ~~~';'~~:.,.'::.'.,";7~',~~~~ .. ,v,~~~1~" PUBLIC NOTICE Plays jth~ CllY ot CO\t• Mu•, Counlv ot FICTITIOUS llUSt .. ESS-- Qver the years lht' plays have been g1 vcn Oranoe. Stettof,C•1110"'1" .,.,._E STATEMENT r I b b . fhat tne amovrtt ot our<h•W pr1c• Th• tollow1nq per\On~ ., .. do1no Or C U S, USlfleSS and industry and Churches, or (On .. dl!r6llO<\ 1n COl\t>eCltOn W•lh bU\IM\H\ and new plays are commissioned every so often '"'0 '"'n''" 0 ' "1d "'"n•• for MONTEREv o•l COMPANV t> ~ tht .. 11malfd lnlfi'f\to.rv ",..,. \um 01 l!lu cr., C:•tl forn•• '11&.iq l~• ....... M••"••P'•<•Ott tM Ota~ Co••• DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Y•w C•" I•• " ,1..., It 4542 •M lS o..., Co• S.nrc• f,.ot If Wttf'i e Wlftt Ad '••t Ct•4'4 A,....,el ••••••••••••••••••••••• EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RIAL EST ATE SALES MANAGEMEHT OPPTY L l' a d I n I! . w t• I I established. mult1-0fl t<'I.' company. Pnme Hunt ington Bt:uch locat1011 f'tnd out about this h1~h earning opportunity Will tr ain. Send personal in Wllwt''t Motice: formation lo: Ad No. 775, All real estate advertised Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560 in this newspaper is sub Costa Mesa, CA 9'l627. ject. tD the Federal i-·air ,\II information to re Housing Act or 10611 main confidenll_a_I. __ _ which muke:. 1t allegnl lo ---------• advertise ··any prr· rerence. lim1lat1on. or d1scnmmat1on ba:.cd on race. color rchi:mn .... ex. or national on!(m. or an mtenuon lo nwkl! anv such preference. hm1tJ uoo. or d1i.cn manallon " 1lus newspaper will not know1n~I~ accept any advert1..,1n1l for r e.a l estatt• wh1l·h L" in viola lion or the law ERRORS: Adnrtisers ~d check their ods daity and report er- ron inlnRdiatefy. The DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the first in- cornct insertion only. Houses for Sate •.•.....••.•••....••.•. 1002 .•••..........•..•..... IRVIME TERR.ACE Luxunous front row vte~ home in beaultful lntnl.' T e r r a t' l' E a ~ I Unsurpassl.'d Bay and (}(:ean Vie~ 4 Bdrms IJm1ly rm and lari:t· pool Lob of pnval) Sl.006,000 \ n" "'"n .. r 11 J rh11r I rl\ t•-.t rnt•nl 1 ·o JUST LISTED W. OCEAMFROMT Largt• ~uper <lelux1• cluplt•x :1 Bdrm. 21 ,. ha lit + :! Bdrm.:! hath Ch1111· .. wmer lm·a1 urn SX9:-t.•Jllll' Balboa Bay Prop. an.d assigned l0 reC0<101Zed pJaywn ghlS SUCh aS hctM4>\I and \d•O b\J\•nf'" onct..OonQ 1~111 vrf'f'"V1~w La""• Hunt1'1QIOn Elizabeth Blake. ~;.~~~~o ~· wh•<" <on"''\ ot ,,,., C.rant E ArQ•11t•oM. ••111 c,,..,n • ______________________________________________ .J 0. ,;; v••W ldnP Hun11nq1on e .. H,, IEACHHOME! K • 1., Amoufl1 C•htorn•• ..,,.... IJpl'?rade<I bl'Jl'h hum•· Ca~~rily A~"' ,,) 000 OO f w1c .. Oarrvf Gr•n'l~•d l•\o1 Realtors •675-7060• Ne"7 W atch"7ord: Ohio St' Cl IO,OWUO Rf'•••f' Orove w .... 1m1nster (dhlorn1d ;\;t•v.pon ' \\.Jlk to Ol"·tll OCEANFRONT Alt ot"•• bU\lftO\\ n .. m., ""d •21>8) SS No ~:>4-8<>)1 • or pn\Jlt• tll'alh' 'l'" l'rtm1• Int tfl '\urlh addrt~W'S U\f'd bv ,,... "'6""'''0'\ E dwin C 81.ac kbUf'n. 1Mil Atrl•"' L d I h w1t,,•n 1nree ~·a ...... ""'' ..., Id' 0 o .. v ... Tu1vnq.t. C.hlOf'n•d qt041, S!> ··ariw ., Jll n·:-PJ tnt ' l-t~unJ \\ti h \It'\\ ... I h.11 •nown1ot1•Tr""''Pf..n••• NONE No ~2~~ l'u...,tom Ul'l'Clr :I JJJlto., + 1 ,1pti.rt• ,1 JIJllor;i m ti l. I • • I. _-.---:~ .,_-._ •. ----"'V _____ _,•AU,,.!~ In t h e wake of the Now it"s the Midwest's popularity of the TV turn. How about a sexy series "Dallas" comes a s e r i e s c: a I I e d ..._ _ ___... _,...,,.. ..... "'t - W a tch for it. folks. soon in your TV h~l­ ing. . ''CLEVELAND' the only city with enough industri al ex- perience t o produce enough sex to keep up with the dem and." _r11•t1tf\a•-it<1tH41>ttw,..n\••O H•nrv l """"""· ,.11\ '"""""'' ~tuded ... umlt'l'k' .ru ... l ni;t,thni· .1n11 , ti\ ltt.:hl .~ .......... :tt.:..W~ Kvt~"~ 9@a«tr --aJt~~ -·-~~~·~w-o...wl"4J ,.QU.,<'d bv SK 2007• ol IM Ou"""' No \:II :14-814" "':' '> _ ' • • •'C'h .. '\C~ftt!t-t>M•it'l!!t; --- a no Prol•"•on• Codt. '""' tn• Roo w8,.,.. •1•1 Al>o>I qo SI 1 152-110\l new one this fall called "CLEVELAND !" "T exas." M y fr i e-n d I o o k e d stunned for a mom ent. En110 Bombeck • on~•O,.r•teon for thf' lr4'nstt, o• \.J•d Wooc:Uiaf"C H111,· Cahforr"11: 41~~~S .._1 •• , • ' ', • • Ou\mt\\ and ttdn\tflr ot w 1d ll<•n\11' •\ No 062 l4 ,.,, [ ~ ! •0 bf' paid°"'' d ........ ''""""' ... , ~"9",.,. Jon"''"" :i.11 P~ar• s• lt~e i!]•tl Li·ngo oi-ton aoor-o~ D¥ '-it•d Ofooart~n1 o• •o• o S-ant111 Mon•<d C•11torn1d ~~ ____ ....... ._ AtcoMh< e. ... r_ Control SS NO 11>4 Sll-1188 • ~ • • ~ Tnat d \.dtf> tr11n~ffr ""° t\S\•Qnrnttnl Oon..tld l Goodqrr '1~01 t ....... u R1 .Jh 1•n ot lf'\f •fot,..\diO \IOCk 1n tr AO_. StrAthmnr" ~lrf'f"t Garctf'n. Grove-"' l1xtu••• -.ipmcont <Ind 0000 Wiii Of C:•hfOrftld'I?~. SS NO •)II S1·1•20 CAo.JYOM VIEW , •• a bU\IM'\\ wllt I» mad• •no'"" Rtcn•rO FO\lt'r OltS W•arf' " I w atched the teaser for it the other night as it w arned. "There's only one state big enough to hold all this passion! "What's the matter w ith C l evel and?" I con\IOeratlon ll'ltrt•lor loqo,t""r with Aven~. Founl.,1n Vall•Y, Cahlorn1d $1 15,000 THE BLUFFS lt>t co"'~ra<•on tor lllt '"'""'er ... no q7"6I. SS No 14D-~ -;==========·------------J "'''onment of the alorH.hO Ileen..., '°' Artu.,. ""° C.&rl H•nn~winklf' 014 .Just n'tluccd 'l'hl' lnl "' ask ed. Model Home "Nothin g, but it's SO 1' hetn'"'1 '° °" con•urnmat~ on or Oldllam coon. l eucM!••. Cahto;n•d i.i lmost 10.000 '4 fl :1 indu strial. Besides, RUffELl'S afl•r 1""171hday ot Scopt•mllt'• •oeo. 0107',SS Nos111a.~n Bdrm. 1 1 ~ bath oldt•1 Texas!" l don't like to make trouble amon g t he states, but how do you think that m akes the othe r 49 reel? Like a bri de with a cold sor e, at the '*"''ow departm.nt 01 E \Crow Jt\mM L Wood .. T ,0, 1,...1 tot J h h .o w h enever I think of encoun1er,, tnc . dt 11310 B•a<h and 5 w_, livinq Tru". 1701, A< Ol'Tll;! l <it nceus :.ornt• Clevel a nd. t h e only UPHOLSTERY 8oult'V41rd, In lf'le City ot HunhnQton rowh•<ld LM•. E• Toro. C:al1101nw TLC Addi.I ... econtl :.lOI) Whell Ye.i W.t Beach, County ot Or<1ncie. '>t•tf' ot 916'!lo. S!> No O'M~•·6111 :ind ha\ l' a \ 11· \\ i1r 1-:nd unit hat·k \ anl pool I Br. :1 Ila. lrml din rttt 1·;itlt •·l•ll lg dl'd<s h4•.;1 1111• \\l.tlk 111 o.,!'hool. l1·11 nt., l luh ..,hopptn).! thing that Com es lO C~ldornia. providtd th<1I Ille Ma'111) Volta. t'17 Emerald B•v 1 · I m ind is William Howard tM hst O•Partment 0' Aicollohc Bever.to• u1ouna e.!Kn. ca111orn•d <>1•St ss" '-J t .i 1 n ., () "' 11 '' r 1922 Hst.or lhd. Cont rot r..s a~oftd W•d 1r4nster of •s»~·$:1'13 · 0 mHI\ all'<I 111.tkt• and 111 OV. :-.; Tll E LA~O Slti!J.000 Taft.'' Cotta~ -541-11 56 said lie.ens. ' Tnl\ bullneu '' condv< 1eo bv a ler 5.">6 2ti60 11\e ta<I d•y tor hllnQ Cld1ms •S oenerat INlr'IM<!llUP 240-1 V1!'.ta Noblt'?<I 644-5150 Opn SJ /Su I:! , that's how. "That's because you 7====;:=======~ don't know Cleveland ," • 0\ I said. "It's crawling uIDDf'S with lust and passion.'' CUSTOM FRAMING Sped .. lzing In • • D 0 t h e y h a v e SHADOW BOXES anything like the Dallas 1803 Newport Blvd. FrankJy. I think it's a big m istake to single out one stale as the Passion Capital of the world. Look what's happened to D al l as already bus l oads o r tourists con verging o n the city winking and tip- ping bellhops to send them a Ewing for a little Cowgirls?" Costa Mesa · ~ N o , b u t t h e ~~~~~~1~1=iiiiii:.=::::::::: Cu yahoga River catches 1 fire i n the summer." action. Or. if you're going t o regionalize sin. let ever y- one have a shot at it. J w as discussing this re cently with a local TV programmer just to get a handle on M s reaction . "Does Ohio h ave a Broadway play about it called, "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas"? ··M aybe n ot, bu t K enley is playing 'Sound of Music' in W ar ren, Oh io." WJl..DCATS. .. A ssuming you 're r ight," he said, "what stale do you h ave in "Have there been any sexy novels about Ohio like Edna Ferber did llittl-fll" t:>v Ou•ter Brown mind?" "Look at h istory," 1 said. "P eyt on Place a lr eady put New E n gland on the map. Knots Landfog has done for cul-de-sacs in the California suburbs what Mondays have done for di et e r s . Dall as bedrooms have made the country f orget there's oil tn the ground. with Texas in 'Giant'?" "It wasn't exactly a saga. but l wrote. 'The G r ass I s A l wa ys Greener over the Septic Tank' about an Ohio suburb." "And where a re the sex s'mbols associated with Ohio -like say, D an Rather . T exas?" I played my ace. •·Paul Newman is from Cleveland." Senllnar Set A one-day semin ar. "Mind-Brain-Body as a H eal th System." will be held Saturday. Sept. 6, at the Orange Coast College Auditorium. D esigned specificaHy f or health care personnel. the seminar is the first of a series of continuing education programs slated for this fall. T he initial seminar begins at 7:30 a.m .• and a $5 fee covers admission, lunch and two coffee breaks. Speak ers will include staff mem- b ers from the Ca l i forni a Ins titute of Socioanalysis and Psychodrama. For more informat ion, phone 892-7711. 30 Fashion Island • Newport Beach 644-2464 I '\ / BE AN ICE SKATING ~ at an · /,, ICE CAPADES CHALET • NEW CLASSES STARTING • REGISTER NOW for internationally famous Ice Ca pad es Chalet Ice Skating School. Whether you've ice skated before or never ice skated in your life, one of these classes is for you. • BEGINNERS WELCOME1 • ________ ......_ ____ ..... ________________ _ 2701 HARBOR BL VD. COSTA'MESA, CA. l79-lllO. tnGl1 SAVEii $5 OFF FOR BEGINNERS ._ PreMnt thl1 coupon for a=slUIJ your diacount Vold Alter Ocl 19, 1980 SePlemlle< 16. l'llO ~-1 E Al'Qab<OQl'rt Dated F~~1:111t'l90 Tll•S \tatement wa• h,.d witn t"e Ad~ VI • a CounlY Cl••._ ol OranQOP Covn1¥ on Tr~~ler!!'~~nd Auqu\11•. l'llO. uc .... woes J~K O•m.ito St1<rln A Od,,,..,IO Transi.r~""" •nt~ Tr•Mf~f'ff\ Pubhshtcl Or"'9 Co.ut 0•11• P1tot. F1._1 Pubh\'*I O<anqo '""" Oally P•tot. Auq 11. 5'-pt •. 11. ti t'40 3\l! 80 PUBLIC NOTICE AUQU\l 11, 1'90 lSJ1-IO ._,,~-----NOTICE OF DEATH O F PUBLIC NOTICE JOSEPHINE MARIE BENSON CALLAWAY NOTICE OF DEATH OF aka MARIE CALLAWAY MILDREDPESKINDaka a ka MR S . PAUL D . MILDRED L . PESKIND CALLAWAY AND OF AND OF P ETITION TO PETITION TO AO · ADMINISTER ESTATE MINISTER ESTATE NO. NO. A·10S604. A·10S683. To a ll heirs . T o a ll h ei r s . beneficiar ies, c reditor s beneficiar ies. creditors and contingent creditor s of and contingent creditorc; ot M i ldred Peski nd aka Josephine M ar ie Benson M ildr ed L. Peskind of Ca ll a w ay aka M a r ie N e w p o r t B e a c h • Cal laway aka Mrs. Paul California, a nd per son s D. Callaw ay of Irvine. who may be otherwise In· California, and persons terested in the w ill and/or w ho may be otherwise in- estate: terested in the will and tor A petition has been tiled est ate: by Seymour Peskind and A petition has been ftled James Richeson in the by Michael S. Callaway in Superior Cour t of Orange the Superior Court ol County r equesting that Orange Countv reQuestlng Seymour P esk ind and that M ichael S. Callaway James Richeson be ap-be appointed as personal po i nted as p e r sonal r epresent ative to ad · repr esentat ives t o ad-m in ist e r the estate ot m i nister the estate of Josephine M arie Benson M ildr ed Peskind a k a Callaway a ka M arie M ildred L. Peskind <under Callaway aka Mrs. Paul t h e Independent Ad · 0 . Callaway Cunder the In- ministration of Estates dependent Administration Act). The petition is set for of Estates Act>. The pet1· hearing in Dept. No. 3 at l ion is set for hearing in 700 Civic Center Drive, Dept . No. 3 at 700 Civic West. in the City of Santa Center Drive, West. in the Ana. California on Sep-Ci ty o f Sa nt a An a . tember 16, 1980 al 10 :00 California on Septembe r a.m. 23, 1980 at 10:00 a.m . IF YOU OBJECT to the IF YOU OBJECT to the granting of the petition, granting of the petition you should either appear you should either appea; at the hearing and state at the hearing and state your objection s or file your objections or file written objections with the written objections with the court befor e the hearing. court before the hearing. Your appearance m ay be In Your appearance may be per sonorbyyourattorney. In person or by your at· torney. torney. IF YOU ARE A I F YOU ARE A C REDITOR or a cont -CREDITOR or a cont - ingent creditor of the de· lnoent creditor of the de· ceased, you must file your cea sed, you must file your claim with the court or cl aim with the court or present it to the per sonal present it to the personal representativ e appointed representative appointed by the court within four by the court within four m onths from the date of months from the date of f irst issuance of letters as first Issuance of letters as provided In Section 700 of provided in Section 700 of t he Probate Code of the Probate Code o f California. The time for California. The time for flllno claim s wlll not ex-fll lno claims will not e:ic - pire prior to four months plre prior to four months from the date of the hear-from the date of the hear- ing noticed above. lno noticed above. YOU MAY EXAMINE YOU MAY EXAMINE the flle kept by the court. the flle kept by the court. If you are Interested In the If you are Interested In the estate, you may file a rit· estate, you may file a re• quest w ith the court to re-quest with the c.ourt to re- ceive SPeClal notice of the ceive special notice of the Inventory of estate assets Inventory of estate assets and of the petltk>ns, ac· and of the petitions, ac· c o u n l~ ... a n d r e p o r t s c o u n ts a nd re po r t s descrll19Q ln Section 1200 described In Section 1200 of the <:allfomla Probate! of the California Probate Code. Code. Tully H. s.ymour, 1111 Patricia w. HC)Ot(lns, At· Dove StrHt, Suite 200, torney et Law, ~1 s. Main Newpor1 BHcft, Calltornle Street, Suite 210, Pomona, 't26'0,IS1.o6SS California 91766 Publlshed Orange Coast Published Ore~ Col$t Dally Pilot, A~. 28, 29, Dally Piiot, August 28, 29, Sept ••• 1980 3541-80 Stpt. •• 1'-eG 3542-80 «;:SELECT 'T"'PROPERTIES1 ... ------------ NEWPORT DUPLEX 2 Cn1t-. on rec land Ac~ rrom park i'\l•ar beach. ba). & :.hopp1n~ Pnced at $205.000 I-:\.:-. t).12~ DOORS TO BEACH 2·2 Dupl ex O"ncr motivated. Op~·n t o t'r l':ltl\ l' r10Jnc 1n ~ Pnss1bl\ lllllt· or no t':t"'h \\111 tra.de propt·rt~ boal car or " ' ~ 19.000 Jo:Vl'!'. 54R·O'il:i associated BROK EA S-AEAL TO RS 202\ W Bolboo 61l-l 6H Waterfront Home :1 BR. 4 Ba. cu:. tom wat e rfront home w/lix38' pvt dock Pri ced Sl .394 ,000 Builder " I tr .tdt· for l'alm Spnn)!s i-:~t..alt• For detail~ on this homt• ;md Jppt lo l>l'C. <«111 Carol llorr. a!rt 631·0004 Dotebout Boyb Beach Real Estate llf U I SfAr( H CfUENCf $1...Cf "" DOVER SHORES l..t'aSt' option. Ahsnlull'h ,m.J;.htnl: Vlt'W propcrt' Till.., nut' ha.., ti all lk'amt·d cPtltnJ?:'>. T"" 11r1 c· k r 1 r l' p I a e e ... I 1 I ,t n k c ti f In or I 11 ..: Fr1endl\' W(•t lt;1r In c r c d 1 l> I l' ~ o u r m l' 1 1-tll'ht•n Four lwdnw1m-. 1>1111n~ r<)om F.1m1h room Tl11~ hum<' 111 dulgc<> \OU 631 -7300 Oceanfront Duplex 2 hr each untl. trcmen· tlou-. \'tcw. closc lo :'l.c\4'JXtrt Ptt'r. rents fast. Only askm1t S425.000 JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 SUBDIVISION Prime high <11.'st·rt . Phelan Appro' l'd tcO tatl\e tract map ror ..., 21 ~ acre lot<; Watt-r anti Jl()~er JI ... 11'(ht Slti0.000 Pnn onty . BALBO A I S L Ai'j.> l<l':ALTY .. 673-8700 NEAT&CLEAN Sharp 3 &·droom 2 hath m pnme netithborhood to• c a t u r l' i. 1 n l' I u d ~' builtins. f1replact' and a ---------~ big fenl'ed yard Seller needs qwck sale to t:ike a<h anta~c of new 10 vei.t ment opporlunity Priced below market at S112.000. Call 751 3191 .· •• CSEL ECT &~· 'T"'PROPERTIES EASTILUFF ----------• This cheerful home has 1 SPOIL YOURSELF br. katchen-family room with this beautiful combo. ,elegant hvin~ room & m at uf t.' :.pac1ous 3 Bdrm home tandsc apin". Open Sun Fabulous family room. 2 " fr p I cs • decorator 1·5· 2645 Bunya. S226.900 w a II paper . J a cu u 1 & 1 iiiiiiiiiiiii6iii4iii4ii·ii9ii9ii9ii0iiiiiiiii great location $184.900 11 Call today 979·5370. MUST Sa&. A Owner transf erre&-- , LL$'rA TE make offer on lovely ·• _ I,. BR. 2i,., BA. 2.000 sq.I\. home-800. from bea~h REALTORS Pool . tennis. Asking $179.500. Owner/ager1t. 645-6CBO $1.17 per DAY That's ALL you pay for a 30 day ad In lhe DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DO IT NOW! u2.sn:> LOVIME LOVE MY ATRIUM . Gorgeous 3 Bdrm hodlc with a beautiful atrium. study & comm. pool A:< sumable low int. l0$l' Priced at $127,SOO. {;)Ill now 979-5370, ALLSTATE REALTORS Flnd wh'lt you want In Dally r 1lot Closstneds •. .· (?f DAil V Pl'-OT !hurtldilr· A!fUlt 2t. 1911) th 1tt,_S. ..._..,_.S. ..._.,,_s. ••Fors• ..................................................................... •··········•••··••···•• ewrtil IOU ... , til 1002 •••NI 1002 IOOJ ............................................................................................ ALL MS llOI S tn,111 A l(recn thumber'1 dell1ht with well·manicurt'd 1itarden front & rear. Made for entertalnlnf'. Large 52'xl30' lot with complete prh•aey Oen. 2 bedroom with oversize cl~ and 2 baths. Worlcshop o(( ~arof(e paciou -light -brittht. happ~· home and u ll for Sl79.SOO. WISl.IY M. TA YlOI CO.. UAL TOIS JlllS.Ju;' .._~ NIWPOn CINl'R. N.L '44-4tl 0 REALTORS '7S.HI I •llA'ftST IHOW OM IAITHt ~· .W,. _. -.t. -e fti .. 11 VllW1 c ........................... .... ...._,._ • ....,...,,_~ 1to· .......,......,,.. ... , ...... ,._ ... I. c.,_ .. Mw. SIH,000 COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 l. Coest Hwy.. CoroM d9I M• 675-5511 WANT ACTION• 'SELL idle ite ms with a Clauifed Ads 642·~78 D1uly Pilot Clas~1r1ed Ad mE 111111 . ILllRS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE 114'9 CANYON Handsome Traditional Hom e. C'w!lom Ruilt Overlooks Golf C'ourse & 7th Green. Maste r Bedroom With 1-'lreplaC'(• & Luxunous Rath. Plus lfuJ?e Walk In Clos<'t Fam1lv Room With Wet Bar + Val'w Of Golr , Course Ma r v<'lous Cour mN Kitt•hcn. Shown Av Appointment Only. S9SO.OOO NEWPORT HEIGHTS T wo Yt-ar Old lfom<> With An lnd1v1dual P<>rs'?naht.v C.reat f'nr 1-:ntert:uninJ?. Four Fa mily At'drooms + 21 · Ra ths. Great S tor aJ?c Spnc•c• P ravat•\· For Those Who Prefer This Lu-cu~· In l.1 fo 0 1A·ner Will Carr,v Loan. S240.000. WOODIRIDGE NEW LISTING ·-6N-'Ttff:·L'ft"f! 1\ un~e(.tfe<froom Dctal'hed Condo Ho mC' P rim<' f)(>\·clopmC'nt Surrounded H.v Gr;i<,!o, & Trt'<•s F<Jm1lv Room With F1rl'plafe Opens To Dc>«km.e With N11!ht La.eht & Watt•r Vie\\ Scpar:lte D1nm/,! Room. l\1 any Up.er a d l's. Rl'aut ifullv Del'oratec1. Communal ~· lnl'lud1•s He:ir h. Cl11hhoust•. Te nnis. Pools & Sr ;i S290.CWIO ®· --O••ff•w~·· 759-9100 #2 Corpo1 ah Piasa Nnport leocll ~) ro@tlfm©OCea real 0~ es10 1e -IACK IA Y WITH rOOL 4 Bdr m + bonus room. 3 baths. 2 fireplaces. ne w carpeting. Lovely pool. Lar ge lot on cul-d e -sa c s treet. La rge assuma ble loan . Newly offered at $195.000. -VILLA CONDO ONLY S 145.000. Cha rming unit in R a n cho Sa n Joaquin. Assumable loan. Only 2 yea r s new. Newly offered. -SrACIOUS CDM CONDO. Elegantly a ppointed. 3 Bdrm. 3 bath in great location. Close to shopping, schools & Fashion Island. Fc;>rmal dining room, family room. with wet ba r . Fee land. Offered at $215,000. -1.LUfM IEAUTY. ONLY $148,500. Choi~e end unit o ve rlooking beautiful greenbelt. Best location in The Bluffs. 3 bdrm. 2 baths. Won't last ! 2744 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR 759-161& PAIK IN IEAI CORONA DEL MAR DPl.X W/VU 0.. of• llllld vJ;°"ftr o•9'loold9g the ,_._.A IWOFIAY.OCIAM& lllgllt ...... llpul.., ..... 4 a.cl..._ .... ,,..... ..................... .... lwlck & 9"1wry. CIM I g 2 IMd, ,...... -~ Ftexlble property wltlt ....... $491.000. 673-6900. OM WATD-8PEN SPACE VU .... .., ,... ...... 4 IMd ..... J-stery -----~ ............. . ................. ,....& ....... w. .. w. ............ & ..... UM.-. 611·1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, I.NC. REAL E&J' ATE s... Rcnuh. P.O!Wfty ~ 2436 W. Coatl Hlrol\I 31~ Manrw Aw. Newpori Buch Belboe ltlMld , 6Jl·14IO 67Mtl0 ,... ,J , ... ' • ·~ ... , ~ !• ~. • • I •! ~· .... r . ~,., "! f f1 =c~n l ,,,.,_tlli•~....., .• ~ t'M ... >M l •... ..... .1 ..... .,, .. ,ADDLE TENNIS ANYONE? Charming Lusk-built 4 bedroom in E astbluff ! The ultra deep lot has a pa ddle tennis court. fruit trees and brick patio. The home has a comfy fa mily room. 2 fireplaces and is located near a park. $232.000. U~l()U~ ti()M~~ REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 u .st Coast Highway. Co,ona del Mar WE HAVE 37 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN .::aau SALESMEN! "'!lk t.o golr & tennis. 3 br Earn 90,.., w I • ba. J al'u1z1. pre ·" l'omm e ·t . L k ood ,, have open ings. Call s 1R1~ 3 e"': "oun· ~Ma.ke SS$. tr) C I u b f.st a Les . $175.000. 213·429-6836. --------- CUSTOM IA YSIDE HOME & UOCK 4 BR. 411:? ba th -fa mily room w /\\t et ba r & BBQ. Dock w ill accomodate 2 large boats. Existing loan s of $565,000 a t 137r can be ass umed. Exclus ive a t $675.000. macnab I irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY LAGUNA NIGUa! Love ly family home w/4' BRs & study <easily conve rted to 5th BR> & fa mily rm. Ove r 2600 sq.ft. s u r r ~ u .n d e d o n 3 . s i d e s b y assoc1at10n par k. Now $244 ,500. J eanne Newman 752·1414. C0 -66 ). 752·141 4 ___ 55 I -170~0-- ComJM Volley Centt't Woodbndqe (o,11e. 642-1235 644-6200 IUL ESTATt SALfSMAH Establls•ecl nal utate COlltpmlJ MO•lltCJ to ...... r officft. O,.nl g1 ......... far exp•rl••c•d satespeopl•. Exc.•ll••t co••fulo11 arra1t9••••t. V•ry actl•• office. CORPORATE Pt.Ali REALTY 760-9333 EJSIDI TRIPI.IX Needs some TLC but trs a buy at $150,000. Great Costa Mesa locaUon. Call aaent.. S56-21660 . .. . . . . . ....... ---··· .. , -.......... -.... --· .. - Honft For 5* Houttt FcN' S. HcMlse1 FcN' 5* HcMtws For ScN Houses for S~e ............•....•..... ··•·•·••···········•··· .............................................. ···•·····•··•••••·•···• GeMf'el I OOJ Chttff.. I 002 ..... l.a.d I 006 0.. rot..t I 026 l"IM I 044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• IAll"A K&•--JOI APOLIMA One of a kind, old world design & qua lity of this new authentic French Normandy home. 4 Bdrm, 3 bath c u s tom hom e with fin e st c rafts manship & amenities. Now available. SMS.000. Call for app't. IAYfllONT • We have several fine homes with pier & slip. B. TOIO HOISi COUMTllY 4 Bdrm .. 3 baths; ranch s tyle , mini-estate in orange groves. $240,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J-1: Boy,,d. o,,., N B 675 · 6 161 THE l==iW> NUMBER TO SEE NEWPORT HILLS OFFICE 2670 SAN MIGUEL DRIVl 1714J 759-1501 HARBOR VIEW HOME .Spacious Somerset model f eaturinJ? 5 bedrooms. 3 bath. large yard fo r c hildre n . T ile d entry & drive. Assqmable financing. Locat ed on c ul-de-sac with view of Big Canyon & nite lites. Better move quick on this!! <714 ) 759-1501 DIRTY DA WG!!!! WHITIWATa VllW Story 2 SR 1~ Ba. 1 BR prap apt. Sep. auest qtra.Owner.673--0828 DAHAILUFFS RareZ·story condo with 3 bdrms. 2"'z ba. tennis, ..... '•••• I 007 po o I a n d s p o . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Unobst ructed view o r New 5br. 3ba . $275,000. ocean, marina and city eiy terms, ocn & bch vu. lights. Fabulous master llJ E. Balboa87S.5991 uite with deck $245.000. Cor0M dee M• I 022 -WATE:~ONT ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOMES ' SEA VIEW REAL ESTATE 2003 Yacht Defeftcler • 631-1400 Fabulous financing with F'CMltaln Vall 1034 20o/,, down. 4 Bdrms+. ey Ocean view. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• C/21 NwptCetwter AFFORDABLE 640"5357 HOUSING!! TOWNHOUSE IN THELAICES Magn1r1ccnt 2 Bdrm l', Ba townhomc compll·lc· ly upgr ade d t h r uou l . Ideally localed with com · plete pnvacy yet in close proximity lo pool. s pa. sauna. t ennis. Asking SI 18.500. #7 L.ak epines. ~ RANCH ~ REA LfY ~ 551 2000 ** UNIOUf! 2300 &1. Ft. or luxurious fl v1ng, with it ·s own POOL & SPA! ThIB 3 --------•I Tast e fully d ecorated bdr m & de n a ttached LIVEIM condo w ith s p acious homc as i>o:>sibly the onty BEAUTIFUL CDM rooms and a wet bar ror example an t he pre- EnJOY 3 private beaches. entertam ang. Qwl•t loca s t1 g1o u!> Woodbr idge ocean view. 3 bdrm home taon, assoc1auon ha!> all E<;tatcs with a pn valt· with separate famLI} rm the a m en1t1e::.. Only pool. Call now to Set! & Be,.,t pnce 1n area. f'ee S 11 5 . 0 00 V A I 1-· H A eruoy! land. Only S288.500 Call 545-94!!1. Sl97.500 Agent Ocean P aC"1f1c [~II ~I j _. f! [ flll'V."\Clbrldnc R e a I E s l a l e . . _J.!::,!.iJH l!!Ultl !I 171411s9-1s 1s RealllJ ~~~~~~~~~1 ___ R_e_a_I Estate__ 551.3000 Attractive pool duplex+ 2 ATIRACTIVE 1swua~~11~y.ln11w good rentals. Pmne loca PARADISl TWMHSE lion $285.000 6404999 2 BR A!>sumable loan Cos" M I 024 +2nd T. D . $90,000. MUST SELL BYOWNEH Woodbridge 3 br. 21,2 ba. A«. :!car .:ar. 851-0610 ••• ~:~ •• ~~•••••••••••• C/21 Mwpt Cent« 640-5357 WOODBRGf: 5BR. $23!1:\1 ---Prt>:-.cutl b y Lagoun. HARDWOOD Huntington Beach I 040 ACT l f'R 111 Mandan n FLOORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Owner 552·4666 Sharp 3 Bdrm. large cor· By owner. AJ..1 S7!1,!IOO ---- ncr lot with poss ible RV Samfice prwc. Nice :.s br OWNER MUST SELL a('C'ess. Prc:.c nt loan townhouse. 549 0!13:J 2hdrm. l bu f'll"do. Xlnt rruty be Lakc n ove r al - - !1 5'; mtl'rcst. Move-in -------- l·o nd 1t ion. A..,k 1 n ~ GREAT FAMILY tt·rm ~. O wnt•r <1 ~:--1 :-.t fanan<·ang 1\s:-.umc• !J·'•', loan 552 4 1·1i. I ·4ml-OR29 SI07.~. For an ;.i pµoin1 HOME l'YX!nllo see .call540 1151 .iur. 2Ba. light & aar v. 1 l.ltGI-. EXEt' Trth•rncl- blk lo :.chi & pa rk. I' .. rn 1 llm. I BI<. rt~·dh1ll Hit}. to bc·h Only Sllfl.!l()O Put.r~'l2 iSOO 846-5502 BEAUTIFUL ~HERITAGE • '" REALTORS HANt'll O :0..\:-f .JOA~L:IN NEW CONDOS 1 OV. :'.H0\11-: l'rC.'>llJ!t', ~~~~-~~-\t•mcnn• ;.md prH'L'ti let ./ Bring pa intbrush & elbow grease to m a ke m on ey on th is BALBOA ISLAND cottage wit h C-2 zoning! Adjacent to new recreation a rea . Fe a tures assumable 10.35<; loan payabl~ at S837 month with seller .~..!.!.)R~.tc~y ... a-2:.rW.-Xn., a t 759-1501 , ~&3 .J}~OOMS • -Stan mg ·al s10'i.()(MJ On V1c1ona bt \\n Nl·Wport& llil rbor lih d. 548-3559 Eves 646-6093 _ i -.e<·unt\. 1•l(·gJnt'l'. t·o11 ~s~ Br t}lirn<-r-. _.~I .J:!o " ·~ "-1~ ---==--- :.Sbdrm. lba. fam rm. up l r,11w C Jrnµu ~ .anti ..:raded. land-.c <Jpi-.1 1 . l·,t-.h11m hi.ind I Jll for "I BLOCK TO OCEAN" from this 4 bedroom custom home in pres tigious MONARCH BAY. Featuring spacious rooms with lots of glass . Koi pond & guard ~at e. Price r educed $35 ,000 & s ubmit terms !! < 714) 759-1501 WATERFRONT PROrERTY!!! Sensationa l 3 bed room ho mt.· lo- cated s mack on the water with an unobstruct able vie w of the Blue P acific. Has a private s tairway to the beach ! Owner will carry the financing for a qua lified buyer. Obviously a prestige property and remarkably priced at only $790,000. ( 714 ) 759-1501 -*OWNER ANXIOUS•• f o r o ff e r o n t h i s rart· fin d i n W est c li ff ll i g hlund a rea! Fantastic home featuring 3 bedrooms and 2 baths with a larj?e country kitchen and covered patio for ente rta ining your friends !! S4.500 prioe r eduction !! < 714) 759-ISOl $526 PER MO .••••• is all you pay when you cash out existing 10.2% loan! ! E xcellent 3 be droom ranch s tyle home in Irvine. Locate d in de s ira ble California Home Area!! Only S125,900! ! C714 > 759-1501. •OCEAN VIEW IN LAGUNA• Fabulous ly c h a rming cottage ov e rlookin g th e P ac i f i c! Completely furnished & ready for immediate possession. Featuring 21 'x24' deck & lar ge lot with plenty of room to enlarge. Seller will carry the Isl. Definitely full of value at S195.000. <714 ) 759-1501 ••TURnE ROQC VISTA0 Ba ck country view from this 2 bedroom tden town.home. Featuring cathedral ceiling, tas t e ful decorations, wet bar, generous use of Mexican Pavers & custom oak cabinets ! Add all this to assumable financin g and you have a n unbeatable com bination!!! <714) 759·1501 . Walker &lee Real Estate OPIMDAILY l·l P.M. rru frombt.-arh ,!160 li UK 1n l•1r ma 11011 1111 1h 1-. tlr••Jm home 1\:.I-for Bill <it 5-IO 4h·tl; _______ c OCEANFRONT Cie<>n.!eou~ 2Br 1111 .... anit Sl6.000 dow n. ;;,~ ~1~7 r\1,'1 HOUSE OM $139,900 OM THE HILL 2 .,ty. :!br. 2'-:ha. f:tm r m Large tn·level. teatunng w,f1r pl. hardwood fir:-.. .i Bdrm!>, 3 baths and nl•ar Gold1 ·n W <"ollt·l!l' separate fa mll~ room & f'r~·wa)~. Owncr 1Ai.,'1.. Huge ~eC'ludcd l·ul de sa l' ~i ~ lot 3 car garage :ind - l'lo"e to M l·~a Verdt• Country Club. Sl!Jti.!lOO For an apPomlment tu see. call 540-1151 TENDER LOVING CARE ~HERITAGE • ,• REALTORS E-SIDE DUPLEX Two 3 If-. Units $142,500 FUU.ER REALTY 546·0814 IEASTSIDE R·2 'T'wo ind1v1dual houses. tughly upgraded. Each has l>epar ate ga rage <Jnd yard. Owner will carry a la rge 2nd T D. A!>kan g $135.900 Call 540·1151 .HERITAGE REALTORS •~ .ill Iha -. cul dt• ..,ac.• horrlC' lllWS lo bt.•(•Om\• J WI NNER' La rJ.!l' yard for the kids. & a coH•rcd patio for rel<JXIOJ! m th1..• l' \\' n In g A 11 t " I m ., :n a 1lablt-1Jn t ha :. <Jl SHt>,(XX) 545·94~i BIRON SHOT To Meadow l..1rk Coif 0.iurM". Nin• 1 bedroom. lJ • bath. 1-'ull pract• Slll.900. Park PLarc Inc M:! i 41il ~ INDULGE. •• m ~our own ,.10111 & spa• l-l~:aut1Cul ·I Hr + F H 111 .. Tht• l<ani·h " 1\:.:-.uma hit· loan. exePllcnl ICH:,1 twn & anxious w lk·r-. .ill .1c!d up to ,, v1•ry 11111• \ alw Sl63.!IOO 559·8888 TAKEOVER HIGH INTEREST LOAN f..\Cll ml! I bdrm, fam. rm. l.k•ane lloml', in c\· qu1 ,.11t• '>l'll111i.: and l><·;1ut11 ully IJnd~cap1ng Thi:-fanta-.tit fam1h ho1T1L.0 as ~arml} drt<or ac l'd .ind m :-.pw 11· s pan t-und111on You must .,,.,. tha.., 11111.. I· a-.t cscr11\\ PY'>">llilt•. 2bdrm. l ba, $87 .900. Eftterlainft"'s Dr.am Huntittqton Seacliff, Ire) sincjle story. 4br, tom.I dininCJ. fam rm. custom yrd, tropical 't5Z3 C.01PU5Da~IRVl"E pool. w~ar, spa & <.:UST0-.\;--~1;£--=-c ,~ firepit. &l1oy CJOff, t•n-View. $270,000. Redhill ~ nk & the beoch. Wall Rlty. Brenda 552·7500. Frplc. bonus rm, R-2, lrg lot. 1937 Maple. 645-6343 or 957·8400. FOR SALE IY OWNER As~loall POPULAR to schools. l,,..d oc· ~leach I 048 cupancy. Owner. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 536-0776. lkr/Coop. PACIFtC HA VE R FORD For Sale By A~! plan an Meadow Pa rk is 0092 Washmgton ssi .000 now available. Must see 962·5566 19301 Sa lm on to a ppreciate this highly $109.500 963-6653 upgraded 10 mos . old -------- home . Lgc l'Ount r y tt.ali!9on kitchen, den. inside lmiry ~ I 042 rm. for mal dining & hv-••••••••••••••••••••••• mg rm. 21rz ba. 4br. & BY OWNER-Waterfront. pool ~1ze lot. Xlnl tcrWJs deluxe Seagate <.:ondo. + & financing. CaJI 957-2819 dock. 2•~Ba . $329,5()(). No for appomtment. down to qualified buyer. llB>ROOM Double garage, 60xl20' lot. Quiet location, but close to shopping. New roof. copper plumbing. hardwood floors, plaster walls. good condition. ruo.ooo with an assuma. ble loao. Roy McCarcle, Rltr. 541-7729 EASTSIDE Principals only. 846·3923 ~ 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• **JUST LISTED! Hard to find Bnarwood rrodel in beautiful Wood· bridge Broadmoor . 4 beautiful Bdrm in over 2000 sq n. Compare the vaJue at $179,900 \\OOdbrldgc Realty 551·3000 492tBarr11u·a Pllwy, lr\llllf' PARADISE Lo vely 2 Bdrm m obilt• home on a blufC O\<er Lht• ocean. Beauurully d1• corated. many c·xtras 111 l't udt' c herrv wood cabancli; and. b ua ll an ''acuum $76.900. Long term land lease availa ble don osen renltor" 1213 N. COAST HWY LAGUNA BEACH 4!n·4848 VIEW OF T.HE WORLD Must see to believe the outstanding features of Uus gorgeous ocean view 3 be d r oom h o m e . $650,000. DOLL HOUSE Lovely 3 Bdrm + spa. large yard. enclosed paUo. builtios. Cul de aac, quiet location. Only $125.900. Call MS-91\1 fastest draw in the Pl!~1!1'11iPii West. . .a Daily Piiot -9111!~"!i . OPl N HOU)~ RE Al 1 Y / Classified Ad. 64.2·5678. macnab I Irvine realty New 4 bedroom home I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .-.ooo _,_,. A SUBSIDIARY OF THE lAVINE COMPANY 216My .......... , .... On water 4 bedroom style Cs•lll• Sl.100.000 I Fabulous 2 and three IC .. 11• bedroom condos In Call 113..-00 e legant complex. Many fordelalls boauttrul and unique reaturea, Includi ng a trl ums. f ireplac e , cathe d ral cellings . cermamlc tiles. Buyers choice of carpets. Very IUJturioul. Prt~ at low 11 M ,000! Call and see these todl)' I S40-l 720 WATERFRONT HOMES A£ALE8TATE 631-1'400 TMl&l..llALn STAATll NOt•I Sf4,IOOI 2BR Woodbridge VIilage Green Condo! Assume 1st TD & owner will assist. Immac ulate move-in condition. App't only. Paula Bailey 642·8235. (D-67 ) 751·1414 c~ V<ilirf Center 642-IUI 901 Oo...Di.... 111-a100 Wooc:bidc,e C.,,." 644-6200 Harbor v-Cent. l ... .. (4 DAIL V Ptl.OT !hur!dey. Aupuet 21, tGllO • ~ •• ::!!!:!.~~ ........ ~.~~ ....... ~~.~~ ........ ~!~!!.~~.~~ ...... . e1a11tl llOZ ... ,.. IOOZ .._.... tOOZ eMr.. 1002 ............................................................................................ (;i'A Y L0h CO I .J. I I I Ii I 11.) ~---------- AU.. MS llOI 117' .... A J{recn thumbeor•s delllfht with v.•ell·manJeured aardens front & rear Mad for entert ming. Lar1tc 52'xl30' lot with compll'tl' prlvnt'y D@n. 2 bedrooms with overl'liie ct~ts and 2 baths. Work hop off fi{8ra1ee. Spat'ious -Ught bright. i\ happy home and Hll for Sl79.500. w-.n N. TAnoa co.. llALTOIS JI I I S. Ju ; ' .._ .._. NIWPOlrT CINTa. N.1. 644-49 I 0 CIE llDlll. ILlllS CD. OVER SS YEARS Of SERVICE llCi CANYON Handsome Tr:id1t1onal Home Custom Ruilt Overlooks Gorr C'ourst' & 7th Green. l\fast<'r Redroom With fo~irPpht<'t' & Luxurious Rath. Plus JluJLe Walk·ln Closet. Familv Room With Wet flnr + V1t•w Of Golf . Course. Marvelous Gourml't Kitrhen. Shown Av Appointment Onl.v. S9SO.OOO. NEWPORT HEIGHTS Two Year Old JlomP With An Individual Personaht,\' Grt>ut For F:ntertnininJ?. Four ,.~a mily Rl'droom~ + 21 • Aaths. Great Stora,1te Spare Privarv fo'or Thos<' Who Prefer This Lu~ur.\· In Life. Owner Will Carry Loan S240.000. WOOOIRIDGE HEW LISTING ON...DU:.~!!-_ 'l*m.,u.-.-.lf';tn"'e' ~-· Detarhro Condo HomP Pr1 me J)(>\ elopmrnt Surrounded B.v Gra's & Trpe.; Fam1h Room With F1r<•placc Opcn1> To Dt•rkmg With Night L1J?ht & Water Vie". Sj>parate Dining Ro0m Man.\· Up.itrades. Beautifully DeMraterl. Communll.\' lnrludt's Reach. Clubhouse·. Tennis. Pools & Spa S290,000 759-9100 #2 Corporate Piao H.wport hd ~'} l])ro@tl~@OCea real ~ esta te -IACX IA Y WITH POOL 4 Bdrm + bonus room, 3 baths. 2 fireplaces. new carpeting. Lovely pool. Large lot on cul-de·sac s treet. Large assumable loan. Newly offered at $195,000. -YIU.A CONDO OHL Y S 145,000. Cha r ming unit in Ra ncho San Joaquin . Assumable loan. Only 2 years new. Newly off erect. -SPACIOUS CDM CONDO. Elegantly appointed. 3 Bdrm. 3 bath in great location. Close to · shopping, schools & Fashion Island. F~rmal dining room, family room. w1th wet bar. Fee land. Offered at $215,000. ~UfFS IEAUTY. ONLY $148,500. Choice end unit overlo6king beautiful greenbelt. Best location in The Bluffs, 3 bdrm, 2 baths. Won't last! 2744 E. COAST HWY. CORONA DEL MAR 759-1616 P AltK IN lllAI CORONA on MAR DPLX W/VU O.•of• ... d.;op•rtf o• ....... ...., ... w1111 A IW OF IAY, OCIAM & ............. 11,.cllly .... 4 IMd ..... .... ,,,... ........ ., ........... ..... IN"kll & .,.. ... ,.,. C..., s:dag 2 ltecl, REALTORS 675-551 I •llATIST SHOW 0 .. IAITHi S...· ........ Wife -e f lishUI YllW!• c ........ ~_ ... .,._ ...... .._. ..... ,__ • ._,....,,._it;• ·to· ~ .......... ,, ..... pr_ ... I. c.-.. Mir. 1161.000 COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS ZS 15 E. Coott Hwy., CoroM .. Mw 675-5511 rADDLE TENNIS ANYONE? Charming Lusk-built 4 bedroom in Eastbluff! The ultra deep lot has a paddle tennis court. fruit trees and brick patio. The home has a comfy fa mily room . 2 fireplaces a nd is located near a park. $232.000. U~l()UI: tiUMI:' REALTORS. 675·6000 ~443 EHt Cout Highway. Corona del Mar WE HAVE 37 OF THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN SALESMEN! Earn 90"'.., comm We have openings. Call 64S-ID!O Make SS$. Walk to golf & tennis. 3 br 13• ba. Jacu7.z1. pre· st1g1ou:. Lakewood Coun· try C lub Estate:.. $175.000. 213--429·6836. f1J Coldwe_ll ~an.~~~ CUSTOM IA YSIDE HOME & UOCK 4 BR, 41/:.-bath -family room w /wet bar & BBQ. Doc k will accomodate 2 large boats. ·Existing loans of $565.000 at 13'7r can be assumed. Exclusive at $675.000. mac nab I irvlne realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINE COMPANY LAGUNA HIGUa! Lovely family home w/4' BRs & study <easily converted to 5th BR) & family rm. Over 2600 sq.ft. s urround ed o n 3 -sides by association park. Now $244.500. Jeanne Newman 752-1414. <D-66> . 752-1414 (Qmf:>16 lloley c f'f"E'f 642-1235 qo I Dover Orwe RE.U ESTATE SALiSMAH 551-1700- Wooc:lindqe Centef 644-6200 Horbot 11,-Ceno ... htaltllslted r•al utat• eo..,_y MOYht9 to lorger offices. 0,. I ;s ........ for ••p•rle11ced •••••p•or••· Exc.•lle1tt COMMhs 011 arr01t9••1tt. Very actlu office. CORPORATE PLAZA REALTY 760-9333 Ask for Freel Good. reatel -'f\ ,.exfltle p~ wltlt dlarl •• S4fl.OOO. 673-6 01 WITD--OPEN SPACE VU w..., , .. _tied 4 ltM '-· z...., ............................. ................................. EISIDE TRIPLEX Nee& some TLC but it's a buy at $150,000. Great Costa Mesa location. Call agent. 5$6-2660 ........ w. ............ & ...... For Id Action &all a Daily Pillt 18-VISOI &42-5&11 · 12NMO. ,,, .. ..... WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAlf$ATE S... ~Fllollt. PrOPfl'ty ~ 2436 W. Coasr Hwy 31~ M3rme Ave. NNpot-t &e•h e.1boa Ill.wt '31·1400 '7MtM .... llTA'll e mOlt unlq• kit on the market. Almott 1 •~re ~/pucnlftie view le I ttor J. 4 Bdrm bome.-.IOO. n a.m OJ SWlltOtt COUIT CPAITmOM 1 ACllS. .. cm°'.....,..."* llACM .. I.HY. Wf. lfTM AT I P.M. t• SALi Int .OWi ·--...toll!-....-:UO-l-llM>•ll~ Msraf ••w•~.-..,. '-.. """"''t,.......,__ocw._ ...... =::.=~a:::'~::.::"'...:.·~':,,."";'~= C:OUNTl CIOUlllHOUV 100 CIVIC CUlllll CllllW \llfll I.ti"'""'"" CA c.-...... _., _ _....,., __ .... __ _ Houtet ~or SclM Hot.sea For S• Houws For ScM Ho.Ms For Sale HcNJff fM Sm~ . ...................... ······················· ..................................................................... . G....-oJ I OOJ Ge.tral t 002 lcAoa l.a.d I 006 0... PoW I 026 lrviM I 044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• - IALIOA tSU._ JOI APOUMA St.or)' 2 BR l~ Ba. l BR aaraae apt. Sep. guest qtn.Owner.673-0828 WHITEWATB VIEW TOWNHOUSE IN One of a kind. old world design & quality of this new authentic French Normandy home. 4 Bdrm. 3 bath c ustom home with finest crafts manship & amenities. Now available. $.SS.5,000. Call for app't. ..... , ........ 1007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New Sbr. 3ba. $275,000. ezy terms, ocn & bch vu. 113 E Balboa 879·5991 CoroM .. Mcr 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DANAILUFFS Rare 2·story condo with 3 bdrms. 21;z ba, tennis. pool and spu . Unobstructed view or ocean. marina and rily lights. Fabulous master suite with deck. $245,000 WATI.RFRONT, HOMl:.S REAL ESTATE 631-1400 THE LAKES Magnificent 2 Bdrm l1 a Bit lOwnhome complete· ly up~raded thruout. Ideally located wath l'Om· plete pn vacy yet in close proximity to pool. spa. sauna. t ennis. Asking $118.500. 111 La.kepines. G RANCH REALTY 5S1 2000 IAYNOMT · We have several rme homes .,. with pier & slip. a TOltO HOISi COUMTIY 4 Bdrm .. 3 baths; ranch style. _mini.estate in orange groves. $240,000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR .1-l l Boy\•d• O• •Y• r~ B 675 6161 THE 1~ NUMBER TO SEE NEWPORT HILLS OFFICE 2670 SAN MIGUEL DRIVE 1714) 759· I SO I HARIOR VIEW HOME ,Spacious Somerset model featuring 5 bedrooms. 3 bath. large yard for children. Tiled entry & drive. Assumable financinf!. Located on cut-de-sac with view of Big Canyon & nite lites. Better move quick on this!! <714) 759·1501 DIRTY DAWG!!!! Bring paintbrush & elbow grease to make money on this BALBOA ISLAND cottage with C·2 zoning! Adjacent to new recr eation a rea. Features assumable 10.35o/r loan payable at $837 'month with seller -wHling-t-&-<.'1trrr a-!nd· 'TD: .. 'l'!t4) 759-1501 "I ILOCK TO OCEAN" from this 4 bedroom custom home in prestigious MONARCH BAY. Featuring spacious rooms with lots of g lass. Koi pond & guard gate. Price reduced $35,000 & s ubmit terms!! (714) 759-1501 WATERFRONT rROnRTY!!I Sensational 3 bedroom home lo· cated smack on the water with a n unobstructable view of the Slut• Pacific. Has a private stairway to the beach! Owner will carry the fin ancing for a qualified buyer. Obviously a prestige property and rema rkably priced at only $79Q.OOO. (714 ) 759-1501 .. OWNER ANXIOUS•• for offer on th is r a r~ find in Wes t c lif f Hi g hland area! Fantastic home featuring 3 bedrooms and 2 baths with a large country kitchen a nd covered patio for entertaining your friends!! S4,500 prioe r e duction!! C714 ) 759·1501 $526 PER MO •••••• is all you pay when you cash out existing 10.2% loan! ! Excellent 3 bedroom ranch s tyle home in Irvine. Located in des irable California Home Area!! Only $125,900! ! (714) 759-1501. •OCEAN VIEW IH LAGUNA• Fabulous ly c harming cottage overlooking the Pacific ! Completely furnished & ready for immediate possession. Featuring 21 'x24' deck & large lot with plenty of room to enlarge. Seller will carry the 1st. Definitely full of value at $195,000. (714) 759-1501 ••TURTLE ROCIC VISTA•• Back country view from this 2 bedroom tden townhome. Featuring cathedral cei l ing. tasteful decorations, wet bar, generous use of Mexican Pavers & custom oak cabinets ! Add all this to assumable fin ancing a nd you h ave a n unbeatable combination!!! <714) 759-1501 Walker &lee Real Estate OPIMDAILY 1·5 P.M. SEA VIEW 2003 Yacht Defeftder Fabulous financing with Fo.tain Valley I 034 _ 20% do~n. • Bdrms +. ••••••••••••••••••• •••• **UNIQUE! Ocean view. C/21 MwptC...ter 640-5357 AFFORDABLE ~ Sc1 1-'t. oC luxurious living. with it's own HOUSING!! POOL & SPA! This :1 --------•I Tas tefully dec·oratcd bdrm & den attached UVEIN l'Ondo with spacious home1spo:;sibly theonty BEAUTIFUL CDM rooms and <i wet bar for Pxamplc en the pre· Enjoy 3 private beaches. entertainin~. Qwet loca i.t1g1ou:. Woodbrid~t· ocean view. 3 bdrm home t1on, assoc1al1on has all E .. tatcs with a pnvatt· withseparatefamtlyrm t he amen1l1h . <?nly pool. ~all now lo sec & Be~t pnce in area. Fee S 11 5. 000 VA I F H A enJoy. land Only S288.500. Call 545-9•m . Sl97.500 Agent Oc~an Pac1f1c [~lfll'.'t l ? .. ! C. [ fli]W•odbrldgc R e a I E s t at c . . _J!::_!,11Hl!:!Jrl:::~ c1w1ss-1616 Really ~~~~~~~~ ___ R_e_a_I Estate 551.3000 Attractive pool duplex + 2 good rentals. Prune loca· uon S285.000. 6404999 ATIRACTIVE IS?Ul.\arranl'• Plcwy.lnin.- Costa Mesa I 024 PARADISETWNHSE MU~TSELL BY OWNER 2 BR Assumable loan Woodbndl(e :J br. 2'•2 ba. +2nd T. D S00.000. A C:. 2 rar gar. 851 ·0610 C/2 1 Mwpt Cfllfer - -••••••••••••••••••••••• 640-5357 WOOOARGF: SHH. $2391\l -Pr(•:.coll b y LaJ?oon. HARDWOOD ~on S.ach I 040 ACT 2FH I!! Mandarin FLOORS •••• • • • • • •• • • • • • • •• • • •• Ownt:r 552-4666 Sharp J Bdrm. lar~e ror. By owner. Agt S7!1.000 ·--- ner lot with possible RV Sacrifil'e price. Nace 3 br OWNER MUST SELL access. PreM!n l loan t.ownhousc. 549 0833 2hdrm, ~ha Mftdo. Xlnt may be taken over <it --t •·rm-. O" lll'r a s~•sl !I :>1 ; lnll'rcst. Move.in --------finan<·1ng 1h1>umc ~J 11', c o n d 1 t 1 on . A s k 1 n g GREAT FAMILY Imm SS:! '4-ti. I 49tl·082!! SHY7.900 For an apJ.)Oant HOME I ment to!>ee. rall 540 Wil -1Hr. 2Ha. h~ht & airv. 1 I.HG 1-: 1-:Xt-:l Trtl1•rot•f.. blk to:.rhl & park •·~m a llm. _1.H2<· lh'<lh1ll Hit). ~HERITAGE to bch Only Sll8.900. Pat ,.i5:! i500 REALTORS 846-5502 BEAUTIRIL H ,\ N C II 0 S \ :>J JIJ,\'JL:IN --------•I '10\.\-'\HC>:\IE l'rl'i.t1gl'. ~~E~NDOS -1~~~~~~~~1 M't'unl\, l'll·ganl'l', con L \1•n1enrl· Jlld pnred lo FOr"SaTetly C5wiitt ... Hr-,ri·~lrr vie r.r • tarting at StOl.000 Jbdrm. 2ba. ram rm. up In 1n1• t .1 m µ u ~ a utl On V1ctona bl" n J:raded. lundsl·apt;I 1 ~ I-.L'>h1011 hi.met (all lw Newport& rrufroml:>t.'ach.~l-liUX 1nr1irm.11 1un o n 1111 ... Harbor Bhd. - -oln •am home ,\:.I.. lor Hill 548-3559 OCEANFRONT UC 5-i(Htrili EY~s 646-6093 Geor~eou..., 2Ur on ,,anrl Sl6.000 down. 752 :!197. ------... ---·!-~~---HOUSE ON ON THE HILL Large tn·level. fcatun ni: '' Bdrm:.. 3 baths and separate family room Huge sedudcd cul de sar lot. 3 car garage und close to Mes;i Verdl· Country Club. S198.!IOO For an appointment to see. c·aJJ 540· 1151 ~HERITAGE ' • REALTORS E-SIDE DUPLEX Two 3 Ir. Units $142,500 FUWRREALTY 546-0814 EASTSIDE R-2 l'wo 1ndiv1duaJ houses. highly upgraded. Each has separate gara~e and yard. Owner will rarry a larg~ 2nd TD. Asking $135,900 Call 540-1151 ~HERITAGE ' • REALTORS $139,900 2 sty. Jbr. 21'2ba. farn rm "' r1r pl . harilwood fir-.. neur Goldl•n W l 'ollt·g~· & f'reewa):.. OwncrtAi::t 847·5630 TENDER LOVING CARE .., all th1.; cul dl• .,al horn.· net'ds to IX'coml· ,, WI NNER• Lar~t· yard for the kids. & a COH•rcd patio for rclaxmj.! in the t•n•n1n g. All t Pr m -. a' lf'llablt> on lh1:. at Sl<X>.000 54S·94lll tlRONSHOT To Meadow L.ork Golf Coun.e. N1('(' 3 bedroom. 1·1• hath. Full prin• Sl ll.000. Park PLacc lnr 84:! i •lf;I ~ INDULGE. •. in ~our own pool &s pa' llt·~1uttful .i Hr + 1''. H Ill "Thi• H:J nt h .. 1\ssum:i bll• loan. l'Xl'l'llcnl 10<'.1 !l(Jfl & JllXIOU:. -.dler~ .111 .idd UI) lo a very 11111· \ alUl' Sl63.90IJ 559-8888 TAKEOVER HIGH INTEREST LOAN b.c111112 l bdrm, fam. rm Dt•ant' I lomc. m ,.,. 11u1:-11t• '>t'tlang a111I l:X'alllll ullv landscaping 'I h1 ... fa11ta ... 11 c famoh home" "arml\ rlt.•<:orJt· l'<I Jnd 111 ~ll' n' :.pJn •~>ncllt1on You must -.i•1• th1-; 0111• Fa'>l cs c:ruw Po'>~1blc 2bdrm. lba, $87.900. &tfertaifttt's Dream HuntiftcJlon S.acJiff, 1rCJ siflC)le story. 4br. fonnal dillinCJ. tam rm. custom yrd, tropical '+523 CAMPUSl>a:IRVl"E Frplc. bonus rm. R-2. lrg lot. 1937 Maple. 645·6343 or 957 ·8400. pool• w ft.>ar, spo & CUST o;; HM E · C.\n finpit. Ell1oy CJOff, fM-V1ew. $270,000. Re dhill' nis & the beach. Wall RJty, Brenda 552-7500. to schools. lmmed oc-Laguna leach 1 048 FOR SAU IY OWNER Ass--. Lo.. cupancy. Owner.••••••••••••••••••••••• 536-0776. lllr/Coop. PACIFIC POPULAR HAVERFORD For 5cM ly AC)"t! plan an Meadow Park is 0092 Washmgton ~I.000 now available. Must see 962·5566 19301 Salmon to appreciate this highly Sl09.500. 963-6653 upgraded 10 mos. old -------- home. Lge country Hw1tW011 kitchen. den. inside lndry Hcri»Our-I 042 rm. formal dining & hv· ••••••••••••••••••••••• mg rm. 21,; ba. 4br. & BY OWNER-Waterfront, pool Mze lot. Xlnt tenas deluxe Seagate Condo, + & financing. Call 957·28t9 dock. 2~Ba. $329.500. No for a ppointment. down to qualified buyer. llB>ROOM Double garage. 60x120' lot. Quiet location. but close to s hopping. New roof. copper p lumbing. hardwood noors. plaster walls. good condition. SU0.000 with an assuma· bleloan . Roy Mee_.., RHr. 541-7729 EASTSIDE DOLL HOUSE Pnnc1pals only. 846-39'.!3 '".. 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• **JUST LISTED! Hard to rind Bnarwood tmdel in beautiful Wood· bridge Broadmoo r . 4 beauti!ul Bdrm in over 2000 sq rt. Compare the value at SI 79,900 \\OOdbrldgc Realrg 551·3000 4ftt8arranu Ptn• , lr-wlnf' PARADISE Lovelv 2 Bdrm mob1h' home ·on a bluff over thl· ()('Ca n. Beautifully di' corated. many r xtras in· elude cherr~ wood cabinets and bu1 lt111 rncuum. $76.000. Long term land lea!>c ava1la· blc don osen renltori. 1213 N. COAST HW Y LAGUNA BEACH 497-4848 VIEW OF T.HE WORLD Must see to behevc the outstanding features of Uus ~orgeous ocean view 3 bed r oom home.. $650,000 Lovel,y 3 Bdrm + s pa, large yard. en closed patio. builtins. Cul de sac. quiet location. Only 1125.900. Call 645-9161 . OPlN tHlll'.:>~ Rf Al 1Y / macneb I Irvine realty New 4 bedroom home I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! •.ooo 216..., A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IRVINI! COMPANY On water 4 bedroom $1.100.000 I ac.mu.11• Call 873..-00 for details WATERFRONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 ......... , .... st,t.Cudu Fabulous 2 and three b edroom condos In elegant complex. Many beautiful and unique reaturu. l ncludtna atrlums. fireplace. cathedral <'tili ngs, cermamic Ules. Bu,vers Choice of carpels. Vtr1 luxurious. Pri,ced u low • WJ.000! Call and aee 811.l uap rut db Dall)' theletodayr 540-1720 PUot Want Ads. T Alml. llAl.TY STAITll HOMl- $94,1001 2BR Woodbridge VUJage Green Condo! Assume 1st TD & owner wtll assist. Im m a cu late move-In condition. App't only. Paula Bailey 642·8235. CD-67) 711·1414 COlflfN{Votey Cena• 64Z .. ZH 90 I l)o.,., 0.We Hl-1700 Woocbadqe (8"!9r 644-6200 Horbot 11...., c... I .. . • t J r, -#-• • ... • 28. 1980 DAILY PH.OT tt1a1ftF#S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mu .,..1 IMclt I 06t ........ Unfun1hhe4 Thursda'" .. U-&.--1-L-..l LI~-u-...a....-.1.11.....d • •• • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • •• ..... nTV~MtllllrU ~· ............ ~.~~~ ....... J ~!!!!.~~-~~ ........ ~~.~~-~!!~!~ ...... OlherRHll1tate ... .,.,,.. .. _.. 10" ...... ._,..o,•rty 2000 t:.:::t•:o;:;;: ..... SJ. I ....................... •••••••••••••••••••••• • C..-tr.o I 071 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltetort 2400 -------------------...................... . eoro.. .. ~ 3222 ......_, Unfn •• •• • • •• • • • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••• •• ............ ••• .. ••• ••• •••••. •• •• ••••• ~-3244 .._.,.,..leach 326t Ji\SM I NE CREEK ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SAM JU.AM * mnE llEWCE * MIWUSTIMG 5 HOU$1S ON LOT N\'wl)' r rurbl3ht'Ci Near .:oil course In Eaalaldc Co.ta Me 1 Partnen1h1J1 probl(•m mu11t be sold' sm.ooo. 1:-a:t ltaO ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRI ME I~ AC Com merclal l.and 900 rt Iron tage on ttw y Ill Sl.300.000 <;Jll Darbar11 Gius al C/21 !)andp1pcr. 64'M950 lnlgni:r decorated. w/u ~~.~~•/ Jbr. l 'tba. <;ONOO. pool. 'f~:lyrr!~· J~~iau:'::'~ rwn. P''I pool. spa. sauna Dc1Wte38dr m f S5!l5 /mo. 559·6442 or High Newport Heights. on rear dt!ck. lloman l\lb \\>/forma l d ~ 13_13_______ Yrly lease: $750/lno. Mr. In poe,h Ms tr bdrm. 2400 With bnck f T\JRnE ROCX GLEN Reed 640-2390. Sq rt $2250 64:t 3850 enclosed g 5 Br. :i Ba. 3 car s ar Cotta Mfta 3224 dbl gar. I 408 988-t234. ext 214. BALBOA BAY FRONT. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631 3240 lwcunous 4br. 2ba. jac. ••••• d to .eling IN E Westdiff 2 BR. 2 ba. Jpadous sep. dining rm & Uv. rm with beam ceU & frplc, teak panel. FR opens to kitch. Attached 2 car aar Mlnuts to ~an. t nnis. golf, mu eum, shape, ffbools. Lot·fee sJmple. Unlum. IZ38.000 ; furn s2eo ,ooo. Clnc t udcs antiques paJnUnp. ete I Seturity a~tem. · 0,. "mi z,s-.::. ...... ~:.!;:;.:;,:::~:.~ ' !~~- " Jamhon.'t• AllrnM J 10,.. Tll 1:)0 ,,M.I Well plaMt'd J1111111 homc- w11h 3 bedroom11 ~ h11lh' many upgr de" mr lucl 1111 prl\wlt• 'Pll .and bUllUn BB~ Gr oil ~on J u1n l 11 p1Jtra110 loo t1un Pttrl'd r111 11111 di. 'lale al only SlOU.tl:IO Arent. 498·0042 .... Is .... .. ~ 2100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RAN C H O PALO S n ;noES. :i er. 21tt ba Unobstructed ocean v1tw p'ool Valued at ~.000 clear. Ext•hange for units In Newport ijeach Will trade u p 2131795·9141 days. W.J Gallagher or 7141673-7011 VETHAMS Hawf~ ...... T U R T L E R 0 C K bea<'h shower. private ...., ENT Turtlerock. 2 br. 2 ba. beu c h . boat s lip. Isn't It Ume you owned d b d k ., SlC/\I\ A ·1 ed HOM Om •ee". en, wl't nr. ec . -c:lr .,.,.,/rnIJ. va1 1mm . your OWN home? For ~ & 6 further information call 3 & 4 garnges garage, pool. J acuni bi~. 75·0597. 638-4960. fenc se Kids & tennis S750 t m o 34'Sllp.Supcr 3 Brtwnhse ••••• le~~. >r an 3 t'am1 I e o m t' 833·o.179. 673 2596. or 973.2971 ---W Nwpl. Nr. bch. $900. ••••• ' ly 0---64Z.. I tit hr 11n rorn•r W•ll lo ---------• 3 bdrm . 2 1-'Z ba Townhome. Brand new Xtra large delu1te Private yard. 2 car garaf(l'. S725 m o 1st & last mo. + $.'lOO deposit 24JOSaota Ana Ave. C.M Call Paul. 760 7024 . 7P14e ·t.> REHT ALS 7;,9 058ll eves. o 2br. 2bu SiOO·Sl200 ---'l w.--9"d I 041 •~.Ml)' " M<"ludl'd I 1AC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... _ ""' . f THI ...... •°"'• am rm. !ii~. ONLY WAY <Wk SUll,O(IO Ml l<l TOGO 3 Bdrm floor plan. IW'-'.in ' le w de c It ' I a r I( 1· t-nr lo t>d brlrlt po1 111 Pru.·~ ror 1mmt.-dl•tt ""le a t 1139.000 Ml ION R LALTY "~ 11731 111 Vlol"-co L.Wol• ~i:ht, JPliCIOU!\, elt'~ant all nt>w 4Hr 211 l'.1 din init rm ~ • lot ~\~!:1 ouo p p I 7 14 I 6 ?:J lid U 1;'13 o.118 wall dr111w•. ft•uturl.'it ttm fur 11001 & b11 ,11 ,.1{l r 11v• $11!1 uuu V & r:.1111n 11.111 It II y t' o 21J..:171#-0I' or&41 WC* w............ 1098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• U E ti i I f' I. ;1 R It . I '• B /\ ,. 1· n l r .a I J I 1 n~tom· kll & liJth f'm t·rl'd PAllO lg HJ $!r.! !IOU <)lo nt'f' ti3b .ao7t, ···•·•············•··•• BV O'WNt:K lmnwr .ahr ocn v w. a e.i.um $200'1 UW< 1st, no pis '28!1,IJOC. 494 1216 ~ ~1p ~per 3 Br\\\ nhlle Mable Homo \\ Nwpt Nr l.ldt FarSal4t 1100 f3llO <llO Owner I Bruker •••••• ••• ••. •••••••. ••• 7~~e\t'!> San J unn Capo ~'>.000 2 OCIAtf & CA.HYON THE I LUFfS Br 2 Ba. l '80 :.q U !lyr.. old. Agt 541 ·5032 VIEWS Spacious & dramatic 3 ---------SJ>Unded home or wood txtrm + conversauon pit and glass with ench win and gat'lY' loggia over •EXCITING dow framing a different lookmg lu~h greenbelt. • ocean and m ount ain only i.leps to i.parklin~ Speclaf luy view. Own this comforto pool. O<fered al $194.!'>00 lieautaful • nrwly up ble 3 bdr m home or Agent 640.5560. j.(raded carpets & drps. dram atic spaces for 2Br. 2Ba Lcv1tl llomt.' u1 5265.000. Good financing 1----------1 Laguna 11111:. n1 t•c:.\ available. 5• Pk 1\11 Ill'\\ appl cor 644·7211 llGCANYOM 1w r lot unu:.:. rrum New l'Xclus1ve listing <..,1ubhouM:. PQOI, Jacuui. .,'inest custom home on saw1a. exf'r1·1se & rvt· ' the golf rourse 5 Bdrms hall. IKJ5029l eiC with over t>OOO l'q rt of CLASSIC _ beaut1rul d ayl1mt.' and MOllLEHO'ME evening views ln<'redi· Ille ~ecurity By appt SALES 1052 ' thru Wm Cole Sl.750.000 2706 Harbor. Ste 206A ···~-~~;~;;~·~~·· ·· '*Cote Realty ~~~54~0-~5~9~3~7~~ VILLA & Investment Story end unit "1th 640-5777 l"Z"~--.41Ceail--&. er~11N>ly~W-~~!" 2 bdrm. 2 "2 bath, · Ba.\side separate dining room. \\HERE c:ln you buy a lot 613 2396 fireplace 111 mu~tcr mNpt. Bch. forS-10,000" _:: ____ _ bdrm. Community i>OOI & Close to the water. clo!->C 24 Xtl0. wood panel ad 1hru spa 1219,900 to J pc!°I an.d clOM.' lo l~"' out. spacious lbr lba, Loguna Mlquel Rlty ~ach At 304 Canal Sl fam rm. xlnt location 49.S-5220 496·2413 "e will throw an the Prmc Only. 968-4885. IJ»SUi() 493·94~ house for $129,000. Ori. ve INTERESTED IN LEVERAGE? This home offers terms even the Godfather couldn't resist. With m o unt ain v i ews . 4 bedrooms . 3 baths. forma l dining. c ustom shutters and tile, pool and spa, what more do you need? $299.000. 495-1720. Miuioft Vieio I 067 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECTACULAR VU Ovenized lot with exec. home: features 4 Bdrms. 3 ba. heated pool. dinmJ.! nn. wet.bar. Mstr suite has balcony. Assumable loans. $224,500 Ron Williams Realty 831-8440 .e.wport hoc.h I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIGCAMYOM COM DO Priced reduced. Short tease/option a vailable. C /2 I Mwpt. Cetlhr 640-5357 Pt•IUlalhlplex Completely rerurbished. one blk to beach. You own the land. Great financing. $205.000 ~ 759.9221 UDOISLAMD Open house every day 1·5 pm. 223 Via Ithaca . Best buy on Island. Extra large lot. 3 Bdrm+. $325.000. C/21 Mwpt.C...ter 640-5357 lW OCEAN VIEW Newly decorated on ree land. Owner extremely anxious and priced to sell al ~.000. Call about un· believable terms. ~ean Views Homes Our Specialty Robt. SKiii & AHOC. 546-9522 llACHDUPLD bavestor's dream Close to beach. Good financ· Ing. Suaumr /winter ren· \al.S. 4'710 Seashore Dr. CfZIMw.,tC ...... 640.&357 JASt••cam Dleontcr'a own bome. I Bdrm. 2 s&oey •pli\·lntl. Orean yfew, on wld • ... belL The Wtlmat.e lldecor. llOAtoU Dr. OU.... alto avallable. Cfal ..... c..r-Me-tH7 by then call for appt. Creative finan c ing available. for a buyer with minimum $60,000 down. Ninfa Jan"ls 644-8850 John Coom be broker DOVER SHORES Fabulous pool home. 4 Bdrm. Spectacular. 3000 sq n. S375,ooo. C /21 Mwpf. Cetthr 640.5357 OWNER FIN. 12113% Cliffhann- MnHeicjht Hugt> 3 br. rr w /view. Ex· elusive. $265.000. Rae Rodgers 631·1266. REALTORS SPECTACULAR POIMTSIORM Only 3 yrs new with vaulted cei li n gs , go urm e t k itc h e n , baJcony game rm 5x7' spa in master bathrm PLUS much more . Now orcered at only $429,000. Owner financing availa· ble 644-7211 HAUL OUT MOBILE HOME Except. value '61 12· 12x60. 2 bdrm carport awning, porch & awning, setups & window /\I C Extr . OK L 11• FT5306. S7!J95. Mgr. 714/962·2112 Acreol)e for Sal• 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OAK TREE RETREAT 9+ acreas in Rancho. CA. F a nta s tic v ie w Great future homesate. Xlnt selle r financing w/low dwn payment. FUii pn ce S.'i9.000. Call 714'rn·561L Bkr IHch Property 13 50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Pt~-c. C M I Mc~ia dt'I Marl lo-'i: Ownl.'r fm inc Iii& wllh 140.000 Jown /\l{et\Ul38 492 l ----- 4-PLU <.:.o6ta Ml'SU l0<·011on 3 •••• •• ••• ••••••• ••• •• •• fir. ~ Ila Owner ~ 111 HouMt funti..tt.d narry a l 10", for 4 'ri.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s:M.000 down t-'ull pnce lalboa lsJ.d 31 06 s.!20.<MJO V'-·d rl} 1nc1orn(• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i::'I 0011 T1:r11rnl!> pa) 3br. 2ba. w/gar & ldry uullllc:. UUl mcl al $825/mo yrly A PR€HIG€ '-J--~-~~-HOM€S ltcJ1 E:.lale Investments 3333 W Coas t H\\}. N 8 645·6646 12 Sp. MH PARK 111'ra1lers incl S:J0.000 Down gales Prire $145.UOO & Yrly net return $7.724 ap vru1t 1151 1666. Bkr 311 Apolena 64&9798. lalMMI Peninsula 3107 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ch.arming 5 bdrm. 3 bath bay(ront w1lh 38' boat noat. Sepl July. $1200 mo. Yr l} $1600 mo Ball Grundy, 675-6161. Wini e r : 3br . 2'• ba. SS75/m o 305 Montero 879·5991 Corona ct.f Mer 3 122 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------IUIS 2br. 212ba. ga ull'> hwas her. m o Id No pct!>,_ __ $550/mo • ---·· 2 car i::ir New 2 . J :ll'. air pat1 rmo U57 1723. ~· Home 4 bdrm 3br. 2ba $700 2 Hd. 2 BA. 7th f ir. sec. ry. Near beach Jbr. 2ba $1000 rurn h l d J: . b a Y f r o n l • s. I ncl udi n g 3br.2"'2ba $750·$1500 Sl500tmo. Bob Koop. ner $90 0 m o 4br.2l,ba S!l50 A~.6.11-1266. ..... -t bdrm Comer lot. RV J?ate 2 m iles to t>Cean S650 mo. Avail 9·15 80 S.10-5648 ------- \ bclrm 11 ~ ba Cnnrln pool. 1cnn1s, dubhOU'>l'. µIJ~ ground $5l5 m u 7GK 7633 4br Jba 51000 SPRINGS CONDO OPEH SAT /SUM 12 -4PM WATERFROMT ICCS, 9AM 36' Pier & shp. 3 bdrm & den. Jmplc parlung, $900 without !.lip. Sl.050 ft w /s ilp per mo. Agt. R.H. R. Brkr, 673 7300 lhuL oard C:.inal f'ronl large 4 bdrm Community voots & ten· n1s . r .im il1es . $1050. ~ 3370art 5. Beaut exec 4br, 3ba . Wc!>tdtlC. Jae .• tub. many xtras. Gardener. 1\v a il Ca ll Nancy t>IO 7171 or &'75· 1~3. RENTIMES HTllC tr & 1• or re:1:. 1gci. -t. "n ·c: - $56,000 DOWN! Upgraded 2bdrm. 2ba house with pnvate yrd & l'arpo rt . No P l'" S725/mo Gardener incl Betty Kerr673·1181 bl1_1,,_ __ _ ~ Udrm I Ba. homt! • I c:ir ).!ar . no Completely re modeled 8.1 Stream Wood. I storv. :! Br. I'• l>u. pn me l0t·a 11 on near nl'" "1th t u st o m 1 n l l' ri o r 1\ ~howpl :.itt' ~'lfl.500 11 • .-. a. .... un1"! bll' lo;.in appro'< Sil'.I U00 • $435/mO 1'&1 · 10'··•'• Hrkr 81111 JJ7t. Eve 731 3072 "AMERICAS LE.ADER IN THE IUSIMESS OF RENTALS" Cl\LL 631 -4555 will ncl you 4 deluxe un· Ith in Co!.tu Mesa Nu \'.1canry Lo main· lc•n a nc•t.> Altt.-1nate mt•lhod-. ul I 1nanc1ng a\;nlable too . no pa~ ments on 2nc1 TO' Call now ror more details s.t5--!1491 2 ~ust have rd:. Downtown Munl Bl.'h .10. 1st & las t + $1()0 Agent 536·0875 ~hach 3148 646 5637 ----- J br. :!1-'lba. Be:.ich Walk ••••••••••••••••••••••• \~~:~1;1ga nNof~~=tiENTIMES William J ennings BryrWIO~T SELEL'TIONS once slept here. M AV Al LA BL~: T ODl\''t' hse·2Br. 2Ba. rorma ALL AREAS. S I ZES rm. snrf sun room. i\NU h-.e w i 2 B r . &.. P'1C~TOCllOOSE Hardwood firs ttn FRO:'tl rrylr. t'Od garatd <:ALL TODA y view. gardner jSun Condo. $7~0/mo. I year h•J~C 536·5103. * HEW & BEACH TOO.* 3b<lrm. 21 2ba tn-lcvt•I home. frpk. crpl & \\OOd . gardent•r S795 A\>ail !~ l D1anJ 846 L3i I 846 7345 Sharpe 3 Br . Dmmg Hm -------Nt::W CONDO 2 bdrm. Pvt ~<·cured comm :1Br. den. 21·2 ba. rireplace .!12Ba. w1ccnt 1\C. frplc. $775 64U·9272 formal din. n r <·o mm ----pool & lenni-. Avail St•nt I BR 3 Ha . on canal, hot 15 ~·· S750 m" ;,.,~ 147~ tub. 1 blk to ocean. $900 ----rro. 960 5:all 1\11 the Goodie'' $.'>.111 :11lr with C.'\•nll JI ;.11r. lntd lot Ohle 1-!JrJge & ,1 II ffioJ JOf a pµk Kid-." lr·md Iii~ 11 1 lc\1 HE:'l.i'l '.\1 r; .. -.. 1;:u 15.'l.'> I mm:a<:ulJte t::as tblulf home :J bdrm. 2 ba. lam11\ room Walk ltl Corona rlel :'tt Jr 1 I S. !'on Jh'I ' SU85 mo. Ownt<r i•..O 11237 I l W :5:1 the 'ilut H -1 00 , ..... M S1~per-4r 3 J-4Ss& 1·6P :'tt. tl!l-1 5 ~PM. 3169 MESA VERDE ..b•u&'filt •• UrP~ ....... .UU.µ..111)11.,o ~ _ ~ )?araJ?e. lencerl ~ea r Yorkluwn & Bus hard Sti.'JO :? Kid". -;mall pt-I OK Cons1rler q uall £wd ......................• <.xcan' 1cw l hr t-den. 1 dt•Cks. ll'a'>l' SiOO. r.~"'t:"RYetJNOO -~ ~--- Jbr 2' ibJ , frpk. micro •H· "J\ e. patio. l tar ~ar ' r i · ....................... ~········ ••••··~~~?tennis & \!talk to ltract 1v1· 3 clubhouail. Now un· Lar~e lot an exclusive Br. 2 1311500. Three Arch Bay. So. ti1Sep1..-- OCEANFRONT LOT Luguna. Security gate d 3 Dr. den.2 community w ith p vt Rellltly or m onth.Y streets. beach, tennis & Ba.ow. Bill Grurfr. dubho use. Airport. AV$-5l51 yachting, and fis hing ro-----I minutes away. Owner -front 2 br. 2 '8 •• I h as bu1 It his hume 0 1easc. Avail im nearby. Very rare OP· d. S700 mo. Agl. port unity . Lot price 0060 S l .49 5.000 . Pt.~----- 2 l 3 I 6 2 8 . 1 3 O O o .1r. 34th St Nice/ rum. 714 499·3070wknds. Sept-June S45 mo. •Faftta1tic Buy• REDUCEDS7,00f Only S64.500 Orea~s lot plus approvedJk· for tr: level hol'Tl(' Pt. mg distl)ntt> 10 q14 Harbor. Ownl'r tl'-- 673-8346 2br. fully rum • .>mmuni· IY pool & ll'n~; month to month or se. $1200. Ask for Bit1.Vedmore: 644-7020. Beaul ifulh furnish ed ba\ front wjier & slip. 3 BR 3 Ba. "1· $2300 mo Avail 9/1~ to 6/5/81 Agt E1rnor Bowie. 644.9060 I BH I·~ Uu. \f•rv rkan 5ti i :; m" i ·, ,-3 1 !J l . 7!'>H330. al{! U~", ti4 I 1:! 11 P1111I ~l•J 11•nn 1 ~. m "l.t•WJJtJrt '\J\'sJ SNO/mo t:i \ smglll!> 642-5:i83 -----t>W 11'.YL. 616 32l5 mess. 111 LEASE . North Encl . • 2 Br Co nrlo n ear S.C.Plata. l'allo. pool, !>pa. :SSUO. No peti.. 549.3232 or 641 1-160 • I bdrm 2 ba. flreplacl', dbl. garaue $1\50 mo s:J25 ~u llll~l Forrt.-~tJl Dr 8..\7 19114 Adult apartm1•nt 2 bdrm. 1 ha Walk toc.,.er ything ~mo I 345 ~12 JI! -----1JI Laguna VIII~ R.E 497-1 761 :-lcar bt'ach 011 PcnmsulJ. 2 br. l lia . 115 :Mh SI. Sl!l5 t mo. Dr i ve b y le t~& 7(Ml!I 1ful Newport Heights. 4Br. :ma. wt pool. $675 m o. 642·0211 3bdrm. 3ba. (am rm, 2 l>lOry. 2150 sq ft. 3 car gar. rrplc. 1 ma to beach i\vail now. S850. 962· 1\143 t'll Winter Hental·l\lmost ocn :! Bdrm. :-lrwport ll~~hts. ooo rront.. h..,c & dpl1t. furn. S400 Pref otde r couple . 1. parking. µart ial uttl 646.2032 _ :1 bdrm. with garage & pool. Singles or couple OK. $575 mo. 536-2456 or 53&7979 F'..xec LaQuesta home nr beach. 4 BR 2 Ba. Fam $5SO·SS75 mo. 497·5125 ( L · • E N h ~ d 3br. 211bu. East Bluffs. .i:.l\S : • o rt n splil·levcl 01 greenbelt, Adult apartment : 2 pool privileges $875. Rm. 2 sty, 21"2 car gar. & bonus rm incld in 3000 3 BR. 11"1 Ba. cpts. drps & f I stove. Lge rncd "rd. sq t or i\·ing s pace. bdrm. l ba. Walk to ever· 494-6306. yttung SSSO/mo ---------~ Sl200 mo. Call 642·4300. Space for Rv·s. Cool s ea h Laguna VIII~ R.E 497-1761 :! B d r m • U e I u ~ l' To\\nhuu-.o.: 1-'irepl ace. breeze. 5 min. to Balboa -11-5-7-·24 __ r_s_. ----------gar . OCl.''111 Vl(;W. $475 & bch. $450 mo. + sec Cahfomia Dreaming! ~Hills 3250 &12·~. 644-8722. Rer'i. req. 213 /446·0673 Only S370 ronhis ······················· ------aft 6PM. luscious 2Br W /plush 3bdrm. 2ba . 2 car i:ar. E'Bluff Bay View MHaVerde Soper 4 Br. 2 Ba. Avail now. M;.iny reaturcs Clean. 8675. 546·3937. No Pets. crpLc; & more. <5355> ree RENTl'.\tES 631-4555 Evervones welcome 111 Uusdcllghtful 28drm home. Kicb& Pets OK recreation 1ac1llt1cs 3 Br 21,:r ba. lmmac 2200 S625/m o. N o pe t ~ :.If. 2 levl.'l e nd unit. 4!174072. Elegant. with lite golc.I 1 __ ._.. 1 3252 cpl lmllk'd O<'cupancy, ~-"'«JUe h u r r y w on · t I a s l . ••••••••••••••••••••••• S1075/mo. Agt 851·0424 Only 5450 189451 fee Pnme loc, nr rwy. shops & 631-4556 Call today OCC 4 BR, $695 mo. Stu _______ _:__ 3 Br. den. 211? b:i condo.-----....::..--- frplr pool. .idlls. bl. Blum, condo. 3 DR 21'2 Ha. dents. kids OK. Avl 9·15. 2Bdrm. Dollhouse tn l:c.l Sel'. Sl>Ui). 495 lil4ti. avail St•pt 15. S700. l>Ot· -----tic John s on, agt. Agt. Oaana. 540-231:1 Excellent ar~a ! \'t.•n secluded ' Kids OK. 1.Alw move In. Grab 1l Qwck! S4UO (~161 fee Carrol 631 ·4557 A~. Lo1.-CI) ·I lldrm. " B~ 760 1966: 675-6000 I BR. +\'Cry qwet. l\dult. no pets. Hani;c & refer. Ut1ls parn1 $460 rm 64A1·'2 W. 1!!. 642·0835. College Park 3br. 2ba. pool. $725/m o . incl. ~ardcncr. pool serv. b75-6736 •••••••••••••••••••••• Contemporary 3Bdrm ! ~l Pluah carpets, alr. Ir more. (7513) ree Absolutely exceptional brand new. neve r OC· c up1ed carpet1n~ & drapes. Family room with upstairs loft that can be used as Bedroom or den. 5 blocks fro• . beach & schools. S1200 per m o + ulilllle-. Owner will maintain ex· tenor yard care. Call 89Fi951 Mon. lhru Fri 8:30to5:~. Beautiful bra-nd new 3 Br. 2•'J Ba . H untington Beach Home. Complete- ly carpeted & draped. 5 blocks from beach and schools. S900 per mo. + utahties. Owner will maintam exterior yard ca.re. CaU 891·7951 Mon. thru Fri. 8:30to 5:30. 3242 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lux condo on waterfront. 3br. 3ba, new cpl . $850. 846-6681 ; 846·5792. home on largt.• lot Xln ------- cond N1•w <'J rpr t & SanCIMRnte 3276 pa1nl l.c a -.c S700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -199·2980 Just steps to the ---~and. $425 for this Newport Beach 3269 bcuut1fol3Br. with n ew ••••••••••••••••••••••• appll::antes.<4922 l fee LIDO ISLE Yrly. Pn 'l \'ick1 Agt 631-4556 Bchs end of streets 3 lir. San J den. 2 ba. Near Cl!> .,..~~ 3271 club. So patio. Ownc ~·'"-"" 760-1328 Agts. OK. ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO FEE! Apt. & Condo rentals. V 1 Ila Renla Is 675-4912 BkJ'. D1sunct1ve 38drm ! Kids& Pets welcome• SS25! Chefs kitchen with all major apple Hurry• (8377) agl fee Panoramic Ocean View Call today 631-4557 ~1agruf1cent 4 br. ram. C:.-.&..-... __ 3280 nn. beam ce1I, huge wel _ .. """" bar. garden. Sottc1ble for ••••••••••••••••••••:••• ram. hving & formal en· 3 Br. 2 ba, cpts &.drps inc. tertainment. Ha r bor S575/m o. c hild OK. View Area $1750 per m o. 714/645·2462. 213!281·3398 752·01"2 So.th l.ocJilna 3286 <4~) 996·0561 collect •••••••••• ••••••••••••• l Blk to b ch. 3Br . 2Ba LOWER -r::::E ARCH home, pool. .tennis Fantastic view ho m e. courts. pvt parking. S750 avail yr a round. SL300 m o . 645·36 15 eves. mo. 3Br. 2Ba. den. 2 car 673-6210dys. f'arage. Total c harm. NEWPORT S HORES· 58 1 ·9.500M~>r 499·11 71 3Br. 2Ba. c harming, Shemor tke. pool. tennis . $695 mo. Tusflft 3290 673-6210 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br. + den. 2~ba. liv rm, Big Canvon Condo-Adlts. formal din rm. breakfast ~ 2Bdrm. Charmer! $350 f"enced yard for Kids & dble garage too! rm. a ll amenities. 2Br. d e n . 3 Ba, pool, 2 1 3 . 3 2 3 . 9 5 O O e x 1 jacuzzi. te nnis. no pet.s. " 2 3 l s / d a y s _~_5_mo __ 833 __ .3J4_9 __ _ Treesy area (5317) fee RENTIMES 631-4555 TI4-340-7380teves 4Br. 3Ba. c anal frnt, Wes ..... ster 3291 Waterfroot large 2 bdrm. jacuzzi. deck. comm pool ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba. Townhome. 30' slip. & tennis 237 Canal. SHOO •Rent to Own. 3 bdrm. 2 All amenities. Sl.200 mo. mo. 675-7450 ba. dbl garage. S600 mo. 2 0 8 1 d iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii or lease option. S300 SD. 13 /692· 1 ars. ONW ... _. 14361 PurdySt.847·1984. 714/846-0503 eves. ""' -Beautiful bayfront home ..._... ,..,,.. ..... _. Nu Las FUentes Condo. 2 with s bdrms. frml din U.f ..... d llOO Br + Den. 2'h Ba. Sec. rm. lge patio. pier & sllp.11 ~ 1 11ted. poolside. rrplc. $3.000/mo. Lease. • •••••••••••••••••••••• dbl gar. Intercom. Wal1rfr0ftf Hwt 840-1441. Ille. 631-1400 llOADMOOR COMDO BAY&OCEANVlEW For Lse $750 mo. 2Br. 3br. 2ba. frpk. Irvine 2Ba. 2 car gar. 536-4021 Terrace. $1200 /m o . aft5PM or 960-3640 675-1541. 760-1977. t""'9 3244 VIEW Blurr condo on ••••••••••••••••••••••• Back Bay. 2 master bra. POSH EXEC. GOLF ram rm. 2\'JI ba. frplc. 7 oceanfronts Crom S900 to $1600. Man)' other beach locaUons. ~l. e~- 1les l g . lcr .. :x. ry -.cf. 0 11 . ll'l1 :'tL ll', fl. n. an ~f· d 1 ·of Q 011 ·d i '( n 0· II· ,,r or .r n "l '· '/. .. e n .. \I I. BEACH. 2\.t bllcs. chmn1 2br. t~ba. prtv patio. g or, aduhs. 1ar. /mo. Own 7~2:27. RENTlM ES 631..4$55 lmSUll Available! Del wee 28drm with dble carate & brick patio. COURSE OONDO. newly decorated. 2 car 2 Br 2ba+den. all ap. aar. 2200 sq. n. SHOO mo. pli&O(et lncl. l yr lease 640-9991 . ~/mo. lsl/last+S400 _G_AR_A_O_E_S_A_L_E_a_d_1-ln sec dep. Call Barban We're open every day'·. BURR WHITE REA.l TOR : l ... C. 67 !>-4630 v•cua prestigious hoUse 3br. 2ba. $1050/mo. KldaOK (8308) Ag\. ree Call Carrol 631·4557 Gius al C/21 Sandpiper. the Dally Pilot brlna hap-640-4.950 py results. To plaei! your=;...._-_.;.,_ ___ _ draw1n1 card. phone Classified Ads, your one- j... __ M0-_'7_M:_l_1 ___ 1 Want Ad Reaulf.S 642·S678 Sell Idle Items ;. M2·5678todayl *'Pshopplft1 ~ter. .,_ t .. ah """"-Af c ...... """"-.,_ IMRh"""""" Retltth to Sh.-. 000 OHice Rental 4400 8~r.tn ...... ... . . ............ .. .. . ...... ......... ... ... ...... ............ .. ....... ... ... ..... .. .. . .. . .. . . . .. .. . ..... .. .. . °'' w .... y 5005 CelNMete 1814 ... .,.,.. .... l869 S.C.. ... 3176 R • ...................... . •••••••• .. •••••• ........... •••••••••••• .... :••••••••••••••••••• "*P t em non i smkr C1hl'e space uvu11 !-\ill Salc::J·Dilltnbuion1h•P\ fM KJrk Back In this •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ~ 33. 11hr1• 2 bd 2 ba apt )ervicto execullvc ~u1tt•i1 N l . ti I rroa m O.tom2Ddrnl Unit WI Ot4Lt0015',I Vlewthe W1Vet! $420 ~ V S21U . !162 ·8814 . uvual for h.•a:s~· in Cl·ntrr ~ ~~~f714>7~~~. all lhtt eatrll~. Kids La Lv rm. fpk!. redecor Unbelievable 38drm 963 0021 Pointe Located near oc v.l'lcomcd 1~ 1 Al(t Cff 3 Bedroom. 2 Uath With sundeck & gar' Au"J)ort l''or lt!usin~ 111 MJg L A Co !)2 )'ear. Ntl t'aJI !Cobert t)Jl &<in no pell KJda OK (8358) Agt fe L.;al(Wlil 11.oW:it' lo share fonnataon rail i l><..~Oec Dist over DI i I Si· II $71~yrly Calltoday631 ·4~ f emale prd Large Huff 955 t'J!>h Prin only .,_,..., J.12' ~Ul7 t7l41753·~ A.. ...... ......_............ bdrm & b11 S22Stmo + ·Z288 p O BOX 203, Co5l.t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----.,. ...---dcp. + half ut1I Call ~ 2bdrm. 2bu. Buy orU.fwailaMd )900 Parn 546 2044 work . IYMMts Refttal 4450 M~a.92G_27 ____ _ eocnronabl)' pnC'ed' SWlnY I Bdr rn J uat S200 'A'ont laal lT721S> foe vi1.1w. rncbd tt•r•lll'. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4!1743"9hotrW? ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~toLo• 5025 l4JI uuto opener S7$0 ycnr ~-a..a ~ --F'or stor·I.' & orracl• ~1>acc ut •••••••• ••••• •••••••• •• I} TSL Miml 642-1603 MWSU .•~I Female room mate wunt reasonable rawi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lr~. T\at\le R«-Tn ._,._I, 38r, ;t1.,a.. P\l pitllo Fl'pl • atl&C'Md 2 car aar, lNUllS C'O\lnll pool, + miach more STU thl ldrt-n oll P P lit~ llG ______ ... RfoNl"IMES 6314~ ................ 1140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '' block to beach. ~real New 162 bdrm luxury cd to share 2br house Ill SOO to 2700 SQ Ft. 'NEED IO<'alion. U>vely 2bdrm. adult 11pb In 14 plani; Ualboa Is l Non ~mokt!r MES1\ VERDE bit from S41S. 2 bdrm S300 . u t 1 I an <' I PLAZA l.oH•h •II 11dult. no pc.•lll, 1,2&3 Ur 11plll 1t200 t:d ln.Ct>t h b 84ti 00 HI ~Imo. 968-8263 townhoUllC8 from $$3.' I Wt1!>her /dryer 673·5-177 152.S !\1e!>a Verdel'.:.<.:~ 'MONEY New Duplex. 112 blk from pool~. h:nnli1. 04atcrfalhi. I 545-41 23 ~! Cua for cook In" i. lmmte wtd F'. mat1 rt·sp bt-ach. Avail 9 15. Up 2 .. .,. 1 3b '" "' -----...... ._.. UIO ....................... ~·h.ax.t• poolbide xtru ~a~ Zbr. 2bu 81ln&. d:shwhr 1' 'I mah•i. bN1ch J\t.lll11. PINF. OLtll"I' A Sp.or I Or w ldt Complei' 1'ullo hpk. ••11• I .:11 r 1'>111\1' 1111\h,..hr , Jll I lnll paid. Prom Sun tnp ex r ~,~.,a. i;ar .. ~1nu.:. u .. LL lr. I Ba. $675 Down 2 Or. ""-"o ""-.1 N"'-h wash/dry 6'15·3718 "'"' ""' '"""' 1 r~ B a $ 6 2 s . VK,. nwy vrtVl' .,,. CoM;1 Mt!!>a·i. new w1•ll 1l!l3l3J.S,803S Eves. on Rcu<'h Lo Md•'at.lifrn Fem rmmtc w1samt! Nr ll)('atoo spac :111111 amall lhenWeatonMcVaddcn l>cut h . hou!lc 11 8 hasseveral"lpa<'Cl>t1v1.1tl Al ....... ,..., .... ....................... ............ 110• ....................... SHOtrT TllM HtfT AL w~. ~. mon1h 1700 Avall t 14 fully eqwp rl nopeta 673 2:215 Fum'd. 311 N lia' 1-'ront an the w•lt!r 3 br :! ba lge II\' rm. 1.i 1.111llo Winter Sl.000 mo or ~ rh Sl.200 mo 6i33l l~ 11r 644 1535 -----WI NTER Rt::N1 \I. Spacious Granct C.rn.tl i bdrm. l ba S600 673 ts4:.7 ....... , .... sula 1707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 & 3Br. •, blk lo cwn, winler & yrly 0'4 n1•r i>7S.S710. 675· lS.16 2br. 2ba. yrly S'l50 mo ·Avail 1mmed1att>l v s.&8-9.141. 646. 2848 • WINTER RENT A.L 2br . heated pool. 103 t: Balboa $450/mo avail Sept. 1. 675-11171 Beautafully furn'cl IA:!>!> VIAA•AOUNO f'UN. Social .t.e1tv1t1e• 01 reel"'• Free Suno11~ Bruncn •BBQ s • p,,, ties• Plus mucn more GAUT R£CA£ATIOH Tennis• Free Le,sons IPIO & pro ~l'IOPJ . 2 Heanti Club$• 5.!un11 • HyOfoma~ge. Swim- ming • Ormng Rd~ BEAUTIF\JL APART· MENTS S.nglu~ I & '2 Bedroumb • f ur n1~l'll'O & Unlurn1~h!'d • Aoull LMnQ • lllo PeH. • Mudol~ 011uri 0.:11ly 9 to b Oakwood Garden Apartments Newport Beach/No. bSO lrv1r.,,. 1111 lbll'\1 1714) 645-1104 Newport Beach/So. 1700 16th SI 100•1!1 di lbll>I (714) 642-5113 lndn rm ~IO ~P .. 11" i-: ~di! J llr :.! UJ liulll 11L .. 111 l 'n µle' S.'1/10 11111 '\t1 1~1, IH5 UHJt l-:\1'' 2. lirirm ~ bu p.4!111 i;,1ru1~~. $480 mo ... ~ o:.G:! ;: hr l' 1 Ba townhouw. Oil !JU,, Jlt pJllt.1. & ~.If $415 &15 US37 :.! Br I Ba µutw .apt S300 mo 7:11 \V IKlh !'.t ~" Ii IO !1!11111 ""k I or F;l\1· ,\gt West:f ield FAMILY APTS. Hr.incl rww hNrnllful lrg ;.1pt. for fum1hes with tor 2 rl11lc:Jn•n Nl'ur purk I lt•art p.1111. No 1wb . W1 .l l~ SH \l li:ll ~ S4H :!40H ute81iBllU APARTMEMTS :!llr :!1\.1 $.1:.CI $455 :~It\\\ 1'!>l Y. ilMm. tl31 S58J \llults :" o pei... than blk. to brh Yrh 2 O<.'t-:A:"!o'HO:'\T br. 2 ba S700 Ulll<. pd :1 BEAl.rl'IFULLY Fl,;H:'\ tbr. d111>ll'x. Ill'\\ l'l>l br. 2 ba. S900 t.:11li. p<I 3 _Bl!.,_.,. 1 r e.o.Li c ._.. drapco:-. rl'fri~ & !>ton'. =--~ofHnT3.""ut:WTr'11"'i\ b '/\va;llc-r:·-p.llii'.t·on · iT'"Tnn 1'T '-'"' &!l~-:.and S750 mo Y. inte ~1.11ure at1ult. tor> rd' I 6~3 '""'! uni~ t'illl ;!·lhr~ M:! 1:$011 OCEA."1: FRONT l.ar1;1· l'\'l\la ' · ,..,., =3.:1'! <leluxe J bdrm Sli75, I llMl from :.ant.I rr ... :.hh ck · · -- bd.rm. S-i50 \\'inter. Nn corated. :!l:ir, si50 ·mo. 2 Bdrm :'IO(•w cllapl''> ~ pets.673.&;40. lUr.SlSOmo /\\'aalcarl\' paint. relrage. I eh1ld CoroRCI del Mar 3722 Sept for winter rental til OK No pt:t~ S.~ SaerrJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUOl' m 0432or675 8127 ?\1gml Co. 641 ·1324 Duplex on lhe beat·h. 1 Uri :J bdrm duplex 291h 2 Ult p00I. gar. I ma to comp!. furn . 5700 /mo.1 ll<Jlbo · · · OCl':Jn S.150 Adib No 640-9900. Ai.k for Faye . a. Y. inter rental. peL..; 64ti 0354 or &l4·2578 Agt. · S615 .mo 213/681·8347 o -------7N lb7S·Sli311 Newly decorated 3 Rr 2 Ua Fanta s tic \'Jew of Townhouse. Spac·aous, Newport &y f'urnash~I flreplate. pool Qu1t•t barhelor'!> pad house area. Atlult:. no pet:.. Kitt·hcn. l Ba. Sl2UO/mo. $195. 675 5!14!1, ti45·J:Ml l'~anta stic view of Newport Bay. t''urn1shed bachelor's pad·ho usl'. Kitchen. 2Ba. $000/mo. 675-3030. _....._:_JoJ_o _____ 1 3 bd. 2 ba. upl)(:r. ne:ir Ocean view Penlhouse. t17o14S1!~~11!d V11l11gc S2l6/mo no pets 9112 4998. with 1<ood d1:.pl:.i) Faxed 2br. 2ba. frplc. pool, club 9 ""''' ""· 7:.1 J0.'1.l r:.ite No '( ofl>alc!> $3U5 mo. 1 Ua 1.'0ndo. u1>1.• u( sau1111. $40(), mo house. i.ecuraty Sub Oceanfront for Winlt•r r,.11 :!fl2'l 642 85W parking. $695 mo. RentaJs. FUrnillhe!Wt un FtM nCl.'d\!t.I lo '>hr Jbr --- K46 3675 !6.5 1120. furn. Broktor 675 '1!112 Condo. totally furn s.!75 HETAJL: UF~·1~·1-; ... pal't', .-,, utal 5-18 72fii a\Ull ;00 s Jo 17th & I nine. CM 75!1 15f>li LJ\lt\.t-; Na nu o & iBH $395 ~. nt'W ('j)l & 2 BEORgOMS ~BALD ABLVO Yl•utly lse. Starting 9·1S. S500 mo inrls utils Gui.. 213 966 1711 A., I bachelor. $265. Lri:t I or 2br. ldry, Rar palln 1, hlork fr om b•·J c h 54$-$475 2br. lum or un furn. S7S<))rly 1;73 !1327 Fem rrnrnatt• WJOl<'d to ----,hr 2 Bit 2 li;1 .ipt Jt C OSTA MESA PRIME II\ flt'lH'h & t-;c.J Prormnwry Pt $.%0 rno CHTR m:i :lZ>3 ·no E 11th :-.t RJlµh ... r ( ntr 1201) ,q II 79 OK . nu ~b ti 17 4803 . Oceanv1ew Bach 2 ROCMM 4000 :1 Hd 3 Ba condo S2JO ~ ', :tl:I 27:; llJ1:J Lr1 lvo..-----rooms S400 + Sec de ••••••••••••••••••••••• utal 75!J ~1591! e\cs l'rdcr --- female 'li()'>ITIOke ''''"" l'Ul~T gar l i-;nrl pc>!>ll nf $400 2306 W Room Wllh K1ll'hen pnv 8oba pool Ocean fro n L. N . B Nl•ar bus & hhopp•nR H46 8201 <.:all 613·4154 center AdulW. only Eve:. 1-'<'male wanll"d lo :.harl· 2 HU~ s.9·JOor-wknds 962 7520 br. 2 ha delox(· 1on<lo "'tMG---Npt Shrs. acrosi. from ---------'11";;1 lluntmi."lon .1n·iJ :~t:!IO Vic1l\'l LJnlern 1\1 U.•I Praclo 1100 atl\4Y c~rcial Retttalls 447S ··········~············ Sl'AHKLI ~ICES beach. I Br+den. ~ar On Newport Beach lk•:arh Vrcw SJ2~ t 1111 I CASC: AMS s.\251yrly. Coupll·s µref. Hotel room . 'mt.111 r.t2fJ006 WA7ER 640-5078 kitchen. 2306 w O<-e,111 NEWPORT PLAZA!! TOWENN front S280& up 280Sl•t· & '.! Fl•m .,. 3 Bdrm :! Ha 1•nmi· rt>t ail !>pan• 1:100 '~;w PA 2 BR. pool. gar. 1 ma lo del)OSlt 67:1 ·115-l h •• u ... (' I n , . \I rt SI fj() mo I 01111 "' I.AK ES I DE 1 ocean. $450. Adlts. No DESl't-.l<i\Tfo:l.Y nt·l't.I Brai.tol. ~ B !'at rt l'k AP'\'S VT pet_.,..&t6·0354or6442578 Rm wdull huu't' 3rd lklr1.: m11row\ Tt•nun· ,\J.!l i;:1112t~i •N.k :\1:.ina11(•rt,, pravilc1::es Nl·.,. purl 'W Dl1!arai.:e $175 \111 1 Discount VERSAILLES Beach. •a utll $101J cll·P ca11 lndustrialRental 4500 • Ele(:ant f1n•pla IACH/I IR &t2 6811 Ocbb1e or Ilene ll31 i5'1f, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •!'mate lakesatle p:," neat upgraded full ---llEl.P' I 0011 !-<I rt . 111111•1· ,.,, &hakonlt''-~wily penthouse.over· "°°m for Henl $150 ind -----Yoan•h•ill~l' Xlnl 1•11«• • llcated pool & ~ing parklike ground utal In Irvine. K1lt'hen. Gar'OQes t1•m 13 IU l.o).!Jll f \I ""h1rlpoohpa fountain $500/mo. employed Earl or U:.ive forlleottt 4 350 S3:G f>lh i'.;1 2 •4 miles from btoach l . 644 7211 551 8463 •••• •••• ••• ••••• •• • • • • • 842-1160 S1n).!ll· garagl'. lor n·nt 7511:! t-:lh!> i\ve If 0 sula 2 Hr. I Ba. I Cloc.e lo OCC St60 ;'\:on :.toral(e o nl} S35 mv tJblks W oflk·a:h Hl l \e. l hlock rrom ~rooker. n1 t>.11217i ---l,yearlv $500 mo ~52S10:.irt71'~1 Offlu Reotttat 4400 2 BH. J.)001. i.:ar. I ma lo l.h St 0 Q.3-0W7 ----0t•ean $450 Adil\ No ~ 4!e rm '~ m1 from 0 C' C •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• JX'L" EH6 OJ.5.1 ort>4-1~57K ~e:A.'aous 3 Bdrm. Sl8S mo Fem prt•f ~ FireJch Buall·ins _!6_7_3955 ____ _ ~m;.i!Lbr ~bl¥:i.t.o ~a rj.!..lr . .'sm.;11 pcl allo,·ed 8.13-~u. 642·1334. Sl2.'i !l62 8052 """"' m-~'7f"urt-mrosc prl' KllChl'n . '4a,.h clq. phone. etc &t2 3070 \'ersa1lle•·-. ----1 & 2 plex 2 u.nt} com Ut-:DllOOM CONDO'~ &75-4912 Bb Vat!w. l.Re 4 BR hoo:.l· 1n "'In Counlr.\ dJb 11, ing 11 \'ly. mall• or fomak. hill 118 . pool. :.pa. S400· 2 Br 1 bath ---:.phl 4 way!> Sl50 mo 1\lt 6600 \\>. Y. arner Ave Friday lO·~ch See 5 :..>. 848 8520 8''114772 avl.9-1 128 460 $415 Summtr Reotttals 4200 <;LOSE TO IEJ.CH 2 Bdrm. with garage. stOVl' & refrige. SJ75 mo. SJf>-2456, 536·7979 lA Y FRONT. --••••••••••••••••••••••• w. 5.525 mo. Cabay On the beach an New1>0rt ltA>75·8990 uck Wkly or Monthly 2 Br or ~ 3 Br. K.irk Lamb. 6:11 ()!)()() 2H1 frplc, downstair CLOSE TO BEACH ·IL<. St .. S49S mo. 9 Large B11~ Bear C.ibin 1 lldrm with garage. Ser.10. s.12.3015551.. Ideal locataon for fbhing. :.tovc & refr ge. $325 mo. -~-----::..1 hiking or JUSl i.:c tt1nA SJ&2'1S6. 536·7!179 BAY~ONT apt. 2 br, ;away Wknd or wkly ----------1 ly lvse. S550 mo. ~ates avail 17 14 ) IRAMD MEW k1dc;, "pels. 673-8222 ~16. WESTCLIFF BLOG. NEWPORT BEACH 1.uo ,..., --••1<..i•" J. • ._ .n ... ii •• , .. AH ./ .... Condoho•""9 /./c~ie,.......,..., ........ ./fie••"" ./Futl nt:•o.t~~· ./ x .. o. "'~· ./ . ...,... _ ..... Call Mr. Howard 645·6101 4SO "fl rt ror S42.'i per mo 4001 Birch St N 13 ,\gent fy11·5032 KOLL CENTER ... EWPORT XLNT BUSINESS PARK LOCATION MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK 711W.I7th. St. Costa Mesa 642-4463 • OM 3700 sq. ft . ..,.._ it. Two 1870 sq. ft. u~ it. One 830 'q. ft. of- fice space. lmmediote occ~anc:y. * 35 sq. ft. • Carpets. drapes & wet bar. • l ea sinq office ope n: M ·f. 7:3~4. • CREDIT HO PROILEM 2nd & l rd TD lo.t 97a.6Sl I /15S-I 145 Arr3nl(ed by COCKt Home Loans A Mortgage Broker HOMEOWNERS OM Doy Appraisal L'st• your t'qWlY fur ball:.. home · add1t1ons . va<'J uon!>, cte An) amount. [Jny n•a:.on Crnclat or Job not nt'<'l':>,ary <·om pan• nur 1·11,b 21 hr:.. & "'l't?kl·nd-. 644-1923, 846-556 7 MONEY AV Jt.ILAILE 2ndTD's REDUCED RA.TES Santiaqolonk 7 14-832-5200 A.-,k for Landu Flynn or Karen Lann * HOME OWNERS * $10,000 ru SI00,000 For Any Reason lAJdn' !-.t-c•urW II\ \ ('omhanat1un •if lt°1•,1l ' Joel l'rr,onJ I l'rop .. 1 t ' CaAI Chuck or Janie~ 957-5823 A\11-:RICAN WAV MOKTGAGECO LOW RATES FAST SERVICE UHUMITED FUl'IDS For llomc equity loan-. l!>l, 2nc1 & 3rd Tl>'s. ( 71~ l \164·04.i~H.:a rlJ 1,\gt. l 5030 ······•·••••········•·• 3724 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CASA DE ORO ALL UTILITIES PAID 2Br. upstairs. frplc. deck, OC C. a" a 1 I 8 I 3 0. 2104Lc;t St S5SO m o. Avail S450/mo. family un1l. 1 Mo rent free 2 Master ol Suites. each with full 3 Br. • ba. yearly. W. Rent s 4250 bath & s undeck. Large Nwp.l lenin. S600 mo r .. u ... •••••••••••• 2 Br . 2 ba. ocean vae Soper dean 2 BR. gar h\'ing, danang area wath Da~ f\2 .. 1079: eve p:o·B Jamar. New 1mmed. 551 2866 _64_1 ·_865_._7 _____ _ Elegant exccutlvl' su1t1•l> in pre:-.11ge lor lnclcl!> !oCcretanal i.l·rv1ce~. re cept1on1st. telephone answC'nng & more. From S2 7 5 p <'t mo TH F. HEADQ UA RT E HS C0~1PANIES: A pro· lessaonal cn\'1ronment. Pn' al<' Party ()fir ring S6SO lnd10fc: nt·Jr lll'Yo 2ndT [) with 20•,;, unnu.1 · 2265'. 181111 Ht•dondn Cir . } 1t•ltJ Slll.200 d1M.-ounted Compare before you rent. Custom desiJtn Ceatures . Pool. BBQ. cov'rd garage. new furniture', s urrounded Wlth plush landscaping Adult living al its best N .. pet.s. l Bd.rm furnished $400 2 bdrm rum ashed S480 36.SW. Walson.642 1971 Newly decor 1 Br Oplx Sep b,\· ~arages QLUN emplyd adull over 35 R efs. No pets. S300. 548-l<rll ------ Wanter rental. 5695 mo oldercplpref'd.S375.JIU farepla Cl'-Enclosed 642·7881. 01 fullfac Qay.Wcek \lonte\'asta83129!17 i:arJge From $467. no11th. 546-6493. Call A v a I 1 1 m m e d AdulLs. nn pets 752 2550 1 Bclrm. Yly lease. rnaal - c714 J978 _9060 _____ -11 Br ~sts1d-.. small but ------Oct t st.150/mo 2 blks lD.~..------ 1 f Duplex, S320 lo bch. Ga stove. r"fnu. ••••••Shere 4300 srEP''-'TOBL:.\Cll 1.2. ('()1.Y'-'/OtSO ne:Jl'-'OO<I "' " ,, ~-2br. lba.encl1<?ar. rpls/ dr,, w:.isher1 Monn•••••••••••••• Bdrm. Want er No 1)Ct~ ~ fl;.l2·!1450 alt SP :\1 "' d d L & 67 3-664 0 ~ yrd. peL'I, kids. 963·8286 df)er. 213177.464() Jark r ut 11'401 cpos1 s ---------...1Spar1ou~ t·am al' 2 Ward. Prore~ expense:.' Br·SJ.10. Pot)I & piay JbcJrm condo with tennis -----·----llf71. 'ally s an,·c ~nh J!roond. 646. 1486. • ou rt I mm a cu I ate.· VILLA I JI •OA HOU TES 11....L.-j.,h-..1 Clost'tobcach 96(H>411 ~ ~ .. cu New Luxury ~r Condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• S42.'i-S47S 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apt~ Full Securil und"r 7141851·06lll MC'da cal I Dental /11~1 0. 776 !-q . ft. in N Co:.ta )lesa Ground floor. full} t'<1wpped PnvaLe patio. etc 543 1 mo Tom 957 1000 ------- llil7 \\Cl-I t'h II ;>.; H \I. :mt financial 1n:.t 700th I 1st floor ,\J?enl !l-11 50:1:! =S. Hunt ~c~ IS42·2.K:~ pm·e 645 70C1.I StarQCJe 4550 -- ....................... ~~s. Tnast 5035 Stor.•i.t<' G.irJ~C' f11r n•nl ••••••••••••••••••••••• on Balbo.1 Pl'n an l>ul.i next to I-un Zont 1111 t ' 201'2 lli:l·2943. IH3 J!IJO SlorJgl' Sp:.iic. Sti-0 m•1 tsl & 1.i ... t 2:10" w Orl.'Jnlronl. N.IS ,;;3 11~1 14Y2% llMTERESTl GftWn11 3802 Some wath l'nt•l,<I lmpnccdi<>please! ground parkan Cag~ey Why wast~- •••••••••••••••••• .. •• garage. fireplae~ A II Sunny 2Bdrm. $325 with Lane. S9001mOl\.J0<17 money loo flt' and f\Jmashed off1re. Bank of Rentals Wanted 4600 S350.l.ovelyammaclllate bwltan~.lncl~·rm.Clo'l' plush crpt~&morc. roommat e~ fo r a Cosla :\le~a Pla1.a . Sli5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm. Enclosed garage. to s hopping. TSL Mgmt <rl>od area cS4fi6) fee Fantastir view .tennis. locate. screcr.<' l u !-pc r mo No I ca:-.<· Wanted an Costa Me.a or Quiet cul·de·uac. Adults. 642 1603 RENT! MES 631·4555 health club. P<><I spa. lerV1cw for you~d 10 556 3000 Irvine are.i. 2 or 3 Bl<. SUSCA.SITAS FUrn 1 br apt SJSO. lluRC 2 br. furn. $475. Encl gar. ,\dults. no pets. 21 10 Newport Bl. 548·4968 no pets. Anaheim . l-.-- 1 - 2 - 8 -A-d- 1 --Irvine 3844 lbr. liv rm. kit~ bal. Conf11~ionOuto~~thc Att~ionDoctors! hou:.e preferred . 3 5'16-5704 pper rg r. · u ts. no ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~vaal now. Super .ss95. GoodRoommatcs-'"A IC"l1'1' Adult.s "<Int rcft•n•ncel> pets. New crps & drp:, l Bdrm. Condo i·n The i54·0370 dys 49,101s l:naque free standing Ii 7 3 . 5 i o l t-: v l' l>. & llalM>ol.ac..d 3806 :lll W. Wilson. S34 5 Lakes. Northwoods. 6 _e_''_'es_:_. ____ · __ ' well appoantcd mcd1c:.il weekend!> SECOND TRUST DEED LOANS cOi\CI · S20. 000 ·SSO .ooo • betwn 8:30&5PM. MMllMJ• .. ach 3740 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H.l'sFtMEST Spanish F.state l..lvmg ! Beautiful park·like sur roundings. Terraced pool. Sunken gas bbq, :i parkling founta in~ Spaciou s rooms Separate dining area Walk·in closets. home like k1tchen & cabaneu. Walk to Huntington CenLer. 1 Bedroom·unfurn. $400 1 Bedroom !um from $430 2 Bedroom furn s:;oo Twnhse·unfurn. from ssoo Adults. no pets. Ulililies F'rt.~! LA QUINTA HERMO~A 16211 Parkside Ln. I hlk W. ol Beach. :I blks S. of Edinger. 847·5441 F\arnlshed 2Br. lBu. :.idlts only, oo pets. 2 blks from ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631 21TI .:irv-l l U.O:S c-omn... bldg .. located in heart of t'abulous Bayfrnt Little----------mo. new. s475. Call OCEAN FRONT """""-' r y 11.B 6 treatment rms. x. I I Bo Large l Bdrm · Pool David 979-3953 or Peg at L b s at shp. 2Br. 3 stry. · s · S.'i2 2000 rg l r. $500/mo a r m t Ray rm. bu~inc~~ orfire. fire place. y rly lsc patio. mature adults. no 675·0516.642·1121. 00 ma esearch at< lge recepllon rm + pvt 675-3067 pets. down ... taars SJIO. uri· SPRINGS . __ 752-5111 oCfacc art>a. Avail Sept Mairs balcony SJlO. 11187 lbr. Iba. CONDO. pool. \ersailles 1 Br. Good I. MATIJRE F 1 l. Call today for appl lo Bay Front rompletcly re· Monrovia. 631·7437 Se<:. SS751mo. · ema c furn'd.see. d('('Orated. 3 bdrm. 2 ha ---------'!.pa, tennis, S425 /mo. 213/999-5735 2 br. 2''l ba twnhsc Npt fireplace Creal \'tew o I Br. Fenced yard. 529:> 840-6498 eves. __ ---Hgts S2SO/mo 642 1470 & bay from lar~e patio. Inc ulll. Child/dog OK LOIJIMCI .. ach 3848 1 Bdrm. 1 Ba. Steps t<fi46.75:;5 Beach al )OUr lront door. Bu'T mu~l buy all of m~ ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• beach. $350. Propert>--1-------Avaal Sept. IS. Y<'arly household furn1:-.h1ng!> R House.642-3850.642-1010 ma e wanted. mad 20s. 1 B . xlnt ocean view. -are 3 bdrm 2 ba Cd M lease $1100 mo. 673·34 Sl500. 960· 1065. 642-0661 h or 644 • 4323 ------pore ·, new cpt . pot. 3 Bdrm l Ba. Steps to V-9573. Vickie or Vac· SHARP 2 Bdrm 2 bath lndry. ' blk bearh. 5.500 beach. $650. Property .J.a I mo. Dys 549·1186; evs u-.. --.642·3850.'"2·1010 .,._ ______ _ lbr.beamedre1hn1<?s.gar. enr garage. prl\:Jk 4!19·3922 nvu...:: .,.. yrly. S495 including ulll. p.il10. no pell> S450 mo Separate upstairs Apt. l 'i'z N\ UU.bar.-IJvang ex 67~4822 Call 5411-5880. ask for l br. oceanfront view. bd pe,a . '>. Save ttmC', p L .rm. garage. yard 2 "'" WINTER RE.N'rAL . amor arry pegged & grooved blks from beach. Vcni mo~& confusmn. Let " hardwood floor s . ·~ us • Spacious Grand Canal 2 Br. Crpts. drps. blt·ms $.500/mo. 675.3067• nice. Call before SAM or a compatible bdrm. 1 ba. S600. 673·845i gar. 1\dlts. no pets. $400 Aft 7PM. 673-0238 roo •te for you. We '\tE" ial)oorenmwla 3807 ~··l~~oft~~~~~raa St Luxurious2Br Su1te Single Apt sized house. scF1 '1.~~r~~~RS FU~~~Eo~~:~ in ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------With central air & Near Newport Pier. 1 5-4434 Newport Ce'.rr;r. •··············•······· L ~ 1 Br . garage. 2 Bdrm. 1\pt. Laundry heated pool! Jacuzzi working man. No smok.1~~~~~~~~~ 640-0 wshr/dry r. 1"1 blk beh. area. SUO mo. Call too! Hurry tS8lGl fee ing. furn or unfurn.l·F t.. -----..:::_ __ _ $475 mo. +ulll. b/5·2897. 842-6304 llENTIM ES 631·4555 675·9493. e mk prwrrcd. non · •LJDOPEN11SULA linmmmu~ 673·5203 ------1 LCIC)lllM MICJU91 3852 srm er\ r HB home Ground floo office ----------1 Lrg 2 Br. u nfurn . nr u••••••••••••••••••••• Versailles Penthouse 2 Avail Sep 847·7258 art space: 660 ft. tO?SOO sq, 'l'wnhse 3 BR 2 Ba. palao. shoptl. pool, All ulils pcl. Beautiful 2 bdrm. 2 bath Br. 2 Ba. Ocean view. SPM. rt-. Pnvate parki~. CalliS::::=:::;::~ fplc. jtar . rple or 2 sngls. 1884 Monrovia. 548·0336. ocean view condo. S650 Sec. $125 mo. 644·0452Roo ---~-. ----L 1 do Man a g hen t 9>7Syrly. 646·1220 -rm. Turner Associates. Eves. mmate \llted. 2br 979-3733 • 2 8.r Condo n e ar duplex. qul~ean, de· ----·-----CorOIMI del Mar 3822 S.C. Plaza. Tennis. pool. _4_94_·_l_l77 _______ 1 l Br. Ganten Apt. Stove & pendable. 1,-a ut1I Medical Suite fer e~e ••••••••••••••••••••••• s pa SSOO No pets Lge 2 BR condo. newly re· refrige. Adults. no pets. + S50 dep. 548-8698 Own town Lagu1a f.'h. L'p to 15 yrs financing Wc<'kly eomm1tmcnl::. Fur any reason For your business or For your home. Fa.-.t courteous service. Lrg 28r. 1"2 Ba. w/frplc. 5-19.3232 641·1460 furbished. pool. adlts. no 5310. 548-1377. • . or642·3154. 656. sq ft. Ample ivt ntrk· ,'I:====~~=~ blt·ins & sundeck $625. ' · 1 ...... 11 bch. 536-2877 ---- 3742 760-0274.631·0143. S37S. 2 br. t ba. Aa.r. Lge pets. s.wo. 642-4:M>O. lfS6. 2br. 2ba. Westclifr. fir pl. M/Fneeded for£.ioN. mi.497·2351 11 n,.._ ,.,1.\l ~~,. ;.10,,.'/0Ur r.-.. c.. back yd. Kids & pets ok. 24 hours. pool. adults. no pets S475. 00 in Npt. C • rl V'I I IV V" C7H·?1r11v voi v •••••••• ••• •• • • • • • • • • • • South f H N ....,., y • o wy. r new. 631·2246; 548·2089 Ldle Fornt 1155 &W-6477 or 540·5100 ._1mo. S48·4966\.t · · .• lt...n~ '/O" '(!" ~ • IWW• ...... "°°' I Br furn. Ocean spacious 2 Br 2ba. encl ___ ..;....______ ~ V'JI Q) "' v Oii vt-..w. Across from ••••••••••••••••••••••• Voru ru·-3 Bdrm. 2 Ba. Resp. Rmmte 21·"" iL.n. 1-!ef-"' gar. Pvt laund. 1675/mo. 1 Br apt w /carport. Ex 1 ~J -'" ·pt;;>~~ ? b •a c b . De I u x e. Avail9/15. Owner /A"'. SJOO/mo . 724 James St.. ecut ve Elegance~ Duplex. Year ly. Deck. 2br. apt. 2bllts t rv> r 1 -. fZll>S US76. ..,. Exqul11te 28drm StSS S750 67 Pool COM ..... ,,. 6i --------'CottoMeto 3124 Apt D. 640-9900. Ask for Alr.Pool.BBQ&more mo. 5-J504 • *""'• A Aj .._....... 1741 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Faye.Agt. KJds/PetaOK <7684Hee SpectacuJM' 2bdrm. 2ba. M/ftoshr2Brapt. Use 'tl$W~f ""se rvice • ..... • .. ••1•:·=~;•••• 3 Br. Townhouse. newly 2br.2ba.carpets.drapcs. RENTIM ES 631-4555 dbl gar . dishwas her. 18-3S. l200mo. + ~ Wh en p I a C j n g y OU r _ __... LLA decor. ga:. pd. enclsd nr schools & shopptng, tte.,.ta..dt ltH viewpaUo.Nopets.$6.50. 983-29Gtall 5P M. ad ... a Da ily Pilot ad Prt• ... beach.Luirucy2 gar.Adlts.pool.642·5073 5'2.Stmo.642·9231. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 805 Am igos W•.'·Newport c t 38 3 ~;;.a:.::· ~~:~~l~ 2 81'. 1 bath Apt. Newly _$365_/_mo_. -2-B-r.-n-o-pe-ls-.1 p•• MEIPOIJ G.U·2029. Condo. p:f M rF. l number w ill appear in your SwtmmlDlpools,ten crt. decor. Oas pd. enclsd 2250·B, Canyon. corf MRn ElegantEn\ertainer sblrew/MD&sons.$37 ad w e t ake your PMJO. Lef.ture Uvlng at gar. pool. Adlts. 642-5073. Wilson>. 831·286S COUMTIY CLUI In prime locallon. WI Ill). + v.t util. 645·7577. m e SS a g e S 2 4 h OU r S a ha beet. Mita only. no UVIMG allutila pai.d.S360t 982·L3171thlswknd1. day ... you call in at your peu. d9-32ee. I Br. Newly decor. gas pd. E-Side quiet 2 Br. l Ba. Singles. Ut2 bedroom Must see <64W> fee Share nice Lag NI 1 ..... _ul--u rf l encl gar. Adlts . pool. w i t h qui et putlo, aptam,&to 9 wnhouaes. 1 RENTIMES 631·45M ..... _ . ..,..,,. muonnathlygulne· COnVenience during Office &.AU'll ·-.. u et•• on • 642f>73· enclosed garage. Adulla. F'ro1 ..... •H 900 '"""'"' .....,., h d t th Nfet, 1IOISI came a 00.-....... 0 7"" ""'"" ...,. . v-n· •-eb-.t. 1176 eludes utlla. Mast er OUrS an ge e r esponses = --"'" --"'" ln the BRANDN""'W "'""""'-. ,...-.... "' --~. --""' t d mou ,..... "" "..-·~ Qulet,'cool.2 8r.Gau1es. •••••••••••H••••u•••• Bdrm/Prlv. bath. All 0 your a ... this Service 'I PUot Claaalrled 28r~. $t30SPAClOUSadlt 2BR 1 8a pool. adult•. no pela.38r, 1olf couro apt. prlvllea&a . Non -is only $10 per w eek . For ldOD lbou& MIN Mur. 1Br28a ~so apt.open beams, serving 142$. '42·1340. 1901 H ocean view. walk to amoku prtrerrod . -""'-;.;.:_;:.:J;:.:..:.:.;...:;:::.:.. .... 'hffetudboulbtlt Speciout new Unit, pvt. bar.lotsofwood lhruout. 15 th. St, Ne wp o rt bMc.hatemm.Toabare. •5888Robert more Informat ion and to tar •• You ran aell patio, ctoee io 1hoppm1. S3a5mo.873-8803e\ls. Hetihta 11~1mo ~ place your ad call 642-5678. ,_. tllfftt and la&a of Adults. 1982 Maple. · ' • Rmmate wanted. N /F. edler tblalt tbrou1h 54l-2AOI. 2 br. 2 ba. beam ceil'I· New be•chrront 2br. 2ba, 2 Bdrm, 1 ba. view, lallnd, re1pon1lble ~rson In DllDJ Piiot Cl1Hllled Oar, nr. tennl1 II 1011. gar, a~. bltns 911 w. .-. walk to thopl. -.O. llnl& Bch. 912-8823 Trade Ada. eau Ml·5'71 w .. Ad Help? 642-S871 AdJtJI. 1440. 675-t tee eay. 991-3772 •mo a..tnect Ad• 142•5678 &e:,1 DAllY PILOT \ r • • I . .. '· \1 ll II ll' Ii If 1:. !> • • L II ti! Jl -0 .. \ 11 '· ft • 8 r .. • ' t , • • . . . \. ' i .. ,... ... ....................... 8 A 8 y s ITT IN 0 . my •"'1all carp doora. panel i-1111111111-111111111111,·w ..... ~~:::-· hoaw. Ool&• Mesa •~•. In.a. ••di••· ''" nt. - Mcbs. Ml.cll80 .. 11.\3. ~l.at7 _ Immediate 1enerill con -tncton b1d11 w11nt1ld for BABYSIT C.,.. ......_ NP He11hla tt'inod1tl ORANDPAft£NTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• l..oc•I ref r l'(I Curt Can't Oet A-way" Now 9'&rnpoo • tum clean 11 e r b f' r t 11 I I . Yw CUI! Hou.r. Ooy nr Ullor brllhtt'Mr'll, wht &n 12861&42·»)4 -.wk Mature Eicp. Male-CP'a IOmin bleach Cleon---------W-<*67 liv. ctin rm, h•lt $1& Avg f''UU llme, m> CC'llil• Mo11a homr, 111 )'rd ~ rm 17.50. couch SlO. chr T ....... 15. Cuar ~llm pet odor ••-•••• • •• • • • •• ••• ••• • Qit ~Ir. t& )'I'S t'x pr Ou .. orii lft)"Sdf lt1•f11 )31·0101 £.X.Pt:R 00,by Sitter My -----Home M .~r1 Ria vnt We Carf Carpet Cleaners K Ida be 1 ween t 1.-, up Sleam rleon &. uphol~ Prdblf'm rupp~ Ut Do~" liehav1or Sr•er1 al"ti1 rtt·ward & l'r illlr>t' Mf'thod· 'No <"hok•· Q\llar Pr!lf(r•m" Jn lilt' hon~ lral11l11f( 531 ml!IO -... .._ Wurlt aruar Truck mounl -.,. uiut ~!nt6 m.ctrical ......... S.,...ic• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C.:urpet & Uphol Dirty'' ART'SCARPP.T Sl.::H\' Complete carpet cur Kestretch. rt'p:ur, 1n i.tallauon Orange Coun ly 16>rs. ~rxindable uf fotdable ....................... Xffolt 850 Word P~!!>t> tnil Typlnf, repetctiVt: let lets. enve~-.. 85() over· tc.cl 714·963-9692 EL~IUCIAN Priced nghl free e:;llmate on largf' or small JObl. Lie 11337254 573.0:1fl!l ELECTRICIAN Ht>palr, or remodehni: Day or n1lr . tl.'11 0447 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---rt1&C) Cu ntr actan~ Remodel & Room l\ddt· c.-.t/COftCl'ete 673-8300 uons Exp'd , Xlnt Refs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call l>oug,S3l·-0563 CE~ENTWORK • hndnCJ Pree Es tirna tes •••• ••••• • • • • • •• • •••••• ScottJonas.548·9-177 K & B F l'nt'inJ: Wood CUSTOM INTERIOR Fences & repairs .. 'rt>t' CARPENTRY Cement work of all kinds Est. Kelly f'>40..~090. Kt·n By Jay 642·8809 Patios. sidewulks. bnck 675-7137 Home improvements int/ work. Free e~t. S.'i6,IY157 ~ exl.. Char Renovating Dale W Ph1lhps, patios, •00•••••••••••••••••••• Service. 645-3749 fo undations, & block White sofa. Good 1·ond Rermdeltrepair. quality .542·2162 SlOO or bes t offu. & craftsmanship. 17 yrs Contractor -_54(1-7620 aft ers !_>i::!.:_ __ - in area L ic 'd Mr ........................ GGdeniftCJ Palombo962-8314 _Room additions. re ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carpenter. drs. cabinets. model /plan Georgt• Expert CleaNlpS alum windows. paneling. Pilmer & Son. L1 c'd Trees topped/rl'movcd. etc. 646-7228. 548-8819 557·6932 New_lawns. 751 3476 Mott1a;c1, Trust l.nna..cwnts 5100 Lost&·Found 5300 ~ 5035 ............................................ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cleanups . lawn1, tree Cfe11nup11 . tri mm1t111 . Wunt your hoUl:lt' ne;at? ervlce. landacape. huullng. Frceest1mat"s Responsible. dependablu 11 rplnklurs . hauling. SS7·8271 person to do house work. 64512217 -------Call aft 6 557-3500' z yo una mon w / Oovl.\ ·r~ 1·nmmb1a " resporuilbllltles have ·'•l' Towln• 24 hr omerl(en· 4W01'ruck Yard & Tree t"Y storm 1Jt1rvlce. Clean· m.oml equip <.::in do IC> " hau!lna l<'ree e11t anytt\l na • Call 548·8'20 M8!m.'I --- l..tAJ'ICbcaplnA. lrt.~ ln m ming, cle!1rn up11. .Free L"'t Av1lt.'l< 646-11414 Haul mov1,.clean-uv Con· c:rctc removal. Dump t r uc:k , 4u11.:k :u :rv . 642-7638 Housecleaning Kellable. ~ood work.' ~teady JOb. Hererences 646-7228 Housecleanln.:. fteliuble weekly or bi·weekly service. Re asonable. Ref. Stacey 646-3162 Janitorial C ...... 1/H•IMR,- Luwn S ervi e , J,a ndscape t'ree t:st. 1142 l}'.l)7 Haulrng $20 a load. no <.'On· •• • •• ••' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • crete. Call David f1NEST IN JANITORIAL 545·8046 (;ARE. Comm/Ind. Res. t;ard.enma. landscaping. OUlJor yard cleanup:;, lrl.'e 1 r l m ming & re· rn.1vul 1-'ret-e::.Umale::.. rt:hahlt• & l11cxpens1vt• ;~ 1:l49 llaultGrading. d emoll l1 00 S k 1pl oa d e r . durnvtruck T rees /Yd wk 831 1257 HAULIMG & CLEANING y HO WOHK, dn up!t. 1'rtc tnmming & Plltnl· pruning. !!µr111kler in mg :.lal/repair. hauling. fair Ray 9644276 prices, Li e . Ch r is ~ilMJ (714~5838 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Expertise 645-7440 L.CllldscapillCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Maciel Service Co. IO·yrs exper in prunmg. clean· up & landscar>c 1-·ret-t:st . Call 545· 1865 RENOVAT I NG · R O T O TI L LING SPRINKLERS-LAWNS. C LEAN U P D ave 642-4853 Bud 646-8481 H-*'man R 0 B ( N . S H 0 US E · .::::!••••••••••••••••• CLEANING Sf:RVICE . Complete Maintena nce For a thoroughly clean Service & irrigation Home imprvemenl. 2Syrs hse 540-0857 Jn~tallat1on . General cxper Fencing. Depen· -------Prunin ~. t:all Tony d_a_l_il_e_. 6:_3_~·_4_264 _____ GENER/\L llouseclean· 754,11s5 C:irpe ntry . masonry. roofinJ:. ceramic tilt!. dry wall. Ray: 4994969 Ca rpl.'nl ry ma s onry roofin~·plumbing. l-1oor 1n1c S tucco & lllc Urywall & more .• I B &\6-!l9!lO . HaulincJ mg. r e f 's, reliable -- 962-0510 call aft 4 PM Masonry --...................... . Prof nr wrk. tile. wood. parquet. stnpp111~. wax· mg. buU1ng. :;tedm , Cpl uphol. 751-8951. 838·5543 • HELlA-BL_E_& El'.- FIC l ENT WOMEN Guarantee Sat1sfa1:t 1un ' Call 963· 7237 Brickwork. s mall jobs. Newport. Costa Mesa & ln1ne 675·3175 eve~. Bnek. stone. block work. til~ Or<>. concfete patios. wlks. d ri veways. Hefs. f'rl'e est J flhn 846· 1583 _______ , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving:' The Starvinit Stucco & Plaster P11lCh, College Students have no JOb too sm. <1uick & grown. Lie. T ta4-436. clean645·4203.64~·4199 Same good s~rv 641-8427 .._..19 '~JPaperillg ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C. Gid)ey Plumho r Repair service. installa tJon. backflow certificu- Uon &12·9315 PETERS PAINTING Ex pr'd. Reus Rates. Free Es t. Call Gene ~-0458 ----------Save on plumbing, drains Dave's Painting. serving area 9 yrs. most reas Insured. lic'd, 586·8425 ESSIAH Cstm painting, lo rates. Free est. 3 yr guar. 962-1478. 633·9837 aft 5. F\ne ext/Int painting by Richard S inor . St lie. IJ\S. Try me 836·5555. 24 hrs Painting & Papenng Professional work Rsnbl. ~teve. 547 ·4281 Wallpapering b y Ll' Papier. Custom quality work. Pre ·Christm as scheduling. 536·2350 cleared, faucets fixed. CaJI 7 dys 646-3430 P.O. lox Rentals ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach Pvt Mail Bo x R e n t a I Se r v . Prestigious loc. Avail Oct l, 1!180. Call or write for 1nro. PO Box 1167, Orange. Ca. 92668 t714 ) 633·6012 !'vt Post Box Scrv1l'1· TJIE MAIL HOOM. :t<t hr 2600 E . Cst. Hw y <..:dM tNB 640-0340 or 644-44/S I Resuim Senice .•......•.•..•.••..•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROUl.EM~ N t>ed te> talk ? Free counseling ABC HELPLIN E 645-2222. ---staiMdGlou • •••••••••••••••••••••• Custom windows, dl'loN, etchings. framed or an stalled, Leon 645·8383 StYcco ••••••••••••••••••••••• CUSTOM STUCCO RF.PAIR. RM ON f':RJCS30-0166 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ce ra mic t ile services. free est 494·5887 bfr 9AM or aft 6PM Chuck . Huntift9Jon hach llle Co. Ll•l us upgrade that ~hower, tub, dram board or entr) way Ceramil' Ille· improve:-. appear & value or any home or 1:omm bid~ at a rea:. oost. f'tot•e e:;t & sugges Lions. <714 > 842-:!020 -- Reas. Price int/ext. l•'ree Est. Bay Area. Ciu;tom work. 636·9453 Jack HESUMESEHVJCE& E MPLOYME N T COUNS ELl'.'IG -·c·et"·ornc-··c·T·il-elns·· •• - g:)J.0692 _ __ New & remodell'd. Fret' l"St Cont. L1<'. 11390312. --- AGAPEFORCE PAINTING COM P/\NY 3 Generations Of Paint· mg Excellence 535·6701 Painting. lo rates. 1mmcd sen ·. w ork 1 niate~1a~ guar 848·5684 or 636 7149 Piano Lessons < :amer T1 le 540-0760 Roofinq ·············•·•······· Hepa1 r & l{eroor. All t}Pl'S i.h1ng le s ro ck· T~Service shakes com ~H>· lar Frt ... c •• •• •• ••. •• • ••• •• • • •• •• t.'Sl 54 1·5930 1-'in A11all ROOl''S FOR LESS All type~. hot comp t1k. .:;hake. hcd bonded ins. Fret: est cull 960·8778 T H 1<: E 0 !'.; S I G :--1 • Ornam<.·nta l µr un 1n~ ~ SC'ulptunn).!. topping, thin111n~. rt.>mnval. gen clean.up 1>46·1845 'Wmdow Clec:WftCJ ......................• Hauling & Dump .lobs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• QUAL CLEANING ., Block Bnck·Stone-stu<.'co. Pi , , . n.l.'as planteri; & repairs £-'rec . ano less~ns. begmnt>r & ROOFING Al l T; pc~. repairs. 111 s u I a t 1 o n . fo' r ,. t' i-:srlmate:;. Call Boh . ..••.....•...•......•• "U.•t the Sun,,hmt· f n" Call Sunshint: \\ 1ml11w t'll'<inmg. Ltd 548-8853 A::.k for Randy. · 549.4368 -~------ All around hauhnA IT. truck. Free est. 548.3964 Rates. llomes10fcs Last .1 c.,., ""'"' 968 -... ., 1nlermed1att• students . DetaJI 6.'11--1973 es .,.,., .. ,JVU. · '"""' _ Call Leanne 645·02751 b 5'18-07J>9 llouscc!Paning, Woma11 Custom ri c k . stone. Have something you want -------111l' fastest draw in the has exp & rcrert>nccs. block. 1:oncrete & stucco. to sell'.' Clas:;1f1ed ad,, do ·ELL idle ite ms with a West <J Va1ly Pilot Call 979·97Sli R(.fs.~r~e est. 549.949~ 1t well. 642 5678. Owly Pilot Cluss1f1ed Ad. ClasSlfied Ad. 642·5fi7lf Help Wanted 7 100 Help Wanted 7100 Help W.ted 7100 He4p Wanted 7 t 00 t . •...•..............••..•.......................•••...........•...•.. ······················~ -~--~~0:-- All types of reaJ estate investments since 1949. ~!.~.~ ...... ~~?~ 1~~~ ......... ~~~~ SCRAM •m ~-------FOU ND To y__J,!_~J .~RIU~GEMIMDEO • "L -~ Teewinkle Park. Sun. 'Voul\g Allrac11ve Laun A CULLIGAN MAM AUTOMOT IVE • Cu.lligariOrsan Clem has ARE YOU ~ 1mme d opening:. for S ? BOOKKEEPtrn <.: M 4.!~~~m;-~ .. ~!!"81---·L gam'ellr -mi'g:-nt'M"' ptr -;- likkpr to open n1·w lH' SpeciallliftCJ in 2ndTDs 1Mr111£RS FOUND ADS 83.1·2966 after 5. Ladies dt•"1rf! husbands IUWft SlSO Will make' good wives' Eldest -World -Personals H~3·76X-27ll "42·2171 54S.06 I I ....•••.•.............• Needy -Mildew -AR£ fRE[ WINDOWS You think you've got pro· Call: LAG UN~ BE AC H blems. Last week I said. 642·5678 CHARMER. 2nd TO for "Doctor, l've got a pain PRE LAW student needs $25.000. Will do anything Legal. Confidential OVM. P.O. Box 3242. N B 92663. s a I e . 16 "'2 % Yi e Id. '~~my~·t~dc~ohes~W~lt~N!_!·~~H~~~o;~;::..i·d~,._·_·1 I~~~~~~~~~~ StB.615. P.P. 499-1997. _: M·"SAGE . Happy Ack S 120 l.Dst: Lrish Satter. 8 mo. IW Discounted 2nd TD: 20.2% ••••••••••••••••••••••• answers to Duff. 533.3153 Be pampe red with a yield. 3 yr, 5218.75/mo. or968-1790. personal r e la x in g 8lzy for Sl.5.800. Vivian: ----------1 massage by 12ofthe pre· 964·6771 dys. 586·2219 FOUND. Calico cat. Sat ttiest girls in Southern 8124. lrvine. California. Jac uzzi. eves CottOMA DB. MAR $60,000 2IMI TD. needed for 3 stores in CORONA DEL MAR. Pay 15% int. for 5 yrs. Value $600,000. 1st TD. S245.000 at 10%. Pvt ply 673-1600 2-:ITNltO... S25.000 at 12%. p ays S250/mo due in 3 yrs, secured by 4-Plex $32,900. 14 % p ays S383/rno to 3 yrs. sec b) apts MAKE OFFER! Agent 851-0424 .... , ..•....•...••..... hma.cwnh 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Now You Can Sell More MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY MAKE SOMEONE SMILE Place a HAPPY AD in this column for only $3.25. Call 642-5678 I QUIT SMOKJNG Mom. Aren't you PROUD? 1 Am . Feelin g good CATIIY Lost&Fomd 5300 caJJ SJ0.8866. sauna etc. Open lOam· 4am, 7 days a week. Vis-FOUNO. Male collie. Sun-a/M.C. Atlantis Health day. vi c I W a m e r & Spa. 2112 Harbor Blvd, Beach. HD. 848-7968. Costa Mesa. 645-3433 Br- Lo s t : Dark a raying this ad for your .... special gift. minlature Poodle, 17 yrs ---------- old. Deaf & blind in l eye. TOUCH A CLASS Vi c K ings Rd. NB ESCORTS 675·9137 d ys 646-0613 24 HRS. 752-0817 eves. LOST: Wht. & grey long. haired cat. Mesa Ve rde area Reward! 546-8397. COVER GIRL •OUTCALL• 953-0778 MC /VISA FOUND: Bloodhound, blk & tan female. Schnauzer --•••••••• mix. gray male. NewPort Beach Animal Sheller 644 .. 3656 FOUND: Terrier cross. ma le. blk /bro. vi c. Brookhurst & Adams. HB. 964· 1605 Professional Ther apeutic massage. Lic'd. NB Appl only. Steve 548-2817 RRST LADY Escort • Models ••••••••••••••••••••••• F d G ., oun : e rma n Uist.or Found a .pet. Call Shepherd mix female, Animal A ssis tance half grown. plastic rope League. 537-2273, no fee. collar. Laguna Beach. • Party DC111Cen • * 972-1345 * MC& Visa Accepted Lost: 8/11. E.side CM. ,_494_·_37_25_. --------1-0-M-M-Y-'S __ _ Cockatiel. gry w/yel. & FOUND: Blk female Lab. or. head. "Cha -Cha". vie Jefferson & Slater. OFMEWPORT Reward. 631-516.S Iv msg. H.B. 847-1845, 848·3&n ESCORTS I . DOING -=-~. BUSINESS '.':': ·: UNDER A . . . FICTITIOUS 752-9368 LOST : Poodle, blind 1 eye, deaf. blk/gray. vie 17·25 lbs in 6 wks. No Kings Rd. N.B. Reward. shots. oo drugs. no con· 675-9137 tracts. Kathleen or RDbin 673-0U 1 Lose weight the healthy wav wilh Ucrb!i & Vitamins Money ba<.'k gua rantee. Call Syd 642·8983 Penonal Services 5360 •··••·•···•············ FREE Pre<Jnancy Testing ABORTION •Gener-al CAslffpJ or Local AMsthesia •Low Fee Includes Lab Tnts. Counseling. Surgery. Medicatiofts Cllld Past.Op Exam •CounsetiftCJ & Rm"" rd •Medi-Cal & Insurance Accepted. •Confidential & PtnOMll Care. llRTH CONTROL STER I LIZA TIOM Fw information or i• rntdlate appointment, cal: CAUFORMIA PREGMAMCY COUMSEUMG SERVICE.IMC. A PC ARE NEWPORT BEACH 752-0053 SANTA AHA 972-3104 Hablamos Espanol STOP SMOKJNG.Control Ha bits, Try Hypnos is Call645-7716 for appt. with Dail~ Piiot PENNY PJNCHER ADS Still only ~. .. NAME? l.Dst : Keys in black case. Tues PM. Te winkle Park. CM. Reward. 549-1260 -------1 ~~ GnatConipmty .......... 3 lines for 2 ·days only St a day. 34c a linf' Lost : Cockatie l-bald head. on medication. Mu s t be h and fed. 548-1381, 964-2770. Lost: Bedlingtoo Terrier JXipple, female, no col· lar-Vic North Laguna. Ted: 497·1076. ESCORTS 24 Hrs. 641-0180 Ccnh/CMdts Alll Exp/MC/Visa • •••••••••••••••••••••• Jobs W.t.d, 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want your house neat? Responsible, dependable person to do house work. can aft 6. 557-3596 unLEAMMIES BABYSITTER Wanted ESCORTS for Wed/Sat night in my home. Mature smart all major credit cards person 979. 7806 accepted ___ 530-4_723 ___ H1fp Wanted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ak'S rep sa1 to start A SALE MAM. ~hill· 111 training. <.:o 00 YOU WANT!!! l~nl.'f11s. call 492 321J or I Every other weekl.'11d l:IJ0.3031 EOE off? 2. Exceptional pay pro· AOMIM. SEC'Y gram? for Npl. Bch. H.E. ofc. 3. Demo plan with i;rt?;it Excel. :;kills. congenial hours? attit ude. gd. oppty. for 4. Some of the best train· top notch gal Call 'l;rudy mg or rerres her m auto or Lila 833-2900 • saJes available'! AJI you have to do to ALARMS qualify is: Ambitious. exp'd. in . ·A. Be hard working. s taller xlnt s al. growth. B. Aggressive. oppty, 714-7684330 C. Neat appearance. D. Want to be 111. Am seeking an ambitious Only those meeting these associate to work part or qualifications need av· full time. If you desire a ply! can-er leading to finan- cial freedom. call for in· t e rvi e w. Ad 113 11. 642-4300. 24 hrs . THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2 0 t>O HARBOR BLVO. COSTA M ESA 642 ·0010 For an apPointment. con· tact. Tnnie Montoya or MUte Levine. ANSWERING Service telephone oper. Various shifts, full & part time. many b e ne fits. 228 Forest Ave. (rear>. Lag. Bch ...,_ _______ ~ ---------AUTO PARTS Delivery & A + plasterer w/mxr & stock work. Fem & male tools applicants welcome. Ap· Carpenter w/lool equip. ply: Automotive Supply truck. Co .• 1522 NewPort Bl.. Electrician with same. CM 9'7S-ll20. ~-,-A-l_Y_S_ITT_ER __ For Chiidren of Prof. C.OUple ages 6 & 9. After school 2-6 & on non- school days. Our hQme. Irvine. own trans. $4 /hr. 955-0369 Apprentice sheet metal fabrication. Must read blueprints. B machi.n,isl . Small growing company. Benefits . Apply in person. 16781 Noyes. Irvine. 7 AM-6PM. M · F. -BAB--Y-S_ITl' __ E_R_n-<.'<.'d--ed-f o-r Apt. Assistant Manager Church Nursery in Costa Trainees . Will train. Mesa area. Call556-7787. Couples. Paper work maintenenace. 642·5073 Architectural Babysitter in my home. CM area. Carol. 838.5869 c u u n l s . p r e p a r t' TELLERS "~1 It'" m en · s <·o m · Part Time ro1ss1on~. vayrnll. I ;I\, 101 ms. JHbl s ali:s 1n- lmmed1Jll' opening::. :tr•· V01l'1•s & 1111tow up on ;.og . available Ul our lx:aut1ful mg rece1 v a bit's. S" I Ha ys 1de office S ix Nego.6317770 months S&L expt>ncnt·e ------ as preferred. Selected ap· loold&HpiftCJ/CIHir plicants will cnJOY · 1-\dl lime. exper helpful •Top salary but not nee. Many t'o "'l:''rec career apparel t.enefits. Aj.iply at 1660 "'F'ree parking Placentia. Costa Mesa Please apply on Friday. August 29. from 9:31> am to3:30prnat: RDB.n'Y FEDERAL SGYingsand LOCllt Assn. 1515 Westcliff Drive (al Dover> IOO«IEEPER MktQ/Sales NewPort Beach invest. fmn has opening, per ex- pansion. To handle sales commiss ions . acctg. functions. Comput e r knowledge a must. E:\· per. matunty necessary Call: 640-0123 . Newport Beach BOYS & Girls for ad-~~Eq~ual~Op~p~t~y~E~m~p~ly~r~( vert is ing c i r e ul at ion. ..:. TransPortation providt.>d Banlung •ffiLER * Fil HUMTIHGTOH BEACH Exp pre.ferred. cashier exp may be acceptable. lite typing. Xlnt Co. benefits & working cond. t-'or interview Call Mr. Jeff Rollins 714-846·3306. from 19th & Harbor. CM. 646·66bl --- •BUSBOYS• S3.50 per hour. Full t1ml', part time. apht s hift , C;.ill 7!'>1-4433. Mon.-Frt. 2·4PM for a ppt. Busy women's European speciality shop needs ef. f 1cient & t horough cashier & stock control ve r s .. n . Ref. r eq APROPOS, 21' Fashion Is land, NB. or call 644-~l. SOUTHWEST CAILETV COMPANY SAVI HG S & Wants PIT service man. LOAM Eves, weekends, gd pay. ASSOCIATION ~~_:~i. H iggin s: draftsperson. perm p rr. --------- xlnl lettering & draftin Babysitter need~. 4 days 17071Springdale St. Carpenter Wanted, tem- exp req. So Orange Coun 3 MONTH. 8·Spm, 15 mo E.O. E. porary. P /T. High quali- ty. da)1ime hrs. my of· girl. 645·5 111. d ys ..... Be-a-ut_y ________ t y & wide variety or flee. 496•8740. 675-8128eves. CdM area. HAIRDRESSER finished Carpentry for re mode Ii ng contractor . ARTWORK TECH. BABYSITTER needed for No future in presen t Older semi-retired man Printed circuit boards. 9 year old girl. approx-salon? Change jobs and OK. 851_0149_ 2.sided & multi-layer. imately 3 hours after work with us! Earn morei---------- yrs. exper., salary open. s chool ; your h ome. dollars a nd receive CAR WASH APP 1 y t 0 : 1 r vi n Eastshore f11ementary. medical, dental & life in· Cas hiers wanted part Engineering, Inc. 16872 <Woodbridge. lrv.1 surance. Paid vacations tune. C.M .• Npt Bch. HaleAve.,Unit "B".lrv. Please call Ginnie: &holidays,companydis· Fa.sh. Island, Fnt. Vly.; 642-4321 ext 321 days or cowlls & profit sharing 644-4460 ask for Nancy ASSEMILER/ 552-0461 eves. plan. Compare our total ~~,,..,.IC earning package with CASHIER ~•"vn Banking other salons. Immediate openings. a...lll!:M# _...CCOU ..... S Ourcompanybenefitsln-Recorder-No .cash re- \\tork near t he beach. ,....,,,, "' "1 elude: discnt privil ege. gister. Be nefits. Fine' Mechanical assembly, COUNSELOR medical. dental, lire in· ladies apparel s tore . wiring, soldering. 6 mo. For our South Coast surance. profit sharing, John Hogan, lll Fashion. min. exp. req'd. Growing Plaza Office. Experience pension program. Apply Island, N.B. 644-7100.~ Ad\ ertise one or more items valued up to SIOO. Each additional line is only 60c for the two days. Sorry. n o commerC'1al ads a llowed . Ch argl' Your Penny Pincher Ad o r u se your Bank Amerlcard Visa or Mastercard II you hn• IUM fll•d. your new Flcllllou• Bualn••• Name •nd hHe not yet .Ubmllted It for publlcatlon, pl .. M don't forget that th• llmllallon la 30 .d•Y• from det• Of 1111119. Tiie DAILY PILOT will pvbllah your at•ement tor 13 •. 50. Our circulation Include• Ille enllr• Orange CoHt arH ancJ ..... l'IOttce• appear In .. , edition•. In order to •ubmil your alatement f or publlcallon •\nd approprl• copy and a chacll to THE DAl\.Y PU.OT. P.O. lo• 1seo, Coala Mesa, CA t2e2t. We 'II C10 ttte ,.... For lnformedon ebovt 199111 actwertlalftO pleaH call MMU1r.t.m . FOUND: Lge M. Pup, brindle. collar, vie. Npl. Shores 642-3162 FOUND: •FOXYLADY • OUTCALL ONLY * 972-1131 * co .. good benefits. Call preferred. Good typing in person. Mon thru Fri·.._ _______ ~ for appt. 645-3632, s kills required. Call day .. ACCMTS PAY AILE Newport Marine Engr.. Ra 1 p h Kinnin g s : . Jc PENMY c•"fflfRS Clerk needed for busy 1020W. 17th St .. C.M. 540-4066. 24 f'a;hion Island M For mor t' inform11t1on and to place your "d call BOAT 675·1355 MA~KETS For 2nd & 3rd Shifts contracting firm. Com-~-Painter. full lime, C A L I F 0 R N I A Newport Beach Ar k. h put.er exp. helpful but not FEDERAL EOE M "" u· • e you ma mg w at 548 u:A min. 2 yrs. exper. Salary SAVINGS •-LOAN ____ ._. _._·_l_r__ TVTE M' you're worth? 11 not call nee. ·....-.l commensurate w/exper °" · 695Town Centet Dr. BUJ..ING CLERK Mr. Booth l714) 760-7037 A t CI k F· 1T V · d h XI t coun er • .., • a r 1 e rs · n · Costa Mesa CA 92626 Lnsurance Agency has M~SAGE $10 W I AD lmmed. Opening, payroll benefits. 54&-6682 F.qual Opportunity new position for billing • 1wu•• 5100 ... , au•llh 5100 FOUND; Lg male Golden Retriever. vie Slater & Goldenwest, H .B . 842-2168 FOUND : Sm Golden Retriever. abt 1 yr old. vie Magnolia & Adams. HB.974-7478 MYSTIC MA.5SAGE ex,p. belpful. Apply San AUTO MECHANIC. Employer desk. Must be self starter S Clemente Inn 125 &plan-556-4656 anta Ana dian, S.C. exper'd, fo"'ign Ii or Banking ~~-detSalails le organizing We promote to manage-.............................................. hypnosis ffi8SS8:~ 714 63113Q1 reflexdogy accupressure 'WsT: Wht male cat. col· lar w/ID. vie J asmine Cr eek area. C dM. Reward! 758-1352. FOUND: small fem. Peldnese dog. Blk. blind Vi c . Garf ield It 8rookbunt.96M348 """ERWEIGl:IT". You can domestic, prime loc. C~ arcWT.._ ~. ary compara-mentlcsupervisioofrom' v• ---------DanaPoint.496-4865 .. .._. ble w/exper. Paid com· within. lose 10·29 lbs a mo. •ccou~•~ --------• ruanv benef·its CaU Lin G d S d ,. "',."' n ..... , .... Ex~rlencepre-r-v • . WANTACAREER" uarantee . an Y n. .. -...... dino oppty. ror Auto Mechanic wanted, UDUAU.16 da· ""0 ·"""'1 Call 63 ""'" 540-7375 vu........ .. rer r ed, owever. =iiiiii_iii...,..iiiiii..,,...~ii·~~iiiiii (7~4) l ·-1 staff accountant. Varied F rr. xlnt opportunity· cashiering experience • !'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ duties in inter-company San Clemente. s yrs exp. would be belpfuJ. .... a.tr Clllles &...a. ana.lysbal acct'g. recon· For eign /Domestic. UnitedCallfomiaBank Must type SCMOwpm le ""I"'"' ciliation for div. oC int'l. Breunig's Automotive. 2220ceanAve. booklteeplnl exper. * Outcall * co. Stability le growth op-492-8510. La1UDa Beach helpful. but will train. pty. + top benefits . Call •'UTOMOTIVE 494-6546 Call Vicki. 540-6055. for interview. (714) ~ E.O.E. Coastal Personnel Agen·1---------&42·3112 831-7792, Helen Scharrer AUTO CASHIEI ---------• cy,2790Harbor Bl .. CM LDCARE center asst. ~nel Agency, 28052 Immediate opening. Ex· NEVERAFEE SaddlebackCollege. Mis· MC JUI.a Camino Caplatrano, perlence required inl•--------•I·~~~~~~~~~ sion Viejo. Qualiflca· Found: BOc • wht male /IM Ila. Laauna Niguel. automotive ca1berin1. DO YOU ii ttons: Min. certillcauon' ldtlen. Vfctoria 6 Wllson. --------No Fees Ever Good salary & company OFFER A SERVICE! in early cblldhood educ. c.M. Can't keep. tnMesmryofmymother. ~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! benefits. Cont act Mrs. Lett.hepubUclmoww1tb Toplaceyourmeaaie from o communJty col· ~ Margaret Elim Jacbon Hauser al an ed In the Daib PU« betorethe lege. 2 yrs. teadtln• ex- Found: Old re male ·~Ile Elltahound. ...... CONN Ell C HfVROL f:T ., .... ! 1,. I f , ' \~ t who went to God on Acct1. clerk· •anted ror Service DlredOI')'. It CaJt readin& public, per. in a procram tor Aucutt 27. 1911. So sadly marine hardware co. cost )'OU u little as SU7 phon cblldren 2'ft l o tlnc miSMd all thele years. I Xlnt. benefits, room for per dly. For more In-Dally pf lot der11artc1o age. SAM t4 Iona to have you back advancement. Apply in ronmUoo and c:omple~ ClauUled,8414678 1:30PM, M-F . Salary ...... 1.. to Jdu aw au my person: 900 w. Coast raa. call 80·51'11.. ... H fA -88 .._.... ' H NB •Allt7tt ran1e. -·-"'.... per S•b I :OP Call642·5678 tean.Sil. wy, • "'"" · ht.831'4850btwnW .. .. ' . ... ~.~ .. ,-...,,. ... ,. 7111 MiiliiW.iiiW JIM ll*Wcds• 7100 .............. ~~ ................. 1 .. -;T" .................. . CllllC"8'9TAIY ·-0.-alOfflNCt.rk Ptr. alllllY lllcm-~l. H •COOll• '!)''"' 1l11l1 IOWpm, atoa llairuertt• An ruu • PHl••· _.,., m.J0t atoclll broker••• QUI. ....,. ~hOUttU ,,. ... Ap ..,. ()('airport Hrs ,., c.i.kaJ el)' In peraon DIC'lc ~rt t:clien MG.llJl lMel Tbr1f\ • 1Ma ta a.rcta lttl\. -Npt Otner•I OfllH Need '°*""'for a ..at •t.artant Bl. CM ahui> 1al for b1.11y con indMdual to no an •lr>' -trartor'1 ofc Ty pin •• level d•rical poallion Counter help •utc>d. hvy phones +miar ofc Ml.lit bau JOOcl math P1r . and••r h man duu ..... Wllr\ln I' T blatlilro\&Rd 6: IYSK-SO want•d. F JT HP Ml-~ ~-Xlat. brnet11a a: G.,, • Dell, m 21 °"1lft1 o;;;;;-- ...-_tnl coadltion» For ..-, c4'11 Mr MunlOft. COUfl&er Ualp l>l)I R pMJllbl,•. rronl otrk~ w -. ...... 6 , A • ~D O.a '"' t rum 11ppc.1;.tt11n1·r . ad ph1Jnc ~~ "'"" ...,.n. ~tore :au 392 lT'JO peraonullty t•S111H\ll11I , 7\.t llN> 11UJr k lt'llrtil'r. 111Jproit Q.ERlt;AL Ht;t;Ef'T "rol>'c D1anclnf. a nat'I fttl\('til rorp. ha• •n Im med. openlna In Fln Vl · for an uper'd penon 11.•/ltlnt. typU\J It rh<>neo 1>kllh. l'IC'a $l' \'D II e&t-4116 for lntt'rv1e11o e&.•ICAL t:itpand1na Irvin.-('lrt U'OOICS firm hu full llnw OJ)C'nlnQ for lll'l'UC'illl" 11rong basic mMth d .. peodable ptr&On for our credit d t>pl X Int ''I' ponunlty 6 benefit~ C•JI Amy~Jlll!O. ---60 6?iw11m . arcur.Mtu C°'*1M...., ll'Wµori ~at'h hK'Ulltlll llam lpm an Ht1tlft£ In IOOQrmu rail 7~ 031:S ll"maUooal atmu.phf'r~ ln llfpC Bch mt'M\ ..... ca:N KR Al. IH' I" I(' E lncn' .:1n. $3 :iO 11tllrt II Lumb€•r t;;om11ar1)' 11et•d11 ~oo art! *"II 1roomf'd 6 ~r..<J11 from HI 4! Mun HMM' to • 11rk rome or fo'r1 ~LS ~ 11 1>1ra_~ r II 1'ht> Ort11nt •• PftSS I.SI !M77 GF'.Nf.RAI. Ot'l"IC.'~· or df•r dt..,k, I \<l)inj(. IO kt'). Jllt•Uhilll 1>h11m• miAnnt•1 COUMTB...._, nt"t"dt'd for :O.•nd~ h•h ... t.ip Moo F'r1 part ur lull llml" Anlholt> !> 0\'11 171181 Sk) I', rk. St1· In l'jll ~~i Otl70 for appt I t·rn1X>r1o1nly llH Jl1-d 111 Lun.i U1 h mo\< mg 111 II R In 2 mo \~k Cor UeruM' 17141 7bl 2301 GENUAL OFRCE .--------lllf D t: LI\' I:: Kr IH' r ,.,o n 'IJturt'. e p in lur n Clerical c.1ud1 up 4t del1\{•ry I:.! to Sl2000 l.1~ht bkk1>0J.: t!Xl)r in dud1n2 A R & l\1P knowled&l' 111 kl'} b) totll'h, accurate H p1i.l. i?d w/Cll!U rci., ll1thl rlhon<'l> In Tust 111 call HJ:!. 7:ltMI f'nlr811 OFflCE hr "'k $4 ~ ht t·J11 01 .. 1 llutUU\L t) bet !I & 11 AM, 1>-12 ~J BSISTANT Good communications skills required for this g:rowmg Newport Beach • personnel Cirm T) Plnlt ~+. 10-key ability. pro Delivery P •llnll' AM .LA T1mei. SIOO per wt•t<k 1.agwia Beach 4!).t IW!*l DELIVERY PERSON fesslonalism u must W 111 Need 1mm~1t1lt!IY. part assist In accounting rune 11 me. Tues. & Thurs tlons and all clencal ~UP· &U ·8820 port. Call Ondr1a for --·---appt. DENT1\LASSISTANT __ for Laguna Niguel ufricc. ---------• <:t·:N EHAL OFFICE Oil l' i.: Ir I 0 rr It l ' I (Ir fOJ 111\t' con.st ruet 1on t· u m 1> a o )' S e I I 1mll\ utor, all pha.sl'l> ol (llfH'e work. Pt•R board .s)'Sl t•111, expdr exp<>r helpCul S850 mo 673-1630 557-0045 CJ\-Llr\C::. ltt.M'Ot!MY 1'£1lSONN£l S(IMCU 2 yrs exp. req 4!15 ~60<l Dental t:xp Chairs1de Dental Ass1s l anl gd hrs Benefits. Irvine a rea 752·1>.w4. ------ General Ofrlcc CURRENT OPENINGS NEVER A FEE! v Stockroom Clertl ., S&L Su~isor 0 F. NT A L J\ s s i s t J n t "' Receptionist ........ CatclopW mon.l l"Y ()c!pt. D••d• 1 C'e rtltl~d rt9p\r1tory tech. Part t imu Nl&bt 1 b 1IL Rt1plralor ) therep11ta1Per Ole m ~ All 1hlR.I <:a-t• Maia M o m o r1al JbpUaJ. M2 2734 or app ly In pt't80!\ 301 V1cton 11 8t C M llolpltal Medical Hecorct. Ckrlt Ill..~ A K T or cllJCI hltt or l yr ul}tlr X Int. lwnl'ftta. Costa M c8a r-h·mori 11 l 110111> It j I. 642 :.1734 or uppl)' 111 ~on 301 Vktoma St .. C.:0.l• Mt1•a •HOSTISSS ExPfnt'nc"...t t'ull t1mt•, purt U11\ll. 11pUl shift l'ull 75 1 4433 . M un fo'r1 2 4PM for 11ppt l~ll.d llou:w man 1.wrr11a nent full 11~ ~· \Ir I ll'wlU. All!>O C1 t<'k Inn. 31106 Coast llwy. South LagWla HOUSECLEANERS up to 15 per hr. Car 645·5123 Housecleaners llunl· ml(ton Beach area 7M 960 3766 ---- llou.c;eke<>pcr. ~~/time. de pt:ndable, nt•eded for pt>rma nenl pos1t1on 111 bc(lch area condos. Xlnt wurking con d . call 675 6101 ~ F. 8 4PM Holl!>ekeepcr·L1ve m for l'lderly Gentlcma n 1n Lc1:.ure World No nun; '""' Mature worn.an pre· fcrrcd. 837 8652 ------ llUUSt-.:K t-:EPt;ll L1vt! m. lite cook1ni::. -.en 1ng. musl dnVl' 2 chlldn•n, 10 &5 496 0-159 MT ALL.-n' LOANOMCa S.nktna •x~r In collec UOn & lnataJlment lo1ru nee Exctl u l11ry 6 hc-nent1. Apply. PerlOO· nel Otrtttor HllUTAGllAMK 721 N. Euclid Ana.het m 00 I 3860 EquaJ Opp E~lr!:._ Insurance Account Assistant to Employee &:nem £x. CC UllVC w /lll:I UranCt! brokeraae firm. 111clud· In(( secretarial duties. mu.'l huve exp in group hfc &. h1•ulth insurance 1nclud111g mttrket1ng XJnt N B loeat1011 .,·or appoint m ent ca ll 714·644·5522. ln.~UTUllC·C ACCOUNT REP. FGS has OJ)('nings for in Manaiicr /Luslna Aat. for busaneaa park Full Ume.8days a week With exper ien ce and re. fcrcnccs required. C.ill t114>54V·~. -----Manufacturing. hghllnl? manufac turer net>dll pe l'liOC\5 eit p In ma n uJ a c turmM. raw int:leriols GC'neral knowledge or powe r equip nl'eded Mechanical 11b1ht1es a muitl. MUlll be Wllhn~ tu learn 546 ~901 llarry MATURE WOMAN Unencumbered. no 1•x pr Mr F1ex hr... Newport lll'h loc. Xlnt pay after trammg. Call 64.2 1494 or 673 SJ66 MECHANIC TRAIN l::E Pnmc lurauon . Dana l'Olnl 496 4865 CU.'ilOmer service dept lo .... .,..,CAL o~cE ~t'r\'lce automobile ar· ,.._, m t'Ounts Must have good Typing , C'l1·r1t·al. 2 oral &,.written com · days wk. room for ad munication skills. ex?t·r :_ancemcnt. 7591191_1 __ desirable Starl1n R MEDICAL ASSISTANT :.alar) rom mensuratl' \\anted. backofc work. w exper & abi11t ) Lagw1u lhlls area Ex Progressive bonus plan pernec 770·6313 avail 1f licensed. Xlnl ---- company benefits in M/F Yacht Sale& person c areer Jd\•anremenl wanted potential Call Linda 673·5200 5'19·8161 F V J ANITORJ AL· Exper'd waxer. full time, In area P ay com mens urate w 1abtl1ty 979-3923 Motel Manoqet s COUple to manage nice motel in &llboa. ExpN m mold mgmt rc4'd !\1olmtam cumpll')(. hun· dlC' books. ett Call Gar\' Rice. 540 fi055. Coastal Personnl'l J\i.tency. 27\11) Harbor Bl . C!\1 NEVER A f'Efo: OPllA TI OMS OFCR Ml Min. 3 ytani cxpcr Anaheim branch. r-:xce& salaey It benelllts. App· ly PertiOMtl 01.rector HBJT AGE IAMK 721 N. Euchd Anaheim 99 l · 3800 Equal Opp Em pl yr NCR 36 OPERATOR Needed.s~d. accuracy & consc1enllous 1m· pe r at1ve. Ne wport Beach. near Newport Blvd. ONLY EXP NCR 36 OPERATORS NEt:o APPl..Y Wnlt!Class1f1ed Ad 11686. Daily l•llot. P 0 . Box lStiO. Costa Mesa, 92626. ----- PAa<ER needed ror hght mfi: Call 546·2901 ask ror Bruce l'ART TIM E Companion, I day wk for pleasant easy to care for lady. R~rs r!.<I 642 m_1 __ _ PART· Tl ME person for lunches to work w1lh n1c1: people. :'\1on Fri. s:i 75 hr We1nersC'hn1ll.cl <: M Call Ellen!IS7-071i PART Tl M 1': work for Sl U dents or housewn cs. hr.. .i 30 II 30 ~Ion l'hur. 9 30·J ·JO Sat. Call s.t2 lo.14 PAllT Tl:\1 E sen·1l·c r1:µ for ~ret'lin),: t·ard com pan;.. Earn ext"• munc) "'h1lc kn.ls 111 i.c·hl Work llunllll!ll•lll 81 h. L11n~ Bl'h ar1•.1 L .111 afler .i OOP!\t li42 !~5 PART-TIME GIFTWARE JEWELRY Design <.:n looking for hardworkmg stone runers l'nmanly ml:J} type JOb. Expn pref'd. but will train XlnL s alary potent 497 21 l5. Mo n ·Fr1 IU·4P~I ---- ---Pf•ro.,on.ible. enl'r f:!l'l1r KENNEL Hard. dir1' work \lorn mgs. 30-40 ·hrs J)('r \\ (•(•k Wtll tram' Mm Wage ~tent l!'I CRl':A.C::F.! Mu.st h'ave auto 557 6020 NOOH SUPERVISORS Pl'l"hlm nf'l'decl w arrntu· !'J c111 n s u per v 1 s ,, r .., Jhlhl v !11 m1·rrhand1s~· & urgl•nll) needC'd l>y Hunt d1i.play J.:tfl"' arc t\lso b1: mj..'lOn ijeal·h Cely School N."-pons1hk for l'i.l'h1..r D1~tn('l I 2 hrs per ddv ml! '1on Fri. !I :!P'1 $t 03 per hr Aµply n.•, C.111 tht> stort> m~r form J,llh St . Hunt1ni;111n lt•rv1el4 JPl>l Beach. 536-885 l THE GUILD DRUG NURSES AIDES -161 O San Mil)Uel Dr. 3723 llrch stre.t Newport leach -'="--~---·- Orthro cha1rs1de Xlnl • Comm'l Ins. Sec'y wa.ie & benerils. RDA or • Ordtt' D~ Sec.) 'e11 J? ~i> r: · "tn'1-ri ---.. -s-tOff"Accounfcint. llOt:SEPA tlENTh Mature ~l F couple ton· side in gro up homt> & ,upervise 6 DID adult~ KI :-1 DER G A R TE N ~ Alt'chJdt~wieK'£1rfds rl'cl'~ ~trcr:-fut1 -~or 7 to J & 3 to It Cl'rt & N.wport Beoch !r.il)f\JH\• ,\.th• • V••u!•' -64.4-7330 ~~ .i. .... ~ ~-......-....... -~ Expcr 1>r~I P r red Fall Cn"<knl1als Call SOOO mo & bent•f1ls Susan640 g820 ~~!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!~I 640-0l2l "'Acctg. Asst. Conv Hosp 66t Centc·r PART T1rnt·, fll·x hour' !',t C~_I _ ___ \\ 111 tram Good n·ad111i.:, 01::::"-l'TAL • Order-fil~ Cllc •0•.•er•k·-------1 l'enodont1st need.s full ., Typist time a s:.1stanl ~-x , G~al Office panded duties opportun1· S t /CP ty. X·Ray cert1Cict1te re • e<:tt "Y A q'd. Exper. preferred .;Sec'y to PortMn Cl.ERi TYPIST "" .... , Xlnt. benefits, s alary 714-831 _7792 A major r esidential -~n. S42·66Jl Helen Schaffn- hornebuilder is seeking a Dental Rece ptionist for p Clerk Typist to assist in established orrice. a::x ft"SOflMI Aciency tvpjno and vanous other d 28052 <.:amino Capistrano J .... per1ence , mature L N' duties in our busy a e-S454SSJ. ;:205-aguna 1guel (·ounting d epartment. Qualified candidate must have excellent typing skills < 60wpm > We offer an excellent salary.benefits package. District Manage r Position GIRL FRIDA y open with local Tille Co TRAINEE $800 We are seeking only self Xlnt. oppty. w/Npt. Bch motivated & po~it i,·e firm for bnte. outgoini: person for I. B. an·a girl who must type In· Commission only. t'or 111· dlv. will have opply. to For immediate con-lerview call Stcphanit• learn Citing. bkpg, & sideration please apply _66_l-0826 __ o_r_97_3-_l440 ____ 1 secretarial skUls Xlnt. 'n person 9am-12noon or Domestic Help Needed co. benefits. Mon-Fri. call; Housekeeper Lave in Lag 8:3()..S. Call Eleanor al Bch r esidence. pri v.1_752_·7_S9_l _____ _ Grna Mezo 1714) 975-1609 PONDEROSA HOMES co m m u n 1 t y • x I n t GIRL FRIDAY w tctuldren. 3 & 4. all Bo s:r.ha rd & Co. o f ph~l'S or hst•work. must Newport Bcarh need to :.pe ak e nglish . non· employ a person ex· smoker. top sal. for n l{hl penenced in basic book per;on. Call 640-7 IC» M·5 keeping. records. & typ. 1\1 F mg. We prefer a mature ~Business Ctr. Dr. trvme. Ca 92715 1 person with expenence Donut shop work. full & in small busml•ss for a part time shifts. Apply rowided out ab1hty. Pay am only. D.K's DonuLc;. commens urate with 2963 Fairview, Cosla ability. Contac·t Mr. Affirmative Action Employer M /F Mesa. Moore or Mr. Lambert al Clerk /Typist, part/full ---------1 (i44.<J8&l for appl. time, financial business Drivers SS per hr Part1-----..:..:.---- deiires mature woman time & full time. Mim GO FOR ITll with gd skills for general Bus Shuttle Drivers Call • • orr.ce duties. Sales exp for appt. Debi 4gg..0220 You want · we've got! helpful. Call between 9 & --"-'---------• Let's do 1t ! We Teach! l. Irvine. 754·1142. Drug Clerk. Experienced We Train! Our agent.-; 1 full time, 9·6 Mon.-Fri. are happier. have more l part lime t ·6 Mon.·f'ri support. and are doing Professional Pharmac), more business. You can Newport Beach 642 l580. too! Call Al Stellato to Mr Grant. find oul how. 963·5671 WALKER & LEE R.I::. Clerk· Th.atre Tits Clerk for ticket agy Mon·Fri .. 10 tll 3. Will train. f'or appl. 557·9212. Mr. West. Newport. Sta· Uoners. Inc. Electrical devi ce in-. ----------1 stallers. exp. Pull lime Great opportumty_for SO· COACH· Athletic Assis· """lllons. Knowledge of meone. not reqwnng am· l t · Is' lie ball 2 ,,_ rTEd. income. Film Co. ~ ·Jy~ 91;.~orf. Da~is electronics. l~w voltag.e, seeking aggressi ve. Middle Sehl. Newport old construction a must. career-minded person •Mesa Sehl Dist. 760-3400 Local San Clemente who desires a slimulat firm. Mostly So. Orange ing position as a profit :i;OCKTAJL waitresss Fri Co. work. Wag~~ com· sharing assoc. with a ;:& Sat night. M2-8293 Ask mensurate w/ab1lity. No highly profitable futurr ~ forCeclUa trainees please. Call 714·957·0282. lJnited Ct>rc•br:il l'als~ "-'-'oc . 516 5760 ------ llOUSEWlVES·Are your children going back to sch!. are you bon•d or nel'd extra money? If )ou·re rrrcndly, cons c1entious & dependabl(' we want you for a de l1ghtful & qu ai nt restaurant for a variety o( duties avail. No exper nC'c. We train. Pos1t1ons a r e now <ivail r or weekdys 8·4., full·lime. Please apply in person; Stone Mill Terrace. 2915 Redhill.C.M llskpr/Babys1tter needl.'d own trans. Mon. Wed. Fri. 9·3, Irvine area 975·1145 --·-------~ HSICPR WANTED! Separate llvmg quarters 760-6040 Ins. MldCJ. Rep.. Sl6 to S23K. Not com· m1ss1on,+ e ar & ex pen~e. Must have 3 to 4 yrs. expe r 1n com · l'Tll.'rc1al underwriting or mktg. an in!>urance. Call V1ck1. 540-6055. Coastal Personnel Age ncy. 2700 Harbor BL .CM NEVER A FEE Inspection IN PROCESS 1st shHl opening for in· div. having recent exper. w/fasleners or s m a ll mach componenls. Ex eel. pay s cale & out· standing benefits which also includes fully paid medical & dental ror staff & dependents ROSAN, IMC. 548-5.:)33 ~ewport Beach An F.qual Opportunity Employer ..__ ________ , aftecSPM. 498-4590. --------- -E_SC __ R_O_W_S_EC_'_Y_ t.;;:.":C. lay Club Is!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~ •• "* CoatTAIL WAITllSS Desir e knowledgeable nowhiring: 1---------Apply In person: Camino • Mexican Rest. 20111 S. escrow secretary looking Hairstylist w /follow mg. / for high office activity & Xlnt. work ing cond . V • Brookhurst. H.B. rich compe n sation. 642-0092. Ask for Joyce. ,Co mpanion Nurse. Diversified successf ul INSPECTORS •mature christian lady parent company . HAND WORKER /Hood preferred, no smoking, Pleasant office at · Sails. Exper. pref'd. 4C no drinking, live-In Pff. mospbere & guaranteed hr wk. Montrhurs. $4. lady on Balboa Pen. top salary. Mr. Merage. 1_hr_._S48-_3464 _____ _ m.n88. 848-2235 Happlness-havlng a 2nd 'Companion for elderly I IXIC. SICllTARY inflation bealinR. tax .. lady. Live In . cook TOPRISIDIMT benefillncome. 968·~- . mtala. No house work. o( real estate co. Excit· Health Bar Allendanl, . R oom at board + ing potential. Type 70 Moo·Fri 4·10 752-7903 S!:iO/mo 673-1934 wpm or StH 110 wpm. · · • · · f'\ult o(fice appearance. ask for John. Universit y .. Cook. experienced. Call: Wm. EDoud"Co AlhleUcClub. . 497-44111. Aak tor Rkk or 673-1800 Health Food bar at beach, j Kart Partner's Blstro, FACTORY TIAIMll counter help at manage. p Lquna Beach. Gd. pay In plastic menttralnees. $3.40-$3.SC ;()()OK.Mature • reliable, ad hes Ive co. lS 3 7 to start. 673-2345. all wound cook. for sm l&om'oviaAve .. NB. HOMEMAKER. llve·ln. rd!remeat residence In temporary for refined ' La&una Bc.b. 10 hr 4 day f1oral De•l1ner. up. older l1dy. Detall• wk. For 1ppt. 4M·M58 F ff, Newport Beach. ~ "5-7MS. 'liiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9 Cook. Prr. Pre1c:boo1. •---------11 ' Ute coc*int • clean up Food Service Prep, Mon· Hospitalt duties. CleanllQell A Fri, U·I. 752·'1903, ask f~r RadlolOIY Technician. musL Childcare beoeOta. John. Unlveratty AtbleUc Full time d1ys; part • trv: 551·7331, Tulln: ._Ct_ub_. _______ 1 lime days: full time 5*1411. Full Time Electrician special pTocedurea t«hDoloCltt, Ii part time COOIS mln.5yrs.exp.Callafter secretary. ftluat be • AA>11 tn ~ .. Call ..... ARRT. certlned. Xlnt. Our successrul growth In the computer manulac· luring field has made these positions available. 'mEMILYUNE 'IBDVlll 'RECTICAL 'EIWICAL We otfer a stable work environmnet with an ex- cellent sala ry and benefits package lnclud· Ing company paid Life, Dental . Medic a l lnaurance, Pemlon Plan. Savings Plan with high Interest. lO'h paid holidays per year and 1 week paid vacation alter e mont.bl. T~ position mu1l be rll I ed rm . mediately. Please apply a\ PERSONNEL: mDS -~~~--~~~ KITCHEN WAREllOUSF GIR.L m.-eded for part~ rental store Appl} 2025 Newport Blvd C~I LEGAL SECRETARY t;rowing Real Estate L1t1 gat1on Firm 1n Newport Cntr. seeks ex· µ'(!, l-ff1 c 1cnt . & t•11erget1c: legal ~et··~ S/11. Dictaphone & X 1111 Typing Skills a must' Xlnl Sal. dcpendmi.: upon qualifications & exp Good Benefits 640-6960 LIQUORtWlNECLERKS FUii & pan·time. 631-1212 Rick U \e·m help for mobile Sr C1Lizen Lite housekeep mJ{. able to drive. Mesa Verde 557~32. LIVE I~ NEEDED v.ith ~o me nutriti o nal knowledge. to rook & clean. -;ma ll e rrands fioom & board + salary In South Laguna Rt'! req. Call 499 1749 for in ter view date. LOAM SERV CLRK w1accntg expr Heavy phones & typmg. Mon Fri. Call Arti1J. 760·6060 NURSES AIDES romprchen-..on & Jlll·n t1on t<odcta1L ~,s;.731 1 Pref t-xpcr f't•rt cl.1sst"' :t\'Ull II !>h1rts avail Xlnl medical & dentab bencs free aft. prob App ly · 144SSupcnor . NA ----- NURSING l.VN f It. 3 to 11 Nurse A1dl'. J to 11. Countr:, Cluh. 54!1·3061 ----~urMng 1n d friendly work111g atmo:.pher c Costa Mc~a Memorial Hospital. Curn•nl open mgs: Med·Surg R!'fs/LVN'!i Days, eves, & niqhts Full time and part time Benefi ts Flexible Hours ICU/CCU /ER R="''> 121.-shifts Work 3 7 days man l!Ohr pay penod Time & h paid ror hours worked • over 8 CCU s..-rvisot" with e)(pcnencc oet.'<icd 1mrned. Come see us about our new s alar1rs and our benefits wh1<'h include dental plan & employel' credit union PART TIME $500 PLUS PER MONTH E:slabhshed Auto rOUll' for home rn~wspaper de livery of thl' l>AILY P I LOT 1 n SA:"\ C'L f':~~:NTI': A Hl.;A Available sept Isl :\1 I• .! 30 r, 3UP\ol SAT. & !-,l,'N. 5 30·8 ::JOA "1 Mu~l hav<' dependable c;ir. Some rollPl·t 1nl! n·· qwrcd. Eam1n1ts based 1m l>lte Of route. ldl•al Ill l'ome SUPPLE.:\1 ENT call 496-6800 Ask for Mr Holland or Mr Bush Oranqe Coast Dailv Pilot 330 W. Aa v Street Col.ta ~tesa. C.1 F.qual Oppor Employer PART TIME DRIVER Sal & Sun :\tornml!s to deliver D allv Pilot l>widles to carrier~. llt- qu1 re~ van or larg~· wagon and a good dnv 1ng rl'rord Phone M2·432l . ask for Don Wil liams. Equal op portunity Employer Locker room atte ndant, ~t us tell \'OU about nur 6 ·JO am·2pm, M-1". rt'('en t u cl 1v1Jt 1on t•f Um\'ersily Athletic Club. Alcoholis m Recovery N" 90 .Serv1t·c Prog r Jm PERSONNEL New organization seeks 2 dynamic people . t:xp with a temporary help serv. andtor a keen de· sire to work in t he em pl~ mt. field. These are excel. oppty's for the candidates interested in gelling m on lhe ground nr. & growing With a CV wtuch has been started by people who believe that excellence is still op tamable Call: 0 · 752· 7 3. <.; r 1 ti c a I c a r e u n 1 t LOT ATIENDENT Must Supervisor w /cxper be 111. full & part. tame. needed 1mmed. Contact 494-0760&557·0520 Vol a nd a 1-·1 ore n ct>. DlrL'ctOr or Nurses. 17141 Lumber yard man. Saw & 642 2734 Ext 272. 301 Vic Fork I i Ct exp r e q . ton a. Costa Mesa. Between 18 & 6S years OFl-1CE MANAGER 5'IS.3073. Wed thruSUn MAIDS Bahia Connth1an Yacht 542.3030 Club, 1601 Bayside Dr . !»O· 0400 CdM. 644 9530. Maids wanted Seacl1ff ----------1 Motel. 1661 S. Cst Hwy. OfflCE CLERIC Vicki Heston & Assoc. 1800t Sky Pack Blvd. Laguna Beach. 494-4892. Part tame. Needed for F'ountain Val l t!Y Su1te235 Irvine MAINTENANCE. AM ~gmeering Co. Hrs !I PESTCOMTROL shift. apply in person. Ice to l. Mon thur fol-1. Call Exterminator. ex1>er or Capades Chalet. 2701 Lindaat641·0280 trainee. steady Job for Harbor Costa Mesa ----------1 right person. Profitshar· 9'19-8880' OFFICE DELIVERY ing & group health. In· BOY terv1ew Sept 2, 9·5PM. Maintenance M an· Helper. Part time for Apt complex in C.M. Rellred or semi. 642-5073. Full time. Neal appear Lloyd Pest Control. 566 mg individual w /vahd E. Oyer Rd. Santa Ana Cal iforni a driver ~ license. H.S. Grad. Apply Photo lab technician. Ex· in person to Mr. Fuentes. per. in B&W printing. MAINTENANCE at Robert Bein. William E 6. proces~ camera. etc. Permanent. full time Frost & Associates. l40l Call Rick 8·5. M·F . job. excluding janitorial. Quail St. N.B. 752·6484. for lge ore complex. ----------1 S56-00!ll. Office Work & Manage. PIANO SHOP ----------ment. Food Worker . needs full lime helper. Manager assistant. FIT & Seasonal, 6 mos. Senior StarUJ.~957·8735 Ptr s ales help for fabric Citizens welcome lo app· Picture Framer . P /T . cham. Fab. or retrul exp _1y_._c_at_J_960-__ 8_1s_1_. ___ • exp. Art World Frames. pref. Call Margarite 656 North Coast Hwy, 64M040. --·om-·c·E--· Lag\D'la eeach. 494~1os . Picture Framer. Ex· The Daily Pilot has an perienced in fitting & ~~~ Immediate opening for Ill F' v o~o ~184 full lime permanent pos1· se ng. · · ......... · lion m our Classified PRE.SCHOOL Dept. Must be able to TEACHERS AIDE. af• type 35-40 wpm (ty5'1.ng -....;::::::/ test will be administered ~lo 1PM.644-0232 A Flctltloue 8 111lnen N•m• St•t•men1 lll•d with 111• County Cl~ll II w•lld tor ftwe , .. ,, •n•• wlllcll time cont1n111n1 t>utlnH'" mlltlt retlle. P11bllcellofl It MC•H•ry only If there ••• ch•n,. •. C:.11 the Letel O•p1rtm1nt •I th• DAILY l'ILOT lot lnlor11tetlon encl _ .. ...,~ 142-4321 llll.$)2 to all applicants). 10 key adder helpful, answer PRlNTSHOP phones, learn computer TUIMH 4t other general duties. To Operate press. f' tr. Opportunity for advance-S333rd Sl. Lag Beach. ment and excellent com· pany benefits. Salary PtrWORK AVAILABLE commensurate with ex· Need a 11 tt I e x l r a pe.rience. For Interview money? Work ror the .,&ease call 642·4321, ext Irvine Unlticd School m me... Dls trlCl·(ood service dept, p/t . & still enjoy Ptlot other actlvlttea the l a.c.,tNX Rea Es tateS»lts Sparkllnl( personalll)' DPlllEMCID will aet you lhls front olc. AGENTS pos. Grt"t t cu:st-0mcrs. Weofrerthe follow111i;. ~01111' l'DX & lypma ex· "High Comm~1on l)t!r. Excel. bt!11eliL<1 Cull 1 Best location V1rk1. S4().WM. l'oai.tal 1 Pnvatesccre\ary Pcr~nd Agency. 2790 1 Proless1onal assocs !!arbor Bl . CM Cull now for appomtm~nl NE\'£R A FE;E 673-7300ask for Wall 1------•--!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ RECF-:PT-I ON-1-ST--w-an-ted, I.E. APPRAISER Fee a ppra1i.er capallle or handling ex1st111~ stru1· lures con."t loans. ~l!I rarru I> to multi unit. an l'lud1ng romm'I • 1n dustn al & raw land Mall rt'Sutn! 10 HERITAGE 8ANK 721 N t~urhd Anaheim. Ca. 92801 &iual Opp Emplyr RECEIVER n t' e d ~ d f o r I 1 .: h l rnanulactunni.: NJ <:.ill 5'16·2001. a~k for Urun• .:ood ~alary. ht!ndll~ ror plelll.nnt 1wrsonuht ~. & hwndlv Jtl1tud1: "'tfop· JI''~ l111,•rnal1onal h:ur ,,lion now 1n OC l'all <i10\Jnn1 955.3912 for JPPt R.E. OFFICER Expe r d . bank r1·al estate ofrr 1-:xcd ~alary & bf'nd1b l\ppl y · P<·~onnel Oire<"tor HEJllT AGE BANK 721 N Euchd Anaheim 99l 3860 1',;qu::il Opp Emplyr RECEIVING CLERK Hlo,STAL HANT P a rt - F IT u .. k r II r I' J lfl lllTll' hdp. must be rl eXI· 6.11·~ bit· in hN.. l''CJ>t!r helpful. Hl·ccptioml>l . lri: :'l:t•wpun J)l'rft'l·l for hofl'lt!maker Beal'h l n~uralll.:l' J\~l'lll'\ ft.In 1911 _____ _ net-di. p1 r.sun tu t) pt• He.lJur<1nl f1h.•, & :~n,v.i·r IJu:.\ llCJSTESS pos1t1ons phunc<. <.ood hours & av111I 1-ull or pan lime. bcnd1l?> ~all Diunl' 0 Warchou.sc R~!>ldUrant. ~ 95.'>0 t. () F: li7_3_4700 _______ _ HECt-:P'flONl~T \\t'll thru Sun. 2 !11'1\1 Hah1;1 C orinlhwn Y .1l·h1 I 'lut>. tij(ll Bays1dt• D1 ( tl~t 1'41 '1!>30 RECEPTIONIST Lt•:iding U1strahut11r of Po.·rsona l ('ompul1•r" -.1 • t • k .S t• II I h U .._. a "I l I(' ix·~on lor tt•ll'J>hlll1•'. re 1•epl1un1.,l & 11).(hl I\ fllllJ.'. 1.0J.,11lu11 l<Jplll i.:rowth 11f11·" uppurl Ullllll'" Ill UI 111,· 1111 1h1• "l'"'l'llr1 ~Jl1•rfronl (.'all .lt'I r1 t·~ ,11 ti7:J •ill : 1u ... tautant COOK· WAITRESS DISHWASHER fo'1t1me 1>0.s1L1uns avail. ltleal ~rhed ule . X lnl nunpany benefit:. wh1t•h 1m·ludc lllt'1hl·al. dental. profit 'haring, llf~ 111- 'ur.rnt'l' pC'nsion proJ i:ram ,\pply 111 (X'r-;nn· J .C . PENNY 21 l'a~h1011 hlJnd 'lcWl)Url Bt:J l'h 1-: o ~; ~1 r 1u. ... 1 Jurant RECEPTIONIST ~1' Pt:PPEHONI ~ 1-·u11 111111 L1i.ht1na.: m h. PIZZA STOHi'.. l11nl.1nl! tur ,.,11 r :-;ow h1nnt: lur lull & tl'lt·ph•1n• rt•11•pl10111.,1 part l1m1• op1•nlfl~' a1 '1u:.l hJ\ ,. ).(c>eid l \pin~ h1tJ~1on~ nr OC Airport .. k I I I ... .1 n ,, I I I! h I \ ane.'I t.l.J} ... & hN. ldl' ti .k,p,0~1+:4i;c u~~l.ll~~ .,.,uo~lca\;[11 al ir~ror 111..:-•1-tti i!')OL ·a:.k lcJI hou.~e\\IW:> & !>lUdenh IJ.111nv _ 1 lur progre.,..,1' t> gm"' IOI! "'mp<Jn} offers oppl} s 1111 Jd\ Jncemcnl basl'<i IO II \ I) U r ) II 11 periorma n1T PlcJl>Jnl '">rkin~ l'OOd!. Must bl IK C)r bvl.'r. Apply Ill J.'l'r..Oll H•·1 1•puvn1~l P1·rm.1111·111 I·. JO "'l'I 11 ll IJhlllto'' l'1•r l11rm 1'1>1111! t11 tnhule m:11I & rlla111tJ111 gcnl·ral file•. Top !>Jlan de OUl'.'tJndina.: l'Orµorall' llcncl1l.s t·.111 l•lt 111 I I' r v I 1• "' 711 5'1fi ~l~IX.1 •• IJ " l 2300 So. East flristol SJnla Ana Hc1ghl.s 1Next lo McOonald.s I 1\ m l ' r 1 c 1 a f l c J\ n 1-: () 1-; r\l'Tll'nc.tn!-.lJndarrl ("(I l ---- RECEPT /TYPIST \«1·uratc-1yp1sl. 54Jwl'm lur C'PA l1rm nr Fa;.h11111 1 .. 1.1n d . Sl.UO\J 11111 7~11 l<El'f...PTIO'lll S I . net•d1•tl . l d.1v "•·ti. < \\ l' d 111• 'd J ~ I l' J II Dana,~ iil'IH RECEPTIONIST Agl!r<'ss1ve, .self -.1 11 I• r v.anll'd for e nln 11·\1·1 .st..tff ~1l111n with I• m porJry 1•mplo) nto•111 M'r\ll'l'. Ab1hl)' lo "'011t under µre!>~un· J mu l CJll ror J~•Pl V1rl•>r T .. mpcJrJry St.•n 1t 1 :).""..S HS20 SELL. idle ite ms with a O'JJly Pilot Clas:.1flcd i\d. &tZ·Sfil8. Hl•JI l·:'.'t.1t<' S:.ill'' ltc:.taurant MANAGER/Troine~ FULL TIME Other full and p rr pos. 1\ Jll 1mm.•rl. .\pply 1n j)l'Nlfl. L~ P~ite Cafe Huntmgtnn C enter Rest.wrant . ...r~. G~ ~ '-, ~~ --~ -Is Accepting Applications For the Pos itions of Busboys. & Hoslcs!il'!>' Apply between l & 4p10 dally. 2406 Npl. HI\ d • NB. LIBERATED AT LAST! X·HOUSEWIFE EARNS $85,000* Housewire ror 23 years cseemed like a thousand) was paid S85.000 in 1979 as a salt'sperso n for Walker & Lee Real Estate! Call now and get started on your SJ00.000. *(Proof avail abl~). COSTA MESA C7 I 4J54S.949 I. S:hris NEWPORT IEACH C714J646-nl I, lob CORONA DEL MAR/ NEWPORT llEACH 17141759-150 I, Geoff Walker &leeRealEstata SlllC & RNlt HURRY C S I H I T T Y J R 0 A W S T B R S V NMOABPOOOAYAKANUOAW 0 0 E S T H E T B L U P S A S T E H I C S 0 A U T R U S G N P 0 H T H W f 0 L A 0 P S 0 S E E A E E C R R~I E C G M M A M T U T T T 0 T R Y C U 0 S 8 C L H F L E G T E U A A R C R R I T N E E 0 E G 0 E 0 E P T R H G E R L l 0 K l R T I A D A S P 0 I E H l Y E 0 I l A 8 N 0 S U I J l M N R L R L C V T Q H 6 M I A 0 R K L T l I R E K W A W N C 0 U A T 0 0 F T 0 H U T E C 0 L 0 L I A l Z R Y A R M E C D S 0 I C S P I M 0 W 0 R C A A A S S E H T U Y A T K 0 l 0 N l G S Z 0 M E G Y 0 Q Y T H tor a'pt. Lord Jlm'1 :=--~..: Office Clerk for benent1. Cost• Mesa ~..arut. _. BNtol, ma)ar stock brokeraire Memorial Ho•plUI, Clll1'1..ol41 ftrm our o.c. Airport. M2·27S4 or apply In Not1*1.,.qulr-.ct. Hrs: ...-. 301 Vlc:\Oria St. ~ Havuocmtblnf JOU want •AM~ttll . Call Judy OOlta M ... 330 y Street bal~ce orthe day. Apply CostaMe11a.CA 2941 Alton Ave, Irv.'----------------__. F.quaJOppor Employ•r M2·ll83. E .O.E. Mike your s hopp1n1 r to seUT C1ua1lled adl do ldllft. MNW !!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~ it ..U. "2·$171. 8'1 ... .._ ....-Wat Ad a.l&lta 142$18 ' ~llwilhEME ! lt'aa BREEZE Clusified Ads 842·54Fl8 • Want Ad Raulls 842·5871 Sell tdle Items . ...... ... easier by uaing lhe DaJ13 PllotClaaalf1ed Ads. Sell with EASE! It's a BREEZE Cluaitied Ada 6'2·5671 ...... -----...--..---~~ ............. ~--------.. -----. HetpW..t1'CI 7100 He4pW..ted 7100 .... cmc.. 8010 ....................... ······~················ ..........•............ ~~ .... !.!~.~!~.~~ ..... ~!?~ ~.~~~ ..... ~!~~ 1hur!id111y Auqu~t <·u 1 JvV DAll.V Plt.OT Retail Full Ume positions nvailable ror career oriented ind\v1duals with experience. . Excellent Company Bcnefit.s Co ll For A ppoinune nl. NOMAN MAICUS 15S.1900 Ext 222 49 , ......................... ...... An •::c.tuiil Oprx1rt11n&1\ P.mptn:n •r Reltauran& ,· .\L~ Pio;OPU: net.><h-<I S l r 111 w H D l PI l. ta lor n~w µrudut•t C1m1:1M fh :11t aunnt. It U A. Faulll1nc Enh•rrn1.ri. Fountain Vallt-y lu,•ia &&.!> lU211 liools. Openings for n· &War & leud pt'r:svnnl!I SALF.SPERSON De.y or oittht. part or Cull for expanding company lime. Exp U\ p1ua opc•rn Uln'lmt_:'~on 6~~ Zl~t SIClfT~RY P tlrnP An:hltrc:t , 11r1· Np& lkh Mornln14&, :to hrs + Goll K to I\/\ M ~170 Soc:ttlari 'Ji In •II fllll<b of bwitnna to travel. top pay. b1Uo1ual < "'rcnr ll. German "Spa11l1h1. lipd wrltln l Pl.,uu cM l l 1714 >ll9t-91104H II 9J1m S.-cr~t ary Wonderful Oritanu: Cook. l.•1'u11u &ach. •99 $683. Sc!<"l"fltary I" IT accur ulc l.Ys>tna:. 60w'1m CM Ofll('C 540 5Wl TIUPHOMI SOUCITOltS t:all S1111 L'lomC'ntl'. Sun Ju11 n l'uplstrl•no arna from your hllllll' or <.:h1IJrt-11 '& llo1>p1tal Oruntcc Counly H'llOC1 Thrift St11rt•11 l.lbt!rul Commlo1ons ' For Appl c al l Mr M c kel•vcr 9'12 l.loi2 TEL.LIRS f'urm flume. 5~ dy wk A ppl1co nt ~ w / flUpetvlsory pott•nllal de· 111rt-d 'fyl)(' 40 wpm X Int IJl.•1wr1t:t & »dv11nn•mc11t 1>Ut<11t1al 979.3000 1'.:0 1'.: -~ ---------•ITobuc<'O Shup Clerk Part ••fi l!;CHrt'ARIES• • t 1mc Hetu 1 I ex per Tt65trhtnk/CiroWS12.00 h1•h1ful ~enior t:1t1ien srn~/Prt•i1/HXS19.000 OK Smokt• Shuck, 495 1-: ActgC.:lktC:mptrSt0,1100 17th. St C M ___ _ GO Ht'.'Cpt /AnahJIO,llOO Tr .. School• Ut n .. indf'r~ Aiceuty Cost Too MMch? 4020 a m ·h, 1'.:stab 'tl4 Ncwport/ll33·8100/t'ree Leun1 a :1k1ll and gel 1.n11t.l wtulc you trrun m the Army Reser vt.'. Ser ve SECIETAlY Mktq/Sdfl llt'fn~. 20,cU/(l. fro:-.Hn•c•, Fvmffwt 8050 MisuflaMOUS 8080 Office Fumitun &r 'J'>plst alrmnd,hk,• n1·w. lx::st of ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~,._nt 1015 fer. 644-Ml t. __ °'4'ner Movinu Must .,1111 <.11m~l{·r 11hl'll. Cit:. t11lhe1 •••••••••o•••••••••••• POLICY TYPIST .: year old extra lariic tustom kinl( 1>.t ClulJt1on ToyotJ 01 Datsun $125 Cumplete set or matched ,.,11131.1ty ilrvH Xlnl bdrm ~ul lc 2 chc1>t:. 12iJ 7l•Hl6Mlti27 e xt<' W;;ln1.ot O ff1c \' 'l'hl:s pol'ltion re<1UJres un \'Xpcncnct·d typist with .ioud skills C45 50WPM. IH'l'Ur ately > und knowlcdi;c of general of· li ce p rocedu re s . Fa millurit y with 1n -.u r1t n ce pol icy terminology assembly anti iit·l·up 1s desired Good verbul commun1ca· llOl'lli skills urn required Please contact Esther Hagberg at 714·558·1414 t•xt 200 tor 10terv1ew up· pointme.nt. INA lnswmce Compcmy of North America soo s. Meritt arc.g., Ca 92668 Equal Opportunity Employer ~ •' J d L ht ~,, ... f\Jrn .. tor !tale w /act•om cond.$100.552·5266 rwrs1 Ii;( l'" !>l:llnl"U SAVE SIOO 1\Ug only' .,.,., ula!.S flllOtHirlmt-nls dC'l'OrUtOr Item~. 7:.4·7°""' " H1.1pp11ll!!il> IS u QUtll•n '.; licycJe1 8020 \\-arrant)' 7M1557 ·3024 wlrl~s l.'OOkwar..-St:t (u1• . ...................... --1 drawer Wang cabmetl!. Misc wall cabmcti. 67.»·5444 Miyata 710 touring . 10 2 matching i.ofos. y1·1l~1w \'Our lovt.'t'.I oiw 96115802 spd. Many xtr as. ~o. & white. xlnt cond. $JIJCI KARE 1934 SJOO Fed Rt:~ 5411-lfllJ anytime~ set. 552·8639 weekdll>" NotC' Gd l'Ond Muke orr after 5. 5J6. ·1852 Sh,1rp L'opp11•r ModC'l SF"i'lO. pl1tir. paper. 3 )'rs Olli $1200 5·l0.8082 M F MOPED Mo t11b l't'.1nt· 8.4 30 Mans 10 spd bike. almost -----------------1 new. S75. Comer bed set $.'iO Earl) 631·2029 Amer rocker loves£•:.tb. 20" BMX good cond. S40 645·4227 c .. nn&r ...,,...nt 8030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $125 pr Dt:sk $.50. M 1sc Antiques !>46·6321 Wrought iron Bistro set $75. Kellie grill $25. Trcs tie tbl $175. Pine desk S95 Pane hutch ~. Pine & sla te cort'ee tbl Sl25 Mamiya CJJO. 80mm lens 955.0586 with pistol grip. S35Q. --------- 957·0989. Coffee Table. near nr w Cats ------8-0-3-5-1 $.5(). Green & Gold area rug, 8X8. S25 842 7877 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H i m a layan Kittens. Recliner chair SUlO. Sora C F A. Ricadoro/Ming sleeper Sl25 Good cond Chiu Line 540· 1760 Cash. 962·6318 $150. 2dr' ~ rdng green --------- ~ :J65.~i N·Scale train IJvout. girls 3 ~p<I h1kc. ~t·ubu ~car & refr1g Ma ke ofr Call &14 5631 Finely Crafted Danish Tbl Desk & 2 EXl'C :;1dl· Chrs. dark wood w mch brn uphol Sl400new. must sell $400i0 BO Call Pets 8087 .....•................. Shih T7.U, /\KC: .... 4 yrs M. II mo M. 4 mo. All shots Reas 83.5·4581 -------- Lt>avmg St'lllng :1 piece black vin) I stul fed Liv mg Room I urn11 ure I S 1 mm o n s s l e ep 1• r . Mercury M;:irqws Car. ,\ I I 1 n g o o tl co n d . 979-2w.J Pi.OS & Ol'CJOftS 8090 -----· ...................... . En'IH>-:cnl') ltghttn g transformer S20 Approx 150ft chain link fence S50 642.JJW \nt1que l l!Kfi P1 ann Mason-Hamlin uµrii.:h1 Walnut burl finish. $47:; 646·6244 Ilona prefer~. Appl.) 111 Sal~ People ..-uu time & person 6920 u.nier Ave. 1xin u me KM Abrams Career oppty in fast paced Npt llch uwe~t · ment firm lle()wres IOI> skills 1shth11d · 90; typ111g 751 Sound JJrolc~i.10.nal \'xper . matunty & c•or p<lrate bkgrd. helpful <.:all . 640·0123 near home plus these benefit s PX. retire - ment. experience. a nd rrore Positions for prior ~1·rv 1 ce al s o . L osl•--------- /\lam1tos Reserve Ctr. Typists Persian Kittens. CFA reg. Contem p din · rm c;l't Champion lines. S200 ea. Beaut rhromglass tabli· 962·8542 . 842 ·3 l 00 . w /6 uphol c hair -. --------1 OLD U.S. Ar my wmd up Phonograph S.50. Locker Hox S20 Large MagnC'l tor Underwater treas ure SIS <1 gal contact cement SIO Che\· II lug 11; 5 Du pl c x w 11 t' t' I S l 0 I Ii I 2 I .I II p E I t' l' )fotor~ li4Z·337~l BALDWI N G RAN !l . llB. 8'7-2571 Qu a.tog Showroom . 1819 Restaurant Newport Blvd.<.: M Waitress wantoo Joli} SAl.F.S TEl.F.P_H_O_N_E_ Roger. Lagun"' Beiu ·h A "'r SIH' exp 'd No ..-..a cal Is Apul y 111 i;.. c · c r !"'""""' · .. lelephOnt! sales person to person. sell ~port:-.wear & d(" Restaurant t•essories by telephone s.ack lar Attn•t. nauooally Sales ex~r Pvt. country club, fuJI rcq. Surfer Publishing lime. lOAM to SPM. 6 day Group. Suri .Juan Capo wk, SS. per hr. Call Wed 49\i·592:i! Ext 55, Dave t.hru Fri. for interview Witham 644-5404 --- Restaurant Now accepting hostttss & cashier applications at McCormick ·s La nding 300 Airway. CM. SAVINGS ACCOUNTS COUNSELOR Permanant P /T Position avail in our Security Officers wanted Newport Beach a r ea $4+ per hr Uniforms & traming supplied. full or part time. Male/Female. He t1r ees w e l co m e T«lephone & transporta· lion required . Call for appt. 972-1980 --- Sccy/Recept . a bright cheerful non.smoker. Josie 851-9025 RETA I L S A LES / MANAGEME NT : South Co<1st Plaza offi ce. SENIOR ACCT Exp preferred. induding Knowledge or accounting Sat hours . Call Kathy thru financial statement, Amburgy. !>40·4066. immed opening. Mgmt California~ potential ror n ght ind1v VIDF.-0 STORE in CdM. 64().5003. 10 to ti. Mon. thruSat. ~--....--'"'-""1.-:)a~.._ • --~-r Immediate Sales pos1· tion ope n for ear eer ··~·957:~-~ 695 Town Center Dr Service station attendant . Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 full or part time. aftcr- E .O. E. noons & evening!>. Neal appearance & ha nd writ f'en dontal Assist. EXECUTIVE • Dental Hygen u;t ' Dental Assist SECRETARIES Dental X·ray Spec Oral Surgery Assist. We are accepting ap· Clerk rfypis t plications for executive Medical Supply Spec secr etarial pos1t1ons Behavior al Sci SJ>t>C Shorthand or 80wpm re· Call your Army Rc!>vrve qwred. Wide variety oC Recruilertoday back~rounds needed Los Al;irna to!l 527 3031 Orange County Airport Santa Ana 5.52-3173 area. T RAINEE Alarm ~ystem lnstatla 11on Knowled galJ ll' w/tools. \Vitling to work S4 75 to :,tart 642·3493 Travel docum l'nta tion clcrk needed for lrg t·om m c rl·1al a gcn cy 1r I rvlnc T) pang 60wprr req. ~led1cal & Dental paid <.:a l I H o wa rd 714-8.51·0933. Ty~~r / Al'ttu~ Pasteup. typesetting. ex per pref'd. F ull ume days Call 89H·2628 557-0045 Cr\-Llr\W::. IEMP011Al1Y PERSON NU SEIMCIS 3723 Birch Strfft Newport Beach WAITRESSES Apply m person or c.all for appt Lor d .11 m s Restaunint 2~ Hns tol. CM 751·034 I --------oriented person. Male or Female . Part time & Schools Ing. Apply 2500 Newport 1---------Blvd. Costa Mesa TYPIST 675-061 l. Pam S40-l.230. ~-------~ Dogs 8040 ~Sate 8055 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• KEESHOND Pups. AKC. Great Garage Sale. furn. Champ sire. Mt F. Pt•t & clottung, s porting J:(oods s h o w P v t P l Y misc l day uni), Sal Au..: 2131697 1345 aft 6 pm 30. :,1.5 19831 \I anti mt• .\KC Cor ker Sp aniel. ma le. Buf f. 1 1 ~ yrs. l.Jl If l.i <Beach walk 1 orr Goldt•nWt'~t hous e brokt'n . $3011 Giant Garuge Salt·, Sat & 673-7631 Sun. HJ :11109 l'oohdgt• F 0 R S ,\ L E . A KC '~'t'. C~t (In allt•) l RcKisll•rt'd SA MOYED Sul & Sun 11 l. Y..1t\•1 l.'.l rr¥>nths old. Best oHer cloud Wah•rtwll. p;11nt 492·~ 1ngs. d1s h c~ r.11 \t•d Just Flown an from Chana, rare Shar·f'e1. pupp1e~. Hong Kong. For Sale 213 367.6394 . M1·x11·an 11 .. ~k 1'11a11 dl'11er. clothrng wwc·ln & lo~ 111 t-'<nt1ng Junk •t25 Im . (.'d\1 Free to-Y-ou----8-045 6~3 . liamil111~1 . t\111 D ••••••••••••••••••••••• tiiltl 5K'1~t J·.vt•r' th1n ~ E I h Sh I $l0l'' l:iflrrn l111'11 .\\a,.~h'1 P~~:S~ Ce~al~~~P~~l~. & d r)t'r' rl'fr1g ,1mc· rrectogd homr 6:Jl i430 lurn1tun.' Bah) l'lotl11·' Iv ---=' t -ltt'ffi~ ---·--- 't Cocker mix. I Terrier . mix. adlt females. xlnt Snf,i & L•;\t''"''''.1 V.c"•" hsl•dogs957 !I~ frn~·c! ~ oUC'h . ~' o .. v. -----·----llLl-l·'t lll~ptl n1·v. San 01ego Antique Show Aug 2!.I JO /:!I To11.n & C.:uunlq ll nt ~I Set> clai.s1f1erJ S(·cllon 11005 for J euub Ebony 5'8". ti mos uld Perl cond. $680010 8 0 . 642·975.5 PIANO WANTED. Priv Party w:ints to buy P1uno for c·ash. 55fl·0913 HAMMOND ORGAN CONSOLE H-1 00 1-;xcellent Condition '.\IO\'lng MUST St'll $2,000 OB0644 ti!S47 L'.wd Sµun1 sh roof till'. )OU h.iul 3V t•a l'layho) Upnght piano. vcr) gootl m.Jgatin1 • .., l!l51! l!IH:l. t•ond To pnvat«" part~ t;oorml't m.1 14,11.111t·::. S.)i fi20'i afly_:~~m - 1•i.i!J 1$() rna k1• l)fft•r on a l I .1 r µ a r t 1-; I e t t ' pl'" r 1 11• 1 • Du .I u r Tnumph SlllO ~lh ~1-16 VYUH LI TZl'.:H Org.1 11 Model 4140 tx •·nnd $65(1 or I rad~· lor µ1;.ino !lti(J.8()31) Sewi"CJ Machines 8092 !·'H I tj I D /\ I HE . dog •••••••••••••••• ·•••••• /.!I C)IJITTln)! c•qu1 p, h:.I orrt•r II r\ {' (. t\ H D s I' w. fl g . .;u; l.#i6ur<1:11 'i'l'i'7 ~IAL'lllNE Sti;, f'l'rfe('I Hd IJmt•ttl' Tahh• l 'hair' C:ornl 9tiM 7!l7:l mus t b e av ailable NOON SUPERVISOR·l anytime. Please apply in hr daily, Davis Middle person. Smarty Pants. Sehl, Newport Mesa Sehl 2.407 So. Bristol. S.A. Dist. 760-3400 Ser vice Station Allen· dant. exper. refs r eq 'd. S!50 per wk to start. NB area. 644·7151 INSURANCE •~ERK TYPIST* \\ ;.i 1 t re !. :. t•" . a p p I y bet ween !Jam l 21J m Char lie s Ch1l 1. 3001 Redhill. Hldg <!. SH• 226 •WAITRESSES• S3.50 per hr. Full time. part. time. spht s hift. Call 2·4PM. Monday·l''rida_y. 751·4433 Frei• to .l(Ond h o me Chrome T1uc k llumrwr Young, lovaule. health} 1\ 138 · br:.ickct Wi:I ~an m1 n 1atu r e. ft•mulc lat\na,\vc (.',\TS.S t h1hua hua. Has shot~ ''"•<·..irlo .... h1 tt• 2 l'.!111 644 l75.5 0.wl' an ;i 11reumc Bernt l<•iJ\t..'<.!l52 :l:IM7 SportiftCJ Goods 8094 REI'AIL Clerk. Moh-Fri, 10.5. Apply in person: Pier l. 2710 Harbor 81. CM SECRETARY Or Escrow girl w J some bk kpg. exp. Bo nus w/real estate license, Start immed. Mr . Davis RETAIL 770.9001 SALES SECRET ARY Sal ary. commiss ion . 25·45. part·ti me. book- bene fits. Exclus i ve keeping. t yping exper ladies apparel s to re . req. Good pay. Randy or John Hogan, 111 Fasruon 1_Ge_n_e_95_7·_4025 ____ _ Island. N.B. 644·7100. Sale-• Wanted 642-3260 SALES Growth orient e d SECRETARY E xprd. Probate a d · ministrator for growing law firm. airport area. Newport B ch . Ca ll Wilma. 833·9983 manufacturing company SECRET ARIAL/ located in Costa Mesa. CREATIVE ASSIST. needs salesperson to sell Background in bkkpg. 13 Western states, in· accounts payable & re· eluding Food Chains & ce1vable. VERY GOOD Mfg . c ompani es. ASES"' ARYN tB h Pre mium items. non· 8 ~ · P c food s upplies. (carton ,_loc_a_l _955_·_l4_33 __ cutler s. markin~ <lt· Sec y for CPA Office m vices .. el~.). S,alary + Lag Bch. Call 494·1034 for comm1ss1on. Send re-a ppl. s ume to: P.O. Box #10869 --------- Costa Mesa. CA 92627 sales CWSIAED ommE SECRETARY P a rt o r f ull t i m e Ple&Sant variety of duties inc l"g simple to learn word processor. 644·431 l SECRET ARY /Exec. SALES for President SerY Sta. Attend F/time. Apply. Chevron. 1251 N Coast H wy , Laguna Beach. Shipping & Receiving & misc. P hone 7:30-JPM Mon-Fri. 960-2463. Able retired welcome . SHIPPING DEPT. inspecting & packing sm. parts. Will train. Female pref'dt Monthly r-evues & x ln t. c o. be ne fi ts. Deltronic Co rp. Costa Mesa. 545-0403 Shoe sales. full time with or w /out exp .• or will train. Good co. benefits. Apply in person 9am to llam Mon lhru Fri. Stan· dard Shoes, 3077 So. Bnstol.C.M. STOCK Clerk for retail Excellent opportunity for sharp. detail minded mdiv1dual in Insurance Claims. Good typing and office skills required . Competitive salary. full benefits package, plus adv an ce m e nt o p · portw11ties. For inora informa tion contact : ESTER HAGIERT at 714·558-1414 ht. 209 INA hnurance Compoety of North ..,_rica SOOS.Mam Orange, Ca 92668 Equal Opportunity Employer manne hardware s tore. I~~~~~~~~~~ l''ull ti me .ex pe r nee. . . Good co. benefits. Call Typist. general omce. n.o Balboa Marine. 549·967 l. ex per. necessary .. H .S . E.O.E. M/F/H grad .. good benefits & Swiss Automatic Screw Machine Set·Up Ma n or Ope ra t or for T o rnos pro m o t io n a l OP · portunilies. Farme rs ln:,u ra nc e Group , 54-0-4100. E.O E. Automatic. Min .5 yrs ex· ----- WANTED. MATU Hi.; A OLT CO U PL I.-.: to manage lf:i unit apt nouse in nice E a s t s1de CM are a. Resume & loc:.il ref. req. Exp. pref. To upply. please send com · plete resume to ad no. 77. Dally Pilot. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa ;\ksa. Cci . 92626. WEEtcEHD RECEPTIONIST Real estate office. Lite typing. Coldwell Banker. Newport Beach. 944-9060 • •••••••••••••••••••••• · ~ht•d & Garuj.lt• Sal1'. Free to )OU: Springer C.:lass11·s Salt• &. mut111 Sparuel.•1 mos old. shots boat µart:-. ""Jfl H<Jrt 5.57·0237 tools. ant1qut-marirw .i '7 Stl'el Shed <.Id t'ond Y'IU lfrmow S.SU !11.150 Carf1l'ld H Ii !163 1207 -----l'rt\s Penny 1\rt'Jd1• \\c i1l(J~m•·n Blind~ t;mos "Pokey", affect1ona1t• )lal•htnl' & ma ny 1tern:-. nld. \Int l'flrHI SI IOU gr:iymale k1tty Frech> ot ~real t·uno:.1ty ><2. \;.ilul' v.ill .,,u·nt1C·•· gd home. St7-5676 Sat Aug JU. 120i Nonh S20H OBO light bt•agc FrL>e to gtl home. 4 mo. Hayfronl. Hulbo.1 hi ( 111 •ili(1 X:I•.:! an~ time fem Orange Tabby Kit ~~X_l _ ten. Sh ot s. p l ayful u__es 8060 Sell 7 year membership ~ for family f1tne;.s centc •r 960-8771 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nauulu:. eqwpment SJOO. Furniture 8050 Reg Appaloosa Gdd mg. ti !lfiO·ll778 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .\rs. Vcry well trained w ·d ressage IJackgrount.l **I BUY** ..!_1200646·i909E~~s __ Good used Furniture & Appliances·-OR I will sell or SELL for You MASTERS AUCTION 646-8686 & 833-9625 Oak CoHee Tbl. beaut ro nd S t8 5 . Off 1ec Credenza 4 dra w w llge PARADE HORSE C h am p ion Mor.i;:an Stallion Show llor!>c A l>t'aut~ to see. d plcJ~Urt' to own I or a kind SI0.000. mcludt'S ;.1 t'he!>I full of throph1es & rib. bbns Dy., '•!Ii :1 100 l'\ .wkndi; 951 6.513 n1snc) land AOP com p. ~et $400 c1·11lll't't ors platl'Sl ~15 1!114 --- l\mg S1zr Muttresi. .• 111d box :.pnngs. 1; mo:,. All hedd1ng & framt• SJOO 95.5 (JSjj6 8081 $•co C II ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 8005 ~~:l~d~;;.,a "". a ~yr old Quartt•r H1ir~1'. TOP CASH PA ID ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------man>. gentle S600 F'or used furnitun• & ap. -111111Wl!l!!!!!!!'..,,.,.'!!!Tl!IM'!llll!IN'!llS!l!!T~E!l.R~-, Oak ReCeC'tory labll'. 6 A46·l5fl3 plianC'es Working 0 1 nol .i:..:> chairs. Xlnt Cone!. ------!JSi 8133 ABBEY ll o ANTIQUE MALL S<\95 45. 75 Jewelry 8070 Mlsicot · . ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 083 Daily 10.6. Fri 10·9 tt pc dinmg grp. Italian •IMMEDlt'\Tl'.: ('.\.<;II• nstnments 8 Clo~edTuesday Prov .. antique wht. Will For Gold. S ilvt•r, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11751 Westminsll'r Ave. s:ll sepe r~tety . lnt'l . Platinum Any k tnt.l . CO~ Director trombonr Garden Grove 5!>4·6103 Lighted china c a binet cond . a mount Uanll'I wi th C'asc Excellent con· s.500. Buffet Server S400. 548·50.53 dllmn. SIOO li'i'5·8051 altl·r Thi w/2 12 .. leaves & 6 6P:\1 chrs $950. Freezer 21 cu 3 Piece Unique D1amo11tl ft $175. & other misc Y.. ed d in g R 1 n ~ 1\ p DHV:'v!S h} Ludwig. hght .....•................. TRAMPOLllU 1 7 rt by 14 ft wt•bbed mat 1111 roller-, I.I K 1-: N 1-;\\o • Has a C'O\ 1•r too? S7l5 11r l)('St ot fer Ca II 731 -8216 V. V. !irt·ener light ha r poon r 1£lc Act:e plln,.: hid'> 768·58.'17 Antique flshmg reels. a:-. sorted Vom !lore Xt Pflue ger li!SllEE'!-i · 'i'l4·6i5·5180. ----- Sl.'<i Scuba eqwpmcnl. med "nylon II" wet '\Ult aluminum 1an k. ba cl. pa"k U C . HegulJ lor. &, gauge 1:•111sul. m1H" t'QUl p i5 Hl!l67 S urfboard \\o avt' tool. ti't t" cherry cnn S75 Call '7141!:>fiU·7066 ------- St0tt, Restaurant. Ser 8095 ..•.......••........... Nearly new s howca&t·. 4 .\ls u other al traC'f 1vt· pla~lll' shelves. 675·83!JO. 64U <!.121 SALE o C r est aurant lu1 nishmgs & eqwp T ak- ing mvt?ntory & lot bid thru Tues. Sept 2nd. 3505 \'1a Oporto. N B The Daily Pilot has an Expr'd, top skills req. opening Cor an o utside Sl500 /m o. n egot. + sa lesperson to handle benefits. 646·9661 automotive and real per . Micro P recision Typist for fun NB Co. Ac· Swiss. Laguna Nigue l. curate, b~sy phones. no 831·9331. exp nee. Call 675·3256. Antique Gravity F1ow Gas Pump. Xlnt Cond. $325. 546-0469. 552·6498 642·6676 pr a i s e d at S Ii 7 5 blue clecir '.! 1-loor toms. TV. Radio. SYSTEMS 6 TYPIST GSWPM. train as JO.ANNE MIX OIL PAINTING Deseperate take S31!5 .i ha~c 24". J Z1lgren HiFi, Stereo 8098 Operators need ed. ex· computer opre.rator . 10 per'd. only. Call : 979-8900 key adder. non-smo_ker. Calendar Shows Presents THE SAM DIEGO Cash. 631·6374 C~ mbals. Roger ·!. high ••••••••••••• ••••••••• • estate accounts. Sales SECRET ARY experience necessary . R.E . Investments. Nd 4.x9ft high. French Girl m Garden. $2.000080 Mov· ing MUST Sell. Machinery 80 8 ha I com PI ct c w I a 11 KEF' Sprkr 1mces are go ••••••••••••••••••••?.. ra~es S900 OMO. Call art in~ up St•pl I Buy or or Salary plus commission. person expr'd with s1;1les TEACHER-TYPING Must have car, mileage staff. Excel ty ping & H you are an exper. Costa Mesa CPr\ firm. Call Corinne 754· lMO Antique Show & Sale Collections of French. Englis h . Euro pe an. fl 30P~I cil.i 1137·6449. der now tu beat Int'. Binx metal spra,\ booth. -----.\tlantic Musil'. ti46·8895 like new 00·0232 !la m till Steinway 6 ft 14 m '.\lodcl --- pajd. Excellent company phone s k ills. Ca II B. degreed typi~ teacher TY~IST . benefits. For a ppoint· Tompkins 76().6060 we have an lmmed req. Policy Ty~1st needed ror ment ror interview. call ---------for your s ervices. F'or a n Cast growmg I nsura nce noon. A. 1926. xlnt cond. WANTACTION? 644·6847 Orie ntal furniture & --------- furnishings + jewelry. si l ve r . art g l a ss. porcelains. paintings. lighting. primitives and much. much more! COFFEE TABLE Rad ial arm saw. 642-4321. ext 277. Secretary· Part Time, ex· immed. inte rview re· Age n ~ Y • M_u s t b e ORANGE COAST perienced. Laguna Bch, garding this rewarding energetic. R~p1d adv an· 5ftx5ft Square. Off white $150 p a i n t e d r i n i s h . 642-9507 DAILY PILOT 497·3000· oppty call W .D. Polick at cement for n ght person. 330 W Ba St Secretary-General needs Irvine College or Busi· Paid compa ny benefits. :1~~;;,I~Lo:J.vM~v~ Mscltlaneous 8080 1ng M US T S ELL ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa M!sa · girl frida y ror Irvine ness P h. 556-8890 o r CallSaJly, 848·6264. Equal Opportunity based company doing 752·1629. This is a morn· •Aug 29 /30/31 * CONVENTION C ENTER 644-6847 LUGGAGE TAGS Employer fund raising for college _ing_..;._pos_i_ti_o_n_. -----•Ty-p.is•t _____ Jl!llll_ SALES C lerk for retail athletic dept. Typing. Teacher -Preschool & EARN EXTRA marine hardware store. shorthand. filing. Ftexi-kindergarten thru 3rd. N.B. loc. Part time, ex· ble with exp. Need gd Out of state credential MONEY per nee. Call Balboa ref.5S7·8810. _ok_._646-_1_444_. ____ FOR SCHOOL MMarin/F/He. 549-9671. E .O.E. Secretary, must have Teache r s. Pres chool. U you need extra cash. bookkeeping e xp. hle Prr. F /T. Must have typing .• 4 day week. T· F. some Early Childhood Kelly can help! We have SALES immed. need for typists. FGS ins urance agency 673-2180· F.ducatlon background & 3.5wpm & up. Town & Country Hotel 500 Hotel Circle at Fashion Valley Rd. Plenty or free parking With this Ad · S2 each DOLL SHOW HUNT DESK BEAUTIFUL c urve<I Walnut & Leather Top Finis h W /Matc hing Cha ir. $500 OBO. Moving MUST SELL 644.6847 Sat/Sun Aug J0.31 ll x 13 Ovpru Ivory area -Free Admission rug, 48" md lbl. lge bar Huntington Cente r Mall all SlOOtea. 645·8373 frum your bus iness card Send one card ror each tag plus one spare. We re turn pe rma nentl y sealed attractive ta(! & strap. meeting ;11 rlinc l.D. reqwrements . Pre vent loss & theft' fo'or ;t personalized tag enclosl' wallpa pe r , fa br11· or "Day Glo" paper & we will back & tn m ~our has immed opening for S E C R E T A R y I or t;xp. Irv . 552· 7331. We also have other In· trainee. some exper in CASEWORKER . 2 posi· Tusun: 544·1467. teresling assignments auto ins helpful. Inside tions in l oc al c on· Teacher Aide. Preschool. available. Top pay. paid 405 Fwy & Bch Blvd. 8 p . I' bd H.B. c. gir s rm yellow & wht $650. 10 I 0 847"6296 after 6pm. tags. Or try two cards set. back to back. Call PRICES n v acations . r efe rral position. Good bene ts. gressman's omce. Need FUii & part time work. bonUS4.'s . salary at bonus. Call Lin· good typing & telephone lmmed e mployment. N~VER A FEE da549-8161 F.V. skills . X lnt sala r) & Must supply character 17 c If yellow ref rig. No de livery poss . $250 Ev /wknds 951 ·8530 SALES Gi rl wanted benetits.SendResumeto reference, For lnforma · IEL[~ Pltime for plant. store. PO Box 2421• Newport lion Call 540-1919. Bch Ca ~ 6' Hlde-a·bed sofa. Ex· King Bedroom Set S195. 2 Love seats $75 e ach . Game Table Set $225. Glass coffee table $45 Much more. 675--0105 PlanlknowledgebelpfuJ. --·--· ------Teacher.presc:hool,40 hrs seRvices cellent condition. Sl50. 6'5-339210.6PM SECRETARY. sales dept. a week. some exp & re· 675-9088, 673·1503. HEX . .\GON shape Med. SALES needs a good typist. able feren es req. For in· Call or come in today style tbl & 4 chrs. pad & 2 to generate own cor· formation call 54().1919. Irvine, 833·1441 Washer & Dryer. works leaves. $300. 957-8798 U you are a&reJtive and reepoodence. good start·•------· -----2102 Business Ctr. Dr . great S50tea. $85/pair. --------- 9oc*ing for• future in re.· ins aalary, xlnt benefits. TUM LIADIR 1!2r.6 751·2394 after Spm 3 Bar s tools. padded ~~J~~ Call114·549-8'700 Part tlme. SS.57/hr . As· l5cu. f\. FRIGIDAIRE 16 anna. brown. Naugahyde ....._ ... t•a-....... thru SECRETARY aistant Supervising. Hunt. Beach,847·3498 yrs. old. Coppertone w/chrome. Sl50. Eves --..... ,.. _ _. plannlnl1 & Initiating 16152 Beach Blvd. 557·$009 S2eaor 3/$5 4/5 tags $1.60 ea. 6/9 tags Sl .50 ea lOor more $1.40 eu , Sales Tux Included NO CARD" Draw your own or $end name, address. phone & we·n make one card per· tag. Add 25' each. Send check or money or derto: PILOT l'RIMTING P.O. Box 1560 Costa Mesa. Cu. 92626 Fri. SlaDdanl Slloes, 30T1 NE w PO RT 8 E A c H leeo procrams. City of 1230-E Finish 199. 499-32166 --------SD. Briatol. C.M.. CJVIL ENOfNEERlNG lrvtne 11&-a14 Elegant Cotton Sora & Lose weight now. 10-2H lbs C 0 . N E A R 0 . C • ~· . • Laguna Niguel. 831·0542 WasheBor.'!.~er Loveseat. loose pillows, Cala mol Sa. lOO'i<d '~}o'l~~;ntced. 811 1 •D want.td to ltll AIRPORT. l SelcHen 27957CabotRd. uu1wv new!546-0669,SS2-'498 n y..,,. . ..curil.)· eervlcet ln the JflaU time. experienced. a11 pl• bonUlet to F.qual~unlt~ 646·5848 CERAMIC Nnwwrt a...,h Corona ....... rfi•·• .a.11 _.__. ""o --n---s E ..,.,....,. ~ F N•tural Kin" wtterbed, ·-_. ••h• ... • c ... .,.., w person wan-_._ 1~ .. ,._. "'""""' · rnployer ... M/ I FRJGlDAJRE rerng. 15.5 " TIUllSQUE del )h" areu. Ex· r o r e n tr Y ·I ev •I No telliac. Acroea from 1---------1 c/f, white. Spotless cond. SllSO. Desk. S25. 468 VW 6x6", ~per piece. Paint ~ '*°'11'>' but 11ecretarlal poaltlon OC Airport. 2·9pm call S2S0.548·7813pm .. rims.S50.S45-83'7!l & Jelue your own tiles. Dll nqmred. Call for w/opportwdtyfondvan· Sue,6U.018t 25" Color TV. Bentwood Good ror c~ram1c 11hopi1 -".-."'._ll_m_._im. _____ , cement. Stron1 cyplq • What a Wonderful World TyphtP.tlhM STOP!! Coptaln's Chairs. pine or private part.le!! to u~e IALISMAM aome shorthand ablllllH of 8bopplni1 rlaht 'It Wortton Peninsula. Hoe Tate Ume to relax and tuble, 2 goltS c hat rs. your artltti<l a.b11llles. Part Ume/Patnt Dept. neceasa 1 ry. AppllyMrln your flniertlpa every. hoW'tperdayneJtible. ~'i>f:~~':T't~·5~il':~~ c00ch.964'6787. 7S9-1227. _534_·7533 ______ _ ToM. evealqt. 'Wed. ~ • res\ n~ 0~ln· d • >' I D a' I Y P 11 o t lrvl~~e~:!~C.::!ncy Claulfted Ads. And Ir Top cond 9• custom made University 1\thlctlc Club moral•I•· Apply In .. ...,,". 1 """"'"" ' ClUlllled Adi. To place you have somcthina to n.ist sofa, end table & Membersh ip ror salt- .,.....n; Ktrm Rima Wllllam Frost " Al · )'OW'ad,call642·5678and s:'e~7lh.Cost&.~el~~ s ell. call a fri endly s m a ll ctlt in . sz 2 ~ $400 + transfer fees. R.._..1111119• .. e. -Harbor IOclatel. 1401 Quail St. let a Clwlfied Ad·Visor Classified Ad· Vis or at 491»7176. 551-3510 a.ar tta. help 642·5678 1-----~- --· 6J'i.8J07 Classired Ads 642·5678 TIME IS MONEY I I I oO bt,6y -tt) take 8d V'eGfA? l'::>o.:::>11 6.twov-k? Use Answer Ad service when placing your ad ... a Da l ly Pilot ad number w ill appea r in your a·d we t a k e you r m e s s a.g e s 2 4 h o u rs a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hou rs and get the r esponses to your ad ... thi s se rvice is only $10 per week. For mpre information and to place your ad call 642-5678. DAILY PILOT .. . . Auto•, lrt.!IJOrled Auto1, lmpotfed Auto1. lmporiflJ Autos, UHd ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ W..t.4 tltO .._, lmpo~ ....................... ····~·················· WllUY CUANCAIS AMDTIUCKS IMW t712 ·····'················· Mtrcedet 0.rt• 9740 Toyota . 9765 VollawoVf't' 9770 C.O,..,ette 99JJ 22" COLOR 1' V Sl2l l) r Warr•nit)' &UU.O TcnnLS on TV 'f\.lnjl '-'•t'' Nffd to bu) ~ompJete '\abol ror mov1t props Call Clnl'mafloal 842 TV mcl Co:st s.cit> Ue.i.it Ot l!!' U'ORT \UNI .. ·as11 fl'f Mlh4'"' 71£1 '4on un G.rnw Sho•·. 1111o,-d " 11""'' ~ m1 <Mk'huruwl l' ll Jl'flf'rMN1 l'u$tm l 'M 64.> 0037 ltitn!><'t!ht'r nnC"r 111li.f'n 1&1l ot bo\. S50 nr br~t o( t Al. ll~ w 1Npt bt>rlti lt<r. C.11 l'aul TI4 u:' tit1an. fully equipped for tlJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLASSIC! 1962 FOttO U..CNllO C OtofNEll l.Hf.VRO U T }I t I '.i. II I r , \ \I I . \ i,4(> I ZOO . TOP DOU.AR rAIDFOI GOOD I CLEAN USED CARS! & SADDLEIACk VALLEY IMPORTS h••i•• r.celved o 1..,. H~I011of NEWIMW'S •bo 15 ,RE-OWNED IMW'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '612505 Sunroor rn1101 $S9SO JIMSLfMOMS IMftORTS ltnOllAHHOH nr.vu COSTA M t·:SA 631 -1276 611 2R(1 SL 2 Tops V~ry 'harp Auto air $1:1 !15010frl•1. ti7J UJ36. ~12llt~ '7STOYOTA COROLJ.A 4 r ylinder, 4 speed . bri&ht yellow Great Mil eage Gette r . 1982MXUl S24'9 HtO/JtU~ VOlKSWAGEN. INC GAROlN GllOVf , lJ73l llnrbor Blvd. M VW AUS. Xlnt Hun 1978 CORVETTE rung Cond Super l 'lrJn. Silver Anniversary edl· many xtro-;' Mus.t Sl'll uon with ONLY 14,000 631-2778 art\.'r Sp111 nules! 1'9.000. CaJI Girl ran't fix truns. '" 1-497-1810 must ~acnrice 65 UuJt IC no aruswer. please keep S7SO New ttr\.',, ball, i.eat lr)'_;._m..;:g;... ------- cvrs. cng gd 642· 7480 '77 Black Corvette, fully ·59 BUI( ltebwlt t·n~me. equip, 27.000 mi. 4spd, ftud1a1'. no dent!> &:st Call Melody 847·0838. orrcr 968 964-0 Dodgir 99 3 5 534-4100 7l VW Bug l'OOv Nt·w e111: . t 1 rt.':... l ram, & lop. '70 Corona Mark II . .i <Ir. S.1[)00ororfer.001-1J!ll. ··•···•·······•••·•···· .............. .......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• rik't' or crulaC!. St-ti .,, tt.Je up 10 IAJ1tt>r boat w Nt• ... pc;n slip 61!14349 ... • • ar• to 1 o 'JI 2 29 197$ "''·at'I, $ G 1.')I. nt>W •nllnt'. nt•W t nuu1 . n•w tlrNi, new tlN'tnral l\lteom new p.unt JUh llocor 11hUt & carpet Slh001bt•"'t C>tr r C.111 tl4IJ tl(IM aftt•r 3 r> m If bi.lay. µINu1l' ket•µ tr> mg. tf no anaw\'r. pleuM• k~ptryinai:' To <'hoose from ·74 thru '79 2002's, 320! 's, 5301 ·s. ~I\ '1U i ·11 :1oou. !>nrr. }l'lfow. ba111lio11 int . uux I.ink, Clt!a11, MK $15.000 hiJ 736H ~~~1~.'~~~ good Volvo 9772 -~ ...........•..•.....•.. '76 COROLLA SRS. whit~ VOL VO SOUTH COAST DODGE It's coming soon• Watch for our grand opening! ! ! •••••••••••••• ••••••• •• ba,i' 11w1m 1tt>p, knot ROI". m.~ M9 8lU ~tom mudt-vn1ud lluw '67 rc>HTIAC "GTO .. for thl• bes t dt'aJ 111 Oran~c Couoty l 11nw M.>c w. today ' 1980 MBZ 240D lot.Jdl·d A~'>UCIH' 11·,1-.l• 711 .,..I !K!i wtlan int. 5spd. new 1.ll belled rad tires. AM IF~l .,ll·reo cass deck. I nwner 759 1191. SALES, SERVICE AMDLEASIMG OVE~fo:AS DELIVnn· t-:XPl-:rtTS in.: Dory ft'Cis work ~ Ute rbrl(h no,,. m~ 01n~y ,,. o .. r Sl'l~ 1-~~I" Ka,:.k w l,,.,t') & Skll't S~ 673 6331> 17' ~dllr)'"' trlr & :i1hp -.! 3>lUb. <'Ornpa)o' l'tr Good tOnCi £! 000 6.11 4t. I :1 Of l()7~ "'on Rt.>d~eul ~ nl.an in ~"41 nat.ible buJl. John ... on " 9070 fl P 0 B .! } r i. o I 11 ••• •• • • • • • •• • •• •• • • • • • • 673 3756 s I d t' T I ... .. \ J 1 I 2 5 I 1bcrgl a !li. !IJ II bo.tl:. loah. Morine Mark al ~th St M.tnna &p1,_nt 9030 G73 ~ __ _ ~;~·;·~~;t:,::;;.··~:~~;r: \\'antro i.1de :.hp tor 17' Ted Willianl!l Special. 811<,t~ Whalrr until rn1d hardly u...c.'<l s.iou 642 7257 lkt 631 I 164 eves 18' Cl:h•.ic i''an TJll Transportation lawich mohh lil•i.t ()l ll'r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 :.>pm 642 7<m ~. SaAe/ 14' Valeo. 2511P E\ 111rurl1· Rent 9 f 20 tilt trJr S1~80 ti7 h45 4602 • ••• •• •• • •• • • •••• •• ••• • -----'76 P1lgnm 8' lied t amper loah. Pow•r 9040 $700 6 4 whl clnve tires •••••••••••• • •• ••• • •• • • S40 ea 327 Chevy eng 1978 SCARAB lliO 646· 7306. Twin 330's. 150 hours. Mot°:!1!~/ loaded . Pn ply. Makl' Sc 9150 otrer '\~'<! to !.f•ll 1 m •••• ••••• ••. •••••••. ••• mediately . mo,·in~ ~iul 7!1 Yamaha 750 Spec. o\ area .• tall 5 lti li!OO !l,000 m1, xlnl rond. new ~eekend!> 1 Ask fo1 ___ _ \ '<, 1 ~•~•-d ftu'tory air l'onll1twn1n i;, pow,•r 't('(·nni.: I owrwr 'l'I") 11ni.:inal 1·ond1t100 with r.u.1ory llurst IV 1-.N~ l $2999 @Hfa.°* Uowctul l/Ot.llSWAGfN INC G AllOfN GQOI/( 1:n:11 llJrbor Blvd 534-4100 '41i Ford Wooc.ltt·. 1 l:lll01 t•d $13.000 675 6161 'S2 W1 LLYS I'll ;i11:1 ('hev.v en~. "'\ hd. bt•!it ur ll'l' 536 !Y195 Bu~ Eye hµn11• For lntormalton !'>15-1914 Rec~onaA Vehicles 41530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fo1b<'rgl:i~s Dune Bui:gy Rasket C:JSl', 40 Hµ O'hauled eng1n<'. !>and llrt'S ~00 642·337!.I 4 Wheef Drives 9550 ······················· ~.I on · f r 1. d a;:.. 1 I n·ar t1rt-s, rark & bat•k 131-8216 l<>,en1ni;;, & rest Srott,7527900 Jerry 'liSUZl'KI HM125B Moto '63JEEPW \GONf;Jm ,. XI t N Good CondtUon 43• G M · tt -.:ru.., ... , nt ron1 1·w 8.1S <!!HS 1 1 .. ran . ann , tJres S67:i 1 )80 ;,.ii; 01!0 . , """'="""' _ _,,_,,,,~---bw--~~ij·bA.J -e ~.p. ~ !!:---•u}v=:... ~· ----beaul1full~ maintained, ''7!1~uZUKI GS750 PiU::GNANT. Must Sell' ready to rrw!>c or h\'l' 4 M~ Olcl Exe Cond ·~ J E EP CJS. ;imtfm. aboard Slip ma.·)' be' S2.200 t>4<! 9ti2J cpl, under warrant~ a"a1lahle 11'-:r, financ - -------~646·1221 1ng Poss1bll-$72,UOO. or · '71! Suwl.1 1K5 Enduro. 56.5.000 ,.., no brokt•r 111 very rk·an $.l:'lll \ohe<! Cl1·an dt•:il will · Doui;:!J6.t 2llol inrludc 9· 1\ '-On Hl'<lt>rt'!>t -- with nuorhoa rd!. and 4 5 l!r74 Hwkman eng 1ust ll<>rsePowt>r J ohn:..on out. rcblt. xlnt shape S300 or board. J ack C u rley besloffer f.456355 534 -1S05 evenings & ---------- wee kends. 642 4321 250Tn umph. weekdays. IH0·:.!254 on l'herry 1·ond $.'>()(). the boat. !MiJ .. ·,300 eves. '7 ti 2 4 • S k 1 11 1 a c k 7i l1;1rh·v Sporty, runs 1-ltAhtbndj.!e. Lo w hours fine. nL•eds ltule! ~ 1-'ully equ1pµcd . many MS 1536eves Trucks 9560 ..•......•..•.......... *CHEV. MEW '80 UTILITY PICXUP Auto. t ran s • p ow er steenng. 86GVW! (6884). For plumbers. electn· c1ans. etc.! $8698! HOWARDCheYl"Of.t Dove & Quail Sts. NEWPORT BEACH 833-0555 WANTED! Late mod1•I Toyolus amt Vf)lvoi. Ca ll U !l TODAY''' E,arle/ke TOYOTA· VOLVO I ..... .._ ... ., Cotl• Mne ""'•o·• )OJ or H 0.'40 SADDLEIACK VALLEY IMPORTS 28402 MarJ:uente Pk"'' M ission V1eJo 831.2040 495.4949 '72 BAVARIA u/r, 4~1X1 ' t• r ' c I e a n . M l :-.. T St::LL! Leaving li !:-. S3SOOJOBO 675 17-11 •75 SJOI. auto Ira ru.. air. $6300 675-0693 Capri 971 5 ······••·········••···· PO RSC HES WANTED :! OC'W Iron! l\<1111 -.hcll'k' lf1tllng '72 tu '71 \ 1,·.,, on!~ $70 lor lJl>th "'•·w Allow us th\' opportunity Sears h1•;n·) tlul' IH to cons1d1•r t he pure hast' month bull1•ry. onl.' S:IO cir lr<•d<'·tn ur vuur dean l..Jke :'lll•w "Hat'l•mark .. l'orsthl'. Chl'Ck with Us leathPr o;port 'lt't'flll~ Today• ~·11., .. 1, only $50' l'11ll l::;iii--.---::-J;JI;; ':1 1;;5 60.57 ;_ff(} "\~ ~.~~-:-. = ... -~~~.~ ,,,o..,-.,.a~ II() u4. ... t ti.JI H.oou• tu .... t ClllOt'n < ,rr,¥1• "• 636 ?3J3 Top Dollar Paid TOPS PAID FOR IMPOHT & SPORTS CARS. 848-7100 l' x tr a:. . w 1 r .1 tier . .............._ -.... -__ --5-_.-_Vi - Sl5.200 493·25.~ •l!Ni ij6!17 . ...._.__ nvmrs, UR' ----Rettt/Storage 160 " 26' Paccinaker. F 18 xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• in & out. S8.000 ORO 1978 25 FT. ·w Chevy PU 3SO V·8 a., ton w !l~,· Wl~kender. Auto. air. stereo. 2 side tanks, a ir s hocks. Xlnt Cadillac Seville. cash. H . .E. Brkr. ·;~ 1211: I dour. Nl•t•d.., body work & mul r1t·r SSOOO Ens.: Xlnt. 56!1-> OBO &16-672'J _ms 1213: 213·6!7·~~e~!> • PACE ARROW · hn n M ho MOOELC 27 C 5 <:ru · a gany Sleeps 6 to 8 on Gaucho LalJ)trake hull! Vt1. 283 t1etls. fully self con· e ng. 20 knots. Im maculnte cond . Catalina lain('<!, roof ;.itr eond .. Jt en <>r n tu r , AM I F i\I l'qWpped. galll'} • .iuto stereo cass ettl'. C. B. ptlol. radio. l1a1l lank. r Jdio & onlv 33.200 miles new covers. ldl'al bav i\lu. ... l!ldl ~ (Ser. 1698>. boat or Wl'ekenr1l'r At 17141559•1304 our docks Sl6.SOO or best --- orrer 642·5i3S bkr lh·nt motorhomC'. 2212 · ;3:-Chris -Craft Twin .,el( i-ontained. $250 per "'""k + 6• a mi le. l'ng1ne .. Mus t -.ell IW 2283 D1vorcl' AsktnA S2.U.HI __!: _ __:_ ______ _ Good cond Nl•t-ds :..omr In Costa Ml':..a. tra iler work. MS 7673. :..pace. 30irt. max. 140 17' V-Hull fishmg & skt ~llu, Slts5. 646-6725. 12011 P. IBtOB w /trlr Trail~. Trani 9170 S3HXl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 546· 1330. 645-0775 '79 18' Invader 5th whCt'I. ~ond . S3ooo P .P 962·7844. 1980 Ford 1 ton Fully Equipped W I Reese H itrh·T r ail<'r PKG Loaded Private P arty 546-5767 78 Subaru Brat. 4WD. A:\1 /FM stereo, ram per top. 30mpg, S4200. 642·2687. "iR Chevy Luv PU. wh1k w1tan int. a ir !>hOtks, s l1d1ng cab window. cu tom whls & tires. AM /FM stereo cassette. 44.000 mi. xlnt cond. Best o ff e r . 6 46 ·0672 eves/wknds. ----- 64' 9688_. ___ -;x f"lal 128. )!Oud l'lt•:m. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alfa Romeo 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2000 REBATE! on any 1979 ... Coupes, Sedans & Convertibles. 1980 SPIDERS HERE HOW!!! BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 i8 Spyder. Sil\'cr. blau. alloy whls, air. gd cond, $7500. 499.3205, fu<·I eff1c low 111111• S33SO or otrer >!!YT IW4 or 4~·1JO'J 80 SPIDER l'on' 20011 loacled. a /l'. s t er1:11. special tnm. I~ rack .. 1 beaut'. mu-.t ~ell. di.km..: $9750 955·24 111 Honda 9727 .......•..•..•....•.... VISIT YOUR ORANGE COAST HONDA HEADQUARTERS i>I \h-1 n•dt•'> :l(M1I>. 35 IJCMI llll .. "1•r h l111· -.nr r $111 .• A-t 1 ,..,h 111 .... -.um1 l-.1· 111 l:!'.m11 ~ SISOO 1b1 Iii J 1'1'.J.1 ----------'70Corona $1100 &16·4162 '67 Tovota Runs good :'liew trani.. good boch ~:;5 0 Call d d}·, fl.II 1170 540·5.'>i4 EARLEIKE VOLVO 19ti6 HarlJOr Bl\ cJ COSTA MES,\ 646-9303 540-946 7 ~Harbor Blvd. COSTA Mt::SA 540-0330 h I J):-. Uri" P t '' 1·ullri:1· "tlll t'IJ!>'I t;ii \1 BZ .!511:-. l.aiok., ~·uml run ... good ~ s.111 1101;1; or h-15 1~*'> -;7 SR5 L1(tback, :it Iver Autos, Used w black. AC. AM/F:\1. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 69 Oodgf' Pola ra . One owner . S8K on g. miles. C'omp m.11nl. history avai l . G REAT Sllt\PE1 1 ! Sl.250 or best offer 675-1230, 673-3068. 673-2712. l'.nx \.11·rl'l <It·.., :1001 > h i.:ht nh I ,11!H· 1:11•1•11 ..,1111rl 114•1 kl'r 1 .1 •• I tc· :-:-1111\ 'Int ''"•HI to•I'' !llillli .. pd R .. uJ1Jb 536·7226 :in ~ 990 I G ••••••••••••••••••••••• MG \Ill 'iK :"illD \ 1111 nindll 11111 I' I t!l:J I •1, 9742 ........•.•........•... '76 MG MIDGET 51[, 1!111 i'I ( El.II',\ GT COUpt'. •• •Pd. lully loaded . .,un roul. .;mtrm K tral'11 .,1. rt'<>. air. power slct•r rni.:. :t2.000 mill's. Xl111 l'Ond \1 ust sell~ S6850 <}I ht•.,t nftcr Call da}' S.">2 5252 or eves .">S!l·S48lJ Tri~ 9767 ..•......•••••••...•..• MOTHIMG OVER $4995 NABERS AUTO CENTER 1425 Ha h r Str<'l'l < 'OSTJ\ MESA 540-9202 1•1 Sp11r1rl', radial-;. llUck 9910 -..t'-•rt•o boot & tonne.tu ••••••••••••••••••••• •• rovf•n. S4~ ~ OSOli l!lti6 Buick Rt \'tern Hun:.. ------- 1971:1 l>od i.:e Colt. Ex . t·l'llcnt condition. 2 door !:-.l'dan. maroon . low mill·:ii.:t" 4 ~µecd 1ransm1!ls1011. FM stereo 1·a:..'>cllc'. SJ.550 F l RM S.51·443.'l lrvinc. ------- ·77 ~<.;PEN WAGON 21M rru. Whtll'. Good Cond. 640 71.'.ll 9940 ·.:i \lliH 1;·1. 111 1111lo-.11tc ~l n1 t·11111I. onl! ""' 111·r S'Hllll tt40 :i 1 ::~1 !!ood. look~ J!ooO ' Sl.'1 • I'' MGB 9744 Vofftsw~n 9770 JpprC'l'IJlc' S!l7'1/oh11 ....................... •••. ••••• •••• •• •••• •••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••• 1\!lk for D.1v1d at !175 011 ·1 \IC .I\ <.1 l I," 11· Olllll 1·011ol ·i:.:~1 l'l'I :l('U'1 S4ll00 R£:8A TE! 11 lt 1111 \ li I J II 0 111• \\ l '1 U~l'Ol 1.114 1980 SOSs (Gos & Di~sell HERE NOW!!! K1.>1 l>ove!-.trc·1·1 '\ !. \\ I '0 HT II !'.Al II 752-0900 '78VW SCIROCCO · I rylmcter. a utomattl' 1ransm1-.-;ion , gold f'pr(N't fur your wire 1 :~1"WL'r SS899 @Ht~Uowau{ VOLKSWAGEN INC G AllOfN Gl?OVE 13731 II arbor Bl\ d 534-4100 Pcoche 9750 ------- •••••••••••••• •• •••.... i l bnghl red super bcctlt\ 17 lOl l'r: \\I) i.;111111 t•11nd tnl t)UI. $.)500 tl57.1170 i'! !111 Hlk "" b lk Fact .11r \ \t V\I ~ 11 I. s lt:rl'il, 'l11l l'llllCI. :S3'Hlll l 'Jil l~l tliO:I f.\'C & \\ 1•nd' '•11 !Ill SC l°IJl' \\hill·, hl:tck rrim. ~up<'r low 1111 ko.; ~u11roor. "lt:rt·•). ,\(' ,. .1 multtl lldt• nt '' r . .., \111:..1"l11 u:n 1:iw. 1.1.'> 11..!':l!i IJ,I\ 1• 'i'1 l'or:..1:ht• ~l 1 1'.u ~a. air. alloy", l<lnt 1·1md s1:u100 Mti OR22. '7:1 !114 :! 0. l'U:>t11m 1lt'<I. 'Int c·cm<I to mileJJ!l'. 9~1U OBO 838-•ii:!:! looks great. runs grl'al S2150 675-0349. Rabb' • & Dasher a ux. tank, 1 day m!il . com· plclt• Sl75. 75!1 1200 77 VW bus, good rood. blue/white. 7 µass. S4750. 4W-4672 ------ L'n!I VW CONVERTIBLE. metalhr bluPtblk. xlnt C'Olld, 6900 m1. $88()1) 01 bl,..,l 7(i0 0861. WANTED VW Hug m good m nd. With good body. 641 11157 ~vw saoo. Needs work 644.6285 ::.. I'\ t 11 L· c" II \( I l I h 1 t• Hn.11blt'r. • u-.tom "'lr4' whb nt-w rJ1l1.1h. :! dr, lo m1. ~h·rn•dl"• dulh lnµ, drk hrn & 1·0111x·r ton• t·olor. I or ;1 kind, JO l')I' catctwr ~.0001b\.>:,l olr t<!IJl l87· 171 I '76 Eldo Clasi.w <.:onvl'rt . Beaut. l!OC>d cond Must sell. ~IH)(J60. fltil ·3451 I' I' ···········•·••·•••••·· 7!1 l.1mou 'i 1n e. 44" :..trNch. Sony Color TV. Hlack ext. 4600m1. ell"' t!>OlatJon window. Blarl< ll'ather front int. blue velour back int. Elect ITT>onroof .in pas-.cn,ger l'ompartme nl. $37,500. 543-5655. '74 CONTINl::NTAL. fully loadcc.I, new tries & brakes. Blk. S2500/0BO 5.51-0St;s 'i!I ~·vtlll. dJrk-hrown, ~ 9950 lt'Jlht-r int. l1k,· n,.w ••••••••••••••••••••••• OltANG F. COUNl'Y'S 12.01111 m1 . '11.:100 fto.JEST '*1().6.'tt;, .... -- --Ll~COLN·MERCURY • 'W Sev1lll' bll.. w11Jlk lthr DEALERSHIP tnt, ~loonroof. tnµ tnm RA y FLADEBOE pull'r, rully luadt'tl. l'rnlt LINCOLN·MERCURY or OWnt'!rShlJJ. 1\-.i.umt• 16·1BAutoCenter Dr. Isl'. ~1rkc ' A~l /lalt· SDF'wy Lake Forest exit eves.~~4____ IRVINE CGlnOrO 9917 830-7000 ...........•.•......... 1977 Camero LT Very clean cond1t1011 Yellow "-Ith while IO· ·72 Colony Park 9 pass. wgn. Loaded. Original owner. SJ000.67~161. tcrior Air cond1tionlng, 7S Colony Park Wa~on. :1 power hrakt'' and "ll'f'r pai.s. ver y gd cond. mg. AM 1 1-·~1 H tr:ick loadrd.645·237Jarter 6. ~tt•n'O 4~K rr11 W mpi:. -~ i 611·5s.17.,, 1!178 Mercury Zephyr sta ''7!J Xlnt ConCI. t ak1• O\l'r \'Cl) low lea:..l' Xtra::.. 760 1w:1 -------- wgn, R&H. air, $3850 ~3 or 768-3455 ~stanq 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~ l'A:w!ARO Fully loJtlt..'CI Mustann 65. 289 eng. 4 w/sunroor & vmyl top spd. twn pipes , needs 17.000 m1. Mint cond mr1lor work. $9SO SAcfU "'ICE 8, ..... L Completl'ly self . r • 1 '"' yman c-ontainl'd. air' cond .. de· Islander. foormer Owner i.ignt·d tor c·ompact 57 Chevy Pkup, stock 327 & 4 spd hydro. Ne w int., llres good body. firs t $1600 lakes. 642·5438 BMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES&SERVICE OLDSMOBILE HONDA GMCTRUCICS '"'2 ,111 T Ta "' . \ <-: Al 68 VW convertible. nl:w ' .r,..a 1 t•ng1nc ti r e~. top. s.5.800 or mak1• urr. Mu -;t 6i'3·2484 ______ _ set•' Dy; 644·70'..!U. l'VC!l ' .,,,, M l C rt ••tnn &10-1.23! u<> us . onve . .......,.,.,. t:dger Ber~en. Ideal Bay pickup. $4.000. S.'i2· 7896. Launrh Runs good - S2-t50 Low inte rest \lJO Trav<'I Traill'r, sips rmanc111g avail. 673·1344 fl. ~ood cond. $1400. &7141973-1345 64&1:~ ---- Ford Courie r w /shell, cass stereo. make orr. Lw msg, 548-9185 76 Ford 250 Ran~er, PS. CREVIER & I ST & lltOADWAY SAHfA AHA 835·3171 f'fE ULTIMllTE DRIVING MAClilNE 28.50 Harbor Blvd COST A MF.SA 540-9640 ·77 HONDA CIVIC 5 :.pd Radials·Rims-xlnt rond cau JeU arts 548~2 lu.'s . Had1Jh. AM /FM. S48·l83i Call 5:>7 2810 ---'-· ------Run., good, loots great. '73 EXCl::LLl-:NT CON Sl().9782 '77 l'or~c he !II IS. l<lnt mnd. ,oil xtra!> 4~·4194 u r •IHI; 3615 INDIA RED TARGA ~ 300or V.W. Camper 79 SCIROCCO. metallic rl'd. deluxe doth 1n ll•nur, sunroof. stereo. 9>200. 673·3383. DITION Maroon Color & . -------Low Mtlc:i $:.!,60o OB 71 Mustang. ps, pb, a r. 559-7380 stereo taµe. !I mall V-8. I fiiJ.tll78. --------'75 Camaro. 6 C} I. l<lnt ·10 VW FastbaLk. xlnt. rond. Reil 1 owner '68 Mustang Fastback. 2 __ .. R&H SI 850 r1·rm t II c h 0 0 s e r r 0 m . lvuu. . . · · $3400 645-6355 Eves aft 6. 644·5752. $2000/0BO. $1800/0BO. ·79 :\IARQUIS 24' offs ho re 1!!80 ;\MER. HOLi DAY Po"'er boat 460 Ford :w foull y equip·Lndt•r dual slpg, berths. Tan. Warranly·R Bath·A/(.'. dum lrlr. very low hrs Butane Tank-Automal1r -ell or lease Sll.950 Reg·'.'lever Used mso. 775-1090. 645-4223 Private !'arty 546-5767 PB. auto. Sll'reo. AC. rust wheels. 3 tanks . S37000BO 545.9742 ----Vc:was 9570 •USEDBMWs• '72 2002 Tu w I si r t2061 > '733.0CScpc, mmllo:;59> '74 2002Til Sir (0332) '7S2002a ({)()35) Honda ·1s Htchbk. t\uto F.l.'i '7:!81i ~6-~ Xlnt rond. + mpg. S2'J&I ReMUtt 9755 1970 VW Bus. new tires. recent limed. S2200 or bst ofr 842·8953. 1978 CHEVROLET P.P. 897 4012. CAMARO ~28 otciMDbile 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 32'TROJAM'77 Trailers,Utilfty 9180 Ford '76 · ISO. 41.000 T w. dsl. r1ber Jtlass. ••••••••••••••••••••••• miJes. 6 cyl. slJck . S2600. sacnfice at $.59.500 Al our WANTED 642-3493. docksno"-. S mall ulthl ~ trailer 1977 Trademan 200 work UNITED YAClIT BKRS. 751·89ti7 van. SSOOO. Must see. For i;:n.3133 __ Jw1o Ser-Tice, ,;;----sale by Owner. SSH15i2. J 7' BoSlo n w h a 1 er & Acceuorin 9400 , w/llSHP Mercury l'ng . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 73 DODGE Trades man sssoo or b est ofrcr. $SAVE SAVES $300. Runs Good-Great 546-8397 WITH USED PARTS Work Van Sl300546-746J 24' Sklpjack :19. Open lmportedcarparts '73 VW Cmpr Van, x lnt IMPORT cond. New paint & tires. Hull. Volvo 225. 120 hrs. AUTO SUPPLY AM /FM s tereo cass VHF. Swim LOR, fresh 101 N. Manchester 640-0818 wtr· flus h. mint cond. Anaheim 776-9900 ---------- M u s t s e l I P P '74 Dodge Van. new tires 714-673-1611. Pr Chev 15" chrome rims eng over -hauled. $5()() & •77 24' SEA RAY . Weekender. trlr .• loaded. 200hrs. Sl.3.~492-5897 '77 Bay line r 27'. new engines. needs work. MOO. 673·8457 SJS. Ford 4 bbl manifold take over payments or w/carb ~-Sama II parts $2000 . Call Jeff: 536-6119. Wash Bin SJO. Late _______ _;.:.....:..;, mode l trH!laxle core Allfol W..t.d 9590 125. Old t' re expander for ••••••••••••••••••••••• split rims $15. 1950 Buick WE PAY TOP DOLLAR radio & center das h tor top uted cans-foreign. grille S25. 1949 Packard domestics or classic.,. It ...... Sell 9060 radio szs. 2 disc "'heels YoW" car I~ c1xtra c lean. ••••••••••• ••• ••• • ••• • • for 1927 Chev $25. 2 wood see 111 Fl RST · UNDENBURO 22' ruaa rac•, 6 ulla w/trlr. 1121*tMMIU spoke wheels for 25 Chev ao. Pair 39 Packard 120 fro nt l enders $95. 642-3'79 556-4689 aft Spm. • •••• ••••••••••••••• ••• '7SS30la w !Sir t 1483) '762002s r 4Sp.(15781 '77630csi (456SXGI '78320l 4 sp, a ir (4228) '78320ia. air 16095> '78530la loaded (54681 '7!l S281a sir (2615> '76Civic. 4 spd. low mile"I air, am/fm. $2750 OBO 646-6729 -------- "6CVCC5spd. good cond. $2500/0BO. nm1fm 960-7108. radial t1rt•s CloMd Swtdays ._ _____ _..;;..__ ~ 9730 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & Sales-Service-Leasing Rov Carver,lnc. Ilolls Royce BMW 1540Jamboree Newport Beach 64().6444 IOI McLAREN's & ••••••••••••••••••••••• The Superb Jaguar XJS, ( '80) 8.000 mi. bsl ofr over $20,000. 499-4757 9737 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 RENAULT "GORDIMI" 4 rvlmder. !> speed, far tory air cond1t1on1ng, J\:\1 FM .,ter<'o. i.un roor Sup1•r low miles with everything. (547YTY.. 1 $5699 ®~ ttf<11JcUowa·"l VOlKSWAGEN. INC GAi/OEN GllOVE '72 VW Bus. 9 passenge r. xlnt cond. $2600. 968·2124 arter lpm . '67 VW Squareback Sta· lion Wgn. A·l body with new paint. Interior good · Sun roof -Runs xln't · 35K miles on dual port rebilt e ngine. 545·2083 Sl.500 '75 VW BUS. beige, 19.S ml /gal lon. radials. r ad i o, S44SO /OBO lm-6566.546-0400 '77 VW Rabbit AM /FM. 4 speed. New brakes & battery . Ex· ce lle nt cond. $3500. 638-7858 '68 VW Bug. Runs. but needs work. $950 or bst olr. Call 846--0572 '79 Coov . VW B u g Wht/Wht 2000mi, stock· perfect S9500. days 8C2. 7794/494·2136 eves 73 Karmann Ghia Con· Aut omatic trans .. a i r ••••••••••••••••••••••• rood .. pwr. :.t eer '79 Diesel. Olds Cutlass Ing.AM /F M ca~!lCll<' Brougham w/all xtras. deck & mags. t:xccp A.5sume last 18mo. or :lyr llonal~ 1859LKE). be. Ca ll : 955-0031 wkdys, $4988 551·1673eves & wknrls. THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBO R BLVD . COSTA MESA 64'2·0010 ·77 Cutlass: 442. V6. Air, Stereo. 52.000 miles. S3200. ~aving 9·1·80 for Hawaii. 642·4337. 9957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9920 '72 Ford Pinto $450. Some ••••••••••••••••••••••• body damage-rear end· SEE US FIRST! runsoi. 8onnie67s-331!1 W1• have a good selection ·75 Hate h back. Air. 11 r N E W & U S E D stereo. 47K miJes. $1795. ~vrolets ! 559-9411. ----------'73 Pinto lair cond. gd mi Sl.000/bst orr, economy car 980-1483 CONNELL C:HtvROLET •h 11..rlM•I Jl h d ''"l \ \H:-0\ 54~1200 '74 WAGON Aut o. ---------• Am/Fm 8 track· Luggage 'SS Chevy Sedan VS. aut Rac k Gd cond Sl 700 tra ns . radio. or iginal 9004495 • 72,000 ml. 2 owner stock --------- S3.000/bst orr 846-4519 '72 Pinto, fix up or use ror n Bel ,., hoc'-· parts. Make offer. n.r,4 s ..., new. 4 645-5'33 new brakes. new paint.----·------ xlnt int., vinyl roof. new ..,,_..,. 9960 starter, runs xlnt. $800, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kenny,557-0994. '71 Duster. 2dr, 6cyl, lo mileage. 11400 or best of. 1974 Surburban, auto. 4 te r. 646·2231. 9965 whl dr. 90.000 mi. Eng. POlllHec good. $2000. 661 ·3354. _.:;.. ________ ........................... . 'T1 Moma, auto. 305 e ng, '89 BONNEVILLE Convt. PS, PB.. Air condition· Orig. ownr. gd. cond. log. 64()..4985 eves. SUJ95080. 540-7558 '72 Malibu convt. Xlnt Vege tt74 cood. 20mpg. IZ,89S or ••••••••••••••••••••••• best ofr. 642-1520 Must sell! '72 red, ~ C11Alac11t.. tflO ~:~~~lock, st ................ .. ..... ---------- '13 Mark I V. Champ. Pcoplewboneed people cond. Champapf' con • •hnuld aJwaY1 check the Blklblk leath lntr. 12400 Setvtce Dlre«oey ln the Must 11ell. Ph 548-9080 DAILY Pl LOT COMICS I CROSSWORD ThUBday, Augu1t 28 1980. DAIL y PILOT c 11 MARMADUK E by Brad Andtnon by Virgil Partch by Charles M. Schulz BIG GEORGE ----------------------------~ o·-·--...... SHOE "Now we're m tor 1t' We have to submit to a bone check!" MOON MULLINS Boo-Uoo! • -...__;::J.~ NOT TO EWY ME A 5'1~THDAV PR~S!:".J~' MISS PEACH FUNKY WINKERBEAN 50 THA'f S.()c.)U) GIVE. t,)00 A ~IC. IDE.A Of WAAT tAIE'Ll 8E 00tfll6 IN ENGU6H UiFRA1URE mt!> 4€1\~ f by Jeff MacNelly by Mell Lazarius I~ li~ETHAT CO~ C.Al'f f'E l'EL.ATED iO ONe~ HIOOO? NO! JIA'i 1'HE on-4~ OAY, t WA~ DEEP IN A 8~ 5T'LAOY. FEELIN6 6L.IAE A00lAT ALL. iHS ~Uf:N~ LIKe YOU WHO sa.1eve THAi. IT llE4U. y MAOE THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane "So the bosketboll would go through it." DENNIS THE MENACE ME~~D ••• GORDO JUDGE PARKER l'D 00€00 THAT THEV'\IE TAKEN f)ll.L INTO EMER· 6ENCY ! WE'D 6ET TER CHECK HERE! ' J i ! t 9 BECAUSE WE~E NO GOOD .. . BECAUSE WE'RE NO 6000 .. . BECAUSE WE'RE NO 6000 ! by Tom Batiuk DRABBLE 1\JE S£rn \..('f'ft~b M~ M~'fAlM( t,ROW re>R ~1~£ 0~'4S. ANO rr's ')'f\\.l. 6A~EL~ N.o1'1cH0LE ! FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE HAPPY BlfmlDff't', MOM t -I WRAPPE.DTl-llS I CH05E rr ALL BY M'ISELf P.N' I f-1ROC -iHE CARD ALL -I B'/ MY<:.f.LF • :i ALL Bf -~~J MYSELF! DR . SMOCK we= L.L-. SO MUCH FOR AN INIRAVE::NOuS FE:E::PING OF C HE::RRI E::S · .;u e 1 L-e:e::, KIDDO ..• by Gus Arriola T>'Ai!s M:JI SK.'// IT~ /#IS 0cJY'S RO.BE Z THIN!<.( . by Harold Le Doux ~ HVeeAND I!> ON M10 V'IAY TO 5C.IR6ERY! we·1..1.. NEEO YOUR ~AlURE ON THEf>f PAPER5! Hlf> CONDITION 15 CRITICAL.! by Tom K. Ryan. NANCY by Emit Busltmiller NANCY···ARE YOU G IVING THE HOUSE A THOROUGH CL EANING? I SURE AM·· I VACUUMED EVERYTHING IN THE HOUSE t'M EVEN VACUUMING THE VACUUM CLEANER 0 .. . ·'Wake up. Georqe. They repossessed your ham· mock while you were asleep" fl!O~Mh~, If '400 ll)ANf A c,ooo MvS1'Al1tf:, 'fOV'v£ 601' 10 (,1-JE: l"f 'f1 M~ 1.~ by Kevin Fagan 1\1.. bt\/E If At.101'~~R 'Ii l'Oul< I I TODAv·s CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS t H1111aro 6 Suffi~ tor teen 10 Ladle 14 Quiet 15 Shoe part 16 01hefwlse 17 C8I style 186"to 1· 2wordS 20Sow 21 Derive 22 "And so - •8 Stano1ng 49 Bribe 50 Tory's loe 54 Snooker teats 2w<>tds 57 Girl's name 58 E.lustence 59 Mllaylew 60 In names 6 t Smlri< 62 Soc:18fy gals 63 Removes DOWN 23 Not close 1 Moccasins 25 Layouts 2 Drug plant 27 Lusters 3 PM>t UNI TEO Feature Syndicate Wednesday's Punle Solved TH AIT•I M I I I c" 0 II I " ( "'°-c A I A I H O P £ II II A Tll•H I L L I u, , (. (" ••1111 " ( LA T I 0 MI II I LK: KJ• r-• I I ·--IDll•TIHll I I llTll A M llLll•I HIAID•llTIO ' " LIO•llH Ol'tlf•Hllllllll IT 1111•110 1111 •1 AlllTlfl (0 ... D ... ..... ··--o II I ca-F All LIU II I I ND I I' E M DI M I ... I l C E A I I I AU M T•Oll v I I A T I MI I' A C l •AIT A II . " 111 D I I L I D•lll L T 30 Mustangs 4 Mow like 24 Paymenl 41 B.A.or M.Sc 31 UK money Astaire 25 Fountains 43 -tape 32 Time of day 2 words 26 Burden 44 1mper11nence 33 Fasten 5 Ogle 27 Scot11sh river 4!"> Mu11neer 36 Celtic 6 Jacob's son 28 Champtoo 46 Remove 37 Encir'clel 7 M111t tource 29 An•ious 4 7 HOfdes 38 Parry 8 Edtfloe pert 2 words 49 Pltroe 39 Pronoun· 9 Ump's kin 30 Soup s 1 Sleet ..0 Glass sheets 10 Sult 32 Cavity 52 About 41 Solemn song 1 t GyptUma 34 Gloomy Dean 2 words 42 Agurine 12 Eyot 35 UtQC>ia 53 Turns right 44 Dec:teaM 13 YOl'kahlrt city 37 POf111l 55 Owned 45 ~ 19 Divest 38 Vulgar nag 56 Poem 47 Exllted 21 Fuel 40 Slacks 57 Parent -- _...._. .-...-- c•a DAILY PtLOT ··~· ~arn1ng: The Surgeon General Has Determined hat Cigareue~mokmg Is Dangerous 10 Your Health _--::-_,,.--i- ' ---n.~· .-·:"':1"• .... -· .. I .! I I ' -.. 'iiiiiiF . -- Menthol Fn;..c:;h -:O CIC.AR( T TZ. •• Menthol Fresh ~ ti ULfJ Uitta Low Tar Ultra LowTar ' I 17 B11•tlllgton Beach . Fowntaln V!1~0~y '\'our Hometown t Dally Newspaper 1 I . n, NO. M1, 3 SECTIONS,«> PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST28, 1980 TWENTY·FIVE CENTS ' W ASHINOTON CAP) -Preal •dent Carter called today for UT .t Mlb lD l•l tax cut.a for ladhlchaall aad b•lne1aea u part of an election-yen economic propoaal tbat also . alma to create a mllllon jobs withiA h1110 yean. But be laid. "I will Dot accept a pre-elecUon blU to cut taxes." The president also request.ed con1reuional authority to spend .Cocaine Seized In Valley Cocaine valued at $400,000 was seized by police at a Fountain Valley home Tuesday afternoon, and three men and a woman were arrested on various drug c harges, ac cordi ng to Westminster.police. _ ~~ f Officer Earl Graham said the arrests came as the result of a ·month-long investigation '-Westminster police were assist- ed in the arrest by drug enforce- ment officials and Huntington . peach and Fountain Valley Jice, be said. "'•, . vern~~Ers ted Eu ene ~wi.. , .and Mic~ael Duane Wa er, , ' both of Huntington Beach, ter allegedly making a cocaine urchase from them at 10933 La • errua Ave., Graham said. . Police later returned to the res- idence with a warrant, Graham ald, and arrested Richard · AvaJoe Macua, 31, and hla wife icbele Louise Mapna, 25, of Fountaln Valley. Graham said a :i>o.tnd of the drug was con- fiscated. Police are still seeking a flfth <penon ln connect.ion with the "case, Graham said. The . four were charged with ·conspiracy, sale of cocaine, possession of cocaine for sale, ~ and poaaeasion of Quaaludes. ;,Graham said. · They were taken to Orange c:County Jail, where bail for the r,'tbree men was set at $.15,000 ,each. Ball for Mrs. M agana was ·set at $10.000. Body Found 'I · lnF~M ' Identified t A decomposed body found ~ near a Laguna Hills construction site has been identified as that of Peter Manford Moore, a 23-year- old Santa Ana man reported missing by relatives July 8. Preliminary investigation of the body . discovered Tuesday night showed that Moore died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the heed, according to Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart. A .22 caliber rifle was recovered at tbe scene, he said. i Moan, who wu studying den- tal technok>IY in Santa Ana, left class the day of hJs dhiap- pearanee and did not return, an iavesUiatiQn revealed. Kil Car wu found near the in- t teneetion ol Alicia and Moulton parllwayi several days later but • inveati1atora could not find lloore. The near-skeletal remains were fomd by youths walktpg in tbe area. Hart said. ,Rill' HND IN Bll4T S41LS •The l>a11y. t'llot realty Nadtll bollt buJen aloft1 the Or• .... eo.t. '•t .id lll1 Wladaarfer the 418 to the ftnt caller reply· i. tM ad I plHld lD tfae Dai· elwUJecl 9eetlon .•• ,,._,, tbe ~ •ueCC!ll ft!!lrJ fl Ille IAllma a.a~h man ~ tldl ed la tbe Daily Jobs Cm·ter K~ys -to Ecoiloniy ) t aa additional S3.e bllllon In 1981 to retrain workers. weatherize homes. maintain highways, bulld ports, boost research and d e. v e I o p m e n t a n d h e 1 p economically distressed coun- ties and cities. ln additU>n. he urged Congress to rapidly extend unemployment benefits by 13 weeks to help workers laid off by the re· cession. Benefits currently ex pire after 39 weeks . This would cost Sl.35 blllion over two years. Carter unveiled what he called a ··r esponsible·· economic blueprint to an audience of busi- ness. labor. consumer and con- gressional leaders gathered in the East Room of the White House. The president drew a sharp contrast between his economic plans and those of Ronald A Letter Fro91 lraa Dr. John F. Dwyer and son. Ben, 14, show letter received this week !tom wife and mother. Cynthia, under arrest in Iran since early May. The letter, received this week, is the first communication the Dwyers in Buffalo, N.Y. have received from the woman who told them she is well. She went to Iran in April as a free lance writer and was ar- rested later by revolutionary guards on spy charges. FBI Hunting Three In Casino Explosion STATELINE, Nev. <AP>-The FBI is hunting two men and a woman wanted for questioning in a bombing that blew the side out of a Lake Tahoe hotel-casino during a botched attempt to ex- tort S3 million in $100 bills from the gambling house. The FBI also s aid the sophisticated design of the com- plex bomb, which sent plumes of smoke skyward and showered debris over several blocks when it was accidentally detonated by a robot, may offer clues to who built it. Late Wedneaday, at t. be requeet of the FBI, an all-points bulletin was issued for three men. described by C alifornia Highway Patrol s pokesman Judd Strong as in their early 206. He said they reportedlY' were driving a black 1975 Ford and wer,e1 beaded west out of Lake Tahoe when last seen. But today the alert was canceled and the des.cription changed to two men and the woman. Agents tried to meet the ransom demand to save the posh resort. but the bomb exploded Wednes- T-8HIRTS PROVE ~ATTAHOE-A3 day during attempts to dismanUe it. The blast made rubble of the $20 million casino's bottom Ooors and blew out most of the windows in the 12-story building. No one was injured. Thousands or people bad been evacuated earlier from a four-block area around the casino. There was no immediate estimate of damage. The blut came more than 30 hours after the bomb, encased in a blue steel box inside an IBM C()m· puter carton, was discovered at Harvey's ResortHotel·Caalno. Slate and federal officials, some of them experts from nuclear laboratories, rushed to the scene as 1amblers in this re· sort city tried to make bets on <See TAHOE, Pa1e Al) . Reagan. although he did not mention the Republican· pres- idential nominee by name. "Now -in the heat or an elec· lion year -ls not the lime to seek votes with ill-considered tax cuts that would steal back in inflation the few dollars the average American t axpayer would get." Carter said. ''America needs to build mus- cle. not add fat," he said. "I will not accept a pre-election bill to cut taxes." Reagan proposed an im- mediate $37 billion tax cut to stimulate the economy as part of an even larger tax cut plan. Carter said his proposals will begin a "journey toward a more productive. more competitive. and more prosperous American economy. .. They will put people back to work. reduce taxes. increase .. public and private investment. and constrain inflation." he said . The president said there are no easy solutions to the prob· le ms facing the economy. ··But there are responsible ways to create productive jobs without reigniting inflation." he said. <See CARTER. Page A2l Mandie Involved? Belsito Charges 'Coverup' Plot By PATRICK KENNEDY OI • o.ltr ~Mil St.ft • -'"""'Ru-nrin-it8Vi ~H c1ry.·'1\ir- ministrator Floyd "Bud" Belsito s aid today he was fired by the City Council this week because he wouldn't participate in what he says is a cover-up of a con· met or interest involving Coun · cilman Bob Mandie. Belsito also complained that unproven charges that the city violated federal nepotism reg- ulations because three of his relatives were employed by the city's federally funded job pro- gr am also contributed to his downfall. He said the nepotism allega· lions by Bob Nelson, director of the Orange County Manpower Commission, were based on an unofficial document and should not have been r eleased last month. Belsito was fired by the City Council Tuesday on a 5 to 2 vote. The action occurred In a closed session after midnight. He must vacate his office by Oct. 1. under the council order. Belsito said Mandie should not be allowed to remain on the City Council because he is president of Mandie Motors, which has a business arrangement to handle police-related towing business. "Mandie can't stay on the council if he has a financial in- terest in the business," Belsito I.ow lmerest Loam Offered ForHBHoma L o w i n t e r e s t h o 'm e improvement loans are being offered in a new area of Huntington Beach, )f ayor Ruth Bailey has announced. Owners of homes bounded by Garfield Avenue on the north, Yorktown Avenue on the south, Woodward Lane on the west and Salmon Street on the east, may be eligible for loans as low as 3 percent simple interest, payable over a 3>-year period. The loan rate depends on family size and income, a city spokesman said. Eligible improvements include new and repaired roofs, room enlargements and additiona,.kitehen and batbroom remodelinl, lnsuJaUon, painting, gara1e add-ons and fencing. The funds. are provided by the federal Housing and . .Urban Developm.ent Department. The borrower must a1ree to bring bis ::;rty up to a mlnimum bull and safety standards. For urtber lnformaUon, call city ball, 538--5M2. said ... It's either that or the city tect the city and the City Coun- faces an anti-trust lawsuit. cit. but they chose to. ignore it. I( -"I'm not gotng-ttr·uc ~rt m---r-~<r..~jotr'bytn'ii1i:;fi'ii ttti~ ta-- their cover-up." Belsito said of their attention, then I lose my the council. "I'm trying to pro-tStt BELSITO. Page A2> Beiglat OIJjection Valley High-rise Plans Scratched Plans for a 14-story Fountain Valley office building were of- ficially put to rest at a city Plan- ning· Commission meeting Wedn~)'nighl. Stephen Gavin, vice pres ident of Pacific Mutual Life Insurance Co .. told commissione rs the firm is \flthdrawing its variance applications to build the b.igh- rtse on the southeast comer or Brookburst Street and La Alameda Avenue. The company put its plans on "hold" several weeks ago in the wake of community opposition to the 2J>S.foot height of the pro· posed structure and to potential traffic problems. Gavin Wednesday kept the company's pledge to announce a final decision on the project Aug. ?:1. After announcing the format withdrawal of the proj- ect, the Pacific Mutual official touched briefly on the com· pany's future plans for the site. "We are ex.amining different designs for the project, and hopefully a new plan can be de· veloped in the near future which will be mutually acceptable and a credit to the community," Gavin said. Outside the meeting. Gavin said he could nol specify when the firm might return with a new plan for the downtown site. "It's a very complicated pro- cedure to move from a 14-story building to one that meets the city's 50-foot height limit," he said. He noted that the company lost several hundred thomand dollars in connection with ctesign and consultants' work on the bigb·rise proposal. Gavin said a shorter structure may require expensive underground parking. and could eliminate some of the Convicts Give Up MONTREAL <AP>. -Nhte convicts at the maximum- security Laval prison laid down their weapons today. releued the last ol their hostages and surrendered. end1ng a three-day standoft. open-space landscaping t he company included in its hJgh- rise design. Gavin said the company prob- a bly will cons ult with local community representatives on future project designs for the Fountain Valley site. 3Attackers Sought in Cop Shooting Anaheim police had no sus- pects in custody today after patrolman Paul Lee was at- tac ked Wednesday by three men. Lee was shot in the thigh with his own police revolver. Lee is recovering in the Anaheim Me morial Hospital. and a police spokesman said he probably will be released soon. The shooting occurred about 7 :35 a .m. Wednesday. Dean Grose. Anaheim public informa- tion officer. said Lee was patrol- ing Manzanita park when be heard sounds or g lass bottles breaking across the fence on the Ri verside Freeway. Lee climbed the fence, Grose said. and was jumped in some shrubs by the trio of attackers. One of the men grabbed Lee's gun and pointed it at the of- fice r's face, Grose said. Lee then forced the man's arm (See ATl'ACK, Page A2) Coast Weather Sunny Friday afternoon following morning cloudi- ness. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight SO at the beaches, 65 inland. Highs Friday mid 70s to upper 888. 1tlotlaer Assails Suspeet INSIDE TODAY David and Dorothy DN- ling wtte ordn'ed to nr ... tt'llUr Uwir ~ otter aut"°""" fovn4 tltc child k/f oloM attn ,,.. parnta went to CM det1U1t. The Dw1liftf• "'°"' tr..ir child baclc -thq q Chol jud becouf ,,,., botlt an ....,.. ByDAVIDIWTZ•ANN ................. .A Santa Ana man1 atandlnl trial lor tbe clrownlnl aeatb of bil 4- year-Old nephew last April, was called a "cold-bloo-ded murderer ' by bis mother Wedneaclay during an emotional outburst l.n Orange County SUperiorCourt. Later intheda.'/, SQPerior Court Judie Ille.bard Beacom,. who ii C'dlnl over the non-JW'J trial, d murder defendant Emmett Mitchell's taped confet1ioa to poltce April 11 ln which he detcribed Ont 1tran1Un1 and then drownlna his nephew In a bltbtub. '•Something snap.Ped," Mitchell said to detecti+e Gall Clark, "IJuatanapped." • Mitchell bu plMded not fUllty by reuon of tnaanlty to tbe mRtdercbar1eu1_aln1tldm. · Hts neP'1ew, John LewiJ Jr. died at Chudren'a Uotpltal Oi Orante Oounty after 1pendlq a week and a half OD ute •uPPOrt sy1term. The courtroom outburata belan Wedneaday mornint wbeD Mltcbell roee to bil feet d\lrinc questionln1 of bl• 1l1ter, the child'• mother, and cried out, "That'11 <expletive) lte. You're a <expletive>liar " Th• wttn-., Dianne Left, bad been wwrtaa qUMtlool about her andberbro&her11 uDbr'tulas. Atthll po&at, 111~8 '1 mOtblr-, Dorothy llltchell, ltood at the rear ot tbe imal). Jourtb·floor courtroom in Santa Ana and )'ellad. .,SIDmtttr. JOU'N a cold· blooded ......... You kllled an lnnoeellleldld .•• A1 lblrtft'1 dlDutMI nstrmMd blm, llltdllll Ila ba9t Ill 11111 mother, "You eauted me to laave a nenom brealrdown. '' Responded hi• mother, .. You did \t )OQHelf wttb all tbat dope '/OU wentakinl. '' ''You're 10DDA pay, Emmett," Mn. Lewll1akl from the witneu stand. Defense attorney Ron Butler uked for a receN but. wben the trial rwumed In the aftel'DOOG, there WAJ one more •~all out· bunt. um .. aln by llltebell's ~ when lbe wu ut,ed by Judie &e,com to watt outat4e tbe CO'flU'oom wbUe tbe tape WU plated. Tlall wu done becaue Ille la a P*RUaltu&urewltDelt. How•wr, Jin. lltubell "'°" teated, H.J)DI, u'l'hlt la my trudlcm we're ta1kJ.nc about. 1' She thin left tbe courtroom, loud· b bantlnl oPeD a door OD tbe WAJ out. Durtl\I tbe playln« of the tapes, <See SNAPPED, P .. e Al> '°"' nfarded ~-·· "'"" tM, aM't tMt propt1" CON of Ian. S.. "°'W• Pall All. •••ex ~"-""""Ad a.~ a .,.. ...... f;:I ....... -.u ~ .,-.: =-'= :: ~ Al •==·" ........ c.11 ci-ea '" . • .... .a ere.c • • en .,.,,.. .,.,.. • ......... .... ..... •'-' ........ """ ......... .. .... ,, ' 1' .......... . -.11 nMllrt .. .. ..._... Ct.f ...._ M ll•™-9a ..... ..._M .....,eeo,....,, an • .ti CW\. V P!LOT Htf Thundlr. M• a 1• ~-~JVST' 8RE'4KING u. ~..,,.,·fi'riri ...... ..,.. ... Allllil ............. w .... . Israeli Air Strike Hits Lebanon 6oaiJt BEIRUT. lAba"°" <AP> -laraeil planes al'd. heUc:op~ra struck Pialt"lltlnian taraet.s In southern IA'banon ovf'm l1ht. •nd an lsraeU a unboat uc:bancect hrt' with perrlllaa oo the f.(lban coai1t. e .N. spoka'mao reported tf>d~y A military apc>ll maa ln ~1 Avtv confir med Israeli fon:et attacked "t.errori t tarteu akJnt the Lebaoesf' rout" but 1a ve no further detall There ~re no repe>rt.s or tnJurtes. the U N 21p0keamun smd l~ruel httli ~·t.·n stcppma up 1~ war oo Palestlntan outPo$UI In southern Leb11noo. and sent soldiers and warpl1&ne1 acroas the border Aua l9 ln a ma1or rad aaamst auerrllla potntuons that ten as m1my •11 tiO dead. lt wa the IM'if'St m1htary of)tlratlon s ince the Murch 1978 braell lnvas1on of the south 7 1 ...... lrt1•U.1U E.reftdftl By Tiie .U.OClaled Pttsa Five tram an army officers and two civilians were executed by fi r tng squad today tn it coastal park un Iran's southwest to~ of Ahwaz utter bemg found guilty of plotting a e<>up attempt against the revolutionary regime of Ayatollah Rubollah Khomeini. BELSITO.· .• Job.'' CWTftllly. the dty poUcy ot al· lowln1 two com]>anlee accese to all po&ice-... la\ed b>WIDI bull· n••• w belq chaUen1ed by • •t 1 mltUon antt-truat action. The laweult also questions wht!ther Mandie hH an unta!r C1dva ntage because he Is a coun· ell m an. M11ndle> couldn't be r"acHed for ~omment today. Currently • City Council com· mitt~ ts drafting a new towing poll<'Y "To show how blatant the con- n u:t or lnterest Is." Belsito said, .... Her they fired me 'in ex.: l'cullve session they discussed the ramlricallons of the pro- posed towing ordinance a nd ~· lowed Marl<lic to s tay for the dlS- ·n1sslon." Belsito said nepotism charges released last month were pre· mature because the Manpower commission had not acted on the report. T he official Pars news agency reported the seven me~. "agents or the coup d'etat t'Onsp1racy," were shot at dawn tn Ahwaz. 340 mules southwest of Te hran un 011-rich Khuzes tan province. Traift O~rallftf; No~ ff"" DUNSMUIR GP) The southbound Coasl Starlight passenger train was derailed on a side track near here today, but no~e oft he 306 passengers was hurt. a railroa~ spokesman said .. H e said Ro bert L . Cun- ningham. former director of the city's federally funded job pro- gram. recently wrote a seven· • page letter to the. M anpow~r Comm ission defending the htr· ·Ing of Be lsit o's d aughter. daughter-in-law and nephew in 1979. The Portland-to-San Diego Amtrak tram pulled on the side ' track al Gibson at 2:55 a .m . to allow a northboun~ pas~enger tra!n to go by. said Charles Kennedy, a Southern Pac1f1c d1sp~tcher in . Roseville. He said the baggage car derailed and pulled ntn~ ot~er · cars off the tracks. The cars remamed upright and the main hnc wa ·not blocked. Ruuian Print S~ntnwrd • -MOSCOW (AP> -Dissident Russ!an. Orth~o~ priest GTeb '\'akunun was convicted today of ant1-SOv1et a~1tat1on l:!"d prop- aganda and sentenced to five years 1n labor camp and five years ..Dtinterna.Lextle. __ ---~ .-. ---.r-f ~ · Yakunin. 46-year-old co-founder of a ~1ss1dent group to oe enu the rights of Christian be"lievers. declared m ~ourt. ~~n~sday that his actlvities were "my religious duty as a pn est. ha~ wife repo~· ed She said he denied his work was aimed at s ubvert mg the Soviet state Rites Today For HB Man C.E. Cross V1s1lat1on will be held today tor Charles Elbert Cross. 86. who died Tuesday at the Hunt 1ngton Valley Con va lescent 1 los pital. M r Cross had be e n a t·arpenter for th<' City of :1unt· ung ton Beach for many years Born Dec 14, 1893 in Cado County. Okla . Mr Cr oss is sur· v 1' <·d by daughters J uanuta 11 udgeons or Hunlln~ton Reach, :'lklba Hyepock of Hemet, Willie H y t•ppck of Rhone rt P a rk. C,llif. and Alta llodges or Hereford. Texas. Helen Pellem nf 1 rving. Texas. lrma Rickman or Hereford, Texas and son, Car- roll Cross of Santa Ana. J\l s o s ur v 1v 1ng art• 2:1 ~rand<'hi l dren . 44 g r ea t J,!randchildren and two great· great-gr andchildren. Visitation will be from noon to 9 p.m. at Pierc e Broth e r s S m iths' Mortuary. 6Z7 Main St .. Hunt- ington Beach. Fro•P~1\I • SNAPPED • • which were made shortly after Mitchell's arrest. Mrs. Lewis wept quietly at the rear of the courtroom as the d efendant described how he killed her c hild. At sever al points in the tape, Mitchell la ughed heartily while describing what be had done. He told detective Clark he was a "suicidal nut" and a "masochist" as well as being homosexual. 'Mitchell said he attacked the child forbreaking hisstereohead· phones while baby sitting the boy. Mrs . Lewis attended night classes. However. be lat.er said he killed the child as a means of killing himself. Wed n esd ay·s dra ma tic courtroom action was not the fi rst s uch occurrence in Mitchell's ~rial. On Tuesday. as proceedings were beginning, Mitchell shouted out , "I don't want this in the press ... I don't know where they <the reporters> are. but J don 't want them in here." Cunningham wrote that the commission report misinterpret· ed Comprehensive Empl?yn:ienl Training Act <CET('l gu1deh~es concerning nepotism. Belsito said Belsito said Cunningha m . who ha s not been see n s ince February. did not s ay where he IS l\VIDj?. CARTER ••• lie said his program will create up to 500,000 jobs in 1981 <1nd a total of a million jobs by the end of 1982 in addition to those which normal recovery and other new programs are ex. pcctcd to provide. ··We expect lo add 2 percent growl h to the gross national prod- uct. increase real investment by 10 percent and help to hold down inflation al t he s ame time," he said Treas u ry Secret ary G . William Miller told a news brief- ing earlier that a ll the tax in- itiatives and virtually all the s pending proposals would not be pr oposed as legislation until January. The t ax reductions would go into effect J a n. 1. retroactively if necessary. ··All of these thmgs will con- trit1\Jte to r einforcing the re- covery, but it's not a stimulus package,·· Miller said. T he wide-rangin g package would increase the proposed federal deficit by a pproximately S6 billion in the fiscal year that begins Oct . 1, bringing the pro- jected budget shortage to more tha n $35 billion . Only fiv~ months ago, Carter was cham- pioning a balanced budget as the key to his then-economic policy. f'uneral services will be held Sat urdav in Hereford , Texas. Membership Drive Staged by Klan Dana Board Unifllle F RESNO CAP) -A ha lf-doun White-robed members of the Ku Klux Klan staged a "me m· bership drive" here while police, stood by in case of violence. 'The Klan m e mbe rs stood along a city street for about 45 minutes Wednesday night. Some passing motorist s honked or tJlade obscene gestures. Another 2() to 30 motorists stopped to pick up literature. Fume8 Harmless DEL REY CAP ) -Sulfur dioxide leaked from a 500-gallon t~nk at La Salle Winery in this Fresno Cowtty town Wednesday, bµt workers washed the spill away wit.bout. any incidents. HIF DAILY PILOT Retirement Plan Called Incentive By DON CHAPMAN Of Ille o.lly 11119' '"'" T he Dana Point Sanitary Dis· trict board appears to s tand a lone among Orange Coast gov· ernmental agencies voting itseU a $500-a-month retirement plan. The pension, which became ef· fective in April, amounts to $50C per month for board members who have attended 10 meetln~ per year for eight consecutive years and have reached the age of 65. Board members are paid $50 per meeting. The law provides for the pension through various sections or the state Government Code and the district can afford it, ac- cording to board member Angus Smith. Smith noted that officials from other districts had been contact- ing him to see how the Dana Point board esta blishe d the plan. "They're all coo!ronted with the aame problem (of 1ett.tnc and keeping qualified board members)," he said. The diltrlct'• five board mem- bers donti pa)' into the f\lnd, . wbJch ts provided throqh the cli1tttet•1 general fund. . No board members art ellat- ble for the pension no•, sa1d Smltb. He explained that the plan ~d provide incentive for service. • 'The PQ1"POle behind lt (tbe Plan) ls to eacoura1• peopat to 1ta1 on the board and con· trtbu&e, •• a. aald. Re Mid u..n lw been rehae· tanc. •ta. put ol the public to beeo-liDtOlftd on •~b ~ • since Proposition 13 and ftaan· cl•l dleokilare Ian came Into effed. Board merben ~~month· ly. b ut Smith said the lime they spend during the month on district business fluctuates. ··A board member could easily put in 80 hours a month.'' he s aid. Smith is 50 years old a nd has served on the boa rd for nine years. President Louis Dunning, 60, has served for 20 years and un- de r the plan could qualify for a reduced pension if board mem· bers and fund counselors ap- proved it, officials s aid. Smith stressed that the dis· trict was in strong financial s hape and is operated effi· ciently. The annual fee for district sewer services, he said, had been reduced from $24 per year to $16 per year. He said the district is strictly within the law in set.ting up the retirement fund. "We don't step out of line," he aald. Attorney Clayton Parker of Santa Ana, who advlsed the board re1ardlna the pension plan, eald one applicable Gov· emment Oode section autbortles local a,enclH to establish benefits or omcers and mem· ben. A not"er aecUon provides power for local a1eneles to pro- vide health and wellare benefttl. h•~•ld. ..._ .. Tbe $10,000 peMioft trust lllllU wUI be bandied ·by Plannln1 Counselora, Inc. of Santa Monie.a. Tb• diltrict eervea about 7,000 cuetomen In tbe Dana Polnt area, operatlq MWtr lilMI and trealln1 aewa1e thtou1h the Soulhealt l\qt<lnal Reclamation Aut.ho~lan. SMOKE AND DEBRIS EXPLODE FROM HARVEY'S RESORT HOTEL AS BOMB GOES OFF FBI HuntJng Three People for Queatlonl".'g In Blast Which Rocked Stateline Area fi'f"091PageBI Suspect Held In Sex Attack OnFVYouth TAHOE BLAST • • '! whether the device was phony. A fi re briefly raged in the casino five hours later Jerry Yablons ky, .Fl~I special agent, said the soph~stucated de· sign of the bomb might provide clues on who made 1t. "l don't know of another similar device being used." Yablonsky s<1 1d "I have not ~een anything like 1t in my 28 yeal':Scf)f ~<!e.::.. ~ __ .. As far as the r ul is con- cerned, all the stops are out to bri n g th e pe rpetra to rs t o Justice." Some of the n ation's most highly tramed electronics. and explosives experts failed in ef· forts to crack the design. ScientisLs and bomb experts from the Lawrence Livermore nuclear weapons laboratory. the Ar my. the Depart ment of Energy a nd the FBI worked with the device more than 24 hours before the ill·fated at- tem pt to disarm the mechanis m. T he attempt was approved by casino-owner Harvey Gross. 75. The box. which m easured 2·bY· 2-by-4-feet. had another s mall device on top wh ere 28 mechanical switches were locat· ed. Two of the switches were de· signed to monitor tilt and mo- tion, authorities said - The bomb reportl'dly con 'lhat's Real Inflation P HOENIX. Ariz. C Pl -- For his newly rented four· bedroom house. Ike P itrat was expecting a utility bill of about $12. Ins t e ad , the c ity o f Phoenix served him a bill for $10,355.61. T hat in- cludes $2,548.61 for water , $101.74 for state tax. $63.39 city tax . $5,888.74 for sewer fees and $1,752.60 fo r trash pickups. Plus $5.53 for "previous am ount." Pitral figures a com · pule r ma de a mistake, and he's planning to con· front city hall. 0 tained 1.000 sticks of dynamite. There was no word on how the device might have been set off, but officials speculated ut might have been disarmed by rlippm~ the. s witches in a s pecu ric se quence. After the blast. the f 'BI re· vealed that agents tried to meet a S3 million ransom demand, but the extortionists failed to sho~. • ala__pr,e.a.cranged heltco~ei: Jen- dezvous poinl. "The requests of the extor- tionists were met." Yablonsky said. "However . they did not s how up at a second location a fter a phone contact had been made lo set up the payoff " He said a helicopter pilot with S3 mullion put up by Gross wa~ supposed to meet the extor- tionists "within a 15·mule raduu.<; of the c lub, but they never showed " The money was re· turned to Gross. a rancher and early settlerinthe Tahoe region The pilot had been contal'tl'<l b y t h e extort io ni s t s at a specified location about 12: w a .m . Wednesday and told to ny to a second s ite, where he was to "receive a s ignal from the 5round" that never came. The purpose of the extortion attempt was "sole ly for profit." Yablonsky said, a!> the raruwm was to be paid in SIOO bills. The horn b "'a., whcl·lcd into the casino at about 5.30 a m Tuesday by two men pos ini.: a.<; computer techmc uans. said FJlf agent Bill J ansen. Whtie thl· m en .. delivered" the bomb to the casino·~ second floor offtC('~. a woman driving a while van waited ouU.ide, Jansen said. Minutes later. the bomb wa:- f ou nd w ith a thrl·e·pag(• typewritten letter attached l'X plaining the t•xtort ion dt·m<inds Expe rts s tudied the bomb. after it was packed in 260,000 sandbags, for hours before de· cid i n g to u se a sensit ive mechanical robot lo disar m it. The 3:45 pm explos ion m the 250 room raculitv shook nearby casinos "like a sonic boom ... said one bystander. rattling glass and dra"';ng cheer~ from people c rowded unto nearby casinos. As the bomb exploded. the second and third floors on the building's south side bulged. Police said the blast vicinity was expected to be closed to traffic for two days. .\ 27 )'l'Jr old Westminster man has been arrested on <'h<i q~c!> of M.•xually ass aulting a f"ountain Valley youth at kmfe· point carllt•r an the month, police ~aid . Fountain Valley de tective L.1tr~ Gru~wold s aid police..., - pulled over M l<'h<ic l Charles B<1 lk I<' at 4 µ m Tuesday for a 1 ralf1c v1olal1Un a fte r being not1t1c<I by the as:.ault v1ct1m that tht· man who had ·allegedly lor<:1.:d h11n to part1c1pate un sex J d !-wa:-. un the area Balkll' wa:-arn•sted at the in- ll'rSl'<'t1on of Edmge r Avenue ;.ind Brookhurs t Street. about a m ile and onc-halI from where 1 he allC'ged a!>sault occurred. Griswold said . Police ~u1d the s uspect <1lso had a lovdcd semi-c:rntomatic pistol 111 his car at the time of th(' arrc!>l. Griswold said. Halkw b lx:mA held on sex and weapons charges at Orange County Jail. Fro• Pagt-A J ATTACK •.• down and the gun fired. hitting the patrolman in the leg, Grose "aid The bullet passed through th<' lt•g and didn't hit the bone, ht· :.idckcl Thi• attackC'rs fled and Lee t•allcd for help on a walkie- t alk1 e lie> manai.:ed to climb the fl'nc·1• a nd was found by fellow oft'1<·1·rs t•ollapst'd on a .sidewalk 111 the park. It was lhl' fir:-.l timt• an J\nahc•im police officer has been !>hot while on duty, G rose said. Soon. 34 other Anaheim police offi cers had set up roadblocks in the rundown neighborhood west of thl' pa rk. Grose said cars ll'avung the area were s topped a nd checked for suspects who matched Lee's description of the ·three Latm men who he said Jumped him. f''ullerton police and California H1ghwav Patrol officers a lso as- sisted. ·and two tracking dogs from t he Hunt ington Beach Poh ce Department were set on the s uspects' trail, said Gr ose. o~ ~ ., and the most competitive prices, anywhere. G) . ~·rh :: @ .= ~'g ti· @-:,~-o.:.~~ cl---\;j) </Uallii -9/1; ~ 0 CAllfORNIA <12660 ' ---------------------·-------------------.. .. • CALIFORNIA Thunday. August 28. 1980 DAIL y PILOT A~ Trilppetl Crews Evae•ated r. Blnze Rages Up San Jacinti> PALM SPRINGS. C alll. (AP I -M eanUme. an aor tanke,"on its way to members who could not be evacuatJ t'lrefighter~ planned lo use the closed fight the blaze accidentally dumped 500 before dark were forced to spend ~ Palm Springs Aerial Tramway to gallons of fire retardant on a major night in a burned-out area of the moue transport personnel and equipment to· Palm Springs thoroughfare Wednesday. tains. ·• day in their effort to stop an out-of· There were no reports of injuries but Ch' h · · ~ control 6,()00.acre brush and timber fire the gooey red liquid splattered str~ts mo. TacU evah Undd bTa~~w~ ca~ .. raging up the side of Mount S an buildings. cars. sidewalks and a fe~ hons .~ere a engu e Y e a me •• ~ Jacinto. people. e sai · · Althoug~ orricials closed the tramway Several local fi re. ·department trucks ' to the pubhc after the fire burned within had to be called in to 'hose down streets 0Ff1CIA.LS SAID the only damagec half a mlle of the sightseeing attraction, and cars blanketed by the substance. from the Dry Falls fire was to• California Departme nt of Forestry which usually leaves a permanent stain watershed and timber, a lthough nearlyt s pokesman Dave Hillman said the on clothing and paint. authorities said. 100 e xpensive homes were brieflyC r. r1· oht o ld 't t h th t threatened Tuesday evening. f ire e-ers w u use 1 o reac e op FIREFIG....,ER~ AT th bl f 1 or the l0.786-foot peak. ". • e aze SU • Th r· t rt d bo t T d r fered a setback Wednesday afternoon. e ire s a e a u noon ues ay. THE SAME HOT. dry weather which Hillman said. when the blaze outflanked apparently when four boys -ages 8 to . had plagued firefighters since the blaze some 450 crew members who had to be 11 -were playing with matches in a ! began Tuesday contmued to hamper ef. evacuated with the help of helicopters. flood control debris basin. authorities! forts at containment as the fi re reached "The fi re ran around them and got said. They were released to the custody~ the 7 .000-foot level and rushed on into behind them and we quit fighting th~ of their parents. ; forested areas. fire and JUSI made sure we got everyone The blaze. burning in a southwesterly: "The fi re has progressed from heavy out a li ve,'' Hillman said. "By doing that direction, has never directly lhreatenet ~ brush to timber and we have a crown we probably lost an additional several this res1dent1a l resort city which isi fire now." Hillman said. "It sure looks hundred acres." nestled agamst the mountain's eastern ; like the fi re could reach the top of Four firefi ghters suffered minor in· s lope about l lO miles east of Lost Deat•Leap Mount San J acinto... Juries. he said. and another 45 crew Angeles • t New Mortgage Plan Eyea Finn to Mine Leftover Ore • ~ Tom McGuire . 29. a temporary clerical worker for the Veterans Administration. kicks out glass on 14th floor of the VA building in S~n Francisco (right ) before leaping to his death (left>. Police tried for more than three hours to talk him out of jumping. Attack by Acid Fatal SAN FRANCISCO CAP> A San Francisco company says it plans to mine gold from a deposit missed in the Gold Rush days. Homestake Mining Co. said Wedncs day that t h e "sig n ificant gold mineraliz · n" in a remote area of Napa County thwest of SACRAMENTO !A.P l A variable rate home mortgage bill was sent to Gov Edmund Bro wn Jr. bv the L eg i s l ature Wedne s da y a·s an alternative to a bill he.vetoed. A 72-0 Assembly vole completed passage of AB 3142 by Assemblyman Alister McAlistcr. 0 -San Jose. Sacramento is in fine particles can not be panned or seen by the naked e Mc Alister said the bill was backed by The deposit will yield 'more than one the ~avings and lean industry. con· million OWlCes of gold. estimated Harry ::.umer groups and the governor. and t to one half percent a year to a maxt amum of 5 percent over the 30-year lifE$ of the loan In terest rates are hovering al about: ta percent. They fell to l l't2 percent; after rising <ts high as 20 percent earlie~ this year t SYLMAR <AP> -Burned, blinded and disfigured after mysterious as- sail ants threw acid in her face. ~~--J>~i.ciii .WMi;ell •• V4,W .. e.d-f~r hospital bed to continue attending law classes which started this week. ( l M ~ong1·r. president and chief ex mt there wa~ no known oppos1t1on. C> . ecut1ve of 1cer of Homesta~e , ut ::.av in gs and loans preferred Sf A.TE Pure gold has be~ selbng for about another bill. SBl937 by Sen John . _ ~-_ --------· -f:3~trt o~~'l var;.!~?_~2fld n;..a...r.k_et~ .._ -h'<>'"""!<lo.-~-J.::.r~~~-~b...Bro~ _ ~ rf Y. · · . Vl•toed Fornn abandoned efforts tu L'ndcr McAhstc r'!> bill. the borrowerf could choose to have monthly payments rem a an constant for th rec. four or fivcl years Al the end of the chosen period ~ the ratC' "'-OUld be reset up or down bY. a s mueh as one-half percent dependinfi on what happened to the market. • \ The borrower could the n choose .morncr·pcrr5trof three. fo uror-hve: yl•ars for the monthly payments to· re .. main const<1nt under the new intercst=- ratl' ' "That's what really s urprised me. but she has always been a two-fi sted wom an," said Steven Miller; a close friend of Ms. Worrell. "She started law school knowing she was going to finish and this wasn't going to stand in her way." ~~t!~ ~illion by t he same date a year m~~io~-~~n ~~~nJe;,'s1~h~n~h!~0~n.~::e ovl'mdc the vt"to lhb week • 982· mill arc expected lo be in operation b) McAllster·s bill allO\.\S state sanngs But Ms . Worrell, president of the student bar a ssociation at San Fernando Valley College of Law, never returned lo those classes .. She died Sunday, 10 days after the attack. The 34-year·old law student could not identify her attackers and police have no suspttts in the case which has left them and the victim's friends baffled. Bmi•9 Pia• IJplleld SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The Los An geles Board of Education appears headed for the natio.n's highest court after the California Supreme Court refused to bar mandatory busing and pupil assignment this fall in the city sc hool d istrict's ele me ntary and junior high schools Saying she was "not al all sur· prised" by the high court's decision Wednesday, cHy school board Presi- dent Roberta Weintraub sought to ar· range an emergency session of the board tonight. Ddklt ·N.., S•rpl .. SACRAMENTO (AP) -New pro- jections by the legislative analyst say the slate s hould have a $60.4 million surplus on June 30. 1981. instead of a $12.6 million deficit as previously thought. But the report said Wednesday that if all pending legislation is enacted. the deficit could widen to as much as SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A movie crew that apparently filmed a West German stuntman's fatal leap from the Golden Gate Bridge is the object of a so-far fruitless search by the California Highway Patrol. "We're kind of an dead end. We can't find the film company," CHP Officer Roland Miller said Wednes· day, a day after Wolfgang Hans Gun- ther Kopke died while reportedly try. ing to set a world high-diving record. The 34-year-old Kopke -1979 European high-dive champion -fell 250 feet, landing on his back as he hit the San Francisco Bay water at more than 100 mph. Salal'JI Bills Sip~d SACRAMENTO CAP> -Two bills des igned to equalize judges' salaries that were made unequa l by a stale Supreme Court ruling were signed in· 1 to law Wednesday by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. One of the measures, AB3274 by Assemblyman Walter Inga lls. D· Riverside. places a proposed con· stitulional amendment. SCA37 by Sen. John Garamendi, D-Walnut Grove, on the November ballot. Under the other bill, SB2060 by Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Van Nuys. municipal and superior court judges would get raises In J anuary. The s alary levels would be the same as average salaries now paid to the judges. , A 1976 law froze judges· salaries for t 'h years and limited future an- nual increases to 5 percent, rather than an increase geared to inflation. Donavan & Seamans on the Rolex setting crown. The setting crown is often the weak link in other watches. but not in a Rolex. The Role" crown is a patented construction which. like a 5ubmarine hatch. screws down onto the watch case. sedling the movement from dll water. dust and sand. 1"hirtv manufacturing steps are required In its co nstruction. Our full selection of men's and women'S Rolex !iCVle~ is available in a wide p rice range. lllu~trated 'oate Ro lex for men or women in all steel. steel and gold. or all gold. With strap or bract?li!t. ~([flYIJl4nf ~th~rn Calllomia'S St-nt<)< Role"Allcncy 'i760 Wllthiftl' Bh1rl.. l~ Anaelei • 213-939-2121 11 fdllon bt.od. l"ll'Wport Beach • 11~576-t 1984 . Conger said . and loan in:.t1tut1on:. to offer the same Prospectors during the 1849 California 'ariabll· rate mortgage which federally gold rush bypassed the area along the licensed firms h<ive offered since last Knoxville Creek in northern Napa Coun· spring ThC' nt•w federal law has been ty because the gold was not visible. little used so f:.ir Th<.> Me/\hstcr bill dOl'S not have tht) "nt•gall\'l' amortization" frature or Foran's bill. which could result in the borrower owing more a fter five years ot skad1ly rising interest rates than at the, Conger said. It allows interest rates to vary by up start of the mortgal?t· · PROMONTORY POINT A PARTMENTS BEO\LJSE 'rOU BELIEVE YOUR APARTMENT SHOULD BE AS DISTINCTIVE AS YOUR LIFESTYLE Promontory Point 1s not for everyone. It's for the person who appreoates the exceptional. who understands and requires a unique lifestyle. and who 1s willing ro pay for 1t. Simply stated. Promontory Po rm rs luxury. A fuxury l1f estyfe that rs unmatch ed in Southern Calif orn1a. Promontory Point 1s spectacular ocean views. Twenty-six variations of floor plans with skylights. lofts. decks. patios. And all the quality extras you'd expea. It's a million dollar rec center w ith pools. health spa. sauna. lounge, game rooms. banquet and conference rooms and library. a permanent tennis pro and lighted tennis courts. Promontory Point is an award w inner. It has won recognition for design excellen ce from the American Institute of Architects, Architeaural Record, Sunset Magazine and the National A ssocrat1on of Home Builders. And rt's touted as one of the most beautiful apartment projects 1n the country by residents and industry leaders alike. The Point is unique. rt 1s understated luxury for some very speoal people. Promontory Point ... A place for people who enjoy and can afford an affluent Ufeeyle. Rents from S665 - Sl 500 675-8000 Gr . ProntOdtoltJ?oint in Newport Beach ' I l ,. I. .. • . -. - I l I • Orang eoaso oa11v P1101 Editorial Jl'!!fJ.e ------------------------------------~----- A• •I I' • Thu110ay August 28 1980 Rober1 N Wffd/Publlsher Barbara Kreibicn 1Edltorlal P• Editor Belsito Action ' Not ~urprising The di mi ·sat or Hunllngton Btach Caty Ad mlnl trator FloYd t Bud> Bel 1to comes as no surpnse '!be City Council hlil held thr(.'(' cp rate \!Oles lO rare him since last Novt'mbt•r Tht' ~2 decl ion Tu~ay wa& tM culrnination or muh. COWlC•I complamts Last year a majority ol council mcmtK>rs complained that Belsito laekcd innovam·c t<k'as to deel W1th ProPo&a· Uon 13 cutback and d1dn 't exercl.M' propt!r rontrol ovt'r various city deport ml'nt . It wos also alleged that when he wa nwav from r1 t" hall he le(t incxperlenc •d empk>yecs In charge. • . In January o council mu1onty vol<'d to fire BE'lhlto. b.Ul gave hJm six months to ra1st• his performance level Slnce that lime. howe \!er. two m HJOr t·ontrovcrsie& m volvl ng the cit y's federally funct~ Job program havl' <'Ol'nc to tht• for cf ront Lus t February tht· non-profit <·o rµoration that ha ndled the city 's job program was d1s manlled for al lcged misuse o f (unds . · It was on Be lsito's recommendauon that the C'ouncil turned over the city's re ponsibihties to the corporation He had assured the counril he personally would stay on top of its activit ies The final straw"f>robably came las t monlh when the Orange County Manpower Commission alleged the city violated fede ral nepotis m regulations because three of Belsito's close relatives were employed by the c ity's Cederally funded job program for varying periods over the past year and a half. Belsito ha s had his ups and downs as the cit y's lop appointed official. An-advocate of the low-profile school of administrators. h e 's stayed pre.tty clear of fireball public issues. But when his relationship with council members began to turn sour . he couldn't convince them he had the stuff to do the job. Belsito m ay find consolation in the fact that city ud· ministr ators a nd city managers seldom last long. particuJarly in a local government as volatile as Hunt- ington Beach's 1::::::..-.-.;· l1'JldiAe J1c.Ww:.f o.u.r ~a~rouml h~<Lls.JUJ.W~­ ment. Question of Influence Huntini!ton Reach Councilman Bob Ma ndie apparent- ly h as used poor judgment and opened himself to charges of conflict of interest involving his automobile towing company. Police Chief Earle Robitaille says Mandie may have tried to influence a proposed ordinan ce that would set s tandards for towing companies seeking police·re lated towing business. Traffic officers involved in drafting the new or- dina nce say Mandie has contacted them frequently with questions about t he proposal. One tr.affic officer said he felt Mandie was trying to influence him to recommend c hanges in the proposal Mandie de nies he was lobbying . He sa ys he was just asking questions If Ma ndie did try to influen ce the proposal it could be cons ide red a viola tion of state conflict of inte r est law. ac· cording to the city attorney. The councilma n . who manages his father's towing company. also re presented the fa mily business at a meet- ing held by the police department to discuss the or- dinance proposal. Currently, the Mandie firm is one of two companies with exclusive access lo police-related towing. But this policy has been <"ha lle nged in an anti-trust lawsuit. The suit a lso questions whethe r Mandie is in a n ad- vantageous position because he is a councilman. Even if Councilma n Mand ie did not ask for the pro- posal to be changed. he should not have become so pe rsonally ·involved in the drafting of a city ordinance I hat wouJd directly relate to his financia l income . During City Council meetings, Mandie leaves the room when the subject of towing is discussed. He should have maintained this ha nds-off policy in his private ac- tivities. too. • • Op inions e><pressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Daily Pt101. P 0 Bo>< 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd/Fears By L. M. BOYD Some people are deeply afraid of heights, you knew that. And some are afraid of closed in places. And some are afraid of giving control of themselves to others. Each of these three fears can become intense phobias. And there are those who suffer from all three. Llttle wonder then. is it not. that an estimated 25 million citizens are afraid of flying. an act which tests all three or these fears? Synthetic hormones tend to cut back the brain's ability to respond to the body's senses -sight, sound, touch, so on. Or so say Stephen Wong and John Tong, researchers at Ontario's Queens Unlversity. The cooclmlon: Wornen tall· inC the pill aren't u mental- ly alen u other women. Dear Gloomy Gas ~ Tb• 10ftl'90r abou.Jd ••• , ..... , ti•• ••. pre11I• •'do It up brow•" doeaa't w ••• .., ....... ........ ..,. D.11. Q. You quoted writer John Cheever as saying that all the American Nobel Prize winners in literature. except Pearl Buck, died as alcoholic suicides. Please exempt John Steinbeck. He did not fit the description. A. You're quite r ight, The most knowledgeable authori- ty alive on the matter -Mrs. John Steinbeck -says this particular laureate was not alcoholic. No two tiger s have the same print patterns on their furs. Do you recall during World War II when the U.S. gov· ernmenl wanted to find a s ubsLance tor car license platet to replace tbe needed metal? A aoy~ail compound waa tried. But given up. Cows kept eatln1 the license plaLes. Q. WbeD did t.be tracllUoo ot the U.S. PNl1clenta send· tna otnclal Chriltma• cardl be&ln? A. Prwldent Dwiaht D. ElaeDbonr startad Lt. Q . Wbat'a tbe uUo of men to wom•n amon1 SeUCIMd CtU...! ' A. Over.,. If: •men to 100 WGIDID. °'9r' 14: 48 1MD to 100 WOIDlll • Q. How maoh ~ do u. a.. a. 8rid.p toll bootM ....... ., dQ! .. Ja k And~r~ou . Mob Silences Crime Witnesses WA 'IUNCTON Beginning four ycurs auo. I he fo'hf was ll\unnt'd by It Kcrlt>:, O( nearly 30 Mob atylt> executions across the <'Ountry What disturbed the G- tptn Willi the unmllft1tkablc pat tern of the killings The victims wrr,~ Informants or witne1SSes scheduled to l<.>t1llly ;_1gainst Mob fi gure " and nil wNe murdered with sllenct>r equipped 22· callber revolvers This became u J(nevou:. ('Qn· t•t•rn or or11un1icd cri me r1ghtf'rs. who rea red thl') could get no more conv1l" lions sf their wit n esses <·ould not be protected I.aw enforce· men t au · l h 0 r I t I t• ~ bc l(<in an urgent snvest1gat1on. usi ng agents in 20 FBI fi eld oHi ccs and the federal Bureau or Alcohol. Tobacco and F irearms Their find ings haw not been disclosed to this day A ~ECR ET ATF analysis of the killings in the New York and New Jersey area concludes lhat all the victims were slain on contract. and that all were members or associates of the Vito Genovese organized crime family Here ts a partial list of the targets : ' Vincent D. Capone. a gambler and Mob business associate. who rashly bragged about skimming m o ney f,.rom Genovese en - terprises. I-le was s hot with a 22 on July 1. 1976 Frank Chin. a witness In a federal extortion trial Ile was gunned down on J an 24. 1977. with the same 22 used to kill Capone. Thomas Palermo. found stuffed in the trunk of a car parked al Kennedy International Airport m March 1977 The 'iame .22 pistol did the JOb J ames Joseph Queh Jr .. slam on Nov 1. 1978. Again. the hit was made with the same .22 handgun. "THE ACTS ~re bchevcd to have been planned and executed by van ous memlx'rs of the Genovese Crime Family." the ATF report states lt adds that in addition to gambling. narcotics and htJack ing activities. "this Family is p~rl~cularly active i.n c?ntract ktll1ng a nd acqu1slt1on of firearms for this purpose.'' THE ATF TRACED the con- nection between the 750-man Gen ovese fami ly a nd th e smaller "Purple Gang" of New York City. Between August and December or 1975. members of the Purple Gang traveled through Florida bu ying handguns: o r the 86 pistols they bought. more than hair were 22-caliber revolvers. The gun cache was transport· ed to the New York·New Jersey a rea. where "these weapons will continue to be utilized as the need arises." the report stales. ft concludes that "handguns and silencers are being made availa· ble to members of the Genovese Family by the Purple Gang, and there is a certain amount of ·contract s wapping.· " Whal that means is expl ained th1~ way "In essence, when people of 'little respect' arc to be 'whacked.· the contract will be given to the Purple Gang. When ·more respect· is demanded. the contract will go to Hoboken· • Genovese." One Genovese hll man. the re· port al.ales, Is a shrewd and suc- cessfuJ businessman. "It is as- s umed," notes the report. "that he does contract work for status and prestige and not money." Footnote: The a lleged leader of the Genovese Family, Frank "Funzi" Tieri, was recently in· dieted for racketeering. Law en· forcement auUlC)rities told my associate Tony Capaccio that. with only two or the 86 pistols re· covered so ra r . there is the possibiUly of another rash of .22 caliber slaylngs. CUBAN CHILDREN: Rapes, as- saults and suicide a ttempts ma rk the daily Hfe of the 900 Cuban refugee children who are without parents in the hastily set-up refugee cam ps. But legal technicalities preve nt the youngsters' release lo relatives or foster-care groups. "It is a real crime that this leg a I issue has not been re- solved," said a n official of the U.S. Catholic Confere nce, the largest of the volunteer resettle- ment agencies involved in the C uban r e fugee program "There's vi olence being done to these minors in the camps, and we arc angry as hell about it.'' The troubl e is that before Cuban children can be resettled pe rmanently. the slates to whlchi they are going must accept long-· term legal custody. This is a safeguard in casc individucil sponsorship breaks down. But so ·=-. far, only two s tates . -New -·-· '"Jer~ey· anatlorlcfir'. Tive~ mt.I&! -'v1SA.MC. J!!'!iX• ~~ ... \~~ agreed to take legal custody on a long.term basis. UNTIL THE red tape can be untangled. the kids stay in the refugee camps. And a s a Catholic welfare worker noted to my reporter Jutta Hennig. " .. a camp with a prison-like at· mos phere behin d a 12 -foot barbed-wire fenct! is no place for minors." ' ACK A CARD-.twi (.ARD! I Several suicide attempts have been reported in the camps. But the State Department tends to pooh-pooh the seriousness of the reports ... Unttl all these cases <i re examined:' a spokes man said. "we cannot say which are attempted suicides and which are attention grabbers ... Mailbox Car Industry Woe Pinned on Government To the Editor. Daily Pilot columist George Mair has. in just a few short paragraphs m his July 3 column. sho~n h.ss complete ignorance in unde rstanding the problems plaguing the automobile in- dustry. The American public dictates to dealers and manufacturers what they will, or will not, buy. And, the public is about as fi ckle as a 16-year-old beauty queen trying to make up her mind between a dozen prom invila· lions. Ours is a nation of fad followers . What's "in " or "fashionable" at the moment counts far more than what is logical o r sen sible .. or necessary, By in large people fee l this way a bo ut their clothing, their homes, household extras. entertainment . . . and the c.ars they drive. IF THE POWERS that be would see fit to roll the price or gasoline back to under one dollar a fallon, I'm convinced you'd be amazed at how quickly the automobile business would recover. Drop credit restrictions and interest rates along with gasoline prices and lbe auto in· dustry would thrive and the en- tire nation would prosper. The average domes ti c automobile gels almost double the mileage it got three years ago . . so apparently progress is being made in Detroit. If you could get Joan Claybrook off the bac ks or the automob i le manufacturers, get CalifornJa to be more realistic in their EPA ratings and correct all the out· side influences allectlng our in· duaLry, then I believe Mr. Carter would find that he bu more than enough time oa bis bands to deal with pressing issues like over· hauling the welfare system, in· ~me tax, loteilD policy and, oh yea, curbina rampant inflation. The autorooblle business would not need utlltanc• from "Bil Brotber," ll "Bia Brother" would butt-out and leave us alone to do What we do belt . . . build quality, eaerty-efficlent automobiles. Ob, and while you're at It, you mllbt abo CCG· rinee ·•ma Bnidler" to re-= tbe ba1ace of trade. That help the~ bulneaa too . . . not to m.enUon cOUDU .. tbousMdl ol other AmerlcM ln· dutrt.. JACK ROCKWELL General Ma.,er, Beach Qty Chevrolet Co. Gra~•r•i To the Edltnr I think "Gravel Pit Culture .. I!> a super idea. /\ cultural develop· ment here would go over great. I would support 1l Tl H. TITUS OU Ri911 To the Editor; It was incredible to read in your Aug. 20 edition. "Oil Rigs Blocked." that the Coastal Com· mission is blocking oil produc- tion off our shores when our country is staggering under the economk burden of foreign oil blackma il. They save every feather. on every bird. while they fleece the people. When do we get free from that monster bureaucracy? GOLDI E JOSEPH Appoinf :IUfJrnt>fl To the Editor: Re your editorial of Aug. 7 re· garding our Huntington Beach city attorney's being e lected or appointed: It is my feeling that the logic you've used captures the real crux of the matter. So long as the position remains elective. the problem no doubt will exist -i.e .: decisions made for Punch political purposes. rather than practical purposes. As illustration of your point. the city attorney's office. th~ record wi II show. has continued to block every effort to bring the litigation which reportedly will interpret our charter lo a just and final conclusion. Our city is too large and com· plex to be encumbered this way any longer. DEAN ALBRIGHT Trwdda9 c .. t• To the F.ditor: r am writing in response to a recent article which appeared on your Comment page under the by-line or Thomas Elias. The ite m concerns the deregulation of the trucking industry in California. Mr. Elias' article makes re- ference to items which are not supported by racts. Elias reports that "the old rules have cost California consumers about $300 million a year. or $50 per ramily, according to the stale Public Utilities Commission." If Mr. Elias is in possession of data to substantiate such an outlandish figure. I respectfully request that he favor me with such in· formation, as repeated efforts ''That Mulhroom Julienne! Have you the antldote1" j r by industry to secure such sub- s t antiation from t he PUC or Gov. Brown have been met with silence. THE AUTHOR'S inference concerning tying freight rates lo cost of consumer goods is clear- ly based on hearsay a nd in- dicates lack of proper research. As any novice economist can at- test, the relationship between transportation cost and s helf price is negligible; and for Mr. Elias to base conclusions on faulty grounds reflects a lack of understanding and knowledge on his part and does a disservice to both your readers and our in· dustry. A.E. BARTOLIC P resident. California Trucking Association Airperi Neea To the Editor: It seems to me, as a taxpayer. that our governments have now wasted millions or dollars mak- ing various studies, and fighting the Orange County Airport. We will always have with us those people who live under the flight paths to complain about the planes. Improved low-noise aircraft will never satisfy their complaints. However, the "silent majori· ty" wtll tell you that the aJrport is necessary to our economic Ufe, and that we should expand the number of dally fllghts, rather than freeze them al 41 per day. IT HAS always amused me that less than 5 percent of the aircraft flying out are com· mercial, yet we never hear any complalnL1 abo ut private alrcralt which can be just as nolsy. The hard facts are that In the pas t 20 years, greater Los Angeles has lost 30 ~rcent of It.a airports, yet need for air travel a nd air recreation bas In· creased. It ls Ume for the pollticlana to be honest about this matter, get Lhe airport rebuilt a nd ex- panded.J and set on with the busl· nesa or satl1fytn1 the needs ol the entire populace. R.M. WOLFF • ,._.Deity Plllle __ ,_.. ... ~ .., .... ....,.,~ ......... ........ .. , ................... , ... c.--.., CAtK .. ~~-~ ..................... --..n .. ....... """'"' -... .._ -.. 111( ........... , ................ .... ,i,u. .... 1 .. ·----..- " . Thursday. August 28. 1980 DAILY PILOT At: Von Hoffman Investor With a Conscience Can Still Profit : . A '"' ...,_ qo. ao IWnolt Central Oulf frel1ht trala JwnS*l l&a tracu ln lluWtMlb. ky. J'our lank can carryiq vtQ,yl eblolide caqbt fire ·..a the whole community ot ..,. 1 ,500 peraoa1 bad to be ... euMd. Wreekl of Ulla 1ort baYe become eo fl"equen.t they are often QO loe1er treat· ~-~ .cl .. • ........ tant news, ... , tboqb tbe U· ....., hDoW Cmlral .. mea WU IO bad It made front pa1es. A 10'7 -car Boston 6 Ma.Jae train went oft ill track5 ln Gardner. Ma1.1 .• but luckily the propane tank cars it was carrying were empt y. or there ml1bt have been a terrible explosion such as the one t.Ut killed 1S people near Waverly, Tenn., in im. Incidentally, it was only last . April that another Botton & llllalae tr&ln rtmmed a tank oar ln Som aervllle. Mau . The pho1phoru1 trl·chlorld• in Its tanks eteaped to form a cloud over the commu.nlty Deffllltat· lq &be evacuaUon of 13,000 pee>· pie . WI THO UT accu1lnc any parUcuJar railroad, the ••ol· doe ailt.t that 10me an de· liberately nmalftf ....,. lines. They certainl.Y have every lo· ceallvc not to malnta.ln thelr tnckl la a coadiUoa suitable for eitber the ufety ol tbelr worken oc the people wbo live near where trains loaded with dangerous chemicals roll. 'lbe Federal Railroad Admlnlstra- tion will lend money at 2 percent interest to repair the ricbt-of· ways after they've deteriorated enough, so why should a railroad spend its own money to keep itself in working order? A railroad ian't like a cat which bas an innate need to keep itself cleaned and groomed. We're told tl'• overly 1trlct re1· ul1tloo which la a1pbyx.laUnc American industry. StlU there mlcbt be some alon1 the railroad tracks who tb.lnk it's American Industry that's 11pbyxlaUn1 ut, and that in some 1reaa, the mus h com- plalaed ol re1ulatory and in· 1pection system Is more a theoretical draa on prolita than a real one. EVEN wrnt its traiM killing people and terrorid n g com- mu.nlUes. a railroad can still be a decent investment. Illinois Central 1ndus tries, the pro- prietor or the Muldraugh, Ky .. accident, bas been paying a round 8 percent on its stock. But should one invest in a company that has accidents of this sort? Can you make money without making injury ? Some people have, and have actually gotten rich at it. For example, we have the Rodale Press in Emmaus, Pa .. the publis hers ol Prevention, Organic Gardening, New Farm. Bicycling and New Shelter mquioes. Roclale aJao publilbes boob, au devoted to healthy living and other ac· tivltiea of unsurpassed ecological purity. It is also estimated that iross revenues were about $65 mllUon last year so sometimes at least in addition to being its own reward. virtue can bring In a few outside shekels. Unhappily for the investor wltb a conscience, interested in making an honorable buck, Rodale is a private concern whose stock is not for sale to the Qu~tes ''Now we reporters won't have to cover trials by peering through the crack in the courthouse doors." -Kevin McCarthy, a re- porter who had been ousted from a Vir~a murder trial, com- menting on the Supreme Court's ruling that the public and press have a constitutional right to at· tend criminal trials. even when defendantswanttoexcludethem. public. Nevertheless, there is hope for the high minded. The Continental Savings .and Loan. Association or San Fran- cisco offers a choice of what it calls Solar T-Bills or Solar T - Notes or Solar Certificates Qf de- posit. ln interest yield to you. these fully government·ins~ forms of deposit don't differ from what's being offered around the corner at your local S&L. What's different is that this money will only be lent to help people inst all solar heating equipment. AFTER THEY'VE taxed the interest on a Savings and Loan account and you figure in the ravages or inflation. any kind of deposit in a thrift institution, solar or non·solar. is a money loser . But ther e are op - portunities for the investor who would prefer to make his money without poisoning h.is neighbor. Barron's recently did a study or three socially con scious mutual funds . (A mutual fund pools your money with other'!f people's to buy shares or stool from a number of companies ) The Dreyfus Third Century Fund decides which company's· · stock to buy, not only after de- ciding it's a good business de· cision, but also after checking . the company's environmental record and its employee safety and hiring policies. That you can do good for •' yourself by doing gOQd for others ' ' is exemplified by the Third Cen-• tury 's profit record. In the past· · five years. the value of Third Century stock has risen 169 per- cent. Which is not to say that virtue will be equally well re· warded in the next five years, so be warned. Investing in the goodly and godly will not chan{le corporate behavior. Most investors will make their decisions on profit cons iderations alone. but they . can console themselves with the adage that there is no such thing as dirty money. only dirty hands to pass it to you_. _ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· LABOR DAY WEEKEND SALE .. Exciting values throughout the store. Shop Fri. 10-9:30, Sat. 10-7, Sun. 11-6, Mon. 10-9:30 . ! .-:8% oH •elected. t.11vl'•® J11an• Jeans for men, women, boys and girls, 'jrs .. young men. Limit 4-pair. Cords, denims, stretch, brushed, ·Movin 'On."A . 52, 77, 133, 175, 177, 418, 419, 560 Float• fpeclal Perfect pool-side coverups and at-home loungers. Long polyester florals. S-M-L. loungewear 53, 115 -voiiiiiimenJS,;1a1d8hi;18 ---· --~ Lightweight polyester/ cotton with short sleeves. Blues or browns, S-M-L-XL. mike's place 196 ---<iueen:s/zesola .. sleeper ---~ Fruitwood-finish wood framed. Tweedy!.,, -·~ beige/ brown Herculon · olefin. r' Soucie Jackel• Soft, nubby, casual cardigans in colorful acrylics. S-M-L. women 's sportswear 62, 29.99 were $40-$42 113 to 11a oH rain coat• Rain or shine coats in tailored, trench and loose styles. Petites 6-16. women 's coats 426 39.99 were $80-$80 30% to 35% oH Ecco Bay · Interchangeable jackets, shirts, skirts, pants in solids. and prints. 8-18. blvd. sportswear 18 7 9.99-21.99 reg. $15433 Flutter •IHVtl ladln' top• Save 25% on a beautiful array of polyester prints in sizes 10-18. teddi 178 14.99 reg. $21 . , S.re 26%-on .,,., .,,,..,.,.. Plush pullovers, and cardigans. 4-6X. }ustk/ds56 11.19 reg. 111 19.99 spec/al Pierced ea"ln111 Large selection "' studs, hoops, bands with 14K gold filled posts. fashion jewelry 22 4.99 •peels/ Sav11 50% on sung/a•••• Tropic-Cal and Riviera ladies plastic and rimless styles. fashion acces- sories 3 3.50-7.50 reg. $1-$15 Cord pant• tor boys ,,Tom Sawyer/ Elderado polyester/ cotton cords in 8-14, reg.lslim, 26-30. mike's for boys 14 9.99-11.99 special Sav11 40% on boy•' knit• Kennington short sleeve knits and terries In polyester/ cotton. S-XL. mike's for boys 164 8.99 w•r• $15-$16 You1t11 m.n'• cord pant• By Eldorado. Waist 29-36. mike 's place 191 . , . 9.99 were $18-$19 Save $45 to $106 men's suits Vested, 2 and 4-pc. and T's by famous makers. In neat patterns and textures. men's suits 21 199-1149 reg. $145-$255 Save 25% on Qiana kl shirts Short and long sleeves in subtle patterns, solids. By Van Heusen. men's furnishings 492 9.99-11.99 reg. $14-$16 • Wamsutta sheet set• Ultracale., polyester and cotton percale. Fitted bottom, flat top, pr. cases•. linens and domestics 34 29.95 spec/al 'Twin set, one case only . QuHnl klng comforters Wamsutta patterns in polyester/ cotton with polyester fiberl/11. linens and domestics 41 39.99 •peels/ Sam.onlt•® Son•r• II Save 200"' tq 30% on soft-side luggage. Everything from totes to garment bags. luggage 402 -rep. sel. all stores 31.50-183 reg."5-$110 furniture 140 1499 reg. $650 Frultwood recliners Head-to-toe relaxation! Upholstered in tweedy beige/brown Herculon olefin. furniture 147 1349 reg. $400 Burl-look finish 3-pc. wall system Has drop/eat desk. open shelves, door cabinets. 30X 17>-. 74 ... furniture 465 '699 set r eg. $1,000 Fi ve-piece game set Four comfortable armchairs up~/ stared.in vinyl. Octa-gonal pedestal table. furniture 142 '995 set after sale $1,400 Today'• 1980 Hoover upright Full time powered agitator with 4 carpet pile height adjust-ments and dust bag. home economics 73 49.99 •peels/ Big •weep women'• •hlll• Long. Shorts. Airy light polyester/ cotton by Mistique. S-M-L. budget loungewesr 815 7.99-9.99 were 9.99-11.99 I ,I it .. .. .. I . . • . .. . .. -, ----------------~----------------------------__ .... ______________________ .._ ______________________ ~. 'I ,. ' a company COila mesa -south coast plaza -3333 ao. bristol -546-932 1 ts11bn•nater -westmlnater mall-goldenwest at san diego twy. -898-2521 mlllton vieto -m!Uion vl4tjo mell -crown valley at san dlego twy. -495·2800 ' . ' . .. . '. , . ' s ~.~.,- ••00n·t mow., ledy. n..·a a water P'•tot e4"*1 r\ght at your he&r." Danger Seen State Growth Limit Urged If 0 DUtD urn COME EARLY, the hot stuff mAJ' ju.st .. u ..,__.__,,, out eo why dawdle Danny? ATLAS DELUXE BEDROOM' LAMPS ~~R2597 BRASS •201 POLISH BRASS OR =Wrm 2997 OAK TRIM •301 Got a nice swing arm ao you can get more light where you n ffd it. (So you can read theM ads in bed and aave your eyes. ) TUC·KER ~ TRASH CAN The price of trash cans is getting so crazy you can't afford to put trash in them. H e re's one that makes the affordable rating. Rugged for t he money. 30 GAL. f FLUORESCENT TUBES SACRAMENTO <AP> -Stal e Resource.s Director Huey J ohnson say~ California mus.t lim1l lts population or face social and economic col· lapse, the Sacramento Bee reported. • Johnson said population control could start with expanded abortion services, tax. penalties for large families and cutbacks on low-income hous· ing, the newspaper's Washington bureau reported. K.D. RECORD CABINET 14!?s SHELL NO -PEST STRIP 2 4FT. 77c 1~ For y.an I wondered who "KD." was. It's HE SAID THE FEDERAL GOVEllNMENT short for "Knocked Down," weird phrase. s hould tighte n immigr~tion rules, but You .... mble it, but it 's ea.y, honest. ackoowledged that such a pobcy could pose a pro· Limited quantity, no rain ch.cu. 166 _ Just hang it and forget it. Safe and away from the kidd ies. The bugs will find it and t h en ... biffo. bammo, bye· bye. blem for Gov. Edmund Brown J r ., who has political Ues to Hisp~ic groups that want to ease --· i'rmbl!J'aliuiru!Mrtctroo~~ · - -·-..:..,,. __ - Johnsoo said bis proposals are opposed by state Health and Welfare Di rector Mario Obledo, II -CALIFORNIA CLIPPER -f~,!Cl~a~3::::::&::;.;''~s=o=Li~D~C-;-. o-=R:"":'.'E=--f= ... ::":":. ~\ :~~~ MAHOGANY ·· who has called for an open· ~ borde r policy with Mexico. "l absolutely disagree with Obledo. He wants to open the a :g,~ ENTRY DOOR gates,'' J ohnson said . Johnson said Brown may side with Obledo. but predicted he might tum around when he sees population as the central problem in this era of limits. ~ll~ ~~G 4999 gj il;1 {i It's the Sorrento or Mediterranean design. They really look nice. Don't believe me? Okay, ... for youraelf. (He's so defensive.) 109!! •2822V4 2777 . 8 FT. 197 · Check your fixture. 1£ t h e thing is weak o r the ends of the tu}>.,s are dark, get a new one and get your energy bills worth. ROCKWELL YOUR CHOICE : l/a" ADJUST ABLE VARIABLE SPEED DRILL KIT OR 2 SPEED JIG SAW KIT 997 oeuoo ff E S A I D T B A T throughout history, civilizations have disappeared because population growth outpaced resources. We must have got hold L-----------------1----------i-------:;-I of a dea l. You don't usually oet things that are adjustable/ va riable I two speed. etc . for this money. Full factory guarantee. Limited quantity, no rain checks. .. We can no longer proceed with single· purpose decisions. For example, if you provide un· limited low-income housing, then you draw poor people from Vermont. "We don't have the resources to continue to supply the population that is coming in. Before you run out of rope, you ought to acl.iusL "California and the United States can't con· tinue to be the basin for everybody else's pro· blems. We've got to start discussing it." Johnson pointed to water as a resource that is becoming more scarce. .. WE GET ANOTHER 411, ... Californians every year who have to take baths and we don't have the water ," he' said. He said he is urging Brown to take a second look at the proposed Peripheral Canal, which would increase water deliveries to the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California, in the light of the Legis lature's refusal to enact water conservation measures. Brown's office said the governor had no com· ment on Johnson's remarks. . Transamerica I . Hit With F1Des OAKLAND (AP) -Oakland-based Transamerica Airlines has been bit with $116,000 in fines for alleged aircraft maintenance viola· lions. Among the violations cited by the Federal A\'iaticin Administration were flying a DC-8 on more than 100 passenger flights witb a broken cenerator; overestimating runway length OD Airport charts; and failure to perform required in· specliom on cargo planes. The FAA sent the airline a list of more than 116 safety violations and gave it until Sept. 5 to respond. Tranaamerica is primarily a chart.et' com· pany. although it does have several scheduled nma ~ween the East Cout and Europe. )· Driver Training • Bill Defeated SACRAMENTO (AP> -A btll requirlDI sebool diltrictl to offer beblnd·tbe-wbeel drivers' tralninl f« at least five more nan wu defeated ~y the state senate. ..... The muaure, AB1265 by Aalemblyman Dennis llaqers, J>.HUDtiDCtoe Beacb, fliled on a 2S-14 vote, fourlbortof tbe required rt. Badten woa Del'lDllsioll for another vote later ~ ..... I -.... ______ _ Slit SANDER 15!? Fast cutting or real amooth fW.hing, thia does it all. (Anything that "dou it all" ahould be watched carefully.) WORM DRIVE 7 1/t II Slit SAW 115!r ~ Thia ia the pros' delight when you need a aaw that carried through the day. Take ca.re of it and you'll be able to pua it down to the kid.a. GUIDE-A-BIT 199 Get perfect drilling, • st.rai9ht or angl .. , even upside down with no chipe in yo\11' fac.. Mounts on your drill. TROPHY TOOL BOX 7!!is 17~ inch plaatic boa with nc:uucl drop handJ.. Lift-out tot. haa aluminum hancllee and a 6-inoh 4 -compartment aUdin4J tray. (I !Oft to ha" eome real lacta.) ACTIOI LEATBD CARPENTERS APRON 16!!427 r STINGER #3 RATCHET SCREWDRIVER The bits stay in place znagnetically. You get Phillips and reqular. (A little znore enthusiasm wouldn't hurt h ere. kiddo.) Zzzzzz . ~ 199 ,,,, CENTRAL QUALITY SAW TABLE 3597 •666 You can mount almost a.ny power aaw and get precision cutting every ti.Jne. Got rip and angle guidu. CAROL CABLE COPPER 8 FT. BOOSTER CABLE I ??08P Keep a Mt in the car. People will give you a jwnp from their battery, but nobody um to push. PIESTOIE II SUMMER COOLANT 31!! Sum.mer or wintu you'.- got protection for your cooUng .,.tern if it'a up to anuff. Check youra. refill or add .ome. SAE 21 PC. SOCKET SET 447 That'• like tw.nty 90me oez\ta a eocket. I can't get a 91-ecl old· feahioned donut foao th.at. Jfot laecL Handy traTeling products. Warm soup, baby's bottle. etc. Have light in C&M of einerc;iencies. KITCHEN 10N THE GO COMBO SPOT LIGHT 899 777 .. CBllESE .. ~ PURE BRISTLE llUSB ·~ l", l~" & 2·· 87c 177 ·:: Briftla brush.. really do it. I had a 100% l\Jlon and tried to paint with lat.a. hummert Went wild.. Better to ha .. briftle. 1 . . . .• . ThurSday. August 28. 1980 s DAILY PILOT 1\9 0 • NO ·FREE OEU\JERC-f \S [)DC'fbtc:. ~~'4tS'f/t.J sr1u. Punch what? (Punch your nose?) It's the big weekend ( the lut before school, kids weep parents cheer). Get enough. The price is al"n.--~::::~J cheap, ·oht? · ~I UJ; . £: 2 . . .. UIEJI -.;/" --~ .·1.~' YOUR CHOICE: Z LITER ~ DIET 01 REGULAR 7. u~" sn11sT, COU•TIY TIME LEMOIADE FLAVOR.t AIW ROOT IEEI Oa BAWADAI PUICB_ -"':>~--:-----:~ ...._..... --c ADO MILLS BDCB )JATE PENNZOIL MOTOR OIL 78:r 86:r ~tl j 30 WT rllbfoR OfL I 10/40 wr '-:::..~ We've atartecl a thino with this el. U we don't have it in the ad, the nu.ta 8tari phoning UI. li we mi89 a WNk. don't phone, okay? J:::::. Okay, fint add a litti. brab fluid, then clean the carburetor, clean and condi· tton your ~ eptem, wash the car, then ... coU.pee. S!!i3~=Y 69c ....._ . .--~;;I) CONCENTRATE 120Z. .. •2131 HEAVY ~COOLING 99c CLEAaER 10 oz. 53~<1L 69!<1L ... 9!!!~!!!!!'1!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~~~ WEBER KETTLE BARBECUE Dealer told me. "You guys are unfair. You're killing the price.•• I replied, "Customers aren't complaining and that's who we work for." Weber is the Cadillac of barbecues - smoker top, even cooking. 1'imi t4lld.. quan tit.v ...XK'-s&in ~ • checu. TURCO BBQ I wonder if you can do a turkey on a Turco barb.cue? (Oh, aony. my m ind wa.a wandering again. ) Thb is the LP gas deal, with the 20 lb. tank. _..._ 159!! WOOD LETS 88!. Th ... are c:aS' fresheners. Your choice of oaium spray. or mist scents. Small •ruN9h to carry with JOU· • 88 MECO BBQ ROTISSERIE 13.99 15.99 National almost ·has a price for everyone's budget except the guy who says he can get one for eight bucks in Lamont, Tezas. SERVINO TRAY 89' •3812 DISH DRAINER 99' •6049 BATii APPLIOUE J IS •7075 BATH APPLIOUE 1 St •7096 Rubbermaid stuff hold. up, looks good. and we snake the sweet price. 48" PLASTIC FENCE AJ.L AJ.UMINUM TABLES 1-610-24"z48" 13.77 l-640-36"a72" 39.77 l -624D-24"a60" 23.77 1-6120. lo"x72" 29. 77 TN., fold to a "IY compact aise 90 you can 1U9 them a..r to Aunt Sally'• to help out for GraNlpa'• Wrthcla~ party. 39:.rr. Something to help keep things in their place. Like that nutty dog who diga up the carrots. Or the chic:ken'a relati,,.a. ~'-------~--~ ...... _.....~ ~· I BAND s LIT CEDAR GRAPESTAIES 67!. I ... them for 99¢ and 89¢ nerywheN. Saw 80me "on special" for 89¢ and they W9re real chaluerei (that'• phonetic, spelling quNtionable). IAMIOO FEICE 3~!. Nice for pri•acy, windaonien, SUIUCJ'Mft. atm09ph.re, what...r. Put 90ll\e up, oook from a wok. meditate. and J'OU'll encl up with a T.,.ota. _ P~a1c.JN6 . PO LORON i,-, GAL. ·179 JUG p .19 lGAL. 317 JUG 785-12 S OT. s•• JU~ 986 12 OT. 7'7 SWINGER P -1.! 30 OT 8~~. CHEST ~~<gT 17!~11 ·!Wfi~~:::;2t'\l 5 GAL. 1099 m COOLER P. 1s aof\ YyOu)a'~ - lo\19 theH specials where they put the whole assortment on sale. Now you want to buy them all. right? (Wrong, don't try that subliminal stuff on me. ) CLEANING STUFF 22 oz. GLASS AND MORE • I T! ._ .. __ .·-.- 9 0Z. TY -D-BOL . . ' ·-I _-I HAND I WIPES These are some nice fans. Pushy buttons and all, ,,.ry quiet. super quiet. Dial for turning or fiaed position. RUF DOUGLAS FIR 4x6 99 c LIN IT. 6x6 1.79 LIN. FT. 6x8 2.39 LIN. FT. 6xl0 2. 99 LIN. FT. How much can one aay IDl!lJ about boards. They do nice thinqa if you have qood plans, otherwiM they're just boarda. 6"x8" I.ROAD TIES ' Cl ~·~VALOT . Cigarette's Risk to H~ai=t Debated 808T0N (AP> -Tll• Swaeoo Gent>NI'• 1t'19 report lbat dpNt~ •motlna 1Md1 to a 1realtt risk of a.art dlMMe hu neH·r ..._. ea.arty aubttwlaead by ecltnl.lne "•Htth. a 1ut1t .-orial writ r cWIDI ln lhe S.ptembtr luue of tM Amerkan Heart Jounal. But a ~ Mart ,.....,..r rejected tM cl&lm, IQ\1\1 It lpored 1tucllea t9"t s ho"' • cur~t't IU'lt betwMO cl&ar"f'lt and hHrt dll· .... Or. Carl C ' ltaer ot Boston wrott' that h1I re-. amwation of tht data used in lM 19'19 rt'por1 ho't\ • "It IS reaaonab&e to bf lit1ve lhat stoppinl 1moll1na daiel not Nduee U.. rbk of coroaary heart dltHH and that the,.. la no .. ubUabM proof that 1 moldnl II ceulally relaa.d .... S.llaer, wbo bold• a Ph . U 1n blolo1lcal ad m.ctlcal anthropolo-y. haa tau,i.t at Harvard Unlvenlly and •~rvet • a vl1ltlna professor of nutriUon at Tufta University His article wu pubUahed t.hla week in th~ Journal. an 11,000·clrculallon monthly magadne In St. Loui.& The ed.ltor1al was lmmedlately at tacked by Dr WUUam Caa~m. diree tor of lM Framingham, Maas., Heart Study. Researcben at Framingham have beefl examlnlne heart attacks and their causes for 20 years in the nation's 1ongeat-runnlne heart study. CaatelU accused Seltzer of "being funded by the tobacco Industry" and said the editorial l1noret evidence that amoken are twice as likely to iiuCfer heart attacks. Seiber, a cigar smoker 40 years. said ln an interview he received funding for his research from a variety of groups, but denied slanting his research in any way. Studies that show ex·smokers are healthier than smokers are WU'eli&· ble, Seltzer said, since ex·smokers as a group are healthier to begin with. Ex -smokers cenerally have leH chest pain, leg pain, brealhleaaness and a &t11er lun1 capacity. he aald. Seltzer, who said be served u an adviser to the SW'feoa General's 1IS4 r eport on cigarette smoking, said the federal government abould not have gone beyond that report's conclusion that there waa not a clear causal re· lationship between claarettes and heart disease. Castelli disagreed. "AU of the data is very :;triking," he said. "Smoking, independent or every other risk tac· tor, is related to coronary heart dis· ease." NATIO~ -01'1· '\; MO.:\'.. FHI ~t A .M . 6 l' :\t . S ATU HDA Y 10 1\ M .· 4 P . .M . Huntington Beach. CA 92647 SoutNm C.llfoml• ~/oll•I Olfloe1: ~n E. La Palme Ave., An1helm. CA 92807 8955 Valley View St .. Buena Park, CA 90620 1666 Amelll Rd .• C1marlllo. CA 93010 FSLIC --.. ·-- 20715 S. Avalon Blvd. C.11on. CA 907'8 ~1 Lake Center Ot. (Lake Forestl. E1 Tcxo. CA 92630 1001 E. Imperial Hwy .. u Habra, CA 90631 Gl •140 t.oo0 Beach Blvd . Lono Beach, CA 90807 • 22939 HIWlhome BIVO . T0<rance. CA 90505 1095 IN•ne Blvd . Tui;11n. CA 92680 IOU•• 235 N. c11rus Ave. west Covina. CA 91793 ~r~~·t .. <l "MtHCUry Room .. ava1/1bl• Ofl , f9Sfl~ blSIS QUEENIE FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY "Ps1tlCPenney ''RED -HOT' SALE'' Hurry Quantities are Llmited 1 DAY ONLY-Starts 10 A.M. Fri., Aug. 29th /I ,._ ____ 8 -28 ··Loot h~· grNt 'ilo'E''rt> doing Who says there's no business hkt' show business"'" . 1\lPU~-N<!TJ$.L --~-. FICTITIOUS 9USl•£u FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT Tl~ lol-ng ~"""' Is dotnQ llY\l ~ '°''-'"9 r:ienon •S dotnq 11<is1 nf>S$ ~n MU d\· THE HAPPY ..OUSEClEANER. ARC. 183S1 E11l~rl>O'i\t' Lllne. Munl· U1 lltlvi<'•• Ori.,.,, Costa Mt ... lnQlon S..C:h. C.lito<nl,.<nMe C•ltlwN•m77 OovlO Wayrw Tut>"''""· 1134 W l(•lhlten Ero11 R<'tlY. 3&1 Rovl•r• MOO•<'. S<IM• AN,"'""'"'" ttlOI Orlw. Costa ~'"· Citloforno,. 91671 Th•• b~lnfts i\ <ondU<l"d by on 1n Thi\ buslnes. "<ono..<ttd by.., In dlvt0ua1 d•vHlv•I Ohl(! WIVM Tu«>mi11• ICa"''""' Rtilv Th•\ ""'......_' w•' flltd wltll t~ This 51alement was 1111!<1 wll!I ttlr County Cl•rk of Oran~ County on County CIH1t ol Oran.,. County on .AUQuH S. 1• .AUQUS1 S. 1'180 l"UlStt FlfHI? Published 0r6n<I<' CoaH Dally P1101. PubllsMc! Or~ Coast Dally Pilot, .Al>Q 1. I•. n. n. 1980 --ns9-eo AUQ 1. 14, 21. 2'. 1'llO l7•S.IO _ --------- P UBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE ----------Mn'IC•O, NOTICE OF Al'll'\.ICATION l'Olt INYln ltO a tDS CM ANGE IN OWNE•SHIP OF NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN "'-l ALCOHOUC aEVE•AOI! LICENSE t ... 11..-of Eo.KatlOft o1 !fie lrvlne To WhOm II May Concefn: Un II led Sc-I Dlslrltl of Orenoe CYNTHIA CAROL -JOSE LUIS County, Clllfamla, •Ill r9Celw sealed 8ARltAGAN, •r~ applying lo t~ bids UC> to J:OO p.m. Oft.,,. ... of~ O.pattment of AtcOflOll< Bever-~ ,_ .. ~ time Mid bids COfltrol to Wit ak OflOllc ~-' at wlll be IUlll<ly ~ Md read for .. ., .. ON SALE GENERAL IPUBllC Lease/Purc,..se of Harrow Aisle EATING Pl.ACEI RH<ll TNCtl. Bid <.-ltlonS and 1,.. Publlshe41 Oranoe CoHI Pilot. tlrvctlOfts 91111 bid ~ may be Ol>- August 2'. 11IO lSJl.to talned at Ille onic. of Flscal Sue>Por1 Servkes. 7M1 Alton AWflue, Irvine, PUBIJC NOTJ C.llfomlL The lloard.,, EduUllOft , .. __ _, ,,,. rl1ll!I to reject any or •II l'ICTITIOUS au bids or to ...i .. .,Y lmt9Ufatlllfl or NAME STATl!Ml!NT lnlO<' ...... llles In any bids or In Ille bid· T,,. lollowlnq .,....,..., ls doing llusl-ding. MUH. IRVINEUHIFIEO T & L WELDING. 870 ~ SCHOOL DISTRICT Street. Colla~. California tH.71 ~ HertllM. Tony J . Large. 110 Conoren """*1Nd"'9eftt Street, Ca51a '-'Ha, <Alllomoa .,.,, Putlllsllecl <>-. (OHi 0.11, PllOI ""' bu!olnKs Is conducted by Ml In· Aug 11. 21,,.. ~ dlvldu.i. T°""J urve PUBLIC NOTICE This Sbl-1 •~ 1111!<1 witll tr----------County Clerll of 0.ange County on . August IS, 1• FICTITIOUS 8USINES5 F10 1'1 HAM£ STATEMENT Publl"'9«1 Or-Coast Dally Pilot, ThP tollowlnv ~r'°ns arp do•no AUQ. >I, .. ~. 4, 11, 1980 ~ bUSIM\S"" P UBLIC NOTICE STEARNS ACACIA G.AROENS DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, 1oa Oua11 Street, Newport Beac11. C•lllorn1a 97660 "ICTITIOUS BUSINESS Stear~ Oewloe>~nl Comp""y NAMESTATl!MENT In< .. 10U Ouall Strut. Ntwpori Tiie I011ow!n9 PH'SOfl Is doing t>usl· B•ach. CMllO<'nla 9'660 MU a\ This l>U\iness Is <.ondV<lfd bY ll <or· VAN WIE ENTERPRISES. 11• p0ratlon. 11th StrMI, API. 0, Huntlng1on Beach, Sttams Oeveloe>ment CMl!omlam. C-v. Inc Thomas A Ven Wle. 119 11th PhllipA. Sttarns. StrHt, Apl. 0, Huntington Buell, ~iclHlt Calllornla~ Tiiis si.t-t "''" liltd wolh t~ Tiiis buslneu Is <onclu<tf<I by •n In. Coutttv Clerk of Or<1n94! County on dlvidu.. AUQU" S, l'l80 ~A. y_, Wit' l"ltWJ This Sbl1emeftt •as filed will\ t~ Publtsl>fd Or~ Co.st O•ily PllOI, county a.no 0t Orange County .,., Auo. 1. "· 11, 79. 1980 JJS~ August IS. 11IO. FMIM1 Put>llshed OrMIQlf Coas1 Daily Pilot. PUBLIC NOTICE Aug. JI. 2*. Sept.'· 11, 19'0 lQl,.to 1----------- PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS BUSINESS "ICTITIOUS. BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Tiie lotlowlng person Is clol1t9 bUSI· nenes. JACICSOH COMPANY, 1'31·J NAM« STATEMENT GrK• Line, Costa Mew. C.lllomla Tiie lol'-lflO l)er10n Is clolnq bu$1· nu. neu n : Rl<lla"' L Ja<kson Jr., Inc .. • PACIFIC RENTALS. Sl7 "II calllornla <OO>Ot•llon, 1'31·J Gr•ce StTMt. Hurltlftglen llHGll. C.lllornla UM. CD5bl MHa. C.lllo<'nla .,.,. n.. Tiils buSlneu Is <OfldUCt.cl by• cor-J 01111 A, Meuersmlth. 0 1 P<H'•llon. GoldenfOCl. C.-Ott Mar, ca11rornl1 Rlcllard L. 92'1S Jae: Itson Jr., Inc. This tluliMn It <.onCIUCted by a11 111-U a Callfornl• corii. dlvldual. Akhllnl L. Ja<klOf'I Jr Jotln A. Meuersmlth President Tltls ""_. was Ill.cl •Ith tlte This switenwnt was tiled wllll tlte COO!lt., 0.rk ot Orange eoun1., on COU11t., Clenc ot Oranoe County on Mgust 1' "'°'-A119VSt 2', 1WO. .. ,.,.., ....... I PW!lslled Orel!Qe Coast oe11., Piiot. Pvbllllllel 0r-. cont oau., Piiot, I •ue. 21. Seslt. '· 11. 11. '"° ~ •ue. n. Sellt. •. 11, '" 1• ,,.... BEDDING Reflections Rugs. Blue & Brown only. 24x36 · a 99 Now 4 .50 orig .. HOUSEWARES Small Ceramic Bedroom Lamps. Red floral design. orig. S16 Silk Floral Arrangeme nts. ~g.9]5-19~-- Save 50% M ikasa Dtnnerware Accessories. Nowa.99 Nowlt.99 · orig s12..s43 Now S6-21 .50 FASHION FABRIC Spring & Summer Yarda.ge. Print Terry. orig. 3.99 yd. Surllne orig. 3.50 yd. Burlington. orig. 3.39 yd. Now 1.99 yd. Now1.99 yd. Now 1.99 yd. HARDWARE One and Only. Low Luster Interior Paint . reg. 13.99 gal. Now 9.99 gal. Scenic Wall Murals Covers 9'x12' wa ll orig. 34.95-69.95 Now 1 a .88 SPORTING GOODS Special 39.99 Morey Boogie Board with Leash attached. Quantities Limited. Special 39.99 PATtO FURNITURE Adjustable 4 position chaise. Lemon straps/Lemon Finish. #4448 orig. s159 Now sag 42" Glass Top Table wtth umbrella hole. L emon finish # 4445. (4 only) orig.$113 TV-STEREO MCS"Modular Component System S1ereo Receiver 75 watts. Nowssg orig. 599.95 (3 only) Now 399.95 GARDEN SHOP 2 Gal. size • Aucuba "Variegata" Speci•I 4.91 • Philodendron Salloum 5 Gal. size • Aralla 5eiboldi Specl•I 8.99 • Variegated Mirror Plant :============;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;;:;;;;;:::=:=====:;1 • Gardenia Veitchi • Juniper "Tam" • Juniper "Blue Pacific" • Juniper "Sea Green" Soll Prep Potting Mix. 1 cu. ft. reg. 3,50 Now 2 .44 I" Indoor Ptanta. Asst. Varieties Spectal 2.91 C.OFFEE SHOP Red Hol Mexlclln·Plate "Enclllled9a •a.II a ...... Two chill 9IKI cneeee encnttlldu •• ~ refrted bMoe .rMS epenllh nee. lpecl .. 1.~ MENS Terry Shirts Special 7 .99 30% off Waves Shirts. orig. s12..s19 Now a .40-s15 50% off Wallets orig. 4.SO-S18 Now 2.25.sg Sport Shirts. 100% cotton •n fashion stripes. orig. s15 Now 10.50 Men's Striped Pocket Polo. -~~ -Now4~- Men's Pocket Polo Shirt. Solid colors. ong 4 50 Now 3.37 Men's Fashion Ties. orig. 8.50 Now 4 .99 Men's Plain Pocket Co rd J eans . orig. 13.50 Now 10.aO BOYS' Boys' Crewr:ieck Shirt. Asst. styles. orig. 3.5()-$5 Now 1 .99 Boys' V-Neck Shirt. Sizes 8-16. orig S9 Now 4.99 Boys' Denim Jeans Fashion styles. waist 26·31. orig. s14-s16 Now 4 .99 50% off Boys' Athletic Wear Various shorts and tops. orig. 5.S0-8.50 Now 2 .75-4.25 GIRLS' Girts' Fashion Tops. Many styles. fabrics and colors. orig. 3.49-9.50 Girls' Terry Shag Top. Various colors. Sizes 7-14. orig. se 50% off Now1.99 Now3.99 Girts• Dress Closeout. Summer tro picals, Jumpers and sundresses. orig. sa--s14 Now S4-S7 Girts• Back-to-School Dresses. Various fabrics and colors. orig. s12..s16 Now 9.99 50% off Girts' Swfm Sult Closeout. Various tank and bikini stytes. orig. 6.SO-S10 Now 4.99-6.99 INFANTS' Toddters Terry Top Sizes 2T, 3T, 4T. orig. s4 Now 2.19 Infant•' SIMYeteH Terry Shirt. Schren print design. 100% cotton. orig. 1.89 Now 99- FINE JEWELRY 17J Name Brand Watctt.a. Waltham. Ou Fonte, Lucien Picard and Arnex. ortg. 185-1150 Now 42.81 50% off Men'•...,.. Sliver Moner Cllpe ..... Ker CMlna. orig. 32.50-37.50 NOw 18.21-11.15 SPORTWEAR 25% off Ditto's Tops and Pants. Jr .. ms and full figure. orig. ss-s27 Now 4 .50-20 .25 Special Buy 2.99 Jr. Size T-Shlrt 100% cotton. solid colors. Jr. long Sleepe Plush Pull-over Sweater. or ig. s15 J r. Long ~oorilvr.,.._ Pull-over Sweater o rig. '16 Jr. Long Sleeve Leno Shirt. Now9.99' Now9.99 orig. s13 Now 5 .99 Jr. Belted Stretch Poly Pant. orig. s1 5 Now 9 .99 Jr. Pleat Front Jeans orig. s19 Now 10.99 M isses Patch Pocket Jean orig. S18 Now 9 .99 Misses Herring Bone Poly Pant orig. s15 Now 9 .99 Misses Long Sleeve Acrylic Plush Sweat er. o rig. s14 Now 9.99 LINGERIE Halter Bra, white or nude. Speciaf 1 .99 Camisoles, white or nude. assorted sytles. Special 2 .99 Haff Slips, white or nude assorted styles. Special 3.99 Full Slips. Assorted styles and colors. Special 3.99 Pant Uners White or Nude Special 2.99 Cotton Shaper Bikini, white nude. pink and blue. S·M·L. orig. s2 Now age WOMEN'S ACCESSORt.es Women'• V1nyl Handbags I 399 Now 1 .99 or g .. 30% off Women's Fashion Betts. orig. ss-sa Now 3 .25-5 .20 SHOES Spectal Buy 8.99 Women'• Sporty Heel Sandal. Tan and wine. whole sizes only 5-1 o Special 8.99 Women'• Vlnyt Low Hffl Slklea. Red , white. blue and tan. reg. 6.99 Now 2.99 Intents• Nylon/au.de Joggers. SlzeH reg. 9.99 Now 5 •• t FASHION ISLANP STOAEONLv r 844-2313 l • '' ~ • 13, NO. 241, J Sl!CTIONS, 40 PAGES ---·----~,, __ Your Hometown oa11,.· NewHpap .. r TWENTY·FtVE CENTS NB on Niece AppointIDent Stirs Ire , . a, alCIL\U o a sBN ... ..., ....... • JrviM Mayor Art Anthony has aa1ered the ~it)'• ltberal factioft y appolntt1t1 lbe niece of \ rmer ,,,_khnl Richard Nlxon 'to tbe I rvine Community rvitt1:1 Commiulon. La~ Anfinson, 31, a sht· year city resident , wall replace 1 Lff Stewart on the five-member commiseion. Community Services Com missioneJ' David Kldd. appoint· ~ to the commission by Coun· cllm an Lari')' Agran. aald he "wu •hocked and uddened" by Anthony'• move. Anthon1'1 IC· lion waa caused by a com· mlHlon vote ln which Stewart sided wilb Kidd, accordln& to Kidd ..You do serve at the pleasure of the councilman who app<>lnted you." Mrs. Anfinson said. "I don't understand what Kidd ls up to." Asked if her political affilla· lions would hinder her career In city government. Mrs. Anfinson APWI,..,.... 'f\.SHIRT MAKERS GET ON THE BALL EARLY Bllny •nd Sue Brown Bombing Survivor• 'FBI Seeking Trio In Tahoe IJombing STATELINE, Nev. <AP) - The FBI today bunted two me~ and a woman believed involved in a bombing that blew the side out of a Lake Tahoe hotel-casino during a botched attempt to ex· tort $3 mHUon in $100 bills from the gambling house. The FBI a lso said the sophisticated ·design of the com· Ji)ex bomb, which sent plumes of smoke skyward and showered debris over several blocks wht:n ; it w c,ts accidentally detonated by J a robot, may offer clues to who &" built it • Authorities Wednesday night t issued an all-points bulletin for '-.three men in their early 20s driv· l. ing a black Ford, but cancelled the alert this rooming after the lead was ch ecked out and proved false, said FB I slpolcesman BUI Jansen. adding of the !fio: "It was just some kids Calklilg. •• ' He sald the FBI has little to go OP in its contiDuing search for tbe two mm, both said to be in tbeir -.. and the woman. · "We do not have any swspects or what tbelr names are,•' Jansen said. "We're working on leads mainly from people calling in." ~· "'~Agentatriedtomeetlheran90m J• aemand to aave the ~b rMOrt, but u.e bomb nplocled w~ tlay duriaa attempts to dismantle tt. TM blast m• ~bble of tbe • m111o1t casino'• bOt&om noon '8d blew out ID09t of. lite wiDdoWI tDU...u.tory buildill1. ffo .-e •• iDjured. Tboul..U ol people. bad been evacuated earlier from a four-block area around the casino. There was no immediate estimate of damage. The blast came more than 30 hours after the bomb, e ncased in a blue steel box inside an IBM com· puter carton, was discovered at Ha rvey's Resort Hotel-Casino. State and federal officials, some of them experts from nuclear laboratories, rushed to the scene as gamblers in this re· sort city tried to make bf;ts. on T-8HIRTS PROVE POPULAR AT TAHOE-A3 whether the device was phony. A fire briefly raged in the casino five hours later. Jerry Yablonsky, FBI spe<:ial agent, said the sophisticated de· sign of the bomb mlght provide -clues oo who made it. · · 1 don't know of another similar device being used," Yablonsky said. "[ have not seen anything like it in my 28 years of servie." "As far as the FBI is con- cerne.d. all the stops are out to brin g the perpetrators to justice." Some of the nation's most highly trained electronics ana explosives experts failed in er- forta to crack the design. Scientista and bomb experts from the Lawrence Livennore nuclear weapons laboratory. the Army, the Department of Energy a nd the FBI worked wlth1 the device more than 24 hours before the ill-fated at· tempt to disarm the mecbanilm. The attempt was approved by casino-o\vner Harvey·Qroa, '15. The box, Which me11uted Z·b)'· 2·bY·4-feet. bad another small device o n top where 28 mechanical switches were local· ed. Two of the switches were de· signed to monitor tilt and mo-, lion. authorities aaid. The bomb reportedly con· talned 1,000 sticka of d~mlte. There ... no word oa bow the device ~tu.ft been .et olf, but oftldalt 1peculated it mllht have-been dlNrmed by fliPll(Ds the swlt.ct. la a 1peetftc se- quence. Alta' the blaet. t.be FBI re· ftaled tbat .,... tried to meet a tam:= rwom demmad, but ... ein~ ''ti fallld llO lbow Ill a ~ helicopter nil· denom point. • 'Tbe requesta ol the extor· tlonllls wer. met.'' Yabloalky Hid. •'ffoWeMt'~ U..r dkl Dot 1bow up at a MeOGd JoeaUon C8eeTMIOE, Paae Al) said. "You mun as far as Uncle Dick <Nixon>? l'm a 37-year~ld human being in my own right. I'll be damed if I'll be associat· ed with anybody in my ramily. "l respect my unele very much and ror what he stands for -but he's 3,000 miles away and I don't kowtow to anybody." The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mixon said that he r political lnvolvement to date has been limited to fund-raising ac· livlties, but she looks forward to serving on the city commission. Meanwhile, t he man s he replaces said he has no hard feelings. · . · · Kldd is trying to make ~o mething out of nothing," Stewart said. "I serve at An· thony·s pleasure and will abide by his desires ~ith no ill feel· ings. Kidd is just trying to stir up a hornet's nest. .. Anthony said be replaced Stewart in order to lighten the workload of the public relations man for Avco Development Co. "About a month ago I began talking with Stewart about his removal because of his big work load -it had nothing to do with Kidd. I just don't like to over· load my appointees." Kidd. a rreelance writer. has been a foe o f Anthony for several years. About a year ago. Anthony wanted Kidd kicked out of a public council meeting for yawning while he <Anthony > talked. Agran contended there is an unwritten rule among the coun- cil majority that no appointees of the so-called liberal council minority <himsflf and Mary Ann Gaido ) gain pos itions of chairman or vice chairman on city commissions. It was Stewan 's vote in favor of Kidd becoming Community Services Commission vice chairman that led to Stewart be· ing booted off the commission. Kidd charged. uiet 1 ] ets P~shed Riley Asks County to Clear New Plnnes By FREDERICK SC'HOEMEHL Of the Dally Piiot Slaff Orange County 5th District Supervisor Thomas 1-·. Riley1 urged immediate action by county officials today to clear the new and de monstrably -q'Di<•ter _: McDonnell Oo11~las . nc.9 Super 80 for use at John Wayne Airport. In a letter circulated to fellow supervisors. Riley termed the new craft "astonishingly quiet" and "even quieter than my most optimistic expeetations." Air California. one of two jet C'a rricrs now authorized to •.tSe John Wayne. Airport. expects to take delivcryM the first of fo,1r of the $16 million planes in January. However, the airline cannot use the plane at John Wayne Airport un l ess co unt y supervisors ease current runway weight restrictions . Airplanes now must weigh less than 95.000 pounds on takeoff. Air.California has proposed in· creasing the restriction to 128.000 to accom modate the Supe r 80s. In the letter, Riley said the county not Air California s hou ld prepare a complete analysis of the effect of the Super BO's entry to the airport. That a nalysis. Riley s aid. would "necessarily COQSider the• possible reduced life expectam.•y of the runway itself, and any ad· ditional impacts that might tx· incurred by increased passenger (Sefo SUPER. Page A2> 'Shaking' Building * * * eo.rt O.tll•rst PSA Pilots Mother of Droimed Won't Fl Tot Assail,s Suspec,t Super 8~ Evacuated Employees at the Daon Cori>. 's Newport Beach head· quarters are back at work lo· day. but wondering what caused the fiv~·Stol')' structure lo start shaking Wednesday. Officials from the Daon Corp .• which built the structure two years ago. and Prudential Corp .. which owns the building. aren't sure what the trouble Is. "Somehow." s aid Fern C ri s l er. a P.rude n tial spokesman, "a main column moved and a support beam twisted." He said about 100 workers in the structure at 4041 MacArthur Blvd. were evacuated while crews banged down several walls and part of a ceiling to locate the probfem. "It happened last week. too. but we assurned it was just normal settling," explained Crisler. He said workers welded s everal temporary s upport beams onto the column, allowing employees to return to work this morning. Prudential does not house any of its employees at the building. Daon officials initially dis· missed the movement as "normal settling" and called the evacuation "an overreaction." Prudential's Crisler said that, when the problem is clearly un- d erstood, the building may again be emptied so workers can make repairs. Seaman Killed NEW LONDON, Conn. <AP> -A cable snapped during the lowering of the main mast on a Coast Guard Academy training ship that had Just set sail for a yearly maintenance check-up, Jdlllng a 2S-year-old CaJifomJa seaman, offtciala reported. 'lbe victim wu seaman Richard A. Coe of West Sacramento. By DA VIDKU'l'ZMANN ........ Nmt ..... A Santa Ana man, standing trial for the drowning death of his 4· year-old nephew last April. was called a "cold -blood ed murderer " by his mother Wednesday during an emotional outburst in Or ange County Superior Court. Laterintbeday,SuperiorCowt Judge Richard Beacom •. who is presiding over the noo-jUrly trial. heard murder defendant Emmett Mitchell's taped confession to police April 21 in which he described first strangling and then drowning his nephew in a bathtub. "Something sn apped," Mitchell said to detective Gail Clark, "I just snapped." Mitchell has pleaded not guilty by reuon of insanity to the mu.rdercharl(es against him. His nephew, John Lewis Jr., died at Cbudren 's Hospital of Or ange County after spending a week and a half on life support systems. The courtroom outbursts began Wednesday morning when Mitchell rose to bis feet during queaUoning of his sister , the child's mother, and cried out, .. That's a{ expletive> lie. You're a <expletive) liar." The witness, Dianne Lewis, had }>efn anawertns questions about her andber brother's upbriJlging. At lbis poiDt, Mitcbell's mother, Dorothy Mitchell. stood at the rear of the s mall. fourth-floor courtroom in Santa Ana and yelled, "Emmett, you're a cold· blooded murderer. You killed an innocent child. Ir As sheriff's deputies restrained ~1 llitebell shot back at bis mouier. "You caused me to have a nenousbreekdown. '' Responded his mother, "You did ll younell with all that dope you weretaklna." A•to Missing Mistaken Tow Twm Tables Jobll Duve, UC Irvine's ualltant dlnetor' of partine' anct u..portation ayatema. luid tbe t.w. tuhaed oa bim lutweek. RE WAI rasPAalNG TO I.Utt fifa apartmeat tn Santa Ana --be dlleovwed be .......... aomeUdnl lmportlDt: ldl ear. Tbe man wbo !>nlillee o.er the Ucketble aad tow'naJ ol .ebka. It t1CI learned dat It feels like to Mft one•• c•r hauled awQ. "I eouldD't believe it -J nnt out to mr car and It J•t ., .. , tlMN," be ,.a111. ··•• tot tt. an ... .,,, ... out IMll'. It w• tOW9d from ID1 a...,.._ '1 milt.Me_. It w• .U mMI pd to me. .. _,.. I lllll'SD llY UPOINl•&N'\' tbll _... wttb eome offtda1I at Hanor: M•dplll o.rt « ....... Uct tram~ Ueteta are proHIACI>. ''And wbeft I told UM *-1 to die ,.._ I Md • appolnttnmt with, be eouldn't llGp ......... I 6tll't UdM lt ... ftl')' ftmny ll tbe time.'' "You're ~onna pay, EmmeU." Mrs. Lewis.aid from the witness stand. Defense attorney Ron Butler asked ror a r e<:ess but when the trial resumed in the afternoon. there was one more small out· burst. this again by Mitchell's mother when she was asked by Judge Beacom to wait outside the courtroom while the tape was played. This was done beeause she is a potentialfuturewitness. However, Mrs. Mitchell pro· tested. saying, "This is my grandson we're talking about ... She then left the courtroom, loud· ly banging open a door on the way out. During the playing or the tapes, (See SNAPPED, Page A2) Carter Bares 'Responsible' Economy Plan WASHINGTON <AP) -Presi- dent Carter called today for $27.6 billion in 1981 tax cuts for individuals and businesses as part of a n e l ection-year economic proposal that a lso aims to create a million jobs t.>ithin two years. But he sald, "rwm not accept a pre-~lection bill to cut taxes." The president also requested congressional authority to spend an additional $3.6 billion in 1981 to retrain workers, weatherize homes. maintain highways, build ports, boost research and developm e nt and h e l p economically distressed coun· ties and cities. Jn addition, he urged Congress to rapidly extend unemplo~ment benefits by 13 weeks to help workers laid ore by the re· cession. Benefits cun-enUy ex· pire alter 39 weeks. This would cost $1.35 billion over two years. Carter unveiled what he called a "responsible" economic blueprint to an audience of bual· ness, labor, consumer and con- greHlonal leaders gathered in.. t he East Room of tbe White" JSouae. The pnsident drew a sharp contrast between bis economic plans aad t-hote of Ronald Rea1an. altboqb be did not meaUoa the Republican &>res· ldenllalnominee bJ name. ••Now -m the beat of an elee· Uon year -ii oot the time to 1eek vot• wttb Ul-eoaatdered tax cu&a tbat woWcl steal beet tn tnnaUon lb• few dollan the aver••• Amer,ean laxpa7u would-." Carter Mid. "Amertca Deedl to baUct .... Cle, DCllt add f~" be takl. ''I will not ... a prHlecUoQ bW to cuttaxel." .... By STEVE MARBLE CM tM Dally PMl!t Steft Pilots for PSA, the San Diego· based airline seeking permission to operate out of John Wayne Airport. claim they won't fly the newly certified Super 80 jets. Bryan Conn. spokes man for South West Flight Crew Associa- tion. said pilots "won 't go near" the new OC·9 Super 80 unless a three-person crew sii.e is used to fly the jet. He said the pilots• refusal 1s being used as a "bargaining tool" in a current contract dis· pute . Th e a ssociation , which represents only PSA pilots. has voted to go on strike in late Sep. tember unless a new contract is signed. 'And I don't think it will be," said Conn. "so, I guess you can assume that we won't be flying the Super 80." The majority of commercial pilots in the country, represent- ed by Air Line Pilots Associa- tion. already have stated they won't fly the new McDonnell Douglas jet unless a third person is added to the coekpit crew. The new jet, billed as the quietest and most fuel-efficient commercial jet to come off the assemblyline, was certified this week by the Federal Aviation Administration and will be al· lowed to go into operation with two-member crews. <See PILOTS, Page AZ> Coast Weather Sunny Friday afternoon following morning cloudi· ness. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 60 at the beaches, 85 inland. HJghs Friday mid 705 to upper 805. INSIDE TOD~ Y David and Dorothy ~­mg wett ordned to nir .. rndn their cblgltUr attn authoriffe• 10tlftd the child left abw a/In tlw JIClf'ftt• ""' to Ow dnlitl. Th~ DNtCnegt tOOfd tlwir child back -,,.., ..., that ""' becoue .,., boCll Of'e ... tollw retanW .... ., ""°" thq cmt't r-. propw c:.tw of her. See "°'JI, Po.-Alf. llMlex .,.,.....,.. ..... ~ a .,__.Cl ....,... ••tt ..... ..,. ............... . ....... , ........... _ .. ~ U I =ClllllW Att 0...-.. et-• ..... °"*9 Ctt A .... .O = . Cfl .,.... .... . ..... All E= ..., _... .......... ., ... , I I aw ..... ft9IWI ..... ~CW...._ M .._ ''"' a --,.,. .... lsztsa an 1 OAllYPILOT ~--JlJ. T BRE.4KINC l..al' .iniu /rom todo11'• tOOtftl Olltll *lUOMI llNI *°''°""""'' Israeli Air Strike Hits Lebanon CotUt BEIRUT. lA"banon <APl lsnc>IJ planes and helicopters struck P1tlc llnaan tar1ets ln southern Lebanon ovemlahl. 11nd nn lsraell wunboat exchanaed f1N! w•t.h 1uenillH on thf' L.cbnnl".!ie coaat. 1 N spc>ai ma:n reported today. A mllltary apolre•man tn T•l Ava• cootlrmed l1racli forctl U\\bl'k\-d ''ttrronat larte>ts Mani the Mban~ ~Mt" but lllVt tW> furth\'r dt.'ljll The rt' wt•I"\' oo ffVort.l of lnJul1c>1', the U N spok()tlman atd lsr11d hu:t bl~n aiteppma up 1\b wt1r on Pales linum outpO:JUi m soulhem Lebanon. Hd lff1'1t sold1t rs and warplaoea a<'roes the border Aua l9 ln a major rild against gu~rrilla potlUon1 that leJt u nlany a eo dead It was tht> lar11 t military operaUoo since the Marth 1918 lsratb in\•&111on or the M>uth ·••••·•..-.... ~ .. Olfl~ VALEN<.'\;\ I A P l Th\" henffs bomb squad delonalt'd • what il lhou~ht ~ u:i. a bth!fcas" full of t>xplos1 ves today after a SS0.000 bomb extortion threat wa~ rec\'1ved b~ a motel, but s1ud the bomb turned out to be a hoax • The Ranch 1lt1USt' Inn Motel. acro:i.s the rreeway from • Magic Mountam a mui.ement pjrk . re<'e1ved the te lephoned • bomb thrl'tlt at 8 a m .. said Lob Angl'lci. County s heriff's Sgl. George G:ilt'<'ner One wmg of lhe motel was evacuated as the bomb squad ex amint.'d lhe bnt!fcase. ~h1ch was discovl'rcd an a trash can. Galet>1Wr said The can was moved a safe distance from the buildmg and the briefcase was exploded by the bomb squad, he said . 7 ffo~ lra111a .. Ex~ed t By The Associated Press ,, Five Iranian army officers and two civilians were executed by t firing squad today in a coastal park in Iran's southwest town of ~ Ahwaz after being found guilty of plotting a coup attempt aga inst the revolutionary regime of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Tht· ofric1a l Pars news agency reported the seven men. "agents of the coup d 'etat conspiracy," were sbot at dawn an Ahwaz. 340 miles southwest of Tehran in oil -rich Khu:wstan' province Trai11 Dn-al~ .\'o One Hurt DUNS MUIR GP> -The so uthbound Coast Starlight passenger train was derailed on.a side track near here today. but noneofthe 306 pas~engers was hurt. a railroad spokesman c:aid. •The Portland·tp-San Diego Amtrak tra_i~ pulled on the side track at Gibson at 2:55 a .m. to allow a northbound passenger train to go by. said Charles Kennedy, a Southern Pacific dispatcher in Roseville He said the baggage car derailed and pulled nine other cars off the tr ach The cars rem ained upriJ?hl and tile main line "a:. not blockt•d Hunan Priest S~nt~ MOSCOW (AP) Dissident Russian Orthodox priest Gleb Yakunin was convicted Loday of anti-Soviet agitation and prop- aganda and sentenced lo five years in labor camp and five years or internal exile. Yakunin. 46-ycar old co-founder of a diss ide nt group to defend t tw rights of Chr1st1an bclievl'rs. declared in court Wednesday that his activities were·· my religious duty a s a pries t." his wife report· ed Shl' said hl' de nied his work W<JS aimed at subverting the Soviet state Dana Board Unique Reiiremem Plan Called lncemive By DON CHAPMAN Of IN O•lty ~llet Si.ff The.• Dana Point Sanitary Dis· t r ict bourd appears lo stand <Jlone among Orange Coast gov· ernmental agencies voling itseU a $500-a-month retirement plan. • The pension. which became ef- fective in April, amounts lo $50C per month for board members who have attended 10 meetin5's per yea r for eight consecutive years and have reached the age of 65. Board members are paid S50 per meeting. The law p rovides for the pension through various sections of the state Government Code a nd the d1strict can afford it. ac· cording to board member Angus !jmith. Smith noted that officials from <llher districts had been contact· ing him to see how the Dana Point board established lhe plan "They're all confronted "1Ut the same problem (of getting and keeping qua lified boa rd m embers)." he said. The district's five board mem· be rs don't pay into the fund, which is provided through the dis trict's ~eneral fund. No board members are eligi- ltle for the pension now. said $m ith. He explained that the plan would provide incentive for service. ·'The purpose behind it (the plan > is to encourage people to stay on the board and con- tribute." he said. He said there has been reluc· lance on the part of the public to become involved on such boards since Proposition 13 and finan· cial disclosure laws came into effec t Board members meet month· ly. but Smith said the tim e they spend during the month on distr ict business fluctuates. ··A board member could easily put in 80 hours a month." he !>aid. Smith is 50 years old and has served on the board for nine years. President Louis Dunning, 60. has served for 20 years and un· der the plan could qualify for a reduced pension if board mem- be rs and fund counselors ap- proved it. offi cials said. Smith stressed that the dis- trict was in strong financia l sh ape an'd is operated effi- ciently. The annual fee for district. sewer services, he said, had been reduced from $24 per year to $16 per year. He said the ~trict is strictly within the law in setting up lbe retirement fund. Su.PER •.• ' uafflc brou11at on by tbe tom""9t '-set: aircraft.'' A RUeY 8'de iNIJd lt la more rea· .-Ult few \be C!OUD~ tbu Alt Calllbnlt to conduct~ ...... mnt due Lo tbt current prob- 1 em a s urround ing other alrllns ' requests to serve John Wayne Airport One ol thoelti airlines. PSA. for example, bMa ordered 20 oC the Super IOI. S uptrv \sori. wll) conslder Riiey's proposed plan of action Tue ad11y Haley :;aid the S uper 80 s hown during a r ecent dem· ontst n aUon flight watched by a host of officials, airport critics und oews representatives -"of- (ns the first serious opportunity to reduce noise ge nerated by use of the airport •· The Super 80. according to noise measurements taken dar· ang the de monstration flights. \\as an average of 7.2 dedbels quieter than Boeing 737s now nown "I have heard much about the noise reduction achieved by this new aircraft. bul experiencing it myself mude me a believer. and confirmed my feeling that the Board of Supervisors should do all it can. and as quickly as possible. to clear the Super 80 for landing at J ohn Wayne A I rport." Riley said. In a letter sent lo Riley Mon- day. Robert W Clifford. Air California president. s aid "lt was a thrill to hear a pplause and cheers whel) the Super 80 passed overhead ..... Clifford termed the plane "en- vironmentally desirable ... * * * f'ro• P-.e A J PILOTS ... The Air Une Pilots Associa- tion has filed a complaint in U.S. District Court as king for a re- view of the FAA 's procedures ror certifying the new jet. But a s pokesman for the pilot association said the court action is not an attempt to block the Supe r 80 from going into servicl'. PSA1 has 20 of the $16 million jets on o rder and expects de- Ii vc ry in Septembe r . Officials for PSA claim they will use the Super 80 at John Wayne Airport if Orange County officials give the m permission to operate out or the county facility. Conn. a PSA pilot. said his personal feeling is that two. person crews can fly the jet but t hat "that third person just makes it that much s afer. The s ky is congested and in an e me rgency situation. you'd need that third person." He said the Super 80 is the first in a new generation of jets a nd that pilots want to clear up the crew si2e d ispute before othe r new jets. such as the planned Boeing 757 and 767, com e on the market. "fo,irteen years ago." CoM ex- plained, "two people wer e okay. But not anymore ... Pilots from Air California. the New port Beach-based airline which has four of the Super 80 jets on order, have not entered into the crew size dispute. Fr .. Pap Al SNAPPED •• which were made s hortly al'le r Mitchell's arrest, Mrs. Lewis wept quietly at the rear oC the courtroom as the defendant describedhowbekWedhercbild. Al several points in the tape, Mitchell laughed heartily while describing what he bad done. He told det.ectlve Clark be W¥ a "suicidal nut" and a "muocbist" as well u bein~ bomoeexual. However. he later said he killed the child as a means of killing himself. We dnesday· s drama tic courtroom action was not the first such occWTence \n Mitchell's trtal. On Tuesday, as proceec:tings were beginnin&. Mitchell shouted out . "I don't want this in the press ... I don't know where tbey (the reporurs) ·are, but. I don't wf.Dt them in here." DAILY PILOT ,.,....p.,.aJ •-111 .... "'··--~ '"'·~ "~•P<O\ldoflt-o.-.. -.... ,,_,_. ECIHO< ne-oa,_,... WMfl ... I .. o.to.ll,'----............ ·- TAHOE BLAST • • • after a phone contact had been made to set up the payotf." He said a heUcopter pllot with $3 million put up by Groll was supposed to meet the extor· tionist.s "within a 15-mlle radius of the club, but they never ahowed.'' The money wu re-turned to Grau, a rancher and early aettler ln tbeTa.boe ,.lion, Tlie pilot Md been confact.ed by the extortloniata at a specified locatlon about 12: 10 a.m. Wednesday ua toJd to fiy to a second alte, where be w .. to "receive a 1lfnal from the 'round" that never came. Tbe 1Q'POM of the eltordon attempt wu "eottly for proftt." Yablonsky·aatd, aa tlM ramom WU to be paid in 1100 WIJI. Tbe bcHnb WU wMt&ed Into lh• a.mo at about 1:• a.m. Tuesday l)y two men poean. u computer teclmiclua. aatd n1 a1eot. Bill Jensen. While tbe ti me n "delivered" lbe bomb to the caamo'a ~ noor offices. a woman d.rivina a white van waited outalde. Jansen 4ald. , Minutes later. the bomb was f o und with a three-page typewritten letter attached ex· plalnlnl the extortion de1nands. Experts atudled tbe bomb, after tt was pacttd tn 2801000 sandbap, for hours before de· cldina to use a aen1tttve mecbanleal robot to diterm tt. The S:4S p.m. explolkMl in the 250-room facility shook nearby casinos "like a aonlc boom," said one byltan~er. r1ttlill1 glass and drawtq cbeen from people crowded Into n~a~b7 caaino1. M the bomb ~. the 1--.t ... tMrd noon on the bulldini'• IOUtb aide bulpd. Police aakl tbt blut vlcWty w.. espeeted to be cloeed to traffic for two days. (.i Shooting Suspects At Large Anaheim police had no sus- pe cts in custody today after patrolman Paul Lee was at· tacked Wednesday by three men. Lee was s hot in the thigh with his own police revolver. Lee is r e covering I ~ t he An a heim Me moria l Hospital. and a police spokesman said he pro bably will be released soon. The shooting occurred about 7 35 a.m . We dnesday. Dean Grose. Anahe im public informa- tion officer. said Lee was patrol· tnA Manzanita park when he heard soun<i;; of glass bottles breaking across the fence on the R 1 vcrs1dc Freeway Lee climbed the fence. Grose said. :ind was jumped m some shrubs by the trio of attackers. One of the men grabbed Lee's gun and pointed it at the of. fi ccr'sJace. Grose said. Lee then forced the man's ann down :ind the gun ri red. hitting the patrolman m the leg . Grose said. The bullet passed through the leg and didn't hit the bone. he added. • The attackers fled a nd Lee called for help on a walkie- A Letter Fro• Iran APWl,....o talkie. He managed to climb the fence and was found by fellow officers collepsed on a sidewalk an the park Or. John F . Dwyer and son. Ben, 14, show letter received this week from wife and mother. Cynthia. under arrest in Iran since early Ma y . The letter . received this week. is t he first communication the Owyers in Buffalo, N.Y. have received from the woman who told them she is well. She went to Iran in April as a free lance writer and was ar- rested later by revolutionary guards on s py charges . Oementeans Fight Fuel Loading Plan Operators of the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station want to began loading uranium fuel rods in Unit No 2 by nl'XI J\ pril But they face opposition frorn a group of San Clemente res idents who like n the Southern California Edison Co. move lo "the camel po~ingitshead an the tent. · Edison Co. officia ls s aid they will be s eeking a licensr: rrom thl· /\tomic Safety :ind Licens ing Roard in lhe near future in "ord(•r to lo:id fuel and test it ... •an Edison spokesman said today The license would be good for abouttwomonths. he s aid The utility filed a brief earlier this month with the licensing board. asking approval to test th1: ne w generator before hearings are held on the final permit. If the licens ing boar d issues the tow-power license , the companv would have a two-month jump on starting up the plant s hould hear· ings be delayed. "Our goal has been to load fuel in Unit 2 by mid-April," the spokesman said. "If the hearings a re delayed, we'd still like to start tow-powertesting." But Anaheim attorney Phyllis Gallagher, who r epresents an an· ti-nuclear group called GUARD in San Clemente. opposes testing of the unit before final licensing. ·'They should not be allowed to load <Unit 2> until they dem· onstrate that they can protect the people around the plant ade· qualely. "We think it's a shame the y can l!l't there <to full powe r ) m· C're mentally. Once you load a pl:rnt with nuclear fuel. you pretty Wl'll tx•t it will m·ver bf' co nverted t o another type of power." Shlo' said onc·e the camel's hearl 1s m the tent. the rest will follow. "and when you 're dealing with nucll'ar powe r. you must bt• careful not to se t things up that wav. Edison offacia Lc; :.ay they will ··~tall nel'd to m c('l all of the n" quare rnent.s for appro\'al of the \·\·entuul operatmg h cense." even with approval of a low.power h Cl'OS(' Ediso n . <J nd co-owner Sa n lhcgo Gas and Electric Co., would take to have Unit 2 in full 11pl'ration by next Oeccm ber Unit 3. also under construction at San Onofre. is scheduled to go into operation in 1983 Membership Drive Staged by Klan FRESNO (AP> -A half-dozen White-robed members or the Ku Klux Klan staged a "mem· bership drive" here while police stood by in case of violence. T he Klan members s t ood along a city street for about 4S minutes Wednesday night. Some passing motoris ts honked or made obscene gestures. Another 20 to ~ motorists stopped to pick up literature. I l was the firs t time an Anaheim police oHicer has been shot while on duty. Grose s aid. Soon. 34 other Anaheim police officers had set up roadblocks in the rundown neighborhood west of the pa rk. Grose s aid cars leaving the area were stopped and che<:ked for suspect:; who m atched ~·s description of the three Latin men who he said Jumped ham. Fullerton police and Califomau lhghway Patrol orficers a lso as- sisted, and two tracking dogs from the Huntington Beach Police Department were set on the suspecL'i' trail, said Grose. Body Found In Fie/,d Identified ,\ dt·compoSl'd hody found near a Lai;una llllls construction Sill' has been identified as that O( Pt·ter Manford Moore , a 23·year· old Santa Ana ma n rl.'portcd m1s:-.ing by relatives July 8. Preliminary in vesta~ation or the body discovered Tuesday night s howed that Moore died of ;1 self inflicted ~unshot wound to the hrad. according to Orange Co unty Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart /\ .22 caliber rifle was recove red al the scene, he said. Moore. who was studying den- tal technology in Santa Ana, left class the day of his disap- pea rance and did not return, an investigation revealed. His car was found near the in- te rsection of Alicia and Moult.on parkways se veral days later but inves tigators could not find Moore. The near-skeletal remains were found by youths walking in the area, Hart said. 0 0 0 ' Deatl&Leap Tom McGuire. 29. a temporary clerical worker for the Veterans Administration. kicks out glass on 14th floor of the VA building in San Francisco <right) before leaping to his death (left). Police tried for more than three hours to talk him out of j umping. Attack by Acid Fatal SYLMAR (AP> -Burned, blipded and disfigured after mysterious as- s a ii ants thre w llicLJJLb_er ~e "1'alricia "Worrell vowed from he; hospital bed to continue attending law classes which started this week. ''That's what r eally surprised me. but she bas always been a two-fisted woman." said Steven Miller. a close friend of Ms . Worrell. ''She started law school knowing she was going to finish and this wasn't going to stand in her way." But Ms. Worrell, president of the s tude nt bar a ssociation at San Fernando Valley College of Law, never returned to those classes. She died Sunday, 10 days after the. attack. The 34-year-0ld law student could not identify her attackers and police have no suspects in the case which has left them and the victim's friends baffled. 81•1•9 ri.,. llpMld SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The Los Angeles Board of Education appears headed for the nation's highest court after the California Supreme Court. refused to bar mandatory busing and pupil assignme nt this fall in the city school district's elementary and junior high schools. Saying she was "not at all s ur- prised" by the high court's decision Wednesday. city school board Presi- dent Robert.a Weintraub sought to ar· range an emergency session of the board tonight. IJdldt N.., S•rpl• SACRAMENTO CAP> -New pro- jections by the legislative analyst say the state should have a $60.4 million surplus on June 30, 1981, instead of a $12.6 million deficit as previously thought. But the report said Wednesday that if all pending legislation is enacted, the deficit could widen to as much as {-.. SIATE-) $1.37 billion by the same date a year later. 1982. Fil• Crfte Sollflltt SAN FRANCISCO <AP > -A movie crew that apparently filmed a West German stuntman's fatal leap from the Golde n Gate Bridge is the object of a so-far fruitless search by the California Highway Patrol. "We're kind of at a dead end. We can't find the film company," CHP Officer Roland Miller said Wed.nes· day. a day afte r Wolfgang Hans Gun- ther Kopke died while reportedly try- ing to set a world high-diving record. The 34-year-old Kopke -1979 European high-dive champion -fell 250 feet, landing on his back as he hit the San Francisco Bay waler at more than 100 mph. Salart1 BHb Sigrted SACRAMENTO CAP> -Two bills des igned to equalize judges' salaries that were m ade unequal by a state Supreme Court rlotling were signed in· I to law Wednesday by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. One of the measures, AB3274 by Assemblyman Walter Ingalls. D· Riverside, places a proposed con- stitutional amendment . SCA37 by Sen. John Garamendi. D-Walnut Grove. on the November ballot. Under the other bill, SB2060 by Sen. Alan Ro bbins . D-Van Nuys. municipal and superior court j udges would gel raises in January. The salary levels would be the same as average salaries now paid to the judges. A 1976 law froze judges' salaries for l 'h years and limited future an· nua l increases to 5 percent, rather tha n an increase geared to inflation. Donavan & Seamans.on the Rolex setting crown. The setting crown is often the weak link m othet watches, bot not in a Rolex. The Role'.\ crQwn i\ d patented constrU<"tion whi<"h. like a submctrihe hatch. $C~ down onto the watch case. sealing the fl\~ent from all water. dust and sand. Thlrtv manufacturing steps ctre "-"Quired in it.s construction Our full selection of men's •nd women\ Rolex ~tvle 1s c\vailable in a wide price range. lllu~trated 'oate Rolex for men or women in all steel. sted ' and •old. or a11 a<>kl. With strap or brctcelet. ~<Qli ••••• Squthcrn CcJllfomlcl\ St>n1or ltdel ~ m 10 Wlhtllft! Blvd .. Los An&l'le\ • 21l..fJJ9-?1?1 11 '8thlort l•land. N~Poft Beach • 714--t>-44·57&4 ~ Cllrd. VIM. d'1 Anwrican ~s .tecepted . -. --. -----------.... -... ------- Thur9day.'-ugust28. 1980 O'-IL y PILOT A~ Trappe• Crews Evae•ated Blaze R_ages Up San · Jacin~; PALM SPRINGS, Call(. <AP I - fo'lrefightera planned to use the closed Palm Springs Aerial Tramway to transport personnel and equipment to- day in their effort lo stop an out-Of· control 6,000.acre brush and limber fire raging up the side of Mount San Jacinto. Although officials closed the tramway to the public after the fire burned within hair a mile or the sightseeing attraction. Ca liforni1t Department of Forestry s pokesman Dave.,jlillman said the firdight~rs wouJd use it to reach the top of the 10,786-foot peak THE SAME HOT, dry weather which had plagued firefighters since the blaze began Tuesday continued to hamper ef· forts at containment as the fire reached the 7,()()().foot level and r ushed on into foresied areas. "The fire has progressed from heavy brush to timber and we have a crown fire now." Hillman said. "It sure looks like the fire could reach the top of Mount San Jacinto." Finn to Mine Leftover Ore SAN FRANCISCO (AP I A San Francisco company says it plans to mine gold from a depos it missed in the Gold Rush days Homestake Mining Co said Wednes· d ay that th e ":.1gn1ficant gold mincrahzation" m a r emote area of Na pa County 70 miles northwest of Sacramento is in fine particles that can- not be panned or seen by the naked eye The deposit will yield more than one million ounces of gold. estimated Harry M . Conger . president and chief ex· ecuti ve officer of Homestake P ure gold has been selling foi:...about $630 an ounce on various world markets recently. Surface mining of the .shallow s1x- millioo·ton ore deposit and an on-site mill arc expected to be in operation by 1984. Conger said. Prospectors during the 1849 California gold r ush bypassed the area along the Knoxville Creek in northern Napa Coun· ty because the gold was not visible. Conger said. Meantime. an air tanker on its way to fight the blaze accidentally dumped 500 gallons of fire retardant on a major Pa lm Springs thorqughfare Wednesday. There were no reports of injuries. but the gooey red liquid s plattered streets. buildings. cars. sidewalks and a few people. Several local fire department trucks had to be called in to hose down streets and cars blanketed by the substance. w hich usually leaves a permanent stain on clothing and pamt. a utboritjes said . FIREFIGHTERS AT the blaze s uf· fered a setback Wednesday afternoon. Hillman said. when the blaze outflanked so me 450 crew me mbers who had to be t•vacuated with the help of helicopters . "The .fire ran around them and got behind lhem and we quit fighting the fire and just made sure we got everyone out ahve." Hillman said .. By doing that we probably lost an additional several hundred acres ... Four fir~fighters suffered mmor in· Juries. he said, and another 45 crew m embers who could not be evacu before dark were forced to spend mgbt in a burned-out area or the m ta ins. 4 Chino. Tachevah a nd Tahquit.z OJi yons were all engulfed by the name~ he said. • ~ OFFICIALS SAID the only damag~ from the Dry Falls fire was tf watershed and tim ber. a lthough nearlf 100 e xpensive homes were bciet11 threatened Tuesday evening. T he (ire started about noon Tuesday; apparently when four boys -ages 8 to 11 -were playing with matches in • flood control de bris basin. authoritiet said. They were released to the custodj of their parents. ~ .. The blaze. burning in a southwester!]! di~ection. has.never directly threatene~ this res1denltal resort city which i~ nestled against the mountain's eastenf s lope a bout 110 miles east of Lo$ Angeles. : • New Mortgage Plan Eye~ SACRAMENTO U\P J .,. A varrnble rate home mortgage bill was sent to Gov Edmund Brown Jr by the f, c g 1 s I a l u r e W c d n e :. d a y a :. a.n alternative to a bill ht· vetoed A 72-0 Assembly vote comple ted passage of i\83142 by Assemblyman Alister McAlister. D-San Jose Mc Alister said the bill was backed by lht> savings and loan industry. con suml'r groups and the governor. and that there \Ht~ no known opposition But savings and loans preferred another bill. SBl937 by Sen John . f''or::in . D-San Francisco. which Brown vt:tol•d Foran c.ibandoned efforts to ovl'rradc tht> veto this week McAlist er·s bill ullo\\s state savings and loan anst1tut1ons to offer the saml' variable rat\' mortJ.!agL· Y.h1ch fedcrall> licensed farms havt: offered :.ance last sprang The new federal law has been hllle used :.<J far It allows interc:.t ratt·s to vary by up ~o one-half percent a year to a m8~- 1mum of 5 percent over the JO.year li(t of the loan '. • • Interest ralc!> arc hm enng at a1>9ul 13 percent They fell to 11 1 :! perc~nt after n sang as high as 20 percent eartief this year i l.indcr Mcl\hster's bill. the borro"et could choose to have monthly paymeriti remain constant for three. four or fjvt years. At the end of t he chosen per1<><t the rate would be reset up or down· bf ci.s much as one-half percent dependinf OJI what h~pened to the mai:ket. ~ Tht• borrower could then choosf another period of three. four or fiv~ sears for the monthly payme nts to r~ main constant under the new interes rate • The Mci\lastcr bill dob not have tht "nl'g at1Vl' amort1zat1on" feature ot Foran':. ball. which could rc:.ult an the borrower owing more after five years ot steadily r1s10g interes t rates than at thd start of the mortga~c } __ _ t ~ ' PRoMONTORY POINT APARTMENTS. ~ ' .. BECAUSE YOU BELIEVE YOJR APARTMENT Sf-DULD BE AS DISTINCTIVE AS 'OUR LIFESTYLE Promontory Point is not for everyone. It's for the person who appreoates the exceptional. who understands and requires a unique lifestyle. and who is willing to pay for 1t. Simply stated. Promontory Point 1s luxury A luxury lifestyle that 1s unmatched 1n Southern California. Promontory Point is speaacu/ar ocean views. Twenty-six variations o f floor plans with skylights. lofts, decks, patios. And all the quality extras you'd expea. It's a m1thon do llar rec center with poofs. health spa. sauna, lounge, game rooms, banquet and conference rooms and library. a permanent tennis pro and lighted tennis courts. Promontory Point is an award winner. It has won recognition for design excellence from the American Institute of Architects. Arch1teaural Record, Sunset M agazine and the National Association of Home Builders. And it's touted as one of the most beautiful apartment projects in the country by residents and industry leaders alike. The Point is unique. it 1~ understated luxury for some very special people. Promontory Point ... A place for people who enjoy and can afford an affluent llfestyle. Rents from S665 -SlSOO 675-8000 G:? PromOlitoryj?oint ln Newport Be~h ' l • f < J J . ' .. ' • • t 1 ~ f ~ , • , J • " ~ . . .. . .41 I Thu11day. Auguet 21 'Cl80 ROberl N. Weedl PUblt1her 841,.,.,. l<rtibiCIVEdltorlal PtQe Editor oran119eoa 1 oaorv P1101 Editorial P!!Jl.e ................. ~ .................................... ... Delay_ed Decision Will Prove Costly lrv\ne chool truat"9 last w k told Superintendent Stanley Corey to establish a apeclal all·day ciao for tainted and 1lfted yoUnpters befinnlna Sept 3. Oo~y aad he was ln favor of the class but uraed that at not·be established until n xt year. His or1umt'nt11 went unh eded by a maJonty of tnattees who had been preuUttd by parents seeklnai u t1peclal educoUonal program for lhelr c·hlldren. 'n'8 clus wlU rve frqm 100 to 150 talented and gift ed s tudents and probably will require the hiring of new teachers. ln nil. tt could ~o.<st as mucn ns 1150.000 to pro · vide the personnel and equipment for t.ht! class Thal translates to about St .000 per student. The school dislrlct already pays $2.300 In early educational expenses per s tudent The school trustee who supJ)Ortcd the immediate establishment or the class were probabl) sincerely trying to r espond to a need But camng for the 1mplc mentatlon or the class so late: in the game undoubtedly ruised Its pric~ tag J_f Lhe de· cision had been made months ago. teaching assignments in the district could have been shufrted to eliminate the need for hiring new pe rsonnel The issue was before the trustees and the superm· tendent as early as last spring. Their delays in making the decision means more money wi I l have to be taken out of tax· payer pockets. Transit Study Tiinely The lrvine Company's pledge to support a trans~t study for the City of Irvine and pay up to $100.000 to put it on the road is welcome news . Irvine's villa~e concept makes intra-Irvine travel a gas· and time·consuming chore. ~ntil recently ~here ha_ve been so few commercial attractions to go to in the city that intra-Irvine public transit was a moot issue. But now the Irvine Company says it is finally moving a head with its plans for a super shopping center .in the triangle formed by t~dntcn\n~arrDtego cmd· tB'guna fr@ways. Company officials also say they are ready to dramatically increase commercial growth in other areas of itie city. . • If the company·s a m bitious plans for commercial growth come to fruition. intra-Irvine public transit would truly be necessary and economically sound. .. ft is timely, therefore. that a public transit study be co~ducted for the City of Irvine. The results of that could be <ioubly useful when the Irvine Company's proposed commercial centers take shape. Police Safety First Late this yc;;1r Irvine p<>ltce officers will begin patrol- ing city streets aboard motorcycles. The Irvine City Council has supported a purchase agreement to buy five Kawasaki police motorcycles at a'cost of $4,492 each. · The machines will be purchased with a $14.175 California traffic safety grant and an $11.280 city expen- diture. Police Chief Leo Peart says the bikes are needed to improve traffic patrol on congested streets in the city such as MacArthur and Jamboree. The potential value. of course, needs to be weighed against the question of safety of the officers riding the motorcycles. The experience of the cities of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. which h ave motorcycle tramc officers should be helpful in this determination as the police de- partment evaluates the new motorcycle patrol. • Op1n1ons expressed 1n the s pace above are those of the Daily Piiot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and art1S1s. Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642·4321 Boyd/Fears By L. M. BOYD Some people are deeply afraid or heights. you knew lhat: And some are afraid of closed in places. And some are afraid of giving control of themselves to others. Each o r these three fears can become intense phobias . And there are those who suffer from all three. Little wonder then, is it not. that an estimated 25 million citizens a re afraid of flying. an act which tests all three or these fea111? Q. ·You quoted writer John Cheever as saying that all the American Nobel Prize Vlinaers in .literature, except PearJ Buck. died as alcoholic suicides. Please exempt John Steinbeck. Re did not fit the description. A. You're quJte right. The most 'knowledgeable aulhori· ty aUve on the m atter -Mrs. Joh.a St.eiabeck -says this partleular launate was not aleolllotic. Synthetic hormones tend lo cul back the brain's ability to respond to the body's senses -sight, sound, touch, so on. Or so say Stephen Wong and John Tong, researchers al Ontario's Queens University. The conclusion: Women tak· ing the pill aren't as mental- ly alert as other women. Item No. 93C in our Love and War man's file was the ex- planation by Henry Ford or how to achieve a happy mar- riage "Stick to the first model." Biggest television audience watches on Sunday night, smallest on Friday nigbl. No two tiger s have the same print patterns on their furs . Do you recall during World War II when the U.S. gov- ernment wanted to find a sub1tance for car license plates to replace the needed metal? A 90ybean compound WH trled. But given up. Cows kept eating the Uceue plates. Q. When did the tradition of the U.S. Prelidenta send· lq olUeial Cbrla\mU Cardi be1ln! A. Presldenl Dwt1ht D. ElMnbowv staned lt. Q. Wbat'• tbe ratio of men to women amon1 S.UODld Qtiw? A. °'91' ... M : •mento 180 --. Onr M : • men '°"°---· Mob Silences Crime Witnesses w A:;tnNCTON Bcainning rout year• • ~o. the Ff:l1 w~11 atunnl.'d by u 1Jerle:> of nearly 30 Mub atyle execut ions across the rountry. Whal disturbed the G· •l'"" w1u1 th~ unmistakable pat. torn of tht' kilhrlgs The victlm8 wtlrt' lrlform11nt1> or witnesses AcheduJcd to testify uaatnst Mot n1urea. and all were murdered wllh s ile ncer equipped 22· caliber revolve rs This bec•mc a gri.,vou:i con l'ern ot o r1-:an11ed c rime fighters . who reared they could get no more convic t1ons if their w i tne sses could not ~ prot ec t e d Law enforce· m l'tlt 8 U · th o r1t1 c•s b eg an an urgent 1nvcs t1 galion . using agents 1n 20 FBI field offices C1nd the federal Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms. Their findings have not been disclosed lo this day A ~ECRET ATF analysis of the killings in the New York and New Jersey urou concludes that all lhe victim!! were s lain on contract . and that a ll were members or associates of the Vito Gcnovci:;c organized crimt rsmlly. Herc IS a partial list or the targets. Vincent D. C11punc . 11 ~amble1 und Mob busine1>s ussol'1ate, who ras hly bragged about skimming money from G e novc~e en· lcrprises. He was shot with a .22 on July l. 1976 Frank Chin. n w 1lrll'~!'I in a r •demi extortion trial He was l(unn~d down on Jun 2<\. 1977. with the s:1m" 22 11st•d to kill Capone> Tho m a' Pu lcrmo found stuffed in lhl' trunk of a car parked at Kennedy tnternutional Airport in Murch W7T The same 22 pistol did the Job James Jo!'leph Que h Jr . slain on Nov I 1978 /\~;.11n . the hit wu~ mud1· with the )>ame .22 handJtun "TllE /\CTS :.ire b<:licvt·d to huve been planned und cxccull•d by various ml·mbcr:. oftlw (iCntJVf'M! Crime Family," the /\TF r1·1>ort states It adds thut in udd1twn to gamblin.I(. narcotics and h1Jat·k Ing actlvilles. "tbls Family Is particularly active in contract killing and acquisition of rt rearms forthi11 purpose." THE. ATF TRACED the con· neclion between the 75-0·man Ge novese family a nd the smaller "Purple Gang" of New York City. Between August and December of 1975. members or the Purple Gang trave led through F lo r i d a buying handguns. Of the 86 pistols they bought. more than ha lf were 22-caliber revolvers. The gun cache was transport ed to the New York-New Jersey area. where "these weapons will continue lO be utili~ as the need arises." the report states. It concludes that "handguns and silencers are being made a vails· ble to members of the Genovese Family by the Purple Gang. and the r e is a certain amount of ·contract swapping.' " What' that means is explained this way "fn esse nce. when people of 'little respect' are to be whacked .' the contract will be g1 vcn to tht• Purple Gang. When ·more respect· 1s dem anded. the ' f'\CK A CARD-~ CARP! I Mailbox contract will go to Hoboken· Genovese." One Genovese hit man. the re- port state11, is a shrewd and suc- cessful businessman. "IL Is as- sumed." not.es the report. "that he does contract work for status and prestige and not money." Footnote: The alleged leader or the Genovese Family, Frank "Fund" Tlert, was recenUy ln· dieted for racketeering. Law en- forcement authorities told my associate Tony Capacclo that. with only two of the 86 pistols re· covered so far. there Is the possibility or another rash of 22 caliber slayinJCs. CUBAN CIULDREN: Rapes. as- saults and s uicide a ttempts m ark the daily life of the 900 Cuban refugee children who are wlthOul parents in the hastily set-up refugee camps. But legal t ec hnicalities prevent t he youngsters' release to relatives or foster-care groups . "It is a real crime that this legal 1ssu<' has not been rl'· solved." said an o((icial of the lJ s. Catholic Conference. the largest or th<' volunteer resettle· m ent agencies involved in the Cuban rcfuJ.?t•e p r ogram "There's violence being done to these minors in thE' camps. and we are angry as hell about 1t " The troublt· 1s that he ron· Cuban ctuldrcn t·an hl' resettled permanently, the l>tates to which they are jlOing must accept long. t crm lci:ial l'U~tody Thil> ·~ J :.afcguurd 1n case individual sponsorship breaks down. But so far. only two s tates -New J c r s<'Y and Florida -havl' agreed to take lega l custody on a long-term basis. UNTIL THF. red tupc cun be untangled. lhl' kids stay in the re fugee rnmps . And as a Catholic wclfar\' worker noted to my reporter Jutta Hennig ... a ramp with a prison-like at m os phl.'re b<'hind a 12.root barbed-wire fence is no place for minors " S!'veral suJc1d(' attempts have b<'en rt•portcd in the camps. But the State Department tends to pooh-pooh the seriousness or the rcpons. "Until a ll th<.'sc cases are examined.·· a s pokes man sa id. "we ca nnot say which arc atte mpted s u1c1dl•i. :\l\d which (Ire attention i::rabbcrs · Car Industry Woe Pinned on Government To the Editor: Daily Pilot columist George Mair has. in just a few short paragraphs in his J uly 3 column. shown h.is complete ignorance in unde rstanding the problems plaguing the autom obil e in· dustry. The American public dictates to dealers and manufacturers what they will. or will not, buy And. the public is about as fickle as a 16-year-old beauty queen trying to make up her mind between a dozen prom invita· ions. Ours is a nation or fad follower s. What 's "in " or "fashionable" at the moment counts far more than what is log ical or sen sible .. or necessary. By in large people feel this way about their clothing, their homes. household extras. entertainment . . . and the cars they drive. IF THE POWERS that be would see fit to roll the price of gasoline back to under one dollar a gallon. I'm convinced you'd be amazed at how quickly the automobile business would recover. Drop credit restrictions and Interest r atM along with gasoline prices and the auto in· dustry would thrive and the en· tire nation would prosper. Th e average domes tic automobile gets almost double the mileage it got three years ago . . . so apparently progress is being made in Detroit. If you could get Joan Claybrook ott the backs or the automobile manufacturers, get Calilomia to be more realiJUc in their EPA ratinp and correct all the out· aide influences affectiJlg our in· duatry, then I believe Mr. Carter would find that he bu more than enou1b time on bi.I handa to deal with pressing laauet like over· haulinf the weUare 1y1tem, in· ~m• tax, foretcn poUey ancr. ob yet, cutbln.I rampant tnnation. The automobile bualaelf would oot Deed Ullat.anct from "Bl• Brotbtr," ti "Bll Brodler" would butt-out and leave " alone to do what we do belt . • . buJld quality, ener11·etflclent automo)>l1e1 . O~b and wblle you're ai 1t. you au t allo COD· vtnce ''Bia Brcl&MI' ' to ,.allo \be ... ,..,. ol ll'ede. 'lb.at wwld balp tM •omobU• ballnw too • • , DOI to m.uc. toalll .... Lbou_.. ol c6m' America In· .......... JACK BOCKWSLL 0.•al ••upr, Beeelll t1t7 Chevrof« Co. ~.,, .... To the Editor· In the Mailbox. Au~ 17 you printed a letter entitled "Monkey Suit Time." in which Warren Althoff recalled hi s days or youth. attending chur c h. as scratchy suits. hard looks from mother . and long sermons I a m s ure there were beautirut songs and times of victory in that church but these are forgot· ten. Warren has observed that the forces of good a re losing. An observer al Disneyland might observe people waiting. in long lines. An observer at a fish· ing trip or picnic might observe the insects and the uncomtorta· ble places a person musts1t. A person might observe that at the Big .. A". after sitting a long time. the home team seems to manage to lose. but we pay our money and go AS A BOY 1 played checkers with an old fellow who had ob· served a battle between the Union and the Confeder acy. He observed a Union soldier drop a repeating rifle in the creek after being shot on the bridge. As an observer. he left his cellar the next day and retrieved the lever action rifle. These rifles were the new secret weapon of the Union. The Con· federates had single action rifles and muzzle loaders. Pun~la As an observer. my old friend never tried to get this rifle to the Confederacy, but saved it for a squirrel rifle. He was an Arkansas boy, and he observed that· lhe Con· federacy was losing, but as an observer and not a participant, he collected a squirrel rifle. As an observer. Warren wore a monkey suit. be listened to long sermons and received hard looks. Now he observes that the forces of right are losing. I wonder if he got a good squirrel rine out or it all. JIM BOLDING Tntdd•9C .. t• To the Editor : I am writing in response to a recent article which appeared on your Comment page under the by-line of Thomas Elias. The item coocems the deregulation of the trucking indus try in California. Mr Elias· article makes re· rerence lo items which are not supported by facts. Elias reports that ''the old ruJes have cost California consumers about $300 million a year. or $50 per family, according to the s tale Public Utilities Commission." Ir Mr. Elias is in possession of data to subs tantiate such an ouUandish figure. I respectfuJly request that he favor me with such in- for mation, as repeated efforts "TMt MUlhroom Jultennet Have you t"9 enttc1ote1•· A by industry to secure such sub- stanti ation from the PUC or Gov. Brown have been m et with silence. THE AUTHOR'S inference concerning tying freight rates to cost of consumer goods is clear · ly based on hearsay a nd in· dicates lack of proper research. As any novice e<:<>nomist can al· test. the relationship between transportation cost and shelf price is negligible : and for Mr. Elias to base conclusions on faulty grounds reflects a lack of understanding and knowledge on his part and does a disser vice to both your readers and our in· dustry. A. E. BARTOLIC President. California Trucking Association AlrpenNeet& To the F.ditor: It seems to me. as a taxpayer. that our governments have now wasted millions of dollars mak· ing various studies, and fighting the Orange County Airport. We will always have with us those people who Uve under the night paths to complain about the planes. lmprove <J low -noise aircraft will never satisfy their complaints. However. the "silent majori- ty" will tell you that the airport ta necessary to our economic life, and that we should expand the number of daily flights. rather than free1e them at 4l per day. IT HAS always amused me that IMS than 5 percent or the aircraft flying out are com- mercial, yet we never hear any complaints about private aircraft which can l>e just as noisy. The hard facts are that in the past 20 years, greater Los An1eleg bas lo&t 30 percent or ltt airports, yet need ror air travel and air recreation ha~ in· created. · It la tlme for the pollUcians to be hone&• about thia matt.er, 1et the airport rebullt and ex- p1Dded. and 1et on wtth t.he busl- nett ol Ntilt)'ina the nffdl of UM entire populace. R.M WOLFF • n...-. ... .--.~ ... ··-..,., ............ Ullln ........ ....... .. l ..................... c-. ...... u-. ................... , ... ...................... -.ct .. ............. _ ... ...._ ... .. ........ .., ................ .. tires ... , ·" --..tsurt t•ll'Mtl lltr rHUaac adool fMUill,_.,. aoeouth..UO.al ............. .no.. ... ................. Uomto ... ..... faemu .. wkbout dts .. . Al..._..,.. cbarlM of more tlllan too aou•fbbl l tor 1h ~••••rooma , be 1cbool • ....._._.UM ufet.trla. ACUJ'a OrUlle c.untr ll'GUI) wuta die fadlitlee few H lllllHW .. lialalw eoelw.ee Oet. 11 In edd*Uon to the waiver ol f HI. ACLU obJectfd to rules rettricUu renters from quarrel· lQi, abullve lanauaae or no!se otfenalve to nelabbors . Jt allo atruek. from the lnlUal· ly propoMd rental aareement. HCUon1 prohibitln1 use for purpc11e1 that are "immoral. of· fenalv' or harmful." ,,.._. daUHS, Westrejch con· tended. are ln violation or Finl .Amendment rteht.s . !:.and-locked Arizona doesn't pose pro· ,l>lems for true surfing enthusi.asts. They t simply pack up their boards and head for . . Big Surf. a Tempe recreation area which offers artificially-made waves for would· be beach fans. ( ~luumel Work i Tenants Continue ~lltds ·Sought p . .. . t.~ R -~~:«9rm. runoff carried 'ivtest OJ ents •bOUt 260,000 cubic yards of ~ into the lower portion of~ San Juan Creek Channel SlJl:Vey says. suney estimates that the remove the material U..t settJed up to a mile up. from the mouth at Bay will be $600,000. work is expected to take 45days. · tkts from rontriactors propt>S ~i SO remove the &ediment will '*' Dbened sept. Zt at the county lladf of Administration {~'°',Paint ~ •• -1.. 'Di ·is ~WV gi ' ft!:r San Clemente police of· bave received City Cou.n· tU approval to paint house · fluinben on the curbs or resi· '-... ts. wj)ling to pay sa for the -w.i .. Tbe four officers would con· d Ma~ during their !N:..utJ··boun. Police Chief Ott>' Brown said. • ID a letter to the council, the tol&ce employees said ~})le E ~ wouJd aid·~ fll9 oUlcials in respooding •merwenctes l)ana ·Schooi- By STEVE MUBLE Of• Oelty ""$-Owners of the luxury Promon- tor y Point apar.tments in Newport Beach are offering long-term tenants lower rents but tempers are still on the rise. Jack Vangr..,w, unofficial spokesman for tenants upset with a new rent schedule. said the discount pragram offered by the Irvine Company is aimed more at soothing tempers than providing "real security." "WE DON'T WANT a free ride or anything," said Vangrow, a cardiok>gist. "We just want al air deal." And a fair deal, he explained, would be if the Irvine Company rpU~ its rent schedule back to what it was last spring and then . agreed to tie future rent hikes in with a cost ol living index. · The new rent discount policy ·was offered to·Promontory Point tenants just prior to a tenants' · mee(iilg last . Monday evening that drew abqut. 150 angry rent· ers. IT WILL REDVCE .monthly rents by $50 for tenants who have Ii~ in~ units for more than a year and up to $100 for three.year tenants. Jerry Collins. a company spokesman, said· the discount pro1ram is also being offered to tenants in the development firm's other, Newport Beach comp~es' -Mari.ner Square, Bayport 8aywood and Bayview .. , He sJid the discount will be •subtTacted hom the current market rate..!. the rate new rent· ers pay and the rate others will be bumped up to wben they reach their anniversary date. But Vangrow said this isn't enough because it offers no permanent solution. • '1'JIEY MAY offer this. for OD· ly two months and then take it away, who knows?" be argued. He said he is conducting a survey with renters in the 52Q..unit com· pl ex to see if other action, such as withholdi;Dg rent, is desired. Collins said so far Vangrow is the only Promontory Point resi· dent to withhold any portion of his rent. The new rent schedule, un· veiled last June. boosts the minimum price of a one· bedroom unit from $600 to $650 per month and the cost of a top- of .the-Une two-bedroom apart· ment from $900 to $1.020. Bar Looted In Clemente San Clemente police believe someone might have concealed themselves in Goody's Bar early thia morning, then taken $270 in cash after tavern operators closed for the night. An employee at the tavern, located at 206 S. El Camino Real, told police the cash was discovered missing early this morn.lng. The theft occurred sometime between 2:15 a nd 5:30 a.m. There weren't any indications of forced entry,. police .said. altitude when they pass over our homes." Lelpton said an established rodte fQllows the commuotty's freeways. "but tbey do not follow Ulil. ·• Wiring \Vork Set for Police Bab8e raulty eleetrteal wirtn1 at the San Clemente poUce ranee bu empted City. Council mem to approve soeodin& •.ooo to repair tbe pOtent1a1 buard. Tbe lac:k of electricity pre· •nta nlcbt 1hoottn1 at the ran1•. _located near tbe mualdpel fOll coone. a11d bas alto r.ultH tn tbe lack ot a aillill MCUrtty U91K. • In a Jetter written Sat\.trday, We1lreich gave the school dis· trict until noon Tuesday to respond to ACLU demands . lo a press release Tuesday. Westreicb announced the ACLU would file an acUon In Orange County Superior Court if the dis· trict failed to bend. Tbe action would seek to halt the district from imposing condi· lions contrary to free speech and . charging fees to civic organiza· Fund Plea Planned By Laguna Laguna Beach officials are preparing a letter to federal or. ficials urging them not to withhold funds. even if the city does not meet ·a deadline for a housing ptan. City Council members moved Tuesday to draft a letter to the federal Housing a nd Urban Development Department, tell· ing officials it is not practical for the city to prepare a low· and medium-income housing plan by Oct. 31. THE LETTER WILL urge federal officials to give the city $153,000 in funds for Thurston Park improvements and $25,000 for housing rehabilitation. Orange County housing plan- ners told council members that city projects "coming to con· clusion" would be funded. but money for new projects and "loans in the mill" had stopped. The city had been told that $417,500 in Housing and Com· munity Development Block Grant funds already approved for Laguna would be withdrawn unless the city submits the plan for housing construction. LAST YEAll THE city spent $10.000 of federal funds for pre· paration of a plan for Thurston Pa.ck....sewers, storm drains and water mains. Mayor Wayne Baglln moved that the letter to the federal of- ficials should state that the city is revising its general plan, in- cluding a housing element, and that it is considering housing use of sewerage plant property riext to City Hall. The letter also will advise of· ficia1s that the city is consider· ing small sites in town for low and moderate housing projects. Housing and Community Development Block Grant monies are distributed to cities throughout the nation under terms of a 1974 law. Dana High Boosters Set Dance The Dana Hills High School Booster Club will host a cocktail party and dinner-dance at the El Adobe Restaurant, 31891 Camino Capistrano, in San Juan Capistrano on Sept. 5. Proceeds from the dinner-dance will be turned over to the club treasury to be used for future donations to Dana Hills High School. A no-host cocktail par· ty will begin at 6:30 p.m. with dinner st.art.lng at 8. Dancing will follow wilb the Gill Orr band. For inlormation or to make reservations call Winnie Pavlovich at 831 ·3013 or Stacy Strauss at 496·.2066. Pen Skill Cl888es Offered The San Juan Capistrano Adult School will off.er two levels of calligraphy classes this fall. Beginning Calli· grapby. empbasl1la1 italic, Roman letten and fancy flourlsbed capitals, will belin Sept. 4 from 9 a.m. to JIOOll at Crown Valley CommUJd. ty Park. cam1rapby It will concentrate on humanlat backhand, blac~ letter and Roman scripts. Thla cl111 will begin Sept. J from 'I p.m. to 10-p.m. at Caplatrano Valley HJ1b School, room B· 12. Recletratlon wW taU place at tbe flnt ... ._ of each nln•·•••k coune. The fee II po. For information call ... .... Thurldey. Augufl 28. 1990 USC DAIL y PIL.OT A • journalism programs. lions in violation of state f aw and constitutional requirements of equal protection, be said. District Superintendent John Nicoll. who managed a delay in the ACLU request for response. said today that be has written a letter authorizing ACLU use of the facWUes wit.bout charge. Westreich offered the funds, probably about su;o. to alleviate any concern that ACLU would • profit from the conference. ; ln his letter, Nicoll a lso : agreed to the contract deletions deman(ted by ACLU. He a1ao is accepting the ACLU offer to donate proceeds from the legislative conference to the district's four high school RETAIL ELEMENTARY SCHOOt. Bran«!hing Out His actions. he wrote. "should not be regarded as precedent. setting nor acceptance of the aJ .. legations and charges set fofth, by you." · • EXISTING FIREHOUSE .BOYS' CLUB Square marks spot where Irvine branch of Harbor Area Boys Club is to be built. A Sl.5-million fund-raising cam- paign is under way for construction of club which can begin as early as spring of 1981. Irvine City Council has given tentative approval to zoning for club. Irvine Mayor Art Anthony is leading fund-raising drive along with Ray Watson, president of Newport Development Co. Four Seek Vacated SJC Council Seat Four San Juan Capistrano res· idents are seeking appointment to the City Council seat left va- cant by the resignation of James Thorpe. Applicants include James Atkins, a commercial airline pilot; Chuck Ward, president of the San Juan Homeowners As- sociation: Robert Davies, a member of the city Planning Comm.issk>n, and Ilse Byrnes of the city Equestrian Commission. His position on the council will be filled by appointment by the other council members Sept. 17. The appointee will complete the . unexpired portion of Thorpe's term. which runs until April 6. 1982. • Those interested in applying for the cotmeil post must be resi- dents of San Juan Capistrano. Applications are available at Ci- Thorpe. a former mayor and second term councilman, cited personal reasons for his resigna· lion effective Sept. 1. ty Hall. 32400 Paseo Adelanto, in : the clerk's office. AU applications must be re· turned to the city clerk no later than SepL 10 at 5 p.m . HOW ,ouc.. ltMl-p.int • C:O--• """' 8ft ...... fftellOw. ~teetlngcolOr. 27colo1 .. nc1 _..... ....... , -~~9 •11•• BUY 4-GALLONS GET THE FIFTH FREE! OIL BASE STAIN WOttd ,..,_. ,...,. .. NNfltrl,lllifitllift<l StHo! • CllOlc9 °' ........... Ciet• .,_ ••.,.. , • .iur. ...,_ ~. 01 ~ eoior type. u.-ee MIKtiofl °' co!Ota. .~~ •13" 8UPERSPORTER BLUE ICE CHEST TMCotdlelntMMdl Julttfeezethe lldMd UH. Keepe food cold fOrhoute. Mote food .... ...., duty COMlnlclloft. ' 29 REG. ••• . ' J '• '• . • . ~J·~YN.OT . ~·~··- . r.:~arette's Risk to Heart Debated ,~ . I BOSTON (AP> -T-.e &a-1eoo Geoeral'a 1t'l'I report lhal ctcarette 1moklnl .... to 1 ,,..ater rilJl ot Mart dleeaM bu newr Mel\ clearly tu.bl~ b.7 acteoUt~ retearcb. a 1ue1t edltoftaJ writer clllilm tn UM September '-IU. of the American Heart Journal But a prom.1.nenl beart ~ rejected the dalm. ••fine it I~ 1ludlet that abow a curect 11nk between cl•arenea and heart dl•· ..... Dr. Cart C Selt.ltt of Bolton wrote that hls ~umlnauon ot the data uaed in the im report aho11-a. ·•rt la reasonable to bt-lltwe that slopPtnK 1 moktnl doel not reduce the riak Qf coronary heart dlaeue arrt that tbere 11 DO "tabU.Md proot that 1moldq la ca\alally related.·• Sellur, who holds 1 Ph.O tn biolotical Md medluJ anthropolo1y. hH taqlat at Harvard Unlvenlty ud NrVee u 1 vl1ltin1 proleu<>r ol nutdUon at Tuf\.a UnlYerslty. His artJcle wu pubUabed thl• week in the Journal, an l.,l ,OOO·clrculatlon monlbly m11aa:tne ln St. Lowa The editorial wa1 lmmtdhttely at- tacked by Dt. WUHam Cutelli. direc· tor of the F'r1mln1bam, Ma.sa . lleart Study ReHarchers al Fnmlngham have been examining hurt attacks and thrir cauies fw 20 years ln the nation'• &onge1t-runnln1 heart study. Caat.elU accuaed Seltzer ot "betna funded by the tobacco \nduatry" and uld the ed.ltorhal tcnorea evtdence that 1mokera an, twice a1 likely to suffer heart attacks. Seluer. a clsar smoker 40 years. aald In an Interview he received fundlne tor his research from a variety of iroupe, but denied slanting hls research in any way. Studies lbat abow ex·smokers are healthier than s mokers are unrelia· ble. Seltzer said. slnce ex.smokers as a group are healthier to begin with. Ex-smokers generally have lee• cheat pain, leg pain, breatbleuness and a bluer hang capacity. be said. Seltzer. who said he Hned u an adviser to the Sureeon General's 1984 report oo d.(arette smokln1. Hid the federal 1ovemment should not have gone beyond that report's conclusion that there wu not a clear causal re· latlonahip between cigarettes and heart dluue. Castelli disagreed. "All of the data is very striking." he said. "Smokin1. independent of every other risk fac· tor. is related to coronary heart dis· ease." • NATION Ol'I·., :\110:'\; FHI. ~* /\ M fl P.M "-i :\l'\:Hl>/\Y 10 i\ M ·11 '.M . Huntln<Jton Beach, CA 926-C7 &wt,,.,.,, C41/loml• lf#g/QMI Ofllc.,• 5en E. I.A P11ma Ave., Anaheim, CA 92907 8966 Vall«y View St., Buen• Pali(, CA 90620 1666 Amell! Rd .• Camafillo. CA 93()10 20715 S. Avalof'I Blvd .. Caraori, CA 90746 --·--.. ----·-- 23021 Latte Centet Ot . (Uk& FOfHll, El TOfo, CA 926:l0 1001 E. lmperlal Hwy .• La Habra. CA 906J1 G:t •1.0 U>nQ Beech Blvd . U>no Beech, CA 90807 • 22939 Hawthorne Blvd , l orrance. CA~ 1096 Irvine Blvd . Tuattn. CA 92680 ~ N. Citrus Ave . Weal Co¥lna, CA 91793 "M•rcury Room" 1v•ll•t>1• on • reurwd t>a11111 QUEENIE FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY lr~CPenney ''RED . HOT SALE'' Hurry Quantities are Limited "Look how great we're doing. Who says there's no business like show business" 1" -----------""'---------PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE -Fi"cnnous BUStNess ~•CTtTIOUS IU!tNEH-- NAMI! STATIMl!NT NAMI! STATUlllll!NT '"" ~..., --Is dolno t>usl· nw followfft9 _._,Is dOl"9 ~I· ~nn t>eU•\· THE-HAPPY HOUSECLEANER, ARC. 1an EnfH"P<IW u~. HIHll· JtJ Rivi••• Dr'lvf'. (0\1• Mu•. 1oqton 8M<h C.llf0<"4•'1~ Calllo"llamn David wo ,.. Tubman, llJA w 1(•1"'~" Erin R~llv. 307 Rivie•• Moor,., S..ntA AM, Alllorn1a 91101 D•lvf' Co.la~. Calltornla 'l?b11 Thi\ b<Kl~s I\ conduct~ by an 1n Th1\ ~\I\ <ondU<ll'd by Ml In dlYldU•I dlYICI~ 0.-.k!Wa.,.... Tubm•" ICelhleen R•llv flll\ '"''-' W&\ lllfd """" , .... Tiii• si.-.i ••• lllt!d wllll Ille County Cler~ of Orat>Qe Covnty on c.,_,, Oef1i Of Or~ councv on Auovst), "'°' A~ s. "'° fl142'ft PtttSa Publl"-'d 0r41'9 Cone Dally Piiot, Publlv.rd Or-(OHi Dally PllOI, Auo 1. 14. 11. 21. ,.., 31S .. to AU9 1. 1•. 21. a. ,.., ms to • PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE P14UIU P\il:lll,,.. Or .. COeS1 0.lly Pl'°" A119, 21. 21, 5-t.•. 11, 1'IO ~ 1---------- PUBUC NOTICE ~ F.J,uityrunds~Inc umNllD~ltNC8,.. '1Mt 7dMOl!O ----...... 1 DAY ONLY -Starts 10 A.M. Fri., Aug. 29th BEDDING ReflectJons Rugs. Blue & Brown. only. 24x36 · a 99 Now 4.50 ong. . HOUSEWARES Smalt Ceramic Bedroom Lamps. Red floral design. orig. s1s Now 8.99 Silk Aoral Arrangements. orig. 9.95--19.95 Now&.99 Save SOCYo Mikasa Dinnerware Acc6ssories. ong s12-s43 Now S6-21 .SO FASHION FABRIC Spring & Summer Yardage. Print Terry. orig . 3.99 yd. Surllne orig. 3.50 yd. Burllngton. orig . 3.39 yd. Now 1.99 yd. Now1.99 yd. Now1.99yd. HARDWARE One and Onty. Low Lustet' Interior Paint. reg. 13.99 gal. Now 9.99 gal. Scitnlc Wall Murals Covers 9'x12' wait orig. 34.95-69.95 Now 18.88 SPORTING GOODS Speclaf 39.99 Morey Boogie Board with Leash attached. Quantities Limited. Special 39.99 PATIO FURNITURE Adjustable 4 position chaise. Lemon straps/Lemon F1n1sh. #4448 orig. s159 Now sag 42" Glass Top Table wtth umbrella hole. Lemon finish #4445. (4onty> orig. $113 TV -STEREO MCS Modular Component System Stereo Receiver 75 watts. Now•69 orig. 599.95 (3 only) Now 399.95 GARDEN SHOP 2Gal.elze • Aucuba "Varlegata" • Philodendron Salloum 50•1.*9 • Aralla Seibold! • Variegated Mirror Plant • Gardenia Veitch! • Juniper "Tam" • Junlpec "Blue Pacific" • Juniper "Sea Green .. Soll PNp Poltlng Mix. 1 cu. ft. reg. 3.50 - I" Indoor Pienta. Asst. Varieties Specl•I 4.99 Special 6.99 . Now 2.44 Specl•I 2.11 C.OFF.EE SHOP Red Hot Mulelln'Plllte ......... , •• cl9 CNI Qu1eo00 Two cttm Ind cneeee· enctutadu ..wct wtth refrled ~ans and "*'"" r1Ce. &peel.a 1.~ 1V9ENS Terry Shirts Special 7 .99 30% off Waves Shirts. orig. s12..s19 Now 8.40-S15 50% off Wallets orig. 4.SO..StB Now 2.25-'9 Sport Shirts. 100% cotton rn fashion stripes. orig~s15 Now 10.50 Men's Striped Pocket Poto. reg. S6 Now 4 .50 Men's Pocbt Polo Shirt. Solid colors. orig. 4.50 Now 3.37 Men's Fashion Ties. orig. 8.50 Now 4.99 Men's Ptatn Pocket Cord Jeans. orig. 13.50 Now 10.80 BOYS' Boys' Crewneck Shirt. Asst styles. orig. 3.so-ss Now 1.99 Boys' V-Neck Shirt. Sizes 8-16. orig sg Now 4.99 Boys' Denim Jeans Fashion styles. waist 26-31 . orig. s1.µ16 Now 4.99 50% off Boys'Athfetlc Wear Various shorts and tops. orig. 5.50-8.50 Now 2.75-4.25 GIRLS' Girts' Fashion Tops. Many styles. fabrics and colors. o rig. 3.49-9.50 Now1.99 Girls' Terry Shag Top. Various colors. Sizes 7-14. orig. sa Now3.99 50% off Girts' Dress Closeout. Summer tropicals, Jumpers and sundresses. ; orig. ss-s14 Now •4-'7 Girts' Back·to-School Dresses. Various fabrics and colors. orig. s12.s15 Now 9.99 50% off Girts' Swim Sult Closeout. Various tank and bikini sty1es. orig. 6.SO..S10 Now 4.9&-6.99 INFANTS' Toddfen Teny Top Sizes 2T, 3T. 4T. orig. s4 Now 2.99 lnfanta'SleeveleaeTerry Shirt. Schren print design. 100% cotton . i 189 Now99• or g .. FINE JEWELRY 17J Name Brand watctte .. Waltham, Ou Fonte, Lucien Picard and Amex. orig. teS-'150 Now 42.18 50% off ......... ,.,.. Siver Money Cllpt Md Key Chalfte. ortg. 32..90-37.50 Now 11.25-11.75 lrclCPenney IJ~ISlAM> ' l I SPORTWEAR 259/o off Ditto's Tops and Pants. Jr .. ms and full figure. orig. ~'27 Now 4.50-20.25 Speclaf Buy 2.99 Jr. Size T -Shirt 1000/o cotton. solid colQrs Jr. Long Sleepe Plush Pun-over Sweater. orig. s16 Jr. Long Sleeve Poorboy Pull-over Sweater --Ofig. '~ Jr. Long Sleeve Leno Shirt. orrg s13 Jr. Betted Stretch Poly Pant. o rig. s1s Jr. Pleat Front Jeans orig. s19 Misses Patch Pocket Jean Now9.99 Now9.99 Now 5.99 Now9.99 Now10.99 orig. s1a Now 9.99 Mlsslits Herring Bone Poly Pant orig. s16 Now 9.99 Misses Long Sleeve Acrylic Plush Sweater. orig. s14 Now 9.99 LINGERIE Hatter Bta, white or nude. Special 1.99 Camisoles, white or nude. assorted sytles. Speclal 2.99 HaH SHps. white or nude Special 3.99 assorted styles. Full SUpa. Assorted styles Special 3.99 and colors. Pant Uners Special 2.99 White or Nude Cotton Shaper Bikini, white nude. pink and blue. S-M-L. orig. s2 Now89• WOMEN'S ACCESSORl_f;S Women'• Vinyl Handbags I 399 Now 1.99 org .. 30% off Women's Fashion Belts. orig. 15-18 Now 3.25-5.20 SHOES 8pecW Buy 8.99 Women's Sporty Heel Sanct.1. Tan and wine. whole siZeS only s-10 Special 8.99 Women's Vlnyt Low Heef SlldH. Red. white. blue and tan. reg. 6.99 lnf•nta' Nylon/suide Joggers. SlzeM reg. 9.99 Now2.99 Now5.99 . I J FASHION ISLAND STORE ONLY 644-2313 7 ~ f : 73, NO. 2•1, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGEi ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1980 t'our Hometo•n Dally NewMpaper TWENTY-FIVE CENTS 1 1 '0n<JfFe Nuclear . Test Plan Opposed ~ ot the San Onofre Board int.he near future In "order would have a two-month jump on in San Clemente, opposes testing well bet it will never be converted eventuaJ operating license ... even ,1 I· I 17 I . I I 11~lear O..Watlq StaUoo want to l~d fuel and test ,t," an EcliJon starUna up the plant sbould hear· of the unit before final licensing. to anothertypeof power... with approval or a low-power .._,. lpedt~ .. ur&Dlum t~l s p011tesmanuldtoday. lngs be delayed. "They should not be allowed to She said once the camel's head license. la UallNo. 2 ~ aext April. The Ueenae would be good for "Our goal has been to load fuel load (Unit 2) until they dem-is in the tent. the rest will follow. eut lMJ fae.~Woll fronu abouttwc>monlhl,hesald. in Unit 2 by mid· April," the onstrate that they can protect •·and when y. ou're dealing with Edison. and co·owner San P of S-O.meete ~ktents The utility filed a brief earlier spokesman said. "lf tbe hearings the people around the plant ade· nuclear power. you must be Diego Gas and Electric Co · lillal the Southern Calilonlla tb1s month with the Ucensin& are delayed, we'd still like to start quately. careful not to set things up that would like to have Unit 2 in full ilOft OD. move to .. the camel board,uldnaapprovaltotestthe low-powertestln~." .. operationbynextDecember. ~lntluheadintbetent." new 1enerator before hearin&s. "Wethinkit'sashametheycan way. l'-idUioa Co. officials said they a re heldontbe flnalpermlt. But Anaheim attorney Phyllis get there <to full power> in· Edison officials say they will ill be aeetinl a liceue from the tr the licensing board issues the Gallagher. who represents an an· crementally. Once you load a "still need to meet all of the re· l"lomk Saf~ty and LicensinR low·power Jtcense, the company li·nuclear group called GUARD plant with nuclear fuel, you pretty quirements for approval of the '/Viguel Bank Looted # Unit 3, also under construction at San Onofre. is scheduled to go into operation in 1983. 6th Man Convicted • m Caper • :Few Taboe Clues 1 Three Sought . i. n, ~Jlllo:st • 1 " • • .,. • .J • !' 11~ ~ ,. .,;. • J STATELINE. Nev. (AP).-· .on in its contiWiftg 'search for e FBJ today hunted two'men the two men. both said to be in d a ~man believed involved their 30s. and the woman. ·a bombing that blew the side •'We do not have any suspects ut of a Lake Tahoe bote ·casino o r what their names are,· uring a botched attempt to ex· rt $3 million in $100 bills from he gambling house. The FBI' also said the ptmticated design of the com· lex bomb, which sent plumes pf molle skyward and showered debris over several blocks when it was accidentally detonated by robot. may offer clues to who bullt tt. AuthortUea Wednesda)' night issued an all·po\nt.s bulletin for three men in their early 20s driv· Ina a bl8Ck Ford, but cancelled the. alert this morning after the e ad was checked out and 1proved false , said FBI T-9HIRTS PROVE POPULAR AT TAHOE-A3 Jansen said. "We 're working on leads mainly from people calling in." Agents tried to meet the ransom demand to save the posh resort, but the bomb exploded Wednes· day d\U'ing attempts to dismantle <See TAHOE, Page A2> l..aguna's Famed Chef ispokesman Bill Jansen. adding of the trio: ''It was just some kids talking." He said the FBI has uu1e to go Brack Dies (· ,-AD-~-tn-Wl_N_D_ t IN BOAT S41LS ; ; ''The Va11y. 1'1lot really , reaches boat buyers along the :... OrangeCoast. .. ~ "I sold my Windsurfer ·the ; first day to the first caller reply· ins to the ad I placed in the Dai· t ly Pilot clasaified section." That's the advertising success , story of the Laguna Beach man ~ who placed this ad irt the Dally Pilot: W1nd11u1 fet . ~ork:S ex cellent. Lots of run. good COlld. SiOO XXX·ltXXX 11 you want to reach boat buyen all along tbe Orange Coast, place an ad in the Daily i · Pilot Clusilied section. can the friendly ad·vbers at 842·56'71. Lucien Brack, a Belgium-born chef who operated the Old Brussels restaurant in Laguna Beach for nearly two decades, is dead at the age of 62. The dapper chef died Monday at Brotbman Memorial Hospital in Culver City. His Freneh·style cooking drew customers to Laguna Beach from as far away as Los Angeles. His patrons bad to adapt to both bis charm and bis temper. For Lucien Brack was a tem· peramental chef, who could take crtticl.am, it'it was legitimate. If a customer sent something back to the kitchen, the ener1etic chef would taste it himself. U the complaint wu justified, Lucien would prepare the dilb again. If, in tasting the dUh in ques· lion, Brack decided it was good. be would storm out of the kitchen and confront the <See OIEF. Page AZ> ~· ........... -~ Cats Dig Pla9rooaa Nancy Goodwin of the Pet Responsibility Committee and Loren Haneline find cats at · the Laguna Beach Animal Shelter are en· joying their new playroom. When the com· mittee built the "cattery," Mr. and Mrs . Haneline, owners of Vacation Village motel, paid the $360 cost. Dana.Benefit Plan Called Incentive By DON CHAPMAN Ol tM Oally ~1191 Staff The Dana Point Sanitary Dis· trict board appears to stand alone among Orange Coast gov· ernmental agencies voting itseU a S500-a-month retirement plan. The pension. which became ef· fective in April, amounts to $50C per month for board members who have attended 10 meetin~s per year for elgbt consecutive year.s and have reached the age or 65. Board members are paid $50 per meeting. The law provides for the pension through various sections of the state Government Code and the district can afford it. ac· cording to board member Angus Smith. Smith noted that officials from other districts had been contact· ing him to see bow the Dana Point board established the plan. "They're all confronted with the same problem Cof getting <See DANA, Page AZ> Cops Identify Man's Body A decomposed body found near a Laguna Hills construction site has been identified as that of Peter Manford Moore, a 4'J-year· old Santa Ana man reported missing by relatives July 8. Preliminary investigation of the body discovered Tuesday night showed that Moore died of a self.inflicted gunshot wound to the bead. according to Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart. A .22 caliber rifle was recovered at the scene. be said. Moore, who was studying den· <See BODY, Page A2> AVCO's Niguel Building Joh Resumes BJ IOllN NEEDHAM °' .. ....., .......... After delays that date back to 1972 wben Avco Community Developers, Inc. was foreed to halt pillding at Salt Creek Beach in Lapna.Ntpel, earth movers are 6oce .,aln preparing the land for COllltnletion. Gradinl operations at the site were abut down by court order after PMSqe ol PropOllUon 20, the Coutal Aet, tn im. Avco went to court claimtna It bad vested rt1bt1 tO dnelop tbe propertybutlolttbeeuelD 1'". N"eeded permlta ... ...-.ct by tbe ~ Commllliaa tut Se ..... after ndieal e._... were ma oa A•eo'a propaMd plana lor dtftlapmat ol tbe area. Tbe O'adinl now tak1DC place on a 111-acre Dlft9I on tbe ID· land ltde °'a.at Creek Beedl .. tbe ftnl ..... ol ........ ,..... developmmt plan. 1 Dewelopmat Of tbe ntlre saa.ure oeean •I•• parcel, dtvtded Into ................ . peeled to take from six to eight years, according to Sam Couch, Avco planning manager. Avco originally estimated It would take 10 to 15 years to complete the project. Couch said 66 sin1le·famlly homes will be built on the 1JS acres now being craded, u well aa nine boles of an J.8.bole cbam- plon=..1olf course. He uid lh1a phase ot tbe project ts expected to be completed someUme next year. lloet ol the Avco land where deveiopmeot will take place tiel above Salt Creek Beacla aad ~ tenU beck aioq Crown Valley Parkway, Ni1uel Road and StoDebUl Drlve. Two-tblrda o1 tbe a,ooo ,..... ldentlal matta wtll be built at tlle upper portion of tbl1 laad. PropoMd are comblaatklal ol town bomu, 1:ondomlnlums. 1Jn1le fUDllJ homes aDd time abarlnl apertmenta. Included in '&bis development are SIG 1o~called aHordable (8ee "vco, .... AJ) Robbery Believed . Biggest By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ol tll9 DMly ~i ... Si.ti The sixth and last suspect in the "Miss ion : Impossible" multi·million burglary· at the Laguna Niguel branch of United Califorrua bank in 1972 was con· victed Wednesday or bank larceny and conspiracy charges in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles. Harry .James Barber, 38. who was a fugitive for more than eight years prior lo his an-est in Pennsylvania in May. will be sentenced Sept. lS ror his role in what record keepers have called the world 's largest bank burglary. Official estimates of the loss to the bank and the holders or 4S8 safety dePQSit boxes that were systematically rifled was placed at $4 million. But knowledgeable investigative sources said the loss actually may have exceeded $6 million. Cash. rare coins, jewelry, negotiable securities and other valuables were taken during the weekend·long crime that oc· curred between March 24·27. 1972. / Five other people were con· victed in connection with the well·planned and executed break·in. Though sentenced to federal prisons terms of 25 years, each, all except one - Amil Dinsio. the alleged ringleader -has been paroled. Barber's trial occurred in rather routine fashion. said As· sistant U.S. Attorney Robert Biniaz, in contrast to the 1!1'13 trials that included testimony about elaborate fllibis and a murder plot against a prosecu· lion witness. The key witness against Barber was Charles Broeckles, a participant in the conspiracy who, however, was never in· dieted. <See BANK. Page A2> Coast Weather SUnny Friday afternoon following morning cloudi· ness. Slightly warmer. Lows tonigh,t 60 at the beaches, 85 lnJand. Highs Friday mid 70s to upper 80s. INSIDE TODA. V · David oftd DoTothv JM. ling were ordnftj to nr .... r.-r thrir ~ attn outhorUW• lovnd the child '-ft °'°"' a/en u.. pornt1 t0Ht to the dntut. Th• DW1littgl IOOftf tlwir c#Uld back -,,.., .. u.aa ,.. ,__.. ,... boClt .,. ,,..,.. taUt ,......., '*-'t -UN,~,....,,.._ care ot her. S.. "°'J, PaOI Alt. •••• ,.. ................ ~Cl .,..._....a...._ ... . UA. .... M .......... . ....... ........ .. == ~1·~·" ~ g; !e..:.. .... i: .......... AU llW ........ ,., ......... a .... 1 I ~Ml .... ,........ .... E:"' ~ =--:: f ~~--JIJST BREAKING----... wa..,..,,.. ...... --" .......... ~d6WlclplMIW. ... -··~~larueli Air Strike Hits Lebarwn Cotut · BEllU.rr. Lebanon (AP) -tar• u planes •nd bellcoptera tlt'Qck Palett.lnlan tua ta b\ llOUlhem Leh.non ovem lgbt. and •n lnaell 1unb09t eachanged fire with 1uerrtll u on the l..ebaMle l'O&lt, • U N. •&JC* man reponed today. A ftlilar)I. •IM* man In 'hl Avi• CClftllrmed lnaeU force. au.eked ''tenw\Jt t..~U along the Ltban.se cout" but 1ave no rwtbm' dt&all. There wtte no reoort• of 1nJurie11 the UN apolteam&n sald .. • • · brae& has ht-en steppln1 up n.1 war on Palesunian outpoeta ln &outhern Ltt>.non. and sent sold~C'\"5 and warplant'8 •tross the border Aua. 19 ln a fll•JM rald agatnst g~rralla positlona t.tuat ten aa many as tiO d ad It was the larae~t military operation since th\! Murch 1978 bntli '"''• ion of Lhe :.outh "••••' Dn•,.••H •• 0111~ VALF.NCIA cAr> Tht! ~ht>rtrt'i> bomb ~Quad delon;.tted what It lboullht wa5 u briefcase full or uploslves today af'\fr a • SS0.000 bomb extortion threa\ 11\llll n·celved by a motel. but i.aad ; the bomb tumed out to be a hoax The Ranch House Inn Motel. across the frttway from )tog1c Mountain amusement park. received the telephoned 'bomb th.real at 8 a m . said l~ Angeles County sheriff's Sgt George Galeener. . One wing of the motel wa~ e .. ·acuated as the bomb squad ex- amtned the briercabe. which was discovered in a trash can Galeener said Tht! can was moved a safe d istance from th~ bu.ilding 1mcl tht' briefcase wai. exploded by the bomb squad. he said. 7 .tfore lrania1u E.rervtt»d ByTbeAs~ia&ed Press Five Iranian army or<icers and two civilians were executed by fi ring squad today in a coastal park in Iran's southwest town of ' Ahw;.iz after being found guilty of plotting a coup attempt against the revolutionary regime of Ayatollah RuhoHah Khomeini. The offtc1al Pars news agency reported the seven men, "agents of the coup d'etat conspiracy." were shot at dawn in Ahwaz. 340 miles southwest of Tehran in oil·rich Khuzestan province Trai,. DeraiWd; i'"o Otte Hurt DUNSMUIR GP) -The southbound Coas t Starlight passenger tram was derailed on a side track near here today. but none of the 306 passengers wa.s hurt. a railroad spokesman said. The Portla nd-to·San Diego Amtrak train pulled on the side rrack at Gibson at 2:5S a .m. to allOtN a northbound passenger train to go by, said Charle!> Kennedy. a Southern Pacific dispatcher In Hosev1llt> Ill• said the baggage car derailed and pulled nine other <'a~~ off lh\• track~ The car!> rl'mamed upright and the main line was not hlock~d Illusion Print Sent~ ' MOSCOW <AP> -Dissident Russian Orthodox prtest Gleb Yakunin was convicted today of anti-Soviet agitation and prop- -aganda and sentenced to five years in labor camp and five years of internal exile. '! akunin , 46-y~ar-old. co-founder of a dissident group to defend the rti?~l~ ~f Christian bellt:v~rs. declared in court Wednesday that his a.ell v1t~es were :· my reh g1ous duty as a priest." his wife report- ed . She said he denied his work was aimed at subverting the Soviet state 'Respmasible' Plan President. Unveils Economic Strategy WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi- dent Carter called today for S27 .6 billion in 1981 tax cuts for individuals and businesses as part of (!n e lectio n .year economic proposal that also alms to create a million jobs within two years. But he said. "t will not accept a pre-election bill to cut taxes." The president also requested congressional authority to spend an additiona l S3.6 billion il'l 1981 to retrain workers, weatherize hom es, maintain highways. build ports. boost research and d:e v e I o p m e n t a n d h e l p economically distressed coun- tres and cities. : In addition. he urged Congress t~ rapidly extend unemployment benefits by 13 weeks to help ~orkers laid off by the re· cession. Benefits currently ex- pire after 39 weeks. This would d>st St.35 billion over two vt:ars. ·Carter unv~iled what he· called a· ··r espons ible'· economic blueprint to an audience of busi-n~ss. labor. consumer and con· gressional leaders gathered in the East Room of the White House 'The president drew a sharp cbntrast between his economic p1ans and tho!le of Ronald Reagan, althou•b be did not OAANGI COAST LIK DAILY PILOT • ' me ntion the Republican pres· 1dential nominee by na mt'. .. Now -in the heat of an elec- tion year -is not the lime to seek votes with ill·considered tax cuts that wouJd steal back in infla tion the few dollars the average American taxpayer would get." Carter said. "America needs to build mus- cle, not add fat." he said. "1 wm not accept a pre-election bill to cut taxes" Reagan pro posed a n im· mediate S37 billion tax cut to stimulate the economy as part of a n even larger tax cut plan. Carter said his proposals will begin a "journey toward a more. productive. more competitive. and more prosperous American economy. •'They will put people back to work, reduce taxes, increase public and private investment. a nd constrain inflation." he said. · The president said there are no easy solutions to the prob- lems facing the economy. ··But the re are res ponsible ways lo create productive jobs without reigniting inflation." he said. Fro• P.,,e .4 l AVCO ••• housing units. Couch said be was unsure when these units would be completed. Across Coast Highway oa j.be ocean side. 400 boualna unitl wW be built as well as a 350-room re- sort hotel. Coueb sald Avco bad entered blto a partnenblp wttb the Pebble Beach Corp .• a 1Ub- sldlary d 20th Century Fox, to operate tbe hotel. , Tbe ocean property wtll a1ao include a seven-acre coastal park and two boles of tbe 18-bole cbampionshtp tolf course. The rest of the course will be located 1n the inland side of Co11t HJOway. 'f'be overall development will contain 38 acres of parkland and a lar1e recreational area wttb tennil and lwaclb&U courtl. Avco plans allo call for ex· pan1ioa ot Monarcb Bay Plua and lnc:lude coaatrvcdoa ot a restaurant wttb n.ws toward t.be ~. 0¥erk»Olrln1 die fOll coane. DUK ..• Th• crime was leltlelly plaaAed • Obio. later atra~ HlllODI wue beld lo t6e Bellflower area an• a poah La1_. Nlptl W11t Nlne ceD· domfftlum rtnted to the bul'llatY lHm u a bale ot operations. Teathnony ahowed that the team diaabled an audible alarm at the bank, bypassed silent •1tran• wtred lnto a secWity flrm. t.ben entered an aUJc area above the bank vault where Uiey drilled. ~Upped and blasted t.belr way through lhe LS.Inch s~l re· mrorct'd concrnte celling. Once lnslde the vuult, they col-lected more lhan SS.000 in cash belongin8 to the bank and one- by one punched the safety de- P<> It boxes. There wus one report, never confirmed. that one box yielded $200,000 In cash belonging to an t-lderly woman who was at · lempting to avoid income taxes. Much of the loot is believed to have left the state ln a boat tra ilered by Barber's bro1J¥r. The invesUgation of the crime by the Federal Bureau of ln· vestlgation was as impressive as the crime itself. For example. agents sifted thr ough seve r a l h undred thousand airplane tickets to de- termine the dates that members of the burglary team traveled Crom Onto to California prior to the assault on the bank. Agents netted the first sus· p ee l. Cha rles Mulliga n of Youngstown. Ohio, after follow· ing him to California in June 1972 when Mulligan headed to a friend's Tustin home lo dispose or a get.away car outfitted with secret compartments. · The Laguna Niguel bank ap- parently was selected because of the afnuence of Its patrons. many of whom live in nearby private communities. In addition to the massive in- v es ti ga t loA.-.lhL bu i:glary p r o mpted several lawsuits against United California Bank by safety deposit box holders who claimed they were led to believe that contents of the box- es were insured. FrowtPageAl CHEF ... customer, tetung the startled patron the dish was perlecL Perhaps, be would s uggest. the customer did not understand fine French cooking. Brack was born in Brussels and worked with his father. also a chef He was trained by some of the best chefs ln Europe, his former wife recalls. and he owned and operated severaJ restaurants in Belgium before moving to the u .s. in the 19405. H e owned the Normandy restaurant in Denver, Colo. and later operated a restaurant in Los Angeles before moving to Laguna Beach in the mid· Fifties The French cuisine he offered at the Old Brussels soon resulted in the restaurant becoming one or the most popular in Laguna Beach. _ Brack. garbed in a tall chef's hat and white apron, and his former wife, Helene, operated the family restaurant for years -he in the kitchen, she in the dining room. The volatile Belgian had fre- quent confrontations with lmmi· gration officials as a cootinu.J.ng s tream or "cousins" arrived from the Old Country to work in his restaurant. Brack continued to operate the res t a urant until the mlo -l970s when be sold the South cOast Highway property . He is survived by bis former wife, and a son Manuel. 19. both of Emerald Bay; and two brothers who live in Belgium. Memorial services wlll be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at St. Catherine's Catholic Church in Laguna Beach. Fr .. P-.eAl BODY ••• tal technology in Santa Ana, left c lass the day of his disap· pearance and did not return. an Investigation revealed. ms car was found near the in· tersection ol Alicia and Moulton parkways several days later but Investigators could not find Moore. The near·skeletal remains were r~ by )'OUths walking in lhe area. Hart said. p,...p~AJ DANA ••• and keep\n1 q'l•ltfled board membera>:' he aaid. The dilt.rtct's five board mem· bers don't pay into the f\md, which t. provtMd throuab the dlatrlct's general fWld. No board memben are elili· ble for tbe peuk»n now. said Smith. He explained tbat tM plan would proytdt lnff9tive for aervlce. ''The purpoM beblnd lt (the plan> la to encourare people to 1tay on the board and COG· tribute,'' be said . APWi,..- T-.$HIRT MAKERS GET ON THE BALL EARLY Barry and Sue Brown Bombing Survtvora FrOMPageBJ TAHOE BLAST ••• it. The blast made rubble o{ the $2Q million casino's bottom floors and blew out most of the windows in the t2-story building No one was injured. Thousands of people had been e vacuated earlier from a fo ur-block area aroundthe c~mo. There was no immediate estimate of damage. The blast came more than 30 hours after the bomb, encased in a blue st.eel box inside an IBM com- puter carton, was discovered at Harvey's Resort Hotel-Casino: State and federal officials. some or the m experts .from nuclear laboratories. rushed to the scene as gamblers in this re· sort city tried to m ake bets on whether the device was phony A fire briefl y raged in the casino five hours later. Jerry Yablonsky. FBI s pedaJ agent. said the sophisticated de- sign of the bomb might provide clues on who made it. "l don't know of another s imilar device being used ." Yablonsky said. "I have not seen anything like it in my 28 years of serv1ce. ·• .. As far as the FBI is con- cerned, all the stops are out lO bring the perpetrator s to justice." Some of the nation's most highly trained electronics and explosives experts failed in ef- forts to crack the design. Scientists and bomb experts from the Lawrence Livermore nuclear weapons laboratory. the Army. the Departme nt of Ener gy and the FBI worked with the device more than 24 hours before the ill-fated at- tempt to disarm the mechanism. The attempt was approved by casino-owner Harvey Gross. 75. The box. which measured 2-by- 2-by-4-feet. had another small device on top where 28 mechanical switches were local· ed. Two of the switches were de· signed to monitor tilt and mo- tion, authorities said. The bomb reportedly con- tained l,000 slicks or dynamite There was no word on how the device might have been set off. but officials speculated it might have been disarmed by flipping the switches in a specific se- quence. After the blast. the FBI re· vealed that agents tried to meet :J S3 million ransom dem and. but the l':Ktortionists failed lo show a! a prearranged helicopter reo· dczvous point. ·'The requests of the extor- tion 1sts were met.·· Yablonskv said ... However. they did nol s how up al a second location a fter a phone contact had been made to set up the payoff " Woman Hurt lnFreeuxiy Chase Crash A short-lived high speed chase on the San Diego Freeway by the Highway Patrol early today left a Laguna Ni guel woman seriously inJured after her car plunged down ·a 40.foot embank· ment. Offi cer Dick Van Cott of the CH P said a car driven by Syl· v1anna Simone Manzanares. 32, was clocked at spt.>eds in excess of 100 miles per hour traveling south near Avery Parkway al 1 a .m. Van Cott said shortly after the s peeding car was intercepted at the Avery P arkway exit, the lights on the vehicle went out and the car then swerved sharp- 1 y a cross th e south bound freeway traffic lanes. He said the car thel'l went out or control and -..eered off the roadway. knocking down 50 feet of pe rimeter fence, rolling down a 40-foot embankment and final- ly corning to res t about 55 feet JW:JY from the ~1t1e walk on Camino Capistrano. Ms . Manzanares was thrown from the vehicle. Van Cott said the skidding car left tire marks for more than 400 feet along the roadway. Ms . Manzanares was taken to Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo where s he un- derwent s urgery. A hospital s pokesman said her condition could not be determined until she was out of t he recovery room. Van Cott said it not known wh y the injured woman was traveling al such high speeds. He said the accident is under itt- vesligation. I Mother Calh Son A Killer ( By DA VIDIW'l'ZlllANN Of .. o.lly ..._IUff A Santa Ana man, standing trial for t~ drowning death of bls 4. year-old nephew last April, waa c alled a "cold -blooded m urde r erv by bis mother Wednesday during an emotional outburs t in Orange County Superior Court. Later in the day, Superior Court Judge Richard Beacom,. who is presiding over the non-jury trial, heard murder defendant Emmett Mitchell's taped confession to police April 21 in which be described first strangling and then drowning bis nephew in a bathtub. ··something s napped ," M itcheU said to detective Gail Clark. "I j ustsnapped." Mitchell has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to the mw:derchantesagainsthim. His nep~ew . John Lewis Jr .. died at Children's Hospital of Orange County after !>pending a week and a half on life support :>yslems. The courtroom outbursts began Wednesday morning when Milchell rose to his feel during questioning or his sister. the child's mother, and cried out. . '''fhat'sa (expl etive) lie. You're a (expletive) liar." The witness. Dianne Lewis, had been answering questions about he r and her brother 's upbringing. Al this point, Mitchell's mother. Dorothy Mitchell. stood at the rear of the small. fo urth-noor courtroom in Santa Ana a nd yelled. "Emmett. you're a cold· brooded murderer. You killed an annocentchild." A's sheriffs deputies restrained him. Mitchell shot back al tus mother. "You caused me to have a nervous breakdown.·· Responded lus mother. "You did it yourself with all that dope you were taking." "You're gonna pay, Emmett," Mrs. Lewis said from the witness sta nd. Defense attorney Ron Butler asked for a recess but when the trial resumed in the afternoon •. the re was one more s mall out- burst, t.his again by Mitchell's mother when she was asked by Judge Beacom to wait outside the courtroom while the tape was played. This was done because she is a potenUaJ future witness. However. Mrs. Mitchell pro- tested , s aying, "This is my gr .rndson we're talking about." She then left the courtroom, loud· ly banging open a door on the way out. During the playing of the tapes, which were made shortly after Mitchell's a rrest, Mrs . Lewis wept quietly at the rear of the courtroom as the defendant described how he killed h er child . At several points in the tape. M 1tcheU laughed heartily while describing what he bad done. He told detective Clark he was a "suicidaJ nut" and a "masochist" as well as being homosexuaJ. llowcver. he later s aid he killed the child as a means of killing himself. Wed nesday's dramatic courtroom action was not the first such occurrence in Mitchell's trial. On Tuesday, as proceedings were beginning, Mitchell shouted out, "I don't want this in the press .. I don't know where they (the reporters) are, but I don't want them in here ." . Death Leap Tom McGuire. 29, a te mporary clerical worker for the Vete rans Administration, kicks out glass on 14th floor of the VA building in San Francisco (right> before leaping to hjs death (left ). Poll ce tried for more than three hou~s to talk him ~>Ut of jumping. Attack by Acid Fatal SYLMAR <AP) -Burned. blinded ( J and disfigured after mysterious as- sai 13:n~s threw acid in her face, Sf ATE Patricia Worrell-v~.fr&m-her--_ _ hospita l bed to continue attending ----------- law classes which started this week. $1.37 billion by the same date a year "That's what really surprised me, later. 1982. but she has always been a two-fi sted woman." said Steven Mitter. a close Fil• Cr~ So119ltt friend of Ms. Worrell. "She started law school knowing she was going to rinish and this wasn 't going to stand in her way." But Ms. Worrell, president of lhe s tude nt bar association at San fernando Va lley College ol Law. never returned to those classes. She died Sunday, 10 days after the attack. The 34-year-old la w student could not identify her attackers and police have no s uspects in the case which has left them and the victim's friends baffled. 8.m•9 Pla11 llplleld SAN FRANCISCO (A Pl -The Los Angeles Board of Education appears headed for the nation's highest court a fter the California Supreme Court refused to bar mandatory busing and pupil assignment lbis rau in the city school district's elementary and junior high schools. Saying she was "not al aU sur- prised" by the high court's decision Wednesday, city school board Presi- dent Roberta Weintraub sought to ar· range an emergency session or the board tonight. ~llrit Noee S•rplu SACRAMENTO CAP) -New pro· jeclions by the legislative analyst say the state should have a $60.4 million surplus on June 30, 1981 , instead of a S12.6 million deficit as previously thought. But the report said Wednesday that if all pending legislation is enacted, the deficit could widen to as much as SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A movie crew that apparently filmed a West German stuntman's fatal leap from the Golden Gate Bridge is the object of a so-Car · fruitless search by the California Highway Patrol. ''We're kind or at a dead end. We can't find the film company," CHP Officer Roland Miller said Wednes- day. a day after Woll gang Hans Gun· ther Kopke died while r eportedly try- ing to set a world high·diving record. The 34-year-old Kopke -1979 European high-dive champion -fell 250 feet. landing on his back as he hit the San Francisco Bay water at more than 100 mph. Sala'1f BHb Si91tf!d SACRAMENTO CAP> -Two bills designed to equalize judges' salaries that were made unequal by a state Supreme Court ruling we re s igned in· I to la w Wednesday by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. One of the measures. A83274 by Assembly ma n Walter Ingalls. D· Riverside. places a proposed con· stitutional amendment. SCA37 by Sen. John Garamendi. D·Walnut Grove, on the November ballot. Under the other bill, SB2060 by Sen. Alan Robbins, D·Van Nuys. municipal and superior court judges would get raises in January. The salary levels would be the same as average salaries now paid to the judges. • A 1976 law froze judges' salaries for l'h years and limited future an- nual increases to 5 percent. rather than an increase geared to inflation Donavan & Seamans on the Rolex setting crown. The setting crown is often the weak lin.k in other watches. but not 1n a Rolex The Rolex crown is d patented construction whic h. like a submarine hatcl'I. screws down onto thP watch case. sealing the movement from all water. dust and sand. Thirty manufacturing steps dre required in its construction_ '0or full §election of men'> and womt?n'.s R.olex stvles i~ ava1ldhle in a wide prk.e range . lllu!»trated 'oate Rolex for men or women in all steel. stc<il and gold. o r all gold. With strdp or brcJcelet. ~"~ ~\hem Callfurni"' Semor Role' A(aeocv S760 Wll~irv 81\'d.. l e>t ~nlt'k-s ~ 11l·9J9-2'121 n fMhlon h .. nd. Newpon BeKh • n <W>44·"7b4 Thur.oey.August28. 1980 DAIL V Pll..OT ,44J Trappe• ~rews Evae•ated Blaze Rages Up San Jacintb . . .·2 PALM SPRINGS, Calif. CAPl - l''lrellghters planned to use the closed Palm Springs Aeria l Tramway to transport personnel and equipment lo· day in their effort to stop an out-of· rontrol 6,000-acre brush and Umber fire raging up the s ide of Mount San Jacinto. Although-offieials closed the tramway to the public after the fire bumed within half a mile of the sightseeing attraction, California Department of Forestry s pokes man Dave Hillman said the firefighters would use it to reach the top of the 10,786·foot peak. THE SAME HOT, dry weather which had plagued firefighters since the blaze began Tuesday continued to hamper ef· fo rts at containment as the fire reached the 7 .000-foot level and rushed on into forested areas. "The fire has progressed from heavy brus h to timber and we have a crown fire now." Hillman said. "It sure looks like the fire could reach the top of Mount San Jacinto." Finn lo Mine Left~rOre SAN FRANCISCO (APl -A San Francisco company s ays it plans to mine gold from a deposit missed in the Gold Rush days. Homestake Mining Co. said Wednes· day t h at the "s ignificant gold mineralization" in a remote ar ea of Napa County 70 miles northwest of Sacramento is in fine particles that can- not be panned or seen by the naked eye -The deposit will yield more than one million ounces of gold. estimated Har ry M . Conger. president and chief ex eculive officer of Homestake. Pure gold has been selling for about $630 an ounce on various world markets recently. Surface mining of the shallow six million-ton ore depos it and an on-silt: mill are expected to be in operation by 1984. Conger said. Prospectors during the 1849 California gold rush bypassed the area along the Knoxville Creek in northern Napa Coun- ty because the gold was not visible. Conger said. Meantime. an air tanker on its way to fight the blaze accidentally dumped 500 gallons of fire retardant on a major Palm Springs thoroughfa re Wednesday. There were no reports or injuries. but the gooey red liquid s plattered s treets. buildings. cars. sidewalks and a few people. Several local fire department trucks had to be called in to hose down streets a nd cars blanketed by the substance. which usually leaves a permanent stain on clothing and paint. authorities said. FIREFIGIITERS AT the blaze suf- fered a setback Wednes day a ft.emoon. Hillman said. when the blaze outflanked som e 450 crew members who had to be evacuated with the help of heli copters. "The fire ran around them and got behind t hem and we quit fighting the fire and jus t made sure we got everyone o ut a li ve." Hillman said. "By doing that we probably lost an additional several hundred acres." Four firefi ghters suffered minor in- J Uries. he said. and another 45 crew t me mbers who could not be evacu before dark were forced to spend night in a burned-out area or the m · ta ins . Chino. Tachevah and Tahquitz c . yons were all cngulled by the name . he said. Off1Cl.ALS SAID the only dama from the Dry Falls fire was watershed and timber. although near 100 expens ive homes were brief!)' threatened Tuesday evening. ' The fire started about noon Tuesda! apparently when four boys -ages 8 11 -were playing with matches in flood control debris basin. authoriti sa id. They were released to the custo<& of their parents. • ~ • The blaze. burning in a southwesteri~ direcuon. has never directly threaten thii. residential r esort city which · nestled against the mountain's easte s lope about 110 miles east o( LOli Angeles ~ ( ~ New Mortgage Plan Ey~ SACRAMENTO <AP > -A variable r at e home mortgage bill was sent to Go v . Edmund Brown J r . by the L e f!1 s lature We dn e s d ay a s an a lternative lo a bill he vetoed. A 72 ·0 Assembly vote completed passage of AB3142 by Assemblyman Alister McAhster, 0 -San Jose. Mc/\Usler s aid lhe bill was backed by the s avmgi. and loa n industry. con- :,umer groupl> and the governor. and that there was no known opposillon But i.aving:. a nd loans preferred ;i nothcr bill. S B1937 by Sen John Foran. D San Franc1~co. which Br<>wn· '~toed For an <ibandoned efforli. lo OVl·rride the \'Clo this week M c/\hster·~ bill <illows i.le:1te savings and loan 1ni.t1lut1onl> to offer the ~ame 'ari.iblc r<1tt• mortgage which federal!) li censed firms have offered since last s pnng T\le new federal law has bee n little used so far ll allows interest rates to vary b~ up • ' to one-half pl•reent 1.1 year to a maJ · 1mum of 5 pcrn:nt over the 30-ycar li{e of thc ~an • ' lnterc~~t rate·:-are hoven ng at abo* 13 percent. They fell to 11'<2 perce t after ris1n~ as hi~h as 20 percent earl! this year Under Mc/\h!'ter':-. bill, the borrowJr could choost• to have monthly paymenf6 re main constant for three . four or fi\(e years Al the end of the chosen peri64. the rate would be reset up or down ~ ;.is mur h as one-half percent dependi1f on what happened lo the market. ~ Th l' bor rowC'T'\'-OO td-til1!lr""t!rT60~~­ <1 nothcr period of three . four ·or fivl' ~ l':J r~ for tht· monthly payments lo re· main consta nt under the new intere~ ratt· · • Tht· Mc/'\hstcr bi ll doci. not have the .. nl•gall\ ,. umort1z1.1t1on " feature or Fotan·i. bill. whlrh could result in Uil! borrower owing more after rive years df :-,te;.1dil y rising interest rates than at t~ :-,l a rt or thl' morl!!:ai:!l'. :1 ' . PROMONTORY POINT A PARTMENTS I.I I ., , . BECAUSE 'rOU BELIEVE 'rOUR APARTMENT Sf-OULD BE AS DISTINCTIVE AS 'rOUR LJFESTYLE. Promontory Point is not for everyone. It's for the person who appreoates the exceptional, who understands and requires a unique lifestyle, and who is willing to pay for ir. Simply stated, Promontory Point 1s luxury. A luxury lifestyle that 1s unmatched 1n Southern Cali fornia. Promontory Point is spectacular ocean views. Twenty-six vanat1ons of floor plans with skylights, lofts, decks. patios. And all the quality extras you'd expect. It's a million dollar re c center with pools. health spa, sauna, lounge. game rooms, banquet and conference rooms and library, a permanent tennis pro and ltghted tennis courts. Promontory Point 1s an award winner. It has won recognition for design excellence from the American Institute of Architects. Architectural Record, Sunset Magazine and the National Association of Home Builders. And it's touted as one of the most beautiful apartment projects 1n the country by residents and industry leaders alike. The Point is unique, 1t is understated luxury for some very special people. Promontory Polnt ... A place for people who enjoy and can afford an affluent lifestyle. Rents from S665-$1500 675-8000 @ , • • o I .. Promontoryl?oint in Newpor1 Beach t . _,. .. ,. ,• . ~ ' ft ._ :1 .· ! l I I f .J . . · . • ; .. ·- f I f O•angeCoaat oa11v Pilot :£dlioridl Pge ---------------------------------------- RoO.rt N. Weed 1Publlsher 8trbara Kretblc h 'Edltorlal PtQe Editor Water-Sewer Issue Merits Full Study The L.aauna Beach Cit)' CouneU is couiderlnt com· binlnc the clty'a sewer operatlona with th• Lapna Beach County Water Dlaltact . One council member sugnll the move would Hve city taxpayers ~.000 a yeu by doln1 •••1 w\th dupUcation in providing the two servtcea, both o( whk h uN m~h ol lhe same type ol equipment and tec~uea Bl.It so~ membt'n do not want to relinqulth the con lrol they have over seweT hookups for ne w development. That would be the case If ~ service were combined with the lndt'pendent water district . where board mtm bera aN elected by the 't°<Ken and are not anawerable to the city admJnlstratlon or the City Council. It ls not the first time the st.bJect of consoUdauon has been broached ln Laguna Beach. Former cou.ncll1 have kicked the idea around for years But the current council has decided to consider the l&· s ue agaln. an~ has appointed several of lts members to meet wtth water dlstrkt officials to discuss the pros and eons. A cureful study should show th~ idea 1s feasible. or put the issue to rest once and for all Planning Lesson Residents along two streets in south San Clemente are victims of the "let someone else worry about it" men- tallty. The homeowners along Avenida San Pablo and Avenida San Gabriel have tbe misfortune to live below six new housing tracts. And the only way for those new residents to get to their homes in Presidential Heights. Mariner's Point and other tracts is up and down the two narrow residential streets. Neighbors complain of traffic bottlenecks, increased rlQlse. pollution and safety hazards to their children. City planning officials say the problem began 14 years ago when the city approved subdivisions without taking future traffi c needs into consideration. : Now the area is j ust about bum out. thus making the --b~-oLfin<!ioK. .. wrn&;.v.e Iout.es for. new...res{dent&..un.._ • ~Ty: • The council approved hiring an outside traffic engineer to study the problem. He 's about the only hope for finding a solution to circulation woes in the south pa rt of the city. The problem points up the need for proper city trou- ble shooting ahead of time. instead of remedial problem· solvinf! after the fa ct Speedup Will Pay Since becoming .saddled with a S6. 75 million debt for purchase of Sycamore Hills two years ago, Laguna Beach City Council members have sought ways of lifting that fin~ncial burde n. They took u step in the raghl direction by overruling planning commissioners and approving an environmental report on the 522-acre parcel in Laguna Canyon -thus speeding up the deve lopment program and hastening the day when the C'ily t:m reap some financial return from the property. The comm1ss1oncrs had said there was a lack of af- fordable housing in a planned development on the proper- ty a nd insufficient information on s ewage and water service. While the n.•port does not explore affordable housing. city officials have said it was adequate. Inconsistencies between the city's housing element goals. and the Baywood Development Company proposal for 60 acres of the Sycamore Hills property are not of m a · jor concern. they say. The S6.75 million debt on the property is costing Lagunans $1,500 per day and further delay or the ap· prov al process would be costly a nd unnecessary. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those or the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of thetr authors and artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Fears ByL.M.BOYD Some peoplE' a re deeply afraid of heights, you knew that, And some are afraid or clos~ in places. And some are afraid of giving control of themselves lo others. Each of &bese three fears can become intense phobias. And there are those who suffer from all three. Little wonder lheD, is It not, that an estimated 25 million citizens are afraid or flying, an act which tests all three of these fears? Do you recall during World War II when the U.S. gov· ernment wanted lo find a sub1tance for car license plat.es to replace the needed metal? A soybean compound was tried. But given up. Cows kept eaUng the llceaN plates. I~ No. MC ln our Love and Wa, mm'I file WU lbe ell· Dear Gloomy Gue planatlon by Henry Ford or how lo acrueve a happy mar· riage: "Stick lo the first model.'' No two tiger -: have the same print patterns on their furs. Biggest telev1sion audlenct watches on Sunday night, smallest on Friday nlght. Q. You quoted writer John Cheever as saying that all the American Nobel Prize winners in literature, except Pearl Buck, died as alcoholic suicides. Please exempt John Steinbeck. He did not fit the description. A. You're quite riah\. The mott lmowled&HbJe aulhori· ty 1Uve on tbe matter -Mn. John St4tnbeck -aaya um p1rtlcular laureai. wu not • alcoholk. Q. When did tbe tradttloo of tbe U.S. Preaklenta MDd· 1111 offtcial Cbriltmaa c1rdl be1ln? A. Pr11ldent Dw,abt D. ll:tunbower a'81Ud It. Q . Wb1t'1 tbe ratio of men to women 1mon1 StalOllld Cltlaae? A. <>Ytr.,. M : • men to 100 ,.__., Over .. : • ma to 100 ........ Q. llDw mueb mou7 do tM 0.-Ol&e Bridle toll bootlll bllll la...., dQt A~ Aboal•,OOCU1tJptnl. Jack Anderson Moh Silences Crime Witnesses WASHINGTON ee1•nn1n1 fo11r yeara Ml(O . the f' I wa11 1tunned by u ~erie• or nearly 30 Mob·ttyte executions acroea the country. What disturbed the c. rpen wu the unmistakable pat· tern of t.he ktlllngs: The vlctima were lnformont~ or wltnenes at"hedwed to testify •tc•lnst Mob fl1urea. and ull were murdered with' allenccr·equlppe d .22· caliber r.,volvers This became a gru:vous con· tern o f oqn1nl1ed c rl m e flahtera. who feared they ('0 Uld ~"l 00 more coovic tiona af their w i tnes ses tould not be protected Law enforce· m ent au thoritio<i began an urgent in vcst1 gat1on. usm g "agents In 20 FBI field offices and the federal Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Fircurms Their findings have not been disclosed to this day. A SECRET AT F analysis of the killings 1n the New York and ~ew Jer1ey area concludes that I the victims were s lain on ontract. and that a ll were embers or aasoclates of the Vito Genovese organized crime family Here is a partial Ust or the targets: Vincent D. Capone. a gambler and Mob business associate. who rashly bragged about skimming mo ney fro m Genovese en- terprises. He was !\hot with a .22 on July l. 1976. , Frank Chin. a witness in a fede ral extortion trial He was gunned down on Jan. 24. 1m. with the same 22 used to kill Capone. T h omas Palermo. round stuffed in the trunk of a car parked at Kennedy lnternaUonal Airport in March 1977. The same 22 pistol did the job. J a mes Joseph Queli .Jr. slain on Nov. 1. 1978. AgJin. the hit was made with the same .22 handgun. "THE AC'n' an· believed to have been planned and exl'cuted by \'arioui; members of the Gcnove!.e Crime family." the ATF report states. ll adds that in addition Lo gambling. narcotics and hi1ack· \ P\CK A CARD-{#( CARP! I Mailbox lnl act.Mllea. ''thit Family ls partlcuJarly active In contract ktllln1 1nd acquisition or Clrearma for~hla purpote." THE ATP T&ACED the con- nection between the TSO-man Genovese family and the smaller "Purple Gana" of New York City. Between August and December of 1975, members or the Purple Gang tra vele d t hr ough Florida buyln1 handguns. or the 86 pistols they bought. more than half were .22·caliber revolvers. The gun cache was transport· ed to he New York-New Jersey area. where "thete weapona wtll continue to be uUliled as the need arises." the report states. It concludes that "handguns and silencers are being made avalla· blc lo members of the Genovese Family by the Purple Gang, and there is a certain amount or ·contract swapping.' " What that means is explained this wav . "In essence. when people of 'littlere~pcct' are to be ·whacked .· the contract will be givC'n to Lhc Purple Gang. When ·more respect' is demanded , the 11'.S'SEE.TGar \JSfi .MC. lf!.iX· <tfJfr.}r,. \~~ contract wlll 10 lo Hnboken· Genovese." One Oenovae hlt man, the re· port slatet, ii a shrewd and auc· cea.rul bullnH1man. ··u la as- sumed," not.ea the rePort, "that he doe1 contract work (or status and preeti1e and not money." Footnote: The alleged leader of the Genovese Family, Frank "Funzl'' Tieri. was recently In dieted for racketeering. Law en· forcement authorilles told my anoclate Tony Capacclo that, with only two of the 86 pl1tols re covered 110 far. there la the posslblUty or anothE'r rash of 2' callber alayln~s. CUBAN CIDLDllEN: Rapes, as saults and s uicide attempts mark the dally life of the 900 Cuban reruaee children who are without parents In the hastily set·up refugee camps. But legal t echnicalities prevent the youngsters· release to relatives or foster-care groups. "It is a real crime that lhJ~ lef!a f Issue has not been re- solved.·· said an offi cial of the U s . Catholic Conference. the larg<.•st of the volunteer resettle· m cnt agencies Involved in the C uban r e ful'ce 'program "There·s violrncc bfing done to thei;e minors in the 'camps. and w(' arc angry as hell about it." The trouble is that before Cuban children can be resettled permanently. tht' slates to which they are Jtolng must a ccept long. term le~al cu!\tody. This is a safeguard in case mdividunl .sponsorship breuks down. But so far . only t wo states -New Jersey and Florida -h8\'(" a rc~.tetake leRal cust~).I lon~·term ba!is . UNTIL THE red tape can bt.• untangled. the kids slay in the refugee cump11. And as u Catholic Wl!lfa re worker noted to my reporter Jutta Hennig. " a camp with a prison-like al· mos phe re behind a 12-fo ot barbed·wire rence ls no place fo r minors." Several suicide attempts have been reported In the camps. Bu• the St.ate Department lends to pooh·pooh the seriousness or the reports. "Unlll all these cases are examined." a spokesman said, "we cannot say which arc attempted suicides a nd which are atlention grabbers ... Car Industry Woe Pinned on Government To the Editor Daily Pilot columis t George Mair has. in just a few short paragraphs in hi s J uly 3 column. shown his complete ignorance In unde rst anding the problems plaguing the automobile in- dustry. The Amer1can public dictates to dealers and manufacturers what they will, or will not. buy. And, the public is about as fickle as a 16-year·old beauty queen trying to make up her mind between a dozen prom invita- tions. Ours is a nation of fad rollowers . What's "in " or "fashionable" at the moment counts far more than what is logical or senslble .. o r necessary. By In large people f eet t h is way about the ir clothing, their homes. household extras. entertainment ... and the cars they drive. IF THE POWERS that be would see fit lo roll tbe price of gas oline back to under one dollar a gallon. I'm convinced you'd be amazed at how quickly the automobile business would recover. Drop credit restrictiona and interest rates alon1 with aasoline prices and the auto in- dustry would thrive and the en· Ure nation would prosper. The ave r age d o mesllc automobile gets almost double the mileage it got three years ago . . . so apparenUy prosreu is being made in Detroit. If you could get Joan Claybrook off the ba c k s of the automobile manufacturers, get California to be more realllUc in their EPA ratl.n,. and correct 1JI the out· side lnfl\llllces affectlna our ln· duatry, tben I believe Mr. Carter would ftnd th1t be b&I more than enoulh Ume OD hll bandl to deal wllb pnu1q tuu. Wte OYer· baullDI tbe welfare ayatem, Ln· com~-~-t~en p0Ucy and, oh yn, CURllll' r1mpant Inflation. The automoblle tu11lne11 would aot aMd uetat.nce from ''Blc Brcllber.'' if"Bil Jhicilber" would butt-out. •ad l11vt u1 alone to do what _. do belt. . • . bUUd qualtl)', ner1y..tftclent 1utomoblle1. Ob, and while you're at lt, you ml•ht lllO ton· vlnce "Bla Bro«bern to ,..aliln the bllace of trlKM. Tbat would help tbt •at.omobll• bullnell too . . . not to ,neaUoa COUDU., thouallllll of otbel-America la· tluatria OeoeraJ JACK ROCXW&LL llanaltr. 8"cla atJ Cbnrol•Co. r Oil Rig~ To the Editor: It was incredible to read in your Aug. 20 edition. "Oil Rigs Blocked ... that the Coastal Com· mission is blocking oil produc· lion orr our shores when our country is staggering under the economic burden of foreign oil blackma il. They save every feather. on every bird, while they fleece the people. When do we get free from that monster bureaucracy? GOLDIE J OSEPH Publie"s Righf To the Editor Public Communications 1s one or the most important items on the Laguna Beach City Council agenda and Wayne Baglin is playing games with it. He is de· nying citizens their rights and due process by attempting to censor. restrict, delete, and re· duce the authorized speaking time of five minutes to some speakers. He has told citizens that time is short, etc., and that they should telephone him the next day and discuss their public communications with him. Does Wayne really think he can get away with that? Once he cut Bruce Hopping off owing him two minutes. Then on July 15, Public Communication was ac:heduled for about 7 and Bruce wu once a1ain cut of( and not permitted to speak until after 11. Warne says he IJ doing this to expedite the a1enda and save time. A su11eation: Why not limit the council members to • flxed Ume on each lsaue; that should save Ume and reduce lhe meeUnp C()Ollderably. IN 11Y OPINION the Ba&lln admlnilt.raUon bas made very llttle pro1re11 1lnce he has becOme ma)'OI'· A cue in pOint I• b.la neptive vot. om the rtght to vote OD tbt San Onofre iaaue even thcMalh JeOt cit.liens si,gned • 1*WCJD for lt. lt makes one wonder Jull •bit Wayne really rep......m. On PIODI• 1uua the 8a1Un adml.nlslriltioa baa one or the poore1t record• of any City Counell In memory. Whal ever happmed to tbt peoplt-orfented CU1 c.ai.meu t.bat wu elected on Apr. 11, i.! l C1Mll campalp prom• do not mean a UU.O, once ) vou ar«? e lected to office. A Politician is a politician -be it Washington. D.C. or Laguna B e a c h. They kilted senior citizens' housing on Oleoneyre by a 4 to 1 vote (poor Sally). In doing so. they denied Laguna Beach and needy senJors over Sl2,500,000 or subsidized funding. They refust to discuss senior citizens who need an kinds of help. They are alllO overlooking shut·ins, day care centers. dial-a-ride, etc. Sooner or Isler this City Coun· cil is going to have lo accept the fact that almosl 26 percent ol our population in the Laguna Beach area (almost 5,000 peo- ple) are senior cilii.ens . They cannot continue to ignore them. a nd we will not permit this to happen. ALAN E. ADAMS Nlllle\lo•~ To the editor: Three years ago a s mall group of local citizens came together to try do do something about t.be San Onofre nuclear power plant. Tbey were mostly longtime rest· dents and the majority were seniors. But now what. do you do about the Edison Co. and City Hall and the county Board of Supervtsors? "Educate them," they said, and educate them they did. This month, almost exactly three yean from the beginning of that effort; the Laeuna Beach City Council authort.zed a ref. erendum . on the operation and expansion of tbe San Onorre plant. They were moved to UUa action by the sipatures of near· ly 3,000 ta1UDA Beach ~ on a petition clre'Ulated by a local or1antaatk1D. For uae ftl'lt time people wbo live alon1 tbla beauutulCOMt w''l be abl•toi.t· i1t1r their leeltua about the dangerous an,-pollutlna machine down the road. WE RA Vlt Just been told that we are Uvtna In a buardoua place. We are aulomaUc.U, to be evacuated lf tomeWAI .,. wron1 at 8Ul Oaolh. TIM old fuel rods are beins stored then until they fllUft out wbat umrtll· lng slate wtll take tbem. Tbe electric bWa wU1 -up. WMa Unit One 1et1 too "bot" to operate in 10 or so yean, we ud · our cbildna'• ebUclne Mll M stuck Wltb It for aobod) .,_.. bow IOQ8. Uniu Two and Tllnl, DOW uader' CCIDltrudioa, wU1 lat maybe 35 191R Qllect. Plltl of 4 ' thf>m. like the waste, wlll be with u.ci forever. The reactors make plutonium. one or the most da ngerous sublltance~ known and the primary ingredient for nuclear weapons. What a way to boil water ! Tbe only Jusuncatk>n for the plant is that it is profit.able for a relatively few people. But now even the economic validity of nuclear power ls being ques- tioned by the bankers. The City Council did the right thing. Now it's up to the resi- dents of Laguna to help us all along the coast by voting ln No- vember against that macblne down the road. PETER CARR • .,,,,,, s ... -~r To the Editor: I 'm wri\lng to applaud the· La1una Beach lifeguards for their excellent prog ram this summer. Our 9-and JO-year-olds spent the past s ix weeks Ctwice a week for two hours each day> under the IUidance or an en· thusiaaUc and able team or guardl led by Conley Ware. The Mermaid/Seacub chant reminded me of school days and says a lot about the spirit behind the program: "Every day in every way, we get a little better . . wbo are we? Mermaids ... WI HAVE seen ID evolution with our younpt.en because of tbelr tralnln1. They have learned to be confident but cauUOUI lo the oeeu, respecting the tidee aad rock formatiool. Their lmowledp ot nnt aid and emeraency treatment baa grown tenfolCI. Bat It ls their newly formed loYe and confidence for the sea tbat ii truly excltlng to see. Wrappin1 up the six-week pr'O- gram was a picnic thrown by the guards, complete wilb hot dop and watermelon. Many loe11 mercbuatl leGefOlllly donated prlaee such as beach cbalra and towels given to the hllher polat earnen participatin1 ln tbe ,._ lays and other competitlou. We think Bruce Baird aod hll f1De crew for mUiaa our tlldl and m.., otben ufer and happier beach 11*"1 this summer. FAYE E. BAOLIN Ora111e £ .. st EOtltON I I VOL.. 73. NO. 241, 3 SECTIONS# 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNtA THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1980 Your Hom .. •own Dally NewHpaper C TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ~ N-M to Seek Handicapped School Aid I , J. .1 Newport-Mua 8(hool D\atrkl ad m la lat ratora ha•• been autbort.t to approach Oru1e Cou.nty ~ autborilltt next mooU. ln an 1U.1npt to maintain control of tbe d\1tr1ct '1 pro- 1 ram• to educate the ban· dicapped. Dr. Norman Loats, deputy superintendent. was authorized by the board of trustees this week to request that Newport· Mesa be designated a regioo Wl· Carter's· Program Unveiled . WASHINGTON (AP> -Presi· dent Carter called today ror $27.6 billion in 1981 tax cuts for individuals and businesses as part or an election-year economic proposal that also alms to create a million fobs within two years. But he said. "l wilt not accept a pre-election bill to cut taxes." The president also requested congressional authority to spend an additional $3.6 billion in 1981 to retrain workers, weatherize homes, m aintain highways, build ports, boost research and d eve l opment and h e lp economically distressed coun· ties and cities. In addition, he urged Congress to rapidly extend unemployment benefits by 13 weeks to help workers laid off by the re- cession. Benefits currently ex· pire alter 39 weeks. This would cost $1.35 billion over two years. Carter unveiled what he called a "responsi ble " economic blueprint to an audience of busi· ness, labor, consumer and con· gressional leaders gathered in the East Room of the White House. The president d1 ew a sharp contrast between his economic plans and those o r Ronald Reagan, although he did not mention the Republican pres· identialnominee by name. "Now -in the heat of an elec· tion year -is not the time to seek votes with ill-considered tax cuts that would steal back in inflation the few dollars the average American taxpayer would get," Carter said. ·•America needs to build mus· cle, not add fat," he said. ''I will not accept a pre-election bill to cut taxes.'' Reagan proposed an im· mediate $37 billion tax cut to stimulate the economy as part of an even larger tax cut plan. Carter said his proposals will begin a ''journey toward a more. productive, more competitive. and more prosperous American economy. ·'They will put people back lo work, reduce taxes, Increase public and private investment, and constrain inflation," he said. The president said there are no easy solutions to the prob· lems facingtheeconomy. ••But there are r esponsible ways to create productive jobs without reigniting Inflation," he said. H e said his program will create up to 500,000 jobs in 1981 and a total or a mllllon jobs by the end or 1982 in addition to those which normal recovery aDd other new programs are ex· pec.!ted to provlde. AD Plff WIND IN BOAT S41LS ·'T he oa11y Yl1ot really ,..aches boat buyers alon1 the Oranceeout. · "I sold my Wlndt urter the flnt day to the fint caller reply· IU t.o the ad J placed In the Dal· IJ Piiot cl.,.lfled 1«tion." Thal'• the adverti•lnl 1uccesa ltol"J ol ti. Lasuna Beach man who placed' thll ad ln tM Dally Pilot: Wlndaurftr: Work1 tJC· ceu.m. LoU or f\a, aooct coad. '500 ICIClMOlXll der new state laws crealtn& a CalUornla Muter Plan for Spedal F.duut.lon. The new system lies more state controls lo the laraer al· locations California ls maklnJ to handicapped education pro· 1rams , said Superintendent John Nicoll. U ode r the master plan system, local regions will con· trol fwiding · Reclons must contain at least 30,000 students, Nicoll explained. Newport-Mesa District has fewer than 19.500 students. Smaller districts, such as Newport-Mesa, must develop a plan to educate handicapped stu- dents with other districts in creatlna a committee-operated special education region. NicolJ noted. Newport-Mesa officials have been working with ad · ministrators from the nearby Irvine United School District, which has about 10.000 students. in drafting plans that might qualify for regional funding. he said. However. the two districts' ad· ministrators decided recently it would be best for the mentally and physically handicapped stu· dents in both districts ir each of the entities submitted waivers from the law and independent requests for funding. Nicoll told trustees Tuesday that in addition to opportunities for the handicapped, the issue involves local control or pro· grams. However. the superintendent said . that the county superinten· dent of education will have jurisdiction over regions created in Oran~e Count v. The county.· he indicated, might opt for funding regions even larger than 30,000 student population and could combine Newport-Mes a with s everal other school districts. Administrators said a funding region co mpo s ed of jus t Newport Mesa and Irvine as originally studied would be superior to such a plan. Newport-Mesa schooled 1.632 students under special education programs last year at a budget- ed $1 5 million Irvine spent about Sl.8 million in educating 1.252 handicapped youngsters, officials said. Narmco Case Lags Judge Delays Mesa Foul Air Hearing AflWl ....... \o T ·SHIRT MAKERS GET ON THE BALL EARLY B•rry •nd Sue Brown Bombing Su"'lvore FBI Seeking Trio In Talwe Bombing STATELINE, Nev. (AP) - The FBI today hunted two men and a woman believed involved in a bombing that blew the side out of a Lake Tahoe hotel-casino during a botched attempt to ex· tort $3 million in $100 bills from the gambling house. The FBI also said the sophisticated design of the com· plex bomb, which sent plumes of smoke skyward and showered debris over several blocks when it was accidentally detonated by a robot, may ocrer clues to who built it. Authorities Wednesday night issued an all-points bulletin for three men in their early 20s drlv· ing a black Ford, but cancelled the alert this morning after the lead was ch ecked out and proved fals e , said FBI spokesman Bill Jansen, adding of the trio: "It was just some kids talking." He said the FBI has little to 10 on in its continuing search for the two men, both said to be in their 30S, and the woman. "We do not have any suspects or what their names are," Jansen said. "We're working on leads mainly from people calling in." Agents tried to meet the ran50m demand to save the posh resort, but the bomb exploded Wednes· day during attempts to dismantle lt. The blast made rubble of the $20 million casino's bottom noons and blew out most of the windows in the 12-story building. No one was injured. Thousands of people had been evacuated <See TAHOE, Page AZ> School Board Stamps'OK' On Budget Newport-Mesa school trustees approved their district's final budget ror 1980.Sl Tuesday night following a public hearing that resulted in no comments from taxpayers. The budget, which now goes to t he Orange County Board of Education a nd Board of Supervisors for approval, is $3.1 million more than the publica- tion budget, a tentative docu· ment, ofrered at the end of last month. Superintendent John Nicoll was careful in noting that the in·. flux is money received from sale of the old McNally High School site ln Costa Mesa. He said that within the next month that mopey will be lransfernd rrom the operations budget to the special district re· serve fund that can be used - under state law -only for capital expenditures or for some 1chool maintenance. By JERRY CLAUSEN Jn the interim, the firm and its °' .,. D•ll• ,., ... SVt1 p a r e n t o r g a n i z a t i o n , t h e Four attorneys conferred wilh Celanese Corp .. have been sued Harbor Municipal Court Judge in Los Angeles Federal 01stnct Robert Polis in chambers Wed-Court by residents who claim nesday to determine. on ce they have s uffered physically again. that the air pollution case and mentally from the plant's agalnst.-Narmco Materials Iifc,...--o-p-eration ' of Costa Mesa will be delayed. Narmco 1s operated in lhe center or a residential area un- der a vanance granted by the City of Costa Mesa Company officials have an· nounced they expect their firm to be moved to a new location in Anaheim next year Judge Polis. assigned the case Wednesday by Judge Calvin Schmidt, said he'd need time to review some 200 cases sub- mitted by Orange County and the defense supporting and op· pos ing a Narmco demurrer claiming the pollution filing is unconstitutional. A.t Wayne Airport Polis re-scheduled the misde· meanor charge hearing for next Thursday at 3:30 p.m. N armco, a plastics production firm at 600 Victoria St., has been cited for allegedly emitting c h emica l odors in its neighborhood April 4. Narmco ~Horney Kenneth Steelman. accompanied Wed· nesday by two other. lawyers, has delayed pleading in the mat· ter, originally scheduled May 30. Last month, arter several de· lays, Steelman filed documents questioning the clarity and con· stitutionality of the pollution charges which could result in a fine of up to $500. The case was fu rther delayed by answers to those documents by Orange County Deputy Dis· trict Attorney Doug Otto and by his subsequent vacation. A flurry of additional answers and counter-answers to case law Tuesday res ulted in Wed · nesday's additional delay, said Otto. Narmco still has not entered a plea in the drawn-out affair. liquor Tax Equity Due? SACRAMENTO <AP> -The Assembly has sent to the gov· ernor a bill that would halve tax· es for rugh-powered liquor such as Wild Turkey bourbon. The bill SB1311 by Sen. John Foran, 0 -San Francisco, was approved Wednesday by a «·14 vote. Liquor that is 100 proof, or 50 percent alcohol, or less is taxed at $2 a gallon, while that which is more than 100 proof is $4 a gallon. Wild Turkey is one of the few brands at the more potenl level. The bill would make the rate $2 a gallon for all liquor. Riley Supports OK For Quieter DC-9 By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL OI ti. D .. ly fll"" St.ff Orange County 5th District Supervisor Thomas F. Riley: urged immediate action by county officials today to clear the new -and demonstrably quieter -McDonnell Douglas DC-9 Super 80 for use at John Wayne Airport. In a letter circulated to fellow supervisors, Riley termed the new craft "astonishingly quief' and "even quieter than my most optimistic expe(4tations." .Air California, one of two jet carriers now aut horized to use John Wayne Airport. expects to * * * take delivery of the first of four of the $1 6 million planes in January However, the airline cannot use the plane at John Wayne Airport unle ss county supervisors case current runway weight restriehons Airplanes now must weigh less than 95,000 pounds on takeoff. Air California has proposed in· c reas ing the restriction to 128 .000 to a ccommodate the Super 80s. In the letter. Ri ley said the county not Air California - s ho uld pre pare a complete (See SUPER, Page i\2) * * * PSA Pilots Refuse To Fly New Jets By 8TEVE M~RBLE Ol 1.111 o.llV ttli.t S'-ff Pilots ror PSA , the San Diego· based airline seeking permission to operate out or John Wayne Airport, claim they won't fl y the newly certlfied Super 80 jets. Bryan Conn, spokesman for South West Flight Crew Associa· tion, said pilots "won't go near" the new DC-9 Super 80 unless a three-.person crew size is used to ny the jet. He said the pilots' refusal is being used as a "bargaining toor' in a current contract dis· pule. The association, whi c h represents only PSA pilots, hu voted to go on strike in late Sep- lem ber unless a new contract is signed. "And I don't think it will be," said Conn. "so, I guess you can assume that we won't be flying the Super 80." The majority of commercial pilots in the country. represent· ed by Air Line Pilots Associa· tion. already have stated they won't fly the new McDonnell Douglas jet unless a third person is added to the cockpit crew. The new jet, billed as the quietest and most fuel-efficient commercial jet to come off the assemblyli ne, was certified this week by the f ederal Aviation <See PILOTS, P age A2> C oas t Weathe r -Bothe.-Assails Suspect Sunny Friday afternoon following morning cloudi- ness . Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 60 al the beaches, 65 inland. Highs Friday mid 705 to upper 80s. ByDAVIDIUJTZMANN I Of-o.lfto "9ieltllff A Santa An• man, 1tandln1 triaJ for the drowninl death of b1I 4· )lear·old nephew lfat April. wu called a "co d ·blooded murderer" b y h is mothe r Wednesday during an emotional outburst in Oran1e County Superior Court. Later In the day, S11perior Court Juct1• IUcbard Beacom,, who I.I pruldbtl Oftr tbe DCm•Ju.r)' trlal, beard munlerdefead.aat smmeu Mltcbell'1 t.ped eoef..,Aon to~ police AprU 31 In wblcb he duulbed ftnt strao1Un1 and tben drowninC bll n•pltew In a batbtub. • •some&btn1 aaapped, • • Mllcball uk1 to deWdl•e Gall Cla~111t1upped." .. -......... DOl pil\y bJ reelCID ol 1.Mntt1 to t.M .. ....._.,,.. ...... lllm. His nephew, J ohn Lewis Jr., died at Cbudren'a Hospital of Orance County after 1pendln1 a week and a half on life support syatema. The courtroom outbunts be1an W e dneaday mornin1 when Mllcbell-roM to hit feel durinl queatlonln1 of his 1i1ter, the child'• modler, and cried out, "That'aa<explet.lve)lie. You're• (esplet.lve) Dar." Thewttneu, Dianae Lewll, bad been -~untlou about -beraadber r'1u9brtDtlnl. Att.bllpo:&at, lleben'1 motber, OorothJ llttcbell, stood at the rear ol the amal). fou.rth·floor courtroom ID Santa Alla and ye~"Smmett, ,ou're • l'Old· blooded.,._,_ ___ .......... You kWed an lllnoellll cllll4. •• Aa ablrUr1 daoutlee re.trained him ~ i\ot bffk at Ida moth«, "Yao caUHd me to have •' a nervous breakdown.'' Responded his mother, "You did It yourself with all that dope you weretaklng." "You're tonn• pay, Emmett," Mn. Lew\a said from the wi\neu a land. Defense attorney Ron Butler asked for a rec.1 bul when the trial retumed ln the afternoon, there wu one mone 1mall out· bunt, lh1I a1atn by Mitchell'• mother when 1be wa• asked by Judie Beacom to wait outaide the courtroom wb!Je the tape wu played. Thi.I WU doae bee.UH lbe I.I a pot...ual futW'ewitHll. However, Mn. llltcbell pro- ·t11ted, HYID.I, "Tlll1 la m7, P'•Ddloa '"'re talklnt about. · 8be it.. Wt tbe courtroom, loud· 11 banll .. op-. a dooroa tbe •tY out. Durinl the pl?11" of the ta,pes, . ' which were made shortly after Mitchell's arrest, Mrs. Lewis wept quietly at the rear of the courtroom as the defendant deacribedbowhekilledberchJJtl. At several points In the tape, Mitchell laughed heartily while deacrlbtnswhathehaddone. He tolddetedlveClark be wua "auicidalnut" •a• 'maaochlll" H wellu~homotexual. However, be lat.er Hid he killed the cblld u a meant ol ki1llftl hlmHlf. W1dnuday'1 dramatic courtroom action•• •ot tbennt 1ucb ~cwnDff ill lll&c•ll'• trial. 0niru.cs.:r, uproc-""• were .....-•n1, MltchttU lbouMd • out, ''I daa"t wut tldl lD &M ,,_ • . • ldDD\bowwbentMy (tbe reporten) .,.., bat I don't want them ID here.•• •. - INSIDE TOD-"\' Oatnd ond Oo rolh!I Ote· aing were ordertd to aur ... rmdn thftr doslQhltt attn auChorU~• found the child U/t aJoM O/ttt Uw porfftll went to t he defttitt. The Dit1Ung1 '°°"' tM'1 child bock -,,.,,., q that juat bccaue tlwv both or• TMn• taU11 rftatded 00.tn't rnCGft rhq con't talat proptr care of her. S-ltorll,,,. Al6. •••ex ._,._...._ ... --~ Ct a,.. ...... a ....... ••n "" ....... "' ........ .. ........ ~'! ............ ... ~ -10r .... = &'1 ~ et-• PWlkl c.-... cu &11,u..a caw• a,...,...._. .......... ...,.. •w ........ ~ .............. e-.11 I ,.......... ew ............... =' ··: ·-··· ~ ---... ,....., ·~ en --~--~----~-~--~~~ OM,YMT C ~--JlJST BREAKING-----... l.M• ... ,,.. la.daw'• ... ,., _......., ........ , ....... Israeli Air Strilce flits ~bnnon €oa8t BEIRl"l'. Ll•btnon '" P> ls rath plaMI Ind tHtll~pllln ruC'k Pnl\':-Un1 .. n tar.:"u 1n \Outht'm ~banon onrnl1hl. and •n I rat>lt gunboat nC'han•td rirt with autrrlllH on tht' t.ebanest-C'dJst , a l l N spok~m•n r11por1<'d tod•)' m1htur~ SfKlkl·~mun 1n T1•I Avi v C'onflrml~ l5rHh forrl'li lltl1ackl-d '"lurmrl~t lltrl(f'l.'\ •lun& lht> l .. t•bane l" C'ota•t " but A&avt> nu furthl•r 1.Jtota1I Tht>rt' wer(' no r<'ports of lnjurl,·s. lhe U N spokMman said • lsrc.l•I tw.,. bf!\ln 111\C'pillnl up lb war on f1aleJ1ltnhan oulJK>lltl.'l 1n ~outht'm 1 ... banon , and tiof'nt '\oldlt>rs and warplanei> armis lhtt btlrder Au..: 19 tn a rru11or riud against 1e1wrr1lla poMtlon11 that It"ll u· man~ .a ~· tlt'ud It "a' th<' luriit>:it m1ltturv t•VNttlwn SIDl'l' lht' \t an•h 1918 li.r1.1t•h 111\ 11~aon of tht' .. outh VAl.fo:~l't-\ 1 f' 1 Th•• ~ht'rtfh bumb :.quad 1frtu11~ted Ii' hut It thoutihl "II'> ,1 bnl"fClbt' (ull Of t_>'(plOSIVl'!> todlH ufll'I U $50.000 t>c>mb ,.,turnoo threat li'a~ rec('IH'd b) a mutl'I but !>Uld the bu1'1b turnt.'ti out to tk· J hoax The RJnch JIOUl>t' Inn Motel. j('rO'>~ the freew1t ) rrnni Ma .:1r Mount ;un j ni u!>t-m ent park. rec('l\'t:d the telt•phorwd bomb thrl'al at K .i m ~1d Lo:. .\ngt'le~ l'ounl' '>herirf:. Sgt George Galeent·r Onl' \'Ing of th\' rn111t'I '4 ::b e\ acuated a:. the bomb :.qu;H.l l'x amined thl' brte(<'a~e. '4h1r h '4as discovered in a trash 1·1.tn. Guleener said The can "as moved a safe distance from thl' building und the bnefruse wa:. exploded by lhl' bomb !>quad. tw stud Ruufan Pri~•• Snafftlf"N Mt?S<.:OW <AP_) Dissident Russian Orthodox priest <.il eb Yakunan was convicted today of anti-Soviet agitation and prop aganda and sentenced to five ~ears 1n labor camp and fi ve Yt'ar:. or in ternal ex1ll'. . xakunin: 4() y~ar old.co.foundt•r of a dissident group to ddend t~~ rights of C.:hrast1an believers. declared in court Wednesday that has <1:Ct1v1t!es were· ·mY..religious duly as a priest ... his wife report ed. ~he said he denied ha s work was aimed at subverting the Soviet stale Train Derail~d: .\'o One Hurt D LrNsM L' IR GP > The southbound Coast Starl1 ght passenger tram \\as derailed on a side track near here toda}. but noneofthe306 passengers was hurt. a railroad spokesman said The ~ortland -to-San Diego Amtrak train pulled on the side track at Gibson at 2 55 a.m to allow a northbound passenger train to go by. !>aid Charles Kenn~d . a Southern Pacific dispatcher in Roseville He said lht' baggage car derailed and pulled nine other t•a rs off the tracks The cars re mained upright and the main ltne was not blocked 'Stealth' Bomber Defense Chief Set For House Grilling WASHINGTON !AP > Secretary of Defense Harold Brown has been called before a Rous e subcommittee to answer under oath whether the new ··stealth" mea sures to hide.. bombers fro m e ne my radar we re d elibe rately leaked. a member said today Rep Robin L Reard, R-Tenn . told the Jlouse that Rrown has been called to testify next Thurs· day before the liouse Armed Services 1nvcst1gations s ubcom· mittee. Beard. a M:ir1nt! Reserve ljeutenant coltmcl, called public disc:losure or the measures "an irresponsible compromis e of one of our most sens itive projects." He s aid that If the House in- vestigation finds secret informa- tion was 1lle1rnlly disclosed "I shall dem<i nd criminal prosecu lion .. Rep Jame•!. A. Courter, R· N J . said he 1s introducing a res- olution of inquiry that would de- m and Defense Departmen t information on whether the m easures were deliberately leaked Courter noted Brown said on Friday he was disclos ing the breakthrough partly oecause it h a d been publicly leaked. Courter said he wants to know if Brown or other officials leaked th e information to prompt Brown's public confirmation of at The leak Brown referred to was a story in the Armed Forces Journal. The magazine's editor. Ben· jamin Schemmer, told the House subcommittee We dnesd ay he believes it was "a directed leak (or political purposes because I ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT f"'• 0t4tft0t C...\t 0.th' Poot ""''" wPhtf'I ,, <om•uwoet t,,. H•"'" P,-.,." •t Pvltlf\hitd .,., '"" Ot•~• C.W\I •9bft\ftf"9 C~n\' """''•t• ~1l10f'f\ .,. °'*•\ftlloG Moftd•• '"'°"" ... ~''"' fot (O\t• -~ Ht.-..... S.«ft H\tnt+ftqUH~ 8f"•<f'I ,.ownl••" Y•llf• l t¥ifte L•OW"• '""'" ~1tt , ... " • '41\0lf' ,.,,on.1 .. ,, • .,. I\ • ovbh \"'td S•1vt,.•\ ..0 ~"CHn ,,.,. 1W1f"(1p.t1 1 PwOi1\r\tl\Q OWl'I t\ •I lJO Wf'\I 8•f Str .. 1 P 0 • &•• l \til (ott• IN~• (•ltfOl"I• .,.,. ·-"" ·-Pt•''°'"'' •"-0 P11b'1~r • ,. J.C.•" c., .. , '+lit•"'"·~,., •"4 a."f"• •' .... ,,.'>", ,,...,. ....... . te11fW ,_,, .. M•,,..M ~·"•01"'° c~•~ CMl'M•M LM• A\\l)jaftt ~Nt1no ldJtor Coete MeH Ottlce llOWt\t 11 .. Sl•HI """"·~· '"""" .. 0 Ila• !loO O)jof> OfliClH .. =~:~:,~o~~:,; [!:..~ =;:!~o T• ..... MCn4JMMm a. • ..,.. ..,,._,.i.i .. eq.selt =~ =. 0:.:?. 'r..:t..~..I..""~.::.. "'•"•' ...... , .. ,,,m."" ,.., •• fll "'•' " !=:.~~1,"tvt tlft••t .. ,,.,.,,,.,,_ •• .. ( ... et•\\ .. , .......... C:t\1• .... ... ( .. -<lot IV•!") lM-1 -••ll'f-9' <t( ~~1~1.'.'r'!,';:;:~Jl.:::!:.'111~! W _.,.. can think of no reason why lh1s story should be made known at this lime.·· Schemmer said the story was leaked to him by a high-level · Defense Department official and he called the action "totally ir responsible." Adm Daniel Murphy , a P en· tagon official. told the subcom· mittee that Pentagon research chief William Perry had given Schemmer the i nformation Before Perry met with Sche m- m er. the decision was made to ·'dec lassify'· the fact that the pro1ect existed . Murphy was quoted as saying · Actually s t ories a b o ut ··stealth" have been published periodically since 1976. Lt. Gen. Kelly Burke, an Air Force deputy chief of staff, descri b ed detai l s o f t he technology, without using the word "Stealth." in a speech J an. 21. ··stealth" is a combination of meas ures that can be taken to hide bombers from radar SUPER ... analysis or the etfecl of the Super 80's entry to the airport. That analysis. Riley said , would "necessarily consider the possible reduced life expectancy of the runway itself, and any ad dit\onal impacts that might be in curred by increased passenger traffic brought o n by th e som ewhat larger aircraft .. A Riley aide said it is m ore rea- sonable for the county than Air California lo conduct the assess- ment due lo the current prob- 1 ems s ur rounding oth er airlines' requests to serve J ohn Wayne Airport. On e or those airlines. PSA. for example, has ordered 20 of the Super 80s. Supervisors will consider Riley's proposed plan of action Tuesday. Riley said the Super 80 - s hown during a recent dem- onstr ation fligl!t :-vatched by a host or officials, airport critics and news representatives -"of- fers the first serious opportunity to reduce noise generated by use of the airport." The Super 80. according to noise measurements taken dur· ing the demonstration fii1hts, .-as an average of 7.2 decibels quiete r than Boeing 731s now nown • "I have. heard much about th e noise r eduction achieved by this new aircraft, but experiencing it myself made me a believer and confirmed my feelln1 that t.he Board ot Su.perritora 1bowd do all it can, and u quickly u po11ible, to clear the S\lper 80 for landln1 at lobn Wayne Airport,'' Riley Hid. Shooting· Suspects ;ft Wrge Anaheim police hud no SUS· ptich In custody todiay after putrolmuu l'aul l.ee was at- t ac·ked Wt.>dnesday by three mtin Lt•l' wus shot In the thigh with hlN own pohc·t' revolver. l.tie Is recovtiring In the Anu lH'•m Me moriul Hospital, und a pol\cot> s pokes man said he prc1bably Wlll be released soon Tlw Nhootlng occurred about 7 J~ u m Wednesday Dean (;rosc, Anaheim public anforma· lion offwer , said Lee was patrol- 1n~ Manzanita park when he twu1 d sound!. or glass bottles br<'u kanl( a<'ross the fenc·e on the R 1 verN1de freeway Lee climbed the fence. Grose '>jld, and was Jumped an some Nhrubs b~ th<' trio of attackers. One of the men grabbed Lee·s g un and pointed it at the or- f1 cl'r ')o, face. Grose said. Lee then forctd the man's arm tlown and the gun fired. hitting lhl' 1>atrolman in the leg. Grose NUld The bullet passed through tht• I<'~ a nd didn't hit the bone. Ill' add<'d T h <' attacke rs fled and Lee tailed ror help on a walkie tulkit' lie managed to climb the frnt•t• and was found hy fl'llOw offtn·rs collapsed on a sidewalk 111 the park 1 l wa ~ the firs t time an Anaht'im police o fficer has been s hot while on duty , Grose said Soon. 34 othe r Anaheim police offt c·ers had set up roadblocks m the rundown ne1ghho rhood west of the park Crose s aid cars leaving the area were stopped and cherked for s uspeC'ts who matched Lee's description of the three Lalin men who he said JUmped-ftttr1 -----. Fullerton pohce and California Highway Patrol officers a lso as - s isted. and two tracking dogs from the Huntington Beach Police De partment were set on the suspects' trail. s aid Grose. Fro• Page . .\ I TAHOE ... earlier from a four-block area a round the casino. There was n o immediate estimate or damage. The blast came more than 30 hours after the bomb, e ncased in a blue steel box inside an IBM com- puter carton, was discovered al Harvey's Resort Hotel-Casino. State and federal officials, s ome of them experts f-fom nuclear laboratories , rushed to the scene as gamblers in this re· sort city tried to make bets on whether the device was phony. ~ A fire briefly raged m the casino fi ve hours later. Jerry Yablonsky, FBI spedal agent, said the sophisticated de- sign of the bomb might provide c lues on who made it. "I don't know of a nother T-SHIRTS PROVE POPULAR AT TAHOE-A3 s imilar device being used," Yablonsky said. "I have not seen anything like it in my 28 years of service." .. As far as the FBI is con- cerned. a ll the stops are out to bring the perpetrator s to justice.·· Some or the nation's most highly trained electronics ana explos ives experts failed in ef· forts to crack the design. Scientists and bomb experts from the Lawrence Livermore nuclear weapons laboratory, the Army. the Department of E nergy and the FBI worked with t he device more than 24 h ours before the ill-fated at· tempt to disarm the mechanism . The attempt was approved by casino-owner Harvey Gross, 75. The box. which m easured 2·bY· 2-by·4-feet, had another sm all d evice o n top w h ere 28 mechanical switches were local· ed. Two or the switches were de· s igned lo monitor tilt and mo· tion. authorities s aid. The bomb r eportedly con · tained 1,000 sticks of dynamite. There was no word on how the device might h ave been set off. but officials specula ted it might have been disarmed by nipping the switches in a specific se- quence. After the blast, the FBI re- vealed that agents tried to meet a $3 million ransom demand, but the extortionists failed to show at a prearranged helicopter re.n- dezvous Point. ·'The requuts of the· extor· lionlsts were met." Yablonsky said . "However, the¥ did not show up at a second loc:ation after a phone contact had been made to set up lhe payoff." He said a helicopter pilot with S3 million put up by Gross wa11 s upposed to meet the exlor· tionists "within a 15-mile radius of the club, but they never s howed." Tbe money was re- tumed to Gross, a rancher and earl tlerintheTahoereiton. PARAMEDICS AID MOTORCYCLE DRIVER FOLLOWING ALLEG~~·~';~\;~~ ... ~~~l(~•rdlC-ler Crowd Gathers at Costa Mesa Intersection After Four Injured Passenger on Cycle Saved by Helnre* A helmet prob<i bly !:la ved the life of a Huntington Beach man riding on lhe r ear of a motorcy cle that slammed into a car at a Cost a Mesa intersection Wednesday. pohces ay Eric Knuth. 21. fl ew on 1mr,act &Yff the-re&r oS a·-t>IH'-Htat -ul~ legedly pulled into the intersec lion afte r stopping onl y momen Lanly for a red lig ht. pohce re ported. Knuth's full fa ce helme t . police said. was battered as a re- s u It of the colhs 1on. He was treated for minor tnjuries al Costa Mesa Me morial Hospital and sent home following the 5·40 p .m coll isio n at Place ntia Avenue and Vi cto ria Street The driver of the motorcycle. Thomas G. Bond. 19. also of Wes tminste r. was n't so luckv He suffered extl•ns1ve arm in juries. police said. and 1s report· e d in !>table cond1t1on at the Mesa hospital Also low on luc·k is the Costa M esa dri ver o f th e ca r . destroyed b;. the motorcycle's impact. traffic offi cers said Motorist. David Andrew Em· hur). 25. of 220 Monte \11~ta Ave .. held m Costa Mesa Jail on S2.500 bail for sus picion of felony hat and run and dnv1ng under the influence of alcohol Witnesses told po hce that Em lrnry·s car. eastbound on Vic to ria. s toppt!d for the traffic s ignal at Pl ace ntia and the n s tarted out before the lig ht turned green. The northbound motorcyclists hit the car broadside. officers said. Embury's roummale and car pass enger. Kevin Conley, 25 . was reported slightly injured in the collision. He was treated at the hospital and sent home. Fwnes Harmless DEL REY <AP > -Sulfur dioxide leaked from a 500-gallon tank at La Salle Wine ry in thi!: Fresno County town Wednesday, but workers washed the spill away without any incidents. P olice c laim Embury, who also suffered minor cuts. s lapped into a gathering crowd al the ac- cident scene and then walked awav He was arrested about an hour later a hlock south of the in· ~ Lersecti~-cr.uising offa~r arme(j with his d escription. police said PILOTS ... Administration and will be al· lowed to go into operation with two-me mber crews The Air Line Pilots Assoc1 a lion has filed a complaint in U S Di stract Court asking for a re \'te\.\ or the FAA·s procedures for certifying the new Jet But a spokesman for the pilot association said the court action as not an attempt to hlock thl' Super 80 from going mto ser vice PSA has 20 of the $16 m1lhon Jets on order and expecu. de· livery m September. Ofri c1ab ror PSA claim they Will use the Super 80 at John Wayne Airport if Orange County offacials give them permission to operate out of the county facility Conn. a PSA pilot. said his personal feeling as that lwo- person crews can fly the jet but that ··that third person just makes it that much safer . The s ky is con gested and in an t'mergency situation. you'd need that third person." lie said the Super 80 is the first in a new generation of jets and that pilots want to clear up the c rew s ize dispute before other new jets. s uch a s the planned Boeing 757 and 767, come on the market. "Fifteen years ago," Conn ex plained. ··two people were okay But not any more ... Pilots from Air California . the Newport Beach-based airline which has four of the Super 80 jets on order, have not entered into the crew s ize dispute. 'Shaking' Building Evacuated Emplo.>ces at the Daon Corp ·s Ne\.\ po rt Beach head· quarters are back at work to- da). but "ondering what caused the f1 ve·!.tory structure to stan- shaking Wednesday - Officials from the Daon Corp which hu1lt the s tructure tw~ ) ears ago. and Prude ntial Corp . which owns the building. aren't s ure "hat the trouble is ··somehow.·· s aid Fern C r 1'\l er. a Prudential s pokesman. "a main column m oved and a s upport beam I WISlCcl " He said about 100 workers in the :.tructurt> at 4041 MacA rthur RI vd w<•rc evacuated while ere \\ N bungl·d clown :.ever a l wall)> and par1 of a ceiling to l1Jt'ate the problem · · 1t happened la:.t week . too, but we assumed it was just no rmal sett ling.·' explail)ed Crisler lie ~aid workers welded c;everal temporary s upport beam!> onto the colu mn. allowing- employec:. to n •turn to work this mo rn mg Prudential does not house any of its emplo)ee!> at the building Daon ofra c1ab in1ttallv dis - m 1 ssed the mov e ment a s "normal settling" a nd called the t'\'acualion ··an O\'erreaction .. Prudential's Cris ler said that when the proble m is clearly un: der~tood . the building may again be emptied so workers can make repairs Cities Squeezed NEW DELHI, India CAP> Soviet forces in Afghanistan ap· pear lo have e mbarked on a strategy of driving residents from the outs kirts of cities they control. a Western diplomatic source here reported Wednes· day The sour ce said the Soviets apparently intend to isolate the population centers from the Moslem rebe ls who cont rol much of the Afghan countryside. ONDS 0 ~ \ .... j, Af'WI ...... Tom McGuire, 29, a temporary clerical worker for the Veterans Administration, kicks out glass on 14th floor of the VA building in San Francisco (right) before leaping to his death (left). Police tried for more than three hours to talk him out of jumping. DAIL v PILOT AS Trafped Creiws Evae•atetl .Blaze Rages Up San Jacinto PALM SPRlNCS, Oallf. <AP) - Plrerl&hters planned to uae lhe closed Palm Sprlnaa Aerial Tramway to transport personnel and equipment to· day in thelr effort to slop an out-of. control 6,000.acre brush and timber Clre raelng up the side of Mount San Jacinto. Although officials closed the tramway to the public after the fire burned within half a mile of the sightseeing attraction, Callfornla Department of Forestry apokesman Dave HiHman said the firefighters wowd use it to reach the top of the 10,786-foot peak. THE SAME HOT, dry weather which had plagued firefighters since the blaze began Tuesday continued lo hamper ef- forts at containment as the fire reached the 7 ,000-foot level and rushed on Into for~sted areas. ·'The fire has progressed from heavy brush to timber and we have a crown fire now," Hillman said. ''It sure looks hke the fire could reach the top of Mount San Jacinto." Meantime , an air tanker on its way lo fight the blaze accidentally dumped 500 gallons of fire retardant on a major Palm Springs thoroughfare Wednesday. There were no reports of Injuries. but the gooey red liquid s plattered street!, buildings, cars, sidewalks and a few people. Several local fire department trucks had to be called in to hose down streets and cars blanketed by the substance. which usually leaves a permanent stain on clothing and paint, authorities said. FIREFIGHTERS AT the blaze suf. fered a setback Wednesday afternoon, Hillman said, when the blaze out.flanked some 450 crew members who had to be'~ evacuated with the help of helicopters . "The fire ran around them and got behind them and we quit fighting t.he fire a.nd just made sure we got everyone out alive," Hillman said. "By doing that we probably lost an additional several hundred acres." Four firefighters s uffered minor in· juries, he said, and another 45 crew members who could not be evacuated before dark were forced to spend the night in a burned-out area of the moun- tains. Chino, Tachevah and Tahquitz can- yons were all engulfed by the flames, he said. OFFICIALS SAID the only damage from the Dry Falls fire was to watershed and timber, although nearly 100 expensive homes were briefly threatened Tuesday evening. The fire started about noon Tuesday, apparently when four boys -ages 8 to 11 -were playing with matches in a flood control debris basin, authorities said. They were released to the custody of their parents. The blaze. burning in a southwesterly direction, has never directly threatenet this residential resort city which is nestled against the mountain's eastern slope about llO miles east of Los Angeles. Finn to Mine Leftover Ore New Mortgage Plan Eyed SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A San SACRAMENTO (AP) -A variable Francisco company says it plans to rate home mortgage bill was sent to mine gold from a deposit missed in the Gov . Edmund Brown Jr. by the- to one-half percent a year to a max- imum of 5 percent over the 30-year life of the loan. Gold Rush days. Legis l ature Wedn esday as an Homestake Mining Co. said Wednes· alternative lo a bill he vetoed. Interest rates are hovering at about day that the "significant gold 13 percent They fell to ll'h percent mineralization" in a remote area of A 72 -0 Assembly vote completed after rising as high as 20 percent earlier Napa County 70 miles northwest of passage of AB3142 by Assemblyman this year. A b A F \! t · · r· t• 1 th Alister McAJister, D-San Jose. Under McAlister's bill, the borrower ltack Y Cl e d atal • ~acramen O lS m me par lC es at can· not be panned or seen by the naked eye. Mc Alister s aid the bill was backed by could choose to have monthly payments The deposit will yield more than one the savings and loan industry, con· remain constant for three, four or five million ounces of gold, estimated Harry sumer groups and the governor, and years. Al the end of the chosen period, SYLMAR CAP> _Burned, blinded M. Conger, president a nd chief ex-that there was no known opposition. the rate would be reset up or down by and disfigured after mysterious as-( J ecutive officer of Homestake. . as much as one-half percent depending sailants thr•w aci"d 1·n her face C"I"' -'TE Pure gold has been selling for about 8 ut sav~ngs . and loans _preferred on what happened to the market. .. • J .1 /1..1 , another bill. S81937 by Sen. John Patricia Worrell vowed from her $630 an ounce on various world markets Foran D·San Francisco which Brown T he borr?wer could then choose hospital bed to continue attending · re~ently. . . . veJ.o.e.cl.wt\,C;l~f!~.r~e4.~ .t~-~2oth~fonn~pf thr~~~..19.Y.L.2.r..Ii..Ys._ • ._..__ law classes which started this week. Sl 37 billion l»,r Ut3<-sam-o-•-_ ~ .. ...S!J.~IIUlUng.-('j....the sttaHow stX':--overritie the veto this week. yea_rs or tlie moiilnty paymen~ to re-~t'S'"Wliat f€f1Tfsifrpnseo,~e.'--tater m .r • "" ~u::-a Y'i'0 • million-ton ore deposit and an on-site mam constant under the new mterest but she bas always been a two-fisted ' · mill are expec~ed to be in operation by McAlister's bill allows state savings rate. woman," said Steven Miller, a close Fii• Crete SellfllaC 1984, Conger said.. . and loan institutions to offer the same The MCAiister bill does not have the friend of Ms . Worrell. "She started Prospectors dunng the 1849 California variable rate mortgage which federally ''negative amortization" feature of law school knowing she was going to SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A movie gold fl:lSh bypas~ed the area along the licensed firms have offered since last Foran's bill, which could result in the finish and this wasn't going to stand crew that apparently filmed a West Knoxville Creek in northern Napa Coun· spring. The new federal law has been borrower owing more after five years of in her way." German stuntman's fatal leap from ty becaus.e the gold was not visible, little used so far. steadily rising interest rates than at the But Ms. Worrell, president of the the Golden Gate Bridge is the object Conger said. It allows interest rates to vary by up start of the mortgage student bar association at San of a so-far fruitless search by the .-------------------------------------------------- Fernando Valley College of Law, California Highway Patrol. never returned to those classes. She. "We're kind of at a dead end. We died Sunday, 10 days after the attack. can't find the tHm company," ''CHP The 34-year-old Jaw student could Officer Roland Miller said Wednes· not identify her attackers and police day, a day after Wolfgang Hans Gun· have no suspects in the case which ther Kopke died while reportedly try· bas left them and the victim's friends ing to set a world h.igh-diving record. baffled. The 34-year-old Kopke -1979 European high-dive champion -fell 250 feet, landing on bis back as be hit the San Francisco Bay waler at more than 100 mph. ._. .. ,. ..... Vpltelfl SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Los Angeles Board of Education appears headed. for the nation's highest court after-the California Supreme C-ourt refused to bar mandatory busing and pupil assignment this faU in the city school district's elementary and junior high schools . Saying she was "not at au sur- prised" by the high court's decision Wednesday, city scheol board Pres I· dent Roberta Weintraub sought to ar· range an emergency session of the board tonight. lldlftt N.., S11rpl• SACRAMENTO <AP) -New pro· jectiooa by the legislative analyst say the state should have a $60.4 million surplus on June 30, 1981, instead of a $12.6 million deficit as previously thought. But the report said Wednesday that lf all pending legislation is enacted, the deficit could widen to as much as Salary BHb Slgn~d SACRAMENTO (AP> -Two bills designed lo equalize judges' salaries that were made unequal by a state Supreme Court ruling were signed in- to law Wednesday by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. One of the measures, AB3274 by Assemblyman Walter Ingalls, D· Riverside, places a proposed con- stitutional amendment, SCA37 by Sen. John Garamendi, D-Walnut Grove, on the November baUol. Under the other bill, SB2060 by Sen. Alan Robbins, D-Van Nuys, municipal and superior court judges would gel raises in January. The salary levels would be the same as average salaries now paid to the judges. A 1976 law froze judges' salaries for l lh years and limited future an· nual increases to 5 percent, rather than an increase geared to inflation. Donavan & Seamans on the Rolex setting crown. The setting crown is often the weak link in other watches, but not'in a Rolex. The Rolex crown is.a patented construction which. like a submarine hatch. screws down onto the watch case. sealing the movement from all water, dust and sand. Thirty manufacturing steps are reQuired In its construction. Our f ult selection of men's and women1s Roi ex styles is a~ailable 1n a wide price range. Illustrated Date Rolex for men or women in all steel. steel and gold. or all gold. With strap or bracelet. ~"~ Southetn C•liforn11~ Senior Rolb Aeen<V S760 Wlllhi~ 81'1<1 • Los Anaeles • 213'"9.19-2121 11 Fathion lsl1nd, Newport ~ach • n4-6«-S1&4 PROMONTORY POINT APARTMENTS. BECAUSE lOU BELJEVE lOUR APARTMENT SHOULD BE ;AS DISTINCTIVE AS 'rOUR LIFESTYLE. Promontory Point is not for everyone. It's for the person who appreciates the exceptional, who understands and requires a unique lifestyle, and who is willing to pay for it. Simply stated, Promontory Point is luxury. A luxury lifestyle that is unmatched in Southern California. Promontory Point is spectacular ocean views. Twenty-six variations of floor plans with skylights, lofts, decks. patios. And all the quality extras you'd expect. It's a million dollar rec center with pools, health spa, sauna, lounge, game rooms, banquet and conference rooms and library, a permanent tennis pro and lighted tennis courts. Promontory Point is an award winner. It has won recognition for design excellence from the American Institute of Architects, Architectural Record, Sunset Magazine and the National Association of Home Builders. And it's touted as one of the most beautiful apartment projects in the country by residents and industry leaders alike. The Point is unique, it is understated luxury for some very special people. Promontoty Polnt ... A place for people who enjoy and can afford an affluent ltfestyle. Rents from $665-$1500 675-8000 G? Pro int ' o .. -eoa .. 0a11vP•IOI Editorial Page ........................................................ Thurtdey,Augu.t29, t980 Rot>en N. Weed/Publisher Barbar• Krelblch/Edl•orl•I P.t91 EdHcw £ity-Fair ~act -·~,··= W-ill Save Money . . " Tbe lona-dl.scus ed but of\en·delayed amphltbeater ~ the Oran1e County falrgl'O\md1 appean to be near re· alJt.y at last. Two weeks aao. the falr board and Costa Meu'a City tee>udl 1iped an aarHrMnt seUllna dilputes over who 1llu n.t lo ay reg1rdtna future state-owned falrsroundt 'devek>pment. • t 1be board aarH<t to lnatall tramc si1nal1 and 1m J. prove ltrMtl to s~rvice th~ tncreas~ in f11rrround tralf1r anUclpated ~1th added attractions It al"o a1reed to ub- mll lo the city any plans for commercial development Additionally. the board aarttd to comply wtth county noiae laws. The fair 1s a state a,ency and rord ng ('Om· pllance with local laws i.s a murky area As a result, the city asreed to allow non ~ommer~tal f alr1rounds develo pment without revu~w by its plannmc department Dropped was the city's sul\ that has been '"one court I or another since last £all m an attempt to (orce plan re -I views. ... The s uit has cost t>Oth the c ity and the s tate thousands of dollars and pro bably wo uld have cost •thousands more iC an o ut-of-court ag reement had not ·been reached. Meanwhile . the amphitheater. which was expected to cost a private de veloper $3.8 million in 1979 before .the suit forced delays is now expected to cost twice tha t amount. Attorneys and s ta ff members for both parties in the litigation worked long and hard for a solution that. Ul_l · doubtedly will s ave money in the long run and. it .as hoped, provid~ to p-flight mus ical entertamm ent in Orange County. Poor Tinllng Newport-Mesa school trustees have been telling con- stituents and employees for a year that it's time to bile the bullet, that expenses have to give in the once affluent district. The seven -m e mber board this yea r trimmed teachers, nurses and psychologists from the payroll. .alon~ with many non-teaching em ployees. ·'""' -ifems-were oTOl.he aistrict no longer could afford • to bus children to and from school without charging up to $15 a month per child . And the district cut allocations for busing athletic teams to after-school events. lay ing much of the transportatio n burde n on student fund-rais ing events and adult booster organizations. Then last Thursday and Friday the board spent $3,500 on a board-administration works hop at a hotel in San Clemente. Reason for the out-of·town workshop. officials said, was to assure partici~ants ' full attention to bus iness. Last , year, said board President Ken Wayman, a similar I 1 workshop s uffered interruptions because it was held at Newport Harbor High School. There's little doubt that getting away from the office and its problems can be of benefit to s uch endeavors. -And the ·$3.500 budgeted for the session. including hotel rooms for a night. really isn't big m oney But the times make the timing bad. C.Opters Questioned As Costa Mes ans residing near John Wayne Airport mutter about jet noise and north city residents grumble over the helicopters that fly at 500 feet daily over their roofs, city officials are on the verge of adding more aircraft noise to the community. The city Redevelopment Agency -actually City Council members sitting with different hats -has ap- proved a plan that would establish a he liport in a downtown parking lot. The approval c ame despite a Planning Commission warning that copte r takeoffs and landings at 19th and Newport Boulevard could create a racket in residential neighborhoods to the oorth and east . . The City Council -sitting this time a s the City Coun· cit itself -is scheduled Sept. 8 to study the heliport which it approved as the Redevelopment Agency. Then on Sept. 15 council members will hold a public hearing on the landing pad and the corporate head- quarters also planned by P acific Federal Savings and Loan Association at the 19th Street corner. There 's not much question that helicopters can create considerable distui:bance in landing and taking off, so it's easy to understand' why the neighbors a re concerned. The council should consider carefully whether the helicopter landing pad in that location really is a major asset to the -city rathe r than just an asset to the specific development. • Opinions expressed in the s pace above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Dally Pilot. P O Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 Boyd/Fears By L. M. BOYD Some people are deeply afraid of heights. you knew that. And some are afraid of dOffd ln places. And some are afraid of giving control of themselves to others. Each of these three fears can become Intense phobias. And there are those who suffer from all \hree. Little wonder then, ts it not, that an Dear Gloomy Gm estimated 25 million citizens are afrair\ of flying, an act which tests all three of these fears? Do yoo recall during World War It when the U.S. gov· ernment wanted to rind a substance for c"ar license plates t.o replace the needed metal? A soybean compound was tried. But given up .. Cows kept eating the Ucense plates. Q. When did the tradition or the U.S. President& send· tne official Christmas cards be1in! A. President Dwl1ht D. Eleenhower •tarted it. Q . What'• the ratl.o of mtn •to women amon1 Seasoned Cttlnnl! A. Over a1e M~ II meo to 100 women. Over M: • men to 100 women, Q. How much money do UM Goldea Oat. Bride• toll bootbl t.Ue ID..,_, d1y? A. AbouttsO,OOOlltyplcal. • • Jack Andenon Mob Silences Crime WitneSSes WASIUNGTON Be~innlng four years aw<>. the FBI Waii atunned by a series of nearly 30 Mob·atyle executions 1tcr<>S5 the country What disturbed lhe G rpen wu the unmistakable pat t•rn of th~ killings· The vie\\ ms w.sre Informants or wltnesses scheduled to lcistify ugalnst Mob tiaure.11. and all were murdert>d with silencer equipped 22 caliber revolver:. This becam~ a grievous con- cern o f o rg an iz e d c rim e tlahterli, who feared they could get no more convac· ttons 11 their witn esses t'ould not be pr o t ec ted . Law enforce· m enl a u th o r 1t les b eg an a n urgent inves t igat ion . using agents in 20 FBI fi eld offices and the federal Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms Their findings have not been disclosed to this dar A SECRET ATF analysis of the killings in the New York and Nt>w Jersey area concludes that a ll tht• vi('tims were slain on cont r act , and t hat a ll were members or associates of the Vito Genovese organized crime family Here is a partia l list or the targets· Vincent 0 . Capone, a gambler and Mob business associate, who rashly bragged about sklmrrung money from G e novese e n- terprises He was shot with a .22 on J uly 1. 1976 Frank Chin, a witness in a federal extortion trial. He was gunned down on Jan. 24, 1977, with the same 22 used to kill Capone. Tho m as P a lermo . found stuffed in the trunk of a car parked at Kennedy International • Airport in March 1977. The same 22 pistol did the job. J a mes Joseph Queli Jr .. slain on NO\' I, 1978 Again. the hit was made with the same .22 handgun. "THE A~ are believed to have been planned and executed by \'a n ous m<.'mbers of the Genovese Crime f'amaly," the ATF report states. It add~ t hat in addition lo ~ambling , narcotics and hi jack· Ing activities, "this Family Is particularly active In contract k\11\ng and acqu is iUon of firearms for this purpose." THE ATF TRACED the con- nection betwee n the 750-man Genovese family and the s maller "Purple Gang" of New York City. Between August and December of 1975, members of the Purple Gang traveled thro ugh Florida buying handgWlS. Of the 86 pistols they bought, more than half were 22-caliber revolvers. The gun cache was transport· ed to the New York-New Jeney area, where "these weapons will continue to be utilized as the need arises ," the report states. It concludes that "handguns and silencers are being made availa· ble to members of the Genovese Fa mily by the Purple Gang, and there is a certain amount of ·contract swapping.' " What that means is explained this way: "In essence, when people of 'little respect' are to be 'wh acked: the contract will be given to the Purple Gang. When 'more respect' is demanded, the contract will 10 to Hoboken· Genovese." One Gfl\ovese hit mu, the re· port states. i• a shrewd and •UC!· •· cessful busl.llea1mu. ·'It i. U · · sumed," notes the repott, "Ulll he does contract work for •tatua and prestige and nOJ motley." Footnote: The aJ1e1~ leader of the Genovese Family, ~ :} ; "Funil" Tteri. WU ·reftnlh:·:llt\ . .,.~ dieted for racket.eerinc: LaW'.et1-· •• forcement authorities told my associate Tony Capacclo that, with only.two of the 86 platola re· covered so far. there ls' thf possibility or another ru b of .a2 caliber slayinu. · ~t' CUBAN ClllLDllEN: Rapes;a~J ';",. ~ saults and s uicide attempts 1 mark the daily life of the !al Cuban refugee children who art without parent& in the hastily set-up refugee camps. But le1at technicalities prevent, the youngsters' release to relativa " or foster-care croups . '1 "r ''It is a real ~rime that tbll leg a I issue has not beeft te· solved," said an official of the U S. Catholic Conference. the largest of the volunteer resettle- ment agencies involved in Ute Cuban refugee program . "There's violence bein&.done to these minors in the camps, and we are angry as hell about it." The trouble is that before Cuban children can be resettled permanently, the states to which they are going must accept long- term legal custody. This is a s afeguard in case ihdividual sponsorship breaks down. But so far. onl y two states -New Jersey and Florida -have agreed lo take.legal custody on a long-term basis . -----------·.,..~----... -...-. ~- ' PtCK A CARD-~ CARD! ' Mailbox UNTIL TH.£ red tape can be untangled. the kids stay in \be r e fugee c a m ps . And as a Catholic welfare worker noted to my rePorter Jutta Hennig, ", .. a camp with a prison-like at- mos phere behind a 12·foot barbed-wire fence is no place ror minors." Several suicide attempts bave. been reported in the camps. BUt. · the State Department tends to pooh-pooh the seriousness of the reports. "Until all these cases are examined.·· a spokesman said, "we cannot uy which are attempted suicides and whic.h "·' are attention gabbers." ·1 ' Car Industry Woe Pinned on Government To the Editor: Daily Pilot columist George Mair has, in just a few short paragraphs in his July 3 column, shown his complete ignorance in understanding the problems plaguing the automobile in· dustry. The American public dictates to dealers and manufacturers what they will, or will not. buy. And. the public is about as fickle as a 16-year-old beaut)' queen trying to make up her mind between a dozen prom invita· lions. Ours is a nation of fad fo llowers. What's "in" or "fashionable" al the moment counts rar more than what is logical or sens ible . or necessary. By in large people feel this way about their clothing, their homes, household extr as. entertainment . . . and the cars they drive. IF THE POWERS that be would see fit to roll the price of gasoline back to under one dollar a gallon, I'm convinced you'd be amazed at how quickly the automobile business would recover. Drop credit restrictions and interest rates along with gasoline prices and the auto in- dustry would thrive and the en- tire nation would prosper . The ave r age d o mes ti c automobile gets almost double the mileage it got three years ago . . . so apparently progress is being made in Detroit. If you could get Joan Claybrook off the backs of the automobile manufacturers, get California to be more realisUc in their EPA ratings and correct all the out· side influences affecting our in· dustry, then I believe Mr. Carter would ftnd that be bu more than enou1h time on his bands to deal wlth preuing Issues like over· hauling the welfare system1 in· come tax, loreien policy ana. oh yea, curbing rampant inflation. The automobile business would not need ualltance from "811 Brother," If "Bii Brothet" would butt-out and leave us alone to do what we do beat • . . build qualJly, •neray-efflcient automobiles. Oh, and wblle 1ou 're at it. )'OU mlpt aho con· vtnce "BIC Brother'' to re·alip UM balamce ol tnde. Tb1t .,Wd lMlp tbe automoblle buatae. too • . • D0t to m•tJoa ctOUDtltll tboQlandl ol other American la· duatrtle. \ J AClt ROCIUVl!U. Geoeral Man~. Beach City Chevrolet Co. OIJsereatimu To the Editor · In the Mailbox. Aug. 17 you printed a letter entitl~d "Monkey Suit Time." in which Warren Althoff recalled his days of youth, attending c hurch. as scratchy suits , hard looks from mother and long sermons. 1 am 'sure there were beautiful songs and times of victory in that church but these are forgot- ten. Warren has observed that the forces of good are losing. An observer at Disneyland might observe people waiting_ in Jong Lines. An observer at a fish· ing trip or picnic might observe the insects and the uncomtorta· ble places a person must sit. A person might observe that at the Big "A". after sitting a long time, the home team seems to manage to lose , but we pay our money and go. AS A BOY I played checkers with an old fellow who had ob· served a battle between the Union and the Confederacy. He observed a Union soldier drop a repeating rifle in the creek after being shot on the bridge. As an observer, he left ~is cellar the next day and retrieved the lever action rifle. These rifles we re the new secret weapon of the Union. The Con· federates had single action rifles and muzzle loaders. Punch As an observer . my old friend never tried to get this r ifle to the Confederacy. but saved it for a squirrel rifle. He was an Arkansas boy. and he o bs erved that the Con · federacy was losing, but as an observer and not a participant, he collected a squirrel rifle. As an observer, Warren wore a monkey suit. he listened to Ion~ sermons and received hard looks. Now he observes that the forces of right are losing. I wonder if he got a good squirrel rifle out of it all. JIM BOLDING Trttrld•9 C-..t• To the Editor: I am writing in response to a recent article which appeared on your Comment page under the by-line of Thomas Elias. The item concerns the deregulation of the trucking industry in California. Mr. Elias' article makes re· ference to items which are not supported by facts. Elias reports that "the old rules have cost California consumers about $300 million a year. or $50 per family, according to the state Public Utilities Commission." If Mr. Elias is in possession of data to substantiate such an outlandish figure, I respectfully request that he favor me with such in· formation, as repeated efforts "That MUlhrOOm Julienne! H•~ you the antldOte?" , by industry to secure such sub- stantiation from the PUC or Gov. Brown have been met with silence. THE A\JTHoa·s inference concerning ty\ng freight ratea_to cost or consumer goods is clear- ly based on hearsay and in- dicates lack of proper reffattll. As any novice eccnomist can at· test, the relationship between . transportation cost and ahetl price is negligible; and for Mr. Elias to base conclusions on faulty grounds reflects a lack ol . understanding and knowtedle oe · his part and does a diasemee .to both your readers and our \ft. · .. dustry. ~ M 1 : A.E. BAa&vwv ~ President, Callforilla TnJSfilt 1. \ Association · AbpertN~ To the Editor: It seems to me, as a taxpayer. that our government.a baf_.•.°':r..'r -'1· wasted millions of ·dollaa, -'~ ing various stuclin, and fl&Wai · t.be Orance County Airport. We will always have with UI u.o.e people who llve under tbe fl$aht paths to complain abOut the planes. Improved low-nciiJe .·~ aircraft will never setilfy tletr · complaint&. ..\ However, tbe • 'stleft\. m~lt, ty" will tell you tbat the airport• is necessery to our economic Ure. and that we should expeod the number of dally 1U1bt1, rather than freeie them at Cl per day. IT 11"8 always antu..4 W ':..' that ltiU Ul,aa, 5 "'°ee'ftt· ~.uw· .... aircraft Oythi out are com· mercial, yet we never hear any complaints about private aircraft whlcb can be J\llt u · noisy. . The hard facta are that ID life past 20 years,. greater Loa Angeles has lost 30 percent of ill airport&. yet need for air tr1vel ' and a ir recreaUon baa in- creased. It ls time for UM polttitiliM tD be hon.est about till• mat\er. Ill the airport rebuilt all ••\ ·. panded, ands« oo wiU. • .._ . nttl ol satllf)'lQt tbe ..... di~ tbe entire populace. R.M. WOLn" , ............ .....:.~---· 'WT ............ ~-11111 ' ......... ,. .... , .... CA ..... ~ I ·fll'lf .. .................... ......................... -. ......... .., ........... ... ·'"···--- !TOCKS I BUSINESS TRANSACTIONS Recession Brunt Dae PAJUS CAP> -Tbe UDlted Statel wlU feel tbe bnmt ol ltl reeWlkla d"rlnc the ~ Ulf ol tbla Jeer. followed b7 sradaal reco~er:v ~ 1111, acCotdlal to •"*" by tb• 0:11auoa for Scoaomlc Cooper ... DnelopaMat. I s CAIL Y "'LOT • We K11ow B e tte r Statistics Don't Give Picture By JOHN CUNNI FF ,.,. ................... NEW YORK Statistics have their obvious uses. especially to those who deal with them professlonaJ. ly. but when served to the public they often become u mumbo-jumbo ritualistic gumbo that is gobbled up. They· are so ritualistically accepted, In fact, that we honor them even when we know better. And the perfect ex- ample of that came last Friday when we we re told. accord· ing to the statistics, that inflation ceased . THAT AT LEAST IS what the most recent consumer J>rice index tried to tell us. Overall. it didn't rise a smgle inflated dollar over June. even if you did leave a lot more of your cash at the grocery checkout counter. The chief reason for this was a 5.7 percent decline m home mortgage costs that tended to offset a 0.9 percent in· crease in prices at grocery stores. You are correct tn pointing out, of course, that you didn't buy ;:i house in June and that your home mortgage rate neither rose nor fell, because it is fixed by contract at the same rate for the next 25 years. You most certainly did buy food. however. and you know that the pnces of beef. pork and poultry rose sharply after lhrec· months of <lcchnes And that · fruits. vc~l·tablcs and dairy µroducts also rose !>ubstant1ally. So why does lhe government an elude mortgage costs as it e veryone 1s affected by tht:m'1 Wt'll. that's what the professionals have been asking for years. Nol gC'ttlng anv aC'tton. they ~imply adJUSl thl'tr analyse!'! TllEV'Vt; HEt:N ASKING why lhe index should bt! used in t·.1ln1lat1111.: mcr£'a"l'" in Social Security benefits, since it 1s cll'ar tot>\ t'rvunc· that people on Social Security aren't aggn.•sssvr bu~ t•r<; or homes Some pro:;. al!'IO wonder about that device called ~·C1son~I adJU!.t1n~. which WCI!> applied to those July con· !;,Umer prtl'l' figures It 1s a nscl! concept, everyone agrees. bul they dtsagrN' on whether 11 works. In Dl·<·cmbcr for example, retail sales always rise ht•cause of lhl' holidays If nnt.· is lo discover the underly- ing rate or !)ales, that holiday season bulge has to be • c·ll m tnall'd It 1:-done stat ist1t·ally. Samt· with lh~ e mployment. and unemployment figures Thi• JOblc:;.s rJle you see 1:;. not in any sense an CIC· tual t•ounl from which extrapolations are made. It 1~ sl';.isonall .... JdJu:;.lt'd in order fc) chm1nate the strictly short· term snfh:<·nc·c·-.. -..uch CJ!) tht• flood of j?raduates in June One or lhl· problems With !)t.'asonal adjusting is that tht! .. norm" for any period 1s bused on what happened o ver the prcnous ftw Yl'<lr" l\ut anyone knows that pract.1cally nothin~ hu~ t>.•1•n normal in recent years. SlaW>l1l·s. 1l 1-. oftl·n said. are for stat1sllc1an~. amt many people 1n guv1·rnment and in the private ~cctor worr.v alJout 1 hl'1r u:.L· as popular indicators. Tht• possibilities ol' misleading are just too gre~t. FOR EXAMPLE: IF YOU check certain economic growth periods durm~ the past decade you will find that staltstics on retail sales showed them rising month after month. Was America on a prolonged buying spree"? · Not necessanly. If you examined the statistics you would have found that the old month's figures were lowered just before tht: new month's figures were released. Revisions are common in s ales statistics. Statistics. say those who use them, can mislead those who don't understand them. and one ofthe most bizarre il- lustrations of this is what might happen should a devastat- ing hurricane strike the coast. What might happen is a sales surge for lumber yard.:; and home buiJders, and JObs ror carpenters and plumbers and just about anyone e lse who wanted to exert himself As a result, GNP would rise. BUT mE MOST IMMEDIATE illustration is the re. port that the consumer pnce index didn't rise in July when. 1n ;.sc tuJI fact. C1nyone who bought rood and beverages knew that consumer prices were higher than before. So why, when we know better. do we accept the statistical stew and !'al it without asking what's in it? Sto~k" In T h.- Spodi9fu DoarJon.-11 .. t t·rragr• NEW YORKCAPI F~I [)ow.J-~ avgi. ~~,,A119.11. Open H01h loW CIGH O'CI XI Ire! '130.00 ~ 14 'mAI '4.l..,.._IO.J) 20 rrn 323.IJ l'1A oo lit 20 :D0.17-J..11 IS VII 110.n 111.36 109.'7 ll0,4j. 0 l2 •S Slk lAS.ll ~loll 12 lQ.U-l.2A lndU~ • • • . • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • J..,1,11111 Tran . . .. . . ...••• .•. . • •. . • tll.ta> VIII\ •••••.•.•••••. .•. ..• ~l,.lllD ..S Slk • •••••••• • • ........ S.22S,ICIO M·hat S toc·k • Did NEW YORK CAPI AU9-'1 AOVW<..O Ot<llned ~ New~ New- WMAT AMEX 010 NEW YORK CAPI 4UQ. 21 Tod.Ir ns JSI 7'14 117 JO 1 .ffftab N EW YORK (AP) -Soot l!Oftfer~ .. metal or lees cod.Iv : C-.9~1.01\<I a pc>UnCI. U.S. dH11- Uon~ \.eM «Mt c..m • OCM\d, ZIM 3S">-3'lh Cl!ntS A poulld, 0.ll ... r9CI, Tiii 51.~ a oound. -rtW'Y SAOS.00119" 11..ai. ~··-·w.irovo1.N Y Sllrrr NEW ~IC CAP) -H....-, ~ 14........, Sllvet todily, $Mo.ISO. wpto.1J. Eno•lhard 111,,er $16.100, 1111 $0. ll, febl'lu...,slt-•~'51.11110 117. Gold ,, .......... . 8yTIWA-.&atMl"ftM S.I~--1cl OOld Pf'kn l'lelty: U...1 mw""'9 fh11f!o MG,7S eff IO.tO. Le!Mlllt: ....,._,11.1,,....._.1111,,...,, • ~·"'' ~fllllfto•1..s, up$J.1'-~ ....... ! flx'"9 9'11.M. eff tO.SS. hrkllt ~--•'.OO;Ml7.00""9d. ,..,. Yert!: KA!ldy& H_._ ,_...... ~.JO.U9tlA.5. .... "tn: E,,...._., ....... ~""' momlllO~ upJ IA$. .... Yftt ~I~ ........ momlllO $651~. • 11.s1. lk~ a11d Ma•ie Andrew Duggan and Barbara Barrie play President and Mrs. Eisenhower in the conclusion of "Backstairs at the White House" tonight at 9. on NBC, Channel 4. ~ I~ ...... ~ Jac;ll Robot1aon. wno swam IM Engllah Channel. l:008 'TWEWALTONS An tllderly Wa11on cou.111 llfl,.,,.. on tho mountain, and Ille family ~fS tte has come tnere to die. (RI II GAM68 PEOPLE Pl.AV Host Bryant Gumbel Pf9- ser>t1 U'11JIU81 and ent«· 1a1n1ng competitive endeavors eod the people wno partlcipa1e 1n rnecn 8 MOVIE * • ''°' "Slrth Of A legend" 111173) Ooc\lmet1lllf)I. A coyote pup wl\lch has beerl orphaned ventures out Into lhe w4de, wondrou• wor1d (2 11<1.) G 9 MOM & MINCY Motl! come. up against a grouP of hooded blgote WhO lnlend to m&ke Mindy their next target (R) Q MOVIE ••on "Ctlrna Bou" ( 1872) Tel!y ~ Tony Oaa1111~ Lbti119s 9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles a KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind.) Los Angeles • KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I} KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ.. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles t!I KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles • KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles G KOCE·lV (PBS) Huntington Beach 8.B. Mp111 'Dal,ltlll' Minus Endings ~ NASHVILLE, (AP) -Actor Larry Hagman s ays it's going to be a while before anyone knows who shot ornery J .R. Ewing, the character be plays on the television show "Dallas." "It doesn't look like 'Dallas' will be on until October or November due to the actors' strike " Hagman said during weekend appearances on the Grand Ole Opry and at the Opryland U.S.A. enter· tainment pa.rte. '1be real ending may be shot the day before it goes on the air," be said while answering ques· lions from fans du.ring Texas·style 95-degree beat at an outdoor theater. BE SA.ID PARTS OF 10 fall shows have been filmed but endings to these shows have not been ®ne. "I think there are about three different possibilities," Hagman 48, said without elabora· Uon about bis assailant. Sat>eto. Tne top"*' In the crtmo ayndlute Mltchee NI protage rlM In ~ (2 IWL) .P.M.~ Mary Hart vlalll Avdrflf seott .• 711·yMr-<>id stun1 women lrom C.OtM. C-. tOfnla; a Loci\ Neu Mon- ster hunter. Donna Ruth on se111ng up a home we<k· shop: SU1Y Kalter wltn men's COlmolU. G) MOVIE • *'h "Johnny Cool" 11963) Henry Sliva. e..r.a. t>eth Montgomery. An ttal- 1an boy raiMCI by a Sicilian goemtlll ls _,, to New 'l'<><k to Wf1l8lc ...engeanoe on the enemiet of an Amerlc:en e~trlate. (2 ""I m 21fOHIOHT '1i) MAGIC METNOOOF OIL PAJN'ONG "ROM•" Hosl: Wllllarn Alexender (J) M8. PHOTOOENtC U.8.A PAGEANT HOii AoOer1 UrlCh II ~ by The VIiiage People, Nle>- M!Y Rueaell and Metlene Akld al the ~Hotel In Lal Veges for thia Int annual pagoanl featwtng so conleetenta who wtll be )udoecl on tl!eif ptl()(~ quallcy. polM.. tie.ity encl c::tMWm. l:30 • lll I.NOii AllO'M'• temperature rlaea wMn • ~Hui blonde tall• ov. Bl'ed'a pr9CtlCa aft• l1il beCtc gooa out ort htm. • THE OOOCOUlllU When 01C8''a lllOllMlf ,_,.. for ,_ llOn'a aoclll .... ,... ..... _ ... ~.car.pt. z;;;.. .. -"°'•"'•"• "••dint" ............ ,.... .... "Ho ... ·-'• ~"~'°'*'A"'­OOll __ ...._....,.. le..CfQ ..... ~ .. ._A/WI,..._ .. .... Cl> 8ANN't .09 ·---~-J"' .... N ... of• """'*' .... Ing "* "" .. be ...... ot -CfilM. ~ • MCIC9TANATTMI ...,....,.,.. Tiie end Of ... -bringt dfMllo cNftoae h>f LJINrl; Hetl'y '"'"*' -cM of tM WI"'-Mouw and eile .. ~. but ~ ... -..~of OwlQllt ,.....,,...,.,,.,, (Plitt •)O{RI • U IWINIV MIL.I.a &ernoy waits 10 11.-r .....,,., he'• ~ hie lonQ·OWelt~ PfMnotlon w1111e • 1-11c c:amoe out • ono·m•n vondotla .. tmia-Q(A) • MBWGM'AH au.ta: GebtMI ~ .. Ml!! Tonne, l.enof9 o·~ ley. T °"' IXOONn. Ktll Krwno. GOU>~ Bob c.lllNn .oonYertl • pulk:t\llln oellW>g t111ivro to • wall 1wllch; Aobor1 Gib- son domonstralol tne art of "mart>llzing .. ; and 8111 P8Pien d~ l)luml>- 1~ prCIO!emS. .,.. u 111 HOeOOY'8 PERFECT Hart has himself lelod 10 INtn ""'*11 I pti.oner hU hidden Ille lool l'lom a bank rot>t>ery. 8i) THE NGKT£0US APPl.E8 "A.S A.P " J T 8oMam Is l<><oed Into a '-0-to-flead t>ente With the son of the leader of a white auprema· cy group. IA) '1!) u.8. CHAONClE "Goers Country, u S.A." Jim letlfer repons on • sp01 In America lhal 11 sllll peaoetul and unhurried - ~·a Counlry, US A. - ll!sO known a1 the "-· hunting capital ol the nation. tO;OO 8 (I) KNOT8 LNONO Aelonned 8IConollC Gary rinda hilNelf -ble 10 cope wlltl ~ Midden euc- -and ambetl!1 on • drlflill"G IPf'M. (PM1 t)(R) 8GNEW8 19 20/20 NATlONAL HEWS CAMERA TitME "Front 'T'hO a.llroont To Broadway And -eactr" ~ of the An'lertcM OeltCO Mechlno and ttlnlO tlOllr'Oom ~ demon- .. , ... how IOciel denolng ~lntOI~ ~ -1·--MAllW.C. AP ......... . Ewing was shot by an unknown assailant on the show last spring, triggering a world-wide pssing game about who did it. LARRY HAGMAN WITH MINNIE PEARL Dela' J.A. GoeeonGrendO .. Opry TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTING~. 1MIATM "Ulli« Amerlea" "''°"" • Lllll9'• ... ""' lft ....,_ TUBE TOPPERS df\111 ,.. {2 ln-t ,. ...... MOYlm * '°' "I Covo' Ttte UncMlwotlcf" (1M'I a.n Mcaory, ,,_... Jordan, ...... CflMted ---.. 00-. ll)Ut ....., doudl ... OC*llftO of ,_ pley In H9w Yotll, (Pert 9 of ~)CJ(R} NBC e 8:00 -Games People Play. A sport-variety series tocuslng on un· usual &Jld competitive activities with Bryant Gumbel, Cyndy Garvey and Johnny Bench . A tllaolooy etudont --tl'lo Identity ot Ille ~ tlMl1 bnlhr ... bafole tho ....,., llttaoft ........ IDC>el• ,...._, (' lw~ 30 Ni.t 1:11• NIW8 ... MOYla 'W ... 1Mo lftdoet" A portt.it of Angele ~ \Odey, .. ... *""-.. SM~S....Unl­ ~MdlMSMF.­ oilcoMIMtllute. KOOP • 8:00 -"Johnny Cool." Henry Silva stars as a hit man for the syndicate in this movie with Elizabeth Montgomery. ••• ~ "The lpo9ll ,.. • ( 1965) ~ c.lne. Nlgef Graen A prl1onor ~ lo 8ritlll\ ltlm/ lnlell~ 19 comm1 .. "°'*' to ...trltMI a daf9ct· ed 9dontlclt. (2 llrL, 10 min) u:001 • • ()) o Niwa '9M.WlmGAMI TMIMlT ......... A look .. ..._. ttlo Untlocl 8~ llende MilttetHy ~ 10 the SOlllel Union ei'Ct ,_SALT H 111411 KCET QI 10:00 -Camera Three . 8 MOVIE el'9d tM '*'°"'• eecurtty Ballroom dance teams re·create fa mo us routines from Broadway and the movies of the 1930s and 40s. • ··~ "MJMooola ~ (1985) CamerOlt Mhchall, Ethel AofO. 4.-00D MOVIE ;t'~OOUPLE ,...,. nMXIUl'ltl tlO'IW ho and Ole« '"91 wtllo a.Ying jurfduty. • THE ....... *-L SHOW 8-nny doet an ~ "°" of • poc>IMw te>ort• commentat<><. G IXlB•IOHS 11:to 8 ()) U.8. OPEN TENNl8~ Higl#ta ol tho day's action are ~led lrom flulhing MeadOw Paril H\ Co«>ne. N.V. II TONIGHT Hoit : Johnny Carson. ~1: Jim Staff0<d, Syd- '>frf Oddlmrth. Sy l(r-. Oevid Steinberg. 8 OATIHO GAME G ®l ABCNEWS D MOVIE •• 1h .. AIHHinallon" ( I 1167\ Henry s.tva. Fred Belf. A Secr9t S«vlOe ag<!nl supposedly dead d~ that hi• wtte Is • plennlng to mMrY the dou- ble egent he mutt e•pc>M. (211<•.) at HOGAN'S HEAOES ~and ht• men dllCOll· e< a Gormlll'I IPY In thew midst. II) OETSMART Smart must take a payroll to CONTROL agents l>ehlnd the Iron eu.-tam. ED CAPT10MB> A8C fEW8 UM 8 11JJ CHAAUE'S ANGELS Kelly's best friend latts In IOlle <Mtl\ a suoYt ernt>ei • JOHN DARLING nor wl\o has martted tho Mgal tor mutdef (Al _;tM>flGHT- 12:0011 (I) TH£ JEffSllON8 A total srrange.-arrives et the apartmenr and ded-that Louise 1$ her rnotflef (RI G TWIUCJHT ZONE On their way from England to America, a jell.r• and 111 et-travel oadtwards In time -~: IMP08818l.E The IMF must stop a ma.- 5'119 spy ring tNll 1hrea1ens 10 cripple Lile country wuh a deadly pneumonlc plague (I) THE OOOOIES Tiie Good-stat'I a vete<'- nery clinle. 12:::30 f) Cl) C88 lA T£ MOVIE • • 'h "The Ulltmate Chase" ( 191<11 E"c Braedlln. 8'1tt Eklana A wealthy bualnenrnan's daep·rooted paranooa lead• him to klll one man and enter into a deadly struggle ...,,n anotl!flf. 8 DA TING GAME (I) MA TIONAL NEWS 1:00 0 TOMORROW U MOVIE * * "'The Grw:ty And The Treasure" (1974) Oocu· tner'llllfY In cl!O tore t800s. a lam11v laces sevl!fe obSlacta In their •Olenl· leal hulll lor gold 1n the CBS Has 7 of Top IO Alaskan Kloncltlte. ( t hr~ 55mtn I •III BAAETTA ear.tta tr-10 IOc:ate e y<>Yng murder w1tnen before the killer doos (RI ID MOVIE • •·1t "Be"t foot Fonolard" ( 19'131 tucllle Bell. Wllllam Guion. A mo vie star becomes lnvol\led In a na1>0na1 acan· Gal when she a11enos a prep SChOOI d anc:e ( I hr • 45 min I G) MOVIE * • • ··sanctuary" (19611 Lee Remick. Yves Montand When her Creole lover re1urns 10 coose fur· Iller trouble. a Southern gorl ffltl\elns alien!, ( 1 hr , 30,.,;,, I 1:30 D THE LONE .W.0ER 2:000 NEWS D MOVIE •*'Ir "Suoc14e Comman- <IOI" ( t967) Aldo Rav. Hugh Fangat·Smn1'1 On Ille ewi ot O-Oav. a group of Brnllh commandos 111 a&S>gned 10 118b0tage .. Nan air t>Me ~tea dllei> IMlh.n Cetman temt0<y (2 t>rs I 2:100 HEWS 2:308 HEWS Q) MO\ltE * * "Ufldel'COV81' ulrl" ( 195 t) AJex•s Smtih. Gla- dys GC!Ofge A pol.cewom- an strugotes to clll)ture lier falher's murderer and l>eCOm8S 1rwolved w!lh a • * • wTne Dorll Ccmor'' ( 19'81 L.ualla 8811. MW'k S1even1. 4:15Gt MOW! • * 'h ·•A G-0t "-"'u (1948) "°""Loder.~ Long. 4::9061) NEWS 4:458 HEWS 4:t0 8 MOVIE * • "he.ape Sy Night" 119371 Wllllam Hatt Mno Neagle. E'rlda11•• Dayti.ae ·"•.,le• 11:00 «I) ~ 'n "In The Money" ( 19581 eo-y ~ Pam. eta OoNhue -AFTERNOOH-------12:00 0 •'It "Space Monattw" ( 196' I Francine 'l'Otlc • .Atfo. my Btacon. m * •• "love Cf'azy" ( t9• 11 WllUe,.. P<Mell, ~ na l.O)'. m • • * ·~ "The 8elts 0t St Maty's" ( 19"51 EMttg Cn>$Cy, I~ Bergman. ~ 0 * * '.\-"Flytng LM1~· "18Ck l" ( t9S\) Jolllt Wayne, Robert A\'M. (!_C!J •• * ·~ "Come Sad!, L1tua Sheba" (18531 Shir· ltiy Boolh. Burt l.ancaa1• S:30 0 • • • "Buck Anc1 Tl\e Preacher'" ( 1972) &dM¥ P0<r.er, Horry 8olelont• &.1>0 m * • • ~Home "' lndlana " f t9•4) len McCams1er. Wallet 0.- I nan. by Armstrong & Batiuk ABC. Squeezes ·Victory NEW YORK (AP) -CBS bad seven or the week's 10 most.watched shows, i..nclucli.ng No. 1 "Circus or the Stars" and back·to-back episodes or "Dukes ol Hazzard," but ABC won the prime-lime competition for the third week i..n a month, accord· ing to figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. ABC's triumph was by the narrowest of margins -one-tenth of one point. Limited to three or the week's Top 10 shows, including the premiere episode of .. Those Amazing Animals" in s~ond place, ABC bounced back with seven of the next 10. ABC's rating for the week ending Aug. 24 was ts, to 14.9 for CBS and 11.3 for NBC. The networks say that means in an average prime·time minute during the week, ts percent of the country's TV· equipped homes were tuned to ABC. .. TB08E AMAZING ANDIALS .. was one of two new prime·time series unveiled during the week. 'lbe ABC show finished second to CBS's re· peat of "Circus of ~e Stars," which registered a rating of 22.2. Nielsen says that means of a1J the homes in the country with television, !2.2 percent saw at least part of the show. The other new show, NBC's "Games People P lay," finished the week in 30lh place. As ls common this Ume of the year, the week was dominated by reruns, and only a handful of original shows were even moderately sU<!cessful ln the ratings. "That's My Line" on CBS was No. SS. "Nobody's Perfect" on ABC flni.sbed 421td, NBC's "Speak Up America" was No. 45 and "FridQ Night Fights." also on NBC, finished 47tb. TWO MOVIES, "FINAL Chapter-Walldag Tall," No 11 for the week, and "Heroes or Rock 'n'RoU" in 13th place, scored for ABC. Two CBS movies did not do as well -"Perfect Gentlemen" in 36th place, and a first·run screen- ing of "Islands in the Stream" No. 39 . . "I'm going to be iD an iron lung for four or five oows," the terrible Tex.an said. Comedienne Minnie Pearl gave Hagman one ol her famous straw bonnets Saturday and be wore il during an appearance on the Grand Ole Opry. Be received spirited applause when be walked out qa stage with it on instead of bis usual giant cow· boy bat. Cronkite Ainµng for Kids NBC listed three of the week's On lowest· rated shows, including "Here's Boomer" ia 58tb place, "Man's Great.est Sporb" 61at and "Buct Rogers in the 2Sth Century," No. 62. A "CBS Reports" presentation, "Tbe Baby Maten," wu No. 59, and an "ABC News CIQSeup" called ''Tbe Killing Ground: An Update," was No. 60. ' Here are the week's Top 10 shows: "Circus of the Stars," with a rating o( 22.2 representing 16.9 million homes, CBS; "Tboee Amazing Animals," 20.9 or ts.9 million, ABC; "II· A-S·H." 20.6 or ts.7 million, CBS; "Alice" and "The Jeffersoos," both 21ll.1 or lS.3 m1llioll, .._.. CBS; "Dukes of Huzard," 9 p.m., 19.1 or t.S.1 million, CBS; ''Dukes of Haizard," 10 p.m., CBs, and ''Three's Company," ABC, both 19.2 or lt.e million; ''60 Minutes,'' 19 or 14.5 million, CBS. &Del "Vega$," 18.9or 14.4 million, ABC. • llJ88 PEAaL, WHO WENT to school with lla1man's mother, actress Mary Martin, called him "a cbarminl, delightful fellow" and presented llim with a gold record comparable to the key to Cbeeity. ~ Hagman said the "Dallu" cast gets along well despite re])Or1s to the contrary. "We're a family," be said. Asked by a fan bow it feels to be a cult figure. be said, "It happened so fut. I've spent 31 yean in tbe business and it's nice to have this much ac· claim." He said be really ls not mean iD real Uf e like Ewiq. '•1 WEB I MD •Y kids here to let you know bow ake I am. Tba1 lady baa been man'ied to me for• yean, .. be said, 1esturtnc to bis wife. ''Tbere'• no way I'd treat my wife lite I do Sue Ellea," be taid, referrin1 to Mrs. J .R. Ewtnc on ··n.u.." LOS ANlftLES (AP) -Veteran CBS newscaster Walter Cron.kite bas unveiled plans for a new pilot television prosram that will be broad· cast on a local Public Broadcaating Service station ln October in an attempt to link cluaroom education with current news eventa. ./ 1 Speaking to reporters at PBS station KCET by telepbooe from Cape Cod, where be ls vacationing, DocllDlentary Hii SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - A televlalon documentary on Sban1u1, the Cbiw sister city of San Frandaco, wu previewed for an aoclieoce ol about 100 people, lncludlni Xie Hen&, the c:onaul of Chinese culture here. Xie Hen& told the poup after "Sbanabal Shadows" was shown that abe dkl not feel all ol tbe bour·klae proeram waa repr:e1eateUn ol ber COUil· Uy. Cronkite said the new balf·bour show, "Why in the World," will run for a week on KCET as a showcase to help raise money for possible na- tionwide broadcasting over PBS in fall 1981. The program will feature top·ranked educators discusaiog current news events in a way that bi&b school studeota may apply to their studlel of literature, history, geography and other subjects, Cronkite said. "Our purpoee ls to really broaden this field ol contemporary, relevant education," said tbe newscaster, wbo will supervise, but not appear on, the new abow. Cronkite ls chairman of Satellite Educatioa Services. Ma,... UftllldNeMClftaoulpoet .......... ........... u:u••• ........ ...., "'°""' -~ ........ --. .............. .. -. ..... ..., -......... .... ---............. ... ..... _ ........ ...,._ ...... THE ll~ OF THE Top 20: Movie -"Final Cbapter·Walkln1 Tall," "Charlie's Angels," Movie -"Heroes of Rock'n'RoU," all ABC : "House Calla." "LoG Grant" and "Trapper Jobn, M.D.," all CBS: "Taxi" and "Hart to Hart," both ABC, and "Love Boat'' and "Tbat'1 Incredible," both ABC, tie. .........,. __ -. .• ,__._ .. ._I __ _ ,