Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-09-25 - Orange Coast PilotA111erictans Leave ••ladad . Bar Told 'No 3 Rape VietiDts Tell of Ordeals Room in Town • For Both of Us' At Trial of 4 DAILY PILOT * * * 25c* * * --..-.uspecte o .c' THURSDAY AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER 25, 1980 VOL. 7J, MO ... , e YCTIOllS, •~NU Amerieans Flee Truce Goa& Cited by Iraq Reported = Seeking MD Job BAGHDAD, Iraq {AP) -Iraq announced conditions for a truce with Iran and claimed its forces cut off two major cities in southern Iran by seizing the vital Tehran railroad today. While lraq said it captured us square miles of Iranian border territof')'. in four days of fighting, Iran claimed it pushed back Ira- qi forces in one area and report- ed for the first time the capture Rape Victims Tell Ordeals At OC Trial of a border post inside lraq. Ira ni a n jets made their deepest penetration into Iraq, bombing a gas refinery at Ayn Zala, 280 miles northwest of the Baghdad and 400 miles from the nearest Iranian air base. the Iraqis reported. In Beirut, Iraqi Defense Minister Adnan Khairallah list- MIDEAST NATIONS GO ON Al.£RT-A3 ed the goals of bis country as: redefinition of the Iraq-Iran border, protection of the Arabic- speat:ing minority in southern Iran and the return to Arab sov- ereignty of the islands of Abu Mousa and the Greater and Lesser Tuobs. The islands were seized by Iran in 1971. Otg Bau Visitor Legal troubles have multiplied for an Orange County man ac- cused of illegally practicing medicine and causing the death of a diabetic, following bis ar- rest Wednesday on new charges. Gerald Barnes, 47, who lives at the private Coto de Caza estates development in Trabuco Canyon, was re-arrested late Tuesday on a bench warrant is- sued by Orange County Superior Court Judge Richard Beacom. Bail was set at $200,000 in •the new legal action taken by Judge Beacom when investigaton dis· closed evidence that Barnes bad begun seeking employment as a doctor again. The defendant already was scheduled for arraignment at 9 a.m . today in Harbor Judicial District Court on two other counts. Three young women ranging in age from 14 to 21 described for an Orange County judge Wednesday how they were abducted at gunpoint earlier this year and sexually assaulted by four Vietnamese men who drove them to secluded groves. lo Rome , the Iraqi ambassador lo Italy said Baghdad will accept no mediation to end the war unless Iran agrees to return to lhq ter- ritories that it claims. Why would a giant-turkey buzzard bang around Laguna Beach City Hall? The big ~ird perched ominously on a telephone pole across from city offices during the lunch hour Wednesday as unnerved city official.I looked on. The city bas financial problems, but city employees didn't need this bird to remind them. He bad been free OD J2,SOO bail since Aug. 22, following his arrest on three counts involving practic- tng medicine while posing as a --- do,!!tor. But the women -includjng an 18-year-old Costa Mesa resident -could not idenWy all four s\ia- pecta being held in the cue u · the ones responsible for the la~ night attack.a. Tbe four defendants -Dung Quoc Pham, 18, of Irvine; Bo Quac Phan, 19, of Irvine; Minh Quante Nguyen, 19, of Santa Ana, and Tung Thumb Le, 17, of Santa -face 72 counts each stemmma from seven rape incidenta. Tbe District Attorney's Office alle1es tbe f'"our Vfetnamese ref-4 usees -arrested last month by Huntincton Beach and Costa lleaa police officers - kidnapped the YOUDI women and drove them to oran1e 1rovea near Irvine, forcing them to parti~ipate in sex orgies at 1unpoint. The surest identifications made Wednesday during a pre- li min ary bearing in Oran1e County Central Municipal Court were those by a U -year-old (lee ATl'ACK.8. Pa1e AJ) At U.S. government urging, 53 American civilians -48 buai· nesamen and their families and seven dependeota or memben ot the U.S: Embassy staff -left Baghdad by bua for Amman, Jordan, a trip that normally takes J.5..18 hours. U.S. dJplomata were not being advised to leave Iraq tor the time beinl. A chartered plane arrived in Amaferdam, Netherlands, with other American evacuees from Iraq . They included 241 employees ot a New Jeney con- <See lllDEAST, Pase AZ> 'Whoa, Pard' Mesa's 'Rodeo' Corraled The ownera of the Rodeo bar and restaurant in Anaheim don't cotton to lettlnl otben make bay otftbeirname. Tbua, tbeownen oftbe western bar that's been cashina in on the "Urban Cowboy" tread.flied a suit in Oran1e County Superior Court Wednesday ukiq that a Colla llaa bar drop ita reference to ''Rodeo.'' Ladder Aids Escape From East Berlin . BERUN (AP) -Two men in West Berlin threw a ladder' acrou the Berlin wall today to help two men in communist Eat Berlin escape under fire from border parda. West Berlin police said the two S.4R RESC V ES THE &ODEO 18 LOCATED at u• s. State Colle1e unidentlfted retuseea made it Blvd., not far from Anaheim Stadium. It ~ed the name acrou and were uninjured. B, ~ r ~~cl ~G ~CT on Aus. e. ~ Tbey said their dartns escape ~.autl " '" .II Accordinl to lawyer stepben D. Johmon'• auit, tbe ni&bt appeared well timed. The West Life and death, prec'-lon and spot baa become an immediate bit tbrousbout Southern Berlin a11i1tant1, operattn1 .. California by "or&an.lzinl lta restaurliit and cocktail facWty from a nearby rooftop, threw the peril, are balancin1 acts in, aroundtbeOraqeCountypnJ(euional1porttn11ceneandin ladder acrou the wall in the which membera of Search and rtt-·• -~--..atbe• -•-1 R " w t B Ii di i t r Rescue (SAR), code name pa ..... aruvuuu .-,_.e • ams. ea er n atr c: o Marine Angel 1, from El Toro Tbe ownen, OCSC Inc., wblcb lilts John Perrin ot ltreu1ber1 just as the retuseea ' llariae "--Air-C!•-•'-, ._... Garden Qroye u presidellt, bave spent Iota ot money to earn made a tua for it. -.-,_.UVA 1111U the reputation u a waterlq bole for the Rama, Jobnaon The flnt qian Sot aero. the tbemael¥e1. claima,bypaJtqfor1uestappearanceabyRamplayen8Dd wall without trouble, but the (See MEDICINE, Pase A!) Coast Weather Denae coastal fog Fri- day morning with hazy sunshine Friday af- ternoon. Lowa tonight 58 at the beaches, 65 inland. Hilbs Friday mid 70. to mid IOI. ~SIDE TODA V At a ffnw .-,. tlw nalioft'a t»fn. depnda morw heovi-· l1t °" Uw National Guard llkDI at a,.., Ume line• Ila• R•ooltlttollarw War, pubHc apotllr Ito• depleted th• t'Gllb of Uw.,.,....,..,. mWMI. !HtMol't~aaa l0toa ton °" Page Bf. •••ez Sm.per Reported I SAR reeeatl)"-made its lltb I coachm. • second slipped and fell back OD medical aid o1 tbe year UliDc tbe Eut 8erlbi puund, tbm alert· ::.=..,,... •: :.:= g LOS ANGELES <AP) -A1 be~ when It plucked the 10 'IBB OWNSU OB~ the court to make in8tbeborderparta. . . ~-=--: ::::-:,_ C::: HeoDd sniper incident wu re-drtYW ol • pickup from lilcCGubQ'• Rodeo 8t 111 W. Bber St. in Costa llesa quit He bad to scale the ladder 1 ....._. et-n ..._..... .. rt_.. .. 1 1 p by terrain after tbe •eldde in ....... '-.. ..._._ -~-~-once more with two bulleta ftnd c---. Al ~a..., • po -near .. 1• an ark in bad f.U. ewer l,OOO 1__.. ......__ Ui I .-name -_.--.--ta .ad alps so none , ·~ DM ,.... ..... downtown Loe Anse .... limilar Saa ~ ..,... ot th• true Ram fw 1et romdld up ba lbat Rodeo. in bis directioll, but a1ao Sot C111M1a o ~a.• to 1be OM in wbicb a polliee U.., Put. Tbe ,.cue re-lolmcm ....... ba UM laWIUlt tbat McCoDaba1'1 LI us-· 'acroa.-catbed,policeaaid. 1 ::.....:.. ~ =:--. ~ 1er1..a waa llljund earllertbia quired delicate maaeuftl'bal but in1 r•w. to "Rodeo" iJlesallJ beeaUle it baa never West Berlin flrefl1btera I .. , Ill T......... o •eet. Pulice said ao ODe wu ~~= p':f;."f"1'' filed wida the ttate far wb a ftcUtloul bUlineu nasqe. brou1ht out their ladden to :=.' · cw ~ ~ 11.rup bJ the latellt 1boU. , . rtffue ~ two ualltanta frocp =.11 • g ~ .._ ,.,. ) ,., the rooft6p. • '-::==~~====================================================.f;;'·==:::;===========~========:::::.:====================================~:=-====::::-::=-~,.!..~~-~~---~. I I •-"'.a f ( I ( I f I t J : E ' ~ Tankers on Move Hormuz Strait Traffic Normal, • LONOON 1AP1 Tankt'r traf fa r movt"d no rmally today through U1e St riaU uf Hormua. llw wurld' ' maul oH artery. despite the esralatln~ Iran Iraq war. th• lolclligt>n\'.-dt11>a rtm~nt of lJoyd 's ol London I"\' ported I\ spok~sman for Shell 1n London also said 1U1 inform•~ was that Ule Ml.mt tanlrera whkh \' urry mure than 40 perctn\ ol the Wel'trm world's oil supptJes w~ .. .. . t 'ro• Pap ti MIDEAST • • • structlon (•()mp11ny and their ram1hes f oreign dtplomut..\ su1d lht-y were making plaJb lo evacuate F.:u rooean. Ja1_>anese. Korean ;i nd f'11Jpmo c1v1Jians working in Iraq Mihtar <'ommuruques issued here and LO Tehran indicated ground and air activity had not l~t up. Both Jran and Iraq halted shipments or oil, not a major worry to the world for the pres· ent. but the war threatens to halt shipments from other oil· producing ('Ountries in the Persian Gulf Baghdad Radio said Iraqi troops punched 12 miles into Khuzestan province and out· flanked Jranian garrisons at Khorramshahr and Abadan, kill· ing SO soldiers. It said Iraqi troops seized the railway Ulat connects the two cities with 11ehran. the Iranian capital 340 miles to the northeast. Baghdad Radio said the r ail road seizure cut the two cities off from reinforcements promised by the Iranian govern· ment, adding: ''The two cities a re doomed. Their surrender is imminent " The Iraqi command said its troops and tanks seized the Ira- nian border town of Naftshah to- day while other Iraqi forces raised the nag over Mehran, 90 miles lo Ule south. Iraq s aid its troops took Me brao on Wednesday after completing the capture of the major Iranian border town of Qasr·e ·Shi rin , 350 miles southwest of Tehran, taking 351 pt"isoners and pursuing fleeing Lf anian soldiers to Sar-e ·Pol· Zahab, about 20 miles inside the border. Iran conceded its troops fi!treated in the Mehran area and said the lraqis also seized nearby Sa.Jehabad. An Iranian communique said fighting was continuing in the Qasr-e·Sbirin area and claimed the invadine Iraqi forces had been forced to retreat. pl_ylJlt lll bol!t cllreelk>N th"CMICh the JS.mll«Mride atrall, "aJbell • lillleak>wt!r\JM!nuaual " The auurance came amid mount.iQi fH,.., and unconllrmed rt>porU, that the fi1htln1 had brouiht oil traltk to the Pertdan Gulf toa our standlltlll "Traffic appeanJ lo be pa.ulna lhrou1h the s t rait without hindrantt and the routlnp lm poaed by the Iranian govemmtnt Electric Car Plans OK'd BERKELEY I AP) Plans for city aud lo un elee tr1 c c ar manufactur~r will go ahead even though tests showed a prototype or the vehicle did not live up to its billing, Mayor Gus Newport says. The city is seeking S8 million in private and government loans to help CalifomJa Electric Car Co. begin manufacturing the EXAR·l . The plant would provide at least 400 jobs for the area and the city would share in the company's profits. But Walfy Rippel of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, who supervised testing of the car Wednesday, said it did not live up to its de· signer's claims on speed, acceleration and power storage. Ribbons Fly For Hostages CARSON CITY, Nev. <AP) - Yellow ribbons commemorat· ing American hostages in Iran have been allowed to fly again from trees around the Nevada Legislative Building. after be- ing removed Wedne s day because advance permission wasn't obtained. Art Palmer, chief of the Legislative Counsel Bureau, or· dered the ribbons removed, but then checked with Legislative Commission Chairman Keith Ashworth, a Las Ve1u state senator, who told him to "cooperate" with the group. Palmer's rust move prompt· ed calls to the bureau, the gov· emor's office and the Capitol press room from several irate people, including one woman who said it seemed "un· American." are bc!lna observed " Roaer l..owea, C&llualty report}na officer of Lloyd'M lntelllllence deoart mt!nl. told The Associated Preu. l,loyd'11 momtoni world sblp- i11t\t( rn<1vemenU O n Monda y n ight, Iran dticlarecf It.a coutal waters war 1ooea and ordMed shipplng in the Per1l11n <lull lo foll(>w prescribed routes alter passing through the Strait Alth<X11th the reisl of the world's oll nmli were eustuoned by lbe current clut In Ule world market and Importi ng nations ' istockpilca, the shutdown of the Abadan refinery rorced Iran's In· te riot Ministry to impose a nat1onw1de ban on sales of gasoline, diesel ruel and kerosene to private customers today and Friday The announcement said only taxis and public transport vehicles would get fuel on Ule basis of Uleir average daily con· sumption. Japan's Transport Ministry said al least eight vessels operat· ed by J apanese shipping com· pan1~s were stranded in the dis· puled waters between Iraq and I ran. It said '4 other ships operat· ed by Japanese companies were either at anchor or sailing in the PersianGuU. Fighting between Iran and Iraq has p~hed Ule price of gasoline and heating oil up 8 cents a gallon in a week on spot markets in Ule United States. The war h'as removed more than 2 million barrels a day from world crude oil supplies, whlcb of late had exceeded demand. However, the United States ob- tains no oil from Iran and very lit· tie oiJ from Iraq. Iraqi and Iranian Persian Gulf oil ports have been reported closed by Ule fighting. And Iraq claims to have inflicted heavy damage on Iranian oil refineries and harbors. Iraq bad been exporting 2 million barrels a day by pipeline to Mediterranean ports, said Gary Ross, an economist at the Petroleum Industry Research Foundation. Iran's exports are said to be a million barrels a day or less. But traders say supplies are so large that the prices consumers pay for 1asoline and beating oil area 't likely to rue -unless the fighting should spread and cut off oil shipments from Saudi Arabia and other Persian Gulf exporters for an extended period. Man Slays Wife MODESTO (AP) -A Modesto man, Andrew 8 . Crane, 52. killed his estranged wife with a 20·gauge shotgun, then shot and wounded himself early today, police reported. No Noise Iaereene Pre•••se llll SAUDI ARABIA 0 111 f~,....P11pAI ATIACKS • • Santa Ana &irl, who told Judie Gary Ryan •be wu abducted by four men from a church parkifta lot lut April. The teen·a1er identified the Pham brothers and Minh Neuyen u tbree of the four men responsible for her abduction. The girl, questioned by pros· ecutor Carl Armbruat, said she was returning to her church about 7: 15 p.m . after buyin1 candy at a neuby liquor store, when "tbeise four Oriental• asked me for dJrectiOftS to Santa Ana.1' When she approached their ca r to write down those directions, sbe testified, they "closed in oo me. I started to run toward my Sunday school, and they caught me." She said she was carried to the car. thrown in and told to be quiet or they would tiU her. MAP L~ ... TEs '!llftft MILE FRONT OF IRAN-IRA .,,"'..,.... A gun was put to her head, she ~ _. 0 WAR said , as they drove off. Rolcling Iraq Cute Off Two ctttea __ • T_et_l•_T_ruce __ eo __ ndtt_k>_n_• __ ~,. the gun, she said. was Dung Pham. Cash Squeeze Told Cutback in Spom Among N-M Options In making plans public that at the most drastic end could close as many as four or five- elementary schools and two or three middJe schools next year, Newport·Mesa District officials also warn of other distasteful changes. Norman Loats, deputy district sup erintendent, announced seven topics Tuesday that he said school trustees must come to grips witb in "the near future." They include fi ve·period days at the four district high schools, elimination or some programs at all levels~ reduction of athletic involvement in middle and hlgh schools, centralizing c ur· riculum, unifying program sched~les. c urtailing s upport services and the possibility of in· advertent segregation of minori· ty students. Administrators noted Tuesday that some schools, especially those in the west Costa Mesa area, are drawing Jarger numbers or ethnic minority children. Care must be taken in closing schools. they said, to avoid ethnic segregation. School closures are the result of a declining student enroll· ment and a drastic income pinch resulting from less state money -offered on the basis of the number of students attending district schools, Propoaition 13, which curtails property tax in· come. and the Serrano vs. Priest court ruling that ordered equalizatoin of California school financing. The eombination, dis trict a dministrators note , h a s voraciously eaten into the finances of what once was one of the state's wealthiest school dis· tricts. State law now curtails district financial spending to increases of no more lban 2 percent a year while inflation rises at a rate of more than 12 pe~nt annually. District enrollment, which stood at 20,194 at the end of Sep- tem ber last year. has dwindled now lo about 19,154, and officials see a steady decline for years to come. With annual overhead-cost savings of about $125,000 tor every elementary school closed and $200,000 for every middJe school shut down, the district's administration and board of trustees agree that closures are a necessity. And administrators note Ulat closing down aJI of the schools under consideration still would not .. r~sult. in the remaining fac1hties being filled to capacity. Enrollment in the once· affluent district began to decline in 1964. Subsequently. trustees have s hut down eight elementary schools. the latest during June, 1979, when Monte Vista and Victoria closed their doors. Trustee Roderick MacMillian has long cried for a system or closing down schools in an or- derly fashion_ The youngster said she was eventually driven down a dirt road surrounded by trees and then raped by three of the men. When Uley had finished, they drove her back to South Coast Plaza, but before Jetting her out, she told Ryan, they warned her not to walk alone at night and apologized for what they had done. The four defense attorneys representing the refugees re· peatedcy questioned the young witnesses about whether they were sure of the identifications they made. The 18-year-old Costa Mesa girl, who said she was abducted and assaulted Aug. 11, identified the Phams and Tung Thumb Le as her captors. She claimed she got a good enough look at them to ideatily the suspects in court and added that she has had dreams about their faces. . ''Son:'etimes I can sit with my httle girl and the faces come in· to my head," she said. f'ro• Page AJ MEDICINE • • Barnes was subsequently c harged. with second degree . murder ID connection with the alleged negligence·related death o f John McKeniie, 27 of Anaheim, who died lut y~ of diabetic shock. McKenzie wu seen by the SUS· p eel at Pacific Southwest Medical Group in Irvine while suffering from uncontrolled diabetes. . Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright alleges in the latest action against Barnes that he applied for a new job Sept. l.S, the day before murder charges were filed. The Iranian news agency Pa.rs quoted a communique saying Iranian forces captured the Ira· qi border post of Chalamche. Pars did not specify the location of this post and Chalamche does not appear on major maps. This ~ the first ~ilion inside Iraq that Iran bas claimed to overrun since the war erupted. In Ule air war, an Iraqi com· munique said Iran.Ian jets rut Ule Ayn ZaJa refinery, onJy 15 miles from the Syrian border; Doura oil refinery on the outskirts or Baghdad; oil instalJatjons and airports in Ule northern cities of Kirkuk and Mosul and res · ldential areas and economic in· stallatio ns in the northe rn Kurdish town of lrbil. Newport Settles Airport Suit . Officials at Wilmington Doctors Office in Compton wbe~e Barnes was allegedly seeking employment notified authorities. Officials of the California Board of Medical Quality As· surance in Santa Ana notified the Orange County District At· torney's Office. Cloner Claims 'Inquisition' LA JOLLA (AP) -Cloning re· .aearcher Ian Kennedy s ays be is the victim of "an inqu.isition" and was left to resign although h e n ever falsified data as University of California col· leagues suggested . ..... -Kennedy wrote his side-of • months-long controversy over c loning the wrong virus in a blistering 12-page letter to the 'National Institutes of Health, which was disclosed Wednesday. ORANGE COAST ~ DAILY PILOT ftir Otilf"Ot (.._"' 0 ••'' Pilot •''" wn•<." '' (Of'T\01n@G tr. N••' Ptl\\ '' pvoh\"tel 0¥' tM ,_ 0'•"9,. '°"'' A.t04•VH"O (on.O•"• i..tNt#ff' f'01t10n\ ,,. ,,,_,,CM•W\fO NtoNM, '"'Ov9f\ Fr10..f' •ot (O\t• ,._." ~fwpo.,t 0f'.C h totunt•"OtOft 8•4Clt row~t•1'" V•l•t• tf wtftf L4Qwn• ,. B••tr' ~'" c.o.'• .a "'~'" oo~• .. ,IOI' ,, pV011\f\fG '4tutcN¥\ M'Ct Sund•f\ Th• Pf'IM1CNI OVOh\fttnq plMit 1\ 41 JJO Wt~t 8•t jfrf'tl. P 0 80" I '60 CO\t• Mt\• (•llfOf'n•• •ltlt .... ,. .. -p,,.'\tOltl'\f '""' P\M•v-tf' n•:::::q~NIME-: <Mrlet H L-A\\IU•1t• M.t"'-4'1Nr fdilOf' Telephone {'114)142-4321 CIHlltlH ~d•er111in9MMU1 ''°"',...._,"'°'•"'CM Cov"1Y ~"""' .... ,,.. ... Newport Beach officials claimed today lbat by settling a lawsu.it against Orange County they've received a legally bind· ing promise that jet noise at John Wayne Airport will .never increase. "This is a big, big victory," commented Mayor Jackie Heather. "This not only gets us to the bargaining table but it puts us right in the driveT's seat.'' Supervisors al.so clean uie way for the county to purchase 13 acres of land on the airport's we11t side. City officials, who filed a suit against the county last June, bad planned to go to court Oct. 2 and r equest that the land purchase in Costa Mesa be blocked. "Hopefully," tbe mayor con· tinued, "this will be seen as a positive step by those who've The agreement approved viewed Newport as a bunch of Wednesday by the Board of obstructionists.·· * * * * * * Santa Ana Beigllis ~Building Barred-- In Jet Noise Area By FaEDE&JCK SCBOEMEBL Ol .. o.lty ........... The Orange County Board of Supervisbrs took emereency action Wednesday to prevent construction of new residential unit• in areas of Santa Ana Heights impacted by ;et noise lrom John Wayne Airport. The board, at the ur1in1of5th District Supervisor Tbomaa Riley, whose district i.Dcludel tbe heights, approved an urgency ordi.Daace taldn1 effect immediately to prevent con- struction in areas where jet noiae exceeds the 85 Community Nohe Equhalent Level (CNEL). RUey said the ordinance wu needed because of ID · comistenclea between the coun· ty aeneral plan and current IOG· ln1 ln tbe area. Tbe ameral plan'• DOile ele- ment, he explained, forbids developmeut ID areaa impacted · by DD afJl.CNnor..an••• But It la ~ area'• IO'llLDC wbicla determ1net whether ecm· •truction cu or c&DDOt occur and akttq ..ua, mak• no provbicm IOI' forbMldlnc deft)op- ment .,_. on nolte lmpada be •aid. ! ' The urgency ordinance will te· apain in effect for four moat.ha. During that period, Riley said, all development proposals in Santa Ana Heights will face scrutiny by the county Planninc Commluion for their con· ai.stency with the general plan noiae element. As part of its action, the board directed the county Environmental Management A1ency to begin work on de- veloplq a "specific plan'' for Santa Ana fleigbts that wUf bring the area's &Oiling into con· formity with the general pJan. Riley said be raised res· ldential development Issue because of a recent variance ap- plication tbat raced board action. 1be variance wu IOUlbt by a builder wbo bad plans to construct two condominium uniu within the 85 CNEL noite "footprint." The variance was required becau1e of a substandard dri•eway width . Had U1e driveway been of the coned width, alley poiDted out. tbe EMA would haYe bad no choice but to gut a bulldln• permJt, ror the project rqardJeu of the noise impact impllcati•· --~ In agreeing to settle the suit, the city received assurances that the county would not lift the daily 4l·flight lid until a master plan and enviroomentaJ study of the airport ia completed and ac;· cepted by supervisors. Further, the county agreed to adopt a noise control program at the airport in cooperation with Newport Beach. "This isn't a cop-out and peo. pie shouldn't look at it that way," stressed Mayor Heather. "The suit could have bought us time, maybe several years. but now we really can get somewhere.·• Newport City Attorney Rugh Coffin explained that Ule city's suit, which argued the county s hould Fomplete an environmental study before buy. ing the land, bad an excellent chance of success. Authorities allege Barnes bad posed as a doctor for four years practicing in various Southland medical facilities. Investigaton allege be most recently bad fHled out ap. plic.atiom for employment at th~ee Orange County hospitall using background information about a legitimate Dr. Barnes. Thur!d!y. Seo!!mber 25, 1980 QM. y PILQT A.1 Persian Gulf NatiOns Order Alert · BAHRAIN lAP ) Sauda Arabia and other Penlan Gulf natlo.a bav• put lhelr armed WCM Gil. Merl. a cMf•DH ptt· caudon in c ... the •aLbet._.. Iran and Iraq apllla into neltbbortna territory. hlahly plaeM IOUttel aald today Tia• Saudi• moved an un· apeelfted nwnbu ol anU·aittraft mlaaU. unlta to their Eastern Provtac•. alle ol UM Penlan Gulf o'1 tennlAal ol Ru Tanura • • • and al Dammam. the world's lar1e1t oil fltilct. tb~ aourct'S Hid "It la mtttiy a c:lefeDH pre c autim. a partial a le rt to protect our inW...ta and not ln any way lo tale aidel in the cootuct." said a IUlf olftdal who aahd not to k ldentined ·'The Hrial combat t. ao clOM to our country that we bave lo take aome precautionary action." be added "A 1wln1 by • • • ~War's Good,' Iraqis Claim BAGHD6.Q, Iraq (AP> Iraqis are tuning in their radios and television se9or news of the border war with Iran with alt the en· thusiasm that Americans follow the World Series. Military communique No. 20, the latest report lo be issued on the conflict, was received almost breathlessly by one cabbie in this nat old city that is just beginning to grow skyscrapers. "The war, it's good," Hussein Aly, 73, told a passenger. "For25, 30 yea.rs there was no big problem between the two countries. Then this fascist regime comes in and all the (Iranian) people hate it -the Azerbaijanis. the people of Arabistan (Kbuzestan), the Kurds, tbe Lurs. the Baluchis -so they (the Iranians) start trouble with us." "ISAW111E nRSTWOllLDwarandthesecond, and I think this is the most important war for Iraq," he said. Iraqi officials, whose status seems to be roughly defnied by the size and quality of television sets in their offices, are no less preoc· cupiedwbenthecommuniquesarereadonthetube. They excuse themselves. tum up the volu.me and eagerly translate eacb bit of news fortbeir guests: •'Six planes down in Mosul. 10 in K.irlruk ... Mer the news, the programming resumes with patriotic poems and sonp over films of tbe Iraqi army training and marching. It seems the officials always forget lo tum the volume back down. APA&T ROii AIR A'n.\CKS ON Baghdad, a city of three million that sprawls for miles in the Tigris River plain, the war is be· ing reported by communiques from thetwocapitals. Several hundred correspondents from all over the world have been invited lo Iraq by the government of President Saddam Hussein and are being housed in the city's best luxury hotel, the Spanish· manaaed Man.sour· Melia, on the bank.a of the river. The reporters watched and filmed Monday Dilbt 's air raid on the Ruhld military bue eoutbeut of the eily from their balconies -a arand view ol the fighters swooptna over the city amid the pink anti· aircraft fire. surf ace-to-air m.iaaile and bombuplosiom. "'lbe sty Jmt lit up with anti-aircraft ftre and miuiles," aa.id one reporter. "A missile just barely missed our hotel, and some of the planes and missil.S fell in civilian areu. We got it all on film, really Sood stuff." The Iraqis reported 19 civilians killed in the battle. BEPOaTE&S BUSHED TO 1'llEJa BALCONIES Wednesday morn.ing for a brisk round of anti-aircraft fire, followed by an Ira· nian raid. The !host rigorous ordeal faced by journalists bu been the ~hour drive across the Syrian desert from Amman, Jordan. Traveling at night, many suffered through the lut 70 miles wit.bout headlights, a blackout being enforced by military and civilian police posted every mile or so on the highway. Baghdad is ghostly at night, with only a few lights visible acrosa the entire expanse of the city. Cars rush through the almost deserted streets, nuhing their lights at what the driven suspect are oncoming cars and at intenectioos. Baghdad airport, target of the ftrat Iranian attack. baa been closed for three days. But by 9 a .m., the bridges that span the Ti· gru, which snakes through the city, are jammed with near normal traffic. TEEN-AGE WOMEN ABE AT EACH corner in blue suits directing traffic and strictly enforcing traffic laws. "They're very tough," said Hussein Aly. "U they tell you lo do something, you better do it. ll doesn't matter if you 're a general or the president." "Thia as war." laughed an official of the Information Ministry who met reporten at an outpost near the Jordanian border. "We'reopeo 24 hours a day. Call WI anytime." Although the Shatt &I-Arab waterway, Iraq's only outlet to the aea. bu been the scene of fierce fighting for three days, there ap· pear to be no shortages in the capital and there are no signs of boaJ'dina. Scattered nei&hborhoods have been bit by falling Iranian planes, but most residents still run outside lo watch the show when the air raid sirens start wailing. · WITll THE TENSION BUILDING IN the Penian Gulf. the conservative monarchies of the area are reported nervous. "On the one band, they want to see Iran brought down lo si&e," said one diplomat. ·'On the other band, they are weak and they do not want any trouble." Defeme Minister Gen. Adnan Khairallah told a news coo· ference Wednesday night that Iraq "fully reallied" the daneer of atartln& a m8jor conflict in the gulf. He added be hoped Iran would aaree that disputed border territory riptlully belonp lo Iraq. • ii\ ne&hter ln air combat can e~u11ly brln1 It within a mlJe of our t~rritory The nearer the ll1hllQ1 th~ mor~ worried we •re ·• Armed forces In Kuwait, whic h as lraq '2' aoutbern nel1hbor Is near the combat 1one. wero on mulmum alert today. accordin1 to sources in Bahrain Tb~ Kuwait govern· ment haa avoid~ makin1 any public comn1ents on the war between It.a oil·rich nelpbon, but the Kuwaiti news media have been supportln& Iraq atronaty. In the laland state of Bahrain further aouth, Defense Minilter Shelldaa al Kballfa, ordered his chief of staff lo inspect military trainin& bases and "iHue cer· tain diredlves." The confUct between Iran and Iraq aimmered for moolba and intensified this week after lraa ~ Ringing in t~ FaD abropted a 1975 treaty setllln& their border d.iapute. There have been unconfirmed reports of other Arab nations offering a.uistance lo Iraq. Israeli television has said Jordan allowed Iraqi transport planes to land at Jordanltn air fielda to keep the aircraft out of reach of Iranian air raida. According lo the Iraqi news aeency, Kine Hassan of Morocco ha.a offered to send UD· Even though summer officially came to a close Monday afternoon, warm tem· peratures have not left the Orange Coast. Six·year~ld Marcie Hersch of Newport Beach was enjoying the sunshine late Tuesday afternoon while playing on the rings at Harper School in Costa Mesa. • ID TV Amerieans Tops Russia Lags Far Behind With 'Tube Gap' WASHINGTON (AP) - Americana are more telerisicJD· oriented than the population ol any other country and own twice as many TV sets as the sttond· ranking Sovieu. There were almost 156 million television sets in the United States ill mid-1979, compared lo. 70 million in the Soviet Union, according to the Television Factbooll published annually by Television Digest, Inc. And all the Soviet sets are black·and· white, whereas color receivers exceed the number of U.S. black·and·white sets: The United St.ates also led the Canadians Flay Hawaii VANCOUVER, British Columbia (AP) -External Al· fairs Minister Mark McGuigan has officially protested lo the U.S. government and the gov· emor of Hawaii over the number or robberies and beatings suf· fered by Canadians visiting the U.S. state. Roger and Ann Clapham. an Aldergrove. British Columbia, couple attacked and beaten while on holiday at a state park on the island of Kauai nine months ago said the federal minister told them he registered a protest. The couple described to MacGuigan and Hawaii Gov. George Ariyoshi in a Jetter bow they went through a night of ter· ror when eight lo 10 thugs at· tacked two tents at the Lydgate State Park. Mrs. Clapham, beaten and covered in blood, managed lo escape into uie bWlb with their three children, aged 3 lo 8, but her husband WU COO· tinually beaten and kicked. world m the number or full· service television atationa in the middle ol lut year, with 1,00'1. And with the poalble exception or J apao, no other country is thought lo be close m matching America's percentage of total households with at least one TV set -f11 percent. The last category is difficult lo determine, editors of the Factbooll explain, because few nations have conducted TV household surveys. The world total or TV sets r0&e last year lo 465 million from 429 million in 1978, the Factbook says, with Japan , West Germany. the United Kingdom, France, Bruil, Italy, Canada and Mesico ran.kine behind the United States and the Soviet Union in the lop 10. At the bottom of the list is the Central African Republic. which bad one television station and 100 black·and·white TV sets. of 0Ut9 The 2,~paee reference work also includes U.S. market rank· ill&• based on the sue of the TV audience. New York City was still No. 1 last year with 6.4 million TV homes, followed by Los Angeles , Cbica10, Philadelphia, Detroit, Boston, San Francisco, Cleveland, Washington and Dallas-Fort Worth. While the numbers of TV sets and stations continue to grow in the United States, cable television also is coming into its own, with 4,255 systems across the country. The Fact book re· ports there were an estimated 15.5 million cable subscribers on Jan. 1, 1980. That's 1.4 million more than in 1979 and an ad· . dition or almost 5 million since 1976. San Diego, with 170,000 sub- scribers. led the cable field , with New York and Los Angeles tied for second. Clemente Isla ... Bid to Prohibit Goats Sal,e Wses LOS ANGELES (AP> -The Fund for Animals loat a bid ill Superior Court to problblt 1lm Clapp from Hllinl the aoata ol San Clemente Island for alauabter, altboufb the trapper aay1 be bu never comldered the idea. mered out a contract with Clapp where the trapper was to lain title to tbe animals once they were re· moved from the 22·mlle-lon1 atretcbotland. specified military ualatance to Iraq. Expressions of support for Iraq have also come from aov· ernments or state-controlled news media in most of the Penian Gulf nationa. Accord· ing to Baehdad radio, Kini Kbaled of Saudi Arabia telephoned Iraqi President Sad~ dam Huaaein today and auured him of his fUU support. Sexual Pressure Reported WASHINGTON (AP) -An agencyinchargeofprotectingthe rights of federal employees said today that sexual harassment is widespread in U.S. government offices. Ruth Prokop, head of the Merit Systems Protection Board, said in releasing a survey of federal workers that about one of every four employees reported being sexually harassed in the last two years . "Our survey shows that sexual harassment takes many forms in the federal workplace, and that some are far more severe than others." said Mrs. Prokop. But Mrs. Prokop pointed out that surveyed employees believe sexual harassment is no more widespread in the federal govern· ment than in the private sector. She gave the flndings of the pre- liminary report on sexual harass· mentlotheCommitteeon Post Of· fi ce and Civil Service's subcommittee on investigations, which has been looking into the problem over the put monlba . The survey was based on questionnaires sent to approx- imately 23,000 male and female federal employees, or various ages, racial and ethnic back· grounds. Mn. Prokop said tbeun· usually bilh response rate ol a percent indicates the data re- ceived is reliable. She reported that over 40 per- cent of the women reported J>ein1 sexually harassed at some time in federal job8. The survey found that most women were harassed by men who were older. ol the same raceorethnic background. She said that only 2 percent ol the allegedly harassed employees filed a complaint. and oaJy half ol ~hose got relief from the situation. Kids Held Hostage LOS ANGELES <AP> -Two c hildren were held bosta1e briefly by a bank robber who in· v aded their home and held their family at gunpoint. After dis- arming a guard and taldn1 $1 ,180 from the Ban.It of America Wednesday the man ran acre.a the street and into the bome · where a woman, her daupter and two granddaughters were staying. Tbe fund attorney arped that Clapp bad violated an oral em· traet DGt to ..U for poaalble a· ecutJcm tbe 4,000 animals to be rounded up: Fund for Animals attorney Marcelle Philpott-Bryant con- tended that the $148,000 contract Clapp aiped with the N'avy dealt only with the removal of the aoata from the laland and did not extend to what bappened to them OGce tbe1 naebedtbe mainland. Your fifvOflle Des1Qne< Will Be Happy To Assist You .......... ,. ............ 8oM KMMM1Cly, to, mother ol two ematon and a Pl9i· dent, wderwet 1ur1ery at New Ea1land Baptlat llGepttal ID Ba9tGD to nmon Mt of._ blt:Cne Wedw· Uj DllNt. Sbe u nparted la ltallie'Cmftkm todAJ. I Judce Tbomu T. Jobaacm cm Weda.lay NfUMd to trmt a pre1lmAaarJ baJaet.lcm. He Mid UM ........ bela.pd lD federal eoan. .._..a CGllf.,..ee ca Ute maU. .. eebeduledfor Prlda.j. LHt Decemkr, attoner• repr ..... ttpa Ute U.S. NaY), wjalelt ORI Ute illud, ba~ .. Clapp Mid be did not lDtend aendiq t.be &Dimab to deatb deaplte a meuaae be seat to memben ol Give OUr A.Dlmall Time ID •UV September M1iDI that becaUle ol ftauclal dif. ftculU. lae m1abt be forced to..U tbe .,.._ •'l\O wbomner waldl them" Ill fall' marbt value. , -i>ROFESSIONAL INfERIOR ESIGNERS 0,.. .,,._., Tllrt. & M . l•n. .... ' JZ II HAllOI ILVO. 'COST A MISA '4f'·027~ -------·--·--·--·· .. '·A ·,1 , DAIL V PtLOl NATIQtq /WEATHER Reagan: Figh ting Fault of U.S. 87 nte A.NOCla&ed Praa At rir1t. Ronald Re.can want eel to conler with h1a advtffn befort' rommeotm1 on the fi1ht ln1 between Iran and l nq Later. he qrffd Jlmmy Ca.r1er r bad no cholce but to keep America neutral A.nd before I.he day wu out. he 11ald the pn"S1 dent wu "lar1ely to blamt' .. Without puttln1 it dirt'c:lly, the Republican nominee strongly · Implied on Wednesday that ht' 11 would prefer at least tht' option of uslf\i military force in the crisis. But a weakened defense. • be c harge d . h as tied tht' administration ·s hands THE ADM I NISTRATION ' vehemently d1 li al(reed w1lh Reagan's ever s ha rper im · putation of ll S culpability In the crisis "It '11 t.•asy to he<'tor about that problem," derlared • Vi ce Pr e~1 df'nl Walter F • Mondale In Rhode Island He '• challen,ced Reaaian . mstead, to . Not 0 11 Profits <'Ome up W1lh a &0lullon "I won t rail him • w11r monatr, said Mond alr. In 1a 1aunhn(l ref('n-nce lo the dom1 nant campaiten rhetoric of re t'ent day11 "I want the Amenun ~pit' to draw wh8lt'Vt•r run cluiuon.,, they ...,111 ' Rugan, campa1f(TI1n.i in Ttx as and Colorado, 1nit1ally bel(led off qu~llon~ aoout the M1de~Jft He had refused lntc llttcf:ln{' .. br ie fing s rr om th e administration, and sMd ht! needed to consult his adv1sera Hours later, he complained tha t the president "probably IS doing all that con be done now becfuse of our own defense posture. "He has a llowed the defensive capability of the United-States to become so weakened that it's like when he said that we·would use force with regard to the Pe rsian Gulf and two weeks later bad to admit we don't have tht• lo1ce." Reagan bltd A•k••cl l'IJH.'r1f1 n 11l y 1f he would use fon•c it that were po11111blc , Rc a11un replied, "' don 'l ltnow that anyone could :my that I'm not asking lo send f11r1·e to anyplace unless it is a bsolutcly necessary.'· But R~agun. l•ter in the day. took his complaint one step further when he declared out- ii.1de a clothing plant in El Paso, TcxllS, that "What is happening ID I ruq and I ran 1s the conae- <a u c n c~ or polici es this adm1rustralion has followed dur· 1ng the last 3 ~ )ears -a vacillating foreign policy and a weakened defense capa bility are largely to blame. ·'The situation is both serious and unfortuate. not only because the American hostages are endangered but also because it could spread into a generalized war and because it threatens the world's oil supplies." R eaga n asse rt e d also A laska ResiJenU Share Tax Refund .. J UNEAU. Alaska <AP> -The slate of Alaska, overruled in its first attempt to share oil profits with its residents. is mailing out $185 million in tax refunds authorized by a new law that also repeals the stale income tax. Gov. Jay Hammond signed the bill Wednesday, just hours after the state Legislature met ln special session to pass the measure. which replaced a similar law struck down by the state Supreme Court a few weeks ago. While the first version would have abolished the income tax . for residents who bad filed re· turns for three years, the new law eliminates the tax for every- .one . It also refunds 1979 and i980 income tax payments, with , ,the average 1979 refund estimat- ed at S2ll. ,, Hammond said be was sorry that court action had delayed re· funding some of the billioos of dollars in oil money -profits from exploration of the rich oilfields in the Prudhoe Bay - that have been glutting the state treasury. "AFTER ALL, the oil wealth belongs lo the citizens of the state, not to the government," Hammond said. State Revenue Commissioner Tom Williams said 90,000 re· funds would be in the mail by ·Friday. An additional 40,000 ·were being processed. "We'll work all evening. and past midnight to get them out." he said. "It's just going to mat- ter bow good your mail carrier is... . Acting on a complaint by an Anchorage couple who arrived in the state in 1978, the state ~ Supreme Court said the first law ~ was unconstitutional because it discriminated against staort- term residents and newcomers. ~ The law called for a taxpayer's • liability to be reduced by one- -i third for each year he filed a tax ~ return. That meant three-year ~ filers would be exempt from • ~ paying any tax. .; The court decision prompted ~ Hammond to order the • Legislature into a special ~ session to come up with a new . ,.. - lax relief plan. The income tax had been on the books for 31 years. Only one of the state's 60 lawmakers voted against tax re- peal -the lame-duck president of the Senate. Republican Clem Ti Ilion. "I DO NOT AP PROVE of out- right appeal." he said. ''That 's the tu I resent the least. . . If I have a bad year. I don't have to pay as much." The special session adjourned s hortly after the tax-r epeal measure was adopted, signaling the death of another share-the- w ea lth plan passed by the Senate. but opposed by House lawmakers. The plan called for the state to make a one-time-only cash pay- ment of $500 to every Alaskan over age 18. A total of $150 million wouJd have been dis· tributed. Expu&ion O tte? .,..,,..,._ A House ethics committee has voted 1().2 to recommend expulsion of Rep. Michael Myers, convicted of accept- i o g bribe in Abscam scandal. Myers, testifying Wednesday before the vote. admitted taking "easy money" but insisted he broke no law. 'Johnny' Outhouse LalVsuit Disn1issed DETROIT (AP) -A Mich.igan business man was free to rent "Here's Johnny" portable toilets when a judge dismissed a $1.1-million trademark infringement lawsuit flied by entertainer Johnny Carson. The host of NBC's "Tonight Show" contended Earl Braxton ridiculed him by associating the one-seater with Carson's famous television introduction. "The court is of the belief that defendant's use of the trademark 'Here's Johnny Portable Toilets' does not present a likelihood of confusion, mistake or deception," U.S. District Judge Julian Cook said Wednesday. The suit said tbe toilets might be confused with ~lher pro- ducts endorsed by Carson -men's clothing and cologne and Here's Johnny restaurants. In a depQSition, Canon testified that bis son and the "Tonight Show" producer asked him whether he had expanded into the portable commode business. Cook discounted people would confuse Carson's products with Braxton's toilets. "The court concludes that 'Here's Johnny' is not a strong trademark and therefore it is not entitled to a broad scope of protection which would preclude its use on completely unrelated non-competitive products ." Braxton's wife Joanne, 38, said the couple operates another portable toilet business under the Porta-John trade name. They lease about 4,500 portable toilets in 12 s tates earning $3.5 million annually. Tom MupbiDe la searcblag for Ute Ricky-Tld:y of Pol.ltlca. Illa Jaat Couttag colamn m•y resame sometime. • ~ Storms Hit East Coast. N. Carolina Whipped by Rain, Tornado c a111 .... 1. Mir,........, .......... M-.. frld.ty II 'IOU 00 "Of ..... your -by & 30 I>"' CAii t>e!ore 1 ""' •l>O yo.Jt~wo!I O.cleh- S.•u•d•Y -5"n61y II 'IOU 00 nOI re<:o•v• O(Ool( tooY DY t • "' ~ oeior" , ' •"' •"" 'flN' cocir ''"" o. CMt1v•t-' , .. .............. Aft811te ..... _.. .... ....... ...,,.¥11 .. ........ ~s.c. ~w.va, ~ CNc ... CIMl...a ~ Oeltft. ..... ..,,,_ oa..- Dltf'91t ...... H-ulu '° ,. • 01 HCIUllClll '2 Ill .01 llldlaNpoll• 7S S1 Jac:ll-llle •1 ., ICan»•CllY 10 ., ,CM LnV..-•s '5 Little Rodi ,. ., .... l ........ as M lOUISWll .. ,, ,, Mam,i.k .. ,. • 22 Miami ., " Mii•-M " MlllMapolll"St, P.ul .. 17 • 01 Naltlwlll• n ., ·" NewOtl-.., " .os .... .,-10 S1 Olll-Cl!y .. .. s.r1-..,,., S..rt: ""'"'• ............... ,,,... lmum M ltflt In IHI, period hi te<O!Mtt. 1 2 12 I 2 12 , J u 2 J 11 that the current fighting could not have happened "lf our gov- ernment had not helped in the fall of the shah <of Iran). And there Ls no eAcuse for our help· ing to pull the rug out from un- der that government," he said. President Carter essentially stayed out of the political ex- changes over the crisis on Wednesday. But he sought to as- sure the nation that world oil supplies should not be seriously affected by the Iran-Iraq fight· ing. so long as the Persian Gulf remains open to shipping. The president said the United States is consulting with other nations on ways to ensure that the strategic Strait of Hormuz is not closed. Should that occur, he said, it would indeed pose "a serious threat·' to the global energy balance. "FREEDOM OF navigation in the Persian Gulf is imperative," Carter declared. The president also repealed his stand that "the United States is in no way in· volved in this dispute and ... there should be absolutely no in· tervention by any other nation." That's /tlg K i d M e anwbile, independent challenger John B. Anderson said in New Yo rk City on Wednesday that both Reagan and Carter favor policies that in- advertently heighten the risk of a conflagration between the United States and the Soviet Union. He called their positions an "alliance of folly ... Mother giraffe Sandra takes hold of newborn daughter Shannon at Chicago's Brookfield Zoo Wednesday, pulling c urious infant away from photographer. The 5-foot , 158-pound African giraffe was born late Monday. . . Woman's 110 Pets Freed NEW YORK (AP> -In what the Health Department called "the largest haul on record." 107 dogs, two cats and one squirrel monkey were removed from a Staten Island home that had been the source of neighborhood complaints for months. officials said. Eric Piasa, law enforcement direct.or for the American Socie- ty for the Prevention of Cruelly to Animals, said it took five vans eight hours to remove all the animals to the ASPCA 's Brooklyn shelter. The animals were seized Tues- day at the home of 70-year-old Mary Quinn of Todt Hill Authorities said neighbors had complained about the noise and stench for months. "They're taking away my dogs," the woman cried as an ASPCA team began to remove the dirty but apparently well-fed animals -most of them tan. ap- parently inbred mutts. "We expected lo find a large number of animals, but nothing like this." said a spokesman for the Health Department. which s en t representatives to the scene. "They kept bearing barking, and every door they opened they found 15 or 20 more." Piasa said of officers who entered the home with a search warrant. Piasa said sanitary condillons in tbe house were "deplorable," with a "staggeri ng roach population," but that Mrs. Quinn was allowed to remain with two of her older dogs -a poodle and a mutt. He s a id the city Human Resources Administration sent a case worker to Mrs. Quinn on Wednesday to see if "the city can be of assistance to her.'' "Unfortunately, this is not unique." he said. "We confront these situations contlnuoualy, where people with humane in· tentiom allow a situation to get completelyoutof band." The agency appealed to the public to adopt the animals from its already overcrowded shelter, saying the pets needed "a lot of care and love." KNOW FOOTBALL LIKE A PRO With "Profile", Saturdays in the Daily Pilot Vou can keep up w11h the pros this football season by reading "ProF1le", an in-depth report oo professional football appeanng each Saturday 1n the Daily Pilot. "ProFile" will feature timely pictures and Information to keep you current on events happening in the National and American Football Conferences. Enjoy your television football viewing w ith "Profile", your weekly armchair guide to all the hard·hittlng act ion as 28 teams vie for a berth in Super Bowl XV . Regular attractions in "Pro File" w ill Include: e Weekly scouting reports on the weekend and Monday night football games. e Probable starting lineups for those games . e Detailed statistics on both tootl:!,atl conferences, updated weekly . 0 Summaries of the previous week's games. 0 Professional odds on current games. 0 Interesting feature stories, photos. puzzles and quizzes. Don't miss this special chance to st ay up with the pros during the 1980·81 football season. Watch for "ProFlte." Scor e w ith 642-4321 DAILY PILOT To wbl<rlbe, <•116'2~1. C>t Wnd yCIUf' name, acldfWUand pl!One numtler with M lo O.lly PllOt Clr<UIMlon °"''· llO w. e.y SI., Costa Mn.I, CA~ !. · CALIFORNIA ~ 'Canal' Reaches Ballot? SAORAMENTO tAPl Oppo- ntnta ol t.he P"ripheral Canal uy they are t ubmiuin, more than twil'e thf! number o f 1t1nallln't needed to qualtfy a referendum for tht' ballot. The Coalition To Stop the Pertpberal Canal said W~· day It would submit more than 750,000 slrnaturt'lt H at lust :Mt, l 19 ~ Nir\St4.!rt'd voters, lbe referendum wUI ht-on the ballot al the 1982 primary , ur any earlier specutl t'lection (°#Mfn-~fttdlNI LOS ANGELES <AP l A private study 1s being conducted to see whether a SOO·acre area nut to the USC campus can be turned into a ma1or <'ommercial· [ __ sr._AT_E __..) industrial center to attract jobs and people. The study should be complete<i next month Pushing for the ambitious project is Ted Watkins. a leader of the Watts Labor Community Action Committee, who said he would like to see lbe area turned into ·another "Westwood." the community near UCLA. Otit-f to Ret i rP SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Board chairman Harold J . Haynes of Standard Oil Co. of California says he plans to retire next May alter 34 years with the company and seven years in the top post. George M. Keller. 56, was chosen at the Soc al 's board meeting Wednesday to succeed Haynes, who will be 55 next week. Kell e r . now vi c e . chairman or the board. joined Standard Oil in 1948. Criaee Fund Set LOS ANGELES (AP) -A prot"ram offering cash rewards to help fight crime on city buses was announced by Southern California Rapid Transit Dis- trict officials. The reward system r evealed Wednesday i s part of a statewide "We TIP" program offering up to $500 to informants who help convict those involved in RTD-related crimes. This is the latest attempt by the RTD to combat r ising violence on buses. According lo latest statistics. vandalism costs an es timated SJ million an- nuaJJy. Honored f)g Pee1-s Fred Astaire poses with the ''Pied P iper" award as wife. Robin, smiles a pproval. The American Society of Composers. Authors and Publishe rs honored the 81 -year· old entertainer with its highest honor in a ceremOQ.Y Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Astaire has been an ASCAP member for 30 years by virtue of his songwrit ing. Meteor Flashes Over Three States By The A~iated Presa Authorities say a large meteor sailed over Arizona, New Mex· ico and California. where it may have landed. And a meteorite popuJarly known as the "Old Woman Meteorite" returned home to California on Wednesday after 18 months of study by scientists at the Smithsonian Institution. Police in several wes tern cities said people reported seeing a falling glow in the s ky south-southwest of Tucson about 8:30 p.m . Wednesday. PIMA COUNTY SHERIFF'S deputies went to one area west of Tucson, looting for a possible downed airplane, while a county Department of Public Safety helicopter hovered above, flnding nothing. , "It defmitely was a meteor," said Lanny McCaslin, team supervisor of lbe Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Control Tower. "We saw it from up here. We must have bad 150 calls about it. A lot of people thought it was a plane crashing, but that's impossible. You can't see a plane crashing in Tucson from Phoenix or New Mexico.·· He said a Federal Aviation Administration official in Los Angeles toJd him that the meteor landed in California. "but that be didn't know where. They've bad a lot or reports from all around California." THE NATIONAL WEATBEll Service in Phoenix was one of the few places to miss the show. "We didn't see it," a spokesman ,said. · Old Woman Meteorite, siad to be the largest ever found in the United Slates or Canada, now is 15 percent lighter because Bla%e Contalnt-d Smithsonian scientists sliced away 942 pounds of its 6,070-pound bull for research. SOLEDAD CAP) -An arson Composed mainly of nickel and iron. the rock bas been mount- fire that spread over 2,000 acres ed and was scheduled to go on ex.b.ibillon Saturday at the Bureau of of brush near Pinnacles Land Management's station in Barstow. National Monumeut in Monterey County has been contained, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY had sought a court injunction to the California Department of prevent the Smithsonian from cutting into the meteorite. County Forestry says. officials argued that slicing it would mutilate a rare specimen The fire , which broke out from space. Tuesday afternoon, was con· Although a federal judge turned down the motion. Smi~.onian tained late Wednesday and was scientists agreed to cut away less tha n they had onginally expected to be controlled this planned. morning, a forestry spokesman The meteorite was discovered by three pros pectors in the Old said. No injuries were reported. Woman Mountains near Twentynine Palms in 1976. ~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ JOIN TD IUl:PUBUC I ' ~ubllc ~=! 19772 MllMrthur UMi.} lmneCA92715 17J4) 8SH>991 I uam.d~ BW PROUDLY ANNOUNCE THE RE-OPENING OF OUR HAJRWORKS ALON Come meet our talenietl new staff ol srylisis a1 BW Newport Beach. Let them pamper you with personalized service and guidance in all phases of hair design. custom hair color, predictable perms :mcl comple te.: makeup. For an appointmt!nl, phone 714-759·121 I, eXl. 260. I lalrwo rks Safon, Newport Dcach B~ llOCK) WI lS~ I ~b NEWPORT BEACH NEWPORT BEACH 83 FaShlon lslino 759-1211, Mon·Thurs·Frl 10·9. fues ·WeO·Sat to 6. Sun 12·5 ... ~.~25.1980 Actors Pact Reached? Tentative Settlement Reported Today H OLL YWOO D CAP ) - Ne5'otlators for s trikin5' t e levis ion and film actors reached a tentative contract agreement with producers early today. a union spokeswoman said. ff ratified . the agreement would end the strike by some 67 ,000 actors that began July 21 and which has virtually shut down the indu.st.ry and delayed th e start o r t he new fall television season. The tentative agreement on a three-year contract came early this morning after a bargaining session of nearly 19 hours, s aid Sc r ee n A c tors Guild spokeswoman Kim Fellner. ''ATS A.M. <PDT) a tentative agreement was reached between the actors and the producers and . ··that followed a final 18~-bour bargaining session," said the producers' s pokes man Phil Myers. ''The SAG a nd AFTRA (Ame rican Fe d e ration or Television Radio Artists) boards will meet starting this weekend to approve it," be said. "After that, the re will be a ratification process by both of those groups. And each board will decide when the actors can go back to work pendin~ r atification. San Onofre To Reinforce Heat Sleeves How's th.is for a job offer ? Receive $500 fort wo days work, experience not necessary. It was enough to prompt 400 job seekers to fill out applications for 100 jobs at the San Onofre nuclear generating station. "We 've qu i t t'aking applications , .. a Southern California Edison Co. spokesman said Wednesday. After three days of training - during whi c h the c hosen applicants will receive $100 per day -they will spend two days installing metal sleeves inside 7 ,SOO small beat exchange tubes on lbree generators in Unit One at the San Onofre plant. Work is limited to two days because that's the maximum allowed for any possible radiation exposure. The tubes have sediment buildup and corrosion on their interiors, and the sleeves will reinforce the old tubes. The Edison spokesman s aid no firm date has been set by the nuclear Regulatory Commission for the work. but the utility hopes to get under way within a few weeks. Train Delayed OAKLAND CAP ) -An "electrical overload" caused a Bay Area Rapid Transit train filled with commuters to sit for about seven minutes inside an approach to the trans-bay tube, a BART spokesman said. The 10. car train was moved back toward the Oakland West station whe re passenge r s were un· loaded. pending ratification. "So in terms of when the pro- ducens go back into production, we would have to wait and see what their decision is." However, Ms. Fellner said lbe unions could send the actors back to work pending ratification. ... IT'U. TAKE TWO a nd a halt or three weeks for the whole ratification process," she said, since the actors would vote on the pact by mail. The contract includes a 15 per- cent increase in m inimum salaries for the first 18 months, and IS percent for the second 18 months, for a compounded in· crease of 32.25 percent over the life of lbe contract. Myers s aid. Actors cu rrently earn a minimum o( $23S a day or $785 a week. Fellner s aid the tentative agreement also included in- creased pension and welCare b e nefits, a s tro n g non - discrimination program, im· '-Long Walkout' proved working conditions for minon and an overhaul of won- ing s~hedules. NEGOTIATIONS RAD pro· greased more rapidly since actors and producen •lreed a week ago on a complex formula that would give actors a share ol the lucrative home video market. That issue had been a major stumbling block in negotiations. Work would resume almo.t immediately after the strike on new prime-time series for the ABC, CB.5 and NBC television n e tworks . But network s pokesmen have said it would take at least three to four weeks before any new half-hour episodes could be broadcast and six to eight weeks before any hour-long show could go on the air . The strike has virtually balled the new fall t.elevision seUOD1 and forced several thousand non-performing craftsmen and others dependent on the movie· TV industry out or work. PSA Pilobl' Strike Grounds 200 Flighl,s SAN DIEGO (AP) A pilots' strike shut down Pacific Southwest Airlines today. and other airlines were besieged by the San Diego-based carrier 's stranded passengers. Picket lines were set up at airports in Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, and reservation clerks said telephone lines were jammed. The 200 flights nown daily by PSA to and from those cities a.a weU as PhoeniJl, Ariz., and Mexico were canceled. "We're ready for a long walkout," s aid a spokesman in San Diego for the 500 striking pilots and flight engineers. The strike, the first in PSA's 31-year history. came oa the second anniversary of the mid-air collision between a PSA Boeint 727 jetliner and a light plane over San Diego that killed 144 people. TBE WALKOUT BEGAN at 12 :01 a.m., said PSA spokesman Skip Myers, after 11 months of negotiating failed to produce a new agreement. "I doo't see a q uick settlement in sight when we are IO far apart oo everything," Mye.rs said UUa moruin1. He said PSA will honor ita charter fii1bt rese"atiom wttb management personnel, but will not attempt to operate com-mercial Oigbts. "Other airlines have agreed to accept our tickets," Myen s aid. "Many are adding a number of flights to pick up the slack." PSA is the nation's 13th largest carrier based on paHencer volume. The walkout idled a 28-jet fleet and 3, 700 airline employees besides the pilots and Oigbt engineers. A TOTAL OF 11 CITIES and 25,000 daily passe.ngen are affect. ed by the strike. Jn addition to carrying a majority of airlines' commuter Oighta with.in CaliJomia, PSA bas Oigbts to Nevada aad Arizona. Talks broke down Wednesday night when the airline rejected a reduced pay demand by the Southwest Flight Crew Association, wb.icb represents PSA pilots. "There is virtually no hope that 1 can see for any kind of settle- ment now," said Bryan Conn, a senior captain who beada the U · sociatioo. AN AW.JNE SPO&£SllAN said two demanda by the pilota were ''totally unacceptable ." Those were for pay ol almost $100,000 annually for senior pilots Oying Boein1 7271 and l)C.f.tQa and for fewer working hours. The pilots have demandefi a 3S percent pay raiae over two years while PSA offered a 29 percent raise. At present, salaries range from about $10,000 annually as a start for second officers to $70,000 for senior pilots. The pilots' previous contract expired lut December. A federally mandated 30-day "cqoling off" period ends today. ' ttl--- . I -......J..-' 1/2 Off-For a limited time. Designer knit sport shirts. Save 50% on our most prestigious designer labels. Enjoy the comfort and good looks of 100% cotton knit. Notice the contem· porary detailing . At this \ \ \ \ price why not buy more than one. Navy. cream, brown, white. tan. \ ' \ S·M·L·Xl. Reg. 40.00 19.90 silverwoods 41 M9HION Ill.ANO, .... OlllT •IACM .__ ......... P' • Rebert N WeedtPubllsher ThomH Kffvil/Editor · Orange Coast Daily Piiot £ditorial PDfl.e ---------------------------------------------------- • 11/f' Barbara K reiblch/Edltorial P~ Editor Huntington BeaC'h city offklala 1et edn al any roention of the federal JOb trainlnl pro1ram UJuaJly rt> f•rred to u Ct.."'TA. 1 And well they should : The <"ity was rocked t>arly Uua year by II •candal c.'On <f mlq the Western lnsUtut• of CaJ'ffn, lnr a non pruru corporation establish~ to admlnlater Hunliniton ~.c·h·11 portion of the Comprehenah•e Employ mfnt and TrainlnK .\Ct (CETA> JOb pro1ram 11\e t'Orporation was dUmantl~ 1n•r r hartct"t' c1f m111 mana.iement, t•xtravagan<'t-C'onns('t of 1ntert•~t nntl :ln improper loan The city has ht>en tnppm~ hghll> m unc1 thf" I"""'' e ver sanet> Voc11tmnal a nd training program ~t'rt> 1ume"<l11\ •'I lo the Coa s t Co mmunity Collea" tl1st11l'I 1\n<l administration of pubhc s.-rv1<'e s empltH rt•!\ \\or kin~ 111 the city government was h andt>el ttl Oran~r ''ount' of fi~ials Tht! city l"Ontmut.'d to w Obh 1t ~ hand" h\ tt'l't•nth withdrawing from the Manpower Commas um. th<' •'llnl\ aaency that dispenses ft"deral dollars to part1c1vanl"' The city shouldn't be blamed. perha a,s . fnr "nntm~ to get as far away from the problem H pot'l'1hl«> But withdrawing from tht' Manpowf'r l'o mm1.i,1on <'I' pears to be hast y and 1mpra<'l•t•al The action wa!' t akt>n wHhout re~ard l\l t hr r1m<oP quences to the comm1s s1<'n wh1 r h . as 1t h.1rn~ 1lll\ ~ 111 "U' !er no adverse c(f eC'ts What th<' latt-st de<'t!ll1on reall\' mt-ans . 1i; that Hunt mgton Bf>ach has ll''."" up 1L-s vote on ho" C1':TA n\ll1H'' can be used The ('tty s hould ha,·e usf'd 1l~ 1nflu<'IH'<' tn channel the money into important W!f)s But now the i:1t~ "'It haH nothin~ to sav ~hout 11 Parade Merits Support A traditional Hallo~·een parade almo:i;t pas ed Fountain Valley by recently whe n the Cit y Council expressed r eluc tance about s ubs1diung th~ Lions Club-sponsored event. Fountain Valley officials calculated that police. maintenance and other services required by the annual parade and carnival would set the city back about $6,000. After Proposition 13, new recreation fees we re c harged to make cit y-s ponsored sports and arts programs pay for themselves. Also, city contributions to local service club projects were trimmed. With this back-to-basics philosophy in mind. several Fountain Valley counc il members had trouble deciding whether the c lub-sponsored Halloween parade a nd carnival merited a $6,000 sub5idy. Eventually. when the Lions Club threatened lo cancel all Halloween activities if the council did not provide s upport for .both a parade and a carnival. the COWlC'il unanimously approved the sub5idy. ;, That approval came with an appropriate stipulation ttylt the Lions must assemble some volunteers to help With maintenance and other chores to reduce the city 's outlay. The council s hould not feel guilty about givmg local residents a little something beyond street s weeping and basic police and fire proteclJon Ideally. city officials should help roster a sense of community among their constitue nts. And fe w things bring together young and old residents and contribute to hometown pride like a colorful holiday parade. A Beneficial Tax A local tax to m aintain a proposed t8-acre park may be the vehicle to provide residents with a large recrea- tional area that could enhance the quality of their lives and surroundings. The pro posed Langenbeck Park, near Garfield Avenue and Magnolia Street, bas been on the drawing board for more lh'n five years. Many local residents have organized an~1peatedly demanded that the large parcel be developed iJtto the proposed recreational area 4 But state legislation in the past few years, including Proposition t3, has cul sources of revenue for the city. leaving many of the proposed parks with no means of maintenance. The Community Services Commission has recom- mended creating a park assessment district that would tax residents based on the benefit they would receive from the proposed park. 1bose living closer to the park would be taxed more than tho6e living on the outskirts of the two-mile assess- ment district. At least 50 residents living near the proposed park in- dicated at a recent public hearing that they would con- sider a $10 monthly lax to maintain the proposed park a reasonable fee. The city currently provides maintenance for many four-acre neighborhood parks. But if local residents agree that a large, 18-acre recreational area is worth their paying a special lax, Langenbeck Park finally may get out of the planning staees and into the planting stages. • Opm1ons expressed 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 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O B<lll.1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd I Mate Ratings B1L•. BOYD Item No. 7338 in our Love I aad War man's file ia the re- lkar Gloornv ... Gus With all the suJta and fines acalaat private lnduatry for pollutlnc the air who's tollll to sue and fine the connuneat for forclq ·c1ncer -causin1 eatal,Uc converten oa .our can? port on a survey. More than 2,000 men were uked what they comidered important in a matrimonial mate. The quality that 1ot the hiCbest ratlnc waa listed u .. that the woman love him" -81 per- cent. Second, "• sense of humor" -'7 percent. Third, "inteWceMe .. -&& percent. Fourth, "self-confidence" - 5e perunt. And ftftb, .. nice lee•'' -40 pe~t. Find it noteworthy that • 'aelf. confidence" beat out "nice lees." P'ar back ln tbe pack were .. pntty face" at II per- cent and "blc bultllne" at 11 percent. That the world's moat famous Siamete twtu were named Enc and Cbaq la widelJ tnowa. 1.-a well ... ported '8 \be fact that Enc meam left and Cbana meam _ _.,,~riP.:r ..! ID ftai. • . Jat'k Andt-rtton Mideast Nuke Policy Prepared WA S UIN(i'fON In •n om lnoua ()t.velol)mtint, Prf'J1ldt•11t t•.1ct f'r h u1 lu uc-d 1tl'c rct dlr.-dlve.i. lo thr l't•ntQ&on to ~lr .. p•r•· th~ 111,tlon of., uslnl( nuf'ltrnr w••i.pon& in lhfl vt1laUIC! M Idelle• 1':11111 T h1•1 •• tuevt> be•t•O hlnlll of such 1t 1~1111\lblJllY 1n th\· va11l ('•rtt>r'~ •I all' of tht• uo 11111 11d d rc-:.11 lu111 Ju11u11rv rm t•a.omplt• 11t-r l11ro'tl that '1111 ult1•mpt h y Jll ) 1hlt11 1dl.' for c 1 11 jl 11 1n 1•11ntrnl 11r th•• l't•I b ldO (iulf will b<• r1• 1u• rdt>cl llli BJ\ W:11>ault uo th•• vital 1111t•resl.s of tht• lJnitNI States 11end I Wiii ht• n .•1J(>llt><I by WU' uf uny m t-1Ut.'I lit't't'~sary " /\ n d H n b l' r t K o m e r • unc k r11t•1·r('lury of c1f'fense for p1lllc•y. puhh<'ly stutcJ that if 1·onvt>nl1onal tlt•tcrn•nls in the Middle 1i:m1t failed , the USC or nuc·l<'ar wc•1111011s would be 1·11n 11 1dt•rt>tl llut lo set'ret 1h t'N'l 1 vc11, l hf' president has 11pl'lll"<i out tht> nudear option l'lt>arly and expli <'illy IN PRK"IDt:NTIAI. Decision M1•morandum No SI, Carter outlined a new U.S nuclear l'IQhry for the Middle East. But thns memo was ignored in the fur o r ove r Presid e nt ia l 1>1ret't1ve 59. which c han~ed Mailbox ti S mlMl h• tarl(c~ In lhe Soviet l1r1lo11 The contents of POM No. 51 and rt'lulcd do c um e nts . includh11C 41 directive to the ~lr1tteJ(IC Air Command from Ot-fcnSl' Sec re tary flarold Hro wn . are d e11ll(n ed lo "11lgnlricaolly dograde Soviet capeblUUes lo prt>J~ct military r1ow t'r 1n th e M i ddl e l':n~l Persian Gulf region for a 1wr1od nf al lca11l 30 days " To iH'compl1s h this, the p r 1• R I rl <' n t o r d 1• r t• d l h c formulation of various military options, my assoC"1ult• Oa lc: Van All a hu!\ lt>arncd T hr most ~•t:rHflt'ant of these was tht> "limited strategic option" for uu· by the commander of lhP Rapid DeploymNll 1-'orn'. <it·n f' X. Kelley SUBJECT TO l hc us ual pres1dent1 al aulhor1zat1on for use of any nurlear wea()(>ns . this option involves 19 nuC"l car bombs earned by fl 52 bombers The aim is to keep S<wirt for<'es from invadinJ( Iran, and the weapons includ£' both B 57 bomhs. w1lh an CX Jllt)SIV{' J)OWf'r about equal tu the llin•shima bomb. and the more 1x1w1·rful R 6 I v a r i a b I c• y 1 1• I d ther.Jllonuclcar hombs Sc5\Jrces s aid 'artt·r ordered his planne r s to formu l ate several add1t1onal limite d strategic options, as well a.'\ a mor e far-reaching "::.clecl1 ve attack option" that would target Russian facilities near Iran, including military bases and airfields irulide the Soviet Union. Military eltpcrts noted that with a 8 -S2 force -the SAC's 57th Air Division at Minot Air Force Base, N.D. already earmarked for Middle East deployment, the bombers would he the most likely vehicle for nuclear weapons, rather than long range m issiles in silos in the United States, The bomben arc far more flexible, one source pointed out, adding , "If we screw around with our ICBMs, you don't know what the response would be." "Flexible" does nol mean "reasonable," howeve r, in the view of some 1ns1ders. They contend that the conce pt or limite d nu c le ar warfare i:onfined lo the Middle East is a <'hild's dream that could become u nightmare for the whole world. "IF WE INITIATE tactical nu clear warfare in that area, we are opening a Pandora's boll," said Qne Pentagon source who is alarmed al the idea or preparing strategic options for the Middle Ea st , ''The Soviet s could respond with tactical nuclear weapons against our warships in the Persian Gulf area, and who knows where it would go from there?" F ootnote A White House spokesman refused to confirm or deny the contents of PDM No. 51, or to discuss U.S. nuclear policy with respect to the Middle East JUl,..Y'S LATEST : Our political odds man is out with bis latest pick -and it's Ronald Reagan. Unimpressed by the latest polls, Jimmy the Greek still mak es Reagan a 2-and-one-half-to-l favorite over Jimmy Carter to win in November. Jimmy has zeroed in on the states with many electoral votes, and here's how he sees Reagan winning: New York (41 ) -Carter carried in 1976, but the unhappy Jewish voters -given John Anderson as a Liberal Party alternative -will tip the scales for Reagan. New Jersey ( 17 ) -Ford carried last time. It's close, but Reagan has the edge. Pennsylvania (27) Carter and Reagan are even right now, but if Reagan can nail enough of the ethnic vote, he's got it. Florida (17 ) -Carter won here four years ago, but resentment over his handling or the Cuban and Haitian refugee problem in heavily populated Dade and Broward Counties may give the state to Reagan. Mit'higan (21) -Gerald Ford took the state with 54 percent of the vote. Reagan's not as strong as the native son was, but the depression in the auto industry s hould work to Reagan's advantage. Ohio (25) Carter won by an eyelash 15,000 votes -in 1976. But unemployment in the steel, glass and rubber industries helps Reagan, and the state's Conservative Party, which sat it out las t time , is working enthusiastically for Reagan. Illinois (26) Reagan's native·son status and discontent among blue-collar workers put this in the R~ublican column. WATCH ON WASTE : The Pentagon 's philosophy on expenditure of public funds was made stunningly clear the other day. One or my reporters called lo inquire about a contract for 300.000 laminated-plastic reeipe.i cards to be used by bartenders at the Army's officers' clubs and enlisted men's saloons around the world. The bids aren't in yet. but the cos t is expecte d to run somewhere between $5.000 and $10.000 Wh en m y reporter s uggested that perhaps the mihtary pubs could get along - as they have for decades - without offi cial guidelines. the P e ntagon s pokeswoman observed brightly that "even if 11 1s wasting money," printing t he recipe t'ards will "still be pron ding JObs to someone." Is Real Problem an Excess of Freeways? To lhe Editor I'm peeved over pavement payments and I question the heudlimng question you say is the answer lo ruture higl'lway funding proble ms <Toll Roads Answer to llJghway Ills?> Your question is not the solu· lion to ~e problems. bul is rather JU.'ll another hard a nd perh&Pf' unnecessary addition to the lari<cr and more important t•tau util>n wh1C'l1, when solved will an11 wt'r U11• rnust human pro- hf~ff111 Truly. It w<1uld be fooHsh to dl11rt•i<urd lht· fa<'l there will be fulurt· fundinl( problems but r ht'll1·v1· th•· r1·usons for those 11ruhlt·m11 1·1rn lw eliminated IH•f1irt• Uw flll't C..rtalnly. If the t•urrt!nt philogo11hy of freeway c:xpam11on <'Ontinues there will he money 1thorlllges. but, 1t !ICCmll lo ml', and I've lnaveled somcwhut. lhcrt~ exists 1•re11ent- ly plenty of 111w•!m •nt to get the job don.- SUPPOSE INSTEAD or view Ing the lack or money llS the potential problem we view the problem as an e "cess of freeways. Then, after holding this perspective for awhile many so-called future highway fundina problems disappear. You may say cessation of highway construction would bring on other problems, whJch may be true, but maybe lhoH other problems would be lea costly and complicated to solve. Maybe your headllninc quesUon should be "Hi1hway Illa; Should We Toll Over More Roada?'' MICHAEL HENDRIE Polled To the Editor: I reemtly reeelvtd I loq clil· lance phone call from Cambridee -Uldne me lf I would ....... quaUom nllua, to c1adldate1 Carter, Reqan and ADdenon for a poWqoraantuUoe. A"-' they aatlafted my curiosl· t-y that tt WU not ~··· Humcw or U1 kind ol IOUcltaUoe • proaeb or ri~, t qreed to ...... ca-e• wit.bout ldlati- lytn1 IQ1Mlt unUl tbe end ol tbe queatkmbal. ' The caller assured me that he was not merely a telephone caller but a "pollster" feeding me pre- determined questions and supply· ing the answers to the general •pool of answers Cro m other pollsters asking the same ques· tions. The line of questioning was ap· parenlly designed to determine the convictions of respondents about the three candidates . in - cluding three or four similar ques- tions to help them determine irthe answers agreed with each other with or without wavering. TH F. ('i\IJ,ER could not assure me tht1t I <'ould receive a copy of the questums with or without my answers until hf' consulted with !40ffi«'<lllC else al lhc other end of lhc line No, 1l wai; finolly de c1dcd, t•opws of questions or un11wers could not be provided. The y sugl(eslcd that Time M agazinc rel(ularly reports the results of variou.'I polls In case I wanted lo JUdl(t' my answers with· others. However. I have no idea why I waft selt'cted as a Laguna Beach resident tat random or by predetermination) whose family e•rninl(s cllt't'fll $25,000 yearly. Finally I "'alited that I would be amona others without knowing whert they lived or anylhln1 elae about them At least I answered strontcly cnoul(h to be judged moderately Ubl-ml Some of the questlon3 madf' mc answer In favor of •II thrtt randidatcs Ukc-do I bflltve In the honesty of ont undldatc abovo tht othen. Another question covc>rt'd lhe priorily of national dtf('nAe, lnfia- tlon and uncmploymt'nl -male· Ina me wondt'lr how many replies and what kind would hesitate or not a1reewilhHeholherl I wu uked If m)' vote would chance lr UMlre we" no debatee or II debates Wt're nol to include all three candldatn. Maybe this wH a ke7 qu..tion but I can acarcely believe that lt ahould aerloualy be 11ked I AR11f\JR WEISSMAN rroet To the Editor; Kbadafy of Lt by 1 could proYe lo e¥91'1body'1 HUlfec- lion tbat bribery had no plaet> U1 his munificence toward Billy Carter All he has to do is loan $220.000 to every gas station operator U1 the State of Georgia. J.W REID \vi Triluate To the Editor Don Wilkes. s peaking about Vietnam veterans 1n a recent article. suggested a parade for Vietnam veterans What a .super idea ! The time has come to absolve our guilt with this blank· blank war and recognize. before 1t is too lat,e, the real heroes of Vietnam ... the veterans. What about proposing a grand parade on a national scale? A pa r ade in ever y major city <'tdebrating Vietnam Veteran's Day? ll 's time we acknowledged this unique warrior, and said thank you! PETE MEADE Clean If Up To the Editor: I think that there should be laW! that make a company that dumps hazardous waste pay to clean it up. It is well known what com- pany created the dangerous situa- tion at BolsaChica. I have also heard that this waste was leaching into the water table for five years. A friend of mine who lives extremely close to the contaminated lots now bas cancer. lsthis whereshegotit? There must be new laws that punish chemical companies that take 20 years off the end of a person's liCe. I wonder how many "man years" a nuclear plant or dump costs the innocent victims. The best way to clear out the Bolsa Chica dump is fast. They should hire four different dump- carting companies and each one start at the four corners and rlDish in two days so that those Hving in the area can get out of town for their health. J .COLLINS Otlf of ~In~ To the Editor: Endorsement of Democrat Mangers in his recently circulat- ed letter by some registered Republicans who are on the city councils in Costa Mesa, Htmt· ington Beach and Westminster displays less credit to him than it does discredit to the en- dorsers. Those who are city council people loudly protest their DOil· partisan roles and yet use the suppoeed credibility of their ol- ficea to support a Democrat partisan claimin1 blm as somehow quasi-Republican. Ho• would Republicans aucb as they know? Actually both parties are total- ly partiaan and both fully com- mitted to estendln1 the ai1e, scope, authority and coats of their own respective levels of 1overnment -and all In cooperation with each other. EVELYN J . SPEIR • Ldt•r• /10fn Mldn'• ore wlcomf. Tlw"""' to~ Jdtn1 to fU fPOC• or •U~ U~I ii , • ..,...,.. wttn• of -_,. or .... '°"' ~ gfon flNI~. AU i.ttna tnd a. c'* .._..,. Oftd ~ odlha but ftOmnmaw bt~ld °" reqw•I •f ••lf'dnt NOaOlt ti oppo,.,u, Poetrw dlno« bcf*btillwd. • '-~~-----------~---~--· MORE OPINION OM. y PILOT Af1 And Rooney ..... ~ .. Endorsements That Backfire la lbere anything wors~ than havlq someone you don't hke on your aide! I reme mber that as • kid. w hen we we re choosanar up teama, I always ~ l wa.~'t on the same aide with Billy C r owd er p.n.1wo after he wa.s conviclc.•d of lry1n1t lo k1U • man All in all ht> just doe1m 't sMm likt' Rugan's kind of a guy, and whllt' tt 's a lways hard lo hate somf'Of'le who llkes you, Ru1an probably ~Id have been JWit as happy 1f Clcavt"r had decided to ~o with Carte r 1111 a in this Yf'tlr Amendment wer .. troublesome tn him, he felt Anderson came 1'1011eat lo r .. fl ectinl( hts own views PLAINS, Ga. Btlly Carter , currenU y under conaressional 11crutlny over his Involvement wilh l.he government of Ubya, satd today that he planned to vote for Ron1tld Reagan in November. "'Jimmy's still my brolher and I love him," Billy s aid, "but I think Reagan will be belt.er for the oil business." The only real kiss of death for an y candid ate would be a n announcement from Tehran that he bad t he backing of the Ayatollah Khomeini. J \ .._ _______________________________________________ .. Now , ever y onc e i n a while l'm at a party a nd I make some rem ark just to kee p t he conversation 1oin1 . First tbin1 I know some guy I've T hi sort of thmg hapJ>eM In ~\11•ry elecLLon year. of course, a nd I supl>()6e Lhere'll be more ol tt I was Lry1ng to thank of aome nt>ws st ories the c and•d•l es would least like to read about people who decided to support t ht>m Imagine how they 'd feel 1f tht'y t'\'t>r read anything lake the~l' ........................................................................................................... · Sydn~y H a rris a lways disliked s~ak~ up and says, "Boy, I couldn't agree with you more. Yo u 're absolutely r i1ht ." It Can Take Years to Acquire a Face I c rawl ba('k into the woodwor.k and wonder where I went wrong with that thought l just had Ronald Reagan must have had the same reeling the other day when he r ead the following news item about a renow Californian SAN FRANCISCO Timothy Le a ry , f o rm e r H a r va r d profe sor who popularized the use of LSD a m ong co llege students m the 1960s, said today that he hopes Jimmy Carter wi ll be re elected. Leary swd that whale be didn't have much confidence in Carter himself. he thought he had "CUP ERTINO, Cal. (UPI) surrounded himself with good E ld r idge Cleaver , a for mer _..<people. leade r of t he r ad ical Blackr Panther Party, endorsed Ronald ROME, Sept 20 In a special Reagan for President today." bulletin released by the Vatican The story went on to say that this morning, Pope J ohn Paul II Cleaver endorsed Carter in 1976 a n no un c e d th a t h e was but thought he hadn 't lived up to a bandoning his usual neutral e xpe ctat ions , s o h e was stance in regard to the election switching to Reagan. or a n Ame rican president by C leaver w a s one of t he supporting John Anderson. brigb~t and most m ilitant of T h e Pope s aid t hat while the black leaders of the 1960s. Anderson's stand in favor of but be served nine years in a bortion and the Equal Rights The old adage t hat you can't tell a book by its cover may very well be true , but I have neve r held with the corollary that you can't tell a person by his or her looks . After a certain age, you can. As I recall, il was Somerset Maugham who said that after the a g e o f 40 , every man is r e s po n s ib le for his face. Wh a t h e m e a nt , o f course . was t hat while we can't help the looks we were born with Lincoln was acknowledged to be one of the homeliest men in the country - our character and conduct s hape our expression as we ripen into we•we ao• baraallns you'd newer expect to find in a Hardware Sto1•e: SATINHIDE LO-LUSTRE LA TEX ENAMEL For Kitchens. Bathrooms. Woodwork -And Most Interior Surf aces • Enamel Ourab1llty • No Strong "Painty"' Odor • Easy To Apply Brushes and Rollers Clean Up With Soap and Water s1199 WAllHIDE WORKMATE INTRODUCING THE LARGEST WORKMATE THE 35'' CLAMPDOWN A Wort< Center. Giant Vise, a amping Press & Sawhorse All In One . crown HAIDWAll LATEX FLAT WALL PAINT Using the Patented Mlcroflo Process. Stains. Spats and Normal Household Dirt Clean Up Easily. Excellent Covering Power in Most Colors. NOW ONLY 3/8" V ARIABl.E SPEED REVERSING DRILL 17127 51688 R~on 31071.C ... Hwy. \/ ................... ~ c_._ ... ..., OPEN SUNDAYS HAIDWAIE w ............. ...... s...0.1 1114 ........................ .. 673-2100 Prioee Good Thru Sept, 30, 1980 6A2·1I33 maturity. Whal made me think of this was a passage in Otto Friedrich's fascinating book about Berlin in the 1920s, "Before the Deluge." Ar tur Schnabel, the great concert pianist, had come to study wilh Busoni, the legendary composer and pianist , and relates their last meeting, shortly before Busoni died : "WHEN I entered the room, be said , 'Schnabel, you a re acquir- ing a face.' ll impressed me deep- ly a great compliment. It m eant that I had none until then, of course. I was the n forty years old." If we compare the faces of most of our leaders, both public and pr ivate, with those of creative people who have made a signifi· cant and permanent contribution, we can see a very real difference. The shallow people. t he hollow people, no matter how handsome or das hing, equally lack in- dividuality or distinction. Their faces may differ in detail, but they are nearly indistinguishable from one another, li ke so many movie starlets, whatever their age. BUT WHEN you look atthe face of an Einstein, a F rank Lloyd Wri g ht , a Ma rc Ch a gall, a Be rtrand Russell, it is there that one finds genufoe individuality and an imprint of personality that has not been conformed or con· tr ived like a product for public consumption. Whatever their other fauJts of temperament, people who work and live for something beyond themselves acquire a look that is • .. . ... . . "'. .# " '"' -~~ rarely found in the counhouse.; the clubhouse or the conference,· room. ••A MAN FINDS room in the fevi square i.nches of his face for th'e..- traits of all his ancestors," said Emerson, "for the expression ol all his history. a nd his wants.'' Nor ls it merely a matter of ac- cidental genius, or talent. You can find great character in the face ol a peas ant, a priest , a potter of no s pecial renown. What is decisive is the set of values he lives for, the strength and steadfastness he has drawn from bis experiences , the· reaching out for growth rather tha n the mere grasping of power and pleasure and possessions. Schnabel could not really play · Beethoven until he acquired a face. -· '· 14K Gold tacular. Save 1/3· to 1/2 on Otar entire •1,000,000 collection ~.v:, in fine jewelry Chooae ttom eatings. cholns. beads ond bongM; bracelets In so many styles, why not take home aeverOl-beoutlfUl'<:lecisbns ore .bard to .ma1t9,+. F and w selection Is t-od to beat. '"' E<mlQs,-reg, $18H696. ~ $1~ ~~ .. ~cc .;,.... BeddS. 7 mm.reg. Sl90. d S«>C>.· ¥ 4 ~·sale $17& -"" Chans. reg. •. . , sale -100-$2.000 Bongle brocetets; r-o. ~SSlO, sae S8W33~· Sale ends oetobetr t Aobiwon's Rne Jewfity. 1CX> -.~~'°~~ SHOP RO&NSON'S THl.A?SOAV At<IJ FRDAV .0·9 R061NSON'S N~ FASHION ISi.ANO ·WESTMINSTER MAU ·--- • . ___ __, .... ,. .. . . A• DAILY PILOT ~Red Tape EJiminated? Study SP11t to Board -Willi Criticistafl a1 iratcosaK'& ftnlltt;Mt:HL Ott .. o.i•~-- bt"neflldl'vclo&H:r?I b)' ulcrtlntc th(•m o rly in \he plan· nln1 Mtaat>t ofl()tentaal ob11tarlc-11 toprojtlct •pproval. ~··· fOf' 1lr.-amUnin1 Oranae County 1ovenunmt '• proces•ln1 ol deve~mt'nt pt'rmit• have bMn forwarded to th• Roard ()( Supt'rvltors. but not wilhoul a dole or <'ntlclsrn fr\)m lht' rount y Plan Dint Conun.laalon. Comrnluioner WllUam M1dlnu11•ll It'd lhe as 1ault on the rt'rommend•llunit. r hara\na that tht' eommittee that formul•tt'd lht>m waa too ht'AVtl) oriented toward lht> ,·onstru~Uon 1ndW1try Tlw eomrmtt.-t• •lao rec-omml"ndc.-d c reation ot a """" dJvbJIOn wllhm lht' l'ounty l':nvlronmental Ma na.cemt>nl At<""''Y thol would l>t' ruponaible for ahepht>rdina 1•rnJet't11 OK they movt' throuah the 11y11tt'm Madll1ot1•ll 11a1d hti wtea (•onctirned about a re 1·onHnNldatlon by th•· r11111mltt•1u lh1tl tht1 manager of tht'I Pr'OJI08f'<i dlvhoon would report directly to lht' dtrt'<'tor of tht1 EMA HE QUt;ST,IONt:O WRY ho nu10 .,,.1nt>u· ../'1roupt, educators and tmvln'lnmentalut' ·'in cludinc maybe those ovt.>rualous 1itroup~" wt>rt> not represented on the-comm1tt~ formed at the ur•lnc ol 2nd OisCrll't Supt"rvli'Or Harnett W1t-df'r "lh11 \tht' munfitt'r's l !'(•rlotm finft• wouldn't tw hu11t'll 11n .,.u11l1t y of output. but how fMSt he gets ' 11 1toflt', · Ma<'Houtcull u td Reflecting on[ tht' t••pllg~ commtltC:4" rf'5)()rt . i\nollw1 r ntu· of tht· <·om&>e•otton of tht< ('om 11111\t•t' wu..' t'omm1i.i.1t111t'r .. ·n-.l l..1teht MacDougall. ah appointee of Sth Ulstrt t't Superviaor Thomas Raley, s1t1d, "W~ now llnow what the development mduslr)' an Orunat• Count y wants by the end of this t'entury " UGtrT f 'OMPt.AtNt;o that tht• com m1ttu did nnl "'u(l11'111 1t:. f1nd111wN with any "qufintalative d1tlu · Amon1 the major propo5als t'Ont 1unl"d an the committee report is an option whereby p~essmK or general plan amendments. tone changes and -other-detailed plans Cor a particular developmt!nl could occur simultaneously I low1•vt'1 Cum 111111,1on1·r I rvlllK t•1l'kler said tht• c·11n11tullt•t• h11d u1•t•11111phi...ht•tl what the Board o( Sulk'rvasors w1rnl t'tl .Aud hl• s tud ht: opposed any t'ftort to dt•luy tlt•h vt•ry of tht· comn11llcc's report to tht' t>ourd Under the current system. procesi.mg of toot• cban1es and subsequent planning doc uments can not occur until a decision on any required general plan amendment js rendered C'111n1ra1sblon ('hu11'l111m .. :u1 I Wooden termed the 1•omm1ttcc's report "11 n•itl s tep forward ... ''I'm anxious to ~el.' tl overtht>rc loday, .. Wooden siuct In rcfe rcnc·t· lolhc bourdofftct's CONC'UllllENT PROCESSING, the committee said, would benefit the county's decision makers by giving them detailed informa.tion on the ul- timate design of a project at an early date "One-stop" processing. it added, would Comm1ss1oncrs vOlt'<l lo send the report to supervisors without eommcnl, but indicated they hoped board members would rc11d the minutes of the ir d 1scuss1on on lhf• committee recom - mendal.Jons. Autlwr-critic Set As OCC Lecturer Alvin Toffler. author of "The Third Wave" and "Future Shock," will speak Oct. 3 at Orange Coast College. Totner will appear at 8 p.m. in the OCC Auditorium. Tickets, priced at $7.50, can be purchased in the OCC licket orrice in th e co ll ege's Administration Building. The office is open Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m . and 6-7 p.m ., and Saturdays from 8 a.m . to noon. Tickets will be sold at the door for $8.50. Toffier is a ruturist and social critic. His book . "Future Shock," defined the issues of the 1970s. "The Third Wave" UCI Policeman Wins Two Medals UC Irvine policeman Bruce Ross, ZT, won two silver medals at the 1980 International Police O lympi cs las t month in Hempstead, N.Y. The UCI policeman. an Irvine resident. took second place in the penta thlon a nd obstacle course events. focuses on the changing social and business themes of lhe next 20 years. For ticket information. phone 556-5527. FUTURIST Alvtn Totfter Cl1runpion Of Feminists UCI Guest Feminist Gloria Steinem will lecture at UC Irvine Oct. 8. Her address will be "Steinem on Steinem.·· Sleinem. known both as a journalis t and a champion of fe minist causes. is an editor and writer for Ms. magazine. She serves on the advisorr board of the National Orgamzation ot Women. She has wrilte n for film, television and several political campaign5, most notably those of Robe rt Kennedy, George McGovern and Cesar Chavez's United Farm Workers. Steinemfwas one or lbe con· veners of t'ie National Women's Political Caucus in 1971. She serves on the group's advisory committee. Steinem's UCI address will be at 8 p.m . in Crawford Hall. Tickets are $4 for general admission. S2 for UCI students and $3 for other students and UCI Slaff, faculty and alumni. Tickets may be purchased at the Associated Students box office, Gateway Plaza, UCI. For furthe r information . call 833-5549. Charter Plan Rejected Not Wonh Cost, Panel Detennines By GLENN SC01T ou•o.11, f'IM4Sutt A probe to determine whether a county charter could free Orange County from some state restraints was formally abandoned by lhe Orange County Boardol Supervisors. The supervisor s t ook the action aft.er receiving a report from a so-called blue ribbon committee they assembled in March to weigh the benefits and costs or a charter. Most of the money went to John M. Sanger Associates Inc., the law firm that consulted on the issue. The board h as budgeted SS0.000 for the study, and county s upervis o r s praised the commiltee during Wednesday's meeting for saving some of the money. "I'VE HEARD IT said one reason Orange County has the most progressive government in the state is b ecause we're THE COMMJTl'EE began the w i 11 i n g t o I o o k a t a l l study with most or its nine a lternalives," Judge Sumner members apparently believing said. that a cha.rt.er could add muscle However, boa rd c hairman to county 1ovemmeot. But they Ra I ph B. C I ark sa id t he eventually resolved that the committee's 63-page report flexibility a charter lends to unde r scores a continuing home rule isn't worth the cost of problem: "We're still trying to creating it. d o t o d a y • s w o r k w i t h , Superior Court Judge Bruce yesterday's tools." Sumner, chairman of the He pointed to one further committee, told the supervisors possibility listed in t.he report - Wednesday that even though the a constitutional amendment to recommendation was negative. widen the authority granted t h e $ 4 0 , O 0 0 s t u d y w a s charter counties. He noted that worthwhile. , Sao Diego County has discussed such an amendment. The COWlty, in fact, introduced a bill into the state Senate last year through state Seo. John G. Schmitz, R -Newport Beach. But the bill did not progress past committee meetings and gained little backing. Said Sumner : "There hasn't b een a great outcry o r movement to give more powers to cities and coWlties. People seem to be satisfied with the concentration of power at the state level." ORANGE COUNTY, which has the second largest population in the state. is the only COWlly among the state's s ix most populous not to have a charter. Los Angeles, Alameda, San Francisc·o, San Diego and Santa Clara have charters. In the past few d@cades the state bas granted more flex ibility to general law c ounties -those without charters -by relaxing some of its organizational mandates. Denicks, yes. -Health fair' Free tests for blood pressure. eye. pulmonary. hMtlng, fltMSI during Huntington Center Health Fair Thu,.. thru Sun. Aleo CPR. acupunctUl'9 demos & tchOOI Immunization. Now more then ever ,...neec1ttt• lfttomtetlon printed ftefJd•t '" tM •1.•111111t1•1•1"'p111i"'tll'lll Dining room sets, no. We've taken the ads and listings that busi- nesses use to call each other and p ut them in a se~e book-The Los Angeles Business To Business Yellow Pages. You'JI find materials, equipment and services from firms all over the g reater Los Angeles market. And you'll find them faster and easier than ever. Dining room sets? They're listed in Pacific Telephone's Los Angeles Consuwer Yellow Pages. ORANGE COUNTY Bank of • ICa .. 11/t· • 11.05°/o W11ti .1 11ur11r111 irn rlr•pr1•.1t <JI r>nly 'f, 10() yo11 r:rin 1!;ir11 t11qt1 rnrir11·v rrnirkr!I r;i1n·.m1 ?Y,. yo;ir rir lr111q 1•1 ltm f'( .1•1hl11.;ilt!•.ql IJ"P<>'.11' ')r1 4v1:n rf 1r1tr:r1 1• .I r .itr ". qCJ rlown 1r1 ti,,. f 1Jt11n 1 I' 11 ir r "'' litrr ,.iii· w ill r 11rit1111 JI; tr> 1-; 111 1 ln<l:1 / ". t 11qti 11 1tr!ll:'.I fr1r ;11 11!.sl'. (Jr lr1r1qr:r tf ;111J 11;J11t I ti1•.111t1 •rr",t 1'.r,1i1111>1111111J1 •rj rJ,J1l/ ll1r 1r1rh.,1rl1J.il•. 11.68°/o H.ir1~ 1,f /\1 111•11r..111ff1·r'. rr1.1r1/ '..i11rir r . pl.111•.111 r t.r;11'.I• trcm1 ·11 ll1r1r<", lhlJrt(J 1<; tJ(J<JrlE:: 1•1'.I r11itit ,,,, 1•1•1 /-111111,tt,.it tt1r·r.rir111:ru1:nr~e 1,f1111•r I t 1r 1< 1 I 11 .1r ,, , ,, .... t.itr • 111d 1: ;i(l(J 10 11 ti .,,., • .,,,,1 H.1111< ,1 /•rr11!r1u11•, tt1r) w1',f~ choice f11r !'•'" ._,,.,,,,,,, Annual Yoelrt BANK OF AMERICA m LAGUNA BEACH POLICE ASSOCIATION proudly presents the annual • • *PiiUcEMAN'S BALL .. FRIDAY, SEPT. 26 9 P.M. Featuring the Fabulous AND Donnie Brooks and the Shamrocks "The Donnie Brooks Shoe" ... Special Added Attraction ABC T.V.'s Keith Williams Big Band Skip Stevenson-a super comic from "Real People" ( television show s 120<> per couple Marriott Hotel, Newport Fashion Island 900 Newport Center Drive L. M. BOYD ) Informs and (JACK ANDERSON) Reveals I .U. DAILY PILOT F . , -· .. I r 1 fl l ,, f I ' c r f ( < I I Spiders Not /tlea11ies llP Wl1'9 ..... lo There's no reason to be afraid of spiders, says Professor Lenny Vincent , UC researcher at Berkeley. He maintains spiders a r e hardly the feroc ious creatures they have been made out to be. Living proof, he says, is Rosebud, a ha iry tarantula with a leg span of 6 in c he s, who o ft en perches on hi s shoulder . T a rantula bit es have little effect on people and "more people die of bee stings" than bites of black widow spiders, he says. Who Can Pay Cost, , Canoe? NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP > -Entertainer Jerry Reed wants to keep white water canoe- ing on the Ocoee Ri ver. The Tennessee Valley Authority wants someone to pick up the multimillion-dollar tab. The TV A announced last November that it plans to reopen a 66- year-old hydroelectric· plant on the Ocoee, which would ruin the rapids. "I WANT TO find out where TVA gets its money," Reed said, '•and if they get it from us, I think we ought to tell them to keep the river open." Reed, who joined Gov. Lamar Alexander at a news conference to announce bis new CBS ·series , ''Con c ret e Cowboy," recalled that be and Alexander bad gone rafting on the Ocoee in southeast Ten- nessee. "I never bad so much fun in my life," be said. TVA offered to divert water into the stream foi' 82 days a year for canoeing, if Cbngress would pick up the $5 million cost of the lost electricity. Congress balked. ALEXANDER SAID be did not think it was fiscally or legally possi- ble for the state to pick up the tab. "I try very bard not to run the TVA in ad- dition to what I've got to do"besaid. Center Moved FRESNO (AP) - Fresno State University will become one of two centen in the state for a federal program designed to help farmworkers who dropped out of bigb school and now want to obtain their diplomas. 'Tbe Higb School Equivalency Program will move the center to Fresno from Cal State.I San Luis Obispo. Health Fair! Watch our 9.99 . pullovers work with just about everything. (Even eacll other.) . Enjoy special savings on the V-necks and cowls that'll spiff up your skirts and blazers and cords. Or layer them together. They're just that soft and ligtit. Cowl, in burgundy, brown, rust, camel, black, teal, plum, cream or hunter green. V-neck, red, brown, burgundy, navy, camel, rust or hunter. Acrylic. S,M,L. Mail and phone orders invited . Plaza Sportswear, 149. Program Slated on Fitness A program on fil.n ess will be held Oct. 7 at Sou th Coas t Medical Center in South Laguna. Entitled "Seven Steps to Feel Healthier and L1 ve Longer," the two- bour program will be he ld in the hospital auditorium Crom 6 to 8 p.m Ca r o le Hall , the hospital's chief d ieti- c ian. will recommend means of improving eat- ing habits and therapist Belly Bermensolo will discuss the importance of daily exercise. For information about the free sem inar, call 499-1311 Population Up M ADERA CAP ) - M ade r a Co un t y 's population increased 52 percent during the 1970s and stands al 63,078, according to pre Ii m ina ry fed er al census figures. The C'ily of Madera had 21,675 residents a nd Chowchilla 5,115 in the 1980 census, o ff icials reported. THE BROADWAY YOU R N E IGHBO R HOOD STO R E Thursday, September 25. 1980 ~LY PILOT A9 1IJ8 ~Y Ptt..OT ··Cot o pn>Nem" Thnt u•nft' lo l"'al t>vnn Pat u>tll ctlf r~ tape!, ~fling lhf' OMit'f'ra arid OIC'hon JICN nt'~ to iolor 1nequ1t11•1 an gtWt'"'mf'nt ond """""H• Moil Jl(*r ~"'°"'to l'ot f>vnn. Al Your Sttv•U. Or~ Coo11 Ouil11 l'tlol . ,. () BOJ 1560, ('(l$IO M no. CA Hf26. As matiJI '"""" tU pc1.u1Nt' u111/ bC' oiuwn~. but phorvocJ mqwnf'.s or-lrlt~s nol 1nrlw:bng lht' reader·a full oome. oddr-f'U ond bwtnt'u ""'"' phuft' llU m fwr connol br con.ndnf'd T h&Jt'\tl umn Upp.tor I do1 IJI uc~ Sundays ·• Dlrldftld Pia• Df-l•llH DEAR PAT: Will you give me an u planaUon of the "automatic dividend re· investment plan" of investing? l 've heard this as a way to buy securities without ut ih1ing the services of a brokerage firm and without payina brokerage eommission fees. K.L . Newport Beach Tbe ••m•llc divhleM re-laves&aea& plaa ,la a volu&ary progam wltkll prevtdes a met.Md of la· creaalq allare owaenllJp by ltavla1 dJvtdeeda paid • ~ alftady e--4 .... ••tkally re-la· vested la addllloaal 11lare1 ol lite compuy'1 1&ock. Tbeae ,a ... uaaUy permit llaaret.oWen a. IMay eve11 more llaares by 1app&emeat&aa &.Ile dJvlde.U dae diem wtdl voln&ary cull paymeau. Muy corporatlou llave laatl&ated tlds plaa for &beir sbarebolden. Tbe plus are oftea adlllhlb&ered for tbe com- paay by bub ud, aldloap dllfereeeH ••Y ellia& ln admlalstra&ive detail. &be plus are aabs&u&ial- ly comparable. Typically. tlley c.tam tbe f.U.w- i a 1 featarea: tile plaa 11 available to all sharellelden oa record How.en el 09e er more clasaea el lffutties; caalt divldeada • a partlcl· paat'1 allares are Htomatlcally re-lavnted bl addl· QUEENIE .. If yuu rt> nol concerned a1>11u 1 fht' l"OSI. why dtd y11u order 'twCt :;evenieen nint-ty f1v1·~ a11d ii ~tdt' ordt•r 11( four hit) ., · Health Fair Free demos and health checks during Huntington Center's ,,_ " THE ~:~G $det .......... .,.. -c;, l 'l .1tlb ... . .., ....... <~ , ,,.,,.. 4-l•h Al ",1~1 (l1l(W 1C. •ll ..,h_• N • ..,...,., Y'uvt At.-4) COITAlllHA641 ·1289 ·~,.-­MIHION v.uo495-0401 >.nc._c_ ..... ti•"~ F-l'Wy at A.-..., -llwy l Health/Fitness Fair '--------- Thurs thru Sun CONSUMER \ -DI · GOURMET1' I I MARKET I Tired ol traffic jams ? Don't forget to check wltb aa about our free bome delivery len'ltt. MORNING FRESH PRODUCE Fl'Hla Luse Bawallan Papaya . . . . Ste ea. So. Amerkaa Baaaaaa ...... 4 lbe. for 1.• Loeal Growa Italian Sqaub ........ ne lb. Solid Bead Greea Cabba1e .......... lit lb. P.RIME & TOP CHOICE BEEF aged at least 31 days to the peak ot perfectioa Center Cat 7-Boae Roasts .......... I.It lb. O·lloee RoaAs .................... 1.11 lb. Boneless Rolled Beef Roast ........ 2.11 lb. .._.._ Homemade Apple Pie . ........... 2.ft ... r,......... ' Baaaaa Bttad.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. I .ft ••. We arf' happy to announce that Delaney's now has a ~ourmet cate ring departmrnt. • From party platters to a complete sit-down dinner. Call fi73-SS29, ask for Tom Martin \ DELANEY 1 BROS. SEA:FOOD FRESH LOCAL SWORDFISH ........ 3.49 lb. LIQUOR DEPARTMENT Delaney's Private f.abel Chablis or Vin Rose c150 rniJ>· .... ,.!.I.II Berlqer WIBea (750 m> · ~ • Claelda llhulc re1. 6.95 .....•.•.•...••. 3.11 · Bel Artn. Vl9eyanla Cabenet Saari,... re1. 7.ts. .•••••••• 3.15 Bolla Wines C750 mil> -· Soave or Trebblano .................. 4.ZS 1 ~ Scoresby Scotch (liter)S.55 .......... qt.I.IS 1 (;\JI liquor prices do not lnclade tu> ... -._ i • I New Store Boan M, CloMd Stmday 2920 Newport Blvd.~Ne..,Ort Beac · 673-5520 Uoaal llaa.res oa a qaarterly or aeml-auaal bub; r------------:-------------------------------------------. addltl••I abare• p.rcbaaed for partlclpHU, &hoap ollea parcbaaed at or aread tbe market price, may sometimes be pattllued at a dlHout; a partldpaa& may wttltdraw from &.Ile plu at aay time; ud dlere may or may Mt be a ••all brokerage commluloa or lervlee cllar1e tO ~ par~a11&•• AddUl011al l11formatloa abeat dlvt re-lavestmeat pl ... may be reqaested from &.Ile Secutties aad Escbu1e Commlsa._, Office of Coaaamer Affairs, Aaa Staaab•ry. Special Coasel, SM N. Capitol St., Waalllactoa .. D.C. 11541. I R~allfl~ ...... Sltould•'t Ha"~ DEAR PAT: I was married last month and re- ceived a lot of gifts which I can't use. There also a re a number of duplicate glft.s. l 've heard there's a store in Los Angeles that exchanges gifts of all kinds. Ca n you tell me where it is? M.K., Newpolt Beach Tbe Gift Escban1e la located at 8128 W. Pl~ m LN Aageles. Escbaages are aot UmJted to •ed· dial glfb. USDA Traces Ailing Birds SANTA ANA <AP) -All the exotic birds ex- posed to an outbreak of Newcastle cmeue Sept. 3 in Florida have been traced to the points where they were shipped and no poultry was affected, the United States Department of Agriculture said. "The birds bad been shipped to 39 stales, in- cluding 13 shipments to California," said Barbara Kohn, spokesman for the USDA's Western Region Task Force. THE USDA SET UP task forces in five areu of the country, she said, as well u in Canada and over- seas. "In the Western Region, the disease was diagnosed in a facility in Inglewood. The birds were bought and the facility depopulated last week," she said. "Depopulating" a facility is an euphemism for killing the birds in it. "WE AL.SQ FOUND a case in a pet shop in Scot- tsdale, Ariz.," Ms. Kohn said. Those birds were also purchased and killed, she added. 1be third positive case in the Western Region coming from Pel Farms Inc. in Miami, she said, was at the Avian Distributors holding facility on lbe island of Hawaii. In addition, the disease wu diagnosed at a San Diego pet store, but was not from the Florida batch. "We have depopulated 1,122 birds and paid $67 ,000 to the owners in the Western Region " she s aid. Nationally, the figures were 15,782 birds at a cost of $775, 719, she said. Aesa \7erde \J ine and 19iqoor FETZER WINE SALE! FETZER 1979 CALIF.1 GEWURZTRAMINER A lovely, luscious white wtne. Reg. $5.00 $3. 99 FETZER 1979 MENDOCINO JOHANNISBERG REISLING light, llVely Md deficiouS, I R~.-M~50 $3.77 ; FETZER 1977 MENDOCINO CABERNET SAUVIGNON · Gold Medal Winner Orange County Fair Reg. $5.00 $3. 99 All 750m[ -. Barney Fetzer. his wife and etewn c:Nldren run tt'lta family~ winery In Mendocino County. They m1ke OU'1t8ndlng wines that are l"MIOnable In price end good to drink. We're • femi~ store and loYe to •1 fine wines. exP9d•'Y when tt'ley're priced et 15.00 and under. We belieYe thet flne CalUomll wlfMe .. evellable et nNl9C>Nble Price. and thlt ~ don't have lo be WMft~ Of • wine tnob to ~ them. Come on In and let 1 t"k wine! · · • e believe that·ba holdups are a crime. YQu've eaten away half your lunch hour being held up at the bank . You've left the car rurming a.t the curb only to find a crowd parked at the teller line. You've rushed to get money before 5: 00 and got caught in t~e r:ush hour ... in y0ur bank lobby. - Imperial believes that's a crime! At our offices throughout California, we've come down hard on time-robbing incon-. veruences. That's why at some locations we open express lanes at peak hours. We keep most offices open on Saturdays. We have ample parking outside. And we've got people who are friendly, but stay fast and efficient. Imperial has many WjiS to help you save. Not only money (pa!§books and certificates that pay higher dividends than any bank), but minutes too. So if the slow ins and outs of bank- ing are holding you up, there's a quick alternative. It's Imperial Savings, for people on the move. . hn~!:~~1AT§avings 549-4044 · I Coeta Meu, South Co••t Plaza Town Center 3310 Bristol Street (714) 540-7591 . . Newport Be8Ch 3366 Via Lido (714) 673-3130 ~_.8Al(fR AT HARBOR• __ ,,. ___ e.:.O_._... __ s....,_ ... _'-_~_ .... ______ ._Ne_w_po_rt_ee_n_t•_r_s_so_N_e_w_po_rt _c _en_te_r_D_l4v_e_(_71_4_) 64_4--14_6_1 _____ ...,._...,==.,,,.,,...,----' • . . . ~ ._. . ? .. •I . • v . f s J . T , NATION Famed Paper Revived Territorial Enterprise to P1iblish Agai1i VIRGINIA CITY , Nev <AP> -The fam e d T ut1t o r1 a l Enterprise, wboae writt r s ran1ed fro1n a youn1 Maril Tw aln lo the 1860s to tht> namboyant Lucius Bee~ 10 ~ 19501, la beln1 revived by wrlter-newaman David Toll Five hundred copies of a four -paa e T e rrit o r i •I Enterprise, with a front pa&t' prom ise to ''e aplorfl tbe contlnwualy chan1ing state ot Nevada and report what we rind," we r e pr lnt t'd for circulation Wednesday in lhu; old mining town. "I Ju8t t.-lt th•t th ...... time w as r aa h t ," Toll 11a1d In t'll J)hainlng his rusons for lh•• latu t tn many rt'v1val11 of the pa~r "Tiu8 111 a bf.ginning of om t ttun1 I N>ally hoJM' will bl' splf'nd1d and fine '' DETAILS, IN("l .U DING fm anc~. have not Men workt'd out Hut Toll, a !llxth l(t'ner•tJon Comstock 1.ocit' resident, said he ho pf's to publts h monthlv al fi rst T hi a 1 • To l l '!> H'co n'1 n~wspal)t'r pubhs h1ng Yl'nture tie also rt> 1 ved a n••wspaper an ............... Thia 4 by 6-foot pretzel, called the world's largest, weighed in at 300 pounds at J'acltaon, N .J . Laurie Sheeran, 20, compares it with a regular pretzel. The record pretzel contains 200 pounds of flour, 60 pounds of water and 10 pounds of butter, among other ingredients. It took 41!.a hours to bake. nur t>y Uold Hill, wh~re he ll vea llndcr Toll. lht' Gold Hill N..-ws WWI rmnlt·d from l974 lo um TOI.I. SAIU HE intends to k''"P tht: Ente rprise going: "There ut-still a great many question.is to ~ answered 1&bout I h.-fulur•• ot Lhe Enterprise. But lhe .. :ntt!rpr111c does have a future " T htl original E nterprise was bo rn 1n Neva da 's f i r s t ~e ttlem~nt , Genoa , in 1858. Following the fortunes of those mining boom and-bust days, it rnovt>d to Carson City and then lo V1rg101a City in 1860 The Enterprise blossomed under the editorship of J oseph T: Goodman , Ma rk Twain 's mentor The paper, chronicling the golden age of the big silver and gold bonanza, "was the a r c h e t y p e o f f r o nti e r journalism,'' Beebe once wrote. It was as a n Enterprise reporter that Sam Cle mens first used his famed pen nam e. ToU's first edition of the Enterprise 6 inc ludes pa rt of Twain 's "R ecollections of a St a r R e p o rt e r ," i n c lud e d in "Roughing It." ALSO IN THE new ed ition is an engraving of an underground mine scene, depicting another famed Enterprise reporter and contemporary of Twain, Dan DeQuille. The Enterprise rolled with the ups and downs of the Comslock's fortunes . After the 1870s, however , il was mostly down. Following its 1952 revival by Beebe, be wrote that the ''terrible-tem pered Territorial Enterprise is still a source of outrage on the Comstock." FOR EIGHT YEARS, be needled conformist society, now and then irked the local folks, a nd delighted a national audience with the shock power of frontier-style journalism. The F..nterprise continued to be printed, off and on, after Beebe and bis companion Charles Clegg sold it. The last publisher was Clayton Darrah, who printed the paper in Winnemucca until 1169. • The People's Marketplace for the Orange Coost is the classified sec t ion of the DAILY PILOT 642-5678 --..--.----- Th4ndey, Sepwnbef 25, 11180 CWL Y Al.OT AJ I G s E A D V A I E • • A savvy look at the myths and realities of aging. Laguna Hills, Monday, September 29, 10:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. Registration begins promptly at 9:30 a.m. for this comprehensive seminar featuring the following topics and speakers: Laughter la The a.at Medicine Mell Lazarus. cartooniat for "Momma", as seen in the L.A. Times "Look At Me, Uaten To Me ... ,. Virginia McBride, Professor of English & Communications. Mt. San Antonio College Or. Steven Zlfferblatt. Pritikin Longevity Center Representatives from Ultima II Cosmetics. Aging la A Femily Affelt Or. J ames Peterson, Professor, USC Gerontology Center Planning Aheed For A More Secure Future Nancy Scott, Financial Consultant. Advance enrollment is required. 4.00 per person (2.00 if you're 60 or older). For further information and reservations , please call (714) 495-5733. THE BROADWAY Portable AM /FM Cassette Recorder Minlsette ·-VII by ReaUstic Save33°/o 95 'Reg. 89.95 CHARGE IT (MOST STORES} Enjoy great savings now, and compact, portable entertainment for years .to come! Record lectures, meetings or partles with the built· in mike. tape directly off the air, even play prerecorded cassettes. "Sleep" switch automatical!)-tums off tape or radio at end of tape. Features Auto-Level recording, Auto-Stop, pause control, tape counter, AFC on FM, LED battery indicator, speaker monitor switch, full array of accessory jacks. Only 4 V2x811 .. x211 .. :· Earphone included. Batteries extra. Save $30 now! 14-803 Step Up to This Powerful Stereo Receiver At 33°1° Off! STA--820 by Realistic Save 5 120 239!~ There'll never be a better time than NOW to upgrade your music system! Two magnetic phono inputs let you make your own "Disco DJ" tapes- cut in and out from two tumtables. Plenty of power for two speaker pairs-rated 40 watts per channel, min. RMS into 8 ohms from 20-20,000 Hz, with no more than 0.06% THO. Get your new receiver today! 31·2087 47°/o Off! Slim-Line Hi-Fi Speaker Optlmus ·27 by Realistic Save 5 70 Extra Savings on a Complete System Save 528080 ·s519 Reg. Separate heme 799.80 79?eg~' ..... --=----. ~~~~~~-·2o:o~o~·Jo~o_~·~·~·..S..;:;;2;J. ~=----· 149.95 • Each • Reallatlc STA-820 AM/FM Stereo Receiver Get a pair for superb stereo! 8" passive- radiator, 6%" woofer and 1" tweeter for clean "transparent" sound! 27:Y .. " high. 15:y .. • wide, only 6'' deep! Walnut veneer. 4().2033 31/rDigit LCD Multimeter By M\cronta e Save 520 3995 Reg. 59.95 .,_iii&ii;;;;ii;~ • l'Wo Optlmua-27 Paaalve-Radlator Speaker Systems • Realistic LAB-270 Automatic T\Jrntable wfth Base, Hinged Duet Cover, $27.95-Value Magnetic Cartridge 13 ranges, 10-megohm input for accuracy. With leads. vinyl pouch. Battery extra. 22-111 Don't wait-save now on CB featuring special instant- switching to Emergency Ch. 9 or Highway Ch. 19. 21-1503 Check Your Phone Book for the ladNt lllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES I A DMSION OF TANDY CORPORATION DAILY PILOT -------- "'' ' A 12 DAIL y PILOT A••ewrtl President Kennet •h Kaunda or Zambia lambast ed Zambians who shun eut1ng re ll ow corn imported from th e United States because they ure mo re u sed to th e white varil'ly Thlndl!v. Sepe••~ 25. l!llO NATION Tests Show Some Human .Infertility Treatable BOSTON (AP> A teat abon that betweftl S percent and 10 percent ot Infertile adulta are barren beuwae chemlcal11 in their bodlea llUl aperm, but tht"y may he able to produc~ bablu ll tbt'ly take commonly avail• ble med1cat1on Ont-researcher who developed the ltst nld the dlt;('overy may mu.n hope for hundrl"dll of thousand5 of American men and women who ue Infertile RetwHn to perc.-nl tmd 15 percent of AmenclU\11 of ch,ld ~arina age ~ are unable tu produce children -Researc hers s us pected that a malfuncUun or the body 's disease· fighting system 1mmellmes plays a .. ,..,,,...._ role The test, developed by doctors at ttie University of Penn11lvania Medical School, shows that some men and women are infertile because they produce chemicals called antibodies that destroy sperm. But wilb dru11 called cor - ticosteroids, these antibodies can be suppressed lo ng enough for pregnancy to occur. The study, directed by Dr. Gilbert G. Haas Jr., was published In today's New Eniland Journal or Medicine. "This objective teat may be used to identify and then to help manage In- fertility in patients with suspected antibody-mediated infertlllty," the dot"tors wrote. · The Wonderful World of lzod. The doctors administered the teat to 114 infertile people, inetudln1 2S1 couples. ~Y found that 10 percent or them -13 percent or the women and 7 percent of the men -produced antibodies that killed sperm. Hau said the study group might not be an accurate cross-section of sterile men and women, and the actual proportion of infertile people with sperm antibodies may be somewhat less than 10 percent. Nonetheless, he said in an in- terview, "it could be a really signlfi· cant number. You're probably talk- ing about severa.l hundred thousand in this country.•· Researchers elsewhere have shown that sterold5 can be used to offset sperm antibodies. In this study, the doctors administered corticoeteroidl for 13 days to three men and one woman. The anti-sperm activity dlnppeared in all four. And within a month, tbe woman became pregnant and one or the men impregnated his partner. from babysitting to window washing the classified Service Directory helps you find help. Consult the Service Directory in the classifieds of the DAILY PILOT Now, a great new collection of crowd-pleasing classics just for kids. Incredibly comfortable, colorful clothes gently tailorf!d with all the electric, effortless appeal of the grown-up lzods. There's a wonderful feeling to be derived from wearing clothes like these. Clothes instantly recognizable anywhere in the world-for their status, their savvy, their snappy good looks. And we've got quite a clutch of these indispensable, sprucely shaped numbers in the richest, most whisper-soft textures ... in fall's raciest, most high-flying colors. And need we add each item of apparel is adorned with the inimitable, omnipresent alligator? Come see the entire collection of clothes imbued with all the prestige, quality and ease the name lzod Lacoste implies. Clockwise from the /eh: The terry wrap robe, in navy/red, white/navy, red/navy. Sizes 8 to 14: 124. The warm-up suit, in navy, tan or red acrylic. Sizes 8 to 20; 37.50. The knit pajama, with screen-printed alligator, in white/navy, white/red, white/green polyester. Sizes '8 to 14; 116. The striped crewneck sweater, in navy· or green woo/. Sizes 8 to 20; 123. The long-sleeved knit shirt with three color stripes, sizes 8 to 20; •15. 50. - /In K.l.D.S. -where we are all the things you are. - Sou(h Coast Plaz;i 3333 Bristol Street, Costa Mesa. Open Morpay through Friday from 10 am to 9:30 pm; Saturday 'ti/ 6 pm; Sunday 12 noon to 5 pm. I . ~ ... - ...... ..,._ ......... , ·- -----------Thur9dlly-,S..,i.mbef-2£, 1980--CW-L'Y PtLOT ____ Si!.orts •• Boxers Put Mouths Where Fists Are Ali, Holmes Tell It Like It ls Before Big Las Vegas Fight By n J,RT St:t:Ut;N OIU.'Dell, _,_ LAS VEGAS Prominently louted follower aaad 1t '11 the best Ah hu looked , Sln<'e UllllO "I'm the master of the world and all the hypocrit.es will bow and kiss my feet," he continue11. "I'll be jabbing in round one l'U win It big. By round four you'll start realizing that I 'm mate rializing and then you'll be apologizing," Ali exclaims. might be overstating the issue just a bit, but you can't tell that to the devoted boxing followers who have already started to pack the Las Vegas hotels for this one. Asked if he'll be talking to the usually animated Ali in the ring, he responds, 'Tm fighting. I'm not talking to Ali. If he's going to talk. he's going to get his jaw broken again. That's what happens when you open your mouth." on tht1 waJI 11r l.arry Holmes· lavish Caesan Palace suite ht>rt! 1s a very nkt' poater ol Muhammad Ali Wt'll. 1t wu • nice poster How ~ All h•t'I 11hout hill phytot·11I well be1n1' · Every liml' Holmes, the undefeated heavyweight boiun~ t·hamp1on of Lb(' world, has an t>Sper1ally "t""'" show1n& during his daily worlrnuu. nll'mbers or his staff add a ymbohr slltch here or there lo All's posh:r Or they blacken an eye. Or they eliminate a few teeth He answen in one uf tus patented pot"ms ''Iha bl-hind will be mine m nine." tw t.old •n t-l'lthuiuMSUc 11ud1ence following a publi c workout lu the C'aesan Sports Pavilion Wedn.-:.c1ay 1tf tcmoon This is not the Muhammad Ali who many said was punch-crazy. It is not the Ali who had been rumored to slur his words. Ali was articulate Wednes· day when he addressed members of the media The billboards and radio stations here bill it as "The Last Hurrah." Muhammad Ali c alb it "the demise of Larry Holmes," and Holmes cautiously admits, "I ju.st wanttodomylhing." The atmoephere around the two box- ers' camps is different, just as on~ might expect. All, putting on a show for more than 2.000 fans, got hold ol a microphone following his workout and then began a verbal assault on' Holmes, much to the delight of his followers. By next Thursday. when Holmes and Ali. the three·t1me heavyweight champion. squa re off at Caesars Palace. there will probably be very ht tie left o( lhe All poster And AJJ as an shapt' lie has pared off the love bandies which blO!isomed after he retired The 2SO pounds Ah carried then have melted to • lean 219 He showed he was capable of not only using his mouth but his patented shuf· fie . quick jabs and vario us com· binations which helped him become one of boxing's all-time greats. Holmes has defended bis heavyweight crbwn seven times now and has scored knockouts in each case. When he meets Ali in a specially constructed outdoor arena with 25,000 seals, he will be try- ing to knock out Ali for the first time in Ali's car~r. Right about the same lime, Holmes was sleeping, but a few hours later be entertained about 2S reporters quietly in his hoteJ room. His' staff supplied finger sandwiches and Holmes graciously o(. fered beverages to~veryone. "What you are going to see 1s a mira cle," boasts Ah of h\s attempt to gain the heavyweight crown for the an un pr;ecedented fourth time. Promoter Don King and Caes ars Palace will bring Holmes and Ali together in what King says is the "big- gest event in world history." True. King And when it comes to talking about actually knocking out the former champion, Holmes has a tendency to imitate Ali's wit. You might say Muhammad Ali looks bad on paper Out he looks a lot better in person; so good. m fact. that one 'Tm dan<'ing and I'm trim I'm at 219 and that was my weight when I was 25 " But does Ah feel as good as he looks? Ali is oft.en impressed with himself, but be was in a particularly gloating (See ALI, Pase 84) Mota-vated Rally II! .. Dodgers Win on Manny's Pinch Hit LOS ANGELES (AP) -Manny Mota, the Dodgers' 42-year-old coach who recently was re- activated as a player, hadn't been able to get much hitting or running in during the last several days. He's also the club's hitting instructor, and was disturbed over the team's lack ol offense. BUT IN THE BO'JTOM of the 12th inning Wednesday night, Mola stroked a single against San Francisco to knock in Steve Garvey with the winning run as the Dodgers edged the Giants S-4 lO' move back into a tie with Howit.on for first place in the National League West. . "I'm used to situations like that, and I like them," said Mota, the major league all-time pinch- hit leader with 1~. "All I was trying to do was make contact. Tommy Lasorda gave me a lot of confidence. sending me lo the plate in that situation." The Oogers had loaded the bases against loser Jim Rowland, l·l . Dusty Baker led off with a Allfle& Bla1tlcftf at MUtcaa•see ( ... Pege 82) single and Garvey sacrificed, but catcher Mike --Sadek threw the ball into right field and there were nmners oo sec:ond and third with nobody out. Mickey Hatcher was walked intentionally to fill the bases. AFrE& BOBBY MITCHELL popped to short left, Mota appeared al the plate. Baker. though, was caught in a rundown in an apparent blown squeeze play. But Mota followed with bis clean single through the middle to score Garvey from second . .. Al my age, I don't run so well," said Mola. "I' haven't been able lo do my nmnin&. I've been too busy. But in the fifth inning, I went inside and was batting a softball around. The pitch was a good one, I just went with it through the middle." The Dodgers took a 2--0 lead in the second in· ning when Derrell Tho.mas singled home Ron Cey. who was hit by a pitch, and then Steve Yeager, aboard on a fielder's choice, scored on a groundout by starting pitcher Jerry Reuss. RICH IWUKRA Y'S TWO.BUN homer in the fourth, bis third. tied the score. Jay Johnstone led· off the Dodgers' fourth with bis second homer, and Cey singled home Baker in the fifth for a 4-2 lead. The Giants tied the score a second time in tbe six- th on singles by Jack Clark, Murray and Sadek. Tom Griffm started for San Francisco, only his secood start or the season, and gave up four runs in 10 inoinp before Rowland took over in the 11th. Bobby Castillo, 8-6, the fourth Dodger pitcher. earned the victory, bis fifth straight. The clubs were to conclude their brief series today, with Ed Whitson, 10-11. startin1 ror San Francisco, and Burt HootQP, 13-7, for Los AUeles. From all appearances, it seems lbe divisional title won't be decided until next weekend, the final The Pennant Race Dodil•,. Hou1ton Cincinnati , Gel'IMI W L GB Left 1M1 M 10 M M -10 .. • 2'YI t TMll •EMAINING KMllDULll DODGERS (10)' HONIE (4) S.pl 2S '"· S... Fr-iKo, Oct. l,•.1 •" HOUUOft. /11,W//l,Y ltl S..,. l•, 11, 1' al S... ~; 5"1. JO. Ort. 1,1 •I San Fr-I.co. HOUSTOH 1101 : HONIE ltl ~. ,., ,,, a ft. ClnclnNIU, 5"11. JO, Oct. 1, J.,. /11,llMta //l,W/11,V (41 ~. 2S al All-A; Ocl. l, 4, 5 al L°' ,., ...... CINCINNATI (•)· HONIE U> S.Pl. >O. Oct. IV$. S... ~;Ort. l . 4, S Vl. /11,flMta. //l,W/11,'f (4) $9pt. U al S... ~. 5"14. 2', 21. 11 et "°""°"'· Two of the games are already sold out, and on- ly a few general admiuion seat.a (to be sold on a reserved-seat basis) remain for the third. The present pitching rotation would put Dave Goltz, Bob Welch and Jerry Reuss on the mound, in that order. for the Dodgers' fmal three games with the Astros. But Jilonday is an open date on the schedule, and it wOuldn 'l be surprising if Lasorda decides to shuffle bis staff in order to put bis three most con- sistent starters in that fmal series -Hooton. Reuss and Don Sutton. The Astros have two crucial series remaining rather than just the one with the Dodgers. This weekend they play host to Cincinnati, which trails the co-leaders by only 2'h games. ALI AND FRIEND -Muhammad Ali , former heavyweight boxing champ and sometimes actor, has a ringside meeting with boxing buff and actor Sylvester Stallone during a workout Wednesday in • Las Vegas. For Campbell, It's a Team Effort By JOHN SEVANO °' .. o.lty Pttee Sutt modestly. •'Everything that happens depends on how good your team is. who know what to do when the ~­ ssure is on." PETER CAMPBELL The UC Irvine water polo team began its season with a big splash over the weekend when the Anteaters won their tournament over a myriad of top competition from throughout the state. "I'd rather win lhllD score goals. Campbell began his water polo career six years ago at University, where his team enjoyed better than average success. The same can be said, too, of l!CI, where Campbell's team finished in first place in the PCAA in 1978 (third at the NCAA champion.ships), and second in the PCAA in '79. I'm more concerned with how the team does than how many goals I score. Water polo is a team effort and a team game." One of the main reasons for the team's success was the play of the Anteaters' two-time All-American. Peter Campbell. who scored 17 goaJs during UCl's seven games. Campbell is certainly no rookie to his sport. In the past two years he's participated in more than SO in- ternational contests for the U.S. Junior National team. In 1980. quite frankly, the Ant· eaters have high expec:tations . . . or at least their coach, Ed Newland, does. Campbell, a Univer~ity High graduate. was sparkling, especially in lhe championship contest against Stanford when he tallied four goals in the team's 7-3 rout. Campbell credits this exposure, along with the team's experience, as the two principle reasons the 1980 Anteater team is the best he's played wilh. ·'This is the best team I've ever had, .. he says honestly. "It has a lot of depth and talent." For Campbell, though . bis performance was nothing more than a reflection of the teammates that surround him. "This team has depth, talent and experience, .. _raves Campbell. "We ha,ve at least 10 guys on this team who have played international ball. . Of Campbell, Newland says, ··Peter is a gifted player who plays at a different level from eveeyone "You're only as good as your team is," says lb~ 6-4. 190-pound junior "That's great in terms of ex- oerience because you have people <See TEAM, Pase 84) It's_ the Biggest Game CdM-N ewport Rivalry at Its Peak By aOGEa CAaLSON Of ... a.My~ ..... It's Stanford against Cal, Army pitted against Navy, USC-UCLA or Orange Coast College and Golden West. Take your pick. Any will suffice, each contains the same ingredients u Friday nipt's -non-league football duel between long-time rivals Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor Hi1b. It's the ul- timate victory or ultimate loss. THE GAME 18 SET for Newport Harbor with kickoff at 7:30 and tbe Sailon will be tryin1 lo make it nine in a row and 15 out of 18 acaJ.nst the Corona del Mar Sea K1nea, the rival on the south aide of Upper Newport Bay. Corona del Mar is 2·0, Newport Harbor la 0-2, but the latter la a alllht favorite because of the home field advantqe and a history for pu1liq it out agalnlt the Sea Kines. "Newport Harbor la good, baa some lile and tbe7're bUDll'J," says Cdll Coach Dick Morris. "They're always bunary foe ua." •oams ALSO AD•ITB an ap- petl the Sallon, aince the Sea 1 K ven't won the Bll Game II •• ,,,, "' "They're pul..ling out all the sto.- for us," adds Morris. "Tbe 5Cltb re- union, new jerseys, fireworks at halftime, Homecoming. There's not much else they can do to fire them up." ·•1 doo't think you can play it down as just another practice game," says Newport Harbor Coach Hank Cochrane. "The kids know the importance and it's very similar to lut year. We've come lo a point wbere we need a victory." THE SAILOas STV•BLED to ~·--.-~ 2-5-3 in l9'19, but one-of thoae victories was over Corona del Mar, which means 19'19 was a aucceuful year. 1 As for each team's tuk, here ta. what each coach has to say: Morris: "Newport's pasatna is venaWe aid a lot of aeta and motion create problems." Cochrane: "Corolla del Mar's of. feue ta almost entirely optilOD 8Dd pa11e1 very well to tbelr backl. (Chris) Bricbt baa looked very aood." As .for=own clube,_ nda eeee room foe vemem. Says II : "We loet four of ftve \See UVALSY, Pa1e IM) ...,__ ___ . -.. ..... ..... -~- U ONLY PtlOf A Capaule Repor1 From the World of Spor11 Retirem nt et at Ag 45? TI1af's Tr~vino's New Goal From AP Dlfpatrliln E PSOM. Entclund l.H ~vino. to Britain n for th~ Kob llupt' ClaH 1r . IU\DOW\~ Wedn..sday that he was tJl"t"d of bt>tna a Jt-t iwt iufW'rstar Tht 4D-yt'ar old AmtnC'an 1~ plannana to quit lull lime goll an l!itU aod ~C"Ome> .. JU3l • simJJle tourut ' Tttvano bret"lt"J into Epsom ror the-start of I ht'r Uc JO day European camp.u1n and u 1d "I know 1t'is a bit "llrl •to be pu k1n11 1t in a t 45, but in 1985 W.1 my contri.t"ls run out I will b.-hrianraally ~ .. 1:ute l''rom I.hen on. I will play in ooh 10 tournamenu a Yt'lir Theo I will be ablt? to ~l\JOY tht-c1U~ and the countries I v1s1t anti just be u touris t So f1tr I haven't had the cha.ricf• " Trevino, whose career wmrungs exceed S2 m1lhun, l~ one of the favontes for the $240.000 Bob Hope event Trevino won lust week's Texas Open at San Antonio and bas eollected $390.000 on the U.S. tour this year His populanty in Europe is second to none. but Trevino said: .. All the tames I have been here I have n~ver s een London or Paris It's us ually a question of flying from lllrpOrt to airport, going from my hot el to the course and then back again in the dark ll 's been like that aJI over the world Now my ambition Is Wln another one or two ma1or titles before I semi-retire." Trevino and smooth-swanging veteran Sam Snead a re the top U.S. attractions in the Hope classic. making its debut on the British circuit. Hope, the British-born 77-year-old comedian, 1s making a personal appearance off his 16 handicap in the 72-hole pro-am and competes with partner Severiano Ballesteros or Spain in the first round today. r-------fluol#' ol IM Day-----. After taking a shower to cool off on a sweltering day, Yogi Berra was told by a female fan, "Gee, Yogi, you sure look cool." To which Berra replied. ·'Thanks, you don't look so hot yourself.'.' PatrioU Bol•ter Saflflfng Deteruw Two star holdouts were back in the fold with [i] New England Wednesday. Cornerback Mike ••• Haymes and defensive lineman aJcllant BlaMp came to terms with the National Football League club as t.be Patriots took a step toward bolstering their ~haky delen.se . . . Tbomas "Hollywood" Headenoa signed a con- tract with Houston, but club officials were uncertain whether be would see action in Sunday's game against Cincinnati. Henderson reportedly took a salary cut from the $125,000 plus incentives he earned annually with San Francisco . . . New Orleans running backs Toey Galb~a&b and Chack Macie have been demoted to the second string . . . Barry Canoe, the New York Giants' middle linebacker upset with his sub- par performance. now bas something else to worry about. He showed up for practice Wednesday, but will be faced with fines for missing team meetings. • t'aH~ Pld a Df!Hf I•, .. .., 811dy Ont snapped an o.ror-17 slump with a .~ run-acorintc alntClc. Bob WaU. drove In three run.a and Sea.le JaeU.. collected hb lOOth RBI as th& Now Votlr Yankees defeated Cleveland, 7·3, to con· tlnue their 1tran1lehold on the American Lea1ue Eut lead. It wa1 the Yankees' 20th triumph in 23 1amea thll month and kffpA ttw>m five games ahead of Baltimore . . Baltimore df'lutt'd 8'Witoo, 12·9 . as no.a OeCtaees rapped a three-run hom~r in the seventh lnning to give the Orlolca a come-from-behind victory. Teay Perea had two homera and five RBI for the Red Sox Mark Ftd.ryd1 failed in another stllrt ~ut Detroit rallied to beat Toronto. 9-8 on· Ricky Peten' lOth·inninl bases-loaded single. Toronto scored six run1.1 in the llrst IMlng as Fidrych walked live of the first seven batters be faced BD&cb Wy11e1ar drove in three runs and Pete MackaalB slammed a solo homer as Minnesota defeated Texas, 9-5 o ... , frr at.s s ixth straight victory . . . Larry MllbuunM''• M1ueeze bunt scored Re11te Wal• with the go- ahead run as Seattle beat Kansas City. 4-2 ... Oakland got pas t the Chicago White Sox with a 7-1 victory as S&eve McCat- l y toi.sl.'<I a two tutter and Toey Armaa slugged a two-run hom~r TI1c A's now lead third-place Texu by 6~ games with nine gam1•s rl!maming. P~oroba011 Doulll~ D.....-Aal"'Olf P inch-natter Blff Pocoroba delivered a two-out, Ii two-run sixth-inning double to snap a 2·2 Ue and powe r Atlanta to a 4-2 victory over Houston in the light National League West race. Pocoroba's liner to left center field scored pitcher Doyle Ale.aader and Terry Harper, who both walked against Houston starter JoaqlliD Aadajar . . . Dave Concepcioa'1 sacrifice fly in the loth in· ning scored Ken Griffey with the wiMing run as Cincinnati J -defeated San Diego, Griffey tripled with l/'1 one out in the 10th off reliever Rollie '~ Fingers for hJs third extra base hit . . Pitcher Rick Rhoden and Omar Moreno drove in two runs each during a six-run fourth-inning that gave Pittsburgh a 6·3 vict,ory over St. Louis . . . Pde Rose broke an O-for-15 slump with a single that scored Jay LovlglJo from serood base in the 10th inning. giving Philadelphia a 1-0 win over the New York Mets. keeping the Phillies to within one-half game behind f'oeottoe• Montreal . . . Gary Carter drove in three runs with a pair of doubles and Larry Parrish had four hits and two RBI as MoJltreal swept to an 8-4 victory over the Chicago Cubs. forcing Philadelphia to win to continue a half game behind in the East. Er-pitcher Eddie Sho~ 8'ft WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. -Former American Ii League pitcher Ernie Shore, who with the Boston Red Sox burled a perfect game in 1917 after reliev- ing Babe Ruth, died Wednesday night. He was 89. Shore's historic appearance was on June 23, 1917, coming into the game after Ruth· was ejected for arguing a ball four count on leadoff baller Ray Morgan in a game against the Washington Senators. Morgan was caught trying to steal and Shore retired the next 26 batters in order. He got his start in professional baseball as a batting practice pitcher for the New York Giants before spending four years with the Red Sox and two years with the New York _ Yankees. SPORTS BREAK I BASEBALL .-----Bflff'•all Teda• ------. On th.ia date in baseball in urn: Frank Tanana beat the Kanau City Royall 4·1 to enable the Angels to clinch the AL West title • . . the first championship ln the Angels· ti-year blalory. On this date in 1976: The New York Yankees won thelr firat championship in 12 years, clinching the AL East crown wit.ti a lo.& victory over Detroit. On this date in 1960: Casey Stengel won his 10th aQd final AL Pennant as New York Yankees manager a.s the Yanks cllncbed the nag with a 4-3 victory over the Boston Red Sox. On this date in 1956: Brooklyn's 39-year old Sal Maglie hurled a no-hitter to beat the Philadelphia Phillies 5-0. On this date in 1941 : \ Pete Reiser's homer backed the five-hit pitchinc of Whitlow Wyatt as the Brooklyn Dodgen clinched the NL Pennant with a 6-0 victory over the Boston Braves. On this date in 1929 · New York Yankees Manager Miller Huggins died at the age of SO. Today's Birthdays · Former Boston Braves pitching ace Johnny Sain is 63. Former New York Yankees shortstop Phil Rizzuto Is 62. Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Dick Davis is 27. Bra11n Make Atte11d~ IJllCllll..,.. ATLANTA -All 12 member clubs of the Iii N atlonal League have surpassed the I-million mark in home attendance. with the resurgent Atlanta Braves becoming the fmal team to do so · on Wednesday night. The Braves, who now have drawn 1.014,421, went over the million mark when 24 .897 fans paid their way into Atlanta Stadium to watch them defeat the Houston Astros 4-2. lt was the first time the Braves have surpassed the million mark since 1971. It also was the fi.rst time in major - league history that a every team in a league drew at least 1 million I~ into its home park in a single season. Deadu 1tlar Sport• R'orfd San Diego Union Sports Editor Jack Murplly • died of cancer Wednesday. He was 57 ... Funeral services were scheduled for today for James McGratb, vice president and general counsel of Doubleday & Co. and a board member ol the New York Mets, who died of cancer Monday at the age of• ... • The starting quarterback of Lenapah High School's football team, Kyle Waite, collapsed and died during a practice session on the Oklahoma campus Tuesday . . . aalp• Hollett knocked out Chrla Oarke at 1: 45 of the second round to reclaim his Canadian middleweight boxing championabip in Halifax, Nova Scotia . . . Jockey Aa1el Cordero was granted a stay of the se ven-day suspension imposed against him by stewards at the Meadowlands for rough ridinc ... Ne w York Kiticks forward Toby Kalp& bas tom cartila1e in his left knee . . . Golden State has signed Joe Barry Carroll, the National Basketball Association's No. 1 draft pick. Details were not released . . Soccer legend Pele scored a goal for the Cosmos for the first time since leaving in urn, but he could not prevent a North American Soccer League Se lect Team from ta king a 3·2 victory in the Fr••• Beckenbaaer farewell exhibition match . Telerislon, Radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Hockey -Kings vs . Calgary, 7:30 p.m., KOGO (600) 'Phantont' May Help Brett's Bat Sorenson Soars Angels Cold, Oglivie Hot ~ ~.:S'cuBA DIVING RENTAL EQUIPMENT SAIE PL.A%! VERDE LIQUOR ONE LITER SALE-BOTTLE OR CASE EARL y TIMES Reg. $8.25 .... Now S6.89 SAVE ~SU• NEW YORK (AP ) - Baseball's records committee decided Wednesday that George Brett's official batting average this season will be listed without regard to any "phantom" at- bau that might be added to it to make him eligible for the bat- ting championship. Brett, of the Kans as City Royals. batting .391 before Wed- nesday night's game, needed 24 more plate appearances to reach the 502 needed to qualify for tbe batting title. If injuries pre· vented him from reaching the 502. "phantom" at-bats would be added to his statistics with the re· suiting average used to compute the batting title. But the records cdmmillee said it would consider Brett's "official" average to be the fi1ure be achieves at the plate, without regard to the extra "phantom" at-bats. The question of Bre tt's aver age may be moot, however, as the Kansas City slugger was held hitless in three official at- bats Wednesday in the Royals' 4-2 loss at SeatUe. Brett's averaged dropped to . 389 Wednesday night after grounding out to second and sbortatop, walking, then nying out to left field. SOUlHCOAST DODGE SERVICE DEPT. ••• OPE• MSOLUTILY FREE OIL CHANGE!* (WITH THIS AO) , ..... '*' s. .... .... lountCOAIT ~ a•...,._~ c.-..... Off., Good Th"' seot. 30. 1980 Cnryster ~Only MODESn Y USED AND WAIRANT&D MILWAUKEE CAP) -Ben Oglivie kept insisting that his main goal is lo finish the season with a .300 batting average. make good contact, and with my stroke, il l make contact . I can drive the ball The home runs will take care of themselves.·· Mark V Regulators Buoyancy (.ompenso.tors CANADIAN MIST Reo. 8.28 Now $6.72 SAVE $1.M S.P.G.S. & Safe Seconds Scuba Tanks Then someone reminded the Milwaukee Brewers' outfielder that his seventh-inning homer, his 37th this season. bad tied him with New York 's R eggie Jac kson for the Amer ican League lead. Sorensen and Frank Tanana. 10· ll. had matched shutout in· niogs until Robin Yount reached on an error by Camey Lansford. to start the Brewer sixth. Cooper blooped a single which landed a foot inside the lelt field line. "o 0 0 0 • 0 "Did he hit one tonight?" Oglivie asked. TOLD JACKSON hadn't . OgUvie said, "To be sincere, at this stage, I'd Like to get it (the home run title). No doubt. I've come this far. and I've got a chance. It would really be great." Thomas doubled home a run, • and Oglivie followed with his • two -run double. Sal Bando singled home Oglivie for the in- ning's fourth run. Oglivie also beat out an infield single in the fourth inmng, then sparked a four-run sixth inning with a two-run double Wednes- day night. Cecil Cooper added his 24th homer as the Brewers. with Lary Sore n sen, 12-9, pitching his second successive !Shutout, beat the Angels, 6-0. Oglivie, a 10-y e ar major league veteran but playing onlY his second season as a reguJaP, is batting .301 . His three runs batted in Wednesday raised his total for the year to 109. "Hopefully, I've got a shot at it, and so does Gorman," Oglivie s aid of te ammate Gorman Thomas, who has 36 homers . "BUT .3M IS my primary goal," he sa.id. "If I do that. I "I CAN'T SAY I got pounded that inning ." Tanana said. •'There was the error and the bloop, and Thomas just reached out and hit it where no one could get to it. But Oglivie s moked it, though. I'll s ay that." Coope r 's seventh inning homer tied his career high for homers in a season, and be tied George Scott's 1975 team record of 318 total bases in a season. Oglivie homered one out later to conclude the scoring. Sorensen, sent to the bullpen in midseason. is S-2 since rejoin- ing the starting rotation Aug. 6. He said he corrected flaws in his delivery while in the bullpen. ··Being sent to the bullpen might have been a kick in the tail. Maybe they were telling me l bad to win a job instead of say- ing, 'Here's your job.' " Sorensen said. Air compresson, yes. Air mattresses, no. We've taken the ads and listings that busi- nesses use to call eadT other and put them in a separate book -T he Los Angeles Business To Business Yellow Pages. You'll find materials, equipment and services from firms aJI over the greater Los Angeles ma rket. And you'll find them faster and easier than ever. Air mattresses? They're listed in Pacific Telephone's Los Angeles Consumer Yellow Pages. # .... .. , -. -... -.. At PACS & Other B.l.U's Former John Wet Suits CROWN RUSSE Reg. SS.M .... NowM.53 SAVE $1.11 And Much f.lae TWO DAYS ONLY KESSLER Reg. $7.44 .......... NowS6.11 SAVES1.J6 SAT. & SUN •• SEPT. 'II & 28 RON RICO RUM Reg. $7.n .. Now S6.11 SAVE-SU• GORDON'S GIN Reg. $7.23 .... NowS6.19 SAVES1.04 AOUATIC CENTER l1z.....,1H..s-.Aae J & B SCOTCH Reg. $14.15 .. Now S12.39 SAYE S1.7' ACROSS FROM KONA LANES 1525 Mesa Verde Drive East Costa Mesa 549-1422 Baseball Standings BARWICK DATSUN AMERIC.4.N LEAGUE West Division W L Pd. GB x-Kansas City 92 61 .601 Oakland 78 75 .510 14 Texas 71 81 .467 20~ Minnesota 71 82 .464 21 Aa1ela 64 87 .424 27 Chicago 62 88 .413 28~ Seattle 57 95 .375 34~ x-Clinched division title Eut Dt'Visloa New York 98 54 .645 6 Baltimore 93 59 .612 S Milwaukee 82 72 .532 17 Boston 79 70 .530 17~ Detroit 78 74 .513 20 Cleveland 74 77 .490 23~ Toronto 64 88 .421 34 ......... #.1c: ..... MllwMee•,..,....O Ml.-.OWt TuesS 0•••-1, o.iceeo 1 Se•m• 4, k-City 2 Belllrnor• 11, ... ton t O.troltt, ToranlOI CIOlnnl~l NnY-7,C19wel-l T.-r•10-Clll<ego ,._....,,., 2-111 el O.•l•t Oeltlend (~=.!!i'~t-:.1~ 11·141 et N•w YOr'll ,.,_,,, ""'·" r. .. s CICa<MrHl ets..tlM (Orflsl .. '-'1,n Oftly ..... tcNdul9d NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pd. GB Dod1ers 86 66 .566 Houston 86 66 .566 CinciMati 84 69 .549 2~ Atlanta 79 73 .520 7 Sao Francisco 71 81 .467 15 Sao Diego 68 85 .444 18'1; East Divlaloa Montreal 84 68 .SSJ Philadelphia 83 68 .550 ~ Pittsburgh 80 72 .526 4 St . Louis 69 83 .454 15 New York 63 89 .414 21 Chicago 59 92 .391 24~ ............ 1c.w ~ S, S.. Frenc:IKO 4 Cl2 l""l~I _,....,,Oll'-4 All...Ce4,-2 ,.,, .. -.... '· -y-0 (10 '""'""' Plt~4. St. Loult I CIMlnnllll 7, S.. Ole9o • ( 10 IMl~I T...,.10- Sen Frenc:lsco CWllllton 10.111 el ~ (HootOfl 1).1)," CIMll'Wllltl cs.-10.71 .. Sen o._ IWI• ... l,n Hout-Ck. Forsell IM 21 .. MIMI• ( ..... ,. .. N•• Yor• IZacllry •·IOI el f'llll-IPftle (Autll-..._IOI. n SI. UIUls (Alncon M l et PllUMI .... ,.......,_ ... l,n PRE-OWNED BEST BUY! * ,. '77 DATSUN PICK-UP long bed, S speed, air, radio, $3988. Stock #5069 . * WFllRllWAY CLOSI: ~~ ..., ................ ,,,AD. -----r --• _.-_,, ____ ._-.~ ...... FOOTBALL ~. Septlmber 26. 1980 OM.V ALOT si.: Workman Won't Let EdisOn Forget Upset ... .r BJ aOGSa CAaJ.80N __ ...., ........ It wu a duak uput a ,..,. qo at !l Modena Hl1h where th• Vanfuards threw a monkey wrench lnto Uson Hl•b'a dnama ol an UAdefeat.d M UOO Jt'a doubtful anyoae who wit.neued the a.17 verdict will ever for~ it. •pedally Miton Coach BlU Wor\man, clearly a very fruatrated individwal that September evenlnc. yard• n11hin1 and 229 y.rds paaaln• for a to\al net of 401 yard11 probably -put Un11 it In an ultra·ridlculou11 category for Workman fr1day t he l wo collide again, this time at Oranlff' Coa11t College and In· 1tead ot unbeaten dreams on the line, I t 's a 10 s ame wi nn intc 11trcak El Modena hu to shoot •t Says Workman: "El Modena will be exclt.ed for \18 a1aln, but everybody la." Will the Chargers respond in kind? "Gee, I hope so. But you can't whip your IUYS up to a fever pitch for any .. PREP FOOTBAU Wortiman's Char1era, defendinl CIF Bil Five. Conterenutcbampiona and victon in their fitst two 1980 1ames, a.re ranked No. 1 in the Bil Five Conference. El Modena? Well, the Vanguards are No. 1 in their conference (Southern) and No. Sin Orange County. Edison's passing game hasn't been s uper pro ductive and Les ter acknowledges it. one week because there ls a natural "It would be nice to put a nine·man letdown the following week. front to protect against the run," says "Beeause of newspaper ratin1s. not Lester. "But they are going to throw. "They had 300 yard• NM1n1 aaatnst ua,'' aays Wortiman. "That had never bappeoed to ua before. it's ridiculoua. '' DaUy PUot statlatica reflected 112 "I know euctly 'what that guy Riii Workman ia doing," says El Modena Coach Bob Lettltir "He'11 1eettin1 1111 lhOH bel. (aJlt guyll jarked Ull and what worriett me ls that ht! is successful do ina at ." necessarily warranted, others get up for We'll do a lot of stunting, but he's go- you. ~ats _W_o_r_k_m_a_n_.~~~~~~~~~~in_e_t_o_thro~_w_,_h_e_h_as~t_o_. •_·~~~~~~~~~~•-lll~-~~~R~K~M~A~N.;___ Marina Tackles Foothill Five games relating to Oranae Coast area hi1h school football are on tap tonight. headlined by a duel betwe'e n Marina Higb's Vikings ·'and Foothill Hig h's Knights, a pair of un· beaten teams. Foothill is ranked No. 3 in Orange County and the Vikings are No. 9 after their victories and the Knights will be try- ing to avenge a 14· 7 de· feat a year ago. Pacing Foothill is former Marina High running back Tom Fisch· beck , while the Vik· in1s counter with a veer offense revolving around quarterb ack Bob Grandstaff and running backs Chris Ventura and Pat Lustig. VEN'l1JllA IS averag- ing 12.S yards per carry alld Lustig has shown consistency. running for a'7.2average. Costa Mesa and Ocean View lock horns for the lint time and the latter will be trying to extend ita winning ways to two straight behind the one· two running punch of Doug Irvine and Rick lrloser_,. while Cos ta Mesa's injury·riddled lluatanp counter with their short passing game. - Tam EiJerts i.s expect· ' eel to be at the' helm again for Costa Mesa in place of regular quarterback Greg Teregis. Eilerts bas completed 31 of 64 for 278 yards in two games, but the de- fense hasn't kept pace. mVINE IS averaging 7.8 yards per carry and is expected back after an injury kept him out of a 17·1' victory over La Quinta. Moser's norm is 4.2 per carry. Estancia meets de · fendinl Century League champ Santa Ana and the latter will be going after the Eagles with thei r veer offense, built around quarter back Scott Franklin. Franklin is a double· threat with bis running and passing, which was primarily respons ible for 31 firsl·balf points against Costa Mesa. Estancia enters at less than full strength follow· ing the lou of returning starter Steve Kraiss, a venatile linebacker and offensive back, who suf· fered a chipped vertebra in bis neck last week and is out for the season. Mater Dei and St. John Bosco form another unbeaten matcbup as the Monarchs of Mater Del seek win """N o . 3 to enhance their No. 2 ranking in Orange Coun· ty and No. 3 rating in the CIF Big Fi v e Conference. radio tNller WIDE AREA COVERAGE 0rall' CelialJ, L.A. C.. &J. a .. .,_,... c.-y. "'""* c..e,. '17.75 I II/' ',I I ' ' II 'I) ii. \1 • • fl 1!l'HI1'-f I ~ \ I I IL"' ·, -,, .. ·~·· ~ STA-LUIE HAND GLUEMATIC PEN , ... ~~~~!!!. -· WOlllal Silol .... ,,,_ .... llt.r....,.,.. .. ., ...,.. .. , ,., ltclL llll II Ht. lit w11·1 ci.11 ·~' FLASHER Ill.AL Ten lllHl 6 •111rd e1n l1t ~ ttv. ... .., ..... t ,.,... ..................... _,.._ Hit 11111 ......... 11 • ..... •!l»V EACH. ''"'" ,, tl cu •IZll JACK STANDS ..,, ... ,.,_,.,_. "'"''""" ....... ....... .., ......... , ...... 1( ........ lu. ... 1.-..ct lelNUc,• '"' , ......... '"' ,, ... '!\,:, ~·.~..c~;:• 11·· IASCO HEAVY-DUTY BRAKE SHOES fOf mott pouengre, cot' Ger ~­''C>pPll'9 powt'f by teploc1ng •°'"· """'°'• btok• t.h<M• today S.t ol • ,i,.,., '"' 2 •""'' 3" n KASCO DISC BRAKE PADS Ono .. the Nmtlofl'• M"' '--'"' .... ....., .. -. ~···--·'~'" tff1Udi •11f'I the Ont ff HUd•"Q 1omffll ... , .i2m aw1ti1bft tocNv' Onl't ttt\I ~illM~ 1 0U91'1ty f~ ::?;~::, ~CltWAU .ns.oecteo c.u.1no~ .,, w teito '°' • ,, HUd•l'M) O'OCf"\\ ,.. .... G€T YOUlll AT DOflMAN I -aLACKWALU WMITIWAW SIZE PRICE FET SIZE PRICE FET . •o78x14 17.00 36 078x14 tt.00 .36 •E 78x14 17.50 38 E70x14 17.50 50 0560x15 17.50 .31 F70x14 23.00 .55 •50sx1 5 17.50 31 *A78x13 15.00 .32 •G78x15 24.00 .45 •C78x13 17.00 33 •L78•15 26.00 .50 •Whitewalls DOllMAN'S l•lehmt hmtltO w111•nly 1ga.nst detect 1n -•mansh•P and MTMAO matr<iats. tree rtptn ement up to ~1 l? 11te1 ~13? thr<t •"" ot •.. -....... 1 C"'1•1lt ot 50' 0111~ OtlCt oown to ?fl? Ho •d1ustmtnt w11/ 1>< .. _._. • 1ttowtd '"" ?I l'l' UPTO 12 MONTHS TO PAY PRESTONE II COOLANT Prestone s-t•INI. Wllf NIMrHH. AU 0 ru r '"'"'"" Oat '"'"· • Af~t UMIT 12 GALLONS 419 CU:DJ;fi'i'CIII ~ WT!,..,. --GAL. PRESTON I SAVE 150 ON SUPER-FLUSH CD-2 OIL ADDlnVE au ••TE-otl DUlllGIMT. s1.,. ~ltd •J ti hr•l1I HflH dtJl lllL •4111 Union Culllde ollen you • Sl.511 refund on ••• purcllase ol PrHlone s,.er flutll. Co-Miio yo.r 1'9 nearest Dorn1•f1 lcw -• detllib. s,.., Jiu' 11-11 r1d1tt1< rut. •-11 tlly rtliiH. hit w 2 2 0 z UIJ 11111 •AS·IOl · Dll fllUT•IMJ.91c ... JtWtr •ii-,. cr111d c..,,1111M Mtlfa ''" "' "'"'"' YOUR ••101 CHO ICE lttft lilltt ..... , rt•trt"t ... . _.,,., ............. 11 ... ... , .... , s.,.1.sr1, 110 11 ltr 111.i1111 311 ""'· .i ... tr flld. •ZWI EA WESTINGHOUSE 12-YOLI BULBS St1t1• .............. , ,,., • ........... ,, .. _..,..._,...., tlf il Cfttld •tl•lt t ll 21 • _, •IG1HorUo ..... "" EA SIZE 145X10 155X12 145X13 155X13 165X13 175X13 PRICE 26.50 30.50 2S.50 31.50 32.50 35.50 COMBINATION SPOTLITE ___ ........,,.. .. t1t 111n1 '"'''' l ulKIM ..... u ..,.., ...... -....... --.... -. --......... ,, __ ... ~~,.=~ :;.::,~':'':':.' •CUI .0L•Ee .• I'~ L•• J&:I ' ... :,.. ~~ LF-1 LEI '-,,g AIR LEE SPIN-ON FILTERS Oil FILTER YOUR CHOICE 30% OFF OUR EVERYDAY LOW PllQS Swt ,, ................. '"' *' ' ,., .. , ... 11., Ill ti It" ...... •LJIYP 219 EACH "'--·· .... "' -..... to •-tti out rour llftport. FET 1 08 1 39 1 32 1 47 1 61 I 83 NO TIADl·IN llQUlllD SIZE PRICE 155X14 32.50 165)(14 35.50 175X14 37.50 185X14 39.50 1S5X15 35.50 165X15 37.50 FET 1 54 1 69 1 91 2 09 1 63 1 78 DORMAN'S UMmDTIIE WAIUNn Qot"'O'I , •or•OI"•••' oil.,~. h'"' ... ~"00'00f t.,..1tr '""'".., 41',...._, "'" Ot \f.OtoOll •OfO"I' I! ..._.1 •• '°" Ptl'rha~ '•Olnw\ '°'•' .. loo~iCM•w• ""O dtfnt, ••'"'"ti\• ,,.., •o ~· Ooi""'Oft '"°"• ••111>1 ..._ 011'9""0' ...,,,.oio "' a..-ac>•~ .,o .. •+ti'•••••• •1fltw1 a totl'I 1•lw--ct OI ••wilt ••chot'lp '°" o t ...... ~ ~-"-'• t~O<~ '°" O"I, l'l\f •Ol•O'll, CO\! fOr,.,... h•Od w~Cf , ... •Ol'OO'I'• (0\1 +\ "'4' O ,~ P'>C"• JOW po1d lor H\t' IW• l"'fW•"9 t,,..;..1ot .... _.,. tO• cti,,.'*d b, ...._., •'9'f'IOI fll'od -~ ,.,_, lttt' O"'OOv"I W\,,,d ONIE YIEAA LIMITIED WAAAANTV- 50.00 53.00 57.00 llOAO«IHO 30,000Mlll HATIOHW1Dl llMITlO WAllllANlY FRONT WHEEL PACK FRONT WHEEL AUGNMENT Amerlcen & Mott F-lgn Cot8 01cludlng Front Wheel Drive Cora Our eApert mechanics aC11us1 caster camber M05T AMERICAN CARS Or 90 Days Same As Cash in 3 montNy payments with approved credit (25.00 min.) or terms to lit your budget. We pack inner and outer bearings. inspect seals. loe-1n & toe-out to .9S manulacturer·s using the most ortginal spe. c1l1ca11ons, .. S~ .... Al!!. 8RAKES ~ aRAKES modern prec1sron equ1pmen1 •LMtlfTIO Ootmi.n • hont 1no 11m11eo •artant~ W• "'''' tfHt AUQNMINT •hQ"+mtnl tt N> cost •n th-e ••~t IP'lll 11 tH!CO"ll\, WAM AN'Y l"IKtHa'\' t~ 41 ohett ts ~O.d 10' 1ne Of'•OO of Oftt ,..., hOfT't tf'I• O.tt of OttQ~•' tot> NICU uncnv1 IMIOUGM .~IOAT OCTOlll 1, 1tl0 C·21' . COMPLnl AUTO CINTERI (hfts, Tim I lentce) et lheM tocallone: Open dally 9-9. Saturday M , Sunday 9-5. AnaMMI ,eunlaln v..., La ..,,... 1280 N EUC114 _, Wlllltl' l#t Slit ... Ill ...,...., II tl""'1 ffl ,...,.__, (11•) MfolM1 m-N4t (714>...,.." lllMloftYtefO ....... ,. ,......... ~10Alicil ,,.,...., 5296 llNdl ll'fd. Mt t llltplrW ,_ ..__, "' ____ ,,...,. ........ "1"9111 (114) .... tM ~ c....-. ,....... 1131 ...... ,,,., 211'1 V.W l.llm ....--4711 • ,, .. ...... G403 ...... l#t . ........ (114)MWM1 S8111aAN 2111tS,•1t1o1S1 __ ,,, __ , 114-tal "'-:::'C:O-. 1111•·----.................. IUUl( WU h ire h •d 11111 Jlllt '" ... blrt "''"' ... lh t • u (J lrl ... ,. falll d•"-'•' hire lwtlhlltl Llq11d 1601 •T 1 349 EA S TW$OlllT( 1t1P alttllf' twr t«d r• .... _ .. ..,..., .......... 1~~1'' DIA ., .. )14" ~· HOSE CLAMPS IH AL Will ud•ito "8C ...... ICllWI £7u. MASTER 11NEW" FUEL PUMPS Omt ltl. OlfJ ti. Ct•trt. •Htt Clrt1. a cyl. ttst-·n. 12u . m . 305. 307. m . Jill. httfl ttrty t• tN '* IW1 ~· Cllln ltt. ClltWTtltl. Cllny ti. CllMlll. C..t. I ctl. 15 71 EACH Dlilt. ,,,...._ I qt. '* 75 ,., 131i. 3,1. JU. hctJI RI l'lrltrtlllu.I EACH Jtr•.Jeirt-.Flleoe,lftWIU. laolllf. ltt ... I c-,4 1•-11 1zn . 302. 351. b e.fl ....... 10., hul '"'· ftlrtt1t. h too. •..iu. ....... _ C:-. I qt EACH 1~71. ROAD KiNG NATIONALLY WARRANT RD 30,oooMile Glass Belted Radials R.-o·•I •'"-" d•••ff'\ •1.c:eue"' '°"° QhOP."9 .c •.an'" •lm0$1 •"J "'"•'"'•• P mtlt•t comn1ntta •ll'°' •ta••I COf'l'1'wtl•On mtll"' l•n 1001n9 't''-+ll~• Ind 9re1tt1 •ut • MY•"QS fwo pol'f t\Ter lN>O., p1+41 '"'° 1•0 h'be-'O'•" oe•11 ror t"'OO"' 1 •Ot •""° t''O"l9 l1rt 000V FREE! • TIRE MOUNTING, ROTATION • BRAKE & ALIGNMENT CHECK NO TRADE-IN NEEDED ~E9 R ~G II •IT AEMlilGTON 9 SINCE1824 e •a-· (lldbienaal I I 114 • DNL Y PILOT BOXING I UC IRVINE ............. . TEAM •.• ·e11e becauM be ... thlQP di!. feNDtly. "He Ju.t aeem1 to do Woe• became it'• ~t to do Hf''• very •mart and plQ• both ends of the pool very well '•The beauty or Peter, bow ever. 11 that he· 1 • 1ood team pl•yer. He bu no teeUnc• at all about bow many point.a M •eoret. He oaly cares about lhC' outcome ol the t.eam." Campbell la ao &eam oriented, lo fact, be may sit out next •eatoo ln lieu of 1avan1 some younae r players more ea- perience. "I'm not IOinl to 1raduate Ml't year anyway." he uplalna, •·ao I fiaured t.hia way I could sltt!tch m )' playinl over h ve years. too " UCI Fever Beginning More Than Half of Reserved Seats Sold 87 JORN St:V,\NO °'_.....,..__ II'• Oftl)' the be1lJU>ln1 ol UM: colli:.ttC'I football season, but olfl<'la.IJI at U(.' Irvine. who don't have a pl~allln pro11ram, arC' already plannlna and 'lookln& forward l(> bHkelball Thf' start of prat'Ue•· 1.11 l(':llJ lh•n 1t monlh away (Oct l~l •nd more" than ~ JK'rcent or the rderved seals available h•ve bet"11 luued I N D E ED, TH t: A a a I VA I. '' f U 111 Mulliaao. his. style of play, ancl th\' younptf>n he's brou~ht to the 1m•tirai ni has tht' winnina h1mgry llC:I fon!O 1lroohni( with antlc1~Uon A II these players are stron1 un- ttc-rnoath tht! haitltet. which would tend to 1nc1lrate Mulligan Is 1otn1 to try to power opponent.5 with an inside plan ol attack. Of t•ourse. the basic Mulli1an principle uf run, run, run, run and then run some l/C IRJ1NE UPDATE mort' w1U still be there. As a matter or h1rl, to Insure this, he's adopted (or will utt.:mpl tv> UNI.V's defensive outlook, whereby his ~am will pressure all over t hc-floor in the hopes of forcing the action. • there should be a lot of scrambling by hla playen, because UNLV's style of derenae is more suited for one·on-one than helping out. But that should sit well with Mulligan, too, if he slicks by bis plan to use 10 phayen per game. It almOfit sounds like he'll have to. Regardless, the fever has started, and Mulligan will unveil his new·look An- teaters Nov. 29 at UCI. ••• BILL MULLIGAN Donahue Speaks Campbell also flaurea ht' ran 1et another aood year from the National team. "It really helps to play in tbo1e sames because you're competint aaainst some ol the top players in the world," he analyae11. "And. playina aaai.Mt them bu lo make you a better .player." Although the final l11nk~ h11v1· Y<"l lU ~ worked out, the blut>pr1nts for tht' 19"0 81 season rail for the Anteater?) lo nm "Ohio State 's" offense with "UNLV':." defcn:s", which was ongmally Norm Ellenbt>rl(t'r'!> defense at the University of Ntw Mexico Offensively, Mulligan will run a double low poet in an attempt to get the ball anlo one of bis big men underneath wht<th1•r it be Kevin Magee, Grant Taylor, n.-n McDonald or Scott Hartman It 1s hoped that this line ol attack will tit ast11.•ally reduce the amount ol time ball- l'Ont rol teams like Fresno State and l'al'1f1c c;rn s it on the ball. Mulligan's strategy is that he will try lo set and maintain the tempo of the contest, v"ry s1rrular to the way bis Gaucho teams did al Suddlcback. MAGEE, THE CO-JUNIOK COLLEGE Player of the Year for 1979, has added more than 25 pounds and is back to 242. Magee played at that weight bis first se¥on under Mulligan at Saddleback and then dropped to a s lim 217 pounds last year. The loss of weight made him quicker, but less menacing. Highlights of the Purdue and Colorado same,-will be dis- cussed as UCLA football Coach Terry Donahue speaks at the Bruin Booster meetin1 Friday morning (7:30) at Salvatore's restaurant in Garden Grove. Noted more ror bis derenaive prowess, Campbell admits he's more uncomfortable when be has to play otreMively. M ULLIGAN IS BANKING that his lt•am's natural talent and quickness will lw bt>tter than his opponents. That means Now, he's bulked himself back up again, more for strength purposes than anything else. Newcomers and suests are in- vited to phone 638-1011 for re- servations. f 'ro• Pa,,.-Bl "People tell you that defense is harder to play. but I think playing orrenae is," Campbell say1. "You have to think more when you're on offense. Derense just comes more natural to me." ALI-HOLMES FIGHT • • • Winning also seems to come natural and, aa Campbell says, that's the bottom line. "I enjoy success and I Uke to win. Nobody likes a loser." ,. ..... r~•• RIVALRY ••. fumbles acainst San Clemente and we have to eliminate that to win. Clay Tucker is throwing the ball well, we're not throwing in- terceptions and the orlensive line is doing a super job pus blocking. SAYS COCHRANE; "We ha- ven't looked as good as I thought we'd look at this point. There is an injury situation, but that's not an excuse. It's dif. flcult to draw things together when you're working with dif. ferent people one week to the next. We're improving de- ren.sively, but not to where we _ are eventually going to be.•• Physical items: Corona del Mar lost com erback Nick Rabe for the season <spiral fracture or the fibula). Kimball Millikin replaces him. Mike Giddings is expected back as a receiver for Newport (knee>. but lineman- Jobn Stockham may still be lost (also with a lmee problem). · The keys: The Sailors boast junior quarterback Gary Par- r ish, runners Pat Evans and Mike Gazsi and a solid defense. Corona del Mar counters with a veteran backfie ld , l ed by speed.st.er Chris Bright and a de- fen.se anchored by nose guard Roger Roelle, who bas been limited somewhat because of 10 stitches in bis foot. The right perspective for this game? Morris makes no bones about it : "You have to live with it the rest of your Ufe if you lose." mood, centering on his training schedule. "When I fought Stinks. l mean cr..eon) Spinks. I didn't take him seriously. When I was supposed to run for four miles, I'd stop after two,·· he recounts, feigning disinterest and boredom. But this year, Ali has been training for six months, and he talks about his ability to ac· complish yet another comeback. To begin with, be starts running at 3 a.m. every morning around the Riviera Country Club. Asked why, and he responds, "I can't sleep." Then be gets serious. "Actual- ly, it's because I'm in bed by 9. I only need about five hours sleep at night. The key to my longevi- ty is rest," he explains. "I also eat a lot of vegetables and I stay away from pork. Holmes -be eats restaurant food, .. Ali adds. Despite Ali's claim, Holmes says be weighs 212 to 213, and be feels bis quickness is going to cause problems for the now slower Ali. "I don't think Ali's head can move as fast as my hands can." he says. . Asked if be has to come into A 38-yard Punt -The Wrong Way AZTEC. N.M. (AP) -Foot- ball is supposed lo be a game of for-ward motion. But one couldn't have sur- mised that from Cortez. Colo .• High School punter Craig Ward's performance be r e recently against Aztec High School. The Cortez kicker received the snap on bis second punt or the game -the first bad been blocked -and executed the kick . The ball went up about 2S yards and then traveled 38 yards -straight back from the line of scrimmage. "I thought it was the world's beat punt," Ward said. "But I didn't know where it went after I kicked it." tht> fight w1lh a killer instinct,, llolmes res ponds , "I Hon 't believe in violence. r pray to God no one gets hurt. I just will do whatever I have to do to win." l lolmcs won the World Boxing Counc il title in 1978 with a vu•tory over Ken Norton. It was the same year Ali relired. Over the next two years, Holmes s uc- cessfully defended his title. prompting Ali to announce earlier this year that he was going to at- tempt "a miracle.·• He then told reporters be plans to hold the title until 1985, fighting two bouts a year. "I promise you I 'll be champ until 1985," he shouts. ~ Ali's trainer also fee ls confi- dent. Angelo Dundee says the training Ali has gone through over the last six mont hs would destroy most fighters. "He does 13,636 calisthenics every day. When you can see bis ribs, that's a pretty good sign," Dundee adds. The boxers have one more week of trainfug before the WBC title is put on the line at 7:30 ~eJt.-Thursday. Tfi'OSe persons not traveling to Caesars Palace can watch the game in Southern California at a number of locations. Select TV bas been named one of tbe co-promoters of the fight and is the pay television outlet for the bout. Persons with Select TV installed in t heir home television sets may pay $10 lo view the match. In addition, the championship fight will be seen at five locations: Anaheim ConveotiOll Cente r , Long Beach Arena. G lendale Auditorium, Olympic Auditorium and San Bernardino Auditorium. In the meantime, Ali will con- tinue to exude the kind of cocky· confidence be displayed in the mid 70s during his first come- back. "I 'm not conceited. I'm jt.m convinced I can wbup Holmes. And besides that, I'm prettier than him," Ali adds. , But if Holmes has his way, Ali will look a lot like the poster in bis hotel suite. Football PrObe Q. ~ack &ld•ard Todd .. ad &lte betla year of .... career wit .. lite New York Jets laat HalOa. Bow did Todd'• ---compare wtU. u.e best of Joe Namatla! A. Coming back from a broken collarbone in '78, Todd bit on 171-of.334 passes for 2,880 yards, 16 touchdowns and an NFL- leadiq average-per-eompletiOn mark ol 7.• yarda. Tbe yardqe totals were tbe moet for a Jet QB since Namath paaaed for 2,818 yards in '72 and the touchdowna were tbe bi&best for the club •ince Namath'• JO in 1f74. But Todd'I IHIOll ranb only aeW!Dth oa tbe Jets' all· Ume u.t. Namath, like Todd, a iraduate ol Alabama, bad ftye better campallDI and Al Dorow threw for 2. 741 yarda ID '81. Namath'• tielt aeuon = IS1, wben be went 251·for·411 for 4,007 yardl and. TDa. Q. Aa coac .. of Ute Redakim, lilow .... more ••eeeufal waa Geor 1e Alie• than hla pre- deceuon Im Waablagioa! A. Allen bad a 87 -30-1 record as coach of the Redskins from 1971-77. Washington won the NFC title in 1972 and lost to Miami, 14-7. in Super Bowl Vil. Tbe Redskins, made the playoffs five times in seven years under Allen, who was twice voted NFC Coach ol the Year and was the. NFL Coach of the Year in '72. In bis flnt seuon, Allen fuided Wubiqton to a 9-4-1 record - W ubiqton '1 most wins in 29 yean and t.beir first playoff ap- pearance in 28 seasons. In the decade before Allen arrived, Wubiqton bad only one win· Din& seuon, the 7·5-2 posted in •• ln tbe Redskins• lone season under Vince Lombardi. Pirates In 15-10 Victory • SELL SKIS • BOOTS • POLES • BINDINGS • • ilO"ANNUAL SKI SWAP; § SATURDA y I SEPT. 27th ~ u 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. Orange Coa s t • G O College's Pirates made BRIN Y UR OWN EQUIPMENT AND ~!~f:e~~~~~~i:: ~~ :; JOIN US IN A SWAP MEET ATMOSPHERE junior college water % All DAY IN OUR PARKING LOT polo, shelling the vis-- itors, l.S-10, with a six-a goal first period leading % the way. - Saddleback, however, m wasn't as fortunate as • visiting Santa Ana turned the Gauchos ~ back. 14-5. _. El Camino made a 0 slight run at Oran ge Coast in the second ball, L paring an 8-3 halftime • deficit to 10-7. but the _,, Pirates pulled away with a five-goal fourth t- quarter. 0 A live·goal quar ter 0 was Saddleback's undo-• ing as Santa Ana broke open a 3-1 first quarter • lead with rive in tbe second period to put the game on ice, then came up with three goals in each of the final two periods. "' -¥ "' >-:::» • WE STILL HAVE A LARGE SELECTION OF 1980 NORDICA, HANSEN. SCOTT AND HEIRLING BOOTS! SKI PACXAGE SALE ONE DAY ONLY SAT. 9-27-80 ROSSIGNOl S3 $210- TYROUA 260 W/BRAKE s -- SCOTT POW S .,_- MOUNTING S 20- S34800 REG. 2700 W~ COAST HWY: • 642-8335 -VISA' • 0 0 .. "' • , 0 ,. In "' • • -z a -z G' "' • n ,. g Saddleback and Orange Coast are idle until Friday. SKIS • BOOTS • POLES • BINDINGS • CLOTHING Enter Champion's fabu· lous new sweepstakes. You could win free gas for a year, a month or by the tankful. Just stop in soon ... and get all the details plus official contest entry forms. Don·t let Champion's "Win Free Gas" Sweepstakes get away. r/~ / ~CHAMPION ~ ~~ NO PURCHASE REQUIRED. ENTRIE S MUST BE RECEIVED BY MIDNIGHT, DEC. 31, 1980. * •to ••rc•au 11 11lhr 4. I . ., • Ch••ln ""' ...... ........... ., , .. , .. .,. A dirty air Mir can cost you 3 to 5 mites per gallon. ChlnQlno your lllte1 Is qulcll -s2.1e Beacon Ado Parts and Machine Shop -N. Old Ne=, Newpol1._. 1111 1:00. ·=-............ 1:00 • l:IO .... WE KNOW WHAT YOU MEAN WHEN YOU 'RE TALKING PARTS \ FOR THE RECORD I QUTDOORS I BOA TING r ~ . ' . " •-...C.NLUGW ...... -.... uu......... ...~··-·· ., .. . .... .._., u ' • 1 • .-..i1w. • • • • o Cenw, .. J t I t Y-1 u \ I I f ~····· -·· ,,,. ......,, .. J t I 0 ~,fl f I I I ..... 111. l'I J • • • Ootll•le ti • , ' ' C)tlell. ,. J t I t 0. •It <"f J t I • H .. -, t i I 0 I 0 H ... r" rt I t I • Clelll, If f t 0 0 -... J t l I ....... < I 0 0 0 0-01•" lilt I 0 I 0 H.,ri,""' I 0 0 0 v .. 1 1 • 0 I 0 Cll9u#11.< o t oo Mlllet,pfl I 0 I 0 , ...... , a o ' • to,_., • • •• • k_.,,..... CM1f9rllla -• -o 1111111•.-.-.... "'-• E l e1t\tOl'O OP C••U•'"•• I MllwavkH I lOI (a11lo1n1a 10 Mii• ...... II ~· ()vii••• Mii '-' l4. OllM• un CM ..... f-(L1~11 1 Hell<kl .,. " ••••• '° ''' • ) I l'°' ' 1 I ............ s.n-1w.11•1 t I 0 0 f -J l3 A \,'1t .,,.,..._.~, tHal '.IOI 010 001 \ I 1 Ml,,_\Ola 011 JIO 00> • 10 I Melle<k. Lewally11 (ti. BalKo<k 0 1 Hovtll 111 eftd S..ndbero, Wllllam1 •net Wy .... er. -WOiiam•, ~·J l M•ll•O . 10.t. HA THH, Bell (ISi. Pu1.-.m 1171 Mlnneto4AI. Meck.,.ln lfl A J 9'.J OirMMt 12, ·-le• • '°''on JJI ;iao ooo-• n o .. lllm«t 10. 100 l01-1J IJ 0 A..,ko, Torrw (J), A-'• 01 and Fl\>., SI-. 0 "-111. T M.trtlrwr CO , SIOO- Nr<I Ill -~Y w-T M.tr1lrw1. •l L-To<rer, ,_,. HA~lon. Peret J U•I 1 •1ll""'"· ~ 1 (Ill. OtClncH IU>- A-Jl,.U.. v.._1,1.._.> Cleftl•"" 020 000 lc»-l • I N-'I'-003 OlO IOll-7 II 0 O•<"''*"· wi11to1 u1. s1 .. 1on 01 - HHHY, Tlenl, p Underw-Ctl -C.-. ~-Tl-, M . L-o.<hl'*O, 2.e. S--P u--111 •-n,ut T"'°" t, -Je~ I T-to .01 ODO 010 ~ 10 0 0.ll"Oll 020 OQj OIO 1-t If I T-, ..,_ f.i, Mirabelle (ti, G.en.ln (t i, IC-(IOI -Wl>ltt. F!O<ych, U)dl>r (11, A..-UI, P ~ Ill, Ple1ry IM -woe-.... w~,..,,..,, ICM. L- I( we••, J.I. ,.. A1-0e1roll. 1Cem11 011. '#ock ... IUM (16). l,11t. &'&1,Wlllteie•I Cllk t90 001 000 OOC>-1 1 I Oetll-U2 000 "• ' 10 0 Tro111. O. Roe.I-UI. Holfm•n 01, Contrtr• (II -.,_..,, lklrtmenn; Metal· ly •locl ~-W-Mcc..tty, IJ.H . l -TrOlll, ~IS. HA--0.C .... , Eui.t UI, Arll'IM (U I. A-2-. ~4.•ey•ttJ Kenws Ol'f 001 010 OOC>-2 • 1 s..tfle ODO 012 llbr__. II 0 Sptllorll, Peltl" 171 and we111en;. Hontrcwll, Perrott (t ) •"d Co•. W- H-ycim, 1~11. L-s.lltortt, 1i-"n . S- Perrtt1 m. -1.,., NATIONAL LEAGUE Doclaef'l I. CMa'"8 4 &&• PllMeCflCD LOI ...... Las "'',,."Cf V....eM•·" O.E•-.lal Cl"11, rf -lfnl,lf A-IMlid,p Mvrrey,U> S..ltn,a SCrefn, pfl LeMstr.- Pottlnl,a s..eti,c Grllflfl.11 Not111, C1 ., . ., .. , .. ., s 0 , 0 ~. 2tl l 0 0 0 I OOOuw,<I •OIO • 0 2 0 a...M, If j I 2 0 l I I 0 ~,.....,,lb S I 0 0 S 1 l 0 Cay, Jb 2 1 I I 0 0 0 0 Hale-, lb 2 0 0 0 • 1 l J Jollnsln, rf • 1 J 1 l 0 I 1 MllcheCI, rf l 0 0 0 100 0 YHtOr.C 11 00 J O 0 0 Veleftlte.p 0 0 0 0 • 0 1 0 T""''"· pfl O 0 0 O S 0 1 1 S.H-, p 0 0 0 0 f 0 0 0 Moftday, pfl I 0 0 0 1 0 I • C.•llto.p 0 0 0 0 -··"" I 0 I I 0. ThftlS,1£ S 0 2 1 lt-.,p •100 I Fe ..... Mfl,t O 0 0 0 PercOftt,pr o o o o kloM:le,c 0 0 0 0 ToleH • f 14 • Tot61s Ill S 10 S Saf'Olll'll ...... s.<I F rMCIKO 000 202 000 ____. Lot A ..... • OIO I 10 000 001-i r-°"'......, #11'1'11119 run scored. E -5edltl 2, Oerll. 0. E•-. 0. '""""-· OP -La,,........ J. L.09 -S... Frenc11eo u , Los Aneelot 12. 2B -O. E••n• 1, Jofl1111-. Murrey. HA -Murrey UI. Joflns...,. m. sa -~. s -~. klOKla, Gerwy. IMPr--. CP " ••• ••so Grltfln 10 1 4 l 1 • A-IOfld IL. H I I~ 3 1 O 1 0 Lea ...... AeWI •11> II 4 ValefU-. I~ 0 0 S.H_. 1 1 0 C..UClo (W. M l 2 J 0 HSP -by Gfltfln CGeyl T U ,!11 ,..,,_ .. c:..NIMll > 4 I l 0 , 0 I 0 I t ) .. A - St. LOllb ODO OlO OOf>-J 12 O Pl~ ODO MIO OOa-4 10 I ,,..,,In, Frui.< Ill, UrTM ltl, OU_, Cl) e11C1 SI,..,,..; A-. G J«llMWI (71 - Hlcosle. ~A,_.,, l•S. L-M<lrtln, l.J. $-G. Jectllml (t ). A ,1t7 ...... 4.A*'"t _...,. 000 CQO OOC>-2 • 1 Atl""• 011 007 oo.-.. S I .,., •. o. Smtlfl (ti .... ·~· o. Ale•· ...... C.,. (II -lleMdlct. W-0 . AIH · ~. 1 .... L.-lldUfer. >-1. S.-Corn11 (10). HA-HoullCI". Asllbv IJI. Allam•, Murplly 1>11. H-(:ISi. -2' ... 7. Ptlllllee '· -• N-Y-ODO 000 000 0-0 5 I Pfll -lllft(e 000 ODO 000 1-1 4 0 Lynell. Allan (II end T•••lno; Chtl&t-. McGtay '" -a-.. -McGr-. >-4. L.-llen, 7_., A-14,211. 1..-a.c.a• Mofttrool IMO ltO 1014 IS 0 01ke9e 000 022 ~ • I &.ae, ....,_ (4) A'ld <:arlor; A-hel, L Smltll m. c.llle ctl, ~Ill (ti -0 e«ry. ~ ... s. L-4t-h01, 11-12. S- a.llftMfl 141. HA-<Jll<'90. Merten 1221. A.-2,tlS, ... , ......... CIMl-'I 101 .. IOO 1-1 IS I SM! OIOID IOO 01> 010 o-. 10 2 ftrl<e. HwN m, ..,, m end lleft<ll; Elc"elMr .. r, KlllMY l•I. Lwcn 141. l"I,.._.. 191 ..,. T-. w--..r, 2-4. L- l"llll'f'I. ... HA-S.. Ole90, T~e (IS) ~.1S1. -·-illl"'""· l'llJl•0.11111•• •I .... ~ •• a 11.,.1a D ..........,, 411.,.la ll ._ ~ ... ~.~.It ·---·· "' ........ ,...,._. __ 111 "4""(1'". " L ... I\ 1a o.rwr. ~.. .. <••le• "'9111tM l. " IC _,..,....,.., \I l ovn .. --~-......... 1 .. DMlt ...... 1 1 1111~ fl lll•llwrff\ U • (•lllDft l"flll--, i>.a ·-.. °'""llM .. II• ··-· ..,....., 11 t . HMO•. 0 ..... •. •t I . it•\.tO.r• C.tlHU'tn•ll 17 I ~4111 .. """I~•• -(ll•<mn•ll I04 Oe4 Mar b~ R•clny --0..~A'+' \ l~IULf 111• ...... _,..,., ·---, .,.. ,... ' e .. ,, ....... 1\h.inoWn .. 10~ t JO L•.>JO ~IM .. toS•< l~iM•Or .. .a J 10 ,.,,,, .. 0.0..Cl-1 "'r• P1' ~ tO " •• • .,.,,,,_, .. eo a....--.... ~~ t•c ~IPf"I .... Al~C• IHOCNI I) 00 t 00, t 00 1rl 0...C•• \(a\lrOI / ll> • fO 1 lleGrtat -....... , .. ,. .... 1 ' ..., TM rd rat.t Oe<'-• A1< t11u 'P.uiuw 1 ; : ~!mlf: .. L,;."::..t::..:.'1'~~':o":;1 I~: u ~··"· 1•31 pel<I ~00 n.r........-fOvlt" ,.,.-Count 1 h• Uo•a CVal••\l.,.le) 10 10 6 Cl •ell Full llafn,.nl I Torol • 40 'tO SI-S••' l(••l•,,.,.i..I UO F 11 11\ ••<• P•1n1eo P1 Inc "" IVel•llluel•l,f.00, i .0.2 tO M•u lloldM•1or IW•tk••I., IO. t "° !>llvm•n~ 11/fl .. (IVtrtl 2 • .0, Udelly-.c>!e 11 \l pald$10 00 Sl1ll1 r-. Manoy' lo,,_. IH•wlHI S 20. l IO 1.70, 011•., Moll C Oel.oltouuayel, ) IO, 4 00. Aed ~ MiitJUUW!' l"Ah.'!fUv.•••· 3.., S•••ntn f4'(.e M •'\ ~Q •t ale IOelal'Wklu.yel I• 40, 1.10, • .0, Tne """ Bro•d CTorol, I 60. • IO Kelln Andrew IMen•t,i w EIQltlh rec• rr·"911110 (Rem1ru 1. • 00. •.Ml •• 20. Hone•I Roao IH•wl•Yl .• 00. '00. ~n• Pine 1A..,•~I. 1 .o. U •••<t• 11·\I Ptld ""so H tftth r•c• Ao m •n M•••'ty (C.11..-1, 6 . .0. J to, l 10, Cl\ ... QUIQ St.1 CHewleyl, f .00, J •0 B"•u VIUHe C0t1-...,..1. 2.IO. T ... tlt ,_. -Fu,,,,lly 1CtiC411nfGe ) • 70. •.OO. 2.tO; BoCOtr Mano.ti~ IMenel. u 40. J.tO; GoldRn DD< R•y CTorol, J.00, \l ewe ta (5-4)peld~OO. U Pkk SIJI (~l.+7 I \) paid $11,075 IO Wlllt l winning lkU1' C•lx M<,...l $2 Pltlt SI• con.olatlon peoc1 ,, .. to wltlt II•• •IMlnQ licUU lfl .. llor~I E lewenlll r•<• Plenlv O 'Tool• CAamlrer>. II IO, 1.60, • 60, Sol "'''~ (Plerce l, 1 IO, ).10; Summer Siren (0.l•houssevel, J . .o Twelllh rece H•PPV New Year fOele-.sst..-1. •.20. 3 00, 2 00, E•I•"°" (Mene l, J.00, l oo, Princ e Yenao IVeldl•letol, &.10; U ou<la U·tl P••d Ml.50. Atl.-.C:e l ,tOO HoflYWOOd Perk WIEDNECoav ·s RESULTS (29 .. ,...., ......... -llAI) FINI r.ce -M.t<.ell (Todd), 10 .0, •.OO, •.60; Oentoro H ICrOQhenl. U 00, •.10, F IQllllnQ Son IB1ec11manl, •.tO; SJ uacta ... ,, peld $165.00. Soc-r.c:e -CecU-r O.vlln CP•rkerl, U.O, J,00, UO; Fl,..1 Gem (Grundy), J.40, 2.10; OH-Jey's Memorltt (Rlcnmonol. 2 10 end 5pHdy SU ( AO~m.onl. 7. 10 Tlllr<I raa -Ster Clle"1 IFoleyl, U.20, ,,00, J.00; c.11 a.ck CA.t<lllordl, S.60, S.00, Acll4n StW ISOIWW•lll•l , J.00; .., e1<K le C1~2, peld W.00. F°"rtll reu -~ln.1 u .. 1e 18••--I. 4.00, 2.00, J.JO; Mr. E.O.G. CV•ll•n di~). S . .JO. f IO; Truly S.-ty (Gru,.,y) l M . Fifth rec. -Bold Slrtek (Perker). S IO. l .IO, 2.00; T-W-(V•ll•n<1l1>9f>.,.,), 4.20, •.10, i;..,... Brloede (GrP<JOrv). I tO. 'j ... ~" , .. ,, pe1c1 '12•.oo SC•tll rec.e -Alllertaul• (Wllll•m•I, a..o, •.tO, J.ID; Mexllle CK.-.. 1, l . .O, l 00, K.B. Kl119 CGn9orvl. l 20 . Stftntfl rec.• -H-y J Miu (UQl\111111), 1.00, 4.to, UO; IClmotte H-ver IBeyleu), •.oo. J.oo. _,.,. Ntlu IK.-i .. 1, > «>. 's .. -1 .. 101 ~ '100 .. so $2 Pk k Six C•I0-5'+Ul pekl $10,075 wllll ,,,,... wmnu.g lkll.is (•I• 11orsesl, 12 Pkll SC• contolollon peld i 1'9.IO with 107 wlm lno tk •••• Cfh•• '-Wsl. EIQfllll reu -Dee l Amy (Anoer_,l, 21.00. t.ID. '-20; Jlftdff Im-(IUl<ltlel. 4.00, 1.00; Hekyon Holly IB•Yl•ul. f . .0. Nlntft rec.e -M.V.P CSMrrtnl, 4.20, l 20, 1 . .0; Fr• E1presston tOIFr•nco>, "60, l .00; Sully For You CLJQl\tltlll), 3.tO, \S ... ecte (M) pelO $ff.SO. Tertlh •«• -Flrwst Otrl>Y I Pertierl, • . .O. J.40, 3.00; Pecan Biii 1a.iv1enl. 1.IO, 2.40; Ol•lt1 "-ITo<ldl , s . .o; SJ o•ct• ft.ti ... ldSJt.00. All<tndance -&,374. Men'• Toumement lats.I f'r-lto l ~ .... St ..... Aevc '""'"' -· Brue• Menoon, ~1. J.s, .. 2; Vince v .. PettOl'I def ErCll y.., Diiien, •·3, •-•: E llot Tellscf\er def. '#•lier A-.u ... 2.1•,7·1. TlmGulllUonelti Pet ~ ... 2, ~1, 1-S; Rote.,. Te"""r Clti llMI Purcell, J.S, w. Bob Luu oet re,,., -·· ...... 1 • .-Krielr det. Jof\n S.Orl, 1.• •.. l. ~,. 1-s; n .... M.tyott.e o.i ,,.,, Wa11t1e, 7_., .... 0-6, W . Biiiy M.tl11n Cle'! Rollel1V-.,,HOl,._.,/ .. , 1o-t,•·I Women's Tournamant , ... _, ,...... ..... St ..... S llll• JNn Klno def. AM Klvomure. '-'· 1·5, M ; l(ettly Jorden mt. 8elly Sloft, 7_., 1-4. Hene -111.ove ml, L..eur a DuPont • .. 2, "° 5ec8M ...... St ..... Wendy WllJI• -Rosie Ces111. , .. , , ... 1·5: W-y Tumbllll -· Peule Smith, .. 3. .. .J; 01.,.,. Fromllc>ltz 0... Jee-OuV•ll. .. J, .. 2; Lwcla Romenov def. SNtrrv A<lter, .. ,, 1-4,M. Hlilh School WOMEN --11.~Hlll• SI ..... Tran (Ml dlf. Miiier, 7·5, def. Lee, .. 2: '°''to llMI-. ,..; AlbertJ (Ml loll u ; -l·S, W ; J«Qllle Hgu\len (Ml _, .. I, .. , .... ,. ~ McCellwm·Blftns (Ml <tel. Sewnder"' Styrmen ... 2; dlf. B..,,......elO-AemMJ, .. I, -... J . Qerns..ShOr rocl, ..O; &Am-VII (Ml -"°· --..a; -u : -.. 2; Goodrl~si.phOnl (M) -.. I, .. 2, t-J. llWl-1.Mtlllll .. ulNCU ,,....... Cll•ff" (H9l def. Srodle, •·>; def. Hernendea, •·2; L•t<Y IHSI cost lo ~0.0; ... ~ .... "4; l(elly (Hll lotl '° ..-. 1•; dlf. Delergver .. I, 1·5; Women'• Yolleybell COU.••• UC: ,,,,.._ -· UC Al_..., IS-11, IM, .. IS, IS-S.. ''*'" cou.a•• Or .... Cent lief ....... 9ffc", U·IS, ··~~:.s;_-. n·ll. .... -· !"\II.,., 1"-11. , ..... lk,IM. Nt ... ICMOOL ,...._ Y...., .... '--ll, IMS, 1~1', IM. c..teMIM*'f ....... IM, t•H, ...... 1.8TOUR"4UdllT ue-.... -· ·~ .._., IW, IN. ........ 9Mttl -· '-"9 Mtolke. IM. '~'- PCM Stalletlce fOTAI. 0"''"'' ,. .. , • ._ h-0 l'laf\ Y• ( , •• ~...,.1. ~\ 1_,.,. 1 44 ,.,. \I l•r11.-c \I ult I n ~ ,, ..... lOO\j ·-·")I I /I )11 llu.)w" .... ··~ J ... iO'I '••Uil•''° Ul.oi1-.1 l W ~ lilUl totU•G ·-····· ...... Wttlhll• \4f1 ~ 0 •n Y• I ., 1)1 H•yhH•J t \ • vlt.tur.1 WHh~ '~hMAi h•1t I '1""'•1 t' t , .,,"-'\I I !O J01 1 tO I~ I t0 IV .. ,., ..... u ..... ,, .. J JJ rrJ ., ...... , ........ '' ••'""" C \ t uOttrhJ'-WOQ9or' .... 11 •c '''""f't 'nn(I t;e-.,.-n \1 1U\<4""' I IP"VllO~I ..... " ... ,,. 1)1•,._ ,, 0 ~A ,.CT• 1 II H .. J t i 43 U1 J l011J1t 1 ~ 1• ., .. ,.,~100 AIECIEI VI NC:. "'••"' tr.m WttUuti'I 1...n JOV Mev•1to' t•Mtflt Myt Oflf Uf(llP'\ ~I I lt01np'Clfl, UIM> '>I ; 'en1 S..n )O\fo r.e,,ofo cs ruit•rmo Oddi C l'C Y• l II 111 ) 11 us J .. m 3 ll I~ ) 11 ltl ) • .16 !From H•rwa~·· CAenol Race, Sllon• -Nl'L ••m' Suwr New York G149nfJ Bulfdlu 7''> o••r 0 •1\l•od l a"'o• Oo J o•er Cl•vel~na Detroit It' > ovtr Mlnne"°ta Hou\ICJf'I J over C1nc1f"lndfl P11CSOurQn IJ over ChtOOO Ml1mt 1 over Ntiw OrlednS Ph1lftdietP"•• )', oo;•r St \.oUf~ O•tta• 10 over GrHn 9,.y San Olego•o•er ll~"""Cllv ">11n Fr<t"'(l«o )Over •11anl<1 B•ll•more •over New YOf"k Jet' W••h•nQlon •••tr Se•llle Ntw Er.qliAnd 'O\l•r ~f'ltttr CO~Lt:GES llSC llOYfr MlnneM>I• UCL"' 11.,..rWl•<on>in Alebem&. no od<I• Of\lo Stat~ 1• over Art ton• ~C•t~ Net>r.,,.l\• J .,.t, ,...,.... St••• Okl•non>a IJ o..,, Slanl0<d Pllhllul"Qh. noooos Ttc ... noooos Nolle 0.-. no od<I• Floflda Sl<tle S over Miern• Fl• Gt<>rQI• u over.TCU Ml\SOUtl. no odd\ w .. nlrtQlon IV> o•tr Or090" NOr'llt c..roe1.-. •I' o~er M•rYl•nO Ar••nws. no Odds Ml<hlQan • .,.,Oytr Souln C.,ollM Aut>ur" 2\11.rov~r tennesSfl!' High School Cro .. Country MIEN u•~ 11, M11'1ea Ytete• tat u.,_., Hlllll C Me.,,... (UI. 16:12;1. Emery (Ul. 1':1l; l Lloyd IUl, 1':1f; f. Ooelts fUI, 14:1S; S. OweM (UI. 1•.tS; •· -H CU), t•:ll; 1. NeltOn CUI, 14:U ; I. Wlllle (MV), l41Sf; 9, Oloft (MVI. 11:01; 10. 8uelerd, CMVI. 17:0t. -EH u•_..,.., It, Ml.._ vtete 41 I (llel Ar.rnentrO\lt IUI, Benl01 IUl Plumer CUI, 11:51;•. S.U.rwe(n (UI, 12:0>; ~. Srlerr (MVI, 12 07; '· HolQWfn CUI. 12: If; I. Zef!k IUI, u·so •• -CUI. 11:52; t. Scllr-r (Miii, n J1 ; 10. L..ew......:e IMVl. ,, u Weter Polo JUMtO• COL.LEGE Sctn.., o...-n El Camino 1 1 • J-10 Oronge C..O.~I ' 1 2 S-U Or•nge C011S1 scoring: Alllson J, BorSUll 7, ~ Wval1, J . W't•ll 2, C•rroCI 2, Oonrwll 1, Sollo • Sc.,.. 11¥ <Nenen S..nl• Ana l S 3 l-1• S.OOltb.Kk I 1 0 )-5 S•OOI--scoring· Greif 1, ICrls Kr- 1, K•n I( r.ttntr l Misc. Wedneldey'a Trana•ctlone IUDALL Net-I~ ff EW YOAll METS -Acllvelecl Phll Men•-sar, lhlrd bewm.,., to Ille .0-111•- rO\ter ' IASICETIALL Nati-c ~ .... II AsMC.lelloot OE TROI T PIS rONS W•l•ecl Waller O•nlels, QU<trd l"OIANA PACERS Rtleesed L.eAue Martin, tHller. Ric~ Miiier. lorwerd, and John I( uester, QUtrd NEW JERSEY NETS -Tr-A-r P httQley, -0.torwerd, 10 lhe CleYel- C•••Her\ for Cl•renc.1 "Foo•s" W•lk.,.. ou•rd. ~OOTaAU. ......_ ............... BAL TIMOAE COL TS -AtlHMd lloel Rebe, lleM end, Acllvelecl M.tcll All1oft. tight end. OENVEA BRONCOS -Slgnect LArrv Brunt0n, wide rtctlvtr·l<lck retumor. GAU!H BAY PACKEAS -Slfnod S..... P lser111-lct, q ... r1erllad1, -ICUl1 Al-l«man, llneoec11 ... . HOUSTON OILEAS -SIQMCI T~ Henoerson, llrwlleoer. Placed Conwa, Haymen, offft!Slve gwird, "" Ille injuroll ,... wrft llsl MINNESOTA Vll(ING.5 -Pl«ecl Jim H""91\, llUMd, on Ille lnjwred ,.,.,.... llst. Acllvtlecl Mel Mll<htCI, 11 ..... d. A<qwlrtd J im Lanter, center, from IM Miami Oollll\lns tor a sllllfM'-1t11 *•" clloice. (II LMl9W II on 11'9 Vlk"'9s , ... , Ill 1"'1, Ille Dolphins •Ill rec.I,,. a fllltl-r-1"2 dreft choke.I HEW ENGi.ANO PATRIOTS -SitnOd Ml•• Heynos, cornerbecll, and Alcherd llslloo .......... llNmtll. SAN FAAHCISCO .,EAS -S......, Mel Und, defonsl .. end. TAMPA BAY BUCCANEEAS -SIQnod Conrod A11<11.er, ll(lllt encl. HOC.EV .......... Moc...., ....... llUFFALO SASRES -Slontd Oertk Smllll, GeflWr. ST. LOUIS SLUES -Senl Alclr. Wll-, clel•nHtnen, lo Klntston of tile Ol!terlo Junior ho<lr.•Y ........ NHLScorea EJIMletTIClld .............. Ylclwla -.LA, ..... I We....,... 2, 5---AllC I T11IM CHL4, ~I ~---s.v~s.11e l'tlllMll ... S,N.V.111~2 Cllk..-I,_..,.,. 2 Detroit•, .......... T-•1.-........t '. OM.YAlOT a .:.!' Jim Niemiec 'Record Bass Catch? Salt water ftshinl Is sUll producing some nice catches ol mixed bi& same flab for those anglers who are tmt.lng our local waten. Marlin, yellowtail, yellowfio tuna and albacon (up north) are accountlnc for the bulk of the la.r1er came fiab, altboUlh there are still good catches of smaller came nab bein& made by all party boats fiabing out of coastal harbors. THE IDGRLIGRT OF TBl8 put week's fish· ing wu a possible world record black sea bus booked and landed by petite U lliao Scott of Irvine, while fishing aboard the private sportfisber "Menehune." which, trans lated means little peo- ple. The black sea bass was the fourth landed by Scott this year. In last week 's column it was reported that Jobst Doug~erty and friend enjoyed a double on blacks oo the back side of Catalina, but wbeo Scott booked up, there were two other rods bending. The other double was dumped to allow her an opportunity lo land the big fish. Tackle was on the light side being SO pound I FGA string and matchihg rod. The black sea bass look three hours and 25 minutes to land and lbe monster weighed in at "62 pounds! ! Scott's catch was made only about 50 yards away from where J .D.'s catch was made the pre· vious week. MEANWIDLE, J .D. of Bi.sbee 's on the Island, reports that the marlin action has shifted a bit to the south and fish are being reported on the 14 Mile Bank, 277, 267 and209spots. There are not a lot of fis h being booked and landed, but the indications point to a good closing season on all billfisb in local waters. Currently seas remain on the mid-calm side with water tem.' peratures l.o the 67·71 degree range. Down south the're Is still plenty of yeUowtail and yeUowfan tuna being caught, but loads are on the light side and it Is jus t a matter of time before party boats can not continue lo justify the long runs with few passengers. THIS WEEK MARKS tbe openlnc of California's first crow season and varmit shooters, equipped with shotguns . are looking lo good sport from these tough fliers. Most hunting l.o Orange County and other parts of the Southland ii on pa riv ate property, but ranchers would be more than happy lo have hunters come in and rid their OVTDOORS field of these scavangers . The number of crows bas risen so high in California that the Department of Fish and Game decided to open a season on the birds which will run into January of 1981 and there is no limit on the harvest Waterfowl hunters should not rorget that tonight is the annual Or ange County Ducks Unlimited Fund Raising Dinner party that begins at 6 o'clock at the Orange County Fairgrounds. There will be hunters from all over the Southland on hand to exchange hunting stories and take home the many raffle and action prizes given out during the evening. The dinner ticket includes wine and door prizes and 1s well worth the tax de· ductible dollars contr ibuted. . For those who have never been to a D.U . Din· ner. this is a good opportunity and a chance to get out for the night. T ickets may be purchased at the door according to Dennis Baird. this year 's D.U. chairman for Orange County. 999-mile Race Change In Race Planned Mazatlan Entries Received By ALMON LOCXABEV Dellr -........ Writer What is the actual distance of Los Angeles Yacht Club's biennill..race to Mazatlan, Mexico? Most long distance yacht skippers would agree that the answer lo that question would depend on the weather conditions and/or the person sailing-the boat. · The question is apropos because LA YC is now posting the actual dis- tance aa M miles instead of the 1,032 advertised for previous races. THE &EASON: Race committee · chairman Jim Cowie has recently measured the distance at 999 miles as the shortest course. That is as· suming that yachts don't wander around all over the ocean seeking their best wind. Or assuming that the wind i.s not "on the nose" down the coast of Baja California forcing skippers to do a lot of tac.lri.ng as opposed. lo the usual soinnaker nm before the wind. ·There have been several Mazatlan races which required as many as 1,200 miles or more to reach the finish line. There have. bffo others in which lbe "parking lot" at the tip of Baja made it seem like many more. Theo there is the 9ther distance to be taken into consideration by skip- pers and crews in long distance races -the handicap distance, usually much shorter. This is to compensate for the fact that a race such as the Mazatlan 1s primarily off the wind as opposed lo triangular races on which hanilicaps are computed. Triangular courses provide an e qual amount o f windward work, reaching and run· ning. Regardless of the distance, general chairman Don Wood said the club ex· peels about 35 starters this year . Deadline for entries is Sept . Tl. WOOD SAID 15 paid entries had been received a full two months in advance of the Nov. 8 start. "Judging from our initial response, al least 18 more are expected by deadline," Wood said, "but we never count them until checks for entry fees have been received." First skipper lo respond with check in hand was John Scripps, San Diego Yacht Club, whose 79-foot ketch rare· ly misses a Mexico race. Othe r firm entries are Dick Daniels' 65·fool Ragtime , Long Beach Yacht Club; Roy Disney's Shamrock, LAYC; Morrie '}{irk's Santa Cruz-SO Han3 Ho, Ba.lboa Yacht Club; Alex Gietz's Red Shilt, LAYC; Al Martin's Sumatra, LAYC: Allen Puckett's Blackbird, California Yacht Club: Dick Meine's Midnight Sun, LAYC; Nick Frazee's Swiftsure, San Diego Yacht Club; and Ben Holt's Cal-40.Pirate ll. LA YC. Southern California yachts racing home from San Francisco in lhe Ca1 Coastal race - rollo wing St. Francis Yacht Club's Big Boat Series -will no longer have to sail the light wi nd, often foggy leg . from Anacapa Island to Newport Beach. N e wpo rt Harbor Yacht Club, founder and co-s ponsor of the 38S· mile race announced it w as abandoning tbe downwind slide and California Yacht Club of Marina del Rey prompt· ly took over the terminal end of the race. St. FYC w i 11 continue as co- s po nsor . according to Milt Sm ith , eve chairman. This year's race will start Oct. 2 in front of the St. FYC clubhouse, 1ust inside the Golden Gate Bridge. BISBEES SPORTFISHING HEADQUARTERS th1· complf-le tac I< I•· •.h op 406 S. Bay Front Balboa Island 675-5180 A.ngelman Series Ends This Week Coming Sept. 25, Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will wind up its six-race Aogelmao Series for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet this weekend with races around the buoys Saturday and Sunday. Also at BCYC the Commodore's Trophy will be up for grabs in the club's Junior lnterclub Challenge Saturday. ~ The bay should be alive with Sabots Saturday 1 ~w.hen (be Pacific Yacht and Balloon Club stages its annual Sail of the Sabots out of Lido Isle Yacht Club. 1be Sail of the Sabots was started a number of years ago u PYBC's answer to the defunct Flight of the Snowbirds. The event draws as many as 100 of the colorful eight-foot prams. LMA ....... L.91111Mea CebrlllO 8Mcll Yocllt Ch.111 -CebrlllOSOrlOI Ho. 7, S.lvrcley. Llltle Sflloa Fl.--lnvltetlOnel A..-ne 1•11 <1-1 5-y. Aleml ....... YocM Clllb-Clotlllt °'"A ....... Seturtlev. ~.,. one cannaker will be announcing an engin e that automatically goes from 8 to 6 to 4 c ylinders. II 1 .... 11 1 (rt ·11n.111 "'""' '·'1'•111<'"(' II 1...,1) I II, lit.all II 1~11'1 1\1111 .... t\ 11.-.. Anlerlcan St'1· 11~ ~cpa·111l'l<'1 :2!)th ; 1111 f t 'XI x •rn ·111 'I • II 11 ..... n 111, irh, 1l 1h ' 1 ·1 lgll1l' C.lttornle Y.c:M Cl• -lnvol1ed E.-o <Fred Herrls SMlotl Setwtley . ........... ... l~t!!~tl Pe._ Vet*S Y«llt C"* -Girls Gfl thO ltloys (~RFI Sttllnley; Slntlo-Mndlldreco IPHAf'I s.-tv. Wlndl~ Y-CMI-Jelly AOIW A-"8 ldllltlllftl S-.y. s..o.._. c ....... Gen Y«Jlt Chlll -~ Sfrlft No.'· Set11nle'(. sen oi.. 'l'«llt Ctve -L.Uer Clrcvlt. s.tur9ev, ~Y. sn-Gele Y«M Choll -Sen Oloeit ~-... (C.·U. Cetetl-11. Atft99t..JI, T·llr<ll Set-y Swftdey. C ......... Yac.tltCtve-"9iiilnsTr_.,111¥1 ... _("8ncll<-..l ~. Oc...,_ YecM Clllll -Fell S«IOI ls.fl SwlMp. ~YOCllt C"*-F•llSoriel C--)Sundey. _ _,, ..... Venture Y«lll CIW-~Cup"'-"· Setwmy. SenU ...._, Selllflt Ctve -SWnmer terlft Ho. J. s...My. Hobie Race Tightem SANTA CRUZ -The battle for the Dobie Cat 16 National Cbamplon.abip tilbtened up Wednes- day with only seven point. separating the first five places. Movin& up to flnt after alx races wu Rick Ed· diniton ol Newport Beach with Dine points. Seeond wltb ~WU Gary Ruasell ol Santa Crus; third ... Mike Shearer or Salt Lake City witb 11~; fourth wu Jeff Alder of Capistrano Beach; 12~; and Oftb wu Tom Materna ol Sherman Oab, 11. Omohundro Wins NHYC Race1 · Tom Omohundro ofj It WH the second tbe bmt club defeated 20 1t1al1ht Lebman-11 rivab Sunday lD a ftve perpetual tropbJ race aeries for the Omohundro bu won lD Sc hock TropbJ in tbe lut month. Lebman-12 diqbln at Sffoad wu lllte Al· Newport Harbor Yacht len and third wu. Jeff 1Club. llerickel, botb of NHYC. . . -~ ----- DAILY PILOT IJ>ecline of Patriotism? ~~ Natio11al Guard R ecn1iti111l IAl(.41 Badly By Pt:Tl\R AR E1T Al> .._ .. I c..---- • •WEBSTEK Cl1'Y, low1t In many of thl• 1qta1I towns ot Amc rit•a, lbe N"11on1l Guard U'JDOI')' Ulre th~ churC'h and th~ school 1s • llak to a happu•r past. • ttmc of sp1r1tf'd patriotlam. ' But lhat patnotbm bas f1dt'd h~~ In WebslC"r a&y "They Just don't aive a damn." said Britt Gep. Rokrt W Gilbert. lowi\'s adJutant 11t-nt>r1 l. d'eurlbina the sentinrnnt tn this nourlst11na rbmmunlty of 8.000 that sit amidst the rlrh comfielda In the mlddlt• or &ht' ~tatl' THE GEN t: KA •• ·s ('OM M ENT Hhot-~ 1-yond the> Com Belt to other st &tt' .• f.al$1 a nd We I , wben the s ubJ\'('l o f ttu• Natrnnal Gu a rd domes up. Al a tame when <'lt1u•n soldtt'r"' ur1• tieing counted on to supply half tht' ft rl'fJC•wer 1n the event of wRr, publil' apathy has set If\ "Peopl~ around here could eart• It·~~.' n 1d 1-;c1 IJamson ()(the Chambt>r of t'ommcrt't' tn Wt>~tt'r City. a city settled by German and Scltnd1na\lan farmers. "This set!ms to ht' ·t• Uml' tn AmerktH1 history when we don't have mueh s p1n1 anymore " Little interest was exhibited h~rt> when the lbwa governor a nnounced his plans to elose the Webster City armory and 17 more of the SS in the ~Be because or lagging recruiting The people or 'Jj~ter City shrugged and went on their ow~ 'f'/3Y ~ For three decades. the red bnck armory has a.en a landmark on Superior Street It was erected in honor of two local youths killed an action dDring World War II, Guardsmen who went into b'lttle in North Africa with Iowa's 34th "Red Bull " Olvision. , TODAV, ONLY 24 GUARDSMEN DRILL at Hie armor y. all th at 's left of Co. C , 4th lfaintenance Battalion. _ Master Sgt. Val Ewing. the lone full·time Guardsman, laments that if the governor's phrn toes through, the armory will be turned into a racquetball court. The Guardsmen will have to oommutetoCedarGrove, 20 miles away, to train. But, said Sam Ades, a former National Guard master sergeant who runs a fast.food franchise, ''.3'be closing won 't rajse a ripple here. "I r e m e mber when the community enthusiastically built it ill 1951," Ades said. "In lkal volunteers. Today \flt ' I\ 11.l .'I' U.Ose days we had 135 ( J there's 24. People here . . i.ave given up the battle to keep the militia going." Recognizing the recruiting problems t hat mushroomed with the end of the draft, National Guard officials are looking for incentives to fiU the ranks of the 3,300 Guard units in 2,600 dommunities. Guard ranks are 84 percent filled , with about 351,000 troops. but the turnover is high, u much as 46 percent in Indiana last year. YET, A WORSENING WORLD SITUATION bas placed a greater def~nse burden on the militia than ever before . Guard units are expected to be on the front Lines overseas within 90 days to ieinforce the all-volunteer regular Army. In •ddition, the Guard is frequently called on to help ip times of natural disasters. civil disturbances, and other emergencies. l. Still, a lot of people don't take the National \lruard seriously . "They seem so inconsequential in terms of modem Weaponry like misstles and technology." &aid Jane Curtis, a reporter from the local HELP· 1 PROBLEMS WITH NEWPORT BEACH POLICE? If you or anyone you know have been the victim of any use of excessive force by Newpo rt Beac h Po lice officers, please call Attorney William Sheffeld, 1215 N. Ross St.. Santa Ana. 714-558-7200. W1•bstN City llt'Wb1Ju1wr , The O•llY fo'reeman. lr\11111-t In ~"'111laln ht·r t•c1 mrnluHly'~ indifference W 1• '\1-t• uw 1n 11\ th1 ·11 II t l11• Krt•1•11 trucks and ht lie ,.:1 t•t<n un1forrn' 11nd lht'y d1)11 't 'it>t<m r<·al " l'on1•c-r m•cl about 111., unUI((' ul> a "weekend ~ urn ur, · u younl( <'UJ>l11111 with T exas' 49lh A1 m un'tl U1 v1:.wn durc!> 11111 wt:ar has uniform .ir oun1t hi' 'ln~h·' .11J.11t1 nt.'nl bualdinl!( 111 Houston lh• d1,in.:~!'I rlothc' <it th<' urmory , a closet (; u ,1 rcli. rrtu n lto ht·rt ft;ns!-1111 , ;a 'l'u1o pa advertis ing ··x~t·utivt· who '" ct 1Jt1~:Hht:r general in the Florida NJt1onul <:u:trd. 1s su Jascrcet uoout has connection with thi' nu httu that most or has fnends were surpr1sc•d to 'lN ' him interviewed on national televas wn while ht• c·om manded Guard troops handlanJ: the flood of l'uhtt n refu~ees into Key West this summer ENSSU N SAYS, "T HE TWO BIGGEST reasons we lose people are wives ana employers." And Ensslin's wife barely tolerates his military avocation . "She does n't think people should be running around with guns training to kill people." the part-tame general suid. Many wives also resent their hus band's giving up one weekend a month and two weeks each s ummer for Guard training. In Webst er City. the attitude of som e employers was. "Next time l hire som eone I'll make sure he's not in t he Guard." said Lamson of the Chamber or Commerce. On t he other h and , some companies pay employees for the two weeks they are away at Guard ('amp. THE IOWA NATIONAL GUARD HAS its own problems Its image was smudged recently by major scandals involving a former state adjutant genera l. Brig. Gen. Jos.eph Mays was given a four -month jail sentence.' which he has appealed, for using a Guard plane to court a woman he later married. Gwt!ndolyn Applequist. "The Guard was cheapened in the eyes or all the people," s aid Ades. the former m aster sergeant. The Iowa Guard is the weakest in the country. with only64 percent or its authorized 7,651 troops. ''The writing was on the wall for the Guard in this state," said Gilbert, the current adjutant general. "There was a shortage of tax dollar s, a nd the governor's economy committee had already consolidated the school system. The Guard was next." Under the plan, almost one·third or the state's armories will be closed, resulting in a saving of S123 .000 a year. Units will be consoUdated in communities more enthusiastic a bout the Guard. thereby retaining the $44 million paid lowa annuaJly by the feder al government in the form of wages and expenses for the Guard. "DON'T PRESUME THAT PATRIOTISM is entirely dead in Iowa,·• Gilbert said. He mentioned the community of Mapleton in the western cornfields. Faced with the closing of its armory a few , months ago. Mapleton's 1,500 people "proved that there is still coWltry pride in the smaller towns," in the words of the town's mayor, Meyer E. Davis. who runs an automobile body shop. Mapleton h ad been able to find only 14 volunteers for its share of the 2nd Co., 133rd Infantry Battalion. Yet, the 100-year-old prairie community had a long tradition or service, sending National Guards men to World War II. Korea and Vietna m. ~~~~~~~~~=~==~~~~~~~~~ The governor's threat to close the old armory ?. -------., stirred editor Mike Lyon into action, and his CALL TOM MARSTON ABOUT A SECOND TRUST DEm LOAN UP TO ssoo,ooo -1-{ewpo~.~~!~!.!!1;.lnc • (714) 760-6060 weekly ne ws pa per rallied the community. Within a few wee ks. 20 more recruits were gathered from the s urrounding farms and s igned up, fi lling the com munity's commitment. ''WE WERE NOT ABOUT TO LET the Guard down ... s aid Davi s "We recogn ize the responsibility or rural America to our nation's defense " • The mayor of We bster City, antiques dealer Eugene Gray, sees a more pressing commitment business g rowth. "We have s pent a lot of money here preparing for industry," he said. "There will be a sense of loss whe n t he ar mory closes because it is something we always expected would be ther e. But wt> <'an a lways use the building as a community ha ll , und our firs t duly is to business growth. and that takes all our lime " NEXT No More Kenl Slates Poaching on Rise DAR ES SALAAM , Tanzania (AP ) - Tanzania's 220 anti·poaching game scouts are los· ing the fight against poachers largely because they're s hort. of ammunition, says game director F. Lwezaula. The past year had been the "worst ever " for wildlife preservation with a record increase in poaching activities, he told a meeting in the cen· tral Tanzanian town of Tanga. -Haallh Fair Freete9tafof blood ,,,..,,.. eye, pufmonatY. l'lelltnQ. ntneM durinQ Huntington c.nter HIHlth Felt Thut1. ttwu Sun. Aleo CPR. ecupunc:ture $77,()()f) Won in La~uit I.OS ANGELES (AP) TERRY COLE-WHtnAKER IN A LR 'ftAMSFOIM ... SUCCESS SEMINAR SAT., s.T. J7, 10 AM-2 PM HUM'nl•TOM llACH ..... SCHOOL AUDITOllUM MAIM a YOIOOWM. MUMll18TOM llACH . NATION The author of a post· m ortem book on Howard llug hes based on in· terviews with two aides o f the late movie · aviation tycoon has been ordered to pay almost $77 .000 In damages to in- dependent film producer Presented in Southern Califom1a by Reverend= Bassett and the Church of ReligkJus Science ol liJntt Beach. Kenneth G. Gale. A Superior Court jury made the award follow- ing a four.week trial. Gale or Re no. Nev., al- 1 e g ed autho r J a m es Phelan intentionally in- Terry has been profiled on CBS Television and in US and New Woman Magazines "With love, Terry" is seen weekly by thousands on KHJ Channel 9. Los Angeles, Sundays at 11 .30A,M Tickets available at the door Tax deductible donation of s25oo per person. Please arrive by 9.30 A.M. For further intormat1 on call (714) 536·9336_ terfered ~th Gale~ con· ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tract rights with the two :: ---- a ides, Gordon Margulis and Mell Stewart. GALE CLAIMED he did not participate in the $400,000 in r evenues from the L977 best-seller .. Howard Hughes: The Hidde n Years," said Gale's attorney Richard M. Colem an. PUBLIC NOTICE STATE MENT Of WITHOlllAWAL FllOM l>AllT NElllSHI P OPE ll ATING UNOEll flCTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME I lle lollowlnq ""'°"hes w1111<1rawn •s • gener•f P•rtntr trom "'• perln•rshlp ooeratlr19 under Ille lie lillous buslneu name ol DESIGN PARTN ERS. al J.1101 Co<lst HIQhway D•na Polnl, C.lllornl• '116,. The ll<lll•ous bu\l""U name '1•1•· ment '°" llW r»rtne•l>hiP was llled on JuM IS, IU~lntlleColnlyol Oranqe. Ga le claimed in his Full Narru• •no Aooru• or Iha . h h . Per,on WllhOr-lng SUit t at e mtrod':'ced I Annt M HIJlb, tm• Br1g•nHne St ewart and MarguUs to Orlve. o ..... Poonl. CalUornl• 9161'1 P UBLIC NOTICE f'ICTITIOUS"'iUirNaSS NAME STATEMINT Tllo lo11owl119 person• are ooino buslneues· TIMBER RIDGE. LT D., J Corpou1e Pleu. Suite JOI, N-""'1 le•Cll, CallfOf'nle 92..0 NEWPORT INTERSTATE INVESTORS, INC., • C•lllOf'nle cor. PC>••lton, l Corpor<lte Pier•. Sulle JOI, Newport Buell, C..lllOf'ni• 'nMO This lluslneu h conClucleCI lly • llmlleel pert,.rstolp. Newport lnlersl•I• ln-eston, Inc Richard J. L0ttne1. Pnsldlnl TMS stet-"' w., Ii-wllll .... C°""IY Cl•f'll of Or-County on Sep. lemller 2, ,.., PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS aus1111•SS ~STAT•M .. IT Tl•• to11-1.,. "''°"' ••• Clolno buslneu a1· BACK BAY DES IGNS. UO Or<NrCI Ori..,. s.nt• .-..... Cellto<nle '2701 JerlAllll Gon1elft. no Dr<ll•rCI Drl ve, s.nta Ana. Calllornle '2101 Charin Welhr, 2242 Orchard Drift, s.nte ,,,,.., c:.lllO<nle '2707 Tiii• Dt.ISIMU I• <Oftelucleel lly e Qerwrel ~Ip. ~Gonui.• 0\¥ ... E.Welllef Tllll ll.-1..,._. wes 111..S •1111 tlle Counly Clen< of 0reFIQlt County on S.1>- 1 .... i..r t. t• Phelan. a Long Beach· A,,,.. M H1111• ,mm based writer. fo r the ' Put>ll•Ned Ora"9'f co.nt Dally 1>1101, purpose of writing a book S.pi 4· 11• "· 25• '* 3611-te> a bo ut the r ecl usive PUBLIC NOTlcE-- "' .... ' PullH~ Or.,. COHI Delly Piiot. f144Jn Sep!. 4, 11, II, U . ,_, lM7-eG Pullll•""" Or-'°"'' D•lly Pllol, ----------- bi llionai re. B UT GALE was cut out of the profits from the book, in purported violation of the agree- m e nt h e had with P helan. Coleman said. The award included $50,000 i n pun itive damages and $26,912 for breach of contract, Coleman said. Sept 4, 11, 11. ts.,.., ~,..., f'ICTITIOUSiusiifEU NAMa STATEMENT PUBLIC NOTICE Tiie IOl-l"IJ .,.,,,.,,, Is CI04no t>u•I· l'ICTITIOUS •USI NIESS neu H : NAME STATIMENT PENE LO PE 'S FASHI ON Tiie lollowi"O per10ns are Clolno FAIRE, 11U Vktori•. Suli. J, c ... 1. t>uunena•· MeMl,Celltonllemi. SCISSOR COU NTRY, 11197 Heney Penelo.,. Wein, ll"l Brookhurtl St,..,, Founlaln V•lley, Brookllu,.t, No, UO, Hunllnolo'I Calllornia 927111 S.acll, c:.lltomi. ,,_ Lewi\ Johrt Gemwv. 4'2 Sc-rlo Tiii• bu\lne\• Is <onclUCleCI llY •n In Orlve. Hunllnvton S.~h. C..llfornle divleluel. 9?M9 Nancy P. Weiv K au.Inn Sue Garnsey 4IU Tiiis st.1....m ••• filed with -Scenario Drift Huntl"91on 8.ac11 County O..n.o10r.,,.. c.o..ntyon ~ C.lllornle._ · ' ,...,...,, •. '"° Tiii• t>usin.ss I• c.-.Cl..S lly en in. Ptt41., Cllvldual Pullll"'"" Or-CoaS1 D•lly Piiot. Kathi-Sue G¥nwv Sept 11, II, ll. Oct 2, ,.., ~ Thi• •tat-I WM Ill.cl with - .,. --c.,...,.1y c1 .... Of Orentit County on See>-PUBLIC NOTICE ••mller 2, I .. . PUBLIC NOTICE P1CT1nous au1111asa llAMll STATHqllT . "' ... Nllowl .. --· ... -... 11us1 ..... •: M.J.A. L TO, 16151 T.,,._. Ln., HIHlll ..... IMdl, c.t"'°"'l•ftMt Merlen J . Ares, IWt Ty,._,, L•M, Hunu...., llN<ll. C.1...,...1• .,... Gereld-. Dr .. IMIOI C-«d, H-1""°" 9Mcll. Celllenll• .... Tiii• -..si ..... ,, ~ .., • -·1--. .... . ...,_J,A- Tlll• ......_ •• ftled wffll -c-1, oenr ef 0r..,.. c-ty "" Set* ....... ,.. P1441" ............ Or ... CMtt Dally ~ .... s..t. "· II. ts. Oct. 2, 1• .., .. PUBLIC NOTICE Schools Close f'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT "-Put>ll"'"" Oraf9 eo.st Dally l>llot, ---P-,CT-ITl_OUS_•_U_S_l .. -.-ss--;J..J Sept 4, II, II, JS. ,_, 3't..eo NAMll ITAT•---llT OAKLAND (AP) - Two Oakland school s tructures have bee n added to the list of six closed since the collapse of a n AnLiocb Hig.h School auditorium roof, s t ale officials say . Under investigation is pre -stressed concrete cast between 1958 and 1962 that is believed to b e s hrink i ng to a cc o m"ln o d a le l h e contracting pressure of st eel reinforcements. Tiie lollowlno .,.r10M ••• Clolno t>u•IMuas Tll• 1o11-1.,. ""'°"' ••• Clolno busl....ses· OMN I SHELTERS, 707• Ouell Slrut, Newport Bu ell. C•lllornl• '2660 P UBLIC NOTICE . UNITED STATES UTILITIES .. SURVEY. Jtn Ou"-Drive, Irvine. C.lltornle '1115 STEARNS DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC .• C..llloml• cor-porall<ln. 102' Quell St,...t, Newport &Hell. Ca11tomle9?MO flCTITIOU5 aUSINESS llAME STATEMENT Tiie loll-1"11 persons are oolftO bu•lnes• as · J...,... 0.-, 9M S. Bri.WI, San· la Ana, Cellfoml• '2703 PROTECTIVE CO AT ING c~"TEltS C-OMPAHV. " FlrelllrCI. Irvine, Calllornl• '1114 Vlroll FrMm•"· 1147 Memory Lane. s.nte .-..... Callfomla '270t AF $ DE.VELOP MENT CORPORATION, a Calllo,.,le <OfllOf'•· lion, 1111 "8" o..,._ Awnue. oranoe. Calltornl•'1tM T"ls -'""' I• conductecl by • ral ~~-VlroOF- Tiiis bu•lnHs Is conclu<l•CI lly • 9enere1 pe-.Np. Dalt R Lolle, 1J FlreblrCI, l•vlnt, Calllornla '2114 Donald M. HI~•. Jr , ll Fl.-lllrCI, Ir vine, Cell!omia '1714 Tiii• S1el-wa tllfel with tN C:O..nty c~ °' OraftVI C-ty on S.p. lemller l, t•. St_De...._....,t ~ny,lnc. This ll~IMu Is eonoucteCI lly • ~n•r•I partnership 1"1-PullH-OraftVI ~1 o.iry Piiot, Ptllllp A. SIH~ns. 0.1• R.Letllt s..>1. 4, 11, ''· 15, ,.., ,,.,.., --This stet-I was tiled wilh tN C:O..nly ci.rk Of Orenoe Counly on~ tem11ere, 1• Thh 51•1-I wes lllMI with IM County Cler• or Orenve Counly on AUQUSI S. l'llO. C•ll 642-5671. f'1t41.. 1'14H'7 Put>llshld Or-Coa"" D•lly Piiot, PullliSIW<I 0r""9t Coa•I O•lly Piiot, Sept. tt, ti, U,Ocl. 1, I_, 3702.all Sepl 4, 11, II, U, l'llO ~17-eG Put • tew word• lo work tor ou. Put.lie lnwltedl FREE SEMINAR FINANCIAL FREEDOM & PROSPERITY CAN IE ACHIEVED THROUGH WISE EFFECTIVE FINANCIAL PLANNING ........ -0. .... ,.. c•• le•r• •t "• Free S11k• • Benefit• of nnanct•I pllnnlng • How to beet lnnatton • The three vttal ele.,..nt• In eny IUCCeMful flnanct.I .,..n . • How to avoid common lnveatment mistake• • How to benefit from reel eatM9 In your flnanctal pl1nnln9 • How to auc:c.ufu"J rHp the tu and profit benefit• of real aatete and ellmtn.t• the h•• .... • How to lepHy Hve on tasea un- der the new tea laW9 • How to •wold the red t8P9 end••-penM of probete In your , • ...., eat•t• pl8"Nng • When you ehould end atlould not UH e tlulit? • How to find end UM hidden •• aeta to your ectvem-ee • How to cl8cem the difference between epeculdon end aound ..._ veatment • How to benefit from • t•• eheltered IRA, Keough, TSA or Corporete Penelon Pl•n • How to heve profeaatonel Hrvk:99 coonln.ted to rour ·be91 adventage Tiiis Sllmuietlno -lrrfermetive wmlMr w•• lie prew<Md by -edloc-....., Is_., WC· CHSlul In IN lleld Of flnMl<lel pt--II staro et I p.m. -c-H rlY I« a 900d-· LAST 2 NIGHTS! THUIS.. 19'r. JI I PM ...... ,MOT& 18800 Mec:Arthur Blvd. l!Vlne Across from Orange~ Airport ..... WJ.26 ~YIMM ..... 1860 S. Harbor Blvd., Anlheim Presented by: PROFESSIONAL DEVB.OPMENT SERVICES. Inc. ' J ] , J ] J • Old fashioned, romantic dinner-dancing is back in stylC . . ... and the Grand Pon.age now offers you an eveni ng to compete with your favorite memOl)'- Soft tinkling dinner music, ckgant (.'afldlellt table seu lngs, the ttrandeur of flaming tahle5ide rookery. The ultimately danceable Dick Powell Trio is fcatuttd · ""rhuniday through Saturday 1 to lT,' and soft p iano other cvcnqp. SEAFOOD CONNOISSEURS ( Thur5day. Friday, Satu~y ask fOt our "flying LobsCci'" ~Jll'tt • · fresh Majne lobsters, ~tc:rs. clams, ~own in from Bost~. ~laced ~~n. rejoice! ~ · , ~REGISTR1 -r -· ---· 18"4111 MacAnhUr Roulnanl (714) 7S2~m ( I ; I t ctemo. I tChool .... l"'""'nlratlon. w..------------------------------~n..~"t".!'....;.;~~·~_.'_k•_«_r_"'~"'--~-~--~~--~-----------·----------------------------_. Ja • • ......... -• .. .. ·- r I f_ "'ATION "Go on. have one lor the guile< ·• Almanat.t Sa.,·s: • Mild Weather This Winter LEWISTON, Maine (AP> The prog nosticator who made the forecast is now dead, but the 1981 Farmers' Almanac says to look for mild weather this winter, followed by a hot summer and an autumn drought. The almanac, which claims an accuracy rate of at least 80 percent, said this fall will be rainy. while the winter "wlll not be as cold as average. even less severe than the last one.·· The vene rable publication's long-range forecasts have been close to the mark in recent years. forewarning or three cold winters in SUC· cession, followed by a warming trend in 1979-80. THE PROGNOSTI CATION S WERE p r epared by Ha rry K . Buie, a retire d schoolteacher from Inverness, Fla., who died last July at age 68. Buie, the fifth forecaster in the almanac's 164-year-old history, prepared the 1981 weather data and had just about completed the 1982 charts when be suffered a fatal heart attack. The forecasts are based on a complex formula involving swispots. the position or the planets and the tidal action or the moon, said almanac editor Ray Geiger , who traveled to Florida to recover a trunkload of data from Buie's files. "He kept the formula a secret. Even his wife was n't sure what it was," said Geiger , who believes he can piece it together by sifting through the files of Buie, who took the job in 1956, and the forecasteT who preceded him. GEIGER SAID IT WILL BE DIFFICULT to replace Buie, "a quiet, mild-mannered man who was dedicated to his work. We called him 'the Wizard or Inverness·." recalled Geiger, who is ap- proaching "a very famous astronomer" from New York about taking over the job. The almanac, just off the presses, contains the us ual mix of household hints, puzzles, one-line jokes. inspirational messages and recipes, in addi- tion to weather and calendar data. A champion of old-time values and rusticity. the almanac also fires off another salvo in its bat- tle against the Postal Service's plan to replace the five-digit ZIP code with a nine-digit one. Labeling the proposal as "a further frighten- ing outbreak of bureaucratic nonsense," Geiger calls on readers to write their senators and con- gressmen and the Postmaster General. urging them .to "zapthenine-digitZIP." THE ALMANAC, WRICH IN THE past has been criticized by feminists for jokes that gently poke fun at women. includes a two-page essay in praise of suffragette Susan B. Anthony. But it la- ments the fact that the Sl coin honoring her memory "appears to be a dreadful dud so far as public acceptance is concerned." Geiger , who turns 70 this month, has been almanac editor since 1935. His 48-page publication, not to be confused with the 187-year-old Old Farmers Almanac in New Hampshire, has a circulation or just under six million. It's sold to banks, insurance companies and other businesses in the United States and Canada, which distribute it free to their customers. Fresno Rejects Bailout Progrrun FRF.5NO (AP)·-The Fresno City Council has rejected a program to help the city's poor pay their power bills. The program, which would have given S,000 residents a one-time bailout of $10 to $2SO, was de· feated oo a 4-2 council vote. The program would have involved $145,000 col- lected throuah a 4.6 percent city utility tax. It was proposed after hundreds of poor residents asked the council for help. "'lbat measure cannot pass," said councilman Ted C. Wills. "It's unmanageable. It would have caused more problems than it would have pre- vented." -, .•.• -, ..... , ...... , • .., ... 1 For a..lflecl Ad I AcnON A DA't: PILOT AO.YllOll M&.1671 . I ~------~--------- -.. -~---r WEE1Di 1s , To ' ] AD GooD SAT.-SUN. 9 TO 6 THIU OCT. 1 6 FOOT Ix& DOG EARED Fii FENCING as: Tit le tells all. now back to the jokes . ( 1 told my denti•t $20 was a lot of money to pull a tooth, only 5 seconds work. So he pulled it slowly.) 8x24 .... 1.97 8a36 .... 2.77 8a48 .... 3.77 10.24 .... 2.77 HEARTH CRAFT GLASS SCREENS FLAME VIEW In Antique Brau or Black & Polished ~~:hes. 5497 SLIMLINE Antique ~~':h. 6997 Umm umm, thia look.a like quality. The heat radiat .. out, but the warm air doun't pau back thru. It's energy aaring. YOUR CHOICE WESTERN BIRCH OR WESTERN PINE PANELING A real good look in paneling at a n affordable price is what paneling buyers want, right? You got it here. h '\) REMPE SUPER TOUGH ~£.~1'11 1/z" MITRE BOX ':v ~ -::::.. ..:::,, 197 PNC&at (or u it premoulded) ~glea. Perfect 90, 45 degne cuta everytime. Tough eo it should la.at u long u the mort9age. STANLEY POWEILOCI II 25 FT. TAPE 6~~'25 .-1w.:11rf ·-~· A full one inch width, big figune. brivht face, refillahle. Puah button automatic ...turn. '• . ...... .. . ..... JOHNS-MANVILLE FOIL BACK INSULATION . Can't think of a bett.r wa7 to NCluce JOUr winter fuel hiu. or ·---. a..p the hOUM cooler duri.r\9 hot 8P9lla than b\eu.lati"41. He,, look !I~:'-. . ._ <\ •! . .'·· ... : .' ~~!_~9p~~ ~t 18% 1raa CNdit on JOUr home ~ 4·tt FUL-THIK R-11 6~" SUPER-THIK R-19 15"x40 697 . LIN. FT.· 50 SO. FT. ~~rr.I O!!. rr. CLOSE-OUT ZYNOLYTE FABSPRAY FABRIC OR VINYL COLOR SPRAY .. I~~~ Been around for years for people who want to change a color or renew an old __ ,, faded color. ::--- .,.--1 ai I r} I II 0 l RUBBERMAID ROUGHNECK 30 OR 3t GALLON TRASH CAN 11 44 G.E • WALL PLATES 15! Choice of nritch plat. or nceptacle plat. in brown or i.ory. Replace a crack.d or worn one for penni•. 15"x24 LIN. rr. 6!!.rr. 5 GALLON PLANTS 5 8EA~ Choice of Camellia, Aralia EleQantiuima. Gardenia, or Dwarf Citrua. Super healthy ( you espect me to aay they a.ren't?) GLAD 30 GALLON REA VY WEIGHT TRASH BAGS I'! You get eight 3 mil bags. Three mil u pretty thick so it isn't stretching it to call them "heavy weight." SAFEGUARD WINDSHIELD WASHER FLUID 77~ Got the stuff to diuolve road taz, grea.., bugs, etc. Won't harm your finiah, however. CAROL CABLE 12 FT. COPPER BOOSTER CABLE 4 4!12 K .. p-a Mt in the caz. Nobody wants to ))'Uh nowada:v-. but it dOMl'\'t hurt to jump a battery. f:OU~KER. QUAIEI 20/50 WT. .. STATE MOTOR OIL ~ 76: \40TOR Oii U I told you how, much ,.,. ..U JOU wouldn't beli ... it. ( Oo ahead. try me. ) It pa,. hi9 to cha.ftoe your' own nowada'19- -DAILY PILOT NATION Bid E'a.,ors Si .... MERCURY SAVINGS ar~wn Not in Favor of Population Controls 01'1-:N \10N. FHI. ~t :\ M f ; PM. and loan auociation WAS HI NG f O N I A I' I Gov Edmund Brown Jr su~s he ai r« wltb Resources ~··crl'lar)' tluf')' JohlUIOn thut Californi• . houltl tud> ltt carTytng ra1)ot 1t but do<'!in'l f avor ROvern uu •n t p or1u lut inn controls for 111dvocary of popuh1tl()fl control measurt>'I inrlutt lnti a c·utbadt on low 1n<'n m1• ho u!\ln .c , t• x p 111 ndc d abort ion ""' vlr""· t a' ~nttllJe for I a r JC r f ri m 1 I 1 t· 11 11 n d I 1 K h I 1• ru• <I lrn m1grat1nn t·ountry •~ ovf'rpopul lilh'd," Hrown 'aid "It inlght tw undt>r1>0puh1ted "Wh .. 11 you rl y over Cahfom!a, you ~ert ulnly !U't' u lot of empty 11paces " Drow11 itllHI llll id (;aliftTrnla'll low lrw urnt-houlllntc "Is so mode11t thut 1t 's already at rock bottom." "Thl• ou.:hl to bt1 • voluntary matttr," Bro wn to ld r porter s during a m~t'tlna of t " N•lmnal Govemon; Ass0<·1at1on The Demuc rutu· l!IO\ .. ruo1 hll!> resisted demands b~ own-than half tbe IA'tetslaturt-that he.• hrt' John.'4on After ttw ruror ovt-t his co mments last month, John-.un r1·tractt.-d hi• r nll for hrn11.:1 c'n low income.• hoWJlnit nn.iWTl said ahoul 90 ,..-rc-.. nl of tht' lt>llt>r!i to h111 offl<'t' have bt!en pro J nhn.-.c111 Hui ht' d1Sairt~-d w1th "'' C'rlll nf Johll'<l •O ti ,Uj{l(t'SllOOS · 11 ·s not r l1·1.ir to m~ that ttw tie skid urban planning that locates workt-1'1'1 <·lollt> to their JObs would lrWrt-a. .. I• tht• 11umb(or of people that t he st ate a nd the nation could &<'co mmodate with the s ame rt'11011r<'•'1I Plate of the Day ~-------iliiiiiiiiiiiii ::::•CALIFORNIA ig 1 REDSOX • • l R ED SOX -Once a Red Sox fan, always a Red Sox fan. J ust as k transplanted Bostonian John Quad.ros. tntorm•ltO" fOf tht Pl.lff' Of ow 0 •• 1t i-uc>Pl._O t>'/ MJl1t F'•rley, •ultior o' tn.t ,.,. f"'d•flon O' rtvo W"O' WN> of ~tSO"'llited C•flforn1• L•<Pnw Pl•I*' Family Cancer Link Probed NEW YORK CAP> -There are times when cancer seems to run in the family. and these families may provide a clue to causes of the disease, say geneticists at a medical seminar. The phenomenon is so well recognized today that it has been given a name. the "cancer family syndrome." said Or . R Neil Schimke of the University or Kansas Medical Cente r in Kans as City. Schimke and other speakers told doctor s attending a symposium on cancer gen etics Wednesday tha~ the incidence of cancer in some fa milies is so high that an unidentifi ed genetic defect wh.ich may predispose people to the disease is probably being passed from· generation to generation: THE SE MIN AR WAS INTENDED lo bring practicing physicians up to dale on the genetic techniques. It w~s s ponsored b y Memorial Sloan·Kettenng Cancer Center. "I would say as many as 5 percent lo 10 percent of adult cancers have a significant genet ic com ponent If you could identify a family as a hijlh risk. then you could make sure they get regular e xa minations or even prophylact ic surgery and head these diseases off at the pass," Schimke said in an interview. Cancer fa mily syndrome is not new. Napoleon, his father. his grandfather and three brothers and sisters all died or s tomach cancer. More recent ly. physician s a r e m a king systematic studies of such families. Dr. Frederick Li a nd collea gues a t Sidney Farber Cancer Institute in Boston began studymg one family 11 years ago after the father died of skin cancer and two sons came down with s arcoma, a cancer of connective ti.ssues, and one of them died. SINCE THEN, LI SAID, THE OTHER brother died of a second sar coma that a ppeared after the first one was cured . One daughter died of breast cancer and the other daughter got both breast cancer and sarcoma. And one son of the dau2hter who died has leukemia, a blood cancer. Salt 'ri<H Good Thru Oct. 1, ·19ao .. ---...... 1\11 Sale 1tem1 are Sub1ect to Stock on H1nd All Photog.raph1c. Typo0reph1ca1 Clertcll and Prlnung Erroll are SubJe<:t to Correction I l' I II the old heater can't get It any hotter Time tor a new one Dependable, ell1c1en1 gaa water heaters. Glass-tined tanks. rapld hot wat er r ecovery systems. h igh temperalure shut-offs 30-gal .. Reg.114195 10995 ~I .. Rtt. 12US.. ............. 119.95 SO-tel .. Rtt-!SUS.. ............ 149.95 consistent curl with mini Iron Gllelle m•n• curling Iron has 120140 volts tor worldwide use Fast heat up Positive temperature control UL hsted #2620 Reg 9 99 7•• try the view three ways Make-up Mirror Set It up on dresser. balhroom vanity tor chest. Hurry In. only she left! Reg 4.19 311 D [d Rut he alflU uld that the 1rowth of urban area• wUI mean "less water for the rural area• and leas for agriculture." Hrown said Johnson's su11estion for te tttudy or the atate'a "carrying ciapaclty" Is "an Important idea." lie suid his administration bas begun a study of the number and diversity of all forms of life In California. But he added that "we may not have the knowledge yet to decide how many people can live in1 the state." I S ATlJHIJAY 10 AM . ·I P .l\1 . Eacutlve Offices: 7812 Edtnoer Ave., FSIJc: Huntington Beach, CA 92M7 -~---·----Sourh•rn C•llloml• ~lone/ OfllcH . ------Mn E. La P1lm1 Ave., An1helm, CA 112807 89M V1lley View St .• Buen• Plril CA 90920 tW Arnelll Rd., C1m1rlllo, CA 93010 20716 s. AVllon Blvd., Cereon CA ll074e 23021 Like Center Or., (like Foreat), El Toro, CA 92e30 t001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Hlbtl, CA 90831 Gl 4140 long Beech Blvd., Long Beach, CA ll0807 • 22939 H1wthome Blvd., Torrence, CA 90505 1095 lrvlna Blvd .. Tuatln, CA 92e80 l QUAl 235 N. Cltrua Ave., West Covina, CA 91793 HOUSl"C "Mercury Room" nel/eble on •,.,~""''' W •Dl• \ oscillates to Irrigate ' Aalnbird oscillating sprinkler 1dJusts 10 cover small o r wide aree1. Lightweight. easy to move 1round. #0·13. Reg.8.49 441 zap the weed and have some feed Vtgoro Weed and Feed controls pesky weeds at the same time that II lertlllzea your lawn. In 25-lb. bag. Reg.9.95 711 vigor-up your plants with vlgoro A general utfllty fertlllzer for better flowers. shrubs, tree1 and vegetablea. 5 lb. box. Reg. 1.99 101 The precise genetic link with cancer is known only for one r a re inhe r ited defect called xer od erma p1gme ntos um, s aid Dr. James G er man III of the New York Blood Center , CO·chairman of the seminar . In this disease, cells lack one of the enzymes needed to repair damage done to chromosomes by the ultraviolet portion of the sunlight. People with the defect, which is common only in J a pan and Egypt, get sk in can cers on the sun·exposed portionsoftheirfaces, a rms and necks. do it right with Stanley But even in more common tumors, such as breast cancer, stom ach cancer and leukemia, studies have s hown that relatives of a cancer victim run a two-to three.fold greater risk than the public as a whole of gelling cancer, implying that genes play at least some role in the disease. THE SITUATION IS COMPLICATED by the fa c t that genes often interact with the environment. In lung cancer, for example, relatives of lung cancer victims run a four-fold increased ris k of getting cancer if they are non·smokers, but their risk jumps to 14 times normal if they smoke. Another problem, said genetic researcher Mary Schneider of Sloan-Kettering, is that cancer ls so common -about one person in four gets it at some time in life -that it is the unusual family that doesn't have some relatives who have bad the disease. To circumvent this, Schimke sald, docton look for clusters of a single type of cancer, a cancer that occurs at an unusually eaTly age or cancer at multiple sites. The hope is to find a genetic marker that will identify which persona in the affected families att at risk. Brown Vetoes Bill SACRAMENTO CAP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr . bu vetoed a bill aponaond by tbe medical in· ffltry tbat...would have mllde tt b~ for toverD· ment health planners to block IOIDe bOQ1ta1 build· inl projecta and equipment .,..-chMel. In bia veto messa1e, Browa said tbe bill '"would expedite procedW'9 In eziltiq beaJtb plan.ninl laws, but it doel IO al tbe a..-. of mucb·needed coat control." Tbe bW, AB31• by Anemblyman CurUa Tucker, D·ln1lewood would have required state or nlloDa1 bNlth pl~ a1enelea to proye, la maDJ e ... , ._t bospital comtnaction WM UDDeeded or would .. plieateotber area facWUee. dry your hair with yellow max Max 1000 watt llttle hair dryer by Giiiette. Full one year warranty UL approved. #9060. Reg.12.99 911 •top the ....... with the forty WD -40 stops 1queeks. protects metal, l oosens rusted parts and frees sticky mechenlsms. 9. ounce bottle. Reg. 2.39 1•• Stanley Mitre Box and Back Saw adjusts to many angles. Deluxe. On legs. Lightweight and rugged. #19 -035VP. Reg. 59.99 39aa spred It on the house Glldden Spred House Paint goea on eufly, dries quickly. Durable flat finish. r .. lsts bllstera and peeling. Reg. 15.49 10'! El ~ fant11tlcally1~~~~ sprudlble Exterior spred latex gloss HouM & Trim p1lnt from Glidden. Goes on with ease. Chalk resistant finish, quick-drying. Reg. 18.59 keep the windows , shut Aluminum wlndoow slide a1op keeps the wlndoow shut. Keepe Intruders out. #1406. Reg. 1.05 trigger spray those stllna X· 14 Instant Miidew Stain Remover has a convenient trigger 1preyer to work on bathroom Ille. 1hower stalls. and grout around tub. 18 oz. bot- tle. Reg. 2.98 t•• Conveniently Loalfed ... Eosy To lteoclt 2666 HARBOR BLVD. IN COSTA MESA PHONE 546-7080 HOUISa WlllCDAYS 9 ·te 9 IATUIDAY AND SUNDAY 9 to 6 ~ ..... __ ... . } .... Harb~r High Turns SO By mCHAEL OOUG.\N Ot .. o..,,... ..... The 102-root tower of Newport Harbor lhah S<-hool h.i1 stoOd for SO ye ars •:c • s nibol o l education in the eyes o( L'08ta Mesa and Newport Beat'h rest dents. Aging, but still trn,.1oslng. Lht! classic spire thl:. weekend will look down on a proud il:SSOrt ment repre!f~nt1ng numy of thc- almost l5,000 graduatt'S who !'all Harbor High their alrnu mater P roude st of all those d S sembled on the Sl·hool ground. pe rhaps, will b~ Sidney H Davidson, who ser ved as Harbor High ·s rirst pnnt'1pal. the dis trict 's first superintendent amt, even 21 years after retirement , is an artir u late a nd hearty booster of the Sailor s and lhe1r school. HARBOR KIGH'S HISTORY begain in 1921, nine yea rs before the school was opened, when lhe Harbor Area was for t'ed into the Santa Ana School Dist rict. The result was much like today's re· ac tion to involuntary busing - parents raised hell. The letters-to-t he ed itor col- umns of local newspapers were filled with plaintive. angry and c onfused m is siv e s (T he ne ws papers the mselves were split on the issue.) PUBLIC PROTEST meetings attracted an outpouring of resi· dents . Committees were formed to work toward the goal of establishing a high school dis· trict for Newport Be ach and Costa Mesa At issue was t he fact that Harbor Area residents "had no voice in the government and on· ly paid taxes to the county,", said Davidson. Newport Beach and Costa Mesa residents were not even al· lowed to vote in Santa Ana school board elections. "MANY RESIDENTS of the 'city of Santa Ana were sympathetic with those of the outside area," s aid Marie Heibsch, an early teache r who bas documented Harbor High history. "But it seemed impossi· ble to change the s ituation under existing laws " - Before.~ •• After ••• 8 the mid 19208 a full blown c-•mpalp to form • ae11uat • hitth &ehool dialnl't wati under way m ~ Harbor Area . despite lc-rvent op~jUon from the San ta Ana Chamber of Commert'4' 1 whic h w as s1mult a neou11 ly worlnna tn havt Cost a Mesa an nc>s t>d by Santa Ana l •nd l'•ty sc.'hool admirustratoris I ALTHOUGH POLLING BOOnlS wert> finally placed in the Harbor Arl'a for th~ 1927 t·hool board el~t1on . taxation "''1t h r e p rese nt ation was no longer suffi cient for loca l res t d e n ts They wa n t ed a hig h school of their own Three commuruty lea ders L~w H Wa llace . Donald J Dodge and Fred Opp took the issue to court They served a writ on Orange County Superin t e nde nl Df Sc h ools 1 R P . Mitc he ll,· demanding that he s how cause why an election OD the proposed district should not be held. The y lost in court. Frustrated residents turned to the st ate Legislature for help. Sen a to r Nels Edwards o r Orange, with the support of As· se mblymen Ted Craig or Brea, introduced a bill to permit the withdrawal. VICTORY CAME IN 1929, when the bill passed the Senate a nd Assembly. In May, it was signed by Gov. C.C. Young and, on Aug. 14, the bill became a la w. Committees in Nt>wnnrt p,.A,.., · a nd Costa Mes a immediately began circulating petitions call· ing for a vote on the propooed new school di.stricL The election was held in Sel'" tember. By a ballot of 894 to 23, the Newport Harbor High School District passed from the status of dream into a reality. WAS11NG trn'LE TIME, re· sidents elected five school board members, called for ap- plications for the principal 's p os t and selected an architectural firm. Building plans were worked out by December. Within six months, a flag.raising ceremony and official ground-breaking was held. • ~llOOl. OPt:NED nil Sept. 22. 1930, with 178 11tudents . f>M vidtt<ln Wll:S principal &nd M s llJeh8('h, a music teacher, wu on his 11taff They were Joined by Bob We ntz and Webb Jont'I , other veteran teachers who recently shared those ~arlY dlllyli "W~ st arted with only three ye.r11 of school," Davidson re- called "The semors continued to be sent to Santa Ana High School " ·'P robably the most difficult problem was in getting our kids lo find school spirit," be added. Davidson said the students. w,bo had trans fe rred from well· organiied schools in Santa Ana and Huntington Beach, were dis· couraged because they didn't know each other and the school had no athletic lie ld. A PATCH of ground on the north end ol the campus was set aside for that purpose. But, until the field was finally built, the ground served only as a source ol dust when the Santa Ana winds swept by. "They picked up quantities of dust and blew them right into the sch ool , inc luding the ca f e t e ria," Davids on r e-- membered. "It was so thick we couldn't serve food. On those days when it was very bad we used to let school off.·' IN TIME the g-ro wing pains subsided, a nd only two more traumas were left for Newport Harbor Hi~h . One was the earthquake of 19,13. Davidson s aid the school survived with minimal damage. "rt hadn't been built accord· ing to the later earthquake specifications, but it was a pret- ty sturdy building. About the on- ly real damage was• when some of the ornamental plaster over the exterior of the stage in the auditorium fell. If anybody had been sitting there in the or- chestra, it would have been tragic." IN ADDmoN. bolts in the auditorium roof sheared off and a crack appeared in the school tower, which held symbolic significance for community resi· dents . • This field. at what is now the location of 15th Street and Irvine Avenue, was selected as the site for a new high school following a nine-year political battle to secede from the Santa Ana High School District. The new Harbor High School opened on Sept. 22, 1930, with 178 students and a faaJty d 12 . But the su"ounding field remained b8tren for several years and winds generated so rooch dust the students /:fad to be sent home. ... ·---- THE SCHOOL TOWER WAS AN. IMPORTANT SYMBOL TO RESIDENTS IN 1930 ''The reason that there was the tower was tha t the people or the complunit y wanted to be able to rook up there and say 'That's our high school."' ex· plained Davidson. The second, and much bigger, shock hit just over a decade later . It involved blackout cur· ta ins. bomb drills, gasoline ra· tioning and, in time, a "rowinR list of students who had left to serve their country and would nevff return. WORLD WAR II "affected (the school) in many ways," said Davidson. "It changed the nature of a lot of the jobs we had to do. · .. TREBE WAS also a shortage of teachers at that time. Many of the young people you might like to employ as teachers were sub- j e ct to the draft or had volunteered for service. ''There was also a sho rtage of teachers at that time. Many of the young people you might like to employ as teachers were sub- ject to the draft or had volun· leered for service. In addition, there was the very real fear that Japanese bomben would make their. way across the Pacific and tum Newport Beach into a war zone . "We didn't have any lights in the western school area and in our homes. We put black cur· tains up," said Davidson. BOMB DRILLS were held ·'because there were several scares." he added. Evacuation routes were posted on bulletin boards and in hallways. But the bombs never came and the tower still stands. An emotional blow still re· membered was QQe that affected the lives of everybody in the country -the Nov. 22, 1963, as- sasination or President John F. Kennedy. ON THAT DAY, a student named Donald Nixon stepped outside and quietly lowered the school's American flag to half· staff. "He did it on his own." said Assistant Principal Jack King. "Nobody told him to." Young Nixon's uncle, Richard, would later occupy Kennedy's office in the White House. Meanwhile, the high school dis trict had grown. In 1959, Costa Mesa High School opened. Two more -Corona· del Mar and Estancia -came along in the '60a. PERHAPS FOB THAT re· a son. adminstrators decided in 1966 that one of Newport Harbor (SeellA&llO&, Page CZ)' Many Grads • Ill Show Biz Any effort to list Newport Harbor High School graduates who have gone on to distinguish themselves in a variety of fields is too large a task. Tbe roster is too long and, inevitably, many would be left out. Still, some of the more well· known alumni were asked last week to reminisce about their days of read in·, writin' and arithmetic. Several who have made their -Oame in sbow business attribut· ed their choice of careers to their experiences in high school. .. THAT'S WHERE I got start· ed," said Anthony Zerbe, stage and screen actor. Zerbe, whose credits include leading role5 in ''The Omega Man," "The Turning Point," "They Call Me Mr. Tibbs" and a regular part on the television de· tective series "Harry 0," credit· ed former Newport Harbor High drama teacher Bob Wentz with launching bis career. "He i5 the main reason I'm an actor," gaid Zerbe. "He's a won- derful source of inspiration." The 1954" graduate said be , participated in several dramatic presentations at the school, both as actor and director. ZERBE STILL returns to 'Harbor High on occasion to pre· sent poetry readings. ... .. It's the only high school I do poetry at," be said. ''Mostly I do collegs and univenitiea." Another celebrity who credits Wentz with bis success l.s Bill Skiles who, along with Pete Hen· derson, is part of one of the longest·nmninl comedy teams in show business. "He put us together," said Skiles. "Pete waa a aophomott; there wen ai.x yean difference in our a1es.· I had been out a year while m the Air Force." "Bob Wentz said 'You ought to meet tbla kid; be plays piano and you ought to 1et to1ether, · " the 1M9 craduate remembered. And that's bow the famous act called Sidles and Hendenon wu formed. SIULF.S RECENTLY moved ,Kona,Hawail.ButhefrequenUy · return1 to the malnland to tour ·with Hendenon, who haa a home in L•IUD• Beach. "We've been toaetber 2Z yean 'now; we're tbe lonteat act ln the . f>ualneu," be aaid. "Al far u 1taDd-up comedy teams, we're . tbe only onet IOIDI." Unlike Zerbe, Skiles and Hen· denon, aucceuful opera aiqer llanellee Carta1a aald abe did DOt partidpate in any dramauc . . a\:livities while a s tudent al Harbor High. Ms. Cariaga, who graduated as Marvallee Moody in 1955, said s he didn't appear in llDY plays because "I wasn't c6osen to. They wouldn't even let me audi· tion." Which was no great impedj· ment, because s he began appearing professionally -in the Orange County Light Opera Company -at age 15, Miss Cariaga said. She we.nt on to marry, have two children and continue her career in opera companies in San Francisco. Vancouver, Pit· tsburgh. Hawaii and New York. SHE WENT ON to marry , have two children a nd continue her career in opera companies in San Francisco, Vancouver, Pitts burgh. Hawaii and Hew York. Ms . Cariaga now lives in Long Beach, traveling frequent· ly to perform. Although not exactly in show business. The Rev. Terry Cole- Whittaker bas become a celebri· ty through televised broadcasts of her Sunday morning services at the La Jolla Church of Religious Science and her popular book "What You Think of Me i5 None of My Business." 1 "I WAS VERY involved (in school activities )," said the 1957 Harbor High graduate. "I jlW loved school. I lettered in swim· ming, diving and baseball and was in the school chorus." Wentz said a number of other graduates have made their names in entertainment fields. These include: -Stuart Cooper, who gradual· ed in the early 1960s, then went to tbe Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London. Cooper stayed in London to become a producer, director and writer of ftlms that have gained international recognition. -ROBIN FIELDS, a night· club entertainer in Ne w York. -Chris Weatherhead, who re· cently appeared in the off· Broadway play ''Place Set- tings." -Frank Marshall , a . Hollywood producer who participated in the mating of movies such as "What's Upl Doc," "The Last Picture Show,' "Star Wan" and "The Empire Strikes Back." -HARRIET ABRAMS who, as Irene Worth, became a well· respected actress in serious <See F.ulOUS, Pa1e CZ> Celebration Schedule They'll be pulling out all the stops this Saturday as Newport Harbor IDgb School in Newport Beach marks its Golden An· nivenary. Principal Tom J acoblen said up to 5,000 former graduates and their families are expected to join in the festivities, which belin with a bomecomin1 1ame Friday night and end with an ln· form al series of brunches on Sunday. · But the main events are scheduled for Saturday and they offer notbiq if not variety. A number of local 1overnment and school di.strict offlciala will participate in the opeoln1 • ceremonies on the hiab acbool campus at 10:00 a.m. They ln· elude Sidney Davidson, who wu principal when Harbor Hilb flnt opened ita doon on Sept. 22, 1930. The campus will be covered with exhibits and aala booths. Re1ular tours will be CODdueted tbroUlh the acbool 'a new hil· torlcal mU1eU1D,' Herlta1e Hall. At ll a.m . 1raduatea ol the acbool will present live enter· tainment in the auditorium. An auction on the campus quad baa been set for 1:30 p.m. Items to be sold are mementos aalva1ed from the remodeled auditorium, aucb aa li1bt fix. turea and decorative tiles. A half-hour later, a alide show on the b1atory ol the school, pre· pared by the aeoior claaa, will be preaeated in the auditorium. The cloeiq ceremony, with a nostalpc rendition of the alma mater, will come at 3 p.m ., but the party woo 't be over. Two IOclal hours have been acbeduled for Saturday Dilbt. Leut formal of these Is the drop·ln event at the American Le1ion Hall, intersection of 15tb Street and Bay Avenue on Balboa PmlDlula. A no-bolt bar and anacb will be offered. ' Tbe larser affair is Ht for the rooftop ol the Lido vwace part. lnl facWty. A S15 ticket (re- aervatiom cloeed tbia week) will provide the 1rada 1ourmet ·fooda, freab fruit.a and hon d •oeuYl"el and delerta, an open bar and the atraim of atrolllq muaidma. C! DAIL V PILOT o.u.-, .... - BUILDE RS CITED -Betty Belden, le ft, c hairman of ft'lJN0$Y llouse. und Arlene Post. co-c hairman, pres e nt c lock to Don Anderson, L.~. (Bob ) Al~rtson and Bob Anderson of .Village Homes. projec~ coordinat<?rs· The .home will be auctioned In November to fund burn unit at Santa Ana-Tustin Commuruty Hospital. ·craftsmen Honored By J UDITH OLSON Ofl .. 0•11• ,. .... , .... There's a very special house in the Villa Heights a re a of Orange County, with a spectacular view of the city lights, that will be sold at auction come late November. The purchasers of the 3,500-square-foot house. which is expeeted to sell for around $400,000, wtll always live with a lot of love because that's what the house is made of. It's the FUNOSY House, a fund-raising pro1ect for Santa Ana-Tustin. Commu~ity Hospital's proposed burn unit, the first private burn racilily in Orange County. The home is being built with donated matenals and labor from nearly a hundred h r ms and craftsmen in Orange County. IT WlLL BE sold at auction and the proceeds will be used to equip and open the four-bed burn unit. . The fow·-bedroom. two-story Tudor-style house will lruJy be a luxury home for its owners Every possible amenity is being added by the donors and it wiU be finished to the last detail of landscaping before it's put on Lhe auction block. There will be three fireplaces, intercom and bwJt·m burglar alar m systems, mirrored doors, gourmet kitchen, etched glass windows . and tile from a brand-new line All the contributors were honored dunng a Sun rise Champagne Breakfast at SATCH and details of the bum unit were given by plastic surgeon Robert E Miner MINER SAID the SATCH burn unit is needed because the only other specially "'Quipped hospital. the UCJ Medical Center, is overtaxed already. "There are only 12 beds at UCI and SATCH plans to add another 4, at a cost of more than $30,000 per bed. He said serious burns are "the most severe injury a t>opy can sustain" and that t hey requi re not only special medical t reatment but• PS,Yc ho logical and social therapy as well. "A third-degree bum (the most serious) is a parual destruction of the largest organ of your body," Miner said. He explained that the skin keeps fluids in and bacteria out, and because of the invasion or bacteria, infection is the most serious problem for burn victims. . S ince the s kin also keeps people. warm, bum victims need more calones, but •• .Harbor since their bowels are s hut down because of the loss of fluids. they can't eat solid food. "Bums are a multi-system problem," Miner said. "Patients need a special environment with controlled temperatures and humidity. A bum patient needs two nurses and · special beds." Burn victims also require rehabilitation in their whole lives, Miner said. "It's a total body problem and a question of the quality of life." FUNDSY House will be open to the public for the ftrst time on Nov. 15. Award presentations were made by Betty Belden, chairman of FUNDSY House, and Arlene Post, co-chairman. ORANGE COAST firms and their re presentatives recognized were Leverton Beck plumbing, Irvine, Bill Beck; Hydra Bath Costa Mesa, Nelson Betacourt; Model Glass. Irvine,' Chuck Boniols; Associated Design, Costa Mesa, Stephanie Colt, and Clark Cabinets, Costa Mesa, Clark Dicus. Also Ken Mattson Studios, Costa Mesa,. Ken M~ttson ; Coland, Irvine. Di ck Rees; Custom Glass Etching, Costa Mesa, Ed Water s ; Far West Fir Sales, Huntington Beach. J ohn Weston ; James Lumber. Huntington Beach , Jim Harr ington ; Homebuyers Guide, Newport Beach, Park E. Bryan, and C & L Shower Door Co .. Costa Mesa, Franlt Starr. · Others were Samco, Costa Mesa, Joe Samuel; Baldwin Co .. Irvine, Jim Baldwin; Dr. Howard Lang, Irvine; Signal -Landmark Properties. Irvine , R.· R Ja mes and R. B. Warmington, Irvine, R.B. Warmington. Special recognition was given to Don Anderson, L. C. (Bob) Albertson and Bob Anderson of Village Homes of California, Santa Ana, for coordinating the project. Gaming Slated An evening of chance, dining and danc- ing is being offered to local residents by the Orange County Chapter of the_ Na~ional Kidney Foundation of Southern CaJiforma. The group will sponsor a Monte Carlo Night Oct. 4 at the Santa Ana Country Club, 20832 Newport Blvd. Tax-deductible tickets for the affair are $30 per person. Reservations are required by Sept. 26 and may be made by calling 996-238.S. (From PageCI) High 's oldest traditions was no longer necessary. But few stu- de nts complained when the ma ndator y girl 's uniforms became a thing of the past. leges were doing," be remem· bered. "But they were always a little behind. of love, join the teams, the band, the chorus, the cheerleading corps, and wonder what their future will bring. The uniforms -dark skirts and white blouses -were re· q uired du e to "significant socio-economic differences between segments of the com- munity," said King . "They were i ntended to eliminate any sjgnificant cliques or groups." But now those elements of soc iety a re 'no longer dis· d nguishable. In the late 1960s and early L970S, much or the division that racked American society was c.enected in the student body at Harbor High, King said. . ·'The schools picked up on ;bat the universities and col· .....__ "THINGS ARE very quiet now," be added. "There are no burning issues." King noted that over the years the Newport school h as excelled on the athletic field. "We've won 4S California In- ters chol as tic Federation trophies," be said. "And in some of tboee sports there were more than 500 schools competing." NEWPO&T BARBOR HIGH School's student population has dropped from a bigb of 3,000 several years ago to l,850. ~ Like their counterparts in 1930, they lug their boob to school, laugh in the balls between classes, fall in and out \ktas. - INTIMATC APPARa . hos 0 Th.sdoy, FTiday and Scm.day, Sept. 2S, 26 and V Open lknday ,... Til ~ p.m. • 1 lo that sen se , little bas changed. Nor, over the next SO years, is it apt to. • • • Fa111ous <From Page Cl) stage productions in New York and London. ~ -Pete Jason, the stage name of Peter Ostling, who played in the recent movie "The Long Rid e r s" and numerous televlsioo commercials. -And PauJ LeMatt, who ap- peared in "American Grafitti" and the mm "Howard and Mel· vin," released this week. Baldwin Pianos and Organs LESSON~ INSTRUMENTS r APES · RECORDS y-~~.:~~R '••Ilion l1land •~·9020 DAIU 114. IUN 11-S MON THUllS 'Ill 10 I ---_,..... _____ ------. . FEATURING Cruelty Can Be Kin~ OEA f\ ANN LANDERS: I have been married for IS years lo a ma n who drinks too muC'h. In my heart I have known for a long time t hat h e i s a n a lcoholic. but I never wanted lo race the fact. Recently, I read in the Chicago Sun-Times an a rticle by Sue Sussman. She said: If you reach in to help a drowning man, you rescue him. If you hold him while he tries to drown himself, you are an "enabler." Peo- p I e wh o ba il the alcoholic out of drunken- drl ving charges, lie to t he boss about his absence or do his work for him are c alled "enablers." Until they stand back and make the alcoholic responsible for his actions, there is little chance that he will make an effort to save himself. The quest ion, "Are you an enabler?" can be answerCc'd by re- viewing the following questions llave you ever : Completed tht> work of a co work e r t oo hungover to do his own'! Called your husband's boss to say he had the nu wh~n he was reall y in bed sleeping off a binge? on the sofa from booze? Called it "youthful ex· uberance" when your teen-ager came home drunk night alter night and never discussed the matter with him? Kept a n alcoholic employee ~n the payroll because He had been with the c;ompany so many years? Climbed ,into a car with a drunk driver - since a challenge might start trouble? Gossiped about an alcoholic friend or rel- ative instead of con· fronting him or he r head-on? People are bound to ask , '·Are you nuts? H ow ca n you l et someone who is dear to you fall on his face?" The answer, according to the experts, is that be will never seek help un- less he falls on his face a nd has to get up by himself and admit lhat he is powerless against alcohol. Please. Ann . print this. It could help a lot of p eo pl e . -BEEN THERE DEAR B.T.: It's right on target. I am in total agreement with this ap- proach. Thank you for s haring. There are times when we bave to Ann La11ders stand my daughter-in· law. Susan. They are both married and live near me. Betty thinks I do more for Susan than I do for her. She resents it because she is my n esh and blood and Susan is related by marriage. I help t he m b oth financially when they run short. I also give them advice when they ask for it. I try to be even-handed, but Betty doesn't think so. She 's on my back a lot. Susan never complains to me about anythin g or anybody. When t he girls are together in m y home there is constant bicker- in g . I love both m y r 0mars "~ I CUSTOM Ff'AMING I Soec1al1zmg 1n HAMD FtMISHID FttAMIS 1803 Newport Blvd. ? Costa Mesa ~ ." 548-4511 C't.4t Cooked dinner for your faUter, brother and sis t er becaus e your mother had passed out be "~ruel" to be k.ind. ----------1 L AD-NED '1 : s ~ .NM ~ RUFFELL'S daughter , Betty, can't UPHOLSTERY ( Horoscope FRIDAY, SEPT. M By SYDNEY OMA RR ) ARIES (Mar . 21-Apr. 19): Obstacles to financial progress are removed ; you gain a wider audience and can markedly improve distribution and display of product. Libra and another Aries figure prominently. TAURUS CApr. 20-May 20): Fresh start enables you to eliminate past errors. Moon cy· cle is high; take initiative, lead the way. follow through on hunch. Timing and intuition are on target. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): You decide on direction and receive a "formidable" offer from reliable organization. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius natives figure prominently. CANCER C June 21-July 22 ): Display versatility, make inquiries, give full play to in· tellectual curiosity. Avoid scattering your ef· forts. Accent on friends. hopes , wishes, ability to make most of business or career op- portunities. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You're asked by one in authority to revise and review basic material. Be receptive to creative suggestion. Don't permit false pride to block progress. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Travel and, long-range ambitions are accented. Gemini, Sagittarius and another Virgo figure prom- inently. Become familiar with legal rights, permissions and abstract principles of law. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Money con· ference with one close to you rates high on agenda. Major domestic acljustment figures prominently. Emphasis on investments, in- terest rates, financia l obligations. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You get "facts of life" in connection with agreements, contracts, partnerships and marital. status. Define meanings, avoid self-decepllon and make sure others are not taking you for grant· ed. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): P ractical matters relating to employment , de· pendents and basic security come into sharp, clear focus. CA PRICORN <Dec . 22-Jan. 19): Finish rather than begin a project. Tie loose ends. Emotional involvement colors actions. U play- ing games, move on. Nothing occurs halfway. Money and love figure prominently. AQUARIUS (J an. 20-Feb. 18): Feeling of restriction is temporary and actually will work to your advantage. You'll have time to gain emotional "second wind." Build on solid base. w._y ... w ... ........ IU2Hwtiorlh tl Co•t•MtM-541-115'' 0 Qdellghtful 0 blend of cheddars with a nip of beerl Aw.....-oftty ...... ....,,., ••eta Wealulff Plull ,,. ....... . ............ MMt7J FMNoateland ... .,.,, ..... .... PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): You regain sense of direction; short journey aids in com- pleting a m ission. Cancer , Capric orn, Aquarius persons figure prominently. ~~~~~~~~~ HALF-SIZES HALF-SIZ S daughter and daughter-in-law, but the tension is making a wreck out of me. I don't want to hurt anyone's feelings. l feel constant pressure to side with one or the other. What can J do? -FRACTIONATED INLA DEAR FRAC: Tell both Betty ud Suaa H · actly -. Y• feel. E•· plal• tlaat yo• eaJoy their eompaay -b•t 90& together. You Ille wlll be lalbdtely more tru· qull ud so ,nu Suu'a when Y• see tbe girls one at a lime. Betty wlll probably coatlaue to mak e hurrlcaaea wherever sbe goes, but at least you won't be in- volved. ------- Health Fair Free demos and heallh checks during Huntington Center's Healthl'Fitneu Fair Thurs thru Sun ALOT OF DRESS for a little ~Y In prints cX solids, just $27.00 3ot67 Via Udo .... part leach 67M510 Available In Navy and Tan Ella lhf's HALF-SIZE SHO 1 We stock sizes S to 10, widths S, N,M. t M fAIMON ISLAND, NEWPORT HACH (114) MMUi 127 MAIN STMET, ALHA•M (111) -..n I l FEATURING RIDING IN STYLE -Auctioneer Art Anthony and Soroptimists (from left) Carol Schroeder, Beverly Ritch and Carol Whelan are on \heir way to club's Western Auction set for Sept. 27 at 213 Via Cordova. Newport Beach. Western Theme Set S ofr o pt i m i s t I n · ternational of Irvine is planning a Western Auction and Barbecue beginning at 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 27, to raise funds for the planned boys• and girls' clubs of Irvine. The Redeye Saloon .11ill open first, and the auction is scheduled for 7 :30 p.m. Concluding the evening will be a chow line at the chuck wagon. Auctioneers will be Irvine Mayor Art Ao· thony and Dave Balter, and the items will in· elude football tickets. paintings, vacations. dinners and a cowboy hat. The event will take plac e at 213 Via Cordova. Ne wport B e ach. Limit ed r es- ervatiom are available at $10 per person. For more informalio call Beverly R itch 675·5334 . SenSe? Nonsense! I saw an ad for a new diet the other day that will never get off the 1round. It's called "STARVE." The woman pictured with the article looked terrible. Her face was drawn. her eyes looked tortured. her bu s t sagged, and her neck looked like a candidate for chicken stock. The diet promised you nothing but work. sacrifice, and a 15-pound weight reduction in a YEAR if you changed your eating habits. No pills . No bot -air jumpsuits. No staples in your ear. No hypnosis. Just sens ible eating habits. Who wants to bear that kind of talk? I want to believe the ads that tell me I can lose 12 pounds aa I sleep just by wearing a "strangle suit" and awake to slimmer thighs, smooth hips and a caved-in waistline. I want to try the ''magic formula" that up until n o w only famous Hollywood and TV stars could aftord but is now available to me in a plain wrapper. I want to believe that I can loee three pounds a week lounging in a chair eating frencb fries, thanks to a weight re· duction lipt bulb that also makes me tan. I am hypnotized by the words, "MELT AW A Y INCHES." "TIJE MORE YOU EAT THE MORE YOU LOSE" and "LOSE UP TO SIX POUNDS BEFORE WE CASH YOUR CHECK ... Dieters are like that. They cannot handle the truth. They live on prom· ises and fantasies and a ctually believe that in days they'll be walking around the house wear· ing five-inch heels with a bathing suit and have hair halfway down their backs just by putting a cbeckmark next to a lit· tie box that says, "yes! I want to free myself from fat bondage forever!" If you 've ev e r wondered who reads those full -page testimonials with the befo re -and -a fter pictures and a headline that reads, "I WAS TOO FAT TO LOVE ... " I do. Somehow, no matter bow disgusted I am with myseU, I am never as bad as Tanya who wore coveralls at her wedding and surprised her husband one weekend by losing 325 pounds. Last week. I s aw a provocative ad in which a man built like Arnold Schwarzenegge r was crashing 'through the surf carrying a nymph in a bikini who weighed about 36 pounds. {I've roasted larger chickens than that.) The headline challenged, "When was the last ti me your husband carried you anywhere?" As I wrote out a check my husband said, "Sure- ly you're not going to fall for that picture of the girl in the surf?·· "I can't lose," I said. "tr I'm not completely satisfied in 30 days, I can return an unused husband and get a new one." If It floats, chances are you'll read about It In the DAILY PILOT Our Ultra Feminine Sling byiMmll~ "Top" . . . Black or Taupe Kid. A classic pleated vamp sling on a new mid-heel. Thursday, Sec>eember 25, 1980 CWLYAlDT Cl Peanuts Pay Family Builds Dymuty COLUMHIA , S.C. CAP> It's the old comer PUBUC NOTICE P1cnnous • .,.. ..... ..... IYAH•llT n. ._... --........ _,, ""-" M ! M IC HAE L C Al'l lt ENTERNIM!S, 1"91 ·-· ~ ..... ., ....... c.a...,. ... ,_, C.11••. 11Jll ··•-r, "-•lfl Valley, CL tr1'I Tlllt ...,_. It <.-.CW llY .,. Ill· c11 .. -1. ~c.i· PUBLIC NOTICE l'IC'TITIOUS •UllN•ll NAMll ITAT•M•llllT Tb• ... _1,.. --· •r• -.i,.. Ml-•: H INl'.S·LESLIE INSU•AlllCI COMl'ANY, U "lr•lllrd. lr¥1"•· (•llf«fll• ft114 0.le • ~. H "lrfflrd, lr•IM. Cellf9tftleftll4 0-ld M. HI~ Jr., n ,.1,..llird, lrYI .... C..lfonll•ft,14 1(1&8 11tuU01\ down on As$embly Street. where you ~·an catch It bit or 11h11de on • steamy day under the pe.ihn" bradt 11UtUco ll 's where the Cromer brothcn1 ell i>t•anulb Tlllt -----flied wlti. .... •• ~tyC-fllOr-C-y_ ... Tlllt -1 ... st It <oncluc:ted llY e -•I llertMrW ll. o...•.Utli. And If you don 't like peanuts. the Cromer hoy~. James and J 0 , whomp up a com dog a.nd oda or 11 mound of cotton candy. J I> muy draw t he soft drink himself, and he works fu t That's one reuoo -the great service for the SS0.000 co mputer behind t.he counter. kt-t'J'IDI l1tbS on a business that should 1ross $3 million this year THE CllOM£RS AREN'T JUST RUNNING a Pt'<anut stand Their business Is cheap thrills wholesale carnival trinkets. candy and gum. plastu· game&, pennants, prizes and party favors. Th.-y sell cotton candy machines. hot do& roasters a nd othe r concession equipment to schools, carniva l companies and civic clubs. They have bingo and raffle supplies, cmdy apple cookers and vending machines Their warehouse is a fantasyland of vampire t eeth. big plas t ic ear s, rubber s piders, noisema kers and ba lloons by the hundreds, thousands. lens of thousands. "Used to be we'd buy a thousand of this or that." J a mes s ays . "No w we buy just about everything in truckloads." BUT IT ALL BEGAN WITH THE peanuts and a wisecracking sign put up by the late Julian 0 . Cromer that still has tourists doing double-takes 43 years later. J ulian was J ames' and J.0 .'s father. His sign says "Cromer 's Peanuts , Guaranteed Worst in To wn." A competitor had been telling everyone that Cromer 's peanuts wer e no good. Julian's wry response not only assured his success, it made his business a landmark. And the enterprise has been expanding ever since. As J ames tells it , a carnival operator wanted to know why she couldn't buy popcorn supplies along with the peanuts . "We thought it was a good idea, so dad finally gave us $500, and we got a popcorn popper, cotton candy machine and snow cone machine. '111EN THE VENDERS WANTED TO know why oot bubble gum and charms . From that we got into novelties, then party supplies. gag gifts, stuff for wedding s howers . "It goes off in every direction," James says. "I don't know how you stop it, really." The merchandise bursts out the back wall of the former gas station into a rear warehouse for retail browsers. about 10 percent of the business. James bas his office in a covered alley. which leads into the computer area and more storage in what used to be a fis h market and an armory. It's not enough. .. We've got to be thinking about a new building," be says. THE COMPANY, RUN MAINLY BY close friends and relatives, distributes its catalogue in seven states in the Southeast, but orders have come from all over the country and abroad. So does fan mail, addressed to "World's Worst Peanut Co. in the World, .. or "The Worst in To11(n." or "The Craziest Peanuts." Somehow the letters get delivered. Peanuts now make up only about 16 percent of total sales, but J .D. points out that this is only becausetheolberitemshavegrownsomuch. "We're selling more today than we ever did. andit'sgrowingevery year, "he s ays. .... .. . .. I I .• . . OCCSets GraplUcs Workslwp Scribblers and block· printers enchanted with calligraphy, that elegant sc ript ~riating centuries a_.,... the Orient. are invited to two weekend workshops at Costa Mesa 's Orange Coast College . A nine-part workshop by Frances Les begins Friday from 7 to 9 : JO p.m . in room 107 of the OCC Home Economics Bu i ld i ng , l a sti ng through Novembt:r. A second ide ntical workshop taught by Ann Okimoto is s cheduled beginning Saturday in the same room, where registration for the free class will be on a first- come, first-served basis. Th e two a ward · winning calligraphe rs, artists and graphics in· s tructors request that pupils bring Speedball pen ho lders, the re· quired CO and C3 model pen nibs, Pelikan brand fount ink, a supply of bond paper and rule r to the first class. Materials are availa· ble at most art supply stores for this class, which is tailored for beginne rs and w i ll stress two basic calli· graphy hand styles. Salary Hiked MERCED (AP ) - M e r c ed Co unty s upervisors will receive another $5,000 per year. The board voted the raise for itself. The money is to compensate members for running Merced Community Medical Center, a tas k for which they receive oo compensation. THIS FRIDAY AT I. MAGNIN SOUTH COAST PLAZA 1. THE NIPON BOUTIQUE FALL COLLECTION ARRIVES m Shown by a special representative in South Coast Plaza on Friday, September 26. Informal Modeling to 3:00. Miss Magnin Young Designer Dresses a g n South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa 957·1511 I n PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBL!j: NOTICk lemta.f tt,••· ,.,..,.. ....... 1 ...... Or-°"'" Delly ..... S,.p(, "·ts, Ort 1, '· 1• •11• PUBLIC NOTICE Tlllt JIM_. wet filed wltb tfte COll,.IY Ci.r11. ot 0.-•"99 C-ly .., A ..... tt S, 11110. 1'14Mll P..-llr.hecl Or .... Coal! Delly PllOt, S.Pl. 4, 11, 11, 1.S, ltlO S.I ... PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICa Off TRUl'Tae't tale PtC'Tlnout !MlalNe• LOAlllf llllO -INN ....,.. ITATeMeNT Oft TMnday, ~ 16, 1•, al ....!i':u~~ ... "9r-• er•--' ... to:• o'clock A..M.. POMONA l"INAN-MHA VERO€ l"LOORING 1'S1 CIAL Sl•VICES. INC .... T....-, Herllor "''Wiil ,._._ ....... ca ...:.- ..,.., 4lfld ~ to 0.. of Trvsl -'..___ -· '·-de led J11ly Jt, lt17 uec 11led lly D•"111• Mer• l"oaler, 1117 W. Rey-L. ___ K_l_L. Cl>aftdlerA ..... ,S.-aAM,C..ft1'M A-r--..,.. "''" -r• . 5"-Wldler "..i.r. n11 w <or-~ 11 IWJ 1 t N Cl>alldlw A ..... , Selle• Aftil, ca. ft1'M JJ6J2 111 -IDft .;.... ,:;. i;:.;kl:j Tlllt ......... It~ .... WM ..., RK••~ of Or-C-y, Callfoml•. ln<or--_ ....... - -• .. 111 s.11 .. .,..... euct..., tolN1119"Hf pert~w ,..._ bidder !or <·"" .. _I.,•-of <•Ill T . !c•Nl6-r'• check OftlYI peyellle •I 11,... • Ill• at---flied wltll .,. OI sale Ill 1 ...... 1 -y Of -U11lled C-ly Clertl of Or-C-y .. -- Slelu , et tN mel11 ..,,,M<• to IN t.mber 16• 1•· ,, .... Coumy c-. In llw city of s...te l'llllll"'9d 0r-. ~ Delly l"lle4 A,.., Celltornla all r19M, !Ille, -I,.. c-. II ts Oct. I t t• J1 .. ~Ht <_.,.. ___ lwld lly lt~ ' • '' v-r Mid Deed In -Pf'--1Y 111 ... I'• ed In llw C-., of Or ..... , SI-ot Celllornle, described••: PUBLIC NOTICE LEASEHOl.D INTEREST IN AND l'ICTinOUS •u••M•M TO; Lot 1' of Trecl alJ, I" llw City of NAMa l'TAT•M•NT Newf'Ort 8N<b, C-y ot Or ...... es. TM followlft9 --It do1"9 -I· per mep rec~ In ._ 1'1, P-""' ••· II Ill"' 1', Mloull.-Me11t, In llle C•EATIVE ENVIRONMl'.NTS o"k • of tlw c-ty •.c:-of ..... LANDSCAPE CONST•uCTo•s. , .. C-ly • D Mont• Vl1te, C:O.le Maw. C... Tiie 11reet -ft• end o~ <Mn-'1'16 ., mon de~lon. II •ny ot tlle reel pro-Mllclle41 J , .._._,, • 1n11, lf...,,. 1Mtrty det<rl--... II purf'Ortecl 10 lntlonllff<b,Ce.9- be IU-lStfl Sf,..,.t, N-""'1 8HCll, Tiii• butl.-u It C-.Cled lly ... In· Ce •t~. Tiie .-.,,19n.., Tru1tea dl•lduel. dl~lelm\ eny llebllily IC>< eny on<Or• Mltcfle41J.Hel119rt rectn•n ot llW llrffl ecklrH• end Tbll alal..,_t "" flied wltb ltw otllH common dHl9n•llon, II eny c-1, Clert< of Or-c-ty on s.,.. !hOwn ~~n !ember 1'. ltlO Seid w le will be ...-but wlt"°"t l'l- coY•ne11t or werrenty, HPf'HI or Im· Puotl""" Or-Olest O.lly PllOt plled, r-nllno !Ille, poueu lon, 0< S.111 II, ts, Oct. 2, t , I-_... encumbr-.<H, to IMIY 111<1 rem•lnl"9 prlntlpel wm of '"" note(•) secured by ••Id Dee<! ol Trull, wllh Intern! 1 ........... M provl-In Wld nole (a), P UBLIC NOTICE edve1><••. II ... ~-tlle term• of ~ICTITIOUS •USINEH Seki Oeed of T , f .. 1. <llervn end NAME STATEMINT ••M"n\et of ttw Trustet •n<I of ~ Tf\t •oUOWtnQ piprson ., do4no t>Vt• truth «M ted bY kl Deed of Truil. I nen •• Tiie tolel emounl ot Ille unpeld ANMORE OISTRl8UT0RS, 117S bele1><e Of ll'w obll .. tlon V CU-ed by NPwporl 81.0 , C.0.te ~WI. CA '1623 tlle pr-riy to be sold ar>et r'H\Ollebly I JoM 0 Ellmore. 50S Columbi• SI esUmated t M ti., f'•C>en'9S and •O· N~wport BeM.h, CA '2 .. ) .,.,., .. •I th• time of Ill• 1n1t1e 1 Tll•• t>u\lne.s 1, t Olldutled by an vn· publk•llon of tlllt Notice ol Truil .. 'I •nco•por•ted ••soc:lellOI\ other lllen • Sele I\ l tn,m,.. p.ortnflf\ll<p Tiie -klM'f ..,,.,., Wod !>Md, by JOIWI 0 £11,,_e reu.on of ll'w bnecll or IMfeun In ""' Thi\ \tel-• ••• hied wolll Ir. obl'9•1-M<"'ed llereloDfore ••Kut· County Clerk of Or-Countv OI\ 5'9-- •<I end "'"-to Ille un,,.n i9MC1, a lembtor t•. '"° wrlttHI de<l•allon of o.fevn -,,.. Pt41JW me"d for wle, ...., wr1n.., notlu of Pubh11'e0 0r....,. Co.JI Delly 1'1!04 breecll -of •IKllon to ceuM Ille un-Se1>t II.JS, Otl 7, 9, 1'90 Jlt!reO der1l9ned IO M ii H id '"OIMtrly lo wll1tv Mid olll'9elloM •"" ttwreaner on Mey 11, l tlO Ille und.,•lon•d Ull-M kl notice of ~ee<ll Of •'-<· tlon to be re<.or-.. lnJI No 2._.S1111 -13'16 -1000 Otfkl•I ... -ol Or•-~.C•llfomle. D•ltd' S•ptember 4 . 1910 l'OMO NA F INANC IA L SERVICES, INC.. eo wldTrvst .. ..S-c;.,....,A-. Swlt.S ......_,c.el.....,.lett, .. T ........ :71~1 8Y LoltC~ A_S.C......., Pvbll\llad Or-CoHI Delly PllOt S.,pl, 11, 11, "· ltlO »- PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS eUSINaH NAME STATEMENT Tll• foll-Int pet'_, I\ dolnt -·· nen as THE MILIC PALACE, .MO West 19111 Slreet, Coote MaH.;Celllornle .,,.,, G treld J•met Heru.i, t• .. t We1tlell, TU$11n, C.lllOmle ~ Tllh bull,.., I> <--bY M I,.. dlvldWI. G«eldJ .... Nlll n.ls .,.._, •as meo "'"" -c-ty Clertl of Or-Covftly on Set>- tember 2, ltlO. '1.atl Pu1111.-Or-Coe•t Delly Pllol, S.ot •. 11. ''· 1s. 1'90 35'5-«> PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE . f'IC'TITIOUS •UllN•H llllAMa STATIU,..llllT TM-,. 119r1m1 It ....... ""''· ...... : l'ACll"IC WEACH HOUSE, L TO., 1170 E. ,.., SI., L·llS, 111-1 9Mdl, CA '26'3 ' Leytllll 1.M Coel1, 1'70 E. IMI\ St., L· I IS, .._, llMctl, CA 9'2'61 Tiiis -IMU 11 <OftdvCled lly e llmltecl -1"""'4p. l.avtDn LM CM!• Tblt ,_ -flied wltll t11e C-IY Cleft! ot Or~ C-ty °" ~.n.••· new.,.,_, for •ti tM Or.nge Coeet •• ,.,.,,z.11q11m1 .. '• ) Do\ILY PtLOT r. I' • • ~Without Warning' Needs One ' By aoaEaT 0890&NK ••'*>'I' wa.•••• tht1 ll<'rt,~play, whJch ha~ so many ii- • n. -~ ,._._ ,... lugh'al turns and holes as lo almost totally i._~llmwa,y• may have one ol the mott un ,._..,., .. ..,.....,.... ...U1•"·-~~:v:'..:::'t:!:'.: dcncutcr the 8Care factor. llWDUonally tunny mov\H of \.he seaaon ::=.:,.'.~··• • 1n,. ... ,l\.ft oM\ .. 1f'kNt1n1• '~ lta hands with ''Without Warnlna," a """,."" , .... -..... I adpan 1cl·f1 11.&Spen.er about creatures l - m outt r apace lnvadln1 a ruraJ •~•. ~:;:, • .::.: ,.'·::_-:::, ,~~~!;.,',.::1::., ~~· .. ~~."..~·~,~ •rrioc Jaclt Palan<'l' aa a wtnrdo moun ~':.~';.'.!~ ~:'.!."::,=.::: ..... , .. ~ ... 'I"•• in man havina to b•ttle. amona other Ir ,._,,.,.,"-"""""' .. l&Dt.ILllOID• Oym. Objecta thAt ttHmble """""Ila'"'• • ut:HPITE THE SCRIPT'S blockades. ''"lance plays with conviction, quite the 11\>1>011ite of Landau, whose foota1e c~uld a mm1t be u.'led aK a ''How Not lo . . . '' .culd\• In 1111 actlnlJ class, at leut in re1ard th the• portn1y1&1 of an unbalanced mind. t'1.1mN·oo Mitchell. lucky stiff, geta aapped by one of the dcMdly friud e1uis early on, .. uacuve fried e111 Produced and dlre<'tf'd by Greydoo Clar'. Ute ftlm COQjurel up a few lt!llWM IUrH, emplo19 tome famiUar fac:-es Uncludln,a Marlin Landau. N cvUle 1\rand, Ralph i Meeker, Cameron Mltchell, LarTy Slor"('h ) but dluolvu lnto enou1b ludlcrou' situations to not only bnn1 on th~ howl11 but lteep 'em rollin& t TITLE NOTWITHSTANDING, ever : 7body warn.a everybody Palance warns •four lHD·a1ers (Tarah Nutter, Chrl1topber S. Nelson, Lynn Theel. O.vld Clll'UIO> not to bead into lbe woods too dancerous After two are slain, Nelson warns everyone at s~ l Ane Langdon's bar about the danger out .side. Nebon and Nutter warn Palan« about . -r-- ' looluna ln"ldf' ll111l woocl"""'' •I 111ld11licht 1111d both Nrvllle Urund and Ralph Meeker l.•nclau, 111 1U11twf"1111mf' dlll&,I•)' of 1l1•1111•11tl11 1111 vt• what umounl lo billed bits. crosat'd with 11r1•1w 1 d1t•wln.c. w111t111 11111• l.1.rry Sturrh Mutomatlcally brings and all ahoul •n 1t1v11111lm1f1111111ll,.ti.11t1&111 •• lnu.ih11 101 u befuddled scout leader until It'll "WlUwot W11rnl11ic ... Mllh11u6(h iu1 111 111•. loo. at••tl4 ftlllM.I by an l)Uler being. No lC'rf'slln(l h1uull1•, uhv luu"I V I rfm Pl h•1111 to ltll' llHlnllurl 111111Mdt' oft ht• f Mlf' Of his S<'OUllroop, plotllne th1m tww lh•' f\1111 will 11lllm1at••ly 1111ly ocw of th · eu-rlvt's loopholes. As the fad•· fm1111hr to-r ' lrlt1hh•111'4I 1t•c•11 11tet>r 11 , Nel11on and Nutter Th.-""~1 tnt1••111m 1" ""\"''' uf 1111' 111111 '" '" 1• 11•11•y thiat Cli1rla hM• 1·11111l1•11•u•1 ull llw 11d1011 111 In tht• fln•l 11nuly:cl11, "Without Warning" to thrt"f' hni.11· "'''' 1" h1•hl. 11 t uv1•1 n, • 1lt• wlll llkdy 141v1• 1rny 1audl\•11ce it uttracls far :.t>rh'd IM1u.'l1· I , 1·1•rt 11111h u h1•l11 111 kt•••&1h11( • mun• luutthM than 1u•1.r1•11 And, If anything, budg1•1 1·0..'lb 111 11 1111111111\1111 Mo!\I 1lr&1rt•sz; II 11r11v1•11 thul while· f"ilmwuyll now t1ports 111.i ai.1111•1•\ 1:. llw hll'I thut 1111 lt•'i. 1111.n four 1111 l'ln:11111 tll'w 11llull11 1111m1•, In 11ome wrlh:r'll (I. 1111 to'11·1·1111t11. lltmlt-1 t:1ocl11lk , 11'lr11•1•tl'I llw 11111 A111c•ru·1tn fntt-m11taonul Bt'n N1•1l, Sit• t' Miethl:d 1ur 1·11•1h1t•cl with Nllll llvc•:c J "WHiMfler ..• '' .. , . HAllOI CHalSTIAM ACADEMY ra.SCHOOl & llMDBGAITEH Gro.,ing Up , . ' ,,.. ,. Keeps you on top of the entertainment ' scc•ne, Fridays in the DAILY PILOT Enroll Now and Recel"V e SO% Registration Reduction With This Ad. • MIO.,C- • Hoti-..._ • lnlncthndC-"c..,_ ·Mly~ 740 Joann St., Costa MMa, CA 92627 548-7295 BETTE ~I I H L E R '-222' l.\i)L<ir 1111 llrt)<ulu>ay Ry JA V SHARBUTI' Nl';W VOftK (Al') Kttren Vale ntine had yet tu Net• "Homunlic Comedy," in which Mia fi~nrrow­ pluys a timid young writer in love with a rich , handsome play wright cssay(.-d by Tony Perkins. Hut she's seeing a lot or the play n<>w. She and Keith Baxter replaced Miss Far- row and Perkins in the show. It's Miss V alentine's debut on Broadway. • Granted, Broadway seems an odd place for a lady best known a s th e s tar o r ABC 's former ''Room 222" series. But she's been busier oo J the stage than the tube the last ~ few years. vALENTINE She's been doing summer stock and regional theater. Last year alone, she says, she appeared in "Born Yesterday," "Two for the Seesaw'' and ''Voice of the Turtle." IT'S A GOOD DEAL, she thinks. While "Room 222" got her fame, a few bucks and an Emmy award, it also got her typecast in the minds or movie and TV moguls as the First Lady of Wholesome. "The things I'm offered are always sweet, cute, kooky lrinds of parts," she groused. She played that lrind of part on her old series, now re- running everywhere. "Those reruns come back to haWlt you. People don't realize all that was seven years ago and that I can do roles with much more depth to them now." -----·--------------~-----~--- FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 26th 6-11 P.M. \ ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES ,.,. ......... SATURDAY SEPTE MBER 27th NOON -11 P.M. .ltut Dhmle- Bette Midler sports a new chapeau at an autograph session in a Cambridge, Mass., book- store. She's star- ring in the new movie ''Di vine Madness." SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 2Bth 1-6 P.M. * * * • • • * * • * * * * • * * * * * * LIVE· I~ ·coNCERT OVER 20 COUNTRY MUSIC SUPERSTARS LOS ALAMITOS RACE COURSE- 4961 E. Katella. Los Alamitos , CA *PLUS* COMFORTABLE GRANDSTAND SEATING * JOHN CONLEE • ARCHIE FRANCIS TICKETS STILL AVAILABLE • MISS JESSE ROSE * HAROLD HENSLEY FRIDAY SHOW $15.00 McOUEEN * CAROL CHASE SATURDAY SHOW $15.00 SHEANDBAXTEll WD..Lbeon Broadway until • NORMA HAMMOND • THE SENSATIONAL SUNDAY SHOW S 8.00 Oct.18. Thenlbeyandtheshowwilllourfor20weeks. • AL BRUNO DANNY DAVIS & CHILDREN (Sun. Only) s 2.00 I • • II ... , 11,Ml(HAEL Rll< Hlf: ,, ., , • Jf RRY BLAfl. BETH MIOLER. BRUC f Vil AN( H HC JWAPD JE FFREY >· .. , • 111 ••. ,, • WILLIAM A FRAY£ R J "' I••,. ,, • CJJr~.....ul"' "°"' • • ' • A Ladd ( (Jfnpony Release "· .:; ,, .. • •· 0 1• • I# •• ,... • ~1 '· J .. -•11·· 1ko· .. wt ' .......... r ......... I 'Rl ...... ,flD .: I l • ..... •Mpol \1 1 .... n • .. J' •_) 4 j' ', ........ v, ., .. l~iw· ~ , •••• ._ .. , ......... . ,. .,. . ~·---~-.... -----8TAAT8 TDMDAAOWI --- CISTI MESA UA Cinema 540-0594 " (l Tm HAIR WEUMlllSTH WlS1MlllST£1 Saddleback Cinedome Cinema West Hi-Way 39 Drive-In 581 -5880 634-2553 892-4493 891 -3693 NOP..._. ~IC> c::r..RNCJ THa !!'~.,.,.J..ir1 . _____ .......... -.. Miss Valentine, brown.eyed and so tiny you : ~~~ii~~6:~RIE THE NASHVILLE BRASS could sculpt a life-sized statue of her from a peb-• HELEN CORNELIUS and Special Guest Emcees TICKETS AT All TICKETRON AGENCIES OR CALL ble. was working in a beer bar when lapped for • WYNN STEWART * CUFFIE STONE "Room 222 ... The show lasted 5't2 seasons before • STEPHANIE WINSLOW * GENE PRICE (714) 995-2342 or (114) 952-2050· expiring in 1974. • • LENNY GREEN • SAMMY JACKSON A year later, she bad a short-lived sitcom. • LORRAINE WALDEN * LYNN WAGGONER ''Karm."Thm~me a~wnandthu~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ movies and game shows. Last April, she made an NBC pilot based on Neil Simon's "The Goodbye Girl." "It didn't make it on the air," she sighed. Dolby Stereo NO NUKES (PG) U~1t THE STUNT MAN (R) 11:1~1• ,_,.," URBAN COWBOY (PGt \2::91-&_1 __ BRUBAKER (R) 2:»-r:JO -Health Fair' I Free tests tori blood pressure. eye. pulmonary. hearing, fitness during Huntington Center Health Fair Thurs. thru Sun. A190 CPR. acupuncture demos I school immunization. 11 AIRPLANE''. INI '"RMAI. COUNTDOWN'' ·--rHE HUNTER'iPG I "XANADU" (PG) I "MOUNTAIN MEN" (A) ""'THI IMPllE .,., SftlKISIACIH __ , .. ._ "HI! KNOWa YOU'M AL.OHi!" ''TN! HU111ar ,,., "BLUES BROTHERS" "PROM NtOHT" (A) I -··'.:~; HU:TEA" -' "ftNAL COUNTDOWH" (PG) • ['l'!"l!r.. -• • -.-::. .::::> I '"THI_. LAeootr. tar .. CALIPOIMtA SUITI .. ... •.. . . ... . ... llf'l.A ... .. "UTTUD~I .. ,,., -"CMacH I c:HOM•" .. ACAPULCO M>t.D" .. , DAILY PILOT -.. -.. TWENTIETH CENTURY-FOX PRESENTS 'WILLIE & PHIL' MICHAEL ONT~EAN/MARGOT KIDDER/RAY SHARKEY PRODUCED BY f?:\UL MAZURSKY AND IDNY RAY DIRECTOR OF PH010GRAPHY SVEN NYKVIST. AS C. MUSIC BY CLAUDE BOLLING WRIITEN AND DIRECTED BY Ai\UL MAZUASKY ~ '--'---'-"-~~'--'---' PRINTS BY DE LUXE/COLOR BY MCNIELAB Cl .... ..,-.fin. Q#tW'I'... ® STARTS F~IQ_~ 9-:2, ----· _.,....__.....-. ...... .,,... ........ -.. -.. , '*"'-~--·--. ,.. .......... .. ( ENTERTAINMENT / INTERMISSION 'Picnic' Drama _Rich in Atmosphere Before the emer1ence ol Lanford Wlhion, few pla1wri1hta apprO•<'h" th• atmoapberc of Mldweate rn. small town Ameriu wllh thf' autbentlcll.Y-ol William ln1e And atmoephere, both ln lht dramallc and technical ueaa. 111 th~ lleynoce ol the lat~t pm ductlon ol I nae's mo~t popular play. t~ t•uuu.-r Prlae-winnin& "P1 <'n lr," by Wu t manster'is Sbowrue Producltoo One ran •lmott fH"I the bn1crin• heat of a wbor Day evenina in Karusu while Vlf'Wtng J un Koba 'a ti&htly craft.I'd mountmi of thu1 slice ol Amf'nu n a. ciru '"° It is among the fint'i.t ~f't tln&s <'reatt'd for <'O m mwul) .~ tht-ah•r ttus yt>ar, meticulowsl> ~, IJ detailed nght down to the lb 1 j mt"t t'r on the 1udc oC Me of the houses l"ortunate ly t he overnll ~rCorrnanre level 1:-1dmos1 a:. Impressive v.•1lh u (1nt' sense of •oa• ensemble playing exh1 b1ted in this dated but engrossing work about awa.k ening maturity. Visually, the Westminster production Ill masterfully detailed TOP INDIVIDUAL HONORS m the produrtton must be shared by Marty Green as the embittered mother ol two young women, Sharron White as the schoolteacher terrified of becorrung an old maid and Alex Koba as her storekeeper s wtor reluctant to change his bachelor life. Miss Green is the most quietly natural or the cast. Miss White the most en grossing and Koba the most humorously arfecting * edwards cinemas , WHERE THE BEST PICTURES PLAY KILL" lllUll llll "MIDDUAGI .. Intermission Tom Titus whtlP reta1nm1t i'I v;.i-.lly br hrvm.: demeanor In lhf' leadlllit ruh·-. l':m1I Knodcll J)()Ssesses lhe phyS1C'1,1I 1tlmt-n~1u1111 of lht· honclsomt-, athletic drtftt·r and c111t•<i u t•rt-d1t<1bh· Joh or t1r llng when not l"l(.Ml t A u'•t hy WllhM t 1""1" di'., f..O Of i..n lo~ \t...,_ 11\.-'\•oit' I •""• '>t .. llN •MG 1>Y llooll• l •• -llOC-rt 0.w•ICI 11\11111"9 llr ~td .,..,_, ~ ~ "-\•Qin 11• tWb iton\Jt .. ~ Al•• IC'ODI C>t•Mn\ect hi\ el prt-f\il"~'· ., f •K'Mr •NI \.,etuuJ•y •• t JO••,,. C..ontmun1t¥ ... , (..,._, eudtkwt~o '"' Wih \tntt,.t•t ,..,.. W""trnin\t•r I"• .. • .t hl'.VU• ... ll \\ t\•t l •r tM M-•~U...n'- , lo Clw•"' fCUW'""e#f Hn•••O~., ... Aiiilflh• (i..,;~, l4•1•"4w•"~ Ho•on Pulb ltma Jlo..re»••llt' • M l\lltw',ch:Jrr•••lttlrt l WI·• -...,.,.1 ... ttntl K«WdeH Hytm• Wtlll•m\ M.etH' Gr • .,, ~rr~t,Wf\itf' ...... * l _.Utl• NeWf P•t thw•kl A•nH JhOr'M !Miit LU C...tM• MCMurPftr lkllo• "'"""-'0 ove rchara<'tt>r1i111 J( th~ ·Jumb Jock " am age 1\s the beautiful girl '"Hltt!n by ham, Nor ma Wilham:. 1s quatt: good hut t·annot fuJ ly convey the arhang mot1 vat1on of h..r "too pretty" character l.aune Nt!M•rf t!> splendjd as Miss Williams' tomboy youngt.-r sastl'r, whale Pat Oswald does a fme JOb ou llhort nott<'e as her squarish. wealthy s uitor Kenee Thome ls a bit erratic but ertjoyable as the lonely next-door neighbor. TH&EE MINO& ROLES Ince must have had ~ gleeful time creating -the schoolteachers who ar· rive to accompany Miss White In a day "on the town·· are beautifully enacted by Bette Lee, Carma McMurphy and Bettie MueUenber1. They t ypify the manners and mores of the early Fillies with great economy of c haracterization and dialogue. Only two performances of "Picnic," the open· Ing production of the Showcase group's second season, remain -Friday and Saturday at 8:30 in the Community Services Auditorium al 7521 Westminster Ave., Westminster. It's worthy of at- tention. • BACKSTAGE -Glenn Daniels or Laguna Beach is a me mber or the musical group "Something Extra" which will leave Oct. 16 for a S6·day USO tour or. the Azores and the Mediterra- nean to entertain American servicemen and women ... Daniels is a singer and actor as well as manager of the troupe . . . Donald Smallwood or Costa Mesa is the new president of South Coast Repertory's Board or Trustees for the 1980·81 season . . . Donald Christenson and Maurice DeWald will serve as vice presidents with Valley Reilley as secretary and Eric Wittenberg treasurer ... joining the board this year were Pat McFarland and Win Rhodes ... Mick's Book Good Bet Q . We reaUze &hat Mickey Rooney baa made and, we hear, squandered mlllJons because of his gambling. Anything to thJs ! -Grace Carbona, Statt'D Island, N. Y. A: We on<'e asked the veteran trouper if he did a lot of gambling. And he replied: "Not really I · gambled mostly picking brides instead of ponies!'' Anyway a Las Vegas read· er was thoughtful enough to send us another one of Rooney's many sidelines. It's an ad for horse.cha rt subscribers called "Mickey Rooney's Win Side Up' '' with a bettor endorsing the system by writing "Bless you Mickey. We 'd never have •ooNEY bet lhis Trifecta if it wasn't for Win Side Up ... We collected $1 ,030, which made this my most thrilling day at the races." (This proves Mickey's wisdom. The Mick makes money selling tips, not necessarily betting on them!) • • • Q. Yoa write • lot •boat Beuy Yoa11gmaa. Ne:ii:t Ume yoa talk wttla ldm wW yo. au wlaat 10me ol lals favorite stories an! Oaly ome &Mag - llltey mast be older tlau Ile la wlalcll I read la mear- lag·75, maybe more. -'ent D., lli.Mapolia. A: "Well," Youngman smiled and said, "try these on for size. A guy was bit by a car and when a cop asked if he got the license plate number, replied, 'No, officer, but I'd recognize the driver's laugh anywhere! · "Then there's the fellow who was a chain smoker. For 25 years he'd t ake a purr of a cigarette, then stamp it out, light another and keep doing this 25 times a day for 25 years. Now the idiot complains that he has cancer or the s hoe." When be was on his honeymoon, Henry re· members his wire Sadie enjoying picnics. On one sunny weekend be picked an exclusive Beverly Hills club to spread out a tablecloth and began serving sandwiches and beer. When a burly guard ambled over and said, belligerenUy, "Are you and your guests members of this club? If not -beat it. .. "You know what?" Henry answered, "Ir you don't talk nice, bow do you expect to get new mem· bers?" • • • Q : What's this basiness of name-calll•g betweee Carl Rel.Der aad playwrtpt NeU SlmH! I tboa1ht they were supposed lo be Heb good friends. -D. Downey, Laa Vegas. A: They were and still are . The name-calling you 're referring to was done with love and admira· lion at a recent Man of the Year Dinner in honor or Simon. Comedian-director -writer Reiner (a not-so- small 'eniu.s in his own right), called Neil a "freak. ' "After a bout the 20th piece of material- Somewhere along a thousand miles of barbed wire border, the American dream has become a nightmare. LORD GRADE pre~enls CHARLES BRONSON Wl ''BORDERLINE" PfodUCed Dy Ot1eGled Dy JAMES NELSON JERROLD PREEDMAN W1111on by STEVE KLINE and JERROLD FREEDMAN LPrO ................ _....._ !POI wr.a...-.-•n• ca j .... ,__.., ............ ~ .-----~~-~111'1!!i]!fi!i]!}--+.....-~ AT A THEATRE OR DAIVl!-IN NEAR YOUl 'Glad You Asked That' by Marilyn and Hy Gardntt plays, movies -I realized this man is a freak," exclaimed Reiner . "You with your freaky brain. your freaky ability lo write one hit after another. Thank God, I'm human." he sh.rugged. "I do one hit, one bad, one good, one medium." • • • Q : Wby did Roger Moore decide be wasn't go- ing &o play secret agent '•mes Bood aaymore? And is tbere any cbuce llltat Seu Connery will become M'1 agala! -Mlcllael S., St. LMJ.a. A: To answer your first question first. as we heard it Roger was negotiating a contract for bis fifth Bond movie ("For Yow; Eyes Only") when be beard that producer Cubby Broccoli was secretly auditioning other actors for the role. Highly insult· ed. Roger declared no more Moore. While all this was going on, Sean Connery, rilmland's first James Bond, was getting ready to sign with Filmways for THEIR Bond movie called "Warhead." Everybody still thinks Connery is lbe real James Bond," declares FUmways. "Despite tbe fact that he's aged aeveral.yean since tbe. last one, be really is the top Secret Service agent," they brag. Meanwhile, back on the other movie lot, we still haven't he ard who's going to play Secret Agent 007 for producer Broccoli. Guess it's still a big secret. ••• Q : It was such a surprise to me when I heard actress Jean Stapleton being interviewed. Her voice was so well-modulated and refined -so d.if. ferent rrom her Edith Bllllker "screecb" OD .. All la the Fami{y." Did she ever use her "Edith" voice in any other role she bad? -J. Davids, Ft. Lauderdale. A: As a matter of fa<:t. yes, back when she played in "Damn Yankees." Though the voice was the "dingbat," the character was not. ••• Q : I cu't believe tlaat S&eve LaWftllce ud Eydie Gorme are really spUWag ap. Please say It isn't so. -'oyce W., St. Loals. A: It isn't so! It's just that Eydie has decided to take a vacation from their act for a while. So Steve's new partner is the master or the insult. Mr. Warmth himself, Don Rickles. Send your queltimu to Hy Go~. "Glad You Aa~d That," core of thil ~.P.O. Boz 1900, Irvine 92714. Marilyn and Hy Gordnn will OM1Dtt aa many question! cu they can in thdr column, bbl the volume of mail make! peraonal r~s impouib~. a;rJINIV•RBAL llTUDK>a TOUR .... ~MCA~ ()P{HIOOO Ul 1•s11ou~3lOPW This i5 Bro1her~, Leadhffl'l-- 1 c:mptati()ft •• Forhc's M\o, to ft>lk,w. .,,, . .... in 9o~ me Trust __ A MARTY ff.I.OMAN FILM "IN GOD Yi'E TRl~·r !\1Arr1111t ~IARTY FEWMA.'I • pi,_jf:R BOYl.E • LOlllSE L~$P.R \l'uh a 1·t5i1atlo11 hy RICllARO PRYOR ~ God llllroductng ANDY KA!IFMAN ~ Armagt'lldon T. Thundcrh1rd A llOWARO mr /GF.ORGE SllAPll<O PROOllCTION \l'rtllen by MAl<TY FF.I.OMAN & CllRIS ALl.f.N MU$k by JOHN MORRIS ElliCUtive I~ NORMAN t HERMAN ~la&e Producer LAllRETTA FELDMAN Produced by HOWARD WEST and GEORGE SHAPIRO Ou·etttd by MARTY FELDMAN . -!!!.N'.~.f~~.".l.C!l!~ tiJ.:::::.== .STARTS TOMdRROW _,, W-MIU --·HNeS'" .... , ....... Olll'fl 131·~ ll lott $tl•MID ....._. "'·*3 .... IMTICIUT ...... c-.wuT IT._IMI .. c.tl MIN '4t-2711 Wttlllllntter 191-313~ 0111191 &ID-1 710 l ---------- ml ··.nil AUl'.N ~IS Hl'.M ON l'.AlrJH I ~ I«» ···~•UP ~ J<Jtff~ ,~ 11A ..,nv1f ', i 1 ,. •1••h ....... , ... "4 2~ ll •1•••· .. ........... --'"-··-AllP\ANlc ... ~Ill •M .... Rll A I.I MMetl-9 ... ~!Jt~,. --·-"*-'"' MOUNTAIN MIN 111 •• =-r;·~Tc:t' .. ~-~-, ............ IW"l"ll':'n~~--.,.-.,-,--.. "" lfM WMI MMC-..-• ,_ TMI .__. l1ltUI IACKCNI 7lltSll 9SIO .._, ... ,,__. "'-..., - 111-.a.eee1 ........ ,..., ·-----...... TMl l&.UI UOOON• .. , ..................... ,....._, .... lll/Sll 9UO .. , l1l_l_l_INl•ll .. , _., --HC»ICOn:M ... ...... _,_ 7131s31 tsao ....... •C- 7tl1Sll 9SIO ' " ... 1l l•MIO•tt 494 1!>14 't .... .. . ,., .... ,, 494 1!>14 ..... ( .. '""'" 496 1253 __ '"_., __ AllPl.AHI'"' .......... ~" ....... _ MIA '"' ....................... -"""' • OWll-........ TMI MOUNTAIN MIN191 ................. - ,"WITHOUT WARNING" (A) _v.-,,..., ... ,.... I MT,_ --:a.1-. -·-v "Bl.UE LAGOON" (A) -1 _......,.,..., ... ,_ MT,_ ·--.-1- "ZULU DAWN" (PG) ."SILENT SCRUM" (A) ; fOU'U ..-IUO MOM MAM ... 1111 ICllMMI ITOPS191 """ DIUllUM 111 -------- "" "IMOUT' mw • Mal IMClllT Al9 1111 Ulelf I 1Nt """ 1MICNI -1111aaMMsat1111 """ '"'NIMlll"I (ll\0<41 .. , .... ··~ • .., ............ . a Of IMWWM ............... _ ••llAWl• ... •OCT,.._llt .,_ __ ... .._ IUUIMWN!Nt """ IUNf ICIUll11t • '( •' I TeleVisiod 0 DAllYPILOl -~---... TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS -n11••-.. , ....... WONOllt WOMAN wono.. Women .,,._ lfl ftme 10 lol ·~ .... Of • ~ !Nlfll .. A\"*6 -~ • MAUOI ........... 1119 -•t ~ w ..... di~ ..,., foW"1 hi• t0t• 10 '**'Ul>IOV (f .. 1 >I • M'A'f•H WNle Mlltl11Q IJOWr> to ... 11111 10 the Army Hall't ~ 11\e 401 nt> 11 bOtn l>arU.O ••><! .. 11 .. th un .. plodelJ boMD o.t\IN • fHE llENNY Hll.L IHOW A 1.0-, pllM•lwllal U.C:t<M to 1•11• u() .._. 11\an 91M1t ""'"" c.ol""-l"'ll ........ ,,,. ,,_,, 1Ht1n~ I S-2·1CONTACT O HERE·s TO YOUR' HEALTH "Growol)IJ Uv l'1" Eurly Yu1~tAl Rerormer 1:301 ~TS:LH , Ml.COME BACK, KOTTER Gabe has !rouble IKllU•hng to !>elng a'°"9 when ha i.arna 111a1 Jul1t1 15 QOtng Sllllng tor the weekend wtlh a glrtlrlend James Whitmore portrays a therapist who conducts sessions aimed al helping sex offenders ove r come their anger toward women in "Rage" tonight at 9 , oo NBC, Channel 4. • SANfOAO AHQ SON Uncle Geo<ge d,.s and Lamorn will lnhe<lt $7 ,000 II he produces a SOf't within the nexl 12 months and names him George • DICK CA VETI Gu.t· Jonathan Miiier (PM! 4 of 51 (R) G S-2-1 CONTACTQ Cl) M•A•S•H Q) 8ARHEY Mtl!ER A religious Crlmlnal scolds Oe1ective Wojel>owicz for not attending Mass regu- llfty and then sets the police 11a11on on lire 1:00 8 C88 HEWS D NllCNEWS 9 HAPPYDAYSAGAIN Troubles with his studies and an lnsolllng professor cause Potsle 10 quit school 8 A8CNEWS I J()f(ER'S WILD M 'A•S"H Frank 1S drrven by Ns je.,ousy ot Trapper Into proposing to Hol Lops • BARETTA foffowlng a series or ove<- ooee o.&1h1. tne trail of 11 drug oealer leads .ltra\ght to a CIOte 1·riena ot Baret- 11'1 • OVEREASY Gues1 Jose Gr6CO O (Al G MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT (I) TIC TAC OOUOti 9 MERV ORlf'AN Gues1s K C • Devo, Eugene Fodor. 1:30 8 2 ON THE TOWN St-H amlnes the ,_ b<Mlcthroughs of an age. Old di-. addlc1l0<1 to iove: IOllOw the unpredle1a- bte and dramatle evenlS dunno a night at the Emer- gency Room or Mar11n • Luther King Hospllal. I FAMILY FEUD SHANA HA Guest: Barbara Mandrell. 8 'flEWfTNESS LOS ANOEl.ES Plul Moyer mMts Normao SeeH, a lop phOtgrapher ol record album covers. explores the Navy's state or read"-5, Inez Pedroz.a meets Chuck Norris, the Channrl Lbf in gs IJ KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles D KTLA tlnd ) Los Angeles D KABC· TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 K'HJ·TV (Ind ) Los A nqele:. Q1l KCST (ABC) San Diego GI KTTV (Ind I Los Angeles .., KCOP TV (Ind , Los Angeles • KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeies CB KOCE·TV (PBS) Hunflngton Beach hetr apparent lo Bruce Lee I FACE THE MUSIC ALL IN THE4'AMIL Y While celebullng Mike and Gloria's llrsl wedding anniversary, the Sllvlcs end the Bunkers recall the traumllte day when Mike 11rst mel Ills tuture lllltler· 1n-1aw • MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT Gl NEWSCHECK (() P.M. MAOAZJNE 1:00 8 (() THE MAGIC OF DAVID OOPPEAFIELO Mester magician David Copper11e!d performs feats ol Illusion. Gue111s Include Jack Klugm1n, Debby Boone. Mary Crosby, Louis Nye, Shimada and Cindy Wiiiiams Q GAMES PEOf>LE PLAY Featured· cars racing In r-se. gymoastics com- petlllOn, 1n obStacte race for hor5e$, amateur lug· gllng compe11110n Guest Tanya Tucker 8 MOVIE • • • • "Giant" (Pan 2) ( 1956) Ell2abe1h Taylor. Jemes Dean, Baseo on the SI()()' by Edr1a Ferber Tex- as ranch Ille and the pur- sul1 or oll wealth aHect three people. (2 hrs.) a o MO\ltE * * "The Bad News Bears Go To Japan" (1978) Tony Cur1111. Chris Barnes A greedy agent decides 10 grlb all ol the P<Olits he can from a little league bateball 1eam's trip to a 1001111men1 In Ill• ,.., FHI G MOVIE • • rout noo. Out' I 1~1 s,,. LyOO, Pfl<~ Mob.,.t• A l•wm111n lukM 10 t1'14t dttM<I With Ill• glll 11111'<! ll'IO I M('.Uf'lty QUllld • n.. IMlll'IQ ~uMd ol h•11~ 10D04lty JOO<l ft\Ufd .. ~r11a1 • l'M MAOAllNI A t11rllng '"cwt In thtl Ar1 IOll• OIM<I, M M W lre~I mont to• 1101111 atl!Ml~ vtc 11111. cnot 1 etl 01•k1t11 1111 1t1ve1 c111ci.on •H•CI h1<11Mh1*1 Jv<ly Ml•Mll Oil ••••c.llll•Q wltll p1npa JVY'JI Jlllltlt1 ••l)llllfla Hl\U •••\llfl\j • MOYIE • • Mystot-Or lhe 1'6<.11'1c. I 19191 Oocun1 .. u l••V f.p101• Ill• .... , H•h•t1d unlwet •• ot tna l'illl il'l Wllll lh VOi< 1tn~ 1~••od1 vunn1nuut. s~.-, 111111~05 1u1t • 1v1il1<1llon~ 11nd 1111noow <«•lnroo cornl 1uvt~ (?no~) • 21 TONIOHT Ou"81 Or [1lw111'1 K1upp dlSC.UUo~ S IJllC.tl j111ll astronomy GD WILD DUCK 1:30. CAROL BORNETI AHO FRIENDS • EVERY FOUR YEARS Jonn Er11crunan, Ct111k Clll- tord and JO!e9h Ca11tano IOln Howurd K Smtih tor a took ill the growth and 1>0wef ot "Ille president's men "(Port 3) O (R) 9;00 8 (() MOVIE "A Rumor Ot War" (Prem- 1e1e) Brad Qev1s, Keith Carradine Battle-hard- ened and embittered Capu10 lakes part In a seemingly tullle operation and winds up being chargeo wolh the murders or IWO Vietnamese CIVIi• lans (Part 21 D MOVIE · "Atioe" (Premiere) DaVld Soul, James Whitmore A convocteO rapist Is aS&lgned to a program deslgneo to retorm ottend- ers by toaQhlng them to venl their anger In a social· ly accep1able manner GJ MERV GRIFFIN GU8$ta: Nina Blanchard. Tony Grilli. Sharl Harper, Oan Bromstad, Tree Allen, Shel• La Roque «!) SLIM CUISINE "Chte~en" 9:30 fl) THE RIOKTEOUS APPLES "Apple Juice" Sandy Burns helps a ter monally 111 woman lace death with Q.!_8ce. (Al ~ U.S. CHRONICLE "In The BeSI 0 1 Times" Jim Lehrer travels to Seat- tle where an economic bOOm Is bette<lng the Hves ol almost everyone - except blacks. 10:00 9 U NEWS D O 20120 G> NATIONAL NEWS • CAMERA THREE "Fall Walle<· An Amencan Or1g1nal'' The New York 'Reality' Hits theFan 'People' Program lrwades Daytime TV By PETER J. BOYER LOS ANGELES (AP) -Reali- ty. heaven help us, bas come to afternoon television. Not real re- ality, but television's reality. Reality that substitutes con- trivance for human drama, weird for poignance. "Reality" with quotes around it. "Real People" reality. As network prime.time is already thick with the stuff, it figured that someone would franchise the "Real People" produc t for off -network syndication. Someone bas . "World of People" is the result. "WORLD OF People" wu de- vised by Bill Hillier. an expert at making synthetic "news- people" programs . While lt Westinghouse Broadcasting, he in vented those one-size-fits-all Mandrell information magazine shows. "PM Magazine" and "Evening Magazine," which gave smaller independents the same empty- headed fluff the big boys were selling. "World of People'' is produced in Marin County. It is dif· ferent from the long, gray line of network reality shows , Hillier maintains. because it doesn't utilize a studio audience. film segments or a laugh track. And the show's six "presenters " are based in three regional pro- duction centers. He quibbles "World of Peo- ple" bears the family traits of its prime-time cousins -froth and frolic, an inclination to caricature and an aversion to substance. For light, bit-and-run amusement, though, ''World of People" is on par with its COD· temporaries. test for dogs and a feature on women who wrestle in mud. The subject of this latter segment was a former homecoming queen named Tanya who grew up to work in a bank and lead a nice, normal life -except for her mud-wrestling. In the dark streets of the mud-.., wrestling world, she is k:nown as Terrible Tanya, and she sports a tattoo on her arm. Oh. the irony of it all. The segment's presenter, Jan D'Atri, asks Terrible Tanya the obvious question : JAN: "TANYA. what is it about mud that appeals to you?" TT: "I've been quoted as say- ing we're ladies, but we're animals in the mud." Shows such as "The World of People" do no harm to anyone, any more than a little comic book re.ading stunts the mind. My complaint is that television's library is already crammed with comic books. And the presses roll on. Clt l ol lllll Oro1dw1y hit · Ain't M l1011hav111 " Hlulllt fhe g11111 A11141rleon tau muak:l1111, ••'10*' •111.1 COlnP<l-1 NEWSCHECK 10 30 • NEW8 MA&TfJAPIE~ f H!,ATRE l llllH I illy Genii A l>...c.• l lllte'a daun11es.s nelu•e ~•11Htt h•• on •llltt the dHlh ot King Edward, an• tetlr •• 10 11111 ~(II'"' or Frllf\Cft tn llv11 <>1.11 ""' l1Wt1t yura (Part 13 or l'.lll)(R) ID SPECIAL "I n St!y I Am" A loco• on 11111 1a1n 1 fec;hnulogy 1llow1ng children and edulll who are sl)N!Cnles• doe to aev .. e physlelll hAnlllUp• in c.ommunlCAllt Ind • ec,91.., e qu.,hlv fl(Jv calk>n 19.J>rOSet•I~ ti 00 8D• (t_f) NEWS D HOLLYWOOD SQUARES D MOVIE a • ~ 'Carry 011 Cl6o ( 19651 Amondu BArrlo. S1dnoy Jom11s Mor c Anto- 11y arid Cl8Qpolrn 101 lhll a111ves loose. and Julius C11611ar gels his ju" Hlwurd oo me Ides 01 Ma1cn (2 hra, GJ YOU BET YOUR LIFE Buddy Hackett plays lhe game wilh a 1111sband-and· wile bo~lng learn, me AmeflCan Honey Oueen end e man who helps break up marriages G> THE BENNY Hill SHOW The American and Russian zones 11re In ('llspu,1e on Benny's honeymoon suole ~ EXTENSIONS 11:30 8 (() THE JEFFERSONS A llr811ge• l•lllS 10 p;ck VP Molllor Jellerson 1n the efeve101 IA) 1J TONIGHT Hosl Johnn~ Carson Guests Mac DaV1s McLean Stevenson 0 MORCAMBE & WISE Tile French Foreign Legion booomes "Legion 01 Ille Lost'' once E11c and Ernie enlist U ®J ABC NEWS GJ HOGAN'S HEROES Hogen gets help lrom ine German Gestapo when he tries 10 delaon a German ~eral at Stalag t3. W IT TAKES A THIEF A vague Brohsn agent '' sent 10 help Al Muno)' JOHN DARLING TUBE· TOPPERS ABC8 8:00 -"The Bad News Bears • Go to Japan." Tony Curtis picks up where Walter Matthau and William Devane left off in this third adventure of the pint-size ballplayers . CBS99:00 -"A Rumor of War. "The conclusion of the new TV movie based on author Philip Caputo's experiences in Vietnam with Brad Davis in the central role. NBC tD 9 :00 -"Rage." James Whitmore plays a therapist attempting lf) reform rape offenders in lhls new TV movie (photoatleft). •ooover a mterodqt hidden 1n an East Berlin museum. &;) ~ CAPTIONED ABC NEWS f 1:50 0 ®) CHARLIE'S ANGELS A tleme·throwlng mag1C1an " wspected ol moonlight· 1ng as an arsonist (A) -Ml>NIGHT- 12 00 IJ (!) MCMILLAN & WIFE A klllllf trap~ the commis sioner and Sany 1n tllelr own nome end pumps 11 lull 011e1ha1 gas D TWILIGHT ZONE ··Tna Old Man In The Cove" GJ MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 1110 IMF sels out 10 per- suade lhe lrusled hench- man 01 a tmme syno1cate leader 10 1es1oly against n1s IP3dl!f 12.30 0 TOMORROW Gue51 Los Angeles auor ney HarOld Rhoden 0 MOVIE • * ·~ The last Roman' ( 197:>) Or'lon Welles Michael Dunn A Roman cenlurlon !alls In love with lhe queon ot n conquere<:J tribe 11 hr . 55 moll) (I) NATIONAL NEWS 1:00 0 @) POLICE WOMAN Pepper is asSlgned to accompany d w11 ness against Ille mob from MeK· ICO tn Ille troal s11e IA) 0 MAVERICK Brei swttches ldenhhes with 1 milllona1re In a plot aJmeo at the attec11ons of a l>eautllul girl GJ MOVIE II * * "Oriental Dreams" 1 t9441 Flonold Colman, Marlene Dietrich. A beggar and his daughler gain positions or wealth lhrough the man's Ingenuity I.I hr . 30mln) • mJ MOVIE • • "Mummy's AeVfl<lge•· ( 19731 Paul Naschv, Jecit Taylor Superna1ura1 event5 begin when a mum- my searches tor a body to house his wile's IOUI. 1:45 1) NEWS 2:000 NEWS U MOVIE • •'Ir "0P4lrauon Cross Eagles' (19691 Richard Conte, Rory Calhoun. A commando group kidnaps a German leader to use In e•change for an American (2 hrs) 2:10 0 NEWS 2.15 1) MOVIE ,, ''n. "Who Killed The MyslerlOus Mr Foster?" ( 19701 Ernest Borgnlne. Sam Jal1e A lronller mar- shal finds his 1ob security w3venng (2 hrs I 2:25 0 NEWS 2:30 0 MOYIE " * • 'Roman Scandals" (1933) Eddie Cantor. R111h • Etling A man takes a lun· hlled daydream Journey Dack 10 the tome ot Caesar and tne Roman Empore ( 1 hi 40mon I • MOVIE *''*' "Hlgflwrf DttOM!" ( 19541 Rtcllatd Conte. Joan Bennett An ex- Marine become• the tclipeOOet ""'*' • bNutl- lul Oltl he'• known CMUelly la IOUtld mutdeted. ( 1 "' .. 30mln.) a:00e MOW * • * "The Well" (1951) Rich.wd Rober, Harry MQ;. oan. Petty prejudlcea di.- ~ whefl a bll!Gk clllld becomee !rapped tn a well. (1 hf., 30 min., 4:00G MOYie * * • "Portrait From life" (HMI) Robe11 S..tty, Mii Zetterling. A mMltary INlfl travel• to a.nn.ny In -~Of • Oltl wlloee Por- trait hung In a Lortdon gal- lery (2 hta.I • MOYIE * * "lady At Midnight" ( 11M81 Rlchatd Denning, Fra.nces Rafferty. One mll- tlon dolalr1 II Iha ~ leg lor committing murder. (2 hrs.) 4:101 NEWS I 4:15 MOVIE * * • "C1e<>pa1r1" ( 1934) Clauoette Colbert, Warren Wllllam1 Tiie dramatic love aHalr of Cleopatra and Marc Anlony Is Mt against the elaborala splendor 01 Egypt and Rome ( 1 hr . 45 min.) 4:30. NEWS f 'rfda8'• . Dayf inee Hol'ie• 11:00 m • * "The Star Packer" ( 19341 Jonn Wayne, Verna Hiilie. -AFTERNOON- 12:00 U • • 'h "Hiida Cr-" ( 19561 Jean Simmons. Guy Madison ...... ~ ..... Find You" ( 19421 Clark Gable. Lana Tumor. G> • • • "Island Of Love" ( 19tl3) Robe!'t Pres- 1on, Tony Randell. 3:00 (!]) * * 'n "The M1dwom- an Of Chaltlot" (Part 2) I 19691 l(atharlne Heobum, Charles Boyer 3:30 U * * 'n ' The ShOOting" I 1967) Mollie Per11ins. Jack Nicholson by Armstrong & Batiuk- ANO NOW LET'S GO "i:> MIN N(f:; CAME~Of'..I W tTH HE~ 5PECIA L ~ES::Oi:n ON ~ CTTY~ LA~~ UNE.MPL.O'fMENT ~OU-5! Blgh Sfepper Jose Greco at 60 still knows his way around a flamenco routine, as he shows tonight on "Over Easy" at 7 o'clock on KCET, Channel 28. 'Slwgun' Propels NBC to Top Rating NEW YORK (AP ) -The five episodes of "Shogun" were the most-watched prime-time programs for the week ending Sept. 21, and the miniseries' success contributed to NBC's best week ever in the ratings, according to figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co. NBC listed eight of the week's 10 highest-rated programs, in· eluding "Real People" in sixth place, "Games People Play" ninth and "Quincy, M.E .. " lOlh. The network's average rating for the week was 26.3, with ABC a dis tant second at 14.9 and CBS third at 14.4. The networks say that means in an average prime·time minute during the week, 26.3 per cent of the homes in the country with televisi~ were tuned to NBC N BC'S AVERAGE WAS second only to the 31.S for ABC durinl the broadcast of "Roots " in January 1977. NBC's previous high - 15.9 came during World Series week, Oct. 9·15, 1978. The average rating for "Shogun" was 32.6, the hicbest for any miniseries save "Roots.·· In addition to scoring for NBC. "Shogun" effectively wiped out the competition. CBS and ABC offered first-run, made-for-TV mov- ies opposite the miniseries. and both hit bottom. "Once Upon a Spy" on ABC was the week's lowest-rated show, Slat, juat abead of "Rodeo Girl" on CBS, which tied with a repeat of "Benji at Work" on ABC. Al.SO AMONG THE WEEK'S five lowest-rated programs wu ABC's "~20." in 47th place, and "The lncredible Hulk" on CBS, 48th. Show Set NASHVILLE (AP) -Country music entertainer Barbara llandrell says she is movin& to Hollywood for three months to tape a variety television series for NBC. THE DAILY 31-minute show, syndicated in 44 markets, in- cluding Boston, Los Angeles and San Francisco, began this week. The show's publicity sheet pro- mised to "take viewers into the dramatic moments of people's lives and show the fascinating tbin11 people do for fun, for fame, for love, or the challenge of just doing it! • • 'Fixer-uppers' Eyed NBC finished the 1979-80 season in third place, u it bad the season before, but had shown signs it was ready to cballence tbe leaders. The network decided to broadcast "Sbosun" in what would have been the rirst week of the 1980-81 season, even tbou&b fall programming bas been delayed by the actors strike that be1an July 21. IMMEDIATELY AFrEa "Shogun," NBC betan rebroadcut of the miniseries "Centennial," and the openiq installment wu No. 26 for the week. Part ll wu 19th in the ratinp. Tilled "Barbara Mandrell and the Mandrell Sisters," the six hour-loog shows are to feature Mias Mandrell and her musical slaters, Louiae and lrlene. lliu Mandrell said the series will air at 1 p.m. on sis con- secutive Saturday ni&bts belln- Dinl Nov. 22. I The show will empbasiae family·type entertainment, sbe, said. t Where have we beard that spiel before? Some of the fun and cballeqe offered in the first week in- cluded a Bill Blass fashion show or wu it a lone commercial? and a trip to GlUle's bar in Pasadena, Texas (of "Urban Cowboy'• fame), a trek I fear all televhion talk -variety-, Information-people shows will feel bound to make. There was a Frisbee con- -NO• 'unt/C- * * CIBA C8ftB 1 W'CIUIMlll U. WA * COl9o ... ~ ClllllA ...... Moll tJMMI El TOIO lll·NIO ~ 1 ~cm~ Oronet a.w111 MJCJ-CIMIM 11W1t 661~ * 1 Ml ...... _ ' MAILBOX What does it take to turn a di 1 a pi dated 120-year-old Victorian house into a modem, comfortable home? The series "Thia Old House," premiering Oct. 3 at 5:30 p.m. on KOCE, Channel 50, promises to take the mystery out of home renovation. Host Bob Vila, a Boston de· signer and builder, takes viewen step-by-step throu&b the remodelln& proceu, covertna a variety of topica from plasterine and paintin1 to roofinc, landscaping and tax assess- ment, as he renovates two homes. · For the flnt 13 weeks, viewers will follow the restoration of a single-family home more than a century old. During the next 26 weeks, a decaying Victorian beauty wUl be restored and con· verted into five condominiums. As the remodeling progresses, Vila will reveal many of the un- pleasant surprises that may oc- cur when taking on such a pro- ject, and will offer advice on what to do about them. ABC picked up points, meanwhile, with the flnt TV abowiq ol the movie "Midnight Express," in 11th place·opposite tbe Ronald Reagan-John Anderson presidential debate carried by both CBS and NBC and, as a non-sponsored program, not rated. • Here are the week's 10 highest-rated shows: "Shogun," Part III, with a rating of 36.9 repreaentin1 28.7 million homes, "Shogun," Part IV, 35.S or 27.7 million, "Sbolun." Part ll, 31.7 or 24.7 million, "Sbo&un," Part V, 31.5 or 34.5 million, "Shogun," Part I, 29.S or 23 million, and "Real People," 25.S or 19.6 million, all NBC ; "Guinness Book ol World Reeorda," ABC, and "60 Minutes," CBS, both 22.1or17.2 million, and "Gam• P~ pie Play," 21.S or 16.7 million, and "Quincy, 11.E .," 21.4 or 11.S million, both NBC. TREAT YOURSELF TO THE TWO BEST COMEDIES OF THE CENTURYI LACAIE AUIFOlUll (~:(a~) IYllYIAT • .-Hf •MAISHAU. 1. OMSTA .. ... .-. .'!4!"..!!1~1 !lift\.-~-·-P'£ ~ ~ ....... _ ...... ,.. SIMI Ml 540-7 444 --·~T19 HUllllllfllll Mell t41·03ll ....... ""' ntll Mlssloll Ylt!O 830·6990 .,._ ............ f'l&U °""91 639-tnO .... ~~·~ ~ ...... ...,,. Orlllll' 134-~~ .. ma __ ..., -·1111111111 lrrittl ~' ·05$5 I I I . ... _ ~ .... ___..............._ --.... ,.. ----..... --•--...-... 'COMICS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Brad Andenon PEANUTS by Charles M. Schull BIG GEORGE Dlll. y Nm Cl - by Virgil Partch • t . ; i -' FUNKY WINKERBEAN 15 IMt~E:. AN'{ PLAU: IN ll-lE -~ lMAf '5 C~FORfA8U: ~WE.LL APPolN"TtD WMtRC rHt ~IR~ r L.AOlt CDUl.O llq;lAX lJJ( Ll I NOW THAT LtbO MENTION I r , IJlEJtE'. ~ONE. ~181lf1l..I .. "He llkes to wear my glasses Thuy make his lunch loo!>. bigger 1" SHOE ~ ICE!>T UP A 1 Brf IN PRIVAC' ( ~ by Jeff MacNetty Thi~is ?-~ titne to check your sntM tire~ ... MISS PEACH OT .OW\ f~ • 1 µ,A'vE --'h C; SoMi;THING . _,.._~ 10 FIX F1'<5T A~e YOLA~ PARENT? ~ENE~OlltS Wtn-4 YO<-i , I~A ? by Mell Laiarius ~~E-IF T._,E~E'~ ANVTHIN6 ! WA,._,T, ALL! HAVE TO D O I? Sc.~EAM FO R IT ... L.OOK, rT CillOLD ONL.4 B£ RlR ONE ()Al.,> WHILE MR3. CA~ 15 VlolTlt>IC-, THE SWOOL f DRABBLE I &UE~ 'fo\)~ ~'f10NS Altf. ~'f Ll~f. '40ui fl'llJSC. L~~ I~ '40o £,IV£ 1't.4£M A ~'f (£NVOO'> ~O(~OO'f, 1'1lE~ &tloli\f, S02£ .. &u'f EvEN'fvAl.L'I f llE'l°LI. 8ELOll\i ~1"~0NuER. AtolQ ..UO~''f llU~'f bl" tr\OU.. FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE uUST A Q)Uf'LE OF DAYS BEFOREOOR CAMPING -lR1P> ANNE~ DR. SMOCK ----------------------, OUlSIOE IN R it.NT, ~ITH A CAMP STOVE., AN O\JTl-\OV~ r-10 RUNNING WITTE~.NOTv.-1 THE KIDS t.UILL ~ IT . SO, ARE: YOU AN O RPIN.ARY sAw e>ONE:S OR ONES OF '"f'HOSe H01""SHO"f" Q U ACKS ? "Try the other cr1nk." by Kevin Fagan -----~ i :> ' by Lynn Johnston f\T LEAST 1HRTS WHRT WE-KE.E.P TELLING OUR~L\IE.S. by George Lemont J •~ JAws'' LOAN CO. ---· THE FAMILY CIRCUS "Why ore you feeling our toothbrushes, Mommy?" DENNIS THE MENACE ~! MnWJK WENE ~ ~ NJTIQUITV1 HU.~! ~~ . ~;;o_ ..... _~~~ ~ JUDGE PARKER l'l.l. M Rl0HT BACK, JEAN NIE' l 'M JUST 00NNA WALK M155 SPENCER DOWNSTAIR~.' TUMBLEWEEDS MA¥1 ASKuUST WHV,~A LUCK?! ... WE ~lJRE APPRECIATE THE OPPOl«UNITY fO LIVE HERE Al SPENCER FARM~, MA'AM.' IF lHERE'!> ANY WORK YOU NEED DONE AT YOUR HOUbE, JU6T 5AY THE WORD.' 5Ufl881.t .f'~re•i.r. SC.lft&•:.E: .. THEY 'RE BEIN G CHASED BY MOTHS by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 49 Lend 1 hand 1 Tree 50 Nobleman 6 Uncovered S4 OluectlOll 10 Electric unlls ace UNITED Feature Syndicate wecsn.ey·s Puzzle Solved 14 Love 57 Wiik furtlwly i;r;,~ll;~lo:ll~F.+il~ 15 AboYe 58 Roullne O:JOCJ ~O!JD DC!JiHJ ::J:H:J() OC!CO c:JOOlJO [J[][):J UllC!O CODc:JlJ [)[J:J U[)C[J[JOOlJOUCJ 16 Theiler algn 59 Came down 17 Copal, e.g. 60 Norman Vln- 18 Blue blood cent - 20 Oillseed 61 "-blenl" 21 POOf1y lit 62 Stage lwe 22 Smart9' 63 HIWlg guns 23 Osiris' mate 25 Tank DOWN 27 Money 30 Lurc:h 1 Zh!vago girl 31 Melian· s 2 Asian gull neighbOr 3 Flower Q[][J[![J:J(J [JIJ[J[l a:ia a~oo Di.la aa~3:J ~~C!c:J cmoa u::J:JLJ uaa~CJ am:io :!lJUll JllCU OUUOll [J[]::J ~::][![! J0(3 :JrJOU ~DIJIJCJ(3D IJrJ:!J(JO:JUllCIJO IJO;J II :JC!() U COl!JiJ CD l!JCJ o mnm 1J ca CJ Ll t!l I! CJ l:J~Oll:l ::l!JOD iJOOD 32 DormouM 4 CenlOfioul , 33 Frenc:h firm 5 Egg tource 26 -Age 41To's mate 38 Spoken 6 Foundation 27 Chedl 43 FedetatM 37 Charmer 7 Monad 21 P.,.t: Fr. 44 8ulh 38 lizard a Mythlc:ll bird 29 Magnify 45 Chic 3t Treenall 9 Anlel 30 Ope' dalgh-4' Chait voa 40 Pigeons 10 T.. ter · 47 Simple tong 41 ~ 11 NMdl 32 Meat dllh 49 Tatars' milieu • 42 Sernblanoel 12 Metric unit 34 Sp9nllh land 51 Dutctl P90'1 44 Kind of con-13 Severe mM1 52 She: Fr. vlct 19 Pk.II vllul 35 Simple 53 Clarinet, e.g. 45 Loud tlllller 21 Fonnlng tool 37 A*age 55 Gtapfl 4 7 Condemn 24 Wlckectn.e 38 Sur11er se A11nQ ' 48 EJCcelllnce 25 Conceml 40 ........ 57 Helfttl epoC I: .. ~ '--·--~ Q DAIL 't' Pl LOl Ange . in_Sky jSaves Lives S&oryud ..._.... By &ICllARD &Ot;HLt;a Ol-0....,~-- .. rlends in !IC&rt'h of fun roaud their pickup at m oat t o the> lul switchback atop Santa•MO t~all I.it lie did they know that one would leave by air The four-wheel dr\ve t ruck bolt_..t from the roadwa_y, ft'll 200 fl"t"l and dropped another 1.000 feet chrouli(h the busby terrain SEARCH AND a F.S('l'I:: tSAK > the twin-engine Huey he h<·optN' up propriateJy t'Odt' nam t'd Ma rin Ansel 1, got the call at nOQn for tb 16th medical aid n •.s vonse of tht' year . Their balanc ing act bet wt't'n hft' and death, precision and pent was u s lsted by the tl verado paJd r ail volunteer and Orange County fo"'lrc Department paramedics who freed the victims from the wreckage But the helicopter crew defil)' hft ed the driver in a litte r from lhe mountajnside and pr ovided quick transportation to UC I rvine Medical Center . "IT WOULD HAVE taken hours for an ambulance to reach the scene from the park gate, and the injured wer e in no condition for the bumpy r ide down," explained a cr e w member. SAR's crews of four are based at El Toro Marine Corps Air Station with primary responsibility for pilot rescues and aircraft emergencies at the base. Safety, pilot profic ie ncy and positive mental attitudes are e m- phasized by Capt. Pete Frttman, 32, of Mission Viejo, because "a ny 'routine' can be dangerous." ll n ti I a r 1• 1· f" n t t r a n If" r , h " • u th<' otnccr In <'h11 r91e1 ot ro 1>llCJt OoUR Morun. <'r ••w r hlrf Knbttrt Moyf'1 llnd Navy nit-di<' rorpsmttn JNli. ll(•lf t1<'lOW. lihown on thb p•lCf' it u r1 n.i a n in t er •itt•nt'y a klll ~hit q .lf'OHllJI '\t'bSh lfl Thi') ltrt> h vt' uf IJ pc<n1111tll\t'l on rail 24 hour11 1.1 day. equll'lk'\I with rl'scu h11nwM>, S1okt•11 h ttt'r, mt•tal C'u ttr 111, ml r 11v..r1ou~ lt1tk•s . nwd1r 1tl :-.u1,11hc~ uwl :l.'10 fc•t•I of 1·11h lt• lo n-1ll'h I ht• 'l"t•nt> That n11tothl l"• u l.111111m• ll1•1u·h r hff or t lrteJ:n lh ~h•'u wtwn-they u r ,. :. u """ 11111· 11 tq ,. o u 111 y I u w 1•n Con·1·nw111 11ff1t•rnli., ttu• t'uhfornlu llq.:hw1,1 y P 11trul or \1 S t'oh•:s\ S..-n \I'\' tu n •nd\ 10lH'l't•i..;1hh' ur1•u11. 1·~pc•t•1ulh .11 111.:hl or 1n h1HI wt•uttwr "Tt .. : PIUlT'S 1u1lt111Wnt 1:. lht• kt•\ " l"n•1•m u11 ~aut "tk h it:. 11 m1°l lwn dollar 111 r1·ruft 111111 four (t'rt•• l hvl'1' uln·11clv ul ~tllkt· u111I rnu i.t dt•1·11lt> w)lt'lht·r to 11tt1•mpt m rt>JN 'l a m1!-SIOll .. Most n it:hls 1'\l!T l'\'\i l>t'l'Ull.'lt' Wl' havt' ~lll'I\ h1 ~h tnlt•n ·st, u •11I 11ncl th1>rou.:hly pra c l1t·1•il s Mc•t y pror1 C'ien<'Y Our st'r v11·t• 1s 11 \1t•ry 11m.:1blt• good for tht' Manm•s und lht• rom m u naty" And Ma rin t• Ant: l' I h as ,. v ,. n r esc ued a jail inmalt• who was llurt or a hand crew battling a bru:;h fire last July along Coal Canyon Road off the Riverside Freeway. While fighting the blaze. he suf fered a broken coll ar bone and dis· located hip. SAR came at 5:30 a .m. through the s moke to pluck him off the side of a hill for: a m ercy night to medical aid. · Orange County firemen and paramedics shield "victim" from dirt and sand as hovering helicopter prepares for pickup. After the litter is hoisted, Moyer brings ft on board and Beaucage _adjusts medical tube enroute to Mission Community Hospftal. LOCAL T eamwork is a vefY big part of the missions,· says Capt. Pete Freeman, below. Crew chief Lance Cpl. Robert Moyer gives thumbs up fo Navy Corpsman Jess Beaucage as he rappels to "victim" at sfte in Black Star Canyon. ) .Business On the Big Board National Education Corp., the nation's largest proprietary vocational education company and headquartered in Newport Beach, was welcomed recently to the New York Stock Exchange . William The Nava l Air S yst e m s Command, Washington, D.C., bas awarded a $37 million con- tract lo the Newport Beach Aeroneulronic division or Ford Aerospace fr Commulcatioas Corp., to produce guidance and control sections ror the U.S. Navy's AJM-9L Sidewinder air-to-air missile. Lisa Padgalskas is publicity coordinator at The Cox & Burch Advertising Co .• Ne wport Beach. She lives in Huntington Beach. ,.ADGAU«.U Kenaetb 0 . Wentzel, El Toro, is regional vice president, Orange County, for C ity National Bank, headquartered in Beverly Hills. Wentzel will assume mana gement responsibilities for the regional headquarters bank in Newport Beach and the City National Bank branch in Lido Village. PaW Miller is assistant to vice president and gene ral manager Stephen P. Rogers at Bozell & Jacobs/Pacific's Newport Beach office. Leoaard Shane, Newport Beach, chairman or Mercury Savings & Loan Association, Huntington Beach, has been elected president or California Savings & Loan League for 1980-81. Gary C81utl.Dgbam is vice president, copy director of Cochrane Chase. Livingston & Co .• Inc .. an advertising, public r elations and marketing firm in Irvine. CJI I UNDA BLUE ABOUT A SECOND TRUST DEED LOAN UP TO 5500,000 Newpo~,fJ,~!1J!!.!!'!!!;,1nc G (714)760~ ® Batten, left, chairman of the New York Stock Exchan ge , g r eets J ohn McNaughton. C'hairm..an of Nation:JI Education Corp .. and H. Uav1d linght. president of the company. Women Seek Jobless Pay S AN FR A NC ISCO CAP) -California housewives derued unemployment benefits when they quit jobs to take care or their children could share more than $70 million in back payments if the state Supreme Court rules in their favor. The high court agreed Wednesday to grant a hearing to a woman who seeks to certify more than 100,000 housewives like henelf as members or a class or women who s hould be eligible for benefits not paid because or a law that has since been nlled illegal. The petition challenges the May 29 appeal court reversal or a 1979" ruling by Sacramento Superior Court Judge Frances Carr which had certified as a plaintiff class all women denied job- less benefits between Aug. 23, 1968, and June 17, 1976 -the dale the Court or Appeal ruled the con- troversial la w invalid. The petition said that for 23 years, starting in 19S3. California denied benefits to the class. based on a disqualification provision. WHAT IS AN ALLERGY? By Terry Grant, R. Ph. Allergy is a sensitivity to a specific substance 1known as an allergen 1 which in similar amounts 1s harmless to most peo- p I e One ~ a pers on becomC'S sens1t1 ve , there ma y be an unfavorable reaction on rcexposure. An} body organ ma) be involved m allergic re- actions The breathing system b often affected. resultinll in swelhn~ of the nasal membranes. called hay fever, and spasms m the bronchial lubes. called asthma. Various rashes mcludmg hives and eczema appear on the skin of some pen· pie. YO R DOCTOR CA:\ PHONE US wh en you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if shoppin~ nearby. Clr "e will deliver promptly wfthITTJt extra charl(c. A g r eat man y peo ple entrust us with their prescriptions. May we compound yours? 'AH UDO f"HARMACY "'"l).tly~ JSI ....,.. ... _, H•wporf IHCll 642-1510 A Golden Opportunity Let Inflation Work For You QUICK CASH (usually in 710 10 Working Days) MO Oil LOW MOMTHL Y PAYMIMTS a.-.... .., ....... , ... 4 .,...,,...., MUMT.-TOM llACH ........ ~, ................ ......., w...att-tJMt 114/MMM7 • llJ/ltl-1117 '1,000 to '200,000 CALL TODAY! Avelleble tor up to one year . longer terms available with Interest only payments Offkles .net afflllatn at90 in 8-\ 89"\ardlno. Rlvenlde. Palm Springs, S.n Diego. hMdena. s.n Francisco. ~.century City Thursday. Sep1ember 25. 1980 OAILY PILOT COLLECTORS C9ffNER As ault Rue Colna a St•mp• GOLD & SILVER Prtcea for t-24-IO -C:-1199 -Cl '22 .. . ..., -- 011 Shale ' ~~~~ :· ::: ~PHO\ N70 _, '°"' -;11.,.. 8AQI> ,_, ·~'"' WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD Jev.els oy Joseph purcha!>I<'> cJ1tJmonds gem s.tones gold and !'>1lver troJ11 111111.tle 1nd1111C1uals and tJ!.>lates Careru1 el(l)m1nauon ano evatua- 11011 by our eAperlo; H1gtt~1 puces 1.><1ocJ 10 9 OJ1iy S<1t t0-6 Clo'>t:CI Sunday Pt1one t<><lay A \k tor Betty Grae,. or Doug KPnnedy Plrumed C•M lw ,.,,..... 4-• • ,,.l,.,~,.. ,. r•u\1 mA , •• oo •1 .. n Soulh~;;;.;,~lll•g• ,J[W[LS by JOS[PH S AN FRAN CIS C 0 L.....;..'K~-~-----c_-_ .. _._ .. _••,;.> _~--·So-u1•h•Co•a•s•1 ii.Piiilaziiiiiiiia.iiiCliioiiisiiita..,.Mff-;.a.·.i54-0-.i906-6;.. _ _, (AP ) Some o r t he nation's leading ene rgy,--------------------------------------, Indus tries say they're I 1 ready at last to go a rter I I America 's oi l s hale, I n •u I which they claim could I 'J n 10U can 1/w1g1 ''" ' I y ield e nouf.th fuel to I O n 1 m eel the countr y· s : 11 J. P. Cano/I paint job 1 • : needs for centuries. 1 0 Q 1 "We ttunk it's really I 0 n I going to happen t his I n ll Ourprimnry a1m 1sloassureyourbuilding I t 1 m e , · • c h a i rm an I ll u lht• prtJtN·tion of the finest quality paint -1 Willtam Love or O c-: e~pertlyopphed.Thebcauty ofthejob 1 c1dent1tl Oil Shale or I ·~your exlr11 bonus.Be11urcyougetboth. I Grand Junction, Colo., Call for an estimate. I told the American Min I ing Congress this week. He foresaw an assault on recoverable reserves es tima ted in the trillions of barrels from vast de pos its or oil shale locked in and under the rugged l'anyons and cliffs of 1 Colorado. Wy('lming and 1 Utah "THE ONL V way to stop il is tf the price or oil comes way do wn. which isn't likely. or if I h e gvvl•rnmenl reg u l atory a genc1t>s stop us.·· he said Speaker.;; f rom Oc c1dental, Union Oil and othe r C'nergy companies told of under~round and above.ground me thods of unl<X·king a waxy. or- ganic subo;tance called k Ho~en from oil shale, a n d t'l)nverting 1l to erude 011. The l'OSl ur producing c rude oil from s h<ile has been greater than the cost of re<'overing liquid petroleum But with n s 1ng pe troleum cost s, shale oil has become m· creasingly attractive. L 00V E con tended Colorado has e nough water not needed ror agriculture or other purposes to support a 1.1 million barrel-a-day oil shale industry. Interest centered on J. p. CARROLL COMP·\NY P11nt1na 1nd W•llcov•""IZ Con11actor\ ORAllGE COUNTY 2704 So1.1tr1 Gr.ind Avenue S.inta Ana 1714) 5-10 3313 10$ U CHIS 310 Nun~ M.101•M1 Av~11ue 12131 660 9?30 "Painting the Town Since 1930" Soda Ash, yes. Soda Fountains, no. \\'l•\ l 1,1k1·n tlit-.1dc.,.i nd l1..,l1ng<, tl1c1l li11 .... 1 11l''>"'" ll ·1 t.• t.11. 1·..11 h nth1·r .11.d put th1 rn 1'1 1 "l'p.ir.ih br111k.-1111 I"" \r.gd1·c., R11.,t'wc;., In H11..,1nl''-" )l IJ.11·. I'•>" .. )11 1 It .11J m.tll 11.il.... • q11•prnl·n1 .md .,,. ',,, . ., tri •Ill I :ni... .111"'1·r 11\1· rr1.ik1 Lo., /\nr1·1, ... :n.nl "'· 1\nd ,1111 11 trnd 1 li1·111 f,1c.,tC'r ,1nd l'.t:-tl'r thc1ll l'\ 1•1 S11dJlnuntJ1n ... ~ lh1·\ :1·1 ... i.-d nl'.uilh ll·lq1hPm:\ I ,,.., r\ng1•'1--. (. on.,u11w1 )1 !11 I\\' l '.1~L.., t he "Gr e c n R iver ,.--------------------------------, l'ormation ... ~n oil r,-, shale laced geologic I ~\'J structure j • • ' Occidental s aid it is In the ha rd at work on the l j \-.... world 's biggest mine, a ~111 1~ $2 billion facility. L- News from all over Califorma is rounded up each day DAILY PILOT ..,;. \\C~c.\\• ~9ot\ \)fl.\.> \~'\ \\0.,. e -£,lf-\> \)f.• \' .0 : \ • ii!':~ . ('-Je.t\ ~~s. ,• ·~" ""\t-J\t'e c..nc; ~\\ '• • ' \ \VV fj.'>~JV :..-'°'-.....: Q \i\) \ ..... -.. .. . . . . . . .... . . .... . .. .. ... ... • ., ' ' .. .. " • .. • • . • ' , : I _.___ (; J e DAILY PtLOT Coordiiiation Stressed . EVANSTON, Ill tA P) A comb1naUon of . bad buainess d«u1ons and thf' ra1lurt ol aovt>rn men\ to provide up&>Qrt I ~ponsiblf' for \h,t dt'cllne ol lbt' • consumer t ledrorucs tnduatry, u ~.000 VS ('on1mt>rce Departmf'nl study haii t•oncl\Kied Moreov~r. the' study unvt'tltd this wttk <'On C'ludea, lht-re art' slans tht> umt lhln1 Is h•PPf'" mg to the enucundurtor indwitty Tht" "'port re commend& t•1tpltal 1nvt's tmf'nt 1n('enuves. tu rt' rMlo paler WIDE AREA COVERAGE tWllC'f C...). L ~ (' ... ,.,. S.18-ni.r4a. "-' ~htnl* r ... c,. '17.75 \Mal IDO. f'OI\ no depo5" on credit approval OR"'Lt <Ill 'H R"l>IO II l I l'tfO'I \IR\11 I '"" • SANTA AN.A MPdallions Nt>ar End t'r•m Wirf' S.-nlc~li If you'rt' C'Of\sldenn~ buying on.• of thost> gold mtd alhom~ offered by the government, 'ou'd better act qutckly The dudliM 1s Tuesday There are tw o medallions 8\•ailable. One . weighing one·half ounce, memorializes singe r M arian Anderson . Th e one-ounce medal honors painter Grant Wood. Order forms (or tbe medallions along with instructions on payment and determining price are a\'.ailabl.e. at pos.t offices. Herit~e Bank \tt'lllllt •r I 1>11 . CONSTRUCTION FINANCING •Residential up to 4 units .,- no takeout commitment required •commercial Buildings Takeout commitment required along with leases •Orange County Properties •Land Loans up to 1 year 50% of appraisal •up to $750,000 G:t He ritage Bank IQ""4. oGnllC 1.-l!NDl!R 2171 CAMPUS DRIVE IAVINE CALIFORNIA 92713 CONTACT JEFF JOHNSON (714) 833-3700 tit'( and <'OOrdlOUll'd lrllt~roatlonal trade policies \Cl t•urb ltw lr(•nd "rf IM OBVIOtJM TO rnr th~l the p11ltems .we saw herC' art! tw·ina r•·Vt'•h~ In the semiconductor 1ndu1try,' say11 M1ch1u!I ltadnor, a proressor al Northw.-:iitrrn tlnlver lly 'lll Kt'llOllJ Graduate School of Mtin¥Mt'lflt:nl "Wr 've got lo have an ln· ll1'rn11tlor11tl Jlt1l 1t·y fflr ttw 1ndw.try " Radnor wrutt• the ytiil.r long, L»page atudy of forf'1g.n r(lrn1wt1tl11n In the conliumer eleclronlcs industry tor the tommtiue Department's <'<.'Onomu· dcvdopment odminislraalJon Tht-lu.•y lo Ji.µant":1C ~uccess In electronics, Radnor fvund . hi.it t..,_,n the coordinated industry· 1ovc>mm1>nt t•ffort to p.:oetrate foreign market.a through re?>earch, investment, two-tiered pricing and other methods tJ S ronsumer elect ronics firms contributed to lh~ir own decline, the study maintains, by k~ping to old marketan..e strateiies o( selling nationally advertised. name.brand products and pushing high profit merchandise such as big television con- soles ME~LE, THE STUDY says, Japanese firms were introducing small. low-priced TVs and radios that eventually forced the U .S . manufacturers to abandon the market As a result, the study said, in 1978, 100 percent of video r ecorders and players and household radios were Imported along with 85 percent of black-and·white televisions, 64 percent of con- sumer hi·fi components. 43 percent of phonographs and stereo compacts, 35 percent of tape recorders and 18 percent of color television sets, The result has been » negative balance of pay menls totaling $5 billion in 1978 and a dechne in profits, employment a nd the number of American- owned electronics firms. $50,000 to $500,000 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • lnterell only ... v-111 • hteo•• •Co.•erdal • R .. W••d•I • Wee .. ly <O••lt-ftte • 11!1-•••v f•ntu ... • 6 -"•"• to S year• • Sotttl.en1 CalHon1t. ( •1ot u I ••'n loaon l11fonmaU0 11 •«"11<• ,, ., v• •ur hn.uat "'ll th'•'d' (714) 759-1515 AMERICAN HOME MORTGAGE 2:}() Newporl C ente• 011ve Oe~•gn Plaza Ne ... port eeac;11 Ca11101n1a 92660 Who Can Live in Indian Wells for Just $121, 500 ... ? YOU CAN! Yu. incredible as it sounds, you can live in the City of l~dian Well11, one of the mn11l exclusive and expensive communities in America . for as littleas$111 />00. the 11tartinl( rmt•eol the Inst :14 condominium units ~till availahle (but not for . lf>ng) al Indian Wells Rt:icquet \luh. T he secret ? It's quite simple. Developer William Messenl(er got here early and he's willinl' to pass along his savin1ts to you. Indian Wells •tarquet Club is well -e11tahlis hed and ell hut complete. It already has 362 happy ownen;. Inc he final pheHe, there are just the :l4 newly completed units. plus an additional :l4 improved lots. After they're Rone. the ··Sold Out" sign goes up, mark inf( the end nf ol)e of the hest housin1it buys in the desert. The location is superb. In a beautiful, private. wind-free e11ve flu!lh al(ainst the majestic Santa Rosa Mountains and right next door to the rollinl( fairways oft he Indian Wells Country Club. The homes are in the Messenger tradition of quality and craftsmani;hip. clustered around swimming pools. each with three patios or balconies. private entry courts. cathedral ceilin1ts I most models). walk-in closelH, tiled ti replaces with !(as l11R· liithter and fully equipped kitchens featurinl( top-of·t ~l.ine appliances includinl( icemakerR and .Jenn-Air built-in BBQs. A!' a hnnus, membership is automatic in the riu·quet duh itself. an elel(ant so<'ial center with lounge, dining roovi end 10 tennii; cour1s. and which is managed hy the dean of resort operatnrs.j'red Renker. We earnestu,.1'1ivite comparison. Take a very t•arcful look 1iround Indian Wells. Then take nur word for it. You won't find anything at a lower price -and you w1m'1 find a heller value. . .. ... ,.., .... -.. ... • • # - Four models from $121.f>OO to$ 11;9.f>OO 46761; Bay Club Drive Indian Wells. California 92260 (714) :145-2811 (duh) (714) 345-26PI (eales office) Letiu~e Lost A fieldworker bemoans Joss of thousands of heads of lettuce in field near Salinas because of strike by 2,600 workers of Bud Antle Inc. All activity at the firm, the nation's lar~est lettuce grower. is at a standstill. It is the company's firS,t strike in its 33-year history. ------------- Car Prices Drop DETROJT (AP) Sticker prices on the 1981 Dodge Omni and Plymouth llori2-0n models have been lowered by Chrysler Corp. from an earlier tentative price. making the new cars $9 cheaper than year.end 1980 models A spokes man for the No. 3 automaker said the cost reduction stems from changes in "some appearance packages ," such as fender trim. Stickers on the s tandard front·wheel drive 1981 cars will carry a base price or $5,690, Chrysler said. It also announced a new "miser " model of the front·wheel car which will sell for $5,300. ()vt•r Th..-Counlt>r MASO Li1tiftCJ' BUSINESS I MUTUALS Missile Carrier Patented WASHINGTON <AP) -A aystem that could adapt wide- body jetliners to carry the ciruise misaUe bu been patented by tbe Boein1 Co. Currently, 8-52 bombers ue to be modified to carry the mia· slles, which are launched near the border of an enemy and can carry a nuclear warhead up to 1.500 miles to a target . THE B-5ZS h ave been in se r vice fo r many yea r s, howe ver . and are expected to be phHed out by the end of the century~ creating a need for another carrier for the missiles. The newly patented system was deaiped for Boein1's '14'1 jetliners, but Boeing spokesman Allen Bobbs said it could be adapted to other wide-body jets, such u the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 and the Lockheed L-1011. ACCORDING TO the notice in the Official Guette of the Pa· tent Office, the system allows the missile to be carried inside the body of the jetliner on two rails running the lencth of the plane. The patent was issued June 24, but was first reported Wednesday in a copyrighted story carried by the Fournier Newspapers. " Terry Freese, an aide to Rep. Norm Dicks, D-Wash., said tbe Pentagon and Congress have de- cided not to fund the miuile- jetliner adaptation in the 1981 riscal budget, but the option re- mains open in future years. (Jps and Dotmts Neme I EIP 2 SurvTe< 1 ll'tlOl'CI • .Me'90rd ! l:~ 1 Telemtn I Al'ltllrn El i: =~ 11 Olnlc:Sc:I 12 lnlolnll IJ SowH-1• ~«Ir 15 Cwtlr Fff DOWll8 us:~ _°'\, 1 -' ~ \11 • -\11 2~ -14 21/• -\It 2'"' -11.t I~ -2 ~ -.,.. 10 _, 5 -.,.. toe\. UP •7.l Up '1.1 UP JU UP JI.I Up ... Up »-• UP 16-1 Up 1•.0 Up ll.1 Up 21.A UP Jll.4 UP 19.4 UP 11.I Up 17.t Up 11.4, UP 16.2 Up IS.I UP 1SJI Up 10 Up IU Up 1U Up IJ.l Up 1U Up 110 Up 110 UP 110 ~ Oft IU Oft IU Oft It.I Oft 11. I Off lo.1 Oft 10.0 Oft 10.0 ()fl ••• Of! •.S Off '·' ()fl t.' ~enc,ec:t SCI 16 E~L. 11 w II VTN It Glllnr d II Vermtlt 1 21 UndelHO 22 IWfllCS 12~ -IV. ni. -\4 . -~ WI -Yt '"--1¥. 7Jllt -'"' 2h -\4 12 -1 1•11.t -2 JV. -\4 Ofl a.t Off L7 ()fl ... Off l.l OH U Off u Oft 1.0 Off 1.1 DKllMO ..••••••••. ... Undl-d . . . ...... 1,5i. T-ls-s ....•• , . •. • .. • 2.7«1 ..... n.ghl . .. ·•· , . Ill -lows . ..•• ....... •• IJ Total sews • , ... , .. • •• • •• • Jt, 1-..00 MUTUAL FUNDS Z3 Sl.-Cca I :; ~Jr:( » S.HrMI 27 w.tdlrfl Off ,_. Off 7.1 111. -... JOVt -IV. 1 .,.. Off 7.1 Off , .. Off 6.7 JV. •;. lit, Va JVt -"' Off •• , Off ~7 Off •.1 NEW YORlt (API C..pm 10 ... Nl Ta Fre • 99 NL. ""I c U7. .. . MFH •. 70 7.22 ""Fd 10.0I ll.02 ~ 0 '·" NL. -r .. lollowln9 quo. C..pll s 13 J2 NL us GYI 7.7S NL. lnvQuel 9.3' 9.IO -Nrl 14.71 NL. ~h •. ,. t.51 Fllfto.: ~Ions WDPllecl by Gol<fl ll,99 Nl F1-llly GrO<.lp. lny Bos 1).14 14.21 -rlll Lrnc:n: Frol'tl '7.93 1.61 l. U.12 lt.S2 .,,. N•iionel Asso<I· t.Mn Bullo<:lt.. AcJfH 1.33 NL. lrwntors Gr-; Belk IU1 ll.11 ""'.. I.ts,.,, .. Miid 1'.ti 11.10 •lion of Securlllet Bulle-••.S. 11.20 AINI 14.29 NL. IOS Bel •.57 •.73 Gllplt 17.M 1t.u 5'1K1 11.'5 12.1J ,,.. Gt 1" 137 OHien, Inc., ere C..ndn 10.JI 11.27 Bond 6.'8 NL. IOS Grt IUI 11.59 Eq11 Id t.7l 10.H llll'lm Grp: ,,_ W 11:s.t JD:» 1111 prlcu •1 Which Ohlll 3.ot 3.31 Conon 46.91 NL. IOS HIV ..02 •.19 "4 Inc 1.2' ..... ,. .. Fd 11.12 11.4' l'M c.p t.92 10.11 1-wcurlUes Mofllh 10 60 ! 1 SI Gonftll ll.40 NL. IOS NO t .•1 IO.S1 LtMet t .M •.99 ~ C •.12 S.1111 l'M Inv 1 1' t W COUid ...... bffn NI ws .:JI 10:11 Dsl"' 10.1•. .... M<ltl t .15 10.10 ""'-'HY t .00 •.• Mel lfl 7.'6 •.• Trev Eq .. :u 11:,. '°"' (Ne\ uioel hFr• '·" 10.ll Eca Inc 11.01 NL. P\'09 .... 5.,. Munllll 1.11 I ... ~ F....cl: T• F4 •.n NL v.1 .. 1 or be>uahl Cflt Shi 12.59 IJ.51 Each :M.O NL. r .. E~ J .50 J.U Pec:Fd 10.'1 11.1J Fund 21.JS u.u Gt 11.'5 NL Ivel.. Phll .. i., CNn Fd 11.U %3.'6 MelJel 72.IJ NL. S4ocll 22 ... U.61 Sol Vel 12.41 .11.21 II Inc 1UI IJ... Set ,.... NL. c....,ool Wed,. ()Ip Ow 20,U NL. Ml.-> Bel 7.2• NL. s.!ect 7.>• 1.'5 Micl AM U I 7.lt PIM ll'V 16.12 NL USAA GI 11.ff NL. lell ••Y 0-Slnul lU2 Nl Fldel 10.CM NL.. Ver Py t .7t 10 ... MMllOIPt lt.14 •.•. Pllaf1h 16.'5 11.U USAA Inc U I NL. Acom F 27.61 NL CO*tl•I Funcll: Gvt Se< ... 1 NL. Inv llHh l.'1 t.7• N!Off'(' I" 12..42 IU7 Pllfmcl 1 .... IUM Aecu S.2' NL. ADV lot.IQ NL F....cl 11.26 12.Jl HI Yid 11.S. NL. IMet »... NL. MA Ff 11.U NL Price F-: Ulllf Mui 11.IS NL. Ahllure 16.'9 NL. Gr ... h 7.tt 1.7J L.I Mun l .U NL. Ivy Fd ,... NL. MIA left 10.tO 11.. Gnolll 1•.» NL""'°" Svc~: AIM Fll>Cb. HI Yleld 7,)6 I.CM P\lrllfl 11.11 !'IL. JP Gr1h 12.tt 1•.12 MIF FwMI: ·-l .'7 NL. lreM u .. 2' 1•.J1 CvYld ••.U U.11 lflCom •. 12 1.0 s.1.... 7.13 NL. ~!'._!~o 110.12.~ IN.IL.7 Fund 1.56 t.2J N I .re JJ.61 NL. .... '"" t.2A .... Ecllon 14.71 15.IO ()pin 11.26 12..11 Thrift t ... NL. -· ~ ~ S ... 6.U N H«ll 17.11 NL. UC.. U .,. Ji,711 Hl'l'kl t ,64 10.ll TH Me U.01 .... 1 Trend Jl.64 NL. ~HM<r<.'ll ,. .... ...... t .26 10,01 "''"" 10M N Ull Inc 11.11 11 • .a Alpl\e F 16... NL. CAllu Glh 2UI NL. Flnefl<lel Proa· --'""' ,,_ Mllluel tJll OmeM: Tll Frt I.SI NL. I.Ml ... F-: • A 8lr111T 1•.55 15.'ll C.M111 AB 1.20 I.JO Dyne 7.1'7 NL. ~ 111-?! 192.~ ~ 10.221 NL "'9 5-rvlCiet: AcClll I.ti •.T.I _,, ... F-<:•Ith CD , .. , '.. lfldlal •Ml NL. --· ·-... ......... J. I 5,... ~T 1•.1' NL. ..... s.a s.a A &.I 1.72 t.SJ Comp M Ut 10.•2 lncom 1.11 NL. ~.!~• Ea to2.!_! 10N.,.L. lncom I.JI UJ """' 1.61 NL. C.. Gr 12.56 IJ.1J Nncp IJ.°' ... ,. Comp Fd to ... 10.12 k1 lnves100: ---""' ··-: T• F,. IOM 11.13 lnciOlft .. ,. N c.. Inc 11.1. 11."' A"""'' 12.76 IJ.tS CGfl<Ofd 10.20 NL llnclDI Ap 1•.92 ,,,°' ~, __ """*• 2.J. 1.16 ~Sllrr •UI NL ""'SIP 14.11 iUI ~ ,, ... •.u Alt Glh t.21 IO.I• Coflfle<lklll 0...t: KO 9.1• t.tt ,_.. · .._.. •1.S1. ··•· """'9l'll I" .... : HI Inc IJ.11 U.11 Bond 12.06 IJ.11 Fund 15.l• 1'.l7 Grwth 12.0 IJ.J7 Gtow 12 ... ••.m Nel Avie I0.02 NL CalW ,. •• 17. lftc-t.11 '°·" Fd Inv 1.•1 9.lt tncom 6.U 7.lt •ncom 7.0I 1.1" ~~"'e 1·!! 1'·~ Hal,,,. 17.ts NL. IM 1.111 11.27 11. ,_.... ..-. 1.n Gnwtf1 U.U 14.J1 Mufi 8d 7.U I.I• Ollcfl '6.12 7.15 ..._, ·"" ... Sec:wltlet: 0-e U ... IS k• t.M 11.7$ Inc.om I. U 1.M ll'V 12"2 12.11 Sloca 7... l.l1 ~ 11•9.1910 21S1·~! ..... 10.'5 11.27 Grwtfl IJ.ft IS V..e 11.17 12.11 ICA t.59 IOM Gllrlllel G 1'.12 NL. Th E• 1.11 t J9 ....,,~,. • ·-80lld JM )... HI Y,. U .. 7 M, SWQ t.7. NL N ,.., ...... t ,42 QINUIU W.lt NL .. W.11 22.«1 NL. T.Ch U.41 ••. ,, Ol"'41 s.• s.n ,_ •. ,, JS7 ..... LIM F4: -Mt 1.ff t."JO c..nt -t.OO NL. Ffld Gltl J ... 6.21 Toi Ill ~J.11 14.~ ~ 7, .. 1.0 1~ 11.11 ... ..IN 16.tS 11.a ...,,_ 09,.rel: ry C.., IU1 1'.n ~.,!' G-.p1 : NL. ~--Bl 1'f*M \. _1 ,.,.... ... ··~ .... 1, 0.. 1 ••• IS.74 t!K-1.41 1 ... Call 8d .. ., 7.2t _,,, Group: .... ...,. 1.M C.. · ,,_ "'*" •-6. ·fu I• 11.M 19. Lev Gt ie.• 11.46 Enlrp 11.n l•.•5 Okel U.50 "·"' lncom IUI NL. c.. 82 11.56 "·" Stock 10.~ 11.2> VII.. -··· _. Sit 11.IJ 11.4 tii Vici t 711 10 40 Ott-IUt 1•.12 Mllllll Ut 10.1' C.. M 7.)5 1t.OJ T .. Ea 1.75 UI _Ver• M.OS u.a -leftdtn• -I 17'.!0 11'.J7 Otkh 1.5' I,» 5'1K1 10.17 NL. C.. lt1 7.75 A1 1.U.. Fund: ........ t.• NL. 1-11 ... 12.J:I Veftlr n 72 i..a Ta,,,. 7.00 7.U Fr-llfl Gr~: Qa 1(2 .... 1.41 E.4IUlt •• ., 22.40 ..._. •. 12 NL lflVeM .. ,. .... C/Ntll 12'.67 ,,;,., 0.1.. 7.7' I.SI AGE J.64 J.'2 0. SI :I0.11 22.U Grwtll ISM 17.05 lilfe(.e lecw: c;...a f •.•1 NL. EMh 41.lt NL. Dir Cep t.OS NL. Or-US 5.'9 C.. SJ 11.44 IUO lfteem 10.SS 11.47 ..... 11.27 c-t\ I.SS t.at FCI Am l1 30 12 3S OodCa 81 JUI NL. ONTC 14.• IUI C.. S. t.47 10.51 -let 21.tt U ,OS ~ ,.... 0.H 1 c;,..,. JI·_.. NL. Oo11C11 St 21.0 NL. Grtwth 7.67 1.27 l,,..,nt •,63 S.O. THla •• 4' 6.7' Ince 11.11 NL. Jl.•I NL. HMtlr 12.51 IJ.U Ore• aur "·" NL Utlla •. ,. •.57 LA•l""'°'1 Grp: ~ a...m: SIPeul ,.._., P«;e 2"-49 2•.11 Oreyfus Grp: '"'°"" UO 2.• QI Ult IU7 U.13 E!WYf 11 .• NL. ~ 1s.• 1•, .... 21 NL. Prwvld J .• •.1• A&nd U.10 NL. US Gov 7.11 7.7! ~ 13.93 NL. Gueid f1.i! NL. Grwt11 IUS 16.M lal&I 61.'6 NL. AGCllFCI 7.42 1.00 0...-1 IU! 17.12 Cepil IUt u.u IMom l .•1 NL. ~ 4. 1 NL. IPKI UM NL lllHf IUI NL. A Hltfl.. ..n NL. LA... u .tt 21.40 _£quit •.CM '-SI lletll 10,04 NL. 4. NL. k5 ....... , Plf9 I 19.. NL. A •••no 5.... •.•S N NIM 12.27 HL. Alndt Inc. UM,,,. 10.'1 11.99 P11111t l'-'' NL. .. ''1 NL le ..... "·· NL. A 1_. 1211 NL. 5111 inc 7.'6 NL. cmrce t.n NL UfldJnr 10,41 NL. Sdlus s... NL. · • • 1 IL "'8(1 14.a. ISM A 111¥. II!( 12:.1 HL. fea E• 11.0 NL. Ind Tr ••. ,. 13 ... ~ s.,, .. I s: Wld 11.n NL. ·~ 't. L v......,. aro.: A NIGtll 4 >5 • 1S Thfd C 24... HL. PllOI I I.a NL. .._1 .U =L. !WW' Gt 11.1' NL s:· I L ~rr 2S.ta· NL. A Htlnc u:u 1.:u E.ea1 Gtll 10 ... 11..17 ~!.Pec:fr IH! NL , J!'Ad .. ~,\~·"' L. ........... }"' 111,,. l'tNL.L. ." • L 11 Tr \1.'1 NL ~· •.n t.75 lafofl&W-wd: ..... '···· NL --. ---· ·" 7. NL p •lflC '·'* NL. ..... """""°"' .. ,.. Ul t.52 OE S& aut NL ~"!. '·!! :00''2. 11.41 NL 9-KI •• 11 NL $;. IUI NL 'Me I.• t,SJ ,,_. 10,°' ML. GE SS L4 t.11 NL. --·-• tftt II.IS -~ 1S ,._., \t,47 PtL lllCOf'fl ••• ..., OrWltl ... ,. 30.2> S1!!!. ~ U.J1 Nl .~--2' '!··" 1!-%! .H! 117 • 1.tt ll• '·" NL. Sllcll t .» 10.•2 eem •.15 5.2J _.., 1.-17.14 NL. ·--·· •• ..... .... • • 1.M MlllM 14,a NL. ~CM 14.1• 1UI I 12.w. 1J,ts Herflll10ft: ~ .. Ire: It.la NL 11.lt I"' ij"' l'tL. IM 12.W. H.IS 11 ... 12.J7 F HOA J.I. U4 1F""' lt.2'~ 1:.1,, INf P•: Ultre •.ti tt. ... NL 1111: IM NL 1111itntNt ~-.: Gr"'4fl IUO 1U7 Mam -f II ... ll·i .._.... f .-: v I 1 .fl NL ... IM UM NL. Oltm Ff '"'cm\, '·: NL ~Gov ~" t~ :. "·'' 1: /ltlft .... 7.71 NL \I II .ii NL j I (I I ~ ~. Y~.~r10.t5 E1111b ~·.i i::r: ~Ltt ~., :t ~-r~i0:.1 fj1 J:U ~· ~ ··~ .. L Wlliil r.:r. =t ~~ '~ii ·~1 ~:::ir ~tll.~ .. ~1 .. Mell ~,.~1 1:JLl ...... ,,;,, 14.15 .• J,.. 1h1 NL = 1'· t ~ 1':n =t 11Mc li II.ft Ht l""1 T. a e.U ..... INA HIV UI 10.J ._. IJ ..... U .1• I 21-'f QI, C-I 11. IS. ~ UJ Nt ... HI~ 11... NL. ¥f9ftl JS.II NL '" ~= '"'"' 11~7 ,,,., Tlll!I '"'i °"""' I .... 'IS' N 1 ---~: 11"19 17.Jil 19,1J ~ UJ 7.1• MlsaF'--1, Cle< f7. • !! N = , t~ Ml Fd I ,OJ NL. fml AG IUJ IS.I:* I-J.7• 4, MMllgT 11t?! 11•,.114 M it. I, U G I 111 Fd M NL. ....., .... ,._. Trtl Ill 10.ti 11.tt. •• .., t~ NL. I: = 41 •• ,7 NL IPI lllt 14 ... ISIS EllCll •..a NL .-..ry• '·; NL. MC0 17.t7 1t.J7 .... , NL. i-J , .... ...._. co: A/fl '--t.11 t,1' frfl!e $11 -•1111 Ml IJ..Jt .. ,, NL • ~ H(J. 4 NL I Alft CH.:.. NL. HI'~"' 11."4 12.H llr• HY h a. 14. Mf'O 11.11 ~.41 le I ·'. 12.'1 ..._.. . e:i-Ht .... Frltf 10.0I 11.cn Opl IUI 1J ft l!Cff 1..-11, 11 Ml'e 12.J) .J4 • 0-1 Tn.. I 7 N M • 9Mr Go: ""-' F IUI l\.OS liGlliiTa t~1 10 1 ..-:-48 1.12 12 t't lt.41 II.,. -~ t: ltL I ~- BUSINESS J STOCKS $ ....... , fil Wedn~8day ·~ Clo8i~ Pric·'°s NY-SE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS "• '• ,,.,.. ,.,... .... ; •JMll tt.,, \.J._ ,..., ,,..... ,., \l*1\ Nft "8 ~ &-• • • ., ~ • • I t\J\ Ct• J• l hf\ p.,_. tt i •• t •tilt\ l ti.M (t1~ t . I ;ff ..,gl.l • 1"' C-• 11 ,. " , ... u .. • .,.. .• Ho\1111111 146 • Ill ..... ... -IWll «> ·~ .~ .. YI P•PL 1. ,; • l)f ""' Yo Soll\Gf. I! • n '~. loll I M . '"'"' .. (emtr•lr ..... tit ..... "" ~ ,, JI ''.1•0 ,, .... H••llf>tt. ••• .,, •• .t -lelnf.. .. ,,_., ~ ll'•l'Lpfl40 '"" '"'" v. SoHR•• I 10 107 -··~ A-A ( .. IM•I Vlll .. ,_.,,. ~-JOI u011 I) o• •1 t< .. lll l'fl lO 11 16 •'•~I lJ10lol •'"•l'"I ,..,.,,., I M I 6j2 U \I; SowllM;el M 61'• 11-.. YI i!-ll """ c ...... l ,tl• ~ r.-... "' l!O ,,. •••• ~ .... 1 .. f>IO u ........ llN<'•C.11 ~II J-h l"•PL pt l) dlO fl I SHf'fel l •• ~· .. 1• If tho \t c ...... 1 41 e tl ... , cl\e 111' t0 14 • 'ft Ml\loo•• -I IJ/ 11 '• __ ,,I II :IJ~ 'I• PePLr • l l lOO lDW/1 )'.! SowPe< 2. t tOll7 40'4 ,. I • .. .. "' (em,., I • • " 1\ .. ~ •• I• " .. •II Yell .. IO -,,., _.., • Ul ., .... I... ........ l '° u -SowRy J .. I Ml " -\lo Alo\ t ... illH ll'f ~e< '' -e.11 ._. I I IC111•nll0 I ID I II 16 , ', _,., 114 ••• 11'-"-"--1Jf I tO 21 ,,.,.., Seit' IJf J.to I 24~-l/o1 AfO i . liJ .. "•~· ·' .... ,,.... • 1· "° lot ·~ .... • ... 1111100\ I .. IJ &1,1 I """ "' -rlclt Ill I) .., 14 • ~ ....... ""' 1 ' ft5 JClll). I SoUnCo '·" 7 J2 ,. All)( . H Ill J14o, \, -Ill .. .., lQ 19"'• 4 I " If .. : '· _,, t llJ I, .. t•"'• "'*"'"' J IO ll 01 6/t\1 .. Plorwlt1Jf8 t . L20 11~ .. *41"41 .. 1 t2S 21~-loll :-~ ~ ., ·: lt .. -I l I • ,.. • • ." I ~ •• • , .. , iL •· 1111110.. IO II , .. , "~ .. I.. ........ It• 10 '" l~V. "-c!O. 1t • IO 15'4+ ·~ =~t' 40, ~ ~~ " =~ ~ I 0 ... ..Cli. •• '"' .... .. ,. ... -HllO,A I ,.,. J u•. -""' , » ; :it .. ~"". JVI .....,fn l 10 u o ~,~ •), S••••· • l2 ' tH w7t • .. .• I ~ 'ti ,.... , ........ I ... 1ft ''"' ,.,,. IJI .... ••• • H•Uf\ I\ H .. tO , .. -·y11.. I J Jlh ~ICO I JO ' '24 ~· .. Swte·~ ... 7 .,. •"-·~ · .._ ·~ ell"tt ,.., a.I, • ..,,~ llfl•• if ltl• ,., H11,.c,,..110 I •'-MO C.vp M JI U"' -......_,nE 1111 410 SV-. \/) --~ .. u I J... 4 .,11.1. I I) IJ n• ..... .. o• . I II 9)1 !t: ........... , J ,, •I till 10) ' ~ .. II '" )1\1. y, ~ltle '411 ' 409 nv ...... $wf l8-... 7 JJ II .... tJ 111 _..'I t"" et' ... I I .. ' la • ._ • VU I .. I i. \ ,...,.,,wt IOJ .. It• ~MNI I » II 2h 1/4-4't ... roll\ .I. U 2AS 4:1\4 • v. Sw,,e pfl,lt .... U '41 .... le ., • ,, -CO ' t '" '-'~ ,., 9'MI >iO t>ot ~ "-' ,._. ,.._ _., ' ti I• yt MANI I ,,_ • 11 t)i,, "" ...... , >"" 71 41 .... $wll'we .JD l "2 ~ ,,-. AftolLI I 12 • t.fl • • .,..i'tt .. • • 11\o> ..... 1 H 1 t<1D ti"' ,. Ht>"•ll J t •--h 1 lloilaWff '~ '"' .. "°' ""'R• ptl.1'. t Ulll .. V. S..tGes I.le 1 .. IO t loll =.I •• n• n ....... ) ,. • tn ..... tct.1i.. 0 It ,.. 14 .. -u I ,... ., ,..., ... -(41 I • M ..... ,..,_ I .. 14 167J .,.,.__ h SWtPS 1.a • 111 lllM •• ._. Jiit ..... 1'1 ('..,fl Ill t tJ " JI"' .. rs~ I JO ti 1 .. Jl ' llOfltlft ft l 8 • t1 U -·~ I.Jo • f'oi "'° PlwlpO I t0 I WO 40 ..• 5'1¥1CN! 1 • • • Jal!;• YI i It 111 ~ f .. T-. I t r1 .,._ .. I It ' U• ,._,' • HO•lf_, t7 .. 1 ... , .... MM"'t. JS. t 14 ~ • I;, "'111t E.1 1.IO I »9 llV., V. =~'::: 11j _-: =: ~ = I 1: t~ 0:: • \'I • ., U11 ,... t llV. • .. 1:io. M • .. , .. ..c:., , • n r11a 111& , I"" ~ttet ¥J II I /)4 14 Plllll llf l.10 L40 • .. 5"f'Hv pf J .. 1 ,...._ l'o ,. " . ,, .,.,,..,I . ) la .... . .. ,. ' •• '°' )>. "~Eil ' .. I )119 .... ... --1 WI , .. IO . l"I Ptoi .... '·· d.o a1 -..., .___ I.'" 1 ·---·~ -• " •I. te<t"• , .... IH~ .. t~..,.,b . "'~ .. I .. I "M -llt>f li@ '°ii..-"""'·1~4 .... uo Joi""•"'-·· .• -H ~ AM!!!'! t U!! _,...,, 4 •ftHwll'f 1 a "'°" r 1&•C. I• t .M 1$ .....,, •t) tit o Meyl)) t W I Q lO'o 1io PNI pf 7 . UO lllo'l-"'1 Sl>r1119J I.JD 4 IO ~t loll ~::: ~ r' ... .',3N ~ • 11"' el'IWf!I • .. t1lt II ~ IM4 •.. I> Ill .,_ • '• HO•""' I ti ••I.,. , • ..., llM'rerO I tO t JJ ti lot l'Nll 111'1 t IS dO '2 ~I~ 11 . .01, IOIO _!! ~!L H~ _..... • ... • .. NO ., u -.. ... OS IUU Jill ..... H ... 1 11'1'1 d .... --.oJW • I ~ ,.....,.OflS.U •. 1400 107 "ij ...... -~---.. "'-O .40 , 1 ..... '' ••II ~ -It 111 14 _.,.. •) W ,._ 'lo H..,I' pt 1111 •> M ~ MAWlt 1 .. t ,. JI~ lot PNIE pt t .tO ,, 1100 10 SteRlte .IO II llt 1"-• ._ AltM1" • '8 .. ,t.J #l• • , .. C•''"' 1•tt1G1D " r -pf1 ;o. ,. IO\,. "9vo•n u • t ~\ 11 , '<It *°""' 1••1011 » • 14 ""''£pf 1.1$ 110 SS .... l\r~ 1 ~ ~ ~ft r.~ ~ £::'' 1t' a' Q 111.... -C0otK.• n 4 &J ,..._ i~ t till • IMv.-.• I"' Kov,oj(> I Jiii 10 .. M\oJ• "9 MCOl'llf ?111 Jill JJ • Ito "911Sub 1.14 U I S --1\lo $l~et l ,JO .. rlJll ft°"'' 1 » • -c:: .. .-, ..... u • lfv• Ill "-, • ......011 •• " n. .. 'Q • W0tt: uo ' n l4 fllNIMr 'lloO '·-42\o'I+ -r.• I -' •I 40 Ill> (:Oft(o It ,. .... .....,£1 I tO 10 m .... .. ttO•ot~ ~ • ltl U'-• 7 ~·On Cl • 10 rs; .._,__ Iii PNllllCI 1t • l\1 • • "'1 Pl! ·72 1 I... I~+ _., ~. ' • t .... »loo , ... ..... -..I • • ... It .. l!Nt-..-u • "''" t\ I 1., Jt\oo t &NIN l• UI 11 " ~owol n H IM ,.,,, • 14 WOotlD 'ID ; 1 S1 ,,.,.__ \it .... 11ne1 IJf I . • JI It ~ SIOllCI J.to 6 ISO n +t-1 ~°:' 1 ~" .,J ~ • ~ ~=~~; { !: : ~ ::~ · JE&:i '~ •: l:! ~1; ·~ ~~~~ u'i ~ • 1~ ~:: • "" ~8r.t" ~: 1 1,: :._ ~ =::~ 1·: : "~ ~!t.~~ s10 1nc1 '2.21111 Jm .. 1011. •1"' ~ ~ ~ t * ~ ~ ~~~~llL.:. ~: t D~ ~' fi~ '~ T~ ril ~' I:; ~~\~I '1; ,; ,:: ~\\ t ~ ~~rl~t ~ S1 IJ ~ :;~.: t: =V1 1:~ ~ I~ ~·Vo ~i=.c: Is : Jr. ~~: 2-.. ~ '"i •" , J1••' :~~, " E~~:l: ": .~ .~ ~ .. ~ t:Mt.~: : tJi: t~: · :~ ~~;::.-v, ~ 11 ';! ~ • ·~ ~t:!r 12 !! '~~. ~ ::tt~v 2 • ~ ~1~ si ... w, ... • .. " -.... AlltPw .. tMPw 1 ... , ti IJ •• l't lNttl\ l)Jll .,.. <) K¥MCI\ «1 • 1' ,,~ ..... ~M01•0l tl1llll~l'o ·l'4 Ploner 1.60 11 w •• ~ ~=~nn~ ... ~ J '::.'.~ Al•Gil I I 0 19\it• •"Sol• .. IJ tM ••>• Enle• • t 1)1 I~•• t I ; >tuttEI-' 10 I UJ ~ • MCl'ltll 'ID I 10 I) "' Pllny8 I «I t ti• 1"'~ 14 Sl.W.~ I l2 a t \4>-loll !:& 2 ; : "~: ~,.: "~ ~:.~.. ~ .: :: ~:: .. F 1'~ • 't ~·· ·· ,, '"° J •• 1 •• ]I • ::::.. ': .~ -i: ~~~ _,~ i:i:r:r ~·~ i6 ,m :::.:..,~ ~=" ';: : 1: 1;:: ~ :!~ ~,?~~ Il::.:: ~~::?.' :tl lH .r~· =~~ · ~~ .~ ... :~~""'HO ~ :!~. ·~ 5~.~:'qli ~ ~ 5?,~ :;H 'fl~~ ~::~f:~p ::.~ .~ :~~ ~ """",.. n 1 n 11 CM • I I .. ..., ~··. •• ~f j '.: .~ •r, ~!~: ~ :=!ft.~:': i ,...... IMr<Slr t.2S 6 l 11~ ,,.._v I .... I) .. 561'>-I~ SterlDtl .'2 ,. , ... lSl' .... 41<.. UO ) l6J !!~ "Chmf; I • t I l) ,~ &n.111 I •I tS tOJ ... l"'•J IU lnl I 10 • lie) JIW. 14 -•Tu l,Jl I J3 JO , , P,.vmo I IS 4" ~+ ~ ~:=~~:.;: ! ~ ::-· ~ NnlS.. ,,.,. •• lU ~ ... Cl\ml pf. tO .... -• • &ctottt•• IO ' • I•'• "' '1e1u.1~1. pt ,' ~, ll l2 J M.e•O J JD 15 m """ ..... "-Pd ..... U20 vll'llo. "' SlewW• "·· 1 IS Zl'h-1 Amea l t0 t .. 2 S211 CMm~ 10 t 197 10 '• IEl.u•Ch 10 t 29 .. _.., ... ,_p , • 14 Jt•i. IMrClllh 1 :12 • 10 42 • YI Por-CI I 2• «M :i>llo I.!. St""VC. I . I l l 1, to z::, :. fg \ o~LJr.:; .~: CM rlCo I 1.l.Sl2 J I'> .J E•rln' to IS 111 S2vh '1< 10ealB I 60 6 114 ?1•1 ~ ~ MerrLy t 1' t I.OS l4"' V• Pndrow ,40 9 111 12'1>, ... SloneW 2.lS. ti 20 llYI, Ji. =:">~1 .1s"'S:h-·S~: ~~::~~::1.s 1~w'~!":: (~~~pt !.: r •r."t~, j~~ :~;, 21: 1; : ~I.. ~. =::=o'rn1l,:. IM SI •I'•\~ a::: ~ ~ ~ StonCon .72 6 60 22~ to NnAlt WI '1 l'I< I• CM •Fd D " II .. • .. ~~~'P'O I ~ f !Ill !!<.' :'". llPo• pt'l Ool J'.lO II lllOl l>M'llo ..-!'> PortGE t.10 11 141 12 .... -I,\ ~~ t.Jll ,; 11tt ~~·. i._ ••• , Cha-"" l a • M2 41._ v • ...,...,.., • -llPoW pf412 1100 J31o, Mcwb I :JM 11 11 U~ • V. PoG pf II.SO .. llO '2'h+ 'h Storer• .72 10 114 11\<o t .... _,pf 2, II · 11 1,v. '°' CM>M plS U M 041 .. E"I" I •10 2 U"-1 TW I I 6 >I 1. W \I• 1 I~ PlwG I:' J.60 .. l It .. S I RI 1 Vt ~~~I~ 1~ ~: :~ ~::~:J :;.: 4~,,,' :~ Euon 1 tOF4J~ts n • .. J\•• :::t6<-" •;: :,~~ ~··, '• =~~,:•mu:~·.~o .:::+ ,,, ~~El~·~; m n +~~~~~I.:!•,':~• •t. Atlt'•pf J.7S I ,. Cf\NV pfll7 JI 10 ~ ~~ 2' "° • 264 2u'"· ll"C.P I tov •• " ::ee pfcCJtO .. ·:: ~f'" PatElpf 4 so . 11000 i.. • )'.! SvnC.llmUO 1 " JI~· .. ... d pf 2 .• , • .,, • .. CPllPtll• • , 111 U"9. -pt 2S 11 lndlM pl ll ,SC*) tS IVl t:. I I Premier,, .. " S• ,,_ .,. S..nEI .72 11 ., 1•V. ..... ABdut IM> • ni lS'vl • .,, ChlPtPn 1 lll ti tu ~ .. F.o1>199 ., tl tJ• 14'· • 1. trodlM 1Jf1 u , 1~ "• Mth n lh 1JO14 • tl~ v. Prnley .o • l6t ,..,,_ I'> s..nco, i.eo , tS7• ,..7 • ,~ llldM I Cl\onlt , ~ • 913 """. "' FobrfCtr tt • • •'• lncllM pf2.2S 1 .... Ml\WI pf2 67 ' H V. Pl-lmeC' 35 ,.,, .. v. 1 s..nc pf 12S . 6 "" ·•\\. ~n 1·: : I~: ~· .: ChlMh• II «I IJL, • "• ~..:•1Ef11 I~ 7t 10 Sll'o •· lnGIG•~ 2.60 S • 11~oo., ,. ~~WCTI r ).! 1 1.! ::to· P\'tmMI S 14 IJO IS 'I> S..nllm UO 6 27S tt "' AlnCan pf2 IO ~ • .,_ 'c"h•iMP,..h• pl l I 1111 11·41~ r •lf<hO > 11 1 •SO 1' ~ "' ll>dlPL 1.2• • 112 201;. • ~ e I -.,. • l'>«IG >IO 10 2 ... n -Ii,, Sunchlr I tO II m -· 'h • · II • l' ..,. '"' l'.,.,Olr •• I .. 1s-. 'I• lnGN•ll 1 tO S 56 10 MldSUI I SI 6 t'JS II~ PtdR'1\ l 2t 17 U l•V. "9 S....Mn • 411 SI tl26 2•~ 14 Aetntry • 271 •·~ • '• C.l\f\Fvll IOI! I SO "' FrWttFn ' J 141 • lnncu ·10 u AlOI ..-.,:;;,.. Mld•NIM 4 n l"'· , .. PYolet 1,40 ~ "23 ~ v. 5'1p(Val to 11 us lolV• "° ~~.,, ::: : 1f~ :t;_1~ Cl\rltCll S11 10 l4 U'+ F•rM'tMI II ltl ~ '• trio-tR l Jl tO MO al~..-1.--MIORo• I «I 1 IH 17 .... +IV• E'SVCol I 60 10 702 13,._ V. SuprOll • 10 20 66.S m , 2"'• Cllrl\ln 40e IJ 16 U I,\ F@Oden 2IO t' • • ''O fngR "' 2.JS U ~ h MlllerW 1.10 ' • .,.~ I P5Cot pll IS tlO llV.. S..pmkG So4 ' l20 17~ 'I• •Et...., J.22 1 71' 11' \. Chrc>m• i 10 1 n. n~ '"' F-eoCo l oO •• JO ·-... inldSil' 1 io 1u 21~ Ml118<11 1.10 t 111 .»¥. • . PSGol pf2 10 .. 13 1~ • "• S..p~<P · 675 sy;._1 ""'~ 2 • 107' «> .... "' (hrf\ltr tm 10• ........ FeoEc"' " ... /01.o, ,1,, trbllCO .. 0 • 111 ,,~···1 ; MlllR ' 41111 IOS ,.....,_"" PSlncl 1 .... 111 71 .... Swenlo I.CM • 11210 ... ,.._ .... •FMI I ..0 • If' 1......._ Chrn wl :ml SV-.-'/\ FclMaQ t.10 1 " 11uo ·11o ,,.11, pt t.2S 1 U -Vt MlnnG\ 2.04 • 19 JI 14 PSln pf 1.04 ISSOO M~ Sybron I ot I .. t~ • .... AGnQ> 1 S U "'-• '• Chrft pl 95 10'> l'eoHNI I 28 t 111• Ut > •,. lntlfnvTr )7 1~ MMM 1.IO II 7tt 60-\It P51n pt 1.ot .. 110 I',. .... Syt>•n pt1 «> .. 14 29.,. ,,.. •Cfta ~.u • UI... \~ c11urc11 n • 10.. ,..,. .... FeoPO ' ..... ,... .. "''090'' "10 .. , ,..,,:· .. MlnPL , .. I •I 1•"'--"' PSvNH , 12 • ?JD ISVo " -T-T - M;I .«Me lO ·~ .... Ctnllell 2.12 • 12 tt v. FF-~llJl'st' •,,·!,' ~ 1~· ll(p~ I..,, u ,. • .... MtrrOC.p • • ' tlV, ..... PSHH pf2 7S 1100 IO • TRE t 10 AllS JI ... l'I· AGACv I ..... • II 7•"'·· -· CinGE 1 Ool I 103 11b ''I -OS1 -....., lol'f>-"• 11\1.,.<o 2 ... '7 •• S3 "' Mltt•lns \,to I 10 J"t•i. ~ PSHH pfl II 1 ~ .. • TRW 110 I So4t so•,'J ~~~!j~.: 'H~~~ClnGpt • •. •IOll~·~" .. r• 120• _,, lnlofp1 7.1S .. 1 1 .. '<T-llJ MP~ctl..r1 6 !~"701 ''""PSHH pf4.U .. 1001'l'l·-V•Tf1W pf 440 .. 9110 .. _,..,... • • • 4,. ClnG pl t JO rlDO n FICIFln ,40 44 6' ll\lot . fnlrllo l.10 • " 11 -V. -~ .. v lb 1 .,. I ~ "• P5vl'IM 2.ol 6 ... 1~ .... TRW"' •so .. 11 93\1> ti!; ~ '.·f! 1 1,1 ~,.! ~ ~ ClnG pf t •. 1100 .. l~ FICIUN 2.IO S M ,_... If• in\Alum .60 6 110 IS\I•+ V. Mo PS pt'l... t 1711>-"" PSvEG 2.J1 6 S9I 1111>-Vt h 118nt .M ' 111 J2 -"1 _,.,...._ '" ... ... ~ Cl,,G pt 'S2 1150 n _, FldCll 2 s 9 11•> . IBM l ... IJ ~77 '1111· ~ -PS e>r1.61 ' ~ .... PSEG pf\,«)' l IH "" Telltf "I IOI s~ Am)nV1 ·-a S• lllW-V. ClnMll Ii• '1 S:Jlh-1 Fllrnwy .20D . -fl!Oo t ~ IMFtev ., ll •SO ?»I.... -t>ll J.«I • lSM 71 ... •l~ PSEG pl•.11 .. 1100 lJ .. T1llef pl 10 I'll. '' -'Mt$ ., .. '2I 5otl/'o+ "' Clll<tp I Q s 115' 21 -.... Fllrnwy pf .. • ~. ~ lnlH•v 2.so . 111 lll,o \I• Mobll•H u "' )V.. 11• PSEG pl•.JO ISO 37 -"' T•mpE I 56 4 134 II" .... ~'~:l:lf = .n.-t: Cltle5Sv •Ull 11"74~+1\4 FnQ>Arn t ... • 116 IJ_..., to,_, 1.J'l t 41f 47 1iv. MCIAMr 1013 • 1411.-.,.. PSEG IJfS.OS 1100 11"'• , ... TenCIV ttU33 lllofo_:lf't Am$l.Fae IDC> I H 21 ,4 Cttytn11 I.SO 5 S13l UlO + 111> FlnSa.r 110 1' It>'• 1/'t IMMlnr pf • 1 l1 .,._.c..t n 2l IOI 11, t 'II PSEG pf2, ti 141 111;, ... Tenelyclt u ,.. 1'14 °' A511ip lo IJ l6 ll't>-II> CllflM wt •• W J • \'t FlnlF*I I Oil 1 251 3''"> 'l<o fntMull l.ll '9 56 1-.. '(I, MohHCO ,2') 11 '" 10 /ot .... PSEG pt'l.tl 7 1........ 'fd•ncolr l.ot • IJ2 M-fo AS4Mtd ' 4 T TO n City In pll.31 • I 56 + t Flrftln .lO .. J'l3 tlta ..... lntP-1.40 7 617 41 ... -hl!Ole It 7Cll 2S'14 PSEG pit.GI . t210 t:1 -11> Telolrna .M .. ,.. ·~ 'I> .S..rll .l4 IO Jlt -. :..:· ~ C.Cll~~"J", .J. .7 ,!!! ~ + 3~ FIOln · 9 SS2 ,..,_ V. IMRecU ,Jl 7 M 2Jl.t. + '4 Mof\loR 110 ~ I 14 PSEG pO 40 110 59 -V. feleom .10 11 J2 10\Ct ·--· ----·~ -.... --FUCN' I.JO ' IS• 15' v. lnlTT·' 2.40 II 1016 3:11\oo ..... -""" '_., • m • -llho PSEG pff,tJ . 1110 7S _. TelClyn • • .,. , .. .,.._I -·-r .eo • l J • I'll Cl•rl<Oll I «> • lQ2 ., .. FtBnT• .... • Ill ~. v. lntTT pfH • S9 Hl'>--2 -..o<Jr ..,. 5 77 --:\to Publlctt I .. ..,,_ .... Tt1prmt 21 ~ 2S-. .... ""'"' pfS.SI ·· J ~· 1 ... ClvCll I .0. t S13 l3 • '"' Flln8n 1.IO I .. ,.,.., \'t IMTT IJfJ • I 531'>-I~ Moftsa" J 60 6 "6 51h • °" P\mblo 4 IS • • ' Teln St •11 s• V. :H IJf ! ~ 2~l3 ~ ~ Ctn e l J 7 716 ''""' Fit.Wu SO 21 170 51 + 1\lt tntn pfll • ll sw.-1iv. MnlOU I.to I " :IV · PR C.m l 11 6 v. Tennco J 411 I lltO .,"" • .._ •n pf • •• llS -~--,.., Cl~E.I pl r,«J . ltO S711J-I Ft1N8o 2 20 4 12' lJ ..., lntTT IJfO 5 .. • 51f't+ f't MonPw 1.l2 II Solt JO 4 "'' PgSPL l,M 10 140 13 • Te11c pr 11 o • .\<+, 'It ,.. ··-. --Ct .... ,_ 60 11 100 I ..... FNSl8 n 2.'20 5 s ~ .. '"'"pt l.lS . • 411"1-"" -nSt , .,. " ""' '1• P\•"""' I 11 ,., -· "' T1rnc pr '411 • .,,.. ..... AWetWk ... 5 1 •2 .... Claro• -., 1 .. ·~ FJIPI .2lj 112 µto Ito lntTT pf •.so " s. S4 _,.,., MOHV l.112e • •• ..... • P\l<ea 13' 1 207 " .... hreelyn ie 3113 Sl\rl.,. I ..... ::.::: ::~ '.I I: :~ .. j,111 Cl.,.llPe .. t Ill 10 Fu Pe wt II ll-16 •II• lntNnh 51 IO 7 l76 J:Pia• .. MoorM 1..11 S II ....,._ ~ Purllt\Fe • S.. ,,_ v. TIP!ioro .n. l ll04 1'V. , 'to ,.,,.,..0 60 6 2, ll't?-V. Ct.,.llP pf I .. • ·~ 1t. FtPtMl9 · · 12 I~, V. llllr'PQ 1..0 I Ill 1~• 1~ _....., l AO • lSS .,, .. _ 'II Pllottt I 40 It • •~• 'I• TtiOt pl 11'. 70 "", tloll Coe<I"" 101 ~ F1UnRt 1,3' II 17 111t> • f't lnl009 1.60 7 Ill 1' • ¥.. Mo<ICn' .'2 12 "°' •+> • "-Q.olflO 1.60 1 .. 1 JO+ ... Tneco 1 «! • 71~ ,._... 1 .,,.... • Ill IJI •• ,. "· CoH ICp -·;I ... ,."'· .. ti. FtV•B• .Sl s 1' IV... lntst .... '56 I 17 12... Mon •Sh .n • tO I~-~ QueltSO •. ., 15 IJ)li ll:fo+ 'l't TH Cm t.tO II 2S1 ff • "" z::'~nc: 1 ·~ 1~ 1lt! ::!-i: Cs\ICppf\,19 l ulol V>• I~ FIWltc I .• S II 2•~ V. 1-eOI Ao ' .. ~+'i.\ Ml9TrA"' IO M I°""' Vt ~-1'.12 I 4So4 J4 -"' Te•E>I l.10 • l,, /Q>/o If. i.n.co . .oe • IJ 29'11.+ 141 ,c~1.cp11ClftA:J16 Jn'' ~!!· '~ l'tt£.hCo 1.so 9 SJ lol'llo . 1-•EI 160 1 lS 11v. Mor Nor t.411 I #t7 2'1f• • ~tor 20 " 57• ~h .. r.eT pf 1 «> J -.., ~· -8 ~.,, Fllllf'ds 40 IJ • ~+ Vt ._llG z'.10 7 12 11v.:_'.'~ ~Ftrol1• 12-~ llOl lOO .. ~+ ~ CllletlrptA 2 -I 211<. V. TT1rc~CT plt1,.,11 .1. tn'O ~~. ~ Anlpea .2A 12 161 _., f't Co<tCI 1.14 10 II .. Joi~• .. FlllWS<I .52b t I .. ll'llt-. "° -Ill pf1 )I 1100 ""+ ~ ,..1 ue -•~ ,. -It-It -• T _,, -"""'ec>C4> II 107 11'-• I.!. C-8-.'4 t .5 tlli-... F ... IEnt .52 • IJD '"'•-Yf -•PS i 10 ici 1' IN!+ 1'11 MIS Tel 2.:12 I SI 17-"1 ROlftd 21 t IS 10>'1 + •.Ii THlnll .111t1 1 51 Ji~ •i. ,.,..., 1.lS ' 12' ZI~+ .. ColeNI ,IO • 11' " • "" Ftemlnta 1.12 • ., u -"' '-•Rs 2:u • 15 22 -14 ~~~1e1°'! -• "t0 .~· ~ RCA 1:eo • H77 27-.. Tes Inst '" U I 1.»>1>-1 AmstMI 1.At • 115 45 -... Coleco I l2\ 12 '4 Fle•IV .IO ll ltl J\V,, • I~ .12 . . " 5*--loll ,.._, ,.. ·-"-~ RCA pl 4 . I 61 -I~ Tu Int lJD t'7• ~·I AIWoe. 2• S2 l2 ~ Col9P•I I .. I 1Sll "". "" Fleal pf 1,61 • . • It-.... 11""9811 2 72 s JI --... "'""""' ,.OJ ,. ... ,.,_,., • RCA pf 2 12 m ~ v. T1r100• '-ll JO m ~ 14 AncfW 1.21 1 •5 '""" .... CoHAt• n • l:J .... FtlQMSI' ". '°' Jl -·~ 1'91iCp .07• " Sii lJ • v, =~~~'. 1·~ .~ .n ~~I \II RCAC pf J:.s :.. .~ 2'~ •.. ' l •P•c • J4 • ... -.. NICl•Y 1.12 1 11 2' -~ ColllnF :n s ~ 1111o.:.: "' Flelic:&I ,JOI 7 I ., ............ Cp -J·-· 1J120_ 11,\+ .... MMr~o 1.-6 " It --~TLE .~ 11 .-,! i.v. .. v. Tt •Ullt 1.1' 1IOIJ2 1711> ... . z::iu ,411 ' n. Ill'>-... Col Pen 1.40 • '" " • -Fie PL J,n 6 '" ,, ~ .... . • ... ~ .. -• "' •• ,. fe•'911 1.ao ' '°' Mllfl4. '"" ·-· ... "·" ' .~ ~ "v. Colllnel 1.to 5 Ill d ll)-.... FlePw ' 1 • .M 1 »1 .. -"" JWT 09 •1.4' • )j M.,._ .. ~vlOmL ··~ ·,· ~ 1,,1-!! Rtl•Pur .... 36911 121.; ...... TT•.".11,r1 ',!'!. l : ~ "'?. .... +s.,. _..atrt .2A U...., --• CotO.s 256 t 112 »~+ ... FleSI ' I 1 27 U'llt-"' ~F 1.tO IO 1' 211'>-~ ..... n .-_., + -~ 11e21 10ol7 ~ .. Vt fi ,_ . _ ~., .,..,. •• 21,. llS7 lll21/4 I\/) ColG> p1s:. •• I ""' • . Fluor. ..211 Jll211 s2"" .. 14 J-R• n ... I 107 21-14 NCH -72~ ... -,..,..__ "' Ranco ... 7 It 1sv.-"" T~111,,,,, '. 7 511 a-... v. ~Ole u• •• 111,,,.: "" ~~I 2:: ~ ~ ~~ z: ~:'~ 1.J .~ ~ ~ :z ~ .~ 5 ~ ~ ~ NCH• :. s IJOI 1.41.!o .... =~c'°; 7 1! ~ :-:. ~ i:!~.';.°' ;, ..: ~V·: '~ .... Mg 1.s.st ,. " " -Vt cso pf.. I T\2\1;. l'llo ForMK 2 I IU 21.... .. Jei:'P111 1.40 .. ,.. 27'12 ..... =f:'..c, 'J .~ .m ~~ ! ~ ...... UOb :. 161 W\lo, .... Tllloh l, 110 IS7 J:I "" -1.a. u• 2~\'cl CSOpt 1ns..H·~. z:lll lllV>-1 FtDeM I~. 23 I~ ... Je1Cpf ... 110 11 ..... "'LT I~ ...... 2Al\lo• loo Raymdlnt I J2 "' ,.._...."" Thrn8eJ1.nn u .. 14~ ~ Areal pt 2 .• I 12v.; YI c om11n1n1 1.«1 ~., " "°' f'rtH°"" 1A '2 70 M\l't-+ "' Jere pf t.:» .. alt w -I NVF I.JM , ;;; JY. • w. RArlW!n 2 u "' ..___ ~ l homln . .W. s 11 lf\I•->'I AtCM pf 2.16 .. 4 • ...._ v. Cm~En 2.60 tl 11' ISll.-1~ FotWll .n IS 17S ·~I JerCpf 1.12 .. &JO. " -1 HeblM.O I '2 7 IU u-v. R.Hd .. 1 ..... lfl .,-" ""'"'' .n ... ll • -NOWO .• II 1.n ~ " C.m~f.CI ·'°' .. HI • • .. F-·' . in 714. Jere pf 7.• .. 1100 " _, Nel<O 1:.0.. '7 .. -.. Rde .. , pf1.\3 .. ,. Jt'h-ll\lo Tf.C•ro 1\1.JO 5 • ~ .. ~JJ: i~lh 1ft 1~.~ ~=.ctitn2:?:':~ l:lllo -.~ ~:~:'; .. '; ~ =··-~. Je•Crt_ 2,11 .. I '~""' l'l•pc:o .11 11 •to...,, :=:r1~~10,:s.>:.+ v. ~l=~!,',1:::~·~ =! ~ "6111tt .60 I I ' ... CwE ~A I •~ · *'I Fosbro 1.:1> IS 11 52 .. _...., C 1.9'2 6 Ill l21ho-~ NepleFdt .0. I It 1Jt,i.,-'..' v; "-C E . "" SOI ..... ·;,,; Time In 1-12 1-~ .... -11~ •~LG (2 10 Ill JI-V. ,., ~ F -1•"'·-· •• .._l<or IOS 1211 .... \4 N.,co : .. ,. 11 1s... .. llo ..._f!!! q n -0 • !...~ + ,, -,.. -~ ,..... I · • CwE pf 1."2 . 7 IS,,._ loll reftttM -6 41 .....-,. J,.,,.,.,.,, 1.'2 t 1516 .._,__ '9 l'I•-l:lO • IO. ll-I ......,,n .10 I 40 .. •vn + .,. llrnl pf81,S7 .. IOI 4' , •-· ArlenRty .. ,._. 4 ... · CwE of 1 tO I 13l\lo FrplM , I 'Ill IOU .. ~ • 2 JnMn pt S.40 • 26 (1 -v. NelCe n .. S • 22-... AM<eQI .to t 17 ~.... Tltfte~ 1 .. 11 172 ·~ • .... ~ I •· ' ,!! ~ ._.. ewe pf 1 : 2 IS FFr,!!_lh"'f 1 ?! 10• ~ '·~ ~ Jofw\Jn 1.JO 1J )40 --~ HICtyL I• ll t0 I~ ~ "-v18 U O S J Jl~'> •... , T1m ttn Je 7 G .. -V. :-~ ... 2'-10 ... 10 41 "· ewe pf ... rl50 tO . -,_ ., 2' • J-EF 17 2IO I..... • HIO.lr 1 s ZI .,.. R9k l!O> .•IS ,. 12V.-14 ToddSll .Jlle 6 SS J,._ loll -.. ~'" · ·· -CwE of 111 4 '"' F11<111<1 .!ill • 1104 ""'•IV. .J«wtc.n 1.10 11 273 2'Vt-1;, NelOil1 • I m -· ·~ At4Gtt 3 ) 14• ,..._I.rt Toallelm .10 ' MD a 11o+ '4 "'"'Ru 1.20 12 56 16*-14 ewe "' 2'11 : 1 21-..:: Fuoe pt t.1S 11 u ...... Jonl.4" .AtO , ,.. 11¥1+ \\ Ne1edu I e15j ' .. ,.,,..._ .... RtiG pf 2.ao .• 1 ~ ~ Tolf dl• u o 7 ttJ , ...... to "6MW1n I.to 7 153 I~+ Yo e we Ill t.«> .. '150 60 -¥. -G-G -Jorp n I.JO 1 7 ~ _., NetFG LlO 1 d6 30'lt "911n pf 2.61 .. 11 22','w ..... TOIEd "'7.3', 14 17--"'"'Wt pfJ.75 . Ull J4 .. . • Comw t 2.lO • -.. _ .... G•F IO I ., ,,.,.. "-'-... 10 MO 1211..--HFG pf Z.JD '° 20 ..... ~, .10 .. 217 -..... TOied ,,,,,, • ' , ...... "" ~ 1 6 al 111\ir-'"" CoP•y • » 20 212 1"' G•F pf I.JO 60 t7'4-.... ._..._ 1 ·-1• •-~~-... . . -,.. ~ ,60 S '2 ~+ '4 T-eCp Alt 1 1•2 l2 -.... "6rowE "' 10 7S :ii -"' p . ' . G•TX 2.lO I m llV.-"· ...... -.. .:.~-·.:.. ,.,.,-.... N•IGyp IA • ICIJ , ... "" lltpFnS I I 205 22...,_ -TootRol ..... • 17 • -Mo Nll\f\ i 12 11 .. , IS>, v. Com s 1·• I II ,.,,._. loll O•T pf 2.IO .. I .,.,.,_ "" KLM 2 Jlto+ v. H•IHom .• " 2V. .... A9llMla 111 ,, -.... ToroCo • 211 w 1114. Atvi.. pf . 2 . 7 2-~ ~=:ti •• :: m ~::: ~ GCA t 20 1' ?-..! .. \lo l K .....,., .'2 .• 4242 22..,._ Vt ~~: : :~ I~ ~~·;. "9i!NY"ll.CM • 106 l3 -"'-TTOtcRO n 617" ,._ ~ -tCO 1.ci. 11m sw ....... Ccrtv'"' ., "7 .a-.2.,.. GOV • ,,... .... ~ .... Kai•"" u o • 720 JP.-~ NMMent .7S" .,. ., ....... RNV pt 2.12 .. ' ,, -'"' O'/ us ' " 140 n-.. ~-OGI 21·~ SI !.7! =~: ConAgr I.JO 10 m ulS _•IV, GF Ecie> 26 • •"'• • ~ Kiii 6'pf •.7S.. I IOt -2 NMlneSv 56 2' ll IO~--""6fl Z. • IO 2l\I?-V. Tracor • 40 IJ \M l l-~ --ConeMI 2 S lll •2"' _, GK Tee I.Jill 7 1'2 ~· t. te.!IClt 1.40 I 71 ~+In NIPrwtl 1·~-• 1t u•~-~ "-OTea 1.16 1 .ea 311 +Va Trane 1.0. t 4J -... , Allllone 1.0 6 13 23'1.-llt ConnG 152 7 m "' GK pf I ..... Sl-Yt ic.;cpf I.JI .. 10 ZlV.-14 HIS.mlt -~1 .. )46' .,;;;; AncoO 111 J7S :15V>t V.TrenU,,2.4C)I02192 !O'o't• ~ AICyEJ 1:1t. 1 41 I~ I,\ c-Mn J.lO 14 Sii ~: ': GM~ Pr . , S 7'111o, ·., te.iC pf 2.SO . . 4 "1\lt-~ HISvln 1 2, • lM 22i;.-.... -· S 221 lf'h-\It TW Con> . • 13'1 ".,.._' •t1 Rk ll11.90 •m,us.J:llt+) CnnNG 1.IO. 2". ·--O.lvHOLJ111 .. J1 +I KMl'SI II -UV.•"" HSl!l.!!d ,:.,. 7 s.s I .... 'I> R;,/lofl 1.s.10 52• ~v. TW Ce>wt . ltl 4flt-'<It AllR< pf l · • I uJ60 +II c-o 2.10 • 1603 f11\1o + 2-C-11 1 1' 239 S711• + Ito K-"'11 .21 . • '2 .._ ..... NeltSll l 7 2.7• 27-11> R .... m all I IO 14"" 11• TWC pf 2 . . 5 IS.,._ V. All Re pf J.7S .. 11411 37V..... Conte< .ti) 1 W 1t1,• .. '-Gt11Str •• • H II -~ ic-.«I II nJ 33\'t ..... NelTH I J ~ + loll RalU\tCI I.CM I SS 1.-.+ >'I TWC pl 1 to . l6 17¥> .... AtlR< pf2.IO . l.S ul• +6'/J COf\ECI 2 ... s Jn U V.-.... G•"'"" 1.lO • IJ9 n 'f.o KClyPL 1... • .. 11114-Yo Helom .. ' I 10,.... 1136f't +2V. Rteynln 12.10 7 1021 ..,-... ~ TWC pf 2..... 24 ~ \') •1ia.cp .. lit ,.__ .... C.onE pf • • .S . Oto 37 -~ Ge•Sv< U I I S2 ,,_.... \\ KCPL pf4.SO .. ll600 ~,... Helom pf • 1:1 ~ +•lllo Rtyln r4,IO .. 11 ..... '4 Ttenem 1.21 S ..a 1'°"'+ Vt ....... .• ti , .. -· Yo ConE pl s IS 40 .... I\ Geert\t •. 1021 162 40111 ' KCPL pl2.20 .. .. 17 -v. NevPw tl.Jl 10 ... 2114-... AevMt 2.20 • lJO 40 ... Tranlnc 2.•.. •• U·~-I,\ AoMOtt 76 21 173 SI~+ ~ COf\Flh 1.76 '• GI U llo• .,.. GelCo I ._. 7 4117 ,.,..,_ V. KCPL pf2.J3 S IMt V. l'levP pf l.JO , z200 11\lt-Vi ReyM pf•.SO .. I IO -1 Tr-o l.M 12 '76 •7 + ... Avco(;p l.20 4 561 ~ .... ConF ... 4 IO ' l M • .,, GemC• ... 22 Jl'I>-''• KOoln t.40 1 S7 CMfo+ v. HevP pf l.tS ' .. _ .. RkhCO 1.311 2' • '"' .... Tte'IKO pfJ.11 . 1 SIV.-.... Avco pf ,J.30 ·• 20 S3 -? C"l'frt l .e • .. ~ .. Vo Gemll' 1.10 . IP U~ ... KenGE I.~ 1 .. l~ Vt ME~EI 2.1» 6 a 211~. Re~ 1.Jl I SSS 27 -t l ranecn ,IO 12 21 •14• loll •vcopf 4.10 .. S .. +I, CnsNG J.2A 7 111 t4 -..., GAtnv 2.12-·-9' 1011)-·~~NO U lb 10 161 24t-l +I NEnGE 1.72 • 11' IS"°··-· Rleolll l.IO S 11 n -'flt lrG~•.U .. &60 "1n ..... ~-l' ·~ : .~ ~ = .% ConlPw 2.:.. 11211 1~ v. GnArnO ''°" 11 114 16Vr o 111. KMIPLI 1.0. 1 11 11 ... -. ~ MI N..cl .lOll In JI.,._~ RloGr., I t S33 53'..,_ V. 'frG IO.J2 .. U0 .. loll+ Yo .:::-J '11'3 Jl'l'o-Yo OIPw pt4.SO .. 1210 SJ ..... Gn~"' .eo • 9 l111t-v. K•PL pf2,J1 ' JO 11"'1 ..... HEnP pfl.76 " ,. u -V· RloGt "' .IO . ,,. ~ .... ITrG prt.M .. &60 71Yo ... -. ·-~· 21 l10 ~ + ~ OtPw pr7AS .. I.JO M'Vi.... GC.tnm 111 10 t•l 1..... .. U P\. pt'l.U .. 1t 1"'-+ Vt NEnt,T JAi I IJ • -.... llUte•lct .7S II "' J2YJ ..... f'TrGP pf l .SO .. 6 I,.,.,_ 'I• .J ~.~25.tMO s DM.'l'ALOT' Cll Neg, Boole Ft .... No Name WriterS Get 'Big' Break By JORN CVNNJFF AP ............ NEW YORK -World Authon Ltd., a book publi•hinl lirm conceived as a counter to atablilbment publiahen, i• out with ita first volumes Ulla moatb, and thus ita presi· dent's valedictory bu beiun. It took faith, Ume, money, patience and, eome in the industry say. colossal nerve and a blluful iporance of how dlffindt it ls to penetrate markets controlled by gianta and their corporate parents. Ill toal souoded too hopeful, naive, or bau&bty: "WAL la dedicated to the proposition that excellent pl"Pfill can be made by publishing worthwhile boob -boob that in· form, l.nsplre and give pleasure.'' But the first books are published now : "Pampini," an adventure tale by Uri Geller; "Tantra Today," a deluxe art boot on Indian yogu by Eleanor Moore Montgomery ; and "Nirvana Now,'• a science-religion tome. The latter is by Roland Gammon, writer, edi tor, small-business owner, president of World Authors, and thua the valedictorian. His involvement begins at any ooe of the cocktail parties that authors attend. cu11H•~~ Gammon, who bas written several books, wu ac· customed to hearing authors complain they couldn't get published because . they said. some of the bi11est houaes were looking only for commercial bestsellers . IT WAS A TIME, he s aid, whe n ''corporate carnivores." SO·called by Archibald MacLeish, were buy- ing out big-name publls hers, ··to the unmistakable de- meani.ng of authors and obvious subversion of publishing independence and literary excellence." To many authors, said Gammon, the acquisitions were a "dangerous threat to the intellectual values, quality literature and professional integrity once characteristic of older publishing houses." Three years ago Gammon's musings grew serious. "Here 1 was, sixty-ish, head of my own company, com· fortably upper class. a world travele r." be thought. An idea possessed him. "WHAT A CRANCE for a grea t valedictory thrust for abowt 10 years," he thought. "Why not publish some of the writers I hear complaining about establishment companies that won't print their works?" . Authors would be guaranteed pl"Olllotion of their book e ven if it d idn't sell immediately. Time between manuscript acceptance and pUblication would be halved. Authors would be "list ened to thoughtfully." There followed the bard business of raising money. About $100,000 was accumulated, but it went out quickly. as advances for authors, for paper, for printing, for ad- vertising, for travel to conventions. \\. ALMOST EVERY CENT went out, and none came in. Gammon's business bad to subsidize the operation, and be bad lo forego any advance on bis own book. But, be aaya coofidenUy. the money will flow in October. Initial press runs were small. between 4,000 and 8,000 copies each, but Gammon hopes to 1enerate prollta of $80,000 from ju.st the initial offerings of the three tiUes before going back to press again. S1 ork• In Tiie Spo1H9lu -v. ---\!; •I + ~ •2\1. ..... .1~ -2V. -v. .. , .. +I ..... -\If •"' HEW YORKtAPI FIMI ~ ...... ~ .. Sep.2A. JD INI o;;S9 Wt.'ra ~ ~+ ~ » T"' '41,5' W .211 J.M.a Ml.ti-0.22 15 VII l lOAS 111.lO TOU S IM.5t-0.2', ti5 SC-JJ4. II Ut.JJ :15167 lll6.1h O.>S ....... • .. -.................. 4,23SAllO Tr Mt .. • .. • .. .. • .. .. .. • 1-.too VIII• ....... ............. ~.llllll .S SUI ..... ..... ........... 6 ..... .000 Nf.W YORK l•PI s.p, M T-.Y --.. o.tllned l9D ~ 1IM ........ *J. Q1 ,. ~·-·~· --CllPw ""n l200 S5l/t-..... GOyn."' 1.211 10 ... n ......... !CatYlnd • Dt "'-• \ .. NVSEG , ..... ·~ ~ AaClllwol I.AO 10 l 'ID 2.S!At-'4 T....oh .40 5 12 ll'l'e-..... --·-01PwprJ°15 '' 21 271o11+'4 GOynptl,U .. l l:J -1/)Utyt, .... ,.... JD tl'I HYSpf J.71 .JIOO11 -Y, Rolllsn 2.206 411 41\r-V.T.-1.10 7111 ~ .... tl~rfranLradrr• ==~111.·~J ~} im!1~ g:::::fn :: ,; ::::-:.~ ~~~ 2~ :1m ~ ~ ~~ 1::; ~ "? :~~'.": =~~= ~~ 11~ tt"'~·v, =-~1 J: ~ 2ll :~~· .. ~~~re;.·,~;=.~~~~:~ l oto9t I-• .. New N!IN ZJ --> WHAT it.MEX 0 10 ISt 42 2 a.·-'•• 14 u ~. "' O\Pw pf2.Q .• • ITV.-v. GGnOHl"1"''.~• l23 l':' ,•,•t>-v. ic.... .tO • 1S %1 -YI HH••tl to s 1• II-.... ~~Tl '1-t! •, "2s --s·~ ....... T~~~ -,1 2221 Ill~· ~ ·-=u 1·:;: t 1" ,1.,~ ·~ COntAlr ,IOI .. 111 I~ \lo n ot . ~. · ICelle• .JO 17 /5> t1V.+ ti. H••h•ll ,.SO • • 21"'--v. ....... owr .... ,,.. ... ·-~ ._.. + n _... -.,..-•• ccntCop •91 S 71 ..,.._ V. Gtllntl I 12 l51 ti + '-Kai'-1.l'2 9 9Jt Z '• .. , 1'4ewm1 1 .0. 6 ICMI 59 -\c. Ro<lowl 11.411 t '" M + \.'t Trlt P< I t 49 19'/r-,.._ .. 81dV,,~"' '1··~ .•. ·'1 7011>-IV. O\tC fl( i.1s .' I.JO IOV· .. : Gnln•lr pt l .. ·~ '1'1>-~. ICelh•G .40 I.SI ,. ...... .... ' Hewprlo .2'" .. ~· 1-. -H 2.l'l 7 :n --v. Trlcntrl 11 u ~ 17'o .. loll ... ' ·-10 IS 1•7, V .,._ ~ c;,tlCOrp 2.10 • Jlt JO -1\lt CiftMllls 1 .• ' ~ ~. 11. KenllRIV 17 7 ~ "° 1'41eMP 1.S2 7 2SI ,,_, ... Rotvthd • Ill 1111>-I.It Ttko .20 II 217 ~+ "° .. ~vGE ,·~ • , .. ~. l'I OltlGrp 2.40 • SQ l l.... ... OMol ,,.,. "1402 »V>-"" ... mt' .eo " 56 ~· "' Hl•Mpf l.40 . zl70 ,.....,_, RolilM •• u 610 J:J,1:-'.'-· !"'. TT~~nt.ylpn '1.'s.,2 107 !!'7 ~, .. ~! ~ -· .... ..., ~ '.tit CntGc> pf 2 , . S 17~ V. GMot pf l .1S .. 5 .UV.-Ila K.enncl 1.40 7 '1• D'll t \f, Hl•Mpf l.all , aJO 1611J-I Aalrn s JI ~1 • , -E .. • ...... llenCel 1.12 6 21 111'1>-~ ccntfll f.IO S U1' lll9+ 14 GNlol pf S 6 41\4 .. v. !tfUUI 2.12 11 ,. 11 ... NleMpf ··~ 000 17 -I/• ~ Sl J . , TCFoa I U O 1 11' ~ • ...., ~ .101 1,1 "•2 ~ 14 ContTel 1.3' 7 lll '~ v., Gtll'o<I IO s 211 :Ill,\ • Kw •Gts ... 1 1• II"'. .. Nl•Mpf s_u aoo Jt\IJ... ~ .to '' 22 ,,_ 111t Twin!>$ I.IQ 1 " 1"'9 ..... a.nohn ~ "° CtlO•IA 60 10 10 9 14 GPU l 107• '"°'· . K .. rG pfl,70 . • 19"'+ ft HIMpl 10.to ,. <SO • I Rofer M II 2" IH'I+ ... l ycoL.tb 1,10 t 1l2 ~ '12 1111.WY 2.n s 21 lS 14 c:or-1 • 1 " • • GnRelt ' J2 ·-. v. KertM 1.IO '~ llSO .... v. +:Ato Hleg_Sh ,. • SS n"'-"' Row .. $ .Ot,. .. s n'iJ-1 Tyler"' .so 7 n ISV. .•. BllotVe I. 16 S sS !JV>,· • · CoollUn . Ue I 261 ~ Vo GnSlenl l,11 11 1911 .. ,,.._ ll. KoysCon . . 11 ~ "' Ht CO Fl 2 ... 1 It. lJ~ + V. _.,, pf2.04 , . 27 51 -2 Tymsllt :Z0 M ~-.... llnt.Am I ... 6 16IO ~~ ~ '-' I Ot ll -SI • Vo GnSl"I ... 7 s 1~.. ' l(eysFO n.20b 10 60 l•f..-.... Hobl•t" 1• 1' .. S2~ •. RC Col I.CM • ll I 1"'-. -u -u -..,_mitt n U O 16 15 221'>-t Coopt pf 2'«1 27 SJ -I GTE 1.12 1 1422 U.V.-\It Koyslnl ~.M 11 12 311\lt. . NorfWn 2.70 7 ~ ""'-IV. RoylO •.SO. l 4ll ~ .. 111. U•L .2JJ . l601 ~Vo .... Tr J.JO • 1'1 m..-v. C:.0001.Ab '.o 7 m ~"" GTE pl 2.so I 14\4-... KIOcle .. ., s 10 40\o'J• "' "'°'"" I 60 11 ll--.. Rwllbrm .'2 II tU ,..,.,.._ V• UGI 1,76 • " .. ~.1 81tTr pf 2.so .. • 2311>.... c.ria.TR :eo 6 tt """-V'J GTE pf 2.41_ • 20 KIOdl 1)1'8 ' '. l SOii> + ,,., Horris .. .., I ll> ZI .. RuuT09 .. • 125 IH .,.. UMC 1.20 1 "' u v. . .. Blllr pf •.22 .. 1 31¥1 ..... C:-lnCI .'2 II JS u -.,.. GTFI pl t.2S . 110 II K'-pfC • •. • ~ v. N•C ... 1 n \0 56 " •IV• Ry .. H t.10 10 ,., ~"' UMET Tr •. JI lYI..... ('p• a11d Doarn• ~o ,·.~'i's .. ,, '.',.,.:..:. u. Golll>wd .... 1 26 21'1. \4 GTFI pf I.JD L«JO "''' ... Kidde ,,..... .. • Jl'loo-1 HOAMlg 11 •to R~ I.Ott> •• !JI ,..,.._ ~ UNCRM ,121 •. us 1114+ ~ ---··--CorClur .. 2l 27• ~ Vo GTlre I so II 367 ,,... ,,, klmbCI l .20 I 191 SJ -I HoAPhl l.IO • 20 35 -... -.,..-,5 -untrc.o ... 22 IS tv.--\4 NEW VORll l•PI -n. '1o1-.ne "'' a.rdClt ,.., 12 2~ "' \'4 Coreln ~ :. II 22 It .:-... Ge ..... <. ?JI m •"-· lll1190St .«> • ... .,..._ v. NoeitUt I 10 7 1320 I'll+ "· SC• .lOI " '4J .. .,.,_ 11. UnlHV •·••• • St ~ v. ~ .... New YOf'IL Stoett ~ 8emGo .eo 7 12 zsy,. .... eorne 2.1211 135., -~1 Gentle 1.60 • s.. .,.. .. , Klrtc11 1.11 1 u n -v. HC•ISL .10 1 l2 1s11>-'-5sH: '·!?,~ !! ?!,V:•'~. P~!:."I' 21 .. ~ ~ ,u,0s "" ..... -~ stocu1nt1w•r•n1.stn.111e ... llD"9YP Bet1\ek nl.10 7 ll 2'*-"' CorrlllL 1,71 12 , .. ~ ~ G•t pf '·" .• I l4 ...... l(niglRd .70 II 79 ll>h+ ... "''"CIPS '50 • 1411 IHI .... " _. .. ~ ~ _....,rb .., > ----.,.. motl •nd -" 11\e ,,.... be.cs on ~r .S2 11 161 '2-IV. c-tfl I II 14 2t _ Ito GenvPI \,Ool 11 1 .. JH;,-111o ~ n I.JO ll lJ tt • Vt NoSIPw 2.'2 ' .. U .. V. SPSTec .721> 7 141 J1~ 14 Un<:omr .20 7 Jl t'r..-~'I !*'Uni of cllM199 ,._..._al ¥Ollll'W Y' r ., .. 3S Z2\I·-~ Coll8td I ., •• •110 UY>-lYI G•P•c 1.lO II 171 77V.-~ Kollrnrs ,40 11 U7 JisV. "" HSPw plJ tO .,., 31 _, SAl>lr>e. • 40 417 .... 'llt•4h Union"' .m • M ..... ' for Wed .. ~_!'!,!'YI~ l21• '2»1• ~~·1-1'' Crel9 .0.1 .• 9 • . ... G•Pec prJ.14 ' I J2 -,,., ~' 1.40 II lM 31~+ "' 1'4SP• pU,10 yl«I MY>+ "' sr11e111v1 n.AOJl 11' ,.._ ...... unElcK 1.52 • 2tt II..,_ 1/. No totKurilHI• 1recs1,. lltlooll '2 .,.. Incl· _,, ·•• ' "--r-• Cr-t 60b 7 '2 l l'I'>-I" O.Pe< pf8 •I JI -I Kraft J.20 1 S21 ·~ ..... HSPw pfl.to , jlOO 7S .. ~. SeftJdln" 7' '"°"· · UnEI pf 6.40 .. ISSOO •7'1t->'I ......... , end perce,,,... C'*'91S-I"' 8H1lrv .... " ... j,41/), • '. CreOIF ' so 6 12 1~..-"" O.Pw pfl.56 s ,......_ ..... l(roef\tr . .. ~. ~ l'ISPw pf 1 ylO 5'\Ao-1~ Se .. wy u o 1 1• llv.~ 11. UnEI pfL • . . I.JO " • . • • • dllttrenc.t bel-,,. prnklul cto&lno BeyFnct 16 121 M ..... CTlton s ' 6 11 ~ V• GePw pf2.SJ •. II tti. ..... Kr00otr 1.)t 7 156 21'12+ ft HorT•I t 1 111 3' -IV. SeeclCP ... 1 t0 1--. i;. UnEI pf 2.IJ •• 1 I~ ,.._ llfl~ end-......Y.:!C>fk e . .. YStO ,,JO • II ~ .... CrockH l ,lO s 115 ~"' G•Pw pfl.IS . 1 '114. Kuhlm .IO 115 .. 10 .. . H1"41•••, 274 "-.... SJoM" I.JD I• CJ .......... " Uf!Ollc..t ,,., u1-.. Bayuk' ,J2 6 10 ' ·· .. Crc-1'1 pf2.ll .. 7 2~ V. G•Pw p0.72 . I.JO 56 K'fOIOCA n.I .. 11 .. lJV-'I> Horfrp .IO 'i 1-41 :\to SUoLP I~ ' 10 t~ loll 11 lltS ~+IV> H LMI Ota Pc.t ..... lno I • '2 27'>« ..... CrmpK I 20 • ., ~, .... G41c>src .'210 «> u1051it . n, ltyt« .• • 17 llit.-loll HwstAlrt .. Ill 160t ,. -... SILS.F 2.SO ' " u~. • UnPec . 1.411" 1412 llMl'h•l" : I GOV~~ .. • '"" Up 21.0 BNIFcf I.JO 7 ... 21~ ... Cn:IYHI' . I 17 95' l9'/I+ s., Get bPO I 14 7 .$2 1M/\. .. -L-L -NW18cp .... «JI 2••A-~ SPevl '... t i t .. Unlroyo9t .. •21 ~ • .,. 1 ....... pl l it .. 11 UC> IU ~~ >.·!it I: ~~ ~ ~O. 6 117 tt -11> Geny l.ao. • 1040 '1 +J~ LFE .Ur U 47 ~· .. Nwtle • I t 261 21'h• 'A r.R99P 2 6 :im. l:JV. +I~ Unlrytl pl .. dJO la .... . J llllmlltl 7~ • 1 Up IS.I :::!:'."'n"o .= ,. 26• .. -~.,k CrwZtl 2.311 " ,.. ·~+ ~ Getly pt UQ . • u~ . LITCO I • 12 ,,,,.._ 14 H•E1111 Jlf'1.t>. J2 1714 ...... .._..... ·40 • 1:1 7-.. ... Unernd ·-• " " .... 4 Ketler Ind 12>'1 .. '"' Up 12.• l'IEW YORK IAPI s.>. 2A T_., ..., "' JD 1'22 '° 1 ....... o:;, llJ3 -lfS2 101 2 C••••r .tl~·1.0S\lo • povnCI, U.S , desllnetloM. LAatl Q ~. ,,.._, ~ltK J1'1J.J7-. ceftU• pOuftel, dell.,.rtO --T111 to.7••,.....0. ·I--, lb. H.V .... n. llMft"'T .. 12.00 per .. .,,, ~1•1'-S10M711 tro,01. N.Y --------------Sllerr NEW YORK CAP) -H_, &. Her....., lltftr 1...., m . .ao. off to. 1.-0. En9el,,.rCI sll.,.r JU.270 off JO '* flbrlctled Ill-RJ.Q, oft t0 17M. • • Gold Quo•ation• -· n .. _,.,. ., CT2el p14., • 61 V. GlentPC .. J5 S""• V. LLCCp 21 ;At. Hwllnd t.a I 21S 31 .... + "° .-mDc>s .. tOI ~ \0 U8nlpf 1.10 .. 2J 1,_ •··· 5 CW11 WM JO-. 2¥1 Up IOA ........ 1 2So4 '~· .. ·-CntmF11: .. ·• SI ll'h-11> Glblf'Tt .602S ., ·---.... LLCQ>pf . I ll~V; Nw1Ppf U 6 .. I 20 .. SO!ttGJ uo 1 211 I~ .... UnEnkul.52 10 Sl•52~+2\W 6Clle.:reo 21-:2 Up 10.J L•••-= mernlno 11•1"9 fll l.00 un. 8tk oPI I 1 1111 52~ •• .,, °"-.. ~ l'I GklL••. t 1 :161 J9 • v. LTY J 17 .. 131,.._ loll HwllALt l,Q:Je 10 21 , ___ .... SJuonR 1.451 2S l2 It -1,\ uncnv .2• ' Ill ~"' 7 •TMCG Inv J~ • v. Up 10,0 Cl\llfl99d. t::."H'.'.l~ 101 "'• l17~".-· ... ;:. CMmEn I.to ij U U...+ 14 GIHHlll .'2 I » ~ "' LTV pf I .. 1 IJV.-v, l'lwSIW 1.20 I • ll'h ...• Sande~ .5120 17S 536"' • • Ulllum 2 ... S 5S 311 ..... a ...,< .. etHY n l lM • \0 Up 10.0 ~: ....,_ 11-1"9 V IO.S0 off11J.50, -" ~ o.mo.v 411 10 2 ICM\-v. G ueO• t.'ID 7 a tt~ .. LTV pt 2 . .0 .. 41 ~ .. 11. l'lorfon 1..0 to 71 47Y,....I-SFelnCI 1 • .0 • .. ~ V. Ulllv pf 3.'7.. 11 ~ V. '.._11'4> 1 Z2V. • 2 Up '·' Pent ... I ....... 112 • •I-0.rll" 1·10 l6 • Glnoslnc: ... • 21 10\0 ..... LQulrM 1.111 20 JO 1"'--Ho1$lm I.GI 6 15U ISV>-.... SSF,,.1,n,pf ·"'12•· -11 211 . ·,·· Ulllwpf 1.311 .. t400 IS'h-14 10 ,,..,.... Ind I~. IYJ Up u p ......:........~,1-· '!~'"'•'~11,UOU5 . ... """ .2" 7 '°' ll~· .... CwtW ' I .• -~-.-2~ OleHW .. 1 JS 22v.--l.etC. I .. s ll ....... ~ Hvcor .... •32 ~ -• "' . •• 59'9• ,,_ UftlUnd ·"IO 6S ..... ~ II City 11\Vftl » • iv. Up ••• r--.: ...... 11 ...... $7.M, 8tl1C4 0 ,... • 2 ,.,._ v. CwtW A 2 ,, 37\lr•3 Gtot!M , .10 It rn Ullo• 1\lf l.MMSft ,411 12 w ,.._... -~ -59tW•I I • 7 H'l\ ..... Unlllnn .22 7 102 .,..__,.... 12 CWllMWr ,., J7Y) • l Up 1,7 Z.rlcll: ,,.. •• bid, off "'·°"· '"'·· ...... 2 .... ..., S7\l--2 Cyc:IOpt .,. 2• 17 GldN\191 St '" i.v. ""Ltne8ry I • •1 ,, ..... oo.ic...c,~ !Jc IO 13' n~· I ~·RSEI .~'2l •, ,..,_'<It UJetlll ,,.,.. 4 211 ~ 14 13 0--Co wt I~+ llot Up 1.5 blled. . •' .... pf 4.Gol .. 21 JO -1 .:.. l>-0 -..... OICIWF"n .Sol 1 175 It ' ... LMller I ... .. Jt ~ R .... .411 14 110 ..-ti!.,.,,,., IP -I ' """-~ UMMo\" .. 112 ~ .... _ .. COrME I \\ Up l.S .... Y•rll: Het\Oy .. Herman rnlci.~ ~ 2 1 si. 21\ct ..... OPF s S2 "" .... Gcttlell l..M. 151 l~ .... LtwtCll aG IJ 7 '""'"..-Occl,... ' ... lOloll +I~ SAYOnO .511211 '112S \111 ., ... Unl'llMft 1•1s.> ,,,.._,"' St :fr • • I ' ... , pt uo .. 6 J2Y,....""' DMIDlt 20 JO 22• ~ ..... GoodY• I JD 71131 "~ ... '-"' .... ,· 11 u mi t.V.:.1Y1 OcclP pft.I• ' 47 + '"" SevEIP l.20 12 •17 ,_ + .... Un....... 4 ,.. M_\41+ ~ :: ~ ~ 2~y,, ! 1:: t: ~l m;:.. ~::;~,:.:;:. ........ IWIC. ..... t t::!Blfwt•"' u o ·~ ,',~ 11,!'-.. ,: • .' O..Rlv 1'.12 • a ~"' GordJ w 'n 5 " 2'\lf+ 11r LMrSo 1:2• 1 1.i ~\.'I Oc<IP pfl,411 .. 1 ~·2~ !!:Ee ~:·."'· ~ 1t.,-.. ~~. 1-!!! ·,· 2'!ll D1s~· ~ 1111 o tr,•nv,ncllf• ~.-•. JVr1 ... ~ e. .. 21 _,_ .. 10 _ -• -,, ., -.. p.n,,cp1.ao 1 201 2AV'J-IV. Goltld l.72 7 '31 2•--l.ltMSpt'l.25 ... 7Sll>-V. OcclPpf '· 6 u ., ... -......... .-. ..... .,_, • ...--... ._..._ AMI ·--.... ..-............ ,_. ..... .,,. • ., • -loll Oeftlel llMl 21 HO !DV.+l~ G<Mlld pfl.35 " • 24lllo-\lo LawyTm I.JO • Ito JD.,._ .... OcclP pt2.SO 17 2W• ... Sevin .70 '11235 11'-• \lo US4lr pfl.87 .. 211 ., -Y, 1• Gull OU ~+JIM Up e.o ..... .,.,.., f"'9111erd ••r•<•t..S 90111,J .. t.... .M II lit ts~ .... Clw11NI ' 2 6 ..., .._,_"' Gree:• t.• • '12 --.... LM£rtt ... 10 " 11 -"" OcclP pft,311 '. I> lt'Ao-"" !!;J:;.pf ~ ,· .:: '~-+ .... ~lei ,2.~ s ~ ~I,\ :II ,..rkll "9tl ~ • I ... Up '·' ,,,,...._...sns ........ _,., .. 11e11\Stl IAO t Jll 1M-14 8:!& 2 tJ .. .,.,_ 'h Grel"11r I II al 3' --loo LtgP!a« .52 t 20 tJ ..... OOECO I D lSI 4l"' • .. -,..,.. .... " .,..,'l'PI • .,.. 6 .,. _......-V. JI SllDIM 1 6'6'o + 4._ Up 7.t •19~ 1' It J05 M + '° n i; 116 7'V.+ lloll G•..,IM I 5 '1 IJI'>-'6 l.Af\Ytllnd .. IU 1-+ Yo Oadlfl 2.20 7 '3 4J'h-_., Sc. .... '91 .. U 4~ -·· VSOy pt I.... J l l -'4 22 ~ p1 14 t I Up 7.7 •1-l .w u • lllN. .. o.t.Ter ·•• 211 ,,_._., Gre;or .eo 1 u 10 --. Lllinpf .. 1 15 _"" Ofi1oe e1 1.1• 1 '°° n~ ..... t~f1~ '·'° '° ~ ~: USHom...., 1 431 v"'+' J> 0 JO .. l \'cl Up 7.6 SflMbof• e11FS I .. ,. M llt'·.. .. ~ I 22 213 Dv.-IY, GGttALILtl'c.,_. ....... !!.~ .. ~v.:.~ ~ 1.1.1,,. .. 11£ !!~· ··;,; OtlEd pf J.90 •. l.70 2'"'1 + \'t Scl\tmll I jll zj 111 "' + ~ ~l!~~ ·!~ •• 1~ 22'"""". M . pf w + ~ Up 7.5 d Nt w ••• ,,,tow .. M •• ··••I·-,~ •tetl!Of ,,. • 411 n .. --0."'9 .SM> • JS 12\lt+ "" ... --• ,. -·-• ... ..... .-.... Oll£d Pf .... . a. Joi _, ·-~·-~ ..... ., .. _,.L v~ .... ... "-'-14 2S Inc;,. 21"' + ll'o Up 7.4 •• ~ • • ...... ••H~ "'·" t D a • ... EE"" 1.a t Jll trlYr-YI GHlm 3.7'9 II • >1-.. to i.-a 1.• t lot JoMto+ v. Ollfd IJf 4 • .M .. Z:UO MY, .... ~IA'ii •" 14 jj ,. 42"' "' US "1Y HO too IJ\I;-19 OOWllll Un1tu •''-"''w "°ltd. r•lo OI Olv1c1t-, etelrJn 1 I .. ZS .... · yll'L 1.1' 7 • 41M1~'+" :I.. Gt-IL IAO 7 IOD 1' ..... LaFey .Al t IOt """'-If'> Otlf.d pf 1.-.. » ,.___ to Scoe • ·• 1 Jt t5 .:..:: \,i; US5lloe 1 . .0 6 J2J ~ I,\ Ne,.,,. Lat (JIO Pc.t. •rt •"""•' C11.-~tNnl• IN•C!CI on t>w l•tl lllML S I 6 I• 1~ l't 1 .• 12 tu .,. .,.. GtWl'ln • 1 231 1'._+ V. 1..futMie l!O '"'-lit OllE pf MA rlO llS.,..._IV. Sc • uss.I I.to .. ID tt\f)..... I ~ IY> I Off IU qv•rterly nr ltm• 1nnv•I <lt<l•'611on .. •k llH" 1.1' 12 fin n--. -Oetm,. IA 1 S1 IM+ 14 Grw\111 1Jo 6 473 I~+ 1't l.roll'dC. ': 12 » ..... + \\ Oii£ pf 10 7' aaG ti + ~ otLed .OS. 6 • t~ .... · USTOOc J .• tO .. J7~+ "" 2 -..1 LWE '5 = ... Off ,;. S~Clll or eclt• dlvtOf"<I\ or POtnt nts not ...... 1.111 6 ti Jiiii + I" ~ I.» 10 50» 4~1M Grwyflnd _. -· Its 2..,_ ~ UtvlStr tU O I 157 Jt + I.rt OllP P'G1.l7 .: J 11 ......... to:r.:1 1~ ~ m ~=---~ UnTecll J,211 llJJO SJ\\+ I.rt J !(CPL •.50pf ll'll _ ~ Off 1.7 Clf\•9"•191 a\ ,..,..,.,. ••t oe11Pn1tt1fel '" '"' ......._., .. '1 • ..... o.itll'9 .. m 1~+1 GrowG .oMb ll JM 11-. .... , IAVIUF 1 7 • 27lh-llo Olli.Of UO 17 ltJ tl YI ..... ~. .J2 IO IZJ 21~" UTCll pt I . I "212 +2 • Ql>.leGE pf m _ "" Olt I.I follow1119 ootnoln .....,. 11.>0 1 111s ..-. " DtMIC. n1.s." 1•1 s1~.,., I 0 111R1y .. " . m+ "41 L.OI' 1.20 11 .. 2~ ..... OlllG~ p1 .• .. ~ 7~ '-S<oviTf 1 sa , 101 1114_ °" UTCll lllf 1.11 .. 22 • +W• s OCA C«p 1 ~ -4 °" 1., ":c:'-;,:.~~ .. r c'~l~:~.,:..~;"~1!10!1,:'0°'1<tl llolMC 1.15 • ,., ..._. "" Qlo11•111.1' 1 21 in.+ Yo C#f\lfl\m I.JD II ., t1V.-YI L.OF ... 4.1$.. ' "'4 ..... Olll•HG J'IO n..,. .... Sc·-. 27 21 1·-·~ Vlct\pl 2.St .. 151 UV...... • MlllMrcll • • -214 °" 7.4 ' llotdltft I te 6 ... ~+ ~ ,,__, • 10 -,...,_ 14 Orum oft.ID t Zlfll , •-.,. .. Olln I 1 417 21'111 + ll'o _, • -UnlTel IM 7 10J I~ YI 1 _..,,., t ...... 1 6 """ 7 4 O..cl•rtd 0t Pl•O '" pre<eCl•l\Q 11 "'°'""' ... .-.w rA • 7> ~ "" ~y ... IS ID ~ ... E'" Al lO lft ~ ..... ~. :.o 1i I~ ~ ~ Om••• , .... ' "114""•'~ Scllld r,1.01. -· I t l4 ..... UnlT ,,.,.... • 2114-\lo • r:d"1..d"" ~ = Ir> .... • Ot<l•ttd Ot Ptl•d •lltr \10(\ Otv•ClfNI or\ llotmM Jll 21 4\41 °"* t 7 27 IJ'h-.. , 11 t .JS J 1$5t lt\l'o-\4t UllYEll t.JO l2 .. 5"'\tt. .•• . Otwlde t ... 1 g ~ Vi SHC pfl.4' ·• 2S llMt>-~ Unltroll .JG II 107 ~l 'CM!. e"' lnw ... _ V. g: t~ >Phi up I P•oO lllt< .,.., . divtOMd om111 ... • ..... i:n ·; Jt 11~·~ O.l• 1 ... 1 ffl 11,._ 1(1 tfW pf us .. 1 '11'>-~ UncHt , 6 56 a v.-14 ~Ilk• IUJ s 10 .. I,\ S.eCAJBU O .. 5 i.111 ..... Univ• .JM s n 11*-v. 10 C.t1tc-• pf isv. _JI.rt Off i.o 0tl••r•d ., no 11<.tton ••u n •I •••I Cl•••~ .... pf ... ·.'* ""1+ "" °"I pf I.... I 16 -to) GlfW .. l.».. I • ..... llntPI \'Ji IS ISV. Oi'tllR~ 1:.0 1 4S ll)lo-Iii =~L2 ~ ~ ~ .. ~.~ Unlvl'd .911 I It 12'!1..... II.,_ f'nlf w. _ ~ Olt 6.0 ~:~:i.t:. ~.:r~,: cfi::~::;,~ ~~·;;::.,~ ::.:;u::: : ~::::: ;.:a1::u=: =; s::,~~'::.i: ;m.:'~ tr.::: 1:::i: m tt111~:~ Sf.~ ~.i E :i~'\(;t:,v:r ; .. ·: 1: ~~ ~/l!i Iii F=~ a~--l!v.=t"' g: t.: ~,N~::~~~~..:!'~:::cs: .. r.:.1!:"r.':!:·: r.,.St 1.:£ •• ': ~·\ti; g=: UL = ~~·i4 == r-:: :: : =:·\4 tm:~ 2 :: t 1r....:..:·~ Outt .. Go .Ml lU 111 Jl'h-v. =: 'itl:1J ": ~ ~ ~1 ..... a.u .. I 2' _, n ~f;:f All i::: =I* g: H ;~~~· v~7..:~;:·, ... ~:;•::·a~~!::.~= ...... IM,, .. 47V>-l\lf \UO .' 0 .... -•v. eu 1.• 5 157 II .... LockM .. 402 ,....._ v. O...t110r I • ~ ~ .... SHfAlr • J2.. ,. --14 USLIF~US.. JO ~ 14 It ""'""'' • 2A"' -Ill; Oii H O•I• lril~ l,1te 6 In JJ'h+ I ,-t .71 .. dl1I 14\4+ ._ lfUtd U 4 I 1M 22141+ loll L«tl• .5' ta 1• ~+I OvrnTr UO S 7 • -YI SiNIPw t'Jll I t n Ulllfe d ...... Jl M ..... 17 a.1ftA!rL 111t -11; Off .... • • dlvi.-na O' H ""'" , Ea d•••Cletll .... WOI 1 .. 1 J t7\4-l: ,, I.• · · S Ml't-~ tNll ... t ,. 16 + 'tit "-1.lO S 12 ..-..-1 ~ 1 .JO t • 11\'t-\Ir SHrleG '.J1 IJ tJ4 ~ ' -l.bPL 2 tO ,.. IJ\llo. · · • · • • HIM I • ., it -\Y, i S.S •"0 ,.1 .. <n l\tll t S.le• tn !vii .. LUO UI 1 O tt~"" .~ ltl 1!! ~te\11 ...... -..... _::---. i:::::.•;!! t) tf lm::·;;_ 8:::ffit u: 11 m ~·~Seen 1 .• 10911 17-Vt ~~:a::: ~~ m'!: ~ I' it Hetty S... _., -M U <•d-Ct llfd WCI""-01s1ro1>vt1>e1 "' W'*' ="-~~~ ·7 : ::;-Yi ,n,.u ., j al""'; HeC•W t.a 1 s -~ .. iii aiM 6 JOI ~ \; Oafnlln .7• 1 17 1114'4+ 14 Sfftreln .. 2D2 Hit,···· UIPL pf t.O... 1 17'1r-141 ~ ~=:" ~ = 1= ti ~:~,".':,1, "':,:;,:.r~~hcs,°:t~~1":c:~ •• Wllh0Wf1 ·-... .,. .. ..... 1·• • 1 ~ M•leee 17 22 ...... =1LClt l"' • .uo ==loll -P-0 -=~ ,:j .: ~: VF -v-v ... -12"""""" Kn '°"" -'" °" J.I P·E ••llo , ....... ,. ot • 1100 A\ 111 9-o. t 6 .. ,._+ Y> l,Jf 11 • g -141 14811,.8 1.W IO la a -"41 L Ljlf,. Al .. I ltli ..... PHKGp 1.04 It >S • -~ SeltLt 1'a ' 1114 -1,41 C4t l.tO I 21~..... 21 Lelle "•Y ~ -~ Of! .S.I mv111p11r ot 1»1 -· •••~•"9\ "'""'d .,, llwftP« .1'114 •• ,,.._ y, I ... t J747 -·~ t4e111M 1 '8 Wl7 ta -llJ 1A1vOJ .14 11 212 M'Vi+ 19 PNllMC 1.4*.. M llYJ .... Sv=lnl : .. 'i 172 17 -14 VSI Ctl .It 10 ff '2...,_ \\ M W11n41 Alrw 4" -11o ()rt S,I 01V10tn t~ t«••I 11 monl~ ••'"'~' toO\lfto lf'ftNtl .•IS 1114 \Sy._ I.rt M 11 961 •14+1\4 .._,,. I.JD 6 145 .-.+ \,to 1#811 ... t i 256 ,,._. y, PPG 2.16 6 t') J1W.-_., '" .t0 u M7 2A~IV. 1181ef'9" .» Jll jJID 21 -"" ~ Greyllnd _, 1"' -V. Olt S.0 ir\l o I•• >Al• eric• __, a~il' I~: ... -~ •• 17'1'" ....... "" 14-.IS 1.Jet .. tll II-14 ~ IMIUdJ J5 +l\le ~.'l ·~ 4 S= =: ~ 11 .U 6 d U\lt+J ~:i~ . .,,, ~ ~~ ----...-..--!lot --~ * 1 ... ., • ,,. ...-.... . Mell.JI ,.... .. 17 15\'I-\II u~ .72 ' 110 ~ .. "" ~ !AO .. -II.._ YI SflffrL. AO • '11 ,.,,._ v. ll•len " " 212 J2 --'l(ilfi '"'' Not !$.;.-,; .lr'~:: " .. 411Vt ..... ..--17l•IMlt+Y>LflwGtJ,14hl•!Mlt ..... ,.~i.t•'t'l'*"'•~SIW410•1 ... lt,.,. __ t1V.v-:4D t lMl2Yr-VI .Pl l~~lt'i" (llQ Pll"«hCw CllCI Plil\d'l t!Mo (hq y ...... • ,._,. 11:',~ = ~ =M . .,l~ = t::+'~ '--"';! if '=:-:.~ fl9Ct;; 2.401 9 61~ .. 5 1c:-1e•.Jlle • ~: 1::,:·i4 V-01 ••• 631 41'6+1141 -·--W W--_:_ . ,...,.,, .. "'~" lio "' ..... ,..,.,J u•• a~ ..... t= 'J'.IJ,,..._,"..,..,. .. _, ... , "'.._"41 IG pft C .. 1 1",_"v.-.. 12 4\h "WlltJpf 1..110 "41 ..... Wl'IClt•o.11 ..... ,~+"~J.,,. .. '\, ·-11 m",.i:I '.'. ": -,~ ;: ,~·~ ~ :: -: == ~ t:.-: ... :··~ :~·il $E'r 1::11 u: i~i~:: ..... ~:c ij: ·; ~ =: i: F. ;:'~i. J~ ~.: :::: •.• ·; ,:f ~~=.,Jr .. ·~:::..:·~ I '._ J:ft .~ ~ =.~.~ ........ t.• t 11'117 + It . , IM 17141-~ aH•,..11111 AD 761 t~ Wt i.A1Ur!1 • 52 I 11'o'I. .... h ot •1 1t di ..__ ~ ~I • I IO .. .,__ 141 V pf2, ID .. It 11 -I WfftO!l 1 I T4 112 ftlt 'MIU......... .. & ~ . I'\. I.ft 1 Jt 1n.-\9 ....... I I.JI 1 -er.\• "' i .. m m -·"'. arrh I • t ,._ .... L,..csys ·"'" 1 ... IS -,.. P8<TT 1.• • 74 If* ... , .. SI ... 1.61 • 2S ... +I V•1 •.• 1 ,,. ~ 14 W9r!WL. l.J2 15 t&ff m.--WI.In .I.If .. at ........ -~ U:t • 41 11 ... lrlltl llf ·•.. • ,..,.. •. " " u ~ "' .nt• • 11 •1 .,_._, -...__.. _ ""'n.. . t 14 J •-.,. E'"Pl'9C _.,. m 1,_ .... ve P "1.n .. is1t11 ss -~ ~ u2 • • avt--..., """"ff 11&.. ' 1M+ ~ _.... 1.t0 • 191 919- 9.,.... lllfl1• ... ·,• MCI ~· ·~ 11 at6 14 H8rte, 1 7 1 JS ..... MACOM 1.a 40 '5' ldO +"' ,......., ."4 U 7.. I,__ l4o ,..P81 .»It •I Wt+ v. V•I,. ~ , • dtll M -Wt ........ 1.• 7 ff 8'lt-._ !llllMlll I. ' I~ • + It ·: t ... =• • _..,,-"" I , aa " tclmW I • ,,,, IS ..... fljl(A I.JI • ; IMlt-Y> ""'"'"' ..... '" • -"" ,.., . 2't ,....__ .. va1~·1J .... 71 .......... -·.. t Q _, ...... J ..... II ..-..... ---• " • . -..... • a ' .. ·-..... • ,.._. .... M f _ .. -·.JO >"' U ....... _ ..... > ..... Yo •• to ·· .... .,_. -'·JI > ~ ·-·-•M .. !!:!.•··•· -..... !II-· ...... ·1t1= ~~ : ... 1:..:.~.-·-=-~·~i ~; .~1 .. ._ &..:;·~ '"'., .. = ~~.,r, :19:;·i4 l~= ,·:tt ~ :~= ~:1,.1-l:ll :: = 1 .~\.:= :;ft ie fi' .. ;;::t1.~. ~~r·,:1·:. ~ ....... «' ~ .. ~ .. H • .. 5 .1 'i , .. ~ " .. ,.. ........ \lo """'" • .., •• "' ,,... ... • ltltl ... " •at a .. -... ~ ..... , .. ti .... ..,. ·i .. 1& • 141 ..... ~ IA.. .. ~ ,... .,. • .. , ___ I .. t-_. I .-.. ~ ... I 1:11 .. • • •Y"" • .. a 11-14 MKOll AO 1 11 ~ ..., !$ 1.pa 1 24 ...-..... • '" ., ... If 111t ~. + ,.,. VWclnc Al • • ,,,. • "' WIWO "' . .. J 1 + '-.._.,,.. t .. t ~ \It . •• " .:-----.... 1 S1t -141 "' 11 10 ,,,___"' ~ .a t M I "" 1.16 1 1" t'.,._ ll8r I.It 7 I ~ ..... Yllkt\M 1 1 11 .. "'"'" ~ • II 4 F."" 'lllNl~S.7S 'j •• r_.._, t I... • , t• ,_ W • " 1. •• t '"'· "t: HeO=t .. ' 1' ~+ Ill> -U•t i.-6 " Or1 .M 11 J4 fN+I .II 1t .. H~ 14 -W-W -I ''It" I • 1tt1 =-41 + !! ~ • A iO •n" ,..,,.__ 1 • • .-..... , a ---·~ !'« " ," Fi ~ "'*""" . ..," ,,_ ..... ==:..'"' • ~ _..._. ~ , .,. ,, 111u 1 ........ WICOlt > ... • 1• at\11..... :a "tt "' E .... pf .J .. ''ft 5--~-· .. ni .:=--.. ~i f'11 : t:: nw.::::. IDSI .._,,.Hell"" all tit ~ ._.,,). 1 •, ~l\,to ~ M \t,.~1... c1"!f.i! t ?! ~ .. ::;,t ::rpf.::.~.: r;I~ II t,{ta tU ~t: 1'.i: is • ... ~.~ y -11'-,Y-&. +. ;Ar.~~:: = I~~"" s'"t:'" :~i" r .: E~ ! .: .it: ii =11~ ~ ·~-• ~:·: =i:'.&t!·r,Jl-==.. ~·:. J ""· \: ~~ ·" ! 'ff ~ ~ , ..,.. ~ ~" ~.r: •. ...: .~ ,;;; ~ ~ l':tr 1 '=J It"'!'!: ~ !j •a.1m71·--.. ..., .. ~"", p MM • IM•I = 1.a li ~·" I m .... 0 l.1• ·~ ltl ,r:.:.·u ... ., .• 11 ti.I ___... r.::R' a. • " ~ \'t .44 .. ,g. .= .. ,.. i;a,: ti ~ .. p .... I ~ f1 tf" ;-i -11 1 +t~ A;fi:.11e.: ,: :~.~ -~-1 Ii ;;:=~ '1f~ .. eJ ~?: . 111 1--r' fl g::::·: Sf.e\-1 .~ 43 :;~~Lt : .~ .u 7\'t .. ,~ ...... ~.·i., m::.'.~ ,JI 1 ~. a! .. "., " ' ... ".._.'I 1• ._."'--... ·12 1 ,. ~~ "'f.21"" •,1 ~ ... s-t~ ·• • • •1--~ ::... •. ...:; .sl t.~=:' 1.od Jl =:::.1 • .~ ·~ .. "'!...,,. ~· tl 14 ...... ~ 1t ltl 1 r.. =Al, '.'.I I ~ ... 1=: ~-\~ n ~I: m:m l:ll 10 1111r=t ._ Ill' ,ft 6 SI' ..,._. "11 ~lld t::: ,: ~·~ Witt.I"' I.• 7 .. M t \It ~A '-202 .... • ••.• __. IS.Jet ~" lwlllN '2 UO ~ • ~ . " . . .-', " "" 0 0 : • • The Doily Pilo and our local teachers I Here's wllat our partners say about our Newspaper in Education. ·program ... ''Thank you for your program! Not only does it assist in providing a basis for timely discussions , but it also encourages all of us to be more aware of the newspaper's importance." --M . Teresa Santoyo College Park Elementary School .. Well done program, very worthy program , students respond and develop excellent awareness of current events in the news.·· --James Lande Marina High Schoo l "We use the program in fifteen different classrooms. All of the teachers feel that it is an excellent tool for pre- senting current events.'' --Karla Koepenich Isaac L . Sowers Intermediate School ·'I t is outstanding. I use it every week and it really helps the students become aware of the issues. Particularly the ques- tions at the end . They help. Thanks .·· --L . Meyer Charles W. TeWinkle Middle School ''This is the best current events program available. I have included it on a weekly basis in my 7.'8 grade Social Studies program for the past 3 years. It has made my students better awreciate the world around them." --John Wigat Masuda School DAILY PILOT 642-4321 Our newspaper in education program is designed to draw students into discussions of today's major issues. Best of all, the program challenges kids to use their minds and Imaginations and to become Involved in their community and in the world around them. As ·partners with the schools In the education of our young people, we feel this is one of our most important projects. For more information about our program please contact Janet Steward, Newspaper in Education Coordinator, 642-4321 . ----·------......- ........ -.. -. -.. -------.. -.... .. . _........-.... .. -.. -.... --...... -. .... - - - ---_..__ •• .._ 4-------.,....._ ...... _~.....:: .It . -- ~. Sepeemt. 25. 1980 CWLYPWT-•J The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DAILY PILOl CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Call Service Fast Credit Approval ..._., kr S. He.w. Fer S. He.Mt for S-. Hofi•1 for S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••.•.............•.••••••••..•.........•.. •···•·······•·•·••·•••• ........•.............. ••• ,.. I OOt ••• ,.. I OOJ .._.... I OOZ .. I 002 ...................••..•••...............................•........••. EQUAL HOUSING QPPORTUNITY ......... tMofiH: A_ll l't!MI t'llllll1• l dVt'MIM'•I in U\1$ IMJWlil)ape.lr Ill $Ub iert to ~ fo'edt>rlil t'•tr h ous ing Art of l!f•itl wt\.ir h maltn It 1lleg1tl lo adv11rt1:sc• "any p re ference. Uin1111t111n .• 1r lhsrnmrnalloo b~t."\l un race. cok>r. ~hgwn, •'"· or national onl(in. ur 110 intention lO nw k ... Jll} such preference. hmllu lloo, or c:hsrn mm a tum ·· 1lus newspaper will nut knuwinKI> a ci.'ept .in} adve rtising lor real estate wtuch as 1n 11ola lion ol the law • HI UOOIUU ... . - Top floor of the t op high rise an Nt'wpor t Bea c·h Beautifully df.'corated, view of tht' bay, mountajns and ni ght lights 2 bedrooms. 2'h ba ths . Cull secu r it v Offered at $725,CXX> . U~l()UI: tl()Mr=~ REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 ioHt Co.al Highway. Corona del M•• OllAMCMTIH ~ un.lt 1,.•ondo in Irvin~ I Fil.Inn. rom 10 pool 6 l t'nul• h wn.-r "">'" "i.ell' • lJ .. r m.arktil at $70 .000 l-'11nta ii t 11· i ....... ,. .. RED CARPET 754-1202 SO. COAST CONDO SS9.900 Hett~ hurry on this one. It won't IJst ' Sharp 2 Bdrm. with new pamt & carpets t-an assumablt' loan. Call now 54().3666 WE HA\/E 41 Of THE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN ~~~~~~---1 .&..Whelcfn IUOIS: Act .. rtiMn 1-------,,. Real Estate ...... chtdi their adt COMMBCIAL cWy mid report er-REAL EST A TE ran -.clahfy. Tlw CARHR DAIL y PILOT assm.s to:Stabhshed local firm is ......._for"-fint • taking applical 1cms from --·1 licensed r e al estat e correct......._ Oftly. salesmen & brokers for a ••••••••••••••••••••••• Geuad 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEWPOIT SI 11,tOO! Very affordable Newport Terrace co ndo! Up career in commercial re al estate management & broker age. Extensive on the job training in aJI aspects of this rield. A unique opportunity for the business minded real est ate person. Call for an interview. Realonomics Corp. 675-6700 IXC.wlOMAL coma LOT Harbor View Homes, 3 Bdrm Monaco, reduct-d to sell at S207 .500. windows a fford mor e graded end unit. Extras ·::.ii••···~·.;;::11 light and vie w plus added coun t e rs " s tor age in co untry lritchen ! Take over low interest, low payment. low priJic. loan t 10'1%. S680 mo. S89.300). ~e and submit! Call 752-1700 THE ·~ NUMBEfl&TO SEE f~i.111 9 · 1\1~. ~,,,,, l•llldll MEw;ORT IEACH OFFICE ZMJ WHlclff Dr. 17141 646-7711 CUfF HA YIM"S LOWBTNicl TrftrtlHi~ Super sha rp 4 Bdrm family room . atrium. ser lude d location. pro Jess1onally decorated An excelle nt buy at SJl0.000. ~ .......... Ddebout B &Beach R~Estate COSTA MESA CE '.W.I Yor U>me wbo can '6le help i n HO U SE PAYMENTS! Neat tllree bedroom. two bath home PLUS attractive one bedroom rear unit. SOX165 R·2 lot. A great potential. $165.000. 611-7100 ...... ATIIMT10M UA&.ISTAll NOfHSIOMALS The William Michaels lAI will show you how to make 1t happen NOW We ure currenUy staffm& our Dana Poanl office & are it)t«viewmg sa les & management pen10nnel. C;ill for a ronfident111I a11vt 831·0655. SPYGLASS HILL Submit offers. 4Br. frml dming & hv rm. Prof lndscp. pvt courtyard w /spa. Trade. A ITD nr land ronlract $459,900 Harbor View Realty :>&4·9411 675-1163 !!z.D~!, 3 Br a ~. Ba . New carpets, drapes. rlnors, apphanct's. pa111t. ctr. Dbl alt garage 203:.1 1.r eenv1 llt' St nt.'ur Warner S.A . D S ~ducators Heal~ 642-7743 CORONA oa MAR Cute older 2 bdrm home on n z lot. Ocean side of the hwy New roof, C'OI' per plumbing f1replare. l·arpets and drapes $187.500 /\ D1 \'1~1011 of tla rhor lnvc-.tment Co THEratCE SLASHEll STRIKES AGAIN! o n t his sensational HARBOR VIEW HOM ES Some r set model ! Featuring 5 bedrooms. 3 balh. new carpels. tile in entry and dlning room a nd large yard on a cul · de-sac and a large as· s um abl e loan !!! 759-1501 HotlwsForS. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. 1002 G1•r.. IOOl .• ,.,.. 1002 .,.,.. 1002 •••••• ················-••••••••••• •••••••• • • ••••••••••••••••••••••. !_•_•...!.!..!.!..!,•••_!t..!.,!••······ IAUOAIS&.Me- 101 APOl.84A One of a kind. old world design & quality of this new authentic French Normandy home. 4 Bdrm. 3 bath c u s tom h o m e with fin es t craftsmanship & amenities. Now available. $585.000. Call for app't. IAYROH'T We have several fine homes with pier & slip. a TOIO HOISi COUMnY, 4 Bdrm .. 3 baths ; ranc h style. mini-estate in orange groves. S240.000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bay~1dr· Dr•v .. N B b7S 6161 OcNn•iew D~l Big 4 & J Udrm. well m:,,.mtamed by one owner oryy smre new. Ownl'r ret1 rmg and with 2!1'• t.1<1wn wiU carry the en lire bat,nc:e 5249.500 JACOBS REALTY 67~6670 HEWISUHDH This newly constructecl home offe rs the best of lialboa Island l>es1gned m the F'rench country style, and ideally situat ed. this custom home of fers the finest amenities incl uding 3 ~pa rious Bdrms . 2112 Ba. Koman t ub, bonus room. and t us tom bri c k patio Proudly presented at SlS0.000. B AL BOA I S LAND REALTY 673-8700 SUPER DUPER Beaullful 4 bdrm home with large family room and lg mas t er s uite Fi r eplares an m as ter suite and family rrn f.a rth tone colo r s $154.900 Call 979 5370 now ALLSTATE REALTORS OCIEAN IREEllS PRICE PLEASES Super sha rp 4 Bdr m home with a lge family rm Close to beach, shop ping & ~chools. Flowing \·aulted ceilings arcent ttus very aura<;11w floor plan. Only $147.500. Call today !n9-5370 ALLSTATE \'.'1-:Sl.l.Y ~ 1\YLOR CO. HEALTOHS ~llll't' l!Hli • All YOU COULD AK lloa Ate A Lrm.l llJ MOii 2 Bedrooms. 2 baths. 1,750 sq.ft. family room & separate dining room, hobby room attached to 2-car garage, large living room w/wood burning fire place. Oversized lot. beautifully l a nds ca ped . Gre at for outdoor entertaining. You can't get more for $179.500. WESLIY M. TA YLOI CO .. UAL TOllS 2111 S..Ja ; I ...... Nl*\lllllWPOll..,,,.ITw CINTB, M.I. 644-49 I 0 REALTORS '75-551 I IASTSIDI COSTA MESA SUIPllSI: T hree bedroom. two bath. with huge 24x24 fun room . cathedral ceilings, plus deck and s pa. Rustic d ecor. Asking $150.000. COLE OF NEWPORT RIALTORS 2s151. c.... Hwy •• c..r. .. w.. 675-5511 MESA DB.MAR Large 4 bedroom 2 bath family home wtth wet bar. Great location near schools and shopping. Owner is motivated so make an offer. Full price $12:5,000 s.56-2660. REAL TORS Trade your old stuff for Have something you want iiiiiiil-miiiiiiiiiiiiiiil new goodies w•lh a t.o..sell? Classl.!ied ads do t;:SELECT T' PROPERTIES B&AMT Classlfied ad. 00-5678 1t well 64.2·5678. macnab I Irvine realty FIXB St 1,000 Bring your paint brush and save thousands ' 4 Bdrm townhome. dining room . pri vate t r ee shaded patio, and huge greenbelt. Just s teps from pool. Impossible to match I Call 963-6767 Got to see it to believe it!! You would be surprised! A little TLC and wham! You've got the buy of the year. Come see this 3 bdrm . Right in Cliff Haven. You won't believe the price. HURRY IT WON'T LAST!! #215 Have something you want ~ Great Locatioa to sell? Classified ads do -Bis 3 bedroom. neat and C..COHDO Beautifully appointed. Plu s h ca rpetin g throughout. 3 Bedrooms. 3 bath condo in great location. Close to shop- ping. schools, tennis & swimming. Formal din- ing room. large family room. Fee land. Offered atS320.000 A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IAVINE COMPANY ()Pf,... ''t U • I ' I lt<1 'l fo• '' I [el&ll MIWPOIT DWLIX 2 Unils on fee la nd Across from park. Near beach, bay, & shopping. Priced al $205,000. Eves 64.2·2253 DOORS TO HACH 2·2 Duplex. Owner motivated . Open to c re ative fin a n cin g , Possibly UtUe or no cas h. Will trade property · boat · car · or ? ? 5249,000. Eves ~·11115 associated BRO"ERS REALTORS /!1 i 't/tt Brilb rJ ti' l I lib I llOIMHOME $17,900 Attract ive home with crackling fll'eplace in li v- ing room, and close to schools and shopping. Large 118X6S lot. VA & FHA financing a vaila· ble ! A real steal ! 963-6767 oPtN ri1 Q·If\1\111 •')tilt. I [eH~!UI w ... ,,_..._ 5 BR. t Ba. custom waterfront ho me w /17x38' p vt doclt. Pric ed $1 ,394 ,000. Builder w I trade for Palm Springs Estate. For details on this home and appt to see, ·call Carol Hoff. aat. 631-0094 TWOFOI~ T wo cute houses-one low price. Prime Eutside Costa Mesa rentals. 1141,500. ~7171 • "l:!l'fN Ill q." \ IUN ro111,.,Jfrr- l•IMI Owta ANXIOUS. baa boulbt another home and ii Jook:in1 at two pay· meab! Lovely executive ranch sty le in WEST CL IFF HJGIU..ANm. Featw-es 3 bedroom. spacious country kitchen and a covered pMio. The price bu recently been re· duced to Sl75,000 and owner will belp with priute flnancia11111 7'-1.501 1111. I FAIULOUS Z STOltY Multi-level home, cathe~ral ceilings, sunken living rm, 2 frplcs, patios. giant firepit. lots of trees. 3 car garage and almost 3000 sq ft of wide open spaces. DE FI NIT ELY NEWPORT AT ITS B~! ! #216 PALM~S SPICW. COteO Incredibly beautiful Palm Springs condo. Over 1300 sq ft in move-in condition. Mirrored & panelled walls. 2 community spas & pools. See the desert at its best and WATCH YOUR MONEY GROW!!! #1Z7 150/o DOWH • S 1,200/MO SHf,100 Sounds incredible? You 'r e absolute ly ri ght ! Can you imagine spa in mstr bdrm. wood siding, s pacious rooms. trees, patios & lots more. Best of all BEST FINANCING IN TOWN ! ! #218 TOMS&TOMS OfTIBS You've simply got to see this custom built home. High up in Anaheim Hills. 3000 sq ft of s umptuous living. Giant mstr bdrm. The yards look like a forest. Only $304,900. As.5UME 1~%. $1,65.5/MO! #219 SWiii PIMMSULA"· Magnificent, spectacular and only a few yards from the Pacific Ocean. 4 bdrms . 2 baths. sundecks. spa, professionally landscaped. DEFINITELY AN OCEAN PARADISE!! #220 •• i&mOM IMftSTOn. IMCOle .. Of an Tbruout our 90 offices we have an incredible variety of income property. Financing is our specialty. We put the impouible transactions together . . . results = incredible down payments, unus ual cash now, $$$ IN YOUR BANK ACCOUNT. Call today for free investment counseling. #221 ·~ Walker &lee 1111 E1t1t1 it well. 642-5678. clean. with all bit-ins and •• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-: a big pool, cool screened ..o1111 in patio. on a large )tesa Verde lot. Well priced a t only $133.950. Please call before it's too late 751·3191 C::::SELECT T' PROPERTIES CHIAPDllT PAIMT&SAVl 4 Bdrms-den, choice <"!'\<nr.>A~ •• ~.,. .. 7St-1616 MAGMIFtCEMT 8000 S/F· VIEW MANSION Sl,750,000 Vacant lot ready for building in Newport Heights. Level 60 x 90 for only Sl 15,000. ' tree lined Newport Rick Alderette, Rltr neighborhood. Anxiously 832-0440 TBNS DBJGNT! Privacy & seclusion included in this immaculate 2BR. 2 bath townhome. Ground-level. end-unit McLain "Big Canyon.'' Don't miss this for only $189,900. Suzanne Rudd 642-8235. <H-71 ) 752-1414 551-1700 Comp..\ llollev Centf!f Woodbndqe Cenieo 642-1215 644-6200 Cl()I Do•fl' O.••e H0tbor View (e<lte< r ~ ~~~~ pnced! $189.500 _H_Ol_SE_PIO __ P_EllTY ___ --t .. ---------------.. uN1v111<1"''"·"' ''''" • 12 acre zoned A·l and I~ NEWPORT CENTER • 644-9060 ~ ~ ~ _,. ............................................... / ............................................... .. ' ' I · W2~.,r ~'"· Attention I ! ~ Businesses l i ~ l A Fictitious Business Name ~ l Statement flled with the County l ·1;. Clerk Is valid for five years after 1, which time continuing i businesses must refile . l ! Publlcatlon Is necessary only If ! : there are changes. Call the 1 ~ Legal Department at the DAILY l l PILOT for Information and ~ I necessa~~;;Ed.~2 I ! ................................................................................................ :;) STOP!! Take time to relax and shopatbome. ll'ssimple with Daily Pilot Oaulfied Ads. And If you have something to sell, call a friendly ClauUled Ad-Visor at 642-5878 ls YOW' Proteuioa HOME REPAIRS! Did you know you can place a clauifled ad la the Daily Pilot Service Directory for a whole month for as tittle as $2.17 per day! For more information. call 642-5678 STAR GAZEK ..... t-"---..;..:..;..,.,..... __ ,1 CL\ T ~ POLLAN M. r-o.il)' -, GIMo K V Ace9t dlot I• I~• .Slon. V To dueiop ,.,.uog• lot Ftldoy, rtod ......t.cormp>nd1ng to~ of Vo"' Zodkle birth~ I ~IU&HI ~~~~;~~ Agent. s.56-2660 EXCLUSIVE BAYSHOIES 2591 .., •••• Dme, "" .. , ...................... ..,.. .. ....... ..._ ..... ...,.a • ,_ .....,.._wllltlWr&ll-. ..... ..... ,., _.-.., 99& S4tl.OOO ON .WATD-VIBUNT DECOR y .... -HC ..... WATH .. OMT 2-•tory ..... .... • ••• ., "' .. , ..... & ........... ..,. o..r"I .... ._ J..e.y ....._. ... _.IL pl•~•. .,.....,_ • ..,..... ..... c._ .......................... .. ...._ ... J "'4 + ....._ Sl,otl,000. '7Mt00. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATE s,,i,,, Rental•, Prl)p<!lly M~nogemenl 2436 W Coast Mwy 31!> M~rine Ave Newport Be<Kh Balbo.t Island Hl-1400 671-6900 CE 110111 ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE llC'iCANYOM Handsome Traditional Home. Cus tom Built. Overlooks Golf Course & 7th Green. Master Bedroom Wllh Fireplace & Luxun ou.s Bath. Plus Huge Walk-In Closet. Family Room With Wet Bar + View Of Golf Course_ Marvelous Gourmet Kitchen. Shown By Appointment Only S9SO.OOO. MIWPOIT HIMMft'S Two-Year Old Home With An Individual Personality. Great For Entertaining. Four Family Bedroom s + 2 "'2 Baths. G reat Storage Space. Privacy For Those Who Prefer This Luxury In Life. Owner Will Carry L-Oan. $240,000. MIW USTIM6 • WOOOlllDfH Professionally Decorated Three Bedroom Unit In Mint Condition. Enjoy Woodbridge With AJI Of Its Recreational Facilities. This Home Has An Assumable 9~~ Loan. Priced To Sell. $104,000. UIK&RNl1 159-91• #2Capa•,._ MwwpatC.....- BOAN UNOER LIBRA C S I l I N 6 X R A M 0 H C U 0 R 6 A N 0 D N 0 l E I l U J C E A N W X A l I 0 N Y D W A l l S l P N A I Y M N F I E N A T I I N E M P ft E l R I A Y R P A N P W W D l W A E E l T C S U E E I M l G Y S R T l P l I U k U S R N D H L 0 R U A E E M I A A E C N H Y 0 N GEUAHRRAOMEYATEOWOO Y A k C M M I J C N M H A S Y A I R I " H y 0 p l l ogo s E l y E OAWUlAN6 PUNLEL R S 0 I T R 0 T P P S k £ W I W l A H l A I £ £ N C A P R E D D E I D R E Y E P P E S U I Q R S M M 0 E G D I P R E T l A W I M N :...-........ ,_.:: ........... · -------., .... 1111111111111 ....... . .. ...... .Mii UMon .... Clwtll ~ _,_ -c..I .... = .. ::r. .:,-:~ s~ ... ··' a..A*y ..... v-,...,,..: ...... Dilllt ... -- ., ,... OAll 'V Pll..Ol OSITUARIES 'Sta• Wa.s' Nixed fo•-DeDDlark Kids COPl:N'liA~EN , Denmark (AP) llayblo lhe Force la with t..uh Skywalku, but Danis h chlldreo under 12 &ren 't. cen1onhlp for adults In ••. qulcllly leadin1 to • ttputa llon aa o ne of the w o rld '• m oat permlu ivt M)cae tlu On the baaia ot a blue ribbon commit tM,'11 rerommt'ndaUon. ho•C'VN. parOamenl conUnuf'd cec1w r11h!p tor chlldren mandate lt to protect chllclren from movie~ likely t o h a v e a '•bruh1.lilln1 urfti<'l." that abe and her huaband were turned away from "The Emplre Strikes Bac k " after travellna a lon1 dlatance to take their 13· year-old son and his 8·year-old sister to see the: m o vie. "I don't thi nk children will be harmed if they see two adults going Lo bed with each Qlh~r. But only ii they exj>ress love for each other, do what they do with feeling,'' he said. nouncement.a wam1D1 part!llb. In addition, t.be policy is to abow them after 9 p.m ., when children are likely to be In bed. ln • country where an a yeJlr old b welcome to see "The Happy Hooker." Denmark's cen•ors bave put the "Star Wan" movies otf Umll$ to ktcb 11 and YC>WlOr "It'• becauae of lbtt a.c-m m t.be movie that wm 1lve chUdttn a abOC'k, wall frifhtt>-n them," aald Dr. Joer1e"ll Bruun Petenen. who made the deelsion on • ''lbt Empire Strlb.a Back,·· the l«"OOd In thfl tu1bly auc ceaafw aeries. ll e mpo w f'red the-tbrer ct'naon to ban m oVIM an two u t e 1ones chtld~n under 16 and c-bUdrff\ under 12 A third cate1oey wu addt'd lhia ye•r. pare nt.a.I wam•nw for c hildren undf'r 1 11 • c:ensur hl uncertain about a film, he c:m call in either or both co ll eugues , und the l'enaor11' dct'ialoo11 11re appeal&· ble to u board headed by a JUdlJ t>. The dl11trlbutors of "Star Wars " appeal ed , and the board 'a lrrevonble rulintt upheld the ctn80n OFTEN, ntERE IS disaeree· m e nt from movie-makers or dis· lributors over the censors' a c tions, and the results can be s urpris ing. · Klaus Groos, a spokesman for the Culture Ministry. said the only parliamentary moves to end cenaonbip have come from members concerned about the money the board spends each year. THE STATION, which prides itaelf on ita independence from government interference, fre- quently shows movies and American, Britiab, French or West German entertainment pro- grams t.bat would be restricted underlbechiJdceDAOnhiplaw. THE ORIGINAL "STAa Wars" had t.be Hmt' rcustriclloo So did "Cloae l':ncounteN ol the Third Kind," "Star Trek The Motion Picturt!," "The lnC'.'redJ· ble Hulk" and even -such made for·kids features ias ·'T h e Blac k Stallion" and comi<' J o hn Rit ter's superhero spoof "H ero at Large." PETE~ EN, St, a baldang, b ea rd td pro f el\'iOr 0 1 psychology s ... td an a n Interview ht' thmks the new <'Blejlory waU bt' u11otd ut~runvely "CHILDREN AKE NOT al· lowl'd to Set-a film that de· St'tilllUtcis lh~m t o viole n ce , Lo s uffering,'' Petersen said. "Tbt-y mwit nol see a film if we feel th.-y will tc et <from It J less ub l ltty to fet!l pity " One highly publicized case in· volved the Danish movie "Du Er lkke Alene," or "You Are Not Alone ." It was restricted because it de picted a homosex· ual love scene between a boy of about 16 and a pre-teen youngster, Petersen said. Groos aald there have been no attempta to extend censorship to television, aod Petersen said there won't be any. "I don't think we have the political background to ap. proach censoring television,·' he said. "That will be censoring for adults, and we will never accept that." On a recent night, for in· stance, a child refused entry to "The Empire Strikes Back" could have gone home, turned on the TV and watched a German movie in which: For esample . a movie such aa "Tbe Empire Stnkea Back ' p ro babl y s h o uld no\ have been banned tor c hlldreo 7 l2. he said, but when b e rf'vie w ed the film in July . t.t\e new provision w as not ln use Almost a l wa y~ th\> no A man unmercifully beat and tried to smother bis wife; be tried to hang himself but was cut down, gasping for breath, by his wife; she fell in love and cavorted cb1ldren restric tions are im· polled beeau:se or violent scenes In a m ov\c K arate films, for in- s t a n <'e, generally a r e banned for those Wlde r 16 On appeal, the board r e moved all restrictions and "made guidelines about what is accept- e d much broader," he said. Sex g e n e rally i s not ob· jectionable , but sex with violenre definite ly is out, P e tersen sai.d . HANS JOERG EN Jensen , pro-nude in bed with the woman who gram direct.or al the publicly had nursed her back to health, There 1s disa~rcement, too. financed Danmarks T elevision, and the wife ftnaUy poisoned the Denmark e limina ted film The law g1 ves the c-ensors 11 good de al of lt:eway 'l'h~1 r One 1ndi ~n a nt mother com · vlaaned t o a local n e wspaper said programs that might be ob-husband to move in with her new jectionable a~e pre~eded b y an-_..!._o~er. Punch I P UBUC' NOTIC'..: l'lc:TITIOU~ IUSIHESS NAMll STATEMEHT r,.. 1o11-ino l»t"'" 1$ clOlnQ 1>u\I M>• ti PROCESS EOUIPMEN'I" OF CALI FORNI A, llSI Ellesmer• Av• , COlt• -· CA 9'162' J e. s.All .. 11. 2951 e11 .. mer• Av• ' Coll• Mew, CA 9'1620 This bUStneu "con<1<1<100 1>y an tn· llMclu•I J.E Suble11 fllls s1at-.1 wa• tiled wlln '"" County Clerk of Or•noe County on Sept, 1J, ,..,, ,UJ1ft Publl.-Orengo C:O.>t O•llY Pllol l PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICF. FICTITIOUS •U\U .. \~ NAME STollfEMl"NT 1'1451» Pubh~ Or#\Qr (._oe\t 0 1111ly PUot 11'14$71 Sept 18, 1), O<• 1, '· •"80 ....,. llO 1..-~~~~~~~~~~~~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 0" FICTITIOUS BUSINESS FICTITIOUS IUSINESS NON·llHfl'OMSlllLITY lllAME STATEMENT NAME STATIEMIEMT NOTICE IS HEAEBV GIVEN '""' Tiie IOllO#lng ~r>On\ M• oo•ng Tll• lollowlno person• ere cloln(I , ... u-sl(INO wlll not be -"II'• bU~ll\e\S '" buSIMU ti. IOf •ny -s"' lle4)illll~ contracted SHANGRI LA. l TO l C0<p0ral• GO HAWAII. 111 Cedar Street, by envont ot,.... ~" myself, on or Plua, Sulle ?01. Ntwporl B•.,cll, I Suite B, Ne-1 a..c11. CA '2"'1 •fl•• 1111\ o.te. Ca11forn1a 91660 SCott G«tlllly, 111 Oocler SI reel, Dated"'" ht ... , of AUQUst, ,..,, N E w POR T I NT E R s TA' E Su He B, __. llN<h. CA '2"3 ,_.. s. Hiii. ••• INVESTORS, INC ..• CAllrorn16 (Of Jemes Sl•ll-. 1)10 w. B•ll•N T_,. s. z.tln Porallon, J Corpor•te Pldta, Sutt• JOI, Blvd., Apt A, NeWPort Beach, CA JlJI c;.n,.,. Drive New Port Btotr>, Calllorn1a '116'>0 I n.., Cati. Mew. Ca. 92'26 T nl• b"."""'" I• conout1ed by a Tiii\ buslrwu 11 conducted by a Puo11.-Or-CoeJI Dally Piiot llmlleO part,..,,.h1p, o•rwral .,,.,,,_.,.1p, Sept 14,U.Oct. I , ltlD 3166-tO N"wpori lntt••late ~ott GenUlly lnvesoH\, Int. This slal....,,..,,t w•• llled wltll Ille PlcMrO J Lo,...,Mt County Clark ol Orange C°""'Y on Pre,10..nt Sept. 13, Ital. I'"' stat"'""nt wA• tlleo wllh lh• I "'uni "~ Count t Cltrk ol Oranll" County on S<!P-Publl\ftld Or-C.oast Dally Pllof, SUNlllOll COUaT OP THE !ember 2, I'*> S.pt 2.S, Oct J. t , 14, t'IO Sept. JS, Oct. 1, t, 1', 1'90 Pu1111st..o Or•noe Coa.t Oallv Piiot, , t *MO Sept. n ,0c1.1.•. ••. •• PUBLIC NOTICE -~~~-~--~~-~- PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUSIMESS MAME STATEMENT Tiie lollowlnQ per1on '' ootno OU\IMH.S: FOR POTS SAKE. m N H•rl>Or BIVd .• Fullerton, Callfoml• Advance ~r1Y S'(steml, In<... IUSI Typlloon Lane, Huflllngton BH<ll. c~o•oml• ,,,_ r111s bustneu Is conduct.a by a corpo,.tlon. AdvanGe P,._rty S,,_IM Marlon J, ArOI Ilk• Pnsloent l"llls 5'11""""" was fllecl wltn l"9 Counly Clerk of Orange County on SePl•mber I. ,..,, "How humlllatlng-personally ·1 would rather borrow or steal." 11'1t(Jf7 Publi~ Or-Coast Dally Piiot, SepL ~. 11, U . Oct. 1, 19'0 .14•HO PUBLIC NOTICE For the Record FICTITIOUS BUSINESS MAME.STA'l"EMENT ---.B(rCJu_ MOAG MlrMOll IAL MO~ITAL "llESIYTEalAM 11••• , .... Mr. •ncl Mrs. -.rd Cl•r-. Cost• -... Qlrl Mr. and Mrs. Brian Gilmore, Casi• -... 01n Mr. •no Mrt, TO eo IClyokawa, Corona dtl Mar. l>O( Mr. and Mra. Rona10 Van Wert, i.....,.. &Mch, Qlfl , ..... -,. Mr. •no Mrs. George Mftker, Hunt· lngton Beech, o!rl Mr. encl Mr-s. Vietor Albano. •r•lnt, boy Mr, encl Mn. Jowpf> Lanln11, Hunt· lnvton Beech, glrl IN, •ncl Mn. Ja,.,.. Ivy, lrvlne. Qlrl Mr. •nd Mrs. Pllllllp Orac."m•n. .... ,...,, llNc"· boy Mr. encl Mrs. Oevld Cumberland, Cost• Meu, boy ,.,. "*'' 11 Mr. and Mr1. l"llolT>as BorlC, Hunt-ington a..c11, boy Mr. and Mn. Robef1 Wiiiey, Costa Meu,boy Mr. and Mrs. Richard V•rnend, Hun· t1119ton llNch, gin Deai•N••~ ,.,.. ... 1J Mr"""" '~atl'.'JfOfii;"k.~~ Mew, bcl'f Mr. •ncl Mn. Oanl•I \lnetler, Coo ta Mew, boy , .... rte Mr. •ncl Mrs. Rlc'1erd Flb.-oe. Cost•Mes.a.bo'f Mr. •nd Mr1. Pttlllip Oula. C0>1a MeW,boY S ;1,£;"119, IS Mr •nd Mrs. J®n Gibson. Cool• Me .. , boy Mr •ncl Mn . Jof>n O' A90Sflno, Santa An• Hel(l,,O, Doy. Mr. and Mn. Pttlllp Sawl•lle, Irvine, Qlrl 5-•-1' Mr, and Mn. SlepMn CrOOlte. I "'lne, l>OY Mr and Mrs. AodGer Winn, Irvine, l>Oy Mr. ano Mr1. J.,,_ Kiiroy, Foun141n V•lleY, boy Mr. •nd M.-.. MlcO>a•I ICneiovlc.11, lnrlne, boy Mr end Mrs. G«lrQI ICorunero•, lnrlMi, Qlrl Deac•N•t~ The lollowlng person\ are dotnQ bu\tnen .t$ .Q.t_Sl"Rl8UTEO COMPUTI NG SYSTEQ$;"J9CXJ'Plli'h fotw ~&; lrvTne, CAlllor111a 92715 Erle ~Shey Olsen1 1'900 Par-vlt~.., •B, lr111ne ca111orn1a 'l'JIU Steven Blalnr w1111e11111 1/11 Mll<h~ll l>jo, 1•1. Tustin, Calilor,,1a 9270S TlliS l>u\IMH I\ COlllluC leO by • general P6rtnerslllp, Eric W Olsen Tiii~ Slat-I was lllecl with IM Count• Clerk of Oran~ Coun1v on ALIQull 11, 1980 11'14"'41 PubliShed Oranoe C.O.st Oall~ 1>1101, So.pt •, II, II, 2S, 1990 3611>«1 PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS IUSIHESS NAME STATEMENT Tht tollowlnQ persons are dolflQ buslneuas: OLIVERS RESTAUAAIH, JOOO Bristol, ea. .. MHI, CA '14» Oll vers Inc,. • C•lllornla cor-Porallon, lOOO 8"1SIOI, Costa Mew, CA 92•2' Tiiis businftl I\ <onduclecl by a CD<· Pof'•llon, Ollw" inc:, Melvln M Oel-Y ~ This .siatement w•s 111.0 with ,.,. LAZ.AllUS County Cieri< of Orange Covntv on .E ~~~ NJAMllll A. t.AZARUS, di.cl In Elllet Scllac llman •lso by 17 11'1U7W l.os Alemltos, C... on S.llCember 11, Qrancl<llllclren •;,d 6 g reat· PubllShtc!Or-Coast Dally Piiot, 1M al..-a lono lllNIS&. He was ... Qranclcl!llclren. Grn .. lde services Sept. 2S, Oct,?.•. 16. 1• Born In llllrw. Llltluenle, on Auvust 221 _,. .. 1c1 on T-Y. S.ptemi.r JJ. ...... ._to .... UnltN St•es as. ,. •I J:OOPM ...... H-u- chlld In Ille -•Y 19'0'•. His parents, Mount Oii .. ~l•I Perk. Services MMrls ... DllWI UIM'\S, MUied In under .... dlrectlOn of H•rtlor LI .... 80.ton,_ ~hus.ttJ wller• hn· Mount Olh• __ ,of Costa Maw. t•mln was ecNc:atecl In Ille publl< S40-SU4. sci.ota In the tecllnlcal tr-depart· MELSON PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT ment of Norllltastern before II LOREHE J. NELSON, roslOlnt o1 bee.am• • ..,1 .. rs1ty. He~-In • C.osta Mt!wo, Cl. Pass.cl away on Sep. -lac:tar, st Ille GE Pl-In Lvnn. tember 13, 1990. Survived by lier MHHcllus.th .,.lore opening his 11..-no Clal,.. Helson of Cosla Mew lemlly -•lore In Nortll Sllor• C•., 2 cl•wgllters encl SOl! .. ln·la.; BH<ll T-. He IS wrvlWCI ..., Ills Margaret elod .-. HHlcl ol Nebraslt• •II• Bes•I• and tllelr 4 clllldren, encl Donne and George rtllo of A.-tcl, ,,,_.,..,, Miidred MMcus and •Newport 8Mcll •. C.., t brolNr lteb. Tne fotlow•nQ Ptr\on ·~ do,,,o bu''""°" a\ ~IOELITV Pl!OP ERT Y MANAGEMENT COMPANY, 1SSOS L• M•r~da, ldouna Hiiis, (alllorn•~ '1bH Howaf'"d Ltwr•nc• OutMn. 1HO~ La Mtrclda, Ltlquna Ht11\ C•Htorn1a 9203 Tho• bli\lness '' tonducled ,,., an 1,,Cll'JtdU~I rACIRC VIEW MIMOllAL rAltlC Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pactftc View Onve Newport Beach 644·2700 McCOIMICIC MOltTUAltlES Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cap1slrano 495·1776 HAalOll L.AWH-MT. OLIVE Mortuary •Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave , Costa Mesa 540.5554 P'IBClllOTHUS MU. UOADWAT MOITUAltY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 IALTlAlaGUOH SMITH 6 TUTHIU WISTCUH CHANl 427 E 17th St Cosla Mesa 646-9371 P'IBCIMOTMlll IMmtl' MORTUAIY 627 Main St. Huntington Beach 536-6539 ,., ...... , COl.OMIAl ...... AL NOMI 7801 Boise Ave, W..tmlnster 893-3525 . I Harry L. Oedy ol a.ta MeY, C.., 2 ..,.,..~,dOuMn This ~tate'"""l .. as 111•0 wltll '"" County Clerk ol Or•n<JI' County on S..ptem~r 8 1"80 F 1447M PuOll\""" Orar'90 Coast Oaooy Piiot, S.-p1 11 19, 2s. 0< 1_1_1"80 'll>"H>-80 PUBLIC NOTICE •1st•" ~ Flnr of Los <>-too, Ca. and Myrtie Brano of N•bras ka, ) orenclcllllclren end s g re•t· or•ndc:llll-. f'..,.••I wrvlcH will .,. llelcl on Frida,, Sept.,.,ber 2•, l'llC> at lO:OOAM at tile Fir.I Unllecl Metllocllst Olurcll wltll Rev. OMorles 0 . Clarll olflclatlnQ. Interment at H•rbor ~ Nletnorlel P.,k. Frl-s m•y cell at Piere• Brot,,.,. Bell Broeoway __ ,on Tllurldey, Se~ temller 25, lflO from 4:00PM to OllANOE COUNTY SUPIERiCiil t :OOPM. In llW of f!owe" -lions . COURT mey .. -'° tlw ~ ~·'°" 1• CIVIC CEMTEll DlllYE WEST Memorl•I Fund, First United SANTA AMA, CA(l"OllNIA Metll9clllt Olllrdl, 420 W. tetll St., PLAINTIFF: YEISER·GARLA~O Coste.,..., C.. ftt21. Pletca B..-rs & ASSOCIATES. a PMtntrslllp llelllr_y __ ycllrectors.. DEFENDANT· CLYDE H .. VLEY, llUDY. . JERRY ICING, Individually encl 001"9 DAPHNE BllENOA GEORGINA bu•lneu as CHJay, tnt.,mod•I lllEADY. ,...,..,. ol c.o.t. Mesa, ca. Se"'I<•• -Fumfslllnos Company, for I y~. Pa...O -•Y on Sett-••It• CeeJay Furnlshln9s, • co· te"'ller 21, 1tl0. S..rvlwcl by lier ....-tMrVllp, AHO DOES t.10 llulMM Oevld __,, of ....,_, 2 SUMMONS -Ke..in D. llMcly of Sen 0 .... , Cto. CASE MUMBEa JMM6 Mid Gwy C __,,of R-. Hew ... , a NOTICIE I Y• NW ...... -'· T ... de"fllter 1(-F. llNCIY of ~ <•rt ,..., dac._ ....... -•-BHcll. c:.to •• • wotller Geor911 An· yew 11e1,. .,. _.... -,......... darsen, l slat""'· Oof'otlly S..ltll, wltllln • uys. ltHtl tM l1tfermetlefo M•roaret Matt.an •no Sylvl• An· llelew. darsett. "'1-.,,,ka werw lleld •t II you wlsll 1o _., 111e aovlce ot en 11111 Hwtllr i.-Mllt'twi.1 OWpel. •1t0<My In tills matter. \IOU 11\ould oo 5i1,..1c95......, .. cllnl<t14111 of H•bor so promptly so tllet your written U-,.... Oltw Mllrtusy of Coste ,..~ ... II any, may be flled on time. Meta.,...... AYllOI UllM lie .... dllm•Afl ... ST•t• El ~ _. dllea.tr c.Mre U•. llOSE W. STEIN, r•ldllftt flf El lltl ....._ ... -.-IH .......... ,_, c.a. ,_.... _,, • tie11u ...... ,. ........ •a fllls. ...... .--. n. ••· ....,,.,.. ~•.., .... "Su c ... _. ..... . ol El T-, c:a. "'1,,... 9Nlc• Wiii lie SI USIH ..... lllllkllM el <-)ode ll•ltl In tlle famllr plot at N•w un •bo9aclo en n,. asunto. tlellefll•' Mefltefl6re Me,_,lal "•rl<, "'M llacerlo lnmedl•t•ment•. cl• est• Lawn, lMlt I...._. -Yerll. Hartlor maner• .... _. .. esc:rlt•. •I ll•Y L9Wft M9ultl OI""' Mert\Norr "' c... ateune. ~ -r119lstr.s. a tlempo, Meta..._. .. ~,_SJM, TO THE OEf'f!NOANT: A clvll ------------~1 cotnplelnt hn -flled by tlle Pl•ln· llff eval111t "°"' If \IOU wllll to defeno tl!la tawwtt, you """'' "'""'n JO dllys ---:====-====,----ii after lflls --IS -vect on .,OU, PUBUC NOTICE •ec:nnous •utt•au-1 flle with thl• ~ • written rescionse MAMS ITATaMelfT , to , .. complalnt. Unlfts you 00 so, TM fell0wt"9 pe~s •••.,.I"' your dtflllllt Wiii be entered on ·~ lluilflll• •: Plltetlon of the ptalntltt, ano tllls court I a & a. 1.00 0.... SC,..., S..lt• may antw • J.....,_t ag.tln1t you for 111. ~ llMdl, CA ftMO Ole reOtf damendlcl ln Ille compl•lnl, T,_,_ J . ..,recll. Jr., • ln,,.r• •llkll COWlcl ,.....11 In .. rnllllment of -i.-,......,. IMOI, CA.,... wages, talllftg of -Y °' pniperty or "-"10. ..._, , ....... lteed, otllar rell" ,..,..tff In tile com· ..._I .. , CA.,. ptalnl. TMa ...._. la c_.., 1W • OA Tl!O: M8ttft 1t. ,_, llflllltM ,_.... ..... LEE A. BltANCH, """-J. knick, Jr. CIM'll f'llll ........_.. -fl ... wtttl tlw• BrAMYSILllA, C:-tr Claf'I< et 0r..,.. '-IY en OeiMv ..... u, ,.., II LAW Of' ... ClllCM' U... Lo...... OIOltM I. J••11a1n .. ............. 611 ........ c..r DftW ............ CA... I ..... ". 'hit C1'Ml1 .. ,W ........... CA ... .... ,,~ . ......., .. , ~ ' ,.... ...... er-. CMet o.i.,, "''°'j ., .. , ....... S.C. as. Ott. I, t, ti, a• PutllltMtl Or.._ OM•t Detty l"llot, *7 ~,,.. 41.11, 11, U. IM ll6U-to ' h ---~1 NOflCE OP MOM-•IESl'OflSlllLITY STATa.Ol'CALll'OttMIA "°It FloM:nt *HO PUBLIC NOTICE Nolle.a Is ,..,•by 91..,.111a1 1,.. un-TME COUttTYOf'OaAMGE Publlsl'ted Ora"Vf Coast Dally Piiot, i _--. oe"1onec1 w111 not .. """°"''"'• '°' casa NO:,.,...., ~Pt •. "· ''· 1s. 1'!80 1620-80 PUBLIC NOTICE ~--~~....,......,.., ---NOTICE 0" "EaSOMAL .. v.u .... OTlc"l' 'eny debt .. "' llabllltlH <.onlrKled by •E .. llESEMTATtva·s IALE 011' PUBLIC NOTICE A lien wle Will be 1-ld Tllursclsy •nvone oti.r It\.,, "'Ysell, °"°'•Her llEAL ... O .. EaTY AT .. lllYATE MOTICE INYITl•O llDS O< t-r 9, 19111 at t:OO '""' on ttw pre 1111, elate. ---- m1SH •I SJD E. CMJI Hwy , New Oal.O tNs 11111 O•y of September ~~Er~":c,=:::;:.; of Illa NOTICE OF DEATH OF .. ~~!1';!~1~1l1:,8~.,~l~I:. ":: e .. cll,C..onllleloll-lnQwnel: I l'llC>, Perton and htale ot: STELLA -ROBERT JAY BRANOT, labor, materlah, eqwlpmeftl, • ~t t71'BN, 24' We•tbll, Hull e.ri:;;:1 ~..,,,:,:,. ALBERTINA Ou80tS.Con»nr•t•. ii k ii R 0 B E R T J • tren_,..IOn -l!Udl-fecllltles CF 2._.E.K JI' 8 llbo H 11 1,.,,1,. c. niu NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that BRANDT ilkil ROBERT u may i. reqwlrecl tor STllEET •2lt50I • • y, u f Publlsllecl 0;.n~ Cont Oally OOllOTHY BEllGQUIST .. co• .. B RAN r) T AND OF MAINTENANCE Cl~t• ""-11 Tiw --"'"" Piiot SeiJI u 2' Oct 2 IMO WNetor ..... "'41 •t prt ... te Wle, to,... p E T I T I o 'N T 0 A eftCI 1 ... ,..,, wlll .. tec•I-"' -• ' ' ' ' lllghut -llfft bidder, u"*r ,,,. 0 • City Of o.ta IMY M IN oflke Of -o.A11iae.~v111-~~~ ~ms_c_u-.. ,..INlft.,,...... MINISTER ESTATE NO. C1ty C1fflt.,nFatr0r1 ... costa1111ew, Publl•hecl Or•110-Coa.sl Da lly t............. '-'II 1 Pl ·-PUBLIC NOTICE --· enc1 -1ec1 to con11rm.t1on bv A-105_,,_ ..... orn a.""'" -"°""of 11 :oo a.m., 101· ....,., U, ,.., ltle 5-IDr Court.., ~r JO. ~. • Oct-1, 1•.mtwNcl\tl,..t .. y"'Clll _.., ----'*· e1 tO:GD a.m .. 1n ~..-J, °' T o a I I h e t r s , be --publk t, -·--'" -------1<1CT1T1ous1uS1NE.SS INrHtter wttNn ._,._a•-by bene ficiaries, creditors 111e c-11 CMmt•n. S.•IN pro. • PUBLIC NOTICE NAME STATEMENT •-. •t t11e aHta of H, TED HERTZ. and contingent c reditors of -·· --.,,. 1111e of the~ Tiie tollowtno persons are cloln9 attorney for tlle consenat0<. 12900 and Ille -of -lllO!lotr llut "° PIC'tlTIOUS IUSIMESS bu•lt>ttsti: Garden Grow lllvcl., Swlle • IU, Robert Jay Brandt, aka otller cllstll'IQUltMno ~kl. Any bid NAME STATEMENT J 0 E SW ER IC S CA E AT I \IE Garden Grow, Calllorftl•, '2JMJ, •II R Obert J . Brandt, aka received """"' IN tehecluled clOM119 Tiie 1o1tow1119 ...,.'°" IJ 001r19 11u1I· ElECl"RO•ocs. 111 w, s111. Sult• No, 1t1e rlQflt, 11t1e. 1n1-1. -HUi. ot R 0 be rt Br and t and aim.'°' 1t1e receipt of bid•""'""-•• ness as . '· Santa AN, C.llfornia '2701 , .. ~-. -all -rl(lflt. title. ' turned ta -~ -*· II 1"911 BEST O'NA'l"U ltE, Hit w_ Josepll Step,,.,. Lecher. 1us.o tnterell •no nt•t• 111e1 111e con· perso n s who may b e 11e111eto1e._lbllltyof1t1ebl0der Sunll.,_rr·•.s.nlaAM,CA'2'°' Harbor B1vc1., No. 212, Senu Ana. servet~ofSTELUllALBERTINA otherwise interested In the 1otHt11etlll1bicl t1rece1-1n- Ju,., a. Tenw•, u-11 w. Sclnfl-r ca111om1en104 0ueo1s, -aqu1..o.,., __ o1 will and/or estate: 11 .... T ... s.nta AN. CA n'°' L-Coill11 M<Gow.,,, 931 Wm 1-or GUWwl• .... , ,...,,, or In -. A petl lion has been filed -~ ~11~10 .:~.11a~~.~ lsloMto Tiiis -'-Is concluc\ecl by an In. Ouft!le Aoecl, S...t• Ana. C.llfornl• dltlon to. -ol -~nr•lee, at . • --~ _,. .,_..,.. ~ ..... ._.. 01.1-1. mo. u. tJ-d u. oroor crMtlno MOCll by D1ck1e Stephens in the ti. s1a-.isp11dtkM-maybeot> .Mwr'f B. hnw• sue Ellen Ma~ln, mt Cypns.o, con-..--.ip, In -to •II -<•r· Sup~rior Court of O range ialn•ct •t 111._ olflu ot 111e c11, . nm---lllW with ~ !M!Me -,-catlfomlettret;-· a.IA·#Hl 1111-'"'~I ....... City C Ur t ti th t Er>OI-. n P'M Ori .. , C.ta Mew, C-lyCler'llDfOr-Countyon~ llllS busfMn Is conouctecl bye ol Garden Grow, Or•noe Cownly, 0 n Y reqUeS ng a • C•lllomfa, -nonr~ ... y. lember1',1.., QeMr•IP«tMnlllp. Cellforni.,d1Hcr1becleslollo.$:11111 D ickie Stephens be ap-menlofSIO.GD.A.11eddltlonel dlar0tDf "usm JO!IOIPh S. Leci.r L•mpson Aw,,_, Garden Grove, p O j n t e d a S per Son a I S2.00 wn1 be -If """"'ecl by m•ll. Pu1>11-Or-c.i.st O.lly Piiot Tiiis •t.i......,1 ..... flleci w1t11 ,,,. c.111oml•, n.c, -..-. parttcutar· represent atl ve to ad •1 Plan" sooclllc.uons -~ c-S.p1. 11,zs,0ct. 2, •. 1• J11t.«1 Cou111y Clerk ol Orange County on lyclHcrlbecl•: , . tract clocwments may also lie••· -~----------.AUQust n.1•. LOT I OF TRACT 11U OF mtntste r the estate of •mlnecl911Nofflceofti.Clty Clertr PUBLIC NOTICE .,_ "GAil OEN GROVE MANOR," AS Robert Jay Brandt, aka oftM CltyofColt9'1-MI. Publi\ftldOr-O>ast O•llY Piiot. SHOWN OH A MAP RECORDED, .. Robert J Brandt aka Eull bid Sll•ll "" made on ta.. -Sept ,. "2S Oct , 1• »...., B 0 0 I( 3'. p AGE s 2 3 0 F • , ProPowl '°""· -P·1 Ill~ P-4 S"TAT•MaMTOiA" .... DOlllMEMf --.:.-:.-..:......: ' . MISCELLANEOUS MAPS llECOROS Robert Brandt (under the proY IOlcl In Ille contr«t CIOC-o"usao• PUBLIC NOTICE o F o It ANGE co u HT Y , Independent Adminlstra· •nd •11•11 11e accompanied l>Y a PICTtTlOU$8USIMESSMAME CALIFOllNIA. tion of Estates Ac t). The c..-tlllecl or tallller'• cllllck or. bid Tiie IOl!owlft(I --...... -· PICTITIOUS. Tiiis .... Is -IKI to <urrenl lHH, t •t . . t f bOnO for not , .. , than 10% Of ..... -,,.,. .... o1 ,,.. Fictitious Busl· USIMEIS cow•o•ntt. conclflloN, rntr1c-t1on•. pe I ion IS se or h earing, amount of in. b!cl.,..,... .,., • .,.. 10 u. ""' ........ , T.11• ·=..!'!.":!:~".~. cloln '1olllt•. '""" ol •ay, -.... -. -1n Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Clay ol Costa-· No -I .... II COUNl"AY FLOWERS, 190'1 l!uslneu•: (I .. Isling enc-anc-. of record, II Center Drive, West , in the : c. '°"' ... ,., ... 1eu _,_..., '!' 8-c.ll Bl..i., Hunll"91on BHc."· c.. NEWPORT ENTERPRISE lino any. C i t y of S ant a An a J s..ch , • .,,..,.., ci.ck. c.,., or~' ,,_ N••-1 Bllld .._ 8Hc.~ ,. Tiie terms and c-ltlons of YI• C . • , bond. Tiie Flo ltlous 91n1,_, Name r• 926'1 ·• ._.._., • ...... ,., call\ lfl 1..tu1 money of,,... unit· alafomta on October 14, No 1>1<1-.1 be cons1-un1ets 11 lerrecl lo -Wft (lled In 0.-llone \/, Flsclll, l010 Newport td Statad Amerl<a; Or, partial CHI\ 1980 at 10:()() a .m . I'' m-on a bl-lonn fwml-by eouns:,v,,::~ ~'. 1511 Al!\•zon Blvd .• ~ 11Nc11, CA '2M:I ano .,.,,... c.-t. Ten -cent <1"'4> IF YOU OBJECT t o the ,,. citv of o.ta ~ -1' m.-In Rim Clrcl•, Fountain ll•llev. c• AllCT!';"'s.':i=·~°'..,~p11in St,. =.:-!o'"::1.!'.:!':~':;:;:9;'c~ granting of the petition, ~~"°,.~~--::.::W'slonS"'tllt n7oa 'Lv..ft stontao' 109 0otp111,. st rlect-iectto~1mwtt1onof.,..w1e you s hould either appear E•cll ~ ,,_.,. tlUMH and Debbie Dea Smith, 1021 Apt. #t SHlllNch CA"'740 ·· by Ille c.w1. T._, r.m.s, -rellftg at the he<lrinn and state also p,_...llleclau-4..0by .. w. Forclv-. E.1 To">. CA '26Jll A ' • -malM--·--_. '.... • Tiie City Ouw::ll of "'9 c.tty ot C.ta r111s -Inn.I was.--by• A i;,n:,. ~lreefl.CAl20 P•lo Alto mluma 4'1 lllMwenca acc9P1a.,.1o , .. yo~r objections or ftle Mew,_._ IN rl9M to ,..IK1 .,., oo,.,., .--"'1lp. ";i;11 .Mi,.., "::"c....::;., 1>y • pure..._ INll .,. ..,.... .... as of tM written objec.tlons with the or •II bids. TlllS =:..'!.-~ •1111 ti. gener••-"'"""P dllt• °' <Clf'lflnNllOn of se1e. Tiie ... court before the hearing TM c:..trador -11 comply wltfl lloN v Fl.d-1 •mlnetlOn of tltle, ,...,orc11no of con-You a,.._a be. tlle provlaloN of s.cu-1TIO to 1711 C-ty o.rtr d Or ..... C-nty on~ Tiiis ~ Wft filed wilt> Ille veyence, ellcl e11y lllle lns.,rance r ~ ranee may lncwslve, Of Ille Calllornle ullor tember u. 1•. c-ty o.n "'Orenea c:-.ty s.-po11cy ....,, .,. .,. ,,. .. _ of ""' In person or by y our at· coca, 1t1e .,..,,.111no r• -Kale o1 "'am temlle• " •• on _c.._. torney. ..,_. et1.e1111.-ltf , .. City of c.ta Pubfllftod 0r.,. C.oart Dally Piiot • · Bids or offwn .,. lnwll9d for 11111 I F y O U R Mew wNcll .,.. flled wltfl -City S.pt, 11, 2S, Oct.?, f , ,.., .,,..,., p Pl..._ Pf"Operty encl,,_ be In wrltlnQ -A E A Clerk of .. 1c1 City; --II forfeit llbll-Or-.goCMSIO.lly Pllot wlllberecelwedet"'90ff1UofH.TEC CREDITOR o r a cont· penalllaspreter._-.fnlor-· P UBLIC NOTICE 5-pt. II, U, Oct.'· t . ,.., J7..._., HERTZ, ..,_y for ti. c.onwrvator. fngent Creditor Of the de· compllancul tlw wlcl ea.. PUBLIC NOTICE ., 11'00 ~ Gro .. BIVd., S..11• ceased vou must flle vour EILEEN P. PHINNEY -----;ICTITIOUS IUSIHEIS MAMa STATEMENT II 145, Ger-.1 Gto .. , C.tlfornle, '2Ml • ' ' ' Oty Clertl of Ille ------------or may .. ,...,, wtt111t1e <...,.of.,. claim with the c ourt or OtyofcoataNlfte T lie lollowlnQ persons are clolnQ bu•lneuas: SUNlllOll COUllT OP Sup.rt or co.,rt. or oallyered to presen( it to the personal Pwbllshecl 0r-. C.oast Dally Piiot Cou .. TY~~".1!..EL•s 001toTHv 1E1tGOUas-r. -c..... representative appointed ~-25• Oct. 1• 1• _,,.., OUALl'l"Y rooL.S. 1356 Wataon An,. Calla MHA, CA '262' ..... ...... ...... '"' Aw-. ~1•• Mt.-.... 5S407 b th C........._A.11M1 perunelly ... e11y time alter""' Y e court within four 1-------------~ Rl<Nnl A-rtton, 1"6 Wal,.,,. 1.n ti!• M•tt•r 01 ANTHONY publketion of ""• -1ca -....... months from the date of PUBLIC NOTICE AICHARO.OOMlllllC PETERS Minor. melll119.. ...... first Issuance of letters a s r---::,,.,,,=,.,,.,.-,....::.,....,.-_._ __ Aw., Cosla IMW, CA '2•» W.,nn Helw, 1154 Watson A ... , co1t•M.,•.CA'262' ~:mrs,: ::-:..•,=::~'~ ,:,: =~~.·~.::;~:"ofa;'! II.,'.~ provided In Seclloo 700 of "~~~'::!.::::::' pereflu . torN1ylcrtN~•l«'.TherlQMls the Probate Code of The followlng P••M>n Is doing TlllS ou.slrwu Is conducled by • (leMral pa~s/\lp. To Gflbltl'1 LMon R-<prnume0 ,.. .. .-toreteclany eioc1at1blcl1, California. The time for ouslMss•: ,., .... , --rHtloVts untu'O-lftCI "·TED M••TZ fill ' • • I LAGUNA POINT """~P"HY Rlc...,cl ROblrtson Tiiis \lellemenl was lflecl Wllh Ille Cou~r Clertr of Or•noe County on Sept. 23, 1'IO. 1oa11per~ct•lmlnQ to11et,.1M11er A.._r•u. . ng c.a1ms w1I not ex-._..,_ ~ .1211 or mot.lier of wlcl minor pej'!on •l>O.. ............... ....... pt re prior to four months ~~=~::.:;:1• 142• a.,._ Buell, named. ,..._ S"MI from the date Of the hear• L-A. Funtl. 27*1 Vktorla Or., By order of '"'' Court you •r• ._...,_,CA ftloO I t• ed bo u-r. --~-.. c II"-I -... 11'14S7M Pul>ll-Or-C.oast Delly Piiot, Sept. 2.S, oo. ,, '· "· t9'0 11ereby c1ttc1 •nd required to •PIM• Tet: 17141ur..JNt ng no IC a ve. ....... ----. · • .... n • ..... 1 before tlw Judge Presiding In Depart-Publl,,..., Or-eo.11 Dally Piiot YOU MAY EXAMINE ,,,:1~1~-1' concluc1ecl by •n ment '4, rm. 411 of Ille ....... entltlecl s.pt. 11, J.4, 25, t• lllMO the file kept by the COUrt. "1.a .. ---------~ court, loc.tea st"' Nor1h Hiii Street, If you are interested in the Publl-o.._ Coe.st Dally Piiot, Los A~. Calllornl• toOU on Nov-~ tt 11 2.S ')cl 1 PUBLIC NOTICE ember 14, '"° att:» A.M, of,,,.,...,,, PUBLIC NOTICE estate, YOU may file a re-' • • • · • ,.., ,....., STATEMENT OF W.fHDA"iWAL FROM PllATNEAS"IP OPE RATING UNOER 111en ano tnen 10 -c.auw, 11 .,, quest w ith the court to re--~-~--_.._ ____ _, :"c1!~:.W:::.~ ... ~':.':i! MOTICE a•vm•omaos ~eive special notice of the PUBLIC NOTIC . .,. parents eccordll'l(I to Ille petlllon on NOTICE·~~ 1.!::'E~ ~\/EN that tnVentory of estate assets '-=------~---r.-- llle ..... 1n. '"'" Pt"OPOMls w111 ... recelwo 11'1' and of the petitions, ac-PtCTlnous au11NHS FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME file following ouS® Ms .. 11hdrawn tH~ d g~"""·' 1 par tr~ r I rom the partntrst\lp Ol"'raltnQ under the lie ''"ous ous•nf\S narT"e ot THE PLVMBERS, al qo17 °''"'"'" Onvt. HunttnQ10f'\ 0e'9C:P'I. Cat1torn1a Fat fell..,. to Mtancl, you may .,. u. city o1 o.ta.Meu. to wit.: TIM Cl· c; o u n ts a-n d reports ....,. STATllMaNT °"1Nc19uOtyof•contemptotcourt. 1y c:-cu, P.o . eoa nao, c..ta ,... .. , described in Section 1200 TM IOllOwttlo --11dlllne111111· The petition lllad "9reln Is for Ille Celllornla m., on or before , .. llOUr NIU•: ll'lf'POM d ll'Wln(I ti. ~b)e« cl!llcl for of 11 :GO un. on TIM'lday, Octo«oer t, of the callfornla Probate DIANA'S BEAU'TY WOllLO, 16311 place,,_ tor .-..CIOn. IM. It _, .. IN r-slbllltv of Code. N. Pr-II St.. s.nta AN, c:a. tt1tt Oeted: 5-. 16, tM. Ille blddW ID dlll-Ills bid to IN City Olene LynM Call all..,, 11721 1 he tic11Hoo~ t>uslnto\S n11m• \tat• '"""' for tf'W! oartner~hiO wa~ hltd on May I . 1'80 In I~ County ol OrenQf' Full Nam" ano AOdt., .. ot th• JdWIJ.c.orc.orM, c1er1<'•0fflce11Yt11e,,,_r_ea Ro~ L. Humph-y•, s.11ne1,GardllnGrow,c:..,.. c-ilY Cieri< ti-. lllcll wtll be "'*kly --...0 .,... • • • • Tlll1 .....,_II ~tty Ml In· ByR.Klllllpo, reaoa-.t11:aoa.m.,or .. ._. Attorn•y at L•w, 111 .,..,..,.,, o..MY ta.r.41ft«aspractk -on Tllundey, Dover Ori .. • Suite •• 0t-.1..ca11....,. JellllM.IM-.Clmlyc.-.1 Octotlef t, 1•, tn IN C-11 CNom· " 1 ••• Tiiis _..,..,. -llled wltft n. Per\on WHN:traw1ng Oor>atd Alar> Bruf\k, ~11 Chr<slln" Orlv~. Hunllngton Buen Calllorn1a Oon•IO A Brunk C:.ra4t..~. •rs. c11y HMI, n Fair 0r1 ... co.ta Newport Beaic:h, C.. '2MJ; c-tyo.tt110r....,.Coeu11ty.,.s.p. ~rc:..tfc-.t Mesa, Callfornla tHH, for tlle tel: MS-2710 *"W4, 1-. F1J7Sl4 Publlsr.eo OranQf' Coast Oa•I~ Pilol, Sept. 4, 11, 18, 75, 1"80 H81·80 PUBLIC NOTICE _M................... f"rnl1llln9 of "AIHT, TRAFFIC, LMA ...... CA_,J LINE, IHSTANTORY-Tal! fH.ttll Addi-lllll el IN ..,.c:llk ata... c-. .. La......... may be -Nd st 1N Otlke of Ille ~,-..... ........ Pllf'CllHll'IQ AteM at n Fair Drlw, Pllbllllwd Or ... CMst Dally Piiot, Cotta Mesa, Callfllrnla. llklS should .. Sept. U, Oct. 2, f, 16, IM retwr-to Ille -tlOn of Ille City --------------=----------atS_HD-'-Clerll, wlttlln Mid •-llmll, In • CT T OU I S SS IHlad enwlOll9. lcla!ttHled on tile ovt· ":W:-~ sT!T:M'::T PUBLIC NOTICE side wltll IN llct I tam N-•ncl the TM fOll-lng Plf-I\ OOlnQ bull· Opefllllg ~. MH ... DMD'> Eacll llld llMlll specify each ..... COUH'l"R Y FLOWERS, 190'1 etOTICROt'"BUCIAL• every time .. set fortll '" ti!• Be.ell Bllld., -lnvton Beac:ll, CA OP ... MOMM. .. llOPSaTY specHac.ta... Anr -ell h<9'1119M fH41 NOTICE IS HEllEBY 01\IEM tMt to tM ...-lflca.tlenl "1Ult .. Clffrlf Sendra IC. -..._,, 1511 AmallO!' poi~ ID 9ICtlall ~ flf tlw CIYll 1tat• In IN 11111. -f•ll-t9 9" River, F_,taln Valley, CA '270I Code, State flf C.llfernl•, 11111 ""· I01111 • ..., I.,. In UW ..,.c:Nlcat1-Thl• ~f\IHs Is concluc:t.cl by an In· clers19Md wlll _., et "'*I< Nie by llNll .,. .,_,. for ,.Jectlen of ti. cllvlclual. com111111t1 .. lllddll'll on tlle lolltl .. , flf bid. Selldr• K _,...... Octoller, 1•, et m• e'clec• A.M., on E•<ll bid lllall 111t lor111 the Ml Tiiis ,. .. _ -· lllecl wllll Ille tile praml-~ .... ~y .... NI-• -~ .. of .. , --County CIH11 of Or~ County on Sep.. ....., ....,, ...., wflldl -._mt ...., .,.rti. 1-.... lfl -,.........., tember IS, TM Pul>llc S ...... , IM., *5 ,...._.la II .. llld ls"• C«l*'et14111, _.... tM ll'ltllff A .. ., If! tllt Clty0fc.A9 Meta, c:-.ty fnamet If .. Clffleen .... CM 119" en Publl"'9cl 0r-. C.oasl Dally Piiot of Ora1119, MR el c.aafwftl•, IN .., .. -on..,.....oftlltcwpjWatlon s. 1 11 " oct 1 ' ,.., .,._., ....,..,_. ...... chettlM or pef'MMI Mid wtllltlltf ,,.,.. 1Mn -llfftcer 0 · • • · • ' ~ ClelUttllll ...... In tM l'llM· must slJn. If ti!• bltl ts by • PUBLIC NOTICE ten Of: ... ~or• Jcllnl ..,,tur•, sUW WllllM'l .. llcll; golf c9dtly, 2 llwMIMS-aclllNunOhll ..... ,.,, ----------t•llles. 10 boaes perMnel lt•m• . .,.r1Mrs_lolfll_turet.11ii.lll• "ICTITIOUS IUSINaSS Marwin ,._, c-11. 6 \atllff, a tier II • ... ,,..,lftlnlllp w .,..._ MAM• ITATUMNT '•· .... -· ..... "*"'· -JI ... m, tMt ... .., .. ,..,. un•r • Tiie fottow11111 --I• clolno bu•I· lie••• ~I Item., s wltc-s, fktlttoua -· .. 11111 ....,, • lfl n. ""'s~~IE pfYfC)H ENTEllPlllSES, ~HY •. IHtlleft: mo =.:-:.=111--:..:::11 .~o:: )110 .. artt HewllQri •JOI, llle•pert ........... _ .. ,... ....... ltlle llctltlwt R-1''; prewlllH, 8"<11, c:.. ftMO tM ..... ~ ........ fMlll ........ -... fletltleul -........ Sllsl• S. Peyton, II tO Park c• aftly end,_. w at tlle tl!M flf tltM IHll-tllln II • Ctlf'l'9ftt ,.. Haw-• •JO•, Ne'"*1 ....... ca. ,we.._ .... ,~..--.... 111tratlMI wlttl tlle OHnee c-ir '2..o H 111 aM ,,._. .. ,_,,,..et .. tlMe litK.,..,, lfl ca. flf COf'llllt1lt1-. In- Tiils IMI""' 1, <~IN bY an'"· "'~ ........ t ....... ~ CIM ... -.... ~nt, dlwldllal, tetletlefl 111 .. ftllftll Ill llttle-lt IKretMY, T,__.,,.,.MIMBW. Mle!o .... yton .. ._lailtlleN_. ........... r1Y. TlleCltrC»tlftCllllf .. CttvflfC. .. Tiii• It.--.. -llled wltll Ille ~ .... t-.., el tie•IM9r. MeM -.. ntM to reject eny C-ty ca.n. Ill Or...., COumy on Sff• t•. er ell_.... lenl"9f 16, t•. • "19l.IC il'OltAGI, INC.. OatM! _....... U, ttlO. "'..,... ~ fll"*411Mt1 Or.._ CMtt O.lly Plllt. "Ubll,,_ 0r-. Coeat 0.lly Piiot P\IM ..... Or .. Ole.a 0Mly fltleoc a..t. IS. t• 5"t 1e. ts, OCI, I, t, 1'90 Jlll-IO ·Setit.ts,Oct.J. '"' .. ,... ..... Publlllllld 0r.,. coast 0.111.::· "'*I"'" 0r.,... c.. Dally l"llet ~-18, "· u . ,.., Sept. II, IS, Oct. t, '·"" .,,... PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE O" a•Te•MD TaAldPaa UMDaa llCT14*1191 MtD ._,. CALl~NIA BUIUllUIMtD f'llOt'RUIOlll COD9 1. "-of 11<-. Illa Soclal SK .. lty IUl'ller, ..... ...,_Ill I~ premltn, IMIWlno Zip Code: OOllOON It. HANSMAW, Sec. sec. Me.: ~S495. ls.A Adlms, C.ta MAM,"" ,_._.l.~ES A. TltENT, Soc. SK. Me.: U>*SGl, 1Joe.A Ade!M, C.te Miila, CA.a. 2, N-, 5oci.t secw1tr nlll'fller. Mid...,_ .. ........,.~. fn.. clvcll"9 lip Code: l(YUSUL ICIM, Sec. Sec. No.: filiMt."'7, .... L.. Well LIMefft A ... , AN!lelm, CA tnOt; MYUMGA KIM. Sec. Sec. Ne.: ~ ...... n.o L, well Lincoln A ... , ANlf!.!l~.CA .... _. _ J. Kind .. Lk-111 lfl---to lie tr9111fttTM: Off S... ~I~ Ho.:U..,..t 4, TllUI c-ldltretlon to be paid for_......_ -•ac-It St»•• Detcrltlt*I A,,_. C:.tlldePllltecllMOascrow t.•.• OemMd NoW to be recllaefnfcl In catll 11weu111---....... N ...... s.c.,..11y ....,.._, u.-• an..-,, NoM 11.-... TOTALCONSIOERATIOH ttal ..... 5. Tile~ ........... t~ ......... .,_. .... ..._ ..... tile lk-er 1ic-s II to be pe141 It:..._,. ......... IE-~Mlell, 1a1s. Yortl85'Net, Sul• •101, Ttlltlll,c.llfMllaeflWefter~1t. ·-.. TM-11" ...... tNt .. <_., ...... .., .. t~f/f .. ..._ ...., tlle •~er a~ as te • _. ~ tlW o-•••• • AIU!lllk .._ ... c-tr'lll.._....,...._ ..,..,...v.....,. J • .._ ........... -,_....,I .. naa91 MUTUM. HCltOW , ................... ... ,....~-ATT•: A•IMTM ausaau. Ger8l'I "· Hefllllaw ,,_A,T,_.,. T.• ..... "'" K"""' IC Im M..-.lalClm Tr_...... ,_..,... 0r-. eoe.e Oa11y ,.,,.., s.. u.. •• ..... ' '" ' "-"" ... ~ .. -- ... •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ For s. Thurldlly, Sep...,,._ 25, ,.., OM. y PtlOf • • •••••• ••• • •••••••••••• ......_........ __ .___ -:------;-"---..;..;_.;..;.. ___ ,,,__-=:.;::.;..;.=:.:...-=:;::. PlJBUC NOTICE ~~ ..... ~~.~ ~~ ...... ~~~~ ~~~ ... ~~~. .._..,... INch I 06f ,_. r_.-S. Por S.· oee..,. •___............._ ·······•·•··········•·• ..••................... .....•.••••.........••• ...... ........ ftCTI,,_ M* .. .. .... ffAT ... ltT , ............ ~ ....... ... ....._.. . l"I O•Cl110$. H1U '-"'• ........... v .. ...,,CA.,. O••i. " ,,_,, ",., '-"'• .__, ,.__ v ....... CA.,. ........ . ··-· ........ ... Aw •--..v.ii..,,CA•,. , .. I"'_._ .. (~l ... ,, • _ ....... w.. ~ ... _ ''* --· '" ....... -c-" c.11 0t o.-c • ...,., .... i....n. ... ··-........... Ot•-c ....... 0•''' ....... '""" " 0.1 I ••• ·--. I PUBLIC NOTH.'£ •tC"nneut """"'" .... " ....... , , ... .......,. __ .. __ ~ -·· MOa VIHOING, Ill .. S."'• A ..... C,, ........... v .. 1e, Collft,. Ot ... ---.,,.. .... 1. o11-....cr ,,._v.ii.,. C••1• '"'' ---.. '~-........ ........ , Otl•·-·-'"" .............. , ..... ••'" ... c-.. c: ...... °'-~-...... ,,....,,, .. ,,,_ ...... ._ ~-c ... 1 o ........ '"" s..-1'.~,. It I .. - "'IUC llOTICI NOllCE IS Hf.af.l'r 91-1 ... 1 • ~k ..................... ., .. .. Howi"I -c-n..NI') 0. .... 1-'""' C-1.._ Of"'° City Of c.c.i. -.. Clll-"' c.i. -.... in .. ..., .. .......,_....,..., ,,.,r _,.lll'lo •• IM,,__, -IO ... cc1ntldere<I i.r l~"I In ._ Clb 't Hou>t"9 end ,_ ... IMll'Y a....__, Nelllc•llll'I cowrl ....... lltfloCI Of FIK •I ..... , ,,., .. ,_ ~lllft•IOfJI -lftllllon doll.,, Wiii .,. •lloul4IO '°' H~l"9 •1'14 C•""""""" 0.v•IOtoment pro 9f'•ml ll'I C.1e Mew ,.,. _ll'lt wtll .. held Cl'\ f'llu••· My, Oc~ t. t•. Of 1 JD pm , In Ille Community Room 01 tlM CeH lotle A~. loceted •• '"'° P•rll Av.,.ue, C"•"' en4 C.nter Str"hl C:O.t• MeM, c:.llfonll• Notice It~ 9h••" INI et wld lime •"" piece, .,,, -•II per'°'" mer --119 !Werd by llW HOY•· 11'19 aftd Community Oavelopm•nt C-.mll•. PuMh"" Oran .. Cool 0 .11, "llet.5-.U.1• --MMD. PUBLIC NOTICE tlOTIQ TOUIDJToiS ~ IUUl T•AlllSfll• CSeca.•Wl -•llJU.C.C.I lil•llc• h "•••bv 9l ve" to Ill• u•I~ .. ~ A H.,..,.._ and J•-A. ,,_ ,,.,,....,,, - "'"''""' ....,._, 11 11 .. Placenll• •-. OIY • c.i. -· C-tv of Or ...... SUie ..-c.tltomta -a 11ui. ,,_,_It-lo lie -•o K.,....,, Kim -1111.,....,. Kim Tran......, ....... Nl••H --.U h C/O ,... L Wetl Llnco111 "lvenu•, City ot AMIMlm, c-.ty Of Or ..... St•o Of c:.llfwftl~ T"9 ~ to lie lr-1en-.cl II *t<rlllM "' ........ 1 H : All ·--In "-· fbt'I-, _.,,.,,. -QDOd •Ill of -L'-$lore butll'IH$ •-" H Part'I' Tlmo Liquor an• I«•-.. IWI •A. "°9ml, City of1 c... ....... ~of Or ...... Stat• of Cellfwftlll. T"9 llullC ''"""' wlll .,. c.., ... ,,. --.., w after tlw lMJI N'I' of ~.,.. .. •:IM.M. .. ~ Milt,..I Etcrww CM•; Al ... : Antllll •-11 ............. 11 ... , $. V_..., ..... WI., ....... Cel.._..a. .,.... ........... .., llllftt , ....... lft !Ito ••er-ref~••• t• .,.,.•In 11 on..r1J ... So fer •• h '"••" to '"• Tr_,_, all ..,.._ _, --.... ..,.. .., tlw Tr-'wen.., .... "It .... ---··-0....~12.1-. K.,..... l(lm Mtwlll• It Im Tr....,_ ........ o-..., ~ o.tlly PtlOt, s.,t. JS, "" PUBLIC NOTICE ~~~~~~~------; NOTICE OF DEATH OF ALLISTER C . DAVIDSON. aka AL. c. DAVIDSON OF LAGUNA BEACH, CALIF. ANO OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A·10S'9M. 1 1 To all heirs. beneficiaries, creditors and coriffngent creditors of Alllst•r c. O.vldson aka Al C . Davidson and persons who may be otherwise Interested in the will and/or estate. 1 A petition has been filed by Helene D. Roberti and United California Bank in the Superior Court ofl OranQe County requestlno that Helene D. Roberti and United C.llfornla Bank be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of Allister C. Davidson, aka Al C. Davidson (under the I n d e p e n d e n t Administration of Estate,s Act). The petition Is set for hearing In Dept. No. 3 at1 700 Civic Center Drive, West, In the City of Santa Ana, C.llfornla on October 21, 1980 at 10:00 A.NI. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D IDIAL•...._YNM 28tar}o, Jbdrm aod 1uea1 qWU'ters l..Mr1tt! patio l*.000 lOUlllCIT& ...... 671-llll ..... ,. I ,,, I 007 ......................... OCIAlrl·IAY YllWCOMOO Stt blda, PoQI. 2 Kdrm11, "bi, boll ~1111 11va.11I f>n<'"! l•l ~II al P.18.950 OW Hll r Ownl'r 87~ lfl9ll 1022 .UXITUUX Ueautllully upJraded lriploa All 2 Bdrms , 'eparat• gara1c• und pallo11 Nf'w wood t.>X t ~rior1 int.I inltirlou Nt•w 1·u1111•t.<1, P"'lnt und waUpJAflti Owner w11J 1·arry th" fl num·init 111 I 2 '• • I' 1 t e t• ti a t S171l,IJOO 1-'or mort• tn f9f1n111hin. 1·ull ~ ll~l .... ,_ HERITAGE . . REALTORS __ fcr~-- Rcaltors MIWPOIT WATHfllONJ Largest noor plan offered. Open. fresh and a beautiful view. Custom decor. gold fixtures and many upgrades. Boat slip rights up to 45'. $749,000 JAMU I. 60ULD Hl·IHZ ....................... ---------llUPl.F.X AV (IWNgH Chotf'e I« So u( Hwy Wiit to b(h, ll-2, 2 2, frpll' prof fteroratf'd bt!lu~ appr11l1f'd value, Pnn ci'::S only tm 10~~ Sount Of> tfWY 2 Bdrm C h <t r m tr firep 111re , p.£t 111 • &arage Sl 85.000 II Eil~rUell o\Jt:t 81~ :!nJ ''' n~~ SIAYIEW ..... ~ a.d. uo.ooo 15"l On, Bit m financing Largest ~av1t!w 4 &!rm Port Royaj Mdl 2700 Sq n. 2yrsold Motivated seller• C/21 ...._.,.,. Ctt9ter 640-5357 1-~ourPle-,c Xlnt Loe.Gd Cond. nr Blurr Ry Owner 2 J br. 2 2br, frpl c. l' re a 11 v e r 111tiIII'111 g. ll75-lOS5 OWNER ANXIOUS Charming 2 br 1·otta~e. rebuilt. R 2. assum 12% loan . S 22 5 ,000 Owne~/agt, 498 0257. cars*bikes• *skateboards· trucks.baby carriages•tea carts•trikes rol lerskates • walkers•toys •wagons•••• scooters*hot rods•coupes• trailers*hard tops"convert- ibles•motor horries • 1awn mowers*limos •corporate headquarters •garden carts Model A's.•••• • typi ngtabtes wheelbarrows• recreational vehicles•golf carts*model trains•bikes •pianos•cars r efrigerators *skates•••••• If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a · Daily Pilot classified ad. Call 642-5678 and a friendly a·d· viserwill help you ILUTSIDtl-2 'l'wo Individual hoW1o>1>, highly up.itadeil 1':1H·h h1111 llt'paruh· .c4.1rat1~ and ............. I 040 Ir.._ 1044 rar•I Own.Jr will curry u 1tr.:c 2nd Tl) C'll ll ~11~1 .. '.•.•HERITAGE REALTORS E-SIDI DUPUX Two l Ir. Uwits $142,500 FUUllt ltEAL TY 546-0814 NEW CONDOS EASTSIDE C.M. 2512Sant a Ana Ave 2 BR 21/B ba. contemp design $116.000 646-5096 646-6091 ASSUMAILE LOW IMTHEST Nearly nf'w 2 BR, 21 ~Ba . tondo 1n small pro1ect ••••••••••••••••••••••• F:njoy the fresh Ocean llrt"eze 111 this "Landing Home" W/spa, 3br. 2ba, pre mium lot' BY O!Nf-R~-- •$990900• HO 9UALIFYIMG 3 Br 2 Ba 641 8833. Agt. HAMMER SWINGER SPECIAL! ,\ tap, tap here and there, and you've got a WlNNER! Great family home thal needs a little "TLC". All terms make this a good buy at $105,000. 545-9491. w,pool and spa 2nd TD lr.W.. 1044 ava1lahle. 67S-4912 bkr ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11%% LOWDOWN 4 NEW TOWNHOM ES 2&3 Bed . 2112 Bath From SI 05,000 ... 751·1364 (8·5·F) Ne wport Heights By Own er: Lge R2 Lot w/cuslom Jbr. 2ba hme. Frplc. Oak Firs. Alley Access 230 E. 15th St. $149,500. 548·2728 5 Bdrm, 2'ba, 3000 sq ft. Ass umabl e loan s . $189,500. Agt. Joe 546-8640 JllDltOOM Double garage, 60xl20' lot. Quiet location, but close to shopping. New roof, copper plumbing. hardwood nooni, plaster walls, good condition. SU0.000 with an assuma- ble loan loy~.ltltr. 541-772' BY OWNER, 1900' J br, best loc. Beerfield owe $149,990, Lowest Vacant. 752-5353 llADY&WAmMG Beautiful 3 Bdrm vacant home, newly decorated tbruout. lldeally located in the CALIFORNIA HOMES area. Close to schools, parks, pools, s hopping. Asking ' '·' ~-HANCH Hf ALTY s~ i 2000 •LOWDOWN• MeMV_.bec. 4 Bdrm. + rec room pool. Call 641-883.1. S.cceu IHlty THl~ONDO .. IN WOOOllJIMH OHL Y SI 32.500 + A delightful 3 BR adult occupied Creekwood Aspen Plan on low tralric cul-de-sac street. The Lg 4Br, 2Ba, College Pk, compl paint in/out. Sll8,000. S46-8477 agt. 0.-PoW 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GOOD ASSUMABLE FINANCING lowest cost detached re· sidence in Woodbridge. CALL QUICK 644-7211 rJn Nl uEL GAILEY & ASSOC I Al ES ••••••••••••••••••••••• RCTaylorCo 0..TlleL.Gk• Woodbridge 2 Br plus ften, 2Va Ba condo . "Brighton" B Plan . Large master bedroom i.uite. Sunny kitchen on cuJ.rle·sac. 1214.500 Woodbrldl)eYlloge Uniquely and beautifully upgrade<! 3 Bdrm condo. Choice corner across rrom park with mountain vie w Many e xtras . Priced at Sl 12,500 RCTaylorCo (J40 9900 VALU~VALUE As k about "terms" & you'll be most pleased ' Freshly painted 3 br + 2 ba "California Home" an a good localton short walk to xlnt year round sc hool . Owner h as bought another & says ··s ubmit Submit" SllS,000. 559-8111 LOIJlflNI l.och 1041 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E:HDOFTHE RAIMIOW Breathtaking village and ocean view from this sparkling 3 Bdrm 2 bath home. Spacious ramily room and living room, many extras in this beaulirully decorated home. SUI0.000. Assume existin1 loan. don osen r1·altor-. 1213 N. COAST HWY LAGUNA BEACH 497-4848 THI ONLY WAY TOGO 3 Bdrm noor plan, ocean vi e w dec ks. large enclosed brick patio Pr1ced fo r immediate sale at SU>,000. MISSION REALTY 494-0731 ON THE BEACH-Mobile Home 28r. redwood deck. cedar s h akes . hardwood int, frp !c. $59,900. (714) 499-3816 OCEANV1EW·4Br. JBa. ram rm. 2 blks to bch. $32.5,000. 497.5132 Thls 3 bedroom. 2 bath contemporary home has 2 fireplaces, proress1onal design, and a balcony with a peek-a-boo ocean view. Jus t lis t ed al $169.000. 493-8812 **100/ MWI Pri•ocyAlla•• /0 UUnn. 2 Master Bdrms. 2 ba. buys this lovely l Bdrm beamed ceilings, green condo. Great investment house windows, frplc, or starter home. shuttered windows. spa. Lingo SB2,500 ~~.bri c k y a rd . •••™· [ flll'"'°"brldge· I• Willi .. RHlty 497.5494 ~~.!~ ... ~~?.~ s~~~ i--._.--.... ---..... --c-Spmi--th-- 1!..Ef OFF TH •T •t20Barrann ,.,.,~v.fr.,lu Classic tiled roof Spanish w ~ home . O ceans ide IUSY STREET-Emerald Bay featuring and into a quiet condo Woodbridge Condo, ocean view, hardwood lucked away for peace & 2bdrm, Iba, highly up· Oooni, open ceilings, 3 privacy. Lvly decorating graded, S94.000. Call for Bdrm. 3 Ba. family accents the s pacious appl. 559.5102. room, formal dining. A rooms, with a wet bar for nice home . $575,000. entertaining. Owner is ftlBrBI 644-7020 very motivated. Offering * * .iur-u: all terms. 545-9491. Hard to find Briarwood model in beautiful Wood- brid&e Broad moor. 4 beautiful Bdrms in over 2000 sq ft.. Compare the value at -. .,-I 1050 turn your wheels into cash. ............. 1040 $179,900 &....,... ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• IF YOU OBJl::CT to the ~ranting of the petition, you should either appear at the hearing and state 1 your objections or file j wrltt.,, ol>Jedlons with the l court before the hearing. Your .,._.ranee may be In person or by your at· torney. (Uj]--. • SHADOWIUM I F y 0 u A R E A 6 \\bodbrldge Beautiful 4 ~r. 2~ ba, CREDITOR or a cont· s· DOING HIATFAMILY Reallg ram rm. macro wave, lngent creditor of the c»-... , BUSINESS HOME Jenair cook cntr. Call ceased, you must file your ·.·:.:.·; UNDER A 4Br, 2Ba, light at airy, l SS l-3000 agt, Marilyn at830-tlSl ••••••••••••••••••••••• claim with the court or ... 1 FICTITIOUS blktoa(hUrpark. l \i!i mi 1mBunnn Pli•>.lnlH prewnt It to the personal 4 ..._ to bcb. Only Sll8.900. LOVB. Y repr.sentatlve appoint~ --=--NAME? 146-5502 Woodbridge townhouse, LAGUNA HILLS by tM court within four " ,011 ll•we 1.,.. fifed by Owner. 3 Br l\i!i Ba. Principals only. Large 4 months from the dat• of ,011, no• FlcUllou• upgrades. $119,SOO. Bdrm on oversize lot. first Issuance of letters as 2 luelnoH Ne1110 end lalandvilla1elogo 559-1&64aft6PM. Upgrades &alore! Finest I provldld In Section 100 of llewe Mt,.. .. bN lnM (no seal beach ivp) home in area with splen· Lt"• Probate Code of lttOfp•lll•••·•-$5000Doww dous mountain view. C.llfornla. The time for """ ,., ... "'81 ttto WOODllRIDGE "COT· $113,500 with large as· flllng claims will not ••· :!:.!:•: ~· ..:!..~ SIOOO DOWM TAGE" sumable loan. Drive by plre prior to four months DA IL.'I "LOT wlll f.njoy ~ 2br on New detached 3bdrm, 25471 Bam?ls Sl. Then from the date of the he.Ir· • putttl.., '°"' .... _ .. , sandy beach for $1500 2"7ba, man,y upgrades. l call. Mia .... t .._. I 06t ~ 2ll!"'f lied. I 069' ...................... . ••••••••••••••••··~··•• •••••~•••••-•••••••••• ~S...._. I 100 JUSTUSTa!· WA19Rl0Mf PIER/FLOAT, quaint 2 bdrm home on legal R·2 lot. 2 car garage 542.5,000! ..... a.y,...,. ......... •675-7060• , ........ .,.... . Completely refurbished, one blk to beach. You own the land. Great financing. $3)5,000 ~ 75f-9221 lllD"SEYE Ocean + bay view condo. Boal slip. Try W k down. Owner is motivated· ! ! World R.E. 543-2591 JAS ... C._ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Decorator'• own home. 3 San Juan Capo. m .OOo. z Bdrm ... story split level Br, 2 Ba, 1480 sq. ft. syn home with nlc:e ocean old. All SU-5032. view. The ulti11111te In de- cor <'all for appt. I•-------• <>then In area are 1tlso avallable. Call C/21 Newport Ctt9fer 64~SJS7 REDUCED 60' to beach, pt sea view. comer, 7 rm. 2 ba. 2story sngl. on R·2 buildable 90' lot, '315K. OWC 2nd. local condo or? 7101 Seashore . Open daily Owner,645-8410 MEWPOIT HTS. 4 Bdrm, 3 bath Condo. 2200 S/f. $199,000. As- s umable In . Own/Agt 646-9798 •EXCITING• Beaut~n'!'!r.y up· araded cupets & drps • 28r, 2Ba Levitt Home in Laauna Hills nicest S•Pk. A1J new appl. cor· ne r lot across from Clubhouse, pool, Jacuui, sauna, exercise Ii rec hall. (KJS029). .............. le1t a., Im: Toww 12x55 2Br, lBa. fronl kitchen. Home to have new exterior supplied by seller. (006464). CLASSIC MOllLIHOMI SALIS 2706 Harbor, Ste 2Q6. A 540-Sfl7 EASTaUFF M.P.I . !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I Bea ull ru lly re mode I ed I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BEACH OOPLEX ' Two · 2 bdrm. I bath un· its. Sum~rtwinter ren· tals. Priced for quick saJe. IALIOA-HEWPOIT Realty 675-1170 THEILU~S Upper bay view Most de!.1red original area Spacious 3 bdr m + hob by room. end unit. Huge patio. S250,000. Agt , 64(). :>.'i60. FOR SALE IY OWMER Giant 5 Br. 3 Ba Only 1269.500. Owne r will carry al $1500 monthly with S20,000 down No credit needed (714 1 ~1964 Newport lleighls. By Owner 2 Bdrm l Ba 2 Obi Garages 679·9667 Eves. -..tAGNIFICEMT HACIENDA ON IACI( IAY Will trade for Condos in Hawaii, Mammoth, Vail or ? 4 Bdrm. Maids room, pool. $499,000. Agent 64&1M4. llGCAMYON home w/extra large pie 1---------• shaped lot Landscaped for pri,·acy! Fireplace in entertainment a r ea w /ope n & s pacious kitchen/dining areas. J Br 2 Ba with room to add OR ! Fantastic buy with lO'it down and owner financing or assumable Isl. 64~ 1736 557.4437 2707 Bristol St. CM BLUFFS NEWPOIT llACH WhyPorl...t- when you can buy a home near the waler on the Lido Peninsula ? 700 Uclo Partr Dr. 114 I Br. I ba . furn $32,500 1112 2Br Iba, SS8.000 1122 2Br 2ba S6S ,000 Community pool, walk to s h <1 p s & man y restaurants. Wattrfrant Ho.. Inc. 611-1400 $20,000 down. 4 br, 3 ba Owner will sell on con· l ra cl or lease option 1·-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! B r o k c r • S t e v e , Newport Beach, beach 957 l!lll0/64().9345. nearby, 2 yrs old, 20X40, ------2hdrm , 2ba , corner Just reduced S15K. ?wner space. $41.500. Days anxious 3 br, I '" ba. 673-4801 eves642·5528 pool S210K No agts at · · thi s pn re . p le a s e Au.ocpforSde 1200 642. 7071 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -icE&LOC"TIOw-; acres . Huntington "" "" " Beach. To be sold at Asking $215,000 w /large pub l 1 c auc tion o n assumable loan. carry 10116/80 by order or the ~· ~Br. 2Ba, + pool. Superior Court. Broker prest1g1ous N. B. Ca 11 cooperation invited. ln(o- Na ncy-Agt 979-872H Mars h Dozar. Auc - eves, 97S.53'70dys lloneers. 2131272·9536 -------leoc.h Property I JSO IB>llCBt! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Harbor View Homes MORRO BAY : Ocean Montegormdelongreen· view lot, $7 ,980. full belt. 4 Bdrm, parquet pnce. Easy terms. Agt noors, and many extras. 661·2606. Owner will consider 2nd 1---------- TD. S249.500fee. IA.RUTT UALTY UGISllll 642-5200 1500 New exclusive listing. Finest custom hom on the golf course. 5 Bdrms with over 6000 sq fl of ~~~~~~~~~ fwo Paciric View Lots Side by Side· Both for price of one $550 644-9158- beaut. daytime and even- ing views . Incredible ---------•IC::O•wdtll security. By appL thru B£ST BUY II f'roptrty 1600 Wrn.Cote.St750.000 •••••••••••••••••••••• '*Cote Realty Hnr flPlands LA~ ~~~H & Investment $163. 14 Leased commercial· '__ 640-5777_ :-..--mdustrial unit.s located __ 3 Bdrm. ramily room, on one o( Laguna's main <='•"""BLUFF rt.replace. high assuma-highways. Building re-~· ble loan. new plumbing, ti _ _._led H'gh 3 BR + ram Rm. open cen ey remuuc . 1, carpet. pa.int and drapes. demand area. Partners L & R + d e n P I a n Call 645-9161 want out. offering very Carefree pool sized yard. attractive financing on a Imm a c home with total price or 1575,000 charm. $199,000, 10% as· · ·th .. 66150do sumable loan. 752-2197 WI .. • wn. Realonomics 61>6700 owner/agt. M4%0ME OCEANRlOMT Older ho~. garage and Sbdnn, 2ba, super loca· barn will produce some lion. $399,500. 964-7198 UDO SPECIAL income while you plan agt. Princonly. ' new development. 8,950 Try lOo/o down. Move in sq. ft. or land near 18th & $5.000 DOWM tomorrow. Charming 'Nhlllier, Costa Mesa. No qualifying. Prime patio entry home . 4 W.-Ja.. M. T-'-Co. N.B. location. 4Br. lrg. Bdrm. J bath on Estrada ~ 6•4:.t IO yard, S239.000. 640-7403or walkway. Reduced for 8.11-7824 . rast sale . $359 ,000.1 _________ _ R.H.R. Bia. 673-7300 Prime C·I comm. invest· FOR SALE BY OWNER ment. approx 1 acre nr NEWPORTSHORES S..a-new shopping center in 2 story , 3 bdrm. 2 ba. re· r-:•""'-o I 071 Vtsla $13>,000. 498-5735. cenlly redecorated ... :::?:: ................ COfldo.-.-.~ow• Sl39~s-4.167J.8145 By owner, forced to seU ..._..fer 1700 our i,tream house. 4Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOVER SHORES 2·slory, 2~Ba. wtcntrl BY OWNER·3Br. 2Ba, FABULOUS HOME a i r . As s u m . l 0 % alr. enclosed patio, new· Wini POOL mortgage. 6 blocks from ly decorated. nr pool Ii 48drm.,3000sqft. Dana Pl. Harbor. Im· game rms. $88,000. Cj21 Ne.,.,.C....,. mac ulate ! S149,900. ~. 64"5157 493-3&43. I------------------Warmington C Plan. Most .-WPOn HEIGHTS CHAIMB This remodeled home features added master bdrm and family room, 2 rireplaces, hardwood rloors , new copper plumbing, new roof, RV access and much, much more. New orfering al $188,900. Call 540-U51 ..~~.~ HERITAGE REALTORS OP8t DAILY 4-WM 426 Vie Udo Mord MA..,_AC9"'UDO IAYFllONT Enjoy the good life on Lido in this newly re- modeled 2.siory home in a Main Bay location with fabulous view on the water. Beach out front. Well planned 3 bdrm at conve.rtlble den. Master suite with fareplace. Nice dining rm. HORSH-HOl.SIS popular 3 bdrm condo in 1 ac. equest. estate. New lrvine. Also B Plan. By 4300 sq f\, single story agent. call S52·5510 after csl.m hm. Has valley & 7 pm. ocean views. 1575,000 .....;; _______ _ D. Bourke Realtor ~lft/ 546-985() • CWh u. 1100 ---------...................... . s.ta AM t OIO UPL-••••••••••••••• •• • •• •• • OCN VIEW D SA ----... 1111111111 ...... _1 $142,900. 20% dn. owner 2 IDIM COTT AGE will rtnance at 12w~,, tnt only payments. Please OMLY $13.tOO call bkr. 631-2246 or Newly listed. A cute 541-2089 starter home with huie --------- yard. New carpet at I•--------• paint. Near Santa Ana 19«.A nOM College. Fl~! CALL QUICK ..... ,.._. 644-72 I I 8 Units, 2 lots, steps to bay at beach. Xlnt ren· ' la;ls. Call today! lngnotlC9daboY•. for au.JO . 011r mo. (Tax deductable). blockfromlake,$17~:000. C/21 Ne.,.,.c..hr YOU MAY EXAMINE 5 clfcufattonlMMIMIM Pool , c lubbouae. Wk : 937-1300, Hm : 640-5357 LIASl/OPT10M the fife kept by the court. =:!'~..:':.: !::: 752·211'7, ~. 857-0209. P1nt.:1 ~I P.W If you are lnterestM In the ,....., "' .. .-..... 111 OOM TO ~aowt L..-. ..,_. I 012 Large 4 bdrm home on ntatt, ~ may fife a r• ord•t 10 •ubtlllt , • .,, LOA.DID R • ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• comer. one year option qunt with the court to re-• t • t • 111•11 t t •' Wfth extras. Nice, clean. is wbat you get in this 4 PAMOIAMIC SIA with Sl.5.000downlt $1300 IASYTOIUY c:elve tplelat nottc• of the 6 Pub II u 11011 •.,. d 3 Bdrm. Only 2"11 miles to bdrm, 2'1' ba. Cornell VllW per_ mo. Sales price of 3Br. 1200 aq 'ft, 1 car Inventory of estate asset91 • :r.'::':9T':f'oT.t: ~~:500cb . Full price Model in Coll~ge Paartk. Very nice and ne1rly PI0,000. pra1e, ne1r bualnel8 •net of the petitions, ac-"'LOT, ,,o. ... ""· ParlrPi.c:elnc.842-7461 Uplfadeatonumerous o new 2 Story,3-Bdrm .. 2.,. ---dist.rid• aeboola. Coa· counts and reports 7 Cetta ...... CA.... Ust.$1.M,900. Bath Townbome . WATERFRON1j v~. delcrlbld In s.ctlon 1200 Wo'I di tfll '"'· '°' Specious • f\. llaater HOMES , IY O""'•MlflM•-of tM C.llfpmla Probate' llltenftalan......... Prime downtown loea· Bdrm.Suitewtlhretreat. AEALE'STATE ' SI0.000 ~0!9~.,..,::.• ' ::::1.~'=~ "' UoD. J Br, l ba, atepe lo Private and quiet. 631-1400 I KJ-1112 ~,.. ""' WV .. Lake Parlt. Top -.11• 0 u • r d e d I a t e ....._.. 8 ........... Wt*' I Jfw l"I ~ .... "9wW It. Placln1 your ClaasUied tloe throu1bout. New nei~,..:O· Claalfied adftl't.llbll la• ••••H••••••••••••H••• ........ CA-1 ad b IO aimple ... Just ~='. =~/': 495-D a.itu bitter way to tell more MIAT 4S A,.. Tai: CJtll .. tllt tlve • a call on tbe Co RJ -..,.,. 413-MN people about llae service 4 Bdrm. • Faml'-Rm. -.... r-·-draw in 1 .. _ 1 ~llNd Oranoe Coast --.. _ _. ·u .. _, ., tn.~. ---M y .... -... De Plllt tt..-2.S 1 --we aap JOU1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ you baq to uuer. ~ wltlt beautlful yard. Wat •.. I Dall)' Pilot 0c:•~ 19 • _,... • 2'1 I= )'oar Id for fMt re-•• . Clauilied Adi, your one· about our low ratea La=~~· ClMalliedAd. Call Today · ' ~u-===--=~~..L:·;::=·=....,.====·====::::J~OMlilied======Alill::.::==;:=ea:;;.1111;;;;.J.::============::l=-=op=lhoppiac;;:=::==e=eet==«=·==::..l::&oda=:::'.y=.1;!!=5111::::::::::=·=====1~P=========· ==·7=41l;i.;;I0.5878~~·~==:;;;;;;::;==:k: :-:-. -' - • • -·--------------------··-' fl/ --- \ ......_U ......... d ~...... lHI N1 .. HU•fwm•d Af lw .. ,_wi1h14 AflelwataUaflnl. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• ..... .._ • ., .... JZ40 2bdrm. Iba, r ecently .._. Jl6t ..... , 1 f• l707 1111111._,, ' I di •07 rwtor'ed ~anner. New •• •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••-••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Country Cott aa• 137~ Spec~2Bdrm Kidt l fs..w>> Asent e.s1 ~ee ::!:· ~~!:f:e:'c; ........ .._w,., ea& &flt, Bay rront, 1r. I Bath. 9300 Yearty. beach fl lown. Ocean 3 Br. 2 Ba. partly tum. ly. CW> Incl. utlb, pref. Ut 11 a pd · 4 • 9 P--W · v l e w 1frp1 c . •& 5 o. bllna, fnae. frplc, ~et older m1o, refs . no pet Mana1erm.s112 4hr, ~/m>nth, 2\la nilfmmt.•ch MO~ &-6308. bar, eaUo. Boat slip side _67_3_67_65_1_873-_72_19 ___ •s yearly. Charmine - -----tie 2:5 . No pell. SlOOO mo 2 hctrm, 2 bth Parkln1, YTly.115-4421. Small Apt ror RETIRED Bay Front. l Bdrm. dcckl. flreplarc, nor L Mille, NON DR1111Xf.R. Parking. Ulils paid . l11o11 1111111( 1• ta11le l1u11lc" .! hd1 111, I Im 114111u Nt•w h utlt '""· 1·1ari•cll111(. w;1llpopo·1 ~ 11a1 :11 1 I• .. :w11 SI li.11 ~1()11 S hlka to 0ttan. t;t~giant 2 t.trm, ram rm 6 den, 117'.!!5 1110 ) PIWJh crpt.s, 2"'» bu, ccdor & Klass. l>til rnr pvt gar, fully m alnl yd Adults , no rll·lll lrtq ia r1: at SZ1 Lath S I '1 lit /1160 633 I or 116() '331 beac:h. S700/rm 494-87 14 lyr . new. Extra spaciOll.'I, tst & l ast Sl50 m o 17..-r Ews. 28 r, 3Ba. luxury carde n Two Temflc tto-1 lkllh lll'e 3 er . 2ba with t~'e8fl VICW11. 90() & 9850, coodo w /wet bar & trplc. 67>5654 Balboa Peninsula 2Br apt. Newport. Heights. Close Spectat ular Oceanfront Cov er ed c arpo rt . L..-.IHclal.L 497-1761 to beach & shopping 3nJ. nuor. 3 Ar 2 Ba. SMO/mo, Annual rental. lllO. IMll-llMOor Mll-7945.· Fireplace, Bui cony , 2 _552_-0853 __ . ------ Newer dh \nJ)a.x , ni-Su Cout Plu.a 3 8r owol!'r uml. 4-unw low Int In Owner wm help flntnrc- w tJK, dn. 113>.000 D. Dl>w'ke ll4-•llor St'-MO •UNITS. Ct~TA M ~A $450,000 lt~.000 dwn C&Sh now Neu twu·h 9 sh•rp iuden un1l" Owner rarrlea flnanr11111 Ill 7c;i uv1.-..11ACH 4 UNITS. tluntingtun Huch. Dll0.000 -.S.000 down Beautiful 2 BR lOWnhowle wuta 3 lJ It 2 Ba. home for own e r Seller cames financing OWHTHlllST 2 ol the rtnest townhouse units on the coast ocean Views, walk to beach 3,200 s q.ft of lull Uf>' Low down and super write-on . Only 1247,500 wllh only 129.000 down 972·9300 H. Bruce Hanl•s IUHITS Wests ide Costa Mesa , good coodiuon. income $40,800 yr. Price $445,000. On payment SlJ0,000 OWCbalance. al 11%. A PR€HIG€ '-t-------fi--HOM€~ Real Estate Investments 3333W. Coast Hwy, NB 645-6646 PARTNERSHIP LIQUIDATION 4units.195.000. 5 units. SlJ(),000 10 units, 113S.OOO San Bernardino Buy dlrectnl4-631·5010 AMAZING! Units in Newport Beach. Fee simple land. Best buy in town. Need fast u le. Sl89,000. Hurry ! Call Sea Prope rties, 499-1318. ..... ,..,, ..... 11e1 JI 07 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L'barnuna ~bdrm, 3 bath ba) frottt With •• 00.1 f'lollt St-P' July 1\200 mu Yrly SllOO mo 8111 GNnd.).tmlitlSt C.-.. W. JIU ...••..•....•.......... So ol Hwy up1raded 2 Br 2 e. houM un la r«eo lut , Yard 6 "u pon an Thru July 15th lktty Kt'IT 8'7S 118 I 2 ur 3 bdrm. lba, l•rgr ~nv yard No Smokers lrVUle Tt'rrace 639-8670 .... ,... .... lf'9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IAYAtOMT O~~ER Beautiful 2 bdr m +den. 2 ba, frplc, pvt beach, ten rus coun & mooring for 17' boat Ut il in c l. $1200/mo winter. IAYFRONT jlal Is. EXCEPTIONAl. VIEW of Pavilion. Plush decor. '700/wk. or shon term. WIMTB UNT ALS 2 Br, new rum, $600/mo 1 Br. $500/rm. new W a terf ront/Sallsbury 67Ut00 UDO ISLE Completely furnished with everything yo u need. Remodeled & de· corat«l 3 Br. den 2 bath. Monthly. Bill Grundy, Rltr, 675-6161 P EN I NSU LA BAY FRONT House with beach and d oc k . 6 bdrm s , furnished. Great view. Avail Oct 6 thru June 6. $1500/mo. Waterfront Homes 631-1400 SPYGLASS \'o u t an l1vi+ 1n nn Flp)'1lu~ tint for only S1J'!IO mo •:11t-rut1vc-• lir homll' In IH ll'•l ll(IUU,. a rtta R (' Tsi )lur ~9!lflll Blul ,,. conlk• a Hr dbl l(ar W U, 11dull11. 1111 pru IMO rno ~6 4.l 1) Supi!J' IK't'ltll 4 till\ \II'* t e m u d t' It· rl le 1 t 1· h c• n w J•nn '\Jr 'C ini "" .. lion 1 Im,,. 10 fo\.1,h11111 hi ln1nc· t'uias l ( l ' bu rht"11 &-.,.rlll <iBr 1 $1000 ~ )146 2 Br , I"> li.i hOITW'. <!\'I !lilt:!> fr om lj1(l t'oron:i t.-ach, frple. pvt patio, ~ardener iorl Sl;llO 11 nu AliCt ~9llOO C-taW... 1224 ..••••..••............. lMPlCCAILE S e<.'luded on a 4u1t'l E.side cul·de sac this J 8d pool hQme Wlll tak(' your breath a wa y SW5 You do the gorrle nmg $74S. J~anne 631 1266 re rna x logo rever~l' REALTORS ENCHANTING tbd rm $365 Fenced yard (S481) fee /\Ill <tllr M(H1t 11•c•llu n m rlo llu1h 11\li, rc•fr 1to1 111 l r ro um 2 our i:ur :. !ti .. 4 :w 11 1 u ,. '. h Iii l•ru111•n 1>'· N1•w U h IU11 l.iw n1lrv h•.Juk 1.111 lfllrll).:tl lrnot ~u1tl • VULio 1\1lull,.,, nv '"'I.Ii ~· tH~ r:ioo 141\l"I l1u 1(1' 4h1 , lllm rm, 'lu<l> 21M, d tlflt• lu purk & 'huv11111.: $1l!J:, rr1t1 ~7 111'23 >t:! ~ I-'>11.ll•3lu 111:1 4!1 ur~u1 ..il lt') '1~7 I U~I 11.1 ' ~IH H!llS,<, l'\ e~ '-h.arp :111r ~llu l,.Jllllh room & I 1 p lr I 11:st11111 de ti•I I hruo11t 1-:h.'~ ).:urai:e tka1r I. t'tl\ t'I l.'\J IJ:ll IOS, "i1ll1 to :.1 hool~ ~ .. : ... oll.'1 MJr Jrt•4 $7!15 rrll1 1~ li:!I~ ~ llr , oi•, IM, lll'W 1·rnulo 11o \1t•11o $1i75 mn ~12200 URAMi\11CC:h11rmcr , Lg. ulx 3Hd 3Bu, joi: ll('h, V~•C $7506'1(; 10.1.'l :I BH I '~ U.U. yarcl, gar., Vllt'aul und dean $.'l25 \gent 6'12·6368 BAl"K HAY .Uk , carpets & drps. $600 mo ti.'11 51\70 aJt tiPM RENTlMES 631 •1555 3 BR, s harp & t•lean. Mesa -Vt•rde $650 mo Ask for Bill. 54&5A80 RENTIMES AMERICA'S FIRST COMPLETE HOME RENTAL SERVICE ALL AREAS. SIZES AND P RICES CALL TODAY 631-4555 Spanish Hacienda S495 Kids 6 Pets welcome in this inviting 3bdrm! Must see! <5566) ree UMTlMES 631-4555 3 Br dupl un1l SS2S. J Br ho u se S275, p h one 6.11 2122or 675 no2 3 Bdrm La rl(e ) ard. Redet.•or Ki ds Pell> OK tssOmo. 675 4912 Bkr 3226 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WATCH THE-WAVES! 2Br. 2Ba. w/ocean view! $42.5 Kids/Pets (9575) fee l&mMES 631-4555 -Gr eat Dana C rest 3 2 BR. Cottage, Adults Br + r a m rm . N e w No pe t s . Ra n g e & landscaping. low care refrige. wisprinklers. Close to Utils paidS450 mo. sch, park. New home. !I Hdrm 2 lie w /family rm, 1ust i:omplt!lt!ly renovat 1.J, 11u Clif'lMlL'I/ drapes/ lllr1, 'I) tnt from beach. l:rUSll slll. Jln lOllhurst/ n u•burd C1t rdenln g r>alcl hy owner SIS75/ mo. < ·1111 Oebbi.e 1:u 5844 nn~u; FOR RENT 3 Hr $S50 F'erm~d yard and i;ura ge F 11m l ly p lrus t! Kids & pe ts welcome U.11 9'>4·24566 or 973·297 1 Airt , no fee HwtW• H..-.. 3242 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----L.OIJI-... 3250 ...............•••• , ... llOME FOR RENT 3 Bdrm. SMQ. Fenced yard & gara1e. Family I, 2 8rdm, 1 ..... Ba, 2 C a r Garag e , P ool . Sauna, Spa . Wa lk To Beach. $625 mo. J 11y . 1se,9u10 pll•a se. Kid s & pets r---------· welcome. cau 964 2566 or !n3·2971. Agent, no fee. 3Br cci.do. Vie;; ol moun· t alns. oee,r 1011 course, La gun a Hills villa ge Pools, Lennis, volleyball etc. S895. 962·5585. Ask for Dee L.OIJI-Mlcptl •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ Br. 2ba condo. Pvt patio, gar, swim pool SS25/mo 495 0227 Udo Ille Le-aw ! Br, 3 Ba. den. 2 frplcs, E 9th Condo, 3Br. 2Ba . on wa ter view, S800/mo. got( course. $625 mo l:joat sliµ possibly a\'ail. 4!n-492'& aft 7PM /wknds 8'10-1358, 84& l911S Ttus warm. comfortable home is close to tennis a nd beac hes With 3 B<inns, 3 ·Ba. den and formal dining room, it of· rers a perfe<:t blend or family l.'Omlort a nd easy entertaining. Sl200 mo lr.W 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sµac1ous JBr JBa $550 Huge enclosed yard for kids & pets(6396) fee R&fTIMES 631-455~ Woodhridge, 5br. fam rm, t.lm rm, Jba, air, month· month. no pets. S975. Agt 541·5032. ---- 1'urtlerock -View. Exec Twnhme 2 Br. 21 Ba eartht.ones. I yr lse S700mo. Ginny Stevens Agt. 833·8600. 975·1192 HOME FOR RENT ~~-~ ..... ~~~!. HOME FOR RENT 644-9'90 3 Bdrm. $550. Fenced yard a nd garage. Family ple ase. kids & pet5 ~~~~~~~~~~ welcome. Call 964-2566 or ;_Cle 973-2971 Agt, noree . _. m1nh 3276 ~ .......•.••••..•.••.... ~wport leach 3269 Seascape Village, 1 story ••••••••••••••••••••• condo, 2 br, den, .2 ba, 0 FEE! Apt. & Conde frplc. Nr pool. te nnis. No ren tals. Villa Rental! pets. S650 493.4343 675·49l2 Bkr. -------------- -...... RENTIMES "AMERICAS LEA.DEil IH THI IUSINESS OFUNTALS .. Capistr..o 1278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nr Marina , l story, 2 br, den, 2 ba , frplc, pool, ten· ni s . No pe t s S6 00 493-4343 garages. Winter. S900. I br, by beach, patio, ga, 640-4784 ___ utils pd, $400, refs. Costa MHo 3724 673-1401/613-1275 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I Bdrm. Apt. SUS CASIT AS 12th. " 13th. between Streets. 675·7876, fou m I br. apt. s.125 & up. Yearly $375. Encl. gar. Adults, no 547-4200. pets. 2110 Newport Bl. ,.-__,.--~-----~.-2-... -548-4968 betwn 8·30 & _. ... __ -,. SPM. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---l Br. Newly decor. gas pd, J Br. Cottage. Fu rn .. enc:I gar Adlts. pool. Clean & private Adults 642-5073. only, no pets. Ut1ls incl.---------- SJ.SO mo. lsl. & last + 3 Br . Townhouse. newly Sec. dep 548-~ decor gas pd. enclsd gar. Adlts. pool. 642-5073 ........... och 3740 ••••••••••••••••••• •••. 2 Br. l bath Apt. Newly H.l'sFIMEST Spa rus b &late Living' Beauttful park-ltke sur- roundin gs . Te r raced pool. Sunken gas bbf1. spa rkling fountains S pa c io u s roo m s Separa te dining area Walk-in closets. home Like kitchen & cabinets. Wa lk to ll unt1ng t o n Center. I lledioom·unfurn $400 1 Bedroom furn rrom $430 2 Bedroom rum Sit!IO T wnhse·unfur n . fro m $510 Adults, no pets Ut1lllles l"rec! LA QUINTA H ERMOSA 16211 Parks ide l.n. 1 blk W. or Beach. 3 blks S. of Edinger 1147.5441 decor. Gas pd. e nclsd gar pool. Adlts. 642-5073. Super Saver ! Only 12.SO Garage ell more(54111 )fee RENTIMES 631-4555 2 Br. 2 Ba. Sundeck. $t25 . Avail approx .. Oct. 1st. 548·8675 dys, 760·1418 eves & wk:nds. Lavish 2Br, $375 w /gar all a pplc,pool(6312>fee 631-4557 Robert Age nt Newly decorated 3 Br 2 Ba Townhouse. Spacious, fireplace, pool. Quie t area. Adults. no pets. $495. 645-3381. 675·5949. Ne w 3 Br , 2 'h B a Tow n ho u se . $550. Private yard. Close to shopping. Adults . 1982 Maple, 548.~ 4 lidrm. $595. Fenced yard & garage. Family please. Kids & pe t s welcome Call 964·2:W56 or 973-2971. /\gen~. no fee. CALL 631-4555 SOMfh LCllJl9MI 1216 lr'riM l7 44 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• Spac1ou.s Family 3 bdrm. 2 ba. 13115. Play&J'OW>d ell pool. 548-91556 from 12-7 PM Lakes. 1 Br condo. pvt hot tub. Tennis. pool, j a c SS001mo. 213/456--8523 aft 5pm. RENTALS 2br. 2ba $700 3br, 2ba SlOOO Furn 3br, 2ba $750 3br, 2'hba $750 4br. 2~ba S950 4br, 21~ba $1750 Spyglass Bayshores Ocean view. blk from 2685 Baysho r e Dr beach. 4 Bdrm, 2 living, 4bdrm, 2V,ba. SlJOO/mo.. s auna . spa, pvt guest year lse. 213-441 ·3252 or qlrs, $1600. 499·5304 __ _ _~ __ 21_7_6_. ______ 1 Lower 3 Arch Bay J;'Dl· WestcliJr area lovely ex· ta ge, 2bdrm, I 'hba! 2 peop le max. Nu ga r . ecutive home. 3Br, 2Ba, S850/mo . Please call available for lmmedialf 754-0370, Mon.Sat, 9-lp m occupa ncy . Dee, J .D or eves only 499·5045. Property Management. 751·278'7. Bluffs condo. 4 Br, 21h Ba new paint. new ca rpet lease l950/mo. 833-1357 &w-8170. 3298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 hr, 21h ba , xlnt toe, nr fwys , pool, sel'. gate, kids OK, $575. call agi Jan. 848-3119 or Vickie, Newly furnished Condo. 1 Br + ofc or 2nd br .. Sun· ny deck. st re am, AC, dshwshr. carport, pool, tennis . etc. S550 mo yearly lse Adult. no pet s , Avail Oct 15 548·0412. 3748 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Oceanfront apt, furn, WO, frplc. S650 mo 499 4956 eves . -Hewpori •.och 3769 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Bdrm, l Bath, w /deck Ir encl. ,er. E .side. MSO. 1be m!l\I Estate Store 675-1T7l Perhc:t 2br 2ltll 1100 sq fl. fplc, lndry. OishWT, encl pr, $500. 3107 MaceAve540-4 00 $410.$46.S. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. Pool. laundry rm, crpts, drps. Adults only. Cat OK.. TSL Mgmt. 642· L603. lnduatri~ ~-.. -llPO ••••••••••••••••••••••• Terrific Vu. 3Br upper dplit. rum. laund. 2 gar. 5116 SeashoTr Dr;-~tt- New 10 Unit Industria l ,_m_gr_. ______ _ 648112 W 18th. 642-0835 &5/mo. Avail now, call days 496-0'Z21. agt . -~~~[~'ds·~~ 2 'Br. i ha a iiplex.·ocean -~.8600~:"1!fif!-..I good location(9570lfee view. frplc, gar, no pets. Jbd r m , 2~ba condo .. ~_1139-4~;9'4==~·~-----4 ·~a'ut ocean & city IHef Coedo!MliUlftl ~ew. no pets, $700/mo Unfwwished 1425 SllORTTERM RENTALS ~ &..\Y;nter: Agent 6';5·8170 545().$475. 2 Br. l BIL Apts. .All .bllill:.im. end~ .. l~L W/D hook.up. Near S.C. Plaza. Cat OK. lmmed. occupancy. T'SL Mgmt. 642·1603. Bldg. C.OSta Mesa. 16,000 lBr. nr ocean. Adlts. ~-P!Y~~f cI~l~~ quiet. Cln. util & cable only payme nts for 3 free. No pet.. S39S winter ye ars. Phil Su Iii van 1_548-_1_425 ______ _ Realtor. 548-2103. 2br, 2ba, yrly. 5'50 per Loh for 54* 2200 mo. no pets, no childr en. quiet. 675.3198 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •F.e.tklllf• REDUCED $7,000 Only 164,500 Ocean vie w lot plus approved plans Homes &Mfw .... d ••••••••••••••••••••••• JZ06 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for tri level home. Wallt· (•-••--••-• in& distance to Dana Pt. IALI04 tSI AMO Harbor. Owner 638-1614 lllLlllM '-t~ wl New carpet, paint and charm oo Bay with patio on WATER. Really special 2 story 3 bdrm, 3 ~ ba. frpl c , new kitchen. $1100/mo. lease. IEEANFIONT LOT Large lot tn exclusive Three Arch Bay in So. Laguna. Security gate communit y with pvt . su;eets, beach. tennis & clubhouse. Very rare op- por tunity . Lot price $1 ,495 ,0 0 0 . C a ll 213/628-1300 or owner 114 /499-3070 wkns<b Large OCEAN VlEW lot 2815 Bernard Ct. Laguna Beach $175,000 847-5887 ~ ... , .. 2300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVINE-TIIE GROVES 2 br, 2 ba, a/c, dbl gar . upp-aded. 966,000. Shown b y appt , 73 1-0599 Owolttl•-· th.a•o.wt. ....... 2400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Waterfront /Salisbury 673-81()() WIM1B llNTALS 2 Bdrm home, lovely patio and prage $600. Bayfroot 3 Bdrm lower. prage, Sl.000/mo Bayfront 4 Bdrm uppe.r. garage, $1200 YIAIL Y l84T ALS LitUe Island. Lg 1 Br apt w/dttk, lmfum. SliOOlse Beautifully r emod 3 bdrm home. unrurn $1200/mo b e. Includes utilities. South Bayfront 3 bdrm lower, 1ar. fwn or un· rum $1200/mo CALLBob6.11-4557 agt S500 /mo. 661·8864 or IUDS/PETS OIC TT0.7872 tt523 CAMPU9Da~f1WltCE E-Side House, 2 Bdrm , Spectacular ocean view J1m~or 968-t650. ••••••••••••••••••••••• You'U lilte this adult liv· in.g tn Newport's finest. 2Br, 3ba, den. pool, J ae. tenru.s. No pets. 833-3349. H UNT I NG T ON HARBOR. prime loca- l.ion, manna view. beaut new 3bdrm. $975. Jba. balconies_. frplc, etc_ No pe t s 213 -634-8602 or 714-M0-6655. Garage, Fncd yard. $545. 2 BT Condo. S600 * •I.WES! 642-2510, 64&4848 Beach Cottage 28r. S.S00 Roughly 10 to choose Modem 2Br Manor, $385 w/spacious fenced lot . kids/pets wlcm (S361 )fee Betty Agt. 631-4SS7 1 mile to beach Agent from $375-S950 monthly 496-5980. on I year lease. We're the Nice secluded studio, pvt ones to call yard. ocean vu S325 inc (g]Woodbrldge OHTMllAY 2 Bdrm. 2 ba with a pool. Security S950 /mo Wottrfrollt HOllWs BLUFF'S CONDO single level. Jbr. 2ba. no pel!i 1 $700/mo on 1 y r ls e 640-5211 Eastside 3 Bdrm 2 Ba. Livin g room. Fam ily room. fireplace. fenced yard, Gardener . carpets, drapes. Close to schools 9675. 55&-1737 aft 3PM. util ~----Realrv Lovely home for lease. 551-3000 lftc. 631-1400 llGCAHYOM McLain Twnhme 2Br. 2ba. Tennis pool jac sec. Cvd prk'g for 2 cars. S950. 644·7722 d ys , 640-8368 ev /wknd Dana Pt. 4 Br 2 Ba. ya r d 'h m i le f rom 19?.JIBarrann Pkwy,lrvln" Cozy, 3br, 2ba, Hunt. Bch nrOcean. 2car gar, frplc S650 Imo. 840-1137 Marina. No pets. Aft 6. 493-5087. E.side duplex unit. 2 Br 1 BToro l2JZ Ba lrg yrd child/pet ••••••••••••••••••••••• OK. Avail. io11 . 2661,1, Prestigious Palace! Santo Tomas. $450. Ca ll Stat~y 3br Exec home Joho646-5006 W/a1r&gar t6460)fee Brand new condo, 2 story, 3 bdrms,' 2'h ba, frplc. 1300 SQ ft with W /W Cpl, d.rps. 2 car gar w /opener. $650 /mo. 2182 Maple 673-2282or67S.5487 eves. RENTlMES 631-4555 HOME 1-'0 R RENT 3 Bdrm. $550. Fenced yard & Rarage. Family please Kids & pets welcome. Call 964-2566 or !173-2971. Agent, no fee. Brand new 3 Br 2'-'z Ba ,_.. V~ 1234 townbome, fplc, patro. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• car garage, Npt llgts Contem porary 3Br Home are a . $745 548-7638. f'rplc &gar l6424) fee 646-912Seves. R!NTIMES '11·4555 2Br. lBa, llv. rm. frplc. gardener , no pets, $SOii 548-5827. Exec. farruly home. lge & very priv. newl y redec, 3 br. 2 ba. lam. rm, wet ~ or duplex, 2bdrm. bar, crpts, drps, bit-ins, Spectacular view from lge, brand new TH in Turtle Rock, 2 M /br suites, den, 2• 2 ba , wet liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 2 mi. from beh, new delux. bar, frplc, a /c , $975. • • Q U A L I T Y 3br , 21h ba , built -ins, 752-8350/ 751·5813 N E W P 0 R T . pool. 2 car gar , $175/mo. WOODBRIDGE 3 bdrm. W EST C LI F F H S E 213-438-8316 Condo . l \.la Ba. Near Wildwood Park. pool, spa. tennis, lake. Lease SSOO mo. 213·837 .8339 minutes from beh, JBr. _D_e_l_u_x_e_2_b_r_,_2_b_a_. 28a,2 frplcs,2.000 sqrt., wa s her /dryer , fr plc . gardnr incl. $900 mo. (213) 843·5578, (213) pool,patio.a /c,built-ins. 271>-7091 ask for Pam.•• gar. $550 T71·1.533 after Bea utiful Golf Course I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Condo. W /great view in BLUFF'S CONDO: s ingle Rancho San J oaquin . I I b ba Nearly ne w 2 Br. 2 Ba. eve ' 3 r. 2 · no pets! $700/mo on 1 y r. lse . end unit. Air, pool, spa. 640-5211 S 7 2 5 mo . ln c ld s 1---------- washertdryer . Adults, no Move an today. Clean pets. Owner7~1719. Eastbluff condo. 3Br . lbdrm, ram rm, private 1_28a_._E_v_es_._67_>_24_24_. __ pool & jac on cul-de-sac, Beautiful go lf co urse avatl immed. 559-6406 or 972·1717, leave mess. townhouse, 2 Br 2 Ba. dining rm, bar, pvt, jac., Woodbridge, Jge 4 br, Jba . pool, Lennis. garage. lam. rm, atrium, a/c. or $1050. 640-8126 or 4!n·5411 Spm On the Sand. Hunt. Bch. 2 Br 2 Ba, pool, security, sa una , g y m . w /v u , $1000/mo. 644-6604 . Tn-level, H.B. 2Br, 2'1'Z 8a. microwave. trash com- pactor, tennJs court. rac quetball, pool , jacuzzi & sa una. Avail Nov. J. $750 mo. 968-2044. 1·568·0166. 848· 729'l Tow11ln•• Uwfw wished 1525 •OCEANFRONT, A' ail now, daily, weekly. Spec· lacular \'iew. 673·SURF' - NO LEASE I I 3 Br . 2 Ba. upper. or OCC. fami ly unit , S450 . 641-8657. 752·51U REQUIRED '. SHARP 2 Bdrm 2 bath. encl g a rage. pr i vate pat.io. no pets. $450 me. Call 546·5880. ask for Pam or Larry. YEAR-ROUND FUN: Social Act1V1ties 01· rect"r • Free Sunday Brunch• BBO's •Par· lies •Plus much more GREAT RECREATION: Tennis • Free Lessons (pro & pro shop)• 2 Health Clubs•Sauna• Hydromassage •Swim· ming• Or1111ng Range BEAUTIFUL APART· MENTS: Singles, 1 & 2 Bedrooms • Fur· nished & Unfurnished •Adult l.J111ng •No Pels • Models Open daily 9 to 6 Oakwood WcatFll!ll:I FAMILTAnS. Brand new beautiful .lrg apt. ror families with l or 2 child.nm. Near park. Heal pa.id. No pets. I 2Br, 2Ba $44» 398 W. W'llson, C.M. 63 l ·5583/548-2408 12 Bdrm li>use, refrige & stove. Small child OK. MSO. 5411-1377. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Duplex. Pel /· Child OK. $425. 548-0IL. Garden Apartments me8tiBJIB Newport Beach/So. AP AKTMEHTS 1700 16th SI (Dover at 16thl Beautiful brand ne w (714) 142-5113 • garden apts, spa . Adults, nopet.s. Newport a .. ch/No. 2Br2Ba $4S5 880 Irvine 398 West W't.llon. 631·55113 FOILEASI South Bayfront 4 Br up- per, ear. $1SOO/mo, rum orunfurn lba, 1954 A or 1954 B w a s h I d r y . r e f r i g . Meye r Pl. no pets, small atrium, xtras, $650/mo. child OK. $425. 549-3484. Leas e pre r 968-4737 / --540-0011 2 Br duplex, $470, util pd, Hwtl... • __ .. 3240 p o o l , le a se in c l . NEWPORT SHORES. 3 gardener , water & lac, br, 2 ba, '745/mo, older no pets, $950/mo, avail. pref. 67U14S/67s-4886 Nov. 1. 551·3ll7 aft.. 6. (&I t61bi -1 (71 4) 145-_11~--Br. $3a>. Pool, quiet ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'----------.4. location. Adults, no pets. OWNER FINANCE Costa 423W. Bay. 548·9516. New 2 bedroom 2 bath home . Mission Lakes Country Club. Golf. tennis-pool. Be auUf ully land1caped1 no main· tma.nce yaro. L.. ..... &Asaoc. 67S.llll 333 E. 21.st, CM. adlts/no •-pets. • •••••••••••••••••••••• 9880 Clubhouse Rd. Desert Hot Spriop 2J3.31S-2S72 ..... PIP•' •'lllti 1207 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21r .,._.., dlcorahd Downtown, shopping l blk, bc h 2 m i, new paint/crpt, drps, garage. S400 mo. Mr. Tri bolet SS2·'765S Exclusive Penins ula Point. llodern 2 Br. Den. 2 Ba. Micro, Block ocean 6 bey.•· 213/371-3119. Mesa del Mar, 5Br. 3Ba, BRECKENRIDGE SKI ,.._ ......... ...,._ ~222 2300aq fl. elec gar, A/C, RETREAT. New , 5 __ ,...... • Gardener incl, DO pets. bdrm, solar-warmed, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nice. $1000/mo. 751-4998 1.-cloul home with l&>ee· 2bdrm. den, nice. N E W p 0 RT T E R R . tacular C°'°"8dO moun· 1525/mo. 707 i,<, Acacia. lain view from acre-plus 8*3'767 · CONDO. -~"~ ._ '"-000 by 2Br, 2Ba, frplc. gar. pool. --.:1-. -· •--· • Immediate occupancy. Kids ok, no pets. $575. ~ ~ 1c!:. ~ Fantastic llO de1ree 961-83118, 960-1503 ....,_.., '5-rv· • ocean view-city li&bts ----'--'----- yacht and s lip. Call from au room1. Lr&. 2Br, Newport Hei1hts. $695. ..,.-re.-. 28a, family 6 dlnina. 3Br, 2Ba, yard, frplc, ......... •tmo. Wknda 6 ewes: beach clbse adults pref. llCll 1 II 2IH MMlll, wkdp: &U.S7SI. Avail. 10-1. Call Jon: .. -••••••••••••••••••• h-vu.TerTace Do1Jbou9e. ~uo,orm.m1. Palm Spftnp. Will U.· 3 Bdrm, 3 beth, family z br cottage, w/garace • ~ beautiful, Iara• kitchen. Walk to bay yard, 10 min. to beach; Lu.__~ =Natefor' beact.. Sl350 mo. lncl. MSO. adults, no pets . 81.J-.r.~°' prdener. Act. '44·11817 831-41189 bome. uw714· . eves. --------- .... llhh Lovely liWe 2bdrm bouae w..... 2900 SparkliDf, intereaUna. in prime E. 1lde location. ...... •••••••••.e••••••• new 3 bdrm, 2 bath, $550/mo. 962-1940. ...,.JDe•1l1p1r P•tlo, 2 car 1ara1e. 2 Bdrm townhouse, a vail. n"41 bulldable IHd Carpets, drapes, Oct.L$M5mo.2ill80San· paella••· ror condo9, microwave ov!:un:•· ta Ana Ave, Unit A. Do boulel, apertmenta, of. bWuber, beam ln a« cllaturblalanta drive flet bwldln11. com·; llvtq room. Uled brick by, then call ' TcMWa.n I =-· p...a loc!aU.: 9Gl112. 1J6.nJJ '~ (JJ vii°" -' Channing 3bdrm estate W /baJcony view. Frplc &garage too<6759)fee RENTI MES 631-4555 3 br. l'h ba condo, pool. $550/mo. 548· 1313/559-6442 WOODBRIDGE Condo for Beautiful brand new 3 tease. 3Br, H4Ba. Patio, 1---------- bdrm. 2i,<, ba. Huntington pool. la ke . tennis. no ~fs beaut. condos for Beach home. Completely pets. S.S75/mo. 544·2292, leue. $750 to SB50. Agt, carpeted tit draped. 5 daysor832·4365eves. &44·1133. blocks from beach & schools. llOO per mo. + NORTHWOOD. s in1le and new ac beaut, upper utils. Owner will main· story . 3br, 2ba, e xec ba prof d 2 b 2 .... home. lmmac. 1 .... yr old. y, · ecor, r, .,... ta.in ext. yard care. Call .,... ba 2 s .. -.. -lts patio 2 Sep DR. wet bar. FR, ' w~ ' ' 960-4614 . frplc. No pets. $700. AvaU ... c_ar_..;;g;...ar_._f1_95_. 673 __ -443_1 __ RenttoOwn! Gorgeous 9-27. Can be seen Sat & UDOISLI 48drm $5115w/lse/opl! Sun. 1-4. 19 Clay, or call 2 Br. 2 ea. Den. frplc, c a. yd for ldds/pets(9620) 840-ll88 after6pm. bleTV. elec gardr .• Sl2SO RENTIMES631-4555fee mo. Adulla. Yrl.y lease. Abtolutely exceptional CUYl•VM 675·6949 . 885-02 15 , brand new, never oc· TOWHHOMI! 613-1328. cupled 3 Bdrm. 2~ ba. Newly decorated 3BR, 2 d home. Landscaping, bath. Bridtfplc . covered Br. or ocean. A Its . carpe ting & dnpes, patio. $725/mo. incl. quiet. Cln. uW • cable family room with up· water fl gardener. Lois tree: No pet. $385 winter stain loft thal can be Egan&M-QOO. (H4) ~1425 used u bdrm. or den. 5 ILUPFS COMOO blocks fro m beach & Jbdnn, 3ba, fam rm, bot school. $1100 per mo. + tub, all in x1nt cood. $1000 utlls. Owner will main· month to month .. AvaU lain ext. yard . Call 1 med ,,_ ..... .u •1-m1. I~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .__m __ . _ _._ ..... _. __ _ • Bd r m . 1 ~ Ba . ~~ ..... ~~~! 4 ... ~:~,::'!tove, Flreplace, Fam Rm. 2 Jo.TO"*llACNI compl. rurn, fenced ~}::!-,.:.· ';; From\hiaele1anuBrl patio, 11• aaraae, 20' mo.IM-7111or~ KidlOK! (8'75)fee t.o.t lllp, •tmo, yrty, _____ _;.....;..:.,;..;,_· -•..mMH 611·4515 wkly or wtmct. 1'7$-92. Exec. 4 br, a be, lae ram. r75-t411. rm frplc , nr beac h , G,..cloua Uvtnc m' lovely br + den. 2 ba twnlwe ..,...,__ •· 531-0aS 3bdnn, 2ba •/spa. No tondo U. Tbe Bluft1, new ~ * G73-8m . MHl.C...HwJ .• ~ • I Slary c.do, larp 2 Br. ..u. -/mo . ..,-4012, paint • crpt, blt·ins, l~ Ba. Pool. Adults only. Oceanfront mobile home wuh/dry, 2 patloa, auto. rA«1t11.1,1~r.!!!l~::..=...i!lllf1 Near Broo kburat/ rrom $500 mo. (714) 2 c:ar 1ar, frplc. pool, Ada•. Ml. llMISI. -..11 tm/mo. M4~ ·- Mes a Twnhs . $87 ,500, Oceanfront/view 2 & 3 Br. $22,500 down. 2 bed l ba . f 2BR 2ba, den, adlts, DO Pool.645·3474,760-9310. balcon y, r p lc. gar. pet.s.Lge appernrOCC. Fro m $550. winte r . $450.AvaillO/l.~2'16 .,... ... Uiwfurw 3600 640-4187 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br, l ba, in newer lri· OCEANFRONT. Winter. plex' upper, or So. Coast 2 br, 1 ba, e ncl. gar . fenced, pvt, immac, no pets, $395. 5411. 1734 ., ....... ,.,."-ct ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... 1 ...... 1706 • •••••••••••••••••••••• STEPS TO BAY, lbr, great patio. F'rpk, gar. $395. Winter. OPEN. J28i,<, Sapphire· 644--0954. ..... , ...... 3707 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Sl e e p i n g r oo m s & kitchenettes. SllO wk 6 up. Oceanfront. 675-8740 OCEANFRONT. Small 1 br's $350 & up. 2 br's • yearly 6 Winter $550 & up. 67J.9270or673-4928 B A Y FRONTA G E , Beach, Pier, 2 Br. $625, 1 Br. SSU. $450, Adlls, Wntr. 3oo E. Edgewater . 1·8'71·2886. . BeautlfUlly tum, walk to beach without crossing Street.. Yearly. lmmed. 2bdrm, 2ba, $650. Jbdrm, Zba, '800. Call between 4-9,613·03U. 2bdrm, lba, WINTER RENTAL. Waled pool, 1teps to bay . beach, ferry. $42S. Call e ves 815-1871. Exec. Type, good a rea, Plaza, bit-ins , aar. quie t , 3 Br & l Br. 644-5623 675-46118. Sharp, clean 2 Bdrm. 1 3 Br 2 Ba. avail. 9/8. Ba. built·ina, Westside 4 SllOO/mo. Pie)(. Kids OK. No pets. 613-33.SS. Act $375. 645·2478 Eves • ST E P S TO BEAC H 1 Wknds. Bdrm. Cottage. Winter. EASl'SlDE 2 BR 2 Ba, _N_o.....;...pe_ts_. 6'7U640 ___ . ___ 1 patio, gar, new paint, 0 C E A N F R O N T 3 avail DOW. 1425 mo. Call Bedroom. Large deluxe. 546-SMO, aak for Pam or Winter. No pets. 673-6640. Larry Winter Reola!: 2 Br. patio, garage. 1375 mo. lnclds utils. 209i,<, 33rd . St. Open House Sat/Sun. 213/322·3653. STEPS TO BEACH• Br. l 'Ba. Furn. gar a ge , no pets. $400 mo. Winter . fi'13.M40. MJO 2 bdrm. patio, pool. adlts, DO pell, 3Z5J 11th Pl oft SA Av. aft 11 am. 641-5137 APT IN 4-PLEX Lee. 1 bdrm, front car .. tee palio, ldry., fri&, rm for ve1 adm. Nice 1t., or Newport/Jab. reh. No smokers. 1310. S20 off to retired per1on for It. "-Im.ts duties. 642-2142 &Mfwwitllld ,---------- ••••••••••••••••••••••• E'1ide l Br, 1,. yard, ..... ...._. 3106 $S85/mo. 230 Coata Mesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• St.&6()..1114.1183-?ICXt Deluxe Bayfront 3bdrm, 2ba. refri1. frpl~. adults. I Br. Stove, private pe.Uo. no pets. '800/mo yrly. Gaa paid. Adult•. no 641-7213, ....sue. pets. Ref's . $21$ mo. ~ l Br. kplc. new palDt 6t--------- carpet. Adlt.s. no 'fib. • 2 Br. Ceedo near SC Ref1. S350mo. 210Topa1. Plua, SA. frplc, teenJa, Shown Sal/Sun 10 to 4. pool ......... No pets. ... -.:z 54t-SD2,14l·l• ~·. -.. -~ - l ....................... ····••················· O' •• .::: Me t'IUwr 6 Soft. ral"pt'nlty rm addlllon remudlna Omcnal ~u~ paf\JtJon» remov.-.l win Cu.Mi d o w" doo r aAdall ., ... 11 ..... ....................... tbrbor Aha Apphanct! &lrvtet11. lJK ()vr 2l) ) I loeat t~p t•actur trained ttttlnlt'laM All ~&war ~Jim •••• ....................... Dnvewa)11 •Parkma lot •Kepair• •Seakoat1n1t S6S A<'Pb•ll &4f 4t!ll Uc'cl .......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• z l!;xp MothN~ will 8aby111l Ma11111ll11 & TaJ~rtWl t!87~ C\JSTOM 11''1.l':ttll>R CARPENTRY Hy Jay &42 ll*IY Llr IM"I ,_ c..,..s.-nc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shampoo • iilHm d t•a11 l 'Clklir bntcht~n. .. .,. ~~ lO min hlt'1H·tl ('Ir an u". dlll rm, hall ··~ \ \ lol rm ff ~. {"()IX'h 110 1 hr 15 Gw.r eh m 1w1 Oolh•1 ('pe ~·( u ~" .. ,,.,. I\> wort "'y-.rlt rtrr .. S.1 1 tllOI \HT'S l .Akl't,T S~H\ICl- \KA Ar\• N\"r"n ·., Won rrn ln~lallalmo . r "'l•M t ' ,,,.lillll ,.1 .. amn11 1,,1 [1p hol :\I'" 1111t n 1 ••Ill:• \'11unl) I~ '1 ~ t "I I 1\0) \in...-"-1' 00"1 W1• C11H· C;A~·t I l1"1n1·r" Slr:am r lc>•m & uphoh W11rk 1euur 1'rud. 110111111 C11slom Home! R~pa1 umt 00 :nu; lnl 1 E11t C H AR RENOVATING~ 37 19 C...... /COfflCrT+e All types remodt!hng. r I' pairs. etc 2nd gt!oera tion. 17 yrs in 11rt!a hc·d Mr. Palombo 962 8314 B. Wilson & Sons. patios. rm add. remode l. plan~ Free est. 30 )'1"S exp L.1c 7487 Bonded 646-1140 ~ ti08.'> Sell wilh EASE! ........... ~··········· Oefle W Ph1fh p&, i>J\llh found a 11ons . & blol'k ~·2162 To place your message before the reading public. pbooe CA.l- COMfUSIOM7 t \1.l.. A IHHl l' il It t' A It Jo. I!: H I. I t• t-. W<lRKMIOI' 0 1w "' \~ 11a,,1 11rnm l' "' ll trll'lhC)(hl '1•1•11 I I 11 ra1~r 1 i.-vt·ll~1mc•nl 1 le. ,1 111m11tr h{·11i.t\il' , , .. ,,..tJ hrt! 41 work vhu•lllni: ''"' rr"• f'or 1!1•11111~ 11111 111<1 1 ~1 mz a.c+nc• ··•··•····••···••·•···· ._J.u:nw 'IAN 1•m·1•11 n atl'll frl't l' u rmll\ 1111 l&ri:• 111 """'" l"l"' I JI • IJ7~1 111 1 O.i.'111 .. I t• I I I I l I .. " I I I • 'C:llUll t Ill "'" J•1l1' Hld l0111h lllt • & ll l•Oltr .., 1"1! !i.21L1 M11w1n14. ti•l1t1r1.i, trim m11w l'w1C'e monthly JOO \ ·11·Jn u11t1 on :cl\<I r ••ir•te11111R 1 .. 1nllM·11 p111.: ,. , I' I r r I '"Ill I" I( & flt 11111~o11 ~t..1ur Cl1•1111 I 11 1-·r ,.,. lo ~ I I 111•x l'""~I\ t• 15-4 1:&411 1 •• 1w11 flWlllli'll~lll'I:' W1· 'IM:I UlhLt:' Ill ,1µt, lYtllll~ & 1 o 111 m ... r" 1· .. 'I .t<1H ~l.Kll oifl bl'M CioeMf'al WvkH ......••••......••.•.•. I-'IJa·ncnn .'ll ml/ murkl!I 1111: t •1·1 ul!H· w 1r~1lu1 t'\llf•f 1,.111'1' Wiii I rt•lltt' 1irl11 t u1h 11uirkl'l1nii .,.,1...,. 1..ttcn r 111!0 .. pol:.. 11t•w'l l•·lt .. r . briw hurt·:i .111\l I' H < .1 II 07~ 1 :!:ltl Hc.dyWllln i V o un1 M en W ll't!lipon11ibilit1t'8 havt '•T 4WU Tmck V11rd & I'~ nw11nl rqulp Can 11 o 11 n > 1 h 1 n i.: ' C u 11 ~.4ft 80'.!0 111\lJI JNI; & Cl. RANI N(; Tn~ tnm & pumt111i: or ~ Ra)' !lf.i4 4276 llaul/C>r1uhnl(, dt!moh llun Sk1pload .. r. dump \r uc k Tr 1· es I y t.J wk Kit 1251 tluuhng l2S a loud' Ca II Uav1d after 3vm at S45 80<t6 HouMclecNtcJ .......•..•..•.•......• Wanl a REAU. Y {,1..E/\N HOUSE., \'all Gingham Gtrl t-'rec 1•sl 64S 5\23 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l-lou~eclean1ng -t plus L11 rt .. 1 ... t 1 l 1IAll .. 111 u .. 11 ... 1m11P\'ll--·Ol.~yr~ whal" 'a llSuds 'n Stuff Ir ·Hit• w r "111 1111 ""' , ''~' l-'1·111 111.: B1t~n fort.Jt!ta11s 842 0884 hunu 1mp1 "' • m• 111 •l.lhli li.:11 1~1 1-..i:! 11 I •...•...•......•••..... C&f!CWH!p' /HauUnq I J "' II ~ 1· I " I I' I' l .tnt.l:>"t .. IJ•• h t'C-"·"' 6-12 ~17 1-,xp <.iJnJe11er t·o111p \ .1rcl mumt . l'lcanuv I!. Ir•·.: tn mmm~ l''r1•e ··~t l'Nc 641 1096 J \I 'I\ o r-\I.I rHJ\l>fo:S ll1111w 11·p .. 11 i.. 'm ull 101" I°\ kr lj.H; 1<1.15 I ·.irlJI. 1111\ p.1111l111J.:. cler l r 1l·J I p lu mbi ng Jl:llll~ l'O\ ,.,, '\11 Jllb t111 ,111,111 H11·k l!l4 3-1:!:! ~pru1·1• Ill' I 11r ~ 1 n ll·r ,Inv'<, Yar 11 llom•• µro pen~ d t:an up 5Jf. ~ Houlinq •.•.......•.........••• Ct.'flur Crpl & uphol cln, Sim, St otchgrd, pro( nr wu x R\'aS t!3H-5543. 751 8951 H O B I N 'S ll O U SE l'LEANING SERVICE: F'or a thoroughly dean hse 540-lll.57 Home Cleuning Rehabll'. honesL xlnt work. Call Pearl 775~ I~ th•1tcle I I ••••••••••••• ••••••••• De.,end11hle: Lady to clean your home t;11p own Tral\li. 6469001 751-0383 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bill & Manlyn's Cleaning. Painling & Carpentry CO o ffers fall s pecials . 548-8444 Fine ext/Int painting by Richard Sinor St. lie. ins. Try me K36-5.\SS, 24 hni A.GA.PE FOICE PAINTING COMPl\NV 3 Generations Of Painting Excellence 53H101 ....................... THEPOSTIOX :B57 Uirch NB·<>C /\irpl Avail now.2( hrs·1 dys M•sa11e & pkg servtce MS.22117 •lM·~901 RoofiftcJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .... Re1>a1r & Reroof All ty pes-shingles 1·ock shakes · compo.tar Frer Papering by Le Pap1er. est 541 ~Fin. Avail. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $13.SO/rl all rms papers --- --- Jo:xp 10/15/80 536·2350. REPl\IR: all types. 10 yrs RENOVATING · ROTOT ILLI NG SPRINKLERS·LAWNS. C LEAN ·UP . Dave: 642·4853. Bud 646·8481 -------exp. all work guar 1-'r Painting Speclabsl , int & ests. Jack. 848 1053 Bncltwork, small Jobs . ext. Free estimates 839-6793 any lime . ---- Te xturing by C:tla rlie . Tum nat or s way walls Into creative & designs 494-8248 Newport, Costa Mesa & Ir vine 67S-3175 eves PaintinR b) Churlle Bnck. s tone, block work, tile nrs, concrete patios . wlks. dnveways. Refs io'tee est John 8t0.l~ HART MASONRY · /\II T y pes Bril'kwork & Custom painting & s tain ang ol all types. 494 8248 .•......•...•.......... Painting inter rexter, lo rates lmmcd $e r v 842·03QI or 6J6. 7149 Blockwork . -~ 645 7307 P9cnter /Repair Painttllg/PapenllCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• PETF:RS PAINTING ~x pr·d Re as Rates Free Est Call Ge ne S.'i2·0458 ..•...•................ Stucco & Plas ter l'alth. no job too sm qwck & clean 645-4203. 645 "199 Neal patches & textures FrM Est. 89 3-l 4 39 Oave·s PaUlltng, ser ving Spec1a httn~ 111 int/e xt area 9 )'T'S, mosl re as patchrng & rest ucc()s. lnsure1.I, hc·d. 586·8425 Free est 64S-56Ei0 BETTER BUILT JlOOf' All types, hot rom11 tile. '>hake, lkd bonded ens f'ree est. C1111 960·8778 Sancl.lottinq ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sand & water blusl ini:o. Xlnt cleanups, lo rates 675-5994~ 21.3/S92·390 I ---Social SenicH ••••••••••••••••••••••• PHOULEMS -N c €·d 111 talk? Free counsell ni: A B C ll ELP l~I N Jo: 645·2222. ni. ..••.•••.............•. Huntinqt°" leach Tile Co. Let us upgrad e thal shower. tub. dram lx1an l or entry way l'eram1r Lile improves appear & value uf any home 111 comm bldg al J rcJ'- t·osl Free t·st & ~u~~ ... ,., l1011.<, 1714' K-t2 3020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tree tnnuning, clc•n· upi., hauling main · let111nce An1ie S48 Ml( 1h-e &Shrub1'nnimint1 Ir Removal. Yard t:lean· ups. Haultn~. G4S 0118. 84111413 J im TuforiftCJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• "RF.ADI NG" ltighly Qua I Prof. w /K-l2 Crtl<lentials M F.d. Posl Grad. UnJY. Work.Ref's Avail. 548·6022 TYPn«JS...¥ice ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fast accurate typing on lllM Corretl/Selectnc, otht!r St«•retanal work. bus iness letter s. re s um es. r t c Kure n 615·1230 Wmdow CIHniftCJ •............•........• "Let The Sunshine In'' ('all Sunshine Window Clcunmi:. Ltd. ~-8853 $2.17 per DAY That-., J\l.L you pay ror a JOduy ad 1nlhe DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY 00 IT NOW' It's a BREEZE Cassified Ads 642·5678 Dall)' Pilot Classified. 642-5678 •VERY LOW PRICES • On la nds cupe main tcna.nre F'rl'C cst1 mdles _21 ) r experil·m•c (;<-org1• !>19 2()15 I laul mm 1• C'l,•an u11 Con l'r••te removal Oump truc l.. qll1l·k ~e rv l;.t2 76:!!! The Mac1els Apts. & Ilse Cleanini;: & Busine~s BUI ldeng. Carol 646-f'502 after.a.JO Classified Ads 642·5678 Pamtang & Papenng Prof. work. Free est. Rsnbl. Steve. 547 42:1ll Trade your old stuff for new 1tood1es with a Class1f1ed ad 642·5678 Want Ads Ca ll IW2 ;,i-;18 i---6_4_2_·5_6_7_8 __ _ A.pa Iwata u.tww. Apor twoHh u.tur.. .,_.....eftb tMfum. Apartm•nb Unfum. Aportmnh URfurn.. R...tdt to~ 4 300 Office Rentd 4400 Office Rental 4400 lndmtrial Rent~ 4500 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·~····················· ••••••..•....•..•.•.... ····•··••········•····· ··•••····•··•·•··••··•• Cost•Mno 3124 CostoMno 3124 Hwulif4onleoch 3840 ~wport .. ach 3869. SanCletMnt. 3876 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• E'side Ob Twnhse. 2 Br. 2 br, 1 ba. new crpl. drps. Lovely all adult. no 1•cti.. PARK NEWPORT 2 Hdrm. 1 Ba. sml y rd. 2"'a ba, frplc. bllins. dbl Lile. palt0. paint. huge 1,2&3 Br apts 62()() Ed COUNTRY CLUI garage, l'lose to beach. gat. WID hJtup, deck. fenced yd. children OK, mger, h.b 84&0619 LIVING $375/m o 493 5047 o r fncd patio. gardener. $4.50. 1779 Westminster , 496 -1292. 0 S <.:rose to the beach' Sinl!l <'s . 1&2 bed room ad.Its, no pets, avail now. • B. pen at. 9 5, Refs pis . 1580/m o . 646-4ffi8 bright2Br. S325.K1ds• apts, & lownhnus~ 63l~eves 1 Br. Eastside, small but cozy w/lols o( neal wood. $.'Bl. 642·9450 aft 5PM. $375. 2bdrm. 1 "'aba studio. draped, carpeted, palio, adults, no pets. Avail Oct 15. M2·2'7S2. 118400 Val 631-4557 agt Prom S14~ 644 1900 SanJuc. Capistrano 3878 2 br , l ba. E. side adult apts. $375/roo. no pels. Sublse to Mar 31. 1981 543-5478 JBr. 2& wtrfmt condo Xtra Lrg ROOIM Clean. quiet. 2 Bd, 1 Ba. no kids/pets. $350/mo. C.llll Craig. 631 · l266 RVM~, REALTORS w/boat s lip $900 mo 1213) 592.5426 Lovely 2 & 3 Bdrm Townhous es. garage, patio, laWldry Cac. $425 & SS2S, Call 213/596-72()2 or 714 /96().7347 . Condo 2bJrm 2ba Bay ••••••••••••••••••••••• vie w e nC'lsd garage. Condo 2 Br. 11"2 Ba New auto opener ~5 year· carpets, drapes . paint. l> TSL Mg ml. 642-1603 $475 492--6700. 492 Z196 ---- Versailles Security com Tustilt 3190 p.Jex 2 Bd rm Vie w ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-49l2 Bkr VILLA BALIOA Female roommate to s hr 3Br, 2Ba apl on Balhoa Blvd .• NB 615-503.5 Shr 2br Oen 1-'tont Yrly 10 mos. left. 43 yr (lid man w /1 0 y r o ld daughte r visiting S400 + :.hr util 953·81 IU Ale x M1Ftosh.r 2 Br 2 Ila apt. I hlk to !)each. 1262/mo Bal Pe n. Avail 10 /1 673-3436 aft BP M. P r ofessional to s hare , Pent Hot.ISe. Ocea n Vie w. Promontory Poml. $400 mo 835·301 o Da y s ' 673·755-0 Eve Ask for Jeff. Medh·al, Dent a l 111 MO , TI6 !>fl r1 In N L'o~t 3 Mesa Ground Ooor. fu lly ~uipped. Pn vate patio, e t c $543 m o T om 957 1000 1617 Westcliff N B Wanl rinanc:1al lll~l 7000s f lsl noor. Agent 54 1 5032 - - NEWPORT IE.ACM J649 Westclirf Or Call Gene um 642 0200 KOUCEHTER S175 /mo. 1-\Jm nffirt• ruhu '"" 111 new bldg. Rent 1m·lutlc·~ e l ec . r eccpl1on telephone ans wereni:. conference rms. c•op.,yenl( fac1ht1es. k1tC'ht!n. nitcl\ iamtonal ... erv1l't•, t) pm1: s t•r v1ce on Sill' E x e cu t 1v c (;;i r d c 11 <, 557 I L51 Mt'<i1cal or Offi<'e SWll' (or lease Downtown l.a~una Be a c h 656 sq rt $623 /mo Ample pv\ park t n lol Owne r 497·2351. NEWPORT Elegant exe<"utive s uites in prestige location. With co mpl e te s uppo rt s e r v 1 c e s F I RS T CdM Deluxe Su1ll'S. 15<"' ( n,1,1 \k sJ l1w:il1on. lot 8 .I ' x :I u u I' a l'l i ~d I .Y f••un·d :.! s t rue l ur~s <:011111 111• ui.ed ror otreces. d < ~ .. II! 11115 dys. 552 7882 ('\I ... Ster~ 4550 ············••••···•··· 31II -,q fl Sl\Kl per mo. all 11111 p<l Many uses 443 H.,m•lton G45 7184 Rentds -Wanted 4600 ··•·•·············••·•· Wanter! 111 D>sta Mesa or Irvine ar~u 2 or 3 BR. h o u ~c p r e ferred 3 ,\dulls .'<Int references. fi7 :1 5701 E ves . &: wl>el<cmls 2 Br 1 ~ Ba townhouse. bll-1.ns, air, patio a. gar. No pets. 5'25. 645-4837. 3126 MARINER'S W A.U< Lg 2 br aptsJrom $450 Frplc. large >•d. patio, gar. nr Hunt. Ha rbour. 16662 Jib Circle, /\pt 1. 84().6807 New t.wrury 2 Br Condo. Full Security under· ground parking. Cagney Lane. rnstrm 575.3007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Respons ible Female wanted lo share 3 br house Newpl Heights are.a 64&-37911 MONTH FREE. sq ft. AC, ampl pkg . Ulll 714/851-0681 pd. 2855 E C~l llW}. lusiMst/ln•Ht/ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiii. 615.0000 ~ 2 BR, pool, 1ar. l mi lo ocean, $4.50. Adlts. No pets. 673-1708 or 640-6175 SPACIOUS 1 Br patio, nr s tores Ir bus. $350. ~7816 2 Br, carpets, dra~. bll· ins, ad.Its only, no pets. 1110 Victoria. Avail. 10/1. 548-1367 alt SPM. 1 Br. stove, ~frige. small yard. Adults, no pets. s:ns. 541.1377. 1 Br. + Oen . Duplex. Newly decor. Ac ross from Newport Heights. Fenced yard. Adults. no pets. $45(). 548-4679. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DUPLEX: Xtra lg upper. 3 Br, 2ba. 28x18 liv rm. Some ocn vu. close LO bch & shops. New plush cpts " drps. 1595. 499-2237. 495-1490 Beautiful lrg. 2Br, 2Ba. $475. 615-4174 or 615-7346. Tri plell!" Hwuli14• •ac11 3140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Breezy bungalow 2BR S'$5 Kids OKI 9628>f ee 631-4556 Agt Carolee HUMnMGTOM LAICES SPARK.UNG STREAMS CASCADING WATERFAJ.J..S TOWERING PINES Avail. fur short term. 1 N"EWSPACIOUS bdrm unfum house . S250 LAKESIDE incl. util. CaJI ~0719 ADULT APTS. after 4 pm. •Elegant fireplaces ----------1 ·•Private lakeside patios PINE BLUFF APTS & balcorues Spac. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Adult •Healedpool& Complex. Patio, view. whirlpool s pa Crplc, encl gar .• gas •4milesrrombeach s tove. dishwsr . spa. 141-1160 lndry rm. $175. 7562 Ellis Ave. H.B. SPMC 631-6107 t3blks W. of Beach Bl l DoUbome l bdrm apt on oversize lot wilh stalely country home. $375 without ulll. 6'5-6625 Bachelor unit, water & hot water, gardening serv. $270/mo. 6'&-3627 DetllXe poolside xtra lge 2br, 2ba. Bllns, dshwhr. 1 "'1 miles beach. Adlts. no pets . $395 m o . 536-8362. WANT ACTION? Classifed Ads 642-5678 0 0 0 0 0 Use ,,,..,,.. At/ service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... this service Is only $10 per week. For more information and to place your ad call 642-5678. DAILY PILOT ... . .-.-.- --------------- 2 Ocean v1ew Penthouse, 2 Br 2 Ba. Sec. $700 mo. 644-~52 Eves Seawillr.,. ------······················• 2 Bdrm, 2 bath. Fireplace. Garage. $450/mo Cull 963-2205 VILLA IALIOA CONDOS Adult only Bdrm, Den, 11/4 Ba. Spacious 2 Br front apt, Large pa\10. New l&.2 bdrm luxury adult apts in 14 plans from $415. 2 bdrm from $505 + PoOls. tennis, waterfalls. ponds! Gas for cooking & heating paid. From San Diego Frwy dnve North on' Beach to McFadden then West on McFadden to Seawind Village (714)~5198. S 3 7 s f mo . 2 k 1 d s 2 Bdr m. 2 Ba with ocean Slater/Beach. lsl & last. view 848-5465. &11·9303 From R)S() Mo ------J RLProperties lBr. 1Ba Bil U\S patio, 645-4566 645-6459 lmile beach $360. Ask ------Oceanrront for Winter Lavonne . 213·595·4565 ~EW DECOR 3Br, 2Ba. Rentals. Furnished & un- blwn 1G-5. frplc. gar. 2 blks heh. rum. Broker. 6754912. 1 br. w/gar; new crpt, <Ui>s. paint. $285. 1sl/last + dep 641>4559 --~ New condo, I & 2 bdrms. SS75-S6SO Adults univ, no pets. many rec fac1ht1es. 846-1826. 2 Bdrm l Y:t Ba Condo. $450. Adults. no pets Call ~2566 or 973-297\ Agt. noree. 2 BR, puol. ga r , 1 m1 to ocean, $450. /\dlts. No ~ts 673-1706or640-til7S. 2 Br, 1 ba. stove. cplS & drps J\vall Od 15 Garage S335.1148 8592 ----- 1 Br condo. like new. pool. 1 ac u z z r. n o pets . $400. mo. P P 962-653.1 lrttine 3144 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br Condo m .. Lakes". FUU jac, lenms. end unit. $500/mo. 731-416.1 LogmMI t.och 3148 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I BR, xlnt ocean view, porch , new cpl. pol , lndry, ~2 blk beach. $475 mo. Dys 549·1186. evs 499-3922 Wide ocean views. Classic architecture on acres of gardens. Pool & spa. Estale living. Close to beach & s hopping. l Bdrm. Apt. $475 incl ut.lls. Mature considerate adult. 49446.53 or 494·0017 STUDIO: Refrig. Drps, Cpl. Stove. Yi blk lo bch. $340 Incl. ut.11. 497.3077 Bac h apl. Ulil Inc l. $250/mo. + lst/lasl + cleaning. 49U723. L..,..a....... 1152 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br, 2 ba condo on golf course Includes refer, wuber & dryer , $600. az-6700 or 492·2'796. Lee 2 BR coodo. newly re· furbished. pool, adJta. No . pets. $500. 552-0042 aft 6. ......... ... " ••••••••••••••••••••••• W4-...0MT ' WOMDB S675 m o y r ly No R009 pets/kids. 645· 1682 --•••••••••••••••••• ~~!.~ 2 BR Vrly 1 lllk from beaeh t;pper Unrt m Duplex I Ba. stv. refrige. waler, S400 mo. 3505 Babloa Rl\'d A(.!I Gus 2 13/ !l°Jti 171 l 2 B dr m 1 1, Ba Townhouse ~tyle Adwt.s. no !>('ls. ~s. ~-2682 __ & \ F'rool super large c:ondo, 2txlrm, 2ba, sec bldg, boat dock u vail, ad u lt s no pe t s Ownr·r a1n $1 l50t m o ti75 01 0.') l Ud rm. IX>QI. hl ock lo oce.m . s1nl'!le adult $300 mu. 642 5002 BAYSIDE DHIVE .. THE c ovi-:· Deluxe 1 bd.rm rle n , 1°2 ba Pri vate beach, JJOOI. s pa , large palJI) SW5 rm "159· 1092. Zbr , 2 b a .a p l q ui e l neighborhood. olde r clienlele ~!l5. 640·6379 2 Bdrm. Apartme nt Light. airy, large patio. Call 645-9314 Empl. man 35·45. lt1t pnv, $115/IIX>. Call !f341. 642-4300, 24 hrs. Roo m w /f ull house privileges, Newport Beach. Oct 1. 642-6811 VacatiaellMltds 4250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Palm Springs 3 Br. 3 Ba. bouse. furn, $2000 mon· thl y rental during sea.son. canyon Country Club area. 645·5'917 MOUMT A.JN VIEW VILU.S TBMSCLUI Near Palm Springs . 1·2 & 3 bedroom villas availa· ble Weekly. monthly and aMually. 7 lighted tennis courts. Close to Rancho Mirage ·s Restaurant Row. Agent. <714, 328-<4007. Palm Desert view condo. 3Br. 2Ba. beautifully rumished. sec. gale. 12 tenn11 cts. Avail. Oct. 6 ·N o v . 7 . Sll OO . 714-640-8268. R...tdstoSMn 4300 ------...................... . * * •,, Blk to ocean. 2 BR J 1."l Ba. fplc, encl gar. LR. adlls no pets. $.59$. 6.11·3888; 645·6822 ------ Easlblu!f. 2 br, 2 ba, coun· try char m. rrplc, dis· hwasher. $600. no pel. 6.11-2029 Moving? Avoid deposilS & cut living ex pens es! Proressionally since 1971. HOUSIMATIS 1132.4134 The Roommate You·re Looking For ls Looking . For You! $50 fee for peo· 2BR. pool. gar. I ma to pie with home lo share. ocean, $450. Adlts. No mf rllnw!looking pets.673-l706or640-6175. 0 • 2 br. 1 ba, married cpl, adults only, no pets, $375. 631-4649 2 Br. 2 Ba. Luxury Apt. Quiet neighborhood. Easlblulf area. Older clienlele. $495. 640-6379. s..c..... 3176 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Distinctive 2Bdrm $330 W/1Ailspaid(498S) ree R8CTIMIS '31·4555 Move in today. $325·$375. I 4' 2 Bdrm. Walt to be.ch. Nice & clean. 418-6187 or -.1m andl'°~~ny a roommate search agy. 752-9475 Rmmle wanted: Vo11ng professional is looking lo ahr 2 Br. 2 ba Bayfronl home in N.B. M or fem. $M0 mo. incl utU. Avail Oct 1. 615-1875 aft 6 pm. Fem to shr 2br, 2ba, nr 0 . C . C . $2 0 0 I i n c I . utl l.540·3233 Dorolh y, !r19-B7 eves. im med. Apt to sbr rm mo. l lh blll:a from bch , Clyde Female room male to share ruce 2bdnn. 2ba furnis hed apt Mesa Verde $250/roo ~9-2804 Fem tc. shr 2 bdrm apt in Costa Mesa. $190/mo plus util. Close to OCC. 548..arl4 Mature Resp Shr Nice Apt. Priv. Br & Ba S230 Rec. Fae.. 751-7908 am Fem Rmt Wanted to Shr new Jbr hseon B.l. Conv Loe. Furn s ep ba wash/dry S300 incl. utJ Avail. irnmed. non-smkr. 613.5477 Male rmmte wanted lo shr 3 Br 1\1':1 Ba apt. FUil rec racilities. No las t, ulil pd $230/mo. Harbor Green Apts next lo OCC 97M940 Fem. UCI stude nt shr 2 story condo in Irvine w /senous student. non· smokers. Gall. ~8888. Want responsible. neat, mature Roommate to share luxurious 3 Bdrm. Condo in Costa Mesa . Call aft 5. 545-SJ!M. _____ , Female roommate lo shr lwcury twnhse, rec facil. mstr bdrm. bath, $290 mo. smaller bdrm $260 mo. 640-4538 Cathy art 5PM Female to shr furn 3Br hse, Irvine. $250 mo. + 'h util 559-6796 Roommate wanted. new Irvine hse . $250 mo 532·6875 dys, 857-0343 Idea l location for At tomey. Real Estate, or Entrepre ne ur. OHice now available -large paneled Reception area wrth s tora ge and 3 priva te o ffices 1n beautifully ma intalned full ser vice building <Comer Weslclirf Dr & Irvine. Newport Beach J 800sq ft. Call Melissa 645·6101 COSTA ME.51\, ORANGE COAST FINANC IAL CENTER: SU1TE6 284.5 Mesa Verde Or E. S295 mo. inclds Recep. l1onisl, and ulllities. See 9-5 or call 957· 1414 J.E. Ounger Attorney EXEC. OFFICE Pnvate bath w/showe r 705 E ·Balboa Bl vd, NB 450 s q . ft $250 mo 642-4623 Office for rent. Approx 550 sq. fl $400 mo lncld utils. 2450 Newport Bl vd. Co s ta M e s a Se e Manager. ---Newport. West cllrr or h ces Professional of fices or suites. Month Lo month or lease Fu II service & law bbrary C~I Building Manager, 642-3111 or J o anne . 646·9603. Evenings or weekends, 760-8600 ~TI6 sq. ft. General Of. fice tMedical No. Costa Mesa. Gmd Or. Ii&" & up Tom 9 57 -1900 , 213 007 2064 Prime Ocean view loca lion m Laguna Beach 450 sq . fl in Blueb1rrt Center S550 m o Call Paul 497 ·4844 Office for rent. approx 100 s q fl $250 mo With answenng sen MO· 7555 WA.UC TO llG "A" LUXURY EXl::Ct:TIVE SUITES Hecept1on1s l. Sec reta rial Ser~lce. Phone Answering 111 Beautiful Garclen St!! tin~. Conferenct-Rms. Racquel Ball Court. & Pn \'ale Patro 9711 1001 Office space 1n Ne"·port Fina ncial Center, 2 or fices w, pn v entram·cs Pat. 641-9190 4450 •........•.•.......... FQr store & orfice spare a reasonable rates 500 to 2700 Sq Fi. MESA VERDF. OH PLAZA t.525 Mesa Verdl• E. C )1 545-4123 NB CM. up to 4700 sq fl a\'a1I al pnme t•om er 17th & Nwpt Bl v tl 67S.fll00 DANA P1'2Tois Room Ofc &Comml ~"1 price From $2.45 mo. !n5-l I 20 SI'ORE SPACE for lease . :.JO sq. ft Avail now. lS()(J sq ft. avail. Oct 15th Negotiable terms Coast Equities. 21J/596· 7202. Prev Chiropractic ofc JO vrs. 1800 Sq fl. 493 Old Newport Blvd. 642-551 1. 250 sq. Ct. grnd nr .. utils ----------I pd. $165/im. 779 w. 19th. Fem. to shr 3 Br 2 Ba St. C.M. Tom 957·1900. home nr bch. $175. eves 1635 s/f al 28' s /f. comm/ indust area In Costa Mesa. Useful for storage or shop rac1I. 642·2928 or 548.9035 SJS.1140 625' OFFIC E SPACE. ---------1 Panel Walls/ Cpl/ Heat/ ~°I!. Off St. Pkg. 20.52 Newport Space for rent in Euro- pean Skin Care Studio in Corona del Ma r 615-5080 -.--4350 Blvd. CM 556·4181 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Sin gle Mesa Verde. Ha rbor /Adams, C.M. S4S. Storaae only ~3232 or 641· 14Q>. tOx~r Gar. Storage only. Costa Mesa $40/mo. Call 1·5pm.63M13>. Single garage, $45. 131 w_ 18lh St.. Costa Mesa. 640-9900. 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTCLIFF BLDG Nl WPn R I Ill ACH .... ' ' •• • • 11 ... C.•11 M1 H,,,.,.,.,d h4S b101 644-~ Nice office. w /stor age or llldustrial R...td 4500 shop, 850 sq. rt. $250/mo. ;~;~·~·~~~~·~;;.;; 646-8082 sq ft. Great location & Office fwhse. 300 sq ft of· parking. 33• g r os s . fice. 1600 sq ft whse, xlnt 73J.746 W. l7lh St, C.M. Sky Park, Irvine loea· -~---· ------lion. 540-9982 Office Space Cor Rent Udo Stupyard Area l -400sqft 1 . 246.$ sq n. 1·290sqft 1·132sq fl. Com mon rcpt & ntrm. facil. Inquire al loc. 201 Shipyard Way.£, NB Office by the ocean. 315 3rd St., HB .$200/rn o. Gl'OWMI floor . sconatALn SU.75JJ l2n> sq. ft. $375 mo . Front olflce, large rear area & door . Un it 23 629 Terminal Way C .M . 540·~352 Day. 646·0681 Eves. 1800 sq. fl. 2 Front oCfices. 2 Baths. Large rear sbop area Ir door . $t95 mo. 1T75 WblWer Ave. C.M. 540-9352 Days, S.6·0681 Eves . ..: FOR LEASE KOU...IRVINE INDUS. Just alep& to tbe sand From \his 2Br w /cara1e Only~ (6405) fee CE2 675-70&3 ----------•Commercial : a lores, NI Br I Ba, view. gar,•---------Office space avail. FuU ......... E!Si .. -:.. c u . Fr CONDO 6200 sq ft w/2,075 ore space , nr OC Airport. $UO. 220, 3 phue elec. Asking~ sq ft., gro68 3 yn. C.U Hugh al 540-7923· Mon· Fri. lltmMIS 6J 1-4111 NO FEE I Apt. • Condo rentals. Villa Rentalt 87Ml12Bkr. lndry wallt to sbo-$370 Fem. roomm9le \0 shr 2 .,..._ ~ '"' • .... · service ex~utive suites '815. 1w/water.548·™9 493-2710 Br apt. Sl90 + $lOO sec. avail for leue in Center dep. ~4 Pointe. Located near OC 3 Br 2 ba, 2 balconies, frplc. ocean vlew. 1590/mo. 58f·OH L '168-4541 M/F Abare houae in H.B. $22S/mo. Reapon only. A vall Octl . .0-'l'ZG. Airport. For leaslna in· formaUoe call /DeeDee Hllf:t55-22m. Have somelhin& you wan\ to sell? Classified ads do lt well -Call NOW. 642-5678. Want Ad Help? 642·5618 llMMnHs Opport.ity SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• M3 r ket1ng Manager 1partt1mel needed by establish~ company ror 2 product lines that are leaders rn their fields- sk r are~1s & mar inas. Orders on taand Wlll re- l urn inv e s t ment of S25,«l00 en 6 mos PleasJ! call. 64~-64~8 5 --- Expandin g bus iness req new associa te· willing to learn & ope rate own busines s. p art-lime. High profit potential. Call (714 I 962-7306 ---------Molwytoloan 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• /NEED /MONEY • CRB>ITHO PROILEM 2nd & 3rd TD loam 978-6531 /855-1145 Arranged b) Coast Home Lom11 A Mortgage Broker * HOME OWNERS * SI0.000 TO $100,000 For Any baSOft Loans Secured By A Combination of Real a nd Personal Property Call ChllCk or Janie• 2-1 hrs 7 days 957-5823 AMERJCANWAV MORTGAGE CO YOUCA.HIE SUREWlntA BANK 2nd m's REDUCED RATES 5.ellllJO ... 714-132-1200 Ask for Linda Flynn or Karen Linn ....................... Sattler MhJ. Co. All types ol real est.ate Investments since 1949. Spedal1llMJ .. WTDs 64J.Z 171 545-06 I I C_..forT.D'a. Amer ican Mlg. Bkr 115..'Hl41 People who nHCl people- ahould always cbttk Uw Service Director)' in the DAILY P ILOT .. . ·-· ·----· .. ... . ... - . , ... w ' ... .. DAIL V PILOT 'tt.11 a .. ,.,... Dei4i SOJS ........................ 1ftClow hN rmnC") for 2nd T.D No <'~tl r heck. no ,pally for IH'Hon r ail ACT 6'13 T3ll an) urrx• t.-" I• 3ni T ll fur .,~1~ C11ll af\l·r fi I' \1 566-li'Ttll CY111i. r-1•n•Rh/ ,.... .... , .... ,,....... . ~ ..................... . '•1•c111Wllk SIOO ••••••................. . Now You Can Sell More ~ It h lh 1 I \ •• 11 II t PF.N1'\' l'I" Ill H AV:\ NIU unh i.:: 3 ""•' 1111 .! "'"" onl~ SI ,, oJJ, .111 , l111t• Ad\ l.'rl ,,,. "111 "' murl' 1fl•m, 1 ,t1111 d up ' " ~ 11111 "· .11 h add1t1nn.il 11111 1 Only fl(I(• fnr tht• 11111 da}s "iorn 11" commt'f•·t,11 ·'"' a 11o 11 l' cl L 11 ;11 u, Your Pt•gr1' l '11ll'IH 1 A d u r u :. l' 1 " ti 1 Bank Aml'rl\·.1rtl Visa or ~h1:.t1•rt ard For more 1nfu1111Jt111n and to pla('e xour Jtl. J ll I 642-5678 SCRAMLETS ANSWERS Radium Cloak Purge Weaixm PIERCED Tiley gave our guesl (I( honof' a set of cu!ninks. He dtdn"l own a shirt he could use lhem on. so hc bad h is wr1 s t i. PIERCED. n~. SeQlt)ll-OW 25 ti.Ul • hnm4111b 5350 tWpW....., 7l00 •••••.•....................................... PRP 1,1\W 4t\ld1•n1 nh•ds ~ 000 W1U do an thin!( 1 .... "al t onrld t>nl111l 0 \ M P 0 llo 't2~:l '>Ji!·~· TOUCH A Cl.ASS HCC.TS 7~" llfll7 TOMMY'S OfMtWPOIT lSCO.TS ,:.;: ti.ii ~Co ... .-, ESCOllTS 14 111 , 1.11 "'"'' C~ Clw<kt A"' Elf' MC, V l.o LITIUAHHIES ESCORTS 111' Ill l)llf Ir, <Ill It •r11l1 •l •Ml I, .:J Ill\ \lll"\11 \\\'I l 11 • i.1 I • llul I l•ll I l 111 • I' ,111 11.'lll' lh "' " .. 1,.:ht 1...... I I .!!> ltt> ln""k' '"'ho •l' Ill• ll rui:, n11 111111 rJ<'l ~ ti"'jtlllll *FOXY LADY * 111 l'f\ "i\l.J. l)~I \' * 972-1138 * G~H'Gols ESCORTS •972-1621 * NolW 1 linng after 6prn :\t/\SSAC; E S10 W \I> :'11 YSTIC \IASSA<..i 1'.: 5.:-,0 1656Sanla Ana TtrNI l)f be •n!! alone·• Want a goud youn~ Mex 1can "1fe 19031 768 27 12 FIRST LADY Escort. Moct.fs. Party 0Qncen. • 972-1-345 * ~IC & VISA Accepted COVER GIRL • OUTCALL • Apt "'"ost nt '1 .ino11cr Tra1nr.-.. Will l 1 u111 l 'ouph.,, PalJl•I .... ork & malnlC'11('Nwr 1~12 ~11'1 AU YOU TOOYOUMG FOlt AllLltUS I.it l'Cllnfl1lrt\ h 11 Ill'~ II ln"' frtr •.h111rp 1•111 to.iu.,111 1-t.'f}jtll' ''"l'r IM It 1'1' lo 11 4\1•1 'II fur, rr11111• '" 111aJlll I lflt·\ .\ ll'•lll I U11u1n i u u r.,111 1•1•11 '1u .. t I 01 ll •lfll' I• It,.,. tn 1 .. n 1m11 r 1I "• ,,,.,, nt.' '"''"''' ,• ""'1•• k • • l"'n"'" 1~1 tr 11111111: I•' o 11 f ..I II\ I II I ,ot 1 \I l tr;ol'l~l·••l11l11111 i\ 11"11!1111' 'Hf H \ t .... I ••• I I~" '"lflllfll \ 11111 l•HllU•• I' 111 1tl .. 1•l1·111tw 11 IO 1nv11"• l1o1 or<trl\•t"' "11 \11 I I I "t' • " ·~1 11-•1 \\ I I' 11 .USEMILY WORIC ''"'' 111·" ti11 ...... ,, i. 1.11 I 111111 1pp l\ 111 ..... , 1•11 \n O'll \l.u111I ''I 11 111· I In• lJf1'1 t .. •t/,<111 '" \ \\ 'J.'I\. ... ..i •• 1•1,11 .t.SS EMIL ERS WANTED \ppl) ..ti l'.illll• t1J1tl1\ IUlll'lltll ''II \\ lith"I ' .... 1.1 "ti..,.J ASSEMBLER rl••lrt<J I M,d1..i11nJI E\Pt>I " j '"l'lltltl \ Ill • t'h·t•ln•·<1I ,\ IHl'1•h,on11 .ti l'<JUIJ)nll'ltt 'M1l1lt•ror11: & hllhl 'hop 1•1111~1 S.rn11· loh w11rk 1•:1.1,.·r tlt•-.11 a hit' l;uod p.n hl'11t·l 1h <:111Wll)j,( i.'0 111 ~.111 .111.111 ( 'apo 71 1 1!l:11jl;~1 ASS EM 11u:H El.fa''l'H lmined1ale upcnini.:s for mcchanu·al a-.sc•mhf\ F.xper µref hul nul t t' q'd Cruv.mg t·u i.tood henef1ts. call for .1µpl fil :'i Jfi32 Nt!wporl Manne r.ngmeennr; 1':11 gr lO'lO W l1Ui St . C M ASSISTANT MANAGER Draper's Laguna Mills s lore Mus t lie t!K perie n C'ed 1n bdler women s rcadv lo Wl':.tr and spurtswcar Apply m person lo Manager Ma ble Austm. 23621 Moullun Parkway Plaza or call 768·6622 for appointment H9tp W ... ed 7 I 00 Help W_.,,,, 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• lla11km11 HewAcc~t Ci.rli l'r1•\ 1011' ,.111.W'tlt'lll'I' oh• '11 ,, hh• !i 1111d I y 111n ~ 'kill' 11oe11t1r1•tl ~llllnt"h 'Ill' I I. In jl t,t.. 11 IJ ill h l' hl'l1•hrl l 1111r.I \ ulll111111.1 llu11k • '4111 ..... \111trl ~l ~ ... 1111 .\1111 ~Jit 1 llU I ""'"'I M1 ~ I .1flt•\ I ••I•, 11.111lo.1111• COLLECTION TilLER \\ I II ,.. ,., lo( II u .. II k I II Jlljl• ( OUlll\ \II j.1<1f l I !t it• I "·'' ,111111lllM'lli.1l1· 1uo;o;l l111 ,, ( 11111 ·1 111111 .111.J \\ '" I 1 ll1' \ftol11\ 111 l\t" 10 \\ l'\I "' • UI ild\ ,11111 plt'.1 Jiil flhHll• !llJlllll I I "'°'''II I 1111 h lllPltlh~ Jll • \IOU~ , .. ,, .. lfl'lllt "rt 1111111•11 \\1 111!11 l\ltll••11t '""''''" "·"·''' 111111 1111 11 ... u1 ''" "11h l' Ill 11• Ill• I ll I '. l• , .. I •'•Ill l.J Ill.I I 1714)752-8735 ,\,.,, ~) ·~~ .. W E LLS FARGO BANK l.1!.IO Mat· Arthur Ulvcl twriort lwat·h, CJ\ hqu:il Opp!.) 1-:rnployer M F II Ba 11k1n1: Chl.'1.:k Surtt-r '\t ad11ne Operator see our arl ur1der l'len t·al. ll<t nk of Nt-WJ>Ort Banking Santiago Bank is Expanding! IOOllC--~/C N11t Orh inv.,-;tmrnl C11 m 111•1> c>JWnm.:. pc·r l'X 1>a1111ton. for F /t: com nuu lon hkpr 111'1 Ptl ori en t e d p erson l'omputer krwwlt·llRt• 11 rnu-11 'k11lful on phonri. & 111 I' H 11nrlc. maturity 1w1· 'ult MO lll23 llll~INt-:ss MAN/\<: 1-.R r111 1 <Hntnullll) Mi~IK'lll 111111 Hl'L1n-.1 W\·lronw ""cnol "'"IUlnf' Ill Jtl no ~'IH l>1t1ly P1l11l, I' I) llrnt 151!0, <..'wl u M1"ia , Ca ~(ll,\2tl C~HVASSERS l',111 111 1'\rll T lnll' fur V11l1•1 1tn;11.irat 1011 1>11"'4.' S7 112/hr Wurk 11wt1 ,1rPJ :J'J9 6563 CAR WASH ! J:.h1t•r" wu11t1..'ll Part l1111c Fuuntiun Valli.~>. '<•·~toorl ~·.1d1 1•1111 ti-11 ""ll ;1:-.k for:-.luni:~ l'J-.h•t!r want ·d l'art t1111l.' L •• 1~WlJ ~ach/ £1 f UI U .Ht!U 6-1~ 44fl0 . l.o1•l11:1a ) CASHIER \11"1 have cxf) & IJ<1:.1c µholo k1111wll'<lgl' F T \ppl~ in person Pholo· ~rllphy lJnhm1tl'<i, 16889 y t• a c h 0 I \' d . ll B . K-17 366<1 C.\SJlt 1':1t llou~£'w:1re Salt!S Aµply m person . ll111n Hardware 1024 Irvin• WestcliH Plaia I Nil. .................. C~HIERS UTDTEM MA RKETS For 2nd & 3rtl Shifts We promote lo manage mcnt & supervision Crom w1thm. WA.NT ACARJ-:ER 7 • Call I 7141631 -9421 CASHIER Clcri1:1al N •• w p u r L 9 1: a 1· h ln.-<uranre t:t1 offers an entry lev1•l llO."illon of IJalhnJC <.:I •rk Oood co bt:nef•ls. JH"J hrs /wk. 13 611/hr Call Laura 8.'JJ~ ('lencal GEN.OFFICE ~SISTANTS We are acctipllng ap· pllcatlon.<c for temporary clcncal support positions re<1wnng ~wpm typing. Pleasant phone attitude Pro fess1onalls m ls a m~t Call today for in formation. 557-0045 Cf\-Lll\W::. llMPOl!Al1Y l'fRSOl'INfl SllMCn l72l llrch Strfft M.wporl•och Clerk IPharmaC'y. exp pre ferred . cos metics . t:iflS & cards 64().. 7373. Cl.EU TYPIST Immediate opening for Clerk /T ypist tn loa n brokerage co. in Fashion lslJnd. Basic office skills req'd Growth opply Call Ms Heap. r.40 9350 Cl.ERIC TYPIST tr you arc luok1ng for a challengin~ pos1t1on, en· JOY vancty on lbe JOIJ. & want lo work in Newport. [leach, we have a job for you We need someone who can provide ~ood 1•lcncal support for our purchastn~ dept. Type 45wpm, & lyr previous offit·e exper For appl. call 640·4580 exl. 11202 F: 0 E. Codctail Waitress 1-ull time. Pnvate club. 1:1:33·9561. Cornrrercial LOGI Officer Banking, exp req. Xlnl salary & benefits, apply personnel dl rector HHITAGEIANIC 721 N. Euclid , Anaheim 991·3860 EO.E -------~ 0 e I I v e r y m a n I G•rdener /Handy man wa~houaema n tor aiclr needed. , rr. ror condo la room •l.IPpiy deliveries. N.8 . Pleasant worlda1 Knowledge of Orange condition• • xlnl OP· County • good driving portunity for r i 1bt rt:cord requlret.1. Call person. Ellp 1n pool M&-3435. maintenance • +. call DruV£RV & COLLEC· 67~1 bet~na•sror TION MAN ror washer & appomtment. - dryer renlal service. GENERALOFFICE llvy driving req. 18 yrs & Busy sales Rep. Co. good dri ving record. needsGlrl Fridaytohan· United Renl·All64511760 die office-part lime. Ol-:NTAf.------Salary open + benefits. Ort ho chairs ide. P /T 846-__ Z7_9_l_. ------ 1-:Xp. preferred. 642·5997 General Oental ---Part time help wanted. lnserter"S. Monday trues· t:icp Denlal A.ssislant, day nighu . Apply UMIO work 4 days get paid for Pl M 5 642·0112or644·6687-acenlia, C. · Dt!ntlil Ortho, chairside. must have exp. P /T J d ay /wk Newport Beach and Cosla Mesa. 546-5170 DENTAL ~SlSTANT . For ortho practice. ROA or eligible. Laguna Bch. 494.8555 Dental Looking ror a highly motivated chrside asstStanl lo replace our "~1other to Be" Xlnl salary & benefits, Pedo. Ask for Sharon 548-5580 DEMTAL .ASST. Chairside RDA or eligi· ble X-ray li C' , busy of· fire. Cosla Mesa 642·1670 DENTAL ~SISTANT· Pedo Ofc, X-ray lie Chrside exper req. Ask Theresa 548-5588 De n tal Assistant , chairside, 4 day week. CdM area 644 7162 Dental receptionisl. xlnl opportunity for person e>tpenenced in front & back om ce procedures. 4 day work week. CM. tHS-7~ -------- DOCTOR'S OFFICE Receptiorusl. Must type well & bookkeepin g. Start $900. Lag. Hills . 830 -9790 . o n Fri .. <196-6066. DRAFTING G&tEIAL OfRCI SllOOTO ST ART MORES Wint EXPERIENCE Five Girl Office Varied Activities We Will Train Company Paid Benefits APPLY BETWEEN 8 & llAM 853 Production Place Newport Beach GBlOFFICE Entry level position . Llghl secrelarial skills. Newport Fashion Island. Hours 7:30am-4pm. Ask for Mrs. Prall, 644-9111 Gift mlr needs person to cut fabric & keep inven· tory reeord<!. Knowledge & interest m fabrics de, sired. Accuracy & neat working habits required. 8:30am-5pm. Irvine loca· lion. 979-333.1. GUARDS 1''ull & part time All areas. Uniforms furn 'd Ages 2l or over, relired welcome No exper. nee. Appl y : U ni ve r sa l Prolertion Service, 1226 W. 5th Sl .. Santa Ana In· lerview hrs: 9·12 & l 4. Mon-Fri. HAii STYLISTS Command Performance has openings in Npt Bch & Hunt. Bcb. Guaranteed salary + commission. Paid holidays, paid vacation, co. paid beallh insurance and advanced training. Phone Patricia for appl. 964-4448 ~/Uv•l• L.-t1-1tw•A1ce" We're not the Bradey bwdl, no children. but ... do need aa "Alice". Happ~l)' la buut N.8. desires resp. boael&. eQr'd uad 1m maculate. non-amokinc 1Mdy to lreep bcM.lle. XJnt salary, commenaunte w/abiUly. Refs. a must . 1-..- HOUSEKEEPER. Live out. English speakinc preferred . Own tran s portat io n . References. Ne wport Beacb.673-llOtS HOUSEMAN. Live out En11ish speaking pre· ferred. Own transpe>rta- li o n . References . Newport Beach. 673·1CMS . Howiewives. Prr. earn xtra money doing what y ou know b es t : Housework. Call Suds & Slllf. 8'24184. lmmediale p rr openings avaJJ ror cooks, barten· ders, • delivery driver. Cooks m ust b e 18, drivers 21 •over w\tb gd dnvinc record. Start from $3.25/hr. Apply dai· ly after 5pm. Ask for Jean or Mary. 410 E. 17th St.C M. Insurance Technician. In· dependent agent. Re · quires experience ror pe r sonal lines un · derwriter. 494-llOM. IN SU R AN CE, S J C branch office needs exp. persoruil lines secy. Musl rate, market & quote. Xlnt oppty for self slarler willing to take responsibilit y. Salary negOliable. 542· 7244. Janitor al Experienced noor man, t.op wages, 979-39ZJ. JANITORS Part time eves. Newport Bearh/c.c.ta Mesa area. Janitors• waxers. Must be over llyrs. old • U.S . citizen. Call 532-6558, lOAM-3PM, Mon.-Fri. J EWELRY OF.SIGNER seeks p/l asst. Model making /assemb ling. 497"'550 ~ & F.-.d 5300 f/5..1 0778 M ·/VIS,\ ••••••• •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • ErnDloynmnt & - AUTO MACHIMIST TRAINl'.:E. Pd vaeallnns & ms urani:e Appl} al Hub .\uto Supply 2120 lla rbor Bl vd CM &16·2464 ~Claud Orange Count}·:. olde~l independent bank will ~ opening a nc" hraneh m rullerlon lrnmcct1ate cart'i'r upponun1t1es are a\'ailablc an Fullerton ant..1 throu~houl all of 11ur hranchc .. frir highly motivated, cxpcneni:ed hank personnel Experienced rull lime position open. Salary commensurate w 1exper. Apply in person. Metro Car Wash, 2950 Harbor Blvd., C M. Chauffeur. We will train Neal appearance., Must know Lag Bch, Lag, N1g. Npt Reh & CdM areas. Good dnvmg record. For appt call Wah. 494·6004 or !151·2l81 Companion housekeeper. li ve in . Mon-Fri , $25 /day Mus i d'rive Balboa P e n in s ula . 673·5545 Mechanical. min. 2 yrs exp or dllg cert. Basic lrig & geom. Self starter. knowledge of USASI Yl4.5 dft.g practices. Br· ing work samples. HARD\VARESALF.S Apply in person: Rion Hardware, 1024 Irvine (Westcliff Plaza>. NB. KITCte4HILP Sandwiches • salads. f\IU time. Private club. 833-9561. '"-pas ation j ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROSAN, INC. Schools & C>1)('rat1ons Of fi l'Cr -------FOUND ADS lREREE Call: ' lnsfnlctiOft 7005 714·548·5533 Hospitals Newport Beach Cardiopulrronary Dept. LAITICH. To assist in e l ec· trica l/optical develop· menl work. Mus\ be ex- per. in hand.ting dettcate, m i n iature parts & ~ a high degree of mtelligence ft rmUvalion to handle a variety ol u · signments. Ex.per. in lig.hl shop practices & electronics des irable, but not req"d. Xlnl. pay /benefits. Growing Co. in San Juan Ca po. 714-.00-6634. 642-5678 REW ARD WKITE C \ T Lon g haired )du n g neutered male Answers lo Ule name of Snowman <tag says SS noman 1 Call 494-2437. 494 5094. or 497"'°27. F O u ND G erman Shepherd mix, male small, young. fnendly Beach and Ellis. 962-4931 FOUND: Near CdM Pv:-.l Office, small dog, brown mix, call 644 7262 or 640-6688 ----------- LOST : Fem R ed dish/Brwn Dobie Type Uong Tail) COM area ~ward760-9261 Found: Female German Shepherd. Vic Bo lsa Chica area. 714-840..3461 Found · German Shepherd m El Toro Ca 11 BS54849 FOUND Old Poodle blk female. Cocker mix, blk •tan male. Shellie·Sable •white male. Ch1hauhua mtx, brwn f e male . Newport Beach Ammal Sbeller 644-3656 U>ST: Vic. Adams Sehl 9lk/Whl male cat w 1blk flea collar Lim ps 'Pickles" REWARD ' ~11557-4019 ., UllST: Vic. Adams Sehl 2"k/Whl male cat w/blk fte a c o 11 a r L 1 m p s ';J>lckles" REWARD ' oll 557-4019 FCil.md: M Siamese. blue Ollar . C lu bh o u se .,,/35lh, NB. 67Hi049 ~-. man's gold dinner ~ "11 w/dlamond & ruby 4 ~nero u s rewa rd ~ (6-!MCM days. ~und : s mall yellow finch, vie Goldenwest & a>lsa. S!FT-Om5. F-: Ladie's perscri;. eye glasses. Vic: p 81 • 19lh. CM. 119-3141 -Fem. ShelUe. Vic. adden/Goldenwest. •while short fur. leward. 897-5439 or • ~'121111 ..... -5350 ..•.......••..•..••••.. Cosla Mesa 'hnsl 1a11 Pre SebuoJ JWW enroluo~. lo lruduC'lOry nffrr SW 50 Wkl) Incl hot lurwhes 646-5423 Tear 1:as tor l'tt1zens rlas~c-. Sl'heduled m 11 B TauJ!hl IJy law enforce mt'n l 11 f l 1 ce r ~ 711 R46-f~l5 Jobs WCl'lfed, 7075 ....................... Ex11erit•nced woman wanh day work rn your home canng for invalid ()r 1U person 549 0373 Help w Cl'lfed 7 I 0 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Accounting SHIRT-SLEEVES Pff, hours open lo assisl treasurer. Duties varied. Ind. trainiAf( on operat 1ng L sen es Burroughs c•omputer. Salary com mcnsurate w/abiltty and exp Costa Mesa 631--0700 Accounlanl. Jr Tax & hookkeeping. Lc1 11.una CPA vffice P 0 ~x =t l34 Laguna BeJ Ch. 9'..!652 Acco untin g Pro u f Operator Run IBM. NCR. k()dak m!l<•hrnes rn bank, encode checks. balance 1rans act1ons. keep cash ret'<>rds 2 yrs colleg{•. :.lat1st1cal typ ang. t'omputt'r aputude. Take ad to nearest stale cm1>loymcnl office DOT 217 382-0lu Ad paid for b) employer Advertising Sales TI1e Daily Pilol has an 1mmediale opening for a sa les p<.'r :.o n with newspaper display ad· \'ert1smg experieore. Good s alary, com - m1ss1ons & excellent fr ange benefits. Excellent growth opportunities for a person with career am- bil1ons. Call for appoint- ment, 642-4321. ext. 'l77 Orange Coast Daily Pilot 330 W. BaySl,C.M EquaJ Opportunily Employer M /F /H ~UTOMOTIVE TIRE URVICE A.SD hRhl repairs Will 111~ lo lrutn 'lll'll IHHl Tare Cenler, JOOll E Coast Mwy •AUTOPARTS• Cuunl erpcrson Min 2 'rs Jnbber exp T up ""agt•s P:.ud . a cal 111n &. lllSUr:JRCl' :\11-!ml txitl'll t1al for nj.!ht p.·r~on \ ri pl~ al lluh \ulO Suppl\. 2120 Harbor BIHi t'\l. 646-24&1 See Clau<I Aulo Painters Custom Van Painters wanted Ask ror J oe IWHJ068 &bysitler. Tues ,'!,, Thurs mornings, pay negt)lla ble One 9 mo old 111rl 97~2896. BABYSITTER NEEDED 20th St. & lrvme Blvd area. Person to sil 4 year old S o m e e ve s & w e e k e n ti • O "' n transportation prdcrred bul nul nccesi.ary Please call 631-'446 Babysitter. 4 1la~~ "'k. m> home. Garden 1;10,c VIC 6i3· 1236art 71im Banking TELLER FULL TIME P11s1lmn ava1la bll• Ill uu r Costa Mesa offlc·e t::x perience prl'ferred Please i:all J at·k Clarke .it :><i6 2:1m Califomia Fec:kral Sa•i~&Loan Z700 Harbor Bl vd. Costa Mesa. Ca. 9262!i E'..qual Oppt'y Employer Banking TB.LERS PfT&F/T Agress1ve mdependenl bank in N. U. seeks exp telJers Xlnl oppartunily. salary commensurate wtlh exp. Call Susan or Thera for appl Commerce Bank 540 0061 E.O E Bank mg •TE.lER• l'l;pw Al'euunls Tellers :"lotc Dcpan ment Secretanes Outstanding bene frts JlJt kaa.:c with an expand· mi.t ootar11zat1un Please l'OnlJt't SANTIAGO BANK Pcr:.onncl CXf1 C<! ~.., F:a:>t First St Tustm. c,\ 92QJO 1714 1832·5200 1-:qual Oppty Empl M IF ll.'.lnking ffiLERS PART TIME Uur Costa Mesa branch ts scekm~ a person who desart:s lo work part time J tlays per week includ· m~ ;i Salurda> We de :.ire 1nd1 v1duals with background rn public re- lal1on.., and C"ash hamll· 1ng experience. This IJ(b1Uun offers excellent opportunity lo lie trained Jnd "111 offer unit m1lcd tare1·r advanc ement wllh1n lhP indus try Salan commensurale with expenencc Please call Mr Tom Drosk' for further ut.forma L1011 - BRENTWOOD SAVINGS & LOAN HHO Ada ms Ave . Co:.la Mesa. CA 92626 (714) 9'nJ.J910 Equal Opportunity 1-::mployer M 'F B ea ut y Opera t or , manicuris t, makeup arttSl lo wi>rk an warm. lnendly salon. Hrs nex . Renl or eom m. 557 -2234 IKPR/JR. ACCT. for rapidly expanding fi nancial firm In Fashion lslant.1 Exper a must Daily mpul & general ledger desired. 759-1515 1 'llfUSTM~ :\ION F;V P:n lhu si ast ic Homemakers . earn lo $2UOO by Thanksgiving demonstrating Toys & Gifts. No delivcnes No collecting:· Need a <.'ar Call 5.i0..8330 collect to see line GIFTS N GAOG ETS Celebratinl! our 30th year'! COOK All s h1fls Apply in !)ersoo. The Jolly RoJ?er. 203 Marin e Ave Newport £leach. 673·8720. ·;; COOK Active retirement com· mun1ly. Good benefils N B Mrs Swanson 631·3355. Cook Saute C-Ook. nights Prep CLEANING HF.LP G~ cook !Some hne exper I Days Mr Ki vela working conditions l)Jl 7ZZ1 . Cl.ERICA&. The Balboa Bay Club is nowhiri~ Catering Secretary. part lime, Mon· Fri, 2PM-6PM Must type 60wpm. Please call for appl. 645 7358, Mon . Fr i. 8:30·5. Clerical Check Sorter Machine ~rat or Immediate opening for a (.;heck Sorter Ma chine Operalor to work 12 mid night to 8 AM in our com· puter l'enter Excellenl salary and benefits plus an addi t1onal $100.00 per monlh for m1dnaf'(ht·sh1fl work. For an interview please call· PAT MAGILL 17141760-6000 ~ 493 2603 or apply in person . 34150 Pacific Coast Hwy, Dana Point COSMETOLOGIST ~usl have completed 5 years apprenticeship in European s t yling & lechnique. Will apply European methods & techniques m styling & culling ha ir Teach technique to trainees. Requ1 res Ca l ifornia Cosmetology li cense & abilily lo cut, s tyle, shampoo. massage. dye, bleach, straighten, curl & wave. S840/mo. full lime. Take ad to nearest EDD office , DOT 332.271 010. Ad paid for ..!!_Ye~pl~ COUMTB SALES lligh volume qwck print needs counl e r cle rk. must be neat 1n ap· pearance & able Lo deal with t he public. Call Bob: 898-:!QS. ---- Counter. dry cleaning laundromat. 'lit 9 PM. 5 days. Dimmill Cleaners. Corona del Mar. 759-9001 Counter help needed for sandwich shop, Mon·F'ri. Part or F tr at Anthony's Deli. 1711111 Skypark. Sle A, Irvine. Call 556·0670 forapp. s:~nk Newport Counler Help Wanted P tr help. fast food exp F.quaJ Oppty Employer helpful. Apply al ln- iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiii/iiiFiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I lem at ion al Holdog Co. Clerical Lido Marina Village, N. B. 673-'7781. INVENTORY Counlerhelp. f\111 lime & COUNTERS part lime. Gary's Deli , We need 40 good coun· Dl9 E. Coast Hwy. CdM . le rs. Ca 11 l od ay r o r _67_s-_2_193_. ------Bookkeeper w1c-0mputer aJ '>C h Speci 2·day invenlory c·•,.tomerServt'-trat'nee. Teller needed lo work exp . approx ""' rs pr · t I I .... ""' Equal Oppty Employer R e s !> i r a t o _r y therapists/ Per Diem OR.l\PERYWORKROOM. -Pool AJI shifts... Costa Exper. Up to SS/hr. M-M e s a M e m o r i a I Th. 7 5:30. Apply in Hospilal.642·Z734orapp. person : 1835 Whitlier ly in person: 301 Victoria Ave. B-7. C.M. St. C.M. DRIVERS Certified bus drivers for private school. Apply 16835 Brook.burst. Foun- tain Valley. 962-3312. ESCROW TRAINEE --------~ HOSTESS Dinne r s . Appl y 1n person: LeBiarritz:, 414 No. Newport Blvd. N.B. 645-6700. Must type SOwpm, learn Hospital with 33 yr old company. Medical Records Clerk. Xlnt opporty Salary lo needed. A.R.T. or eligi- ability. ~nerils. Call ble or l yr. ex per. Xlnt. Bay Escrow. ask ror benefits. Costa Mesa Lynn. 547-5625. Memori a I Hospital. Controller or CPA for in-642-2734 or apply In s u ran ce company . person: ~l Victoria St .. Insurance background 1~Cosl~!~~M!!es!a!!!!!!!!~ necessary, Salary open. 1: Orange Co. Airport loca- tion. Please send resume lo ad no. #738, Daily • Pilot, P .O. Box 60. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. EXECU11VE SECRETARY Holel Nighl Auditor. 5 nighlS a week. NCR 4200. Please applY.. to David McNeil or MT$, Baltaz:ar. Hotel Laguna. 425 So. Coast Hwy, L aguna Beach. 4!M·LLSJ. Landscape Maintenance Foreman. mln. l yea.rex· per. in 3 man crew s u pe r visio n . $1000.$1250/mo. Ask for Ron. 64&-7441. ~ STc'y-lr-f. Mid-sure firm seek.a cons- cienUous legal secretary w/3+yn. exper. Salary negotiable. Xlnt . 'Tnedical plan. New bldg. Call 714-833-3622. To worlr closely wilh Presideol of fasl paced investment company. Must have experience. good skills and be detail orienled. Xlnl benefits. Salary open. Call Mary Jo at 754..f.601. LEGAL SECRETARY Plaintiffs personal in· jury position avail in Fullerton for well groomed. personable Hospilals secrelary w /ex per • Radiology Technician. good skills at lhe Law Full time days : part FinnofGarber.Sokolofr time days. full lime & VanOyke. Inc .- special procedures Medical ins & p rofil technologist,• pert lime sharing-5:116-22167 -• secretary. Full & part l i m e r a d i 0 1 0 g Y Ute office & retail sales in EXECUT I VE SECRETARY to presi· dent of development company located al the bch in Laguna, mature, self.motivated w/xlnl bookkeeping skills, It. ac- curate typing & SH, sales & renlals. lo $1500 mo. Qualified persons only. Call for appt. 499·3816 Fast growing new health Co needs you. If you are not satisfied with your in- come ca11 Mr. Sparro from 1·5 al 962-8311. Female attendant to care for disabled woman wilh resplralory problems. 7 hrs/day. Tu-Sat. Irvine, 559-5109. Field Rep.special temp. project posilion. Good pay. lmmediateopening. Inquire Te leprompter Cable 1V, 901 W. 16th St. NB, 642-3261. transcribers. Must be pilot s upply store. ARRT. certified. Xlnt. Orante Co. airport vie. benefils. Cos ta Mesa _F_rr_._540-_'1594 __ . ____ _ Memorial Hos pital. 642-2734 or apply in pel'SOl't. 301 Victoria Sl. Costa Mesa. Hotel llGHT llllT .. El Full time career poeltion immediately available. Qualified applicant• should pauess 2 yean hotel night audit e:it- perie nce. Enjoy ex- c e 11 en t c ompan y benefits. Apply lo person 9AM-Noon. Mon-Fri. Personnel MAlllOTT HOTW.. 900 Newport Ctr. Dr. Newport Beach Equal' Opp Emplyr M /F' Live-in companion for elderly genlle, must hav' ,·alid drivers lie .. car is provided. Puties loci: cooking, ll hseki!@p' ing, • some practical nuntna care. Refs. req. Please call 645-0iM2 bfr 8:30AMorall5PM. Uve-lo housekeeper /com- p an I on for wire in wheelchair. Non- smoller. Car available. -.o:Jm after 7pm only. LOTtie4& llMT AL AMMTS for Thrifty-Rent·A-Car. Full time. Nr. OC Airport. Expr. pref, but not nee. 0utstandln1 rr- inle beaefats. Apply in penpa or call Dirk at S..fl.51 FIOMTDISI k N L ass1gnmen . rv ne area. Typin" & good phone Al w Good J b f fulllime in our beaul1ful w • o · a g u n a · Monday 9""" " u-.--1 W ted 1 ays o s or I· 771·2390 ''" personality. Posilion re-~ eaner an or local people with Sad-HUMTIMGTOM -------Tuesday9/JO ui h d · Girl needed for small 2 days per weelr. or LVN, 11-7, part time. No wlmda. neceuary. Mesa Verde Conv. 661 Center, N.B. 541-5515. di b 7.45AM . 4PM q res a s arp, ela1l· busy Mamlacturing Of. ft''"' -• e ackPersonnell\gen-BEACH Bookkeeper, F 1T , for Call loday orie nled Individual. fice.Dutiesloclude:typ· youn1..,.toworkaner cylnMlsslonViejo. branch. Experienred S & N.B. CPA to assume Definite advancem ent Ing, filina. phones. school or Saturdays. ANSWERING SVS. nds L Teller pre ferred: principal bookkeeping & 557-0045 for the righl person. cuslomer service&some Harbor Rid&e area. NB l Cashier ex.per. may he administrative duties, Graphic Resources sec.-tarial skills. "-lary Kathy. 711H47t. ma ure person, llpm to 7 '"" <i>4I MAIDS M2-JIDO ~~ .......•.••.......... am shin 362 3rd St. 1!C. acceplable. Typing " prior CPA exp req. Tax cn--Lin-: Cori> .. 1198-3584. call for Open! Contact Brian flouffkeeper needed by ..... Wanted. SeacUff Laguna Beach. customer service skills e.x.p preferred. Salary to appt. ask for Rick. Jorgensen at M5..(M77 Newport Beach nee llcJUI. Lqma Beach. necessary. Excellenl SISOO 7S2 lOM • ' .. -: Ul•~lf'( Apartment Manager . compa ny benefits & . - . 1 nMl'Oll~!rPEllSONNHSEIMctS Delivery Person Needed, f\tn, Responsible person · live lo, lo cook fl clean, r t llUU.Jllll Couple. 70 Unit Adult workingC"Ortdilions.. IOOICKEEPEAF/C Good Driving Record toca~for2ynachildren sllrt 5am. Benefltl lo-Maintenance: For apt pampered wllb a Apt. Beach area. Ofrtce Growing marine mfg. In l7231Wch Street Hunt. Bch. Area 5311-2593 Mon. ft Thun. 8:»5:30 elude separate llvln111 camp1n ID c.o.ta lleu. raonal r e l axln 8 & maintenance skills re· For interview, call Jeff Irvine has openlna tor Mewporta..ch 642-3340 qtn w/ board. salary Ir _..ftom12-7Pll. ••&1• by 12 of lbe pre· Rollins, ~3306. exp. F /C bkkpr lo work medical blilW'&nee. Reta ---------~t girls in Southern quired. Reply : P.O.Box thru financial stale· Whal'sYourTr.te! f\tmiturestoreneedsPrr required. Reapoulble, llA'nJllEWOllAN allfornla Jac uni , 3111. Seal Beach. Ca. ~-~ ments. Exp.In both mfg. What a Wonderful World 12 .. l7perDay helper for deliveries Ir mature peraon.1:11-1415 P/l'Ol'l'ICI luna etc. Open lOam 90740. .Ja~l $ & l • real estate dev. des of Sboppin1. ri&hl at Thal s UtUe to pay various duUea. Aprox (Barbara) 20 hrs/wk. Newport ui. 7 days a week. Vis-If YOU l70'7lSpriogdale St. Call Barbara, 957.3222 your fingertip1 every· for an ad ln the Daily 30-40/hr week. SUS/hr. _;_ ________ Beacb IU' oc Airport. :tM.C. AUanlis Health ha ... t off '"'"ual n.....•y EmplO'Jer ror appt. da y ! D a i I y P LI o t Pilot Servlce Directory Inquire in person, TUes ~eeper Waated I -..,. -. 2l12 Harbor Blvd, ve a Mr.-oce 0 er or L"i "'Yn Classified Ads. To place lbal can establish your lhnl Sal, al 1931 N............ 2 kids • borne need k>ve .,, .. _ •• -IDOClil toaeU, place an ad M t h t The f t l d I th 1 d ... -..-· ~ mta Mesa. 645·M» Br-fn lhe Dallv Pilot a e your a opp ng as es riaw n e yourad,call642-5e7tand professlona I entity . Blvd,C.M. •care! Newport Loca· SELL idle Items with a u thi1 ad for your Cluaifted ~L easter by \nlA& lbe Dally West. .a Dally Pilot ""a Classified Ad-Visor For more Information lion Ref's R.eq 5410944 n..nu iiielal gll\. .:·uun Pilot Claaaified Ads. Classified Ad. &U-5678. help call 642 5678. Find what you want In or 751-5311 . • I _, Pt.lot Cluaified Ad. =:::::::::;:::========:.l!Pb~-~DM~~IG.~..-.~, •. ,~~~l.=======~~==:.L::::::::::::::::=::::::~.::::::=.L:;::::=you=::=· :::::::::::::::::::::::::L::==::=:====::=.l~Dal~~~Pl~lot~C~a~s:~~raec1s~._.l....=::=::=::::=:==:::::::::::::1.:::~~~·=-;;;;;:==:;=:= A • -t• . --.... ... .... ---.... ----_..., ---.... . .. -· ....... . --· .. -...... --- ~' ~~~~ ..... ~!!.~ ~~~ ..... ~!!.~ ~.~~ ..... ~?~~ Me~hankall )• lndlned Of!RCI ASST. Rec pllon11lt r? 111•l for low •tt~<'t'. radio dlli Vandy ul duties. type m11 nuh l't url'T lll .a1tc ol patcher Knowl~~-oC ~ ~. blue pnn\s , g<)(){I H' Y lelcphonl", m ull area deau-ed WiJlana to p~ voire 111usl ba\lc huve tcood \OIC<' lo llikt• work w1mds Must havt> o w n ear ' In t ru 1>rtlt<rl t;1Hell r,. clt'l'itril abtlll). nun tanchu $4 15. hr nuJNl.r•Uon.150 ll~ Smoker <t93 3091 Apvl) 117~ GI 10 llCW'TIOtiltST In pcirllton 3 171 l l.ua IUos. SJt' MEl.:tt t:N<; ll~ ~l.;tt Wantt'd Jlrr1.f>n ~Ith .it ltast IM m11nlb1' t'X ~ne•1wt• m fabnt•alwn & C'l\.'Ctlon ol h11h pr.-"un• botll'n 1300 ~)() 1>~1 1 steam lcx'Ufl~l he tu Imp. plpl~ 6 \iehl' !>"l una. llikmbl.> 111 cc t111111 ol ~m.ill h11&b llru~ur" 3te11m 11n11 1nc·11 Mu'!I h•\O \'n,lnt'\•rlllJot ('X J>tti•ntt 11\lffH'lt'O\ to dt• sip, ~•w. • lr~ l ht' detallt.od ~""' r .. r m.artn'i' ent10t!b t\S tlC'iitl t'\' II) tnlllh UI \'llltllW\'rlllft at 25 h<lor Taki• 101 ll• ne11rl':1l St.ill' E111vl11' nH· II\ \)( r II ,. l \\ 1 l ~n Ofi\ 111 1 \11 p,1111 fo r b) l'llll)IO) l'I M l' tJ I ,. II I It t' I' .. I> tionibt llo<1kk•·1·1~r ..:~ Pt'r Ol\I) l".111111) pr.JI ll c..'\' m i;' a:. tu on I ., J J 111 I 044 1025. 9 5P\l Medical Off1l't! N.1>iblU11l Expent!nt'ed, "' a I (; 1rl Surgeons OffH'I' for J m os while rl'l(UIJr emplo) et! 1s un mt'd1e.iJ leave i l4 SH 8567 Mixer Tramt.'t! needed for adhesive <'Olor & paint rmxing & gnnd1ng on '.J. roll mill lS37 ,\lonnw1a A\le .. N 8, MOTHE R'S HF:LPER wanted Mun thru Fri 2 o r 3 hrs da i ly c ~t 642· 7169 Need Document Typist & TelelC Operator for a MelC1 can Tour Co Travel Benefits B1hngual in Spanis h for Teleic 1s ttelpful. Call Am1 ~0 Tours 752.(1788. Nona MMd •dra lllDMY for holidaJ lhapplng! APPLEOME has temporary assign menlS available now for legal exec. sec'y & sec'y , typists, word processor system 06. days. MEVRAFH Call Barbara 957-6026 Nurse Nefld L VN for doctor's office 10 H.B. No rules or weekends Fun at- m0sphere. Clll"'Efa1ne at 848·2377. 1~;30pm. NUASES AIDES 1 lO 3. Cert. & trainees Mesa Verde Conv Hosp 661 Center St. CM Nurses l'ED. MURSE Priv. duty l.ive-in posi· lion for registered nurse with pediatric /nursery exp req Congenial last · paced atrmsphere _ Good benefits Salary com -mensurate w /exp. For interview, call 67~9151 . MURSIMG LV.--: or R.~ needed for f1t1 me PM stuft 10 ronv hospt. XJnt. salary & benefits, including in surance , vacation & sick pa) .• Apply . Bever ly Manor. 340Victoria. CM Nursing: l full time RN & 1 full tJme LVN Laguna Hills Nutritionist C:linic: day hours: effective Oct. t : rnterviewmg now. AP· ply w/resume. Prevcn live Health Care Found a llpn Clinic. 1-714-855-4077. MUil St NG RN, 3-4 days/wk. 41 bed COO\'-hosp. Ver; clean. good staffrng. Santa Ana Heights. ~9-3061. Nursing in a friendly working atmosphere Costa Mes a Memoria l Hospital. Current open- ings: Med·Surg RN's/LVN 's Days ...... & Nqhts f\111-lime and part·time Benefits fiex.ible Hours ICU/CCU/ER RN's t 211rshifh Work 3-7 days in an llOhr. pay period.. Time & "2 paid ror hours worked o¥e.rs. CCU S .. 1nitor with experience needed immed. Come ~ us about our new 11alaries and our benefits which include dental t>lan & employee credit union. Let Ull \eil you about our rec,ie activation o r Alcoholism Recovery Service Program . Critical care un it Su per \llsor w /exper. needed lmmed. Contact Yola nda Florenc e , Director ol Nunes. l114) 642-%734 £xt m . 301 Vic- toria. Costa Mesa. OKOf.R CHA K Pt>rwo Iv ht1VI' l!JlaJ r\''IAll\.'llbht\ for 1>r0t-r lit'~., 1nducl1111¢ h1tmlhn1t 1•w.11>11){>r 1 .. ii.. I\ i.iinw lO\ o>IC'e'>i 1·11ntrnl or In\ t'fll l•r\' .\I • !•Ill mwuriauun "tlh vl.1111 ro• .:ar1h nl( ... lupm1•11t" & pr0<tuf lion '' hedult>' 'HW t"ompt1IM \"ump• nt-n \1> \.Cl lr,1n, 't• ~7 10IJ). r.w ww.r......-, ll11th '1 ll11ul II r11d 1i.~-c;jf'd for tr•1mn11 111H1 .u~1l'f\ITW'fll 1n 1 h .. -.t.ol~ ,1Jl1f f'.lllV\)I" \OU 1 1..·~·t•t \ c lnp 11<>t,•h tr .1111111jl 10 ,111 \Ill!\ '>l"hl• >f' lt'bt1111114 l h t• •kill •••U l tl111h\' l(UJI Jlt\l'\'11 1n ... nllO)C 't>.·h•rr 111u r nh:.I '1 1111 Old\' l'llt1"'r Z J 1•r I 'ear C(l.h:>llllt"Ul • 111)1• I nltt'41 l 'ommani.J l'er1011nan1 •' hou .. t> lln1< ,,.1im m•11h l'e<'t'IJlllHtl3\.'i In Np\ Iii h & ltunl Och l'1•.!1Ulvn 11( (.,Jti t't• l);WI ho•itllh Ill 1'UllllHI' p11lll hohtl1l)" &. l'lllll '•rllltHJ1t Afl t1l1 1 a11LJ. rnw.I 11 .. vl! uuti:u l nfl ltt'l ~lllHil l l \ b1• ._l\l11h Ill 3llltl'UrUOll und mw.t lw ial1h tu h1iJ11 tilt• H'r~ 1111• lik lq11t Vh11cl1• l'~I nft" Im v 11v1 'lh4 M411 lh ·• 1.'IJI 1111\(11 1 \1 ,.,,J I''" I I' n I(' t I I 1· I k .. "r ..,1 • .,. port llr· .ti h It .. · hrm Mu 'l>l 1,.. ,h,11 11 h .. 1~• 1h1ht1 ll• 11 .. 111111• hll'\ J•hllllt·"'I ~ pt Ill'•'\'> 1n'-''"""" t1ul1 l.h 111-.11 l.W'h °"' n .. tu" , "",, 111111 , • 1.1 I llJ('tlf ollH t" l ,1 If I ii·• W '" )11.'.o.I ·~'I.II• 'k llh PJ• llJI 111 ,, 0011 tk<•t•pl , ... ,,I (Jfl1l;t' \1 <'..l!>h h.1nw; Jftu t1 '111\ 1 u1 ati l>J,llnl(. \lnl ph1111 11111 "U'il hl in 11110.t l•••h 'lton ,m .. k•r •ha1>1 .ino ti.1' .. h1.;h ,6 .:>IUll whuul d1vlo111J l '.i fl \11 ' tlJ \ l'C ~-r \ M ~\.>tu 1112'> II\ • IT Bt-: \l'll ~ ij82l l.Al.L N,\ llll.l.S 76H 52.51 SA~TA \.'JA 342 243.'i THIS IS THl ARMY l':.tl"l !IOI(> help lo JSSl!tl \\1lb ~'~loped Mentall} 01sabll'd People MuM b e ablt> l v o,\Qrk "t.'f'kemh l'llll l')n th1;i 552~ P \ RT T l ~t E 11 a )' u r nq~ht . 1an1tors o wn transpon at1on tl75·2230 f'art time person needed 1n book paste-up Mon. & 1'ues. No exper nee AP· ply Pennysa ver, 1660 Placentia Ave C.M ••c:.pt(TypM l'urt l1tnr for ,, rl'lut ,·t· tural 11rm 111 Nt'w111>11 li ca ch l' u l l 'I on 1· > 759 9111 RECEPTIONIST '\~etled for µlt!aSl.llll bui.111i-~s uUH·e t:uoll Crout utfice perscma lit y Lite I YIJIOI:: Tl.'lt'ph1)fll' exper pref Xlnl wnl'k 1og l'QOU ti:jl -07UU Rec~tioftist lndel)l'mJent 011 CQ weks t.!XP re r l·pt1on1s t , i;d phone manners, Ille typ 1n g, general o tr1 <'e duties.pleasant working eond. Apply a t 1740 Newporl Bl vd, C it 646-9661. ---------•IRecept111msl needed at Part '!ime bus} hair salon T om Mottiftll) Operations Rae lla1rstyles, 645 4012. No ew. reqwred. Mus t --- be dependable & availa· Receptionist for <..:onslruc- b I e o n · ca I I N p t lion Co. near Adami. & Bc h /F ash 1on lsland Broo kburs t II B . area. 700.0001 962·6686. ~~~~~~~~IREC_E_PTI_O_N_ISTrrYPIS'r ---------•I CM based company. Min PART TIME quahric3tio.ns. 50WPM. EV&illMGS d icl a pho n e eK per Adults over 21 with out-_957_·81_9_1 ------ s ta nding attrac tive personalities who enjoy working with kids. S4 per hour. Call 642-4321 Exl 2SO between 2 and 6Pm Ask for Lori. 0....,.Co.t Dailwl'Hot 330 W. Aay Street Costa Mesa, CA Equal ()ppor ~mp1oyer ~~~~~I Paste-up. Ex pe r pre ferred. or will train. Full t im e positi o n . Co. b e nefits Ap p l y in person. 1660 Placenti'a C M Pharmacy Assistant. ex- RECEPTIONIST Switchboard & lite typ· ing. Xlnl benefits. Call ~. Receptionis t : Newport Beach Pull time. PYont office appearance Good phone manne r and general office skills llecessary. O U 549·2'988. lllPllO APPREtn'ICE Exper. not necessary Xerox & Blueline copy mg. Full time. !'don. Fri Fringe benefits. Conta<.'l T o m , a l Ma s ter Blueprint, 234 Fischer . c.~ 540-4174. per'd. 1-6 ~ton-Fri . Call R E SALES Mr Grant &l2-1580 TIME SHARE . . Experienced salespeople Pnntmg shop, full line. is wanted Call While looking for exp. AB Dick Waler R~alty Inc. Pat pressmen, and willing-Bryant. 498-SURF ncss to learn olber press, _ _..;.._ _______ _ machine.ry operation. In Restaurant llunl Bch, call Newton. SGT. PEPPERONl'S 848·0IBJ PlZZA STORE Now hinng for full & pa rt Production person for lime openings at loca gurmenl manufacturer lions nr OC Airport lo assist 1n c utting, Vaned days & hrs Idea l bundltng, sample lines. supplemental income for fabric inventory. e tc. housewives & students Steady. fulltime pos1lion our progressive growing tn Costa Mesa. QuaUfied company offers opptys pe rsons call Lorraine at for advancement based 63_1._n_w__ _ ___ o n y o u r J o b PROOF' READER / BI L Ll NG KNO WLE DG E. It ofr work, s tart part·t1me . Call Phyllis (114) 97S.Sl76 P lime, 7days, 2hrs /dai· ly. AM deliver y. L.A. Times $100 per week. Laguna Beach. 494-8496. Real Estate Sales UPEIJIHCB> AGIMTS We ore er the following. IHigh C.Omm1Sslon performance Pleasant workmg conds. Must be 18 or over. Apply 1n person· 2300 So. East Bnstol Santa Ana Heights (Next to McDonalds I E.O.E. Restaurant Calabmh L-dincJ & Olstillet'y A ne w r estaurant & lounge now hirin& for all restaurant positions. Ap- ply in person. Mon.-f'ri .. 2pm~pm. 179 E. 17lh St . CM. /Best location Restaurant I Privatesecretary Lady needed al Tea & 1 Professional assocs. Call now for appointment Sympathy to assist. cook 673-7300 ask for WaJl mostly dishes & clean up. ~~~~~~~~~ 13.50 starting. hrs lpm· 6pm. Tues thnl Sal. App-RECEPTIONIST Property Mgmt Co. in ly in per.son aner 3:30. 3119 E. 17th St. C. M. Irvine seeks energetic & •---------- pleasant person wit h Restaurant front office appearance APPETIZElt COOK lo answer busy phones. Food prep. The Quiel lnclude1 lite typing & ril· Woman, 3ZM E. Coast Ing. Call for appt. Hwy, Cd M. Apply in 5S9·1802. person, AM pref. ask for -~~-----~1 Mike640-7440 lecept./Cleric .. I M M E D I A T E Re\ailSlores OPENlNG Opening .soon in Hunt- G r owing comput er ington Beach; a new software company is ladles' Fashion discount looking for a brigbl, store. Openings a\lalla- peraonable Individual ble for store manager. wilh Cront omce ap-assistant m a nager . pearance t• ha ndle sales. For interview, ask phones, llaht typlo1. m. for Ann a be I I e : Ina & other office duties. 213-749-tOtl. l::xcellent benefits in-Off tce T rainee. bask eluding dent al. Great Retail sales, experience skll1a necesHry, typing. working environment. preferred. Ftr. CM drug apellina. able lo meet Send reswne with salary stor e . Call a fter s. public well. Mrs. Barela requirement • history 641-1744. IG5GOC.ltl. to: 18010 Sk,y Park Cir· UTAIL SALIS OFnCE HELP-f'eliable cle. Suite 100, Irvine , 12714. St r o n 1 . c a p a b I e , per.on for varitty o -. ---------penonable, mature lady dutlu . P leasant at-' Utlltltll9JI w/1reat lasbion sense, aapbere. F tr. hn nex. ClMlified Adi arerealli room tbaln lady's bouli· '1.50 at.-t. NOD·smot er . ...aJ "people to people" que In Lagun a Och. Ap ply 10·3 . 011Slte ..._calla wiUa bil re· Gr.at opply &c potential. Photo/ 1rapbics, 3303 ........., and bl& reaultal llr. Edward& •9S·Cr1$2, HartJor Bhd, Unit £.a, To pl.ce 10W' cluaifled «·101' or Mn . Trablah CM. ad,ta0todayl0#18. 55T-1S7t ... ,,,ij6 . .,..,_ __ .. ,., ... ~--.. -~--~-. •• He4p W..e.d 1t00 Http WClllt.d 1t00 Httit WCMfed 1t00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• llOUn;tts WANTtW !wrumJ M''" ;\11pl)' 1n Vt'f"IOn "74 w l9'h b l <:ue.t11 ..... ~ 1•1 s•.,....w_,"' 642-lHO '\alt':'> \t•11•11lln1< 11µpl lt· .. t1un for fu ll tun.• VUJ1ll11t11 111 It " .111 " r A 11 0 I' V I fl'l1·1>h1tn1· &. l '11u11 lt'r Sul<'' c:r••I •1iclllng & "' JllllllHI (''"•l'l\lH•l App ly 1'1•1111' .t\r r . IAiiU l'l.u·rnl•• lw" (' M ........... < ·c >1.1 ... :c: Y. :-;TtJ 1n:N'l'S Wu1 k lull •Jr lzll•r\ llnit' ' • I I 1 u it 1• I e ,. 1 r u 11 1 c' • .. 1. ul111orl> 1111t•rv l lllnlJUler". ft f'l'lult'\.1111 0 1h1rh 1rc la1I !>Ull''>I Ko11wlh lll" uf ''tJffifJUlr'r "'''11'111 ,.,, ht•ll1l 11I <:011<1 fJlH & l"°nl'f llS 111 I 'O'>\ .. l\1t•,.a I Jll l..t!V \40 l!-131) ~\I.I ~ \ l.fo.ltl\ lu ll 01 1>.HI t1mr w I~ ni..11 11t- n~rl1w.1 rl' 1 u mµan) With j!(lod h•:'fl1•111~. ru.m1 r \If U 0 \ ti II \' 0: n1 l' 11 l M~ 1711 .... .i .... [;,_•-.1grw1 J L'\\t•ln 1"1rm l11uk1n~ 1•11 vruft'::O!>IOl\ul quahl\ Sale. Reµ Xlnl P·•> ~ e11mm1'l~11111 Svml' t ruvel pui.stl1lc Ful l ur µarl llllll' l9'i 2115 Si\l.l-S I N'l'l':H lH:SlGN ,\rt lum1.t> acces::. Flair for d~i,.1i.:n hlpfl Will tn.11n Hl9 1461. 661 701/H SJ\LES U you arc agrcss1ve uml looking for a fulurt• 111 re t,111 mgmt w !good 1·0 benefits a ppl.> in pcrs1111 9am to I lam Mun l\)ru l''ri Standard Shoes. :1077 So 8nSt(1I, C. M . •SALES LADY* F\Jll or pa rt tune THE SHOWOFF 22 Fashion Island N B SALESLADY Exper'd f' rr BenerilS, paid holidays. Sta rt $185 /wk Regal Beauty Supply, 263 E. 11th St , CM. S al es -Moti v at e d s alesper son to sell s ecurity pro duc t s 642·1815 --- Sales People. Full time & part time. R.M. Abrams Catalog SboWToom. t819 Newport Blvd. C.M. SALESPlllSOH need e d for HOME DECORAT I N G FABRICS. Please COP· ract Alicia or Susan at Home Fabric Center 64S-5121 Salesperson needed for sailing school & sailboat ch a rterin.ir business . Some Clen cal duties Salary +commission F\JIJ lime desirable. part time possible. Sailing knowledge desired. For appt, cal1645-7100. __ Salesperson, mature. for furniture sa les . .J.9pm. ' Days 540-3100 . evenings 6'MHi766. • S~RETAIL OHice and graphic arts supply co. has full tune pos. open. M-Fri. Will train Busy & interesting work Fringe benerits. Apply Master Blueprint 234 Fischer . 01. 540-9373 SALES REP. Add a proven brass line to ~·our tcrntory. Com m 1ss1on negotiable 714-197 6000 -----· Sandwich making people neaded, full & part lime. ~all before 1 l. 752-:>401 SECY P IT, F /T for pleasant exporting office in C.M. Eltper. with lnl'I Frt. forwarding, 18 M Memory, & good typing skills req 'd. $.5 lo S6 per hr. 754·1004. Blwn9-l2 SECUTARY Secretary for a sales and marketing oHice - small. growing medical electronics company , near ocean, CulJ company benefits. Qualifications in clude r ecen t ex · perience. or1anizational ability, ability to in· terface ef(ectively with all levels of management In a wide variety of duties and a fast paced. innovative environ ment. Ask CorTeni. Cal 64S..014S Secret ary·Assistant to Financial Genius. Gen· Ue. Joyrul, Perfectionist. Organic Cook. 499-5683. SECRETARY to President of Real Estate firm. Typin1 75 wpm and shorthand 100 wpm. Salary open. OUTSTANDING OPPTY Wm. E. Doud Co., Inc. 873-11100 SECUTAIY For Newport Beach ~aw office. Xlnt typist & die· laphone necessar)'. Salaiy negotiable. Con- tact Pat. 844·9190. Secretary /Receptionist, b asic knowled ge of purchau orders " In· SICUTAll ln 2nd Tru•t Uetds fo11crow CJtfice. Newport Ouch 8 $, M fo' Xlnt hc11hh in~uriant>u plan Ind denlUI <.:all lor ap· 1.1ointment fo'r1t nC1"5, ~a2 4tt>I> ~~rttiary l"IH'lf1c C1\y Rank tms ovunln~6 for bra n r h st-crdurlt>11 Hunk lo on 1• K 1>"r vr..C 1• r1 !.!ti . In \ll)lvcs ~·nmmcrl'i11l a. m '>LillmClll dO<'ll ffi l'lll U t1m1:1 1-·or i.vPl <·a ll H 11 Col~ at 1 l4 8411 1234 16041 <ioldenwei.l St , UWlll.llRloo IJ.!acb. !1'~7 . . ~ 0 E - St.·1..·r d .ary l l > v111t rec·ep t111111~t NUN SMOK l::K. D11taphone ur .,horthand nt•r1•l>M<ry L1~hl book ktll'1J l11 g & of r 1re sNv11..·es Salary oµen . Duna Po111l l'all 493 2744 Jft fipm & weeke nds St·1..·rt!t&rv c;outl typ1sl ~ 111ce µhone ~r~onall ty Good ~neflls. fun l'OrtlplJh ~ ti75 JG56 Scnelary _ Boo kkHpcr \1atu r e µe rson tu handltl all 1 anety 111 dul1es throu~h tnal balance Minimum Syrs work t..>xper , plus husy d1vers1fil!tl duties H.eqwre del)t'nd:lble & t>I f1c1ent self starter Fast & accurate typin)! re q uired Non smoker xlnt salal) & lieneflls Mission Vil'JO area. Mrs Parelh 581 3830 SECRETARY Mktcj/Sales Career o ppty 1n fast paced :-.!pt. Heh. m11f'.st ment firm Requ.1res lop skills (shthnd ~; typm.i 75) Sound professional exper .. matunty & cur porate bkgrd. helvful Call: 640-0123 _..111111!111!11111 ... 111111111~1111fW ... MtNi•IGH Ga. ... We 1055 STC>CK~IRI ••••..-.••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• START $140 Mo Contnctor'• Shop S11le, Mite. Items & Furn. JobSecurlty builder'• harltware. 10<.$250 Fr1diay-Sat. tAtabliahed <.:omp11ny hand toot.a .. plywood, etc. 9-4pm 3002Java Rd.C.M. t't~medical/dental Sat Sept 27. 9-4, 123 In· Apply In pef'80Q rlustnal Way, C.M 8loclt Sate: 2 dirt bikes. ~lwet!n 8llm llam -----1040 clothes, miac. Sal /Sun 8S3 Production Phacc Doti 11·5. 30I I':. 8ay , Bal Ne..,. .. -Re11ch ••••••••••••••••••••••• Perun. 575-287'7 ~ . ... ....................... John Wayne Tcnala Club. Family Membership. $1.SOO. 673-6106 Victor 4080 Presllnt com- puter ized Cash Rea. Musl selJ. Call 614-6900 ext \3, days. -""' • KEJo.:SHONI> Pups. AKC. ------_________ -! Champ sire M/F. Pet & Garage Sale. rti, Sal & SONY Betama" Video Str ong bookkeeper lo s h o w · P v l P t Y Sun Table & 4 chairs $'75, Recorder Model "7200 work In small electronics 213/tl>7-134S aft 6 pm vacuum cleaner $10, lots w/36tapes $750. 8'0-2682 (1rm in CM. Duties In· Adorable Keeshund PuJl5. ol Tupperware & other Crafts m an 10.. RadW dude AH coolrol, colltlc Male & fe male No items. 32tl Iowa. C.M. Arm Saw w/stand fl ac- Um\ & a ll Inte rnal ac1'lg. papers. 6 weeks old. ~ S u l iary o p e n . X lnt G3 l·02J62 GARAGE SALENojunk, cess. fTS. +Planer & benerils. 642-SlOO -------S a t I Su n 8 · 4 -8 6 9 l Joiner $25, 833-3Sl7 A.K.C. Cocker Spaniel. La11>kport Or ll.B. CARPET sll1htly used Teacher. prtMlehool, 1-'f f , Buff, 6mo old $150 call .. _ r·t l day only I E verythlng xlnt cond, 4 rooms. light ~ome ""'ne 1 11. 964·5716 after 6pm ~·2550. ---~----_ _ for 1nfanl.s. Xlnt Cond. buricandy short sha1 . ---En~I. Sheepdog, 4 mos, Other Quality Decorator Redecorating, perrect TF.ACH~R pet Ed./· pape rs . $150. Custom It e ms . r e aso nably forredolnaVan.s, Bdrms Masters m Beh ~ vrer. doghouse, X·lge, $lSO. priced. Sat. 9/2'l 10-4 2635 or ? S2S each roll Call fo;x p w/DU. multi· 760-8479 Temple Hiii Dr Lag Bch Rick betw 7-9am or handicapped adlts. Abili----494•0237 7 9pm. 552.7552 ly lo "nte/1mplemeot Free to You 1045 behaviora l progr a m ••••••••••••••••••••••• plans Supervisory exp Cockapoo, his name is r r<1 $1150 /m o plus Band\t because he's benl'rils s ·Jll·l\PM Unit-wtute with black mask. 5 e<l C:eretical Palsy As-yrs, a people dog. loves soc· , 546-5760 kids, want loving home. 644-6698. \ Garagi: Sale. the best you've ever seen Frl- Sat-Sun 501 l Seashore Or.NB ------ YARD & BAKfo: SALE Sal 9·4pm at Isl Christian Church792 Victoria C.M. TEL EPllONE: S,\l.F:S . Lrg Frigidaire. botto m Teenagers & Retirees freezer , 'Working condi Horws 8060 welt ume Earn good lion 64&4005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• monc} Ca ll after lvm Beau Reg Appy mare, 63!H005 Malt.> pure bred TEH Genllt'. lvng w/tack. T~ Solicitors "1.'eded 1mmt!tl1ately. 20 s l u d e n l s c1n d /ur homemakers who need tu t<arn rn:>ncy working pltlasant evening hours. J !I ~on F'n No i.clling. Salary s:i 75r h r. + i.:cnerous bonus l\nuss f rom J o h n Wu y n 1· Airport. Call Soe lifter 2PM ~l·OIOO T~ Solicitors <#rowing corp. Earn ex eel money 1n the pri vui:y & c·On\len1cncc o( your own home o r use our modern rac's <.:ollege s tudents O K ' <..a l l 9&1·2239 for complete in- fo Ask fur Bar\ RI £R 13rm 's, shots . to 11 Sl600 or hst nrr. 831-1007 lov in g ho m e o nly . Jew.al-. 8070 548· 1:!80 ~ J Kittens Cor a ~O<Xl h11111e 2 black & white ma lt!s Call 9ti3 1568 fvrnfhn 8050 •...••.....•........... ** IBUY ** Good u.t;ed l"um1lUre & ,\ppllances OR I will sell orSEU. for You MASTYS AUCTION 646-8686 & 833-9625 Early American Birch dining rm set. oval drop leuftbl. 2 lea\es, 2 arm & ,, side ch rs 496.5800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BUYING gold & silver sc r ap & Jew e lr y Silverware, dental l(old. diamonds. class rings lmmed cash. 549-2685 Thunderhead Indus ROL EX Pres idential Watches. Wholesale pnces Call 71i0-11218 ---Misc:.eU~ 8080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LUGGAGE TAGS King Size Waterbed w/maltress Crame & Pedestal & Heater. Sl.25 64S-6386 ALI ¥S HOl.MIS OcL 2. Good seats avail. $600/080. 675-1415 STERLING SILVER 8 pl. settings + serv. pell. 1714)174-753:1 PP Designer Clothes al give- away prices. Size 8·14. 673-2772 --------- l.AJse we1ghl now. Fun & t'a-'•Y way lo lose I0-29lbs a month. 100% guaran- teed or your money back. Mr. Sparro 962-8311. I 5pm. 1V DECODERS On-Select & Z channels. f'air & reas priced in· ~unng you c>f qualtty UD · its Compl. installed & guar. Do nol be taken in by ridiculous low pri<.-es. Remember j ou get what \OU pay for. 840-3680 !please leave message). ---------•! Tow Truck dn.,ers want Solid , exet $500 desk. :ioxt>u. must sell . S2:!5 675· 1230 or 673· n 12 from your business carrl Send one card for each tag plus one spare We return perma nently sealed attractive tag & :.trap. meeting airline I D reqwre ments. Pre vent loss & theft! For •11 personalized lag enclose wallpape r. fabric or "Oa~ Clo" paper & we wtll hack & tnm your tags Or try two 1·3rds back to hark. LAWN MOWER McLane 20" reel-Self Propelled Xlnl Cond. $150 833-2842 SECRETARY P /T Good al organizing. ~ood skills, to work Ill Fashion Is land. Ca ll Arleen , 759-1515. ••SECRETARIES•• Sec rrs.s10et ai 11Sll.OOO Claims Exam/ Exp/$14.400 T60/Leg,R5 pref.$13,800 Wd proc (rTO acc. $12,000 Liz Rrmders Agency 4020 Birch. Es tab '64 N('#J)Ort /833-8190 I Free SECRETARY P !Time. Escrow, real -estate Or' huildlng eJrJN?r helpful. SCOTT HAL TY 536-7533 -SECRETARY P /T Work Tue & Thu for NB yacht broker . No sh. Heavy public contact. Free to AppUcanl Irvine Pel'S<lf\nel Agency 488 E 17th. Costa Mesa Suite 224 642· 1470 -....-....._ ........._ .......... .....-....._ _....-....._ .... ~....-.~~-- SECY-OFC MGR F T im e . P rof phone tech Good offi ce skills, lite bkkg, organ. abilties. NB area. 957 3046. cd exp'd only Li\e. m Cw.la MC\ia 646-9638 Trainee j 600 Alltonmted Press Operator Gd opportunity for lht.! nght person Pleasant wo rkin g cond , gd benefits PIP. 642-0621. 298 BE. l7thSl,C.M. Typist, General office. no cxper. nee. U.S Grad. Good benefits & promo· t1 onal opportunities. I rv1ne area. !o'armers Ins ura n ce Gro up , :J40.4100. E O.E. Waiter Waitress poi.ition . Part lime & full time pos1lions avail SS.75/hr No tips. Pvt country club. Call for interview 644-5404 WIRE OPEtlA TOR Leading brokeragt' firm has immediale opening for wire operator. Salary commensurate w /exp. For appt call Helen McGinley, 64-1-2292. Fullerton S av ings & Loan has fulltime teller pos 1t1o n s ope n at Newport Beach office & Huntingtoo Beach omce SERVICE Will train Typing re ln-Cield. Xlnl opportunity qwrement 30 wpm Ca ll & benefits wtth rapidly 871-4244 ror a ppl. EOE growing company for ~L.-..a eleclrically-inclined in ~-w King Size Hvy Dul)' Xtra Firm. tnnerspnng matt wt matching coil box spnng, never used . still packaged. Worth $520 in- cl. delivery S2<t7 Cash on ly 640-8<B7 __ _ Rcdecoraung· Must Sell' 8' Sora,. 2 Barrel Chrs. Cof ee Tb . Lamp. Wa lnut Dming Set, w/4chrs, XJnl Cond. Great for Condo or Renlal Sl.050 Cor a ll. 644.6340 4 drawer dressu $50. 2 6 draw e r dresse r s w matching kg hd~rd $\ZS Nite s t a nd . 2 drawers $15. All ln g<Jod cond. Dark wood. Wht desk w •chr. needs re finish ing $20. '75 GE r e rr1g /(reeze r , w11cemaker , xlnt shape $400. 968-564--"-~ --- Water bed. burgundy velour w /stereo hdbrd Must see to appreciate &t2·0642 9 Piece Oirung Set. table w/leaf. ti cane chairs. china cabinet . server SloOO. Also 3 custom oak bar stools l50 each ,\II x.lnt cond. 675-5710. Couch & Lnveseat SSO. Coffee Table $.50, End 'Olis SSOteach. 645·6452 M i s c h ouse h o ld furniture. Pvt P a rty. 964-5747 PRICfS : S2ea or 3/$5 4 Stags Sl OOea. 619 l ags $1 SO ea. JO or more Sl.40ea Sales Tu Included NO CARO? Draw your own or send name. address. 11hone & we'll make one card per tag. Add 251-each. Send check or money or- der to: "LOT l'WJMTIMG P 0 Box 1560 Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 CERAMIC TIUll5qUE 6x6", 25' per piece. Pa ml & glaze your own tiles. Good for ceramic shops or private parties to use your art1st1 c abilities. 534.7533 Send someone you love a bouquet of 30 multi col- ored helJwn balloons tied with nbbon & your own pe r sonal messag e Perrect for ever~ oc cas 1on We d eli"er. 673-4419 Pos t r emodelin g sale. cedar shakes. cedar s1d Dro p Le ar Tbl· End TblsT V ·T ypewriter T ires Mel al Detector 642·2895 Sl.rollee car seats for sale. good cond. $15 each. 536-0168 :O.lodel radio-controlled outboard boat, all ac- cess. 5200. 64S-5073 f or Sale new Kini Water Bed. Stereo, Xlnt cond. s:m ea. Dan S5tr3253 Jbhn Robert Powen, 18 wk prof. modeling course. S72S value for SSSO/ofr 642·0059 Comm'I pwr mower & edger. 1225/both. Washer & Dryer. S22S /bot h. 646-5848 WANTEO..New or almost new maternity clothes .· size 7. Call alter 4: 5:30 wkdys. Anytime wknds. Ask for Rita 7Sl-8967 MllUl--W..e.d IOll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will Buy : USED OFFICE FURNITURE .. Work Benches, Shel \lin1 , 631-2177 Wanted: Old Americasi lndian Items. 494·7974. mg. doors. Ctrewood, nail stri ppe r & harnes11 . ,Milllkal hatchet. Cell. & more. .....,._..., 1013 -~2538. • •••••••••••••••••••••• d. d I c..-n c"WV\ ••••••••• •• •• • • ••• • •• • • IVI ua . .....,.,,.,.,.,. ~ 1005 -O··" D L r 2 Caddy spoke wheel Antique ..,. raw ea n ms. SlOO for both 'fable 36"xJ6" 2 12" CONN Director trombooe with case. Excel.lent coo- Jit1on, $100. 67~ after 6PM. SERVICE STATlON AT-••••••••••••••••••••••• TENDENT Male ' female, ful l time. $4. hr +comm. CdM 644·241 0 WESTMlNSTER ABBEY ANTIQUE MALL Daily 10-6. Fri to-9 Closed Tuesday 11751 Westminster Ave. leaves S200. 545-7815 839-2002/ 839·9320 SHOE SALES ---------Refngerator. kg si. bed. child's bed, luggage. 645-7231 afl aft 4P.M. MEMBERSl-llP. Newport Bea ch thletic Club. Y A M A H A A M P Sl2S, reg S200. 538·9342 WI Re verb. h ke new. $195. 675· 1230, We have an opening for a pan time salesperson on wk.nds. Exper. pref. Con· tact Mr. cannon Hem- ptull's Shoes. S4 fashion lsland. N.B. 644-4223. Garde.n Grove 554-6103 673-2712. Ne w Queen Waterbed. The fastest dra~ m ~he $250 & 2 King Walerbeds West'. : .u Daily Pilot SEIL idle items with a Goin1 out oC Business Sale, Janes Antiques . 2721 E. Coast Hwy. CdM. 673·5'752. $7 5 e ach. Com Pl e le ::C~lassiiiiii1iiir1iiiediiiiiiiAdiiiiii. 642iiiiiii·iiiS67iiiiii8iii ... liOaiiiilyiPii'ilotiiCilasjjijslifiied~Ald~. 839·3363 I Shoe sales, full lime Wllh or w /out exp., or will train. Good co. benefits. Apply In person 9am to llam Mon thru Fri. Stan dard Shoes, 3077 So. Bristol. C.M. 10 pc. Duncan Phyfe antq. W A NTED -Bab y rurmture. crib, dressing table. dresser, misc. 751·8967 din. rm set: Queen Anne G«racp SciH 1055 desk. SSl-5955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ame r Oak: Dres ser ----------r w/Bev. Mirror. Oak rd Hu&e Selection! Clothes' Appl! Shoes ! Hsehld items! Beacon Bay NB Sat·Sun. Small Parts Assepibly Clean work area STAltT $4.25 WIU. TIAJM Apply between 8-llam 8S3 Production Place Newpon Beach Pe~~<?/e~~ic Co tree 1,.b le . Maple Dr esser & Iron I br ass Obie Bd. 2678 Club Mesa Place. 646-3478 19 cu rt white Sears frost free refrig. xlnt cond. 546-0269 aft 6PM /wknds. Lady Kentmre heavy du- ly Washer Dryer s et. Xlnt Cond. Can deliver. S2SO &t.2-8828 duties to one or more m a n agers . Goodshorthand and lyp-G.E. electric dryer. lrg inC skills required. Math capacity, gold . xlnt cond . aptitude and ability lo 115. 493-8365. Whirlpool Elec Dryr, 7' couch. walnut rocking chr, wicker chest, cedar chst, maple lwn hdbrds, student's desk & chair , 4 drwr maple chest. Peca n ster w /tape deck. Zenith walnut stereo. Parsons tbl, lamps, pictures. 41.X29" mirror, 2 like new 10 spd bikes, new 21 " lawnm<>wer, d is hes. housewares. Sat & Sun 9-S, al 18317 Foxglove Way. Irvine. !Culver to Sandburg) 551-549 operate l~key by touch. --------- Good salary. ~nefils G.E. electric dryer. lrg and workin1 conditions. capacity, gold. xlnt cond, Please submit resume or 115. 493-8345. Tear gas for ciliaens. classes scheduled In H.B. Tau1ht, by law enforce· call in confidence to: (714) M0-1111 OOUCMASOIL COMPAHY Em p lo)'e e Relations Dept Eva Taylor Sl80Alrway Avenue Cost• Mesa. CA 9Qll26 "A subaldiary ot Conoco Inc." Affinnatlve Action Employer II IF Obie Wide Rerrigerator m e n t o r r i c e r s . · Good Condition , Frost 714..tMe.6885. Free $2SOS52-494'7Ginny -----------------1MOV1NG .. Gara1e sale. ~ eozo Everyth.lnc aoes. New qn ••••••••••••••••••••••• water bed $250, Washer ' Mens ten speed bikes. rair dryer $100ea, 10 spd\blke shape $5(>1080 496·53:9 $40, 2 kin& waterbeda $1$ 1 after4pm. ea. lamps, tables, nice 3 10 speed bikes. Xlnt dinette w /6 ch rs $75. cond. boys• 1lrls. Make Many art pea • printa, offer.~ nice clothes. » or I f« ---------1 $1. Very nice miac. All MOTICI low low prices. Sat/Sun how Dally Plklt Clan-7AM ar \6284 Ml . Islip, llltd acla diaplay their Cr. Fountain Valley. Use ,,,..,.,. At/ service wh e n pla c ing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number w ilt appear in your ad w e take your mes sages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad . . . this service is only $10 per week.· For more Information and to place your ad call 642-5678. · voicina, wtth aood typinl skills. Salary negotiable. M2·4IOO --------•Pladle a Qaaalfted ad is n.e ruts draw ln the •..., u 41aliaC )'OW West. . .a Dail1 Piiot ~· Give • a call. Clualtied Ad. ta-5'71. We'D dot.be rest.142-NTI meua .. wltb lestbWty and llDJ*'l? Ow' adl, we att pc'OGd to sa.y really 1et r esults. Phone 842-5678 . Nel&hborhood aarau sale. Fri, Sat. 1457 Labr ador Dr .. C. M. 549-1.5:.. DAILY PILOT --· ...... ,. -........... ··---. -· .. -.... -- .. . . t L I I ......__ tHO .......... rtec1 ~ .... 9740 v....... t770 ...... UM4 .. DAIL 'r PILO T •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ...................... •····•·•··············· '71 VW BUI. 41pd. New Caru ft II tWUll .... ,_ .. , IOtl ·····~················· Rent an 1Mtrumrn\ Amcn ran Mu111 <:o Sil 2$86 \!"11( Tu..r.• 22' l fMd1•. r ur d1nclle SIU IH)(J s.11 :us ·n nat f' v W/Uh New New'" \.()Wn, pvt p\y, ndll bf'lu, AM fM cl lltt. r.d ~'(table nr Wiii J>IY <'0041 SlllOO/ulr ~I :tmo tuh !ltr().3ttitl '7J OM<' tlumpht'Ct, I'll I tut11owc1> 3 Lon hoilll i:W)t Allto-. I • • rhd t lfftor ~ 1001 ••••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Wt. t7ZO '73 Mercedes OOSLC, ~··•••••••,:.1••••••••••• Sllvei:. bllack uphol. xlnl cond, t t2,950. Call wlcdys, 994-0(500 radiaa.. ~. IOeC)O. ••••••••••••••••••••••• See at t91Z'i Harbor Blvd. ~'10 ado, miolaiad. lo cnt. Co1ta Meu, or call See to apprec. Sac. 7\4''JZS.t'M. ..,,.,/bltotrMM431 c ,. '"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Trumpt>" Olfh $\~~ Btn..:~ ~. --C'll'<t ['ar1n .. r Wat1l (•d ·'"' Swnfl)h1·r '""'~ 1 l\11111 lllt..,t•I rt rn1lur KUI-' ll r plh '1H101li-r .iulo p\111\ • !1:'1 ~ h \ 111-' I lh•ll) uUU11¢lh'" ht11I 1.111k \lllrltll~ """' h·~ ~ t' •• I , . m I• I < 11 11 " r ~ m11tnr W .. 1111 l a II T1"911n. T~.. fl 70 ••··••··············••· IV 1 ·t1.,vy 'J too "tu1rt~·d Slhl'r 1111 V"· ph 111t r r ul•I' L'nntrul 1i ut'I htnll.,, !Jiil ~.iull'I 111l lo, 10 m1, how nn 1•0111.1 !'.•·i- tu 1q1111t" tul r• $67'11) '/f'.J \~II~ Ah •-o 9705 • • •• • • • • • ••• • • • • • • • •• • • lllllP!llll ..... ,... ..... "91111 '58 220S Classic a ll record A/C i\MFM $4.500 M/0 Kl·3S24 Wanted· '68 thru '71 SE Mercedes Conv. In xlnl c'Of'ld. P.P. Call Bob Mis· \er, 551·~11. 8·5 Mon Fri. -®-,'15 Ca rmro. One Owner. Xtra clean. low miles. S3400 o r best offer. 64$-f35,5. rn zms l1Mi6 MJrtin Uat ''''"'' So uni.I uc"' h11111, ht II 1:116f' $1..c,(l 1m ... vn l ~r uJJ \ u11111h<1 ,111.11 .. U'1fll~h~ 1'2 t'. \°l)1lll\ rlnu h. Sltlllv IUH 1.r. I ""'" l(lll '4 Ill I lll \\on ..... ~· S111mp&1r · , •I I', ".l. L1h h1tc'h ,101 r11111J l"lt'l' braLe<i "UJM'I P."''" s.n:r.11 ~'t· .. , ""111 \ 111 1 ><- r 111 .. dc· 'J t or ··.ill IDfJ WM lllx:i.3 funui.h"d 11hl1•t ~101.l ()WH<'I fWH "7'/!J I Ill I ebnllh t'M .... ~.Parh I Acc .. i.erWa '400 ••••....•••..••........ Ill I 'h1• \ ~ l'11·k 1111 ·~'I' W Shdl '(1111 1·0 1111 $411(.0 c •Ill 1 \.'17 1121):• uflt•t lipm ~c. t'h""' 'fuw lrul'lt , , ... "11 ' • nm t• w 11 r k tw•1 11111 1 •n•1 Utt.ii J 1•r1 , l"INAJ. ALfA ROM .. :o 'Lf.ARANn: AL.I. '79h MUST(;o• "W.-'re ()f-i.hn'" 1910VIDHS HHIMOW!I! llACH IMPORTS K4ll Duve StretJt Nt>;Wt't)RT Rfo:AC ll 752-0900 ·n 2.t!OZ i ~ 2, <t·i.pd. elec-. i:.nrl. /\M /FM cass .. A/C, !>3K m1, $8500. 661 7(n<t PRE-OWNm SPECIALS! ------A.o.sum l..se '80 4~EL or '7!1 280CE lo m1. Call Mr Wood 955-1949 -~70 2.8l6L Koadster 2 \t)IJ6, xlnt cond. Sl3.llOO 714/633-1281 -72 J()(SEL. 4]':'-- flSOO 840-Jll03 ~: v e Go topless in a Rabbit Convertible. FROM tUO ••••••••••••••••••••••• SHUSFllST! We have a good selec:tion o f NEW & USED Chevrolets! COMHEll CHEVROLET 'K..~ 11.lffMH H t• 1 ' I t-. I \ ,, ~ ' \ RISS(1N 1:1111111 \11111 l.'11 Wtttti. 13.'W Clt\il '1111 Cond Lw ... l,-t1 1:1111.AI ~1 ~ 'Atilt--\m t' S\""I ~711..'fJ.3 Offtc•~I ........... 1015 BOSTON WHALER 11 1 JFeet o..ty I ~OW! Ired M.w Jot.MM! 10.. f S.AYISAVI S WITH USID P All S lm1urtt'd r •r 1141!1<1 I MPOlt1 - \I T< 1 :..111' l'I. \ 1111 "' ",1111 hC'''''' '1'1 l lw• \ 1.l I lo 11111,., ' ,. 11111''' ~wll s:iom 11;1!> l'f~ t"\I'~ '73 Alfa Sypd,·r 2000, t!i,000 m t. amllrn l'as11. $1 1().) ~-W,77 e ves '79Dahun 2 IOWOCJOft Auton1allc. air cond .. citerco c.'ai.sulle . roor ra c k . w uod l(r a 1n . C8742PW I I 12!11 > MGI - --9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '67 MGB GT. New clutch, witt wheels, new slere<>. S2200 u r best o ffer 1\41 4931 @~uowcw1 · '/Oll($WAGlN. INC GAllOfH GROVI '14 VW "TillNG". Xlnt Cond & New Motor 556-3673 S4i>-1 200 70 Chevy Malibu. mags. new lrana. new brakes . S795. 675.wJO, ask for BiU r-- •••••.•..•............. \ "\ T I l/ t I :-. I I \ \\ WAI.II. EH '4thd 1•uk hhn.: 1·i.!)1111't'> :-;.•1 111 I '4-.· II• J.Pl•H' 1.ll•• l :tll ll •, 1o11:>i or 114:! o I CK 1-. "·:t • l I\ I-llt· "" " 'hr \\ .. h111I '""'' 1111• :.t•k l \1•1 :.I ,_,,, ~•II $G511. t.Jl \11h Si\t,.t-:...;. :.. \t-'1-:.-. .., \\ I-.., (;1-.•I hU\ 1111 ' ,(, 1•1.: llll I '"°'" ll1,1n \11 h<IUI' ,, ... ltt \I I All \o \\''too:!> Ml\ l. l "' H I It -; , \l.111\ 'lr .1' r .nl.i1 .i11lu p1l••l •'I • \\u,, ,,.11 ~" t•f'l "\Ii IVJll• I. .'II l~lo ll ( ud11\ I .ihlfl ~I)\\ I lho~I l'ulll I $. .!CUii "~ '', 11 \natw1 m 11h 'l'.JIJll I \It \\\;'llll" "11111 \\ h1lr 'lt.1k•"' HIUI.'' $Jill I'•• ~.: ... n 1.>I \.\ 11l1h .. r .. 11f d ~-" ~· l umvl••I• h,1l.11u ul w1I hl111·,1111llt•J $!\(Ill •Ill 1'711111 Ill t'\I H1 11 111 I '.JO 11 t.111" \ ,i\1 II.ti'"" 11 tU Jur11t 1111 1,. . .,, ufl l'r 1 .. d1t·' K I I 1:1•1 I ti .i '., •11..:i t i'" '""Ill· I) 11,Ull .... llUJ; I 1111 l".111111<'1 ''" 11 "h111 t 111 ti f 11 o:S i'f ttl.1 ~fl.I H \ICI ,11 \!1111 1'11 I.up I l 1111'1.! I '1-"t I 1•,.,lotl 1t 111vh 11.1u, .,:rl'.11 s:1101 '!.'\lh \•I ·' II l'I 1..l I lllf.•I 9570 '1:1 \l11hu Sµ\lle r <WOO, ., l ,. r i· o t-' M •' .i s :. . \J:>Oll OHO ti75 :!793 i:!:I ltl'lll 9707 •....•...••••..•.•••... ·1is Audi ldr ">t'1l.i11 I .va•l"'1 $7 ~ or 11lfor 1!15 5)Q7 Jf\ til-'M 1:1 l\ud1 f vlt. runs i;ootl $1 L"IO •>r ll(>::.t offer 536 728-1 $4919 '79 Datwn l I 0 1 u upe Slick , s te reo 1· a s s c t \ e . m a J: s I 0294031 ( 5233 J SAVE SSS '80 Dotwn 2 I 0 2 door aut o mati c: •77 Clauic COllCl '76 Camper: Xlnt cond. 645.3854 Top·of·lhe·hne a cces. ·14 GA hkenewr.:n~;ss. soooo. 542·1775· new lop. S3250 72 Bug Srrog cert. One 675 1598 owner , AM/FM stereu ·79-:\otGB l'Onvert . -lug· Lape. new buttery Must gage rack. cstm whls. sell due Lo divorce $2900 AM F M c:ass. lu m1, xlnt or bsl ofr Many t!Xlras <'Ond. $5995/0BO. Dys 494 9227 631-0365. eves673 8547 '79 VW Convertible. '72 Caprice, 4-d r . foll power, S750. Good cond. 673-4749 eves. ------- '71 Caprice nice. one uwne r /A.C. 1348 Garl- ing.ford, Costa Mesa until 6:JOpm ------- •74 Chevy Van, aU power , Air. fixer. Steal it only flOO. 640-28U ,4 1;1,J)'olllJh• 1 • l 1$ ll I' l11h11,11n 1111 l'l•llll•h•I(' 1"'1•r lll.~ Ill'\\ :t1.1 hr ' t IJlll •" 1111 1•11 ~ Sl99!'1 tii:l ;,.~·· ·····••••·•···•···•···· •........•.••.......... 16 F tJ)C Xlt Nu shol·ks. air 1·011d ,\10 r M t•ass Xlt mvg ! $2995 oho, 'all Ad 11362. &12 clJUO, 2,l hri. I Sl~>l ll!H) $4949 ·ii 'i>fG B. low mi. roll bar. lugg rk, xlnl cond. Ask 1ng 54500. 631 ·6367 Yellow. Bucks kin lnl. 6000miles cou,.. 9933 3 R 11y11 I l~Jll•I ,.,,,,., 1., nWMh•ls I I\ lfrd 1wlllll1 Pcrfrt't 1·n11ll Iii.••~• 111 S2800 :o 3 !'1:1'.! ~~1311 l'•, 642·<1300. 24 hr. :1 l'lli EXCfPTIOHAL VALUE fBM ~lt·~'lm· \'mtai.w E-\ec. + t> l>t'Wrtr ::.lJn1l & addinit ma c:h $5'1'1 6.'11-5155 Pets 8087 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Young Amazon L.n en dar-head, "Yoo !loo ". gentle & finger tralnl'd. Sl50 com pl w l'aRe SAS-64}10 wkd)S. 546 !>.11'1.t Lar g t' P a rakeet . Bt! a u t 1 f u I Ru rm e s c R.mgnt:<'I. Cage incl r.s .. ~ 69!l.1 j 11 f' l' 11 ll \ ,I n 2 ti II~ llr1.IJ.:t' .WO hµ !>~I 1'11. ... ..i fulh 1."1u11•1 .... <1 ror fl,hing :.till uoth-r "Jrr. Jin\ pJ11y !);II Ti~l S5!1()4l, 2·1· S .,011 C1!>h l'r . ~· II T \\'ll \'IJ. cablll J eff hull c; 1.~s '"'' PW. gd s h .1 pl' 5 J b 7 9 I I o r tiJ:j :111~1 U\ nwnl'r tran:.ferre,1. ~rfe1·t l'.177 Century 23' ,1~ S. cm pr c<1n\ a~. 251 F or d VM. \00 hrs Tandem trlr. loade d Dana Manna s tor age 514.500 493 (8)7 0. UWF.NS SE1\ SKIFF'. Small :\kCa~ P.irro l. 211. room). xlnl rnnd tame. n~ alh!11t Good Pnze sbp. Sa c SI0,900. home only SJ()ll.t!>4 0993 f><IO &136 Pianos & OnJans 8090 loats, Soil 9060 .•••.......•.••........ ·····•·•··············· Upright antique piano. SSOO or nea rest offl'r Ph 646-0305 afl LPM --- Swaps 8096 .•...•..•..•...•....... Gemstone dcal1•r ha :. '>Ur plus RUBIES. W11l tra d<' fur gold. an\lltlH'S or ' IJ<IO 8688 TV, Rocio, HiFi, Stett0 8098 ....••••.•••.••........ -19. Luders 16. :!Sfl, vam h ul l. s lip 1 11 :\ll. bl'autdul $4UOO ~ .. , !)lllll Tu I l(lt>1c \6. Cat ft>ver (·ol ori.. w 'lrlr Xlnt t ond Sal'. $1995 54ll 47 H ts48 !102'1 l..ayman l:!. 2 sail:.. trlr. t•over. racini: ge a r S600 l;.:a!'l-4iZ7 Ueaul1ful Ztmth 25" 1·ulor Cal 25 :11 sp in 2 Jlhs. TV. 2 )r wrnt~ 1rce de \'llF s lip ava il, $50l' ln cry $124 b4& 1186 hrm b7:t lf641 7 5 ~tarrant2 Stereo w 1·a!>'> $()() ne" ~11ak,•-. Sllll \Jnder \\ J 1 r :!.·, 1 11l11r 1·onsull' bl.i()U ~J( ~011 957 5i.t7 181.. D1•mn ~.1h· G rl'.11 spea k I' r:s J I ~I •• JI prices Athonll<' ~10:.1l' 14~ E I i t h St . <.: M 64-0-8895 SON\ B~tamax \ 1deo Rt'l'Order ~1odcl 111200 w 3~tapes s1;~1 840-2t)82 I Ji lo I I Mull i::J718, with -.ail' tcJ\l'r, and trailer sum n .11 &12 31tr. L11r.111 .1 do I l . c enter c•o I'~ I' 1 t 1 mm " e u I a l c rnn1I & JI! ,,,~.-.'. :lita' trJtl•· R I'; 11r 25 30' Sa1i I' P !69,50!1 lii:l-4220 21 Clipf*r c\H.P sips 4. trlr, c..'Over. Npl Bch :.hp. S3500 836-8907 ---&oats. Slips J Doc: ks 9070 Sony s. ... V0 -2600 unit. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 15 ·11"cnlor\'1deo laJ>i!!I. Uq :.lora ~e ava il , l>Cs1offer.f>.IS .. lll!7 Newport Dunes, 1131 lhi ~k Bay Or .N B. ltCA l'olor <.:ombmat1ou Danish t·Jb1nct X lnl cond. i3SO Jfl 6 642 8828 19" Color T V only 4 mos 11lrt S250 &\2 :;2:\5 644 o.510 25 Sl1µ with overlap. Hu n tingtun llarhour. Kay Pa r ke r 898 9651 dys . <213 > 592 29JOeves Boats. S--t & SIU ~ 9080 •·••·········••·······• I MPOHTA•fl 'IOTICI•; TU n Ftinl van n vtd heel. \(F \l>l•:R~ ,\Ml n•fn~. '\II a" 1!1.0110 m1 .\uv1-:rc11s ~:ns 'l(lk :r:.'7f> - Tht· vrt •'l' uf 11i•ui.. 1·. . allvt'rll ... •·<I h\ \eh11'11• •··I ( "' '.11r \".rn r un ... 1kdler ... II\ lho· n•hid i· i.:ood ht·~I 1itf1•r 1;.1:.! ,l<U\2 da::.-;1ftCll 111l q·rti-..n..: 1 wkdyi. •mb t·ulumn1> d1 .. ·s n1111n1•lu1t.• .7ll t-:~50 Voril l'a m pt>r .im apphc ub\t' 1 aXL'!> 1 , . II. ·ens" I ran f f llUl)I) etnp, rt'fnl!. ~tflVt'. ' .~. :.er l'\'S, fmaO<'t' churges, ll:t'S for i.l,crt'O. l'USlOm lllt, auto, air pollullon c-onln,1 lit' $6.600 or mak e orfer vll'e cert1f1calion. ... or \Je Wkda ys afte r Ii 1·all aler ducurnent.ir pre ~ 28& varat1on charl(es unless otherwise s pcc1r1ed by Lht! advertiser 9510 ........•........•.•.•. SOUTH CO.UT DODGE Looking for s tyle and fuel economy at a re aso11able pnce'! Whether you wish to buy or lease TRY US Buy or Pick up Lease. \980 DOUGE w ac:. r~tal cabinets, slora11e bihs , wo rkbench 8-12·5177 l!lflO Vui <-'tievrole\ Sl0.10010 80 494·2996. t~~sg t!.J80Van Chevmlet SIO.<m/000 494·2996. Iv. msg Autos Waruhd 9590 7(i lOOL.S Gd gas ml 1-\ll xlras St60-0 or o ffer i!IO 9206 ... ves, or 631 2191 BMW 9712 .........•............. & SADDLEIACIC VALLEY IMPORTS is ;mt recei•-illg the lmt shiP"'Rnt of Mew 19801MW's! Exct:llent Sele,·tioo Come In Toda) Before They're Gone ' Also ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• '80 Dots-200SX Sµon luxur'I pkg , 5 !.f>c c d . a ir c:ond . cassette, s1er1•11. 84011 mlle li. l1k ~ nt>w., 1 ~VZM Peugeot 1&>-82\8 974 8 Must Sacrifice '67Cougar, '70 VW :<lnl mechamcal $2,000 /best ofr X lnl $8189 '75 DatSUot 280Z t ~riced . air l"Ond , stl'rl'11 t a pe• & allo }:. 12178561( 1315) $4999 'IODotwn 510WOCJOft Automauc. air l'Ond . H lrac·k. lu1o;age r a1·k. whJle walls & more Low miles l:i2!1ZJIY)l ~300~ SAVE SSS ••••••••••••••••••••••• OltANGECOUNTY'S l'EUG EO't' 1)1 ESEL HEADQUhllTERS 1980 505s lGas&DieseU HERE HOW!!! BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACll 75~0900 Ponc'he-9750 ·······•··············· 1;1; 912 classic· Good m veil.mvnt Xlnl l'On<I s.5.800 675-4-114 '79 Por. 9ltS<:Targa 1-'ul ly loaded, ~Int cond. l7K m1 . PP &H4198. newport datsun 114 833 1300 ••••••••••I ·r.• 1 !1z.t -Po~che Sil~er w sunrf & s lH i:a ss. condition. S2000 cond. 644-6579 ~1·3065 --------'73 Co u ger C unv . '76 Sc1ro1·co 31 ,000 mi. C.:h a mpag ne Ed1t1011 . $4900 759.UA.50 Ha Ja !lug neel.ls c ng work. f15Q 955 3601 or 754 7!110 'ID VW Aug, ong owner, l'n~ xlnl. bOO\ had , S6SO G61 24fl2 Sacnf1ce $1000 '62 VW Ragtop. '71 duel port eng. Gd cond 645 0395 71 VW.. Bu.g Xlnt m«h cond Needs body work $1000 ~7 2947 'Ill VW Bug. xlnl cond1 lion Reasooable offer '64·5301 Completely Rebll. s uper dean Isl $2950 Lakes 840-1964 9935 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'W Dodge Coronet liood trans . air S295 t.: a II 64S-CT1 SK Ford 9940 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 f'ord Granada P /S. P H fM Radio T<>P cond \'1~13 U>w on cash~ Rent a used Ford by the month. no c r e dit Pay m ents Lowarm purchase C2lJl 43..1·2939 SOUTH COAST DODGE ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAV TOP DOLLAR 8 Uf?'que for toP used cars.foreiRn. he-Owuted BMW's '73 l200. 29mpg. xlnt 1n & out' 91M m1. Sl400or besl o£fer 495 606.'I S7800 or bsl ofr Call Ad ~361, 642·4300, 24hr5 Rolls Royce 9756 f Qrd LTD ·oo. S250 or of 'till BUS SltiOO firm ' Huns fer 751 -:t220. call before 4 Cooc:I Dave 631 1121 pm ________ _ 281111 ila.rbor Blvd COSTA M ESA 540..0330 Anti I Cl~ CIUtU 9520 ··•·•·····•·••••••··•·· 1957 FORD THUNDER II RD The most desir ed l'lass1c 1n So C al i f Full} restored. white w blue 1n t & ful l p o we r lln'iUKZI SAVE!!! 46 Ford Woodie. restored Sl3.000. ALSO ·29 Model A Town Sedan, 4 dr. restored. Ideal for stu· dent. Sl0,000. 675·6161. '60 MGA! new cng. paint. tops. tires. more $4500 firm. 645-753l CLAS SIC A.UTO SHOW & A.UCTIOH Hunungton Center Mall Oct. 34·5 Consign your car now F.nlirc Empire exh1b1llons 848-2296 ctomestlcs or dass1es Ir • To<:t.oos. Forom! your car ts cictra clean. For the Re!>l Deal in see us f'IRST' Uranj(e C~oly Come• See Us Today1 S.AODLEl~Q( '76 li210. lllnt l'Ondtl1on. AM FM. 8 trk. $2995. 962-0056 ........•.............. "l DEAlER IN U.S.A. ROY IRR CARVER '72 VW Convt New Eng. Pamt. Tup. Int Clulc.'h , a m 1fm ca ss , i·h rom e nms radials, & more ' $395() ti6 I \.2l)j' '76 Gran Torino Wagon Gd Cond tow rru-S1850 OBO 2265CanyonDr EC.M. Mercury 9950 ,, . .~· 111 111 Or~ C_.., 292.5 llarbOr Blvd. COSTA MF.SA 979-2500 WEIUY CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS COHMRL CHEVROLET 2:10111 .. rtior llh 11 t ·c )ST A ~ ~:..., \ 54'>·1200 -~ - Hlc.HIUYSt Top dollars for Sports Cars. Bugs. Campers . 914's, Audi's i\Sk ror U/C MGR JIMMA.RIMO VOUCSWAGEM unn Beach Blvd. HUNTLNGTON BEACH 142-ZOOO TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAM USB>CARS! v .ALLEY IMPOITS BRAND NEW 28402 Marguerite P'r.w\ . DATSUNS! Mission Viejo • 831-2040 495-494' 'IO 510 Hatchback r ROLLS·ROYCC 1S40 Ji1mt10ru Newport Boch \'-----'-- CLOSED SUNDAYS _ Closed~ooays S spee<I , The rmoKuard ~~~~~~~~~~ ~-Ot~lKM'l. undt'reoae,..&, ·'GI S1l11er,.Cwud-..-Einu l)t'O\ect1on pkg. (0318381 l'Ond Elegant, white CREVIER ( 1194 I Ownrr S2 I 500 640-4999 ' $6518 -. 5 sveed '(:176898) 1703> Soab 9760 '66 BAJA. many new items, 12 12 V. new int, AM FM cass. x:tr a enit. Loo ma.ny xtras to hsl Ha.,, e r e.c.eJ.ll l:.. S Ul9.5- Ca sh. 962-1~ ....................... ORANGE COUNTY'S RHlST LINCOLN-MERCURY OEALERSHJP _IA Y..R.ADHOi- LINCOLN-MERCURY 1&18AutoCenter Or. SDf'wy-Lake Forest exit lRVINE 110-7000 & I sr • lllOAOWAY SA"IA A,.A ON\.Y $5219 •••••·,·9i()su0i•••••• '80 310 O.X Sedan TURBOs '!IO Rabbit conv GREF:N METALLIC Cassette. 5s neve r reg Tan mter 9!'15·0310 Volvo 977l Musteq 9952 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 835·3171 THE Ulr>Mo\Tf ORl~ING 1'0AC111HE •USED BMWs• 'i22002 l11WI S r t2()6!1 ·73 3.0Cs cpe. mint (055!1 I '7-l 2002 tu S/ r (03321 '75 2002a ( 0035 1 '75 :.JOla w s ir 11483> '76 2002 s/r.&sp.1 157~1 '77 630csi (456.SXG l '78320i H p. air (4228> '78 320ia. air (6095 I '78530ia loaded (54681 '79S28ia sir (2615) CloSo_!d~ ORANGE COUMTY'S OLDEST A M FM l'i t c r e u HERE HOW! T h e r m o g u a •d p r o .•.....•.••.......•.... VOLVO leclivn. body i.1db m old EXCELLENT 1 n g s & u n d e r co a t SElECTIOH! I \502571 <6021 ONLYS49" ·so 210 Hatchbeck 5 s peed 1588413) (815) ONLYS4819 '80 P.tdlup 4 speed. (254973) ( 1133 1 ONLYS&Olt newport dat sun 114 83 3 noo 1 BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove St reel N~WPORT BE,\Cll 752-0900 SALES. SERVICE .AHOLUSIHG O\'ERSE~ D~LIVERY EXPERTS E.ARLEIKE Tri...... 9767 VOLVO •••••••••••••• ••••••••• 1966 Harbor Blvd. '77Tri...... COSTA MESA Spitfire. Xlnl cond. t..u 641.-9103 540-9467 mi's. AM/F'lr1 tape. Lug-'75 Volvo 164E, 4dr. air, gage ra<.'k S3:IOO. 536·8915 auto trans, am 1fm cass. or960·5545_--snrf. xlnt c:und. $3600. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•••M 1.974 Tnumph TR6. Low 6.11·1!>32. '66 Must V8. Auto. gd cond. S25001orrer. 644..mss ·79 Xlnt cond. xlnt. gas mileage. $4900. After 6PM 964-6723. '79 hatchback. a/c. ps. auto, wire whls, lo mi. immac. 759-0066 /675-3066 Mustan& ll. ·74, steri::o. A/C. PS. auto .. n eiw brakes & lireii. V6. ntint cond. $2200. Calls a ft. 6PM : 962-U..'iO. 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• :&~ Fef-nri 9723 · mileage, extras $4250. Class i;-·67 4-d r . 1m· '•••••••••••••••••••••• 0 18 10 365 l,QM . 714 maculale. t owner. 4. '79 C ustom su'prt>me Fen-ari Dino Spy*r 838-5026 spd. 23·28mpg. rlbt eng. b r o u g h a m , r u 11 y Sales-Service-Leasing 1974 r~/blkdream car '?9TnumphTR? ~onverti M1chelins. s eeks ap· eqwpped, assume lease. E\•t'S 642-0696 ' nr t ' h consider trade. 548-5710 Roy Ccrver,lnc. --hie. sspd. AMffM stereo ,. ec1a ive new ome. days : 675-9514 eves & Rolls Royce RMW Fiat 9725 cas)etle, A/C. flawless Sl!iOO/OBO. SSS-8055 llft 6 wkends. ~ Charmcl M1xm1t l'On!.olc W Re\'erb h> Q !'. <..: ;mo Wa u i. S ac rd "''' $250 6455107 i9 Kaw .let Sl-.1. 3 mos '28 Ford Model A C pc old. mus\ ~di '>ltJllO l'all \\trUm blc ,cal. $6400 miracle mazda IS40Jamburee ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9.000 m1 S8500,oHer orwki;ids. !----·------ Newport Beach ti40-6444 ·70 850 Spyder r1a1. t-639-3625aft 6PM ORAHGECOUMTY Pinto 9957 ----radials. A)I fM. ai. 1s VOLVO S.S.'iO !>-10 Q2Ui VolbWOCJlft 9770 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~1'1 ll'Ab'1 tH0-1665 25' C.:OLCJR T V SI.Ill l \c ar Warran\) 642 53.10 ----loats & Marine lquipmrnt r ninsportation ••••••••••••••••••••••• C~.Sole/ Owc:k 'SJ Skyl<\rk convt $3500 53 C.:arnbean c:on\1.. $5500 A few other 50's cars 497 SS37 ZISO ......... cl. I Costa Mno 645-5700 . ~· 808 ...._._ 1 •R~'• -••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCLUSIVELY VOL VO ~ ~ ~ Honda 9727 HERE HOW!!! Lar1est Volvo Dealer •••••••,••••••••••••••• "Dasher Diesel Power"! mOrangeCounty' Also a good selection or lJUY or LE~E Sciroccos. Check us for DIRECT '78 Pinto. auto. ps. am/fm cass. CB. new radials. $2400 or bes t offer. 754-74719-3 ...,,...... 9960 • •••••••••••••••••••••• •.•...•............•.•. 9010 •••·•••················ JENSEN CANOJ:;S. try before you nu} !>.'i7-0089 evcs Boats, MaintfftelnCe/ Rent 9120 •.................•..•. 8 ' t ah o ver c ampe r St ove , 11·ebo't. verv de:i n ~500 494 652.5 days, 4!.,1-5492 eves . Motorcyc~s/ Stooten 9150 Musl3Jlg '64 '65 I owner Gd ~·ond Ong lhru out $000(.I l>'.f 3 9'Z7 l I' p --~--- 9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTED! 851) N Beach Blvd LAHAliR'A <5 Ml. No. of SA Fwy> l714t52~5333 Sunday by Appl. VISIT YOUR ORAMGE COAST t h e BEST prices ! ~::.r::.~<,···· ....... [!~~ \919 Lakewood Blvd. 2025 S. Manchester Anaheim 750-2011 '75,.,_....WCMJOll Good cond. Many xtras. Al.so has a welded on to frame class A tr ailer hitch, offer. Call 547-3182. 'Tl FURY WAG 6 Pas. 360 Service 9020 •.•••...•..•.........•. Boat work. repairs , re furbishing. pa int & varnis h High t1ualll.) work1reas ral~ 548-7044 eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '67 OT! Y /\MAHI\ 25U l>1rt bike S250. 640·!10l9 HARLEY DAVIDSON BLK /Chrome Com pl Rell Eng. new lrans rac· Ing valves. cam s & pipes . Xlnt Cond $270010 80 b73~J' ftlll Custom ·79 Dodge D·SO. crew cab & 19' 5th whl trlr. Assulnl! equity & loan. Must sell 646-9873 eves 9550 1 U• t4-1oor ll•tl e~• ...... "•O·tJOJ w S40·'4•7 PORSCHES • '7 9 BMW 320i , Cully equipped, pick up lse or pay cash, 673· 1806 a ft 6PM. 644·9050 d ys W. Mains field HONDA HEADQUARTERS TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES & SERVJCF. OLDSMOBILE HOHDA GMCTRUCllCS 2850 Harbor Blvd. LONG B EACH IZ 131597-3663 OPEN SUNDAYS lt7SVWC.AMPEll Dynamite Westfalia Pop ToP in super slick condi· lion. Air. auto. sterec ••••••••••••••••••••••• G1Mnl 9901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOTHIHGOVEA $4995 Eng. New Brake. Tires. Trans. S2200 546-37~ ·73 Dix sport sta wgn, prime cond. stl bits. 16M PG. Sac Sl29S. 646-7274 loats,McwiM Equlpmt..t 9030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 14..., GLASS1'RON Ncwh Rebwll outboard 45 II P on American Trailer SLOOO 645 3623 loah. Power 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76CHEVY BLAZER Cheyenne Pkg, V8. auto, air, s tereo. nu tires. xlra s. 1mma c . $4300/080. 779-1794 '79 Ford Ranger Lanai. super package, $10,000. 645-2495. Mark. 9560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 43' Gran Mariw.r Fu 11 y e q ui pp e d . '67 ¥•ton Chev P U. 283. 3 WANTED Allow us the opportunity LO consider lhe purchase or trade·m of your clean Porsche. Check with Us Today! 13631 .... !)()< 8••d Ga1oen GrC>ft '" Ul--2Ul beautifully maintained. peed Str o n g . $1550 ready to cruise or Ii ve Must sell. •75 Suzukj GT 546-37~ eve wkend. aboard. Slip m ay be 7 50 . Great cond. ToplJollar available. 11._,,'hi Financ S850/obo. 213-431-4723. SOUTH COAST iJll possible. $72,000. o r DODGE 11.:.1 e .ooo If 00 broker in· '78 Honda CB750 SS-F , I" .. volved. Clean deal will 5700 ml. xlnt cond, $1850 TRUCKS For Your Car ! lncluck 9' Avon Red cresl G6l·9l5l /81rl·3737 JOHHSOM & SO" IMW 1972 3.0 CS Auto. Must sell. 642·0696 GOOD OPPORTUNITY '80 BMW 633i, white, beige lthr int. BBS whls. A l pine s uspensio n . $29,500. 751-5021 early mom or 75l·7l53 dys, ask COSTA MESA 540..9.40 ·73 Accord, sunrf. xlnt cond1t1on. 19,000 m i, l owner $5300. 759-1973 ......... 9730 tape. (4l8ZR8) $5995 JIMMA..RIMO VOLKSW.AGEH 18711 BEACH BLVD.· ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Jaguar Mdl X J 6L. HUNTINGTON BEACH HAIEIS AUTO CENTER 1425 Baker Street COST i\ M E.5A 540-9202 '63 Valiant con vert., needs work. $400. 731·1456 wiUI 7 PM . '70 Valiant Duster. \. owner. 6 cyl. 2 dr. runs great, S1195. 645-7578 fCllUfiac tt65 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for Antonio. · Silver.1°tt:f~rf. p P . iiiiiiiiiilii4iiZ.iii2iiOOOiiiiiiiiiiiii ~~•••••••••••••~!!~ '74 200'l, 2Smpg, am/fm ----------1 Having t rouble selling ••-'10 lt1tPONTIAC stereo. xlnt paint . Must ·n Jaguar XJ6L. yellow, your car? Try us! Paid • -Gran Prix Coupe , sell. 974-0276. 36,000 m.i, IB500. for or not! Ask for Tom 5IC'YLAB Economy V ·6 . This 760-1789 4 door sed~. Automatic, dynamite car hu only '76 2002, s unroof. air, ---------Ai.kJllnM. .....,...,Rl...aO air conditioning. P retty 19000 actual miles. a•tfm. new paint. xlnl Mada 9731 l"'IA " car! (0509) I <210WRD> cond, S6750. 974-0276. •••••••••••••••••••••• • VOLISW AGIEH S6t•ll $4ft5 '78 GLC Sport , air . 11711 11.ACHILVD. HOWAIDct.•rolet JIMMAllHO 76 3.0fl . 60.000mi, 4 sp.. am/fm, silver. 5 spd, Oovefln.·-llSts. VOUCSW•l!!.-.t sunroof,$7SOOOBO,must $3300 ac.646-4105 ttwl'-'••adl ....-.___... sell, 640-6748. ~ ·-9740 142-2000 NEWPORT BEACH 18711 BEACH BLVD. -" ... lll-0555 HUNTINGTON BEACH w\\h Ooorboards and 4.5 ......._.._.....__.,.,_._Vi Your Oran Ke County Llftc• Utrc~ ..._.._.._ • ..-Ram Tough Truc k horsePower Johnson out· R...t/Storocp 160 Center 2626Harbor Blv .. l)ahuR 9720 ..................... .. board. Jac k Curley ••••••••••••••••••••••• CostaMesa 541>·5630 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LUl!l•t• '73 VWWestfaliacam-r, '72 Skylark. orig owner , 51il·lS06home.or84C).2~ SOUTH nSIW"•! .... mtheboatweekends •AIMotorcyct. WeP., '712102 Leaving the country! O ran ge. nu mich , beautcond,a/c,am/fm, ·~PonliacGTO.Cherry 142.2000 s..,Mfft Low mileage, jet black Must sell my baby! um a m /fm, P .P . $3500. white I b row n · inside " out! Owner ' 2 1' riberglass Tug. OrangeCowlty'st..argest CQAST OVER beauty. Wire wheels.See Mercedes-Beni25()C that 4116-9678. See/drive/make orter. mmt sell! Asking n585. tuander Weekender or All Indoors, Space Avail. -lool& this one I (ARI 218) is really clean. Loaded '71 q uareback. n ew Ml-1283. Call 67S-1763after6 p.m. Qaaracter BllY Launch. FrlSepl.12: 6pm-Upm. l DQDG E For Your Good $7"5 Inc. leather & AM/FM eng/tires, all ori1, mint • Bui k R I &aM>. old. vw Robbi\ oit•Olllyl<"'•••Counly VW,PoncheorA..il JIMMAAINO .,..,...Call.,.._•-· """'·-- 11 ' .. , .,.... ... 'llacLW.4 tt70 Oltse l. f'ull galley. Fairarounds 24 hrs. info after 6 p.m. it 675-9050 clean, extras, ~.00 ml. ••••••••••••H••••••n• -.we. refrigerator , dbl. 714.931.511& ~~t;~~d. (ffl:tlB:ltJ~; .. ';1'.JI l81VOUCUB""~WCHAB~IHVD. days . '75 Rabbit tdr, am/fm , Call846-3B35 eves. '7111\underbird 003 CYW ..... rth. head. co mvlctc. 5 .. 111.0~10 . -ic.n ... 41.K ml, 1 owner. Good C • ff 11r Xlnl·Mlnt cond. Orig -Rent , 22' Lux. Motor "'V" • I HUNTINGTONJJIEACH '6t MIZ ZIOSE Cpe shape. l2950, 494-9822. --H • 0 w n er s Be s t o ff aa.S00.646-7887_ -Hme, SIJJS 6, se lf·t'Onl. VW·PORSCHE-AUUI 142-2000 2dr ,o\ulo \ran·. beaut •ii vw Bud, runs great, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 213-423-9088 .."1'10 S2 0 ... SELL ldJc items with a 44.5 E. Coast Hiway " -._ 'l Dor-,... "--WANT Al N? 5 /w... + 8 < I m t. DaHy Pilot Classified l\d at Bayside Dr\ve SELL idle Items with a car' ful I lthr' s nrf new brakes, am/fm 8 '" E. -· vuuver\. ELL Idle Items with a .:=e~~~s=U=ed=~"~~~~=:~~,d~~==~======~L~~-~~~~·-----i~N~~~~~~~~~h~~~·~~~~o~~~-~b~P~i~~~C~lu~s~i~fi~ed~Agd~OO~·~~~~·~~====Lt~~. m~t~IMW. xw~.-~ml~. ~~~o~medA~ \ • p212>. ~~· M¥::..:51'18;:;..:.:.:...· ----- ' j ... _,. ... ·--.... -. . -..._ ... --. . .. .. .. ,.. . __ ,_ _____ ... -_. _.. - - ---.. ~-"t-J.-..-Z': • I ' • Huntington Beach Fountain Valley E DITI O N VOL. 73, NO. 269, 4 SECTIONS,«> PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Year Ho•etown -Dally New8paper THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Will Sei Fi Flfeks Sell Real Thing? ay JODI CAD&NHltAD ........ -..... T b e m a D l n t.b e a r a y pinatrlped 1ult has beaded aeweral ·~ milllou to Man and Jupiter. But Wednesday nilht he waa on a new mlllion to aave the U.S. space proJram from a slow death 8 . Gentry Lee. manaeer ol ml11ion operations and en1lineerlna for the Jupiter Orbiter, tried to sell his UC lnlae audience on apace u p)oralba. But the coUe1• atu deata Memed more lnteNll\ed ln what be thou1ht about aden<'e flctlon movies His UCt talk, "Star .Wart· Scl•n<'e Fiction and St'lentifl<' Reality," la one of five lectures Lff sivea to various audiences around the rountry. The beapectatled scientist made it clear Wednesday nieht that while be was willing to dis· cuaa telence fiction mowiea, it's the real world of aclence that ez. clte1 him. "I am laking the atory of the Joy of aclence and exploration dlrecUy to the people," be said aa he started a sUde show of Jupiter and Mars explorations. ··At the end of this lecture you wlll know more than any person alive knew about Jupiter two years ago," he promised. Through the pitch blackness Looking n...,. Oii ...... ................ ..., ....... _ Acting as an extra set of eyes for the pilot and co-pilot, Lance Cpl. Robert Moyer (left) and Navy Corpsman Jeu Beaucage, check out the terrain on way to scene of an accident. To see the results of their Search and Rescue (SAR) maneuver out of El Toro Mar1JJe Air Corps Station, see Page ·cs. 'Doctor' Jailed Again County Man Found Practicing in Clinic Legal troubles have multiplied for an Orange County man ac- cused of illecally practicin& medicine and s:au.ing the death of a diabetic, following bi.a ar- rest Wednesday on new cbar1es. Gerald Barnes. 47, who lives Jt tbe--private Coto de Cua estates development in Trabuco Canyon, was re-arrested late 1 ueaday oo a bench warrant is· sued by Orange County Superior Court Judge Richard Beacom. Bail was set at $200,000 in the new legal action taken by Judge Beacom when investigators dis- closed evidence that Barnes bad begun seeking employment as a doctor agal.n. The defendant already was scheduled for arraignment at 9 a .m . today in Harbor Judicial District Court on two other counts. He Ud been free OD $2,500 bail since Aug. 22, following bi.a arrest on three counts lnvol ving practic·- iDI medicine while posing as a doctor. Barnes was subsequently charged with second degree murder in connection with the allesed negligence-related death of John McKenzie , 21, of Coast Weather Dense coastal fog Fri- day morning with hazy sunshine Friday af- ternoon. Lowa tm:li&ht SI at the beaches, '85 inland. Wgbs Friday mld 70s to mid IOI. Anaheim, wbo died last year of cijabetic shock. McKenzie was seen by the sus- pect at Pacific Southwest Medical Group in Irvine while suffering from uncontrolled diabetes. Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright alleges in the latest action against Barnes that be-applied for a new job Sept. 15, the day before murder charges were filed. Officials at Wilmington Doctors Office in Compton where Barnes was allegedly seeking employment notified authorities. Officials of the California Board of Jiledical Quality As· surance in Santa Ana notified the Orange County District At· torney's Office. Authorities allege Barnes had posed as a doctor for four years. Warning Proposed On Dump 'Hazards' By ROBERT BARKER °' -De6ly rte.-..... Huntington Beach Planning Commission Chairman Mark Porter said today be will ask the city to embark on a public in- formation program to wam resi- dents of possible hazards posed by an abandoned chemical dump in the city. Porter said that schools could be asked to warn children of the apparent dangers. Anotbef" alternative would be sending leaflets to neigbbon of the site, southeast of the in- tersection of Warner Avenue and Bolaa Chica Street, Urging them to keep their children away from the four-acre dump. Officials from the state (See DVMP. Pase AZ> Se•oot Pay Bwle HuntingWn 'Final Off er', l(ejected BJ PAftlCI( KENNEDY put two weeks. However, then ... ...,......... baa been no teacher walkout Teacher repreaentativea durinl clua boun in the dla- unanlmoualy rejected tbe trict's seTen blch acbooll thU INSIDE TeDA W "final" coatract offer of the year. At a ...__ • ...._ u.. _._._,, Huntlqtoa Beach Unloa Hlah ~--~ _ ~=.._ School J>iltrict Wednelday even-Wednesday the dlstrithct pre--1·--..--.. _... ,_. 1 •• _ _.. • .-&... return sented the teacben wl four . If °" UW Naltoftal GtlOrd U. ..... -are req_,..... a contract cbolcea,. but used at attf thH ,.tte• th to::.::.lf!:1f=ationlby tbemtoaeeepttbeofferwithtbe Rnolulblarv War, pilbUe teaclMn appear to be ipreadlna lowest PQ tnereue Ulil year IO apaU11 "°' depleted "" throulbout tbe dbtrlct. llon teacben laid off la1t •Prlna raMI ol tM uo-....r tldlltia. than 50 lutrueton pleketed could be nblred. SH tdd'• ,_,,....., a °" Wfttmimter Jnp School Ulil School board President Doril l0toa to. °" Page Bl. mornlq before school to protest Allen aald, If the teacben accept I .... _ UM 1aek of a CGDtnet ud wbM a 1evm per'ffllt pay increue •-.r• \ Uley eoukler to be erowded Ulil year (four perceDt UM tint an_...._ •• WU I 0 • a elaurooam. 1eme1ter; llS pereeat tlae =a..-I :::-'9 J: \ It •• tbe MCODd 1aeb ,..._ aeeoncl HllMlter) 20 teaellln ~ ,. _.._ cw marcla tllln iD two daya ..S could be rebind lmmedl...aJ, Lee's excited voice explal.ned lbe 1aseous atmosphere of Jupiter, the bubbly lakes of sul- fur found on one of Man' moona and the fact that there la a cur- r ent of some sort generated between Jupiter and its closest moon. The Voyager m ission to Jupiter coal only ball a billion dollars or $2.38 per American," explained the scientist. .. For $2.35 a year I can give your children an AUu of the solar system equal to the AUaa of the world you had as a child," he said. Lee ii selling the space pro- gram through lectures and a television series, "Cosmos," because, he says, for the first time in 15 years, the United States has only one space ex- ploration project .. When the current Jupiter re- port is completed there are no more apace prosram1 planned. Space exploratlClll will add to knowledce of the earth's history, increase nat1C11al prestige and productivity and will step up technological advances, he saya. "How can it be that you're not willing to pay $2.35 per American to go to a real planet," be asks. "Far less than wepaytogotoa movie." Lee had opened the lecture <See SPACE, Pale AZ) Truce Offered Iraqis Seize Vital Rail Line BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -Iraq announced conditions for a truce with Iran and claimed its forces cut off two major cities in southern Iran by seizing the vital Tehran railroad today. While lraq said it captured 115 square miles of Iranian border territory in four days of fighting, Iran claimed it pushed back Ira- qi forces in one area and report- ed for the ftnt time the capture of a border post inside Iraq. Iranian jets made their deepest penetration into Iraq, bombing a gas refinery at Ayn Zala, 280 miles northwest of the Baghdad and 400 miles from the nearest Iranian air base, the Iraqis reported. Io Beirut, Iraqi Defense Ministel' Adnan Khairallah list- ed the l(Oa1s of .bis COUDlr)' aa: redefinition of the Iraq-Iran border, protection of the Arabic- speaking minority in southern Iran and the return to Arab sov- ereignty of the islands of Abu Mousa and the Greater and Le11er Tunbe. 1be illanda were aebed by Iran in 19'71. In Rome, the Iraqi amba11ador to Italy said Baghdad will accept no mediation to end the war unless Iran agrees to return io Iraq ter- ritories that it claims. Al U.S. government urgine, 53 American civilians -46 busi- nessmen and their families and seven dependents of members of the U.S. Embassy sWf -left Baghdad by bu.a for Amman, Jordan, a trip that normally takes 1S·l8 houn. U.S. diplomats were not being advised to leave Iraq for the time being. A chartered plane arrived in Amsterdam, Netherlands, with other American evacuees from Iraq . They included 241 employees of a New Jersey con- struction company and their families. Forei1D diplomats said they were making plans to evacuate European, Japanese, Korean and Filipino civilians working in Iraq. Military communiques issued here and in Tehran indicated ground and air activity bad not let up. Both Iran and Iraq baited shipments of oil, not a major worry to the world for the pres- ent. but the war threatens to bait shipments from other oil· producing countries in the Penian Gulf. Baghdad Radio said Iraqi troops punched 12 miles into Khu1e1tan province and out- flanked Iranian garrisons at Kborramshahr and Abadan, kill- ing 50 soldiers. It said Iraqi troops seized the railway that connects the two cities with Tehran, the Iranian capital 340 miles to the northeast. Baghdad Radio said ·the railroad seizure cut the two cities off from reinforcements promised by the Iranian govern· ment, adding : "The two cities are doomed. Their surrender ~is imminent." The Iraqi command said its I troops and tanks seized lhe Ira- nian border town of Naftshah to- day while other Iraqi forces raised the nag over Mehran, 90 miles to the south. Iraq said its troops took Mebran on Wednesday afler completing the capture of the major Iranian border town of Qasr-e -Sbirin , 350 miles southwest of Tehran, laking 351 prisoners and pursuing fleeing <See MIDEAST, Page AZ) 'Whoa, Pard' Mesa's 'Rodeo' Corraled The ownen of the Rodeo bar and restaurant ig Anaheim doo 'tcottoo to lettinl others make bay off their name. Tbua, tbe ownera of the western bar that's been cubiq .in.on tbe "UrbuL~bo)'." trend ftl.S a auit in Oraqe County w Superior Court Wedftesday ukinc that a Coata'Jlesa bar drop its references to "Rodeo." THE RODEO IS LOCATED at 1168 S. State College Blvd., not far from Anaheim Stadium. It assumed the name on Aug.&. According to lawyer Stephen D. Johnson's suit, the night spot bas berome an immediate bit througbout Southern Calilomia by "organiling ill restaurant and coc.lrta.il facility around the Orange County professional sporting scene and in particular around the Los Angeles Rams.'' l'""'fbe ownen, OCSC Inc., which lists John Perrin of Garden Grove as president, have spent lots of money to earn the reputation as a watering hole for the Ra'ms, Johnson claims, by paying for guest appearances by Ram players and coaches. SO THE OWNEllS ABE asking the court to make McConahay's Rodeo at 72.5 W. Baker St. in Costa Mesa quit using tbe name in their advertisements and signs so none of the true Ram fans get rounded up in that Rodeo. Johnson alleges in the lawsuit that McCooabay's is us-· ing references to "Rodeo" illegally because it•has never filed with the state for such a fictitious business name. Dr. W adJiU Seeks $500,000 Damages Dr. William Waddill was back in Orange County Superior Court Wednesday. The physician-unsuccessfully prosecuted twice before for the death of a fetus following a saline abortion in lm-uked a jury for damages stemming from an alleged $500,000 busi- ness loss be suffered throuab purchase of the Huntington Harbour Beach Club ieven years ago. . Attorney Michael Richman, representing the Westminster- based obstetrician, claimed in openin& arguments Wednesday that bi.a client was cheated out or the ball million dollars through the actionl of attorney J erome Bame and Frank Janette, once a stockholder in the beach club. Waddill contends Bame con- spired with Janette to defraud' him and another partner, Dr. Robert Trace. The beacli club ultimately (See WADDILL, Pase AZ) ~i EC: :: l came • tbe taeell of a h•c-. 'tberebJ allnlatla1 ero"ded ... ! -:'cvi lit·iD bJ • teaelm'I w.--., clauroom cmdltAW. ......... CH ,I iD tbe omee of Plalllp ~'=' Tbe ~ ecmtrofaet ~d*cem I ... I DriDcilMll of l:dllcm Hiiia IDelude an w•• • tU ==:-J: la Ra.ti ellllt ~ ralle. All al . .._ ..... ....,,..... ::=. ~ :..,L :: teaei.::= ~e~w = four eho6eel offer a ils -per-e-:m• -PNJTUnNG TUCHIM HOLD •.....aMN' AT TMI OPPICI Off IDllON PRINCIPAL ..._•_11_1 _.,_. __ a~·:-----marcbll ...,_. eluw ID tbe (lee ftA<!BS8I. Pal• Al) Pl'tnclp91 PNlp GrOM (bM:llground) T ... Wiit t11 Unlnvlecl Gue• ~~=--J-:;...;;~~~=--~~~--l--=--~~~~~~~-£.~~~~__;:..;:....;.;:.._~~-+-~~~~~~~'~~~..;;_~.:........:~~~~-=-..J:.=.~~~·~- -· -·-------.. - -------- . . . . ~--JUST BREAKING--............ -..i• ll'J"' fT09 •+-o~·· UIDfW oNI IMllffOMI MW ._lopn•Ct .. Judge V plwldit CensWJ V 1idercount Argument .. 0 F.TROIT I AP> A ft'deul J'"'1e ruh1d today that UMl ll 8 Cen1ua 8 uTt'au'1 UllO flaW't'9 1ttluU1ly w.dert'ount th• naOoft'" populaUoo, par11cularly mtoonll•. and muat be adjuated e..tore thty may be u ed fo r rt-•pportiool,,. Cl'W\lnotll or dh1trihuUn1 fedt rat tnnds In a suit tiled by the l'i\1 ol Oetroit. U S Olllrl<'t ('ourt Jud~e lk\c'a«1 O llmor~ upbeld the arsument ol lM AAU•'• Sillth hu·cett t'lty that Ill& population had b.en und•r'f'OWlted In lhe t•f'n l'tU G1lrnof'1'0 ll rullna 111 a naUonal or~r wMf'h atf•rtA all rltl• which vrotestt'd that tht'1r povulatlON were und•ft'O\.Lnttid llllM..._ 0.-.t-rf .... 8rfW .tfftllF WASJllNGTON IAI"> Oespit• )udimenl Impaired by alcohol, Ht:lJ John Jenrette. 0 S ~ • put up "toru1lder1bla re sl11ta nt•c,-· ••hen an 1'~81 undf!rrover a•mt aftf'Hd him a teo,000 hri~ ~c '4, an i.l('Uholism u~rt who viewed a vldeata.,. of tht-ffi(~·lml( ll'titlfit"tt today Dr Arthur Phlhp Most-r. an Air fo'orce ('aptaln who treated Jl'nrt'lt(' at a military alM>hohsm clln,<', told th• )ury •l J c nrt>th''s bnbt'ry trhtl In S O\strid Court "Thti mornl eode Installed hy l\IA pa.reota waa allll aomelw>w tr ym.i lo yt'l l rur has attention .. A f1-cft'ral .:rand Jllry has rhar,ced that Jenrette and hla co dt•ft>ndnnt, bu!>mt·l4~1111ian John Stowe o( Richmond. Va , apUt a $50.000 bri~· on l>t't' G, two d11y11 after the videotaped meetfo1. ...... ""' .. d ,.,, ·~' c ................ !'\AN GJ\IHltt-:1. \Al'\ Two coW>ty shenff's deputies invesliRotin.t a 11rowler l'all loday shot and killed a man who re· portedly thrl'lllt•ru.•d tht•m with a knife, a department spokesman retxlrtl'<i The deput1rs who were not Immediately identified by the de· pnrtmt'ttt, investlRokd several reports of a prowler near a railroad riRht.()f wuy hehmd the 4900 block of Acacia Street in un un"1<'orporull'<.I area tlorfflflflf'" Hnr.-Hif• l ·I Prl'l''f8111 LOS ANGELES Great Western Savin1s & Loan Assn. has 1nert·a~cd il.s home mortgage rate lo 14 percent, an lncreue o( a quarter of a percent. Fro•PapAI DUMP WARNING. • • Department of Health Services have noted that toxic and can· ce r -causing c hemicals have risen to the surface in places, posing potential health hazards. F,....PageAI WADDILL .. w e nt bankrupt, le ading t o flnancial diffi culties for Waddill tbat during his murder trials prosecutors used as a possible motive for his allegedly killing a fetus to a void costly malpractice litigation . Richman s a id Jane tte, a neighbor Of Waddill's in Hunt· ington Harbour, approached the physician in 1973 about purchas· ing the beach club. Waddill agreed to go along with the venture , the attorney said, and joined a corporation that included Trace to buy the club for $2.2 million. Janette retained Bame. be said, to help a rra nge the purchase. But Richm an claim ed that B a m e m is r e p r esented by $260,000 the amount Janette in· vested in the venture. He al.so claim ed that Bame should have known that Janette had taken $200,000 of the $2.2 million of· fered by the corporation for the club. Richman claimed Janette, who has dropped out of sight. also "was s t ealing the cor · j>oration blind." He said Bame advised Waddill and directors or the club, who bad discovered the illegalities, lo forget J a n e tte • s action because bringing them lo the at· tention of authorities would jeopardize efforts for refinanc- lflg. Causing Porter's concern is the f acl that neighborhood youngsters play al the s ite and u.Se lbe area a s a bicycle course. Porter als o said that dis· cussions are under way with the Mola Construction Co .. property owner. to ring the area with a chain link fence. Meanwhile . the Planning Com· mission this week approved Uie frame work for enviromenlal studies conc erning possible hazards dealing with the ell· cavalioo o( about 100,000 cubic y ards of tbe contaminated material. The studies will focus on m o nito ring lhe area for po isonous vapors durine ex· ca vation, an evacuation plan for residents, safety measures for workers, and precautions for the tra nsportation of the material. The s tate De partment of Health has urged the city to al· low Mola to haul away the material and bury it al a new dump site, probably in West Covina. Th e rec ommendation . however. is opposed by the South Coast Air Quality Manage· menl District which has warned that excavation would expose the community to toxic gases and particularly matter thal re· portedly includes cancer caus- ing agents. Mola is seeking permission t.o build more than 200 con- dominiums at the site that in· eludes the former four-acre dump. The environmental report COO· cerning potential hazards of e•· cavation is scheduled to be com· pleted Dec. 16. Fro. Page A J TEACHERS' HASSLE • • • •raise the second year. Another contract offer is for a five percent inc rease both 'se mesters equalling a year end .raise of 7.5 percent. This would ORANGE COAST " F DAILY PILOT fl~• Ot.,.. (.H\\ 0..ly P1,0\. W1\f'I '#Ntf\ '" <ombtM!O ,,.. H•""" Preu. It-P'UO'•""'d o., IM ~ Of•~ C.0.\t P\tOh V.h'\IO <..omca-tn• S..r•t• tolho"' •r• QUb!I~ Moncl•t. thrOVQn Frio.., tor Coi-1• Mina, NtwOCM'I Bf•<". Huttll~on 8e•c ft Fot.t,.l •in V•ll•Y lrvH~•. &.•ount 8••<" Soutft CoHI /II. "•"9'~ n 9'6Mf .ctlt.on '' 1 1Ht>l1""'° SM.,,,,..t\ M.a ~-'~ T~ SJlrtn<~ ouOh\PtlnQ pt.,t h •I llO Wttt 8•Y SttMt, P 0 Boa 1\t4, {OU• Mlu.1 (._4111t0tn1• •1•1• "-"-Pr•\tdiff'lt •"" P\lbff~ ,,,__,,. ., IC ""ti Edll., TM"'l•A M..,..,WM M.t"'"0'"'9 Ectitor 0...W.M L-AU.l\tant Mt~lno Eo11or "-··--· WlllO<_C_I• Eollor allow the rehiring of 10 teachers, Mrs. Allen said. The final offer call• for a six percent increue the first semester and a four percent bike the second. Mrs. Allen said the offers would exhaust the district'• COO" tingency fund of about $2.2 million. She aaid it wu the finaJ. and best offer becauae inllation, declinine enrollment and a lower fundin1 formula from the at.ate prohibited bi1her raiaea. The district bu tdeotifled au cluaes that have more tba 17 students. Lut aprtni,..127 teacben wen laid off, but more than 100 of them have been rebi.red. Dave Olapel, president ol the district· Educaton A.uoclatklD, conteoda ti., district can offer a bi1ber wqe iDcreue by b8Uer · budtetine of ulltin1 fundl. He said teuber repre.ent.aUve1 re· jected the district'• olfen by a 31-0 vote. Entry c&neeted IUDDL&TOWN, Pa. <AP) - Tbe tblrd m...._, aploratlioD ol I tb• balldlaa llou1la1 tbe I o ........ N9dGr' at tbe ... I ' lllle f.llmd auelear PGW• '1aM waa eueeled wlalle plaat ol· ftclall ltady a eleuult ndial bJ the atate hbUc Utlllty Com· millkla, a plaat 1pokesman Mid ···-· • OC Kids' Facility Pushed A Joint public and private drive to ralte funda to conatruc:t a new home for Oran1e County's •bu1ed and battered children w H lunche d today by tbe Oranae C ounty Bo ard of f\uparvbon The partnenitUp to raise the money nec:euary to construct a fad Uly to replace the now over t-rowded AJbert Sitton Home wu lauded by Board Chairman Ralph Clark who uld, "I a "°"our•'-ed by early slgm of aupport ' Clar\ ipeclflu ll y referred to an offer by the Newport Harbor Junior Lea.rue of SS0,000 in mMlchlntt funds that would be n•de avallable tor ~e project ii a like amount Is raised in the c·ommunity 8111 Steiner . director of Sitton home. located in a compound of county facililJes In Orange, said the need for a new facility is critical. The home is the repository for chtltlren who have been abused, sexually exploited, neglected or abandoned, A total of 1,861 children were admitted to the home during the 1979-80 fiscal year, nearly 4SO more than the previous year, ac- cording to a Sitton home fact sheet given civic leaders who at· tended this morning's kickoff meeting. Offi c ials predi c t that admissions will double within the next 10 years. Ellen Wilcox. coordinator of the drive for a new home, said a private non-profit corporation should be established ror fund raisin& purposes. She predicted it could be up to 2 i,; ye ars before s uffic ient money is raised for a new facili· ty 3nd perhaps five years before it is opened. Under a current proposal. the new facility would be construct- ed on county-owned property near th.e existing home. The Horace Greeley School is now located on the site. The school will be vacated next summer, according to county official$. The site was recommended bec ause no land acquisition cost would be involved and due to its proximity to county Juvenile Court and the UC Irvine Medical Center. Officials said s ome costs might be saved by uslng some of the school facilities as part of the new home for dependent children. The new facility. as con· ceptually proposed, would pro- vide living a ccommodations for lSO children. The current home houses up to 88 children. Cooper New President of College Group Longtime Huntington Beach civic activist Thomas J. Cooper, recognized for local community work. bas been elected 1980-81 president of the California Com· munity College Student Affairs Association. A former chemistry teacher and 18-year employee of the North Orange County Communi· ty College District, Cooper is associate dean of s tudent personnel services at Cypress College in Cypress. His new duties include representing staffs of 107 com· munity colleges throughout .~ -California. Cooper has been involved with the Huntington Beach Rec reation and Parks Com· mission for 15 years and this yea r wu named Commissioner of the Year by the state As· so c ialion of Parks and Recreation. f',....PapAI SPACE •.• with some tbou1bts on current' science fiction movies. -"Star Wan: .. "I enjoyed It lhe lint time I saw tt and the second time, too. But didn't you find It 1tran1e that In the bar· room scene beln11 from aepar.te planet& are capable ol breatbtn1 the same atmoephere ... -"The Empire Strikes Back: .. "When I saw It I WU troubled because moet people in thla country do not dlacrimlnate between those thine• that make lo1lcal sense and those tb•t don't." -"ClOle Encounten o( the Third Kind: " "Part. of tbat movie were beautttu.111 llone. But 8Dl utratel'l'e9trlal belllll we enecMltllr are not Ukety lo ... like the Plllabury DouP Boy." -"Alim:., "It eomea froaa tbe old ICbool. It sua•tl tbat there milbt be another ttad ol terreatrlal beln1 tbat lan't friendl)'.'' ---------------------- Otg Ball \/isitor Why would a giant turkey buzzard hang around Laguna Beach City Hall? The big bird perched ominously on a telephone pole a cross ~ro~-ci~ offices during the_!_uncb hour Wednesday as unnerved city officials looked on. The city bas financial problems, but city e mployees didn't need this bird to re mind them. ------ Oil Tankers Move Despite Conflict LONDON (AP) -Tanker traf· fi c moved oorm ally today through the Strait of Hormuz, the world's main oil artery. despite the escalating Iran· Iraq war. the inte lli ge n ce d epartme nt of Lloyd 's of London reported. A s pokes ma n for Shell in London also said its information was that \he giant tankers which carry more than 40 percent of the Western world's oil s upplies were plying in both directions through the 35-m.i.le-wide strait, "albeit a lilil.e.slowertbeo usual." The assurance came amid mounting fears, and unconfirmed reports, that the fighting bad brought oil traffic in lhe Persian GulftoanearstandstiU. ''Traffic appears to be passing through the s trait without hindrance and the routings im· posed by the Iranian government a r e being observed," Roger Lowes, casualty reporting office r o( Lloyd's intelligence degart- ment, told Tbe Associated Press. Lloyd's monitors world ship- ping movements. O n Monday night . Iran declared its coastal waters war zones and ordered shipping in the Persian Gull to folJow prescribed routes after paasmg through the Strait. Although the rest of the world's oil needs were cushJoned by the current glut In the world market and i mpo rting nati ons ' stockpiles. the shutdown of the Abadan refmery forced Iran's In· terior Minis try to impose a nationwide ban on s ales or gasoline, diesel fuel and kerosene to private customers today and Friday. The announcement said only ta.xis and public transport vehicles would get fuel on the basis of their average daily COO· sumption. J a pan's Transport Ministry said at least eight vessels operat- ed by Japanese shipping com- panies were stranded in the dis· puled waters between Iraq and Iran. It said 44 other ships operat- ed by Japanese companies were either al anchor or sailing in the Persian Gull. Fighting between Iran and Iraq has pushed the price or gasoline a nd heatins oil up 8 cents a gallon in a week oo s pot markets in the United Slates The war b\.s removed more than 2 millioo barrels a day from world crude oil supplies, which of late had exceeded de mand . f~ro• Page .-l I MIDEAST FIGlfl1NG • • • Iranian soldiers to Sar-e -Pol· Zabab, about 20 miles inside the border. Iran conceded its tr9ops retre ated in the Mehran area and said the Iraqis also seized nearby Salebabad. An Iranian communique said fighting wu continuing in the Qasr-e-Shirin area and claimed lhe invading Iraqi forces had been forced to retreat. The Iranian news agency Pars quoted a communique sayine Iranian forces captured the Ira- qi border post of Cbalamcbe. Pars did not specify the location of this post and Chalamche does not appear on major maps. Tb.is is the first position inside Iraq that Iran bas claimed to overnm since the war erupted. In the air war, an Iraqi com- munique said Iranian jets hit the Ayo Zala refmery. only 15 miles from the Syrian border; Doura oil refmery oo the outskirts of Baghdad; oil installations and airports in the northern cities of Kirkuk and Mosul and res - identit,l areas and economic in· s tallations in the northe rn Kurdish town of lrbil. FJ7 Planners OK 'Split' Of Complex The Fountain Valley Plannmg Commission approved plans Wednesday for dividing a 472. unit apartment complex on paper int.o 115 fou.rplexes and two si.xplexes. The blocks of four or six apart· m ents are to be sold to in- dividual investors, altholtgb mainten ance o f the overall grounds will remain under the j urisdiction or a.n owners' as· sociation. Receiving the unanimous vote is tbe Park Pacific complex al La Hacienda A venue and San Bruno Street. Village Property Manage - ment, which proposed the un· usual s ubdivision plan, bas stat- ed that individual apartments will remain as rental units and predicted that no tenant.s will be displaced as a result of the sub- di vision plan. The firm also agreed in 'writ- ing to delay any rent increases until 12 months after the ten- ant's la.st increase and that any new rent hike will not exceed 7 percent. An ordinance permitting de· velopers t.o apply for such apart- ment subdivisions was approved by the City Council la.st month, and the Park Pacific proposal was the first to come before the P lall1linlz Commission. As the coocept is new in Foun- tain Valley, commissioner Fred Voss requested an evaluation ol tbe subdivision project be re- turned to lbe commission in one year. · A representative of Village Man agement agreed to provide the lnformalioo to the city. Actor Stricken LOS ANGELES <AP) -Actor Paul Michael Glaser. wbo played Detective Dave Slarsky in the ABC·TV series "Stanky and Hutch," had to be rescued by helicopter from a remote Wyoming f15bing camp after sul· rering a stomach ailment. his publicist said Wednesday. · CALIFORNIA, 'Canal' Reaches Ballot? SACRAMENTO (AP) Oppo ... a. ol the PeripMral CaoaJ HJ they are 1ubmitli.q more titan twlu the number of 1lpat.,... DMded to qu.Wy 1 ffferendum for Ute ballot. The Coalition To Stop the Peripheral Canal aaid WedbM day it would 1ubmlt more than 750,000 1ipatur" If at lust Mf.Ut are resiatf'red voters, lbe referendwn will be on thf' ba1IOC at the 1112 prl mar y . or any earlier special el~hon C....a~r Si ttdlrfl LOS ANGELES (APl A privale study Is belo1 conducted to see whether a SOO-acre atta next to lbe USC campus can be turned into a ma1or commercial ( __ sr._.4'l_E __ ) industrial center to attract jobs and people. The study should be completed next month. Pushing for the ambitious project is Ted Walk ins, a leader or the Watts Labor Community Action Committee, who said he would like to see the area turned into another "Westwood,•· the community near UCLA. Olirf to Retire SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Board chairman Harold J . Haynes of Standard Oil Co. of California says he plans to retire next May after 34 years with the company and seven yea'°' in the top post. George M. Keller, 56, was chosen at the Socal's board meeting Wednesday to succeed Haynes, who will be SS next week . Keller, now vice- chairman of the board, joined Standard Oil in l!M8. Crime E'.,.d Set LOS ANGELES <AP) -A program offering cash rewards to help ftcbt crime on city buses was announced by Southern California Rapid Transit Dis- trict officials. 1 The reward system revealed I. Wednesday is part of a _ statewide "We TIP" program offering up to $500 to informants who help convict those involved in RTD-related crimes. This is the latest attempt by the RTD to combat rising violence on buses. According lo latest statistics, vandalism costs an estimated $3 million an- nually. . .. Honored l)fl Peets Fred Astaire poses with the "Pied Piper'' award as wife, Robin, smiles approval. The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers honored the 81-year- old entertainer with its highest honor in a ceremony Wednesday night in Los Ange les. Astaire has been an ASCAP member for 30 years by virtue of his songwrit- ing. Meteor Flashes Over .Three States By The AAaoclated Preas Authorities say a large meteor sailed over Arizona, New Mex· ico and California, where it may have landed. And a meteorite popularly known as the "Old Woman Meteorite" returned home to California on Wednesday after 18 months of study by scientists at the Smithsonian Institution. Police in several western cities said people reported seeing a falling glow in the sky south-southwest of Tucson about 8:30 p.m . Wednesday. PDIA COUNTY SBE&IFF'S deputies went to one area west of Tucson, looting for a possible downed airplane, whHe a county Department of Public Safety helicopter hovered above, finding nothing. "It definJtely· was a meteor," said Lanny McCaslin, team supervi5or of the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Control Tower. "We saw it from up here. We must have bad 150 calls about it. A lot or people thought it was a plane crashing, but that's impossible. You can't see a plane crashing in Tucson from Phoenix or New Mexico." He said a Federal Aviation Administration official in Los Angeles told him that the meteor landed in California, "but that be didn't know wbere. They've bad a lot of reports from all around California." THE NATIONAL WEATHER Service in Phoenix was one of the few places to miss the show. "We didn't see it," a spokesman said. · Old Woman Meteorite. siad to be the Jargesl ever found in the United States or Canada. now is 15 percent lighter because Bfaze Contained Smithsonian scientists sliced away 942 pounds or its 6,070-pound bullt ror research. SOLEDAD (AP) -An anon Composed mainly of nickel and iron, the rock bas been mount- fire that spread over 2,000 acres ed and was scheduled to go on exhibition Saturday at the Bureau of of brus h near Pinnacles Land Management's station in Barstow. National Mooumeut in Monterey County '1as be~p contained, SAN BERNARDINO COUNTV had sought a court injunction to the California Department of preve.nt the Smithsonian from cutting into the meteorite. County Forestry says. officials argued that slicing it would mutilate a rare specimen The fire, which broke out from space. Tuesday afternoon, was coo-Alt.bough a federal judge tu.med down the motion, Smithsonian tained late Wednesday and was scientistS agreed to cut away less than they bad originally expected to be controlled this planned. morning, a forestry spokesman The meteorite was discovered by three prospectors in the Old said. No injuries were reported. Woman Mountains near Twentynine Palms in 1976. ~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~- .JODI TBS RSPUBUC I I Republic Home / Lpan . 197'72 M~ur 8'vd./ lrvtne. CA 9'l7i5 171418!U·0991 / UorJwd Bmller BW PROUDLY ANNOUNCE TIIE RE -OPENING OF OUR 1-WRWORKS ALON Come meet o ur talented ne w staff o f scylists at BW Newport Beach. Let them pamper you with perso nalized service and guidance in all phases of hair design . custom hair color, predictable perms and complete makeup. For an appointme nt, phone 714-759-1211, ext. 260. Hairwo rks Salo n, Newport Oeach B~ llOC~5 WI l5~ I~~ NEWPORT BEACti- NEWPORT BEACH. 83 FUhlon lslMd 759-1211, Mon· Thurs-Fri 10-9, Tues·Wed·Sat to 6, Sun 12·5 . . ·-.. -.--·- • • •• • ...... .... • ••• .. ._ • • # I • ~ • ..,. .,--·~ ii' ~.~25.1980 QM.YALDT .45 . Actors Pact Reached? Tentative Settlement Reported Today HOLLYWOOD <AP) - Neaoliators for strlklnr television and film actors reached a tentative contract agreement with producers early today, a union spokeswoman said. U ratified, the aareemeot would end the strike by some 67 ,000 act.on that be1an July 21 and which bas virtually shut down the industry and delayed the start of the new fall television season. The tentative aareement on a three-year contract came early this morning after a bargainlna session of nearly 19 houn, sald Screen Actors Guild spokeswoman Kim Fellner. "AT 5 A.M. C PDT) a tentative agreement was reached between the actors and the producers and that followed e final 18Ya·hour bargaining session," s aid the producers' spokesman Phil Myers. "T h e SAG and AFTRA (American Federation of Television Radio Artists) boards will meet starting this weekend to approve it,·· he said. ·'After that, there will be a ratification process by both of those groups. And each board will decide when the actors can go back to work pendin.li! ratification. San Onofre To Reinforce Heat Sleeves How'sthis for ajoborfer? Receive$500fortwodays work, experience not necessary. It was enough to prompt 400 job seekers to fill out applications for 100 jobs at the San Onofre nuclear generating station. "We've quit taking applications,•• a Southern CalifomJa Edison Co. spokesman said Wednesday. After three days or training - during which the chosen applicants will receive $100 per day -they will spend two days installing metal sleeves inside 7 ,.soc> small beat exchange tubes on three generators in Unit One al the San Onofre plant. Work is limited to two days because that's the maximum allowed for any possible radiation exposure. The tubes have sedime.nt buildup and corrosion on their interiors, and the sleeves will reinforce the old lubes. The F.dison spokesman said no firm date bas been set by the nuclear Regulatory Commission for the work, but the utility hopes to get under way within a rew weeks. Train Delayed OAKLAND (AP> -An "electrical overload" caused a Bay Area Rapid Transit train filled with commuters to sit for about seven minutes inside an approachtothetrans-baytube,a BART spokesman said. The 10- car train was moved back toward the Oakland West station where passengers were un - loaded. pencHni ratification. "So in terms of when the pro- ducers go back into production, we would have to wait and see what their decision is." However, Ms. Fellner said the unions could send the actors back to work pending ratification. ••IT'LL TAKE TWO and a half or three weeks for the whole ratification process," s he said, since the actors would vote oo the pact by mail. The contract includes a 15 per· cent increase in minimum salaries for the first 18 months, and is percent for the second 18 months, for a compounded in· crease of 32.2S percent over t.he life of the contract, Myers said. A c lo rs c u r re n ll y e a-r n a m inimum of $23S a day or f78S a week. Fellner said the tentative agreement also included in- creased pension and welfare benefits, a stro ng n o n - discrimination program, im· 'Le..g Walkout' proved working conditions for minon and an overhaul of work- ing schedules. NEGOTIATIONS BAD pro- gressed more rapidly since actors and producers agreed a weelr ago on a complex formula that would give actors a share of lbe lucrative home video market. That isaue had been a major stumbling block in ne1otiations. Work would resume alm0$t immediately after the strike on new prime-time series for the A BC, CBS and NBC television networks . But network spokesmen have said it would take at least three to four weeks before any new baU-hour episodes could be broadcast and six to eight weeks before any hour-long show could go on the air. The strike has virtually balled the new fall television season1 and forced several thousand non-performing craftsmen and others dependent on the movie- TV industry out or work. PSA Pilou' Strike Grounds 200 Flighn SAN DIEGO (AP) -A pilots' strike shut down Pacific Southwest Airlines today, and other airlines were besieged by the San Diego.based carrier 's stranded passengers. Pick.et lines were set up at airports in Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, and reservation clerks said telephone lines were jammed. The 200 flights flown daily by PSA to and from those cities as well as Phoenix, Ariz., and Mexico were canceled. "We're ready for a long walkout," said a spokesman in San Diego fort.he 500 striking pilots and flight engineers. The strike, the first in PSA's 31 ·year history, came on the second anniversary of the mid-air collision between a PSA Boeing 727 jetliner and a light plane over San Diego that killed 144 people. THE W.u.&OUT BEGAN at 12:01 a .m .. said PSA spokesman Skip Myers, after 11 monlhs of negotiating failed to produce a new agreement. "I don't see a quick settlement in sight when we are so far apart on evel')'UUng," Myers said thia morning. He .said PSA will honor ita charter fll1bt reservations with management personnel, but will not attempt. to operate com· mercial flights. "Other airlines have agreed to accept our tickets," Myers said. "Many are adding a number or flights to pick up the slack." PSA is the nation's 13th largest carrier based on passenger volume. The walkout idled a 28-jet fleet and 3,700 airline employees besides the pilots and flight engineers. A n>TA.L OF 11 CITIES and 25,000 daily passengers are affect- ed by the strike. In addition to carrying a majority or airlines' commuter flights within California, PSA has flights to Nevada and Arizona. Talks broke down Wednesday night when the airline rejected a reduced pay demand by the Southwest F1Jgbt Crew Association. which represents PSA pilots. "There is virtually no hope that I can see for any kind of settle- ment now.'' said Bryan Conn, a senior captain who beads the as- sociation. . AN Al&LINE SPOKESllAN said two demands by the pilots were "totally unacceptable." Tb.ose were for pay of almost $100,000 annually for senior pilots flying Boeing 727s and Dc-9-805 and for fewer working boun. The pilots have demandt!ft a 35 percent pay raise over two years while PSA offered a 21 percent raise. At present, salaries range from about $10,000 annually as a sUrt for second office'°' to $70,000 for senior pilots. The pilots' previous contract expired last December. A federally mandated 30-day "cooling off" period ends today. tf3 . """-. 'J 1/2 Off-For a limited time. Designer knit sport shirts. Save 50% on our most prestigious designer labels. Enjoy the comfort and good looks of 100% cotton knit . Notice the contem- \ \ porary detailing. At this price why not buy more than one. Navy, cream. brown, white, tan. S-M-L-XL. Reg. 40.00 19.90 silverwoods --·--"'-·--.,,·-·· ._.., __ , 11/f' oranve eoaso oao1v P•101 Editorial P~e . --~ ................................ --........................... _ . ;t• Robert N Weed/Publisher Thomes KMvU/~dltor • Barb.Ira Krelbich/Edltorl., P"9 Editor ~Manpower-Action 4 Costs City ~ Vote (.. Huntington Beach city otnclala set ed1y at any mention of the federal )ob lramlna Pl"Olnm usually re ferred to u CETA. And we.U they should The city wu rwked early thU year by • tcandal coo· remlnl lhe Western Institute ol CarHn. Inc a non·profit corporation ntabllahed to adminbter Huntlnston lteach'a portion ol the Comprebmsive Employment and Training Act CCETA> ;ob proaram. The corporation was d11mantlcd after char1n of mis· management. elllnvaganc~. conflict of Interest and a n improper lou. The rlty has b«n tnppmg bghlJ.>• around the issue ever sinct> Vocational and tra•run& programs were lumed over to the Coas t Co mmunit y College Daatric t And admmi~trat ioo of public serva~ employNS wo rking an lhe city government wa.-; handed to Oran1e County of flcials The city contmued to wash lts hands by recently withdraWU'lg from the Manpower Commission. the county agency that dispenses federal doUan to participants. The city shouldn't be blamed, perhaps, for wanting to cet as far away from the problem as possible. But withdrawing from the Manpower Commission ap- pears to be hasty and impractical. The action was taken without regard to the cons e· quences to the commission which. as it turns out. will suf · (er no adverse effects. What the latest decision really means. is that Hunt· ingt.on Beach has given up its vote on how CETA money can be used. The city should have used its influence to channel the money into important uses. But now the city will have nothing to say about it Parade Merits Support A traditional Halloween parade almost passed Fountain Valley by recently when the City Council e,xpressed reluctance about subsidizing the Lions Club-sponsored event. Fountain Valley officials calculated that police, maintenance and other services required by the annual parade and carnival would set the city back about $6,000. After Proposition 13, new recreation fees were charged to make city-sponsored sports and arts programs pay for themselves. Also, city contributions to \ocal service club projects were trimmed. With this back-to-basics philosophy in mind, several F-0untain Valley council members had trouble deciding whether the club-sponsored Halloween parade and carnival merited a $6,000 subsidy. . Eventually: when the Lions Club threatened to cancel all Halloween activities if the council did not provide support for both a parade and a carnival, the council unanimously approved the subsidy. 1 • That approval came with an ap ro riate sti ulation --· that "the Oons mus assem fesome vo unteers to help with maintenance and other chores to reduce the city's o:utlay. The council should not feel guilty about giving local reside,nts a little something beyond street sweeping and basic police and fire protection. ldeaUy, city officials should he lp foster a sense of community among their constituents. And fe w things bring together young and old residents and contribute to hometown pride like a colorful holiday parade. A Beneficial Tax A local tax to maintain a proposed 18-acre park may be the vehicle to provide residents with a large recrea· tionaJ area that could enhance the quality of their lives and surroundings. The proposed Langenbeck Park, near Garfield A venue and Magnolia Street, has been on the drawing board for more than five years. Many local residents have organized and repeatedly demanded that the large parcel be developed into the proposed recreational area. But state legislation in the past few years, including Proposition 13, has cut sources of revenue for the city. leaving many of the proposed parks with no means of maintenance. The Community Services Commission has recom· mended creating a park assessment district that would tax residents based on the benefit they would receive from the proposed park. Those living closer to the park would be taxed more than those living on the outskirts of the two-mile assess· ment district. At least 50 residents living near the proposed park in· dicated at a recent public bearing that they would con- sider a $10 monthly tax to maintain the proposed park a reasonable fee. The city currently provides maintenance for many four-acre neighborhood parks. But if local residents agree that a large, 18-acre recreational area is worth their paying a special tax, Langenbeck Park fmally may get out of the planning stages and into the planting stages. • Op1n1ons expressed 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 is invited. Address The Dally Pilot. P.O. Box. 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71-4) 642·-4321 I Boyd I Mate Ratings I By Lii. llOYD I' Item No. 7338 in our Love and War man's me is the re· port on a survey. More than 2,000 men were uked what they considered important in a matrimonial mate. The quality that tot the bi&belt ratln1 was listed u "that the woman love him" -81 per· cent. Second. "a sense of humor" -11 perttnl. Third, "lnteW1ence" -84 percent. Fourth. "sell·c:onfldence" - 51 percent. And ftfth, "nice let•'' -., pettent. PlDd it notewortb1 that "•elf· conftdmc:e'' beat out •'nice lep." Far beck tn the pack were '"pntty face" at S3 per. cent and "bis buatliae" at 11 perc:eat. I Dear Gloomy Gus With all the suita and fine• a1aln1t private lnduatry for pollutJnt the air ....,., .,.... to 1ue and fine tbe • covenuneat for forelnl • cancer -caualnc catalytic CGDYerterl on our cars! G.J . Tbat tbe world'• moat famoua a ..... twina wen named l:lll &Dd Claaq la G' .. "''/ Gitt ,_, •rt .... wiclelJ lmowa. Leu .. u .... ~ ~~~ :.."..: ported ta tM fad tlaat ... =~'t.,';:y"=l9'-.. ...... Wl wl a.... ··-..__ ____ -=----::=::::=::::__~2rtP:!1 t • '!'ba'· • ... ·------- Jack Andenon . Mideast N~ke Policy Prepared WASH I NG TON In an omlnou1 development, Pralde:nt Carter hu laaued 1ec:ret direclivn to lhe Penta1on to prepare the option of u1in1 mac:lu.r weapona ln lhe vOlaUle .,lddle Ea.at There have been biota of Auch a poa1ibWty in the paat. Carteir'I 1tate of the unlc1n addrels laat January. ror e uample. declared lhat ··a n -ttempt by 1 a n y out111de force t o gain control of Ute Pe rsian Gulf will be r e garded as an assault on the vital interes~ of the United States (and> WlU be repelled by use of any means necessary ... " And R o bert Komer , undersecretary of defense for pol icy, publicly stated that lf conventional deterrents in the Middle East failed. the use of nu c lear weapons would be cons ide red . But in s ecret directives. the president bas spelled out the nuclear opt.ion clearly and explicitly. IN PRESIDENTIAL Decision Memorandum No. 51, Carter outlined a new U.S. nuclear policy for the Middle East. But this memo was ignored in the fur o r over Pres identlal Directive 59, which changed Mailbox U.S. miulle targets in the Soviet Union. The rontenu of POM No. 51 and related documents , lncludlnc a directive to the Strate1ic Air Command from Defense Secretary Harold Brown, are desi1ned to "sl1nlf1cantly degrade Soviet cap a blli ties to project military power in the Middle !:Ht-Persian Gulf region for a period J>f at least 30 days.·· To acc:ompllsh this, the pre s1dent ordered th e rormuJation of various military ·options, my associate Dale Van Atta has learned. The most significant of these was the "limited strategic option" for wie by the commander or the Rapid Deployment Force. Gen . P.X. Kelley. SVIUECT TO the us ual presidential authorization for use of any nuclear weapons. this option involves 19 nuclear bombs carried by 8 -52 bombers. The aim is to keep Soviet forces from invading Iran. and the weapons include both B-57 bombs, with an explosive power about equal to the Hiroshima bomb, and the more powerful B ·61 variable yie ld thermonuclear bombs. Sources said Carter ordered his planners to formulate several additiona l limited strategic options. as well as a more far-reaching "selective attack option" that would target Russian facilities near Iran, lncludln& military basea and airfields inside the Soviet Union Military experts noted 1 that with a 8·52 force -the SAC'a 57th Air Division at Minot Air Force Bue, N.D. -already earmarked for Middle East deployment, the bombers would be the most likely vehicle for nuclear weapons. rather than long-ranae missiles in silos in the United States. The bombers are far more flexible, one source pointed out, adding, "If we screw a.round with our ICBMs, you don't know what the response would be." "Flexible" does not mean "reasonable," however. in the view of some insiders. They contend that the concept of limited nucle ar warfar e confined to the Middle East is a child's dream that could become a nightmare for the whole world. "IF WE INITIATE tactical nuclear warfare in that area, we are opening a Pandora's box," said one Pentagon source who is alarmed at the idea of preparing strategic options for the MiddJe East . "The So v ie ts could respond with tactical nuclear weapons against our warships in the Persian Gull area, and who knows where it would go from there'>"' Footnote: A White House spokesman refused to confirm or deny the contents of PDM No. 51, or lo discuss US. nuclear policy. with respect to the MiddJe East. JIMMY'S LATEST: Our political odda man i.a out with bis late•t pick -and it's Ronald Reagan. Unimpressed by the latest polls, Jimmy the Greek sliU makes Rea1an a 2-and-one·haU-to·l favorite over Jim my Carter to win in November. Jimmy bu zeroed in on the states with many electoral votes, and here's how he sees Reagan winning: New York <41) -Carter carried in 1976, but lhe unhappy Jewish voters -given John Anderson as a Liberal Party alternative -will tip the scales for Reagan. New Jersey C 17 ) -Ford carried last time. It's close, but Reagan has the edge. Penn5ylvania (27 ) -Carter and Reagan are even right now, but if Reagan can nail enough of the ethnic vote. he's got it. Florida Ci7> -Carter won he r e fo ur ye ars ago. but resentment over his handling of the Cuban and Haitian refugee problem in heavily populated Dade and Broward Counties may give the state to Reagan. Michigan (21) -Gerald Ford took the state with S4 percent of the vote. Reagan's not' as strong as the native son was, but the depression in the auto industry s h ould work t o Reagan 's advantage. Ohio (25) Carter won by an eyelash 15,000 votes -in 1976. But unemployment in the steel. glass and rubber industries helps Reagan, and the state's Conservative Party, which sat it o ut las t time , is working enthusiastically for Reagan. Illinois (26 ) -Reagan's native-son status and discontent among blue-coll ar workers put this in the Republican column. WATCH ON WASTE : The Pe nt a gon's philosophy on expenditure of public funds was made stunningly clear the other day. One of my reporters called to inquire about a contract for 300 ,000 laminated·plastic recipe cards to be used by bartenders at the Ar my's officers' clubs and enlisted men's saJoons around the world. ·---rfle-liids ·areri·t in yet. buHne co s t is e xpected to run somewhere between $5,000 and Sl0,000 . Wh en my reporter s uggested that perhaps the militaiy pubs could get along - as they have for decades - without offi cial guidelines, the Pe nta go n s po kes woman obser ved brightly that "even if it is wasting money." printing the recipe cards will ·'still be providiflg jobs to someone." Is Real Problem an Excess of Freeways? To the Edi\Or: I 'm peeved over pavement payments and l question the headlining question you say is the answer to future highway funding problems. (Toll Roads Answer to Highway Ills?) Your question is not the solu· lion to those problems, but is rather just another bard and perhaps unnecessary addition to the larger and more important equation which, when solved will answer the most human pro· blems. TruJy. it wouJd be foolish to disregard the fact there will be future funding problems but I believe the reasons for those problems can be eliminated before the fact. Certainly, if lbe current philosophy of freeway expansion continues there will be money shorta1es, but, it seems to me, and I've traveled somewhat, lhere exists present- ly plenty of pavement to get the job done. SUPPOSE INSTEAD of view· inl the lack of money as the potential problem we view the problem as an excess of freeways. Then, after boldinJ this perspective ror awhlle many so-called future bi1hway fund.inc problems disappear. You may say cessation of bithway construction would brint on other problems, which may be true, but maybe tboM other problems would be leu c:oatly and complicated to IOlve. Maybe your beadlinlnt question sbou.ld be "Hitbway Illa; Should We Toll Over More Roads!" MICHAEL HENDRIE Pollftl To tbe Editor: I reeaatly received a 10G1 dis· tance pboDe call from Cambridee -aatmc me lf I wouJ.d amwer questklnl relatlne to ea.adldaUI Ciflw, ReAIU aad A.adenan fOr • polllqOflanbatklll. After tbey aatiafted my cuno.I· ty tbat lt wa not Col.let• Humor or aa1 ktnd ol IOUeltatioa ap. proacb or riJ>Gft, I aaned to .... q...UC-wltbout ldlatl· fJiaC .,..., ...uJ tbe end ol * ............. The caller assured me lbat he was not merely a telephone caller but a "pollster" feeding me pre- determined questions and supply- ing the answers to the general pool or answers from other pollsters asking lhe same ques. lions. The line of questioning was ap· parently designed to determine the convictions of respondents about the three candidates. in· cludinglhreeorfour ~imilarques­ tions tohelptbem determine ifthe answers agreed with each other -with or without wavering. THE CALLER could not assure me that I could receive a copy of the questions with or without my answers -until be consulted with someone else at the other end· of the line. No, it was finally de- cided, copies or questions or answers could not be provided. Tbey suggested that Time Maguine regularly reports the reaulta of various polls in case I wanted tD jud1e my answers with others. However, I have no idea why I was selected as a Laguna Beach resident (at random or by predet«mlnation) whose family eami.np exceed $25,000 yearly. Finally I reallied that I would be among others without knowing where they lived or anythlq else about them. At least I answered JtronaJy enou1h to be jud1ed moderately liberal. So~e of the quealiom made me answer in favor ol all three candidates - like do I believe in the honesty of one candidate above the otben. Another question covered the priorttyofnatioaal defeme, lnfla· tion and unemployment -mak· ln1 me wonder how many replies and what kind would hesitate or not acne wit.beach other! I wu asked lf my vote would ch ante lf tbere were no debates- or if debates were not to include all three candidates. Maybe tbil WU a key quesdoa but I caa scarcely beline that lt 1bould seriously be uked I ARnlURWEI~ p, .. , To tbe Editor: ltbadaly of Libya could prcwe to nerJbodY'• aatidae. lion that bribery had no place in his munificence toward Bill y Carter. All he has to do is loan $220,000 to every gas station operator in the State of Georgia. J .W. REID \'4•f Tribu•e To the Editor: Don Wilkes, speaking about Vietnam veterans in a recent article. suggested a parade for Vietnam veterans. What a ~uper idea! The time has come to absolve our guilt with this blank· blank war and recognize, before it is too late. the real heroes of Vietnam ... the veterans. What about proposing a grand parade on a national scale? A parade in every major city celebrating Vietnam Veteran's Day? It's lime we acknowledged this unique warrtor, and said thank you! PETE MEADE Clftln If lip To the Editor: I think that there should be laws that make a company that dumps hazardous wute pay to clean it up. It is weU known what com· pany created the dangerous situa- Wlrlcs 691117~---........ 1 .... ..... r p' IPR ... ..._, ... , ....... ,.,.." lion at Bots a Chica. I have also heard that this waste was leaching into the water table for five years. A friend of mine who lives extremely close to the contaminated lots now has cancer. ls this where she gotit? There must be new laws lbat punish chemical companies that take 20 years off the end of a person's life. I wonder how many "man years" a nuclear plant or dumpc:oststheinnocentv1ctims. The best way to clear out the Bolsa Chica dump is fast. 1bey should hire four different dump- carting companies and each one start at the four comers and finish in two days so that those living in the area can get out of town for tbeirheallh. J .COLLINS Oac of~••• To the F.ditor: Endorsement of Democrat Mangers in his recenUy circulat- ed letter by some re1istered Republicans who are on the city councils in Costa Mesa, Hunt· ington Beach and Westminster displays less credit to him than it does discredit to the en- dorsers. Those who are city council people loudly protest their DOD· partisan roles and yet use the supposed credibility of their of- fices to support a Democrat partisan claiming him as somehow quasi-Republican. How would Republicans such as they know? Actually both parties are total· ly partisan and both fully com· l'hitted to extendin1 the sise, scope, authority and costs of their own respective levels of gqv-ernment -and all in cooperation with each other. EVELYN J . SPEIR • utteu lrom reoder1 ore welcome. T~ riQhl to condnle leltera to fit ~u or •limbtal• libel a. reNfWd. Lettera o/ JOO wordl or le11 au be P'Hft pnf~e. AU lettera mt&lt M- cla.M ~ Oftd rncUlmg cdh.,1 btit norrwa mdJI be ~Id°" rwqwltl ii 1u/fkinl rl'CUOft a. appor,,.,. PH11J 1GW '90t be p11btiahcd, __; l BUSINESS , STOCKS Thur day' NYSE l l a.m. (PDT) Prie'°'8 COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS P't a," 11 ~ '..J\ • I •. ~ ~ ......_ t .,... ,., t '°ti 1 \falf"" Nf.i ~ 1 r.•1 \, ......... 1-emml••»tt ........ "'fPu•ll'1\S I llP4• '• l'!Ulll f•40 . '"' ....... """' .. ,.."' • Jl't '"" PS•EG 1 ». IS> 11 ... '1·. 1'111 n ... ,,, ~ 1 ... , ·,: J! :-!! ~-.: ~=-.:i:· .~: • 1~ :~ '· 1.,~.;~ 11 1: ~ ~ • • • •t .... , •• 'in ""' ,. :1~,~: ! : ~ ~:..'. ~ ::11~,":rn '!!Z ,~ ... · ~. {::Pf n: • ~ ~ · 1 A~ ,1j •: 10 1\o , ~~;'!'1\11:. t ::J !!~. ': (~":'I ll) :t ,u ~ • '.., :~~""' l lO 1~ ·~~ ":::!~·~ 1 ~1; .. )I~') Ii. PUl(p1'U tUO 71 •1 ~=~::;• ~ • J ~~· m ~ • ~il ~~ ,': ~~~:v-:.~ I\ ~: : !~ I :~ ~ Jt: .. :::';·~: ... ~ W'' .• =~z:.· ::,t J ::~: ~ ~~~ t ... l H t i. f~~lt· :i ·m ~.: I ,..,,. •) •I u , ... t ..., .. _ "" • "' ~:~ , .... ,r ' ... ' ...-,.,_, • :~~::; : :: • ;n ~:t. ~ ""',""L l Clf , ~1 ,.~. ~· ..... '11 ' •• 1 ,, .... "',s"'·· • ";. re""<•"'°' • 101 >-ll't "' -I.II 1 10 '' IOJ I.) • • ( • o 1 J4't io t; .. ., Me 1• 11 11 -, ""' "'11" '• 1 J >t ....... ' I T<Jlllnu .. i. >•• .,...,._ t .\c....C 1411 , 11 .._ ~:~,;:,.o 1 :, ', ''""''" 1 •• ,,. 1, 11 .. u•...,"' 111 11 .~ • ••~. .., MP~(. ~ Xl • tl un , J P\i111nt • • )'O •h '•"""" ·'°" J> '°"' ..... Do 0. I \ ''" 11' t i •' L "' ,. -o .U 1lllo Motl'• IC> I 16 ''°'" • l'IH-oht t 40 It U l'f • 1'> t 1 I -1 1-• ,.._6;. I i'" '' •• • 1,,_.,,.., .. ' ,. • ., • _, : "" ' t• .. • i ... 111 i .o • IQ .,.. '• IWll'~....,.. • """ °"'"~o I .cl I ., ~. • ovn ' --~ '°' IJ .l< / ••'-~!~!'<I ..: ~~ :i~' 1, f-1'..:l!'ll'' W 1 ,: '! ;• • :"'11.!.!.!._ ,.,~ ' !...."'., ~I J CI l1'11 """' \f, c:MaaO l!I •>+ rt.c>o .. • 11o ~=:~~ml ~::er, ~· " ';;:;o; JI '?j •"" • • ~ ~., ,._ ll• , '" i•\.. l~• , te u 40 1~ ti'• .,..., 1 • 1~ ;r '" =:H 'l "f Jllo =.,so • 10 " nv. •llVI • ~ r.11nco J 40 11011 .,.14 ~1..r'111 •to !l:~· • .,••h • I ' 'JI•~ • 1~t ''" •..., >• "'1~~~c11 ,J t '' "'"" =:..l..n"'h ,f, ~;.: ~ <M••o~ ·~~,: ;r, ~· ~ h n<Dt 11 11 •v. v. =I• t lO • ,1.)1 11 , • c:~f:~ I '° • ,! :~. (=~=~I ~ ,f ....: !~ . .: ,:cg., ,, • )~ tt.. ... MOMWO n 1 II a 1011. QIM\lrQ<A a , 11"-Vo ~:~!l;n I «> 17 i: U"" '"" ";., o • • C•rt .. .,. ' •• • •O. ti•' L"'n • ' "' 16\• • ,,.IM flf1 ~ S i;•A "" ¥ONO•• It ..S 1'i. • '41 • • "'°'o .:a. !I 21Clf ,,,.. • "" !l~;r~, t rJ :J '!! Q • ••• , .. Hn•"' I 10 ,, • ., f.Mf\M .n, It IJ\.. lndi(,a l I It ,,,~. \ ~It· t ~ ~ , 14 ... ' .... =~~,,.; 11 • 12 10"-Tet.orplJ " .. 4j 42~•114 1411.ICWW IO I Ill f:~: I \4•1"'•' ~ • U 111'11 •o ,_,. )-0 e J tho lttdifll t 4 6 )I IQ V.=~·.~ i , ~r: vt A.CA ~~ ~ ~ m:. Teuco J,40 141 .. ,.,_, 14 ~= :r '! .• J .:.. . ~;~I~~ .: ,: .: :~ ... i=z-· , : ~ ,: ... ~. . :=".:' '1: ,t ,n ::: ~ ~-t m · 1'f m. • i. =~ = J ~ • u w.: ~::~i:: t: ·~ ~ '11"": :;: Al•P"' • « 1ill • t •l•i>I 1411 .. I-... • 'q(LI '.so .. IJ .... 1••11 'H IO u .,,, .. ~.,.. I -• ., ! A.TE ,,,. •1 I •••• r .Err ,.., . . 7 U V. Al II • t;H o('I) " ' .. lit ' ~· I •I h llJI .0·~ II, Inell pl I JJ tt .... "' ~ '' -' jlh • V1 .. • • TeJCG ,_ .. I 20:> SS~• 4' •• •.pr.: ! 11: I '1t1:.• j'", l •l•"W J oO • • '""' • E-r~ Ill l 1 I•' In;,, I ~ti t ••' Moftll'w 1 U II JI/ J ... t l\o ~~hPur .. 'ISH 1211. Tulnd -I H »14 .. ~ .... ,in :>O ~I: 11 \•'•""'''° I ••. l~•C" Ill t '"• • 1nr~r' 1 10 •• ~ -...si 1• ii ""' R:nt"'!° 'l:1J ~ 1~' ,, Tu111~1 216 •1• , ... AID.otly , I It U~ 0 ,..,.o h IU •.\., ·~ fit•"'• Ill I\ .. \J,. '-ll•hU "'C> ) td If~ .. ~~:.I~ : ~ .:v., :; ~m 60lt I t l1 , ~. Tulnl tO 4714 ,,_ .. • 3~ 41\19110 • • ... l•lo ... ~-··· l\ • • ,. • t:tn.1 I JO I ,, t. • .. ... ut !If I u i u~ •• h M•>ttt'I , • • ... 4)lO. .. IU~ pl( J I 14 TeaOG• $.l:I " ~ """ •• .-. Allllan' IO t~ H 0 '•, 'a Cl.•.",.~~ 1 1 110• •, -1 !!',_, ~ ~,.,.~p 1 .0. • lilt ' .. ln\111,.ll l\o Mo1l ft \ '1 12 11 a v. "' A.'1'11 I liOO 11 11>.. I TT.WPU•<111' I 1• l41 S ... , AIUIH t tO t o• -~· ... ~--• • i..,... I .. IO \I '' • l"Wl90'• .. 10 11 l\il MOt .. MI n t 101 JO\h \, lU¥Mcllnl t JI 91 ,.,,._. \, ea 6IJ t Vt Alc:os10 1 .. • 1 -. vn1111 '" • .., •) • • •tit J • " o ll<P~ ''1• 10 !!, M19 TrAm 10 ,. 161~ IU¥1"" t 11 11• ..,, , 21• T••~~11 1 60 • •m 57 1"' AM•dl tO It l"i) Iii • (•n""' I G I ., 11.. • '""" I ,• If ' 'II • • ll'ICtl~ J :J ' JO .. • • 'lo -NII I Cl I 1" ~"> \'t A...08•1 ) IOU 111 •II• 1 ~::P1 l1~ J .J, ·~ t AllQ(I> I °"' • \0 »•· ~·"' •l \ ' IJ ..,. ' • I ~""" I tO • u• ........... • u u•.. • MOllOI• I Cl ., IU 6,)lf> I .. Rdgllel PU fl t 1' "' re-1-I ID 1 1s• -• A'9CP pll e. l Ill, , ('•~• 1 t: t .t It ... ' ' "' 1 t•M , .. 1f •'10 .... "lo Mlf'.11tl 216 tO n U "'-R.tmp11t nl ·~ 10 JS ti'• '• ~ ·-· ' " \\ .. ltll.ud t '° • ·~1 16 I . ' ... , r· , 1, I ,1•.• • ~~~· I !: 11 10'• >,~ .. •·. • ll\t F•o• 'flt ... E'• Ml!.T'et 111 I 11 11 ...... RltRt• I Ue • I "'4.. ~~·.·· ~ ~ ~ '11 ?s 1 :'.: ;... "'glo 01 ) • M I ~·.. • .. ·-'"•tl<IC:fl ll • .. • • '"'"•'• l IO J1) ...... Mull!OtO ' t ..... ~ Re<gnEq n JO /ti "~. \, •• , p --...... -A111U1 1'11 " 'I 11<. s-••HCt, ., ' " ll'O u • '" t .... ,c;. \C... t • ,,,._' , n • II• 11 Mun Id pl tO > 4 ... \• Rearnn 10 10 .. 10"' 'I• TT!.-1 'r'1EI n 11 '" )l 'lo Iii <llllQP\lo t .., It) ,... 'RI» ., .. ) y I • b l .. ) .. ... :~:r~ : :J • i3~ I•' 1 • lliilun.MlQ tOJ ,. II 11 • ~. RottCP . .c> • tS •• • Th 09° ,i,,.; :g ~ ~t.4 ""' AlldC1' l N •>V "'i• : ~ :~:~ : ~ ,~ ~::. • ~:,:,•~ ' ,~ : '1 ~::' lf-Rr<H Jl ; lO tO~. ~ Mulllf\C. t 1t ) J tS14 RffV\0 210 S 10 Jiii> Tllo~I';, .5111> 5 e 11._, l'I z:~!I t ~~ II • • l,._, I I . I 0 '' ' I ••4'\MI If /I ••· • lntn ) t0 11 ..0 ~ ~· Murp() l .IO IJ fSO 44 '/\t A.tlCl\Ch 41 U 29 12~> Thrllty .n I 11 12\t>-.I\ AllltCrt l ~ :: ff;. n ... :f; 'JO • \ ~ H • "-" IM • 1111n j)ftt • t •' • "~ "'""'o t 20 • 4 ti\, I~ ~::gp I l J l 2; ~· ~ fl.Cero n2.10 s I u2' .... "' ::::n·i:: ~~·: ~ !l 1 ' '~~~~.f!':l , .~ 'L ~,~~~"'·"':~ ~~ ;:~:· .: :;:n ::~ ~ 1{ ~: •• ":~~~·1~~n: .. :i::. i. ~:~~1~11 ~ ,:: ~~ ~: ~::.~::.j:::~ ~~~'II ~ AJ~o. J 10 > 171 " • Cll4•1l0 I • 1•>1 It• •• ~ I lU I IO ll"• llllTl pf JI) J «>,'' NCH n 10 ... t...... R•pCp .0 46 2l'· ..... Tlmeln 'ID 11 ts .o .... + "· AmlSl..g l 00. tf ,.., >4 • t C114'1Co •I ~ ll"r. f<MIN I 'I 9 l>I U' • lntll pl ' lO 3 S;i • '> NCNB ID S tOO 111 RepFnS I I Ml 12'-'> TlmelM 1,61 II z. O '-' V. ..,,,.. I .0 • .. , SJ C"••ICo .. , •' 1\1 ''", ,. •~PS I f H Jl•4 llltNrth •I 10 I \94 JoAt., .. R J e 157 l•V.-\'o R•l>Ml!I tlS J J' 1 Ttm kn J. 1 13 •S¥> 14 AIYWA I>' J J ., , ~,,.,,.11 .i. J ""' ~lb&"• ILJ ' ,~, ::-• '• 1ntNrt~ I>'•.. i :N 10• \..o =f '"° 1 00 U Mil ~, 1~ R~'!' ,, 04 • I• J3 ' '" ToddSll 50e • U 1114 "' =:.: IJ ~ 1 .. : ~r:·.; ~::::~ J)'t,' ·~ ::··. '"~~·o 1 :~: 100 u•.. :;;.~ :: ~ l~u~~: ., =~~ ,',!!; ~ 1fo •• =:::~~. 1 ~! ~ U if"'• ~::"~:~1~1~ ~ ~~:"' AmAJr 101 '" ·~· , ........ ..,, J •••• ,f~~::: ,:.·: 1}4 11'• • lni.•"'-t S.. 11 11,• N•O .. <ol •1 I 102 ,!::: :: A.evcoO Ill tSJ u '• folEO pf1 1' I ti\'. ~ ... nAh wl 10~ µ. • • C~ITIN'I' 1 a I ?I •>-ll """' lnPY.r, 1 II •100 16 • N•ltO t .0 14 10S Ro-Wt• 4 14 16'' ·~ TolEO ro 11 • 1'',._ \lo ~.: I~ IS f! a.. ~~.;,:' t 1 10 ~.:' ' ~~~. 10~ S ...; ~·~: .: ::::e: t ~ : 1~; ~~ ' :: Napeo 21 10 10 ~· ! ::::~pl 1 So •0 ti~ ~~· ~: f::~:olp.::: : ~ ~~=: ~ AB<llO> • tO I .~ tlJ'o (l\t'\P., I 1' II lCI )0 ' .; f111.,,., pl 10 1•.' lo 1-llG 2 10 I 11 111', N•p .. Fdl _,. I S 11 ~ "' A.e"".rm IOU I• 14'11 • T«woCo • 21 n7 tl C\ • 14 48'0 pf 1 IS J i• "'"''''" 1 '6 • II" q •, .... ~::ftt"'. ":',u· r: :!. ' .: IOW•PS 120 tO J ": ~:~~ ':'t 1: ;:~ , .. RO MO I 01 SU 1q ...... ~01<0 n • IOI '" • ~t: pl 1 :c: I I 4J ' '· ~::i::: pl 1q t u~ • lo 1''"1F.':: t OSJ r 21 ..... ·~ 1,1:-ru11:CB~s 2 t~ o ~! ~•'I N•ICen • • lJ 21.\ot-\..o ::~1~\~ ~ I 118~ !t1 ': '~! T~;:.,~•, \ . .0 g I~ ~::: I~ ABI~ I 1• 1~ r,~ .. (l\IPM T I I • ,, ... ~;c~i~ ~ q ~ ... • k J n s tH '°''. V> NIChL •• 11 tJ "~-Rey In pf2 7S S7 100 • 2 Tr•1w I (M • 20 ,.~. • .. Ame.in > 'ilO • 10J ll», '• ~~~.~~\', ~ 1~ :~ ,:: : • r"'"' 1 20 • •J9 l~"'" , • u~~c,. ore 1q m ll", 1. ~~nJ;, ~ ~ ,~~ ~ r: Rev in Pl• 10 10 .,, T••nu~ 2 . .c> 10 111 so~• :;: ~~~i/:1.ot!O~ !J~ l ··= .: ~~~.~\~' .o!.1, ~ ,;:; •. ! ~:r.~· :~: '~~ ~.·: ... ~~~p ~·"° .. ~~J :J ~ ... ,. ~::nu •2°,~' r: lt~. ~ ~r~~.ff,1i ~~ ~:.:: ~: ~,~~:~·,. ~ :;~:. ·· AO'ff I 18 ~ •1 JS>;, • Cl\fOmA I 10 I ... 77'• F•IM•u SO 11 108 SO~• J•meRv n 18 8 JI 1111, ~' ~·.1IGHomyp I 4 6 1!_! ""'' -1" R. l !IU l ?J 1'WC pl I ~ ~· 12l.. '• AEP\lo Cnrom pt I 10 11'1 FsrNBO 110 A 88 33'•• '• Je l 12 S ll 9'1> " " 1'1• R::i-:MI I ~ ~ B'•• '• rwc. I 266 IS 2tl.. ' ... 'E 11: ~ 4bS II. ' Ch•n•:. iio 10•.. FN~IBn 110 ) 1 ll. '• J~·r t )1• 19 9'•• ~: NILlbly n ti 'l<I 711.+ ... llioG• UI llO ·~s )H •••• frd(l!m 128 1>81 19'•• .~ ... ;r.~r. oO • "'I: 38"'. • Ch••• wt 1.. s•. ... ••IP6 111 J)() s· ••.• .JeflPlll I .a • 81 ,,. • I . NMdCr ID 11 "° ..... ·~ R1ltA10 H It s 31<.. Tran Int 2 08 2S '•' " AGnCp 1 s 1u 11-.~ •I Cl\ru DI 7l 10110 "' F\IP• W1 s IJ 16 JtrC pl 1 ti I ls->t NMeoEnl II II 121 41'\'. +ti.. ROO-. Transco 1:« 11 11' 4 ' ! : 111! "Gn"' jPIJ 2S 30 )) • C~u•Ch n • , .• ,, .• F•P•M•11 ,. ... •• , .... ic '117 6 JJ l2'• ~. NMlneSv SC. JO 10 11\e+ ., A.~.i'; ~ t~ ~ U"" • Transco ptJ.17 s S9 • ' AG18d 1 O•.. SJ "" C'"B•ll 111 ' ,_...., '• FIUnRt t le 11 I 21• ;.,..1tor 108 429 8>o • ' NIPrt>I t SO. ' ti ZJ~ \, Roo-n• 40 S JIM IU t Tr•nscn .10 11 10 6'• AGnCv t _... tJ 1•'• C1nGE I G>1 IS 11•., o Ftv•B~ ll ' !6 I • JM -I 9? I 1111 211'• i: NIS.m" 1' IOl7 .o, • I" R«l\G I U I 11 IA , TtGP pl 1 SO 6 19' > AH9rltLl .0$ tto i C1nGp1 • t.O Jt\, ~:~~P::~ :;14._ JnMn p<StO JJ •7 NtSvln l.I•• •n •··1R0<hrtto89 tll!l'"'•Tranwv l80) tSH1 • '• Amtioill t 12 • •I 11>... '• C•nG DI 9 JO 1.IDO 11 ~,.11~01 40 tJ •I ~"' • John.Jn 1 JO tl J1J a3 1 '• NSl•no 121 1 SI li~. :: R0<.•0*' 1• )O< 1 1q )'•. • IT•••ln l ~ ) IJS ..,._, \o ,.,.._ 1 10 11 rzu 79>•, , C•nM11 1 " ur """ • "• Ft\1trS<i Ut> 9 ,,... Jlh, h JonnEF 11 t3S is-.. , =::~s~! 1 : n; 5._. 1 I R«kwl )t .o ~ n• ll'•, '• l''•ve•• DI 1 J II • t :=r J I• iq! '!5,,. 1:: g::~~~• !t'~ SI~•~ "'; Fl..,tfnt -5J •1 f 'l'I l'I =~pl I~ 12 ':~ ))•., "' NllOMll>S I tO l91J :i.-.. 0 Rorwn" J J1 I , !O' i '• TrtCon 7 Ille 6) 21'• '• Alnln•t .,.. 8 J.I 11..., Ctli ln. t IO ) Jut :a•, 1•1 ~::z:~"IJI ~ ,: :~ 2l '41 Jonl.Qll .c> 1 t66 ~~": ~ Netom pf • JJ ~'• 1~ :~~~o ee ~ ~ ~~ ''• ~~:!r~ .01> : 1! t~~~ "' AMI 1 10 lo I~ W ,. • > C.olylnv wl ~J 1 Fin l pl Lt! . I ~:!t ' V. .lolll!M S 9' 10 JI U <. Ne¥Pw ~ l2 IO 'l<I 1,,, • ql)ll)'I ; J8 tSO •I, •, I rlaP~ I q IS 1'1'1 • " Am-n Ut 1134 µ. ''"'" pll lt t 1151 • 1 Fl SI \~ JoyMAg 1 90 13 ~ .. s~.,~. NOP P1 t .0 '100 ·-'• Ron""' ,, l '• Trl<nlrl n 01~ IS 116 ti ••• AN11tR J .. 9 109 43 • •, Ctlyln pl 2 tO 44\>-lh Ft~l\\'~11 '~ ~ ~ lJ ..., ~ lt-K -Ne•P pf 1 JD tlOO 171~ R-\IO ~ tO fl~ fl1Co 10 t9 2'19 1127'') • t'• AmSLFt• IOt> I ,, 11•. • Cl•rkf '10 /IJOO »"' .,,, F p '" + KLM ,. ~ I NewP r. I.ts. , u~ . Rorer •• II t" It • Tron•tn. BO 10 90 ~ *=~ .~ :~ ~:~ 1q: ·: ~::?~~·\ '~ ; .ll *:~ · ·· ~::~I~·~~~ ? ~ !r". ,: ~:R~ i* :~ ·r~ .~ ~ ~i~~i. ~a 1t ~ ~~ ~ a~~ ~:2~,,: 1n ~:: ;:: irfn°~:: rn ~ 11! ~~: ~ AmSlr BO 8 }4 29,., ClvEI DI 7 "'1 1SO ~ I'> luor ' -IO 20 :112 UYt ' ... K•1l>Ce I .0 I 31Y 30~~. N E ~T J . .0 e 7 JHO--'"' Ro 10 6 lOe J ~It 90 ·•, •• h<OL6D I 20 8 3A8 "'• • '> AmStr pfS St 2 .... " , .. ,..pk "° ll II ......... ~~~ t ~ •• ~t ~~+ : K•IC g• I JJ 1J 24 • v. ~~~ f ~ ~ • Sl :!"'·· .,,., Rut::;,.. '17 II so ,..,. .. rylerCp IO I •• a• I ~H pl ! I 16~ tt,. .. ~,:,~01"1.Ppe~ :I ~ 7~J) :g.~-.... ~~!:.~ 1.1! I s~ = .... ~:~M'u ,. " •; ~ ~: ===~~.": ~ ,: m: ;~ :~!~1;fll I~ : ·:: i:!;. :: u'vAmsnL r -?:' u~ A9 .. ... ATT P1 l M S lit 1, -.,. -'• Frt ~w t.-i• I K..,,... 'IO 11 169 331'1 • '"" • RvclefS I 08l> '• n_ 29J.., '' .251 811 10'' '• AWafWk .... ! 1 11 Cotchm 11 9\. ~ -' Sl'I> • KCl~Pl 2-.. I 4S JCH(. \.1 Ne•mt I «I.a 6 '" ...,_ '" ~ UGI t.76 10 t'.lO uJO• 1 • '- AWitl DI I •l flOO U•o '• C.0.stCD .io. '10 }4•, "' ~:~~al n .. ~ .. '"" KC PL pU SO 110 JI"•"• Newprk Z.lS II SO•'I' ~SCA lOI ti 171 19"'' ~. UGI pl 2.H UOO 23 ..,,,.,on 1.20 • 11 lll'• •• Coc a811 16 tll .... •• , ........ KCSoln 140 , "' ...... ,,. Nl•MP I S2 , »• n.... SCM t ., 5 '"' ,., • 'I• UMC t to I JO I). • ,.,,_0 60 & 17 ""' u "' C0<.•CI 7 16 tO .,. )I\, ... FourPl\4 II C3l lO'\o ' '1• 1<.C:SO.. pt t 120 9'o Nl•Mpl J e0 "° 26" '" SFN '17 11 St 'l<I~• • •, UN CRH 121 '.lOS Ii' 1, ', Amelek 1 117 tit 2• 1, ColeNI to • '.lO "'°', ''o Foa'ilali ,,_ 1 '1 12 ~ KllnGE I 91 'j JI 1µ." Nl•Mpl J 90 1100 1t I ~PSTt< n11 I Jt J1"> '" Unarto 661' 14 ' '• Ami'< 1 '.11 I /S lJ '• Cole<o I 167 tl'o ,,. Foabro f JD IS " SJV,-\\ KM>NC> t.4111 10 1'3 ~,--'\', NltMpt 4 10 110 JI 1 \1 S.CllM \ JI" , .. Ul1\o , ... UC:.mp 1 eO I Ill 46'>• '> AMPlnc I 13 118 11>.-.. Cor9P.rl I C11 e IOU 16:0. FrenllM 48 • t2e IP/o. · KMtPLI 2.0. • 0 171 >-'°' NI~ te 10 11"-'il90Bu\ n «> 20 !IS lt', '\ UnC.rb l 20 I Sil &II ... oAmpco .0. • ll JO•,• '> CollAlk n I 23 ' , '" ~~r.:lll~ s .JDI 1200 l!! MIV.-V. OPL pt2 l2 5 1p,, \, NIC R l .. 1 311 lJ'l, • • S.IQOln n •q I" '" UnComr 70 1 II 9' o tAmPe• l• 17 11 2..,, '• Coll1nF J1 5 11 tt v., ~ •~ \, IC.itl¥1nd 59 llh o 1. N-•111 161,S ., S3 • "'S..fewy 1t>O r )11 33'.-.,.. Un1onC1> J21 6 JS S'• """epCp II 100 "", • ColPtn 140 4 •Ill II'•, v. Fruehl 140 • 4 21'• '• IC.itl¥ pf t "' 8 JD• ... 1,. NorlWn 120 1 lJO •S'"• ... ,~Cp u I .S 101, UnE!t!~ I st o 151 ti''' Amsl•1 1 ll • JtJ 1"' 1, I Colllno 1 'IO S IJI 46 , ''> Fuqv<I 50 4 m "" Kllul8r .11 • IM ti'•, ~. Norlin I t0 · i. U"ll !>JoMn 1 lO It ISi ..-. ''> UnEI pl 4 SO 1'10 33', 4msl P1 Ml I y , ColG.. ) S6 a J/I lit", Vo F uqa pt I.ZS 41 IS'"'• '" <-..0 7 16 73-U • "' H0<rh I t0 t IJIM 1'"4 • "-SIJOLI' t 2' 10 S 10 , 14 Un El P1L I rtOO .0 t Alnsl.0 1 .. • 49 45~, ~ ColG\ pfS.41 J SI 14 -o-G -Uller JD II 2.S it+ ~ NACotl n 10 17 •I',. , SILS•F J SO t • 11 ., .... Un El Ill 2.72 J.; 12"• '1 ""4100 $ )I 11 JI~ •• ColuP(l so • lit ll -It• GG:~ .... ~ • ?!! ·~ .... M llOQg ',, 9 11S 10 '" NOAMl11 ..s 4... . SP•ul I.~ 13 ' UnOllC.1 \.IO "Ul 9 ~ •• " Al>c:hOr '11 , s '"" '· Co•S01' 1 11 I 1 12~ •• "· ... ... ~ 11'. ICtU..0 .41> ISi r ..... NoAPhl 1.10 :ti )4I" "' SIR99P 2 6 ,_ """ .. UnPK ' I ., 1' 9'11 w. .... AnCl•Y t 12 • t ,. 2S',... ·~ C'iO pl 141 t 1et4. '"' GA T)( 2 20 I '11 ,. ..... \<, oe.n11Rty ti l •t'• •. ,. N~llJI t tO ISO •::::-'• S•l•nl .40 I ' ,.,, • l/o Unlro••' 27' ~. .t,naltllt• .O I 110 111 0 '°' CombnlM I 4C) , 4i0 lt'I>, ... GA T pf 1.50 1 ., ...... l(_,mll .ID I! II :Ml/•-•n NCelSI. 10 ;n IS.., .. S.m~ U,. !'to Unlryal pf l200 3" ..,.,.. .. ,en .. 9 tS9 ~ CmbEn uo .... I .. +t'I< g~~. .201; ~ 50 •• ,. l(.n~I t.40 I SJS J:JV. .,, NlndPS 1.50 21' ""' so1 .. G\ t 60 I tSl ""'' UnBnid . .0. • s. ,~.,. ... Anl1tr > 14 11 tJJ 1~ 1. CmbEq 'OI 331 ·~• , °"' GF 1' -2 l(yUUI 2 12 II SI 16!-.-"• NoSIPw t A • 17 U !>Ju•nR I ..St U 19 t9 UUnBErOnp~ ~l20S2 .9 1•11 Silt'."°, '• ...,...,. • l8 1• 119 l2'< t omdis n .21 IS ,. 16 Eqp ,. ,, 4-11. • ic: ... a 11 M 7 9 11.... NSPw pf).60 . 110 )t S.llCle .. .5171 ,,, Sl''l t .. R.. • ... ApldOlll 16 ti 11 .. , 119 CmwE t . .O I U'I 19-v. OK Tr( 1.50 1 U S +'""• ... tt•ffG pfl,70 .. t 19\lo v. NSPw pl4.Cll .. 110 3SV. <1. SF•lne 1 • .0 t SJS 13'41 I 11, UnGrty 2' 9 JS ~ .. ""91Mg I SSI 14 10 tS'I• •-. CwE pf 1.'IO 0 1~ Gc;~CI Pr 1 "4 •. 10 Sl\o,. IC¥rM LID 12 90e 15' ~ NSP pl 10.1' Z2tO 9'-... SF•ln pf .50 J 10"'° • v. Ulllum 2,61 S 'l1 to\lo+ \'t MUI• I 2t b JO 14~ ~, CwE pt t J I• 10 2"'-. l(eytFO n.lOI> 10 6 ISVo+ I/, NerTel ti 1 . 111 U-... SFelnl n 11 ... s•-\I. Ulllu pf J.97 . IJ 17"•·. ~utc.., pt 2~ .12 107•• !~ .• •·. ~ ,c.w£E "'pl I.JI dOO ao • • . g::.•Ho s .. l:l ll "' :n · l(~nl i.41 1' • JO -"-N:,';'1•1•, . . 1n 111<11-"' 591we1 1 1 21 "'">-.,. u 111u pf 2 10 _ tJOO 14 , '' ~CIE~ .OJ; 0 j~ ,;; CwE 5" ~: it~ !.\"" c;.,.'::1 ,i: 1: ~ ~~llo-; ~ Kldtle l.ID S 26 ~ V. :.,i.firt = 1,1 ~ 47~ ..... S.ulRE OS.63 '" \~:: 8~tl::"pf '.~I~ ~ =:;: ~t-• »t-.. 1,_. •. ..,, sat t.::e-• -Jl~ ~l ,4 GMilftll l,JD l 57 ,11V.-I!?, ~=e.:~ J. ')_A ~Q .. ·~ NW18cp IA • o:> ~ \4 t:~~~ ·~ ,1: ~ 10 1 Unlllm .22 1 11 »-'>• v. .t,rlPl>I 10 70 ~l4CI 9S •' CoPiy ~ 3''11 Ill lJl• ~ C'~Svc l"lr't 1:1" IJ"'-\i OSf"'.18 l 1069 '~Vi ltW\1E'S I I "121 ··~ S.vEIP t to I) tJ t l/\o• V. UJer8~ I 04ll 4 lJ II • 11. "'klkl . .o I 20 • Com PS I. • 10 .. \.II a.•-v .0 s s I~ .... l•Kll 1.n • 6 22,~ "" N•Env plt,IJ .. 27\k. \'I S.•E pl t 21 . t ~ IJftMM n ,,. S1't-.... "'111.G >I H 10 Ill JI.. Com1>9r 21 9 1'l 21,.0 .... ~arlll I .211 17 ff 11 • " (nlgtRO ID 11 S ~ '" NW11nd 1 a I 101 33"7+ .. S.vin 10 1 7q I)... unl't<Mn 102 1•0 6' o-\\ ,.,...,Rly 1n *· COll'lPSct •• ISS ,..... Gelco .... 7 .,. ,..,, • i. ~r n I JO l2 •79 u2" '. '• NwlP pl 1.50 , 1J -.... S.•ln pf I so I II UnR-'11 .,. • 57 23' "" ~· 8 ) T '• ep1 .. n, Q 1" Sl\lo-'°" Gem<:a M 4 31~ • 14 !QJflmr l 40 l'll 111 JS" I NwMlfl mt n fT 10'1>, ·~ S.aOft ~ I tll 7,;· ~OS 1-3 n...+ ._ "'1Tlco I M 1 11)1 ul4 , '"' CooAQ• 1 ~ 10 11' 14•r, ~ ~';'n': 2 ',: 1 • ~ • .. =· I 40 It !JS 31>o '• NwSIW I 70 I o u .... 1-. Sc ... 9f~r l 1.. 1, USAlr ~ 0 1 15\'0 ... Anne Pl 7 10 139 u41 I COMM! l S 10 11'" ,,. GnAmO tOI> 1I 11! Tl' : 1'o <r•ft pl l ~ I ~ ::: =:~~ : = 1~ 1~~ ~''>' ,., SchrPto 1 Ml • 192100 111:: '" ~~,:,pl;~ ,;: !:1, ...... Z~Ae' ~ ~ 12 ·:~ ~~, t: ~:;:~~n H~ ,: 1: ;~:::: :.; GnBcsll to I •I 171-. • • • <rotttlr . JO •' >-f: Nu<Or ., I /1 61''1• V• ~~::!.'b U 02l , .. 1~ t~ USGll>t H O 1 101 lit..,,+ 11, ArmWln t 10 I II• t~ CnnNG 1 IO I I 11 GCinm ID IQ 24 2414 <r-r 1.l6 I 127 11'' -0-0 -Scttlmb "'' . JD .. • I USGy Pf 1.IO I 31 .t,roCorp ' • ll '10' .. c . OOy114m 1..211 10 IJO n \Ci .. <unlm .ID Ill s n.-OKC 1k 1(1 "' n -"' SclAll .. JJ USHom .... j ,,. ,.. .. N r-E 111r 10 ti ~, '41 c::~~ 1 = ~ 1~ ur.:;: .,:'; G9nEI J I "' S.-V. "" <yolOc. l\.25r II ll l2,.._ 'h Olllllnd .40 u I) 61 -\Ii Scoo , ... 7 1~ ~\'. • {'II US Ind _,, • 371 I V.. N vln 1 11 II Jll IS'• c .... ed , .. 5 ru ,...... GnF01 '211 • llM 11-... "' <t'SOI' •• • SI 11 -"' OoklMP t.• • 103 1•11>-"" 5<041..0 OS. • • 511• usi.-... SJ I 19 llV.-1-. Arvin pf 2 4 ~·. • ,,, C""E Pl I -·~ '..'. GnGlll 16.41• IJ •7 11'11 . -L-L -O<cl""1 2 4 2'74 ~-11, ScotFel I ID 7 23 -~, • .. US Rty 11J 14 131/J • 'I• 4.wrc:o 1 4()e I .,.1 51•, ConFd' 1 ,. 6 ,~: jj\,; "" GnHoS1 ID > S 17~• • ,,_ 1.FE .llr 21 IS 914-~ Oc<IP pl1.16 4 .fl"+ ""ScollP 't I 706 if~~ USSl>oe 1.60 6 .. , 291/a \'II "5111011 l 10 S Jl 381.w ·.._ Cn\Frl t .o • IO. 7t%.-.,.. Gnln11 I 12 48 ID -I -ITCO 1 I I 1711.-I/, O<clP plUO I .. .._ • ~• S<.ollyi S2 1(1 3' 71,,, USSIMI 1.60 . MO 12 -'" As/110 pt; SO I 40'•, .._ Cn>NG J,21 7 SJ 4IV., o.i, OnMUh 1.48 • , .. lt'i'll . . l LCCp II P'o O<elP pl 4 . I "4'i'll-~ Scovil! 1'51 6 43 1e '' i USTObc: 2.0I • I St JI " ~-OG ', ~ Isl ?Do • .. CnG Pl '10,.~ I 11,ao, 1031,X:. •• ,. Ga:"' J.& .. 1111 Sl-1'4 -~" SSI ll\'11 .. . Oc<IP pl1,j0 22 21''" . . Sc-r 17 u ....... v. UnTec:h 7.20 8 394 Sl'H . \• ~u• _ , , ConsPw .-71 ~ ol pf 3.75 9 U \I> . -V pf 5 -2 .,.,..._ \o O<dP pft JD • lt\4 Scud pll Olt 1 '"' • ,,.. UTcll pl 131 t ut4C>', +'• "''JEI I .. 7 •9 1r-.. CnPw pl4 so 110 lJ GMol pl s. 7 *"'-~ ~Tl/ pl I s m ._ ODECO l.SO iJ .. '3 -... SH CA .,it.. 10 10 . ' UTCll pf J 17 JU .. !::R~c~st r 9 ~1 .. ~11.:1:: ~:::~~!'~ t~ ~~::• :: g~~I ID ~ m 2~~· "'~b:'.i~ l~l~it ;~ ~ ~ ~d n: ~ ~ ~*"-~~ t:~:..:"B~I06 ~/ ;;r:.•.: ~~~.!"~~/It~~ ~ ~ AllRc pt J /S 1300 • • , CnPw P12 '3 5 17\o, Vo GnReir • 7 ei. ..«GM t ... S 16 I~• '!\ OllEd pf t 4C> 11JD n •'lo S.•bCL J 20I> s ths UV. fl UnlT lplt SO S Jtl, .. llRC pl ,'° • ul21" .. ' ConlAJr 101 112 1\o GnS1911I t 21 12 14 44"' ... ~ISft . .0 11 JI ..: ... ~. OllEd"' I.. 1100 )3 :.., SuWA ., n ... • UntlrOO so IJ , .. 151, I, AllHCI> ... JJ to~ ••• '°"''°" ... s ., 7 ••• G"S'""' .. I " ... ......ary t • ,. ......... OllEd pl 'IO t7 14\'0 '. Se•••• I ,. • .so ,.~ .. Un.••r s.. s I t 11 • v. "'-' 4111 191 40 • "' CnlC pf I JS t l-0 10 I. GTE J.n 8 , .. ll'• 'IO ...... ~ 1 ... 16 ti Jfi.. Of\£0 r ... 1100 M'I'> "> Se~rm I tO IS 19'1 ... 14 .. Un.vFd 9' I ' 12''Y '• •ufo~ 16 21 111 SI'• i. CntJCorp 2 to t 113 JD GTE pl 1 SO t 11"' • .. ..-o. .cl tJ 46 ll'> OttP p IOI 110 60 -J '>Olll'~ 30e 1 I tttr. • UnLul I J1 10 "12 JG\li~ '• AvcoCp tlO •1011 H'u \, CnllG<pl .O ... )I'"'• GTE pf ,. 10 10 .a.rPets.tl t• SSJ 24'• Of1Pp187.0 141> S7 ,...., Se•IAlr iJ IO 315 ,.~ '• Vup'°""•FE ,10 11s 151 u1 •• " Aw<o pl JlO 7 »'••1" Cn!Gppf 1 I 11•., '• GTFl l)f 1.U 110 II .a.rS9 12• 7 S00 JI>'• .. 011P p<C 7MI 11'0 fl Se•tPw t JD I .. 2J' , ... SLIF. .,, l "• " Aw<O P1 • 20 3S o9'>•1'J CntGp pt4 l0 e :i. " GTuc• t 50 21 12' 11 '-._..,5 pl2 lS 4 16 • ..., OllP plGJ 27 4 17 ''> SeerloG S2 tl 4'I 11,"'' ,12 USLl,,.-617.H ll »>... A ... ,, 11 ... 1J Contlll 1 IO 201 21'• G.nHCO 2M '" ....... ..swyTrn I.JD 8 16 10"+ ... OhP pfA 14 dO 102• ... ~ Seers ',. tO iotlQ "'" UsllleFd -1l ... A•MI 1 I 113 JI'•• '• ContTol 1 ll 7 704 14', ,.., Gen•l 9 1 . .0 • 20D JI .. t .Mfnl .'4 9 16 ~lo ~ OllP pff'. I~ l20 102 -tV< Sealrain 116 6 U~PI. l 10 IOI II~ A-. J ' ,., ... .... CllD•l• "° 10 •9' n~ I .. c;.nupt t (M 11 10 21~. ..911Pl•I 57 8 s 11"" .. Dkl•GE 160 " 11' IJ~ "' Se<PK 1 ) us A ..... tt VIPl.,Pf l .IO t 11• 1 Aydin 1 20 149 11' ,_ I 1 (nDI pl •.SO i.a )II I GePK I 20 t I Sii U .. -""Ve I Ind 21 I~., Oki GE pf ID 120 11.. .... Sed<o s "41'1 i S1t /OJ4' , UIPL 1>f 1 90 lJ 2l' 1 -1-1 _ t.oo«Un !Se e tM 6'• • "' O.Pw pl1.S6 1 llVI" ... _...mn I /le ll 14-ltt Ot<laNG 1 10 M uJ.1~, ~ Selt1l l I 20 I 11, ' ,~ U1PL pl 2.04 I 16'• .. BT Miii JI 2'· C.00Pt • 1 OI IJ S3 50'\i. v. G•Pw "'1 n 5 1•~·-·~ L.enMr .J2 112 ~ t Olln I , ~' 1111>-•t. SvCplnl ... • 20 ti' I -V-V -I a.ci. "°' s IJS lol... C..Opl pl 2 90 18 u GePw pf2,7) s ,,,,. --· t '8 16 :14• .. -.,.. Om•·-'.. • ti .... t.4 . ,,., 51>•~1.. IO ll 117 14•~ ••• VF "' I.bi) • Alt J1-.-I BMrlnl' tO n 3•S <>t7'••' Ca>Pub 60 1 " u • •;1. Ga Pw p17.n •tOO sc. .Jt>fAY &II 1 9\\• '• o .... 10.' .60 , • 2S~• .,. SM•rL ' l>ll • us "'"• ' vs1 Cp 12 10 .,,.,.,~.,'"•r. BalOOr 1• 1s n '°"'• v. Coop TR 80 • ~t 13 • '• G.osrc 9? 20 SJ u10l>'4 + "• .ieuc..ola 2l ~· J,.. "• Opelika It 33 2 10 SlltllO, 1 .c> 10 1m "''"' • ~ V• .. ro r> .1010 119 11'" • V. BatOwV 1 40 11 11 41'•, ... Cc9T pf 1.1S t 14"• " GerbPO I.TA 1 6 24' ?->;, ..t•Fd( S U~ I '"" OrenRk 1 . .0 1 21 13,.._ + lilt ShellT I .lOe 1 ti 11,~ • ._ Vallvyln .40 33 .S6 1~. I~ 81dU pf 2 Ob 2 701 7 O>otlno 117 I! f8 t4• r , 1 Gelly I -9 1011 " 7 \Av Fin ISa J I~ 0 ••"94' 331 •!'o SllelGio JO y I"'° V~Orn t 1 41 10 1, BellCD t .c> • 40 17' •• ._, '°P9Wd 1 •8 1 1 711, '• Gelly pt t,70 . 1 IS'"' o..ov1S1r •I.SO J.IJ :!' OrlpnC Cl a S5 IA'''-5nelC. pit·_, S t1 lld'>An S2 12 J70 JI\• lo BellyMt . tO 14 SSO l,S•. lo C.0.dur• 44 JI 11 •~• ,,. GllnlPC '' ~ '--"'UF I • iq 2•'• , ... Oull>M 10 ll 12 tl'loo + •il> snr .. 1n IS.. I IS Jt \oo Vara 40 e 7• fl " 8111GE J S. I S. ,,.,, , Co<eln' 41 tl ti ti'• I• G11>rFn 60 25 21 IOV. ~.-.OF 11011 JI 2A'I<_ OuUttlCo 60 111 .. Jt'" , .. 51.,...pl 4411 rtlO U '~ Veecos JO U 219 ~ '"' 81nC.I t 12 b 21 791, • CornG ) 11 ti /q 611' 1 • 'I> GidLtw s t 7 , .. 1''1. • ~. I.OF pl 4 15 7 49•,. O•erllOr I 1 11 16''• v, Siu Pu t '40 I ti tJll'I • ,,,: V,._ 15 •'• Beno.Q 10 ti 12' 1123'" ,,, C0<r81 ... 111 17 ,. JI 1• .. GlllHlll .'1 I ti to'lo llo U 1Jt¥Cp ... • 26 tSO.r-"' 0.rftTr I Cl 5 10 ,,.. .. 51911•1 I 10 .. •1111> -" VHIX I.JM 37 IOI. • .. Bal>aPYtl t , bl 2S' 1 1 0 Cowin 1 18 71 ?8 Glll011e I 'IO 1 70t l'l'h Ulemk \ Ml IS S7 l2 1 • l<t UVS111>, SO 9 It JI• 0, ... SI I It I l '3 ' V11tom IO ta 126 )1 ''• 8kN'f 2 72 S t] JS '• Co•Bro s O 11 IO'I 5\ , •,1 Glnaslnc 61 fl 10-'' ullyEll 2 JO 12 S46 Sl\.o '1 0-nC 120 11 .. l8'r ''lo S•~~c :12 IO 51 I): : VllEPw 1.4() 1 'lOO 1010• '• 8kolV• I 1' 5 11 IJ , ,,.,9 o.1 16 S'• '• G1euW 10 I 2S 11"11 , ''II UncNI l 6 SO •1•• 0-.ntll t t0 ) tot 1V•~ • SlmpP<tl S6 ll 1:14 .... V. V•EP pf7 12 IAOO SS BnllAm I ... .010 ,.,... I "-t l>Ob JJ )I• j Gt-' 70 ti J10 SJ\!. 2 u ncPI ' • ] ts•.. OalrOln 16 1 tJ ,. '• SI~· lo 10"' V•EP pll.14 1120 .. l!UimRI nl 60 ,. " n . CrNIF so " "• C,ldNugt • 10 1'1\lo .... uoneJ lOb tJ SI 12 -P-0 -SI I ) jO s V.aEP P19 7S ztOO II &an~Tr J JO 4 .Jlt S.'• , Cli«>n i it 2• , v, GldWl'n W 7 213 II.II. I~ 1.llton 1JOCI10 .OS ~ ~, PHH Gp I 04 11 S2 )II 5,'ir.,! 4I lS .. ~ ~.:• VaEP pf1,90 I 11'• '• Ill< Tr P1 1 so • IJ 12.. '• CroON 2 10 " ...... ., Gdrtcll 116 • 9'1 1)\1) .... U n pf~t t ul tO • I PNBMlt 04e 16 11v •••• Smlln• I .0 II J) t~ i .. V•E':J:."·'s 1100 )I ::~~·r~ .. :~ ~~·1·~ g~l(pt~·M •• ~ ~ ''·~~h·~·~ = .:~".-... ~~ ': 151 ~"·,· ~n 2~: ·~~ ~ :.;smlllll \ .. II" U Y. ~~Inc ~ .. w· ~.: Ber~O '.0 I) .q 61 .. CrouH1. t 11 •"8 .. , I , ... G<.rdJ.. n s t7 ,.,, .. '• UIClll• S6 u 6S »•· '• PKAS I JO l6 10.... '<lo ~~~·~.;'.'to1S1 i;~ t~ .<.:lvw~nM 2 ....... BardCR .,, ., .. 11•. • • CrwnO. • • 18'.-•• Gould 1n I tl02 ,..... • .. l.Oe•S 1,20 s 4S ..... • .. PecC.E , .c> • •25 JI\. '. s pO .. ,, •31 BlrnG 10 I 18 lS._ '• CrwZ..I 1)011 Sil .V> '• G••<'" 1 30 q 111 11 .\l LomFn 1.28 I 54 t81t PoKl.111 i H • 107 lO"o t., na n ' JAV,' 1 " -W-W-8ern8e nl 20 o 11 1• , • '• vz.1 pl .a '3 I ~ ~. Grain11r I t1 ... l&~ ~ .._ LamMt 2 lie I 19 t•• .. • '" Pt<Lm 2.40 IS tS3 60 I'• ~rf P ·': tJ 71111 ""-' ~ WICOR 2.04 • ~ l'()•,, •11 81rryWr U ti b) '3 • Cr11mF , I >I" • 1.a 32'• ~ Gr•nllvl I S ll U' • ''• LnSI., I 6S 6 42 JO'•• ~ PNwTel t "" 8 10 I""'• 1,, SrcoC ~ i SO 6 ~ ~~~' i~ W.baSn eO • 11 t• • ~. Btrl'Wr .... 1~ 11'. _.. CulbtO Sb '°""· G••rD• BO • II tO"" ... -.ILCo I 86 • AOI t~. PttPw 7,04 8 180 ,_ • Sr c pf2., I 1~· • 11.' Wacl\Rly 9 ,, .~ •• 1, BasR1NV n Jt Sii 9• 1 1 CumEn I 80 11 14 U'1> 1, GIA Pc . J3S & Ito LIL pf P 1 0 I 18 "' Pacx1e SO 14 16 11'1• •I So~l~fn • J~ • , ' )VallMt AO II S lO' > ''l Blu~h t.70 tS 2J7 S8 • "' Cw1nOrg IO Ill 1 10"-, IN GtLklnl .... I 171 ull•io • 'l'o LIL PIO 1 41 · I '""' P.t<Scl WI 9 11•1+ ''• SCrf G 1 11 1 ,. •s•~ ,'" wa111rn t oO I ,I 4()1,'o • 'lo S..•ITr• 6'1 1• ttt ~~ '• Cu<rlnc t.to . ll • GNlrn 3.1~ 11 • JOVt l'I LOnQOr 1M tJ 41 l5 • i,~ Pacn t AO • 2l ts>o> '• SoJ ,•• "" WllHCn g t.J1 s.14 7810 ,,. 81yFncl 19 4jQ • • "' CUf'1W I 6 ll:)t JO'. '') GINoNk IAO I 12 -~·-v.. Loral\ . .c> 21 690 IC) • \\ Pe<Tln I 14 • 20'1!t-... •• In I .. 6 11 24 1-'o i .. W•llBus I • 4'Vt ~ ''• a.ySIG J 20 & ••9 12~ CurlW A 7 • JI', GIWFln • 1 406 1911> .i. U Und t BO 12 13 .. SS~•• ''It PaillOW 4.1 12 ,.. 11''• " SoulO•n t I 21 ult ' ~ W•IMu 1.oOb 12 Ut , t,. 8H I I • , 79 '. (yC100$ Ill ti ,, 11 G•u fl '10 • '111 IS\IH ... I.a Pee n • "' "'" ... Pai)N pl t JO ., 70 SoHIB~ •• J95 11~ •• ,. w llJ 1 '° ) ,.. 811a;l'3 I JO 1 IMO 11 • "' o-o -Gr•yhncl wt n ,,, • '" Lou•Gs 2 ,. • so ,...,., i>.1m8t I 10 7 ,, 221\ •• ; SC•• Ed ,, ...... 7S\< '"' w:llJ ';11 "° I : Jo:~: :.: !IHI pl • t IO)l •••• OPI' ) ,, I~ • GrowG 411> 13 ,,. 11•. •• LOWMll 17 •OJ... ... P•m•OI " 31 4•, t:i:.:f: l ~ : 1~ :!~. W1tdFa . •5 .... Be•l 1>1 J. ~ ., I •• Damon 10 ]I 101 tO •• i. Grumm 120 I) ... J7 .... I I l.0-\ n .Ml 15 61 21 "' PanAm . ••ti ••• '• SoNR t IS to 1' s• .,, W••llllCO IO s 69 16 ••• IMO m J2 19 IU JS , h OanRlv I 11 4 11 "'' '•• Grum ptl.ID H 2t.\lo . ''t Ltbll t IO 14 119 71'.• I P•nEP JI 71 9 91 J7 " H ' ,_ 11• WtnCtn \ 1 11 %'/ ~ •, 811cln0 .., tJ 133 17 • ' o.necp I .0 7 101 , • ..,. • '• Guard ln ., IO 1'I lJ\, \• LucllyS I 11 • ts ·~ P111<ll 1.2s11 I 43 '"' •• SNETet 1-'° I 107 JS -'-W•mrL '1l 14 1062 21·. .. Belo.er '237 18':t .. o.n ... 1 :IOD71 Ill 4~1.-'• llW1l s .II I •11 "~ .... LUO!-IO 7 ., 11 ..... p.,..., I 16 I !SS 211-'• t:::•< ~~;:~ID~ ~ WHllG12 51 . 10 ,,,,, •• a.1c.0PI I 1 126 SI... , Oitrtlno 2 6 '81 .. , .-•, tfW pl S 7S • 67 ,, l ull*"' 41 12 1l IJ') P•rtlDrt J4 f t 'It ~ I y ' ' WV>N•l I SO I .. 3' , • 1 Beldefl\ .... II )8.1 u'J'I',. ... Dart Pf J 3 .. .,, .. 11011 1.50 s t.00 4)\, "' LvnCSo 10 1l '3 IS PllH•ll 1.:n • tU ,, ~ t. t~~t~ ~·: 1 : ?!!" • WtllWI 11• • •1 ,, • 1, S.tclnH l6ll 9 0 7 • 0.141C.n U 1'3 75 t''o Gull Res .SO 11 .. 1 II .... -M-M -Per-P•n U t 63) 13 'II ""' '• WHloM ,90 21 6J 7711'>,. " S.llHow -I l4 111'1-"' O.!al ... 30 l t .. , 1&',, h GullR pfl.30 I J:J'l!o MACOM ,,to .0 JS2 uSO~t• 1• P411Ptl 121 SM ~ Soullnd .. 1 lll llt.'11-v, W.iklnJ .. ta 1' J7'•» " Bellino .24 I oS 1310 'o o.tpnl I 27 II al''> GllSIUt 1.1' S 41S ti' .. • Vo MCA I SO • 129 Sn '"' Paylsnw ... 9 JO 77 • i4 t::Rot \ 4C> 61 46l ~~ • l\'1 Way~ .OS. ti) ulO • 1V. &.mi\ t 60 10 10 lo~ ', DeYCO S6C> o N u .... 11 OllSU pl4-52 • L30 Cll6 "4 ~llC .44 10 16 In..• .... l'NllCly 3111 IJ 1ll 31 • Vo 5,..1';1', l J2 ,s 6111~ .,! ... ' "' WayG pf! 60 21 ul'Att • , ... llend4• 7 14 t 401 511 I'• 0.¥1Md I IO q -lO ,, ('uilUld 1 ll • •II 21 • "' '""' I. t2 9 J.. ,_ .... ""'-t7 SO ~ " • ·' 'Nt~Un 20 11 J ·~ "' lleneli~ pl J l tit'> J' D•ytPl 1 11 1 01 tJ~. ... Gullon .0 $ 61 16 MGMOHll . .Ob 14 250 14~. . l'llnC:en 10 Ill W ·o• i ' SwFIBl ''° 1 l)I> 11 • 1•• w.t>DD 20 I 41 I~ a.ndM pl • 04 .0 •q • '• Cl«>er• I 90 12 2003 41"4 .. \\ ---M.tcOn 40 I 4 /V, • Vo ""'"°' 1>rB 10'4 'Att "• SwFtB pt2 ti · J ISV. 1• 'Nell•F t.117 s 117 24'• 'ti. llen!Cp 2 1 IOI 11~ l• O\ltmP t Al I •O 12'1'> HMW I 21 /I/, 'I'll Macke S2 I 7q t3Y.. . . . PtnCn prS 27 8~ W't--1.0 SwtForo .SO 6 IU 10 -~ WelFM J 10 1S 21~ •1, Bentl "'I 30 11 ;n1., . Doll•A t.20 10 !IS 4711.' ·~ H.atlFB t.$4 10 343 :ao M8 Ltd II n l,40e "18\. ''• PlrnnCp ..... uq "' .,. SwlG•I t ,. 1 )t t\4-.,. Wl'enP Dl4.SO . zzo J1v .. -DI 2 so 12.SO ,... Del\ONI 103 IS\\ HlllCll 1 ,, 3'll 1301'1. "' Macmill .12 ' 106 tS'I• ,,.. Pwnney ' .. I "' 11 SwlPS t.11 ' 19 llV• WIPIPe J.20 • :i. .IC)'h ;..;, B:,itB 14 110 1• "' DehlllC nl S. ·,. 107 s1 · · i~ HemrP 1.50 • so JO•t> •.. , Mcml pl t,20 -· to 11 •I PaCo pl ... , . . 2 101''•-.:t · · ~rton 1 19 • 16'1•-'I• WnAlrL 20 106 ,,,,, ::.:~p ,.:~ '~! ,;~·" ~~::1 ~1~ :: :~ "'~:::1f :::::· ft a~:~=~:,,~~.'. 1rlu~. tt ~:~t ... !·~.~J~ 1f'·.;-~.:::.~ i7: tt m'z-:.:: ~i:...r 1.ah ': ~t:· ... ;..;. llotllSll 1..0 S 111 ~ .. _ Qenlsply ti IS J I tt~ + \'. Hndlmn I I 116 13 .... MaalcCt l1 Jl 9S IOVt V• Pa PL pf I 40 1JO 6'fl'1 ,.,.,rry 1.76 1 1'0 52\k V. WltCoNA s 24 22 2a. ~'• t\ llt1Tllr , .. II Ill YMl/I• "' DtSolo t 7 aJ2 ,, .. ,. 14 HendyH 10 ,, ,, ~ -I~ MlrfOftH I.JI" 3S llV. "' PePL pl •u. 1'2JOO ..• 1 Scirl~ t.10 • 14 .. ....._'A WP.Kl 2l.7Se •• SI ., •• ::~t , :: ~ 'l :v.= ~ g::~oP1 ~ ~ • ~ !! .• .. "' ~:i;:., l : ~ ~:: :! =~ ~-~ J~~ ~,,.:_ . ~ ~~Ir 2·.~:. ll~ ~~ i,; ~~r;... \ ~ :~ ~ ~~: 'v. WUNOft 1.40 . 211 ,.,,,_ \It llllODr .It t tW )I -'-o.tE P1 1.MI .. 1100 » , I H•rllld \ ,ID It IJ ....... -LI .J2 I 2S ~.. .. """w pl t.to j i;;:;-~ SlaRll• 10 IJ .. ti ,.. 'I'll :~~n~;,~ .. ~ ·~'•: •:;: l lkHPw nl ... • t 27.,._ '' DE plF 2.75 J )I ~ H1,,.ISlll .41> U t• I~ 14 MW-2.S2 5 Ill 3111>-l't l'WlnlOI 1 2 • '31 4'1...-'loo SISld8Brnd t M 9 _, lO -I WUTI pf 2 56 11 I~ 'i'll .. lrJ11 I I II 14'1. 14 OE p19 2.IS . • llV. ,,_ Herr8 k 1 • • 11~• ~ MAPCO 1.10 10 ltl 46 14 P\loc>Or .21 I U IS¥. .. -.. r r HO · dO Miio-i Wnlt1Ell.4I> -. 110 UV., "• l llHL \ 1 • 1• 1~ l'I DlctE pr 1.21 1' 1•14 •.. Harris .ID 17 •JS .. l'I • ,_ -all 1 10 1U2 '3 •lift 1'9ot>E11 3 10 S1 SJ-V. S18PI\ n 11 Jt JI-..• V. W$tv..: 1.M • 11 J4 ~, l k kHA 1.7' 11 IU 3114-1"" Ou l&lr t 12 tlt D'n • • H11rsco 1 7 5 M~ 14 ""-Mid ·'° S 91 lt\I. • '111 PWisJCo I JO 9 SS2 216..,.._ v, StdMolA .. ti 71 11"' . ""'"Y••hr 1 c30 tO t07S JS~ \, Bluel 1,ID • J) JI "' DIG4or .56 I "' "'•· "' H11rtSM I 6 1' u -lonL ,., 2J St ·~.... ""'"Inf n 11 ,,. ,....,. \It StOllCI 3,.0 • IJOt ,,.._ ... """'''pl I IO . u ~ I loe!Ole&r . • u • _ DIG<Of pf? l s . 1 """ .. _ H•n•"" Ml u u 12-"' Mitrt!Cll :i. n 21 ui-.. . .., ""'"' t.«1 ' 11 1:1,,..._ •111 s101na ~ 20 11 m s .. 114-tl'I WNetF 1,.,, 11 11 .,..,, ....... SI 20 7 .. , -Ol•tCp t 'IO o t 11.... . Hllrl!Zd ,40 • 1 I ""-~pf 1.20 · · I ~· • '~ PttrOll\ 76 I• 1.0..... +' "-SIOOll S I 40 11048 ~ •I WheelF pl 2 3 47\'t I leh•C 1 1s • !21 ~ '" Dl•lnt l .20 10 i. 31 •• H•llEI J.M 1 • U-"'. "' -le• t 9 10 J:l ' 1. PttRs J l'le . _ o "'H•; h SOOtl Ill 3 IS .. 1490 S1~• ~. wr.e1P1I 3 1 111 • .,. ." 9cwdll11 I,'° • ll4 u v. OU.ms 1,60 q .. ,. M*-... HayesA .IOI .. 7S 12 • v. -riot .10 12 JU JD ; I Pllmr ...... ,. -41 -.,.. SstP•cCp 70 • tts 1• .... WlllrlPI I.,, • 61 21' "' &ertW 2 ... • 1J •1 • l'I OfotlOld ID It 512 1147 • 11(1 H11nllrl .ID 10 t 2911. • "' MrtllM J,60 II '2 .. ,,,.I .... 11>9. 1 . .0 7 567 ~ 'I• 1-t• 15 ' JI 17\<o-"' 'MtllC 1:40 6 ~ 14'~+ \'II acwmn1 .10 •• " ,.,.. .. . Olatllllfq 11 a .-J'l4-2 HKllS .JD 7 " 11 • "' IWll!f 1.24 10 93 IS1/• .. , . PlllUIEI u o 7 JO) u "· s1 ... w' .. I l05 II Wlllltak 1 I SOI 31 ,,.. 8"Ed 1.n I 20 JI-II.. 14 Olnlntm .70 • "' lt\lt-v. HHl•M 10 SJO ·-IV. MllrtM 1.J2 • 427 "60V.+ 'h PtlllE pf •.eo .. 1120 .12V..-"' SIM"1lll¥ 31 ' s~ WiCllH I 0.. .10tt 16111 90\E ,, ""' • 7 " .. "' Olilon 1 Olt> 10 12 , ......... 'I• Hellm8 .. 10 II UV.-""' Mwvk I II 17 33 ~ ,.,.. PllllE pf IS.ZS •• !330 '°'....._ "' Sl•MS. 1.12 . l2 ''"'· WieC>lctt ... • . 10 ~. ~ 8ranl"~i·· 207 .v.-.... OllftlY .72U J» •• _,_. HelnlH 2.41> I 110 0~-1/it NG CllCI .M 1 12 2~ V• Plt11E pl ,,S1 .. 110 '2 -·-Sl..,ICh l.to • 7fl It'~ i,.; Wlillam5l.tO '• 9141211.t V• •n~ 'l.Jlii I 1• 27_,.,.. Dl¥nldln • 14J 7VH .,.. HeleMC ' 12 ·-.... M9KO ... " "' JI._"' PN1$ub '21 u 27 -51"90 ,t21> • t3 J '" Wlllf\rO 1•1 st 131 IS .,,, :~::: ...'·~ 1~ 11:: ~ -."' ~=· ·" •i 1u ,m·+·t.i ::::li.~"J ··~ 2: !t ~.:.:.~ =:''\~S: ~ u ~~~ .'11 ::::::~ 1 :: : ~1 ·=~~·~ r.:f;~p :: ,1 ~ "l~~: ~ :i~g: a·'·91 q s: !I., • ~ 8 tll .... 1.7M • J7J J111,-14 Oacumat , .. 1114 ..... HtmC.' .. 2 • .,,, ..... -s.yF .• lllS •'II .... PNlllldpl I .. I 11~.+ •11 SlttlDtl .'1t• "2 2JV.-'ll WIMllQO iS.:i.7 JV. ... lrtlWGI 1.20 1 11 17\lo-\4t Dome ti .SO • 101 ID Jllj, H•mlM Ifie .. 4 ~ ~ MllCP UQ .. 11 14h . .• PNI .... t.10 I At90 4/~114 S1erndrtl . .0 7 40 U -,_ W!ntwJ .lie .. S •'n • "" !~YUGG..J-22., .' QJ t3 + .... 0....ld n .60 10 14 22-. ..... Httcul• 1.10 I.,.. >>-..-n • -•re 1,211 . It t14+ ~ PtlllVH •• I • 12~ ..... SM•nJ I.DI s 106 16"4>-..... WlsEP 2.s2 • JO n "' -U ,... I~ OonU ,16 tJ 12' Ille+ \'< Herll\l UO • f U -iUE .lSe 9 JOJ 37'""+ '-PMdA'il 24 • tJO I~ I SlewWo SI• 7 J 214+ W. WllG pf 2 SS J 72 ·-Sii 1.20 7 J D l'I: . : Oannly l.H to tlO • ..._ 14 HeHlllll .IOot" 21 ~: .. :. Manel JO " llt t~ '4 ...... G .:.. • , ~· 14 SlollVC '. I I 26""-.... WIK PL ,·f'J ·; ,. 17~"~ .,,.... .JD I " D Dllr•l •• s tos ·~· v. ...... "' Ull 2 ,. -·wt . . ,.. ~ "' ..... I fl .,.. SlonoW t .7511 10 127 ,._ " WIKPS '., • ,, ,~.._ .... ewnGp J • JS M"11 ..... Oowrs 1,Clf 14 I UV.+ V. HeulMfft IM t C22 >t1<o+"~ M91110l l·'° .. 41 3119-Yt Plltbry 2 ·; 19' 40y.:.:·~ SlonCOft n • 31 n 111 Witco t'60 • IM JOft• ,._ llwnFer .7'014 tlO )I "'io, Dow0t 1..0 I '7• is.. ..... Hewll~ '411t •I n I MeyOS .M 7 112 26~+ Y., ,,...., 16011 2211 41\14+ v. SIOPSllCl l.20 • U ... .._...., WIUr R 'ID• HO 21-..-1 •Nlswll '° , ... u~ Iii OOwJn IMI 11 I 5''1>• "" ......... ~SJJO ISS ~ Vt Mey..() 1.IO • • 17 .... PlerwEI .tit • • 21 • ..., SlorTec I) .,. u ... Wo4•rW :n 1 •• , .. ~ ... .... .-pt2. J fT..,_ \'II 0r.... t.»" ID ~ ..... Hl$1\e•r -• • ~ "" MeylJW • tO l Y>+ .,.. PllllYI 1 40 • IM ~ 1,4 SIOftr ' n 10 171 JOll't-... -( 66 II 15 11 ..... \'t 8rvll\W • I t2 S1 •!Ao-•• C..W l.20 11 S40 ~ ~ HIV041 .• IUD t• 171<1 ... , Merle t• I 12 ,.__ '-PHn8 pl 2 12 .. Ill ltV>-l'I SlrldRll I I• 9 .. l•V.-\ill Woodpt s ::n 19 QI :J:l~u Iii 811<yEr .. ' .. 2•-Oro•ll I.. .. 12 I• • "' HlllOllM , .. 7 • • Mcr>t'm IA• Sit • ••• .. Piil*' I JO ,. '20 ~. "" SUnSl>o .211 7 "' 1¥1-... -W\h 110 4 137 11"-~ ::ii~~~; •t ,: =·~ ~= .1! :tm ::v.='~ ::::,, t:'; r.t ~i~ =t: .. :M.: =~--. ~=~ :"~,; ,=::: ~ t=~t:; "~ r.~: ~ ::.:sri/to :. >l 1!a.. ~ 8olftdy ... 1• 11 w.-~ CIUP111 lllUD .. I J7 ..... Hell*y .7'0 l' PJ 29~ '4 McOOllO .tD I Ml 17\lt-Vt Pl•yllOy .11 IJ •l IW·t Vt S....EI .n II J3 U\o\, .. Wl'lllly, 1.4• 9 63 UV>• ~ hMrH t,tt .. ' ~· ~ !.'.!".!'pl•.• .. l 61\11 ..... Hel'YS ' • " _, M<OU IM ••• 21\1>-.......... y ..... II II ,. -,,. SUflCo . I.ID • m 0 14 . 14 -ll(r -15 ~ "' ltMlllt 12011 ,. ,, ··--· .-P 1 . .-J. ,.., 1"'-Yt HrMGjlfl.16 .. 1 '*-"'McOrH Ulll 6;J" -\It~ IU •S ""'""' Su11C pf J.25 .. s"''"'' \'I WyltU>s .4010 71 IS -14 t tlllld ,:. • m ~ 11o ~. ,. •,·".. I niw.-"" Homst 1..1112 ..s IOll'r-2\11 '*'""'' • .. • nvt-"' l"ollllN .... lhUI aw.-'Ill "'"""' 1.30 • '' " ~ Wyty • 111 1w. ~ INo' 1.U 7t3" .. lit. "" .....,... pl 7'0 • UIOO .. -"' "°"'" wl .. ., 61\li-ll't M<Lll•ll •• . . t2 ....... .. . Pllr•rold "' m JOV..... Suftew t . .O" ,... '°"'. "" 9"N• p1 .ss ~ a... 111 1.1' I' t20 ............. HllllW _. 1 m '"°" + ,.. McLoilt 1. 23 1v.-I.\ PndrOM .eo 1 41 12v.-v. SUnMn • ., ss 190I ·U\lt-tt~ -JI -Y-1· .,.N•pft •• :. u ,,_ .. i __ ~ lJ: t ~ '6111 .... HollWll . J. U2 ~·w Mc=• .• n a .--. l"opTel• '.10 l 2J 22~ ~ Sup•V•I •• ,,"'~tit Xen111 UOtOOS! "'"'•''141 15.~ '·"" 1 tallt-14 ;:;;::: ... "' fl.!'!-.:.:.·; ........ u 1.ltlO J7I ..... v.M<Ntll ....... IS ... ,, P'oi1« ••• a!""'·-·· SUptOlls .1020 1•ttSll't-2V. XTAA ..... JJO """' ~ .,. ,.._ 1,4 .,.._,.. • .. 1 ... 1-..Y-.. 14wlaanllf.l9 4 • m•+ \It MeM 1 • • t7flt+,. ~"' s.• .. •*' 11 +"" SutitllllG .J.4 • '' 11'111 •••• z.i.oi 1.11 s 11 m~ y. ..... 't allM 6' -IV. Olli! Pl'Kl. IO .. S I~+ 14 Herl-at Ill ""'+ YI ._. .JI II W7 ~J..-l'W\GS t.10 12 te Ut. ..... Sutlt<o .. tt ~ t.; ZlllpfA .IO .. " +I Mtrl111.tt e tt ,,..._..., Oul"'8 ·Il l• M W'h ....• H...c.t.ed .. ~-~IAll • 4S ···i.: e. c Utt U ~i.SWal\111,_. 6 e ,...._ .... lepjtU .ett etD 1S\4 '"° ...... 17 lie ,...__ V. Oy!Wt> .I0.14 aJI ~ ... HeMllltl ... 1 a •'41 t ~wllle , ... t Ill 1' -• """" I 1,SJ 7 .. IJIAI+ Vt Sy_,efl t.• 6 11 ltV.-11t Z..yreQI .J:Z • t• 171 ~ _ C:-C _ -- -"-... .a ia • ..._ , __,... . . IM ,,...._ °" -. .. 11 U Jl\tt-\It SY11rn pft,40 , • I • + '-Zefll .. lil ... U JH 16\i'll, _ .. Cit 11111 i.• u 41 ,,_ v. eGG • Au 111 ~1v. ........ ., 1 .. • ,,. ....:.: itt ~Mr I.JS • 1 ~ .••• , E .• • 121 I.Ai~ y. -T-T -Zero• .st 1J u ~· ..., s Ut t •I ifV.-" l S'f' ft .a'': ~ !.:_I ._,, fll ~.. J 41-"° ,_TH UI 1 W a ..... Pr t U 124t O'lo-th Tltf: 116 il Jt-..... ZWNllO .'2 I ft t.4111 t ~ ' s ,. ._ ~ ., ~"' Hwlt11 ue • .,. ~"'Mete• ueu m•11.+1 "' • " • HV.+.,.. A S I ~-LC , , 11 :::~ t=i, 1·•:1.J: 'I::,: ... ~0 1.a11 .. --. ..... ,__ ... , .. • s GVI• v. ~ ue10., ,....__ uto a es ~rease ::."1111:: • ;t ~~ ~Mii.: W!e ._..-;~ns ·if:'lr"°~ E\'•':U.sf.1: ~.~1·,:;:& ~ lr :~ DETROIT CAP) -Domesttc ~., ::. ; ~ ~: I!' '1 J ,,i: 'J;:• ~ ~..._. ~ .. ': ~ a-:.: ..,111 • • cw.-1i. ....1.1' ., 21J ~ 14 automakers' mid·September aale1 •,. " 1111...... 1.n , as ~ • 01.» ·; *I ,,_ =:: u .. n !! '~ • ~ 11• ',·• • 240 1 ....... · dipped 38 percent from the eompara· ,. .. If M *-w ~Ill JI U 14S ... ,~ ~ t Al It It.__ .. .. ts111-" llf •• .. di .,, ... ' bl 1 » 1~ "' le11r II I• it ,_+ ::? "'"""" 1.1111 m ..,._, IWIOMFt"I ·• 11 111 ._ " · · H=t·" • us ~+ "' e Um~ period, but analyst. aay the ,.. ' • ,,__ " . ~ i I 4lf "*'• .. """*' t "'"' m ~ • "' *''"' ,_. • '" ._,. • -., . " .n .. •* • .. .. . i d l l9WI ti 171 l .st • -n• 1 ;.! ' M ~ ~ H-tnJ1 . 11 ~ =l11lh t.• 14 4 'Ti"".. H .et .. I .;::"l! n Ull:ry cont nUet to move out of ita • 11 ...-. 141 1,... , ; i * '4 • "' H1111tC11 • • " 11-.-Tlli ,... 7 2' I • "' " "''·" .. 11 .. slump • ,. . + • M Ut 1.• • S42 t . . . .. M UI • 49 Yo • I ·---------- H/F ---... __ ...... , OM.YPllOT CJJ No Name WriterS Get 'Big' Break By JOHN CUNNIFF .. ......... _,... _ NEW ~ORK -W o rld Authon Ltd., a book publilbing farm conceived u a counter to establishment publlshen, is o ut with its flnt v o lumes thia month, and thus its presi· dent's valedic tory h u betun .. It took faith, time, money. patience and, some in lbe industry say. colossal nerve and a blissful l porance of how difficult it is to penetrate markets controlled by giants and their corporate parents. Its goal sounded too hopeful, naive, or bauahty: "WAL is dedic ated to the proposition that excellent profita can be made by publishing worthwhile books -books that in- form. impire and give pleasure," But the first books are published now: ''Pampini.'' an adventure tale by U ri Geller; "Tantra Today," a deluxe art book on lnctian yogas by Eleanor Moore M ontgomery ; and "Nirvana Now,'' a science· religion tome. The latte r is by R o land Gammon, writer, e ctitor, s m a ll-business owner. president of W o rld Authors, and thus the vale dictorian. His involvement begins at any o n e of the cocktail parties that authors attend. cuNN1~~ Gammon, w h o h a s written several boou, was ac- customed to hearing a uthors complain they couldn't get published because, they s aid, some of the b iggest h ouses wer e looking only for c o mmercial bes tsellers . IT WAS A TIME, he said, whe n "corp o r ate carnivor es,'' s o -calle d by Archibald MacLeis h . w e r e buy - ing o ut big-n ame publis h ers, "to the unmis takable de· meaning o f autho r s a nd obvious subver s ion o f publis hing independenc e a nd lite r a r y excellenc e ." To many auth o r s , said Gammon, the a c quis itio ns w e r e a "danger ous threat to the intellec tual values . quality lite rature and professio nal integrity o n ce c h a racteris tic of o lder publishing hous e s ." Three yea rs ago Gammon's musings grew s erious. "H e r e J w as, s ixty-1s h , head o f m y own company , c om- fortably upper c la ss. a world traveler," h e thought. An idea possessed him. "WHAT A CHANCE for a great valedictory thrust for about 10 y ears,·• h e thought. "Why not publis h s ome or the writers I h ear complain ing abou t es tablis hment companies that won't prin t their works"" Authors would be gua ranteed promotion o f their book e ven i f it didn't sell immediately. Tim e between manuscript a cceptance and publication would be halved. Authors would be ''lis t e n ed to thoughtfully .·· There followed the hard business o r raislng m o n ey. About $100.000 was acc umulated. but it went o ut quickly, a s a dvances for authors . for paper, for printing, for ad- vertising, for travel to co n ventions . ALMOST EVERY CENT went out, and none c ame in. Gammon's business had to s ubsidize tbe o peratio n , and be had to forego any advance on his own book. But. be says confidently. the m o n ey will now in October. Initial press runs w e r e s mall, between 4,000 and 8,000 copies each, but Gammon hopes to generate prom.a of $80,000 from just the initial offerin gs o f the three titles before going bac k to press agaln_ In addition. be h o pes lo sell Geller's n ovel t o H o lly wood and believes p aperback rights will add greatly lo the gross r e turn. He feels Gelle r , of extr asensory perception f ame, h a s great popular appeal. A VAJUETV OF TITLES is scheduled to follow, among them "The Great State of Maine Cookbook," com - piled by the Ladies Aid of the Caribou Universalist- U n itarian Church, and "The Shakespeare Conspiracy " a wbodtmit by Jean Joffen. a professor and Shakespe.;ean scholar. A speciaJ thrust or WAL will involve the conflue n ce ol spiritual and scie n tific knowledge, and Gammon already has a work under way b y Rabbi Alvin Bobroff tentatively tilled. "ESP P h enom e n a and tbe Holy Bible." W o rld Authors , h e r e minds a listener, "is dedicated to the interrelated proposit io ns of making money and raisin1 th!! consciousn ess o f m a nkind." .-. f o~k• In Thr .'ipotllghf NEW VORK IAP) -~ltt, w.-.... , prlc:t and nel c'*'9t Of Ille lllleen '"°'' •<live ,._ Vorl< Sl«k E•< ..... Ot 11.-. lrldlt19 llM"""'lly •I mort tl\ln \I Arn Molo<1 1,213,ll)O y . ''• Saft'I Corp l,QJl,lOO ,.... .... O tkorp as,IOO 11 • 1 Ttllit<O Inc 71',AOO ... , I He<culellnc ••.600 U'• • ~ Gutt 011 SIJ,AOO O'loo • JI. IBM 547,100, ''"' , 'Ii 0 1• tnVtt1 SU,JOO JO • 2' .. ~ Doll• AlrL SOJ,SOO 47'• 1" S.11nR-S00,100 17'1• V. AmH~u s 02,CJO :a.~. , IV. BumsA.L '37,SOO 1~ , t ~cla.n1 Pet UUOO 30'" , , ... K Mllrt 424,ZJO 2210 1-. Pl'tlllPtPel AIS,IOO 48~1 t 2 .. ,t llM"rf~an Lrad,.r• NEW YOAK tAPI -S.I~, We-M)ll prlu end N I c:~ at IN 11"'1 most ecll,.. Amerl~lllt Sl«k Exe...,. 1u .. 1. tredlng nollonau, .t mor• 1Nn S1 Gll~n_g s ... .IDO 1,.,,..o!I A 11 JD.a -y()G s 219,IOO HouOitM 115, tllD T«h s,m m,-o.n.,..., ti l!l,CIO T ue-Mll a I 11',AOO Chlo! Ov 11 1 119, 100 lntrClyGs ti ttJ,900 AMtvlrOll • 101, 100 UV. )7•') IS\'1 :9-"' ·~ .. "" 10'11 20'h .,,. t "" • 21/) •• tll't . "' . " . ,_. ; "" .... . ' Dou•.fo11v11. l rrragv• NEW YORK IAPI Final Qow.JonH ·~ lor -··Sep 2• STOCKI JD Ind 2111 Tr11 IS UU U Sn lndld Tr en Ullis u 51~ Open .. lllft Low OoM Otll ts7.s• '11 71 fla.T.I ...... + U 3 l47.5t J» 211 )M. ---0 21 llQ,d l tt 10 IOt.15 llO.St-0,216 JS.I. II Ut )1 lSI11 J.56. lh 0 lS• NEW 'l'ORll CAP! Sep. 2_4 Advenc:ed Oocllned Ul\Ch-d TCICal 11-s -hlgl>S .... lo.., TO<llY 211 3SO 2IW d 2J J WHAT AMEJt OtO NEW VORK IAPI Sep. l• TO<llJJ m JIJ 1m 10 1 4,llS,IOO .,. .... ··==· Prtv. <llJ. 4:11 ,. IS9 l:t 1 "''"· ":t ltSl JOt 1'52 101 J Ce""" 1,02~·1.0S\4 • pound, U.~ dHllMlioM. l.e .. '2cenb•"""""· ' ZltlC l1~~ CMllS • .,..-, CllllvertCI. ' Tl•Sl.7••11C111ftd. ,.._._,Ill, N. 'I', .. 71. MOf'cwyMIJ.Oll,_r flask. "'-...._. ~ lrO'f oi. N. V. Sll1•vr . :.- NEW YOtlK IAPI -H-y & H~ ,,..., ,...,,..,,,.,ofl ... nt. Engelllaro slhror U t.SSO, olt J0.7,.. 1111><1ca1 .. 111 .... m.•. off to.no ;· .. ' •I ·-------- .I . . • .,., .... #" . ,... . e • • The Daily Pilo and our local teachers I Here's wltat our partners say about our Newspaper in Education program ... ''Thank you for your program! Not only does i t assist in providing a basis for timely discussi ons, but it also encourages all of us t o be more aware of the newspaper's i mportance ." --M . Teresa Santoyo College Park Elementary School "Well done program , ve ry worthy program , students respond and develop excellent awareness of current events in the news.·· --James Lande Marina High ·school "We use the program in fifteen different classrooms. All of the teachers feel that it is an excellent tool for pre- senting current events.'' --Karla Koepenich Isaac L . Sowers Intermediate School .. - ·'It i s outstanding . .I use it every week and i t r eally helps the students becom e aware of the issues. Particularly the ques- tions at the end. They help. Thanks ." - -L . Meyer Charles W. TeWinkle Middle School "This is the best current events program available. I have included it on a weekly basis in my 7/8 grade Social Studies program for the nast 3 years . It has made my students better awreciate the world around them." --John Wigat Masuda School DAILY PILOT -· 642-4321 Our newspaper in education program Is designed to draw students into discussions of today's major issues. Best of all, the program .challenges kids to use their minds and imaginations and to become involved in their community and in the world around them. As partners with the schools in the education of our young people, we feel this Is one of our most important projects. For more information about our program please contact Janet Steward, Newspaper in Education Coordinator, 642-4321 . • . __ .__.,. .. Irvine EDI T IO N l ' . ' ~our Ho1n~town Dally Ne•Npaper VOL 73, NO. 2'9, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,.1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Will Sri Fi Flkks Sell Real Thing? • 81 JODI CADENHEAD .............. Tbe man la the 1ray plnstrlped sult has beaded several ·~ mwlou to Man and Jupater. But Wednesday al1bt be wu on a new mluion to aave the U.S. space prosram from a slow death B. Gentry Lee. manaaer of misaloo operations and enaineerina for the Jupiter Orbiter, tried to sell his ti<.: lnlne audience on 1p.ce es plonlion But the rolle1e stu dents seemed more Interested an wbat he thouaht about acimce f1ctJon movies. Hla UCI taU1, "Star Wara Science Fiction and Scientific Reality," ts one ol five let"turea IAe gives to various aud1encea around the t"<>Wltry The bespectacled s c1ent1st made il clear Wednesday mght that while he was willing to dis <'UH &clence fi ction movie., It's the real world of aclence that ex· CllH hJm "l am taklnat the 1tory ot the JOY of science and exploration dlr.,clly to the people," be aaid as he lll&rted 1t 51.ide abow ot Jupiter and Mars uplorations. "At the end ol this lecture you will know more than any person a live knew about Jupiter two years ago." he promis~. Through the pitch blackness Lee '1 •excited voice explained the gaseous atmoaphere of Jupiter, the bubbly lakes ol Sul· fur found on one of Mara ' moona and the fact that there ia a cur· rent of some sort generated between Jupiter and tta closest moon. The Voyage r miasion to Jupiter cost only half a billion dollars or $2.39 per American," explained the scientist. "For $2.35. a year I can give your children an AUu of the solar system equal to the AUu of the world you had as a cblld.'' be said. · Lee is selling the space pro- eram through lectures and a television seriea, •'Cosmos,•' because, he says, for the fint time in 15 years, the United States has only one space ex· ploratioo project. When the current Jupiter re· port is completed there are no more apace proerams planned. Space Hploratioo will add to knowledge of the earth's bi.story, increase national prestiee and productivity and will step up technological advances, beaays. "How can it be that you're not willing to pay $2 .35 per American to go to a real planet," he asks. "Far less than wepaytogotoamovie." Lee bad opened the lecture <See SPACE, Pa1e "1) Truce -Offered Iraqis Seize Vital Rail Line BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -Iraq announced conditions for ending the fighting with Iran and cla i m e d its forc es today captured an important oil port and cut the railroad linking southern Iran with Tehr an. Tehran Radio. meanwhile, broadcast sirens warning of an impending air raid and went off the air for 3> minutes after an announcer warned citizens to seek shelter. The Iraqi attacks have not endangered the lives ol the 52 Ameria n hostagea, a s pokesman for Iranian Revolutionary Guards in Tehran said in a telephone interview. In Geneva , the Iraqi ambassador to Switzerland re- Looldag Detma Oii llOrfd WAST NATIONS GO oN ALERT-AJ Actina as ao extra set of eyea for the pilot and co;pilot, Lance Cpl. Robert Moyer (left) and Navy Corpsman Jeu Beaucage, check out the terrain on way to scene of an accident. To see the results of their Search and Rescue (SAR) m-..uver out ol El Toro Marine Air Corps Station, see Page C8. ported that Iraqi forces had '' peAetrated into. A badan,'' Iran •a ~ oil refinery on the northern tip ot the Persian Gulf. The Iraqi claim to have Drive Started For New OC Sitton Home A joint public and private drive to' raise funds to construct a new home for Orange County's abused and battered children was launched today by the Orange County Board of Supervison. Tbe partnership to raise the money necessary to conatruct a facility to replace the now over- crowded Albert Sitton Home was lauded by Board Chairman Ralph Clark who said, "I am encouraged by early signs of support." Clark specifically referred to an offer by the Newport Harbor Junior League of $50,000 in matchine funds that would be oade available for the project ii a like amount is raised in the community. BUI Steiner. director of Sitton home, located in a compound ot county facilities in Orange. said the need for a new facility is critical. The bome is the repository foe children who have been abused. sexually exploited, neglected or abandcmed. . A total ot 1,88'7 children were admitted to tbe home during the 1979-80 fiscal year. Coast Weather captured the oil port of Khor· 'Doctor' Suspect ramshahr, about 10 miles north of Abadan. would be the biuest victory acored by Iraq in the four days ot fighting. Iraq bu already claimed to have captured 1.15 square miles ot Ira· oian border territory. . Returned W Jail Iran claimed it had pushed back Iraqi forces in one area Legal troubles have multiplied for an Orange County man ac· cuaed of illegally practicing medicine and causing the death of a diabetic, following bia ar- rest Wednesday on new charges. Gerald Barnes. 47, who lives at the private Coto de Caza Sand Canyon Project End Of Landmark? There is a possibility that the Irv i ne General Store , established in 1909, might be de· moliabed in a road -widening project. Irvine Assistant City Manager Paul Brady Jr. said to- day. "It is remote at this point and we are looting at ways to retain it but it's possible (the store's destruct.ion)," he said. "We also want to look at ways of widening Sand Canyon A venue but still re- tain the oak trees alongaide the road." The Irvine Public Works Department is planning to turn the historic two-lane Sand Canyon Avenue into a sl:a:·lane divided highway between the San Dieeo Freeway and Irvine Boulevard. It must be widened because ol plans to. build a city corporate yard and dog pound on Saod Canyon Avenue just north ol Trabuco Road, accordin1 to Public Works Director Brent Muchow. eat ates development in Trabuco and reported for the first time ~ Canyon. was re-arrested late the capture of a border post in· Tuesday oo a bench warrant is· side Iraq. sued by Orange County Superior Iranian jets . ma.de their Court Judge Richard Beacom. deepest penetration into Iraq, Bail wu set at $200,000 in the bombing a gas refinery al Ayn new legal action taken by Judge ""'12ala, 2llO miles no~west of the Beacom when inveatigaton dis· ~agbdad and 400 males from the closed evidence that Barnes bad nearest Iranian air base, the begun seeking employment as a Iraqis reported. doctor again. In Beirut, Iraqi Defense The defendant already was Minister Adnao Khairallah liat- scheduled for arraignment at 9 ed th4: ~~ of bis country aa: a m . today in Harbor Judicial redefm1tlon of the Iraq-Iran District Court on two other border, protect.ion of the Arabic· counts. , speaking minority in southern He bad been free on $2,500 bail Iran and the return to Arab aov· since Aug. 22, following his arrest ereignty of the islands of Abu on three counts involving practic· Mousa and the ~realer and ,j ing medicine while posing as a Lesser Tunbe. The ISiands were doctor. seized by Iran in 1971. Barnes was subsequently lo Rom e, the Iraqi c harged with second degree ambassador to Italy said murder in connection with the Baghdad will accept no alleged negligence-related death mediation to end the war unless of John McKeniie, 27 . of Iran agrees to return to Iraq ter· Anaheim , who died last year ot ritories that it claims. d iabetic shock. McKenzie was seen by the sus· peel at Pacific Southwest Medical Group in Irvine while suffering from uncontrolled diabetes. Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright alleges in the latest action agalnat Barnes that be applied for a new job Sept. 1.5, the day before murder charges wereflled. Officials at Wilmington Doctors Office in Compton where Barnes waa alle1edly seeking employment notified authorities. At U.S. government urginJ, 5.1 American civilians -46 busi· nesamen and their families and seven dependents of memben ot tbe U.S. Embuay staff -left Ba1hdad by bus for Amman, Jordan, a trip that normally takes 15-18 hours. U.S. diplomata were not being advised to leave Iraq for the Ume being. A chartered plane arrived in Amsterdam, Netherlands, with other American evacuees from Iraq . They included 241 employees ot a New Jeney COD· atructioa company and their families. No Noise laerewor Pie 'we Foreign diplomats said they were making plans to evacuate European, Japanese, Korean and Filipino civilians working jn Iraq. Military communiques issued here and in Tehran indicated ground and air activity bad not let up. Both Iran and Iraq halted shipments of oil, not a major worry to the world for the pres- (Sft MIDEAST, Pa1e "1) 'High Roller' Craps Shooter Wins $777,000 LAS VEGAS <AP> -There's no doubt the player was a high. roller -he walked into Binion's Horaesboe Club with $'7'71,000 in cash. And there's no doubt he had courage -he risked it all at once. And there's certainly no doubt be wu lucky -be walked out sm,ooo richer. The player. wbo remained un· identifted. won bi.a $'7'71,000 bet Wem.e.day on t.be third roll ol tbe dice in a craJ19 game at the club in Lu Vegas' glittering downtown Casino center. The casino, bome of the an· oual big-money World Seri• ol Poker, bu claimed for years · that no bet is too big and gamblers are told they can risk whatever tbey can afford. ·'The guy called previously about betting anywhere from $200 ,000 to St million.'' Horseshoe Club president Jack Binion said today. "We said, 'Yeah, you can do it'." Binion said be bad bad no further contact with the gambler, described only u a Southerner in bis 20s, until be showed up Wednesday. "He bad two little suitcases, one fulJ one and one empty one," Binion said, "and be left with two fulJ ones." He said the man had the $777 .ooo in cash -$100 billa in $10,000 bundles -"and we paid him off in cash." The man plunked his entire bet down on the "don't pasa" Bandit Hits Irvine Store An armed robber toot $92 in a Wednesday afternoon holdup at Bob's Re:a:all Drug Store in Irvine, police said. The lone gunman waited until the store at 14429 Culver Drive was empty of customers and de· maoded that a clerk give him all the money in the cash register. Detective Ron Veach said. The suspect is described aa white, 5-foot·ll, in bis early 20ll with dark hair and a two and one-half inch scar on bis left cheek near bis moutlt. He fied in a 1975 brown, four· door Buick with a dama1ed rieht front fender, police said. No one was hurt in the robbery. Une at the club. The woman who was rolling the dice threw a sl:a:, which became the "point," then a nine and on the third roll threw a seven which meant the house lost. •'Three rolls and it was all over with," said Binion. Binion awore be did not know the man's name, but added he would not releue it lf be did. Further. be aaid, be didn't think the Internal Revenue Service knew the man's identity either. "They're going to be lootihc around for him," Binion said. State Unveils Upper Bay Cleanup Plan By·S'l'l:VE llA&BLE °' .. ...., .......... A dredCiDI plan calling for re- moval ot f"OUlhly half the amount of sand and silt that wubed into the Upper Newport Bay last winter was proposed Tbunday evening by state Fish and Game officials. The long-awaited dredging scheme, cited as the first mltjor step in restoration of the cloeaed state-owned ecological preserve, was sbown to a small audience gathered in the Newport Beach City Council chambers. Fish and Game officiala bad been on order to detail by ~ tember bow the(,d spend $'700,000 on a bay cleanup project. Their answer was this: A hydraulic pumping system on a barge will suck up around 230,000 cubic ya.rda of silt and sand from the upper reaches ot the bay and deposit the spoils on oneoftwodiaposalaites . The dredging process, official.a noted, could lake as long as 300 daya with another year long wait lor the dredcing material to dry before lt can be trucked to a permanentdiaposalaite. Ron Hein, a Fish and Game of. flcial, said the plan, as now envlalaned, would cut a banana· shaped channel from an area parallel to Galaxy Drive to the top oftbebay. (See BAY, Pa1e "1) Dense coutal fog Fri· day moming with baiy aun1bine Friday af· ternooo. Lows tmigbt 58 at the beacbel, es iDJand. Hi1bl Friday mid 70. to mld·IOa. Also, Sand Canyon ball been identified u a possible route foe large dump trucks on ~eir way to the planned Bee Canyon Sanitary 1.andftll in the foothills north ol the city. Tbe Irvine City Councll Tues· day told~ public worb staff to belin drawiDC up plans for the wideniq of the road that is 1up- poud to be able to handle 55 mpb t.rdlc. ... Newport Settks Airport Suit 1'be-department bu $10,000 in fundinl from the lll0-81 Irvine City eu.s,et to deslp the road and tbe Inine Company mlPt 1 help fund tbe desl1n 1tuay, llucbow laid.. lludmw promJaed the council that loeal historical autboriti• will be inYOl•ed in the road· nlenlallbady. Tbere II u effort under way '° ... U.lnlDe o.o.raJ .... oa tM state U.t of blstorical 1tus, .. laid, addiftl lt .. .. al ta. oldest 1trudw.. in Newport Beach officials claimed today that by tettlinl a lawsuit qalmt Oraqe co:::.r. they've received • le1ally - ln1 promlle that jet nolle at John Wayne Airport will never increase. ''Tbil is a bi1, bl• vtctGry ... commented Mayor Jackie Heather. ''Tbll not oa17 ,_ • to tbe barlalDlal table but it puts ua rllbt in the drlyer'• Hat." Tbe a1reemen't approved Wednesday by tbe Board of 8uperNon al9o clean tbe • ., fOf' tbe C*llllt.1 '° oureblH u ICl'el ol lancf cm the alrport'I Whtlkll . against the county laat June. bad planned to 10 to court Oct. 2 and request that the land purchase in Coata Meaa be blocked. "Hopefully," the mayor con- tinued, "tbia wm be aeen aa a positive atep b)t thoae who've ~ewed Newport u a bunch ol obetructlonlata." In ~ to Httle tbe autt. tbe city received aaaurance9 that tbe CCMmty would Dot W\ tbe dally 41·nllbt Ud mtll a ~ plan and envil"onmmtal ltudJ ol the airport ii completed and ac· cepted by aupervilon, tlie airport in aooperatioa with Newport Beach. "Tbll_ llD 't a COSM>Ut and peo- ple 1bouldn 't loot at . it that way," ltreued Mayor Heather. "The suit could have bouibt ua time, maybe several yean, but now we really can get aomewta.re." Newport ctQ Attorney BUib COlftD aplalned that tbe dtJ'• 1ult, wbleb arped the CCMll1 abould complete an envlroammtal atud1 before buJ· inl tbe land, bad an ucelleDt cbance ol aueceu. •:t:: Heather said after reae qreemeat on the new oe:at atep is to wort on a DOiae control prosram. She claimed the current DOiae poUcy "hu no teeth in it." . "The moat tbat'a been done ao far ii a few letters to airlines admonWttn• operators for mat- inl too much DOiie,'' abe aaid. •'And that Just won't do it." Tbe ~ interelted in draft. inl a Pl'Oll'am aimed at eneoura•l•I operatora to purcb .. qulMer J9'I and offer· lnl flDmdal *-Uvea.to tboH that do, lln. Heather Hid. Sbe added that Wednelday'a a1reemeat1 abould 10 far lD u1beria1 in "a new era of - '-----------' I tM CttJ. Clty oMclall, who filed a ault tur1her, tbe eouaty acned to adopt a ...._ eoatrol prosram at airport °"ration cooditlona, the cooperation .• ' . • , -'; -A • -· ~ --_. -:-.....,....,,__.._._ .............................. __ .. --..,..,.,_...,_._ .... -_,,.,... ........ _____ .,... __ ....., ---~--~·~------ , .. ~--JVST BREAKING Left &ttm.1 from toda11'1 world Giid "'°"°"°' M1DI dnlfloptulat• V.S. Blocking Sales Of Er1~ines to Iraq . WASHIN<t1'0N IA p I ln an abnapt poUt'y reversal. \be Shale llt•,)annwnl toda) \em1)Uranly bl~ked the pl•nned ule of Ut>neral t-:ll'<'tm· 111a~ 111rh1nt E>ngin~a for ltahan tn1a1es ordered by the lruq1 n1tvy . lkpurtll\t'l\l Sptlkl':..man Jark r annon Satd \ht' de<:11k>n wa3' bas~d 0t1 llw dt't'V''l\lnl( hm1hlit.Y betwt't'O lrao and Iraq 11nd thto American llt>bm' oot h' tak.-aides in the conOlct Ht' K111t.I tht' dt'C'ts •on wu not related to Carter adm inll'ltrat1on ft>a1 ... for th" 3aret • of tht' ~ Amen ran ho4t\111.-a in lt•u11 Ca1u1011 ,u11I the• "1l111U\1J1lrallon would rerons ider It.a de clsiC1n to N1~·k tht' :..ult· onl'<' there• 11' an u.slna ot tenAlons in the rt·~1011 Mlu..-~~ IJ.-,._.rib~• Brilw Srfolw W t\StllNt:TON \;\ P 1 Ck' pile Jud1ment lmpam~d by alcohol , R,•p John Jl'nrette 0 SC , put up "considerable re· sastun<'t"' ~h .. o ao fBI underro\•er a1ent orfe-red ham • '50.000 bribe l>t•(' 1, .w all•ohoh.sm UJlt'r1 who view~ 11 videotape of the m~ng te:.hfwo h>t'a Or Arthur t'h1hp MQbt'r. an Aar Force captain who treated Jtiorettc at u m1hh1r ukohohsm clinic, told Uu: jury at Je•nrette's br1ber tmtl 1n 1 S D1stnct Court "The moral 1·0J t' mi.hlll-d by his parents was still somehow trying to yell fo1 his attention " · . A federal grand Jun ba:. charged that Jenrette and hJs. co defendant, bus111c!li.Olan John Stowe of Rictm1ond, Va . s_plil a $50,000 bn~: on D1>c 6, two days after the vl_d~taped pl~ting. .H1u1 KiU.-d bff L.l Coaauy DepU1fin SAN GA AR 1 EL 1Al'1 Two county . sheriff's deputies investigalm~ a prowler call today shot and killed a man who re portedly threatenud them with a knife, a department spokesman reported. . . 'd ·r· d b lh d The deputies who were not 1mmed1ately t ent1 te Y e e· partment, investigated several reports of a prow.ler near a railroad right-of.way behind the 4900 block of Acacia Street in an unincorporated area. . . A man deputies stopped to question at lhe sate aU-:gedly pulled a knife from his pocket and walked ~oward them. 1gnor· ing repeated orders to stop. a spok~sman said. Rabi DelofP Cuho11 ReltlflPO Tran11ter FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. CA~) -The first _planeload ~f Cuban refugees being transferred from a relocation ce~ter in Florida to Fort Chaffee was diverted today because of ram and a short runway at Fort Smith airport near here. A second Oighl from Eglin Air Foree Bas~. Fla .. was due to land at Chaffee later in the day. Hor•gflfJP Raf.-Hi•" 14 Perrent LOS ANGELES -Great Western Savings & Loan Assn. has increased its home mortgage rate to 14 percent. an increase of a quarter or a percent. f'rom Page .-\ I BAY PLAN ... The cut in the middle of tht bay. he said, would reduce the deplh to seven feel below sea level. As a point of comparison, he ex- -plained, the top of the bay cur· rently is roughly three feel above sea level. Water would return to much o1 the top or the bay, he said, when the project is complete. Fish Ufe an d an increase in bird population would presumably follow. The plan's only hitch appeared to be where the bay's muck would be placed. A . number of Eastbluff resi- dents. armed with printed warn· ings cir culated the day before the meeting, said one of the proposed -dump sites was within feet of Back Bay Drive homes. "This stuff is going to stink," objected Bud Quist. who said his home is adjacent to the proposed dump site. He was joined by several neighbors in urging Fish and Game offi cials to push for an Thug Grabs $6,000 Ring An Irvine wo man, about lo enter her Deerfield home alter a Wednesday morning shopping trip, was approached by a g unman who deman.d ed .her $6,000 diamond wedding nng. police said. Lynn Blackburn gave it to rum and he then Oed on his motorcy· cle. He is described as being white 20 to 30 years old, six·fool· two, i65 pounds, with dark hair and a three-day growth of beard. Mrs. Blackbum wasn't hurt. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT A-r1N-Pr~\\4*nl •"O ftVbt ....-r ""*"''' •••wll E1MO' , .......... """""'' .. M•~•alll<I Edotor CMn.tH l."' l\\,.\~\•M'• ~ntqinQ £dlUW a lternattve sit~ ol\ Irv\oe Company property on the in.land side of Jamboree Road. ·'This is the first good step we've had," commented Newport yacht broker John Miller, "and someone may.. have to give a little and if it smells, tough -the wind wil I shift eventually.'' A number of people, incl~g Assembl ywoma n M a ri a n Bergeson and Newport Be.ach Mayor J ackie Heather, praised the plan as a good first step. ·'What's really caused the PS:Ob- lem ·' said Newport Planning Co~ missioner Allen Beek. "is the heavy development on tbe San Diego Creek. ··If the county had put its dollars toward proper control of these developments instead of throwing it down a rathole on these worthless NIWA <Newport- 1 rvine Was te Mana~ement Agen cy) ~aper·shuffl.rn g ex- ercises, things wouldn t be so bad,•· Beek said. Fish a nd Game offi<:ials cautioned lhat all $700,000 wtU be spent on the actual dredging and that money will have to be fo~d to pay for removal o! the spoils from the disposal site. Also, they stressed, the depart- ment must obtain permits from the state Coastal Com mission, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Regional Water Quality Control Board before the dredging can begin. UP Pf It ItfWPOHT BHY ECOlOGICAL RESERVE ·Waddill €I aims Fraud Or William Wiaddlll was bllck In Orantie Counly Superior Court W ~docitday. 'fhe phy1iic11m unsucceaafullY proaecuted twlc~ berore for tbe de•th or a retull rouowlnar • 11alln~ abortion in 1977-Hked • jury for damaaea stemming from llfl alleged $500,000 busi· ot1u IUlilll he surre red thcouah punhaae of the Huntington II arbour Beach Cl u b seven YC llU &10 Attorney Michael Richman. represent ing the Westminster· based obstelncian. claimed in opening arguments Wednesday that his cli ent was cheated out or the hall million dollars through the actions or attorney Jerome Bame and Frank Janette , once a i,tockholder in the beach club. Waddill contends Bame con- spired with Janette to defraud him and another partner, Or. Robert Trace. The beach club ultimately went bankrupt, leading lo financial difficulties for Waddill that during his murder trials prosecutors used as a possible moli ve for his allegedly killing a •retua to avoid costly malpractice litigation. Ric hman said Janette, a neighbor Of Waddill's in Hunt· ington Harbour. approached the physician in 1973 about purchas· ing the beach club. Waddill agreed to go along with the venture, the attorney sald. and joined a corporation that included Trace to buy the club for $2.2 million. J anette retained Bame, he s aid , to he lp a rrange the purchase. But Richman c laim ed that Bame m isrepresented b y $260,000 the amount Janette in· vested in the venture. He also claimed that Bame shou.ld have known that Janette had taken $200,000 or the $2.2 mimon of- fered by the corporation for the club. . He said Bame advised Waddill and directors of the club, who had discovered the illegalities, t o forget Janette's action because bringing them to the at- tention of authorities would jeopardize efforts for refinanc· ing. f'N*' Page A I SPACE •.. with some thoughts on current science fiction movies. -"Star Wars:" "I e njoyed it the first time I saw it and the second time. too. But didn't you find it strange that in the bar· r oo m scen e beings fro m separate planets are capable of breathing the same atmosphere." -"The Empire Strikes Back:" "When I saw it I was troubled because most people in this country do not discriminate between those things that make logical sense and those that don't." -"Close Encounters of the Third Kind:" "Parts of that movie were beautifully done. But any extraterrestrial beings we encounter are not likely lo look like the Pillsbury Dough Boy." -.. Alien :" "It comes from the old school. It suggests that there might be another kind of terrestrial being that is n't friendly." If movie producers bad bothered to Laite advantage ol available scientilic data all of the movies could have been more realistic, the scientist said. During a question and answer period that followed hls talk no one asked the scientist about Ute color slides of Jupiter and Mars he had shown. MAP 1HOW1 PLAN FOR UPP!A UY llLT REMOVAL Pwopoul ,, ........ Good Flrat ....,. ' . ' : .. --' ------.,,.,. ---------~- Citg Ball \'isiior Why would a giant turkey buzzard hang around Laguna Beach City Halp The big bird perched pminouS:ly on a telephone pole across from citr of!ice_s .!1uring the ~unch hour Wednesday as unnerved city officials looked on. The city has financial problems, but city employees didn't need this bird to remind them. ·...,. , .. Oil Tankers Mo~e Despite Conflict LONDON CAP) -Tanker traf· of Lloyd's intelli~ence deoart· fie m oved n ormally today ment,toldTheAssociated Press. through the Strait of Hormuz. the Lloyd's monitors w~rld ship· world's main oil artery• despite ping movements. the escalating lran·Iraq war, the intelligence department of On Monday night . Iran Lloyd'sofLondon reported. declared its coastal waters war A spokesman for Shell in zones and ordered shipping in the London also said its information Persian Gulf to follow prescribed was that the giant tankers which routes after passing through the carry more than 40 percent of the Strait. Western world's oil supplies were Although the rest of the world's plying in both directi~ns ~lb oil needs were cushioned by the the 35-mile-wide straJt , "albeit a current glut in lhe world market little slower then usual." a n d i m porting n at ions ' The assurance came amid stockpiles. the shutdown of the mounting fean, and urtconfirmed Abadan refmery forced Iran's In- re ports, that the fighting ~ad terior Ministry to impose a brought oil traffic in the Persian n ationwide ban on sales of Gulftoanearstandstill. . gasoline, diesel fuel and kerosene "Traffic appears to be passll\g to private customers today and through the strait ~ith?ut Friday. The announcement said hindrance and the routmgs am-only taxis and -PUblic lran&port • r... I · g emment vehicles WOtlld gel fuel on-~t.be _, wsed. bY.~·~ r.u1an o~. basi·s of their average daily con· are being observed , Roge r Lowes. casualty reporting officer sumption. * * * * * * f'ro• Page Al MIDEAST FIGHTING • • • ent but the war threatens lo halt -shipments from other oil- p rod uc in g countries in the Persian Gulf. Baghdad Radio said Iraqi troops punched 12 miles into Khuzestan province and out· flanked Iranian garrisons at KhorramshPV and Abadan, kill- ing so soh ers . It said Iraqi troops seized the railway that connects the two cities with Tehran, the Iranian capital 340 miles lo the northeast. Baghdad Radio said the railroad seizure cut the two cities off from reinforcements promised by the Iranian govern- ment, adding: "The two cities are doomed. Their surrender is imminent." The Iraqi command said its troops and tanks seized the Ira- nian border town of N aftshah to- day while other Iraqi forces raised the flag over Mehran. 90 miles to the south. • Iraq said its troops took Mehran on Wednesday after completing the capture of lhe major Iranian border town of Qasr-e ·Shirin , 350 miles southwest of Tehran. taking 351 • prisoners and pursuing Oeeing Iranian soldiers to Sar.e-Pol- Zabab, about 20 miles inside lhe border. Iran conceded its troops retreated in the Mehran area and said the Iraqis also seized nearby Salehabad. An Iranian communique said fighting was continuing in the Qasr ·e ·Shirin area and claimed the invading Iraqi forces had been forced to retreat. The Iranian news agency Pars quoted a communique saying Iranian forces captured the lra- 9i border post of Chalamche. t'ars did not specify the location of this post and Chalamche does not appear on major maps. Final Rites Friday for Mr. Williams Longtime farmer and fourth generation Californian William J . Willia ms Jr., who served from 1967 to 1976 as vice presi- dent and general manager of the lsvine Ranch agricultural division, died al tbe age of 71. The Laguna Hills resident succ umbed Monday at South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna alter a career of more than 40 years in the agricultural industry fro m Mexico to Oregon. Funeral services for Mr. Williams will be at noon Friday in Pacific View Memorial Park Mortuary Chapel, Corona del Mar, with interment to follow there after Masonic rites. During Mr. Williams' career with the Irvine Company, be was responsible for all citrwr and other tree and ground crops in addition to livestock raising. He was. more recently, senior agricultural con s ultant for Boyle Engineering Corporation. which has 80,000 acres under cultivation in the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys. Born on rus family's farm in Turlock. Mr. Williams was graduated in 1930 from what woul d become California State Polytechnic University of San Luis Obispo. H e was preside nt of the Council of California Growers and for six years was a member or the UC Riverside Chancellor's Advisory Commit- tee. Social a nd service or- ganizations included the YMCA and Boy Scouts of America: Scottish and York rites; Al Malaikah Shrine and the Red Cross of Constantine. Survivors j.nclude his wife, Mary Taber Williams ; daughters, Miss Laura E . Williams of San Diego and Mrs. Marcia W. Snidow of Irvine; a sister. Mrs. Plinio Madonna, of Cayucos. and two grandchih$ren. ... CALIFORNIA ~Canal' I Reaches Ballot? IACRAllENTO CAP> -Oppo. •nll of tbe Peripheral c...a IQ a.be)' an lubmiltiq more ttaaa twiu tbt auml»tr of 1loat\lnll needed Lo qua11fy • relennctvm IOI' tbe ballot. Tbe CoallUon To Stop lbe Pertpberal Canal 1ald .,..._. day lt would submit more tbu 750,000 alpatura If et least Ml, llt are re1l1tered voten, tbe referendum will be on the ballot at the 1112 primary, or any earlier apec1al elttUoa Cftelrr ~,_, • ...., LOS ANGELES t APl A private study ls bein1 ronducted lo see whether a SOO·acre area ... next Lo the USC campus can be lumed inLo a maJor comm~ttial· (_sr._.4Ti_E _____,,) industrial center to attract jobe and people. The s tudy should be completed next month. Pushing for ·the ambitious project is Ted Watkins, a leader of the Watts Labor Community Action Committee, who said be would like to see the area turned into another "Westwood," the community near UCLA. Oti.-1 lo lletirr SAN FRANCISCO CAP > - Board chairman Harold J . Haynes of Standard Oil Co. of California says be plans to retire next May after 34 years with the company and seven years in the top post. George M. Keller, S6, was chosen at the Socal 's board meeting Wednesday to succeed Haynes, who will be SS next week . Keller, now vice- chairman of the board, joined Standard Oil in 1948. C'rf..e Ftatd S~I LOS ANGELES CAP> -A . program offering cub rewards to help fight crime on city. buses was announced by Southern _ tilif ornia Rapid Tnn&it Dia- •. trict officials. • The ·reward system revealed Wednesday is part of a statewide "We TIP" program offerinc up to $500 to informants who help convict those involved in RTD-related crimes. This is the latest attempt by tbe RTD to combat rising violence on buses. According to latest statistics, vandalism costs an estimated SJ million an- nually. 8'aze C'onl ained SOLEDAD CAP> -An arson fire that spread over 2,000 acns of brush near Pi·a•acles . Nati<*tal Monumeut in Monterey · Couo\y .,as been contained, the California Department of For•try says. The fire, which broke out Tuesday afternoon, was COD· tained late Wednesday and was ell"pected to be controlled this mornine, a forestry spokesman said. No injuries were reported. ( .JOIN TllB IUl:PUllUC t I ~.·Republic Home / • Loan I e ~ 19772 MacArthur BMij ~ . lrvtne.CA92715 , (714)851-(>991 I 1-Ucnwd-Brokirr----i lorgaiN "'* $.50 en lourd I MrY SorwdDy In OM-MKS ............. BOllGrftl "" Peets Fred Astaire poses with the "Pied Piper" award as wife, Robin, smiles approval. The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers honored the 81-year- old entertainer with its highest honor in a ceremony Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Astaire has been an ~SCAP member for 30 years by virtue of his songwrit- mg. Meteor Flashes Over Three States By fte Auodaled Presa Authorities say a large meteor sailed over Arizona, New Mex· ico and California, where it may have landed. / And a meteorite popularly known as the •'Old Woman Meteorite" returned home Lo California on Wednesday after 18 months of study by scientist.a at the Smitbaooian Institution. Police in several western ciUes said people reported seeing a falling glow in the sky south-southwest of Tucson about 8:30 p.m. Wednesday. 'PDIA OOUNTY SBE&IFrs deputies went to one area west of Tucson, loolcing for a possible downed airplane, while a county Department of Public Safety helicopter hovered above, findine notb.ig. "11. definiJely was a ~eteor," said Lanny l!,crCulio, team supervisor of the Phoenix Sky Harbor loternatiooaJ Airport Control Tower. "We saw it from up here. We must have bad 150 call~ a~ it .. A lot of people tboug.bt it was a plan~ crashing, but that s 1D1poss1ble. You can't see a plane crashing in Tucsoo from PhoeoiJt or New Mexico." He said a Federal A viatioa Administration official in Los Angeles I.Old him that the meteor landed in California "but that be didn't know where. They've bad a lot of reports fro~ all around California." THE NATIONAL WEATBEa Service in Phoenix was one of the few places to miss the show. "We didn't see it," a spokesman said. Old Woman Meteorite, siad to be the largest ever found in the United St.ates or Canada, now is 15 percent lighter because Smitbaonian scientists sliced away 942 pounds of it.a 6,070-pouod bulk for research. Composed mainly of nickel and iron, the rock bas been mount· ed and was scheduled to go on eltbibitioo Saturday at the Bureau o/ Land Management's station in Barstow. SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY bad sought a court injunction to prev~nt the SD)ithsoni~ !to~ cutlina into the meteorite. County "Officials argueCI that s1.icmg at would mutilate a rare specimen from space. Alt.bough a federal judge turned down the motion, Smithsonian scientists agreed to cul away less than· they bad originally planned. The meteorite was discovered by three prospectors in the Old Woman Mountains nep Twentynine Palma in 1976. BW PROUOL Y ANNOUNCES THE RE-OPENING OF O U R HAIRWORKS SALON Come meel our taJemed new staff of srylis1s at BW Newpon Beach. Let them pamper yvu with perso nalizec..J service and guidance in all phases of hair c..Jesign, custom hair colo r, pred iclable perms anti comple1e makeup. For an•appointmem, phone 714-759-1211, ext. 260. Halrwo rks Salon, Newpon Beach B~ llOC~5 WI l)U I~~ NEWPORT BEACH ,. -Olly~ ... ,,Ill'" 1 NEWPbRT BEACH. 83 FUhlon_ls~ 759-1211 , Mon· Thurs· Fri 10·9, Tues·Wed·8al 10 6, Sun 12·5 , ~. Seplltmber 25, 1tl0 • Tentative Settlement Reported Today HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Ne1otlators for 1trikin1 t e levision . and film actors reached a tentative contract a1reement with producert early today, a union spokeswoman Hld. If ratified , the •1reemeot would end the strike by some 67 ,000 acton that be1an July 21 and which has virtually shut down the induatry and delayed the start of the new fall television season. The tentative agreement oo a three-year contract came early this . morning after a bargaining session ol nearly 19 hours, said Screen Actors Guild spokeswoman Kim Fellner. "ATS A.M. <PDT) a tentative agreement was reached between the act.on and the producers and that followed a final 18~-bour bargaining session," said the producers' spokesman Phil Myers. ''The SAG and A FTRA (American Federation of Television Radio Artists) boards will meet starting this weekend to approve it," he said. "After that, there will be a ratification process by both of those groups. And each board will decide when the actors can go back to work pen_dln~ ratification. San Onofre To Reinforce Heat Sleeves How's this for a job offer? Rec.eive $500 fortwo days work, expenence not necessary. It was enough to prompt 400 job seekers to fill out applications for 100 jobs at the San Onofre nuclear generating station. "We 've quit taking applications," a Southern California Edison Co. spokesman said Wednesday. After three days of training - during which the chosen applicant.a will receive $100 per day -they will spend two days installing metal sleeves inaide 7 ,500 small beat exchange tubes on three geoeraton in Unit One at the San Onofre plant. Wort ts limiteCI to two days because that's the maximum allowed for any possible radiation exposure. The tubes have sediment buildup and corrosion on their interiors, and the sleeves will reinforce the old tubes. The F.dison spokesman said no firm date bas been set by the nuclear Regulatory Commission for the work, but the utility bopes to get under way within a few weeks. Train Delayed OAKLAND CAP ) -Ao "electrical overload'' caused a Bay Area Rapid Transit train filled with commuters to sit for about seven minutes inside an JlPPl'oacb to the trans-bay tube, a BART spolre$man said. The 10- car train was move d back toward the Oakland West station where passengers were un- loaded . / pendiq ratification. "So in terms of when the pl"C>' ducen 10 back into production, we would have to wait and see what their decision is." However, Ms. Fellner said the unions could send the actors back to work pendin1 ratification. "IT'LL TA.KE TWO and a half or three weeks for the whole ratification process," she said, since the acton would vote on the pact by mail. The contract includes a 15 per- cent increase in minimum salaries for the lint 18 months, and 15 percent for the second 18 months, for a compounded in- crease of 32.25 percent over the life of the contract, Myers said. Actors c urrently earn a minimum of $235 a day or S78S a week. Fellner said the tentative agreement also included in· creased pension and welfare benefits, a strong n o n - discrimination program, im- 'l.Atng Walkout' proved wortiq conditions for minon and an overhaul of work- inl schedules. NEGOTIATIONS BAD pro- 1reased more rapidly aince actors and producers •&reed a week aco on a complex formula lbat would live actors a share of the lucrative home video market. 1bat iaaue had been a major stumbling block in negotiaUona. Work would resume allllOlt immediately after lbe strlk• on new prime-time series for the ABC, CBS.. and NBC television networks . But network spokesmen have said it would take at least three to four weeb befor e any new half-hour episodes could be broadcast and six to eight weeks before any b~ur·long show could go on the air. The slrilte has virtually baited the new fall television seUODI and forced several thou.sand non-performing craftsmen and others dependent on the movie- TV industry out of work. PSA PilobJ' Strib Groumls 200 F/,ighbJ SAN DIEGO CAP) -A pilots' strike shut down Pacific Southwest Airlines today, and other airlines were besieged by the San Diego-based carrier's stranded passengers. Pi~et lines wer~ set up at airports in Los Anseles, San Franct.Sco and Sao Diego, -and reservation clerks said telephone lines were jammed. The 200 flights flown daily by PSA to and from those cities as well as Phoenix, Ariz., and Mexico were canceled. "We're ready for a long walkout," said a s pokesman in San Diego for the 500 striking pilots and rugbt engineers. The strike, the first in PSA's 31-year history, came OD the r sec~nd .anniversary of the mid-air colliaion between a PSA Boein& 7Z7 Jetliner and a light plane over San Diego that killed 144 people. THE WALKOUT BEGAN at 12:01 a.m .. said PSA spokesman Skip Myers, after 11 months ol negotiating failed to produce a new agreement. "I doo't see a quick settlement in sight when we are so far apart on everything,'' Myers said this momin1. He said PSA will honor its charter ru1bt reservations with management personnel. but will not attempt to operate com-merciaJ. flights. . . "~r airlines .have agreed to accept our tickets," Myers s&Jd. Many are adding a number of flights to pick up the slack." PSA is the nation's ~3th largest .carrier based on passencer volume. The walkout idled a 28-Jet fleet and 3,700 airline employees besides the pilots and flight engineers. -A TOTAL OF 11 CITIES and 25,000 daily passengers are affect- ed by the strike. In addition to carrying a majority of airlines' commuter flights within California, PSA bu fli&bta to Nevada and Arizona. . Talks broke down Wednesday night when the airline rejected a reduced pay demand by the Southwest Flight Crew Association which represents PSA pilots. ' "1bere is virtually no hope that I can see for any k.iDd of settle- ment now,'' said Bryan Conn.. a senior captain who beads the u - sociation. AN AllU.JNE SPOKESllAN said two demands by the pilots w$ ere "totally unacceptable." Those were for pay of almost 100,000 aooually for senior pilota flying Boein& ma and l>C-s.tos and for fewer working hours. . The ~ilots have demandetl a 35 percent pay raise over two years while PSA offered a 29 percent raise. At present, salaries range from about $10,000 annually as a start for second officers to $70,000 for senior pilots. The pilots' previous contract expired lut December. A federally mandated 30-day "cooling off" period ends today. • 1/2 Off-For a llmited time. Designer knit sport shirts. Save 50% on our most prestigious designer labels. Enjoy the comfort and good looks of 100% cotton knit. Notice the contem· porary detailing. At this \ price why not buy more than one. Navy, cream, brown, white, tan. S-M·L·XL. Reg. 40.00 19.90 silverwoods 41'AIHION18LA•, NDIPORT MACM Orange Coast Daily Pilot Editoriai P!HJ.e. miiiliillllillilll ............................................................ . AC I Ro~rt N. Weed/Publlstwr ThorNl1 K"vll/Edltor Barbar• Krelblch /Edltorlal Pacae Editor Town' Center Plan Finally in Motion The long awaHed U niversity Town Center commercial complex acrot.1 Campu1 Drive from UC Irvine finally appears to be matins Madway now that the Irvine City 'ouncil hu approved plans for the »-acre prOJect. The OOWlCll gave ulltlal approval to the 1orun1 for the commercial center as far back u 1972 However.•• with other areas of the clty , the Irvine Company haa bffn more &nterestC'd in lu<"rative rHldential development than commereial growth In an effort to encourage commercial development In Univensity Town Center. the council Uf'd approval of 4,000 residential wilts planned to be built near UCI to ttw> devl'lopment or the S!>·a Crt' commercial eenter G1vttn thost.> gu1dt.>l1nes. the company moved ahead with plans for thtt one nullton.square root rommerc1al eomplex Tho5e-plans. approved las t TuHd•>' by the t'Ouncll. call ror a 250 room hote l and a number of rf'staurants and retail shops. among other lh1ng$ The approval ean be seen as a pos1ttve developme nt in two main ways Firstly, UC l's students and s taff as well as people living near the campus need the kind of retail services the commercial cent e r will offer Secondly, the council's success in inducing the Irvine Company to develop much·rteeded retail businesses bodes well for othe r comme r ce ·s tarved areas of the city Worth Preserving Stately oak and eucalyptus trees now line Sand Canyon Avenue as it goes from Barranca Road on the south to the Santa Ana Freeway on the north. Like many roads in Irvine. Sand Canyon is m a state of transition. It is changing from a rural farm road primarily used to get to the now·historic Irvine General Store to a modem street that will be used by large gravel trucks on their way to the proposed Bee Canyon Dump and vehicles going to the planned animal control facility. While everyone recognizes the necessity that the avenue be improved, it is a sad thing to see a historic old road turned into a nondescript modem through way. A balance should be struck in changing old Sand Canyon. . Of primary importance are the beaut~ul . tr~ that now line the road. They should be saved 1f rt 1s at all possible . . . The Irvine City Council at its last meeting told the public works department to begin a study on what the ne w Sand Canyon will look like. That study should carefully addr ess ways in which those trees can be preserved. Sad Aspect of Growth The lrvine Police Department has announced plans to establish a three· man undercover narcotics team. F\Ulding for the e ndeavor was included in the 1980·81 city budget , adopted several weeks ago by the Irvine City Council The team will be trained in Sacramento before bitting the streets in J rvine around the end of this year. It is a sad reality that Irvine has grown to a size where undercover narcotics officers have become necessary. Howe ve r. this seems to be the only effective way of meeting a very real drug problem. Currently, Irvine police enforce drug laws only when they get a lip, someone files a complaint or an officer actually sees a drug violation in progress. By the end of this year, undercover officers will be out in the field searching for drug violators. The new narcotics team is as much as anything, a symbol of the growth of Irvine and its loss of innocence. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those or the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is 1nv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (71 ~) 642-432 t. Boyd I Mate Ratings ByL.M. BOYD Item No. 733B in our Love and War man's me is the re- port on a survey. More thar, 2,000 men were asked what they considered important in a matrimonial mate. The quality that got the highest rating was listed as ·'that the woman love him" -81 per. cent. Second, "a sense of humor" -67 percent. Third, "intelligence" -64 percent. Fourth, "self-confidence" - 56 percent. And fifth, "nice legs'' -40 percent. Find it noteworthy that ·'self· confidence" beat out "nice legs." Far back in the pack were "pretty face " at 33 per· cent and "big buslline" at 16 percent. About 80.000 Americans were so badly hurt when they fell in bathtubs last year that they bad to be hospitalized. You'd think, therefore. that somebody would Invent a soft bathtub. And somebody hu. Dear Gloomy Gus Some people who choose to ll ve on hillsides seem to think there's a apeelal "a llde rule" tbat permit.a them to aUp out from all reapomlfMUty with the allele. D.M. A small Seattle firm has come out with a tub that's an inch thick polyurethane shell covered by a puncture·proof vinyl. If you slip, you land in a cushiony manner. l gather. And the foot.holds are said to be a lot better on the soft sur· face. Did I teU you more Indians live in New York City right now than were there when Peter Minuit bought Manhat- tan for $24 worth of whatever? Q . Why do ambulances have the word "ambulance" spelled backwards or upside down or however across the front? A. So drivers ahead can read it clearly in their rear- view mirrors. New Yort Yankee Re&lie Jackson lD tribute to Tom Seaver: "He's ao 1ood that blind people come to the park just to bear him pitch." The island of Greenland is bigger than the continent of Australia. Q. Can you buy beer and wine lD lru? A. Not le&ally. But a few restaurants there reported17 serve wine lD pop bottles to known C!Ultomen. ADd an or· der for tea in some restauranta ia a ~ request for beer. Q. Ii lt true that panotl kUI 1beep? A, One tort of parrot oaly, yea. TbekeaofNew Zealaad. It attadm aDd deYoun pqwn tbeep, lncndilQ. ~ I Jack Anderaon • Mideast Nuke PoHcy Prepared WASHINGTON In an om lnout developmnt. Presldml Carter ha1 laaued secret dlrec:llv.. to the Penta1oa to prepare the option of ualn1 nuclear we.apons ln the volaUJe Middle Ea.at There have l>Hn Mnta of 1uch a puHibUlty ln the past Carter's 1tatf" of the union addrea• I H t January. fur eaample, declared that "an auempt by MO)' nut111de force to a••n control ol Uu- P~n1an GuU will be re aarded as an assault on the vilaJ anterest.s or the United Stat.es C and l will be repelled by use ol any means necessary ... " And Rob er t K omer. undersecretary of defense for policy. publicly stated that if con venllonal deterrents in the Middle East failed. the use of nuclear weapons would be cons idered. But in secret directives, the president has spelled out the n\Jclear option clearly and explicitly. IN PRESIDENTIAL Decision Me morandum No . Sl , Carter outlined a new U.S. nuclear policy for the Middle East. But this memo was ignored in the furor over Presi dential Directive 59, which changed U.S. mlaaUe t.ar1eta In the Soviet Union. The contentl of POii No. ~I and related documents, lncludln1 a directive to tbe Strateaic Air Command from Defense Secretarf Harold Brown, are des sned to ''1l1nificantly dearade Soviet ~apabilitles to project military power In lb~ Middle Eaat·Persian Gull region for a period of at least 30 days." To accomplish this, the president ordered the formulation of various military option.a, my associate Dale Van Atta has learned. The most significant of these was the ''limited strategic option" for use by the commander of the Rapid Deployment Force, Gen. P.X. Kelley. SUBIECT TO the us ual presidential authorization for use of any nuclear weapons. this option involves 19 nuclear bombs carried by B·S2 bombers. The aim is to keep Soviet forces from invading Iran, and the weapons include both B·S7 bombs, with an explosive power about equaJ to the Hiroshima bomb, and the more powerft.'1 B ·61 variable yie ld thermonuclear bombs. Sources said Carter ordered his planners to formulate several additional limited strategic options, as well as a more far·reaching "selective attack option" that would target Russian lacilities near Iran, lncludlo1 mllltary b11e1 and alrfieldl inside the Soviet Union. Military experts noted tbat with a &52 force -the SAC'• 5'7th Air Division at Mlnot Air Force Bate. N.D. -already earmarked for Middle East deployment, the bomben would be the moet likely vehicle for nuclear weapons, rather than long·rance miuiles in siJoe in the United States. The bombers are far more nexible, one source pointed out, adding, "If we screw around with our ICBMs, you don't know what the response would be." "Flellible" does not mean "reasonable," however. in the view of some insiders. They contend that the concept of limited nuclear warfare confined to the Middle East is a child·s dream that could become a nightmare for the whole world. "IF WE INITIATE tactical nuclear warfare in that area. we are opening a Pandora's box ," said one Pentagon source who is alarmed at the idea of preparing strategic options for the Middle East. "The Soviets could respond with tactical nuclear weapons against our warships i.n the Persian Gulf area, and who knows where it would go from there?" Footnote : A White House spokesman refused lo confirm or deny the contents of PDM No. st. or t-0 discuss U.S. nuclear policy with respect to the Middle East. JIM•Y'S LATEST: Our political odds man la out wltb bla la teat pick -and it 'a Ronald Rea1an. Unlmpre11ed by the latest polls, Jimmy the Gr-eek •till makes Rea1an a 2·and-one·haU·to-l favorite over Jimmy Carter to win in November. Jimmy baa aeroed in on the states with many elect.oral votes, &l"d here's how he sees Rea1an wlnninl: New York (41) -Carter carried in 19715, but the u.nbappy Jewish voters -1iven John Anderson as a Liberal Party alternative -will tip tbe sc:ales for Reagan. New Jersey ( 17 ) -Ford carried last time. It's close, but Reagan has the edae. Pennsylvania (27) -Carter and Reagan are even ri&ht now, but if Reagan can nail enough of the ethnic vote, he's got it. Florida (17) -Carter won here four years •10. but resentment over his handling of the Cuban and Haitian refu1ee problem in heavily populated Dade and Broward Counties may give the state to Reagan. Michigan (21) -Gerald Ford took the state with S4 percent of the vote. Reagan's not as strong as the native son was, but the depression in the auto industry s hould work to Reagan's advantage. Ohio (25) Carter won by an eyelash IS,000 votes -in 1976. But unemployment in the steel. glass and rubber industries helps Reagan. and the stat.e's Conservative Party, which sat it out last time, is working enthusiastically for Reagan. Illinois (26 ) -Reagan's native·son status and discontent among blue.collar worken put this in the Republican column. WATCH ON WASTE : The Pentagon's philosophy on expenditure of public funds was m ade stunningly clear the other day. One of my reporters called to inquire about a contract for 300,000 laminated·plastic recipe cards to be used by bartenders at the Army's officers· clubs and enlisted men's saloons around. the world. The bids aren't in yet. but the-- c o s t is expected t o run • · somewhere between $5,000 anc1- . ...rt~M9 '$10,000. When my reporter s uggested that perhaps the military pubs could get along - as they have for decades - without official guidelines, the P e ntagon s pokeswoman observed brightly that "even ii it is wasting money." printini the recipe cards will "still be providing jobs lo someone." ................................... ~ ............................................................................................. ~·~ Mailbox Is Real Problem an Excess of Freeways? To the Editor: I'm peeved over pavement payments and I quest~on the headlining question you say is the answer to future highway funding problems. (Toll Roads Answer to Highway Ills?> Your question is not the solu· tion lo those problems, but is rather just another bard and perhaps unnecessary addition to the larger and more import.ant equation which. when solved will answer the most human pro· blems. Truly. it would be foolish to disregard the fact there will be , future funding problems but I believe the reasons for t.bose problems can be eliminated before the fact. Certainly. if the current philosophy of freeway expansion continues there will be money shortages, but, it seems to me, and I've traveled somewhat, there exists present· ly plenty of pavement to get the job done. SUPPOSE INSTEAD of view· inl the lack of money as the potential problem we view the problem as an excess of freeways. Theo, after holding this perspective for awhile many so·caUed future highway funding problems disappear. You may say cessation of bi1hway construction would brin1 on ot.ber problems, which may be true. but maybe tbo9e other problems would be leu costly and complicated to solve. Maybe your beadlinlnl question should be "Highway Ills; Sbould We Toll Over More Roads?" MICHAEL HENDRIE Polled To the l!'.dttor': I recently received a loq dis· tance phone call from Cambriclp -aaldng me if I would amwer quntlom nlatlnl to candldata Carter, Reqan and Andel'IOD for apolliqoqanlutlaD. A"-tbeJ 1atiafted my curiosi- ty tbat .... Dal Colle•• Humor or U1 ldDd of IOUettaU. .. proadl °" nr:;:. I •INICI to ..... q.... wttlaoul ldlllli· fJinl ...,... ..uJ tM ad of tM .............. -· The caller assured me that he was not merely a telephone caller but a "pollster" feeding me pre· determined questions and supply· ing the answers to the general pool or answers from other pollsters asking the same ques. ·lions. The line of questioning was ap- parenUy designed lo determine the convictions or respondents about the three candidates, in· cludingt.hreeor four similarques· lions lo help them determine if the answers agreed with each other -withorwit.hout wavering. THE CALLE• could not assure me that I could receive a copy or the questions with or without my answers -until he consulted with someone else at the other end of the line. No, it was finally de· cided, copies of questions or answers could not be provided. They suggested that Time Magazine regularly reports the results of various polls in case I wanted to judge my answers with others. However, I have no idea why I was selected as a Laguna Beach resident (at random or by predetermination) whose family eamlngsexceedS2S,OOOyearly. Finally I reali&ed that I would be amoog others without knowinl where they lived or an)1hine else about them. At least I answered stronpy enou1h to be jud&ed moderately Uberal. Some of the questions made me answer in favor of all three candidates - like do I believe in the honesty of one candidate above the others. Another question covered the priority of national defense. inl1a· lion and unemployment -mak· tng me wonder bow many replies and what kind would hesitate or not agree with each other! I was asked if my vote would cban1e if there were no debat.es - or lf debates were not to include all three candidates. Maybe thia wu a key questJon but I can scarcely believe that It should serioualy be asked I ARTIIUR WEISSMAN ,.,..., To tbe Dlltor: IUaadafy of Llbya could proH to e¥WJboclY'• 1atJafac· ... ---. lion that bribery had no place in his munificence toward Billy Carter. All he has to do is loan $220,000 to every gas station operator in the State of Georgia. J .W. REID Qui~• Co•ing To the Editor: -.. Many people are of th opinion the only good airport is a closed airport and the only good airplane is in a museum. and the recent tests or a so-called larger quJeter jet ror the 80s seem to bear that out. The noise made by that jet., while loaded only half full, extended all the way down to the coasUine five miles away. So much for the American avia· lion industry's latest product. IOHN WAYNE Airport has been operating under a tern· porary noise variance granted by the California Division or Aeronautics under Section 5062 or the California Noise Stan· dards. The airport is forbidden by law from expanding its CNEL contour lines in any direc- tion. Since the new heavier jets simply move more noise down lo the high.priced homes, there is little the airport can do about US· ing them, and the state can no longer grant vatiances based on hopes for some future quiet jet. The future is here now. It is noisy. but soon it will be quiet. RICHARD TENEFRE La•dlord's Rl•k To the F.ditor: I would like to warp people, if ybu have a piece or property for rent, be careful who you rent it to. Be sure that you have a good rental contract and inquire of a pastor or someone that you have confidence in to recommend you a dependable family to rent your property to. I have a friend who has learned an npensive lesson. They have not collected any rent for three months. One eviction was set aside by the court •hen the renter brou1bt pbony charges aaainst the owner. He dropped the charges, but the eviction has been set aside. and the proceedings will have to be started over. There are a lot of nice families out there looking for a place to Live. They will take care of your property and pay the rent, but be sure that you have a good contract. even with them. The best you can do is still a gamble. JAMES BOLDING \·~· Tribuir To the Editor: Don Wilkes, speaking about Vietnam veterans in a recent article. suggested a parade for Vietnam veterans. What a JUper idea! The time has come to absolve our guilt with this blank· blank war and recognize, before it is too late, the real heroes of Vietnam . . . the veterans. What about proposing a grand parade on a national scale? A parade in every major city celebrating Vietnam Veteran's Day? ll 's time we acknowledged this unique warrior, and said thank you! PETE MEADE Eno .... Progrn• To the Editor: ]; My entire household and I are unequivocally oppoeed to any type of hotel or commercial de- velopment which will lncreaae demands to enlar1e the airpolt facilities. We have been resident.a of •. Newport Beach for 12 yean and:: have seen it expand to incl-*: air pollution, water pollution.:: , noise pollution and four.wheel~ pollution. ·: Enouab la enough -let's stop;: this ."prosresa" before our cttY.: ls totally ruined. LORI GAi~. . -) Letter• from rtadtt• ore 10e1come.; · The rlQld to ~ r.una to /if.:. tpOce or etiminat' fft.I ii r•""*·:! · I.Alter• of .100 IOOrde or '-" di ~:. gion pffftf'lf«, AU ltftn1 _..,tit(.-: chlcN ......,.. Clftd mcdlMf addrai;' '*' ftGftVI maf t.toMMffd °"~ii ,, ••ffidftt ,..,. .. apparntef Poetr, '°"' ... ,,.,,..,,..... . --· l -. I • Laguna/South Coast D I TI O N Your Hometown Dally Newspap~rf VOL. 73, NO. 269, 4 SECTIONS. 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1_, TWENTY·FIVE CENTS Mii Sei Fi Flieks Sell Real Thing? BJ JODI CADSNBSAD ............... The man ln the 1ray pinstriped sult baa beaded aeveral apace mlaaiou to •an and luplter. But W~nesday nisbt be wu on a new mlukxl to save the U.S. llP•<'t profram from a slow death. B. Gentry Lee. mana1er ol m is s i on operations and en•lneerin• for the Juplter Orbiter, traed lo sell bfs UC lrvlne audience on apace ex ploratJon. But tbe colle1~ •tu dent.a seemed more \nl~rtsted ln what ~ thought about sclm ce fiction movtes · Hit UCI talk, "Star Wars Scitnre Flt tion and Sc1enllfic Reallty,'' LS one of flvt-lecturn Lee givell to various audiences around the rountry The bespet'tacled scumt1:sl made at clear Wednesday night that wtule be wa.s walling w das cu111 llcltnct fi ction movies, lt't th" real world ot science that el• cites him. ··1 am taktna the story ol the JOY of science and e:aploraUon directly to the people," he said as he stuted a sllde sa.ow of Jupiter and Mars explorations. "At the end of this lecture you wlll know more than any person a live knew about Jupiter two years ago,·· he promised. Through the pitch blackness Truce Offered Iraqis Seize Vital Rail Line j ., BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -Iraq announced conditions for a truce with Iran and claimed its forces cut off two major cities in southern Iran by seizing the vital Tehran railroad today. While Iraq said it captured US square miles of Iranian border territory in four days of fighting, Iran claimed it pushed back Ira· qi forces in one area and report· ed for the flrll time the cl!'pture of a border post inside Iraq. Jranian jets m ade their deepest penetration into Iraq, bombing a gas refinery at Ayn Zala, 2.80 miles northwest of the Baghdad and 400 miles from the nearest Iranian air base. the Iraqis reported. In Beirut, Iraqi Defense Minister Adnan Khairallah list· ed the goals of bis country u . redefinition of the Iraq-Iran 'mgh Roller' Craps Shooter Wim $777,000 LAS VEGAS (AP> -There's no doubt the player was a hi&b· roller -be walked into Binion 'a Horseshoe Club 1tith ST7'1.000 in cub. And there's no doubt be baa courge -be risked ft all at once. And tbere'a certainly no doubt be wu lucky -be walked out sm.ooo richer. The player, who remained UD· identified, won bis sm ,000 bet Wedne9day Oil the third roll of the dice ln a crape game at the club in Las Ve1as' glittering downtown Casino cent.er. The casino, home of the an- nual big-money World Series of Poter. bas claimed for yean that no bet is too big and gamblen are told they can risk whatever they can afford. "The IUY called previously about betting anywhere from $200,000 to $1 m i llion," Horseshoe Club president Jack Binion said today. "We said, ·Yeah, you can do it'." Binion said be bad had no further contact with the gambler, described only u a Southerner in his 205, until he showed up Wednesday. "He had two little suitcases, one full one and one empty one," Binion said, "and he left with two full ones.... - He said the man bad the $777 ,000 in cash -$100 bills in $10,000 bundles -"and we p81d him off in cash." · The man plunked his entire bet down on the "don't paaa" line at the club. n.e woman who was rolling the dice threw a six, which became the "point,'' then a nine .and on the third roll threw a seven which meant the house lost. "Three rolls and it was all over with," said Binion. Binion swore be did not know the man's name, but added be would not release it if he did. Further, he said, be didn't think the Internal Revenue Service knew the man's identity either. "They're going to be looking around for him.·· Binion said. border, protection of the Arabic· speaking minority in southern Iran and the return lo Arab sov- ereignty of the illands of Abu Mousa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs. The islands were seized by Iran ln 1971. In Rome , tb,e Iraqi ambassador t o Italy said •OEAST NATIONS GO ON ALERT-A3 Baghdad will accept no mediation to end the war unless Iran agrees to return to Iraq ter- ritories that it claims. At U.S. govemme.nt urging, 53 American civilians -46 bwi· nessmen and their families and seven dependenta of memben of the U.S. Em busy staff -left Baghdad by bus for Amman, J ordan, a trip that normally takes 15-18 hours. U.S. diplomata were not beina advised to leave Iraq for 'the time~ A chartered plane arrived in Amsterdam, Netbel'lands,, with other American evacuees from Iraq . They included 241 employees of a New Jeney COG· struclion company and their families. Foreign diplomata said they were making plans to evacuate European, Japanese, Korean and Filipino civilians working in Iraq. Military communiques issued here and in Tehran indicated around and air activity bad not let up. Both Iran and Iraq baited shipmenta of oil, not a m*" worry to the world for the pres- ent. but the war threatens to halt shipmenta from other oiJ. producing countries in the Persian Gulf. Baghdad Radio said Iraqi (See MIDEAST, Pase A%) Audit Attempt Rebuffed NQ l!-und Chicanery, SC Mayor Tol.d BJ8TEVE IUTCllELL °' ....... "" ..... San Clemente Mayor Karoline Koester apparently bu lost her battle to order a 10-year audit ol the city's sewer fund, which she claims is fraught with erron and dlacrepandea. ID a study aeuion Wednesday night, the council majority in· dicated it doubted there wu any Coast ' Weather wrongdoing in the keeping of the boots, and said the finance de· partmeat should be left alone so it "can get its ad together." Mn. Koester baa long coo· tended there are major problems in the city's sewerfund and, ather insistence, the city prepared lengthy reports answering her charges. Among the -mayor's charges are: -Developen failed to pay all sewer and water fees required by city ordinance. -Funds collected by the. city from sewer and water bond sales were not used for related projeda but diverted to other areu ol the city's budget. and be blame s "continued criticism and unfounded al· legations'' against the financede- partment for the frequent turnover. He suggested Wednesday that the City Council direct any further questions regarding the sewer fund to the auditon during the annual preaudlt meeting with the council. And be uted that those questions be formally itemized. He also su11ested that the council conclude that a aipifi· cant contributing factor to the sewer problem "la an inefficient accounting and data procesainl system." He said continued reseattb ol (See AUDIT, Pase AJ) Lee's excited voice explained the aaaeoua atmosphere of Jupiter, the bubbly lakes ol sul· fur found on one of Mars' moons and the fact that there Is a cur· rent of some sort generated between Jupiter and its closest moon. The Voyager mission to Jupiter cost only half a billion dollan or $2.38 per American," explained the scientist. "For $2..35 a year I can give your children an Atlas of the solar system equal to the Atlas of the world you had as a child," be said. Lee is selling the space pro- gram through lectures and a television aeries, •·cosmos," because, he says, for the ftrst time in 15 yean, the United States bas only one s pace ex· ploration project. When the current Jupiter re· port is completed there are no Otg BaU l"isitor more space progl'ams planned. Space exploration will add to knowledge of the earth's history, increase national prestige and productivity and will step up techq,ologlcal advances, he says. "How can it be that you're not willing t o pay $2.35 per Ame rican to go to a real planet," be asks. "Far less than we paytogotoamovie ." Lee had opened the leeture (See SPACE, Page A2) Why would a giant turkey buzzard bang hour Wednesday as unnerved city officials around Laguna Beach City 11all? The bi1 looked·oo. 1be city bu financial problems, bird perched ominously on a telephone pole but city employees didn't need this bird to across from city offices d~g the_h_mc_b __ re_m_ind __ lh_e_m_. ------~- 'Doetor' Suspect Returned to Jail Legal troubles have multiplied for an Orange County man ac- cused of illegally practicin1 medicine and causing the death of a diabetic, followint bis ar· real Wednesday on new charges. Gerald Barnes, 47, who lives at the private Coto de Cua estates development in Trabuco Canyon, was re-arrested late Tuesday on a bench warrant is· sued by Orance County Superior Court Jud&e Richard Beacom. Bail was set at $200,000 in the -..new le1al action taken by Judge Beacom when investigators dis· closed evidence that Barnes bad begun seeking employment aa a doctor again. The defendant already was scheduled for arraignment at 9 a.m . today in Harbor Judicial District Court on two other counts. He bad been free on $2,500 bail since Aug. 22, following bis arrest on three counta involving practic· ing medicine while posing as a doctor. Barnes was subsequently charged with second degree murder in connection with the alleged negligence-related death of John McKenzie , 27, of Anaheim, who died last year of diabetic shock. McKenzie wu seen by the aus· peel at Pacific Southwest Medical Group in Irvine while suffering from uncontrolled diabetes. Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enriabt alleges in the latest action ag8.inst Barnes that he applied for a new job Sept. lS, the day before murder charges were flied. Officials at Wilmington Doctors Office in Compton where Barnes was allegedly seeking employment notified authorities. Officials Of the California Board of Medical Quality As· surance in Santa Ana notified the Orange County District At- torney's Office. Authorities allege Barnes had posed as a doctor for four years, practicing in various Soutbland medical facilities. SA.R RESCUES BA.LANCING A.CT Life and death, precision and peril, are ba.lancing acts in which memben of Search and Rescue (SAR ), code name Marine Angel 1, from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, fmd themselves. SAR recenUy made its 18th medical aid ol the year using the helicopter when it plucked the youthful driver of a pickup from busby terrain after the vehicle had fallen over 1,000 feet down Santiago Peak. The rescue re- quired delicate maneuvering but probably saved the young man's life. (Story, photos Page C8.) Two Brothers File Lawsuit In Land Flap Two brothe.rs who have been trying to develop 28 acres of land oo a Laguna Beach hillside since 1.971 filed suit Wednesday seeking to force the City Council to reconsider a denial of their application. William and Leon Lyon's ap- plication to subdivide the land into 11 building sites and 22.5 acres of open space was denied by the City Council last January on a 3-1 vote with one abstention. The land is near P acific Avenue and the Mystic Hills neighborhood. The ·building sites are mostly on the top of a ridge near Park Avenue and t he open space includes steep slopes that fall into a canyon, said city plan· ner Kyle Butterwick. The council sided with the Mystic Hill Neighborhood As· sociation, which objected to the development proposal because of geologic and traffic con'cerns, said Butterwick. The Planning Commission and city planning staff had recom· mended approval of the project. In their petition for a writ of mandate forcing council re· consideration, the Lyons con- tend that the council members did not have grounds to turn down tbe application. They charged that the council bad approved other similar ap- plications and used "prejudicial abuse" in turning down theirs. In the suit written by Beverly (See LAWSUIT, Page AZ) Dente couta1 roe Fri- day mornin1 with baiy 1an1btne Frida,.-•f · tel'DOCID. Lows toa.lCbt 51 at tbe beacbea. a inland. flitbl Friday mid '10I to midD. -Developer sewer fees have not been used for the purposes in· tended. -Cbar1ea for depreciation • have been fised arbitrarily and ellceulvely and have "disap- peared." But City Jlanaser Geor1e Cara•albo, in a report, told cowadl members h1I finance de-' partmeat bu spent bundreda ol houri and more than $3,500 in an1werin1 llra. Koeeter's questiam. School Bus 'War' Looming? The nsulta, be uid, do lhow -eome ~erron and, the report...._, "some part.a ol the annual financial report an con· tu.==eUlttorthe layman to ." Biil --DO drcumltaneel ii tbere-.,eftdaeeolwroo....., or ebleanery on tbe part of UJODe, tbeNPOl'tstatee. Dem Parts, San Clemente'• newestftuadal dinctor. u.ld h1I reactica llo tbe alleled mllMll' er· l rora11 ••.......,,•eowtaat?'" c.,....._ complaiMd thM the· elt1 laH laacl four f ln•Dce cllreetan In the put four years, A Marine Corps major at Camp Pendleton aa.ya be is ready to "alp a declaration of war, fix bayonets and lead an infutry cbar1e" qalDlt the Fallbrooll Union Hl•b School Dl1trict Board. • "It probably wouldn't 101'e anythlq, but lt would make \II feel a lot better," uld .. .,. Bert Alexander, 1poke1man for a •roupol Marine parents wbobaft been fl1bUn1 to keep tbelr cbUdnn from ~ bUHd to Fallbrook Hllb Se . Tbe pumU mt a eourt battle TUndQ in SaDl>ielO to ntlDd a five-year tuition a1rHmeDt between J'allbrook and tlae CaplltnDo Ualfted SeMol Dia· trtct tbM aUond tbelt daUrdr9 to attmd d ... iD ... ....., Sllll Clemente. Major Alnander said the parenta are launchin1 a new ol· fenaive to have the school dbtrict boundaries chanced ao they will reside le1ally within the Capiatranodiatrict. "The petltione have already been filed with the Oran1e County and San Dleao County boards al education," Alexander said. ••A copy bu allo been sent to the State Board al Education and bu been forwarded to the a.te Real1trar of Votere for verlftcatlonoltbe1lpatun.." Alnander •aid in order tor the ltate board to coulder UMir re- qu•t for a boundary cbup, tbey lleeded to &et the llpatune ol 15 perceatoltbe ........... .--.m their YOtm, pn&ad. Aluander said h1I crwp bad aatbered that muy_...,more. ' ''AU we're dolq now ia waitine for the result. from the reliatrar of voten so we can present our caae," Alesandersaid. "Wedoll't plan toqult." He said the fight will continue eventboulh&lperiorCou.rtJuctce Joaepb Kilaarif refused Tuelday to overturn a previous rulinl by the San Dleso County 1choOI board that the studenta m.ust at· tend school in Fallbrook became they Uveiathe J'allbrookdiatrtct. The pareata wen Q9et when the Fallbrook district board DGt did not eat.er into the tuition aareement this year. Tbe diatrtd 1ald It could not afford to Iola tbe •timated aso.ooo in •late and federal f\IDdl if tbe more than 1JO 1tudeata attended ICbool ouUide the district. The parents' 1roup then -.r- launched a boycott of Fallbrook earlier this month at the begin· Ding of the term, with only 11 ol the 120 student. involved showing up forcluses at Fall brook. The Marine parenta and their children live in the San Onofre bousl.nc ana al the north end of Camp Pendleton. Under the tuition acreement betw~ the Capiatrano and Fallbtook dis· tricta, the trip 10 San Clemente Hilb School only took about 15 minutes. But now that the 1tudenta have been ordered to attend Fallbrook Unlon Hltb School, studenta will bave to ride tbe bus an hour eacb way. Parent. say their cbildren will not be able to participate in sport.a and other after school activities. - . -~----~------------ _..._ ____ ... .... ._.. -·- ) AZ DAIL y Pl!,QT USC ~--JUST BREAKING ]udg Vpho/Js Census V11dercount~gument DE'XtlOIT ~ p ) -A ,~,.... .rud1• Nied today lbal the u JS l'cn~us Hur .. uu l9lt0 f1gu""" itenously 1&nde~un1 the naUon'1 J>Opuluhon, purHl·ularly mlOOnllH, and muat be adjusted before they rnay be ui.t-11 for rt"apport.iorunc Con1ru1 or dbtribut1n1 fl•dcral fumh ln a uat hlt-d bv tht' 1:1t)' ol Detroit. U S. Olatr1ct Court Judge tlora('t' UllmorC' uptt.ld tht' •rTument of lb• nallon'1 sixth lar..:c5t cit that Its J)()pulatlon had bffn underc:ounted In the cens us (i1lm<•t't''s r~altnte \:. a national order which atlecu all cltlea wh1(•h vrotci;tt'(f lh•t tht<1r ll0pulat1ona were undercounted Ml•"..,,. o ... ,.,..~ •rtwSn11r WASlllNG1'0N \Al"'> Despite fuq-ment lmpair-.d by a lrohol, ltt>p J<>hn J enrt'tte. 0 SC.. put up "com•derable re :s a:stunce" "ht>n a.n fo'8l unchlrrover •(lot ottered him a $50,000 hnbt• Ot·r .a. an al<."OhoHsm t'x~r1 who viewed a videotape ot the llllot'tan..: tt"sllhcd toda) l>r Arthur Philip Moser, an Air Force captain who treated Jenrette at a m1htiery alcohohsm clink, told \be jury at J enrette'i. braben · tnal In tJ S Otstnct Court. "The moral code installed by lus pa.rents was sull somehow trying to yt'll ror has allent1oo • A federal grand Jury has charged that Jenrette and bis eo- derendant. businessman John Stowe of Richmond, Va .• s plit a SS0,000 bn be on Dt.>c ti, two days after the videotaped meeting. ''"" liill .. d ,,,, L ' C'O..Ufl ...,,... .... SAN GAB R l EL (AP) -Two county sheriff's deputies investigating a prowler call today shot and kllled a man who re- portedly threatened them with a knife, a department s pokesman reported. The deputies who were nol immediately identified by the de· partment. in vestigated sever~ reports of a prowler near a railroad right-Of-way behind the 4900 block of Acacia Street in a n unincorporated area. LOS ANGELES -Great Western Savings & Loan Aun. bas increased its home mortgage rate to 14 percent, an lncreaae of a quarter of a percent William Williams' Rites Set Friday Longtime farmer and fourth eeneration Californian William J . Williams Jr., who served from 1967 to 1976 as vice presi· dent and general manager of the Irvine Ranch agr icultural divis ion, died at the age of 71. The Laguna Hills resident succumbed Monday at South Coas t Medical Center in South µg una after a career of more than 40 years in the agricultural lndus tr y fro m Me xi c o lo Oregon. Fuoe r a l ser vices for Mr. Williams will be at nooo Friday fu Pacific View Memorial Park Mortuary Chapel, Corona del Mar. with interment to follow there after Masonic rites. During Mr. Will.Jams' career with the Ir vine Company, he was responsible for all citrus and other tree and ground crops in addition to livestock raising. He was. more recently, senior agr icultural consultant for Boyle Engineering Corporatioo, which has 80,000 acres under cultivation in the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys. , Born on his fa mily's farm in 'J'urlock , Mr . Willia m s was From Page .it J AUDIT ..• previous years accounting is .. counter productive when our energies should be properly directed toward improving our frnanctal accounting and report· ing system." And Caravalho asked that the finance department ' 'be left alone for one year to make necessary improvements" lo the city's ac· counting system. · Council members, with the ex- ception of Mrs. Koester, indicated they agreed with the manager's recommendations . and asked that they be presented at next week's council meeting in order for the council lo vote upon them. Councilman Thomas O'Keefe did not attend Wednesday's study session. ORANGE C04ST l sc DAILY PILOT Th• Or""91J C.oe\t 0.•ty Poot wit" wf\ttl\ 1\ com01ned '"" Nttr\ Pffli\ t\ P~t\hf'd D't IN Or•"~ (ot\t Pvoh""'1Ai0 Comp'*"• i.o.,.t .. M U1on• •'f OVit)f•\NO Mono•· t"'°""' FrtO..¥ t~ Go"• MftU . H••Potf .. ~h HYftHnqCOf' 8••<" Fo""'•"' V•lf•w. ,,.,,,.. •. L•CJYI'\• a •• ,,. Sou1" Co.\t • \1~1, '•t tOMI •dn'°" ,, Pw01i)1-0 \.Aftlf'O.y\ 4ttld SunchlY\ f~ CHtlKtN I oiut>t""'l"V of..-tt '' •• no .,.,." a •• ~'ft' Po 8•• 1~. <.ott• Mltlo\4 .. C•lltt>t"'•• '7•>t Tfitlfft•tc ... u Ect•tOf' Tlle-•AM-M1"'Q•~ £Ofr0t graduated in 193Gl'rom what would become California stale Polytechnic University of San Luis Obispo. H e was president of the Council or California Growers and for six years was a member of the UC Riverside Chancellor's Advisory Commit· tee. Social and sel"vice or· ganizations included the YMCA aod Boy Scouts of America; Scottish a nd York rites ; Al Malaikab Shrine and the Red Cross of Constantine. Survivors include bis wife, Mary Taber William s ; daughters, Miss Laura E . Williams of San Diego and Mrs. Marcia W. Snidow of Irvine; a sister, Mrs. Plinio Madonna, of C ay u cos . and tw o grandchildre'b. Fro.a Page .41 LAWSUIT • • Hills attorney Kenneth B. Bley, the Lyons say they first applied to develop the 28 acres on Aug. 4, 1971, and have revised the plan six times. In the revisions. the number of building sites has been reduced from 78 to 11. City Council members Neil Fitzpatrick, Sally Bellerue, and Mayo{,.,, Wayne Baglin voted to deny tlte application during the Jao. 15 meeting. Councilman Howard Dawson voted against denial and Kelly Boyd ab· stained. Bley said today that the Lyons don 't allege any wrongdoing by the City Council, but "we think they made a mistake and we want to try to get that mistake corrected." Hearing Set On Ordinance To Save Bluff Laguna Beach planninl com- m issiooen have scheduled an Oct. 8 public bearinl on a pro- posed bluff preservation or· dinance that is competlnl with an initiative on the Nov. 4 ballot. The ordinance wu written by city offtdala after an lDitiatlve by La1una Beach pb71iclan Gene Atherton quallfled for the ballot. a-., .. , .. "' .... :-Auntant MAi,,.._lftQ (cMor 1n Aucust. City Council mem· bera aaid they preferred, the word.in& ol the ontlnance and , sent it to the Pluminl Com· miaalon to beliD the proceu for adoption . • l•gun• Beecll Otllce 1011 No CN\1 HIQf\wo Office• Go\11 *'-' UOWt>t 8Ar ~lottl '""'llnq<on 8Hch 1111 Hluch eo..i.•oro TelepflOne (714)142-4321 CIHlltlecl Adwettl9it1t tu-Mn Lefut1• •Hell AA ~nc.: Telepflone 4~ The initiative would supersede the ordinance lf voters approved the ballot measure. Plannln1 commiuionera dido 't debate the merits ol the two measures before takin1 their action. Ttie City Council· ii expected to bold a public beariq oa tbe OI'· dlnance on Oct. 2L Critica ol tbe Initiative have called it a "bardablp on thoH already OD tbe bhd'1." But Atherton say1 bia ln· ltiatlve ii "1pedftc and flal. ble." ' OC Kid·s' Facilit)' Poshed A Jolnl public aod prlv1te drive lO ralae funds lo cooatnact a new home for Oran1e Cpunly'1 abused end battered children wiu launched loday by the O ran•e Couff'~ Board of Supervlaon. The partnership to raise the money necNaary to conatnact a faciUty to replace the now over· crowded Albert Sitton Home waa lauded by Board Chairman Ralph Clark who uid. "I am encoura1ed by early signs of 8Upport." Clark 1peclflcally referred to an orfer by the Newport Harbor Junior League of $50,000 in matchloa funds that would be r.iade available for the project if a like amount is raised in lbe commwtity 8111 Steiner. director of Sitton home, located in a compound of county facilities in Orange, said the need for a new facility is critical. The home is the repository for children who have been abused, sexually exploited, neglected or abandoned. A total of 1,867 children were admitted to the home during the 1979-80 fiscal year, nearly 450 more than the previous year, ac- cording to a Sitton home fact sheet given civic leaders who at· tended this morning's kickoff m eeting. Officials pre di c t that admissions will double within the next 10 years. Ellen Wilcox, coordinator of the drive for a new home. said a private non-profit corporation should be established for fund raising pdtposes. She predicted it could be up to 21,', years before sufficient money is raised for a new facili· ty 3nd perhaps five years before it is opened. Under a curreot proposal, the new facility would be construct· ed on county-owned property near the existing home. The Horace Greeley School is now located on the site. The school will be vacated next summer, according to county officials. The site was recommended because no land acquisition cost would be involved and due to its proximity to county Juvenile Court and the UC Irvine Medical Center. Officials said some costs might be saved by using some of the school facilities as part of the new home for dependent children. The new facility , as con- ceptually proposed, would pro- vide living accommodations for 150 children. The current home houses up to 88 children. County Backs Dana Point Land Curbs .. It's a Mess Now Caltrans crews continue work on com- pletion of the new A venida San Luis Rey Bridge over the San Diego Freeway at the south end of San Clemente. Bridge is one of seven being constructed as part of a $30 million freeway widening project through town. The 6.4·mile freeway work begun a year ago is expected to be completed by end of 1982. ~ \ I Oil Tankers Move Despite Conflict LONDON (AP) -T anker traf. fie moved norma lly today through the Strait of Hormuz, the world's main oil artery, despite the escalating Iran-Iraq war, the inte lligen ce department of Lloyd's of London reported. A spokesm a n for Shell in London also said its information was that the giant tankers which carry more than 40 percent or the Western world's oil supplies were plying in both directions through the 35-mile-wide strait, "albeit a little slower then usual." The assurance ca me amid mounting fears, and unc6nfirmed reports, that ·the fighting had brought oil traffic in the Persian Gulf to a near standstill. •'Traffic appear s to be passing throu gh the s trait ~ith~ut hindrance and the routings am· posed by the lranjan government are being observed," Roger LOwes, casualty reporting officer• , of Lloyd's intelli.eence deoart• ment toldTheAssociated Press. Llo0yd's monitors world ship- ping movements. On Monday ni g ht , Iran declared its coastal waters war zones and ordered shipping in the Persian Gull to follow prescribed * * * routes after passing through the Strait. A I though the rest of the world's oil needs were cushioned by the current glut in the world market and import i ng nations' stockpiles, the shutdown of the Abadan refinery forced Iran's ln· terior Ministry to impose a nationwide ban on sales of gasoline, diesel fuel and kerosene lo private customers today and Friday. The announcement said only taxis and public transport vehicles would get fuel on the bas.is of their average daily ~n­ sum ption. Japan's Transport Ministry said at least eight vessels operat· ed by Japanese shipping com- panies were stranded in the dis- pcted waters between Iraq and Iran. lt said 44 other ships operat· ed by Japanese companies were either at anchor or sailing in the Persian Gull. Fightine het.w~ Jean and Iraq has pushed the price of gasoline and heating oil up 8 cents a gallon in a week on spot markets 1n the United St.ates. The war has removed more than 2 million barrels a day from world crude oil supplies, which of late bad exceeded demand. * * * . f,ro• Page Al MIDEAST FIGHfING • • • Dr. Waddill Suing Over Investment Dr. William Waddill was back in Orange County Superior Court Wednesday. The physician-unsuccessfully prosecuted twice before for lbe death of a fetus following a saline abortion in 1977-asked a jury for damages stemming from an alleged $500,000 busi· ness loss be s uffered through purc has e of the Huntington Harbour Beach Club seven years ago. Attorney Michael Richman, re presenting the Westminster· based obstetrician, claimed in opening arguments Wednesday that bis client was cheated out of the half million dollars through the actions of attorney Jerome Bame and Frank Janette, once a stockholder in the beach club. Waddill contends Bame con· spired with Janette to defraud him and another partner, Dr. Robert Trace. The beach club ultimately went ba nkrupt, leading to financial difficulties for Waddill thal du.ring his murder trial$ prosecutors used as a possible motive for his allegedly killing a fetus lo avoid costly malpractice lit igation. Richman said Janette, a neighbor Of Waddill's in Hunt· ington Harbour. approached the physician in l973 about purchas· ing the beach club. W addiJl agreed to go along with the venture. the attorney said, and joined a corporation that included Trace to buy lbe ing 50 soldiers. It said Iraqi Qasr-e -Sbirin ,.. 350 miles club forS2.2 million. troops seized the railway that southwest of Tehran. taking 351 Janette retained Bame, he connects the two cities with prisoners and pursuing fleeing s aid, to help arrange the Tehran, the Iranian capital 340 Iranian soldiers to Sar·e-Pol· purchase. miles to the northeast. Zabab, about 20 miles inside the But Richman claimed that Baghdad Radio s aid the border. Bame misrepresented by railroad seizure cut the two Iran conceded its troops $260,000 the amount Janette in· cities off from reinforcements retreated in lbe Mehran area vested in the venture. He also promised by the Iranian govern· and said the Iraqis also seized claimed that Bame s hould have Land use regulations con-ment, adding: "The two cities nearby Salehabad. An Iranian known that Janette bad taken tained in the Dana Point Specific are doomed. Their surrender is communique said fighting was $200,000 of the $2.2 million of· PI an were imp 1 em en t e d imminent." continuing in the Qasr-e-Sbirin fered by the corporation for \be Wednesday by the Orange County The Iraqi command said its area and claimed the invading club. d Su · troops and tanks seiied \be Ira· Iraqi forces had beeo forced to Boar of pervtSOrs. nian border town of Naftshab to-retreat. He said Bame advised Waddill The regulations, which will h l . f The lr""''an news agency p..... and directors of the club, who 'd f d 1 t · the day while ot er raq1 orces ...... ..., gu1 e uture eve opmen m raised \be flag over Mebran, 90 quoted a communique saying bad discovered the illegalities, harborside community will miles to the south. Iranian forces captured the Ira· to forget Janette 's action replace zoning standards that Iraq said its troops took qi border post of Cbalamcbe. because bringing them to the at . existed prior to the plan's ap-Mebran on Wednesday after Pars did not specily the location lention of authorities would proval. completing the capture of the of this post and Cbalamcbe does jeopardize efforts for refinanc-The plan includes several . specific ~idelin~ regar~g ~m::a:j~~~l~r~~~·an~=bo~r=d=e=r=to~wn~=~~~~~t=a~~~=ar~on~~m~a~~~~rm~a~~~-~~~~1n~g~·~~~~~~~~~~~ density, traffic circulation, park acreage and general community beautification. "We have a good plan," com· mented Filth District Supervisor Thomas Riley in urging adoption of the land use regulations The board's action was bailed by Sue Hinman, chairwoman of a board that reviews develop- ment proposals for their com· pllance with a specific plan. "We are extremely pleased," she said. E'n.1PageAJ SPACE ••• with aome thoughts on clirrent' science fiction movies. -"Star Wan:" "I enjoyed it the first time I saw it and the second time, too. But didn't you find it atraqe that in the bar· room scene beints from separate planet.a are capable ol breathln1 the same atmoepben." -"The Empire Strikes Back:" "When I saw it I wu troubled because most people in daU country do not discriminate between tboee thjop that make loiical sense and those that don't ." -''Cloae Encounten ol the Third Kind:" "Parta of that movie were beautifwly done. But any extraterrestrial biinp we encounter are not llkely...to look like the Plllabu:ry l>oq8b Boy." -"Allen:" "It coma froln the old acbool. It auaeata tbat there mAibl be anotber kind of terrestrial bein1 that tan•t friendly." ) ... • CALIFORNIA =,----=-'Canal' Reaches Ballot? ,. .. SACRAMENTO (AP> -()ppo. D"ta al the Pvipber1l Cual HY tbty an 1ubmltUq more tban twlee th• number of 1lpatune neMed to quality a Nferendwn for the ballot. Tb• Coalition To Stop tbe Perlpberal Canal 1ald • .._. day lt would aubmit more tban 7IO,OOO 1Jpaturn. 1f at leut Me,lltan reliatered voten, UM referadwn wUl be on lb• ballot 1t the 1112 primary. or aay earlier •~ial el~lloo Cftaarr Si_,,..., LOS ANGELES (AP) A prtnte 1tudy la bein& conduned to see whether a SOO-acre area neat to the USC campus cu be turned into a major commettial· (_sr._'A~_E _J indmtrlal center to attract jobe and people. The study should be completed next month. Pushin& for lhe ambitious project is Ted Walkins, a leader of the Watts Labor Community Action Committee, who said be would like to see lhe area turned into another "Westwood," the community near UCLA. Odel fo Bedre SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Board chairman Harold J . H1ynes al Standard Oil Co. of California says he plans to retire next May after 34 years with the company and seven years in the top poet. George M. Keller, 56, was chosen at the Soc al 's board meeting Wednesday lo succeed Haynes, who will be SS next week. Keller, now vice· chairman of the board, joined Standard OU in 19'8. Crime f'.,.d S~• ~ LOS ANGELES <AP) -A prosram offerin1 caah rewards to help fttbt crime on city buses "WH announ~ed by Southern California Rapid Transit Dis- trict oftlciab. The reward system revealed Wednesday is part of a _ statewide "We TIP" proeram offering up to $500 to informant. who help convict those involved in RTJ>.related crimes. This ii the latest attempt by the RTD to combat rising violeDC?e on buses. According to latest statiatics, vandalism costs an estimated $3 million an· nually. lllaze C'o•tal•ed SOLEDAD (AP) -An arson fire that spread over 2,000 acres of brush near Pinnacles National Monum•~t in Monterey County baa been contained, the Caliiornia Department of Forestry says. The fire, which broke out Tuesday afternoon, was con- tained late Wednesday and wu expected to be controlled this morninl, a forestry apokesmu said. No iQjuriea wen reported. -JOlll TBS ltSPUBUC I 1 Republic.; -Home I Loan · l9772 Madvthur~ IMnr. CA 927l5/ 171418&1·099l Ucnmd Brom' . \ ............. BOllOrftl "8 Peets Fred Astaire poses with the "Pied Piper" award as wife, Robin, smiles approval. The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers honored the 8l·year- old entertainer with its highest honor in a ceremony Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Astaire has been an ASCAP member for 30 years by virtue of his songwrit- ing. Meteor Flashes Over Three States By Tlae Aaaoclated Preu Authorities say a large meteor Hiled over Arizona, New Mex- ico and California, where it may have landed. And a meteorite popularly known as the "Old Woman · Meteorite" returned home to California OD Wednesday after 18 months of study by scientist. at the Smitbaonian lnatitutiOD. Police in several western cities said people reported seeing a falling glow in the sky soutb·soutbwest of Tucson about 8:30 p.m . Wedneeday. PDIA COUNTY SBE&IFF'S deputies went to one area west of Tucson, looting for a possible downed airplane, while a county Department of Public Safety helicopter hovered above, fmding ~ "It definitely was a meteor," sald Laimy McCulln, team supervisor of the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Control Tower. "We saw it from up here. We must have bad 150 calh about it. A lot of people tbouehl it was a plane crashing, but that's impouible. You can't see a plane cruhing in Tucson from Phoenix or New Mexico." He said a Federal Aviation Administration official in Los Angeles told him that the meteor landed in California. "but that be didn't know where. They've bad a lot or reports from all around California." THE NATIONAL WEATHER Service in Phoenix was one of lhe few places to miss the show. "We didn't see it," a spokesman said. · . • Old Woman Meteorite, siad to be the lar1est ever found m the United States or Canada, now is 15 percent lighter because Smitbaonian scientiata sliced away 942 pounds or its 6,070-pound bulk-lor research Composed mainly of nickel and iroo, the rock bas been mount· ed and was scheduled to go on exhibition Saturday at the Bureau of L•nd Management's station in Barstow. SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY bad sought a court injunction to prevent the Smithsonian from cutting into the meteorite. County officials argued that slicing it would muWate a rare specimen from space. Although a federai judge turned down the motion, Smithsonian scientists agreed to cut away less than tbey bad originaily planned. . The meteorite was discovered by three prospectors 10 the Old Woman Mountains near Twentynine Palms in 1976. BW PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THE RE-OPENING OF OUR HAIRWORKS SALON Come meet o ur talented new staff of stylists at BW Newport Beach. Let them pamper you with personalized service and guidance in all phases of hair design, custom hair color, predictable perms and complete makeup. For an appointment, pho ne 714-759·121 l, ext . 260. Hairworks Salo n, Newpon Beach Thundaw. ~ 215. ,., Actors Pact Reached? Tentative Settlement Reported Today HOl.LVWOOD (AP) - Ne1totlatora for atrikinl television and film actors •~~had a tentative contract agreement with producen early today, a union spokeswoman said. If ratified, the aareement would end lbe strike by some 87 ,000 actors that be1an July 21 and which baa virtually abut down the industry and delayed the start or the new fall television season. The tentative agreement OD a three·year contract c1me early this morning after a baraaining session of nearly 19 hours, said Screen Actors Guild spokeswoman Kim Fellner. "AT 5 A.M. <PDT) a tentative agreement was reached between the actors and the producen and that followed a final 181,',.bouJ' bargaining session," said lbe producers· spokesman Phil Myers. "The SAG and AFTRA (American Federation of Television Radio Artists) boards will meet starting this weekend to approve it,•• be said. "After that. there will be a ratification process by bolh of those groups. And each board will decide -when lhe actors can go back to work pendin~ ratification. \San Onofre To Reinforce Heat Sleeves How'sthis for a job offer? Receive $500 fortwo days work. experience not necessary. It was enough to prompt 400 job seekers to fill out applications for 100 jobs at the San Onofre nuclear generating station. "We 've quit laking applications," a Southern California Edison Co. spokesman said Wednesday. After three days of traininl - during which the...cbosen applicants will receive $100 per day -they will spend two days installing metal sleeves inside 7 ,500 small heat exchange tubes on three generaton in Unit One al ' the.Saa<>nolreplant. Work is limited to two days because that'!! the maximum allowed for any possible radiation exposure. The tubes have sediment buildup and corrosion on their interiors, and lbe sleeves will reinforcelheold tubes. The F.diaon spokesman said no firm date bas been set by the nuclear Regulatory Commission for the work. but the utility hopes to get under way within a few weeks. Train Delayed OAKLAND CAP) -An "electrical overload" caused a Bay Area Rapid Transit train falled with commuten to sit for about seven minutes inside an approach to the trans-bay tube, a BART spokesman said. The 10- car train was moved back toward the Oakland West station where passengers were UD· loaded. .-· pendiq ratification. "So in terms or when lbe pro- ducen 10 back into production, we would have to wait ancl see what their decision ii." However, Ila. Fellner said the unions could send t he acton back to work pending ratification. ..IT'LL TAKE TWO and a half or three weeka for lbe wbole ratiflcat.ioo process," she said, since the actors would vote on the pact by mail. The contract includes a lS per- cent increase in minimum salaries for the first 18 months, and 15 percent for lbe second 18 months, for a compounded in· crease of 32.25 percent over the life of lhe contract. Myers said. Actors currently earn a minimum of $235 a day or $785 a week. Fellner said the tentative agreement also included in· creased pension and welfare benefits, a strong non· discrimination program, im- 'Long Walkout' proved worlrin1 conditions fOI" minon and an overhaul or work- ing schedules. NEGOTIATIONS BAD pro· greased more rapidly since acton and producers •&reed a week •IC> on a complex formula that would give actors a sban of tbe lucrative home video market. That iaaue bad been a major stumbling block in negoti1tioos. Work would resume almost immediately after the strike OD new prime·time series for the ABC, C~ and NBC television network s . But network spokesmen have said it would take at least three to four weeks before any new half-hour episodes could be broadcast and six to elgbl weeks before any hour·long show could go OD the air. The strike has virtually halted the new fall television seuoni and forced several thousand non·performing craftsmen and others dependent on lbe movie- TV industry out of work. PSA Pilo~' Strike ··Grounds aJO Fligh/$. SAN DIEGO (AP) -A pilots' strike shut down Pacific Southwest Airlines today, and other airlines were besieged by the San Diegc>-based carrier 's stranded passengers. Picket lines were set up at airports in r.os Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, and reservation clerks said lelepbooe lines were jammed. The 200 nights flown daily by PSA to and from those cities as well as Phoenix, Ariz., and Mexico were canceled. "We're ready for a long walkout," said a spokesman in San Diego for the 500 striking pilots and night engineers. The strike lhe first in PSA's 31-year history, came on the second annivenary or the mid·air collision between a PSA Boeing 727 jetliner and a light plane over San Dieao that killed 1'4 people. THE WALKOUT BEGAN at 12:01 a .m ., said PSA spokesman Skip Myers, after 11 montba of negotiating failed to produce a new , agreement. "I don't see a quick settlement in siaht when we are so far apart on everything," Myers said this moming. He said PSA will honor it. charter ni&bt reservations with management personnel, but will not attempt to operate com- mercial ftigbta. "Other airlines have agreed to accept .our tickets," Myers said. "Many are adding a number of nights to pick up the slack." PSA is lhe nation's 13th largest carrier based on passenger volume. Tbe walkout idled a 28·jet fieet and 3,700 airline employees besides the pilots and night engineers. A TOTAL OF 11 cmES and 25,000 daily passeqers are affect· ed by the strike. Jn addition to carrying a majority of airlines' commuter nigbta within California, PSA bu night. to Nevada and Arizona. Tallts broke down Wednesday night when the airline rejected a reduced pay demand by the Southwest Ji1ight Crew Association, which represents PSA pilots. "Tbere is virtually no bope that I can see for any kind of settle· ment now," said Bryan Coon, a senior captain who beadl the as- sociation. AN AW.INE SPOKESllAN said two demands by the pilots were "totally _unacceptable." Those were for pay al al.most $100,000 annually for senior pilots flyine Boeing 7271 and l>c-t-808 and for fewer working hours. The pilots have demandetl a 35 percent pay raise over two years while PSA offered a 29 percent raise. At present, salaries range from about $10,000 annually as a start for second offtcen to $70,000 for senior pilots. The pilots' previous contract expired last December. A fede.rally mandated 30-day ''cooling off" period ends today. ' fjj - ~:· 1/2 Off-For a limited · time. Designer knit , I sport shirts. Save 50% on our most prestigious designer labels. Enjoy the comfort and good looks of 100% cotton knit. Notice the contem- porary detailing. At this price why not buy more than one. Navy, cream, brown, white, tan. S-M-L-XL. Reg. 40.00 19.90 silverwoods NEWPORT BEACH. 83 Fait.Ion ISM! 759-121l, Mon · Thurs ·Ffl 10·9, Tues·Wed ·S. to 6. Sun 12•6 Orange Coast Daily Pilot Sycamore Project Can Benefit City L.agu.n.1 llcach • t~ CouncU members have approved plan~ for u • · to,.1\home dt>velopment on eo ac res of Sycamore Hill 1>ropt>rt)' m L.aguna Canyon. The e1ty 1s n··~ot 1aung tht' 11le of 60 acrH of lu 552 acre purc·PI to the Ba y wood Deve lopment Co Pro<'~l4 wuultl ht• used to el"\11ce 1 S6 ? million debt the city owes on the lltnd, nnd N"duc-e the Sl,SOO per day lntcrest tJmt \S arr rum~ '11tl' l'Ot1nc 1l nppro\'t'd the plun and a.n envaronmenlaJ r~p<>rt dt•:-pitt• ul>J~cttons lhat lht pro1et't lacked houslns for low a11J modt>ratt• 1m·omt> '3m1hes Tht>r \' ·~tan .iq:unwnt for more arrordable housane m Lagunu Bt>!ll'h , hut tht• Ha~ wood development locat~ m iles. out tht• l'jn~·m nt•.Jr LN1 ure World ts not the p htC't' tlow~an.: (nr ttw eldt•rly and lower income people should b\• m•,Jr .1 <'It)·, downtown. '4-here residents can wa lk to fht• sttm• ur tu lraru>por1at1on C'enter~ Tht• Hj) v.c1o1 1d dt'\ t'lopmt>nt ~ould go a long way toward pa 'If\!! ufl thl' mortgage owed on Sycamore Hills Swift .it•lwn 10 .. 1pp1 o' tog tO\•H,house p la ns was appropnJh.' Pre ervi11~ History It 1~ rdrt·~lung to see developers in San Clemente holding h .. 1C'l.. l\\O h1'>toric estates from the bulldozer's blade A t•v.port H~ach developer wants to maintain Casa Romautica, th<.· or1gm al Ole Hanson home overlooking the munic1pa l p1l·r. m its original state. The 52 year.old casa , now used as a dining room for about 40 reuret>s h\'lng on the 140,000-square·root estate, would become a pubhc restaurant, according to the blueprints. Down the coast about a mile, three partners are seeking city permission to subdivide the 20.9 acre former Cotton estate Ttley want to create 16 separate lots, ranging ln ~ize from a half acre lo 3.5 acres. But. again . they intend to leave intact the original stucco home, whtch housed t he Nixon White House for four years Jn past yc~rs, vintage San Clemente dwellings have b e e n d emolis he d t o mak e way for box -like condominiums and apartments. In the case of the two old estates, both the developers and the people of San Clemente stand to come out ahead. Opposition SeHish The govern in g board of the Laguna Niguel Community Associa tion has voted to oppose the construction of 56 low-to-moderate-income apartments in tbe Avco development to be localed at Niguel Road and Alicia P arkway The apartments would be let t-0 qualifying families and senior citizens. with the federal Department of Urban Development subsidizing the rent. The association opposes the project on grounds that construction of the ap a rtments will decrease the value of bousil\g in th~ a rea a nd also put a strain on local schools. " But in fact the location selected by Avco for the apa rtments 1s ideal. The site is r elatively level so grading costs WilJ be minimized. The site also IS near bus s tops that service Monard~ Bay Plaza. which will be great help to senior citizens. lt seems lo us that quite a few successful people s tarted out in what is now called ''affordable'' housing. No doubt many who are opposing the construction of the low-cost apartments could not afford the homes they now own if they had to pay today's prices. Self ·interest aside. the homeowners' association should \ll'lderstand and support this reasonable program to pro~ide some relief in a housing ~~rket that has priced so many citizens out of a fair chance to get a roof over their heads. • Opinions expressf>d 1n the space above are those of the Daily Piiot Other views expressed on this page are those of thetr authors and artists Reader comment is invited. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714} 642·4321. Boyd· I Mate Ratings By L.M. BOYD Item No. 7338 in our Love and War man's file is the re- port on a survey. More than 2.000 men were asked what they considerP<I important in a m atrimon'ial mate. The quality lhat got the highest rating was listed as "that lhe woman love him" -81 per- cent. Second. "a sense of humor" 67 percent. Third, "intelligence" -64 percent. Fourth, ''self-confidence" - 56 percent. And filth, "nice legs'' -40 percent. Find it note worthy that "s e lf· confidence" beat out "nice legs." Far back in the pact were "pretty face" at 33 per· cent and "big bustUne" at 16 percent. About 80,000 Arnericansl were so badly hurt when they fell in bathtubs last year that they bad to be hospitalized. You'd think, lherefore, that somebody would invent a soft bathtub. And somebody has. DPal' Gloorny Gus Some people who choose to live on hills i des s eem to lhink there's a special ".Jltde rule" that permits them to slip out from all responsibUily with lbe slide. D.M. ~----- A small Seattle firm bas come out with a tub that's an inch thick polyurethane shell covered by a puncture-proof vinyl. U you slip, you land ir. a cushiony manner, l gather. And the footholds are said lo be a Jot better on the soft sur· face. Did I tell you more Indians live in New York City right now than were there when Peter Minuit bought Manbat- t an for $24 worth of whatever? . I Q. Wby do ambulances ban the word "ambulance" spelled backwards or upside down or however across tbe front? A. So driven ahead can• read it clearly in their rear-· view mirrors. The island of Greenland ii bigger than the continent of Australia. Q. Can you buy beer and wine in Iran? A. Not lecally. But a few restaurants there reportedly serve wine in pop botUea to known C\Wtomen. Ail'811 or- der for tea in 1ome resta\D"anta ii a tode reqllelt for beer. New Yom Yank .. aeatel Jacbon in tribute to' 'fOm Seaver: "Ue•a ao aood that blind people come to UM put Just to bear him ptkla." Q. II it true that panab klll abeep? A. One 801t of parrot oa.11. • yea. The tea of New Zealand. It attaeb lad dnaQn powa ........ tneredlbt}'. -. Robert N Weed/Publl5her Thof'NS Keevll/Edltor Barbara Krelblch/Edltorlal P-oe Editor Jack Andenon ~ Mideast Nuke Policy Prepared WASHINGTON -In an omiooua development, Praldent C arter ha• luued 1ecrel dJrectJvea to the Peot1100 to prepare th• option of u.ln1 nuclear weapona lo ttle volaWe Mlddle f'.ut. There hue been blot.I of 1uch a poeaibiUt,y kn tbe put. Carter's atue of the unlon address laat January. for example, df:c lared that "an aue mpt b y a n y oubide force t o gain control of the Peraian Gulf will be re ac•rded as an asaault on the vit.al intereata of the United States (and> will be repelled by use of any means necessary ... '' A n d R o b e r t K o m e {, unde rsecretary or defense for policy, publicly stated that if conventional deterrents in the Middle East (ailed, the use of nuclear weapons would be considered. But in secret directives, the president bas spelled out the nuclear option clearly and explicitly. IN PRESIDENTIAL Decision Memorandum No. Sl, Carter outlined a new U.S . nuclear policy for the Middle East . But this memo was ignored in the furor over Presidential Directive 59. which changed Mailbox U.S. miaaUe targeta tn the Soviet Un1on. The cootenta of PDM No. 51 and related documents . lncludint a directive to the Slrate1lc Air Command from Defense Secretary Harold Brown, are designed to "sitnilkantly de1nde Soviet capabilities lo project military power in the Middle Eaat·Persian Gull region for a period of at least 30 days." To accomplis h this, the presi dent ord e red the formulation of various military options, my associate Dale Van Atta has learned. The most significant or these was the "limited strategic option" for use by the commander of the Rapid Deployment Force, Gen. P.X. Kdle1. SUBJECT TO the us ual presidential auUlorization for use of any nuclear we apons, this option involves 19 nuclear bombs carried by 8 ·52 bombers. The aim is to keep Soviet forces from invad1ng Iran, a nd the weapons include both B·S7 bombs, with an explosive power about equal to the Hiroshima bomb, and the more powerful 8 ·61 var i abl e yie l d thermonuclear bombs . Sources said Carte r ordered his planners l o fo r m ulate several addition a l li m it ed strategic options, as we U as a more far· reaching ·'selective attack option" that would target Russian facilities near Iran, including military bases and airfields lnside the Soviet Unioa. MUltary experts noted tbat with a B-52 force -the SA.C's 57th Air Divi5ion at Minot Air Force Base. N.O. -already earmarked for Middle East deployment, the bombers woWc1 be ttle most likely vehicle for nuclear weapons, rather than lone-range missiles in slJOls in the United States. The bombers are far more Oexible, one source pointed out, addln1, '.'U we screw around with our ICBMs, you don't know 'what the response would be." "Flexible" does not mean "reasonable," however , in the view of some insiders. They conte nd that the concept of limite d nucl e ar warfare confined to the Middle East is a child's dream that could become a nightmare for the whole world. "IF WE INITIATE tactical nuclear warfare in that area, we are opening a Pandora 's box," said one Pentagon source who is ala rmed at the idea of preparing s trategic options for the Middle E ast. "The So viet s could respond with tactical nuclear weapons against our warships in the P ersian Gulf area, and who knows where it would go from t here ?" Footnote : A White House s pokesman refused to confirm or deny the contents of PDM No. 51, or t.o discuss U.S. nuclear policy with respect to the Middle East. Jl••Y·s LATEST: 0'-lr political odds mu ia out wttb Ida late.t pick -and lt'• RClnald Rea1ao. Unimpre11ed by tbe latest poll1, Jimmy tbe Greek 1WI · makes Reaaaa a 2·and-one-balf-to-1 favorite over Jimmy Carter to wln ln November. Jimmy bu MrOld in on the states wUb many electoral votes, and bere'• bow he 1ees Reqan winnina: New York ('1) -Carter carried in 1976, but tbe unbappy Jewish voters -tlven John Ander.on as a Liberal Party alternative -will tip the aealea for Reqan. New Jersey (17) -Ford carried lut time. It's cloae, but Rea1an bu the ed1e. Pennsylvania (27) -Carter and Reagan are even ricbt now, but if Reagan can nail enouab of the ethnic vote, he's 1ot it. Florida (11) -Carter woo he re four years a10, but resentment over his hand.lin.I of the Cuban and Haitian refupe problem in heavily populat.t Dade and Broward Counties may give the state to Reagan. Michigan (21) -Gerald Ford took the state with 54 percent of the vote. Reagan's not as stroai as the native son was, but the depression in the auto lnduatry s ho tJld work to Rea1an's advantage. Ohio (25) -Carter won by an eyelash -lS,000 votes -in 1.176. But unemployment ln tbe steel, glass and rubber industries helps Reagan, and lbe state's Consenative Party, which sat it out last time. is workin& enthusiastically for Rea1an. Illinois ( 26) -Rea1an 's native·soo status and diacoatent a mong blue-collar workers put this in the Republican column. WA TCB ON WASTE: The P entagon's philosophy on expenditure of public runds was made stunningly clear the other day. One of my reporters called lo inquire about a contract for 300,000 laminated·plutic recipe cards to be used by bartenders at the Anny's officen' clut. and enlisted men's saloons around the world. The bids aren't in yet. but the c o s t is expected to run som ewhere between $5,000 and $10,000. When my reporter suggested that perbap1 the military pubs could get aJoq - as they have ror•decadea - without Official euidelinea, the Pentagon spoke a woman obs erved brigbUy that "even ii it is wastini money." Prlntbti the recipe "cards will "still be providing jobs to someone." Is Real Problem an Excess of Freeways? To the F.dilor: I'm peeved over pavement payments and I question the beadl.iJ:µ.Dg question you say ii the an.Swer to future highway funding problems. <Toll Roads Answer to Highway Ills?) Your question is not the solu· lion to those problems, but is rather just another bard and perhaps unnecessary addition to the larger and more important equatioo which. when solved will answer the most human pro- blems. Truly, it would be foolish to disregard the fact there will be future funding problems but I believe the reasons for those problems can be eliminated before the fact. Certainly, if the current philosophy of freeway expansion continues there will be money sborta1es, but, it seems lo me, and I've traveled somewhat, there exists present· ly plenty of pavement to get the Job done. SUPPOSE INSTEAD of view- inl tbe Jack of money as the potential problem we view the problem as an excess of freeways. Then, after holding tbia penpective for awhile many so-called future hlahway fundinl problems &appear. You may say ceaaation of bt1bway construction would bring on other problems, which may be tnae, but maybe thole Olber problems would be lea costly and complicated to solve. Maybe your beacllbilnl queaUon should be "lllpway Illa; Should We Toll Over More Roada!" MICHAEL HENDRIE Pelled To tbe l'.ditar': I reemtly reeeiYed a loq cl.It-. tance pbaDe call h'om Cambrtdae -aUbll me lf I wo.all ....,.. 1 qwtkm relatlal to H.Ddidatel can. . ...,... and Aade'IOl!tor · apoum,orsan••ettm. After U., utllfted m1 curioll· ty that tt WU DOil Collea• Humor or U1 kind of aoUcttatlOD ap- proacb or ":;::· I qreed to .. ... q~ wltbout ideaU· f7laa IQ1lelf until the end of the q~. The caller assured me that be was not merely a telephone caller but a .. pollster" feeding me pre· determined questions and supply· ing tbe answers lo the general pool of answers from other pollsters asking the same ques- tions. The line of questioning was ap· parently designed to determine the convictions of respondents about the three candidates, in· cludlnglbreeor four similar ques· lions to help them deter mine if the answers agreed with each other -withorwithout wavering. THE CALLER could not assure me that I could receive a copy or the questions with or without my answers -until be consulted with someone else at the other end of the line. No, it was finally de- cided, copies of questions or' answers could not be provided. They suggested that Time Magazine regularly reports the resulta of various polls in case I wanted lo judge my answers with others. However, I have no idea wby I wu selected as a Laguna Beach resident (at random 01' by predetermination) whose family earnings exceed $25,000 yearly. Finally I realized that I would be among others without knowing wbere they lived or anything else about them. At least I answen!d stroneJy enougb to be judged moderately liberal. Some of the questions made me answer in favor of all three candidates - like do I believe in tbe honesty of one candidate above the others. Another question covered the 1 priority of national defense, infla· tion and unemployment -mat· ina me wonder bow many replies and ,vhat kind would hesitate or notagreewitheachother! I wu uked if my vote would chan1e if there were no debates- or U debates were not to include all three candidate.. Maybe this wu a key quest.loll but I can scarcely believe that it sbould aeriCM}ybeukedl ARTHUR WEJ~MAN Proof To the ICditor: Kbadab or Libya could proTe to everybody'~ aatilf~ lion that bribery bad no place in bis munificence towa rd Billy Carter. All he bas lo do is loan $220,000 to every gas station operator in the State of Georgia. J .W. REID -' ttlo11st ro1dty To the Editor : We join those who despise the monstrosity on Main Beach in Laguna Beac h by scutptor Pastorius. We've always wondered bow anyone in this art town could call "Vestige" beautiful by any stretchoftheimagination. Every time we drive by it, it of· fends us. What could be.beautiful about an ugly, rustedsbape? By all means let's get rid of it. Sell it to someone who likes hideous things. JEAN VERRILL To tbe F.ditor: The CoastaJ Commission is really unique -as a bureaucracy it bas no peer. It seems to begin where reason ends. At a bearing held on Ap- peal No. 153-80 (La1una Beach/ American Legion>. the Coastal Commission stated publicly: (1) That they are Dot here lo enforce state laws and (2) that guidelines were there to be used as they saw fit. That was one of the strangest state- ments I have ever beard. THE COASTAL Commission'• peculiar behavior bu enabled tbe City of Laiuna Beach to violate the following: ( 1) State access laws wbicb pro- vide parking spaces for the handicapped driver. (2) Strict auideUDes OD impact Quotes "I've nOticed that everybody tbat ia ffW abortion bu already been born." -Republieu pn- aldentlal candlcf ate aeaal• ...... ~ bil debate wttb lndepieadeld JobA 8 . AndenGD . I • parking, making life miserable_ for the citiuns who live in lbe vicinity of the American Leaion Building. <On record is a •ilned petition by said cithem oppoatnc impact parking.)• ( 3) Our own Lagu.na Beach Municipal Codes by setlinl \Q> a two-tier system of justice -one for the City of Laguna Beach and the other for the citlleu. Tbe ctty Council bu authorised Wqal variances for the American Legion building. The propoeed land use violates tbe city's general plan. This precedent-setting dedlion that the Coastal Commluioa bu taken is incredible. They are overlooking the law and due prc>e· ess. Tbe irresponsible bebaviot or the City of Laguna Beach, if permitted to succeed, willsetdue process back many years. ALANE. ADAMS An Appred••I•• - ' To tbe Editor: Wily do we call Lapna Be8Cb the Art Colony? Beeauae. .tu. our tolerance and eaeoaraae- meat, we have drawn a i.,.. group al a.rt1sta wbo fl.ad tbLI a ple•aant climate for won u well M for bealtb. We baft oar summer fesUYaJa ad our 11111117 1allerlea. And oo. we haft a piece ol aeulptun on publk dla- play • a rem•ader to all tw tbia la lbe Art Coloa.7. WOULDN'T it be worthwtdle from a buaineaa aa well a1 1aestbetic ~ ~ Yiew to .- otb er artl1t1 to join· Bal Paatoriu in lettla1 ua Mow samp&ea of tbelr worb iD oar public pa... -· CltJ Ball. tbt parb.«e. Let ua ba~e y ear·l"OUDd re- · minden ol tbe ad;lllta who make our eoa., eo Ullk&Ullt TbaDk ,_,: rHal Putortm, and ma1 otMn jJcUyou l · MARJOBJSC. CO'i I &H 1 --~ .• --... TlleDelfrNle----~ ... -"" ........... L..-. ....... ....... .. ; ......................... c....--. ,CAttt .. ._.....c-*'"twJU*'-t , .................... -..... .. , ............. _ ... .._ ... .. 1 .......... _, .............. .... 1~-.-· l I I ' I ~ ,J _L_o_c_A_L ______________________________ -=-------=-""'==""""----~~------------~-------'~--~------~~----......:.:~=.::=.:·~Sep==•=m=Glt:...:a~.~1980==---~L~~~r.~.___:DM.==~YA~LOT::.:..~•==7~ f;a,,...a Co•tnif fees . Oct. 31 Deadline Set for General Plan Revisions Audubon Society To Vie w Eruption I Lquna Beach city officials have let u Oct. Sl dHdllne for 1la du-commlttffl to ubm.it drafts ln tbe d ty'a 1eoeral plan revi1loe pre1teaa even U the documenu are not rudy V llo1t co mrn l tt ee I pl ••• I a• D' le II fJ n • ( representaUvea attt>ndln& a Cit)' Council meetlna on lhe procea TuHclay nl&ht lndJcated they could meet lhf' dHdllnt-, but Donations OtBiood Set Oct. 9 A fall blood d r ive s ponsored by South Coast Medica l Center and the American Red Cross will be held Oct. 9 at the South Laguna hospital auditorium. would like mo.re time if l>O"•ihle. But couJlc ll me mbers and plann n_g commi8:9ionera uid that an initial ctraf\ 11 needed .toon T htoy s aid that the commUtett would continue lo parUctpalP In th t: re vh wn procrs aftt!r doc ument~ 111rt- ubmlt1C'd Thf' cmttn romm1tte~11 wer~ formed In Ma . u th~ <'llY OPEi . prepared to update the nine elt>menU ol the general flan The city faces. a Ju 'J , U•l. deadline for completion ol the l.ocal eo. .. tal Pro1ram, which will 11ddreu the Cou ul (;ommiulon Act policies. T he rUiJh for the 1eneral plan revialon l• to ellminate \.'OnfUcts with the coutal pro1ram. "'or im1t11nce, hillsides are 8 AM· 6 PM EVERYDAY dealpated ln the open apace and conaervatlon element of the 1eneral plan as being in a preserved status. while the city 'a llOlling map ahowa them zoned for sinale family homes. Chalnnan Jack Cam p ol the land uee and noise iroup 1aid the houaifte portion of Its atudy was provina to b e time conaumin&, "but we can mana1e lt," be said of the deadline . The l ocal coutal plan committee ia actin 1 aa a coordinating group a nd will review the various drafts as they are submitted. After the documents are -reviewed the reviled plan wtll b e written , evaluated by official• and the public, and implemented. Members of the South Coast Audubon Society will view slides of the Mount St. Helens eruption wben they meet Oct . l ln San Clemente. The public is invited to the program, which begins at 7:30- p.m . at St. Clemente's Episcopal Church, 202 Ave. Araaon. For more information, call 492-0873. 240 BROADWAY LAGUNA BEACH 497-4403 SALE STARTS The donating process, which takes about an hour, begins at 12 :45 p .m . and continues through 5:30 p.m. ~I ~--J ~ ~~J SENSATIONAL PRICE REDUCTIONS MANY MORI ITIMS ON SALi TOO NUMIROUS TO MISS NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS • CHECK SALE PRICE~ BELOW ITEMS ADVERTISED SUBJECT TO QUANTITY ON HANO & TO PRIOR SALE QUANTITIES LIMITED NO RAINCH ECKS All SALES FINAL NO EXCHANGES OR REFUNDS '-•• Last year, the Red C ross provide d the medical center with more than 1.400 pints of blood. To schedule an ap· pointment , call th e bospitaj at 499-1311, ext. 644. SchOOl Cited for Cost Cuis By switching off lights and setting electric fans on timers, El Morro Elementary School of- ficials in Laguna Beach s a y they s aved the equivalent of 6S barrels or oil the past year. Southern California Edison Co. officials pre· aented the school with an en ergy m anagement award for the school 's conservation efforts. By reducing electric fan operations and ex· terior lighting, school maintenance personnel cut the sc h oo l 's electrical use 27 percent. · A number of interior lights wer e switc hed from 1,000 watts to 300 walls in the energy pro- gram, said El Morro Principal Art fisher. Furniture Heisted Discriminating thieves apparently with their own patio to furnish vis· ited a West Newport COO· dominium complex and fled with lawn and lounge equipment valued at $3,290, police were told Monday. Chanceford Luthe r Mounce, president of the Newport Condominium Association, 1 Discovery Drive, told investigators chaise lounges, chairs and tables were missing. Police said the grand lbeft WM ~ by froundskeepen Sunday when they went to tidy up t b.e comp I ex ' s recreation area. Runs Set In Irvine A 10-kilometer run s ponsored by Sad· J dJeback Colle1e and the City of Irvine will be held ~Y in Irvine. The coune for the run ·best.aa and ends at the eollese'• north campus at .reffrey Road and 1"1De Center Drive. Information may be obtained by calllht the \C!Ollele at Dl-4158. call 142-5'71. Put at .. word• toworll Jof TOOLS WHAMMll HAMMll "•• '890 $1 soo Sole "rice V & I flAMING HAMMll 37 oz -~·g 22 79 $1 s 00 We~lce. AU UIFKIN MlASUllNG TAPIS SO%o,, KENNEDY TOOL IOX A09 23 ~ $1 2 99 Sele price. STANLIY YANKll SCHWDllVll llTS R~g '2 13 1 S9 $1 00 Sole price. All. 1 , .. DRILL PHSS Mc:(i.1o w·fd1ton l!eg 7990 $6000 Sole price . STANLEY IALL PIAN HAMMH A09 819 $300 Sol• price • 14 OZ SAW HORSE BRACKETS Stanley Sow Bu<• 1109 S90 $2 00 Sole price . IHNZOMATIC cunER Rey I I 90 $ s 00 Sole price . 1 I ont,1 3 /1 DllLL KIT &Joe~ o nd Ot:ell•' Ae9 29 90 $1 s 00 Sole price. RIGID SPOUT PUMP 0.1 con "·g 149 so• s.1.,.,1 ••. llWIN MAIKING CHALK e oz Rog 90 so• Soleprlce . IAIDWAll WESCO CASEMENT WINDOW OPINUS '109 7.S9 $SOO Sele "rice . KllP IOXIS 6 ·-"-f()).206 lt90 .• 79' 40• lelel'ric•. KWIKSn INTIT L.OCK~ -90 17.13 00 hie ,.nee . (7 .....,) CONCllTI ADHISIV .. -eg 799 $400 We,.rk• • 901. . PAllT 32' lXTINSION LADD El 1!09 1<>699$8 soo Sole ~Ice. I only OLYMPIC STAIN .S.mi-trotu.porent oll bow •09 lS99 $1 1 00 Salo l'•lce. Gol luMed 10 •IOC\ on hand only AllUSS PAINT SPIA Yll &.rgeu Rtg 39 99 $2 soo Solo ~lco. IONDO r.i..,vlou •epo" '09 237 $1 50 Sole "'''• . I "> 41 WALLIOAID TA,. J.I+., •or>e IS rd• Re9 159 7S• Sole ~ko . JOINT TA,. Plotterboord 7~0' ••g 199 $1 00 Sel•-"•• • KRACK-KOH R19 769 $200 Solo p•lco • CONSTRUCTION ADHESIVE Oop to•u R19 439 s200 Sele price . 211 01 OAP PANIL ADH151VI Ca•l~1ng T •b• 29 OZ Req 449 $200 s.tertc•. PADC:O WALL PAPU SMOOTHIJS Reg 169 7S• Sole p•lce . llD DIVIL GLASS cun11s Reg 149 7S• Sole p•·lco . CllLING PATCH khr A«ovu1c ltog 3 29 s 1 n Sele Prke. CORK SQUAHS Re9. 213 7S• s.l•~lc· . 9 .. TUTUll IOLLll -e9 "59 s200 s.1.,.,1 ... HYDE 3 " WALL SCIAPll lt90 193 • 1 50 w..,nc •. UGL DITLOK ncH R09 l .19 s 1 SO .... ,...1c •. 20 .. IOTAIY GAS LAWN MOWll 8<1991 Ond S"oltoft e1>91M ;;; ~;,:'~bo,71nd..o.ds 00 S.lo ,.,1c •• WllDIATll Co•dlet• ti.cir.,. -09 s." s3000 -s.teiwtn. 1109 CHLOIODANI Ortho Reg 1999 $1 200 Sele price . Vi got. COIDLISS SHA HI --'ea' •ev n .99 $1 soo Solo ,.rke. I ooly OITHO IUGGETA Reg 199 $150 Worlco . 2 lb •or McCULOGH MAC 110 Choin Sow Go, 10" Rog 9999 s7000 Solo Itri&•· TANtC SHAYIH Sf>•oy 0o< I > go Reg '1999 $1 ooo Sele l'tlce. SWAN GAIDIN HOSE Solt & S..pple 3~•7S lleg )I '19 $1 soo Solo l'rlco. Nyl Cord •u7S R09. 24 69 $1 000 Sole price. How Remnonh 'J) or ~. Rag 119 2 •7 $1 00 Sol• ""c• . P'•"''""' tt•blH• .... n Reg )7 )9 $1 8 00 Sate l'•lco. NILSON OSCILLATING SNIMUIH 11010 1100 '1" ••11 e 11 ~300 Sole,.rlce • l0•9 )000 1q.ft. Rog 1999 $800 Sele r te• • N()jS.\ lSOO •o h •ev 1999 s1 ooo s.1.,.,1 ... Noh.on lo•o -oln Sj>rin~ler Snoppe• lmpocl Sj>t!n~ler •" 7051' 1190. 1399 $600 W.l'ric•. IOTO·ILO LIAF ILOWll lleg 6999 $4000 Sele ~Ice. I only AMIS LOPll 1109 9d $600 W.,.rk•. SPICTIACIDI I j 0 1. <M•OtOI lleg. 2.99 • 1 so s.te Itri&• . Co~&t l-H~RDW~Rb 240 BROADWAY ~ LAGUIA IEACH i 497-4403 ~ PRICES SUaJECT TO ST~IC ON HANO THltU OCT. 5, 1980 GIO-STIAIT Tiil HOLDIH •ev 277 $100 Weprtee . PINT WATlllNG '0TS -09·, 19 so• S.ltric•. AMES FLOIAL IAKI Reg . 3.90 $200 Selerlco . WATIR WAND •09 799 s400 Sele ,.rk• • WHllL IAllOW llgl\f dviy I only •ev 2699 $1 soo Sele l'•lce. llACH IALL 'addle botl j~ lt09 699 ~ 00 Sele fllric• ..• Replo<0men1 bol.!l lor obo•• R09 2.39 ~ 1 25 W•l'ric• .. MOllY IOOGIE IOARDS -...w. II (4 .... ..,, ......... '-"' 1190. 33.99 s2 2 00 Sele l'rlce. HllACHI IAlllQUIS •09 699 $300 We rice . 10.10 •ev 9.99 s4 oo w. ,.rk• • 10.20 ALL WllU llQ'S un IN STOCK CANVAS BEACH CHAIR ~ ClllSTUS ALL CHllSTMAS TlllS S0%0FF 1979 PllCI ALL CHllSTMAS UGHT SITS 50%0FF 1979 PllCI ILUI ICE ICE CHESTS •·11 599 s200 Sele IM'lc• • 1ln9lo HACH TOWILS &orth ond Oreyf•H 1190. 13.99 $700 We,.rke . WHAMO PllSlllS reovlor -eg. 1.49 7S• Sele IM'lc• • oly"'f'k -09 6S9 $300 Wel'ric•" IGLOO LITTLE PLAT~TI -... 17.79 •700 ........... IOUSIWAllS KllOSENl GLASS OIL LAIUS ~·11 9c9 ssoo S.l• l'ric• . SALTON DRINK MIXll 1109 11199 s 1 2 00 W.l'ril•· PlASTIC GUTOI AND IOWL SET l!og I 99 7S• Sole~lce . STAINLESS SILVllWAH o.....io 20 -e ........ lot • -09· •9.99 $2000 Sele ,.rk•. 3 only CLOTHIS HANGll Pull ovl 7 l1M 1!09 799 $300 Selo ,.rk• • STIAINll CANNING TOOL ll•g •999 s20oo Sele ,.1c.. l .,,,1y KllNIL Kunll A09 3 S9 $1 50 Sele l'•lc• • 4 only VllTICAL CANNING TONGS lltg 2.99 $1 00 Salo .,nee • IALL CANNING JAH 0o. lle9•lo• °'s Re9 397 300 Sole ,.rk• ••. Dor W "'°""'f. ::.~; ••... 30~ Oo1 w Mo.,th '!J. 11.g •.•1 ~JOO Sele rice .•• IALL CANNING ACCISSOllU 1109..lo• lidt 1111 lleg 37· 1 S. Sol• ,.,1 ••.. W Mo•th Reg 7J• 30• s.I• ,.rk• •• lleg•lor Cop• •ev"" so• W.l'ric•. w Movth lle9 149 7Sl Sal• ,.rte •• MICIOWAll -oo•'"'9 llock lleg 1199 200 S.l• l'ric• . la<on Rock • ::~::.: •. 600 ~1"9 ••"9 lteg S 79 $200 w.,n... PllCISION HAND CAN OPINll ""9 4.79 •2 so w..,nc •. COUlllll COIDON ILIU I " QUICHI PAN Reg 14 99 $1 ooo Seto l'•lco. WHEATON GLASS CANNISTll SETS Reg 2499 $1000 W.,.rk .. HllALL LIAD CIYSTAL OLASSIS 17 .. ,. of 6 only! ;:0 l~.9S $ 2000 CIOCKllY COOK WAI I qut<he Re9 10.99 $ s 00 Sele~lc• . COlM'ole 22'1 ~ 1!09 18 99 ~700 s.to l'ric• . ......... 1,at. lleg 10 99 :4))s00 Sele "'le• . llTZ OVEN Mins 1109 () 29 s3 oo s.1........ (111 QUICHE AND T-AIT PANS \moll lltg 199 S04 Sole price . Med 11,g 2c9 7S4 Sole price . lt9 Rig 199 s 1 oo Sole price . TAYLOR AND NG TEA con·s Reg 999 s400 S.lo price . < TAYLOR AND NG OMELETTE 'AN Reg 11 •9 $soo Sele ,.rte •. TAYLOR -AND NG PAELLA PAN Reg 12 . .i9 $600 W.ltric•. LOISTll AND CIAI KITS .i Fott,/ 52 <'0< • .,. •ev 1099 $SOO s.i.,..1c •. SCHOOL HOUSE CLOCKS 1109 69 99 s3 soo hi• ,.rte •• VEITICAL IOASTIH lo•..,,.11 90..,.,,.,,, Reg 1499 s700 leleltric•. FllNCH IHAD PAN do.Ille -09· 3.49 s 1 so leleltric•. . PLUMlllG PHRLESS FAUCETS dfl.ton•r cotlKtlOf'I •19 }999 $2 500 Solo l'•lce. ~.9 8999 s 3 5 oo Sol• price. IOlllTSHAW THERMOSTAT .... ~'"' atuo"'nt*< '4' boc-~ to, ht ahnQ onty Reg 5990 $3000 Sol• p•k•. All DlfLICTOIS PADDED TOILET SEATS tn QOkf bro~n onl)' "•11 1399 ss oo Soi.,. ••••. IATHIOOM FAUCET 9•odley Del"•• gold Rog 127 99$sooo Seto "rice. I only ELECTRICAL SPOT LIGHTS GE o••doot nw Of 100.. ll•g "11 s3 oo Soleprlce . _ MAUIU Sealed &.o"' repkx•""'"' l19hn R19 497 s300 Sole price • PICTUIE LIGHTS 14 Ce..-ieft •• -o" &wlbt •·9 ,4 11 s700 Sole price . MALllU STARTER SET • l19ht mv..,,oom lut fo, yo11r pot~o ••ci 13999$7000 Sole prlco. MALllU COLORED LINSES '"'al 3 •09 399 s2 oo Seti• l'rM• . STllP LITE 74" f kwretctl"f Ro9 IS 89 s700 Sele~lco . CllCILINl IULI GE I 6 •Ow '°" while •19 13•9 s7 oo Sole l'•k• • CIRCILINE IULI 1'1" nw Coolwhi!e lleq 1099 $600 s.lo~lco . 3 M SAFETY Lill lltivot 5-<ut1ty lite -eg 1499 s750 We,.rke . POP·UP SPONGES WITH PURCHASE FROM RIGHT ' COLUMS ABOVE HOUSE OR CAR KEV LIMIT 1 lltlt C°"'°"' BRING IN THIS COUPON .\n.<lcOft °"" Thlt covpon entltlet bearer to -fltff ICfY duplicated ''°"' your arltlnol ot eur k91 department. COllt*I bpi,.. Oct. S, IMO ~ I -DAILY PILOT NATION Bid f'a1'en St .... Brown Not in Favor of Population Controls 0 P J< '.\J 1\1 0 '\; I-' I U ~ t :\ \ 1 f i t' \ 1 SATl :fU)1\Y 10 :\ :\1 ·l PM WASHINGTON (AV ) -Oov. Edmund Brown Jr. say1 be a,,.._ wllb R'tourcea Secretary Huey JolaftlOD that CaWomia aboukt stud~ Jta can)'iq capacity. but doeln 't fl~or sovernment population controls. fOf' advocacy of population control meuures. lndudlna a t'utback on low-Inco m e hou1ln1. u pande d abortaoo tervtCf.'I, tu penalUa for lar1e fam1l1 e1 and t1ahtened lmmlrr1lion country is overpopul1atcd." ffrown u ld "It mil(hl be undervopuJated. ''When you Oy over California, you rertainly ~ a lot of empty spaces." Hrown 1alau ~iaid C alifornia's low income hou1tln1 "is so modest that it's alr~ady at rock bottom." .. Tbl1 ou1ht to be a volwatary matter." Brown told reporters dvrln1 a meelinc of the NaOoeal Governors AuociaUon. After the furor over hli comment.II latt month, Jobn1on retract.ed hb call for Umkl on low inromt' houlinl flt' said urban planning that locales workers close to their jobs wouJd 1ncreue the number of people that lhti s tale ~rnd the nation could 1t c t'om modate with the s ame rt'llOUrCf>S Tbe Democratlc roveraor .... ,_lated ct.mancb by more Uaaa balf tM Lelblato.re that he flre-Johnaon Brown Hid about 90 per('ent of t..he letters to bis olflre have been pro·Jobmm But he dtaa1ret!d wit.h several ol Johnton'a 1u11t1Uona "lt'11 not clear to me that th" I ago SOX -Once a Red Soi fan. alwaya a Red Sox fan. Just uk tranaplanted &.ton.Ian John Quadra.. • ~r::~::;·~'r'u:: :~. =~~:,,,"' o'•~.e·~ v::.. ~ !l ~~:..~r,•::J C•lllor.,oa LICeftW-Pt•ltrS Family Cancer. • Link Probed NEW YORK (AP> -There are times when cancer seems to run in the family, and these families may provide a clue to causes or the disease, say geneticists at a medical seminar. The phenomenon is so well recognized today that it has been given a name, the ''cancer family syndrome," said Dr. R . Neil Schimke of the University ol Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. Schimke and other speakers told doctors attending a s ymposium on cancer genetics Wednesday that the incidence of cancer in some families is so high that an unidentified genetic defect which may predispose people to the disease is probably being passed from· generation to generation. : THE SEMINAll WAS 'INTENDED to bring practicing physicians up to date on the genetic techniques. It was sponsored by Memorial Sloan· Kettenng t:ancer <.;enter. "I would say as many as S percent to 10 percent of adult cancers have a significant genetic component . . . If you could identify a family as a bith risk, then you could make sure they get re~ular examinations or even prophylactic SW'gery and head these diseases off at the pass," Schimke said in an interview. Cancer family syndrome is not new. Napoleon, bis father, bis grandfather and three brothers and sisters all died of stomach cancer. More recently , physicians are making systematic studies of such families. Dr. Frederick Li and colleagues at Sidney Farber Cancer lnatitute in Boston began studying one family 11 years ago after the father died of skin cancer and two sons came down with sarcoma, a cancer of c~~ve tissues, and one of them died. SINCE THEN, LI SAID, 111E OTBEa brother died of a second sarcoma that appeared after the first one was cured. One daughter died of breast cancer and the other daughter got both breast cancer and sarcoma. And one son of the dau2hter wbo died bas leukemia, a blood cancer. We Prkts Gee4 Tltrw Oct. 1, ltlO .. ----.. ... ~II Si te lttmt are Sut>JKt to S1ock on Hand All Photograph lo, T ypographlo•I. Clerieal •nd P(lntlng Errora are Subject to Correc11on .· If the old heater can't get It any hotter Time lor • new one. Dependable, ell1ctent gas water heaters. Oless-llned tanks. rapid riot water recovery system s, high temperature shut-offs. 30-gal . Reg.11-4.95 10995 4t1el.. 1.,.12us ............... 119.95 50-taf., .... ISOS.. ............ 149.95 consistent curl with mini Iron 01tette mini curling Iron has 120140 volts for worldwide use. Fast heat up Positive temperature control UL listed. #2620 Reg. 9.99 711 try the view three WaJS Make-up Mirror. Set It up on dresser, t>athroom vanity for chest. Hurry 1n, only six lettl Reg. 4.19 311 But he also said t.hat the crowth of urban areas wlll mean "less water for the rural areaa and le11 for agriculture." , Brown said Johnson's su11esUon for a study of the state's "carrying capacity" la "an important idea." He said his administration bas becun a study of the number and diversity of all forms of life in California. But he added that "we may not have the knowledce Y.et to decide how many people can live in I tbe stale." I Huntington Be•ch, CA 92947 Soutll«n Callfoml• ,..,,Ion•/ 011/c.e: t'SIJC -... ·---_._ ___ _ sen E. La Pelma Ave., Anaheim, CA 92807 81166 Valley View St , Buen• Patt< CA 90820 tW Arnell! Rd., Camartllo, CA 93010 20715 S. Avalon Blvd., CarM>n CA 9074e 23021 Lake C.nttr Or., (Lake FotMI), El Toro, CA t2e30 1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra. CA 90831 Gl 4140 Long Beach Blvd., Long Btac:ri. CA 90807 22939 Hawthorne Blvd., Torrano., CA 90506 • t095 Irvine Blvd .• Tustin, CA 92980 lQUAl 236 N. Citrus Ave .. Wttt Covina, CA 91793 ~~~".o "ll«eury Room" n1//1t>I• on 1 rtHrl«I bit/a \ oscillates to Irrigate Ralnblrd osclllatlng sprinkler adjust• to cover small or wide areas. lightweight. easy to move around. #0-13. Reg.8.-49 zap the weed and have some teed V!goro Weed and Feed controls pesky weeds at the Hme 1rme thal If fertilizes your lawn. tn 25-lb. beg. Reg 9 95 711 vigor-up your plants with vlgoro A general utlllty lartlllzer for better flowers. shrubs, trees and vegetables. 5 lb. box. Rag. 1.99 . 1'' The pre(:ise genetic link with cancer is mown oDly for one rare inherited defect called xeroderma pagmentosum, s aid Dr. James German III of the New York 'Blood Center, co-chairman of the seminar. In this disease, cells lack one of the enzymes needed to repair damage done to chromosomes by the ultraviolet portion of the sunlicht. People with Ute defect, which is common only in Japan and E1ypt, get skin cancers on the sun-exposed pbrtionsoftheirfaces, arms andnecu. do it right with Stanley But even m more common tumors, such as breast cancer , stomach cancer and leukemia, studiei have shown that relatives of a cancer rictim nm a two· to three-fold 1reater risk than the public as a whole of gettinc cancer, implying tbat genes play at least some role in the disease. THE Sm.JATION IS COMPLICATED by the hct that genes often interact with the environment. In lung cancer, for example, relatives of lung cancer victims nm a four-fold lncreaaed risk of getting cancer if they are aon-smoten, but their risk jumps to 14 times normal if they smoke. Another problem. said 1enetic researcher llary Schneider of Sloan-Ketterlnl, is that cancer ii so common -about one person in four 1et.a it at tome time in life -that it is the 1DlUSUal family that doesn't have some relatives who have bad the • dlleue. To circumvent this, Schimke said, docton look fot clmten ol a sin&le type of cancer, a cancer that occurs at an unusually early a1e or cancer at multiple sites. The hope la to find a 1enetic marker tbat will ideQtify which persona in the affected fapiilles are at risk. Brown Vetoes Bill SACRAllENTO (AP) -Gov. 1'.dllnmd Bl"OWD Jr. bu vetoed a bill apouored by tbe medical ln- clastJT tbat would bave made It harder for ~vena­llMDt ................. to~ IOIDe hospital build- ., ~and equipment pardauee. In bis nto m ... ace. Brown aald tbe blll ~ apedlte prondure9 In niltiq health Jiaen•-. laws, but tt ._ ao at 'tM upwe ol' ~ dry rour hair with yellow max Max 1000 watt little hair dryer by Gillette. Full one year warranty. UL approved. #9060. Reg.12.99 911 stop thl squeells with lb• forty W0 -40 stops sq1.4eek1. protects metal. loosens rusted parts and free• atlcky mechanisms. 9- ounce bottle. Rag. 2.39 1•• Stanley Mitre Box and Back Saw adf usts to many angles. Deluxe. On legs. Lightweight and rugged. #19-035VP. Reg. 59.99 39aa spred It on the house Glldden Spred House Paint goes on aully, dries qulctcty. Durable ft•t finish, retlata bllstara and Pffllng. Rag. 15.-49 10'! D ~ tantastlcally~~~!I!!! 1preadlbl1 Exterior spred latex glou House & Trim paint from Olldden. Goea on with ease. Chalk resistant finish, quick-drying. Rag. 18.59 lleep 1111 windows , shut Atumlnum wlndoow slide stop keeps the wlndoow shut Keeps Intruders out. #1-406. Rag. 1.05 bigger spray tho11 st.Ina X-14 Instant Mildew Sain Ramovw h .. e convenient trigger spr•yer to work on • bathroom ttle, shower stalls, and grout •round tub. 18 oz. bot- tle. Reg. 2.98 1••. ---·~ colt ecmtral ••• TllellW,ABl14byAIMmb1JmanCurt11Ttlcker.• , would baH nqulnd atateor nllonal adDinl ....a. to pron, la maQ , ... , •t ba9pital ~WM....-.. or would fljplln&eotberareafadlitlea. 1 , Conveniently Located ... Easy To leoclt 2666 ·HAIBOI BLVD. IN COST A MESA PHONE 546-7080 HOURS: WHKDAYS 9 te 9 • SATUIDAY AND SUNDAY 9 te 6 • I • r _J I l [ .. , . --- Orange Coast lOl f l O N .. ------ Ye•r••••l••• Dally N••8pa .. r 1 VOL 73, NO. 269, ~SECTIONS. 40 PAGES ORANG COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1• C TWENTY-FIVE CENTS ,,J I Will Sri Fi Flkks Sell ·Keal Thing? 81 IODI CAOSNHE.\D ................ The man la the aray plnatrlped ault bu beaded 1everal a,_ff mllaiou '° Man and Jupiter But Wednesday niaht he wu on a new mluioa &o aave the U.S apace Protnm from a alow death 8 . Gentry Lee, manaaer ol mlsaion operation• and eaaineerina for the Jupiter Orbiter. tried to sell bia UC Irvin• audlenre .on apact e• ploraUcn. But lbe colleae stu dents teemed more lntereated 1n what ~ tbouaht about srknce rlcUon mowiea Hle UC I tall. ·•!oitlJlt Wan ~ientt FlcUoo and Srientlrlc R•ality," ll on• of flVl" lct'l\Ltt"li Lee ,tvet to vanous a\td1enctUS around the country The beapet'tacled s r1enllst madt" it clur Wednesday night that whtle he was willing to dts t'U81i ljdm ce ffrtl0t1 movies, It's the real world of ll lence that ell· c1te11 hJm "I a lll l•llintt the story of the joy of scitmce and exploration directly to the ~pie,·· be said u he ~tart~ t• sllde show ol Jup1tt r and M ai:-s explorations. "Al the ~nd of thb Lecture you Wiii know more than any persoo alive ~cw about Jupitt>r two years ago,•· he promised T hrough lhe pitch blackness Lee's excited votee Hplalned the 1aseoua atmoapbere of Jupitel', the bubbly lak• of 1111· fur fomld on one of llan' moam and the fact that tben II a eur- ren t of some aort aenerated between Jupiter and ita daeelt moon. The Voyaaer miasloD to Jupiter cost only half a bWioD dollan or $2.31 per America." eJt plained the sclmtist. . ··For 12.35 a year I can "" ·your cblldrea an AU.. of the IOlar sJStem equal to tbe Atlu of tbe world you ta.cl u a cblld." be Hid. Lee la ael.lin1 the apace ~ gram tbroulh lectures and a television series. "Cosmos,•• because. be says, for the lint time in 15 years, the United States bu only one space ex- ploration project. When the current Jupiter re- port is completed there are DO ' more space prGll'ams planned. Space exploratian will add to knowledce of the earth's bistGry. increue national preatiae and productivity and will atep up tecbnolocical 8dvaoces, be says. "How can it be that you're not willing to pay U .35 per American to go to a real planet," be asks. "Far less than wepaytogotoamovie." Lee bad opened the lecture <See SPACE, Page A2> Truce Offered lra.qis Seize Vital Rail Lille BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) -Iraq announced conditions for ending the fisbUng with Iran and claimed i ts forces today captured an important oil port and cut the railroad linking southern Inn with Tehran. Tehran Radio, meanwhile, broadcast sirens wamiog ol an impendiq air raid and went off the air for 20 minutes after an announcer waned citiaens to seek shelter. The Iraqi attacka bave not endangered the lives ol the 52 Amerian hostages, a spokesman for Iranian Revolu&imaary Guards in Tehran said in a tetephane interview. In Geneva, the Iraqi ambmador to Switaerland re· Actina as an extra set of eyes for tbe pilot and co-pilot, Lance Cpl. Robert Moyer (left) and Navy Cofpsman Jess Beaucaae. cbeek out tbe terrain on way to scene of an accident. To see the results of their Search and Rescue (SAR) maneuver out of El Toro Marine Air Corps Station, see Paae , C8. . ported that Iraqi forces bad "penetrated into Abadan, .. Iran'• mQlr·oil reft.De17 cm tbe nortbenl tip of ti. Peniu Gulf. Tbe Iraqi datm to bave capba'ei tile oil port of Kbor- ramtb*, abuat 10 mllea nartb of Ab8d.aa, would be the bigest victory scored by Iraq in the foUT clays ol fightina. Iraq bu already claimed to bave captured 115 lqaal'e milel ol lra· nian border territory. More Changes Predicted For Schools "\ In mating plans public that at the most drastic end could close as many a s four or five elementary acbools and two or three middle schools next year. Newport-Mesa Dlltrict officials a1ao warn of other distutefu1 cban,es. Norman Loats. deputy district superintendent, announced seven topics Tuesday that be said acbool truatees must come to grips with in "the near future." Tbey include five-period days at the four district bilh schools, eUmlDatioo of some proerams at all levels, reduction of athletic involvement in middle and bigb scbools, centralhing cur· r iculum. unifying program schedules, curtailing support services and the possibility of in· advertmt segregation of mioori· ty students. Adminlstraton noted Tueaday that some schools, especially those in the west Costa Mesa area, are drawing larger numbers of ethnic minority children. Care must be taken in cloeing schools, they said, to avoid ethnic sesre1ation. School closures are the result of a decli.nina student enroll- ment and a drastic income plncb resultina from leas state mcmey -offered OD the basis of tbe aumber of students attencHn1 dlatrict acbooll, Propoaitian 13. wbieb curtails property tu in· come, ad tbe Serr.no vs. Priest court rulina that ordered equali•atoin of Callfonlla scbool flDandJll. Tbe combination~ disttlct adminhtratora note, baa (lee OIANGES, Paae AJ) Getting Out The Hard Part Burllan 1lipped into a 110Utb Coeta lieu bome wtt.b •»PUWll we w.....u, w•theJ fOWld -opm wtadow, bat pWq out, fOUeeuld, WM anatberstory. · · TM bome wu ruaaeked, Hid rmldellt J'. B. Popelar, ud about .. ,. -'la of ... ., ........ _........ a eloek, Je .. ir, a BmeH, 1il•er COUal &D~ a ........... ·;:it .. 111e......._aweatlled ......... n. tblft9I eouldD't ................. ...., ,, ............. ..., ... _ . ._. ___ _ ............................ .., ~tllelltoatoltMbom•. ·-- 'Doctor' Suspect Returned to Jail Iran claimed it bad paabed back lnqi forcea ia one area and reported for the rust time the capture ol a border pmt in- side Iraq. ' Legal ll'OUbles have multiplied for an Orange County man ac- cused of illegally practicing medicine and causing the death of a ch~. following bia &r· rest Wednesday on new cbarses. Gerald Barnes, 47, wbo lives al the private Coto de Caza estates development in Trabuco Canyon. was re-arrested late Tuesday on a bench warrant is· sued by Orange County Superior Court Judge Richard Beacom. Bail was. set at $200,000 in the Settlement Seen Curbing Plane Noise Newport Beach officials claimed .. Y that by settling a lawsuit •«a.inst Orange CCMmtv lbey've received a legally bind- ing promise that jet noise at John Wayne Airport will never increase. "Thia is a big, big victory," commented Mayor Jackie Heather. ••Thia not only gets us to the bargalnl.ng table but lt puts us ript in the driver's aeat." The a1reemeJit approved Wednesday by the Board of Supeniion al8o clean ibe way for the county to purcbue 13 acres of land on the airport's we•t aide. City olftdala, wbo ftled a auit a1aimt the coqmy lut June. bad plaaned to 10 to court Oct. 2 and requeat that tbe land purcbue in Costa Mesa be blocked. "Hopefully," the mayor COil· tiDued. •'tbll will be seen u a po1ltive ltep by thole who've .W.ed Newport u a bunch of ot.lnlctiaDista .•• 'In ...-... to aettle tbe suit, tbe city received aHurancn that tbe county would not lift tbe daily 41~ lid UDtil a muter plan .... .mrcinmeata1 •tudJ of tbe = .. ~,.... &Dd ac. ~.-=:· ...... to ~ .... eaatral.,,.,...... at tM alrpart la eooperatioa wttb Newport Beach. • .,,. llD't a eop-out and ,... pie 1bouldD't look at It Uaat • ., ... ••11• .. .,.. a ..... . •• ,... .. could ............ -u. •. ....,.. ........ ,..,., bllt aow •• reall7 caa 1et 80IDe'Wlllll'e. ,. Ne..-t CllY Attorllfy Hueb (lee NOIBa, Pace Al) . . . new legal action taken by J..S,e Beacom when investigaton dis· closed evidence that Barnes h8d begun seeking empk>yment as a doctor again. The defendant already wu scheduled for arraignment at t a.m . today in Harbor Judicial District Court on two other counts. He .had been free on $2,500 bail since Aug. 22, following bis arrest on three.counts involving practic· ing medicine while posing aa a dO<'tor. Barnes was s ubsequently charged with se~nd degree murder in connedlbn with the alleged negligence-related death o f John McKe nzi e , 27 , of Anaheim. wbo died last year of diabetic shock. McKenzie was seen by the sm- pe ct at Pacific Southwest Medical Group in Irvine wbiJe s uffering from uncontrolled diabetes. Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enriiht alleges in the latest actioo agamst Barnes that be applied for a new job Sept. ts, the day before murder charges were filed. Iraniaa jets made their deepest penetration into Iraq, bombiq a gM refiDel'1 at Ayn Zala, 2IO miles nortbwelt of the Baabdad and a miles from the nearest Iranian air baae, the lraqil reported. In Beirut, Iraqi Defense Minister Adnan Kbairallab lilt- ed the toa1s of bi.I country as: redefinition ot the lraq·lran border', pratectioB of the Arallic- speakiq minority in aoutbern Iran ad tbe return to Arab tov· ereipty 9' the ialanda of Abu Mousa and the Greater and Lener 1'mlla. Tbe ialanda were seised bJ Inn in 1971. In Rome, tbe Iraqi ambassador to Italy said Baghdad will accept no mediation to end tile war unless Iran aereee to retunl to Iraq ter- ritories that it claima. At U.S. aonnuneat urlina, 53 ,Amelie• dvlliaM -41 bull· MMmeB Md tWr famW. and seven depe11deats of memben ol the U.S. Embmy ataff -left Ba1bdad by bus for Amman, JoTdan. a trti-that normally takes 15-11 heun. U.S. diploluta 'Whoa, Pard' Mesa's 'Rodeo' Cormled The ownen of the Rodeo bar and restaurant in Anaheim don't cotton to lettilll otlMri mikihay Olf tMlr aame. Thus, tbe ownen of tbe western bar that•• been cublq inontbe"UrbanCowboy .. trmdftledaauitinOraqeeo..ty SuperiorCourtWednesdayaakiqtbataeo.tall ... wdrop its references to" Rodeo." TllE •ODEO IS LOCATED at u• s. 9tate e.ou.,. Blvd., not far from Anaheim Stadium. It auumed tbe aame 00Au1.6. Accordiq to lawyer Stephen D. Jobmcm •• tuit, tlae D1Cbt spot bu become an immediate bit tbroqllioat Soatbem CalUornla b)' "ore-anlslna its restaurant and eoe'1all faelllty aroundtbee>ranae County proleulCJDal aporUqeeene and Ill particular around tbiLoa Aqeles Rams." The ownen. OCSC Inc., wbicb lilU Jolm PerrlD ol Garden Grove u president, have 1pent loU ol maney to tun the reputatloa u a waterln8 bole for tbe Rama, Job.DMm claim.I, by paytnafor peat appearances bJ aam play_.. &Dd coaebel. . 80 TBI: OWN&as AU Mldq \b9 ee.rt to mate 11cCCJDaa.a1'• 1toc1eo at m w. Baker a . in eo.ta 11 ... qu&t uaing tbe name lD tbelr ~Md 1lpl IO MM of the true Ram , ..... ,....w., la tlaal Radeo. Jobmcm a11ep1 ID tbe JaWRit ti.at lleCaeabar'• ii •· · inl referw.'e9 to "Rodeo" WelallJ beea ... It bu....., ftled wttb tbe llate for 1ucb a ftctidoul bultneu name. were not bein& advised to leave Iraq for the time being. A chartered plane arrived in Amsterdam, Netherlands. with t>ther American evacuees from Iraq. They i ncluded 241 employees of a New Jersey con· struction company and their families. Foreign diplomata said they were making plans to evacuate European, Japanese, Korean and Filipino civilian.a working in Iraq. Military communiques issued here and in Tehran indicated ground and air activity had not let up. Both Iran and Iraq halted shipments of oil, not a major worry t.o the world for the pres-, ent. but lhe war threatens to halt shipments from olber oil· producing countries in the Persian Gulf. Baghdad Radio said Iraqi troops punched 12 miles into Khuzestan provioct" and out· flanked Iranian garrisons at Khorramshahr and Abadan, kill· ing SO soldiers. 'Big• Roller' Craps Shooter Wilu $777,000 LAS VEGAS <AP> -There's DO doullt the player WU a bilb· roller -be walked into Binion 's Honesboe Club with rm ,000 in cub.. And there'• no doubt be bad courage -be raked it all at once. And there's certainly DO doubt be was lucky -be wallled out rm,ooo richer. Tbe player, wbo remained UD· identified, won u rm .ooo bet County Halts SA Heights Construction 81 F&EOE&ICK SCBOE•EBL °' .. ....., ........ The Orange County Board of Supervisors took emergency action Wedne.sday to prevent constnactioo of new residential units in areas of Santa Ana Heights impacted by jet noise from John Wayne Airport. Tbe board, at the urging oC 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley, wbc»e district includes tbe hei ghts. approved an urgency ordinance laking ·effect immediately to prevent con· structlon in areas where jet noise exceeds the 65 Community Noise Equivalent Level <CNEL>. Riley said the ordinance was needed because of in - conaiatencies between the coun· ty general plan and current zoo. me in the area. The general plan's noise ele· ment, be explained, forbids development in areu impacted · by noise of 65 CNEL or greater. But it is the area's zoning which determines whether COD· 1truction can or cannot occur and nillinl zoning makes no provision for forbiddinl develop- ment baaed OD ooiH impacts, be laid. The ursency ordinance will re· main in effect for four months. Durlna that period, Riley said, (See BA.LT, Pase A2) . Retiring Cop Feted in Mesa Some 80 fellow offtcen and well·wilbers will gather Friday at the Mesa Verde Country Club for a noan lmcbeoa to honor retJ.r. l.q Colla 11.. Police Oftlcer Prank Upbam, a 10.year pilot on the belicopterpatrol. Wednesday OD the lbird roll of the dice in a crapa game at the club in Lu Vegas' glitterin1· downtown Casino center. The casino, home of the an- nual big-money World Series ol Poker, bas claimed for years that no bt>t is too big and gamblen are told they can ria.k whatever they can afford. •'The guy called previously about betting anywhere from $200 ,000 to SI m i llion,'.' Honesboe Club president Jack Binion said today. "We said, 'Yeah, you can do it'." Binion said be bad bad no further contact with the gambler, described only u a Southerner in bis 205, unW be showed up Wednesday. "He bad two little suitcases, one full one and one empty ooe," Binion said, "and he left with two full ooes." He said the man had the $777 ,000 in cash -SlOO bills in $10,000 bundles -"and we paid him off in cash." The man plunked his entire bet down on the "don't pass" line at the club. The woman who was rolling the dice threw a six, which became the "point," then a nine and on the third roll tbrt"w a seven which meant the house lost. ''Three rolls and it was all over with," said Binion. Binion swore he did not know the man's name, but added he would not release it if he did. Further, he said, be didn't think the Internal Revenue Service knew lhe man's identity either. "They're going to be looking around for him," Binion said. Coast Weather Denae coastal fog Fri- day momlng with hazy sunshine Friday af - t.el'DOOD. Lows tonight 58 at the beaches, 65 inland. Hi1ba Friday mjd 70s to mid 808. 11'81DE ;JOBA ~ Al o Hme uNll tM no&..'1 de/rue .,,,.... more lwotli-. lit Oft tM N°"'1ftaJ Gwml 11'an al a,.., Um• •i,.c• tit• R•vohlt'°'9Grv War, pubUc opotlt11 Ito• d•pld•d Ila• "°""' of Uw ooMdHr militio. SH ..,,.._., llappeu19 in Oft Patnllman Upham, 41, joined the JoeaJ·deputment in 1151 after ll'aduatiGD from Oranae Coalt Colle1•. where be atudled crlm':::& &Dd in 1l'10 he wu ' eboleefor -duty . Iowa ton °" ~ 8'. •••ell •M't-....... A· ........... a ....._ • a.w.r. a • .......... a ..... CH LM..... M ....... ,__ Ctl ........ °''' ............ .. Aa avid 1portaman, Officer Upllam baa been vacatlonina in tlle Laa Sb.ta area of nortbern Callfcnla uaU1 bla format Oct. 1 ntlmDmt from the police de· partmeatt.keselfed. · He wW t.bea make bla home lD the Lake Havuuarea. ___ ___,_ ~ M =c-IY M ~OM ..._ c.iel 0 M.Cl.DI 0.1 e 0..... •M ...................... Ct, .... nn m ;:-c!: ........ a.a ....... ......._ a..,.._ M .... ,._ a . --=~-----~ 1 • t _J ' I ... ~ I J I ' t 1 1. . DAILY PILO T V.S. Blocking Sales Of Engines to_lr:aq . W tnNGTO CAP1 In an abrupt polio revenal. the State Dl!partmeot tod•> tt-mporanly blockf'od the planned Hie of General Y.lretrlc KU turhlnt' ttn«IMll for ltahan fn1atu ordered by l.h.., lr11ql navv Department spokc>aman Jack C.nooo Hid the deriaion wu based un th" dtt•1>«>mn.c tta.lility betW'ffft Iran and lnq aod the Amrriun desll'f' nol to tab ldM 1n thf' ronll1ct llt! ·aid the dec lston waa not r elated to Ca rter tu1m tnlt1tnttlon fur-. ror the' ~•l4"ty Qf tht ~ ~m4"r1 ran hotta1es In lratn Cannon !lrud thl' •dmlnlstrauon would recon•lder lta de l'l81on to bl01.'k lht+ ""'C' one-t• lht"r .. 11 an ea1in11 or ten.11lon1 In lhe rt'.ilon tlcue lilHt-d ltfl Lt ('o...,w ... 111lfln SAN (iAHltl 1-:1. ' "I rwu ('\)Uftl)' sher1U's depuliell tnvt!M1~uun~ u p1 v~lrr r II lod11y shot and llllled a ma.a who re porh:tlly lhrl'lill'llM thl•m ... u, i. knift-, •department IJ~Hmkn reJ)(>rtt'<I Tht• dt<vu11t·~ ~ h (1 ~ t'fl' not tmm~.hately adt·ntiried by the de pa1 tmt>nt, uw esttJ(ull'\I "-'' er•I reports of a prowler neu a r .ulroad nght tif w ;H lwl11nd th.-4900 bl()('k of Acacia Slret"t in un 11n1nN.t'lll>rnll'1l .1r c>11 11 d ,\ mw1 dt•pulwi. ,t0 p 1>t'd to que.suon at the site a ~ge 1y pUIJ<'tl U k1 Ufl' fn1rn hi' ~l'kl'l llOd walked toward them, 1gnor 1nji? fl'J>('Gt•·d onJior, 111 .. w p a '>J)(1kesman aid 'l 'nlkN .~f•( flll tff#.df,-('1•ftiruek UN ITED NATIONS t o\P I Secretary of Stute Edmund S Mus k•€' anti Soviet f'nre 1gn Minister Andrei A Gromy~o rl'al'hed agrl'('ffit'nt tnday to fJrien neg_otiattons for a cutback in nucleur misst les in Europe , Muskie said . Rut 1t was not immediately clear whether Muskie got from Gromyko any assurances that the Soviets would try to use their influence to end the spreading war between lran and Iraq H.-1•~ 11.-nd ffJ ('half..,. FORT CHAFl-~EE. Ark (AP) A planeload of 174 Cuban refugees from Florida landed at nearby Fort Smith airport to· day and awaited buses to bring them lo this relocallon center to join others from around the country Hort~ Rn1.-Hit• f..j Pft"l"ftlf LOS ANGELES Great Western Savings & Loan Assn. has inc-reased its home mortgage rate to 14 percent, an increase of a quarter or a percent William Williams' Rites Set Friday Longtime farmer a nd fourth generation 'alifornaan William J . WiUiamb Jr .. who served from l007 to 1976 as vice presi· dent and general manager of the t rvinc Ranch agricultural divasaon. dJed at the &Re of 71. Tbe Laguna Hall s res ident succ umbed Monday a t South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna after a career of more than 4-0 years m the aRricultural Dr. Buckler Rites Slated In Newport Private memorial funeral services are scheduled Saturday in the Dover Shores home of Newport Beach's Dr. Arthur S. Buckler . who died last Saturday. Rites for the general pracli· liooer and seven.year resident of the Harbor Area will be at 2 p.m., with arrangements under direction or the Neptune Society. Family spokesmen said Dr. Buckler , 59, died or a combina· tioo of illnesses. A 1948 graduate or George Wa s h i n gton Univers ity in Washington, O.C .. Dr. Buckler practiced medicine for 18 years in Irvington, N.J .. before mov· ing to Southern California in 1967. Associated with l.N .A. Health Plan o f Ca l i f o rn ia, a Westminster·based m edical group, he was a Lions Club member in New Jersey and in Costa Mesa. Survivors inc lude has wife. Kathryn , a son , Kevin, of Newport Beach. his mother, Irene, of OeJ Ray Beach, Fla., and two sisters, Mrs. Jacqueline Wellen and Mrs. Shirley Kumos, both of New Jersey. ORANGE COAST c DAILY PILOT '"• o,.,. '°''t 0 •11 .. Pilot •II" wnt(f'I! I\ Comt>uwo .,. N••l Ptfl\\ ., PU~it~ by ,,. Or•~ C.O.\t P\lb41\#'W"O (omp.tr1, s.p.r•t• td•hon\ .,, OUl>t•W'40 Moftdf Y, '"'°"""" Frt<M' tor CO\t• ~w. Ne•DO't &.tten """'inqlOf'I 8•Acrt "o"'"'••" Vtlltl•f '""'"' '-•t wn• 8t•t" 5ioutn '°'*'' • ,..noa" '•tion•t .amort ,, 0\1041~ S..h,,r<Mn .no SVft01h\ fnio pr1nc.1.,.t °"'tt'•'f'H"'O ofat11 '' •t UO W•'' 9•¥ Stre.t D O Boa tW C,o\t• Mf>\f C•Ufon''• .,.,, llt .. rl " WM Pr•\IOf"l llM Pul)hV-t , .. ..,.. ...... .. £di tor T"'-'" MIH""4,.. Ma"•~•nQ Edt1« ( ... 11 .. M LtH A.\\f\tA"f AA•nfl~ll''IO (dllOI Coela MeH Ottlce UOWf'' 8•w S•r•f'ft MtO•nq ~tklr•n P 0 Bo• tW t)11h. Office• L~,. &ftat f\ t01t HO CM tt ti•~•tlf ....._ M\;AUf\Qtor\ O••c.f\ 1111' 8t•c.Pt tou•t••r• Telephone (714)14.2~1 ClaHHleO 4dHl11el"I W.1111 ~¥'•t: ~ ~~"?:, '~:~::~=~'"'::..~ m•Tttr •• •dw11•U••,,,.nh rt•tt1n m•w • r••ttOWC•O •·•~t 'ewe••• ""''H\\•ott of ,._,,..,. . ....,. $o<o40 tl••I ,..,, ... DOid •t CeUA W l.t, U lotOf"'f IV$PS , ... , Wltt(to~"' < .. t ft t \4 • tftOfttf'My •• m•1t U M monfMy m1ht•tfdf\hA4h~\ \.f 00 ~tf'h indu s tr y fro m Me xico to Ore~on ·Funeral servicu for Mr. Williams will be at noon Friday in Pacific View Memorial Park Mortuary· Chapel, Corona Jel Mar, with interment to follow there after Masonic rites. During Mr. Williams' career with the Irvine Company, he was responsible for all citrus and other tree and ground crops in addition to livestock raising. He was, more recently. senior agr icultural consultant ror Boyle Engineering Corporation, which has 80,000 acres under cultivation in the San J oaquin and Sacramento valleys. Born on his family's farm in Turlock, Mr. Williams was graduated in 1930 from what would become California State Polytechnic University of San Luis Obispo. He was pres ide nt of the Council of California Growers and for s ix year s was a member or the UC Riverside Chancellor's Advisory Commit· tee. Social and service Or · ganizations included the YMCA and Boy Scouts of America; Scottish and York rites; Al M alaikah Shrine and the Red Cross of Constantine. Survivors include his wife. M ary Taber Williams ; daughters, Miss Laura E . Williams of San Diego and Mrs . Marcia W. Snidow of Irvine; a sister, Mrs. Plinio Madonna, of Cay uc os, and two gr andchildren. f'ro..PapAI SPACE ••. with some thoughts on current' science fiction movies. -"Star Wars:" "I enjoyed it the first time I saw it and the second time, too. But didn't you find it strange that in the bar· room scene beinas from separate planets a.re capable of breathing the s ame atmosphere." -·'The Empire Strikes Back:" "When I saw it I was troubled because most people in this country do not discriminate between those things that make logical sense and those that don't." -"Close Encounters of the Third Kind:" "Paru of tbat movie were beauWully done. But any extraterrestrial belnp we encounter are not likely to look like the Pillsbury Dou1b Boy." -"Alien:" "It comes from the old school. It su11esta that there might be another kind of terreatrlaJ beln1 tbat isn't friendly." If movie producers had bothered to take advantaae of available aclentillc data all ol the movies could have been more realilUc, the scleatlat aald. Dur_inJ a,uestioa and answer period ~ ollowed b1a talk DO one asked Ole aclentbt about the color slides of JuS-iter and Mara• he had shown. Kids' Home Funds Pushed /\ Joint public and private drive to raUie ru.ndlt to conalr\lct a nrw home for Oran1e CoW'1ly'1 abuaed atnd battered children wu launched today by the O ran11e1 Count y Hoard of Superviaont The pattn•nhlp to raise lhe money nece.aary lo con8truct a raclUty to replace the now over· rrowded Albert Sitton llome wu lauded by Board Chairman Ralph Cla1rk who said. "I am 1•ncourat1ed by euly signs of I Upp()rt " lark IK!Ctrlcall y referred t.o an offer by the Newport Harbor Waddill Seeks Da~ages Ur William Waddill was back tn Orange County Superior Court Wednesday The physician--unsuccessfully prosecuted twice before for the de ath of a fetus following a s aline abortion in 1977-aslt:ed a jury for damages ste mming from an alleged $500,000 busi· ness loss he suffered through purc hase of the Huntington H a rbour Beach Club seve n yearsag~ • Attorney Michael Richman, re presenting the Westminster· based obstetrician, claimed in opening arguments Wednesday that his client was cheated out of the half million dollars through the actions of attorney J erome Bame and Frank Janette. once a stockholder in the beach club. Waddill contends Bame con· s pired with Janette lo defraud him and another pa rtner, Dr. Robert Trace. The beach club ultimately went bankrupt, leading to financial dilficuJties for Waddill that during his murder trials prosecutors used as a possible motive for his allegedly killing a fetus to avoid costly m alpractice litigatioo. Richman said Janette, a neighbor Of Waddill's in Hunt· ington Harbour, approached the physician in 1973 about purchas· ing the beach club. W addilJ agreed to go along with the venture, the attorney said. and joined a corporation that included Trace to buy the club for $2.2 million. J anette retained Bame , he said . t o h e lp a rrange the purchase. But Richman claimed that Bam e mis r epr esented by $260,000 the amount Janette in· vested in the ven\w"e. He also claimed that Bame should have known that Janette bad take" $200,000 of the $2.2 million ot fered by the corporation for tht.. club. He said Bame advised Waddill and directors of the club, who had discovered the illegalities, t o forget Janette's action because bringing them to the at· tention of authorities would jeopardize efforts for refinan.c- ing. f'n>111 Page A I ~ NOISE ... Coffin explained that the city's suit, which argued the county s hould co mplete an environmental study before buy· ing the land, had an excellent chance of success. · Mayor Heather s a id after reaching agreement on the new airport operation conditions, the next step is to work on a noise control. program. She claimed the current noise policy "has no teeth in it." •'The most that ·s been done so far is a few letters to airlines admonishing operators for mak- ing too much noise," she said. ••And that just won't do it.·' The citr is interested in draft· ing a ncnse program aimed at e n couraging operatJ>rs to purchase quieter jets and Offer- ing financial incentives to those that do, Mn. Heather said. She added that Wednesday's a1reements should go far in ushering in "a new era of cooperauon." "We had to tie them (the COUD· ty > up to make the point of bow unfair it b for a city to get all lhe burden, all the nobe but no voice." Gasohol Explodes COLUMBUS1 Ohjo (AP) -A· drum containmg a mixture ol alcohol and euollne Dashed into names during a gUOhOI dem· onstraUon and shot up like a rocket, spray1n1 a crowd 9t spectators with bumint liquid, officials say. Seven people wen hospitalised when the drum a · ploded Wednesday. Junior League of $50.000 in m atching funds that would be r:iade avaiJable for the project lf a like amount is raised in the community. Bill Steiner, director of Sitton home, located in a compound of county facllides in Orange, said the need for a new facility Is critical. The home ls the repository for children who have been abused. sexually exploited. neglected or abandoned. A total or 1,867 children were admitted to the home during the 1979·80 fiscal year, nearly <tSO more than the previous year, ac· cording to a Sitton home fact sheet given civic leaders who at· te nded this morning's kickoff meeting. OHicials predi c t th at admissions will double within the next 10 years. Ellen Wilcox, coordinator of the drive for a new home , sald a private non·profit corparation should be established for fund raising purposes. She predicted it could be up to 2'h years before s uHicient money is raised ror a new facili· ty and perhaps five years before it is opened. Under a current proposal, the new Secility would be construct· ed on cou111ty·owned property ne ar the existing home. The Hor ace Greeley School is now located on the site. The school will be vacated next summer, according to county offi cials. The sit e was recommended because no land acquisition cost would be involved and due to its proximity to county Juvenile Court and the UC Irvine Medical Center Officials said some costs might be saved by using some of the school facilities as part or the new home for dependent children. The ne w facility . as con· ceptuaJly proposed, would pro- vide living accommodations for 150 children. The current home houses up to 88 children. HALT .•. a ll development proposals in Santa Ana He ights will face scrutiny by the county Planning Com mission for their con· sisteocy with the general plan noise element. As part of its action, the board dir ecte d the co unt y Environmental Management Agency to begin· work on de· veloping a "specific plan" for Santa Ana fieights that will bring the area's zoning into COD· formity with the general plan. Riley said he rajsed res · idential deve lopment issue because or a recent variance ap- plication that laced board action. The variance was sought by a builder who had plans to construct two condominium units within the 65 CNEL noise "footprint." The variance was required bec ause of a s ubstandard driveway width . Had the driveway been of the correct width, Riley painted out. the EMA would have had no choice but to grant a building permit for the project regardless of the noise impact implications. i UPPell ttfWPOllT llJIY ICOLOOlCAL flt!UflW MAP SHOWS PLAN FOR UPPER BAY SILT REMOVAL ~· ,, .......... Good Flrat Step' J Bay Dredge Plan Unveiled by State By STEVE MARBLE Ot•Delty ~IUft A dredging plan calling for re· moval of roughly half the amount of sand and silt that washed into the Upper Newport Bay last winter was proposed Thursday evening by state Fish and Game officials. The long-awaite d dredging scheme, cited as the first major step in restoration or the clogged state-0wned ttalogical preserve. was shown to a small audience gathered in the N.ewport Beach City Council chambers. Fish and Game officials had been oo order to detail by Sep- tem ber bow they'd spend $700,000 on a bay cleanup project. Their answer was this : A hydraulic pumping system on a barge will s uck up around 230.000 cubic yards or silt and sand from the upper reaches of the bay and deposit the spoils on one ortwodisposal sites. The dredging process, officials noted, could take as long as 300 days with another year long wait for the dredging material to dry before it can be trucked to a permanent dis posal site. Ron Hein. a Fish and Game of. .J fic ia l, said the plan, as now envisioned, would cut a banana· shaped channel from an area parallel to Galaxy Ori ve to the top ofthebav. The cul in the middle of the bay. he said, would reduce the depth to seven feet below sea level. As a point of comparison, he ex· plained, the top of the bay cur· renlly is roughly three reet above sea level. Water would return lo much of the top of the bay, he said, when the project is complete. Fish life and an increase in bird population would presumably follow. f'roM Page . I I CHANGES • • vor aciously eat e n into the finances of what once was one of the state's wealthiest school dis· tricts. State law now curtaiJs district financial spending to increases of no more than 2 percent a year while inflatioo rises at a rate of more than 12 percent annually. District enrollment. which stood at ~.UM at the end or Sep- tem ber last year. bas dwindled now to about 19,154, and officials see a steady decline for years to com e. With annual overhead-cost savings of about $125,000 ror every elementary school closed and $3)0,000 ror every middle school shut down, the district's administration and board or trustees agree that closures are a necessitv. And adinirustrators note that closing down all of the schools under consideration still would not result in the r e maining facilities being filled to capacity. Enrollment in the once· -- atrluent district began to decline in 1964. Su bsequently , trustees have sh ut down eight elementary schools, the latest during June, 1979, when Monte Vista and Victoria closed their doors. Trustee 'Roderick MacMlllian bas long cried for a system of closing down schools in an or· de rly fashion. Tuesday he proposed keeping the more sophisticated schools -those with equipment and facilities for broader programs -open. The concept would close older elementary schools first. mov- ing students into middle school plants for their ele mentary education and then on into high school facilities which might become schools for grades 7·12. Under this plan, he predicted, the dbtrict eventually might end up with four high school plants housing students from kin · dergarten through 12th grade if enrollment continues to decline at the current rate. CALIFORNIA 'l;anal' Beaches Ballot? SACRAMENTO (AP> -Oppo. .... al the Peripheral Caul U.1 &My ant aubmittiq man Uta• lwlc• lb• num\er of alpat .... ....s.d to quality a ,.., ............. for the ballot Tb• Coallllon To Stop the Peripheral Canal .. ,d w.._. dQ lt would aubmlt more thu TIO.• alpatul"ftl If al leut Ml.lit.,.. ntliatered voten. U.. referendum wUI be on the ballot at th• ltl2 primary . or any earlier special election en.err S• ttdl..,f LOS ANGELES t AP> A private study is bem& coadut"led to see whether a 500-ure area neat to the USC campus can be tuned into a major commert tal ( __ sr._:4_TE_J industrial center to attract JO.bs and people. The study should he completed next month. Pushing for the ambitious project is Ted Watkins. a leader of the Watts Labor Community Action Committee, who said he would like lo see the area turned into another "Westwood," the com mlmity near UCLA. Oaief fo 114-dre SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Board chairman Harold J . Haynes ol Standard Oil Co. of California says he plans to retire next May after 34 years with the company and seven, years .in the top post. George M. Keller, 56, was chosen at the Socal 's board meeting Wednesday to succeed Haynes, who will be SS neat week. Keller, now vice- cbairman of the board, joined Standard Oil in 1948. Crime ,...,.d s~i L-OS ANGELES (AP) -A program offering cash rewards to help filbt crime OD city buses was announced by Southern Caliromia Rapid Transit Dis- trict offtciala. The reward system revealed Wednesday is part of a statewide "We TIP" program offering up to $500 lo informants who help convict those involved in RTD-related crimes. This is the latest attempt by the RTD to combat rising violence on buses. According lo latest statistics. vandalism costs an estimated S3 million an- nually. Blaze Co111ai11ed SOLEDAD (AP) -An anon fire that spread over 2,000 acres of brush near Pinnacles National Mooumeut in Monterey County ~as been contained, the California Department of Forestry says. The fire, which broke out Tuesday afternoon, was con- tained late Wednesday and was expected to be controlled this morning, a forestry spokesman 1aid. No iJOuries were reported. ! JODI TBS llSPUBUCt I .; Republic. ~ Home / ~ Loan I .... 197'72 ~ur8M1./ l.rvtne. CA 92715 (7141851-Cl991 I lJcrJ*'ll 8robr I • ' ~. Septilmbef 25. 1llO Actors_Pact Reached? Tentative Settlement Reported Today BOllftrftl "8 Peet'S Fred Astaire poses with the .. Pied Piper" award as wile, Robin, smiles approval. The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers honored the 81-year- old entertainer with its highest honoT in a ceremony Wednesday night in Los Angeles. Astaire has been an ~SCAP member for JO years by virtue of his songwrit- ing. Meteor Flashes Over Three States ' HOLLYWOOD (AP.) - N e 1rotlatora for atrill:lnr t e levision and film actors reached a teotati ve contract acreement wit.b producen early today, a union apoteawoman a aid . If ratified, the a1reement would end the strike by aome 67,000 acton that be1an July 21 and which baa v.lrtuaUy. abut down the industry and delayed the start of the new fall television season. The tentative agreement oo a three-year contract came early this morning after a bargaining session of nearly 19 hours, said Screen A c tors Guild spokeswoman Kim Fellner. "ATS A.M. CPDT) a tentative agreement was reached between the actors and the producers and that followed a final 18~-bour bargaining session." said lhe producers' spokesman Phil Myers. "The SAG and A FTRA (American Federation of Television Radio Artists) boards will meet starting this weekend to approve it," he said. ·•After that. there will be a ratification process by both of those groups. And each board will decide when the actors can go back to work pe11_din~ ratification. San Onofre To Reinforce Heat Sleeves How'sthis for ajoborrer? Rec.ei ve $500 fort wo days work. expenence not necessary. It was enough lo prompt 400 job By n.e Auodale4 Preu seekers to fill out applications for Authorities say a large meteor sailed over Arizona, New Mex-100 jobs al lhe San Onofre nuclear ico and California, where it may have landed. generating station. And a meteorite popularly known as the "Old Woman ' ' W e ' v e q u i t l a k i n g Meteorite" returned home to California on Wednesday after 18 applications ." a Southern months ol study by scidtiats at the Smitbaonian Ioatitutioo. Calilonua Edison Co. spokesman PC)llce in ~veral west.em cities said people reported seeing a said Wednesday. falling glow in the sky south-southwest of Tucaoo about 8 :30 p.m. After three days of training -Wednesday. du ring which the chosen applicants will receive $100 per Pot\ OOt1NTY SBl!&H'l"S deputies went to one area west of ~·Y -. they will spend two days Tucaou, l,ootin1 for a poaible downed airplane, while a county·~-"matalling-metal aleevea inaide-~!!!men. t of Public Safety helicopter hovered above, rinding 7 ,500 small beat exchange tubes uvw.u.ue on three generators in Unit One al "It definitely ft'a• a metepr," aaid Lanny McCuli.o. team theSanOnofreplant. supervisor of the Phoenix Sky Harbor Intemational Airport 'Work f! limited to two days Control T~r. "We saw it from up here. We must have bad 150 because that's the maximum call~ a~ it._ A lot of people thought it was a plane crashing, but allowed for any possible radiation thats unposstble. You can't see a plane crashing in Tucson from exposure. Phoenix or New Mexico." • The tubes have sediment He said a Federal Aviation Administration official in Los buildup and corrosion on their Angeles told him that the meteor landed in California "but that be interiors, and the sleeves will didn't know where. They've bad a lot of report.a fro~ all around reinforcetheoldtubea. California." Tbe Edison spokesman said no firm date bas been set by the THE NATIONAL WEATHER Service in Pboen.ill was one of nuclear Regulatory Commission the few places to miss the show. "We didn't see it " a spokesman for the work. but the utility hopes said. · ' lo get wtder way within a few . Old Woman Meteorite, siad to be the lareest ever found in the weeks. Umted States or Canada, now is 15 percent lighter because Smitbaonian scientists sliced away M2 pounds of its 6,070.pound bulk for research. Composed t0ain1Y of nickel and iron, the rock bas been mount- ed and was scheduled to go on exhibition Saturday at the Bureau of Land Manaaement's station in Barstow. SAN BEKNAaDINO COUNTY bad sought a court injunction to pr47v~nt the Smitbsoni~ ~ro~ cutting into the meteorite. County officials argued that slicmg 1t would mutilate a rare specimen from space. Although a federal judge turned down the motion, Smithsonian scientists agreed to cut away less than they bad originally planned. The meteorite was discovered by three prospectors in the Old Woman Mountains near Twentynine Palms in 1976. BW PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THE RE-OPENING OF OUR HAIRWORKS SALON Come meet our talented new staff of stylislS a1 BW Newport Beach. Let them pamper you with personalized service and guidance in all phases of hair design. custo m hair color, predictable perms and complt:te makeup. Fo r an appointment, phone 714-759-1211, ext. 260. Hairworks Salo n, Newport Beach I Train Delayed OAKLAND (AP ) -An "electrical overload" caused a Bay Area Rapid Transit train filled with commuters to sit for . about seven minutes inside an approacbtothetrans-baytube,a BART spokesman said. The 10. car train was moved back toward the Oakland West station where passengers were un- loaded. pendinl ratification. •'So in terms ·o1 when the pl'O' ducen IO bact into production, we would have 'to wait and see what their decision is." However, Ma. Fellner said the unions could send the actors back to work pending ratification. "IT'LL TAKE TWO and a half or three weeks for the whole r~tification process," she said, smce the actors would vote on the pact by mail. The contract includes a 15 per- cent increase in minimum salaries for the first 18 months, and 15 percent for the second 18 months, for a compounded in- crease of 32.25 percent over the life of the contract, Myers said. Actors currently earn a minimum of S23S a day or $78S a week. Fellner said the tentative agreement also included in- creased pension and welfare benefits , a strong non - discrimination program, im- 'Long Walkout' proved workin1 conditiona for minon and an overhaul ol work· lnl 1cbedul•. NEGOTIATIONS BAD pro- greaaed more rapidly aince acton and producers aireect a week qo on a complex formula that would live acton a share ol the lucrative home video market. That issue had been a major stumbling blocll: in ne1otialiona. Work would resume almost immediately alter the strike on new prime-lime series for the ABC, CBS and NBC television networks . But network spokesmen have said it would take at least three to four weeks before any new half.hour episodes could be broadcast and six to eight weeks before any h?ur-long show could go OD the air. The strike has virtually baited the new fall television seasona and forced several thousand non-performing crattsmen and others dependent on the movie- TV industry out of work. PSA Pilou' Strike Grouruh 200 .Flighl,s SAN DIEGO CAP ) -A pilots' strike shut down Pacific Southwest Airlines today. and other airlines were besieged by the San Diego-based ca.rrier's stranded passengers. Pi~ket lines wer47 set up at airport.a in Los Angeles, San FrancLSCO and San Diego, and reservation clerks said telephone lines were jammed. The 3>0 flights flown daily by PSA to and from those cities as well as Phoenix, Ariz .• and Mexico were canceled. "We 're ready for a long walkout," said a spokesman in Sao Diego for the 500 striking pilots and flight engineers. The strike, the first in PSA 's 3l·year history, came ~ the second anniversary of the mid·air collision between a PSA Boeing 727 jetliner and a light plane over San Diego that tilled 144 people. . THE WALKOUT BEGAN at 12 :01 a.m., said PSA spokesman Skip Myers, after 11 months of negotiating failed to produce a new agreement. ._ "I doo't see a quick settlement in sight when we are so far apart oo everything," Myers sald tb1a morning. He aaid PSA will honor its cbU1.er flight reservations with management personnel, but will not attempt lo opera"te com--mercial flights. . .. __ _ . "~r airlines _have agreed to accept our tickets," Myers said. Many are adding a number of flights to pick up the slack." PSA is the nation's 13th largest carrier based on puaen1er volume. The walkout idled a 28·Jet fleet and 3,700 airline employees besides the pilots and flight engineers. ~ rot'AL OF 11 CITIES and 25,000 daily passengers are affect- ed by the strike. In addition to carrying a majority of airlines' commute.r flights within California, PSA bu flights to Nevada and Arizon.a. I . Talks broke down Wednesday night when the airline rejected a reduced pay demand by the ~west Flight Crew Aaaociatioa which represents PSA pilots. ' "There is virtµally no hope that I can see for any 111:.i.nd or settle- ment now." said Bryan Conn, a senior captain who beads the as- sociatioo. AN ADLINE SPOKESllAN said two demands by the pilots were "totally unacceptable." Those were for pay of almoet $100,000 annually for senior pilots flying Boeing ma and l>c-t-aOs and for fe'tl(er working hours. . The pilots have demandetl a 35 percent pay raise over two years while PSA offered a 29 percent raise. At present, salarfes range from about $10,000 annually as a start for second officers lo $70,000 for senior pilots. The pilots' previous contract expired last December. ·A federally mandated 3().day "cooling off" period ends today. • .. tB .· 1 /2 Off-For a limited time. Designer knit sport sh!rts. Save 50% on our most prestigious designer labels. Enjoy the comfort and good looks of 100% cotton knit. Notice the contem- \ \ porary detailing. At this price why not buy more than one. Navy, cream. brown, white, tan. S-M·L-XL. Reg. 40.00 19.90 silverwoods 41 FAIHION la.AND, NIEWPOllT •UCH NEWPORT BEACtt. 83 FUhlon Island 759-1211. Mon · Thurs·Frl 10·9, Tues -Wed· Sat to 6 Sun 12·5 --------. - I . I i I ; :: .. Ora,,ge Coast Daily Pilot CoOI Welcome For " Step Into Future Some Costa Mesa ity Coun~U member• ban indicated lb.al to ~evelop t.M old downtown aru the)' are to&na to have to step into the JOtb Century to attract corporate investors. ~h a move took place lut week when the council 1ave tentaUve approval for a twUport aou1ht by Padfk Federal Savin1s at the firm's propc>Hd new headquarters at 19lh Street and Newport Boulevard A 5mall army of retidents and homeowner auoclaUon m e mbers turned out for the 1et1ion. wamina that heliports m Costa Mesa wtll pollute the city with rioise a.'i well as windstorms kkkf'd up by ~\1olvln1 rotors Safety also was dascuued The downtowt1 heUpad wu approved for lhe top of a three story parking garase behind P1c1fk' planned corporate headquarters bulldifti Fina l approval, how~ver . ts <"Onltnl(e nt upO!] helicopter landing and take-off aest.s to be ronduC'ted art er the parking structure as buHt All well a nd good Heltcopters could serve to stimulate healthy commerr1a l attitudes tn the cit)' But their value an this respect must be m easured carefully against the ir noise and possible salety probl~ms If operations are controlled to a point o ( only minor nuisance, the 20th C~ntury might well be served, but the City Council owes residents the assuran<"e tha t a ma jor nuisance doesn 't evolve. And approval certainJy s houldn't be interpreted as a welcome for he licopter pads on every com er or Costa Mesa No Easy Solutions A report indicating a lack of affordable housing for industrial e mployees in Costa Mesa bas prompted the Chamber of Commerce to form a committee to study possible solutions to the problem. With the blessing of the City Council, the committee m et last week in the city hall in an initial brainstorming sessjon. Advanced were proposals ranging from government ho using aid to finan cial innovations that would reduce interest on ho m e buyer loans by allowing lending institutions to be co-owners of homes purchased in the city. Such a plan would give lenders a share of profits gained by the hom eowner if he sells a fe w ye.ars later for an inflation-triggered higher price. City Council m e mbers have all but decided that to reduce the cost of housing, more and smaller apartments, condom.iJtiums a nd houses must be fitted into smaller parcels of costly acreage . Me mbers of the Mesa West Homeowners Association, meanwhile. have warned that such moderate-cost h o u s in g is sy no,n y mo us with "neighborhood delerforation'' a nd h ave warned they will fignt such -preje<?ls~in ·theiMlrea .. --· · ---. One thing seem s certain, the committee and the city won't fand a n easy answer to a problem plaguing all of Orange County. No matter wha t solutions are offered, criticism will be offered from one quarter or another . Fewer Bus Riders Ridership statistics for the new pay-as-you-go busing progra m for Harbor Area students fail to reveal whether the program is a success. According to Newport-Mesa Unified School District officials. nearly 1,700 students now have purchased the $15-a -month bus passes . That translates to 69 percent of last year's ridership figures at this time. Then, it was estimated, roughly 2,600 youngsters were making the daily bus trip to and from school. District officials maintain the pay system is s uccessful. But it has, they admit, presented more than a few headaches to employees trying to establish finn bus ro utes . Daily modifications are necessary. they say. adding that ridership should swell when daylight saving ends and the rainy season comes. There remains, however , the question of how clote the bus program is coming to paying for itself. Last s pring. school trustees agreed to pay 50 percent of that cost in hopes the sale of passes would make up the shortfall. _ District officials say they are still in the adjusting stage and intend to e liminate buses and coordinate routes to attain the 50 percent goal. While it is safe to say that a lot of school-bound c hildren ar e still riding s chool buses , it is too early to pass final judgment on the program. • Opinions expressed 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 Pilot. P.O. Bo!( 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd I Mate Ratings ByLM. llOYD Item No. 733B in our Love and War man's file is the re· port on a survey. More than 2,000 men were ulll:ed what they considered in\portant in a matrimonial mate. Tbe quality that cot the bi1hest rating was lbled aa "that the woman love him" -81 per· cent. Second', "a sense of * Dear Gloomy Gus Is Costa Mesa so poor it can't afford a new lock on the door of the wo,men'a ~able potty at the Soll course? Or better yet • whole new one? EMBARR~ED 01 .. ,,,, 0-l , __ ........ . fftlHell •Y , .... ,. •M lie •el _ ....... , Nftlel ........... .. ............... ,-... _ ... .. C.-MY 04n, O..ly ....... I • ... = humor" -67 percent. Third, "intelligence" -84 percent. Fourtb. "self.confidence" - S6 peFcent. And rlfth, "nice legs" -40 percent. Find it noteworthy tbat "self· confidence" beat out "nice legs." Far back in the pack were "pretty face" at 33 per· cent and "big buatllne" at 16 percent. New York Yankee Reggie J ackaon ln tribute lo Tom Seaver: "He's ao good that blind people come to the park Just to bear him pitch." Q. la lt true that parrots kill sheep? A. ODe IOl't of parrot only. yp. The kea of New Zealand. • It attadm and c1noun IJ'OWD sbeep. iDcredibl.y. Tbat tl~e worJd•a mo1t famOU1 Siam•• twtm wen named Ena and Clau1 ii wldelJ klmwD. Liii well ,... ported II tM feet that Dia meam left and Cban1 m•- rt1ht ln Tbal. .. Robert N ~eed/Publl•her Thol"MI 1< .. vll/Edlt0t Barbar• Krelblch/Edltorlal Page Editor J•ck Andel'80n -"j' Mideast_Nuke .-Policy_:f!repared W ASHINOTON -In an oml DQYI _dlll_ve~ment,.Pra'denl Ca rte r hat saued secret directlvee to the Penta1on to prepare (be opllon or u1ln1 nuclear weapona l.n lht vot.We Middle F.ut There have been hint.a of auch a poHlbtlity In the past Carter's atltte of the union addru11 laat Januny, for esamvl~. d("clared that "an attempt by 11ny out11Hli" fore~ to gain t'Ontrol of the P~ulan UuJ( will be re garded as an assauJl on the vital interests of the United States <and> will be repelled by use of any means necessary " A nd R o bert Komer , undersecretary of defense for poli cy. publicly stated that if conventional deterrents in the Middle East failed , the use of nuc lea r weapons would be considered . But in secret directives. the president bas s pelled out the nuclear option clearly and explicitly. IN PRESIDENTIAL Decision Memor andum No 51. Carter outlined a ne w U .S. nuclear policy for the Middle East. But this memo was ignored in the fur o r ove r Presidential Directive 59, which changed Mailbox U.S . mi.uUe target.a ln the Soviet Unioa. The content. of PDM No. Sl and r ~hted documents, lncludtn1 a directive to the Strate1lc Air Command from Defense Secretary Harold Brown, are deal1ned to · 'si1nificantly degrade Soviet capabWtiea to project military power l o the Middle EHt·Persian Gulf region for a period of at least 30 days." To accomplish this, the pr es id e nt ordered the formulation or various military options, my associate Dale Van Atta has learned . The most significant of these was the "limited st.rategic option" for use by the commander of the Rapid Deployment Force, Gen. P.X. Kelley. SUBJECT TO the us ual presidential authorization for use of any nuclear weapons, this option involves 19 nuclea r bombs c~rri~ B-52 bombers. The aill\)rto keep Soviet forces from invading Iran, and the weapons include both B-57 bombs, with an explosive power about equal to the Hiroshima bomb, and the more powerful 8 ·61 variable y i e ld thermonuclear bombs. Sources said Carter ordered his pla nners to formula te ·several additional Ii mite d strategic options. as well as a more far-reaching "selective attack option" that would target Russian facilities near Iran, lncludin1 military baaea and airfields tmtde'1be SOvfet Union. Military experts noted that wltb a &..$2 fore. --lbe-&\C'• S7th Air Division at Minot Air Force Bue, N.D. ~ already earmarked for Middle Eaat deployment, the bomben would be the most likely vehicle for nuclear weapons, rather than lone-ranee miaaUes in siloa in the United States. The bomben are far more flexible, one source pointed out, adding, "II we screw around with our ICBMs, you don 't know what the respome would be." "Flexible" does not mean "reasonable;• however, in the vie w of some insiders. They contend that the concept of limited nuclear warfare confined to the Middle East is a child's dream that could become a nightmare ror the whole world. "IF WE INITL\TE tactical nuclear warfare in that area, we are opening a Pandora's box ," said one Pentagon source who is alarmed at the idea or preparing strategic options for the Middle East. "The Soviets could respond with tactical nuclear weapons against our warships in the Persian Gulf area, and who knows where it would go from there?" - Footnote : A White House spokesman refused to confirm or deny the contents of PDM No. 51, or to discuss U.S. nuclear policy with respect to the Middle East. 11••v·s LATEST: Our political odds man u out with hia la teat pick -and it 'a Ronald Reacan. Unimpressed by the latest polls, Jimmy the Greek atlll makes Rea1an a 2-and-Gne·hall·Lo-l favorite over Jimmy Carter to win in November. Jimmy baa aeroed in on the states with many elect.oral votes, and here's how he aees Rea1an wi.nnin1 : New York (41 ) -Carter carried in 19'16, but the unhappy Jewish voters -given John Anderson as a Liberal Party alternative -will Up the scales for Rea1an. New Jersey (17 ) -Ford carried last time. It's close, but Rea1an bu the edge. Pennsylvania (27) -Carter and Reagan are even right now, but ii Reagan can nail enOUlh ol the ethnic vote, he's got it. Florida (17) -Carter won h e r e rour years ago, but resentment over his handlin1 of the Cuban and Haitian refucee problem in heavily populated Dade and Broward Counties may give the state to Reagan. Michigan (21) -Gerald Ford took the state with 54 percent of the vote. Reagan's not as strong as the native son was, but the depression in the auto industry s h ould work t o Reagan's advantage. Ohio (25) Carter won by an eyelash -15,000 votes -in 1976. But unemployment in the steel, glass a nd rubber industries helps Reagan, and the state's Conservative Party, which sat it o ut last time. is working enthusiastically for Reagan. Illinois (26 ) -Reagan's native-son status and discontent among blue-collar workers put this in the Republican column. WATCH ON WASTE : The P e ntagon 's philosophy on expenditure of public funds was made stwmingly clear the other day. One or my reporters called to inquire about a contract for 300,000 laminated.plastic recipe cards to be used by bartenders at the Anny'!f officers-' clubs and enlisted men's saloons around the world .• The bids' aren't in yet, but the cost is expect e d to run somewhere between SS,000 and $10,000. When my reporter s uggested that perhaps the military pubs could get aloog - as they have for decades - without official guidelines, the Pentagon s pokeswoman observed brightly that "even if it is wasting money." printin( the recipe cards will "still be providing jobs to someone." Is Real Problem an Excess ·of Freeways? To the F.d.itor: I 'm peeved over pavement payments and I question the headlining question you say is the answer to future highway funding problems. (Toll Roads Answer to Highway Ills?) Your question is not the solu- tion lo those problems, but is rather just another bard and perhaps unnecessary addition to the larger and more important equation which, when solved will answer the most human pro· blems. Truly. it would be foolish to disregard the fact there will be future fW'lding problems but I be lieve the reasons for those problems can be eliminated before the fact. Certainly, if the current philosophy of freeway expansion continues there will be money shortages, but, it seems to me, and 1 've traveled somewhat, there exists present- ly plenty of pavement to get the job done. SUPPOSE INSTEAD of Yiew- jlll the lack of money aa the 'potential problem we view the problem as an excess of freeways. Theo, after boldinl this perspective for awhile many so-called future highway fwldin1 .problems disappear. You may say cessation of hi1hway construction would bring on other problems, which may be tnae, but maybe tbo9e other problems would be leu costly and complicated to IOlve. Maybe your headlining question should be "ln1hway Ills; Should We Toll Over More Roads?" MICHAEL HENDRIE HJgll• '1otn-1 To tbe Edit.or: How does one become the Rl&bt Voter In Colta llaa? At el•tion time, at chi~ mw•np or public e..ata, one bean tbat tbe CltJ Oouncll wanta to bur from the .oter, tbat they need Input from tbe concerned clU.... Slnee tbe council members are elected repr•IDtatlYe1, eMtllil votea tbat are to upnu tbe will ot tbe people, lt would .... logical -if one were dange~ly innocent -to think that they would indeed Hke the guidance of the people they represent, stating directly how the citizens feel about particular issues. But again last week . at a publi c h ea rin g on the advisability of permitting a heliport in downtown Costa Me sa, a st rang e t hing happened: none or the citizens who got up to speak against the additional uproar that helicopter traffic would cause, was the Right Vo t e r ! All were counterfeit somehow. a nd though none seemed transparent to me, the City Council, led by a ce gho s t s potte r Ed McFarland, saw through them all. IF 111EY lived close to the impacted area, then they lived too close -didn't see the broad aim of city developmeQt. If they lived farther away, ~ell then they couldn't really be all that concerned, could they? When they spoke as individuab, they were "narrow" but when they spoke as representatives or groups, or carriers of petitions, our crafty council perceived that a conspiracy was afoot. And people who simply objected to noise were put down as not having the necesaary "expertise." J would have thought that ears were sufficient, but I ~s it takes a Ph.D. to hear a helicopter in Costa Mesa. So that's the story on citlun input in our town. Convincinl the council that you are the le•endary voter of Costa Mesa is about aa euy as provinl that you are the missing C1artna; but if you ever manage It, then uk for the moon -you've 1ot the field all to yourself! DOUGLAS R. TOOHEY Proof To tile llditor: ltlliadafy of Libya could pro¥e to nerybodJ '• aatlllac- U. tb8t brtbeQ bad DO plac. ID .... • \ his munificence toward Billy Carter. All he has to do is loan $220.000 to every gas station operator in the State of Georgia. J .W. REID To the Editor: Don Wilkes. speaking about Vietnam veterans in a recent article, suggested a parade for Vietnam veterans. What a ~uper idea! The time bas come to absolve our guilt with this blank- blank war and recognize, before it is too late, the real heroes or Vietnam . . . the veterans. What about proposing a grand parade on a national scale? A parade in every major city celebrating Vietnam Veteran's Day? It's time we acknowledged this unique warrior, and said thank you! PETE MEADE La11dlord'• Risk To the F.d.it.or : I would like to warn people, if you have a piece of property for rent, be careful who you rent it to. Be sure that you have a &ooc1 rental contract and inquire or a tt'lcla pastor or someone that you have confidence in lo re111mmend you a dependable family to rent your property to. I h ave a friend who has learned an expensive lesson. They have not collected any rent for three months. One eviction was set aside by the court when the renter brought phony charges against the owner. He dropped the charges, but the eviction has been set aside. and the proceedmgs will have to be started over. There are a lot of nice families out there looking for a place to live. They will take care of your property and pay the rent. but be sure that you have a good contract, even with them. The best you can do is stilt a gamble. JAMES BOLDING . o .... ,~ .... To the F.dlt.or : Endorsement of Democrat Man1en ln his recenUy cittulat· ed letter by aome re1l1tered Republicans wbo are on tbe city councila ln Costa Mesa, Runt· incton Beach and Weatmimter displays leu credit to him than it does discredit to the en- donen. TbOH wbo are city eouDeil people loudly protest tbeir aan- partlsan rolel and yet UM tbe suppoled credibility of tbelr of. fices to support a Democrat partisan claimin1 him H somehow quHi·Republican. How would Republicana sucb u they know? Actually both parties are total· ly partisan and both fullJ com· milted to extendlnl the alae, scope, authority and costs ol tbelr own '9pectiH lnela ol 1overnment -and all ln cooperation wlth eacb otlMr. EVELYN J. SPEIR • lAttna from ,_.,., an ~. The rlfht to ~ wttm to tu IPOC• "'•tima.ale ~t.f u r•lmled. I.Attn• Of aoo '°°'* "' wa .U I» gfon mt~. AU Wffn•"""' .._ c: ... ....,.,. Giid _,..., ...... belt ...... "'°',,..,.,.,..., • .....,., f I n//icWttl "°'°" u Clppat"ftU. PoctrwtoMIMtt.~. .. I I t ,_ T1elns Galore Two for one isee med to be the order of the day as rivt> sets ol twins Wt!re born at the 8 apt1.st Medical Cente r, Llttle Rock. Ark . within 36 bour11. f'rom left are Mrs. Sam Brownlow. with two daughters: Mr$ Ted Brown, with twin girls; Mrs. Bruce Lantz, with twin sons; Mrs. l .ynn Vines and Mn. Larry Pigee, both holding twin dttuf(hters. Panel Backs Newport Oil Storage Plan Housing Plan Backed The Regional Coastal Com· mission has approved a request by the City of Newport Beach to construct an 011 storage facility on county land near the Santa Ana River and the city's western limits. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the state Fish and Game Department have ruled that the site is not a natural wetlands, the commis sion agenda report stated. To be located just east of the Newport Shores residential area in the Banning Oil Field, the facility will include two 1,000- barrel shipping tanks. two 250- barrel sludge tanks, two 200- barrel surge tanks, one 750-barrel wash tank and a facility lo separate ml from water. The commission, meeting in Huntington Beach, stated that the oil tank farm must remain al least 2S feet away from lbe channel that aui-rounds the Newpbrt Shores area. The commission said the project must not allow any sedi- ment in the channel and that natural vegetation around the channel most be maintained. Clemente Hopes to Spur Home Building San Clemente has adopted a s trict new housing element to its ge n e r a l pla n , des pite the building industry objection that the guidelines are unworkable. In a split vote last week. the Cit y Coun<'il adopted a housing plan that was seen by one council member as a means of "prodding the builders to move abe ad swiftly " in creating affordable housing. WHU.E ADMITl'ING the ap- proved element ''.is a hard-line document," Councilman Bob Limberg said be believes such an approach is necessary in San Clemente. where the city faces pres s ure Crom the state to provide affordable housing. But council members Thomas O'Keere and Patrick Lane, in opposing the city plan, termed the document too specific, adding it would be unworkable in today's topsy-turvy housing market. Philip Bettencourt, of the Building'lndustcy Association of Southern California, Inc., said too much detail in the city's plan renders the document "clumsy households, the mortgage or rent cannot surpass 30 percent of income. ' BETTENCOURT argued that the city's plan bu no provisions for the changing market prices or the fluctuating h~fDe interest rates. He said the county's approved plan allows for such nexibility and he urged the council to del e te the affordability regulation for the housing e 1 em en l and adopt-, one comparable to the county's. But a number of speak· ers, including members of the council-appointed General Plan Review Committee, said the strict housing element would forc e developers to create affordable hous ing in San Clemente. · And councilman Bill Mecham. in endorsing the s trict program, said that if it proved unworkable as builders predict "we'll come back anddoifagaln." Pendleton Parems Lose School Plea By JOHN NEEDHAM Ot•Delly ........... Parents of high school students living on tbe Camp Pendleton Marine base have lost another round in their fight to have their children attend cluaea in San Clemeoteinateadol Fallbrook. state and federal funds if the more than 120 students involved at· tended school out.side the district .. Thieves Get Furniture ·· ·a·D'"'d~·un·workable in the S•o Die10 Superior Court J"udge Joeepb A. K.il111rit ruled Tuesday the students must attend school in their own district even though they bne been allowed to go to San Clemente High School in ,the past because it is closer to their homes in the San Onofre '!!~a,_ ~ THE PAaENTS living on the Marine base don't want their children bused to Fall brook, a trip that takes nearly an hour eub way. 1bey say the children will be un•ble to participate in extn- c u r r i cul a r activities. San Clemente High is only about five miles from the Marine housing area on the northern edge of Camp Pendleton. Discriminating thieves ap- parenUy with their own patio to furnish visited a West Newport condominium complex and ned with lawn and lounge equipment valued at $3,290, police were told Monday. Chanceford Luther Mounce, president of the Newport Con- dominium Auociation, l Dis- covery Drive, told investigators chaise lounges, chairs and tables were missing. Police said the grand theft was discover e d by groundskeepers Sunday when they went to tidy up the com- plex 's recreation area. In Newport day-to-day give and lake or land-use regulations." BE SUGGESTED the city adopt lbe same program used by Orange County, which al· lows developers more creati~ty in developing affordable umts, and encourages irrnovativ.e financing. But supporters of the city's housing element prefer a strict definition of affordability recommended by the ·city"s planning commission. The council majority adopted a definition for low-income households as those in which the monthly mortgage or rent payment does not exceed 25 percent or lbe household income. For moderate income JUDGE KJLGA&IF upheld the decision of the Fallbrook Union High School District board and the San Diego County school board that the students don't have · the legal right to •tlend a school out.sidetbeirowndiatrict. , The Fallbrook board stopped the five-year practice of allowing the students to goto San Clemente this year becauie of budget COD· straints. Fallbrook estimated it could lose at least $250,000 a year in Condo Plan Rejected A plan to convert an 11-unit Newport Beach apartment building into condominiums and sell them to 450 people on a Ume-sbaring basis bas been re- jected by City Council members. A spokesman for the Futrends Corp., which purchased the building at 1510 West Balboa Blvd. for $600,000, admitted the convenioo plan would be highly profitable. "Unles s my figures are wrong," said Councilman Paul Hummel. looking up from a Remain 'Village,' HB Told Recommendation that downtown Huntington Beach re- tain its vill.,e atmosphere and elimln.te bi1h·rise build1ngs wu made by a committee work- lnl on the city's local coutal pro1ram. At a joint meetine with the city's pluming commission, the • 11-member Citizens Advisory Committee al80 made a •troac plea to preserve the BolH Cbica weUandl. • Tbe recommendation to mam- t a i.n the a re • '• v i ll a 1 e atmotphere also would limit beitbt of buildin11 to three Rorie1. I PlaaninC Commlaaioner Ralpb · Bauer Nid lbe low denaity re-1 commmdatiGD ii lbe same tne U.at bal beeD advaced ovtf ·tliie rears for downtown re-1 vtlaliutioll witbout produdq reeu1t1. I "Sometbtn1 dramatic 11 DHded to create a drtvln1 twee ·to ,_ UllDll moYlDC." r page of calculations, "you'U be s elling this place for $4.5 million." AN A'ITORNEY for Futreods agreed that ·'the potential profit here iA astounding." r He told council members that if the conversion w.ere allowed, there would be nine condos and each would be sold to SO persons -+ each getting a week of ownership with two weeks of lbe year reserved for upgrading and maintenance. The cost for one week of owoenhip, be explained, would be anywhere from $6,000 to $10,000. COUNCIL MEMBERS ex-' pressed concern that the proper- ty lease was set to expire in 33 years, opening the possibility that the building could be tom down at that time. ~•'Thia really represents_ a radical cbaoee in the city's housing element," noted Coun· cilman John Cox, before be joined colleagues Don Strauss, Evelyn Hart and Hummel in voling against lbe proposal. Hummel suggested that, even with the conversion, the buildin& would remain essentially an apartment complex with '"peo· ple moving in and out every week." CITY POUCY BANS condo conversions unless the city's rental vacancy is five percent or higher. Currently, city officials s tressed,. the vacancy rate is just a liWe more than two per- cent. Richard Ho1an, a consultant hired by Futrends, said the apartment build.in1 was switched to summer rental r•tes last spriq to help pay increased leasebiold costa. Io "1ticlpatio.n of.. the con- version, be continued, units have been held vacant aa. tenants hue moved out. eurte'nUy, only three are occupied, he a_!ld. • T" ................ llUY l'OR llOO,a.; 18.L FOR M.1 MIU.ION? Ne sport R•l•cta CoftdO Conwenloft PtapaHI Slace school started earlier this month, the parents ~ave boycotted Fallbrook, with only about 11 students attendin& classes there since the term began. About 100 of the students have stayed out or uhool in protest and are being taught by. private tutors or are living with friends or rel- atives in San Clemente and goin~ to school there. The parents say they will con- tinue to boycott Fallbrook until a decision is made to their satisfaction. So far. legal action bas not been taken against them, but Fallbrook has sent out truancy lettersto the parents. Industrial Area Set For Condos The Irvine City Council amended the city's general plan to allow a 350-unit condominium project lD an industrial area and the possible construction ot a commercial project in an agricultural area. The condominium project is to be built by Douglas Plaza, an af· fillate of the McDonnell-Douglas Corp., on Von Karman Avenue near Dupont Drive, acrou from John Wayne Airport in the Irvine Industrial Complex-West. THE co••E&CIAL project involvina the urtcultural land ls to be built b)' tbe Daon Develop- ment Co. of Newport Beach on 11 acres of vacant land la the city's Northwood area. Douglu Pina repreHntatives successfully argued th•t the con- dominium project would provide homes foe people who work in the ladustrial area. · DAON &EP&E8ENTATIVE8 told the council the 1eneral plan should be chanced relative to. their property bec•uae it is too small a site for agricultural uses and could be better used for a commercial center. The city'• ceneral plan is the document that sets the broad guidelines for all development ln Jrvlae. Ski Cius Slated A "set ftt to akl" clue, ottered tbrouab tbe Oran1• Coaat YMCA ID Newport Beach, la Mt to bepa Oet. lJ. Tbe ecmdltlclD1nl elua, wblcb w i 11 atrea1 1tretcbln1, cantioYucular conditioDlq and aatlilY eserdses coeta • far DOD·YJICA members and '10 for memben. CIN OM.YPLOT 87 Dlliee Complex Irvine OKs Center Plans BJ aJCllAJlD G&EEN °' .. ....., P-.. MMf Irvine Company plau to bulJd • major commercial center with a 250-room hotel across Campus Drive from UC Irvine were a~ proved by • 4-1 vote or the Irvine City Council. II •yor Art Anthony voted aealnst the SS-acre project, known as the University Town Center commercial core, saying there was too much office space and not enough retail services in the phm. "IT WIU. BECOME an office park with homes around it/ be said Wednesday. "Orielnady. it was supposed to be a mixed-use commercial-residential project. I don't think it Is good to put an office part_ in that area." The project will include 750,000 square feet of office space and 250,000 square feet of retail services, Irvine Company vice president Dick Cannon told the Ci- ty Council Tuesday night. He said the first phase of the commercial core to be complet· ed In late 1982 will include the hotel, about 130,000 square feet of retail stores, 270,000 square feel of office space and 250 high- density residential units. THE <n'HER TWO phases of the project will take shape in the early to mid 1980s and the entire commercial center could be completed by 1988 depending oo the economy , compa n y spokesman Martin Brower said today. CounciJman Larry Agran said this morning he supports the project even though ·'it is fairly heavy with office space. "It still will be a unique kind of a project and I would have voted against it bad I felt it was going to be just another office . park," be aaid in a telephone in· terview today. .The ELS Design GroJ!P of Police Nab Plumber on Cocaine Rap A criminal complaint charg- ing a Sant• Ana plumbe~ sales of cocaine to undercover Newport Beach police detectives who claim they seized $12,000 worth of the drug wH being sought today. Michael V. Izzo, 27 , of ~ N. Bush St .• remained jailed in lieu of $15,000 bail following his ar-rest Monday cllmaxmg a one- month investigation. Newport Beach Detective Sgt. Darryl Youle said bis men visited Izzo's downtown area apartment near the Orange County Courthouse in Santa Ana Monda)' and paid $3.900 for two ounces. He claimed that, cut for street sale, the quantity could bring $6,000, and added investigators also confiscated two more ounces at the apartment as evidence. GolngDOlml Berkeley is doine the architectural work for the proJ· ect. IN APPROVING THE plans, the council requested that the Irvine Comp&J\y consider allow· lnl small, street-level vendon to operate near the commercial center buildings. }he Tuesday night council action occurred more than ei1ht years after initial zoning was granted for the center. Now that the Irvine Company baa won approval of its com· mercial center, it can move ahead with plans to develop up to 4l000 residential units around the r acility. In an effort to increase com· mercial development in IrviM, the City Council bas required that the company begtn building the University 'I' own Center commercial core before building the majority of the residential units. 9 Olympic Athletes Honored Nfne local membe rs of the honorary U.S. Olympic team have given Newport Be ach City Council members a bittersweet accounting of the rise and fall of their Olympic .dreams. "I didn't qualify in 1976, .. said water poloist Eric Lindroth, "so I hung around for another four years only to lose out again." GARY FIGUEROA echoed bis colleague's comments, addinl, "I'm probably done playing now.'' The local athletes were in- vited to Monday's council meet- ing to be presented with pro- clamations. · Several, including Newport Harbor Hiab s wimmer John Moffet, predicted they'd try again in 1984 . Others noted they'd gone into coaching and likely would try to help other athletes strive for the Olympic gold. HONORED AT the meeting were water polo team memben Kevin Robertson. Jeff Stites, Joe Vargas, Figueroa and Lindroth.' Rowing team members Brad Lewis and Bruce Ibbetson also were handed city certificates as were J onathan Van Cle•ve, selected to participate in the kayaking event. and l6-year-0ld Moffet. Charge Dropped SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -In exchange for a guilty plea to a IUD possession charge, a Hells Angel member Obie Peters, 36, bas bad a federal racketeering con- spiracy charge against him dropped. Federal officials said Tuesday they also dropped several other charges aqainsl Peters. The-home ol Dr. and Mn. C.L McArthur. at Ml Del llar Ave. in Laamia Beacb'• Arcb Beach Hellbta falla victim to the bul1doler u part ol a "'5,000 municipal ,.. con1tnactloD project. The bom• wa1 dama1ed In a . landllide Feb. 11. I' 'I .. I I I . . OM..'Y PtLOT NATION • ~CURY SAVINGS . OU loG• ~ ()l 'I '\.\le I'\. I HI 'I \ \1 t. I ' \1 • Brown Not in FaVor of Population Controls 'fiASHJNGTON (AP> -Gov. Edm\Wl Brown Jr. aaya be .,,... wltb 1lt1o"ru1 Serretarr Huey Johnson that Calltornla 1boukl 1t'9dy ltl eanyina upaclty. b~ doeln 't fato r aovernment population coatrola. kw ach'ocacy ol populaUoo control mtHur•. lnt ludln1 • eutbaell on low.tncome hou1in1. eap•nded abo..UC. Mrvicea, tax penalU• for Iara• raml liu and t1cht ened lmmlcraUon country Is overpopulated," Brown uld. "It nu1ht be underpopulated. "When you n y over California, you t'ertalnly aee a lot of empty spaces." But be mo aaid that UM lrowth ol urban areu will mean "lela water for the rural areu and lea for a1rlculture." Brown said Johnson'• •ua•Uoe for a 'study ol the 1tate'1 "carrylq capacity" la "an Important idea." ....., ,\ I I t (I I ·\ 1 I I I ·\ \ 1 I I ' \ 1 HUfttl"Otoft Beech, CA 11141 SotltNm C.1Homl9 ,..,,_.., OHlo.e: SITT f . La ~ Aft,. ANM!m, CA lll01 .a& Yattey View 9t., luene ~ CA IONO 11M AtMllt N ., c.m.rtuo, CA m10 ~TJc -.... ·---.. ------- .. Tbl1 ouaht to M a voluntary matter,•· Brown told reporter•. duriq a meetlnc of the NaUoaal Gonmon ANoclaUon. Aft• the hal'Or over bl• comment.a IHt month, Johnaon retraded b1• call for timita on low lnromt houlln1 Browri said about IO percent ol lhe letters to hit office have been pro.JobNlon. But he dluirwct wtth aev~ral ol Jaihnton'• 1u11etUOftl. e'ro wn alto a aid California 'a low-income houain1 "ls so modHt that It 'a already at rock bottom." H• said urban plannlna that locatea worhrw clOH to lbelr Jobe wou.ld increue the number of people that the state and the nation could •ccommodate with tbe same ret-0urcet1 He said hta admlnl1tratlon bu. be1un a study of the number and / c;liveralty or all forms of life in California. But he added that "we may not bave the knowledce yet to decide how many people can live in I the state.'' 20115 I. Aqton •t\ld,, c.t.on. CA 9014• 23021 l.AJc• Cefttet' Dr., (LMI• ilOl' .. t), El Toro. CA t2l30 1001 I . tmpen .. Hwy.1 La Hebra, CA '°'31 (i) •1.eo l.o"il a..ch llva., Lofto IMofl, CA IOI07 229311 Hawthorne llwd., Torrenee, CA 10805 1095 Irvine •t'td., Tuatln, CA nllll lOOAl 'the Democ,.Ut 1ovtrnor bH nalated demands by more than half tbe Lelialature that be flre Johmon "It '• not C'lear to me that the 236 N. Cltrue Ave .. WMt CO'llna, CA lfrts 110Us111c; "M9":Uf'f Jtoom" etfelleble one,.,~ IN1/1 lfMIKt . . l W. Pric" 0-4 fin Oct. 1, 1'IO .. ----..... 1 &ED SOX -Once a Red Sox fan, always a Red Sox fan. Just uk tranap.!anted Boetonian John QuMroa. Information fOf' ,,. "Pt••• ol IM 0••" I• -•le<! by Mike '•t ley. •utllor of IN '"' ecllllon 01 ""' .. _., -of ~rSONllked C•lllornl• Ll<enw Pl .. H " Family Cancer. Link Probed NEW YORK (AP> -There are limes when cancer seems to run in the f•mlly, and tbese families may provide a clue to causes of the disease, say geneticists at a medical seminar. The phenomenon is so well recognized today tbat it has been given a name, the "cancer family Sfndrome," said Dr. R. Neil Schimke of the -t1rtiversity of Kansu Medical Center in Kansas City. Schimke and other speakers told doctors attending a symposium on cancer 1eneUcs Wednesday that the incidence of cancer in some families is so high that an unidentified genetic cterect which may ]>redispose peopJe to the disease la probably being passed from generation to generation. THE SEMINAR WAS INTENDED to bring practicing physicians up to date on tbe genetic techniques. It was sponsored by Memorial Sloan-Kettenng l,:ancer (.;enter. "I would say as many as S percent to 10 percent of adult cancers have a significant genetic component ... If you could identify a family u a high risk, then you could make sure they get regular examinations or even prophylactic s_urgery and bead these diseases off at the pass," Schimke said In an interview. Cancer family syndrome is not new. Napoleon, bis father, his grandfather and three brothers and sisters all died of stomach cancer. More recently, physicians are making systematic studies or such families. Dr. Frederick Li and colleagues a t Sidney Farber Cancer Institute in Boston began studyint one family 11 yean ago after the rather died of skin cancer and two sons came down with sarcoma, a cancer of connective tissues, and one of them died. SINCE THEN, U SAID, TBE OTBE& brother died of a..second sarcoma that appeared after the first one was cured. One daughter died of breast cancer and the. other daughter got both breast cancer and sarcoma. And one son of the dawrhter who died bas leukemia, a blood cancer. The preeise genetic link with cancer is known only for one rare inherited defect called aeroderma pagmentosum, said Dr. James German Ill of the New York Bl~ Center, co-chairman of tbe seminar. In this· disease, cells lack one of tbe enzymes needed to repair damage done to chromosomes by the ultraviolet portion of the sunlight. People with tile defect, which Is commoo only in Japan and Erypt, get skin cancers on the sun-exposed 'p(lttionsoftbeirfaces, arms and necks. But even In more common tumors, such aa· breast cancer, stomach cancer and leukemia, studies have shown that relatives of a cancer victim nm a two-to three-fold greater risk tban the public as a whole of 1ettina cancer, implying that genes play at least some role in the diseue. THE SITtJ~TION 18 COMPUCATED by the fatt tbal getaea often interact with the environment. In lun1 cancer, for example, relatives of lung cancer victims nm a four.fold increased risk or tettlnc cancer If they are noa-smolten, but their riU jumps to 14 times normal il they smote. Another problem, aaid 1enelic retearcber l .. ry Schneider of Sloan-K.u.tJll, 11 tbat caneer 11 so common -about one person in four 1eta it at 10me time in life -that it la tbe unusual family that doesn't have some relatives wbo have bad tbe dlleue. • To elttumvent tbil, Schimke said, docton loot fo~ clusten ol a •inlle type of caneer, a cancer &bat occup at an unusually earl)' ... or cueer at multiple sites. 'l'be bope la to ftnd a aenetic marker tbat wtll identify wbtcb .....-in tbe affected .(!fnlliea are at riak. ' I ·• 'Ut s ... ttema ere Sutlject 10 Stock Ol'I Hand All PhOtoQrephlC. Typogtephlcal, Clefteat and Printing E"o" are $ubJeci to Correction If the old heater can't get It any hotter Time lor a new one. Dependable. ellic lent gae water heaters. Gtaas-llned tenka, rapid hot water recovery sys tems. h igh temperature shUt-offs. 30-gel .. Reg.11'.95 10995 .. consistent curl wltll mini Iron Gllette mini curllng Iron has 120140 volts tor worldwide use. Fast heat up. Positive temperature control. UL listed. #2620. Reg. 9.99 711 try the view tllree ways Make-up Mirror. Set II up on dreSNr, bathr~m vanity for chest. Hurry In. only six teltl Reg. 4.19 311 dry your hair with yellow max Max 1000 watt llttle hair dryer by Gillette. Full one year warranty. UL approwd. #9080 Aeg.12.99 911 stop .... squ111l1 wtlh .... forty WD-40 ltOP I aqueeka, protects metal. loosena rusted part• and '"'••• sti cky mechenlama. 9- ounce bottle. Reg. 2.39 1•• .... • . do it right with Stanley I Stanley Mitre Box and Back Saw adju1t1 to many angl ... Deluxe. On legs. Lightweight and rugged. #19·035VP. Reg. 59.ff 3911 spred H onlhlhouu ;'Glidden Spred HouM Pelnt goea on eaally, drle9 quickly. Durable nat ftntah, rellsta bllsters and PM!lng. Reg. 15.49 10'! D ...... tlcllly'~.., ~~ ...,. ...... Exterior spred latex glou HouM & Trim paint from Glidden. Goee on with ..,.. Chalk reetstant flnlah. qulck-dry\ng. Aeg. 16.59 \ olClllltel to ln'lllte Aalnbtrd oaclllatfng spnntclef adluata to cover small or wide areaa. Llghiw.lght. eesy to m<>Ye around. I0-13. Reg.1.49 4•• ~­zap the Wiid IM have some I .... Vlgoro Wud and Fud control• PHky weeds at the .. me time thet It lertlllzff your lawn. In 25-lt>. ~· Reg.9.96 711 v11or-up your ....... with vtgoro A general utlllty fertmzer for better tlowera. 1hruba, tr ... end vegetebla. 5 lb. box. Reg. 1.99 1'' 11.., .... wlnll•••' shut Aluminum wlndoow 1llde atop keepe the wlndoow 1hut. K•P• Intruder• out. t140I. Aeg. 1.05 X-14 Instant MHdew Stain ,..mover hll a convenient trigger 1prayer to work on bathroom tlle. lhoww 1tall1, end grout around tub. 11 oz. bot· tte. Aeg. 2.tl 1•• Ce11ve11le11flr ...,.,,_, · ... l•r 1• IMClt 2666 HAllOI BLVD. IN COST~ MESA PHONE 546-7010 HOURS: WlllCDAYS 9 te ! • SATUIDAY ·AND SUNDAY~ I ~ " . . • ·-,;: .. ·-.. ,.... ..... ~" •• • ..... It" .. . . . --- ' • ------.......... ........ ,.. - ' --- ,, I • ;1 I• ·'I <I '1 il ,, ~. J I I . { ~ I I i t Orange Coast OITIO N , Today's Clo81ng N.V. Stoeks VOL 73, NO. 269, ~SECTIONS. 40 PAGES O RANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1980 N TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Will Sri Ji'f Flfela Sell Keal Thing? 81 IODI CADINll&AD ............... Tb• man ln the 1ray pia1trlped ault hu beaded 1everal apace miaalou to Man aad Jupiter. But W~a•day lli1bt be wu oa a new miJWoa to aave the U.S. 1pace procram from a 11ow death. B. Geatry Lee. mua1er ol mi11lon operations and enaineerina for tbe J uplter Orbiter. tri~ to sell bia UC lr•lne aodiuce on apace ea pk>ratica. Bul t.he ~l•S• 1tu aenl.I aeemed more lnltre9ted in what he °'°'Cht about science ncuon movies Hlt UCI t.allt, .. Stu Wars . Sclen« Fiction and Sclenliflt Reality.'' ts ooe ol five lerturea Lee gives to various audiences •round the country The bespectacled scientist mAde ll clear Wednesday rughl that while he was willing to dis· CWll ldmtt nctJon movl•, it'I tbe real world ol science that ex· cite• bl.m . • • 1 am lakiQI the 1tory ol the JO)' of 1d~ce and eaploraUon directly to t.he people,' be said as he started a slide show ol Jupller and Man exploratiooa. •·At the end of this lecture you will know more t.ban any person au ve tnew about Jupiter two years a10." be promis~. Through t.be pitch blackness Truce Offered Iraqis Seize Vital Rail Line · BAGHDAD, Iraq (APJ -Iraq announced conditions for ending the fi1hting with Iran and claimed its forces today captured an important oil port ~JlL th~ _railroad li!llting soutbem Iran with Tehran. Tehran Radio, meanwhile, broadcast sirens warning of an impending air raid and went off the air for 20 minutes after an announcer warned citizens to seek &better. The Iraqi attacks have not endange~ the lives ol tbe $2 Amerian hostages, a UPPEH ltfWPOHT »HY IECOU>OICAL flESlllVIE s pokes man f o r Iranian Revolutionary Guards in Tehran said in a telephone interview. In Geneva , the Iraq i ambassador to Switzerland re· ported tbat Iraqi forces had -"pene"trated -into A-badan," Iran's major oil reftnery on t.be nortbem tip of the Persian Gulf. The Iraqi claim to have captured t.be oil port of Kbor· ramsbahr, about 10 miles north of Abadan, would be the biggest victory sco~ ~y Iraq in the four days of fighting. Iraq bu MAP IHOWI PLAN FOR UPPER llAY SILT REMOVAL Ptopoeal ..,. ......... Good Flnt ...... Bay Dredge Plan Unveiled by State BJlrl'BVE llA&BLE ... ..., ........ A dredltnl plan calling for tt- moval al roucblY half the amount of sand and silt that waabed into the Upper Newport Bay lut winter WU proposed TbW"Sday eventn& by state Fish and Game officials. Coast Weather The lon1-awaited dred1in1 scheme, cited u the first m~ step in restoration of the cloued state-owned ecological preserve, wu shown to a small audience gathered in the Newport Be.ch City Council chambers. Fish and Game officials bad been on order to detail by Sep. tember bow they'd 1pend $100,000 on a bay cleanup project. Their answer wu thia: A hydraulic pumping ayatemon a barge will suck up around ZI0,000 cubic yardl of •ill and sud from tbe upper reacbel ol the bay and deposit the lpoill OD oneof twoaiipoeaJiffia. alre ady c laime d t o have captured 115 square miles of Ira· nian border territory. Iran claimed it had pushed back Iraqi for<'es in one area and reported for the first Ume lbe.. capture of a border post in· side Iraq. Iranian jets made their deepest penetration into Iraq, bombing a gas ttfmery at Ayn Zala, 30 miles northwest of the Baghdad and 400 miles from the nearest Iranian air base, the lraqia reported. lo Beirut, Iraqi Defense Minister Adnan Khairallah Ust· eel the goala of hia country u : redefinition of the Jraq·lran border, protection of the Arabic· speattnc minority in IOUtberD Iran aod the return to Arab aov· ereipty ol the ialanda of Abu llouH and tbe Greater and Leaaer Tunbe. The islands were sened by Inn in 1971. Jo Rome . tbe Jraqi ambassador to Ila ly said Baghdad will accept no mediation to end the war uDleu Iran aarees to return to Iraq ter· ritorim that it claima. At U.S. eovenimeot urgiq, 53 American civilians -46 bulii· neasmeo and their families and seven dependent.a of members ol t.be U .S. Embasay staff -left Ba1bdad by bu.s for Amman, Jordan, a trip that normally take• J.5.18 hours. U.S. diplomat.a were not being advised to leave Iraq for tbe lime beinc. A cbart.ered plane arrived in Amsterdam, Netherlands. wit.b other American evacuees from Iraq. They included 241 employees of a New Jersey con· struction company and their families. Foreign diplomats said they were making plans to evacuate European, Japanese, Korean and Filipino civilian.a working in Iraq. Military communiques iaaued here and in Tehran· indicated ground and air activity bad not let up. Both Iran and Iraq baited sbipmetita of oil, not a major worry to the worJ~for the P-.TeS· eat. but lbe war threatens to ball shipments from other oiJ. producing countries in the Penian Gulf. Baghdad Radio said Iraqi troops punch~ 12 miles into Khuzestan province and out· flanked Iranian garrisons at Khorramshahr and Abadan, till· Ing 50 soldiers. It said Iraqi troops seized the railway that connects the two cities with Tehran, the Iran.Ian capital 3tO miles to the nortbeut. Baghdad Radio aaid tbf' railroad seizure cut the two cities oil from ftinforcements promiled by the Iran.Ian govem- ment, ecldinc: "The two cities are doomed. Their surrender is immiDeat." . Lee· a escUed voice explained tbe 1aaeous atmosphere of Jupiter, the bubbly labs of aul· fur found on one of Mara' mooos and the fact that there is a cur· rent or some sort generated between Jupiter and its closest moon. The Voyager mission t o Jupiter coet only half a billion dollars or $2.38 per American," explained the scientist. "For $2.35 a year I can give your children an Allu / of the solar system equal to the Atlas of the world you bad as a child, .• he said. Lee is selling the space pro. gram through lectures and a te leviliion series, "Cosmos." because, be says, for the first time in 15 years, the United States has only one space ex· ploratioo project. When the current Jupiter re· port is completed there are no more apace proerams planned. Space explo.-ation will add to knowfedge ol the earth's history, increue national presti1e and productivity and will step up technological advances. he says. "How can it bet.bat you're not willing to pay $2.35 per American to go t o a real planet," he asks. "Far less t.ban we paytogotoamovie." Lee had open~ the lecture (See SPACE , Page AZ> Why would a giant turkey buzzard hang around Laguna Beach City Rall? The big bird perched ominously on a telephone pole across from city offices during the lunch hour Wednesday &!I unnerved city officials looked on. Tbe city bas financial problems, but city employees didn't need this bird to remind them. Building Barred In J#'t Noise Area By FaEDE&IC'& SCBOEMERL Ol-CWly~S.- Tbe Oraose County Board of Superv.isors took emergeocy a ctiob Wednesday to prevent construclioa of new residential units in areas of Santa Ana Heights impact~ by jet noise from John Wayne Airport. The board', at t.be urging of SU. Distrkt Supervisor Thomas Riley, whose djstrkt includes the heights, approved an urgency ord.mance ta.king effect immediately to prevent con- struction in areas where jet noise exceeds the 65 Community Noise Equi v alent Level CCNEL). Freedom Gets Win in Cup NEWPORT, R.l. <AP> -Skip· per Dennis Conner and the Freedom crew bad victory in their grasp this afternoon when they began the last leg in t.be America's Cup yacht racing aeries with a 3· l lead over the challenging sloop Australia. Needing only one more victory to win t.be best--Of·seven series, Conner bad a 3·m ioute, 10· second lead and held it to win. Australia started the final leg of the race with little or no hope of catching Conner and the crew aboard Freedom, the 24th de- fender of the America's Cup since the race first was held in England in 1851. Riley said the ordinance was needed b eca u se o r i n - consistencies between t.be coun· ty general plan and current zon. ing in the area. The general plan 's noise ele· meot, be explained, forbids development in areas impa~ by noise of 65 CNEL or greater. But it is the area's zoning which determines whether con· struction can or cannot occur and existing zoning makes no provisioo for forbidding develop· ment based on noise impacts, be said. The urgency ordinance will re· main in effect for four mootbs. During that period, Riley said, all development proposals in Santa Ana Heights will face scrutiny by the county Planning Commission for their con · sistency wilh the general plan noise element. As part of its action, the board dir ec ted the co un ty Environmental Manage me nt Agency to begin work on de· veloping a "specific plan" ror Santa Ana fleigbts that will bring the area's zoning into coo· formity with the general plan. Riley said he raised res· ide ntial development issue Wcause of a recent variance ap· plicat ion that faced board action. The variance wu sought by a builder who bad plans to construct two condominium uoiu within the 65 CNEL noise "footprint." The variance was required (See HALT, Pace AZ) More Changes Predicted For Schools In making plarus public that at thf' m06t drastic end could cloee a s m a o y a s. f o u r o r f i v e elementary schools and two or three middle schools next year, Newport·Mesa District officials also warn of other distasteful changes. Norman Loats, deputy district s uperinte ndent, announced seven topics Tuesday that be said school trustees must come to grips wilh in "the near future." The,t include five·period days al the four district high scboola, elimination of some programs at all levels, teductioo of athletic involvement in middle and high schools, ce nt ra lizing cur- r iculum. unifying program schedules, curtailing sup,port services and the possibility of in· advertent segregation of minori· ty students. Administrators noted Tuesday that lome schools, especially those in the west Costa Mesa area, are drawing larger numbers of ethnic minority children. Care must be taken in closing schools, they said, lo avoid ethnic segregation. School closures are the result of a declining atudent enroU· ment and a drastic income pinch resulting from less state mooey -offered on tbe basis of the number of students attendina district schools. Proposition 13, wblcb curtails property tu in· come, and the Serra.no vs. Priest court ruling that ordered (See CHANG~. Page AZ) Deme COM&al foe Fri· day mornlna with baay 1un1blne Friday af· ternocJG. Lowa tonilht 51 at tbe beaebea, a inland. lli&bl Friday mid ~ to mid ... Tbe dredgin6 procea, oftld.all noted, could take u Joag a1 aoo days with another year lont wait for the dredPtC material to dry before it can be trucked to a permaneatdlaponlalte . Ne Nelse laerease Pccis ltted Ron Bein, a Flab and Game ol· flclal, said the plan, aa now envtaicmaf, would cut a baDW· 1baped cb.lnneJ from an area parallel toGaluy Drift to the top oftbebQ. Tb• eut in the middle of u.e bay, be •aid. would reduff tb• depth to seven feet ~ sea level. Al a point of co,JDparl1on, be H · pt.ined, the top ol tbe bay eur· NDtl)' ii rOuply three feet aboft sea level. Water would ret\ll'D to muebol tli• top ol .... bay' .............. tM\PIOJed la eaml'lete. ,,.. Ufe and-..faerwelD lilrd .......... would pt ···eNJloUow. Tbe lllm'•..., ldtdt ............ to be ......... ..,., mud: would ·r=:.-ol ....... ,.... , .... , .................... . ..... ,, ....... .., ....... ... , ' ( ... &\Y,P•AI> --Newport ·Settles Airport Suit Newport Beacb officials claimed tod.ly tbat by HtUlq a law1ait aa•lmt Oraqe °=l tbey 've received a te1ally · lnl . promlae tbat Jet D01se at John Wayne Airpol't wW never lncre .... "TIUI ii a IQ, bia vtdary," commented llaror Jackie Beatblr. '"nda not oel)f' .... • to tbe .......... table .. it pull UI rilbt fa tJae driftl''S Mat." Tlae •1reemeat approHd Wednesday br tbe Boan of ..,.._.. Uo cleaia W&J ,_ ... C!laUlltJ to DVdaMe u aelW' ol ._.. oa dae airvort'• ••tl6dl. c1tr1 otndu, wbo flied a Alt a1ain1t the county Jast June, t.be airport in cooperation with bad planned to IO to court Oct. 2 Newport Beach. and request that tbe land "Thia isn't a cop.out and peo- purchaae in Costa Meaa be pie shouldn't loot at it tbat blocked. way," streued Mayor Heather. "Hopefully," tbe mayor con· "The suit could· have boqbt ua tlnued, "this will be seen u a ~time, 11\•Ybe several yean, but positive 1tep by t.JM.e who've no w ~· e re a 11 y c a n I et viewed Newport u a buneb ol somewhere." ob9tnletiGDllU.'' Newport Qty Attorne7 Rueb ID qreetq to settle the lull, Coffin up.laiaed that the etty'1 1uit, wbicb arsued tbe COWltJ' the etty received a11urancea 8 b 0 u 1 d c 0 m p I e t e a a that tbe comtr would not Wt the eoriroamental ltucl7 before ""7· daUy '1.ftitbt lld uaW a mlllter Int tbe 1-d, bald u uc:tlleat p&aa aad •YircmmeDtal 1tudy ol ol tbe atrpwt 114!0llipl-.ct and M!· chance IUffeU. ~ bJ 1uoervtaon. Mayor Heather said after turtblr, lb. comaty asned to reaching acreement on tbe new _.pt a tf'M eoatrol procram at airport openUon eoaditfom, tbe nut step la to wort on a D<JUe rontrol proeram. Sbe claimed the current noise policy "ba1 no te9tb lD it." . "Tbe moet that'I been done so far ii a few letters to alrlinee admoalahinl operators for malt· lnl too mucb noiae," abe said. "And tbat jU1t won't dolt." Tbe city ii lDtereatecf in draft· · lDg a DOiM procram aimed at encoura1tn1 operators to purcbaM quieter Jets and otfer- lD1 ftaandal illcetativea to thole that do, Mn. ffftther 1aMS. Sbe ...J that Wednesday'• a1reemenll 1bould 10 far in u1berin1 in '•a new era of cooeer-Uon." ' r 19i:::i::o#:tJ;=o:;;;;;;;::::;;::~a-;::;;::=;.::::::=:....;:;._--,__.:......;..._....;~-=~~;...._-----------------------.1----~--~--·-·-~ •. _______ , __ ~ ~----------------------....,·.·------~ ~ 'i -:f I DAIL 't pt&.QT N ,,,,,.. §MM!•f!M 20. ,., U.S. Blocking sales Of Engines to Iraq . WASHlNGTON l Al'I Ln an abnapt polky ttvernl. lhe State Oep~u1ment today temponnly block~ the planned aale ot Gentral Elttlrtt' !(•~ turb1nl' Mj(1n~ fOf' Italian fri1•~ ordered by the Jraql nav · DepMrtnwnt spokt'Srnan J•<'k C•nnon uld the dedaion waa btlSt'll on lht• dt'i'l>t'DlnlJ ho.~Ullty bftw.en lr•n and Iraq uad the American dt!i1rf' not tu tde sldf-1 In the C'Onntct lie s aid th\' 1t t(·1s aon wu not relehd to Carter udmmlstra\100 ft>ur~ for thf' -.aft-ty of lht' S2 Amtrlran bmta1~ in trun {':uu10t1 'l"d lht< :admuustrallon would re~ider Ill de c1s100 to blodL the' :.ale> 1111ei• lht-N' 1s an eutn1 of t~lona ln the r"J( ion ffn,. lt.lllH f>tl I. I <'•_,If ..... w. SAN 6 A IHU t-:l 1t\l' 1 "'*o rount)' ahtonff 's deputi~ invl'sh..:atm..: ,1 pr"" kr c•;.11 hldl\ hot and ll.1Ued a man who Ne· vorkdly thn·atc'rl\"ll ttwm 'A'\lh ll krufe,. department spokesman r"portt'd 1'ht' dc•puuc:. wh11 -. rt> M'l 11n 111e<.half'I 1dfl1tlfaed by the de, par1mt'nt. u1H·~t11tt1tc·d '"'rr.il reports of • prowler near a n 111roud n l(ht 11( "") twh1r11t tht• 4900 hlock ot Acar1a Street ln /Hl Ulllll("O'l)(lr ,11ttt1 lH't'll A man dc'put1t·~ ,wpi>t'J w 11t:1e:.t1on •I the site alleaed\y pulled a knifr from h1!> pot'kt'I and '<''1lllf'd toward tbem, 1inor mg rt>ptontt'll 111tlt•1' to ~top ,\ i>l>''IH'l>man au\ 'l 'alk!( .-..~·I UH tfi~otiff' ( 1t1hm-k L'NlTEll ~ \ rtU:\S 1AP1 Se.·retaf') of State Edmund S. Muskit> a.nit Stl\ 1t'I Forc·i~n Mrn1stN Andr\"1 A Gromyko rear hcd Jj?r t'c'nwnt toda~ 111 0 1ioe11 Ot'6!0l1at1ons for a r utback In nuclear m1ss1les in t-:urnpt'. Musk1t' sau1 But 1t "3:. not 1mme<l1atel~ dear 1Ahether Mwsk1~ got frof:D Gromvko :tll' assurances that thl.' &w1el5 would try to use their influence to end the spreadtnit war betwttn Iran and Iraq. Rt»f~ lft-nd to Chalff"f' FORT C,H.AFFEE. Ark. <AP1 A planeload of 174 Cuban refugees from flonda landed at nearby Fort Smith airport lo· day and awaited buses lo bnng them to Uu.s relocallon center to JOtn others from around the country , •lorfga~ Rate Hiu 1-1 P•n.-111 LOS ANGELES Great Western Sa\'1.Dgs & Loan Asso. bas increased its home mortgage rate to 14 perC"eot, an increase of a quarter of a percent Willi. . 'W'J:illi• ' am n; a~ Rites Set Friday Longtune farmer and fourth generation Californian William J Wilhams .fr . who served from l967 lo 1976 as vice pres•· dent and general manager of the Irvine Ranch agricultural ,..,..,.,. p~ l I SPACE .... with some thoughts on current science fiction mov1es "Star Wars·" "I en1oyed it the first time I s aw 1l and the second time . too. But didn't you find 1t strange that in the bar· room scene be ings from ~eparate planets are capable of b r ea th ing the s ame atmosphere." -"The Empire S trikes Back:" "When I saw il I was troubled because most people in this country do not disc riminate between those things that maJce logical sense and those that don't " -"Close Encounters or the Third Kind :" "Parts of that movie were beautifully dol)e. But any extraterrestrial beings we encounter are not likely to look like the Pillsbury Dough Boy '' "Alien -'' "It comes from the old school. ll suggests that there might be another kind or t e rrestrial be ing tbat isn 't friendly." . 1 f movie producers had bothered to take advantage of available scientific data all of the movies could have been .more realistic. the scientist said. divis.ioo. died at the age of 71. The Laguna HilJs resident succumbed Monday at South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna after a career of more than 4() year.i in the agricultural industry from Mexico to Ore11ton. Funeral services for Mr. Williams will be at noon Friday In Pacific View Memorial Park Mortuary Chapel, Corona ~el Mar. with interment to follow there after Masonic riles. Dunng Mr. Williams' career with the Irvine Company, be was responsible for all citrus and other tree and ground crops in addition to livestock raising. He was. more reeenUy, senior agricultural consultant for Boyle Engin~ring Corporation, which bas 80,000 acres under cultivation in the San Joaquin and Sacramento valleys. Born on his family's farm in Turlock, Mr. Williams was graduated in 1930 from what would become California Slate Polytechnic University of San Luis Obispo. H e was president of the Council of California Growers and for six years was a member or the UC Riverside ChanceUor 's Advisory Commit· tee. Social and service or- ganizations included the YMCA and Boy Scouts or America; Scottish and York riles; Al Malaikah Shrine and the Red Cross of Constantine. Survivors include his wife, Mary Taber Williams ; daughters, Miss Laura E . Williams of San Diego and Mrs. Marcia W. Snidow of Irvine; a sister. Mrs. Plinio Madonna, of Cayucos . and two grandchildren. 0€ Kids' Facility. Pushed A Joint public and private drive to ralae funds lo conatruct • new home for Oranae County's abused and battered children wu launched today by the Oran1e Co unty Bo ard of Supervt#on The ..-rtne,..hip to raise U.e money ~e.ury to construct a facility to replace the now over crowded Albl-rt Sitton Home waa lauded by Board Chairman Ralph Clark whO aaid, "I •m encoura1ed by urty signs of •u~port." Cl•rk apeclfacally referred to an offer by the Newport Harbor Junior Lea11ue of $50,000 in rnatchln~ funds that would be oade available for the project iJ a li\e amount 1s raised in the community Bill Steiner, director of Sitton home, located tn a compound of county facilities an Orange, said the need for a new facility is cri,ticaJ. The home is the repository for children who have been abused, sexuaUy exploited, neglected or abandoned. A l-Otal of 1,867 children were admitted to the home during the 1979-80 fiscal vear, nearly 450 more than the previous year, ac· cording lo a Sitton home fact s heet giv~ civic leaders who at· tended this morning's kickoff meeting. Qfficials predict that admissions will double within the next 10 years. Ellen Wilcox, coordinator of the drive for a new home, said a private non-profit corporation should be established for fund raising purposes. She predicted it could be up to 21fJ years before sufficient money is raised for a new facili- ty and perhaps five years before it is opened. Under a current proposal, the new facility would be construct- ed on county -owned property near the e"isting home. The Horace Greeley School is now located on the site. The school will be vacated next summer, according to county officials. The site was recommended because no land acquisition cast would be involved and due to its proximity to county Juvenile Court and the UC Irvine Medical Center. Officials said some costs might be saved by using some of the school facilities as part of the new home for dependent children. The new facility, as con- ceptually proposed, would pro- vide living accommodations for ISO children. The current home houses up to 88 children. Martial Arts Courses Set Martial arts courses for adults and youngsters are being of- fered through the Orange Coast YMCA in Newport Beach. A Kung Fu classs for those between the ages of 6 and 16 is taught on Thursdays at 6:30 p . m . Instruc tion is by Ben Brandt. A course stressing competition rather than self defense is of. fered on Tuesdays at 7 p.m. For further information, call 642-9990. Fro. Page ,t I HALT •.. because of a s ubstandard drive way width . Had the driveway been of the correct width, Riley pointed out, the EMA WQUld have bad no choice but to grant a building permit for the project regardless of the noise impact implications. During a question and answer period that followed his talk no one asked the scientist about the ·color slides of Jupiter and Mars he had shown. 'High Roller' ORANGE COAST .. DAILY PILOT ff'\e Or•NJI C.oHt Oe1ly Pttot, \lift!\ _,,"'-" t\ comDlM<f ,,,,. N•.w't Pf'~u. j\ OWOh4.MCI oy IM Oteflll•t C:M~t P·Wh\l'\t"' c.om.•"V ~'4tff' N lflOftt •re-ouolliiW<f Mond•Y fftt'OuQft Ft•CSl'f 10# 'o~•~ ~.M~ Nt•OO,, IH•<.ft H""\h'\oQfon 8rtt<ft Fownt41•,. Y•Hf', '"''"" l.•9""• Bt•Ch \ot.itf' C.0.\1 " '-"94• 'f'O;~I •01hon 1\ t>v&f•\ftH S..h1r<J4;y' •"" SwncMy\ fn• Pt•n<•N I pVDlt\fH"Q l)tttnl 1t •I UO WUI 8•Y Sttftt P 0 t 8o• 1160 C:.o\fe MefA (.tflfOrf'1• tttJ't . . • . . . . • . . . . . • .... ,., ....... Pt•\10."t •1'0 P\,,Ol1~ T ... M .. AM-""-f\•ot"Q E~tor c...,,..,." l. .. , ........ WN.M.oNlqll\lj ~Oll .. OfflcH Cftt• '-""' ))0 We\t a .. , \.lr!"t!t \.~ ~Kh '021 No (OHf t1~9ft•O Huntu-.OtM BH<h t111S &tlt ft &ou1.v.,d "' T .. ephone (714)M2-U21 CIHetfted Adnrtlslng 142·517' Craps Shooter Wins $777,000 LAS VEGAS (AP) -There's no doubt the player was ~lll&b­ roller -be walked into Binioo's Horseshoe Club with $7'1'1,000 in cash. And there's no doubt be bad courage -be risked lt all at once. And there's certainly no · doubt be wu lucky -be walked out rm ,000 richer. The player, who remained un- identified, won hiA f1'7'1,000 bet W edneaday on the third roll ot the dice in a cr.pe 1ame at the club in Lu Ve1aa • 1Uttering downtown C~lno.ceter. The casino, home of the an- nual blc·IDOMY World Series ol Poker, baa claimed for yean that no bet la too bt1 and gamblen are told they can risk •bate.er tbey can afford . "Tbe IUf called prevlomly about betUn1 uywbere from $200,000 to U mlllioll " Hol'Hlboe Club president .lad Billion 1aid today. "We said, 'Yeah, )'OU can do It'." BlnlOll said he bad had no further contact wltb the tambler, described oaly u a t Southerner in his 20s, until he showed up Wednesd•y. "He bad two Uttle suitcases, one full one and one empty one," Binion said,· "and he left with two full ooes." He said the man had the f777 ,000 in cash -$100 bill.a in s19,ooo bundles -"and we paid him off In cub." The man plunked his entire bet down on the "don't pass" Jtne at the club. The woman who .JUI roW.ng_Jhe dice threw a six, wbicb became the "point.'" Oien a nine and on the thlrd roll threw a seven which meant the bouae lost. "Three ro\11 ud lt WU all over with.'' 1ald Binion. Blnion IWOl'e he did not know tbe man's name, but added he would not release it lf be dld. Further, be Hid, be didn't tblalt the Internal Reve1tue Service lme• the man'• Identity either. "They're 1olng to be lootina around for him," Binion aa1d. ' IAtoking Daten. on ROrfd Acting as an extra set of eyes for the pilot and co-pilot, Lance Cpl. Robert Moyer Cleft) and Navy Corpsman Jess Beaucage, check out the terrain on way lo scene of an accident. To see the results of their Search and Rescue (SAR) maneuver out of El Toro Marine Air Corps Station, see Page cs. ----------- 'Doctor' Sw;pect Returned to Jail Legal troubles have multiplied for an Orange County man ac- cused of illegally practicing medicine and causing the death of a diabetic. following his ar- rest Wednesday on new charges. Gerald Barnes, 47, who lives al the private Coto de Caza estates development in Trabuco Canyon. was re-arrested late Tuesday on a bench warrant is- sued by Orange County Superior Court Judge Richard Beacom. Bail was set at $200,000 in the new legal action taken by Judge Beacom when investigators dis- closed evidence that Barnes had begun seeking employment as a doctor again. The defendant already was scheduled for arraignment at 9 a .m . today In Harbor Judicial District Court on two other counts. He bad been free on $2,500 bail since Aug. 22, following his arrest on three counts 111volving practic· Ing medicine while posing as a doctor. Barnes was subsequently charged with second degree murder in connection with the alleged negligence-related death of John McKe nzie, 27 , of iaheim, who died last year or .. belle shock. McKenzie was seen by the sus- pect at Pacific Southwest Medical Group in Irvine while suffering from uncontrolled diabetes. Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright alleges in the latest action against Barnes that be applied for a new job Sept. 15, the day before murder charges were filed. Officials at Wilmington Doctors Office in Compton where Barnes was allegedly seeking employment notified authorities. Officials o r the California Board of Medical Quality As· surance In Santa Ana notified the Orange County District At· torney's Office. Fro• Page .4 J BAY PLAN ... meeting, said one or the proposed dump sites was within feet of Back Bay Drive homes. "This stuff is going to ·sti.nk ," objected Bud Quist , who said bis home is adjacent to the proposed dump site. Re was joined. by several neighbors in urging Fish and Game officials to push Cor an alternative site on Irvine Company property on the inland side or Jamboree Road. •'This is the first good step we've had," commented Newport yacht broker John Miller. "and someone may have to give a little and if it smells, tough -the wind will shift eventually." A number of people, including Assemblywoman Marian Bergeson and Newport ~acb Mayor Jackie Heather, praised the plan as a good first step. ·'What's really caused the prob- lem ," said Newport Planning Comm1ss1oner Allen Beek. "is the heavy development on the San Diego Creek. "If the county had put its dollars toward proper control of these developments instead of throwing it down a rathole on these worthless N1W A <Newport- 1 r vine Waste Management Agency) paper-s huffling ex- ercises. things wouldn't be so bad," Beek said. Fish and Game officials cautioned that all $100.000 will be spent on the actual dredging and that money will have to be found to pay for removal of the spoils from the disposal site. Also. they stressed, the depart- ment must obtain permits from the slate Coastal Commission, the Army Corps of Engineers and the Regional Water Quality Control Board before the dredging can ~gin.--·----- CH~GES • • equalization or California school financing. The combination, district ad ministrators note, has voraciously eaten into the finances or what once was one of the state's wealthiest S'chbol dis· tricts. State law now curtails district Cinancial spending to increases of no more than 2 percent a year while inflation rises at a rate of more than 12 percent annually. District enrollment. which stood at 20,194 al the end of Sep· tember last year , has dwindled now lo about 19.154, and officials see a steady decline for years to come. With annual overhead-cost s avings of about $125,000 for eve ry elementary school closed and $200,000 for every middle school shut down. the district's adminis tration and board of trustees agree that closures are a necessitv And admuustrators note that closing down alJ of the schools under consideration still would not result in the remaining facilities being filled to capacity. Enrollment in the once- amuent district began to decline in 1964. Subsequently. trustees have shut down eight elementary schools, the latest during June, 1979 . when Monte Vista and Victoria closed their doors. Trustee Roderick MacMillian has long cried for a system of closing down schools In an or- derly fashion. Tuesday be proposed keeping the more sophisticated schools -those with equipment and facilities for broader programs -open. The concept would close older elementary schools first, mov- , ing students into middle school plants for their elementary education and then on Into high s chool facilities which might become schools for grades 7-12. Under this plan, he predicted, the distrid eventually might end up with four high school plants housing s tudents from kin- dergarten through 12th grade if enrollment continues to decline al the current rate. . ------. ---------------- J r I I I I I CALJFORNIA 'Canal' Reaches Ballot? SACRAJI ENTO (AP) -Oppo- nent.a ol t.he Puipberel Canal Hy I.bey are 1ubmltUQ1 mo.. tbaa twl~• lb• number of •lr.atur. needed to qualify • ... •rendum f« the ballot Tbt Coalltlon To Stop tbe • Peripheral Canal said Wednes day lt wou.ld 1ubmit more t.hao 150,000 1lsn•tures If at leut Ml,llt are re1t'1ered voters, tM referendum will be on the ballot at the 1112 primer)'. or any earUer special t!lection CfteCrr SI INHH LOS ANGELES (AP\ A private study is being condueted to see whether a 500-acre area next to the USC campus can be turned into a major commercial ( __ sr._AT_E ___ J industrial center to attract 1ob6 and people. The study should be completed next month. Pushing for the ambitious project is Ted Walkins, a leader of the Watts Labor Community Action Committee, who said be would like to see the area turned into another "Westwood,'' the community near UCLA. Otief to Reiirt- SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Board chairman Harold J . Haynes of Standard Oil Co. of California says he plans to retire next May after 34 years with the company and seven years in tbe top post. George M. Keller, 56, was chosen at the Soc al 's board meeting Wednesday to succeed Haynes, who will be SS next week. Keller, now vice- chairman of the board, joined Standard Oil in 1948. Crime f'Ulld Sea LOS ANGELES <AP) -A program offering cash rewards to help fight crime on city bmes was announced by Southern California Rapid Transit Dis- trict officials. The reward system revealed Wedne~day is part of a statewide "We TIP" progTam offering up to $500 to informants who help convict those involved in RTD-related crimes. This is the latest attempt by tbe RTD to combat rising violence on bust!s . According to latest statistics. vandalism costs an estimated $3 million an- nually. Blaze Conaained SOLEDAD CAP) -An arson fire that spread over 2,000 acres of brush near Pin n acles National Mooumeut in Monterey County has been contained, the California Department of Forestry says. The fire, which broke out Tuesday afternoon, was con- tained late Wednesday and was expected to be controlled this morning, a forestry spokesman said. No injuries were reported. Honored bg Peets Fred Astaire poses with the .. P1ed Piper" award as wife, Robin, smiles approva l. The American Socie ty of Composars, Authors and Publishers honored the 81 -ye a r - old entertainer with its highest honor in a ceremony Wednesday night in Los A/lgeles. Astaire has been an ASCAP m ember for 30 years by virtue of his songwrit- ing. Meteor Flashes Over Three States By The Assocla~ PftSa Authorities say a large meteor sailed over Arizona, New Mex ico and California. where it may have landed And a meteorite popularly known as the ':Old Woman Meteorite" returned home to California on Wednesday after 18 months of study by scientists at the Smithsonian Institution. Police in several western cities said people reported seeing a falling glow in the sky south-southwest of Tucson about 8:30 p.m . Wednesday. PIMA COUNTY SHE&IFF'S deputies went to one area west of Tucson, looking for a possible downed airplane, while a county Department of Public Safety helicopter hovered above. finding nothing. ''It definitely was a meteor," said Lanny Mccaslin, team supervisor of the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport Control Tower. "We saw it from up here. We must have bad 150 calls about it. A Jot of people thought it was a plane crashing, but that's impossible. You can't see a plane crashing in Tucson from Phoenix or New Mexico." He said a Federal Aviation Administration official in Los Angeles told him that the meteor landed in California. ''but that be didn't know where. They 've had a lot of reports from all around California." THE NATIONAL WEATHER Seryice in Phoenix was one of the few places to miss the show. "We ilidn't see it," a s pokesman said. Old Woman Meteorite, siad to be the largest ever found in the United States or Canada. now is 15 percent lighter because Smithsonian scientis ts sliced away 942 pounds of its 6,070-pound bulk for research. Composed mainly of nickel and iron, the rock has been mount- ed and was scheduled to go on exhibition Saturday at the Bureau of Land Management's station in Barstow. SAN BERNARDINO COUNTY had sought a court injunction to prevent the Smithsonian from cutting into the meteorite County officials argued that slicing it would mutilate a rare specimen from space. Although a federal judge turned down the motion, Smithsonian scientists agreed to c ut away less than they had originally planned. The meteorite was discovered by three prospectors m the Old Woman Mountains near Twentynine Palms in 1976. ~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~------~~~~~- .JOlllf TB& 11.BPUBUC I ' ~-Rej>ublic · Home Loan 19772 MacArthur BIYd.i IMnr. CA 92715 (714J8Sl·0891 I . I l.ar.d Bnlker • BW PROUDLY ANNO UNCES THE RE-OPENING OF O UR "HAJRWORKS SALON Come meet our talented new staff of s tylists al BW Newport Beach. Let them pamper you whJ1 pt!r~unalizctl service and guidance in all phase~ of hair lie:-iign, custo m hair color, predictable perms anti <.:omplctc makeup. Fo r an appointme m, p hone 714-759-1211. ext. 260. Hairwork.s Salon. Nt'wp<)n lk:ich ...... NEWPORT BEACH. 83 FaStllon Island 759-1211, Mon· Thurs · Fri 10·9. lues ·Wed· Sat to 6, Suo 12 ·5 ~----- Thur.day, September 25. 1980 Actors Pact Reached? Tentative Settlemem Reported Today 1101.LYWOOO (AP ) - N e a o li a tors for s triklna t e le vis i on and film Mc tors reached a tentative contract agreemt!llt with producers early today, a union spokeswoman said If ratified . the agreement would end the s trike by some 67 ,000 act.ors that began July 21 and which has virtually shut down the industry and delayed the s tart of the new fall televis ion season. The tentative agreement on a three year contract came early this morning after a bargaining session of nearly 19 hours, said Sc r ee n Act o r s Guild spokeswoman Kim Fellner. "ATS A.M . (POT) a tentative agreement was reached between the actors and the producers and that followed a final 18~-hour bargaining session, .. said the producer s' s pokesm a n Phil Myers. ''The SAG and A FTRA <Am e ri can F e deratio n or Television Radio Artists) boards will meet starting this weekend to approve it," he said ''After that, there will be a ratification process by both of those groups And each board will decide when the actors can go back to work pend inf.? ratification. San Onofre To Reinforce Heat Sleeves How'sthis for a joboHer? Receive $500 rortwo days work, expe rience not necessary . It was enough to prompt 400 job s eekers to fill out applications for 100 jobs at the San Onofre nuclear generating station. "We'v e qlil.i t t a k i ng a pplication s ,"-Sout he rn California Edison Co spokesman said Wednesday. After three days of training - during wbich the c hos en applicants will receive $100 per day -they will spend two days installing metal sleeves inside 7 .500 s mall beat exchange tubes on three generators in Unit One at the San Onofre plant. Work is limited to two days because that's the m aximum a llowed for any possible radtallon exposure. The tubes have sediment buildup and corrosion on their interiors, and the sleeves will reinforce the old tubes The Edison spokesman SaJd no firm date has bee n set by the nuclear ReguJatory Commission for the work, but the utility hopes to get under way within a few weeks Train Delayed OAKLAND CAP ) -An .. electrical overload" caused a Bay Area Rapid Transit train filled with commuters to sit for _ about seven minutes inside an approach to the trans-bay tube. a BART spokesman said. The 10- car train was moved back toward the Oakland West station wher e passengers were un· loaded. pending ratification. "So in terms of when the pro• ducers go back into production, we would have to wait and see what their decision is." However, Ms. Fellner said the unions could send the actors back to work pendin11 ratification. "IT'LL TAKE TWO and a half or three weeks for the whole ratilication process," she said, since the actors would vote on the p~ by 11\ail . The contract includes a 15 per- cent increase in minimum salaries for the first 18 months, and lS percent for the second 18 months, for a compounded in- crease or 32.25 percent over the life of the contract, Myers said .• Actors c urre ntly earo a minimum of S235 a day or $785 a week. .Fellner s aid the tentative agreement also included in- c rea sed pension and welfare be n e fit s , a s trong non - discrimination program, im- 'Le Walkout' l proved working condiUons for minors and an overhaul of work- ing schedules. NEGOTIATIONS BAD pro- gressed more rapidly since actors and producers •Creed a week ago on a complex formula that would give actors a share ol the lucrative home video market. That issue had been a major stumblin1 block in negotiations. Work would resume al1D08t immediately after the strike on new prime-time series for the ABC, CB.5 and NBC televiaioa networks . But network spokesmen have said it would take at least three to four weeb before any new half-hour episodes could be broadcut and six to eight weeks before any hour-long show could 10 on the air. The strike has virtually balled · the new fall television seuoni and forced several thousand non-performing craftsmen and others dependent on the movie- TV industry out of work. PSA Pilo~' Strike Grounds 200 Flighu SAN DIEGO (AP) -A pilots' strike shut down Pacific Southwest Airlines today, and other airlines were besieged by the San Diego-based carrier's stranded passengers. Picket lines were set up at airports in Los Angeles, San Francisco and San Diego, and reservation clerks said telephone lines were jammed. The 2.00 flights flown daily by PSA to and from those cities u well as Phoenix, Ariz .. and Mexico were canceled. "We're ready for a long walkout," said a spokesman in San Die go for the 500 striking pilots and flight engineers. The strilce, the first in PSA 's 31-year history, came on the second anniversary of the mid-air collision between a PSA Boeint 727 jetliner and a light plane over San Diego that killed 144 people. THE WALKOUT BEGAN at 12:01 a .m ., said PSA spokesman Skip Myers. after 11 months of negotiating failed to produce a new agreement. "I don't see a quick settlement in sight when we are so far apart on everything," Myers said this morning. He said PSA will honor its charter flight reservations with management personnel, but will not attempt to operate com- mercial flights. "Other airlines have agTeed to accept our tickets." Myers said "Many are addJ.Dg a number of flights to pick up the slack." PSA is the nation 's 13th largest carrier based on passenger volume. The walkout idled a 28·Jet fleet and 3,700 airline employees besides the pilots and flight engineers. A TOTAL OF 16 CITIES and 25,000 daily passengers are affect- ed by the strike. In addition to carrying a majority of airlines' commuter flights within California, PSA bas flights to Nevada and Arizona. Talks broke down Wednesday o.igbt when the airline rejected a reduced pay demand by the Southwest Flight Crew Association, whkb represents PSA pilots. "There is virtually no hope that J can see for any kind of settle- ment now," said Bryan Conn, a senior captain wbo beads the u- soc iation. AN Al&UNE SPOKESMAN said two demands by the pilots were "totally unacceptable." Those were for pay of almost $100,000 annually for senior pilots flying Boeing 7%7s and l>c-9-809 and for fewer working hours. . The pilots have demandett a 35 percent pay raise over two years while PSA offered a 29 percent raise. Al present, salaries range from about $10,000 annually as a start for second officers to $70,000 for senior pilots. The-pilots' previous contract expired lut December. A federally mandated 30-day "cooling off" period ends today. ' ---------------- • ... , 1/2 Off-For a limited time. Designer knit sport shirts. Save 50% on our most prestigious designer labels. Enjoy the comfort and good looks of 100% cotton knit. Notice the contem · porary detailing. At this \ \ price why not buy more than one. Navy, cream, brown, white, tan. \ S·M-L-Xl. Reg. 40.00 19.90 silverwoods 41 FAIHION Ill.AND, NEWPORT HACH , O••ogeeoasi oa••vP••o• Editorial Page ....................................................... Hobf-r t N Wee<1 1Publlsher Thomes Keevll /£dt10f Barbara K reiblct\/Edltorl•I P~ Editor PUblic Can Help Plan Coast Park It wilJ be al lust three years before the pubUe II allowed tnto the hilly terrain ot the nf'wly r reated Cryst a l Co\•e State Parll tn ioulh Oranae County That ·s \\hat residents ~rt> told l u t wef'k by t ah· park,," and recreation architttt David AJlt-n an Newpon Beach to ans~er questions on lht> nrw parlt tie said u was premalutt to predict what the pttrk will look l.Jkt' .md tha t thf' bulk of the plonnin.r pr<><'t'~!> 1!'> still ahead But res1dt"nts wh o tumtd out ror the m eellllR ap peared lt.>Ss conc•t>m ed with what Utt' park m ight look hkt· than wha t its imµa t't will~ Tht-y wanted to k no~ how people wo uld get to thl' park . whttrt> tht> µark ust'rs \o\OUld lea\e lhtir t'ars and who wouJd put out fi re~ u1 lht> «O&St •I hills Sevt'ral surfrr~ ""'llnt~ ~ kno""' what would bt· dont' with tht' thn•e m ilt• strt>h'h .-r"bt>arh rontamE>ct 1M1ctt-the park bowtdary Allen stres!)ed tha t the planning of tht: park will largely ht-up to the publlc He satd comments would ~ rerorded and "ould go farm determming ""hat the park ~ eHe<'ls \o\111 be We hope Allen I!--right and tha t publtc concern~ are m s tr·umcntal not o nl) in dlrtatmg what the park will look like but how pt>oplt' get thert• and where t hey'll leave their c·ars And. li ke wise. "e hope the people do speak up 1'he11 next chan, • ., to do so Wlll ~ thJs December at a vu bl1c workshop in ~ewport Beach Fewer B .us Riders Ridership s t atistics for the new pay-as-you-go busing program for Ha rbor Are a students fail to re veal whether the progra m is a s uccess . According to Ne wport-Mesa Unified School District officials. nearly 1,700 students now have purchased the $15-a -month bus passes. That translates to 69 percent ol last year's ridership figures at this time . Then, it was estimated, roughly 2,600 youngsters were making the daily bus trip to and from school. Distr ict officia ls maintain the pay s ystem is s uccessfuJ. But it has, they admit, presented more than a fe w he adaches to e mplo yees trying to establish linn bus routes. Daily modificat ions are necessary, they say, adding . tha t ride rship sho uld swell when daylight saving ends and the rainy season comes. T her e rem a ins, however. the question of how c lose the bus progra m is coming to paying for itself. Last s pring, s chool trustees agreed to pay SO percent of that cost in hopes the sale of passes would make up the s hortfall. Dist rict officials s ay they are still in the adjusting s tage and inten d to eliminate buses and coordinate r outes to attain the SO per cent goal. While it is sa fe to say that a lot of school,-bound ch ildren a re still ri ding school buses. it is too e arly to pass final judgm ent on the program. ' Football Ordinance? When the Newport Beach C ity Council gave preliminary a pproval to a n ordinance s witching its meeting nights from Mondays to Tuesdays, the jokes were ine,.;table. The ordin a n ce w as humorlessly nickna m e d the •'Monday Night Football Ordinance .•• But the reason for the switch, claims Mayor J ackie Heather. 1s mor e t han just football. She e xplained that council m embers. who receive their agendas on Thursday. normally review the m over the weekend. "They need th at extra working day on Monday to ask q uestions." she explained . Also a problem is the fact that Mrs . He athe r serves on the South Coast Regiona l Coastal Commission which m eets on Mo ndays a nd frequently conflicts w i t h scheduled afternoon council study sessions . "Our Monday eve ning meetings are also a terrible cha llenge to c itizens who must c hoose between our m eet ings a nd a good g a me," the mayor added. Newport. whic h is expected to complete the switch Oc t. 14, now joins a host of other Orange County cities that have given up on Monday nights. Although the rea soning has varied from city to cit y, the re undoubtedly will be those who s uspect t he lure of g r eat football gam es had something to do with t he decision. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot, p o Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone ( 71 4) 642-4321 . Boyd I Mate Ratings By L.M. BOYD Item No. 7338 in our Love and War man's file is the re- port on a survey. More than 2,000 men were asked what they consideted important in a matrimonial mate. The qual\ty that got the highest rating was listed as "that the woman.love him" -'81 per- cent. Second, "a sense of humor" -67 percent. Third, "intelligence" -64 percent. o~ar Gloomy Gus With all the suits and fines against private industry for polhrtine the air wbo's 1oln1 to sue and flne the 1ovemment for forcln1 cancer -cau1ln1 catalytic converters on our cars? G.J . Fourth, "self-confidence" - 56 percent. And fifth, "nice legs'' -40 percent. Find it noteworthy that · · seH - confidence" beat out "nice legs ." Far back in the pack were "pretty face" at 33 per· cent and "big bustline" al 16 percent. Did I teU you more Indians live in New York City right now than were there when Peter Minuit bought Manhat· tan for $24 worth o f whatever? The lsland of Greenl.rnd is blg1er than the conlinr nt of Australia. Q. Can you buy beer and wine in Iran? A. Not leeally. But a few restaurants there reportedly serve wine in pop bottles to known customers. And an or- der for tea in some restaurants ia a code request for beer. Q. la It !Ne t.bat parrota klll abeep? A. One aort of-parrot only, yea, Tbe kea of New Zealand. It attacb and devours arown •beep, laenctibty. Jack Andenton Mideast Nu~e Policy Prepared· WASlllNG'fO N In lil n omlnnws dt'vt1lofment. President t'aru•r h 1u u ue d secret 1tl rt•t'll vt!11 to th\' Penu aon to prepDrt' lht' option of using nu<'h:iar wt·ia 110n"i in the volatile M l<ftth• t :1t:-11 T ht•n• huv .. twen hints of s uch a 1~11u;11Jihty so th{• post Carter's !>l.all: of the· UOIOll uddrt'~ ... lll''ll J ,lflUUt") fur-l•~.imple dt·<'lun-d lhl.ll ·an t•tl .. mpt h J II Y uut11de fort•(> l ti ~ U I fl 1•ontrnl or U1c l't>r .. 1a11 (iulC v. 1 11 tn• r c ga rdi>d as an assault on the v1taJ 1ntnesL'> or the United States 1 and I will be repelled by use of any means necessary ·• A n d Rober t K ome r , undersecret arf of defense for pohcy, publicly stated that if conventional deterrents in the Middle East railed, the use of nucle.u weapons would be cons ide re d. But 1n secret d 1 rtit•t i ves. the pres ident has s pelled out the nuclear option dearly and explicitly. IN PRESIDENTIAL Decision Memorandu m No. 51. Carter outlrned a new U.S nuclear policy for the Middle East. But this memo was ignored in the fur or ove r P r es id e ntial Directi ve 59. which c hanged Mailbox U S. missile targets lo tht• Soviet Union The contents or Pl>M No 51 a nd relu t ed d ocume nts. lnc lud1ntt u directive to the Strategic Air Command from De fe nse Secretary ll a rold Br o wn . a r e d e s i~nt'd t o "signifi cantly degrade Soviet capabilities lo project military p o w er in t he M iddl e East· Persian G utr re~lon for a per iod or at lensl 30 days .. T o accom plis h th1\. the p r e s i d e n l o r d e r e d t h t' Cor mulalion or varioui. military options, my associate Dale Van Atta has lt'urned Th most significant of these wa-. thl· "limited strategic optinn" for' use by the commandt'r of lht> Rapid Deployment Force. Gen PX Kelley SU BJECT T O the u1,uJI presidential authorizat rnn for use of any nuclear weapons this o ption invo lves 19 nurlt-ar bom bs earned by B 52 bmnl.wr., The aim is to kel'p S<1v1f'I fon·1·-. from invading Iran Jn1t llw weapons 1ndudP hrith H ~7 bombs, with an t''t pl11~"·1· ,.,,\, ,., about equal to th<' ll 1rn~h11n<1 born b. and thl' mort1 pn"'t'r ful 8 · G l v a r i a b I f' v 1 • I ti thermonuclt>ar bombs Sources said rartt·1 11rd1·rt•d his p I a n n c rs Lo r 11 r rn u I a I t· several add1t ir>nal l1m1t1•tl st rategic option~ as """" a., a more far rrach1ng .. .,,.,...,.,,\''' attack option" thJl WOlJM tarRt'I Russ ian racllitie~ nl'ur 11 an - includini; mi litary bases and '1trril'1tl.11 inside the Soviet Union. MI la tary ·xperls noted that with n B ·52 force the SAC's 57th AJr 01v1 s1on at Minot Air l-'orc1• nasc. N D. a lready carmarkcct ror Middle East deploym~nt. lhe bombers would be the most likely vehicle for nuch•ar weapons, rather than long r:ulgc missiles in silos in the United States. The bombers ::ire for morti rte>Cible. one source pointed out , adding, "If we ~C"rew around with our ICBMs, yo u don 't know what t he 1 esponst> would b P " "f'lt•x 1ble" dl'>es not mean "reas1111ahl<'." h<)Wever , 1n the view ,.,, some insiders They <'Cl ntend that thC' concept or l1m1tt·tl nuc l ea r warfare 1·onhnt."(1 to tbe Middle East is a t h1ld s dream that could become a night mart· for thl' whole world. "It-' WE IN ITIATE tacli<'al nucll•ar wJrf.lre 10 that a rea, we .1n· 111x·nin~ a Pandora ·s hox." ~.1 11! »ru l'c•nl,1go11 -.our<'C who is .1L11 m•'<t al llw 1dP;i of i.ircpanng -.trat· !!•• t11't1ons for the Middle I•,,.,, 1 ~,, S<1\o11'1<; rou ld r•''lpond with tactic.ii nuclear "'' .,,,11m. :11t;1111.;t uur war'>hlp!'i in th~ 1'•·1-.1;111 <:ulf arl'a. und who kn•>"" .. wh• r" 1t would 1(11 from th• r1·? "'"" 11111 1 1\ Whtt~ llouse "'"'1., .. .,m:111 n·ru .. ,·d In <'Onfirm 11• do•n\ tlw l'lltll••nb of f'l)M Nn 'ii nr !•' •11-.<·11.;-. I S nurlt>ar poll1·} with r•"·P• 't to the \1 1ddle ba"' -. ~I' ---:: .. _ -i -~ -...... JIMMY'S LATEST: bur political odds man LI out wttb hil latest pick -and it's Rcmald Reagan. Unimpressed by tbe lawst polls. Jimmy the Greek ttl1I makes Reasan a 2·and-00e-half-to·l favorite over Jimmy Carter to win in November. Jimmy baa zeroed la on the s tates with many electoral votes, and here's how he sees Reagan winnin&: New York (41) -Carter carried in 1976, but the unba:! J ewish voters -1lven J Anderson as a Liberal Party alternative -will tip the sealee for Reagan. Ne w J er sey (17) -Ford carried last time. It's close, but Reagan has the edge. Pennsylvania (27) -Carter and Reagan are even right now. but If Reagan can nail enoueh of the ethnic vote, he's got it. Florida (17 ) -Carter won he r e fo ur years ago, but resentment over his handlin1 of the Cuban and Haitian refuaee problem in heavily populated Dade a nd Broward Counties may give the slate to Reagan. M ichlgan (21 )' -Gerald Ford took the state with 54 percent of the vote. Reagan's not as strons as the native son was, bu\ the depression in the auto industry s h o uld work to R e agan 's advantage. Ohio (25) Carter won by an eyelash 15,000 votes -in 1978. But unemployment in the st.eel, g lass and rubber i ndustries helps Reagan, and the state's Conservative Party, which sat it o ut last ti me, is workin1 ent husiastically for Reagan. Illinois (26) -Reagan's native-son status and disCOl)t.ent a mong blue-collar workers put this in the Republican column. WATCH ON WASTE : The Pentagon ·s philosophy on expenditure of public funds was made stunningly clear the other day One of m y reporters called to inqui re about a contract for 300,000 laminated-plastic recipe cards to be used by bartenden at the Army's officers' clubs and enlisted men's saloons around the world. The buts aren't in yet , but the c os t i s ex pe cte d lo run somewhere between $5,000 and $10,000. When my reporter s u g gested that perhaps the milita ry pubs could get along - a s they have for decades - without offi cial guidelines1 the Pe nt agon s pok e swoman observed brightly that "even if 1t is wasting money,•' printinl the recipe cards will "still be providing jobs to someone." Is Real Problem an E xcess of Freeways? To the Editor; I'm peeved over pavement paym ents and I question the headlining question you say is the answer to future highway fund ing problems. (Toll Roads Answer to Highway Ills?) Your question is not the solu tion lo those problems. but is r ather just another hard and perhaps unnecessary addition to the larger and more important eq uation wnich, when solved will ans wer the most human pro· blems. Truly, it would be foolish to disregard the fact there will be future funding problems but I believe the reasons for those proble ms can be eliminated before the fact. Certainly, if the current philosophy of freeway expansion continues there will be money shortages. but. it seem s to me, and I've traveled somewhat, there exists present· ly plenty of pavement to get the job done . SUPPOSE INSTEAD of view- ing the lack of money as the potential problem we view the proble m a s an ex cess of freeways. Then, after holding this perspective for awhile many so-called future highway funding prob le~ disappear. You may h y cess ation of highway construction would bring on other problems, which may be true. but maybe those other problems would be less costly and complicated to solve. Maybe your headllnin1 question should be "Highway llls; Should We Toll Over More Roads?" MICHAEL HENDRIE Polled To tbe F.ditor: 1 reeenUy received a long dis· tance phone call from Cambriqe -asld:nl me if I would answer questions relating to candidates _carter, Reacan and Anderson for a polliDlorcaniuUOD. After they satisfied my cwiosi- ty that it was not ~ete Humor or any kind of tollataUon ap. proacb or rip-off, I a1reed to anawer questiom witliout ldenti· fytna myMlf unW the end of tbe questlonlna. .. The caller assured me th;il h~ was not merely a teleph(lnt· • :ilicr but a "pollster " feeding me pr· deter mined questions and suppl} ing the answers to the general pool or ans we rs Crom othl'r pollsters asking the same· flUC'> lions The Line of queslionmg ~ J' JJ parently designed lo r1clt.'rm1nt• the convictions of res1><>ndt>nts about the three candidatf's , in eluding three or four s1 mtlarqu1•s tions to help lhf'm determine 1flh1 ans wers agreed with each •••hH -w1thorwithout waverin~ THE CALLE R could nrit 11ssu11• me that t couJrl reel''"'' ,1 .-op~ of the questions with or w1th•,.Jl rm answers until he ronsult\.'11 with someone else al the other end of the line. No. it was rinally de cided , copies of questions ur answers couJd not be provided. They su g gested t hat Ti m e Magazine regula rly reports the results of various polls in case I wanted to judge my answers with others. However , I have no idea why I was selected as a Laguna Beach resident (at random or by predetermination) whose family earnings e~ceed $25,000 yearly: Finally I realized that I wouJd be among others without knowing where they lived or anything else about them. At least I ans wered strongly enough to be judged moderately liberal. Some of the questions made me answer in favor of all three candidates - like do I believe in the honesty of one candidate above the others. Another question covered the priority of national defense. infla· lion and Wtemployment -mak· in& me wonder how many replies and what kind would hesitate or not agreewith each other ' I was asked if my vote wouJd change if there were no debates- or if debates were not to include all three candidates. Maybe this was a key question but I can scarcely believe that It should seriously be asked! ARTHUR WEISSMAN Proof To the F.ditor: Khadafy of L1bya co uld prove to everybody's saUsrac- lion th.it br 1lwr' hatl no place 1n h ... ni1r11 f11 l'"' •.• ,,, .•fll n111v r· .tr ~ 1 • II 11• h.1, !I•,,,, I , .. I Sl,2(),000 tn •'\'•'r ..: ·~ •, .1111•n 11p•·rator in 1111· St'll•' uf <,,...,1 i.:1a .J W ltEID ~ ,.,~., ( •n!1in9 T11 th•• r·:dilor ,\t .Ill \ l<ellp1'• are or lhe opinion tht' 1 111, 1'toci11 ;11rpon is a cln"eci 'I 'I' lrl .Jnl. the t>OI~ /!,II .. a1qilJJ1e 1$ 1n a rr-.uc.,!'urn , <1nc1 the rl'renl tests of a so called larger quieter Jt't for the 80s seem to benr that out ""'he. noise made by lhat jet, wh1k l11anr•I only haH full, exlend"d 111 th11 wa) down lo tht coasthm lnl' miles .1 way. So ruu<'h fnr Uw American avia· t1on 1ndu~1ry·s latest product. JOHN WA \ NE Airport has bei>n opt'r .lting under a tern· porary noise variance granted hy the Californi;i Division or Aeronautics under Section 5062 of t.he California Noise Stan d::irds The airport 1s forbidden ti law from expand ing its C'NF.L contour lines in any direc- tion Sinre thl' new he avier jets 51mply move more noise down to the high priced homes. there is liltl1• 1he a1qx1rt can do about US· 1n~ them am1 the state can n9 lon~er ~rant variances based on hopes for some future quiet jet, The futurc 1s here now. It is noisy, hut soon it will be qwet. RJCHARD TENEFRE f ,011df(•rd·11 Rhck To the FAiilor · I would like to warn people, if ybu have a piece of property for rent, be careful who you rent it to. Be sure that you have a good rental contract and inquire or a pastor or someone that you have confidence in to recommend you a dependable family ta rent your property to. I have a friend who has learned an expensive lesson. They have not collected any rent for 'l h ree months. One eviction was set aside by the court when the r e nter brought phony charges against the owner. He dropped the charges, but the eviction has been set aside, and the 1>roceeding:o; w1'1 have to be started over There are a lot of nice families out there looking for a place to li ve. They will take care or your property and pay the rent. but bl surt' that Y"U have a good nmtracl, '-'''t'n with them . The best you can do is still a gamble. JAMES BOLDING ,.,., Trihwr To the Editor . Don Wilkes, s peaking about Vietnam veterans in a recent article. suggested a parade for Vietnam veterans. What a ~uper idea! The time has come to absolve our gwll with this blank· blank war and recognize. before it is too late. the real heroes of Vietnam . . . the veterans. What a bout proposing a srand pal'ade on a national seal'? A parade in ever y majlor city celebrating Vietnam Veteran'• Day? It's lime we acknowledled t his unique warrior, and said thank you ! PETE MEADE E11ougla Prag~•• To the F.dltor: My entire household and I are unequivocally opposed to 8Q type of hotel or commercial de- 1velopment which will lncnue demands to enlar1e the aiJ1IOfl facilities. We have been reaidentl of Newport Beach for 12 years and have seen it expand to include • air pollution, water poll= noise pollptioo and four-w pollution. Enough ls eDOUlb -let's ltcJp this "progress" before our dt.J is totally ruined. LORI GAIL· • Ltfttn from '"*"' an •le....,. Tht right to condnN i.ttm Co fl tpQCt or tUmbloU libel u r•"""'4 LAtttr1 o/ 300 wordl or kN ..U bt gion pre/tmtet. AU lfttn•.,.... • , elude~ and~ oddreel but MrMlmcllt betoil~Olt ....... , i/ ta.//idfttl ''°'°" u o,.....a. Po•t"JI tDW Mt be pMNUMd. f Thur. da)'~ Clo8i11g Price~ ... .. NYSE ' OMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS °"'"'•ll-1n<1wdlo tr-">ot!M.._• •••'-MIO-•I P• Ill( PI W 9o41q11 l)otr .. l•.,.\.l"'l!\Mll t&e<• a.c-.·-·--~· .... ~-·'"·-···-.............. ~ ...... _ ......... . 1'hurldelt. SeptM11t>et 25. 1990 IN DM.YALOT CJJ Dow Jones Final DOWN 8.79 CLOSING 155.97 NfteB .. lcFi,... No Name Writers Get 'Big' Break By JOHN ClJNNH'F .,. ........... ,.. NEW YORK -World Authon Ltd., a book publiabinc firm CUKeived as a counter to establishment publiaben, la out with its first volumes this month, and tbus its presi- dent's valedictory has begun. It took faith, time, money, patience and, some in the industry say. colossal nerve and a blissful icnorance of how difficult it is to penetrate markets cont(Olled by giants and their corporate parents. Its goal sounded too hopeful, naive, or haughty: "WAL is dedicated lo the proposition that excellent profits can be made by publishing worthwhile books -books that in- form , tnSpire and give pleasure." ~ But the first books are published now: "Pampini," an adventure tale by Uri Geller: "Tantra Today," a deluxe . art book on Indian yogas by Eleanor 1 Moore Montgomery; and "Nirvana t~ ~ , Now," a science-religion tome. ~""' The latter is by Roland Gammon, ~· writer , editor .. small-business owner, ' president of World Authors, and thus ""' the valedictorian. His involvement begins at any one of the cocktail parties that authors attend. cuNNtl'I' Gammon. who has written several books, was ac- customed to hearing authors complain they couldn't get published because, they said, some of the biggest houses were looking only for commercial bestsellen. IT WAS A TIME, he said , when "corporate carnivores," so-called by Archibald MacLeish, were buy- ing out big-name publtshers, "to the unmistakable de- meaning of authors and obvious subversion of publishing independence and literary excellence." To many authors, said Gammon, the acquisitiorus were a "dangerous threat to the intellectual values, quality literature and professional integrity once characteristic of older publishing houses." Three years ago Gammon's musings grew serious. "Here I was, sixty-ish, head of my own company, com- fortably upper class, a world traveler," be thought. An idea possessed him. "'- "WHAT A CRANCE for a great valedictory lbrust for about 10 years," he tbougbt. "Why not publish some of tbe writers I bear complaining about establishment companies that won't print their works?" Authon would be guaranteed promotion of their book e ven if it didn't sell immediately. Time between manuscript acceptance and publication would be halved. Authors would be "listened to thougbUully." There followed the bard business of raising money. About Sl00,000 WH accumulated. but it went out quickly, as advances for authors, for paper, for printing, for ad- vertising, for travel to conventions. ALMOST EVEaY CENT went out, and none came in. Gammon's business had lo sub8idite the operation, and be had to forego any advance on h.is own boot. But, be says conlideotly, the money will now in October. Initial press runs were small. between 4,000 and 8,000 copies each. but Gammon hopes to generate profits or $80,000 from just the initial offerings of the three titles before going back to press again . . ftf tH-k• I" T#lr .. -.,,"'"""' HEW YORK IAPl -So'". l pm.·,_; prlu -,,., <,_,.. Of '"'" 111._,. ,,.... e<lt•t -York Stoel £,_c~ in•-· trodln9 ...tlonellV •I ..-a tMn \I IBM S.59 ZOO ~· -"• SHnRoet> 5S1,«l0 17''0 'la Tu.co '"' 5n,oao ll>'.e "" T•••S t"tl •,Kl> lS t .,.-l°'lo Xc<o• C$> •75,200 ,,,,. • I ttercui.tol"C •TJ,«IO T.I' • ''' ~·~rc.:r. ~·~ ~~ -'~! 8onM,.,.. A2S,lll0 24"° 1 City lnvait •11,«IO ~ 1\11 Sqw\Db C« p •.OOO 17"' • '"' Ollcorp J~,6CO :!OV. ~ Sony Gor 11 341, 100 ''"" • ''• MoQll Ja,tllO l:W. -:\/. BurNAL »7 IOO 1-. '• Pel. Up 20.0 Up 16.0 Up tS.7 Up 12.7 Up ··' Up u Up S.5 Up 5,4 Up S.4 Up 5..3 Up u Up 5.1 Up 5.1 Up "' Up 4.7 Up .. , I.IP .., Up 4.7 I.IP 4.7 Up .... Up u Up u Up 4.5 Up 4.4 Up u Pa. Olf 1U Oft , .. 09. t .1 Ofi I.I Oft 1.1 Ott ... Off ... °" 6.1 °" ... Oft u °" u Oft •• o Oft s.Alt Oft M Oft M Off S.A Oft S.4 Oft SA °" 5.l ort u ort s.t °" 5,1 Off JO Off u Off s,o c.,,., t oz\41-t.05'4 • pound, Us. OHUllM\ons. Load Q c.nes • POUNI lllK l1~:\4 centl • pcMWI, .-11 ... ,.-. Tl• 11.1• • l*M Alo-,111.H.Y ~n MHCwy "61100 .. ,11•>11 ,.~, ..... Jn.$1).1 lroy OI H, Y. I su .... r H E W YOAK (AP) -H~ t. H.,.M .it'"' tadrt. uuoo. °" "° no. E119t11\ord sliver $21 SSO. oft Ml.110, toi,,lcotod Ml,... m.-. off to.no. Gol.d Quotation• ~: nww""'9 tlal .. '111S,OO off"·'°· L.Mlfllll: .,_ fhd"' "'7.75off112.75. P'ant: --""'"' ~u. off s10.'2. ,.,....,..., flJll .. .,. 07, off '5.19. lllricll: "'7.00 Did. off 112.00. 1100.00 •M<ecl. Mo• Yorll: Hendy & Horm•n mid· rnorn•"9l*f7.7S,off112.75. .... Yn: E .... 11-d IOlll"O llf'ICO mi. rnor111fte 9"7.75, oft 11us. .... 'Y-: £19tNrd 1Mr1Cotecl ..... m~l122.17.offJIUll. ~fl•IHlb d Nhw '¥r•rl., tow u N•"' v••''' h•Qh Vnfe\\ otherw1w no14!."d, r•tl'\> ot 01v10rP~ ''' ~nnu•• d•.,r"'~"O b.u~ on ttw 1-.st• QU•tfrr ly nr \tJm• Annu•f dt<••r•t1on SPf'<t•I ot ••tr• d1v•Otno\ or o.vrntntti "'°4 Of>\19n •tfd ~ r.-qutAf' ,,,. •Mnttf,f'd 1n thP follow1nq tootnotf"\ I -.1\0 f"1r4 Or fAffof\ 0 Annu4I f'"•ffll Ohl\ \to<• d•v•~nd c 1tqv10•t1n9 O•w•O.no 8:~!:~:: <:.. O::.~o'".r:~-:~:t ·~.':!:::;.' ! · ~ht up t P•td '"''·Y••r, d1v1dPnd om1ttH. m;~~;:c' r ~~~t;f o:·~~~ :~.!·:;.~··~~: CufTtul•11~ l\\Ut w•I~ d1vultnch 1n .,.,,.,, "t<t• •\Wt f l>t<t•rto 01 IMl•O '" i><"-M'"' 11 "'°"'"' pt~ •too d1v1ci.nc1 t Po10 1,. ·•~o '" 11<..:~0•rMJ 11 "'°"'"'· .,,,,...,., <•~ vatUIP on f'• 01v1°"'nd Ot t• d1\"1tM..hOt1 0•1• .. A 0111t0tnd "' •• ,,~h '£• O•••Oitnd ,,,Cl \•It\ 1n tt.ltl 1 s.i., .,, tu11 Cid C•lleG WO WM<1 01\lrtbulPO ,., _......, l \\Ufd "''* W •th ••rr4nh •• Wttl'Kkll ••rr•t\h .. a,, E• Ot)tnt>ut1of'\ P E '•tio f"f Ot•C• o• • stoc• A \ • muU1pl~ of Pf' \h•r• ~•tn1no\ dettw•O O, .~~,V~~~~Y ~:. •:!~ 11 tnon•h .,,,..,no, •t0"'' -»Ir\ ,.., -........... ....... ""' Solo\ ,.. Pl I"°' :lrY ("4 ?t ''"' ''"' ~"" rt '!di l'°" Cllij -·--ww--ww-1 ... 22 MS 11 + _, Wll\lec IM • t$ Ja -Wt Witco t,• 6 2DJ JD -Ill A .. tl4 lP! ..... ~ I.JO IO 1.-a JS..._I .... WlltrA .eo 5 -Hiio-! i .. m~+1111 =•"2·: ., " ,..__, w.1ww .u 1 ., tt -.. • +t\li ~ t, 12 11' 47\lt-Ill ~ ..... 2!0 12'1>-" U I 'i'll F llf t . 1 I 4,_+ 'i'll ~ t .al 1• P1ll r::~ 1 11 'i'll Er"" • IO h .... , Wlfwlll 1M • 214 ,,. 4 Ill ,__ "-t.e t 144 JI.._ Ill ~w 2.•.. 1 -'I> , L• " ~"" 1.• • 456 Mlll>.... .. • .-... .. ~ l 'r••· :-~ ... ~ ~·; ..! ==·~:..:,'' .... 'ft~; • :I • , 11 ........ ,.... .. .. , ... ·:1 ••• ,. ., ~" • t : . ::: ~t\o\. ··~ • i~O ii l~l J:; i? ~. -Jll_!t M'--'l't .·.t: ..• L ·~ !.."' ,~~, ,, .. , ~· ~·~I 'I ... , . ri"..!''4 r!J,il .. d ·~ • .. "' '· s ' ......_ ... :.ttJ-. 4 JI' ~l:t ='f '.~'ft ~'\ti; A ' it I l!...•l •. liiiiiUii ~ • • d " . '"' ..... fi1' . ., ... , ~ f ~ ""111••-r··. ~-'i'll W!IOlif .SS . l ..... Ill 'l t ~ .... IMffllif ,M , 1 1~ 14 WllcP\. .'2 1 2t I --t I +"' ._..., A •It 4 _.,.+•i.\ W111tPS I.It• ff ....__ 14 tfllll . Ill .... !. I ,. ' -. . ,.. . , ..... ,, - 0 • • ' The Doily Pilo and our lo~ol teo~hers I Here's wllat our partners say about our Newspaper in Education program ••• "Thank you for your program.' Not only does it assist in providing a basis for timely discuss ions , but it also encourages all of us to be more aware of the newspaper's importance.'' --M. Teresa Santoyo College Park Elementary School "Well done program, very worthy program , students respond and develop excellent awareness of current events in the news.'' --James Lande Marina High Scho.ol "We use the program in f ifteen different classrooms. All of the teachers feel that it is an excellent tool for pre- senting current events. , ' --Karla Koepenich Isaac L. Sowers Intermediate School I "It is outstanding. I use it every wee k and it really helps the students beconie aware of the -issues . Particularly the ques- tions at the end. They help. Thanks ... . -L. Meyer Charles W. TeWinkle Middle School ·'This is the best current events program available. I have included i t on a weekly basis in my 718 grade Social Studies program for the past 3 years. It has made my students better appreciate the world around. them." --John Wigat Masuda School DAILY PILOT 642-4321 ~~~ Our newspaper ln~education program is designed to draw students into discussions of today's major issues. Best of all, the program challenges kids to use their minds and imaginations and to become involved in their community and in the world around them. As ·'partners with the hools in the education of our young people, we feel this is one of our most important projects. For more information about our progra please contact Janet Steward, Newspaper in Education Cootdinator, 642~21. ( ,