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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-09-29 - Orange Coast Pilot-- \ 2 en • ouDty • • 8ID ID -, ____ - ·-~ Denies Boss Her Lo1'er MONDAY AFTERNOON, SERT_EMBER 29, 1980 V~ rl, lll0.111, I HC'TIOllltl. a l'AGU -...... ._ ______ lllilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ________________________ ..... -u ' • • • • Winds F ,an Huge Castaic Inferno Boss Not ~ Lover, ~1 She Says .,. . .,........ DENIES RUMORS Wlll•mAee• 0088IP TARGET Mary Cunnlnghem 2 Murdered In Separate ·oc Incidents T•o men were abot, and killed Sunday in .eparate ibcidents in Anabelm and Santa Ana. Kamron Jabaneiri., 25, was killed in a aboottn1 at 6: 15 p.m. ta a home at m N. Kocfjat St. in Anaheim, said Police s,t. Del Wade. Jabaneiri lived witb his -,arenta in Oran1e. 1aid Wade. Arrested on auapicion of mW'der WU Dwaine L. Barnett, 10, wbo lived at tbe Kodiak Street addre11. Barnett was taken to tbe police bead- quarten b7 bi8 attorney at 9:30 p.m., Mid Wade. Wade said tbe two men ap- parently were ar1uln1 when ~ ...... rt ... lbot. He uJd tbe nucm wby tbe men were qur- nllD1_ wun 't clear. A poUce ~ ( .. I Dyo, Pate Al) a • ) 1 4 ? ~ SOUTHFIELD, Mich. <AP) - Mary Cunnh:a&ham bu request- ed a leave of absence from Ben- dix Cerp. ln the wake of goulp t hat linked the 29-year-old woman's rapid promotions to her friendship with William Agee, the company's chairman. In a three-page letter ad- dressed to Agee and the com· pany's board, Ms. Cunningham requested an "immediate but temporary" leave of absence, saying "as a result of media coverage I have received in re- cent days, I have been placed in an impassible situation." News stories appeared after Agee, '2, stood before some 600 Bendix headquarters employees Wednesday and said contrary to rumors within the company, Ms. Cunningham's promotions and influence resulted from her qualifications and not from a personal relationship with him. Promoted Wednesday to vice president for strategic planning, Ms. Cunningham said she didn't know how long she would be gone. In her letter. Ms. Cunningham said because of "false innuen· does," she has heft "rendered ineffective." She said if she re- sign ed, she would set a "dangerous precedent" by al- lowing goSBip to dictate cor- porate POliCY. Agee· said Sunday that Ms. Cunningham's request will be granted and tliat an arrange- ment will bp worked out so she can "continue to provide signifi- cant couueJ and benefits." Ms. Cunningham, who re· ceived if master's degree in busines1 adminiatratioa from Harvard, joined the company in June 1979 aa Agee's executive aaaiatant. Agee was divorced a month ago. Ma. Cwmin1ham bas been separated from her husband for nearly a year. Agee declined Jut week to ad- dreu rwnon be wu haviq an affair with Ma. Cunninpam. He referred inltead to statement.I that the two were 1ood friends and that abe wu a qualified ex- ecutive. Bendix is the largest lnclepen- dent supplier to the auto in· duatry. Author Ousted COLUMBIA, Mo. <AP) - RobiJI Moore, author of tbe novel "Tb4 Green Berets," WU booted from a weekend 1atheriq of about 750 aelf-deseribed IOldien of fortune bec•uae of a nctal slur comidered "offenaive to lood IOldien," the or1anizer ol the 1atberln1 aaid. , I Mealtime for Squirrel I Control Expected Today Oeilf rlNll ...... .-, 0..-Y A-- Young squirrel takes meal from eye- dropper at Irvine Animal Care Center in Laguna Canyon. The squirrel, named "Norma Jean," was about three weeks old when this photo was taken. Kennel attend- ant Mike Igoe cared for her after a WO man found the baby squirrel in Irvine and brought her to the shelter. "Norma Jean'' since has been released and is believed to be living happily with other squirrels somewhere in Laguna Canyon. P~~ce Plans Ignored Iran, Iraq Clain New Victories in Battles BULLETIN VNrl'ED NATIONS CAP> - luq &old V.N. Secretary- Ge.eral Kan WalAelm today It ..... llleed a Senrity CoatU call I• a ceue-ftre If lru allo a1ree4 &o ad die lloatWCles, Iraq'• ambuaHer to Ute UllMed Na&lou aald. Tiie apoteamu Hid -com•aieatiea laa41 Mee rttelftd lroa ...... BAGHDAD, Iraq <AP) -Iraq claimed fresh territorial gains in southwest Iran today and Iran claimed • sweeping naval vic- tory u both nations seemed un- w il H n1 to heed efforts to ne1otlate an end to Uleir war. arrived in Baghdad from Tehran, where Iranian Presi· dent Abolhassan Bani-Sadr told him: ··we will continue to fight until the last aggressor is driven from our territory.•• Neither side heeded a resolu- tion adopted unanimously by the U .N . Security Council calling for a cease-fire. The Tehran Radio quoted the commander of the Iranian navy ~alley Restaurant Robbed by Bandit In response to Iraq's propo1al A man armed with a piat.ol for I cease-fire on ill tenm, rot>bed the Central China Iran'• envoy ln M09cow offered Reltaurant in Fountain Valley counter-proposall, includiq the Sunday night of $444, police re- reslpaUon ot Iraq's president ported today. and tbe surrender of Ill army. The bandit burst into the Another Iranian envoy said ID· reataUJ'ant at L8125 Brootbunt di1 a leader ot the non-aliped A bo t a d d nailo;.1,-.._ •• ~belpencl• .. -war. ve.t a u p.m . an e ---manaed tbe money from tile P 1ktit1 n i Pr•• i cl en t cash rqister. Police aakl tbe Mohammed Zia uJ-Haq, beadiq :;iect escaped. in an older an Islamic ""oodwill" mtuai. el,tanVolb~~1en. ' \.. ,T &·· • aa saying it waa in control ol the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf's outlet, and adding that foreign commercial ships could proceed normally as Jong as they do not bead for Iraqi porta. He was quoted as saying the Iraqi navy was forced to seek shelter in ports of other Persjan Gulf nations. President Saddam Hussein in Iraq in a brpadcut Sunday said Iraq would stop fi1httn1 if Iran recognised Iraqi soverel1nty over all of the Shatt al-Arab estuary at the head of the gull, returned to Arab control the three small islandl at the mouth of Ule gulf. seiled by Iran ln 1971 and called off Ule propa1anda campal1n by Ayatollah Rubollab Khomeini and bia sup- porters to lnctte a M091em upril- inc .. ainat the Iraqi govern- ment. Iraq made the same demand.I last week after eacalatlna border fttbtiq with Iran, and u.e tram .. rejected tbem. Huuein aaid be wu ready to (See llll>EA8T. Pa .. Al) 1 CASJ'AIC CAP) -Firefighters raced the wind today to gain contr,ol of a 6,000-acre brus~u-e near Castaic in the Angeles 'Na- tional Forest after subduing a stubborn 250-acre blaze 35 mil~ southeast. The smaller blaze was brought under control at 6 a .m. by 200 firefighters who circled the fire which burned along Pigeon Ridge in the San Gabriel Canyon, tJ.S. Forest Servtce spokesman Bob Brady said. Brady said the Castaic fire, believt:d to have been triggered by target shooters in the hills . should be contained by 6 p.m. to: day. The fire began Saturday morning and briefly threatened the small communitjes of Green Valley and Lake Hughes 20 miles east of Lancaster, but no homes were evacuated and no buildings burned. Firefighters originally pre· dicted the blaze would be con· tained by 6 a.m . today but de- layed it because of warnings that lS-25 mph Santa Ana winds were expected to pick up this af. ternoon. The northeasterly winds "may or may not have an effect on the fire," Brady said. He said in~ !rared photos of the fire last ~ight showed no "hot spots" or mtensely burning areas left in the fire. The Castaic fire in San Fran- cisq uito Canyon, 50 miles north of Los Angeles was fought by 700 firefighter», including 33 hand crews. along a perimeter <See f1RES, Page AZ> Coast Weather Patchy early morning fog, otherwise fair, though buy. through Tuesday. Lows tonight 55 at the beaches, 60 inland. Highs Tuesday high 70S to lower 80s. INSIDE TODA~ TM Raml, eoUh two wiru in a r01D, talcle on tM divifton. leodfrag 4tera Surado11 at Anolwim. Sn ltoriet Pao- Bl. l•tlex L.M..... ,.. ......... c........ Al C......... CM Cllllka .. Ce••=• .. .._......_a ...... ,.. ... , .... .,.. ........ c:w 1 ... 1111'1 a = -- .. DAILY Pl!.OT • S .... f 'rune 1•ap . I I ~DEAST .. negotiate directly with Iran or through any third party or in- ternational o r ganization to reach a "just and honorable" settlement that would recognize Iraq's "legitimate and historic rights." Iran's ambassador In Moscow, Mohammad Mokri, told a news conference his gover nme nt might .,ee to a cease-fire if Hussem.tesigned, Iraq's army s urrendered, the city of Basra were turned over to Ir anian con- trol pending a plebiscite there and Iraq's Kurds were aUowed to vote in a referendum on whether they wanted autonomy or to join with Iran. IRAOI SAM MISSILES STANO READY TO INTERCEPT IRANIAN PLANES NEAR THE IRAOI CITY OF BASRA 8•_1fMied Cfelma Terrttortel Gelne, Whffe lren Report• Big Navel Victory In lntenettylng W1t The Iranian ambassador lo Kuwait, A. Shams Ali, on a mis- sion to New Delhi on behaU of Bani-Sadr, told reporte rs he would urge tndt an Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to play an active role in ending the war. On the battle front, an Iranian military communique, reported by the offi cial news agency Pars, spoke of a sea-borne raid by the Iranian coast guard on Iraqi oil s tor age tanks and m ilitary targets at Faw, Bisheh a n d Qesleh. Faw is a major Iraqi deep.sea oil terminal at the head of the gulf by the en- trance to the Shattal-Arab. The other two places mentioned are nearby 1·,,,,,. Po~ I I ,,,,,., FIRES ... of more than 14 miles They were aided by several heavy air tankers. U.S. Forest Service spok-esman Bruce Bundiek said. One firefighter injured by a d1ain saw was treated and re- leased. Bundick said. Authorities believe the blaze to have been caused by legal target shooting in the forest. "Much of lbe area which bas been consumed has not been burned since we started keeping records,·• Bundick said. "Some of that brush is 70 years old.·• B~h in the area a lso was ex· tremely dry after a long, rainless summer and the fire was burning over rough terrain. "The combination made it a major fire right off the bat," Bun· diet said. Bundick said firefighters from various parts of California were brought in to help fight the blue. The San Gabriel Canyon fire, 35 miles southeast of the Castaic fire in the sprawling national forest , started around 2 p.m. Saturday, Bundick said, and was burning chaparral and brush north of the San Gabriel Reservoir, about 25 mileseastofLos Angeles. Cause of the fire was under in- vestigation. Pilot Strike In Fifth Day SAN DIEGO (AP> -No tallts were scheduled between striking pilots and Pacific Southwest Airlines as the walkout went into its fifth day today and the state's air commuter traffic jam began to abate, according to a PSA spokesman. The second strike in the 31· year-old airline'~ history was costing the company Sl million a day in lost passenger income as the 22,000 air travelers PSA nor~ally carries each day used _,autos and found space on other .ca rriers, PSA spokesman Duane Youngbar said Sunday. A bout 500 pilots and flight e ngineers of the Southwest Flight Crew Association walked out Thursday at 12 :01 a .m . Since then, PSA has laid off 3,500 to 3,700 employees, Youngbar said. But he noted that revenues from PSA sub sidia ries s u c h as cha.rter flights, fuel s ales, jet maintenance and pilot flight school -plus reduced costs - would keep the airline operat- ing. Landon Improves TOPEKA , Ka n . <AP) - Ninety-three-year-old Alf Lan· don was silting up in his bed and doing "ju.st fine'' after being hospitalized follow ing com· plaint.a of feeling weak, his wife says. Landon. a former Kansas governor who was the Republican presidential nominee against Franklin Roosevelt in 1936 , was hospitalized Thursday. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT '""' o .. .,. Got\t O..tt P1tot "'''"' •"-<"' I\ <omD1nt11 Ow trit.~ Prt-u 1\ P...O••'ht-0 Of '""' 0'•"99 CoHt P\111»1•9'•"'9 Com""" S...'•'• f'CltHOft\ ~· PYOh~ ~o· lftrouon ~"°"'' '°' cm. ""'"· "*••Po•f ee.-cn HVAt•ncJfon I t•<" Fount•ir Veit••• lh11nt. l •Own• l •ecrt So-Ith ~' A ._."49•• '•O•Ot1•i td•t'°" +\ p.,,oi1\1'14"d s.tuir-.u.,.., W'Cf•'t' fn40 ~1M1&WI ~·'"'"" .. 411\, II •• )JO .. ,, •• , Sh ... I p 0 h• IMO. C.otf• •"W. C.l1IO#tt'• '161' ·-f1N-Prf\10.nt •nd Pybil1\1Wf "::::"~;.. "'r.r.::- ~ .. .._ •nn"""' ~·~ fd•tOt T~• ('N•)to-cnt a..-....,.."6 ..... '42-a.71 p--"'-~'""'-'' ... ..... , .. Ad Misleading Reagan Sig11s 'Wrong Bill' LOS ANGELES <AP I A TV commercial purporting to show RonalcJ"Reag'an ·C'1Jtting California taxes with a stroke ar a pen may actually show the former governor signing a bill liberalizing stale abortion laws, says a co-author of the abortion bill. The abortion bill, which the Republican presidential nominee has taken pains to say he regrets signing, is not men- tioned in the commercial. The ad, instead , tells how Reagan cut taxes while governor. The commercial. which has been running on nationwide television since Sept. 10, shows a brief story of Reagan's life, beginning with his childhood and covering has career as head of the Screen Actors' Guild and as governor. As the a d's narrator tells or the tax cut. Reagan gets up from his chair, smiles and shakes hands with two legislators, former stale senator and now U.S. Rep. Anthony C. Beilenson, D-Los Angeles. and former Republican Assemblyman W Oraig Biddle of Riverside. The two were authors of California's liberalized abortion bill that Reaggan signed June 15, 1967, about six months after taking office. Reagan now is a strong opponent of abortion. l Dead, 2 Burt Huntington Probes Fatal Auto Crash Huntington Beach police are investigating a fiery weekend a uto accident that claimed lbe life of an L8-year·old Anaheim youth and seriously injured two other teen-aaera. Police said Raymond Harold Armstrong was killed when the c ar in which he was riding slammed into a van pa rked along Pacifi c Coa st Highway near Goldenwest Street at 3 a .m . Saturday. The dead youth's 'l!other. David Armstrong, 16., a ijo a paasenger in the vehicle , re- mained in critical condition lo· day at Fountain Valley Com· munity Hospital. The driver of the vehicle, a 16·year-old Huntington Beach youth whose name was withheld by police, was in serious rondi· lion today at lbe same hospital. Traffic officer Orva Akin said the 1972 Mazda containing the three youths was eastbound on Jailed Man's Past Traced TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP> - A gunman charged with kidnap- ping four Pizza Inn employees here served time in a federal prison for threatening the UJe of President Nixon, according to a published report. The Indianapolis Star said in today's edition that a close rel- ative of Ronald May verfiied May had been imprisoned for threatening the former president in 1973. Authorities were unable immediately lo confirm the re- port. May, 26, was arrested Sunday and charged with attempted murder, rape, confinement, armed robbery and kidnapping in coMection with the allered abduction. State police said May surprised the employees as they were cleaning the restaurant early Sunday morning and forced them to go with him on a 150-mile trip. The employees either escaped or were left behind along the way. state police say. Deputies Outwit Pot Grower8 SANTA ROSA (AP) Pacific Coast Highway at a high rate of speed when it struck the unoccupied van . which was stopped in a no-parking zone just off the roadway. Both vehicles burst into name, he said. According to Akin, the 16- year-oJd at the wheel was not licensed to drive. Raymond Armstrong, who had been riding in the back seat. was pronoWtced dead at the scene Akin said. ' Ads to Cite Dangers of Tampons Use WASHINGTON (AP> -The m aker of Rely brand tampons, already facing multi-million- dollar legal claims, has agreed to an unusual, expens ive media carppaign warning of the prod- duct's LinJc with sometimes fatal toxic shock syndrome, the Food a nd Drug Administration an· nounced. Procter & Gamble Co., the manufacturer , signed a consent agreement with the FDA which binds it to one of the largest con- sumer product recalls ever un- dertake n , FDA s po kesm a n Wayne Pines said. The company withdrew Rely from the market voluntarily last week after two studies showed a closer association between that tampon and the ra re ailment t ha n that between other tam- pons and lbe disease. It. issued a statement Saturday saying the agreement confirms "the steps which the company is taking in connection with the voluntary withdrawal from the market of Rely tampons . "We believe the agreement . . . marb the first agreement by a tampon manufacturer to join the FDA 's education effort to inform women about toxic shock syndrome and the link between this disease and tam- pons," lbe statement said. Laguna Man's Car Torched Authorities using a helicopter to Vandals set fire to a Laguna outwit marijuana 1rowen have Beach man's car in the 300 block aelaed $700,000 worth o.f tbe of Anita Street during the early pluta and UTested five people, morning hours Saturday, police Sonoma County Sheriff Rocer J ald today. McDermott 1a.ya. Police said the vandals started McDermott 1aid Wedne9day the fire by l,,Uting the car cover that u,e raid occurred Tue9day on a vehicle belonging to Matt near tbe Sea View Rancb area. DeRosa that was parked outside nortbweat ol Santa Rola. The hl1 residence. ~ic .. o.:;r:. ':Ir.'' ,.~,...,.,,. c-1berttr 1ald tbe 1rowen uaed CB Reportedly the fire damaaed =:!'t·., .:·::.:r. .. ~~\':'':.~~ ~':'~ radioe to warn each other ol ap. part ol the puteO&er aide ol the ~-.=::..:1~-'""'"' "'"'""9'1.. pro•cblnl cara, mekinc lt car before a neighbor ran out ol ... _ ···~~ ., "'"• ..... ''y&.ruaaUJ lmpoulble" f« dep-bl1 boule and pulled the cover ~:~ !..-,. •Y • ... ~.;~ .... ...:.~-:· .uU .. to arrive before evidence from tbe ve~cle. Police •aid the Death Probed Of Football Player, 15 Orange Counl.Y Coroner's deputies said today they have not determined the cause of death of a 15· year-old Orange youth wh(I died Saturday rnornin~ after col· la psing during a junior high srhool football game Friday af ternoon. Junna Ch1l, uf 27\1 E. Serrano AvP .. a running back for Cerro Villa Junior Jl1~h School, col lapsed during .i ga mt.• that wa~ being playf•d with Yi>rha Junior High S<-hool Cho was 1n1t1J lh treated .1t Chapman (;eraeral ·, rol">p1tal dlld Chlldren's Hos pital of Orangt• Coun ty hefore be111g tr .1nsferr+>o to llC Irvine Mt!di ce1l Center where he died Co roner·~ deputll'~ !'aid an autopsy would he l'onducted t.o determine th(' cause• nr death Radio N oise Routs Birds HOOPESTON. Ill <AP ) A "horror" broadcast may have succeeded where shotgun blasts and fi re hoses failer1 in attempts lo scare away tho us ands of sta r lings plaguing this Centrnl lllinois community The local r adio s tation, WHPO, broadcast a tape of a dy· ing s tarling twice and birds b egan fl ying away. an an - nouncer al the station said. The st ation asked Hoopestown 's 6,000 residenL<> to perch their radios outside their homes in the hope of driving the birds out of town . "Everyhody that called us said that when the birds heard the noise, they went crazy." an, nouncer Bud Mc Manis said. Panel Says U.S. 'Oil Vulne rable' WA SHI NGTON (AP ) A House subcommittee investigat- ing emergency energy conserva- tion plans ha s concluded the United States is not ready to deal with a major interruption in oil supplies. its chairman said Sunday night. Rep. Toby Moffett, D·Conn.~ · chairman of the House Govern- ment Operations' subcommittee on environment, energy and nat· ural resources, confirmed the panel's findings would be issued in the form of a 50-page report. The Casual Side or Rugby An Irani an communique sever al hours laterreported that Iranian forces attacked the in- vading Iraqi tropps in Sar ·e·Pol· e-Zahab. forcing them to retreat and capturing "a great number of undamaged tanks ·· The town is near the main border crossing potnt of Qasr -e-Shirin in the fort hest northern sector of the battle• front about 350 miles north of the head of the gulf. ! r aq reported ground fighting along a 200·mi te invasion front, running north from Abadan on the Shatt al-Arab to Mehran Iraqi communiques claimed the capture of Ahwaz . the capital of oil-rich Khuzestan province 70 miJes north of the Shatt al-Arab and 50 miles from the border, b\ll Iran said the re- port was "a great lie." It ussein in his br oadc ast speech said Iraqi forces also en· terf.'d Oezful, 70 miles north of Ah waz, and Kho rramsbahr, I ran 's chief port on the Shatt at- Arab where a bitter battle has been raging since the middle or last week. Iraq claimed today it captured Dezful's air for ce base and radar station, and I ran claimed its navy infl.icted heavy damage on Iraq's oil-loading port of Faw al the northwest tip or the Persian Gulf. There was speculation that if Ahwaz was captured, the lraqls would install a provincial gov ernment m ade up of leaders of the Arab majority in Khuzestan w h o would declar e th e province's independence Although Iran and Iraq are both Moslem countries. the non- Arab Persians are the dominant ethnic community in Jran while the Iraqis ar e Arabs f ·rfun Page ·I I 2 DEAD ... sear ch of Barnett's home turned up several guns, Wade said. Francisco Perez. 25, was shot in an alley in the 800 block of Eas t Harwood Place in Santa Ana at 2:55 a.m. Sunday. Police Sgt. John Collins said the victim was s hot with a .38-caliber handgun. One suspect is in custody. but Collins said his name will not be released Wltil more of the in· vestigation is completed. 100% cotton rugby shOrts and pants available in colors of red, white, khaki. sky blue. navy. and gold Also. the classic t:>ar stripe rugby s hin. 1n a POIY/cofton blend Coffee Haul Of Burglars Burglars who apparent· ly are having a tough time s taying aw~ke durin1 thelr nighttime pursuits are believed responsible for the disappearance of nume rous l hree.pound cans of coffee from a Mis- sion Viejo supermarket. Employees of the Alpha Beta at 27142 La Paz Road discover ed that a n un- determined quantity of the ca nned coffee was missing from a storage area, ac· cording to investigators. A dark colored car was observed leaving the area about the time the coffee was discovered missing Friday night Stock Mart Declines Continui1ig NEW YORK <AP1 The s tock market post ed sh arp ~eclines among a broad range of lss ues today, continuing last week's slide. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks , which tumbled 23.63 points last week, pl unged another 15.00 to 924.00 in the first two hours of trading today. Declines outnumbered ad vances by an l l ·l m argin on the New York Stock Exchange. The market has been sensitive to rising short-ter m interest rates Following the close of t r ading Friday. the Federal Reserve reported another sharp increase in the nation's motle} supply, increasing concern that the Fed would tighten credit and trigger further hikes in interPst rates. The U.S. dollar rose sharply on world money markets today in apparent reaction t o the spiraling U S. interest rates . Actor Union.'j Okay Pact HOLLYWOOD rA l'l West Coast leaders of two striki ng ac tors unions recommended ap proval of a controve rs ial new three-year contract with film-TV producers, signaling a possible end to the 70·day walkout and a limited return 1.0 product.ion on the tong-delayed fall TV season. The western boards or the Scr een Actors Guild and the Ame r ica n F'ederation of Television and Radio Artists recommended passage at a meet ing here Saturday. and their eastern counterparts were to con- sider the proposal in New York to-day But while the eastern boards are considered likely to approve the contract, it will take another two to three weeks for actors to. vote on the proposal, and there will not be a general return to work in the interim , though some taped shows may be al- lowed to produce. Marijuana ~eized SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) - One man was arrested and 56 marijuana plants valued at $30,000 were seized on the Ran- dolph Hearst Ranch in San Si · meon. sheriff's deputies said. Peter Edward Allen, 25, of San Sim eon was arrested for in· vestigation of possession of hash ish and marijuana ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 {)""· 111J11-. ... .., ....... .._._,, • wu dell&roJed, amounl of da"a1e ia unknown. ~~---•=--s----------------------------f--------------~~----------------'t.-..~~--------~----------~~----::.>-----~---=--===~~---..u·~__,,,__ __ -r ------·-- \'our Ho111etown ·Orange ·Coast Dally N"wHpaper. ___ _ E D I T ION VOL. 73. NO. 273, 3 SECTIONS, • PAHi ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1980 C TWENTY·FIVE CENTS p,_rtial Payment In Arson Insurance a1enta h.ve handed l-'--a..$$50.000 check· to the ownerot-- C oa ti Meu '1 ABC Lumber yard, wbicb was deatroyed last July in a deliberately set fire. James Moore. operalln1 out of a 1araae tucked on the rear of hi1 otber-wUe empty parcel of land on East 17th Street. said the settlement will pay for his losses in equipment and inventory. The M:tUement was announced today by Wes Bannister, owner of a Huntington Beach insurance company. Moore said he expects an acidi- tional settlement from another insurance agencY' for the loss of bis building. That amount, he aaid, would likely be more than $300.000. Moore said he hopes to rebuild the lumber yard as soon as he gets the city's permission. He said he's kept all eight of his employees on the payroll, awaiting approval of city permits. City planner Roberta Costa said Moore needs to obtain a conditional use permit for his lumber yard and home improve- ment center because the area's zoning doesn't allow for lumber yards. Also, she said, the plans for a new lumber yard will have to be reviewed by the ci ty 's Redevelopment Agency because the empty lot at 140 E . 17th St. is inside the boundaries of the city's targeted redevelopment ione. Moore, a Newport B~•ch resi- dent, said it would be inap- propl"late for him to discuss his lumber yard plans until plan· ning commiuioners vote on his condiUooal use permit Oct. 13. Meanwhile, arson in - vestigators are still following up leads on the July 30 fire. Investiaators claim a namma- ble liquid waa splashed in large quantities on at least two and potalbly three bulldtnt• at the lumber yard. Tbe liquid, investi1aton said, wu splubed on lumber shelters and, pouibly, agalmt the back wall of the yard's sales building before it waa torched. They said it remains unclear what the motive was in the arson job that sent names leap- ing more than 80 feet into the early morning sky. Violent Man Arrested on Mesa Street A shrieking, hallucinating man believed to be under the in· fluence of the hallucinogenic drug PCP was c aptured in downtown Costa Mesa by police early today and jailed in heavy restrainta. The victim was taken into custody after a violent struggle at Park Avenue and Center Street near the new Casa Bella senior citizens housing project. He was booked into jail as a John Doe. Investigators said today they bad no knowledge of bis true identity yet, since be wu still under the influence of the drug but apparently in no physical danger. Patrolman Dale Birney sum- moned backup officers after en· countering the victim, who was crawling alon1 the sidewalk, screamin1 and 1roaning and bellin& for help in pluckin1 im- a1tnary bup from bis body. . Tbe team of officers required to capture the alle1ed PCP user 1aid they were finally forced to ue bmdcuffs around both bis wruta and bis an.k.les to 1et bim into the patrol car. · Man Attacked I By Robbers Tbup, one of tbem wieldinc a pistol and anotber a steel pipe, an ICMllbt today lD the $aO rob- bery of a youn1 Costa llesa laborer Saturday. Geol'll Oomalel, aa, a Sierk9 StrMt Nlkleat, told pollc:e be w aa attacked while vl1ltiD1 1U11at aequtntaDCel at a ,.. ldenc:e ln tbe 1100 block of Newport Boule'f ard. TIM vidim told police be WU 1truc:k ID the arm wltb tbe plpe carried bJ one of tbe bandits and t.caulNd medical attention at Getting tlae Neas Shelley Young and dad, Jim, react to announcement that she is Newport Harbor High School's 1980 homecoming queen. She is a senior from Costa Mesa. Queen was crowned Friday night during festivities marking Harbor High 's 50th anniversary. Firemen Battling Blaze Near C~taic CASfAlC CAP) -Firefighters raced the wind today to gain control of a 6,000-acre brushfire near Castaic in the An1eles Na- tional Forest aft.er subduing a stubborn 256-acre blaze 3S miles southeast. - The 1maller blaze was broulbt under control at 8 a .m . by loo firefighters who circled the.Jire whlcb burned alon1 Pl1eon Ridge i n the San Gabriel Canyon, U.S. Forest Service spokesman Bob Brady aaid. Brady said the Caatalc fire, believed to have been triHered by target sbooten in the bills, should be contained by 6 p.m. to- day. The fire began Saturday mornin& and briefly threatened the 1m8ll communities of Green Valley and Lake Hughes 20 miles east of Lancaster, but no homes were evacuated and no buildinp burned. Firefighters originally pre- dicted the blaze would be con· tained by 6 a.m. today but de· layed it because of warnings that 1.S-25 mph Santa Ana winds were expected to pick up this af. ternoon. The northeasterly winds "may or may not have' an effect on the fire," Brady said. He said in· frared photos of the fire last rugbt showed no "hot spots" or intensely burning areas left in Newport's Al Forgit Hospitalized Longtime Harbor Area busi· nessman and former Newport Beach City Council member Al For1it was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital this morning alter being stricken at bis home. Forgit, 80, was treated by Newport Beach Fire Depart- ment paramedics called to the residence upstairs over Al For1it Hardware Co., 2205 W. Balboa Blvd., where he lives with his wife, Pe11y. Fire Department 1pokesman Art Morton said Foralt appeared to be in stable condition when traa.sferred from his home to the hospital. The octo1enarian whose views on both local, county, state and national 1overnmeatal affaln have been published la his newspaper adl for yean re- cently announced bis retire- ment. For1it bad retired once before, u a service 1tatl'oa operator la downtown Loa AD1ele1 in .llM, and moved to tbe Harbor Area where be became iDYOlved ln tbe com· merclal ftlblna bullneu. He md Ida wife bave operated tbe hardware at.ore lD McFadden Square liDee UIA. Offlclala at Hoa1 Memorial Ho1pltal tbl1 morntn1 aald For1tt waa ltill under1oln1 teata to determlne what caUHd bim to bftome W abortl,y before 7 a. m., the fire. The Castaic fire in San Fran- cisquito Canyon, SO miles north of Loe Angeles, was foueht by 700 firefighters. including 33 hand crews, along a perimeter of more than 14 miles. They .vere aided by several heavy air tanlren, U.S. FOTest Service spokesman Bruce Bundick said. Crash Injures CM Cyclist A yO\Dlg Costa Mesan racing a girl acquaintance on her bicycle while he was astride bis brother's high-performance motorcycle is hospitalized today with a fractured hip after ram- ming a parked car. Daniel A. Loucks, 24, of 2027 Presidio Drive, was listed in good condition this morning at UC Irvine Medic al Center following the Sunday afternoon crash. Police said be was treated in· itially at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital after the mishap on Cibola Avenue at Presidio Drive. The crash caused moderate damage to the parked auto, in· vestigators said. • .,,,.,, J 08 Iraq Claims New Gains Condition Told For c ·ease-fire BAGHDAD. Iraq (AP) -Iraq said today it would agree to a U.N. Security Council call for a cease-fire if Iran also would heed it. There was no immediate response from Iran and both countries meanwhile pressed their war efforts. Iraq reported fresh territorial gains in soothwe5t Iran. k"an claimed a sweeping naval vie· tor y while seeking a role by the non-aligned bloc to bring about an end to the war. Iraq's ambassador to the Unit· ed Nations, Salah Omar Al·Ali, disclosed a message from Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to U.N. Secretar y-General Kurt Waldheim and said Iran would also have to agree to a cease- fire. A U.N. spokesman said the message was being translated into Eng.lisb from the Arabic. The Security Council approved unanimously Sunday a resolu- tion calling on Iran and Iraq to stop their fighting. In response to an earlier Iraqi proposal for a cease-fire on its terms, Iran offered couoter- proposals and sought the help of India, a leade r of the non- aligned nations, to help end~ $320,000 Jackpot on Birthday LAS VEGAS (AP> -A Glen· dale housewife has won what was said to be the lar1eat Jackpot pa1off in history - '320,000 -oo her '4th bl~y. In Las Vegas on a 12-hour fun spree, Myrna GallelU, a native of Managua, Nicaragua, was down to a handful of silver dollars -about 15 -when she hit the record jackpot at the Flamingo Hilton at 11:45 Satur- day night, a casino spokesman said today. Closing her eyes as she pulled the band.le, she pleaded, "Please give me something for m)'. birth- day." When she opene'd her eyes, she was staring at five 7's. "I didn 't know I won. I thought the machine broke, because l was expecting money to come out. "When they told me, I started crying," said the mother of two teen-age daughters. She had been playing the machine less than a half hour and put about $100 in it, she said. ............. HOT SPOTS DENOTED CeaH-ftre Nearing? fighting, whic h ente r ed its eighth day. A "goodwill" mission from the Islamic Conference, headed by Pakistani Pl'esident Mohammed Zia ul-Haq and Habib el Cbatti of Tunisia, secretary general of the Islamic organization, ar· rived in Baghdad. In Tehran, Iranian President Abolhassan -eani-Sadr had told them: "We will continue to fight until the last aggressor is driven from our territory;ll DENIES "UMO"S WlmamA ... The Tehran Radio quoted the commander of the Iranian navy as saying it was in control of the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf's outlet, and adding that foreign commercial ships could proceed normally as long as they do not bead for Iraqi ports. He was quoted as saying the Iraqi navy was forced to seek shelter in ports of other Persian Gulf nations. President Saddam Hussein in Iraq in a broadcast Sunday said Iraq would stop fighting if Iran recognized Iraqi sovereignty over all ·of the Shatt al-Arab - estuary at the bead of the gulf, r eturned to Arab control the three small islands at the mouth of the gulf, seized by Iran in 1971 and called off the propaganda ca mpaign by Ayatollah Rubollah Khomeini and bis sup- porters to incite a Moslem upris· ing against the Iraqi govern- ment. Hussein ~aid he was ready to negotiate directly with Iran or throuih any third party or in· t e rnatiooal organization to reach a "just and honorable" settlement that would recognize Iraq's "legitimate and historic rights.'' .............. GOSSIP TARGET Mery Cunningham Romantic Rumors· Rout BenJix Aide SOt.mlFIELD, Mich. CAP) - Mary Cunningham bas request- ed a leave of absence from Ben· dix Corp. in the wake of gossip that linked the 29·year-old woman's rapid promotions to he r friendship with William Agee, the company's chairman. In a three-page letter ad- dressed to Agee and the com- pany's board, Ms. Cunningham requested an "immediate but temporary" leave of absence, saying "as a result of media coverage I have received in re- cent days, I have been placed in an impossible situation." NeW. stories appeared after A1ee, 42, stood before some 800 Bendix headquarters employees Wednesday and said contrary to rumon within the company, Ma. Cunnlnaham's promotions and influence resulted from her qualifications and not from a personal relationship with him. Promoted Wednesday to vice president for strat.eatc planning, Ms. Cunnln&bam said she didn't know how long she would be 1tone. In ber letter, Ms. Cunnm,bam said because of "false lnnuen- doe1,'' abe bu been ''rendered ineffective." She 1aid if abe re- • i 1ned, abe would set a "dan1eroua precedent" by al· lowln1 1011lp to dictate cor- porate policy. Al"-1aid Sunday tbat lb. Cunnln0am'1 request wW be 1rutecl and that u arraqe- ment will be woned out ao abe cu "CGDtinue to provide alpift· cant C!OUlllel and benefit.a.•• assistant. Agee was divorced a month ago. Ms. Cunningham bas been separated from her husband for nearly a year., Agee declined last week to ad- dress rumors be was having an affair with Ms. Cunningham. He referred instead to statements that the two were good friends and that she was a qualified ex- ecutive. Bendix is the largest indepen- dent supplier to the auto in· dustry. Coast Weather Patchy early mornin1 fo&, otherwise fair, tbouab buy, through Tuesday. Lowa tonight 55 at the beaches, 80 inland. Highs Tuesday high 70s to lower 80s. INSIDE TOD/\ t' The Rama, with two m. fft a row, kJlw °" tlw diotlion· leading 4tert Sunda11 at AnaMim. Stt llorie• Page Bl. I••• ...... ~ .. ....... .. = c:: c.ieca .. Ci • .. .......... a EE: ~ .......,. a _ Cotta.._, Memorial U.plW. -whn fbewww wen nmmoned. Allee 11.ay Kipp, a South Dakota naUve who now lives in Park Superior Convalescent Hmpital ID Newport Beach, la all amilel over her 100th blrtbday. 11111 Kipp, who ii takinc c.'Olle1e exteoaion counea In IOdal ltudl• and In· door plant care, wu honored at a blrtbday party lut week at the convalescent home. Officials tbere claim Miu Kipp attributes her lonaevtty to never havtn1 been mauted. Ma. Cunnln1bam, wbo re· celved • muter'• de1ree la bu1lDe11 admlnlltraUoa 'from Hanard, jo6Ded tbe compuy ID June ... aa Al•'• es~ft .. ,, ., r I -· l .... .! DAILY PILOT ~--JlJST BRE,4KJNG----..... School ]tid/(e Releases Five /11 M1111icl1. Boml1i~ K AHt.sRUflE. We t Gt>r many <APl An inveatlgatm l( Juda• lodu) ftlt>aM'd th · lead r and four members of • bannt'd n60 N H & 11ruup for lark of \'v1dent'f' that lhty werf' c-unnt•cted with lht" dt•adl) bom b a ttar\ on Munkh·s Oktotw-rft:s l A <11.xth un1tlt•n11fled ~U,Pt'C't rt"matned In lnvesu f •tory cullttldy pendan.c quel\llOntnJil, a iipokc> ·man for the ff"dtra pros eeutor'l! offk,• 111rnl Gt•r1tu111 law JN>rm lb poll<'<' 10 hold SUM J>t'<•ts 48 hOurs fol' questlonlnl( before a n ln\•f'."ltll(tttlnR Jud ict• must decidt> wht•lht'r to n.·lcM.'k"' thc>rn or frlt' l"hargel\ • Kurl·lleuu Hoffrna nn, 43, a SIHnbo11rd paant1•r who llke11 to WNtr Na&i·t)'Vt' umforms, 11nd tht• five nwmbt•Ni 11f has Mt lltory Sport Gruu1' lloftmunn wt>re 11\kt'n into l'Ustod · after 1''11duy·, bomb lllast whrrh k1ll1•<1 ll. incluctani: !he ulleRetl hc1mh<·r nd lllj ltrl'\l 2 IJ l11ac·"""" f ''""'"" 2 Plmtt1t -11i:1.t::NA . Mont 1AP1 The-narond t'op11,·r \o u11 noun<'t><J today tb.11 11 '' s uspendwg upenH100!> 1ncle/1n1t l·I at th smeller 1r1 Anaconda .ind its copper rt-lmrn at (;rt.di ... .,Iii. About UOO l'lllJ)loy1•t·~ \Oo ill lo~t· tht!tr JUbs AmH·ond u'!> rnuun~ anll U'lllhn.: nJ>t.•rntio11" lri Bultl' will not be a fft>etE'd Tho.w ~•II eontinut-pending z.t:ttlcmenl of a i.cnkt> PresHtt>nl JJml'i. Mun an !>ll11.J lht.· romvan} evaluJtt>d federa l and stall' t.'11\'lronml'ntal dnd h1•alth .,, andard i. and c·on <'lud ed tha\ tht' t'X"'"'~ ::.mt-ltt•r in \n.iNmda cannot bt• retrofittcxf to rnc<•t thr l\lJnJu1 ti~ J11d ..,(Ill ht> i.-rono m1 calh t·11111 peta t1vc Par.-urs Pic·l.:c•f .4itc·huoL<tt lgreiu LOS ANC !::LES '/\ P R~e::. pulled away empty from !>Ome schoolyards today and p<1renL'\ picketed as Lhe f1~al 26 schools wert.> added to the city school d1slnct s mandatory busing plan. Most of tht.' absences and protests were 1n the pre dominantly white northwest San Fernando Vulley Paru cipation by minority c hildren was more compl~te. but school~ in ~a~ially mixed areas also had no-shows on the first day of the d1stn ct s full integration program at 153 srhools. officials said In all. the district had e xpected 30,000 students to be bused to day. There wert' no 1mmed1ate figures on how close those estimates c<.1me llnr••dt•t·il l'oul i11ui119 f 'figlu ABERDEEN. Scotland tAP> A West Germa n man trying to become the first person to cross the All antic strapped to the outside of an airplane has made it safely from Scotland to t he F aeroe Islands. airport off1c1als said today J aromir Wagner. a 41 -year·old former army ski champion from Giessen. West Ge rmany. took off from Aberdeen, Scotland at m idday Sunday an sunnv. 45·degree weather. and arri ved in the Da nish islands. about 375 mrles to the northwest. Sunday night. of- ficials said \nry ('11l11•d I uprt•pun"ff NEW YORK 1A P 1 A confidential fleet r eadiness report rat ed only six of the Navy's 13 aircraft carriers ready fo r combat this month. The New York Times. reported today The report dated Sept 15 rated 94 of the Navy's 155 air squadrons as combat.ready while 21 of 82 tactical fighters. at· tack a nd electronic warfare squadrons were considered unfit for com bat. the Ti mes said. Cubans Arrested By Border Patrol Three Cuban refugees were taken into custody by the U.S. Border Patrol Sunday after they a llegedly tried to race past the San Onofre checkpoint with four Mexican nationals in the car trunk. Border Pat rol officer John Wesson said the Cubans were School Days Star( Again At UC Irvine The 16th year of instruction began this morning at UC Irvine as m ore than 10,000 s tudents streamed into classrooms. About 2,500 students live on campus this year. There wiU be on·campus housing for another 450 students this Ja nuary when construction is completed on a re· s idence hall being built between the Biological Scien ce a nd Med ical Science buildings. Also scheduled to be com plet- ed in Januar y is a large student union near the Admims tration Building that will be ca lled the University Center. Classes were fi rst held at UCI on Sept. 26, 1965. About l ,589 stu- dents were enrolled that year. The UCt library then contained 100,000 books . This year the library is to ac· guire its one -millionth volume. apprehended just north of the checkpoint afte r the driver or the car d rove at hig h speed through the truck scales to the right of the roadway and back onto the San Diego Freeway. Reportedly officers found the four illegal aliens in the trunk of the car , d rive n by Manue l Sanchez Fuentez, 23, who along with his Cuban p assengers. Me r cy Bode Gomez. 36, and Ola yo J ustaz Cardenas. 35, who entered this country in May. The three Cubans are s aid to be residents of Chula Vista and list their address as being at 2073 Otay Vall ey Road. Wesson said the four Mexkan citizens. found at 3:30 a .m .. told border p<.1trol officers each had paid a man in Tijuana S250 to be smuggled into Los Angeles. The four men said the man ha d taken the m across the border and brought them to a parking Jot in Chula Vist a where t hey met the three Cubans. Jus t south of the San Onofre checkpoint , the four Mexican na· tionals reportedly we re told to get into the trunk of the car. where they were later found. Wesson said Fue ntez, Gomez a n d Carde n as h a v e bee n cha rged with tr ans porting il - legal aliens, wh.ich is a felony. If convicte d. Wesson said the Cubans could serve three.year terms in prison for e ach or the four aliens. Re portedly the three Cubans are still in cus tody. -Absences Costly " ~·n:v~ MIT<'tn;u . °' ... ~._ .. _ - LlJt(UtUt Hc•ud1 school h '1U1tcc11 huvt' C'\lnW u 11 with 11 plan &hoy hop(• w1 II 1 t•1>lo11l11h funds h111t wht•n 1n11·t•11111 talw lhNr kid:. 1111t of 11 l't111ol lo ~CJ skrlntc, (ly l o tluwoi1 ur• M1•x.1t·o. or b1H·k 11;w11 hi visit l(run1lln11 Uut In onk r tor ttw i.trfrlly voluntt'c•r prul(t 11111 tu wo rk. tr111>ll'\'h :m y lht•y 'n • ~111111( tu lll't'd lht' ro1111(•rutwn uf purt•nts ~ hv un.nuull) tukt• off with llw k1d:i on v.1l:a11011~ "l111t• 1-(·h 1t1l 1ir. Ill l>i'bl\ll)ll The l\1t1;.1ll t't111ol d1i.1 rH'I ''" 1Jt'11d on l\l at~· fun1b for 111ud1 or Ill\ budto?<'t A111( I tw st att• 1·a1 um~ 11111 tht• m1>nt1~ bu~c>cl on the· oumbt·r of l\lu1 h.-nh 111 .;rh11of t.>a rh da • l"vr t>a1•h lla, u l\I od,•nt '" out on an rm,•xcusc.•d t1bM'll<'<'. tlw 1.hst rttl los<'s $HI 59 1wr sl udt•nt Th.it mt>ans wht.•n Mom and Oad pull Johnny out for a wec'k on th<.' slo!>('s at Aspt.•n, th1• ths tnct los1's nt•arly s,r;:1 Trustet-s w~mt pnn•nts to ro11 sider ~1vin~ a donation to tht• drstrat'I of SI0.59 for 1•<t1•h lfuy a st11d t•111 is away fro m <'.-;choc1t 1111 &n unex<•used absence Dis ln <'l Supl•rintendent l>r Hobert Sant'his says the district lost near $45,000 last year due to unex<'used absences He sa y:s th ill. considering the district's fin ancial situa tion . that am ounts toa bundle. The s mall school district has been hurt fi nan<'ially by Proposi· tion 13, declining student enrolf . ment and the equalizing effects o f th e Serra no-P ries t s tate Su'5reme Court decision . In the past two years. t rustees have been forced to cut more tha n 91 million from the budget. Last year t he school district began charging parents to bus children to schonl. Now t he d istrict is askin g par ents to pay up whe n they take the kids out of school for mid-year vacations , Sanchis said the only other s chool district he knows of that asks for s uch volunta ry con· t r ibutions is the San Marino Unified School District . "T hey're fac ing the sam e budget problem s we are ,'· He said he doesn't know how par ents will react to the volun- tary program , "but we're sure h o p i n g fa m il ies will par ticipate." And. he said, ''It is our un· derstanding that sufh donations wou ld be tax deductible " 'Worthless' Loot Taken From Plant Valuables which would be almost worthless to anyone but a bus iness competitor or vengeful forme r e mplo yee, including client lists and job data have been s t o len from a Cost a Mesa engineering firm . Ra mon Wong . spokesman for Environmental Structure Corp .. 666 Baker St .. reported the grand theft case to police ove r the weekend after the $1.165 wort h of materials vanished. Wong told police the loss in· eludes books of computer data used in the firm 's design of structural system s for building projects, along with bound books conta ining all sorts of customer informa tion P atrolman Pa ul Ale xande r said it appears there was . no forced entry to the norths1de Costa Mesa engineering firm of- fice. ORANGE C04ST' DAILY PILOT '"'• Or~ Cot\1 O•llv P1'G1 W1IP'I ..,,.o<h ., (Omt>1""'"° fN N • ...,, Ptf'\' I\ Ovbl1\MO Dr rr.r O••tMtt coe,.,1 Pu0t·\"4f'IQ COffto•"• MLMt•.ut1> .01tt0f"\ _,. P\ltM•V.O Moftct•• lll'l•OVQf\ F uf4t t IOt Cott• 4'Ww "'f•DOfl &.•<" H...nh~on l••Cl'I Fow"l••" v,u1.,, .,.,,"f' \.•'"",. ltt~" 5-ltl'I Co.11 A 'W"'O'• '~'WM' ..,,,,°" t\ ~1\MO S.1"''°'" ~ Soci,ftO•H Tti.-. °'inc P•I ~011\l'l•"O otil"lt f\ at JlO Wt\I 8•• S1tfft P 0 8o• tS.0 C..t• ~\• C.!lth fOtnta •>•>• 2 Sa/ ari Animal.s · Killed by Cheetahs 11 .... , .. _ P't\lctftPlt .. f'IO~tVW-1 T-, ... _.,,. ""41\•0•~ ECMO" Clle11M .. ~ ... A\\i\ltJttl ~" ... nt t a1'°' Coat1M111~ UOWt\I 8•tSV"t Mj111nQ AOttrft\\ P 0 &o-.. 1'6() •?•>• OfflCH \-own-. &t•<W lO'>I PrifO (O.\I Hiif'•ew """'"'"!"" Bt.l<ft '"'' ftt•t " eo..1 .. .,d Tel .. ne (714)142·4321 CletlMM Act.tr11'"'9 142·9111 I Cheetahs killed two hoofed animals late Saturday or early Sunday at Irvine's Lion Country Safari after a car rammed severa.I containment gal.es on the compound, police said today. A SECURITY GUARD on duty at the wild animal park told police that he was unaware of anythln1 out of the or· dinary taking place at the park Saturday night. Irvine police officers were called Sunday morning when several gates were found broken and • Tbompeon Gazelle and a Moullon diseovered 41ac1. Gates are used at Lion Country Safari to separate one group of animals from another. THE ANIJIAL COllPOUND waa closed Sunday in or· der to allow repairs to be made on the fences. Lion Country Safari officials told police that six aates were damqed and that repain would coet about seoo. They also said the unscheduled cl01ure of the parlt coet " about 98,000 in loet revenue. 1aV1NE POUCB Aas 1ookiQC for ampects in connec- tion with the felony maUckq miacbief. Llon CoUntry Safari •PGt•womaa Reaate Grat aald that the part opened for bualnest today . -0 1 ..... APWl.-.-10 Oldie B11i Gf1odie Ida Mintz. 74, of Fort Lauderdale. Fla .. approaches the fi nish line of lhe America's Marathon in Chi cago. She had never attempted lo run a marathon before Sunday . but she finished it in four hours and 45 minutes. California Hero Given FBI Honors WASHINGTON I AP) -The FBI has honored a Ca.lifomia auto dealer who risked his life for three years as a bureau in- for m ant to help win t he first felony conv1ct1on of Joe Bon nano, an organized·crime leader the bureau had been pursuing for decades. T he private ceremony for Louis E. Peters. 48. a former auto dealer in Lodi. was held to· day in FBI Director Willfam I I. W e b s t er's o ff ice , F BI spokesman Roger Young said. Webster presented Pet ers with a pla que and ·read the inscri p· ti on which said : ·'To Loujs E. Pete rs. who set ne w sta ndards of patriotism , of selflessness and or valor. with the gratitude and r espect or his FBI friends." Peters refused to accept any payme nt for his services. At one point during his unde rcover work he divorced his wife to pro- tect her . He a lso had brain sur- gery recently a nd has been g iven less than a year to live. Bonnano. 75, of Phoenix. and his nephew, J ack Di Fili ppi. 54. a San Jose commodities broker . wer e convicted Sept. 2 m U.S. Dis trict Court in San J ose of con· s piring to obstruct justice. They were cha rged with in· terfering with a federa l grand jury investigation into the laun- The Casual Side at Rugby .. dering of illegally gained funds through Bonnano family busi· nesses in San Jose. In his decision. U.S. Dist rict Judge William Ingram s aid tape-recordings m ade by Peters of Bo n na n o a nd P ete r s ' testimony left "no room for reasonable doubt " in the case. Bonnano faces up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine at :;entencing Oct. 28. It was his first felony convic· tion. although authorities say he has led a life of crime for more than 60 years. allegedly rising fro m a g un.runner for Al Capone to head of one or New York ·s fi ve organized-crime families. Peters. who wore a bulletproof vest during the trial, collapsed twi ce last summer. In JuJy, he underwent brain surgery for a m alignant tumor, and bis doc· tors gave him six months to a year to live. Bills Burned SHOREHAM. N.Y. (AP) - Demonstrato rs burned t heir electric bills during a protest against a nucle ar power plant be ing cons t r uc ted b y Long Isla nd Lighting Co. here. About 600 protesters paraded past the plant Sunday. 100% cotton rugby shorts .and pants. available In colors of red. while. khaki. sky blue. navy. and gold Also, the classic bar stripe rugby shirt, an a OOly/cotton blend -...... -,._ .. ----·· -----:::::.. ~ ---~~ -----. -.,.. ... --. . --. .. -. ~-..-.. -.,,, ... _ ... Airport To €lose 6Days Air travele rs who normally use John Wayne Airport will be forced to fly from Ontario or Los Ange les internationa l airports Oct. 6 to 11 because of a $100 ooo runway resurlacing project' at the Orange County facility. Air California passengers destined to Fresno and Mon· ter ey wiU have to catch flights from Los Angeles International while tra velers bound for San Fra ncisco and other loeations must catch nights a t Ontario Jn. ternational Hugh es Airwest also 1s tr ansferring its Orange County flights to Los Angeles and On-tario. Hug hes will offer travele rs free cha mpagne on its flighLc; dur ing the fi ve-day period. Air California will provide free cof fee to people waiting to enplane. The runway resurfacing proj eel will not affect Orange Coun. ty operations of Golden West Airlines. a commuter service. Private airplanesJ won 't be al fected either , ~ Bandit Gets Cash, Leaves Fingerprints Costa Me a police detectives are studying excellent finger and palm prints left by a ne rvous ban- d1 t 's s weaty hands when he barged into a car rental agency Saturday to pull a $790 armed rob bery ln vest1~ators s aid the tall, slender man who brandished an apparent .38-caliber revolver at Montgomery Ward & Co. c lerk Cheryl Lawton wasted no time ·'I want all your money!'' he snapped as an ~ccomplice waited outs u.le at 3088 S. Rristol St., with the getaway car 's engine run nmg. Officers saad ii was obvious the bandit was nervous and the re s uiting moisture on his hands furnis he d an excellen t im press ion of has fi ngerprints . Mesa Store Burglarized Second Time Police said a burgla r used an ar row-shaped "no pa rking" sign in front of the F ashionable Furniture Manufacturing Co., 3179 Airway Ave., Cos ta Mesa, to bash in the firm's glass front door Sunday. Once the door was s mashed. the intruder carted out loot va lued at nearly $1 ,300, includ- ing a TV set. a dictaphone re- cording device a nd a microwave oven Police Officer Ed Dryzmala said he was on patrol in the com· mer cial d istrict near J o hn Wayne Airport during predawn hours when he spied the shat tered entry door. Police said it was the secono burglary in two weeks at thE fir m . AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT B~CH (714) 644·7030 ' Leopi11' Retriet.-en H~ather Taylor exer cises her golden retrievers at Farquhar Park in Huntington Beach. "Simba" (snatching F1;sbie ) is the father of "Jasper," patiently awaiting his tarn. With their leaping abilities the father and son look as though they could retrieve birds on the wi ng rather than having to wait until t he winged cr eature s are brought down by a hunter. Home Town Plans James Dean Tribute FAIR:\10\TNT. Ind I AP) Orlen~e Wins low. the woman who rru:.ed James Dean. doesn't understand wh)' they come. He was "Just Jimmy" to her. But be was much more to the hundreds of flower-bearin g fans who flock here each Sept. 30 to touch the tombstone of t he in- tense young actor killed in a car accident on that date in 1955. This year. more than l.500dev- otees ar.e expected Lo make the p il g rim age to Dean 's grave Tuesday for a memoria l servtce commemorating the 25th an- niversary of hts death at age 24. "I'm glad that people think that much or h.im." s aid Mrs. Winslow. 79, Dean's aunt, who raised him after his mothe r died in 1940. "It's always been hard for us lo understand • · 1 just don't know." she said • A lot of people have told us that he had been an inspiration to them. I guess that's part of it He was talented. He had a lot of determination, just a lot of it." Dean's lhree films -"East of Eden." ''Rebel Without A Cause" and "Giant · became cult c lassics for young mov- iegoers who identified with lhe rebellious. vulnerable hero he portr ayed That was the James Dean the world knew Mrs . Winslow's J immy was the varsity athlete at Fairmount High School. the music lover. the born actor who fell in love with the footlights "He just couldn't get acting out of his system ," she recalled. "He was determined to make a go of it. It was real natural, too. When we went lo the movies, we could hardly believe it was a movie "It was JUSt Jimmy -his ac- tions, not the parts he played. l was always sorry he couldn't have been around longer to play Taxing Time For Barry L U KE AIR FORCE BASE, Ariz. (AP > - Arizona taxpayers can find a sympathizer in Sen. Barry Goldwater il they have complaints about tbeirwes. ··1 made more money last year than ever, and still can 't pay my taxes." Goldwater said here. Goldwater said he would have to take out a loan to pay laxes due in the next fiscal quarter. "I've got a wonderful col- lection of art aqd a library. I don't want to,,.t I ml1bt have lo sell some of lt,' • the ·1eteran Republlcan aenatorsaid. APWl,..._.o ACTOR REMEMBERED James Dean In 1955 some other kind of part. He had a good ti me, he wasn 't that sort of person T hat really wasn't Jimmy." Actor Martin Sheen. who has C'alled Dean his idol and ins pira- tion, has promised to lead the m e morial ser vice, s aid Ann Warr, curator of the Fairmount His torical Museum , who or- ganized the Dean memorial to fall during "Museum Days," Sept Z7-30. He r muse um a b o ve the Western Auto s tore houses memorabilia of Fairmount's "distinguished people" -CBS Commentator Phil Jones; Jim Davis. creator of the cartoon cat Garfield, and, of course, Dean. "We've got items that have been donated from admirers, like oil paintings of Dean from France and artifacts and memorabilia from the old Fair· mount High School," Mrs. Warr said. ·'There seems to be a devotion to James," said Mrs. Warr, who bas answered more than 200 let- ters from people interested in the e vents commemorating Dean's death. "I did not think abo ut anything this big happening to Fairmount," she said. "We don't even have a motel, but maybe now that will be possible sometime..'' Events have lnfluded tours of Dean's alma mater, a 10,000- meter run and a Madison-Grant County High Sc:hool presentation of "Rebel Without a Cause." T- •hlrts reaturinl a pen-and-ink sketch f:A Dean have been selling ·'like hotcakes" at $8-nch. I I Donkeys Bray for !Jene/it M ov1e. medi a a nd s ports celebnt1es egged on by curvy Rams cheerleaders will meet Orange County business leaders Tuesday night in a rousing benefit game of donkey basketball at Costa Mesa's Or ange County Fairgrounds . The game beginning at 6:30 p.m with preliminary music by Dis neyland's Main Street Maniacs will raise money for the United Way of Orange County. United Way officials say game action tn the Old Horse Show Ar ena a t t h e f ai r grounds. Newport Boulevard and Fair Drive, begins at 7: 30 p m .. featur· ing a variety of other entertain- ment. Admission is SS per person which includes all refreshments in addition to a gLi mpse of players such as Robert Ito, co-star -of NBC'-; ''Quincy" series, Chuck Norri:., star of "Octagon" and "A Fo rce of One," and KABC-TV sportscaster Ed Arnold of Foun- tain Valley. A team of 10 suital1fy balky donkeys has been lined up for celebrity and business teams led by hamburger entrepreneur Carl Karcher. while the Goodyear Blimp will flash the score from aloft. The United Way annually col- lects funds which are disbursed to numerous charitable and health organizations serving the people of coastal Orange County. Plane Waste Nearly Fatal R UBIDOUX CAP) -Ron Mullins is not too happy about the frozen intruder from 30,000 feet that fell through his roof and melted in his garage. A Federal Aviation Ad- ministration official told him it was waste from a commercial airliner fly i ng over this ·Riverside suburb. ··I'm extr e m e ly upset," Mullins said after the incident. "It could easily have killed one of us.-I don't trunk it's fair or safe." Mullins' wife, expecting their second child, bad been in the garage moments before and their 2-year-old son and another child were asleep in a bedroom only 10 feet away. Carter Supported NEW YORK <AP ) -Presi- dent Carter has won the en- d or a em en t or the New Democratic Coalition, a ll'OUP of liberal reform olube that could help him capture New Yorit'a crucial block or 41 electoral volea. Student Abuses Charged SIERRA VISTA. Ariz. (AP) - A group of parents in this southeas t Aritona town has charged that students have been sexually abused and had their mouths taped shut by substitute teachers since 200 regular teachers walked out in a con- tract dispute three wee ks ago. The group -Con cerne d Parents for Education, formed to try to end the strike -filed suit in a state court in nearby Bisbee, a sking that the five Sierra Vista schools be closed for the protection of stu~r that a receiver be apJ>Ointed to run the district. School Superintendent Frank Samuelson called some of the al- leged incidents rumors . But the di s tri c t 's lawyer . J o hn Richardson, said the taping inci· dent was "being investigated." The incidents alleged in lhe suit include a s ubstitute teacher stabbing a young man with a penc il. knife fights, nail throw. ing and a striking teacher being hit by a car on school grounds. ··A substitute has sexually abused six students and one dis- trict employee." the suit alleges. The co mpl ain t d i d n ot elaborate, but the Tucson Citizen news paper c ited an unidentified source in report- ing that the charge involved ad- vances by a substitute teacher to gi rls in a tennis class. T he strike by about 200 of the 291 regular t eache rs in the 5.700-student district started Sept. 3. Teachers charged that the board was not living up to a December agreement. Issues in- clude money. binding arbitra- tion. personal le ave, classroom s ize -:ind workforce reductions. The teac hers contend the boa rd pro mised a s t arting salary of $12,200 last December but actual ly has paid only $1 2,035. Both s ides say all issues except that of binding a rbitra- tion probably could be resolved quickly, as couJd demands for amnesty. But with both sides s aying there are principles at s take, efforts to get negotiations under way have fai led r e- peatedly. Two Events Set to Aid Bolsa Chica The Amigos de Bolsa Chica environmentalist group is plan- ning two events next month to raise funds for the preservation of the Bolsa Chica marshlands. The first of the two events, a gotr tournament, will be held Oct. ll at the Meadowlark Golf Course in Huntington Beach. An entry fee of $30 will inc lude green fees. a cart and an eve- ning awards party. The second ls a JO-kilometer run and a S·kilome ter walk, scheduled to begin a t the Warner end of the Bolsa Chica State Beach Oct. 18. Entry fee is $10 and will in- c 1 ude a "Running Is for the Birds " T-shirt. Exhibit to End NEW YORK (AP) -The last or more than 1 million art lovers will trek through the Muse um of Mode rn Art Tuesday as the awsome exhibit of works by the late Pablo Picasso comes to an end. .~., ........ SEISMOLOGIST SAYS THERE'S NOWHERE TO HtDE Charles F. Richter In Altadena Home, Office Plans Called Key To Quake Survival ALTADENA IAP> -Charles F Richter . whose name 1s linked like none othe r to the s tud y of earthquakes , says Californians have nowhere to hide from the earth's tremors so they 'd better learn how to sur vive them. But th e 80 yea r ol d seismologist. who devised the Richter scalP that's used around the world to gauge the size of quakes, has little patience with -new~mers who become uh· sessed with a fear of nature's trembling. ·'One can only as k why, if they feel th.is way, do they come here in the first place? The state is overpopulated already." he said in an interview "We don't need people o ut laying the g r ound w o rk for panic k y behavior in an emergency." Ric h ter. who .has st udied earthquakes for half a century at the California Institute of Tec hnology, retired years ;igo although he re mains a partner 10 a local consulting firm. He said he's often as ked where you can go to escape the risk of earthquakes. In Californfa. the answer is simple : "Nowhere.'' Nationally. he said, "the least earthquake risk in the 48 states is Florida and the Gull Coast of Texas. But then I have to ask them how they like hurricanes ·'Every area has its own risks so the only alternative is to go somewhere e lse and accept some other risk." But if Californians must ac cept the inevitability of earth· quakes. they must also make careful preparation to limit their damage . Richter said recent years have seen a g rowing recognition of the risks. and both government and industry are bet· ter prepared than ever a lthough majorproblemsstill remain. remain. This new concern. he said, 1s r efl ected in Los Ang~les · official earthqua ke Aware ness Week . which begins today and includes a series or djsaster drills and publi c e duction projects . Richter. an outspoken advocate of earthquake planning, is prom inently listed as a sponsor of the program. His' prtmary concerns ai:-e skyscrapers "the problem has improved with better cngin~r ing but personally I'd rather see fewer of the m ·· a nd old masonry structures that predat<' modem building codes. "These old and unsafe buildings are our outstanding risk problem in ea rthquaJce countr y." he -said "and there is a pretty fair con centr aton of them in every older popul ation center in California.' Sitting in his modest home on the edge of this foothill suburb of Los An geles, Richter conceded that on a personal level, "even those of us who are professionals sometimes neglect things . Tha giant grandfather clock shoulll be anchored to the wall a littl1 better and I really s houldn't stack those books so high." His small living room-orfice is spectacularly cluttered. An an cient typewriter r ises abovf newspaper clippings and scien tific papers filed in boxes that once held brown-and-ser ve rolls A seism ogr aph that h asn '\ worked for several years stands against a wall. Cardboa rd boxe:-. resurrected as file ca bi nets h.id1· the fi replace and books are scat- tered everywhere Race Bene/ its Art Museum The second annual "Run Your Art Out" lO·kilometer run to benefit the Ne wport Har bor Art Museum is set for Oct. 12. An award cere mony following t he morning race, which will cir· c le a port ion of t he Uppe r Newport Bay, wlll be held in the museum's Sculpture Garden. The entry deadline is Oct. 8 The fee is $4 .50. For additional information call race director John Blair al 546-3663. th<i high country ... J?5dfic trai)$ all pu:rrxm- JClC'Kcit, 1ight\UZ.ight dacron and cotlon with w.lcro clcamz.a on a11 ruf'!S arrl pxka:ts. combination zip and snap front willi ~W' JXXKat in back, mak<ZS this jackczt gnzat for all cut.door activitifz.e. avoik2bki in xs thru.xl, in six color ccrnbinaticno of gr:ryjroyal , ~nJ tanjmvy, naVY/tBn) solid navy, solid tan @)~o@@)§@ 44 Rashion Island• Newport Beoch·114/644·5070 JOOI ""twood Blud..·~srwood Villoge•213/419·7727 OA&LVPILOT ~. SicMn1» a 1"80, Just oa Cing .., 2& ~ .. u.~:r Tom~~'' Marphln• Off the Track NATION I WEATHER 165 Arrested at Nu·clear ·Plant SllOREHAM.N.Y. (AP>-PoUc.a,.,......lUADU•DUCMardem· onstr•lort who blocked-three entnlr~ to the ...,....ID euelear powerplantconstrucUon1iletodayindellaneeol1cowtorder. Authorities tM!can haullna protelten away around 4:30 a.m. F.01' JW1t ovrr two hours later, conatructlon workers were 1tre•m· ln1t th1-ouich the main a ates ontotbealteforlhela.m. 1hift. Th<IM: 11rrcated were placed ln plutJc·band bandculf1t, liven p,. llmanwry 1m>eessin1 at the site and driven away, about 35 per bua ln. four school buses, to the Suffolk County police headquarters ln Ytl J>hank. KOltOltbole ane9tANI bad to bedraaed or carried to tbe bulel . ~ NW-moet ot. &.bit deJDGUtra&Qn__DWcl be chutecl with dilorderty cooduct, a mildemeanor. "I thouCht tbia wu a beautiful, beautiful action," aaid Eetber Pank olHauppauae, coordinator oltbe prot•t. "I think once •&•in we raised tiu:. iaaue of nuclear power, and that '1 eucUy wbat we wanted todoWday." Speakiq for the Loni Illand Utbtina Co .• which hopes to have ltl ~.000.kilowatt nuclear 1enerator oa line by lm, June Bruce aaid: I think we were successful from tbe point of view that we wanted to avoid violence." 11 ti ' Kt:£PON 1'1lAf'IUN' Dt:PT. Youuy your vaullon Is over and you nct,-d to get horn~ from San Francl11ca lO Oran1e County" You ~ny 1our alrline ticket ju11t went out on 11tMkt-? Yout"ar uu't1•!\tnnd<'d • ~KK Does fl ,, 'l '• . • If I' Never feu1 Why notlry lhe tratn"' You remcmht-r trolna, don't you·• Thl'Y hu\t~ this locomotive up front wturh pulls o bunl•h ol t•unc tl11'<' n l wo r1<11l . \•aUl'd the track. Well. tht•v USl'\l to \'ttll it the track, anyw•y Nowadays, they rall1tAmtruk T he nr~t thJn~ ~OU nt>l'<i to know obout taking th<' Amtrak train from Sun t-'run<'1:.l'O to Sunt ll Ana Is that It d0t•isn 't tk> tha t !lny mm t' 1'h\' tr .. un <I Ot''!<O 't havt-track!! tn Siul Fran ciaco. Thctrilin conu.•i. to Oak I.ind IF VOl l'\TIU , 'fHJNK the tram C'omes to San Fra111·1!>ct1, the la t time you \\ere on ont> ~ou must huve ~en weanng a raccoon roat and!>\\ a 1low1ng goldfoh Amtrak does. hn\\ l'Vl't , have a station m the t.olden U ate metropolis This 1:. "'ht.>r~ ~ ou ralrh the bus to Oakland so you can catch the \'hoo t'hou to Sa nta Ana This can g~t tn ck} You m1~hl. for '"''umpll' assume that the time shown on ThU u Whal a Tram t..ooked Like When They Stayed on Time your ticket 1s when the tram leaves Oakland. Therefore you ought to show up at the SF husstop an hour early. Warfare Training NASHVILLE. Tenn. (AP) -A facllC'moflhe Ku Klux Klan bu set up a guerrilla warfare training CMmp In northern Alabama to pre - pare for a race war it expects will break out soon. according to a published report. KI ans m e n wear combat fatigues at the Alabama camp and take target practice with a utomatic weapons, according to a l'Opynght story in today's edi· lio n s of The Tennessean a Nash ville newspaper. ' "l' m afraid this might be the firs t indication of a new kind of terrorism that we 're not prepared to meet ... said an agent for the - Alabama Bureau of Investigation who asked not to be identified. The agent said he was pushing s uperiors to establish a Klan sur· v«>1 ll ance unit. "We are going to be ready to take the offensive," said Terry Turker of Cullman, Ala., the group's leader ··1 don't think the re 1s any tactical squad in the state wecouldn'tstand against." Double Trouble This young snake might mean double trou· ble to some but being a harmless water snake, it makes an interesting pet for the Miami Serpentarium. The two-headed, 6- ............ inch snake, was found in Charleston, W. Va., and offered to the Miami reptile at· traction for safe-keeping. .. WRONG .\GA IN. The time shown on your San F'ranc 1sco ticket is when the bus leaves lo cross the bridge to catch the train at a later tim e If you don't get lh1!> straight.) ou're gomg to spend a lot of time hanging around the 1939-st yle magazine stand at lhe Oakland depot The magazines w\11 be about the same as they were in 1939 54-year Murder Puzzle Solved Even if you do get 1l stra.t~ht, you may still speod a lot or time around the Oakland terminal. No sooner do you get off the bus than lh<'Y announce the train, due in from Seattle, is two hours late. Something about a frei~hl car derailment up , north. YOU MAY REM EMBER the bygone era that if a train was two minute~ late, the trainmaster shot himself in dis· grace. But today, nobody on Amtrak gets extreme just over a lit tletwo-hourdelay. fhey announce it about as casually as tell ing you the club car 1s now open. Once you gel on the train. you'll love it. After you get through tounng the backsides of every Junk yard in the Bay Area. the train t hen chugs down some of the most beautiful coastline in Cali form a. You'll see miles of untouched beaches and shoreline FOOD IN THF. DINING car is pretty good You'll re· member the watter from your last trip in '39, too He's the same haughty guy who slaps down a check and stub of a pen· cil, orde ring you lo write up your own order. It's good for your nostalgia. Oh by th~ way. if you want to nde the Amlrak all the way to Santa Ana. you can't You have to change trains at Union Station in LA. Now that you're two hours late, maybe you'd better nollry that Your baggage could end up in Phoenix. Throu~h all this, don't get the idea that trains can't do everythini; that the airlines offer you. They can. The railroads just wentonstrike too. LANSING. Mich. (AP) -For 54 years. she held the secret that could unlock a puzzling murder case, but kept it to llerself for fear of reprisals. Now, of(icials, say. she has told police that her former hus band was a kilJer. PoUce in Weberville recently received a letter from a 78-year- old Texas woman who said she h3d decided to unburden herself of knowledge about an attack at the Fowlerville home of Arthur and Marion Monroe. Mrs Monroe was beaten to death and her husband was knocked WJconscious in the 19216 incident. Monroe died in 1947, Israel Dedicates West Bank Site TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) -The Is raeli governme nt dedicated another of its controversial Jewish settlements in the OC· cupied West Bank of the Jordan River, a paramilitary outpost that will be turned over lo civilians when it is completed. Flood Warnings Issued Souther,:,~States Get 48 Hours of Rain c ... ial Weaih~ "•telly ••rl) morroo119 •oo, ..,_rwlw l•lr '"'OUO" TW'IO•v wltn llaJY .. 'f'. Coallel "11111 In Ill« 10\ :o,. ~~ llllaM lllQll ._, IOS. 10 .. M) WAit•, 67. 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The wMT1l1191came•tter m«e tNn H•-11 .0 .. _,,of -y rain, In H CHl of 12 H-tutu 90 n ll'C flles In some •a ls, from HOUllOf\ ti 73 CM 10Utllwfll!lrn Teus to C¥041,..s. lndnee>ll• 76 '° Tllerewerealtolt0letfd ~early Jeck~vt .. • ,, II today In ttle n«tr-t -•'°"'I Ille 1Ca11t Cll't' .. .. GullCoast. LalV-' .. .. Tiie forwcesl for•;:!:• compiled ll!Ue R«• " ,, ., Oy the National Wea her S.r·vlce. LMA .... lft IJ •S celled for ~ !Of' tlle Gutt Coeli. Loullllille ,, ,, Ille M~ end llw Nor111Wftt. Ral11 IMmptll• 6S ., l,t4 wlll HI-from TeQI ,_,,., tt\'°"911 Ml .... I I 90 n . 01 the MltslMlppi Veti.y 1o tr. Wftlenl MllWW-" '° GrHI l.Mtft re91ot1. T-w111 at10 be Mplt-SI ... • u Sl .01 sflow•" _ __..o,.... ti. He ... •111• .. " .01 -1hern Pacific Coast. • Nt!w~i.-.. ,. Cooter ~atures • .,, UPKted NewY04'11 ,, " ICM' the Hol1Mast Mid -ts of Ille Otlte CJty .. S7 Nortllwesl, wttll warmer t•m· Omalla 74 ,. pereturesowr the Upper Greet UllH, ~landO ., n Ille soutllWll Plelnt,andtheSout-•t, Pttltedpllia 7S u Ille ,...,,Ice said. l'lloellt• IOI 1t Early mornl111 lemperetures l'lt ..... '911 11 4' •round Ifie ...tklll ranoect from 2S ..,,.,..,0!'9 11 SI .01 de9'"' et HOUnall, ININ, t.o as •I --.. ., 8tythe, Callf. S.llUM • • Tempn-at•rn Saft Dleet 7J .. Sell I'• .. 71 S1 s--.. " "'""-II ,.. SI Louts .. SJ ...... 1. .. lS l.02 Sl"·T-" 14 .. ltlfnore ,. • TulM ., "' ..... ,. .. WWtill9tll 11 5' ..._ 70 .. .,_,.. ..... ., 7a ........ Jt -CMJNttMIA c...,_ " S2 8ellenfleN ., .. Cl>"-9o .. SS 91YVle MS ,. Clftc!MMI n '1 "'-• "' c .......... .. " l.encaew t1 • Marys•ll .. to SS MOnterey .. S5 Ne.c!IO 103 m OOl•nd 12 SJ lled Blun .. ,, Sa<t•m~lo " SS S...t• 8a~r• 10 4' Stooton 11 5' T..,.rm•I 104 .. B•t\tOW .. .. BISllOI> 90 4S El Centro IOI! 70 Long 8HCll " SS Newport llHcll 76 51 ontarlo " "' Palm St>rlf191 101 70 S.n Betnen:ll,., " S3 S.n Jose 72 65 s.t\ta-la " • Tal>oe Vallell n 31 .. ANAMIERICAN Acepwtco 17 16 JO e.~ 11 7a 8-1• 67 m Cureceo to • Guedal•l•• 14 62 ·°" Gu_._ m ,. •• l(lngllon 90 m Metat!MI 90 76 2 ... Merida t4 ,. ,0) M .. lco Clty 76 ,. .12 _,.., .. 74 .JO •s.tnJuen ., n .J2 St Kit .. " n •• TrllllclaCI ti 74 Verecrw 17 74 .n s .. ..,,....,n-. . TODAY Second-1 :J1 p.m. s.s S.C:Olld """ t :Olp,m. o.s TUUDAY "''"'""" J:S)a.m. J.7 .. , ........ 1:21•.m. u S.C:Olld """ 2:•p.m. s.1 S.C:oftd -IO:•p.m. o.s Sullrlwt6:.Sa.m .• ,..,6:1tp.m . MM!\ rtw. 11:1» p.m .. WIS 12:N a.m. s..r1-..re Surf: ·-· ........ Ill ..... ,.. ••• lmum lleltllt 111 Ifft, period 111 MCClftft. Zume S.,,t•~· ... .,...,.Hufttlftgtoll Sell Ole9D County I J 12 I 2 10 2 l ., 2 J IJ s-11: •-•he1e11tl11'9et,111••· lmum fletoM In i..t. dlrectioft, Zume 1 •• Sent•~· , •• H--1~ 2 tw SM D1eOt c-ty J ,.., Gwti0.11 lor TuuCl•f: l.lttte c:'*'19. never able to tell police more than that he was s truck from behind. The woman told her story in an article in Sunday's Lansing State Journal. She agreed to be in- terviewed on the condition that hernamenotbeused. The woman said s he had kept quiet for years because her ex· husband, Russell Smith , threatened to kill her and their children if she told. But Smith died about four years ago in Tex· as, s he said. "I remember that night be came bome," she said, recalling the half-century-old incident.·· He was very nervous. He kept washing ttis hands over and over again. ''We livedin a shack in a swamp and he wouldn't get a job," the woman said. "He was out every night with other women and just wasn'tagood man." A hired hand found Monroe un· consciom in the yard the morning alter the slaying, and discovered the body of Mrs. Monroe, 52, in the home. Robbery was the motive. said Fred Teeple, Livingston County Sheriff at the time. About $40 and the couple's gold and silver ~y watches were taken, according to newspaper accounts. Smith was never questioned, ttis ex· wife told the State Journal. There are som e inconsistencies between the facts of the case and the woman's recollection, state Trooper Tony Gibson acknowledged. But he said he was convinced she is telling the t.rutb. "I'll turn everything overtotbe Livingston County Prosecutor and he'll make a decision," said Gibson, who spent about two months checking the woman's story after receiving tbe letter from Weberville police. "But~'U recommend tbat the case be closed." Awarding check for more than $1.000 saved by Daily Pilot carriers Pat. left, and Tim Kelly is Daily Pilot Circulation Supervisor Don Williams. Dailg Pilot carrier brothers collect • J,000 Costa M esa brothers Pat and Tim Kelly recently reaped extra fruits of their labors when they withdrew their savings of more than $1 ,000 when retiring from service-as Dally Pilot carriers. Pat 14 received almost $700 he saved during his four years as a Daily Pilot 'carrier . Tim, 13, received more than $375 he put aside during two years as a Dally Pilot carrier. If you'd like to earn money while learning valuable business skills. de- aling with people, and are 10 years or older, become a Daily Pilot carrier. . Be somebody! Be a Daily Pilot carrier! Call 6-42-4321 or mail the coupon to Dally Pi lot Circulation Department, P.O. Box 1~, Costa Mesa, CA 92626 . r--------------------------------7----------, I I would Ilk• to be • D•llY Piiot carrier I I I I NAMIE . . . . . . . . . • • . . . . . . .............••••............•.•••..... • , · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · I I I I ADOAIESS . . . . . . . . . .•........••............•. , ..•.. · ••...•.... • · · • • · · · · · • · · · · • · · · · · · · · I I I I ........................................................... ............. .............. I I I I PHONIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . • • • • • . . . . . . . • ............ • . • AGE . . • . . . . . . • • . • . I L-------------------------------------------J DAILY PILOT 642-4321 , I --------------·-,·· ----------.. I CALIFORNIA Actress ume ... In Effigy HOLL\'WOOO CAP t Protesters anary over the cbott"e of VaM*H Redlr .. e &o portray a Jewish aurv,vor ol • Na&i deatb ump In · · Playln1 ror Time" burned the actreu ln .t rtn outside CBS' 1tudio. and called for a boyroU of ~ TV movie. Tbe zoo protesters wbo 1atbered Sunday at CBS's Televlaion City included mem bers of the militant Jewish Defen1e Leaau• and a 1roup called "Cbildnn of the Holoca-..t." The movie is to tM' broadcast Tuesday nlabt. THE DECISION BY pro ducers lo cast Miaa Redgrave In the role ot Auschwit1 survivor Fania Fenelon has pro mpted protests nationwide, even from Mias Fenelon herself "It'• a horrible insult Six -..-----.. --,_ ----. Lett~e Strike Ends ...... ------.. ·-· .... ---. --... ----------. --------------- Mondey( Sec>lember 29. 1980 IA-'ted(]se Legal Laetrile Bill Approved SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has signed a bill legalizing the use of Laetrile on a limited number of cancer patients. Brown's omce said Sunday tha"l the bill, SB1S80 by Sen. William Campbell. R-Hacienda Heights. authorizes Laetrile only for certain terminally ill pa- tients, and others in principal m e dica l s chool teaching hospitals, until 1985. It also requires an "informed consent" procedure for all pa- tients aimed at informing them of the nature of Laetrile, and as- suring them that it need not be taken at the exclusion of or- thodox treatment. Laetrile is literally the squeez- ings of the kernels from the pits or apricots and bitter almonds, and is present in numerous other plants "Pat" Brown, had earlier represented a Laetrile doctor in a legal case lo Southern California. Several years ago the pro· moters of Laetrile, continually rebuffed in court for medical reasons, swltcbed rrom the medical to the political arena to achieve legalization. Gold Chip Thefts Go Unreported SAN JOSE <AP) -The thriv- ing Silicon Valley electronics in -' dustry has spawned a $20 million-a-year business in stolen gold, and most thefts are never reported, a newspaper reported. million Jews wi l1 roll over I n their graves." said JDL leader Irv Rubin. "We en - courage Jews and gentiles alike to call CBS in pro- Fieldworker Jessie Gutierrez paints happy face on head of lettuce to celebrate settle- ment of lettuce strike in Salinas Sunday. The 2,600 workers voted to accept new three_rear_ contract giving them l !_l>ercent raise to $5.8.5 an hour, "the highest paid in the entire industry.·· Harvest will resume Tuesday, ending first strike at Bud Antle, Inc ., in 33 years. ITS PROMOTERS, including a very few medical doctQn. cite any number of individuals who c laim to have had cancer that was cured by Laetrile. The San Jose Mercury ~ss~1,_,_­ companies are reluctant to !re Disaster Plans Mulled But orthodox ca ncer re- searchers say there has never been any scientific proof that Laetrile ever cured anyone of cancer or anything else. port thefts of scrap electronics parts containing gold and other precious metals because tbey think it's bad for business. "They never prosecute," sit.id a corporate security executive who declined to be named. "ll 's bad publicity, and they don't want people to know they have so much valuable stuff laying around.·· The electronics com panies clustered near San Jose e constitute one of the world'i. largest centers for production ol integrated cir cuits for corn puters. uooaave test. We hope to cancel the show before Tues- day." CBS had no immediate com- ment. In the past, producers have said Miss Redgrave was the actress most suited· for the part and that her political beliefs were not a consideration. Federal Agencies Study California Quakes Campbell told numerous hear- ings during the five years he was trying to pass the bill that the effectiveness or Laetrile against cancer was not the main point. He said the main point was the freedom of the victims to be able to choose their own treatment. CRITICS WHO HAVE pre- viewed the drama are nearly unanimous in their acclaim for Miss Redgrave's performance. WASIDNGTON (AP>-Facing the possibility of a major earth· quake striking California, the federal government today an- nounced an effort to coordinate federal and state disaster pre· pa redness planning. percent to 2 percent, but survey officials say recent observations lead them to believe that chance has increased to between 2 per· cent and 5 percent. If a major quake similar to the one that hit north of Los Angeles in 1857 were lo strike today, officials estimate that between 3,000 and 13,000 lives could be lost. Members of Children of the Holocaust say they are Nazi ex- termination camp s urvivors and their children. Spokesman Mike Adelson said be is concerned that protests against Miss Red· grave have only given the show free publicity. The Federal Emergency Management Agency announced that it would lead a team of federal agencies working with state and local groups to improve • readiness to cope with potential majorquakes. And if a less probable tremor should hit along the Newport· Inglewood fault the toll could be 4,000to23.000. "But we must encourage a boycott. I feel so much pain for my relatives, my people who did not survive, that we do not need this sort of taunting from CBS," he said. The U.S. Geological Survey has reported that faults in the state pose a significant threat to San Francisco, Oakland. San Diego and the Los Angeles area from San Bernardino to Santa Monica. John W. Macy, Jr., head of the emergency preparedness agen- cy, said his group will establish a staff office in California to work with local agencies on prepared- ness planning. Their goals, be said, include: Normally experts consider the possibility of a quake along the San Andreas fault to be about 1 -Developing earthquake response plans for the San Fran- cisco and Los Angeles regions in- Kidnap Plot Report Names Prison· Gang OAKLAND <AP> -A state report lo be re- leased today says a prison gang implicated in the shooting of an activist lawyer bad plans lo kidnap foreign consular officials in San Francisco, the Oakland Tribune and Eaatbay Today has reported. The newspaper said in today's edition the re- port by the attorney general's Bureau of Organized Crime and Intelligence on terrorist ac- tivities in California says the 1'79 shooting of San Francisco lawyer Fay Stender was part of a "larger revolutionary effort" by the Black Guer- rilla Family prison gane at Folsom State Prison. fi'ater S1rppfy 'f'lareafettftf STOCKTON CAP) -High waters whipped by high winds in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta threaten the aqueduct carrying water to a million residents of Oakland and surrounding com- m unities, but officials --------. said service should con-( J tinue. Sf' ATE "We think we will be J able to continue service without rationing, but that 'a not to say a disruption is impossible," James Lallie, spokesman for the East Bay Municipal Utility District, said Sunday. Parlfl Plaito,... Flaffftl MONTEREY (AP) -The Slate Bar Associa- tion bas voted to condemn any political party plat- form that places ideological conditions on the selection of judges. Though no party was mentioned by name, the resolution was clearly aimed at Rooald Reagan, wbo ta nmning on a Republican platform ~lank re- quirine that judicial appointments be given to those "who respect traditional family values and the sand:ity of ~ot human rights." Kia• Ralffl ll•r"e"''"' FRESNO <.i4-P5 -A Ku «lux Klan rally and cro.1-bum.ina went off at a park eut of here without violence, 1berlff'1 deputiea aaid. Fewer than UO klan memben attended the event, deputies said. It wu led by BW Wllki.oaon, self-proclal.mecl imperial wbard ol tbe lnvillble Empire Knilbta of the Ku Klus Klan. Robed klammen totinl deer rtflea 1uarded tbe park durinl tbe event Saturday but deputies wbo checked the 1\1111 said tbey wen unloaded. American Women Trust God NEW YORK <AP) - In God the American woman has trust; but Congres s. auto manufa cturers , newspapers, the presi- dent and nuclear plant operators all have slipped in wo men's estimation over the past decade, according to a survey. Tbe poll of 1,000 women by Ladies Home Journal also indicates that women said their ''most trusted '' in ~ dividual in each of four categories -film or television stars, writers or columnists, religious leaders and political leaders -was "none." ONLY AMONG newscasters was an in- dividual singled out as most trusted -Walter C ronkite, who was named by 40 percent. "none" followed with 31 percent , NBC anchorman John Chancellor was named by 5 percent and Dan Rather -Cronkite 's successor a s CBS anchorman -received 4 percent. · "World pressures are enormous ... , '' Cronkite told the agazine. "When things ••t seem to be work· ing, we blame the managers. We clutch our own, and reach out lo make sure we're get- ting our piece of the d iminishing pie. We're inclined, perhaps, to cheat a little. And we lose trust in each other." DESPITE THESE problems, Cronkite sald be had "trust lo America." Among political leaders, "none" re· ceived a a percent trust rating. Former Presi- dent Ford sot 11 per- cent. President Carter lol 10 percent, "None" also waa most trusted amonc reli1loua leaden, wltb 38 pereent. Pope JollD Paul II wu named molt trusted by -n 1J9ttellt, 6 percent named Billy Graham 'CHEAT A LITTLE' Walter Cronktta ·~··,.,..... 'MOST TRUSTED' Pope John Peul II and 3 percent named God. NONETHELESS, God received a plus-60 rating for trust over the past decade, obtained by au~ tracting the percentage wbo said their trust in God bad decreued over the past 10 years from the percentage who said it had increased. Computers got a plus-2 rating, but all others got negative rat- ln1s. Tbe wor1t were Congre11, minus 81; auto manufacturers, minus 11; state 1overn- ment, minus M ; nuclear power plant operaton. mlnua IO; tbe p~ldenl. mtftur5S-, and the courts, minus 54. eluding provision for predicted as well as unexpected quakes. -Developing an agreement bet ween the state and federal gov· ernments lo enable the president to declare a major disaster and in- itiate full·scale support for life- s aving and assis tance within minutes or a request from the gov- ernor follPwing a quake. -Documenting the needs for ,medical emergency serv,c.es and em ergency communications. -Organizin g practice response exercises to prepare of- ficials and agencies for dealing with a catastrophic tremor. Opponents tes ti ried that Laetrile is being promoted for profit as "a cruel hoax" on desperate cancer victims . But scientists admit that Laetrile has caused many patients to feel better and have better a p- petities. The tiny computer "chips" are composed mostly of silicor. -giving the area its nickname -and gold-plated electrical con nectors. A shoe-box full of scr,ap parts can yield as much as ~· in gold. one metal refiner said. The companies use soml! 600,000 ounces of gold ever y year, worth $400 million at CUr· rent prices. -Developing a program to publicize earthquake awareness. hazard reduction, first-aid and other information to prepare the public for reliance on its own re- sources in the first several hours following a major quake. BROWN ENDORSED the bill early this year. citing "freedom of choice." which bas for years been the slogan of many of the promoters. many of whom are organized into pressure groups. The Democratic governor's father. former Gov. Edmund Despite the reluctance of the firms to report their losses, the police department in SunnyvaJe. 10 miles north of San Jose, is re ceiving more than a dozen thffl reports a month. ~ Schools Closed Structural Danger Seen SACRAMENTO (AP> -On March 25, a drama student at Antioch High School noticed tiny fragments of concrete falling from the ceiling of the school auditorium. School officials ordered the auditorium and thr~e nearby rooms emptied. About 10 minutes later. as morning classes normally would be start· ing. 60,000 pounds of concrete crashed into a 40-by-100 foot section of the empty auditorium. SINCE THEN, FIVE OTHER Northern California schools with similarly designed roofs have been ordered closed, including a community college building in Kentfield which was evacuated · this week minutes after state inspectors finished their tour. Minor defects have been noted by inspectors in at least 27 other public school buildings, and about 90 more schools remain to be inspected. Engineers in the structural safely section of the State Architect's office and on the Seismic · Safety Commission staff are hesitant to speculate on whether the defects are related to defective de- sign, defective materials, or both. BUT THEIR INSPECTIONS ARE concentrat· ing on 216 school buildings using so-called ''pre- cast, prestressed" cbncrete and steel cable roof joists. So far, all the school closures have been in the San Francisco Bay Area: Antioch. Vallejo, Oakland. Sunnyvale and Kentfield. But in· spectors are also examining schools in the Los Angeles and Sacramento areas. , • ''lbese precast joists tend to be heavy, so they a\-en 't transported too far to construction sites. Therefore the schools involved tend to be close to manufacturers. You don't see them trucked to Fresno or Redding or places like that,'' John ·Meehan, chief of the Structural Safety Section, said in an interview. .. ORDER YOURS NOW • • 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS STYLISH TYPE ON GOOD QUALITY WHITE GUMMED PAPER • PERSONALIZED • EASY TO USE • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND { !. I ALL 11IE SERIOUS DEFECTS, including the Antioch High School roof which collapsed, were . found in buildings constructed from 1958 through Ul64. when prestressed concrete first came into wide usage, except for one building constructed in 1970. "This was early in the use of prestressed beams, and there have been design cban1es since then. Designs are modified aa we learn more," Meehan aaid. r---------------------, F1ll 1n lhls coupon clip •nd mail w11h $1 75 t 2S posrage lo Meehan said the principal effort has con- centrated on inapecting the schools. He aald an aoalysia of designers, suppUen, contractors and the like will be undertaken after the inapectiona are completed. The current inapectioaa were ordered by the Leetalature. ID November, after a preliminary analyail ii complete, a subcommittee ol tbe state Seismic Safety Commluioa plans a review and poulble bearinp. I • Pilot Printing. Label Div. Post Office Box 1 560 • 330 W. Bay St. Costa Mesa. California 92626 Be Sure to Use Your Z1peode PILOT PRINTING "TBEaB WAS NO WAaNING t wbataoever. Fwt&mately, aatudaltaawaomeamall 1 L--------------------- plecea rom•n1 down &a U.....udkorium and alerted a buildbi11 auperviaor," aaid AlltiHb l>latrlct Su.periatmdent Jerry Pancbunl. - orangecoasiooi1vP1101 Editorial Page ...................................................................................... RobN'I N weed 1Publisher Thomes Kee111t 1Edltor Barbara Kre1t>1ch tEdltorial Page Editor Old Courthous Ideal for Musewn T herttonce -.·as a sug,gestion t hit the old Orange Count ~ .., Courthouse in downtown Sant a na tX' torn do wn to m nk1· w ay for. yes. another parking lot ' Fortwl att.>ly, that idea nevrr r1rn~h1 on In futl, 1t onl) h~l ped t riager lht-r('Hr tt movt'rnent that lhl. 79} NH old red Ari ion a snnd1nonc fa<'t>d ~t fUl'l u rt> h<• prt·s<'r vt-d I r~slored and devt'l\lpt'd uuo a muM·um of 01 an Jilt' C'ouot v h1s torv Pro~n.·:-:-h 1:-~t'n madt' 'to" ant thut t>ncl 1.11 l(t'I\ through thl' t>ffort~ "' ttw Old Co\lrtho11M' Mui.l·um Sorwt' un <t s everal ant('re:nt'd romH~ 0Htt·1:1 l:i Ttw h1~~1·st problem t-imfronttn ~ the h u1lclmJ: toda\ "t<1 m ake 1t l'arthquakt• s a(t' :\ rl'<'t>nl 'ltud' on thut 1~s11P for n•d ____ lbJ!, CJ:li.Llll)_ _lk>.~u·G-ul ~i~son-tn orct~ tht.> hu1 kllf\Jif- ev aruttlt'd and t\lllrS of lh h1:-to11<· nc•partnwnt Ont> cou rtroom :,toppt>cl Estimates a t the t1mt> 1ndll·.ttt.•d 11 eould l'O:-t up tu SJ million to makl' the bu1ld111~ :-.afe Man) beltl·H~ thut f1~u1 l' to be inflated and that th"' l'O.'\t l'OUl d be :,1gndwantl\ ' rcduc·ed A setond opinion ha been :,ought Clearly st will cost ~oml'th1ng to brmg t ht> h1\lonc· structure up to standard ll may be that p n ate fund~ w 111 be r equired to s u ppla nt whatever assis tan ce ma~ co m e from • the c:ounty. the stat e o r thl' federal governme nts However. the hnancial obstades mus tn t be used fo r any new attempt that could lead to the busldmg s destruction. The courthouse 1s, ufter all, one of a kind And Orange County doesn 't have many re It cs oft he• past worth preser v ing fCoastal Nitpicking The C alifornia Coastal Commission was estabh :,hed by vote of the people to ins ure preservation of the s tate 's coastline and guarantee physical and visual access to its unique scen ery Overall it bas had a beneficial e ffect, but then~ a re times when the mean d e rin gs o f state and local com missioners -and particularly l.heir staffs -baffle t h e mind. In Laguna Be a c h. for example. the city toiled for years to persu ade property owners to accept the idea of a n emergency fire a ccess road that would e nable fire eq uipment lo move within m inutes from one hilltop neighborhood to another Residents feared s uch a road would create traffic pr oblems and lure view admiring sightseers. F inally t h ey agreed to a narro\\ roadway with access rt-stricted to e mergen cy vehicles ~ T he regional coastal commission s taff decided it -would be nice to include bikeways and pedestnan pat-hs for the public. That was just about gua r anteed to blow the w ho le deal. Fortunately , commissioners a pproved the o riginal plan. Meanwhile down a t the Mam Beach park. the cit) was trying to expand needed grassy areas by narrowing one section of a paved walkwa y and to improve access for the handicapped by cxpand m g pavement in another sector_ The commission s taJf didn 't thmk any sidewalks s ho uld be narrowed nor ~hould a ny pavem ent be extended. for a whatever reason Up in Monterey County things a re even more absurd Whe n the coast a l p reservation law was passed in 1972, th e cit y o f M onte r ey was compl et ing p lans for redevelo pment a nd upgrading of its famous. but now decrepit Cannery Row. Eight years , four drafts a nd countless workm g hours late r , it's s till t rying to come up with something that will m eet the ever -mou nting conditions imposed by the Coastal Com mission. The case of one developer, who has just thrown in the towel afte r seein g the cost of his project rise from $1.6 m illion to $.1.5 million tells t h e story Da le Runyan bou g ht fou r rickety o ld c annery buildings covering 71,000 squ are feet. and drew up plans to convert the m in to a commerci al center wit h 50 shops s urrounding a 9,000-squa re -foot plaza. The Coasta l Commission authorized development of on ly Z7 ,000 squa r e feet and imposed e nou gh n itpicking conditions to m a ke the project fina n cially impossible . So the d eve lope r , who has lost about $250,000, is going to settle for just restoring the buildings minimally to m eet city r equire m ents . Some commission ers in sist the p roje ct was not rejected, s ince Runyan did receive a perm.it -with restrictions. But on e pointed out more aptly, ''I( we can 't come together with som e thin g econom ically viable. we a re in fact de nying the project." It's not two years since the s tate Legis lature. responding to com p laints about unreasona ble Coast al Commiss ion de m a nds . ordered t he agency to be m ore responsive to public n eeds. The next session of the Legislature probably would be we ll advised to follow u p on that order . • Opinions expressed m the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those or their authors and artists. Reader comment 1s invited Address The Dally Pilot, P.O Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 . Boyd/Gossip By L.M.BOYD Wha t 's the d iffe r en ce between conversation and gossip? Herb Shriner said ''When three women stand at a comer talking. that's con· versalion. When one leaves, that's gossip." The Swiss tra ditiona lly plant a tree when a baby is o~ar Gloomy Gus Re that gay laws uit agai ns t Disneyl a nd : App a r e nt ly Tomorro wland s till bolds on to some old v1lues. A.V. I, born . An apple tree for a boy, a pear tree for a girl. Those of raised consciousness have not yet made an issue of this bit of discrimination insofar as is known. J ack Mille r of Sussex, England, did not know how to read or write. And he had less than $35. But he wanted to go into busine s s for him self. By the time he reached age 22, he owned a car de alership g rossing mor e than $8 million a year with 200 employees. Anothe r thing you can do to while a wa y the time al stoplights is count up the various captains, re al or fie· lional. that come to mind. Like Captains Quee1 , Mid· night, Kirk, Hook, Bligh, Nemo , Ahab, Marvel. Any others? Q. What's the airline pilots' creed? · A. ln God we trust. ev· erytbing else we check." Diplomat Mugging No Accident . W.\SIUN<. l'ON l'h1• Soviets 11.1 v1• 111 .. ult• ll bru1111ly cl ·ur lo lh 1111t•I .. ~nl'<i thul clett<lllC' Ill d <'tHl It hu1,1w11t'll 111 Lt.·11rn~r .. tl whert• 111"' .1 IJ S 1·1111'111l .. 1r ofndnl Ile w.1, mu1owll l1y Hu,:.wn rowdieb ~ hu 11um mdt.·J tu n1 w II h lh1• t•ffl 1· 11•11,.v111 .1 K <; n 111100 -.c1u11d I ht· .11t.i1 k un·urr<'d while 1-'rwcl 1md h1-. v.1 r, ~•·re• wulluni: t o.:1•l lw1 r •' ('l•OI I y llrt I ht 111\ :.lrt•t•h <,; 11 \ I ,. I '• f -f '""''"'f rt mm I-I 11• 1t !> J I l•ll'kl0 1"> 1A1•11• 1111pl\ J11111l..1 11 n1111l1g.111., hul IOll01ltKt.'OC' I\ pt.•r I:. :.UbJk:C't 11 t•ould h.i\t· IJt·t.·n llw ltan11tv.ork of lhl' Kl;H Top "l't'rl'I Stalt• Dcpartml'nt l·able:-. 1h:-do">c the 111cagcr dt! ta1b of tht· o.1,s ,rnJl. whH·h has Lhl' d1 plumaw 1·P1 µ:. :.cl'lhmg Th<' assa1hmLo; ut·c·ost••d the· Amen l'an tl11>lorna1 fu1 no t·1qJla1ncd rca 'oon 111., in1ut 1cs-were scnnu' t'n11ugh to fl'<t1Lrc medical .tllcn tson dllhough ht• v. as nol d1s- abll·d ll1s .. •.:1fr. Olga, v. a" untou<"hl-<l, but !\ht' prvv1dt>d t lw ">o und <'r ft:ets. Y''ll1 ng with all ht·r lu11g p(1wt·r TH~ S'l'K '\NG I-.tl1wn1•c o( anv polic1• as ... hat mak•·:-the sn tellsgt.·n<'l' t'~pt·rts ~u:;pic1m,1s /\s nn<' sourn· t·,plasllt'tl to my ;1:< :.Ot•1alt• Jat•k l\11khl.'1l till' St1\IN poli<'"' ur""11 '1 l1kf'b to let an A rn t' rr I' ;1 n d 1 p Io m • l "' J 11 d"' r around I A·nmgr;id or ;111' oth1•r S O v i ,, I c• I I ~ w t I h fl u I pl<1111<.'loth1•snwn tr.111111 ~ a rnupl•' CJf blurks b<>h111rl \II fore1~11Prc; ari> 'uh1er tPcl to ;1 t.'l' rt 111 n a mount q( :.N· rel JJIJI irt in tcres t. hut diplomat..; part1cularl) '\rnt>ric~1 n:-. C1re VJ do d y watrhecl th::it a s pon tancous Mlack hy va~rant drw1k:-. 1s dirfic-ult to belie\" Inte lligence expert:-. s tiet•ulal<' th:.it the ~tS'>Jult «onld have hc(!n a dc lsbl'ratl' \l;J ming 1nt cnd«>d to .;enrl a mel>"U~e 111 the UrutNI Star~:; a warning agc.11n•t A ment'an contciC'I with Soviet d1:- s 1dents Sources t l'll me that Hu ssian "drunkards" have a habit of malcnalmng whenever an A mencan 1:, su!>pccted of V<'snl;{ E arl "'' a l~rl- • 111 too l'lo~l' t·ont act with diss1- dent1> 11 1~ not known lfthe l"rieds were 1n touc'h with dissidents M t:MBERS OF C.:ongress who have hc<'n lo Leningrad recently hu ve related disturbingly similar !!lon e · of burly, slovenly dressed Ru:.:HmlS suddenly looming into vie~ before or after the con· gressmen's interviews with dissi- dents . One congressman a p- proached some rough -looking tnen he suspe<:ted were KGB · t1uls and warnJd them not -lo harm the dissidents to whom he had JUSI hccn taJking The State Department de · ltHred <i quiet but still offi cial µrotcsr l!I the Soviet government over the 1''ned mugging. But the Russians slick by their dubi°"5 stor y that the diplom at's beating was the result of a chance en- counter with some s treet louts. The significance of the incident is not lost on our Kremlinologists. who note that even in the darkest days of the Cold War, the personal sarety of American diplomats was rigorously guaranteed. Footnote. The State Depart· ment had no comment on the in ct· dent. HUSH-H SH SETTLEMENT: The General Accounting Office is supposed to be the watchdog on waste and other government wro ngdoing in cl u ding job ~---~·-· ' \ jus. t (a.n't seem to <Jet ahead .. '' discrimination. Now it 1s quietly negotiating a multimillion-dollar settle ment of a class.action laws uit brought by it s own fe male and minority employees. While details of the settlement are being kept under close wraps, reliable sources report that the a ward will total c lose to SS million. This would be the bigges t payment Uncle Sam has ever made to its e mployees under the Civil RightsAct Sworn affidavits riled under the laws uit spelled out racially dis· crimjnatory practices by GAO pooh bahs. indicating that minon- ly or female employees are last hi red, first fired and least promot- ed Trained, qualified personnel who happen Lo be m inorities or women are kept rn low paying. dead·end Jobs without promotion f o r a s lon g as 4 0 year s, according to the afftdavrts Some s hockrng examples of GAO 's discriminatory 1>ractice include A former chief of the fiscal m anagement branch staled that "s upe rvisors and employees s hould be matched by the color of th et r s kins." The chief or a ma1or GAO d1 v1s111n excluded a ll blacks from hb rt'tsrc::ment party in 1976, even q, () u ~ h a boll l h s Ir 0 r the employe('S in his branch were tilac·k WATC'Jf ON WASTE : The FBI h:>s made wh1t1· colar <'rime a m aJ1lr targe t in rcc1~nl ) e~rl> hut ~uvcmment inspectors havt• n111C'luded th<it 1 he G men may ha~t· 1he1r prrnritil'!'i rmxed In one 1.'C'Pnt rsscal y1•ar, 1r1rcx 1rl1pl1. thr 1-1<1 '>t't a~1<i<' mort than S.10 rrnlhon to 1nvcst1ga!l• pr11pl•r' v t·nmcs lik E' l he theflrif go\ l'rnnw111 g1101I..; Hut the in ~ pf f If Ir'> \\ Ii 11 ~ hf' I' k, f' ti t h t• h11rf';111 "book,., l'011t ludl'd that the F'Bf ~ ... s dt•\nllng V> much of 1l:. tsmt' :mci rr11111l'} to rf•l<ill\t!ly '.l111;1ll pro~·rh tnmes involv in;! ... urns• i S.'MJ,000 1Jr le.,s that lh•' \\c·ren 'rlo111J.(:1dcc1:ntJobon th" Ill{! l'iiM''o l'l1l' •nsp••c" • r• ,.,U,l!~t stcd Lhar 1111' (, 111• II I 11: hi ll•'ltf'r let Sl:llc ,, "d I 1H ..a I I ,j w 1 11 for re men t .wthonlt•''-en .lfll•rthl's mallfry, 111.hlll• lhl' huri au <'11ncer11rate~ rm 1 tl" h1J! f1-.h tl1,1l 1inly the federal 1!•11."'I OllH"nl l'<lO l rH• h Staying Ill Office Becomes Prime Goal "It 's more important for thf'm t o he 1n 11fh re th&n to d<• something while they're hPrc-" lJ S St!nator J ames Aboure1k was speaking Ile was refe'rrin~ to the members of Congress but he couJd just as well have been talkrng about t he California Legislature. "Very few people here ~land f o r some - t h 1 n g ," h e sai d "They have taken public opinion pulls to h ear t The r e's n o th i n g wr o n g with polling. but wh e n you s tart calcuJ atrng on every sin~le little issue, 1t 's somt=th1ng else 'How cute am T goin$l to be on this? llow am I going to gim· mick tlus on<! up !>O I can g<1 back home and not he in trou ble? · There are very few guys Charl e~ McCabe arc1und hc1 ~ who ure nnt airatl'f to ger m trouble on anvthsng · OHVIOl'~l. Y referring to Lhc art1v1:-.ts who clamor on every iss ue, the senator continueod "The} are afraid to commit lht>mselves because there's a yahoo out there raising hell Instead of politicians thcy·vf' become technocrats s itting Lhere reading polls Their calculations have become so finely tuned that they 've forgotte n what the public really wants." Abourezk 1:. quite a lo(UY Hess a DcmO<"rat from South Dakota where they believe in plain talk and straight shooting He served in the US Navy during the Ko r ean War , r e turn ed t o graduate as a n engineer al South Dakota School eif Mines and then received hrs lay, degree from the l111iversity ur South Da kotll . Elected to Congres:. 10 1970, he served one term in the House and was elected to the Senate in 1972 By the end of that ter m he had becom(• disgustt:d :ind rdusl•d to r1111 ror re elec 11on in 1978 That. nr 1•11urse IS whal makl'S h im different. He b elieves Congress m e n and legislator:, are e lected to repr esent the people. not to carve lifelong careers out of holding public office. WllAT HE learned in his eight years m Washington he teUs in typical farmstyle language. "We hav e a government that is s'posed to be by the people and for the people. That's not true. What we ha ve is a government run by the establis hment for the establishment If there are some droppings left over for the peo- plt' okay. but that ·s all they get, dr oppings ... "The system we have runs on greed:· he continued "It works fairly well when there's enough so that eve n the greedy are satisfied. But when we run out there's gonna be a catastrophe There'll be a violent poht1cal up- hca\ al Thl·rc"ll be> a change ll m1~ht l>l' :-11c1Jl1sm 1t r.'llght be fa :-cs5m T hose reople who abhttr the 1de:i. 1f their foresiglsl wen• not foreclosed b) greed could ;woad that " R E FERRING BACK to the polls, Abourezk said , "If the Am er ican people really knew the facts they could make fair judgments, But newspapers and t he r a d io pres e n t i ss ues s up e rficially at b es t. In televis ion you har dly get a minute's worth of news. Bow the hell can you present an issue in that time?" Reflectrng on the situation thf' South Dakotan said , 'I'd llke to see an America where so much power was not in the hands of so few. Where everybody would gel a fair shake But the establish menl wanLc; uneven odds. They want the deck stacked. Maybt! the Indians knew it all aJong They s melled it way back. You know what they s ay ? Custer had 1t corrung all t he time." Regulations Won't Cool A01erica1ls' Vocabulary You can't keep up with every· thing . Th,•rc's so much iniquity a round. As an 111stance, I haven't yet been able to get in my tup- peny ·s worth on one or the more s tatesmanlike 'Frisco moves of recent months I refer to the action of our Civil St!rv1ce Commission that wouJd endanger lhe jobs of any p u b I i c employee or official if he s hould lose his t e mper by saying something to any ot h er e mployee or official that he finds offensive. ' The policy, adopted by a J.to-1 vot e , m akes il "prima facie evid ence or the lack or com· petence , . . to use slurs ag.Unsl a ny person on the basis or race. color. creed. national origin, an- cestr y , age, sex , sexual orientation. or disa bill ty." THIS AMBmous atte mpt by t he Civil Service Solomons to wipe out cursing and wicked talk is as frivolous and foolis h as Us source. An Irish-American offi cial re· ferred to some activists as "god- damn clunks'· or words to that er- f e c t A g ro up o r C hin ese quidnuncs made a big case out or this. and pressured a complaisant City Hall and a misguided Civil Service Commission lo ovetTeact dangerously, and make of an a lmost univers al human fault grounds fo r gigantic economic re prisal. THE MAJOR premise or the decision is nonsense, to start w~th . Swearing, or cursing, or s lurring, in lhe view or the com· miss ion, i s '"p ri ma fa cie evidence of the lack of com- petence." Some of the most competent people on earth s wear· like troopers precisely in order to get a job dooe . A sergeant major or a construction boss. or the coach of a pro baseball or football team. would feel deprived or a leg if he we re deprived of his vocabulary .of abuse. And what or "tbe word \bat won the war." It was the ftrm belief of the leaders of that war, from ser1eant up to a lot of brass, that youcouldn'tget an American soldiertollflapot,or s wabdowna latrine , much less annihilate the enemy , without li bera l use of that energizing noun TO CUS.S and to swear, as one editorial on the s ubject s tated, "is hu man." "People shouldn't call people s uch names. but they do," the editorial added. T he Irishman who started aJI this absurd todo, whose name will not be mentioned because it has been far too often mentioned. has already been seriously hurt. He has been made a public butt or r idicule, and has lost some of his authority as a long-time civil ser · vant. To my mind, the "activist" who squealed on him deserves rougher treatment than the man himself. Countless Caucasians over the years have been called "white devils" by the Chinese com- munity. I daresay ther e was no more harm intended in the or- ficial 's outburst when he was so unwise a s to say "goddam Quotes "A good newsp .. pcr, I s up- pose. il> a nation ta lking to itself." Arthur MUl~r. PloJIW'"!lhl chinks" than in t he r outine description of whites as "de· vils." Surely a s lur on both sides, but hardly something to legislate about. IT IS ONE or the cliches of this country that you can't legislate morality. The minute you try, as in repression, you create a black market in what you are trying to eliminate, and frequently give greater currency to the practice you are legislating against. To tell an American he can't swear at a public official. and make the rul- ing slick. is fortheoiseaux. Among the slurs specifically mentioned in the silly deba te on the matter we re "old coot ," "dumb broad'' and ''son of a bitch." To excise these word!! from the vocabular y of people who work in city offices wouJd be to shutoff human nature. There is the proble m of cnlorce- m en t. How many s quealers, at how much per annum, would be rl'q ulred to keep the Civil Service people on top of this problem? Personally 1 feel that people who engage in Uus kind or work, of no m a tter which race, creed or whatever. are rotten (slurs delet· ed) andshouldbetreatedasaucb. ~ I ORANGE COUNTY MoncMy, See>temt>er 29, 1980 Deputies-Pushing for Stanton NO FRILLS TEETH 0 FAMING Auto & Homeowners Quotes By Phone OMLY s22 -:=:: ~~~~! -·---· 0£PUT1EI' CHOtCE Roger Slanton ·TOOK A STAND' PNlp Anthony Air Pollutant Ozone Limits Cancer Cells WASHINGTON (AP) -Scientists have dis· covered that a common air poUutant called ozone inhibits the growth of cancer cells, a fincliq that they say could point to future applications in cancer therapy. Researchers at Washington Univers ity Medical School in St. Louis said that continuous exposure to ozone of a variety of cancer cells slowed their growth much more than the gas af· fected normaJ cells. DR. FREDERICK SWEET, A BIOCHEMIST who led the research effort, said it was too early to tell if the surprise finding eventually would have human therapeutic applications. But as a first step in fmding out, the re- searchers have begun exposing mice with lung cancer to air rich in ozone. Lung cancer is the easiest to expose to ozone because the gas is breathed in with normal air, he said. If ozone proves to be of any value against cancer, it may be used in combination with more conventional therapies. such as radiation and drugs, the researcher said. But more testing is necessary before any use of the potentially toxic gas can be recommended, he stressed. SWEET SAID IN A TELEPHONE interview that cancer experts at the university find the dis- covery interesting, but point out that ozone's effe~· liveness as a therapy may depend upon how well at penetrates layers of cells. "Its errects may not go too deeply. and that could limit its usefulness," Sweet said. "But that's what we'll have lo find out. "In any case, the work shows another dif· ference between norma l and cancer cells," be con- tinued. "ll shows another weakness in the defense mechanisms of cancer cella that someone may be able to exploit." Anthony's Legal Woes Cited By O.C. HlJ8TING8 Of .. ._... ........ peuon reception for Anthony Wednes· day ln Newport Beach. • ~' l~ FAl.,_S IMSUllAtfCI MOUP 642-0112 JIOl ... MllML.C..M9M Roaer st.Anton, the Fount&ln Valley rlty counc-llman who la challenliA1 Phil i p Anthony for the lat Superviaorlal' Oiatrlct 1ut, Lt happy, naturally, about beln1 endorHd by the Oran1e County Deputy Sheriff'• Auoclallon Co-boaca for the Irvine Cout Couft. try Club reception are Newport , Beach Mayor Jackie Heather and ________ _. S4 .. IH4 er n1-1ur ltl4tWW-C .... MeM "It's proof." said Stant.on, "that lhos.-who en/orce our laws want a supervt1<>r m th.. li t Olatrlct who rt'spec·ts our laws " STANTON HA.8 8££N playtn1 I.Al> Anthony's leaal difficulties in his campaign to W\&eat the incumbent supervisor Anthony baa been under a cloud si.nce l976 when he was fint indicted for his alleeed role in a purported campaign fund laW\derin1 scheme For his part, Anthony stressed Fri- day that. while be has supported measures to strengthen the sheriff's de pa rtment, contract negotiaUons with the deputies may have played a part in lhe endorsement. "We had rather strenuous labor negotiations last year when I wu chairman (of the board of supervisors)," Anthony obllerved. "I think: we treated them fairly, but we had to take a final stand when their demands were a little excessive." AS HE HAS since 1976, Anthony played down the significance of bis legal problems. He said the alleea- tions Can indictment doesn't presume guilt)· have nothing to do with hi5 performance in office. "It hasn't prevented many fine people from endorsing me," he added. *** A MONG THOSE endorsing Supervisor Anthony's re-election bid are Sth District Supervisor and Mn. Tom Riley, who are hos tine a $.15 per former Newport mayor Don Mcinnis. The Invitation beln1 sent to Newport Beach folka the hosts figure mi1bt Uke to attend. urae the red· pient.a to "rtnd out bow Phil Anthony feels about vital issues facing Newport Beach." Amona the names on the invita· lion: John Ward Kae Ewing, Cle- ment Hincb, John Virtue, Vincent Jorgeaen. Tim Strader, C. Tbomu Wilek, Dorothy Doan, William Ficker, Xaury De Wald and Pete Barrett. *** ' ASSEMBLYWOMAN MARIAN Bergeson, ft-Newport Beach, wilJ be attending Brigham Young Univenity homecoming festivities Oct. 10 for a special reason. Mrs. Bergeson, a .BYU grad, will receive the alumni association's Disl- intuisbed Serve Award during a ban· · quetonlbeProvo, Utah, campus. 'l'be award l5 given to an indivadual who bas given "outstanding service to their profession, community, nll· lion or church." Mrs. Bergeson bas been a teacher, a school board member, president of tbe slate association of school boards and an assemblywoman. She bas four children cunently in college. *** DEMOCRAT Mf)[E DOW of Balboa Island bas challenged bis opponent l.n the Orange Coast's 40th Congressional District to a "debate on the issues." Dow says incumbent Republican Robert Badham of Newport Beach is the "phantom congressman" and hasn't taken up the challenge. Dow is a deputy Orange CoW\ty district attorney. Bulldozers End Fitting's Shacks Hospitals Studied BOSTON <AP) State boards that set LOVELOCK, Nev. CAP) -It was a Fitting hospital room rates, although w i del y end.With the roar of a bulldozer, the tiny collection criticized by people who run hospitals, are of shacks known as Fitting was razed to ma.ke way effectively holding down for a wider road. h of be' · k The few shacks, and five residents, are gone. t e cost mg sic · a study says. In the end, there was little protest. The The report said that Pershing County sheriff's office had confiscated even though hospital nine guns from the five residents. h Fitting had been around for about 100 years, c arges are going up everywhere, the annual District Attorney Richard Wagner estimated. It i n c r e a 5 e 5 a r e 3 was located at the intersection of two dirt roads percentaie points lower ~ The classic blaze r, made in the Brooks Bro thers workrooms O ur blazer o f n avy blue is i nd is pensable in a well dressed man's wardrobe. We m a ke rhis h andsome jacket o u r e l ves ~ we complete its fa u ltless Jook with gol<l -p la 1ed button s em- bossed with our Gold en Fleece symbol. In fine wor ted flannel , o n our 3-button model. $235 Use your Brooks Brothers charge ac1·01m1 or American Express. ISTAILISHID 1111 OZONE IS A FORM OF OXYGEN made by electrical sparks or ultraviolet light reacting with air or gases containing oxygen. At ground level, air normally contains much less than one part per million (ppm) of ozone. northeast of Lovelock. in states that have ~~ ~ ~ ~ Most of the recent residenta have been squat-rate-setting agencies. ~ ,,,.--. "'/ ,,--A ~'/,/ ters, Wagnersaid. "Substantial re-( _) /f'('/1,J ./ '/r//1(7/..J A nearby mining company wanted to ductiona in the rate of ---._ ----~ . widen the intersection at Fitting to cope with the increase in the cost of a ( ( ·:-_;) ~ lL © y ~ ~ a ~ © ~ ) ~. large equipment turning there, Wagner said. It or· hospital stay can be _ ~ deredthepeopleoutofthetown, which it claims attributed to the ~ Mrn:s~.·8oys·rurnishing9 ."'1lS ~r ihor.s J Strong concentrations of ozone irritate the eyes and nose. and can cause breathing difficulties and chest discomfort, particularly for those with asthma and respiratory problems . under a mining patent. cost -containment , S.\O WE~·1 r i 11 ~·1 Kl-El.l.O"i.\'\Cil-.U ...... C \l.11· <IO<JJ4 • .Hard '~lings arose. Wagner s•'d. programs," s aid the ~ n· Bl 1 , .. ,1 .. study published in the '"-'~~;-.1...,l.\'\ll. '1-:\\POrd "~-'"" ' "I think probably the people there became a New England Journal of ~~-~ nu~ancetotbe miningcom~p~an~y~,'~'h~e~a~~~d~·~~.....:..~~M~edi~·~cme~·~·~~~~~_!~~~~~~~~~--;;;;;;;;~~----;;;;;;;;~~~--~~~~~~~~ FOREWARNED IS FOREARMED. BE PREPARED. THINK AHEAD. Wisdom &om the past Invites us to pr..,-re for the fu. ture. There are many Important life ~ent1 that we should and do prepare for. Some, like weddings. or buying a houH are pleasant and we eagerly look forward to gather-'ng Information and planning for them. Others, like death and funerals are more dlflkult to think about ahead of time. They are no less Important! There ls Information that we can provtde so that you can plan ah.ad. 0.ath 11 a major ewnt In all of our I"-· Funerale and vt.Uatton1 arc daighed to help ua c:ope with d.ath. If you'd like more In- formation about tuner.a. for yourself, your church, or civic group, call or wrtte us. We'll gladly ... 11t you. Taking Ume to get aecurate Information about death now wtU help yo_y.. deal with the actual ~t. Harbor Lawn· Mount Olive Men1orial Park.· Mortuary · · Mausoleu~ · Crematory. 1125 Gisler A..we • CoRa 11 .. • Phone M0-1554 Com Mno't ORi, ~ hMral Fadlfftt • Takeoff on Air California and Hertz will take off 25% on your car rental. Air California • ~~§?.gives you more ~---~---• '-than low fares in ~ERTZ RENrs FoRos ... No o n•eR FINE c.t.Rs the air. We give you low fares on the ground. Because when you fly Air California between September 8 and October 31, 1980, you'll get a discount on your Hertz car rental. Special Hertz offer. Just presel)t your Air California ticket at the Hertz rental counter io cities served by Air California. You'll get a big 25 % discount on time and mileage· charges on any Ford or other fine car. And as an extra bonus, you'll get a Hertz chip good for one free drink on your next Air California fli ght. Call Air California or your Travel Agent to make your reservatio ns . And let Air California and Hertz make your traveling easier. AIReCALIFORNIA We want everyone to fl y. .r r ONLY PILOT QUEENtE "I'm workmg 1hrouth lunch Brina me something thal doesn't stick 10 11\e ribl or anything elsl" 1f yoo know what I ml'an " \ NATION Hot Time in the Olil Town PATAOONIA. Aria f AP> Voun11f.ert tou matches to the cround to watch puff• of dust and name t'rupC In Oda Ultle Arb.ona town, where .0- year old natural 1aa p1pu t>e11n leakln1 18 montha •IO AduJu pll«'h claarettel! out the back door of • tavern to watch thf' lllllt flreworks in the alley. AND DAVID OCHOA'S atort buckled in the middle when a pofk.,t or natural 1u erupted bf'n .. at1' the noor lie bad dropped Aorne co1ns and w H 11e1trchlna for lht m wlth • cl&arette Uahter. It '3 bt't'n Ii J(&&S In this elty of 700 people some !'i() mll"1'1 iwulh or 1'uc11on since the pipes be1an w.-aring out 18 months aaao Fun 11ometlmes. but d•nllt'rf•1U1, lo<1, c·Uy otllrlallssald Tht• lt•uk lnK hnlln& fuel smells, residents N~ma)ltalrwct And while It poses oo health prob· lt-mli, It Is a flrn hiaurd, officials said. So city m11na1<cr Mux lnc Crt hlln Onally bundled up her filt· of t't1rnJ>h11nls trnd called the stale fire flh ll ~h.il ·A lot 11( J*ODlt• were fnghtened," she said lu1 week. "We're aettlng aome acUon now," A Southern UUUUe11 Ou Co. crew arrived ear· ly in the •ffk, bit into lhe tround with a backhoe to repair the latest leak and hlt the maln water line. , .. We had a lSC).foot 11tream of water going into lhlll brand·new house," said Jim Leather, city water and sewers manager. "He dJdn'l check with u11 at the wuter department." THt! TOWN WATER 11upply had to be shut down for five hours and a reservoir had to be drained be(ore Leather and hJs crew could repair the damage. "lf there had been a fire, the whole town would have been wiped out," Leather said. ''The town would have burned to the ground." Despite the shaky start, Leather and Ms. Cre han believe the utility's owner, Al Kinder, will make the needed repairs . , "Al first we couldn't get ltn.Ylhiltg done, but now everybody's gelling on that gas line," said Leather Tbe Arizona Corporatt~n t:omminion~ utilities dlvialon in Phoenix bu liven Kinder an Oct. 31 deadline for •urveyin1 the pipes system ror leaks. Kinder, who Uvee ln Tucson, plans to have a Los An1eles conault.in1 firm survey the Pau1oaia gas system in mld·October. And be'a tryina to sell his one-man uUlity to a bi&aer au ~mpany. • 'll 's almost 1etlin1 to the point of personal ~rsecution," Kinder said of recent publicity. "I Just wish it would all stop and let me 10 on doing the best I can." · MEANWIDLE, IUDS AND grownups still set off some of Patagonia's year-round fireworks. "Sometimes you get a pretty good one." Leather said. And Ochoa continues to operate his store. bulg- ing floor and all. . ··~ey've "ot the windows open and the fans gomg, Ms . Crehan said. ''They say the gas is diminishing. There's quite a breeze going through there now, so it's hard to notice." f, Campout Campus TB Nursing Home Fear ATLANTA I AP > l'he national Center for Disease Control has re· commended t hat all new nursing home res idents undergo c hest X·rays and two-step tuberculin skin tests. r ays or repeat sltin test· ing of patients whose s kin tests have been negative w ere not re- commended. case or pwlmo nary tuberculOfiis. all patients in the home we re given a skin test , the CDC woman's wing, than for those in other wings, the CDC said. All patients io the woman's wing we re also given chest X·rays, and Cive patients we re eventually treated for tuberculosis . 1 Sights, Sounds Elate Visitor By HUGH A. MULLIGAN •~s.-i.iw ... , ....... CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -The Frisbees t.Jtat soar in the rail -tra la , go Illini, go -have much to do with the thing called higher ~ucalion in America, tra la. They s how the free spirits of academe are no w n oating on a higher spiritual plane No one this early in the semester is locking the· president in his office or burning down the Air Force recruiting head- quarters. He re at lovely. s pacious University of Illinois campus, the Navy ROTC students m ove pea,tefuJ. ly about, unwarred on by the pacifists. The only belligerent sign I saw dur· ing a weekend sojourn in this rarified intellect\Jal air was in a window above a campus dining hall : "NUl<E THE SALAD BAR." One of the fraternity houses was festooned with s treamers suspicious· ly akin to toilet tissue, but I was told this was not a manifestation of ridicule by a rival organization but some hymeneal rite having to do with wooing co·eds , who are no longer called that. lo an autumnaJ disco hop. There were certainly som e s plen- did prospects about for that sort of recruitment ONE OF THE NICEST things about the advances made by the women's m ovem ent in providing equal r ecreational facilities for all sexes is how much their efforts have improved the girl·watching situation. Golden prairie daughters playing touch football or chasing a Frisbee on the greensward of old alma mater cut a more pleasing figure in those slit·leg trac k shorts than in the dreary faded denims or yesteryear. It's a delight to walk across the playing fields of a modern university and watch these healthy specimens glowingly exe rc ising their equal rights. Beats a s uffragette parade any day A MODERN UNIVERSITY, of course, is a pla ce where the legislature and the administration go to thJ? limit of their r esources in pro- viding computeriied labs and lecture halls with aJI the latest audio and vis· ual ajds so the trendy. with·it modem instructor can lead his students out of doors and bold his seminar on a large rock, provided free by nature or in· eluded in the original land grant that began the college. That's called a diversified tutorial psychometric expe rie n ce. and it works best when the mosquitos aren't around. Other things had c ha nged besides scholastic feminine attire since last I wandeTed at large in the groves of academe in *e seething 60s and sur· ly 70s. Bicycles now outnumbered sports cars. motorcycles and pickup trucks, and maybe even book bags. Guitars were still in abundance, but I dido 't see anyone humping a sitar or leaning into a fiageoletor a four·fing~r tipple flute. A NUMBER OF students bad• brought their horses to school. which may be traditional on a campus like this where the cornfields back up to the tennis courts, or m ay be another ramification orthe energy crisis. Anyhow , a well ·rounded equestrienne present s a more pulchritudinous rearward prospect when viewed from the dock, croup and gasldn ol some elegant steed than when 1ripplng the midriff of some helmeted handlebar freak from the buddy seat of a Honda. Several memben of tbe journalism faculty told me that student concen- tration this year wu at an all-\ime hllb in their uperience. I eueu It would have to be, Judtinl from the brain-damaging' amplified hard rock pourlnl forth in 'a catacylyam ol con- cussive fury from almost every dorm window. I saw a number of schol&r1 10 by wearinl earphone•, but I couldn't de· termlne wtletMr they were tunlq in or tuninl out. The earlaPI resembled tbo1e nolH alle11uatou we cor· ' ,, respondents in Vietnam had to wear on _\h!L decks of aircraft carriers when they we re launching flight operations and the j ets we nt; scream· ing off lhe exploding catafalque. I HAD A CHANCE lo witness slu· dent concentration firs t hand 9n Saturday night. when my researtwl took me to something called the Zodiac C lub, an o ff .c ampus laboratory for anatomy majors and life c lass art students that aJso draws some patronage from the architec- ture and engineering schools. The pneumatic star t\Jrn. as a m at· ter of fact . did seem to contradict some basic principles of stress and cantilever design when s he reduced her wardrobe to the legal limits . Clinically speaking, her pectoraJ pro· file was much wondered al and ad· mired by. the undergraduate seekers a fter mammatocumulus datum , although a dissident e le ment in the lectur-e hall kept calliqg out for someone called "Sunshin~ Granola," who never did show up. Budding behavioral psychologists no doubt profited from this vulgar display of rampant rhinestone sex- is m on a strobe· lit runway. Anyhow. to give this fine un· iversity its inte llectual due, the lines at the cash register in the textbook basement of the student book store far o utstretched anything the pom m ovie house or the local pool ball could attract. The handsome under· ground , undergrad library could have hWlg up an S.R.O. sign. SCHOOL SPIRIT seemed to be back in fashion, too, especially among the female scholars. Everywhere you went on campus, the word Illinois was spelled out across a pleasing promon· tory of T·shirt. And great anxJety wu reflected in cafeteria conversation and in the headlines of the Illini, the cam· pus daily newspaper. over the eligibili. ty of the new hot-shot quarterback un- der Big Ten ruJes. <The quarterback has since been rated eligible). I was told that the chap, a B·plus student. had suborned the system in some way by playing hookey from ·the locker room for a year and act· tually going to class or some such athletic effrontery. This shows how intellectual ferment has accelerated on campi around the land s ince pedagogues first pioneered extension credit courses in jogging, fly casting and wok pot distilling for jocks under contract. Property Divided SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -Unmar· ried couples who agree to share their personal property while living together must divide it evenJy wher. they separate, the state Court or Ap- peals has ruled. The court upheld a district court ruling dividing the 1 jointly owned property of Bernabe Dominguez and Esther Cruz, both or Los Alamos. Sam Brown, director of the federaJ volun· teer agen cy AC· TION. has confirmed that he is resigning in or!r to return to his -ti me base of Color o. Officials Blamed For Riot SANTA FE. N .M (AP ) -Gov . Bruce King says be intends to pus h for changes in the s tate's correc tions policy in response to a report that a hard·line attitude by officials help ed s park a February riot at the s tate penite ntiary in which 33 inmates died. King said he would like officials to have more authority to re. ward inmates for good behavior. That could be achieved through more flexible policies on s en· tencing. p a role and prisoner classification, he said. The r e port, issued last week, said that the groundwork for the riot was laid four or five years ago when re · habilitation progr ams wer e cut and inmates wer e coer ced i nto "snitching" on other convicts. The re port said many of the in· mates killed in the riots were slain for being in· formants. The report wa s ch a llenge d by Clyde Malley, who was warden five years ago. Malley, contacted in Austin, Texas, said rehabilita- tion programs had not been cut. • l'al<1 Advertisement 'Real •Y Cf:state DONOVAN CU WFOID REAlTOlt CURIOSITY SEEKERS If you Intend to Im· plant a "For Sale by Owner'' sign in your front" yard, be prepared for the l nev ltable ''curiosity seekers''. You'll probably spend more time tramping through the house with curiosity seekers than showing It to firm pro- spects. Your "For Sale l>y Owner" sign tuves you open to •If types of peo.. pie and pn:ibfems. For example, a visitor may present an Offer to buy on which he doesn't In- tend to folloG!t through. You may make plans bued on ltCC~lng It, only to INrn that the "prospect" had no In - tention of completing the agreement. A Realtor has the ex- perience to unmask the Insincere offer and turn It away before it does any harm. In fact, the presence of a Realtor usually will discharge any attempts of that sort. He will qualify prospects in advance and allow only those who are definitely pro- spective buyers -not curiosity seekers -to Inspect your hOme. -::J.~::-.~~ •• --.. -__ ,,.. --...... - -...... -..,, .. ·--------·-··-···--.. ·· The center . whic h made the recommenda· lion in its Morbidity a nd M ortality W eek l y Report. cited an out· break of tuberculosis in 1978 at a nursing home in Oklahoma. The case, re ported by the S te phens County <Okla.) Health Depart· ment, involved a 68· year.old resident who contracted the disease. About 71 percent of the residents housed in the same wing had positive tuberculin s kin tests. compared with 34 per· cent of those housed in other wings, the CDC said. THE FINDINGS ii· lustrated the potential for trans mission of tuberculosis among in- st i tutionalized people suc h as those in prisons or nursing homes, the report said. Tuberculosis in nurs · ing home residents is particularly difficuJl lo diagnose because the re· sidents are us ually elderly and often have other chronic diseases which· m ask th e symptoms o r tubercul06is, the report said. For that reason, new admissions should be given both chest X-rays and two-step tuberculin skin tests, the CDC said. ALTHOUGH a positive skin test does not always mean the pa· tient bas an' active case of the disease, "patients whose tests are positive and.or whose X-rays are cons istent with tuberculosis should be thor«fughly evaluated to exclude c urrent dis · ease," the report said. Patients with positive skin tests and negative chest X·rays who have not received treatment for tuberculosis s hould then ''be carefully monitored for symptoms suggesti n g tuber · c ulosis," the report said. Periodic chest x. Now more than ever you need th• Information printed every day 1n the •1.-u~1S"'j•4"1tr.iil!"!ll After the Oklahoma woman was hospitalized in~~ust 1978 with a said. The s kin test was signi(icantly highe r for the patients in the iiiiiiiiiiii ... -. ~- Need $10,000? It's Yours For , Just 5180.18 a f1onth! When you need a larger loan. your house may hold the answer. We can often help .....;th a homeowner loan. Count on us. Other f am ilies and busin~ have for over 65 years. On a $10,<XX) loan, monthly payments are for Ila months at an annual per- centage rate uf IXJX'l't. Total of payments: $21.62 I ,fj). We'll find a way to help. Call us today. NO POINTS. NO BROKER FEES. COMME"CIAL C"£DIT CQR.PORATION @ ~c:\ ~ flfl(lnc1o\I ~rvo<e o( \::I c:;f CONTf/Ol DATA CORJ'OR,.ATION A loan of $.'>.<XX> and over must be secured by a combinat1on of real and pel"!".Onal property tlJ\I'•"''" ,,,,. LEN DER COSTA \JE:-\.\ •TiO E. li1L rm·1 •11l;>.p,700 ll LJ \Tl\CTO\ IH:.•\\.11 • IWIS IJoldr·n \ es1 't.•8 17-7771 i\lfSSIOi\i VIEJO • 21.l'J5 .\lwia Parkway. "u11e 2F. • 770-2651 Alicia Tuw11 Pl.1.w SANTA Al\A • 1221EJ!>t171h ::>1ree1 •5 ~7·5871 SHEEPSKIN SEATCOVERS FREE s11 •• ,, .. ,.. sturt... • .... , c••1r1 wHtl •·~ ,.ir ef ..... _,.... ... s..t. DOLIN SHEEPSKIN SEAT COVERS 17431 BROOIHURST, FOUNTAIN VALLEY ~~~~:AT '• 964:St 61 =• Genuine sheeos k 1n sealcovers i..eeo<> you cool and dry in tile summe< ano warm 1n lhe winter A ltne aual1ty oroduct !hat woll wear feel and looli gond all year round Nothing has ever been made Illa! really works !Ike sheeosk1n 2• MONTH WARRANTY ON AU SEATCOVERS FREEINSTAU.ATION WITHIN MINUTES AUO MADI FOS TRUClfS. YAMS AHO P\.AHES HMl YOUI COMYIM84CI HOWOf'ltf TUIS. & THUIS. UNTIL 1:00 r .M. --------------AIOUT AIOUT . 1 s189G•EA' I 9 DINNER (') ' O Good tor ll'l!H pieces ot juicy, golden brown Kentucky C Fried Chicken, plus single servings ol cole sit•'. ~ mHMd potatoes end gravy, end e 1011. Llmll two offer• 0 P1f coupon per cu11ome1 Custom11 peya 111 1ppflc1 • IZ bltHIHllX. Oller ••P•IH October 12. 1980. 821 S6 Aft SUPER. 9-t7DINNERI Good 10<, twelve plec11 ot lulcy, golden brown Kentucky Fried Ch\c;ken, wllh six 10111, plus your choice of tltlltf e taro• cote slaw or 1 large mathed potatoea, and e 1mell grevy. llmll two oilers per coupon per cullomtf. 828 Cu1tomer p1y1 111 1ppll<1ebfe Hitt tax. Offer .. p1re1 Oclobtf 12. 1980. Prlc:H may very I I .,.,. tlclpetlng 1oc111on1. Good only In Southern Calll0tnl1 wflete you '" Ille Colontl'a lact Window blnntf. z 0 Q. ~ 0 (.) NEWS FEATURES Monday, September 29, 1980 ™'Ly PILOT Al If ¥our Sore ~hroat Worries MD, Pay Heed By Oil. Pt:Tt;a STt;lNC&OHN Dur Dr. Stt'lenollt•: I remembf!r th•t a rew y~ars aato. wht"n l "'llS a kuJ 11 m now• 23 year oltl 1notheroftwo> havm~ a a.ort' t~roat wasn't a b11 deal You'd take :i.om(' uspir1n, stuy home from school for 11 day or l!.O, 1uu.• atoon your way But our peditttr1c1an 1>t'4•m:. to tak.-1t too enous ly It ut all duubHul, ht• tnblStli on taking a lhn>Bt cult urt• Jk 's ufn ud ol . t n •p throat lsn 't he bt-1ng too 1·aultou.<> • Mrs.~ 0.-ar Mrs. Q.. ll ' n:.turaJ to wond~r why so many culturt's urt• n1•1·t·:-sar , r , l)t'<'1ally wht>n rr• 1>'1rt~ l'(111u• ba\·k m•gut '' 1• and lab ff't!S •re so high Y \'t. I th111k) ou1 tloctor 1s vluy\n" 1t saf.-Makm.r lh., d1 L1g11oi.11> o( :.lrcp thro.11 b' l>V tnJ)tomi. and 'lien!> <ilone i n 't olwa' i. J)lh~lhlt> Tht< rno1>t n 1mmon r au:.t•i-of i.ore throat art' Are1L~Pd Singer J e rry L ee Lewis has been or - dered by a court to stay away from his estran ged wife , Jaren, of Me mphis, who has accused him of beating her. Women Can Halt Risk Of Tampon slrep\()('O('c11 l p~arynat1t1s , viral vh11ryng1tls and in· 1·r~c:UoW1 mononllclcol'.lb Out the cau.se11 of at l~ust l hatf lhv cust•s ol 1111n• throat are u1,known (" r WHAT'S IMt-Ok TANT IS n l AT t:AaLY tr~at- mtiol {'an vr••vt•nt rht'unwt1c fovcr anct the refore pot t'DIHIJ rht•IJIOUll<' ht'Llrl 1Ji~tltlSC Tht• n 11k ur UI Utf• rht'llmllh(' fev~r Ill greateat hct wt•1m lhc Ujlt!1111f 5 und 25 y1•ars, 1u1d slrnply "look · 1n.i' ul ttw th rout dm•lln t ulwuy f(l ve the doctor a lea.'t on m .ikll\I( th1· 1·11r11·1·1 du1icnos11t If thertl(s m u<'h Nlr .. r> 1uf•·•·t11111 orounll . s11 11 wt1mc•:c at rn1tkt'b .:u11cl "'OM.' lo ~1v1• lrt•uln wnt l'V1•11 IH·fort• llw rei.ul ls 1.( th1• l hruut r ult urt-an• n•1)(1rl..<l l\rcualut~ to AnlhtHI)' DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE Komaroff, M D (JAMA 4/3/78), acceptable treatment regimens adults are: penicillin G benzathine, 1.2 million units Intramuscularly; oral penicillin V potassium. 250 mg four limes a day for 10 days; and e rythromycin, 250 mg four limes a day or 500 mg twice a day for 10 days. HE FOVND THAT TETRACYCLINES and sul- fonamides are Jess effective in preventing rheumatic fever . Be especially suspicious of possi- ble strep infection if the sore throat has lasted more lhan six days. Whal I have been saying, Mrs. Q .. as that your doctor 1s aware of the possibility of overlooking strep throat and is taking precautions to treat it ll 's easier to "pass off" a sore throat as "nothing" than to take ste ps to combat it. Be thankful your doctor believes in prevention. · MEDICALETrES I For Mrs. V.: It's Uk:ely that what you've been• hearing about as a new treatment of acne is ··vitamin A acid." rt is applied tolhe skin dlreetly as a lotion an~ causes peeling. Y~ur family docto_r ~'l dermatologist will know about 1t. You can obtam 1l only by prescription. As for using vitamin A by mouth often r ecommended in treating acne -we are notsosureitiseffective. • • • For Mr. 8 .: For exercise. especially as you have mild hypertension, you wouJd be better off taking long walks than weightlifting and doing isometrics straining by push ing your bands together, pushing away from a door -all producing needless strain on the circulation. Such exercises often raise the blood pressure. --- -ID -I We're unique Brand names for the MO'>I ~r (lrl's occa!-.1011alh SYRACUSE , N .Y . (AP ) -U.S. Surgeon Gene r al Jul i u s Richmond says women can avoid risk of toxic shock s yndrome if they stop using ta mpons "If a ny wome1n has any questions about her use of tampon:-., s he should get in touc h with her phy s ic i an ,'' Richmond s aid in a speech at t he Upstate Medical Center. "Thert! are other producls that s h e c an use i f s h e does n't wish to use lam · pons. A olll'r ·-•• win~-.. bur llH'~· <lon·r l'ompan· ro \1a r-... J 1. 111 .... ~ \\'1· do n I !1;1\1° ,\:> ~t\ \\"('t'kh· ..,,t]('~ ~ ~ l ... 'l o r ;pl·c·1,tf entire family and home. J\1 Mar .... JwJb . 1u:-.1 ,\1>01 11 t '\'I 'r'I I h II\~ \"Ol I 0lJ I It 't'<I I.., . 1·1111\·(·1111·nth urnk r 111 11· .,, ro1 1I. Yflu 11 ii11d .1 lttll l11H' o l hra 1 rel nanw 11H·11..,w 1·ar· llll!-."-{'!'. clllcl Jlllll Of~· la"liions. llllgt·ne uncl I What's the secret behind Marshalls Tlwn 1 ... 1111 ....,"' 11·1 n1 I'·" 1 ........... ,,, \till.,,,, 11 ........ l>c I' 11111 11·111 ..,,,,,, IJ1 1u·r.., 11111\'r t I w11 11 wr1 I 1. tr lei , ... ,· .a -..1'"""" .iltt ad .1 11cl P·'~ 11 all f '' 111· <hll l lll\t'I " \\.Ill lllll tl tlit· T HE DISEASE, which has killed at least 29 women since 1975. has been linked to use o f tampons . bu t r e searchers a re trying to determine just what the Unk m eans The Center for Dis· e ase Control has re· cei ved re po rts o( 299 cases of toxic shock .this year and the Food a11d Drug Administrat ion has warned women to a void using Procter & Gamble's Rely brand. which has been linked mos t often to the dis· ease. Procter & Gamble last week recalled the produ ct from stor e shelves. DOCTORS ARE con· fused by the relationship of the disease to tam- pons. Richmofld s aid. "In the process ol im- proving them. they may ha ve introduced a ha rm f ul ag e nt ," Richmond said. R ec Class Signing Up Fall classes in every. thing from aerobics to puppy care continue to be offered by the Laguna Beach Recrea- tion Department. · Registration will be open until lhe classes fill or begin. recreation of· ficials said . Further in· formation may be ob· tained by calling 497.tJn, ext. 201. It's Tea Time t . /#' J µur<'h.1!-.<.·:-..0t1r ' f '' ,. al I 1f.. r mC'r('hci ndi~· . • .... \\'ii\' ... pl l( ~·( "' (I ~111> ... 1.1111 ldl san 1 11.~ .... Sollll' :-.t nn . ...., ollt'r 0 11h wo1111·11 ...., lu..,hion~: \\'l' olkr hra11d na11u· .... !Ctr tilt' c·1111n· 1.111111\· \ Quality. selection and savings It rna\· -,urµn'>t.' yo u 10 d1..,con·r t lifll \\'(' offl'r t Ile ~rn1c-sdecl ion of l>rc111cl name l<l-;hio11:-. vou'JI li11d in ck p,in nwnr and SJ.>t'('l;tlty -.,wn ·~-·n1c cl1lt1·r l 'ltc"t' bin rlw -xl\111}..!..,' Arni \\·irll rn·"· ..,h 1pnwn1:-. arn\1 11~ regL1lc1rly In l'.tl 11 111 w ol 0 11r -;ton.· .... \·111dl li11d a l<1rg1· sdl'('lio11 ol tll<· mc1~1 up In <btt· la'>l1 IOllS at '-<l\i llg'> LAKE FOREST .J<'< c..,~onc . ...,: \\"c 111 wn ·.., la rgcr ~l/.l' '>pc>rh\\"t',lr. 111lw11...:. 111ddl1·r-·;. n11cl d11lclrC"1 1·:-. """" r. Ian 11 h-1<11 11 wt -.1 r. d11111c...,11c ~ .111cl ~ii I\\"<! n · Marshalls every day savings .. Y<111 c·.111 1111<1a1>.argd111 .11 '>WI w ~1 on· .... 0 11 on·a..,iu11 .'\t ,\1;1r ... haJI.., \'OU lll'\"er l\~m: to wail. \'ou'll lmd ··.min~.., 11n rack airer rack ol brand n.i111t· 1a ... l 11o n .., 1'\'l'f'I" dCI\'. :)2 \\01·ck..., ;1 \'1·;11 /\t Mar ... i1a11 ..... ,·ultw .... m · 11 It' r11k. llOI I lit• l''n·p1 I( Ill °"""'""11 l>t'l!"'" Tla:tt ·...., "fw 11 \\I t .11 1 111 1\ I Ill' -.,,111w 11wn I 1.a11cf 1..,1 .11 lmu·r \\'l l•1l1· .... .1l1· 1J11t 1· .... \1.111111.11 11111, ....... d i .11 l11\\1·r wl 1n lt ..... tl1 · Jl llt l '" d 11 11 111.! 1I 11· ..... " .... (I II I H't. ll , ..... , • I I 1 t • \ \I. < ,, 1·1·p n 1d1at1 ·d 1111..,..,l'd o1 dt'll\t'r\ d .111 · 111 111·1 ti 111 r11.1 k 1· l 011111 1111 1111• 111 ·\l "I ,\..,1111' 11111 Our services 1\1 \l.11 .... 11.111 ..... 1111r < 11 ... t<111wr .... 11.1\1 .al\\•I\' l<11 111tl lliv llt'...,I q 11.d 1l\ .11 llu 111\\•'"l p 11<t" H 111 1l1o1l -...11111 tl1t ·1111h .td\.1111.tl..!<' 111 "''1)1'111111..'. \l.1 r .... l1;tll ..., II l11 r .... 111111· n-.i...11 11 , .• ,11 !1.1\1· lll n·11ll 11 \ I ll 11 p I II t Ii .I "I' I> I 11 t I.! 11 I 11 I 11 l' -... 'I\ II I' d c·...,i, \\ 111! lilt· l"l"J..!hlt 'l n ·1 1·q 11 \\"lllllll I 1 1111 11·1·11 d. I\ ..... 1111 I " 1 11 rl"l 1111t I \ ·1111 r lll11111' .\11cl .ti \l.ir .... 1J.1lh. \1111 ll rwu·1 lid\.,. I t 1 p.r...... l l p ; l !.! I , .• , I I> 11 \ ; I I ()",, 1kp11-,1t \\rll l111ld \"11111 fllll<ll.t"'' lw 11(> 111 .m d,I\..., Oil 111 11 J,1~,l\\,I\ p l.111 Milirsh~llll~ LAGUNA HILLS MISSION VIEJO ...... a Hills G1-and Opening 'lb11rsday, October2 at9:30a.m. IAV11111F5 n II 5 The Affiliates of the Laguna Beach Museum or Art will hold its an· nual membership tea and open house Tuesday from 2 lo 4 p.m. at tbe museum, 3'11 Cliff Drive. Furtber infor,maUon may,. be obtained by calling 494-6531 . a.======= Brand N~ for Les~J------0 LAGUNAIULLS: OakbrookVillageonAvenidade la Carlota, take , ~:~v,,l~ ;:;s~ • El Toro Road exit off San Diego Freeway {Rt. 5) you need aimtS to ~ ..ery ~.the ,,rnmamu (ad1acent to Laguna Hills Mall) · ~~ ~ ' Ll·--~,~---4?~~~-------------1:·~...::...:~...:__,;;.::._ __ ~~----~--~~.__~~~~--~~~~~~~~-r-~~~~~-=-=-~--;;:-~ ROW OF VACANT BUILDINGS TUAN BENTON HARBOR, MICH., INTO GHOST TOWN 0nc~1P9roua Munk:lpaltty a Crumbing SheH of Abandonment, Red Ink Really Rehabilitation They Don't Escape From Venezuela Prison CARACAS, Venezuela. CAP> -.No.body breaks out of El Junquito, Latin Amenca s first low security prison. Instead , people break in. The compound -which houses 400 inmates serving time for every crime -is flanked by hillside slums, rows and rows of brick box-houses and wooden shacks. "Hill people" have been breaking in to steal eggs from the prison chicken coop and tools from the wor.kshops. In places where t~e shan~~es almost overhang the prison waJls, children climb over to play inside. "Mf1ST OF THE INMATES com e from there " said warden Luis Augusto Sayago, sweep- ing hls arm in an arc to take in the surrounding hillsides. "They can't get away from it." El Junquilo is an experimental low-security prison that selects its .inmates o~ the ~asis. of personality tests, not crimes. The first of its k~d in Latin America, it has attracted some attention from prison officials in Argentina, Columbia and Guatemala. The reaction so far, according to Sayago, has been positive. Part of what keeps the inmates inside the com - pound, said one of the few guards out.side the low walls is the fear or being transferred to the nearby Mode'l Prison, known a mong tbe prisoners as "The Other Face of He ll." downtown theater. On We dnesdays a nd Sundays , visiting days, the little shops a re filled with inmates' children. "They bring them here, where they can say. ·nus is where Daddy works,"' Say~go said. "They don't like to go to the cells on family days. It m akes them feel like prisoners." The warden encourages the inmates to talk things over with him, even perceived problems with the system that put them behind walls. On a stroll around the compound, he en- courages Vicente , a 20-year -old accused of murder, to articulate the faults or a system that has already kept him waiting more than a year without trial. "THE IUDGES ONLY work when they want to. It's a tyTanny, ''Vicente said. "But." he shrugged, "at least while we're here we can try to get ahead." Vicente proudly dis· played a painting for sale, of two chained and straining hands. Sayago said he wishes he could take his prisoners -who he tends lo call "boarders" -out or the shadow or their neighborhood, an environ- ment he considers depressing. But he also has a motto: "The key to rehabilitation is not the place, but the mind." WORLD I NATION City Left Shambles • m • White Fligld, Mismanagement Take Toll BENTON HARBOR, Mich. (AP> -Benton Harbor la rotting. The downtown area or lhe once-prosperoua rac- tory town nestled on the shore or Lake Mlchican is a crumblin• shell of boarded-up windows and emp- ty parking Iota. Only three stores are open on Main Street. Security guards roam corridors in city schools, which are under a rederal court order to de- segregate. UNEMPLOYMENT CLAIMS nearly 26 percent of the town's workers . Plants stand empty and silent: Whirlpool Corp. is the only major employer left in town. In less than a year, Benton Harbor has stag- ge red through rive "payless paydays," postponing payroll• until state-approved loans came through or willing merchants paid their taxes early. The town's plight can be traced back through two decades of "white flight" and civic mis· management. BENTON HARBOR'S 15,0M population is 80 or 90 percent black, a reflection or what happened when the town, in an unfortunate coincidence, began an urban renewal project just as racial violence ripped through America's cities. The project took over a large area which had been home to most of the city's black population. The displaced scattered, and Benton Harbor's while residents fled. Left behind were the blacks who couldn't move away, more and more of them out or work as the factories closed and the national economy suf- fered . Benton Harbor's woes only worsened through the years because or fiscal mismanage- ment. That problem, in tum, was heightened by political infighting on the nine-member city com- mission. "THEY (THE COMMISSIONERS> would ap- prove a budget , which was a completely useless document, and then do what they wanted with city funds," said Paul McCauley, the city's fourth manager in the past five years. McCauley, 45, came to Benton Harbor in March. several months after the city took its first step toward reorganization by hiring a new financial director , Bryce Weeks. "What I found here was unbelieveable," said Weeks, 50, a retired Army 'finance officer who took the Benton Harbor job arter holding a similar post in suburban Denver. "There was no cash, no investments and a $400,000 overdraft." Weeks said. "You couldn't find this bad a financial example in a college text· book. Nothing was routine, everything was a crisis." McCauley said his predecessors paid the salaries of an inflated workforce with federal re- venue-sharing funds intended for physical im· provements. No money was budgeted for capital improvements and nepotism was commonplace in city hiring, he added. Weeks agreed. "Shortly after I aot here, I looted out ol my of. flee one day and I saw two feet atJcklnt o;ut from under the copylne machine." Weeka said. "It wu the former city mana1er, Mel Farmer, chanaln1 the loner 1n the machine. Thil la tbe man reaponal- ble for running the city." McCauley and Weell:a have made some chan1es, cutting travel by city colnmiaslonen, increulna water rates and traffic ticket fines. They have laid ·Ke flf'' lier,,.,,..,,,. of flw ,,.,.,..~ .. llw ,wopl•• deaf rfudd11"f ...,.,. II #Ollleteflt-rP ef#f•. • off 110 or the city's 2SO empl<!Yees and ~ to re- or1anize the town's seven departments tnto three. Voters recently approved a tax increue of six mills. "I'm impressed with McCauley," said Leon Gi- deon, 78, president of Barentaen Candy Co. and a past major and city commissioner. "U the com- missioners leave him alone, he could do a 1ood job." GIDEON BLAMES MANY or Benton Harbor's problems on Michigan's welfare laws, which dole out checks to new residents shortly after they ar- rive in the state . Benton Harbor la 1n extrem·e southwestern Michigan, near both the Indiana and Illinois borders. "We got the bottom of the barrel the people that couldn't make it somewhere else," Gideon said. "But r don't blame them . I'd go somewhere else, too if I knew I'd get more money." Another problem is the makeup of the city com- mission, says Terry Kelly , editor of The Citi1en, a weekly newspaper geared to black readers. "YOU HAVE A CITY that's 80 lo 90 percent black with 50 percent on welfare and a city com· mission that's 60 percent white and 100 percent middle class." she s aid. De velope r John Dickey, who moved from Chicago and bought several downtown buildings here, says he's optimistic about the town's future. He points to a recent order by -Gov. William Milliken that a ll s tate offices must relocate downtown, and the conversion of an eight-story hotel on Main Street to a federal Job Corps train- ing center. "I've been to cities and seen the rehabilitation. I know what can happen," Dickey said. "All we need lo do is get the people back down here -and they 're coming." Refugees Decline BANGKOK , Thailand (AP> -The number of Vietnamese refugees fleeing to other Southeast Asian nations by sea declined in August for the third consecutive month, the U.N. High Com- mission on Refugees said. ----.-------------------------------- BUT ANOTHER REASON is that the prisoners can learn trades and study up through university level while they serve time -things they had no chance to do when they lived on the hillsides. "1bey come here sometimes not even knowing bow to eat with a fork and knife," Sayago said. 1be warden's current project is setting up a program at El Junquito to teach neighborhood peo· pie how to read and write. He said he believes adults who would feel humiliated by Ministry of Education instructors would not mind learning from inmates. WREN SA YAGO TOOK over El Junquito five years ago, he tore down the solitacy co~ine~ent cells and let prisoners who could get outside lo~s start small businesses. Now there are rows or tiny shops that sell paintings, pottery and jewelry made by the inmates, as well as two large garages for fixing cars. Your Group Need Funds? If your nc:m-c>rof1t orgamzat1on needs help raising funds. call Huntington Center to mail Community Help details. Phone 897·2533 Work is mandatory , as is the three-hour study Thf ~' swop met>I on 1r..- period most evenings. . OronQI' Coos1 IS fourld evf!fy cloy In their spare time, prisoners lake part m •n •he closs1f14;° ods.'n '"" cultural activities. Recently they put on a play -,, mG!ttll "To Do Away with the Judgment of GOO '~ _a:_~~---~2 5678 r ~~'l3:\,5 ls/and a~~~t toFFashfon • Sty/ ee ree 0 e and Ballet Si<. mea~o:::~:ti~ns in :he w111 be e 0·. lus there a11ailab1: ,~~~ntt I run the . u o too1 s1.·~1ant Ski Ramp ; • · ,.., instruct ~ Champion . ors and be on h Skiers Will r)' ·. and for sna . P . attent10 t ,, .. c1a1 ,. n o Your Skiing. MAMMOTH SWEEPSTAKES Enter the SPtcia/ F , Ski Sweepsra1< ashion Island Which include :~ ~o win Prizes eluding sic/ rental~ Pl to Mammoth in-~ Showtlmes • Frida. e~sons and much m am -1:00 _ 3:00 ~· rtOon . 3:~ _ 5. ore. Pm. Sunday, 12:l) :"°2·.e,m: Saturday 11·00 ·tlV • 3:l) Pm. ' . 13~~~ between Jamboree and MacArthur Boulevards. .. . . ( Cambridge Lf!SS than 0.lmg tar Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. L-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Box: Less than 0.1 ms tar. 0 f'llUlp Morrll lK. 19'0 Lna thin 0.1 mg "t•:' 0.01 nicotilll IV. Plf Ciglflttl by FTl Mfthod. I '· 'e st -l I I I I •l•N•S•l•D•E·:~·S~t·oc~k.s11111·C~o~m~i~cs~~ ............................................... ~.-~~~~ •Movies ·felevlslon ONLY PILOT •• It's Two La•ghers In a Row for Ritms But Next unday Doesn't Figure to Be as Easy Sunday's Scores "> JOH iu;v NO Oll ... O.it•~lt94\i." EA~I HUTllF.HfOHO, NJ ll 'or flcint tht> Hams an• buck Grantt>d. they may not be al lhe nm«> level they wcr'' a~ Inst l'1tt:iburah in Super Ro"'I '(IV. but the) 're ('trt•IOI)' better lhlU\ the kia111 that playt'<i the (int t "'0 Wt'i'ksoCthe N fl, i.c• ·on The Rams. who beat up on hi.111.- Green Bay. 51 2\, nint• da s ago. had another relebrat1011 party Sunday against the equally hapleios Ne"' York Giants, who put up hulc oppos1t1on in th• face of a dev astaung 28 7 set back "We're definitely 1mprovt.-d. .ud Coach Ray Malavas1. who ma> have un der tall'd h111 <itnt1•rrwn1 a bit 'Wt 'rt' not tht N8ml· lcam Wt' wen· lhrcfl we•t•k11 ago THREE W•:l':k S AGO lh l' H1m1t1 wt•rc stlll ~tvinlC through th..-motions of pr~ uoson "'hen thr los t to Detroit four days latt>r thf'y tnt-d to regroup IA(IUJnSl i·amptt Ray and ali;o ftoll i.hort It took u pair of !>ub SOO lt•arrui Lo get the R11m:r. cm tht· right t·f'l.l<'k But as Jar k "Rt') nol<t.' l'atmnzrlnt-il · lwi1 wins am two ""'"1' no matter whom tht•y 're agatn11l l'he~ 're I Grt.>t!n Hay and New York Giant~ 1 maybe nol two of the stronger lec1ms in the league, but the two victories .srt-what we ncedtd " said Reynolds ··Nett week will be a better jud1e though of where we 're at right now." Next Sur,day the Rams' opponent ls the Wt>slem Division leading San Francisco 49ers It's almost a cinch they won't roll over and play dead like tht! Packers and Giants ed quarierback Phil Simms. who almost sinele-handedly destroyed the Rams in the Giants' 20-14 win at the Coliseum last year. Rams 28, NY Giants 7 Atlanta 20, San Francisco 17 Miami 21, New Orleans 16 San Diego 24, Kansas City 7 Pittsburgh 38, Chicago 3 Cleveland 34, Tampa Bay 27 Dallas 28, Green Bay 7 Houston 13, Cincinnati 10 Detroit 27, Minnesota 7 ON mE OTHER HAND, though, the 49ers are going to meet a team that ap. pears to have its offense and defense in total sync. With that eame on their minds, the Rams' defense came to play, using a number of different formations to throw off lbe second-&>ear QB. Defensively, the Rams smolhered the Giants, particularly their running game C 1f you can consider 62 yards on 18 carries a running game). and that placed con- siderable pressure on the Giants' talent- "It's very 'complicated," said Jim Youngblood of the alignment used. "lt was basically a matchup of formations. Let's just say we had a good game plan and everyone hustled their butts off." St. Louis 24, Philadelphia 14 Baltimore 35, NY Jets 21 Seattle 14, Washington o Tonight's Game Denver at New England (Channel 7 at 6 o'clock) BY HUSTLING, the Rams held Simms to only 10 receptions in 23 attempts for a •NFL Roundup, Page 83 • Summaries, Page 84 <See RAMS, Page 83) A Haunted House That's What SD Stadi11'm Is to Lopes ' SAN DIEGO CAPl -The sun shone brightly on beautiful San Diego Stadium. but to Los Angeles second baseman Dave Lopes, the place looked like a haunted house. With one out, the bases loaded in the San Diego eighth inning and the score tied 5.5 Sunday, pinch hitter Barry Evans hit a routine popup in the direction of Lopes. But the Dodgers' second baseman, s hielding his eyes from the sun, let the ball drop in front of him and Luis Salazar raced home with the go- ahead run in a 7-5 victory by the Padres. THE INF1ELD FLY RULE was called on the • play. but Salazar dido 't hesitate once he saw the ball ttlt the ground. The loss cost the slumping Dodgers, losers or seven of their last 10 games, a chance to move to within one game or first-place Houston In the Na- tional League West. Instead, Los Angeles is two games back. Each team has six games remaining. "I've got no excuses." mumbled Lopes as he s at with bis arms folded, staring into his locker. "I don't know where it was. I don't remember. fcan,t comprehend anything right now." The loss was a blow to the Dodgers. but they're not out of the pennant race yet, according to Manager Tom Lasorda. "IT WAS A GAME we had to win," said Lasorda. "But we're s till alive. We have six to play, three of them are with the Astros." Rookie reliever Steve Howe, 6-9, was gunning for bis 18th save but wound up instead with the loss 86 the Padres rallied for four runs in the eighth after trailing 5·3. San Diego scored three times in the first in· aPw...-ning after Los Angele~ starter Bob Welch pitched The P ennant Rae~ Ho1111on Dodg•ra Cincinnati w 89 87 86 Game a l GB left 66 6 68 2 6 71 3"> 5 T1'e A•.,..tftl ... ~-le OOOGE~S t.i Home Ill Oct ) • I ·~ HOU.Ion Aw•• t ~Pl lO, Oct. 1, 1 et Sen Fren<t\co HOUSTON l•I Home Il l Sept lO Oct t J .-All•nlo A••• DI Oct l, •. S •t LO\ ArtoelH CINCINN.ATI UI Hom. ISi S~pt JO Oct 1 .-S.n D•...., ~<I l •, 5 Y'I All .... (• ' ju~y. But a three-run homer by Ri ck Monday in the fourth inning tied the game DUSTY BAKER, WHO TIED an NL record by drawing five walks. scored a run in the eighth on Pedro Guerre ro's pi nch-hit double and Joe Ferguson's infield single scored Guerrero tc make it 5·3. ROwe struck out J"erry Mumpnrey to upen tfie San Diego eighth, but Dave Winfield rJouhled to start the winning rally Randy Bass and Salazar followed with singles to make it 5.4 Howe then walked pinch hitter Craig Slimak to load the bases . Don Stanhouse replaced Howe ar 1J walked pinch hitter Broderick Perkins to force 1n lhe tying run. Evans, batting for winning pitcher Rollie Fingers. 11-9, then hit his high infield popup off Fernando Val en zu ela, who had repla ced Stanhouse Gene Richards singled in an '""urance run before the side was retired. THE RAMS' ELVIS PEACOCK FLIPS OVER GIANTS SAFETY BUD HERBERT. to two batte~, then left the game with a groin in· "That was a devastating ball to drop in a pen· nant race," sajd Padres· Manager J erry Coleman, a former New York Yankees' second baseman. John Sevano s On Rams' Faulkner EAST RUTHERFORD. N.J. -Rams assistant genera I ma nager Jac k Faulkner didn't accompany t he team on its night here Friday Instead. the burly GM was at the University of Colorado watching the Buffaloes tackle Indiana. Upon his ar· rival a telegr am was in his box at the hotel which read: "l would like lo handle ,YOur second {Mike l Trope fight if you lose 40 pounds. "Please let me know what tailor you use." Signed. Angelo Dundee The joke telegram was sent by Coach Ray Malavasi and it was in obvious ref· erence to Fa uJkner's alleged bout with the controversial player agent at Rams Park last Thursday. * • * Elvis Peacock's 8S yards on 19 carries alonJO? with his three touchdowns Sunday . tt>ll B..,.er' 'fells It AU was his biggest day as a Ram and il proved one thing: that he could run on artificialturf. The g re atest im_provement of Peacock's game. however, was that be stayed on his feet, something he'd had trouble doing on the natural grass at home and at Tampa Bay. An yway, Peacock's performance has the Ram coaching staff guardedly op· timistic. * • • Even if the Rams don't win their division. they will lead the league in one statistic by season's end -most miles traveled. Five of the Rams' eight road games this year -Tampa, New York, New England. Buffalo and Atlanta -are on the East Coast, which is brutal for traveling teams. "It sure is nice when you win game.s like this." Rich Saul was telling Kent ----- Hill after the game. "Otherwise those trips home are awfully long." ment personnel and the coaches. Special note: she still had nothing to s ay lo the press. ••• Giants joke circulating through the ••• press box : The poor people of New Jersey are going through a water shortage here. They don't even have enough water to take a bath. The Giants team, however, des pite the drought, are managing to take a bath every week. The game was so bad that the band that was performing lert at halftime .. The crowd at least had the decency to wait until the third quarter. • • * Giants rookie cornerback Mark Haynes joins a long lis t of defensive backs who are questionable tttls season. • •• The artificial turf was hard on some or the Rams. Jack Reynolds caught a seam and twisted his knee. while Rod Perry caught another seam and twisted an ankle. Neither injury is serious. ••• The upset of the week was Georgia Frontiere and her husband Dominic making the team rught to New Jersey. The Ram owner was very animated and talked freely with other manage- Haynes was burned on three or the four Rams touchdowns. His final mis· take. which allowed Drew Hill to catch a 60-yard pass at the New York four· yard line early in the third .quarter. benched Haynes for lbe rest of the game. Haynes isn't the only rookie defensive back having problems. Roland James isn't doing terrifically at New Ebl{land (See 11DS .JOKE, Page 83) DAVEY LOPES Mekn Coatty Error Reds Not Buried Yet Cincy Rallies to Avert a Homton Siooep HOUSTON CAP) -Disgruntled Cincinnati fans have bee~~n\~ing the Reda' grave all season. "Nobody we can win except us," Cin- cinnati Manager John McNamara said sarcastically. And if the struggling Reds eventually are eliminated from the National Lea1ue Western Dlvisfoo race, Houston Manacer BUI Vinion Sun- day gave them a fittinc epitaph. pitch over the right field fence for his 11th home run of the season. Singles by Jose Cruz and Alan Ashby gave Houston two more runs in the inning. Tbe other Houston runs came in the second on a grounder by Terry Puhl and in the fifth on Ashby's second RBI single . Cincinnati scored one r un in the first off Houston starter Ken Forsch when Dave Collins waited and scored on a sacrifice fly by George Foster. "The Sood teams die bard," Virdon said Sun- day after Cincinnati came back to beat Houston 8-S and prevent th~ divlslon-leadin& Aalroa from aweepine the pressure-packed aeries. "We got the quick lead, but that doesn't guarantee victory. PHILADELPHIA CAP) -The Montreal Ex- They can score runs, loo." poa were home in the friendly confines of Olympic After beinJ abut out in the f~l two eames of Stadium today, just a wffk away from a possible the series and falling behind 4·1 on Sunday, tbe first championship in the franchise's 11-year his- Reds could easily have been mistaken for dead. tory. But Cincinnati rt1ht fielder Ken Griffey re-Manqer Dick Williams and his team left vlved bis teammates with four strai1ht bits, -in· . Philadelphia Sund-.y confi$fent but not over- cludlq a two-run bome run In the flftb lnnhl• and· · confident that 1980 was their year. a 1ame-wlnnlna double in the aeventb. · The Expoe beat the Philadelph.la Phillies 8-3 The Reda left town llmplq but aWI in tbe Sunday and led the National League East by half a race. ' 11me. They came to town one-half game behind "We can'\ afford to ION any more " Griffey the PbiWes and took two of three. aald. "It'• ob"1ou} we are In trout»le. we'n1urec1 to Willlam1 thought the key was beating come out ot bere with two victories and IO home Philadelphia ace Steve Carlton Saturday. with a pntt.y 1ood shot. Bui 1CMl look at lt. we•ve ·~y we bad our ace, Steve Rogers, cot a cbaace, it's Just a little iitlimer." . ,..,r«i llld we kiiilr~ould beat them, and we ·-Thi stopn on the Hmidrdrt~-en-l>_y_'J_ob Foster of Mississauga, Ontario, says lt all u ·FOliir-:rdfts Its car diiflDj a race lD Montreal Sunday. :W.etm MCOrid uv•an Joe llor1an p U..~' WIJHt•rc~ -=-----.. Altroe alt to a fut 1tart la Houlton'• three-nm "But tJlil t.hinc could 10 rilht down to tbe'lasl tint inninC when be bit Frank Puton'• aecond day ot the season," WilUams saJd. --- .. 112 DAILY PILOT ort s Break A Cepeule Report ''°"' the Wortd ot Sport• Muncie's Parting Shot: This Team Falli~ Apart From~P.,....&cllM!I m al o_. atart. manq N or the New Orleans Salnu e • • NEW ORLEANS Wllb the team on to a dla EIJ havt! tredfd Chuck Mun<'U!, the star runnln& bull • who n.llhfd ror team ~cords but had trouble mall in& It to preCU('e Muncif wtll 10 to lhf' San Dieao Cbar1ert for an un dlaclo.ed draft choice, h wu announced Sunday "I work~ with Mm for a couple ol )'Ur& to try to make htm understand that this ts a team sport. not a n tndlvidual ont'." C'o t ch otrll Nolen said Sunday ruabt Nolan said Muncie was often latt for prar ell"t and for tu m meetin&s ··'There are a lot of people out there who work extremely ht rd to wtn," the coach saad. ··and we 're not goln(I to sacrifice those people for one individual " But Muncie said he was not disap· pointed with the tum of events. "I was s hocked but happy as hell ," MuNc11 Muncie said . "I'm going from a 0-4 team to a 4-0 contender ." He also said he does not expect tbe Saints to have a good season this year "This is not a togettaer team. lt is just falling apart.'' he said. "The team is not loose; everybody is mad at each other. Last year we had te am parties and functions together This year after our first loss everythina fell apart." .,....------Qttatr al I~ Dat1----- Aubum football coach ~ Barfield, whose 18th· ranked Tigers were crushed by 'tennessee, 42-0: "I feel kind of like Gen. Custer at Little Big Hom." M'orld-t"ha•pio11 Pl rain Our ol Rart- Mlck Kelleher'• two-run triple in the sixth in· Iii oing led Ule <.:rucago Cubs to a 3·1 victory over Pittsburgh and e liminated the World Champ- ion Pirates from the pennant race in the Nation· al League East. Kelleher 's lriple also led to the ejection of Pirate Manager Cbacll TaJUM!r and plajers Dan Parter and John Milner off the bench. Tbe Pirates lrtere angered by a 3-2 pitch on previous batter Mike O'llerry, .. wbich umpire Jerry Crawford called a ball. Kelleber's triple rubbed salt in the wounds, and Milner an· grily WUed six batting helmets. one by one, onto the field. Umpire Doll& Harvey counted on each helmet, as if to say Milner would be fined for each helmet he heaved from the-du1out ... In other Na· tio nal League actio n Sunday: Joel Yoaagblood slugged a two·run homer and Mike Scott tossed the first shutout of his career to give the Mets an 8-0 victory over St. Louis. The victory snapped the Mets' U LLEHu seven.game losing streak and gave Scott his !ir:st ~ctory of the season against one loss . . . San F~a~c1sco s scheduled game in AUanta was rained out ... Cmc1nnal1 a verted a sweep by rallying to beat Houston 8·5 ~nd M~treal !Doved into first place in the NL Eaat by beat: mg Philadelphia. 8-3. For details see stories Page Bl. Deehacn Ho•er Keeps Oriola :l&l'r Doa1 DeClace•' two-run homer lifted Iii Baltimore to a S-3 victory over Cleveland. keeping alive the Orioles' slim hopes for an American League East title. The victory kept the first-place Yankees' magic number at three. In other American League games Sunday: Bob Wataom booted Tom Brookeu' ground ball in the 10th inning, enabling pinch runner Lyu Jeees to score the winnin1 run as Detroit edged the Yankees, ... 6-5 . . . Jim Rice smashed bis 22nd homer W · and rookie Steve Crawford scattered 11 • bits as Boston defeated Toronto, 7 ·3 . . . . Oakland nipped 11(,ilwaukee, 3-2, on Dwayae Marplay's two·out, bases· loaded bunt single in the ninth inning . . . Gle1111 Adams slammed a two·run homer and Rob Wllfoa& blooped a run· scoring double in the bottom of the seventh as Minnesota rallied to defeat Kansas Ci· ty, 8-7, for their ninth consecutive victory. The loss was the eighth straight for tbe oec•MCH pla y off·bound Royals. a c lub rec· ord . . . Job Gnbb'a two-run seventh·inning homer lifted Texas past Seattle, 4-1. • Lakers tumh/,e, 113-97 PORTLAND CAP> -Billy Ray Bates led a balanced attack as the Portland Trail Blazen de- feated the Lakers, 113·97, SUD- day. night in the nightcap of a National Basketball Association exhibition double·header. In the opener, Lonnie Shelton and Paul Westphal combined for 45 points, leading the Seattle SuperSonics to a 111·113 victory over the Golden State W arriora. Bales got most of bis points ln the third quarter as the Bluen added to a 12·point advantage gained in the aecood period. Portland held Kareem Abdul· Jabbar to 12 polnta and five re- bounds and out·rebounded the defending NBA champions. 47·35. Forward Calvin Natt and Mychal Thomps on, playing center and strong forward, led the Blazers with eight rebounds each. Guard Norm Nixon led Loi Angeles with 21 points. Shelton bad a game·bigh M points and Westphal added 21 for tbe Sonics. Purvis Short led the War riors, who suffered their flrst exhibition loss, with 22 points. Rookie Billy Reld added 19 for tbe Warrion, bittlna on nine ol 11 field 1oal attempts. SOUlHCOAST DODGE SERVICE DEPT. radio PlllR' . . . .. . . . ... SPORTS BREAK I BOXING ('~H ... alr Barll fH M'IH1.,.,-·,, (.1nel .. Miracle Worker ._ er-laa• earned h1a ftnl loW'ftament UUe !I ln JO mont.ha. firln1aone·under·par11 Sunday and wtnntq by a comfortable four·•trok• maratn over 'Jae' a .... • le Na P-A' Dr o a.ol I --tournament. . . Golfln1 auperatan LH Trevla• and lleH.U-.......,.,_bad the Bob Hopa BriUah Clualc: jackpot 1tolen from under their noMt by unheralded Spaniard Jeee •aria c..au,... A bli1terln1 flllaJ.round a.. el1ht under par, by tbequlet man from Madrid took bJm to a OM·tttokt victor, at tpaom, l!n1land . o. .. UU1erfOU1htoffday·lon1ralnand a determined C'har1e bf A,.... Pal••r to fire a flnal·round 10 and wfo the World Senaon lnvttatlooal Sunday at Char· lotte . t'orm&r U.S. Open champion JtrtlJ'8 Brita overcame a 1haky i t.rt wlth three blrdles and nabbed a one-abot lead after 'he rain 11hortentld Hcond round of the LPGA Dallas tourna- -A1i Legend:-= ment Sunday · M'••rfd 'f'if If• (I IJrf•fUH fftr JfNH"" Alu Jc.es, 11lill w allina for the reality of captur· • ln1 tht' Formula One world champion.ship to sink In momcmta after winn&n1 lht' Canadian Grand Prix Sunday, said, ''lt'11 what l've been worklngforaince I - etaned drlvlnt& " Jones, who averaaed H0.004 mph, took the crash marred race eaaily, beating Willlama teammate Carto. &e•temau, lhe second·place rlniaher; across lbe finish line by 15.541 seconds. · · J 'm still find.in« it hard to believe.•' sald Jones, who has a total or 62 world championship points. "I expect I 'II be back at the hotel tall· Ing a shower before it sinks in ... Dale Earalaanlt, having boosted bis lead to 105 points on the Grand National stock cair circuit by winning the Old Dominion 500. doesn't plan to slt back and rest. ''That's not a lot with four races to go. But 1 'll tell you, we're going to go to win. We're not going to go to stroke for the points," the Chevrolet driver said after his Sunday victory at ·Martinsville Sp eedway in Virginia. "°"91 Earnhardt, who won $24 ,315, got his break wnen Uldsmobile driverCale YarbonMt&ll, who trails him lo the point standings, cut a Ure while leading on the 488th I ap. .-------Ba•f!llall Tod•fl -------. On this date in baseball In 1963: ln the final game or bis 22-year career , 42-year-old Stan MusiaJ collected bis 3,629lb and 3 630tb lifetime bits, leading the St. Louis Cardinals to a 3:2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds. On this date in 19S4 : Willie Mays' over-the-shoulder catch of Vic Wertz's drive saved the game , and Dusty Rhodes' pinch homer off Bob Lemon woo it as the New York Giants scored a 5·2, 10.inning victory over the Cleveland lndjans in the first game of the World Series. Today's birthday : Montreal Expos first baseman Warren Cromartie is 27. IJCL. l·B11t•kt-yt-Ga•t~ tHI T\l .4taturday Saturday's college football game between un· • defeated Ohio State and UCLA in Columbus, Ohio, will be televised regionally to much of the nation, ABC-TV announced Sunday. Air time in Southern California wiUbe10:30a.nr., wttb thektcllotf at 10:50a.m . Both teams have 3-0 records, with Ohio State ranked second and UCLA 16th in last week's AP poll ... The National Hockey League exhibition game between the Kings and Edmonton Oilers at Edmonton Sunday night was canceled because of an , air traffic controllers' walkout in Canada . . . Gelle Mayer de· fealed Ellet TelUclleT.6·2, 2~. 6-1 Sunday night to win the San Francisco Tennis Open. The victory moved Mayer to fifth place in the world rankings ... Welsh boxer JoluulyOweu re· mains in "disappointing condition" after undergoing brain sur- gery twice since be was knocked unconscious by Lape Plll&or during a Sept. 19 bout in LA's Olympic Auditorium .. Tbe U.S. national women's volleyball team beat its Japanese coun· terpart Sunday, lS-10, 15-17, 15-9, is.~. to even its seven·same seri~inOmiya, Japan, atone apiece. T~~Radle Following are the toP sports events on TV-tonight. Ratings are : / ./ / ./ excellent; / / / worth watching; ./ / fair; / forget It. I p.m., Chennel 7 .( ./ ./ ./ NFL FOOTBALL: Denver at New England. Announcen: Frank Gifford, Howard Cost'll and Don Meredith. With Steve Grogan at the hefm, the Patriots won their second game of the season last week, downing Seattle, 37·31 . Grogan threw three touchdown passes In the victory. Denver's Broncos had six passes Intercepted by San DleQO In losing to the Chargers, J0.13 and dropping to 1·2 In the standings. RADIO Football -Denver at New England, S:SO p.m., KN X <1ot0). Raseball -Milwaukee at Angels, 7: JO p.m., KMPC (710). \ Final Chapter? By Will GRIMSLEY LAS VEGAS (AP) -Muham- mad All, 38, slower, nabbier and battered by 1,000 battles in and out of the ring, tries lo win the heavyweight boxing c bam· pionsbip for a fourth time Thurs· day night against undefeated WBC title-bolder Larry Holmes. "Unthinkable," say the ex· perts. "Don't sell him short," counters promoter Don King. "The ma n is a worke r of miracles." HERE IN CAPSULE is the life of this a s t o unding personality: Jan. 18, 1942: A fal·cbeeke;d baby is born to a sign painter and bis wife in Louis ville. "We'll call him Cassius Marcellus Clay, Jr.," s aid the proud father. "It's a noble name." Olympic Games. Rome, Italy, 1 960 : C la y , a g e 18 , a light-heavywe ight, wins gold medal. Oct. 29, 1968: Makes pro de· but, beating Tunney Hansaller In six. F eb. 25, 1964 : Winner of 22 straight fi ghts, s tops Sonny Liston in s-eventh ro und at Miami Beach to win world title. Feb. 26 , 1964: Announces publicly he has embraced Black Muslim faith and taken nfme Muh a mma d Ali. "Muslim women wear long dresses.'' he says. Feb. 28, 1964 : Senate Antitrust Committee investigates $50,000 Clay·Llslon contract MARCH 13, 19'4: Balks at selecti ve service. Jack Dempsey calls him "Un· American." Rebuked by Martin Luther King for becoming a Muslim. Ma r ch 20, 1964 : Selective White Sox Sweep Angels From AP Oispatc:be1 Bob Molinaro and Todd Cruz each drove in three runs Sunday as the Chicago While Sox routed the Angels, 8·1, at Anaheim Stadium. Molinaro drove in the first three Chicago runs with a two- run single and a sacrifice fly and his second bit of the d ay ignited a five -nm e ighth, which was bigbligbted by Cruz's bases· loaded double. Britt Bums, 14·13, scattered four singles while striking out seven before giving way to Mike Proly in the eighth. Molinaro bounced a single up the middle with two out in the first to score Mike Squires and Harold Baines. Fred Martinez, 7..S, was the loser. The Wh ite Sox s wept the three-game series and all six games in Anaheim this season. The Angels' lone run was un· earned. Dickie Thon was safe on an error by Cruz in the bottom of the eighth and later scored on Dan Ford 's b ases -loaded grounder. servtce test shows his IQ 10 points below normal. Rejected by A.rmy. April 7, 1984: Says be may quit boxing to lake $100,000 teaching job in Egypt. Oct. 25, 1964: Marries Chicago model Sonji Roi. May 25, 1965: Stops Liston with "phanto m punch" in first round to retain title. Congress demands an investigation. July 1, 1965: Divorces Sonji Roi. FEB. 10, IMI: Draft status COMMENTARY changed to l·A. Ali says he's a conscientious objector. April rt, 1967: Refuses to ta.Ile step for military service. ''I am 90 percent preacher, 10 percenl fighter," be says. He is stripped of his title by U.S. and other ruling bodies. J une 20, 1967 : Sentenced lo five years imprisonment for draft evasion by Federal Judge. He appeals. , Aug. 17, 1967: Weds Belinda Boyd in Muslim ceremony. Oct. 26, 1970: After two yelll'S- of court suits and ring rust, re- turns to ring and stops Jerry Quarry in third round. March 8. 1971: Loses hard. fought 15-round decision to Joe Fr azier in "Fight of the Cen· tury ," JUNE ZS, 1971: Suprem e Court overturns his draft evasion con- viction. J an. 28, 1974 : Wins 15-round decision over Frazier. Oct . 30, 1974: Stops George For eman in eighth round in Zai r e , Af rica , to r egain heavyweight title. Oct . 1, 1975: Stops Joe Frazier in 14th round of "Battle of Man ila ." "Like being next to death," he says after brutal bat- tle J UNE It, 1977: Weds model Veronica Porsche. F e b . 16 , 1978 : Lo s e s heavyweight crown to Leon Spinks in split de<:ision. "I will return." be vows . Sept. 14. 1978: Ambassador Andrew Young nominates him for Inte rnational Award for Valor in Sport. . Sept. 15, 1978: Pounds out unanimous decision over Leon Spinks to gain title a third time. Sept. 22, 1978: Federal Grand Jury subpoenas financial rec- ords of second Ali -Spinks fight. JAN. 4, lt7t: Retires. Nov. 9, 1979: Offers himself in exchange for U.S. hostages in Iran. Feb. 3, 1980: Makes five· nation tour of Africa as special envoy of President Carter. Feb. 11, 1980: Says he favors draft registration. April 16, 1980 : Ends retire· m e nt, s igns to fight Larry Holmes for WBC heavyweight ti- tle. Oct. 2. 1980: ????Who knows? -It's your guess. Holmes Thumbed In Sparring Match Bmeball StandingS BARWICK DATSUN LAS VEGAS, Nev. <AP) - Lal'1')' Holmes got thumbed dur· inl a sparring session Sunday. and threw a real scare into bis camp and members of the neWB media watching the workout. Holmes, who defends the World Boxing Council heavyweight championship against Muhamdlad Ali Thurs- day niaht, was in the fourth round of sparrinl against Wen· dell Balley when the two men suddenly stopped. Bailey led Holmes to bis comer. "I got thumbed (in the right eye) and I didn't know what it wu," aald Holmes. AMERICAN LEAGUE West DIYlaloD W L Pd. GB x·Kansas City 92 64 .590 Oakland 80 77 .510 12th Minnesota 74 82 .474 18 Texas 73 83 .468 19 Chicago 66 88 .429 25 Aa&els M II .41t Z1 Seattle 59 9'1 .378 33 x·cij.nched division title Eut DIYlaloll New York 99 51 .623 Baltimore 94 61 .806 4\AJ Bolton 82 70 .539 lS Milwaukee 83 14 .529 16'h Detroit 80 15 .516 lB'h Cleyeland 71 78 .497 2l'h Toronto 64 91 .413 34'h ......,. . ._.. Cll<latilt I. Allllll9 1 Detf'91t 6, -Y9'tl S I 10 IMlflell ..._.,,T.,....J .. ltl!NnS, CllWI_,.. a Ml ....... 1,~Clty7 o-.-I. ........ J Teu14,,.._1 NA'nONAL LEAGUE West DlYlsloa w L Pct. Houston 89 67 .571 Dodgen 87 6t .558 Cin cinnati 86 71 .548 Atlanta 80 75 .516 San Francisco 73 82 .471 San Diego 70 87 .446 ' East Division w L Pd. Montreal 86 10 .551 Philadelphia 85 70 .548 Pittsburgh 80 76 .513 St. Louis 72 84 .462 New York 64 92 .410 Chicago 63 92 .406 .......,.,._ ' Sa" Dletl> 7. Oodlen S New Vort< I, SI. I.OUK 0 Sa" Fr.-cltco M Atlem•. ""'·· r•I" MofltrMI I. PNladelptll• 3 C II IC 1t90 ). Pltts11Uf'1111 2 Cl11<liv..tll, Hola""' S GB z 3'n sin lS'h 19'n GB 'h 6 14 22 22'h Te•Y'tO-Saft Fr.n<llCO l...,......,m« ._.,et Al*U (.utul• ll·IJI Plttstiurafl IR"°*" ~SI el Hew V ... 11 ILY'ICll PRE-OWNED BUY RIGHT! * '75 HONDA CMCCVCC 5 spd., AM radio, (so:KA) ••• OPEN WIDE AREA COVERAGE 0n9P C..S,. L.A. C:... ty ............ c..My, Rhenl* r.-.,. PRIME RA TES ARE COMING DOWN AND SO ARE OUR UTES! 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WFalPIBWAY CLOR ~Jm"H "Wlllt-ollifll.,.N>. -~ -------------~if.1 l • ~~ HANIFAN'S FIRST WIN -St. Louis player s lift head coa ch Jim H a n if an on their s houlde r s after a 24-14 upset over APWlr-to Philadelphia Sunda y It was the first win for the Cardinals this s e aso n . f 'rnm Pogp BI THIS JOKE IS ON FAULKNER. • • a nd the jury is still out on the Rams ' Johnnie Johnson. These three players represent the top three DBs picked in the NFL draft and a ll are s truggling. _ The Ram s have s hifted Nolan Cromwell on passing situations so he can cover the tight end in· stead of Johnson, who has been getting burned badly. .. . .. The biggest cheer at Giant Stadium Sunday came from the a nnouncement of the Yankees score, which was 2·0 in the fifth. .. .. .. Contract updates : Jack Reynolds Actually both Reynolds and Ferragamo are making the R ams look bad ... or at least they're making their bargaining powe r look better f~ro• Page 81 RAMS BREEZE. • • h armless 131 yards. including one tnterceJ?llOn. He was also sacked four times as the defensive front four gave him little, if a ny, ti me to spot his re- ceiV'ers. Vince Ferragamo. on the other hand, couJd have held contract negotiations with ~neral Manager Don Klosterman, he had thatmucht1metothrow. And the Rams' quarterback responded by com - pleting 14 of 18 aerials for 215 yards and one TD. Those numbers. combined with the ones he a massed against Green Bay, g ave the Nebraska graduate figures like 29 of 37 (78 percent) for 417 yards and three TDs. Not bad for someone who's trying tone- gotiate a new contract. "The entire team is playing well now and that makes it very easy on a quarterback." admitted Fer- r agamo, who spread his completions to 11 different {eceivers. "THE BIGGEST THING I'm gaining from all this is confidence . and that goes both ways. My receivers have to have the confidence that r·rn going to get the ball to them. too. "I'm JUSt a player who's trying to do the best 1 canfortheteam. l 'm trying to playthebestl can. I'm pulling everything l have into each play, whether it's a passors imply a handoff. "The biggest thin g, though, is everybody is con- tributing, everyone is helping out. Our offensive line is literally starting to blow some people back. They'resimply awesome," said Ferragamo. Awesome might be a good word to apply lo the entire Rams squad, although the players are being guardedlypessimisticabouttbeirnew-foundpowe r. "We're not playing to our Super Bowl level, but our intensity is getting better," explained Fred Dryer. "We can play better and I think we will. If we don 't gel any injuries we can get nothing but better.·' "WE RAD A REAL good game plan and we ex- ecuted welJ," added Jack Youngblood, who was the defens ive unit's ctieerleader. "We're definitely on the right route. but there is always room for improve- ment. All we have to do is keep the same concentra- tion level we've bad the past two weeks and we'll be justfine." "When the games are like they were last week and today, they 're fun." said Jim Youngblood. "We wanted a shut.out because there were some things we felt we had to make up for. But it's bard to shut out anybody in this league with the new rule changes.·' Brett'8 Slam Lift8 Average BLOOMINGTON . Minn. (AP) -George Brett's pinch-hit grand slam home run in bis on- ly at bat against Min- nesota Sunday raised the Kansas City third ba1eman'a average one point to .•. Brett now bas 491 plate appearances, just 11 aby ol the qualifying 502, wttb alx 1ames to play. He entered the aame battlftl ..394. Cassie Auto ~how/ Auction Huntington C.nter Oct .... M . 3-<jay classic car 9llhlblt with aualon on Sunday. Phone 848-2298 to sell. I' FAULKNIEll l'EllllAOAMO OllY£11 Each is playing extre mely well. Ferragamo 's numbers are more obvious. but Reynolds' play can 'l be underestimated. either. The Rams, who originally offe red Reynolds $135,000. a re now up to t he S200.000 mark. T he prob· le m now is in the n umber of years. Reynolds wants four or five, while the Rams want two. The middle Unebacker. and rightfully so is also starting to realize his full worth to the R~ms. $.200.000 m ay fall a bit short of Reynolds· new goal. Ferragamo, on the ot her hand, is worth more and more every time he throws a football. He"s already turned down a three-year pact at $200,000 pe r. Now, with the way he's playing. SJ00,000 mieht not be enou2h. As for the "Who 's No. 1 ?"debate, Ferragamo certainly has laid that to rest "l always thought l was No. 1." s avs Fer-ragamo coyly, with a sm irk on his face. "If P at (Haden ) comes back and they want to s it m e down. then they 'II sit m e down, I gu_ess. "AJI I know is I want to play football and l want to see things happen. I don't want to have any distractions r JUSt want to do my job a nd keep winning." . . . . . F erragamo is currently domg his JOb JUSt frne , thank you. So fine. in fact, he may become valua- ble at any pnce. .. ... As for Fred Dryer's phase out, that plan was put on hold as he displayed a strong performance against his old Giant teammates ··My role could be c hanging and that's just fine with me," says Dryer. "When r heard about the rotation, there were two things I could do. r could either say it was a bad deal and mope. or r couJd pre pare m yself for playing the whole game and then go out and play h ard. Well that's exactly what I did." Dryer.' whq hasn 't been seeing much action of late , played ahbost the entire game. , .... How bad are the Giants? Well, when you insert six defensive backs on passing situations and s till find them s ingle-covering the Rams' receivers, you know there are proble ms. • ft * Early line on t he Packers-Giants _battle in1 New Jersey Nov. 16 : Giants by 2; one point for t~e home fie ld advant age and another for their quarterback. The Giants don't have much else, but then the Packers don 't have anything. Prior to that game. however , the Giants might be looking for a place to hide. With a~olutely !IO relief in sight the Giants face Dallas, Philadelphi~. San Diego. Denver , Tampa Bay and Dallas agarn in the next six weeks . 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September 29, 1980 1.WL Y PILOT ll:J Lions Are Genuine Sims Gets 157 -Y-ards in Detroit Wm Ky The Assoda&ecl Pre111 Billy Sim:.. a genuine rookie at 25, is ontJ of the matn reasons why the Detroit Lions have already duubled lht•1r victory total or las t year and are one or three undefeated tt>a ms after four weeks of the 198-0 National ft'ootball League campaign. Cltlf Stoudt, also 25, is a bogus rookie who made his pro debut Sunday after a little more than th ree years on the bench of the Pittsburgh Slel'lerh nanny White 1s somewhere in between. He had punted and pluyed some quarterback in four seasons with the Oallas Cowboys, but this is his "rookie" sPason under fire since the retirement of Ho~er Staubach Al.L THREE HELPED their teams to vie· tor 1es Sun,fay Sims. the NFL"s leading rusher, rolled up 157 ~ ..i r<ls an 'l:I carries to lead Detroit over Minnesot a 27 7 Stoudl. who qualified for his pension las t NFL ROUNDUP week without a sin.:lc second of NFL action, com- pleted 5 of 8 passes for 80 yards and one Tf? in a m op-up role in Pittsburgh's 38·3 rout of Chicago. White passed for two TDs and ran a fake punt 411 \'a rds for anolhl'r in Oallas' 28· 7 victory over t'rcen Bay ' Detroit. Buffalo and San Diego are the NFL's only unbc atC'n t e ams Buffalo, paced .by quartl'rback Joe Ferguson's near-perfect passtng and a merciless defense, dominated Oakland 24-7 San Diego, led by quarterback Dan Fouts' two TD passes. swamped Kansas City 24-7. Kansas City, the New York Jets and New Orleans are the league 's only winless teams Baltimore defeated the once lughly regarded Jets 35.21. and M1a m1 srorerl all its points in the fourth quarll'r to overtake New Orleans 21 16 TWO TEAMS, Ph1ladelph1a and San Fran- t'l'>t'O . tasted defeat for the first time Allanta m adc San Francisco mortal with a 20· 17 victory Ph1IJde lph1 a. :-.o dominating tn Monday n1ght.s rout of the New York Giants. couldn't contain Olis Anderson and w<.1~ beaten 24· 14 by ~he St Louis Cardinal!>. who claim ed their first .win for Rookie coach J im Hanifan In other NJ''L a c tion Sunday, Clev~Ja~d downed Tampa Bay 34·27 , Houston edged C10cin- nat1 13 lU . and Seattle shut out Washington 14·0 The Lions. 2 14 last year without Sims, now have a devastating running game. which has made quarterback Gary Danielson even better .. Last year. when we were going 2· 14. ,r. did~ 't se.e. t.oo many med ia lt\U'.S ~r.Q u_nd '-__J1 a1d Danielson. who threw two TD passes ··r have to say J like it better this way." AND WJTH THE OFFENSE on the field more, the defense has been stronger. Agai~st Mi!l"esota, the Lions intercepted five passes, includmg Ray Oldham's 29-yard TD relum The Lions. who turned a 7 7 l':>lftime tie into a rout, have not been scored on in the second half th.is season · .. Boy . this 1s such a n exciting situation,' . said Oldham . who played on one Super Rowl winner with Plttsburgh. ''I'm JUSt havtng the time of my life. We all are ." Dolphins 21, Saints 16 Another rookie who was playing his first down was third string quarter back David Woodley of Miami However. he didn't fare too well, complet- ing just 4 of 15 passes and throwing three intercep· tions. But Bob Griese came to the rescue, throWlJlg for 241 vards and one TO on 16-for-23 passing . Ali'M1am1 's scoring came in the fourth quarter after New Orleans had built a 16-0 lead. The ga~e· winner was Oelvin Williams' 8-yard TD burst with 2 36 remaining. "There are advan tages and disadvanta~es lo coming off the bench ," said Griese. who w1ll get Coach Don Shula's sta rting assignment next week. "In thls case. I had an overall view of what they were doing. All r h~d to do was get a feel for what calls s hould be called a nd when." Bills 24 , Raiders 7 The Bills. whose last winnjng season was m 1975, benefited from an unyielding defense and Ft>rguson's 17 for 22 passing for 175 yards The dt-fcn~<>. led by lcrt end Ben W1ll1ams, forced three fumbles and had two Lnt1·rct'J,.1t.uns while holding Kenny King, the AFC's leading rus her going into the game. to 24 yards Ferguson. whose controlled :1tta1·k ll't Huffalo hold the ball fur more than 41 m11rnl1':--hit 011 his first 11 pai>scs, missing only when ht' threw 1n completf1 to st<Jp the clock with fo111 :ict·o1tcfa ldl Ul the first ha lf, sett in~ up a fst•lcl goal that ~ll\ 1· the Bills a 17 O lead Cardlnals 24, f.a~h·<1 14 Ott1-. Anderl.on w a:. 011 ~h:-.pla y Suucl •Y Som ewhat tcntat1vf' 1n his f11 "t th1 t •· ~:1mes after last year's phenomenal r.<><>k1l· ... 1·<1•on, An~erson was a powt-rhoui.c• J~~11n~t tht· i'.<ij.!lc·-. runnmt! for second half Tfh of 11 .ind :11 ,,,rd·. ;ind 151 to1a( yards on 27 <:.,rne ... ··He 's fontas11c· · <,ate! f'.;.cglc·-. ( 11itc·h 1>,ck Verme1l '"Thev 1u:.t l.c•pt g1\'1111.; hun th1 ball .ind he kept makin.g } ards f1 d1<111't lmk l1k<' he was ever gou\g Lu WC'ar 1l11wn · Brown~ 34, fluCt.;tnt••·J s 27 Brian S1pl' m1-.sl•d h1<; rir· t 1• I' t"'' hen t•omplt>tl'd 22 of 2fi for thrt·c Tl>' t,. • "' t ilvin llill and:lUl )ards 111lhl'Bro"'n v.111 ·•1t wa s Or1 <tn "'"1· I· dl~1 l:l1t1<' • ;11 d Cleveland Coach Sam HultJ.!lt.1110 I tho111~1i1 v.e would get hlown out or th1·r1 liut h1· '.wit· IM• " Dou• Wilham -; llad :10 r·1•111rrl• 11ons er .• « it tcmvt:, for thll'C' Tl», :111d l1 \,111h 1111 !" 11 111<1 flay Oilf>rs 13, 6f·n~.ib 111 ll11u.sto11's Kc:1111} <:;1,111!1 r ..... or ~•·tl h1 . 1,11 s hort p<.is~lllR ~amt• l•> pt!rlt.•l'tlun. i.. m1~lc.t~nc • '?1- 34 pa sses for 241 } ,1 rd' hut •' .,... .1 I '"II I , ,,. 11 :.. two fourth quJ11rr f1t•lfl 1•11;tl• tt1.1t 11111 l 11•·11 t ·r:. over lh<' BengJI" rnL-.th ... gunw IA 11111111 .... j\,, 'I J11 I. t' ;J'"tl punt return ll\ Cat I 11 rr.H ht•<, ·The d1ff,.rc•11t·1 111 llr•• l t1111• v..1 111' u 'I.; hng nn thal pu111 r•·t11 11 1 •I 1 1 m t • 1c l Forrest Grt·i!~ t "alron ... .!•1 H*<·r, 11 '){l•\ I Fl.If I kuv. ""I I I I I 1 l'Jl>S t" _, lfretl Jf!ck'>nn and I \nn < a111 • !. •••I I 1 n m 1,.,~ in t he (ourlh qu 1t1t•r h.tntl• d '" " I rt• 1• • 11 It· 11r ... 1 defeat St1•\ r ll••B1·rr 1 ''" 1•lt t ': ·1z •I !11 1>a'~ .., 1111 345 yard.-. for 1111' 1~1t•r.., ('har~e r\ 2.t. C'hu+ .. 7 Tht> p.1-. ha pp~ l'hlll l.!t r-. ~11\ l!l~ •.;11 <Is 1 1 the grounrt tr> kt•t p thr rll'f1•n ... 1 ltnnr•-.\ :mrt I l:~r. i' 11uLc; fired /'.('(trtng p;i ... .,,. r! I! •• 111d I •I rl tr1 ·lien Winslr11,4 1n lh1 \lttor.,, "'''r K·111 .. 1"C"1r ('olt.ao 35, .Jcb 21 Hal11 mr,rf' hH" w1>11 tw1 1'.m11 ttus >:r<.1s1m . both agam!>I 1 ht• "irllr·-. ... , It 1 • 111 11 I on1·<, ron1H•1•t ed on 18 pa:.se-. in ~; 11l1·rn1t1 ~ l••r !1~1 v.111h anti three T Ds, Jiltl111•• 111-; lh1r11 "l"ttrt• aftt•1 lht .Jets had closed to Vd'hin ""'l'll 111 11n1.:. lall· 1n th<' fourth quarter ~t"aha"~' l l. lh·cl1.,kin ... (1 ..;,.,11!11 .I 01 I 11 f.1 1-.• I nr' • 11 .:1 .ranh t.. 1 .rr 'r 1 u1'"1 ·rl r ' .1 •• .,.. •1 !Ian Doornmk tlt•cl lht· , 11 IPr '"'" r •' rd J IJ tU11 But the s urpnse of the game \43'> the rnsp1red play of the Seahawk def ens" 11. h1<'h h.JrJ l'w·f'n r mlced next to last In th1• "F"L I ll)J.: 1r1tn ht ) ,, ne Washington -.onl~ m1 -..111 c 1ht• r1·•1ri•1I John k1g gins. couJd 11nh rn;in.,~·· i" ' '"'' r11st11t1J:: r, 2:!> carries Daily Pilc)l41 Oran~t' ( 'ounc' Pr Pos. Tt•am, ri·<.'Mtl Th l Ed1~1)n t '.l ll > 2 M <itt>r Drl 1.1 II t 3 C'<1p1str:mn \".1lh" .1 o 4 Marina IJ H1 5 f:I IJor .1.!11 1Jll1 6 Esper..tn1;i ':i o 1 7 Fountrun \.tilt~ 1.! l 1 R F.1 Mnd1>nJ 1? t 1 9 l.oara •2 l 10 Sant:. l\n.1 \ al11 \ ~ I 11 ;. '"' 1 I .. 11 \\c•1•t.' c 'l'r •n• 111 \1 IJJ~ l[I • i\ I 11"1° •' I " I It j d1 I M II f• '1Rlln: •• 1 11 •• 1. - ')U( \ fu St•t \I I \"ilia I' 1r\( '•t ~ IM•rt tl~rb11 C'.m) n NFL Stamli,ngs NATIONAL CONFERENCE AM ERIC AN CON 1''ER t-:Nct East Division F:ast w L Pct. PF PA w L Pct. J>F P\ Phil a 3 I .750 118 40 Buffalo 4 0 I 000 96 50 Oallas 3 l .750 93 68 Miami 3 I 750 65 fi6 St.Louis I 3 .250 87 99 New Eng 2 I fi6i 92 RS N.Y.GianLs I 3 .250 72 l21 Baltimore l 2 ~ s.r; 7fl Was h I 3 250 47 7& N .Y . Jets 0 4 000 72 ·~' Central Central Detroit 4 0 1.000 117 41 Pittsburgh 3 l .750 117 67 Minnesota 2 2 .500 72 106 Hous ton 3 I 750 67 l'.4 Tampa Bay2 2 .500 71 83 Cleveland 2 2 .500 7fl 90 Green Bay I 3 .250 47 114 Cincinnati I 3 .250 68 75 Chicago l 3 .250 45 87 West West San Diego 4 0 I.()()() 1 IR 57 San Fran. 3 1 .750 104 91 Oakland 2 2 500 82 89 Rams 2 2 .500 108 79 Seattle 2 2 . 5()0 75 P.7 Atlanta 2 2 .500 97 82 Denver 1 2 333 60 77 New Oris . 0 4 .000 68 104 Kansas CityO 4 000 50 88 ~,·,S<-11 ..... ll, Hew York Gl•nU 1 Pllltlluf'9h •, ChlC"90J Cl9•elanll ~. T "'"IMI Bay 11 Oettas lll, a...... e.v 1 5-r'•G•mH San Franc;1.co at Ill~• 8alt1,,,.,,. al Ml-I Hovston IJ, Clnc1nne1110 0.lroll 11, Mlnnttola 7 Miami 11. H-Orr.an• 16 Bulle lo 14, Oeliland 1 Sl LO<"' 24, PTlll.oelDllla 14 Allenla l'O. S.. Francisco 17 Battt._-e » . ..._ van. .J•h 11 San Oletl) 24. Kamat City 1 SUlll• "· Wasfll"91on 0 ,_.....,..,o_ Denver el H..,r EnQland IChann.I 1 at • o'clock I Clncln...tl at Grnn Bay CHn••r el 0e ... 1-CHtn>lt at Atlanta New Enot.OO 1t Mew Y0t~ J,.,, PlltsburQll al Ml!lne>Ola St. Louh•t-0.tons Seattle at HO<lslOft WaohlnrJton at PTlll-IPlll• Butta lo at San Ole90 IC en..,, City at Oeklencl Hew York Gl...U at 0.11 .. ~Y.Ocl 6 T •mlMI S.y at Chl<AQO .. --~' .. -..a •• ~ ............. ,... DAIL 'Y PILOT ~ . ' ,, ' " MmfttCAN LIAOUI w.we. lo1 I, A ... 19 I t •UCAOU CALll'OtUlllA ....... ...... '•n•on t t ~ulr .. II> ea1,,.. ,, ) 0 I ' • '0 0 \ I l 0 1 Q ' ~ J I I J 1000 I"°" \\ • I 0 ft ( •t·•• II) 4 0 1 a ~ '"""-... Molln•r If l '"'11110 • I 0 0 o O tot4tt t OOt Oe•ft<l\Q. ... • 0 ' • 11'.unh II G<1c11 111 I 0 0 O ~'"""' 10 f l)lty. t I I I CI••' ti • 0 0 0 I I 0 0 ... Ill•• <I I 0 I 0 "'•"' . '0. 0 ,...,..,,,.,,.,'"'It t 0 ~''""'' t 0 •• 0 )}t~• tol.i• 111 \1 \< ...... ..... Ch•<tQO 101 0'111 t t •lltorn1• 000 010 I E. l Cr\11 lt•t• U~ ( "'' .tQO t Lott Ch«-• t.•lllqfftl. I 18 "•'""' ' '""' ~1 ~.,., a •• ,,., Moto\~uo S' MOllN<O 0 U Clllu.. ti' M • l• aa iO t\wrn• IW U •JI Q 0 I Prolr \I C•ll-• 1111••11,.., ll ltl l •llocM .. I T 1 i& A l'I 011 • ~., 1..-..... j • 0 \ 0 il••hrnG<~ 100 OOJ 100 > 10 I (l .. t l•n<I 100 110 I 10 I P•IMt't r ,._., hrwt U 1 Stooo.to f11 jiiftO O•MO\f'r O w tl'lltntiiu W1hlol c P •no MH\Ot. DI., (II W P•IMtt •• 10 l O•<h1nko 1• S SIOCIGllrd U•• HR, BOIUmon. $<"Qf•lon IZJI O..C1ncf\ 1111 • 10,oll " .. SoA 1, •tw J•r•) Boston 000 l40 000 I I l Toronto 000 002 001 l I• 1 Cr•.,totd •nd R•cHr J Mcl.itUOhHn B••I-(SI. Ual (S). Ci•r•ln Il l •nd Whitt W Ct•WfOIO, HI l J llll<L.•uQMn .,, t1R -Boston, RK• 11'11 A ll 041 T•n•, Y .. ~.~J Hew V or• 002 001 100 0 ) 10 I Oelrotl 000 0CU 010 I • • 1 r u"°"'-· R 0 .. 1. 1.,. B"o 111 Gou•~ Ill, Crtlt1n I 101 ...0 Cer~ Pt1'y P Unde-111. Ronm• 111, l -t (101 •ncl P•rr1>1\ w loou. 13-4 L Cir1ll1n 1·3 tHh ~w York, B•own 1131. Ot (rou, p.,, ..... 12•). s.,,,.,,,.,s , ,., " 1l,1•1 Twlr" I, "•Y•I~ I ~an\aS City 101 004 000 I II 0 Minnesota q30 010 .cl• I I I 1 Sp1111or tt, Clt•mOtrlaln Ul. G•ff 161, Qyl'lenllerry 01 ""d Porter, Eric''°"· 1(1,.. n<-nun 131 Rectiem <•l, Corbett "¥: Wyneqar w ROClem. 1-1 L G•I• • HRS G Brett (72) MlnM10I•. Ad• ' ,., 6,9-ll A'•l,e.-.02 Mlf••uttt 001 000 100 l S J E)U l•ncl 000 000 201 ) 1 l C••d-11, Cle""I""" 111 •llO C M00<e MCC.ltl'""CI e.u..n w M<C•llv, ...... l Cleve•-. 10-q HR O••l•nd, N ... m ... lfSI A 10.1161 R.--n 4. Madaen 1 r~••• ooo 100 101 • u o Se•111e ooo 1110 ooo 1 a 1 Butcher. Jon"'°" 01, O•rwin 1.i •nd 0 llOl)HI•. 0. llOl•!tt\ 191 end N•--on w - Butcher 11·31 L Bt!4111t U ·lt), S Darwin Ill HR Tun, Cirul>O A l.•1• NATIONAL LEAGUE PMfres 7. Dodoers 5 LOS A~ELES SAN DIEGO ao r II Ito •It r II Ill LOOe>,b> • 0 0 0 Rl<hards,11 • I 1 I ..IOM\lon r1 3 0 0 0 0 Smit,, U l 0 0 0 Hatcher ,Ofl I o o o MumlltlnJY.Cf 3 1 1 t IMhr ,11 0 1 0 0 Winfield. rt 1 1 I O C."'e¥,10 •I I 0 Bas.s, 111 J 01 I c:e,.,a J 0 I 0 0..... I" 0 t 0 0 MclncMtr, cl 3 I I 3 C.111, Ill o o o o Ciu•rrero,cl I I 1 I S..luer,Jll • 1 l 1 FfrQuson.c 3 O ~ ' Fl•'lnerv,21> J o o o Welu,11< o 0 o 0 Sttm•c. c o 1 o o YHo•r.< o o u o hn•o, c J o o o D Tllom•>.U J 0 0 0 Per,1ft\, 1b 0 0 0 I Wolch o 0 0 0 0 Eoclllllrgr,p 1 o 1 o S"lcltlft.0 I 0 0 0 1..ucas.o 0 0 0 0 R LllW, pit ' 0 I 0 Fu>Qer< 0 0 0 0 Beuw1111.o O O O 0 F•l'leY.11" o O o o Da••llllo,11" I 0 0 0 B Ev•ns.Oh I 0 O O CAU1llo,p 0 0 0 0 I( 1 n n ~ y p O o O Thom•s50fl,pltl 0 0 0 Tellm•n, llO 0 O O 5 H-•.P 0 0 0 0 SlanhOuMl.P 0 0 0 0 va1en1.,..1a,o O O o O Total> " s 7 s Tol•IS Scenllyl1111I~ 1..os /4n901ts ooo 030 o~s San Dll!QO )00 000 04• I E JC>ttn$1one. Flnoen. LOCIH OP LO'.\ •n~IH 1. S.n 01"911 2. LOB -Los Anqe ... I , S•n Diego• 7B Ci•r.ey, G.,.rrero. Wln- lltld. MR -Monday (IOI SB R1tha•d\, Mumpllrev. S.l•Z•1f, l:•cl'lelber~t S 0 Smith, I.GOH, C.Ney lMA-'91 IP H a Ea ea 50 W•f<h 1 "1 I I I 0 0 SUtctllfe 3"> • , , ' 1 Bec:twllh 1 0 0 0 I I c .. 11110 S Howe IL.I>-., StanhOuw V•lenruela SH~ Elcllelllerger l....CM Fl,_r< IW, 11·91 KlnMy Tellman SlanhOo.I• oltclltcl elghlll, T -J; II. A -11,,11 0 0 0 0 ., l • 1 I 0 0 0 ' 0 1 0 0 0 0 'i ' •, I ~ 0 '·> 0 to one • 4 ' 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 b4ll1er I • 0 0 ' 0 I 0 0 0 In '"" E...--1,llJltlf-I Montreal 011 OOJ 201-I 11 o Pftll-lpttl• 010 000 020-3 S I Ao9tr\ and (arltr W•lk NOIH (•I S.u<ltr .. ,, lie.a Ill. L.ercll 1•1 •nd S- W ROQitr\, 11>-lt I. W•I•, 10.I Mlh Montreat. C¥1.-(1'1 /4 40.JOS "-•.AstYw1J Cln<lnnall UICI 0'21 )10--1 17 O "°""°" 310 010 000-S II I Pat1ore, Prlc• '''· u cou UI, Hume (11 end Nolen, I(. Forsell, /4ndular <•I, S.mbfto '71, WICor1e (/), Hl.,,,.nn t.i end As/Illy, w -L•Coss, t0.12, I. •nduler. l·I. S Hume 1141. Hlh -Clnclnnetl. Citllley (13), ICnlQlll 1141; Houston. Mof'9"'n 1111. A 32,714. C-J,Plr-.z Pltbburgh 000 100 001 1 • I Clll(-000 101 00•-3 I o ltyteven, Te-u•v• Ill a nd Nicosia . KrukOW, CAllCllll f7) •nd O'Berry w Kr"•-· 10.u. L -Blyle.,..., •u. s Ctlldlll HA -P1ttsllurgh. Ea•ter 12•) A -tb,JOS. ...... c.-..111 St. t..ouh 000 000 OOC>~ I J New Yon. 100 000 O .. _, I l OtmstMd, urru <1), Lllllelletel Ill, Martin ,., elld T. IC-y; M. Scott - Tr••lno. W -M. 5'.ott, 1·1. l -Olmst..,d, 1·1. H .. -Hew York. VOUnQbl-111. A ...... Top10 , ....... at ..... ) MM•tCAM LllAOUll OA• • N M 111 'll II 1.. .JIS ,. 5" ., 215 .Ut UO SU IO 17' .M 1u "' •s ios .m ,., di 7J f7J .Jfl 123 •10 72 IS. .m US '16 IU 2211 .m 1$1 '" llJ ,.. .J" 011¥91', T ... K 1• .... '1 IOJ .JU Wtt..,., Hew v-12' •5' 60 142 ,Jll ......... 091twle, Miiwa ukee, U ; Tltomas, Mll"'41he' V : Ila. J«Uon, N•w Y0t-, J7; Amtet, Olllleftd. ~; Mwrey, le"lman. ,.: MA•lilefrt, 1'-, 2' • ........... Coepor , Mllwe11he, 11'; Otll,.le, Mll••vU•. llJ; 011"9r, han, tU; 0 , .,.11, te-e111, 111; ,,.,_, 0eei-. ... •AllQto!A~ LIA•Ut 0 ••• " ""' '•"'II' ..... Sc L ... " 11• ... fl 1{• JJI ....... -~" l..... ·~ \/I •• II) JU • .,.,,.., °"'-•• \All ., ,,. n• c_,,. .__ ,,, .,l ., ,., 111 w ...... -·-· ...... 111 ,,. ,. ,., .. J '"" ._._, IU i&l II Ito 1111 "-""It l-• ... ,... /j It) ., '''II"' .... " ~-· 10 .. ~ •• ... .......... ~ .... ,. ,. '" -.... ,,."" ..... .,._ I\) •tl .. ltO II)\ -·-Wll ..... 11'1111-lpN• u flt111•• ,.,,..,. I• U M<.l•lift• ,.,..,.... II ..... 0 ..... "- ... ,.,,., -... 1 • •-a.-1• \& P\tntdt J..~11..-tpN• t '4 H•ndn•• '' l"Vt1" lOt ~ •• o...-u '" ,., •• t _, ... , .. ,,._, \1 l l\\i•\ ... ~ t"t•tf\ef"tf•& \l Lew'' ti .,. ...... I 160H1t•\I •• ...,. , .... ...,,9'1 .. • ·-·· ~ II •. ,,,,_, o .... ,. II t C •d lo" ~Nl ... tlifW,4 I).• p•,kH 9 L tn+.•t'f'\.atf tl I "--~ ,,. s.a-·-""'1111•••• •• rt • ....,_, -•-•P'I•• lo 10 HFL Rema 21. Glentt 1 5'-llY °'""'"'' LO~A,_1~ I• I I 0 /ti H Y G•""b 0 11 II I LA Pi.-.oc-. 1 tvn \('orr•I '~"-• l.A At«oc' t tu:n tCorret ~•<~) LA ""'°'o u ~\' lrom F•H•U..mo ICott•I 'K'I l A Pe"COO 4 run ICot,.I 1',IO I NYG Pe"''"' ,_, D•\~ trQm 8runrf I O•r>eto 1',1<\I A /3,•I< LA 10'0 ,.,,.,down• n 13 Ru1~\ V<l'Ch 0 1•1 IH 1 P•\•tnv v••d'> 103 IMI Re1urn ••r<b .u P0>se1 14 It I p..,,,. • 4J Fum1>1r.~f 11 Pen•111 .... ,.,.,. t .U lllelv ...... i..e-n " , .•. 1~9 11 ,_,, RUSHING ~ "~··~ Peacoo ·-Brvant 11.~ -Yolk. HHI•• 11-41 PASSING LOI An9•lh Forr•Q•mo 1•11-JIS-1 New Vorll. Simm• 10 1J. fJt.I. Brunn.• 5'-IJ.- A£CEfVIHCi 1..0• A"9'1le1, 0 Mill 7 IOt, Weddy 1·23, Dennard 1 I ) Nrw Vor~. Mull.cly l-4S, Gray l,. Falcons 20, 49ere 17 "-"' 0....'19" J 0 3 0 3 0 Allan•• S.n Fr•nc.i\Co All FG Mauot11 .cl SF FCi W~ll(ng 47 All FG Maul'lll ll ,. '° 1.--11 /411 J«t<ion 10 PH• from B•r1kow.lrl (Martttll klctl All -CAin 1 '"" (Mau en1 "10 1 SF Sotomon t3 P•n from OeBe<Q (Wenchlno kick I SF Cooper 11 o••• from OeB•rQ (Werschi"Q kick I • -S.,518 --,,,...,._.flu•n RlJSHING AU•nla, Andrew1 11 ·100. Cain ••·SS San Fr•ntl\co. Hofer 1 .. n. C-r. 7-11. P ASSING /411ant•. Barlkownl 11·17-•0·0. S an Francisco , OeBerQ J2·Sl·:MS-7 AECEIVINCi Atlanta J•ntln1 •·40, An- drew1 J.<S San F••nc1sco. Moler I0--4t. Clark ..... Sol<wTOl S-•J:l. Coooe• ~I. DolpNn1 21 , Sainte 11 ScenltY O.<Wn New Ort-O ' 1 0-ta Ml•ml 0 0 0 11-11 NO FG RkMClo 34 HO -FG lli(Mdo 3' HO -FG Al(-)t HO -I. ~I• U PH& troff! Me-... lltlCM'dD tld<I Mia-"°""'"' I run Ivon k llemMtn lltclll Mia -IA• S pas. •rom Grlev f•on SchamaM k''t l Mia -Wiiiiams & ""' (von Scha..._, klct f " 40 .... 1•v1-11..e .. n AUSt11NCi ,._ Orluni, Wliton 2M1, MUl>cle S-IO Mlam1, Wiiiiams •t-1•, _, ~" P14SSIHG -Ne• Orte•n1, M•nnlnQ 10-U.201-2. Mol,,.... 0.140 Ml...,1, Gr-16-Ji.241-4. -ley .. IH I l AECEIVING -Htw Orle•ns, Mol-. l·S4, H•rrli ).S., Wit""' l-41 Mleml, N•ll\en I 118, M..,..114-G, ~ .. SI Cowboy• 21, Pecker• 7 kor•llYO.rten Oa ltu I 1 7 1-21 GrHo !Wy 0 I 0 O I 0•1 Oorwtl I"'" IS.Pllen klO, GB -AU.IM6 run IMercol klCkl Oe1 --1ru,,1S.~1enk1<•1 Del Calllle S °"''' lrom Wltllt <S..PI•.., -le~> Oat -Plrt¥10tt 20 IWIU from Wh1lt !Seo- llon klO ) A-S.O,n6 1.......-..~ AUSHIHCi -Oa llu . Ooru11 11·11, NtWflOUM ... S4. Wltnt J.SI Ci•u .. a.,. Ivery •·51, /4l~1n1 I 44. Elli• S·JS PASSING -0.lln, Wllltt ••·10·111-4 Grffft !My, Olct e, 11·16·141 I, Pl .. o l1w1c: 2·S-".0 llECEIVIHG Dalla•, Hiii ) 71, JDl>nton -· PNtJOtl l·J~. 0...Mtl Ml G•ttn 8•y. Thomp_, HI. Elli\ 1·J7, /4lkln11 i.. Lo!ton 1-11 Uon• 27, Viking• 7 Sc-... ~ Mlnneto1a O 1 o O 0.1•011 1 0 3 I/' 2/ 0.1 -Hiii J IWIU trom O.Onlthon <Murr•y k!OI Min AaSl\ec:I 40 l>e\S lrom l(r •mer ( O.n-meltr i.ici.t Oet -Scott s ~· ''°"' Oanlehon \Mu< ra, t l<tl O.t -Oldham 1' i>eu Interception IMur ray ltl<I<) 0.t -FG lllA"tay 2• A -I0,2" l,.."*91~ I "USHINCi -NllntHUOI•, "'*o •·>•. l rown .. 26, Detroit, Sims 21-ISI, •• .,. 5'-15, Bu1w, t-ll. o...1e1son J.24. PASSIHCi -Mlnnelole, Kramer "•ll·S-221, Oil• 2·~11. Detroit, Oanlelton IJ.2"1-150. .. ECEIVING -Ml-tote. Y-~$, S Wlllte s-J•, lleilled i-n. o.trolt, Scott '-57. Hiii 4-44, Slfm J.26 • ..,_, J·U . Canlnale 24, E .... • 14 ._.." 0..rttn l'flll-lllflle 0 1 0 1-1• St. t..ouls 7 a 1 1-14 SIL -Allefl 10 '"'ef'CltlClon ILlttle kick I Piii -~Siii t "'" (P:renltlln kk kl SIL-FGUttleJI Sit.-......._, 14 rvn 1Llt11e kick> Stt..-"Vldot"°"JJ""' <Llllle~lck) Piii -l(r..,fle t OHS from Jewontl (Frtflklln k10 .) A -4',Aln , ........ LNltn "USHIHG -'9111~e, Mont.........., ta.n. HMrb 1·25. SC. UUll, ..... rwn 21·U1, Mefrts 1CM1. llJASSING -Plttl ... l,itl•. Jewers-1 1'-16-231.J. SC. Louis. Hert I HM_. "£CEIVlltG -....ila*lpflfa, CMmkN91 S·1U, Kr111tte 4·'1. '°"ntea111ery J.JO, ~· M2. St. Louis, Tiiiey Mt. Merrit , ... ...... ,.JI, 8ee11 3 ........ , o... ..... "''("° llJlllW..•QA (hi I <. f~\ II I 0 I II 0 0 ' I I • p ,l "1lilU\ 11 °'"'' hOITI Utttd\.h•• tli""' Ille~ I 1'11 I (, l\anr It Pit \inwth 1' .,,.\\ h0tn tit .cl\I\•• t U#tt II<~ I fltt \nwtf\ J1 P."' lutm ltt..a;J\.a>N lu.tv ,,. . , .-u (\atfli~~#t; I'"',.' hUirt thedt.Nw '6•11• "•., Pit ..... ,., • µ.it\\ hum '"•tOU(tl Ct,t.#u 'Ha I A IJ WI/ ........... w ... ,, flfU\ttlN(, (rut•'#> .~ ... ,UI' *' w \U"'-ty I u .-uhbutQt) •• ,,.,,., tJ J • H.,wl"'<;r,.. ,, J'I 11 ...... j 11 ""\~tH(, ( , .. , • ..,.,, •''''IN' IU lO ua t l••f'l I I 14 t P111\~U'11" U••Ch'°'.t'tlll> I) .. ,.,, l.4.....,.\./00 'hC t 11/IH(, ti•"-ll•><l'lo•QOt I '6 \wh•Y l it P•rlOf1 J U Wllll•mC J I• PUhburQI\ \mllh• tit "•""'"°",. l ~ C.\111 ftJ~ef'eM) lt4 ~wenn J Jl H4'tti\ t 9 81Me 2.4, Reldera 1 Sc.,..lt•O.Wr1•n 0 0 I 0 I IU U r I< Oeh••no 8ulle10 8111 8111 Bui Oo thow-n I run (Ml"• M•·H·r-k1(~; (tlt:JOl I f'Wn (Mi-.e M4Y•f 9'"~) f (,Ml~• ,.....,_, lO tt•rn .4'J Qr.tu rnlttteftP''O"' 1 b""' &1<~ I 8-..1 t 1u>t>1ii. )t O•~"' f,uo; fetQu""" lM11t• ~nit IUCI" ... 11 1)4 1,....,...1u-n llU'i>HINCi 0.kl•nd ••o Eeg"'n 10 ... lll"Q I 1f 8utl••o (1100\ )0-'IO Br o .. n II 31 Hoolu J.11 PASSING 0 •1',l•nd P •1lot101 10.10 •st 1 fe'9"""' 11 n 11s 1 RECEIVING O@.i.no. c .. \I,., •-•I (ltandlor J-t/ Kong I to 8ull•lo. Buller J 4'I (rlbC» l-3', HOOi\\) 10 Colt• 35, Jet• 21 Sc-"' Oo&arten N V Jth 0 It 0 I 11 B•lllmoro 1 14 I I JS Ba• W•'"'"9'°" S run t Ml'9 M•.,.,, "'°'' Bal W Cawlu u """ lrom Jon"' (Mlh Ma~r -IOI HYJ L-)tun(Le•n•••C>I N v J C.lnts 10 oau "°"' T Odd I L•""Y 1'10 1 Bal Bufllt' 19 ,,.,. ''°'" Jone• (M"r llllaor kl<"I NY J LonQ S '"" IV•lly '"'l Bat Carr S Pl'\\ lrom Jonh 1M11',t M•yu 1'101 .. ll,l/3 INl•l-11..•-n RUSHING No .. Vork, GAOnr\ 8 3• Oletkl nq Y JO. LonQ ) H Tudd I 1• Ballimore. Wa.,,lnQton ti 81. O•"'•• 7169 Jones).-•. F'r•nklin S4 PASSINO -New Toro 1000 lo J7 JJl>-1 B•lllmotW, J-it 1S-11 S 1 R ECEIVING Ht'" Yori.. l Jonr1 J ~ Muper J.:tl, W•lker 1 :i.. Ci•llno 1 JI Ciall'ei 2•21, Oi«ll•nQ 2 I) 8all1m0t~ But,.., -· Burte...O. ""'' 1-4, W•Sb1nq1on 2 11 Cttervers 24, Chief• 7 SU..lt~O..rten S.n 0 1000 I U ) 0 1• KAMa\ CTtv o .., -0~ t SO -~lfe!ll Jrun Ulenirscllke ~ttkl ICC Mc1Cnlo111 I run (LOwerv kl<• I SD -Win•low IS pa.s lrom Foul\ IBen.,sc:flllt klO I SO -Wtn~•ow t& o•\'\. from Fouh IBenl•KllkeklOI SO -FO l2 B•1111r>ehke A -.U,161 l,...v!Aal Le-n RUSHING San Ole90, C•e>oellelt• 1 .. )1. Ruswll, .... C. Wiiiiams 1·11 ll•n"'' C•••. Mt. KnlgN I •·JO. 8tllon ~It Fulltr • IJ P/4SSIHCi San 01~. F°"l\ IS·lO l'M I K•n>U City, Fuller II 11 ll I. Cl•m•nt\ 1-11.n-4 RECEIVING s.,. D•e90, Wln•low o /4 Jellerson J-60, JoiM• 2 l' Kans•• C1tv M<l(n1gttt, ~. J T Smith 3 JO, Rffd 3-1'1 BtowM 34, Bucc.nHts 27 sc...,~en c1e .... 1-Tamoa Bey TB -FG Veor-eml..., JI TB -FG Vft)f-eml..., l$ Cle -FC CoOroll J} 0 II I 10-J.& • 1 0 ,. 21 TB -.i...,... 41 pau from w 1111am1 1 Yep.e- mlan kldll Cle -White I n;n ICoCkrott 1'1Ck 1 Cle -Hiii J pau lrorn S1oe ICoo rott ••0 1 Cle FeecMr U i><tS. lrom Sipe ICoVrv!I t iO I Cle -'UI Miit '3 PA\\ from ~1oe ICo<Orotl T8 -.Jones 3 P<IH from Wllil•ms I '!"•pre ml•" t ick) TB -EOWOOO I P<IH lrom W1ll1~m' IYtpremlen t l<k l A -•S.SAO • IM1vi..a1 t..e-n RUSHIHCi Cl•velano, M Pru111 IS-'8 W1tltt 11·11, O. Prn111 l t• Tamoa Bav, M"91ns Hiit, Ect-• 1·71 Btll ..... PASSING Cleve••no. Sipe 71 31 llll·I Tampa, Willl~JO. S.-J.&3.2 RECEIVING Cle ... land M Ptu•ll 5'-J'l llo.Kker 4-1', Fe~""' 3 15 T •ml>d Ee •wooa (~IOI. -I 10. Ci Oh•I • •S Olle,. 13, Bengals 10 Sc•• lty Oioa r1en HOUS!Oft 0 I 0 b IJ C1nc1nnali 1 3 o o 10 Cln -lleu U OAS\ l•om Tnomoson ISunltr k'ckl Cln -FG 26 Wiiier Hou-Coleman I run IFfllH l'I ~·<•d HOU -FCi ,, FrlUcl\ Mou -FG 2' Frl\$Clt A -S0.•13 , .. ....,.LA_.., "UIHINCi HOySlon Wll•on 1·11. C..-penler 14-11, ColHn.tn 1 S Cmcinn.ttr Joflnson 11-U. A1., ... ,,_, II JS T t>omawt• 1·12 PASSING MOU\loll St•blrr I~ )HI 1tl Cin<tnnati, Thomf;>ion U )• ' 1.).t llECEllllNG H°"sron, C•rpenter I •1 Jot1n1on s ... ,, B•rtMtr • 41 C1nc1nnatf Jollnson•·•l , 11~• 1 21, K reldf t, I 11 High School TMll Wl'ak ·s IC"EOUl..ll T"UlttOA'r O:•l .......... Ou•n View V\ WHlml,,.ttr •I Hunt lneten8Hclt c:..lslr-vaun •• Coron• <lfll M•• •• Hew-1 KattlD< 1Ce111Wdy "'-Nloo#l1o01n v .. w et llowmH O ,._ ........ • ... ,.. P-"' Savanna at La P•lm• Pan C-yu._.. S-t• -Valttr ... c.n ........ EI"'-... Or ..... "' s.rtlA An• •I S.onl• An• Bowl f'alDAY 11·•1 ............ Mllllk.tfl"' Edi'°" at Hunllnvton Ba<1<n Sentlte V\. FiMlnlalll Vell•y •I Ctrrlt~ Coll ... Hu11ttneton lleech "' c;ypr•" •• WH ltm E•lencla "'·Marina •f W•1fmln1t•r UlevNI Hllll vs. Co\te Mawo el NtWpotl Hefllef' L....,,. INc.11 .. lr•IM £1 lont M Mlt1lon VlelO E f c•ten ei San Clemen .. f'11llef1on et ...._ ,__., ....... w .. t ... 1'11. AMllollm •I LAI Palm• P•rl< M...-..1. ~ ,...._ .... Saftl• .... ... I tuft11y Hiiis "'· T,.y et •-P•rll ...._...,,.LA,._ 8•1W Qt ...... Vt. $a<ttleeo ti Gerdel! c;,..,. Petlflc.t ~ """"° Alamltoi et 8olta c;,.,... I J :: ... ---... ·-·· ·---·----------- Pomona \VloOAV'' Af!SUI_ H l*-o• •••om-..l•fttl• oil-IOOW\ """ •.w:•• Wllty Cora, lt.dt111>-.1 s ?O lOO. tMJ Urum 0110 J 1to IU,.\•f\dUI lCJO, 2 .W Rfl(.,•t ttr~•w tO.tvhtvl J 00 U "'•O• 1 • 11 "'"n i 11 ·rei 04.t.t'1f'tfiW)I'~· ~P\hf\d • •., _,-fl'f"tl Ou~,.,. ll •nou1t1I ZI 60 '9 fllO '~ A I'"''" A:wh 4(1.,.,,,.,.,I 4 40 I IO Ut-t f.aUA (,,u l _.,, fM ;l(l\fofH , <0 OH ..... C.•Oo'°'• I IJI) ,,..," '4<"" r.-..o 11\ft••H u•~r11 s .u ... cu ) f, 1Pl)I F"••tht' M .1 l'\ .. 10 t 80 J .tO Peo.. ~,.... '""W•I• I ft. U ,.,ttltA I 11 1>~•0 .-J uo T "°' °'l<fllbt ..i\ r ovrl,, 'Mt' a.,4'u Joflu tR""'" .. '' ll 00, 1 ~ J IV He>1ne1na ll ••1r • M•nM ) .0, 110 Md\tM Ff't•ln(J • Rt>Od o0 F1ffh l'A(# R'httl M"nnv CW'n1 tft .0 1000 M r h1f~'> •tt1nor IM \ 10 "ttO £1 rto-.-, ' '""'" 10 •U ~'-lhtot• E'FIArrt1t;b 1tmr1µ,01 •ltC 1 80 1 b(J C,,.•f\Hv•n••n \ t "' '-""'"'' 1 ttO 160 (1Hhf"tf!1) (_,1ft·t~i. fi0\'61•' • }0 S,.vfn\h '""' •t•l•Ot-r Qt)\ith I c.• ) •O ) 00 Ado1d ·~ .. nn.1 I M1 t'ld I 10 I,. .-Go rto 8ttmb• '8' ,.1 '"' •xi E: •QfHt1i r• t. IH f rlu \\411 r ""'',_.,, • .0. • 6() 1 ~ 0 Aovu·" "•·•u-t•••r.. .. ,"'(J S .0 Mr N .. ,__,. Nu bti• • 4V h t ••t' 'lllf II JI O••d \111 00 N1ntP\ ,~... Pyntit100 ( ,Outi.Jit•I 1Y 8C llO •00 P.,r111nuw-..sdn R'"""'"' •w l '° '>hoot •nr HW W.0.)f\ tit •t Utl u ft ) f!O f,.nl(I rAcr (N,.n f1~hr11 ''' ~ .. ,..,l'tl\I 16 10 I 00 3 CO i ..,11uw tht hul<Jr i M"'"'"'' s 00 J 10 Rt"• t lnfh'\.I 4tJ s, '""·' f I /J Da•o >•.a 00 Efe\tt"ntn '"''.. M,.,bl~ < o~''' ""''"~ & '10 1 40 1 N1 4.,.,.,\ t\H.11h•' r~·""1", ) 00, , 40 J-1""'"' t ''"'''" J •ti Tw~llfn r•(t• l11t11,W1tl't V1th1•1J )fli l 40 'I 80 ! 11 .. U1t'f' Mt •'(J.-1 4' /t 1 "-.i '"lv1f"lqlru-~ F lrtM.t UJ \11 ••,.tl.1 )4 p~ld '" '"' .All~r.tt ~ 71 -r:r- Hors(' Racing Stilnd1ngs fhn>uqn 5f'QI ll MtC..J•' I ,,,,.,, ... tt)rt11!lH \h£#.l,,tofir.•I I •II n•l1\t'Hhp ,,,, Jt.•_,nU'\V'I" \/~l,.n1u•·l.­ Vf1,.,cwf / MtH.trQ,#' B"""' .. wn.,,,,,u,.ur• 0.lp f'." M "rfit Lu•-'' f J tC~!IY JOf"'lt"\ McAn•rrv Jo,..nv•n (Anti'. SCM't•••• v• .. , H1•I John t1 .. f\ry GIOr•o~ ~ coo,. ffl'me>-r•1' ~·' Bold N Doi"''"" Cio """' """.., w,,.., .. , ' ..... JOCI( E rs M OVl'lh ht )fWj _,, l. \ \'I I I ~i,, 1f": 41(, ' n HIM hi. •1 .. , '~ ,, ~- , II fl\ '' f NAIN£RS ~,.,.h ht 1nd Pwr\" ... ~\ '' n: ,., '""'"" 11 AL • Jt V 11'1 11 ,. t I\!."' I• " '1 I\ I I•\ llM l'i' A I A) tW 4 l .11 \JI) ,. -,1 'l" ll I~/~ HOFl~E ... ~'"*'" '" '""' l • • ,,," '"'" ,, l!. <41f! t .... ' '-' "' % ........ WI IH ..., hl •"Jf',"' ••1 fll,J Atlenta Tourney SI••• ,, .. 1 t4•n• Mef'(Jtll.ov• «tit W•oOy f "rnb4.IU, • J I i lllMo<ll°'O"'' .. 1n, t l0.0001 Sen Frenclsco Tourney 51 ... l~Fl~I <..en.,.......,,,,_ def euot TellW:f'MH •• '·) •• • ' U~•'lt:' w•"' U I 100, T eltM n•r win\ tlUOOt Nape Tournament Ben Cr•~h41w, \~.000 .. •' .. II 111 }A<' RHI"<'' i 'l?,000 •I 11 •110 11• r om W•I""', '11 .oo Ml n 10.. 111 G•,. ttallarro, s 11 «lO •• 11 n 1>1 7/i lon M1nllte. \11,000 l>I /4 Ml •q '19 J c Sne..i, \lo,oso &a n •' " 2llO Tom Wro\~001. U0,0\0 61110 1110 180 Mike Re10.110.oso && 10 I• Ml 2llO OODD• Wod~ons, '8,100 13 6• 08 /I lit Jnnnnv Mlll•r S6.'IOO "8 &• 1113 117 D•"" t1tn..lt:Jo>rqer, M> 'ICIO 11 no/ 11 117 8•11 ~C>\j.,. t6.'l00 08 I) 11 •0 111 lohn Scnr-•. M>.'IOO 611 n n 10 :H17 CrAIQ Sl<>Oler, \4,900 I• II II .. 11'1 ltndv Miii"'· M.•SO II 61 I• II 29l A"'1• llu" M.•so .q II I•.~ ,., Onn B•.-. \4.•so /1 &9 11 n 1113 Jey •1-a\ M~SO 1' /1 1161 :Ill Tom p .. , ..... M 100 I 111 13.. ,.. tr•IP Rec• SJ.610 .,. /J 111• 1IS O•n Pont \J,UO 17 •• 10 '. llS l drt v N•l\On U 610 II /1 •• ll 11S Bon (l.tm,,...11, \1.880 10 10 l).IJ 2116 J1m N•il<M<I \7 &llO 10 IO I• /1 1116 M1• 1• Oon.t•CI \1 880 .q ,, 'l ,, ,.. ...... l ve s1.11u 10 n 1• 11 111 lluddy C.M<1n<'' \) )10 I) 6• /1 13 281 Rod '"'I• \2.310 bq I• II 13 111 Oa•• Hill. )1.().0() n 11 116• l1lll 6rutt l 1"1111.~ U.O..c'I •1 It "1A l98 ,;,. MdSY'nQo>I• U (J.;() toil I • /'l.ll l8j P•l•r Ja(o&;O l I ~I• II If •q IS 78'! John f'oUQlll \I S1• 10 10 14 H 199 V•"Ct' t1t-atrwr-\l U4 It I J ll I f 1" 110 .. irO T .. 1nv )I SI• /) .. ,. ,. m i A"¥•'"'1.-qlf"f J,IH• ltl•IJ-l&-199 l,"1.HU• Aft""'°' '\I \I• IU I J It I\ lfJQ <.1f'4ff'lt {0'1·• \' ~14 1110 I) I) 1" ,,.,., .-.,. .. , 1 SI S1• IJ ,, /J ,, ~ Nt>Wv A·•• trb ,,,, i t 1t I t '0 ,) 10 1Wo 't•rt, J..,.-1 •~• \t ~1A I• 10 II~ 1ftf M1tn. lt/\1 ( ""1"1t.>t )V'1 1)11 'I '• I I 190 ~.trh t vA1y \0'11 '' '' '7 H 2"Kt r1J,.,,,,WJ 1111/ll• ~ U•, ,.,,,.,h-1 )~7 o.A n 1110 ~ ~ott ~•HIU\b'' ,,..,1 It f\\# 12 Js, NO h.u HitUt>lt Y.Jn ,,,,_..,, ,.~ ,, ~' 1QO l1ttl (lo·•,.,.,.., 11 ,,, ,, ,~ ~ Bob Hope Tourney ~., fe>1i0'11 Ett~1 .. no1 I I I ' ,,,.,,~ l l/\ JI ~· ,., It t.• 16'1 I• lt•'f'·'" ~•I flil~Q 110 Ur 1df ~ tit., 68 •!t •) 1l 710 ,.y,., ,,,, ~ .. ·~, .. ,I') oh~ 10 N> 110 Btr ""' .ro ~ dnQ'>f !..o r,I •1 It 11\ S14f'dv l .,,,. O •Ii •' o4 111 ( .,roonn l~" v ~ 10 'Q 10 )tl M '" JarT>K Ml 7l •• 68 713 Crtf'(f Norrndfl 101,4 •9 10 Ul LPGA Tourney 1•10.1lla tl 1 •'t .. v dtt'"Y"" D1 ,.,.~. 11.,,,. ""'" 1-1~u at -.. .no rwntJ ...,a tt\t -·nal ''"'"<' tllrlllffl ~ r " pl•fl>fl •rid.-,. fol~ &r •<J·,.,. fl,.,,.\«_,,,,,,,.,,,, L.aur.t b.tuQh ~f\'l1r.tP11,...., Pt1t N',.t,.,, ti I/ I<.) IJ ell 141 , .. ,,. .. , te II ,., .,,, 14(1 Cttnu1n• Q .. ~.,.,, A lbt-1"• 4,, fi.C ;v\I,., .,..., 11 1ri, It II ... /f 10 ... 1~ 11 ... ,. 11 ,., Geneva Open t.11 ~-.1 Swrt11rt.,,,dl $1ttql~~1NI nt1•10I t H' 'l(/Y )#I ~lt ot . ' tntern;itronal Tourney ftll MAdrtO) S1nq~f'\ F1~l .1.1. Ja1mt' f 1'!)1 nt~ "'' .,.., ..... .-'ta L 4 ta • I (,,..,,.,,, .. Aft.I"• /: bdfbf ""If••'"'·" Ali( .. W11t"t'oJ" \4 f't</flt .,.,,.,,, .. tl•'" s1.,,,. ito\~., 8aro~·tt OAI~ Lundc)ul>I r 41riv Motw luf1~St~r '(41l"v M<.MullH 4ht• M 1llfr brll r aur'"'""'' ~.,nd•.t ~111cr '14''b4t <l \Mt rO¥t "'""'"" .. "" .. ,. ( •lh•• "" o..._ r>nn,..,. Oo\w "~ov rvn,, kot..nW••Hv Mt1r'I Mt' M •tQA ~tubC,.MM 111 L..•no., FIPUO r'.tl"Y Wf'l,tw()rJt-r -.ti\ (hAf'Q .. ~ ... 80 /0 I)() tO·l~llO IO JO 150 ,. 11 llO 17 /3 llO •• 11 ISO &• •9 llO "/I iH 10 11 ISi t 1G 111 •t IO 111 1' /l Ul •• " 1)1 •• '• 111 t1 11 tSJ 11 tJ IS. II IJ ·~ eo /) •>l 811J Ill u 11 155 Liglit Air S lwrte1ls • FOR THE RECORD I BOATING i.PGA ..._,.....,. ,,,.... ..... 1'1 1. o....-c...oi ........ ..,,... ' .. "' DMlai .. .. J Amy Ak.Oll ... ..... 4. Nancy 1..-•·Melton 1•.•· S JoA-c...-ner 111,.>lt.. I P•I 111--, 1'Uk 1. S•llY U"le Ut,Mt. I ~.,.. el-k IU,117. •. Jo Ann w-...n ,.,,,., 10. S.lldf'• """ ... , .. CenMflan Gr8ftd i-rta let~I sunc1av'l •Hulls. wlllt -•nr. 11pe of car. ••IK completed •net winner'' a.,., ... Spff0 1n"""" 1 A•.,. ~ .... Au•lr•ll•. Wllll•m•, 10, 110 004 1 C..ono~ lleut emann, Artenllne, Wllllami, 10 J Didier Plronl, Fr•nca, litter. 70. • John Watson. Brllefn. M<t..a,.,,, 10. s Giii"' Vllltllf!uve, c ... ..sa. Ferrari, 10. • He<IOt llellaQue • .Merlco, Br~m. ••· 1 Jean~Pietr-e J•tter, Ft•n<•, Tyrrell, '4. 8 Jacque~ Ulflle, France, Lit le<, ... 9 Kelle R-•o. Finl-. Flttli>eldl . .._ 10 Eltodt AnQe ll\, llaly, Lotlll. 61. 11 Joe""" Ml•>. West Germ•nr. "'"""· ., 11 J •n L•mmen, Netllertana•. Eni19n. ... 13 Al•1n Pr'O\t. Ft•n<•. McLAten , •t. I• RM• Arnou•. France, Ren.ult, 3' 1$ Jnn·Pltrn J•Doullte, Frence. Renault. H •& Nelson Plquet, Brull, Br•Dlltm. JJ, II Marlo Andttlll, UnlltJd Slates, l.ot\A, " 11. /4nclreadeCurts. 1 l•t'l',/411a ll-.I. " Eddi• Ct..ever, llfly, 01Alle, 1. 10 Em.,,.,.. Fllllpaldl. Br•lll, l"lllllMllOI, H BrunoCil•<ometll,llaly,All•"-·I· Romto. 1 12 RICUtdO P•ftHe, Halt, •rrowt, 6. Oe•n Daty, trelancl, Tyr,.11. and Mlle Th•<kwell. En9 1ano , T yrrell, ltotlt w1trw:trawn before ''"'' re.1art.O loNowlnil 11rno1airua11t CART Money LHdefl 1 Jonnny Rutherford ""2,7" 1 8obl>V lJns.r "9.JOt l l om Sneva 1'2,0IC! Rick Nlear\ 12',,.. Gor-. Jol\ncock 111:1,0JV • Ci••• 8t~11auwn 11111,m I Pa~l'IO Carter '1,704 8 A 1 lJnc!wr •1.on 9 Da11ny °"9<11\ 61,. IQ Tom Bagley '3,241 Misc. Weekend Tran.actton1 eASEeAL.L AMerk .. a.....-- _ DE T 1101 r TIGl:RS Announcad tttat Cidle\ 8•.,,.n. Billy Con\Olo, A099r Cralt, Alu Ciramma\ and Olck Tr•c•wtkl. co.ocllts, wlll '"turn'°' Ille "" s.a-.. e14SKETeALL Nat-I aau.-it A-leU..0 UT /4 '1 JAZZ SIQM<I Darrell Cirlttllrt. Qu.J•O 10 • ....,,11·••¥ contrect. P:OOTaALL " ............... "- "EW OAt..EANS SAIHlS T.--Clluek Muncie ""'"'"II O«:k 10 IN S... 0199D C"••otn tor en undiw:I-dratt choke. HOCKEY ""'''-"8cllef ~ NEW VORIC RANGERS -S ....... ""'' E•PO••IO, unler. lhrouQll Ille .. ,,.., --·-- NBASco,.., SU•DAY'I UlHt•ITIOlll Portland Ill, Los /4nge~'1 K an\as City IU, Atlanl• I lJ Now JU'leV 10$, W-lnQton '7 ~~Ill• II/, Golden Sl•le llJ Pt'\1•a0tlorua 101, O.nv•r •1 NHL Score1 SUNDAY'S EllMtatTIOtlll W 1nn1ppq 7 Vancouvef" ' wasllu"Jlon '· Pln~aurQh • Monr>e-• •. Eomont0tt 1 MonlrH I t , °'1<4901 - NV ts•-nl. ButtatoJ lo\ 14noetes at Edmonton c •ncelled a.cauw Of an •Ir ft•fflc confrolters' ••lllout In Canada. An{(elnia11 er1es ...... .. ..... radio pager Bahia Corinthian Yacht Ch1b's s ixth race or the Angelma n Series Sat11rrta) a ncl Sunday was one or extreme rnntras\s The evl'nl w:i~ hilled a~ .1 r .1C(' lo Long Poi nt , Catalina Island. on Saturday and a race home Sun· day. both count 1ng ;i s onc race ~aturday 's rac~ to the island was a l)reczy affair with the wmd hanging in the 20-knot range But Sunday was another <.tory The wind was so lig ht that none of lht• b<1ats fintsh('d before the 6 p m d1•aclhn<'. -;11 n·~ult~ wc•rc cnmputPd on the basis of the· rnc·c· lo l..011J! Pomt The results . Cl.Al'S /\ I T t•menl,:. Tcd Kerr RCYC .. 2 Lvnc h Mob. Hoh T.ynrh, HC'YC 3 No name. Jim o·ewotrc . vvr Cl.A~ B 1. Porpy , Roy Sinclair. BVC; 2. Howlin Owl. /\lien Stf'wart. VVC. :\ Ma riposa. Dick Hayden. RCYC . CL/\SS C I /\n1nte II . F'red Mas ino. VYC: 2. Just Plain Cr J1.y. Oavl' Ru«hanan. VYC. 3 Ques t. Roger Ciom.hnJ!. \'YC Rawhide Wins Race Light air SUnday m ad<> a slow.moving a~fair.of the first race of Capistrano Bay Yacht Club s Mis· sion Series. The winds got ·so li~hl that the race commit\ee had to shorten the t l.8-mile race. . Overall and Class A winner was Rawhide, skippered by Kenny Kuhn of Capo BYC. Class. R winner was V-Max , John Jlooper. Dana Potn~ Yacht Club. and the winner in Class C was Skosh1 Tiger. Bob Stran~. Capo BY(' Gaudio Tops Lt"hman Field Mark Gaudio of Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club topped a field of 14 Lehman·12 sailors Sunday in a five -race regatta for the L>od1e lieek liabbOOn at Newport ~rbor Yacht Club. Runn ·UP was Bob Baker, Cabrillo Beach Yacht Clu 'Thlrd was Tom Omohundro, NHYC. ( I.. M. HOYI> ) frAc.;k ANOF.R~ON) lnlorma and DAILY PILOT . . cosu ..,u ,.641-1289 ts,. ..... ..., ., .. d MISS•OH v1uo49S-0401 , .. 11 C•""""° C•cH•tr•"O tS•" 0..90 !Jrw" •t Aw•ry ''•Y I COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Coins a Stamps GOLD a SILVER Price• for •25-80 ~c10 .. rmso -cL 1n10 ,.., -'" ...... , r.•••d~ fT24 rnr. Maprp (~al I'm. t7M. u lOOC-.. IM2.50 .. t.IO IOPo.~ .. 7.IO .. 1.90 90' s •• ..,. 8a9' ''"·'"" ..... ,,. Cell lotc..,,...,.-. (714)5~50 South CoHf Pl•za VJllag• _ ......... fteroM--C....-1 WIDE AREA COVERAGE Oraagt c.uty, L.A. C... ly. SH kru,., ... c .. ty. R!YtnWt Cauty. '17.75 &o&al mo. C91& no deposit oo credit approval 0 114,C.I <Ill 'n IUlllO II I 11'1111'\I \I II\ H I , ..,, :lri Herit~e Bank ~1n11111•r I 1111 CONSTRUCTION FINAMCIN .. *Residential up to 4 units no takeout commitment required •commercial Buildings Takeout commitment required alon1 with leases •orange County Properties *Land Loans up to 1 year 50o/r or appr aisal •up to $750.000 Gr ·--L •NDU• Heritage Bank 2171 CAMPUS OAIVE IRVINE, CALIFORNIA nns CONT ACT~ JEFF JOHNSON (714') 833-3700 -----.--,---_-_,,..... _____ _ l 1 I -- Classified ads · work "• Daily Pi lot classified ads work. They work -whether they sell a $10 tool or a $1,000,000 home -by reaching a known audience and eliciting responses from that audience. The Daily Pilot reader audience is young, educated and affluent. Sixty-four percent of them consult the classified pages regularly. And, combined with the Coast Life audience, they number more than 340,000 . Ways you can put that audience to work for you through the Daily Pilot classified section include: £-Dime-A-Line ads, where you can turn your clutter into quick cash with 10-cent-per-line ads on <c:lll~items priced up to $50. -Penny Pincher ads, where you can sell up to $100 worth of items for $2 for three lil_les running twice. ~ -Piiot Po....-ads, where you get four Ii nes any Wednesday for $2. The ad appears in both the Daily Pilot and Coast Life, reaching more than 340,000 readers. -The , where you can find reasonably priced help or advertise your service, from babysitting to window washing. r-----------1 -•CCJlllCll ms I ,where you can save L,.: __________ , valuable time and gasoline shopping locally advertised values. -You can even put Daily Pilot classified ads to work in your absence with llnsw•t Iii telephone answering service, which takes messages from people responding to your ad for only $10 per week. . -Put the Daily Pilot classified section to work for you. Call 642-5678 today. DAILY PILOT 642-5678 , ' i • • 1 • I • DAil Y PtlOl ~· S.C-•mr a t• by Brad Anderson PEANUTS ~ ( 1 ...... 929 'Mr SnvOt'' \l1&1 ,, • .,, 1 Pi>:-•'d :,, -.1.11 .i u1 when lht>y pl1t\ ''" 1:,. .• , •II ,.•• SHOE MOON MULLINS .----------....... ', ....... l'VE 8EEN Tl-ltNl\tN6 PERHAPS '(OU'RE A YfLLOW BILLfr (.UCKOO ~· FUNKY WINKEROEAN I'I> L.l~J 101HA~~llU. "1 • Kx I f< !I< WMINV l lll 1 HlRl f00At..> rn M( 1 I NIJ. AND r WAKr •,nn re r.t-~l rl1Ar rw1 ~! 1'11 .. l'..' H/ll'f\',1 10 ~ If ~I IN f\.AiNUlf.. iJ..l I ~~ .. ~.:, ·~ i {._.,, I '1 • l I ' , by Jeff M acNelly by Ferd & Tom Johnson LO rs t-ow:. -. ' '( -- by Charles M. Schulz ThEtf 60, '~K"A l(A l<A KA KA KA KA KA KA l<A KA KA KOW KOW KOWlP KOWLP KOWLP KOWLP .~Ro·-. ~. ~L~.-~. --·· .. wt:STV1€£Al I DRABBLE • ' ' . l • "":: c:::.-:_: :j\ --~.\, J by .f om Batiuk FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE •·s.. ~~ ' ,L •vU •nr 1P Ml MY 1U\·~.[ .... ~; L '""" ., ~-LL'I ' ,) (_ ~; { -,i~ '- BIG GEORGE COMICS I CROSSWORD by Virgil P1rtctt "I hate Mondays." 0 • ! i .. by Kevin Fagan Nl.IM&C~ "Wft! IS M~~ ~ ~Q.e.?! Wllll\0E~ ~\VE? by Lynn Johnston 5l:J l CAM SEE ! MISS PEACH by Mell Lazarius '--1-... ....... .__~_._.~~-------~'----~~~--L.=:~~~----~~~ :v .'.C:.:.~1-....:; ·'' .... ::\/\ ~j -r ,qz..:: ~ J c.;: wC;...t"< "tCC:. :::> --~ -1: --W ... -.._. THE FAMILY Cl RCUS by Bil Keane "I'm glad yov met Mommy, 'cavse I wouldn 't like not being here." DENNIS THE MENACE ·-I·~_._ GORDO GAwrJOf Al-I FeEL. A)J .Jv.\MW~f:l..A 1,'1' SUHT'NT'i Tl~1 "TUI~ I& A<J ~ )('TlZ). WDlt-JA.S:::v r:-Ai..JDf JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS I Der-. r KNO\.\ HOY\i N IC E. \\LIS .... I -.Ct,,1 L..?C'K ? '......__ NO"T A. rouf;I -.J ·.~,1.µ ~V-ND T~AT IT~ AN AlJTH~TrL' IQ:Lt~/ DR . SMOCK WC:L-L.. WE. ANAL-YZE?D ..,-HE: PIL-L- YO.J'VC: BE:E:N ON 1"HA1" _OCi<.S L.IKe ..; ANc;;"V' MRS F==E:RN 11 I 5 ( CANDY.' ,..---- by Gus Ar riola Exr~ Pr<:t.2E- l.ESS ANO 1\CR'TH- LES';:), A-l1:S::> SE:V I E.t<:/ by Harold Le Doux by Tom K . Ryan ''!7EAR HlLt7E1 ••• HAVE YOU MA~Rlf:Cl VOUf~ COWf?OY ~f:ALJ '{el? IN YOUR LASI L..E::nt:R '{OU SA ID HE OWNEl7 1WO MILLION COWS •... MY fiXJPNESS! POt'i{TIHEYGET MAMA r?OESN'I Kf'{)W BEANS AOOUI COWPINCHlth. ~~M.....11~~-...... ~~--~ ~ jj. )ff ·'~'"' ~ ~ NANCY DON'T SLUR P YOUR SOUP TURN DOWN THAT RADIO by Ernie Bushmiller by George Lemont TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 52 School Fr 1 Uns0<1eo 54 Ta• flour 58 Swell Br 4 Cunieo 60 Hindu god· 9 US ski rescrt dess 14 Pen p0tnt 61 Irene, et al 15 01 hair 62 Well 16 Work hard 64 Denge1 17 Fa'ltled 66 Aed as - 19 Scotch city 20 Ameftnd 211<noctt 22 Min. part 23 War delly 24 Stage scen- ery 26 Moccasins 29 Garden IOOI 31 Hasten 32 Row 33 Olhce clerks 36 Fin1snes 38 Synthetic language· 39 Co'!1e forth 41 Tornado 43 Lick 44 P.1 palm 46 Think 47 Stare 49 Louse egg 50 Tchrs' gp St Actress Patricia - J I 67 Ctta11ot or old 68 Seine 69 Less well 70 Pe4t 1 t Art Lal DOWN 1 Santa - 2 Clocker 3 Decrease 'Neat as - 5 Japanese coin 6 lrtsh county 7 Otalg1a 8 Engraving method 9 Serpents 10 Uses a broom 1 t For each 2 words UNITED FNture SyndlUte Saturday· a Punt. Solved M A D t ll•a L A 111 I 8 D A ' I L I 111 -A TA I AC II I A I I DIT•I M Till AMC I 0 , I A T-•A I I M 0 I UM A -T llMiu1• IM 1 I A L QllllA OIAITll D•O I 1- 111111 •YIDIO UL•I ltCITlll AILILll-111'1 TIO ,-DIAlllll l flLllll -· 1111 I I• YIDIM -a T 1•1111 11 1111 llMITI , A I T a I I I L A Tll 11- IO Ill I I II I T A I L•A M A T IM A I I I I T l •&IC D II I llU LU I U, A t•llT U 0 I I l I A I I f II T•lll I I M 12 Woll down 42 Salt' t3 -degree 45 Oemocritean 18 land ot plen-believer ty 48 Funeral or•· 24 Foreordain lions 25 Burgundy: 53 Lariat 2 words 55 Stadium 27 West Polnllf 56 Light ampll· 28 Cache lier 30 Algenan c11y 5 7 Assays 33 Crlmlnal 59 -noire 34 Coun1erpart 61 Secrete 35 A Finn 62 Bleak 37 Facet 63 Nigerien 40 Gourmets 65 Knowledge I i r ' I· TelerisiOn TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS Monday, Sep1ember 29, I 980 ··-·-V ~ ( CWL Y Pit.OT "1 \111'\ll\) -M•eG--, ...... WOfCll." WOflrWtl A lflilled OolplWI .. '-ICI neppecl, "'~ •1111 ......... atlO Mnl on • dMdly Mi..io.. to alrlll 111 olf tri• • tll W\. POOTM ll Den* ·-•I N•" f~,.•lrlOI• I TIC TAJ; DOUGH M•A•t•H 1'h• P•ttOllll•I o! Ill• 4017tll 11)1 10 mell• • ~ lmOfMalO<I on • Pl~ lrlat .....,, lllrM lelWMS With rMNiQnment • ~MNHYHILL IHOW 9enny II a Wllj9tl tO! "f"'-1• 'four t t!t " I W •I (X)NlACl C Pft()El~~ "l unar Geology' ··i== WllOOlff I.ACK. KOTTP 'Clllpmuok P\onl!", CMI I .. I m.i... l>f..0 .Wfllrlo 11\d dull'\pllnol. Of WMGO 11.U • oui, on gleueolft• • 80ll0 Q()U) HO.I Andy Qlbb GuMll Sttpllanle Mlllt , Paul Stmoo OU. mog. Boyt, Aoclly 8urne11e, Coell•••. B~t Cotby • TIHflll\, 1' AIL°"'S ~N LECAAM:A OONll!A&A TION JOl•n l • CMt•, llUlllOf ol l Ill~ ef f lllOt Sol<llef, l>IJY tallla wllll ROl>et1 MatNttll al)Qul Ill•..,,_, In mia w.c;1el lllj)Cld r-lly II\( llnO UO 8 THE CA 1'1N THE 11AT t>< S.usa 1 rllymtng ca1 "'lh Ille 110~ 1181 '"'"",.. t() Ille In an 11\lmll· "'1 v•••IOn ot lh• 11ory ol 1111 t 811\y day Yllll 10 IWO bou1d cnud1en IA) Gt CAROL BURNETT AHO FRIE.NOS • GREAT PERFORMANCES linker Tailor. SC>ldler. Spy" G1110rge Smiley (Alec Gu1nness1 rs ulHld becll co duly 10 uncover 1119 Troub.. on 11w1 Kouor hOmeftonl I nd bel- IM S-lllOgs wf\<trl I.,_., hold • ,,..., e1ee11on illl<I B11rbarlno 1s ove11111own (Piii 11 • SAHFOAO AHO SOH W'*1 Fred returns 11arty from 1 long 1np, ne spotls a homecoming party L•mont a.n<I Grady had plaoned ~foh:-.~.1 (;111~1 t ind lh:.m Bull~r seal llw1r t•n~u~t•nwnt ~ 11 h ._\ k1:.s on ·Little I Joust> on thl' Pr ,w h' tonight at 8 on NBC. ('harmd t Mole.· a dOUllle agent whO llu lnl/llratll<l Ille 8rll· 1&n SlfC1et Service Ager>ey and 11 1ea~1ng cop secrecs lo MOSCOW IPBrl l)Q ~ MOlllE • DICK CAVETT au..i~ R1Ch11d Bu11on (Part 1 ot •) (Rl I S-2-1 CONTACT Q M •A0 S•H 1;00 C8S NIWS N8CNfWS HAPf'Y DAYS AGAIN Marlon's lrequenl mySlert- ow ebMnces lrom llome creale susplc:ton In Iha l\ousellold I JOt<ER'S WILD M•A•S•H A lecture. 1 Shirley Temple movie end 1 plenle are emong lhe acllvllles lldledui.d lor the 4077111. • BARETTA ear.it• beoomeS 1nv0tved wltll a t>eautllul bul dan- gerous young woman while wonrlng undercover on Ille doclls. • OVER EASY _ "Gr0wtng Older. The Next 20 YMrS" Guests Gray P•nlher le•der Maggi• J\U"'' l ~II ft: J 1111 C.t.iu<le Pe:t>f•••• '11.) MACNEIL I Li11RER REPORT TIC TAC DOUGH 7 30 f) 2 ON THE TOWN Steve and Melody look at E•rlhQuake Aw1Ht1ne~s Weelt.. a 1001i. al Jam~ Dean s mlluttnce on '"" young peopl& ol 1od11y llD FlGHT9.AC1(- T optCS tnclude BOIO cllal lenge phony c;narges we1gh1 10&~. repa"m~n weSh1ng hPS >Ind Roy.it ()jc;flt1ng Micro Machines U SHANANA Guesl Miiton Berle 0 FACE THE MUSIC QI ALL IN THE FAMIL V Arcllltt lump~ ol 8 S35.000 oiler to sell nos 110~ 10 a blacl< lluyer Ell) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT m JAMES MICHENER'$ WORLD ··soorts tn AtTW>flC& The Chann~I Li11t in911 tt-KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles-D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles 8 KABC·TV (ABC} Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Drego D KHJ· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles GJ) KCST (ABC) Safi Diego • KTlV (Ind J Los Angeles • KCOP·TV (fn<l J Los Angeles 8D KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles 8i> KOCE-TV (PBS) Hun11ng1on Beacr • • • Tiiis Spotting life" t!luc~ Atlllute lntetv•ow~ ( 1963) Richard Harris. wrtn Mut1 dmmad Alt Rachel Rober'1s A suc· A11hur A~M. 0 J Strnµsun ceutul rugby player loses J11rt otho" 1101...i .. 1111uros Ifie love of a gOO<I woman •rr91t ''I"' th1~ 1:•plor.itrQn aller laktng advanlage ol I till< '"""0""1 !<lie 01 ne1 ~ llrs.) '''"'~ P<1lllC•P1tlron In 8:46 IJ QlV TO BE tv11ct1<.&n sports lfU ANNOUNCED 8) P M MAGAZINE 9;001)()) M•A•S•H lnu Shroud ot Tuon a Chailes returns to lhe unll tarnll ot watu1_sk1e__!,L afle• a wild binge In Tokyo. 81>0-.J RIKKl-Tll<Kl-TAVI unable 10 rerMmbe< Wf\6re A l•tllt1 mongoose who IS he was or w1111 lie d •d. (R) sav&a tr om drowning by an D fHE TONIGHT SHOW IMran !Jmlly Docomes Iha 18TH ANNlllERSARY' lunrolv s proleccor 111 tll1s SPECIAL t1n1moled spec101 llased on Ed McMahOll and Doc tr1e cta~src by Rudyard Severlnsen join Johnny t<tpllng (RI Corson lor a celebrallon 01 0 LITTLE HOUSE ON Ille sllow's 18tll annlWI'· THE PRAIRIE sary, including segmen\11 laura llroaks oll nor from past shows tea1uling tlngagcmenl to Almarno Batie Mldler, Berry Mani. and ro1u•ns nos ring when tow, Steve Marton and 0111- 1\1> r11tuses IO allow 1181 to OIS teach (Part 2)Q 1J THAT'S tNCREDtBLE 0 MOlltE Fea1u1ed· a one-legged • • • • Tiie Aparlment · htgll SChOOI sllr, a yogi t 1960) Jack Lemmon. Shir-who 1e1s an 11leph1n1 walk iey M11clalne •1op1ng to on him; a pries! who sup- ge1 8 promotron. a young posedly made a para/yZlld 1nsur11ncP man lends n1s m&J\ walk apartmen1 10 r.elllOr e•acu-CD M!RV OAtf<FlN !lveh Gues1s· Gary Coleman. 0 MOlllE Tammy Wynelle. Jane • • • ·~ Calling Nortnsi~e Seymour, Or Joyce Broll!· 777 11948) James Stew-ers. Arthur Murray Danc- Jrl, Hillen Walker A ers. reporte1 reopens an 11-8) HEE HAW vea,.old case to flee a Guests Norm Crosby. wrC1ngtully rmprtsoned Janie Fricke, Buck White . man (2 hrs I [I DON CORYELL GI P M MAGAZINE Hosll Tom Kelty and Don TUBE TOPPERS ABC • 6:00 -Monday Night Football. The Denver Broncos meet the New England Patriots in Foxboro, Mass. KTLA • 8: 00 -"The Apartment." Jack Lemmon and Shirley MacLaine star i n this Oscar-winning movie comedy about a fall guy who's the "key man " in a love nest operation. NBC IJ 9:00 -Johnny Carson's 18th Anniversary Special. Highlights of past "Tonight" shows spice this two-hour program -a rare Monday night appearance for its popular host. <See photos below) ptay•ra. 9:30 9 ()) Wl<AP IN CWCIHNATI MOlhet Car1aon decldet tllat 11-ye•r·Old Arlhur Carlson Jr • who llu Ju•t bMrl kicked out ol mllllary schOOI, ahould 18arn Ille radio llusJnen. (A) 9 THE ADVOCATES: ELECTION 'IO Represenl atlvet 01 Iha ml ]Of presidential candl· daces deblle foreign and domestic issues Michael S. Ouk akts moderate• trom Harvard University's Kennedy S<:hool of Gov· emment. GJ) MOVIE • • * "The Log 01 Tiie Black Peart" 11975) Ralph BeUamy, Kiel Martin A slockbroker sets oul 10 recov11r • sunken treasure after 1119 Oylno gflndtlllhllt tells lllm where 10 nnd II ( I llr .• 30mln.) 10:00 II()) LOU GRANT 81111e uses wtrll goes on •t Ille Trlb le< lier angle on • s1ory about se~ual harass- ment on Iha Job UD NEWS D MOVIE ••'Ir "The Termlnat Man" (1974) George Segal. Joan Haclttll B8$8d on • novel by ~lchael Crlclllon A man becomes a guinea pig JOHN DARLING lnvoMng electrode lmplilllling when he 1utter1 trom bltckouls wlllcll rnllle lllm violent (I llr., 30 min.) I NATIONAL NEWS 10:30 • NEWS JIJ2. AT SNOWBIRD H11<ble Mann and his se•- lel perform "Memphis Underground," "Cln- n•mon Flower" and "Just The Way Yoo Are" In a concerl taped II U1all's Snowbird resort 8i) MASTERPIECE THEATRE "Crime And Punishment" Ra~lnlkov, Impoverished and unstable, con1em- pla1as murder as Ille ol)ly SOiution 10 Ills desperallon (Part 110 11:00 8 llD (I) llJ) NEWS 9 HOLLYWOOD 80UAAE8 G NEWLYWED GAME CD YOU BET YOUR LIFE Buddy Hackett meels an uollc dancer. 1 lady plumber and a male nur941 wllo rs also a basketball player • ONE STEP BEYOND "Fatfler Image" A young man lnherlls Ills lathers es111e Including a mysteri- ous Old burlesque t1111a1er 11:30 8 ()) OUINCV, M.E. A f11end ol Quincy's Is WHENE.'IER PECPI-~ 6E.E UG IN PE~ON J. IHE:Y Al-WA"'6 5AY Wt:. LOOK "THINNER ll-4~ Wf, 00 ON 'TELEV15ION/ tececl wltll nnanclll ruin beCaUM of • 1111 end run acdelent. ll TOMOMOW O\!!Mt: 8udOy Hacken • MOMC.urlR & WISE Eric and Ern!e atar In Ernie'• vet•lon 01 Ill• ctu- lkl "F1111ken1teln " ,,~E Two hlllblllles 111empt 10 awirldkt Ill• 1own~p4e ot Dodge by Mfllng tllem wonllleu mining c111m1. • HOGAN'S HIEAO£S A new prltoner dllma he l1 rNlty an Amerleln general lndtsgUIM . • IT TAKES A THIEF Al Mundy It sent 10 1n Iron CUrtlln country to rffCU8 the I I-year-Old d1ugh1er of 1 detected scientist • G CAPTIONED A&C NEWS @ ABCN!WS 11:&0 0 IRONSIDE llltJllng hit b•nk m1nage1 on pe1son11 bu11ness, Ironside Is caugh1 In lhe middle ot I rot>t>erv ~~- 12:00. TWILIGHT ZONE Thomas P81rlck Mcfllulty 15 given a watch that possesses I Sh ange pow- er. D A8CNEWS • MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE Tiie IMF mus1 tree a po!lll· cal prisoner trom an ·~·l>'OOI glasa cell. 12:20 IJ MOVIE • • "Hammerllea-d'' I 1968) Vince Edwards, Judy G11&son A secret agenl sell out to c1ac:I( an lnlernetlonel ptol Involving ptens to a nuclear defense ~tern. (2 hrs ) 12:30 8 THE 8AXTEAS D THEFBI I NATl()fjAL NEWS 12:40 ()) THE SAINT Simon helps a young girt who claims 10 1$e Hiller's dauglller escape from two men pursuing ner 12:509 AOAM-12 Malloy disappears 1n10 the wilos ol Gntfltll PBlk wllrle pursuing a robb(lry sus· pec1 1:00 0 THE BEST OF IATUN>AV NIGHT UY! • MOVIE * • * "The Voung OOc;. 1011" ( 198 1) Fredric March, Ben GUUte. Two d0Gto11 wl1n opp01fng viewpolnll learn lo 'trlPeCI ucll 01"-t 1tte< worlclllQ r:her. ( 1 llr , 30 min.) 1:30 NEWS THE LONE RANOEA "Green F0t GOid" 1:501 NEWS t:20 NEWS 2:25 MOVIE **'It "Wllllt FHlher" ( 1955) Robert Wagner, JOhn Lund A l)(01C>9Ctor 11 ln11rumen111 In bringing petu lo Ills territory. (2 hrt., Smln ) 2:30 11• HEWS Taw•darf'• Dayd•e Mo.,I~• 11;00 m * • "Wyoming Out- law" ( 1939) JOhn W•yne. R•y Co11tgan. The Three Mesqultears upose a crooked pOlltlclan wllo 1111 been selling jobs lo lmpav- erlslled ranchers. (I llr.) -AF~R~~ 12:00 ID * *~"Sliver River" I 1948) Errol Flynn, Ann Sheridan A pompous Ind sell-ce.nlered g•mbler learns humility and com- pesslon when Ile watches a deur friend slowly dying. (I hr . SO min ) 8) **'\"Stage To Tlll.n· der Rock" 11!l64) Barry Sutllva11. Marllyf Ma.well. Fearing a l)(Oblem of toyal- lies. 1ownspeopte hire a gunman 10 11ssume a spe- cie! Job 101 Ille local law- man (2 hrs) 3:00@ * *!A "Smile Wilen Yoo Say 'I Do" ( 1973) Nar- r a led by All(ln Funt A look at lhe baffle or tile sexes wtlh Ille Candid Camera crew ( t hr 30 min.) 3:30 0 ·~"Beware! The Blob'' ( 1972) Godfrey Cambrrdge, Marlene Clark. A frozen, s111pefeu mus brought florn Ille Nonh POie by a geologist it lllawed oul by his wile and goes on e rampage ot kill· 1ng 12 hrs J by Armstrong & Batluk Tiie Snrood ol Turin, a Coryell discuss Sunday's ...._ ____________________________________________ .:..,. ____ •_a_m_.1_y __ o_' __ w_a_1e·r-sk-le_•_•·_J ____ ..!;c:11a~r!oe~r~g~a:m=e~w:11:11!spec~~Jl~lc..L._!::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::...!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::....::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:..J 'Cosmos' Hypes Universe By MICHAEL DOUGAN Ot-Dally rtlM , .... Whal Carl Sagan's new. highly touted public television series "Cosmos" needs is a little more cosmos and less Carl Sagan. Sagan bas done much in recent years to popularize his ..apecialty, astronomy, and other areas of scientific interest. He is a darling of _th~ college lecture circuit and oitdl appears on talk shows. His books -particularly. "The Cosmic Connection" and "The Dr agons of Eden," a Pulitzer Prize winner ._ are eminently readable excursions into realms rarely touched by bis lay audience. IN POPULARIZING science. be bas also popularized Sagan. He uses bis handsome features, boyish expressions and bright wit to draw people into his topic. And so, in "Cosmos," viewers spend less time learning about the universe than they do watching Sagan, often in profl.le, display bis pearly whites. He seems less inte r est e d in imparting hard information than in waxing poeticaJly on the awe of it all. "I would be very pleased if viewers left the entire 'Cosmos' aeries without remembering a single fact." he has s aid, "provided they rekindled some of that ancient human joy in understandin g the natura l world, in the celebration of nature.·· IN FACT, SAGAN comes across as Jess a scientist than a cheerleader for the universe. Despite this, and his unabashed e10 tripping, "Cosmos'' has promlN, aa judged from the ftrst episode, scheduled to air on KOCI!, Channel 50, at 8 p.m. Tuesday. Beneath the chaff, Sa1an does put science into a new, and meaningful , penpective. If nothin1 else, the special ----------"''•te•\ "a (81. AH ""' C.A.S. ,_ ~l ••• , ff• 111•111••rt ,., =••ltt~, ~a111111erclal1, ,.._ ...... ,..r111.-"._. ., .... _,. mr• ' I I CALL NOW ! .. , (714) 957-0282 ----------• SHOWING WHAT MAKES THE WORLDS GO ROUND Or. Carl Sagan, Hoet Of TV'• 'Coamoa' effects are excellent. Sagan uses them lo Lake his viewers beyond the galaxy aboard a "spaceship of the imagination" and into the ancient AJexandria library, "the first true resear ch institute in the world.•• The space tour includes a g lobal s tar cluste r ("like a swar m of bees ... every bee a sun"). a "steller nursery'' in the Orion nebula and the scene of a collision between two galaxies. R E ·ENTER ING OUR own solar system, voyage rs see lightning on the dark side of Jupiter. the rings of Uranus and Pluto's moon, all discovered only within the last few years. Back down on Earth, Sagan demonstrates how the Egyptian Eratosthenes calculated the circ umference of the home planet some 2,000 years ago. "His only tools were s ticks, e yes , feet and brains ... the modem astronomer notes. For an impre ss ive finale , Sagan resurrects his famous ··cosmic Calendar." CONDENS ING THE 15-billion-year history of the universe into a single 12-month period. Sagan puts Lhe Big Bang in the first second of the first day of January. With that point of reference established, he illustrates that the Earth did not form until mid-September and man made his debut on Dec. 31 at 10:30 p.m. Our entire recorded history covers only the last few seconds of Dec. 31. Now. that's perspective. "Cosmos" is the latest of a progr amming genre in which intellectuals or note present t heir personal world views through a limited t elevision series. Earlier efforts, like Jacob Bronowski's "The Ascent of Man," Allistalr Cooke's I IN GOD M TRUIT (N) ,,.1:11t·• .,......,.,, .. -.' .... -~~· .. I]· fiiWil-.... _ ... ,. ,,..-~~ ~ ""'. .......... T. Slnlll Mii ~1444 IT._lllft-411 ..... IMA PUU Ollflll' 63H 770 111., ~·~339 Tum your unusabfes Into usable cas11.ca11 Dally Piiot clauffled '42·5671. , .. U"~Y(N) ' CR) •• 'J:»J:IO ..... ..,.."' H11111111fll!llllCll Ma0388 ....... __ ,...~ MISSIOn VfllO 13°'6990 c-....... .-.. Or1nge 63-N~~ .. ._ ------· ··--•& Ir.Int ~r ·06!>5 "America," and Kenneth Clarke 's "Civilizatio;a" ex h ibited considerably more substance than this first edition or "Cosmos." HOPEFULLY, comi n g episodes will be more foc~ed . fact-filled and fascinating. After all, Sagan has more than poetry in his head; his is one of ,the most bril l iant minds in contemporary science. run of secrets to share. As be points out, "The cosmos is all there ever is or ever was or ever will be." And that's worth knowing about. Letterman Off the Air NEW YORK CAP) -NBC's "David Letterman Show," daytime TV's only comedy- variety program, will leave the air Oct. 24 after a four-month run, the victim of persistently low ratings, the network ac- counced. NBC took a chance with the show, offering a young comic perhaps best known u a sub- stitute for Johnny Carson on the network's "Tonight" program to . the daytime audience. "The David Letterman Show" pre- miered Jwte 23 as a 90-minute late-morning fixture, and was shortened to an hour Aug. 4 when raUngs did not improve. , •• ,f.tt{I, I Hftl ~ \ot: l'I /\//\ ~ (:."J1tNllllll'lll.' ~ 1Btla for Jolanng Johnny Carson, who celebrates his 18th anniversary aa host of NBC's "Tonight" show tonight at 9 on Channel 4, is glimpsed in photos from each of his previous 17 seasons. The two-hour special will include highlights of past shows. cma n 11m11r111 •• uau ..m .-Edw11di Ctntml Edwatds Twin N1t11tl UA City Clfltflll Ctnlrr 848 0383 499 2327 634·3'1\ 979-4141 --.. -._, IM'll Woodb11d1e C1neme Yie;o 011ntt DrM·l11 Westb~ S30·4401 S51 ·06S5 U0-6990 SS8·7022 .U1M1nn's 81ta PW11<710 52H339 -Orance Mall 637·0l40 _SM IM aNTIMI M1sSton Dtive·ln ( 114l 49HS~~ -- 88 DAIL V PILOT Remember Guido? He's Schnelder Lt-Utt or tht> Wtt"k tfrom Art J ar· retl:"C'llntOn, 0 "D1•ur th and Mural n Man )'t>itn ai::o. J 111n, l'ht1racter "ho rnlled hlml'lt'lf •(:u1do Pon11n1 av pcan'd quilt· ofll'n tm the St vc All h llnd J~1d., f',1.ir tth0" Int lltl Olhtr ~ll ball uml 111hrul11i.:" ''••h•ment., he l'lllitnl'\I 111 ~· d -.111 '" '" 11f tht' ""~ ll'lg of lht' II ah.111 l ru1 .. 1• 'lh111 thr Andrt-ai Oonli 111 Im h h\' ""n l\<t°d b\ ""''lmm1n.: ushcrrf' -them. toptbe.r in Ulclr own .a~.._ That would have been the Emmy. wlnnln1est fether·aon combo ln the hl1tory of TV. It'• a 1oM q ... U•: la U.. FCC EqHl nme edld a plu or• ma.ua for GOP cudldate toule &ea1u! ENTERTAINM_ENT '. ll18 man\ ~ 1hl , ~JI n i. 1·1111.:ht th1• '" II r 0 r I h " \ II\ Ill I ~ f J l I 0 n n c1 N1ll urJllru111111 "''" 11•1• "hn l'C•n1t11ct l'd •I ltl\1111\l~h lll't\111 I nu... I [11'111 n Televlalon station managers, who maintain a library of Reaaan·s old TV ntma, have been beaie1ed by viewers ukint them t.o rerun some of them in a "Ronald Rea1an Week." While concedin& that thi1 would be shrewd s howmanship, the decision· makers all brin& up the Equal Time r ule as precluding such program- ming. / 'G la d You Asked That' 1111111·11 o111t 11 Ii.· 1'111 tf,irr111~t1111 .Ir PAT HARRINGTON WITH HIS 'ON! DAY' FAMILY Andrf• Oona Sontlvor' Make• It to the ToP '!1011 111 l\11 '1 ,, lop li.u1 111,1 11 Uw ·•let J Jck \\ luh· 1 tub lb Jl "'llOK \\ORIO-I> I' tlu '\lh lll.11l111um IJCtr .J' .1 '''l''"'ll•'I in •I \I\' Jtl aw1·m'' 1\1 ' qUt''' 1110 '' • uuhl tlu.-. lw Lht ,,111u·.l'.11 ll.11 t lllflun ""ho pl,I\' th1• f>JI t 111 I he' 1111,tn J.11 I. ul 11 1 tr,111t'' l.\thncult 1 ''" lht h11 l H:... )'\ 'Item On1 ll.1 . •I J I 1r111 1 11111 .... " ,1111 1n tht> twadt111t-~ \\ nrl11nJ,? J<.. .111 Nnr t1 nw ~all'i.mr111, l'.tl ",,:-, 111tn .. tm t•tl to a CHS pro NOT TOO LONG a fterward, Pat 111 udt> a decision "With that iccent," ht· t•xphunt!d. "Uu1do gets laughs I 1·u11 't get myself. . But in the end, \\hat I have to do Is really make 11 a~ Pat llarrington .. And he d id - 111 n11:ht dubs, on the stage and in I'\' On the other hand, many Reagan- 8 ush Republican bac kers have mixed emotiOl14, especially after re- r eading the reviews of at leas t several of the movies. For example, a review of "Thal Hagen Girl" (co· s tarring Ronnje wilh Shirley Tem- ple). which played on some stations the day Convention '80 opened, read like the critic, quoted in 1947, was a Carte r De mo c r at. He hissed , "Pictures like this trash must be the reason Shirley is so happily retired'" r.1111 dir1•1 h•r a' 1;u11lo t'd1111111 a !Hll' '' 01 ,,, lilt' i\ndrrd l>unu ' In II I t'f \ !ht• k llalt.111 tll'l't!Ot ht• 'X 11l.111w1t th.it he .,. J' 1111 tl11· hrid~t· "tw11 II h.tptit•nt•d .11111 IL .... u~ \ \'rV 11.1 r l. . \ 'ml onh <'lll I [) IU-11< I!'> tht.' ... ,, m , " 1, I.. ,.1 1 11 l r .1.I t'... 1 h l' !>hlJHHl'I le .. 111n \llll 11•IJlt• \Li.' ho111 in '1'11111'--.1101 ·., l 1•lt'lH 11' ...... 1,10n unto ,1ftcrr1•ot•ll "h' 11 Ith• \ndft'J L>oni1 t'\)f <:111\111 t1t.•1·:111w u 1u11mng 14a~ th.tt 1•\1·11t1i.1ll\ 14111 him a start on the ...,,,., ,. \llt.'11 -.bo...., lit! turned uµ from llflll' 111 lllllt' ,1!> '10 lt.tli~n WIUtt'I , illl Ir l!>h 11x kt') ti Scol<'h ld11cl and a bop 111u:.1t1.t1111.imt·d Luwre·nct-W1•lk ' Today. he's regarded as one or the most hila rious comedians in prime- t1mt> TV, starring in CBS' "One Day at a 'flme " He only r egrets that he and his father never developed a property that would have co-starred Send your ~nwna to Hy Cordner, "Glod You Asked That," care o/ thi3 newspapeT, P.O. Bor 19620, Irvine, 92114 . Marilyn and Hy Gardner will ~ aa many queations aa they can in their col- umn, l1ul the volume of mail makes ~rsonal replies 1mpouible. ~i~ll ~;~~I .. "'J ._,....,_,~_ .... • '"' ... WWIH A StaANOla CAlUm \li4 1400 lb4.I0.4.I .. --...... .. ::-] ..... .,94:~ Mk-4 °"'~-~ • -........... Wlllll & llHllt•I I OO.J1tt•l10 •t100•I01JO ( .. , ... ..,.......,. ... aoaOH llNI ''°' ·~ .. 1::---4Mlt4.I n.o..i, Oi>4 lr't °"'' A -·· AIOLA.HI 1P01 ... " I .......... 1l t f ... ),4,.. ... 10• MlATIAllS !POI 6.f) ~U••?.!.tl .. t.t ............ 11 w--. AJ'- STAlOOSf MLMOlllS111 1::-.111 .. --·- • -I """,.._t o.,.~ .. ,._,.,,_n..w.,...4 ··,~ HOPSCOTCH '' --,, .. , ___ ....... 49.f t 'd4 ~~ ·--.......... hy .. IN 000 WI ntUST !"01 1l4>t Hl .... MMJ .. Ue••U A s-,. Of Ne"',..j l- TNI llUI UOOOH 111 ·~-,--··· '"WHEN A STRANGER CA LLS' "110A'fl-1 -·06-10 0 (Ill 'Al1Wto , "-> .... :IO 1 tM "f HOPSCOTCH .. (R) w•ou a-1 ~ •~10 >o t•r 10 I Q0..2·4J.' 0 , U.-t u .. BORDEJtLINE .. (PG) THE IN-LAWS" (PG) n.. Al .... ,.,_ ,, -°" ...... WmtOUT WARNIN0111 ,. .. DIRANOID !al ,,..,.._ .... -..... ~ c.lth TMI MOUNTAIN MIN111 ~, ... WHOLLY MOlll tPOI n.. ._....,. t--....... SMOIUY ANO THI IAHOfT It IN J ,. ... 1941 IN ) _.,.,.,,"""' .... ~"" nu CHIUMllN (I I .... THI VlllTC>a 111 ....... ll 11 .... , ... "" •••• , "·---·· IOIOIRLM INI ""' THI CHANOll'"° c•1 ..................... - '"' llO llAW\.1•1 ""' TMI OCTAGON 191 ......... _._ ... __.. NUO CAUi lllO '-IL ftlN DI lA MUltn 'Sta~d~st' Sharp Satir~ Ry tlON PENNJN<;TON ~ ... Hollyw-ll~w The (in1.• line bt'lwct•n genius and madness is comfortably str addled b) Woo<l y Allen in his latest him. "Sta rdust Mem ories .. And he uses this vantage point to ta~e a humorous look at both sides, which are wonderfully merged in a ~atm<·al t>xamination of an a rtist's relJtionsh1ptn the !"Ol'lely in which he works The fil m , which is l Mo''1E J probably Allen's mos t ' personal work to date, is REYJEW hasically his "8 1h," ..__ _______ __, aJthough it actua lly seems more to be Alle n 's un.pt.CSS.lOn of Fellin i 's "R12" as interpreted by RerAman IT I, A Sl'RRf:i\USTIC excursion through the psyt·heof u filmm aker< Allen I who is searching for a grand patte rn to life and a profound meaning to ex1stenc(• Whi It' it is not as unrelentingly depressing as "lntNior~. · it 1s often quite dark in the phil11soph1cat qu<'stwns it tackles II 1s also very funny as Allen unleashes his barbed humor at pseudo-intellectual posturing and, most of all, at himself and his work. He stars as a filmmaker who sees the human suffering around him and who does not want to make funny movies any more But he is told by his studio executives (in• scene featuring United Artists president Andy Albeck and Jack Rollins. who executive produced "Stardust Memories" with Charles II. J offe), his fans and even s ome alwns from outer space to :·make funny movies " • T HE BASIC' SETTING IS A "Film Culture \.\'cekend" devoted to the filmm aker's work at the Stardust Hotel, a seas ide r esort. Within this framework. Allen details the pressures off a me, with fa ns constantly bugging him for his autograph and people pressuring him to give his support to various charitable causes. He also puts down efforts to find deep meaning in his art at one point a fan ponders "what the Roi ls· Royce re presented ,'• to which a companion replies. "r think it repres ented his car." And Allen directly confronts payjng tribute to other fillmmakers ' works when someone questions if a certain scene was a hom age to another work and his associate replies "No. it wasn't a homage, it was a direct lift." As in "81,'2," there are also three women in this man's life, none of whom he can com mil h~mself to in a fully satisfactory relat1onshlp. The three women a re Charlot'! Rampling, a neurot ic actress h~ once_ It E T T E \I I It t E R is 1)Ni-nC"'YYJMffW,U_ [i!J •. ~·~:~:'·c;~·~:::~·~::·:__ CISU •SA U --lfSTllllSTtl IUl-111 UA Cinema SaddlebKk r.1nedome C.tnema Wesl Hi-Way 39 Ortvr>ln S40·0S94 S81 ·~ 634·2553 892 4493 891 3693 NOl'_-'WO_TM1 ... 0 men1 TREAT YOURSELF TO THI TWO BEST COMEDIES OF THE CENTURYI U\CAll AUIFOUIS (al~:fa~} IVllYIAT.-...J .a..MA~ OMIT.M nAllOUST Ml:MOlllH UINIMA'11111 En cutlw proOvcetl PtOOu<.•r Olr•<lor·tc"""'C'I•• • Ja<' ROUIM, Cl\a•le•... Jottt AO!lltrt G••""""' Woody Allt n ..... ,.,. .... ,~ ........ . C .. t WOOCly Allen, Cherlolle Remptlng, J.s1I<• H•rpt r M•rle ·O>rl>ll,,. S.rr..,11. Tony II-rt. 0.. .. 1 Sltrn Amy Wr1g111. th ltft Hamt, John Rothm.,., Anne OtS.IYO, Joen Heumen Ken Cllepln . RuM1"9 lime -"mlnul .. M~AA ae11 ... : .-0 knew ; Marie-Christine Barrault, as a French divorcee with two children , and Jessica Harper. a n untainted young violinist. Tony Roberts is also featured, along with an extremely large cast of inte restmg faces who wea ve in and out of the a ction. TKE FILM COMBl-NES-lantasy and Fealit-y-tn a non-linear time framework and it has been given a marve lous look by producer designer Mel Bourne a nd cinematographer Gordon Willis, whose black a nd white photography is richly textured and filled with interesting images that ofte n com bine delightfully incongruous elements. The excellent technical work is the result of Allen 's usual team , including Boutne: WilUs and editor Susan E. Morse, with Santo Loquasto joining as costume designer. 'Rose' Star, 'Taxi' Actress Will Jf7ed NEW ORLEANS <AP) -Frederic Forrest nominated for an Oscar last year for his role .in th~ film .. The Rose," will take an actress for bis bride -Marilu Henner of the television series "Taxi." a spokesman says. . A spokesmarr for the couple said the wedding wiJJ be Sunday at the home of friends in New Orleam. It is the first marriaae for Ms. Henner who is 26. Forrest Is 42 and was married one~ before. After the cer emony, they will return to Hollywood, where she will resume work on "Taxi" and he will begin work on a movie, "One From the Heart." ~ I '\II Fl!MJ.. PICTI Ht . . NOW PLAYING AMC ORANGE MALL Orange 637 ·0340 MAU'l IOUTM COAST Costa Mesa 546-271 l EDWARDS' IADDLHACK El Toro 581-5880 EDWARDS' CINEMA WEIT Westminster 89'1 ·3935 PACIFIC S Ml·WAY JI DRIJf·IN Westminster 891 ·3693 STADIUM DltlU·IN Orange 639·8770 MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE "AIRPLANE". INI "DIVINE MADNESS" {ft) "XANADU " (PG) "STARDUST MEMORIES" (PG) "'THE EMPIRI ,,., SftlKIS IACK" --l'Alla- 11esn11c1£0 "BLUES BROTHERS" Undt• 11 '"""• ecc-nr"'CI 1 "PROM NIGHT" (R) ....... "'"""" o-o-c=::::::--...::-·--··· ··:.-::::.:.::.;.:...: .. ......;,.,J 11 "THE HUNT£R" ® HO OtlE IJNO[A t1 AOM!TTEO I "~INAL COUNTOOWN(PQ) .. ( ... ,. """' ... , .. ry ,,,,_net-I . r; , • :;::::i I '"THI ..... LAeooM" All D m AllO 111,,u.tt RECEIVE f "C. u.O:~ •• SUITI" nil HM. Of !WE MOnot>I l'ICT\l'IE ! INI CODE Of IEV llEOUl.A lt0'4 ~ • C """ a -1 ! "Am'\At4r ----------"UmlD~I" f1J UI • Anrwh•r• In the ·m•1.1"•"'•···"'a"1t"'·P· ,,., -Cl•CM I ato.." .... KNOWS flt YOU'M ALONI" ,, . • • '\il. ---------·#., -·. -· (· APWlre•t• Shared Rnle Ginger Rogers (right >. who starred in the original movie version of "42nd Street." visits Karen Prunczik , who plays the s ame role in the Broadway production, backstage aft e r a recent performance. "WILLIE & PHIL" (R) l'lUI "IN-LAWS' "INGOD WE TRUST" •N,t IO. IOU (PG) INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Classlfled •Horoscope • Invisible Victims NEW YORK <APl S11t years a10 a 18·year-Old Cbicaao high rhool student waa set upon and 11avaaely beaten In a c hurc h pla.y1round. Today, ttt 22, he's m a nursan1 home for adolt-3cents 11._. had s uffered brain dama..ce. Laat April, he received $10,000 from the Illinois Crime Com~nutloo Bo.rd lt wu lhe maximum payment, bul It 1sn·t nearly enou1h The protcnosas 1sn 't f•vorable Medical bllls and other disabllil.)' t'X~nus have bttn hutte and may wen continue 1ndef1nltel)' Even so, this vicUm of cnme was mor~ fortunate than-flfbif'Decau.se nuno15" u •mong st~tes that make some provision for aiding them. In general, while ·the cnmanal JUSt1re system may bring offenders to JUSU ce the assailant in the Chicago cast was sentenced to 8·to-20 years -most vtcttms are left to fend for themselves THIS ALOO•'N F.SS Is coming urider t.ncreasing .attack rrom critics who argue that the chief product of crime as. after all, victims. most ot whom suffer physical. hnanc1al and psych.le buns the system does htUe to ease and sometimes unwittingly aggravates . The crime victim is hardly peripheral in our society. FBI figures show that every 24 I There ·s a painful paradox m the cnmmaJ justice system's preoccupation with defendants and thelf rights and its aloofness to victims. Part of the reason, according to some crime sp ecialists, is society's peculiar habit of blaming the prey as well as the predatcx. There is no justice. ·says Diana Montenegro {above holding photograph of her murdered daughter). ho uri acrou the nallon, 53 persona a re murdered, 1,400 uuulled and 180 women rapf'd t:vtry 31 a«onda produce another victim m lheM-c8te1torle• of violent crime alone. "It ·a an old uw around here thal lhe victim 14 vlctlmlied onre by the criminal and once by thf' rrimlnal juatice ayatem," says Jan Kirby, diret•tor of the t.•w Enforcement Aaaistance Adrnmh1tnt1on's victim wttne68 pro1ram. 1'hf' t.EAA hH put toaether a chart entitled · '1'he Cr11nlnal Injustice System" which starts by noting that the criminal bu only a 20 percent chanct> of getting ar rested IF HE IS ARRESTED, he's informed of his rights, receives medical attention if injured, is provided with an attorney ii he can't hire his own and may then be relellSed on bail. often to the d1squ1etofhis victim. The victim us ually pays his own medical bills, replaces damaged property from his own resources, is often required to give up his Ume and sacrifice some of his earnings to aid the investtgation. Generall y he 's kept in the dark about how the case is going. Then there's the trial itself. The defense, exercising its rights. may delay and postpone, plea·bargain, succeed in excluding evidence .and employ the fuJI artillery of the law while the victim or his relatives watch, wonder and often fail to comprehend. THE VICTIM may be asked lo go through a painful recounting of the crime· and an even more painful cross-examination by a hostile attorney. He's outside the courtroom while waiting to be called. He has no right of apj>eal "The system as it is doesn't treat victims like people." says Harold Boscovich, director of the victim-witness program in the Alameda County district attorney's office. "It treats them as though they were burglar tools or a stolen television set, just another piece of evidence." That's certainly how Diana Montenegro felt at the trial of the teen-age girl wbo killed Mrs. Montenegro's 16-year-old daughter, also named Diana, last s umme r . Sandra Vivas was convicted of st~bbing Diana to death after a tussle that started harmlessly. Sandra called herself Apache, and Apache was reputed to lead a gang called "The Crazy Homicides." The prosecutor couldn't bring this up in court because it was inadmissible, but this wasn't made clear to Mrs. Montenegro. ALL SHE KNEW wa s that the second-degree murder charge was reduced to m anslaughter by the jury, and that Sandra Vivas got 7-21, meaning she'fi be eligible for parole in six years. She has already served a yel!r awaiting the trial. ''The defense attorney was so much sharper than our district attorney." she says. "I felt my daughter was on trial. ( fell r should have hired my own lawyer. l thought l had a friend m court. I was only the victim's mother . That ts our system. The girl who murdered my daughter will be out on the street in a few years .'' Whatever the rights and wrongs of the trial, Mrs. Montenegro was left confused and bitter. Thousands like her, unsophisticated in the law, are left to stew in similar bitterness. In victims who survive, the aftermath is often more than mere bitterness. A 50-year-old Phi ladelphia gra ndmother who offered a 17-year-old boy she kne w a ride home one night was raped and beaten w 1th the butt or a gun. THE BOY WA S sentenced to ll ~-to-23 n'lonths in prison . The victim, who had nearly lost her eye, suffers headaches, dizziness, pain and is no longer able to work. "I'm not worth two cents. It's messed up my whole life," she told reporters. The tragic ordinariness of such cases -not to mention the numerous nonviolent crimes against property is prompting c>alls for s ubstantial change. Today, some 29 s tates and the Virgin Islands have crime compensation boards to aid victims financially. Scattered through the nation are some 1.500 programs aimed at helping in such practical ~ays as cutting down on unnecessary trips to court. counseling r ape v1ct1ms an<l getting ' ~ A A neighbor of a burglary victim surveys a ransacked apartment in New York City. After such a crime,. because of society's unequal treatment of criminal and victim, the victim often faces further unfair losses and psychological ~~ trampling. Only now is society slowly starting to move towarclprotecting victims and giving . them rights. ·.-.i ••• ,,,.,. ...... police departments to return stole.n property held as evidence before trial. But most specialists agree such efforts don't go nearly rar enough in according crime v1ct1ms rights and meeting their needs. AMONG SEVERAL new proposals is one by Judge Lois G. Forer of Philadelphia. She suggests in a recent book that criminals who are not dangerous be compelled to take jobs and make restitution to their victims from their earnings. "It has often been said that the wallet is the tenderest part of the anatomy," she writes. Dr. Robert Reiff. a psychologist, advocates 3 thorough overhaul of the criminal justice system lo protect the crime victim more effectively. He develops his arguments in a book called "The Invisible Victim." ''Our society beJieves that ii the offender ia caught and put in jail, it repays the debt to the victim," says Dr. Reiff. "But that is not enough." DR. REIFF STRESSES that he and others striving for victims ' rights are "not tat.ting about t.a1ting away any offenders' tights. It's JUSl that I want to give something lo the victim." He a rgues that social attitudes are an o!>stacle to fundamental change because society is ambi valent to the victim of crime, whether it's a mugging, r ape, or arm ed robbery. "Blaming the victim is an old, old American habit." he says. "There's n o s oei a l consciousness about this." Only Child Becomes Twin, Then Triplet NEW YORK (A P > - Three identical triplets have been reunited -19 years after they were split up al birth a nd a d opted by thre e different families. "They talk the same, they laugh the s ame, t h ey hol d their cigarettes the same - it's uncanny," said Claire Kellman, mother of 19-year-old David Kellma~ .. who was reunited last week with hie two brothers. The three actually would ha ve be en quadruplet.a bad not a fourth brother died in cbildbirth at Long l1land J ewish Hospital, ac co rd i na to th e adoption agency that placed the three boys. Each of the three was un a ware he had a ny brothers. One of the triplets, Robert Shafran of Scar s dale, r ecently entered Sullivan County Community College in upstate Loch Sheldrake, N. Y. There, friends of a former student. Eddy Galland of New Hyde Park, noted an uncanny r esemblance between the two and got them together by telephone. Thus the initial reunion came about. Then last week, David Kellman saw news stories and photographs o f the reunion . He Camel Races Predicted look ed up Galland 's home phone number and reached Eddy's mother. "You're not going to believe this," Kellman told her, ''But my name is David Kellman and I 'm looking in lbe mirror. I believe I'm the third.'' "I couldn't believe it," said Galland, when he round out about Kellman's phone call. "I could not comprehend it. I sat there with my jaw banging down for about 10 minutes. I was in total awe." Kellman, a freshman at Queens College, was reunited with the other two a day later. .Camels May Rllll Mile NEWPORT, Del. CAP) -A dot ia man's best friend, the saytnc 1oes. But why not try a camel? Gus Scaran did. And be hopes they'll walk -or ~ -a mile for him. •• UI a herd al four, lncludlq ba, wbo'U be a momJQy any day , and be wants lo race them. I Ulink tamel races will be iD 1911·blaom In about three Jean." be Mid. ''I won't apftt there to be qy parimutuels. Tbll ll a fun tblal." Camela nm about 11 mpb, futer &ha trotten, be said, and they have lood endurance. • Scaran plans to move from Wilminston lo Lum'• Pond soon, where be wants to put in a quarter·mUe d.ift track for bis venture. Lut year. be spent some Ume lD Amu~aMthNMlFullerton.w•m be calla tbe "camel man ol that ........ . • 'n.ey race camels there like stock can," be laid. Scaran, •· allo bu a "farm for retired animals" at Ida Lum '1 Pond property. "Allotetber I have • moutbs lo feed " -camels, do11, clucb ..... and Alric .......... 0 Hot Dog! New, Yet Old By JUDITH OLSON °'_.,...., ...... , .... If lime bad been turned back wben the little bot dog restaurant in Costa Mesa wu built a few mont.U ago, the calenda.r would have showed somewhere around the year 11130. Pee Wee's, the tiny green art deco building oo Newport Boulevard in Costa Mesa, iaofthetype built between 1920 and 1940, accordingtoitadesigner,Steve Dob- bieof Newport Beach. "It could be called 'streamlined modern.' It was a futurbtic style for the 'IOI and '409," Dobbieaald. Steve Russell, the owner, bad wanted to open a stand so be wouldn't have to drive to the San Fernando Valley to get his favorite bot dop, but be didn't want to build just a square box like most fut-food restaurants. A Los .Anieles County fireman, he bad an appreciation and eye for the vintace arcblteetun of tbe city and decided to approximate itbere iD bb home area. "Steve hd pictures of aome ol the buildlnp in LA, and be drew some 1ketcbmfor me," Dobbie said. the theme waa to be baseball and hot do11. IDd Ruuell look a photo ol his son, Toby, I, to an art.lit for a caricature to Hne utbe 1oto. \\ :JS Steve Russell holds baseball ~t-shaped hot dog holder {below). Art deco style hot dog stand is above. His resulting "little Pee Wee" has a '50s look and is attired in the green theme color . To carry out the baseball theme, Russell h as collected photos and m emor abilia for the waJJs. There also are original Coca-Cola signs, a restored cash register and refrigerator, a nd antique lighting fixtures. Extra touches are streamlined windows with glass block sections and a baseball signed by Babe Ruth and Lou Gerhig. "It's supposed to have the feel of Ebbeta Field, the old home of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and Wrigley Fleld in Los Angeles," Russell said. The 729-1quare-foot restaurant, which seats 20 penoos, took 21 months to plan and build and Dobbie, wbobuadeareeiD architecture from USC, WU elated lo work for a client, wbo actually carried~ al I hll original ideu. RuueU, ir/ tum, is ao happy with Dobble'1 work, and tbe reaultln1 friendahlp, that he hu promised the dealper ''free bot dOga for life." . . ·- C"l OAJLY PILOT Desig11ers' ff o ·me Tour F ive Newport Beach homes will be spotlighted Oct. 8 during the Designers· Home Tour sponsored by the Virginia Castle Auxiliary of the Newport Beach Assistance League Tour proceeds will benefit the Children's Dental Health Center in Newport Beach and the Child Day Care Center in Costa Mesa. In garden room - Being Dropped Part of Life D~ AR A N N L ANDERS O ur 7 year·old daughter is in her room cr ying her heart out because she was not invited to a dassmate's b irthday party. The birthday girl 11 will call her Wendy) l ives 1n th e neighborhood Her father 1s a psychiatnsl. Our daughte r and Wen dy w e r e good friends unli ! a f ew months ago when my moth e r became a patient o r W endy's father Since that time o ur daugh t e r ha s r~ce1ved no invitations to play with Wendy. In fact. she was dropped like a hot potato. I believe it is sad and· unfair for a 7-year-old c hild to be shunn ed b e c a u s e h e r grandmother happens to be a patient or the girl's father. Please tell me h o w to deal with ques t ions like, "Why wasn 't l invited t o Wendy's party?" I 'm afraid the truth might be too mu c h for a 7·year-old lo handle. - HEART WRENCH ED PARENT DEAR PARENT: can't believe that a 7-ye ar-old child would be Cold. "You cu't be friendly with Saale anymore becaase her grandmother la nor, your father's patient. ' This doesn't add up, no matter bow I Ogure it. Children often change friends -especially at age 7. Being dropped cao be painful, bat lt ls part of life and chlJdren should learn to cope wUh hurts early. When a child loses a ( Horoscope ) l .. flHd«•rs friend or ls not invited to a party, paree&a Doll.Id avoid becomla1 lavolved -and there aboald Do& be too much band·holding . S u c h co mmi se ratin g promcKe8 sell-pity -an undesirable altitude at uy age. DEAR A N N LANDERS: Considering the clout you have and the influence you wield , one would think you'd have better sense than to side with the pros - titute in Beatty, Nev .. j ust because she gave to charity and bought uni- forms ror the kids in the high school band. It is true, there was a humanitarian aspect in· volved -and we should help our neighbors. But when yo u said you thought it was "rather s w e et " th at t h e towns people gave a benefit for the madam when her house burned down. it was too much. S .ign m e CONCERNED FATHER ~~ ~-~ \f' 0mars ·1 f CUSTOM FRAMING I Open 6 Days A Week M on.-Fri. 9-6 Sat. 10-4 1803 Ne wport Blvd. ~ Costa MeScl I! 54fd511 o-.~t , ; ,. ......... _,_ ...... , ... OF SIX IN BEARDEN. ARK. DEAR ARK: I knew my answer wouJdn't be a popular one but J ca a g bt H E Doublf' Toothpi c ks fo r m y answer. Please take into coo - s id er a t ion that tht> madam is not ao outla•• -she is a practitioner or the oldest profession for which there must un- q u es ti o o ab I y b e a market. Alld evea in a boase that la not a home there should be room for co mpa ssio n a nd generosity of spirit. I For your club or I organization with I no cost Call Hunltnglon Center I tor Community Help. 897-2~3~~ Borcr>•ns .•'>dc-1 SSO ate loo1nd every So1u1doy 111 DIME A Ul>LS Ol'1v·"11wvm1m1u b42 567R FEATURING PlJ BUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PVBUC NOTIC,E _.== OBITUARIES Sfafe Poll Majority Eavors Propo ition I 0 SAN l''KANl:ISCO lA P l allfornlana sur v•,Yed ln a s lale wtdt" poll f»vor by 2 l '~ t"ruUon of amoktna and no smokin t>ctlnn!I In •nclOled pubUt" plact" as oullln~ in JSroposil on 10 on the No"ember ballot The fmcUnte" of the C:a llromla r oll •nnc>uMed by the M~r"''° I') f'1tild or1anlaal.lon "e re nearly identiul to 11 pull lukl•n ln July THF. P-Ol.J~ •'OllND THt: propo11t ion wa!'l hlvorl>d by ft5 l>t'rc~11t lmd opposed by 31 Pelrct-nt Among non :.muk.-r~. the mea&u~ was favored by 70 vt•n·1.·11t with 2'S pt>rt't'nt oppoe~ But a ma Joelly of ~mokt!rb . Slf pt>rc-tnt , al o favor thl' Ull'asure, the poll found Adulls an l'allrorniu 1h v1(ll'<i along the hnes or abou1 a third who 'a~ the) s mokt" a nd lwo·thuct.<. who are 11011 :smokt'r!!t l'ALl•'OKNl VOTED OOWN A SIMILAR measurt!, Prvpt>:s1llun 5. two ytian. ago nhke the 1978 measure, Propos1t11111 IO ~ould not require walls or petitions to epurate smokers and non smokers The poll mvol\'~d 1.\11 ~ adult!!t 337 s mokers and 66'1 non-smoker Comic Books Remoood NASHV ILLE, Tenn (AP) Southern Baptist book stores have been directed to quit stocking comic books that were said to be loaded with er· roneous anti· Roman Catholic materials. Southern Baptist officials said the "Alberto·· comic books published by Chick Publications of Chino, Calif.. contained non-factural, derogatory al~liQJlS..and were ordet:ed re.moyed_!rom three enominational stores, in Oklahoma City, AltiU- querque, N.M .. and Memphis, which bad stocked them at request of customers. Indian Bones Found CRETE. Ill. <AP> -A group or young men on an outing in eastern Will County have unearthed the skeleton or an American Indian who may have lived more than 1,500 years ago, officials say. County Coroner Richard Tezak said the re- mains, which were round by four young men driv- ing near Plum Creek, we re shipped to tho University or Illinois Circle Campus for ex· aminalion. Plate of the Day :::::•CALIFORNIA~ 1 URTH . . .. l UR111 -Howard Winters of Sunnyvale re- minds us there a re no replacement parts for our one earth. so we'd better take care of il. ln!orm•tlon !or the .. Pl411• ot lhe Day·· ii .._i1e41 ll'tl ¥1u Far .. y, eutllo< ol tlle 1'n ..,lllon o• 1r-. ··wNl'I -of ,..,_,. .. ,.., CAlllfor.,la L ion"° P1411H •• 90NUltA Cllurcll, ..._, 9eKll, CA. llll•r· JOSEPHINE R. BONURA PHMCI me<!l Peclflc View ~lal Pen.. ••o Seclt-r 11. ••In N•'ffPOr1 Peclllc.Vlew~Y.dlre(1or•. S.ecll, ca. JoMplll,. WU bom 111 11 .. Y ~II Sellt-l»f'. :IO, ''°1. Siie ll 6Urvlftd by G EORGE 8. JONES rHl.S.111 ol a ton Meroo Bonura, Costa "'-... Ca.. Wutml111tar \lllC* 1'9. P-awe~ a1$0 llrotlllr S.fvf11a 8ata110. Bel Air. S.ptembef 2', 1•. He wM a mal11- Ca. •ncl 3 gt..OClllldrtn Meu T""· ten.nee -11er for 13 years tor I .. clO momlllQ at 10.00AM •I SI Jo"" LOflO Beecll Vlllfllld Sc,_I OlstrlC1. Ille 8aptl•I Cllurcll, wllll 11urla1 lo H• 1, su,.,,I_ IPt Ill• wit• All~• ~. follow al Ille calvary Cemetery 111 Lo• Weslm1ns1er, ca., 4 cllllO,..n GeorQe, A1199IH, ca. Family requn1$ In lleu of Jr , llllnol•. 0..1-Frv, llllnol•, AIOll flower\ donations to Hoty Famlly Jonas llllnol• ICallly Allen Buena Ado ption S.rvlce, Santa ,lna, Ca. Park, 'ca .. 111rC.U... and J listers, a1,... U...S.r Ille di,_llon of 8alll llercieron· • grandcll llclren and I g reat· Smlll\ & TUll\411 ~71. l 9r.tndcPolld. ~vic-s •Ill be lletd T~. IUltGESS day, Sept-. 30, al l:OOPM In the .. I.LAN J . BURGESS, DOS, rHlclenl Harbor t.-. Men.wlel Chapel, wllPo ol Nowpor1 Beec:Po, ca .. ,.,,,..., tt•I· Re.;. 8ruu l(urrle of V.. P'flbyttri.r> c»n.t of S.. MerlllO. ca . -9r.OU4lle Cllurcll of IN Cownent of Costa NW .. Ill USC P.nwc! away September 21, oftlcl.ttl119-5-rvic-s _,the dlr«· 1'90. Sunl..cl IPt Ills wife Ren .. , son lion ot Herbor L•w''""'°""' 0 11 ... R lcPoard and da uQllt., Dia nn• Mortu.try. s.o.sss.. Moseley, llrother Alvin J Buro-11. LAMCAS'Tllt OOS , Alllerton, Ca , a l•o ' BERNIE J il¥ES LilNCASTER. 9r-Nldren Vl•IC.ttlon 1-rs MOn--P.tuecl _, Yfl'"°*Y 411 Anafttln\, day, Seplembe< 1'. tram •·~•·voPM c a. Bernie w• Dorn In SM!• Ana, ca. at Pacific Vie• NIOrtu.try CPoapel. .September "· 1902 ettd ,. .. a !If.ti,... s.r.1cu SeD!embe< JO. llAM, .. O..r reJIH"'. He.,. .. •""""' cleO tor IS Lad O~n o~ngell Catllo~ years lor oa..gias Alrcnitl. He Is sur· McCOlMtat MOITUAltllS Laguna Beach 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cap1s1rano 495·1776 HAalott LAWN-MT. OLIYI Mortuary • Ceme1ery Crematory 1625 Gosier Ave Cosla Mesa 54().5554 PIUCI llOTHHS HLL 110.ADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9150 IALTZIHGUOM SMITH & TUTHILL WISTCUff CHAf'ft. 427 E 17th St Cos1a Mesa ~6-9311 rtllCl .. OntMI SMITHS' MOITUAIY 627 Ma1n St. Huntington Beach 536-6539 .... , ...... y C9',0MAL. PUHM.t.L HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893"'1525 vl....i by his~ 1....,.. H .• 5-ll• Ana, ea., l '°"" 8ef1 E. l.AncHler. I.A,._ C.tSIU, ea .• Bernie L. UllCHlet. So\1111 ~IN, Tllomff G. lAllCHter, Or-. ca .. sister ICa.,,.,lne W-'111, w .. 1c11H1«, ca .. bn:rl~ J.ck La,.. e asier, Sa n O l•Qo. C a ., ll 9randc1111e1ren .tnd u 11 •••1· 9r_IM_. Servka wlll be Mid Tllunelay ltl l:CIOPM 4tl , .. Wewrley Cllvrcll, Senta M a, C.., wltfl Inter· menl to follow 4tl Falrhawn Memorlal Park, Sanla Ana, C.. Under tfle dire<· tlon of ~Ill -91tron-Smllll & TutPolll. .... .,,,. Deatlu Elsewhere CAMBRIDGE, Mass. <AP) -Judge &k•anl aeeye llaz&er, 59, a member ol the Intema- tional Court of Justice, the 15-member judicial arm ol the United Na· tion1 Jocati!d at-The Hague, died Thursday of cancer. WESTMINSTER, lld. (AP) -Ama G.ab_.. Mncltlea. 9.\, tbe slater of writer ff. L. llencken, died Stmday at the Car· roll County General Hoepital foUowin1 a Iona lllneu. LONDON (AP> -Prtae.. U. of Den· mark, a, Britiab·bom wife ol Danid Prince Geor1, died Satuday at ber 1.-doa bome tbe Dullb embau1 iaid to- daJ. Pl'tace Gears la the uncle of Deamar'k'1 Queen~n. Moncier.~ 29. ,., 0-Q UNIVERSITY IS DOING FINE AFTER FIGHTING MANY PROBLEMS Ind ten Studenta With Cftenc:eflor Dennie Bann. Reer Cemer, In Lecture Hall €ollege _Wins Fight Indian Facility at Davis 'Turns Comer' DA VlS (AP) -A year ago, an Indian college created in dis· carded Army buildings and named for god·like figures with unpronounceable names seemed about to lose its nine-year strug· gle with the federal government. But today. D·Q University is in its best shape ever. The colle ge is receiving $224,68.5 in long-de layed federal Indian college money. Its ac· creditation problems have im· proved. And when it begins classes, D·Q will have its first full-time raculty and 200 stu· dents, 13> of them in a newly re· novated dormitory with solar panels and a greenhouse. L971 but later shortened because of the sacredness or the Iroquois and Aztec names, has been in· vestigated over the years by numerous branch es or the federal government. "WE HA VE BEEN audited by every audit possible. They even audit the auditors," says David Risling, a Hoopa lndian and D·Q board member. "We get ac· cused or this and accused of that, and there's never been a single prosecution." The idea for the schN>l dates to 1970 when Risling, who beads the Native American Studies de· partment 'at the nearby UC Davis. wanted education that "COMPARED TO a year ago, would work for ~alifonlia In· • . 1 di ans. things are really going we I,.. Standard education. he says. says Steven Baldy, a Hoopa ln· was trying to "main.stream" In· dian and D-Q president. dians. to change them into white "D·Q went through a tough men. year and a-half," says American . "You have to aJlow Indians to Indian Move ment fo unde r be Indians first. 50 they'll have Dennis Banks, a Chippewa and an identity, then ,you can teach chancellor. "Now, we're turn.in& them bow to live in the white the comer.'' wcrld u Indians,'' Risling says. Obstacles remain however D·Q must reapply to renew the D·Q COVUES stress Indian federal grant, and it muat de· culture, but also include skills monstrate to the Western As· that could be used in either the sociation of Schools and Indian or white communities, Colleges that it will have money, s uch as agriculture. social students, faculty and its land in sciences and health care. the future. In 1970, Risliog and others D ·Q, o r iginally named searched for federal s urplus Deganawidah·Quetzalcoatl in land and found the Army Com· Optiom Urged For Caesareans I WASJDNGTON (AP) -The rate of Caesarean childbirth bas increased threefold in the last decade and docton should consider non-surgical alternatives during troubled labor if the fetua is in no im· mediate danger. experts say. A panel convened by the National Institutes of Health said that in the absence of fetal distress, such as indications the unborn child may not be getting enough oxygen, "there is room for clinical decision-making.'' OP110NS IN TROUBLED LABOR WITH a normal·sised fetua may include resting the mother, sedating her or attempting to in· duce the birth artificially ~rior to considering a Caesarean, the committee said. However, these options may not be open when dealing with premature infants or those abnormally positioned in the womb, it added . The panel also said that if a woman bas one Caesarean childbirth, it may be unnecessary for her subsequent children to be delivered surgically, as is common. But the panel recommended that normal deliveries in these cases should be attempted only in hospitals prepared to perform 1!mergency Caesarean surgery in the event of complications. DOCTORS AKE RELUCTANT TO L.ET women who have bad Caesareans go through normal labor and deliveey for fear that the strain could rupture the old incision. But the panel said most ·~­gical deliveries in this country are done in a way that may permit normal labor and delivery later. Dr. Mortimer G. Rosen ol Case Western Reserve Univenity, who beaded a wt force which atudied Caesareans, said 90 per~t of the operations are done with a boriiontal, lower abdomen &n· cision. . .. Thia procedure, called a low segment tranave.rse ancLSton or ''bililil cut," appean less-llkety to rupture-\llldft the strain of labor. Rosen said thb incision generally bas replaced Yertical and T .ab aped cuts commonly uaed before the ll50I. "Following a Caesarean delivery, over• percent ol women in the United States underro a repeat Caesarean for any aubeequent pregnancy," the panel a aid. .. DATA no'& NATIONALANDlDternational IOUttes 1uaest that labor and vaatnal delivery after a previous tow ae1ment Caesarean birth ia of low risk to mother and fetus ln properly aelect.41d cues " it continued. Tbe panei, compoeecl ol clocton, lawyen, CODSu.men and ot!lera, wu charged with detenniDlDc the reaaou the number of Caesareans bu been rialq and to make reeommendatlom to the medical pro( ... ion. 'ne IJ'OUP 1ald Caesarean1 are lDneaalD• bec•UH of ID· creued demancH by IOCiety to recluee the infant mortality rate, u well • medical advances that outb' reduced the riab ol the operatian.. ltMMr and more fnqMllt diapoeil of abDormal labor, aften with the= of eledroalc fetal moaltortq, allo coatribute to tllle treed. tt • - .. ' munications Center site 10 miles west ol Davis. It had been closed since 1956. / The Indian group, joined by a Mexican-American group, re- ceived a JO-year lease from the Department of Health , Education and Welfare to uae the land for a college, but only after a lawsuit and occupation of the land. The fledgling two-year collqe received grants from private foundations and in its early years also got federal money, in· e luding $3.2 million for migrant worker training. Most of that money went to families enrolled in the program, not to the col· lege. THE INDIAN AND Mexican- American sections split in 1978 because ol differing goals and fund-raising and the passage by Congress of the Tribally Controlled Community College Assistance Act. Because that . law required tbe coUeee to lrne Indian board members and ltu- dents. the llezican-American board members resigned. The school is now almost all Indian. D·Q was in its de-epest trouble early in 1979, when the federal Office ol Education froze more than $200,000 in student scholanbips because of suspect- ed misuse ol previous funds. But after an audit, it released the funds last October. A still unresolved dispute is over a $100,000 Title III grant for de"eloping colleges that D-Q s ought from the Office of Education. Risling says the col· lege received letters last fall from an aide to California Seo. Alan Cranaton and HEW of- ficials aaying that it would get the grant. Instead, a federal team ar- rived in Dttember, and asked for student and faculty lists. A .IANUUY STO&Y in the Washington Star said the team round only two students at D-Q and said it "does not exist as a school." Baldy said most of tbe 100 stu- dents enrolled tben were attend- ing night classes and some. working on a solar project, were ignored by the team. However, the report sent to D·Q officials only asked them to anawer some queations about auditing and enrollment, which they say they did. The grant pro- ceaa went no further. The land ii another problem. HEW threatened in 1978 to end the lease because it said D-Q was selling crops it was IJ'OWinC on several hundred acres. D-Q officials said REW bad granted them permission to do that. &EP. VIC FAZIO, D- Sacramenlo, introduced a measure in CoQgraa in t.m to give D-Q the land, which would let D-Q sell crops and lease put oflbe land. But because of the other in· vestigations, Fazio held off for a year. then added some COG· ditiona -inchaclin& that D-Q must remain accredited and have a certain number of ltU· dents._ . The new '224,615 1raat, tbrousb lbe Tribally Con· trollejl Community Collep As· slatantt Act, coven tbe llKal year that beean tut October. Baldy hopes to let $300,000 'for the new ~C,.ar· but tbat de-penda on a COGIClltlum of lacUa colJeps ....... to .. Coaareu to lDcreue tbe pro- 1 ram '1 bud1et from tbe $3 milllcm requellted bJ U. f....,... Bureau of IDdl• Aftaln to d9e $16 millloa tbe coll..-MJ tMJ -.reed. .,.,.._... .. a ... ._..~ DAILY PILOT Q.ASSIFllD ADS ... c:.. ..... ,.... ....... 0.. Cell..._ l•-·-·-M .-.e-._...._; ......... EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY Wrt r ,-. Moller. . ................... ... ... ........................ ASSI•• ---·•1D. o.A, •·• cbm and ..... will carry • 2nd. TD Super s harp ~Ide. Bdrm 2 batb bolne. Brick fireplace, 2 car praie + new root. Must call on this one! ~Z3U All real estae advertised in this newsp11per is sub· •·--• jec:t t.o the Federal Fair._ ________ ,. Hou1in1 Act or lHI --------- wt.kb makes It meaal to SPAMSHISTATI advertise "any pre· $14',toO rerence. Umitalion. or Towerinc trees enhance disc:rimanatJon based on this 1or1eous 2 story ratt. color. ttli1ioa. M•. estat~ Spanish tile en· or naliooa.I on sin. or an try. leads t.o slep-down iatenhon lo make any Uviac room and massive such preference, Umita· brick fueplace. Formal lion, or dascnmination " diJlanl room too! Second This newspaper WI IJ not knowingly accept any advertis in& for real estate which is in viola· bof'l ol the law. BllOllS: ......... 1 .... ...... dledl .. .. .., .... ...,.. ~ fWI I .... ..,. n. DAR.Y PILOT __ a ....., ......... .. arnc1-. ...... ..,. Ho.es far Sale ••••••••• --t. ••••••••••••• Gwrllll 1002 • •••••••••••••••••••••• CAPISTRANO COMDO 95.500 Well pnced two bedroom end unit in one uf So. story hosts secluded master suite. + 3 more queen size bdrms . Sparkling peol. Com er lot with RV a ccess. Hw-ry! ~ SEA C0\1£ PRCY'ERTES 71~31-6990 HEWPOltT SI II.too! Very affordable Newpon. Te rrace condo! Up. graded end unit. Extra windows afford more light and view=-p lus added counte r s & sto rage in country lotchen ! Take over low interest. low payment, low princ. Joan -c 10"2'";. l&80 mo, $69,300). See and submil ! Call 7S2-1700 Califorrua's fastest ap . ._ ________ "" 1Xtt1ating areas. Th~ 1s 9rJIB RRAI. a gnat starter home or www,•.11.•i-~ i.nvestment with an as· ~ .-. ~liiil swnable 10% FHA loan Call~ C:SELECT T'PROPERTIES MEWPOaT AX& 4 8'lnns. 3 baths. huge family room and formal dining room . A real bargain near Dove r Shores. Call for complete details. 546-2313 Ddebout Bay&Beoch Red Estate COSTA MESA ICal191Pnt JI.Wt listed a well located three bedroom. two bath home. Great potential. Improvements include 1---------...i oak plank flooring in kitchen. Swtmming pool. TIY Sl.000 DOWM Lovely 3 Bdrm l YJ balb home 0 11 lovely qwet lree·lined street Owner says be flexible on finaDdq ! Ct.II now. ~.000. 631-'1300 N. 8. MEW HOME (t) LITS ~crrr'C' MAJCE A DEAL with separate mother-in law qrt.rs. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba + ZBr t ba. Must sell to ap- preciate. Has many ex- trH. Only S2SSK . In Oran1e. C .G .B .I 633-1880. SC9-4008 SEA CO\IE' ~ 'c:;.> Larae assumable loan 714-631-6990 and seller will carry 2nd. LoYely 4 bdrm home. 2 SH.tSO lge m aster bdrm s . breakfast rm. 2 miles to M 0 ITH C 0 ST A beach. Only $139,90<1. MESA CaU 97~5370 I.Oday A spectacular 3 Bdrm 2 A bath home with huge LL$'rA TE brick fireplace. bui llin I,. vacuum system, brick - BBQ, and wood decked REAL TOA$ sp11 + many extras-. Call ,_546-__ 2313_· ___________ .,. ~~~~h THBREAL &S°l:A.TERS Coac>MA D& MAI DUPlD Lar ge enclosed brick courtyard. French doors lead to formal living room. Beautirw llalian tile and Oak planked floors enhance family r oo m and c ount ry kitchen. Master suite overlooks Oower rilled terrace . Huge 4 c ar garage. Call now! (lJ SEA C<NE f'Ra'ER7ES 714-631-6990 this Harbor Highlands charme r . Beautiful hardwood floors oomple· ment t his s pecial 2 bedroom w /den home A spacious rear yard has lots of fruit trees. Sit beside your used brick r1ttplace and enjoy one or the best maintained homes available today. Well pnced at St89.500. 644-7020 ATTBmOM UALISTA11 P'IOflSSIOMAl.S The William Michaels Co. will show you how to make it happen NOW. We are currenUy staffing AIR. our Dana PoiJrt office " are interviewing sales & "1.000 manacement personnel. Bring your paint brush Call for a confidential and save thousands! 4 1131.-s5 Bdrm townhome, dining .a~ppt!!!. !!!!!!~!!·~!!!!!!!~~ room . private tree= shaded patio, and h111e ·-Oiw:inul-creenbelt. Just s teps OIAMG!llH Crom pool. Impossible to Qad unit condo in Irvine. match! Call96U767 t Bdrm. comm. pool ~ tennl•. Owner says "sell!" Under market at S70.000. Fantastic -;;;~;;~;;~~ creative ruaancu.,. r.: • RED CARPET' HOISINOP•n 754-1202 ~ ecn IODeCI A·l and ~;...._ ______ _ located in the Back Bay Newport area. Owner will fiDaace willl 85611 down. F\all price $175,000. A.aent.556-.0 Pa , fl Dll•IH Sl75,to0 Brint your peint brush, shovela and a little lm-••atioa to caah in on bl1 SH. Tbla beach dupla i8 J .. t oae block to the water and tbe owner' sa.ys be creative cm ftnancina. Thia won't ~·@· SEA~ ffO'fR1ES €f DMLVPIL()l ~ .......... 3'.18S> ....... ,... ......lfOf'S* HonnForS. HwetFwl* ...... 1For59t . .. I ............................................................................................ ······················· i.' • .!!!~:.~~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... !!~~::.~.~ ........ ~.~~ • • •.-NI IOOJ .... ,.. 1002 .._.... 1002 ColteW... 1024 ,,..._ 1044 '· . .... .... . ••••••••.........•.•••....•..•......•....•..................••.............••.....•••...•.• ••····················· -•••• 1eu ••••.. '"' ...... 1002 ••• ,.. 1ooa •••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••· •••••••••••. ••••••••••• •••••• •••• • •••••••••••• 1nc1111 .. tto. . Bachelor Unil E Side IUY NOW-SAVI UDO llLI Move up to the benents Good Income Propert )'. & APPllCIATE : Newly remodeled tradlUonaJ style 3 of tbla out1undin1 4 S124 . 900 AG T Leave Th.la :s Bdrm 2 Ba Pu d +---btdroom Mesa Verde na me•nwnber63l·tn49 , r ue bdrm. 2 bath home featurinc large home. tmpeccabl~y plan In <;OLLEC ~ WTWIW•IO•• •1a II Nlln .. OUS •ALUY _,. Beautilul_Jy detiped bomf' by Ivan Wells. Ne wly painted interior Unus ual hlgh atrium e ntry with travertine noor s f amll)' bdrma plu lovely master bdrm suit e . formal dininl. family rm & ~autlful pool, spa Ii patio with Back Bay It city lights view Owner will carry lst T 0 subj. to buyer qualifying Vacant $550.~ WIS&.IY M. TAnOI CO.. llALTOll Jiii S-Ja ¢I ._.._. Ml;""WPOll,.,,..rT.,.. C..,.. M.I. 644-4tt 0 llAL cuts -OM'"' WATlal Best buy on N~wport Harbor· 3 bedroom. loft plua 1t one bedroom unit. Very versatile : very tutefuJlY done 3 fireplaces. a sun roof, skylights. an outdoor s pa and a pier and slip Presented by Unique at $765,000 U,_..IVU tit)~I= . 675·6000 2443 Ee•I C6 ... 1 Hlghw•11. Coron• d•I M•• WE WWE 41 Of rtiE BEST LISTINGS IN TOWN WAHTID Twu liuycr11 111 i.hurl' priJ t! of OWn(•fbhtp duµle~ Pnnll' t:a:.htdc l'OStJ Mesa \ bafljJtn UI S14!J.500' Call now ' 646-7171 I Unfh S 120,000 rwo 1 lldrm, 6 bal·helors Bread and butter units $1 200/mo tnl'ome . 560.000 assuma l>le Isl Owner *ill carry Won·t last <:ull now' !'>4<>-3666 recreation room 6 2 patios. Living mainta!ned and cJecorat· Cif'1LAM*I PARK area ls the lowest room has attractive beam ceiling ed with custom carpeting Gltlnancin& available on "'1•11 BotheSrsh. Ust~ for ,i I h d • and draperies, double this lu1e 3 bedroom. sa e. uy t as '"'auty rep ace & Frenc oors leading onto rlreplaceandfreshpaint . Dinlna a reii. family nowand you wlllrwt only bric k patlo. New k itchen bit-in Wl\h the bottom hne of room. brick fireplace, save~ybutgetextr41 appliance8. Close to tennl1 courts, only sw.ooo you'll have kitchen buill-ins. Only 5 ~l:iion as wl well. sandy beache8 & .c-lubhouse. Now to act q1.1lckly . <:a ll males to BEACH! Close 132 500. available. Call for appt. 7~1-3191. to s hops. sch ools . C SELECT Sll0,000. Call TARBELL, IA YNOMT T REALTORS, 54().1120 We have rce veral fine homes PROPERTIES Hwti190.leoch 1040 ' with pier & sUp. ---••••••••••••••••••••••• 1·--------PllCI 51.ASHID See t his Woodbridge townhome aw11rd win ning model with all the refinement of fine de corallng and design Spacious 3 Bdrm and large yard. $1 62,!JOO Here's your chance. IL TOIO HOISi COUMT'IY 4 fidrm .. 3 baths : ranch s tyle, mini-estate ln orange groves. $240.000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ' I • •'. , .f, i I• • • '~ 1-\ t1 7 ', b 161 SHOPPltl CENTER $985,000 cash down on new centl'f' With major t~nanl ttc»r regional 1111rk 111 Arixonu IO'A 011n unll l(ood l'ash re tum on investment. MAYOCK (.,,..,., ..... I l••N 380 GlfNN(YRf LAGUNA 8Ell01 C1M)4M·2Me 1006 .............•.....•... Ry owner 217 Apolena. 2Hr, 2 i;tM ) house, frple. 2Br ~arai:e apt + I ri: separate owner'i. unll $392,000 Gr>Ud ass1.1m 6nam GHAT FAMILY HOME 4Br. 2Ba, light & 01ry, I blk to schl & park. l \7 m1 to bch. Only St 111.000 846-5502 ~ -DCELUHT LOCAL Near Huntington Center Nice 4 Bdrm. with lar~c Family Rm & neat patio Park Place Inc 84<! 7461 IAJlREn REALTY REGISTER 642-5200 POPULAR Plan 4 in Orange Tret! Condo's l hdrm. I ba -+ I.OFT Oecoratcc.1 1n earthtones. Outstandin~ recreatwnal facilities The best in adult univ comm1.1mties · Prime h igh desert. ES9rATJERS ~_!'.! SUIDIYISION THB: REAL • . Phelan Approved ten ,... ________ "'"' •~ ~..,.IC Woodsy setting shows off this CdM duplex. Two bedrooms each, with nice patios. Close to shops and beach. Of. f ered at $275,000. 2 UMITS Diamond/No. Buy area 3 Bdrm home & 2 hdrm apt Lovely home ror your famtly+ rncome. ~.000. EnJOY the fresh Ocean Breeze in this "Landing Home·· W1s pa, Jbr. 2ba. prem i um lot ' BY OWNER 84f .. 0374 •$99,900• HO OUALIFYIHG 3 Br2 !fa 641·8833. Agt. tal1ve tract map for 16 1, a<'re lots Water lie powt:r ---------1 PAINT & SAVE al Sile. SI00.000. BALBOA I S LA NIJ REALTY 673 8700 macnab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IAVINE COMPANY llG CANYON LIASI! Lovely 4BR family home in one of Newport's most prestigious guard-ga ted com munities . Minutes to Fashion Island & beach. $1700/ m o . water & gardener incl. Jeanne Newman 752-1414. (J-59) 752.1414 551.1700 (olTlplJ'I Vollev Cen•e< Woodb<odge Cen•e< 6426'US 6444200 <1()1 Do.er Dn•e HO<bot View (Mte< For an Ad in WOMtn'I Wortd Cal S..~ 642°5678. bt. 330 Three Easy Pieces! Ortu 1un1c tiasllc top panh •II w•t supple CASY' hsy to 'le• ln1 to "0' Choose ntw ;>r•nt •no soho LOIOI 'nits POfytsft1 tltl>t f0t now 1~81 Pttntt<I Patttin 9230 M1~ S•m 8 !O 12 I• 16 18 10 S•lt 11 (IJUS( J• I C•tt~ ll"S 1 j 8 fllOS 60.incll 11011c s-4 Sl.75 "' 11t11 "'"""· ~ * .. .... """"' "' """''-ti!IMll. """"'"" S-4• llMIMllAllTlll Pette111 0.P' u 2 Oelly Pllol nz w.1 ••SL 11 .. ,.,.. ., 1•11. ,,.. .... Mllltlu. Z1r. sia • snu ..... P1t<ts too 111cn' Sena "°" to. ou• NlW IAll WINllR PAlllRN (AIAIOC St• ~ 1na p t btl ,., Quahty' Otti 100 Stilt \ 11tt P•tltrn C4uoon tltOl!ll II H· 110 IOI C..11tot SI 00 •»-, .......... ~"·~ Ul·Mtll • lltcl ~ SUS IJl.s..ilnSIM JI.if lt.1t l~hlr t....M Sl.1$ Sizes 38·48! Oar. 1n day~ out you II lttl comln<tablt 111 rh1s co1r li!C•er lou1 color stripes acctnt lht sma•I \tra1ghl lines ot this long 1aoet Crocnet •n u sy v st•tcn~ o! s1ntne11c ,..Otste<I Nore big colla1 Pattern 1124 d11ect1ons 101 Wt\ J8 48 •ntludea Sl.75 tor each Pattein AOO ~0< each patte•n IOI f •st clu s a11 111111 and nandl1np, Sett' to: llict ...... N1tedleefetl Dept. 105 Delly Pilot .. 16.J, °" CW.U Sii., 11tw '"'-•Y IOI ll. 'Mt ....... MM9. li,. Pltttnl ltwftlMf. Cater. on to the mh t>oom' ~nd for l)Ur "l[N 198i ~l((Jl(CRAH CA I ~I 0C • lJ•t• : lZ Ottrgn~ I htt Palle•n~ 1ns1dt SI 00 AU cun llOOlls . .Sl.75 *" m., ..... .._. Qitt1ttt11 IU<Q.111 on......, m.a.,, 111CkQw11t1 lJO.S......f..._.S1M1ll-S6 1 n.o.a · 11 • l"' '1111S1M 111.r....._. '"'""' °""" 117 ......... '11' Olilte I H-1\llf\f Cntlt flellM IH-"'91 ~· m.£., 5m. ·11· OrN11M11t1 IZJ.Slltell '11' Pltdl Qtttltl IZHllfl '11' ,.tiff Qlllta l 11-CNCllet wliil S--e 117.r., Art " ......... , Ui-11...,iftJ Q.ltb ll !t-hlr Art " ..,.. Clalllt 11"-t ............. JIJ_,!Ut.,.._ • "1·1111111t """" ........ ei...t ....... , ... w.. 1114'11 WCt11diew J COZY CHARM Dt:strable location nn channel steps to secluded beach +&lrm. Many urr- 1que features. Si250 ooo 714 MAGNIFICENT 8000 S/F· VIEW MANSION Sl.750,000 Riek AJdereue. Rltr 832·0440 4 Bdrms-dtm. ehott·c l r ee ltnt!<I Newport ne_!Ahbomood 1\nx1ously barg11 in pricelf' Sl891600~ 6-16·7171 THE REAL ESTATERS NEWPORT DUPLEX 2 Units on fet: lane.I Across from park Near bea<'h, ba). & shopping_ PMred at $205.000 Eves &t2·2253 COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS HI 5 E:-Coett Hwy.,-c__.-.. ....,._ 675-5511 4 SHAR, UNITS Close lo beach 8 Bdrms on a 50' wide lot for only $400,000. Or buy 1 ~ for on ly S200,000 fee JACOBS REAl TY PRIC E REDU C F:D . owne r de s perat e. W00<1s1de Village condo. upgraded l Bdrm. P• tiath , private patio. creative financing Call 546·2313 LOU IRECHTB. and Assoc. 675-3331 latboa Pe•wl• I 007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THINKING OF SELLING? llave <"bent for Pe nin Pt home $300.000 ran~e 25% down. Owner carry balance Agt. 675·8170 ---Coronodel Mar 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S.6670 1.----------RY OWNER. 505 Carna ~• ... RKLE PLru.-v THE REAL lwn, 2 BR + guest or. 3 _.,.. '""'' • BR home + l BR gar apt DOORS TO IEACH Lovelv -I bdrm home with ES9rATJCRS w fplc $255.000 673-0727 2 2 01.1plex Owner a spacious living rm, 2 mottvated Open l o frplcs. nearnewcpts and -----FourPJcx Xlnt Lot.Gd c reative financing. a glistening pool As ---------Cond nrBluffl3yOwner l'oss1bly htlle or no cash. sumable loan. $124 ,000 ADORAILE 2 3 br. 2 21>r . frplc. Will trade property boat Call 979·5370 today. COTT AGE t r ea 11 v c r 1 nan c, n g · ear · or ?? $249.000. Ai $134.900. Th is bright, 675·l055 COMMYCIAL Eves.>a8·071.5 ' LLSTATE airy 3 l>lo-droom, 112 bath ---REAL ESTATE 1,.. wt th hardwood flnors O~ER ANXIOUS N Charming 2 br collage. CAREER REALTORS near ewport Beuch rebwlt, R-2. assum 12" Baek Bay IS brand new &tabhshed local ftrm as h Jo an . S2 2 5 . U '' o MES ... DB. M ... R on t e market Large. taking applications from "' "' Owner'agt.498·0257 licensed real estat e Large 4 bedroom 2 bath lovely tr<.'(' s haded lot salesmen & brokers for a ------family home with wet Plenty or space for ad Co5ta MHa I 024 career in l'Ommerc1al re· OWNH ANXIOUS! bar. Great location near ding to tlus valuable R·l h I d h location. al estate manugemenl & Lowest priced 4 Bdrm sc oo s an s opping. brokerap"' · .tensive on FEE LANO. Bayshore~ Owner is motivated so the JOb trainmg m all home. Plivate beaches. make an offer. FUii pn<'e ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---- Owner. 4bdrm or 3bdrm & fam rm, 2ba, clean fam1· ly home, ru ce area Price reduce<l Open Hou!>e. Sat 1Sun . II 6pm 714·846-3777 or 84&8ro2 CUSTOM HOME Ocean View 3br. 3ba. <leeks. optional s pa. great buy' $179,000. 53&0Z72 OWNH BOUGHT ANOTHER J ust look & you'll fall In Im e w this blfl 4 br J lL'>l steµs to beach in move in <-Ondit ron 963·5671 **TUmEROCK 5 Bdrm executive home wlfeature:. and upgrade!. as you·ve ne\•e r !teen' Call for your personal in specl1on of this lrulv magmf1eent propert) S329.900 lr'liM --LCICJll"CI leach I 048 l 044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......••.•..........•. BY OWNER. 190<)' 3 br, best loc Deerfield owe $149,900, Lowest Vacant 752·5JS.J --- **10% DOWN! buys this lovely I Bdrm condo. Great investment or starter home 582,SOO THEOHLYWAY TOGO 3 Bdrm floor plan. oc·ean v ie w de<"ks . largt! enrlo!.ed b ri ck pall•> Priced for 1mmed1ale sale at Sll1.000 Ml~ION REAi.TY 494·0731 aspe<."ts of this field. 1\ security gate. communi· $125,000. 556·2660. unaq1.1e opportunity for ty hving. • SELECT the business minded real 2802C1rcle Dr. estate person. CaJI for an 673-&SO PROPERTIES interview. Realonomics i.----------i eol'l>. 67>6700 THIE REAL -------• 759-1616 El\STSIDE. Broadway St. dream house, 2 BR and den. t:lf• ba, alley ac cess. owe tst a t 12": $127.500. Prin<' onl) Devin & Co. 642·63611 (g \\boob ridge ASSUM••E LOAM . Reahu This 3 Bdrm 2 bath home 551-3000 ON THE BEACH-Mohale Home 2 Br. redwood de<"k . cedar s hakes. hardwood int, lrpk $59,900. (714) 499-3816 0CEANVIEW·4Br. 3Ba, ram rm. 2 blks to heh. $325,000. 497.5132 R~l8~!n 3 Br l o/• Ba . New carpets, drapes. floors. appliances, paint. etc Dbl att garage. 2033 Green ville St near Warner S.A. D.S. Educators Realty 642-7743 ESTATBRS WaterfrOllt Honw !'> BR. 4 Ba, custo m waterfront h o me w117x38" pvt doc k Priced Sl ,394 ,000. Bwlder w trade for Palm Springs Estate. For details on this home and appl to see. call Carol Hoff, agt 631·0094 Want Ad Help? 642·5678 CE 110111 ILlllS ca. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE .. ST TIMI OPfam! HAUOR .a.Ht.Ales Charming And Immaculate With Large Living Room, Three Bedrooms. T hree Raths, Den. NEW Gourmet Kitchen Two Patios. Lovely Landscaping. Room F'or Motor Home. A Must See At $197.500. COIONA HIGHl.AMDS Y11W Great Home On An R-2 Lot Approximately 17 Acre. Three Bedrooms. Two Baths. Two Fireplaces. Hardwood Floors. Master Bed room With Fireplace & Patio. All This With Ocean & Canyon View & Keys To A Private Beach. Call Now. S289.SOO. tiJ Coldwe_ll Ban.I.<~~ , CLOSI TO llACH Lovely Corona del Mar duplex. Charming 3 BR. home in great condition with private patio. S mas h ing 2 BR. unit with built-in kit. beamed ceilings & corner fireplace. $298.500. Ideal financing. "I IN NEWPORT CENTER tis 644-9060 ~ ~ PBINSULA PT -REPAIRABLE Mew• -wt!,._.. toe.._•,._ .. S•r Parll. Great pote .. l•I -•net Dflff D ... .,. Wp ....... na.,.... fll tpl•c•. 3 ......... 2 ......... $215,000 features· huge oversized 1'208arranca Pk,.>o ln·ln" lot, w\th mini orchard. Near new carpel. used brick r1rep la <'e. hardwood floors. Owner will also assist with the f inanci n g. As kin g $115,000. Call54().1151 ... ~ .. HERITAGE . • REALTORS E-SIDE DUPLEX Two 3 Ir. &Mifs Sl42,500 FULLEI REAL TY 546-0814 $107,900, CHECICTH1S! Outstanding 3 Bdr m. s hake roof beauty! Formal dining room, too The kids wiU love the big tree.shaded yard with patio and BBQ! Lovely condition inside w1lh oozy fireplace. Hard to find these HARDWOOD f1.00 RS ! Call 540-1151 -~s~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS NEW CONDOS Woodbridite townhouse. b) Owner 3 Br 112 Ba. upg rades . $119,500 539· 1664 aft 6PM. Lnvestors. Reduced s.iooo $103,iOO, assume 9"2''1 loan at S65.500. S37 ,500 lo as s ume Tnl pa) S6 00 t m o . H oward . S.52·6000. Agt. CHARMING DUPLEX English Gardens and brick paths lead to spacious owner ·s unit French doors, cheerful s kylight. cozy dec k Private lower unit has natural wood charm. private patio and quaint kit<"hen. S:ls.9.650. Lovely 2 Br 11, Ba L..-Yilloge R.E Townhome, in lus h ___ 4_9_7_·_1_7_6_1 __ _ garden setting. w ttennis ---------crts. pools, saunas, spa. Great price at SI 14.500. All SPM, 730-3662 READY & WAITING Bea1.1ti(uJ 3 Bdrm vacant home, newly decorated thruout. Ideally located in the CALIFORNI A HOMES area. Close to schools , parks, pools, s h opping . A s k i n g II ~-H1\l\JC-:H HEAL TY ~)~) 1 2000 OCEAN& CAHYOH VIEWS Splendid home of wood and gla~ with each win· dow framing a di£ferent ocean or mountain view. Own this comfortable 3 Bdrm home or dramatic spaces for only S26S.OOO Good financing availa- ble. 644-7211 Laguna Hills I 050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOY&Y BAYFRONT CONDO IACIC IAY s.c.tfr, ... ,. .............. YllW of EASTSIDE C.M. 2 FIREPLACES.- 2512 Santa Ana A\'e. ...lo enjoy in this lux· LAGUMA HILLS Principals only Large 4 Bdrm on oversize lot Upgrades galore! Finest home in area with splen- did m o untain view. $193,500 with large as- sumable loan. Drive by 25471 Bamels St. Then caU. Rare Two.Story Condo In This Lovely Area. Minutes To Freeways . Thrtt Large Bedrooms. Living Room With Fireplace. Sunny Private Patio. Swimming Pools lie Recreation Area. Beautifully Maintained Grounds. Only Sl42.SOO. ·--.............. ,., 75g.9100 #2CCWplf ... ,._. .. ..,_.e....,. ., .... ·-..... ·-·-. ..., .... ·-....... ... ~­.,.. :c :..:: 4 :t=- E• =--:.. ... == ·-. ._ ·-®"'- .., & ,.... .::::-z .......... ., ..,....._ SZl,000. a.--.... ...... SJJl.000. 61I·1400 WATERFRONT HOMES. INC. REAL ESTATE Sai.•. Renr•I•, P1~r1~ Mana1ienwn1 2'16 W Coas1 Hwv JIS M~nN Aw N~ri &.ch &lbo.l !stand '31·1400 '7Uf00 .... .... 2 BR, 2~ ba. contemp. wious IRVINE GROVES design. SU6,000. / town h ome. Many 646-5°'6 646-6093 amen ities in thi s '"popular'· largest 3 Br ASSUMAILE with C.A .. plush carpel· LOW IMTBEST ing, covered patio & Nearly new 2 BR, 2~ Ba. rowitain. 2 Pools! 2 Ten· condo in. s mall project nis courts! Greenbelts! w/pool and spa. 2nd TD J~t listed! $149,900. available. 675-4912 bkr. 55'..aaaa C /21 Newport Cettt..- 640.5lS 7 ---------i !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~~~ •••••••••••• ~~~-~ JBROOM Double 1arage, 60xl20' lot. Quiet location, but close to shopping. New roo(1 copper plumbing, harawood noors. plaster walls, good <'Ondilion. $110,000 with an assuma· bleloan. Roy~. ltltr. 541 .. 7729 PIXOllUILD E. Ude l br, ehl40 R-2 lot, vacut. AUuaw loan. •• 000. a Albert Pl. 0n/atl,Al-2m. macneb I Irvine realtg A SUlllDIAfllV 0, THE IRYINE COMPANY WOODlllD•t -UMDll SIOO,OHI Cute. immaculate upper end·unit condominium. Close to an recreational facilities. IDgh assuma•te loan 6 owner will assist on balance. Paula Bailey 642-82:§. (J-60) JU-1414 (Clfl'4M V*r C..... ... ,. '°' r>a-0.W. • . 2 j f l 0 2 '· k 0 I, • • ', , • 3 IN BIG CANYON DRAMATIC Custom Bu.ill Home of nearly 5000' 48R. 4RA. + 2 ha ir RA C1the-dral Ceilings. 3 Frplcs, Glamorous Mu t..-r Suite with Ovt>rsn('d Closets, Oreuin g Room. Jacunl Tub Lart.tt> wtmmang Pool wl St>a & Watt•rfoll Ovt'rlook1n tt Golf Cuurs.e. SL200.000 EXOUISITE 3BH. 3RA Townhouse H1~h Ceilings. Cus tom Wall & Wlndow \<werln1t-"· Ch t.."t'rful li.:ht F.at In Kuchttn, Roman T ub an Mastt'r Huth 3 r1u 11ara«.-.. & lovely µnvuh' µutw ur\'U s.w>.000 NOT TO MENTION A Stun.nm.: 28 H, l BJ\ TownhouSl' t\bo with high cci hn ~s . 1.·u~l()n1 dec-nrutor touc·ht-s. & largt> sturu~e a rt'B Thi~ OOl' for $290.(Ul 1032 Wall St La Jolla CA 92037 JOL~~ BROKERS I. LTD • 7t<MH.JUI C.tlC cMMd ___ fcf~--H , •• 1ll 11rs NEWPORT WA TERFROHT Largest floor pla n offe red Open. fresh and a bea ut iful view. Custom decor. gold fixtures and many upgr ades. Boat slip rights up to 45' $749,000 JAMES E. GOULD Ul·IS32 . ..-... ........ ---~ -. .-~ ..,_ ........ _. ... ,,......._.. ... ' Oth.r le• bt .. e HoMwt ..... th.d ................... th.d Monday September 29. l!MO DM.YAl.O'r (S . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. .. .. ............. .. . .. .. .... ... . . . .... ... . . ---------------------------- -.... Pr.,.f'fy ZOOO Corw .. M• JIU C...... .. M9r UZZ ....... U•fw••d HHHI u ........... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ' Polllt UH 1r-. lJ44 Ht~IHdl 126' r------------------So ol tlW)' up11radcd 2 Ur J IOIMPAM HM. HOMl .. 1NCOMI 2 8a houto on lurgc 101. 2bdnn. den, nl~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••••. 1525/mo 707\.'a Arami WATCHTHIWAVIS! Heautlful Golf Course -~6-:1767 2Br. 2Ba. wtocean view' Condo. Wtgreat view In ONLY Jf 1.100 I N1 t·c> 2 ~droom hc1u"1 ''ard & l'itrport 167!\ rhartnlni! Wt•ll llll'alt·l:t r I IJ s cl up I ex It I) d Thru J uly 1$lh lk-lly llVtHl-l ... CI $425K1ds/Pets <9575) lee Rancho San J oiaquln. ---• "vel" Th= .::'droom , Dim__ MIS 6ll·4H5 Nearly oew 2 Br. 2 ea. ..._.,.....ech 316' "" ,, ,,.... ~ end unit. Air. pool, spu. hurllt• nea r ~antu n.t tuu111lc~ lo r1iovltl1· in Kt-rr61~t 111'1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Two Bath Home With Ore al Dana Cres t 3 $125 mo . In c Ids l'OUC!tt' 111lr CUlll "'' & l'Vrtll' Ow1wr will 1·11rry II • r Ir.. •• l' .. I II I I II II Jl • ,, •• r t• ii \ d Cl w n l11rriwl)O(f nn1 llrt•µl.il'" 7'\;l ltrlll LIDOISU & 11• b11lt. CAU 644-72 I I l'Olt l>l':t All.:-. /Jn t;l[,[L {\Ail I V & AC,~UC II\ I f.~ USYTOIUY "" l:!Ol ''I fl ' I .If ll••r •• ' •H•.1r hu"ttth' " tit II trt & "hooh t tltt \. ,,, ....... . IYOWMtR SI0.000 ••• Ill\.' 1090 .••••••••....•......... EHCHAt.,TIMG ESTA TE I H1ti111 t U'>l•t111 ' 1.11• I" II ht'tl l ~t ,1 h1ll1t1t1 111 •h ·"1 ,1hh -..111111111 ,jf l'J 1 lt••."lt fl!~)r jtl,tll ,tl)fj lltlf'I '""Ill \1 ,1~11·1 lid1 Ill I •·I t .ti lt•JIUt t > •1111 """"' 1••1 l 11ul.;1 '"" "'ll•J "tllti;.lll'h<J .11111111• nn~ 1111 , .1111' ..:li•• ·~~l don osen r~altors lilh ,\ r t'HC lS Pf< ·r TUSTIN i:ll :ll I l OthH' R"' Estat~ .....•••.••••.......... Mobile Homes Fors• 1100 . .•.•.•..•.•••..•...... San .luau Capo $.')!'> O.Kl :! llr. 2 Ba. MXO sq rt Ii) rs ol<l ,\gi ~··~id32 Ac~forSale 1200 ..........•............ ,, u l' re i. II u n t 111 ~ t u 11 10,.. flt t ·l O ,_.,.I 8 UNITS \\',•I •Ill•· c·,.,1,1 M~·:. ... 1•u .,j I tt1'14ltt hUI lllCUllfi.' SIU 191•1\1 1'1 11 1• 5-' l!i UOO 1111 IM) 1111 Ill SI.Ill IJIJll I'" I h,il.1111't Jl 11 , ."(' RE:HIGE /t--_HOME~ U"JI 1-.-.1.1t" l1""'t11H.·111' Llt.:l W ( uu,t 11~' "I ll 645-6646 I' \IC'I'"\/ 1-:ll!-11 Ill' I.I \Jl ID \TH JN I u111b Sd5 000 . > Ulllh $1:10,UVIJ 111 urn" 'n.·, 11uu ..,J11 L1t-111JCdt1111 llm llH<'I l 111 li:ll )0111 ;1 I nth lo. S11J1• l 'u,lU :\k,,a :.! huc•hclur~. I ::!IJr 1;r1•Jl U1cad & Hutkr il:!.l .!11)4) bk r .. r l>o:nonn· L'mt•mla \GT 77>2 t~:ru ( 'omµlch!ly ru r1111 .. hed wit h t.1111i ry th1n11 you nl"\,-cl Rcniu1Jclt!tl & dto n 1rlltl'tl :.t Hr , den 2 huth Mc1nthly l111l Grundy , IUtr 6'15 Gl61 I' !-. N I N S U L A HA V 1-'HONT lluu.::SI' ~ti h 111.·uch tint.I tl •1t·k 11 hdr.m 'i. lurnt'lht'd Great view ,\\ :111 <A'l G lhru June 6 1.;011 m o Waterfront ll11rr11.'ll r.31 1400 WATERFRONT SURF Furniture Optional :lllr, 2Ra, :.par1ous 1450 ~lt 11 F: '<t'l' or pror . hotne" •lrnfr '1ature adlls $750 mu ~Ir Tnbolet 552 7655 'l l·rrif11· Vu 3 r upper .tplx furn. luu11d. 2 gar :.i 16 Seu!>h•ir~ Dr. sec 111).(f I Hr n1 11ce<111 Ad It s. qwet Cln util & 1•ahl<' tree Nu fM!l S:l'JS winter ~ 1425 21ir. 21Ja, yrl;r S450 per mo nu peu,, nu children. (jWCt 67~-3l!Jtl -•D•E•L•u•x•E•T•R~l•P•LE•X--l :i Ur condo, 212 ba. pool. l'htl d rcn µel !. OK llt'.11111rull~ uµgrad1•d Sll.\11 mo. fi.1 5 :17ti5 or 111 plcx All 2 Bcirms . ~13 372 1231\ .,,·pardLe ~a rages and 1>altu' :'lie:" "oncl t'' H.\HBOR Hll>GI:: ll:flJ)rS .111d _1_1_1!1•rior-. ...(.'u 1H-0m 1ied 2 story t'~ rar111•ts. ramt and ho me wnh f11ntas t1 c w.;llpaµt•r Ownt-r "tll view ... Aval l 1 1,1. 1·;ir1 1. the hn~ncin~ a t $35()()/mo J Ooran. A~. I 2 , 1 • P r 1 c <' d a l MSt '1522 S171l.OOO For n10rt in · 1orma11on. 1·a115-IO·l 15t Um1urpassed V1e w11 Of 1J r + f 11 m rm New washer /dryer. Adults. no l:S 11 Y • 0 l' e a n landscaping low citrc pets. Owner76CH719. 11100/Month Year 's w /spr1nkler~. Close to -------- I.case Broker 759.9~ sch, µark. New home 4bdrm. ram rm. pri\'ate Coste W... lZZ4 •»Si mo. Avail now. call pool & JllC on cul·dc·sac. days 4"" ..... ,1. a "'. avail lmrnec:J. 559 . .;.ioo ot ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""'~ .,. 972·1717, leave ines!. Chol a•o; Zbr hoft9 1295, p1ci et red yard {;real ror klds(6J701fee 63l"4556 Belly Agent RENTIMES AMERICA'S FIRST <.:OMPLETt:: HOME Rt:NTALSERVICE ALL AREA.5. SIZES AND PRICl':S <.:ALI.TODAY 631-4555 JHr Home m secluded area $495 t&i55J ree RE:MTIMES 611·4555 2 BR C:ott:ige . Adults :-Jo vets R an g e & rehige lilt ls paid $<150 nlt1 6481 ~ w. 18th 642 Off35 KIDS /PETS Ok E Side House. 2 Bdrm . Garage, I-lied yard $.'HS 642-2510, 64~4848 F. side duplex unit, 2 Kr I O:i. lrg yrd , t•htld1pe t OK A\'a1I. Ill I. 2661i Santo Tomas $450 Call .J11hn 64~5096 Hc:nt buy opt to 1982 Panoramic ocn & hill vie w, 28r. 28a Condo, SliClO mo 642·9712, 12131 4~~5l88 3 Br . Hilltop Twnhsc . va l ley & or n v i e w, security g ate , pool, Jaruzz1 , s11una, tennis courti.. dshwshr. com pactur. W 0 . ftplc. garage. S.575 mu Owner 774-440.'> . 2 hr, 1 bu dplx nt•e:m 11ew. l rplr. gar. no pcti.. $500, ut1ls µd 770 7872 El Toro 3232 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1-~legam:e & 1-:cunomy' JBr home w central a,c fncrl >d SSSOC6400>ret• RENTIME5 631-4555 llW-1 E F'OR RENT :1 Udrm SS50 f ('nt•ed yard & garage. Family pleaH• Kids & pct s wekome Call 9ti4 2.'!&1 or !1i32'Ji 1 Agent, no foe Fountain Valley 3234 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seeking the ultimate? Try lhis exqws1te 3 Br S.525! 18476> fee RENTIMES 631-4555 -lb ab.a 11.Q m o u r H tiftC)t .__h ~1.a"' SI I0.000/5~ dn 494 2.'>61 1WFGn _._ ~ .. v-••••••••••••••• •• •••••• Brand new 3 Br :!' ~ Ba tuwnhome. fplr. patio, 2 car i:arage. Nµt Hgts ;i rea $745 S4tl 76:18. EMG-9125 e\'CS Woodbndge, lge 4 hr, 3ba, ram rm, 11tnum. a 1c, nr poo l , leas e in c l gardener . water & fac. oo pels, S950tmo. 11vutl !\ov t 551·3117 a ft 6. :.t br, I ' 'I ba condo, l)(>OI. $5.50/mo 548 l3t:l/559·M42 3 Br. 2 bu , dbl gar fncd yard. Si>SI> rro Park Hlty 551 5000 TURnaocec GLEM SRr. 3Ba. 3 car gar , 40K 988-1234. ext 214 l rvrne /Wood br 1dge 2 Bdrm F'enced yard $575 per mo. ~I 2554 . 4 Ur 2 &. lg )d lo1·al refs req. $625 bl3-3022 01 bl3·fl158 WOODIRIDGE Lakeside 2 Br 2 Ba . ~ mo. Lakefront 2 Br 2 Ra $925 mo. 752-2211 RENTALS 2br. 2 ha 3hr 21Ja 3br 2 ba 3br. 2•.,ba lbr 2ba $700 IOOIM£S "~ASLUDH tM THI IUSIMISS OPllMTALS .. CALL 631-4555 NEWPORT SHORES, 3 br, 2 ba. S74S/rm. older pref 673 8145/67S·4886 Arand new & beaut, upper bay, prof decor. 2 br. 211 ba, 2 sundeck.s. pulio. 2 car gar .S7!6 613·4431 LIDO ISLE 2 Br. 2 Ra Oen. lrplc', Ca hie 1V, elcc gar dr .. $125Cl mo. Adults Yrly lease 67S 6948 , 885 0215 673·1328. ILUFFS CONDO 31.xirm, 3ba, ram rm , hc}I tub. all in xlnt cond $1000 month to rronth. Avail 1mmed. 640-9044 WATERFRONT 4 br. 2 ba, refng, stove compl. ru rn. renretl patio. lge garage ;rn· boat shp. $950/mo. yrly wkly or wknd 67:i 36!Yl t.15-4421 ly r. new Extra s pacious, 2Br. :JHa . lwcury garden condo w1wet hur & frpk Newport Heights Clo:>e to beach & ~hopping $8!«J. 848 9840 or 8411 7~S 1.arge 2 Stun home Close tu beach With pool fuc1l :1 Br 2 Ba f1rplace. pat 111 .. undeck Ve ry C'le<ill S750 673-8141 & 67S·4912 -------------------• lk11l'h To hc :.old at ~HERITAGE • • REALTORS BA YFROMT /Bal Isle EXCEPTIONAL VIEW of Pavilion Plush rleC'or $700 wk or short term 2Br, !Ba, !iv rm. frpk. gardener. nu peb. $500. S.'8·5827 BeauU(ul brand new :1 bdrm 212 ba. Huntington Beach home. Completely carpeted & draped S blocks rrom bearh & schools. moo per mo + utils Owner will main Lain ext. yard care Call 960 46L4 <tbr + li 21 2ba SIUOO 1-~urn $750 $750 S82.~ $91111 &~ 4 LCKJUnG Hillt 1050 .......•.......•..••.•. SACRIRCE Sbr. 3ba. 2600'. ('Sim IOI. w view 2 patios, rec \eh access $142.500 7711 R3.'!9 ur 768·0.'16.'i ..Wwport leoch 1069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JUSTUSnD! WATERFROKT PIER /FLOAT, riuainl 2 bdrm home on legal fl 2 lot. 2 ta r ga r age Sl.25,000' Balboa lay Prop. REDUCED 1;()' to ~ach pt 'f'a view. t·orni-r 7 rm 2 ba 2 slnr) ~ngl on H 2 bwldahle oo· lot. SJ ISK OWC 2nd . loral concio o r~ 710 1 Sea~horc OpPn daily Owner. 645·84 I 0 THIS PROPERTY JUST WENT UP! lnrlat1on watt!> for no one' Seller Just rais ed t h t.' pri ce u n l h 1s beaut 1 ru1 r ustr;m hu1 It :lBr. 2Ha nt'l'anfront h o m e . w b a r h c I '' r quarters. lrom 54MS.1100 to SS00.000~ pu l>l1 r a u rt1o n on 10 Iii 80 hv order ol the Supenor h1urt llmk1•r C'OOpera11nn inv1tc1l Info MJr !.h Uu1ar. \u1• ttoneer:. 213 272 !IS:lli I t\<' comer lot, C<iltfornia P tnl'S. Sl .·IOO dn lakl• over payment!. of $7-1 mo 1714) ~J9 c\'e~ 1300 •...........••..•••.... BY OWNER On Top of lots for Sate 2200 .•..............•...... OCEANFRONT LOT Large lot in exdus 1 ve Three /\rch Bay 1n So. Laguna Se1·unty >:at<' l'ommun1t ' with µvt streets. bt-ach. ll'nn1'i & clubhouse Ver) rar<> uµ portun1l> L ot µrice Sl .•195 ,1100 C all 21:11628· l:IOO or owner 714 -199·3(170 wknsds WINTER RENT AL S 2 Udrm . new furn S600 mo I Bdrm. new. $4501mu Waterfront /Salisbur) 67).6900 WINTER REMTAL Oceanrront 4 br, 2 ba. $700 mo. Nwpl Be ach Heally. 67S· 164.2. Housff Unfurnished Mobile HOftlt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Paric 2300 Balboa Island 3206 ...•....•...••....•••.• ••••••••••••••••••••••• House or duple"l. 2bdrm . Iba. 1954 1\ or 1954 B Meyer Pl. no pets, small child OK. $125. 549·3'\84 2 llr duplex. $470. ut1I pd. 333 E. 2lst. CM. adlts /no µels J 13drm 2' ~ & hrand new spacious condo Vaulted ceilings, frplc. S625. Agt 964-4590 NE WPO R T TERR CONDO Trop1<>al paradise. 2br SJSS. close lo school!> Ki ds OK. gar included 18488 > Agent 63HS.">'i fee Absolutely cxcept1 nnal brand ne w, nl•vcr oc cupted 3 Bdrm 2' 2 ha 't5Z3 CA'4PU5Da·IRVINE home Lan dstap1ng. t•ar pet1ng & drapes. LCICJU"CIB.och famdy room with up ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3248 st al rs loft that can be used a:. bcirm or den :; hlocks from bear h & school $1100 per mo + ut1ls. Owner will main JOG TO THE BEACH! From this elegant 3Hr ' Kids OK' 18975 1 fee RENTIMIS 631-4555 tam e"tl )ar<l Call Gracmus ll\1ng m lovel.' 960-4614 Jbdrm 2ba w s µa No Lido Isle LeaH This warm . comfo rtable home 1s dose to tennis Jlld beache s With :l Bdrms 3 B<i. den and form;. I dining room, 1t or lers a perfect blend or family comfort and easy entertainmg. $1200 mo 644-9990 Lovely 3Rr twnhs e 1n :'l/ewport Heights 21 >:Ba lrpk. & pool Ne wly de C'O r ated $8501m o 645 4955 or 645·4834. RHltan •67§-7060• ll~RRY before th!' price ~~~~~~~~-·! ~oes up again ~' Dano Point Harbor 2nr. 2Ba. all e lec lu)( adult Co-op apl. Sl.2'J.OOO P HI NCt P,\LS UNLV -196·2134 Small 28' Space ror rent Senior Cttiie n P urk l'11sta Mesa 641>--1151 IALIOA ISLAND leautiful layfront 2Br. 2Ba . frplc. gar. pool. Kids ok. no pets S57S . !lflll.8388. 900-1503 Allr 2Br Monl1cello con- do, Bwlt·ins. refrig. in ter ccm . 2 c ar f!ar . 5S7 H 36 Blu e <.:h ip Properties Rustic retreat. S29S F'or a cozy 2br close to the beach<96281fee 631 4556 Agent {;a rrol pets. $825 /mo 497·4072. Oceanfront 1rob1le homl' Lrg. 2 Br Condo Newport He ights F'rplr . po•1I "a s h e r & dr y er $6S01mo 67S·84 10daysor ti73-22Si 1•ves. ' PeniRMla~x Completely rerurh1shcd. one blk tu beach You own the land. Great fi nancing. $199.500 ~ 759.9221 lllD'SEYE Ocean + bay view condo Boat shp. Tr; ior; down Owner 1s motJ\·a ted '! World R E. ~3-2591 THEILUFFS Upper bay view Most desired original area Spacious 3 bdrm + hob by room. end unit lfusie patio $250.000 Agl. 640.5560, MAGMIFICEMT HACIENDA OM IACI< IAY Will trade for Condos 1n Hawa11. Mammoth, Vail or ? 4 Bdrm Maids room. pool $499,000 Agent64&1~ $5.000DOWM No qua1try1ng Prime N.B. locatmn. 4Br. lrg yard. S239.000 640. 7403 or 831 782-1 FOR SALE BY OWNER Nt::WPORTS HORES 2 story. 3 bdrm, 2 ba, re c·e nl l y redecor a I ell , S139,000. 67!>·48861673-8145 DOVER SHORES FABULOUS HOME WTTH POOL 4 Bdrm . 3000 sq ft C /21 Newport Center 640.5157 NEWPOttT HTS. 4 Bdrm. 3 bath Condo. 2200 s /f Sl99,000. AS· sumable In Own/Agt 646-9798 JO"\LS I{ I \I I \ I 'l 1-..1 M-!1 673-6210 --------1 135-0 McM91t•. Dff«t, Resort 2400 leoch Property . .••••••..•.•.•.•...... MOHfW BAY Oc•e an vie w lot . S7,!HIO, l u ll µrice Easy terms. Al(t 661·2606. ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOR LUSE ~~~~~~~~I Commercial Properly 1600 .................•..... BLUFFS New carpet. paint and charm on Bay with patio o n WAT E R Rea li) special 2 story 3 bdrm. 3 1~ ba . frplc , n e w kitchen. $1700/mo. lease. Waterfront/Salisbury 67J.OOOO New 2Br . !Ba. Laundry hook-up, gar age. front yard + patio Adu.Its. no pets. $550. 645. 7300. Sharp 3Br. 2Ba. Family ---------•I room & frplc. Custom de· t::xec 4 br, 3 IJa. lge fo m r m rrplc, n r beach . gardener.S850.SJ6.042!1 Presug1ous Palace! JBr Deluxe Home .frplr garage. balcon) view + more! S500 <6759 1 fee RENTIMIS 631-4555 from $SOO mn I 711) ON THE 8AY 2 Bdrm -199 3816 2ba ''" pool Sel'urily EMERALD IAY Oceanside Front Ro"" \1ew 4 Br. lge rec rm Avail 10• IS 12650/mo. 494~ ------ LCICJlllMI Hias 3250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br condo \'1ew of moun S950 mu S ECU RIT Y CONDO 2Bdrm. 2ba. S750/mo. Waterfront Homes · Inc 631·1400 S20.000 down. 4 br. 3 ha Owner will sell on cun- tr att or lease option Brolser . S t eve . 957 1900 640-93-15 LAGUNA BEACH 9600SQ.FT. New 2 bedroom 2 bath ho me Mission Lake s Coun t ry Club Go lf· tennis·pool. Beautifully landscaped, no ma 1n lenance yard. 9690 Clubhouse Rd Desert Hot Spring~ 2 l3·:f78·2572 WIMTa REMTALS <.'Or thruout. Elec. g arage 2 Bdrm home. lo.ve'6' door. 2 covered patios. patio and garage $600. wa1k to schools Mesa del Baylront 3 Bdrm lower . Mar area . S7951mo. ---------tJJnS, near golf couf"lic, IA YFROMT COMDO 2+ den. excellent loca ttoo $1700 pr mo. Boal s lip available. Agl 760 9333 BEST BUY IN Harbor Highlands S163,000 3 Bdrm. ram1I.> room. rireplace. high as~uma­ ble loan. new plumbing. carpet , pamt and drapes Call M5·9161 14 Lea~ed commerC'ial · 1nclustnal units lo1·ated nn one or Laguna ' ma m h11:hways Bwldmg re· t•cntJy remodeled High dcm<1nd a rea Partners Y.ant out. nffenng \'Cry attract ive linanrini.t on a total price of S575.000 with $166.750 down Realononucs 67S·fiiOO M-GZONE Older home. garaRc and barn will produce :.ome income whi le you plan new development 8,950 l>Q ft. of lamJ near 18th & Wh1tt1er . Costa Me:.a W~stey M. Taytor Co. Reaffon 644·49 I 0 BRECK E:-JRIDG E SKI RETREAT New. 5 lidrm. solar warme d . spa• wus home with s pec tacular Colorado moun tam view from acre-plu!. ..,ecluded lot $190,000. by 0"11er whu will ('Ons1der eqwly trade for Newport yachl and -;l ip. <:a II 55!Hl977 eves. Outof Stat~ P rop«ty 2600 ············~·········· 60 J;.c~s Wyominq OOJ.66()9 eve,. 4br.$650/rmnth,212 m1 from beach. 840-5648 garage. SlOOO/mo i54-621.2. Bayfront -I Bdrm upper. --5 hlks Lo ocean. Elegant 2 garage. $1200 YEARLY REHT ALS Little Island. Lg 1 Br apl w/deck. unfurn. S6()0lse Be autifully remod 3 bdrm home. unrurn $1200/nv> lse Include:. utilities:l .South Ba\'fronl 3 hdrm lower , gar. rum or Un· furn Sl200/mo South Bayfront 4 Br up. per , gar. S1500tmu. furn orunrum 2 Br. 212 ba. new W'VleW $75/mo 963·220.5 condo bdrm . ram rm & den. tS725 mo). Plush crpts. 21 z ba. ceda r & glass. DRAMATICCharmer. Lg. dlx 3Bd 3Ba, jog 13ch. Vac S75064~1035 3 BR. sharp & clean. Mesa Verde S650 mo. Ask for Bill, ~~5880. Perfect for indiv o r l'ple. 1 br w /yd, $3SO /m o. sorry. no pets. refs rcq Call ~G-4752 Dbl car pvt gar . fully ma tnl. yd. Adults. no pets. lnqwre at 527 18th St 7 14 960·633 1 o r 960-6l31 3 13drm 2 Ba w ramll} rm, just completel} renovat· ed. nu carpets/ drapes tile: '2 tn1 from beach. <.:ross sts Brookhurst Bushard. Gardening paid b) owner. S67S/ mo, Call Debbie i31·5844 ~~~~~~~! BUILDERS Lou lndttel & Assoc. 675-3331 New. lge :~BR 2•, Ba con· Real Estat~ ~~~~~~~~~I do Wetbar, micro. WW ••• Ex •• c.h•ange•••••••••••2•8•0••0• Dix ., Bd d 1 3 t•pts. drps. elec gar opnr. HOME FOR RENT LIDO SPECIAL Tn 10'7. down Move in t1)mor row Ch armi ng patio entry hom e . -I lldrm, 3 bath on Estr ada walkway. Reciuced for rast s a le S359.000 R.H R Bkr 673-7300 PAa<AGE Re ad.' lo go UI fire Bulld10g. Sant a An.i. Near the Ci\'IC Center. lll,400 sq. ft. lnt•ludes working d r aw in~s & permit Chuck Spiller Broker 631·1266. Palm Spnngs Will ex change beaut1ru1. larJ?c Las l'almas cslalc for Hal boa. Lido. or Newport rome Call ;14.325 078.'i ---------•I Pnme C-1 comm invest· 2900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HARIOR RIDGE LEASE/OPT Cas a Bla nca Model 3 Bdrm. den & view. Flex. financing. For details call today. C /2 I ..Wwport Center 640.5357 ment, approx I acre nr new shoppmg center tn Vist a. $135.000. 498·5735. NEWPORT/6 UNITS 1n heart o N ewport Beach. Located in com· mercial area. It can be used for business. re- sidential or ??. S450,000. Watwfront Homts Inc. 673-6900 Have Cas h will hur Da.is&Clark 851-1666 Wider /De•eloper needs butldable lanci packages. F'or condos. houses. apartments. o r rice buildings. com merctal &etc. sconREALTY 536-7533 ~~~~~~~Retltds COftdoMi•l ... s/T own· ••••••••••••••••••••• •• houses for scH 1700 Houses FwnisMcl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' r m up ex. · in tercom, gas BBQ. story living rm. frplc. Patio. many xtras. avail SlSOO mo Widock l2000. l Ot 10 /80. $67S m o . 67S_·_3067 __ -----7J.l·631·7100: 642 2001 CoronodetMcr 3222 ----- ••. ••. ••••••••......... Clean 2bdrm. Iba, gar , no HARIORVIEW 3 Bedroom Sausalit o model home Beautirully c a r e d for Beamed c ath e dra l c e ilin gs. SllSO/pr mo. R . C . Taylor t:o. 640-9900. Imme diate occupancy l-'an1ast1 c 180 degree ocean view·city lights from all rooms. Lrg. 28r. 2Ba. ramily & dining. RJSO/mo. Wknds & eves: 644·8889, wkdys: 64.2·S751. Harbor View home. 3 br. 2 ba. beaut. Mo naco. SBSO/mo. avail. Oct. 1. 700.8128/836-7183 pets. $<125. 2208-C Placen- tia 545·798.1. 2 Bdrm. House Cln Tri· Plex). Enclsd garage. patio. rrplc. prerer quiet older or middle aged adults No pets. n o children. s:ns mo. Avail. appro x. Oct 10th. 642·5872. 2bdrm, lba, encl yrd. 1 chi ld OK . $440 /m o 64.2·4610. Exclusive townhome. W. Costa Mesa. 2 br. 212 bath. 646·870217S2·6671 Joy BIG CANYON Exclusive listing. Finest custom home on the golf course S Bdrms with over 6000 sq fl of beaut. daytime and evening views. Incredible securi· ty. By appt. thru Wm Cote. S1.7S million. BY OWNER·JBr. 2Ba, lalbool.a..d 3106 2 br hse w /dbl gar. patio, 3 Br S550. Fenced yard and garage. Family ple ase Kids & pets welC'ome Call 964-24566 or 973-2971 Agt ., no fee New 2 br. 2 ba condo. pvt adult 40+ commumty. rec far. all apples. crpt, drps. avail. immed. S.550. 540-4249 2br. 2h ba. den. delux con· do. rrplc. wet bar. tennis. pool . $625 /m o. H iii Sfj0-1217.SJ6.6S6S 4Br Exec. 21,Ba . S750 mo. Agt. 54~0022. 964-2255 3bdrm. 2ba. near Central Park. S625. 841·4525. Ir.-3244 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna Hills village Pools. tennis. volleyball etc. SQlS. 962 5585. Ask for Dee -------- HOME FOR RENT 3 Bdrm S.S50. Fenced yard & garage F'am1ly please Kids & pe t s welcome. Call 964·2566 or 973-2971. Agent. no ree. 3252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beaut. 2Ur. part. furn. 1 S67S lor unfurn I $650 l patio home. Spa, 2 c!lr gar. immed occupancy SJJ.7540 Mission Vieio 3267 ....•..•......•..•..... :\1ed1terranean 3br home Central air throughout W bnck frplc<6370Hee RENTIMES 631·4S55 HOME FOR RENT Lrg Jbdrm upper duplex. I house fro m ocean . ocean view. $750/mo \ r I~ 675-8018 San Juan Capistn.o 3278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful 2Br Estate! $450 <.:ool N Breez.> nu bit ms 1Gds<&i09l fet! 631-4557 Agent Valene ------ Tustin 3290 ....•••................ (.;ountry Collage. 2Bdrm Stone rrplc,$400 t5440 l Agent Jim 631 ·4556 Condominiums Unfunllshtd 3425 • •••••••••••••••••••••• H U NT I NG TON HARBOUR. prime loca· lion. manna view. beaut new 3bdrm. S97S. 3ha. balcorues. rrpk, etc. ~o pets 213·634 ·8602 o r 3 Bdrm. $550 Fe nced yard and garage. Family please. kid s & pe t s welcome. Call 964-2566or1(2~~~~- 97J.2971 A((t. no ree .. --- ..Wwport leach 326' ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO FEE! Apt. & Condo rentllls . Villa Rentals 67S-491.2 Bkr. Bayshores 1 268S Ba ysh ore Dr 4bdrm. 211ba. SlD>/mo .. year lse. 213·441·3252 or 385-2176. Westcllrr area lovely ex· ecutlve home. 3Br , 2Ba. available for immediate orcupa ncy. Dee, J .D. Property Management: 751-2787. ta Mesa 2 BR 212 Ba. lush urut wil h patio. 2 r ar g arage a n d fi replace. Adults only complex. $57S mo. Credit check required. 675-SAAO or 759·9341 On the Sand, Hunt. Bch, 2 Br 2 Ba. ,pool, security, s a u na, gym . w /vu . $1000/mo. 64Hi604 Tri·level, H.B. 2Rr, 2•2Ba, microwave. tras h com· pactor, tennis court, rac· quetball. pool, jacuzzi & sauna. Avail Nov. l. S750 mo. 968-2044, 1·568-0166. 848·1292 I *'Cote Realty & Investment 640·5777 air, enclosed patio, new· ••••••••••••••••••••••• n o p e t s, $700 /m o . ly decorated. nr pool & Sl'EPSTO BAY. 3br, 2ba, 64().9350/64().1589 gam e rms . $88.000 dining rm. Frplc, gar. 2 S46-45&5. patios. $59!>. Winter OPEN 328 Sapphir e· Irvine Tenace Oollhouse. 3 BdJ:m, 3 bath, family kitchen, Walk to bay beaches. $1350 mo. incl. Family w/lge yard. 3br, 2ba, rrplc. cpt. kids ok $68S/mo. SS9·11S9 or 967-0251 Woodbridge, 5br, ram rm. din rm. Jba. air. month· month. no pets . $975. Agt: 541·5032. Turtlerock . View. MESA VERDE: S Bdrm. Exec. Twnhme. 2 Br 2 3bdrm. 21"1ba c ondo. beaut ocean & city lites view. no pets. $'700/mo. Jim 963.(8)2 or 968--4650. lormal dining rm, pool, Ba. earthtones. 1 yr. lse llG CANYON 3706 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ST EPS TO BAY. lbr. great patio. F'rplc, gar. $395. Winter. OPEN . 328112 Sapphire· 644-0954 . EAST.., M.P.I . Beaullfully re m odeled home w /extra large pie shaped lot. Landscaped for privacy! Fireplace in enterta inme nt area w open & s pacio u s kitchen/dining areas . 3 Br 2 Ba with room to add on! Fantaatk buy with ioi;i down and 9-Wner Hnand nc or au uma ble 1.st. n•.ooo. ... ,42-1736 557.4437 2717 lri1tol St, CM 'n.e fastest draw 1n the West. . .a Daily Pilot t1...med Ad. 142,541;9, 644·0954. S. Cleftwnte I 076 1100 .-......._ p.....-1-....1a l I 07 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8'llVU9 ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• LUSE/OPTION IMFUTIOM Luxury . custom 3 br wood & 11ass home on FIGHTER! nearly l acre close lo 8 Units , 2 lots, steps to b e a c h . $ 4 0 0 , 0 0 0 . bay & beach. Xlnt re n· _0wn __ e_r_1a""gt._._498_--0'l5_7_. __ 1 tals. Call today! ..... c••-1011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dy owner. forced to sell our dream houae. 4Br 2·story. 21h8a. w /cntrl air . Ass um . JO% mort1aae. 6 ~ocks rrom 673-6210 Dana Pt. Harbor. Im· SEU. id)e items with a maculale ' Sl49.t00 . DailyPilotClaasllledAd $3143. 842-5678. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• (,'harming 5 bdrm. 3 bath bay(ront with 38' boat noat. Sept .. July. $1.200 mo. Yrly $1.600 mo. Biii Grundy. 675.&161. U tllt! Miss Muff et sat on a Turret, along came 11 spider and read in the Dally Pilot Classtried section about Miss Muf. fet's Tulfet and bought It tor te.95. Vou can sell your t ulfet and lots or other thlnas through Dally Pilot Class1rled Ads Callt42-5678 - gardener. Ag\. 644·9687 maintenance & gardener $'700mo. Ginny Stevens McLain Twnhme 2Br . incl. SU&>/rm lse. Call Agt. 811·8800. 975-1192 2ba. Tennis pool jac sec. Wate rlronl Ho mes . -';...__------,---i Cvd prk'1 for 2 cars . eves. 631-1400 HOMEFORRENT USO. 644·7722 d ys , ------~-------------• 4 Bdrm. 1595. Fenced ~evtwknd ..... , ........ 3707 ----------...................... . 2 Br. 1.,., Ba home. 21'2 NEW 3 BR 3 Ba condo. yard • garage. Famil) Bib from Big Corona lplc. patio, 2 ca r gar. please. Kids • pets ---------OCEANFRONT. Small 1 beach, frplc, pvt patio. Near s hops. as mo. No welcome. Call 964·2566 or • • Q U A L 1 T Y br'1 sa:sc> It up. 2 br's gardener Incl. l680/mo. .-. A ... 7""' l"'"" ...... .....,1 &aenl no fee N E W P 0 R T • .... ~ • Wint ..,..,,. •-.... -· e•· -· ......, .,.,...,,, . "" ' . W ES TC LI FF HS E ye ... .,. er ....., • _Act_.__._64Q.. __ ll900 _____ 2br, sml'lncd yrd, clean. Turtle Rk 3br, 2ba,11 Ir+ miDIK• rtom bch. 3Br. up. 673-9270or&73"'928 Jasmine Cl"el!k new 2 Sly, at car, pet OK. Crpta .ti dr, 2 patio, rp. 2 car 1ar. 20., 2 lrplca. 2.000 sq n.. Bach. apt. Bay front. yr. ocean view 3Br, 38&. Din drpa. M70/mo. 842·0M7. pool /rec. fTIO/mo. Move 1ardnr In cl. l800 m o. ly, S3.'iO Incl. utlls. pref . II Fam rm. Sec sate. Dm.P.W 1226 lnnow2U/:n7.fel7 (213 > 843·5578, (213) older man. refs. no pet. S~.mo. 213/~. 271-'JWl ask for Pam. • • 613-67651873-7219 •••••••• .. ••••••••• .. •• Spectac ular view from ~!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!'!!!!'!!~~ H )'OU'te not reading the ~acuJarocean view. lge, brand new TH In = Spectaru.lar Oceanfront little ada ln Classlrled. 2 Br. Condo. 9800 Turtle Rock. 2 11 /br BLUFF'S CONDO: single 3rd. floor. 3 Br. 2 Ba you're mlulDI ~ lot ol BeacbCOUqe2Br. l500 suites, den, z~., ba, wet level. 3br, 2ba. no petal Fireplace. Balcon y. 2 newsy Info rmation •• l mile to t.adl. Acent bar, trplc, al e. 1975. f700/mo Ol\ I yr . lse. 1arages. Wlnttt. SIOO. well as some great buys. -..... 1JZ.l3.'lt0l 7$1·5113 _640-__ sa_u _______ 1 M0-4784. - ft DAILY PtlO r .... d•• c..,.. -·· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• " .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• -ait IM Ac .. •ct•• -;hampoo • lilt'il• 1 rlu n • ~ 92$fi l .1i.1r hr1jtblllnt'n; "'hi &L,l'.J"t..91'Rltl N 1'11r4-<I rtltltt frH n tlm111 le 1u1 l11r11e-c1r :1tn1.1ll Jol1!'1 tlmrw 1mpr\·eme•nl. 25 yr11 e111~r f'C'1W1nii lk!~·n 1h1ble ti.'11 <Wllil Q<dar c rpe • uphol t•h1. :oitm. 11cutch1rd. vrof Cir WIU Rt11111 8'8 l)43, 7~1 "95l Noland Maaonry Cu.tom 81k Work as Retalnin& Wall11 . •·ree e11l. ~·'1968/549''*'9 P1unt1 n1 'by Char lie. Repair Ir Reroor. All T R EE D ES l 0 N : Custom palnUn1 & atain· l~pea·1hin1le1°rocll • Ornamental pr 11nin1 . Ingot all phase11. 494-8261 snakes · compo.tar. Free Sc1&l(>l urln1. toppin1. '•nl ral Ar upunc1 u• t• q,Cit IO mm blu11h C'lran t'Hml! h\ din rrn. hull $J& l\v11 n n S'1 30 m urh 110 l'hr AlfllMi't ~ lh u.1r 4•hm 1wt ''°"' ••-• •• • • • • • • • • • • 0 • 0 • 0 • ()14 rrp..llr l!! r I )I, lJf tJr •337~1 G7:t 11.'J.W fo; I ~ l' I r I l I Ill II l. I r 111:i10fl ('JO !'>111 Jub,,,, m1o1mtcoo111wt• & 1 ••v111r11 MIC ~~ JM'K IW \l..L THAl>t:s llumc 11'1>0.1rr-'l llllilll jUl,. 'f> 11•1, 6--IH 14~ RUHI N'S tl OUSt: Cl,i':ANl.NO s•:RVll'i': l''or it lhomu11hly cl~lln h\C~OflS1 .~'• ,.........._ est. 541-5830 Fin. Avail. lhinn1n1. removal. 1en -...., clean-up. 646-lMS J6.4lll RF.PAIR! all types,lOyrs 1----------e•p. all won guar. "l'r Tree trimmfoc. clean· -----Mo .... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orivt>wa)ll • 1'<1 rlt11111 lt•l llo wo1 I. n11 ,(Off Re•(, •Rep111 r11 •St> )ko<Al111..: =-ll 111111 S4rS A ~phull 11~6 1111 l u, 'LI t.bplffinlJ .••••.................. 4 i-:'ljl Mlllhl·I > "'ill llab,\,tt M11.:1111l111 .l 1'albt•n tlln K!11.1 C--.+Mc*inq ·•••···••·············· \IU '>l \IW'fo' I :.f It\ H I' \I\\ \11 .\ 'hll~• II " \\111~ m ln~tnll .1""" 1 r 11wir" •It .till • h'.•llln ,,,.,., llP hul :-1n 111i.: 11r .1na1· I ,111111\ II• I r• I .. II .111'llllt1 nll t~H llu 1111• Ke1H• 1 r 1·J111111 1 \\i· 1 •111., ,111>t 1 , l•·ar1t•1..., Uri. K 1 t • h 1• 11 I .1 h 'lt·.illl ..i,.,,11 ,\ Ul'hul' I' II I 111 I l •1 .... I .l 1 11 I: \\'1>1 ~ );U Ir l 1111 lo. ll'luUlll W11lndo"' I 1 1 , I t I>~ Ill~ IUllt h4.) f1 lh CetNnt / C OftC~te •.•..........•.••••..•. ·••·•···•··•····•······ t'l~i'OM l:-ITFll H>H t~n1t•rll .,.otr ._ !.I ll'• t \RI'"'" rn\ "·1'' "'111. ''-H!> 11·•11"' ,, j .,_11 w"'~t 1•1< ~I IT •"11111.l\1"" \ •II n\ ·" ""....., · .1111•r > ••IJ ·~·~ \ll lYll•'' 1 \'ll1tHll'l11111 11• COWtsehftCJ pu1r' l:lt· :nJ ~i·o,•t .t ••••••••••••••••••••••• llllll, 17 , .. , 111 ,1rt-.1 Ii \ ''1----------Mr l'.1lt11111.,,, L ~1 t II W1l-.011 '" "MIO' p.IU•" I "1 Jlf\J tl'1t-.1dl'f pl.Ill' l"ro:.-"''t 30 • " <'\11 l h 7 IK7 n .. fllll .. 1 t>-W· I 7 Ill lT~1·0~1 L'.\Bl,Eb '' II 0 M I•: I\ !-; I' \ I II I N T 1-; ~ i' l ' 11 \ It RENCJV \'T'l~C 1;..15 ;ri l!I C.UEH C ONFUSION? \I I \ lH> I t PI H \ I< l' I. It I I F 1-· \\'I lH K~lll •I' Oii•' "' t tw mo:.t pn11nh 111~ rnl'I h•>tb s1•e11 1111 c·a I l·~·t d~\ <'lop11~111 ' 1' .1 1111111r1•ht·O~I\ l' lt:-.ll'•I 1111 «.. ""I 1-. pLion111i: p111 •'t'~~ t-'or t1••t:u l-. c:1ll n\4 • 557 il'i2 1'1nd what \OU "unl 111 ----------~uily P1lul_l'.l~:;1h~<b WJnt \d H1·l11 • t~I:! :lll7H a.•-. .....•..•.............. Ct.••/H ..... I. ii .,. n .., '' r ' I • ,. 1 .rndu ·• l't I 1 ,.,. i-:.~ I M2 l!Ul11 • VIRY LOW ,_,CfS • 1111 h1nthl ii>• rtl•llll l1•f'l.llll\ '"" 1''11111·11• ~l \I r-\ll0'111 Ill I t:1•1•1.i1 •l!I ~II~ """'"'~ ••11!1111 11 1111 m•n•• I A ' ,. 11111111 hh ,.1 I h 111 llJ" I , I \.111 ''·" .1 .. uir1 I Hiii " ·'l•llllil I I I l I , I Ill 111 1 .. 1: 1\ f( 111•1\ oll \f.1J •I I I· Ill l I' I re c• I' , I I 11 1 ' 111'11"1\1· I ... 111•1 .....•.....•.•.•..•...• '""ll\'lll'm'l.'<.i J U m ;1 rkt•I 11\I! l''l'l'llll\ ,. ... 111''(hJ 1 'l'l'r11·nt'l' will l t'l',111· 11nnt J1!-. ma rkt•t ttH! \Jlt·:. l.:ll1•r ... r.1tl111 'IXll" 111·wi.ll'llt'1'. li111d 1un·' .11111 1} R C'all b 1 't 1:c10 l'la:.:.1f1rd \th your •JtW ~top :.hopµ111g Cl'lltl'r ~ ·······•·•·····••·•···· ll11uhn11 & l)ump J ob. l\i.k '"" Ho111d> \19 IJtlll lluul lllu\ltt l'lv1111 uv l.'1111 n••h· ttHllll\lll Uum11 I t u c· t. II U I I k '>I.! r \I f•~ m:11 v I.I u II .i M I' II W 11·:0.1)1•tU11l11lll11.•'> h uvc- •.J '4WIJ T1uf'I• ru1d ~ l • 1·1 111111111 t~lllP t'J11 ol 11 ,111, I h I 11 II ' (' 11 I I ,,Iii m4!11 IL\l l.l"'IC;&1 '1.1< .. \N IN<1 I r~l' tnm & 11.i1111111.: IU ' ltuy !fl;.1 ltflo llJuluw s:!5 J tu.HI • <'.ti I U,H 1!1 .1fk1 J11111 ul ~1111-u; 11111111111'. \'.m l( 'le .. 111 l II·" llu111h m.111 Joi~., J ''" h1f. !Jll1l HOCIHCleantftCJ •..••••....•...•••.•... Want .1 Rl-:ALL Y.l'LE,\:-1 llOt.se·• t'ull Gmi.:ham ti11 I Frt't.' l'"I h4.5·fl l23 ltt>u~edeJllln~ t pl US \\h,11" Call su.b II Stutr for 1lelaib 842 llAA4 llw Maru•ll> Apt.~ & ti e rl1•1111ln1t & Bu~in1•1111 fll.11 ht111g ·a rol MG 650i ••ltur ~ 311 l>t'Pt'Od1it>l1• I.ail} to r lt!un )t1Ur homti F."I> uwn '1'1 un.-. 1>16 !1()()1 751 O;JS:J llOUSl.,t;L!:;A NING \o,;Xf $ti Pt,;R ltn S42 i961 J.wtorial ••••••••••••••••••••••• UJll & Manl~n ·, l'.leuom~. Pamtlllt! & Carpentry Co offe r's fall .s pt>riah S.WI IW44 Landtc~ .........•..•....•..... It t: N ti V A T I N Ci ll 0 T 0 T I l, I. I N G Sl'l<INKl.F:RS I.AWNS. C:LE.\N U P Da ve &l2 IK53, Aud li46·1:14R I MoSCMrf ...............•....... Bnck"ork, small Johs Ne wport. <.;o.5la Mesa & Ir.int• 675 3175 eves. 11/\RT MASONRY : All T y pes Bn ck work & Hl<>ekwork Moving! The Starvin11 ,.......,/519tt College Students h•ve ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~rown. Lie. Tt24·436. Painting lriter/exter. lo ~~l~!IC!rv.64l·8427_ r ates. l mmed. stJr v. '~l"•rilMJ M2-03a>or6Jl>.7149 ................................ /llep9ir Pl'."TF.RS PAINTING ••••oo••••••••••••••••• 1-;.11pr 'd . Reas Rates. Stucco & Plaster Patch, t~ree Est Call Cene no job too sm. quick & 552·0458 -----~~ 645-4203, 645·4199 D11ve's Painting, serving urea 9 y rs. most reas . Insured. lic'd ~·8425 f'me e.111/lnt pamtrng by Richard Sinor St lie, ms Try me 836 ~. 24 hrs Painting & Papering Prof work Free est Rsnbl. Steve . 547-4281 Neal patches & textures F'nelst. 19).109 --------- Sper1aliz1ng In int /ext patl!h1ng & restuccos .. Free est. 645-5660 Plas te ring & restucco, special textures. free est. 494-6262 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• AGAPEFORCE New construction, re PAJNTJNGCpMPANY model. rep1pe . Slab 3Gcneral1ons 0f leaks, &lcctronica lly Pamtmg Excellence l loc a l ed & repaired 535·ti7Ul drams clured Top Hat' l'apenng by Le Papier $13 50/rl all rms pa1iers . Exp 101 lS/80 536 2350 --- Texturing b y <.:harllc Tum rial or s pray lex lured walls i nto a t r e at1ve dc-;1gn s ~~· 8248 63&2030 -----P'.O.lox l...tals .....•...••.......•.... THEPOSTIOX 3857 Birch NB·OC A1rpt :\\latl now·24 hrs ·7 dys ~essage & pkg service :;49·2287 4!>-1 5901 ·~ The fastest tlraw 111 th<- 64f>· 7:.l4Y7 SEU idle items with a W~t a Du1ly Pilot Sell idle items &12·5678 O:uiy P1luu.:la::.s1rted .\d C.:lass11led Ad &t2 5678 esu. Jack. 848·1053 ups, hauling main· BETTER BUILT ROOF lenance. ArnieS4IU4l4 All types. hot comp. tile, Tred1 Shrub Trim ming & shake. lied bonded ins. Removal. Yard Clean· Free est. Call 96()·8778 upe. Hauling. 645·0118, ----------• 846-l413Jim s .. ...._H.g -----~---············· ········ ·· ,..._... !;and & wate r blasting. Xlnt cleanups. lo rates. 675-5994. :!l.3/592·3901 Sewiftq/AfftnffoR1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Experience Dressmaking And Alterations . Reasonable Rate s . 548-5756 -----n. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hw.tiftqtonlHch T"-Co. Let us upgrade that shower , tub, dram board or entry way. Ceramic tale impro"es appear & value of any home or comm bldg at a reas rost. Free est & sugges· lions 1714> 842·3020 For Qua li t y Tile & Mas onry Work at the most inexpensive prices arow1d. 675·-l394 II you're m the ma rket for a bellt!r car. be sure to check lhe many autos advert 1sed for sale tn Class 1f1ed. ••••••••••••••••••••••• "READING": High ly Qua I Proc. w /K · 12 Credentials M. Ed. Post Grad. Uruv. Work Ref's Avail. ~·6022 f ypilMJ S.'ric• • •••••••••••••••••••••• F'ast accur14\e t yping on IBM Corr-:ttSelectric, other seeretlA.rial work. business lette rs. r e s umes. e t c . Karen 615·1230 ----WlftdowC ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Let The Sunshine In" Call Sunshine Window _Cleaning. Ltd _548·M.53 MOW IS THE TIME for jot> seelters to chec k the Daily Pilot Help Wanted classification. If the job you want is not there you might consider offering your services with an ad in the Job Wanted category. Phone 642·5678 4400 lusiMH ...... 4450 ot\par+mtnts f;.irnishtd Apartments u..fum. Apartments Unfwn. ~ h1Nttts ""*-"-~Hts Uwfwn. Rooms 40 ...........•...........................••..................•.............•..••..•......••....•...••••••....•..........................••.• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Irvine 3744 CostoMeso 3824 Costa Mesa 3824 HuntinC)tonleach 3840 tWwportlHch 3169 OnNe"'portBcach Beach ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••.-••••••••••••••• lloteJ room · s mall :\cwl v fum18hl'd Conrlo. l S.tSCl-$4iS 2 kr I lia AplS uwely all adult. 110 p<-'ls. p•• NEWPORT k11c•hen ZI06 w <xean· Br + ofc 11r 2nrl br 1 ha Westfiekt '\II bwlt·m1>. encl~tl gar 1.i&J llr :.iµls l\200 t-:<J. ftl\I\ front $28(J & up +-$280 'unn\' d~ck. stream . \C 1 W D hook up Near SC 1111tcr. h b Klli Ofll9 COUHTitY CLUI ser & deposit 613-4154 1.bhwshr. carport. 11e.M1t, FAMILY A.PTS. Plaza C:al OK Im med ----- 11•11n1s de S5.i0 mu l\ranil new loeautdul hf! vi·cup11n~v TSI. M1tml :1l.lllrm. :1ba + dl'n. lrpk. LIVING Room&locrd 4050 \'t!arl\' b(( 1\tl ull. tlll .ipt, for lamilws "'"h 1 or 1;12 t603 att.iched 2 car i:ar. lrg tnglc::.. 1&2 bC'rl room ••••••••••••••••••••••• µels .' \•.ill tkl 1:! 2 dulJ ren Near pa rk pnvµaho,$6.".0 aplS,&townhouse~ Roo m & board 111 t!X :>-18·l)112 Me<H p;•i<I Nt1 f1t'l'i 2HR.SL.Pt:H LOCATION A.'1,U from$449 644 1900 ch&nge for 4 hrs, 6 day '>_Br. 2Ra "I'"' "Ill COST A ~1 E Sr\ :Jll<lr'm. 2ba. C'ncf "Jr . 2 wk cleaning & cooking l ....... 0 8 -ach 3748 ... '"' ., N!-:W DECOft.Jllr. 2Ba. f --,-· _. .~!I W W1l su11.C M LO TS l)I' lt OOM pn \' patu);-.. SSllO Mike Al4,556-1737 ·•••••H••············· ti31·5SR'.l$-Ul 240tS P A TI O 5350 M o . !JG!!.~ .._. frplc. gar. 2 blks lll'h ----\.\:eanfront a pt, rum. WD !'>I0·5cl..'i2 S67 5 m n ) r I y N o Vacatioft Refttals 4250 lrpl«.:. $650 mo -t!>'J 1!156 2 lj(lrin !lou.~I!. rern 11.e & 2 Udrm 1• i Ba Condo IJClS ku1s.64S:lf.82 ••••••••••••••••••••••• e\es -.ti.ve Sm._111 1·hilcl OK 2 & :s Bit 2 Ha. ~ar t•pi,,, s.iso Adults. 110 f't.!\S. Call MOUMTAIM VIEW S-150:;.iii 1:1'ii drps. W D hkup. paltO. !lfi4 251;(i or 9732971 AK\ 2br, 2b a .apt q u11tt VILLAS • IGHT SOL', O<>FSl-.A Wr· 1rpl· gar to-G ;n Kl ~14 r494-5l!K 331-2222 2 Br I 11.1 Duplex Child OK ~25 S.~4301. no pets. 2 kid:.. $125 & i1urce nei g hborhood . older TENNIS ClUI l'Nt SS25 181 II O I ''l chentele ~95 640.6379 l' •a r ;'>;e ar PalmSpnngs.1·2& t,.JS-9-IS.'i N1ee 2bdrm. I' i ba twnhse 2 Bdrm Apart m l'nt. 3 bedroom villas avalla· Newport Beach 3769 l liedroom. stov•·. rdn g enl'I. i.:aral{e No 1>l'lS S3JS 646-:eJO I s t}I apt Pool, gar. h 1 ble. Weeki}. m onth!• d L1g 1, airy. ar,:e patio. , I n r} · n e w c r P t • Call 6-15.931.i and annually . 1 lighted ·•••··•••••·••········· SHORTT ERM RENTALS Weekly & Winter ,\)tent Gi5·~170 IUeS tiBllU '\495 mo 9 60 5 043 -------tennis courts. Close to l-G:l().0350 • •• 1, Blk to (){'ean. 2 fiR Ran c ho M 1 r age · s '••JCEANF'RONT /\\'ad tlOw da1h . wcekf\ Spec t:icular ~·lt·w '173 Sl HF Oceanfront \'Ii.?"" ~ & :'I Hr halrony. frv lt: g ar From S550 \\lnlt•r G40-478i -----OC E/\NfR O NT :I ikdroom f!argc d l.'luxe Wmter i\o pet' Gl:l-li(j.1(1 'iiEPS TO Ri':A<.:11 2 Br I Ba furn. itarage. no pe\s i400 mi>. Winter lii3 6&10 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Balboa Island lBOf. .....••.•.•.....•...... Deluxe Ba\ front 3bdrm, 2ba. refrii. frpk . adults. nv !X'lS. $900/mo yrl} _ fi46. n 13, 644 ;; t~ APARTMENTS U1•autiful brand n e w ~artll'n apt:-. ::.11a ,\d ults. n(1 f)et~ :!Br2Bc1 ~55 3lJ8We~l \\1lson. 1\31 558:1 <iflR 21Ja. ot.•11 , .1dlts, no pet~ Ll{t' upf)"r nr OCC. S1511 1\vatll()1J 9'i92411i Sharµ. clean 2 Bdrm I IJa bui It-In.<;, Westside 4 Pie, Kids OK No pets '1.375 ti l:'i 2178 J-:Vt'S & \\M\u~ f: \ST'ill>t-: 2 llR :! Ua. pul1u, ,!•.tr. 11t''-p~11nt, JVJtl no"' $l25 mo Ca ll !W6·5880. ask for f'am or l.311'\ 1-: ;,ide Oh Twnhse 2 Or 21 ~ ha. I rpk bl tins. dbl ~ar w n hkuµ. deck. fncd patio. ~ardcner. a1Jll'o, n•) pc·b . nva1I now Ref., pl-s SSli 0 1m o 6:11 4659 eves 1l .. 1m~ 3 Ar T1Jwnhous1· \pl tn qwt't Adult com plt.>x Nl.'WI} rl'\lccort1led. 1-'irl'plaee . t•nclsd patio & ~ara(!e So rry no ~t::. Sl95 mo li45 33111 or 1>'75-f.949 J 13r I Ma ComµletC'I~ rt' <let•or a t l·cl. 111cl u1les rcfr1ge , patio. laundr) rm. $310 mo. ~ depos it. W70 Wallace &t6-034l. !>15 615'1 SliS L:irge chee r y 2 btlrm 2 ba <'lose lt1 1K't'an "ofo µets li75·619i-i, R3J 3307 l BDRM Unit tn Tn Plex. ~per mo 53&-7542 ~ k4lrm in Duplex. near bo:.ich $400 per mo. 530-7542. NICE Adults I Br patio. pool. garage. rrpll'. $315. S 4 6 11 2 B r 2 H a mu ~2-9583. 642 5251 Townholl!>c Frplc. 11e<1r Ir.-3844 new, .ill hwlt m:.. patio ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmmed. occupanc~· TSL l llr Condo '" "Lakes ". M~ml t>l2 l~ F\tll jac. ttnrus. end unit. E SIDE TRIPLEX UNIT $50() mo. 731·4i 63 2 br, lba w1deck. encl. Fo;;;; rrodel rondo m g.u .. 1~1rge mslr Child the Spnngs over ool ok $l2.'i 675· 1771 s 3 2 5 m o . 8 3 8 6 7 O O Dm\O Point 3826 ~~·-7098__ __ _ _ _ • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • LOCJ1MnG leach JI 48 DUPLEX. Xtra lg upper. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. 2ba. 28XIX liv rm Wide ocean views Cla::.sic Some ocn \'U, close lo heh archileC1.ure on acres of Balboo Peninwlo 3807 l Rr Stove. 11m ale 11at111 & shops New plush <'PL'I gardens Pool & s pa ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cia>. pa id . Adull!'o, 110 & d,....1~ o0c9c 499 2237 · •" ""' " E.st atc h\'in" <.:lose lo -;nl.'.111 Bach S300 Yearl) !Jl'l!. Rd':. S29:'1 m o 1!15-1490 _ beach & sh opping. 1 t: t I I !> p rl .a K p M ().16 ·~:i !>tanagl:!r675 5ll2 · ' ----~Oft Beoch 3840 Brl rm Apt $475 inc l 1 Br Eas\s1de. !>mall but ••••••••••••••••••••••• ul1ls. Mature cons1dera te <·ozy w lntsofneatwood. !:iunny 2Br.S325w/applc adult 49-H653or 494·GOl7 l hr , b)' licach, pa tio. ,::a. u t 1ls pt.I , S40IJ . rch S:~ 642 9450 aft SPM good lccat1on 1 ~66 1 fee Sturlio apt. ptly furn .. pvt REHTIMCS 631 -4555 '-'a"h ccess, SJ7". ul 1ls -2 Br l' :t lfa lownhoui.e. -----"" ' " /\pl hdwct-n bll·tnS. Jir. pallo & i,:a r Deluxe poolside xtra lge mcl. 499·4517 li13· l401 1673 1275 t Bdrm l21h & \'earl) 5-11 -t200. !:Ith Streets Nn pe~ ~25 645·4837 2br. 2ba Bllns. tlshwhr 1 Br. near Victona Reach. S375 6i5· 71:1'ili, l '"2 m iles he ach. Ad Its. u t r 1 1 n" I S38 S /mo. 2 Br. c arpets, <lra~>es hit ~ I I no p et !:> $ 3 9 5 m o 49'1-8316 ms. an ts on y. no pets. :l.1&.8362 lctCule bachelor \l•r)' lll0\'1clonu 1\v:ul. 10 I ' -• ----l.oquMHiUs 1850 prh·ate °" huite de<'k .>-18 1.16i .•rt SP~1 HUMTIMGTOH LAICES ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~_t2.5_· 1_moyrly ~75"!0lll 1 Hr Slll\'l' refng,., smnll SP.\RKWNG STRE \MS ll11ls1de28drm wJpool Corona de4 Mor 3822 ~ ard ,\dull!>, no p\'l~ CASCADING $455 Nu applc(58J6) fee ••••••••••••••••••••••• sns 548 1:177 WATERFALLS REHTIMES 63 1-4555 TOWERlNG PINES -------'J BcJrm, l ba. rt•ar u1111 w pallo 514 .Jasmme l\va1I Ckt l ~1!151 m11 673·8MS SSOO 2 Br I Ra .\pt. Dollhous~ I l><lrm apt r•n over.r.rie lot with ,;tatt'IY 1:oun1r v h o me S375 w1thout ulll 645-6625 NEW SPACIOUS LCICJUIMIM'4plet 3852 LA.KESID~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• /\L>ULT APTS. Lge 2 BR condo. newly re- • Elegant fireplaces rurblshed. pool. ad Its. No •Private lakeside patios pets. $500.·552 00.2 aft 6. 11 2 Ba, rplc. encl gar Restaurant Row Agent. LR. adlls no pets. S595 (714>328-4007 t\31 ·38118. 645·682'l --------"CALIFORNIA ' Eastbluff. 2 br. 2 ba. coun· Ln r harm. frplc. di, hwasher. Sf.ot). nr1 pet fl:ll-2029 ------ 2 Br 2 Ba Lu:o..ury Apt. (Ju1et ne ighborhood. EastbluH area. Older ellentele. S495. 640-6379 Big C:anyon Townhouse 2 Bdrm. 2 Ba. 2 under· ground piJrkmg place!> Pool. tenrus. etc. 644·0509 Versailles. Dlx 2Br . 2ba. frplc. 0<.'n & biJY \'lew. 85. All amerulies eves 644-4596 ------- EAST BLUF F 2Br. 2Ba. den. frplc. pool. lrg pvt . deck. dbl gar. Adults. $59 5 848 Amigos. 644..()906, 6-16-5.507. ---------- Yearly !bdrm . re furbished bathroom. kitchen nouk. S350 309 34th, Apt #-4. 67:1·0945. .. -- 3-2-1. yearly rentaJs Call ror details 67J 2493. 673-6210 aft 5PM. ~. 3 Br 2 Ba. Apt All bwlt·ins. enclsd garage. washer 1drye r hook-up. Blocks to beach. Adults only. TSL Mgmt. 642 1603 s..ca.-11t• 3876 ••••••••••••••••••••••• s:l..10 + ut11il1es paid Kids OK. Treesy area <498.'i)631·4~:1gt fee Move in today S325·S375. l & 2 Bdrm. Walk lo beach. Nice & clean. 498.6187 or 498·1903 Palm Spnngs Condum1mum Rentals Luxury Condom ma urn:.. Completely Fumtshed. Country Club Setting. Golf, TeMis Avail - a ble at Spec1a I Rates (or our Clients only Weekly, Monthly and Weekend Rentals. Call ITI4) 328·8911 CATHEDRAL CANYON COU:-ITRY CLUB 34·561 Cathedral Canyon Dnve Palm Spnngs. California 92262 Desert Resort Realty ......... os.... 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving? Avoid deposits & c ut h v1ng expenses~ Professionally s ince 1971. HOUSEMATES 832-4134 The Roommate You 're Looking 1-'or Is Looking For You! SSO fee for peo- ple with home to share $3.Sforlhoselooking and l wo-s canpiny a roommate search agy. 752-9475 M, F share house in H.B. $225/mo. Respon only. Avail Oct l. 9flO. 7787 Female roommat .. lo shr 3Br. 28a a pt on Balboa Resp Fem to shr :'lbr, 21, ba tr i pl e x C M Wash dn No K 11.l s 645·3718 Will ;;hare my plush tn level H.B. home. rrpk. mir ro, S265,rno. 111cl. all Rita. 536-8090 Halph Lauren polo l YJ* female neeJed lo shr lux· ury 2 Or 2 Ba apt on the beac h 1n the s and Compl. furn .. frJ>k . W D etc Housekeeper I tune pr wk, garage. Non smoker. good se nse of humor. Call Dys 642·6600. l've::. 673· 1531. Jose ph. Laguna 13ch. TOW res1d Xtra br avail. shr ram rm /lvg rm. kit. S235 w/util Pref. mature non· s moke 830·5330 d ys. 494·5613 e\' ------ 2BR APT CC.M 1 Pny 350 ( tst fist I 642·4982 "Too hip lo drink" Cute :'lhdrm 2ba house for rent. ne~ res pon 3rd girl, Newport Hts area 646-3798. J j Will Shr Apt w/fem adult Free renl for companion S48·2850 Female Roommate want· ed to shr beaut. Irvine home w1prof male, pool. tennis pref. (lOn·s moker 25·40. S250mo Mike 551·1149 Mat-Nons molter . 23 + Fem to s hr 2 Br. 2 ba. or So. Cst Plaza. $'ZOO ind ulil. 545·46'16 050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1 For store & oCfice space al Ideal locatton ror Al tome)', Real Estate. or Entrepreneur Offl\'e now available large 1 paneled Receplton area with s torage and 3 private orr1 c e s 10 beautifully maintained full serv ice building. t Comer WestcliH Dr & Irvine. Newport BeachJ 800sq ft <.:all Melissa 1>45 6101 COSTA MESA. ORr\NGE COAST F l NANCI AL CENTER: SUITE 6 2845 Mesa Verde Dr E S295 mo. melds Recep uorust. and utrl1t1es See 9·5 or call 957 ·1414. J E. Dunger Altomey 250 sq ft. gmd fi r. utils pd Sl6.5 mo 779 W 19th St.C M Tom9S7·1900 625' OFFIC E S PACE. Panel WaJls/ Cpl/ Heat Off St. Pkg. 2052 Newport Blvd. CM 556·4181 or 644-2228 Office by the ~an. 315 3rd St., HB.Sl95 tmo Ground noor. SCOTT IUI. TY 536.7533 Ml'Ci.ical or office suite for lease Downtown Laguna Beach. 656 s q . ft $623/m o. Ample pvt. parking. Owner : 4~·2351. Cd~1 Oelwre Suites. 1500 sq.ft. AC. ampl pkg, Util pd. 28SS E. Cst Hwy. 675-6900 Pnme Ocean view loca· lion in Laguna Beach. .iso sq. ft. in Bluebird Center. $550 mo. Call reasonable rates. 500 to 2700 5G Ft. MESA VERDE bR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M. 545-4123 NB1C~l. up to 4700 sq.rt avail at prime comer. 17th & Nwpl Blvd. 67>6900 DANA P'1'2To8 Room Ofc & <.:omml '°"price From $245 mo. 975· 1120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPER NICE. 1600-6SOO sq ft. Great locittion & p ark i ng. 33• gross 738·746 W 17th St, C M. &46-0505. 1200 sq. ft $375 rm Front office. large rear area & cloor . Unit 23 629 Terminal Way C M 540-9352 Day, 646·0681 Eves. Lil)() sq. n 2 Front offices. 2 Baths. Large rear shop area & door. M95 mo lT15 Whittier Ave. C.M. 540-9352 Days, 6-46-0681 Eves. • FOR LEASE KOLL·IRVINE INDUS. CONDO 6200 sq ft w/2.075 ofc space. nr OC Airpor t. SUO, 220, 3 phase elec. Asking ~ sq_ ft., aross 3 yrs. Call Hugh at 540-7923 Mon-Fri. Costa Mesa location. lot 83'x300'. Partially fenced. 2 s tructur es couJd be used for offices, etc. 548·1015 dys. SS2·7882 eves. StcrCll)I 4550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Paul 497-4844. Storaae Space. Newport 10"20' Gar Storage only. ----------• Beach. 2306 W. Ocean· Costa Mesa S40/rm. Call Office ' space in Newport front. 673-4154. 1·5pm.636-4120_. ____ 1 Financial Center. 2 of. fices w/priv. entrances. a.tds W..ted 4600 Single garage. MS. Pal ~ 9190 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 731W.18th St. --' --·--·-----•Wanted in Costa Mesa or Costa Mesa. 640.9900 600 sq rt office, l yr lease. Irvine area, 2 or 3 BR, $700 per mo. Newport h ou se preferred 3 Offic• R..,.al 4400 Center. 561 San Nicolas. AduJll. Xlnt references. ••••••••••••••• ••• • ••• • Ste 109. 644-4&M 6 7 3 • 5 1 o l E v e s . & WESTCUFF BLDG. NfWPORT BEACH lfl Pl ... !'•j 'I! " ,r H\11 I' If> &,t• Call Mr Howard 6 45 . 6101 UDO SHIPY AID _w_ee_k_ends __ . ---- AREA .__../I t/ New A/C offices FiRmlce "" l · 661 sq ft. • •••••••••••••••••••••• l · UllOsqrt l•IR•• 1·1984 sq ft. Orpal'Mdttt 5005 l · 21640sq ft. -.. r Lido Mgmt Co. •••••••••••••••••••••• • 979-3733 for app't. Mark el in g Man ager ______ ...;..;;. ___ , (parttime ) needed by Block l o beach Nirl' Bachl•ll1r mill. water & hot loca11on. closC' lo all. waler. g:.irde01ng se1 v. & balconies --------- •He.aled pool & tWwport Beach 386' whirlpool s pa ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 ba. 2 balconies. frplc . o c ean view S590/mo 586-0Ht . 768-454 1 Blvd., NB. 675-503.'i ___ ,ornce space avail. Full serv1c~ executi\'e suites OfffCI SPACE Small pri vale offices near O.C. Airport. Rent on month-month basis. 833-8lll or 833-82«, Mon· Fri,9·5pm. established company for 2 product lines t hat are leaders in their fiekb- sk I areas & marinas. Orden on hand will re- turn In vestment of 12!1,000 in 6 mos. P lease call. 645-M698-5 . Patio •bal cony T SI. ~~o-~ &._!6-3ii27 )fgml 642 1603._ Xtra lrcJ Rooms Clean. quiet. 2 Hd. l lja. no kids/pet!. S350/mo. Call Craig. 631-1.266 •4 miles from beach WA TBtFttOMT -. 842-1160 WONDER 7562 Ellis Ave. H · B. Just steps to the sand (3blks W. of Beach Bl> From this 2Br w /garage 3824 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br Newly decor gas pd. en rl gar. J\dlls pool. 642-5073 3 Br. Townhouse. newly RF/M~ REALTORS decor. gas pd. enclsd 2 hr l ba, crplg. all new gar. Adlts. pool. &.12·5073 pam1. hit-ins. S350/mo. 631·5188 aner 2pm. Sublse to Ma r 31, 1981. 3Br, 2Ba wtrfrnt condo w t boat s lip $900 mo. (213) 592.5426 Lovely 2 & 3 Bdrm. Townhouses, garage, pallo. lawidry tac. M25 & $S25. Ca II ~ l.3 /596· 7".!02 or Only S450 16405) fee RENTIMES 631·4555 NO FEE! Apt. & Condo rent a Is. Villa Re nt als 675-4912 Bkr. 2BRYrly l lilk from beach Upper Unil ln DuP'ex N~w 3 Br. 2 11 Ba Townhouse. $550 Priva te yard. Clos e to :shopping. ,\dulls . 1982 Maple. 548-2-i08 Spacious FamHy 3 bdrm 2 ba. S395. Playground & pool 548·9556 from l2·7 PM lbr. !-:. Side. Pri''· Fericcd Yd.S340Call Louise G73 6$62 or 536-4.192 NEW BREED l\PTS Bnch & Lof\, 1 &lrm. Bach. From $315. Frplc. rec room. pool. jaC'uui, enclosed garages. Gas & 714 /960-7347 -l Ba, st v, refrtge, water. $400 mo 3505 Babloa Blvd. Agt. Gus. 213/ 966-1711 MARIHB'SWALk Lg 2 br apts from 5450. Frplc. large yd, patio. gar, nr Hunt. Harbour. 16002 Jib Circle. Apt l. 840-6807 ,~2br2bo water pd. r\dulls. no. 2 Bdrm. 2 bath. Fireplace. pets. 393 Hamilton, c. \,. Garage. $450/mo. 645-441 l. Call 963-2205 UOO sq tt . fplc. Ind ry D\shwr. encl gar. $500. 310'1 Ma«e Ave a40-4400 2 Br. l bath Apt. Newly 3bdrm. blt·lns. frplc1 lrg S4Jo.$465. 2 Br 1 ea. Apt. decor. Gas pd. enclsd master bdrm w/walk·ln Pool. laundry rm. crpls. gar. pool. AdJta. 642·50'13. clo&et. IHO/mo. 995-1093. drps. Adults only. C3l Lowmovein!S2952br Harbor Area·2br, lba, no OK. TSL Mgm\. 642·1603. GoocUocaUon<6370>f~ pft5 ! $400/mo. 554·2811 -Mr.Shores631-4556AI\. aner8pm 'Whether you·r,. bl4)•mgor --~------- Hllln1 Clasa1ried ad· 2 Br. 2 Ba. Sund~tt. •· New condo. l as 2 bdrms , vertl•i~ wW 1u~t your AvtU apprnx. Oct. l•l. 1575-9650. Adults only. nu .-sage to Uie ri&bt pe<>-s.8·1675 d ys, 7S0.14l8 pets, mAl\Y rec facillties. ple. ~ll Todayl 1)42.$678. t!ve1 Ir wknds. 846-1826. Bay Front super large condo. 2bdrm. 2ba, sec bldg. boat dock a vail. adults, no pets . Owner/itgt $1250/m o . 675-0Ul5. RmKICBJ Deluxe 2 bdrm 2 bath condo In convenien t Westcllff. Carpels. drapes, fireplace, m lr· rored bar, bltin kitchen. pool a nd much more . Reduced to '850 per mo. Adults o nly. Harbor Realty 1714>673-4400. 2 Bdrm. l Ba. sml yrd. garage, close to b-!a11h. S375/mo . 493·5041 or 496-4292. Sh.r·2br Oen Front Yrly. avail for lease in Center 10 mos. left. 43 yr old Pomte. Located near QC ma n w 10 yr o ld daughter visiting $400 + Airport. For leasing in· sh.r util. 953-SllO Alex formation call /DeeDee Hul'f: 955·2288. S-Jum Capim-3171 Mature Resp. Shr . Nice ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apt. Prlv. Br & Ba S230 SUITE DEAL 3000 Sa. Ft. Condo 2 Br. 1 1~ Ba. New carpets, drapes. paint. $475. 492.f?OO. 492.2796 ~·,.,.llMd or.,..,...llwd 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sawindf.U-e R<.'C. Fae. 751·71I08am Male rmmte wanted lo shr 3 Br 11"1 Ba apt. Full ree facilities. No last. ulil pd. $230/mo. Harbor Green Apts next to OCC. 979-4940 •Will Bt.Dld~Suit • l mo. Free Rent F1exible F1oorplan Udo Marina Village C7 I 4t 675-1662 BEST RA1t In JOPORTBEACH ..... OMceS,.C. 700 to JOOO Scf. Ft. •Janitorial Service & Ulililies Included •Adjacent to Airport & Restaurant Row •Access to3 Major Freeways JANITORI AL ACCNTS for sale . San C lem, Lacuna. CM area. IMO to $S300 yrly income. Cub or ter ms. Mr . Inn . 544-nao For Sale By <>wner, beaut BouUque by the aa In San Clemente. liOO sq ft . everytbin& you need, just open your door & start makin& money. 492·2411 New 11'2 bdr;"itxury adult apts 1n 14 plans from $4.lS, 2 bdrm from S505 + poola, t e nnis, waterfalls. ponds! Gas for cooking & heating paid. From San Dle10 Frwy drive North on Beach to McFadden then West on Mc fadden to Female roommate to sh.r luxury lwnhse. ~ facil. mstr bdrm. bath, S290 mo. smaller bdrm S280 mo. 640-4538 Cathy aft 5PM WATERfRONT & PENTHOUSE sums _ __.;.1_3_3-l_l _IJ __ ,;.:-:~ 1021 ............... 4410 ...................... . •Seawin d Vi lla1e. ('114)883-SUl8. Oceanfront for Winter Rentals. li\amiahed • un· furn. Bn*er. 87~12. ._ 4000 • •••••••••••••••••••••• Roommate wantetl., new Irvine hse. $250 mo. 532·6875 dys, 857-0343 eves Fema le roommate needed to abare lar1e 2 bdr m houae. Laguna beach w/ocean view. $3$0 mo. + Vt u ti I. -~7 .. Room w /full house Fem. to ahr 3 Br 2 Ba prlvlle1ea. Newport homenrbch. Sl75. Beach, Oct. 1. MUIU -.1140 ZIOteJOOO~ .. . .......•............... , ................. ... ,, ........... . Oa.Vlewl w ...... '7141 675-16'2 IOU.CMl8 Sl'ORE SPACE for leaae. 300 sq. ft. Avail now. 1500 sq ft. avail. Oct 15th. Nesotiable terma. Cout EqulUel. US/M-7202. Pm. Cblnpnrtlc olc. 30 yn. 1800 Sq ft. 493 Old Newport BlYd.. ~11. MIWPOIT EAelant nectltlve suites ln pretllp •ation. With JD 1/f at 21" 1/f, comm/ complete aupp'or t ld\Ht area in Coata 1 e r v I c e 1 . F I R 8 T M ... UsefUI for atora1e MONTH FREE. °" ahop tacit M2·21121 or '1141151.al ,.. .. YOU CAM II S-.WITMA BANI 2nd M's ....C•IATIS s ....... 71MU.HOO Allt f« Llada F1ynn cwX....Uan - Monday. Sep1omber 29, 1980 Mwytol.om IOH Lellt&,._. UOO ,...,.... USO W-'-4 1100 HefpW•t.4 7100 .W,W..tecl 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• v"NEm {MONEY • CmcTMO ..... wawnu ... t1Mlll/llS.l 141 Arrqedb)• c.... ..... a.- A MMtca&f ttnMtrr ......,w-... HH ••••••••••••••••••••••• •.ooo wantt'd. •"''W'\' by Znd TO °" CdM pn~rt' 87).~ ....... , ... ,,.. DeHi son ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.e.,.....,c .. All l>'s>n ol real "icu11 .. lnv•tmeinu inn ,._. llM9 S,.c ....... WTDt 64J..J 17 I 545-06 I I UlST. Vir Ada.ma Sehl * f81Y LADY* ASSIMILH IEAUTY ~W..ted 7100 HtlpW-.t.d Blk/~ nwle r 11 w/blll t!ltl ltlcal. Mll.chunic· I. l'ollcen O'llar a '11 New ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7100 ti ~• collar L.impa OUTCAU.~l.Y ~.~iwr w lots~m blv of 6 ankln1t S.lon ()penin" 01:t llll, <:IVILt;NGINl-:l':HING Ul';NTAL ASSIST ANT· "P lr kles" REWAR I>• * 1'"·1131 * "-<1nc161 • nwrhanlc•I W~1c11rf Plaaa, Npl !Sehl t:NGINEl.HS Pedo Ofc , X ray lie CallU l-4011 '' 1. .. 1uivmt·nt SoldcrlnR a, S p are AV ll 1I Ca l J>fo:SJGNl!:HS Ch rside exper roc1. A11k , I Nit & Ugh1 11h•.P •utJ)l•r Son~ H 1& l34r> OltA1<1'SM i;N Theresa ~-551t8 ...... R::=r-~~·b "<Of'l~CllCPt·r, d"",ira Re u u l y Ope r 111 or . C!,reu <>pportunllies tor DISPATCH. Mechanical KW ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,.t• uuu PU> I l('n<' its i 1 d' twent t'd md1vldu•lll. l!:lC· • 0 I S J mon cur 11t, pe · 1cur111l. ly lncbned tow serv1t•e SSS Loi.1, • unih y n14hl ~21 80, Wb Rouw"11n ntult.'n'd malt, blad1 Ir um, v•I')' fnf'ntlly l.iMI 1n l"ap 11t r1no Dea r h Ar\:\\ t'lfWIC' rall J 8ml"> 4ll8 11U t'OUNO llQ) Macie Pou Ille U-'dl ~ltlt lulht< 1«1 Oublt k.l'''l\JI durl ina black Poodle m1>. lloldt'n Rfttl~\t'r ll.w tu> ti I.Ind. 'fem n nu • l'c11·lr.11puo. Brl tt •n>· St>iarucil nu• 6 mul'f' \1~1 cau & kttlt'O!I Adopl 11 VC!I at lr\ln1• \n1mnl ( 0llf'C' l°l'ntl'C', OlW'n t'\ ('r\ cl.a -;'~ :rT34 ,__.,..,...,H.I. S.11'!3&2 "-W il~l(I t'\)UNO Blunddt'OI \u,1 ~p QI \.ioldt'O lll"ln\ \11cton.i Bch. L.i~un .i 197 S\26. l';M Jl76 Wi• a mw AJ co m . "" uun ~ier In laod dev~lopment ........... 7005 1 'ulJI) '114 4l)J #Jl..U lo work in friendly H lnn cngineerin1( Appl) In r lil d i O di Sp at Ch c r I lni nex. Rent or l'Om '"'•rson w ,_.,ume •. ~ork Kn11wledgt' of .1 re11 de ••••••••••••••••••••• • • i\S~l':M HI .l':k 1':1.t:t ·rtt •· u:.., .,.,... ~ '..... .. -I d W k m..,s1on . ...,, . ........., ~umples 10 Mr Futmles s re . llllng to wrrr Coata M•11C...'hr11t11nt•r\• l111ml.'lh111,• 11p1•11tt1K~ ro1 ----w k nd M u s t hu vt School now enroll 111< In nwr h .. rm.il .ii.11t•m b tv BINOEkYOPERATOR ut Robert Bein, Wi1J1.11l1 cle rica l ability & n(ln ll'ftdurtury otf.ir Silt $0 1-:,1i.·1 11r.-1 hut not rt' ~<>Mew Set up & r un sm u ll l"msl It AsSOC'tates. 1401 i.moker Apply in person, Wiiiy lml hot lum·hf'~ •1 ti 1,ruw111•• 1·11 "111111 fl1•111111t11f S&L .--eekli folder , SlltC'her. drill, Qua il St., Ne w port Owuvin's Towm" St•rv ~~ ......... " " b -'-Beach. " .,..., ,_ llr11d1u <'all for a 11pt 1od1 v w•S&I. ~•P 10 :i n, ... ~rllJ>, t·utter & 110 -------3l77l Los Rios St. SJC .... W...... 7100 u I.\ J•,J.! Nt'"" ltt1rl jultl their !(ro w ing handwc1rk tn :In expand- •••••••••••••••••••• o • • .\I .111111• .. }\RllWt•n n1t l'JI or 11 110 1 fltlton uHtrlnl( lnjl ffit'll Slit! proUU('\1011 t'1ounlln1 SHllT·SLHYES P T , houN Ot>t•n l11 .i ... 1<•1JI Ir 11\ur1•r Out ll' v.i11r1I ln1 I 1r.1inin~ un '''" r ol 1na I. 't n··• H1111 u1.1~ h~ < omput t • Sal n • • 1111 nlt'Nllf<oltl V. l)h1lih .i111I t'lll• Cost.i ~klul ••II Oi'OU \'l ollnlUfll J1 I ... & h1111k k .. rp1ni; I ul(uri.1 ('I•\ 11Hll'r P I) H"• • I U I L ... unJ lkudt .0 ;:;.: Acc....n b c:el•.,. "' 11r.!11W t7thSl \' M xl11t lwnl'rill> ~ootl lob s t\11µ Some exµer r~'d i.el·u rity & s t11rt 1n 11 I n s uran ce & olht'r ASSISTANT MAMAGH 111.q •\'• , Lui:11111 llllli. 'l lJI t• M tl!>l bt' < ~ jlt I II• Ill' r If 111 h l' lt .. r "Ullll'rt ' 1t·.1<I) tu \H•,1r 111111 )jJCltl-'>wc.1r \pfll} 111 111•1,un W .\1u1111~t·r :\la 1k A~lln 2:tlttl M11ull1111 l',J1kwa, Plt11.u 11r 1•1.dl 11.11 IW~ fur llJJ)Jmnt rrw nt ~a lnry to ~IO henefits. lr vme loc. Cu It C .. C9TJ '1Z·HH J im· 8 30·S. Mon Fri IGIR t-: 4lh St .SA 979-1~·- C,... Cl9tdaer My furnntt' S&L seeks inrtl\ "'1'1tW or !Come ktnt1 nf (·rt..odtl dlt'Cklnl! b lHk~rounc.t and a rll'Slrt' for JOh 't'Cllrity xlnl b<'Ol'f1L~ & s tartinR :.ala• y lo S86.5 C .. c_,, '12·ttSS 1616 to; 4th St .. S.A c--· Lo. f'roc ..... UPlt/JR. ACCT. for rapidly expanding financial firm in Fashion Island eicpcr. a must. O:iil) mpul & general ledger desired. 759·1Sl5 Clcncal Temporun Use tempon1ry ;.ii.Mgn. ml'nls as a lmd.:e lo a new career lm1ned1atc oµenmgs availa ble ror · PBX/Recepl10111s t General Clerks Uicla phoneSca eta ries loternat1onal Busmess Serv1re 752-0161 CLERICAL Heg1sler tt.oda.>' for lot·al temporary a.%1 ~nments 557-0045 Do-nut shot> work. early AM. no exp nee. Apply OK 's Do Nuts 2959 f'a1rv1cw. (.'M DRAFTING Merhamcal. mm 2 ) r:. exp or dft~ cert Bu.,•l' trig & gtJQm Self ... 1urll•r . knowledge of 'SAS I Yl4.S dftg praw<·t•' fir mi: worksam1>les ROSAN.INC. 714 S48-S.'iJ:1 Nl·wvort llc;.ich Equal Op11t) 1-;mplt1y l•r C_.fwT.D'a. Ame ric a n '°Sltg ifk r f'~nd r .i1rn>C In Se'°'port 1-icp ncl~"ar) 1rml ur 1• 1.-m.ill'. hed\~ llj!UI~ wurk Mu!>! lk! µrufll'lt.'1\1 In f1i.:ure.. Ith' I\ ping 10 lie\ It' IOUl'h Xh1l t'o bene11ts t jppor1u111ty for Jdvam·emeul lnformul ufrtt·e. C: M Cull Millie aflt'r 9am. 64S·5800 AUTO MACHIMIST l'f<AINl::f l'J \ lH'Utloll!> & ""urance AµµI\ .11 llub \Uto Supply ~ li~U If a r l1t11 01\ ii {' M I~ 24t>l.SC.c ('IJwl lll1U ul•flll S&L s eeks 1nd 1v w C 'tp in processmr.: of construct & horn(-improvement louns to Join their fr1enc1ly staff Cu. offers xln t benefits . .crowth poll•ntial & startinl! IOATS Gd-Coaters 2nd shift. at least l yr exp in use & mainlemmce of airlesl> spray eqw1.1. Bi hni:ual h elpful. 11 ad'; r~· i:11r Yacht:.. 16.'.ll f>lan~nt 1a, CM 0\-Llf\: UlllV ~:HS Ccn1f1ed hu.o;, <In v1•r.. fur private <,chool A11plv ll)R:l5 Hr1.okhur~1 J< "u11 lJln Valley 962 J:lt:.' 9153410 Ueul·h 00 II :!S •'Jli to ----1~n11f\ tl47 2'\IS Widow hu mone' for 2nd T:o No credit chl:!ck. no pnlty for action c ull AGT 613-1311 an} ume 2nd T.D. SJ0.000 at 14« lnt Due J ) rs 20" r d ISC Bkr. 898-78SJ or 964·2607 ._a•n•llh/ Penoulh/ Lost&,... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Now You Can Sell More wllh Dail y P ilo t P ENNV PINCHF.R ADS Still onJy S2. J lines fo r 2 da,·s onh· I a da\· 34c . .i line. · · Ad,·ert1se o ne or more items ,·a lued up l o 5100 Each addit ional line is only 60c' for the two da_\S Sorry. no co mmer c 11ll ads al lowed Charge Your Penn) Pincher 1\d o r u se }Our Ban k Am ericard Visa or Mastercard f or more 1nform11t1on <1nd to place your ad call SCUMUTS ANSIEIS Theory -Often - f1uid -Nickel - LEPI'OUT SlSO ••••••••••••••••••••••• r RE LAW student n1:!e<l1> S2S.OOO Will do cln) thing Legal t'on f1 dent1ul DVM: P 0 IJ())l 324~. N B 92663. USAGE Be pa m pered w1c h a per sona l re l axing massage by 12 or the pre ttiest girls in Southern Californ ia Jacuzzi. sauna-etc. Open lOam- .aa m. 7 days a week . Vis a M.C. Atlantis Health Spa. 2U2 Ha rbor Blvd. Cost a Mesa . 645·3433 Rr ing this ad for you r s pecial gift TOUCH A ClASS ESCOITS 24 HRS. 752·0817 Prof6s1onal Therapeuc1c massage. Uc'd. NB l\ppt only, Steve S48-2817 TOMMY'S OFHIWPORT ESCOUS 752.9368 &t'MtCa .. my ISCOITS 24 Hrs. 641-0180 c-.;ce.cb Allt llpJMCfVIM UT1UANMtl5 ESCORTS all major credit cards accepted S»-4723 ---DIAMOND WANTED ; 1/2 to l carat P /P So60-0208 blr ll.aA~. Over wei ght-lose 17·25 lbs. m 6 wits. No shots. no drugs. oo con tracts . 673--0111. GupM"Gds ESCORTS •972-1621 • Now Hiring a fter 6pm Bul•\:.tll• r wuntl·il \Ullr homie 1111 I & .1 :!', 'car , .111 :1 11r I J ay:-J "'eek Fa1q.;rounu arcu C.111 ---------·1 ~--. Utl50 ACCOUNTING a.Ell MW.... I .,.. OC• c...tillg •xpwi...c• or e.,-valettt education reCl'li.-.d. Ability to operate I o.key plus ~ fYl*9. W1I h-.. ct.ccnllchburwtMnts mid receipts. bcmll ,.... co11cillatlons and •-"-' otMr-accOUltf. illl) «Mift. Ouhtandinc) salwy ..cf IMnefih. Apply: Personnel Dept NATIONAL EDUCATION 4400 Campus Drin Newport leach, CA Equal Opportunity Em ployer M f Act'OW\ling ACCOUNTING TEMPORARY ASSIGNMENTS Orange County is boom ing! And so are we! We 're There arl' roaoy n ew firms f110VIOg into the Orange <:ounty area. br· inging about an increas· in g d e m a nd fo r e 'I.· perie nced accounlin~ personnel. CPA's Auditors Tax Accountant.:. Cost Aceountants Senior Accountants Booltkeepers &nk1n~ S&I TRLERS fullertun Savin~:. & Luau has fulllime teller p o:.it 10 11 o; ope n at Newport Beat·h offke & Huntington Beach offi ce Will t rain Typin~ re qwrement JO wµm Call 871 ·•12.H ror appL 1-:oE. UJnking •TELLER* Teller neede11 lo work fulltime m our beaut ti u l HUMT1MGTOM BEACH branch Experient'ed S & L I elln pr e ferre d Cashier ex11er m ;1;\ be acceptable Tyµ111g & eustomer st•rv1 cc skills neces,,a ry Excellen1 rompany hen el its & workrn g conditions For mterVlew. call Jerr Holli n5. 84&-:\JOti Southwest S & L 17071 Springdale St Equal Oppty Employer Banlung TELLER Xlnt oµport un1ty 1n growing S&L. Full time pos1L1on offers varied a c- tivities in Telle r a s well as New Accounts. Ex· perience desired Ca II l.A!e. 754-1801. Orange Coast Savings 1700AdamsC.M. E.0.E. Banking c--.rcialTeler Banking exp··tie nce pre· f e rre d , howe ver . cashiering expe rience would be helpfuJ . salary to S950. Cd C.-ry '7Z-tt55 1616 F:. 4th Sl .. SA. AudtClerti Beautiful beach located c·o st1eks i n d iv "' t yp1nJ! ability t o assist internal auditor w v a riet v or du ties F:x l'ellcnt benefit:.. l!ood f.\rnwlh pot e ntial. startmg.salary to S 1150. Cal C.-ry '72·tt55 1616 E 4th St .. S .i\ 'root s.n1sar t;rowing bank seeks C''ltp mdiv. co super vise sm;ill <lept. & grow with bank Must be" ilhnR to p it1·h in & ope rate marhmc;; un occa111on, 1f s omeone is 111 or heavy .... ork load Xlnl henefits & :.111rt 1nR sa la rv to $l2Ckl. Cal C.-ry t12 .• ttss \616 E. 4lh ~l . S.A T.._.. Have several positions throug hou t Oran!(e County for i>xp tellt'rs v.· x lnt bene fit s & start mJ;: sa laries . S750 S92S Cal c_,, t7J.tt55 1616 E. 4t/1 St .. S.A. T,,nt G real opp<>rtunity for individual with typin R abilit y to join rapidly growrng company in rea l estate app r a isal dept Good benefits & a dvancement potentiul. Cal c_,, t72-tt55 1616 E. 4th St.. S.A. M•1g11 s&l Be~utiful S&L seeks exp. Branch Man ager for Or an ge County b ased position. Xln t ben e fits . S t artin g s alar y lo S24K. Cal C9TJ t72-ttSS 1616 E. 4th St .. S.A. Bookkee~r w comµutl!r l'XP :llJprox 25 hrs pr wk , Nu L ag u na l T7l·2:m Uoukke 1•per. I-' T for :II B. I f'A l 11 as:.um1.: pnnt·t1>::1I 00.>kkeepmg & :tflm 1111stra11 Vt' dul1e :., pnor CPA exp re 1 Tax l'XP preferrecl Sala!) lt> SISOO 75.!· 105..5 8ookk~pn Muture pcrl>on 10 harlfl 1e a ll variety 11f duties through t r1ul l>alance ~1m1mum S\'ri. work ex per, plus bus) d1veri.1r11:u duties Req1.11re depcnda· hie & eff1r1e111 s1•H 'turter F:isl & a c1·urale t_\ pmg rcqu1 red Nou- smokt>r. x lnt l>alal')· & henef11s. ~1 iss1on \'11•J11 area .\l rs P u t t•lli ~81 3830. IOOt<KHPER~ /C Npt Bc h. in vestment (1rm has upemug. per ex pans1on. for r <..: tom· m1ss1011 bk pr dt'I ;ii i ori ent ed p en.o n comµuter l.nowledge :.1 must s killful on phones & m PR w11rk. ma1untv nee Cull 641111123 · BOOKKEE P E R f ;ener al Office. I girl ofr. must he motl\'ated & self starter Start S900 mo Newport Beach. 673-1630 BUSl:-JESS YJANAG l~R for commuruty associa- tion. Retired welcome Send resume to: ,,tJ no. 658. Dally Pilot, P 0 . Box 1560, Costa Mesa. Ca 92626. CAMVASSERS Part or Full T ime for Voter Reg1 s tr11 l111n On ve S7·Sl21hr. Work own a rea 999-6563 CAR WASH Cashiers wanted. Part time Fountain Valle}. Newport Beach. Call. 644-44 00. ask for NanC)' 11MPOllAllV PlllSONNH SllMCES 1721 l irch Street Newport &.och Cll'rk Pharrna c~. exp prefe rred. l'O,.me t1c-.. ~1fls & cards 1i<lll 7:r.3 ClERJ< TYPIST I mml'<11ate openinJ( for Clerk T1 µ1 st 111 l11Jn hrrlkera~e co 1n Fush1on l!.1:.m<t lla'>tl' offH·t• sk ill-, rcq II Gro~th uppl) l'.ill .\h lleap (>411-!l:l~O COtmltrcial Loan Officw Uanking, exµ req Xlnl ~alar} & benefits . aµµly personnel director HUIT AGE IANIC 721 :'./ Euclid. Anaheim 9!Jl 38f,(J 1-::.0 E Controller or CPA for m s uran c e compan ' Insurance bark~ruund neeessa~ S.ilary open Orange Cc> \l!'P'Jrt lm·a · lion Please send resume to ad no, =738 Dall) P1lul. P U Box fill. Co~la '.\lesa , CA 92626 C1.ok. Purl time \Iott L~n ch :., 31 1 Pal rn llulboa Pen. 6i5 15Sli Cook Saule Cook. m~hts Prep cook ISome hne exper 1 Days Mr K l\e l<i 493-2603 or apply 1n person . 34150 Pac1l il· Coast Hwy. Dana Po1n1 --------- Counter Sales Need s harp person , fulltime. to deal w1lh customers & do hght bin- dery work in busy Costa Mesa print s hop. Ex· petienced. or will train Call 642-3039 Counter help, Kuster 's Cleaners. p IT or F rr 548-42.13 Counter . dry elean1n1t laundromat. ·ut 9 PM 5 days. D1mm1lt Cleane rs . Corona del Mar 759-990 I URIVERS <·ro,,i. t•o1.1nt 1 ~ ~o s~l.'1al h•·cn'e 11"1 d :'r1acGrq~or Y11rh1,, lG.H l'lucenttu. C .\l ESCROW TRAINEE Must I.'~ 50wpm. t.·.irn \\llh 3.1 ~r old 1·1)mp.111\ Xlnl opport.y :-.11lan tn ab1lll\, hener1t!> c .i ll Ila' F: ... rrow, .i:.k l11r Ly11n, ~7 5625 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY To wM k dosuly w1lh fJn .. .-s1dcnl of faM pat'l•tl 1nvestme nt ewnp Jn ~ ~1usl have elq1enenn· ~uori s kill:. und lie detail 11neotoo. Xlnt hcn1•f11:. Satar~ o~n (a II .\1 af) Juul i!H liCOI I-: X I'.. C L T I \ I·: Sf:CRF:T,\ll Y to pn''' lien! of de\ l•l11 11m1:n1 1'<1mpany lex: at etl al l hl• br h in La~un.i. m:.itun · :.elr moll\atl•d "' >.Int l')Ol)kkl'('fJlni.t i,ktlb. ll J• curate l} p1nj! & ~II -r.ilt·' lie rentals l• ~l:iOO m .. Quahf1L'<.1 f)l;>r~ons onl\ l'.ill for appt t!l!f :lf111, f .\C'TUH\' WUllKfo.ltS day & nt~ht .. hit•.~ all 111bl;full time~ t.1<'11• l•I' • .\ 1J p I ~ in I' e r ~ 11 n ,, l Vohann •>f Calif •r,Jl\1 \'ia De \nza :-.1111 .lua11 C.ipo :'Jew 1ndu,,tr1.i1 park oH l>I l.J m1 nu Cup1stranv m ~d" .Juan I apo Fu'l gr<1•ving new hPallh Co needs,ou lr \•tU Jr not sat1:.f1~<1 w1I h 'our in come ca I I M 1 'ip.J r r11 from l·S al 962 8Jll Female attendant to t·are for w oma n 1n wheelchair Tut>• S;it I PM . 7. JO PM Irv 111" 559·5109 F1elc.I Rep-spel·tul 1 emp project pos it 11111 Good pa~ Immediate 11vcn1ni: lnqu1r~ Tclepromf)lt•r Cable TV. 901 W 16th ~I NB. tw2 3261 FROMTDESK DAILYPILOr C7 7 10~' .....•.•.•........... ., r..-n •rul ::~, P11rt lime h~lp wuntc~· ln.,crter., Mon1luy rru.ci.. • d11y nh1ht!i J\JJply 1000- Plu('enllu. C.: M GetHAL OFFIC f SOOUTOSTAR'.J' Morn; s wrrn 1-:xv i-:ni F;Nct-• Five c:1rl (>ff1rf' Va111.'(J i\!'t 1v1t1.-:-; WL· Will 'l'tmn C.:nmpany Pmfl lierwfth \PPLY Rlo:"l'W F:I·:;-.: 8 Re 111\M 853 ProcluctJ•m l'lnc1· NcWJxtr'l fl(:l.ICh G~tral Offic:l' P.111 11nl(• n,., k I'>""'· ntJ SH llr' oltcrn<J<>n I 51'M Maturt• wnmlln .luh lot 'i1.•wport Ol'11 1;.&o 7•\:JI r.1 fl 111 tr rwl'ds person tu m t fabr11. ~ kc1·11 "''en Lory I l't~mL, K1111wl1·1l1tt• & 111ter1 .. ,t tn lull1°1l'" 11" -.1rt'll 1\l'n1r JC' & ncu\ \\Ill kini.: 1111111,. 11·•1111rc·1l !I :loam :i11r11 11 \1111' l111·a lion !fi'l s:u.1 GIRL FRIDAY l'.111 flllll' '•'l\j)Hll l<t' .11 h I ,1.,. > .-1 "••1· • :-0.k 1 lls lk 'I 11 11 r-. rn k lln~hl & \r11<•11lu1l• prior· lt-i.:.il e\11 lll'h,lul not r• '!IJlrt'IJ • 'I .10 hr 'Ii .) ) !!iii GO FOR IT!! \'ou "Jiii ",. ',. ~11t · l.1'1 °>; •Ill 1t' W1· l't-.11.·h' \\ t' T1 :1111 ' Our •t!.••111 ,1r1• /1,q1p1u h:I\•' m"'l' ~uppor1 .ind un • d111111 111111 c IJu,1111....... \ nu 1 .111 llAI' I ',111 \I °'I• 1:.11'1 111 11111111111 hriw ·~,:1 ·,1.;1 W \l.1' 1-'Jl •'-l.F I• II F G UARDS 1··1111 & lli trl 11011· \II ,trl',1'> I 1111111111 111r11 ti \~I'" '.!I 11r 1111•1 I t'l lfl•tl \H•l1·1111w °"" "'Pt'r n1•1· \ 11 11 t ., I n 1 ' <· r " ; 1 I r•r11tn'l11111 S1•n11 .-1''1'11 W ;,1h !-.t :-011111,1 \li e In 1.-n '"" 111 '.J t:i ,ot.; t 1. .\Jon f r1 MAIR SIYUSTS L'11mm.l 111J J 11 rl 11rr11;i nr1· hr1~ u111·ntnJ.?., 111 '\lpt lld1 N l11111t lkh I ;11.ira11f1•('d alan • 1·11111m1~s11111 I .Hll h11l11l.I\~ va11I 1 1 ... 1t111t1. n1 \'.Jiii h1·,1hh 1 '>111.1111 • ant :1tl\ :1nt0L•d tr.11ntnl! Ph111w l'·1t ril'ia !11f .11'Pl ·~;1 111 II' II \hl.JW \ltl'.~·\l.l-S \f>1>h 111 1Jer..;11n 1<111r1 ll.1rtl1\aic· 1o::i I n 1,.. ""·,11·11rr1•tJ .1 "n JI,,.,,,,( ii ln~urant'" h1ll111~ , l<'rk t11p 'at:Jr) ~ fr n.t hc11cf1t.s \1111 t •• pin,g 1'<'11 "l'" p•irt H1·.,..h :11 e.1 C.111 t>IO X'.•~11 HOSTES S 1>1nnerl> .\µµI } 1n person 1~:Bwrnt 1., H·I No Newf.1<1rt 11111.I :'.; H. 645 moo CASHIER A govern~nt panel in- vestig a te s any Congressman who was orrered a bribe. It wants fo know why the rest were LEFT OUT. 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOIMIADS ARE FIEE Call: MASSAGE SIOWtAD MYSTIC MA.5SAG E 556-4656Sant a Ana FIRST LADY Escort.Modeh. Pmiy DCMCen. Accounting Cler ks l'nited Cahfom1a Bank 222 0cean Ave. Laguna Beach 494~6 E.0 .E. H you are not aware of ---------• the benefits or working tem porary, \ISll us or give us a call. we will be ha ppy to discuss it with you. We are located in the Coldwell Bankt:r Bank mg Now's the lime tu take advantage or the growth r>f a leader m sanngs and loans. Fideht) Federal Because of new services we'll soon be providing to our c usto mers. we'r e seeking Tellers now for our Orange County or fices. Six months S &L or bank experience 1s pre· ferred. but we will con· sider trainmit sharp ap- plicants with ca1'h1en ng experience 1n some b r a nches. Al r1de lily you' II enjoy: H.wAccomh Beautiful beach located bank seeks 2 exp. new accts peoplt> with nice p erson alitie s & appearance to join its rapidly expanding stafr. Offcrin1: xlnt benefits. S t a rt ing s alary to Sl.000. Cal C..,, t12·tt55 1616 E. 4th St.. S.A Cashier /Clerk 10 work m Corona del Mi.Ir area. '.! 5 days/wet-k Expenented & dependable Nice Ill mosphere Call 644 7575 1Tern·1. CAS H! E R /House.,vare Sales. Apply in person Rion Hardware. lll24 Irvine 1 Westcti rr Plaza i ~B. Counter help needed for ~undw1ch :.hop. Mon f'r 1 Part or f' 'Tat Anthon} 0!> Och. 17881 Skniark. Ste A. Jr vme Call 556·0tii0 forapp Counter Help Wanll'<i P T help . rast food exp helpful Apply a l In ternauonal Hotdog Cu, Lido Marina VillaJ(c . N B 673 Ti8l. lmnwd1al1. nprnml! ex IS\~ fqr l Pll:thll' p1·r!'111l "1111 µll•:1 1111 11hun. mann~. .\. a1111t 1111!• '°' f11eurcs I ..11111} ex r el li.•nt 111mpan\ li.·1lt'lil ~ m1 lutJ 111,: ,1 fr••t• n~al JJer ~h1fl \ppl_\ Ill flCf'itlll !I \ \J Nunn. Mun F1·1 r'c•r:.011 ucl Girl needed fo r -;mall hus} Manufa<.'lunn)? Of f1ce Dulles include l' p 1n _, fll1nf(. µhon l"" l'USlomer S\'f\,l'C & !>IJnll' seC'1etanal -;k1lb Salar} 011e11 : Contact Arian - Jorgensm al 54~ l~lii MARRIOTT HOTS. ~)O .'Jo:\\T>Ort (Ctltl'l 1)1 "t.•WIJ• lrt Ill• .I d1 b111,i1 • >11µ Empl} r M F 64J..5'71 * 972-1345 * MC & VISA Accepted COVER GIRL * OUTCALL • 953·Cr178 MC/VISA Use '1llwet M service when placing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number wi ll appear in your ad we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience during off ice 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 Building 2333 N Broad"' a' =200 Santa Ana 17141135-4103 FRE E PARKING Advertising sm The Daily Pilot has an im mediate opemng for a sales 11e r son w i t h ne wspaper display ad· ver tis ing e xperien ce G ood sala r y . com missions & excellent fr- inge benefits. Excellent growth opportunities for a persol\ with career a m · bttions. Call for appoint· ment. 642-4321. ext. :rn Or-.Comt DallyPllot 330 W. Bay St,C.M. Equal Opportunity Employe r M/F /H ANSWERING SVS. nds mature person, llpm to 7 am shift. 362 3rd St. •C. Laguna Beach. Apart m e nt M anage r , Couple. 70 Unit Adult Apt. Beach area. Office & maintenance skills re- quired. Reply: P.0 .Box 3111, Seal Beach, Ca . 907.0. Apt. Assistant Manager Traln e ea. Will t r ain. Couples. Paper work &r maloteneuce. M2·5073 ARCHITICTUIAL WaadW1 .,,......, ... Conunerdal. civic, hous-ina ror-rype I Uma Types construction. Minimum 2 yrs expr. N!q. Perma- nent posltlona. xlnt bene, Dan L. Rowland It Assoc. loc. Tl4rn&-U.SO ~EMBLERS. We wiu t r a in . A ply Ta m . MecG,retor Yacbls. UJ3l Pt.centia. Oaata Mesa. •Top salaries "f'rce career ap!Jarel •Paid medical dental •Profit sharing •Free park mg •OUlstandlng gr owth potential For more information about th.is excit ing op· porlun1t y p le ase call Venda Stanber \' al (7\4) 642-4000. - L09I Serrice o.,t. Secy. Beautiful beach located S&L s eek s m a t ure Secretary with some bkpg knowledge to join its friendly staff. This co. is known for its long term employee & xlnt ltene fils. Cal c_,, t72-tt55 1616 E. 4th St . S.A Typht Do you want stable job 1n h e autif u l beach a rea? If so this is for you . T h i s fr ien dly company needs mature individ ual to stay with them for a long lime. L ots of long t e r m co-wo r k e rs . Xl nt b e n e fit s . S t a r t in g salary S800. Cal C..,, t72-ttH 1616 E. 4th St., S.I\. RDIUTY ,....Tellr FB>IRAL Beautiful beach located SP""' ..cf bank seeks exp. Note Lo..Auociatiolt T l'ller to join its An Equal Opp Em plyr friendly start in Trust ~~~~~~~~~ De pt. Great oppty for ;;;: a d vancem e nt. X lnt Bartender Part ti m e . benefits & st a r t ing Mull Lynch's, 311 Palm. sala ry to "950. Balboa Pen. 6'75-W6. C• C.,., t72·ttll llAU1'Y STYUST 16111 E. 4th St .. S.A. Making enough rmney? C•Ht•n Gettin1 n ew p atron s? Need exp. Collectors to Pay ing for suppUes? We wor k 120-day ace ls use lhe best passible pro· balance only collection. duct&. Xlnt benefits & starting --------- ·a shi er wanted . Part lime. Lagun.1 8eC1ch El To r o a r e.1 44 4460. Lel1C13 -------- CASHIER :\lust have exp & llas1c photo knowledge. f T. Apply 1n person Photo· graph y Unhm 1ted. 16889 Beach B l v d . H B . 847·3664 Cashier /Retail Ftr permanent position. xlnt benefits. l.adie~ ap· pa re l s lore. F'ash 1on Island. (i.W·7l00. C~HIERS UTDTEM MARKETS For 2nd & 3rd Shifts We promote to manage- ment fc s upervision from within. WANTA CAR EER'! Call (714) 631-9421 CASHIER Experienced full time position open. Sa la ry : com mensurate w /ex per. ,\pply In person. Metro Car Wash, 2950 Harbor Blrtl.,C.M. -------Benefits Include : high s a lary to $1,400. comm ission & earnings c• ,._ t72 ttll paid weekly. No supply -·1 • CHRISTMAS MONt:Y Delivery Person N1·eded. Good Dri ... ing Record llunt Bch. Area 536-2593 DELIVERY & COLI.EC TION MAN for was her & dryer rental s1•n •1l'e . ~Ivy drivmg req JS yrs & good dri vrng reco rd Umted Rent-AJI 645-07(j() Dl.•bvery man. L A. Times to homes in N B. 3;30am to Sam $550 10 1i6251mo 348·8441or 646-14 13. Dental receptionist. xlnt opportunity for person expen enced in front & bclck offi c·e proc·edures. 4 da y wor k week. <.:~I 645-7580 DENTAL Ortho chairside. P IT . fap preferred 642_:5997 Dental • Exp Dental Assistant , work 4 days get paid for s. 6'2-0112or 64<C·6687. DENT AL A.SSJSTAN.T · For orthn practice. RDA or eligible. Laguna Bch. 484.8555 De nta l Lookin g for a highly n.,tivaled chrslde assistant to rep la ce our "Mother to Be" X lnt salary & benefits, Pedo. Ask for Sharon S48·5S80 DIMTALASSIST. Chairslde. 963·5634 cost to operators. Paid 1616 E. 4th Sl .. S.A. E n t h u s I a s t i c v acations & holidays. Homemakers . e am to D&fTAL/A19'1t. Sales t raining & a1-l'lOOO IJy TbankaaM ng Bus y . N.B. restor ative g resslve ad pr oaram. de monatrat1n1 Toys & practice nffds ellper Style lr:iinln&. me!dlcal & Gifts. No deliveries . No c::,on, good salary · dental insurance at low coUecttng. Need a car . lts.a3l·249'l COit. Opportunity to ad-Ca ll 540-8330 collect to Dental Ortbo. chalrside, vance. Apply in person: CARRY see line. mus t have exp. P IT J.C. Penney. 24 Fu hion GIFTS 'N GADGETS 3d u y fw k Ill e wpo rt bland, Newport Beach. FOX Cele br1tin 1 oaar' 30th Beach and Cost o Mel4a. E.O.E. M/F. ~'"-ENCY ar" '1 nv. ye . . 5"46·51 o. F\.tn. He~pons1blt· pt•rs•>n to care for 2 yn!-( t·hildn•11 )tun '& Thurs fl JO.fl Jo 6-t2·3.140 Garde ner Hand> m.in net.oded.~-T. for rnntlo 111 ~ D. Pl\'a~a11t workinl-( l'Otld1lwn~ & 'I.Int oµ por1u n 1 l~ (1ir rt~hl person b:xp 111 pool mamlenance a + Call 675 6101 bet ween II & :, for a~1.~!me~ Gas allendant wantctl hours 7 J, Mobil Station, 53J.1 Um vcrs1ty Vr G&tEAAL OFfl C E i\ well organiied per~on needed for hea\'y typing & nllng Accuracy Ver)' important. $900/$950 IT1Q 4 girl office Excellent Benefits O.C. Alrport Arca. Frederick Brown Assol' !>'6-9995 ---- GENERALOFf'ICE Busy s a les Rep Co needs Girl Friday Lohan· die orfice·parl t 1ml' Salary open + benefits 846-2791. General 0'1lce GllLRUDAY Telephone & Lite Typing Call Newport Floor Co•· ering 675-1636 for in lerview MNIRAl.OfflCE Our ra pidly eicpandin~ lnternationaJ co. i.s seek· l.ng an enthusiastic. sell · st a r ling lndlv for a general olc. position In our Purchasing Dept C'.d. typlna . phones & fil. Ina required. Outsl and. i.na compensation fc xlnt co. benefits. Pleasant worltlna environment Cootll<.'t : Personnel. Sdeallflc :'::.1=-lh Irvine, ~'1-9051 EOE llvtcl HOUSEKEEPER Evenings Wl' Jrl! r urrentfy -.ci:k1n1: ;1 rehahlt• 11ers11n ;ilile tQ w1•rk full Qr part l• m t'I l'l\tnl{:> f-:nJ1l~ t'X cellent l'<imp:Jn) h~nd1ts iod uJ111g ·' rri·1· meal IX!r ~h1ft Awl> !.11\.\I '-;oop. Mon f"r1. 1'1,r-;onn~·I MARRIOTI HOTEL !Mlll /'it>wporl Ct'1tl1.•r Dr :-Jewµl)rt Ucach F:qual Opp I-mpl~ r )1 I' Hntc l N •Jehl ,\ llthtor .> ni.:hls .. 1 M•ck. :'\l'll ~:?OO Plc~1!.e apply tri D:.iv11! Mr:-.ictl o>r ~!rs l~ .. illa1 .• 1r. Hotel l.a)!11n.i. l<!!'i $v Cua:.l "";. f.;igu11;.1 llearh -1!)4 I t.>l Hot el NIGHT AUDIT MANAGER F\.tll time rarl't'r i><•Sillon 1mmedlatcly avmlable {~uullfi cd llfJPlt cants should poi.qei,s 2 >care: hotel night audit l'X· perlenl·c E nJOY ex· celtenl co mpan\ benelils i\µply in 1>erson flAM -Noon. Mon .,.,., Personnel MARRIOTT HOTB. 900 Ncwv<>n n .r . Or Newport Beach Equal Opp Em pl yr M 1 F Housecleaner Wantl!d l or 2 days per we ek . or young girl to wflrk ofter school or Saturdays Harbor ltidgc area. NH Kathy. 76(> 14711 Houselleeper /CoolA L ive 10. Prlvn t t' 4uurtL'r' C~ucation. bencrllS & so Mu!I\ be cxpericnc'l't Jble 10 s t art lmrot•ll l11 1 •ly Matur~ woman pre rerred 1-·or c1etu1ls, coll 631-7475 ' • nl\ll" PILOT .... W..ted 7100 ..... Wanted 7100 H.1p W&Wtted ······················· •.••....••............. 71 00 I' It 0 U l I <' 'I I II "14 rH \IN ~ .. : ltuhlk•r h11w Jll llfht< I• Mu"t i'U'' ro ......... ti rnrl tJ,rl'k \ I 11\ 1.1k1111( •1J•1•h• .1111111 .. ,, I ... II H I fl ii II I \ I fOll\l'~l'('Jll'r "'tlllll~' .a kn.ls & homr• nt>t-.1 h" t' & r••t•' Nt'"lli•11 I 11t.i l1t1n Hl'I " HN.t U1 ti!\ I~ ut 1.111 I ll~t,t'k<'1.'1Jl'• II\\' 111 torn lkllllllll fot Ill\ I •1111 IJ1h lllt \l\t \ti1 .. 1 hjq • "''' ~ 1111 l'rl'f1•r lull 1111w I'll 11111111 ,\ litlh ~ \!f .... ~ .. , lluu,,•k1•1·11111,,; I hihl• .11 1 hit '0,,(,1 \Jt•,,1 hom.• , 111 I .\11111 111111 , .. , , 'i'.'1•• '-'Ul,u \ '"'I rt\u t lhe• t•I Pl'l'llll,11 I oll I d I\\ f'l'I I\ l'\' k t: I h /4 (llq; ,, I 11;04 If~·· llllllM'Wll "' I ' I' 1•,1 1 11 \lr,1 1110111·• •h•1111: ''"''' \ ti II I.. It 11 \\ I, l I 111111,1•11111~ t',tfl '"I ,\ "'l11Jt 11-1.! IJAAI I 1111111•111.111 I' I "" 111111•, ... • 111 1111 ..... lo.If 1•'11 d1•1 ' ,\ dd11~·11 llfl\•'I I 0 ll\I I.' 111 11 I t,. I 14 di111•1, •t,\ .. , .. , "1lh1..t 1!o I \ 1111' 11 "' ,j 't.111 11 .. 111..:1 .• hi \11111\ .1.11 " .1111·1 1111 ''" •·•I ,, 111 ••1 ",,. IJ•I I I tlh -.1 I \I 111 111,111n I•• 1111111,111 111 "''I'• nd. 111 11;1·111 f(, •p 11111 \ 1u·rh tt1 1 l' I! I ' 1lfl ii I 1 ti 1• ol1•r\\1tl"t l''l lilMIK l'ISIH\,<I I •I l 1111 I l 1l ~fH'h 1111111• Ill"" •\I' ~,I I 111'1'1111:11 h111•\ 'l'I'\ \111 ,1 1,1tt•. m.1rl.l'l '" quot.· .\l11t llJ!j>I I 111 1 "•J I ~t~irlt•r w1l l111.i.: l11 t.il.1• l'c::.µ1111 ,if11l11 1 "·"·"' l•t•)!1Jlt.1hl1 °>-I:.! 7: I l'\TfH lll•:.'-H::'-.:-\1 t-:S \r1 l.Jnlll'>, ;ll It', .. l-'l.111 ffi'r 1(,·-.1~11 hlpl I \\ tll 11 1111 l!l!• 111,1 10.11 ;u:.:x 1 JANITORS f'.1n I trll{' 1•\l'' ;\1 U Jlt1ll ................. ~······· M:;1n11•nnm·t> h11 u 111 1 th11• tvm1>l.o 111 ~ v l 1 \h•,..i $17S 'lll MO ~lli !t~h11111l.!1 l'\I 1111111111· .. 1111 11 ... 111 MAIMT./MECH. EXP. RETIRED 'ART TIME l1i.1!.int: '"' ,ttl llt f (' I I I l' I' \\ t• It' c I , I i I l•lu111h11111 & ••II 11h.1 "'" "' 1lolv 111.11111 •'I" r h•r '111.1 ll """ I n1011 ~ I ii 111 11 ,.,.,... II• \lhl" 1,11wl l'•ll \pµI\ \1t11•r I .... /1•1t lt·1 lt~I II.ii,. \\ 1 II\ REFRIGERATION MECHANIC I< ..11<'111 •'l'l'<tl I 11011 1 h•I '..i ... 1.1. Ill I ..... ' \\II h llllUlllllllH 111 ' \ 1•,1r' I'' ,,..., H Utt• Ill t t•ll 1• •'I ,,\h•U "111111111• Ill I. Jl.•11 I 11 jll\ "'ll 'I I 111111.: l •Hll llJ II\ l\t•fll'lll' lll!'hklttH _. ltt•o· 1111 011 I~ I 'hofl \pph Ill I" I "'II '\\I •••II \\.,,. F1 1'1·1 .... 11111.·I MARRIOTI HOTa It.it· , up .. n 1 111!11 111 '\, "1"11 llt h h I qu.tl 111111~111pl\ r \I ~ MANAGEMENT l •H 11 I ,.,,, Ull \' 't ... •111.1111 .... """' 1tl11.d 1111 l'li.:h 1111 ••Ilk I' I ,,111.1 111111 II 1111 111·1111pl•l\l'd ,\ 111111111 1 .. .JI \Jr ! .1111111 Id ,11 1,\ • '•.I \I\ l Ht·: \\'c 1\.1 \' P /T OFFICE ~11 hr' l\k '''"linrt l{l•,1\'11 Il l l•l \11111111 jf'i'I :1>r;·i \h•1 11 .11111 alh Ill\ l11tl'lf lo"' 't°-l~U•• J...tlliU oli' p.1td11•1 h.nu"'l"ol~·· 111 .111'.1 cf,•i.1n·1I W1 ll111f.\ 111 1111rl. "k1111, :\lu'>t h." ;· I lo•ffl ,d ,olll Ill\ 111111 '11111k1·1 1•1'1 11~11 \pph 1111 ll"fh ti ill! I llhl; k I 1·1••• 11•1 t.'l•I I •'ll pl111111 .. 11,,-...1 r-111,• I 11nh•n•n1 ,. 11111111' llfJll lll' 1 ... ti l.1lo h1•11 I 1111\111111 "" l '' 1 •ti 1', t, , 1 tit• n ~ ,_'\ I I •I Off1CtASST \ 11111' ••I 1l11t If'~ I ' l't' I' ~I hl11t•1111111 • 111111 11hrn11 \ill t 11111 I h.JH' I \\ ft I .If \ f fl f I II \,, 111•111 I • lo I I• 1 ~ I 1!11 1 •fl; I \\.,ti, "'"" kul 111 Ill :-0 I r .1 I u t I 1• ' I 'I It • I •\t11i.lro1111 '"' ll\t11t• I.Ill' " l\t•111l.11" ltlil I 11 I' 1111 ti I• 11 I \ I> I It ll I I I I "I I, "-'11\\l 1' 11111'. 11 ••It w111 lo I 11 I I'•"! I 11111 t ,, 11 I' It 1 I It " • I I I i .,,., 11111. ' h 11 I ,. I ... I ,. ,. I l1Uhl \ "•'\ '111 tt \ li•I t I HU U1•\4 .&\ tttl,thh lti )1\1111 •fl;I /1 lllU I" I' I 111 I 111•t 111 1 tlr•il In ,,11,111 111 ; h1t1•1 I UI ol 111111 loll 111l11l111.: l'I I ,1111h I~ '"''' 111111 , ....... ~ "h1111lil 11 ' " I II .t II I f o• ti 1111'" 11111 .tlh "" 11111•;1 \\111111 .. llJ h•1ttll 11111·1~·-· ,,, ,,. \li!tl ,,, ,,,, ,.,,,.,,, '''"fll 1'1 111• Iii• "" 11 \11l d 11 II ''" tlo ''' II 111111< I ..... .. I ' 11 I lt llll 111111 h 111 111 1o I • l11 l11 t1 tl I ol1l11t 1t1 11 "I I \ f ' I '' •• " \ ' l •• \\' 11 • I' 11 llu \ '.!' -.. ntl h I IA Ufl 1 I 1 'l.'ti, , Iii' f~ I 14•' I. ..... "' ..-> t• 11111< jll,I\ 'Ill ti II h e II •u '" 1 ii h \\I rl ••ll\ •·n I \ 1lt'lll olh1·1 ~ I lo I 1lol1• 111111 )fllO 1"'1 141'1 I. "' "'"' 1111~ \\ Ii I. .lo ho 11 I 1i.;1t11 illo .11 II l!>I HI'"• \•Ill \I •I \\ . ", .. , !"\,ii '"U ••II f111u1 I •' 1~11 ti Ulll h 1t1ol 11llll• "' ,, lt'Jl ll \\1 ... 1•ol t:I 1 .. 1 111111 I I 111111 111111 1111' I ,. I Ill ' •. I• I I ,. I \\ 1·1111 I • IU lll f"I I(, 1111111 ti 111 .... 1 ,, '1 1 ·1~,, •Iii' PART. TIMERS ~.1111.1 \n,1111t1u 1111\\ htr t fl I' I I •(I C) I I I ht 11 I • I 1; 1 1 1•' \ \I \ I I l111.11:11al···· ~· il tl 111 .... 1.1 j:);., '" •• 1:1 :~1:,1 l'.11! 111111· llru~ 1 11.'rl. i:, ht ... ,, .. , Wl'l'k T111·~. V.··dlll" l h11 1, att1•1 111wm:-(h1\1•r' I II' II' ljUI f'l•fl t;.I:? -111~1 l'.11t 11'11•• JWl'M•ll 111•1•d1•1I Ill l><>ok r•<i!>ll' up \I 1111 ,.,., l'ul·~ '\11 t"q11·r fll't' A11 ph Pt 1111\ '·" 1•1 . llitill l'IJl'l.'nl ta \ ,.,. t '\I Ht•.il l',1,11< !'..1lt·-. EXPERIENC ED AGENTS ..... 11llo ·1 lht '''""""I~ . ll1gl1 I '111111111 """ ti.,, lo~·.i\11111 • I '111 If' ,,., 11'1 JI\ . I '1 ui..,,11111.11 .1·.,111 .. 1 .1l1 rn111 1111 .11•1i.1111tn11·111 1ti'.I i.10• .1-.I. 1111 W,dl 111·1 l'j)ltllllbl ,\11'''·'/.:l' (' l' 11 ( I' I (. h· I' I. V 1 If 'IJ1·" 1•111 I llt•.1d1 I< 10: I 11111 SI\ 1td1l;11;1rd t·\1••·1 I t'IJ ti ~llt .. I lt1· ,h,1 Ip. h,1\C' al>1ltl \ 111 h,111dl1.• 1>11'' 11hor11•, ,\ pr1w1•,~ fll1• .. ,if)!t'\ q1111·kh lll';J Jll'llfl1,11J-.hlp 110111 t1ffH'" <1Jlf1•'3r,111•·t• ( .ti! I .1ta 1(1;1 ~MHI 1'\l : !fW, H1·1.1·pt10111-.1 1'1 '"'' lur 111.'.lt h t 11'1 ' "' -.1 '' '"' .J.11111111' ,\ \\J,\·I'> \111 -.I f. •l\1•1 l~\I~ nld .(, l .... 11111.11 tJll 11··1 .... ~~ .1 \\I l'\I \Inn l-11 lt10' 'i.11 ----------- Ill , ... , ~1111 .I I iii 1. ..... , 111.111111J•t111 t•r , ·•l!l'lll 11\ \ lt•lt-µh1111 1• lllU 1 ha't' 1!•~111 10111.· 111 1.11.1· I 111l11tl ii 1.,, ..... , •ti 11•••1 top\\.Jj...t ~ ••";•• (11'.,!.J Jll Ill \lo·th• .1 1 l all 1111w tr 11)1 11111n 1 I \M"ll llllJ \11 oUlll \ h'llll Ill 1 • cl t • t I 11 I I t 1 1 ! 111 lll 111•1 t11ll111i.: ''I' PART TIME EVENINGS n1ol1.•r' l-.\11•11 11 tllll It I ,11!011 i:1!I 115\t RECEPTIONIST R•c.pt/Typltt I 'itrl l11111•, (w ,trC'llllt't• 1ur11I ltrm 111 Nt'"fl"'l ltt•111•h I .ill NOIH ) 7'.!I !II I I n u · .. 1-rtPNIST 1TYl'IS'1: l M l11"t .. l 111111111111y Min 1111.111(11 ul11111' :.oWPM, 1111III1Jlt o11" ,. x I•<' I !'67 111'11 lltECB'TlONIST TY'9ST \ 11Ulll( .1j(l(l l'"I \ 1• ( 'M 1 I '1\ ht 111 S,11!11 v tu ~.,o J l(JI•. l ',111 \d ,\11,w1·1 "~'in .11 +iol:.! 4:1110 ~I hrs ...... ''" \ HCEP'TIONIST Wtlh Ill Wtl1111ul IV 111111( 11v1•dt•1I l'CIJI JlJ \ Tt• 111 1••t11n & ll1ll t 111w I '.t 11 I otil S1•1 \'111'' ,1\ !17~ 11\)1)0 H ~. !'>i\U:s TIME SHARE I'.\ I "'I ll'IH't•d '>Ul""IJ<'llJ>lt• \\ 1111 l "ti { ,ol J W h 1 t t• \\ .111·1 lt.-.1h' Inc l'at lln ,1111 1•1t1 Sl' I< I· l<1·:.t.1un.rn1 DEL TACO ~•:!..>:.! l..1 I 'al Hd 11111 .. l..1)! l.1111 pc·1 .... 111 'I "t'•'ktl,1'' \.\ rll t 1 .(fll \p 1•1\ 111 111'1 '>Ull lll'ftll t' 111.1111111 1li1'r ~pm \11111 I ) I H, . .,, J1tr:1111 DELIVERY PERSON "\H 11•s l<1ura11l ~c.1.-. 1•111·1 J.:1•111· tlt'r'>on 111 do ltt11l'hl 1n-.e itch 1 t'I'\ I ':t 11 l11r .1ppt M.'ll 1511\1 lt.-~1 .. uran1 F11ll ll1tlt' µos11111n ;11·,nl;,i l•h• hh•;il ·.1 tll'dult· Xlnl I'll h1•11{'(1b Whldl In dude mt'J1t·al. cll•111 al. profll l'.hanni.:. hll' 111 ::.w·~ LH:lb tU!!. iirn gram. ,\ppl~ tn p1.•r!>o11 .I I. Pt·rmt''"· :n F."h11111 1 ... 1a11cl .'llt'"1'1'rt !';,.,,. h f', I> 1-: .\f I .. Hestauranl At Cart's Jr. we hove qood taste in food AND 11-4 EMPLOYEES TOO! ----------•IS111t•11p.-r111 •n need c<l ror llc,tuur;111t ,111h11j! '<'hool & 11atlho11t BOB'S HOME Of THE llGIOY lmmt'thUll' OJH'nlrlj.11> Ill our farn1ly rr~luurunts ul m•urby lo<·uttl)ll~ Wt' t'1· 11u1rt• 110 1•rl!v111111' 1111 111•n<'fu't• J111n 111.1r fr11•nrt ly ll'lllTI V lfntl Ill~ U:t tu dlfy 11ClWt.'<.'n 2 4PM CookTralnffs !ffl.12 Allum' II B. Woitw.Woitr.1M1 CookTramHs Cf»hl..-i 7:11 1 Edinger II n :JJ.'i!> l'11, llr1st11I Sunlu Anu Walt..-s Waitreues CasJ.iers ~l Mari:ucrtlt• \l1..,~111n Viejo t·:<1ual Op port ur111 y Empluyl•r ltl't.ul ~ale:., cxµene11('l' µrt-r .. rrt.-d, I" T CM drug ... 1111 .. C'all :1r1,•r 5 1~11i n41 Sol~sman Wontt'd 642-3260 ~Jll"' \1 1 l'11lf 1~ .11111111al 111n" l11r lull 111nt• J>ll'.1l111n 111 Ht•atl1•1 \d llt·p• I l'lo•phrmr• ,-v l'1111111 .. 1· ~alt·' 1:1•"1 '1'<'111111-: & )!fjllJJll.11 ''"l'lllt.d ,\µp I\' 1'•·1111' "·" 1· r 1 ;.1,11 l'IJc·1·rH 1,1 \11• I .\I S:.ilt'' l'OLl.I·;(; I·: sn ll E:-.1'1'~ W11rk full 1 ;, p.trl 111111 ... ,. I I I II I! I' I ,. ,. l I fl II I ' tal1·ul ,1t111 -,. 1111< 111 t11mpUll't ., & n•l.1t1'(I p1·11 ti lli' I " I l' I .11 I J lo.' • I\ 110\VIC'flJ'C' r1t 1•1)1l'lf1U\1•1 ~1·11·l1l'I'' ho•lplul C11•1tl 11.11 ,\ 1•·111 Ith 111 1·11.,t.1 \11·'·' ',1111.t•\ "> llJ l.i'lfl SALESGIRL II\ \I ' 111 11ld1•t 11 c·h111 tt•r1111ot hui.inci.., So111c Clcr11•11l dut1e1> Sular y t 1·111nm1i.,1u11 l"u ll lur11· 1.IL~rra.ble. 11url I trnl' poo;"l>le. S111 hn.: krn1wll'11i.ee flt'Slrl'<I fo'ur &IJIJl 1·ull &15 7100 SAUS/RET AIL i-·rr sales. men's store. i.ulcs l!XJI req. C.M area :>40 111.:!lll SHOES" MEN'S SUITS FINE JEWELRY GARDEN SHOP We have rull time rnm 11111111100 s ales openings en the ahov£• departments for q u;it1 r1ed selling spcewlis ts We offer the tlt'St bener1ts program or :my retail company i\1!.u available. full time f>0.\11100.'i . STOO< RUNNER STOCI< MARkER Aµpl}' in person J <: l'enne,i., 24 F;"h•vn lshmd. .'k·Wr>'lf"l lk·ach ~. 0 E :\l t l-' SECRETARY '•'t·d "e ll-or gan1ted ,,., r('( a~ with goort nf- lrc t ... ktlb lnr bus~ shop 11111~ •'l'nler de1 e loper 11 1· a 1· \ l ~ 111 n g • 11 1 <' t;1ph1111t:. filing. phonl's !'.ti Ill (' SJ t \\ II r k • •10 me. + bt!nefib & I .i~t rJ1 ~~~ lo rq~ht 111 •r .... 1n lool.111 g lur t-.11"t·1·r t ·:1th \. 760 11n '11•1·r .. 1 11'\ I ur YI o < k 11 I ""I' I ,I lo: l' I 1r 111 In 'l'WIMll I I 0l'llll'I .\Jal Ul'l' l>l'I 1111 g111>d l) 111111: ... 11111 .. , . .,,,·nllal $8.'ill mu ( .111 \I J fJ1U'I,, l.·11 2'1 12 SECRFrARY ' 'I;, wp•1n Bear•h I.iv. nll 11 c Xlnt t' 111st & d11· I .1 ph1111c lll'l'l''"·' r1 ..... ;J.11·, 111•1:1111.1 hl1· I 1111 \ .11 I 1'.11 I,\ t 'IJ'~I 'l•lrt""'"" lull or ~·" t ~1·• rt·t Jf\ l(1·l·c1,1111n1:.l. l t mt· T ht• "'''""" t.,,,., i..11.ui,dt.:•· o t 1:1.1nu '1:!:1 \\ II• 1'.11, I I''"' hJ " •Hct.·r-& Ill Fr11111 'I: ll 1,r, Tllol , 1111·rni; .,. , h !!""'' , 1 pm~ >.ill :-..o1.1 r' 11• ..:ul 1<1llle •• 1 ll\1~1 ~SIC~~TY~S·/~T ... Y'8~SlllT•S-1Typisl, General otnee, no WI! huve many openlngs exper. nee. ll.S Grud. tor people that ty pe Good benefit& & µrornn sowi>m t-, s h & die· t1 on1tl opportunities . taµhone very hclvful but r rvine lolrea. Jo'armers not necessary. Top pay. Ins urance Gro up, no ft-c Apply now 540·.CIOO E 0. lo; l'urt•ell Tempora n et. •WA NT ED _A_t _h_o_m_e ltY.!O 81 rch Slreei workers. P rr must have Newport Beach flSI 0055 a sewing mach. Shadey uneStudio64~2111 Secunty GATEGU4RD (ur pri Ville l'Ommuntty, 1.aguna Be ach a r c.11 Hotaling shift. $4 25 hr Call Mon Jo'l'i for apr11. 4f>4 ~7 1 SECY·OFC MGR 1"1T1mc P ru( phone tech Good oHrcc skills. hte bkkK. ori(an uhrllles NB area !157 JC>i6 SERVICE STATION AT TENL>ENT Mal e / fl.'male. full 111111.', S4 hr "comm CdM lio14 :!4 10 WIRE OPERA TOR Leading brokerage firm has immediate opening rur wire operator Salary t•ommens ura1e w/exp. 1-'or appt. ca ll llclen McG1nley, fM.2292. ---- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 8005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTMINSTER ABBEY ANTIQUE MALL Dally 10-6, Fri 10-9 Closed Tuesday 1175 1 Westminster Ave. Garden Grove 554·6103 Service Station Cf»hier 1---~!!'!"_"!!1!!'1'_!1•_~_ • Near U .(' C Apply IHO Nt•wport Blvd 646 9661 Shoe sales. lull umc with or w1out exp . or will tr~in !;nod co bener1ts ,\pply 1n µcrson !11Jm t11 I lam Mon thru.F'r1. Stan dJ rd Shoes, 3077 So Hnl>tol. C M. C.otng o ut of Business Sale .lanes An11ques 2721 E Coast Hwy . CdM 673-5752 Applianctt 80 I 0 ....................... G E. electnc dryer, lrg 1·apacity, gold. xlnt cond. ~.493'8345 _________ 1 c.,.rcn & E .. ,,,,.nt 8030 Small Parts Assemhly Clean-Work area START $4.25 WILL TRAIN .\pµly betwet:n8·11am Jol.">3 l'ro<lur tion !'late Newport Oeat·h ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORS4LE! Canon AEl. Body on· I) .no lens. 6 months to a year old. Woulc.1 retail at $220; asking SlSO firm Cull du.y !I to 5 at 646-4-151 & ask for Don Reis. STOQ< CLERK ST ART $840 Mo JubSccunt) i-:...1ahhshcd Comµan~ F'ree mcd1tal dental ApJ>I~ 111 JX'r!>on _.._.... ......... n .EF. auto _SLR..._3 ll•n, rtu!>h. case $390 Call !l6X 2li0 B"l"E'cnkam 1 lum ~'lJ Proclu('\lon Pl:.icc :\'cupurt Be:H:h Doqs 8040 .•........••.......•... Kfo.~llOND Pups AKC Champ srre ~Il l-' Pet & ~hou Pvt pl y 213 6!J7 1345 aft 6 pm. fTtt to You 8045 ----------· •••••·················· I Ill ' l'\l'I llf 11 I ,\ ffil'lfh ,l'I ~ ..... ~---------l 't'l't ••1 .11 l~d t•\Sn'ru•nt•· \clult, m1·r '.!I \l tlh 11111 ,\J11cl 111t: .r ttr.1111"· rw•r .. 1111.iht ...... "ho ""Jll\ "-11rl.tn~ v.1111 l.111-.. SI p1•r hour l'..111 hi:! 1:1:.!I 1-.xt Z.i(J ht'IWt'l'll .! .UICI ti l111l ,\..,k for L111 1 1'•11nm;i1111 I 't·r 111r111.1111 1• h.11r i-111111~ ... alo1111111'<l:.I n•11·111111111~r.. 111 :\'111 Bd1 6:. 1111111 lkh J'Chll 1011 111 l1·r .. I'll pa11I l1l':1hh Ill •111 .111•·l· p:..11! hnllrl,", ,'(. I 1•,1 llf 1:t1·at 11111 \ 1•1111 NEW RESTAURANT OPEN I HG HOTEL GIFT SHOP 'it 11 C'I ;u I I .1111cJ l \ l•l~l I •' 111n• phfllW fot•r"mJlt l't>11µ1l' 1111t•n1 .. 1I tdwhlt• • 1, 1,1rtt1f """''Ith. fun ( STOCK CLERKS h11tcm. nd hm Tuxeoo Elmcieue 1-uzzclle l mu~ 19i .'iO:!i . 5 -18 64 7 2 645 til-11 ·. YPUNCH OPR S. r1 • 11w;11 I\' la 111 I 11111·11111).' '"' I I I " ' d I ' .1 I H I' , ... I' 1111 1 •'i Ill,,., 1111111 1 l>lhl fj '" l.11 ..... r .. p /1.11 I 11•1111~1 llunl.l.11 pl'r I•:, "'"', \l·Ph "''" I 11• i 11nl1 l•',111111\ pra1· r 1111<'1J.l1,llp<11.;r11•, ! Ill"' Iii l.'t1,ht1111 1-.lcHHf jtf'u l\111h~tlJl';'I hll 10''1 ~I '11'\1 '\1•\\tJtH f llt'.h h X:1I !•1:1fl ___ rm _______ l·,1wr·11•1111•d. 111 .1 I (i11I I \11 •d11 ,cl ( >1111 ,. '"''"llll lABTECH. l · '''hi 111 r•ll'f' ·111 ii 11pl 1t d d• \Pio\• I li'fll \\ II k \Jll'I ho• I'\ 'Ill I L'•'iill .. 111I11·1· ror .! II"' \\fllfo• l't1J.:lll ;ll 1·ropl111 • 1• 1:. 1111 llll'cll• a I I• ·;I\•• i 11 l{.17 lifllii 1•·r 111 1111111111! 1l1•l11 ''" I \lrnl•·h11h • "'''"" I'• 1.1h l"I 11 I ,1 I 111 c I• .rt I ' /I. lilllh l'\lfJ~ '.\:t•o•tJ II•'\\ ''" ,., 1 1111 I ti, r.:11•1· ol 1 ... 1'' \II ·'"''" I' l'''' 111ll'l li;..'1•111 "'\ ll••lll 111111 1 ~I I 'l.17 ll~tj • h,1111111' I\ If 'l\ nl ·" 1 \I ~1~nm1•11t... 1-;,,., I Ill Hll l!·•~C ll.1111.1111 hgh1 '""" pr~111 11 ,., ·' •LOAN SHIPPING• ••le1·tron1cs dl'Strahle. I \\arl'ho.>0$1ng ,,er1 1ein~ Orange Coast Daily Pilot 3:!0 \\ Bin ~tn•l'I I 'nsta :\'lt"ia < • \ lo,qual Op1•11 Emplm t·r 1'.1 ... te up ,.;,p .. r p11· l1·rr1·d 111 \\1ll 1r:i111 1 ull l lfll l' p11 ... 1t11111 ('o l•t'll l'f11 , \ppl~ 1n 1wr,1111 11:1,11 l'la1'!•n1 '" t " Payroll /Personnel Clede f.Xjl<•r \\ l'Offiflltl l•flJi•rl l>J\ roll '"'l'm r1•q11111•cl l'lea-.anl 'lpl lkh ,1fl ,, ~l>-8950 I oll\I• flll"\ h:t\I 0111~11 111~ pcrc;o n 1l1ty h r '>I\ lt'>h Ill ,IJrfJl'.ll'atl1·1• ,1nd 11111:-.1 h1• .alrh• lo h<tn dJ1• I •'fl lf111 l1kkp~ l1hum• l'itln1·1:1 lnr ,1pp\ '••I I I Iii Ho·• l'IJ! I it•rl'l 1>1111·1'. \1 1•u1 ..,t•· I' pin~. xl11l ph1111 t t• 1· h \: 1111 s mu k ,. r :.l~l7 !>>UN w,. re 1nlc•rt•o;l1•tl 111 rl'l'rlllllllj! l11lk. .. 11'11111 .ill \\ dk. ... 11! lilt• \\ hl'thl'r 1·1n1 1·1• r1•11n•1! a hnmrmHkcr. <1r 111 ' ll'rt•-,lt~I in \\Ork•llt.: Ufll'I sthool. ( '.i rl s ,Jr h<Js il "Jl"l fur~ i!U llt't ''HI n1.'<•ol1·ol . t11 "11rk I , 11m11.1111 •ii:, ·12.11, I l<'Xtlilt• hour' Slt11uld i.,. I -,,11• '11n1•nl1'll <111<1ahl•·111 !-.• t•r 1·1..i 1, J-·1 11· p1• oper••I<' • .i..h rt'l.!t!>lc•r I )ov. l"ll lil1m; plt1111t·' 1·:11Ju1 c·"'t'llPnt t 11111 I \,~tor Dc·hh1e :11~1 11111:1 11;111~ •1•1wf11::. ,\pph 111 11t•r,11n \J1\~I N•HIO ~11111 ...,._1·r••I ;,n l·rr i'l'ri.onnl'I <" 1 .11 l11110L' 111 i:n«1l re MARRIOTT HOTa 11•pt111n1s1 \ nta)f>r n · !JIHI NC'wpon ConlC'r I >i • •11 <ht11! '>tud111 1weds .1n "IJt'llJlllrt lk:Jtll ' l't11•r f,!!'flt' dl'lall ITll llril'U EquJI 0Jtp Emph r \l F '"''''t1t10111sl whc1 Im!'' 111 S \LES l\l'l' tlll:\l S1·(e1·tnt·1 \\'" ••rrer 1:r"''' u11rkmg 111,·1ru11mo·nt gel ~al:tn ho•nt•l ll'-F11r llllC'rl IC\\ tall Pall' Hnlt1111 I ,\ :\I 7)1 ~'1115 I 111 not req'cl Xlnl j .ind~h1pp1r1i:uf FllA \'A ----------· ',, lw11111 1 c:nov. 111~ home loan' l':"<'ellent Receptionist l11d1·1wnde111 111 I< 'n ::.c•ck "'P n·1·eptH>n"1 ~rl ph<in<' ma 11nc· rs II t t• 1 ~ I' 111 i: . t: c n er" I o fr H <- d u11e~.1>leasant workm~ cond Aµph a t 17-10 '.'lt•u µ11 rl Bl\ d C ~t &Iii !lfi6 I \\'t• 11H1·r excdlcnt 1~nrk 111.i: eoncht1on~ .incl l{noi.J 1'!1mpensal1on •\llh tht' opportumty 10 work up lo superv1so~ po.;ition~ So ·onu· m .mtl l.!I\ c U!> .1 look <t\'er The man:ii.:cr 11111 be glad to 'f><'ak tu ~OU be! \\l'<.'n 1Uam-5µm )londay thru F'r1da~. ()r 'ilop b} for an appoint mt•nt If you are .Jg~rcsc;" e tind loukmi: for ,1 futun· Ill re• t.111 mgmt w )!0•111 n1 b<'nchh apph in 1>t·ri.1111 9am l•• llam \Ion thru Fri Standard ShOt"s. 3077 So Bnstol. C. M SECRETARY t::xperienced in loan dotum 1o"nt::i1iun Xlnt ala11 & benerit" Apph l'••rsonnel l>trl'.cl or • ., 111 ..,,111 111.111 l'.flH• I 111>1.11111111111\ ~•Ch 1ap1dl.• 1:11•11 .. :•1 I ~'''"•n i.: 11.11111n.1I I m 11 1 l 1! ' c ,. u 1 1 .. , ! .11d'' ,qtt• \I ,111111•11.11111· I'• 111•11<, h1·l11f11I l1ul "'111 1·•111 111.111 111111 I '' 11 ,., 1 11.,111 hu Jl•l'I 1 .tll ;'111 111 .I 111.1n 11'1\\ •1l1 1!17:,11t1t1 11 JI , r ' 1 , 1 11 11 I \,k tor :'\anc·\ ~ 1~u :)1:.!..'>11 1110 \ .. 1. 1111 C OLDWELL BAHKER 111111 1~11., 111 f!, .. ,,d,•11t1ul )l11rtc.1.i.:c l.o•lllbi JJM' (fl J1>1l)..lll~ f11J l':tp;ih)t•, 11lhlla I11•tl llll' II ... ,, JJJ l'lt•lf'l'd , Jlllli-1 h.1\ 1• tn1•('h:t11tt .ii .1p ll\1tdt• ii.II \i51 lil'l\\1•1•11 K :tn ,'I, :1 '.IO \ppl~ ,1t .t:lli l 1 \'1.1 l·'.1l•rt• .11111• \l t .. "111 \ ll•Ji1 1.n: \I. \~:t ·11 t r \H 'i l'l,11111111 ., Jll'l "Hlal Ill lllrl J111'1l l1Jfl .11 <Jil Ill Ful lt·r11111 lt1 1 "ell .:roiln11·d ll"'""11.1 hlt• ... l'rl'l.11 \ \\ 1•\111•1 ,\ ..:uod ,kill, .11 lh1• l..1" i 1rrn of l :.1rh1.·1 Sokulotr ~ \' .1 ll u \ ).. l' I II I \Je1l11·.1 J ;n, & pr11111 -.hanm: 5:!11 ~;7 LEGAL SECRETARY To Sl400 DOE Io µ notch l <J11 firm \\.Jlll.S C\trl'llll'I.\ ('flfllJn' h'nt pcrl\illl "1th :; 1 '' ''"P in C;illl • 11 ii tnol~ l~ccpllonal t' p1nj.! & ~h '~'II" req Cull \ 1d..1<• ~IV lilli>5. l'oa~t.1l 111.•r.,011 nt!I t\gt•nt·~. 2790 ll.11·1x11 ISl\'fl. c.\1 ."En:H" n:r-: Lill' offu·f• & re1.11l -;1th•, 111 p ii •J t ., u p p I \ ..i o r l' Orun~e Co .111 port \11' F T 541175!!-I LI\'!-: I'\ Ni':EOEO 111 t·ook & rlcun Nutri l111nalh m1mh..'<l llcmw en So L<iguna Jim. bom·d. !>mall salar\ .t99 Ii 19 Liv~in Bobysitte.- Prefor ~IJtUrl' Womun Cnmpanh>ll to 12 ~ r old lxn No l bl.'hlc1 duties Pa' nl'~ollJbk Carna 11011 & ll,1 ~~1elc .1rea <.:d:\I fi7~-!1235 Lot Uoy tor deanup & rlc h vcr). must hn\'C xlnt dn ving rot'<>rtl ,\pply 1rt per~on ll ut ches on·s Hod~· works . 140 111 dusti rnl Wuy. C M MAIDS 642 3030 tvhl11ls Wanted Seaclirr Motel. Lailuna Oeach 4\)..14M92 If YOU havt." a sen tce to offer or )loods to sell. plllcl.! an ad 1n the Uutl)' l'dol Classified Sectluo Phone 642-5678. l'onq>Jll\ \ I ·111d\11 II HJ nker ('o \11 o•quJI •ll'PI' ('11 '1•1·ol 1)111'llllll'llt T) J>ISl & 1'1.•lt•i. 1 lpt•ralnr tor ci M1.•x11·an Tour l 'n Travel llc11l'l 1b 1111111.i:ua I 111 Sp11 111"h 111r rc•l1·~ '" hl•lplltl (',ol I \m l)!CI futir' i.i2117HX '\nnj Nttd extra money for holiday shoppinq! APPLEONE ha' lt•mporaf') a!>Stgn fllt•ll!S .J\ a1Jal1ft• llOW ror 1 .. i.:.11 l''(l't: 'l't: ~ & "l'l' '. 1' •"''' word pron·.,.,or "'l•·m•-i da~:-. NEVER A FEE ( 0J ll Barbar.1 957-fifl2fi :\1i:l11 Su pen i,,or fur Y111.11 h Shl'ltcr &12 giao 'lll'"l'S PED. NURSE l'n\ clul,\ ll\'C·lll µ<JSI 111.111 tor re~1stned nurse 1\ 11 h ped1atr1c nuro;cry Pxp rl'q Conge111al fast J>artll atmospht·rc Good h1·rwt1I!> Salary com lllt'llllUrJte \\ exp Fnr lfltcn ICW, l'all 6i3 !1151 NURSES AIDES i 111 3 & 11 to 7. Cert trainees Mesa Ver ile l'on\ I lo:-.p 661 Center Sl C M Nurse Nl'cd L \fl'; fo r cltwlor's olf1tc No n1tes or "c"°kend~ Fun at musph<•re Cull Elalnt> at 818 23i1. Hl·li JOpm NURSIMG L \'N or RN needed for I 111ne PM s hirt m conv hnspt Xlnt "'tlary & he11chh. including tn· surance. vaca!1on & sick puy \pply . Beve rly Mu nor. J.10 Vittoria, CM. Nursing I full lime RN & 1 l'ull lime LVN. Laguna l11lls Nutrilionisl Clinic: day hours; effective (){'t. I : inter viewing now. AP· ply w/resume: Prevcn· t1ve llcullh Care Founda- tion Clinic. l·714-8SS 4077 . HUit Si HG RN, 3-4 days/wk. 41 bed \'unv ~I>· Very clean. good staffing. Santa An a Heights ~·3061. PBX OPERA TOR Full Ttml• Relrabl" µer.,on "llh plt'a.,Jnt & efllC'1ent phone ma 11ner IH'Cd~d lo JOlrl our I' fl:\ tkpl ApµI~ m per!o.111. ~\;\l:'\oun \tnnFr1. P1.·ri.onncl MARRIOTT HOTEl 1-1(1 Nt•wport Center Dr Newp"rt Be:ich Equal Opp Emplyr M I r' l<l':<:El'Tlll:-.ilST front 11( rill• 11. h1 \ phmwi, \I 'lr.illl\c, ~ plea ... ant 11honc pt>r'ionah1 ~ X Int hener1t.., g;i.1 1361 Hen•µ\ I Ont SI 111•t•rlt•tl J I bu~.' h.ur 'alon Tom Hae ll u1r<,t~ ll''i. fi45 '1012 CARL'S JR. SOUTH COAST PLAZA •SALES LADY• Fu II or p.1 rt 11 llll' THE SHOWOFF :!.:! l'"a::.h10n 1::.1..ind :-, B SALES REP. Add a provt•n hra~:. hne lo }our ll'rntun Com m1~!'!1un nel.(11t1abll' i l-1 ·49i 600'J. llavc "m1Clh1n.: you wanl ----------•! tu l>cll" c1,1~loo1r1cd ·'""do PBX/RECPT. 33 3 3 S. Bristol Space I SI Costa Mesa i':qual Oppty Employer l't~lpll' wt1u an• loo1·1•l.111g an .ipartmcnt look l1r:o;l m l'1.1)i~111ctl. Will '011 r <1d he the re '! To pla1·c your .itl. t all •i42 .-,mg It you have PBX l'XIJ with Puls e. D1mt.'n~wn or 1 unsole and 1 ou ltkt• lu 1Hirk whe11 ~nd "here ~nu wan•. t Jll Purl'ell Temporanl~ no" ~'ii !10:;:; 1020 fl1n·h Strt·1·! :-; l'" IJOl'1 13(' al' ll Pel 'tore "alf's S B &I I 0!!80. S ,\ ll:\5 11311 . C :\1 5Sli 1994.11< 58/i .II I.! l'harma<'\· :\sMslant. ex J>t<r'tl. 1:.; ~ton Fri Lill \Ir Grant 6-12 1580 PLUMBING SUPPLIES 1:rowing enm pan~ has excellent oppo1rtun1l' lor Shtpptng & l'Cl'CIVlll )! p e r s o n M u ., t h 11 ,. e general knuwlcdg1• of pluml1mg product:. <io•~I working c unrl1t11111~ Salary 11pl'n Fringe henerits Cati Mr l'cter~. THE BA TH MART 675·4830 Pnnting Trainee 1600 Automated P~ss ~rotor Gd opportunity for lhc right person. Pleasant work in g co nd . gd benefits. Pl P. 6 12 0021. 298-B E. l7lhSl. C.M PRINTING PRESSMAN Two yews lithocJroph experience runnin9 mulff.color Solfta I 2 5 or Da•id1on 700 prns. bcell...t salary and NHlflfL Apply: NATIOMAL EDUCATION 4400C...-Dr. Newport leach CA.f2660 f.Qual Opr>ortunlty £mptoyer M/F ti u l'll 1;..12 SliiH Let's recognize our Women .in Business COMING TUESDAY. OCTOBER 14. 1980 IN THE DAILY PILOT A tribute to the Orange Coast's Su ccessful Women in Business THIS IS THI ACTUAL SIU OF AD Fat bes• ·~oo:luc1'°" o ,~,. bloc> ond white pliote> of O<ty We COi\ be used Yov• m,..s1oq,.. will OfCOmporiy lhl' p•cfure on th.~ \fX>CC You may ewno1e 11 ~'les of copy with abo.JI 30 le""'' or<d spaces lo eocn J;n.. ond 1'cr-e rne compooy nome & odc*es~,,. bold type °' YotJ may e\hme<e 16 ~"es of copy \e4 w:*d tr you c1'ooM! no• 10 publi"-o p.ctlle tlte space ,,,., be f~led ...!Ii yo.11 meuoqe "Let's Rccogniie Our Women in Business" will be published Tuesday, Oetober 14 in the Daily Piiot. and October 15 in Coav LHe. marking National Wo men in Business Week This is your opportunity lo introduce a new or longtime associate lo 340.000 Orange Coost people. The pages are ideal for recognition of a wards. orh1evcments or special contributions by the women who make your bus iness ftO . Recognition notices will be two column by two inches e ach. with a photo you provide. The cost of each notice ls only S30. Call now for m ore information or to reserve space. deadline Is October 1.0. Call 642·5678 today! DAILY PILOT 642:5678 HERITAGE BANI< ~21 '\ Eurhd. 1\nahe11n 9'Jl<~60 EO~ SECRETARY Mkt9/Sales l <1r<'l'r opply 1n fas t pan•d :\'pl BC'h. invest r11t•nl firm. Reqwres lop ... kills 1shthnd 90: typmg 75 I So11nrl proress1onal ex11€r . 1111Jtunly & tor poral1• hkgrd. helpful l'all &10 0123 SECRETARY P /T Good at organizing. good skills. to work m Fas hion Isl.ind. Call Arleen. 759 1515 ••SECRETARI ES•• Set' T6S Oetail 1Sl2.000 Clm sE'<am Exp $14.400 Tio fUn ,Anah1$13.:.>oo Wd pror 1iOacc_Sl2.000 l.11 Reinders ,\gcnr~ 4020 Birch. ~ .. tau '6-1 =""'"port 83:!·8190 Free SECRETARY :"eeded 1mmell. With or without ~horthand Tern porary & full time Call Tod Scr\1cc;. al !179-8900 -Scnt'tary PERSON FRIDAY N U property m ~mt hrm. heavy phones & mgmt rcspon Free lo Applicant Irvine Personnel /\gency 488 E. 17th. Costa Mesa Swte224 642·1470 Set'relary IE SB.ECTIVE! Excellent career o p - ~lOrturuty for individual lo perform sctrel arial duties to one or more manager s . Goo d shorthand. typing skills and numeric aptitude re- quired. Position offers good starting salary. benefits a nd working conditions. Please s end resume or call in con· fidence: Employee Rela· lions Dept. (714) 540·1111 DOUGLAS OIL COMPANY ASubaidlary of Conoco Inc. 3160Airway Ave. Costa Mesa, CA 92626 Affirmative Action Employer Hei.pons1b1li11t'!-will 1r1 d urll' kn µullm.i: and ts :..ll<tnt·t• of par1!> ann .is wrnhllt-s Familiar w1lh 1 um put er pnntoub cle ''re:..l>lc I ~ Yt•ar~ ele<" tron1c-e '<µen cnt•e We orrcr a ~lab It• v. ork ell\ 1ronlll(.'nt with a n ex ct>llenl i-ala r v and hc-ner11s p<1cka(?e. mclutl tn!! romp an~ paid t•ihc<tl l.1fe and Uentul ln~ur~n<'e-... l'en,1on Pl.in. Sa' mgs Plan with high Interest rate. 1012 paid hotida) i. J>{'r ~ear <tnd I \\eek paid \aea11nn .. Iler 6 n"W>nlh' Thi!> po:.1 11un must he ftlled 1m med1citel} l'lc.ise apply at PERSONNE-:L TRIVEX INC • ~"'-• 0••• ",...,.., c_,,...,, l8l5 Ritche1 Strect Santa Ana. CA 92708 E11ual Oppty Em~>lyr M tF Strong bookkeeper to work 1n small elel:lronics firm m CM Dulles in elude AR control. callee uon & all mternal acctg Salary open Xlnt bener1t::.. 642·5100 Teacher's .\1de Fumiture 8050 .....••••.•.......•.••• **I BUY** <.inod used ~urn1lure & ,\ppliances OR I will w ll or SELL for You MASTERS AUCTION 646-8686 & 833-9625 Solid. <'X<'t' $5011 desk 30xDO. m ust sell, S225 6i5· 1230 or '1i3·i!712 9 Piece ninmg Set table ~ lear. 6 cane chci1rs . china cabinet sener SIOllO \lso 3 lUStorn oak h,1r ... toob S50 Pach .-\II xlnt cond 675·5710 W A~TED -Ba by furniture. cnb. dressing la lole . dresser. m 1sc.' 7fll 8967 EXP EM SI VE CUSTOMILT. by Mcriilt-lrattrud HI lo'\ sofa. Down back \'Us h1ons w 1trapunto Bottle green silk $800. Two !all lounge chairs . s:JOO each. These are ex- pensive custom pieres you will be proud lo own. not lightweight cheap 1m1 t a t ions . An i m - mdaculate non-smoking a uJt home in Corona de l Mar. Pnced al a fraction of new cost. 675· 7957 l dresser. fine pecan 11ood. 72"xJO" cost over S450. sell ror $200. 2 club chrs. less than I yr old . dark bluetbeige. On g . c06t S800. sell for Sl75 ea. f>W..8862 Aide for Toddlers 5dys wk 8r\M lPM 640-8820 ----sOIJd oak repro armo1re TEACHER SSOO bst. Pnnl designer Afternoons 2:J0.6P:\1. for sofa $400/bsl. 964·2959 artc r !:><'hool l'arl' ---------- Sclys wk. 640-8820 Kmg size. xtra firm. m · nersp r ing m a ll TEACHER 'per Ert.1 w ma1chrng coil box s pr. :\faster ·~ m Bch Sc prer. 1ng. never used. still Exp w 0 0 . mu I l.1 · packaged. worth $.520 m- hand1l':.ipped adlts .\b•h· cl delivery S220 cash on· Ly to write 1mµlement ly.f>.10-&~. heha \'1oral program _____ _ plans. Supervisory exp. Gcracp S• 8055 req $850 m o pl u s ••••••••••••••••••••••• benefits. 8:J0.4PM. Unil· Whirlpool Elec Dryr, 7' ed Cere bral Palsy As· QOuc h. walnut rocking soc .. 546-5760. chr. wicker chest. cedar ----chst. maple twn hdbrds, TELEPHONE S/\LES: studenl's desk&ehair,4 Teenagers & Retirees drwr maple chest. Pecan welcome. Earn good ster w /tape deck. Zenith money. Call after lpm walnut stereo. Parsons 638-4005 lbl. lamps, pictures, --------• 4l.X29" mirror, 2 like new Telephone Solcfton 10 spd bikes. new 21" Needed immediately. 20 lawnmowe r . d ish es. s t u d e n l s a n d I o r housewares. Sat & Sun homemakers who need 9-5. at 18317 Foxglove to earn money working Way. lrvine. <CuJver to pleasant evening hours. Sandbura> 551-6949 3-9 Mon.-Fti. No selling. ...._._. Salary: $3.75/hr. + .............. , 1070 generous bonus. Across ••••••••••••••••••••••• fr..om J o b ~ Wayn e RiOLEX Presidentia l Airport. Call Sue arter Watches. Whofesafe 2PM: 641.0168. prices. Call 760-8218 Telephw Solclton Mi~ 1010 Growing corp. Earn ex· ••••••••••••••••••• • ••• eel. money i.n the privacy Lo•• 1•a•1 -&~nvenlence of your Send someone you love a o#t'n home or use our bouquet of 30 multi col- modern fuc's . College ored helium balloons tied s tudent s O K I C a 11 with ribbon Ji your own !!64·2239 for complete in· personal m ess age . (o. Ask for Bart. Perfect for every OC· TEXA.5 OIL COMPANY urgently needs person M/F over 40 for protect· ed indmtrlal sales ter- ritory. Liberal com· m.isslom. For personal in erview write K. 8. Hastings. Vu~e Presl· dent . Soulhweatern Petroleum. Box 7811. Ft. Worth. Tx. 78101. EOE. caslon . We deliver. 673-4419 Just moved Into town? Then sei acquainted with t he C lassified Ads . The>"re the Haiest wa> to find Just the items and services you need! 11te lasteat draw in the West. . .a Daily Pilot Classified d. 642-5678. Mhc1'r •-1010 Mlllkel ................. •••••• .... _... 101) LUMA• TA•S ;;;;;;:;;;,;.~;;,;.:;.: frOin \OW Mlntill c ... d. •llh C&M u celleol (.'Ofl• Smd one card for each dmon. 1100 ti?~ 8Cl62 alter lll IM• OM Jlpatt "'' •PM rel urn p•rm a n C'nl I) • M&leO attractive' ••1 • Trumpcls Old 1125. strap, meeunc 11rllne tli!l\ie "2j. • c-1111e1> I 0 Aqulr-.menu Prt' t:Tl 2'79ei VMl IOiiS It theft 1 t-'or 11 Pl'l'IOn•hlf(t tolll l'•Wlo,. .. 1 \t111'11n Oat <l rt".il wal lpaper. fitbrl(' 01 &iuntl. nl'w hutbhl'll "0•>' Clo" paper a. "" case~ l!n M:n wtll back &i tn10 \OUr tap. Or II'\ twu t•ardl back to black PR~ fh1aor3 S,, <&1$ taas S1 6th•• MH~:t $l ~e11 IOor moni SI ..o''" Sul€'S"l'u lm•IU(l\'(I NU l"AHl>' Utaw )our own or t•n1I name. 111tJd~'3'.s, phom• a. we'IJ mu~ OfW r _.rd 1wr tUI Add 25' t'l41'h Send ctw<'k or m ulll') u• tkrio: PILOT NtMTIMG p u uox 1560 l'Ol>t11 Mdiia, Cu ~ l'EKAMIC TILl115qUI tixti", ~per p1tte l'litnl & glaie your own 111~ (;OOtJ for <cera mic shoJll'I or pnvat~ part1~ to ui.t! your art1s11r ;ab1l1t1e~ S34·7S33 2 Caddy i.po ke wht:'t>I rims $1 00 for huth 839-20021839-9320 SONY Betamax Video Recorder Model =noo w 36 ta~50 !WO 2682 I ·r oid Y•maha tudto u1111 1d'll l'<l l'' t'b oni ''°''h s1i.•1 tilllJ tlll Hl~"'ON liUlllH l\n)JI 120 \\all& ~ OHO X.lot i 'ond \16'l Flt'<'\ <i ull ar "' ~ \\.JtlJI \mp $J3<1 M1113911 P\~.htl 'h"•I KUllar t•l\'11 lo:YltU 4' lllOll• ~) 94.'.lf) ~lian.h.all IW \\all 'up.·r lt'ad .amµ $'7illl I b11ru•1 t•lf'("lrl<' ffutl iH pro fieo 1onal motll'I $<4511 tUI 86IM OHluFwwftwv& ....... 1015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAl"t::S SAf't::.'i S.\t'F.S liood h~ on !>di,,., &l2 181~ lXCB'TIOHAL VALUE IBM Sele1.1nc. \'1ntagt.' Exec. ~ l)'~"'rtr stand & adding ma l'h SS99 fi31 ·5155 ~eh 1017 CARPET s hg htly used ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt cond. -l room s. light Yellow-collared macaw burgand y ,,ho rt shag. S250 incl. cage Redecorating. µ('rfect ~.0294 eves for redoing Vans. Bdrms aJ & n.-8090 or ~ ~each. roJI <.:.all ri..os --~' -R ick betw 7 9am or ••••••••••••• ... ••••a.a••. 7-9pm. 552.7552 P1~no s m a ll Oak uµ --"-------gn ght. xlnt cond. $600. IHh. Pewwr t040 T1 ,,,..._ ·········~············· ...................... . 41' .. ....._r •• u I I 1 • q u I p p ., d , buutlfl.llly malnlaln«Mi, relMiy to crul1ti or Ii' t• oabo ard lip m ay he •Vltlable Ill-a'+ t'leant· '"I PQQlhkt '12.0110, or 95.000 ii no bl'OAler In .. Olvt<tl Cle11n dfoal will 1nrlude If A"on ltt•tfrr .. ~1 w11h rlua11 hrMll'(~ und I !l hoMf'Powt•r Joon .. oo 11u1 bo a rll Jark l'url••> 1.\4 l .00 ho1n. ur MO U\-1 on 1be boa1 ~·llr•ml" ~ '\JKINCi ~Jo , 1117!1. I"" ~) Crll'I l''WI '. 7 ·1 Kohlt'a l(t'Tl VII fo' fol ho 'oUffil•ljl tOUl'fl hrHhl•' ~I .ill i.howt•I S!I~ OOH ~ w l) \ ; u r h I fo: ll t h ITT~ L800 21 f1 hl'r11la, .. '''" l"IJmlt•a Wt·t•k,•111li·t "' 111.11 .it·1t•1 Hu ) I."""' h llf11u n ltl \W U,1111111 ll1 .. ,1 I fou l I !:<•Ill'\ ''""' rt'fn1w 11t11r 1fhl I~ lh hl'ttrl t11 rn11lt•ll' S\'.I JOO li4h TKl(j BOSTON WHALER 11 1/J F...t <>Ny I Month Otd! lrand New Jofwnon IOHP Less than 10 hour5 Si!800 FIRM Call Eves 675 2005 'l980" U"ld F LITE 42' con vert1hle. Extended salon. full cle1·tron11·s gal le ) u p , t o ta l l y custom1zecl. Must sell Offered at $250,UUO Nwpt Yacht Exch 675-\IJOO. 1p.jaek 20. 1m Cudtt)· Cabin 225 0 M C Gco0<I cond. S5900. 548-6731 c 'Ii .. Stile/ ... tl20 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '"'"' tht• aai. i.h(l1 t i.11•· with 11 11)1111 1mtnr hume lhlll 1Ct'l11 l!H2tt nllJlt 76 'l'o) Olia Ch tnuok l.1 kl' 1\l'W1 011ly 15.000 m tlt'l\ ti ' I t• 1• p 1 n i.: , p a ,. l' ) rurn11n1 ,, "'""' it'" hox 1t1n1•t1 ,. v•1r1 J J,011 • I hth'I S!UOU I>-..)" ~) :MJI M9t..tudlW.es 9140 .•.•••.••••..•......... 1411 U\ll!i J(Mll ~I .1rlhl<' I I .. ~kin~ i:n:1 0110 ,1111 mrnl ll'll 1J171i 7lJ ~1H·r11ttl l-.11tl inn IUk M11 111 h1•r un1· Mo11('d 14 '"""'>' xtr11~ ,., 101 i.pr rn111I lJIMJ10BO 1173 ~M fo..ar,·111;1:1 01&1 9150 .....•..•.••..••.••..•• 'tt~1 wll 75 Su11.1J..1 (;T 750 tirt'al l'oncl SK.'J(J ol•l 21:1 1 ll 4i23 71.1 ll11nda I li750 SS I-' !)7Utl m1 xlnt • 111111 SIKSO titll •11:11 llf'..i :n :n llU !'ll'STH Xlnl c'1.1nd Kblt t:111: ~~1thn1 t Ncw 'r1 Jll~ l 'u:-.l l'hru ma., See lo "'''' S!1~1 San ti7J 66.11 HO Su1Uk1 TS:!5V, xlnt l'Ond 5011 1111 Sl2110 1>'7.~ Kil<i MotorHon.1, Sale/ Rent/St~ "1160 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •All Motorcycle Sw.MHt Orunge Count l' 's l.argesr All lndoon.. Spal'e Avail. Fri S.•pt. 12, 6pm-l lpm I mte ooly l.{)r«n~e Count..y Fa1r:.:rounds 24 hr:-.. mfo 11-1·831·5116 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'lti 1-or<l WUUt.11e, n.•l\lurt•d Sl!l,OOU \r.SO ·~1 Modt•I A To"'n Scdun. 1 1tr. rt'lllOI <'<1 hJ,•111 Cur 'tu dent S\O OOU IJT5 11161 Buu•k ·~ !'lkvlurk l'Oll\l ~!>3(.'nrnll{o,fO co11\o'I $MUI• \ frw utlll'r ~o·., l'U1' 1!(7 ~\:fl ·s.; Pu1 )>th1· !'>111·1·11:.11·1 l}I ljl & lolally I e-1111 t1I IH 1'tJJI ol !Jlk IJIJlh·r Sl~.500 <2L3>700U745 •H 1:li 1818 4 Whe .. Dri.e' 9550 .....•..•....•.......•. '?ti <'llt-:VY Ul.AZl-:lt t 'heyeonc l'ki.: VII. aul11. • 11 r . ~ll'rt'IJ . nu t an•' ' I r ,, .., 1 111 m a t S.13o0 0110 77!1 IWI 71 Tu} I. C I 11w1wr .J!>K lll'lual 1r11. loh 111 C\ll a' tnl'I s111I hlk 1•hev \'8 \ C. 1ioe>1 tr.11· \l),olutt- 1~ 1mrruit· . 11 ru~l or dt:"nt'>. all orig $3.~kl Cu II l l:! 001 355:! till 6µm 11r I 11 :.:16 1(.()j .ill l µrn \~k lur Carl . d~111 T:ucb 9560 ....................... TRUCKS 'I' our Or:.an~e I 'llunl) llam Touith Trurk Center 2888 ll:irbor RI vd I ~·A MESA 540..0330 ''Tj Gl\fC-oump~. PU1 ton susµ J ton hot-.t Uec;t Offer 642·5235. 557 1021 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HIGHIUYEI Top dollari> lor SPorli. t.:11N , Ru~K, C'1J m11crs, !114'~, Audi I Allk rorU/C MGR JIMMAltHO YOUSWAGEN 111711 Beuch Blvd llllNTINGTON rlfo:A('fl 942.2000 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAN USED CARS! miracle mazda 2150 H.,._ ll•d. Coda MHO 645-5700 f'ri·m1u1n µ1'1l'<'" 11J1d tor an1 usl-d t•ar 1Curc1t:n or flunw .. ur J 1n gc)Oll c·11nil1t11m St'1.· l'io l-'1rs1' SOUTH COAST DODGE 288." llarhot HI vcl ('O!->IA M fo:."ii\ CALL 540-0330 OR 540.9100 ~iltos, Imported ..••..........••..••..• ~lfa Romeo 9705 .••••••..............•. 1-'INAJ. ALFI\ l!OM ECJ cu ;;\HANn; \J.l. 7!;:,, ~WST<iO I "Wi-'l't'lk11hn' Monday. Sep1embe1 29 198Q DAILY PILOT ~·.~ ....... ,~:.~~ ....... ~:.~~~ .......... . ~ ............ !!?.~ ..... !:-:!~~ ....... !!~.~ ~ ............. !!~.~ -~ 61 Sllvt!r Cloud f'tne l.003 Ku.mblcr s:ioo cond Elegunt, wh11e 2W3 kural l'lucc. 77 2l!OZ 2+2. l·Sµd, (•lee snrf, l\M 1FM cass., A1C. 53K m 1. $1!.r,()() ti6 t -700 4 • AUTO RENTALS • 1-'rom 595/mo 631 2697 72 Datsun 1200. IHJU. $1100 (;all urt 3, 61)1 11894 9723 .•...•......•.........• 978 Fe rran Sµltler, like nu-only !l,OOOmi S.J2,fl00 Mr . M c Naughton 546 73ro cclays uni) I 9725 .•••••••...•........•.• 70 85V Sp } der radials A~I F:\t S550 S,l{).()'.!(.18 ioftda f'aat. <I!> IS 9721 ....................... VISIT YOUR ORANGE COAST HONDA HEADQUARTERS TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES & SERVWE OLDSMOBILE HONDA GMC Tll.UCKS 2!!50 llarhor Hh d (.'(~Ii\ MESA Owf!er S2l.500 640 49'.MI C:osta Mt.'llu Own!r ;.-9760 kiick 9910 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1980SAAI TURIC>s HERE NOW! EX CB.LENT SRECT10til! BEACH IMPORTS 8'\11 Dove St reet Nl·:WPORT UE \Cit 752-0900 rniampti 9767 .....•................• '77Triumph Sp.Ulre. Xlnl 1•1111rl Lo mi's AM FM tuJ>t· Lug gaitc rack S3SOO :'131) k!llS or 960 55-1,'> 79 Triumph fR7 c1mvcr11 hie. 5 spcl, A:01 F:\1 i.l~reo ca~sclte. A l'. flawlt'"'i !l,000 mt S8500 ufrt•r l 639 3625 aftfif' ~1 '7'J THI UMl'll Sl'ITFI HE 4 c~ I, -lslJ(l w /0\ erdn 11·. mai.:~. solt & hard ropi,. lo mi. ,1m rm tape. lui:g ra('k 4!S i mp1:, IL!> a ' I U P P $5511V 645--121'1 fofkswoqM 9770 .........•..•.......... HERE MOW!!! Uashcr o·wsel 1'11Wl'r'', \ls11 a l(Olld Sl•lct'l lltll nf ScirOCl'llS L'hN•k US 11)1' l h l' B ~:S T µ r 1 1· " " 1 Prof e!os ron,il le a ' in i.: a\ a1lahlc' .•.............•...•... • IUICJC '80 SKYLAR I( 11 tlo11r bt-d1111 Automu lit , mr rnnd1tionini;:. l'rt:ll} r<1r' IOSOO I $6998! HOW ARD Chevrolet Dove & Quail Stb NEWPORT BEACll 833·0555 :::ocfillac: 9915 ...........•..••.•..... Hll IJ1l'~l·I S<•\ 1llt•. llt'\11 '11 v\•r & hlul', loude<I .11).000 m1 ~uar 1111 cng, ~16,:100 ~W.~1.11 \\ktl)~ :omaro 9917 ....•.................. 75 Ca111;1ro One Own('r Xlr;a l'lt•an. luw mile!. S3 IUO or h est 11H1•r ti45 li:L'i5 :ttevrofet 9920 ··•••···••·······•·•·•• SEE US FIRST! W1• ha \'l' a i:001.I Sl'lt•tl 10 11 o I ~ ~: W & I . S 1-. I> C.:hcvroh·t:-: COHNB.l CHEVROLET 2.828 Harbor Blvd COSTA MF.SA 546-1200 i~ C:.tprt ~•'. I tlr lull IJllWl'r 1 SiS4J ( 1flOtJ t'llflll fi7:1 •17·H• 1•1 , .... iO ' h l'VV W ;1g1111 l r .111:-.11oi1 ;1111m ··a1 ~•:....J.l1:1.691!1 ALI VS HOLMES &·74i :I ____ _ OcL 2. Good seats avail S60010BO 675·1415 BALDWI N' Al·crosonic Upright Ulonde Wood Sl.200. &14·8647 ·79 P e nn Ya n . '..!6 '. Clybr1dge. 200 hp '!:I d1esd. fuJly t>qwppt>d for ftshmg. sull under warr, pri1. part~ SJl-~30 Hcnt. 22' Lux ~l olnr ·1~<.:hev)' LU\' lo milt•'· Hmc. s ips 6. sell l'Onl Camper Shell $2600 1980 SPIDERS HERE NOW!!! 540-9640 lac;iuar 9730 1!11!.1 LJkcw11od Blvd LON<; 11~.\rtl 12131 597·3663 IJJ>E:-:St ~f)\YS i4 1-:1 Jn11110 '!!1•1 1111-hlJ.. 111Lr I ~pd fi r • .11111 nc:w Clll( :"1•\\ llrt'' ~ti 1111)~ ro10 s.i!l ~11;, Lose weight now f'un & easy way to lose 10·29lbs a month 100'' guaran teed or your money back Mr. Sparro 962-8311 . 1·5pm. JV, Rocio, HIFi, Sttno 8098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS900. 2-l ' Sport fis her F tB. Twn V8, cahtn, Jeff Beaut1lul Zefllth 25" color hull. Glass on PW, gd T\', 2 yr wmty. free cJe-5 hape 536-7911 or 1V DECODERS l.!.ve_r>_' _S124_ 64& 1786 __ -i _639_·_31_8_1 __ _ JBL Demo Sale-G reat 8 \' owna.transfe r red. On-Select & Z cha nnels . !>peakers. at g r e at pe. rfect 1917 <.:enturv 23' faJr & reas. priced in· M · J $250 /wk +8· m1 6-15-l727e\'l'~ &w.MlS.5 '7i King C:.ih Uats un. ---------•! 30,000 onl! mi. lK-)ol olft'1 •MEWPORTERS.2 • •Ltk1 new20 Minis •Sleeps 4 adull3 •Spar 1ous r ear halh 14 /pullman & tub •Dbl tloor c·etlar lint-d wardrobe •Kit chen "1th anglt'd <.'Ountcr top t::ake:. >U"; S.'i~1J 1!,1y.,. 9fiJ 2784 night!> Datsun SnuJ? Toi, l'a11l11Pr )>ht-II, short ln•<1. 111!> '7J '7!f. EHS-5073 '71 El Camin11 :!,)Cl Hlk hlk 111Lr 4 s prl. Br:.ind new eng New tires, gtl mpg ~.5491:!4-l5 BEACH IMPORTS S.ltl Uovc Strl'cl ,'111-;w POn I' BEJ\1 II 752.0900 i8 \ll,1 <WOii !'lp~dt•r 15.000 tn1 . am fm l as .. ~'l4fl(I i)..11; W)77 I'\ CS 9707 , •••••................. 76 Fox Xll '\11 shm·k, .. 1r cor\d ,\m !-'VI t·a..,~ XII m1.11:' S299:1 uho ( ull Ad 113f'2 &12 4'.Jl)U. <!/I hr~ .....••........•..•.... ':H .J.a)!UJr ~l dl XJIH .. Silver lu..1df'd snrf. P P &l&l~ 1'1iii J al(uJr SPolun 120 SX'..!(JO 1 tlWl'lt:I 71 l ,,15 ilOH fl>! JJg Xld,: ll11Jd,tl·r , II r 11 nl" w 1 re v. h 1, P1rl'llt tare" new t·rtl! m 1111. uni.: I ;,II f>.l l 11 l'i all1•r611m 72 X.J Ii runs hut nt·l·tls 7X \ W Ru:, hpcl N1·v. rad1,11<. !'l11otlc-., ~r;1~10 "'-.-c ;,I l!Jl7 I Ltrhur Bh ii r11-.1 a \! .. :.a vr I a II i I I 72J 'li!ll -;-4 \'W THl:'l/t:• l 11n1I & \,." \lo111r :>fi1, :im:i ~1111 sunng you of quality un · Prl<'es Atla ntic . us11· SIJllS S. c mpr canvass. 251 its. Com pl. installed & 445 E 17th SI , C :'>1 . F ord \'8. 100 hrs guar. Do not be take n in 646·8895 Tan dem trlr. loaded by ridiculous low prices . SO :-."Y Betama x Video Dana Manna stor11~e. Remember you get what Rec-or der Mod e l it7200 $_1_4,_.;oo_. 4_9_J.(Xl(Y7 __ • I .oads of slorage •Dual air cond1t1oners o6 new 8 ply tires •New earth1one up - bolstery '75 Che v}' L,u v P t; \1•w JMW 9712 14• 11 r k . m" k 1· 11 ff er I'! Bug Srnui.: n :rt Onl' owner AM FM 'll'r"•> tape, 1ww h;.itl1•r) :Yiu~! 't.'11 tl ue lo d1vorrl' ~!"10 ur thl ofr \Ian~ extra~ l!J.1-\J'al you pay for. 840·3680 ~apes S'750. 840-2682 Classic 32· Cabin Cruise r . (please leave message) Sony :it•" \·0 -2600 unit, twrn screw. 1934 Harbor :'t1odel rad10-co nt rolled 15.:y4 • color video tapes. lloat Sacnf1ce. SlJ,500. outboard boat. all a c best offer. &l.S-4IS7 675-2428 eves. <'i?SS. S200. 64S-SQ73 WAN't'ED"New or almost lo~=-1950VINTAGE Read~ for immediate de· livery with 30 days part,,. & labor guarantee $9500 ea DALE S RV (7141 559-4446 1509'..! Harvard Ave. Irvine new matermty clothes ••••••••••••••••••••••• 23· custom bit Chriscrafl size 7. Call after 5 : 30 Gene~ 90 Io cabm cruiser. complete- wkdyc; AnYome wknds ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly refurbished June 1980. "iJ 18. Winnebago, roof Ask for Rita 751·8967 ED HOBIE C T Head, galle y. s ips 4. I b · C B WANT A Dana Pl Marina, s lip a r, 1·a air. . aux gas Ping Pong tbl. x.lnl cond. TRLR four 16' Boa1 8 -11 Mainland $8900 tanks . XJnt cond 30,000 Slot m achine. s mall Call 8111 Avail to see on wkends. actual miles Bes t offer desk. 968-9318 ____ 540-__ ~ ____ _, w e e k d y s c a 1 J or take c<Ar in trade . ----------1 eo.. M .. ••ct/ <213>~3ll05. _84&-__:.._5908 __ . ------ Queen m all r es s s e t Ser.tee 9"020 I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I ,,.....,_ T el 91 7 O "New". llSS: Sofa hide· ••••••••••••••••••••••• "''" Penn Yan, twin ds l, ••••••••••~•••••••••• a·bed like new SJ 6S. JU &tl·8205 Boat work, repa irs. re-Sportfisher. dealer d e· 10"33' furnished. older, fur bis hing . pain t & m o. rull e lectronics, $6000. Owner64&-672S I.JO Sear s Craft s m an 7 .. var nish. nigh quality radar. full fishmg µkg. Cabrillo.CM Circula r Saw. n e w . work/reas rates 5411-7044 Every option. $68,500. Wo s.r.ke, Perts Craftsman Hedge Trim· ..:e_ves~. -------1 213·592·2859. 213·592·2444 & Acuuorin 9400 mer. frplc 1.ogs. make of. loah. Powwr 9040 .80 Penn Yan Sportfishers rer . 714-846·3777 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• & Cruisers. All IB. no _IWG-__ 8602 __ . ------33' VIKING S/F . ·74 toum outdnve problems. Mdl Bar Bells, foll set, 1n. bn dge. teak pulpit, fis h avail: 20'h'. 22·, 2:r . 30·. eludes bench w /e xten-equip. 2 stations. co2 J3'. Closeout sale, call to· ders. All for SSO. 559·9620 system . twn crusaders. day Ma rine Outfitters, afler6pm. $42.900. Newport Yacht 213·592-2859. 213·S9'l·2444 Ex ch 675-1800 Discount on .. P ro-Vita,.. STOP LOOKING' ' de h y drate d food s Partner Wanll'd. 38 . 1979 43'Viking.aft cabin, Vitamins. herbs, µro Sportf1sher <new). twin luxurious. 6-17 Delroits. 1ogger and diet program diesel T.I., radar . RDF. rumuno radar. Air /contl. Call 842·4928 de 1>th sounder, auto Microwave, trash com - Misc .. __ W..ted 8011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Will Bizy: USED OFFICE FURNITURE. Wo rk Benches. S h e l vin g , 631-zm p1 lot. 2 55 ch . VH F paclor , dual st ations radios, outriggers. bail $2.'i0.000. Newport Yacht tank, windlass, some log. E xch. 675-1800 ·s e a l e m p , t e n d e r w motor w 'Slip Call 79' -12 fl. Grand Banks EH2·0337. 8.J0.4:Jo, Mon· fi berglas~. aft t ab1n. F'ri enc l bridge. f i s h TIME IS MONEY equiped. cash Lo loan take over payments, or tr ad·· for house P. P SiS-0741, 634·1414. 9060 '49. Luders 16. 2Sfl. varn h ul l , s lip in NB , b e autiful . $4 000 894·9010. Layman 12. 2 sails. trlr, cover . racmg gear . SOOO. 645-4727. Cal 2S #1, s111n, 2 jibs, VHF. s lip avail. S5000 firm. 673-06417·5. ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSAVESAYE S WITH USED PARTS Imported tar parts IMPORT AUTO SUPPLY IOI N. Ma nchester Anaheim 776·!/900 7~.5xl2llres: $200 White-s pokes Slugs. $60 -197·5537 351 Windsor Ford Eng. Complete. bala nced a nd blueprinted. SSOO ofr 979·0\\0. ext 16, "lu 4 Jn ···•··•·•·············• IMPORTANT NOTICE TO READERS AND ADVERTISF.RS The price of Item s advertised by vehicle dealers '" the 1 eh1 t le class1ried a d1·ertising columns does not i11clude an y apphcable taxes, license. trans fer fees. rinance cha r ges. fees for air pollution control de vice cert1ricalions or de aler documentary pre- pa raUon cha rges unless otherwise s pec1fi··d b~ the advertise r. Lido 14. HuJ1 =3718. wtth Anttot:U, 9520 sails, cover, and trailer ••••••••••••• ••. •• ••. •. Sl,000. Call 642-3187. Coronado 41. cente r cockpit , i m mac ulate cond & all xtrasl May trade R.E. or 2:).30· Sail. P .P. 169,500. 6';3·4220. Need cash, will sacrifice. 20' O'Day. t rlr , OB, 3 sails. au xt ras included. Best orfer 67$-3148. ISL. 24' F. G. sloop. head, galley. s ips 4, &HP 08, xlnt cond. Race/cruise, slip avail. Reason a bly priced. PP. (714> 499·4146 ltlDUCID 23' Coronado sloop. rlxed keel, main, Jib, Genoa, VHF, Johnson OB . 15.200. N wpt Yacht Exch 675-1800 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dry stora1e avail , Newport Dunes. 1131 Back Bay Dr .. N .8 . 644-41510 1957FORD THUMOllllRD The most desired c lassic in So. Calif. F ully restored. white w /blue Int & f ull pow e r . <005UKZ). SAVE!!! THEODORE ROBINS FORD .'flMl HARBOR f\1110 CO'-IA Ml ~A f>·l1 001!) '60 MGA! new eng, paint, lOflB, tires. more. 54500 rirm. 645-7531 Early Mercedes 190 Db diesel sedan, classic pre· fin lines. Wu ston.od by P' yoatic , new ever· yUUn1. $7500. 542·5052 ·a Ford Model A Cpe w /rumble seat , 16400. ~l- Muatq 'M · '65. l owner. Use Anlwet It/ 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. Gd CCIDd. Orig thru-0ut. tolO SIOOO. 173-9'111 PP DAILY PILOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• "79 Kaw. Jtt Skl, a mos. Trede your old •t"r for aid inull NII. SllOO. call n ew 1oo4ie1 w ith • ~. Claillned ad. 642·5171 eng. S2.3SO. Good buy ••••••• •••••• •• •• •••••• 1;12 811.'J() 640.88.30 9570 •.....•....•........... Buy or Pick up Lease . 1980 DODGE w ar metaJ cabmets. storage bi n s. wo r k b e n ch 842.5777 '70 Ford Econohne. mu~I sell. Sl500 or best ofrer ~5-5417. '7 .i D 0 0 c; E \' J n T radesma n ICHI. :-.:e" Tires. Prime Cond. Sl8llO J err 968-4268 1973 Dodge Surfe r Van frig. bed. captain chairs auto t rans, a ar, c rpts mio. 641-1!604 -----WosWClllted 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAY TOP DOLLAR for top used cars rorl'1g11 domestics or classics If your car 1s extra rlt'an. see us F'l RST • ~ ,, I 111 Or~ C-+y 292.5 llarbor Al vtl COSTA M Uir\ 979-2500 WE BUY CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS COHHB.l CHEVROLET .'10\ Hart•1r HI' 11 1 ·osT .\ .,n:....., .\ 541>-1200 We Pay OVER aa..1oo1c For Your Good VW. Porsche or Audi WANTED! Late model Toyotas and V ol v o s . Ca ll u s TODAY!!! Earle Ike TOYOTA·YOlYO ''""~lh& c ......... "446-UOJ., S40·94'7 PORSCHES WANTED Allow us the opportunit)' lo consider the purchase or lrade-in of your clean Porsche. Ch('ck with Us Today! Tep Dllm' hid For Your Car! JOHNSON' SOt4 Lil•• t .. ":v'l. -HarborBlv . ea.ta Ilsa 540-5630 & SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS is just ~ui•in«J tlte lent shipment of Mew 19801MW's! F:xcellent Select ion Come Jn Today Before Thev're l:one' Also ... p,...~MW's To Choose From! For \lie fie s t Uea I m (Jrange Count,. Cume ~.-e Us Today! SAODLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 2!\.l02 ~arl{u('nlr Pkwy M 1~s1un \i1eJo 831-2040 495.4949 Clused Sundays CREVIER &I SI & U OAOWAY SAM IA Al'IA 835·3171 1,.£ ULl•MA IE Ol>IYIN~ 1,1/ICMINf •USEDBMWs• 72 200'.? lll w s r I 20fil I ·13 J Ot' <'Pt'. mmc 11>.SS91 'i-12002 lt1 <:,/r IOJJ<!I ;5 2002a llXIJS I ·;;, 5.10ta w /!i 1r I 14li3 l '76 200'.? s r tsp t 157 1 '77 6.J0cs1 (456.'iXG l '78 32th 4 sp, air 142281 '78320ta air 160'J5) '78 530ta loaded <~tiX 1 '795281a s 'r 12tltS1 Closed Sundays ORANGE COUNTY'S OlDEST s · Sales·Scrvice Ll'asmg Roy Carver.Inc. Rolls Royce BMW 1540.Jamboree Newport ~ 6411-64.W 108 McLAREH11 850 N. Beach Blvd. LA HABRA (5 Mi. No.orSA Fwyl l7141522-5lll Sunday by Appl. IMW I 972 l .O CS Auto. Must sell. 642·0696 GOOD OPPORTUNITY '80 BMW 6331, white, beige llhr Int. BBS whls, Alpi n e s u s pe ns ion . 129,500. 751·5021 earl)' mom or 751-7153 dys, ask for Antonio. 74 2002, 25mpg, amtrm stereo. xlnl paint Musl sell. 974·0'Z76. 76 2002. sunroof, air. am /rm. new palnt. xlnt cond, 96750. 974·0276. 9740 ....................... HRP!!· Leaving lhe counlr-• Musl sell m) hal1y' l!J7 1 Mercede:-. Ben7. 2.~IC that 1!> reall\' c lean Lmrded 1 inc leather & .\M , F!\I !>lereo c;all 6-;:Hl66S 1·1't.'S after 6 p m & fii5 !)115(1 da)S '69 MBZ 280SE Cpe 2d r ·\uto Iran~. h._>..,ut Car. ful l Jthr SOI ( 642 0696 58 220S Classic all recor d 7!1 V W Con1rr11hl·· Yellow Bu1·k..,k111 l11t SIOlmtlc' ilill 1!211! &I Rl S Slti(lt) firm ' H11 1h (io11d 011\l' 1;;111m i; .. H \.I\ m.1n ' 111•11. llt'lll' I:! 14' \ nL·\\ 1111 \:\I f:\1 l'a"' "r.; 1:ni. too man.1 ~tr<1,. to h.,1 Ha1e r eceipts $1!Hl5 Cash. 962-19SI A C AM f\1 14.">00 ~ 0 &.i \ W runs \Int B<1 ~J.352-1 d) 11nt ~d shape Sl2..'i0 \ssom L!.c· '80 450SEI. or 'i9 ~£Jo ma. Call \Ir Wood 955-1~9 i2~EL -l :i $7500 140 3803 E\'e f'J6 !\IR 2:ll6L. 70,000 mt. hard & s11ft top:;, white. $12.000 OHO ti75· 14~1 6ti 2'.I O'i l. ::! l o p -. look:. 1•1111.~ x Int. SI I 9110 Must ~ell i70-571il '73 220 [) :,11 ~speed. SfiG.!IO (;ull 968·2270 9742 ....................... 4~ 72!JCI 75 \/Vl Bui? Com E>i.<'cp t1onal Ahsolut ·h mu;.1 sell si6.50f1rm fi73 6919 73 VW Supt•r flc~t ll' AM FM i.unrnnf new tires S:.."itltl l'all afl .1µm M-F or an) ltr11l' Sat nr SunA..'l9-~l 72 \ W Squarch:tl'k <1Ulomullt' Hl•bll Iran:-. runs ~ r c J l 11e 1· d :. tJ 0 d y 14' I) I' k S I 5 1111 631 1)~1 ·fos1ai:e Ill M1tl t-:J~I ~.If. "'ar'' 'i.5 H,1lth1l. s:moo :.-IH·4~l 'st>\\\ Fa !i tb c:1tk -1•9•7•6•MG-•M•l•DG-E•T-•I SllA RP' Ne\\ Int Un I? Xl11 1 cond , lo m t. O 'A n Xlllt ('n nel .\M F:'tl. new radials Sl7511 0130/l.lh 1"57 :.1ltcr Ton cov . $3.t:Ql. 9611-4924 :ipm -------------•l fofvo '772 "4GI 9744 ....................... 79 MGR tomorrow's col leetor.~ Hem. hke new, dn1cn 1000 mi. am1fm l'ilSS t are,$500. 641_ !HOO Jpel 9746 . •......•.............. 75 Opel, reblt eng. clutch. recent paint. AM/FM. $1600. 492-0092 --->~t 9748 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANG 1-; COUNTY'S PEUGECYf DIESEL HEADQUARTERS 1980 SOSs fGos & DinefJ HERE NOW!!! BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 9750 • •••••••••••••••••••••• 77'.lt 924 Porsche. Silve r w /sunrf & st er. cass. f7800 or bst ofr. Call Ad IJ361. 642·4300, :?Ahrs. 67 Porsche 912, 5 spd, no rust, orig. owner, best over S5000. 832-4369 75 Por s c h e 9 1\S , black /black int. air cond. xlnt cond . Mus t se ll $15,000/080. 646-0928 ~· •re-9756 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •1 DEALER IN U.S:A. IOY CARVER ROLLS-ROYCE ,,.,,.,,..., .. .....,, .. et .. ,.._ ___ ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• VOLVO SALES. SERVICE AHDLEASIMG O\'ERSEAS OF.Lt\'1-:HY t:XPl-:RTS EARLE UCE VOlYO 196() Har bor l311'd COSTA MES1\ 646·9101540..9467 ORANGE COUNTY VOLVO EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO Largest Volvo Deale r rn Orange County! BUY or LEASE DIRECT ~~, 2025 S. Manchester Anaheim 750-2011 Woa.UMd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ......,.. 9901 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NOTHING OVER $4995 MAIERS AUTOCEHTER 1'25Bake r Street COSTA MESA 540.9202 RARE'78 MINl·P ICKUP I o&S mpg, 4 s pd, J piston. '70 mph. rum great $.'lOOtl 2516 Vassar Pl. 641·~ 0 SUNDAYS lf you're looking for • hel 16 3.0FI. 80.000ml, 4 1p .. --1.;.;;.;...;.;;..;;__;, ____ ter job. )'OU wo11'1want10 aunroof.17500 OHO. must Have something to sell? m iss 1 he e mplo1 m ent sell. '4o-i7•. Claullled adado It weJJ. rotum11s 1n Classirled :ouqar 9933 .•..............•...... l[u,t ..,Jl·nh• ,. ti7 l11111!;a1 'S!OhO 111.·-.1 •1lr X lnt 1 oml l~l·I 1:11'.! )odqe 9935 ...•........•.........• ,uok111i.: f11r ,l, It a11d 1111 I t•(•nn11tn' ,,! a r.-:t,t•nahlr fll I• 1•' V. ht•I hl'I ·' l/U IA I'll t11 hm t1r h·..1:;1· TRY US SOUTH COAST DODGE ;!AA~ lbrhor Hl\d l 'l>ST•\ \1 l·:S \ 540-0330 t;:.J l>odgt· i 'urti111•I <i11od tr 111.., • air $2!1~ 1 a ll 1;.1;; m·,» ~rd 9940 •I.\ 1111 l':t•h Ht nL I USltl F .. r•t 111 the 111<1nlh 111> c r c d 1 i P H )' m 1• n l s lo"ard' purc-ha~c 121.11 l.JJ 2!13 • 11rii I 1 ll 1~1 S!.111 11r ol ler i'il 1:!:!11 1 Jtl lwfon 1· µm fiH t-·onl :• d .. 111 r11n. l!l'l'dt ~11 011· hull ilatn.tl:l' s.n1 1-..11 121;1111 ;,;,2 .'>..~J6 "4ercury 995C , •......•.........•.•.. OR \Nia; COtJ~TY 'S FtMEST _ , LIN~'Ol.N MEB<.:L'HY 1>1·: \Lr-:ns1111' RAY FlADEBOE LJNCOl.:-1 MEHCL'R\ 111 18 Autn C~·nll·r Or SIH\n Lake Foresl t xn IRV1NE 830-7000 7 8 MERCURY COUG.AR Fal'ton JJr • 011d1t1vntnJ! (flt WhC'1.•I. C;J'iSC.lle X TRI\ Sil \RI' 1"-IOVWll • CALL 830-7000 ~7~4~ LI Nl'OL:"\ \H:H<.:l. f{ Y 16 A rroc..::-.:1 ER J)H I R\1 NI-. x:111 illCl(l i!I Ca fll'I Su111 oof, ~I a gs, Jm rm I ape tJ,·l'k. 111,500 miles V8 s.1\l'Jll. ~lust s ell' Murk /J45 '1520 or 751 0332 "4MstC91CJ 99S2 .•.•........•.......... 66 Must VII Auto. J.!tl com.I $2500/o{(cr (i44·~1i.') \lust an~ 11. 74. sler,•o, A1C, PS. a uto . llCW brakes & tires. Vo. mint rood. $2200 C.ills art 6PM. 962 1150 67 Muslunl(. 6 cyl. t'i)l)d . 52200 R-i6"n21 ...,_ goocl ::>ldsmetbi~ 9955 ···•·•·•··········•·•·· 79 Cus tom Supremp brougha m . fu ll y eqwpped, assume lease. consider trade .548 5710 eta.vs. 6i 5-9.'> H eves & wk e nds 9957 ...•••.......•.•..•.•.. 74 P1111n Wu!(on. auto, am 1fm s terl'O 13pe, rack SlSOO/OBO M8 62110. -tymoutti 9960 .•••..•................ '75 PlynDutti Waqon Goud cond. Many xtras Also has a welded on In frnmc class A trailer hllch. offer. t'.111 Sl7 311S2 ,Ofttioc 9965 • ••••••••••••••••••••• 6S Pootla<' GTO. Chcrr inside & out ' Owner must St>ll! Ask111g $1511:> Call 675.-176.1aflu6 µ m. Jlavc something to sell~ Classified &<bdo it w.ell W irninq The Surgeon General Has Determined f nat C1gare11P. Smoking Is Dangerous 10 Your Health . . __ I ' , . 20 ctGARETTES I .. - VANTAGE ULTRA LIGHTS Ultra Low1:ar6 mg ............ , r-· ... -.. ···--·---,----~-----.--....._ ____ .-... __ .,... ___ _ B11ntington Beaeh ' Fountalii Valley EDI TION VOL. 73, NO. 273, 3 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANG E COUNTY. CALI FORNfA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1980 _... __ _.,.,.. '°'our Hometo•·n Dally N••spaper TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Winds Fan 6,000-acre Castaic Fire CASTAJC IAP> l-'1refiah1~ra raced l~ wind today to 1•m conlrol ol a 6,000-acre bru.ahltre naar Caalaic ln lht An,e lea Na Uonal Forest alter subd~int a stubborn 250-artt blate 35 mile~ aouth~ut. The smaller bl H e was brouaht under control al 6 a m. by 4D> firefighters whO r arr led the fire which burned alo ng Pigeoo Rid&e in the San Gabr&t!I Canyon. U.S. Forest Service spollt$man Bob Arady saut Rrady said lht Castalc firt', beh"vl"d t4 havf' bet:n tri11ered by taraet ~hoot~rs In th~ h.111.8, 5hould ~ oontamed by 6 p m to day Th e Ca r~ b~anrn aturday mormnti and brien y threatened the small cornmunit1es or Green Vallt!) a n d La kt! Hughes 20 mi le~ east of Lancaster, but no homes were evacuated and no bu 1l\J10gs burned Iran Called Key Flrt1f1ahtertt orlKanally pre da <'led tht' blue would be con· l~loed by 6 11 rn. today but de- l~y~d it her11use of warnings that IS-25 mph Santa Ana winds were ea~ch .. 'd to pick up this af. ternoon The northeasterly winds ''may or may not have an effect on the fire," Br~dy said. He said In~ Crared photos or the fire !last night showed no "hot spots" or intensely burning areas left in Iraq Would Heed - U.N. Cease-fire BULLETIN UNITED NATIONS (AP> - Iraq told U .N. Seue&ary- Geaeral Kart Waldheim today l& •Hid bffd a Stturtty CoucU call for a cease-fire If lraa abo aareed lo end ttae bostllUies, Iraq'• ambauador to tlae Ualled Natfou Hid. Ttae spokesmu Hid • commmdcatloD bad been received from Iran. 4 Claoires Ni.red BAGHDAD. Iraq <AP) -Iraq claimed fresh territorial gains in southwest Iran today and Iran claimed a sweeping naval vie· tory as both nations seemed un· willing lo heed efforts to negotiate an end to their war. In response to Iraq's proposal for a cease-fire on its terms, Iran's envoy in Moscow offered counter-proposals, including the resignation of Iraq's president Teachers Reject Contract Offers Representatives of the Hunt· inltA>D 8Mcb Union High School Df1trict'1 800 teachers have unani1DOU1ly rejected the multi· pie choice offers by the district, but are requesting a return to the bar1aining table. according to David Chapel, president of the District Educators Association. The district's primary offer equals a 16 percent raise over the next two years, with a fi.rsl year increase of 7 percent. However, the teachers are asking for a one·year contract with a 17 percent raise, im- proved medical benefits and a revised teacher transfer policy. Last week was marked by teacher' pickets before class at Westminster High School and a luncheon sit-in Wednesday in the offtce of Philip Gross, principal of Edisoo High School. But a spokesman for the Edison teachers said their pro- Stock Mart Declines Continuing NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market posted sharp declines among a broad range of iaaues today, continuing last week's slide. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, which tumbled 23.63 points last week, plunged another lS.00 to 924.00 in the first two boun ol tradin1 today. Declines outnumbered ad· vances by an 11·1 margln on the New York Stock Exchange. gram of "minor harassment" of school administrators would cease this week because of ta. district's attempt to settle the contract stalemate. Edison teachers have picketed the campus twice before school in protest of the lack or a con- tract and what they consider to be crowded classrooms. School Board president Doris AlJen claims the district can't of. fer the teachers more money because of budget constra.l.nt.s. But Chapel claims the trustees can juggle the district budget lo provide more cash for salaries. The trustees offered the teachers a choice of four con- tracts. However the teachers were urged to accept an offer of a 7 percent raise the first year (4 percent the first semester and 6 percenti the second). This offer, the district said, would-allow the hiring <ff 20 new teachers to aJ. leviate crowded classroom con- ditions. The contract negotiations cur- rently are being conducted by a state-appointed mediator. Another bargaining session is tentatively set for Oct. 6, a dis· ' trict spokesman said. Nude Heist Suspect Held- GROVETOWN, Ga. <AP) -A naked robbery suspect who jumped fron an ambulance and Oed into the woods was foWld a few hours later sitting under a tree not far away. authorities said. Ernest R. Rivers, 36, of War- renton was recaptured at the Grovetown exit on Interstate 20, near the apol where be escaped, 1aid Jimmy Davia, an a1ent ol lbe Georgia BUJ'eau of lnveatica· lion. and the surrender of its army. Another Iranian envoy said In· dia, a leader of the non-aligned nations. should help end the war. Pakis tani Pres ident Mohammed Zia ul-Haq, heading an Islamic "goodwill" mission, arrived in Baghdad from Tehran, where Iranian Presi- dent Abolbassan Bani-Sadr told him : "We will continue to fight (See MIDEAST, Page A!) Council, Cop Pact Meet Set The Huntington Beach City Council will hold a closed-door session tonight to consider a con· tract with the police ofricen as- soclaUoD amid reportl that I.be two 1ldes are cl.o&eto agl'eement. Optimism for a possible breakthrough surfaced after a four·bour meeting last week between negotiators which was described as the most productive to date. It is understood that the bargaining has boiled down to consideration of a 7 percent reim· bursement by the city to the of· ficers · retirement fund and a five percent pay increase beginning Oct.1. A possible obstacle, a city source said, is the matter of education incentive pay for of· ficers. The incentive program in which officers are paid for attending col· lege courses designed to improve their profes sionalism , was eliminated in the previous negotiations. The 233-member association is coming off a two-year contract that expires Tuesday. Meanwhile, Mayor Ruth Bailey said today that there has been "lots of negative reaction" to a ci · ty hall ruer which invites city employees to make use of a dis· closure bot line to report suspect- ed wrongdoings by city manage- ment and elected officials. The originator of the memo is not identified, but Mrs. Bailey said she believes it may have been distributed by the police assoeia· tion since it was instrumental in setting up the hotline. "I've received lots of com- ments that the employees com· pare the request in the memo to 'Gestapo Tactics'," Mrs. Bailey said. Other city ball sources said workers are displeased in that they feel they have been asked to act as snitches on their superviaors. The unidentified memo declares that the hotline is an im· (See PACT. Pa1e AJ> the fire The Castalc fire in San Fran· cisquit.o Canyon, 50 miles oorth of Los Angeles, was fought by 700 firefighters, including 33 hand crews, along a perimeter or more than 14 miles. They were aided by several heavy air t ankers. U.S. Forest Se rvice spokesman Bruce Bundick said. One firefighter injured by a chain saw was treated and re· leased. Bundick said. Authorities believe the blaze to have been caused by legal target shooting in the forest. "Much of the area which has been consumed has not been burned since we started keeping records," Bundick said. "Someof that brw1h is 70 years old.·· Brush in the area also was ex- tremely dry after a long, rainless summer and the fire was burning over rough terrain. "The combination made it a Mealtime for Nonna.Jean major fire right off the bat.'· Jlun dick s aid. Bundick sa1d nrefighters from various parts of California were brought in to help fight the blaze. The San Gabriel Canyon Cire. 35 miles southeast of the Castaic fire in the sprawling nat.ional forest, started around 2 p.m. Saturday, Bundick said, and was buming chaparral and brush north of the Sa n Gabriel Reservoir. about 25 mi Jes east of Los Angeles . Delty---.G__,A...,_ Young squirre l takes meal from eye- dropper at Irvine Animal Care Center in Laguna Canyon. The squirrel, named "Norma Jean," was about three weeks old when this photo was taken. Kennel attend- ant Mike Igoe cared for her after a woman found the baby squirrel in Irvine and brought her to the shelter. "Norma J ean" since has been released a nd is believed to be living happiJy with other squirrels somewhere in Laguna Canyon. RoDlance Rumors Rout Bendix Aide SOUTIIFIELD. Mach. (AP) - Mary Cunningham has request· ed a leave or absence from Ben- dix Corp. in the wake of gossip that linked the 29-year-old woman's rapid promotions to her friends hip with William Agee. the company's chairman. In a three -page letter ad- dressed to Agee and the com- pany's board. Ms. Cunningham requested an "immediate but Coffee Haul Of Burglars Burglars who apparent- ly are having a tough time staying awake during their nighttime pursuits are believed responsible for the disappearance of numerous three-pound cans of coffee from a Mis· sion Viejo supermarket. Employees of the Alpha Beta al 27142 La Paz Road discovered that an un- determined quantity of the canned coffee was missing from a storage area, ac- cording to investigators. flt.. dark colored car was observed leaving the area about the time the coffee was discovered missing Friday night. te mporary" leave of absence, saying "as a result of media cover age I have received in re· cent days, I have been placed in an impossible situation." News stories appeared after Agee, 42. stood before some 600 Bendix headquarters employees Wednesday and said contrary to rumors within the company, Ms. Cunningham's promotions and influence resulted from her qualifications and not from a personal relationship with him. Promoted Wednesday to vice president for strategic planning, Ms. Cunningham said she didn't know how long she would be gone. ln her letter, Ms . Cunningham said because of "false innuen· does," she has been "rendered ineffective." She said if she re- signed. she would s et a "dangerous precedent" by al- lowing gossip to dictate cor- porate Policy. Agee said Sunday that Ms. Cunningham's request will be granted and that an arrange· ment will be worked out so she can "continue to provide signifi- cant counsel and benefits." Ms. Cunningham, who re· ceived a master's degree In business administration from Harvard, jeined the company in June 1979 as Agee'• executive assistant. Agee was divorced a month ago. Ms. Cunnincham has been separated from her husband for nearly a year. Man Sought In Sexual Aitack in HB Huntington Bea ch police are searching for a man with a New England accent who allegedly abducted a Long Beach woman early Sunday and drove her to a field in the Garden Grove area. where he r aped her and forced her to take part in other sex acts Police said the 31 -year-old wom an was grabbed by the sus- pect at t a.m. as she was walk· i ng to her car near Beach Boulevard and Atlanta Avenue. Tht! victim's hands were tied with a belt before s he was driven from the scene and as· saulted. police said. The suspect was described as a white man in his late 20s with a s tocky build, with shoulder len gth brown hair a nd a moustache. He was said to be driving a newer model da rk brown Ford pickup. ft"eather Tbe market bas been sensitive to ri1in1 1hort·term intere1t rates. Following tbe close of tradin1 Friday, the Federal Reserve reported another sharp iDcreMe in the nation '1 money 1upply, lnCl'eaaiDI concern that lbe Fed would tlabten cred1t and tri•1er turt.her bikes in lnterest rates. Tbe U.S. dollar rose sharply OD world money markets today in apparent reaction to ~ •piraDnC U.S. intenat rates. FBI Honors Dying Hero Patchy early morning fog, otherwise fair, though hazy, through Tuesday. Lows tonjght SS a t the beaches. 60 inland. Highs Tuesday high 705 to lower 80s. INSIDE TODA,. BB Chamber Plans GoU Tournament The Hunt1n1ton Beach Cbamber ol Commer~ trill bold Ill fourtb annual lnvltaUODal IOlf tourumeat T\Mlda1 at lbe • leullft OouDtry Club, aooo Palm · Aft. . Nemtr _, aolfen, loelUlliq ...... ..,,,_..,., •• will beCin , ......,_. a ?!IT 1.m. PTGMldl · ..W be alloe1led to tbe chamber .... ......,,.rpo ••. WASHINGTON (AP) -The FBI bu honored a CallfonUa auto dealer who risked bla life for three yeara u a bureau in· formant to belp .to the ftnt feloDJ coavicttoa of Joe Boa· nano, • orsnrtnct-crtme lnder the bureau bad been pUl"S\dQ& for dec8des. The private ceremony for LouD E. Peten, 48, a former auto dealer in Lodi, wu betel to- daJ in FBI Dlnctor WlWam H. Web1ter'1 office, P'BJ l pohlmiia Roc•rYOUlll latd:-Weblter pnMDted Peten wUb a plaque and read tbe lnacri~ lion which aaJd: "To .Louis E. Peten, who set new 1tandarda of patriodsm, ol aeltleuneu and of valor, with the •raUtude and respect of bis FBI frietadl. '' Pet41n nfmed to accept any pa1meat for bil services. At one point duri.n1 bis undercover work be ell~ bil wile to~ tect her. He allo bad brain 1ur- 1ery recent11., aad b11 been at• ...... tbllD • feaJ' to u ... BoGDaDo. 11, of Pboen.ia, and hll ntDbew. Jm t>IP1Uppt, M, a S.n .leee-eommod&tt.. brabr. were l'ODvicted Sept. 2 in U.S. Dlalrict Court In San JOH of CCJll· -· aplriag to obstruct justice. They were charted with in· lerfertnc with a federal crand jury inveat11ation into the laun· dering of illegally gained f\mda tbroup Bonnano family. buai· nesses in San Jose. In h1I decision, U.S. District Judie William Ineram aaid tape-recordlnp made by Peten of Bonnano and Petera ' testimony lefl ··no room for reuonable doubt" in tbe cue. 8onnam faces UJ> to ftye yean lD pr\lall_ and • ~000 ,.___. aent.endna Oct. a . It •M Im flrlt felony convtc- lion, althoueb authorities say he bu led a life ol crime for more than eo yean, allecedly rtalnc from a p-runner for Al Capone to head d one of New York's five orsanir.ed-crime families. In 1977, Peters was ap· proacbed by Bonanno repreeen- t1 Uve1 who offered him f2 mlWon for hil auto dealenblp. Durtn1 tbe nqotlat.lau. Peten went to tbe FBJ. He wu wind wlt.b a recordiDC device and col· lected taped convenatiOOI with IMDUy 1D11Dben for more lbUl two yean about their scheme to •Bee mo. Pa1• .U> The Ra11U. wirh rwo unru in a rOtb, taler on IM diuuion· IHding 49eu Sunday at An~. See 1tonea Page BJ. latlex L.M • ..,. ... ......... ~ Al ~ CM =·· : .,......_..a ...... M t=s".:.. ·~ .... ,. .a "'.IZ DAILY PILOT HIE ~--JllST BRE~IUNG-........ ---.. Judge Releases Five 111 Mu1iich Boml1ing KARLSRUHE. Weat c;.rmany IAPl An lnve1t.11•Un1 judae today rtlt-Ut'd lhe leaMr and four member:-ol • b9Med neo-Nui 1roup for lack of eviden<'e that they were connec-ttd wlth the dt'adly bomb attark on Munich's Otlto~rfest A sixth unidentified 8u.'ipecl remained In lnvestl1•tory custodr ~odina quffUonlna. a •PG'~man for the (ederal proa ecutor • olftct! said Germui law permlta police to hold &\&# .,_eta .a h<Hlra for que1tionan1 bef~ an lnvettlaaUnl( judce must de>clde wht•lher to release them or file C"h•r1ea Karl Helna Horfmann. '3, a slinboard pa1nter who biles to weu Nui type umforms. Md the five membus of has Military Sport Group Hoffmann wert' talc-n Into c ustOdy •ntr Fnday 'i. bomb bha.st which killed 12, including the all~ged bomt>t-r. and lrajured 213 ('11rfrr 'l 'frd fo Pr••lt_. PHILADELPHIA tAPl A US Justice L>epartment an vestiaallOn into alleKed pnt'e fiiung 1n the phonograph record m duatry was killed tast year alter f>Te5ident Carter m et twice with rompany executives. some of whose firm~ were targeu of the probe. the Ph1ladelph1• Bullelan reported today The newspaper in a copyrighted story disclosed about $250,000 had been C'Ontributed by tndustry executives to Carter's 1976 presidential campaign but "J ustice offi cials said the White Housedidnotimpedethemvesugallon " The probe into possible criminal violations of the Sherman Antitrust Act began before Carter took office and the president was informed about it before he met with the executives Darrdt-ril ('ourit11d119 f 'li-u I ABERDEEN. Scotland (AP) -A West German man try an~ to become the first person to c ross the Atlantic strapped to the outside of an airplane has made it safely from Scotland to the Faeroe Islands, airport officials said today. Jaromir Wagner, a 41-year.old for'!!er ~rmy ski champion from Giessen. West Germany, took off from Aberdeel\,-~cott~nd at midday Sunday in s unny, 45-degree weather, and arnve~ in the Danish islands. about 375 miles to the northwest. Sunday night. of· ficials said. He plans to leave the Faeroe Islands later ~oda~ on l~e SOO-mileflight to Reykjavik. lceland. tbenextstopon his chillytnp to New York. \a1·y ('all.-d l 11prt-pan"ff NEW YORK <AP) -A confidential fleet readiness report rat- ed only six oflhe Navy's 13 aircraft carriers ready for combat this month, The New York Times reported today. The report dated Sept. 15 rated 94 of the Navy's 155 air squadrons as combat-ready while 21 of 82 tactical fighters, at· tack and eledronic warfare squadrons were considered unfit for combat. the Times said. The readiness report also showed the Navy's submarineforce, including both attack and ballistic missile submarines, ready for combat. ('arlt-r M'ot'• l.ilwral l..A1lw'r ,.,,, •• NEW YORK (AP) -President Carter urged a liberal labor union today to "look for the union label" when shopping for a presidential candidate. Vying with Republican challenger Rona.Id Reagan for the sup- port of blue-collar workers, Carter told the staunchly Democratic garment workers union: "I am proud to stand before you as the standard-bearer of the one political party that represents the his- toric concerns of America's working people." JD~2Buri Huntington Probes Fatal Auto Crash Huntington Beach police are investigating ll fier y weekend auto accident that claimed the life of an 18-year-old Anaheim Death Probed Of Football Player, 15 Orange County Corone r 's deputies said today they have not determined the cause of death of a 15-year-old Orange youth who died Saturday morning after col- lapsing during a junior high school football game Friday af. ternoon. Junna Cho. of 2714 E. Serrano Ave .. a running back for Cerro Villa Junior High School, col- lapsed during a game that was being played with Yorba Junior High School. Cho was initially treated at Chapman General Hospital and Children's Hospital of Orange County before being transferred o UC Irvine Medical Center . where he died. Coroner's deputies said an · autopsy would be conducted to determine the cause of death. youth and seriously injured two other teen-agers. Police said Raymond Harold Armstrong was killed when the c ar in which he was riding slammed into a van parked along Pacific Coast Highway near Golden West Street al 3 a.m. Saturday. The dead youth 's brother. David Armstrong,. 16, also a paasenger in the vehicle, re- mained in critical condition to· day al Fountain Valley Com- munity Hospital. The driver of the vehicle, a 16-year·old Huntington Beach youth whose name was withheld by police, was in serious condi- tion today at the s ame hospital. Traffic officer Orva Akin said the 1972 Mazda containing the three youths was eastbound on Pacific Coast Highway at a high rate of speed when it s truck the unoccupied van, which was stopped in a no-parking zone just off the roadway_ Both vehicles burst into flame, he said. According to Akin, the 16· year-old at the wheel was not licensed to drive. Raymond Armstrong, who had been riding in t.be back seat, was pronounced dead at the scene, Akin said. ,.,.... ....... '' MIDEAST • • until the tut •1n1ressor 1s dnven lrom our territory " Neither ••dt1 heeded a resolu Hon adopted unanlmoualy by the U N S«urity Council u llln" for • N'Ht' ftrt', Th~ Tehran Radio quoted the t•o m ma11dcr of thl' l r1rn hm navy H sayhlfl it w1u1 m t:ontrol ot the Stnut of llormu:t, the Persuu1 lh11r's outlet. und addlnl( that fortil~u w 111mc•rc·1ul ships could prot·e~d normally us long as Uwy do not hciad for I rt1qi port.<; lit> wu11 t.fl&eJh .• -ct d:S 'aylng the l ruq1 navy wai. forn•d to see k 11hc ltl'r In porti; of ot hn Persian c; ulr nt1t 10f1:1 Prt':f11Jt-nt Saddam Jlussem ln Iraq th n broadrast Suud:.ay said Iraq would stop fighting if Iran r~l·o.:ruicd I ruq 1 sovereignty over all of the Shau a l-Arab t!SlUary at the head of the gulf, returned to Arab control the three s mall 1s lunds a t the mouth of the gulf , seized by Iran m 1971 and called oU the !JrOpaganda c·a mp 1ugn b y A yato llah ltuholh1h Khomeini and his s up- porters to incite a Mvslem upris - ing against the Iraqi govern- ment Iraq made the same demands last week after escalating border fil!!hting with Iran , and lhe_ lramans rejected them. ttussein said he was ready to negoti ate directly with lran or thrOui!h any third party or in· t e rnat1onal organiza tion to reach a "just and honorable'' settle ment that would r ecognize Iraq's "legitimate a nd historic rights." Iran's ambassador in Moscow. Mohammad Mokri. told a news conference his government might agree to a cease-fire if Hussein resigned. Iraq's army surre ndered, the city of Basra were turned over to Iranian con- trol pending a plebiscite there and Iraq's Kurds were allowed to vote in a refere ndum on whether they wanted autonomy or to join with Iran. The Iranian ambassador to Kuwait, A. Shams Ali, on a mis- sion to New De lhi on behalf or Bani-Sadr, told reporters he would urge I ndian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi to play an active role in ending the war. Violent Man Captured on Drug Charges A shrieking, hallucinating man believed to be under the in- nuence of the hallucinogenic drug PCP was captured in downtown Costa Mesa by police early today and jailed in heavy restraints The victim was t aken into custody after a violent struggle at Park Ave nue and Center Street near the new Casa Bella senior citizens housing project. He was booked into jail as a John Doe. Investigators said today they had no knowledge of his true identity yet, since he was still un~er the influence of the drug but apparently in no physical danger. Patrolman Dale Birney s um· moned backup officers after en· countering the victim, who was crawling a long the sidewalk, scr eaming a nd groaning and begging for help in plucking im- aginary bugs from his body .. The team of officers required Lo capture the alleged PCP user said they were finally forced to use handcuffs around both his wrists and his ankles to get him into the patrol car. "This is real . . . this is real ... " he kept screaming. Investigators noted after the arrest about 1 a.m. that the syn- thetic drug often induces super- human strength and violence in those who take it. OAANOI COAST H F DAILY PILOT 2 Sa/ ari Animals Killed by Cheetahs ~-·­~,H ... ft, ena Publt"'r'r -= mac iivs 1 Cheetahs killed two hoofed animals late Saturday or early Sunday at Irvhfe'a Lion Country Safari after a car rammed several containment gates on the compound, police said today. A SECUarrY GUUD on duty at the wild animal park told police that be waa unaware of anytbin1 out of the or- dinary takin8 place at the.park Saturd•y ni1bt. Irvine police olfic:en were called Sunday morning when aeveral 1ate1 were found broken and a Thompson Gaselle and a llouflon diacovered dead. Gatel are med at lJon Country Safari to separate one IJ'OUP of mlmals from art<JtW. THE ANIMAL COM wu doeed Sunday in or- der to allow repalra to be ade on tbe fences. UoD CAJuntr)' Sal Offtdala told police that six gates were~ 8Dd t repain would coat about seoo. Tbey allO tald the beduled cloeure of tbe park cost about .:ooo lD loll enue. l&VINS E A&B loMin1 for suaped• in c:oonec- Uoa wttb tbe feloQy malicioul mllc:blel. Uml _OMmtry Salart •IM*•woman Renate Graf aaid that the part opened for bullneu today. ' -cc _ ... AP WlrtpN>lo Ida Mintz. 74. of Fort LC:Juderdale, F'la .. approaches the finish Une of the Amenca s Marathon in Chicago. She had never attempted to run a marathon before Sundav. but s h e finished tl m four hours and 45 minutes. · 2 Men Murdered In OC Incidents T wo men were s h<>t :lOd killed Sunday 1n separate tnl'1<Jenb in Anaheim .ind Santa Ana Kamron J ahanPtri 25. v.as killed in a shooting at r, 15 µ m in a home at 228 N Kodiak St in Anaheim , said Police Sgt. Del Wade. Jahaneiri lived with his parents in Orange. said Wade Arrested o n s us pi c ion o f murder was Dwaine L Barnett, 40, who li ved at the Kodiak Street address Harnett was take n t o the pol1C·c head f · rmn Pug•• \ I HERO ... buy up car dealerships lhrou.gh the San Joaquin Valley for the purpose of laundering money from crime enterprises through legitimate businesses . To protect his wife, Marilyn, from violence s hould his role be exposed, Pett!rs divorced her 2'h years ago. They were remarried in California on Saturday. Peters. who wore a bulletproof vest during thP trial, collapsed twice 13!.t s ummer. In July , he underwent brain s urgery for a malignant tumor, and his doc· tors gave him six months lo a year to live. quarters by his attorney at 9 3() p m . said Wade Wade said the two men ap par('ntly were arguing when Jahanein was shot He sard the reason why the men were quar- relinit wasn 't clear . A police s earch of Barnett's home turned up several guns, Wade said Prancisco Perez, 25. was shot in an alley in the 800 block of East Harwood Place in Santa Ana at 2:55 a m. Sunday Police Sgt John Collins said the victim was s hot with a 38-c aliber handgup One suspect ts in custody, but Collins said his name will not be released until more of the in- vestigation is completed. Valley Restaurant Robbed by Bandit A man armed with a pistol robbed t he Central Chin a Restaurant in Fountain Valley Sunday night of $444, police re- PQrted today. The bandit burs t into the restaurant at 16125 Brookhurst Ave .• a bout 8 p.m . and de manded the money from the cash register. Police said the suspect escaped in an older model, tan Volkswagen. Airport To Close 6 Days Air traYelers who normally use John Wayne Airport will be forced to fly from Ontario or Los Angeles international airports Oct. 6 lo 11 because of a SlOO 000 runway resurfacing project' at the Orange County facility. Air California passengers destined to Fres no and Mon- terey will have to catch fights from Los Angeles International while travelers bound for San f'rancisco and other locations m ust catch fhghts at Ontario ln· ternational H ughes A1rwest also 1s lransfernng its Orange County nights to Los Angeles a nd On· tario Hughes will offer t ravelers free champagnf' on its fli ghts durin.R the five-day period. Air California will provide free cof fee to people waiting to e nplane The runway resurfacing proj- ect will not affect Or ange Coun ty operations or Golden West Airlines, a commuter service Private au-planes won 't be af focted either. f 'rom 1•,•u•• I I PACT ... portant aid to promoting good government "fl I!' the rC~l'OnStbility of all employees tu protect the public mtc.>rcst." the memo reads. "We are not lntt>restcd in any informa- tion that rt'lates to a person's private hfc! or anything that can be constd(•red gossip .. Radio Noise Ro1its Birds HOOPESTON, !II. C <\P l -A ' horror" broadcast may havt• SUC l'Ceded whPre shotgun blasts and fir(' hoses failed in attempts to sc::1rc away (housands of starling::. ph..1guing this Central Jlllno1s <.•ommunity The lr><':ll radio s t ation , W It PO. broadc:1~t J ta!Je of a dy ing starling twicl' and bi rds be i;:a11 fl y ing away , an an- nouncer l:lt thl' station said. The station asked l-loopestown's 6.000 res idents to perch their radios outside their homes 1n the hopt: of driving the brrd::. out of town. ··Everybody that called us said that when the birds hear d t he noise. they went crazy," an- nouncer Bud McMa nis said. Pan~) Says U.S. 'Oil Vulne rable' WASHI NGTON (AP> -A House subcommittee investigat- ing emergency energy conserva- tion pla ns has concluded the United States is not ready to deal with a major inte rruption in oil supplies, its chairman said Sunday night. Rep Toby Moffett, D-Conn., chairman of the House Govern- ment Operations' s ubcommittee on environment, energy and nat- ural resources, confirmed the panel's findings would be issued in the form of a 50-page re port. 'Gang' Trial Set PEKING (AP) -A special court has been set up to try the "Gang or four" and six other people on sedition and other charges. a Chine~cial said lodav. - ~~--~~~~~~~~- The Casual Side of Rugby 100% cotton rugby shorts and pants available m colors of red. whtle. khakt. sky blue navy. and gold Also. the classic bar stnpe rugby sh1r1, 1n R poly/cotton blend ' AL SGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644 7030 Monda ' NYSE a.m. (PDT) Pricf>fl COMPOSITE •. • Mondey. S..,fllmbef 29, 1980 H/F OAILY PILOT &1 Sm&ll Business Has Big Burden By JOHN CUNNIFF .. ~ ................ NEW YORK -One of the safest polit.ical positions to :iay ls to stand foursquare . forthrightly. 100 percent , ab10JuteJy behind s ma ll business and, as they say, evel')'t.hins lt stands for. The White House now has a "small business ad· toc•tei" and early this year it threw a huge confe rence on 1mall oualness that produced 60 recommendations , 11 re-JO!uUom and a reaftirmation of goals. The Small Business Administration busily schedules get· totet.hen on small business topics, the latest of which, "A Coeference Qn Small Business and Senior Citizens," was completed in Phoenix last week. In Denver last month the National ~ Governor's Association unanimously committed it&eU to ''cooperation in workine at both s tate and national levels to encourage growt h and develop· \~ ~ ment of small business .·· .. And nothing less than a substantial volume could list all the legislators. mayors and city officials who have oral· eel on their undying devotion to the prin· ciples and accomplish ments of sma ll bwlmess. CUNNI,.,. Wby, then, does s mall business continue lo feel baraased by the very institutions represented by mayors, aovunors. senators and presidents? ONE OBVIOUS ANSWER is that conferences, re· commendations , r esolutions and promises don't of themselves solve problems. Another is that many officials ~m ignorant of small-business needs. And a suspicion also exists tha t perbaps the bureaucracy is somewhat out of control. Two esteemed researchers, Ke nneth W Chilton and Murray L. Weidenbaum , document what seems to be "a naiVe belief on the part of"some governmenn>olicymake r:s and much of the public that the regul atory system is neutral with respect to the size of the business firm ·· In t heir study, for the Center for the Study of Am erican Business. the y say one of the most serious threats to s m all firms is the need to make big capital ex- penditures to meet environmental or safety stand ards. TYPICALLY, THEV SAY, A a sm all company must rel)' on relatively short-term debt lo finance its operations, and this reUance tends to make it a poor candidate for in· creased debt to meet regulatory requirements. To illustrate: I( a big company with access to bond market& borrows Sl m illion for 20 years at 10 percent to meet regulato ry expenditures, its amortization and in· t.el'flt cost.a would be S96.000 a year . The sam e amount of money borrowed by a s mall firm on a lG-year term loan at 15 percent a year would re- quire principal and interest payments of $193,000 a year, or about double that or the larger company THE INCONSISTENCV doesn 't end the re. A small firm, they continue, doesn 't have the same ability to pass along its increased costs Its larger competitor can often do so with only smaU unit price rises "ln olber' words." they say, "capital eacpenditures mandated by government regulation produce artificial 'economies of scale."' And. of course, they make the s maller company even less competitive . Chilton and Weide nbaam go on to document other in· stances of what am ounts to discriminator y regula tion that, they say , involves the very survwal of s mall companies and their entrepeneunal managers. Their findings provide one partial but almost in· c1Japatable an5wer to the question of wha t 's wrong with small business. It is government, the very one run by those presidents. le,Uletors. governo rs and mayors who, you are assured, are fully supportive of small busin esr; You ha ve their word they are. Kraft, LA's Dart Merger Approved CHJCAGO (AP ) Shareholders of Kraft Inc. and Dart Industries Inc. have overwhelmingly approved the merger of the two companies. creating what will be the nation's 27th largest industrial concern. kraft, the giant food-processor, and Dart, a Los Angeles· baaed diversified consumer products concern, will ac· complish the merger approved late last week through a stock s wap. The new company, with 80,000 employees and combined assets o( $4.5 billion , will be known as Dart & Kraft Inc. THE MERGER WAS approved by a margin of 95.8 per. cent by Kraft shareholders voting and 88.6 percent by Dart s barebolders, the companies said. Dart & Kraft will be based in the Ch.Jc ago area out opera, tionaof each unit will re m ain.separate. kraft. wblcb markets cheese, milk products and frozen dessel'U, la based in suburban Glenview. 111. UNDER TERMS OF the merger, each com mon share or Kraft and of Dart win be converted lo a common share of Dart & Kraft Inc. ln .mt.ition, more than a required two-thirds of the out- standing Dart preferred s hares were voted in acceptance of the mercer. Each such share also wm be converted to a shar e of tbe new Dart• Kraft common stock. Gold, Metals Quotations Gold By The A110Cla~ Press . Selec~ world gold prices today: Ln ... : morning fixing $687.25, off $11.50. I rs •r•: afternoon fixing $679.25, off $19.50. Parta: afternoon fixing $675.89, off $8.89. hull.fwt: fixing $686.08, off $12.50. lute:•: '681.00 bid, o(( $18.00; $684.00 asked. New York: Handy & Harman mid-morning $679.25, off tu.so. New Yerk: Engelhard selling price mid·mornin~ '9Tl.25, off $19.50. New Yerlt: Engelhard fabricated gold mid-morning f1Cll.02, olf ., .19. Sff.,er NEW YORK (AP> -Handy & Harman silver today $21.100, imcbanged. EapU.ard silver $21.050, unchanged; fabricated dher, m .155, unchanged . Meta& .Nft YORK (AP> -Spot nonferrous metal prices to- ..,~ , --.... ' r - • CWLYPILOT COMICS I CROSSWORD l MARMADUKE by lracl Andenoft PEANUTS "Mr Snyder you 're supposea to stand up when they play 1he national anthem'" FUNKY WINkERIEAN ™el 60, 11KA KA KA KA l<A KAJ(AJ(.~ KA 'iA t<A KA KOW KOW KOWl.P KCUP l<OWLP ~p :' IA£5l\Jl€W I . ' by Charles M. Schull BIG GEORGE by Virgil P1rtclt by Tom Batiuk by Jeff MacNelly "I hate Mondays." SHOE MOON MULLINS MISS PEACH ~M tv EArl°ING M "-JE Vv Sv11T, '\'\A~C.tA . :Jo ! -CCK ""ICE ?' THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Ferd & Tom Johnson You LEARN .ABOUT LOTS OF MUSCLES you NEVER KNEW You Hf>.D ·· OW!·· by Bil Keane GORDO -rHEFZE'S ANOTHEP ONE by Mell Lazarius I DON'T K.NO"N .. HOW N ICE Mt.AST VOIA l..OOK? DRABBLE 1°0 LUC' 'fo &u'I A 00~ ~ CAHO'/... 1'Ak:( A tW~tR. V\.U~t. 8u1' 11~ 1"~£ ONI.~ ON£ IN 'fllt ~;1'0~t ! flt~( 1'AKE ~ tJl>lt'\&E~ .~1IL ~ tJ7. ~·7 t:JA 11) --- FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE BRR·R COULD you t-\RND ME MY Glf\SSES, ELL"? OR. SMOCK WHY DO you NEED GLq$$E.S 1c; '/00 RE Go1NG BRCK IN lrlE. WRIE~? by Gus Arriola by Kevin Fagan by Lynn Johnston by George Lemont TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE "I'm glad you met Mommy, 'cause I wouldn't like not being here." DENNIS THE MENACE ~ . . JUDGE PARKER J U61LANT OVER l HE rv REPOR'f THA"f THE POLICE HAVE NO CLUE5 IN THE ARMORED CAR HOLDUP. TIM DECIDEf, THAT HE AND JEANNIE Will CELE6P.ATE' It"°'"' fl/. p ou "'-' 1-' 9 -29 TUMBLEWEEDS /50TU t:Rte&- ,LESS AND by Harold Le Ooux l}Y THE WM THAl '!> ONE .., ~TOP \NORI\'\'· OF your.: PROBLEM!> INC,' fHE COP!i JEANNIE! YOU'VE NEVER ARE LOOKIN0 BEEN IN 5llR 1 WHAl I FORTWOMEN SAID AOOUl LOW PROFll E ... NOT A MAN 6'flLL 60E6! ..,,.....,, ANO WOMAN! ''PEAR HIL.PE, ... HAVE: YOU MA~RIECl '«:>tJ~ COW~'{ f'E:AU vn? IN YOUR LAST L.E::mR 'vt?U 5Alt7 HE OWNEl7 1WO MIL.LION cows •... My' Emt:>NESS! ~WT iHEY GET iH~IR t..~HES IANGLEP UP?'' .) DON'T SLURP YOUR SOUP TURN DOWN TH AT RADIO .. "•,' ~ "' by Tom K. Ryan MAMA [70ESN'T K~ ~EANS AiK>UI COWPINCHI~. ' I 1 ! 8 by Ernie Bushmiller ACROSS 52 School Ft 1 Unsorted 54 T a1 llour 58 Swell Br 4 Curved 60 Hindu god- 9 US ski resor1 dess 14 Pen point 61 Irene. el al 15 Of hair 62 Welt 16 Work hard 64 Danger 17 Fancied 66 Red as - 19 Scotch c11y 20 Amerind 21 Knock 22 Min part 23 Warde<ty 24 Stage soen· ery 26 Moccasins 29 Garden tool 31 Hasten 32 Row 33 OHice Clerks 36 Anishes 38 Synthetle language 39 Co:ne forth 41 Tornado 43 Lick 44 P.1 palm 46 Think 47 Stare 49 Louse egg so Tchrs· gp. St Actress Patricia - 67 Chat101 ot ofd 68 Seme 69 Less well 70 Pell 71 Art Lal DOWN 1 Santa - 2 Clocker 3 Decrease 4 Neat as - 5 Japanese coin 6 lr1sh county 7 Otatgla 8 Engravmg method 9 Serpents 10Uses11 broom 11 For each. 2 words UNITED Feature Syndl~te S1tu1day•s Puzzle Solved NA 0 Ill• I LA I I I 0 A, I L 111111 -A T A I AC • I A I I OIT•'I II T •A II CI 0 'I A T-A I I II U II A -l llllC • I II 1 I A L G • A DIAIT 110-••I II I I •Y~ all L-T A L Lii-• 01 ta a A .,! f L 111 ·-llllU I Y I -a T '1-111 ''''• 1111 T ' A I 1 I I L Affll 1- IO Ill I I • I T A I L•A 11 A T I • A I I I I T l•llC 0 11 I I U L U U ' A l•tlT U D I I L I A I I II T•ll l I 1 11 12 Woll down 42 Salt 13 -degrM 45 Democrttun 18 Land ol plen-believer ty 48 FuMfll ora· 24 Foreordain lions 25 Burgundy SJ Lariat 2 words 55 St1dlum 27 Wut Pointer 56 Light ampli- 28 Cache Iler 30 Algerian city 57 Awys 33 Criminal 59 -nolre 34 Counterpart 61 Stc:rete 35 A Finn 62 BINk 37 FIG'et 63 Nigerien 40 Gourmets 65 Knowtec19t - Irvine ED IT ION .. '1our Hon1ecown Dally NewHpap_.r VOL. 73, NO. 273, 3 SECTlONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAL-tF~NIA -MONDA¥, SEPTEMBER 2'~ 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Iraq Claims New Gaihs Condition Told For Cease-fire BAGHDAD. Iraq (API Iraq said today it would agree to a U.N. Security Council call for a cease-fire if Iran also would heed it. There was no immeiliate response from Iran and both countries meanwhile pressed their war efforts. Iraq reported fresh territorial gaibs in southwest Iran. Iran claimed a sweeping naval vie· tory while seeking a role by the non aligned bloc to brin1' about an end to the war Iraq's ambassador to the Unit ed Nations, Salah Om ar Al AJi. disclosed a message from Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to U.N. Secretar y.Gene ral Kurt Waldheim and said Iran would also have to agree to a cease- fire. A U.N. spokesman said the message was being translated into English from the Arabic. 2 Sa/ ari Animals Killed by Cheetahs Cheetahs killed two hoofed animals late Saturday or early Sunday al Irvine's Lion Country Safari after a car rammed several containment gates on the compound, police said today. A SECVlllTY GUARD on duty at the wild animal park told police that be was unaware of anything out of the or- dinary taking place at the park Saturday night. Irvine police officers were called Sunday morning when several gates were found broken and a Thompson Gazelle and a Mouflon discovered dead. Gates are !.ISed at Lion Country Safari to separate one group ol animals from another. · THE ANIMAL COMPOUND was clooed sun"day in or- der to allow repairs to be made on the fences. Lion Countl')""Safari officials told police that she gates were damaged anCi that repairs would cost about $600. They also said the wucheduled closure of the park cost about '6,000 in lost revenue. IRVINE POUCE ARE looking for suspects in connec· lion with the felony malicious mischief. Llon Country Safari spokeswoman Renate Graf said ~at tbe park opened for bualne:u today. $320,000 Jackpot Record Payoff . LAS VEGAS (AP> -A Glen- dale housewife bas woo what was said to be the largest jackpot payoff in history - $320,000 -on her 44th birthday. eyes. she was staring al five 7's. In Las Vegas on a 12-hour fun spree, Myrna Gallelli, a native of Managua, Nicaragua, was down to a handful of silver dollars -about 15 -when she bit the record jackpot at the Flamingo Hilton at 11:45 Satur- day night, a casino spokesman saJd today. Closing her eyes as she pulled the handle, she pleaded, "Please 1ive me something for my birth- day." When she opened her "I didn 't know I won. I thought the machine broke, oecause I was expecting money to come out. "When they told me, I started crying,·· said the mother of two teen-age daughters. She had been playing the machine less than a half hour and put about $100 in it, she said. She and her husband Victorio, a machinist, plan to redecorate their home and spend a vacation in Hawaii with the winnings. The previous record or $315,000 was set May 26 at the Flamingo Hilton by David Jastrebski ol Hartford. Conn. The Security Counril approved unanunously Sunday a resolu- tion calling on Iran and Iraq to stop their fighting In response to an earlier Iraqi proposal for a cease·fire on its terms, Iran offe red counter- proposals and sought the help of India. a leader or the non- aligned nations, to help end the fighting, which enter ed its· eighth day. A •.:goodwill" mission from the Islamic Conference, beaded by Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq and Habib el Chatti of Tunisia, secretary general of the Islamic organization , ar- rived in Baghdad. In Tehran. Iranian President Abolbassan Bani-Sadr bad told the m : "We will continue to fight until the last aggressor is driven from our territory." The Tehran Radio quoted the commander of the Iranian navy as saying it was in control of the Strait or Hormuz. the Persian Gulf's outlet, and adding that foreign commercial ships could proceed normally as long as they do not bead for Iraqi ports. He was quoted as saying the Iraqi navy was forced to seek shelter in ports or other Persian Gulf nations. President Saddam Hussein in Iraq in a broadcast Sunday said Iraq would stop fighting if Iran (See MIDEAST, Page A2) Wayne Airport Flights Nixed Oct. 6 ·to 11 Air travelers who normally use John Wayne Airport will be forced lo fly from Ontario or Los Angeles international airports Oct. 6 lo 11 because of a $100,000 runway resurfacing project at the Orange County facility. Air California passengers destined to Fresno and Mon- terey will have to catch flights from Los Angeles International while travelers bound for San Francisco and other locations must catch flights at Ontario In- ternational. Hughes Airwest also 1s transfe.rring its Orange County flights to Los Angeles and On- tario. Hughes will ofCer travelers free champagne on its flights during the five-day period. Air California will provide free cof- fee to people waiting to enplane. The runway resurfacing proj- ect will not affect Orange Coun- ty operabons of Golden West Airlines, a commuter service. Private airplanes won't be af. fected either. Crane Ii• on itl 1ide on tbe Alton A venue bridp over the Santa Fe railroed tracb ln tbe Irvine lndu1trlal Complex-Ea1t. vaa.n. Allauf, 22, of Carlsbad, WU operat· tn1 t111·enae at t a.m.-..v wblD It Upped over while liftina a piece OI heavy _eq~p­ ment on to the north licle of the bridle where coaatrudioft work la tum, place. Sbe w.. taken to Sacldleback Commwdty Rotpltal with ale11nJurr. /tlealtinae for Nonna .Jean Young squirrel takes meal from eye- dropper at Irvine Animal Care Center in Laguna Canyon. The squirrel, named "Norma Jean," was about three weeks old when this photo was taken. Kennel attend· ant Mike Igoe cared for her after a woman found the baby squirrel in lrvtne and brought her to the shelter. "Nor~a J ean " since has been released and is believed to be living happily with other squirrels somewhere in Laguna Canyon. -------- Firemen Battling Blaze Near Castaic CASTAIC CAP) -Firefighters raced the wind today to gain control of a 6,000-acre brushfire near Castaic in the Angeles Na· tional Forest after subduing a stubborn 250-acre blaze 35 miles southeast. The smaller blaze was brou1bt under control at 6 a.m. by 200 firefighters who circled the fire which burned along Pigeon Ridge in the San Gabrie l Canyon, U.S. Forest Service spokesman Bob Brady said. Brady said the Castaic fire . believed to have been triggered by target shooters in the hills. should be contained by 6 p.m. to- day. The fire ~gan Saturday morning and briefly threatened the small communities of Green Valley and Lake Hughes 20 miles east or Lancaster. but no homes were evacuated and no buildings burned. Firefighters originally pre· dieted the blaze would be con· tained by 6 a. m. today but de· layed it because of warnings that lS-25 mph Santa Ana winds were expected to pick up this af- ternoon. The northeasterly winds "may or may not have· an effect on the fire,.. Brady saJd. He said in· rrared photos or the fire last night showed no "hot spots" or intensely burning areas left in the fire. The Castaic fire in San Fran· cisquito Canyon. 50 miles north of Los Angeles, was fought by 700 firefighters. in cluding 33 hand crews, along a perimeter of more than 14 miles. They Nere aided by several heavy air tankers, U.S. Fores\ Service spokesman Bruce Bundick said. One firefighter inJ.ured by a chain saw was treated and re· leased, Bundick said. Authorities believe the blue to have bee1l camed by legal target shooting in the forest. Harvest Fest Events Slated This Weekend Live entertainment, a five- mile nm, a bot-air balloon, a.rts and crafts booths and a formal dinner-dance at the Registry Hotel are some of the attractions scheduled for this weekend·s Irvine Harvest Festival. The annual event begins Fri- day with the Harvest Moon Ball in the Registry Hotel and the opening of the festival grounds at Heritage Park. More than 30,000 visitor.s are expected to tour a variety of booths that will be set up at the park. Admission to the park will be 75 cents for adults and 25 cents for children. The five-mile run will begin at 8 a. m. Saturday at the corner of Yale and Walnut avenues. Money raised by the festival will be donated to local com· munity groups. For more in- formation call SSl-0356. Mafia Probe Aide .Ex-auto Dealer Honored by FBI • WAStnNGTON CAP) -The FBJ bas honored a CalifornJa auto dealer who risked hia life for three yean as a bureau in- formant to help win the fint felony conviction of Joe Bon- nano. an organized-crime leader the bureau bad been punuing for decades. The private ceremony for Louis E. Peters, 48, a former aulo dealer ln Lodi, was held to- day ln FBJ Director William H. Webster's office, FBI spokesman Roger Youn1 said. Webster presented Peters with a plaque and read tbe lnacrip- tloa wblcb sald: "To Louil E. Peten, who aet_pew standards of palrlotilm, of aelfieaaneu and of valor, wttb the 1-ratitude and respeet ol hla FBI friends." Peters ref\lled to accept any payment lot' bJa .. rvteea. At one polat duria1 hl• undercover work he divorced bi• wife to pro- tect her. He abo bad brain aur- -cery rettntly and-ba& been given less than a year to live. Bonnano, 75, of Pboerux, and his nephew, Jack DiFilippi, 54, a San JOH commodities broker, were convicted Sept. 2 in U.S. District Court in San Jose of coo- spirtn1 to obstruct juatice. They were cbarced with in- terferinc with a federal traod jury invnU,ation into the laun· dertn1 ol illecally gained funds thro\llh Bonnano family busi· ne11ea in San Jose. ln hla decision, U.S. Diltrict Judie Williaqi In1ram aald tape-recordina• made by Peters of Bon nano and Peters ' testimony left "no room for reaaonabledoubt"intbecaae. Boauno facenip to fi.e years ln prilon and a $10,000 fine at leDteadnl Oct. 21. It •• h1I tint felony coavic- Uoa, a1tbouO autboritiea say he bu led a tile ol Hime for men than • yean, all91e41y rll1ns rrom a p -nmner for Al Capone to head ot one of New Yort'1 nve 01'(..Uaed-crime famllles. School Days Start Again At UC Irvine The 16th year of instruction began this morning at UC Irvine as more than 10,000 students streamed into classrooms. About 2.500 students live on campus this year. There will be on-campus housing for another 450 students thla January when construction ia completed on a re- sidence hall being built between the Biological Science and Medical Science buildings. Also scheduled to be complet· ed in January is a large student union near the Administration Building that will be called the University Center. Classes were first held at UCI on Sept. 26, 1965. About 1,589 stu- dents were enrolled that year. The UGI library then contained Hf .000 books. This year the library is to ac- 4uire its one-millionth volume. Irvine Bank Hit for $600 Irvine police officers are searching for s uspects in con- nection with the Friday after- noon robbery of the California First Bank in Irvine. Irvine police Lt. Bob Lennert said this morning that the rob- ber got away with about $600. He said the man had no gun and got the money from a teller by merely asking for it. The robbery occurred about 4 p.m . at the bank branch at 17951 MacArthur Blvd. Coast Weather Patchy early morning fog, otherwise fair, though hazy. through Tuesday. Lows tonight 55 at the beaches, 60 inland. Hlchs Tuesday high 70s to lower 80s .• INSIDIE TODA~ TM Roml, with two wim in a row, talct on tM dividon· leading 4tert Sunda11 at Anahmn. Sn stories Page BJ. l•de"' L.M..... M ........ .. ~ "' ~ CM ~ .. cnw • .. .......... CJ ........... ............... ......... CN .... , '" Cl .v I I I l ,l, ?~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~~~~~~--:~t-~--~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~--~-....~~.....;.•mo~w~~=--==----=-'b~~---l:-9 , DAILY PILOt -Laguna-Se'llools-Want-llookg Pagolfs ( dlt trtct k>tel Sl0.58 per atud~t. By STEVE •ITCHELL OI .. ...._.._ ...... t.aama Bt"a<'h sC'hool lnt!t have oornc UJ> wllh a plan they hope will reph•n1sh fundis lost wht'n parents takt• their kids out of 1chool to ~<1 sk lltl¥ Oy to • Hawaii or Mt"~l(•u, or baL·k f.:ai-1 to vlait grandma But m ordt•r for I hr I n<'tl)' volunteer pro1i1rum 10 "or1'. truste-es siiy. 1ht')1'rt• (lOlng to M~ tht> coopt"ralJoa of parenta who annually talle otr with the kids on v•utlons while achool l• m aeNinn The amall C'hc'liol d•1trlc1 .., l)t'nd11 on still<" funds for much or 11~ bucteN And the lfl»l rations out th~ money bHtod on \ht' num~r of 8tu1t .. nt• tn ~rhool Heb day For each da) • student Ill out on on uneJrw1cd atuu•nce. thc -----Jl'ST BREAl\I c---- J1id{le Re/east>." Fit'e 111 M1i11ich Bo111l1i1lfl KARLSRl'HE W t>~t Gt'rman) I AP > Ao 1nvest1gaung judge today rt>lt'.t!>t'd t ht> leuder 1u11t four memberi:. of a banned neo·Nau group for lu.-k of ev1denre that they were connected with t.he deadly bomb att:ick on Munich's Oktoberft'Sl A sixth un1dc11t1f1ed s uspect remained in tnvesllgalory custody pending Qllf'Slloning . ..s spokesman for the federal pros· erutors offire sa1c! Gt'rntl:lll law permits police to hold s us· peels 48 hours for quest1orung before an investtgatmg Judge must decide whether to rele~e them or rile charges Karl-Ht>1nz HofCman n. 43, a s ignboard painter who Likes to wear Nazi t~ pe uniforms . and the five members of his Mtbtary Sport Group Hoffmann were taken into r usto<ly after Friday's bomb blast wh ich ktlled 12, including the alleged bomber. and injured 213. luot•fHtdo ('lm1iu9 :! Plmu." HELENA. Mont !A Pl The Anaronda Copper Co. an- nounC'ed toda) that 1t is s uspending operations indefinitely al its smelter in Anaconda and its copper refil\ery-<1t GTe1lt F-aHs. About 1,500 emplo)ees will losP their JO~s. Anaconda ·s mining and mllhng operations in Butte will not be affe<'ted Thos e will rontinuc. pending settlement of a strike. Prel>tdent ,J arnPs M arv10 !>aid the company evaluated federal and stall' environmental and health standards and con- cluded that tht· existing smeltn in Anaconda cannot be retrofitted to meet the standards and stall be econom1rally com· pct1the f)nrf#df#ril (out in uiug 1:1;g111 ABERDEEN, Scotland 1APJ ,\West German man trying to become the first person to cross the Atlantic strlJl>ped to the outside oi an airplane has made it safely from Scotland to the Faeroe Islands, airport officials said today. J aromir Wagner. a 41 -year·old for mer army ski champion from Giessen. West Germ any, took off from Aberdeen. Scotland at midday Sunday in sunny. 45-degree weather, and arrived in the Danish islands. ahout 375 miles to the northwest. Sunday night of- ficials said. He 1llans to leave the Faeroe Islands later today on°the 500-mile fli ght to Reykjavik. Iceland. the next s top on his chilly trip to New York DENIES RUMORS Wiiiiam Agee ... ~ ......... GOSSIP TARGET Mary Cunningham Romance RllDlors Rout Bendix Aide SOUTHFIELD, Mich. (AP> - Mary Cunningham has request· ed a leave of absence from Ben dix Corp. in the wake of gossip that linked the 29-year-old woman's rapid promotions lo her friendship with William Agee. the company's chairman. In a three-page letter ad- dressed to Agee and the com- pany's board, Ms. Cunningham requested an "immediate but ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ft~• OrM"Qt Coait O•lly Poot """'' wf\1cn ,, (Of'l'ID•'""° Uw Nt•\ P,n, ... l>\IOlt\Md ,,, '""' o,.~ .. 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H IO •t (•\ti Mt--.~. ~-IUS~ , .. eotll '"°""'"-•1 t-~~n::::s.:i.~~ '° -..... temporary" leave of absence. saying "as a result of media coverage I have received in re- cent days, I have been placed in an impossible situation." News stories appeared after Agee, 42, stood before some 600 Bendix headquarters employees Wednesday and said contrary lo r umors within the company, Ms. Cunningham's promotions and influence resulted from her qualifications and not from a personal relationship with him. Promoted Wednesday to vice president for strategic planning, Ms. Cunningham said she didn't know how long she would be ~one. In her letter, Ms. Cunningham said because of "false innuen· does." she has been "rendered ineffective." She said if she re- s igned, s he would set a "dangerous precedent" by al- lowing gossip to dictate cor- porate policy. Agee said Sunday that Ms. Cunningham's request will be granted and that an arrange· ment will be worked out so she can "continue to provide signifi- cant counsel and benefits." Blaze Probed LOS ANGELES CAP> Authorities are invealicalin& the cauae ol a ~.ooo fire ln the two-story Naval Reserve build· in1 in Elysian Park that killed a 24-year-old tlreflabter and in- jured tour otben. Tbe vtct.lm w u identified aa Fraak Hotchkin orNewl)ury Park. That m~ana when Mom and Dad pull Johnny out for a week on tbe alopea at Aspen, \he dll· trtct IOMI nearly SSS. Trualeee want pucnta to con· tlder 1lvln1 M donation to lbe dhstru:t ol Sl0.51 for each day a student ltl iaway from school on an uneacused ablence. Ol1trkt Superintendent Or Robtlrt S.nchl~ $MYli the dlatrict Cuban Refugees Nabbed Three Cuban refugees were taken Ullo custody by the U.S. Border Patrol Sunday after they allegedly tried to race past the San Onofre checkpoint with four Me xican nationals in the car trunk. Border Patrol officer John Wesson said the Cubans were apprehended just north or the checkpoint after the driver of the car drove at high speed through the truck scales lo the right of the roadway and back onto the San Diego Freeway. Reportedly officers found the four illegal aliens in the trunk of the car , driven by Manuel Sanchea Fuente . ZJ, Who-along with his Cuban passengers, Mer cy Bode Gomez, 36, and Olayo J.ustiz Cardenas, 35, who enleredthiscountrY in May. The three Cubans are said to be residents of Chula Vista and list their address as being at 20i3 Otay Valley Road. Wesson said the four Mexican citizens, found at 3:30 a.m .. told border patrol officers each had paid a man in Tijuana $250 to be smuggled into Los Angeles. The four men said the man had taken them across the border and brought them to a parking lot in Chula Vista where they met the three Cubans. Just south of the San Onofre checkpoint, the four Mexican na· tionals reportedly were told to get into the trUnk of the car. where they were later found. Wesson said Fuentez. Gomez and Cardenas hav e been charged with trans porting il- legal aliens, which is a felony. If convicted, Wesson said the Cubans could serve three-year te rms in prison for each of the four aliens. Reportedly the three Cubans are still in custody. Jogger Fails To Outrun Train, Injured A 26· year-old San Juan Capistrano man who almost suc- cessfulty outdistanced an Am· lrak train was injured Saturday evening when he was struck in the shoulder, according to an Orange County Sheriff's Depart- ment spokesman. Lt. Wyatt Hart said Michael James Mack was jogging along railroad tracks near a bridge across San Juan Creek when he saw the approaching train. Hart said Mack broke into a run hoping to get off the bridge before the train caught up with him. Mack received initial treat· ment for the shoulder injury from the Orange County Fire Department paramedics before being taken to San Clemente General Hospital. Amtrak officials said today that their crew didn't see Mack and that the train continued on its way. , Pilot Strike In Fifth Day SAN DIEGO (AP> -No talks were scheduled between striking pilots and Pacific Southwest Airlines as the walkout went into its fifth day today and the state's air commuter traffic Jam be1an lo abate, according to a PSA spokesman. The second strike In the 31· year-old airline's history was costin1 the company Sl million a day in loet puaen1er Income u the 22,000 air travelers PSA normally carries each day used autos and found apace on other carrien, PSA •POl&ffman Duane Youn1bar Hid Sunday. About 500 filota and nt1ht en1ineer11 o the SouthwHt FU1bt Crew Msoc:latlon walked out Thunday at 12:01 1.m. ~ then, PSA hu laid off 1,aoo to 3,700 employees, Youn1bar sakt. But he noted that revenue. from PSA 1ubsldlarl11 auob 11 charter nights, fuel Hlff, jet maintenance and pilot fll1bt school -ph11 reduced cOlta - would keep the a1rbn• op91'at- 1n1. • l0tt near $45,000 last year due to une•cua~ abtencea. He aa.ys that, conalderinl the district's nnan~lal attuaUon, that amounta toebwMUe. The small school district hu been hurt financially by Propo.i- Uon 13, dedinjng student enroll- ment and the equallzlna effecta of the Serrano· Priest state Supreme Court decision. In the past two years. trustees have been forced to cut more than 91 milllon from the bud1et. Last year the school district began charging parents to bu.s children to school. Now the district is asking puent.s to pay up when they take the kids out of school for mid-year vacations. Sanchis said the only other school district he knows of that asks for such voluntary con· Ad Misleading Reagan Signs 'Wrong Bill' LOS ANGELES (AP) -A TV commercial purporting to show Ronald Reagan cutting Calif9mia taxes with a stroke of a pen may actually show the former governor signing a bill liberalizing state abortion laws, says a co-author of the abortion bill The abortion bill, which the Republican presidential nominee has taken pains to say he regrets signing, is not men- tioned in the commercial. The ad, instead, tells how Reagan cut taxes while governor. The commercial, which has been running on nationwide television since Sept. 10, shows a brief story of Reagan's life. beginning with his childhood and covering his career as head of the Screen Actors' Guild and as governor. As the ad's narrator tells of the tax cut, Reagan gets up from his chair, smiles and shakes hands with two legislators, former state senator and now U.S. Rep. Anthony C. Beilenson, 0 -Los Angeles, and former Republican Assemblyman W. Craig Biddle of Riverside. The two were authors of California's liberalized abortion bill that Reaggan signed June 15, 1967, about six months after taking office. Reagan now is a strong oppon~nt_qf abortion. Death Probed Of Football Player, 15 Orange County Cor oner 's deputies said today they have not dete rmined the cause of death of a 15-year-old Orange youth who died Saturday morning after col· lapsing during a junior high school football game Friday af. ternoon. Junna Cho, of 2714 E. Serrano Ave ., a running back for Cerro Villa Junior High School. col· lapsed during a game that was being played with Yorba Junior High School. Cho was initialJy treated at Chapman General Hospital and Children's Hospital of Orange County before being transferred to UC Irvine Medical Center, where he died. Coroner's deputies said an autopsy would be conducted to determine the cause of death. Actor Vnions Okay Pact HOLLYWOOD (AP) -West Coast leaders of two striking ac- tors unions re com mended ap- prov al of a controversial new three-year contract with film-TV producers, signaling a possible end to the 70-day walkout and a Limited return to production on the long-delayed fall TV season. The western boards of the Screen Actors Guild and the American Fed e ration of Television and Radio Artists recommended passage at a meet- ing here Saturday. and their eastern counterparts were to con- sider the proposal in New York to- day. But while the eastern boards are considered likely to approve the contract, it will take another two to three weeks for actors to vote on the proposal. and there will not be a general return to work in the interim. The Casual Side ol Rugby MIDEAST • • recognized Iraqi sovereignty over all of the Shatt al·Arab estuary at the head of the gulf, returned to Arab control the tt{ree small islands at the mouth of the gulf, seized by Iran in 1971 and called off the propaganda ca mpa ign by A ya tollah Ruhollah Khomeini and his sup· porters to incite a Moslem upris· ing against the Iraqi govern· ment. Iraq made the same demands la s t week after escalating border fighting with Iran, and the Iranians rejected them ttussein sald he was ready to negotiate directly with Iran or throu~h any third party or in· t e rnational organization to reach a "just and honorable" settlement that would recognize Iraq's "legitimate and his toric rights." Iran's ambassador in Moscow, Mohammad Mokri, told a news conference his government might agree lo a cease-fire if Hussein resigned, Iraq's army s urrendered, the city of Basra were turned over to Iranian con- trol pending a plebiscite there and Iraq's Kurds were allowed to vote in a referendum on whether they wanted a utonomy or to join with Iran. The Iranian ambassador to Kuwait, A. Shams Ali, on a mis- sion to New Delhi on behalf of Bani-Sadr. told reporters he would urge Indian Prime Minister Indiu Gandhi to play an active role in ending the war. Marijuana ~eized SAN LUIS OBISPO (AP) - One man was arrested and 56 marijuana plants valued at $30,000 were seized on the Ran- dolph Hearst Ranch in San Si- meon. sheriff's deputies said. Peter Edward Allen, 25, of San Simeon was arrested for in· vestigation of possession of hashish and marijuana. 100% conon rugby shorts and pants. available in colors of red, white. khaki. sky blue. navy. and gold. AISo. the classlc bar sltipe rugby shirt, in a poly/cotton blend. tributlons is the San Marino Unltled School District. "They're facing the same budget problems we are,·· He said he doesn't know huw parentB will react to the volun· tary program, "but we're sure hoping f a m il i es will participate." And, he said, "It is our un derstanding that such donations would be tax deductible." Man Held After Struggle A shrieking, hallucinating man believed lo be under the in· rtuence of the hallucinogenic drug PCP was ca ptured in downtown Costa Mesa by police early today and jailed in heavy restraints. The victim was ta ken into custody after a violent struggle at Park Avenue a nd Center Street near the new Casa Bella · senior citizens housing project. He was booked into jail as a John Doe. Investigators saJd today they had no knowledge of his true identity yet.., .since he was stITI under the influence of the drug but apparently an no physical danger Patrolman Dale Birney sum. moned backup offi cers after en· countering the victim. who was crawling along the sidewalk. screaming and groaning and begging for help in plucking im· aginary bugs from his body The team of offi cers required to capture the alleged PCP user said they were finally forced to use handcuffs a round both his wrists and his ankles to get him into the patrol car. 1> "This is real . this 1s real • " he kept screaming. In vest1gators noted after the arrest about l a.m. that the syn - thetic drug often induces super. hum an strength and vtolenre in those who lake it Stock Mart Decli1ies Continuing NEW YORK (AP ) -The st oc k market posted sharp declines among a broad range of issues today. conti nuing last week ·s slide. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks. which tumbled 23.63 points last week. plunged another 14.67 to 925.43 after the first fi ve hours of trading today. Declines outnumber ed ad· vances by an 11·1 margin on the New York Stock Exchange. The market has been sensitive to rising short-term interest . rates. Following the close of trading Friday, the Federal Reserve reported another sharp increase in the nation's money supply, increasing concern that the Fed would tighten credit and trigger further bikes in interest rates. Iranian Arrested PLACERVILLE I APl -A 34-year-old Iranian national has been arrested on charges of set- ting five forest fires in the Kybun area. AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 6 44-7030 . Laguna/South-Coast Your Hometown DallyNew11Jpap••r EDITION VOL 73, NO. 273, 3 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDA'l, SEPTEMBER 29,J980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Laguna Schools Want Hooky.Payoffs BJ ~BVE KIT('Hlt.1. OI .......... ._ La1una Beach acbool truaten have come up with • plan lhty bope will replenish fundl mt wben parent.I take thtir kids out of 1cbool to 10 skiina. ny t.u Hawaii or Mexico. or back Eut to vl1lt Vandma. But ln order for the stricUy volunteer pro1rarn to work. tn&1tees say. lbey 're goin1 to need t.M COOpe!rauon of panmll who annually take off with \he Inch on vacaliOOJI while school LI tn Sedton The small !oi<'hool dl1\rict de· peoda on state funds for much of '"' budtet And tht-state raUon1 out the money based on the number of students in school each day For each day a student is out on an unexrused absence, the .. Iraq Claims New Gains dtatrlc-t ~ tlO.Si ~r student. That meana when Mom and Dad pull Johnny out for a week on lht' 1~1 al Aspen. the dis· lrlct lOlet nearly $M. Trualeell want parents to con- 111der etvln1 a donation tQ the district ol tl0.58 for each day a student is away from school on an unexcused absence District Superintendent Dr. Robert Sanctua says the district lost near $45,000 last year due to unexcused absences. He says that, conaiderlng the district's financial situation. that a mounts to a bundle. The small school district has been hurt financially by Proposl· lion 13, declining student enroll· ment and the equalizing effects of the Serrano-Priest state Supreme Court decision. In the past two years. trustees have been forced to cut more than 91 million from the budtel. Laat year the school district began charging parents to bus children to school. Now the district is asking parents to pay up when they take the kids out of school for mid-year vacations. Sanchls said the only other school district he knows of that asks for such voluntary con· tributions is the Sal\ Marino Unified School District. "They're facing the same budget problems we are ,'' He said he doesn •t know how parents will react to the volun· tary program. "but we're sure hoping famili es will participate.·' And, he said, "It is our un- derstanding that such donations would be tax deductible." Condition Told For Cease-fire - BAGHDAD. Iraq {AP> -Iraq said today it would agree to a U .N. Security Council call for a cease-fire if Iran also would heed it. There was oo immediate response from Iran and both countries meanwhile pressed their war efforts. Iraq reported fresh territorial gains in southwest Iran. Iran claimed a sweeping naval vic- tory wbile seeking a role by the non-aligned bloc to bring about an end tothe war. Iraq'• ambassador to the Unit- ed Nat.iooa, Salab Omar Al·Ali. di.lcloeed a message from Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to U .N. Secretary.General Kurt Waldbeim and said Iran would also have to agree to a cease· fire. A U.N. spokesman said the messqe was being tranalated into Enalish from the Arabic. The Security Council approved uoanimo..ly Sunday a resolu· Uon c~ oo Iran and luq to -stop their fi1hting. In rea~ to an earlier IJ'aqi propoNI for a cease-fire on ltl terms, lran offered counter· pl'Opoula and sought the help of India, a leader of tbe non- ·, .... , ... llAN -"" ..... "'-..... ~ APW ........ HOl.,SPOTS DENOTED c. ... n ... N••rlno? aligned nations, to help end the righting, which enter ed its eighth day. A "goodwill" mission from the Islamic Conference, beaded by Pakistani President Mohammed Zia ul-Haq and Habib el Cbatli of Tunisia, secretary general ol the lslamie-orcanization, ar· rived ln Baghdad. In Tehran, Iranian President Abolbauan Bani-Sadr bad told them: "We will continue to fight until the last aggressor is driven from our territory." Tbe Tehran RadJo quoted the commander of the Iranian navy as saying it was in control ol the Strait of Hormuz, the Persian Gulf's outlet, and adding that foreign CO)'Dmercial ships could proceed normally as long as they do not bead for Iraqi ports. ~ He was quoted as saying the Iraqi navy was forced to seek shelter in ports or other Persian Gulf nations. President Saddam Hussein in Iraq in a broadcut Sunday said Iraq would stop fighting if Iran recognized Iraqi sovereignty over all of the Shatt al-Arab estuary at the head of the gulf, returned to Arab control the three small Wands at the mouth of the gulf, seued by Iran in 1971 and called off lbe propaganda campaign by Ayatollah Ruhollab Kbomein.i and bis sup- port.en to incite a Moelem upris· ing against the Iraqi govern- ment. Iraq made the same demands last week after escalaUng border fighting with Iran, and tb~_ lranians rejected them. Mealtime for No1•nm.Jem1 Young squirrel takes meaJ from eye- dropper al Irvine Animal Care Center in Laguna Canyon. The squirrel, named "Norma Jean." was about three weeks old when this photo was taken. Kennel attend- ant Mike Igoe cared for her after a woman found the baby squirrel in Irvine and brought her to the shelter. "Norma Jean" since has been released and is believed to be living happily with other squirrels somewhere in Laguna Canyon. Sclwol Days San CleJDente Sued . Start Again Laguna Reactions To Ne-w Plan Mixed Stock Mart Declines Continuing For $ 10 Million A!. ~~,.~':~.~!uoo began this morning at UC Irvine Laguna Beach City Council members ha ve olfered mixed re· actions to plans by the Irvine Company to build l,465 homes and a 36-bole golf course in Laguna Canyon. Seven property owners who claim a landslide June 13 affect· ed their homes about a block above San Clemente City HaJJ. have filed lawsuits totalling nearly $10 million against the city. The residents blame the city for improper land development, en1ineeriq, issuing of building permita, and soil testing in their claims filed earlier trus month with the city. Claims amounting to $2.3 million were ftled by Tony and Brenda Baumgartner. whose home at 103 Calle Patricia was the most affected by the landslide. The Baumgartners claim the city improperly zoned their lot, located at the base of a 200-foot-hlp ak>pe, and failed to issue appropriate grading and con· atruction permit.I to the family when they build their home three yean ago. The slide. in which 30,000 yard1 of earth slid down the alope an d Into the . Baumaartnen' back yard, also heavily dama1ed an adjacent Coffee Haul Of Burglars Bur1lan wbo apparent- ly are bavina a toqb time 1ta7in1 awake durin1 tbeir DiabtUme punuita are believed respouible for tba dlNppearwe of numeroua tbree·pouad cau ol colfee rrom a Ills· 16on Vielo 1upermarket. Em]Jloyees of tbe Alpha a.ta a ma La Paa Road dlacovend that H UD· determined cauaattt7 of the e....-~wamiAIDa from a ............ AC· eonlbll to taftltipton. A dart: ealar'9d eat wu •• ,,... ... rial tbe arwa about tM tlme tbe con .. waa di8covered mlniDI f'rtdaJatOt. home owned by Peter and Margaret Linnebach oo South La Esperanza, who are seeking a total ol $2.S million. Three other property owners who live on the slope above the two damaged homes. claim the city approved construction of the Baumgartner house without complying with the city's exist- ing building codes. They s ay the s li de was prompted by removal of material at the base of the slope, thus threatening their houses above. Those claimants. wboae clims total $15 million, are William McCoy. Daniel Boosing and Lester Simoo, all of whom live on A venida Arlena at the top of the slide mass. In addition, two other resi- dents on Calle Patricia claim the slide bu resulted in total loss of their property values. Eugene Roderick and Wayne Cote, who live across the street from the Baumgartners. did not set a damage total in their claims. Council members are expect- ed to routinely deny the clahm when they meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. in c00ncil cbamben. Woman Injured In Viejo Crash A llltalon Viejo woman re· mal.DI in aerioua coadltloa at Jlla- 1loa Community Holpltal after her •mall sedan and a pickup t.ruck collided bead-on. Valerie Dee Keek 21, of Illa· 1ton Viejo wu in the lntemift care Wilt of the lltaaloo Viejo bolpltal today followtna the Sun- day clWb at llarsarlte Parkw•Y and Calixto. lobn JOMpb lloU, 18, "'San ClemllM, clrlverof tbetru:!d wu DGt l!UW'ed in 'the crub, tbe Callfonia lllpway Patrol •ald tM acddmt ta under lnffltiaa-Uoa. as more than 10,000 students streamed into classrooms. About 2,500 students live on campus this year. There will be on-campus housing for another 450 student.a this January when construction is completed on a re· sidence ball being built between the Biological Science and Medical Science buildings. Also scheduled to be complet- ed in January I! a large student union near the Administration Building that will be called the University Center. Classes were first held at UCI on Sept. 26, l965. About 1,589 stu· dents were enrolled that year. The UCI library then contained 100.000 books. This year the library is to ac· quire its one-millionth volume. The plan. which also calls for a 300-room inn and clubhouse, restaurant. and golf-oriented re· tail shops. would replace a joint proposal with the City of Laguna Beach that was ruled out earlier this year. Mayor Wayne Baglin said he supported the company's utiliza. lion of their property. "l'm glad they are able to devote ~s much land to a golf cour:Je as they are.·· The new Irvine plan does not. in· elude realignment of Laguna Canyon Road as did the joint plant which is fine with Baglin. "I don't see a need for realign- ment of the road." he said. "I would want widening of the e.xist- ing road and a median.'• Councilman Howard Dawson said the original joint plan -with a realigned c~yon road -would 2 Sa/ ari Anima/,s Killed by Clwl!tahs Cheetahs killed two hoofed animals late Saturday or early Sunday at Irvine's Uon Country Safari after a car rammed 1everal containment gates on lbe compound, police aaid today. A 8EC1JRnY GUARD on duty at the wild animal park told pc>Uce that be waa unaware of anythln1 out of the or- dinary tatinC place at the part Saturday night. Irvine police offlcen were called Sunday morning ~ben aeveral 1ates were found broken and a Thompson Gaulle and a MCKllJon diJcovered dead. Galea are \med at Uon CounlrJ Safari to separate one rroup of animal.I from another. THE ANlllAL COMPOUND wu closed Sunday in or- der to allow repatn to be mlde oa the fences. LloD Country Safari offtciall told police tbat six 1ates were damapd ud tbat repairs would COit about teOO. 'l'bey mo laid tbe unacbeduled cloeure ol the park COit about 91.000 ID lost revenue. • . IRVINS POLICE AaB lookiAI for smpecta in CODIMC· Uon witb tbe felonJ maUcku mllcDlef. Uon Country Safari apok•woman Renate Graf said that tbe park opened for bullneu today. "' h ave helped the city solve problems with flood control and improve safety on the road. "I fell that those were the greatest benefits that could ever accrue to Laguna Beach," he said. ·'Th.is is the second best choice from the standpoint of Laguna and the lrvilfe Company. "Since we've done ourselves out of a hotel, golf headquarters and golf club which would have produced revenue, now we have no economic rationale for doing anything (with the city's s22.acre Sycamore Hills property nearby)." "So. we're just stuck with our white elephant." "I thought that the newly elect- ed council majority sawed a limb off behind us as far as economic feasibility is concerned," Dawson said. Councilman Kelly Boyd also said the city would be missing out (See PIAN, Page AZ) Jogger Fails To Outrun Train, Injured . A 26-year-old San Juan Capistrano man who almost suc- cessfully outdhtanced an Am· trak train wu injured Saturday evening when he wu struck in the shoulder, accordln1 to an Oran1e County Sheriff's Depart- ment spokesman. Lt. Wyatt Hart said Michael James Mack wu jo&linl along railro.d t.racb near a bridae acrou San Juan Creek when he aaw lbe approachin1 traln. Hart aafd Mack broke into a run bopin8 to 1et off the bridge before tbe train causbt up with him. Mack received initial treat· ment for the 1boulder (Qjury from the Oraqe County Flre Depart.meat paramedic• before belna taken to Su Clemente Geoeral Holpltal. Amtrak officials aaid today tbat tbelr crew didn't see Mack and that lbe train conUnued on ita way. NEW YORK (AP ) -The s tock market post ed sha rp declines among a broad range of issues today , continuing last week's slide. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks . which tumbled 23.63 points last week, plunged another 14. 76 to 925.34 after the first four hours of trading today. Declines outnum be r ed ad- vances by an 11·1 margin on the New York Stock Exchange. The market has been sensitive to rising short-term interest rates. Following the close ol trading Friday, the Fede ral Reserve reported another sharp increase in the nation's money supply. increasing concern that the Fed would tighten credit and trigger further hikes in interest rates. The U.S. dollar rose sharply on world money markets today in apparent re action t o the spiraling U.S. interest rates. Coasr ~ Weather Patchy early morning fog, otherwise fair, though hazy. through Tuesday. Lows tonight SS -.at the beaches. 60 inland. Highs Tuesday high 70s to lower 80s. INSIDE TODA l' The Rarru, with two wiru '" a row. take on the divilion· leading 49trs Sunda11 at Anaheim. Stt atoriea Page BJ. . ..... L.M.ee.-M ......... c........ Al C--.. CM c.Mtct .. er.a•• • ........ Cl ........ M .... -~ ~ CW ......... Cl ---·----____ ...__,...,.__,. I' - ~--J V T BREAKING---.... J11<lge Releas s Five ,,, 11111i<~l1 Bombit'I{ ~.\l{l,.,!U Ill'.: W • t licnnllJl.)' t.u>l An invcst.l1allftg JlllflCl' tu.fo\ rt•t. .. 11<t·,t tht> leud.-r •nd rour mernMra of • bannt'd rwo ~.u1 .:ruu11 fur 1.it•k 1•f e\11denC'e lhat th .. y wert" ronnerted "Ith tl1t•\lt•JJh h,1111 h allJC'k un Mum<"h's O.toberf .. st A :-"lb un1Jt•nt1f1t•d "'L'SJ)t'<'l rtm•ln~ 1n 1nve11tl1•tory l'USt<xl) J1''ttli1 nt: qut"!\llonln~ a spoke man for lht" f~eral pros ef utor'11 11ffil't' '¢U1d <~erm an law pt'rmits pollre w hold 11us 1wc·1:-. 18 hou~ fur quc-:suorung ~fo~ tan in vest1gat1n1 judge mu .. 1 rh.•,•11lt• "ht'lht•t lo rr l.. e them or file rhnrat~ "..irl l k 1tll lluCf111ann ~. a s ignboard p•anter who libs Lo wt•.u 'll11t1 I \ lk' 11111form1'. and tht> (1vt' memtN-r11 of h111 Military ~purl ~111up llufrmttnn \H•n• taken Into l·Ulllody •ftt"r l''ndiay'11 buml.t 1>.l.luLwhwh k.ilh•tl 12.. uwludmg lhe all~l(etl bomber. aud llljlll l'd 21.1 ( ·o ,., ••r l 'i1•fl 1 u 1• roh•• t'lllL1\IH!l.l'lll \ u \Pl r\ ll S Ju ... uc•t> r>ep;u•tmenl in \'t•st1~at11111 1mo a llej(cJ pril't fl'<tn~ In lhe phonograph rt:cord in dU'>lf) \ti ..t~ lt.lllt•d l.i't \ 1•Jr ,1Jtt-r rre:.1dent <'arter ffif't lWl('t" with rompJn) t'll.e1·ul 1H'' 'otn.-of whOSt' firms were targeL"i of lh" probe the Ph1IJd ·lph1J Uulh'tin repclrted toda)' The nt'\\1>l•ll Pl'r in J ,·up> nf:!hted story disclosed about S~0 .000 had bct•n ,·ont11nute<l b~ rnc1ust r> exe<'ullves lo Carter's 1976 pr~Ldenual c um1hugn but Justice 0Chc1als said the Wh1te- Hou edtd not tm}k'tk the 1nvesHgat1on .. The probe into r~>:.s1ble criminal v1olat1ons of the Sherman AntitrlL'\l A<·t bt•gan before Carter took office and the president w:ts infornH•ll about 11 before he met with the exerutives. fl(lt•••dv.-il ( 0111 iuuiug l 'liglll ABERDEl!:N. Sc·otland 1API A West German man l rymg to become the f1r:.t pl'rson tu cross the Atlantic strapped to the outside of an ;urplane has m;.1dc 1l safely from Scotland to the Faeroe Is lands. airport offi,·1 ab ~a 1d today. J aromir \\ Jgner, a 41-year-old former army ski champion from G1essen. West Germa ny, took o(ffrom Aberdeen, Scotland at m idday Sunda.' m sunny , 45·degree weather , and a rrived in the Danish islands . about 375 miles to the northwest. Sunday night. of· fic1als sa1d. Ht> plans to leave the Faeroe Islands later today on the 500 m ile flight to HeykJavrk, Iceland. the next stop on his chilly trip to.Ne" York DENIES RUMORS Wllllam Agee ·~-.......... GOSSIP TARGET Mary Cunningham Roinance Rmnors Rout Bendix Aide . SOUTHFIELD. Mich. !AP> - Mar y Cunningham has request· ed a leave of ab~ence from Ben· dix Corp. in the wake of gossip that linked the 2!1 year old woman's rapid promotion:. to her friendshi p with William Agee. the company's chairman. In a t hree page letter ad· dressed to <\gee and the com- pa ny's board. M s. Cunnmgham req uested an "1mme,.t1ate but temporary" lcctvc of absence, sa) ing "as a result of mcdJa coveral!e I have receivt'd in re· cent days, I have heen placed m an im possible s1tuat1on · News stories appearef1 after Agee. '12, stood before some liOO Rend1 x hf'adquartrrs employees Wednesday and s~11d contrary to rumors within the company, Ms Cunningham's r'romot1ons and i nfluence r<'s ul led fro m he r qu alifications and not from a personal relationship with him. Promoted Wednesday to vice president fo r strategic planning, Ms . Cunningham said shE' didn't know how long she would be ~one ORANGE COAST l \t l•tJlflQl{1)I fhf' 0'•~ (W\1 0,.11y Puot Wll" wn•(I' I\ t omb1f'W4 ,,._ New\ Prt\\ 1\ pvom.n.o nr trw Or•not Co.t\I P\.n1t·.,1nio Ctunp ... ~v s,.,.,..,,.,. -OlltOI'\' 4"~ OYbh \NO ~O t"'rehlQn Ft1d•Y Jot (0\1• ,,,_\a ,...~ .... ~·• ~·'-" t'4vnt11\Q'ton 8••<f\ ,_o.,,, •••" "' .. f4"v l'••ftf' l •qwn• 8••<" Sol,tth C.o.\I A \U'MJI" rf19•0ft•t f\'Jfl'9"" '' SNOh\hed >IH•fCM'I\ .an(I Wnctitto fhc-~f1t\C'.104tl C>UDh\"•l"IQ P' .. •t •'t •t )JO Wt11\I Ro !tltff' P 0 80A t).t.O (.o\t.t Mt,11 (.thfOfnlt .. ,.7. lll1M '1H Wffd p,,., !ffrtt •nd PulMi\,,.f T "•r,u1' K•••'' EdllO• ftHt~\ A Mwttf'HM MAl'l•Q•no Editor (.N f'"" '°""' ~\\t\tfl\t M•~•nq E"dllQt Laguna 8Hch Onlce ton HO c ... ,, Hi.Qf\-•~' OfflCH (o\t.; M#\(1 no W•\t a.., \lfH I HV"l~"OtO"I &9.t<" 11US fk.te.P, &N .. v•rd Telephone (7141~21 Clanlfled AdYertlel"I 142.5171 Laguna hach All o.p..1ments: Telephone .... ,... f".'nlft ~" Cl•~tll .... 6'00 c .... ,T: ~ 0:=, <~.:: .. ':.~::::'~~ ~r,,., or ••~Ht1wm""" " ••• ,,. "''• .. ,,.,edwt•d t11tUftrOVt \CH't.••• o-r mtti\104\ 01 tM¥'•9"'...,., U t •t\f t l•u ,."•9! D••d •I C.o•t• flMu. (•lilOrni• CU6~ "' IO()I \vb "111•1" 0Y '"' r if t .. to ,.,.,,.f\lr llit M •1I U M l''l'\OIUNp ''" •••• ,, ... ,M'Wf.,_\ .. 00 ~tf\ty In her letter, Ms. Cunningham sa id because of "faJse innuen- does, .. she has been "rendered ineffective ... She said if she re- s i g n e d . s h e would set a "dangerous precedent" by al- lo wing gossip to dictate cor· porate policy. Agee said Sunday that Ms. Cunningham's request will be granted and that an a rrange- ment will be worked out so she can "continue to provide signifi· cant counsel and benefits." Ms . Cunningham, who re· ccived a mast er 's degree in business adminis tration from Harvard, joined the company in J unc 1979 as Agee's executive assistant. Agee was divorced a month ago. Ms. Cunningham has b een separ a ted f rom her husband for nearly a year. -Front Page A I PLAN. • • on the financial benefits of the project. "l think the Corginal) plan was good in the first place," be said. "We could have gotten rid of road and flood problems." ·'We could have attracted lax dollars had we annexed it," he said. "Now we don 'l getthefinan· cial benefits.·· "The only thing possible that could happen now is for a hotel to be built on the city's Sycamore Hills property. "Then we could realize the bed tax." be said. Councilman Neil Fitzpatrick said that the new development was ''definitely going to affect the traffic." He said be had not favored the original plan and also opposed this one. Buf be noted that there were fewer homes ln the current plan than in the original one, which ln· eluded 1.831 units. "Fewer houses is better for the city than the old plan," he said. Fitzpatrick said be favored Laguna Canyon Road followinc the contour of the canyon over a realigned highway "carved out of the hllla." CouncU member Sally Bellenae couJdn 't be reached for comment. • Airpc,rt -To Close 6Days Air travelerti who normally UH John Wayne Airport will be forced to Oy from Ontario or Loa An&t'le8 lntt:rnaltonal airports Oct. 6 Lo 11 becau.•u: of a $100,000 runway reflurfacing project at the Onmttt• County facility. Air t'd llfurnla passengers d"11t1ned to l''re1rno and Mon· terey Wilt hMV~ tO CatC'h rughts from l'°1b Ange les International whiltt truvelers bound for San i-'ranci•co and other tocations must culeh Oi~hts at Ontario In- ternational Hug he s Atrwest also 1s t ransfernng its Orange Cowlty flights to Los Ange les and On· ta no Hughes will offe r travelers free champagne on its flights during the fi ve-day period. Air California will provide free cof· fee to people waiting to enplane. The runway resurfacing proj- ect wilJ not affect Orange Coun- ty operations of Golden West Airlines. a commute r service. Private airplanes won't be af. fected either Cubans Held After Chase- Near Border Three Cuban refugees were taken into custody by the U.S. Border Patrol Sunday after they allegedJy tried to r ace past the San Onofre checkpoint with four Mexican nationals in the car trunk. Borde r Patrol officer John Wesson said the Cubans were apprehended just north of the checkpoint after the driver of the car drove al high speed through the truck scales to the right of the roadway and back onto the San Diego Freeway. ReportedJy officers found the four illegal aliens in the trunk of the car , drive n by Manuel San<'hez Fue ntez, 23. who along with his C uba n passengers. Me r cy Bode Gomez. 36, and Olayo Justiz Cardenas , 35, who entered this country in May. The three Cubans are said to be residents of Chula Vista and list their address as being at 2073 Olay Valley Road. Wesson said the four Mexican citizens, round at 3:30 a.m., told border patrol officers each had paid a man in Ti.Juana $2SO to be smuggled into Los Angeles . The four men said the man ha d taken them across the border and brought them to a parking lot in Chula Vista wher e they met the three Cubans . Just south of the San Onofre checkpoint. the four Mexican na- tionals reportedly were told to get into the trunk of the car, where they were later found. Wesson said Fuentez, Gomez a nd Ca rd e n as have b ee n charged with transporting ii· legal aliens, which is a felony. Ir con victed. Wesson said the Cubans could serve three-year terms in prison for each of the four a.liens. Reportedly the three Cubans are still in custody. Her Birthday Vegas Jackpot LAS VEGAS <AP) -A Glen- dale housewife has won what was s aid to be the largest jackpot payoff in history - $320,000 -on her «th birthday. In Las Vegas on a 12-hour fun spree, Myrna GaUelli, a native of Managua, Nicaragua, was down to a handful of silver dollars -about 15 -when she hit the record jackpot at the Flamingo HiJton at 11:45 Satur· day night, a casino spokesman said today. Closing her eyes as she pulled the handle, she pleaded, "Please give me something for my birth· day_" When she opened her eyes, she was staring at five 7's. ''I didn't know I won. I thought the machine broke , because I was expecting money to come out. "When they told me, I started crying," said the mother of two teen-age daughters. She had been playing the machine less than a ball hour and put about $100 in it, she said. Stereo Burgled As Owner Sleep8 A cat burgler in La1uoa Beach took a stereo system worth $1,500 from a home in the 100 block of Dumond Drive sometime between 10:30 p.m . Saturday and 2:30a.m .Sunday. , Police said James Speck, owner of the house, told them be got up durinC the ni&bt and dis· covered the stereo was miulq and noticed that the front door •u open. Speck reportedly did not bear the bur1lar enter hll home. .. --....... . Castaic - Area Ab·laze CASTAIC (~P>°-Fireliihters raced the wmd today to gain control of a 6,000-acre brushfire near Castai<' in the Angeles Na· tional Forest after s ubduing a stubborn 250-acre blaze 35 miles southeast. The smaller blaze was brought under control at 6 a.m. by 200 firefighters who circled the fire which burned along Pill.2J.l • R i-0 g~ in t tre-Sa n G a b r i e I Can yon, U.S. Forest Service ... spokesman Bob Brady said. - Or -·~··..._... .. Oldie Bttt Goodie Ida Mintz. 74 , of Fort Lauderdale. Fla., approaches the finish line of lhe Ameri ca 's Marathon in Chicago. She had never attempted to run a marathon before Sunday. but she finished it in four hour s and 45 minutes . California Hero Given FBI Honors WASHINGTON CAP) -The FBI has honored a California a uto dealer who risked his life for three years as a bureau in· formant to he lp win the first felony conviction or J oe Bon· nano, an orga.nized-crime leader the bureau had been pursuing for decades. The private ceremony for Louis E. Peters, 48, a former auto deaJer in Lodi. was held to- day in FBI Director William H Web s ter 's o fC ice . FBI spokesman Roge.,r Young said . Webste r presented Peters with a plaque and. read the inscrio· lion which said : ·'To Louis E. Peters, who set new standards or patriotism . or selflessness and or valor . with the gratitude and respect of his FBI friends." Peters refused to accept any payment for his services. At one po int during his unde r cover work he divorced his wife to pro· tect her. He also had brain s ur· gery recently and has been given less than a year to live. Bonnano, 75, of Phoenix, and his nephew. Jack DiFilippi, 54, a San Jose commodities broker , were convicted Sept. 2 in U.S. District Court in San Jose of con· spiring to obstruct justice. They were cha rged with in· terfering with a federal grand jury investigation into t he laun- The Casual Side of Rugby de ring or illegally gained funds through Bonnano family bUS1· nesses in San Jose. In his decision, U.S. District Judge William Ingram s aid tape-recordings made by Peters o f Bonnano a nd P e t e r s· testimony lert "no roo m for reasonable doubt" in the case. Bonnano faces up to five years in prison and a Sl0,000 fine at :;entencing Oct. 28. It was his first felony convic· tion. although authontles say he has led a life or crime for more than 60 years, allegedly rising from a gun-runner for Al Capone to head or one of New York's five orgaruzed-crime families. In 1977, Peters was ap- proached by Bonanno represen- tatives who offered him $2 million for his auto dealership. Du ring lhe negotiations. Peters went to the FBI. He was wired with a recording device and col· lected taped conversations with family members for more than two years about their scheme to buy up car dealerships through the San Joaquin Valley for the purpose of laundering money from crime enterprises through legitimate businesses. To protect his wife, Marilyn, from violence should bis role be exposed. Peters divorced her 2'h years ago. They were re married in California on Saturday . 100% cotton rugby shorts.and pants. available tn colors of red. white. khaki. sky blue. navy. and gold .• Also. the classic bar.stripe rugby shirt. In a poly/cotton blend. .~ \ Brady said the Castaic fire, believed to have been triggered by target shooters in the hills, s hould be contained by 6 p.m. w· d ay. The fi re began Saturday morning and briefly threatened the s ma?I communities or Green Valley and Lake Hughes 20 miles east of Lancaster, but no homes were evacuated and no buildings burned . . Firefighte rs origina lly pre- dicted the blaze would be con· taioed by 6 a.m. today but de" layed it because of warnings that 15-25 mph Santa Ana winds were expected to pick up this af- ternoon. The northeast~rly winds "may or may not have an effect on the fire:· Brady said. He s!j~· in· !rared photos m-'lhC tire last ni ght showed no "hot spots" or intensely burning areas left in the fire. The Castaic fire in San Fran- c1squito Canyon, 50 miles north of Los Angeles, was fought by ?loo firefighters, including 33 hand crews, along a perimeter of more than 14 miles. The r Nere aided by several heavy air tankers, U.S. Forest Service s pokesman Bruce Bundick said One firefighter injured by a chain saw was treated and re· leased, Bundick said. Authorities beli eve the blaze to have been caused by legal target s hooting in the forest "Much of the area which has been conswned has not been burned since we started keeping re cords ... Bundick said. "Some of that brushis 70years old " Brus h in the area a lso was ex tremely dry after a long, rainless s ummer and the fire was burning over rough terrain "The combination made it a major fire right off the bat." Bun- dick said. Bundick said firefi ghters from various parts of California were brought in to help fight the blaze. The San Gabriel Canyon fire, 35 mi Jes southeast of the Castaic fire in the sprawling national forest , started around 2 p.m. Saturday, Bundick said. a nd was bu.min~ cha parraJ and brush north or the San Gabriel Reservoir , a bout 25 mileseastofLos Angeles. Laguna Man'~ Car Torched VandaJs set fi re to a Laguna Beach man's car in the 300 block of Anita Street during the early morning hours Saturday. police .. aid today. Police said the vandals started the fire by igniting the car cover on a vehicle belonging to Matt DeRosa that was parked outside his residence. Reportedly the fire damaged part or the passenger side of the car before a neighbor ran out or his house and pulled the cover from lhe vehicle. Police said the amount of damage is unknown. AL'S GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 . I ,, .. -... ------------. -----------. --~ -...... ----. --.. ----··· ........ . Oran}le-coast- 01TI 0 N VOL. 73, N0:273, 3 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1980 Toclay'!iii CloHln.C N.l'. St~kH N TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Laguna Srhools Want Hookg Payoffs ...... .--~~--,ST.£.V--·~ oe ... o..~ ..... need the coo ration of p•rent.s w 0 annu y • r ~ luch on vacations while ~c·t-()(>I 1N In session distract lot1es $10.S9 per student. lost near $4.5,000 last year due to 1 meam Wbelf11ol!raJJd--uneircuaed absences. He says l>ad puJI Johnny out for a week that, considering the district's on th" slopes at Aspen, the dis-financial situation, that a mounts have been forced to cut more than 91 million from the budget. Last year the school district began charging parents lo bus children to school. tri bu lions is the San Marino Unified School District. La1una Beach school tn.&1ltts have com~ up with a plan tt~y hope will replenish rundl lo.it when parents Litke lhear kldas out or school to go skllna. ny to Hawaii or Me"ku. or bark East to visit grandma But in order for the stnrtly volunteer pro1ram to work , ,trustees say. they· re going to The small ~rhool dustrk t de pends on state funds ror much of Its budget And the st ale r&t1oru. out the money bai.ed on the number of s tudents in chool each day for each day a student IS out on an uneuused absence, the t n et loses nearly $S3. lo a bundle. Trustees want parents lo coo-The small school district has sider giving a donation lo the been hurt financially by Proposi· district of Sl0.S9 for each day a tion 13, deelinlng student enroll- st udent 11> away from school on ment and the equalizing effects an unexcused absence. of the Serrano-Priest state District Superintendent Or. Supreme Court <l«(.Cision. Robert Sanchis says the district In the past two years, trustees Now the district is asking parents lo pay up when they take the kids out or school for mid· year vacations. Sanchis said the only other school district he knows of that asks for such voluntary con- Iraq Claims New Gains "They!re facing the same budget problems we ar e ," He sajd he doesn't know how parents will react lo the volun- tary program, "but we're sure hopi n g fami l ies will participate." And, he said, "It is our un- derstanding that such dr:1ations would be tax deductible. · Reagan -Parties Slated Condition Told l''ormer secretary of state Henry Kissinger will be a guest at a pair of Newport Beach fund- raisers on Oct . 16 designed lo help stock the war chest of Republican preside ntial can- didate Ronald Reagan. For Cease-fire GOP County Co-chairman Thomas Fue ntes s aid the cocktail party and a Sl .000-per- couple dinner lo follow could set an all-time hi"h for an Orange County fund-raising event. Fuentes said the county's high water mark for fund-raising is Sl00,000, a figure hit twice - once at a party at the home of former president Richard Nixon and again at an appearance of theQ·vice president Gerald Ford at Disneyland. Tickets for the Oct. l6 eoc-ktail party at the home of developer John Ward will be $125 a couple. Fuentes said up to 400 persons could be accommodated. The $1,000-per -couple dinner will be held at Ambrosia Restaurant in .Newport Beach. Fuentes said the dinner, a four·course affair dlsigned lo resemble a White House State dinner , will be lim ited lo 60 couples. Proceeds he said will actually go to the California Republican Party and be used for a "get· out-the·vote" campaign for Reagan and other Orange Coun- ty GOP candidates. Newport's Getting tlae Neem Shelley Young and dad, Jim, react to announcement that she iS Newport Harbor High School's 1980 bomecomm, queen. She is a senior from Coa~a Mesa. Queen wu crowned Friday night during festivities marking Harbor High 's 50th anniversa':&i California Hero Given FBI Honors BAGHDAD. Iraq (AP> -Iraq said today it would agree to a U.N. Security Coun cil call for a cease-fire if Iran ·also would heed it. There was no immediate response from Iran and both countries meanwhile pre5sed their war efforts. Iraq reported fresh territorial gains in southwest Iran. Iran claimed a sweeping naval vie· tory while seeking a role by the non-aligned bloc to bring about an end lo the war. Iraq's ambassador lo the Unit· ed Nations, Salah Omar Al-Ali. disclosed a message from Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to U. N. Secretary ·General Kurt Waldheim and said Iran would Stock Mart Declines Continuing NEW YORK (AP ) -The stock market posted sharp declines among a broad range oC issues today. continuing last week's slide. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks, which tumbled 23.83 pointa last week, plunged another 14.67 to 925.43 after the first five hours of trading today. also have to agree to a cease- fire. A U.N. spokesman said the message was being trans lated into English from the Arabic. The Security Council approved unanimously Sunday a resolu· tion calling on Iran and Iraq to stop their fighting. DENIES RUMORS wttlamAgH In response to an earlier Iraqi proposal for a cease-fire on its terms, lran offered counter- proposals and sought the help of India. a leader of the non- aligned nations, to help end the fighting, which entered its <See MIDEAST, Page A2) •rw.,........ GOSSIP TARGET Mary Cunningham Al Forgit Hospitalized Longtime Harbor Area busi· nessman and former Newport Beach City Council member Al Forgit was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital this morning after being stricken at his home. WASHINGTON <AP) -The FBI has honored a California auto dealer who risked his life for three years as a bureau in· formant to help win the first felony conviction or Joe Bon- nano, an organized-crime leader the bureau had been pursuing for decades. The private ceremony ror Louis E. Peters, 48, a former auto dealer in Lodi, was held to- day in FBI Director William H. W e b ste r 's o ffi ce, FBI spokesman Roger Young said. jury investigation into the lawi- deripg or illegally gained funds through Bonnano family busi- nesses ln San Jose. In his decision, U.S. District Judge William Ingram said tape-rerordings made by Peters o r Bon nano and P e t ers' testimony left "no room for reasonable doubt" in the case. Bonnano faces up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine at :;entencing Oct. 28. Declines o utnumbered ad- vances by an 11-1 margin on the New York Stock Exchange. The market has been sensitive to rising short.term interest rates. Following the close of trading Friday, the Federal Reserve reported another sharp increase in the nation's money supply, increasing concern that the Fed would tighten credit and trigger further hikes in interest rates. Romantic Rumors Ro~t Bendix Aith Forgit, 80, was treated by Newport Beach Fire Depart- ment paramedics called to the residence upstairs over Al Forgit Hardware Co.. 2205 W. Balboa Blvd., where be lives with his wife, Peggy. Fire Department spokesman Art Morton said Forgit appeared to be in stable condition when transferred from his home lo the hospital. Webster presented Petel'I with a plaque and read the inscrip· lion which said: "To Louis E. Peters, who set new standards of patriotism, or selflessness and of valor, with the gratitude and respect of his FBI friends ." Peters refused to accept any payment for bis services. At one point during his undercover work he divorced his wife lo pro- tect her. He also bad brain sur- gery recently and has been It was his first felony coovic· lion. although authorities say he has led a life or crime for more than 60 years, allegedly rising from a gun-runner for Al Capone lo head of one or New York's five organized·crime families. Peters, who wore a bulletproot vest during the trial, collapsed twice last summer . In July, he underwent brain surgery for a malignant tumor, and his doc· tors gave him six months lo a year lo live. The oct ogenaria n whose views on both local. county, state and national governmental affairs have been published ln his newspaper ads ror yean re- cently announced his retire· ment. given less than a year lo live. · W A• .Bonnano, 75, of ~h~ni~, and ayne Jrport his nephew, Jack D1Filipp1, 54, a Forgit had retired once before, as a service station operator i n downtown Los An1eles in 1934, and moved to t he Harbor Area where he became involved in the com- mercial fishing business. San Jose commodities broker, G w~re _ convict~ Sept. 2 in U.S. els Runway Oastnct Court lD San Jose of con-_ spiring to obstruct justice. • They were charged with in· Resurfacing terfering with a federal grand Ad Misleading Reagan Signs '~II' LOS ANGELES (A1P) -A TV commercial purportlnl lo show Ronald Reacan cutlinl California taxes with a stroke ol a pen may actually show the former 1oveJ'DOI' allJllnl a bill liberalisinl atate abortion laws. says a co-author of the abortion bill. The abortion bill, wblcb the Republican presidential nominee bu taken pains to say be reirets 1lpin1, ia not men· tloned in tbe commercial. The ad,.lnatead, tells bow Reacan cut taxes while tovernor. The commercial, which bu been running on natioDWide televlaicm ti.Dee Sept. 10, abowl a brief atoty of Rea1an'1 life, be1innlnl with Ida cbUdbood-IDCI ~ bi• career u bead of tbe Sereen Acton' Guild and u aovernor. Air travelers who normally use John Wayne Airport will be forced lo ny from Ontario or Loe Angeles international airports Oct. 8 to 11 because of a $100,000 runway resurfacing project at the Oraqe County facility. Air California passen1ers destined lo Fresno and Mon· terey will have lo catch ru,bts rrom Loi An1eles International while travelers bound for San Francl.sco and other locations must catch ru1hta at Ontario In· ternationaJ. Hu1hes Alrwest also ls tran1ferrln1 ita Orange County ruchta to Loe An1eles and On- tario. Hucbet will otrer travelen free cbampqne on it.I OlPta durinl tbe ftwe.fty. period. Air California wll1 provide free col· fee to people waWq to .. ,. ... Bflf'Pll JOO SOtrrHFIELD, Mich. CAP> - Mary Cunningham has request- ed a leave of absence from Ben- dix Corp. in the wake of gossip Aa .&be ed'a narrator teUa ol tbe tu cut, Rea1an ieta up from bll cbalr, amll• and lbake9 baada with two leplatort, form•ltaa. WIMor and DOW U.S. Rep. AntlM>ny C. Beileuoa, J>.t.o. AnleMI. and former Republican Auemblyman W. Cral1 ...... ol IUvenide. Alice May KlppJ. a South Dakota native who now lives in Park Superior uonvaleleeat Haepital in Newport Beach, ii alfamiles over ber,tootb ~. IUu Kipp, wbo ta Tbe nmway resurfaclq proJ-taklnc eoUe1e exteuioo counee in IOdal ltUdlee and in· ect will not affect Oranae Cowl· doo .J.- Tbe two were autbora of Callfonaia'a liberalised abortion llill tMt Reaa• alped lune 11, 1.-i, about 11.x moaU. after tMilll amee.-... .... now ia • 1b'c191Ciflf6&ellt ol abartioa. • ty operationl of Golden W•t r .,... ... care, w• baDond at a lmtbda1 party lut Alrllnel, a commuter aentee. week at the coovaleeeent '*-· Otftdall tben claim Prive .. .u,.lane1 won't ..-.,. llliaa Kipp attrliutes her lonfevily to never bavlnc been . rected either. married. · ,~. --,-_h_________ -1 ~,...,.._ ..... ~ ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~ ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~, that linked the 29-year-old woman's rapid pro motions lo he r friendship with William Agee, the company's chairman. In a three-page letter ad· dressed lo Agee and the com- pany's board. Ms. Cunningham requested a n "immediate but ~mporary " leave of absence, saying "as a result of media coverage I have received in re· cent days, I have been placed in an impossible situation." News stories appeared after Agee, 42, stood before some 600 Bendix headquarters employees . Wednesday and said contrary to rumors within the company. Ms. Cunningham's promotions and influence resulted from her <See BENDIX, Page AZ> Coast Weather Patchy early morning fog, otherwise fair, though hazy. through Tuesday. Lows tonight SS at the beaches, 60 inland. Highs Tuesday high 70s to lower 80s. INSIDE TOD" l' The Rama. with hoo wins in o row, toM on tM divfsioft. leading 49era Sundo11 at AnoMim. See atone• Page Bl. l•dex .. .. AS CM .. .. a .. eM c~• a DAILY PILOT 1111111) ,--1--... ~--JIJST BRE.4KING----..... ................. j • I.GI• """'/Mm eoc1oy•, ...,... .... ~ NW Mw'°Pmnl•. -Judg Releases Ei·ve 111 M1i11icli Bombill{{ KARl.'\R HE, West Oermany CAP> An lnvn tJc•tlng judg~ toda relu e-c1 lhl' lt•r and four m mber• ol • bann.d neo.Naai group for la<'k of .-v1~ort that tb•y were ('Onnected with the de-adly bomb Mllarlt on Muntch's Otrtobt"rftttl A shtth un1dt n1 ified susp('ct remaintd an in vestif atory cu8lod)' ~ndini qut>stlon1n1. • spoktsman for lht f~tra pre» ecutor's offke auJ German la• p.armits polk• to hold 8&.W p.cts 48 hours for questlontn11 twfore an lnvt11Uaat101 judg .. mu8t dt•<'id<' "'heth{•r to rt'ltasf' lhtm or file C'ha rgf'ii K:trl llt'tnl tfoffman11, C3, 11 111gnboanl patntt'r who likes to wear Nina t) ~ u111lorms. und the fivt• membe~ of hi. Mlbtary Sport Group HoHmunn "'e~ tabn into ('ustoc-1 Brter Friday 'tJ bomb bl1&11l wh1<'h lollt>d \2, 1n<'lud10~ tht• 1tlll'llt'd hombt•r and injured 213 l11n.-0Hda ('loNlug 2 PrOlll• llt:J.ENA, Mont 1Ar• Tht• Anaronda ('op11..r t 'Q un noun<'ed today thjl It 1.-. u.s~ndltlt; 01M>r1tlion11 tndef111ll t'IV at Ill' Sm l'lll'r Ill Anul·oodu and its c-opper refiner\ al Gn•a f l"ollti About 1.500 t.'111ployt•cs w11l lo. .. t> lht'cr Jobs Ana('Onda 's m111111g and mtlhnto: n1~rut1on:. In Hutte will not J>e affected Those Will continue. pending St•ltll'ment or cl 11tnke Pres1dt•nt Jumes Marvin ::.aid the l'ompany cvuluat~d federal and talc environmental and health ::.tandardi. itnd con eluded t hat tht' t'Xt::.llng smclt e1 in Anaconcla l'annot b" retrofittt'(! lo mn·t tht> st11ndan.l1> und still ~ el'Onom1cally com petitive Por.,11ts Pid~f#I .\tc·laoob lUfriH LOS ANGELES 1 :\ P > Ruses pulled away empty from some sC'hoolyards today and panmt::. picketed as the final 26 schools were added tot he city SC'hool dis trict's mandatory busing plan Most of 'the absences and protests were in the pre dominantly white northwest San Fernand<1 Valley Partic1pat1on by minority children was more complete, but schools in racially mixed areas also had no·shows on the first day of the district 's full (nte~ration program at 153 schools. officials said IJnrf•df•rif ('out i1111i11g t 'liglu ABERDEEN. Scotland 1APJ A West German man trying to beC'ome the first person to cross the Atlantic strapped to the outside of an airplane has madt: 1t safely from Scotland to the Faeroe Islands, airport o(ficials s aid today. Jarornir Wagner, a 4 l·year-ol'd former a rmy ski champion from Giessen. West Germ any, look orf from Aberdeen, ScoUand at midday Sunday in s unny, 45·degree weather, and arrived in the Danish islands, about 375 miles to the northwest. Sunday night. of· ficials said. \ory ('nllf•d ( upr1•1111n"'fl NEW YORK !A Pl -A confidential neet readiness report rat f ed only six of the Navy's 13 aircraft carriers ready for combat this m onth, The New York Times reported today. The report dat~d Sept 15 rated 94 or the Navy 's 155 air squadrons as comt>at-ready while 21 of 82 tactical fighte rs ,' at· taC'k and elect.ron1c w~rfare s4uadrons were considered unfit for combat. the Times said Cubans Arrested By Border Patrol Three Cuban refugees wert• taken into custocfy by the U.S. Border Patrol Sunday after they aJlegedJy tried to race past the San Onofre checkooint with four Violent Man Captured on Drug Charges A shrieking. hallucinating man believed to be under the in· fluence of t he hallucinogenic drug P CP was c aptured tn downtown Costa Mesa by police early today and jatled in heavy restraints. The victim was taken mto custody after a violent struggle at Park Avenue and Center Street near the ne w Casa Bella senior citizens hous ing proJect. He was booked into jail as a John Doe. Investigators sajd today they had no knowledge of his true identity yet, since he was still under the influence of the drug but apparently tn no physical danger. Pa trolman Da le Birney sum· m oned backup o((icers after en- countering the victim. who was cr awling a long t he sidewalk, screaming and groaning and begging for help in plucking im· . aginary bugs from his body .. The team of officers required to capture the alleged PCP user said they were finally forced to use handcuffs around both his wrists and his ankles to get him into the patrol car. Mexican nationa ls in the car trunk. Border Patrol officer John Wesson said the Cubans were apprehended just north of the checkpoint after the driver of the car drove at high speed through the truck scales to the right of lhe roadway and back onto the San Diego Freeway. Reportedly officers found the four iUegal aliens in the trunk of the car, driven by Manuel Sanchez Fuentez, 23, who along with his Cuban p assengers. Mercy Bode Gomez. 36, and Olayo Justiz Cardenas, 35., who enteredlhls country in May. The three Cubans a re said to be residents of Chula Vista and list their address as being at 2073 Otay Valley Road. ' Wesson said the four Mexican citizens. found at 3:30 a.m .. told border patrol officers each had paid a man in Tijuana S250 to be s muggled into Los Angeles. The four men said the m an had t a ken them across the border and brought them lo a parking lot in Chula Vista where they met the three Cubans. Just south of the San Onofre c heckpoint. the four Mexican na. tionals reportedly were told to get into. the trunk of the car, where they were late r found. Wesson said Fuentez, Gomez and Carde n as h ave been c harged with transporting il- legal aliens. which is a felony. If convicted, Wesson said the Cubans could serve three-year te rms in prison for each of the four aliens. Reportedly the three Cubans a re still in custody. MIDEAST • • eljhth day. A '')00Ctvt111'.-m1f llbn from-tfte lt la mlt" Conter~nre, headed by PakithmJ Pttaident Mohammed Zla uJ-ttaq and Habib el Chattl of Tuniaia, Hcretary «eneraJ or the l!Jlamlc ur.canlration. ar rlvt'd In Ou1i1hcli.d In Tehran, I 1 n n 1 an l'n•1udent A boll\.luao n. nr Sadr .hucl told thtim. "We w111 conLUUA4.1 lo fi41ht until the h111t 8t(fre1111or is driven from our territory " The Tf'hran Radio quoted the c·omrn1mder of t he lronJan navy 1u1 HylnM It was In control of the Struu of llormuz, lhc Persiaan Gulf'H outlet, und addlni;c that fortiign commerclal ships could 1>rot•t1ed oorm ully us long as they do not h1•ud for l ruqi ports lit-~~ tL_uott•d ~:i ·ayin&o the lr1.1ql nuvy wus fort·ed to seek ~hcltt•r In ports of other Persian <:u lf niltlon~ Pr('s1dcnt Saddam Hussein in Iraq 111 a broadC'ast Sunday said I r;1q \\'uuld 11top fighting if Iran rct'Ol(111 ied Iraqi sovereigntv over .!11 of the Shalt al·Arab t-st uary al lhe head of the gulf, returned to Arab control the l hrcc small islands at the mouth or the gulf. seiled by l ran in l!nl :ind called off the propaganda C'a mpaign by Ayatoll ah Huhollah Khom eini and his s up· porters to incite a Moslem upris· ing against the Iraqi govern- ment negotiate directly with Iran or throu~h anv third party or in· ternat ional organiiat ion to reach a "Just and honorable" ~lUement that would recognize Iraq's "legitimate and historic rights." f 'rom f•ngt• l I BENDIX ... qua lifications and not from a personal relationship with him. Promoted Wednesday to vice president for s trategic planning, Ms. Cunningham said she didn't know how long she would be gone In her letter. Ms . Cunningham said because of "false innuen· does." she has been ''rendered ine ffective ... She said if she re· signed. s he wou ld set a "dangerous precedent·• by al lowing gossip to dictate cor - porate policy. Agee said Sunday that Ms. Cunningham's request will be g ra nte<;I and that an arrange· ment will be worked out so she ce1n "continue to provide signifi- cant counsel and benefits .. Ms . Cunningham. who re· ceived a mast er 's degree in ~us 1ness adminis tration from Harvard. jomed the company in June 1979 as Agee's executive assistant. Agee was divorced a month ago. Ms . Cunnfagham has lieen separaled-r ro m h e r bus band for nearly a year. Agee declined last week to ad· dress rumors he was having an affair with Ms. Cunningham. NB 'Bandit' Takes 'No' For Answer A Balboa Island pharmacist , confronted S aturday b y a nervous.looking man with one hand thrust inside his shirt, told Newport Beach police he s imply said "no" when the man de- manded the day's receipts. The would·be robber , police said , took his hand out of his shirt and walked briskly away. Authorities said the man en- tered Balboa Island Pharmacy, 302 Marine Ave., at about 3 p.m . and handed the pharmacist a scr awled robbery message. The pharmacist. who said he rea d the message and answered it firs t by sha)dng his head. told police the money-d emanding man gr abbed the note before leaving the shop. OR~NGECOAST H DAILY PILOT 2 Safari Animal,s Killed by Cheetalu .... ,. .. _ Pf.\IOff'lt •net P""'iV..f nemn Kffv•t Editor r ........... ......... MAh •• I._. EOitOt °'""""·"'-Attf(~ ~•ft4 Editor Teltphone (11•)~ Ct .. IHIH Adw.nt ..... tQ.5'7' Cheetahs killed two hoofed anJmals late Saturday or early Sonday at Irvine's Uon Country Salari after a car rammed several containO')ent gates on the compound, police said today. A SECVBITV GUARD on duty at the wild animal park told police that be was unaware or anything out of the or- dinary taking place at the park Saturday ni1ht. Irvine police officen were called Sunday morning when several gates were found broken and a Thompson Gazelle and a Mouflon dlacovered dead. Gates are used at I.Jon Country Safari lo separate one group or animal.a from another. THE ANIMAL COMPOUND wu dOHd Sunday in or· der to allow repain lo be macle on the fences. Lion Country Safari offlcJala toJd poUce that six gates were damaged and that repairs would cost about teOO. They a1llo said the unacheduJed clolure or the park cost about te,ooo in at revenue. l&VINE POUCE AaE lookinl for auapecta ln connec· lion wttb the felony malick>ul miachief. - Lioa Country Safari spokeswoman Renate Graf aaid that the part opened for buaineu today. , ' - • •• Oldie B11t Goodie I~~ Mi!1tz. 74, of Fort Lauderdale, Fla .. approaches the finish line of the America's Marathon in Chicago. She had neve~ ~ttem.pt~d to run a marathon before Sunday. but she f 1rushed 1t LO four hours and 45 minutes. Firemen Battling Blaze Near Ccutaic CASTAIC <AP) -Firefighters raced lhe wind today to gain control or a 6.000-acrc br ushfire near Castaic m the Angeles Na· tional Forest after subduing a stubbom 250·aC're blaze 35 miles southeast. The smaller bla~was brought under control at 6 a m by 200 firefighters who circled the fire Whi ch burned alon g Pigeon Ridg e in the San Gabrie l Canyor'I. U.S Forest Service spokesman Bob Brady s aid. Brady said the Castaic fire. believed to have ~en triggered by target shooters in the hills. should be contained by 6 p.m. to· dav. The fi r e began Saturday morning and briefly t hreatened the sma11 communities of Green Valley and Lake Hughes 20 miles east of Lancaster. but no homes were evacuated and no buildings burned. Firefighters origina lly pre dieted the blaze would be con tained by .6 a .m . today but de- layed it because of warnings that 15·25 mph Santa Ana winds we re expected to pick up this af. ternoon The northeast(lrly winds "may ~r may not have an effect on the The Casual Side or Rugby tire.· Rrady said. He s aid in· frared photos of the hr& last night showed no "hot spots" or intensely burning areas left in the fire. The Casta1 c fire in San Fran· cisqu1lo Canyo n, 50 m iles north oT Los Angeles. was fought -6.Y 700 firefighters . inc luding 33 hand crews, along a perimeter of more than 24 miles. They 11ere aided by several heavy air tankers. U.S. Forest Service s pokesman.Bruce Bundick said. Panel Says U.S. 'Oil Vulne rable' WASlll NGTON <AP) -A House subcommittee investigat- ing e mergency energy conserva- tion plans has concluded the United States 1s not ready to deal with a maJor interruption in oil supplies. its chairma n said Sunday night. Rep Toby Moffett, D·Conn .. chairman of the House Govern· ment Operations' subcommittee on environment. energy and nat· ural resour ces. confirmed the panel's findings would be issued in the form of a 50-page report. 100% cotton rugby shorts .and pants. a11a1table 1n colors ot red. white. khaki. sky blue navy. and gold Also, the classic bar stripe rugby shirt, in a poly/cottoo blend • -------' Partial Payment In Arson Insurance agents have handf'd a S550,000 check to the owne r or Costa Mesa's ABC Lumber yard, which was destroyed Ja~t July in a deliberately set fire. J a mes Moore. operating out of a garage tucked on the rear of his otherwise empty parcel of land on East 17th Street, said the ~ettlement will pay for his losses 1n equipment and inventory. The settlement was announced today by Wes Bannister, owner of a Huntington Beach insurance company. Moore said he expects an addi- tional settlement from another insur ance agency for the loss of his building. That a mount he said, would likely be more than $300,000. Moore said he hopes to rebuild the lumber yard as soon as he gets the city's permissio n. He said he's kept a ll eight of his employees on the payroll. awa i.ting approval of c ity permits. City planne r Roberta Costa said Moore needs to obtain a conditional use permit for his lumber yard and home improve· ment center because the area's zoning doesn't allow for lumber yards. Also, she said, t he plans for a new lumber yard will have to be reviewed by the ci t y's Redeve lopment Agency because I.he empty lot at 140 E. 17th St. is inside the boundaries of the city's targeted redevelopment zone Moore. a N"'wport Reach resi· dent. said 1l would be inap . propri<tlt! for him to discuss hh; lumber yar<l plans until plan ning commis::.1oncrs vote on hi\ ('Ondillonaluscperm1tOct. l3 M eanwhilP , <1r s on in vcstigalors <.1re s till following uµ leads on the .July JO fire Investigators da1m a Oamrr.a. ble hqu1<.I was ~pl ashed in large quantities on at least two and possibly three bulldin~s at the lumber yard The liquid, 1nvcs1tgators said. was s plashed on lumber shelte rs and. po:.s1bly , against the back wall or lhc yard's sales building before it "'"as torched They s<11d 1t rcmams unclear what the motive was tn the arson ;ob that sent names leap m g more thun 80 feet into the early morning ~ky School Days-- Start Again At UC Irvine The 16th year of instruction began this morning at UC Irvine as more tha n 10,000 s tudents s treamed into classrooms. About 2.500 students live on campus this year There will be on·campus housin~ for another 450 students this January when construction is completed on a re- sidence hall ~ing built between the Bio logic a I Sci en ce and Medical Scit.mce buildings Also sC'heduled to be complet· ed in January is a large student union near the Administration Building that will be called the University Center. ·- Classes were first held at UCI on Sept. 26. 1965. About 1,589 stu- dents were enrolled that year. The UCI librarv then contained \00,000 books. - This year the Library is to a c- 4uire its one·millionth volume. ALS GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714) 644-7030 •• • STOCKS I BUSINESS Monda '8 Clo1ing Pricett ~NYSE-(;OMFOSDJE~TRANSACTIGNS .... ..... ..... "''"' .... i.u... ""' 1olt' Hfl '1tlt• No' \,I'! •••• -·l-":.!.'°"'1"4 ''"IJ1••'-1 '""''•-11..i ~1 1.i11w1"'l P11...i•c...,1iv ,., •• ,, 1 1 11•1 , At(, ! -I !*. ,. 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FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Jeff MacNelly by Ferd & Tom Johnson You L !:ARN ,ABOUT LOTS OF MUSCLES you NEVER KNEW you HAD. ow!-- "Tl-IEFlE'S ANOTHER ONE by Mell Lazarius I DON'T KNO'N ... HOW NICE MlAST VOLA L.OOK ? TMfll 60. 11 KA KA KA KA KA KA KA KA KA 'KA t<AKA KOWKOW KOWLP KOl&.lt.P KOWlP l<!Xi.tP :' ~i\JIEW I ' . '. - DRABBLE by Tom Batiuk ~ 8\l1' l1i.\ 1'"f ON\.~ ONf IN 1'11£ ''fOIZt ! fl£rt'>E. 1'lKE. l 1JVM6£R.~1I!. ~~i I J , ,, , FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE w1w DO vol) NEED GLf\'SSES IF YOO RE Go1 G Bf\C.K IN TrlE WAIER? "I hate Mondays." f i .. by Kevin Fagan ~p,t~ favit~ IS N•tt 14£~ ?! NUM6ER ~\VE? by Lynn Johnston ...... ~-....a.--'--""-A.6...---' .......... _-'--"""';;...._-__..;~ L::....s~~--JH~~ DR. SMOCK we:t...L-. we ANAL-YZeD 'TH e P l L-1.--" YOW'Y E: eee:N : ON 'THA"T" ;; L-OOKS L-1 Ke y CAN PY. ~ .MRS. FeRN... 411 by George Lemont THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane GORDO by Gus Arriola "I'm glad you met Mommy, 'cause I wouldn't like not being here." DENNIS THE MENACE • ' JUDGE PARKER J uBll..ANT OVER l HE TV REPORT THA1 THE POLICE HAVE. NO CLUE !:I IN THE ARMORED CAR HOt..DUP. TIM DE.CIOE~ THAT Hf ANO JEANNIE Wlt..L CEt..E.13~AiE ! l!:.-QlP (// p_o1uy 1-J 9-20 TUMBLEWEEDS ''V'EAR HILV'E:, ••• HAVE: YOU MA~R1e:t7 ~u~ cow~ ~~AU '{el? IN YOUR 1-AST L~mR ;t)LJ 5All7 HE OWNE!7 1V\t> MILLION COWS •... My' 600VNESS! R?ITT 1l-iEY GET ili~IR t.EASHES IAt\k;LEP UP?'' ~) DON'T SLURP YOUR SOUP TURN DOWN THAT RADIO 7 ·-- 8QTU PR10:- .LES5 ANC ~l+­ LE55, NII~ SEVIER/ by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan MAMA ClOES~i KP fJfANS A!K>UI COWPINCHI~. . by Ernie Bus.hmiller TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 52 School: Fr 1 Unsorted 54 Tar !lour 68 Swell. Br 4 Curved 60 Hindu god· 9 US~· resort dess 14 Pen point 61 Irene, et al 15 Of haJr 62 Welt 16 WOl'k hard 64 Danger I 7 Fancied 66 Red as - UNITED Feature Syndicate Saturday's Puzzle SolYed M II D 1111 L II I I 0 11 P I L II 11111 11 1 11 I 11 C I 11aa DIT •TIA• PIA T Alt•11u•A _, If• 'Ill IC II • I A L lllllllllllllll 1- 19 Scotch City 20 Amerind 67Chanotofold l&ILILll 1111111 0Unt -·-"""'" 21 KllOcit 22 Min. pan 23 War deity 24 Stage scen- fJfY 26 Moccasins 29 Garden tool 31 Hasten 32 Row 33 Office clerks 36 Anlshes 38 Synll'lelic language 39 Co-ne forth 41 Tornado 43 Lick u P.1.palm 46 Think 47 St11e 49 lOOM flOO 50 Tchra'. gp. 51 Actress Patricia - 68 Seine lflLlfll 111, Y 1 ••-YllH•I 69 lesswetl -& T ,1 Y11111•I•lll 70 Pelt P 11 I lflO I I I L AITll •- 71 Ar1 l at U T II I L•& •II T I II I I I I f •-a•c • I DOWN 1Sanla - 2 Clocke< 3 Oecreast 4 Neat IS - 5 Japanese com 6 Irish county 7 Ot1lgl1 8 Engraving method 9 Serpents tO Uses 1 broom 11 FOf etch: 2 words I L P A l•ltl U I I L I 11 I I I II T•lll I • 12 Wolf down 42 Salt 13 -degree 45 OemOCfltun 18 Land ol pten· believef ty 48 Funeral ore- 24 Foreordain lions 25 Burgundy: 53 Lartal 2 words 55 Stadium 27 West Pointe< 56 Light amplt- 28 Cache lier 30 Alge<lan city 57 Assays 33 Criminal 59 -noire ~ Counter.,.n 6 t Secrete 35 A Finn 82 Blffl< 37 Feoe1 63 Nigl(lan 40 Gourmets 65 Knowledge