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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-10-13 - Orange Coast PilotI Atlanta Gas Ezplosion \. \ Mesa Cops Dunt Columbus' Ship Topless Thief Located After In ShoplUting 500 Years? MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 13, 1980 VOL. 11, ltO. •• J HCTIC*5. M PAO•I G .. rdl .. Lep ............ A large dog sits atop freshly cut logs in the back of a pickup truck moving through downtown Portland, Ore. Whether the animal was put there to discourage timber thieves wasn't clear, but any would-be thief would think twice. Mesa Police Hunt 'Topless Woman' Costa Mes a police are aearching for a woman who tried to 1teal a fur coat from Nordatrom'1 department store Saturday, ended up ln a fracu wltb a store aecurtty a1ent and a eutomer and finally nect South Co•t plua weartni only a half· llip. Police aald the woman wu 1patted b)' aecurity aient U.a Au Braw It about cloalnc Ume. latunlaJ .. Nordatrom •• ladl• wear dllNutment. • • · 111. lrHo told offtcen the' woman stuffed a $3,000 Cur coat up her dress, between her lep. The woman left, poUce sa.id, and agent Bravo attempted to arrest her outside lbe store. In a tuaale that saw both women rolling on the ground, tbe woman, described u 1peak- in1 with an European accent, falr-sklnned and in her 209, broke free. 111. Bravo said a male cuatomer aaw tbe battle and ran· after the tleelnt ~peel.-~ He srabbed ber and ln an enaum, tUllJe the woman qalD broke free, leavln1 behind the black dreu abe woN, her pune ud the fur coal, police aaid. The wamm r• .......,, cl..S ... , ... a ............. ..... car, PClllee Mid. jUaped la mil ... clrt.-from tbe Soutb OoMt Plua paniq lot. Offle.n aald ~ plate IA· ••tla_.....,..... tbat tlll car I• w\leb tbe woman eHued ................. fromaflml ................ v...., .......... ., ............. , .. · .. '···~.. . -. uake's e Yields Viet· s ---···••.-. ....... ------······-11---····· ·---··-·····--·-..... _ .... _.....__·-· ---·-<•H_ ........... -- Explosion Kills 7 Gas Blast Rips Day Care Center ATLANTA fAP> -An ex- plosion believed caused by natural gas ripped through a day care center al a northwest Atlanta housiAg project today, killing five c hildren and two adults, authorities said. About 15 other people were injured. Officials at Grady Memorial Hospital in downtown Atlanta, where the victims were ta.ken, confirmed the seven deaths . Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown said a preliminary investigation indicated lbe ex· plosion, which caused "heavy damage" to the building, was caused by natural gas. "It was terrible, really terri· ble," said Tinnie Baugh, a teacher at another day care Iraqi Forces Press Drive To Refinery BEIRUT, Le banon <AP> Iraqi soldiers and tanks under an umbrella of artillery fire to- day pressed their drive toward the Iranian oil refinery port of Abadan despite attacks by helicopter gwish1ps. Iraqi forces still fought holdouts in the neighboring port city of Kbor· ramshahr. The shelling of Abadan killed at leut 30·civiUana and wounded 140, the official Iranian news agency r e ported . In the nlgbt·long auault, Iraq claimed two Iranian helicopter gW11bipa were abot down and 38 Iranian 1oldien were killed. It listed Ira· qi loue. u three dead and 14 wounded. The lnqi air force bil tar1et.a around lafahan, Iran '1 aecond lar1eat cltJ, for the flnt time. Iraq said Iranian pUoU tried to attack two towDa near Moeul, the oU emtel' In nortbem Iraq, but were driven off by tround fire. I ran aaid it• soldiers and alnl .. lundaJ "routed" Iraqi uafta wldcb bad eroeaed the Kanm RI"" OD poat.ooa bridl• two d.,. aao ea.t of Abada. Pr•kleat Abolllaaaan Bani· ... dlllmld .. 8D a.i.m.w with TIM Alleoclated P.-.. tlult.. ., .... loreee .. ,. ........... C._ MIMAIT, Pap Al> ~ . center across lbe street. "I went across lo see what I could do alter I heard the ex· plosion." she said. "Some of the kids were badly hurt. I saw one little boy whose fingers were missing." Anthony Miller, a spokesman for the Atlanta Fire Depart· ment. said "We think there are still kids buned under the rub· ble." Police estimated 90 children were inside at the time . Miller said five engines. three ladder trucks. four rescue units and "all available ambulances" were dispatched to the scene. About 485 children attending an elementary school across the street were evacuated after the explosion, police Lt. Bill Neikirk said. Thousands of onlookers gathered atthe scene. Margar e t Ros s. a s pokeswoman for the Atlanta Housing Authority, said the day care center, located in the Gate City Community Cente r , is operated by a private concern and serves the 650 families hv· mg in the Rowen Homes project. A building about five miles away. containing offices and warehouse s pace used by Lhe housing authority, was d1,uvaged in a firebombing lust week. The explosion set off a blaze which destroyed more than a third of the structure, but there were no anjuries, aulborilaes s aid. After 488 Years Columbus' Veuel Finally KEY WEST, Fla. <AP) -It's been 4Ml years since Christopher Columbus sailed wilb shipa lbat became part of every American youngster's school litany: The Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria. Now, just in time for Columbus Day 1980, ·treasure hunters th1nk they may have found tbe wreck of the Pinta. Olin Frick and John Guque, two Key West treuure hunters. aren't totally convinced lbe ship Fire Idles Oil Tanker NEW ORJ..EANS (AP) -A tanker carrytn1 51,000 tom of crude oll aat dead ln the water about 300 mllea lnto tbe Gulf of llexleo toda, u CoNt Guard crewmm tried to determine if It would ban to be towed to port. A ftn broke out ln lb• enctne room SunQy, crlppliq the ablp but a........Uy aotlDJurln• any of, the a2 PeoPle abOanl. Crewmm abHrd the 111-foot ... ltoJallmmedl~ ••aledotf tile ...._ room and Ht off a t .............. .,...,, tbe Collt o ......... . l they found in 30 feet of water off the remote Turks and Caicos Islands in the Bahamas is lbe Pinta. But scientists say an iron can· non and a crudely formed lead cannon ball removed from lbe wreck appear to be from lbe lSlh century. And historical records in· dlcale lbe Pinta was one of lbe few sh.ipa In the vicinity of lbe islanda when it went down in H99or "°°· Next month, backed by a wealthy Dallas investor. Frick, Gasque and a team of 23 divers and archaeologists plan to re· tum to the site to recover the re· maina of the 1hip. "We plan to 10 over the wreck very, .very carefully." Guque said. "We will recover every· thin• that we can flnd -right down to the lut ballast stone. "Like all arcbeological work, we ma, not be able to come up with abaolute proof that it la the Pinta," Gaaque aald of the wreck, wbicb be and bi.I partMr apott.cl three yean a10. "But if we flDCI DOthlDI to contradict it, we tblak the wei1bt of the evldenee will be awfully con· vincinf." Columbua took the Nlna, the C8ee PINTA, Pa .. AJ) I .. Lesser Tremors Continue AL ASNAM, Algeria (AP> Rescuers clawing through the ruins of Al Asnam, hampered by earthquake afters hocks and working by floodlight at night, have found thousands of injured and counted lbe number or dead found at 1,500, officials said to· day. New tremors measuring 5 on the Richte r scale tremors capable or causing considerable damage registered in the area tod ay, according to Sweden's seismological instit ute. No new damage was reported in Al As na m. Friday's quake reg· astered 7 .5. ·'The entire Algerian nation is mobilized" to help the estimated 100,000 people left injured or homeless in the disaster, the s la te radio said. The Red Crescent, Moslem Algeria's equivalent of the Red Cross, said lbe final dealb tolJ may surpass initial estimates of between 5,000 and 20,000 dead. But lbere was still no govern· ment estimate of the number of casualties, and some rescue of <See QUAKE, Page AZ) Coast Weather Continuing low cloudl· ness wilb only partial mid· day clearing thro ugh Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 at the beaches, 62 inland. Highs Tuesday 71 to 74. INSIDE TODA\' Dr. RoNrl Sheridan of Newport Beach procticea tradUionol ~dic!M tn hU Ha r bor View H ome• nnghborllood. He mokea the rC>llftdl on a bic,ct.. gtvino follo111·up claecbpt to Or· thopedlc patfenta. Su Featu'*'fl, Page Cl. • ••• ,..,._..,... .. :=a..-.~ L..M...,. M .......... ~ .. c....... ,., =-c: Cua • • ......... a ........ M ............ ~. I 'f I I ' ( ~ ·~ I • s ... ••• .. , ......... St .. nietl••KilMI The world's largest radio telescope, funded by the National Science Foundation, has been dedicated at Socorro. N.M. It took eight years to complete at a cost of $78 million and 1s made up of 27 dish-shaped antennae arranged along three arms of railroad track. Laguna Bank Plan Told 11 Orange Comt Residenbl File-~ Eleven prominent Orange Coast residents, ·Including a mayor and a munid pal court Judie, have filed appUcation t.o form a national bank and trust company in Laguna Beach. The srouP med an application with tbe federal Comptroller of the Currency to establish the Laguna National Bank and ,Truat Company in the vicinity of Forest Avenue and Beach Street ln Laauna Beach. No site baa yet been purcbMed. Capitalization from shares is- sued by the bank would total $3,250,000. the group stated on its application. Emest George of Corona del Mar would ultimately b e chairman and chief executive of- ficer of the bank, if it is ap- proved as anticipated over the next three to five months. George is the former president and chairman of Cal Western Savings and Loan Association in San Francisco. During his four years in that capacity, the bank increased its capitalisation from S2 million to $22.5 million and from a single office to six. he said. Prospective directors of the bank include Mayor Wayne Baglin of Laguna Beach, an ex- ecutive with the Fluor Corpora- tion; Casper W. Barnes Jr. of Newport Beach, professor of electronic engineering at the University of California at Irvine; Judge Richard Hamilton of the South Orange County Municipal Court. a Laguna Beach resident; Katherine D. Short of South Laguna, owner of the Laguna Travel Service; and Kenneth A. Willig of Newport beach, owner of the J ohn Wayne Tennis Club. o"thers who would be directors are attorney Wi lliam C . Hitchcock of Laguna Beach ; Ke nneth D. Kelly of Laguna Beach, a partner in Lingo Real Estate; Norman D. Savage of Corona del Mar, president of Corporate Realty Of· Irvine; Nicholas N. Shammas of Laguna Beach, owner of seven Los Angeles automobile dealenhips and Workman's Automobile Insurance of Los Angeles; and Burton Sinu1 , managing editor of the Sutton newspaper group. The directors. who would be in charge of bank operations and policy, would be making i.nvest- ments of $20,000 to $90,000 each when taking their positions. They would not be salaried but would be paid from $50 lo $100 per meeting. George said. Argentinean Wins Nobel OSLO, Norway <AP> -AdoUo Pere& Esquivel, an Ar1entine human rights advocate im· prisoned for a year by his 1ov- ernment, wu awanted the t• ~I Peace Prbe today. The 4&-year-old aculptQr and architect' wu honored for hav- lDI "shone a Ugbt in the dark· ne11" of military rule In his land, the Norwegian Nobel Com· mlttee said. The five-member committee paaaed over s u c h oth e r nominees as President Carter, Pope John Paul 11 . British Forei1n Minister Lord Car - rin1too and Zimbabwe Prime Minister Robert Mugabe in choosing the UUle·known Argen- tine for the $212,000 prize. Perez Esquivel heads the Peace and Justice Service, a network of Latin American human rights organizations. The service is he adquartered in Buenos Aires. Argentina. He was jailed in April 1977 "without cause being shown," the com- mittee said. and was released more than a year later. He left Argentina this year for the first time on a trip to Europe. His selection continued a re· cent trend of awarding the peace prize to human rights advocates and groups. Soviet dissident An· drei Sakharov won in 1975 and the London-based Amnesty In- ternational in 1977. Two other previous winners. Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan, the co-leaders of Northern Ireland's Peace Peo- ple movement, nomi~ated Pe~ez Esquivel for the pnze, calling him "the most out.standing non· violent activist alive." The Peace Prize is one of five established in the will of Swede Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite , to honor humanitarian works . Last year's winner was Roman Catholic missionary Mother Teresa of Calcutta. India. Professor John Sannes. chairman of the No rwegian Nobel Committee, said Perez Esquivel was awarded the prize because be bu "devoted hll life to the struggle for human rights aince 1974.'' The committee's statement •aid the purpose or the Peace and Justice Service, which -Perez Esquivel baa led since 1'74, is "to work to promote fun· damentaJ buman riahts, bMing- itaelf exclusively on non-violent means." It bu a network of con- ta c ts spanning the South American~inent. The committee likened the views and alms of Perez Es· quivel to those of Sakharov. whose human rights activities led to his being sent from Moscow to internal exile in a provincial Soviet city. The statement traced years of turmoil under Arge ntina's 4· year-old military government, which it said ''has Itself made use or extreme violence.'' "Perez Esquivel is among those Argentinians who have shone a light in the darkness. He champions a solution of Argen· tin a 's grievous problems that dispenses with the use or violence, and is the spokesman of a revival of respect for human rights ... ·'The prize w inner 1s an Argentinian, but the v1ewa he repr-esen-ts c arry a vital message to many other coun- tries, not least in Latin America, wbere social and political prob- lems as yet unsolved have re· suited in an escalation of the use of violence." Perez Esquivel is the secood Araentine to win the Nobel Peace Prize. The fint wu the late Carlos de Saavedra La.mu, who as Argentine secretary ol s tate mediated a conflict between Paraguay and Bolivia and was awarded the 1936prlse. A nativeofBuenos Aires. Peru Esquivel was a profe11or of architecture before givinl up his teaching poeition in 1974. Tbe committee's selection was from a record 71 nominations, 57 individuals and 14 organizations. The peace prize is the only Nobel award that can go to or· ganiuticaa. ,.,...p .. AJ MIDEAST •• • down tbe lnqla'' and plannlnl count«.uatk.I. Bani·Saclr aald he bad not beard prevloualy of U . N. Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim'• proposal for a tem- porary ceue-ftre in the Shatt al- Arab to allow forelan shlpa stranded ln the waterway to escape. He said t¥ wou&d cllscuu it with the military command, ··and I don't Ul1nk tbere would be anytblq wron1 witb tbat." But there wu no iDdlcatioa Iraq would halt Ila drive to win com_plJ~te contr.ol of tbe waterway I lts outlet to the Persian Gulf and ita ctuef aim in the war. Bani-Sadr .aaid he d1dn't think "It will take very lon1" for the Majlia, Iran's Parliament, to de· cide what would be done with the 52 American hosta1es, who today were spendlna their 345tb day in captivity. He indicated that the chief conditions for their release would be the return of tbe late Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's fortune to his govern- ment and th.e freein1 of Iranian usets in the United States which President Camr froze after the seizure or the U.S. Embaaay in Tehran. The Iranian Parliament con- vened in extraordinary session today and handled some ad· ministrative matters, Tehran Radio reported. There wu no word on whether the hostage is- sue came up. On the diplomatic (cont, King ·Hussein of Jordan met in Saudi Arabia with King Khaled and Cr o wn Prince Fahd , and Hussein's prime minister. Modar Badran, said they aueed to support Iraq's territorial claims against lr8'1. However, Saudi Arabia an- nounced a1reement witb the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar to increue oil produc- tioa by a million bUTels a day to help cover the abor'tfall caused by the war. On saturday, in- formed sources said the Saudis alone agreed to bike production _a million barTela a day. and the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar by half a million each. Iraq's southern oil terminala have sustained dama1e from Iranian air strikes "likely to take several months to repair. 'Alllatt888 Me•••IMI' FromPGffeAJ .• QUAKE • • • 11,373 Aeres __ Laguna Cbie.f Rapa · -·if:::-:: :.t~1:!~ :=:.~-: .. ·--Heannu- but the oil fields themselves'' have Heaped relattvely un- scathed." the authoritative Middle East Economic Survey reported. It said the northern Iraqi fields and _production -··-ricnnr61-were neisentially in- .... ~-tact." but that damage bu been ... VllllA_.M.,,.~tAI done to the main pumpin1 sta- tion at Kirlcuk for both of Iraq's . fi.! J J _ Red Crescent's estimate. • 9'e 'Ca1110ro Ei.UU Many of the dead and Injured :e~-~1~l-=~~u~e~w.!~ On National, Park pipelines to the Mediterraaea. Laguna Beach Mayor Wayne Baglin says the city is "going to pull Ch.rough'' despite its current financial problema. He described Scycamore Hills as "Albatross Meadows" because of the $6.7 million debt the city owes on the property. . The city, Baglin said, should conaider selling an additional 10 acres ol land in Sycamore Hills adjacent to 90 acres which may t;e sold to the Baywood Develop- ment Co. of Newport Beach. In a speech to the La1una Beach Rotary Club, Baglin said the city's reserve fund could dip to $10,000 by the end of the year . The city deaipated $845.000 in reserves for a landslide repair project in Arch Beach Heights after appeals for federal aid were rejected. The mayor said be still has bopes some state money will be forthcoming for the reconatruc- tioa ol the hillside below Del Mar Avenue. However, Baglin said, the city owna M pieces of property in town and ia "in 1ood shape.··· "We've aot the aaaet.s," he said. "We're going to pull through." Surveying a list of problems and issues facing the city. Baglin sounded a theme of belt- tightening during bis talk to Rotarians last Friday. He said: -For every add1tlonal "mini QftANGI COAST DAILY PILOT .-.. ... -~,.,IC9rtnt end Putlti"""' Offtoff c:-......... >•W..i I•• Mrwi ~9"<" >OJl .... GM QH ....... , -........ lo«ll: ,,.,, lffcoll ........ ,. C1111*M.ww..-...11MN111 park'' created -such as Cres- cent Bay Park -a maintenance man will have to be taken from a crew serving an existing park. -Roads will only be able to be repaved once every 15 years. -When a $20 million Aliso Water Manage ment Agency· project is completed in 1982. the city sewer and water districts should be combined, saving about $250.000. . -Police personnel turnover in the city ran at 52 percent over the la.st J.S m0'1ths and better pay elsewhere is a definite fac· tor in the turnover. FremP.,,.AJ PINTA •.. Pinta and the Santa Maria -all wooden sailing ships -on his maiden voyage to the New World in 1492. The Santa Maria is known to have been destroyed after running aground in December 1492, but the fates of the Nina and the Pinta were not known. The N'ma accompanied Colum- bus on bis four later voyages to the Americas and then disap- peared from historical record. The Pinta, too, slipped into ob- scurity, until Frick and Gasque got some help in researching a wreck. From record.a of journeys in the Spanish archives and a 500-year-old tax report, historian and National Geographic consult· ant Euaene Lyon reconstructed the lut journey of the Pinta. He says evidence Indicates one of the Pinta'a owners, Vincente Pinson. wu making a return tip to the New World around 1499 or UIOO. Accordln1 to Lyon, Pinzon island-bopped for about six monU. In a aearch of alaves and riches before a hurricane aank two veuela in bl• neet of four. Lyon 1a)'I suntvors vartoualy reported the 1hlpa went down near "Barbua," "Barbulca." ; "Bavueca" and "Babeque." While none ol 1boM names ap- pean on ma111 of tbe pertod, be aald be ia convinced tbe wreck la ''within the baltl>Vk'' of poealble •••• AD ..,_mtDt ._.,._ Frick and GMqUe's comp::r, Cartb- bean v...wr. Inc., tbe l"- ernm• of tbe Brttllb "IWb ud Cmc.w alvee tbe w..urw bunt.rt IOle rtlbU to HI•• a aamblr al lltll ...S l'nll ~ 11llpwrtdm la tbe arH. TM llW· erammt wW keep • pelftM of, . u.n.1. Some remained isolated by landslides and ruined bridges but a continuous helicopter airlift by the Algerian army was evacuating injured villagers to hospitals. Officials said at least 900 sur- vivors were hospitalized, but Red Crescent President Mouloud Belaounne told re- porters tens of thousands were injured. He said there was a severe shortage of hospital beds and emergency operating equ.ip- ment. Tea ms organized by an Algerian women 's group gathered up small children who lost their parents in the disaster and were wandering aimlessly through the streets. Hospitals were cleared of all but the seriously ill to make room for quake victims. The army said it mobiUzed every available helicopter to ferry the injured to hospitals around the country, and many or the pilots took serious penonal risks in the evacuation effort. There was still no electric power in the city and electricity for the rescue operation was provided by generators. Flags fle w at half-staff throughout Algeria as the nation observed seven days of mourn- ing for the earthquake victims. The homeless were estimated at 50,000, 40 perC!ent of the city's population of 125,000. After shocks shook the ruins as rescuers clawed through the debris in a round-the-clock search for survivors followt.n1 the city's second kWer quake in 26 years. One tremor Sunday rocked the tent headquarters where Preli· dent Chadll Bendjedid was coordinating rescue efforts. Dogs nown in from France and Switzerland, where they were trained to sniff out buried avalan<'he victima, pawed at the rubble, alona with rescuers armed with liateoin1 devices. Hope1 waned for tholle buried iD the wreckaae, but one police officer said he had beard ol vlc· tim• found alive two weeka after tbe 195' earthquake that killed more than 1,800 in Al Atnam, 150 miles W8lt ol Alaien. "We wlll 10 on 1earchin1 u loaa u tbere la the 1U~te1t po11lblUty of aunlvon. ' be ..... Flree Mar Week CHICAGO (AP> -J'lre Prew..U. w.-.,.... to a cklM ID CblealO wtt.b ftNI ln tbe ana tlaat ldllild ftft peopa. u4 left 10 otlMnQdund . Proposed federal legislation that would create an 11,373-acre urban national park along the coast north and east of Laguna Beach will be the subject of a Senate subcommittee hearing Tuesday in Santa Ana. Among those scheduled to testify in support of the park bill i nclude California 's two senators, Alan Cranston and S. I. Hayakawa. Hayakawa, a Republican, in- itially differed over bow the park purchase s hould be financed, but has since fallen in line behind Cranston, a Democrat. in support of the Senate version of leaislation co- au tho r·ed by Reps. Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, and Jerry Patterson, D-Santa Ana. The bill already has cleared the House. Under the terms of the bill, the land would be purchased wtth S38 million in federal land and water conservation funds. However. the purchase would be forced to compete with other propc>MJd land acquisitions. The hearing by the SUbcoJD· mittee on parks, recreation and renewable resources will be held from 2:30 to 5:30 "p.m . at the Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza:.· Alao testifying will be county supervisors Ralph Clark and Tbomaa Rilel; Wayne Baglin. mayor of aguna Beacb; representatives of groups that have lobbied for pusage ol the park bill ; state officials, and landowners whoae property would be purcbued. The latter will include Irvine Company President Peter Kremer. Pattenon said consideration of the bill by the full Senate will occur either in late November or early December. -- - -------- ---- Introducing the Al's Garage Jean . . destgned especially with you 1n mind. lightw9t0hl, comfortably ta110red with a straight leg sllhOuette. in three shades of denim. Indigo. washed and bleached '· ------------__ ._ ' Train Crash Injures 26 TERRY, Miu. (AP) -F.dna Ha.rwood sa)'l sbe thou1ht "bey, this is it" aa five can of a 10.Car Amtrak paaaeneer train ran off tbe tracks at 75 mpb and tumbled down an embankment. Five persons remained hospitaliaed today following the derailment Sunday night near this small town about 20 miles south ol Jack.acm. Hoepit.al of. ficials said the five were listed in stable condition. In all, 26 or the 69 people aboard Amtrak's northbound Panama Limited, on a run from New Orleans to Chicago, were taken to three J ack.loa boepitala with minor injuries. ALS GAAAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (~14) 644·7030 ·; . I Orange Coast EO ITIO N • ~ VOL. 73, NO. 287, 3 SECTIONS, 1~ PAGES ORAN GE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA ~ig Profits Seen Newport Planning Oil Well Takeovers By STEVE MARBl.E OI ... o..ly ,. .... St.H Newport Beach city off1l'1als, after standing on the s1deltnes for 37 years, have decided to pump up city profits by going in· Under Cover? to thl' 011 business Next January , Lhc city will take fuJI ownership of 16 w~~t Newport oil wells rooted an t it tidelands Although nfftcu1ls plan to let ~CLU Ousts Officer From Neupon Meet By JERRY CLAUSEN OI t• o.lty ,. ... , Swft An estimated 150 people at· t e nded the American Civil Liberties Union 's legis lative conference in Newport Beach Saturday. but only one or them was asked to leave. Officer Rich Long, a Newport Beach communit y relations po.liceman. was asked to step out of a seminar addressing the is- sues of police inte lligence gathering and abuse of public authority. Rudolfo Alvarez, president of the ACLU Southern California Board of Directors. said Long, attired in street clothes, was asked to leave because several people indicated they felt un- comfortable that an offi cer was taking notes in the room. p rofess11111als du the actual pumping the t•1ty will market the t-rudc, transport the stuff and h:.uuJlc <ill the paperwork Ci ty Manager Robert Wynn. who est1rnaks the World War ti era wells have at least 20 good years in front of them. says the move ~hould bring m illions in 1>rofil The wc lb. located directly above Coast Highway m county territory. have bt'en pumpin~ about 5,000 barrels of oil each month. Hut s ince 1943. the t'1ty has let various oil firms do all the work and take home most of the prof its . Wynn says the city's been recC'ivmg around one·eighth uf the profits. T hat translat<'s to $65,000 a year , says Wynn . Pxplaining that once thf' C'ilv take. over the yearly profi t~ s houlrl fall between S250,000 and SS00.000 a year The r aty 's current ai;rt>enu.:nt with Armstrong PetrCJ l1.·urn C.:orp . which owns the: 5-urfart' equapnwnt and tank farm . ex pires Jan. :.!5 Wynn says the city ltkt>l}' wall use up most of its first .year profits pur c h :.i~1 n g '>urfare equipment and t'onstru(•t in~ a new tank fa rm. An attractive dement of the move is that the city would be exempt from the 1980 Wind.fall Profit.s Tax. which would eat up about $100,000 of the annual pro· fita if an oil firm was handling MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1980 TOtlay's Closlni N. \'. SttK-ks N TWENTY-FIVE CENTS APWl,..pfloto YOUNG SURVIVOR OF ATLANTA DAY CARE CENTER RUSHED TO HOSPITAL AFTER BLAST Five People Kiiied, About 7 Others Injured In Tragedy Cau1ed by Natural Gas Blast Rips Kid Center Rees Lloyd, ACLU' staff at- torney , a ai ~ to_d.tu ..... .l&.n.i .. ---w-owcf'notnavet>e"en asked to _ ........ _ . -. ,... -the business . GET'S"M:W BOOT· --· ·-··---·-w-ynn·ny. eooeiii .. n>eileve ...... ·-··---- I 1tep outaide the cafeteria al Newport Marbor Hltb School where a panel was meeting if he had identified himself as an of· ficer before the session. Alvarez said someone had r~· ognized Long and reported that an officer was taking copious notes at the conference. The ACLU president said that a request for any police officers to ideoWy themselves went un· answered until Lloyd finally called out for Officer Long by name. "At which point," Alvarez said, "IAng raised his hand." Lloyd said today th at "whenever you have a situation of a police officer who won 'l identify himself, it does im· plicate. First Amendment rights." In a discussion oulaide the cafeteria, Lloyd said , officer Long told him he was not on of· licial business but acting as a private citizen. "However." Lloyd claimed, "he said a police officer is an of- ficer 24 hours a day and though bis notes were private notes he may turn them over to the police department." Catlwlir llnit OlllWV Rlctt L.... it wt~ a. too hard for th• city to get t. knack of wheeling and Lloyd said he told Long he dealing in black gold could step back int o the meet.mg ··with the demand for 011 the if he exi;>l~ned his attendance to wuy it is. 1 thtnk we can do 1t th~. partic1~ants. . . fairly easily," Wynn says. .There lS an obJect1on whe~ The new profits. expected to police. officers attend ~?d don t reach a high of $510,000 in 1982 td~nllf,Y themselves, Lloyd and earn the city a five-year s~1d.. We h_ave bad problems tot al of SJ.5 million by 1985, will with infiltration in the past with go Into the city 's tideland th~ .Pl:1blic Disorder intelligence budget. D1~1s1on of the 1:?s Angeles The tideland budget goes Pohce Department. toward marine operations such Long was at the conference on as lifeguards and beach safety of~~cial police business. . equipment. He was there on my mstruc· And if the wells start running tio!ls," Ne~rt B~.ach Poli~e dry in 20 years or so, Wynn says C~1ef Ch8:fles Pete Gross said the city can consider investing this monung. . . in secondary drilling techniques . He. was to morutor the po~1ce to keep the profits nowmg. mtelhgence and abuse session, the chief said, to note any "ac· tuaf or perceived or other prob· terns in terms of police com· munity relations to determine whether there were, in fact, any issues so the department could take possible actions in response to those concerns ... Long paid his fees, Gross said, and paid for his lunch. too. The chief indicated that the <See ACLU, Pa«ie i\2) Fire Idles Oil Tanker NEW ORLEANS I AP> A tanker carrying 57 ,000 tons of crude oil sat dead in the water about 200 miles into the Gulf of Mexico today as Coast Guard crewmen tried to determine if it would have to be towed to port. Gay Supporter's Resignation Asked A fire broke out in the engine room Sunday, crippling the ship but apparently not injur ing any of the 32 people aboard. Hoag Visit Slated For Bloodmobile A Red Cross bloodmobile visit is scheduled at Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach Oct. 21 for donors throughout the Harbor Area who would like to contribute by appointment. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL oe• Delly ....,. ,..,. The chairman of an organiza· lion which claims to represent 2IOO Oranae County Catholics is callint for the resignation of a county Human Relations Com· miuicmer who helped promote a conlerence on gay spiritual de· velopment. Catholics in Defense of Truth, said be believed the use of coun· ty letterhead in promotion of the conference wu wrong. "One thing we want to make clear, however , is this is not a hate c ampa ign aga ins t homosexuals," Johnson, of San (See CA11IOUCS. Pa1e AZ> Hours for the visit will be 12 : 15 to 5 p.m .. according to spokesmen at the hospital. Ap- pointments to donate blood may be made by calling 645·8600. Al'LANTA 1AP • Ao ei. plos1on believed caused by a gas leak or fau lty boiler ripped through a day care center at a northwest Atlanta housing proj- ect today. killing four children and one adult. authorities said. Seven other people were injured. Lt. John Cameron of the Fulton County m edical ex· am iner's office said five bodies were found. The injured were take n to Grady Memor ial Hospital in downtown Atlanta. Mayor Maynard .J ackson s aid he asked th<' Atl anta Housing Authority to evacuate day care centers at aJl other housing pro· jects in the city as a precaution. l le said he wanted furnaces and gas lines at the centers checked. "ft was so quick." said Melin· da Cole, a teacher at the center. "All I could think was. 'Get to the door. Get out, children, get out.' I got all 12 of mine out - safe and accounted for ... Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown said the explosion. which caused "heavy damage" to the building and hurled rubble as far as 50 feet, appeared to have been caused by natural gas. But Jim Tate, a spokesman for Atlanta Gas Light Co .. said "Our preliminary reports in Medical Faculties Exchange Plarmed By RICHARD G R EEN Of ... O•llY ,.llel SUH A trade of faculty members is being planned between the Bei· jing (Peking > Med ical College and UC Irvine. UCI College of Medicine Dean Stanley van den Noort announced today Speaking to a group of stu· dents and faculty at UCI. van den Noort said two UC! pro· fessors would go to Beijing and two Beijing proft:ssors would come to UCI. His comments came arter a speech at UCI this morning by Ma Xu, president of the Beijing Medical College. Xu said he is on a "~ood will " trip and is studying U.S. medical schools. He pointed out that medical care in the People's Republic of China doesn't compare to what Americans receive. Inexperienced "barefoot doc· tors" are a chief component in the Ctunese medical system, Ma Xu s aid. Xu said thes e so-c alled barefoot. doctors are given one to three months of medical train· ing and told to care for people m remote villages. "We have a very hard time providing medical care lo people in rural districts." Xu said. "Eighty percent of the one· billion people in China work in agriculture and live in poor con· ditions. ·'So we go to the villages and give one of the residents basic training in first aid. We tell them the signs of serious disease and we give them simple equip· ment and drugs. And this is the way a majority of our farmers get medical care. Xu pointed out that this form of medical care doesn't compare to what Americans receive. d1 cate 1t was a boiler e' plos1on. ·· Brown said there was "no sus- picion of fouJ play ... Our pre liminary investigation indicates an accidental explosion." In addition to the dead, seven were injured in the explosion at the Gate City Day Care Center, located in the Bowen Homes housing project , said Mike Yelton, a s pokesman for the hospital. He said one child was in s ur gery with a skull fracture, and another had second-and third· degree burns cover ing 25 per· cent of his body. "It was terrible. really terri · ble," s aid Tinnie Baugh, a teacher at another day c are center across the street. "I went across to see what I could do after I heard the ex- plosion, .. she said. "Some of the kids \\ere badly hurt I saw one little boy whose fingers were missing .. Anthony Miller, a spokesman for the Atlanta f'1rc Depart· ment. said "We think there are still kids buried under the rub· ble.·· Police estimated 90 children were inside at the time. Miller said five engines, three ladder trucks, four rescue units and "all available ambulances" weredispatchedtothescene. About 485 children attending an elementary school across the (~BLAST, Page A2> Coast Weather Continuing low cloudi· ness with only partial mid· d ay clearing through Tuesday. Lows tonight S8 at the beaches. 62 inland. Highs Tuesday 71t~74. The commissioner, Dan BHmner ol La Habra, said to· day be bu no intention of re- 1i1nin1 and claimed the chairman of Catholics in Defeme ol Truth bu ml .. tated the factl ol the matter. lff,.iler to Wed, Di1'orce INSIDE TODA't' Dr. Robert Sheridan of Newport Beach practices traditional medicine an hu Harb or View llomes neighborhood. He make• the roundl on a bicycle, giving follow-up checkup• to or- t ho p•dj c pafintl. See Featuring, Page Cl. 1 Bremner, wbo authored a let- ter on county n.tionery ur&inl attebdmee at the two-day eon- feNDee llllt July at Cal State hllertm. aald be did ao witb the eomm••km'• ba.uin,.. Tb• eomml11lon 1 cbar1e, .,._. DO&ed, 11 to facWtate ........... IJ'OUP9 aad id\ ............ Ylewl. NEW YORK (AP ) -Pulitzer Prize-winning author Norman Maller bH made plana to divorce his next wife even before they marry, a spokesman for the writer confirmed today. Tbe New York Daily Ne~z in a copyrlctrted story, aaid Mauer, who divorced blt fourth wife, 8evert1, on Sept. 24, bu been Uvln1 in Broolllyn with Nonil Cburch and their 2~·year-old aoa, Joma Buffalo. for 1lx 1eara. But 11111 Cbutth woa 't be bla next wtle. Rather, Mailer. 57, will marry jazz singer Carol Stevens, a woman he lived with for seven years and with whom he has a dau1bter Maggie, 9, the News uld. Mailer plana to marry Miss Stevena to honor the years they lived totether u husband and wife and were unable to marry. and live b1I dau1bter parenta wbo at aome point were married to eacb odter, the New• Hid. But tbe eouple will then 1et a "civilised d \vorce" to be -... followed immediately b y Mailer's marriage to Mi ss Church. The News said all parties in· volved have agreed to the ar· rangement . The spokeaman, who did not want to be ldenttried confirmed the report today and saJd that Mailer had nothing to add. "It la a bit d11concertn1 and u.,.ettln& to think what peoele will HY," Miu Church told the Newa. "Neverthele11 I am behtnd Norman'• decision and I understand wh)' he feela he muat do thil.'' Mailer has been married four ti m es, has bad numerous liaisons. and eight children, the News said. The paper said M aUer auppo.rtl 1' persona with alimony and child support. Maller woo fame alter World War II with bis acclaimed novel of the war' "The Naked and the Dead." He won the Pulltaer Prise in 198'1 for "Armies ol the Ni1bt." a look at American politics, and aaain th1I year for "The Executioner'• Sonli." a 1tudy ol executed killer \jary Gilmore. ------------·------... --~ ~~--...__-~-------.. 1. Stock Tratliil#J Balled By Conaputer l>mblenu Nl';W YORK (AP) stoet& tr'Mtna WM IUJJpeft ... ,. minute. today oo t.be New Yen ..s Amerir • 1toe• uci.•a• due to 11 computt!r probl"""' C"tmck SlC>rt't . 11 spobaman (Of U.tt N•w \'ortr RlOC'lt Ex t'hun1&t'. 11a.ld the probl•m developlld U\ Ute •arket clalll aystem. whH'h cootrvla thtt atoclt llicket anll Ml\dl • Ulforin1t.l0fl on t rudt>K It.I the)' O<'C\U'. 'fhCI ''hHrdwurt> m11lfun(U." oecurTe4 .al~• &.nl PDT. he said 'l'ht· t•xchanwu automatlully aw.lldl ... ~ a bac.kup ystt>m, wh1eb did not work. Md tnMliac •u ~all• at I l I a m nt both t'Xchanges. It wu l"ftlumed at t ·OI • lh ..... .,....,,,., • C nlli• LOS ANtiEi.ES 1AP> Ronald Mtar•. ttyhls to put • 1>adlock on the oat.JOI\ 's tM&aett blew of e\ectoral vot., courted Mme-state Cahronwaaa teday an4 r• laeo ...._, ~.itt1 on a colle1'e campus. Settm~ out on a aerie. ul raJliet ~ I.All A.ltCelea. lhe Hepublican preslctutial caNl1date bad to •tt OYer a 1teady chant from op~ aa be appear41d befar9 an •Woor rally at Claremont Colleae lft Pomona. He departed from his speech t.o tell •e beeklera thlll he swp· ported equal riga.ts for womee b'll' 1a1cl a.. oe.11.S t'be Equal R1g hL" Amendment because "thM simpte~ emen4ment ii; not the answer to-securing tMH •"·" I ' Plan,-Blja~kftt h• M• 't '.~·:· · lSTANBUL, Turkey CAP> -A~ AirhM.8oelag 707 jet with about 150 passeagers and ctew aa.i ·~·llijac~ed by unidentified people today during a ftiaM .,,.. Istubal to Ankara and made a refueling stop at tht *-itbtast city ol Diyarbakir, Turkish Airlines officials sa~d . Airline sources said the plane was lhou1ht lo be t.eaded for either Tehran, Iran. or J idda, Saoda Arabia, after the refueling stop. The ldenUty ol the hiJacken waa not llftmtdl•te'Y known but Turkish 1'elevi8ion broadcaal a ~pott .. ,._, the hijacbrs demanded safe p•sa1e to an ~identiftecffo~i,. country. Siglllll, A-.es '• /fl.,,. SAN DIEGO CAP> -The SitDal ComNJUh IM. umounced an agreement in principle today to merae wtUi Ampex Corp. of Redwood City. . The agreement calla ror the exchanae·of .15 of a Sttnal com- mon share for each share of Ampex commoe. Sipal common closed at '4~ Friday, Ampex at 33~. Mer1ter 1>lri were announced in Febn*'Y but were can-cel~ in April. Slpal said the new plM .._. '-completed in January. ,.,....r..,,..41 CATHOLICS Clemente, said. "We are sym- pathetic and love them, as we must love all our fellow men." "But we cannot legitimatize homosexual acts or homosexual orienlatioo,'' he llddecl. ~-c-acvUiOU-=-""ca·m -Defense Oil TnlUl w ........ of about 200 Rom .. Cau.ollca In Orange Cowity. He said the or- g a n it at ion was formed in Januarv. However, Menlltnor-Michaet Driscoll . c hancellor or the Diocese or Orange, said the group bas no official recolJUtion with the church. "We have tried to find out who they are and have not been suc- cessful ," Monsignor Driscoll said. ··1t seems they always want to take their batUes to the press." Monsignor Driscoll said be feh that Bremner's tole ·in Mlping promote the conference was •'perfectly legitimate." Johruloo's call ror Bremner'a resignation was contained in a letter dated last llonday le. Ralrh Clark., chab·raen of tbe county Board ol Supem90n. Johnlon reiterated i.n the let· ter his organization '1 ..,._iUon to Bremner's promotion ol the conference, spensored by Oicni· ty. an organization of ~ay Catholics. He said ~n the letter that should Bremner not reaip voluntarily, he sbOWd be 619· milled by the board. Brenmer said he has reeetved copies or Johnaoa'I corrMPGDd· ence and has pftland a reply. He declined, bowe••t, to dd· close it.s conteftta. "But I am not r .. lpla1," Bremner said. Bremner waa a~ to the com mission by· 3rd, f>lstrlct Supervisor Edison Mllet. DAI LY LILQT Fred True, 30-year Movie ·W7orltw, Dead One of -.e unseen men behind the caineras during the Golden Yean f1I HelltWOOd, Fred C. ~.a-~idP:foe Paramounl ..... ,_ llt ~ ..... ,..,. . .. at GI Ooftlaa d9l Mar fer aear- ly 23 ......... ay. FWleral services for Mr. True, 11, will be held 'l'uetday follow· ing visitation today from 4 p.m. t-0 ~ J';llt.-at Pacific View- Memoritl l>ark Chapel in Corona def Mar. Rites for Mr. True will be at 10: 30 a . m. Tuesday at the Lutberab Cbutch of the M aater, 2900 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar. Burial will follow Tuesday's rites al Inglewood Park Cemetery lo In1Jewood. •'We 1ot tblet.ber in 1934 and were .aarried in 1936." Mn. True said tMa,. "I w•· Jmt a little waitress at tbe Paramouat Studios com- mi1181'Y. _. ttlat's where we lbetJ, .. ~* ..... 'hue. Slit ~ her b"oabed of 44 yeaTS ~ bb taorie career with Umtnal ~ and then switcrhed tO l>atamount. "ll tbey tlhtt•t kbow about so~~ do it or where it • fatted tot' the key ariP.~ Mn .-.. . teuUed today. ··~'f-at.aJS aMiped to a ca.neta; .. _.... die &tc&tin1 and .. ~ ... - "lff ,~ ~ a l« ol the old daat *ff.\:t ... said. men- tieel.al C..-Lombtrd. Bing c~.' l'lauMtte ~rt and ··~MUt..S. •r. TnM. i• ad4ltton to his wlclow, leavet nephews Ray MacCodaber ol Lot An&eles, Ralph M..C.aMr of North HoUJ_... ..ST• MacComber of B~d ... ia 8ddition to a nlee•, V\~ MeOtille, of San- ta II~•-' ·~·. -· . "" MelDGl'ial c.'OD&ributioas to the Lutlaer .. Clute~ ol the Muter aave "" n11ettetf by the famUy. Freeway Vote OK Sought Th~ Orun.:t' C ounty Tr~na.porlal1un Commission uriced Newport H~urh voters lO· day to pulf 11 b1dlot measure on Nov 4 tt> 1&Jlow construction ol a propoMd exteMion of the Corona del Mar Freeway Tht> one-mile extension from 'ampus Dnvt' to MacArthur HouleVllrd already has been ap- proved for funding by State Transportation Commission and Iii scheduled for construction to begin m about 1983. The cost is estimated atSlO million. Newport Beach has a charter provision in which voters have final approval on proposed freeways that pass through the ci· t y or force closure of city streets. Proposition L on the November ballot authorizes amendme nts lo update an original agreement between Newport Bea~h and the state made 15years ago. The Newport Beach City Coun- cil has backed the proposed ex· tension, which members say would help reUeve traffic conges- tion along Bristol Strttt next to the suggested freeway and al.so along nearby Pacific Coast Highway. The transportation commission made its recommendation at the requeatofO.E . "Bu<l'"Schroeder, a member of Newport Beach's Yes on Proposition L Committee. F,...P.,.eAI ACLU ••• ACLU isn't the only organization concerned with constitutional rt1hts. "I am very. very concerned that the ACLU is eslabliahing criteria for some kind of a closed meeting where commwii- t y people and people with responsibility to the community are excluded." He said he believes officer Long 's constitution al rights were impinged '·and shocked th at ACLU would exclude anybody from their dis · cussions." Long could not be reached ror comment today. but Chief Gross said ACLU reports that Long dhh,~t "lftlftedbtely-iileftt.ily blmaelf at flnt request were "at variance to what I bave beard." Chief Groea hu been an out- spoken critic in the past regud· ing public curtailment or police _in tdli&ence . oper..ations... ..noting. that officers should have the same information.gathering rights as the news media. I',.... Page Al BLAST ... street were evacuated after the explosion, police Lt. Bill Neikirk said. Thousands of onlookers gathered atthe scene. Margaret Ross . a spokeswoman for the Atlanta Housing Authorit~ said the day care center, locafed in the Gate City Community Center. is operated by a private concern and serves the 850 families liv· ing in the Bowen Homes project. A building about five miles away, containing offices and warebouae apace used by the houain1 authority, was damaged in a firebombing last week. The explosion set off a blaze which dntroyed more than a third or the structure, but there were no injuries, authorities said. Gun Victim Die8 IDABEL, Okla. CAP) -A gun battle erupted at a care i.n this southeastern Oklahoma care, leaving one man dead and two others injured, authorities said. The shootout occurred in a black section that was the scene ol racial violence last January in whichthreepersonsdied. ·: '.f.,leM Thief 'b •ormn Stripped, Fhw .......... """,i-~ •• ..., ...... j_ Ca1U: Meat police are the woman. deacribed as 1peak· aearclilllll for a woman who ln& with ui European accent, Cf "--•• ---.......... ~, trted CO -.a a ht coat from fair-skinned and in her 20I. ~~· deparl•nt atA>re broke rr ... '911tu11 , llMled up in a rracu Ma. Bravo said a male 9'Gt ~ty a1eat ad a customer aaw the battle and ran CUI.. ... ftnaUy fied South after the Oeeln.l suspect. Cout .. ua weirln1 only a half· He 1rabbed her and in an 1Up. ensutna tunle the woman acatn Potke .... t.be woman wu broke free, leavin& behind the 1'"'"11d bf ..urttJ qent Uaa blaok *-8 she wore, her purse Ana lnw It •-.at ololin1 time and tbe fur coat, police 11.ld. Sal..,_ ta -....t10m•1 ladl• Tbe womaa ran topleu, clad .,..,.........._ only ID a balf..Up, to a waWnt Ma. lraYO told ottleen tbe ear, DOiie. •Ud.. Jumped in and wom• llllfred a •·• fur coat wu drtvtn from the South Cout up IMr *-·._ .... bet lep. Plua DU'klDa lot. TM •• •• left. DOiin Hid, omeen Nld Ucena• plate ln-aH .-8nYO attempMd to v..U.llkln revealed tbat tbe ear arnet 1* tllatdt tbl .-.. la wbldl the woman eaeaped _ la~ f1i tlaat aaw both wu 11eted • ,..... troaa,a..SlmL wotlill a Ge .,....S, Vala., natal ..-CJ· ::t'4 • '0 .,._..,.. ___ ..__ -lo ---•-• l,508F•••• More Tremor • I Victims Sought .... ~ WINS PEACE PRIZE Sculptor Eaqulval Argentine Sculptor "lins Nobel OSLO, Norway CAP l -Adolfo Perez Esquivel, an Argentine human rights advocate im· prisoned for a year by his gov- ernment, was awarded the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize today. The 49-year-old sculptor and architect was honored ror hav· tng "shone a light in the dark- ness·' of military rule in his land, the Norwegian Nobel Com- mittee said. The five-member committee pa ssed over s u ch ot her nominees as President Carter, Pope John Paul 11 , British Foreign Minister Lord Car· ringtoo and Zimbabwe Prime Minister Robert Mugabe in choosing the little-known Argen· tine for the $212,000 prize. Perez Esquivel heeds the Peace and Justice Service, a network or Latin American human rights organizations. The service is headquartered in Buenos Aires. Argentina. He was jailed in April 1977 "without cause being shown." the com- mitttt said. and was released more than a year later. He left Argentina this year for the first time o n a trip to Europe. His selection continued a re· cent trend of awarding the peace prize to human rights advocates and groups. ~viet dissident -M· ···arei "Snlfa·refV·woii inl975" ancr tbe London-based Amnesty In- tematioa.al in urn. Two other previous winners, Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan, the co-leaders of iqofthem Ireland's Peace Peo· pie movement. nominated Perez Esquivel for the prize, calling him "the most outstanding non violent activist alive." The Peace Prize is one of five established in the will of Swede Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynam ite . to honor humanitarian works . Last year's winner w as Roman Catholic m issionary Mother Teresa or Calcutta, India. Professor John Sannes, chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said Perez Esquivel was awarded the priie because he has "devoted bis life lo the struggle for human rights since 1974." The committee's statement said the purpose of the Peace and Justice Service, which Perez Esquivel has led since 1974, is "to work to promote fun- damental human rights, basing itself exclusively on non-violent means." It has a network or con- t act s spann ing the South American continent. AL ASNAM. Al1eria <AP> - Rescuers clawing through the ruins or Al Asnam. hampered by earthquake aftershocks and working by fioodllght at night, have found thouaancb of injured and counted the number of dead found at 1,500, officials said to· day. New tremors measuring 5 on the Richter scale -tremors capable ol causing considerable damage -registered in the area today, according to Sweden's seismological institute. No new damage was reported in Al Asnam. Friday's quake reg· istered7.5. "The entire Algerian nation is mobilized" to help the estimated 100,000 people left injured or homeless in the disaster, the state radio said. The Red Crescent, Moslem Algeria's equjvalent of the Red Cross, said the final death toll may surpass initial estimates of between 5,000 and 20,000 dead. But there was stiU no govern- ment estimate of the number or casualties, and some rescue of- ficials expressed hope the final figure could be lower than the Red Crescent's estimate. Many of the dead and injured were i.n mountain villages within a 20-mile radius of Al Asnam. Some remained isolated by landslides and ruined bridges but a continuous he licopter airlift by the Algerian army was evacuating injured villagers oo hospitals. Officials said at least 900 sur- vivors were hospitalized, but Red Crescent President Mouloud Belaounne told re- porters tens of thou.sands were injured. He said there was a severe shortage of hospital beds and emergency operating equip- ment. Teams organized by an Algerian w o men 's group gathered up small children who lost their parents in the disaster and were wandering aimlessly through the streets. Hospitals were cleared of all but the seriously ill to make room for quake victims. The army said il mobilized every available helicopter to ferry the injured to hospitals around the ·-.---·· Cmropractor Facing Sex Rap Stricken A Newport Beach chiroprac· tor. facing child molestation c harges. has been rreed on $40 ,000 bail afte r bei ng hospitaljzed over the weekend with chest pains. Dr. Gordon Braham, 36, had been listed in fair condition late Friday at UCI Medical Center. Braham. along with his 21- year -old wife. Nancy, was ar- rested last week after a 14-year· old girl told authorities she'd participated in sexual activity with the chiropractor and his wife. She also told investigators she'd been supplied with drugs. The chiropractor fainted while being arrested and later col· lapsed outside his jail cell, police said. Braham's wife was released late last week when her bail was reduced from $50,000 to Sl0,000. lntrod1,.1cing ttie Al's Garage Jean designed especially with you In mind, lightweight. comfortably tailored with a stralghl leg silhouene. In thr" shades ot den1m .1nd100. washed and bleached country, and many of the pilots took serious personal risks in the evacuatioo effort. There was still no electric power ln the city and electricity ror the rescue opera.lion waa provided by generators. Flags fle w at half-starr throughout Algeria as the nation observed seven days of mourn· ing for tJie earthquake victims. Alter shocks shook the ruins as rescuers clawed through the debris in a round-the-clock search for survivors following the city's second killer quake in 26 years. C.Oast Park Bill Slated ' For Hearing Proposed federal legislation that would create an 11,373-acre urban national park along the coast north and east or Laguna Beach will be the subject of a Senate subcommittee hearing Tuesday in Santa Ana. Among those scheduled to testify in support or the park bill include Californi a's two senators, Alan Cranston and S. I. HaY.akawa. Hayakawa, a Republican, in· ilially differed over how the park purchase s hould be financed, but has since fallen in l i ne behind C ranston , a Democrat, in support of the Senate ve.rsioo of legislation co- authored by Re ps. Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, and Jerry Patterson, D·S8Jlta Ana. The bill already hu cleared the House. Under the terms of the bill. the land would be purchased with $38 million in federal la nd and water conservation funds . However, the purchase would be forced to compete with other proposed land acquisitions. The hearing by the subcom· mittee on parks, recreation and renewable resour~es will be held _fr~m. 2:30 ~_).:30_.,,e.rn.__a_Lthe. Hair or Acfrrumslratton. 10 Civic Center Plaza. The bearing will be chaired by Sen. Paul 'l'songas, D-Maas., who is appearing at the behest of Sen. Henry J ackso n , D - W asbington, said J>atte~ - Patterson said consideration of the bUI by the full Senate will occur either in late November or early December. 'lliieves Get Bag, $15,000 A Newport Beach saleaman who bundled up $15,000 in cash in a brown paper bag and then stashed it on the floor of his car, told police that someone swiped the money this weekend while he was shopping. Oliver Lee Reinertson, a 41· year-old Newport resident, said be forgot to lock the passenger door of his car after stopping at a shopping center on Westcliff Drive. He told investigators the money, all $50 bills, was in a bag that was concealed under a newspaper. ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (714 ) 544.1o:ao ,.._ ---~ ......... ---·----··.-....-..._., ... ~ .. -.........-.... _. ,l - Monday, October 13, 1980 CWLY F'tLOT Good Grief! ·Charlie Brown Is 30 WELL! ~ERE ~O\\ES OL. I CHAR LI E 8RO"'N . .... , ....... CHARLIE BROWN MADE HIS DEBUT IN THIS 1950 PANEL A ffM T•e.nt Teat Launched• Netton•l lnadtution SAN'J'f4l0SA <AP> Good lan&uages. The first of a s tring airld' Cl(llc-Rrown as :JO yeM'!I of Peanu~ animated telev1s1on old shows appeared 15 years t1go. And 1t 'bt>ac1u1 tn a rather un-and thousands of products ct1rry llk4!lyl w with u l'Orrespood-likenesses of l'eanuts charac· ence> l' ti an draw&nlif ''from ters. The engag ing drawingi. on~ of e places that says have made Schulz a m illionaire ·tuk" ou rl't' luhmt lest','' said "1 make 1more money than l'rt-titor urles Schulz, whOse ball players," he said, "but I'd humhh:teginnlngs blossomed draw comics even 1£ it only paid 10(1) 1111 )1p1rn centered on the firty doU ars a week." r nrtoonfriP .. Peanuts," which Schulz, 58, is a soft.spoken, celebrd its Joth birthday this reflective man, who works Mon month. ------d&ys-throurb-F'ridays, 9 to S:-in 'l'hat prn~spondence course his s pacipus studio in this and tlllft have made Schulz a ple asant town about 40 milrs fumous\an north of San Francisco, duing 'I dqt know why everybody "the only thing I ever wanted to laughs hen I say that --it was do." a 1o1o~ourse," sa ys Schulz. His characters have al WU}'~ who~e 1orld·renowned c barac-bee n children , but they li re tt-r~ ·Charlie Brown. Lucy, children with a simple kind ,f Lanui. 10opy a11d Woods tock -wisdom that mak<-s them attr;it• :.a p p or 1 11 s o m e I , 8 O o tive to adults ne~s Pf(!l"l! t!Vt'ry day "l 've never thought of 1t ~ " But he strip is no longer s trip for kids." he said r,.faxinr. c hul1 onl> form income -in his spacious, rnodern bool.. Peanu tS a huge industry . lined studio. wh1<'h 1!> <'nJwr!t-rl Hurred:1 or Peanuts books with Peanuts pr oduC'lS "Thal • have :en published in a dozen too difficult to do .. The predecessor of Peanut, a ('um1c strip call~ "Ll'l Folks," nppt.-ared l1l Schulz's hometown new spaper, the St Paul Pioneer l'res& 10 the late 1940s. That ~trq.i evolvt:d mto Peanuts when L nited f'cJture Syndicate invlt ed St:hulz to New Yorlc and ask~d him l<J work for them. "I w.int~ to call it 'Charlie Urown,' but some.body suggest- t-ci Peanuts.· I thought that was u \\.:.f.!Ll...' .'...b>t:...:s.au:' L----- "They would all deny it now, lmt J don't think they had much 1·•mf1dencP 10 the strip," the car 1oon1st :i.a1d. The stnp was initiall y sold to new~papt>r-s a~ a "space-s aver" with smallt-r·th<in·normal draw mgs '\Cter JO years or doing seven '~ri p .. a wel!k. Schulz still gets 1n11: I of his ideac, in his Sllldio, • ind doesn't like 10 s pend much 1110 1-'l\\d Y ll l11kt•!' about an hour to druw • 1 l'l•unuti. '>tnp onre he has an 111•,, t,ut he C'alled the work "ex 11rrntl v dema ndin~ " Daily 1trip1 are due in New York six weeks before publication, and Sunday strips are sent in 10 · weeks in advance. He's usually · ahead or that schedule . Schulz, who trew up in St. Paul, has lived and worked in Northern CalifomRt since 1958. He has five children by his first . marriage, which dissolved after ! 23 years. He remarried seven .year~ ago. - " l think the kids gave me six ideas in 25 years,'' he said, but one of them became one of the strip's most popular sequences. lt was the notion of making beagle Snoopy a World War I flying ace battling the Red Baron. Schulz got the idea when his son, Monte, began building models of World War I aircraft . Schulz. an amateur hockey player, built a $2 million ice s kating arena in Santa Rosa . and occasion a lly makes a hockey player of Snoopy. Mesan Widening Senate Battle Sailor's Release Protested By JERRY CLAUSEN OllMIMlfYl'lleUUH Costa Mesa attorney David Bergland will take his campaign for Alan Cranston's U.S. Senate seat to Northern California in a couple ol weeks. Tbe message, ''Don't Waste Your Vote On More Of The Same" will be heard Oct. 27 at press conferences in Sacramen- to, San Francisco and San Jose. He has a Los Angeles debate scheduled for Oct. 21 and an Oran1e County fund-raising din· ner set for the following night. At bis last appearance in Los Angeles on Oct. 1, Bergland called on his Republican oppo- nent, Paul Gann, to withdraw from the race "to give other candidates with truly different ideas an opportunity to be heard." The Republican, he said, has no chance to win anyway. Gana laucbed when he heard about the suaiestion from a re- porter in eo.ta Mesa early this •Mk. "I clan't intend to withdraw," Genn clmc!klell. "Bat, obviously, someone believes I'm in his way." Gann faces an uphill batUe in bis campaign. The polls indi· cated Democrat Cranston-is favored by about SO percent ol Turks Make It Count ANKARA, Turkey <AP> -Even though th e weather was beauti ful. everyone in Turkey was ordered to stay indoors. Tbe reasoo? Sunday was census day. Officials said they buve to count in the mild weather becawse when it snows it's imPoSsible to reach isolated mountain villages. o.11.~ .... , .... ~ FACES UPHILL WAR S.Mlle Hopeful .. ,...nd the voters and Gann by about half that number. Berlland 'a battle, baaed on tJae polla, iJI more like .. QPhill wa r . Polls indicate the lawyer may have as much as 4 percent of the vote. And while the Libertenan con- tendS lie_ is in the race to win with the IJOly real altemative to what might be called a one- party system, there a.re indica- tions he'd be happy with four or five percent ol the state vote. That, be said, is wbat pre- sidential candidate Ed Clark ol San Marino is hoping for in bis Libertarian bid to create a valid three-party system. This fall's election marks the first in which the Libertarian Party will be listed on a state ballot, says the ~ttomey who i..s serving his second term as na- tional party chairman. More than 100 Libertarians are running for office throughout the state, and Clark announced in late September he would aooear on the ballot in all 50 st es plus the District of Colubia. Lil Clark, Bergland is nm· ning'l a platform c alling for lit- tle ( no national government and s~ interference in citizens' lives Hi relalively low-cost media cama.ign 1s expected to drive homlhat m~ssage via radio in the tek preceding the election. J1t about everything - esptaJly the federal energy bur.:racies -should be cut fro among governme nt senes, he contends. ,_ T! party a lso calls for e1111nation of a ny military drat 81gland says federal money shod be spent for defense, but nonof it on other nallons' pre- partness. H Libertarian plan calls for thecovemment giving up its va11mergy holdings and regu.la- tior which, the candidate con· ten., would eliminate the need for•reign oil. '19n, be explains, there'd be no1eed to worry about io- he Rescue 6urses Set AongCoast trdiopulmonary Resuscita· tio <CPR> classes teaching in· dituala lifesaving techniques wtbe ottered at ab locations on th0range Coast through Nov· eoer. \e free courses are designed toeach sustenance of life until vlims can be placed on ldical support care systems to kp them breathing. u" d students who com· r nine·hour classes will ... ed certificates from an Red Cross and the -"•·•. Heart Association. , one-day class will be offered Cl. 18 from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. at t Orange Coast YMCA, 2300 1 i versity Ori ve. Newport Jach. The course will be re- ,ated there Nov. 8 and 22. ' three-week CPR class run-ng three hours on each even-1 will be held Wednesdays om 7 to 10 p.m . beginning Oct. at Hoag Memorial Hospital, ewport Beach. Weat County students may \toll in a three-week evening f>R aeaion from 6:30 to 9:30 \ . Mondays beginning Nov. 10 t he Finley Leaming Center. 1 Edwards St .• Westminster. dents desiring CPR train- in can also take the course f 5:30 to 10 p.m ., Tuesdays b nnlng Nov. 18 at the B ew Learning Center. 2531 O'ftard Drive, Santa Ana Hthta. sldents of Leisure World, Beech, may take advantage WO 12:30 to 5 p.m . CPR see in the Leisure World house No. 3, 1421 Northwood e, Seal Beach. e first will be Tqeaday and nesday, Oct. 14 and 15, wed by a repeat of the CPR proceclure~ Od. 2LaDd accord.inl to Red Cross of· all. or additional information, 1 Beverly Boyd at CouWne mmunlty College, 983-2CM4. --.....oons Fly n Noise Gripe terference in the Middle \o;dst. and military spendinj! could bt.- reduced. On the c urrenll) ht'at1•0 Senate campaign's focus <1n Social Security µr oi:raro.,, Be r gland explains lh e th111~ could be solved by adding no c1nP who h as not yet paid into the system to its oonef1t rolls Retirement annu11 y plc1 os through t he frec-enlt•rp rt'\t' system would be the an:.wer , ht' adds. with pe rsons <1 l ready participating in Social ~t curity payments or benefits JJa1d for their interest through th(' .;ale (Jf vast government la nd h •J!din~i. His proposals, he sa}'S are Uw only real alternatives in tht- Senate race "Tt\e~ are rn t• guy~ 1t1 lh1s r ace. My view of a w111 :. put in tile total contt>xt of all the races in the nation <ind 1n Lhtl state <Nov. 4)," he says. "We're tryin~ to create a three-party system in this n11 lion. lf Ed Clark does well, gel-. 4 or 5 percent, we will have ac- complished that. NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) A judge's decision to free a 19- year -old American sailor who admitted k1llmg <1 Nairobi pros· t1tule tn a drunken brawl has set off a public outcry in this strategic East AFncan nation. H igh Court Judge L.G E . H a rri s rel e ased Fra n k Sundstrom of Coventry, R.I., two weeks ago on a $70 good behavior bo nd . C h arge d with mans laughter. he could have been sentenced to life 1mpnson- ment. Instead, he was allowed to re· turn lo duly aboard has ship, the I.a Salle, Oagshjp of the U.S. fleet operating in the Indian Ocean and the Persian Gulf. ··No party, except tbe Socialist Party, with a Ion 1 · t~-11111 __ __._ ______ •~ -,...,sr ......... _.._i"r.r pbjlomopby, haa hMl any recent Trm k'• P9el~ etl lmpMt..gD aadonal PollUoa. "Whether the Libertarians A tr ainf>d i>l i:µhant. kept in will bttome that third party 11• l ,;ptavily 1f~ erallrt hfe, is on whether the Republicans a11d its w~y to Ken ya where it Democrats will pick u p our plat-will be returned to a natural form would take a crystal ball to habitat as part of an experi-tell you. . ··1 don't have one." ment on~le~_ha_n_t _re_l_oc_a_ti_on. Bring on 1984 Candidate Already Running LOS ANGELES (AP i Ken nedy. Brown. Baker or Bush may or m ay not be names that figure in the 1984 presidential race, but O'Leary says there's no use being coy any longer. so be is officially ente ring that con test -now. O'Leary, 34. a New Haven. Conn. rock mus ician, m ade his announcement to fi ve assembled mt!m h"•"" of thl" news med ia at 'a ll»llywoo<l coffee shop . i ca11 t h1dt' my intentions an y longt'r 'ht-Scud. O Lf~ary said he is trying a coin eba<'k after finishing fourth '1asl) 10 the 1978 Conne<'ticut guhe m ;1tonal race as a write in. He sav-. he 1s a mepiber ot the Su rpr~~e Party. Port of Stockton Channel Closed STOCKTON \J\Pl The chan net in and oul uf the Port of Stockton remained closed t r~ pleasure craft over Lhe weekend during cleanup of a fu(•! spill, although commercial Hssds were allowed through at hi~h tide. officials said. ourut111ty moc Mo re work was planned today t t> r.~mo\ e what re m ams of ~110,00\) h:Ulons of flamma~le Jet I ud I h.1t spilled Friday wnen a µ1pe hne burst as the fuel was be· 111~ lakPn from the Navy tanker ShC>!>hOOe our but,t..:zr ooft, ~1ovz. ldJ 01cl r 1u · 'I). LI 1 vibrruri'chppzr roJ.7. Ir\N l"o. fh: rnn rL comfor tablcz. shy onyi:-,u l '"-'WT f<Z.Otunz.e tx ucz. rnoc~~1.n oonatruc.t.on with fboro 'becka.derchar.C-c\.u>hicn-e pzrflzct tor strcza.t'MZBr or l.P'ltmg evei\ebl<z. m navy, b r it15h um andrcid, l-...... "£'. v,:vv; ...... ,_. Tt was the m ost serious inci· d('nt invoh ing an American sailor since the Kenyan govern- ment agreed last summer to let U.S. Navy ships J&Se Mombasa. Kenya's chief port, in exchange for increased U.S. military and economic aid. Public c r itic i s m of Sundstrom 's sentence reflected the feeling that the American got special treatment. Editor-publishe r Hilary Ng'weno wrote an his influential Weekly Review: "The general impact of the judge's action was to cast doubt on the evenness of the judicial system, doubt wh.ich is all the more poignant in view of the fact that both the judge and the accused were white, and the victim was an African. and a prostitute al that. ·'The judgment was an em- barrassment to both the Kenyan a nd American governments whose recent close military lies. so pregnant with incidents o{ the Sundstrom kind, are now gomg to come under close scrutin y." he a dded. The Daily Nation devoted its entire letters-to·the -editor page Saturday to the case. IWL'Y PILOT Ja•t :··~ c .. sting "' . • Snl8rl Shirts SEAaCH t'Oa KNOWLEDGE Dt:PT. Certain audemk mlndl ln our tou&al area have poblted with alarm at t.hc trend or uaina lelvlsion to eduu: ~ populace. Alu. they ire behind the tlmet. The boo tu in the cluaroom la now outmoded ln Al for TV 1cbooUn1. the cry wnit up from ~rt• -.,ducaton that all we were dotn1 was allowinl 1tudenU to watrh a n k 1tenn1 video tube and get a 1r*'9e for what they see.You have to suspect some aelf-aervlnl d~eft;H '°b~~ professors who might fear electroruc 1nvu on ID academic discipline AtTt:a ALL. H£R£ YOU have this ~rof wbO te:ch:, Underwater Basket Weaving lOl·A as adh•e:1t~:!iMcl they videotape has ·teach mg pi:ocess an e: a necessary in· over. The professor, hamf sell, LS nWoil~~= oet residual pay· gredient. He's on tape orever. .. menu? ... er hu now · Advanced educational tedmology · nowev · Front o/ Braba T-Shirt; GTOJI on Block -Whal Eue? relegated TV teacbin& to the outmoded shell, along with bu1gywb.lp1 and hula hoops. The new technolo1y, my friends, is teacbine by T· shirt. ADMITl'EDLY, TEACHING by T-shirt 'drew its academic inspiration from the use of educational television. TV classes got started because teachen re- alized that their students weren't poring over dreadfully dull textbooks. They were spending all their time watching Lou Grant. So they turned the tube to educational punuita. Now knowledgeable educators have realized that stu- dents spent more lime reading T-shirts than they do anything else. Thu.tbeAcademicT-ahinbubeenborn: l-....,..,:~~~~~r.;=s~~~f'!l.~·~·,___~_ 8\ earned Ge meaaa1e "Love lie!" acrou Ute fl'ODt. Or a muscular young man whose shirt carried lhe blunt message, "Disco Sucks. . . " Bul nowadays when you read the front of a shapely T- shirt, it's like to be emblazoned with the molecular struc· ture of Chlorophyll A. white oo green. Or the music f0r Chopin's Butterfly Elude. black on pale yellow. Or Max- well's F.quationt, whiteon n11vyorwrmeon marooo. THESE INSTRUCTIONAL THREADS are being brought to you by a catalotue outfit of Lafayette Hill, Pen· naylvania. The catalogue, known as the Journal of Academic T-Shirts for Fall. 1980 does not contain a single picture of a shirt. There are no T -shirts with "Bom to Lose" mottos across the front. Instead, you can order a T-shirt with ~e diagram of the human brain. Or one showing the vanous pa.rta of a frog. Or another with the family tree of the Roman Em- peror Nero. "This journal is intended for a variety of readers, stu- denta. teachers, researchers and all others interested In the instructional and cultural aspects or T-shirts," the catalotue foreward firmly declares. YOU CAN GET YOUR education now for 15.75 per T· sbi.rt, or if you're shooting for a doctorate de~ree! you ~ay . want to order 36 or more shirts for the bargam pnce of Just $4.75 each. Don't just get dressed every morning. Get educated. Oml••• ll•"erlllal Nations Seek !~T!>e~ • ~--·,m·~~ Terrort.t bomblftla in four of tered windows In se the world'• m~or cities lnJured bulldlnp. flv• people and left IJQlice pw-Minutes later, an. 1Un1 over poulble links between man called news o ta in Los unfamiliar anU·Turldah and anti-Anteles and said a up called SwlHIJ'OUP9· "Justice Comm an a o( the Two bombs went off Sunday In Armenian Geno e'' was London, and one each tn Los responsible for the Angeles A.naelee and New York. A filth and New York blaata exploekln occuned early today The bombings, he ld, were In Paria. There were no "in retaliation for lb laughter fatalities. < Relatechtory, A5) of Armenian people b he Turks , A moua callers said \he and for the hara ent or no~y . · Armenians by Turkl.s e ln e•ploeaons an the United Stat.ea America " and one of the London blast.a Lo· d were the work of Armenians an-In ~ on, an u ent.lfied treatment by Turu caller sa.id a group c ed 'The artyh over llers aald anti·Swis~ Armenian Secret A y" was 0 er ca responsible for an e Ion at 1rouP6 were responsl~le for the the Turkish Airlines ice and second 1.oc;'don explosion and the waa protesting the Tu~b aov- one in Pans. ernment 's ·'bloody ctlon" Lond on police sald the -.gatnst Kurds and enlans. two bombings there could be re-The Kurds have been c ducting lated, although diUerent groups a guerrilla campaign l urkey, claimed responsibility. The Ira n and Iraq tdwln a blasts were 30 min utes apart homeland. and a police spokesman said It WORLD I NATION F i e,.,, Leap French stuntman Denis Fabien's car bursts into ball of flame during jump Sunday over triple l~yer of autos .out · side Paris. The blaze was intendonal, with undercarnage loaded with gas tanks. Fabien was unhurt. would be an "extraordinary" coincidence if they were not re· lated . .. But we are not sure about Trenors Rattle St. Helem anything at all," said a Scotland Yard spokesman. In New York, four people were hurt. none seriously. when an unoccupied car blew up ln front of the Turkish Mission to the United Nations. At about the same time in Los An geles, a n explosion of a Hollywood travel al{ency owned Vote-rich States Blitzed By Tlae Aasoc:la&ed Presa Aa the last three weeks of the campaign open, Ronald R~agan is chasing votes ln the biggest electoral-vote state and Presi- dent Carter and John Anderson are wooin& the next biggest prise. Rea1an .Pl•IJ.':..A-C:MDPal&n. blltr~ "'Alifonaia, uin1 bu•ea md helicopters \o move bis campaign to six appearances in the Loe Angeles area. CARTER AND Anderson will be in New York, marching in the Columbus Da.y parade. that is. an annual tribute to the Italian con- tribution to the nation's largest city. Carter then goes on to Il- linois and Missouri, and An· deraon heads for Pennsylvania. California, with its 45 electoral vole•. and New York, with its 41, are among the key battlelJ"OWld states where it is believed the Democratic president and his Republican rival will fight it out in the final weeks of the cam- paign. POU..S SHOW that Andenoo will not get an electoral vote, but he says lhi5 will change as voters realize that Rea1an may gain the presidency. With that realizatioo, he said Sunday oo CBS' "Face the Nation,·' voters will switch to him as the alternative. VANCOUVER, Wash. ~P) - Mount St. Helens con~ed to quiver with small ea uakes during the weekend, bu e ac- tivity was less than tha f pre. vious days, scientists sa~ The volcano was hll y five small earthquakes tbdasted for two or three minutebefore trailing off "into a treor-like acti vily," Sunday, sai1 Steve Walter of the geophysiccenter at the University of Wasbgton. The Class B quakes we Ugbt "pulses of energy" and ve too small to register on the icbter scale of ground motion, I said , adding that the volcano u.ieted alter the quakes. Heavy clouds and rainld the volcano from U.S . :>rest Service observers. Officials closed the restricted '"red zone" around the mountain because they couldn't keep an eye on what was happening on the mountain top, said Forest Service dispatcher Jerene Bon Holt. Forest Service spotter planes were grounded by the weather, BonHolt said. On Thunday and Friday, the mountain belched s team as "harmonic tremors" - thought to be moving molten magma -rumbled in the moun- tain's subterranean bowels. Over the weekend , the firefighters mopped up a blaze that blackened 620 acres in the restricted zone. Losses have been estimated at $106,000, with no injuries or damage to homes. The rire spread from an authorized slash burn on In- ternational Paper Co. land seven miles southeast or Cougar on Thursday. About 200 firefighters contained the blaze by the next night. Mom, Son Slain LOS ANGEL~ <AP> -The bodies of Dorothy Aguilar, 22, and her lwo-year ·o\d son. Michael -both or whom were shot in the bead -were found in their apartment in the Mar Vista area, police said. The bodies were found Sunday about 11:30 a.m., police said. ''I believ e in soft lights,. -" -·-· . . -----'---·----quiet t imes and Fashion I sland." ·Both U.S. Coasts Rainy Lig ht Sno~s Du.ring Vp~r Midioo8t Fashion Island is my kind of place. Where else can l enjoy so many shops geared to my lifestyle plus a great choice of depart- ment stores? Or receive personal attention from sales people l've known for years? Or find stores treated to fresh flowers and lovely interiors and other special touches? Why do I believe in Fashion Island? . . <lr•f .. W'e•llw NltM allll _,,. -<IOUft wltll Mlly INf'ti.I <INrlne TwM!ly •ftlr· . -· ,_ ... 111111167, tow ss. ,,,._ ...... 14, I• ... W•r. H . l:IM...,.., lltflt v.,1•11 .. w111•• 11ftflt Md momllle llourt lle<omtne wntefly 12'o llllllelh T......., etttr· '° -· ...._., twellt -to lftrM feet. CONielf-. c!OudlMu. lll1•.,•e•1ter OvUy •I ... ,....,,. lllew .,,., leutM"" C:..lfWll141 _.. ... IM ._rt.,_ T......, _lel,_ w-1 ••• Clo.,.11\_eU •M coeler tem.i ,.,.lllrot ...... -4k ............ CM_..._,lfle_laMI_ Sen!«.-. 0--,t.ir_.., ......... .., .... lly .... -.,.,..... """ I C ...... _.. ....... 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L.-.. " .... " • .. ,.,. ., • ..... • • =~ .... " • .. .. ....... • • TUIM H SI w .... ,,...,. 6S " CA&.1..otlNIA .... , ....... 11 n •. "' ... .... ,.,_ 1t w Menteny " S7 .02 NMdlot t$ "' OelalMd .. 5' .02 Secr•meMo 71 51 S..t• 11Mti9r• 71 50 S•Otofl 1' w TIWrmel ts .. .. ,._ ,, •S .,.,.. II ,, c.u11 ... 70 ,. IEI c.tltro .. 1l i...9Hdl 1S 62 ..._,.._,, 61 ,. o..e.r1e ., " Pelm~ .. n s.. ........ 11 u SM!-'-.. • s..taAM .,. " S.llte~le IS • TMIOOV .. loy .. 12 .12 .......... .,... ... TOOAY ... s.ceM• •:Slp.m, ••• TU•IMY l'lrt* ...... 1:12•·"'· ).4 "'"''" s:ee.m. u ....... """ U:12p.m, ... s.c ....... 1:Up.m. I.I 11111 ,.., •:» •.m ..... 6:21 p.lft. -... ,... tt:W a.m .. ..., t :n '·"'· ..., ...... Swt: --... IWlfH '" twt, ,,.... lmvm tloltl\t 111 , .. ,, """ Ill MUMI. t I-ft ........... • u ....... , ............ • ,, 1111 oi... c.My • u •• .....: --~IW!fHl11-.. ,,. ... lfllWl'i ..... IA ~ • ... ·" z-. I I w ..... ..... I t • .. fl•=---· ' a • ·" ... ClMlly I • • 0•11 ... fw T11H .. f : Llltlo .............. I We're s ~ Because Fashion Island believes in me. HION ISlAND NEWPORT CENTER . ial, because you're special. Ushire • Robinson 's • The Broadway • Buffwns •J .C. Penney L ~• ofl Pac1l1c C0as1 H19t1way m NcwPQf1 EH11c:t1 - CALIFORNIA 7 People Stabbed f'iole11ee Caps U Street F eittiva/, LOS ANGELES tAP) Sevtft peo pie wer~ at abbfd t.od•Y Ml th.i ~od or an outdoor rock <'Oll<'t-M that <'6tPSM"<t a Wffk~-nd ol f~st1v1th.'S <'ailtd tht' Loll Anaelet S&rt'ct St'<'ne and Blrt'n tennlal C'_.l~brauon Police said th~ tabb"'gs, wn1f"tr may have been u na.t r t'lated, len two _. ort1on Kickbacks Alleged SAN DIEGO IAP> ~late ht.'alth officials have llbked tht.' Dt>partment of Justice to 1nvest1gate alleged kickbacks by California 's largest chain of abortion chnics to d tsk supported family plan ning agency A state health d epartment 1n vestigator called the agency. the Anah ei m -based Birth Corftrol Institute, a "gig ant ic referrul system" for the abortion ~roup. Dr. Phillip G. Weiler , chief deruty health d1ret't or for pre ve n 1 ve health services. told The San Diego Union that he has halted state funds to BCI and turned the case over to the Department of Justice. Weiler said the state is looking into the relationship b~tween BCJ cind multimillionaire a bortionist Dr. Edward Campbell Allred. p~opl~ \n \'rtU ·al cond1hon IU\d u third t-nousl mJun'<t The vtolt•nct' t•ru11tcd at I. 10 u rn •t tht> <'OO<'lus1on of a 1>f'rfon111111c· .. b) tht' group Hlood !'>wt·at und T•·urs Hou rK luter, JK>ll<'f w1•re l!lJll 1111n ·r taln ~hfittwr ITIT"lht' sfublllng11 w"n ' rt>lated or wheUwf the re were two separntc L11cidcnts "It happt'ned wnh1n :stxiut 1 wo nllll\lll· nt'ar th• 1s t ~tn•l' !Int Broudw(ly 1.m •11," saut l.l Usll Lynch of th1· polar 1• depu111ol'nt s .~114:1·1al t;f111.-f11•tt11l known !Is C'HA~ll 'om mun ll~ Rt>suu1 1 c., AJ(r1111:-.t Stri·ct llood lurru; WEAPONS W ERE n 'l'O\'Ht'd 1.y ne h said , lrnt h<' dN'li11t>d lo elaborate. Durlng the we1>kc·nd ,lbscrvann:, l85 different group~ Pl'rforrn cd on 14 different outdoor suagcs. Polirt· on Sunday estimated that u1> to 500,000 peoi.il e had c~uwdPd into tht• squure block festival area ne;ir U1e C1v1c Center. f "'"""' ......... The kickback investig.tt1on in- volves an estimated SS00.000 paid last year to BCI by the Allr ed -owned Family. Planning Associalt!s Mediral Group, which has 12 abortion rlinics in eight counties 111 Southern and Central Cali fornia. the newspJper said Sunday. People were packed shouldl·r·tO· Tra• I A' shoulder lo watch teen he<irt-throb P ~ S Platfontt Allred's abortion business makes an estimated $12 million, about 25 percent from Medi-Cal, accordine to state health officials. BCI has received more than $2 million in stale funds since 1974 to provide family pla nning counseling in San Diego, Riverside and Orange Counties, according to state in· vestigator.i. Donny Osmond play piano lo buck up Chuck Berry, one of the kings ur rock 'n ·roll VIITl.MS OF THE stabbm~s listl'd 1n critical cond1t1on were Michael Barba. 26. of Rosemead and Richard Vasquez. 24, of I .('IS Angeles. Lynch said. Kenneth Kraft. 2i. of Whi ttier, was listed in serious condition. Other victims. listed m stable con· dition, were Timothy Sandoval. 26, Thomas Hernandez, 30, of Whittier and Raymond Carmona and Victor Muhr at CalHornia Hospital. Need $20,000? It's Yours Fo r Just $J60_.J7 a f1onthJ When you need a larger loan. your house may hold the answer. We can o!:-...1 help with a homeowner loan. Count~ Other fam-..,_ ____ ilies aiiJ busiuesses have for over ffi years. On a ~.CXXl loan. monthly payment~ are for 120 months at an annual per- centage rate of 18.00%. Total oLpayments: $43,244.40. We'll find a way to help. Call us today. NO POINTS. NO BROKER FEES. CDfv\I\ ~ ':~ ::iAL C~EDIT CORPORATION A loan ol $S,<XX> and over must be secured @ tl)\.la\ ,..Uli\'ltt. LENDtn Albt>rl·Anthon y Augustitus, 63, st arted campaigning as an independent for the presidency in 1976 As a Chnstian who was born again in jail, his rhetoric 1s unfet- tered. "Triple-A for president! I'm another J f'K : f 'm a no th e r Truman . Th t. Democratic and Republican parties are two bi g bags of dead, stinking fi s h. Carter's s mile is phony : mine is real.·· As h t: stood just off Highway 1. Sunday. shout· ing like a Broadway barker. Triple-A's platform was met with bewildered stares or c ries of recognition fro m passin g motorists. Bomb Destroys Travel Agency LOS ANGELES tAP) -A group of Armenlan t e rro r ists has cla imed responsibility for a P<>werful bomb blast that destroyed a travel agen- cy be longing t o a Turkish immigrant in Hollywood. and another bomb lhat went off m New Y<11 k A similar group claimed it planted a bomb that rocked London earlier Sunda . A pa!STiig mo orlsf was injured when a powerful bomb exploded Sunday at 2: 15 p .m . in Hollywood, on Vine Street a few hundred feet from SunsetBoulevard. QuakeShalce•Ea••Bay BERKELEY CAP} -An earthquake m easur- ing 2.5 on the Richter scale shook the towns of Fre· mont, Union City and Hayward causing a flurry of telephone calls to police, authorities said today. Ther e we re no re· by a ~~ination of real and personal property, CO TA ME A •370 E. 17th Street • G-IS·H'iOtl HUNTINGTON BE1\CH • 16075 GulJen We~l . t. • 8.q.7771 MISS .IO N VIEJO • N3'J5 i\licia P:irb,ar. "'uilt! 2E • 770-2<1:i l po rts of injuries o r ( J damages. ."il.41'E The jolt occu rred .._ ________ __. s horlly after 10:20 p.m. Alit.ia Town Plaza SANTA ANA • 1 2?~ Ea:.t 17th tret!l •Sn-587 1 Sunday with an eoicenter near 1-'remcinl, said Dr. Robert Uhrhammer or the l.'niversity of California's seismological station in Rerkeley OfJtJ("etW Call Sa,.ped Held CONCORD tAP> Police have made a rare arrest or an all eged obsce ne telephone caller after a mother and her d aughter kept the caller on the line long enough for police to trace ~~ call. David Arnold Laub. 33. of Fa1rf1e ld, was ar- rested for investigation of obscene and threatening telephone calls at a downtown phone booth after poli<'e traced the call from the women's ho me . Dad KHb Son in A~ridnd LONG BEACH (AP> A 4-year·old boy was shot to death when a.pistol held by his father dis· charged. The shot passed through a bedroom door ir1to the room where the boy was sleeping, police said Miguel Gonzales was shot in the head by a .38-r aliber pistol wielded by his father, Porfirio Gonzales, 33. during an argument with his wife Maria, 29, investigators said. Police said the shoot- ing was declared an accident and no charges were filed. f'alr Sn• AUnada•e~ llerord POMONA <A P l -The SJrd annual Los Angeles County Fair s et a record for total attend- ance on the final d ay or its 17-0ay run. Officials said the eight-year-old record of 1,268,468 was broken at 3 p.m. Sunday when the •••I count reached 1,308,8«. The record was set despite an increase in ad- mission prices, opening on a non-pay week, intense ·smo& and beat and a change in dates to a later opening in September. officials said. TM CNlt GeUway r:t:utrom SttJndltll ... a very special of~ you'll find only 11t SM/14 labUIOUia rpose ,,.;elbll of heavy.duty navy ~nvas, /OfJO'd with tM IMtUI ,..,,,. ot Stendhal, l'Mls. lnskle, you'll find new C. Sen C.... A~~nte. .. a liflhMeifht creme that helps prevent moisture loa-u'* malceup by da• and ar niBfrt. Both are yours for just '15 with any "fO 5elndflll putchue. Come meet our ;f/,1,ial npesentative soon ... in COlnlllk CollectJona. -white we tn all & tinp you ire! -. --........ _.._.. ................. _.... - NO FRIU.S TEETH 0 fAJtlNG s22 SOUTH COAST ONLY DIMTAL •IOUP 642-0112 ,, ....... IW..C:-.Mele ~. Octoe>er 13, 1980 t:WLV PtLOT AS Gas Prices Drop . LOS ANGELES CAP> -For the first lime in 25 yeara of surveying the data, guoline prices in each of 2111 cities analyzed bas declined, a lead· Ing oil industry analyst said. "I'm a little bit stunned," Dan Lundberg, publisher of lbe weekly Lundberg Letter, said Sunday after looking at a computer readout of the Lundberg Survey completed last week. war Jitters," Lundber1 •aid. The average gu price nationwide Is $1.21.2 per gallon retail and 91:'3 cents wholesale, Lundber1 sahl. Also, because of stiff competition dealers have dropped their profit margina from an average of 13;5 cent.a per gallon in January to 1~3 cents per gallon last week -6.S cent.a under the leR•I limit. ' He said the data shows supply and demimd has had a bigger Impact than lhe Iraq-Iran war on the U.S. energy situation. A sampling of the drop in prices shows the largest decrease -1.7 cents per gallon -In Indianapolia. Prices dropped 1. 5 c ents i'11 Baltimore, San Francisco and Seat- tle. Lundberg's latest s urvey shows a dec line in gas prices over the past month in each of the 26 cities analyzed -the first time that's hap· pened since the survey began in Hl.SS. ·'The truth is that this country is more impacted by s upply and de- mand than it is by any kmd of Mideast Gasoline cost one penny less than a month ago in Albuquerque, N.M.; Denver, Louisville, Ky., and New Haven, Conn., Lundberg said. It was a m ore modest half-cent less in Los Angeles, Miami, El Paso, Houston and Las Vegas. "Heodcx:hes" "Bockoche Complimentary Chiropractic Consultation and Spinal Exam and Ned< Pain" Dr. Raymond l. Salvatore D.C. Palmer C.Ollege Graduate 2711 E. Coast Hwy, Suite 'lf12 Corona del t«Jr 67'UIJ70 ''Numbness" and Tingling "Sports Related Injuries" "Allergies" -- Make Us Your Play-off & World Series Headquarters • Wide ecmn IY--·--~ ..... l'or TMeeomoe~nee • .... .._..lnTown • Compllmentery Ho,. d'oeuvre• During Evening Gem•• Our exclusive "346" blazer in a handsome camel shade Many well dressed men build their e ntire casual wardrobe around the camel blazer: endlessly ver· satile, the ideal companion to trousers of a lmost any color. Our 3-buuon model is of wool worste~, with patc h poc kets, tailo red only for Brooks Brothers, and it features our "346" brass buttons, $190 Use your Brooks Brothers charge account or American Express. ISTAIUSt41D 1111 ~<ilP~ c~~@l~ lilm• tr ,o,.lumt1btn91. aat• ~ lhott 5.\0 \\'EST 7TH STREF.T, LOS ANGELES. CALW ~I014 FAS HION ISLA ND. NEWPORT Rf:ACH 92660 I l ~ I~ I ~ ·~ I ~ ~ I~ I ~ t Edit ri I .. Robert N. Weedt Publistier Or ,.mgo Cod 1 0 d1ly Ptl· ti 0 a ~ ~e ...... Qlicar ll. t.:> Barbara Kr-elblch tEdltorlal Page Editor ________________________________ ......... _ .... Thof'Ns Keevil/Edltor Pension Program Critics Justified Dm.'<'tors uf the Dona Poant Sanitary 1>1.atrtct are standlns rtrm rn their delC'rmmallon to go ahC'•d wtt.h a pension plan lhut wall g,1vr them S.SOO a month at aae ~ after eight yca n o n t hl' board That' uactly 10 ti~et the fee they rt."<'t!l\'f for attencling one board m~tng a month When irate Dttnu Pou\l c1tilens challenaed the •P. parent taxpayea· rip off Wlt.h threats of recall, board member Angus m1th told them to '"go ahead." \naistma he would not teive in to ··sm all pressure groups " Alter lauding the board's work, he oppoffd rescind in1 the pens ion plan Oth~r directors aareed. It's rut't! that thtt board members think so well of themselves But 1t 's undt"tandable that the citizens they are supposed tu strve by kt't"ptng the sewer lines and treat· m ent plW'lt opernt1ng in u cost-efficient manner were startled by this rem a rkable pension deal: . . ~ Particularly galling to the complaU\lng c1ttzens was the revelation that two of the distric t's full·time employees are entitled to pensions of only $120 and l300 for 10 years and 20 years of service respectively. The Sanitary District board, like many such ~ards anc! commissions, is a quasi-volunteer body, required to spend just a few hours a month overseeing district opera· tions. · f · It may be that the state-mandated $50 meetmg ~ as low. But the answer lo that would be to seek corrective legislation not dip into public funds for a totally un· justifiable· reward for a rnere eight years of service - plus an additional $10 a month for each year served over eight years. . While recall movements are best avoided, under the circuimtances one might be in order. The pension pro· gram for the Dana Point Sanitary District trustees shows very bad judgment. Break For Seniors Anyone who frequents overnight campgrounds knows that many of the most capable and enthusiastic campers are senior citizens. Thus, the Orange County Board of Supervisors de· cision last week to cut daily rates in Featherly and O'Neill regional parks was a salute to the campers aged 62 and more who enjoy the controlled atmosphere of the paru. The reduced fees -seniors will pay $2.50 instead of $5 per vehicle -wiJl cost the county an estimated $37 ,000 in lost revenue. But the reduction will doubtless endear the county to those who already make use of the facilities. and who might use them more. For many retired people, life on the open road and in the outdoors 1s an adventure in pioneering lOlll in the planning and much appreciated. lt is observed in varioua meana, from a al.mple tent. t.o the modem version of the Rowland EvanB/Robert Novak Carter May Have Lost Florida MI AMI The Cuban retuaee t'rl•I& 111 lhls keystone of Jimmy (.;artt1r'11 Southtim arch ~aa Wl· d~rmlned the president s pre· f ti r red camp1alan strategy ~r aubmt1r1ina h la own record m hvor of attackin& Ronald Re.iaaiai\ u ~ racist wumonger. Tht attack strategy ls cowited on by Carter to activate the b l 1.ck vote aaaios t Reagian and tu frighten blue c ollar Oe mo c rats . worried abc>Ut war, back to l h e i r Democ ratic h o m eland despite high taxes and recession. That str ategy was bankrupt from the start here Ira Florida, and partkularly ln Miami's Dade County. Charges of racism and warmongering against Reagan never had a chance when meas ured agaanst tne president'• accountability for the Cuban refugee crisis, but Carter moved wttb unaccustomed tardi· nesa to make a pro-Carter record onthis1aaue. DISllEGARDING proposals from leading Democrats here that he send up to 5,000 unwant· ed Cuban refugees to abandoned mihlary bases in Western states that he is certain to lose anyway on Nov. 4, he finally decided in- stead to send them to Puerto Rico. which has no electoral v~tes. That decision, coupled wath a special $100 million ap· propriation for refugee ex. penses, has helped to cure h.is worst r e.election problem \n populous Dade County Dade eave him a plurality of 90,000 votes In his narrow victory over Gerald Ford -well over half his margin of victor)' Exploslve anti Carter emo· tions built up for weeks over the refugee lssue before the presi· dent <'Ould be persuaded that carrying f1orida woul<l require more than his negative anti· Rea~an strategy. From shrewd, cautious Gov. Bob Graham on down, De mocratic strategists sent one SOS after another to the W~!te House begging for help. ·'The White House did not un derstand what was happening," Mi ami Mayor Louis Ferre, a key Carter leader, told us. In other words, despite warnings from Pat Cadd e ll 's polls, Ca rter's m e n apparently believed that making Reagan t he issue would override lhe refugee mess. The result of delay is lingering anti:Carter hostility among mid· dle·tncomc whites, and anger among earlier Cuban refugees (now highly-motivated voters J who were affronted by the low quality of the latest batch of Cuban refugees. CUBAN·AMERICANS will turn out in unprecedented num· be r s on Nov. 4 to vote for Reagan, ln local elections hard· working Cuban·America~s are -- often twice as likely to vole as American-born citizens. That points to real trouble for Carter. lllspanic political leaders h0pe to double the 40,000 Cuban. American voters in 1976. U, aa these leaders told us. they give Reitgan 75 percent of their votes Carter 's comfortable 1976 plurality in Dade Count y could be cut way down. The Cuban-American vote is only the base of the pyramid that threatens to deprive Carter of 17 electoral votes in the state that, until recently. White House politicians called "Carter coun· try.'' Here in Dade County, and northward anto the gleaming condominiums of Broward Coun- ty, the Jewish vote is sullen and unresponsive lo Carter blandish· ment. One telling signal: Last year, the Tenants Association of Florida, la rgely J ewish, en· dorsed Carter over Ford. Not so in 1980, a decision based square· ly on Billy Carter's intimacy with the radical Libyan regime. .. To exploit Jewish concern about Carter, Reagan forces will import Henry Kissinger for a pep talk to condominium dweller~ in mid October . K issinger's message: The worst threat to Israel's securlt)' is a weakened U.S. THE JEWISH VOTE may re- turn lo il.s Democratic home, but the top of the anti-Carter pyramid -the evangelical "Old South" Protestant vote in the panhandle alone the president's own Georgia border -exhibits decisive movement to Reaean. The latest Florida Newspaper Poll, baaed on sampling Sept. 29 and 30, showed Reagan moving ahead of Carter for the first time 'in the panhandle. Carter's basic campaign theme · against Re aga n a s a racist and warmonger cuts little ice in the hard-core conservative north. Many nominal Democrats there ba cked George Wallace and Richard Nixon. Beyond do ubt . something ---cm~a~nly do oat-...S . -- 41.aeouata; tbeJ are equldPed IO PQ u..ir owa •'11~ virtually any tratJ. But -the reduced fees should ~ other seruor residents who have never t.ried camping but Wi!i~~i.Ut~erl·'o'f~~ana ...... ~----· .,. Carter hopes to supply it without del•)'. ..... wish to enjoy the facil.Jlies their ta xes paid for. Classroo01 Tune A report by the University of California educational system mdicates teachers on the nine UC campuses may be spending less ttme in classrooms than they used to. UC President David Saxon asked the college chan· cellors to determine the reasons for the decline and find ways to get teachers back in front of students. Administrators at UC lrvine are quick to point out that the report is based oo a survey of all nine campuses and its results may not hold true for each university. Unfortunately, the survey was desiped to make lt impossible to compare one campus to another in the UC system. Therefore, all nine universities now are stuck wtth the blame for declining faculty time in the cluaroom. 1be report says instructors are spenctiq 5.8 houn weekly teaching regularly scheduled clu1e1. Thl1 number of hours is down from 5.5 in the 1SJ78.T9 academic year and 5.8 in 1971·78. The report also concludes that teachers are 1pend.lni 82 hours per week in university related ac:Uvlij" Pl teaching, research and public service. However, even a small decline in faculty Ufne lti classrooms is important. Studenta have loni e6mplalhed of seeing teaching assistant.a more often than they see teachers themselves. It is commendable that the UC system is loold.ng int.cl the problem and tryi_ng to find ways to solve it. • Opinions e1Cpressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on lhls page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd I Crystm ByL M. BOYD Q. What's the difference between 1lasa and crystal? A. wad. To qualify as crystal, it has to contain at least 24 percent lead 011ide. By European standards. Lead 11 what gives It the IPUtlcal tone. Also, lead Dear Gloomy Gus I don't drive much at alp1 but when I do, 1 laewllably mMt at leut one car wltb on• laeldU. and a eyelllt wltla DO lilbta Oil hll .... 1 U &1111 is ., reC!· ....... MoataUUte ....... , makes it softer, easier to cut. Four out of five colle1e stu· dents believe in extra· sensory perception. Say two does walk toward each other. both wautn1 their tails. Remember this:. 'n •s the dog that wags it.s tall m ost slowly that's goln& to take charge. Or fight to try. Q . Wbat are the odds 111\nat findina a pearl in an oyster? A. About 12,000 to one. Incidentally, if the oyster is edible, it doesn't malle pearls. Ihle ibormonal acltivlty peak1 la Au&umn, please noc.e. It la tlMD, not Sprlq, wben a 7C1UQ1 ma'• faney turna. Q. Don't wamm pt more beadMt11U..meal A. Twlee • ....,, ta flld. Wo•-. 1ls a par. M•, , ....... ,....o. ..... :m A 1' .I . Jlf atloaal BeafQ ... .,. t.ISll it ........ ......... Von Hoffman Sfugle-issue Politi~ No New Invention That sniffhng and schnuffling you hear ls the liberals weeping over the growth of single wue politics, deciding to vote for or against a candidate on the basis of how he or she s tands on one critical, overriding issue. Tbil, we are told, is shortsighted, naive, impractical and deatruc:· tlve of our most a.acred political processes and procedures. Apparently the •alt· abortionists. acting with t.be tun· bfl vision of aealotry, are threatening to bi'ln& down two truly ad Jll I rable, It 1Jemo~ratlc, t~nators , t;eor1e McGovern of South Dakota and John Culver of Iowa. Nevertheless the defeat of even the finest public officials doesn't si1naJ the end o( the Republic and who can blame the anti-abortionists for acting as they are'? SOME SINGLE issues should be Important enough to decide your vote. Jf you think that abor· lion la baby murder, how could you popibly vote for someone who favors it? I myself do favor keeping abortion legal, even though I consider it, well, not baby murder but certainly the taking or human life in some form. A nation that spends some thln1 in the order of Sl.50 billion dollan a year on the military need not be too squeamiAh about klllin1 fetuses. That many people, millions even. wou.ld disagree with that poaltloo and disagree with great vehemence, Is certainly un· deratandable. Thia la no trifling •iDtle lllue. Even many of us who favor letalized abortion know It ia a wormy business. t.bat we tread on morally soft 1round. Slnll• issue poUtks la not a new manlfeatatlon altbouab many a liberal edltorlali1t ls wrttlq u tboqb tt were a novel mutation. 'l'M aboUt1onilt move· meat al the 1Mll and SOI •• •ln•l• lllue polltlci. -The, u now, pe0ple wbo Clldn 't have powerful eoavlctloH about llaY91'J couldD 't uncMn&and wbJ tom ... would vole fw a CD· did ... -...... quest ..... -..... ,... kllMt of ........ ........... tM .-.... tlllJ w ......... -. tt ,..,, .... u.., ... ~e«r• Pr Io r t o t h c abortion coo- t roversy, single Is sues had become a potent e le ment In poH\lcs at leaat twice b.-fore in this c0W1try. The first time was \n the years from 1910 onward when Prohlbilionlsm could make or ruin your public career A dry vote was a vote against the debauchery of the working man by the whiskey trust and bffr lntereat.1; a wet vote was for "clvll rlahts.'' as the freedom to bend a convivial elbow wu called at the Ume. THE a ... saw tt single Issue dominate our polili<'s at le at.st as much as abortion does now. That was the Vietnam War ln the latter part of the decade 1evera l congressmen we re beaten solely and exclusively on account of their opposition lo that conflict The l i b e r als themselves. many of whom decry single Issue politics now. brought dowu Hubert Hum· phrey, Ole Jg&S Democratic can· dldate for president, on one Is· Art Hopp•~ sue and one issue alone, his sup· port of the war. It w as not till he was at death's door that many of them forgave him for his stand. AT ALMOST ANY moment 1here are always a number of is· sues that are threatening to become rull·blown single-issues ERA. prayer in the schools, pro- or anti-nuclear energy, the con· stitutional amendment requiring a balanced budget all swell up from time lo time but never quite make it into the true, single issue category. Single issue politics arises from the congenital weakness of American political parties. Because they are weak and always have been. their leaders have disliked taking stands on controversial issues. They are afraid that chases away votes. When they do get trapped Into laking a stand, there is a strona tendency for both parties to take the s ame stand, as they did, for instance, on Vietn am. It's safer, Moreover, when they do lake an opposite posttion . as lht..J have on the abort •on question. it doesn l _ ~.tn anything. All Democratic members or Congress won't vote for abortion and all Republicans against. The parties have no practical way of insisting on discipline. HENCE. whenever any group forms around a deeply felt ques· tion, it has no choice but to get out and. one by one, put the knife to candidates' ribs and ask 'em. "Yes or no. Buddy'?" One way to weaken the urge for single issue politics i.s the re· ferendum. If people have a way of dire c tly legislating themselves they'll get off tbe politicians' backs. but the COUD· try's rullng circles, conservative and liberal, turn into chattering, badly scared munchkins whenever any national releren· dum proposal la broached. So. deplore it u we may or may not, sincle issue politics will tarry with us long into the future. Found: 'Ille Typical AmerDn Q . Excuse me. sir , bul I believe you are George B. MJd· dlerode. the famous Typical American'? A -Yes. that's right. I make $18,462 a year. live in a $59,780 house, drive a 3.2-year·old car, have 2.2 children and -To save you the Uou· ble of ukine -J 've de· cided to vote for Ronald Rea1an. Q -Wbyla tbat. Mr .· lliddJerode? A -Well, jwat the other day. Lyn Nof1A1er, hi• r l1bt-hand man, wu uked how lnlelllaent llr. Reaian wu. He said, "He may not be a 8enlUI, but be'• smart ....,...... " And rl&ht there, l knew Reqan waa t.b• man for me. Q -You cloe't want • brilliant .,,....., A -GCa, NO. There's no teWu ftlll a brtWaat pnikllDt woali.. do. 1111& .)t'd probablf waat to m.rel9 off ln tlllt DIW cllneUaD or tbM or • ., ... "1 ~ the handle and get us into some mess or other. df course, I wouldn't want some dumbbell ln the White House. either. Q -Would it be fa.Ir to say, then, that you're for a mediocre president'? A -Exactly. Keep in mind that moat of us Americau are very medlocre people. We're not terrible and we're not creat. Just somewhere in between. And it's about time we had a sood, honest mediocre prealdent to represent ua. Q -~ a Typical American.. you approve or mediocrity? A -SUre. Take food. I don't Q -Most of us Americans do. But tell me about your wife and children. A -1bey're okay. I 1uesa I could say the same about my job and my We, too, for that matter. Q -And you're not worried that this country i1 slowly sinkln1 In a morass of mediocrity! A -Heck, no! Alter aU the awful thlnp that have happened to ua lately -uaualnaUons. Vletnam, Water1ate -I'm ha~y to settle for all the mocrtt,y I can cet. Where's Ike when we need him? 10 ln much for anythtn1 too Q -YES, 111£ country was fancy or spicy or 1tran1e. I probably a lot bappler under mean, atve me 1 Bis Mac any mediocre pretldents llke day of the week. Eisenhower and CooUdse than it Q -You think McDonald's was wlth men in the Whlte makes terrUic hamburaen? H o u 1 e l t k e W 11 a on and A -Well, t bey ·re not Roosevelt. But are you belns bad. And I lb1nk J can •llY the fair to Jlmm1 Cart.er? I'm sure same UilDa lbout my bOUM and I his l\IPPOIWn would Claim he's my car. 'lbey're not tbe 1reatelt about • mediocre a pretldent ID tbe world, but net\b•r one'a a u YOU can ctt. real 14tlDDD. A -Oh, no. He bu b1I ...,. Q -And I IUppoM you wlltdt and downl. Ke'1 not HarlJ U .. Three's ComP9QJ" aocl "UW. sincerely ·~ ••ntalntly Heu•• oa-Ute Prak'l•" oa -~tocn u BooaW a.., .. ,. televlalon? / " lty NatthellloeplecUocre?" \ A -How did JOU bow? HJ. NATION ••• Try Farming For Career 81 IOYC'IE L. &IENNSDY DMra1ce: ...... allledlleler'••,.....,..e•· ................ , ••• , ......... " ........ Me ............. ,... ....... , ....... " ..... ,. ... ,.... ........................ ... eUllfttl ......, ..... I.,.... •t11r '""· w• ................. , .. -~al ,.... lllq; I '899 .._. ..... flliwa1 new la .. .,.. ~,. .................. , -B.A ..... w.U,Ga. Loe* at a1ribuaineaa. Experu say American qrieultun ii beaded for a lrt!mendous economic 1ur1•. bluer than anY1Jllnl in the past Wbat will puah farmiq into the v an1uard of 1rowtb indualries b lb• ltr'oal. umelenttn1 rbe in world food demand. Al revolutionary cban1ea sweep lbe croplands -makiq aartculture and Its business side more eapitaliDtenslve, hilb·tecbdepeodeot and maaa pro- ductlmt-«iented than ever -small farms are being aqueesed out by the buabel. Only medium to &iant operationa will earn enou1h toatay in the game. TBl8 •t:ANS DEMAND WILL CONTINUE to riae for professional farm managen -and many other kinda of hired beads. Decisioo·makers will leave tractor cabs for computer cubicles where they 'II make acre-by·acre ( J digital decisions on plant· lif"'~DE'ERS ings . They 'll u se . ~ microprocessors to help _ _ determine the amount of t 'al"1f E ... r Michael Jerry Aspland, a 16·year· old Fountain Valley High School student, received his Eagle Scout award. He is the son of Mr and Mrs Jerry Aspland. Bar Suit Out FRESNO CAP> -A CWLV PILDT Af Fashion Scrubbed by Suits NEW YORK <AP> lt'1 1ot all the ptaau ol hllh fuhlon and none of the outr.,ee It '1 cheap, comfortable and U10fte can wear it. It's also probably stolen. The trendy eottume is the 1ur1ical acrub suit, and they're disappearin1 from hospital storerooms by the thouaanda You've probably seen the suit, with lta alipover V-neck top and pull-on draw1trin1 waist pants, durln1 a hoaplUI vlait or on televi1ion'1 "General Hoepital" or other ahowa . THE SUM'S HAVE become •smash on the beach, de ri1ueur for Jo11en, a must for aallora and a hoot at roller dis· coa and rock clubs. And like jeana with 11cnbbled names on the back pocket, what counts with the scrub suit ia the sometimes s tenciled, sometimes em· bruldered hospital logo. Moat ol these comfy costumes malting the f uhion scene are bein& pilfered from hollpitals across the country, and hospital administraton report losses in the tbou.aands. They're beginning to look askance at anyone donnin& a scrub suit who is not sworn to the Hippocratic oath. · The theft.a are so numerous that some hospitals have reported doctors stand· mg around in their underwear waiting to operate. "l'VE HAD TO wear a scrub dress from time to time when no scrub suits were available," said Dr. Donald Chambers, a Baltimore gynecologist and obstetrician. That's a wraparound dress worn by women surgeons in some hospitals. Gerald Benstock, chairman and presi· Hospital Garb Cu1,s Surgery Short dent of Superior Surgical Mfg. Co., Inc., the nation's leadini manufacturer of scrub suits, said, "It's always been a problem in the hospital marketplace. "ll's a wearable garment, and even when not a fashion fad, something like that could be worn around the house , in the garden or u pajamas.'' he said. .. RETAILERS ARE RUNNING them at $15 to $18 a set. You can hardly buy a good pair of pajamas for that price." Benatock said hospitals pay from $11 .50 to $13.~ per suit depending on the fabric. And while they're made in strict hollpilal colors -jade green, mis- ty 1reen, seal blue, white or tan -some retailers dye them to a rainbow of shades. The style hasn't changed in 60 years, Benst.ock said, because it's the m~t practical and comfortable. Just ask 25-year·old Justin Ross, an actor in the off-Broadway production ·•Fortune." He owns six and wears them to work out at the gym, to warm up for his play, in the dressing room and on the street. "I STARTED WEARING them about three or four years ago," he said. "They give me the freedom to move around. I don't Uke "those tight designer jeans. Besides. it leaves more lo the im· aginaUon." Or a Case Western Reserve Universi ty Medical Centt:r worker m Clevdand who loves the baggy look. ··Everyone's wea1u1 them . . All our friends are docton. Tbe UJpl are very comlortable. The bottoma are very good for prepant women because ol the drawatrin1s." Stolen scrub suits have coat the Charleston Area Medical Center in Weat Virginia $40,000; lndianapolia bospitala report 5400,000 worth of surpcal 1ub purloined over the put two yean; and Dallas taxpayers will 1et stuck with a $500,000 tab this year because of the thefts. MOST HOSPITALS blame the thefts on workers who wear the suits home or stuff them in bags, attache cues and purses. Some medical institutions won't let employees out of buildinp lf they have an outfit on. Others are locldq up the suits and threatenin& immediate diJ. missal for anyone caught takiQa·*9m. .. We're not supposed to leave the operating room with scrub suits on," Chambers said. "So most ol the thefts seem to be occurring in the chan1in1 room right off the scrub suit rack, where the laundered and pressed gar- ments are lined up according to size." One way hospitals are cutting down on thefts is by actually selling the popular garb in their gift shops. And fashion sources say another trend is about to be hatched -the patients' gown. It's so airy! Bargains under $50 ore found every Saturday in DIME-A-LINES only in the DAILY PILOT 642-5678 --------seed. fertilizer, irrigation water and machine lime needed, and the UkelibOOd of reacbiq the crop objective, measured by tonnage anddollan. You say you're not landed ariatoracy and you don't fancy being a farmer's hired bead? Look for c.areeropportunities to deal with farm products after they leave the farm. Grain buyer? AIJ'icultural cooperative manager? Agricultural attacbe? suit brought by Dinuba bar owners challenging the constitutionality of pol ice surveillance of their bars has been dis· missed in U.S. District Court here. The bar owners alleged police were interfering with business by arresting iJ. legal alien patrons dur- ing routine bar checks. iiliiiiiiiiir.i~!iiiiii.-~===========~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~--~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--, Tbere'slotstocboosefrom. · ALL IN ALL. A SUNNY OUTLOOK is seen for tbe American farmer wbo undentands the need to be a combination financier-marketer-engineer· acientilt, and for agribusiness in 1eneral. Understand basic optiooa by reading "Careen in Apibuliness and Industry," by, Archie A. and Marcella L. Stone and Harold E. Gulvio. The 1980 blab aebool textbook ls available for $12.IS from the Interstate Printen, Danville, Ill. 61132. READER SERVICE: More iooblg-aMod MtOS ii QiWfl DI "TM Nn:C 20 ,.or•.'' an rillld·~ report bJI tlw U.S. Nftt» W~ L.tter. ForGCOJlllOf tltU 11lo1tcdllto tu ftdwe, ncloae a 21-cnt acamp.d, •l/-«ldraaed, long IOlaite .,..lope dh JIOUf' rwqwlt to JOJICe Loifl KftlMdal at Boz JS,Codolil•.anal. Aged Tree Survives ALO M:CT, --JITilt::;=Firl. 'Tfll trw, wllieb <AP> -Tb• nation'• bu a cin:amfermce ol aeeond lar1est Eastern 20 feet, la in the Estlv~t white pine will likely Wilderness Sanctuary lD survive damqe from a t b ~ K e w e e n a w carel.. camper's fire, PeD.loaula. a elate Department of The fire spread along Natural Reaources park pine oeedlea and burned ru1er qya. into lbe bull ol the tree, --Tile nCMoot LeUlin..-,,eral iii~ Giant, a tree eatlmated crew extiquisbed it. at 500 to IDO years old, wu aeverely damqed when a camper built a ftre S or 8 feet away and left it uuttended, said Roser Peralt, a ranger at Ft. Wilkin• State The only Eastern white pine in the U .S. bigger than the Michl1an tree is in Maine, DNR officials aaid. JAbaS IHSUIAMCI HOW 54t.H54 w IH-l4J7 1914 Hmrt.r .. c .......... Speak With POISE AND CONFIDENCE TOAmmTEIS CUI 91 1nvltm you to ,,.., intern• tlonel ~cont-winner 1111 _ ••••11m ....,. .. BISiM c .... nMS.. OCT. 16 7:JOP.M.• -•cmst mw.w..11. c .... , CA. .......... = .. mt ,.,11.f'Ni·-...... ... --·-IOIOI" T~--T-­..... llllo'l -....-n>. c..•-. .........,1•• _..,.. ........ --WHEN I DIE--- OON'T HAVE A FUNERAL FOR ME JUST THROW ME IN THE GROUND Th•t le • common statement. There Is " problem with It, how· ever, when someone wc love din survivors react with strong emo· tlont. We fHI Nd, we are upset end wc cry. We find 11 herd to betl.w that death hu come. Without formal ceremony we may &oee •n opponunlty to gain support &om friends and loved ones. By not Melng the deceased we loH the chance to confront the ....Uty of death. Funerals and vtsltatk>ns can help. Some psychol· oete•• have Mkl that the funeral and vttltatJon Is an Important first step In ad)uefln9 to our 1099. Lack of a funeral and visitation will haw no etlect on the deceased but It can have 1erlou1 conH· quences on the eurvtvor. Harbor Lawn· Mount Oliw Memorial Parti ·Mortuary · ·Mausoleums· Crematory.' llmOtlllrAw • o.tall .. • PllaDe_.1114 --~A's Columbus l)ay:_ Dress and Coat Event! •Originally '76, now 55.90 ... Silksationa~ dresses, all by Jaek MuTqUeen lcii Silk FashiOn Group, fn the season's best styles and prints! • Here, the blue-and-yellow striped dress with tucked front stock tie, and belted elastic waist Of Si/ksational polyester crepe de Chine, for sizes 4 to 14. All, in Sportdress Collections. • Plus, a very specta1 purchase on pure wool me/ton coats in wintry solids ... now '139 to '159. • One example ... the classic double-breasted reefer in British tan or black, for sizes 4 to 14, now '139. All in 'SFAntastic and 'SFAbulous Coat and Suit Collections ... where we are all the things you are! South Coast pfaz.; JJJJ Bristol Street Costa Mesa Open M~nday through rriday from 10 am to 9:.JQ pm, Saturday 'ti/ 6 pm; Sund1 y 12 noon to 5 pm. .. ,_ ' I ...-c-.•• 1 I S I I t .& ; .. 'f • Y.•. • . .. . . .. .·. . ·. . .'-..<.: I,, • ,.° •. • I 'lo, .... ',•• . . .. : :i : •• LIGHTS LOWERED TAR & NICOTINE . ·. : ·. n. spbl ot ladboro In a low tar cigarette. 9 • . ' . . . . . . . . . . . .. ... . ·<:· .:.. . . . . . •·· ... : .·. ·: . : . . . . .· .. • o I I t ~ • : ~ o : r :•.: ' o + :~ o :. : : '. INSIDE : •Stocks •Comics ... !1111 ....... ·.M·o·v·ies .... ·T.·.·.fN .. iS.lon ....................... Mondey ..... ~ .. ·OCJer .. 1.3 .• tMO ........... ~ .. ~.~.LDT ...... ~.~ .. ~---~~~ 81 Finally, Phils End Years of Futility Can World Series Top Unreal Triumph Over Astros? HOUSTON <AP> The Philadelphia Phillies and OW Kans u <.:Uy RoylllS. dl1c1ples or th•t famoua fable that lf at ftrtt you don't succeed, try, try again, are 1980 World Sen es oppooents loitt thrtw AL pl uyoffs to the East charnpion Yank~>etJ Tht-Phillies were s wept by Cincinnati in tW76. IU'ld l~t 3 l to Los Aniteles In both t9'77 and 1978 straight extra-inning postseason games before heading for the champagne . It was u series that featured weird plays, such as a triple play that became a double play afte r a 20 minute rhubarb, a Houston run cancelled because a runner left third base before a sacrifice Oy was caught, a ball that was trapped i~ right field and resulted in a raJly-kilUng double play when the umpire ruled at had been caught. broad as the ocean on his face, Maddox s<nrl , 'This more than m akes up for that ll 's the happ1t·->l <lay of m y career." The PluU1e11 joined the Royals In end1n11 > ear!S of !ruatcallOIL..b.)'...~ue.. ~1 lO reach the best-of seven Series. which starts in Philadelphia Tuesday night. Wtule the tloyal11 1tre maluna their first World Series-appeannce. the Phillies' history isn't much better PhHadelph111 reached the Series just twice, in 1915 and 1950 They won just one game 65 years ago agwnst the Hos ton Red Sox, and were swept 4·0 by the Yankees 1n '50 Second baseman Manny Trillo w<is vot£'d the Most Valuable Play1>r of the playoff with e1 cht hits in 21 al bats for an average uf 381 , 1ncludmg a two-run triple in the e ighth innin~ of the <'I 111 htnR game KANSAS CITY, AN EXPANSION team -.hich has never won more than ats West D1v1s1on, cap lured the American League pennant 1n a three game sweep ot the New York Yankees. It was a tougher road for the Phallies. who had to go the ruu five games before subduing the Houston Astros to win the Nat.JonaJ League flag. .J THEIR LIFE HAS BEEN frus tration. especially an 1964, when they led the one-division league by 6"4.i·games with 12 to play and lost 10 straight to blow the pennant. AU that happened in the fourth game. In the finale Sunday, the Astros scored three in the bot· tom of the seventh and the Phillies rallied for five in the eighth. THE A..~TROS WOULDN'T QUIT. They scored two and tied it 7-7 in the eighth, and held on until Del Unser doubled and scored on Maddox's two out double in the 10th. THE ASTROS TOOK A 1 o 1.EAD tn !1 1· firo;t inning behind fire-balling Nolan H} an on 1n 11 Bl double by Jose Cruz The Ptulhe~ l'3m» Ila• h with two in the second a · Bob Ho''°" n pp1·d .1 h~o run single. Philadelphia fell behind two games to one, and came back to win the two finaJ games, both in ex· tra innings. The Philbes, who edged the Montreal Expos for this year's East Di vision title on the next-to· last day of the season, won the first game of the playoffs at home m the series against the Astros. For Maddox it was retribution. In 1978 at Los Angeles be dropped a routine line drive that gave the Dodgers the clin ching NL playoff victory. Houston t1 £'d at 10 thC' <.1xth Wit h the h .,,, or :1 two-base c-rror' and a pin ch ~in~lt< hy i\\:rn i\~hliy When lht' Astm~ <.cored thrcl.' 10 th1· '>CVt 11th 1t looked like the Phlllt<:s Wl'rc done The Phillies closed out the West Division champion Astro5. 8-7 in 10 innings Sunday night in tht. Astrodome, with Garry Maddox, once a pl ayoff goat, doubling across the winning run. Both the Phillies and Royals won their divisions in four of the last five years . The Royals They we r e the fav orites t o b low out the almost anonymous Astros, who had to beat the Dodgers in a one-game playoff to win the West . But aft.er winning the opening game, the PhUlies were taken to a ma ior league record-setting four "I'd forgotten about that," said the happy Maddox in the m adhouse that was the Phillies' dressing room. Bu l the team many :-.aid lacked character re fused to quit. They c·a mc back with fi vl' in lhc eighth lo take a 7 5 lead The Ast ro~ tied 1l ,q th two 1n th~ eighth, bur 01 l'k Huthvcn, a :-tur!tnJ.( pitcher. ca me on in r1•1l t'f :10!1 rt-lirC't..l s1:o< ~ara1ght A champagne bottle in his hand, a s mile as <See PHii.LiE!--, J>a ~t> H:n iiA"'':ll-.:"' , PHIL.ADELPHIA PLAYERS CARRY GARRY MADDOX OFF THE Fl!LO, THEN MANAGER DALLAS GREEN IS HUGGED BY COACH RUBEN AMARO AS PETE ROSE LOOKS ON. Hanis Get Physical, Avert Upset They're Back on Top in NFC ·West After 21-13 Win By JOHN S£V ANO 0t Ille O.lly Pi..4 S-.tf ST. LOUlS -On an afternoon when ups ets grabbe d the headlines in the NFL, the Rams narrowl y av e rt e d on e themselves here Sunday when they physically pounded out a 21·13 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. lt wu the type of game the Rama needed -both mentally and physically -after beating up Green Bay, the New York Giants and San Francisco the put three weeks. THE CARDINALS, riding a two-same winning streak , •ouldn't roll over and play dead for UM Rama like the others. "It 'wu definitely a Sood test for us ," admitted J im Youn1b&ood. "We beat a &ood team cm their home around, and we did tt by ove{coming a lot of mtstak•.'' "It waa a 1ood pbyaical 1ame," Hid Pat Thom•. "It's esaetly what we neecled. We baH a lot of &ood quality IUYS ... ,.., With • Jot ot beut and ........ TltM beart and 1plrit were ~Y emph•iled by tbe Meme, which wu PnHDted * * * with a huge task in trying to stop the r unning of Ottis Anderson and the passing of Jim Hart. THE UNIT a ccomplis hed both as it held Anderson to a nel total of 62 yards on the ground (be averages 98 ). and Hart to only 147 through the air on 16 of 34 passes. Hart, the 15-year veteran, wu continually harassed by the rotating defens ive front four which s acked him five times, runnln~ the season total to 21, second onJy to Chicago in the NFC. The defense also turned in a key interception -by Jack Reynolds -which provided what proved to be the winning touchdown on a four-yard run by Vince Ferragamo just before the close of the second quarter. Indeed, the team needed a break or two as the Ram offense sputtered for the first time in a month. Ferragamo's numbers (12 of 23 for 91 y ards and on e ~ touchdown ) weren 't what you'd expect from the No. 1 r at ed passer in the Nf'L and the run· ning backs coughed up the ball e n o u g h times <five tot a l . although two were recovered) to keep the worst of teams in close. "I THOUGHT the d efense played s uperbly ," said Fer· r agamo . "T h ey go t the Cardinals to a point where they couldn't run any more and had to pass.'' The Ram s . <'onverselv. de· c1ded to grind out their yardal!t' rather than test the Cardtnal~ secondary Cullen Rryant. the steadiest of the Ram backs , gained lf5 yards on 20 carries. while Eddie Hall - re p lacing the inj ured Elvis Peacock <groin pull J had 73 more on 16 carries. and Mik e Guman -replacing the fumble· prone Hill ltwo miscues ) added 41 more and one TD on 12 handoffs. "We made mistakes and it (See RAMS, Page 8 2) John Sevano How You Police ••• NFL-style ST LOUIS -In the NFL, they call It policing your own. And the only way to 1ive an explanation ii lo describe what took place. It started al the out.et of the thlrd quarter when St. Louis wu stopped on a drive and forced to punt. While Billy Wad- dy was waitinC for the ball to come down be wu given a tremendous shot to the face by the Cardinals' John Barefield, who wu the downfield coverage. aides just punch it out, there are ways of 1ettin1 revenge. DUIUNG THE CARDINALS' very next puntinl sltuationi Barefield came down the field and was eveled by the Rams' Joe Harris. Barefield was not only helped from the field, but be may also be lost for the aeuoa with a severe knee injury. Said Harris after ·the game: "You have to protect your own." That's how you police ... NFL-style. ••• Injury report: Elvia Peacock suffered a bad lroln pull during the Rama' rlrst Mrl• and t.be propo.11 doesn't look 1ood for a quick return. The Rams, almost to a player, des~ised playing on the Astroturf at Busch Stadn~m . As a matter of fact. the Rams hate playing on any synthetic surface. . ·'Astroturf intensifies the blttmg because the traction is better." exolained Fred Dryer. "It's difficult to play because It 's hard on the knees and ankles .. "It takes a lot out of me. I have no toenails left.'' Jack Youngblood was m.ore blun~: .'.'That (bleep) just beats you up. I Just bate at. ••• Saul promises there will be no letup by the Rama ln their game next week with the 49ers. "Any time you beat a team bad Uke we did they'd like nothlni more than to slap you up the side or the head the next time around.'' ••• Rieb s.J ma)' have broken the thumb • lail rlOl bud, the aame thumb he's ""*• dine or fGur tlmea ln tbe put. X· ...,. wUl be ta• tod•)' to determlne the Contract update on a scale orO·lO: at.a of \bl '-iV'Y. Saw, however, re· Vince Ferra1amo: 2. =-of tlll ftrdiet, ·~·t mill a Jack Reynolds: o. ..... ,..,_. wttb tM lQJVJ before, Bob Brudlinllli: "Talk to my 11ent." w..-, '°* 1 facial beeUDI but ~---Ra1 llaln•l: "I ban a caatraet until ................ ant ftlk. l (llle 8SVANO:Pat} In> Jahbar Has Eye Injur y In Victory 1.dS A 1, t-. I t-;~ 11\ I The d<'f1·rHJ1ng "1al11111a l H .. .,ketball A:.soc1atwn 1 h.1m p11111 L.1kers an • 2 o 1h1s Sl'<l!>On hut tn1-most important a:,p1•ct of tlll'1r second victory .... asn't thl' game 1lsclf. Earl} 1n th<' third q ua rter S u n d a y n 1 g h t . K .i r e e m Abd ul-J abbar. who was named the NRA 's most valuahlC' player last seao;on for t h1· s1 '<th time, attcmptt.-d to block a shot by Houston's Hudv Tnm ia11ov1r h. Abdul J abbar wa... ar«1dC'ntally poked in th e C){' and an exa mination by ophthalmologist D r . M a n u ,. I S 1 s s o n w a s necessary "Al this t1nH'. we do not anticipate Kareem's eye injury to be serious.·· said a relieved Lo s Angeles Coac h Paul We s thead s hortly aft er the Lakers whipped the Rockets 114 ·103 . Ahdul J alilJar is ex peeled t o play when Los An geles ret urn s t o ac t ion We dnesday n1~hl at "ans as City. Abdul-J abbar left ttie game immediately after being tnJ Ured. was exam ined 10 the locker room by Lakers' physician Dr. Steve Lombardo and then taken t o Dr. Sisson ror rurth e r examination . Or . Sisson diag nosed the Inj ury as a corneal abrasion . according to Bruce Jolesch, the Lak e r s ' publ ic r e l a tio ns director . Abdul-Jabbar will wear a pa tc h for 24 hours, Jolesch sa id, and was to be re- examlnedtoday. ''After wearing the patch for 24 hours, he will decide whether o r not h e wa nts t o we a r gog g les.'' so id West bead . Abdul·Jabbar wore.goggles for a couple of years before removing them last season. Abdul ·J a bb a r h a d 10 polnbl, four rebounds and seven blocked ahota before be\n~ inj.Jlu d . -Earv-i t "·M agie--: • Johnaon led the Lak4t's with 20 polnbl. - I .. , I 82 ONLY PILOT ports Break A Capaute Report From the Wortd of Sport• Royals Fans StemUng Over ABC-TV Coverage •·roa AP DiapaklMte KANSAS CITY. Mo The Kanaaa City II Royala may have swept t.ht American Lea1u• playott1 from the New Vorlll Vanktet ln lhree 1am ... but the nallon•I lelevu1on coveraae of tbe aerlea hu left hometown fana 1teamin1 A front-pa1e alory on the controversy Sunday In The Kansu City St•r •uueated that many Royals fana believed lhat ABC. the playotfs television network. 1tand.t for "'AJway• Biased Covera&t! " And a IOC:KJ ntd10 1tat100 hu been •inna a atrooaly worded, cntlcal open letter to Roone Arledae, president or the network's news and sports department.a. The station alao has been broadcutma the telephone number of ABC 's New York corporate headquarters The source of their anaer wu t.he coveraae of the third and final game of the best-0f-five championsrup aeries by sport.acuter Al Michaela, Baltimore Orioles pitcher J im Palmer and Oakland A's Ma.na.er Billy Martin. "It stW\k," said one fan, Kevin Leslie. ''If they were 1oin1 lo make it so one-sided, with Billy Martin (a former Yankees' manager) in there, they should have had Whitey Herao1 (former Royals manager, now with St. Louis) In there. The pregame show didn't even mention the Royals. It wu all the Yankees." Not only wu the general tone of the coverage tilted in favor of New York, the fans charged, but Geor1e Brett'• three-nm homer that won the final 1ame 4·2 wu 1reeted by 1peechleuness in the broadcast booth. A newspaper TV critic noted that the three broadc!uten bad been toutint the 9'7 mph futbaJJ of Yankees' relief ace Gooae Gouaae. When Brett 1mubed one or Golaage's pitches into the riabt field atands for a homer, Palmer Hid, "I'll bet that wun't a 9'7-mile·an·bour pitch." Momenta later a check ol the radar uaed to clock pitches showed the throw bad been • mpb. Altbouab their voices relistered no excitement on Brett's home nm, there waa plenty of It when the Yankees loaded the bun in the eighth inninl with nobody out, the critic noted. When the Roya.la 1ot out of the inning unscathed, there waa little comment on the team'• achievement. A switchboard operator at ABC headquarters said 1be bad fielded several calls Saturday from irate Midwesternen. "I've been bearing about it since 7 a.m.," she said. "They have been letting us know all about it, in no uncertain terms." Chuck Howard, ABC vice president for sports program product.ions, said Royals' fans were over-reacting. "It's not a chip on their sbotdder. It's a giant r~wood. The majority of the people I've talked to in New York thou1ht they were pro· Kansas City," he said. ..-------Quote ol I~ Day-------. Joe IWae, a 40-year-old lieutenant colonel who spent 20 yean in the Marines, includinl a year in Vietnam, and now a member of the Roter Willlam1 College club football team, which wu wtnleu lut year and bua't \ acond a point tn three 1am. thia .. uon. Hid: "I've 1ot a.• IOO combat mlutona tn a belleopter, for cryiq out loud. 1f I dktn't let hurt tllen, DC1tMn1 MN la ..-. to be too bed.'' • - ,.... .... ,. :Je Paee. ,..•21slzr Forward Lea "Truck" ll1•1M• sco~ed 30 m points aod guard Walter Dam added 21 Sunday nieht aa Phoenix beat Kansas City, 1~100 in a Na· tional Basketball Association game. The victory was the Suns' second straight again.st no losses. Jame. -Harcb, Utah's third cente_r, 1cored.the g.amH last five points as the Jazi rallied for a 125-121 overtime victory over Denver. Denver led from the first period only to faller under • the attack of Adrlu Outley, the NBA'• leading scorer. Dantley scored 25 of bis game-high 38 points alter the ball and it was his two foul shots with 218 secoodl left in regulation which sent the game into overtime . . . BWy Ray Bates ipited a fourth-quarter Portland outburst that pro· peUed the Trail Blazers to a 10'7·98 victory over Seattle before the team's 144th straight sellout crowd of 12,866 ... Guard Mautce Clteeb of Philadelphia was holpitalized Sunday for diaanc-itic •oet..._ testing after he suffered cheat paim in a game with Wtshington Saturday night. A senea of testa for the 24-year-old proved negative . . . Robert J. Laaler Sr., father of Beb LaaJer, died in a hit-and-run accident in Michigan Sunday morning. He was S9. ,.,.._ P-.r ., RAMS VICTORIOUS • • • almost coet us," summari1ed Coach Ray Malavaai. "We ran the ball well and threw fairly well, but it's never good to fum- 1 • ble the ball like we did." "TllBY'RIE .\ GOOD football team," credited Rama center Rieb Saul of the Cardinals. ··A penalty here, OT a fumble there. )'OU juat can't control those things. ·'There was a lot or hard hit· tin1 coma on out there. Nobody said lb.la wu going to be euy. but nobody likes to make the number ol mi•takes we did to- day, too. We jwst have to keep improvtns every week." In improvtnc over the lut five weeb1 the Rum (4·2) finally re· 1a1Dea their CU8tomary po1Woa atop tbe Western Dtvlaloa at.and· lap ~the NFC. ''Thia really isn't tbe type ot 1ame you want," aald Fred D17er ~ the physical P<Manctlnr. "became it take. too much out ~ )'OU. It can make you old ml qtalell:. Tbla wa u pb,y1lcal a team •we've played thl8 yew. -"Bat ...... out to win football I•••· We're not out be,.. tor ebaract.w bulld1q 1tuff." picked off the ball as it new out or the arms or former UCLA running back Tb~is Brown at the Ramu. ''When you start gettin1 momentum at this time of t.be season you want to keep it. That means It's simply a matter of who comes off the ball harder," said Reynolds. "We made some mistakes but we'll learn from them. u' we don't, we're stupid. I'm Jwst 1Jed we won the game and were able to 1et out of St. Louis alive." Pbils Did It -' c.. .. .-. 11'1•• Pnt11••I• ...... Canadian Daa HaU .. ,_ broke out ol a five-n way Ue for the top with couecutJv• bltdie putta of thrM Ind six feet on the back n1De and crulaed to a two·•troke victory tn the Penaacola Open IOlf · tournament Sunday. Hla 2"1S, 13 1hota under par, 1ave him SU,000 from the pune. Behind him _.. 8'dllw .. and Gary Hau._,. ln a lie for aecond . . . U .s. Open champion A•J Alc.U rired five birdies en route to a three-under-par '10 to captur., San J<>11e'a Ladles Proteaional Golf Auoclatlon tournamHlt by four t hota. Alcott's wiMln11of122,500 moves her up to third on the LPGA money list with 1212,$95 ... Raady Lyle eliminated Peter Ja~ 6 and S In the World Match Play aoll championship In England . . . De• Jaauary, at 50, one of the babies of the senlon golf circuit, won the Auatralian Seniors championship in Sydney by two 1troket over over Art Wall • • . Larry Nelaon flred a flve- under-par ff7 to poet a one-stroke victory over Japan's Yutaka Ha1awaln an International tournament at Miyoshi, Japan. l:""fl• Tftltll•9 •~••• ....... IWll United Staie. team to the Olympic 1old medal , Goalie Jim Cra11, who helped the cinderella Iii earlier thi• year, stopped 20 of 22 Montreal sbota, includinl a breakaway by Pierre Laroadte, to help Bolt.on poet a 3-2 National Hockey League victory over the Canadiena Sunday . . . Two goals by Wiii Palemeat in the third period iced Toronto's 4·2 victory over PhHadelphia ... The New York Ranaen built a 3·1 lead, but Pittabur1h roared back with five goa~. including two by Rkke &doe to take a 6·3 win . . . RalHIJ Pierce poked In the winning 1oal for Colorado in a 3-2 triumph over Edmon- ton ... Su ~myl. a 31-goal scorer a year ago, ripped . •me three of them in Van· couver's 8·2 victory over Quebec ... Derek Sml~. Rlcltle Dua and hclre Saunl each acored in the third period to erase a 3-0 Hartford lead and gain a 3·3 tie for Buffalo . . . Chicago left wing Jobn Markr forged the tie with a 30-foot •a•av slapshot with less than six minutes re· mainlq to give Atlanta a 3.3· standoff with Chicago. Mike lloe•Y'• 1oal at the start of the third period gave the New York Islanders a 2·0 lead and the defending Stanley Cup champions went oo to defeat Waahington, 2·1 . . . The Loe An1eles Kiop have sent left winger JoU Paal KeU1 to Houaton ol the Central Hockey League and named 12-year veteran defenaeman Brad Selwood player-assistant coach at· Hout ton. Tnarfc C'w1a Fo1111d Sltoc co ..... SACRAMENTO -Noel Bradley Hitchcock, the m head track and croes country coach at Sacramento State University, baa apparently shot himself to death, sheriff's deputies report. Officiala say Hitchcock, 31, was found dead early Saturday in bis apartment by a member of the track team who was con- cerned because he had not seen him at school. Hitchcock's apartment door was ajar. Deputies listed the single .22·caliber bullet wound in bis head aa sell-inflicted. Friends told the coroner's office that Hitchcock had been despondent over separation from his wife a few months a10. One officer said he had tried to take his own life with drugs In Auguat. ln 1971 while a student atSSU, Hitchcock set a school 6-mile record, andln 1972was SSU'sathleteoftheyear . .....,WeS.,,e• .. l•r,..•d Houston Aatro pitcher J. R. Rlcltard, who is • recovertnc from a stroke, wu admitted to the Univenity of California Medical Center in San Francisco for evaluation and po11ible aur· 1ery ... Waab.initon and Stanford will be seen on ABC·TV Sat~ at 1: • lD a Paeifte-10 football 1ame crucial to ROM Bowl bopee for both ... 11••1 Craun won S117,000 ta a Au1trallan tennis tournament with a 1-41, 8·2, 6-0, 7-S win over over Gae Ma1er Saturday night . . . Rep.a Manlkowa upset second seed We•dJ Tar9bell, 7-6, 7-t in two lie· breakers Sunday to win the singles title in the Phoenix Clank . . . World record-holders Edwill Me.ea and Sara SI· meeal won their events at an international traclll and field meet in Buenos Aires. Moses won the 400-meter intermediate hurdles in SO.l~SimeonH<tared•-t~ tn tlfe"Dlgh jump. T~e-.R•dle Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are: / 11 I excellent; ' .t I worth watching; / / fair; / forget It. e I p.m., Ch•nnel 7 ./ ../ ./ ,i NFL FOOTBALL: Washington at Denver. Announcers: Frank Gifford, Howard Cosell and Don Meredith. The Redskins have had trouble getting untracked this season and are off to a 1 -~ start. This one could develop Into a place kicking duel between Mark Moseley and the Broncos' Fred Stelnfort who connected on four field goals last week avalnst the Browns. Denver Is favored by 61h points. RADIO Football -Washl ~ton at Denver, S:SO p.m .. KNX (1070). ,.,...Pep•• SPORTS BREAK I FOOTBALL/ BASEBALL Morgan Speak. Out Astros Can Hold , Their Heads Up HOUSTON <AP) -Terry Puhl faced the wall and didn't want to talk about the Houston Ast.roe 8·7 lo.a to the Philadelphia Pbillles in the fifth and decidin1 game of the National League bueball playoffs. Art Howe sipped on a beer and •tared at the noor; be didn't want to talk either. Joe Mor1an, a veteran with the Cincinnati Reds until rejoin- in1 Wlouaton this year, walked around the dresaing room and •aid ~er and over, "Hold your beacb up. You have nothin1 to be uhamedof." Mor1an. a can of beer in his hand and drdaed in a T-shirt and a pair of green shorts, kept sayin1, "There will be another year." FOR 111E .\..'lTROS, this may have been the year. They won the National League West in a playoff game with the Los Angeles Dodgers after tying for the division title. They puabed the Phillies to the fifth 1ame of a best.of-five series. They were down by one run, they led by three runs, they were down by two runs, and they kept coming back. But it all ended in the lotb in· ning when Philadelphia puabed across the deciding run and earned the right to face the American Royals in the World Series starting Tuesday night in Philadelphia. THE BIT THAT WON the came dropped a few inches in front ol the outatretched 1love of Puhl. He said, "I just didn't have a chance at it. The Phillies did their job. "It WU a samfylog seuon, and excitinl( series, but somebody had to loee." Puhl said the Royals may have more team 1peed than Philadelphia but, "you know we will au be pulling for OW' Na- tional League champions." Joe Niekro, the knuckleball pitcher who carried Houston put Los Angeles in the deciding playoff game and pitched superbly for 10 innings lo one of th e vi c t o ries against Philadelphia, said, "We scored a lot of runs, but we just couldn't hold them. Give them credit." BILL VIRDON, Astros manager, said, "This series bas been outatanding. The Phillies played well and always came back at us and are deserving winners. "You have to give them credit, but I have to credit our club too. We are better than a lot of people gave us credit for. My hat la off to the Astros. They never wt." During the brief interview, Philadelphia's Infielder Manny Trillo, named Most Valuable Player of the playoff aeries, came into the room briefty and Virdon said, "Congratulations, Manny." Joe Sambito, Houaton 's ace re- lief pitcher, said of Sunday's starter Nolan Ryan, "He juat didn't get a break. He pitched so well and he kept us in the game and It just didn't go right for him." Ryan was coasting unW the eighth inning when a ball bounced off bis 1love, eruing what should have been or could have been a double play. Philadelphia then loaded the bases and scored five runs. PIDIJJES POP CORKS • • • batten, wbile Umer and Maddoa proYlded tbewimalq 1'1111. Phillies Manager Dallas Green, champagne dripping from bia 6-S frame and tean welling in his eyes, said of bia team: "I DON'7 ..KNOW ii-I'll liv~ throu1b this one. I badgered these guys about the necessity ol character since 1prin1 trai.Diq. I don't know any greater dilplay of character than this team showed in the month of Sep- tember, in clinching the division and in this series. They didn't quit. It was incredible." Boone, the veteran catcher who with Mike Schmidt, Larry Bowa, Trillo, Pete Rose and Bake McBride formed the core of tbia team, was in an emo- tional state. Usually cool and verbal, Boone lay exhausted on a table, and the words came slowly. "IT WAS UNBELIEV ilLE. All the pent up emotions of all these ye.ars, it waa all worth it. Ask the city (Philadelphia) about char9der on tbla one.'' Bowa said this was something be dreamed of since be wu five years old, and now that it WU here he found it bard to believe. Rose, a tower of strength and example ot leadenhip by actiaa, --1 Hid the World Series would be fun. He observed that the playoffs, against pya be bad competed againJt all season - friends, he called them -was the real pressure. MANAGER BILL VIRDON ol the Ast.roe said the playoff "bu been outatanding. It typified the two clube that played in it. The Phillies played well and alw&)'ll came back at ua. The Pbillles are deserving winners. You have to give them credit. "But I have to credit my club too. We are better than a lot of people gave ua credit for bein1. My hat la qff to the Astroc. They never quit." The Phillies drank to that, and everything else, too. SEVANO. February.'' Ob. • • NFL StanJinss Ferragamo did add that General Manager Don Klosterman uaured him things would work out . . . whatever that means. ••• Don't look for Pat Haden to be activated any time soon. Why? BecaUle there la no need for the Rama to make a move unless they have to. Ferrquno is playing too well for any cbantet 90w. *** Eddie Hill'• performance of 73 yard8 on 11 carries In a sub- •tltute role ju8t bean out Wen· dell Tyler'• theory that anybody cua nm -and do well -beb1nd the R81118' oftm8ive llne. Special note •bould also to Slroal Hfet)' Johnnie Jobnaon wbo turned In his best performance u a Ram. ••• Al a vllltlna city in the NFL, St. Louil ranll:I 11th, Ju.t beh1nd ClevellQd and Buffalo. Tb• playen dread oomlna ....... Tb• cbHrleadeu, ('Red Lia•'), bowenr, are No. a beMM Pbl18delplaia'1 Liberty Bella (No. I) and the. New Orie-..... (No. 2) • ••• NATION.U. CONFERENCE Eu& W L T Pc&. PF. PA Dallas 5 1 O .m .178 as Phila. S 1 0 .133 173 70 St.Lou.is 2 4 0 .333 140 127 Wash. 1 4 O ·.200 81 100 N.Y.GlanW S 0 .187 11 171 C•&ral Detroit s 1 O .833 1• 9'7 Minnesota 3 3 O .500 102 138 Green Bay 2 3 1 .417 75 13'1 Tmpa.Bay 2 3 l .417 85 120 Chicago 2 4 0 .333 75 100 Ram• 4 Atlanta 3 S.F. 3 New Ori. O We.& 2 0 3 0 3 0 6 0 ....., •• le-. •-• 21, SC • .__. i> ... .._.0, ....... 12 .867 177 118 .soo 14'7 124 .soo 144 l• .000 • 1• CIMI_. 17, ~I• G-..,, ,., T..,.. a.y u con l"llll .... J1, NewY-Gleftb t• ......,...,.,Ml9ml0 0.llH "· llll l't.,ldtce U Ml--. II, Cllk ... r c ..... ,....n.IMttlt> K-Oty21,........,.JO Det'91t Mo .... Ore.-u .... y-Jett ......... , o..i .... a.1111 oi... u T ....... 1._ Wtllll"""' .. Ollw9\' Ca..-11 et•> AMERICAN CONFERENCE Ea1t W L T Pc&. PF PA Buffalo S 1 0 .833 UM 91 N. Ent. 5 l o .833 1'10 110 Baltimore 4 2 o .867 m 106 Miami a 3 o .soo 82 1JO N.Y.Jet.a 1 5 0 .187 9'7 137 Cet1val Pitta. 4 2 0 .91'1 lSS 101 Cleveland 3 3 O .500 121 112 Houston 3 3 O .500 94 111 • Cincinn. 2 4 0 .333 9;4 106 Wea 2 0 a o 3 0 3 0 4 0 San Diego 4 Oakland 3 Seattle 3 Denver 2 K.C. 2 .....,. . ._ .867 •• 121 .soo 137 144 .soo 10. 121 .400 • llt .m i02 m •-• .. 1111 ~rMCIKe C0.-11 et I .. ""' ---•-.n• Def'" ......... . 0-..... o.wlaM M,_.. ft CIMl!wlell lt.L ................. , ............ YertiMI "" .......... ar... o.t,... .. Ollcolllt 1(-QtyltDll!ftt ............... ......_. .... ., .. CMm*lt IM DI-.. T .......... ......_ ....,,oct.• OelllMIM ............. FOOTBALL I BOATING Mond•y. October 13, 1980 ONLY PILO I SJ P UBLIC NOTICE Last of the Unbeatens Extinct PUBLIC NOTICE Bills F al~ So Do Steelers, Oilers, Chargers .. rom "P Pl•P•h·IM'f For hvt' \\t.'l'k:s the 8uHalt1 Kilb led u r harmt>d cx11tenec l!;vcn whe11 th,•y tnt>d l(Olng into the• fo1111h quarter. lht>y :sonwho"' round a way to wln Not Sunduy Ruffulo 's bubble ~u ftnall)' burl'I a-tbe 8-1thnon• l'olt!I , led b> l\ert Jont•t, twat lht> Bllls 17 12 to .s1ioll tht.• Nul1ooal t-~c ball Leugut>'.s tut pcrfe<'t recortl tn rucin¥ to a ~ O mark with their bt"'lt s1.1rt since 1964, tht' ll1lls \WH'c had rull1 t'd tu" en m lhl' final period. so wht.•11 the~· found themst'I Yl' behind the <.:oils 17 !I gom.c mtu tht• rourth quartt·r they weren't purtlcul11rly wnrn1•d "We had a feeh11~ t hut "~'d co me b.irk, ~aid Bills guard ltegg1c M<'Ken21e 'It w ~ JU~t ..i nrnt te r or stopping tht' mista kes . But 1t nc\'(•1 h aPJ>t.-nt'd All th..-Bills .:ould come up with "as a 20 > urJ field ~oal by N11·k M 1ke · Mayer en the late going. and 1t \lo b n t enough. Buffalo wasn't the only upset v1ct1m on the NFL 's sixt h S u nda y Th e Pitts burg h Stee lers wer e knocked off by the Cincinnati Bengals for the second lime this season 17 lll, but stayed atop the AFC Central D1 v1s1on bee a use the Houston Oife rs were surprised by the Kansas City Chiefs 21·20. The San Diego Chargers were upset by the Oakland Raiders 38·24, the Clevela nd Browns shocked the Seattle SeahPwks 27·3 and the New York J ets s urprised the Atla nta falcons 14-7. The Jets' victory, their first of the season. left the New Orleans Saints as the only winless team in the league. New Orleans was beaten by the Detroit Lions 24· 13. In other games. the New England Patriots clobbered the Miami Dolphins 34·0, the Dallas Cowboys overwhe lmed the San Francisco 49ers 59·14, the Philadelphia E agles beat the New York Giants 31·16. the Green Bay Packers and Tampa Bay Buccaneers fought to a 14·14 tie and the Min· Boating 117Compet.e In Gold Cup Despite light wind and hazy weather, 117 boats in 12 classes turned out Saturday and '"·mday ,for Newport Harbor Yacht Club's Fall '•lld Cup Regatta. Six classes sailed on courses inside the bay and there were six classes sailing ocean courses. Largest class on inside courses was the Sabot A with 16 entries and tbe largest class on outside courses waa the Etchells-22 with 15. Trophy winners: 1-~-SAMJT A ,,.I -'· oe.te P'•-· ~l\IC; 1. MIU -vi<!\. Aavc; ), CaswNlra $nwttzer, NHYC • P..,t 81•nll SSYC SABOT 11 Ill 1 Enc (il•tte r LtVC 1 M•rll Fr•ncO l.IYC SAllOT C llJI -'AnMS<llOO, NHYC 1 c n .. vuno L•F•I><'• "IHY( J Stt n T,.,,_, LtVC 1.1 00-1• (" I 0H n Fulton, 5SVC 1 Emanueo (~ter, SI BYC SHIPE (" -I J•fl l.efllla'1, MBYC: 1 Jon Plr•o n ... 8CYC 1.ASEA 1111 I JO GOll>Oft, 1.8 V(, 1. Mlt .... Y RyMI, SOYC, l. !>le~.., A---..••vc ~c1-ETCMEl.~1l llSI -1 Oon ..... r. SWYC. 2. Tom c .... u tt, NHYC< > t--4'ell"'r.• Mete!t-.i.._.llWI' .1t HYC -~TAH.A-lS 161 -1 Nao Time, All.., T.,,...., SllYAC. SOl.IHG(•l-•.Galon0r11r.NHYC U!.1~~_!:~'\~\"t~f~:: ~re~; ~,{:..°:"'~~~~1~,;, Pam Sn.rp, •CYT~ISTl.i i11 -1. Slclt> t(empff, CorYC; J. Ste•• n ... ,,, •• Frnno YC 110 Sailors Top f'l~ld Bill Pascoe, with crewmen Ken Watts and Bryan Smith, led UC Irvine to a narrow victory for the Dick Sweet Trophy, symbolic of the Pacific Coast intercollegiate sloop championship, in a five-race regatta sailed in the ocean off Newport Beach Saturday and Sunday. The UCI crew scor ed 20 points to 21 for Long Beach State with s kipper Kurt Mille r a nd crewmen Mark Golison and Steve Grillon. Third was Stanford with 22 points with skipper Paul Yoet and c rewmen Willie Stigglebout and Barney Douglas. Eleven schools participated in the event which was sailed in Shields Class sloops. California Maritim e Academy was fourth with 24 points. UCLA was fifth with 26 and OCC sixth. 33. .• As winner of the Pacifi c Coast title UC l 4_ualifles for the na tional championship at Cleveland in November . ::: Curra. Salb to \'lnorw :: Hugh Curran in The Vulgar Boatman from a ~t Yacht Club was the overall and Class winner Sunday in Capistrano Bay Yacht Club's at Pumpkln Regatta. •.• The top three in the r ace were Class B entries. ' cond was Purr, To m Adamson. Capistrano Bay acbt Club, and third was Avoca, John Fuller, PVC. ~ Cius A winner was Frodo, skippered by 8JlaftCe Beck, Capo BYC. f]• In the non-spinnaker class the winner wu a'utyrie Steve Rosensteel, Capo BYC; second was Hot; Joe Penhelli, Capo BYC. and third was eutbera, Pat Hearne. DPYC. ;. A mixup in the reverse coune billing resulted a nwnber of 1klppen rounding marks on the I aide and othen doing a 3IO·decree turn to ect the error. BftN!ltt 191er 11111 •l'C' Snta Brian Hench and Mary Jo Tyler ~amed to win st.ewart Carpenter tfODhy ln a five race 1erie11 of Balboa Yacht Club Saturday ~d Sunday. eb md Tyler were 1ailin1 for BYC. But it wun't euy for the winnen. They came m beblnd ln tbe final race to nip Randy Imm. lllalton Bay Yacht Club. Only a quarter a point separated the top two In the final 1tal\d· . Tbtrd place went to Guy Raffee, Mission Bay btQub. Dally P.llot Top 10 n("Ull U \'1ktnllb lUIJllt'd lilt· ( 'h11•a g11 lll'11rli 13 7 Wust11nl(tnn 11> ut Ut•U\l'r tuoal(ht 0 <·1<11111· u cli 1\•11114 ra111 J11nc11 com1>li=ted 10 of ~1 PUSIH"S 1111 :!0(1 )'UI di. 1111'1ud1n ~ a 38·y•1rd 111ur hdown Lu M11>.1· ~11.11u -·\)u1 ll'.1m " ht\bcJ un lhl'• pas11 ." s aid R.ill1111on· C'oul'l1 M1k1• M1·Corrnack "With Bert .lorwi.. we u11c thl' vu1111 tu :.cl up the run " Mc·CorrrllH'k ;di;o pnu11crl the Colts· whu gu\ l' Junci. .tll t11c time ht' needed lt'rl:>IVt' llnt' 1:. J fJf•11HJ ~ruup, · he ... aad third Wt>t•I>. 1n u rcJ\\ no i.ul'ki. " line men. ·•our of· ··For the n on ~1l'('a1t ll·} " 11nc )Urd plun~t -17 seconds ht<fv r l' hJlfl111 H• g <1 \t' Halt11n11rc a 17 6 lead The NFL ROVNDVP Hilb 1·..irue h.u·k <111 .1 49 yard Mike· Mayer field f(O al before tnlt't n11s:.ion. but couldn't get. anything but another f1t.'ld gmtl in the set'ond half Des pite thC' loss. Ball!> Coach Chuck Knox ex- pressed pride 1n h1i. pl ayers 'All l can say is we battled, scra1>ped. hustled and didn't quit," he said ~lscwherc in the NFL Sunday: Browns 21. Seabawks 3 MJke Pr111tl rushed for 116 yards a nd two tou1•hdowni. as Cleveland beat Seattle for the first lime in four meetings. · 'Sinc·c I 'vc been al Cleveland, this is the best JOb we've done ct1llecuv1.dy in a football game ," said Sam Hutagliano. the Browns ' third.year coat•h. "Seattle 1s one <>f the most potent offensive team s tn the league and we ke pt the m from scor· ing a touchdown. Their defense has been supe rb over the past two weeks and we scored 27 points a~ainst them Now that's a great effort." Lions 24, Saints 13 Rookie Billy Sims rushed for 91 yards and scored a pair of fourth period touchdowns , the first of which was set up by Ftack Kane's 62-yard kickoff return "Hack 's re turn wa!> the key to the game ." Detroit Cuach Monte Clark said. ·'The Saints had just come back and tied the gam e at 10-10 and we were kind of struggling But his return reall y got the team up again. lie got a game ball for t hat." New Orleans quarterback Archie Manning completed 25 of 36 pass a ttempts for 314 yards in the losing effort. Patriots 34, Dolphins 0 "We got beat bad," Miami Coach Don Shula said after the Dolphins sufrered their most one- sided loss in 10 years . Steve Grogan and Matt Cavanaugh each threw one touchdown pus for New England and the Patriots' defense limited Miami t.o just 88 yards and eight first downs. Cowbol• st, 4ten 14 Dallas equalled 1U hi1best pol.nt total in the rranclilile'a 21-year history u Danny White threw four touchdown passes before leavtng the game in the third penod. Three or those scores were caught by Drew Pearson. who had been used as a decoy Uahr had an extra-point try blocked a nd also mis · sed a 39-yard fi eld goal uttempt with four seconds lefl "lf lif\ybody would ask me what m y biggest win as a coach was , this would have to be it ," said Bengals Coach Forrest Gregg. "To beat these peo- ple twice and lo beat them he re in Pittsburgh is somt.!lh1ng " "We played under a type of malaise," said Steelers Coach Chuck Noll. "That can happen when you forget where you've come from and the hard work 1t took to get you ther e. When you listen to all the horns being tooted. you get fat." Jets 14, f''alcons 7 Kevin Long. who came to tr aining camp o ver- weight and never challenged for the J ets' fullback job. got in the lineup anyway last week whe n starter Clark Gaines s uffered a broken leg At Atlanta he carried 25 times for 100 yards and scored the w1nn1ng touchdown on ci I-yard plunge with I :38 r em ainmg to give the Jets their rirst v1ictory of the season. ,,-. THE EARL'S l \JflllllllHGrHt:AflNG S04•t WUte• t'f••''"' "" . .. ''"~>ffil t '""° f,111• .• t l _;I I ti ~I! .. ,,, JI '-••Utl,."' ,, ,, At •• t:OST& Meo641 -1289 Hl't M••pott 11-ic:I "ISSIOfol YIEJo495·04Q1 1111'2 Cenw"MI Cepo tf•"o ts•" ~00 '""• ., •••• ., .. ._ .. , J DI. AMIROSf. S.C . LIM 56' W. I Ml Str..+ ColhMHe,CA 541-7270 or 642-2583 radio pager WIDE AREA COVERAG~ Orangt (OQGCy . L.A Co1111 ty. Saa Bf>rnudlno l ounty. RJnr1idt C'oun ty '17.75 ll>\al mo. toi>t no deposit on credrt approval ORAP\jGf CO UNTY Ul>IO lflf PHONI 1,IRVl<I IP\j(. 40 1 S SANTA FE. 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Of QittlnQAlffMO• n "fftt l 1notdertoqu•llh or r •n"lt1 lt,qu•lll1f'dtN p.trtlt tfMU~ n the N4't1on•• ~lt'lltJd lni.ur•nte Progr.,-n IN f 1 lti) C>ATE~ I TM prrk>d for comm.-nt will blt ri•n•tv Pi(>l 4-y'\o 'OllOwtnQ I~ ""'conoout>11f o ''on of tnlsC>roGQ\.ed rul~ 1n •""•'"~Pf"'' ot 1oca1c •rtul•tlon1ne•ch,ommunuv \ ::~~:~";':jl'O•MATIOHCONTACT. Mr.a_,G.~l,M.._l'_ln _ _,..,.,_..,,IMl•»-1-er Toll l'r• u... 191 ~; "" ,.._ .. -1. <.all TOl4 ,._ L-,_, ~~-:;::~mt.~=~,,..._.,w---..o.c..-. T1W-ell ____ lftlatr9'0<el_Mll_etlfW~-- t'°"~of .,.._ ,,,..,._"~"' f\OOd •t•vlt'°n' fOI" M•i!<t~ '0<.•tton\ '" ,,_. tt-11°"' In It< tord•n<• wltn 'f<:tlC!f' 110 o• t~ F ltiocJ 01w~1..-Pr ·tM hM &<Tot ,.ll P&.1b t. ~l 1~>.17 St•t 'IO _.,n1cn...00.0'4"<l•on ti.J10 1Allll NAt.on.t f lood •nwr•t'K.•.At l Of 1 ... (T10e J(lll Of l l"f HOUSlnQ ttf'd Ur~ 0.Vf"fOCJl"f'f"f'I A(t \)t 1961 tPutt l ~4411.•?U S.C .001 41Zl.•n<14-1CFQ•I •t•t Tr.tM etev•t~s. tooitthler •Un tnt Hood JM••" rnen.oemen1 rYM•furet ,-~ for much or the season -and had expressed his unhappiness about 1t. "Jt f~ls good to be back in the orfense and big part of it," s aid Pearson . "There was no fri~~n just a-feeU:ng on my part that t-wasn't1>emg used enough. They used me in the game plan today - but one game does not make a season." NABERS aulre<I by SKtlon 60 l Of IN pt'OQrarn ·-•••loni. •r• ,,,. minimum 111•1 •••re QUl~d. T"-"tiNIMkf l"lOtt>econ,trueCI tomNn •rwcommunU"'t """'' <M ,.•n.,. ..... i\ttNJOrdln.ncH tN t •'• rnort 1trl"'91nt lntntlr fload Pi•in tnMt4-Qll'l't'Mf't reoutn ~..-~ .. cc..:-~~.l.._-.,.4~~(A.',t~~~i---t...,,,.~ny"'llY'lt•nYtt~-•'1"' ... "'-"•~oa.l1&own,.o1 fr\41 ~ • (Ul\SO: puttua"\ IO pollc~ ~l.al>ll~ DY oti.r f'-••1 st81• or A99tone1 .nllh~ Thiie PTCllPDMd •tf!'Vet'°"' wlll eho O. uMd IO<•l<w••t• ,,. ~oPrt•te ftood ll"t -"'::;;jjiiiiiiiill•llliill••liiiilliiiiiiiiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiji~ \uraMe or""''""' ratH tor M • bulldlnot and the" c.ontent1 end t0< ow 1#ConG T~Pf'OPOW(lb ... e c 100.yo r I floo<l•l•v•lk>r» lo< tel«IOCl•ou tlonure P_a .... 1100 ••••I l'IMOEl•v•llOnl l t•v•rol •nMW~~on•1111fltlnQC>ulld1nos and tN lr con,.n" Eagles 31, Gtaa&a 11 Louie Giammona filled in for the injured Wilbert Montgomery and ran fo r two of Philadelphia's four second-half touchdowns as the Eagles rallied to beat the Giants and keep pace with Dallas atop the NFC East at 5·1. Packers 14. Bucs 14 Tom Birney. a substitute junior high school teacher until the Packers signed him last week after cutting kicker Chester Marco!, missed a 24 · yard field goaJ try with 1 :09 left in regulation, then failed on a 36-yara try witn 11ve seconas Jen in overtime. So the ~ame ended as t he fi rst tie or the NFL season "I'm not going to second-guess myself," Starr said of the decis ion to cut Marco!. "Who's to say anyone else would have made those field goals?" Tampa Bay Coach John McKay said it would be ··an understate ment of the year to say we d id not play well." Asked his game plan, McKay sn apped: "To stumble, fumble and throw In · complete passes " Vikings 13, Bears 7 Ted Brown's one-vard scoring run ear ly in the fourth quarter erased a 7-6 deficit and g:we Min- nesota an error-filled victorv over Chicago Raiders 38. Cbargen Z4 OaltJand's Kenny King ran for 138 yards and two touchdowns. one of them on a club·reco rd 89· yard run that broke a 24-24 t ie. Just 11 seconds late r , San Diego's Chuck Muncie rumbled a kickoff return and Oakland's Todd Christensen fell on it in lhe end zone for another touchdown. • "We made some big mistakes ," said San Diego Coach Don Coryell. ''Sometimes we made them in bunches." Cbief s 21, Oilen 20 Steve Fuller, forced out of the pocket hr Houston's Jesse Baker, scrambled 38 yards for a touchdown with 2:51 lo play and Nick Lowery's ex· 1 tra point gave Kansas City IU victory. Earl Campbell carried a club·record 38 times for 178 yards for Houston. 1 "What is m y impression of Earl Campbell?" asked Chiefs safety Gary Barbara. "Have you ever heard or Amtrak? That's my impression of I Earl Campbell. He's awesome. That's the only waytodescribehim ... awesome." Bea&ala 17, S&eeten 11 I "We're a better team than ctncinnati, ao why to the world did they beat ua twice?" asked I Pittlburgb tackle Joe Greene after the Ben1als, behind quarterback Ken Anderaon, raced to a 17·0 ho~;~ ;~:.::-k;:;: •, DENVER (AP> -The Wublncton Redaklnl and Denver Broncoe, a palr of playoff -calibre team• tn lt7t wbo have 1tru1aled with injuries thi• I aeuon, flaht for eurvival toniCbt when the)' face each other ln a National Football Lea,ue tame on I . Channel1 ttl. Tbe Redlkiu, J-4, were attempUa1 to aap a tbr ....... io.taa 1tnu. O.ftl' brouCbt a l ·I re· I eord "*' u. cam.t after t.rtmmlDI e1 .. e1and lf.lla ..... Tb• 8roaeo1 are fnored by 1h1 polntt, ..................... b .................... .................. '8ehlh«: ...••• ., .............. llA . ..,.. ........ tr .... .., ........... o1 ............. ....., .... ........... WW. a IH .... wllUe Dl9ftr Wiii ..,.,. ,,, .............. ,_,_, LEASING? 1981 MODELS MOW HERE! 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Sims .,,..,, Sael ,.., Oelll91-~ • ._, ~1. ~AHINO -New OrlHlll, Me11111111 n-.... ,, •. o.er.lt, OenMI-,,., .... 1 •• ll•ClllVIHO -..... Orte-, C--.. ... , OellrMlll ~SI. Wllli-t M6, HetlNt .. JI, St ... CMll ").~, l4efrl1 1·>1. o.trelt, IC9ft ~ Slfftl ~. Hiii 2-21, 9-y Ml, ~1-tt. ........ , ... _,, ................ 'f-, , .. ._.. .. . , . ' ........ _ ....... , .... ._ ... , ---•--,. CYwoauAlus -OlftMM • ,... ·-OkMy &.tNtCY ....... lelCal · ... "&~\IMO G•e•n l•r Dito .. » ,, t •• ,_ a.,, Wllllem• • 1• O 10). h•-t.• .. Al(ttVINO 0--••• '"•"' 11 1• ~-···. ,_ 1111 ,_ .. , 0 1 ... ..a, ... ," 11<•-• ,, ...... n ... a9'a.UJ _...,........, ( ...... -I • I I II -111• O \ O 0 I ( .. ¥. '"""tll !llft (C'•••IJfl•l<•t tee ,G ltef'""@,. (19 W.l .. t JI -· ,,_ \I_. (OIO ltllHI (le IM!ile )""' tCo;;.,CIOl•klo.I c1e •""'m"'""'c..""'"1<~1 . . , ... :..-l.H9n llV"41HG Ot..i-. M P111111 h '" _ .. ...,....,... -· .,,l , ........ PA.UINO Cte .. lend, 5lpl I) I • •t11 Ste1ll• '°"' U ,.~ lll IU!Cllt\llMC. (' ..... -. M l'rlltn • IJ ,.. • ..,.,. J....., 1....., >• \ooellle-. ._,U, MtCwtl""' ••I Oooff\11\• • )t Vt!Unp "· ... ,. 7 """ .,, °"""'" Ctlo<..., _,.,,...._. Mlft FC. ~''" b ¥1" FG Oenmelet lJ 0 0 l 0 I Ii (Ill EMI l CWO\S trom Pftlpp\ 11 l>cHn•> 1110 1 Ml" .,_ t ,..,.10.Ame••' •lclll A ... ISi ,,.. .. _'""_" AUSHIHC. Chl<eto. Pe,1on, 2).101, H••IM• 11·M ""'""UOI•, 8rown 1s .. 1. .,_,is.a. "AS$1NC. Cl\IC9'jj0, Phlll'>I IJ·lt•._.,, £••"' 0·1·0·0 Mln"•'ole , l<rem., t).H•l·ISS, s.M«0-1~ REC£1\llHC. -C111cec1•1. \Netti l·l1. S<Oll l·Jt, H~ H Ao\l...,.IOte lie-...i, ar-n ~ZS. S. -•t• 2·3' E9gln 31 , 0.anta 11 Sc-"~ 1'1111-lpf\I• 0 J t• 14--'1 N.Y. Gl-U 1 t 0 0-16 MVG -Slmrm I run (0.NIO kick) NYG -.._,lllM IS P.n from Simms !lilck l•lledl Piii -l'G FrMlllln •I N'Y'G -FGOtneloO Piii -Gla-1""' IFret11illn lllclll Piil -Hart1ftll0n """' IFr.,.klln kick) ll'fll -~ 3 run (Frtftlill" 111<111 Piii -ICrepfle • pall from Je-UI CFrentillnllklll A -71,8SI , ........ L.-. ltUSHIHG -Pt1U.-1pt1le, Oltm- t..C, CM'flllfleld 11·•· Harrl"llon 4-U. -'Y'one, Teytor 1~2t, ~ S.21, llU- •21. ~ASSING -Pllll-lplll•, Jewornl tt·M .. ·212, Pl .. rclll c>+O-O. H-Yorll, ""'"" l...,_J .. I. "l!CllVIHG -1'1111.-,lpfMe, c.mtif- . S-Sl, GI--H2. carmlc:-1 )..JD. -Yortl, Mtttfltwl U , Penlfts 2·•, Sllln t.11, ~M).11. Plllrtoe9 "'· DolDNRa 0 ._..., ....... Mllf'lll O O o 0-0 New CE,.,._ 10 1 o 17-.M NCE -f'GSmlllllD NCE -C9114uft I""' CSmltll 11101 ME -Jecllton l3 peu from G...- CSmlllllilclil NE -Fre11<ll 12 NH lrom C•v ......... CSmltll llldl NCE -FGSmlt113' M£ -Cltr\I 14 n#I CSn\ltll lllCkl A -61,2'1 .......... 1......,. AUSHING -Mleml, Howell 1.J•, Wlllltmt M6, Nttlteft >-IS. Hew EllOI-. l'trtu-IC-11, Clerk 1·'11, Calhouft U-31, F_m.,.•2'. PASSING -~leml, Slrocli 1·1·1·1'. w_.., tt·•J.•. New E1191end, o,....., ...... >17J,C.._......~. AEC£1VIHG -Mleml, GlellQUlnto 4-t, Wiiii->14, -J.IS. llCllM ... le J.S. ..... IE.....,., Jee-4-fl, -....n 440, ..,_ .. ..,,. Collll 17, ... 12 .............. ..._ "1. _,, ........ . ......... Bel -Sle nl lf pen 1rom .,onH CMllle-/IUyer lllelll Bal -FG Mla..Mt ... r 21 8uf-~lrun(Nftt.iledl a.t -MlC..y 1 run 1Mlt1..iiMver 11.1c111 8ut -FG M1...-M<1..,.r " aut -FC. Ml ... Meyer JO A -11,U. ,..........,~ llUSHING -8tlllmore, Wes11ln91on 22·14, Fr-lln 1).51, Jonn 4-t, McC..Uley ). •• lh•lf•lo. CrlliM 1 .. 76. 9,_"11=16, L..U 1·11. "ASSING -BeHlmore, J-• 10-21-1·-•uff•••. ,.......,_., 1741·2!0. RECEIVING -Belllmore, Sl.,.l 4-tl, Ctrr :Ml, llotlltr Mt . a..tfeto, auoer ~. H-1 4-42, Crltlbs 4-42. l.twll HJ. ..,..._ 17, St .... rs 11 Sc-"' OMf1ln Clncl""'11 10 1 o 0-17 Pitts-..""' 0 0 16 0-1• Cln-Ale-r I""' 1s..n1 ... 111c111 Cln -FG s..nt ... 2• Ctn -~ 21 lllOI• from A_,_ (S<M\t•• ld<'-l Pit -Devit I run Clllcll l>lockedl Pit -Smllll ll PHI from 8r_,....w la.II< klcll) Pit -FG Bellr 25 A-SS.Ml ......... L.N9n AUSHIHG -Clftc.,_U, Ate-• IH~ _,_... 11-24, .._._ Ml. P~, Htttlt 1).0, ~Ml. .. ASSING -Cli1Cl11n1tl, AndUMfl 11·'2·H1', "*'-1_...IS. PlttMufWI\, aHd.-14-ls.Hl7. Al!CEIVING -CIM ln,..tl, IHI 5-SI, Mcln•llY ).Jt, Aoll >-U. J01111...,. I·•· P ltt1•11r911, S..-1111 S·"· Greume11 i..s. SWeefoeyJ~. Chief9 21 , Otlen 20 ........ -. -...... K•-OIY Hev -l'G Frltlcll 41 3 1 J 1-• 0 0 u 1-1' --CM11*111Jrun IFrltscll 111<111 l(C -,_.,,,..II 31 P•H from F1111er n .-,.,111c111 kC -Spenl 41lllOIS1m.rc.,.11on 1'--" kl<lll Hou -FG Frlbell 4' HOii -8erMr 2' ..... ''°"' , ...... lf'•lbcll lilclil KC -Fllli.r •""' (L.owffV kick) •-15,M I ........ '-"*" AUSHIHG -HouAell, C....•11 »·1111, WlllOll >-U. K-1 Clly, M<Kn~I 12'43, f'UlterMS. PASSING -~-. SteMtf IH1·HJI. KlflNI City, F"ulter tH•l·l41. ' AECelVING -HoutlClf'I, &arMr ....... Cole""" 4-46. KlllHI Cll'I', AMd t·S4, Menlltll 2-SI • College L4Tll IA1'UltOA Y ICOllH H-•11 II, west Vlrtlfllt 1' San 0 .... -U. ll, Wlllttltr U SeftwMlt.4S,0c<l419f1tat 14 WMer M ... Mo114tM 21 Hllh lchoOl lchectu .. c.11 ........ ,: .......... , TWltlDAY INVWL.-- U11lvenov ,,._ Catt ... •1 N•--1 H.,_, ..... "--- ....... vt. Oc-View ti """t~ 9Mcll P¥--.L...- ......... "'· AnaNlm ti Le ~ .. -~trio °'-~ l • "-· ...... ()111\ft '-•••• V.i-le •I~· Hoeu f 1111••-., a t Dot_ fl \1"4ell<le .._.......,. 11..,..NAl.,,.llooel Qu.lftt Hiii tATU•DAY ... c.... ....... MIMIOfl VtelO 411 0tnt Hlllo 11 p.m I .. ._ ......... 11 .......... ,.,_.f"f\ ............ ~ lot Amt-n . itfttie. et O•rdt" Orow P9naec:ota Open c ............ , ... , O.n .,..,__..»MOO ..... 1.10.10-vs Miiie '61111 ...... ,11,MIO .... 11 .... 1-1'.11 Gary He1111ore, \11,MIO 6'11·10-11-1n Oe•• EIUWI...,. .... V ,11S 1-....1-111 l Yrtn Loll. V ,'1S ...... 11·1-VI Tom Kite, 17.IH •S.~H-111 M"lt Go .. , '7,11S ICl-61 ..... 1~111 Mii .. , Be<llor,,.,000 •t.11-n .--m Oof\ •oo1 ... '6,0GO 71.11.....-m e111., aec11, .,,uo .._,,.,1.10-• GIMly Glltlet't. M, UO •"71·70.71>-W Jell CMffee. 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GtM llM"''• , .. , .. 2, 6-4, 1·S CC.--. wl,. 1111,000, Mayer Wini \10,lllOI. UITA Clay Court Toumey ... -.~ ..... 8Mcll.llle.) ............. Fred Stolle .f. 8oel MclC-, .... t-41. ISlolle ..... 12,lOO, Mcl<tnN wll'IS $1,SODI. ~·lllMI Stoll•E.,.... Sc.ott ,..f, MclCenn•Jlm p., .......... J.7·5. ........_ClllMlc ...... ...... ,...,..~ .... ....,.r...-1, , .. _, .. , .................. ,. ._ ..... ~-·· ......... ~ ..... ._, ... ,. •... "'"" IClyOf'llur..ctndy A..,-i, M , ..... Pomona WMDAY'S aaWLTSl , ........ , .. 1..., ...... 1 .......... "'"' rtct -..... T'I Man CAlltffttllll), 6.•. C.3111, i.GO; OnlmMd F ... IAHMdlil, UO. UD; tlw. Siie lwi.ltel, ta. St eucta (4-J l pald"2.JO • ___ .... _____ ... Second rKt -e liwr-t Oii ICMvtll, UO, UO, 2 .O; Lot111 Soul IHtrtl, UO, 1.40: Good Tl-lltO IMltcllttll, 1.10. Tlllrd rec• -llealure Hut CCMw11. a.to, •·•· •.•; .., IO wn '#Nt.1. ••· e • .a; P .... GeM CLiftlUllll, :uo. ts eNCU 12·11 peld-l.ODT1 ....... . T11ail .. .. 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SJ euc\t 11-21 ........ . tt "ell SI• (l·).1 ...... 11 p.ld U•,1S..40 wllll t.a lifflllltll tklltll Isla -wtl; I ~II SI• __. .... ftlld llSJM •1111 1Clll Wlllfllfll lkllttl (fl,,. --l. e1ft0fttll rec• -A•• 1.i-.1, 1.10, s.oo. >.•; Miile .....,,., CLlpl\lml, s.•. •.OO; Don OMlrtelt C~tl, UO. T .. lftll -• -Per1K1 Hlltet' IM<Gwfl). •7.00, UO, U O; l(lttllil IZ-atlt), 1,3111, 4.111; Arll N' Aulltft CSIMftC.,.l, U eue\I , ... , ...... 141.IO. A~-tt.•. NU MOU.,. -ltotd J ).S 11, T-i-tc11 • M 1J, ~ 10~1J ... .._..,_. M IJ, ....,.,.. ... J M 11, Gttf9ft t f.I U , "-I t·J •,LM¥elllt-410 • LOI __.La. -CNMt 4 2_. 10, Wlll:H • J.2 •• ~...., s ..... I!.,,..._. u 2·J J NIHft I M t2, C .... r • t•J IO, ~ ' .. '· .,_ 1 .. t, """', M •. T ..... -IOl .. 1'114. ............... "-"'" " " 1J »-!OJ LM..... 2t » IC Cl-IU TllrM• ... llt ... 1. -Ttml•M•l<ll. f'MllM--...... TMtl fellls -H--.. tt. LM A1!11M 11 TtdW<llt -._...,. '-11 o.1 Mlinft. A -11, 141. NUtoetn U14:11 Ill, 0... U1 ~-·""""'" lli'MIMI ttt, kMMl City 1t0 SPORTS I BUSlNESS Depression '80s Mood Doom Prophe~ Profit on V.S. Fears By JOHN CUNNIFF ,.~ ................ NEW YORK -In the 19308 the naUon WU depressed. Jn the years of the Bil War it wu de· termined, In the early postwar years uncertain. in the 1980I enthusiastic, in the 19709 1ncreuin1ly sober and cautious . What will be the economic mood of the 191J06? Fear might be considered In your aaaessment. It seems to be everywhere -at the breakfast ta· ble, in the bars. in t.he factories, the offices. the bookstores, the private clubs, the campuses, the executive suites. The fears are pervasive. A feeling eidsta that interest rates. prices. jobs, the housing market and more fail to respond t.o the commands they are given. A fear exists that economic leaders can· not 1et results. ..IT SEEMS THAT THE legacy oft.he 1930s - fear of protracted hard times -has been dis- placed in the 19809 by fear of hard times with ever· rising prices, ... says Citibank In its Monthly Economic Letter. The surveys say something of the same sort. Although some analysts see some improvement, consumer optimism remains low. Business con- fidence is depressed by high and rising interest rates. Investor confidence, at limes bullish, seems to be easily shaken by the least bad news. The most glaring evidence is found among the better selling business books. many or t.hem writ· ten by "financial evangelists" who warn of the coming col· lapse of economic society. Prepare now, they say. First on al least o ne popular best-seller list is a volume called "Crisis Invest· ing," hr. Douglas Casey. Ashley Bladen s "How to Cope With The Developlne Financial Crisis," ls prominent. "The Coming Currency Collapse," by cu ..... ,.,. Jerome Smith recently appeared in bookatorea. The nature of popular market letters reveals the same fears. Howard Ruff's "Ruff Times" is ooe of the more successful letters of all time. A half-dozen others carry the s ame me11a1e: economic collapse. SElllN.AllS RO.AM THE country preachine the same sermon, and people sometimes pay hun· drech al dollars to heart.he meaaaae. You don't have to look bard lo rmd the aame types on Wall Street. While they have always been t.here -there seems lo be a market for ad· vice of almost any sort -no longer are they on the fringe. Fears also are revealed in the gold and sil ver markets. which have been rising almost solely on fears that economies will collapse or, short of it, t.hat inflation will destroy lhe value of paper. It doesn 't requir e an economist or a psychologist to explain the phenomenon. Anyone who undentanda t.he contents of his or her wallet or pocketbook ia aware that th1Dp aren't u they abcMlld be . To re..t a new9paper or to tU1'11 GD t.be r8dio or television neWll is to know things aren't right. Not when the nation's leaders repeatedly dedicate themselves to restraining inflation -while infla· lion rages unchecked. The sense that economic events are beyond "Got a problem? Theri wnte to Pol Dunn Pat will cul red tape, getting the answers and action you need to solve inequities m government and business. Motl your questions to Pal Dunn , At Your Service. Orange Coast Dally Pilot. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Aa many letters as possible will be answered. but phoned inquines or letters not anclumng the reader'a full rJame. address and bu.smess hours' phone number c011not be consu1ered This column appears dai- ly except Sundays." Liftand .. ll•dn-.... llood DEAR READERS: Free IUtnldlom la bask car • ...._uce la belal ollered by &H Ceatral Oru1e Couty Leape ol Wo11et1 Vo&en &a U· MClaU. wKll parUclpa&l8& .ARCO dealen. Stan· 18& Taesday, a series of ti. "Car Care -Not FOi' Mea Only" cllalc1 wlll be tleld la .Aaabelm, Saata .Aaa UICI Tut.lll. Eac• MUI09 accommodates ap to ZS pe..-ud lula &wo ud OH·bU llH.n . .Uy moeon.t 11 yean aad older may aue.d. 'l'llle cUTtcala• laclade9 u IMtndiollal video 1llow, pa. ••11..u oe" prac&lce la 1ud1 ba1lc1 aaop- erata.1 a HU-serve pamp, clau&Ja& a &Ire, aad Jamp-.UrUag a baUery. Fael C91enatloa alM ll 1tre1Md. To make reserva&IGM, pliloee 731,.115 or 114·1117 • Seflet-Gr•rUftl 8-p•1•G11 DEAR PAT: I am selling my penonal.res· idence in the U.S. and movin1 to En1land where I wiU be workin1 for t.hree years. I don't plan to buy a new home witil I return. May I 1Ull defer the SainootheaaleoC myresidence? L.J .• Newport Beach Y ... &M •naal II •..U. or &wo-1ea.r ,ertM for npl•:t 1oar .... ldeece ll ••• •W w1111e '" "" won ....... &M u_.... 8'at.-, ae· CW1Uq to &lie IRS. BoweWJr, die replace...a ...,..... .... &lie pe,...., .......... c ..... .... tor men~ fou 1ean after yoa Mii ,..., .... . •' DEAR PAT: Are penom enterina mWtary HrYlce eligible for any educat.lan beneflta? I've beard that benefit.a ceued C1Dct the 0.1. bill ex· plred. .,., a• .., .., r control of elected officials and their economic aides seems to induce widespread fear5 and a de· t.ermlnat.ion by people to take their own private de- fensive meuures . IT MAY BE TRUE that relatively few (so far as c an be determined) are buyln& dehydrated foods. as Howard Ruff su11eata, but t.hey are buy- ing 1old and silver and art and real eatate and other tan&ibles that might hold their value no mat- ter how debased and diluted is the cWTency . And they are buying books too, books that warn d the ''coming debacle," the economic jud&· ment day, and what they can do to save their. financial aaaeta. It might be delayed, it might not come. lt might be only a neuroUc fear. But having seen so m any fiscal and mon etary policies fail, and so many promises for1otten, people seem unwilline to trust very much. SANTA ANA -Westlands Bank has an· nounced an agreement In principle with Canadian Commercial & Industrial Bank of Edmonton, Alberta, to make a substantial equity investment in Westlanda. Canadian Commercial Bank will initially ac- quire 1 millioo new. uniaaued Westlands shares at 15 per share for a total of 15 million. Canadian Commercial probably will be grant· ed an option to a cquire 500,000 additional Wesllanda common shares at S6 per share. (There arecurrentlyt,49'l,388shareaoutstanding.) The tra.maction is subject to a definitive a1reement, approval of ~ boards of directors and resulatory authorities. West.lands Banlt aaid proceeds will be used lo finance expansion. West.lands ~ a state-chartered commercial bank with uaeta of $170 million . Canadian Commercial of Edmonton is a wholesale commercial merchant bank with uaet.a of $810 million . • •• The last two or e iaht systems for The WubinetGD Poet LASERITE network have been shipped by EOCOM, based ln Irvine, the lead.in1 manufacturer of laser print.lng plate equipment. EOCOM is a division of the American Hoechst Corporation. .. . ,. Delta E lectro n ic Corp. has beco me Helionetics, Inc.. and is expanding its effort in photovoltaic solar systems. semiconductor devices and luer systems. The firm's directors have approved seelling a public underwriting. Heliooetics has moved to 17312 Eastman St., Irvine . • •• A VOO Corp. reported ~d•ted re•eaue. ol $528.5 million for its third quarter. up from $474.2 million a year ago. Net eam.i.ngs were $34.8 million for the quarter compared to $34.5 million in 1979. Net earnings per share (fully diluted) were Sl.38 in the 19M> third quarter, compared to Sl.39 in 1979. Primary net earnings per share were Sl.95 in -1980. cempered to tt:!tin 19'79. -- COMPUTER TIME HP 3000 Fl,_lel For9CMlln9 FOii< <:olor G< 9111\1< I TIMESHARING Local T.a.nhl- COLLECTORS CORNER R•,. CGlll9 a ...... GOLDAllLVER H099W10.1CMO -~--" -a..., .. ...... .... .,, .. --.,, .. ... -·· ...... '"" '"" Clll--.-(71•)11UllO Souttt eoe..,.... Ylfl ... _ ...... ....... c...._. AYAl•alMOWJ Prestige locatlon. Ear1y Mall Delivery Holdlng and forwarding U.S. ...... ~ radio ~r WIDE AREA COVERAGE Or•mt• Ceuty. L.A. Ctu-ty. SH 8trur41ae Couty. RJnni.. r •• ty. '17.75 lotal mo. n>tl no deposit on credit approval llR.\'-1.I <Cll'-1\ R.\lllll 111 11'111 1'1 \I II\ I( I !'-( COHSTRUCTIOH FIHAMCIMG •Residential up to 4 units no takeout commitment required •commercial Buildln11 Takeout commitment required alon1 wlth leases •oran1e County Properties •Land Loans up to 1 year ~ of appraisal •up to '750,000 Heritage Bank 2171 CAMPUS DRIVE IRVINE. 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J ,. ~-­er .. 21 ~ • .,. ..... ,, ...... \fro UJ 6 Ml a\.\-~ ..•. -..._ 2:: t II C2 -I I' t.71 ·7 ;, ~.'..:'i4 "' ..... 1270 .. "'"""' 1.17 .. 2 ' + " ,.. •. u ""' ... ,_:: 'i = ;:"'· ~ ,J .... ,. • ~ ••• 4 .... ui•• .. ,,,,_ J:JJ f f: flt: ~ ""t-1 ] ~l ~: ! ...... ~­,. 14' •• .._ . u,J f~E ;t. I tt+ = ;I . -... •• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS o...t .. _lft&._.V ____ ..,.,, M10..\I f...11oe Pl!w, ~, ... Oittrtll-Chtel.,...t•t1•<k ••~.,._..-....,,,.._ 8y lfW NeUon•t A'-WMt(IJh~tf \411t..v••t .. \ o. ... ,, .... l ftMiM L ~. Octobef 13. IMO N DAILY PILO r Dow Jones Final UP 9.22 CLOSING 959.90 1"811ef1ioBurn Seagram Seeks Added Ventures By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Have a company you want to sell? Drop a lin~ ta Edgar M. Bronfman, 375 Park Avenue, New York, NY Bronfman is chairman of the Seagr am 'ompany the world 's largest distiller , and he has a lot of rash on hand As a matter of fact, he has so much that he has htrPd a consulting company to tell him what to do with 1t Wf! wl should have such problems. Seagram is a company that should be well known to denizerui of bars and other places where libations are poured. They have the longest. richest line o{ liquor and wine brands in the business. Here's a partial rundown or their family members: SEVEN CROWN, V.O., Kessler, Calvert. Wotfschm1dt, Crown Russe, Ron Rico, Crown Royal. Passport. Chevas Regal, Christian Brothers, Glenlivel , Paul Masson Jamesoo, Benchmark, Sir Robert Burnett, Leroux, Myns Famous Grouse. White Horse, Mumm, 8&(;, Gold <:;l':il K.1jafa, Ricuoli, Brolio. Julius Kayer. Royal Salute. Henri Marchant. Perrier.J ouet. Vandermant. That's an impressive array. Seven Crown 1~ thf' 1111rrl best selling spirit in the country <6 million ca ·es a } rar ' V .0 .• a Canadian whiskey, is right behind it in fourth pl an• (3.1 million cases a year ). And the No. 8 brand •~ ~a gram 's Gin (2.6 million cases a year >. Seagram has five other brands that each sell more than 1 million cases a year, right down lo the premium scotch, Ch.ivas Regal Cl 1 million cases a year 1 In f'a1JJ Masson they have one of the nation's leading wine brands These b o tt le s gene rate some heady profits but they are not the source of the cur· rent cash now One source is the sale of the Seagram Building in Ne w York. Money Tree Il was widely recognized as the handsomest skysrrapvr buiJt oo Park Avenue in the post·World War II era Se& gram sold it for S8S million. They still O<'cupy offices 1n lht' building; they just didn't want to be 1n the real estate bus1 neaa. .'il"9k• '" Thr .'ipelllglu HEW YOAIC CllP I ~IH, ""°" """f -,., "'""~ of llw llHMn mo\I •<I•"\' ... V()llti. Stotll. E•tt,.,. l\\UP\, tr•no l\tloONlly " mo<• ln•n " ~lllnl'\jr • ..... 000 te.M lOl,!00 ~El 1 .... Al""9• (p 2611, IOO ~SCI ll',B 130.100 us Steel lll), 100 lk<'-il Pet ,,.,Q) TtU<O In< U l,Ql Ciull'#bl • l tl,300 .... ~rye 1"-IOO :f.R°I:" ,:.o / , ... ,600 , ... a BurntRL 1 ... Gl eo.ino • ll»,000 '1'1 ~ ,,., "'• J2~. " 21 ... '• 11'. 21•. .. ~ .. 11'• II ' S2 ... .J'o ,,, . • 1. "3'· .J .. 1'• '• 39'> Pel Up 11,6 VP llO VII II' Up 11 l Up IOl Up 100 Up I .I Up .. Up I.) Up 1,0 Up I.• Up l.l VO 7.J Up 11 Up 10 Up .. VO •.I Up •• , Up ... .l...,rfron l .PodPr11 c...., 4111"-~ •• ~'(J •J > f)ft\,ttlill ''°"' LeM OC•.,l•4D0"'1d J:ilK 31 ' •l-'4 (.~flt\. c.>ouf"d t1t<tt\l,.fN1 Thi clowG Holkl•v 111•"''-lb .. • 11 ,. Mere...., M l7 (l().~111 W rwr ,,,. ... .,, •• ...., SAt>~•' 1rov o• .. • N E W YORK tAPI \11\tt r <k>wd too.av E""lf\¥0 ~•1 .. r SlOIOO ollC I) 1.0-,of t ed Sll,,.r $11 ltl, Oii 0 "'7 S.IK1"1 -'cl 90id P"O~ l~•Y L....,, "'"""nQt..,noMllJ >0011 '1 h l ....... : afttr""'°" ll•lnQ '61• 1\ olf \I !Cl ~ ... 11: af14!moan 1•••1'9 ~II o•I \I ., llr_..,.: IJ11nq "'l 01 Oii \I 00 Zwrkll· M1• 00 bod olf \10 '-0 U I) "° ·~•d. .. .. Yen: Hilf'dy .. H•nn~n ""OhOA'P -Y-. Enotl""ro <t•lllnQ Ort<> "'"' mornlf\O "" 7). ofl" 50 New Y..-: Enqa•t\tU'Cl ••Onf "'"" 9Qld m ld•tnclml1'9 'IQ3 s.t. Oii U •• tl: t{ 1-~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~ "" •.4 .-.u,..IJob Up • • 17 Up •• 0 ,_, ... , • .,, •• W\ ... u ......... , ..... , h "'' Up .... V~'f'\'\ oifWt 'illlll"-' ""'Jh"lj •Ah· f ' • ). ""' Pel. OH .. l °" 7.1 Otf •I OH •·• ()fl •• 5 OH t.I OH 41 OH A..5 ~()fl t! u 4.t ()fl u OH u ()fl .. OH A..I OH •.I Off H OH U ()fl J.t OH >A ()fl u ()fl u OH I.I Off J1 "'" 4 """''" 1)1\1)\,f,, I"~"' f) ...... t .. "~ .. ,. Q\1111, t•,." ,,, ,.,..,. """''. ,, •. """' ~Ht '"' O, ••" • O••"'""n" •• ;~ ,.., • ''' '"' Of>\1Qn•tf'd .. , '"'('''' '' .,. fJ• •'+11' tt" •0110•, "Q foutno1,.. .. d Al\O -"Wft .. 0' .. ,of•it\ f) /uo1 '" '<ti• '''"° \l('H • d twU ... nd 110'4•0,.l·"•I ll " II"''' 0•< lctfl'd"' O.•O '" P•• •Pd oo I •o •HI~ Df't •4''"0 ur CM•d •'", t • • ,, ... ,,." 1 " <i.Ql1I wp t PA10 1"1111 ... ,., I "\,. l'l.t "''' lf11&+t O.t•rtf"(t Ot "f) llt.(ltUt'I ltt•flh ti 1,n t 0 ••fff'"'1 fnH'l1n Q \ {)t>+ fa t'"" C'H f\A"I If\ f f ti l'IH .- t UMVl,.lt•tif ''""' ••IP'td•·•U•nlh .n t'''"'"' n Nrw '''V'' ' ~tlitft<O C'• ~ •• ,, '" "" flth•.., U "'0"'lh\ ptV'\ \tat t. Cl'"''°"""IJ I t>'f'lt•I 1n "'Ol • 11\ &>•"~ •d•"'O t) roontr'h 1 '''''' tlrio C 1t\I\ •Al~,.,,.. •• t11••rti ,._,ti• ,. • ct "" fH1l111t o., .. • , d1•1C)Pn« Q t ,.. , ql\h " t • u • ,,,,.,.., tt"d , .... , '" luH I \,.1 .... 1A •v•• ( 10 ( •Ult"f1 tlllil(t WN " ""'' flYt• d Wt W~.,~ •'-'""O _.. .... "11•11\ ••''"'"'" .,... W ,1,,ov1 ... ,u••f'\t\ Hli\ t, nt\lt\t>ut•on Pf '°'ftf) ft,. l)tttr nt (I \t<'h • _,. ~ mu! ltOlf' Of r•, .. ,,,.,. ',,,"'"HI\ ""' '"' d th d1••d1f'HJ ,,_.I rft1\t ti '"Of'fh ,.t11 n11"1Q"\ f,Q.,111 ·~O l.t\t ,,., ... ,.,,,,. MARMA DU KE Bea t it' by Br.id Andtnon PEANUTS '<ES ~A4M I PIC ED n.IEM Ml(5ELF A~EN'T ™E'< eEAV t~UL 4 DO WE ~AVE A VASE AROUND HERE ? FU NK Y WINKERBEAN I ](V J:&~J ~· I \\~I t :J~lt~~ CHEEJlS FOR LOSIN& FOOTBALL TEAMS! ntAT'5 All RICUT. Mt.AM. .. I'll FINO A PLACE TO PVT T~EM ... . by Charles M. Schulz , by Tom Batiuk COMICS I CROSSWORD B IG GEORGE by Virgil Pntch 4-~ @ LA:.l.....ll~.J-J~~.ua.-L..L.l.-...U....~ ........... ...._ ......... ._.~ ........ _....,~_.._..i.....IJ.._., ··1 hate Mondays.'' SHOE MOON MULLINS iA•ss PEACH I --, _ _J • I• • I . I /• { I~~ l --!"' f -) r 15 ~ W .,' l ' '\ THE FAMILY CIRCUS \A1HATCHA PL l. ~ ,..i,~-r KIP s T l~F 0 1'" M& FOR , \ _LJ $Ll i;-) ' by Jeff MacNelly by_ Mell Lazarius F0t{ 'YOlArl 1N~Cl£MATION, 1 r •4SJ ME "fl.-4EY'lrE by Bil Kea ne <.JE.iT1N6 A OlVOFl'CE i::""l<'CM GORDO J _ \IE .._• 1;:.A cA1-.;:l-l~1.L j~I )\PP1..IED T.:> \JA~tOU-E> 1'1ATl0 1J5 ,IJ VA~OU':?> ~P.:>CH..:; fitO\\ Aeol.Ji '!00 ~.Q. O~A.r. JUDGE PARKER R EALIZIN6 THAl JEANNIE HAS ALRfADV ~TARH O A 1=10HT ~ETWEEN ~OMEMEN ot-\f MET. TIM IN!:>lbT~ t>H( LEAVE THE BAR: WITH HIM.' ~.::::NE~A Ti.lQV:;,iwo 'EAi<::., ll(IOUVOTL 1.A'1 &l.Jli?JED ll'J TIU< :CIL ~ Wl-410{ "These ore called place mops 'cause they show you where your place is." DENNIS THE M ENACE TUMBLEWEEDS 6-AD! ntE: INl71ANS REALLY ZAPF'f '7 You, "'10!-E·EYE! NANCY HI, NANCY--- WHAT S NEW7 AN ARMED GUARD JUST BROUG-HT ME ANO MY MONEY ....__.....,. .-----. TO THE BANK DRABBLE ARE ~o~ R!lO~ ro~ 1'11~ CdM 1'0~'/. MORMA~? "Ou 6E1"'f'CR &C1..1~vE 11' ! I"' Sf1J01EO C-J(fN'f'111~c.\ l'iE lo'JC~CO ('I(~., 9o'>S1~1..~ QIJE'>1'10N 111E"I lW.0 ~Sil\ 0 ; FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE DR. SMOCK DID ')OU HAVE TH~T MUCH ? AIJD ~ll'J..; THf GODO...:=>:.~ • ~IT'!, SHE \~~D r.;­ ~ FaJtJD/ by Gus Arriola ~FTVH Aa , t"A).tLl/.J Y11v.JOW '' Tt<:~•n< 1111,_L CL'T":' by Har old Le Doux . by Tom K. Ryan 1l'Ai 1HEY ~ERVE COWM~US 17AV. by Kevin Fagan by Lynn Johnston by George Lemont 1'"HfSN YOU'Re CESA1'"A IN L,,Y N01'" G~1'"-r1 NG A"l Y MONE:.Y.' ,/ '-- N'-.__ - - TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUULE ACROSS 1 Obellslt 8 RNs' m1heu 10 Telon 4 5 John Birch. eg 48 Beach UNITED Fea1ure Syndiclle S111urd1y's Puzzle Solved 14 Aloes 5 1 More lucid 52 Expected powd111 54 Mount ol SI Pharm Ellu range 15 Bdwaygp 58 Waterfall 16 C11y on the Sco1 T ev111e 59 Latvian coins 17 Ch1nge 61 Burning t8 Blood vessel 62 Conifer t9 Emerald Isle 63 Artb choel 20 Ornamenl 64 Choir votGe 22 Novel 65 T oboggen 24 New Bruns. 66 Numerical WICI< 's ne.gh· sul11x bor 67 Paradises 26 Sow again 27 La ... enforce-DOWN 13 Subsided ment nel· 1 Masi 21 Apex woill. 2 Hewau city 23 Iron or unc 30 Dined 3 Deeds 25 Dodgers 3 \ Po&Sum 4 C1111ens 27 Cooled 32 U-t>Oal 5 Wine d&pOStl 28 Pry 37 S1•lh sense 6 Se voteless 29 Surpasses Abbr 3 words 33 Death item 38 Slow 7 Number 2 wo1ds 40 Across Pre-8 Awaken 34 -hxe II~ 9 View 35 lndones111n 4 \ Warship 10 Wrlnkler Isle 43 Waler bodies 11 Mr Greene 36 Oittchon 44 Opecete 12 Ttp~t 38 Pig noise , 2 J • s , .. 39 t<tnd ol poen, 42 Schooled 43 Bombarcl.cl 46 Wlldebeetl 47 Ear1h ood· deaa 48 Seesona .cg Sptn 50 Hmdunoblt' 53 Lord's wile ISS Number 56 Press 5 7 Chlhc9 ¥9111 60 Cra"<at . .. -···-.--··-· .. TONIGHT'S LAT LISTINGS Television Monday. October 13. 1980 DM.Y PILDT --~··-... L: ==~11-..... IM ~eftt.e Of II\ In~ oi-o- '"• ler mua1 Tr1•ngle .,..., • 9 W\. flOOTMl.L W~IOI\ ,_,..IN al OM...,tronco. 1 1'0 TAC DOUGH ......... The ___.. ..... l\r poi.., g9IN .. tM .077111 le interrwpl«I by lfv• ._.. .... -~ • '"'...,.,*"' IHOW i.-11 hOw not to dO c:-.- 111ercle11. ..nny 11nga "L-for a.·· I W. 1 CONTACT <"'P ""°*' UNl'll•lll" --1"~ wa.coe.w UCK, ICOTTll' •. llltO'M **°""A fouQI Of Ciu." 11er'1 Glenda Jacil~. 0--91 Seoel A lkttlltl dlYotGM rn.t• e l\epplly Mal•leO AmetlCM end .... IO e ... -towle llillQ In"*', II'-) • "'°"" • • • ,,. .. rne P-llfo- k•" (IMS) Aod ........ Gefllldlne fl~. A J9wleh .,_.Oii •.• Ille:• tlm ol NU ~IOn. lotM .. lelth In Ille .....,.. man.(21\B.J ........ MAMJINI Two non-11n9'no Olmonde t>otn wilh .....,. '-'"9 P•Obi.m1, • hellcopt., eowbOy. MM1 1M group "The ~"; Cfl9f T .. mall ... wlr'9 end Qelatln .,.._,, Of Wuco on ennuelpn~ • IOUI) CIOl.D Holl: DlonM Wenricl<. • WHY .. TMI WOM.Dt (I) ICIBrl~ UO. Cl) LOVI AT ""8T llCIHT Arnold w.1111 off .. i..a ol the ecllOOI p1ey ano 111e 8weethog1, unebl• lo !Out• him, ,.., totnethlng le wrong. CPwt 1) PlflfllagBard A t«*!lly mettled men whO "*Pl*"• to be blind IOoll• with ,_ •I hi. ,.,., ..-ling With hi• wtt.'• proleetlw parent•. • llMllON> ANO ION Fr9d buye lleli ownlfll\lp Of • prof9Mlon81 llghler who cen 't fight. • DCKCAWTT Mi chael Landon comforta his injured son, Matthew Laborteaux, alter the boy suffered a football injury on "Little House on the Prairie" tonight at 8 on NBC, Channel 4 . ·CNQ.~ ANO ..... eGMAT ~ "Tlnk.,, Tailor. Soldlef, Spy" 0.0.ge 8mll9y (Aleo Gulnne") renaadl• Ille pul In -ch ol • c:tue 10 lhe Identity ol tlle "Mole." ~t: Anton Dolin. (Pert I ol 2) • N-1COHTACT(lll)Q Cl) M•A•1•H H...,..eye t•nglee wllh • tougfl Army oOlonel end B.J. helpe • Gt who'1 t9CeNed • ··o.er John'' letter. UonMlheme at OVl!ll f.AIY "Whtie HOUM Conterenc:. On Aging" G"'"ta: confer· ence ch•lrmer> end Cetllor- nle •llOfney Jerome Wel-oie. eoclalogy prol- C81'1oll e.1n. O 7:00 I c.. NIWI .CNIWI HAl'PV DAVI AGAtH Fonlle •tternc>ll to teke the ~ of .,. elllng eecepe lll'tlel In • m901C lt'OW to help .,. orpn.,,. ID MACNllL f lEHAE.111 MPORT CJ) TIC TAC DOUGH 7:30 8 I ON TME TOWN I~ i JOKIWI WILD ... A•a•H An lfl1elllgence officer 111\d • ~trlel grec>Ple '°' the rete of • wounded otfi- cet wflo d8lme ...... Je9o• CMll. e MMTTA Bliten• deeperelely tlrug· gi.. to ....,. two down-on- ltleir-ludc young llOlr- ln'llOlwd In • deedly extor· Loa AngetM Herek! Elrem- lner editor Agnee Uf>der· wood 11\etes her 1e:oop1 •t>Out Lena Turner end Jeen Hlltlow's o .. tll; ecl- entlsta explore Ille 1 .... guege ol lnfenll; Melody previews the Male Exotic OllllClng Cllernplonahlp ol tlleWOtld. 8 '1GHT 8Aa< WITH DAVID~ Top1e1 Include e $5.00 gold eerrlng offer, lmpulM buying. uollc brend nemu, 1n lllec:lric cer end a.a ... ~, ......... . • KN.XT (CBS) Los Angeles • KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles I KTLA (Ind.) LOS Angeles KABC.-TV CABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMS (CBS) San Diego e KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles I KCST (ASCI San Diego KTTV (Ind.) Lo• Angeles KCOP· TV (Ind.) Los An geles KCET·TV (P88, L.oe Angelea KOCE·TV(PBS) Huntington Beach 11 ~ <Atafllet Alretl the ch•ll•ng• 01 the brownlea • SHANANA Guetl: Frenk GOflhln I l'ACE THf MUltC AU IN THI l'AMIL Y Archie ~• to h•.,.. Ml Uld4I 1111 u1U81 IMllnga towerd bleck1 wflert lie open1 hie Ileen encl N1 home to Sernmy Oevl1 Jr -~/LBNlll lll90RT G~:AH ALTONA ta VII'# 0. CHANGE "Dulh In the Morning" J-8u111• •r-the origin ol Ille etom bomb l>llek more then H centu- rlee to the kWentlOn of QC>ld _.ylng. iRl? Cl)ll' ...... ~ Tlolo non-etnglng 09tllond1 bol'n wllh -• ,,..,Ing probi.m•: • ll•llc:opllf cOWl>O)'. l:OO 9 DID YOU HIAlll ~JOIHANO KIUY1 A Couple wtio we et>out to be dlllOrOed but whO don'I rMll)' w8"11 to be ...,.,•led come up wtth en UllU8U8I IOlutlOn 10 their protilelll. 8 UTT\.I "°'*ON TMaf'MRR A former fOollNll .._ hhd tooaedl .,.W..,. ~ """ edlool ..... ..,,_ N ,...,...,_ .. MN ...... .......,. ..... ...,.. "·D -.n~ • * * * "Ol)'rnpl•, PM! II: Tiie F•llvel Of The Peo- ple" ( 193') QoQHnen1..y, Olteeted by Len! Alef9n.. lie/II. TM tint PV1 ol Ihle ecd8imed lllm ,_d OI the 1938 8er1ln OlympQ ~ the peth of t1le Ofymplc totch ~ end _. 1119 elabor•le ~ gutmtlon c._.. pr• elded ~ by Adolph Htt· ... ( 1 ht., 30 min.) ... Cl) ....... " HOl'Tlfled by the elZe ol Illa monthly ber leb, H8Wlt*Y9 -to gi.,.. 119 booze lot ....... (R) • MOVll * * * "Tiie Other sics. Of The Mount•ln" ( 11178) Merllyn HHNll, Be•u 8t~. 88Md on the 1110- ry of Jiii Klnmont. A c:Nm- plon .... ~.,.. 1111 KC:l- denl wtllCh ... _ her • bitter quednpleglc. CR) eTHAn~ Feetuted; • hOrM that tepee --; • "-t9d LOUlelMe ~; 811 wtdei .... , dolftlrlo tttdl; ......... ""'° ,,_ .... ......... Uf'Oe. . ._ ...... ._, ............. Mell Collln1, Chrl1ll• 8rinll19y, Jenn Sc8118, Lon News Sunk 'Speak Up?' BJ JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP) -NBC has canceled "Speak Up America" but ita creat-0r, Geor1e Schlatter. contended Friday the show baa cban&ed tel evision, whether the network news departmenta like it OI' not. "1 don't think you can put a Chinese wall around lnfonnatioo like it's privileged territory and oal)' certain people can dispense lt," said Schlatter, who shook up televi1ion in the 1980s with "Lau&h·ID." -"I think 'Speak Up America' will have a ripple effect that will change television," he said. "It already baa. Many news shows now have more people on _the street. I think eventually you'll see Candidates' w1v~ liderviewed on 5 "Hour Maeazine'' wlll host exclusive In· terviewa with RosalyllD Cuter, Nancy Rea1an. ud Kelte Andenoa, wlvn of the U.O presidential eaadld8tel, a1rtna on KTLA, Channel s. Tuesday ~ 'ftuanday at 2:30 p.m. C\llTellt nnt Lady Ro.alynn Carter leada off tbe three-day series of Inter views Tue1day, followed an Wednetday, by Nancy Reaaan, wife or Ronald RH1an. Kelle Andenoa, wife or candidate JobD Aadlnon, appears on Thunda.y's 1e1ment. Dmtlll tbe Interview aeutoaa. political and penoaal vMwl are shared by the three women, tberebJ = to the audience inaitht pre-ftMIJ llilllt b7 them on televilion. o., boltl the daily "Hour Ma1ulne" .... Pl& ,JlltcMD ii eo-bost. all news shows devote time to a kind ol 'Speak Up America,'" THE SERIES, AN OtJTGROW'l'll of Schlat- ter's "Real People" and part of tbe trend toward reality televtalon, waa canceled becaUH of lta poor performance in the NlelHD ratlnp, the network H id. Friday's show WU tbe lut. It bu been IUI· gested, however, that oppoliUon by NBC News may have figured In the decialoa. NBC declined to comment. Schlatter cUdn 't comment on that 1uc1estton, but said, "It is not the news department'• favorite show. Re uven F rank called it 'Throw Up America,' and Richard Salant called it 'Sbut Up America.'" Frank is an NBC producer and rormer presa- dent of NBC News. Salant is NBC vicecbairman and a rormer president or CBS News. NETWORK NEWS UECtJTIVES were re- portedly infuriated with the way it aemationaJized current eventa and ia1uea. "Speak Up America," which 1tan Jlarjoe Gortner, Jayne Kennedy and RboDd1 Betel, blld ill premiere Aue. 1. lt had previously been Men In two 1peclala In April. Il'OllicaUy, the 1bow was canceJed before the majority of the ae&IOD's aeries even 1ot to the air. Those sbowl were delayed by the acton' 1U'lke DOW comine to an end. The show attempted to take a ll&bt-bearteci look at people'• viewt on a varlety ol 1ubjecta and aave the 1potlJ1ht to the proverbial man on the street. G WHY ~woULDIUmT "°' __ ....... .._ ---NOW PLAYINQI --- TUBE TOPPERS I ..wl. YWIO GAMI YOU KT YOUR Uf'I Buddy Hec;ketl '°""II 8 cnemplon sw1rn~r who 11•1•• llah, • venl1hl"'ij enl.,1.Unet end • "Merel bellOf .. Chrl11op11er. A lo11ely ye>ung -1111 K11 ... • pollCe deeoy to ,,_, en wt- 111 W199Cled of ll'llHderlflO .. -11 ot 1111 tonner mod· ABC• 6:00 -Monday Night Foot· ball. The Denver Broncos play host to the Washington Redskins in an inter· conference clash. ~JG 8:00 -"The Pawnbroker." I OHi! ITIP MYOHO EIOHT&H TONI CW MUSIC ON A <>Ne NIGHT STANO .... ( t hi .. 30 "''"·' 1:30 ..... nta LONE MNGllt "Bullett F0< 8allota" 2:00 .... :1:10 .... Pe rh aps Rod St eige r 's great est performance, this movie drama focuses on a Jewish pawnbroker in New York's con crete jungle. The 1!17 9 premi.re concert tour ol the OelrOll Sym- phony Orctwlstr• lhrougti 23 Eu1opeen c11 ... 1n 34 Oeys 11 ceplured In thll cinema verlle·sly .. docu- mentary 1:IOI NIWI l:K UOV-. • • "Only With Merrled ~ .. ( 1974) 0.llld Birney. M~ L.-. A becMlor llrinl the .....,, of en lf'lde.- l)enden I girl by poelng U • m.,rled men (I hr., 30 min) CBS 9 9: 30 -Country Musi c As - sociation Awards. The 14th presenta- tions honor ing the top singers and groups in the country music field (photo below). 11:30 8 (I) OUIHCY, M.E. 0 THEMSTO# CAMOH Gues11 MlchMI Landon. Suck Henry Frenc1ne Neaoo. Bullion '(Al 8 MOAECAMllE & WISE ·~ i:30 •..wa DA.,,._ UCMTI Hemtlton, Kiiien! Ouren, Liu Teylor. • H&HAW ~le: Rey Stevene. Syl- vie, Sulllll Outtmen al DON OOfn'E..L 9:IO. Cl) COUMTlllY MUie AaeoaATIONAWNOI Hoel• Mee Devit end 881· bete MMCS~I ete ioln.d by 1t.,.1 lnciudlno Roy Ctetk, Cryalal Geyte, Dolly P.non encl Kenny Ao09ra whO pertOfm end ~· the 14tn ennuel edition ot theH ewerde honoring exc.ettenc. In the country mullc tleld. • ntaAOVOCATU: ILllCTlOH'IO "Program• FOf The Poor" AllllOUIM end expen wll· -wl\()~1119 ~of Ander90n. CM!• end RMo.., del>ete wtllc:h ~ICHll• ""'" beet -Ille n.d1 ol Ille poor M lcll••I Ouk•ltla modefetH 9 MOYIE • •'h "The Lordi 01 Flet- buefl" (19741 kenry Win- Iller, S~I• Slellone. Four hlgtl ec11o01 tough• 1Mng In 8t00ktyn In Ille lete t950a I-c:onfUC11 With gl'1a Md lchool prob· l8m8 wNle trying to m•ln- leln thelt lmege .. klnge ot the ttrMI. (I llr., 30 min.I ~••..ws JOHN DARLING 8 MOVIE • • ·~ "Birds 0 1 Prey" (19721 Oev111 Jannon Aelpll Meeker. Whlle on 1111 !Ob recio<MO lralflc condlllons lrom lhe air a potol -1n armoreo-car hotdup. (I hr .. 30 min I I NATIONAl NEWS EIOHttEN TOMS Of' MU81C ON A OHE NIOHT STANO The 1979 premiere conceri tour ol Ille Oe1ro11 Sym pllony OrCiheSlra trirough 23 Europe•n c111es 1n 34 d•y• 11 captured on this Cl"41m• vet'1le-sty1e docu- men1ary 10:30 •• NEWS IYM&OlS Of' LIVES PAST vrncen1 Price narrates tn1s lllm about lhe remarltabte Aembov• Collecllon ol Eoypll•n entooultles ano its launder Natacha A11mbo- ve, wlle ol movHl 1<101 RudOlph v1 .. n11no Ii) MASTEAPIECE THEATRE "Clime And Punishment Sull unauspecleo 01 lhe pewnbroker s mu•Oer A81kotn1kov ~ins a psy· cllOtogocet cet•and-mouse g11111 with the e•ammmg m•glatrete (Per1 3) O 11:00. D CJ) (JJ) NEWS 9 HOLLYWOOD 80UAAE8 ., HOGAN'S HEAOES Cl) rT TAKES A n41U fJll 61) CAPTIONED A8C NEWS ~ A.8CNEW8 11:50@) IRONSIDE -MIONtGHT- '2:00 U TWILIGHT ZONE Liz Powell llB• 8 rocurr1ng dream 111 which Sile follows a nurse to ll'lft r>osplt&I morgue D ABCNIEWS ID MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE 1Po11 II llle IMF togr>•s a m1no- dt151roymg drug H•el coulo ensltNO lhe 111>!1 world 12:20 D MOVIE ,. • , tile 01<1 Man Whn Cried Woll ( 19701 Enwsro G Roh1n5on M&rlln B•I sam 12:30 Q TOMORROW Guest. Oir6Clor I actor Jonn Huston coo••ng COlumno~I PH111e F•aney NenGy Frida)' 0 ISPY Cour1 0 1 l ne L•Ofl 0 THEF81 f"l•JAnllco II) NATIONAL HEWS 12 "°II('{) THE HEW JoVENGERS 12:50 ~ JoOAM-12 1:00 Cl) MOVIE • • Decoy ror T trror 119101 William Kirvin, Jeen S:OOD WON.D .... Lrve co-age or Ille first O•~ of Ille WOtld Set ... lrom Ille city ol the Netlon- el LNQue chemplon. Ttw•da11'• Daythae ctfo.,le• ' 11:00 CD • .. ,.,... Oewn Rider" ( 19351 JOhn Weyne, Miii'· Ion Burns -AFTERNOON- , 12:00 Ga • • "L•Oy For A Night" ( 19421 Joen Blon· Oflll, John Wayne. A wom- an trom a o•mbtlng bo•I marries • men tor hit wealth 11nd a much-covet· 'Kl posluon 1n soclery. ( t hr . 50mln I Cl> • * 1~ "Sodom And Gomorrah" 11963) St-ert Gr 81lQer, PHlr Angell 3:00 ~ • • • "Buster And 811- lle" 119741 Jen-Michael V1ncen1. Joan Goodleltow. A popv11r youno men 1111a 1n IOve \llrllll • girl lrom lhe wrong side ol Ille lown. (I nr ,30mln I 3;30 U ***'Ir "To Hell Ar>ll Seek .. (1955) Audi. MUf· phy. MarW!all TllOmp.an. Audie Murphy P'•VI lllm· seu In the acreen edep1e- Hon ol hi• eu1obl<>Qtapl\I· C81 wer novel. (2 ""8.) by Armstrong & Batluk ~ i'HINI( ~A'\'ER CMJ 9E A Y.CNDERFUL ~ING; .JOHN/ t Wunty YoungsWn Do 1Y Drama KOCE , Ch a nnel 50, recently the average sixth grader. • celebrated the completion of a three- p a rt mini-dra m a produced for "ThinkAbout." an instructional televisioo series aired through the United States and Canada. So a cast was puJled totether COD· sistlng of studenta with actiq ex- perience that went no further than a sc hool play . O range County youngsters were auditioned and final cast members included Pam Dugan, 13. <La Paz Intermediate School, Mis- sion Viejo); We ndy Dake, 13, IM c Fadden Int ermediate School, Santa Ana); and Johanna Lepley, 12, {Fulton Elementary School, Foun- tain Valley). B•Cea Barbara Mandrell hosts the 14th annual Country Music As - soci ation awards speci al with Mac Davis tmicbt at 9: 30 on CBS, Channel 2. Pair Star HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Lucllle Ball and Steve Martin will be the 1uest 1tar1 on the premiere show ol NBC'• "Steve Allen Comedy Hour.'' The DeWt comedy abow will make lt a debut T he Ora n ge County pu blic television station is one of only four PBS affiliates selected to produce the ITV programs geared towards fifth and sixth graders. MOST ITV SHOWS run along the lines of "Boy has trouble with his paper route " or "F'riends start a baby sitting service." In contrast , KOCE developed a story centered on a plane crash in the mountains and three school girls who survive it. The idea waa to see if equal amounts of the "High and the Mighty" and "Our Gang Comedy" could develop into an adventure-dra m a that would be in- teresting and educational to 11 and 12 ye ar olds. The action/suspense storyline would ge nerally demand "pro- fe11loaal" talent. Producers Thom Eberhardt and Don Barkemeyer were convinced of just the opposite, however; that normal, everyday kids would make the story more real to THOUGH THE IURY is still out, t h ere are some indications of responses. The Agency for Instruc- tional Television tested the programa across the United States and Canada. Educators were quoted as sayi.nc : ·'These are the best of the series CThinkAbout) . . . "High level or emotional involvement ... " and "Educational processes and goals were done clearly yet subtly." Walt Dis ney Studios have also been generous with praise ror the produc- tion. This t.hree.-part adventure not only represents a long-needed attempt to upgr ade the productio~ values or ITV, but also marks the first attempt Saturday. -----'------------- --- -------AIOUt 1 s1 89o•u' I e 11NN11 n O Good lor lllrH p1ec11 ol 1u1oy. golden b1own l(enlucky ~ Flied C111cken, 01us 11nglt servings 01 coll! "•w, mHlled potllOH tn<I O"vy, tnd I 1011 L1m11 lwo olle•S z per coupon per customer Cullom er pays all 11pp11c:1 • bit HIH ,., I Oller upirH Oclot>er 26. 1118() .. . Prices m1y v11v •1 p1111t 1pa11ng IOCI l•ons Goon only 1r> 50111111111 C111tom1e wN!•., you SH Ill• Colonel's 11c1 WlndOW benMf -------AIOUt S6 Aft SUP11I •-t'7DINNEll Good ior twelve Pll CH ot 1uicy, golden l>foWn Kentuclly Fried C h1Cktn. wllh II• rolls, plua V°"' choice of ell'-'• lerge cola all • 01 • 11rg1 m••ht<I potel<>H, and a 111'1•11 gravy Llmll two Ofltra per coupon per Cull<>tner. Customel PIYS •" •PPllteblt HIH IH. Oller ••P"•• I Octot>e• 26. 1980 I P11ces mty very .el Pit 11c1p111110 1oeo111ons 000(1 only tn Sou111e1n I Ct lilo1n11 wllt•t you Me me Colonel • l•ce wrndOw banner --s:r:::::""I• z ~ :> 0 u .,. ... ·.-·----~ _, ---_;.._ 8a DAIU PILOT Th(· ,\n n) '' -'' n o l.tu14hit\Jl maut·r until Jud) Bt•nf:amln Joined 11. ~ UA MOVIES 4 • .,. • .... • 4• C• I • ..... ~22 .. .., ,.,..., ..... 11)1~)1 9)t0 ........ ,,, ......... ?ll/Sl1 9~80 ~ .. ~, .-"•""• .... 1111~J1 q~eo _,.. ........ ,. OM 0001 IOO« 11 !N I ·-~·-•-11e .. 11 ..... _ NIYAft llMMMINt111 1.-.a.1 ............ l.lt ............... PllVATl llNjAMIN111 .,, ... _Ne.AMII .. ... .-. ...... " "P~IVATE BENJAMIN" 494 1)14 \ -•h .,, ....... 494 ISl4 _,.,_,,00 ·-~ 1µ •M 1M 1$-10 1$ "'HOPSCOTCH" (R) _,,._ ,._...,$-10·a ... , __ ,~--00 1•10-00 ..... _ .. MIVAft llNJAMIM1111 NII 9CMNe '" mu.,.. Up From Horror Flicks Dirertor Joh11 (ftrpenter f 'i lms Rift(-l>(1<1Ret Epic K) 601\ 'l'llOMAS llOl 1 \ WOO i) (/\J'I Nt'W York t'1ly, l997 '1 ,1ntrn11 ;m I .1 wulli'll 111 alll nlum ~ccurily prison for lht' n1m 1n11I for l.,.,, wh<) IOl!t th'' c·1v1J wa r with !ht• ti ~ Police• 1'111 ,.,. ir 1"ort1• One IS r1gg~d to n u~h land on tit .. 1;,l.111cl , and lhe president ht•romt-s a lto:<tu.:1• ~lll'h •~ thl• j¢r1111 \1-.1110 111 John Cairp~nter 1n .. :~<"dl>t! frorn Nt·11o \ 11rk h1!> rww 111ov1e for Avco t-;m bui. } PH•t 11rt·' Quilt-.i departu re for ( urp1•nt1•r IWl t'ltiflll l' lht• t·rcalor or low-budget 1111111 .. 1, llkt• l1Jll11w1·1 n and "'The.-Fog ' l)nl' Of the f t•W l(U ITit' In \OWO because Of the .i1•t111' -.trikt· 1,1 14 <ttH·r had ~fl ~ranted by the St rt•t•n Art111' <.uiltl th l' film h:td been shootrng .. 11 m..r tuwn un ~.irpt'nlcr's unaccustomed three· rnon1h -,dwdult.· I 1·aught up with him in the <·.itat·ombs of tht· W1ltem Theater. a lovely old rnov11· pal:.i<·e now dt•"'•rted and m danger of the 11o 1 e1·k1·r·~ hall T UE DIRE(."fOH FINISHED consulting with lhP crew in a shattered base ment room and rt·sponded to the qut.•stion of the film 's cost: "It's more than the entire cos t of my other six pictures $17 million " Carpenter, a Bowling Green, Ky., native and graduate of USC cinema school, rattled off his credits and their costs : "Dark Star," his first feature in 1974, "$60,000; "Ass ault on Precinct 13." $300,000; a TV movie "Someone's Watching Me," $1 million: "Halloween," a huge, scary hit , S300,000: the three-hour TV movie "Elvis," $2.5 million; "The Fog," $1 million. "Halloween " and "The Fog" made millions for Avco Embassy, which gave Carpenter the go. ahead for "Escape from New York." "Actually J wrote it before 'Dark Star,"' he re· marked. "I offered it to every company and was turned down by them all. They were fairly polite about it, but the reasons were pretty much the same: it was too violent, too weird, too strange. It's all of those things. but l don't think it's too much. A bit cynical, perhaps."' THE PRODUCER OF "Escape from New York" is Debra Hill, who also produced Carpen- ter's low-budget hits. She is the one who ham· m ered out the tough deal with the Screen Actors Guild to allow filming during the strike. Ms. Hill explained that Carpenter 's success By Tiie Auocla&ed Presa The follo~0;re Billboard'• hot record hits for t.be week Oct. 18 u tbey appear in this week·sissueofRitlboard magazine . HOT SINGLES I "Another One Bates the Oust " Queen I Elektra> 2 . '"Woman I n Love" Barbr a Str eis a nd 1Colomb1a> 3 ··t;J~tde Down" Diana ROSS"iMotown) 4 '"All Out of L<wc " Air Supply <Arista> 5. '"lle's So Shy" Pointer Sisters I Planet) 6. '"Real Love" Ooobie Brot hers <Warner Bros > 7 ''f'm Alnght'" Kenny Loggins <Columbia) 8 "Xanadu" Olivia Newton-John & Electric Light Orchestra <MCA) 9. "Drivin ' My Life Away " Eddie Rabbitt (Elektra) 10. "Late io the E\.'.ening .. Paul Simon <Warner Bros .l TOPLPs l. "The Gam e" Queen <Elektra 2. "Gujlty" Barbra Streisand <Columbia) 3. "Diana•· Diana Ross (Motown) 4. "'Xanadu' Soundtrack " (MCA) 5. "One Step Closer " Doobie Brothen <Warner Bros.) 6. "Cr i m es of Passion" Pat Be natar <Chrysalis) 7. "Give Me the Night " George Benson (Warner Bros.> 8. "Panorama" The Cars <Elektra) 9. "Emotional-Rescue" Rolling Stones <Roll- ing Stones) 10. "Back in Black .. AC-DC <Atlantic} PRO-FOOTBALL NIGHT Giant Screen TV, Free Munchies, 50o' Hot Dogs, Giant Hamburgers. MARGARITA NIGHT Giant Margaritas, Chips, Salsa for $11 MS. NIGHT Free Carnation for Women with an order of their favorite beverage. PEOPLE'S NIGHT Happy Hour Cocktail prices, 4:30 -91 WINE TASTER NIGHT Any wine on menu 11$11911111 We'll open 1ny bottte . of yourdlolal. PRODUCER, DIRECTOR OF 'ESCAPE' MOVIE o.br• HUI •nd John Carpenter hasn 'l caused him to run wild on costs, as have other young directors .. This picture 1s sull below the average fe at ure cost today." she s aid "ll 's a very complicated project. involving special effects and visual tricks . We have shot in St Louis. which doubles as Ne11o York, and in Atlanta, wher e the new subwa y was ideal for the Police State headquarters . "Next we go to Ne w York to shoot at the Statue of Liberty and the World Trade Center. John is making the film more reasonably than other dlrertors would because or the way he works." I DECIDE WHAT THE picture is eoing to be like before I do it, m aking storyboards for some of lt," he explained. "That allows me to work fas t and economically when l get to the shooting. l 'm always able to improvise: if the helicopters don't show up, I 'll shoot somethlng else. I don 't wait around and play catch-up, which is what a lot of directoni do." Carpenter and Hill employ the same efficient crew again and again, and "Escape from New York" is literally a family affair. Star Kurt Russell's wife Season Hubley is in the cast and brother-in-law Larry Franco is co-producer . The cast also includes Carpe nter's wife Adrienne Barbeau. as well a s Lee Van Cleef, Ernest Borgnine, Donald Pleasance, Isaac Hayes and Harry Dean Stanton. Russell credits "Eivis" for taking ham out of the image as a Dis ne y hero and into adult roles in features. The actor has great faith in Carpenter "He has a solid basic knowledge of him. a re markable vis ual eye. and a keen ababty to ~dit 1n his head. which as wh at thP great directors cl1d This picture takes ham out of the horror genre and into something t hat nobod>-has done before " r--~--... -----,. H-H-F-. AH "-"-I I s c A S ""' cotl o••• 3000 I I ~~~·:,:n. I I ---I' I ! ! CALL NOW ! . ! I c114> 9s1-02s2 :' ..... __________ _ BAIS TQI. NO or •O~ '-NO 8AISTOVSUNF lOWlA ~Z111 "OH 0001 BOOK II" (PO) 11~---, .... _,_ "COAST TO COAST" (PO) ll:IN:I ... 111 ,,, .. ,, ..... . "URBAN COW80Y" (PO) ,_, .. ,. "IN GOO n TRUST" (PO) ,,..._, .. ,. A Timeless Love Story "AIRPLANE" (PG) "WHY WOULD I LIE?" -----. "DIVINE - MADNESS'' CR r:~:.:::.::~ I "ST AROUST I MEMORIES" ''THE EMrlRE ,,.1 STRIKES IACk" -.or.s.- "IN 000 WE TRUST" (PO) "THE JERK" "BLUES BROTHERS" "PROM NIGHT" (R) c:;-;.-:· .;:;.;___ ...J i "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT PART II "' "1941" (N l r --~ --. ---::::::i Ill "CALIFOUOA SUITE" l \INl'llt~ll tl(IUtl ·-..-,..,..~ ... ~---...~ ........ I "THI IWI L.AGOOM" fii01 ; • • ... ~ ~ "AllPUNI" NOW PLAYING lDWARDI' llUITOL Santa Ana 540·7444 "Lrnll DAIUMGS" IP'Ol "CHHCH & CHOMG" UIWAllDI' IADDlEIACK El Toco 581·5880 ''THE LIFE 1•1 Of BRIAN" IA) UICOIAlmllAll Orange 637 ·0340 AA.L ...... Of91 ......... ~, £RUii' -TlllTOI Huntington Beach 848·0388 ~-,!­._."",._ .***"'*·Evaytldag ls brilliant.. --Cenel"'"~·- MAn nttpdoMI wort. Wilh her stubbcmncr.a and sincerity she reminded me of a youna k.athlrine Henb. um." -4."911d "Judy Davit la the ptalat youna woman to wla our hearts ltnce Kl\lwine Hepburn." -.Nillll 0/111 "A. -"llM mo~Ae . " ..:-.;....-MllCoTV ENTERTAINMENT I MOVIES e A C ANNON FILM REL£ASE e WfSTMllSTUI ... . .--., .... Al\ CIJY Cl-1111 ~· CllUIA ~"wf';•11~C-t1• o.-.,... • 134 ,,,, ......... K.llllOllBlYI> ~ OfllYflll ,,.,t\IOP •wW"n ,...,, hlef.~ '•"•••"'·. 5]1 1271 t) <: b y JI ~ ( h r IJ INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Cl•1slfled •HoroscGpe Two-wheel Serviee By JOEL C. DON 61-~ ......... Time wtas when yuunai Robert Sheridan was v111led by his family physician. The docto r bro uaht hi• fami ly. children and au. over to Lhe Sheridan home ln what was the truest sense ol the neighborhood physician. 1bey we.-. the daya when a docto r who lived nearby could aJao be a family frtend Now, wtth the aid of a bicycle, Or Robert Sheridan is trying to Uve up to an image that lodged 10 his mind as a youth a nd forged h i s career in medicine. The orthopedic surgeon carries a blal k bag of sorts -a bike pouch strapped to the bottom of his seat -for maklOM the rounds of his Harbor View Homes neighborhood in Newport Beach. THEY'RE NOT house calls per se, but follow-up checkups of patients from hla Tustin medical office. The patients alao happen to be friends and nelghbon. He started the two-wheel service after leaving a prepaid medical group to start bis own private practice. "I bought the bike a year ago because I waa overweight," aaya the J8.year-0ld Sheridan. "I had dieted and I couldn't lose anymore. I had to develop an ex· erctae program to lose more weight." The stocky , amiable physician •kipped over jogging as exercise because, of all things. he suffers from chronic knee trouble. SHERIDAN SA VS the neighborbood service was just ll natural result of his daily bicycle tour about the residential development. He figures he's saved his patients time and cost or commuting to his office for what u e relatively aimple visual inspections or healing fingers and toes or rel.aping of splints. And his evening neighborhood rounds schedule doesn 't take away from children's school time or elder patient's I work. t. Cut remov&l, X ray1 1tnd 1urgery would, of coune, NQuire office trcut ment OtherwtM, She ridan dooan 't rn1nd of ferlns convenience to bla patient nelghbon He'a not one l.O agree with the noOon ol a physician separ ating worldna relallonslllpa from friendships. NOT ALL FRIENDS, however. are ready to acc•ept Ma traditional style .. Most are reluctant to caJJ on me because we're friends." he says. ''I'll tell them to go to another doctor If t.My want. but at least 1 ·11 know I've been asked " His neighborhood ro unds have in· eluded about half a dozen patients, gener ally with broken fingers or toes. The mobile doctor packs plenty of gauze and tape In his small bag to put a new &1>lint oo a fractured digit. RHERIDAN ALSO Is vigilant about practicing preventive medicine. He watches the neighborhood for potential c ustomers. He recalls when a 4-year-old neighbor was riding on the handlebar of a bicy· cit! The doctor made sure the mother was aware of the hazardous situation. "l wanted to be s ure that she knew it was going on beC'ause I saw the danger In it ." he says. "I told he r I wasn't sure I was going to be home or not -just in case.·· '-Sampler Oullt" by Paula Costello demonatrrtleS fte rich variety of pattema used In tradlllotttJI qullt-maJcinQ. "Buay &nnles, " a quilt by Doreen Dawson, de- pict. a fllltClftJI scene world tltltt could capture aiy child'• imagination.: • • • Cl Orthopedic surgeon Robert Sheridan, top, makes the rounds of his Newport Beach neighborhood on self-propelled transport. At left, Or. Sheridan inspects splint of 10-year-old Jennifer Breslow, who frac tured a finger. .-.At Julle Draska of Westminster and Delores Bowles ol Newpott Beach admire~ "Chri&.tmas Ouill." Pioneer Craft · Persists Along Orange Coast t : l (2 CWLYPILOT ~. ~otw 13. ,., Home Tour Doll House To Be Shown Houses commanding an ocean view of the Newport. Harbor area will be featured in Corona del Mar High School PTA's seventh annual home tour. The tour of six homes in Corona del Mar and Balboa Island will be held from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 29. A.a part of the tour, a basket lunch and tea will be served at the Sherman Foundation Gardena in Corona del Mar. A donation or $7.50 will help the PTA sup· port scholarships, the baccalaureate tea. sraduation night and the Spinnaker newsletter - Also. a $1 donation will be contributed to the preservation of the Sherman Gardens. Homes to be visited include those of Mr. and Mn. Richard Hunsaker of Corona del Mar: llr. Robert McCaffrey of Balboa Island; Mr. and Mn. E. James Murar of Harbor Ridge : Mr. and Mn. Ernest Schroeder of Corona del Mar: llr. and Mrs. Gil Ferguson of North Balboa bland and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Spadaro of Corona del Mar. For more information. call 640-5768. PLANNING HOME TOUR ARE -(From Top) Mrs . Richard Hunsaker, Mrs. Michael McNalley and Mrs . Con Schweitzer. At top of page is one of Mrs. llunsaker's doll houses. Some Doctors are Doo'Li~ DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please tell me how to find a competent pyschiatrist or psychologist. I know DOW that you cannot let your fin1ers do tM walldn& throu&b the yellow pqes and turn up..,._ who la aultable. l tried it and ran into ... 111 ..... M7 pbyalclan recommended tbe first JllYChiatrist. His very first question was, "Do r Boros cope -nJESDAV, OCT.14 By SYDNEY OMARR ) AR.le <March 21-Apr. 19) · Heed "inner voice" -you intuitively know where you should be and how to achieve goal. Be aware of poten- Ual. TAUBUS <Apr. 20-May 20): Whal had been nebulous, will suddenly come within reach. You 1ain inailht re1ardin1 feelln1s of one close to JOU, includln1 partner or mate. GEmNI (Ma,y 21.June 20): You have most 1Ucceu DOW by workinl with material at hand. You are on brink of wider recognition -and ac- claim. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): You meet IOmeooe who shows you method of completing m important, buic usi1nment. Be ready to ex- preu independence of thought, action. LBO <July 23-Aug. 22): UDOl'tbodox pro- eeduf't9 are destined to succeed. Know it and you lovP your mother·•" Then he asked . "If you met me at a party, would you take me home to bed?'' I am aware that head-on confrontations may be a useful psychololical ploy, but this 1ee%er waa at lea.at six inches shorter than I and old enouch to be my father. Needleu to say, the session was lh>wnhill all the way from there. and I never went back. To me, finding the right lhe rapisLc; 1s as important as findtng the ngbt mate. Will you please tell me how to go about it? -WIT'S END IN CANADA DEAR WJT'S: Do yoa bve lrieada ia therapy! How do they f~I abcMr& tlteir clodon! A penoaal ~mmendaUoa from a aatldled vattnat irttre ~ rrlttr•f. AMClter ..... ce e..aa ,,,.,. Landers be to call ti.e chief of the deputmem& of paycbl•try or psycbology a& a aalveralty laospltal or&» local medical 90ciety. I uge yoe aot &o 1ln up. Hug i. tbere u - tll yot1 n.d Hmeo11e wlilo filla lite bW. It'•._... t1te en.n. ect accontiqly. Focua on teaching, learning DEAR ANN LANDERS. It's S·JO a.m . My md revlainl techniques. husband walked into the house 20 minutes a10. VJaGO <Aue. 23-Sept. 22): You extricate No explanation. This 1sn·t the first time he fO'lnelf from situation which coofmed and sup-stayed out 't1I dawn. Next week we will preaed. Social invitation leads to valuable con-celebrate our first wedding anniversary, if we tacta md pouible travel plans. last that long. LIMA (Sept. 2S-Oct. 22): Protect ideas, I married Tim be<'8USt! I loved him. t got t!Drmau, apecial coocepta -you are 1om1 to be pregnant two months after the wedding. He active, ..,..t.after and the object of numeroua raised so much hell I had an abortion. Ever req..-a from relatives. since then ht! has been sullen and mean -won't BCOaPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Study Libra talk to me. maa ... ; be ready for cba.n.ae, travel, variety. Three wef>ks ago we had a big fight. He Smpbaail on money and how it 1eta that way. slammed the door and left. I was so depressed I 8AGITl'AaRJ8 <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Family swallowed every pill in the house. Lucky for cMfferenees are settled -money picture i11 me, I didn't kill myself. But it did scare me to W11bter and you make valuable, new contact. lhink I could get so out of control. Roadblocks to Pl'OlrelS are removed. Please tell me what to do, Ann. I am 23 CAn.ICO&N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You are years old and have a whole life ahead of me. -••on brink" ol major discovery. Lunar cycle LOST IN GEORGIA movee up -tlmiDI will improve and put er-ron will be rectlfted. DEAR LOST : Tbere are maay escellellt 4Cl'JA&lt18 (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Powers of • •ntaJ beaJdl facWtlea iD you.r city. I use yo• penUllton are beicbtened -money and love are &e make aa appoiat•e•t at oace. < Looll la tile llllblilbted. Cancer, Taurus and Capricorn plMee beoll.> A.ltd doe't aay yoa cH't an.,. a •U•• n.un promineaUy. ,.yclda&rb&. Tltere are a nrtety ol CMUellal f8Ca (Feb. lt-llar. 20): You are major aenlcea daat cos& very UUJe. Some are rree. 'rite ..,Udplllt in a "•tunning victory." Accent on cler17mu wlllo married you may be __..., ibmpleUon ol projeet, rtiachin1 more people ... rce ol belp. Please 1et 1o1a1. Voa att a aldl produd and ideu._.-_________ 11~1_:_ _ llal• funda · NmEEVERYIO 22 t o 40 IS A pounds in · 10 Weeks -~ PERFECT~ Join the Diet Worbhop before Octo1»er31. 1 INIO and IHrn 1 O way1 to become a perfect 1 o ... nutrtt6on. mat ptanntng, ••etelM and morel 8ew•to!tow .. ku36 Cel 1t4•aet-1441 °' •ll-Ha.-N40 fot CIH If your fl001)rOflt org8nlZ8tlon needa help ra111no Midi. call Huntington Center to mell Community Help details. Phone 119'1·2533 Pl.ant Alters . Town's Ways; Not All Good BEULAH. N.D CAP> -Coal, electricity, and natural gaa u e ch•n1ing this sleepy prairie city - creating a boomtown where the population doubled and now doubles again, bringlng jobs and new workers, higher crime and children to crowd the schools. Uulldo%ers began <'learing land near here re· cenlly on the nation's first commercial coal 'asification plant -a major synthetic fuels pro- Ject that is part of the nation's drive for enern in· dependence. MAJO& CONSTRUCTION IS NOTHING new in lhis remote western North Dakota city -where two coal·fired power plants are also being built - and residents say they are unshaken by the pro· spects of another giant new neighbor. The Great Plains Coal Gasif1ution Project. a St .4 billion plant to convert lignite, a low grade coal. into high·energy synthetic natural gas, is due for completion in 1984, and will produce 125 million cubic feet of gas daily -the equivalent or 20,000 barrels of oH. The project has already made itself felt in Beulah. :i one-story city nestled on the rolling plains west of the Missouri R.iver that was chosen for the plant because of its proximity to lignite and water. The network of gasifiers, boilers and water cooling towers of th~ gasification plant will sprawl over 1,000 acres seven miles northwest of the farming city -a new sight on the prairie already broken by the boxy power plants, one with a boiler towering a record 347 reel. ~ THE NEW PROJECT IS EXPECTED to employ 3,000 -equal to Beulah's current popula- tjon -when construcUon peaks in 1982. About 500 workers will stay on when construcUon ends. Many residents say the project meU1s much· needed relier for Beulah's ailin1 job market, hit by a slump in electric plant construction. "I think it's a 1reat idea. It pays for the jt1ba," says Donna Gilbert. who works at the Sonshine Ice Cream Parlor on Main Street. Miss Gilbert, 26, moved to Beulah two years ago and has no qualms about the influx of project workers and their families. "There's a lot or stran1ers. It's nice, though. You can see the town 1rowing. Before, it w•s like a little ghost town," she said. BERNARD TESKE, &AILROAD STATION operator since 1969, foresees some crowding because of Beulah's rapid growth. The population has doubled since 1975, and is expected to reach 6.000 by 1982. "People in general get out of hand when they gel in large groups. They don't respect people's rights," said Teske. Mayor Darold Benz said his native city has been a lignjte mining center since the tum of the century. "We have never been without coal miners. It's nothing new to the community." The city has annexed land to accommodate housing for 3,000 more worken, the mayor said, addina be welcome. tbe renewed boom. Once, Benz said. the community's only grocery store was in danger of going under. Now there are two -both in new buildings. FEATURING /OBITUARIES QUEENIE ..Can you word that so 11 indicates, 'delivered with a croolled lllllt: smite'~" Whistling Champ Blows Rivals Away CARSON CITY, Nev. <AP> -Competitors in the Third International Whistle·Off weren't just whistling "Dixie." Dan Bernstein of Riverside, Calif .. whistled, "I'm Going to Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter" and accompanied himself on an eleetric typewriter. He failed to place in the novelty cate1ory. Then there was Francisco Hernandez, a 21· year-old student from Tequila, Mexico. Unlike most of the other whistlen, Hernandez never puckered. His mouth remained locked in what looked like a casual smile as a whistle emerged. Hernandez said he bad learned the throaty style when he wu a small boy, by "watcbin1 my dog bark." But the 1rand champion in the contest, entered by about SO competitors, wu Roy Tborenaon a railroad brakeman from Cal1ary, Alberta. 1t ..; .. his second strai1ht title and be received U1 18- inch. handmade whbtle as a prize. "Just • few years ago I was wbiaUin1 in tbe shower," Thon!OSOO said proudly. Cashier Foils Heist JOHANNESBURG, South Africa CAP) -Bank ca.shier Elaine Jones told two robbers she wouldn't hand over UIY money unW abe aaw their 1una. police said. One of the robbers holding up a Johannesburg savings bank patted his waist and said that was where he had his pistol. Police said Mrs. Jones in· sisted oo seelng it and the robber lifted his shirt and displayed a screwdriver. Mrs. Jones refused to hand over any money and the robbers fled. police said. De•f•N•Clees ~·y t ... -.. a.. .......... ~., .. DAVID WILLIAM McCAULEV .... """""''o" •••<II, Ce . Pl•r<• llclefll of C-MHe. C:. ,._ •'"'•Y llrotlle" .... _,...,., dlt"Kton- .., O<-11, t• Wvl-by 1111 T•Ue wife 9~, l -Wey,,. H ot IC-1 FlllED C TllUE, re-of eor- • "d Mercy L of F l o r lde. • .,1Mer,C..l'-•••YOl'l0<-r .................. Senll<H w lll 119 ... Id el U. 1•. S...01-b't llb wife """"· l OOPM.., ~. Ot-r 16, 1_, "e pllews T•d MecComb•r ot e t l'e<lflc vi.w Cl\epel. v111tetlOl'I l.allersi .. 111, c., Rey -comi.r ot ,,_, u CID-to•·GDl'""on-... LH ........... Ce •nd "•IPh Mee· dey, Oct-r U , 1..0 lnterme"t torn..., al -Ho4t~. Ca., e'1CI Pecllk V•• -lel P.n Peclfk e "leo Vlrt l"I• M<Grlll ot Sa"fe "I CAN REMEMBER WHEN WE were losin« population. like many rural towns in North Dakota," he said. "It's nice to see the town grow. We have survived. We have been able to ofrer everyone mqre of a town." Beulah needs $3 million in expanded water facilities and $2 million for other municipal services to cope with its growing population. estimated City Planner John Rogers. He said state and federal agencies had been unwilling to fund projects because of uncertainty over the gasifica· tion plant. Y~ dll'9Ctlln. Moftlee. CA '°'ry~!!fll...1!11.JlllCI • .__ __ __ NOUM •1 ti'I:!,. . .%. "•-• ac-r 14, 1"° The gasification project. backed by a con- sortium of five energy companies, has been on the drawing boards since 1972. After delays over finances, President Cart.er committed $2!50 million in federal loan guarantees for the first year's con· slruction. Ro1ers said Beulah haa applied for a rederal grant to increase water treatment capacity to serve 6,000 people. "What we've lost is lead time," he said, pre- dicting the area will surfer temporary water shortages next summer. PATllllCIC WAYMAN HOLAN, .... •• 11;1 t:i:::'lr~~",., ,,,. MeMer, -I of Cor...., dtl Mar, Ca P-Corohadtl-.C:..Vl1lt.etlOl'l°"Mon· ewey Ol'I OctOlll9r 11, 1• lorft Mey 11. d•y. ~ 13. '"° ''°"' o:OOPM to ''°"In.._,, Ot>lo. Survl...i by hi• •·OOPM-' Per:.lfk View CNtlel. l"wr• wll• AetfeL d•Ythte" Merl!'" ..,.,., et I,,..._ Peril C-ry, Wlllyercl of vr-A...-. Mklll..., '"''--· C:.. 111 liev of f~ tM •"d Slll•l•t llllftl• ot Ml"M'•"•· '•"'"" .....,. .. -_,,_1a1 <°"' Ml-la -a -~ 0.-.n of frl...,tlont 119 ,,..... to llW L-•" W•.shl(\111,o", D.C. •nd me11y CllUrchallMMa-,:l'IOOPeclfkVi.• erM«lll.....,. llMmlwC.I •rvlcet •m Dr., COrofta_,. MM. c.. ntu. P«lfi< ..... Id at 11:~ .., T-ey, Ot· v.._-....,,Cll--.. lob• r 14, ltto at l'ee Ille VI•• _,,...,y Owpitl • .._, llM<ll. c.. .. ....... ~et ,,,......... ,._ c-wr;, i....-. c. '" ,..., of D /u ''-" .......... , ·--· -·-; eat M "'-to tM Amerlee11 Ceh<e• Society. Per:lfk .., ... ---y dire<· ton. .... " OVOLEY W. P"An. rftideftt at .. _ 9Hcll, c. .......... ., °" Elsewhere ~ '°· , ........ wrvl-"". _., ~lft D. ~aft ol Colla Meta, c.a. -•F-111..,,...,. 111....,., w111 SAN FRANCISCO ~ ·~~W::' ::::~~~ .. !:~:.': ( A P ) -A r & II • r a..r1a1 ....... c--.. ...,... Weiaamu, 67, a retired THE SEWAGE PLANT WAS EXPANDED for :"st.~~ ~~1=11~ senior executive with a population or 6,000, but streets were deslg:ned to --------the Kaiser-Permanente serve 1.500 people, and the municipal airport needs, ... ---------. Medical Care Program, a 500-foot runway extension, Rogers said. f'tlllCI NOTHHS ...., died Sunday at his Taxpayers have approved three school bond I&'-MOADWAY home. issues in seven years, he said. ~••Y "My concern is if we p.......,... more bond is· 110 Broadway • -.....-~ Costa Mesa NEW DELHI, lndia <AP ) -Professor TMmM llatcla, 49, an usociat.e administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Adminiatntion , died wblle l eadln1 seven Americana and an In· dlan in an uaaull on 23,545-foot Mount Nun in the Indian Himalayas, the Indian Mountaineer- ln1 Federation said to- day. sues, permanent taxpayers are 1oing to say, &42-9150 'Enougbisenough.' " School Superintendent Dale Gilje said be was helped by delay in construction, predicting, "We are going to be able to handle burdens connected with this project.'' But the school district, which expects a $139,000 budget deficit ror 1980-1981, needs help with operattn1 costs. ·'The revenues lhat are 1enerated by the plant come several years after they're needed," GUJe said, estimating the enrollment of 700 will reach 1,000 by 1982. THE SCHOOL HAS ADDED TRaEE teachers lo the 43-member faculty. and may need 10 more. Moel new students adjust easily, but some have problems, Gilje said, addin1: "Some stu- dents have been moved four or five times in one school year, and they're frustrated with the system." A.a the population doubled, so did crime. said Police Chief Mark Gilbert.son, 27. "We're defintely goin1 to be busy," he said, estimating be would need 10 offtcen instead of the current five. "I don't think there will be my major pro- blems," he said. LIFELONG aESIDENT PEA&L Krecklau, 5'7, said moet newcomers are "very nice people. They've all been juat wonderfUl." She baa an an1wer fOf' thole who complain about Beulah'• relatively guiet Ufe: "I aay, 'We've 1ot three IOOd roada out of town. Ptcll one.'" II It float1, cttence1 ere rou•ll reed 1boui 11· lntlte DAILY PILO T IALTZIH6HOH SMfTH & TIITHllL WISTCLlff CHANL 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646·9371 l'tHClllOTMHS SMITHS' MOITUAIY 627 Main St Huntington Beach 536-6539 HM FAMILY COlOMM. llUMHAL HOMI 7801 Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 'ACNllC YllW MIMOllM. 'All Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pac1f1c View Drive Newpcn Beach 644-2700 McCOIMK:a MOITUAllH Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laguna Hiiis 768·0933 San Juan Cap111rano 495-1776 PUBLIC NOTICE "°1'1C•OPPUaUCIALI Oft Oc-11, 1•, et 10:CID a.m. al •tfltel Office. "° S. LYotl, Sanle AM, Cellfor"le, ,.,. foll-1"1 .,scrl-perMnel ,,_,Y wfll .. _ .. "°*le -•i.11.wllflOlll~: 111 ""'"!lure, lnc ludl"t I mrl~-l""'-11"'91, 1 dlnlfttl• .... Jelleil"I. ic--. 11o-1, J..tl< • ._.,_, I ..... --.. I T.V, .uM, J ,.,,..,......,,,..,.., 1 c,,...otd•-•, I W.111<-r«erdlille .. r,J ... ~-.J ellr-<llell"I. ...,.... ... _.,,. .,. mellreu, 1 "19"111•~. '·41r•••• fftt•r. J.-it metal ....,.<-. 1 9N ...... , .... < ....... I, I_.,,.,.,.""" w1111e--. m Kit<,., 11-. tt1CIWitlt Ob-. ......... ,.-•• -.. < ............ . I II L-.' C~ ltlCNdifte c IOtet .. , ....... <""""" lt1Clud"'9 .......... "'"'"· ...i:... .-. (4) ,.. ... ,._ "-· ltlCllMlftt HMrlM llftlfll, hUllMFOlll lleolll, HIMll•t, ....... tl .... 1, hk-hoekt, ....... ...,.... lfllf'llOll, ...... I,_ lfleNoN. f1lft ...... ""'* "'·~ ..... tallfW1ll• Clwtl CMt tw1i.1 "'' °'"' ••• ., ....... 1 ................. .... -.. ,.... """"'"".., .. ... ,.... IA*'-L.-. •· ... ....,. wocot• _ ... ,....~ .. .,. ....... .... "*""'LAWN-WT. OUYI ....,_. .. ....,.._.. Mof1uafY • C.met«Y D9lef:Gnmr1,1• crematoty ~1c1e IOU••e. 1$25 G••llf A,,.. ,...L,. I CO.ta Mela .... ,_,CA..,. S40-5554 I , ._ ..... 00..... C.. cae.IY ....... ...... ________ ,.r-... Ott.II,.... ....... ... -..... " -., -.......... -· (• ~ b ~ r ft h r . The Blggeat Marketplace on the Orange Coaat •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Mond-V Octobef 13, 1980 ONLY ALOT CJ DAILY PILOT CLASS_IFIED ADS You C•n Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad I.iii l One Call Service I 842•5878 F•at Credit Approw•I ......... IOOJ G.....-et 1002 HoltMsfwW. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• \\ f ',I I ·, '. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOJ TAYLOR CO. .......... ...... ...... w. ............ w. ........... Wt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• I \I :\ I I ( J I \ :---. .I 111 ' . I ~ H • ; NEWPORT SHOIH DWUX . FMLcwt I OOJ I OOJ Ch.eret I OOJ 2 Lari:e 2 Bdrm. 2 llath un1111 Uring u~ ynur te trn s . Ownr-r will rnof)t:ratc• Pnn •tJ to ~c:ll al S204,00U. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DO YOU OWN TaUST Dm>S? EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY * PEIFOlllAICE * •PLUS• N ... ~ l'RO<iRAMS fnr markt•Hna 1n lh<"~ T• .. a.dC9"1Nt w.u. .... 1 ,........_..,HoHce: All re.,.1 .:sta11111d\ •·n~t·J • RED CARPET m lhlb l\t'~~(Nlil''I' Ill uh 75 .. 1202 JtCI IU t~· l''<'J,•r • .t 'all ·----~-----·1 llu u11 11111 1•1 vi ltltill whkh mak~ II 1llc.:ial tn iadvt'rlue Jur !Jrt• rercnce. b 1111t a1to11 or d1Scn111inut1011 b11 ... 1•d 1111 race. l'Olul', rt'ht(l(ll1. ,~' ur nut 1ooal V1'l~111. 11r .in tnlenllon tu ~kc Jll~ :.11<·h prefere.tWt'. hm1ta llon ord~l·runinutw11 · This ne11os µallt'r 11>111 1101 know1nt;b lH'l'ePl .111> 11dvert1s1 11 g for 1•c .d ~late whJc·h 1:. 111 11111.1 t1on of the law ~o Yw• mq .. ,. l'h13 1 .. ,. rur•' ot,1purtu111 t ~ tu pick up u ~ l.IC'\ln1om l'.11•es~tter hom(' "'t•ll l)t>hJ"' 1n.i rkd 1 alu•· \ h tth· \ ard 11oorlt. '""ll' 11> .illJ>JV''I rtncl thL'> o n,• 1·an be J "h''"' pl.11 <' onh $1-13 ~ l'Jll 751 Jl!l l C SELECT T" PROPERTIES Waterfront HotnP --------•I 5 UH . 4 U:.i. 1u~1om wat !'rfrunt home "' EllRORS: Adv...+is•n ~ ched& their ads daily ed ~ •r· rors immtclatefy. Th• DAILY fltLOT a1....,.1 lability few the first ;,.. correct iMerffon only. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT HEIGHTS J USTUSTEO This 3 Bdrm fixer Hu~e family room. lar.,;C' g ou r me t kit chen , massive Hreplace. :;pa too! Call now for dcta1ls ~ l7 x311' pvt d0t·k Pn f'cd Sl.395,000 Oullder w trude for Palm Springs Estate F'ur dctaib 1111 th1~ home anct appt tu set" ... all Carol llorl'. agt 6:11 00!~ NEWPORT SI 18,900! VC'ry a(fordable Ncwpon Ter race <'Ondo' Up graded end unit. Extra windows a fford more light and view plus addeiJ cou nl ers & .,,tvra1ie 1n l'o Un lq kitchen ' Take O\•er low interest. low pay ment, low pnnc loan < 1012' •• Sf>BO mu, $69 .300 1 Sec undsubm1t ' Call i;)l!-1700 REALTORS '7'9Ht I COL E Of'' Nfo:WPOHT . Rl!:ALTORS Jcun a pro...ire~sive company with a great future Wt: are looking for 2 or J s ule · pt.-<>plt: to round out our staff ('all Vody or .John at 675·551 l and let u~ talk 1t uvt.•r COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TOIS U 15 ~ Co.at Hwy., c ........ Mw 675-5511 UOO ISU Newl y remodeled traditional style 3 bdrm. 2 bath home featuring large recreation room & 2 patios. Living room has attractive beam ceiling. fireplace & French doors leading onto b rick patio. New kitch e n bit-in a ppliances. Close to tenn is courts. sandy beac hes & dubhouse. Now available. Call for appt. $420.000. IAYPIOMT' We have several fine homes with pier & slip a TORO HOISi COUMTllY 4 Bdrm .. 3 ba ths ; ranch s ty le , mini-estate in orange groves $240.000 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J l l Boy\•d•· Drovo N 11 67~ 6161 liMA~~I SEA CCNE PROPERTES _ --------OC ... IAtR0-1111111111111MT~-1 V ACAMT 71 4-631-6990 IAQ( IAY Large s u pe r d e lu xe LOWDOWN -------$155,500 CORNER duple)(. 3 Br. 3 Owner says sdl now ! 3 HOME E I e g a n l 2 s t o r y ha up; 2 Br. 2 Ba down. sunny Bdrms. sparklmg Use them as a down payment. Owner will consider same as down pay ment on his beautiful Harbor Area home near Westt'liff Shopping Center. You may bf> ablt' to buy this immaculate home w/2 ·bedrooms. 2 baths. family room & separate dining r oo m . without any cash except the normal buye r 's expen s es Reautifull y landscaped. Great fur outdoor living. You can't buy more for $179,500. See any time. TaUST Dims DO NOT AflPllCIATI '" ¥ALUI •IAl HTATI DOISI WISUY N. TAYLOR CO., UALTOIS Z I 11 S-Ju. I t ... Roed NEWPORT CIHTB. N.I. '44-49 I 0 MUST BE A BARGAIN! Very :.eldvm on marl..•·1 • Su per nt>al hard11u otl floor home :1 Bclrm :! bath, br11·k f1n').ll J ,·C vauitt'(I cc1hnt:cd liv111j! room (/lll"t ,.lrcel F'J r1 l ea !>lh· fa1111ll hom t· SIO!J,950 <.:<ell now tr• 3•'C:, S.16·2:113 THE REAL ESTATERS EASTSIDE UNITS 100/o DOWH Needs some fii11ni: i:rc.Jt oppunu1ty for 111w,t11r U.1n't ~<1it •·ail now <'1 ) ----SEA COVE PROl-'ER71[5 714-631-6990 00 YOI I STARRY MIGHTS Twlnldlng Lights A.-.:u beautiful high11 upl!r.idcd 5 IJdrm hornt.· Swiken living ro.,m wnh I Clllhl•d r·:.el 1'l•1linl!:-:.i11iJ hn•µliu·c I 'n1·om prom1-. 111,.: •IC" of nw1u n1,1 111:-. Ot'('dtl l'U0\00 ' iii Ill\ hgllb s.s.:n:;x10 t'ull t•i d ,1' !17'1 'i:r.O. ALLSTATE REALTORS TAKE A DIP R1ghl 1111u tilt' un •an lr um this IU'(llr•o u' 111.•t.•<1nlr1111t ))1)1111• It h:1-; .I Lr 2 hJ. "'1th IHu hl'lor qu.1nt!f• \NI) th~ l•rl• •• "':'.I JU!<l mcn ·<h•·<I t rum IX.''> 1101.1 tu ~'X'i1 OIM1 llettl•r hurl') l.durc I he 11n<·1 i;:r•·i. uµ .•J.:·•111 ' JONFS UI \I I\ I 'lo( I 'I 1~..., liSTSIDE C.M. TRIPLEX Large 3 Bd1 m. :! hath r1replacc p lu~ two-2 hdrm. I bath 1n cxct:llent condit1•1n P r11·1•0 at $197,500 associated 8 11 0 1< ERS -lltAl TG Rc; l O]', W EolboJ b 'l lbfJ ~ S 15.000 DOWN! i\M,um VA Pa) $88.\ mo Jbr, 1 frpll. AGT <.:~ n thia968 (~~ OCEAN FRO MT L Hr uµrcr .1110 2 Or l•1wt•r duplex :\1t't: • arpe t111i.: .. ml dri;p1•,. G11od rr n ti.ls. ne;;r ,., crvlhin~ bk 111)! S\l'J,l~~I JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 Medit. Yillo Beauuful l iiln J:..le :i lldrm don· '1t'll ..itn um. frcnl·h doors, he..im 1·cil 1111(<; <;••arkli111! pn11l ma~ler t1e1l11~Jm '' '•P" $5!(i.0(1(J ...,,.~ .... COLONIAL MANSION ., ll<lrm.-. 1 -.: lldl fi, mdHI " '!Udr1.l'I'-titi!JI• '~ rt C /21 SMrl fteo hy 546-7542 GOOD OFFER ASl-:H\ IC f. ., Let the pubh<· kno" "1th an ad 111 the O;.ulr I 'dot Service D1rectCJr. ll 1·an L'OSt you a~ ht lit: as tl 1 i per day Fur more in fo rmation a ncJ l'omt:ilt•H• rates call 642 51i78. town home. Seclude d Xlnt condition. S895.000! hardwood floors . Newly l...aCOME patio. s un -f111 ed 1a---....,rop. painted & wail111g for " g t kit h l-1 g --r -•.....n.c.w..~·cr. A steal at on· 1---------F..astside Costa Mesa, -l ;~~~ sui~e e: vre! leGlll«t • ..-.-ty 186.SOO. Call now. People wh<• need vcoplt: shuuJd alwu)i. d1l•ck llw Serv1cC' U1rectory in the DAJLV PILOT IHVESTMEHT SlJ4,:JOO T his IJni.:ht. a1" 3 hedroom. I'~ huth W•th hardwuod £lours nea1 Newpurt Heach Back Bay is brand new on the market. Large. lovely, tree shaded lot. Plenty ol space for ad - dina lo this valuable R-1 loc.ation. Bdrm,2 bath home + 2 ' 67 .. 7060 @ more 2 Bdrm units . from 2nd story. Ca ll ior * -* ~ Pride of ownerbs.il>. Only further details. 1~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 1269,000. Cati n ow . @ St&-2313 ~ AMAZING SEA CC\£ PRCR:RTES 714-631-6990 ,THIE RR•L1 YALU£ SEA CC"-£ fflOPERTES LoveJy 3 Bdrm, air COO· ms i~l BRS ditioned. Costa M esa - --714-631-6990 family home on qwct cul de sac. nestJed amon g IT'S A HONEY •UICE TO TRADE! tall trees So much. ror s o One y ear new, open. Lge 2i.., year old home, liWe! Only S89.900. Call spacious home with 3 w ocean view, all extras. 646-TI71 Bdrms. study. family In Dana Point. 1215.000, rm. 2 frplcs. spa & com-trade for CdM, Newport muruty pool. 1219,000 .,,, '""""" -·· Assume Ln-t:ow nt. area,--l--.--415-- Call 979-S370 Now. ALLSTATE REALTORS OI:•-$-"' VA-FHA BUYERS Lovely CoUege Park 3 Bdrm home, beautifully landscaped yard . cov· ered patio. A bargain at $116.000. with VA-FHA terms. Hurry. it won't last! Call 641>-7171 IJ:Erit1~1 JOGTOllACH Spectacular CdM duple)(. Huge 4 Bdrm owner's un- it + 2 Bdrm unit. Un believable 4 car gartt~t: Priced to sell now. Ca II PRIME PRIME INVESTMENT 580,000. 2 story + pool + ~each ! J og to beach f ro m this "bl!a utiful garden home. . ...M.osl...d • s i r able l ocation . Gourmet kitchen. and sWlShine breakfast patio. Floor to ceiling used brick fire place. Im- pressive s taircase to master suite. Pool and spa Low. low down and take over low interest r1tte loan. No new loan costs. Take advantage. Call !163-676i 2 BR 11~ Ba condo. t:pts. drps, builtin.<i. (Over 40 adult community.> Pool. jacuzzi. c lu bhouse 185.000. Near large shop· ping center and bus stop. Ocean.side. 714-433-4422 ~ ITHE REALI SEACCNEPROPERTES li:.¥~~1 ESTATERS 71 4-631-6990 _ -~~~-~~~------....----.--* INVESTMENT SEMINAIS * Ir Lew. How To._.... ill lllcw Proclllci119 Prap1rt, wHll lttle or • •DA•~ cloww * Learn Tax Sav g Procedures •Learn how to Free-up Capital for investment purposes & still retain • ownership of your properties. • Become Financially Independent •Make a Decision Today. Secure your tomorrow •EDYATIOllS IEDUllD (714) •5433 Sat. Oct. 18th 12 Noon . Refreshments will be served. Ill WllS IEAL man R EXCLUSIVE Pl• lllfE ICUlllM ...... o ...... C.:.11!2 !.:..' J ~ Ir":.::-..= ... .._ J. ... 11Aci ... • .. .... ·~--'-" ........ .... .......... -=._ ....... "" .... , .. hi.. • .... .. macnab I irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THE IAVINE COMPANY COSTA Mis.A MOMa-411 J.IOOt Totallv redone 38R "doll house" on lg. lot w/R .V. access. Custom Mexican paved floors, new plush c pts, fplc . 2-ca r garage. Goo~ assumable loa n. HURRY! Won t last. Holly Markas 644-6200. <L-57) 7H·l414 111-a100 Woocbidqe C11n1., 644-6200 Hoobot v._ Center llE llDlll ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE . COIOMA .......... YllW Great Home On An R-2 Lot-Approlllmatety ~ Acre. Three Bedrooms. Two Batba. Two Fireplaces. Ha rdwood Floors. Maater Bedroom With Fireplace & PaUo. All This With ~an & Canyoo View & Keys To A Private Beach. Call Now. SZ19.500. MAllOI ..... M9I This May Well Be The Home Yoo Have Roped To FJnd ! There Are Three Dell1hllul Bedrooms, Three Baths. Lar1e Uvtn1 Room With Fireplace. New G ourmet Kitchen. Breakfut Room -Beautifully Landscaped Yard With Two Patl09. Dellped f'or Easy Care 6 Outdoor L1vtn1. A Must See. 11'7,500. IACI IAY. R1re Two.story Condo In Thia Lovely Area. Minute. To Freeway1. Three Lar1e Bedrooma. Living Room Wit.II ,,replace. 'SWiil)' ~va... Patio. SwlmmiAI Pooll 6 -Recreation Are.. Beautifully Malntalntd Oroundl. 0nly S14UOO. -~ -----~ 1aM FIONT LOT Over halt acre in exclusive 3 Arch Bay! Fabulous building site w~th --crashing surf and 180 degree view. Has coastal commission approval. 24 hour guarded gatt' Nothing else like this is available. $2.000.000. 17141 673-4400 (21 ll 621-2121 HARBOR RCTaylorCo 640 -9900 MIEAR THE LAICE Woodhridge 2 Br pl us den. 2112 Ra <·ondo. ''Bri~hton .. Jl Plan. Large master bcdrnom s uite• Sun ny kitchen on cul-de-sac. $214 .SOV WOODBRIDGE VILLAGE Uniquely and beautifully upgraded 3 Brl rm <'o ndo. Choice corner acros. from park with mountain view. Offered at $11 2.500. RANCHO SAN JOAQUIN "San Joaquin" mode l. 2 Bdrm + den/study. Q ua ltt~ neutral ta n carpel<; & d rfl pes. Fa bulous golf course view. 2 private patios. Asking $175.000. Penthouse "San Mateo" model. 2 Bdrm unit overlooking golf course and ni ght light view_ Upgraded. Community pool. tennis. $169.000. NORTHWOOD 3 Br 21'2 Ba single famiJy detached ho me. Many upgrades. 3 ear garage. Terms. $165.000 RCTaylorCo h 40 -9900 STAR GAZEK• .. ~=~~--B.Cl'\l' .. POLLAN M ,.,., o.,1y Ant•H' ~ ~ V Au•1dtfl'I '• 1lu Sre11 To develop meuoge fOI Mondoy, rtod "'Otd; <~•ng lo ~n of yo.,, Zodlo.: birth sign ~ 11i.,m1 .;:· i c>~ oceaa real ~-.... estate 759-1616 Ea~•auty 3 bedroom 2-battrtoatatly upg r ad e d hom e Amenitiel; include new carpet. paint. k11..-hen and much more. Only $116.500. Call 556 26il0. Agt. ---- STEPS TO BEACH From th.ls 3 B<lrm bueh c h a r m e r · C n z ~· r1rep la1·c. -.leµ s aver kitchen, 3 pnvat1: patio:.. •;tcps from IT) st al ~and of Newport. Owner anx· 1ous, well help hnanre. $210.000 Call tii3 ~ THE REAL ESTATERS 8 Untts $120,000 Two 1 Bdrm. 6 b;;rhelor~. Brcat1 and butter unit~ $1200 /m o in rom c ~O.IJOO assumable l s l ()\111cr will carry Won't last Call now! M0-3666 •Whelan Real Estate $3500 RB>UCTION! $80,450 t otal pri re: Owner despe rate! 2 Bdrm 2 hath townhome Pool. spa. super sharp A must s»e! Call 546-2313 ------- L90ISLI Traditional 4 Bdrm 'custom home on the bay with aa.'umable .IUMIO LOAM at 10~ Inte rest. Separate dining . la rge r m as t e r s uite nverlooltlnl the bay, A never a~aln pric4! ot 11 .zso.000. macnab I lrvtne realty A SUlllOIAAY OF THE IAVINE COMPANY NIWPOIT llACH -S 159.0001 Impossible you s ay! Then you should hurry to see this loveJy 3BR pool home priced to sell this weekend ! Barbar a Gothard 642-823.5. OPEN SUN 1-5 P.M. 1~ DIANA LANE. CL-13) CORONA HIGHLANDS -NIW LISTIMe! 180 degree panoramic ocean view from this spacious s ingle-story 3BR & den home. Formal dinin~ rm -special fami- ly rm. Completely remodeled . Pvt spa $795,000 fee. Donna Godshall 644-6200. c L-14 ) NEWP<>n CltEST! We ll-priced Plan 2 end-unit w/ view of ocean. Walk to pool. spa & tennis. Immediate possession possible. $179.500. Belle Partch 752-1414 . CL-15) NEW LIDO ISLAND llSTIN•! Charnung Country f<"'rench 3BR . family rm home w/lg sunny patio . Prof. decor ated immaculate condition 1 $475,000. Bent Mitchell 642-823.5. CL-16 ) POOL & VIEW! 3BR President home in prestigious Turtle Hock. A1r con· ditionefl tastefull y decorated. Owner wi ll assist in creative fin anci ng $3R9.000. Reid or Elliott !')5J.lr700. <L ·17 ) A ILUFFS HST IUY! Charming 3HR. 2 bath home w/separate master suite. Upg raded w/ a ll new a pplianrt.'s. t'Pt.., & drps. $154.000. Lois Egan 644 -6200. <I .· 18) HA ltlOll 11 I DGE! P res li g ious J odell1• P l;1r1 Es tates model. fl 1.l!hl\ 1 ;H r ;1tJcc1 3BRS. 21h hath!> · 11 1. ,, family rm. Near pout .\ .Jn prime greenbelt locat11)1• .. 1Wt!St pricc:d plan at S655.t~.KI Ill 1i4:!·8235. (L-19) HEW US •'lt~G! Sensational financ- ing \1:n liirg'P 1st & 2nd T.D. 's a\·ail.1hle on this 5BR view home on (;a l~ v Drive $650.000. Ac.1 rhara Gotha rd 642·8235. (L-20) '111 FAMILY HOMI! Backs onto pie· turesque paseo -walk to pool & li ~hted tc.mnis courts. Assumable loa n. A d istinctive offering $2 19 ,500 Lorraine Reid 551-8700. <l-21 ) HAaaoa a1D•I ISTATll Outstanding Miramar Plaa w/2BRS, den, 2..,., bat.ha. lncredlbl.e view location. Security sated eom~ munity w /Jtools a nd tennis. $675.UOO. Sandie Fix 644 -6200. lL-221 11-. c.utYOM -S 116,0001 Exciting Mc Lain townhome in mint condi- tion ! 2BR. 2 bath lower-level uni""t_1 _ __,. m pvt. location. Comm. pool. spa & tennis. Security gated. Suzanne Rudd 642-8235. (L-23 ) ANTIGUA WAY! Dramatic design w/stained glass retractable roof. Beaut i fully r e modeled 4BR. library home w/sparkling pool. $565.000 fee. David Schweickert 642·8235. ( L-24) SO,HISTICATID HARIOI llDGI! Fabulous mountain & city lights view offered in this highly up- g raded JBR Casabla nca model w /ctramati c 2-s t ory a trium . Comm pool & te nnis. $475.000. Lynne Valentine 644 -6200. CL-25) NEWPORT HACH -Sl2l,500! Marvelous condominium w/2BRS. 2 baths & (pie. Comm. pool. Near s hopping. park and library. Barbara Aune 642-8235. (L-26) 5,ECIAL CRIATl¥1 FIMAMCI.._! 4BR fa mily home in north Mesa Verde. Nice yard. Near shopping & recreation areas. $129.900. Jeanne Newman 752-1414. CL-27) DE¥0NSHIRI LUXUIY . . . with skyline & horizon view below. This prestigiously located 4BR home of- fe rs I -s to r y Ii ving w/ atrium. master suite. den & family rm downstairs & 2BRS & reading rm. Gate gua rded commun i t y . $890.000. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. (L-281 "SAN MIGU& .. ,OOL HOMlt 4BR home in "The Ranch " -one of Irvine's finest communities. ONLY $167,900! Lorraine Jackson 551 -8700. <L-29 > IASn.I COSTA MISAI 2BR "Fix- erupper" in redevelopment ar_ea ~ perfect for contractor or m- vestor. Won't last at $115.000. Tom or Terry M2-8235. (L ·30) LOCATION Pl.US! Centrally located parcel, country living -yet close in 21 acres in Upper Bay area zoned for horses. VIEW ! ~.000 .. Lynne Valentine 644-6200. <L·31> HAllOlt YllW MIU.SI 6 months ren- ta 1 ... Nov. through May. 48RS & p ool & view . Furnis hed - $1000/rno. Helen Wood 644-6200. (L-33) . VYe&.ASI .... LIASlt 48R home in park-like setttnI w/p\ltUng green. Lg family rm. $1700/11\o. furnished. $1500/11\o. unfurnished. Paula Bailey 6'2-~. (L-32) -lil·l414 11f;a=7;;;::;;;r-- C°"1plA v-., c-.. w~ CM• 64J.IJll ...... , .. 901 Do.... °""• Hmbor v-c .... • Cf ONLY PILOT ~ ....... ... .....•......•........••••••••.........•..••••• ······················· .................................................................... . ........ ~~ ....... ~:.~~ ........ ~~ ............ ~!~.~ ~~.~ ... ~~ ~ ............ ~~ ~!.-.~!!! .. ~~ ~= 1900 ~.~~ ... ~~~ IOOJ c.t...._ I024 UY UWNt-:tt, 190l1' :l br, _. ... £-.... CH~•·•••· 5-UMT&DG. •w•::;•ED•••••bu••••3•=:•••• 2 br d~ iu::11pa~,· ~ ...................... ·-· .. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• ~I loc· Orerf1l'ld l lWC' --·--• ---·-Near Newport Height.a. """' to Y ... COii· peg,._ av .... VI: .... ________ _._________ --.. IJtlf.Wll t..owr't Vi.runt IS THI Wa.D ~ Fan la• t I c 3 bdrm do or home ln Eaatblulf SM.aal -/<; ~ 1--m 53S3 Lov\!IY s Bdrm 3 bath, 2 Larae • Bdrm, 3 bath + owner's wlit wtfam rm, ~-ol Npt. Bch. Prin. ---------U Ooubk-1ar•c11. 80a120' illOry home ft1tturln1 family room . 3 c11r formal dining rm. 21~ only Bob Hill , days Lovely laraeupper 2 Br. 2 lot Quil!l localloo. but W ..... ~ C... formal dinlnl room and IJU&IJe, beautiful pool '-··t'"" •·fireplace 4 other 1181-6602, eve964·S319 Bii. 2 car. Bll·lnl. Walk ckiM to 11hoppm1i Nt'w 1 d b I "" ,..., "' in closet. Walk lo beach. I · b Spollt'•\ 3 r, I'•"~ ramlly mom, 2 pal 08• an spa. r ck BOQ lovely units ~ach w /2 root, t>tipper vucn '°"· Country lllh•ht"n l~rte Hpar1t ll 1re•nhouse, Showsllkeamodet.or bdrm s , 2 bath s & ..... el5mo.&T1-0ll86. h1rdwood t1410r11, pl1t11ll'r In nd t Of r ed • "" tJliUo l\&&uffillhlet t1ol 11t ne~a l tn a ou · er at .i..,,soo Call hreplace Atrlums &. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Duple ... 3 Br z .. _. avalf . ..... 11 •• ICood f Ol)t11l100 f t ........ 000 Call uA1•c.1 .. ... 1110.000 Wllh 1m "~"unw U4•" StOl IJUO ..!!:1 ... 1 8 ~... · .,.., .., palms 6 closed garages "-"Fwwldl1d 11 /1. f7SO. 704B Iris". bw loan ~ 11 I Ul.1 1 '"""''r ,,..,. w ..-4 parking spaces. Only ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ownr//\#. 7:;e..1837 lteyMcC ... ,lltr. * • * CAL IF 4 yrsNEW 5'50.000 ..._PIM I~• JI07 S•·77Z' w.-y H. Taylor Co. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• Cott•MeM J224 HOMES ~~~~~~~-~~! R..ttors 644-49 IO Charming 5 bdrm, 3 bath ••••••••••••••••••••••• LA._.. ... ,. Beaullfullv malnt. 4 bedroom home with mountain and canyon Vit"WS QuaUty upgrade . new carpet and appUaul<'es. antique marblt> fireplace and enclosed brlt>k courtyard that le nds an indoor outdoor feeling Present ut Sl83.500 <A lotta house for the$). TAllOYll ..,.1°te" {Jutllt a.ndln& 3 tMrni ~haltt ronl hurn1• 1'°l•111ur tnl( forrn11I d in1111t '"''Ill litric' > 11rc.l. "'""u .111d HR'J Olllli h111 .Jwu11il flour I<! .,., 1nt.·• ··-t .!LW JVIJllUbl\' ""Ith .. 'ii'• f1own A•ktn~ )IU1 !Jutt l'ialJ 54() I ~1 . I .. HERITAGE . REALTORS 2443 ~••I c; ..... 1 Hl1th1o1.•~ Coron• d•I M•r WE HA\lt 4 ~ Ot-IHt BESl U~TINC.~ IN lOWN 0... PoW I 026 •••.•..•.•....•...••..• «ii Coldwell Banker IASTl&.Uff Immaculate 3 BR on cul -de·sac. Banquet dining rm. Living rm. & master BR look o ut to v iew mountains & night lights. $249,000. IN NEWPORTCEN!'ER • 644-9060 !~~~ .......... ~!~!.1~.~~ ... ~!?.~ P UPLEX BY OWNER ---------• '10H't' Loe. So. of Hwy LOOK \\:).. . t>:h . 3-2, 2 2. frplc. pr-1ll•corated. below $85 500 ap.,. ·"(! value. Pr1n· c1plc.:. only 675-1055, 673~ ~11urPl1' Xlnt l.111 t:d C.'01111 111 Hl11!1 u, Owner 2 ;1 L1 :! 2tir fq ll!· Cll'Ull'le flllJlll'l ll~'. 675 1115.5 HwlilwJ011 leoch I 040 •.•.•.•.•.•..•...••...• GlEA T FAMILY HOME 4Br. 2Ba. light & .i1n , I blk to scht & purk 11 , 011 to beh Only Sl 18,900 84 .. 5502 .a. Drastic pn ce reduction $149,000 for a dt:IUXI' oceanfront unit 2br, 1 v.ba. assuma bl~ 10'. 1st, owner will carry 752-2197 Agt ------ IRAHDMEW 3 Bdrm custom home 4 blocks to ocean, 2 frpks. forma I dining & m ore C /2 I S..rf R•alty S3 .. 7S42 IEACHHOUSE •,, M1 to Bch. Seaberr)' 4 Bdrm 2 t>alh, fireplace, 2 car garage, large yard. Seller motivated ! 645-9161 CDMCOTIA~E w/3br, frplc, com er 101 , PLUS ~OME p I u s h c p t . 2 I 2 II 2 OPlN HOUSE REALTY / Jt.SSUMELOAM Beautiful 3 bedroom 2' :i bath Brookview condo thats meas~ 1600 sq f\. ll features a laundry room, 1ara1e d oor opener, a pati<MI. com - mlll\lly tennlll & pool. /\s· sume existing loan and owner wiU carry a lar~l" 2nd f\111 pnt'(' $132,500 Cal 556·2660. C:SELECT I PROPERTIES Dalebou1 Bay &Beach Real Estate •Ut ES1trr U ClUfNCC $INC£'"' llGCAHYOM The much sought arter DEAUVILLE Modt.'I overlooking Big <.;anyon Golf Course Three spacious bedrooms , elm ing and family rooms Exceplionlly attracl1ve pool & spa Please call f o r appointm en t l'i85.000. 67J.7JOO ...... ARClllTECTURAL MASTERPIECE Private executive estate near beach. flex terms Owne.r/agt, 498-0257. BALBOA ISLAND 1258.~ '""' YARMOUTH AGT Cyn OR 3 Bdrm. 2 ba home thia 968 am with isolated m s tr - bdrm /parent retr('at or LAMDMARf( HOME in-law qrtrs + 2 bdrm l/Jt!> of Rl'llwood. \1 1r cottage Any wa) vou ron. -lbr !.pa. dnM· t .. dest>ribe it. it's charm bch, St29,WO !Jn,,. hy rn g. up to datl' .in d H792 L"ll,\HFOI l> l>r beautifully lcn·&te d Call \r.'I' 1 •1 1h1J Pm·ed al S280,00IJ ~ ~ CALL FOR Dt-:1'1\ILS 644-7211 rJn NIC.ll 111\11 I 'I I, J\'.:>SLJLll\ I l~ c~taMHo 1024 ......•....•.•......... E-SIDE DUPLEX Two J Ir. Unib Sl42L500 FULLER REAL TY 54 .. 0114 NEW CONDOS EASTSIDE C.M. 2512Santa Ana Ave 2 RR. 21"l ba. t>onte mp design. $116.000 64 .. 5096 646-609 3 3 br, 2 ba condo. Near So Coa s t Plaza t\ssum loan Pvt comm. w .pool & s pa Own£·r 1 agt 646·5096. ask for Minnie FOR SALE BY OWNR/ AGT Xlnt starter home. Jbr. lba.enclgarage.as· s um Isl $46,500 at lO'i;, 588,500 firm. 968·8388. SPECIAL Call for appl, Be ready to move. 4 + F.R. in Mes:i Verde Assume 91i,% V.t\. By Owner $127 ,500. 540-3783. LOW DOWH PYMT! Big comfortable 5 BR. close to schools . Bob Dickenson, Agt. 979-ISlJ SALE OR TRADE 3 BR 2 Ba fixer. $100,000. Ownrlagt. 642·1523 F 0 Tl S 1\ L t: 11 11 :>; TINGTON LANOMARK l STORY ENO CONDO. 2 bdrm, 2 ba, shutters lhr uout, l' • yr. Million dollar rec '••l"i li tir'I Guarded gate ·Ill \ r~ 11r older (.;.rll for appl uni\ 53&.e79 $1.24.001 1042 .•.•......•••••••..•... WATER.l!'RONT Uf.:.\L: (;o ri,teou::. :lbr. 3ha + fam rm, f<Jrm.i.I J I liar 'kyhi:hl, ma rbll· l·ntn & frplt Shp for 42' t.11,11 Only s.s.i:;.ooo t-ull 1'111·c S u b m 1 t ll I I t 1· r 111 " 84().191).1 Ir~ 1044 ••.•............•••.•.• ••10% DOWN! IJuys lh1s lovely I Udrm tondo. Grcal investment or starter ho me Sl:!.2,500 w~\\ldhrldgc Really 551.:1000 19?0 thrnnr·a r•1. .. ,.1,.1n1• Oranl(elree cont.lo . I bdrm. lba, $75.900. Neat : 551-S<XW . Owner 5bdrm. 3ba. Turtlerock Beauty. appr:u!>eJ a I S309,000 Make 11He r OwnertAgt 644 -6125 aner 6pm. _ Spacious Hont1 A two bedroom cottage with plans tor a new unit. Lowest priced residen· OWMr's Special tial home on Balboa Good investmen t. • Island. Onl>• one block to houses on one lot. 1 one the South Bay. Present BR z.2 8drms that are owner will paint & Im-attach ed. a nd o ne 4 prove . Call us for details. • Bdrm house. Llve in one. 8 ALB OA l SL AND rent the others! 1289,000. An attractive price & flexible financing a r<' yours when you buy this l Bdrm cond o 1n Streamwood. A s pacious lower unit w /a very pvt patio is perfect for the active & recreation oriented person Tenn•~ & volleyball are youn. loo Loads of shopµmg nearby. Offered al •1.soo. 6'4·7020 REALTY Call today. TARBELL 673-8700 REALTORS. 540-1720 IEST IUY ·~~111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~1 -bayfront with 38' boat MESA VERDE: 5 Bdrm. t l.a.u· ·1 U1lr111 hunh· ·--lllllllllllllll~!l!!l!l!!l!'--1 Othef' .... lttat• MUST SELL' float Sept. J uly $1200 formal dining rm, pool, ... 1111\ 111. rourt> art.I ,... ·-s mo Yrly S1600 mo Bill maintenance., aardentt THI llvrr ••• ••••••••••••••••• • •• 2 h<>use!> oo 2 du"lex lot:. Grundy 675-6161 incl. ll050/mo tse Call try !'fr1o1.I)' 1•1r1>l'l•'I ,outl M t ........... , c.; M Best uffor lakes -·----· ---1>.imt1.'tf 1hruout •\llrac· µper ba)' view os ForSde I IOO Corona .. Mtr 3122 Waterfront Homu . .' •. ,. /irii•ii· 111., ·" t.ilahlo-1Jcs1reJ or1gtoal area 10'!. rmanr mg Own 1Agt 631·1400 ~ lwiH 1~ ~ .... 7un:.i bit-h t !:>11at·ious 3 bdrm t-hob· ••••••••• •••••••••• •• •• 642·9666 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'f p 111 SM ~Ot .it II '~· t, by room. 1md unit lluge 8 x J 3 hou s c t r a 1 i er ON THE BEACH Pool, Spacfou.s Deck, 3Br. I P&llo $250 000 A0 t wialum. awninu, uO<i'' 2 Bdrm duplex, view, wk· 28a, Frplc, Bwlt·ins. 2 J>U'l.1l1h· ~~I m11nt h \ .. ' "' "' u Oc r __ ......_ W' 640-$560 shape , 1n tJe:iut CM •-~ I> possibly Agt Faye. car gar, rec rm, xlnl ;J ' ~ H,\NCH ~ fd /\l f'< ~ 1•1 .1 2uno *•NORTHWOOD l!t-<1ullful 1 hl·droom home 1dealh lol·ated in till' 1•lq~a11t \I lla~e or .'lorlh w ooll MJll ) anrenilw., cmd pnced l11 sell fas1 1n t odJ y·, e Hl\NCH l\lALTY ~~ 1 2000 POPULAR l'lan .& m Orange Trl·•~ Condo"s I bdrm. t bu Iv f l d e 1· o r 11 t ~ d 1 n eetrthlones 01.11s1 and mi: rel·r~etliuna l ructlillt'" The l~sl m :iduh 0111~· communtt •l'' *•SUNSETS! f:nJOY the \'ICW £rnm thr:-. hlghly upgr a<led :I lldrm condo 1n f abulou:-. WOOUllRIU<;t.; "" ::.urne 10'• l11JnNO l,ICALIFYl:'111;• ~103, iOll w,,,,cJhrldgr Hc.tlcy :i~o I !1111111 l~~O Ila rr .111< 11 1·~ "" In I"" WOODBRIDGE Great value w ith U!. sumable loan. 3 Bdrm townhome. profossionul l:y decorated and aHtila l>IP 1mmrcl 1a t 1•1 .' Slhl!.000 BARRETT REAL TY REGISTER 642-5200 1048 ...•................... THE ONLY WAY TOGO :1 lklrm fluor plan. oc'l'.rn \ I t' W ti l· (' k ' J ,J r !..: I' endo'icd hn c k flat 111 Pnce\1 for 1mm~cl1at1· ..,all.' :.at $1:!1,0UU :'>11S."it0N HEAT.TY l!;.1 0731 ON T llfo: Ht~ACJl-Mobllc llOmt' 2 Rr, red.,.<Jl)d Jet·k . t•cda r sh a kl'~ .. h<:t rJw•rnd 1111 £rpl 1 Sl9.9()() lil<\ I 49!J<JMIJ; •WALK TO Bt:AC:H • 4 Ur. :J Ba ram rm ol·ean\·ie w S325,0llll .i97-5l32 HORTH END BreathtaktnR views from Dana P111nt to P alo~ \'erde!\ are youn; in t his custom :-forlh Lal(un11 home tles1i.1n~ l>.> l'hn!-. J\bel 320tl S<I ft, <I lldrm, 4'~ ba and manv mon• features $475.000 · 497-5411 /'\JEWELL Associates Newport leoc:h I 069 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWNER FtMAMCED 60" to bch, pl sea \'W, cor ner, 7br. 2ba, 2 s ty sn.:I on R 2 buildable 90' lot $298K owe 1 s1soK l2"2'H 2nd Int. only 4 yr!> 13 % 29% down 7107 Seashore Open daily Owner . 645-8'10 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOi SAU IY OWHEll Giant ~ Br J Ba Only $26fl.500. Owner wt ll ~·urry al $151l0 monthly with 120.0011 down No c redit needed I 71.& 1 lj.l() 1964 UPPH IA.Ck IAY TOWMHOME IACIC OH MARKET lhghly up~rad~ 2 un 2 12 BJ li o )µOrnl townhome. new from butlder F ealurl':-o 111 d ude air !'C•nc11t111n111~. i.;u ragc J o11r oµen cr rN·real11111 foe 1httc.., a rid much more l'nccd al Sl6H.900 with ' c r) a tt r ..i l t 1 11 e !10'; fu1an1•mg al 11" • mltirei.t ror ;10 \ l':lfS f'or adcl1 llCIO&I ,;1formal1r.n & ••P 1.111111lment call Pacnetter Homes fl:IHJ1194 .isk for Carol PcninlMlo DuplH Complelcl.' rd urh1shcd . um• hlk to lw.odt'h Yo u 1)wn lht' laud (;r,•a\ £111JllCll1~ Sl!l'J,500 $~ 759-9221 adult park. $85 rent. 2 BR 1...., Ba condo Cpl.'>, MO-~ area. Wik to s hops , pr1t>ed for qwck s ale, <irll6. bwltms . tOver 40 S 9 5 o / m o C a I I S4 :, OU "a:. h 3 2 7 W adult communit) _ 1 l'<>ul. LAlcJi-a leech J 141 eves/wknds 714·645-5761 Wil son , S puc(' 41 jacu zzi, c lul>hous e ••••••••••••••••••••••• G I ti O 8 8 <1 • S65.000 Near large s hop Charminii ne w 1 br on Brand new lux. twnhse, t Ping t d .. t oc'ean. re11sonable, no b 2 b 1675 ft It Itel BAHRINGTON New cen er an uus s op r, a, sq. . mu ._ I• .• Oceanside. 71-i 433 4422 tlogs~_k_1ds_ ._4_99_·_1045 level, a te. cent. vac. I) it."u~cur . 14110' 2hr. He_...leoc:h 3169 frpJ c. 2 c ar gar 2h:i . lam rm llt'W -R-.-~-A-U-R-ANT ••• -;;.;.~•••••••••••••• w iopener, great loc , c·pt drapt's etc '• blk many more features . orn ~.500 960-4 IJ'\, BALKO A ISi.AN U LIDO ISLE S7SO. Call $52· 7355. •EXCITING• Spe<ial IYy B,•aut1ru1 1·us tomt1l•ll 2ri..su· V1k11111 ll11m1• :.!llr. :!Ba & •·nl'lo~cd pordl In Lal(un:i lltlb n1t>es t 5 ,1ur park ·Jt-~3.')!I) Newport leach lest Buy in Town 12x55 2lir , I Ila. lrnnt ktll'h(•n Hon~ l•J haq• new l'Xlenor '\UIJ11h1•d h1 '><'lier 11>Gt>11;.i 1 CLASSIC MOllLEHOME SALES .!71•• llarbor ~l•' 4!011 540.5937 San J ua11 <:u po s..ri.·, 11tii t <! ti1 <! l.S... H.l\\ls4 fl I\' r' t)ld \ITT :HI 503;! AcreoeJe f« Sale I 2 0 0 Excellent Main St loca Completely furnis he d t1on l ndurle:. l and . with e verything you Short term avail. until blrll(s, Jll fixtures, l'lll'll need. Re11Ddeled & de· Jan 2nd 4 Bdrm. 2 Ba telc + 1 Hr apt n.111 coraU!<t 3 Br. den 2 bath. Hefnge . Washer/Dryer, µrice $500.t.IOO Uwnt."r ~1onthly Bill Grunrly , redwood spa. $650 m o will t'<Hr) halan•·c Rltr,675-6161 S ierra Mgmt. Co w SJOO I)()() down ('a 11 h 641-1324 rrcstig1: llomes 61\S filill() 3 bdrm 2 alh. Pcnin. Pl home Mo lo mo. or •INVESTORS• winter l e a s e $700 Hental u1111:> for le!>:. than 1,73 2113 111 x l(r<c.:, uiw or no llG C ...ayo...a n~·l(al1Vl' c;,sh fluw I.ow Aro " d 0 w n I. 1 m 1 1 ,. ,1 Lovely 2Br M c L a in purtnt-r!-.IHµ avail also Townho~. rormal din • 11 1ng rm. $950 mo. Contact 1 a J <ihn Ap~ar .it Suzanne Rudd675·3445 640·5357 or f>-lfi-(1783 . \j(t FOUR-PL EX COSTA MESA til.00() ni!\h & OW<: al 12'• for 7 ~r.., 6451 1113 ,\gt HUMTIHGTON IEACH 4 L':-.;rrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3206 .........•.••.........• Ulx 2 Bdrm duplex, 3· stor) h vmg rm. frpk. S1500 ·mo W dock 12000 675 3067 IALIOA ISLAMD leauHM layfrOftt 2 Br. Cottage with garage & yard. New carpel, tile & paint 10 min lo beach $485. Adults. no pet!> 631-4889 Brand new 3bdrm. 21hba twnhm, patio, 2 car gar. Newport Hts area 347 E 18th St. $745. 548-7638. 646 9125 eves. Sharp Mesa del Mar 3 Br 2 Ba. Family rm. frplc Elec. garage door. 2 cov e r e d patios . with iiardener . $795 1m o 754-6212 ----------~· •J• c:; ::,· • •;l•u• ,: ; : ~ ::·l •c: ~ :. }l.~a" new ' 3Br, 11.Ba &. thrl'c 2Br. c·entr<ill} lr.l·atell O wne r v. 111 c:etrn at 12'; W 25'. down Scn!'.1bl} pnt>~•I :il S2-15.0C~ New carpet. paint and rharm on Bay with patio on WATER Rea ll} s pecial 2 story 3 bdrm. 31,, ba. rrplc , new kitchen. S1700o lease 3 Br Den. L1vmg room. enclosed garage. Nu children. no pets. $500. Ca II eves 642· 7803. 2 Br w /gar $360. C3rpet. fncd yd, water pt.I 22'l4 .. o·· Placentia 636-4120. BAYCREST IVAN WELLS HOME lhdrm :!' ~1i.1 , t11i:hlv mamlarned, l:istfull} dt• 1· n r a t " cl • l o v t: I .' , 1111rt\ ard .. 1ttr11lll\ l' l.i1111,·1·a 111· $4!!10 11011 Pnn•· Onh Wki•nds ~ aftt."r 1;µm l~I<! l!l Ii CIR Hl'allors Hpt Waterfroftt 1.ari:esi floor rtan nf tcn-d Open lri•o;h .~ .1 ~ .. 1ulllul '11·w I ·u,tnm dt'('IOr gold fl~llHl'!'> 6 man\· upgr.J1fr, ll11Jt ''"' nl(ht" up 10 <15 ~4!ltMA1 f.JI 1'132 Jas. E. Gould San CletnPntc 1076 ...••...••••.••.•...... 1 larllnr ~.;,t at~·;, Hsr Surrw 11t11 'u, nr Dan.1 lld11 SJ.lli.51XI. l'h 49'1 171)1 GREAT INVESTMENT 4UNITS llr, 210 Eoch. OCEAMVIEW FROM 2HDLEVEL Clos. to bHc:h & sho~ pine) VACATION & INVESTMENT PROPERTIES 493-9•1 SanJUmt Capistn.o I 078 ••.•••.....•...•....•.. Ont' J\ere 2br C:11untr~ llome Lgl" Ham. 1clc;JI for horses' $!f.S.OOO BY OWN ER. 493-6748 TWO CONDOS 2 lillrm. Ownt'r boughl other property and must sell $79,0ll!J ca Ai:t 493 3500 or <193 7492 LUX HY LIVING for your every neec.I. 3Rr. 21'2 I.la. Vaulted ceilings, s un· ken hvmg rm w wet bar. frplc. lg mstcr swtr w 10 rean view. Will lse1opt $239.500. LOIJllMVillocJeR.E. 497-1761 LAICH HOUSE llAUT1FUL TOO! S or 6 Br. + fam rm w/frplc, formal dining + cat in Kitchen. Bt.•;i1·h To he ::.old al µu1Jl1t> JUI t1on o n HI lti llO Ii\ urd1·1 111 I hl Su11t•nur l.:oun llrok<·r l'UOJ>Cration 1111 lll'<l lufo ~la r~h Oo 1a r \111• tumeers 213 272 !i,,'l•1 Commercial Properly 1600 •.•••.••••.•...•....... LAGUMA IEACH 9600SQ.FT. i·I Lt·ast'<l 1·ornrrwn 1al mduslnal uml!> l111-.11 t•<I I on ont" 11f Lu~un:r ., ma m h1ghwaw. Uwlilm.i rt• cenll) r<'modell·d I hgh demand area. P.rr1n•·rs ...... 6L'NITS ,\II <!ltr . I m t tu ut't•an Two 1rq1lexe~. s ide b\ '1d1•. nt1·e ~on'11l 11111 v. p\l IJJll!IS nr L..ikt· t'Jrk CiwnE"r -...ill c·arn .it I.!'. w 25. do"'n Uolh thl· JblJ\ l' p1 o 11t·rtw~ h;n (' as;.um.1 hli• b l TU i. 1 Wl h,J\ l' :re• C l~~ tn 11'\Jn \ a1ldtt11111,d 1nn1me proµer11e:-,l,1rt rng " etn m111 ... 1 lll\t•,t ment or ~0.0011 up 111 ~.000 Ask ror Jim Wilson or Dav1t.1l.l'i1\1tl want out. offt•nnµ "cry attractive ftnan~•ni: un u tnlal price or $.'o7ft,h011 WJlh ')lr";t1 ;~) tf•IWI, fh.,donumu-:. .. 7!) 1:'i1M1 I llunttni.ctun lleJl"h ltlt' 1714 Is.&<! 1111 :.:1to11l:!I M·GZOHE Olllt·r h»tTll'. iwr.11-:1 .1110 IMlfl will r n 11IUl'I.' "'11\(' in<·oml' whrlt· \ ou pl.111 new-fit-'\ctr:pmc•nt R '150 '" fl of land 1w.1r IHI h I( Whitt 11 I ( C1'1.I '1t•,,1 We~ley H. Taytor Co. Realtors 644-4910 COMM'L 8UILDIHG lyOWMt" 111 l)l~ sq fl lo 111 1n1·1111u· 11( 9j(l.OOll 'r I 'n mt' II B ltx '• tnl Ill llf'h 11111\ S5!15.llllll llur11 Won °I Ltt!.l I 11411· 1'.164 Next to Major lank 5,350 Sq l''t. Comn~rnal Uldg I Blk to l'ac 111<· UC'edn Sell S3!io.ooo Le.i.!>e $!.MO Mo Wesl~y H. Taylor Co. Realtors 644-491 0 lnconR ~ 2000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME'n'IMCOME Nice 2 bedroom h<>use P l~U S duµ l e x and fourplex to pruv1rlc m c·ome Owner will < a rry p a rer :ea s .v dow n 752 19"20 IRAHDMEW 6UMTS 2 Br unit:. w /ga r.11<:es Isl owner benefits Great ren t al area 1n Westminster. Owner will help r1n11n l'e Aitenl G:JI 7300 IUMITS or • .:13 t l'.tt 215i Loh for Sale 2200 ..•••...•..........•... LAMD /CMR4 120 >.. 2111 f on<lu ur Jl'I' b-15 I !OJ t\1,'I Mowttam. o~sert, Resort 2400 . ...••.••..•........... FOR LEASE :-..t·w 2 bedroom 2 bath humc M1%1on 1..llcc·~ <:ountn C lu b G111£ lf.'nlll5 pCIOI BeaullfUll\' ldnJ 'lrapeJ . nc) main tf.'nam·e yartl ~ Clubhoust· Hd Desert Hot Spnn~:-. 213-378-2572 Yu l'Ca Val ley ll 11<h Desert Houses. Lots & Acreage 4 Ddrm 2 Ba ~.000 I Bdrm + Den R·2 lot $32,500 1 • acre to 1 2 acre lots $3.500 and up with utilities avail Acerage S450 anti up We have rnmmerc1al lols & llcteage w11h hq;~hway fronlaitc Mori:' Call GreR al 11 & G Real E!>tate 71·1 366 R0llR. Eves 46.S 8419 Get Awav From The Smog HI ~1 from Palm Spnng• S .u res m Sk} Vallt'\ .!() '< 2Q Ca bm Wa lt:r & 1·:1 ... 1·1 ric1t y S22.51X> cas h PP 675 8740. Suite :K12 Mrs. Kmit. l.v Message ---- Oul of Co.tty ,,.,.ty 2550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Swmt IHI htat~ Move out of the smog' Sucessful liquor s tort> Good lease. Equipment. hcense & mventory tn· cl uded $240.000 OM WATER Exceptional 2 Bdrm w dirferent levels. exc1t 1ng arc h1tt't>ture and water .i<tl' 11~ \'1ewm~ Sl;;()I mo FURN/S800 Mo. '\11 e 3 Bdrm 2 ba horn<• reJd' to mr" e into ~)II mu WJterfront Sahsl>ur.' 67!-6900 WIMT'Bl RENT A.LS T"'o bdrm humc. lovel) patio and garage $600 So Bayfront 3 Br lower v. gara)ll' $'11~ mo ~. Ba:-front I Rr" upµcr v. gar:igc $12\MJ mo '\'o Ila~ frunt I Br uµptr. 1·arport. µ1:.s rlot>k pn \ ~mo YEARLY RENTALS Lillie Island Li<: 1 Br apl unfum $.\5() lsc T"o bdrm apl. gar, deck. unfum $55() Be aul1fullv r emotl 3 hdrrn ho mt>. unfurn. SllOO mo, inc l utll So Ba)fronl 3 br lower. gar. f urn o r unfurn $1200 mo South Bayfront 4 Br up· per. gar $1500/mo. rurn orunfum. No Bayfront 4 Br upper w c arport. $1200 yrly with poss dock priv. lotl lrKhhf & Assoc. 67S.J331 BAYF'RONT B.I. 123 E Rayfront. 2br, 2ba. s ingle garage. 1895 yrly, Herb, 213-478-JSn Capistr.o leech 3211 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUPER TOWNHOUSE 3br, 2ba. oceanview. w d. rerrig. prime loc . no µels. $650 . lease. 499.3982 Corona .. Mtr 32J2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5 BR 3 Ba. 2500 sq.I\ .• Irvine Terrace. Walk to shops & beach. Grdnr in· cl. $1,000 per mo. Agt 644.9635 So of hwy Beaut. & clean. like new. 3 bdrm. 2 ba, patio. Adults only S800 mo. Agent. 675-2313. Immediate occupancy. MESA VERDE Jbr , 2ba, ram rm, 2 rrplcs, over s i zed gar 1s torage. $725 ,m o . incl water gardener 979·62J8 ---- <.:ONDO 3br. 21 2ba, ne-... cpl. 2 car gar. pool. Jat· lennis , nr S C Plaza S650 957 ·6048 2 Br I Ba Condo, newl) dt 1orated, ~l esa \"erdi;, ,\\·ail 1mmcd Rcdi., $495 ..\~ 979·6896 . Very ntce 2 Br. house S395/mo. Adults. no pets. 848.0377 LGE2Br homc,t•pts.st\ relng. fnc d yd. gar ..id lt.s. $350 mo 64.& 9806 Lux •·ondo. 2bdrm, 2'"1ba. ~ l.'ar-gar. frplc, 11t!:tf v.as h e r. nµt s. drp' puol. Jae 6-15 89R6 or 641·1~5. ICIDS /PETS OIC E Side F'ncd yard. S.">45. S pa c ious Townhouse S595 64.2-2510. 646-4848. 3br house w/lrg yard. nr frway&OCC, 642-6811 . Nr S.C. Plaza. dlx 2bdrm. 2ba condo. patio. $495. Isl. last + sec 968-4965 or 557·51S9 ------- Nice 2 Bdrm condo. with dbl gar Refrig Pool S475. Agt. 557-4436 3 BR 2 Ba. fam rm, stove. palio. encl back yard. Children & pet OK. 1625 801 Joann St. Corn .. t Wilson /Place nt ia 953-1661. Marguerite RENTAL MESA VERDE •Hard-to-find 3 Bdrni near golf course , $895 mo. •4 Bdrm, 2 bath, large patio. $1895 mo. Ca ll ror more details. 54&2313 ---~· SUPER Lge 3br. 2~ba, fam rryt, good area. Nov 1. Many features. xtras. Cleal'). new paint, no pets. Nr schools. pri v c lub . S46·3937. 4 Br 2 Ba. Fam. Rm. D/wasber & range built In. New crpt.s & drps.• Newport Heights area. $790. Avail 10.17. !>411-1511 3 Br. 1 Ba. MSO. 225 A East 23rd. No pets or children. Call 645-7253. Newport Heights 2 Bti. E N It A L T macnab I Irvine . realty Vocatloft& lfl•H._.. Properties Westside Costa Mesa . good condition, mcome $40,800 yr. Price $445.000. On psyment 1130,000 OWC.: balanL't' al I l o/r ~~·~,).~·~·~· ~~ A pR€HIG€ s.t•AM 1010 '-.+---~ HOM€~ Secluded hideaway! 66 • acres, beautlfuJ buildlni:i sites. seasonal stream & one bedroom cabin. S200.000. Good owner rinancmg. Other R-2. R-3, R-4 & commerical properties available . Also. R -1 acreage available. F or further Information. con- tact Ken Marks at Fantastic 180 degree ocean view-city lights from aJI rooms. Lrg 2Br . 2Ba. family & dining. tooO/mo. Wknds & Eves 6"-8889. Wkdya 842.5757 South of Hwy, charming newly de(()C'ated 2bdrm house, 9850. Ail 67S.5930. Duplex. Private yarQ, NO PETS. PS. Gas & water paid. 673·22541. 3Br. l~B•. fam rm. frplc:. new palnt, II fenced yd 9800 mo. 642·4408 dy~ ~~eve. D R A T Y I I I' I S EASY I' I I I I i ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• A T8t•AC IUY Great In vestment op - portunity! Spac1oua and sparkUnar 2 Bdrm condo on lovely park· lik e &rounds, near rrkling pool. Enclose patio. "4.900. don osen ' ' ' lTrH AT PROSPECT 'TIJSTIN 73l-3W Real Estate Investments 333;1W. Coast Hwy, NB 64M'46 OWHm RMC. r 10 s .......... 2319 Spring Street PuoRoblcs California 93446 llOIJ 231-7710 9 unit.a. Colta Mesa, 2 m l. to beach. Cash flow. owe-no py mta 2 yrs. $112.500 down. M:I0.000. Prlndp&la....Broke.r, Les Barnhart. SS9·447S o r ' CAM.SIAD f72.1577. Laree 2br. 2ba. condo on water. Sun deck, pool. PAYSFORITSELF Quiet adult. c:ommwllty. C.M. super duplex tv.<'~ Easy fway acceu. UIUm. ftnanclftl. Malle U09,000. U2·2 U17 . offer. 0WnfA&l642-9181. ,.,_/Owner. llVI .. TlllACI Cha rmln1 Three Bedroom , Two Bath Home With Terri fie Ocean fr Bey Views . Ex· elusive Nel1hborhood. SllOO/Month lnc:ludea Water fr Gardener. Broker, 7»9100 Tue Una to reLu a.ad shop at home. It'• aimp&e w i th Dally Piiot Claulfled Ada. Alld If you ha•e IOIDetht.nl to tell, ull a friendly Cla11lnad Ad·Vlaor at ...,., 2 Bdrm, frplc, encl. patid. $425/mo. 140 Cabrillo. 64&472S or aat. 640-~ Ask for Faye. D.-hW UJ~ • •••••••••••••••••••••• ·. OCEAN BLUFF CONDO· aw .. .2~ ablolut. lua-.. ury. aecluded area., •1mo.m-ote7. • H1.11t tbdlrm apt. lbe, 2 car 1ar. carprt, frot\t yrd,~ pd. .-imo. l.I~. lMt+dep.-.-..... ,, ( b G b ~ !I ( h r I ~·•"U•fw hl1il H1 11Ui,_ J•1J Mu hhiJ ., laHh,_.lt.4 AfislaHh~ .. alw•h~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• OAILY~LOT Monoay, October 13 , 1980 4400 ~!:~ ........ !~?! ~~ ..... ~!~~ ~.~~ ... !!~~ ~.~ ..... ~!~ ~~~••ueu~?! !~':'t~~.~~.~ U~Ll~lllj•~-.~!•'!" ........ ~.~•u• !»au. doU hn nr OC"t'ln <lrffnf'rclnt ftlDbtliP home 1.1• 2 Sly r>upa..a 3Rr. 2 2 br, 300' rmm uc't"lln ulils 2 Rr 11, Ua townhoWltl Lovely all adl&Jt no pets ......... .._. Jt6t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sep Rat. I.a >d. pallo. I from SOO m o 1'114 1 rull Ba Frplc I n Ind, rroo m 1 001'1101 blt1n11, 11lr. patio It an' l.2413 Br apta •6200 Ed'.••••••••••••••••••••••• IXSrm. doc or chld Ok -..1e Newport Hchu -., mu 484 4141 No pets 142.S 84S 41137 ln1er. h b. 8*0819 L.ae 2 br, 2 b11 condo. steps Avail Ort 20 ~mo lllt ---to beach. new dee, bit "'lut491.eM.\,ll3l t.10.1 900.2bdnn tondo,onp"1 6t6-Mm M9wp.tileech l16t Stunn1n11. li.rge l Br Deluxe poolside xtn lee Ins. patios. crpt,. drps --b••ch. pool. lt>nnl ••••••••••••••••••••••• <ha rden A"I Pool. rec 2br. 2ba Bltns, dshwhr _,. ""'"93 5 ,,_.. JJJJ -~.t2U l1o.1 0Z')U N«'WJlof1Hlri1hts 3 llr.zi, •OCfo~ANt'RONT. Avull ~rn _"' ... 710 W 18th 1"'2 mJtes beach Adlls , ll/l,...,..5 .....,.. 1 • ba, ram rm. fn•lt'. ne,1u .• 11 L .. ..,..., •••••••••••••••••••••• '" nnw,u11 ).W~od) S pt•<' St n o pels 1395 m o HOMEfo'ORR•:NT ••AL.DIAY 'ctnllt1. 3hoppln11. •s tac·ular \lt'w tl1:JSURF . 3 Bdrm IMO f'tont·l'cf <>l'unatdf' f'tont Row "-' · 4'13 IO!I> Lux 2bdrm, 21 2ba, 2 car ~8362 -rd .. L~ II \'It-• 4 Rdrm tie-t t't' (Jl ~:l\Nt'llON'I Ud ux1· • &..11..-..-.T"""" • "'ICIS >'ll -llU'ltlt! ram ) ' Bluff• Qindlt In nf'W r ornl .. (lllr. r11>k, d111hwashcr . '""'""~ "" -,pluu Kld i 6 prti rm l\qlJI It l 1218..'iO fft) Rr 2 Ou 2 1·11r .cu rugt SPARK.UNG STREAMS ;,;Irr.-.& Call ""•...._,.~ ~ oo:!9 38r .JRa Pvt •pa lnrl h 1oall 1111~ 1111 Jun,. l.Sth crpts, drps, pool. Jae· ..,..,_ .... ......., "' 1117S ma S.. 23UU 645·11986 ur 641 lS45 C~CADING _29'71 ~l'nt nu fff Shlnlflf'd 2 bclrm rtltta11• Sfl lS mo N" Jll'lH WATERFALLS J bt, 2 ba, u r, frlilr like nt>w, Jrn Air.-nna • 3 Br 2'"' t• Npt T,.rrut·l' ti7:J 00.IU Eai;tslde I bdrm, utlUllcs TOWERING PINES 'Mrig, Jr1tf>'''" 1825 l11f1 rl'frta. frvh". hnrdwood Cmrkl F'rool unit •Ith O<·tii1urrnot ~Int er 3 µaid 1275 1mo. 641·85« NEWSPACIOUS 'Mi-ll0'1 noon 6 i·arpot1 916(1() +. 1 l11w "dulls . no 11t•l i. lldi 111 'l llu , frpl', rw ask for Al LAKESIDE utll Near hear h In Nnt1h .,., mo M2 9833 IX!L' $Iii~ \ut I.Inda ADULT APTS. ,._.. V•y UJ4 l.uaun11 11 11 11~ A 11t lf7510110 ,. E SIU!l: 2Br, tBa + •Elegantflreplaces ••••••••••••••••••••••• •IN TMt \'rr)' nh't!2 BR I Ba "'11ll• garage, Int.try rm. stove •Private lakeside patios l ... bar lit' J)llllo ltlOO 1 rh l .. 1 & ref rig, 1425 mo 24 l & balconies ,mmMl'. 4 ...-1"4 Ha Nr ..-.... fl1S 33(N i:Jr•n ,. l'Un in t ulll 1Kl l'ostu Mesa St Unit C. •Heat~I & ;c:hooU 'tlho~ RC'.ap ~r-. JJSO ru111 l'1t·f I ~ull'l touplt1 or f11mll ~ No ••••••••••••••••••••••• NF.WPOR1'ttt;tc.;HTS IX'''"" s;n~, ~ IJ.'ili 6453148 whirl lspa ~ IMt , .... t •, !lill' ........ Ill ' ... " "'OR R"'NT •4 miles from beech ...::._:: .. ~ ......, .... r,r r. Cutt'~ hr 2 bo \'Ollal(1• Spadou.s twnhse. 2bdrm. 14•1160 ............. 4 lir lW F'1•n1·ed \Ord oc fo;J\NF'llONT ... 2blks from bch. lluge newly cpt<l . .abr, d w, (rvlc. W/d hook·up, nu pets, Sll00752· 7414 Heaut Lge 3br, 2 blks bch, d /w , w d hook-up, rw pets. S600 752 7474 ---- $350, avail now unlll May 31 I br. I ba. stove. refrlg, carport, lnrlry rm. 675·4776 MOUNTAJMVllW VIUAS n.MSC&.UI Near Palm Spnngs I :! & 3 bedroom villas ava1la hie Weekly, m o11thlv and annually 7 hghteCt tennis courts Close to Ran c h o M 1r a 1:1.."s Restaurant Row l\l(t!nl, ( 714 1328-4097 Lgi: ij1g Bear t'a h111 1.111111 tble. color lV 2 (rpll'i. Sips 14, 714 1545 ~ltl Retttab to Shen 4300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mov1n~? /\void tle110s11s & c ut II vln11 t.!'( JJcnsei.' Profe:.sion a ll \' '>lnt'I' um. HOUSEMATES RJ2 41.34 ICOU.CBna NIWPOIT · F.legant ex~uuve i1uites in prestige location With co mpl ete support se r v1ct!s FIRST MONTH FRi-;E. 714 851 0681 ltteal location for At· tom ey, Real Estate. or F:ntre pre ne ur o rr1ce now available large paneled Reception area with storage and 3 pri va te o ffi ces 1n beautifully ma 1ntained full snv1ce huilding. !Corner West <:hff Dr. & ln lne, Newport Ue achJ lnlsq rt. Call Melissa 645·GW1 -• 1tnd lllUllt' fo'u m 1 h w 111" fenred )'d & llllr " 1 o t c r .a fl r 2 a a l'-,ba · pool. carpo rt · 7562 Ellis Ave H.8 ............. JJ40 plUWt! Kl1lr. .. pets IW"W rrpt ' J)ll lllt II\ I.Ill r1n•plJ1•c li7J 7tr73 pnvale patio. lrg play 13blks w of Beach Bl) ••••••••••• •• ••••• • •••• wt'l('OITI<' l "a ll 1164 2Mlil or No1 I 1675 mo l' u II y rd fo r c h 11 rl r e n Sl.SOO 4 Br 2 Ba. Ouplt!:< Oceanfront. Wood beam ceilings. t•arpets, drape:.. all bui lt ins . En closed ga rage wit h washer/dryer FU m . or unfu r n. l mmed o!' cupa ncy. TSL M ~mt 642·1603 The Roomrn:.i te You·rL· --------~~·--­Lcxik 111g For ,., l.0011111~ S·blks to 01.-ea11 F.h·iiant :! 973 2911 Alt' no fc(' S.18 7145 1142 886li S425 mo Ca II ( 21J1 New condo. 1 & 2 bdrms. bdrm, ram rm & 1hm 1 __,..__. J•s• ~ 1 d 4W Afa=~..A S3tJ..7633 SS75·S650 Adults only, no IS72S moJ Plush crvts ---.--• ....,...... ' ' · ew } ecvr rm t·on ••••••••••:':"'••••••••••• pets. pool, Jae. tennis. For You ' SSO ft•t• 1t1r 11ru pie ~1th "''""' "' sh :.1 re s:i.s rur thl>'>t' lr.c1k1oi.: 2 l2 ba, cedar .ti ~lulls ••••••••••••••••••••••• J 11 w I t h re r r I ~ Easts1de 2 br. pvt unit . etc. B4&l826 Dbl car pvt gar. rull) 3 BR +den. 2 ba house ln washer d.r)er 1\1 all 1111 lalboo l"-d )806 encl garage, patio No -------- malnl yd Adult!!, nn NlguelShore1>. oceanslJe med 1850 No pe t ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets S425. 642 3 197 , Huntington Landma rk, r:ts Inquire at SZT 18th or h~ > Uated l'Ommunl 8.'\3 1.357 l.)l!luxe Uu) front :ltxlrm. 556 ~6AgenL new 3 Br 2 Ba Highly t 714 960 633 1 or l). te1111l.s crts. pool ell' N 1 ed -~• N 2ba, refn g. frpk , adults. 2 Bd. 1, ~ ba tou~'-ous•·, upgraded, lovely loe 24 fl60.6331 Min 8 mos lease at 1825 ew Y r ecor at.,,, B nu J>t>ts SWO mo vrly • _,.,. "' hr. sec .. full rec fars per rno ~ utlls 491 231:10 ('Ofldo within wa lking d1~ t>.i6 7213. 044 SIJll garage, patio. mat ure Adil Comm. No pets CLOSE TO HACH Sauna -Steam bath Wall to wall fireplace. 2 Br 1 Ba . Double garage & of fice space. Large re nc·ed )'ard. Pets OK S6SO mo 53&2156. 536-7979 HOMES FOR RENT .3 Bdrms . S525·S625. l'~en c ed yard~ a nd earages Families 1,Jlease. Kids & Pl'l s welcome. C&ll 964-2S66 or 973-2971 Agt .. no fee 3 Bdrm home with ex p-emely lge rear yard ,Close to beach. S6501mo 53&3347 or 536-1023 Avail. now, 4 Br or 3 + Den. 2 Ba. Frplc. S625 + Gardener. 963·2852 3 Br . l~• Ba Nice neighbo rhood. Corner Wt. Close to Westminster • Mall. Avail. Nov. 1. $600 mo. Call Mrs Gan2 846-1371 Or 84&-4296 llBR. 2 sty, 2 Ba, adlts on y. $4.SOmo. S3&288.5 '1ea.se, e.xec condo. view. waterfront, main chan- nel, 3 BR 2Yi Ba, bra nd oew. Boat dock. 951·0488 ....... l244 ....................... 2Br. 2Ra Condo, garage. pa tio, pool, very nice No pets . adlls $500 mu "9.S·022'7 tant-e of beach J Bdrm adults No pets. S350 mo. S65() mo 2131592.~ 212 ba, dining rm. II\' rm, I br, yearly. avail Nov 1. Call Answer-Ad, 111!19. - - - cul-In kit che n, put111. S3Stl mo. nr N lia\front. 00·4300 21hrs. Lge 2 Br apt Util pd, pool, SJ>'I, L1ghtt!d lt>nn1:.; 675 1412 · SPACIOUS & SUNNY 1 s:llS mo Ph 536-3347 o r $850 mo Call 642 4074 •ir 536-1023 700·6060 eves As k for Mr AGATE A VE. Br. Enc•lsd garage. patio, M111eo.. Vl.fo JJ6 7 Guyette J ijr, ~ lm , frvlc. 01>1•n D1W. Adlts, no pels $:.150. lrW.. •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• ~ams No pets S900 mo mo. 548·9084 or 540·5446 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 3844 HOMES FOR RENT 3 & 4 Bdrm. S.SS0-$625 Fen ced )'ards and g u ra ges Families plea se, kids & pets welcome. Call 964·4!.'>&l or 973·2971 Agt, no fee , 1269 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bayshores 4bd.rm. 2•~ba. Bayview. SI 150 m o., yea r lse 642·8750or 213/385-2176 3bdrm. 2 1~ba con do . beaut ocean & city lites view. no pets. $700/mo. Jim 963.(9)2 or 968·46.50. llGCANYOM Mc Lain Twnhme 2Br. 2ba. Tennis pool jac sec Cvd prk'g for 2 cars S875 . 644·7722 dys , 640-83611 ev /wknd •2br, Iba, encl frunl yard, adults, no pl'is , gar. use or pool $550 646.3525 /\gt 675 8170 --Condos ror rent in ··The . . LUXURY LIVING Lakes." 1 & 2 Br Pool. lalboa f'..-tula 1807 In quiet Adult Complex. Jue . tenn1!> 731 H63. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Spacious I BURM. APT 857·02 11 Lido Isle 4 bdrm family home, newly redecoral ed, rent or lease option a va il. 642·5001 owner Sma ll Bach $300 Yearly Dishwasher, fi replace. U t lls pd 4 -l!P M . cathedral c e i l i n g. Managc r 675·5112 ba lconies, pool. s pa. ---patios. NO PETS. S395 • • • 1'2 Blk to ocean, 2 BR mo Jl2 Ba, fplc, encl gar LR. adlts. no pets. $.S95 63 l ·3888. 645·6822 3 Br 2 Ba. close lo beach. $750. Jacobs Re alty 675-6670 ----eon.a def M.-1822 J br. 2 ba condo. Ftpk . •• ••••••••••••••• • •• ••• gar. romm pool Over 18 Coz) I Br Ap t Frplc. pool onJy S600 + utls. Avl I employed person, no 11 . l A g l K a t h Y smoker Qt pet. $450 mo 646-so9s. eves 646-5489 ' ~.,i~sl. deµ . ref':, WesbMtstw 3291 ------2Br. IBa, f11>lc, ne w cpts, • •••••••••••••••••••••• :"Jew poolside 3Br 2 sty t wnhs e . volle y ball, Brookhursl & Bolsa $.S90 m o 17 14 ) 964 ·206 8, 531·7952 CaRdaml1l-.s ~ 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• drapes. patios. carport. no pets. SS50. 700. J7 l.J ---CostaMna 3124 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEWL Y DECOR. I Br. gas pd. en cl ~ar, dtwasher. pool Adults. 642.5073 MESA PINES 2650 HAR LA AVE S PMC S49·2447 2 Br. Crpts, cl.rps, bit-ms, gar. AdJts, DO pets. $400 mo. lllO Vict or ia St. ~·1367 Aft5PM. Quiet, ntimate 2·s lory to wnhouse a pt/condo 2br. 21,,ba. accessible to ever) freewa) from Harbor area. Greenbelt ror only 14 units. 2·car garage w r re m ot e. & other niceties $.S75 for yr's lease. 552.3400 Wd brg 2 Br I Ba condo nr lake Ava il 11 I H Firwood $525. 559·8735, 840-6597or 213/3J.'J 7715 THE LAKES Large 2Br condo on lake w 'deck, patio. attached 2car gar, selr cleaning oven. r e fri g , W D hookups. pool. spa, ten· n1 s etc S600 m o 731..os:.>. 3141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• llr, 1'2 blks rrom bea ch. S38S ut1l mcl 494-1966. "94·3196 NEW lbr, Iba. lrg deck, oceanview. close to bch. $485, 494.7079 ......... leoch 1169 ••••••••••••••••••••••• - New 2bdrm &r den condo, 2 Ir. 1 la ~t Newport Beach/Santa Ana Country Club a.rea, Newly decor. as pd, adults, no pets. $700. encl gar, pool, d twasher. RE ~ l T 0 RS 998-66M eves. Adults. 642.5073 2 bd ho use. $450 2 bd duplex $470, 333 E. 21 C.M 645·8103. Eas tside I Br. $200, wood cabinets & beam ceil· ings, small but cozy. 642-9450. PAllllWPORT C~YCLUI UVIMG Singlea. 111:2 bedroom apts, 'townhouses. UdolsleL..oM COSTA MESA 2 BR 2'h l lrTonh•• Woodbridge, 5br, ram rm. Thia warm. comfon able Ba, 2 car gar & fireplace. Newll decor. gas pd .. "THE SEVILLE" From 1448 644· 1900 Bachelor. Park Newpon. und I \\1. ""' t 1.'tllj) lll_Y ocean view, S425. Can rum 955·2689 2 Br I Ba 30' lo bt:ach t:tib pd ~ Property House 642 3850, 642-JOW Nr lloag Hosp Light & airy 2 br. 2 ba, d111 rm. lndry hooku)J!>. !(ar. S.i!!5 &t2 662!1 Unique 2 br. upper. :1 d e l'k s t-n«I <! i:<1 1' garage. l>uilt ms &. frpl(' llfi4QhSLl)<l5 7.5i:L\l-{1 WF:STCLI Fl-:I Hr t «111tl11 New interwr Actulls nu pets $.525 m J fi7J 6640 E X Jo: (' t; T I V !-. p l'.: N T II () l1 s F: Versa1lles--Otean 1·1ew All new deror. 2 kH 2 Bu (pie, g uarded commun1 t ,. + all ;imenilll·s S750 mo lease A1 ail 1mmed Agt 760-8617 Oceanfronl 4 br upper un it. Yrly rent al f''U rn or unfum. Agt. 675·6160 S. C..,_nte 3876 ..•.•.•••.............. Beachfront. deluxe. l'On do. New. 2br. 2ba. $G(JU lease lJ.J.12.2024 S-J-. Caplsfrafto 3878 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• s..-r.--. J 1c111rnm;.tc:.c.11 c h .1~\ 752-9475 Will share 1"\ µlu'>ll 111 lt:\·el H B home frph· rm rro, S26.'> rn1 1111 I ,ill R 11 a, 531>-80!111 Xtra Ir~ home· I 11 '111 W !>IUJt•lll • :! Ill J\ a ll Nr ()('l' llulo Jl.J rn·ll fi7~Ali!Ji aft ft .'llewpl .\pt I•• 'har•· :hilh .SI ~1 F \11111 ,11111k1 I S:t~5 nl•> 1111'itl 111 1), fli.5 !Jli7!1 W11rkinj.! :\luthn w I '1 old lo i hr h:.l' w "'""" S275 mo '''l'' ~ wkn1h 1;41; ~I \lal i'1:r~1>11 t" 111 ,.,,. 11r !'> C l'IJ1J l· ·r ,., ··n111i.i-. 556 'llllf, l'lean c1111•1 11•1111 .. c" W<Jrkin~ w1Jrrnn "'Jllh'<I lo !>hart: QU•t-1 llunt Ill gt on ll:JrD>r ,1 n ,, ,j µt "' 'amt-~llJ • ulll ~ICI 2182 Femalt: wanletl Ir• ''•·•H' J bllrm. :!12 b,1th '"""" 111 'l/ewporl with µ11111. Jacuzzi, tenn1~. l'll' ('~II after 5 :lel µm. li42 i2!1-1 Eruoy h\'tn~ 1n ,, plu'-h Waterfront ltc1nJ<• "'1th boat & dock 111 llunt ington Harbour It "., for 11 Foxy Lady or Cl a \~) Guy, 21 ·Kl IS46-4t25 Male roommate over 2.5 to shr lg home m <.;M . S265 + "2 ut.il. 549-3516 DANA P1'2To8 Room Ofr&Comml •:.price from S245 mo !n5 1120 l'1IM L>t•lu.''' Suite~. LSOO "I ft Ar. ampl pkg. llt il pd :.!~:l!l 1-; l''>I llw y , li7'i l~MIO BEST RATE In NEWPORT BEACH D.tu:xe Office Space 700 to 3000 Sq. Ft. • .l i1n11onal S1·rv1t<' & I td1tw~ l111'111ded •r\rl1.11·c·nl to .\Jqmrt & 1(1•,laurant How • \c c , . .., lo :i M a1or Vr r•c•w:a~,., 833-8813 l'r11111 1·11rn<·r l•Jt· Up lo I ·,i,1 ''I fl 1-\111 service, 111111lt•rn i.tlt1 ,., bldg. 1;.11, v:o.1 AttefttiOtl Doctors! L11111u1· frl'I' ~landing, "''II .111p111nlt.o;I medical hid!! lornlt'll 111 heart or II II h tn'.1tfl'lf:nt rms, X H.,1 rm l1u'9ness ofrice. lar~i: re• l'l'l•on rm + pvt 11H1t 1• area Available . l'all t•l<la1 rur appt to 1n:u c :\RPET ljlt} 1351 LUXURY OFFICE lmme1I •JC'cupanry. 2800 :.11 rt Ste f!f II offices + r unfer\•ncc & reception Koll t't-nter. Newport Oc h Conlacl Ann Ha r vey (213! 556 2000 ------ din rm. 3ba. air. month· home is close to tennis Adults only complex. ed n c I a r . ·AS o 1 o I . -month no ts -1c and beaAb•s. W1'th 3 _67_5-_smo ___ • _____ , t waaher. u t s . • pe . -,,, .. ~ 6'2-S073 "-:StHIQIZ. Bdnm, 3 Ba, den and L ..... -.Lo 2bd 2,Lb ....:..;;;....;....;_; _____ _ 2 Br. w /gar. l i,o. Ba. AdJta. cpts drps, bttn.s. focd yd., water pd. 83S-fl20 E . Bluff, 2 br. 2'h ba, frplc, 2 car encl. au. m5/mo. 640-S2ll New 162 bdr::ift':llrY adult apta in 14 plans from tu.5, 2 bdrm f.rom "505 + pools. tennis. waterfalls. ponds' Gas for cooking & heatin~ paid. From San Diego Frwy drive North o n Beach to McFadden then West on McFadden lo Seaw ind Vill a e . Fem Pref t.o Shr 3br. 2ba hie CdM_ Call Anytime 844-2755 '"THE" EXECUTIVE SUITE Full service offices in Newport Center M0-54'10 ~t/Leue 3.000 sq. ft.. JSZS Wc:at:fleld rormaJ dining room . it of-...,. o.vnuu , rm, '7 a. P'erl.ct 2Aar 2ba HOME FOR RENT rers a perfect blend of 2 car ga.r, frplc. dish .,, ... _ d h t d llOOsqft,fplc,lndry ~ DUTm S650. yard <Gn family comfort and easy was er. crp s. r ps, garage. Family please. entertaining. S1200 mo pool, jac. 645·8986 o r ~h~;~c~~~· Klds & pets welcome. 67).1020 641·~ Call "364-2566 or 973-2971 ~~~~~~~~~~j 2Br. 2Ba, Laguna Niguel, $410.$46.5. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. l ;.:.__.;; .. -=....'..;.•.;,.DO~fee...., • ...,.. ____ 1 0 ,...•g• patio pool v..rv ...1'001, laundry rm, C'1l_ts, Lovely 3Br twnhff i ~-N pets ' dlts' $500_.,, drps. Adults only. Cat Deerfield Exec Home. Newport Heights. 2•,,ea. ruce. o . a . OK TSLM 603 2500 If 4 BR 3 b 3 mo •"""' ,,,..... . gmt. 642· l . s a, yrs frplc, & pool. Newly de· __ ._......-.-___ • ___ _. new, full rec. are a . c orate d . 1750/m o . Toqha••• IMS/mo. 675-9919 645-4955 or645-4834. U.fw ... d 21619-F Santa Ana $390. VILLA IALIOA New 2 Br. l Ba. La undry New Lwtwy 2Br Condo. hook-up, garage, front Full Security under · yard +pat.io. Adults, no ground partdng, Cagney pet.s.1495.645-7300 Lane, S77Stmo. 675·3007. 188 ADULT A ~BLUPT 1 br. sf). (714 )893-5198. . New crpt & d.rps, beam adult, no pets $46.S mo. ceilings, serv. bar. no 644-4767 Oceanfront for Winter pets, $325. 673·8803. ----------1 Rentals. F\Jmished & un 646-:!0M 1595, 2bdrm. 2ba, lux Con· rum. Broker. 675-4912. Exciting :"cw u,11t eµt m Shanng Mature L'11m pallble Fe m wanted for rm.rote in the N lJ C' .\1 area by 35 yr old l0c:;1I bus10essman om.i: thru vorce. omen w s mall child considered f'ur more info. call Jeff :JI 953·5987 after 6pm Warehouse/office space. Pnme "llewport Business D1 :.trn·t 511' sq rt. 556·29?2 ----NEWPORT HACH Jf.49 Westclirr Dr. Q!!l G~.!!_642-<@!!_ C A N Y 0 N V I E W . Hcwbor View Ho1Rt TURTLEROCK RIDGE. Upgraded 3 BR 2 Ba, 3bdrm, 2Yzba, 3 car gar. mu.st see to appreciate. avalJ immed. 979·2560 or Comm pool, children OK. 851·0610.551-1494. no pets :Avail. now. $795 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRVINE/NORTifWOOD . . FAMILY Ans. ---------do. garden, porch, park· lbr . c pl, drpes. no 1ng, c lubhouse & all children or pets. d /w. amenities. X1nt complex. Share Jbr Hse 10 C.M IOOMI 4000 Pets u.k. Call wkch t!\'C" ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646·9819 3 orflces available. Great locat io n o n Lido Perunsula. 400 sq .ft ., 290 sq fl. 246sq.ft Call Jack for info 675·8036 l&n'ALS 2br,2ba 3br. 2ba $700 $750 $750 Jbr. 21,;ba 4br, 2ba 4+B.2~ba $750-$825 $900 \~ONDO Heritage Park. ~. l ,,...ba, 2 sty. patio ~$600/mo. 1· 714-985-9379 mo. Agt. 962·6609 I la rbor View Home. 2021 Port Prove n ce, ne w crpts, new cl.rps, $795, no p e t s . Mi sso ur i. (3l4 )536-2134. ON THE BAY· 2 Bdrm. 2 ba w/POOL. Security. S9501mo. THILAICIS Corner loft, Ibid.rm, UP· graded, pool, jac, sauna, tennis. $500/mo. Call 544·1434. ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEANFRONT, Winter. 2bdrm, nicely furn, S.S95 incl util. 640·5592 o r 675· 7673 after 6pm. SECURITY CONDO. 2 Balboa IM, Oceanfront. Bdrm. 2 ba. $650/mo Winter rates. 990 up wk. OCEAN VIEW . Clean and neat 2 Bdrm, 2 ba w 1frplc. Secunty patio S650 mo. Waterfront Homes Inc 631-1400 For info call 675-8740 2br. Iba, close to bay & beach $400/mo 673'MJS or 998·0768 -.fter5pm 3 Br. 3 Ba. E xclusive Con· ~_;___.:. _______ , do. Pool, tennis, etc. S850. Oceanfront luxurious 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2 Garages. Winter. llOO. 640-4784 Woodbridge 2br, close to Pro pert y H o u se. park, pool & school. 642·3850. 1, blk to beach, newly re· dee, yrly, immed, dlx w/frplc. 2 br. 2 ba, SS80. 3 br. 2 ba. $700. 675-8881 an 5. Fenced y rd, $515/m o 551-2554. 2 br. 2 ba Wstcliff condo. ----------1 pool, frplc, apples, SS25. *WOODBRIDGE CONDO Days 546·2750/e ves 2 bdrm, l ba, WINTER '3br. l..,,ba, pool tennis. 640-4388. RENTAL, heated pool, &id Unit. l650. 640-0547 LUXURIOUS 4 Br CON· steps to bay• beach , ••'Br. 2 Ba. Carpets, DO! Newport Crest: ferry. '425. Call eves d r apes. built-i n s . Spacious family home biS..187l :days673·1900 Gardener. $750. Ca 11 with view! Tennis, pool, Steps to ba y, 2 Br .~ etc. One yr lse. S950. Tom bayview. deck & gar. ELEGANT L a k es Rainey. 549-99Sl, 548·2714 $600. Jacobs Really. .townbome, 2bd.rm, a ir, Big Canyon Twnhse, tux _67 __ 5-667_0 _____ _ frplc. rec rac ililies, 2bdrm, 2ba. spectacular CostaMIM 1724 adulta, oopeta, avail Oct. golf course. Ii lake view. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'ti . M25/mo. 551·4654 sep 2 car gar, tennis, SUSCASITAS fvet. pool, jac. Lse S950/mo. f\Jrn 1 br. apt. 1325 Ii up. 644·3'16. Encl. ga.r. Adults. no Newport Shores Canal peta. 2UO Newport Bl. Front, 4bdrm, Jba. newly 541·4988 betwn 8: 30 &r decorated, pool, teDllU. 2 _5_P_M_. ------ blocks to ocean. 962-8683. ..... .... ._.. 17 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NPT HTS. 3br. II yrd, ·FURN. FAlllLY APTS part rum. 9800/mo. utll freaSI IZ.tdJ loci. M.2-3138 eves Brint ad 3 Br. 2 Ba. 2 car gar, o((ulJk.ltcbena Family rm, rrplc, Juat /no leue, utll pd completely renovated. /laundromlt new carpet, drapes, tUe. /maicllervlce OD quiet cul-d e -aac. HA'PENNY INNS Oirclenlnt paid. mYontownAve PCK/Broakhunt. ~ blk US-Otll from beach. Call Debbie toll free l-tOCM22-440t --~~----r _m __ . ...:_. __ -___ -. ..-.... JJ44 ••••••••••••••••••••••• J•t ....... lato lOWD? .................. wttb Ute CIH1Uled Ada. .._ .............. , .................. .... ,.. ..... Newly~ Condo, 1 Br + ofc (or Ind Br>. I Ba. Suaap deck on •tream, AC, dtb .. br. cupart. pool, t.mil, etc. tllO mo. rearly a ... Midi, ..,.U: Avail. Oct ... 911Ml-OUl19"'1111au. Brand new beautiful lrg apt, for famUJes with 1 or 2 chiJdren. Near park. Heat paid. No pets. stove. $350/mo. 645·2462 Harry : 213·839· 1701. or. On Newport Beach. Beach Hotel r oom-s m a II kitchen. 2306 W Ocean· front. $260 & up + S260 sec & depo5il. 673-41:;4 2Br, 2Ba $465 398 W. Wilson. C.M 63t·SS83/548 2408 2 Bdrm House. rernge & 2 Bd.rm, new carpets & paint. separate patio & garage, close to shopping and park. No pets. Child OK. $425. Call 546-5880, ask ror Linda. stove Small child OK. 1 Br w1carport, 724 James ~-548 ~7 _ St $310 64&6725 or agt 2 Bd rm Ne w pain t , dra pes , t c h ild OK Rernge, no pets $36.S mtJ Sie rra Mgmt Co 641·1324 Spac1ou.s r am1ly 3 bdrm 2 ba. $395 Playground & pool 548 9556 rrom 12·7PM 3 Br 2 Ba Near OCC" S4SO mo Upper a pt. 641-8657 2bd.rm, 2ba condo. near SC. Plaza. S435/mo. 213·693·4690after 5pm. _ 640-9900. l\sk for Faye. me8tiBJlll AIARTMINTS Beautiful garden apts Pool & spa. Adults. no pets. Bach. $330 1 Br $385 161 E. 18th. 642-{g';6 2 Br. 1 Ba. $435 2 Br. 2 Ba. $455-$465 398 W. Wilson, 631·5583 fice: 213·278-6400. P e nthou se 1 Br Versailles. New decor . Nr ocean. Lush crt yrd. ftn. Adult. Sec bldg. No pets. FULi rec. fac. Pool, gym . $550 m o Ag t . 76().8617. --------- 2br, 2ba, Westclitr. pool. frplc, adults, no pets. 1475/mo. 64S-0302 VERSAILLES Lux Jr. lbr, w trefirig. view. sec bldg, 1435 760-8390 Bach. Steps to beach. S300. Uli.ls. paid. Proper- t y Ho us e 642 3850 , 642-1010. Newport Cres t. 2Br, l ,,...Ba, ocean view, W /D, Laguna Beach Motor Inn. 985 No Pacific Coast Hwy. Laguna Bcarh Daily, Weekly Kitchen available. Low winter rates. 494 5294 Empl man O\er 30, kit pn v. S1751rm Call ad = 342. 642·4:.xl, 24 hrs Room with k1ll'hen pn\ Ne ar b us & shopping center. Adults only Eves 6-9:30or wltnds. 962·7520 Luxurious Room abo,·e garage for rnet 1culous male. nonsmkr . maid ser vice 543.7197 2 car gar. Pool, s pa, F'_r_e_e --r e_n_t-lo sin gle sauna.1625. 67S-38S4. r emale in return for WES TCLI FF VILLA: companionship and 1ery I nd a re!>p e;,i .. , ~om)! m ale to :.hn• I 1! II ll hme, o wn ba l.111rl ;i 1147-!'1255 WOODBRIOli E ._,h,u t· new 2 br, 2 h:1 hurrn.• Pools. bo3ll>, Jar·uu 1 & trails. S275 mo t-uul Days 85i IJJO. or 0-i.1 v•,.!•I rem roommate to s hr .:!lir apt Bal Pen nc:<I It• ha 1 &ocn ~nu , • 11111 :>SS 2189 Garoqes for•ettt 4350 • •••••••••••••••••••••• IOx20' Gar Storage onl~ Costa Mesa s.io mo l'a II l 5pm.63&4120 W \NTEU (;ara.:e fo1 light storage ('M NU a rea Cont a<'I J u t.I \ 675·9490, Mon thru Fr;, 8 .30to5 CLEAN&SAVE 2 Bedroom in super loca · lion. Carpeted. Adult. no pets. $350 mo. 568 W. Wilson. caU 646-4477. 3Br. 2Ba upper 4 plex, HHO D. Valencia, no pets MIO mo. 545· 7983 2br, 2ba, patios, frplc, lig ht ho usek eep i ng . On Balboa Peninsula nl'Xt single level. $700 Carol ~-2850 to Fun Zone (Ill' ~x20• 1) 3126 • •••••••••••••••••••••• _67_5-_5390 _______ -1 I Bd r + Ba th. P o o I 673·2943. H73 3930 Ocean view studio + garage. $000. l mile to beach & harbor. Agent 496-5980 THE BLUFFS: Ne wly Jacuzu, C.D.M. $200 + ----- Decor, Split Lvl 3br, 2ba, Sec Dep. 640-8234 Office ....... 4400 Xtra Lsp IOOlll Clean, quiet, l Br I Ba, no kids/pets. $250/mo. Call Craig. 631·1..266. 2 Br 1 Ba condo. newly de· corated, Mesa Verde. Avail. immed. Rers . $495. Agt. 979-6896 $480 2 Br . 2 B a . DUPLEX: Xlra lge 38r 2ba lower. Plush cpts & d.rps. Fenced yard, some ocn vu, close to bch Ir shop!. 1185. Ph 496-1490, 4119-2237 $100 .... ..,. s un deck. $835. Carol 675-5930 E~TBLUFF. Spacious custom 2br, 2ba, dishw., patio, $61.S, n o pe t 631·2029. Beaut. 2br. Npl Hts open beam. frplc, etc. $490. Adulta DO pets 642-'T74S Completely furn sm I rm bitch, POOi, atta1:h~ gar, S32S ulil incl. 645-2663 Avail now I lovely rooms & balcony w /pvt bath. kitchen priv. For mature prof. person S300 mo. 1st + last S75 d eaning dep. 675-5533, 645-6499. Townhouse. fireplace , near new, alJ bulll-lns, patio/yard. lmmed. oc- cupaMy . TSL Mgmt. 642·6221 2 bdrm. 1 ba. with SUD· deck && large prv. _p11tlo area. Enclsd aarage. :MMl Alta Vista, 496-3354 or496-923> r VecaH. a.t~s 4250 Versailles penthouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• studio condo, adult.a only. "CAlJ FORNlA .. no pets, lux 1uarded community with pool, sp a . gym, s aunas ' Palm Springs 1:170-$445. 1 lr2 Br. Apts. Ir l br. 1 ba. ground apt, Townhouse. Near new, fenced yard, no children. sky Uthl, all built ins, 1325/mo, 861·8437 after fireplace, patio/yard. 5Pll. c lubhouse. Min from Condominium Rentals beach. '50(). Agt 768-sec>o, lmmed. occupancy. TSL .......... .._.. 3140 _M_.::l _m_l_. 642 __ ·94_12____ ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 2 Br. Condo near SC Bachelor apt. Avail now, Plaaa, SA. Pool. spa. util pd. $810/Mo. Call •·No pets. 5'9·3232 or 538-3347or538-lcm 841-1480. 770-2313. Venallles·l Br, security, c lose to everyth in1. taOO/moSteve. 957·1900 MIAIUACM Lp a br, t ba upper apt. No peta. l'1CIO m o. Agt, 87Hl70 Very lartte 2 Bdrm, new S'75, 2 br, 2250 Canyon, cpta/drpe. Patio. Gar, Apl..A (cGner Canyon... ~ oac. ~7-4IOI Wlllon>. D1·85 2 BR 2 Ba condo, wood 6iarnlq rp&c, new paint. 2 Br. 2 Ba. ln 4-Plex. drpl, cpta. Dbl car .• lae ~clean 2 Br. "25. En c I 1 d 1 a r a 1 e . patio. nr Hoa1 Ho1p. Fenced i::-utlll paid. Wuner/Bolu Chica Adha, no peg, 11575. aft Rehtt. II chlld OK. area .•. M0-55CM. 4PM,131·11211 No peta.. lllO Wallace. ......,•Mf.Jeell Super claan , walk 10 Udo.._,,.,.., a Br, den. 2 --------1 baeeb, 1• .acl, lbdrm· Ba, h'ple, sandy beach ftld wtalll "'9 wut ill lbdrm, call Andy SUOO/mo.nly. Olla, l'Ua&Cl..uledl. •mo. 11MUO Luxury Coodominlums. Completely f\Jmished. Country Club Setting. Goll, Tennls Avail able at Special Rates forourCUenls only. Weekly, Monthly and Weekend Rentals. Call: C714)328·8911 CA111£DRALCANYON COUNTRY CLUB ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTCUFF BLDG NfWPORT BEACH , ,,, ,., W•\I "" r h "" .ind ,,,,,.,. Awtt ./a~c-111.,...,.. :/ c....,.... , .... , ... , .. ./.MutlC ./1 ........ ,/'..Cl •-OMCOOtlet ./~o• -.iu ,/ ...... ~-.... Call Mr How 11rd 6 4 5 6101 1617 Westclltr. N 8 . Want financial Inst 1000s. f 1st. noor. Agent S41·5032. WATERFRONT & PENTHOUSE SUITES 210 to JOOO 'tt-Ft. rr ............. Oc... ..... w ...... 1714)671-1 .. 2 sum DEAL lOOOSa. Ft. •Will Bui Id;( Su.It • 1 ma. Free Rent nex.lble P1oorpl1n Udo Marina Villaae 17141671-1662 Nwn FRONT AGE RENTALS 2 Rental Spl!('l'S Approx. 550 sq. rt & up. includmg Ullls. $3.'i(I & $450 245-0 \le w1iort lJI vd t'osl a Me:.u. St-e Manager. PRIME HUNTINGTON IEACH Uf11cc spal't! available ~ 500 sq ft Su1t1:s Call i 14 891 7951 'ilurc nr off1t•e, easts1de L'ost..1 :\tesa $175 mo i;.11 ~ask for Al ..,lfll?lc• (11 tri ple urr1ccs a\.1 1I Jlll~ w f ul l :.erl'IU.''· CXCl'Ul1ve al· mos ph(·re. h"' at ed '" lnme & Ncwµo11. Beach. l'all R11a i52 till!/! AJ RPORT ,\RE,\ Birch & Bnstol ;Q.5 to 750 sq rt F'rum $200. No lease re· qw~ c~11 ss1 IOIO P't.USHJPVT. for R E or invest ad- viser IO dix bldg, nr 0 .C Airpon. Servs avail. 97t.aS33 Dove Street orfice loca· tion Approx. r.oo sq. rt. 2 .. rooms t-stor age Coffee room S550 m o. Days 1151 1195. Eves 491-4142 Av 11 I I Nov I s l . or sooner. San Clemente· Individual bath & air cond. S200.S22.'i mo 673 3022. 492 .. u 21. l'l.AZA EX ECtrrfV E SUITES "There 1s a diHerence." 714/752-0234 2082 Michelson Dr. •2132 2021 OusmCl>s <,;ntr 11213 --~ ----'-'""••...t .. 4450 • •••••••••••••••••••••• For store 41 orlice space at reasonable rattJS. 500 lo 2700 S4I Ft. MESA VERDEbR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E, C.M. S~S.4123 --~ -~~-STORE SPACE for lease. 7~sq. ft. Avail now. 1500 sq ft avail. Uc l l$th. Negotiable terms. Cout EqulUes. 2L'll-720Z . Balboa Island lease for sale 673-7372 I I I I I - ~ ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blabyalttina. m y honw iwar Vlrtuna, I }'r • up C.M 642..a Luv1n1 Mother wlll bab)•111 In my hOtnt' Reft'r • hospital n u1 M ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• We~ <::a'lM't CWiuwn sa .... cle.tn • uphob Won 1uar 'l'ruck mount lWl tU :me CARPET CLF.A.'~lNG 30' ; "" 631 -4402 J 1tr k Waltlh ("rpt C'I) ............. ~········· Y.1..£<..'TIUl I \ 'll l'l'l rt"<J n p t free 11"''"'" 1111 larse or •nw II Jut>. U t IDT:.!54 67 J O.lS!I l::lt('\rlt'UUI •Ill.II II Join b1a Juhi. .. ,1,11111 1• Uc fJIM' It 111,u1 '"' Wu 1 I. GiararttL'l'll K llj !1'11161 .......... ••••·•••··············· t-;Jip t.u111w 1 , .. ,11111..11 .. 1 j former 1'f>11t1 "'tu• ' .• II (or r»t"' utl r• i.1,1,•1111.11 & 1'Qmmt·n•11tl I 1111.•· '"" 48.l 489tl ........ " .. ......................... ......................... . c .. 1J .. n 1nic S er vin: 2 \' o u n II M e n Vi.rlii., dr,.muj.llJ. lawru1, WrraJIOGllt11litle..'1 have rompwh1 )d m..mt Trtt ~T 4WD Trurll. Yard Ill trimming 1-'rt>e c11t Tree rnalnt eqUip. Can K'\:'>1'271 do 1rn y th lnf(I Call ...............••••.••• .. A•••nt•10 ••I 1111 1r1.1rkcl 1r111 .. , ... ·uth 1' w 1ood1a •·•11\'n t•nt·c will y rtillt\' 1111n1 .,,,h , 111ll tk~t1ng •Ml•· 1\'lt•-O. nutio :1l)Ol8, 111·w .. 1. u .. rli, Ill uchun·:i u111J I' H Call tl'f!J 1230 *~~ ALL AROUND HAULIN<i IT Tl'Ul'k fo'rt:•: 1-:.St INSURED ~31164 A 0 li I N ' S H 0 U S .. ; CJ..,k;. NING SEHVICE fo"or .. thoroughly d ean h6e~7 Brickwork, small Job11 Newport, Ulslll Men & lrvtne 17S.317Sevei. ---------U.cret4r, 8nck & Block, Slone Ill StUCt."O Stdm~ Concrete All lYJM!S of t.:OOcn.'le Work m:; 4260 l.1c'd .. Bonded Mo•llMJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving' The St arving College Students ha vc· Rrown Lie T12-i 43G. &u'f!!_l(~ ser v. 64 1-84?1 WATl::RFRONT PAINTING l-'1ne 1•ui.1.orn work, exp. & µrur Very rsnbl. L1 c'd. t:all Mark bi 3 3..169 'alMlftcJ/Si"'I .....•.•.•...•......... E L t; t" T K 0 S 1' A T I ' ATOMIZING Auto Parts, Office fo'urn. Wrought .J r-o R.e i.-t0"0 n a l> I t' fl.46.ll6.S2, 831 7:;:n. I ·5 ------- C Rt-:ATIVl': !::'I VIRONMl-:.NTS Construct1011. S tltllllr tl Glua Rem1011.-1, S~u1< 496-31211 A K T S (' A R P f; 'I' S~VWF. KA ;\RT fr '11 \Rl<:N S WO RKROOM Cua.tom Jrap.•nf",. ~)\'~n woocb. m1r11 blind ... 11.'Hdot'll •'tMStom c.arpt-1 1ns1.Uh1 11u1u, ttww ur •·uun. t~ p1ur . re:\lr«'l1·h u~l ~' am cle..uun11. a ti.u uv hol11td') df'IUllllll If, \ r. ""'"'r :lO', ,,(f ti31 &i47 '--llMJ ••••••.•............... l '115t(1n1 woaAI ( "'" • ' ,\, It• vair:. 1\1 lh ,, 111 11~"1 t{cn 117\ 71.1 MORE MONEY t-'11r '"u 1 ..... 1" delA, in t.·11~1 111Jlut1ot1, I hroul(h rlt'w 1 •r.1t•~'11'11al luurn 11J I plJ11ntll(I: W11huul 11l1t1•1111111n , .i.11 Cur dNa1b \ -\1 "i'l'l A H'I' < '() t7l<h ~1!\.'tl'1 ,.......,,...,...,..CJ L>ept:ndable, uwn t r1.1nb. ••••••••••••••••••••••• home111offict:s, this isrca Dave'i. Palllting, st·rvmii 8'$6·8V56 area 9 yn;, mns l r(.llls Insur~. hl''t1 5Hil·842.'.I fllast• /Repair ....•....•.......••.•.. ~tucl.'o & Plaster P all'h, no Jnb too ~m . qwck & <:le1111 !)4:;4203. 645·4199 CUSTOM LN'l't::HIUK CARPt-:.NTH \' I'\ I'll c .... /C..,.... •••••.....•..•......... G•••oliMJ ..•.••..•.............. , L.»dY ~ 'e.x!Jt!r to clean y<HH ho m .:i u..,nbl 646-00Vl 751 0.183 lluu1>eclean1ng + + Fine ext ml pamtmi: by Richard S111or c;t ht· 111.S. Try ~ ~ ~15. 21 hrs Neat palrhes & textures Free Est. 193.1439 • Patct. Plasten"CJ • B; Jay 1..tl~ Cemt!nl ""ucli. of .ill k1mb r11ll01>, Sldc14 lllb , lint k "'rf'e t"Sl ~. tn57 c .... ..,. 1Haulinq I ~~~ .......• ••.•• I.a w n ' 1\1 •• l.t1n•i , ,,111 I-,,.,, I-.i ll••n1< .. 1111:1 t'l•"'nl tS \ •~ iA2 ..-<e1.i•1 h ·1" rni.: Dcj)('n whJl" Call Sutls 'n Stuff for J etails 842·~1 1'J1nt1n1i: & f>JIJ(?nn~ Prof wurk for ce est Rsnbl Ste'" :>47 -1~1 All]°)P\'S 5'i8 7113 ..... "'9 B Wilson & Son ... pat111.:. rm add. reinJdel plan-. 1-'r~ est. :JO ) N ~xp 1.1~· IJalt• W l'h1l11 p1> C'Oll nete, nw~tlf)f) '\in JOI• too,.mall ~ 2t62 7487 Bonded 646.1740 ~ 6Cllt5 CMWC_... ..........••........... -----C.,...S.niu ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 11~111. 1...:11 l.."b-1 • VHY LOW f'RICES * HauliftcJ t>n I Jnd,tJJ•C rtaJIH I••••••••••••••••••••••• l t'f\aJ)\I' "' tt" l':.li1118 h.•:. :!1 yr l'll.JA'l lt 'lh • (;l'\111-:l' I l.wll111t & L>11m J1 Johs 549 2UI~ I •\ le fnr llanJ~ ~!l l:jijl\ G:.rdeninit l.J1otl,, .i1w1i.:I 11 1 n 1• n uµ l'vn •1, ~ ,IU 11\1 \ I ol THI-. \1ACIF:LS. 1\µl5 & Hses l'lecuung & bw.1 n1•:.' t>ldgs Call Carol afte r 4 JO pm 646-650'l -----Landsc~ ·····••···••··········· Yard clean ups, renova lutcr t::xte r Pa11.r 1n.i 1''ast, df1n ..-nt 10 • r~ exp Rock bullom vn n·~ tireg. 979-9ii21 ··•····•·····•···••··•• :"l e w c onstruc t 1011, re inorlt::I, 1 ep1 pl' S I ab leJk:., elc1·t 1 on1l'a lh loc·a t t:d ,~ re p a 11 ed. tlrains cleared 'I op I lat ~20.10 P.O. loll Rentab Shampoo & steam Clt'Jn Color bnghtencrs , wht cpts JO min bleach. Clean liv, din rm. hall SJ~ A~g rm $7.50. couch SIO, t hr $5. Guar eli m pet odor Cpt repair. ~ yrs e xpr. Do work myself. Rd:.. 531·0101 Lit· resp()l\S1ble bab)!Ol ter. ruU ume Mon-Fri for d11~ work1n11 mulhen. on ly lnCa.uLS thru 3 yrs CM. 642-0728 ------Confnldor T r ~e ri111ni 111 ,.e c 1·1t•t1· t•·nw~al l>umµ Remo' al. '111Jor <'l1•J11 , 1 r , 11 , • e r" 1 I • ,,. I u I .. ,, I I " ~ U jJ .. t l'~ •' I tu \ h I:: ';f;,Jll j}CIL.,1\'t' 75:! l,J l!I t 1ons & rei;e1o'<lings Ref~ Call t~r e enbel t I ,;mdse a pint:. 851-U 12!1 Little is liCJ!! PAJNTll'\C ~ Yr.. ~:,11 In NA &CJ~ arPa.!t I in S mall. m~ fJI He~ ,111· 'lllllll ! 67J 1A'i7 Hon ··········•••·•········ l .:.e Our Addre'>S P<iinl1n~ inr t•r t-lltl'1 It• For 'i our Busmess rates, qu;,ht \ .,.orl-. 11n J ~1te ur Rux Number ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mann111g t:onslr Co .. gen contr. foundations to finish. Lie & Ins -661·6200 Have sometbmg to sell? Classified ads do it well Placing )uur l'IJ'i.tl1t•'1 ad 1s so s m111lt' just give us a 1·all o n tlw phone aml we'll hcl11 \Clll word your 11d for fa:.t rt• suits. 642-.56'78. II \l L.J M ; < •• 11o..,,1.i ,,n,·r 311m :.t ~>'1!\ flOltj S.•11 .... 11 h l<A.~ .. : ll 'II llH£1·.Z~: l'l11::.~1rit-d .\,b 642 ~711 Clas:.ifled Ads are rcall} 5ma II · 'J'.H'<>plc lo llt!Oplt·" ~ales caHs with bi~ rt· aders hip and b1~ rc:.ults 1 To µlat•e your cla:.s1f1cd Jd, ('all luday 642·5678 m ed !>t:-r v IS·lll !">ti!l4 111 TllE MAILS IT (:; 6.11i-il49 I 17777 :v1c1 111 Strei l · H' In me 549.4;;i:i The (J:-.te.1 llr;i"" .n thl' Wt:st a Hail) l'tlot 1-EIJ, 1dl~ item .. with a Clu:-.:.1f1ed Acl 1A2 ;.{i7tl. !Jail~ Pilot < 'lass1fied Ad. ............... 4450 """·-· 5 I 00 Personals 5350 ~°!!~.-:t: ..... ~~?.~ !!~.~.a:.t~.~ ..... !!.~~ Help Wanted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Oppart..lty 50 I 5 Prime Harbor Blvd. C.M. 110· frontage 2000' bldg. suitable for car l ot. xestairant, etc. S48· 1156 or 67S.22J3 eves Newport Modem Store or Ofc, nr pcltit ofc. $450, S48 sq ft. 213/477. 7001 ................. 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1800 sq. ft. 2 Front offices. 2 Baths. Large rear shop area & door. $495 mo 1775 Whittier Ave. C.M 540·9352 Days. 646-0681 Eves. ••••••••••••••••••••••• JNVF.STORS WANTED J oin small group In buy · 1ng control o f under valued public co. & in itlating acquisition pro- gram. Steve7141'4fi..7J74 MoMy to Lo.. 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• /NEED /MONEY • FOR LEASE CRfDIT MO KOLL·IRVINE INDUS PROILEM CONDO 2nd & lrdTO loc11u 6200 sq ft w/2.075 of<' 978-6531 /155-1145 space, nr OC Airport Arranged by suo, 220, 3 phase elet·. Coaat ...._ Lo.ts ~1(:~,~.'~·t ~<>;:J __ A_Mi_Mi_1;:;,.ac....;;;...e_B_l'_ok_e_r_ llon·Frl. ' ftml/Leue 3,000 Sq. ft. Warehouse /offl<'e s pac·" Prime Newport Busine!>s 0 1Slrll'l 50< S\I f t 556-2922 1.250 sq rt S395 mo Jol'ont oCfice, large r ear door 1240 Logan St L' M S40 9352 day IHti 06HI eves:- 5500· WAREHOUSE & Of fice » sq ft fronts on Molton Pkw~ n r La ke Forest Dr nr new bldg 951-1~ FOR LEASE KOLL · IRVINE INOUST. CONDO 6.200 sq Ct w 1201:; ofr space. ll0·220 3 1>hast' elec. Nr OC Airport Ask ing 5() per sq fl, 3 yr gross lease Call Huith ~7923 Mon lhru Fri 1300 Sq rt Costa Mesa ~6· per sq ft. 673-!>:WO St.-oge 4550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Storage Space Newport Beach_ 2306 W Ocean front. 673-4154. YOU CAM a SUltlwtTHA BANK 2nd TD's RB>UCIDUns s..tiOl)D ... 7l 4-ll2-5200 - Ask (or Linda F1ynn or Karen Lmn Equal Housing L~nder CASH FAST l s l. 2 n d , 3rd c ol laleratirat1ons. Credit 110 problem , payment to suit $.5,0CX).$2.50,000 +. Open 7 days 8:30·8-.30. Mlc)uefMort. UctftMCI lkr. (7141541-9375 Mort~.Tn11t Dffdi 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sattler Mtg. Co. All types of real estate investments smce 1949_ SpKialu.gift 2ftdTlh 642-2171 545-061 I .••.••................. SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS Anklet Tard; Essay S11t1n· SENO IT Remember the ~ood old days. when .i ,.,ecretur) knew how to takL a l~llcr and the pusl ••fllt•e kn,•w how to SEN[) ITI c .. ,~ 5150 •....•...............•. Need nde. Sari <ifC'mentl.' to l.aguna N1g ti vt liidi.: M F 498·ti806 Lost& fCMtd 5300 ....................... PIU: LAW ~tucfrnl nt'cds Sl.\,ttlO Will flu Jnyth1n~ Ll'J::t l I 11n (11,frn11 a l l 0 \1\1 l'(J li<•X 324:t, .... 11 !f..!tW M~SAGE I lk p:i mperf·1I wrt h .:1 Pt'l ~ttn.11 r L·l a ll 1n.: m:J:.'i:tj..t' b' I:! ul lh<' pr .. 1111.''t ~trb 111 "vutlwrn l' a I ii nr r.1 a .I .1<'u 1. t 1 :>J UJ1;i 1·11 <>11t:n lOum .1 ... n .; 11 •• ,,., a W(•t•k . \IS " ~ 1 '\tlant • ., llt:alth Spa :!112 Harbor Uf\·d, l'tl'la i\h.~a. !HS J4l:l Br 1ng t h1:. ad for you r 'll•'r'1al 1!111 Governess esp for 'an• of boy age 8 ;incl girl al<(..- 4 Mo n Fr i prepa1 e lum·h. laiuutry. r ln their rrru.. s upen1se pl:i M~I have I }r exper Pn\·.i tr- rm board t-Sl ,.4 wli Take ad to ncarE-:.t StJh' EmplO,\ Agcnn llut JOI 677-0IO Help Want4Pd 7 I 00 .......•............... Accuunting Clerk MJt1m l.:1dy for payroll & ex µcn~e repor1 Bank rt· conr 1liationi., q uurtt'rl)' taxe::.. Mu.st bo· ahle to work 1nde pe ndt'nl l} Cos t a M c s,1 arPJ 549.2237 ......•.•.............• J•rofe-.s1onal Th1.:rapcut1t· ----------1 m.1:.~·•J.!1• L11"tl NH Appl uni~. Stcv1• ;l.IX 2fl li Arcounlmg Se111o r :\r1·oui1t111~ l.'l1•rk Gruwin11 food brnkerng<' firm ~eeks s ha rp 1n d1v1dua l l o pt.'r for 111 honkke e p1 ng d uu e~ Minimum 2yrs t•xper in vanous acCUWlt.mg Cwic lions. mcludmg general ledger, ca.sh, & accounts pay able. Fam iliarity with c omputerized ::.y<;tem de1ra hlt' Xl11t Lendtts Pleas ant wo1 k in g environ ment 1n ;'llewport t ·enter offit'l' :"lon·srnoker µrl:'ferrcd :"Jo agent•~ A:.k (•>r the \t·rount1111<( '1 .inJ l!<'r OW !ii ll FOUND ADS ARE FREE l:all: 64~5611 • Found or lost ;J 11t·t" l u 11 I us. We'r e th<> Pt'! l ':tb I ~14 1 739 :9111 j ~l or found " p.-1 ·• L'a 11 I An. i m a I ,\':.1st an t' l'I League 5:r; .!Zi I. 'lio fn' LO S T lr tH1-orn Bi\GKG \M~IU.': Cloa nJ Vi c o f Wai nt•rd;d,· Center Warn,•r l~a<•h !il\'d Hl-:Wt\lll>' tall T he Necrlll•point .I lUff lion 714·&ti! ··:L1.1 Iv !i WST: Small Crec11 UllJt' Pa rrot \111· Lcill.c Park H.,i:.:~~Rn!l:11>1i111:1 11 u j LosL ml):-11\ \\h1t t 1 spayed 1'' <'ill w l'c\'cnt ll. surgery, nr Orang<' & 22nd , C'M 642 7 1ti I 642·3767 LITTLE ANHIES ESCORTS ;,ii rnaJor credit l'ards a r c·epled 5.10-4723 *FOXY LADY* <JI., Al.1.0Nl.Y * 972-1138 * .\I \S~l\Ci .. :SJOW ,\U ~IY~TIC' MJ\.-.,SAG I-: :>.'W! l~Sanla Ana FIRSTLAD-Y Escorl.~s. ·Porty Dane~. • 972-1345. \IC & VISA 1\c•ce pll'd COVER GIRL * OllTCALL * '1;,.'l ll77b MC tVISI\ MERCEDEZ •ESCORTS• 972-9599 24HRS. •• f'OUND I aura dnr pup, rem SI and aril poot.11", blk. fem 'ih C'p h e rol , hlk tan. (Pm llu-;k1l'. rrux. pup, Mk w h fem Newµort Bcarh \nt ma I Sheltt..'T (;.W.JG56 Sf'I HITI 'Al. HEADINGS IOam· IOpm F\t lly Lie 'd 192 T.?9li or -l92·0034. 1815 S, Camino Re al. S an Cle m A if 1 ii o n J I 1 n c-11 m 1• ntoe<le<I '.' If \nu r 'ou '11• mer 21. rall Ans wer Ad i::191 al 642 4300. ~ hr:. llt'r rla) Adm mis trat1vl' A:.s1st l•'a sL pa c·e ll Newport /I r vlnc in vest ment rirm offers career oµpo rtun it y fo r 1n div1c.lual with xlnt sk ills & sound prof experien1•e. Maturity & corp or&le background helpful Xlnt salary & fringe benefits Call Gail ;52.0070 Advertisitr s.s ··········•············ MORGAN NURSES' REGISTRY RN's Mffds LVN's AIDES NEW RATE INCREASE RN's up to S 136.00 LVN's up to $90.00 AIDES up to $58.00 • IOftUS PlmH •Refet'Tal Plons •IMiUrmte• A •ailable •CCMtMllcN A•ailable 7 dcrys wlr. Llc--.d ly: Sttik~ C~o 1,..10,..•nt ACJNCy Act. MORGAN NURSES REGISTRY 1525 ~ Y .... Int, WM ZIJ Cost. MeN. c•. 546-881 I & by s1ltl•r Nl'C'dcd fur Syr old G irl m Newpo rt. Balboa Arc a :\ftt•r School Hours :J 7. 67;, 3(}15 !=''..~'..!'.ung2 & We<>ken<ls BABY S f TT E R , H 0 U S ~ K .. : lo: P t: R :'ilecdt!d for I child, flex hrs . o w11 trans ·ttun t lla rbor He f's n e q 846 llMS trn 0060 Bab)Sltler wantc'(! :J <1f lem oons wk 2 school age children c-a r Prt' (erred Re b 496 114~, Banking 631-1313 ~mking Cap istrano Nallona l B;ink 1s t'Xpanding I mm .. 'tJ upenings for Fa & PT Tellers & New Ac· counts. Exp pre(. yet w1l1111~ to I ra111 Neg. salar) For inter view cdll Bev at 496-8601 B \)IKING , TB.LEllS llU(P'GClYK f'ROOF OPEil. CUU /rYPIST HEW ACCHT ClK • •••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt Post Box Service ntE MAJL ROOM, 24 hr 2800 ECalHwyCdM NB ~or &M-4481 looftRcJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Repair & Reroor All l } pe' i.h1ngle' ro('k i.h11kes l'<lmpa tar fo'ree Cl>l :;.ti~ f'1n Avail. Bt-:r-n-:n BUll.1' Hom· All l}'llt'S, hUl comp tile, shake lied bondt><l m~ F'rt.>e e:.t C<J II 960-!177H ..... ';tee.. .... Lel u1 upgrade that shower, tub, drain oo.rd or entry way. Ceramfo llle improves appear & value of any home QI comm bldg at \!_f"~S cost Free est 6 l'llHes t1ons. (7141842·3020 Trw Senlce . ............•...••. ...,_ .. TREEDESIGN: ;.._: O rnamental pruning , Sculpturing , t oppi,o", Don't Get 'ioukcd. Call thinning. removal, ge n l)oug ,\ 1.11.''d 1·ontr uctor clea~up:. G4fi.. L845_. __ _ who tloc~n·1 t:osl more! BILL'S Al I Lypo•s ut roofs TREE TRIMMING DOUGLAS WAMJ>L.F-:R &CLEANUP. Free est Qfl~G C(J_ Lie. ~103t,af1.4~ - 1139-39'.!b:ti 11.'l.1 l!H U --------r -T~orincj B:tlboa Roofing ( 'o T he ••••••••••••••••••••••• roof1ntl Co for the l'Ou~t Tutor Town-Su• & 1-h ·" ··~I Gel une whilc lob's 1t ':.ho! t.i:Jt;NJ Social Mnius •...•.......•....•••.•• P IHHl 1. F \1 ~ 'J ,. t• cl t 11 t;,J k" f'rl:'e 1•11un't•l111..: l\li (' ll E t l'l.l :\t:: &1!\ l 22:! Tit. •.•.•...•.....•..•..••• < 1-1am1t· T ill' 1nstall<>cl J rn whr>rf• Small JOb:- wd1 ony• :i6() \l'.!ffl If you'vl' nt-vl'r placed a t:lass1f11 .. .od ad. vou'rp in the m1non ty' Try 11 once and sec ho w qwckly you gel rl':-.ults Pho n e 642·.5678 M<tlh, Reading, St.'1enc1· Mus ic. Spanish, Stud> .~ethods Pre·School Colle.:e Calif Creden llals 645-:i176 ~·9570 af tcmoons TypincJ ~nice ...•••................. Fast art urate lypin~ 011 IRM L'orrect 1Sell'Ct rw . other ~ccret aria I work bus iness lett e r s , ,.,, s umcs, cit·. K a r e n 67~·1230 ------ Window CIHninc:J ....•..........•••..... ··Let The Sunshine In·· Call Suns hine Window -Oe.a . .._. W Clllt4Pd 7 I 00 Help W..ted 7 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IOOl<KEErER HJp1dly expantl1ni: C P A firm 1n lrv111c h:i!> pos for 81..pr " n11n J vr~ t'\l>l'I in d vanety of lik1>..: rurwt1ons i:;:!~l l looldc~r l1ubl11· \L·co unl1ni: e x 1>rrience helpful Call bl'lwel'n tl c1 m 1 l a m s.l6 lJSS Clerk / Pharmacy. exp µreferr ed, cosmettcs . itift~ & cards.~· Cieri& /Stock F time, 2 to llPM shirt f'ull benefits. Hi·T1me Liquor, 495 E. 17th. CM ----- CLERIC TYPIST If you are lookmg for a challenJing position. en JUY van ely on the job. & ----------1 want lo work m Newport Oullodts South Coas t ha:-· Beach. we have a job for 1mmed pt!rtnancnt sa le!. ~ou. We need someont' (l(l'>ll11m .. , for our "fluat w110 c an provide good lnJ.! · '>ldff !lours a r..-clerical support for our ~ ._.,!X',·1ull> 1--0n\'Cnie nt for purc hasing dept. Typ~ hou l'Wl\C'> "'llh morn .!Swpm. & lyr previous 1 11 J.! 11 r a r l r r n <1 ,1 n office expt!r. For aµpl ,,, J 1labliul) We arc iilso c all 640 4580 e xt :!112 f f;O f. " l•·nnl! .1l\t•rni~111 C'\'Cll •n,! & \.\ct•k••nd 'alt•:. CLEHI\ TYPIST Rt>sJX1r1 f•1'o1(1on' ~1· x1hll• liri. & Joh Wil l t rain Vlu~I 1mnw<t .-m1>I~ .. ,. d1'>n 11mt work hall day on S:11 .1rt• of1t•rt-<I ( •Jn\l' \I'll Tq,1e 65 15w pm l °.i If lLi JI I he IX'• ,unnt·I I)( Slt•vc. &10-9!1'.Jtl 11\t' \lttn ..,a t IHAM 51':\t & lt'l w; wt•lt•ome ) ou to the UullN'ks Soul h Coast Pla:w fomil). ~~ R.l .. · .... CAfET!tt~ WORKERS 1':111 11rn· :J ~»hr. da \ S>I ~ hr \pµI) N1·.,..port \lt''J I 1111 11·d -.,1'111101 D1,,1 ~Ut1cl ~nice 11157 PIJr e11t 1.1 Ave-r ~ 7f.O :i.r.:1 C.:anv<i!t,,l'rs 1-:xpenent·<' prcfern·d Wall t rain Top pay 2.5 tin. a W(•ck 531 4501 CAREY CHANGE A sut.>1d1ary uf t:: F Hut ton 1s l'Urrently in· len iewinR q ualifie d rersons intcrestl'd in the field of financial plan nlng foull or µart tune S 1.5 000 SlllOUO pa rt t 11ne Fu ll time . unlimited 972·2712 Cashier JR.tail f' T permanent pos1t1on. '<Int benefits t adie!j up· pard s to r e Fa ~h 1on lslantl 1).14 7100 ClERJ<,trYPIST t\1·curate 50 wpm, $800 m o ., lo c ated near I Orange Co. Airport. Call .i. Prankir. 71•1 752 0707 1':0 E ~1 F' COLLEGE STUDENT Garden work in Corona <lei ~a r Ho urs Sdl Ii I JIU Tues 12 ~ S4 Oo ~!:...Refs r~ 7Ji0·87:l:! __ _ Co,,,.,.rciol Loan Officers F u1 our Woodbri1l~c· Branth Banking '"''" req Xlnl s alar}· & benefits apply personnel di rector_ HERITAGE IANIC 721 N. Euclid, Anaheim 991-3860 E.0 .E. ---- COMPAHION/HSKPR ••. De pendable, c~arin )l female for elederly lady Attra ctive sep qrtrs lmmed. 2 11'X>nths assign · ment. Ca ll eves. 494-7617 COOK F\tll time, family slylc cooking. Need mature. dependable person. 40hr. wk. Xlnt. pay. 494·9458 for mterVJew. C-"forT.D.'s American Mtg 953-4141 ..... W..ted 4600 1--------••••••••••••••••••••••• 2nd T D. for sale. J yrs. Wanted in <:osta Mesa or 15%, int only. $24 .300 • LOST Dnl><'rina nn , black & tan 11e u tc red male . "Kt•ll).. Vi c Monarch Summit l>t·t fi REWARD -19:1 42tlR o r 496-9510. 6Gl-31 Ii . •MASSAGE• W<'~kend S pe cia l & ~'l'nrng':. 4 IOpm $1:i per ha lf hr Hut Tub & Sauna Steve's Hair lla p penln,.: 1}16-96.16 Lodin & Gents ESCORTS •97~1621 nw Daily Pilot hds an immediate openinit for a s a les p e r son with newspaper d1!>p la) ud vertis 1ng expe rience Good s a l a ry , c om m1ss1ons & excellent fr- rnge benefits. Excellent growth opportumt ies for a person w1lh career am bitions. Call for appomt mf'nt. 642·4321, exl. 'l77 TB.LEll Ptrmancnt. full lime ;,•~ day w~k. &. fX1rl time Ex pen cnl'e prdcr rf'll. but wlll l'nn.~tdN t•::is h1c r Ing backgrounrJ Typ<' 40Wpm. Xlnl benefit !. & advan <'ement. Ca 11 979-3000. EOE Im m ed -o penings for qualified aµphcants E x per rrq uire d Xln l saJary & henef1ts. C.illSyliva Waters ~">2·6100 BJ.Mk OF IRVIHE ~u<1I Op~~· Emplyr Cashie r r•1,,1t1ons a\ ::i1la ble l loc:alloni. Appl\ 17tll~t·~rt Bl vd C ~1 COOK/HO SEKEEP}:R L1ve·ln Exp'd , OTieihaJ Prcferrable. M or F'. 962·6683, 673-0139 Counter HeJp, P rr. Abo F T ·P t T C'Xper 'd Sandwich Man. Garv's nt:.~ 7:;z.5401 __ ~ Irvine area, 2 or 3 BR, yields 2()%. 96(}. !957 Bkr Found· Jo•riencll} hla t•k house pre fe r red. 3 -===-======== Scotty, male. vie 19th ~ Adults. Xlnt references. Harhor, C M 646 ~13 673-5701 Eves & weekends. WANTED: Garage for light storage. CM /NB area. Contact Judy 675-9490, Mon lhru Fri. 8:30toS Furnished rental wanted. 281' hou.1e or apt. during Nov. Ill Dec. 1980for viail· inl Dr., wife. & child. Contact Vivian Schultz: DM2$4, .. Ul'YSAl.Ote Al•a•c••llh/ PertaR .. 1/ ...... ,...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Now You Can Sell More w llh Dally Pilot PENNY PINCHER .\08 suu Oftl)' sz. Fow1d. !>mall gra y k1tte11 , approx 6 m il old. hluc col lar . Vic Coa~t Hwy ~ Ba ys id e Dr , N .ll 675-1724 Found. Cat. Gray, long · haired fern. Vic l rvirw 552-9257. Found: M yellow Lab. ap· prox. 50 lbs. vie Wa rner I Newland. 848·3160 Found . M whil e Samoyed , N n t ag , Corona Del Mar . 675 7021 Found m ale n o r m a I Cockatiel. Vic. College Parti School ~7 ·ltm. (;11111.>r mfoor appt TOMMY'S <WNF.WPOHT 1-:SCOHT 752.9368 TOUCH A Cl.US ESCOITS ~HRS 752·0817 •GLAMOUR CilRL Escorts. Mo•h DlnMr, O..CIRC) CodrtaH1 771-6671 Ex<'it1ng Entertainment by the King of Comedy Magic Party specialist . 5311.2444, 534. 7312 ·~j:t~ - On.cpCoost Dally ,ilot 330 W. Bay St, C-M Equal Opportun1t}' Employer M /F /H AIDE & COMPANION, rl ept>ndable female, 10 assist middle aged dis :ibled lady by drivlnf.! lo therapy classes. s ho p ping & d a ily chor e s 7 :45AM-S.45PM Mo n Fri Or separate rm • bath for Uve-in. ISlJ.0296 TB.LEIS lllrtpalHefpful Bt·aut' R1t·h~rrl Out>llc tte Salon ha. ... 1mrra:d1a1e o pening for ex pe r . \ cr sa t tie ha irst vli st with sma 11 cllcntclt· Al~o wa11t rnan1r11ris t I assistant ~)(I Newport Cntr Ur. NB li44·6b'71 .,R/JR. ACCT. for r apidly expanding financial firm in Fashion Island. Exper. a must. Daily mput .tr general ledger desired. 759-1515 Boat Carpenter, capable l op quality interior flrushUlg. Sam L. Morse . C~tlERS UTDTEM MARKETS 1''or 2nd & :!rd Shifts We proroote to manage. ment & s ur>erv1s1on Crom w1U1in. WANT i\ CAREl::R? Call 1714) 631-9421 CHRISTMAS SSS Start NOW ' H you ha ve 11 good phone v oic e & c a n work 4hrstdaily, callS43-7957. CHRISTMAS We need help tylng bows & decorating items made !! pot poum. 673-2393. Counter help, 5 day~ a week, Mon thru Fri. 545-4867 Counter Girl needed for d r yl'lea n ers . E x perie nced only. ~ 11 time. 968·3633, ---------Counter help, P rr or F'iT. Kuster's Cleaners, 186 fo~ 16th , 548·4243 ·----- COUPLE W ANTE~ Manage small busim>ss Part·Ume. Will train Call for appt ~3279 ' ....- CUDITCLERI Immediate opening .l or experienced credil clerk w /phone ellperience Good clerical skills es· sent lal. Xlnl. c o benefll!I. 1156/mo. For appt, call Persontliel : a.ta Maa. • clown. _,/IDO. Mut tell •hla month. Ca II collect. _,__ 3 llnes ror 2 days only SI a day , 34c a line. Ad\•erllse one or more Items valued up l o SIOO. E ach additional llnc Is o nly 80c for lhe two da ys. sorrr· n o <'O m mere I a ads a I lowed. C hu1e Your Penny Pincher Ad or u 11e your Ba nk Amerlurd I Vlaa or Matt~ard. LOST grey/white male cat. Female Siamese kit- ten. U.P. Irvine 5-'>2·3823 eves ---------- FOU ND : F e m a le Keesho und, CdM , Ca fn..5733 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sdauh& haluwtlaa 7005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSISTANT MAMA&a Draper's La1una Kills s tore . Mus t be ex perienced in beller women's ready.to-wear and sportswear Apply in person to Manager Ma- ble Austin, 23621 Moulton Parkway P1ua OI' call '188-f622 for appointment. Hom e •'ederal Savings & Loan has 1mmecllate openings for part lime and full lime tellers m the South Orange County branches. We 're looking for applicants with pre vlous commercial bank teller experience. hut will train t he r ig ht persun. Ught typing and ood fiaure aptitude a must. Full benefits and career apparel Sa lary commemurate with ex perience For appoint· ment. ple~t call. Mary Hugar San Juan C.plstr11nu Bunch 71'-"95-2880 54~. • Bookkeeper' __ a._ra. __ Al. __ -ICRT input operator. A<' Exp full t'harge Rook· UU. c urate but w /speed. Co.MS-1843. PW Sale Sudwlch Shop, prime Newpoct Bch loca- tlon, .. 1.000. (714 ) 171-1400, or aft 7PM (213) .,.1117 ror mort tnr ... u. Md to plate ,our !Ml tall FOUND: White fe male cat, 3 It gray spot.~. a. eraY tall. Tame 8*-9506 FOUND: Blae k Lab Retriever, male, abt I yr. V ic Bushard fr Wan.er, F. V. '84..4CJll Coal• Mesa Christian Pre· School now enrolling. In· troducton• olfe_r: '29.50. Wkly. Incl hot lunches. 646 5423. EXPORT• EXPORT• GAAAGS IALIC ads In California Aerobic Dance .._ 0.0, PUot brint h•P· Cl~ now otrerect near pr,......., 'hi,._. your you. P'lrat clu1 frH. dra•l•I card, pt.one 1»-for lhm1 a. loca-..,.tadly. UOnl. Next workshop ror be11ln· ners starts lO·lHIO. For detall1' call West As· soolatflll, 8'2·11838. ~~~~~~~~~- AlltoRoute ADULTS Earn SD>. "50 or more each month. Join The Re1ltter Deliver)' Team. 3AM·5 :80AM. Routes available tn Costa Mesa, Newport Beach Santa Ana. Call 55S·5421, ZAM-tOAM. BABYSITTER FOR • GRANDMA, Weatcllfl area, N.8. Sbort hr1 • ta-•1. ElUeWri&hl LaeunaNliuelBl'anch 714-495-80 llMFD£1Al. SAWISILIAN mn• keeper with great re· Rehr\ster today for local Permanent p rr poeit.bl. ferences wanted for fast temporary assignments Nr OC Ai'lJC)l't. ~ growing ad agency. 557 ._.~ AakforNorma. ... Capable t o work Into ....... CUSTOMERSERVICE future controller posi· • l:xcetrent op'Pe>nuniT) Uon. Contact Kini Ad· r-n. L'n-ror person with 1_v_e_rtls_ln_1~: 644 __ ·7_644_. ___ 1 '-' \• Ii ':. itlraordlnary telepbon« Bookkeeper, Prr. 2days a ICW011AlfVPfRSONN1ts11MCts personality. Outaoln@ week 1n N.B. for new ex. selr·tlarter tor ordea pandin.g Co. Exp l.n sales 37 U 1rc91 StNet desk in 1 ol lart•t J!!OI' office , commissions Ill 111uner electronic ! setting up records ror Me..,.. 1 .._. Salary Ir incentive. T P rompulerftltry. 6'73-2900. ~~~~~!!!!~!!t inc req~re,I. OaJI P n) Gtri. ~puliqueSA-.r/'3. Have -.t.biq you want n.. ,..._ draw tn tho to ..Uf a..ll'8d .. do It U ..,. -W•t. • .a o.117 Pllo we . --··· C1wUMd Ad. ea.Jl'tL,. t CARRY FOX ... AGENc;Y 111 0 Ii . B~~l~h lon ..I s l a nd co . h a s 1 sever al entry -level posllions. IO·key a plus. Exce llent benefits & lols ol .. T o o m f o r advan cement . •"Salaries from 5550. • Call: _,, = tn-ttll 1616 E. 4th St .. S.A. S101ls1 ............. ,. Much sought a fter poai · to director of man n!50Ul'Ce51n beaut. corporate ore. Cl)Jf lge. Npt. Bch. co. • • .Exce l. benerlts & ..;.•tarting s·alary to .$1,250. call; _, .. ~ .... ., 1616 E. 4th St .. S.A. "·;.CIR~ Beaut. waterfront loc .. small co. with • ~x cel. bene fits & )>lenty or room for " 1rowth. Starti ng J"I• salary to ll60. Call· ;,.' .. It • . .. tn-ttll "I 1616E.4thSt .. S.A. , .......... S.C'y. .'. ,'.flo s~orthand nee. · Prestage PoS1t1on in lovely ofc. Must have . .a ome corpo rate ,bact1round or legal .1.•1tper. Starting , •, salary to Sl,350. Call; •• -rs If na.ftU , ... ~ llUI E. «II St., S.A. \r#';..:. 'I • .& ft -.....&. • ti.·. 1. .. ~1•1••·•--:.· l yr. ewper. In accounts dept. OK. Lovely Fashion Isle r.rc. Excel benefits. •Rm. for growth & ; .... tarting salary SB50. I I Call: "'· -JO I ., ..... 1111 E. «h St .• S.A. .-· S.UdalwlJ, •. Lite background ok. l. · .. All positions are within the fi nance area so must Jik(: 1. numbers . Ty ping about 50 , beaut. offices & fantastic benefit.a. Call ;-•. -I 0 • f7Mtll : 1618 E. 4th St .• S.A. S..-.. OfA•r Beautiful S&.L seeks indiv. wiSl&L exp. to join their growing .: .organization offering " •xlnt benefits. good ' )ob s ec ur i t y & ' starting salary t o .. ·' llOO. 11.~•ll Cerry tn.ftll 1616 E. 4thSt., S.A. '···C1 '- t1 ... IL I If BeautJhal ~seeks • $ lndlv. w /e xp. in I, process ing of construct. Ir home Improvement loans c to joln their friendly r , .. starr. Co. offers xlnt · , benefits, 1rowtb .: '"1*ential It starting ~ salary to 950. Cell Cerry • f1J.f9ll ') . I 1816E.4tbSt .• S.A. , ... .~ve aev er al Ht· mona tbroulhout raa1e County for ..qp. telJen w fltlnt Mnellta • starting , ,lalart•. sno.as. "~C • 11 C • r r y .. t?' fJIJftll ~· 1111 I!. «hSt .. S.A. ".'> ... Ill ·y;).aatt:F ML Neb esp . Bran c b --11....,.. for Oraqe "IC o a n t y b a 1 e d 5 1tloa. Xlnt nta . ltartlaa .., ... C I Cerry :-.~· ....... •Hllm&ta8t.,S.A. t • I I ...,,.. ~ 13. 1llO AWP-'/ -from youv ~-~ ~ . A Daily Pilot ad number will appear in your ad we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you call in at your convenience duri.ng office hours and get the responses to your ad ... For more information Answer lltl and to place your ad call 642-5678. • 642-5678 DAILY PILOT HM, W_.... 7100 ...., W~ 7100 Hee, W.twd 7100 Hefp W.twd 7100 Hefp W.... 7100 Hefp WGllc4 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HlfpW9'hd 7100 HetpW..ted 7100 C•h•r~ Good phnne'\llllb a t11h1 \ lo c:ummun1c:au~ a. or IJ•lllk' 1 mUbl l"t>f t-J~ lr'\)t\l\'ll to 'I tm in r I"\ ln e We olfrr 11111••1 •111 .. 1") & tu.LI C'om&>JU\\ huwf1l" ,\WIY nll!OC:4tl /,.·lllt'r ltilllll tlaJe. Lrvlnt' 1>.-hv-l'l1 Mao l \ T 1nlt'' t u homl'"' 111 1'1·'"11011 lkat'h 6 d.i)~ p.-r '"1·~·k 3 :l>AM lo ti OOi\M k~ ~r mo ~49ti7 D&IV•Y PaSON IM M F.0 1 \l ... OPENING Thi! Dli11ly Pilot nl!l!lb u ddl ver) penon for a lar~e ml)tOr route 1n Laguna. South 1.ai.:una B e a c h R l4 l1 &bl e autumob1le 1s a must Hoon M F 3 00-5·00 PM. Sat&Sun6:30 to8 JOAM NO COLLECTING 1':'" cellent earnings for just a couple of hours of .)OUt day For Details call Fos te r O ue ll e l ul 642-4321 0twet-Coast Dailyftllot 330 W. BaySt,C.M Equal Opp Employer MIF Dental ReceptJonist Expen ence m front & back offi ce necessary. 4 day week. Beach area. 645-75111. --------- &.ICTICllC TICH 1'1~Ua11 6 Tmubll" Shf•<Jl tni( ll1 111t.1I • AnttlOt( S' tNlb lut' 11 mall l'f1 Jtrt'\ 111\U l"Xfl <'011t .i1•t D»takrnn In\' 730 1&7~ f'1111t gro-.in~ ""'"" 11. Jlth •'t.lnl1Jlilny nc...;t,. } OU tr \OU a l c not 11..it1xflo-.I With \llUf lt1lU1tlt' «:tll Mc i';pa1ro¥t &Ht hl!hl Rep l1Jler1al tcmi.o ~m)Jett i.io:;1111m t io<11J pa lmmedlale ·i~nm~ 1111.t uire Ti·l1·rirvmµlcr C..:able T V. fllll W 16th St, NB. 642 32161 FlOIAl DISIGHH llelp needed P ,., F 1T . :-Jp t B c h ar~a XAV I E R 'S OF NEWPORT 645-7846 F1onsl Clerk & le.lephone .. ales Some light book ke~p1ng Mu s t write leg1hly & be Jl.'l.'Urah!. Ex~w rienCI' desirable 3Uh1 s wk Cal I Kent 641 <MtlO Clark Kennedy F1orist. Food preparation pre- par e s alad s & sandwic hes . Days & eves. 644·0210 Ga.ERAL OFFICE Newport/Irvine stoc k brokerage firm needs m· d1vidual for busy office. Must have some book- k eepin g expe r ience Xlnt salary & benefits. Call Gail . 752·0070. Dental Exp Oenlal Assista nt. General work 4 days get paid for Growing fashion C-0 has 5. 642·0112or644·6687. per manent positions of receiving & s hipping DENTAL ASSISTANT. fabric. Also in volved mosUy front ore. some som e m aintenance le back ofc. X·rays a m ust. dri vin g. Capis t ran o Eltper required. 495·6322. Beach location. Hours Dental re cept./t •pist 7:JG.4,xlntwagesfor sta· J ble, reliable worke r . Cqood) for ortho office. 5 Contact John, Ee nie day week. 642·5997 · Meenie Bikini, 496-1291. DIS HWASHER·DINING Genera l Office, Irvine ROOM person needed immed. For small retire· area, typing 50wpm. fil . m e nt resid e n ce in ing. phone, mail. Stereo Laguna Bch. No exper m a n u r a c t u r e r . necessary. Will tr ain. TI4-~193. 8AM·2PM. Xlnt pa y . GBBALLAaOlt _4jM. __ M58 __ for_in_. _ter_vt_· e_w __ 1 Consistin1 of load In I DISHWASHER cauette tapes. Ftr first Day shill Moo lbru Fri. shill. SO-Ota 11•-'Wlf'Wl"e!I If yuu .. ne I n .. ndh 1·un11l·1ent1011s • .ind l.le1.N!nd11hk we 11~-d yuu for rfJOl.I prep and Wl'"Vlll.: IO J dt'hlChlful 1r'1 t11ur ... 11 t H to <l Wll't·kda>s W1·'ll tnu n .\pµl y Ill p r r bn n Slu11t'm1ll Terral·c. 29 t5 Hi:dhlll, t'M ll•iu1ww1' e'i P T e J rn \ll ll money amnK whal >OU know bt•s l . hou..-.ework Call Suds 'n '>lull 842 ~ llskµr, hVl'·lll Must love ehJdm . Exp & 1'.:ng pref S500 mo M4-l..,;,.968.:...;;__ __ INSURANCE L.rg msw-ance co. has lhe following full time positions available : Allt..ted s,. ..... 0,.rat• Need a n in di v ldua l w typing ol 5Swpm. Will lrain to input Insurance info on l.'Omputer. some telephone work Acc ....... Cieri& Good figure aptitude . knowledge of acco unts paya ble le receivable ! pleasant ~e manner. Xlnt. working cond. as co. benefits. Life, medical, & dental insurance. Co. bonus. Apply in person Mon.-Fri. SAFECO INSURANCE 17570 Brookhurst . F. V. 962-TI!l E.O.E. JAMITOIS Part time eves. Newport Beach1Costa Mesa area. J anitors & waxers. Mu st be over 18yrs. old & U.S cit izen. Call 532-6558, IOAM-3PM, Mon.-Fri. • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• MANAGER f o r n ew W1ent'rschn1tzel. work for franchise. salary upen + bonUI • benefits, 1~1.are at~So. Brislol, CM ur t•a ll ~7-0717 Mon· Fri9·11 &2·4. ORDE R DESK Receptionist /Cuhier , WlTIHNCENTlVE 9·5:30, mature people SALIS Secretary to CEO. a d· Dynanuc, busy com pany need only apply. 979-8880, COIDIHATOI m I n i s t r a t l v e . ---- MAHUFACTWIMG needs top applicants (or lceCapades mail order dept. Outgo. •--------- ing, extraordinary phone Receptionist needed for personality require d. art• design studio. 9-3. good typing skills . Call Call Oonna&.11-3.\21. Direct phone ser viced mathe matic al. book- contact w 1distrlbutor keeping skills required customer base involving Challcnlin1 opportunit y order placemrnt, order Salary to $18,000. Collins entry . e xped it ing le Assoc. 567 San Nicolas follow-up response for Dr. N B. standard catalog pro· ducta. Prior exper pre· ferable in related fiehl but not req . Contact J eanette Hall for appt. BELDEN CORP, ELEC· TRONIC DIV. 833· 7700 SHOP POSITION Penna nent. Xlnt Oppty for resp. person w1exp in ronstruction or wood & metal fabri c iat ion . Irvine Base Aluminum Door Frame Mfg. Call 546-Z436 M E C H AN I C AL ENGINEER Growth opportWllty A rapidly expanding me d ic al co mpo n e nt manwacturer requires a competmt individua l to strengthen engineering functions. lnchldes de· sign, drafting, materials teiting. and R & D pro· ject.s. A degree is pre- f erred with 1·3 years ex- perience: however , re· cent graduates with good references will also r e- ceive consideration, Great opportWlily to join an ex c itin g tea m . Qualified applic a nts send resume to: Chief Engineer 23891 Via Fa bricante Mission Viejo, CA 92ml Penny at Computlque SA Rental Agent, very busy ~ 7373· olflce. license req. r AIMT SALIS '94-65&t. Part time, Tues. 5 to 9, ln._._.Hefp Wed. 9 to lPM. Some High energy Sant a e x P · K e r m R i m 8 Ana/Tustin restaurant Hardware, 2666 Harbor requi res e ne rge tic Sa l e s F ull li m e Blvd.C M. OOWller help as cashiers. Christmas help needed. part lime & full time. Ap pl y n o w RM PAITTIMI EVMMGS Adults ove.r 21 with out· s t a nding attra ct ive personalities who enjoy working with kids. S4 per hour. call 642-4321 Ext 250 between 2 and 6Pm. As k for Lori. Or-. Coast hllyftlot Equal ()ppor Employer Ca ll Mr. English for A b r a m s c at alog appt. 972~. showroom. 1819 Newport USTMMAHT Blvd C.M. MAMA6R SALES. f\tll & pert time Fast food. Irvine, prof Fa bric Wa r e ho us e , Carftr opportunity. exp C06ta Mesa. 646-4040. req . Submit res ume . Wntr Classified Ad 11678. *SALIS* Daily Pilot. P.O. Box Great Oppty. for a self· iseo. Costa Mesa, 92626. starter w /personality+ &c o utgoin g na t ur e ' UST Au.AMT HILP Direct Sales consisting of Wanted P /I' Hours. At iietting appts. & follow nlEIRVlNE 1ng thru. Good Car ,.a.YROLL CLUBHOUSE Necessa r y 641·0763 ._ RACQUETBALL CLUB "THENElSSEnc o .·· Partlime Payroll Clerk ' needed for multi-office Contact Scott 754. 7500 Sales ins ura nce a ge n c y . ---------1 N T E R 1 o R Salary commensurate Restaarant DECORATING with experience. Linda, a'S Interest in art/home al.'· 963-0941. • cess. f\tU, p /time Will PAYROLL/PERSONNEL HOMIOFTHI t r a in C a ll Karen, CLERK. Eltper. w/com· llGIOY 848·9378,3-7PM puterized payroll system Immediate operungs in Medical Front Office. req'd. Newport Beach our family rertaurants al exp, mature. Send re· area. 640-8950. nearby locations. We re· Sales -lndustr Hose sume to Classified Ad quire no previous ex- #679. Daily Pilot, P.O. P est (;o ntro l pe r son perience.Joinou.rfriend· Box 1560, Cost a Mesa. needed to do term ite con· ly team. Come see us to· 926216. trol work. handy with day between 2·4PM. MEDIC •L building Loots, etc. Gd Wtlltws W.tlreues .._ starting pay. 752.5444 CoallT,.._. OM E. Medi. rentals & Pest control, MI F , for C I l1r1 sales, customer service, Edin E D P . Salary c o m -pest control route. Good 7311 · gerH.B STAIT TOMOUOW I PAIOTRAINING Learn to m a ke t o $2000/mo. 1 SHORT HOURS Ofr by noon & we're only I mile from beach. 1 Good future Secretary I Receptioni st for leading Yac ht Charter business. Gd skills as figure apptitude hel pful Ca l l 1714 )673·5252. Secre tary. F /T . s ma II engineering lal.J Type 5().60wpm. general offl c·e duties Irv. md~t. area . Call 5'19· l<ll.1. Secretary wtlh goo<l spell mg. grammar & l) pmi: skills to takE' l'harge of office Vario us d ut 1e~ with opportw11ty for ad vancement 957-ll916 EO.E Secret ar) /Rc<'l'pllon1s l. part lime. immed. open. plush ore NB 64-1 2507 ------- SECRETARY CIVIL ENGINF.l!:RI NC COMPANY !llEWPORT BEACH. N EAR 0 L' AIRPORT. f\tll time, expenenccd. l.'heerful person wanted fur en try l evel secre tarial µos 1l 1o n w /opportunil} for ad van- cement Strong typinl! & some S H abd1 t 1es necessar ) Apply ln person w resurne lo Mr F\lentes at Robert Bein, Wilh am F'rost & As · sociates, 1401 Quail St . :'ll.B SECRETARY ·th starting pay. 7«•.5445 4501 Campus Or. Irv J W\ior girl Friday type me n surate w 1 ex--WalhnW...,...ws person wanted, Ceramic perience Send resume ..._ h I t he t Call before noon 645-0280 Busy Newport invest· m e n t f i r m n ee d s secretary lo ha ndle diversified workload. Typing· 60wpm. 10-key & good front office ap pearance a must Call Dee at 631-74'1~ Bo Z733 NB .....,.,., ..... ,.sc oo eac r wan · C•'i•n Tile Design Center. to: x · ""'"""· ed 2•~ Id I C rt • "~" 9u7 . y• yr o c ass. e . .,...,,,,, Marguan'te waoes neg per exp. .,... . .., -----d d C II ~ .... .. or exp nee e a Mission Viejo 831·52J61. _ Medical Receptiomst for Su.san&t0-M20. busy front office. Ex· l:'AuaJ=rturu'ty Println1-Want to be a ._ ICIYPUMCH per'dooly. 847·8098· Pressman in Web Of. E yer OPBAToaS & Modeling, commercials, fset ? Full time. Min. DATA BfTIY falJm, extras. Need new ace: 20. WW train. Apply f\tllltparttimepos.1st faces. AU a1es /types . P e nn ys aver . 1680 • 2.nd shills. Immediate n4-~7..Q207. Placentia. C.M. opeainp. 1---------Acc f Ullttes ................... P R 0 0 U C T I 0 N UOOQuail.:..!~N.B. U ve·in. OompaDlon to ~'!;E~r hoM Calli...-acbool-a&e cblld. afta H ... --· -pua co. lllJ Al. SALIS SALES If you are agress1ve and looking for a future in re· tail m11mt w tgood co. SECRET ARY benefits apply in person Experienced in loan 9am to 11-m Mon thru documentation. Xlnt. _.. St--.. -~.,.___ 3077 salary & benefits. Apply r n . ~ """'""'• Personnel Director So. Briaiol, C.M. tmnMaa... Se'-'121 N . Baelld. ADabelm L t 1 b tl n 1 fl 1t t u r e 111.-0 aaleaman for outside E.O.E. _j ... iD (Mt ouwbac Co. ________ .._ !ltf6.27'1'8 EOE 6 ecm1e .,,_ 6 wllencla. pbyalcal lDc:l. back X- Must drive. Pvt rm +· ray. Taking applications S!OO sal. Ideal for stu· b t w n 8 · 1 O o n I y . Apply ID person. Dick •••AL OflllCI Chun:h's Rest 98 Npt TO $1 I ,000 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Blvd, CM. Ac c ur a t e l y p i s t = Stroo1. c apable , penooallle, mature lady w tareat fub.lcln aeme. for daaiD al lad)''• boutl· quea in i.cwaa Bda • Cmta ...... Gnat OD11b • potential. ll'r . Edward s o r Mrs . Trabisb: 497 -1018. or S57-l.S79. Man or woman. exp & ~retary /Sales established prefe rred. Fantastic Oppty with Must be a sell starter. Nu fast growing computer WestLighting731·3:M4. sollware firm. The ideal •lmVEIS• w 1 g e n e r al o f fi c e Jt n o w ledce. V aried d uties. Non·sDX>ller. In Tustin. 832-1300. Lady to clean offices ear· dent. Refs req. NB Joe. S t r a to f I e x . 1 7 6 7 1 ly AM or eves. 3 dys pr 673-0597 eves; 759-1122 Armst.ron& Ave .. Irvine. wk, 3 hrs daily. 96.00 hr. wkdys (Marti) EOE. A Kendavls Ind .. person must ha ve good s.Jalady, apparel exper. orpniulionaJ abilities. Full & part·time posi- tions. starts at ~a~f:ikhurat. 1_N_e_e...:d:...e_;1t_l_r_a _S:...SSSSS ___ d_e_· _Co_.-------- --------~:...·..::..=..:;...:.;..;___· --·---moo1trate liquid e m-/lime.. 3dap. .2brs/dai· ~i..a~.:!._._. •• y Landscape Co. IOoklnlfor DrOTdery . lnlo call ly, AM delivery • L.A. Retail Clertt. Costa Mesa Statkanen. 270 E. 17th St. Coata M... Full time. .Appb in person;. ~12- nooo Yat.ure, friendly. Steady be r es ource f u I • lYl'-Soc.-Sec.-OK-CM enuptk, ._eQjoy wwk- halfsU.abop. M1"500. ing in a sales related en · $3.25 per hr. Call Marlr. 751·21680 DllVB Part time drive r fo r motortiome of Newport Beach Executive. Xlnt. ror reured man. bi 5·8036, ask for Cathie. lmVEIS w ....... Needed to deliver Daily Pilot newspape~ to news racks and stores. Approx 3 to 4 hours daily 3AM both Salurday & Sttnday. Must have de pendable car and good driving re· cord. Good hourly rate with sa lary increases eve ry 6 months a nd mileage allowance Ca ll George Hard in g a t 642-4321. 9am to 5pm week~=- 330 yStreet Costa Mesa. CA Equal Opportwlily Employer M /F DaUGSTOU C lerk. Full or P /T . Moult o n Pl uz a Pharmacy. Lag Hills Mr. Oreyfua 768-3784 EARN EXTRA MONEY by havin& a pvt art & ac· ces so ry works ho p in your home. I'll provide the a rt & accessories. Call 9-1Mon-Fri.641-4931 Saody EDUCATION Coordinator-Adult de· velopment progra m . Master's in Psych. social work o r Spec. Ed .. Sttpervisory exper. with DD req'd. Supervise dai- ly operation cl program. Unit.eel Cerebral P alay, 548-5780 B.ICTIOtlCS IMSPICToa Kltperimeed in the in· s pectlon of pri nted clrc u l t board a•· eembU•. Small med. mf1r. aear ue•n . Pie..-wcrtin c:ondl· Uona. a....nta. rcw IUdt•BDI» ei.Ml•tl •~ capable, qualified men, 5.18-3113, 9am-3pm Times. 1100 per week. Si&n up now for local exp pre ferred. must Laguna Beach. '94-M98. temporal')' work assign-have mechanical a p-Newport Photo Fuhiom ments. Openings in all Utude. 768-4751 belween s eeks n ew modeling P/l'ltsec'y/recepUorde· catagories. &:30 It 3:30. Apply at: 1_ra_ces_._cal_l_873-_·_337_5_. __ sip /adv. Filin1. typing, ARNOl.D-ANDl.llSON 23811 Via Fabn canle , Newspaper Stuffer for phones. M It F. SS.SO /hr. Temporary Services. Mlssm Viejo L.A. Times. 5 DX>rnings _646-__ m_i _____ _ Inc Legal secretary needed per week. lAM to 4AM. R A I N GU TT E R 4001BitthSt.,SleD for growing Hunt . Bch Approx. S75 per week. I NSTALLER Exp 'd. Newport Beach law firm. Frie ndly & Call548-4867 Must be dependable & 545-61.84 ca s ual a t m os phere . haveowntrans.542·U42 Glass-stained. Costa Mesa studio, fulllime. permanent. 1·3 years ex- per. Glass cutters & as· semblers. 646-7474. Guards ~ ARMED& UNARMED OPENINGS Uniforms, cleaning free. WE WUJ.. TRAIN Stale registration pre· ferred. AP PLY IN PERSON MON·FRI 9-3PM BEKIN PROTECTION SERVICES 2801 W. Ball Road Anaheim. Ca. (714) 761·4831 E.O.E. Mtr GUAIDS Full & part time. All areas. UnUorms rum'd . Ages 21 or over. retired welcome. No exper. nee. Appl y : Univer s al Pro(f!dion Service. 1226 W. 5th St .• Santa Ana. In· terview hrs: 9-12 & 1·4, Mon· Fri. Heltw;/Cn .. ar Mon.-Fri. Apply llAM dally . Ml Casa M ex. Rest.296E.17lhSt.C.M. Hotel LaO.W. ......... llflS..c..tDr. (4056Harbor Blvd) ColtaMesa Need individual to help MhJllt • • •• overworked staff, work· needed muat be able to R.E . Agent. Part lime for aholk boss & manic as· train on all shills. Apply leasing r1 apartments in sociates. Legal exper. Cindy at Sttrl 'N' Sand Orange County. J .D. necessary. Also nee d Hotd, Lag Bch 497-4477 Real Estate. 751-2787. legal sec'y for minimum MHSIS AfDH of 3 dys pr wk to assist 7 to 3. Cert. trainees. ex.isling secretaries and Mesa Verde Conv. Hosp, type long documents 661CenterSt.C.M. Real Estate MIWUC84SI? Will train on mag card 1--------- Will consider full lime. MUaSIM(i Why not try commercial 1 real estate? We provide all of the extensive train· Ing you'll need to be a professional. Income . draw II benefits. Call for an appointment ror in· terview. Realonomlcs Corp, 675-6700. 847-6041. Are you looking for a challenge? Want to make a dlrference ? Raleigh Hills Hospt. may suit your needs. We are look- in g for qual it y Re1istered Nurses to work in our Newport L.,.r s.cr.t.-y Growing Real EStale lit i gation firm i n Newport Center seeks experienced, efficient. & e nergeti c legal secretary. Shorthand, dictaphone, • lllnt. typ-ing skills a must. Xlnt salary, depending upon qualilicalions • exper. Good benefits. 64(MBSO. LOAMSALIS N e wp o rt B e a c h Mortga1e Banking Co. hu an Immediate open· ing for a k>an sales cle rk experienced in shipping It warehominl ln FHA VA, & c onve ntiona l loans. Preferrably l yr exper, as typinLrequire- ment: 45wpm. For appt, call: fS40.4.W ext #202. E.0.E. Beach Alcohol Rehab. Receptionisttrelephone Facilit y. Openings are Fllin1 It typing for 5man for the 11 ·7 s h i ft . law office . Newport Rewards are numerous Beac h No prior legal & Include very com -exp. req 'd. Mus t be l>elitive salary. s hift. dif· courteous/responsible. terential, tuition relm· Salary ranee at ~/mo. bursement as weU as an M->or medical benefill. excell. retirement rro· 752·7606 aft. 3pm for gra m. For additiona in· fo . , c on lac t : M s . appt. Vawthan at &41·1616 EOE llC.,..OMST Mtf'-For buay brokerage co. Nun~• In Laguna Hnts. Good · Mo. wcW•4 t ypin1 s kills. heavy ....... AWn telephon i ng . 5 days/week. llOO to start. S171Ar. 83NIOO. We will traln. 8 paid 1----------1 hoUdays. be&lnninl as llC9'TIOMST ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I soon as bl.red, benefits. needed ror sm. micro· i () t r Bayview Convalescent computs sales clc. Lite Mach ne pera or or Hoepltal 2055 Thurin, t....i ... , _. front ofc. •P-lathe 6 mill for produc· c II iii F 11 ,, _.. .-ti on o r precision 842.m.i.~.E. arre : l..!:.pearan=..:;:;..ce~.640-__;__lllO ___ _ miniature part.a. Trainee 1---__;_ _____ RECEPTIONIST· Part or or experienced. Good Nuraln1 full ume for a dealp poalbillty ror advance-c.. ....... nrm. attractive .. neat m enl. E .O.E . Mic ro .......... a--aruce Ana phones Precision Swiss Inc. in _. · ' Laauna Niauel. 831-9331. S4.00,11r. sre8 cUenta. &M-~ or .... 8 pald holldQs. betin-133-1117 ... 5:30. .... Macbin.lat to work a Mlll 6 Dini as soon u hired. Miios Lathe. "8U CM' p IT. fl1t· beneftta. Bayview Con· Re ce pt I 0 n i. t I t y p I I t tur. as dies. 2 yn min valeKent Holollal, 2055 <IOOd> fbr Oftbo office. 5 exp ..... llU. 'lburtn, C.11. lln. Far-dQweek.Ma--7 . EnlUab apukla1 or bl· MAIDS reU : MZ-3505. E .O.E. Receptloniat /typist, llnPal only. Pleue app· i iii D1fnaDW.. Office help.. F /Tiw:i1d w .. 1renc1a. Reaidential 0 II F ._.. --.. -·"t rMI _.. office Meda , , I 1--~----1.,. ___ y , llaiattnaace: For apt • Ute typln1. Call P /T receptlonilt. .: .... • ID a.la lleu. 1_ao......;;...;;.ml.;.;;..;..;.______ 8.t/lun N. ~pre. .....J'talll IJ.TPM. flrnd. .... <Xftee OUSEKZl!PER pror. IMlUN, ....... SPtU· lal .....,.,..., ......... ~· IM ' 1D*7 won, °'"' For prlv ... eomamaMy. tran1 preferred. f'or Laiuna a.acb area. a.t ...... bl Cdll ..... /lllr,amlU .. YaJkt ~I. I dJI, •. 19r. Ad Calf, Dlt_.. Ue. C.11 wwwr m. IOtD It lloa.0 rr1. for appt. In. -.em. 1171 .. MO. llC9'llOMIT luluh1 an 1•10' =.t' wttllOtlll lYDlDI r.111tat ale. cub&cle + Tap ,.,, Ttm~ tlec, ~. t....... ~ 6 Ml Um. Call ............ CoeftNllCt Tod ........... rooaa, ~o I• full, ~ .... , S•te•l ve Gardeas. •·Ull RN relief. 11·'1 Part time. Mesa Verde Convales· cent Holpital. 661 Center St. c. M. $9-5515. IOOtllaS Wanted fot.larp proJect MUST HAVE AT LEAST 5 YEARS EXPERIENCE! in hot application. Call Lee Roof mg 642-7222 1653 Sttperlor Ave. C.M. *SALIS* POSITION Nation a l C o. with a dignified direct sales ap- proach. Operating m 6 state s . We a r e the largest in our industry & growing. Previous exp In sales unnecessary. but helpful. Xlnt lead system & we provide all the nec- cesary training. For con· fide ntial interv iew please call Fune r a l Security Plans. Costa Mesa. 5t0-8106. s.eu W..ted 642-1260 Sales ACCOUMn ... Outside !lalel. Proaf!ct client contact 6 deve mt. Servicin& existin& accts . Will be greetinl & screenint applicants • will have related clerical duties. Salary comm. w /ability as exper. For appt. call Tod Servica. tr7MllOO -111!1~1!!!!!1 !!11!11!111!!!!1!1!1-•I vironment. Must have 2 S•I" • ..-.. yrs. exp. & type 60 +. -· -_..... Non.Smokertr75-lll3 900 + car allowance It --------- commission 6 excel. SICltlTAllY beneftll. I..&. corp. wants p ART TI !II E F ULL mature women It men TIM E . t y p in g . di c - fortheirdental lab s ales. taphone. selfrmtivated, Prefer someone with t r avel arrangemenls , knowledge of de ntal etc. Call Micky. 833-8680. 'equipmt. or reception EOE backlJ"(Mmd in dentist's --------- office. Call Ann. 5'0-6055, --------Coastal Penoonel Agen- cy. 2190 Harbor Bl., CM . NEVER A FEE EOE SALIS SllVICll•. Oired phone service con· t act w /OEM cuslomer base. work load incl'ds quotation order negotia- t 1oos. expe d iting & follow-up on special pro· ducts. must have ability to learn It converse on tectmical details It direct. problem 10Mn1 efforts thru variom areas within the company . College education • or previous exper preferable but not req. Contact Jeanette Hall for appt. BELDEN CORP ELECTRONIC DIV. 833-1700 • •sacaET AlllS * • G OfctT«>/grow Sl2.000 Exec ISbfk>/ Pro S16.SOO F'Chg Sec/RE to $16,800 Corp~/Sh80 $14,400 Lii Reinders Agency 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE Newport/833-8190/Free SECRETARY To $12,000 Accurate typist w /ac· counts payable. accounts receivable knowledge Must know 10-key by touch, good w /figures. Non-smoker. In TlL'ltm 832-7300. ----- SECRETARY ~,1•Yettfory Exper. Purchase Order follow·up. inventory con· trol. t 5•pe 45 Wpm SANDWICH Maker. pt/-Organized person. lrYU\e lime. ideal for housewife furn. mfr. 540-8894, K.11. orstudent . .-522leves. ~ SIAMSTllSS SICllTAllES F or Dry C leaner. ~lclt.,.._ RepainJ.. 6 Alternations. Sec'y $10,100 ""1Jori'/T.5835Wam er W. <ysioSIS,,OO H.B.MM22l Freeand E.O.E. SALES PEOPLE Irvine Personnel Agency '4118 E. 17th, Costa Mesa Sttite z:M 642.1470 llCl.AMYOUI •••••••caw f inancial IMtCurlty, eenlortty, deed end 100.. job dlecrlmlnetlon, tack of management op- portunity. llCllllOM-NOOf Our butln... Is RECESSION PROCW ... Boom Of o.pr .... on. M continue to grow bee au•: •we're an lntematlonat company with IOCal op- portunrt• • We have • ptowrt marketing eya1em •We Mii ,,_,ty= C:::" ·Starting tnc:orne of 111,000 to '30.000 or mofe first.,.. • Ouarantwd Income to atart minimum l300.00 ptf week • Merit promotion-no seniority • Profit lfWtn9 and retirement prognm • MllOf medoel. dtntll P'OOr9m. ~ tlonftC. • DICLAll YOUI IMDIPIMDIMCI ,..,, .. .. _ ......... , "= .::z. ...., n1•1a.J11 SICUTAIY ............. Newport Beach financial services co. Cand idale muat have food skills. telephone problem solving exper . ramillan ty w /fl ling sy1tem11 Duties involve sup_port, ing 6 reporting to Pres. It Exec. V.P. It hlah· level sales s upport. Salary commensura te w/quallflcallons & ex· per. Newport Funding Corp. 114-1$i2.t335 w .. , Rapidly npandl n1 Newport Beaeb rinand •l flrm. Contac t · Ka y 1'9-1515 Sec'y. Airport Law Firm. Top 1ltlilt, bri1bt. Or · aanlaed. Non 8 mlu Joa1e 15l-I025.. l -~. d'llf'I •I I P • A p DAILY PILOT to4o ,,....,.._ ,.,..... t 110 ~ Wds.. tlfO •p•rW ~ 1.,1..w Alltiia. Uieilt ............................................................................................ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tWpW..._, 1100 Cp!~•& Miis la 11 ••o ....................... t .... llc:llT~T •••• • •••••••••••••••• ....................... wee ... TA•S o·._..._...., Full y •qu lp1ad . be1111l1fuU)' malntal.ned, re..ty lo crul•• nr live a~ar•. 8hp mey be availabkl 11 ~ .. ~ t-•tn•111· ln1 poulb&e '72,000, or -.000 ll no two.Iler ln-vol "'1 ti.an ckal will Include tf Avon R¥dcrc:1t wtt h noortioant. und 4 ~ llQNf"poww Johmmn out t>oard J ll r k 'urlt!Y )3t '* hofllll, or 84() ~ Otl the 1Jc1a1 w~k.e11'111 101133'. IW'nllhf'd, l)lder ...., Newly renovalt'd 14ll<"abriUo 0.... fJJO ,.,. '110 ••AI 4 ftt 1 \¥~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.-te ""*1 Toyotu and •• IUT. '73 S Motor. ~r Mm!lMial ~n 0..11 1m 11111 ••• '-I w.O. IMdifta Newpor1 0..p ,,_ ~ ........ Hrd. 5-d ODC card f« .. di , .. ~-cme 1pan Wt return tt•rmanenll) IMJ.ed ~active ta1 6 tlrap, rmetlDI airline I D teqlllnonwnta Pre l th•o . furn111b.~d Sl2.000 140 C:.ibrlllo ~ fl7is Aak for t-'iay~ Vo I v o • Ca 11 u B ,. Clean, A/C, $ apeed. MtOO 080. H l·Z1TO Eves. ••ch .-.al •tale olnl'f' ,.,.., \ttt> d1venlf1cd .-0111 W a l • r b 0 u 1 1 0 1 , lama. Lot\ ol opportW\ily P~ and s-rwunahty lt)'drot..rti. P'or Nlllon a pl u. C a I I G ttorr "'2. S&~<W~ 'bt-UOl a-; O t-. .... tvee C4llh IOJI &ERV1 't-: ·rtx:t1.N l('IAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• MrVI~ • r~.,alr •II t 'PH Alfertlornu blar k male h1h1 <'onstrul·tl1•n &t llJUM snm AJl~ra pro 1a41ncultural CQWlltnt<nt bk-m •llJO Ul 1 Ii II n I ".1qu· r In ~-am. .. theft ' For a .,.nonaU&fd 1a1 .nrk:lflc wallpaper fahr1r o r ·oa> Glo • P•&Jt'r ., w., wtll back • ltim )'ouf lap 0r try lWIJ l'fllda bl<·I& to barll Allto"'i.r*e: , .... & Accet..rt" 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SSAYISAYIS WtTH US1D PAJITS llnport«I car p lH'\R IMPORT AUTOSlJPl-'I . Y 1111 'II Mand1este1 Anaheim 770·9'JOO PORSCHES WANTED --------·n 2110Z 2+2, 4·spd, elec snrf, AM /f'M cass .. A/C, S3K mi, IB500. 661·7074 1'75 POISCHE 114 Z.t lmmacu.h1le! Must &ff lo appreciate• 18895 or ~at offer. Leaving state ... MUST SEl.L! I 1714 ) &42·0138 ~~ ....... !?~.~ Wdi tt I 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Sil...,WNlthll •IUICll '10 me<·haoical. "'"l"lric•I fr D-. 1040 ITydr:.auJk tan'"" Hwa.Hur •••••• •• ••••••••••••• •• Ul1.,.., tr•t'lul'll, furl! Iii\ KE~D Pl.\1» AKt' tnic1&1. tutve .. )'t!IU'll C'll l0hl6n1p \l... M F Pet " l)tr '1 00 pt'r tw 'rakt• ~ h o w P fl p t y U\11 ad tu n~aredl St11tl' 21.3 •7 \MS aft II pm T.mploym1111t offlt.'e, l>O'f PllJCES Cluor3 e • )ttlOIJ (1(1('1 611Hap ll~H I 0 or "'°"' 11 40 ta S:ilei Tn ln<·hattld NO CAR I>! 33' VIKIN(; '74 tourn llndae. teak puJvat, fo1h \'qui~. 2 llitl OWi, C02 i)'llhlm , twin {:ru111ider~. 142.900 "ltiW~lrt Y .)('hl F.xrhan~"· 67~ UIOO ~· VIKJNCi '79, LW 350 Cru1 t'WC, 'I :> !lt'n • Vtll". ta lho .i.umlo~. io urn bridge, i.tall shower lttlc.luced ~.500 Nwpt Yuc ht Exch ms 11M1 4-spHdZ 1r...-u1on Also m1SceUaneo11.!I ~Oil:. 200Z parts Allow 1.111 lhe opportunity to consider the purchase or trade in ol your d ean Porsche. Check with Us Todar! ..... dz ., ......... J\lso miscellaneous ?AOZ, 360Zparts 768-5837 1977~ Rolls Royce, l0n1 wheel base, custom or - dered , rully eqt,llpped. Locally owned Ir serviced. Like NEW! Has ONLY 10,000 mile.s! Shown by appt. 130671 >. Pri. Pty. Call974-l767. S«Yl.AllC 4 door sedan. Automatic. air conditloning, Pretty car !(~) . '""! HOWAaDClw.,... a:i.at co. Ad pain for FltM PHOt• ._1 lo DOG 8llf.AV10R ...:!!. emp .> l'r L'OUNSEUNG SHIPftNG Cl.. C:.11 G~. ~ ~ t'1t1me, Wiii IACl'Cpl ,.,... .. ,_ 1045 trainee SO'Mlll l"Urnpan) •••••••••••••• ••••• •••• &d bene Call 6-12 9ik>3. Ann 1-°l't!C! lo aood honll! Gulden Rt'tnevt'f' malt.>, l year old ~or.s48·94l0 Uobermiin Female. I } r old. rust oolur to lovin& home 673 2721. 673 n 11 lnw your own nr •end name, addttiU, l>hon• 6 w11'1l milk• no. r anJ per 1 aa Add 25' earh lWnd ctwdt or lllllfl~Y or dtrtn PK.OT Pbn1MG P 0 Box Ci60 t'Ofit~ Mesa.s• _ !126218 CERAMIC TILlllsqut 768 5K.1'7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT NOTICE TO READERS ANO ADVERTISERS llllJI ~l•lbOI li1•(1 (f•tO.n GH>v• "• IJl ... Jlll Tap Dlllar Paid For Your Car • JOHHSON & SOM 1.Mc•U1rcMry 2626 Harbor Blvd. 1980 200SX. air. AM /f'M stereo cass, rear defog. ger. 5-sp, blk w/gray int • xlnt cond, .,erfectly main .. must sell, SBOOO, 552 5380. '75 280Z, one of a kind. Beautifully redesigned. •Int running c ond . always garaged Have Sl5.000 in car. Make reas offer. A must to see. ~·~ 644-7321. 111 DEALER IN U.S.A. ~~~VER ROLLS·ROYCC IS4tJ•mMlff New-1 .. Hlt \'-----' M0-6444 CLOSED SUNDAYS Dove 6 Quad Sta. NEWPORT BEACH HJ..0155 "" ••••••••••••••••••••••• • '80 Cpe ck Vlle, loaded, drtt blu llhr seats 6 top, AM /F M tape, W W, Sll,89S. Eves 832·5262. dys 771·2007 S.-9760 '79 Eldorado, 30,000 m i. • ••• • • ••••••••• ••• •• • • • loaded. Sl l .500. 833-2235 / SHIPPIMG D9'T. lnsl)4!ct1n1 & packrn-1 small paru Must be fasl and accurate W tra111 Female prefd Xlnl ('o benefits With this (.'()Sl.i Mesa Co Call $45 UU!I Perfect for Halloween Lu' mg blk cal. green e)t'S Spayed, alJ &hots, smart & s weet Call 6'W·9836 751-32'7. Price· a lovwg home 6xs··, 25' ~r p1e<·e l'1unt & glaz.e your own lJles Good for ceramic :.hOJ18 or pnvate partieii to u.se your 4rt1st1c ab1hl1es s;w.7SJJ 21 t 1 lie rglu Ii Tu~, blander W~llender or (.'haaraLter !:Sa y Luunch. 6mo uld VW Ha bb1t 01ese I f'u II Ka lie y. ~love. rerngcrator. dbl berth, head. c·omplete $1.9.500. 646-7887 The price of items advertised by vehicle deniers in the vehicle classified advertising l'Olumns does not include any applicable laxes. license, transfer rees. finance charges. fees for dir pollution control de· vice certifications ur de· aler documentary pre- paration charges unless otherwise specified by the advertis~--- Costa Mesa 54Q. 5630 MUST SELL NOW 77 280Z 2 + 2. Xlnt cond w I xtrdS. $6500 498-14>1 I tlO SAAi 955· 1498 .,..____ --------- ·--Cad. '80 Eldo Dsl. Lthr 2 Caddy s poke wheel rims SlOO ror both 839-20021 0.9320 I OS TON WHALER w.r., OVER -looll For Your Good VW, Porsche or Auda -_______ , '80 310GX. gold, Am/Fm stereo, 1mmac. 3.000 m1. SSlOO. 673-8318. 673·8427 -------- HEii MOW! int, wire whls. Ca bro DCB.LefT roof. Firemist pnt. 50M SB.ICTIOM! guar. on eng. Lo mi. l,ike new. Priv. Ply. Sl4,99S. 64().8627 IEACH IMPORTS Shoe sales. full lime wath or w out exp , or will train. Good co benefits Apply tn person 9um to llam Mon thru F1·1 ~lan dard Shoes. 3077 So Bristol, C M -----Students . If you 11re rriendly, ronsc1ent 1ous and dependable, we need you fop part.time work in our restaurant. Apply m person. Stonemill Ter· race. 2915 RedhilJ, CM Ftee to good home: pup. pi es, 14wks. trained. 53&1622. Dbl Depth Harbor Lawn Cemetary U>t. y press Sect. S11cr $800, G E Ref rig. SUS S45·S46.1 11 1/J Feet CWy I Mo.th Old! lr9dMew.lohnto11 ION' ~-9520 ...•.....••...•........ '78 Datsun280Z. 18,000 m i. mint. mags, etc. Auto, 6i5-3545 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 15~0900 ~ Diesel Seville, new . s ilver /blue, loaded. 50,000/mJ engine guar. $16.500, 540-3931 w /days. Less than 10 hours Call Eves 675·~5 1957FOID vw PORSCHE·AUOJ 445 E C.Oasl tfiway Toy,ta 9765 Newfoundland 2 yr old male, very special dog for special perso n 548·4982 Wood woven blinds. \..a year old, dnt cond. Light ~lge colors, 1200/besl olfer. 960-8362 "1980" lJNIFLITE 42' eonvertible. Extended salon, ruu elect ronic:s. galley up , t o tal!) customized. Must sell. Offered al szso.ooo. Nwpt Yacht Exch675·1800. THUNDER II ID The most desired clas~ic in So. Calif. Fully restored. white w 'blue int & rull l)Ow e r \005UKZJ. at Bays1rte On ve ~ewpo:_t Beach 673-0900 Fiat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~7~·~;:,·;-;;:~·;;;~;;n·~~ '71 Corolla, 4 SJ.Id, great Wiatt Tan Int. 1 own, new gas mi. S700. 642"7682 aft. C:....-0 9tl7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 77 LT. loaded. T ·top. silver, l:ll.50. ........ 1050 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PATIO FURNITURE : Mhal• IOm TEACHERS Preschool. UJte new z chairs, 2 ot-Wmhd 1011 full & part lime pos. tomana, 6 amall table ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrvine.ss.2·7331 lea1. $UO: Couch $3.S, Will lktY: USED OFFICE Matchio1chair125. Anti· FURNITURE, . Work TEACHER pee. Ed./· que RCA Victor HiFi in Benches, Shelving , Master's in Beh. Sc. pref. Mahotany Cabinet. $150. 631-2777 Exp. w /DD, multi -Antique Walnut Desk ---------- handicapped adJts. Abili-ram. (714) 842-01311. IOIJ ty lo write/implement ... behavioral program * * I IUY ~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• plans. SU~rvisory exp. Good __ _. ""'·nu·t •-CONN Director trombone r..,, 8·30 4PM Unlled ._. ru • with case. Excellent con--.. · · • · Appliances--OR 1 will di•._ .. 00. 875-805Z after Cerebral Palsy Assoc .• sellorSELLrorYou ...._ N I t50 VIMJ AM 23' custom bll Chriscratt cabin cruiser, complete- ly refurbished JW'le 1980. Head, galley, sips 4 , Dana Pt. Marina. &llp B-11 Mainland. $8900. Avail to see on wkends, weekdys call (213 )94,S-3805., $AVE!!! THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBO R BLVD. COSTA MESA 642 · 0010 '46 Ford Woodle. restored m.ooo. ALSO ·29 Model A Town Sedan. I rlr, restored. Ideal fur .;tu dent. $10,000. 675-6161 546-5760. MAST'ms AUCTION _s_P_M_. ------ TEACHER.5 ~SISTA.NT 646-1"6&llJ.t625 Bundy trumpet, good ~~~~~~~~~ '61 Cad Limosint! 11! Special claases for han-cond, free mate, $120. 32' LUHRS, 1973, twn pass.t. Also '60 Galax) dicapped adults. 2 yrs. Solid, nee S500 desk. Cali 7SHll02 aft. 6pm. FWC. Chrys, auto pilot. (36,000 miles> Both need colJese exper. req'd. Ex· 30x80, must sell. $225 natural gas galley, hold· much work Make offer . Premium prices paid for any used car <foreign or dome su et in good cond1t1on See Us f"irst ' SOUTH COAST DODGE 2888 Harbor Blvd t.:OOTAMESA CAU 540.0330 OR 540.91 00 ....... lmpuot9d ••••••••••••••••••••••• llrcs. well maint S4850 Gpm. --- call 7l4-7f,0.1Y728eves. '80 COROLLA Liftback. Honda 9727 SR5, p/s, mag wh~ls, & • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • etc. 67 J...:B26 l6400 VISIT YOUR OllAMCiE COAST HONDA HUDqUilTERS TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES&SERVlCE '78 Celica liltback, very clean, air, 5 spd. S4800. i70-6989 T,...... 9761 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 TR250 I owner, xlnt rood $3500 752.0327 or 673-6733 TR.6 New Engine, Clutch. Hard I Soft Tops ! Xlras . 646-3088 after Spm '6.5 Spllfll'e. looks good but Deeds minor work. Best offer 67~ 846-!MSJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• SH US FIRST! We have a good sele lion or NEW & USED COMMflL CHEVROLET ·x;"ll•rl••r Hi..\ I ( "'I \ ,, ~ " \ S40-I 200 eel. vacation&insurance 67s.1230or6n-2'7l2 Gretsch Drum set. 7 ing tank. S:r7.500 Nwt 642·2221 (or ror msg dnuna, 5 cymbals, + ex-Y ht Ex h ge 675 1800 646 96661 ••••••••••••••••••••••• benefits. Wkdys 8:30 to . xln ac c an __ : __ --·---------F1NALALl-'A ROMEO 4PM. United Cerebral Solid oak Thomasvi~le tras. t ! 549-1417 -25' WEU..CRAn' NOVA 4 wt..4 Drives 9550 C:LF.AR ANl'F. 9105 OLDSMOllLE HONDA GMCTIUCIS 2850 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 540.'640 ----·---- '66 CbeveUe 283 SOOOor bet orr. 897-mt Volllsw... 9770 '78 Caprice. 4 dr, air. ••;;;.:;~;:·(;;•• am lfm. 52,000 m1. pvt Palsy Assoc., 3020 W. pedestal table w/4 chirs C>Htc.,_.wltww& twin l51 FORD; m.iny ....................... Al.L'795 MUSTG0 1 Harvard St., Santa Ana. &2 leaves, SlOOO. 548·4745 ......... 1015 xt r 15 mus t s e e at L980Toyota PU , 5000 mi. 'We're Deahn'" 546-5760 all. 7 wkdys & aft· 12 ••••••••••••••••••••••• woo o s M A R I N E . under warranty Sports 'i7 ACCORD 5spcl, a ic, ~1lver. blk mt. xlnt cond. lo mi $41.50548-2780 DIES& IAlllTS party. 644.1817 -wkends. M c Telephone Operator for ---1 P I T N E Y · 8 0 W E S 7fi0..8IS6 pkg., A M ' fo. ass . ltpm-7am shift. ~hny King Sz Hvy Duly Xlra automatic mailing C.B .. much more S4SOO 1980 SPIDERS HEU NOW!!! ~ 9732 AHO DASHERS!!! 77 Nova. PS/PB. AM /FM All models at discount stereo, CB optional. very ••••••••••••••••••••••• f ., Ft' rm •---npring Mat-machine. TaJte over pay-32' Unlnlte, '77, complete· and takeover payments hene its 228 r orest. uun:: c 11 1y _,uipped tor fishing & 080. 962·5900 La&una.Beach. tr-.. w/Mat.cb Coil Box ments, $60/mo. a -... '14 Jensen Healey conv Dtack. Am/f'm 8·traek. lugg rack. x:lnt. Must sell. 49!M958 or 499-1998 soo US ' clean, onM owner. Xlnt pnces cood. '2500. SS2·5390 Sprln1. never uaed, _83M'7 ___ oo_. ______ pleasure. radar+ many ft1•1a.taOPIR. packqed wonh as40 tn-,... INJ nru. (714)8'6-0021. scs..,.,.,,..., a-4pm. Call cl. delivery IZ20. Cash ••••••••••••••••••••••• IDlllh. Sell f060 llr'1. 8&.ltaaar, Hotel oa1y ~ Red tail ....._ •2\tt to a f\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• La1una. 425 S. Coast -Lud ft Rwy, 494-1151. Twn beds. w/headboards, long, wtth StO aquarium. '49, ers 16. 25 . vam '72 Chevy Blazer 350. A/C, AM /FM 8 track stereo. roll bar. tank/tire rack, map & -""n'o Mud tires 1·639-3625 HACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH JIJ..otOO •-Gw. 9714 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.919 Lakewood Blvd. '74 Monte Carlo, $2500 oc bst olr --=--------uood cond. $40 ea . SlSO.PaulS.Sl-OMS. hull . sli p an NB . " beautiful $~000 Trw:lu 9560 T1llpti a 1 Solciton Needed immediately 20 s tudent s and or homemakers who need ID earn rmney working pleasant evening hours. 3-9 Mon.-Fti. No selling. SalaTy :-t3.7S ~hr + generous bonus Across fr o m John Wa yne Airport. Call Sue arter 2PM. 64J-Ol!ll 64Z-912A att2:30 Pl-. & <>r,.... IOto 1194.9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 72 GTV . S s p d , fllaupunkt ra ss. 67M. \ell to L!.I ~ 642-3133 10 GHIA Lite Blue. new clutch . cass, perfect lX>fld. 64& 94~ LONG BEACH 121 ll 5t7-J'6l OPEN SUNDAYS '77 MAUDUClassicWgn; "72 Monte Carlo Xlnl Cond. Xtras. 5Sl.o254 Cor...... 9932 Redecorating: designer &lass tap colfee lbl/gold bue. Antique wht din set. china cab as buffet ••••••••••••••••••••••• BABY Grand Kimball. xlnt. cood. Mu1t sell. Sl.OOOor best ofr. 964-3111() server. See at Balboa Bradbury Baby Grand .811rCJob. ca11 evt!rfor ptDo;-xtnt C'Ol'Rt, It brwn appt642-6676. mahogany , 124 00 TB.UR Like new twin & dbl beds. spreads. pillows, chall'S. colfee table. misc. NB. 675-4776 l'UU time, in beautiful new Laguna Beach of· King size waterbe d , fice. Must be dependa-carved wood & stained ble, accurate & enjoy glass. 15."iO/obo 539-1726 working with people. Re· quire 40wpm typing. For Dining rm set. 6 cane appointment, call Mrs. back chrs, Med. oblong Jerue, 898· 1496. EOE table . .->orinn. 493-2277 _M_l_F ______ h'ep S. 1055 &IS-9502. Spart ... Chock 10t4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C•dor'a..._ 2 HarR Trapdoor Spr- ingfields/45· 70 carbine . l200. RJIJe, 250 orig Rem- inatoo rollin1 block 7JtS7. SZSO. Trade or sell. 971-57«>. Stwe ..... -.... ... 1ots ••••••••••••••••••••••• Comm. US ran1e. 1tain-Jess back, stove. grill, full.sz oven. Cl7S • 1495 642-1900 s..,. IH6 Typistfl'ranscri~r. law ••••••••••••••••••••••• office. Must type 6Swpm Unwual Mahogany Cof. fc have knowledge of fee Tbl w/mirror insert. leaal terms. Gd position 1?75. Formal Broche S7S. for mature pe rson Twin bed GO. Demi-tasse Anaheim Law f"irm. cups ~Sl.5. Many misc. moving to Newport items. I Heritage, irvine. Center in Nov 82Hl750or ~·1456 or 559-0151 00 '76750HONDAMATIC f>73..64.1l. 006388 0.90 3224 lOll 1012 ForSaleorTradefor ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2br, lba, drps , cpt, Pickup. 731~28 Typbt. lrvine area, lyp. bulit"ins, l&e priv. patio, '75 Encson 32. cstm ml ext. 15 sails. whl. knot. VHF. many xtras. boat covers, nicest on West CoasL M.ust see! 139,s.)O F\rm. !a-~ or 961:1-1.1872 12 ' Snowbird, n i c e learner's boat 1295. 67~9 41' NPSNEWPORT '75 sloop. C&c design, 12 baga , good 1n vesl lll0,000. Newport V acht Exchange, 675-1800. CIUISIMCiSAILOI Instead of Investing S.W to $100 thousand you can enjoy unlimited uiUng ror a rew thousand on a superb 40 ' Kelc h . 673-5340 1976 D E. CUtter. Cruising 11ear, reduced to sell. 68 .SK ask . Fred &ckmJUer btr Owner may finance. 646-4005 to JO ing SOwpm. filing, phone. gar.~ mi to sea. Z mal. TV, ..... mail. Stereu manu.rar· adult.a, non" smltr pref. ...._ Shreo JI' PIH harer.714·~193. S430 /mo. S48-6609 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marc us C hann e l. • •••••••••••••••••••••• IHI 21.5AmtrlcanAY9. C.M. Beautiful RCA 2S" color SUS/rm Typist. General office. no Jw 11 1070 1V, z yr wmty. free de· 87,_.145 Ev~ exper. nee. H.S. Grad."' f livery.SI.a..M&-17811 Good benefits & promo ••••••••••••••••••••••• __ ::__ _______ , ...... Ila.. toto tional opportunities. GENUINE SAPPHIRES JBL Demo Sale-Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• Irvine area. Farmers Your choice only '5 speakers. at great Ory 1tora1e available. Ins urance Group , each!fi40.88M prices. Atlantic Mu1lc Newrrt Dunes, 1131 54G-4JOO.E.OE. Mlseel•s-1010 4'5 E . 17th St., C.M. Bae Bay Dr. NB, ----------••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-8111115 &t4..Q510 Willin& & ambitious In. dividual to begin al pro. The perfect Christmu Beaut Magnavox console/ ,. .......... duction level & advance Gift, ladMe cherry red stereo, tape plyr, re· '' fa nm u abilities allow to rox fur coat, hip lenath. corder, turntable. Nda ••• i .. i;di,i;.•••9i4o s•.._r..ic ....... """'ltlon as never beerl worn. Sacif, repair. Sl25.1163-'1&30 ttu • • •••••• • ..,.... ·--r ...,.. mutt sell, make offer. ~:.:;..::.:.:...~------1••••••••••••• • • co mpany grows . IC'Ct ""' _ _.._., ~ ~ Knowledge or Spanish Call HSI, 142·4IOO, 24 a.,,.., .,.._,'UU> •• UC •-n. PUCH """""""..., very helpful. Call 8111 hours D-120'1 '850 pr. u.w.re-S. Hogan: 642-~ John Wayne Tenrua Club ____ .,,. __ •_•_G ___ -1 llu1'418 Maxi2spt625 --=--------MembershJp. Mutt 1ell. New 1t...,, BDM 801 IV, Ul-ll30 llo-Ptdd.ler M11JtK1 1• '190·1Z741&t4·4871 apkra w /equlinr, M'JOW.PCH,NB ••••••••••••••••••••••• KenwOOd ISO, lat amp w•- ..... 11 IOOI Crib • mattreu. um· 141 watu, Keewood a50 .81 Moped Sllg._, ln· brella t II &. T jued. Nttd1 T .L .C . .............. ••••••••• , 1 ro er • tuntl' AM/f'll ~llr&le9 Gl.oorllves. backpuk. Call 581.m"J SL 1IOO au&o' ,.. tbl, aft«e:•. Akal eauelte deck, WATERllORDCRYSTAL OXC -TUD Dolby , tllO ••••••••••••••••••••••• CENTERPIECE PbMlr' rr 'JOJ reel k> re- ( Period"--HDf) el, DBX ,_.. •nw · "71 KAW ASAK.I llOO 5000 Ele1ant piece, man1 Dl1ital eloell etereo orl..,_. mUes. Wtncljam· cuta. R.ecelved •• alll timer. Sl,000/bwtt olr. ms falriq, new U..... from Ireland, newer MMeU•IPM. Btt&erlhannewS1950 &IMd. On dlllplay ID lotal IQ.eTJO Ul..QZM O.acan Phyfe table. •tore at MU. AakJa1 TV DECODERS POR SALE: SUZ RM 400 dlain, butdl. Sl.000 or SllO. Answer A4 ,.1, .... ,. tnaetUmtcondttJoe .. '111•. -.1191 after KMI003thn. ·~---.-.-.. -... ----1 ~ Mt-5145 _ .. _ .. __ . -------_X_l_n-t.-.-,-.-r-.-0-.-,-.,-.-m-. -... !!f!I.~:! ........... 1T 0 :a=!".4·mX:\ ~: 1700/080. Potter'a IN!a.M' fl ••" IUJO,,...., WllHI : SU0 /080. ...... IO Blk/Wbt. T .V . tit. ·~-.................. HONDA JU.100, l•W Miii• BOAT ........... .._.., ,_.. •It, pipe, -!!!!...,~:!!,.!!:°":....,-:-•. -~-&e-l..!!~!:_TY--:--I-I; '!.ti, ~:;.: "78 Cl IEVY ~ Ill.on est m delu.xe. auto, a r. p1!> p/b. ltlnt cone! Wht 30M S4:nJ 64& 9464 IMW 9712 ~••••••••••••!?!~. Seic) '73 VW Bug rebll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·71 'Vette conv, 2 tops, sharp, low mi, 350 auto, $7100. 545-720 l '70 Chev Suburtian •i T_ ps • p b , 1 o m i I e a R e . Am F'm tape S190h. Mll·89fli. CONTRACTOR SP!::<.: '78 Doc1~e t too. custom boxes rac ks & be d . am/fm stereo cass. H, 0 trailer h.itch, 38M . $7900 645-7531 Yam 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73FORDVAN V8. PS. PB, AUTO ms 641>-1684 "75 DODGE lTon Van. am/fm cassette S2SOO 64&2017 '14 Dodge Trades man 100, mint cond. SUIOO/bst ofr. ll6l-42J&8 J e1r 95to ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAY TOP DOLLAR ror top used can-foreign. domestics or classics Jr your car IS e.xtra clean, see I.IS FIRST! ~ : If~~ Or91p C-.ty I 2925 Harbor Olvd. COSTA MESA 979-2500 I ··•••··••·········•···· Fo r the Bes t Deal an Orange County l'ome See u, Today! I & SADDUIACk VALLEY IMPORTS 28402 Marguerite Pkwy. Mission Viejo tl 1-2040 495-4949 Closed SUndays CREVIER &I SI 6 HOAOWAY SAMIA AHA 835·3171 . TH[ Ul!l .. AT( DAIYtNGMACHINf •USIDIMW1• '722002til w/s/r 12061 ) '733.0cs4spd <~> '742002tiis /r (0332) ·75 2002.a {0035, ·77 630csi 4 spd str (0366) '76200'ls/r4sp.I 1.578) '78 320ia air . stereo (SU8) '793ZOl 4 spd. sunrf (8917 l '78320ia. air 16095) "79 S28a4spd (1944) '7YS281a s /r (2l61S) Cloted S• llll'p oaAMCH COUNTY'S OLDIST & '80 Mazda RX-7 GS. lo ma , loaded. 18.95(1. 842.9209 Mercedes lea 97 40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79t.8CIEHZ 1000 10.000 miles. Absolutely new! Loaded! (923WRN) Sll,ttS JIMMARIMO VOUSWAG&t l871J Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 14~2000 MERC.IENZ STOP DOUAlt S •IUY•C-lp ,.. ... , STOP DOI.LAIS JIMSUMONS IMPOlrTS l970HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 611-127' '80 450 SL with 2 tops. Like new cond.. To be sold al Public Auction, Wednes. Eve Oct. 15th. 11rter 7 :30PM. Inspect ion Tues & Wendes. Eve 6 :30 PM . Empire Galleries, 2722 N. Main, Santa Ana. 547-7384. MG 9142 ••••••••••••••••••••••• eng In .xlnt cond. 12450 or bst ofr 497-3034 Westphalia ·m· Fu II m tenor Lo w m ileugc XJnt cond. QlOO or best offer 714 '768-1941 da}. 714 1661 W82 eves '72 Bug. 1 owner Amt Fm stereo. tape. Smog cert. Many xtras. l290010BO 494.9227. ·73 Super Beetle. 73K mi, nice stereo, map. $2000. 546-2011 or 830-6872 '77 VW, 1 owner. Jtlnt cond. New Ures, brks. AM /FM stereo. fuel in· jection. 2.0. completely s t oc k , 65,000 ml. 5'500 /bst olr 960-72911 a ft 6PM. tt40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·73 Ford Torino Wagon, runs gd. 9195. ~30 or 752 5090. '69 Country Squire Wagon. 67,000 orig m1., very clean, $750. 77~6989 ttlO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S AHIST LINCOLN-MERCURY DEALERSIUP RAY R.ADllOI UNCOLN·MERCURY 18-18 Auto Center Dr. SDFwy·Lake Forest exit IRVINE IJ0.7000 1961 Baja Bug, needs , 1 I work on Int .. l"OC>or best MllCURY COUCltM Factory air condiUonina. tilt wheel, cauette. X· TRASHARP. <640VWH> otter 751·1221 SUPER BEETLE '73. AM /FM. aunroor. new tires. 77,000 mJ, nd5 paint & clutch rpr Dody in gd rond. l2200/bel olr. Call al\ 4 pm M t.hru Fri or wknds anytime. 839-3901 !78 BUSS8M. li000/0BO 96J-J06J CAU. IJ0.7000 ~";t.tlJ.e UNCOLH·MERCURY 16 AUTOCENTER DR. IRVINE UO. 7000 --------77 Monarch, 48.000mi, top '6.5 BUG XJnt Cond. Reb. W 1receipt1 New Tires /Chrome Rims. SLS7S. Laau.na 681·3982 condition, ~aut. car, AM /Fii 1Hr11, eledr l lU\· root, $3500, 549-7505. ......... ttlJ WEIUY CLEAN CARS ANDTIUCIS Sales·Servlce.Leaslng Rov c:.wr,lllC. &Its tloyce BMW IS«> Jamboree Newport Beach 640-6444 MGB '70; new lop, eJth, radials, am/fm 8 trk, mags, lug. rack. Good cond. Sl.800ororrer. must sel I. 493.5797 / ( 213 ) 659-2888, Ive message. "78 VW Convertible, ••••••••••••••••••••••• white/while, AM /FM '87 Muatant. runs ar kJoka <·ass, air, fr.!00. 631 -181S rood. Must .ell. Best of. V~¥O tJJJ ~~: 8'2·1898, TJ4-2Ul ••••••••••••••••••••••• COMMflL CHEVROLET ·~,~Htrhur f<l\d • 1 "I \ \1 I·'-\ 540-1 200 HIOHIUYB T~ doUan for Sports Cen, B~. Campers, 9l•'s, Audi I Ask forU/C MGR MMMAl..O YOUSWA ... 18'lll Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 14J.JOOO TOP DOI LAI , .. ~ ~ac••AM UlmCAlll m1raclp n-i.17d<1 t T-...., , .. ••••••-~ '79 Midget, ll,500 mi, tan 1• int/choc. eJtt. roll bar, IOIMcu.ta.•1 & 850 N. Beach Blvd. LA HABRA (5 Ml, No. ol SA Fwy) Western mags, auto rev. cus , lug. rack. SS()()(). 673-9ZU 1964·2072 9144 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 MGB. Xlnt cond. Sell al best off~. &13-2033 ev, S4 l ·216'72 dys. Opel 9746 1714tlU.IUJ Sunday by Appl. • •••••••••••••••••••••• l~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ln 0pe1 Rall>'•. •Int cond .• 'TS BMW S3Ql : Mu•t sell exlr11, 11000. Days lmmed! Ready to &Ivel 151·9M4. Eves&eo-9103. '511GO/otfer. 714/f7S.0.S, IJJ!m6-567t Ask f()(' Don. WM BMW SIOl, U,000 ml, 4·ap, 1unroot, AM·FM. on1. owner. tolld '7580, MMTTOor-.tm. t711 ....................... ....... t741 • •••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S PEUGEOJ' DIUEl. HEADQUART&as . ....... ........... .-MOW111 llACHMODS ............ VOLVO SALIS. SBVICI AteLIASllCl OVERSEAS DEUVERY EXPERTS IAILllll VOi.YO llllMHarbor Blvd. COSTA MF.SA 64'stJOJ l40-t4'7 Olt•MelCOUMTY a.-... ttH ••••••••••••••••••••••• '19 Old1 Dal C1ttlu1 Brahm. lo ml. Lota ol ea- tru . A11wn leue ol ~. 714 19SS-OOJJ dya or 55M87hY /Wkndl. '11 Vt.ta wan. 1unroot. new trena, aJnl COl9Cl. $1'915. llG-338S 'M PIS. good lr&M ear. Q)e ownr. $300. 557 ... 0 ..... ffl1 ~()I.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• EXCLUSIVELYVOLVO 'T8 lb&naOO.., auto, MW i-:==ai:-tlr81/brakta, llOOO. BUY or LEAS~· 8a·21J8 eves/wkenda DIRECT ft61 Rni~~s.~ Anllhalrn 750-20t1 .~ ................ .. '74 v.,. ..... 4 .,.. "'4 Volvo hdaa, ldr • econom1 low prl •• ·~·l~_.;-:'.·,..": ~ -'"":·;::;:;::;:. ..... ~ .... ,;r .••. , ... c-.-.. ..... ,.. . . -HnPOltT Bual 7Ullll .-..-. er..,. ......... ....,., ~~..._~_~~~~- •u. a r •Mm••• .... \ ••lie ro•r •lito•&:i;: a...an.d Ads, .,., ... ..... .., ........ .. ... llOP .... c.Mr. NalO t'fA9. . ~ ( Orange Coast 01 T l ON J SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANG CO UNTY. CALIFORNIA MONDAY, O CTOBER 13, 1980 Your Homt•fo\\·n Dail~· ~t·•·spapt•r C TWE NTY-F I VE CEN TS • 1vers Find Col um.bus' Ship Pinta? K t-;\ \\E'it ll.1 \I' 11 , bl'CO •""'IM\ l'Jf' ..,1111 I \ 1111 ... tophl I c:oturnbu'i -..11h•1I "11h hll'" th.11 bl'C' lilt' JIJfl llf t'\ I I\ \ lit Ill ,111 younl(~lt-1 ' '' hool Ill 111\ I ht• Nina, th1· l'111t.1 .111d 1ti1 ..,111t.1 Mar in N1l" 11"1 111 11111" 1111 Columhu... "·" t •1xu 111 ''lll •' hu nlt't ' th111I. ttll'' 111.t\ "·", found ltw \Ht'l'I. 111 lh• 1'•111 . Ol 1n I-rit·I. .111ll J• •1111 1 '·"•l\11 l\\O h cv W1• ... 1 tn '''"' hu11l11·. a r e11 ,1 tot.1t h <"11' 1111•1•d 1t1•· 11111 th1•\ 10111111 Ill 30 (t't'l 111 v.1111•1 off lh1• n•rnott• furk., 1111d C.11 n1.., I'll.ind' 111 1h1· H<1h.ir111" ,., ttw 1•1nt.1 11111 "11•11!1!\I!\ i.:1\ .111 II on t'Ull 1\llll .md ,1 1·1 udt•h l1>1'11H·d k ad 1· 111111111 h,11 f 11•1t10\ c·d l'rom tht:: ""1 1·1•1' ·•PP•"ll It• 111 1 r11m the I 'Ith t 1·111111' \11,I t11•luri1 <1I r.-111rtb 1n .\I 1 I 1 lfh' 1'1111.i \~ dl> lllll' llf lht' It'\\ "lllp' 111 ttu• \lt'lnll ) or tht• 1i-.l,1111b v.ht·n 1l w1·11t down 1n 1-1 !l'J 11 I I !'>00 Ne xt 11111nth , bat·ked by a v. t-alth) l>allas invei.tor. Fnck. c;ai.t1u(• amt a team of 23 divers and ur('hueolog1sts plan lo re turn lo the site to recover the re- m a ins of the s hip "We plan lo go over the wreck Vt'r} vt.•ry l'<trefully." Gasque satd \\t• will recover every. than~ that "'e can find nght do\\n to tht· la:st ballast stone ·Like all archeologic:;il work . we may not be able to come up with a~olute proof that 1t 1!> the Pint a. · Gasque said of the wreck, which he and h1~ partner spotted three years agu "But 1r we fi nd nothing to contn1dii't it. we think the• we ight uf l ltL' evidence will be ~I\\ fully l'UO VIOCIOg .. Columbus took thl· ~ina, lht: Pinta ;Uld lh~ Santa \I aria all wooden sailing ~hrp!'. on hr'> ma1dl'n VO) a ge to the New World in 1<192 The S;inta Mana is k no" n tn ha n· been destroyed a ft <'r r u nni ng :..g r o und 1n Del'emf)(•t 1492, but tht-fates of thl' Nina and the Pintu wen: not known. !'he Nina aeC'ompanied Colu ni t>u i. on his four l<itc r voyagl's to th1· Americas and then d bap· peJrc<i from hrs ton cal reeord The Pinta. too, shppt>d into ob scur 1ty until Frick and Gasq ue got soml' lwlp an rcsearehing a wreck. From record ... or Journeys 1n the Spanish archives and a 500-year old tax n·port. historian and National I 11•ogr aph1c consult· ant Eugen<• l.\·on n ·construrlcd the last JOlar·nc·~ of the Pinta. flt· s ays C'\ 1dt•nc·1• 1nd1rat<'~ one of the Pinta ·~ CJY.ne rs. V1nrt·nt1 Pin11in. Y.a!> making a r<•turn tip to lht· \op" World around l •1'1'• or 1500 F ive Perish • ID Day ·care Blast Estant•ia tlueen Sharon Burkt·. 1980 homecommg queen at Costa Mesa's Estancia High School. is escorted b y her father, Bill, fo llowfog her coronat ion Frid ay night. She is 17-year-old senior trom \te's':r Vt-rde. - ACLU Meet Ousts Newport Officer 6\ n 1u n <. 1. \l ~,.,.,, • Of tlW D.i•h P 10• ~,_., An e ... tamall·d l'lll fJN>JJlt• at e nd<'d 1h1· \nu•rt< 1n c 1v1I .1bcrtu·-. l nion ' lf•1..1,l.t11\1• onrerl'rll'C' 1n N··~ p111 t Betwh ;aturduy. tJ11l 1Jnl~ m11• 01 t.hem ~as ask• d t11 l<·.1\1· Officer H1r h Long .• 1 N1•wpo1t leac h l:O mmur.it~ rel Jl1ons olacem:in "a:-ash.<•d to '-ll'P nut f a seminar addrt>ss1n~ the 1:. ues of pol1ct' 1nlPll1,genc e athermg anti ahus.-nf public uthority Rudolfo Alvan·i pr<;:-.1dent of l\e ACLl Southt>rn <'.1\1f111nia ioard of D1n•1·tor-; :.:11d Long, ' ttired 1n street duthC' .... \.\as sked lo leave bt>c au~t· M''"' al eoplc md1calt•d thl'~ !cit un omrortablf' that .in offlt ,.r \\a-. 3king notes in the mom Rees Lloyd. Al'Ll' :-luff at .o rn e y. said t oday Lo n g rould not have bN•n asked to tep outside lhc c afeteria at tewport Harbor 111 J?h School 1 '!re a panel was meet1 n~ 1f he • I identified himself as an of- DellyP'llel,,_ GETS ACLU BOOT Officer Rich Long f1cer before lhe session . Al varez said someone had ree- <Stt ACLU, Page A2) Topless Thief Woman Stripped, Fkes C o s t a Mesa po l ice a r e arching fo r a wom an who led to steal a fur coat from ordstrom 's department store turday, ended up in a fracas ith a store security agent and a stomer and ftnally fl ed South ut plaza wearing only a half. Ip • Pollce said the woman was led by security age nt Lisa a Bravo at about closing time turday lo Nordstrom's ladies ar department. Ma. Bravo told officen the • ttUtred a S3.000 fur coat c1r9a, bet.ween her leis. woman left. pollce said, llPftl Bravo attempted to llhlr cMllde the 1tore. tuaale tb,at uw both Nlllal OD the tround, the woman, described as s peak· ing with an European accent, fair-skinned and in her 20s, broke free. Ms . Bravo s aid a male customer saw the battle and ran after the fleeing suspect. He grabbed her and in an ensuing tussle the woman again broke free. leaving behind the black dress she wore, her purse and the fur coat, police said. The woman ran topless, clad only in a half ·sli.,, to a waitinc car, police said, jumped ln and was driven from the South Coast P laza parking lot. Officen said llcenH pl•t.e ln- vest11aUon rev,aled tbat the car In which the woman ••caped waa listed as rented from• Simi V ahe, rmtaJ altDC)'. 7 Hurt; Gas Leak Blamed ATLANTA <AP > An ex plos1on believed caused by a gas leak or faulty boiler ripped through a day care center al a northwest Atl anta housing proj- ect today. killing four children a nd one adult, authorities said. Seven other people wert: inJured. Lt. .John Cam e ron o f the F ulton County m ed ic al ex- aminer 's office said fi ve bodies were found. The injured were t a k en to Grady Memor ial Hospital in downtown Atlanta. Mayor Maynard J ackson said he asked the Atlanta Housing Authority to evacuate day care centers at all other hous ing pro- jects rn the city as a precaution. He said he wanted furnaces and gas lines at the centers checked. "It WU IO quick ... said Melin- da Cole, a teac"r at the center. "All I coukt think was. 'Get to the door . Ge t out, children . get out.· I got all 12 or mine out safe and accounted for." Public Safet y Commissioner Lee Brown said the e xplosion. which caused "heavy da mage" to the building and hurled rubble as far ClS-50 -fttt,-appeared to- ha ve bee n caused by natural gas . But Jim Tate, a s pokesman for AU anta Gas Light Co .. said "Our preliminary reports in- dic ate it was a boiler ex- plosion." Brown said t here was "no sus- picion of foul play ... Our pre· liminary investigation indicates an accidental explosion." Knife-wielder Attacks Mesan In Parking Lot A Costa Mesa man was treat· ed for arm and thig h cuts late Sunday after he was attacked by a knife-wielding bandit in the p a rkin g l o t a t De nn y's restaurant, 3170 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa police said George Bers haw, 47, and a wom an com- panion pulled into the d ark lot at about 9:30 p.m, Be rs haw told offi cers he closed his car door . turned around and was confronted by a m an with a 12-inch, curved knife who demanded bis money. Bers haw told his assailant he thought he heard police cars coming and got back in his car. T he assailant, described as a 30-year-old Latin, jabbed him in the arm with the knife. Bershaw said. Police said Bershaw and h.is companion attempted to escape when Bershaw kicked the man in the stomach while sitting in the car. Bershaw was cut on the thigh as the thief went down. Bershaw s aid he backed his car out of the parking stall with the door still open. Tbe move knocked the knifer to the asphalt again, he said. The assailant got up, ran for his car and drove from the scene, Bersbawtoldpollce. Later, the Costa Mesa man, who had about S4 In his pocket , reported to Hoag Memorial Hospital's emergency room ror treatment. Purchase Vetoed W ASIUNGTON (AP) -Presi- dent Cart.er baa vetoed le1lllaUon requhiDI the 1overnment to buy land for Minnesota Cblppewa ln- dlan1 at a price determined "ex- cn1lve" by Interior Secretary Cecil Andrue. YOUNG SURVIVOR OF ATLANTA DAY CARE CENTER RUSH~D TO HOSPITAL AFTER BLAST Five People Kiiied, About 7 Others Injured In Tragedy Caused by Natural Gas Quake Toll Hits 1,500 Thousands Mo re Injured in Algeria Disaster AL ASNAM. Al~eri a IAP> Res cuers rl a~sng throui.:h the r uins of AJ Asnam. haml't>red hy earthquake aftershocks and working by floodlight at night, have found thousands of 1nJured and counted t he numbe r of dead found at 1,500, officia ls said to· day. New tremors measuring 5 on the Richter sca le tremors capable of causing considerable damage -regis tered in the area today, according to Sweden 's seismologicaJ institute. No new d a m age was reporte d in Al Asn a m . Friday's quuke reg· istered 7 .5. Catlaolir l/nit ·'T he Pnt1rl' Algerian nation 1s mob1lill'<i" to help the esl1mated 100.000 p1•ople lefl injured or homeless 1n the disaster. the state radio said . T he Hed Cres cent. Moslem Algeria s equivalent of the Hed Cross. said the final death toll may surpass initial estimates of between 5.000 and 20,000 de ad. But there was still no govern- ment estimate of the number or casualties. and some rescue or ficials expressed hope the final fi gure could be lower than the Red Crescent's estimate. Many of the dead and injured were in mountain villages within Gay Supporter's Resignation Asked By FREDERICK SCHOEMEKL °''lleo.llyP'lletlUft The chairman -0f an or ganiza· tion which claims to represent 200 Orange County Catholics is calling for the resignation of a county Human Relations Com- misaioner who helped promote a conference on gay spiritual de- velopment. The commission er, Dan Bremner of La Habra, said to- d•Y be has no lntentiQn of re- sign Ing and c l aime d the c h airman of Catholi cs in DefeDH of Truth has misstated the facta of the matter. BrellVler, who authored a let· ter on county stationery urging attendance at the two·day con· ference lut July at Cal State Fullerton, said he did so with the commission's blessing. The commission's c harge , Bremner noted. is to facilitate dialo~ue between groups and in- dividuals with diverse views. Bremner said he wrote the let· ter ''lo racilitate the attendance of priests and nuns" at the con- ference sponsored by Dignity, a gay Roman Catholic organlza· tion. Jeffrey Johnson. who has iden- tified himself as chairman of Catholics in Defense of Truth. said he believed the use or coun· ty letterhead in promotion of the conference wu wrong. ··one thing we want lo make <See CATHOUCS. Pa1e A!) -"t-_ _._ __ ---- a 20-mlll' radius of Al A ... nam Some re maant·d isolated hy landslides and ruined bridges but a cont inuous he licopte r airli ft by the Algerian army was evacuatin_g injured villagl'rS to hospitals Off1caals said at least 000 sur vavors wc•re hosp1lHl11ed. but Red C resce n t P res ide nt Mouloud Relaounne told re porters tens of thousands \\Crc <See Qt;AKE. P age A2> Or:~~~ ~oa~• ,, . I ·~ . -----.._ -.... \\'e at h er Continuing low cloud1 ness with only partial mid d ay c lear ing throu g h Tuesday Lows tonight 58 at the beaches. 62 inland. Highs Tuesday 71 to 74 INSIDE TODA'1 D r. Robert Sheridan of Newport Beach practices traditional medicine m hrs II a r b o r V 1 e w II c11n e s neighbor hood. He makes tht rounds on a bicycle. giving follow-up checkups t o or· t hoped 1c patient&. See F'eatunng. Page Cl. PNLYP!LOT c ..... Optqtw 13. .. ·~~~--JlJST llREAICINt;·.....--.-........ ... lAI,.,..,,., ttom todflr~ ......., • .... 't•• Stock Trading HlJIJed :By ComputerPlobl.enu NEW YORK IAPJ Stock tredla1 waa au.pended 54 mmuta lod•Y oo lb_, New York alltll American atoc:k ••~•• .. due to a computer l)r'Oblem. ' hu"k Storer. M spoknmlll for Oae New York Stock Ex chanJt!. 1111d the prublem dtvtloped In lM market data t)'•lem. •which <'Ontrol• tht' atO<'k tleket and Nnds out \nrormallon on 1radea as they occur • Thfl "h1trdw•re malfunction" OCNfTed at ?:51 a.rn . PDT. he said . The exrhan1es automaUnll)' ••itched to a backup system. whkh did not work . .nd tradln1 was halted at 8: 11 11 m at be.Ith cxchanit\'s ll was reiawntd at 9:05 a .m . ....... 11..,,..r ,. 9fnp' SAN UlEGO 1AP1 The Sil"al Companies Inc announeed at agreement in Pl'\ftClple today to merae with Ampex Corp of ~Redwood Cit~. ~ The agret>mcnt {'alls tor the uchanae o( 85 of a s11nal com moll shitre ror ~Ul'h ~hare of Ampu common Signal common closed at <i<P, J."r1day, Ampex at 33~•. Mergt!r plans were announred In February but were can . celed in April. Signal said the new plan should be completed 1n January Pia•~ Blj.-kH la .Ni••• ISTANBUL. Turkey (AP> A Turkish Airlines Boeing 707 jet with about 150 passengers and crew aboard was hijacked by unidentified people today dmna a flight from Istanbul to Ankara and made a refueling stop at the southeast city of Diyarbakir. Turkish Airlines officials said. Airline sources said the plane was thought to be headed for eitht!r Tehran. Iran, or Jidda, Saudi Arabia, after the refueling stop. The identity or the hijackers was not immediately known but Turkjsh Television broadcast a report saying the hijackers deManded safe passage to an unidentified foreign country. Smith Coa.1 lo Gt-f .. ,.._,Air' EL MONTE CAP) -For the first time in two weeks the Air Quality Management District forecast good air quality today for the entire South Coast Air Basin. A Pollution Standard Index rating of 9'l was predicted in the San Fernando, Santa Clarita, San Gabriel and Pomona valleys and the Riverside-San Bernardino area. The rest of the basin should have a PSI rating of 42. Sftdfttor, A rrltitert Argentinean Wins Nohel Peace Prize OSLO, Norway <AP> Adolfo Perez Esquivel, an Argentine human rig hts advocate im- prisoned for a year by t)is gov- ernment, was awarded the 1980 Nobel Peace Prize today·. The 4~year-old sculptor and architect was haoored for hav- ing ·'shone a light in the dark· neu" of military rule in his land. the Norwegian Nobel Com· mittee said. The five-member committee passed o v e r s u c h other nominees as President Carte r, Po e John_ ~aul 11.J. Brlllah_ Foreign Minister Lord C ar· rington and Zimbabwe Prime Minister Robert Mugabe in choosing the little-known Argen· tine for the $212,000 prize. Perez Esquive l heads the Peace and Justice Service, a network of Latin American human rights organiiationa. The s·ervice is headquartered In Bue nos Aires. Argentina. He was jailed in April 1W7 "without cause being shown." the com · triittee said, and was released more than a year later. He left Argentina this year for the first lime on a trip to Europe. His selection continued a re· oenl trend of awarding the peace prize to human rights advocates and groups. Soviet dlsaident An· drei Sakharov won In 1975 and the London-based Amnesty ln· ternalional in im. Two other previous winners, Betty Willia ms and Mairead Corrigan , the co-leaders of Northern Ireland's Peace Peo· pie movement, nominated Perez Esquivel for the prize, calling him "the most outstanding non· violent activist alive." The Peace Prize is one of five established in the wlU of Swede Alfred Nobel. the inventor of dynamite , lo honor ORANGe COAST c DAILY PILOT ,... ....... ~ ...... l ... ldhor ~" ...... ,. ... -~ ... ·- c.e.a .... -.f_. ......... , .. .... -11 ... -• ~01t11•.~ •• \I Oftleee ·l..atWM-" •• , ..,., c...e........, """'l"tfloll l!IH<.lt: I"'' hecll ........ '•••••••en•,..._.. 0111muMu11t1...,....,. A ........ WINS PEACE PRIZE Sculptor bqUfval humanitarian works. Last vear's winner was Roman Catholic missionary Mother Teresa of Calcutta, India. Professor John Sannes. chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said Perez Esquivel was awarded the prize because be bas "devoted his Ufe to tbe struU}e ror human rights aince 1974." The committee's statement said the purpose of the Peace and Justice Service, which Perez Esquivel has led since 1974, is "to work to promote fun· damentaJ human rights. baaing itself exclusively on non-violent meana." It bae a network of con· tacts spanatag the South American continent. A native of Buenos Aires. Peret. Esquivel was a professor of architecture before giving up his teaching position in 1974. Mesa Library To Be Closed Fora Week Orange County's downtown Costa Mesa Library will remain clOled to tbe public until Oct. 21, accordlq to Mary Anne 7.ook, librarian. . ne f adlity ii closed because of city eamtruction in tbe Uom Park Super Block area, lndud· in• the MW C01DmWlit1 elDier. U oftldall bad expected .. -· llr•cb would re· ... *'· AddtUODal work, taeludlaa coae,.., tr-.eMlla 9Dd ,,...., laH forced uotier week of cklHd UbraJ'J doan, Ml. Zook IDDCMleld Frida,. UatU Ule librUy _ opeu, abe Ukl, ---......... thole ........ .._.. ...... _ ................. v ... ~ .... at -.... Verde l'nYI I Iraqis Drive to Oil Port 8 F. I RU'f, 1 • .,banon <AP> froql soldiers and tankis under an umbr~ll• of artillery fire t<>· dMy vretfed their drave toward tht· lrM111an oil rdinery port of A bad1rn d eaplte attacks by hel1C'opter aiunahips. Iraqi forces 11tlll fou11ht holdouts in the nel&hbortne port city of Khor· ramahahr. The sh4llllng or Abadan killed at leut 30 civilians and wounded 140, the official Iranian news agen c y r e ported . In the !light-long usault, Iraq claimed two Iranian helicopter gunshlps wer e shot down and 38 lraruan soldiers were killed. It listed Ira q1 losses as three dead and 14 wounded. The Iraqi air force hit targets around Isfahan. I ran 's second largest city, for the first time. Iraq said Iranian pilots tried t-0 attack two towns near MosuJ, the oil t:enler in northern Iraq, bui were driven off by ground fire. Iran said its soldie rs and airplanes Sunday "routed" Iraqi units which had crossed the Karun River on pontoon bridges two days ago east of Abadan. President Abolhassan Bani· Sadr claimed in an interview with The Asscociated Press that Iran's forces were "wearing down the Iraqis" and planning counterattacks. f'l'OlaP..,,e-AI ACLU .•• ognized Long and repo an officer was taking notes at the conference The ACLU presl said that a request for any lice officers to identify thems ves went un· answered until L oyd finally called out for Officer Long by name. "At which point." Alvarez said. "Longraisedhis hand. ·• Lloyd said today that "whenever you have a situation of a police officer who won't identify himself, it does im· plicate F'i rst Amendment rights." ,.,....p~''' CATHOLICS clear, however, ia this is not a hate campaign against homosexuals," Johnson. of San Clemente, said. "We are sym. pathetic and love them, as we must love all our fellow men." "But we cannot legitimatize homosexual acts or homosexual -orientation,'' he-added. Johnson said that Catholics in Defense of Truth was made up of about 200 Roman Catholics in Orange County. He said the or· ganlzallon was formed in Januarv. However, Monsignor Michael Driscoll, chancellor of the Diocese of Orange, said the group has no official recogrution with the church. f'l'OlaPflfle Al QUAKE ... injured. He said there was a severe shortage of hospital beds and emergency operating equip· ment. Teams organized by an Algerian women 's group gathered up small children who lost their parents in the disaster and were wandering aimlessly through the strffts. Thieves Get Bag, $15,000 A Newport Beach salesman who bundled up SlS,000 in cash ln a brown paper bag and then 1tuhed it on the floor of hia car, told police that someone swiped the money this weekend while he Wal shopping. Oliver Lee Reinert.Ion, a 41· year-old Newport resident, said be forgot to lock the passenger door of hi.I car after stopping at a ahopplna center on Weatcliff Drive. He told investigators the money, all S50 bllla. was in a bag that was concealed under a n~w•paper. Hoag Visit Slated For lloodmobile A Red CroN bloodmobile vi.lit l1 1cbeduled at Hoaa Memorial Hoepttal in Newport Beach Oct. 21 for doaon tbrou1hout tbe Harbor Ana who would like to contribute by •PDOlntment. Hours for the vialt wUl be 11:11 w S p.m., accordlnc t.o 1poll•mm at UM boa=· Ap-....... to cloaate may be m• bf callint Ml-llOO. . BofJbg M'on'i M'alk AWne Crippled children concern Bobby Lucas 9 of Inglewood. He is one. The son of Sal~a: tion Ar~y workers Mr. and Mrs. Barry Lucas will compete Saturday in six-mile Jog/Walk·A ·Thon at Rose Bowl in Pasadena for pledged funds to benefit ~gency 's Begoro Clinic in ~hana. Africa. specializing m treating severely crippled children. Friends have said they will put up $150 for Bobby's effort. "Other han- dicapped kids don't have as much as I do, says young cerebral palsy victim. To walk, run, or sponsor entrant, call local Salvation Army headquarters. Mailer to Wed, Split, Wed Again NEW YORK <AP) -Pulitzer Prize-winning author Norman Mailer has made plans to divorce his next wife even before they marry, a spokesman for the writer confirmed today. The New York Daily News. in a copyrighted story, said Mailer. who divorced his fourth wife. Beverly, on Sept. 24, has been living ln Brooklyn with Norris Church and their 2'r'lt -year·old son. John Buffalo, for six years. But MJss Church won 'l be his next wife. Rather, Mailer, 57, will marry 1azz singer Carol Stevens, a woman he lived with for seven years and with whom he has a -daughter Maggie. 9, th~ News said. Mailer plans to marry Miss Stevens to honor the years they lived togethe r as husband and wife and were unable to marry , and give his daughter parents who at some point were married to each other, the News said. But the couple will then gel a "civilized divorce" to be followed immediately by Mailer's marriage to Miss Church. Endorsement Out LOS ANGELES CAP) -Of. ficials of a coalition claiminR to represent one million Southern California Hispanics have re- fused to endone any presiden- tial candidate. adding that President Carter is in trouble with HiApanic voters. The News said all parties in· volved have agreed to the ar· rangement. The spokesman. who did not want to be identified confirmed the report today and said that MaiJ('r had nothing to add. "It is a bit discoocering and upsetting to think what people will say." Miss Church told the News. "Nevertheless I am behind Norman's decision and J understand why he feels he must do this.·· M a1ler has been married four t am es. has had num e r o us laaisons. and eight children. the News said . T h e paper s a1d Mailer supports 14 J>('rsons with alimony 1llld c1ntd su-ppurt Mesa Home Burglarized A burglar who pried open the front door or a condominium in northeast Costa Mesa escaped with $500 in cash and about $11,500 worth of belongings from the home. police said. Rosemarie Sneed told officers that when s he returned home late Saturday evening her garage door was standing ,open and a deadbolt lock on her front door had been torn from the door casing. Listed as missing from the ransacked condominium were about Sl0.000 worth or jewelry a nd a $500 capuccino coffee machine. Chiropractor Facing Sex Rap Stricken A Ne\vport Beach chiroprac· • t o r . racing c h ild m olestation c harges. has been freed on $40 .000 bai l after being hos pitalized over the weekend with chl>sl pains Dr. Gordon Braham . 36, had been listed in fair rondition late F'riday at UCI Medical Center. Braham, along with his 21· year-old wife, Nancy, was ar· rested last week after a 14-year- old girl told authorities s he'd part1c1pated in sexual activity with the chiropractor and his wife S he also told investigators -;he 'd bee n s upplied with drugs . The c:haropr:.ictor fainted while bein~ arrested a nd late~ co ... _ __. __ laps('d o ut ·idc his jail cell . poltc:e said. Brah:.im's wife was released late last "'eek when her bail w as reduced from SS0,000 to $10,000. 4 Die in Crash CANOGA PARK <AP) -Four people we r e killed and two othe rs injured in a head-on col· lision that police said occurred wh e n the driver of a car swer ved into oncoming traffic. Michael George Kane, 24. of Canoga Park, the driver of one of the cars, was thrown from the vehicle Sunday and pronounced dead at West Hills Hospital. One of h is passengers, Kristi Brauner . 20, also of Canoga Park, wrus pronounced dead at the scene. --------------------·---~- Introducing the Al's Garage Jean . designed especially with you in mind, lightweight. comfortably tailored w11h a straight leg silhouette. In three shades ot den1m, lnd1go. washed and bleached ~. I ALS GARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (~14) 644·7030 .. Irvine E.OIT lO N 't'our Home•o•·n -Dall~ Nt•wspaper VOL. 73, NO. 287, 3 SE CTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Gay Supporter's Resignation ·sought 8)' •"'REOERU'K :o'<'llOEMEttL Ot ,.,. CH11y ~, .. , ''•'1 The <'huirmu11 1>1 .in orKaniia hon wh1rh du1111s to represent 200 Orunge Co1111ty l.'uthol11'lj as cathng ror thi: n •s1gnut1on or Q t•ounty tlumun ltd 1t1oni. Com mlssiorwr \\ho tu~lpt'd promote u conferenrt' nn ~u~ :.p1n tual de velopmenl Th e t• o m 111 1 !I :-. 1 n n l' r , O a u Bre mne1 uf La 11 .tbra . .-.Jul to day he has no 1111ent1011 111 11· S IMn ln g and C'l atmc d th e c h a i r m an ol ('utho l1<1> tn Defrnse o1 Truth ha1> m11>:.tuh•cl the fi.cts ol the matter Bremner. who authured u lt:t lt>r on rounty stallonl·ry urging attl'ndance at lht• two day t·on fe rence lust July ill ('al State f'ulh•rton. said he did so with tht: l'Offi ITIISl>IOO ':. blessing Th l' 1·o mm1:.:.1on ':. char gt:, Hremne1 nutt-d. 1s to fae1lttate ct1 alo~ue betwt:en groups and 1n ell \ 1d11ab w1th dlVt.'fM' VICW!>. 1111•11uw1 :1 t11d hl' wrotl' lht' let l t."r 'to far1 l1lutc the a ltt:ndanc:-t- o( pries~ and nuns " at the roo ft-ren<'e i,ponsored Uy Dig nity. u KUY Honum t'atholtc organirn l ton Jt:ffrcy .Johnson. who has 1<.len 11f1ed h11ni.elf ?.s chairman of Catholics IO Defense or Truth. !)a1d he bdieved tht' use or coun ty letterhead an promotion of the t•onfercncc was \Hon~. ·'One thing we want to m ak e clea r. however, is this is not a hat e c ampai g n a,Mainst homosexuals." Johnson"." llf San Clemente, said "We a re sym pathe~I<' and love them. as we m ust love all our fellow men." "But wc cannot legit1mat1ze ho mosexual acts or homosexual orientation ... he added. Johnson said that Catholirs an Defense of Truth was m ade> up of about 200 Roman Catholics in Orange County. He said the or· g an1zalion wa s fo rme d i n January. llowcver, Monsignor Michael Dr isco ll, chancellor or the Diocese or Orange, s aid the ~roup has no official recognition with the church. ··we have triccJ to find out wh o tht'Y arc and h ~1v<· no t been suc - Cl'ss ful," Moni.1gnor Driscoll said "It i.cems they always want to take their battles lo the press.·· Monsignor Driscoll said he felt that Bremner 's role in helping promote the confe re n-c e was "perfectly le gitimate." Johnson's call for Bremner':i resignation was contained in a le tter date d last Monday to Ralph Clark. c:hairma n or the county Board of SupNvisors Johnson reiterated an the let (See CATHOLICS. Page t\21 Five Perish • lil Day Care Blast Dally Pllet~'-- G£T$ ACLU BOOT Otftc.er Rich Long Cop Asked l To Leave By ACLU By JERRY CLAUSEN Ot ... Dally ~1 .. t Staff An estim ated 150 people at- ~nded-the Ame ric an Civil Liberties Union's le gislative conference in Newport Beach Saturday. but only one of them was asked to leave, Officer Rich Long. a Newport Beac h commun ity r e lations policeman. was asked to step out of a seminar addressing the is- s ues of poli ce inte ll igenc e gathering and abuse of public authority. R udolfo AJ varez. president of the ACLU Southern California Board of Directors, said Long. attired in s treet clothes, was asked lo leave because severaJ people indicat ed they felt un· comfortable that an offi cer was t aking not.es m the room Rees Lloyd, ACLU staff at- torn ey, sa id t o da y Lon g would not have been asked to step outside the cafeteria at Newrort Harbor High School where a pllllel was meeting if he had identified himself as an of- ficer before the session. Alvarez said someone had rec· ognized Long and re ported that an officer was t aking copious notes at the conference. The ACLU president said that a request for any police offi cers to identify themselves went un- answered until Lloyd finally called out for Officer Long by name. "At which point," Alvarez said, "Long raised his hand." Lloyd said •today that "whenever you have a situation of a police omcer who won't identify himself. it does Im· plicat e Fir s t Amendment rights." 'Illleves Get Bag, 815,000 A Newport Beach saleaman who bwMlled up $15,000 in cub In a brown paper ba1 and then RMbld lt • the floor of his car. llold police that someone swiped Ille _, tllia weekend while he .. ....,...,... Obftl' lM a.lnerUoa, a U · ci• ":."C = ... · Mid ,._"'&car aftar ~ ..... , ........ ..;w;..n told laMttl 1ator1 tla• ................... ...... d ..... , a ..... 1,500 Dead In Quake AL ASNA M. Algeria <AP) - Hescuers clawing through the ruins of Al Asnam. hampered by e arthquake afters hocks a nd working by floodlight a t night. have found thousands of injur ed and <'Ounted the number of dead found at 1,500, officials said lo· day. New .tr~mors ·m eas uring 5 on the Richte r scale -tremors capable of causing considerable damage -registered in the area today, according to Sweden's seismologicaJ institute. No new damage was reported in Al Asnam. Friday's quake r eg- istered7.5. ·'The entire Algerian nation ia mobilized" to help the estimated 100,000 people left injured or homeless In the disaster, the s tate radio s aid. The Red Crescent, Moslem Alger ia's equivalent of the Red Cross, said the final death toll may surpass initial estimates of between 5,000 and 20,000 dead. But there was stilJ no govern- ment estimate of the number of casuaJties, and some res£.Ye. flcfals express pe the final figure could be lower than the Red Crescent's estimate. Many of the dead and injured were in mountain villages within a 20-ntile radius of AJ Asnam. Some rema ine d isolated by landslides and ruined bridges but a continuous h elicopter a irlift by the Algerian army was <See QUAKE. Page A2) Cmropractor Facing Sex Rap Stricken it' Newport Beach chiroprac· tor. facing child molestation charges, has been freed on S4 0 .000 bail after being hospitalized ove r the weekend with chest pains. Dr. Gordon Braham, 36, had been Usted in fair condition late f'~riday at UCI Medical Center . Braham, along with his 21- year·old wife, Nancy, was ar· rested last week after a 14-year· old girl told authorities she'd participated in sexual activity with the chiropractor and his wife. She a lso told inves tigators s he'd been supplied with drugs. The chiropractor fainted while being arrested and later col· lapsed outside his jail cell, police said. Braham's wife was released late last week when her bail was reduced from $50,000 lt> Sl0,000. APWl ...... ID YOUNG SURVIVOR OF ATLANTA DAY CARE CENTER RUSHED TO HOSPITAL AFTER BLAST Ave People Killed, About 15 Others lnlured In Tragedy Caueed by Natural Gaa Medical Faculties Exchange Planned By RICHARD GREEN Ot IM Dally ~1 .. 1 Slaff A trade of faculty me mbers 1s being planned between the Bei· jing (Peking) Medi cal Coll ege and UC Irvine. UCI C<'llege of Medicine Dean Stanley van den Noort announced today Speaking to a group of stu· dents and faculty at UCI. van d en Noort s aid t wo UCI pro- fessors would go to Beijing and two Beijing professors would come to UCI. His comments came after a speech at UCl this morning by Ma Xu, president of the Beijing Medical College. Xu said he is on a "good wi ll " t r ip a nd is studying U.S . m edical schools. He pointed out that medicaJ care In the People 's Republic of China doesn't compa re to what Americans receive. Inexperienced "barefoot doc· tors" are a chief component in the Chinese m edical syste m. Ma Xu said. Xu s a id these SO·C al le d barefoot d()('lors are given one to three months of medical train- ing and told to ca re for people an remote villages. "We have a very hard time providing medical care to people in rural d istricts," Xu said. "Eighty percent of the one· billion people in China work an agriculture and live in poor con· ditions. "So we go to the villages and give one of the res idents basic training in first a id. We te ll them the signs of serious disease a nd we give them simple equip· ment and drugs. And this is the way a majority of our farmers get medical care. Xu pointed out that this form of medical care doesn't compare to what Americans receive . Irvine Cops Seek Suspect In Assault Irvine police a rc looking for a 20·year old man 1n connection with the Friday rape of a 14· year-old girl. police Detective Dennis Howe reported today. The Irvine girl said she was raped by a man who she met at a party in the Colony housing de- ve lopment in Irvine. Howe said. "Investigat ion rf'Vealed that while attending a party in Irvine the victim was coerced into a van by the suspect," Howe s aid. ·'The victim s aid the suspect at· tacked and raped her in the van at 11 : l5 p.m." · Body Recovered RANCHO PALOS VERDES <AP> -Authorities were a wait. ing notification of relatives to· day before releasing the identity of a maJe swimmer whose body was recovered Sunday from waters off Portuguese Bend. Jtlailer to Wed, Di1'oree NEW YORK CAP) -Pulitser Prise-winning author Norman Mailer h as made plana to d ivorce hi• next wife even before they marry, a apoteaman for the writer confirmed today. The New York Dalb News In 8 Copyripted ltorf I tild llAUer, who dlwrced bll fourth wife, Beverly, on Sept. M, bu been Uvtn1 In Brooklyn wlUl Non1I Chureb and UMir 2~·1••r-ctld ICID, .IGllll Buffalo, f• ala,...... But ..._ Cbuttll won't be Ida ......... Rather, Mailer, 57, will marry jazz singer Carol Stevens, a woman be lived with for seven years and with whom he has a daughter Maggie, 9, the News said: Maller plans to marry Mias Stevena to honor the yean they lived w.ether aa huaband and wife and were unable to marry. and live h1I daupter parents who at tome point were married to eaeb ~.the Newa said. But the eGUple wlU then set a ••et•lllaed divorce" to be followed Immediatel y by Mailer's marriage to Mias Church. The Newa said all parties In· volved have agreed to the ar· raneernent. . The spokesman, who did not want to be identified confirmed the report today and aaid that Maller had not.hlq lo add. -·it II a bit di1concertn1 and uptettJq to thlnk what people will 11y," K1al Church told tbe Newt .. "Nevertheleu I am behind Norman'• •tatea IDd I understand why he feela h• mull do thl•." Mailer has been married four times. has h ad nume rous liaisons. and eight children, the News said. The paper said Mailer supports 14 persons with alimony and child support. Maller won fame after World War II with his acclaimed novel of the war' ''The Naked and the Dead." He won the Pulitzer Prise in 1.-r for .. Armies of the Nltht." a look at American polit1e11 and qain this year for • 'Tht Sxeeutl°"er'a Soni,'' 1 study of exff\lted killer Gary Gilmore. Gas Rips Atlanta Building ATL A NTA (A l'l An ex plos1 on believed <'<1used by a gas leak or faulty boiler rapped through a day care center at a no rthwest Atlanta hous ing proj· ect today, killing fou r children and one adult. autho rities said. Seven other people were injured. Lt John C ame ron or the Fulton County m e dical ex aminer's office said fi ve bodies were found . The injured were taken to Grady M e m o r ial llospitaJ in downtown Atlanta. Mayor Maynard Jackson said he asked the Atlanta Housing Authority to evacuate day care centers al all other housing pro· jecta in the city aa a precaution. He 1akl he wanted furnac• and 1u lines at the centers cheeked. "It waa so quick ," a~d Melin- da Cole. a teacher at the center. "All I couJd think was. 'Get to the door. Get out, children. get out.· I got aJI 12 of mine out safe and accounted for." Public Safety Commissione r Lee Brown said the explosion. whicb caused "heavy d~~e" to-ttnrbutlttrng ana nurled rubble as far as SO feet, appeared to have been cause d by natural gas. But Jam Tate, a spokesman for Atlanta Gas Light Co., sajd "Our preliminary reports in di c ate 11 was <1 boi le r ex · plos1on · Brown SaJd there was "nu sus p1cion or foul play Our pre ltmanary invest igation indicates an acddentaJ explosion." In addition to the dead. seven were injured in the explosion at the Gate City Day Care Center. located in the Bowen Homes ho using project. said Mik e Yelton. a c;pok e~rn an for the hosp1taJ He said one child was an sur· gery ~ith a s kull fracture, and another had second· and third· degree bums coverin~ 25 per cent of h1s body . "It was terrible. really terri- ble.·• said T inn1e Baugh, a teacher at another d ay care rente r across the street • · 1 went across to see what l could do after I heard the ex- plosion." s he said. "Some of the kids were badly hurt. I saw one little boy whose fi ngers were missinl?." Or:.~:Cj,:~a~• Weather Continuing low cloudi· ness with only partial m id· day c lear i ng through Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 at the beaches, 62 inland. Highs Tuesday 71 to 74. INSIDIE TODAY Dr. Ro~rt Sheridon o/ Newport Beach practicea troditicmal medicine in hu Harbor View H omes neighborhood. He make• the roamdl on a bic11cu . giving follow-up checkups to or- Oaopedk patfenfl. Su F'Hturlft(l. Page Cl. •••• .,.,_...,. .. ........ .. .,_..,..._,Cl L.M..... M ....... .... ~ Al c--"" C ....... CM ~ .. ~ .. .... ..... a ......... M ............ P ......... CM M-... Cl A•~ Cl .................... ....... ., .. IMtllNI-•• Pl!MkMllllc .... ..... ., .. ..... _..... .. ,....,... ., ,......,. ., .. ...-.. _...._ A4 t l --.OtMY.• NEW YORk <AP) -Slocti tradinl •• tuapendecl 54 minutn ~ an ti. New Yotk ud Amtne• 1tOC'k exch8ftl• du• to a eornput.er \>n>btem. Chuck Stonr, a 11polr-.man for lb• Mew York Stock E• chanse. aald the prot.Mm ct.¥etoped In the merket d•t• 111tem. which coatrola Ute ttotk U~ Md .... out lnlorm•Uon on tradee •\My Off•. The ''"ardw.,. malf\anctkl9" Off'tll 1.cl at '1 .M a.m. POT1 M said 'nit "'"'•-autometJt'all)' ••Itched to a ben\ap 1y1t.em, wlllcla cl6'9DI work. and tradioa wu baited at I 11 • m at bolb escl\.,..... It wu r•umed at t ·OS ~.m. ...... " ...... .... SAN 011~00 tAP) -1be 9'pal Companie• Inc anMunced an aareemeat a. jriaeiplt lodQ to m•r1e wtth AID pell Corp. of Redwood City. The •a~mut calla for lhe e.chan•e of ~of a Siana! com , mon sbare for each lllatt ot Ampex ciommon. Slpal common -closA!d.at.4'1"-.Fr~day , AlnPH· at.33~ , Meraer plas ttete unounced ln February but were can· celed in April Sipal sale! the nf'W plan should be completed an January. Cart..,. Sf'ftfu t"lc• lftdllll '1.r,- NEW YORK <AP\ -President Carter vowed today he would not reassess U.S. policy toward Israel and sa1d a group supporting Ronald Reag~n is. false~y suggest.ing _that he would negotiate with the Palestme Liberation Orgauuaation. . . Carter sought to portray him.sell as the only candidate with a legitimate claim to the vital Jewish vote in New York. And be tried out a new, r~·fire Litany of the issues on which he claims he 1nd Reagan disaeree. . Seeking to counter rears amOllg Jews that he might shift some of his support frotn Israel to Egypt "1 fortllcoming summit talks on lbe Middle East, the president raised those concerns directly and sought to answer them. / s..t• f:fHUf •• Gea '&.d Air' EL MONTE CAP) -For the first time in two weeks the Air Quality Management District forecast good air quality today for . the entire South Coast Air Basin. A Pollution Stodard lnde" rating or 92 was predicted in the San Fernando, Santa Clarita, San Gabriel and Pomona valleys and the Riverside-San Bernardino area. The rest or the basin shouJd have a PSI rating of 42. Setdpter, A Pr•lten Argentinean Wins Nohel Peace Prize "OSLO, Norway <AP) -Adolfo l!,erez Esquivel, an Argentine ti\lman rights advocate im-~isoned Cor a yH'I" b7 his gov- t!tlnnebt, wu aw-..ct the 1• Nobel Peace Priae-tabay. The 4~~ar-Ol4 keJJQr and architect was booonl for hav- ing "shone a light in t.be dark· ness" of military rule in bis land. the NorweiiU Hof>el Com- Dtittee said. The five·member committee Rassed over such other nominees as President Carter, Pope John Paul II, British ..,oreign Minister Lord Car- rington anlf Zim"bal>fie tTame- M in is ter Robert Mugabe in choosing the little-kaown Arge.n· line for the $212,000 prize .. ·-......... WINS~PRIZ! ~~·· Perez Esquivel heads the P.eace and Justice Service, a n:etwork of Latin American hµman rights organiiauons. The service is headquartered in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was jailed in April Um '"without cause being sbo"","' tbe com· mittee said, 8lld wo released more than a year later. He left Argentin• this year for the first time on··• trip to Europe. humanitarian works. Last year's winner was Roman Catholic missionary Mother Teresa ot Calcutta, India. · Hls selection contlnad a te- cent trend of awardinl $e pea~ prize to human ri1hbi adv~•t.ea and groups. Soviet cliuident An· drei Sakharov won ln 19'75 and the London·based Amnesty In· tematianal in 1m. Two other pre\10.S winnen, Betty Witllams alMI Mairead Corrigan, the co·Ma4ers of Northern Ireland'• Peace Peo- ple movement, nominated Perez Esquivel for the prize, calling him "the most outltandlng non· vio~nt activist alive.'' The Peace Prize ii one or five establiabecr in tbe will of Swede Alfred Nobel, the inventor of dynamite , to honor Professor John Sannes, chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said Perez Esquivel wu awarded the prize becauae be has "devoted his life to the alrul1le for human rights itnce 1974. '' The committee's statement said the parpoee of tbe Peace and Justice Service, which Peret Esquivel has led since 1974, is "to wort to promote fun· damentar human rights, basing itself e"chaively on non-violent means.'' Two Men to Hang ISTANBUL, Turttey <AP) - An l.UObul martial 1aw court today sentenced two nien to hang for the murder Jut April of U.S. naval officer Sam Novello and his Turkish driver. Iraqis Drive to Port BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> - Iraqi IOldlera and tanks under an umbrella of artlllery fire to. day prftffd their drive toward the Iranian 0 11 refinery port of Abadan de8pilt< attacks by helicopter IUNhapa Iraqi torcet 1U ll fou1ht holdouts 1n the nei&bborina port city of Khor · ram•hahr. The 1helhng of Abadan killed at least 30 civilians and wounded 140, the official Iranian news aae nc y reported . In the nlaht·long aasault, Iraq claimed two Iranian helicopter gunships were shot down and 38 Iranian soldiers were killed. It listed Ira. qi losses as three dead and 14 woundt!d. The Iraqi air force hit targets around Isfahan, Iran's second largest city, for the first time. Iraq swd Iranian pilots tried to attack two towns near Mosul, the 011 cente r in northern Iraq, but were driven off by ground fire Iran s aid its soldiers and airplanes Sunday "routed'' Iraqi units which had crossed the Karun River on pontoon bridges two days ago east or Abadan. President Abolhassan Bani· Sadr claimed in an interview with The Asscociated Press that Iran's forces were "wearing down the Iraqis " and planning counterattacks. Bani-Sadr said he had not heard previously of U .N. Secretary -General Kurt Waldheim's proposal for a tem· porary cease·fire in the Shatt al· Arab to allow foreign ships . stranded in the waterway to escape. f'romP~AI QUAKE • • • evacuating injured villagers to hospitals. Officials said at least 900 sur· vi vors were hospitalized, but Red Cres cent President Mouloud Be1aounne told re. porters lens of thousands were injured. He said there was a severe shortage of hospital beds and emergency operating equip· ment. Teams organized by an Algerian women 's group aathered up small children who loat their parenta in lbe disuter and were wanderin1 aimleuly throulh the streets. Hospitals were cleared of aU but the seriously ill to make room for quake victims. The army said it mobilized every available helicopter to ferry the injured to hospitals around the country, and many of the pilots took serious personal risks in the evacu~ffoit. _ There was stm no electric power in the city and electricity for the rescue operation was provided by generators. Flags flew at half-staff throughout Algeria u the nation observed seven days of mourn- ing for the earthquake victims. The homeless were estimated at 50,000, 40 percent of the city's population of ~.000. Arter shocks shook the ruins as rescuers clawed through lbe debris in a round-the-clock search for survivors following the city's second killer quake in 26 years. One tremor Swiday rocked the tent headquarters where Presi· dent Chadli Bendjedid was coordinatin~ rescue efforts. College Seeking 'Cinderella' Cast Auditions for Saddleback College's December production of ·'Cinderella'' are scheduled from 4 to 7 p.m . Tuesday and Wednesday in the Studio Theater on the main campus in Mission Viejo. The cast will include si" women and four men of varying ages. For additional information contact the Fine Arts Division at 831·4747. Tople~ Thief Woman Stripped, Flft!ll -·--Jlllit., ,_ ... ...... ...... l .. ...... 0....lf.Wtl .... , ...... -......,_ Costa Mesa police are 1eanbln1 for a woman who tried te •teal a rur coat from Nordltlf.'a department store SatuntO~ended up in a fracu wilb a aton Mcwity a1ent and a cuttomer ud ftnally ned South Cout plaza weartn1 only a half· slip. Police aaid tbe woman waa ~ "1 lftUl'ity ., .. Ula Ma lraw Ill Oaut cloe&D1 tlme latutdlr ID Nol9trom '1 l.tiaa ..... ~. 111. .. .. o toW' offlcen tbe · wom• ...,,.. a •·• f\&r eoat up Iller*-· Wwn• ber ..... TM ...... Ill. police aald. ...... lrno ..... ,...to arnll111tMtlltltlleltore. I• a ...... tbt Hw both ··~ ... , ...... -Ille ....... the woman, described aa speak· in1 with an European ecceat, fair·aldnned and in her 20s, broke tree. Ma. Bravo said a male customer saw the battle and ran after tbe neeln1 suspect . He trabbed ber and in an enaulq tuule the woman qain broke free, leavin1 behind the black dreu abe wore, her pu.ne and the fwt coat, police aaid. Tbe woma ran topleu, clad ooly ID a balf·1Up, to a wait1nt car, DOllee 1aid, Jumped ln and WU clriftD from the Soutti CoMt Plua parldq lot. - Offtewa 1aid Ucenae ,_ate ln· ••UIM&oD mealed tba tlte car la w\lela tbe womaa _,.eaped WU U.... M r.tld from , Slml ValleJ ....... ..-C1· BofJfJg B Ton't R Talk Alone Crippled children concern Bobby Lucas, 9, specializing m treating severely crippled of Inglewood. He is one. The son of Salva-children. Friends have said they will put tion Army workers Mr. and Mrs. Barry up $150 for Bobby 's effort. "Other han- Lucas will compete Saturday in six·mile dicapped kids don't have as much as I do, Jog /Walk-A -Thon at Rose ·Bowl in says young cerebral palsy victim. To Pasadena for pledged funds to benefit walk, run, or sponsor entrant, call local agency's Begoro Clinic in Ghana. Africa, Salvation Army headquarters. ---- Columbus' Vtmel Finally KEY WEST, Fla. <AP) -It's been 488 years since Christopher Columbus sailed with ships that became part of every American youngster's school litany: The Nina, the Pinta and the Santa Maria. Now. just in time for Columbus Day 1980. treasure hunters think they may have found the wreck of the Pinta. Olin Frick and John Gasque, two Key West treasure bunters, aren't tot.ally convinced the ship they found in 30 feet of water off the remote Turks and CaiC08 Islands in the Bahamas is the Pinta. But scientists say an iron can· non and a crudely formed lead cannon ball removed from the wreck appear to be from the 15&.h-.century..--= And historical records in· dicale the Pinta was one of lbe few ships in the vicinity of the islands when it went down in 1499 or 1.SOO. Next month, backed by a weaJthy DaUas investor, Frick, Gasque and a team of 23 divers and archaeologists plan to re· tum to the site to recover the re· mains of the ship. "We plan to go over the wreck very. very carefully." Gasque said. "We will recover every· thin" lbat we can find -right down to the last ballast stone. "Like all archeo1ogical work. we may not be able to come up with absolute proof that it is the Pinta," Gasque said of the wreck, which he and his partner spotted three years ago. ·'But if we find nothing to contradict it, we think the weiRbt of the evidence will be awfully con· vincing." Columbus took the Nina. the Pinta and the Santa Maria -all wooden sailing ships -on his maiden voyage to t he New World in 1492. The ::,anta Maria is known to have been destroyed after running ag ro und 1n December 1492, but the fates of the Nina and the Pinta were not known. The Nina accompanied Colum· bus on his four later voyages to the Americas and lben disap· peared from historical record. The Pinta, too, slipped into ob· scurity. unW Frick and Gasque got some help in researching ' wreck. From Page .-1 I CATHOLICS ter his organization's opposition lo Bremner's promotion of the conference, sponsored by Digni- ty, an organization or gay Catholics. He said in the letter that should Bremner not resign voluntarily, he should be dis· missed by the board. Bremner said he has received copies ot Johnson's corres~· ence and has prepared a reply. He declined, however. to dis· close ita contents. "But J am not resigning," Bremner said. Bremner was appointed lo the commission by 3rd District Supervisor Edison Miller. -------- Senate Unit Sets Meet on Coast Park Proposed federal legislation that would create an ll,373·acre urban national park along lbe coast north and east of Laguna Beach will be the subject of a Senate subcommittee hearing Tuesday in Santa Ana. Among those scheduled to testify in support of the park bill inc lude Ca l ifo rnia 's two senators. Alan Cranston and S. I. Hayakawa. Hayakawa. a Republican, in· itially differed over how the park purc has e s h o uld be financed, but has since fallen in line behind Cranston, a Democrat, in support of the Senate version of legislation co- authored by Reps . Robert Badham, R·Newport.Beach, and J-erry Pattenon, -o .san1a Ana. The bilJ aJready has cleared the House. Under the terms of the bill, the land would be purchased with $38 m illion in federal land and water conservation funds. However, the purchase would be forced to compete with other proposed land acquisitions. The hearing by the subcom· mitt~ on parks, recreation and renewable resources will be held from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m . at the Hall of Administration, 10 Civic Center Plaza. , The hearing will be chaired by Sen, Paul Tsongas. D·Maas., who is appearing al the behest of Sen . Henry Jackson , D · Washington, said Patterson. Patterson said consideration of the bill by the full Senate will occur either in late November or _early December. ------- -------~ --------------- - Introducing the Al's Garage Jean . designed especlallywirh you In mind. ligh1We1ght, comfortably tailored with e straight leg sllhouene. In three shades of denim. indigo. washed and bleached I • I ... ALSGARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (~14) 644-7030 '1our Hometown Dally New!16paper VOL. 73, NO. 287 , 3 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS Gay S~pporter's Resignation Sought By FllSDEalC'K ~HOE•DIL ... o..e,,..... ..... The chairman of an or1aniaa Lion which claims to re preaent 200 Oranae County l:atholica la calllna for the resagnation or a county Human Relations Com· mi11ioner who he lped promote a conference on gay spir itual de· veloprnent. The commissioner. Dan Bremner of La Habra, saJd to day he has no Intention of re 1lan ln1 and c l aimed th e r ha irman o f Catholl<'s an Oeftl\M' ol Truth has misstated the facta ol lhe matter , Bremner, who authored a let· ter on county stationery urging attendance at the two dty con- rerence last July at Cal State Fullerton. said he did so wilh the com mission's blessing T he ('O mmassion 's c harge, Bremner noted. as to facilitate dialogue betwee n groups and in· da vi duals w1thd1vtrse v 1ews. Bremner said he wrote the let ter 'to facilitate the attendan('e of priests and nuns•· at the con rerence sponsornd by Dignity, a gay Roman Catholic organiza lion Jeffrey Johnson, who has iden· tailed himself as chairman of Catholics In Defense of Truth, said he believed the use of coun ty letterhead in promotion of the conference was wrong. ''One thing we want to make clear, however. is this is not a hat e ca mpa ig n aga inst homosexuals." Johnson. of San Clemente. said. "We are sym- pathetic and love them, as we must love all our fellow men." "But we cannot legitimatize homosexual acts or homosexual orientation." be added. Jotui.wn said that Catholics in Defense of Truth was made up of about 200 Roman Catholics in Orange County. He said the or · ganization was formed in January. However , Monsignor Michael Driscoll. c hancellor of the Diocese of Orange, said the group has no official recognition with the church. "We have tried to find out who they are and have not been suc· cessful," Monsignor Driscoll said. "It seems they always -------- want to take their battles to the press." Monsignor Driscoll said he felt that Bremner's role in helping promote the confere nce was "perfectly legitimate." Johnson's call for Bremner 's resignation was contained in a letter dated last Monday to Ralph Clark. chairman of the county Board of Supervisors. Johnson reiterated in the let· <See CATHOLICS. Page Al) Day Care ·Center Blast s 7 Aliso Viejo Use Pondered By STEVE MITCHELL OI .... o.lly P'llel SMI" A bearing on proposed uses of 2,650 acres of undeveloped land in the Aliso Viejo com munity behind Laguna Beach will be held Tuesday by the South Coast Regional Coastal Commission. DelfyP'IMtl .... - HITS 'ALBATROSS MEADOWS' Uguna Mmyor Beglln Mayor Vows Laguna 'Will Pull Through' Laguna Beach Mayor Wayne Baglin says the city is "going to pull through'' despite its current rmancial problems. He described Sycamore Hills as "Albatross Meadows" because of the $6. 7 million debt the city owes on the property. 'fhe city, Baglin said. s hould consider selling an additional 10 acres of land in Sycamore Hills adjacent to 60 acres which may be sold to the Baywood Develop· ment Co. of Newport Beach. In a speech to the Laguna Beach Rotary Club, Baglin said the city's reserve fund could dip to $10,000 by the end of the year. The city designated 1845,000 in rnerves for a landslide repair project in Arch Beach Heigbta after, appeals for federal aid were rejected. The mayor said he still has hopes aome state money will be forthcoming for the reconstruc- tion ol the hillside below Del llar Avenue. However, Baglin said. the city owns 64 pieces of property in town and fa "ln good shape." (See BAGUN, Pa1e Al> Crash Hurts 21.agunans Two Lquna Beach men are UM.cl in ..;oua condition today mt two IOUlb couaty b01pitall .,._ neelYiq major injuries ln ;.:ar ~ctdent lD Lquna .... a.:!:r a car drivm by ~--··••eclCllllaf ........... --block al Sam· .. Dltw allonlJ after mt.dlqbt ............. A .... .,.._mu 1ahl lt .._ .......... ...,. ••••• ..., ••• bh ,•1tMIA. ll~Omt, Pt*• Commissioners will meet at 7:30 p.m. in Huntington Beach City Council ch a mbe rs. 2000 Main St .. \o review a thick Local Coastal Plan for the coastal por· lion of the entire 6,200-acre de· velopment. This portion is proposed as a recreational greenbelt with the exception of about 100 acres up· on which 450 medium density res- idential units would be con· slructed. The LCP has been endorsed by the county Planning Com · mission and the Board of Supervisors, and. if approved by regional and state coastal com· miuioners, would end the com- mission's jurisdiction over the pro51:. T calla I• preeena&ioQ of I within tbe coutal eom- misalon purview, but allowl IM revenue producing, touriat ancI recreational facilities to offset maintenance coata of the open space land. Some of those facilities ln· elude a 200-acre vineyard, ex- pansion of the elllatin& Ben Brown Country Club 1011 cou.ne, stables and a resort hotel and conference·center. - --:: A commission spokesman said that concerns, if there are any, will probably revolve around plans in the LCP for develop- ment of a resort villa in the area of Sheep Hills. and residential housing near Corral Canyon. The company, a subsidiary of Philip Morris. lnc., intends to build a 20,000-unit planned com· munity on its property . Tuesday night's hearing will be the only one before regional coastal commissioners, although two bearings are normally com· pleted for certification. Both regional commission and Orange County offi cials agreed the one hearing should be suffi· cient. SC Council Eyes Revised Sign Measure A revised sign ordinance that apparently has the support of downtown merchanta is before the San Clemente City Council after unanimous endorsement by the Planninl Commission. Council members will review the thick document Wednesday night, after months of study and public bearings before the Plan· ning Commission. The council held off adoption of a strict Sign ordinance in mid· July, opting to send the docu· ment back to the commi11lon for refinement. • r That action came after oppOal· ti on by many downtown merchants and the Chamber ol Commerce that the propoHd or· dlnance wu unworkable and did not take into conaideratlon problems ralaed by a atandinl· room only audience. Tbelr taaelt complaint w• a propo1al that would require pole alps lD tbe city to exteacl no more than 10 feet otf tbe pvuncl. The Plannln1 Commi11lon now ls recommencllnt a 15-foot bel1bt Umlt on thole aipa, and 1lve1 owners of non-confonniq 1lp1 mare time to brtD& them down. And wblle oppoMllta of tbe ortpaal rnllkm objected to a baa OD NOf llpl, tbe COii;'· millkm recomlMDdaUOD •811 tlMre mAllll be • aceptiml for faela 11p1 tbat appear on 1loptq rnOftopa. <Are ~•t:NR. .... Al> Gas Rips Atlanta Building ATLANTA <API An ex· plosion b elieved c aused by natural gas rapped through a day care center at a northwest Atlanta housing project today, kiliing four children and one adult. authorities said. About 15 other people were injured. Officials at Grady Memorial Hos pital in downtown Atlanta. where the victims were taken. confirmed the deaths. Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown said a preliminary investigation indicated the ex- plosion, which caused "heavy damage" to the building, was ' caused by natural au. I ,.,....,,..... YOUNG SURVIVOR OF ATLANTA DAY CARE CENTER RUSHED TO HOSPITAL AFTER BLAST Five People Kiiied, About 15 Other9 lnJured In Tregedy CeuHd by Natural Ge• --------------- "It <WM t.rible, really tern-i ble,", aald Tlnnle Bau1b. a . t.ea-.ber at uotber day c~ center acrou the street. - "l went across to see what I could do after I heard the ex- ploeion," she said. "Some of the kid.a were badly hurt. I saw one little boy whose fingers were missillg." Antbooy Miller,...JLSJP';>k.esmao _ for-tlle At anta Fire Depart· meat: said "We think There are still kids buried under the rub· ble." Police estimated 90 children were inside at the time. Miller said five engines, three ladder trucks, four rescue units and "all available ambulances" were dispatched to the scene. About 48.S chiJdren attending an elementary school across the street were evacuated after the explosion. police Lt. Bill Neikirk said. Thousands of onlookers Ezpansion Joh ,.tl • Q k gatheredatthescene. ..t'I gena Ua e A building about five miles away, containing offi ces and Council Approves Bus Station Plan The Laguna Beach City Coun- cil has approved an agreement with the Orange County Transit District to expand the city's downtown bus terminal. The expansion would tie two lots on Ocean Avenue lo the ex· isling bus t er m i nal on Broadway_ The $150,000 project will re· duce con«estion and increase passenger use at the terminal, officia.lJI said. A passenger load- ing area and bus access to Ocean Avenue will be provided. The agreement now will be sent to the transit district for approval. City officials said no date had been set lo begin con- struction. The city owns the existing 9,lOO·square-foot depot property and the two expansion lots, which total 4,500 square feet. The expansion project will in· elude bridaing the flood control channel between the properties and removln1 a building on one of the parcels. The two Iota would be paved and landscaped. Shelters, lllht· ins, and benches would be added. Terry Brandt, La1una'.1 municipal aervice dlrector, sald the terminal ls expected to be more dractift to bu.I riders. • 'Tbe clty bus pa11en1era needed a laraer, more conve,· MDt and MatlMltieally pleMinC area, "he1ald. He sakl bulel would be able to moH tbroulh the terminal - from Broadway to Ocean A•nue, or Yice vena. ''Tllere will be 1helter for patrou aad it will al10 ibe I • " Nld Brandt. ..., ............... BETTER DEPOT PLANND For L91'111a Bue Riden The city currently leases the property on which the exlating depot slta to Brent Wahlber1 of Santa Ana for $150 per month. Wahlberg sublets the property to the transit district and the Greyhound buacompany. Wahlber1'1 lease nms throuth 1118'7 and includes an option to extend to 2007. The lease bas been held by private parties alnce tbe Ul50'a. Comtructlon la expected to be.in aftel' tbe cllatrlct ecqullw the rtabta from Wablbert to leue the propertJ either by a settlement or Condemnation . Tb• .,._meat approved by tbe cowacil lt8'el tbat tbe clty shall luM U. property to tbe diatrle\ Ill DO coat I« BO rean. Proftta wouW be lband eQUal· (leeatJl,Pa .. AJ) Toll Mounts; More Sought AL ASNAM. Algeria <AP> Rescuers clawing through the ruins of Al Asnam, hampered by earthquake aftershocks and working by floodlight at night. have found thou.sands of injured and counted the number of dead found at 1.500, officials said to- day. New tremors measuring S oo the Richter scale -tremors capable of causing considerable damage -registered in the area today, according lo Sweden's seismological inatitute. No new damage was reported in Al Asnam. Friday's quake reg- istered7.5. "The entire Algerian nation is mobilized" to help the estimated 100,000 people left injured or homeless in the disaster, the state radio said. The Red Crescent, Moslem Algeria'a equivalent of the Red Cross. said the final death toll may surpau initial estimates of hetweeo 5,000 and 20,000 dead. Laguna Burglars Get Jewelry Haul Burglars in La1una Beach took an estimated Slt,500 worth of jewelry from a residence ln the 1400 block of South Cout Rltbway Saturday, police said today. Police said there were no sllJll ol toned entry lnto tbe bome OWMd bJ lllcbael ~ tree. AIDOlll the ltema Crablne lilted • mllllq are Hveral old chalnl, a man'• diamond rial. a sapphire rln1 and a 1old cl•arette U1bter. Police aald they have no 1111pecta. warehouse space used by the housing authority, was damaged in a firebombing last week. Utted Book Sale At Laguna Ubrary The Friends of the Laguna Beach Library are sponsoring a sale of used books Tuesday. The sale will be held at the main entrance of the Laguna Beach Library. 363 Glenneyre St., from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. All proceeds will go towards the purchase of materials for the library. Coast Weather Continuing low clou·di· ne11 with only partial mid· da.v c l earing through Tuesday. Lows tonight 58 at the beaches. 62 inland. Hi1ha Tuesday 71 to 74. INSIDE TOD!\~ Dr. Robert Sheridan o/ Ne.,port Beach pracficea tra4ftional medidM in hil Harbor View Home• Mighborlaood. He make1 the rouadl on a bicyc~. givmg /oUGt0-up checkup• to or- fla opedk poUentt. Su fi'HturillQ, 1"ofle c J. l•tlex . M\'_..,_. .. PMlllrtlll Cl-I 91 M•nHr Cl a,........,. a ,.. w a•• 9-........ W4 c-.... J! ===='~" .e .......... .. ., a~ W4 ......... M .. -.._ M .f ONLY PIU)T USC _., 91• !3, •• ~--JIJST BRE.4&/NC-~--.... lAll flriU "°"' lodmr'•..,..,. ,_,..,., ..-._..,m..,1. r Stock T=radins Hal,ted ~~.....,_ '3ornputer·Pioblenu NEW YORK IAPI Stock lrldua1 Wll aul~ 54 minutes tacla)' on the ~w York and American at.oc:k eachana• due to a computer problem Chuck Sto1'1-'r. a spokt-aman for the New York Sl«ll Ea t'han1e. said the probl~m ~veloped In t.M market data 1y1tem. which <.'OC'ltrol~ the •tcx:k Ocker and .... out informauoa oa trades aa they occur T~ "hardware malfunction" occurnld at 'J .51 a.m. POT, he uid. 1'hf' Cllchan1H automattcally twitched to • backup &ystem, whkh did not work. and tradin& was hilted at 8 · ll a m 1i1l both ex~.'han1n l\ wa& resumed •t 9 05 •.m. Sltflea&. Ararw• I• •""P SAN l>IEGO 1APl Tb.e Sapal Companlts Inc announced an agreement In prlnciple today to merae with Ampe• Corp of Red wood Cil,y. . The agreement ralllil for the nchanae of 15 or a S1anal com mon share for each shue ol Ampex common. Siena.I common dosed al ~v. Friday. Ampex at 331,ii Merger plans were announced 1n rebruary but were ean- celled m April. Signal said the new plan should be completed an January. Carrn-S~11 l'll_,,.....,...,.,,..· NEW YORK tAPt -President Carter vowed today he would not reassess U,S poUcy toward lsrael and said a group supporting Ronald Reagan is falsely sugeestlng that he would negotiate with the Palestine Uberation Organbation. Carter sought to portray himself as the only candidate with a legitimate claim to the vital Jewiah vote in New York, And he tried out a new, rapid-fire litany or the issues on which he daims he and Reagan disagree. Seeking to counter fears among Jews that he might shift some or his support from Israel to Egypt in forthcominc summit talks oo the Middle East, the president raised those concerns directly and sought to anawer them. Sotdle c ... 1 le Gfl'f •Ge.fl Air' EL MONTE <AP> -For the tint time in two week.a the Air ·Quality Management District forecut good air quality today for the entire South Coast Air Basin. A Pollution Standard Index rating of 92 was precUcted in the San Fernando, Santa Clarita, San Gabriel and Pomana valleys and the Riverside-San Bernardino area. The rest of the buln . should have a PSI rating of 42. Argentinean Wins Nobel Peace Prize OSLO. Norway fAP> -Adolfo P~rez Esquivel, an Argentine hpman rights advocate im· ptisoned for a year by bis gov. emment, WU awarded tbe l• Nobel Pe~se today. . ,;rbe •~ear'-old aculptor ..a ·· a.rchitect was honored for ba•· in& "shone a light in the dark· nj}S.. of military Mlle in hil lUcf, the Norwegian Nobel Com· r»Jttee saJd. •,the five·member committee passed over s u c h other nominees as President Carter, Pope John Paul II. British Foreign_Min.W.e..r L.ord _c rington and Zimbabwe Prime Minister Robert ~~fog8be o- choosing the Uttle-known Argen· tine for the $212,000 prize. Perez Esquivel heads the Peace and Justice Service, a IU!twork or Latin American hbman rights organbationa. The service is headquartered in ~1.tenos Aires, Argentina. He ~as jailed in April 1977 "without ciuse being shown," t.be com· miltee said, and was released more than a year later. He left Argentina Utis year for the first time on a trtl> to Europe. . His selection continued a re· ~ent trend of awarding the peace prize to human rights advocates and groups. Soviet dissident An· drei Sakharov won in 1975 and the Landon-based Amnesty In· ternational in 19'n. ·Two other previous winnen, Betty Williams and Malread Corrigan, the c o -leaden of Northern Ireland's Peace P«>· pie movement, nominated Perea Esquivel for tbe prise, callin& him "the mo.t outstanding non· violent activitt alive." The Peace Prize i.a one of five e11tabli5hed in the will-of Swede Alfred Nobel. the Inventor of dynamite. to honor DAILY PILOT 11-.tN.-f>te\uttnt•nd Pvotl~ ,_ ... -f!dllM n.:,,:,~;.,,--:=- ~ ... u. , ........ _.,.....fdtter OHteM L'SC e.., ... , •. ---.., "'"' ~M .. M" 1NPllNdl.......,d T1l11111e11e C7'4' ...... CIM1M1•Mv .. lllQ..,. ~ ............ -,. T 1&1•1111 .... .._ ... (....... I • ..... humanitarian works . Last year'• winner was Roman Catholic missionary Mother Teresa fA Calcutta, India. Professor John Sannes, chairman of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said Perez Eaquivel wu awarded the prise because he has "devoted bis life to the 1nru11le for human ritht.a slnce 19'14." The committee's statement said the pu.rpoee of the Peace and Justice Service, which Perez Esquinl bu led aince 1974, is "1o work to promote fun· damental human rtgbu, baaing itself exclmively oa non-violent means." It hu a network of con· tacts apannin1 the South American continent. f',....P~AI BUS ••• ly by the city and the district. The diatrict would develop the aite and operate It, and would pay taxf9, utilities, and uaess· ...... Artist Feted In Chiea8o Patnltnp by Laguna ~ artist ffUda RublJI Pierce U.. beell aeleeted for a fall aad wiater UldbiUaa at a Cblcqo l>epuun.tatare. n. ll ll't wart. '° Oii dilplay ·-= lit '"l'be Auual Jn. tent &ahibitioa and 9111. 1., ol L~":ri -October, ,... • ll'l•ld'• at.on. lln. Pinn, wbo d.-crtbes benelf u a "colorlat," bu ~--..-..u.mm11 Gt ..... ~ .. 111'1• ....... "I:&.~.= .. Wiil -· ............ ., ...... . -. ,..,., BEIRUT. Lebanon fAP> Iraqi llO&diera and tanks under an umbrella of •rtlllery fire to· day pfWIM:d their drive toward the lr&nlan oil refinery port of Abadan deaplte atVcks by hellcopte-cun1hlp1 . Iraqi forces 1Ull fou1hl ho ldouts In the netchboring port city of Kbor· r•m•hahr The •helling of Abadan killed at leut 30 civilians and wounded 140, the offi cial Iranian news aaenc y reported . ln the nicht-loog auault, Iraq claimed two lranian helicopter gunships were shot down and 38 Iranian aoldien were ltilled. It listed Ira· q1 locsses as three dead and 14 wounded. The Iraqi air force hit targets around Isfahan, Iran's second largest city. Cor the first time. Iraq said Iranian pilots tried to attack two towns near Mosul, the oil center in northern Iraq, but were driven oCf by ground fire. Iran said its soldiers and airplanes Sunday ''routed" Iraqi units which had c rossed the Karun River on pontoon bridges two days ago east of Abadan. President Abolhassan Bani· Sadr claimed in an interview with The Asscociated Press that Iran's forces were "wearing down the Iraqis" and planning counterattacks. Bani-Sadr said he had not beard previously of U .N. Secretary -General Kurt Waldheim's proposal for a tem- porary cease-fire in the Shatt al· Arab to allow foreign ships atranded in the waterway to etc ape. ,,.,.._P~AJ BAGUN .... "We've got the asaets," be said. "We're going to pull through." Surveying a list of problems and issues facing the city, Baglin sounded a theme of belt· tightening during bis talk to Rotarians last Friday. He said: -For every additional "mini park" created -such u Cres· cent Bay Park -a maintenance man will have to be taken from a crew serving an existing park1 -Ro.m will only be able to be repaved once every lS yean. -WIMD a $10 mlllioa AJiao Water Manacement Agency· project is completed in 1982, the city sewer and water di.atricts should be combined, saving about $250.000. -Police personnel turnover in the city ran al 52 percent over the last 15 months and better pay elaewhere i.a a definite fac· _tor iD ~t~r. -l',...r~Al SIGNS ••• Signs visible from the San Diego Freeway -those in ex· cesa of 15 feet in heicbt -would be allowed only if erected prior to Sept. l , 1!8>. And those signs must ad- vertiae buaine11ses encaged in providing services to motorists -such as lodging. gasoline, food and emergency medical help . In sending the ordinance back for revision last summer, COUD· cil memben made it clear they wanted to see an end to a clut· tered skyline in San Clemente, Whether the commission's re· vised ordinance meets the coun- cil's directive will be de· termined Wednesday. ,,.,....,.ageA.J CATHOLICS ter his organization's oppoeltion to Bremner's promotion of the conference, sponsored by Digni· ty, an organization of gay Catholics. He said in the letter that shouid Bremner not reaicn voluntarily, be should be dia· missed by the board. Bremner said he bas received copies of Johnson's correspond· ence and bu prepared a reply . He declined, however, to dia· close tu contents. '•But I am not resignin&. ·' Bremner aaid, Bremner wu appointed to the comml11ion by 3rd Diatrlct Supervllor F.dbaa Mlller. Coll .. Seeking. 'Onderella' Cut Audltlon1 for Saddleback eou ... •• December production of .. a.derella" an acbeduled from C to '1 p.111. Tuetday and WedaHday la tbe Studio Tbeats ca the main campus lD Mlulon Viejo. Tbe cut will Include alx wom• and four men of •117int .... J'or llCldltloaal lafonDatAoD C!OMlld tbe F\ae Alta DtYIMOll Ill •1..ftfJ. ... BolJIJg H'on't R 'alk Alol1e Crippled children concern Bobby Lucas, 9. of Inglewood. He is one. The son of Salva- tion Army workers Mr. and Mrs. Barry Lucas will compete Saturday in six-mile Jog /Walk ·A·Thon at Rose Bowl in Pasadena for pledged funds to benefit agency's Begoro Clinic in Ghana. Africa, specializing in treating severely crippled children. Friends have said they will put up $150 for Bobby's effort. "Other han· dicapped kids don't have as much as I do, says young cerebral palsy victim. To walk, run. or sponsor entrant, call local Salvation Army headquarters. Laguna Bank Plan Told 11 Orange CoaJJt.Re.idetds File·~ Eleven prominent Orange Coast r esidents, including a mayor and a municipal court judge, have filed application to form a national bank and trust company in Laguna Beach. 11~73 A.eres The group filed an application with the federal Comptroller of the Currency to establish the Laguna National Bank and Trust Company in the vicinity of Forest Avenue and Beach Street Hearing ~~eaJraea On Nationm Park Proposed federal legislation water conservation funds . that would create an 11,373-acre However, the purchase wouJd- _urtran_n1Uooal _park IlODJ tile ..:: 6e. lorced to compete with other cout nor:th and east o~ Laguna proposed land acquisitions. Beach will be the. sub1ect o~ a The hearing by the subcom· Senate ~ubcomm1tlee hearing mittee on parks. recreation and Tuesday tn Santa Ana. renewable resources will be held Amo~g those scheduled ~o from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the testify tn support of the park bill Hall of Administration 10 Civic include California's two CenterPla.za,, ' senaton, Alan Cranston and S. The hearing wiU be chaired by I. Hayakawa. . . Sen. Paul Tsongas, D-Mass .. Hayakawa, a Republican, ID· who is appearing at the behest of itially differed over .how the Sen . Henry Jackson. D · park purchase should be Washington said Patterson financed, but bas since fallen in ·'I am e~tremely confident line bebi~d Cranston, a that this public hearing will Democrat, in support of the bring the Orange Coast National Senate version of legislation CO· Urban Park Bill a crucial step authored by Reps . Robe rt closer to becoming reality when Badham, R:Newport Beach, and the Senate reconvenes m No- Jerry Patterson, 0 -Santa Ana. vember," Patterson said . The bill already has cleared the House. Under the terms of the bill, the land would be purchased with S38 million in federal land and Patterson said consideration of the bill by the full Senate will occur either in late November or early December. in Laguna Beach. No site has yet been purchased. Capitalization from shares is· sued by the bank would tot.al $3,250.000, the group s tated on its application. Ernest ~rge of Corona del Mar would ultimate ly be chairman and chief executive of. fi cer or the bank. if it is ap- proved as anticipated over the next three to five months. George is the former president and chairman of Cal Western Savings and Loan Association in San Fnncisco. During his four years in that capacity. the bank inereased its capitalization from $2 million to S22.5 million and from a single office to six, he said. Prospective diT~ctUl'S or Ole -= oanlt 1ncluae Mayor Wayne Baglin or Laguna Beach, an ex- ecutive with the Fluor Corpora· tion ; Casper W. Barnes Jr. of Newport Beach. professor of electronic engineering at the Unive rs ity of California at Irvine: Judge Richard Hamilton of the South Orange County Municipal Court. a Laguna Beach re11ident: Katherine D. Short of South Laguna, owner of the Laguna Travel Service; and Kenneth A. Willig of Newport Beach, owner of the John Wayne Tennis Club. The directors, who would be in charge or bank operations and policy, would be making invest· ments of $20,000 to $90,000 each when taking their posiUou. They would not be salaried but would be paid from SSO to $100 per meeting, ~rge said. -- --- ---------------- ----- Introducing the A~'r'age Jean designed espec1any with you in mind . liOhtweloht. comtortebty tailored w•th a straighl teo sllhOuette. 1n three shades of denim: Indigo. washed.and bleached ALS GARAG E 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (~14) 644·7030 --1- .. --.......... ..-.._--.. --- H11ntlngton Beach W:ountaln ~alley \'our Hometown Dally NewHpap_.r VOL.73,No.217,3 secT i oNs.24 PAGES ~~~~-o_R_A_N~G~c-o~u_N_r_v_._c_A_L_1_F_o_R_N_1_A~~~~~~M~o_N_o_A_v_._o_c_T_o~e_E_R~1J_,_1_980~~~~~~-T_w~E_N_T_v_-_F_1_v_e_c_E~N_T_s Divers Find ColuDlbus' Ship Pinta? KEY WEST, to'h1 tAJ'> 11 ·:. been • years su\ct <:hn&tophcr Columbus sailed with sh1~ thut became part or t!Vt"ry Amt•n citn youncater's school htany Tht' Nina, the Pinta i1nd the Santa Maria. Now, )ust 1n \lmt' for Columbus Day 1980, treasurt' hunters think they may ha\ t' found the wreck or the Pinta Olin Frick and John c;asque. two Key West treasure hunter. aren't totally convinced tht' :.hw . the' round 111 30 feet of water off the remott-Turks and l'a1cocs Islands tn lh14 Rahomas as th1· t•1n1 a Hui Sl'aentl t.S sa) an iron can non and a crudely formed lead l'annoo ball removed from lhe wrrck appear to be from the 15th century l\nd h1 s1or1C'a l reC'orrts 1n d1ralt' the Pmla was 11ne of \hl' Ce" :.h.tps in tht' v1<'in1t y of tht' 1i;land.s wtwn 1t w,•nt down 111 14\Y.) or 1500 Next month, bar ked by a we11lthy Oullab 111vt':.tor, 1''"'rick. Gasque and a team of 23 divers and drchaeolo~18t:S plan to re turn lo the site to re<·over the re mains of lhe stup "We plan to go over the wret•k vt-ry. very cardully," Gasque said ·w e "Ill recover every thm~ that we can hnd nghl down lo the last ballast stone. "Like all archeological work , we may not be able to come up with absolute proof that it is the P i nta," Gasque said or the wreck. which he and his partner spotted three years ago ... But if we find nothing to contradict it, we think the weight of the evidence will be awfully con vincing .. Columbus took the Nina. the Pint a and the Santa Maria all wooden saihng ships on his m a iden voya ge to the New World in 149'.! The Santa Maria is ltnown to have been destroyed after running agro und 1n December 1492, but the fates of the Nina and the Pinta were not known. l'he Nina accompanied C.:olum bus on hls four later voyages to the Americas and then disap peart•d from historical record The Pima too, slipped into ob sc·unl)' until r'nck and (,asque 1'0t some help in researching a wrerk. From records or Journeys in the Spanish a rchives and a 500-year-old tax report, historian and Nattonal Geogr aphic cons ult· ant Eugene Lyon reconstructed the last Journey of the Pinta. He says evidence mdk ates one or the Pinta's owne rs, Vincente Pinzon wa,c; m rik1n14 a return lip to the New World around 1499 or 1500 Day Care Center Blast Kills 7 HB Jewekr Holdup Victim A Huntington Beach Je weler who had just returned from a buying trip in San Diego was robbed or $600,000 worth or gems Sunday by a lone gunman out side his home. police said. 1,500 Dead Found at Quake Site AL ASNAM, Algeria (AP > Rescuers clawing through the ruina ol Al Asnam, hampered by earthquake a fte rs hocks and workiq by floodlight at night, have found thousands of injur~ and counted the number or dead found at 1,500, officials said lo· -eta . ew_tremors measuring 5 on ~ Richter scale tremors capable of causing considerable damage -registered in the area today, according lo Sweden's seismological institute. No new damage was reported in Al Asnam. Friday's quake reg- istered7.5. "The entire Alger ian nation is mobilized" to help the estimated 100,000 people left injured or homeless in the disaster, the state radio said. Police WJthheld the name of the 44-year-old Jeweler, who re- sides in the southeast section of the city T he Jewele r told polit>e he had JUSt returned from a business trip in San Diego a nd was un- loading his luggage i n the driveway wh en h e was a p· proached by a black man carry· ing a blue steel revolver. The suspect placed the gun at the jeweler's head and ordered him to hand over two brielcases Cull of gems; the jeweler told police. The man then ordered the jeweler, bis wife and two teen·aie daughters to Ue down in the driveway. He then fled on fool with the gems, pohce said. Police said one suitcase coo· tained uncut diamonds of all sizes, while the second contained gold rings with precious stones. The suspect was described as a black m·an. five feet , seven inches tall. lSO pounds, 30 to 35 .Y-e ars .ol~ llifiCJiiiTILwith a ..::_ short Afro, beard and mustache. Two Perish In Huntington Auto Wreck The Red Cr escent. Moslem 1 Algeria's equivalent of the Red Cross, said the final death toU <See QUAKE, Page A2 l Two yow1g men died in Hunt· sngton Beach early Sunday when their car veered off Pacific Coast Highway near Huntmgton Street. struck a light pole and a fire hydrant and b\Jrs t into flames, police saJd. YOUNG SURVIVOR OF ATLANTA DAY CARE CENTER RUSHED TO HOSPITAL AFTER BLAST Seven People Kiiied, About 15 Others lntured In Tregedy Cauaed by Natural Gaa Pope Lauds Sex Restraint VATICAN C I TY I AP J - Couples that r es 1st · 'sexuai liberty" have drawn praise trom Pope John Paul t I, who ad- vocates sexual restraint. "In the midst or so many voices in our permissive society that exalt so-called sexual li ber· • ty aa a part of human fulfill· ment, it's right for those to raise their voices who, in their day-to· day experience of a serene and aeneroua sell-control, have been able to discover a new source of reciprocal acquaintance. deeper understanding and a uthentic · llbiriy, ... ·lbe pontiff said Sunday at a special Mus for the world's famllis. A1 the pope listened, married and enaaaed couples described tbe jo)'I and problems of their nlatiombi.. at ceremonies to biPlitbt a meetln1 of bishops OD birth control, divorce and atller family iaaues. The driver of the car was iden- tified as Joseph M. Wells , 20, of West Covina. Police tent atively identified his passenger as a 16-year-old Huntington Beach resident. but withheld his name pending positive identification through dental records . Police said both occupants of the car died instantly in t he fiery crash at 4:40 a.m. The incident is still being probed by police traffic in· vesligators, who said the vie· ti ms· 1980 Chevy Citation ap- parently was traveling too fast for conditions. Rapist Wounded TRACY <AP> -A convicted rapist from Los Angeles has been critically wounded In a De ue l Vocational Institution f ig ht b e tw een Mexican- .Americans from Northern and Southern California. Prison Capt. Joe Oooman said Arthur D. Pindt was in the second of two fights Sunday afternoon. Iraq PushRs Drive On Iran Oil Fieia BEIRUT , Lebanon <AP> Iraqi soldiers and tanks under an umbrell a or artillery fi re to· day pressed their drive toward the Iranian oil refinery port of Abadan des pite att acks b y helicopter gunships. Iraqi forces s t i lJ fou ght holdouts in the neighboring port dty o r Khor· ramshahr. . The shelling of Abadan killed at l~ast 30 CIVilians and wounded 140, the official Iranian news ag e ncy r eported . In the night-long assault, Iraq claimed two Iranian helicopter gunships were shot down and 38 Iranian soldiens were killed. It listed Ira- qi loaaes as three dead and 14 wounded. The Iraqi air force hit targets around Isfahan, Iran's second I ar gest city. for the first ti me Iraq said Iranian piloLc; tried to attack two towns near Mosul, the oil center in northern Iraq, but were drive n off by ground fire. Iran said its soldiers and airplanes Sunday "routed" Iraqi units which had crossed the Karun River on pontoon bridges two days ago east of Abadan. ·presid"nt Abolhassan Bani· Sadr claimed in an interview with The Asscociated Press that Iran 's forces we r e "wearing down the Iraqis" and planning counterattacks. Bani-Sadr said he had not h ea rd previous ly of U.N. Sec r etary ·Ge n era l Kurt Waldheim's propasal for a tem- (See MIDEAST, Pate A2) Bird Killings Probe Set of the course, 10401 Warner Ave., su.aed that the men were not paid for the 1hootin11. "We don't have a bunch of sadistic people around here," Kyker said. "BHidea, tbe termlnolol)' is wroa1. Thoee btnb are mudhma, aot ducka." Foeae•n v.u., poUee DIUc· tlft 0.Cook Hid the~ WM tun•.,. '8 U. Or-a• Cclun· ,, IMrilf'• Dep•rt•••l, _... .... DtflftAHM of Plsb ... Game aad Or•••• Co••tJ Animai Control officers . He said the two men, both from Santa Ana, did not have I, permita to cliacharce firearms iD tbe city. Accordin1 to the police report, the two men, Jesse Femandel. 44, and Antonio Bar~ ra1an, 19, bad been drinkinl beer wb1le •hoo&ini tbe blrdl. Tbe iDlUal deat.b eount Friday ' of H mudMM bu lncreasecl to lt blrdl. iDcludinl 15 ~ucn-. tln'ee teela and oae mallard, ..Ueeaaid. A police patrolman heard the s hoottna and cam e upon the scene f!iday evening. Tom Martinea1 parks district aur:rioteadent ror the county, aa d the aolf coune ii a leued conceuion on county land and la outside hil jwUdict.lon. But be 1aid county policy ii to capture duck• in nets and tramport tbem to lakea la rural .,.. .. when park ••• become cwerpopulaa.d. 2 Men Sought In Huntington Sexual Attack Huntington Beach police are sea rchin~ for two men who al· legedly raped a 24-year.old locaJ worn an outside a restaurant early Saturday. The woman told police she was leaving a restaurant al Beach Boule vard and Main Street at 3:30 a.m .. when she was grabbed from behind in the perking lot. The two men pushed her to the ground, raped her and forced her to take part in other sex acts. according to the police r e· port. The men then fl ed in a s mall white imported car . One suspect was described as a white man, age 28, five feet nine inches tall. 230 pounds, wtth a "W.C. Fields-type nose, .. and a long. walrus-style mustache. · police said. The second s us pect was described as a white man, age 25 lo 28 8 feet tall, 170 pounds, with plati~um blond hair. The· victim was examined at Huntington Jntercommunity Hospital and rele!lsed. Stabbing Fatal MERCED CAP) --One man at· tending a weddin& reception here wu stabbed fatally. and another man was wounded, police said . Frederico Fuentes, 19, of Le Grand died at a holpital about two boun after the Saturday nl&bl 1t1bbtno. Gas Rips Atlanta Buildillg AT I.A NT 1\ A P An ex · plo..,1on IJP l:t•vld ·aused b) natur.il 1-Ca~ np1.ll'd through Cl day c:.irt• renter at a northwest Atlanta hou5.mg prn1ect today, killing f1v<· C'h1ldren and two. ~d ulls. authorst1c•s s .. 110 About I ~ othe r sx-ople wl:'re IOJured. Offl c1a.ls at c;rady Me monal llosp1taJ in downtown Atlanta. where the v1c·t1n1s were talw n, confirmed the seven deaths Publil' Safety Comm1si.1oner Lee Hrown said a pr eli minary investigation indicated th~ ex- pl osion, wh ich caused "heavy damage" to the building, ~as caused by natural gas. "It was terrible, really tA!rri· ble," a a id Tlnnie Bauch. a teacher at another d.Y care center across the street. ·'I went across to see what l could do after I heard the ex· plosion. ··she said . "Som e of the kids were badly hurt. l saw one little boy whose fingers were m1ssin2." .Antbooy M1Uer, a spokesman for the Atlanta Fire Q_~rl· m~nl. s<tid "We lhlok theu-are.. still kids buried under the rub- ble ·· Pohce estimated 90 c hildren wen' 1ns1de al the time Miller said five engines, three ladder trucks, four rescue units and "all available ambulances" were dispatched to the scene. A bout 485 children attending an dementary school across the street were evacuated after the explosion. police Lt Bill Neikirk said. Thousands of on lookers gathered at thesrenc M a r g ar e t H oss. a spokeswoman for the Atlanta llousmf,! /\uthon ty. said the day care renter. lot>aled m the Gate Cit y Community Center. is operated by a private t>Onl'em and serves the 650 families liv· ing 1n the Bowen Homes project. A bwlding about five miles a way . containing offices and warehouse space used by the housing a uthority. was d amaged sn a firebombin~ last week. The e xplosion set off a blaze which destroyed more than a third of the structure. but there were no injuries, authorities said. Coast "'e at her Conhnuing low cloudi· ness with only partial mid· day c learing through Tuesday. Lows tonight :;s al the beaches. 62 inland. Highs Tuesday 71 to 74. INSIDE TODt4 ~ Dr. Ro~rt Sheridan of Newport Beach prachcea traditional medicine in hu H arbor View H o m e• neighborhood. He make• Che rounds on a bic11c~. giving f oUow-up chu lcupa to or- t ho p ~dic patient s . Su Featurlfl{I, Page Cl. l•tle• . At'f_.......,. M ,....... CH :=a.-. ~ :=:. ~~ L.M ..... M .._ ........... .................... ., .. C.-.-Al ............ M c--Al .......... .. C....-.. CM _.. •w =.:.. : ==-= .......... C1 ~ ., .. .............. M • ...... , ....... ..._ M = ,,.,.,_--JIJST BREAKING JAi• ~ '"*' ......,., _..._. eetfoz' ...... ,, • •••• .-. .stack T=radin11-Ha1Jed ~By Computer Ptoblenu NEW YORK t A Pl Sl<K'k lradml wu awipc-nded 54 •minutes todQ on lhf' N•w Yon and Amencan •lOC'lll eadu1n1• due to a computer problem . Chuck Storer. a 1p0tl .... for tM Ne. York S&ocll IE.a . chan1e. aaul the probl~m -~ "' U\e market data a.yatem. •which t'OOltola th4'! l lOt'll UC"ker llDd ..,.. out 11\fOfmaUCID oo tradff u they 0t·cur. The "hantware mallunt'UCIG" O<'Nrft'd ., , ~. m ro1' .... said Tht euhanaea a.atom•Ut"al.b nn\C"hf!d to • back11p system, which did not wort. ud tr ttdu\t •at hailed •t t l l • m at both exchan&H. It wu ,,_wn...d al t ~ • m ·.-...a.A.,w61•Wft'P _ SAN on:oo tAP\ l'bt-S..~ ~um'1&ru"• lAc....•n~r-;:1 an agreement In pnn<'•Pl"" \'1 \u mt!rlC'" wt\h Amp.x t: orp I Redwood City · 1 • The agrHmt>nl ,••lb fus tblr ~'cl'l~e ol "'of a ~1"n1& • 0111 mon share tor t'arh s h•r.-"' ~ulpt'' 4•om1ncm ~1t11\al t't>fnmon closed at 4-;1111 fo'nd ' \m~' •l JJ\a · Pdergtr plaJ'\i-"'<'h" ~1UK-'l..lll1.~ 1n I' t-bru.-1 v but wt·n· t·an · celled in Apnl S1.:n .. t >"''J l~ '.l.<" vt~1 twu\1.t bt.-l'umplt"t~ m Januaary Pat.,...,.,. Calb 11~-·u.-· LOS AN{~ El.ES ,Al' 1 1-\,rmt>a 'allforniat Cov t.:dmund C . ··Pat" Rrown ~r :r..m~l tU(ilA) h~ wall dcu\1rnd • rclradion ot ··deliberate hes" by HonalJ Ht>ta.ian ma pres1dent1al <'1trnpa1ain ad on TV d ai mm~ HdltM s atved the state Cron\ the brink of bankruptcy. Brown. father of the rurrent &ovunor, told a news con· ference that when he left office 10 1967 the state hlld a $9 million surplus. The Republican presidential candidate maintains in his TV pitch that he was fa ced with a $UM mHhon deficit and ··a stale in crisis." "As I sit at home in my old age watching those TV spots." the 75-year-old Brown said, "it disturbs my sleep. At my age, you don't need your sleep disturbed." C.,.,n-Sef!lu "'• .. ,lftdlill "°'~ NEW YORK <AP) -President Carter vowed today he would not reassess U.S. policy toward Israel and said a group supporting Ronald Reagan is falsely suggesting that be would negotiate with the Palestine Liberation Organization. Carter sought to portray himself as the only candidate with a legitimate claim to the vital Jewish vote in New York. And he tried out a new, rapid-fire litany of the issues on which he claims he and Reagan disagree. , . Seeking to counter fears among Jews that he mtght shaft some of his support from Israel to Egypt in forthcoming summit talks on the Middle East, the president raised UHlee coocems directly and sought-to answer them. Sotdh C'ocua to G~t •Goocf Air' EL MONTE <AP) -For the first time in two weeks the Air Quality Management District forecast good air quality today for the entire South Coast Air Basin. A Pollution Standard Index rating of 92 was predicted in the San Fernando, Santa Clarita. San Gabriel and Pomona valleys and the Riverside-San Bernardino area. The rest of the basin should have a PSI rating of 42. Topless Tldef Woman Stripped, Fke. Costa Mesa poli ce are .s_earching for a woman who tried to steal a fur coat from -Nordstrom~s departm-mt store aturday, ended up in a fracas with a store security_agent and.a customer and finally fled South Coast plaza wearing only a half· slip. Police said the woman was spotted by security agent Lisa ~n Bravo at about closing time Saturday in Nordstrom's ladies wear department. Ms. Bravo told officers the woman stuffed a $3,000 fur coat up her dress. between her legs. f',.._pflfle Al QUAKE ..• may surpass initial estimates of between 5,000 and 20,000 dead. The woman left, police said, and agent Bravo attempted to arrest her out.side the store. Tn usste t1rat-sllw-.botll women rolfmg on the ground, -the woman.-deactibed as speak- ing with an European accent, fair-skinned and in her 20s , broke free. Ms. Bravo said a male customer saw the battle and ran after the fleeing suspect. He grabbed her and in an ensuing tussle the woman again broke free, leaving behind the black dress she wore, her purse and the fur coat, police said. The woman ran topless, clad only in a half-slip, to a waiting car. police said. jumped in and was driven from the South Coast Plaza parking lot. Officers said license plate in· vestigation revealed that the car in which the woman escaped was listed as rented from a Simi Valley r'ftllaJ agency. Guarding Logs OSLO, Norway (AP) -Adolfo Perez Esquivel, an Araentine hu_man rights advocate im· prisoned ror a year by his gov- ernment, waa awarded the 1980 Nobel Peac. Priie today. The 4&-year-old sculptor and architect wu honored for hav· ing "shone a li&hl in ~e dark· ness" of military rule in his land, the Norwegian Nobel Com- mittee-Did. • ---• -- The five-member committee -..p.a·s•~d ·ov·e+··s·u'Cb ·ot'heT nominees as President Carter, Pope John Paul II, British Foreign Minister Lord Car· r ington and Zimbabwe Prime Minister Robert Mugabe in choosing the little-known Argen- tine for the S212.000 prize. Perez Esquivel heads the Peace and Justice Service, a network of Latin American human rights organiiations. The .... ..,..... service is headquartered in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He was jailed in April 1977 "without F,....r ... AI MIDEAST •• • por~re in lire Shatt al· Arab to allow roreian ships stranded 'in the waterway to ueape. &said he '!-OUkl ~uu­ it with the military command, !'Ud I donrt think there would be anythina wrooe with that." But there was no indication Iraq would halt its drive to win com plete coatrol of the waterway, its outlet to the Persian Gulf and its chief aim in the war. Banl·Sadr said he didn't think "it will take very long" for the Majlis, Iran's Parliament, to de· cide what would be done with~ -the-52--Ammcan hostages, who today were spending their 345th d.n..i.n.c~t.ivity. ·-. ·-..... ···-·--· He indicated that the chief conditions for tfieir release would be the return of the late Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi's fortune to his govern· ment and the freeing of Iranian assets in the United States which President Carter froze after the seizure of the U.S. Embassy in Tehran. A large dog sits atop freshly cul logs in the back of a pickup truck moving through downtown Portland, Ore. Whether the animal was put there to discourage timber thieves wasn't clear. but any would-be thief would think cause being shown," the com· millee said, and was released more than a year later. He left Argentina this year for the first time on a trip to Europe. The Iranian Parliament con· vened in extraordinary session today and handled some ad· ministrative matters, Tehran Radio reported. There was no word on whether the hostage is- sue came ttp. On the diplomatic front, King ·Hussein of Jordan met in Saudi Arabia with King Khaled and Crown Prince Fahd , and Hussein's prime minister, Modar Badran, said they agreed to support Iraq's territor ial claims agaiMt Iran. twice. Proposed rederal legislation that would create an I 1,373·acre urban national park along the coast north and east of Laguna Beach will be the subject of a Senate subcommittee hearing Tuesday in Santa Ana. Among those scheduled to testify in support of the park bill include California's two senators, Alan Cranston and S. I. Hayakawa. Hayakawa, a Republican, in· itially differed over how the park purchase s hould be financed, but has since fallen in line behind Cranston , a Democrat, in s upport of the Senate venion of legislation co· authored by Reps. Robert Badham, R-Newport Beach, and Jerry Patterson, D-Santa Ana. The bill already bu cleared the House. Under the terms of the bill, the land would be purchastrd with $38 million in federal land and water conservation funds. However, the purchase would be forced to compete with other proposed land acquisitions. Thieves Get Bag, $15,000 A Newport Beach salesman who bundled up $15,000 in cub in a brown paper bag and then stashed it on the floor of his car. told police that someone swiped the money this weekend while he was shopping. Oliver Lee Reinertson. a 41· year-old Newport resident, said he forgot to lock the passenger door of his car after stopping at a shopping center on Westcliff Drive. He told investigators the money, all SSO bills, was in a bag that was concealed under a newspaper. His selection continued a re· cent trend of awarding the peace prize to human rights advocates and grou~. Soviet dissident An· drei Sakharov won in 1975 and the London-based Amnesty In· temational in 1977. Two other previous winners, Betty Williams and Mairead Corrigan, the co-leaders of Northern Ireland's Peace Peo· The hearing by the subcom· ple movement. nominated Perez mittee on parks, recreation and Esquivel for the prize, calling renewable resources will be held him "the most out.standing non· from 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the violent activist alive." Hall of Administration. 10 Civic The Peace Prize is one of five No Breaks In Slaying, Police Say Center Pla~a. . . established in the will of Swede Westminster police said todff The heanng Wlll be cha1red bY _Alfred Nobe~ _the invent<l_r_Q! _there bas been no l>reakthrOugh -serr:-. Paul~gas, 9 Mur.: ayn a~ 1 . e. to honor in the investigation of tbe who 1s appeanng at the behest of hum anatari an works . Last butcher knife slaying of 41-year- Se n .. Henry_ Jackson. D · year 's. win~er was Roman oldShirleylraleneFilipp. , W~hmgton, said Patterson: Catholic missionary_ Mother Ms. FUipp was round stabbed 1 ai:n extr~mely c.onhde_nt Teresa of Calcutta. India. to dealh lut Wednesday after· th~t this pubhc hearing . will Professor John Sannes. noon in her apartment at 1322 brmg the Oran~e Coast ~ational chairman of the No_rwegian Westminster Ave. Urban Park B1~l a cru~1al step Nobel Committee. said Pe~ez A butcher knife, believed to be closer to becommg reality when Esquivel was awarded the pnze from the victim's kitchen waa the Sen~te reconven~s m No· because he has "devoted hi~ life foundembeddedinberback'. vember, Patt_erson~a1d. to the struggle for human nghts Police believe the woman was Also ~estilyuig WJlJ be county since U'74." . , slain sometime during the pre-superv1so~ Ralph Clark a~d The committee s st.at.ement vious evening. Thomas R1iey: Wayne Baglin: said the ~urpose o~ the Pe~ce She was fully clothed and mayor of Laguna Beach. and Justice Service, which there was 00 evidence of a break representatives of erou)Ns that Perez Esquivel bu led since in or robbery according to of. have l~ied for p~a.ee of the 1974. is ''to work to promote fun· ficers. ' park ball; state off1c1als, and damental human rights, basing Offcers declined to state if landowners whose property it.self exclusively on non-violent finge~rint.s were found 00 the w?ul~ be purchued. The latter means." It has a network of con· murder wea , w1ll _mclude Irvine Company tacts spanning the South pon President Peter Kremer. American continent. Patterson said consideration The~mitt~~ likened the-· of the biU by the full Senate will_ .views and aims ol eeru_Es_· occur. elihif.:in:Jate November or qu1vet to those of Sakharov, early ~mber. whose human rights activities In North By Tiie Aaocla&ed Preu There was rain in some parts of Northern California Sunday and more was forecast for today including as far south as the San Francisco Bay area. There were scattered showers Sunday with Eureka getting lhe most rainfall with .26 of an inch, followed by barely measurable amounts at Monterey, Oakland. Red Bluff and San Francisco. led to his being sent from Moscow to internal exile in a provincial Soviet city. The statement traced years of turmoil under Argentina's 4· year.old military government. which it said "has it.seU made use of extreme violence." '·Perez Esquivel is among those Argentinians who have shone a light in the darkness. He champions a solution of Argen- tina's grievous problems that dispenses with the use of violence, and is the spokesman of a revival of resped for human riahu . . . · Perez Esquivel Ts the second Argentine to win the Nobel Peace Prize. The first was the late Carlos de Saavedra Lamas, who as Argentine secretary of state mediated a conflict between Paraguay and Bolivia Train Crash Injures 26 TERRY, Miss. CAP) -Edna Harwood says she thought ''bey, this is it" as five cars of a 10-car Amtrak papenger train ran off the tracks at 75 mph and tumbled down an embankment. Five persons remained hospitalized today foUowtnc the derailment Sunday night near this small town about 20 miles south of Jackson. Hospital of. ficials said the rive were listed in stable condition. In all. 26 of tbe 69 people aboard Amtrak's northbound Panama Limited, on a run from New Orleans to Ctucago, were taken to three Jackson hoepilals with minor injuries. But there was still no govern- ment estimate of the number of casualties, and some rescue of- ficials expressed hope the final figure could be lower than the Red Crescent's estimate. l•l.•-••eadl A Pacific weather system bringing some precipitation and cooler air entered the north part of the state early today. That weather system was forecast to move gradually south. and wuiwaideclthe 1936prize. Many of the dead and injured were in mountain villages within a 20-mile radius of Al Asnam. Some remained isolated by landslides and ruined bridaea but a continuous helicopter airlirt by the Algerian army was " ' e~'fl'Cllatd:lg injured villagers to hospitals. DAILY PILOT .. _ ... "_ Pr••'•fllt •no ~,.,..., ~·"~ ...... ~··--­........ , ... '-'"l (Mntt" "-•• •• .i.1 .. 1~ f:dllot ..... --Ot-C-••- ·*'','='=!~--........ ~ l'.O ... ,.., .... °""" ~-= ':;:::..cz::=:•• T1' lftlRI (114t.._, 011d"1•Muuclll4__,. _...,_0-....~CIP u_ ... ,_ 11 Cou111 ians Seek Eleven prominent Orange Coast residents, including a mayor and a municipal court judae, h.ave filed applicati~ to form a national bank and trust company in Laguna Beach. The IP'OUP filed an application with tbe federal Comptroller of the Currency to establish the La1una National Bank and Tn11t Company in the vlclnlty ol Forett Avenue and Beach Street in Laiuna Beach. No site bu yet been purcbued. Capltallaation from sbaree la· sued by the bank would total '1,250,•, the aroup stated oo tta appllcltian . &l'Dllt o.orae of corona del Mar would ultimately be cbalnun 8Dd cblef Hecutive of. ftNr of tM bak, lf lt .. • ... proyed • .Udpated over tbe Mxt tbNe to ftft moau.. Geoqe la tM fonner pretldeat ad ~ ol Cal Weltenl :-.:=.::..~ AuodMIGll ba Dul'tlll 1111 ,., .. ,..,. .. tlaat •.................. .......... '° ............... ....... I!;.._ ecutive with the Fluor Corpora· lion; Casper W. Barnes Jr. of Newport Beach, professor of electronic engineering at the University of California at lrvine; Judge Richard Hamilton of the South Orange County Municipal Court, a Laguna Beach resident; Katherine D. Short of South La1una, owner of the Laguna Travel Serv\ce; and Kenneth A. Willig of Newport beacb, owner of the John Wayne TennbClub. o·tben who would be direct.on are attorney William C. • Hitchcock of Lasuna Beach; Kenneth D. Kelly of Laruna Beach, a partner in Un10 Real l!atat.; Norman D. Savace ol Corona del Mar, prealdent of Corporate Realty of Irvine; Nlcbolal N. Shammu ot Lquna Beacb, owner of seven Lo• AD1ea. automobile dealenbipa and Workman'• Automobile ID1urmce of Loi An1ea.; md Burt.cm Sl1111, muaqla1 editor of tbe 8uUm MWI~ ll'°'IP• ,.... ~. who would bl ln cbarp of INIU operatlona and policy, would bl muln1 lav•t· mnta ol •·• to •.ooo ucb .......... tlMtr DGefUclel, n., woUld nat i.. •alarMd but would ... pAicl from ... to a-.... ~rt.:: .,._:..;.;-... .......... _ .. ____ "'"'~ _, ... -:-;;-.. " 11111111, -•· ,. ...... , o.ar ..... d . Introducing the Al's Garage Jean .. designed especially with you In mind; liOhlW8'Qht, comfortably railofl!d with a straight leg SllhOuette. In three shades of denim; Indigo. washed and bleached .. --~---· ·-- ALSOARAGE 56 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH (Z14J 644-7030 NYSE COMPOSfl'E TRANSACTIONS Sell ycur time shore in- terval owner~ip in- terest in a con- dominium, own-your- own apartment or recreational property In the new Doily Pilot clouifmtion -TI MI IHAlllO/INTllYAl OWlllEll• W. Cal Mt-5671. DAILY PILOT H/F L'r PILOT &'J• M011eff to Burn Se~gram Seeks Added Ventures By MILTON MOSKOWITZ Have a company you want to sell? Orop u hoc to Edgar M. Bronfman, 375 Park Avenue, New York, N V Bronfman is chairman of the Seagram Company, the world's laraeet distiller, and he has a lot r;f ct.tsh on hand Aa a matter of fact, he has so mUl'h that he hn~ hired a conslo'tiq company lo tell him what to do with 1l We all should have such problems. Seagram is a company that should be well known to denizens of bars and other places whe re llbnt1ons are poured. They have the longest, riches1 line or lictuor and wine brands in the business He re's a partial r unrlown or their family members: SEVEN CROWN, V.O., Kessler, Ca lvert, W->lfschm1dt, CJ:'QWO Russe. Ron Rko, Crown Royal, l?assi><>rt. Chivas Regal, Christjan Brothers, Glenlivet, Paul Masson . Jameson, Benchmark, Sir Robert Burnett. Leroux, Myers. Famous Grouse, White Horse, Mumm, R&<i, c:otd Seal, Kijafa, RicasoU, Brolio, Julius Kayer, floval Salute, llcnn Marchant, Perrier·Jouet, Vandern11 nt That's an impressive array SevPn C'r•1w11 1s the third best selling spirit in the country <6 mtlhon cases d yellr l V.O., a Canadfan whiskey, is right behind 1t 1n fourth plac~ (3.8 million cases a year> And the No H hr and 1s Sea gram's Gin (2.6 million c ases a year I Seagram has fi ve other brand~ lhlll l'al"h Sl.'11 mt)re than 1 million cases a year, right down In th•' premium scotch, Chivas Regal ( 1.1 millton t'liSPs n \ t'ar l In Paul Masson they have one of the nat1on·c, leo.fd1n~ win.-brands These bottles generate some heady profits but they are not the source or the cur· rent cash now. One sour ce is the sale of the Seagram Building in New York. Money Tree It was widely recognized as the hand.,nme-,t "kvs1 r;.•per built on Park Avenue in the post World War 11 •r•1 !'il'a gram sold it for S8S m illion They still ,,,.r11p' ttfflc·t·s 1n tht> building ; they just d1dn 't want tn he 1n I tw r1•;1, •'!'I ;11 r hus1 ness. BUT THAT'S NOT where 1111' IH., 111110• ' oming from. Seagram was fortunau• enough to I!"' 1n1 .. 1 h1• u1 I business some years ago as a way r f d1' •'r "' 1(' • l'he1 r Texas Pacific Oil Company dtd 'n~ "'•·11 . .nr1 ri1111w they have sold it off to the Sun Compan~ That sale, completed in earh• 'w1.1<•rr.! .. r r ·:r•·rl ""a gram $2.3 billion. It was the ser•mrJ I Jr··~• ·l••al ri the h1i;. tory or U.S. business, topped onl~ I." '>lwll 4111 ~ !!179 ar. quisition of Bel ridge Oil for S3 6 b1llirm It's this $2.3 billion that's burninfl ,, huli in F;dgar Bronfman's pocket. He could d1stnbute 1t tu <ihareholders, but that's old-fashioned Besides, th" Bnmfman~ dre the largest shareholders and the.) dim ·1 ll•'etl t ht' 1111irwy They could use it to wipe out the rompdn\ ~ lnne tH•11 debt (about S450 mjllion), but no one dr>ec; thul t111~ mnn So wh.al's poor Bronfman to do hut luok afo1Jnll ;irnJ ~~, what company or companies he ~an tiuv·• T11 h• Ip him decide he has retained the Cambndlit('. Mos:, . r on.,ull1ng company of Arthur D. Lillie. WITH THAT MUCH money on hand there art:n 't loo many companies that Seagram couldn't buy 1 assuming it could &lllber all the shares). Only some 60 companies have a market value of more than S2.3 billion, market value ........ n.& all their abares are worth baaed oe tbeY' ea,..,.. tndina wwtcee on the 11\od:: exchanges. Momant.o, American Express, Alcoa, J P Morg1m Ml•Oonalds and General Foods are all comparues who~e m arket 'alue was below $2.3 billion at the end or 1979 The aaaumption on Wall Street is that Seagram will be looking for companies with a consumer products back· ground. Colgate, Norton Simon. Standard Brands and Gillette have been cited as possi bi1Jt1es But Bronfman told the Wall Street Journ1tl that ht! 1s , rHdy~~~ ttmtf Of..COm.panfes. fi.cepLCfiose ln atomic energy or the steel business. f>~1rst though, he's go- ing to wait for the report from Arthur D. Little It 'II be one of those far-ranging reports that peer into the 21 sl nentury. pointing the logical way for Seagram to go 1'biS report will not be ready until th~ end at the year, so you still have t ime to catch Bmnfmun s 11ttcnt1on A martini is a tough act to folluw, hut 1h1 n• ~ i" :I bt lhon ther e waiting for somewhere to gu Grace w·i~ Paci Denied by Presidetll WASHJNGTON <AP > The \\ H 1,r:ll't-• 11 Yoht ch last summer became the first hrrn to lw denied 1 l\•deral contract for violating President Coirtl'r c; war!e ;.inti rmre guidelines, has been awarded the saml' cont ral'I In announcing the award or the $12 6 m11l1on ._'lt.'s1gn contract for a major synthetic fuels plant, F.nt!r~y Secretary Charles Duncan said the pro1ect was of c;ufft cient importance lo the country to grant a wa1\•er WREN 'nlE DENIAL WAS announrcd tl'l i\11g11~t. of ficials said it was the first time th£' goHrnment had r~· fused lo sign a contract beeause of a v1olat1on of th~ pres• dent's two-year-old voluntary wage and price guidelines The contract calls for Grace, :i mullib11lion·dollar international chemical firm, to design u S3 bilbon ~ynlhellc fuels plant in Baskett, Ky. The plant, which Grace hopes to have operating by 191S will be used in a complex process that will ronvert coal' into S0,000 barrels or gasoline daily An Energy Department spokesma.n noted that Gra~e and the Council on Wage and Price Stability are s911 ne1otiating the panel's finding that lhe firm exceeded 1t.s allowable profit limit. Spokesman Bob Porter said Duncan felt it wu better lo allow work on the synthetic fuels plant to 10 forward while the dispute is being rei;oh ·ed. Gold, Metals Quotations Gold By Tbe Aasoc:Jated Press Selected world gold prices today: L••••: morning fixing $683.50 off $1.75 ls .. rn: afternoon fixing S679.7S off SS.SO Pull: afternoon fixing $68.5.85, off$1 61 FraMhlrt: fixing 1683. 02, off S l. 00. Zmtdl: t8'74.00 bid, off $10.SO: $675.50 a~ked . New York: Handy & Harman holiday. New York: Engelhard sellln ~ price rnlc1 ·morning 9179.15, off SS.50. New Yen: Engelhard fabricated gold mid·mornlng noa.54, off J.S.69. 1"8 ... NEW YORK <AP> -~ nonferrous m etal prices to-da~. C..-.•.e.·.99'1• a pound, U.S. destinations • ._ 45 centl a pound. llllt ft\1t·3'7~ centl a pound, delivered. '1"1111 claMd Holiday. Al I •• lb, N. y . 12· 78. = &&I MlJ ..... 10.00 per Ouk. ";t ..... troyoc. N.Y. . I . ... ·· '1 UHK V WINK •I AN --- =-----~ltY CMrlH M Scbull T~l'S All l"'1; Ml.AM .. I LL FtNO A Pl.ACE TO PUT TMEM ... #' by Tom Batiuk COMICS I CROSSWORD (~ lt'AN\ It) 001Nu*L IHtC,1 (_,~I WATtH1~6 OOR. 6W6 Pt.Ac) ll4F &AMt . lOO... Af UOCA' nu 'I IJ<'J , (.O(\LllQ MAKE l(~U'ft kt)UCN€ CR<.> ! ~1 111 MOON MU l-l-tN~ 11 •1t1tl1 ~-\\ .• ''i I· ·1 ,\[ • \'I 11 "1 'i 11 l~I· I I \f I. . ' I· .. -....... 'I \ , i .) I. ..,, . t _!. • .. ~· • , I 1-·f,1· 11 I I \\ 111·.~/,, •. , .. L .,: I~-., I I Ml \~ t•t-Al U ii_ : • I Ill e: rl',Jll l f , "" ''~ LllUtl l'llTIALL.TUMI l \\ . ".\. . ' \ . " . ,, .. \ '"" • • , \•;c . ........ . \ . I' \ .. \ ~ -~ \ .\' 1 ~. 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