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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-11-14 - Orange Coast PilotSuspeets held Very short r e ig11 Miss World 1980, 28-year-old Gabrielle Brum of West Germany, quit her title today ... ~~ss than 24 hours after winning it in London. Her resignation came ~hortly after she said her 52-year-old Los Angeles boyfnend, Benno Bellenbaum, a film cameraman, was "not toQ..pleased" with her victory. J ., Lawyer plans fippeal l F RI DAY AFTERNOON, NOVE MBER 14, t980 ~f j VOL. 7), NO. Jlt, 4 SECT I OHS, 4' PAGES Flight _plan fought Airport neighbors skeptical· By STEVE MARBLE OUlleOMty PIMtS&aff Newport Beach residents, treated to a 20-minute slide show Thursday on proposed develop- ment at John Wayne Airport, said they remain skeptical of pro· mises that the airport and the jets fl ying out of it will become quieter. •'The noise level is intolerable right now." said Clarence Turner a north Newport resident. "I can:t even talk to my wife 850,000 r eeo vered Police nab iromen in bank robbery Two women brandishing a ri - ne and a handgun burst into a San Juan Capistrano bank Wed- nesday morning, bound 10 women employees with tape and made otl with $55,000. But Orange County sheriff's deputies captured two suspects Wednesday afternoon. One of the women believed to ... be a member of the bewigged bandit team was captured in Fountain Valley two hours after the robbery. Her alleged ac- complice was arrested later in the day in a Los Angeles hotel room. Charged with sus picion of armed robbery and h eld in Orange County Jail in lieu of $200,000 bail each are Karen Jenks Mapes, 27, and Donna Lou Waddell, 33, according to sheriff's deputies. The two women are held in connection with the robbery at the California First National 81mk branch at 31971 Camino Capistrano , San Juan Capistrano. Sheriff's deputies said two women wearing wigs and sun- 1lasses rushed the front door of the bank at about 8 :30 a.m. when the door wu opened to al- low an employee to enter. Employees of the bank said the women forced them to Ue on tbe floor and bound their h81ljda " and feet with tape. Jnvesti1aton said the two women remained in the bank for about 40 minutes. The pair left In a yellow Chevrolet compact, Oran1e County sheriff's deputies said. A bank empJoree reec>rtedly 1ot a partial ' Jicense plate from the vehicle, which led to th•· arrest of one of tbe women about two hours after the robbery. A 1heriff'1 deputy eaw a vehi· cle inatcblnt the description ot the tetaway cd truelln1 nonh on Ole Slnta Ana Ffteway ln El Toro about t ;• a.m. The deputy followed the car to the San Dleto l'teeway ln Foun· (lee IMl.DlJP, P a1e AU "J across the room." Turner, a long-time activist in battling airport expansion, said claims by airport manager M urryCablethat more daily com· mercial rughts can be aJJowed as quieter aircraft are introduced. doesn't make sense to him. •'According to the noise read- ings." he contiruied, "the new Super 80 jets w~quieter at the airport but there wasn't any dif- ference when it got over Newport." Newport resident Vin Jorgensen said the quiet jets. namely McDonnell Douglas' new Super 80. a re as bad as the "noisy" Boeing737's. Cable. saddled with the task of explaining the recently released master plan for the airport to noise-weary citizens , was direct with his response. ''Unless you get to the point where you just want all com- mercial operations at the airport to stop, this is a good plan," he sa id of 1,500 page, 15-pound master plan. Listenin.~ to his presentation Thursday were members of Newport's aviation committee, city officials and a handful of resi- dents. The basic goal of the plan is to accommodate lhe.1rowing avia- tion demand while reducing noise i mpact on residential areas beneath the takeoff pattern - Santa Ana Heights and to a lesser degree, Newport Beach. Cable says the noise reduction can be accomplished and allow for dally fiigbts to be boosted from 41 toS5by1991. And that will beac· complllhed, he says, by forcing airlinestopurchuequietel'jets. "It's a positive step to get those really loud Jets; those screamers out of the airport," Cable said. notJnghe'dhavenoquaJmataJting all an airline's routes away ifthey didn 'tCOQlPIV. Asked what assurances Newport residents had that future polltlclana would stick to the mafter plan, Cable admitted that Newport likely "won't ever aet an)'lblnainconcrete." "What'• 1oln1 to happen 10 yean from now?" Cable Jiited hlmHlf "I don't know. If the de- mand for aviation 1row1 and Newport hM to npt all the other Oraa1e County cltlet -Newport wurio.e. ''TM realities of It are that political factiou are havlq a clif. fl~Ult Ume a..ttnc Ute bullet ancl (Ille AlllPOaT, Pa1e Al> e's dancing ban Tears of grief Charlotte Carrino weeps as she tells reporters in New York that her husband. Chns. is aboard missing freighter ''Poet." Coast Guard is continuing search for ship. .Same-sex darice ban targe t for appeal By DAVID KUTZMANN crimination or Infringement or oi 1i. o.u, ~11.ui..11 protectable rights in the case. A Santa Ana lawyer who In denying Talmo's request r e presents two teen -age for an injunction against Dis· homosexuals says he wlll'appeal neyland, the judge s aid, "I an Orange County judge's de· think their reasons are lolfcaJ cision to uphold a same -sex and supporta ble'' for having the d an c e ban a g a i n s t m a I e dance ban. partners at Disneyland. , · ·The i n r ring e m en t is Attorney Ron Talmo said mmlmal," he said. Thursday he believes Superior Disneyland attorney William Court Judge John K. Trotter Jr. Billing said ho~osexual patrons was wrong In saying that the have complete and open access popular amusement park could to the amusement park and Its enforce regulations that prevent numerous attracUons. homosexual couples from danc-But Bitting said there was not ing. a single case that showed that Talmo's two~llents -Andrew same-se1t'dancin1 was "proleci· Exler, 19, and Shawn Elliott, 17 table conduct" under the law. -were kicked out or Disneyland Trotter aaid that while there last September after danclna could be ablofote freedom of to1ether on the Tomorrowland beliefs, there could be no stmilar dance ftoor. Both are admJUed absolute treedom of action. bomoaexuaJs. "A line hu to be drawn," Bit· "I believe the court flu tlJ\1 concurred. erred,'' s.Ud Talmo, who ~Ill file . · He later told reporters out.aide his appeal with the Fourth Dis· Trotter's courtroom that Dl•· trlct Court of Appeal In San neyl•nd ofrtclals go to 1real · Bernardino. len1th.s to preserve tbe famJJy Trotter, In rullnc from the atmosphere of tbe world famous bench nuand•J, said he could amusement park and that admit· 'f.ind n' evidence of tel di•· (-MN, Pa1• AJ) Pri s on escaee set up LOS ANGELES (AP) - Authorities searching for the elusive spy Christopher Boyce theorize that he financed hi• escape from a California prison last January by dealing in dope or counterfeit money. Thomas Kupferer. head of the Los Angeles-based task force formed to apprehend the 27- ye a r-old fugitive, said that Boyce may be doing the dealin1 1 n drugs or bogus mone1 himself, or may have set up an operation for others to carry out. "We have reason lo believe be was on the periphery of druJ dealing before his arrest," Kup- ferer said .. He added that con· tacts made in prison might also have been useful to Boyce in set- ting up a narcotics operation after his Jan. 21 escape. Prior to his escape, Boyce had contacted his Tustin attoney, William Dougherty, in seeking to obtain sports gear s uch as trunks and sneakers. Boyce pro- mised to send Dougherty a list ol items wanted. The Orange Co unty lawyer never got the list. Dougherty said he had no inkling that Boyce was planning an escape. Boyce, from Palos Verdes, was sentenced in June 1977 fot hi s part in selling highly cla.ssified information about the U.S. satellite s urvei llance system to the Soviet· Union. He had access to the information as an employee of TRW Co., which had a defense contract to mate spy satellites for the CIA. Boyce, who reportedly bu been spotted In auch divene areas u South Alric!a, Mexico City, Louisiana and Colora~. made a local call lut month to Robert Undley, a Los Ansel•· baaed reporter for The New York Times, Lindley became a friend and confidant of Boye. while wrltln1 a book on Boyce and hi• accomplice, Andrew Da ultOQ Lee, 28. Kupferer take• credll for br1n1in1 the youn1 futitive out of the cold by widely pubUNlna the reeenlly formed task fcne and chalJet'lstaf Boyce'• eto. •'We felt that beeaUH of h1I psyche be had to •tabll1h IOIDe kind of human coataet, and our profile or him lncllcat .. tbl• challen1e wae 1omethln1 be would enjoy, respond to. He would enjoy a cat·and·IDOUM I; type of tblq ... I I I ' magic 'l,000' SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - After revlewinl cl1111fled docu· menu trom the·department.1 of 1tate and treasury, a federal Judie has temporarily baited IC· t.lon on 20 corporate clalma seek· lng an estimated $500 mllllon ln aeta, elllmated llD \ola1 • blDka. The rultn~lday la Ian l"Undloo tbe '°"'9• meat peUtlOM publle .U.· Americana beld botta1e for more lbaD a ,.., • The u1eta were froau bJ Prealdent Oarter after ti•• •ta1• wm takea, 9IMI maay U.S. ftrma and ladlvlduala wmt to court aeekln• compenaatiaa for loue1 they autalned wMn the 1ovemment of the Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini came to power. NEW YOILK lAP) Wl\b a rlllal t* ol ccmMMee OD Wall lllMt tUf.. RooaM lt•a•aa wt1l be ~ for bultnu•. the Dow JonH lnduatrlal avera1e haa ' edaed cme to t.M rare, rarefied 1,000 mark. Peverilb buyinC alace Rea.can wu elected preeldent 10 days a10 pushed tbe Dow Jones averaae up 50 pointa this Wffk, r and It cloMd Thursday at its- : bi1heat. level In almost four years -91Z.U . The Dow's bl&b of 1,051.72 was set Jan. U, lt73, and it baa been Oops! A~r fare citts revised NEW YORK <AP) -Eastern Air Lines, which set off a wave of fare increases in t he Callfomia·New York markets, said today it had miscalculated · and that the increa'ses, in some · cases, will be less than it pre· viously said. The airline said the le ast ex· pe~sive round trip ticke t between Los Angeles and New York will be $455 staring Jan. 1, up from the current S2Q and from the low or $198 t hat pre- vailed earlier this year when Eastern started a price war on the route. (Earlier story on Page 88.) · On the New York-San Fran· • cisco route, the lowest round trip fare will be $475. Fares have been the same on both routes. Those fares will apply oajy ~m . night flights during mid-week, with purchasers required to buy tickets at least 30 days in ad· vance and to stay a week before returning. On the Los Angeles route, Eastern said today, the discount round-trip rare will be $538 on weekend nights and midweek days and $621 on weekend days. • The fares on the San Francisco route will be $562 and $648, respectively above l.OllO la anly three tredlnl peric*. la im. tm aad most rw•nUJ la lftl .. Tia• New Yon Stoel Ex· c:han,. bad lta Wrd·bUll•t day In hlatory Tlauraday 11 •. 14 million llw'e8 chanted bandl. The exchaa,.'1 tMlll•t clay ev•r w 11 the day after the eleetloa. when YOlwne blt M.OI mlWon a hares. Hut today, UMt atoclt ma.net turned In a mind ahowlnl ln heavy tndlna. lenllal olf after the sharp rile of UM put four seaalom. The Dow Joaes aven1e of 30 lnduatrials, up 50 polnta since the start of the week to its h i1heat level in nearly four years, slipped back 2.41to979.78 in the first hour today. Gainers outnunpbered losers by a slight marsm In the overall tally ol New York Stock Ex· change-listed LSsues. Mo!ft of, the experts agree: Presidetli Reaaan will be bullish for business. · · "The longer-range implica· lions of the Reagan victory are distinctly positive for the economy, in our opinion," says the latest Merrill Lynch marltel newsletter. "We believe they will lead to an Increased em· pbasis on business investment, greater productivity and less in· nation." When trading ended Thurs· day, the closely watched Dow Jones average bad jumped 17.49 points to 982.42, ita highest close since it finished at IM.87 on Jan. 10, 19'77. Biggest gainers were oil issues and high-technology stocks, stocks of companies expected to f>enefif Tiom a preaumeCI shift under Reagan to greater stress on production and investment. Seven of the 15 most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange TbUrsday were oil· company issues. Computer-giant Intemational'Buainesa Machines and aircraft maker Boeing, which won a 60-plane cootract from Delta Air Unes, were the two most heavily traded stocks. and both rose in price. .~ ......... HAL TS IRAN CLAIMS Judge Robert P9ctlh•m frosen Iranian aiaet.1. U.S. District Jud1e Robert F. Pe~kham said he 1ranted the 90-day stay on a 1overnment "su11eation of intel'fft" request that ''all further proeeedln;a be stayed" in an effort to help the hoata1e crisis. The State Department bas sou1ht deferrals in about 230 otber claims tn a dozen other states against the Iranian as· * * * tlOD. I In Wa1bluton, apokeaman"' Joe 8-ap Hfd the tnove w11 made 10 that &e1al acUon •'would not preJ•tce our effort.a to oblala tbe release of the' hott11•." He Aid that to his knowledce, no Judie haa ruled on the .validity ol any of the Ira· nian claim caMI. The Iranian 10vemment has demanded that all claims •••inst tta ...... be dropped u a condiUOD for· relea1in1 the * * * I . Hostage trials pushed Iranians study V.~"· response to ienns BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP> - The head of Iran's political par· ty has talked again about put· ting the American hostages on trial as leaders of the revolu· tlonary regime discussed the U.S. response to Iran's terms for their release. A y atoll a h Mohammad Beheshtl, the le ader of the American auto sales increase may level off DETROIT CAP) -Sales of U.S.-built cars increased in ear· ly November compared to the same period last year.· but in· dustry analysts warn the spurt in sales may level off again. The five major U.S. auto makers Teported Thursdarthat s ales were up 3.5 percent com· pared with the first 10 days of Novtmber, 1979. The increase over last year 's reporting period was only the second since January. Despite the upturn, the annual selling rate -what a year's sales would be based on one period's rate -declined to 6.6 million cars from 6.7 million in October as a whole, putting the industry back at September's level. Islamic Republican Party and the president of the Supreme Court, said ii the Iranian gov· ernment decides Washington's reply is unsatisfactory, the Ma· jlis, Iran's parliament, wiU have to deci<ie whether the 52 Americans should be tried as s pies, the Te hran newspaper Engelab reported Thursday. Prime Minister Mohammad Ali Rakai conferred Thllrsday with Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho- meini, the leader of the revolu· tionary regime, and Tehran Radio said they discussed "cur· rent events," including Iran's war with Iraq. But it was as- sumed they also discussed the American reply, which was de· livered in Tehran Wednesday by Algerian officials. * * * Government officials were re· ported to have diacuued the re· ply in meetings all day Thunday. But no government action wu expected today since it was the Moslem Sabbath. The American reply has not been made public, but U.S. of· ficials said it contained a pledge not to interfere in Iran's affairs and explanatiom of the l•Cal ob- stacles to immediate fulflllment of the other conditions set by Khomeini and the Majlis: the freeing of more than• billion in froien Iranian aueta, canc:ella· lion of all American claims against Iran and the return of the fortune which the late Shah Mohammad Rua Pahlavi and hia cl~ relatives transfern:d abroad. * * * ·Saudi Arabia backs Kuwait against Iran BEIRUT. Lebanon (AP> - Saudi Arabia rushed to support Kuwait after its oil-rich little neighbor blamed Iran for an air attack on a Kuwaiti border post. But a Kuwaiti newspaper said the rocket attack was "uninten· tional" and speculated that the Iranian pilot dropped his payload after being hit. ''It ia the position of the cov· emment that 'Judicial proceed· inga at thla time . . . would create a serious risk of prejudlc· lnl the continuing efforts of the United States aovemment to re- 1 0 lv e the hostage crisis," Peckham wrote. Peckham's action came 10 daya after Carter declared in a televised statement that "any action taken by our government wlll be ln full accordance with our laws and our Constitution." The Iranian government as· sets are said to include $1.34 billion in securities and $1 billion in gold on deposit with the U.S. federal reserve. The assets, in addition, include $4 billion in foreign branches and sub· s idiaries of U.S. banks, and about $."iOO million held by U.S. companies. Legal s p ecialists have estimated that only $.1.5 billion is under government control. AIRPORT • • that's why they dream up silly things like putting an airport in the ocean-which will never fly." Several residents s u,gested that the system for measuring noise impact does not show the impact of a singleoccurenceof jet noise. "Like early on a Sunday morn- ing," piped up one resident. "It's unrealistic to measure noise im· pact on a 24-hour basis when jets don 'l fly that many hours at the airport." · Cable suggested residents are asking too much. "You can't have it both ways," he responded. "You have a curfew now on flights but you don't want to stick to the state's C N EL (Community Noise Equivalent Level ). "And, meanwhile," he went on, "You have a business community that wants to know why we don't - have 120 of these jets busting out or here every day ... Newport City Manager said th~ slide presentation will be re- viewed by the city's ain>ort com· mission, and comments will be Compromise Grier plan developed "It's just like winter and sum· mer, you don't go from freezing to sunbathing in a day," said one company analyst who re-· quested anonymity. "We're ge> ing to be on a plateau for ·a month while we see what in· terest rates do." Positive comparisons with fairly strong year-ago sales will b e "incr e asingly difficult through February," he warned. "Saudi Arabia will come to Kuwait's aid acainsl any danger it is exposed to," said King Khaled. leader J>f the world's largest oil exporter , in a message Thursday to Kuwaiti ruler Sheik Jaber al-Ahmed al· Sa bah. Saudi Crown Prince Fahd telephoned the Kuwaiti ruler and assured him of "the im· portance Saudi Arabia attaches to the safety and territorial inte· grity of Kuwait," Kuwaiti sources said. forwarded to the county. The county Planning Com· mission is sei to conduct hearings on the master plan in January. HOLDUP ••• An nth.hour compromise plan designed to clear the way for dual appointment or Margaret Gier as director of both the county Ruman Services Agency and its Mental Health Department was ~delivered to members or the Orange County Board of Supervisors Thursday. The four-page proposal, pre- pared by 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley, was viewed as a last-minute attempt to quell the controversy that erupted in the mental health community over the dual appointment recommen· dation. Miss Grier, now HSA director, has filled the mental health leadership position on an interim basis since the resignation a year ago of Dr. Ernest Klatte. Riley recently propoMd that Miss Grier receive the responslbility on a permanent baa is, arl\lln1 that the HSA dlrec· tor is a prMeD admtttt.atrator who is sensitivet.o\1'eeounty'a mental health needs. Prior to her appointment u USA director, Ml.as Grier wu the county Probation Officer. Dining and ~Vel spotlighted StDMlay Such pleasures as fine d.inini and resort travel will be ex· amined in Sunday's Dally Pilot. T .ASTERS TELL -What puts ertme beef. stuffed poultry and fruit pies in the "gourmet" OAANOaCOAIT s DAILY PILOT ,_ .... _..... Ml••tl11t l:ll;lef o-too"·'-,. ... -~ •• 11 .. , ......... (114)~ CIHd'led ActvertlaNll ... 1111 ,.,_ ~,. Clt1~1111 ....... (suNDAY'S BEST) category?-A Dally Pilot survey of coastal shops reveals why more people are payin1 pre· mlum prices for food. PARADISE LOST! - Considering a vacation In Jamaica but turned off by the ia land 'a recent election bo1tilltiea? Don't worry. The natives ba've atatted two ~~all to make you.r visit tbe frtendllett ever. Staff Writer MieMel Pukevicb pro- vides tbecletalll. lf£M08~BLE T&IP - Realtor Jlm Wood'• lO·day odyaaey acroea country atarted when be notlced a bUI ln Corona del Mar be,_ tcw New Yott and ended When M cl'OIHd the flniah UM of the marathon ln Maabattan. He telll of taklnl the train and bltcbtdk,na to make enda IDMt la a dlll')' that allo delert .... , ........... peo- plebe • • raUll. ..... ,, -~ tM . ,~ ... poUtle • Mld8d the lroa~f epWona are expr•ld ll9 u AllOdated Pres• analyall al tM Voice ol America'• broadea•U on Amtrlcm poU~y ~ the lraa criltl. The five major producers de· livered 163,802 cars· m ·the Nov. 1-10 period against 178,085 in the same period last year, when there was one extra day in the reporting period. Chrysler Corp. sold 14,843 cars against 14,080 in early Nov- ember 1979, including 3,877 "K· car" front-wheel drive com· pacts. That's a 19 percent gain, baaed on sales per day. General Motors Corp. sales of 105.123 represented a 9.6 percent decrease, on a daily basis, from 107 ,900; Ford Motor Co. 's 38,451 w aa 8.5 percent below 41,.2:50; American Motors Corp. 's estimated 3,100 was down 38 per· cent from 5,475 and Volkswagen of America was down 24 per· cent, 2,285 again.st 3,380. Like importers, AMC reports sales at month-end. VW, strong all year, is "run· ning short of inventory" on models introduced Oct. 22, ac· cordln& to company spokesman Tom McDonald. The industry publication Ward's Automotive Reports earlier this week said VW's overall stocks of its U.S.· built cars on Nov. 1 would last 76 days, well above the desired benchmark of 60 days. Indmtry executives expressed no concern about a sales plateau. f'l"f•• 1•a9~ l I BAN .•• tance is denied to no one. "As I see this cue," Trotter said, "l don't believe there's di.a· crlmination per se. Further, I thlnk society has to expect eon· duct be controlled . . . " Talmo argued that Di&· neyland'a policy wat not "a aex· neutral policy. It la a sex-related policy." He 1ald there waa no proof that male dancinc created any apeclal aec:urlty problems at Dl1neyland and that ln other cultW'fll, 1uch danclnc l• eon· •hl•recl the norm. And dllputin& TroUer'• COG· teaUon that au dl1erimin1Uoa waa not involved, Talmo aald UM oaly way the rule could be ap- plied 11 by ldentlfylne the pnder of tb• dance partnen. Three other Arab states on the Persian Gulf, Bahrain, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates. joined Saudi Arabia in express- ing solidarity with Kuwait and concerns that the 53-day-old Iran-Iraq war might spread down the Arabian peninsula. That would endanger the re· maining now of oil from the area to the non-communist world. Kuwait said it sent Iran a formal protest over the incident Wednesday. in which two Iran· ian rockets exploded harmless· ly near Kuwait's Al Abdali post on the border with lraQ. ,,,,,..,.... MIDEAST WAR Dl'ANDI RodrMa hit KUWlllt nere was speculation that the Iranian jet had been assigned to attack the I.raqi naval base ~d port at Umm Qas-r, 22-miles from the Kuwaiti post. The base, on the embattled .Shat~ at-Arab waterway, was hit twice Wed· nesday by lranian jets. • 'Since tbe eruption of the Iran-Iraq war Kuwait has been well aware that being close. to the battlefield meant something like the mcident could happen. a~ any time," .the Ku~a1t i newspaper Al s1yassah said. ad· ding that tht: atta~~ appeared to be ··unintentional. tain Valley at the Euclid Street off ramp where Miss Waddell was taken Into custody. A sheriff's s pokesman said several articles were found in the vehicleconnecting Miss Wad· dell with the robbery. but declined to say what they were. The s pokesman said the second suspect, Miss Mapes. was arrested Wednesday after- noon in a Los Angeles hotel by Orange County s heriff's dep· uties. · A sheriff's s pokesman said more than SS0.000 was recovered during the arrests as well as wea pons matching the des· cription or those used in the rob· bery. I ,K •If' ·..i ,,,. ,,,, ALL IS1NOT THAT MEETS TH~ . ' .,.. ,.. • . • where It concerns thef~~ ., ":': Ing. A pretentiOUI ttorf ....-.Y illn answer any more thlln est•ll~ tllet feature' rldlculous low prkes with ..--1n1 end lnstellatlon Included. What's the lfttwer? Alden's t We'll oP9ft your eves to a cat'petlfll con- cept ~xcetled I · LET US PROVE IT! ·~ I. I : . Toq.gh Yo~ager Beeing solar systeni ......... THIS IS CRATERED SURFACE OF SATURN MOON, RHEA Dl•metera of l•rger Cf8tera •bout 45 mllea By aoaa•T 8CBHl& __ ...., .......... Pullins 1teadlly away from Saturn. the durable Voyager l continues to rise above the planet and its rinp on lbe ftrat lei of Its trip out of lhe solar system. If anything, the information gathered lo the paat day has been more spectaculat than what bad been previously re- ceived at Voyager's Saturn fiy· by headquarters al the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena. lmagin1 team leader Brad· ford Smith announced several new developments with respe<:t to Saturn's rings. Smith, a veteran or both the Mars and Jupiter missions, could barely contain his excitement. "I cannot recall being in such a state of euphoria in any of the other planetary mjssions," he said. The peculiar braided ap- pearance of the F ring still re· mains unexplai.ned, and it now seems that the third inner strand is also braided, though not as tightly. He also said scientists are now unsure whether the ring is braided au Coast park baCkers fret Lame ducks may shunt aside measure By STEVE MARBLE Of• o.11, ...... ,...., Proponents or a bill seeking creation of an 11,000-acre na· tional park along the Orange Coast rear the bill will be pushed aside during the U.S. Senate's lame-duck session. An ~de to Sen. Alan Cranston, D-Calif., an author of the park bill, said the prevailing reeling in Washington D.C. this week is that the lame-duck session will be completed without much· ac- tion on pending items th at have financial strings attached. "The Republicans just want to get out of there," said 'Free' bus riders concern officials By .JERRY CLAUSEN Of -o.lly ...... Slaff Newport·Mesa school officials are pleased with their plan for charging students fees to ride school buses this year, but they are concerned about the num· bers of children riding free or at reduced rates. Earlier this year. the school board ottered free and reduced· fare r ides to children from families that couldn't afford to pay. School officials believe those eligible are the same ones re· ceiving free or lower.cost lunches in district schools under a federal nutrition program. HOWEVER, DISTRICT of· rtcials have no way to determine whether applicants for reduced bus fees really are members of low-income families. Federal law prohibits districts from reviewing free-food pro· gram applications for other purposes. The reason? To pro- tect individual privacy. In a report to school trustees, district Business Manager Ray Schnlerer noted that bus ridership has dropped only Z7 percent compared to last year and adjusted to de clines in enrollment. BUT, BE NOTED, of the 1,838 bus riders, 26 percent are using free or reduced-fare passes. "Our projections, based on ex· periences of other districts, had predicted only 10 percent would be in these categories." "nancially, though, Schnierer reported, the program is just about on target. "We have collected a total of $63,239 as of that date <Oct. 31)." he noted. "IT WAS THE desire of the . . . <board) that l'aid busing would generate approximately $250,000 in revenue for the 1980·81 school year. "It appears we will come close to the desired figure," he said. The district has been hit by declines in enrollment on which state funding is based and by Proposition 13 property tax cuts and court decisions allocating less money to previously ' "wealthy" djslricts. SEVERAL PROGRAMS have bee n trimmed, teachers and other school personnel laid off and other money-saving measures taken. Included is the student-paid busing plan which is designed to cut district outlay for transportation in half this school year. Figures c ompiled by Schnierer show that most bus riders are registe red at Newport Beach schools . On the other hand. most free and reduced· fare riders are enrolled in Costa Mesa schools. Cranston's aide, "and they'd just as soon put off most things to next year, like the park bill." He added that Cranston will try to push the bill through next week. A spokesman from Sen. S.I. Hayakawa 's office predicted the lame-duck session will break up before Thanksgiving with no ac- tion on the bill. The bill, calling for expen- diture of $38 million to acquire land to piece together lhe park -envisioned as stretching from Corona del Mar to south of Laguna Beach -was passed by the House last summer. The house bill was authored by Reps. Robert Badham, R· Newport Beach, and Jerry Pat· terson, D-Santa Ana. During a Senate Parks Sub· committee hearing in Santa Ana las t month, the word being passed by Democrats was that, if Ronald Reagan were to be elected president, the bill's future might be dim. · President Carter, last Sep- tember, said be would sign the park bill when it crossed his desk. Now, politicians say, Carter may be long gone by the time the Senate finishes dealing with the bill. The aide in Cranston's office, though, said the Senator doesn't see Reagan as being anti·park. "It's his state, after all," the Senator's spokesman said. "We don 'l see Reagan as being anti· park, but getting the funding through may be another ques- tion." Perhaps the largest obstacle blocking the bill is the negative review it received from the Na· tional Parks Service and the Of. rice of Management and Budget. The parks service hasn 't con· sidered the,_ park as being high enough in priority to warrant eit· penditure of federal funds. President Carter's promise to sign the park bill was seen as the best possible route for stir· ring the bill a round th e roadblocks set up by the parks service and the OMB. Water fouls Upper Bay Laguna Hil/,s district flow continuing Polluted water from Lasuna Hills Sanitation Inc. continues iJ. lecally fiowina into Newport Bay mott than 10 months after authorities dllco•ered tbe prob- lem, •ceordlnl to water quality official Jim Andenon. W aatewat.r reachinl the bay thro\llb SD Dieao Creek con- tains ~al waste matter and aua oraumma, aaid Andenon. ueeut:ive officer of the Santa Ana Relional Water Quality Control Board. On the other band. Terry Wit- thoft, vke preeldent and tenetal man... ~ tile M1'.fl• treat. ment company louted near Lion Country Safari, sald La1una 11UW Suitatloa bu act· ed rea=bly and tried to end the p1 . "We 61 modify and expand our f ldlltiel to deal with tbe problem," •a.Id \Yhlttboft. "Our operatlq coat.I lncrea1ed by $100,• 11111 year becauae o( the problem." He np11tned Uae company 11 reludQl to 1pend more IDOM)' ae tbe problem, •lnce lt la hoped that UM _.....ater can IOOll be piped ID ID the ocean. lVhlttboft explained that L.,_. 11111 SultaUon pluw to aUacll ltl Hwa1e treatmnt plant to • ...,. outfaU pt,pt bJ tbe AllH Water llana1ement qaey. Anderson said he's heard this promise before. ''They are still dischargln1 lo· to the creek despite their as- surance to the regional water board tn May that they would stop dumping very shortly and be hooked up to the ocean outfall system in August," Anderson said. Investigators from the Santa Ana Regional Water Quality Control Board discovered the lJ. legal dumping one ni&ht last Januaey. "W~ went down to the plant after dark and 1ound they were opening their waste valve at night and cloelng it off in the morning," Anderson said. Slnce that time, officials from La1una IUUa Sanitation have ap- peared several ti.met before the Santa Ana Re1Jonal Water Quality Control Board. Andenoa Hid their promlaes to end the dumptna were never fulfilled and the resloaal water .quality control board decided to forward the cue to tbe atate At- tomey General for pl"OlecuUoa. La._. Hllll SUltatloa wmt before the State Water Ret0urce1 ControJ Board and appulid &.he realonal bc>&rd'• actJae. Tbe state Altorney a ...... a1·1 ontce wm't act CJD tbe cue •til the State Water Resources Con· trol Board issues a ruling on the appeal. That's scheduled next Thursday. Anderson said the State At· tomey General refused to act immediately on the wastewater discharce, since the pollution problem ls technically not a he.Ith hazard. That's partially because Newport Bay is already closed to swimmers and shellfish 1athering, he said. Andenoo aaid the wastewater has tbe effect of ·adding to the exlatlng bacterial contamination lo the bay and creating over· srowtbsotallae. Lal\ml\Hllls Sanitation, 23$&2 Moulton Parkway, La1una Hilla, treatl aewace from customen in Lasuna Hills, El Toro and Leisure World. It la licensed to reclalm the sewaae Into water usable for crop1 and landtcapin1. An UCMI ol HWa1e and a limited capacity to redalin it ba1 led to tbe pftNllt 1ltuaUon tn wbleb partially treated •••ge 61 WD1 dumped into Su UlelO er.., Andenon said. Wbitdloft tQmed tbe problem • UDUIUI riln condltlocta and u~ demand for reelalmed water. the way ~round, or whether Voyager Just happened to ftad Its one inlertwtned portion. The D ring, a falnt structure claimed to have been seen by some earth based astronomers lnside the innermost C rtn1. bu been conflrmed by Voya1er's cameras. ft was not generally accepted as being reil until Thursday. And a shadow, which mov~ across the face ot a small tooth s haped inner moon during pic- tures taken nine mlnutes apart, has led to the discoveey of yet another ring outside of the F ring. Not yet narped or charac- terized, this new ring mu.st be extremely faint and very close to the satellite. The rapidly changing position of Voyager with respect to Saturn has enabled the craft to photograph its targets from 1 m a ny different angles of ii· luminatlon. This has resulted in a torrent of data that will take years to sift through. Saturn's many moons are yielding up their secrets more readily than the rings . Voyager's television cameras we re not able to penetrate through the clouds to Titan's s urface, but the other instru- ments did somewhat better. All the results so rar are extremely p r e li min a r y . N e ve rlhe less, many notions about the secretive moon's structure have already been overthrown. In the battle between the "thick" and "thin" theories or Titan's atmosphere, thick looks like the winner. Though values have only been partially calculated. e xtrapolation of temperature and calculation or the time it took a voyager radio beam lo s weep thro ugh the moon's atmosphere indicate the s urface pressure possibly twice that of earth. Even more unusual, methane, which had been thought to form the major part of Titan's etl· m osphere, now seems to be very rare. Nitrogen, which in one theory had been considered a minor constituent, is now thought to make up most of the Harbor Lions add $20,000 to eye bank Thanks to a $20,000 donation from the Costa Mesa Newport Harbor Lions Club, an eye bank and sight saving cent~r is ex- pected to be opened later this month at the UC Irvine Medical Center In Orange. The funds to help establish a program for corneal transplants, research and pathologic studies was raised during the Lions Club's annual Fish Fry. The eye bank will be in· augurated next Thursday at a dinner at the Tale of the Whale Restaurant in Newport Beach. The transfer of delicate eye tissue, which must be used for transplants within 72 hours of the donor's death, will be the major function or the eye bank. 't'he bank will be made availa· ble to eye s urgeons throughout the country, officia ls at the medical center said. The center also will be the site for research projects to study ways of pre· s erving eye t issue for long periods of time. Information regarding eye donations can be obtained from the ophthalmology department at 634·5761. Reservations for next Thursday's inaugural din· ner can be made by ca!Hng the s ame number. r A S•••f•r• UaheraltJ , ara•u&e. ....rt leMer la a ,..,.. ,.... ........... at vc ........ ........... .. -• radl•l•1l1t. Bl• Jatereat I• ... ,. ... , atarte• I• 1rade adaoel wlan •e wate•M dae la••e•a.1 of • aaaed ••ace 111111t1s. big moon's gueoua cloak. The other Saturnian moons do not possess appreciable at· mospheres. A fact that greatly simplifies photographing them. Rhea, which two days a10 was thought lo be s imilar to * * * Jupiter'• moon, Gan)'mede. now look1 quite different , with "shoulder to shoulder craten" lnundating Ill bright ancleot ter· rain. And tiny Mlmas, wtth a diameter or 'only 300 miles. ls marred.by a hu~e crater nearly one quarter i\1 1lse whose formation . must have nea•lY shattered the moon. The er.er, which wraps around Idle spherical surface of Mimaa.i Is the largest impact c ra~r relative to the size of the boet planet or moon yet seen. Voyager 2 will fly by next y-.ur for a closer look. 1$ '0 * * * rt Era closes in U.S. space explorations When the roar of the powerful Titan III rocket that boosted the Voyager l on its trajectory to Jupiter died away at Ca~ Canaveral that early September morning in 1977, an era in unmanned planetary exploration also was coming to an end. Few missions are planned for the near future . For a ~ world spanning scientific community that had Jhri ved on at least one U.S. planetary mission each year since 1963, the upcoming four.year hiatus in celestial encounters "' between 1.982 and 1986 comes as an unpleas ant reality. •> ., THOUGH NO NEW PROBES will be launched ror ( years. the two Voyagers still have jobs to do. 4 Voyager l will not visit any more planets. Its swing un· der the southern hemisphere of Saturn threw it upward out ·, of the plain of the solar system along a path that will even· tually carry it, in several million years, to nearby stellar neighborhoods. '• It, along with its predecessor Pioneer 11 , will be ·1 tracked to the edge of our solar system and possibly far beyond. During this time it wiU not be retired. Though its !; cameras will have no tafittets, the instruments that detect 1~ cosmic rays, charged particles, and magnetic fields will ·1 be kept busy. A milestone for the durable craft will occur . , when it crosses the sun's own "bow shock" somewhere -, around the orbit of Neptune and passes into the interstellar wind. . ' VOYAGER Z WILL NOT have such a.n easy life. It • :, is scheduled to make its rendezvous with Saturn in late :r; August 1981, following the paths blazed by Pioneer 11 and Voyager 1. Then, using the slingshot maneuver, it will head toward the January. 1986 meeting with Uranus and .. , its nine newly discovered rings. Three years later, in " August, 1989. the tireless semi-intelligent robot will make a •; close investigative run by the solar system's eighth ·; planet, Neptune. ,- . After ~at ~t. too, will leave the sun's domain, keeping m touch with its makers on earth until either a critical component fails or its distant signaJ decades from now ·~ fades so far below a whisper that it is lost in the continuous background noise of the cosmos . Stanton, Nestande accept aides' pay .. Orange County Supervisors· elect Roger Stanton and Bruce Nestande say they'll accept an offer to pay their aides to begin setting up their new offices next month. The two men won't take over their positions until Jan. 5, but the existing supervisors agreed Wednesday to budget about $5,000 to help the newcomers get settled. Both Stanton and Nestande said the move will help them serve their districts better dur· ing the usually hectic first weeks in office. Nestande, who comes to the county Hall of Administration in Santa Ana via the state As· sem bly. said he will send his chief aide, Ronald Rogers. lo. coordinate the transition in the 3rd District office. • Public Announcement '> Supervisor Edison Miller iu be leaving. Miller, who los~to Nestande in June elections, sug· ge s ted We dn e s da y th a t Nestande hasn't seem ed in· terested in county affairs. ,<: In an interview Wednesday:af. ternoon, though, Nes tande shurugged off Miller's "cynjtal attitude." He noted that bowd Chairman Ralph Cla rk has of - fered a desk for Rogers in his.()f. fice. Nestande said Rogers even· tually wiU go where there is ctie least "gamesmanship." 1 The 3rd District covers dle east side of the county running from the Anaheim Hills south1 to Mission Viejo. It includes Tustin and El Toro. b Ttie 1s t District includes Foun lain Valley , Ga rden GrTe , Westminster and parts of S ta Ana. .. \ I On Nov. 6th, 1980 Raciti Jewelry Company Announced Giving Away $100,000 In Discounts On All In St" .. " Items. To Date, There Have Been $83 ,470 In Discou:--ts Given. I .. r .. ' Ri!f!ti ~1ry Compan!J Ootdslntlhlng • Apptalt1"9 • ~Iring • l"'Urd\lslng ltll Newpon ~rd• Costa Meui. CA •lttn • Olaf 646-7741 . .1 ' , •11 • If t' ~~ .. ' it ~ •) f l, '• 'I • OAll PILOT lat ..... ~ ..... ~ Te•~~11r M .. plalae · Let's-sit this one o ut ONCE AaOUND TH}Yft.OOa: Thank 1ooctneu it's the uvanta up at Dis"MY'Tand who now •et \o decide what sexes 1et co-mingled on the dance ftoor of the Matlc Klntdom, and not you or me. Whal a tut! All this comes about because the Disneyland folb have a rule that says •hen upon one of tbeir dance noon the boys have to dance with eirls and lhe girls bave tO dance with boys. This dictum surfaced heavily al the Magic Kin1dom last faU when two teen-aged guys got evicted from Tinker Bell's domain when they tinkered with that rule. The boys sued. ONLY YESTERDAY, Orange County Superior Court Judge John K . Trotter Jr. declined to issue an injunction against the Mickey Mouse gang on the boys• allegation that the rule was sex discrinlioation. Thus pending appeal to higher jurisprudence, the Dis· neyland folks can continue to rule on what kind of people can dance with what other kinds. You need to sympathize with their plight in this awesome task. . HAVE YOU EVER SEEN the congestion on a dance floor at Disneyland? All those kids are out there making ,· . ila..,.le• latnt . Moder ate tide slows Castro SAN JUAN, Puerto Rico (AP) -Prtme M.lnister Manley'• de- feat in the Jamaica eleetlon was t.be latest in a striq of political victories for moderates that have slowed the spread Oil Cuban President Fidel Cutro'a influence in the Caribbean. One reuon for tbe awiq to moderate and conservatlve poUtleianl, West Indiana say, ta a lrowin& realbaUon that the West, with its financial re- sources. its markets and its touriata, offers perbape the only practical key to solving the Caribbean's paralyzing economic problems. MANLEY'S OPEN friendship with Castro frightened off foreign and local investors, and he could not meet the lntema· tlonal Monetary Fund's terms for continued loans. Production Officia& p robe for 's urprises' W ASIDNGTON (AP) -Ad- vance teams for Ronald Rea1an's new administration began fanning out into the Cabinet departments to take stock of the policies, problems and last-minute surpris~ the president-elect will inherit Jan. 20. "We're trying to identify the time bombs before they ex· plode," said• one top official in Reagan's transition office' which announced the team leaders assigned to the 13 Cabinet department on Thurs· day. MOST OF THOSE named were department officials in tbe Nixon and Ford administrations. Reagan's aides ins isted that the 1 appointed team leaders are not necessarily potential Cabinet. secretaries. ( NEWS,4N-4LYSI S J I dropped, unemployment soared. and prolesalonals left the coun- try. The crisis forced the 1oclaliat prime 1111nist.er to call early elediona on Oct. 30. Edward Seaga won the elec· lion by linktni Manley to Castro's commwliam and blam· ing hipi for Jamaica's economic crisis. That left Cuba with only one sure friend in the Caribbean -Grenada. a 133-aquare-mile island nm by a revolutionary government that seized power in a 1979eoup. AFTE& THE COUP, Grenada's new government sus·. pended all elections, shut down the Independent press and began buildine up the tiny army. Some West Indiana say that hurt lef· tiat.s l'\IDDinl for office in St. Vin· cent and Dominica. An increase in Western aid in the past year was another ractor in the shift away from the left.. But even the most Western· oriented leaders stress that if West Indian voten have turned away from leftist politicians, they don't want to join in a power struggle between the United Slates and the Soviet Union or its Cuban ally. GOVERNMENT LEADEaS througbo\ll the area speak of themselves as brothers within the Caribbean and members of lb e Third World, not as ideological allies of the West. Their small nations are black, poor and jealous of their new in· dependence. There is a limit to how much any of them will iden- tify with either side in a cold war between white nations that are large, powerful and rich. Some of the moderates are asking privately if Ronald Rea- gan 's administration will put pressure on them to choose sides and if American aid will con- tinue if they don't . .............. Preparing entry Georg~ Kalman. right, nuclear engineer, has part of his breat~g ap~aratus checked by a Three Mile Island techJ:lic1an pnor lo entering the containment building housmg the damag~ nuclear. re.actor. The Thursday en- try was the fourth mto the building since the accident on March 28, 1979. Polish gove rnor threatens union CZESTOCHOWA , Poland <AP) -The governor of this re· gion of southern Poland declared a state of emergency at area factories early this week and ordered an end to indepen- dent union activities in f1,ce of threatened strikes , wf>rker sources said. It was not known if the state of emergency ended when Solidarity called ofr strike plans after the court ruling. Elsewhere, union sources said employees O( l'JlUSeums, theaters and other cultural enterprises at the Baltic seaport of Gdansk joined two other worker groups at a sil·in at local government headquarters to demand h.igber pay. , _•! "Sure I'd like to dance, Hamett, but you lmow the RIAUs." like jumping jacks at the same U~e~ Sometimes tbey dance together. Other times they leaP. olf solo, orbiting the floor upon their own, oblivious to the (act that they may sWl have a partner out there somewhere, looking for company. The chief Reagan transition official named to the Defense Department, William R. Van Cleave, said 'lbursdar that be will "definitely not' become defense secretary. Van Cleave, a former Pentagon official under Richard M. Nixon, has been rumored as a possible defense secretary. Prime Minister Tom Adams of Barbados, one of the area's most stable and Western· oriented democracies. said in a radio interview that he saw no negative implications for the area in Reagan's election. But be w a.med against a cutback in The action was taken when the independent union Solidarity was threatening to strike if the Supreme Court did not rule in its favor in a charter dispute. The court did find for the union, ac- cepting its charter without a clause declaring the supremacy American o fficia Lc; in Washington said Poland bad secretly asked the United States for $3 billion in emergency aid to help weather its economic crisis. ... I t aid. of the Communist Party. ~----------------------------------------- / In the confusion, what if two of the wrong kinds of peo· ple come together? They may find themselves on the ejection seat at Space Mountain WHAT IF SOME UPPER classman mistakes a chap in a Scottish kilt. who was taking a break from his act on lhe Tomorrowland stage, for the love of his life on the crowded dance floor? One clutch a nd he may not only get a knuckle sandwich, but the boot to boot. Clearly, this dance segregation chore is more difficult than it might seem at first blush. Disneyland may need more than just a dance floor monitor. They may need an umpire and boxing referee out there too. The Magic Kingdom operators say the reason they wa nt to insist that boys dance only with girls and vice ve rsa is so they can maintain "a unique family at· mosphere" at the park. THAT'S GREAT. You guess that means if a couple of rotten little brothers pitch snow cones at each other and mess up the other's hair with cotton candy, that's the usual unique family atmosphere. Any parent would recopize it. And it 'II be up to the parents to separate the scrapping little rotters. But if those two grubbies start dancing with each other, Disneyland's Keystone Kops will swiftly move in and take charge of the separating. WeU, you s uppose it's probably still okay to skip band· in-hand down the sidewalks of Walt Disney's Main Street. Just be sure you look up every now and lben to make sure whose hand you're holding.' The Reagan transition office, which is overseeing the transfer or presidential power. is in· structing the teams to uncover policy decisions to be made in the waning days of President Carter's administration that would conflict with Reagan's objectives, according to the key transition official, who did not want to be named. THE OFFICIAL SAID Reagan wants to avoid the kipif of January surprise the incortling Nixon administration encoun· lered in 1989 when the Justice Department filed an anti-trust suit against the, International Business Machines Corp. on the final day of the outgoing Johnson administration. That suit was one of the most com· plex ever filed and still has not been settled. •'Their team leaders primary mission is to be forewarned" of a new program developed that Reagan would dislike, said the official. "At the least, they can ask that the Carter administra· lion delay il. A second possibili· ty is to use publicity against it." Nation's middle colder Rain changes to. snow as temperatrues drop 11.S. S1•1tJ11i1'1f Much of tNt 11allon'1 m~11on 901 cold, wet --1-y n • cold '"°"' JO•Md rein ''°"' """'"wut••n Tun .,,,.o.q. KM'IMI .,,., I-• Into centrer•""'°"'"''" WiKont•n Tiie rain U\A"99d to .,_ 1rom I IOUill9rn Ml-tot• ttirOU9fl '°"'......, ScHllll ~. mu<I\ Of Htlw•.-,t .,..!I Wyomlno -norlheulern Colorado. Tttvot.n' edltl-ftto "''' pc>1l.O In mtflyer-. T roplctl 1torm "JunM' con tlnl't4 "'*"no K,_ tno GUii or ~ako with wlncn 111> 10 70 mPf!, end •H tltPKlecl to 1111 the Loul1ltf1t CN~I lltll mornl119-Gtl• wernlnol •••• ruwd olono IM '"'" of 1.ou111ono andontem T .. M. llHwMrt, clo.id• 1protd rrom Mlllllt-Tt!Ult 1111'°""' tilt Groat ltllH -Into Ille nof11Mtrn "lltnllc , . .., .... (m:!l I O ·flll ~~- '"'···" St••••f'IOf., ~-mmm --· === ---------· stat"· --IM etmret ltocklH end from nortNrn Ml-.ote Into ffllorn~. Te111•en1C11reS .. ,., ...... .. ,,,_ ._,,_ ....... .. ., .... C .. aHM I Ctfttn ,,_ ., . .... .... ,. ., ,. .. ,. . ,, . .. . Oe•t1 ''•"" NA flOHAI WU l'Hlt U l vo(I NOAA US Ot•• o• CO""'""'''" Len<MIM 62 11 L.Onl 9Hdl 71 IO LOt4 ..... )O u Mery111ll1t '1 a.. 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C.ALIFORNtA Tllreafna 111 .. s'! Prison orders rile guards SACRAMENTO I AP> The CaUforn1a Correc:Uonal Officers• Association •YS a court order requinng conjugal visits and daily exercl:Je for high.risk lnmutes will threaten lives. The association held a news conference this week, aft er which an attorney representing the prisoners accused it of "crying wolf." The preltminary injunction issued Nov. 3 by U.S. District Judge Stanley Weigel of San Francisco applies only to San Quentin and Soledad prisons and the Deuel Vocational Institution. IT PROIU,BITS THE HOUSING of inmates in h1gh·security units unless certain condiUons are met, Including: -Elimination of Involuntary double·ceiling, which the judge said mcreased tensions and is "inhuman." -At least one hour or outdoor exercise every day and two hours every other day, and comparable indoor exercise on rainy days. -The same vi siting rights, including conjugal visits, allowed other prisoners, unless they're told why in writing and given hear- ings to challenge denials. A PRISON GUARD AT THE news conference, who declined for security reasons to identify himself, said, "If these people are removed from security housing units, by all reasona ble estimates we would probably wind up with in excess of l ,000 inmates being killed within six months to a year . . . . These are very. very violent people." But the lawyer representing the prisoners in the s uit, Sanford Rosen of San Francisco, contended that too many inmates are con- fined to security units , where movement is more restricted. He described the injunction as being ·'the least intrusive on safety and correctional concerns ." Rosen added, "We believe there is cruel and unusual punish- ment and a great deal of hardship. The law requires that those conditions be alleviated " MOST OF THE OTHE R requirements deal with sanitary con- ditions in high-security units and food, equipment and medical· care. The state Department of Corrections has obtained a 15-day stay against the injunction and is as king the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeal to extend it until the inmate suit is tried. Hostages .stay Election 'changes nothing' SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The election of Ronald Reagan as president will not change the status of the American hostages being held in Iran, an Iranian militant says. The militant, who identified himself only as Mohammed, was reached by telephone at the American embassy in Tehran Wednesday by reporter Peter Laufer of radio station KYUU in San Francisco. "l don 't care about the election because the CIA runs America.·· the militant said. "Reagan is the same as Carter. It doesn 't matter who 's president." The man said the Am erican hostages are "okay," but would not comment on t he negotiations for their release. He said he was not afraid that the United States would use its military power to try to free the hostages. "That's a stupid idea. That is rubbish." he said. The conversation lasted for half an hour, and Laufer said t he man did not seem angry or hostile. Boy hridgP-.'i Driver: face toll raises OAKLAND <AP J San Francisco Bay area Bridge-bound drivers would have to shell out an extra $17 million a year under toll increase plans being worked out by state offi cials. East Bay To- day has reported. Drivers using the Oakland-San Francisco Bay Bridge, the Hayward-San Mateo Bridge and the Dumbarton Bridge would have to pay $1, an in· crease of 25 cents above current levels, the newspaper reported. Truck tolls -already $5.50 on the San Fran· cisco·Oakland bridge -could jump by as much as $3 on some bridges and commuter discount books could be eliminated unde r plans to be presented to the California Transportation Commission next week, the report said. THE GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE would not be affected by the action because it is run by an in· dependent district. But that agency also Is con· sidering a toll increase . Automobile tolls on the Richmond-San Rafael and Antioch bridges would not be chaDged, but commuter books would be eliminated and truck tolls would jump, according to the report. The Metropolitan Transportation Commission, which hands out surplus bridge revenues, has legal authority over bridge tolls. But the commission's executive director, Larry Dahms, said California Transportation Commission lawyers seem to believe their agency al so bas power lo increase tolls. -Dahms said he is aware of toll increase discU8sions, but said he opposes them. Growth imperils vast/arm area? SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -Some two million acres of farmland that contribute $2 billiOl'I a year to the economy of the San Francisco Bay Area could disappear entirely in 40 years, according to a report. A third ot the farmland in the region has been lost in the last 30 years, and the loss of the rest of it could hurt the area's economy and lt.s quality of llfe, accordinl to officials of People for Open Space, the non·profit group that prepared the re· port and released it Thursday. A~Show -Hu"11ngton C.nter Mall today thru Sunday Bigger jobs ahead? • Reagan aide to have key role in transition ArW .......... REAGAN LOYALIST Helen Von Damm LOS ANGELES <AP> -Helen Von Damm. Ronald Reagan's personal secretary when he was governor of California in the 1960s, has become an integral part of the president·e lect 's transition team in Washington. D.C., and could be destined for a key post in the Reagan White House. The 42-year-old Austrlan~.bom Ms . Von Damm most recently worked as the staff director of the s ix-person, lo w profile Reagan-Bush Task Force which accepted a nd organized hun- dre ds of a pplications from across the country for possible position s in a R eagan ad - ministration. "WE SET up a system of processing the m . We merely wanted to be prepared if the day came -like now.·' she explained. Despite apparent campaign confidence that Reagan would win the Nov . 4 election, Ms . Von Damm said s he was happily sur- prised when the results came In. "The press was floored. You can imagine how we felt!" she exclaimed. "If you ask me what made me happiest a bout the election," she s aid, "It would be that it re- newed my faith in the people. There was an attempt to portray him as something he is n 't. C arter's accusati on s t h at Reagan was a warmonger and somehow the people picked that up The people a r e r eally smarter than the politicians." Ms. Von Damm's 15-year·long association with Reagan began when she heard him speak at a seminar in Detroit. She said she was impressed and decided to come out We~t to work for him after he declared his candidacy for governor of California. No positions were open when s he first arrived, so she worked for a while as a Kelly girl until s he received a call from Reagan headquarters where she was hired as a scheduling secretary. 1 Bad concrete bad news Many Bay buildings may be derrwlished OAKLAND CAP) -More than 100 building projects in the San Francisco Bay area used defec- tive concrete and several will have to be demolished, perhaps at a cost or millions of dollars , officials say. The concrete, contaminated by scr aps of brick t hrough a mixing error, hits been used in a jail, an electroni cs company headquarters, a sewage plant, offices and a condominium com- plex, whose deve loper is s uing for $30 million. A $300,000 building in San Bruno was tom down after bits of brick began popping out, leav- ing holes in the fl oors, builder Carl Claussen said. Criminal bombings declined in 1979 WASHINGTON CAP) -A gov- ernment report says the number of bombings declined in 1979. The report from the Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Fi rearms s aid criminal bombings in 1979 totaled 1.469, or 16.8 percent fewer than the l',767 recorded in 1978. Criminal bombings last year resulted in 54 deaths and 328 injuries, compared with 69 deaths, and707injuries in 1978. Alameda County offi cials say 108 tons of concrete will have to be re moved from Oakland's 14· s t o r y county jail. Cou nty a r chitect Don Wea ver said it could cost "millions" to correct the damage, which was dis- covered in August when the bui lding wa s a lmos t h a lf finished. THE CONCRETE WAS con- taminated when scrap pieces of br ick were accidentally mixed with limes tone that Kaiser Ce- ment sold to Kaiser Sand and Gravel of nearby Pleasanton for use in concrete, said Kaiser Ce- ment spokes man Lee Bryan. The crushed brick contams dolomite, which a bsorbs water rapidly, expands and ca uses the brick to pop out of the finished concrete . Kaiser Sand and Gravel, form erly a s ister company of Oakland-ba~ed Kaiser Cement, is owned by the Koppers Co of Pittsburgh. Sever a l buildings in a $50 million condominium complex in Foster City. 20 miles south of San Francisco, will have to be torn down, and Centex Homes of CaJifomia filed suit last month against Kaiser Cement, Kaiser Sand and Gravel and t wo dis- t ri bulors for $30 million in damages . OTHER LARGE projects that have used the concrete include a ne w headquarters for t he He wle tt Packard electronics company in Palo Alto. a $45 million wastewa ter treatment plant in San Mateo County and a $10 million office building near the San Jose airport. Bryan said Kaiser Cement's ins urance coverage would be able lo cover any claims. Brown picks woman fo r trustee post SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. has appoint- ed Lynne W. Myers of Beverly Hills to the board of trustees of the California State University and Colleges. Brown's announcement said !\t s . Myers. 40, a Democrat. replaces J eanette Ritchie of Menlo Park. who resigned. Ms Myers is a s tudent at the Uni versity of West Los Angeles law school. Her term expires March I. 1988 ~II A~ ---/111111~~1 · _/; r~ )if/l!/~ltJ ( ~f/j/J/J@ /980. df Look dft dfofid.ay CxcitE.mE.nt 'JE.atu. 'l.in9 Cf fu: '3-a1cination of Cfn.tltma11 :P~t o"VE.w ':DE.co'l.ation~ th 'l.ou.9hou.t tfu c/ll(a.[f * d:>"'a.nta dluiva c:Noucntbn 28th SOUTI-I COAST PLAZA , ·. ·'Literally in one year ~ a hair I became his pert al secretary," Ms . Von Da m said. "To me, It's the e pltome,of the old-fasblQned American Drea m." In a recent interview with' a Los Angeles Herald oewspa~r, Ms . Vo n Damm recall•d Reagan's days as governor ahd s poke about the strict 9·tq-s sch e dule he k e pt th e )l , something he was criticized ~r during this year 's campaign: "EVER Y minute o n t)js schedule was booked, and tie never had the chance to read the s tacks of papers that piled up pn his desk. At first he tried to s~y late and read, but found that' iJ he was in the office, the re wo~d always be an interruption. He learned that if he wanted peace to deliberate on t hings, lie needed to be at home. He bad a nice office there. He would go home, have dinner, a nd go read." Reagan a lso was an avid letter writer, Ms. Von Damm said. fie would occasionally take t¥1· screened mail, read it and write back personall y, she added. . It was this side of Reagan tttat Von Damm said she wanted ,lo show when she wrote he r book, ''Sincerely, Ronald Reagan," .a look at the now president-elect as seen through his correspon· den ce. Von Da mm said she wanted it to be a tribute to the former governor when he left of- fice in Sacramento. THE BOOK, to be revised tl)Js ye ar to include additional material and a forward by Sen. Paul Laxalt, R -Nev .. a top Reagan adviser. remained un- publis hed until Reagan an- nounced his candidacy for presi- dent in 1976. Exactly what function she will ser ve on the transition team , and beyond, remains a mystery to Ms. Von Damm, but she says she 's been told she'll be "heavi· ly involved from an administra- tion point of view." Meantime, s he leaves tor Washington. D.C. today, ready to do "whatever the governor wants me to do. China sights UFOs PEKING CAP) -China has set up an association to stud~ unidentified fl ying object which reportedly have been sighted in many parts of the country, the official news agen cy Xinhua said. ' . I . 1 I I I .J I I I· I ~t •. Editorial Pa Robt'r• N weea PuDll•h4rr l Dally f>elOl 9 e F<IO&y NoY!l!'nb9r 14, 1980 Barbara l(r~1blc'1 1Edlt0f"lal Paqe Editor Thom•• Keevll/Ectlt.ot Smoothing path .for n w officials In Washtngton O C .. at & co~t of several millions or dollars, l ff re working to ensure a smooth transition ~ween the &dmtnistraUoo.s of President Jimmy Carter and President elect Ronald Reagan. But ~aNhlngton ls not the only place in transition. ln Oran1e County, two new supervisors -Roger Stanton ln t.be l at SUpervisorlal District and Bruce Nesta nde in the 3rd -will-tltJce office Jan. s. replacing two defeated in· ~umbents. Plan.s are now in the works to help both freshmen s upervisors enter office as s moothly as possible. In decided contrast to Washington. where everything seems to cost millions of dollars, Orange County •upervlsors have appropriated a minimal a mount - ,J,5,000 -Cor the transition program. This will cover the salaries for aides for the two .incoming s upe'r'visors fol about a one·month period. The transition program was proposed by 5th District Supervisor Thom as Riley It was unanimously approved by the board despite some negative yet predictable com· ment from Supervisor Edison Miller. the man Nesta nde defeated. As Riley pointed out, such a transition program ap- pears jus tified given the critical decis ions facing s upervisors early in 1981. Chief among them will be ac- tion on the master pla n that will control the future de· velopment of John Wayne Airport over the next 10 years . The success of the transition program . of course. will depend on the actions and attitudes of those involved . T he elections are past . Those who are now in power should ex· tend a welcome to those who are arriving. And those who a re arriving s hould be g..acious enough to accept it. Soviet roadblocks It was hardly surprising to find the Soviets trying to pull the rug out rrom unde r the third Helsinki review con- ference now stumbling along in Madrid. The 35·nation Conference on Security and Coopera- tion in Europe is s upposed to review compliance with the 10 principles governing conduct between states as set forth in Helsinki in 1975. The Soviet Union was among the 33 European nations signing the Helsinki pact, a long with the United States and Canada. No one r eally anticipated full compliance with the prin ciples which covered, among other thi ngs, human rights, communication among.nations, removal of travel barriers and nonintervention in the internal affairs of other states. But it was hoped that focusing world attention on these principles might at leas t have some benefi cial cf. feet. In the Sovie t Union one immediate res ult was the emergen ce of a whole new group of "dissidents'' who ke pt calling attention to their nation's noncompliance with Helsinki. Sever al of them already have been ap- prehended and jailed. But the most blatant defiance of the pact was the Sov- iet invasion of Afghanistan -a rguments that it asked for Soviet "help" notwithstanding. These issues, of course. are what many members of the Madrid meeting want to discuss. And they're just what the Soviets don 't want to discuss. So for nine weeks the Soviets fought Lo keep them off the conference agenda, and to reduce the entire session to four weeks. Other m embers wanted s ix weeks of general discussion, followed by six more weeks of proposals for new ways to implement the Helsinki agreement. Finally, in desper ation, the Spanish foreign minister simply called the conference to order without an agenda. Meanwhile, in Moscow, President Leonid Brezhnev has de nounced what he calls attempts to turn the co n ference into a "forum for cheap propaganda.·· With or without Soviet cooperation, the conference should go on. At least the delegations wi ll have a plat· form rrom which to a ir their views. And if no further ac- --cord can ~ reached . it will clearly be the fault of the Soviets. Races h e lp tl-ie fair Racing fans will have one more chance to follow the t horoughbreds when the Orange County Fa ll Fair race meet opens at Los Alamitos next Wednesday. The 12·day meet , which runs through Dec. I. wi 11 of- fer 11 races beginning at noon every day except Tuesday. The betting crowd will be offered six exac'tas each day and the popular Pick Six wagering that can pay handsomely for a selection or s ix consecutive winners. The Fall Fair race meet, a uthorized by the state after much opposition from the m ajor race tracks, has been a bonanza for the Or a nge County Fair. which de- pe nds on the racing revenue to finance major fairground improvements at home base in Costa Mesa. Last year's m eet netted more than a quarter of a million dollars for t he fair. So take a short r ide to Los Alamioos, have fun at the parking lot fair. place your bets, If you're a bettor, and help build the county fairgrounds into a m ajor recrea· tiona l center . e I Opinions expressed in the space above are'those of the ba1ly Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot. P.O Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd/C"leopatra ByL.M. BOYD Yo\Ull lady, let's say you paint your eyebrows and )our eyelubes a stark blaclt. ~d you daub the upper lids {blue black and the lower Uds deep green. There you have Dear Gloomy Gu Many turkeys are gone this November and it's not ytt Thanklgiving l B.B. O••""'I $ti• Hflll9\tl!U ...... -. ....... ., , ...... •11• •• lltl __ ,.llY rttlt U ...... , .. .... ........ , ... ,.... ~-Nt ...... .. ~, °"'· o.lly .... it. You've made up your face exactly as did Cleopatra. Ac· cording to the record, such is the manner in wh ich she used her cosme tics. No professiona l baseball player can be paid m ore than $2,400 per season . That's what the National League rule stat ed. Eighty years ago. You know a cross between a jackass and a mare pro- duces a. mule. But were you aware that a croes between a •t•lllon and a jenny produces a b1My? Many a man has worked for 30 years in the Kimberley Mines of So uth Africa without ev e r a eeinc a t dlarnoad. I'm told. ' .... ~~---.--------------------------------Jack Intelligence security shaken WASlllNG1'0N 1 he recent exposure of former ("I A aaent Da vid Burnell 's .sellout to Ute.• Soviet Union I:; only onl' «11apt<>r ln a story of treachl'r y lhat has s h aken th e Ameri c a n 1n - lelligence community in the .pa st four ycu1·s. Aud more revela - tions can be expect('(J in coming months. Besides Barnett the puhlt1• has already lt!arucd .ibout tlircl' o t h e r Am ericans wh o so l d set'r et do,·u menL"> to 80 v i e l 1 n tell1gen ce W i 111 am Kam plles. Andrf.'"' Lee and Chi 1 ~ l o µhl'I Boy<•e. The puhltc· h.1~ .tl•.o l1<·t·r• to ld about llll' 1 ~1u11 tvd ch•OJI h of the to µ A1111·nt•:111 'II.\ in thl· Kremlin c11dt• 11.11111tl.J:n1•111 whOSl' ('OV1·r m:t\ h~\ 1• li«t'I) blown In a Wh111· llc.ubt •11 fic1al's ~arch·ss r,.m;1rk t1! a Was hington d1plu1t1.111" party But wh;,it the pu!Jltt· <lw .... n \ kno"' is th;11 :1 ma.•11r f)\' s1·,11 dal n m\ h1• dt•,·1•11111111~ 11.; ''"' portion-. 1111111al1 h• d ·.1 11,·1 1 h•· l'X JIOSC." th d\ l'O• k1•d I fit 1·01111! I\ a fte r World W:1r I J 'l'tw .lw.111·1· Oepartmt>nl I!'> 1n\ , ... tig.1t1111• c;eve ral CUSl'" 111n1I\ 11 t-l• ;,~,._ ol sens1t1\c 1nfnrn1,1t11111 '" •L•· ..,,. viet:; b) t.: '\ olfw1<1h, nil pr l\ .ill individual!' R Ef'Al'S f" '10ttt: I"' Ill I' proof is 1wt•<ll'fl 1: \\ ,J1, ltl h• 111 fair to 11.1n1l' ·11 ! ii.II : , P'\1 Hu hC'r<' an· th(• dt•l.11h 1\ • 11 ,,, rtl'. aSSO ('IUtc• Dal<• \ ,111 \II,• 11 · sourct•s in the \\'h1t1• llous<' 111;. . Justic<' J>ep<Jrl mt•111 .111cl 1 ht w t<'l Ii g<'n,·1: agt.: 111'11'~ Sonw (' 1rt1 1 "tln11111 11,111111 . off1t 1ab an• 11ncl• r ITl\t ln!almn by thf: JU!-.IH·e l>l'J.)Jflrtll'llt f,,r suspeeted t•sp111n.1 ~t· 1111 hL•h;1 JI 11! lht• Sovwt L'nion < lllL' ~··u1 n S<11cl thc•n· :tc"' r1Jt-1111 ".11 It-1'i1 lhft('" O.,LJf'!I I ,1•,,• ... I J lht • may b<:' a ... ni;.111' .1 h.i!f .1tl111111 lntcll1gcn('t· :-our t l'" d1:11111• that a high lt•v1·l \\'httr Ho11sl! 11( ricial rcccnth hh•w thL· 1 ••.t·r 111 ;1 C IA ;1gn1t "b11 t 1 ·. 1"" :11 f.:is t F:ur11p1·.ir1 , ... , .. .._ I 11 the ag£>nt h.1:.. 11111 111 1·n \ d , rl that h<' h.1s h• 1•n 1·1ort1 ;ir11rn1..,•·tl :ind th:it orfic1,1b 111 1h ,. in11' Earl Walt·r~ he gp1ei, uJ)On nuw know who and whnt he 1s A runkin~ Homanian d•p- 1 om •tl who defec ted l a s t F ebr uar y· ha s ~iv c n C IA debrierer1> the details of a wide- r anl(ing Soviet espionuge opera· t1on based in the Ro manian Em· b:.issy in Washington . Cod e- nam,•d "l,1b<?rty," the network was designed to penetrate the federal government al various levels. Each target had a code name Congress was "Oregon," lht• While Hou1>e was "Amazon" nncl the Stale Department, with ~at don1 c Russian humor, was "Jo" a ' T U E ROM Al'\l AN diplomat had eas) ac{'eSs 10 half a dozen Df'mocrat1 l' ::.cnators and at l<'a:-t t1H 1 Hcpuultcan ::.cnators. ;\lore Jlarming, though, was the Law would t arget Rcrognmng 1hat .mtom11b11t• service anrt repairs lw,·c· twl·n ll fertile field for "rip off · J rl1sh in recent yNtr" r1111in~ ll••1•pl\ intn lht> b1ul~PlS ol tlw :I\ •·t .IJ..'•. a11•11 owner. Sena1n1 llntt. rt l'ri-'l •\ 1 taking aclwn wh11'11 lw hope'-will bf.' a major sl•·P in 1•l 1m ina11n~ tlw problem In fact he rPt•1•111 I~· :11111n•in1•1·d that an :1rf1 1..,011 <''•rnt11"f1·1· f ormC'd 'h \ h im ha s almost rofTl plet crt wor k 1>n th<' clr·1fl I n g n f :i teg 1slJ l l\I' p I a n ~ h 1 t•h "'Ill provide C alifo rnians w it h expert and rehablt• I 111· puhla :ind I ht' l<'gll1mate .111111 n·pmrm1·n l'or. 1•ooperat1ng in the effort 10 draft t ill· lc>gis lation a rc 1 <'I",.,, ntut1 v<'s of 1he C'a hfomia ~·wt' l<'l St:it1ons Council. the Na t1nn:tl Institute for Automotive S1•n'tt'L' F.x t·l'llcnce. the Motor <'·11 lkal<'rs Associatio n . the ;11110 mt ··h.1n1cs u111on . the \11t11rn111 11 1· P 11rts and \c P•" 111·11·-. ,\o.;o,ot 1alion. lhl' as ~·'" 1al"111 11f 1nrlt'p1·nclt•nt ~ar'ag<' ti\\ lil'l' 1h1· II !pit' " :IUIO clubs. "'llll•' l;I\\ 1"11f1 1rt't'nll'nt and C'On ~ 11 l •·• ' •11111 d 1•tf11·1a1.,, and ::i " 111 •I •II I (' 1·r1)!1·-.!>•ll !'o. 1111 : PrtOUJ.f-:" of finding re l1.1hli· 11•pJ1rnwn for tht• auto 1s ,. n •' r11 '' [I 1-. t10l' '' h1ch start~ '' 11 h t!w l'r:1 of lht• · ho rseless "' 1 .1111.1~l' \I rir..,t It wao.: just auto rf.'pa11 '' 111 k 111 .;1.11•· fwd 111:: ~mnron1· \\hO offc•red the ce rtified repair shor~ '"f\'ll(' Soon ho14C'\'er evl•ryone Judging from thl' mak• up ot '' 11 h a monkt·~ "'rench . pliers his broadlv has•·d a11\1!'.or\ 1•1rn .111cl .1 hall}lt'l'n hammer had m ittN• it "would ap1 ('.11 •hat h·· h•1 omt· an "Jtitu m echanic." has indeC'd hit 11p1111 .i HH r ,,r,1, 1 ll•'\ ""' 11p lillll' gara ~<'" with a scheme \.\h1ch ,. 111 ht>n<'f11 •111\tl .:.1 ... pun1p in front Charl~s McCah~ J Romanian'is idcntlrlcnt1 on or a for mer Senat e staff m ember as a purveyor oC intelligen ce lo Ro mania He was employed by a senior Democr atic senator. -Finally and putentially m ost danger ous i s t he Defense Intelligence Agency, 's concern that a Soviet "mole" may have penetrated to the highest levels of the U S govern· ment, and now has acces~ to closely held White House tn· formation. · A lop-secret DIA report re eently concluded that "a definite change in the So\'ict under- ground nuclear te::.t program O<' curred in 1978 toward testing in creasingly highe r > icld de vices. /The significance of this chante lies in the fact that 1t oc cur red shortly after the United States s ecretly changed 1ti. • method of measurin g th e strength of Soviet nuclear tests ln such a way that the Russlana could explode b igger bombs w ithout viol ati n g existing treaties. Tht! DIA a na lysts de- cied this was "m ore than coin· cidc nce, ·• and pointed to the hair ·raising possibility that in· fo r m ation about the n e w m<·as uring sys tem had been leaked to the Kremlin by one of the v<•ry fov. high U.S officials who knew about it. AOOF.O TO T H E cas es already made public in recent }cars. thl• investi~ations cur· rentl> hcin~ purs ued paint a J.!rlnl picture of our nation's in- l c I I 1 gen C' e s ecurity. The R uss1ans ..ipparl'ntly have ex· perienced little di fficulty recruiting greedy or gullible Am erican!. to provide military M:C'rets the Kremlin wants. And wh1ll' Barnett was well p i! 1d for his treachery $92,000 ilnd LC'r> and Boyre collected niorl' than S80,lllJCJ, tl)e KGB dOC!-.n ·1 spend more than it has to It p.ml }oung Kampiles. for t·:...1mpl1•. nnl:, $3,100 for price· lt·:.s rl:.it;1 on lht' CIA 's most ad- \'Un1·tocl !'o..11t•llit1· !-.Urveillance ,v-,11·m !''1101 m111· ·r lw White House ...., ,,., p.1111<· •,t rte ken <tl the thoui.:ht tlwt 1111· IJ..i rnctt sc.mdal woultl hit th1• tront 1>a!le!. and st:J) tht:'rl' dunng the pres- idential <·am1>a1gn The Justice Ocµartnl!'nl, thl'rcforc, sat on tht· < . .,,, •. for ~C\ era I months Jftt•r tht· FBI ohtaim·d J con- fl's ... uin from B.1 rnl'l t Hui l gut ''ind of the storv .111d < :i llt•tl ('IA Di r ecto; "'·'"'''"l<I Turnc:r. Sen . Birch H.1~ h !>Incl .mcl William G . \fill• 1 -.i ,fl rltrt•t·111r of the ~i. n.1t\ lnlt·lliger1t•1· Committee. Ht•;il111ng thr -.ton wus about to hlo"' 11p 1n their faces, t he (',1r1t•r (M"uplt• h.indcd it to The '\f'\\ \'•irk :rimt's 1n a version l'Jrl'full\' ral<'11J.1!Ni to make the .Ju:.111·t· b t·partnwnt look good. .Ju'lta·c., mcanwhilt.'. struck a plt.,1 ba rgain \\1th Ba rnett. The d :1 111 a ~· 1• ,. '> n t r o I m is s ion \1 o rkl'tl I '11l1kC' /\l~er Hiss. \\ho-, t' 1· asl' c1 r a ggrd on fo r \t·.11·-.'H.11n1•H wao.; quickly con· !'tt.'1wd 10 lh<' Ii.irk p.t~'.''" l41thout • m 1, 11 1 :1" In!! ,f"'""" thoughts " '• ,... 1111' 111 rrn·1· F.l1·rtiun ll 1\ car repair r -offs With the advent of serv1r<· stations" many found 11 :idvan tageous to also off<>r :.-1t1l11 r .. p..i1r service-; It wasn't Jong twfnfL' m otonsts lea rnt'd tn tht'1 r !'nr ro w tha t many nf tht''-l' ~elf appointed auto mc·chanit·s wt·rt· incompett-nts who d1rtn't mind charging high prires for th.-1r faulty work. ENT E R THF. aulnrno blll' clubs Early on. lht• triple I\ auto clubs commf.'nced a ccrt1f1c·at1'>n p rog ram for J?aragt''> Their AAA sign sen·cd .1!' e\'ulcnn• of reliability and cnmpclence The clubs interct-decl on complaints and the ga rage~ "h1ch didn 't li\'e up t o the ccrt1r1rat1ons found themselve" remo\'cd frnm the list of appro\'t•d gara_gec; Although 1t has worked well over the years for 1t'> me mbers t he AAA prog ram ha<o n<:\'(•r fulfilled the need for the non members Pubhc rnmpla1nb of repair services pronded h\ those outside of the program re suited m the state ste pping in ,.,,. '' 1r<. har+ 10 ec;ta tihsh the 11 ,11 •I \•'" Rep.iir<; to in- "'" •:iii' 1·ompl:iin1-; and seek I•;. .11 a1111111, :1g;11nst those nvE>r C'hargm;~ M prrformin'g faulty "nrk 11u~ effnr1 too seem~ 10 h;I\ e f~il lt·n -.horl nf the need \\'llAT PRESLEY'S group 1s now ;Jhout to propn!,e 1s a volun ll'l•c l'<'rt 1f1cat1on program pal te1 1wd .if1e1 the A:\.\ rlubs' •·ap- pr11\ l'd n•p:11r s hops" program. Ra" ii u pon s t anda rd s for fa< il1 t1t'" l'qu1pnwnt and com pcti·rn' nf 'ht· m1.•chanics, the 'ilat1• \\1111ld 'rrtif\· thf.' €'Stablish· m1•nt rl1'gutar 1nspC'ctions 14ould ht• m:idt• f ht• program would be t•nt in•h f1 n.inc·1•d \\ ith the fees p,1111 fo 0r I hl• I ('rt 1f1t ;1t10n ~:l\'s Pn'slev. "The r ation ale of our plan 1s that l'f.'rt1fred shops woulrt get m o re busin ess and thuc; en<:ourai.:e the others to r~11s<' their o,Lrnda rds to get into tht• s' o.:tt•m T he plan would be t:ntirelv \Oluntan· and would not r~'q111 rr tax fund.,· · Value of sex education programs still doiibtful There 1s a st'rious question nf whe ther in rad lht• people nf lhc P lanned Parenthood persuasion ha ve not created the problem of teen·age pregnancy that appears so to concern them. ~nd which Impels the m to press lhf.'tr views upon the children of California I h ave long fell that the early training of Sex Ed as a m atter of attitude and lif e style rather thlln si mpl e biol ogy i s more Ukely to i n c:rea 1e sexual activi ty a mong the very young . C h ildre n a re curious, a~ we all know, or they wouldn't be children. The im pulse to find out what you can do with t our body af\er being told is strong indeed. · I am neither a scientist nor a biologist. l also kno w thul the weakest form of llt'flUmt'nt 1:1 lhf' ar g ument from authority But in matters like Sex F:d there ls really no other appeal. 'fhe oot:. ' ..l._ -- ri·m otely authoritative study on Sex ~d and teen·agc p regnancy was made in 1972 by a working party of the Royal College of Obstctncians and Gynecolotists. in England . The Englis h are a littler coolt>r on these matters than the passion ate ideologues of Planned Parenthood. T HE CONCl.USION of t he "'or king p arty Practically nothing is know11 about the e f- (c•et s or sex education programs. etther in regard to \he future hea lth a nd happiness or the in· div1dual children or in relation to unplanned pregnancy. "It was s uggested that wrong. ly oriented sex education could be hu Ying a reault wbkh was the exact opposite of what it was de· sired to achJeve, in that lt was arousing cw-iosity and the desire to rxpcrimcnt. The rapidly ris · lng In cid e n ce or unpla nned pregnancies in the young age· group gives som e support to this idea " C'ha rl('s R ycroft , a dis · t lnJµ11~hed British psych ologist, ~ec~ the unpl anned preJnaflcy problem as one or ensurtn1 that the child is not confronted with m ore than its capacity for anx.1t-- ty and vigilance will enable it to m ast er. He believes it is impor· tant to avoid the child being con· fronted with and puzzled by things it is not yet ready to un der stand. THE REAL QUESTIONS ar e : Is su instruction in school or groups a ppropriate? Js it helpful to individuals and useful to society? M)' wholly falHble answer to both questions is No. Sex in- struction s hould b e s trictly formaJ, as in the home. or s trict· ly informal as in t he streets. or both . In the e nd everybody learns where babies come fron\, and what sexua l intercourse is, a nd I think they learh it better In the home and in the streelll than in schools that wish to gel a speciallied'view of sex across. •• A pamphlci\ put out by The Respon.CJlb1e Soclet¥ ln 8r1t1ln a nd writte n by a l,,ondon educator, K.H. Kavana1h , who hat-had wide experience ln a krie London comprebenalve school, sums the matter up very Wt'll, in my opinion· "P ARENTS 5iffOULO be far mor1• v1s.~1lant They must s~ th~t sex education material is sensitive and dignified so that the natural modesty of the child Is preserved. "Parents shouJd ensure that they are given full explanations of the sort of instruction given, and Insist that it Is set in the wider context of family Ufe - emphasizing the need for love and responsibility in human re- lationships and the upbringing of children. "At the government al level there is need for action. It should be enacted that sex in· s truction s hould not be given by representuU vcs from any or· gnnlzntion 'which has a direct or Indirect interes t In the sale or distributJon of contraceptlves. The govemment shouJd also con· ,cede the !'lnm e r1JChl to par nu as they enjoy In rcU11loua In· stru ctton t he rt1ht to wltbdnw their children from sex l~tructlon classes lf they wish " • j. j I I I I I. I 'I .. NATION I STATE No more .whiiltk -stops Train conductor retires alter 60 years • character or two. "I remember old DiJzy Dean," BLOOMINGTON, IU CAP> 1'bere wa.s a cake lhaped Ulle a locomoUve and a bla alan lhal said. "No More Ml1lle Slope, Jual One Last Toot. ' Confntua.tiom Hal"OW llcOraw." Aft.er eo years and e mi1llon mlles. lbe nation's old"t Amtrak conduttot has made hi.I last run. ' Mar• . 79, who becan hi• car"r in the era of steam I motives. made bis farewell Chicago. to B tton run behind a 1leek diesel en1ine Uult brouaht him to the same yards where be start· Id in llaO. .. HATE TO SAY GOODBYE to everybody, but tbe time has come," McGraw told a crowd of well· wllbers. "Railroads are ln my blood, but I just didn't want to work another winter. I'm retiring today a happy warrior." For the past half·century, McGraw has worked the Chicago·to·Sl. Louis run, a 282·mile stretch of track owned over the years by the Chicago & Alton, the Baltimore and Ohio, the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio and the Illinois Central. McGraw signed on with the railroad he re at 16 as an office boy for the C&A. following the family tradition. There has been a McGraw in railroading as long as there have been railroads in America. HJs father was a railroad's chief accountant. and his grandfather and great.grandfather. an Irish immigrant, also were conductors. Two of his three brothers were railroade rs, now both retired. and his sister was a ticket clerk. Nor does the tradition end with McGraw. a widower with no chlldren. His nephew John was the engineer on the farewell trip Wednesday. As conductor, McGraw saw a famous Curbs eyed the legendary St. Louis Cardinals' pitcher, he ~id. "He'd get out bis old guitar and play hillbilly songs and keep everybody lo the car amused. He played many a tune on that train." And then there was t.be late Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley, Pearl Balley and Tennessee Ernie Ford. AB a freight conductor about 30 years ago, McGraw s uffered a broken back when two trains collided, but none of his passenger trains has ever had a wreck. His passenger run record is astounding: he made the trip every other day, every week, every year alter year. "Going up to Chicago I'd count the white horses, and coming down to St. Louis I;d count the cows," said McGraw. At the farewell party he cheerfully but un· characteristically broke a company rule at a re· tirement party in the conductors' room of the old depot. "RULE G IS OUT today," he quipped, refer· ring to the company prohibition against drinking on duty. Waving his s leeve, studded with two stars and two bars that symbolize 60 years of service, he said : ''I'm going to miss it." McGraw plans to retire to his 10.acre farm in nearby Minier , a homestead he has dubbed Emerald Isle Country Estate. There's a four-ton black granite "Blarney Stone" in the yard, a huge Irish flag on the flagpole -and railroad tracks not too fer away. Plea bargaining hit SACRAMENTO (AP) -A major study of the common practice of "plea bargaining" in criminal cases says it is bad for the control of crime. And the chairman of the committee that wrote t he r eport, s tate Sen. David Roberti, D·Los Angeles, said it is working on legislation that w.ould restrict plea bargaining. PLEA BARGAINING IS the informal negotiat· ing between the defense attorney, the prosecutor, and the judge. It often leads to the accused gel· ting off with a light charge or a light sentence in exchange for pleading guilty, or for revealing evidence against another accused, or some other reason. The guilty plea and the light sentence s ave the taxpayers the costs of both an expensive trial in which a conviction would be in doubt, and long in· carceratioo. But the study, by the Joint Committee for Revision of the Penal Code, says plea bargaining "conflicts with basic principles of justice, in· dividuaJ rights. and due process. 1 ness and public confidence.'' Yet , Roberti said in a state ment with the re· port, "judges. prosecutors and defense attorneys . . . are virtuaJly unanimous in the opinion that plea bargaining is essential to the prosecution and adjudication of criminal cases. Given its pervasiveness and acceptance, it is not unreasona· ble to argue that, to a great extent, plea bargain· ing is California's system of criminal justice." THE STUDY SAID PLEA bargaining has flourished because of a perhaps erroneous opinion that the justice syste m would be crushingly over- loaded without it. Also, it flourishes because the negotiations are largely invisible to the public, "particularly in the 'routine' felonies such as robbery and burglary." The report a lso cited the "safety valve" factor in respect to recent legislation to increase punish· ment through incarceration. Clvll Grumbling .•. Gloomy Gus In the DAILY PILOT "Furthermore, it contradicts the recently enacted legislative goals for crime co'"!lrol, fair· ~~~--''--~~~~-=-....::....;""-~~~~~~~~_:;::::=:::==:- # .,..,,,..to FINAL WAVE ConduCtor McGraw Friday, Novembttr 14 1960 DAil.. Y PILOT \ 7 Hufstedler's hope8' for court pOst fa CI~ WASHINGTON IAP I "I never counted on jt," Shirley"'· Hufstedler says s uccinctly about her chunces of becoming the nllt woman to sit on the Supreme Court. Until last week the 56-year·old :-.ecretary of education was viewed as an odds·on favorite for a ppointment to the Suprelffe Court. Now, with Ronald Reagan moving into the White House, ti!s liberal former jurist's chances would appear to be next to no&, despite the presiden\·elect 's pledge to give ''one of the fitsl Supreme Court vac ancies" to ti woman. '1 fj MRS. HUFSTEDLER SAID UHtl a:. she Wdt ched the electiDn returns, ··1 didn't dwe ll on any su<:h thing That remains .y.o be seen." . She . spent 18 years . as a local. stale and federal judge Jn Cahfomaa before a('ceplang President Carter 's s urprise call last fall to preside over the formation of the Oeparlment of Educatio'J; THE WlDTE HOUSE SAil> tht•n her appointment to tHe Cabinet would nOl rule ht•r out of cuns1der at1 on for the Supreite Court. ~ That fanned the sµN·ulatwn that has swirled a round Mts Hufstedler since 1968. when L~ ndon B Jnhnson made her only the second woman in U.S. history tu-;iton u fl!dl!ral court ofappeals . ~ ~~~~~~~-------j PUBLIC NOTICE ... STEREO LIQUIDATION ·Gall/omia Stereo Liquidators, Federal No. 95·3531037, will dis· pose of, for a manufacturer'• representative, their inventory surplus of new stereo equipment. The items listed below will be sold on a Jir•t·come /irst·served basis at . . . AMB.ASSAOOR tMM 2909 SO. BRISTOL ST CMTG RMt S.AMT A AMA 9:00 A. M. to 2:00 P. M. SA TURD.A Y, NOVEMBER I 5, I 980 ONLY WHIU QUANTITIES LAST 5 Only AMJFM Couette Cor Stereos. In Dosh ,.__ 5 Only AM FM 8 Tri. Cor Sterf"O In Dosh t-' 20 Only 8 Traci< Cor Stereos. Underdosh ..20 Only Cossette Cor St•reos. Underdosh ---32 Only AM!FM!8 trocl( Car St&'r&'Os In Dosh (fHstJ --- 30 ()rily AM/FM Cossette Cor Stereos In Dosh (fHstJ ------ 20 Pair Only Modular 4 Woy Speoltrrs DlsJ>0$0f Volue Price $159. $29 each $139 $29 each $69 $19 each $75 $25 each $165 $59 each - $189 $59 each $119 $89 .,.,,, 22 f'il•' Onl~ C.11u •1ul 1-,,, s,,....i~t>IS (,,.,,., Mn·1' 20 Po•, r1,,1~ f,,.,.,...,1 ( ,,, Sp;>u~ ers G10'll l.fo ' 18 Only (;roph1. Lqu.il1u1~ For Cai H l<Jh ~ .i1109e 23 Puor (Jnl1-2 W.i1 ( 01 S~oltt'•S V11cJI Cr,n•• I 0 Onl~ AA-1 F\f 1n Do•li Cosse·1 .. ~ r ' S'""'" r ors 22 On/~ A.\1} M loswtlf'' f ur c QI '"" .. , ''""' R .. .i ·~· 27 Onlv Pc.u-tr Bcxntt>n For S/lirPv H19h Watt.Ne Dis po.sol Vulu~ Price $89 $29 pair $119 $49 porr $159 $39 •och $49 $J 9 poir $225 $89 flJCh $225 $89 each $89 $29 ~oc" ALL BRAND NEW MERCHANDISE WITH FULL 2 YEAR WARRANTI ES! {) b 1 I J ') " ,, ·r ·1 l ·! ) 'I 'l d .. Buv one or all of the aboue quontle& li.9ted-The Public i.t Invited ~ VISA. MASTERCARD, CASH or PERSONAL CHECKS WF I COMED '1 ONE DAY ONLY SATUllDAY, MOVIMIB 15tt. ONLY WHILE QUANTITIES LAST! 'I '• {J The r, NOVEMBER Gardening Tips. TI1e I I th of No\'embcr is the feast Jay of $1. ~artin - the patron saint of la\·crn·kttpers. \IOC·~ruwl'r' and wmc·drmkcrs! NOVEMBER '8() Flonsfs Cllristn1as Oti~ina l s November 1s an iJeal month to tidy up ~uur i;?ard .. n. and amend the soil with R~er's Soil Activator. Good hmc lo lransplant e\'t-rj.!reen trees and shruhs. ~n·t forl!d to thin Jens!! trees ;ind stake yO\IOl!l'r ones. Lend the waler hasins you made around pl<ints this last ~ummcr s.1 wa ler doesn't t:Olll"l"t dunnl! coming rains .Roger's Reminders SUll a good month to plant annuals. perennials. trl.'t!..<t and shrubs. Finish planting cool season ve~tablcs such as lettuce. cabbage. cauliflower, Br~I sprouts. and broccoli. Plant from a variety of bulbs still availahle for dazz hng sprinlt and summer color. Cut hack Chrysanthemums to ti'' ·X" wht!n tht!y arl' finished hlooming. Control snails and slus.is with That's It snail bait. ~The Plant Doctor. My lawn Is looking brown and somewhat t.ired. What can I do to revive it? Now is an ideaJ time to thatch lawns. Then cut close and overseed with annual rye. After germination. begin cutting and fertilizing on a regular basis for a heiilthy, beautiful winter lawn. Sale $9.50 TIIlS CHRISTMAS, TAKE ROGER'S HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS Garden of Christmas antasy OPEN. Ro~er's has always made Ch ristmas a memorable holiday. A time of Joy. Of festive, good feelings and cheri shed reunion. W e at Roger's are happy to have been a part of Christmas past and sincerely wish to complement your Christmas present. Roger's Unwraps The World. It is Chrislmas as celet)rated in homes the world over. l Tniquc. Nostalgic. Unhurried. Old World and the familiar . Special . Warm. A Roger's Garden Christmas. The world of Christmas has been quielly unwrapped in our garden of holida)' fantasy. Look for Graceful cherubs from Italy. and Italian miniature li(lhts. Whirruical wood carvlnjls from Scandinavia. Elegantly lTeated ornaments. and Decorative tree tops handmade b>• European famllies. And still there is more. Wrapping paper and ream6 of colorful ribbon from Europe. Candles and holders. Hand·paloted ceramic and crystal decorations. We invite your visit and wish the happiest of holidays. The Beauty pf Our : Candlelighting C-elebration The Roaer's Christnw Spirit shines through bright and clear. Our celebratlot\ ol this \'t!ry special holidAy season begin.s with the delightful e1o1perlence of lhthllnll up 1>1 Rc~r·s Cardcns '¥Ith candles. Evtn St. Nick will be hm! It Is a warm timUy affair or candltllithUna dellRhtt. mut.lc and mrW"l~nt.s. December 5 & 12 6to9pm The Christmas Trees. Ou1 ~:ilh.:ry ft·.1turc~ lrl'es with beautifolly dl'l tlrakJ thl·mc.;. Ea.-11 lrl'l' has been in<lmdu~ll~ .. fl'<•ll'J as an ad\-enturc 1n hohda\ 1111.11-:10.11\•m \\'e ln1 Ill' \"OU 111 \IC\\' what a Chri~lmas Trw (;in hl'. The Christmas Gallery. N ool.s and l.'.rannic!I of almosphl'Tl' from most cvcr}Whl're The )!allcrr •~a present 1n itself. J\ place where )'<Ill can Ill' c~(ll'dally 1u:.1kd to nur hnhday ho!Tl\! Jl><:or<itln~ suAAC~lions. Table i.cttml>l,.~. chlM. 1..1ndlcs. place sett in~. crystal. and of cour~. 11Krl'<l1bl~ acl.'.c~911u.$ to 1.omph:mcnl )''OUr holida)' cntcrtaimnia v\'c ml)lht al1111 aJd. our 1i1alll'f)' is a plCMant dcpnrturt> fmn1 the u$ual anJ c>.p~:l'.h:J hustle and hustle of holidar shoppin11. VISA/ AMERJCAN EXPRESS/MASTERCARD NU~ERY • INDOOR/OUTDOOR PLANTS & FLORIST • LANDSCAPING • ANTIQUES PATIO FURNITURE & ACCESSORIES San Joaquin Hiiis Rd. at MacArthur Blvd. Across from Fashion Island • Newport Beach Open 9 to 5 Daily 640-5800 , I • \II ,\ 11 "' ...... nl,1 ,;, '•, n ' I . • l • • I:._ 11 •~II h•m•\ \ lo ''-ii "J ... , , ,,, I II ' I • .f The Ho1iday Nursery School. \, ~. \1 111 ·"' , • ,, 1 ... .11.c 11.thr L11"J. pro·~1•, id.·" I• 11 .111 \ ,, 11 ... ~ to .h ' •I •'II• .i .. 1.1\ 1,,·,1'11 t.1 l'll"P·ll'l"111J p ... l.,1i.;1 •l,11 I I "Christ mas Gift s That (.;row." Tuesday. \< l\'L•mlx:r I l. 11 am. "1\ Spectacwal· Thanks~ivi~ Table 1 From Your Garden". ·I I Tuc~Li.iy, :\o\'cml)(!r ~~. 11 am. Escape To 0 t) CC@Il@IT~~fil]J)(~ Get your homl' anti ~ardcn ready for the holiday ~casnn: C.-ill our Colorscape people and find ou t whnt their la ndscape and ~ardcni~ experti se can Jo lor you! 64Q-580G b ' I ~v PllOT <ldges I proposed y Riley Oraas• County Supervlaor omat Riley thlnk• count y ployem who WOl'k with lbi ultll~ abould wear name ... "It would reward those who do lr well," he said. Then be .. ud it would help those bo doa't do lbeir job wtll." Riley's comment came as a a urprise to others at the = pervisors' me.elin& Wednes· y , but h.i s colleaaues on the ard seemed willing to go along -1tb tbe idea. Supervisor Edison Mill er sug-te st ed that, b e for e county supervisors vote on the idea, ~taff members In the county eersonnel Office should decide which of the county's 9,600 •orkers should wear the badges tnd how much the name plates would cost. Miller also suggested the pro- posal may be one that should be •iscussed with representatives of the county's two major employee groups : the Orange County Employees Assiciation and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees. Supervisors will take up the matter again in two weeks ·Center sets :openlwuse The Stress Center at South Coast Medical Center m South Laguna is hosting a public open house Nov. 21 including dem- " onstrations. tours and informa- tion on mental health. The open house will be held from 1:30 to 5 p.m. with a special occupational therapy ex· hibition at 3:15 p.m. The Stress Center provides short-term personalized care for emotional illness. Fnat¥ Nc>oe11• 1-4 I Cllnles elose · UCI to obseroe lwliday Outpatient clin.ics at UC Irvine Medical Center will be closed Nov. ?7 and 28 in observance or the Tbanks1ivln1 holiday. The wtlversity's Community Clinic of Orange County In Santa Ana and the North Orange County Community Clinic in Anaheim will also be closed on those dates. The medical center's emergency department and the hospital's inpatient care wards won't be affected by the holiday. · .Judgeship eleetio11 Youngblood files another lawsuit Winning must not be every- thl ng to Bobby Youngblood, who finally won a contested j udgeship in Orange County Cen- tral District Municipal Court last week. Youngblood now has filed s uit in Superior Court asking for un- specified damages for the time. money and emotional distress he allegedly suffered because the election for the position was strung out from June to Nov- ember. . He identified Orange County. its County Counsel's office and Regis trar of Voters Al Olson as defendants in the suit. Youngblood defeated incum- bent Judge Richard Orozco in t he Nov. 4 election. But he con- tends in the suit that the Nov- ember election wouldn't have been necessary had the county been prepared for the June elec- tion. In that vote, Orozco first was declared the winner. Then in a recount financed by $5,230 of Youngblood fund s . the challenger was called the win- ner by a narrow margin. Orozco subsequently was suc- cessful in having the election voided. Youngblood said in the suit filed Wednesday that he should have been declared the winner after the June election. The s uit is the second brought by Youngblood in connection with his pursuit of the judgeship. He filed a libel suit last month against Orozco and some of his s upporte rs stemming from char ges made by the Orozco camp. Bay tretland tozuslated A public tour of the Upper Newport Bay ecological reserve, a 741-acre coastal wetland and wintering stop for thousands of migratory birds, wi ll take place Nov. 22. Tour groups are scheduled to depart every 15 minutes starting at 9 a.m. until 10:30 a.m. The groups will leave from the in · tersect ion of E astbluff and Back Bay drives. No s pecia l c l o thing or footwear is required, but parti- cipants are urged to br ing binoculars. Future bay tours are slated for Dec. 13, Jan. 17, Feb. 14 and March 14 .Jolan tt'agne Airport 5-month leases given to Air Cal, Frontier Short -term l ease s f o r Air Californ.ia and Frontier Airlines to use the John Wayne Airport have been ratified by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. month rent. about $3 ,400 in other rees and the same landing fees There is also a com muter airline lhat fli es short fl ights from the airport Golden West Airlines will pay $3.075 a month rent and about S2.000 in other fees County report Funds exist -· .for lighting By GLENN SC01T Ol IM Dally l'I ... ~ff Special elections will not be required this year to continue current levels or service in Orange Counly's 33 county service and lighting districts. That was one or the conclusions of a special re port passed this week by the county Board of Supervisors. THE SUPERVISORS HAD called for the re· port on financing for special districts arter dis- cussions in August when it was s uggested that such elections might be necessary to seek ratifica- tion from district residents of extra assessments . However, Special Districts Administra tor Robert Hamilton said funds set aside for the dis· t ricts apparently will cover expenses this fiscal year -or through June 1981. In the complicated process of post-Proposition 13 financing, t he state Legislature has taken over funding for all of the school dis tricts statewide. . THE LEGISLATURE ALSO has authorized a new funding category called the special district augmentation fund. This fund is comprised of the property taxes no longer going towa rd local schools. Instead. the money is used to bail out the special districts -such as lighting districts which have annual deficit:.. In Orange County, 29 of the 33 districts are projected to have deficits this fiscal year totaling about $4. l million. The augmentation fund wall cover that deficit. Ha m ilton said. But he warned that the future or the augmen- tation fund hangs precariously on the state's abili· t y to finance the s chool districts . Auto & Homeowners • Quotes By Ptlonf' ORANGE COUNTY ART AUCTION to benefit OCC crew Nov. 15 auction 8:00 preview 7:00 admillk>n s2.oo _.... & l••c•• .. & w• 111111 llOI c...tltwy ... .,.... ....... NEED HELP? visit our Do-It -Yourself Store ... or have our competent plumbers do tM wortc! BLOCK PLU1!9ING 5 HEATING i ITIME STARTS AT YOUR DOOIU '" 16562 GOTHARD 848 3 UNITA -6 HUNTINGTON BEACH HOUt• .,, F 8 «»~ 30 S~I 91»31)0 THE VOYAGERS CLUB AND NORWEGIAN CARIBBEAN LINES /N I'/'//: HJ/' ·10 11 .\PH.IA/. ( f({'f.\f I /(,//"( 'fl 'f.\/)11)' .'\Ul'h \llH H /H /1JHl1 ~ I' 1\1 I IJ •J J> J\I AIRPORTER INN. IRVINE Admission Free -Seating Limited l >N Ill/,(, /()I( I /<I I <.JO /\/ /OR >()' \ \., ORlf'1l\' F.ARMUIS IHSUR.At-ICE GllOUI" 541-5554 cw IJS-3437 19 14 Harbor • C~to MHO HARBOR TRAVEL -'675·1311 NEWPORTER TRAVE°L 644-0360 RSVP TRAVEL HORIZONS 752-9035 TR AVEL COUNTRV OF IRVINE 551-2929 - The five-month leases run from Oct. ?7 to April 1. 1981. By that time. county officials hope to have com- pleted a final airport access plan. which will clear up some questions about future use of the county's only commercial airport. UC I Medical Cemer earns accreditation COME TO OUR CORRAL OF NEW & USED CAR.BARGAINS/ An agree me nt w ith Re-public Airlines (formerly Hughes Airwest J also h as been completed , but supervisors postponed final action on it pending developments in a lawsuit brought against the county by the airline in connection with the access plan. A MONTH AGO, the su~rvisors approved a plan to allow Frontier and Western Airlines to begin mak· ing two flights a day from the airport. In the new leases, Frontier will sublease its s pace from Republic and Western will sublease from Ai r California. A lease for Wes tern was approved by the supervisors two weeks ago. Air California, which wiU make 25 ffights a day from the airport -two less to accommodate the sublease will pay the county $9,000 a month rent, about $6,000 a month in utility and janitorial fees and 50 cents per 1,000 pounds in landing fees. REPUBLIC, WIOCH will make a dozen daily flights, will pay $5.400 a A medical commission ha s re· newed UC Irvine Medical Center's accreditation for two years. The accreditation, given by the Joint Commission on Accreditation or Hos pitals . is r e cog nized as a hallmark of quality by insurance companies. educators and regulatory agencies. accordin~ to a medical center spokeswoman. The commission is sponsored by the American Coll ege of Surgeons, American College of Physicians . Am erican De ntal Association . American Hospita l Association and American Medical Association. The accreditation was given to UC Irvine Medical Center after the Joint Com mission on Accreditation of Ho s pitals surveyed the medical center and determined that patient care and s upport services were of good quality. BUYA TOP RLOINSTEAK ~ WITH PURCHASE OF ANY NEW OR USED CAR DURING THIS SALE. l co• ft8T DNft OWi WORLD CAR TIE 1111LIB21 ti MP& ... 1REE! LIVE REMOTE BROADCAST KIK -FM pLUS RADIO COUltlY MUSIC RECORD ALBUMS DOllll 1UR Ill THIS FRI. & SAT. 1REE! DINNERS AT THE CRAZY HORSE RESTAURANT WEITEll ROUIO -UP 1REE! NPllll Ill USPllELU I I. I I I GENERAL NEWS Sex documents open~d IUITATB. 8.&"B O• OWBLRY· Publ.ic may aee Robbina indictment papen CRYSTAL· .. CRAll&NTO (AP) Two court doeufl)ents taat Md to u.. IMlirunnt ot 1taw Seo. Alan . Rob· blm on 1n ~ .,.. open t.o the public. ~ Court Judie 8-,lamln Dtu removed th sea uua -.ek fn>lll the 1rand Jury transcript ud M< la"9t11ator'a amctavlt, wblcb contained ltat.-ol the teeft·a1ed 1lrls involved. RC)hhlnt' attomey ar1ued that opening the ' documenta would lead to publicity that would threat.eo chances for a fair trial. ftobbim, ST, a Van Nuys Democrat, was ln- dlc-ted Oct. 31 on 10 counts of unlawful sexual. con-duct with three t~n-age girls. AU 10 charges are felonies and could lead to six years in prison. Robbins has pleaded lnnocent to thoM and an additional misdemeanor charge of poesessin1 marijuana. Robblns sat quietly at the Wednesday hearing, and refused to comment afterward. ~ut bis at- torney, Nell McAllister Jr., left open the possibill· ty of an appeal. .. That's a decision that will have to be made," be said as the two waded through television camera crews, photographers and reporters. Child molesters McAllhter told -the court that the documents would "add fuel to the tire" or publlcJty. "Let'• cool iL down and let.'s proceed so the de· rendanthasa rightto a fair trial." he said. •. He submitted newspaper clippings and' the re- sults or a telephone poll in Sacramento County to back his contention. But attorneys for United Presa International and The Sacramento Bee, and Judie Diaz. all not· ed that contents ol the affidavit -used to obtain a sea-rch warrant or Robbins' Sacramento residence -had already been published by The Associated Press. Diaz said McAllister was asking hlm to "un· ring a bell"bykeepingthatdocumeolseaJed. Attorneys Jeffrey Burroughs, representing the Bee, and Gerard Rose, r epres enting UPI , criticized McAllister's contention that pre-trial publicity would prevent Robbins from finding im- partial jurors. Said Rose, "Publicity as such does not give rise to violations or defendants' rights . It's unfair publicity. I find it inconceivable .... that in an area as large as Sacramento that we could not find imp~rtial jurors." . E11~11JofJ Senate Democratic floor leader David Robe rti of Los Angeles, claims he has the votes to un- seat James Mills of San Diego as presi- dent pro tempore or the state Senate. PORCBL.&111 - BR01'ZB8- CBDA-s1tv·Ea ···-···· Lou of diamond rings lfMt tlfl'ings, told c:halnt. fine ct.Ina Md . Clr'Yl'll~ branas, tome tUmi· ture, oi&I, c:t..ndelitn, br• l8mps.etc. Something for everyone -from $1 .00 up. F'" ldmit&ion. a.nit of Americ•, Mtl1er 'Chqt, cptdu, November 14, 15 and 16 ~ lnlpletion of 811,.........t. Fri*f, Saturdmy, Ind ... 2 • 6 P.M. Ind 7 ·IP.M. aewport . a~etlon company 2542 West Coast H9'way . ' I Newport Beech, CA Tougher laws sought Doctor arrest e d (714) ,846-2200 CONSNltls•ns AC,_C._ ... , .... 'Ta. 5 PM POMONA (AP) -Citing general !lfl'eement that habitual child molesters cannot be cured, a nu mber o.f prosecutors. social wo.rkers and phycbiatrists have recommended that repeat of- fenders be sentenced to longer, mandatory prison terms. The recommendations, made this week by some of the more than 20 speakers testifying before a state Assembly Criminal Justice Commit· tee hearing at the Californja Polytechnic campus here, were greeted by applause from citizens in the audience. VENTURA COUNTY DEP UTY District Al· tomey Irving Prager said his office will propose legislation mandating 20-year p rison terms without parole for habitual child molesters - those with three convictions and for those who \ com mit crimes involving multipl~ victims or physical injury. Steve White, executive dir~c.tor of the California District Attorney's Association, sug- ges ted that dangerous and habitual child moleste.rs who have completed their prison terms be required to undergo a second jury trial lo de- termine if they should be released. At such a trial the molester could present evidence from psychiatrists and others lo support claims of rehabilitation, White said. BUT SEVERAL PSYCIDATRlSTS told the committee they do not want the responsibility of Arts and Crafts , Fair Nov.15&16 ~m. Sp.m .Foldlng Table and Chairs Company$ comitlg and this table and cl'fairs set 1s perfect for holiday mea.ls and guests. Great as a game table or a holiday arts and crafts center! The folding table has an easy·care tan vinyl padded top (33x33") and rich chestnut brown baked enamel legs. Reg. 24 95 Special $19.88 The classic folding metal chairs look extra special.with a high gloss enamel finish too! In chestnut brown. persimmon. mint green and white Reg 11.00 each or 4 for 44.00 Special$9.88each or $36.88for 4 Total Reg.65.95. Aaron Brothers Ho liday Special $51.88. ANAHEIM 222 N. leach Blvd. • COSTA MESA 17M Newport Blvd. • ORANGE 1112 e .. Katella Ave. lAGUNA IEACH ¥10 S. Coaat Hlghwav • SANTA ANA 1126 E. 17th. St. EL fOIO 24360 Swartz Dr. • HUMYINGTON BEACH 7470 Edinger Ave . • ' . ,ti• DAILV I ILOl &1£ W@M [( @@[(\'!10©@ "<iota~· TMtl wnte to Pot Ounn Pat wilt nit r..i ... _,.0*919 tl'I taa.IWtt• and actwn you netd lo tolOf ......, .. , i11 QO\lf"'''lel'lt and bu.nrieu Mail fC*' quuflOIV to Pot Ou111t, At Your Serviu . Orange Co.al Oo;alJI Pilot. P10 Bo-£ 1560, Costa Mesa. CA aaf At ""°"" l•ttv• "' Po•lible will ~ aMW1ffd. llllt phoMd inqvin., or lelten not 1ndudln17 the ~·• twl oame. addren and bwiMss h(>urs' phone num~ connot ~ con11dered Thu column a~ors daa· hi e:rcept Sundays · · - Sltnrh .-.. d.-r f okc•N f iN1.- DEAR PAT: I sent for a pair of Slumber Trim shorts in early August, but still have not received them. My check for $19.85 has bee9 cashed. I did receive a card more th•n two weeks ago saying tbe shorts would be sent "soon." How long do I have to wail for "soon" to arrive? · D.R., Costa Mesa Slamber Trim says tbe alae you ordered wu temporarily out of stock, but all orders now llave been fllled. It your aborts don't arrlve ln anotber eek, eoe&act Ma. Pat Bates at Slumber Trtm's Glen Head, N.Y. headquarters. Bt>arorc• nf c·lipp ittgfll DEAR PAT: I was going to take some cuttings from my sister's ice plants, but she told me that mal)y of the plants have sacs that look like pop- corn. She has tried lo find out what this is, but none of the nurseries in the Los Angeles area where-she lives, can identify the problem. She is afraid the plants will die. I wonder if you can find out what's wrong and how to treat the plants. K.E .. Costa Mesa The farm adviser's omce of the Cooperative EJ[tension reports that over the past three years a new pest, Ice plant scale, bas become a serious problem la parts of Northern California and re- cently la Lo8 Angeles County. Your sister probably bas seen the wbJ&e egg s acs that contain many oval gnen eggs which tW'D a yellowish color before batcbhag Into tiny "crawlers." This Im- mature form feeds on the plants, bot l.s difficult to spot because It bas the same green color as the ice plant. Any suqtect plant material should be destroyed. Avoid collecting lee plant along roads and bJgbways. ~ An laaectlcide, such as malatbJon, can be ef- fective ln controlling the early nymph or crawler "·stages, but not the mature stages since they are ~ protected by their wuy egg saiip1. Adding an oil ~ spray (such as Volek 011) at the ra&e of two and ~ QJle-baH tablespoons per gallon wtJJ increase the -.t effectiveness of the Insecticide. ;: t. ~Mex ican pmoor ~\.~- ~"pact r e ached --~ MEXICO CITY <AP> -Marking the first long- term sale of geotherma l power between two North American countries, offi cials of Mexican and U.S. utility companies say they have reached agree· • raent on a 10-year pact. The document calls for San Diego Gas and ts Electric Co. and Southern California Edison Co . to f; buy 220 megawatts of energy -enough to supply ! the electric needs of 220,000 people -from Mex - ,..; ico's national utility, Comission Federal de Elec· :: tricidad, beginning in April 1984. CSan Diego Gas :: and Electric Co. serves portions of south Orange \:county. ;.. Under the agreement, SDG&E initially will ~recei ve 150 megawatts of geotherma l power per ;: year from Mexico. The agreement was signed ~:-Wednesday. • Ron Watkins, vice president of resource plan- C!ning for SDG&E, called the agreement "a major !;step in reducing our dependency on oil." ~! To provide the energy, Mexican officials say :,they plan to build four HO-megawatt generating :•units at the existing Cerro Prieto station 30 miles ~south of Mexicali. Two Of the llnits w111 provide renergy to Mexico and the other ltYO to other ~fotilities. • t! ·~· .,---------------· ... ~. ~ • Lifeline Telephone Service What It ls and how you can get it. If you're a residence customer of Pac:J.ficTelephone and you make a limited number of local calls a month, you might be interested in o ur Lifeline Telephone Service. Lifeline allows you up to 30 local calls every month for S2.50 plus tax. - Each call made over the 30-call all ow- ance is extra. (The 31st-40th calls cost 1()¢ each. Eve ry call over 40 costs 15¢.) I Installation, telephone sets, and other services and equipment cost extra. Lifeline is available to residential customers only in mo'st areas of Los Angeles and San Diego as well as Orange County, Riverside, Sacramento, Santa Rosa, San Francisco, San Jose, Stockton. Modesto and parts of the East Bay, Peninsula and Marin. Want to know more? Call your Pacific Telephone service representa· tive for details. @Pacific lillephone -\ KIMIALL ~ AITIST GIAND PIANO 6'7 polished ebony superb quality ~i~5·7·so USED AS 15 OPTIGAN ORGAN TAKE THIS AWAY $50 NEVI · y~MA ORGAN~ ou• 1tm• .l'JOC . u• 250/o Off 10 Beautiful S'S Spanish pecan and uphot· stered bench offered by us tor S7,1 35 '3995 SYN DRUMS MODEL 178 WITH PEDAL LIST $490 1/2 OFF! _, JUllfllNCll " 42'' CONIOll PIANO Offered by UI -, for Sl.695 . $--. 15' lftAIOHT GUITAR CORDS S~~~~ SALi $695 ALL GUITAI STRING SETS TWO POI THI PllCI Of ONI MICROMOOG DEMO LIST '895 11•549 . .. 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ShQrtS1eeve Embroidered Tropical Shirts inJr. Sizes.S.M.t. ''JI 0[!0.•18 Now l.99 Print Blouses in Queen Sizes Orig. 7.99 and Pull-on Polyester Pants for Full Figures. Orig. 7.99 Now 5.99 Misses' and Junior Blazers in Velvets. Corduroy and Wool Blends. Orig.S62 Now 39.99 Velour Pant Suits Junior and Misses' Dresses 1 n assorted styles and colors ~--Ong. s1.µ42 Boys' T-Shirts Sizes8-16 (300nly) Orig. 3.50 Now 1.99 Nows5 to 29.99 Boye' LiSTerry Shirt Sizes8-16(720nly) Orlg.•10 Of course you can charge It -~~ Misses' V-Neck Terry Tops Orig. 6.99. end Misses' Poly Cotton Blouses Orig. s5..11 ~. Now 3.99 Junior V-Neck Velour Pullovers Orig. s17 and Junior Polyester Slacks Assorte~ colors. 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E MINWAX CROWN HAR11 ARE -.. ·PIK MOEN DISHMASTER IN-SIN . ·ER CROWN HARDWARE MILWAI .RMGL AX - ,· .BRAUN co~ . 'HELLER BRANDEN~tLS BLOCKS TAYLOR & I' STER AR KITCHENAID CHICAGO CUTLERY SONOL"~~ ,RKS I . , Westcliff Plaza (formerly Rion) . ~ i: 1,024 Irvine Ave., ~rt Beach 642-1133 I . OPEN SUNDAYS -. . . ""' · .. . • ....... . '. . "' -. . • .. . _ . . . . . . . . .. ,,,.. . . .... . . . . , ' -._ i ...... ' . . ..... . ·.: Corona del MOr· Harbor View-Center . 3107 E. Coast H\Ny . 1 Kllonwtllr' South ot MecArthur I 1a1~f San Miguel Dr., NEP.vpPrt Beach . . 673-2800 644-8570 • INSIDE : •Business •Comics •Stoclll 2 trn mrznuo 1W er yp1m John Sevano Settling ·the Ram·s' pro:lJlems? Thert have been sorn~ very pointed accuu· Uoos ma< le recently by a minority of Ram players th at sucaest management has not acted in &ood faith during recent negotiations. Reme111ber. now. only a sip all portion of the team la lr1volved. But even il it was just one person. wc iuldn't that be enough? "Yes, what is It?" said Klosterman to his secretary as I hid in the comer of h1a office. "There's a player here to see you, air. He wants to talk about his contract,'" she answered. "Send him in. Send him lo. I always have Ume to discuss a player's contract." about what I'm going to get? I'm makin& only $63,000 this season and most linebackers with my experience are lo the $150,000 range.·• N eedleaa ·lO · aay , the II ne bac,k~ • stormed out ih a huff whlle the new player tered. It was a running back. • "Glad to see you, my boy. How's tbe~'" family?" Anywi 1y, I thought It would only be fair if this issue was settled once and for all. Has managemcmt been fair? Have their offers been reasonable ? The player, a linebacker, sat down in a chair. The expression on his face made Jack Lambert looked like Mary Poppins. "Dulte, we have lo get this contract settled. I can't play football with this on my mind." "OH. WE COULDN'T possibly give you tha.t much. I remember when I asked my dad for a ralsein my allowance'. Youknowwhatbetold me, 'A penny saved Is a penny earned." ·'What the hell does that have to do with my contract? I'm not looking for pennies. I'm look· ing for dollars." "You keep asking that every time I see Yi . and I keep telling you that they're fine, b ~ they're hungry. I'm tired of scoring o • touchdown after another for you. Tb.is is my : final year. I need some security. I've produced, t haven't I? Look at my numbers. I've gained c 1,000 yards in only half a seasoo and I've aco:1 ~ HIGHl.~R-UPS CONTEND the answer is yes. The pl ayers? Well , you know their verdict. "FINE, FINE. We 'll get to that in a minute. By the way, did you see the New England- Houston game Monday night? The Patriots sure can put the ball in the air, can'lthey." "Well, OK, let 's <Buzu, Buzzz) talk. Ex· cuse me a minute, will you? -Yes?" "I'm sorry lo interrupt, sir, but there's another player out here to see you and you told me that the minute he got here I should tell you." 10 touchdowns. What more could you want?" i "We couldn 'l ask for anything more. As I matter of fact I was just talking about you to • Georgia the other day, and she almost ex· ' pressed the same feelings. The truth probably Ues somewhere in the middle, alt.hough I found the conversations in General M anager Don Klosterman 's office very amusing the other day. "Yeah, Uuke, they sur.e can. Now about the t contract." "Thank you, Miss Jones. "SHE LIKED HOW you ran with the bal and how ~nceful you looked every time you :I Natura1\ly, the following conversations are fictitious . . or are they? "Oh, yes, the contract. Utd you see what Dusty Baker signed for the other day with the Dodgers? lsn 't that outrageous? I certainly ... " "Duke, never mind what Baker got. How "Hey, I'm sorry, but we're going to have lo continue this at another time. I really enjoyed our conversation. though. I think we got a lot accomplished." ( Buzz:u. z, Buzzzzz) (See SEV ANO, Page Bt) --------------- Speedboat disint.egra!,es Taylor's fatal attempt ~ GLENBROOK, Nev. (AP) - Crews were expected lo be back on Lake Tahoe today to resume the search for the body of Lee Taylor whose rocket-powered boat disintegrated in his bid for the world speed record. Searchers using floodlights and television cameras worked into the night, peering through the frigid lake waters for the boat's cockpit section which the y presumed co ntained Taylor's ~y. THE SEARCH WAS tern· porarily abandoned late Thurs· day after five futile hours. Sheriff's Sgt. Doug Struthers satd : "He is presumed dead. He has not been officially declared dead." Before darkness fell Thurs· day. crews recovered an un· opened drag parachute, Taylor's helmet and several sections or the boat, but found no sign of the 45-year-old Bellflower pilot. ·'He never had a chance lo say 'boo."' cr ew member Luke Fratello said. LEE TAYLOR The accident occurred after Taylor had made one of two re- quired runs through the one· kilometer speed trap at well below the record of 317 .6 miles per hour. The shouts turned to sere~ when the boat new apart in feet of water about one-half · off the shore . Taylor tested the boat this-; · s ummer o n Walker Lake southeast or Reno and reacbeJ unofficial speeds of 333 mph. . ~ · "It's euphoric" traveling ti that speed, be said. "It's sort ol like riding the tip of an arrow justshotfromabow." 3S He said he hoped to bit mph in Thursday's aUempt take the record from Australian · Ken Warby. "MY GOAL IS to bring thJ world's water speed record bac! to the United States in 1980, Taylor said before Thursday's ~ attempt. Warby broke Taylor's pr~ vious record in June 1978 ~ Taylor held the mark for ii years. Both records were set in · jet boats. This was the first at- tempt in a rocket-powered craft .. Taylor. who survived a l96fo jet boat crash on Lake Havasu-, said he made Thunday's nm on Lake Tahoe because of the length available for approacb and shutoff on the course. id Congr':at ulGt ions, Olgnrpians D ENVE It DICK E RSON , Tahoe project director for the attempt, said it appeared that the boat hit a "black line" of shifting currents that caught a wing-like stabilizer at the rear of the boat. The boat "just blew apart," Dickerson said. Doug Freeman of Taylor's or· gan\zalion, said the official speetl clocked on the first run was 269.835 mph, but Fratello said the boat peaked around 350 mph before slowing. He reached 188 mph in tests the lake Wednesday, but said choppy waves da~aged the aluminum hull of the $2.S million craft, which was construct.ed in Irvine. ; John Molffet <left ) and Steve Scott receive plaques from former Olympian Sammy Lee at Thursday night's Salute to the 1980 Olympic tea m held at the South Coast Plaza Hoetl. Moffet, of Newport Beach, is a member of the 1980 swimming team while Scott, a graduate of UC Irvine, is one of the world's premiere milers. He said a black line creates a surface disturbance similar to going over a bump, and the line was where Taylor started to shut off his engine. A CROWD ESTIMATED at nearly 1,000, including Taylor's mother. wife and daughter , greeted the pilot with cheers as he raced through the speed trap. Moving along water al highef and higher speeds became tJie life goal for Lee Taylor in tlle mid-19605. He temporarily held world 3 cords for water skiing an powerboats and was trying to gain the world powerboat mark. Alali•arna face1s BL QB dile1n11na BIRMINGHAM . Ala. (AP> - Did you every he ar the old gag about the? fellow who spent thousands of dollars to send his son to coll•:!ge and all he got was a quarterback? If you •;now of someone like that, send the ~'B's name to Bear Bryant just down the road a ways in Tuscaloosa. Heading into Saturday's long- . awaited clash wttln Notre Dame at Birntin.gham 's 'Legion Field, Bryant doesn't kn\)w the name of his starting quarterback, and won't make a decision until Saturday looming from-among: Don Jai~obs, a 6·'.2, 181-pound senior, was the sta rter in Alabama's first ei1~ht games. But Jacohs yielded the assign· ment to Ken Coltiy against Louisiana State las1l weekend. He took over again when Coley was injured but sp•rained an ankle, which was twice its normal stze early lo lhe week. Coley, >n. 188, sophomore, ls probably the besl runnier among Bama'·s signal-callers. Coley suffered a badly sprained throw. int hand against LSU. ' Walter Lew la, 8 ·0 , 181, Crethman, baa appeared in five 1ames, seeing mop-up .duly ex- cel>t for last week, •hen he started the second half a1ainat LSU and directed a towcbdown · drive. "He played a few plays after the 1•me was wbn . . . very few, maybe 12 or 1& plays," 8rrant says. · 1 Paul Fields 6 -0,1 183, (rHhman , •has r{ve rloya Of v..-11ty experience, al against Kentucky more than a month a90. "If I had chosen him u one of the top three quarterllecka way back there In prea••aaon camp he'd be real aood now,•· taJ_• Bryant. '1' ..,._ cbooMt to 1atnblt ettn f.lrther 1 he CID IO with 0¥1 HayDeL... a talented .. ,.,., . ,, And now, let Jhe real bidding begin if infield, Sutton~ w unge money-UXIT with clubs The 45-year-old Taylor. father of four girls, was fast on foot as well when he played football r~ the University of Wasbingtot and a semi-professional team in Southern California. By HAL BOCK AP 5"'11 Writ~ NEW YORK CAP> -There was ani air of mystery surrounding baseball's re-entry draft today after Ron LeFlore and Tug McGraw, two of the biggest names avai~a · ble in the talent grab bag, were all but tg· nored by the 26 clubs. Le Floere. the speedy outfielder who stole 97 basajast season. was selected only once -almost as an afterthought in the 11th round by the Chicago White Sox. McGraw. one of Philadelphia's World Series heroes. was ignored completely, not selected al all. Under the rules of the draft. both players become eligible to negotiate with all 26 major league clubs. Now come the questions. WR-Y-WOU-LD Dave W. Roberts. a utilityman with routine credentials, be the most popular selection, chosen by 12 teams? Why would journeyman outfielder Jim Dwyer, who has already played for five clubs. be No. 2 on the shopping list, picked by 11 teams? And why would more familiar names like LeFlore and McGraw be virtually ignored? Some think it was a case of bargain basement shopping. Teams know Roberts and Dwyer can't demand the kind of con· tract numbers LeFlore and McGraw can. "I was very surprised," said Paul Owens, director of player personnel for the World Champion Philadelphia Phillies. "It was like it was two separate drafts, one for Le Flore and McGraw and one for the other players. Maybe it's a trend. Players who indicated they would try for big sums . . . maybe clubs are finally getting to the point where they say. 'This has gone far enough.u• That's one theory. Another is that the draft is really a chess game, a battle of nerves 9/ith clubs wailing each other oat. That's Marvin Miller's theory. "I THINK TlllS was an outgrowth of last year when clubs delibera~ely !lung back as long as a player bad one l>lck or no picks because under the rules, when a player is drafted by less than two teams. it is not necessary to draft him or give up an amateur choice if you sign him." the ex· ecutive director of the Players Association said. Another intriguing side of the draft com es from the other extreme -the high· priced auction it created for the services of slugger Dave Winfield and pitcher Don Sutton. Both were picked by 10 teams - three below the Umit allowed. The bidding began immediately. Five teams -the New York Mets, the New York Yankees. the Atlanta Braves the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Cleveland Indiana picked those two players In the first two rounds. He began racing hydroplanes in 1961, and in 1963 set a wor&.t record of 92 mph on waler ski( at Long Beach. In quest of the powerboat speed record he went off course and crashed in l~t Late Havasu, Artz .. and while'M w• being taken to a hospital 'Uf-_ helicopter crashed. J "I came out of the water and up a mountain. They found me, put me in a eoasl Guar9 helicopter and, less than fi" minutes later, the helicopt~ with me inside crashed into th~ lake." Taylor needed two years to re- cuperate from injutte11 that in· eluded three skull fractures. All the muscles to his left eye were severed ln that accident. ., 'a4 Oly~pics: new message, new start ~ ~ - By HOWAJlD L. BANDY CM IM o.M1y P.._. swr When the Olympic qames are held in Los Angeles in 1984, the United Sta~ will be giving the world a message and it will be a better one than that given ln each of the last three Olympiads ac· cordlna to general manager of the L.A. organizing committee, Peter Ueber· rotb. "What has gone wrong with the Olym· pie movement?" Ueberrotb asked a crowd of some tSO past and present Qlympians aloo1 with supporters of the Ol)'mplc movement Thursday nJ1ht at the South Coast Plaza Hotel in Cotta Mesa. "Every country th.al preaentt the Olymptct bat a •tat4ment to malle. In Munich (West Germany, lt'TI). tbty told the world they had become re· vltallaed and lndult.riaU.ed. ''Mont.real showed the world that It wa1 not 1 step chlld of tbe Un.lted States and that. it could spend a lot of money to accompllsb tta pal. "Ill lif.o9cow the)' toot it tatJar tbll ,..... ,,., tried to .... lite ...... tJMy could push it around and It didn't work. They bad lea than 800 athletes compel· 101. . "All of you young people here tonlght who are members of the U.S. Olympic team ol 1J80 gave them a mesaa1e ln· stead. You told them that the Games belong to the athletes and not to the countries that put them on. The boycott worked. "I aay to you now, Uve In the present and the, tuture and don't look back. 1'984 will be a dlrferent year. "Not one pemfy's worth of federal money wW be Ultd to 1ta1e the Olym· pie Game1 lD Loa AJ.atelea and we will be more hospitable and 1ta1e ~the,· Gam• for the competlton and tbe r.,,.. • 'Tbt bo•t country automatleally quaun. for all team apocU wtthout havlftt to qualify in advanee. I think 1ou'll ... •lot. ot slmllariU11 to tbe lce bockey team lD tJU year's wlDtel' Olym· pin. "We11hafta1,000.metllr rm IDd a 400-meur burdJel ran for die~ e1oa1 wllll ertU.f. We ,.... ~· ~ . down for a women's marathon.but when the IOC reconsiders it, I'm sure the women's marathon will be added to the 1984 Olympic Games. " • • • Donna de Varona, a member of the 1980 and 1984 Olympic swimmin1 teams, served as master of ceremonies. "I have been on President Carter's health, fitness and sports committee and s~t a lot of Ume in Wasbiqtonz D.C.,' she says. "I WU also • 1pecl81 consultant to l)le U.S. Senate-and kind of aened as a Uason between tbe Pfeil· dent and athl.tel." Sbe .looU .., tbou,ll she coWd com· pete oa the 1180 Olympic teem and with tbe,,_,. au.iet.. "l Ila)' in lbQe by 1wtmmlas and l'1IDDlal and 1 wW be 1otn1 to 9'oOmd wttll Luce'"1Anc18 to com·,...1nasemonmeet.'' De~..,.. dollata a lot of ber Um• to the epedal Olymplcs ud waa OM o( the ••ill_. ol tM moveaa.t ror tau. dieaPPlllr•.,...•· ~ A •••••r of '8'' Ol1mple ,.,,..,...,. ..... latrod ... -.... ben ol the 1980 team on hand for the OC· caaion each received a plaque of ap- preclaUoo from the Southern California Olympians and their president, Andre" Strenk aloq with John Naber. f • • • America's top mile nan star. Steve ~ Scott, a 1raduate of UC Irvtne and f currently an aulatant t•c::J-ArllOlaa ~ State UnJvenity, felt e of ~ I! pet1tiClll ln the lllO Oly pie Games w~ a "bit dtaappolntment to me. · "JUatltlecl-or not, I'~n aopotltloll'9 •11. But What ll I'm lck ID 1* .ud can't aom,.W. I'll nev r be able to •· pertente U.. ·competttl . It was a bis loH to me not to ,Jble to ao '° Moeoow. • , ·~1 ·u comDete ln 1our lDdoar ..... m· ! eJllCIUll U. lJunkbt meet In Loe~ f th1I ~ear." . ~ lelll tllll two mn he baa'° taNl are die Brtt.ou, S.bUUaa Coe ... .... Ottill wM ... ...,... • ---· :aiii\:.r.=~-J ~ "'-.. •'"·" .. Illinois ha n w gimmick: for Reisman button "1i1Ao From AP Dllpa&d1ea CHAMPAIGN. Ill. -Qujlrterback Dave Ell WU.on. who has put his name In the record books •II• aad on court dockets since comln& to the Universi- ty of Ulioola this year. now has his name on a but· Lon : "Wilson For Heisman." The Heisman Trophy button was the brainstorm of a stu- dent service group, and the latest chapter in Wilson's amaz- ing success story. "We talked to Dave and he's pretty excited about it," said Ray Morrison. director of the Illini Guides. "It's to show the football team and Oave Wilson that we're behind them, and we want to keep him here next year." The buttons go on sale Monday for 50 cents each, and Morrison hopes to raise $500 to S600. "We needed the money, and we also wanted to do somethlng for the football team, so we brainstormed and came up with the Dave Wilson for Reisman Trophy idea," said Morrison. His volunteer group assists students and provides orien- tations at the main Illinois campus. Wilson's name first was mentioned as a Heisman Trophy candidate by Coach Mike White after the junior college transfer student from Fullerton College set an NCAA reeord Saturday. passing for621 yards in a 49-42loss to Ohio State. Wilson, playing under a court order while his complicat- ed eligibility lawsuit against the Big Ten is pend\ng, has been the key to the new. professional look of the Illinois offense un- der White. Wilson has passed for 2.751 yards in 10 games - more than any Illini has done in an entire career . ..------ttuo•e o f l he da ~f -------. Texas Christian football coach F.A. Dry, comment· ing on people he dislikes : "1 only wish you were twins so I could ins ult you twice.·· F lflen run 1111fwaf ~ string fo _1-1 Rick Mac~sb scored two goals and assisted ~ on two others and Bill Barber scored twice as , Philadelphia smashed Edmonton, 8-1, to highlight NHL action Thursday. The win left the Flyers· un-- beaten streak intact with 12 wins and two ties since Oct. 19 ... Rieb Preston's goal seven minutes into the third period lifted Chicago int<> a 4-4 tie with Calgary . . . Don Marcotte tipped in a goal midway through the third period to cap a Boston comeback and lift the Bruins into a 5-S tie with Win- nipeg, Winnipeg has not won a game in its last 12 outings and the Bruins have only one victory in their last dozen starts. Rookie le ads 76ers p ast Indian a Rookie Andrew Toney scored a season-high 32 m points and Bobby Jones came off the bench to add 26 as Philadelphia trounced Indiana, 130-103, to hJghlight NBA action Thursday. Toney, a 6-3 guard from Southwestern Louisiana, hit nine of 11 shots from the fi eld and scored 19 points all the 76ers opened a 61-48 halftime lead. His previous high for a game was 16 points ... Elsewhere, Richard Washington came off the bench lo score 14 second-half points, including a victory-clinching three- point play, to lead Cleveland to a 114-lll victory over Atlanta. Cleveland's victory snapped .an eight.game Cavalier losing streak, while Atlanta 's losing streak was extended to nine games . . . George Gervin poured through 35 points and rookie forward Reggie Johuon came off the bench to add a career-h.igh 22. leading San Antonio to a 113-107 victory over San Di~o. The Spurs have won all nine of their games against Uie Clippers since the San Di ego franchise was established ... Detroit announced it had signed veteran free agent forward guard Larry Wright, formerly of Washington, to a multi-year contract. - Broe.nU lia.,~ Grftftl.-'""''•• rftitl PITTSBURGH -No tackles. no a11lsll, oo Ell aacka. •9 • Those were Joe Greene's totals three weeb ago In a game in which the Pittaburgh St.eelers were beaten 21-26 by the Cleveland Browns. After that game, Cleveland defensive tackle Jerry Sherk reportedly said : .. Joe Greene didn't even get his Jersey dirty ... Greene has been reminded often of that remark in recent weeks, but he'-s not making an issue of lt going into Sunday's rematch against Cleveland. ••I don't need him to tell me how bad I'm playing," said the 34-year-old Greene. "J look at the films. I can see I'm not hav- ing as good a year as I wanted and it hurts. But there Is still a long way to go." In the past two weeks, Greene had his first two quarterback sacks of the National FootbalJ League season , helping Pittsburgh to victories over Green Bay and Tampa Bay. ou ... • "I'm a proud man and I wanted to play up to my poten- tial in every game," he said. "But I'm also a human and being human means having some good games and some bad games. My reactions are still as good as they were three. four or five years ago. ll•pires 1ein r uling fo ..,..ar lward • DENVER -Two umpires and the Colorado Iii High School Baseball Umpires Association have reached an out-of-court agreement that allows um· pires to wear beards, mutton chops, handlebars and other facial hair styles. Gene Mingo, former Denver Broncos' kicker, and Ernest Kozacek fil ed suit in March 1979 against the umpires associa- tion and ils parent group, the Colorado High School Activities Association, when they were barred from the high school baseball diamond because of their beards. · They claimed they would lose $50,000 each in future in· come if they were not allowed to umpire at high school games. The terms of the settlement reached Wednesday were not disclosed. but David Stark, attorney for Mingo and Kozacek, said the agreement ·•struck down the beard rule forever." Activities association officials defended the beard ban. saying umpires should not draw attention to themselves dur· ing games. Sher ry rejoiRs D o d{lf!r o rgaRi%a f io R Larry Sherry, the hero of the 1959 World Series • for the Dodgers. has returned to his old organiza- tion as a minor league pitching instructor, the team announced Thursday. Sherry. 45, takes the place of former teammate Ron Perunoski, who was recently named the Dodgers' major league pitching coach ... On a sadder note. Dale Jones, who served as a scout for the Dodgers the last 11 years, died Saturday at his home in Florida. Jones. 61, was in cha~ge of the Florida and Georgia area for the Dodgers, Jones signed players like Bobby Wlne. Tim Harkness, Rick Rhoden and Dennis LewalJyn . . . The Hous ton Oilers placed middle guard Curley Culp on waivers and 1 signed defensive tackle Charlie Davis, who , had been released earlier this year by the ' Buffalo Bills. Culp had played 13 seasons in the NFL, the last seven with the Oilers ... James "Quick" Tims knocked out Argentinian heavyweight champion Dom· \ ingo D'EUa in the fourth round of their SHH1tv scheduled 12-round fight. In the second main attraction on the night's card. Mike Rossman won a split decision over Lake Capuano, giving Rossman his third victory this year in his bid to regain the li ght-heavyweight championship ... Cale Yarborough, in a fina l bid for the 1980 stock car cham- pionship, won the pole position for the Times 500 Thursday . . . American Mike Reid took a one-stroke lead in the Toshiba Taiheiyo golf tournament in Japan after firing a three.under-par 69 Tefevlsio~ radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Basketball -San Diego at Lakers, 7:20 p.m., KLAC (570). I s McGraw the victim of a trend? PHILADELPHIA CAP) - Reliever Tug McGraw of the Phttadelpfita P hillies was un- available for comment Thurs- day night on being bypassed by all teams ln baseball's r e-entry lack of interest in the relief pitche~r._ did, they laid him off. ¥aft, but this adviser Dick Moss 1'aid the situation was "a real downer for Tug." ··I know that for a fact because l talked to a lot of clubs ," he said. "I think I know what happened. Everyone was just sitting back waiting for someone else to go first. I think if someone else had drafted Tug, seven or eight or nine clubs would have come in. But since no one ''Obviously,'· Moss continued. "it's better for the club that signs him now , because they don't h ave to give up a n a mateur draft choice. This same thing has happened to a lot of pl ayers the last two years. But he's probably the biggest player it ever happened to." Moss sald in New York that •bat happened did not reflect a • NFLS NAMMlM. .. c-~EaENCE fi• W LT Pct. PF PA Philadelphia 9 1 0 .900 268 135 Dallas 7 3 O . 700 290 195 St.Louis 3 7 o .300 208 220 Washington 3 7 O .300 158 208 NY Gianta 2 8 0 .200 158 299 Detroit Mlnnesota Green Bay Tampa Bay Chicago Central 6 4 0 .600 210 188 5 5 0 .500 178 180 4 5 1 .450 155 204 4 5 1 .450 174 200 4 6 0 .400 169 172 West Atlanta 7 3 O . 700 264 189 •••• 6 4 0 .600 277 214 San Francisco 3 7 O 300 213 293 New Orleans O 10 O .000 168 310 AMERICAN CONFERENCE Eaat W LT Pct. PF PA New England 7 3 0 .700 288 221 Buffalo 7 3 O .700 224 175 Baltimore 5 5 O .500 221 211 Miami S 5 O .500 158 191 NY J'ew "2 81>--:200 176 243 Cleveland Houston Pitt11burgh Cincinnati Oakland San Diego Denver K"1sas City Seattle 'Central 7 3 0 .700 229 207 7 3 0 .700 195 178 6 4 0 .600 262 214 3 7 0 .300 142 187 West 7 3 0 .700 259 219 6 4 0 ,600 285 204 s 5 0 .500 180 198 5 5 0 .500 200 220 4 6 0 .400 195 229 ._.,.,o. ..... ,. • .,., ei H-Enei.ncs COWi,_, 2 •• 10 •. ,,, 1 lhlll-•• 0.ltOll BullelO M Cln<"'1Wll Cleve I-el PlttJburQll (CNl\MI ••I 10 • m 1 Gr .. n a.., el How Y-Glaf\1' Hew Orie-•I AllMll<I Pflllad91phla al Wtllll1>9t0tt 1 .,,,,. .. ., •I Ml-sota II. 1.-11 0.llH MO<lltofl 11 Chl<l90 Ka t1Ud City al San 01190 tCNllMI •ti l p.m. I Htw YoOJellat 01n•1• "" THE 1.981 ARE HEREI WE'RE DEALlll. IOWI for SUrf By CURT SEEDEN Of•IMllY,._IUH When the California Surf takes center stage t.onigbt for the 11•, North American Soccer League opener, they will have an unac- customed sight lo reckon with -fans. Nearly 11,000 of them wiU be in attendance at the Long Beach Arena, and most of them think they are going ,to see the Surf host the Vancouver Whitecaps. But in a last-minute change, the Surf will play host Lo the Portland Timbers, thanks main- ly to the the U.S. Immigration Service which will not issue vis- as to the Canadian players because of current negotiations between the owners and players of the North American Soccer League. Th~ National Labor Relations Board has been questioning the implementation of the indoor soccer season for the past several weeks. And the immi- gration office will not issue the visas until the matter is cleared up. So while club owners and the N ASL Players Association meet this morning, the league simply found the Surf a new opponent for tonight's opener which bas officially been declared a sellout. The Surf has even gone so far as to erect additional bleachers Angel staff a dds two more The Angels added two familiar names to their coaching staff Thursday, naming Tom Morgan as pitching coach and Merv Rel· tenmund as batting coach. Morgan was the pitching coach from 1972-1974 and Retten- mund played for the Angels in 1978, 1979 and part of 1980. In addition to working with the major league club, Rettenmund also will instruct each of the club's minor league affiliates. He had a .271 ,batting average during a 12-year career with Baltimore. Cincinnati, San Diego and the Angels. Morgan was primarily a relief pitcher and appeared in 443 games with a 67-47 record. He appeared in three World Series. all with the New York Yankees. Morgan was pitching coach for San Diego from 1975-76 and was with the Yankees' organixa- tion the past three years. which will hold an ad1llUonal 300 fans tonl•bt. The Surf has ahN•Y• COD· sldered itaell Orantoei County's best kept secret,' as evidenced by the team's low flt~ durtng the outdoor Eleason, but tbeNASL team is ce1 tain.ly wtn. Ding a few popularity contest.I in Loot Beach. BACKED BY BIG businesses and little mercbantu intent on continuing Long Bea11!h's imqe as an international c·!1ty. the Surf and the city have learned to compliment each other./ Lon g Beach g E:ti, a pro- fessional sporta te·a .rn; while the Surf gets an appr•,ciative au· dience -at least~r,r one game. What will happen 1:1 game two, no one really Imo s . Surf officials refuse Lo show any real outward excitement about their team 'is first-ever sellout, but director· of market- ing Tim Pearson admits there la some cautious opti. mism in Ute S u r f off i c e s a 1t A n a be i m Stadium. "I certainly can't. tell you bow exciting it is t.o de, .. eJop this type of grass roots supp•t>rt," be says. Pearson is refe ning to the Women's Pro Soccnr Committee which has been the catalyst behind the early ti ckel sale suc- cess . NO LESS T'llAN 30,000 American Youth Soccer Organization youngsters and team mothers rm m througbout Southern Califomiia have been contacted by the ·women's com- mittee. Using a type 01r pyramid pro- gram, the Surf. led by Don Schulte, director of sales and promotions , has enticed youngsters with Surf jacketa, newsletters, coolers and ticket discounts ln establi shing a direct communicatio11 with the thousands of A YSO teams in the area. Pearson says the women's committee is ruponslble for selling some 3,500' kids' tickets and another 2,500 actult tickets. Meanwhile. the Long Beach boosters club has been going about its busines u garnering s upport ever since August when the Surf announced it was mov- ing ib indoor gum es from Anaheim U>nventio.n Center to the Long Beach Arena. Watch Freedom 11 perform with ' the pros on NFL footbal'I teleicasts. The newest member of AC·De4co·s startino team comes on stron•;i. With more efficient startjng p<:>wer. More staying Power. Increased reliability. NOW IN STOCK 544.95 Freedom 11 Is available with corrosion-proof terminals and it features improved resistance to vibration damage for. increased reliability and mainter1ance-free performance. Freedom II. The beSt thing to hit batteries since Freedom was Invented. IN41t hntll,.ri11t CARQUHT A1rte '-'*" . -.. - OOTBALL Estancia short-Circuited Sweazy's four tds pace El Toro, 27-21 ., aooEaCA&UION ... ..., ...... ...., t-:stancla Kiah '1 E11les saw their nine-1amt • Min« 1treak in Sea View lAacue football action snapped Thur11. day nlCJ>l but there was some con· solaUon. Despite the 27·21 loss to El Toro the Ea1les still maintain a share of the championship. And they know they didn't see their wlnoing ways snapped by a Ouke. EL TOllO'S CHARGERS, paced by the unatopl)Jble Damon Sweazy, puuogether one of the finest ball-control offenses in this lea1ue's history in claiming a share ofthecrown .. The picture Cor the upcoming ClF .. Central Coaterehce playoffs remains somewhat cloudy. Each ls assured of a playoff berth, but if Corona del Mar de· feats Cotta Mesa torfight al Newport Harbor, \t wiU be a three-way cham- pionship and coinllips will decide the lea,ue's No. 1, 2 and 3 representatives. I Coeta Mesa wins, then El Toro is the league's No. l , Estancia would be No. 2 and Costa Mesa No. 3 as the third· place team. Those designations mean a lot. The !~ague's No. l representative is assured of a home game in the first round of the playoffs against another league's No. 3. and No. 3s are on the road at No . ls. Those in the No. 2 slots are paired against one another with a coinflip to decide the home team. As for El Toro's victory over Estancia Thu~day al Mission Viejo High, well, it was just a matter of the too- quick Swe.azy, behind a solid front line that repeatedly beat Estancia 's defense, stabbing the Eagles with unbelievable consistency. SWEAZY SCORED all four El Toro touchdowns, going in from 9, SS, 11 and ~ yards. He finished the night with 252 yards on 33 carries . An example of the Chargers' effec· liveness came at the outset of the third quarter as El Toro came from a 14·13 halftime deficit to thoroughly dominate the second half. ••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Urge"t year-end clearance : dlctcites this drastic Monarchs t11mble It took El Toro just si~·plays to move 75 yards as Sweazy rambled for gains of 13 and 12 yards, quarterback Bryan Douglass carried 11 yards on a broken play, then Sweazy for 15 yard~. Jim Eldridge churned for 13 yards a nd Sweazy burst over from the 11. .. The line did a great job," exclaimed El Toro Coach Bob Johnson. "But Damon is that good. He had the holes. but he has the moves, too. He's been do· ing thjs all year long." : price-cut off er! . ..._ ________________________ ~--~ Playoff lwpes dashedin2'J.14defeat : 1"' CHECK! Is your new By CRAIG RUSSELL 01 tM Dally Pllet Sta" Playing before a standing room only crowd of close to 9,000. the Servile High Friars shattered Mater Oei High's playoff hopes with a convincing, 20·14, victory on Homecoming night at La Palma Park in Fullerton. blocked, so Mater Dei went into the lockerroom trailing at the halftime, 10-6. ESTANCIA COULDN'T move the ball • 198 0 ch L UV on the next series and the Chargers were • evy at it again, this time moving 44 yards in a THE SECOND HALF was a defensive (or lack of offense) struggle as it took nearly an entire quarter before either team could get a first down. Servile finally did and it began a 49-yard touchdown drive that was culiminaled v:ith a 12-yard pass from Angelici to Todd Hart. Hart, who lives in San Juan Capistrano, was an all league selection las t year a nd one of only three s tarters returning from last year's Friar squad. dozen plays. • The Eagles got within range when • • t k 1 • t d h , Jim Mccahill found Jaime Aiken from • m1n1-rue IS e ere. two yards out to cap a 67-yard march. As a result of the loss, the Monarchs, losers of five of their last seven games, finish 'the season in fourth place in the Angelus ~ague Cl·3, 5·4·1 overall) and completely out of the CIF playoff pie· lure. paring the count lo 27·21 with 9: 13 left. • But El Toro's ball-control was too much, Estancia never got the ball back • Serial s hoved the ball down our throats and Cab & Chassis, 4 spd. trans., ext. Invoice* The Friars, on the other hand, with only a 3.7 overall record (on the field Servite is 5·5 but were forced to forfeit two wins because of a CIF ruling), are in the thick of playoff consideration because or their third place league finish (2·2). In the fourth quarter, Vucurevic kicked a 43-yard field goal for a 20·6 lead before Mater Dei took advantage o( a Servile fumble to make it exciting. a~~~~ just couldn't stop them," said • Numbe Model and how equipped Estancia Coach Ed Blanton. "They •• 6056 handled us up front. They were better decor pkg,, etc. than us tonight." • ---~-----------+--"----+-r~~~=--= In the second half El Toro controlled • 7099 Pickup, long box, radio, step the clock to the tune of 18:30 to 5:30. BUT SINCE THE Angelus ls only a rive-team league this season, it does not receive the three automatic berths that other leagues receive. Servile will just have to wait and see whether the CIF office will choose to take them as the third team from the traditionally tough league. It took less than four minutes for the Friars to get on the scoreboard as quarterback Gino Angelici hit Paul Reilly with a 10-yard touchdown pass. Following the conversion the Friars led 7-0 and never looked back. Servile extended its lead Lo 10·0 on a Nick Vucurevic fi eld goal before Ma ter Dei finally got on the scoreboard with a Ke vin H iggins two-yard touchdown run. The extra point was The fumble occurred with just over twq min1-1tes remaining in the game. Taking over at the Servile 18-yard line, the Monarchs took just three plays to score as quarterback Tom Baine passed to Mike Trotter for the score. Mater Dei went for two and converted when Baine hit Mark Schafer. That cul the Servile lead to 20·14. SO WITH ONLY 1:27 left in the game, everybody in the stadium looked for the on-side kick. They got it and so did Mater Dei as Dave Scherf pounced on the loose football on the Friar 41 -yard line. But Mater Dei was put to rest when Baine was sacked twice for long losses and then, facing third and long, Hart intercepted a desperation pass. NOVEMBER . bumper, ' spd. trans., etc. EL TORO DOMINATED earlier , too, • with Sweazy's stabbing runs, but the • 5555 Pickup, std . box, ' spd. trans., Eagles struck for a pair of second .,.. ... bum t quarter touchdowns to gain their 14·13 raulO, Si~p per, e C. halftime bulge. • ---1---_,:_ _ _:.__;_ ____ +~L...:;_;.._h~-::-::-:- Bob Urmson scored twice from a yard • 7331 out. the second time with 49 seconds left in the t\alf after Abel Cachola tipped a • --~j...!.!~:!.....'!..::L....::::.:.:i:~...!:.!.::::._ __ +....-..._i...-.11-t---'.__ _ __. pass. then intercepted it, to set the • 0986 Pickup, long box, ' spd. trans., Eagles up on El Toro's 44. d. t bu A pair of fourth-down passes by ra IO, Sep mper, etc. M cCahill, 15 yards to Aiken and 16 • --~~-----------+---~....--i-T~--::::-::-=: yards to Cachola kept the drive alive. • 9452 Pickup, long box, 4 spd. trans., But Sweazy and his front line. which step bumper, radio, etc . consistently opened gaping holes for the • --~~-----------+-----+--:----­~~Trisler, took control in the second • 5937 Chassis cab with utility body & ·'IL was our best offensive game of the overloads cost of which is added year.," said Johnson. who takes his • to Invoice, 4 spd. trans., etc. team into the playoffs with cham · pionship credentials despite nine • 3369 I bo '.,,... t juniors on offense. including Sweazy --• Pickup, ong x, ¥'• rans., radio, steQ. bumper, etc. • 2324 4 wheel drive pickup, 4 spd. .. trans., air cond., radio, step bum· e per, stripes, etc. •• 8208 ' wheel drive pickup, air cond ., radio, step bumper,'~. trans ., e Mikado, etc. Prica Good thru NovembtJr 16, 1980 •• 0528 'wheel drive pickup, air cond ., 4 s7,313 $7,213 •• spd. trans., radio, step bumper, Battery e stripes, etc. e •• 2829 'wfteel drive pkkup, radio, step s7,01 a $6,918 .•• bumper, A spd. trans., Mikado, Spark Plug 36 Month GN S6f'itJs 12 Volt 12FC. 24C, 14F, 11NF regular type 79~ Resistor type .............. 95~ ea. VALVDLINE MOTOR mL mWti,.. 10-40 ctJIWflllitlnt , glllan ,.,tic ;u, . 3'' ~i)~ 1'51111" Sport Grip Lacs-on SIBtllillfl WhBBI Cam II OUNCE 1'' . CIBaner. •• ~tan ;215 Jet Flate common punctuta iMtantly II efflctiwJ/y. ua~-r ~ ~ iiRO'PuGHT12V · ... 20'CORD .Jt a5 :t~ .J~JO 9 Jli ~:::~ NOW 9. 11 Oz. ..... .. ONLY Motorcraft -IOR5'm long life Oil Riter COSTA MESA -South Coast Auto Supply, g 688 W. BAKER (at Bristol) 556 -2500 ftEWPORT BEACH -United Auto Parts, 2902 w·. Coast Hwy. 646-1647 ..... ra.. ~,.. ... ~ Complete New York Stocks. . Delivered same day frtsh to ~l doorstep 8 I DAit v 1'11..0 r Saddleback seeb title Gaucho• face RCC; Rustlers, • vie ELA •1 C\JllT ll:ID&N ................ A MIM'M Oonf•NDct t hamp&ouhlp 11 wltblD Lb• 1rHP• of Sadclleback eou. ... wtU&e Golden Weit muat tan11e tWiUa another one of tbote DO·name Soa1Nrn Cal Conference aquada U. Saturday ll11ht'a junior eoll• tootball action. Game time ia 7:30 for both CCJD· teau. lhanW'hlle, Oran1e Coaat Colle1e take• the •ee.k off to uvor last week'• 1urprisJ.nc 31-19 triumph over Gross- mont. Here's what's in store for the Rustlers and Gauche» Saturday: E.e8t LA •t Go .. n W.8t A promiaing quarterback and a solid d efense sparks the Huaklea of Coach Gil RozadiUa who boast only a 2.S overall record but find themselves ln third place in the Southern Cal Conference with a 2-1 mark. Two of the Huskies' losses were to two of the tougher JC teams In Southern California. Cerritos. which leads the South Coast Conference with a 6-1 over- aJl record, could pull out only a 14·10 victory against the stubborn Huskies, while equally potent. Long Beach struggled to a 17-10 verdict over East LA. to lhl'\ll off LA Soulhwfft last week, wbUe other1 had chalked up a GWC win, aa4 the Rustlers jual did pulJ out a H · 14 tie .wlth the Cougan. "I tr led to tell everybody a bout them." Shackleford aays of lbe Cou1an. "Everyone for1ot that LA Southwest upiet Pasadena (this year's No. 1 rated southland JC team> laat year. "I think this is 1olng to be one lood football came. It certainly won 't be a rout," he adds. Eaat LA ls led by Terrance Hen- derson, who was a defensive back last • JCFO<Tr&4LL plenty of action off the bench in the GWC backfield as well. Rlverekle •t S.dclteb9ck RI verside is the only thing atandlnt between the Gauchos and another Mia· sion Conference crown. With a 3-1 mark, however, the Tigers are certainly .not out of contention. "This game ia what we've been play- ing for all season," admitf Saddleback Coach Ken Swearingen. '•1t•1 a ctlance to win our conference and every year that's our .coal." Riverside snuck into the playoff pic- ture last week compliment.a of a 14·3 triudlph over Southwestern. And Satur- day night's game pits the Mission Con- ference's No. 1 rushing team (Riverside> against t.be No. 1 defense against the year but waa switched to QB at the begin· rush in Saddleback. ningofthisseason. The 'ngers are avera&lnl 194.6 yards Henderson is averagin& nearly 80 on the IJ"OUDd, while SaddJeback is al- yarda per aame in total offense, and is lowing just under 40 yards per aame a much more dangerous runoer than rushing. So, in the making is an of. passer. A sophomore from Verbum Del fensive tug-of-war which just could de- Hlgh, Henderson rushed for 70 yards cide a Mission Bowl berth. and passed ror 84 in laat week's 19-9 Quarterback Ron Jeglum has rushed triul'l)ph over Los Angeles CC. for 371 yards on 73 carries this season, The GWC defense wlll also have to while running back Lance Reed has col· cope with Horacio Davila whose two · r h field goals preserved the Huskies' win lected 353 yards on 83 cames or t e last week. Tigers. Shackleford will stick with the same "He's a good one," Swearingen says backrleld he has used in the last two of Jeglum. And Swearingen s hould games. namely Sam Aiello at QB and know. Jeglum originally planned to at· , .. ~, adeboe Lincoln· Mercury Irvine Call Patrick Thomas 114/830-7000 Inspired by a '36 Mercedes Benz. this claSalc new beauty has a GM 3.8 lite< v.a powerttain and GM chassis. The Centaur Is almo8t entirety handmade. Sculpting of the body, in&erior leather detailing and shaping of the inch-thick solid mahogany dash aie hand done as are mosk>f the luxury appointments. THE' ROADSTER Standard equipment Includes; automatic ltansmission. power steering, disc brakes, air ex>nditlonlng. chrome wire wheels. AM/FM stereo cassette. Delivered, in Catifomla. IOI' 129.600. Tax, license and documentary lees are not included. &b Lo1*Jre, I~ "Anytime you have a team that plays strong defense, you can be sure it's go- ing to be in the game." says GWC Coach Ray Shackleford. Shackleford should know. He refused running backs Mike Teregis and Sam tend SaddJeback after high school but Hie• or leealng-l.ew Spruence .(714) 636-2500(714)112-1161 Cen~~~-Danny Wiggins sho~~d~s~ee~~-~cl~e~c~~~to~r~cl~u~rn~to~hi~s~h~o:m:e~to~wn~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- 13600 Beach Blvd., Wntmlneter, C•. ·Beginningorend?IP.!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ League finales Will decide tonight I By ROGER CARLSON Ol tto. O.lly P'I ... St.ft It's the end for some, the beginning for others, as the 1980 regular season comes to an end tonight for Sunset. Sea View and South Coast League football. Among the schedule are such tradi· tional rival games as Costa Mesa and Corona del Mar. University a nd Irvine a nd Dana Hills a nd San Clemente. A league championship is at stake at Mission Viejo where upstart Laguna Beach goes for its first crown in 12 years. And ClF playoff berths are at stake on many fronts. Costa Mesa's Mustangs are expect- ed to bring their pet toad to their Sea View League collision with rival Corona del Mar -a tradition that has catapulted the Mustangs lo three straight victories over Corona del Mar. Corona del Mar can gain a share of the Sea View League championship tonight with a victory -but a loss would put Costa Mesa into the No. 3 slot for the CJ F playoffs, leaving Corona del Mar out. After setting three school records last week CChris Bright's 9()-yard kickoff return, Bill Bright's 87-yard run from scrimmage and Scott Swan's 38-yard fi eld goal), the Sea Kings are hopeful of m aintaining their new·foWld offense. Quarterback Clay Tucker leads the Sea Kings, boasting s tats which in- clude 77 completions on 149 tries, good for 909 yards a nd four touchdowns. Costa Mesa counters with all- purpose quarterback Greg Teregis, who operates the quick pass Mustang offense des pite shoulder. thigh and ankle injuries. Teregis' stats: Six games. 70 com· pletions on 127 attempts. 837 yards U CI scrimmages UC Irvine basketball rans will be able to catch a sneak preview of Bill Mulligan's squad Sunday ni1ht when the Anteaters hold their Blue and Gold intrasquad game at Crawford Hall. · Mulligan has been running his players ragged over the past month in preparation of the team's opener ~-_..gaj_nst VMI, Nov. 29 at UCJ. Sunaay's scrimmage w111 unveil UCl 's entire 16-man squad including 6-8 postmen Kevin Magee and Grant Taylor, freshman Ben McDonald and guard Kevin Fuller. The exhibltio'1 is free to the public and tipoff ls slated for 7 . and nine touchdowns. Elsewhere, Newport Harbor can wrap up a Cl F playoff berth at Westminster, Laguna Beach has an opportunity to win the South Coast League crown at Mission Viejo, San Clemente. must win to stay in conten- tion for a CIF playoff berth, and Marina holds out bope for a berth in the playoffs. Tonight's Games (7:30) Sunset League Newport Harbor at Westminster Fountain Valley at Huntington Beach Marina vs. Edison at Orange Coast College Sea View League Costa Mesa vs. Corona del Mar at Newport Harbor University at Irvine Sotdb Coast League Laguna Beach at Mission Viejo Dana Hills at San Clemente Laguna Beach at Mission Viejo Mazatlan Race: slow beginning getting slower By ALMON LOCKABEV o.lly P'!Mt lkMit1• Writff How slow is slow? A quick answer to that question would come from a glance at the progress of the 999-mile Los Ange lea to Mazatlan yacht race. After five days or sailing the lead yachts were slightly past the halfway point Thursday with some of the slowest going yet to come. The fleet leader at Thunday·s IS a.m. rollcall was Brad Herman's Secret Love with S73 miles logged since the start. Two miles astern were Morrie JOrk's Hana Ho (Balboa Yacht Club> and the scratch boat, Ragtime, out of Long Beach Yacht Club. For the fir\t time since the start laat Saturday. the lead yachts had logged a 200-mile day's run. Ragtime showed the best run with 220 miles. Ironically, Ragtime is the elapsed time record holder, finiahln1 the race in s days, 7 hours in 1978. The.lead.yacht.a were aWl about uo miles north of Cape San Lucas at the tip of Baja California where skippers and crews can expect to be stalled in utremely light airs. lleporta from the Gulf of California, the laat 200· mile leg of the race, indicated light and variable winds of about two knots :rhursday. f r8dlo· ~- ' This weeks Special .WIDE AREA COVERAGE Or .... C...S,. L.A. C.... cy .............. c..ty. ....,. ... ('....,, lm CADILLAC SEVILLE '17.75 Leather «>vend ... tin., 50/SO dual ~mfort aeata, and AM/FM awreo with lape.(471908 1. 1 1W '·.1 I 1 JI "'• f 't Ii( \ I ' t > ~ t ._ ' •I ·, ,,. '7995 . .. • ClllllltV ............. ..,_........ .......... I • AIO... ..... "-,...., "6t Al ,,_.,..,,..., & U-. ' rr:i: ... -a . . . . . 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Mm "ALL-c:GURT" IMOES ...... ,l ................. 21.15 14.88 .. a~AlmAl "•LAHI" '2 ~ ... , ................... 31.ft 9.88 • ·~ ''CUlllC" ., DHrllll hHll •HUI _., 88 c..-................. 11.lf .. . sm1TH ... uu am IOllLE "~fet-r ...... : ...... 21.10 10.88 . ~ ....... .....,,. . 1111 _, '*C.... .......... 11.H 12.18 SCOTTmNW ' • .................... n.• 13'11 j J \ \ I ~ l • • I FrldeV, NoYember 14, 1980 - . DEL THEHI I THE VERY NEW TOYOTASTAR• ET The 1981 Toyota Starlet is the highest gas mileage car you can buy. Period. In tact, . · Starlet just may be the first small wonder of the world. Because Starlet represents the culmination of years and years of planning, honing and refin- ing. Born small, Starlet is a car capable of solving tor:norrow's big problems. Born small to deliver more miles per gallon of gas than any other car. According to the latest EPA mileage figures, Starlet goes farther on a gallon of gas than any other car you can buy. Helping to squeeze all those miles out of every gallon are such standard features as~ ' * a miserly 1.3 liter engine, an ultra smooth 5-speed manual overdrive transmission, elec- tronic ignition system and steel-belted radial tires. Bom small and designed to help beat tomorrow's higher maintenance costs. The new Starlet is design- ed and built from Toyota's most p roven parts and technology. With millions of passenger- driven miles. the Starlet's pcmer plant could be the most reliable, most dependable Toyota engine ever. The 1981 Toyota Starlet. The newest, smallest, most wondrous Toyota of all. And maybe, the fi rst small wonder of the world. THE NEW FRONT-WHEEl:DRIVE COROLLA TERCEL According to the latest EPA mileage figures, the 1981 Toyota Corolla Tercel is the highest gas mileage front- wheel-drive car you can buy in California. Big on comfort. Once behind the wheel, you'll be amazed how every- thing has been placed for com- fort and ease of ac~essibility. Plus, no other small front- wheel-drive car offers you more front leg room. ·The Star1e1 is rateo at@EPA EST MPG 50 EPA EST HWY MPG "'The Terce1 15 rated a1@ EPA EST MPG 48 EPA EST HWY MPG Rernemoe• Compare Jh•s EPA es11ma1e 10 ine EPA Es11ma1eo MPG of other QiJ<;o hnc.powereo cars w1m manual 11ansm1ss1ons You may gel d1fleren1 mileage oepeno1ng on h().N fdsl you Om1e wcalher cono111ons ano 111p 1e11q1h Actual highway mileage will probably be less 1tian lhe EPA Highway Es1oma1e ** Pulls Its own weight. The 1981 Toyota-Corolla Tercel pulls you through with a "peppy" 1.5 liter 4-cylinder engine. A 4-speed manual trans- mission with direct shift linkage. Rack and pinion steering and four-wheel independent suspension. The 1981 Toyota Corolla Tercel delivers more miles per gallon of ,gas than any other QH front-wheel-. A\r drive car you wu can buy. ~ FEElltNG . TOYOTA -- Ratings at ~take, V, football teams both • can gain 81ra&D80TBSNBEIG .,...,......, T•lt vislon hu UI rl1bt -h6R lt w~t.a us on N•w ear't Day -eoc>bun,overt.oleaye bQule. With eapUve TV audlenc•. the oetworlu know the lm· rtaoee ol the Jan. 1 bowl 1a1Df1. They aJao know at four 1ames on lhr~e nttwotb afford the •top· , unity to compare the merit. ol the tporta pnsen· . tlouonABC,CBSandN8C. So, with bowl bida goin1 out Saturday, here's me important Information about the New Year's a y extrava1anzaJJ. Su1arBowl ABC baa th.is one for 1981 and '82, with options the ext two years. The Sugar Bowl i• the chea~t New ear's aame at $2 million, even lbouab at's been, · gmaker three of the last four seasons, crowrun1 itt No. 1for 1976 and Alabama national champion in Sand '79. One spot automatically eoes to the winner of the utheutem Conference. Alabama qualified tbe ast two years when Georcta was lmoclredoutof con· ntion by Auburn. That tickled ABC because labama, a bigger football name, owned a hieher nking. SPOKIS ON TY This time , the spiked shoe is on the other foot. BC would Jove top·riJnked Georgia to overcome its ubum jinx and win Saturday. The scenario then ould have Georgia and the winner of' Saturday's atchup between No. 5 Alabama and No. 6 Notre ame traveling to New Orleans for a possible na· on al title game Jan. 1. · Kickoff is 2 p.m. EST, creating an audience split Ith the Cotton Bowl starting at the same time. The ugar Bowl was played New Year's Eve from 2·75, but not many people realized it. Even the labama.Noti:e-Dame national championship game 1973 was a ratings bust, losing to all th.ree games e nextday. . Dec. 31 was created for a lot of' things, but not tbaU. Cottoa Bowl . CBS is rooting for Georgia to lose. That would ean unsung Mississippi State or Louisiana State oes to the Sugar Bowl. But CBS isn't singing any allelujahs over its expected home team in the Cot· n Bowl, Baylor. For Baylor to clinch the Southwest Conference's ost spot in Dallas, it merely nHds to tie Rice Satur· ay or Texas the following week, setting up a Jan. 1 ame against Ala ba ma, No. 3 f1orida State or Notre a me. . Baylor isn't a big TV draw and the bowls don't ink F1orida State can carry a national broadcast I ke two.time defending champion Alabama or I gendary Notre Da me, the team immortalized by onald Reagan, cast as George Gipp in "Knute ockne -All American." But the Cotton Bowl is aryofNotre Da me still losingtoSoutbernCal. CBS, doing iLc; 24th consecutive Cotton Bowl , most lost the gam e to NBC two years ago. NBC. ith the Orange and Rose bowls, suggested the Cot. t6n hop aboard so NBC cou1d ·'bowl America over.'' _ The folks in Dallas almost bought the pitch. CBS -wj.s forced to rajse its payment to $3.5 mjllion and nt w loses money on the game. But it couldn't af'ford t<(be shut out on college football's big day. ~ One good tum de!~~!'::ther. Now CBS is try· m to take the Rose Bowl from NBC, which pa.id S2.2S m lion in 1975 and has been '18ying $3.3 million since 1 8. Meanwhile, rights fees for lt\e otbel' three g es have tripled over the past five years, malling t prestigious Rose Bowl red·hot and red·faced. So the Rose Bowl, playing ca tch up, sought bids fr m the networks for the 1983 game. CBS, calling the million figure artif'icialJy low, won the first r nd with a one-shot $7.2 million bid with no future o ions. NBC had until today to match the CBS bid. rces said NBC can't a Cford to Jose this property would strike a deal. ABC and NBC were appalled at the more than percent bid increase and were concerned about the offer would affect negotiations for other nts. Given the projected sports advertising sales r es for 1983, CBS would lose money. But, then in, it would gain prestige for having ~-e Rose I and fo r taking It away fromthe compeUtion. And if CBS is going to lose money in a Jan. 1 bowl, Sac......._,. 1'1', llMI• TICLB,_,., t a.ID. (7) -COLtHS root'llALL P8B· GAME 8801'. t :30 a .m. (7) -COLLSGS toonAl.L-'l1ae Purdue BolJermalllera play tile Mle•11a_. ·wo1vertnet in• Bt1 Ten••• at Anll~n~eh. 12:45 p.m. (7) -COLLDJ& ti · - Tbe Notte Dame '11bltDS lrtlb n . ta.. Alabama Crimaan 'nde in Btrm.lnOam, Ala. 1 p.m. (22) -IOCCsa -Hambut'1 va. Leve~. taped at IAftrhMD,~ $:30 p.m. (I) -IPOafl.. ._ Dale llamhardt and Cale Y~ · tbtlr nlp-and·t~ battle for NASCAR'I Orucllfa· tloaal cba1DpkJmlaip lD Oatario. Allo: Put a of tlN Battle ol the N~ Claeetleaden. 4 p.m. (4) -8PO&TIWOILD -rapee tov· erase ot the nnt m-1ot tradr and new meet held ln the People's Republic of Cldna. Allo: Tbe >ro skiln' cbamptonabJp Httea and NlbU'blaJ action la the Lecenda of Bowllq. s p.m. (2) ~n. aEvtn AND P&SVDW. (28 )-80CCEr." 11 p.m. (5) -COLLEGE FOOTSM.L - UCLA vs. Arizona State. &ADIO 1 Football -Nebraska at Iowa, 11 :ID a.111., KIEV (870); Notre Dame at Alabamf_z 12:to e.:!lt.i KOGO (800); Wublnaton at USC, 1:• p.IQ., ~ (1070); San Dfeeo State at Texu-EJ Pad, 5:30 p.m., KFMB (780); UCLA at Arisona State, 1 :30 p.m .. KMPC (710); Utah State v•, Lons Beach State at Anaheim Stadium, 7:30 p.m., KNAC (105.5 FM ); Cal State Fullerton at San Joee Ststt, 7:30 p.m., KWRM (1370); Riverside al Saddleback, 7:30 p.m., KSBR <•.5 FM>. Hockey -St. Louts at Kinp, 7 p.m ., KOGO (600). Su1ulc11f'• Tl', Ratll• TE LB VISION 9:30 a.m. (2) -NFL TODAY -Seamenu in· elude a feature on some of the top youna QBa cur· rently playing in the NFC. (4) -Nn. ... - Scheduled segments include a profile on George Halu ol the Chicago Bean. 9:'5 a.m. (34) -FtJTBOL SOCCEa -Mexico vs. Canada. 10 a .m. (2) -NFL FOOrlLU.L -The Loe Angeles Rams meet the Patriots in Foxboro, Mass. (4) -Nn. FOO'l"BALL -Tbe Clevela.ftd Browns meet the Steelers in Pittsbureh. 11 a .m . (50) -80CCE& MADE IN GE&MANY. 1 p.m. (4) -Nn. FOOl'BALL -The itansas City Chiefs meet the Chargen in San Diego. 4 p.m. (7) -COLLEGE FOOTBALL '81 - Highlights oC games played this weekend. (9) - COLLEGE FOOTBALL -The Wasbin1ton Huskies vs. the USC Trojans, played Saturday in the Coli!eum. .. :30 p .m . (7) -GaEATBST SPO&TS LEGENDS -A tribute to Peay Flemm~ tbe 1986 Olympic figure skating champioo. 6 p. m. ( 2 > -PRO FOOTBALL ftAP·UP. 11 p.m. (22) -NOTaB DAIR POOTIA.LL - A replay of the Notre Dame-Alabama 1ame played Saturday in Binninpam, Ala. 8ADIO Football -Rams at Ne• En1Jand, l() a.m., KMPC (710); Kansas City at San I>tero, l p.at .• KSDO (1130). Basketball -Dallas at Laters, 6:50 p.m .. KLAC(570). Hockey -Kings at Vancouver, 7:05 p.m ., KOGO (800). (Tiie Dally Pilot la Ht retPM,4lble for late ebagea.) NOW AVAILABLE Mfnf Office Rental S.rvlc" Include •Le< ........ Mtft .-.. --•T.....-.-. •ce• ... -·1-..... 1 •U--.. -· ·-, ........ -. •lee--• •1:4,.r . ....-..... _ .. _ ACT NOW, SPACE LIMITED «••_,.,.. __ .._, POSTAL BOX Mustangs favored at prelirns · Cost.a Meta H18b'• cross COUD· try tealbl -top·seeded in the CIF 4-A claaaification ln the men and women's divtalons, lead the field at Saddleback Colle1e Saturday u tbe CIF preUma 1et underway. The lil'tt ra,ce la at 9:20 a .m., with tbe final race bltled for 12:50 oa a day which includes four diviaiona ror both. There wl1l be three races in eadl diviilon with the top f~ teams and individuals in each quallfYlne for the finals at the aamestte. The top..teeded teaDU in the men'• dlvtaloa are Costa Mesa Cf·A>. Mater Del U ·A >. Barstow <2·A > and Sberman In· dian (l·A>. Women'• division top·aeeds are Costa Mesa, (f ·A >. San Marino (3·A>, Alemany <2·A> and Sherman lndJan U·A). A mone the individuals featured are Edison Hi&h's Jon Butler, Univer1lty'1 Polly Plumer and La1una Beach's Linda Booth and Rennie Dur· rand. SOUTH COAST PLAZA ) F,....p..,,_a1 SEV ANO'S COLUMN. • • a home run. She was really lrn· pressed." "Yeah, but did she talk any numbers?". •'Ob, yuh, sure she did. She talked about the number of func· tlona she bad to attend this week. And sbe also mentioned some figures about all the money ahe's making." ''That's fine. But what about ME? l>ld she-mention any num· be,. concem.lns m~?" · "(Ring. ring). She certainly did. Justa minute. "HeUo. Why Georgia, we were just talking about you. I'm here with the running back we were diacuulog tbe other evening. He'd like to know some num· be rs. "You have some. Great. He'll be happy to hear that. What are they? 3·4·5·0·5·"<>·0. Tha nks Georgia. I'll get back to you later." "I CAN'T BELIEVE it. $3,450,500. How many years is that over?" said the player. This is the greatest thing that's ever happened to me. When can we sign the contract? I'm ready any time you are." "What a minute. Wait a minute. She wasn't offering you a contract. She was just repeat· ing your phone number to me. Sbe said she'd set back to yoti m a week or t.,. In the meant.lille, she told me to i.u you to b•" a n1ce da.J." How accurate wu thia? Hot very, More than aafthJn1 e1" It was trying to prove a ~t. Without revealln1 tbe nam• ol players surveyed, they aU' dicated, without exception, t manaeemeht is willing to about everything except a C!Ob· tract. And you wonder why the team is havin1 problems? * • • It's going to be lnterestlnl to see how the Rams play this &m· day. Many feel, includina. u.e coaches, that New l!n1Jand a. a do·or·die game for the def'~ NF.C champions. I'm ~till convinced this te,@D can whip anybody in the NJ'L when it wants to. But that's j.aat the point, do they want to? • • • An informed source bu told me that the Rams will defin.i&lly NOT be sold for at least twa years . The same source also ~ th a t Georgia's busballd, DominJc, has a lot more input into team affairs than most peo. pie thinlt. This Weeken~ Onlyl By ,. ... '-'" c f • CORDUROY Three Pc. Vested SUITS 599 Reg. $155 •Four Colors T p Choose From •Sizes 36 Short To 46 Long COSTA MESA (714) 54().1502 ,• te r to lose it with the RosethantheCotton . The Rose Bowl, alone in the late afternoon, gets best ratings. The 1981 game, on NBC for the 30th c secutl ve year, could suffer since neither No. 2 them Cal nor No. 17 UCLA is eligible bec'auae of recent records scandal. That gives unranked shingt.on the inside t rack from the Pacific 10. It's s I possible that Washington State, with a 5-6 rec· 3'9 E. 17th St. Suite 21. Co1ta MeH gi,.,.,,, The Ti me STAR J o , could get to Pasadena . The Big Ten team will be Ohio, Purdue or chigan, all 6-0 in the league and each with t~o erence games left -M ich.igan. Purdue and Ohio te·Iowa Saturday, Ohio State-Michigan and rdue·lndJana Nov. 22. Oraage Bowl ABC lost this game to NBC in 1965. ABC, which ugbt u.s the pros in prime time, was wary of doing Orange Bowl under the Miami moon. ABC bad t a bundle on a Jerry Lewis show and didn't want gambl~ on nighttime football. NBC-took the nee and now pays the Orange Bowl $2.885 million. The Big Eight c hampion, probably the O lahoma-Nebraska winner, 1et.s an automatic in· v tion. Its opponent? The loser of' the Alabama· N treDameeame or, maybe, FloridaState. POSTAL BOXES NOW AVAILABLE TO THE PUBLIC!!! WHERE? AT MAILBOX WESTCLIFF In PMwpott hKfl ,5 Right tor Cadillac ~ COSTA ME~ (714) 5 40·9 I 00 (2 l 3) 587 -8266 *' Postal Box Rental (with our prestigious street address) *' Phone in Mail Check (no wasted trips). 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The frugal JOQSD sets n~w ' performance standards with its incredible, turbocharged. five cylinder engine. · Be ,our auest to carefully examine these exceptional automobiles on Saturday. Novem - ber IS and Stsnday. Nove"!ber 16th . .Mission Viejo linPQ11S ) J I Authorized Mercedes-Benz Dealer 21711 Mupertte Parkway (1·5 at Avery). Million V~ CA 92692 '' . '; (71 .. ) 131·17• (114) 4'5-1'70t . • ,., ... ' ••• t FOR THE RECORD I VOLLEYBALL For the record ~ . . ,_ ACllNT DMf'T ........ u..... IM., .... Oll ..... 1, O.w ....._.., ef. J. e>.,.. w. R-m. l ·iftt. J, J"" ~. t M '-•.Mike C ........ IM.t. ,,_..,....._ .. •.Jlltft .. /\lqut1,ot.1. J9Mla.111Mr,.,.l.,I. RoyM-11, lnt.J.Jtrrv ......... eOITOee•eDIOK 1. ~Mw....,.,, t . a.. u-.ot. CM.l~IAUNU I. 0...""*'. ill• J. e 111 Trtwtn , p. J. OM· ,.II...,._, c 4 JtlWI O'A<CllllSIO, p, S o. .. WIAfielf. Ill. e.. Dell 5-illfter, p. 1 Geoff ~ • ._ L De• W. Rom(U. c-l11f. •. MMty ,tttlilt, P. 10. J-ilt!I...,, ot II. $Mill .....,_, P. tJ, e111 St9ln, ll1f. CMICAeO WMITe IOJC I. O•r,.11 PorWr, C J. 0. .. W. 11-'11, C· Inf. l. Jlfft ........ c. •· Roy H-11. Int. s. JIM Ow-,ff,of.111. .. 1.efl A-It, lnl.1. M>llt ~. lllf. L llUllf S-. ol·I'-t. JI*> ~1-. ... 10. •111 Slltln, Int. II. Ron U FIOr't, ot. U. Miile Sede41, c. IS. Dell 1111111-.111. Q.aYU.AND INOtANI I. 0... Mtln, ill• t. o. .. Wll'lfleld, of. l . e 111 Trt~ p. 4, Geoff Z-. p, S. Jclvn O'AC4'11•, p, 6. Roy H-H, Inf. 1 RUllY S~. of.Ill. L J11en .... lque1, of. t. Jim 0wf9r, Of.Ill. 10. P.t KtllY, Of. oeTROIT TIGERS NO Ml«llont. ltAIUAS CITY ROY AU No M'-< tlon9. MILWAUICee eR•w•RS I . Dell Sutton. p. 2. Jotll'I D'Acqul110, p, l. Roy 14-11. Inf.•. O.rrell Porter, c. S. Jim Ow.,..., of·lb. t . Mike CtlllDeee. 11'11. 1. J im l11le11, c. I. 0-w. ROC1trt1, <·Inf. 9. Oef Unser, of, 10. Ed Ff9uero•, p, MINNHOTA TWINS No setec:tlons. N•WYOttK YANICl •S I. Dew wtl'lfleld, of. 2. Oon S.Unon, p. J. Claudell Washlnolon, of. '· D•ve W. RoOer1s, c-lnt. s. JOhn O'Acqulsto, p. •· J im Dw,.r, Of.lb. 7. Rusty SC.uCI, Of.Ill. I. Geoff Z.tln, p. '· em cas1ro. p. 10. Roy H-•. Inf. OAltLANOA'S I. O•rrell Pa<1ff, c. J. 11111 Ceslro, p, l. Roy H.._tt, Inf.• Biii Tr..,tf'S, p S. M•l1y Pattin, p. SU TTL• MARINeRS 1. Jim Eulan,c. J. oa .. w. Roberts, c-lnf. l. Left R ...... Inf. '· Miii• c.-oe. inf. s. Oan Spit-. p. 6. 8 111 Tra..,s, p. 1. Biii CH lro, p, L Matty Pattin, P. t Ray Burri•. p, 10. J-Jotter_,, p II. J -MoralH, of. n. AYStY s-. Of.ii. TUlAS RAMO•RI I. Goof! z-. p. 1. Don Sutton, p. ). J im Inio n, c. •. Biii Trt,..r•, p. S. Jim Dwyer, Of·lb. •· e lll Ctstro, p, 7. Rey Burris, p_ L MIO It-, lllf. t. Wittie -.ene1, ID. 10. Oen $tNll,...., p, 11. SIM eallntel\, p. 12. e 111 Sleln, 1111. IJ. Mike Sadeto, ( TOllONTO eLu• 'A YS I. o.n.11 ,.._, c. 2. Da .. W. A~.<· ll\f. l. JIM Euian, (. NadoftalLeague AT\.ANTA •RAV•S I. D• .. Wif'ffleld, of. 2. 00n Sutton, p, J. Claudoll W.INnoton. of. •. Gaylord Perry, p. s. Stan 8allnMn, p, CMICAOO CUSS I. oa .. W.'Aober11, c·lnl. CINCINNATI RIDI L o ... Winfield, of. 2. Lerry 8 11ttner, of. HOUSTON AST•OS I. De .. Wfl'lfltld, of. 2. oa .. W. R-.U, c-lnf. l. Don 5"tton, p. 4. Oar re II Porler. c. s. 11111 Tr ....... p .•. Rust-r Sleutl, Of· ID. LOI ANCMLH D0 04H RS I. Cla_,I Walllll'IQIOft, ot. 2 Dew W. Ao0er1$, C-lllf. J. JOM -alts, Of. MONTR•AL EKPOS I. Don s...ton, p. 2. Aay Burri•, p l Blll Castro, p. •.Jim Owyor, of·lb. NeW YOttK M•TS I. Oa .. -ltlct, of. J. Don Sutton. p J e111 Tra--. p. 4. -D'A<qu!Mo, p. s. .!-. --. ol. •·J im Dwyer, of. 1. "'"'• c-.... '"'·>..Rusty~. Of·llt. 10 • .- Miiner. OMll. 11. •111 C.-ll'O, p. PIMUOe"9tlA f't41LLl•S 1. Jim Owyoe<, Of.ID. 2. o. .. W. R-. C·lnf. l. Stan...,,_, o. 4, ~ z-. p, S. JOfln o · Ac:.cllllslO. p. PtTTMURCMt "IRATeS 1. Daw Wlnllelct, of. J. Don Sutton, p J. Cl•-• w.tfll,,..on, ot. •. Darrell Ponitt, c, s. Larrv •111-. of.•· J-Moo •tt. of 1 Wiiiie --·lb. I. Autly Staub, Of· lb. t . Gaylord Pltfry, p, 10. Oot u 11 .... of. 12. Jim Dw-rer, of· lb. ST. LOUIS CAROINAL.S I. oa .. '#lnflelct,ot.J Darrell Ponor,c SM OIEOO PADReS NO Ml«lfons. •AN PRANCllCO OIANn I. Cltudltll Westolngton, of. 2. Jim Eulan, c. J. 0 1 .. w. A-'11, c.fnf. •.Jim o......,, Of· lb. S. Lan R-.. Inf. t . 0.1 Un-. of. 1. JOlln O'Acqulslo, p, I. Larry Bllllnor, of. HtGH ICttOOL E Toro rt, Estencla 21 k-.lilfaa.Nn Estan<lo 0 U 0 1-11 Et Toro 1 • 1' ~27 ET-5-Y' NII CS_,., kk •) Est_.,,,_ I""' CMcCaf>lll ILICkl ET-5-rf U non lpau tailed) E11-u.-I run (McCaf>lll ll1Cll ET-5-y II run CruntailOdl ET-S-IY • r ul'I IOolOflan pau to °''"'' Esl-Alke11 1 pan froM McCa l\111 (McCtNll klCILI A".-.e -1.7• '"tlMtltcl) 0-Slttllti<t .. , lotrstO-1l RUSl!n-y..e 2"71 Ptllll'IQ fO(dl tit P•-10.lf.o '""'' ,.,. l*umttl"''-' 1.0 PeN ftlft.yMcll l· IS .......... R ....... •T 10 -:121 " J-S-1 , .... ~ MO I.st-Ur-. 11·3'; Le mberton, J.S; McCeflllf •tt; GIW .. 11'1, 1•; $Parks, l·I. ET-fwe••.,, U -152; Eldrldoe. •·U ; eor", M l;'*"'"" J.14. f .. ,,,.... ........ Isl-Mee.NII, 10.1M , lit . ET-Oouelaa. J.S·I, It. .................. &tt-Alloan, M 2, CtcMla, t 21, CIWfllll, J·ll, L.tmll*-. 1.1 •• ,.,_, 1·11 IT ....... MS, Wllllafnt, 1-1 e.rvtee 20, ... .., Oel 14 W...lly ~ Mt .. , o.i 0 • 0 I-It S.N lte 1 3 1 l-10 t -Aellly 10 pua l ro rn Ant•ll<I I Vu«ire1tk llk kf S.-VIKW:°"IC 21 FG MO--H141eins t rllft lkklL OIO<ktdl S-Hert 12 ,..,. '"°"' A,,..11c1 CV1Kur .. 1e II.IOI S-VYCutn k 4l FG MO-Trotter S pass from .. lne CS<_, pan from 8alnel Attendllftce -t ,000 CKtllNMcll O-lu"'*-MD F1n10-U s 10 ,.., .. AUSlle,.Ytfcb M-IM Ptsslno-rtrdl tJ 4) M-0 4.)1 Penot •JS-l PUl'lts 7.JI Fumbl..__ HI ~· Pentllioloy-U·IO IHU ........... ,R ....... MO-t4109ln•, IS·l2; Vulllonel, t·H : Htrl\tndU. HI; Gr•-r. 2 .. ; 8elne, .. tor. mlnu~ I ; Marlord, l·for·minus n . S-CM ... l, l~SI; Prut.OP ... ,., AnQtllCI, ••l7. .......... Pa""'9 MD-laine, •1'-l , tl; H•rford, 0.1.0. S-Afltlllk l, s+o, 4), IMIWIWtl lttcelitNlt MO_lgQln., l-17; Trott9r, 2-11. H•r1ord, 1-41; Li..,nDis, 1-17; Wllllems, 1.0. S-A•lllY, 2·lt; Hert, I·"; Cl\IWI, I-for· mlnull. ScorH SNYltwL....- Ef Toro 11. Estancia 21 A ....... L_ Sorvll• 20, Malor 0.1 U Pnewayl,NtW SaclclleblKIC l6, Savenna 0 Sunn, Hflil 17. Wfftern 0 ~O....Le..­ R•n<llo Al-ltos 2S, Boise Grand• IJ ~~ Tustin •7. Orange U Raine atatletlca UMieeR..-.S .... Ya A ... Peacoc• 11• W '·' e rvent 11> m •·' Gumol\ '6 200 •.> E. Hiii lt 120 l.1 J . T"°'"n 11 1' 4.6 TJler 11 0 lA Ferr~""' 12 40 3.l Hlckl I " .. .0 Haclon 2 16 J.0 D.Hlll I • •A Cromwell I 0 O.O Totat1 >61 Un •.• 0 119. Tatel 2IO 1)12 '1 ....... Roc:elwn Bryenl WadclJ ,..acoc- Oe,.,,.rd M iiier O.Hlll HlclS -· Gvman A mold E.Hlll Tot•I• Opp.T-1 .... Y ... A ... SI 242 1.1 U J26 IU JI ,., , .. 20 2lt tU 11 J17 16.l IS »• JU II ... 16.7 10 ,.. 16.I • " 16.J • 71 11.1 • 2t l.l "' JU9 u.s ,.. 20M 11.l ~PftMn PA PC 2S2 IS2 ' I 2• 13 Ya TO 1.1*> 20 ,. 0 Ill 0 NFl. lndtvldual .... ,. UAOlll•PAUaRI Jawonll),PNI. llpe,CleY. •ow...-.a-'#lllto, Dallas F-.s o 8ar1tl ... I, Atl. ~.NE Danltltcln, Oet. Br-.Plll. .J-.,9alt. PA PC v• TO lit 161 J,.24' JI l4S • U71 " m 1D U9 • m 1a 1.:MO 11 m Jtt >.on u JeS 165 J, IM It HO t• 1,01• 11 1.. 141 J,014 ' i u t2' t.ns 11 .. "' J,J.11 " LaAOlllG PASS R•<••v•n ..._ Y•A ... TD Jett.r_,, San Oioeo U tlJ IM II Wins-. San 0le90 S4 921 IU 1 Tlller .st.LOUfs SJ 1t11 ••.~ ~ C-r. San FIWl<lscO SJ l67 6.t J Jolnor, San Ol9gD •t 7IO n.• 3 Clark, San l'renclKo " Sil 11.t • Lofton,<#.-Bay ... 141 1'.J J Cl\endlor, -one-Q ffO IJ.7 Jenson.~ '2 ,.. 7.0 Monk, W-lllllbt '1 S7' 14.0 Hofer. San Franch.co 41 •1 11.• a rown, Mi--. 41 4Jt 10.1 LUOING llUIMeRS Ne. Y• A ... To Campllell, -2" 1,°'4 S. I t Sims, Detroit '" •17 4.6 t Pa-rton. ClllctgO 200 "' 4.S J Aftdrewt, Atltmt ,.. 1M S.J l Ande'10ft, SL L..ouls 111 I• •A S M. Pruitt, Ctevel.,. ,.. n• 4,, S Crll*S, llulfalo H• ... U 10 Dwsott, Dallas 1S6 Mt 4.2 • Ki no. OMllanll 12' stl •.1 ' Caln, Atlante IS' S1' l .• I LUOlllG PUNT••s Jtflnl"91, HY GlaMS Guy, Oakland PrastrlclQ9, ~ R-r1s,Mlami AemMY. NY Jots .... Y•A .. St J,1Q '1.J lt 1,10S 0 .1 .. 2.• 0 .l SJ J,270 4A .. 2,0SI CJ.I LSA.DlllG PUNT RETU•NE•S J. T. Sftlltrl, lt-Clly ..... PlltlOurQf> ~. S... FIWl<beo Nolm1, W.3'1h•b• Put .. r. Sen Oleg9 Ne. Y•A .. u no u.a II 211 IU IS t7l 11.S 21 Ut 11.l JI Z2S 10.t L•AOI ... ltlCltOPP •e TURNe RI I wor.,. ,._ IE"llltnd 0-, San Fren<IKO Mtutl,N-~ Lewl1, Setttle Wrtpflt, Ctewl- .... Y•A .. It W 1U .. 442 21.6 l l 7'a U.7 12 J01 u .• J I S10 20 LU04 ... S(Olt. RS l<·Stnlttl, ...... Enoland ..,. tO 7S n 10 10 1(-.. nlr-. San OltoO K • Stiln!Or(lJinvff K·MU~rey, Oetroll K·.Mautttf, At141nta K·llk Uf OoMt•,.• re.W.. IMTAANACCWOMeN ........,...-,c.., Pru1oont's l'llQht: Si'laron Blelr def. lte lhls Y0<1n9; Soml·flnalfll FllQtlt; Lin Sl•ffor"d dltf. llllla ShiM ; Flt1I Flf9hl' lnH Stentllury 001. Conni. Klnilo ; Second l'llohl: ..,... W.rO 0.1 Anda LlvlnoJton; Tl'llrd FtlQlll: Ma,...,.., N .. I Ott. Bernice l(oll. "°""" FllQhl: P•ttl Hoyt dof. WIMO. Wt llOr ; COn_.•tlon IMatch v•. Perl: I. l(ey Jt Mlson, plus lhr•; 1. Dorris McCoy. LAOUMAe•ACMMe N .................... CatO.-Rl-CCI L-o,.,... l'r-IE"'4!r111Qe, 11. A FllQlll. Aoy ~ts. ft..tJ-67; B F119'11. John Morrow, 17.1._..; C Fllgllt: Earl Q11IQlty, h ·ll-"; 0 F llQlll. Byron K lnJ Men. &S·ll-61. E Fllont · W•YM Collln1,t~ Oak Tree THUASOAY'S llEIUL TS U1tteil,_..,,...,. ...... l"Hl'll•U11tl Flrsl r a ce -~1reek1n Deekl n IDtl•llouswyel, s.ioo. 1.ao. uo: Se• Aob (Flore~). 11.10, 6.00; lrl•h Rt•lm IOll•••HI, l.110. Second r•c• -G101t• t\/a11nzuelal, 9 10, •.10, 3.00, Pete's O.•il !Olivares I, •.OO, 1 . ..0. Oru mer's HOllOay (Cftlln.Oal. J.20, u 0111., oout11e 1:1-Sl P••d '" 60 Third ract Supersofer lTorol, 9.60, 6.80, l IO, Flyor~ Gone CEilfedi), 2S . .O. 1.80, Flrll Gr•ncbon IOelelloussa.,.l, 2.80 Foul1h r.ct -F111911 CDtl•hOusw.,.1. t .00, J . .io. J80, Quiet Force IP1ncay Jr. I, l . .0, l .10, Jim TM IM<G11rnl, •.JO Fiith ract Wllllt Si><•lt (Pineo Jr I. 21.60, 1.00. •.20. Toe> r.u r CMenal, •·"°· l IO, Prettndtd IC:.ulenao.11, 180 SS tat<U l~ll IMHO $0 00 Sl lllh ••<• -Olympic Momeni I Ve leni uol•I. S.00, l.60, J 60, OelloMlut Shan 10.1_..,..,.,, •.00. l"OO; TM Ir·~ Broad CTorol. l 60 Stventn rut -Mr CoDr• (Veteniueial, S.60, l 60, l 80. Tr•l>llan IL1pnaml, 11.40 S.IO, Ally$> IHewltyl, l 80" SS u.cta 1•J1 ,..,o '1 ... oo • U PoCIC 5'• IS.l·l ..... 91 p.ud ~4,080 '"'"' tour ••Mino llcllets 111• "°'"''· U Pock S•• consol•lton ,..io '309.60 w1lh 1114 w1Ming ticket• Clove hOrW•l. U scratch conlOlallon p•id '11• 60 lo II winning llCktll (tour hc>rws .no• scretchl EIQlllh race -Biiiie Bots (VelHuueiol 7.00, '<IO, J ..0, Kippy CMcGurnl. 10 20, S.20, Oyna nlte (Upham), S.20 Nlnlh race -P-re IVelentuei•I. 10 . ..0, S.00, l.20, S.0.l>l>O• S..Hr-le COll•aretl, S 00, l.60, Oii .. Mill 10.tallOuswyel, l .60. SS eaecta 1~71 polO "00.SO Allenden<e -11,136. Hollywood Part! THURSDAY'S RESULTS C6111 et,...,...,. llt,.,.,.u m•tl1111 Flrtl rece -Oranper • M•yl ly ICoptlendl, '·'°· l.00, J.00; S" Aron e (Maler I. e.tO, 3.IO, Slivers Slipper (Vall.,,.,_ 1nohem1, S.20. \:l e•a<ta 1~11 iw10 l-'9.80. Second r.ce -Port.,,_,. N ILonQOI, 7.AO, 4.20, UO, Snow D•nce A CGrOQl\enl, 6.IO, •.60. Ten Percenter IStemerm•nl, S.CO. Third r.ce Epic Fere IVall•n01nC)l>Oml. IS.20. 6.60, UO. Borry Bye eve ( Partltrl, s 00, l .OO; So<ure O...m 1wn11emu. l.oo. SS oaa<ta 11041 POkl Sl4'.00 Fourth race -It°"" Coafl IR•tcntordl. SS.00, 11.IO, •·'°· L111tr1 .. d Ledy +An" dOrtoftl. IJ.20. 7.00, Lunar Cl\ence ISh-1, 4 00 Flltn race -"-Jl H•nowr ISMrrlftl, •AO. S 00. S 10. LtflftO• Bromec IK-rl. 16.<IO, 10.00, W.,.. Be Meppy !Grundy), '·'° u uecta IH I POld '344.00 .. Sl•lh race -Ou10 tfl Oei. IB•yleul, 1 20 '60, l.00, _., Siar (T1.nerl, II 20, S Ill. Gtn'l o..st (Anderton), J 60 St•t nlh race -Mo••n Out !Grundy), 2110, 10 "°· 1.00; R•Pld J)e•t I Perked. s 00. ) IO; Farr He-llUyleH I. l.00. SS .. ac. ta (f.41 POk1 "4l.SO. '1 Piek SI• f4-ll).7+2·tl 11411<1 S12.ol07.80 to one wlM1nQ t1Ck.t Ill• horsnl U Pock. S•• ConlOlatlon paid Sl26 . .0 to S9 wlnn1no tock.t u •fl•• horw•l. EIQlllh rK• M•H Hoe>eful IKuel>terl, l•.10, •.20, S.20. Broomfoeto Guy (Bey•ess>. 6.10, S.00, Precious Gttilurt ILonvol, l .80. Ninth race l(lng Jey A IAu1>1nl, 6.60, l.40, 2 60, Fate CSonne•ollt l, •.00. 7.IO, SP<i•llead CAelchloro), S.60. SS uect• C~ll pald$ott.SO Ttntn race -Hi9hl•nd '"•mo CAu111ri1. 6 .JO, ' JO, •.60, Ch•mo•on• Prince CDuomer1. S.80, l.IO; R1gn1 M•l• IShap1ro1, 1 IO. '3 u ecta 11.Jl pe lO "'S.lO. A llendanell -S,761. Horse racing standl"9• (tlwMllll "°"· " JOCKEYS Mc Canon Cordero Pincer VtleM!UOI S-m••er F't ll A'mu\.Yn o. I •llouue.,. Vl ltfl1uel• M•plt a.rrer• w h I lllf'IQhtm Delp F.Mortll'I T.J Kelly LUk., Cante, Jon.s Jol>nson Mc Anally -lit JM P-1,11• 361 J6J '6,14' .. 14 1,69' JOS 177 6.0•,l•I l ,lSO 27' 112 6,019,a31 ,,,.., '" 111 4,,,. .. ,. 'M ISO 17' •,903,173 I.'" lO'I 118 4,ll',J7• 1,UI l4l Jl9 ,,611,2.SO 1,413 20I 20S '·'°'·~ 1,S07 lll 2" 4,1,7,ltt 1, 109 IJ3 IS• 4,017,'°9 TRAINEllS SIMts Ill JM ....... S03 17 11 U ,6S4.07' J7• S6 SI 2.-.m JtS I I ., 2,029,160 S71 107 70 1 .. .... 121 ll 41 1 ... 1.Jll '" St 40 l,QJ,"9 111 4' » 1.111.on '61 80 n 1.n •.1to0 JO.I .. .. 1,720.013 •ll 6l "2 l,6t0.SU MOllHS Starts 111 Tempereno Hill 17 ,.. . ) ' 0 ' 3 • I ...,_ Sl,13G.4S2 1.111.no IOS,Jl1 .., .. S2Ul1 sot,000 SOJ;T41" •nMO ..,.. Spectec:uttr Biel t JOfln Henr-r 11 Bold 'N Oettfmi.-12 Glorlou& 5ono 11 6 • Coclo• • Gtl'IUfnt Al&k I Go Well Youno Man 1 • Wlntor'i Telt 1 S Tiit Very One It S 0 ) I I s ~.7'4 irvine, Artis~ l)olphim admnce Devine denies CH ICAGO CAP ) Notre Dame Coach Dan Devine denied p'Ubli1hed reports early today that be bad revened bis de- cision to retire at the conclusion ol this season and return to coach the Fightlng Irish football team one more year. AYAl••IMOW! Prestige location. Early Mall Delivery. Holding and fOf'Wardtng U.S., ..... s.r-.t. Luana Beach, lrvlne ud Dana Hilla o~ed = 11lrl11 volleyball action wltb victories lu nilbt and will compete lo second round seturclay. Beacl!J. the No. a Heeled team in the banded HUlltlnl\OD Beech ol UM SWllet 15-Ui 1M Mt·back wtt.b O.ldra Dvorak, 9Dulber and and Lila Murpby leadlne the DtGrak II U.. team HUer wtdle the. other two _. bloellen for the Artllta. · trwtM.:Up ln th• Sea View Leape, top. .._ °' u.. l'ootbUl t.e•sue. 15-t, lM 8lllie eoa--(Mtler) llDd Kim Oden (bitter tDSddle blofter) l1Mln1 tbe way. ba.. HUit journeyed to Palol Ventea to defeat bott aebool, •.JI , 15-11, 15·10 wlth Sue .. d)euld and Darci l'a~ 1Maa the Oolpblm ... lift. De.-View lGet"1ocl. La Quinta, IM, lJ.t, ID a •Af'-1'0"1•1111, I "Nothing could be further from the truth,•• Devine said. INDIAN WI LLI• I L DORADO ARI A ~\l~llklOUSQ~ FURNISHED za 3 IEDROOM HOMES ENNIS• SWIMMING POOLS • JACUZZI '2,!00 ·3,000/MONTH WIHL V HNTAL ALIO AVAILMLI M Time• 500 Quallflerw m~:~:~~,~~r-::'!':'611~1!~5:; Speodwa-r. wltl> m•k• Of car end ... ,. ipetd: I. Cai. Y.,,,.,,OUQh, Chevrolet, ISS.4" J. D•lt E•-dt· cn .. rol•l. I St.U S J. Nell Bonnett. Mercury, ts.I.Ill '·Benny ParsoM, Qlevrolet, IS...406 s. 11-., Alltson, Ford, 114 l47 •·Herry Gant. Chevrolet, IS. JIJ 1. Darrell Wellrlp, CM•rotet, IS. 174 I. Rlcnerd ,..tty, C11tvro1t1, 114.°'6 t . Oonn4 Allison, Clltvrolel, UJ,l>-10. Terry ~le. Cllt•fOlel, ISJ.ttl 11,LalleSPMd.Cllt•rolel, ISJ.s.t 12. Joe Milllllan, Ch .. roi.t, H2 Ot9 ll. Ro., Smltn. Otovnoblit, ISi 66l t•. HenlWI McGrllf, Cllt•rotel, ISl.•11 IS LeMJ Pono. Clltvrole1. tSI s.44 " o a .. Marco~. Old"'10blle, Is I .,. 11 Jed-r Alcllty, Mercury, Ul.JU II JoM ~. CMvrotft. I SI 140 tt. TomGei.. F-. u1.oae 20. Gton Jar,.11. Cnevroi.t. ISi °"4 21. 8uddJ Arr1no1on, OoOQt, Ut .oso t2. B 111 S<l\r1>tlt, OlehmoC>l le, 1 SO 6:13 JJ. K yi. "-tty,Cnevrotel. UO UI 2• D.lt. Utrkn, Clltvroi.t. ISO ltl 2S. R icntrd OllklrtH , G""vroltl. t4•.1U 26. Ronnie T_....., Chevrolet, ut H I 27 Cecil Gordon, Old:Smoc>lle, ut 414 71. Stan Barrett, c nevrotet, 14' 0,. 1' Gltfl Frencl1, Chevrolet, 141,801 JO. James Hylton, Clltvroltl. 1'1 O• Indy money leader• Fin•• ...-y -nlno• In Ill• '"° PPG ,,.. o-r Car World Serln 01 O..mplonVwP Auto Racing Teams: Johnny Ruttltrford ~-r unser TomSneva Rick Motr\ Gordon JoM<Ock Ger, Bellenl\lu.en P enc llO Caner Al Un .. , Tom8•Qlty M•rlo A-et.II Volleybell UO),S'IS 113.S" 226,SSO . .. ,, .. 116,SIO '"·13' IC».~ 88,2'7 16,181 11,'11>6 JUNIOR COU.EOI GoldenWHI def Sant• Mon1u . IS 4 IS.10 IS-I. HIOH SC HOOL Cl" .. A .... ,."s L•Qurw Botch def Huntington Be.en, IS-II, IS-I. lrv1nedel Bur-.k, IS t, tS.• O•na Hllll Cltf, P•I~ Vtrdn, 4 IS IS.I I IMO. Mlre Cosl•clel BurroUQMlBi, IS·l, IS• Marymounl Cltl. San Mar<Ol, IS·•. IS·I? B•i!>OP Montoomery del Co<OIW del M•r. tS.4, J·IS. IS.12. El Toroclltl. C..Pl\lr•no Vall•y. U 12, SIS IS" I) St. JOWQhdel. Glendelt, IS II, tS I, IS S WH tm1nS1erdel Downey, IS·l, IS·• Sanl• Btrlltre del South Torrante, IS.o, IS·ll. Pera rnountdef. NolreDame.1~10. IS·ll S.nl• Fedel Culver Cll-r. IH, IS-II S•nla MO<\l<a def Ca111orn1e, t 1-4, IS·7 Ntwl>Or1Ha'11or0.1 Gahr. tS.9, •S·• Mole-0.1 def Montellello, 1~1. IS ... A•iallondef. Marl~h, IS.., IS S J.A L• 0..1ni. .,., Ou•n v .... IH, Is t F't1day November 14, 1980 NHL WAU:S COflFIRt:NCe Nen'l&OMsl<MI W LT GP GA Pta 11 ' I 1l is 2l Kl1111 MonlrHI • I I It so 11 M•rtford s I ' Sl •• " Plllll>UfQh s ' J 60 11 11 Oelroll ) 10 l ,. 10 • Acl-Dl•lsl<MI M1nnt>0I• 9 2 J ., '° 21 Bull•10 • , s SS '° ,, Toronto • s 2 ., .. " Boston l • 3 41 SS • Quttiec , 9 s SI 12 • CAMP SELLCONPIRENCI P•tri<k OfvisSM Pn1 ladelPI>•• ll l 2 IS " ,. NY ISi-rs I s ' 10 .. 10 CelQ.,Y I s ' .. .. 20 Was1>1nvton ' s ' SJ '9 IS NY A•notrs l ., 1 SS 13 I SmrtMD••-2l .... SI. Lou1i 10 ' 3 .. ff V~n<04.1Yef' ' s , ., S6 20 Ch1CIQO • 1 s .. ,. 11 Colorado • • ' S7 •S .. Eomonton ) 1 s .. tO II Wlnn11MO 1 ' s SI 11 7 T_....y·a scor" Winn•l>Cl<:I S, Bostons P~oledtlllho• •. Eomon1on I Cnoe-•,C•klarY• NBA WESTERN CONFERENCE Mi-tDM Mool w L Pct. oa S.n •nton10 IJ s .Ill Ulah It • .. , H> Houston 6 1 '41 'IN OC:e11Sa\ C•ty 8 II 411 S'h O.nver • 10 .JU • D•lli \ 2 IS Ill 10"1 P.CllK OlvlsMCI P~n•• " 2 171 l..Ah N 12 s .II» I '> Go1oen Si.le 10 • '1S ' ~alllt # 1 10 "2 I~> S.n 0•"90 6 10 ]7$ • Portland s 10 ll3 1 .... EASTERN CONFERtutCE AUMtic OlitiS .... w L Pel Ge P"d 60llpf\1a 14 J 12, N~w York II l 111 llrJ Bo SI on ' s Ml l ''> Me• Jerwy I ' .,. . .,, N•SPUnc)ton • 10 llS 1\'r Centr•I 0 1w1s•tlft 111 Mtlw•ukee l n<ll•n• Cruc•oo Aloenta C:le•e••NI D••ro1t •• 4 ' 8 • 10 s ., s " J " S?t .. 111 3H I ,., I'' 1•3 ~·) 116 10•,, Ti'l<ll"'l<leJ't 'icorH Cotve"no tu, Atlanta 111 Ph1tadelph1a IJO, Indiana IOl San Antonio I 1l, San O•t90 107 TMitlll'• G•"'" San d1ec;io al uken New Jersey at Bo\ton W•snu'Oton at fnd1aN Ch1<a90at Detrool Por11ano et D•llH Ntw York at M tlW.Wktt HOu\tOft •t Utan Kansas C.11 •t ~utlle CWl.Y PILOT Taipei Cha~lte"lpe IMT ...... ..._, T ................ Brian TMCMr clef. FrlU ........ ~ "'· 1·•; TlmGulllksondtf.ClvllOtl_.,, .. ,7•1: John AIAlln clef. ,..t.er Rennert, W, H : Ram•&h Krlll\Nn def. Tom Ok•ot. <M, W. .. , Grend Prix tounuunent "' ................. .......R .... ~ Pa11I Mc--def. Vk'°' Arnaye, .... 6-4; Jollfl MCEnroe def. aoo Lva. •J, "'' Sten Smiln def, Brian Gol~led. S-7, , .. , H ; H•rOld ~clef, s.n.y Ma-,ff, W, _.., .... Aonda()pen Tlllff,_.S...,._ Andr .. Jat9fr diet. Pam GHato, ~2 • ..a1 S..un Maiurtn def Lisa OolMrty. ~I, ~ M•r-r Lou:-;telLCltf.l(elfly Horvatfl,..0, ; AnneWlllte f.Di-~tor,l .. ,6-1,6-1. PIJA Pro Bowters AHoclatton Al( RON, Dnlo CAP) -Tiit fine I """"' winners In tne ttlO Profenl°""I 80Wlefl Auocl•tlontour : ,,._YL-n WeyneWellll(RtllObolh,Mess.I Mar II Roll> ISe>rlnoL•k• Helghl\,N,J.) Mike Aullly Cindlenapoll1I Nelson Bul1an Jr. ISi. Loul" Tom B•••• (Butfelo, N.Y.I Pett Couture IWlnchor LO<U, Cann.I G•ry Oiek1nson I Fon Worth. Tu tsi Ste .. Merton 11tlnoicion . Tenn.I Gooroe p-(C/\arlollt, N.C.I EerlAnll••Y IOulllln,Ctlll.) Misc. IOI.Ml 11,ns M,10 6l,71S .. ..., •1,.422 ..,, .. s•.t11 sa.n1 Thurwday'e TranNCttone i(A$1aALL -'-k ........ CALIFOANIA ANGELS -N ...... T- Moro•n -""4r• Aelttflmunct to u.lr • pltchlnQ t.lttf. , ............... LOS ANGELES DODGERS -Nanwd L•rry Sher ry m4n« te._ pltchlnt ln-·- tor. HOCKEY -Heclley~ BUFFALO SABRE$ -Recelled St.,,. Petrlo , •!Qftt ••no. rrom Bra..-. of !fie Western ~key Leegue OFFICIAL PUBLIC NOTICE FLOODWAY AND FLOOD PLAIN ZONING ORDINANCE CITY.. OF COSTA MESA .... - f • ! . ............... ·- AREA AFFECTED BY PROPOSED FLOODWAY AND FLOOD PLAIN ZONING ORDINANCE The Costa Mesa Planning Commission wltl hold a public hearing for con- sideration of an ordinance of the City Council of the City of Costa Mesa amending Title 1ll>f the Costa Mesa Mttnlclpal Code adopting Floodway and Flood Ptatn Zoning Districts and Aeoulatlons. Said hearing wlll be held on Monday, November 2~. 1980, In the council ch•mbers at.City Hall, n Fair Drive, Costa Mesa, C.llfornla, at 6:30 p.m. or as soon as posslbre th•r•after. Environmental Determination: Negative Declaration. Public comments In either oral or written form may be presented during the public hearing. For further Information, telephone 7J4.S2.U or call at the Plennlng Department, Second Floor, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Met.a, C.llfomla. .j ., I t Business· -'. • dir fare war fades; c~oss-country rates to 'leap I ~ l N IW YOl\K (AP J TM uJ are beeomin1 Ina trilndl}' for pu en1ers n )'tl\I belWfffl lbe &ut ud W•t eout.s ,..,.. oa lht betvlly lrav~t~d New York- CaWanla l"OUlet. which dropped to aa low as $191 fw 1 ...-d-lrlp Ucket tJua s ummer. wtll rise to *"• .. oo Jan t , Eu tt>rn Airlines said thla ..-,. Olhef ca.rrlers are expected to match the •'l*reue-a. _ J • ft '1 brin1tn.1 lt back to a reaU.stic level from an umeallltlc level," said David Frailey, a vice .,,..1dmt of American Airlines. EASTERN, WHICH ENTERED the transcon- Unental markets June 1, drove down the fares and wa1 the f\nl to announce the sharp increase. The move la seen as a declanation of peace ln the fare wan that have helped cause most major airlines to report losses so far this year. "We've just really pretty well bloodied one apother," said an airline official who asked not to ~ quoted by name. "We're going to have to settle into e<!OIM>mics." thirds of the t>Htengers on majol' airlines were US· ini discount tares. LAB'T WINTER, FARE wars broke out on some popular routes from the northeast to Florida. An Eastern Airlines ofriclal said it appeared such low farea that wilJ not pre vail this winCer, but cau- tioned that it was too early to ~· The Eastern move on the California routes ay encourage other alrllnes not to slash fares o the Florida one11. The late.st In the general round of ric:e hikes will lake effect Tuesday. when most airlines im- pose increases of 6 percent ln basic: rares, bringing the total mcreases so r a rt his year to51. 7 percent. Those increases have apptfed in most, but not all routes, as airlines have met competition. The airlines are also cutting into discounts, which had offset a large part of the fare lncrea~es. On most routes, discounts of 35 to 55 percent could be obtained if travelers brought round-trip tickets 4 a week ln advance and stayed" through the next Friday. But atartlnt with Ucll:eu boufht Saturday, ror trtps that begin after Dec. 15, the discount.s on most routea will drop to IS to 35 percent off, customert will have to buy Ucket.a a month ln ad- vance and stay for at least a week. On a few routes of more than l,SOO miles the range of diJcount.s will be 25 to 45 percent. On the New York-California routes, Eastern emphaslted lt.s new fares are baaed on the fans that were in effect before lt entered lhe market.s. "The lower fares were Eutem's introductory fares," said a spokeswoman, Ida Roberts. "The in- troductory period expires Dec. 31 ." The current fares on both the New York-Los Angeles and New York-San Francisco routes are $195 one-way and $390 for a round trip, with dis- counts cutting the round trip fares to as little as $268, for nitht nights when tickets are bought a week in advance and the trayeler stays through the next Friday. Under East.em's new fart1, Ute oae way fanl rlse to S.14 on lhe New Ycn'k·Lol Mieles routet and $'32 on the New Yorlr-San P'ruclsco ~. • with round trip rates double tboee fl1ures. • 1'he least expensive round lrlpe will req~ ticket.a bought one month ln advance, a stay ot M least a week. and travel on mld·weet' days. 1'bo9e fares wUJ be $501 between New York and t,... An1eles and $562 between New York and W Franclaco. AME•ICAN .\laLINES SAID it will matc1t· Eastem's fares and Trans World Airlines was re-1 ported by industry sources to have made the um•. declslon as did United Airlines. Those are the major airlines on lhe route, and' cuts by any of them almostcertainJy wtU be matcbed by the others. Other lines fiyine between Calllonm and New York are Capitol, Pan American ._, World, none of which bave decided what ad.ion to- take. . Airlines have been raising base fares rapidly for more than a year, responding in part to sharp- ly increased fuel bills. But deep discounts on many routes have held down the increase in profits. This summer, according to a trade association, two- New car news good for California radio pager WIDE AREA COVERAGE On-ct c:.uty. L.A. CMD- ty. Saa S.nanllao Couty. IUnraWt C' ... ty. '17.75 &.etal mo. co1t no deposit on credit approval 011.\'1,,C,f COl"'-T\ II.\ 1>11) Tl II PtiO'f \(R\11 f I'( Mini Office For '20 Mo. P 0 Bo.x Msgs Pkgs. & Sec 385 7 Btrch. 0 C Airport Newport leach Ca 92660 71 4154!Vi287 The Post Box LOS ANGELES.(AP) -The crop of 1981 cars being sold in California is cleaner and more ruel- ef fi c i ent than last year's models, the Air Resources Board says. In a day of good news for prospective new car buyers, ARB chairwoman Mary J"'ichols also an- nounced this week that smog control equjpment on most American cars is much cheaper this year. FINALLY, ALMOST EVERY car available in other states is now able to meet st ate anti-smog standards, giving car-buying Californians more choice than ever. ''Two-thirds of the 1981 models available in California now provide the same or better gas mileage than similar models sold in the rest of the country. averaging 27 miles per gallon in com - bined city and highway driving," Ms. Ni chols said. On the average, the new cars also emit 8 per- cent fewer hydrocarbons, 21 percent fewer nftrogen oxides and 27 percent fewe r carbon monoxides -the three m ajor smog components - than their 1980 counte rparts. MORE THAN A FOURTH of the different new car engines already meet clean-air standards that won 't be imposed in California until 1983 -and are tougher than standards in the rest or the na - p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...,_.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;--..,__..--.....----.-lion . "This 1s clear evidence to dispel forever the myth that carmakers must choose between good mileage or clean air." Ms. Nichols sajd. ORDER YOURS NOW • • 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS STYLISH TYPE ON GOOD QUALITY WHITE GUMMED PAPER • PERSONALIZED •EASY TO USE • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND r-F;;,~h: :~:::c~ -:-~:-.:.,:,:::s-:;; +-2-;p:,-:o-:.0-11 1 Pilot Printing. Label Div 1' l Post Office Box 1560 • 330 W Bay St I I Costa Mesa. Cattfomia 92626 1 I ., I I I , I I I I I I t I I I 1 .. I I • I Be Sure to Use Your Zipcode I !,_, I I ~: I I I I -------------------~ A major reason for the improved gas-mileage and anti-smog performances is that 71 pe rcent of the new cars have three-way catalytic converters ones that convert all three s mog elements into harmless gases -coupled with sophisticated fuel metering systems . The two-way converters that have predominat- ed in the past only reduced hydrocarbon and carbon monoxide emissions, and required fuel f 'tlll \ Olf .\i;,u•ud t flour .,.,, ,,,,,., •. ,.,,,, ,,_ .. ,,,,,{ .. ,,,. S"!ti:> Invest 12,000-Write off '10,000 Balboa Bay Club Pacific Room Advanced Heaftb Center Ubra ry 1300 Bristo l N .. N.B. Saturday Nov. 15 & 22 Tuesday Nov. 18 (4 meetings dally) 10:00 A.M. 11 .30 A.M. 1 :30 P.M. 3:00 P.M. 12 meetings nightly) 6:00 P.M 7 :30 P .M. Herit~e Bank \ln11l1t·r I 1111 _CONSTRUCTION FINANCING •Residential up to 4 units no takeout commitment required •c ommerciaJ Buildings Takeout commitment required along with leases •orange County Properties •Land Loans up to 1 year 50% of appraisal •up to $750,000 Heritage Bank 2171 CAMPUS DRIVE IAVINE, CALIFORNIA 9~713 CONTACT· JEFF JOHNSON (714) 833-3700 LET US SHOW Y U HOW TO APPRECIATE COLLECT OAS CORNEA ,..,. Cotn• a et.mp• GOLD£ lfLVER Prices fo' 1 Mi-. .... a--. .... OI. ....... .., ... YOUR CAR... . • INSTEAD OF DEPRECIA Tl~G ITI CAil NOW AT754-6581 SUN COAST LEASING Undet' oew ownerthlp ....... , . .. n .... . "''· .... . an1. Wt ""Ill-.... IW~ 111Hl ,,,,__. "'• ........ Ill -----(114)--0 loutft COMt Pt ... wteae SWll_., ... ,," ---~--... OMii~ 17777 Main St. • Suite 0 • Irvine C.11142-MTI. Put .... word• toworklor ,, " = and power-robbing engine modifications as well as exhaust gas recirculation systems to control nitrogen ox.ide emissions. •'There should be no impetus for car buyers to tamper with the smog control devices because these cars have good performance and good fuel economy as well as clean emissions ," Ms. Nichols said. Clean emissions cost less this year, she added: · 'GeneraJ Motors is now charging only $46 extra for the same anti-smog syste m it charged $250 for in California last year. She said Ford is charging $30 extra for its California smog control system -$220 less than last year's cost for a system that was only slightly different. An ARB investigation last year concluded that Californians were being overcharged for anti· smog equipment in what Ms. Nichols described as an effort •'to instigate public cr iticism of California's unique emission control standard.I u part of a campaign to abolish them." But auto company spokesman denied that » legation. GM's western region public relations manager, James Lecocq, said the system used in California cars last year actually costs $480. TIDS VEAR, HOWEVER, the system is beln& used in all cars nationwide, so it5 cost ls included in the car's base price. The $46 extra beinJ charged in California pays for having the car test~ ed and certified to meet ARB requirements. Ford spokeswoman Helen Petrauskas tn Dearborn, Mich .. said Ford too is now using the sam e pollution-control technology on all its can. She said the extra charge to California customers is $46, not the $30 cited by Ms. Nichols. Over The Counter NA.SOU~ MUTUAL FUNDS flp• a•d De.,.. P<t. Up llS;t Up J7.I Up M.S Up 52.9 Up JI.I Up f1.0 • U• .._, :: 11 ~ n1 Up 111.G Up 1'.0 "' .... u, 111..1 Up "·' 8: l~:1 Up ... 7 Up 15.7 Up IU Up IS.S Up U.2 Up •••• VP u . .I ~. "" 11.0 Of! IU Oft 1U Oft IM Oft IM ; , .. , 11.J 12.1 ''·' ::: t.S u '·' u .. , t .1 ... 1.1 .. s tf °" tJ Olt 7.7 • I EOMPOSI'IE TRANSACTIONS 8 U.S. grain &~in sllarpest in year~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Tbe U.S. train stoc:kplle la UD· de,..-oing ooe ol the aharpeat r~ucUom of neat IJm•, mainly because . of thlt )'Ht'I dlouthl·""UCed COg\ harvest and continued hlth demaod from uaera. ~; The e:xacl dlmenaiom ol th1I ualn drain will DOt DI lmoW11 ror many montbl. And iw Jmpaet oo sr•ln m=tl prices, livestock feedin1, irocerf prices and, ultima the n.UOO'a economy alao involves a eood deal ot cOQJ ,. ture at this Ume. But the latest crop productloo at•t:iatict lasued ttbW week by the A1nculture Department continued to aMi that over the 1980-81 seuon the arain situation will hi! tight. :fr. ... , FASMEU P&OOUCED A record wheat crop Uall year befo~ the full brunt of swnmer beat and droucht ~ its toll. But com, soybeans, sorghum and many otlier crops suffered greatly. • • This fall's com harvest, a keystone for the com~ year in terms of U•estock feeding and exports, WU slashed at least 17 percent from the record crop of 1919, a'c:· cording to the latest surveys. · · • As it has been for many years, crop produc~'" elsewhere in the world a1ao is vital to the interesw. farmers and other Americans. And this year's world fr output has declined significantly from _earlier proe~ta. including allowances for the reduced U.S. harvests and 'a poor crop in the Soviet Union. ( ' ALL OF THOSE AND many other factors have a bear· ing on the demands -and prices -that will be put UlK19 U.S. grain in the months ahead. • Another factor will be the 1981 winter wheat crop. a was planted earlier this fall and. especially in parts of tht Great Plains, has suffered from lack of moisture. : Meanwhile, department analysts are trying to d• termine how much grain will be needed in the com"* year. how much will be left over a year from now. and h<rir prices may stack up. ' PSA vowing niore nllnority attendants · '. ' SACRAMENTO (AP> -Pacific Southwest AirlindS has agreed to recruit more male and minority flight atte6· dants. : The state Department of Fair Employment and Houk· ing reported this week that an agreement bad ~ reached by the stale agency, the airline, and the feeler~ Equal Employment Opportunity. • Under the agreement, the airline will distribute $100,000 among 22 persons who have complained since 11'&5 that PSA refused to consider them as flight atteoclants. , ~ Jl will award another $175,000 to any other mel(1Jr minority women rejected durinj the last few years. ~ PSA also agreed to set aside at least S:ZS0,000 to di velop a recruitment plan to gel a flight attendant staff thlll is. about 20 percent male. 14 percent Hispanic, and sin pee. cent black . • ftl fH'k11 I 11 'I'll#' Spofllglu M·hal .'ifo("k# Did Hew YORIC (AP) -· IJ .. Toims en -,. 111 • WM"T AMEX DID 1 ~ ~ j Due to late transmission : today's listing w ill nOt : appear in the Daily PiloJ. ; . , HEW YORK (API -Ht<WN • t4.,..... _,,..,., Jll.40, WI to.030. Enoe lllard •liver $11.310. up $0.02,, fabfl<Jl\ecl $11,.... Jl•.MI, up S0.2•2. • Gold Quot at ion• ; ~: rNf'llltlo 111dno "'1'.00, °" $1..SO .. ~:....,_llxlnoMn.oo,upu.~ ll'am: .._ 11•1no SULJ1. ""a.". , ,,....,....: lllllneS611.JO,up'1.n . t Xwidl: &Me an-1111no '620.oo .,.., i.p 11.oo. ~.oo-. • "....,a....._: ie111na !W'l<ll .. n .oo • .a, u.so. • I ........ : MlllllV prlot "2}.00 'IP U.50.: I ........ : 1-ICaled prl<e ....,.n, 'f' u .st. I • ·-'g. 'i j .4... I ' ." • NO- F~ULT LOVER'S LEAP Britoi11 wn11ders Will prince APWl,....._ Honf»rftf The largest building in New York State would be n a med after outgoing Republican Sen . Jacob K. Javits, un- der a biU to be in- trodu ced by Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, 0 -NY, in Washington. PUBLIC NOTICE l"ICTmO. .... ,..U' MAMe HATllMaM~ fne t•l .. •1119 ,..,..,., ert Hint INllllle»• T Al UK LIMITaO. •1t2 'Y .. ..... ,, ... Ory ~ .... 119«11, Q , ~~1cn.1 ~on f•wlOI, •112 .YI• :::f11Y Or M~1119to.t &H<ll, ta Jey MIC.-1 Zu<li•r. •1t 1 Vie :::r,une Dr. ~J~ 8Nch, c;.. T111a °"''""' " (Clndlltl•<I by • Ul'l'lfte<t p.rtne•~fo, r.\kl'IMI 8. T'eylOr Tiii• tt.eten.nl Wit Iii_, Witt\ tlle Gollftl y c"''" of Or el\99 ~nl y on O<. loCler u. '"° . .... ,"' PvOll"*I 0t"'9e C:O.ta 0.Uy Pllol ~t. 24. JI, Hg:!, 1 14, 1!1§! 92!=fO PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICT,TIOUl•U51NISS HAMISTATllMINT Tne followlftvw-. 11 Oo1no1>1111,,.u ••: PACIFIC MINERAL IHOS., lt17t W•t•rvi-1..n., HW>llngton a..c11, CA '1MI Fr•1lll S UI VIOie, ea• S V•tC1U90 Ra. • •· Glend411e, CA t120• Tiii• l>usl~$ tt C.ond\IC1ed l>y an In· Olv1au•I. Fr en• S. L.t Viola Tiiis stelement ... , liltG ... 111 l~ County Clerk OI O<enoo County on Oc· 10C..r19, t980 ,.,_ Puollsl>e<I Or-Co.•• Deily P1lo1 Oct.JI, Nov 1, 14, 11~9'0 •31..eo PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS eUilH£SS-NAME STATEMENT Tiie lollowlnv D"tr>on• ••• ao1nv IM.l~•ne,,., THE WINDSOR COMPANY, S Wot henlon, Irvine, CA '111• PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI euttMIM lfAMaSTATa ... NT Tiie kll'"""9 llW*' I• dei/11 lllual- MH H ' 8RAO S LAHOS~A PI MAINTIEHANCI, .. ,. Cl\•rloton StrMt, C.00111 Me .. , c;e tt•U Jemu 8ree1ey Cl•r•. 1 IJI C,,.•IHIOft Slrttl. C:O.t.e Moe, Ce. ., ... flllt OlninMt" to<ldU<teO Dy.,, I~ dh•1e1 ... 1 J_.8.Cte111 llllt ,,_..,,_, •H lllM with Ille Covntr C19rtt of Or-Collltlr en O< IQ4Mr22,IM. PVBUC NOTICE .. CTtTIOUI e""QU lllMW IT-11 Tl.._ .. ., Ille tol,_... __,.I• 40lne ~I fleU ... fHI SUNIMINI COMPANV, 1rm °"",.. .. Cr., MVflllf191on .. e<ll, CA'2"' "~"''" 1.Mi~Fen11, 11tt) O.nvelt Cr., HWlllfttiOll NKll, CA '1wt Thi' MIMH ll ~onOllC'-4 oY Oft I" C11vlci..e1. R~IWO I.. l"tlUJ '"'' ................ 11180 w11n tlle Cou11ty Clefll et Oran .. County on Novem.,...S.•'90 ....... , P147tlJ PUbll\1111<1 OrtllQO COHI O•>lf Pilot PIADlllNCI Orenoe C:O.Jt D.it11 Piiot Nov. 1, 14, 21, lt. 1"° 4t&J 10 ~I 14, JI, ~v. I, 14, 19'0 01s-IO ---- PUBLIC NOTICE lftCTITIOUS IWSIM•H NAMa STATSMaNT Tiie tollowln(I ,..,'°" It cl01119 t>usl• ntUH: SEA 8REEZf:, S.1 W. lflll St .. ~le MeM. c.. tteV Rotenllo Ton ... 711 S Sor11ce, S.llllAM, C.. '210) r11" t>uslneu i• <.,,_too l>Y en '" 01v1a.,.1. Aosendo for re• fllll >t•-nl WH 111.0 Wllll lhe County Clerk OI 0rMIQI County on Oc· to!Mr 19, 19'0. ,,,_ Publ1'1WO Or~ CotM O.lly PllOI Oct Jl, Nov. I, 14, ti, tteQ •>t).IO P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •ullNISS -- HAME STATIMIHT r11e IOllOwlnQ l>'trt.on I• dOln9 l>U\i n•s.s •S· CARLSl(IN ISi, us T•mOI• Pl•ce. LeQun• llffcll, C. tt•" Gre9')<Y P..,1 G¥1son, ~• An1t• s1 • L•vune Beech, c. <nu1 PUBLIC NOTICE l<ICTIOUS•UMNHS NAMI STATIMI NT Tn• tollawlnq --It oo<nq bu•i· neuu: OIVEA DAN'S. 1)15 C..Orlllo P.ork Or . M·S,s.tn4•Ane.. C•. 9'101 D•nlel R11sse11 H011•m•n, 110 C.brllto Par~ Or •• M-S. Sen!• AM, ca '2701 flu• _,,.., '' ,_teo t>y en 1n dlvl<lual Den1el RIOl!oell HOU$1nMI flll• si.-• .. ., llltd "'"" ,,.. County Cltrk ot Oteno-County on Novtmt:Mr S. 1990. ,.,...,,, Pu1>11.-Or-Coell 0.lly Pllol Nov 1, 1•, 21, 21. '"° 4419-IO P UBLIC NOTICE marry soon? LONDON (AP) Prince Charles born lo be Irvine Jews slate party Jeflnoy D. 8r1u.•, s West rren1on, Irvine. CA ~114 8•r1>41ra Ooylun 8r11111~. S We•C Trtnlon, 1n1.ne, CA 9271• fll1$ 1>us1nen " conauc1eo DY • o-ner•I ~1nen,111p Jellnoy 0 Brl911• f"" sracemenr was 111.a •Hn '"" County Clerk OI Or•n119 County on Oc 100.r 2', 1980 f ru~ IMISttHK\ IS Conducted DY •" •n dhi!ICJU•t. Grevory P•u• Cer1son fn l• stetemen1 .... 111e0 wit.II lllfl County C~rll ol Orenve Counly on Oc· 100.r 16, 19'0 King of Eng!CJnd, turns 32 today a nd may soon marry a kindergarte n teacher making $240 for a three-month term. In a nother life s he's an al"istocrat with a big country place. ' S~cuJation is raging in the British press that t~e e ldest son of ~ueen Elizabeth II has already po_pped the question to 19-year-old Lady Diana ~enccr, and some report their engagement may qe announced on the future king's birthday. Others sµg_gest ne ws of the betrothal may not come until s prmg'. Acco~ding lo t,he royalty-watching press, Queen Elizabeth appr oves of Lady Diana, who leaches al a private school in London's Pimlico dis tr ict. SHF. IS THE YOUNG EST of four c hildren of t he 8th ~arl of Spence r , former equerry to th e Ql.leen. d1st(Jntly rela ted to the late Sir Winston Cb,urchtll_ and. the owner or vast' landholdings and odle of Bntmn s gr eat s t a tely mans ions. Af!.ectionately. ~ubbed "Ladi ~i'' and "Dishy Ol~n a b~· thl· British press. she 1s a pretty, slim w&hian with s hort hlo nd hair and 1s sa1<1 to oe sny uuophislicatl'll. not pushy and a fan of outdoor ac: ti.lt il•<.; . London gossip C'olummsts report her tight- l1ppcd r1· ... pon~e-; tu n :porter<; have impressed the royal family and inncascd her chances of becom- ing a royal hridl' Like m ost Britons, she is a member of thC' Anglican Church of England. The monarch 1c. hr·;1d of tht.• <'hurch. . THF PRl Nf'E WU .I. HAVE 3 s mall, private b1.rthd.1y part\ ;lt his 18lh-century country house. l11 ghgruv<·. 111 rural <tluuce:-.lers hire. Lady Diana :-.ecms ctrt,11n to at(('nd Whil<..> tht· palace st ays s ilent and the nation wHils. photogr a phers dog the two, who are careful not to be seen togethe r On Wrdnesd ay, Lac1y Diana went shopping .tod rcturnr·d to her Kensington apartment with a parcel T h<' n ·porters hounding her doors tep as ked 1r it eonta1m·cl a birthday present for Prince Charle:-. L ady 01ana mercl} s miled LATER SIU: TOLD reporters approaching her on the street "l am merely out for a walk" and d<'clined to say a nything else. C harles, meanwhile, was touring the Universi· t y of Wales when he was a ske<I b y an onlooker "When an: you goin g to tell us the good news your Royal Highness'!" ' He re plied: "( won't be saying anything. You will have tu wail and s ee." . The two stayed apa rt al a private party at the Ritz Hotel the other night, thrown by the royal fom1Jy to celebra te the 80th hirthday year or Queen Mother Elizabeth Ll\DV Dli\NA'S INVITATION convinced manythat she was C harles' c hosen one. She was a weekend g uest last s ummer at Balmoral, the Royal Family's favonte home m the ~co~t1sh highlands S he Joined the prince there for fishing and shooting, and recently cheered him at a n amateur steeplechase. PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ceme rery Morruarv Chapel 3500 F'at1l1c V1r>w Drive N!'wporl Beach 644 2700 McCOtlMIC:X MORTUARIES Laguna 8eacn 494·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495 1776 HAAaoa LAWH-MT. OLI YI Mortuary •Cemetery Crematory 1625·01ster Ave , Costa Mesa 540·5554 "HCt t•OTHHS l&L lltOADWA 'f MORTUARY I I 0 Broadway Costa Mesa 642·9160 IALn & lfltGHOH SMITH & TUTHU.~ WISTC:LIFJ CHAPll.. 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 P~rmit bac k SAN FRANCISCO I AP) A Marin Superior Court decision overrulin g the s u s · pension of a man 's drivers license in a drunk driving case by the Depa rtment or Motor Vehicles has been upheld b y the Court o( Appeal. The appellate court backed the lower court decision lifting the DMV's s uspension or John Hen ry Dunham's license. KAll90 The Irvine J e wish Seniors g roup will hold its second an nual Hanukkah party at 7 :30 p .m . Dec. LS. Senior citizens. their c hildr en and grandchildren a re invit- ed to the party at the Irvine Senior Center 380.7 Sandburg W ay: lrvme . For information call I sadore Schneider at 551 -9162 or Mi ckey Williams at 754-1944. Law voide d FRESNO (AP> -A F r esno city ordinan ce r equiring that charita · ble or ganizations have a city license to r aise funds has been declared "overwhelmingly " un· constitutional by an ap. pellate court. ''Several s tate and federal de- cisions h ave well established the .ipplica · lion of First Amendment protections to charitable s'o Ii citati ons • • • the s tate's Fifth Distr ict Court of Ap~al ruled. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Tie'Ti'Tlous BUSIHEn HAMESUTEMENT fne tollo•uno oerM>n" •re d o1nQ bu\•ntss .s CANrAMA R MEXI CAN DELI, t•H7 804w Outa, HunhnQlon S.~cn. CA 91f><9 Raymond ano Ol>f>Oloa Gul•trru. 5567 Monv•I• Cr Hunl1n9ton Buen CA '1f><9 Tf\1\ b\ls.tnits1' 1\ <onduct•O oy • venera l 1>¥lners1>1p Ravmono E Cult~rru This, stett!'f'Y'WJnt •• , flltcs ""1th tne Counly Cl*r~ ol OranqP Count• on Novemt>e< S, 1990 1'14K>l PubhshtCI Onn90 Cout Daily Pilot Nov 1, u.11, 21, 19'0 ... ,.IQ PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS ausiNEs's-HAME STATEMEHT flle lollowlnQ Pt<M>n I• dolnQ l!UU· nu '· S SPORTS CAAOS, 5111 Sperro Or Hunllnqton Beecll, C.• ., .... Sttven k!Yel Sl•lll, ~Ill ~r row Or , Hunt1nc11on Be«ll, C•. 9'1Mt Tn1• ~'"'" 1, condu<t"4 bv en In· dlvlOuel. Steven Sttlll This 'llllem«tl "'" 11100 wllfl 1"9 County Clerk ot Oren1111. C.ounty on Novem-5, 19'0 1<1..-.U Publl"'90 Or-Got\I 0.lly Piiot HO~ 1, 14, 11, 21, lteO •-..0 PUBLIC NOTICE l<ICTITI S •USINISS NAM• ITATIM•NT lll• tollowl119 11trt0n1 •r• 001"9 Oll'lntUH, WAllMIHGTON·TUSflH, LTD .. IU'1 Hale A.-nut, Irv~, C.lllor"le '2114 . The ~ P. Werminvton Co. I• C•lltornl• corpo;'ellonl. 1"'2 Hele Avenue. Irvine, C..lltornle '2714 Thi• ""'',." It conoutted t>y • llmlteCI pet1ntlf-tlllo, YHE ROaEltf P. WARMINGTON CO W,J 1'1-, _ _, flllt II~ WH IUeCI With IN CAltnty c~ of Or-c;.o..nty on O<· ....,ti,, •. '""" Ptlbll-""'cl Orenoe eo.11 O•Hr Piiot OCI. 24, 11, HOV. 1, 14, '"° 4-..0 PUBLIC NOTICE JOE l(AR80, n•tlon•llY •nown •utllor OI "The LAIY ~n·s W•y 10 RicM", MCI "TM Power OMoMY Men~". PHMO •W•Y on WOO• nuoey, Hovtmt>er 12, 1990 wlllle 1>e1nv 1nttNl.....O 11y l(HXT Hew• •t Ill• rHICleMe In Hunll"11ton llUCll, C•. Born.,_,, r•l..O In L..M Anoo1e1, C•., M et~ ~•I NU H~ Sc11001 •ncl Mr•ICH In the $0ulh P•clll~ -•no Wbrlcl W•• II. AlllH' Int WH '---H ,.1111 1111 PalMfN P'!'evhou\e, •nlch 1eo 10 p,erh In tttt•ll!Ofl -· •~" .. · T11l1 It your FBI", -"H•lls 01 lvy", Mlt Ol/ltr W!>ll"" fl!Cf~ e dltl file.\ eno M •I~ ,.....Md I w•y -•ln1trs --• "Tiit Sutler $t)y," He It -•l'IM by 1111 wlft encl I UlllOrtn. l'-r•I •rr~lt ~ Ptfldlnq II M.nier LAIWft..Mellftl Ollvt Mort~ 01 C:..W Mett S.UM. COMl"a l"tCTlnout ltUMMUS PIUCt N01"11t5 SMITHS' MORTVAAY 627 Moln SI. Huntington Beacn .536 ~39 ,.. JAMILY COt.OHIAI. ~AL HOMI 7801 8olN Alie W..tmtntte r •»2S • SIBYi. a. CONI N .. .,__ •wly ~STATa .... MT CHI NOWll'IOtf II, t• Ill Of .... , Ce, Tiit ltllOwlllt ,,_,_, •re dolllf Sfle WH I~ Of ..... AM, C.. M IMHMl • \lnce lt4J, ... -• ·--fOt IN MlllC«DU. l"lllllARI l'AIHT a.nt• AM ~ NI' u L';."m Ille A IOOY, t1J W. """-St., S.111• w•s '*"I In 01U1M1N tn 119r ..,_.,CA f.11't1 1, ttot Sht '' e11r•l•eCI "' ' Oeoro• •· Sll<ll•rov, 1on Oe11e11u,., Or c.,01111 'II•»! ot ............ ,C:...~CA._,7 AlleO.f\I, CA, AM INlll• Ctnl11t· UMI JNfl ~. 11112 w. O\llftey of S.."te, W•ll~, 2 C.rt1efl0r.,5tn4•MA,CAtt104 lfl(IOCl'lltare11 l llCI t ,,... "'" ... 1 ...... ~°"411(1" '" • oren.U1ll4rlf!. Ornttlde Nr•l~t ..,,., .. ..,...,._ •01 o. ,... 911 l"rillly, NO¥embtr 14, U.. "-\INlllMllll ltto 11 IOltli\M .. IM lf1lrll•vtt1 Tiii• ......,_. -Ill'° wflll tlle Mtmori.1 """'*""or."•" ••n '-Y ClefW Of 0r.,.. _,. M 0c. MllU•llftt. ~ .,,..., U.. llf~· IMf tf, .... U•11 •I ... ,, h f .. flll•ll'l'lllll I. '"'"''' --"" °'"91 Monlllrf ., c.Mta,. ..... ti11 Fl..US Pubh\lled Or•nqe c...,~, Oa11y Piiot Oc~ 1.~4. 11, "80 4.JS9·IO PUBLIC NOTICE Attorneys ~t l~w 1-F•lrcllild Or., Suitt 100 Pou Ott kt Boa 1"11 PUBLIC NOTICE Ir vine, Celllom1• tJIU Tel: 11141 U~104t FICTITIOUS 8USIHCESS NAME STATEMENT PuDh~...a o..,. Co.t\t Oa11w 1>1101 Nov~ll OK~ 19'0 -~SMeo PUBLI{' NOTICE ,.,.._.. ,., ... ,,, HUNTER & YOSS Al1or1tty1 lit Lew •-l'•lr<Mld Or., Suitt 100 ''" Ollkt 8oa 1"11 PUBLIC NQTICE lrvlH, calltoml• t171J Tel: t1141 t~ll'I Pul>hshe<I Oranve toHI Oa•ly PllOI Nov. 14. 71.11 O.C S 1990-~IO PUBLIC NOTICE ---l..OS ANOll.15 JUDICIAi. DISTlllCT 110 N..,11 Or• ... "~-Los A,......, C:.lllentla fOOIJ PLAINTIFF. FAMILIAN PIPE I. SUPPLY co .. INC ... Calllornl• cor· oorallon LIOAl.NOTICfi OEF'ENDANT : M c; B AS· NIWPORT·Ml!MUNll'llD SOCIATES, INC. MIC11A EL G SCMOOt. DISTRICT BRU8AKEA, DOES I t"'OUOll XX, In· Heek:t (ftvitlftt •lft < 1u,1ve, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11111 SUMMONS lht Bo•ro of Ecluc•llon ot Ille CASE NUM•Ell 4117'tS1 Ntwl>Ort·~W Unified S<-1 Dhlrl<I HOTICll y_, ... ,,. --· Tile o4 Or•not Counly w111 retelve ... 1eo (°"rt mey clet141e ........ yell wlttllMtt 1>101 up 10 1:00 P M on ttM 14111 d•y a1 rwr !Nifte _,,. IMleM "" r"_.i Novtml>e<, 1"90, •I ,,.. otllCAJ ol r.elCI wlllllft >o deyL lie .. Ille ll1ler1Ntlefl kl>Ool District, IO<.el.O et 1151 Pl..:e~ IMltw. .ti• Slreet. Costa Me ... C.Ulornla, •I AV1$01 Usted "' tHle ...... .._. -kh lime u1d l>ld> •Ill t>e pul>ll<ly El i,1-....i ,._ _...,. c-• IH. ooene<I s:~~ ~TH AND : :::::: ;. "::' ~ ~·j,.= ~EO FRAME <lefl • ... sl9ve· All bid• ••• lo .. In K (Of'<IMIU "'"" " you "''"' IO -~ 1"9 tOVlc• Of an Condllton•, ln$lructlons, enO SP«lllca eltorney in tlll> metttr, Yll<t Sllou~ do tlonswnlc11erenowonrtlelnllle01tlceo1 >O promptly so lll•t fOur written Ille PurchlllnQ Olrt<tOt' Of Mid $(tlool •HPGnM, II.,,., mey t>e lllea on lim.. 01\lrl<I. 1ts7 Pl..:entle Slrttt, Cost• $1 U>ted de-Ml >Ollclttf' el tOllMlo 0. Me .. ,c.illornlati.». un ·~ .., HI• •'unto, Clel>e•I• Eecll Ill-.. mwi s..omlt • Did dt ha<erlo lnm.<1le1emen1e, de Hie ~II I" the rotm al • Ctrtlli.<S "" m•ntr•, w -It ttcrlle. Si MY C.~ltr's Ote<ll or 1 9or'll equel 10 tlQunt, _.-Mr r9111tre a ll•mPt>. Jl,000 COne TllOUMnd Ooll•ftl, m.O• TO THE OEFENOANT . A clvll PtYHle to II• Ot'der Of lne HtWPt>•I· compl•int llel -llltcl by ,,. Pa.I"· MeM UnllllO Scllool Ohtr kt. In .... tllf fl•fnll YOU. " YOU With to OeNnO event 01tellurt10 .,.,,., Into >IKfl CCIII-tlll' lawwtt, YOll mvtt, w1t11111 MOO• lrlC\. IM ~ OI tr. <nt<k will be •II., thh WMlflons I• ..,....., on you, lorlt)led to u 10 SclloOI Oiotrl\1 ot lilt •ltll INl court • written re\OOftw <>renoe COunly to Ille comcMelllt. Vnittt yOll oo '°· NO BIOCIH ,,,.., Wl111drlW 1111 Bid for your cMfeull •Ill «It entel'td on el> • 111trlOCI ol lorlv·llw t4ll Otys etler t>ll<•tlon Of Ille Dlelnlltt, •nd thl• court IMcNleMttor1i.ot1tnlne11Wrtof ft'\tY •nle< e J~t eQAln\I yov tor T'~• 8oerd of £d11cat1on of th• Illa t•llet ,.,_In tM con1p1a1111. N••oort·Mtu UnlllOO Sc'-1 Dltlll<I "'"ltll f'O<llCI rHUll Ill .. l'>lllllrntnl ., mer vet .. rltf'I to l'tjte.I eny 0t au wttlll, 111111no o4 moMY ot prOCltflY o• lldt •M 11111 IW<H.Mrll'f ''"" Ille oll1tr rtlltl r•11ue•tea In Illa com· ltwest 81d, •nd I• welve •ny•I,._ lll•illt. fotMt tlly or 1,........ .. 11, In Mlf 8IO ,.. DATIO July 2, 1• tel"td· (.LARK K. IA"O, OATa01 ~ S. lteO oet'll NEWl'OAT·MaSA UHIFllO • .,, R.M Otu Cri11, IC~ Dl'Tl'ICT °'!MY to10r.,...~.,, oao1toa1YicuL.M.1 c:a111orfll• •--.•I.Aw Dtlt'lltttt H., .e-., 1'1-r. ... .,.....,_ ..... ¥eN C.PM., ..... .. ~ .. Olf'Ktgr .. ..,._, .._C... •tt lt\4J HIWDIJ T .. 1 llUI ....... , .... , .. er.,. CMtl o.lf'f ....... "'*' ..... 0r .... c-Olllt\t , .... Hell. 1, 1;, .,_ ••(O I ..... 14, )I, .. O.C.S, '"° •JJt.tO .. mrtfiOUS BUSINESS N-72636 NAME STATEMENT NOTICE O F DEATH OF DV~.~~.:o~~Ow•n11 P"t\On\ .,~ OO•nQ WI LLIAM 8 . CULLEN, ooE ~·sso<.1Atls 1,11 s., JR ., aka WILLAM t.•<>OO• w,. J S•n1., An~ Ca BRYANT CULLEN, JR., '110• a k a w . B R y A N T CotT.~l~"c!"ow l•O• So A<a<•• c u LL EN . JR .. aka c,1,~ oc1oor• 1111 s.. eroaav WI LLIAM 8 . CULLEN w~,.s~naaAn.l.(d ~Ill)• I ANO OF PETITION TO F•,.nlt Altant•r. •Ill W.isnire ADMINISTER ESTATE Bl•O 11~ .... rly Hill\ ,. '!0711 0 r,,,, OUStn~S'\ I\ •On(fuff"O O!f ~ N . A .. 106460. ?•n•"' ~'""""n'p T o a I I h e i r s I oa .. Snow beneficiaries, c reditors rws si.t~1 .,..," ••ltd *•fh uw d t ' · C.ounty Clt•k ot Or•n~ Coun1y on an. !=On tngent CredrtOrS Of F1ttiJ1 No•·m-s. 1"80 W1ll1am B. Cullen, Jr., aka HUHTER&voss Ft....,. William Bryant Cullen, Anorfto• 11 u• PuDio>ntd o''""lll' ,.,..,, Oa11v P1101 Jr., aka w. Bryant Cullen, '~':::':.~:!'::.~~·,;ultolOO N!>• ,, ... H.lB,l'*l U/l .acl Jr., aka William B. C ullen 1rv1n•, can1on11et»U PUBLIC NOTfCE and persons who may be r.1 tm1 ~'°'1 othe rwise interested in the Pu""'""" Or-c ... " 0•••Y P•101 A.Ma.tu will and/or estate: Nov 1' 11,11.o.< ~. 19'0 ·~~8'1 HOflCEOFTRUSlEI SSALE I SPF NO 01 .. 1 A petition has ~n filed PUBLIC NOTICE A~ B•o'•" by Connie L. Cullen In the ORANGE COAST 11 rLe coM Superior Court of Orange FICTITIOUS BUSINESS PANY •C..llforn •• co•l>Cl••hon .. du• Coun ty requesting that NAME STATEMENT ly •Ppoin1ea fruSI.,., ""°*' .... •0110 .. Tnt lollowlnQ !WrtOn\ .,. Oo•nQ ·no Of.C••l>fl1 dHO 01 '""' WILL Connie L. Cullen be ap-0..\•ntu •• SELL ... r PUBL.IC AUCTION TO THE painted as personal repre-RUBY s SANOWICH SALOON HIGHEH B•OOEA FOA CASH sentatlve to administer ,.,3 ....... Ave =C ~t• ~·· CA IP•1•01• .... ,,.. 01 Wit on i•wlul the estate of Wlll1'"'m B. 91,,, mon•y o• IM Unttf'CI S14'ttt• •II r•gnt, v Do•o1ny M H1Q<1er• ... , F•lf Or till• •nd •nlerttl convey.a lo •n<I now cu 11 en. c 0 st a Mes a ' ..101.c ..... -.. CA97•7• ~:~~:;~1~;.~~~1!!";!,::,!;~" •n California (und er the In· 8•vtrly A. Jonn. •ot •Olll Sl • j TRUSTOR FIROUZ 8AG'AH anun· dependent Administration NtwPorl8"ac.n,CA92 .. l m• ... •dman . of Es tates Act). The.peti-r11 .. Du>1ne•~" conoutleo Dy. 8ENEFIC IAR 'I' PROPERTIES tion Is set for hearing In QMer•I =:.·:t H•vue·~ WEST OEVELOPMENT CORP 0 Tll•• SteltnWnl .... , f•ll'd .. ,,,, lhe Aecordo<l Marcll J, 1990 •• 1nw No ept. No. 3 at 700 Civic couniv Clttk 01 Or•n11<1 c >uni• on 91J rn -i:mo, -111' of 0 11.c .. ,. Center Drive West, Santa N ~ s 19'0 RotorO> •n IM olh<• OI Int R0<oroer Ana, California 9270l on o••m , Fl-S ot Or•not County, WIO dUO of lru~I November 25, 1980 at lO:OO Publl•l'ltd Orilnqe CO<t;t Oally P1lo1 dOS<r•IM• .... lo•10w•"11 Proot•1Y LOISlof Traci No "866,1n lM (1ty a .m . No• 7.J.~ .• J.!. •. ~.!.~ •OHO ot Co•t• -... •• shOwn on• Mao••· IF YOU OBJECT to the PUBLIC NOTICE cord•O •n DOOk •11. p..tOtt ti to so in t• f th It' PU•LIC HEAlllNOS WILL BE HILD 8Y THE COSTA MESA PLAN· NINO COMMISSION AT THE CITY HALL, 11 FAIR OlllYE, COSTA M•sa, CAltFO"NIA, AT t :.IO P.M. 011 AS SOON AS POSSIBLE TH lllEAl<T li A ON MONDA Y. lllOYaMaU 1•, IW . REGARDING THE FOLLOWING AP Pl.I CATIONS t. l-1i1<..,oen Perft'\11 lE-111 •no hnt.tll••M#ot Tr.ct fT 10911R tor Jimmy 8. •nd Rel>Kte A B•-•. 1..a Hew Hamcxnll"t Ori••, tor conol llonel UM Permit lor a IC..unll con Oomlnlum with •••lenu rrom re· QUltltCI rur setback anO • one IOI SUD OlviSlon 10< t~1n1um 11urpo10, IOUltO at '10 -»6 Well ltln SVttt, In •n RZ (Rl PenalnQI Tont Environ menl•I Determination Ntq•llve De<leretion IR·7..0., A·~l•I ), ,_ ··~ .... ~" ll-11t •nd T entellw PMcel Map S<tt>-le4 tor Freo F•or•, a11111orl1td •vent for Rltlltrd W AOll11ew, 1Ul Cllutcll SlrHt, '!"' Percel Mep 10 cr .. t• two P•r<th with e •trlen<t lrom mlnumum ,1,. rte111lr•menl. lout.a at 1""1 Al.B •nO tt6J Clllnth SlrHt tnO '""' H--1 &Olllevtrd. In e C1/Rl lont Env1r..,,,,_ttot Delerml..ellon· Hem pt J. UM El<.,CIOll ... tl'llfl Zl*11' •1 ht11tUve M.tp ot Trtel TT·lliit I C A S 0.wlo9ment (o.po,.tlOft, 4 nori1eo 419tnl ,.,,. TOiiy Hendler. ZOU (Giner A-. Los A"9flt\, '°' ConOll'-1 Ute Permit lor a two 11111l <ond0mlft111m wllll • •Ml-• lrotn et· le<MG pe1'1"'9 r~lrtl'l'ltftt tncl T- t•llve Map ~ tr.cl tor • -IOI tub Olvl1lo" for t•ndOlt>lnl"'" P11r1>0>e1, iouttd •I ttaA AllMWlft'\ Avlftue, lft .,, IU IOM. IEnvir~l•I Otltrml..e• 1191'1: ntmol. For l11rt/'llt '"'°'Mttleft Oii iiie ADOve epp11u1-., t~ l$4-5a4~ or ull el lM effl<:e Of 1M Pl-lflt 0.-t· "M111, lltom JOO."""" ~, ..... Cost• MeM, Celllornle CCISTAMISA fi'LANHIHG COMMl,.StOA Rl<f\efll C•••tenwn. °"'"'*' ~.,,, ... _,.. ... le<NtA'Y .,.. Olf'KW to! 1'1-lnt ...-i1.,., 0r.,... C...ot 0.11, ,, ... ....... 14, I.., 416t .. cluSJv• 111 M•.c•ll•neou• M•P• •n ,,,. gr an rng o e pet ton, ota.ce 01 tr.. Count• Atco•aer of ... a you Should either appear c""ntv at the hearing and state ~.';.! g~..,"Ll!,:72~: t.,~110:~':: your objections or fife cnm written objections w ith the "Ill• ct,.,..,.,,"' or common a.-court before the hearing. 119,,.11on 1• ""°Wf1 •t>ove. no we.,•n•v Your appearance may be ~~v1~~1~. to 11i tomp1t1ene" or cor In person or by your at. T11e oenei.c .. ry unot• \elo o..o 01 torney. Tru\l,OyrNIO<lal•~e<llOrdel..,11 t F Y 0 U ARE A ~r!~:,,::'~~=!, \::•:11!:~!:Di~ CREDI TOR or a coiit· 111• Under\lqt90. wrlllen 0.Cl•••llon ingent creditor Of the ~e­ ol 011eu11 ena Oem.tlld tor !>flt. •no ceased , yOtJ m ust file your •Hltltn-iceolDreKhenO oleletllon Cfaim With the C0Ur1_ Or 10 uu .. 11\4! unatr>IQnH to Mii WllO P•O~f1Y LO tet•sly MIO ol>ll;•tlons, present It to the personal •nd tlleree<le• Che u.-019ne0 <•u-repr esentative appolnfe d Mid noll<e ol br'U<fl -ol tlt<llon to by the COUrt Within fOUr ~ reco.-July>•. 1• es in$1r. No. months from th• da"e of lltU In bOOlt lltll, ~ ,., ol M•d ..-1• 0111c1e1 R~ first issuante of letters as t..10 .. ,. w111.,. mac11e. tM •11"°"1 provide<! In Section 700 of coven•nl .. w•rrenry,UJ)rtUor lm· the Prob•t e C ode 1of pllea, r191fdinQ 1111•, pouenlon, or .. en<umt>renGH, 10 ll'IY the remein•nv Callfo rnla. The time for prlnctpel wm ot IM notellf ll<urH fifing Claims Will not riX· by .. 10 o.eo 01 T r111t. w1t11 1n1.,.,, .. pl re prior to four mon hs In HIO -• provldH, ..ivenc. .. , II eny, una.r 111e terms o1w1c1Det1101 rr1dt, from the date of t he h r· ••••. '""o-' •n<1 ••11tnHs 01 t,,. Ing notic9dabove. Tr111tH -ot t11e tru"s trffl.O t>v YOU MAY EXA"""I E .. 10 Det1I Of Tr11S1 $4110 ••N wlll 1>11 "" 11t10 on Frl<Uiy, Novem«>tr 11, 1te0. •• the file kept by .,,. co rt. 11.00 •.m. .• , Ille tront entr•nce 10 tllt If you al'e Interested tn he olfl<H OI Solrtllern Pt<lflc Tille Corn. estate YOU may file • 111n1. J1J HMll ceor1110 P1" Orlve, t • suite 100, S..C• AM. c.i11ornl• mot. QUe'S with, the court to Th• to••• .,,_, of t11t 1111oe10 celve special notice of oe1•11<• 11 ,,.._..,.,..,1on -.. ...a by lnventorri Of est•t• a Wlllt DtOMffY lo 119 tiol<I, l ... lller with d f I 1n••"''· 1 ... ''*.,, .. , _ HttfNted an o he pet tlons, cem, ·~ enc1 ectv1ncu . •• o1 c o u n t S a n d r e po t s tnea.1e11trto1,1ulJ,to.11 described In Sec11on~ 0•1• =c"!~"° of the Callfornla Pr t• T111ec-v CQde. e Callletnla CO<O :,~!~~Ok Oldmen & oa.m "· r11i.c.tnoer1.,1 Frank A •• Oldm•fl.t.. t · 1<.,. .. ..,., """' torney .t Llw, 901 uo"9r s1tM.cw11 .. ,..,. 9'.. Drive SUltl 200 N•-Su11• 100 , • , --• S.UA11t,c.111 mo1 •••c", Callforni1 '16'1, rmw.t-t:• (714) MS-7000. J .,, -"· H1119, Publlshld Orange °"'t 1'1*1;.:~-::CC::"o.u, ""* Dally Pltot, Nov. 7, •· 1~ Nev, I, 1._>1, 1• .dMi 1990 '"57-80 _ COMtCS I CROSSWORD ~ MA•MADUICI '' 9rM Andtnon PEANUTS by Charles M. Sce.utt C••-•.-.••-""' MAAAtET ! ! ~OIJ1Re 6ACk'!'f'OO FCtlNO VS! FUNKY WINKERBEAN BAR1((J I I HAVE ~R P.S.A:r. 5C..ORE.5 AND lllEY'Rt REALL'1> OlE.U.0-l'T ! TELL ™EM, MARllfff .. TEU TMEM MOW ~OO'D DECIDE WHICH PATMS TO TAl<f ••. ~U 5CDRED AU.. ™E Wf¥.J UP IN n.1£ Nl~E.ll,l -NIN"JM PE.RC.EN1l LE ! "Marmaduke, I would llke to lie here and relax without your helpl" SHOE CoMc INTO MY/>.RMS! I'VE MISSED you~ .f Tht most ei'f icient 'Nay is to cl1DF your w-@ indcors ·- ON&..'f ~at&' DO T"MAT IZ oee1::I. &A91ES!.' by Jeff MacNelly ana ige your Mly heat to help Mat the hOuse. by Mell Lazarius DRABBLE NEIL., I J~1" .iAO A i:l£Af I OU roft A~ £Orfo1t1Al., 601' 1'M AffU10 1'M (,DIN& 1'0 ~1 11" 1. ~ FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE DID '/OU HE.ARThRT? -~----_ _. DR . SMOCK WSIA ... , Fl NAl-L.-Y, A DOC1'"0R W HO l-OOKS l-1 KS H~ KNOWS HIS eus1NeSS/ so WHA1'" HAVe; :! GOI, DOC ? THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil Keane GORDO "1'1 save your seat for you, Mommy." DENNIS THE MENACE JUDGE PARKER I WAb ... OVT JEANNIE 0000 MORNIN6, MR. 6AVE ME THE INFOR DRIVER! OAN TOt.D ME MA ftON I WANTED' YOU WERE L00KINC1 FOR ME!..__.- ·-. . CHET, THE MAN YOU HIT.UNDER· ~ENT &RAIN !:>Uf1:6€~T OURIN(J THE N16KT, TIM I l'M CERTAIN THAT THE POLICE WILL WANT TO QUE~TION OOlH lOU ANO JEANNIE! rar~~ . -. by Harold Le Ooux OUT~ E)(P\.AINED HOY'4 Q1£T MANHANDLED HER AT me COCKTAIL l.OUN6E ANO THREATENED YOU! by Tom K. Ryan r-----, I I I I I I I I I I L _____ j BREAK IT UP, BREAK IT UP LATER BREAK •tT UP, BREAk IT UP BIG GEORGE CWLY PILOT 81 I by Vlrt61 Partdl ''No, I'm not wortllng a nail puzzle!" by Kevin Fagan ~l~ ... I ro«&O'f 1t> CAl~N ~ A&oO'f 1'Wt AN'f" latA~Q. .. :·.a I, ·-'· by Lynn Johnston I SHOULD KAVE KNOWN. IF IT WAS ONE OF THE KIDS, HE'D HA'JE SLEPT IHRO.mi IT. by George Lemont I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZl.E I ACROSS 1 Dull ones 6 US m1sS1le 10 Female 14 Popla< 15 UK river 16 Agley 17 SulCl<le Site 2 w0<ds 19Servant 20 Orawout 21 ()()(manl 23 Opening 25Woelul 268om 27 Grain ear 29Fal 31 CarHn 33 Cardg1me 34 Track 36 Accepts 40 "-C11<is- t1e" 42 Pluck strings 44 USSR river 45 Relruta 47 M111's name 49 King 50 VnMI 52 T r111ater 53 Numblf S4 Article 51 Furrow UNITED Feature Syndicate 59 Garment Thursday's Puzzle Solved 61 N. Carohna cape 64 Wisdom deity 67 Parrol 68 Bootblack Slang 70 Al wt11ch ttme i:;:.;.&+~~~~~"" 71 Ripped 72 Cons11uct 73 W1lhMed 7" CIOse 75 Oll1Ce 11ems DOWN I Bundle 2 Greek com 3 Ch1nges 22 Redacl 43 Indian stale 4 ChOMf'I 24 Runs "6 Certain 5 Soap operas. 27 Warmth 48 Was mad e O 28 Cornbread 5 1 Salvos 6 Indian cym· 30 Archlleclural 54 Muscles bals order 55 Axe: Fr. 7 Hutena 32 Skillet 56 Anesthetic 8 Some exams 35 Governed 58 Western lake 9 lt1<11t 31 Liquid luels 60 UK counly 10 light source 38 Un1t0<m 62 Pitch 11 Once 11'\0ft 39 Greenish 63 Shore b11d 12 F~h 11ver blue 65 Bottle par! 13 lkilruth 41 Lawyer: 66 Trickeries 18 Beltl Abbr. 69 F11t1 1 2 a • • .. • • • ~ng askets opular analn& baskets are one ot the t attracUve w~Y• of 1rowinC lna plant.a a nd the 1roup of jecta for this type of 1..-den· lneludet some or the mosl utll\il plants In a II or the t ldnadom. any small leafed varieties ol En&Ush ivy make attractive I n Ol' variegated subjects for hanging basket garden . One t that you may not have rd or is t h e E r igeron vinskianus which is a native i Mexlco. It offers white or · ish daisy flowers set along gracefully tr ailing branches ch wiU now out of a hanging bUket. . NOTHE R FOLING [ plant w.lfh a trailing habit and a good ~ice for a container is the pep· ~mint geranium whose leafy branches are striking hanging trom a basket. Sm all white- flowers in fluffy cluste rs bloom a~ldst its velvety lea~es which si•e off a pepper mint scent when rubbed. There are several shrubs and ~ennials which will tr ail if giYen the chance. The shrimp 11tant is an ever gr een shrub usyally treated as a perennial. lbf flowers are white, spotted wltb purple and enclosed in cop- pety-bronze bracts. By pinching a nd cutting back ste ms. the smmp plant can be kept low aqtl spreading. BASKET-OF-GOLD a nd It..1tlian bellflower are two ex- cetlent selections for hanging b8tikets. Hang your basket-of- g~d in full sun for a mass dis· pl•Y of golden yellow color. The l,t.1lian bellflowe r b looms vigorously in late summer and f aU in shakes of lavender, blue ~white. ~ou have all sorts of choices fot hanging baskets and 'we've only listed a few. The next time YOU visit your nursery tell your nirrseryman what you're after. We're sure he will have many more suggestions for your hang- in& baskets. Hortic ulture group to m eet The Horticultural Society of Orange County will meet Tues· dat al 7 :30 p.m .. at the California perative Extension, 1000 S. bor Blvd .. Anaheim. r . Phi lip Baker, professor of bO a ny at Long Beach State sl e 1959, wi ll show slides and de cribe his experiences in the st ying of plants of the South P ific. here will be a plant forum sale. Refreshments will be ved For information, call e Krystyn, 636·9628. rchidgro up ts meeting ewport Harbor Orchid Socie· t ill meet Thursday a t 8 p.m • at First Methodist Ch urch, 19th Street and Harbor Boulevard. ~ta Mesa. di Bailey of Torra nce will j ak on "Australian Cy m · urns." He will also supply t plant table. embers are encouraged to g their blooming pla nts to $ re. For inform ation, call 1363. .,..., ........ ~ - .. GARDENERS MEASURE MAMMOTH SQUASH Ed Martin, left, and aon, Chuck, check cfrcumfe,.nce Father, son grow- ~ giant vegetables By ROBERTBARKER Ol Ille Oell• ,_. ... St.ff Ed Martin and his son Chuck go in for growing vegetables in a big way They don 't grow m uch but what they grow is big. The prize of the harvest in the bacloya rd of their Huntington Beach home is something called a Hungarian Mammoth Squash . lt is more than five feet in circumference and Chuck, a student of welding and diesel mechanics at Golden West College, says it weighs 106 pounds. THE VINE ALSO has spread throughout the garden plot and has climbed a lemon tree where it is bearing an airborne squash .. Th~Martins also say they grew tomatoes that were more than 12 inches in circumference, weighing 1 and '14 pounds. . They say they also raised string beans that were about 25 in· ches long. THE MA RTINS ordered their seeds by mail after seein~ ad- vertisemenL'> m a magazine. Each seed package carried a Ripley Believe rcor Not statement attesting to the size of the product. The literature stated that the Hungarian Mammoth Squash can weigh more than 45 pounds. "We always heard that you needed special conditions such as a hothouse and speci.al :.oil and fertili zers to grow vegetables this big," said the elder Marlin "BUT ALL WE OIO was give them lots of water. It was fun watching how big they would get." Now that they've grown it, the Martins don't quite know now what to do with their squash Rut they believe its insides turn an orange color and has a flavor Like a pumpkin · If they expect 1l to be converted into pumpkin pies for Thanksgiving dinner, however. they have their work cut out for them. ''I'll make the pies." ~aid Mrs Barbara Martin, "but somebody else as going to have to clean and peel it." Weekend gardening checklist • Check oµt the early blooming camellias at local nurseries. And remember, once you have them in your garden. keep the blooms of all camellias picked up or petal blight disease can spread. • Lift and divide perennials s u c h as phlox and prim- r oses Plant new per ennial seedlings such as delphiniums • It's too early to prune de- ciduous trees and shrubs. Wait until they are completely dor· m ant in December and J anuary. • Gardeners who plan on hav· ing a living Christmas tree this year are urged to shop early for one . The selection is good at this time. I rvin e Garde n C lub slates g u est s p e aker Irvine Garden Club wi ll meet Wedn e s da y at 10 a .m . at Univers ity Park Cl ubhouse. Irvine. Dr. David Walkington. as· sociate vice president of Cal State Fullerton. will speak on "P oisonous Plants in the Garden." A club proJect will be planned a round the information present· ed and will be given to the Irvine Nat ure Center. Tu rtle Rock Community Park, for their dis· play of poisonous plants. F or information, call Marilyn Baum . 559-1695. Me mbers are requested to bring plants for the plant exchange. ecorate house randtna style' -Among the t.hings that made going "over the I to Grandmother 's house" so memorable were distinctive and colorful Indoor decorations she anged for the holidays. Using deep-hued autumn leaves, brightly col· fruit and m any shaped outs, grandmother de the diMer table an adornment to the whole use. The three fruits which are especially adapted California and make excellent Thanksgiving de· ations are the pomegrante, persimmon and the awberry tree. Be iMovative and try dilterent things like put· J an all white, yellow or gold chrysanthemum in dark brown basket wlth a brown and white ecked ribbon around it. Or, spray paint baskets y of the other autumn hues like orange or rust. keep 1n tune with t.he seuon when you are de· ating your home with flowers. And remember, after chrysanthemums have fahecl their bloom indoors, you can cut back Ir i tems to 6·8 Inches and plant them outdoors ere t.My will slgnal the seuon lo your yard next ar . If you don't have your own berried shrub or o or t.hr", now la the time to pl•nt them. Try Toyon. Pyraeantha. Cotoneaat.er, Barberries aosneboWtt. . llake thla Thankaglvln1 a special one and dee· ate ln Orandmotbe r'• style with leaves, aaat&, ts, berried shrubs and those seasonal bloomen tl\t)'santbemuma. ~ I .u ,..._ CLOSfO J •AL ....... ,. TU ....... , ... AL ~0.-..._ ... ·- 60 VARIETIES of IOXED TREES. saooo ... CLOSIOUTOf C 1cWC ..... ,.......•1• .. •z•.-. IUUCLAWN& THOUSAMDS flf PLAMJS PnJ ••...t ~Y.ullTllS 1 gal. 99' • Up 5 gal. s411 • u,. GiAIDIMPIOOUCTS JS gal. 52495 & u, ........ • Pt11ft11w .,.. .. • llllfoer, .... r 1J Home gardens ~winl Survey shows 34 million -and in£retu1ing Capitol News Service SA CRAME NTO -An or - ganization dedicated to promot· Ing home gardening has report· ed that American s a r e ex- perimenting with green thumbs in backyard gardens in an effort to beat inflation and feel they are d oin g s omet hi n g fo r themselves. According to a non -profit group called "Gardens for AU," there are some 34 million home gardens in the United States, an inc rease of nine million gardens in the last 10 years. THE SURVE Y INDl<;ATED about 43 percent of America's households-h<1ve some sort of garden and most of those pro· duced so m e or a ll of that household's vegetables. Food gardening isn 't JUSt work, Gardens for All President Jack Robinson said. Gardening Carnivore tomato created? RALEIGH, NC. <AP> -A researcher at North Carolina Stale Universi· ty 1s working on a pl an to tum the tables on the animal kingdom He's trying, in effect. to create a meat-eating tomato George G. Kennedy, associate proft!ssor of e nt omo logy. says he hopes to cross domestic tomatoes with wild ones native to South America and Central America. The wild varietie!> ure covered wi t h glandular hairs that secr e te a sticky substance. trap· ping small insects rash enough to land on the plants. mortally poison- ing pests in as little as 20 minutes o r m e re l y paralyzing lh••m is now one or the country's most popular leisure activities, out- distancing jogging, tennis and golf. ''TIDS VEAR THE survey re· veals that gardening is a pace- setter in an emergfog lifestyle char acterized by per sona l technology and home productivi· ty. In the face of increasing in- fl at ion a nd econ om ic a nd poli tical uncerta inty, th e gardener is ta)(ing charge where he or she is able -at home and in the community." Robinson explains. T he survey indicated that although 14 million households indicated an interest in garden· i~ but lacked space, there are eight miflion households where vegetables are grown indoors in pots or on porches. • The total retail value of home food production was estimated at an all·Ume high or $15 billion. • A aEGlONAL aaEAKDOWN of home gardentn1 practices int: dicates Uiat the mldwest ls ~ number one 1ardenln1 area wiUi S4 percent or the total gard~r The. eut and south follow with 4J' and 42 percent respectively. nw.~ west trails with only 28 ~rcet• and has had an 11 point declipe over. three years. Also, statistics showed tl)at~ those people with gardens were: inclined t.o increue the size ol' those gardens . Up to 20 percent of the home gardeners incre~: their gardens for an average· site of about 663 square feet. "We have to consider that all this has something to do witJt personal satisfaction, not juq• pur e econo mics," Robinson · says. "People like to be able let make a difference and in home production they can." BARE-ROOT ROSES ARRIVING SOON· SAVE 15% ON ALL PREPAID ORDERS PRIOR TO DEC. 10 FINEST NO. 1 GRADE BARE-ROOT ROSES Select from over 60 varieties arriving before Christmas. PRICED FROM 4. 98 LIVING CHRISTMAS TREES HAVE ARRIVEDI Shop early for best Selectlon ... Remember They ·Stay Fresh I TREES FROM 1 FT. TO 7.FT. THE IEST VARIETIES FOR OUR AREA. PRICED FROM 3.98 TO 65 .00 Put Spice In Your Life ... Florist C ARNATIONS BEST QUAUTY•LONG STEMS MANY COLORS•FULL DOZEN 2.98 DOZEN "The built ·1n r t' sistence 1s int-xpens1vc. e nv1 ronmentali\ !-a fe and compatible with <m y other methods of control the farmer ma\ u~c ... Kenned~ !>aid. :ic1d1n g tha l the da ~·s of the tomato fruit worm. lhl' tobat'CO horn worm and the Colorado pot;.ito beet· lemaybcnumbered ·1 .~im·e 1946 · I "We k:now we can in· corporate the res1!>tancc into do mes tic tomato types." Kenned ~ said "Now Wl' need to find JUSt lhe right concentra- t ion of chemicu l!> t o move into an 1mprov<·d type of fruit. .. J!~~~t*!! Ct I 2840 Harbor llYd., Costa Mesa " j Ad good r rough Nov.18. 1980.wllfle supply lasts • carpet sale I Save on carpets of new Anso IV nylon ALL AMSO IV CARPET HAS A 5 YEAR WEAR WARRAM'Tf. STORE HOURS: Weftdayt 10-6 SATURDAY 10-S CLOSED TUES. & SUH. IMCRBMIU IS a dense heavyweight Anso IV saxony with a beautiful pencil point finish. offering 36 of the best selling colors in the country. Its yarn is continuous heatset. and it also has permanent anti-static. RADIANCE II end s y o u r search for the ever-popular saxony. Pile fibers of 100% Anso IV have been continuous heat set and is available in 27 sparkling solid colors. REHAISSANCE is luxury in a cut pile carpet. Pastels and earth tones characterize the color line. 100% Anso IV nylon. TOUCH OF YB.YET is a dense. cutpile plush with economy in mind . .fibers of 100% Anso IV nylon. 27 se>phisticated colors. WARNER AVE. x . . IMMOVATIVE FLOORING ~ -· 5906 W.-r A••· . llmt ..... • le11•; 840-1345 . . I I . ..... ........... -...... !'ft .. ·~·· -...._ .............. _~.-~.·~ . . INllDll: •lnter1ftlulon •Out 'n' About •TY 1 MoYIH •G•rdenlng Prtdtiy. N~mb9r t~. 1980 ONLY PILOT . .I Fun goes overbotird Top celebrities keep ship jn01ping By CAaOL MOO&E CM IM O.lly ,_...,. ''Anythin1 Goes" a lont way In providln1 the apunk and spontaneity ot entert.alnment that's lost in televilion's emphasis on close·ups and obvious punchlines. · Qranted. the sprl"'tly musical ls not relevant, soctally significant drama. The mischief ' and romances aboard tbe S.S. Americana re· semble "Love Boat." BUT THEN YOU add ge nerous portions of: -Ginger Rogers. still kic king up her 1 heels and belting out tunes in the manne r that made her a show business legend. -Sid Caesar , whose COIJledy -both silent and rapid.fire - deserves a more fre· SID CAESAR • quent forum. -Cole Porter's delightful, delovely' lyrics at their sophisticated best. -ROSS PE1TY, making the absolute most of his disguises as a sailor, Mrs. George Bernard SHOW ••HDa LEGIM> STILL DANCES Gino-R111 a ec1aplle1ta • 'Anytlllng Goe•' Shaw, a catering steward, the Duke of Hanover and a Chinaman. -Isabelle Farrell, almost steallng some scenes with her Impish, squeaky voiced ef- fervesc·ence. Mixing all these elements results in rollicking evenings through Dec. 14 at the Wilshire Theater, 84-40 Wilshire Blvd., Beverly IIllls. Ticket prices are $13 to S21. In "Anything Goes." Caesar plays one of the funniest characters he has ever impersonated, a gangster embarrassed by his rating as Public Enemy No. 13. AS A FUGITIVE, he poses as the gentle clergyman. the Rev. Dr. Moon, and tries to escape aboard an ocean liner during the days of deluxe travel. How he avoids detection is the basis for the plot. His disguise is constantly jeopardized as he blesses "brothers and cistern," shuffles a deck of hymnals and rattles off litanies or Latin crossword puzzl,e def"mitions. Meanwhile, Miss Rogers port.rays a nightclub enc hantress, Reno Sweeney, chaperoning four singing Angels intent on leading the flock "'beside distilled waters." Almost everything goes when Reno and the ensemble perform "Blow Gabriel Blow" with Miss Rogers and the audience alternately requesting reprises. And such ebullient replays! CAESAR ALSO HEIGtrrENS rapport with the front rows. To a line about "50 American dollars being worth more than 300 Chinese yen," he ad· libbed, "in THOSE days: this is an OLD show." While the two s tars unravel their predica· ments through such Porter classics as "I Get a Kick Out of You" and "You're the Top," there's suspense in other staterooms . Will the betrothal of Hope Harcourt <Gail Johnston) and Sir Evelyn Oakleigh (Edward Crot· ty) survive the rough seas and her mother (Jane Judge)? Their fine characterizations keep the out- come in doubt until it's revealed "In the Still of the Night." Will the befuddled, seasick financier Elijah Whitney (wobbly Fred Miller) recognize his top aide-tumed·stowaway? This is made more dif· ficult when his glasses are swiped in Caesar's first feat of physical mimicry. WHO WILL RESCUE the Rev. Moon from his last "hell of a jam" in the brig? Too many shenanigans? Don't worry the next song will put you back on the track. Or sit back and delight in the choreography of director Steven Bohm. A resounding stageful or tap dancers is a rarity these days. Costume coordinator Margarita Delgado must have chuckled as s he contrasted the Rev. Moon's Roman collar with crepe.soled shoes and white gym socks. And s he may have laughed herself crazy designing his final get·up for the slightly funereal wedding. SHE WAS RIGID' on target too, devising the slinky gowns and pastel boas for The Angels, but she could have been more complimentary and less glaring with Miss Rogers' longer gowns. Nostalgia and vivacity keep this production a float, especially for anyone who remembers "Your Show or Shows" or "The Gay Divorcee" "Top Hal" and "Stage Door." The fun overflows, almost washing out what little story line remains after the original 1934 book by Guy Bolton and P.G. Wodehouse about a fictionalized disaster at sea had to be rewritten at the last minute when one actually occurred. HOWARD LINDSAY and Russell Crouse came to the rescue, retaining the roles of actors already in rehearsal and costly sets already built yet eliminating any reference to the shipwreck in the headlines or the day. Their hasty revision became a milestone in theatrical history. It made a star of Ethel Merman in the role or Reno Sweeney and assured Porter his niche as America's No. l writer or songs of fas hion. Miss Merman repeated her role in the 1936 movie version with Bing Crosby a nd in a 1954 television broadcast. Small voiees URBAN PEASANTS REACT IN SURREALISTIC 'THREEPENNY OPERA' ARENA AT UCI Brecht's drama Is populated by the street aoclety of tum-of-the-century England . Frenzy woTth watching '11ireepenny Opera' like three-ring circus By MICHAEL DOUGAN 0 1 IN O•oly PlleC Si.ft Bea r in m1nrl while watchin g "The Threepenny Opera." now playing at UC Irvine's Fine Arts Vill age Theater. t hat Mack the Knife is the product of a Germ an Marxii:t mind. circa 1928. For thi s delightrul play. well staged and performed, is more than a handful of songs about a felonious swain . The story line 1s light. but there lurk~ a message beneath the surface -capitalism breeds the larcenous soul BRECHT'S PLA y is populated by the Un· derworld. the street society. of early 20th Cen· tury England pickpockets, muggers. whores, beggars. killers and the occasional corrupt cop. Motley doesn't bt>gin to descn be them Brecht is not heavy handed. however. and his theme doesn't comt-through clearly until the end. Mack the Kn1 f<'. as scalawags go. 1s certain· ly lovable. But he 1s no elh1cally inspired Robin Hood. Mackie 1s a ,ap1st. murderer and thief of the first order And how does sot<1ety acknowledge him? What 1s his JU.St reward? Check it out. Brecht's cynical conclusion leaves little doubt about his politics. THAT SAID, "THE Threepenny Opera" is a lot or fun. T he tunes are terrific. the direction is dyna mite. the acting is acceptable and several of the singers are very, very good. Equally impressive is the set design by Charlotte Stratton and the lighting by Cameron Ha rvey. Using no curtains and exposing the stage all the way to the back wall <where actors await their entrances in full view of the audience), Stratton and Harvey have created a multi-level, surrealistic arena that enhances the action. :tt USICAL DIR ECTOR Irvin Kimber and chor eogi;aphcrs Robert Cohen and Janice Plastino give each song a pleasing vibrancy and move a large cast about the stage with pro- fessional skill At times. "Threepe nny Opera" is like a three-ring circus -there's so much going on at once you 're bound to miss some of it. While it is easy to regard the dramatic por· tions of the play as mere interludes between the music, director Robert Cohen has imbued his cast with believability And a good cast it is. The weak links are few and, in truth, not all t hat wealc . Conscience, stardom pose conflict for serious actor LISA CANARELLI AS Polly Peachum, Mack's wife Cone of them), is outstanding. She acts with style, sings great and has such an ex· pressive face that you can read it through a widow's veil. Then there's Donna Sotto-Morettini as Mrs. By JACKIE RYMAN ._ ...... p.,.. Wrttw It's a familiar Hollywood story. The band.some youn1 actor wins an impressive television role. The critics applaud; teen.age hearts beat faster. Slz or ao months later, he's living an in· terview in bis Malibu beach house, describinl bis new TV aeries and an upcomin1 feature rum . Tbe ftnt part of the picture wu true enou1b for Kristoffer Tabori, DOW a~ in Cotta llesa.-Tbe ·a0a of ac- tret1 Vlveca LlDdlon, be la a JO.year veteran '11 Sbablpeare produc· doDI ael'Oll the coun-b'J. Lall March la NBC'• venloa of the Hleaee ftetloa eluele "Braw New World," he •aptmted critics and yt.,,.,. at tbe aha.,Uy baod1ome, Sbakea· TMORI pear~ot1n1 blond "uva1•" who •rowa · from -eyed admtrauoa Of a futuriltic world to furJ at hi mAMlel1 coa.formlty. IDOlll' MON'l'BI LATU tM bleacbed bklDcl U1r md Kl'Mll beard -wll6eb be admlU made ................. iD lloUJWOOCI aiCIMhabe -are 1 • gone. Kriltoffer Taborl is back to being himself, a brown-haired, clean·shaven actor who re ally pre· fers to be on the stage. Of coune, it has fts drawbacks. "I hope you don't mind buyln1 lunch," says the 28-year-old actor as he slldea into a restaurant booth at the South Cout Piasa Hotel. ''I'm broke.'' He's playln1 the part ol Tom in the South Coast Re pertory production of T ennessee Williams' play, "The Glass Menagerie." ''TllESE'S nothln1 that makes any sense about beinl in theater," he admit.a. "It doesn't meet with the American dnJam of doinl wbat 's practical and will afford you a condo with a whirlpool batb. '' • • Railed in Neiir York, Tabori hu been in the theater most of his Ute, altbo\18h he aays his pareata trt.d to ~eep him "at a dlatance" until be WH old~'° han4le lt.a llttsl. At 15, he dedded be bad waited 1001 enou1b. "I was a dreadfUl 1tudent," say1 Taborl, who quit eehool to 1tar wltb Anne Bancroft in "A Cry of Playen" at l..Jncoln Center. Tbe play about the youn1 Wiiiiam Sbake1peare waa written by William Glblon, author of "Tbe lllracle Worker." Wii&IN A lllOaT time, Taborl bad ai,ned a contract wltb 30th Century Fox Md fouad himteU bein1 promoted by aeveral fan macadne9 •• a tMn-... ldol. . "But I really wan\ed to be a Mrlout aetor, to now my craft,·· be nfledl. "At 11 you don't become a ~ 1tar, an)'1taJ; ,ou'N a ffld." • So he fled Hollywood for Buffalo. N.Y .. where he starred in "Romeo and Juliet." "Today we're li ving In an automated environ- ment where people don't respond with dignity and size to an event," Tabori explains. "There's an ex· panse in Shakes peare. There is a big issue at stake." DESPITE IDS PREFERENCE for the s tage. he's kept up his work in television, appearing on such shows as "Barella" and "The Rockford Files" as well as In TV movies and miniseries, in· eluding "QB 7" and "Seventh Avenue." He'll be temporarily returning to New York soon to direct "A Play About Lovers," an adapta· tilai of a French play by Robert Wallsten. But, says Tabori, "I've led a vagabond's life for tbe last 10 years and I'm tired or It. I love this theater that .I'm workin8' at now and would love to build on this relationship." But as he nears his 30s, Tabon acfmits he's faced with "the Inevitable contUct" -that to get the roles he want.s , he may have to seek com· merclal fame. "WE UVE IN A society in which media de· termines what will be important or what will not," Taborj says. "People are belnt barraged by so much. the small voice isn't beard. "II you want to be heard, you have to make a terles. I am continuing to explore ho~ to mua1e my conscience and the reality ol bavin1 to be a " itar." • • Peachum. Theresa Larkin as Jenny the Whore and Carole J. Jones as Lucy Brown. All should be pelted with flowers . David Ira Way, the street singer who opens and closes the show a nd provides narraUoo, ls reminiscent of Joel Gray in the film "Cabaret." He moves well, sings well and projects an ap- propriate air of decadence. Less strong of voice, but competent in their roles. are Claude File as J . J . Peacbwn and Dean Weichel as Mack tbe Knlle. THE ORCHESTaA, conducted by Irvin Kimber, sits in the middle of the slafe and bs a fine job. It's the tunes, incidentally, that carry tbe show. With lyrics by Breehl and muaJc by Kurt Weill, they are lively and sophisticated. Try to remember they were written 52 yean aco. The only comp~lnt ts that "Threepenny Opera" runs a little loo Joni. THEATER·GOERS A&E apt to find themselves relurnln1 from the second ln-• termission in hopes of a short lblrd act. (Speak· •' lng of intermlulons why Is coffee the Olll.Y • refreshment avallable? Not everyone drtnki " that stuff, folks .> .• . 'Vou can catch "Threepenny Opera"= . or Saturday. Both shows are at I p.aa. l • beln1 wtiat it la, ''Threepenny Opera" eoeta 400 ~ pennies 1eneral admluiQQ._ JOO for 1tudletl. It beat.a buylac a slx·pack. -.1 I • OAILV PIL.OT \ I \ ,....~----~~--------:-.. ~ ... -------,,-.~~--~-... ~--......... ------------------..,..~-~,--:i----------------------------------------.... ~--------------,:,.;::...;...-.iii~----~--. ... LO ••MOWN l'LUTllT I -I ,• '-TN• TalUM"'I OP HAftSaUltOS" available et all Tlcketron egencles or a.m . CBS wlll fllm the event for ''Two on Mlda• D1ll 1 It returfW ._...to tM ....... IMc" CNIMer ~ lectety'I <*_,. Mrln •t L..,na,IMctt H .. ScMal 8'111tertum, .as ft.WAw. The ftarts ~ Playen wtU...,...,.,., Mlect ... by 8-c", Mourt and •l•HMtt'lft90Dl"~,.lftn. Tickets.,. Pat tM box office prior to tM I : 1S pet'for'fNftA. l O•A .... COAIT COLL ... 'S 10 chor• .......,..,. wm ...,....m Frani JD1es11t H••'s dramatk "Mass • In D" at the cofteoe's audltortum S.turdey night beQlnnlno at I p.m. Tkkets ... $3 and $2 at the door, 2101 FaJr\tleW Road, Cost• Mesa. WOltKS av ••NJAMIN ••int, wm be performed Saturday Md Sunday night by the UCI Concert , the CtwNnber singers and the Women's Chorus In the Fine Arts Conceit Hall at 8. Featured works wlll Include "Hymn to St. Cecilla," Op 27 and the "Ceremony of C.r.ols," Op. 28. The 70..member chorale will perform under the direction of Joseph Husztl with Ronald Salnlo directing the Women's Chorus. Tlcketsare$2and$1atthe -7 box office. For more Information call 133-6617. QUEBECDANCERSANDSINGERS will perform Saturday night at UC Irvine's Crawford Hall at 8. Folk dances and songs will be performed by the group, V'la l'Bon Vent. Tickets are $6 and $S for students at the box office. • 11 tM tltle of• program by celling (213) 4:J6.3203. the Town." Admission ts f'". Moncl9y nlaht sponsoNd by the music \_ <tepertmenl •t C.l State Long Beach In CHAPMAN SYMftHONY OltCHaSTltA Ol'l'·••ATCAltTOONS, /- the Unlvwslty Union auditorium at wlll perform works by Beethoven and Mennln lndudlno"BamblMeetlGodJlll•," e. Woriw b'f Senti, I IMC, van Bruck and Sunday at 4 p.m . In the college's Memorial "Bambi's Revenge" and "Sisyphus" lrattf *Ill be Included In the concert. Halt,333N.GlassettSt.,Orange. will be shown Tuesday at SeddiebKk Tlck•en $2 Md S1 for atudlntsone Tlcketsare$2and$1 forstudentsand Community College's Fine Arts Thffter, ttour before the performance. senlorcltlzens. 28000 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. SADOL9MCK COLLae• SYMPHONY Gt*'• tfttlr concert •rte1, S.tu,_y •ti In tt'9 Fine Arts ThHter, 2IOOO Marguerite Parkway, Mission VleJo. Under the d&rectlon of K=,...• the orthestr• wlll perform " ure to Eomont, Opu• M," by Beethoven, "Br•ndenbu'11 COftcwto No. 3" by Bach .nd"Symphony No. 1 I In G MaJOr Opus •," by Dvorak. Tlc.kets .,.. $C end SS.SO for students. IOUTH•AST YOUTH SYMPHONY opens Its ninth wal51)..Sunday at 4 p.m. In the Cal State lot"111J Beach auditorium, 6601 E. Seventh Street. Directed by John L Grangier, the orchestr.a will perform wortts by Grl~ and Schubert. Tickets are $2 and $1 for students at the door. SPANISH GUITARIST NARCISO YEPES will give sofo concerts tonight and Saturday at 8:30 In the Terrace Theater, 300 E. Ocean Blvd., Long Beach. Under the direction of Long Beach symphony director Murry Sldlln, Yepes will perform Rodrlbo's "Conclerto de Aranjuez" and Saint-Saens' "Symphony No. 3 Organ." Tickets are A NEW DANCE COMPANY, Jeff Slayton & Dancers wlll present Its first performance tonight and Saturday at C.I State Long Beach In the University Theater, 6101 E. Seventh Street. The8 p.m. shows wlll Include a special appearance by dancer Viola Farber. Tickets are $7.50 , and $6.50 one hour before curtain. SENIOR OLYMPIC DAY gets under way Saturday at Knott's Berry Farm featuring exhibitions of karate, gymnastics and welilht lifting from .10:30 a.m . to ~:30 p.m. In the , park'sStarllght Pavilion. "~ESTIVALMEXICO" wlll taketothestreetsof Disneyland Saturday and Sunday as Latin dancers stage an all day festival In the amusement park. Featured will be Mexican artists Fernando Allende and Pedro Infante, along w ith a special Fiesta Parade at S p.m. . TICKETS ARE ON SALE for the Nov. 23 concert of the Pacific Symphony Orchestra at Fullerton's Plummer Auditorium. Keith Clark will conduct Tickets are $2 at the Fine Arts box office for the I p.m. show. STAR TREK PANS .,. Invited to see favorite episodes from the science fiction show tonight at the Clifton C. Miiier Community Center, 300 Centennial Way, Tustin. Admission Is $1.SO and $1 for children for the 1 p.m. movie. COUNTltYftSTERN PANS are Invited to the Nov. 21 concert featuring Tanya Tucker and Johnny Paycheck at the LOft9 Beach 4rena at 8. Tickets are available at all Tlcketron end Mutual agencies. CELEBRITY SERIES CONTINUES at Cypress Coll~ Saturday with the a~rance of actresses Julie Adams and Ellen Geer and dancer Nobuko M iyamoto In the campus theater at 8. Admission Is $3. THE ULTIMATE FRISBEE TOURNAMENT Is belngstaoed Saturday at UC I rvlne's Crawford F=leld beginning at 9 a.m. when fraternities throughout Southern California will meet In team competition. For more Information call 833-6922. Marital cyclones rage the 7:30 program which will Include a solo performance by violin virtuoso Eugene Fodor. For ticket information call 635-3431 . ALL URBAN COWBOYS are Invited to the Annual Great Western Fair Friday through Sunday at the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds. More than SOO booths d isplaying western artifacts will be on the grounds along with TOY AIRPLANES wlll take to the skies Sunday during the Southern callfornia Scale Squadron's competition at Fountain Valley's Mlle Square Park from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m . Spectators are Invited to Emotional 'lest f()feC88t f~ 'Father's Day' By MICHAEL OOVGAN OfU.Delty ........... "Father's Day," latest offering of tlle Newport Theater Arts Center, is a tale ol six people with holes in their souls. Their lives are twisted by marital cyclones and they com- municate only through mutual snipes. It's a popular theme with playwrights and, frankly, it gets a litlle tiresome. STILL, THIS STORY or three divorced couples come together to celebrate -and that word should be in quotes -Father's Day is well-presented by the Center players and carefully paced by director Tom Titus. In short, it worts. And audiences in Orange County, where divorce is as common as the cold, should find plenty to identify with. Author Oliver Hailey uses verbal scalpels to dissect each couple's relationship. It's an ugly operation but a runny one as well and that, ap.. parently, is the point -we laugh at our pain but it doesn't eo away. AT FIRST BLUSH, "Father's Day" would seem to be a women's play. Hailey focuses the script on their clumsy coping mechanisms and I Shop the money sa\'ing values adve rtised in the Daily Pilot. 2 Save \'aluable gasoline by ,plan· ning shopping trips to local stores ad· ve rtising in the Daily Pilot. S Read how other Orange Coast re · sidents use. make and s pend their money in the Featurin g pages. 4 Clip dollar.saving coupons. 5 Organize your coupon savings with The Supermarket Shopper. ap· pearing Wednesday and Sunday in the Daily Pilot 6 Find ~oney-saving yet taMy re· cipes in Wednesday's food pages. 7 Sell idle household items in Daily Pilot classified ads. doesn't bring the male cha racters on stage until tbe second and final act. Yet, the women come across as personally inept, unable to put their past aside and get on with tbe buainess of life. The men, on the other band, •PP'•r to be doing just fine. They are in control. Is Hailey a woman-bater? Fortunately, he was on band at the opening performance lo answer that question. "I've got lo tell you, I really do sympathize with the women in this play," said Hailey. "That's really the thesis or the Play -women don't recover from divorce like men do.'' WELL, MAYBE. But most of us could name exceptions to that thesis and Hailey's view or women as the emotionally weaker sex remains discomforting. Weak or not, the women cast in "Father's Day" can act. Beth Titus, in particular. is effec- tive in he r role as Louise, most biller and shrewish or the lot. Louise has developed a simple method or dealing with her rate -she bates. Sharon Lee brings a touch of tenderness to (See FATHER'S, Page C4) 8 Get good deals on used ite ms. find reliable ser vice people and other llme- a nd money-savi ng va lues in the classified pages. 9 Sa\·e time with the Datlv Pilot Ad Sitter service. wh ich takes calls from t hose answering your dassified ads when you aren't home. le Address cons umer problems con· fronting you and other Orange Coast residents in the Al Your Sen·1ce col- umn. U Rel\" on fina~ial advice by Sylvia Porter · one of the world's most read financial ad.visers who re\'eals un- derstandable. timely. interesting and to·the-point information. To take advantage of all the ways the Daily Pilot helps fig ht infl ation. call 642-4321 or mail the coupon to Dai- ly Pilot, 330 W. Bay St.. P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 ----------ZIP---- DAILY PILOT ....... fiddle playing and bluegrass music , tomahawk and knife-throwing and a chili cook-off Saturday. Admission Is $3. COMPOSERS BRASS QUINTET w ill beperformlngSundayat2p.m . In Irvine's Turtlerock Community Center, 1 Sunnyhill Drive. Admission is $3 and $2 for students and seniors. DESI ARNAZ,JR. and former National singles tennis champ Charles Pasarell wil I be at the Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports Club In Fountain V alley at 1 p.m. Sunday for the wheelchai r tennis exhibition. Laguna Beach national wheelchair champ Brad Parks will be at the game at 11 watch the radio-controlled planes. CHAPMAN CHAMBER PLAYERS w ill present a free concert Tuesday night et 8 In Chapman College's Bertea Hall, 333 N. Glassel! St., Orange. Works by Haydn, Debussy and Beethoven will be included In the program. AN ALL-BAROQUE performance by harpsichordist Ilse Foerstel·Bliss at 7:30 p.m. SUnday in the Neighborhood Congregational Church, 340 St. Ann's Drive, Laguna Beach, will include compositions by Bach, Scarlatti and Couperin. SONGS FROM HIS UPCOMING . album, "Nlghtrlder," will be sung by Bobby Hatfield at 8:30 and 11 p.m . S.turday -Monday at Medley's restaurant, 1177_4 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley. . ) QUT'N' ABOUT "1~. NoY9mber 14, 1980 Dozen does it 1 Anniversary earns. Bob Burns 'senior citizen' stat':'8 in dining· . . bcndlbl7, 1 doMtl yean -come Mst •HU. laave •oa• by alnte Bob Burns re1tavut tools root ln Newport Center'• raala ... l1laad, tlYlDI tbe plate "Hnlor nu-" ..._ amoa1 ftnt d1DJAI ntabllab· ........ bout.a. TM dlol""* O«W'red to ua dwinl dinner \Mn u. ~r •v•nlnl that if tJme rues, it jets. Or IO h ... ma. ,..memberint a turnln&-point birthday we celebrated at Bob Burns not lon1 after lt opened. wm..& 1'BS YEAU have only •&ed ua. U..7've pven Bob Bum.e footln& as a venerable ln1Ututlon. But lookin1 at it from the .... taW'ant'a point ol view that's a relatively abort time to achieve such distinction. M it wu when the public first Cained ad- mlttanee ln December t•. this spot remains oee ol the most attractive realaurants on the South Cout, wllb its old shoe comfort in a warm and lnvllinl atmosphere. An ace reat.au.rateur wlt.b Ule real name of Bob Bumi f<Mmded the Newport place alone with two other lllse·ta•Jecl establishments in Lot An&eles County. TOday nve restaurants bear the name. Bob's untimely death in am stunned hun- dreds of admirers, friends and associates 1alned throu&b many yean in lbe business. Fortunately lbe le1acy of hla proud Scotch heritaie and excellence In food preparation re- malna. OVE&ALL BOB BU&NS suggests the re· fined ele1ance of an Edinbur1b inn brought up- to-date with modem appointments. A minimal uae of bript colon wllb dark wood carvings and P~llna. dim illumination and comfortable fumisbinp create a relaxed feeline. The tartan plaids of Scotland's clans are used dlscrimin"atin&ly in such particulars as wall decorations, waitresses' costumes and carpeting. A judicious eye was further ex- Out 'N' About Norman Stanley erclsed in the selection of the attractive Scotch prints and statuary. Althoulh the sett.log relies heavily on sym- bols of old Caledonia, the dinner menu em- braces a considerably wider territory -from seafood and steaks to some splendid continental dishes. AU Bob Bums entrees are served with soup or tossed green salad -or, ii you prefer, the highly regarded house Caesar salad -choice of steak fries or baked potato (unless otherwise s pecified) and a basket of specially baked breads. hi1bly recommended choice ,also took top honors for the abe of the port.lod -lar1er than any so-called "1iant cut" I've encountered' elsewhere. Other representative selections include grilled halibut, $11.95 ; broiled AustraUan lobster tails, tabbed accordln1 to market plice; filet of petrale sole, $10.95; boned rainbow trout, $9.50; boned breast of chicken, $8.50; rack of lamb, $14.95; beef tenderloin, $11.50; beef liver saute and onions, $6.95 ; vear Oscar, $10,95; and New York cut steak, $12.95. For thrifty-minded, right away diners, Bob Bums features early dinner specials, Monday through Friday, from 5 to 6:30 p.m. Generally tabbed from SS.SO to $6.25, these options always include fish and veal offerings and other possibilities like pot roast of beef, chicken liver brochette or stuffed ground round'. 'Titanic' ready to sail BY WAY OF APPETIZERS there are shrimp or crab cocktail s upremes, or shrimp en garlic butter, uniformly tabbed at SS.50 each. You 'd better be a heavy eater, however. because quantity matches quality on all the items malting up your dinner. About two dozen select entrees range from the chef's daily choice of seasonal fresh fish - swordfish, salmon, sea bass, red snapper, sand dabs -to fllet mignon, $12.95. FOa ENJOY ABLE LISTENING it would be hard to top the music dispensed in the lounge, Tuesday through Saturday. by the Vina Harmer Duo (which becomes a trio on weekends). Vina has frequently been the "artist in residence" al Bob Bums and her delightful piano stylings leave a lingering melody long after you've left the place. It would seem to me, too, that more than a few words of praise are In order for Ed Steward and Gib Fernandez, the restaurant's genial and t efficient managers. Both have been with the I company more than seven years and many of ( the touches that make any visit wholly agree- able stem from their close attention to detail. J Audience to participate as passengers "The Sinking of the Titanic," a new opera presented in English by the Deutsche Oper , : Berlin, will have its U.S. premiere at 8:30 p.m . Saturday at Royce Hall on the UCLA campus. The opera is one of the many events of the six-month-long Berlin/LA 200 Festival. For this unique production, Royce Hall will be transformed into the Titanic and the opera will begin outside the theater with the christen- ing of the ship. The audience will "board the s hip" (enter the theater.) and become passengers on the Titanic, particpating in the performance. At the end of the opera, when the Titanic hits th4; iceber~. the principals of the cast are launched over the side in lifeboats, and the au- dience is evacuated through the bold as the crew assists in the rescue operation. "'lbe production is innovative in that it inte- -grates the audience and the locale into a re- alistic presentation that will provide audience members with a unique theatrical experience," said Christopher Craig, festival coordinator. "'lbe Sinking of the Titanic," composed by 49-year-old Wilhelm Dieter Siebert, was com- missioned for the Berlin Arts Festival and bad its premiere there in November 1979. An accomplished jazz clarinetist, Siebert from Long Beach or .Sen Pedro has composed music for both film and theater, most of it with a "socially critical" slant and this opera has overtones of Kurt Weill. Coming to the United States with the pro· duction are the principal members of the cast, stage hands and technicians, some 70 in all. Saturday's sdld-out opening will be followed by presentations on Sunday at 6 and 9 p.m.; Tuesday, 8:30 p.m.; and Wednesday, 6 and 9 p._m. Seating is limited to 700 per performance. Tickets are $14. For information regarding tickets call (213) 825-9261. Luke's Exclusively lllKEISTOCK$ FOOTWEAR SHOP Roast duckling, se.rved with sauce bigarade and wild rice, $11.95, ~as been one of the most popular dishes with Bob Bums regulars since the restaurant opened. Another favorite is the great house special- ty. Scottish plaice, $9.50. It yields an ex· traordinarily white, delicate and mild fish, gently sauteed. lopped with sauce cardinal, hollandaise glace, served with golden brown zucchini. BESIDES PLAICE, OUR second nod went to roast prime ribs or beef, au jus, $12.95. Roast- ed to perfection, served rare as ordered, this Kudos for the kitchen expertise go to an able team of chefs who rate a 21-gun culinary salute, Jessie Alcala, who has been with the restaurant for 18 years, and Auturo Penefour. Lunch is served daily from 11 a.m . to 5 p.m .. dinner from 5 to 11 weeknights a.nd until midnight on Friday and Saturday. Sundays it's brunch from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. and dinner until 10. Bob Burns is located at 37 Fashion Island, Newport Center. Reservations: 644·2030. We just cut the budget on Hollywood's biggest production. For Cl.mifird Ad ACTION C.11 A DAIL T ,.ILOT AO.YISOI M2·S'71 r-:-~---------:i I ·==!1~..::n I · CRUISES DAILY ~1XM'TllDN OR (213) ns.1111 (714) 521-1111 (2~3) 132-45211---------------,.-------....L...------I Thanks. Orange County! attraction. Castle Dracula.So I I You made our 16th year cut out our coupon and Largest PS y CH IC in Orange County Next Sat., FAIRE 11aw. Sth Nov. 15 Street, Santa Ana Sponsored by the AUM Church of cerritos 30 Psychic readers in full Renaissance costume 10-6 p.m. For further info. 542-3981 UNIVERISTY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE COMMITTEE FOR ARTS PRESENTS V 'LA L'BON VENT - FRENCH QUEBEC ENSEMBLE The French Quebec Cultural Exchange presents this dynamic group in an evening of French Cana- dian folk songs and dances. Saturday, November 15, 1980 8:00 p.m . Crawford Hall Tickets available at the ASUCI Box Office, Mon.· Fri., 9:30am to 4pm. For further information call 833-6378. Main Floor -$6, Lower Bleachers -SS, and Balcony $4. The State of the Union G9REVIDAL Wedneaday,November19 8 p .m. UCI Science Lecture Hall Tlcket1 ASUCI Boie Offlot: ,M genet111 9dmftefon; SS faculty. "'"'· UCI Alumnl AleOdltton inernMn. Ind other stUdenta; 12 UCI 1tudent1. SponlOredbyStudent Affairs Lectures (933-5588). If It floete, cllenoea •r• you'll re•d •bout II . In the DAILY PILOT DAVE'S SPEOAL FOR NOVEMBER 20% OFFI · ON All CUSTOM PRINTING GOOD SNAPSHOT OR'-SLIDE GREAT ENLARGEMENT!! * Enlargements From C.olor & Block & White Negatives * Direct Prints From Slides Are Our SpeCialty! ! * Custom Printing Includes All Cropping, Dodging & Burning "WE'LL PRINT IT JUST THE WAY YOU WANT ITI" THE ~BOR AREA'S FIRST & FINEST COLOR LAB WE DO OUR OWN ... •1!111-~­,roc....,. I 1 Dav ~I . "'''-~_, ....... •C""1omomtaffofll _ ........ • CutlOlllCOIOt~ lfom --Mttfhl ..,,._ otrtcllettel All typn of ,_MpOft A ID Photoe (Color ,._.., Avall•bl• In I Min.) the best year ever. And to watch the movies come to life I I applaud you. we're reducing For $2.00 less all adult prices to children's Admf••loft~ I admission pricesfiowthru AdWta -...-....... v-Prtce . I December24thon/y c1a•owrJ se.u se.u I C I h rid. Present 1111s ce111ticarea1 Tour l>O• office ome exp ore t e WO S Ce11111c:ateg00d lor ma~1mum or 6 oersons biggest and busiest movie Th1scert1hcatee<1nn01 be comOrne<l with I d. W • · any 011'8• savings otter CNOT FOR SALE) -StU IQ, e re ShOOflng your HOl!yWOOd Freeway 81 Lanketsh1m Blvd favorite Sta rs on OU r Back lot. Ooen 7 days a wee1c For 1ntorma11on call I and scanng the daylights 1213> e77 1311 - f • An MCAComPdny out o visitors with our latest , 19ao u,,..,.,sa c "'s1u<1oos IN" I ' I I OAllYPl~OJ INTERMISSION ~.~~~~--------~--~~----------"':'"-...... ----------------~--------------~------~--~----~--.;_------------~-------:-~---~--------__;~~--~..:.:...=..:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.:.: 6 more s~e productions ligJit up ()_-i-a'!g.e l;dllst Lut "" • lb Oraftl• Cout ••P9riHced wh•l amounted to a theatrical earthquake. The art rsho<'k11 start tonlMht and con\lruae lnlo next • weekfnd One mlaht think that local theaters •hot their bOll with uven produc·tlou open.tna in the tpace of thr days tut week Nol entirely -alx more wm bf rnowilln1 the •ta.es ln lhe week ahead, be•innln1 with tonight a double o~nlJil of "Once ror the Askin&" al the Colta Meaa Civic Playhouse and "The Good Doctor" by Weatmlnster's Showcue Productions. AGATHA CHRISTIE'S "Murder on the Nlle" arrives Tuesday. courtesy of the Lido Isle Players. Then Oran&e Coast Colleae mount. a three·day production or lhe drama of l)ra&lllan terrorism "Savages" on Thursday. 'FATHER'S DAY' ••. c From Paie CZ> her portrayal Qf Estelle, who met her husband in an orphanage and continues to mourn even as he plans a new marriage. And Lois Farah makes a good Mari•n, whose relationship with her ex conUnues on a carnal level. .. •. BEST OF THE MALE cast is Greg Brown e as Richard, a self-assured bisexual. ~: John Greenslade plays the part of Louise's ·· former spouse, Tom, pretty well However, be ;., loses credibility when discwising h1's Cincinnati ~ boyhood in a distinct British accent. Why ~·~ couldn't Titus modify the script to match the in- flection? Brian Ayres seems less comfortable in his role as Harold, the bemused orphan on the brink of his second shot at wedlock. Finally. a complaint and a precaution: THE COMPLAINT concerns the actresses· costumes. Do women in New York really dress .·like t hat? Do women anywhere dress llke that? Why? ' The precaution· is for anyone planning to treat the kiddies to a night at the theater. The ~ ~::~!. is heavy on sexual content and dirty If you're looking for something uplifting, "Father's Day" is not your cup of molasses. • But it is recommended for an experience in skillful stagecraft. It's good community theater. Performances are scheduled for 8 p.m. . Roundln.1 up the week are two Frid•.Y • open· 1n11 -"Ballroom" at the Laauna Moulton Playhou.te and "The Paisley Convertible" at the SaddJeback Valley Community Theater. '"fhe Good Doctor'' is Neil Simon's in- terpretation of stories by the Ruuian playwrtpt and novelist Anton Chekhov. Direc- tor Alex Koba doubles as the narrator for the comedy. which also spotUthis Maureen Shrubsole. Robert Kokol. Lou Kosoy, Marty 1 Green, Pat Oswald, Paul Teschke, Lynda Scarllno, Bette Lee, Larry Barnes, Renee Thome, Chuck O'Connor, Carma McMurphy, E mil Knodell, Laurie Nesorr and Bettie M '1ellenberg. PERFORMANCES OF THE episodic comedy wUJ be given Fridays an~ Saturdays at 8:30, with a closlni Su.nday matinee Dec. 7 at 2 p.m. ln the auditorium, 7571 Westmblister Ave .• Wntminster. ReHt<¥aUoa• ar• take.a. at 9M·539Z, 894-6788 or 893·9'12. "Once for the Aakin1" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse ii a lampoon comedy about a good fairy who crants wishes for people in a Long Island community. Patl Tambelllni directs, with Rochelle Hoffman and Brendan Rice heading the cut and D.D. Calhoun u the wlab-grantina fairy. Others in the cast are Matt.hew LaVipe, Mason Dow, Robbi Schoonover, Benson Patlian, Rieb Macht, Helene Briggs, Mary Sullivan. Ramon Spicer and Matthew Benedict. "Once for the Asking" plays Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Dec. 6 at the playtiot.e, on the Orange County Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa. Reservations 154-51.S9. NORMA BELL IS DIRECTING "Murder oo the Nile" (the stage version of the recent movie "Death on the Nile") with Stan Bell serving as assistant director. Cast members include Graham Tingler, ..Errol Gath, Pat Moran, Dottie Brewer. Joe Lampman, Patty Lloyd, George Harris, Stephanie Bema,rdy. Chris Harwood, Bud Brewer. Maidy Reside and Bob Campbell. Fridays and Saturdays and 2 p.m. Sundays through Nov. 30 at the Newport Theater Arts Center. 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach. Tickets are $4.50 for evening shows, $3.SO for Sunday m atinees. For reservallons call 675·3143. THEY'RE ABOARD FOR INTRIGUE IN 'MURDO ON THE NILE' AT LIDO ISLE From 19ft, Ctwta Herwood, Pat Moren, Grahe• Tlngler, George Henta, £not Gath iallS/ wtst~ DINNER PLAYHOUSE 140 Ave Pico, San Ctemenle 92672 ••••••••••••••• for an Evening to Rem~mber. Tua. thru Sun. e"eninp PLUS Sat. ~Sun. Mad- (714) 492-9950 MAKE RESERVATIONS lliiiiiiiiiiiiN OW'iiiiiii• II ' '' _ .... ___ . ____ ... ____ , . ·------. <!IJr l>illa~r 311111 II \ I . II 0 \ I "-I . \ " U ~ HEAR YE!! .... :~ HEAR YE!! .......... The PilcJrims Never Had It So Good! Your Choice: •Roast THI T.-by •Vln)Wa lakec;' Hem •Roast Slrloift of lftf THANKSGIVING DIMMER Only 56'' Dinner Will Be Served 12:00 Noon tfl 9:00 p.m. MAJll YOUI llSHY A TIOHS MIL Y 121 MMNAYI. 67MJOO El ·1 t1.- 11 '1CUIS•mTDS 'Z15a 'l.!5 I • 12v. It ........ Cnll I Ull llill l*tlr 3.95 = '4.95 To Go °""" BAR ANYTIME • • • • • • ·sERVEO IN OYSTER --c---U19119 C:...ef cu ..... .............. aw-'11 ... == ..... u:mt•a• .. C4dl .... .,., -·-~· E ......... ~ C0910M~Al0 4•s .. -~ 7 ts o..iy .,, ,... °"" ... 30""' .... Only .... .. 30 .... 0nly AVERY SPECIAL DINING EXPERIENCE FOR YOUR DINING & ENTERTAINMENT PLEASURE. l .. LL y G0NM>N ' DUO Tue. tbru Sat. DANCING ··~TNO Tues., thru Sat. MAH CIAWMNI• Sun.andllOD. KELLY LEMAIRE Tues. 'lhru Sat. TwllltJat Dblnen '10ayaAWeett •to•p.m .•. 15 ntll COMT KW't. IE • • • • • • • • LAGUMNIGUIL 1-.c-....,,_,, ........ -.111:1 Real cantonese Food Ht h•r• or t•k• honM STAG tff INESE CASINU .. MRJH:nml ~MJalAl.f PRO-FOOTBALL NIGHT Gi .. t Screen tv. Free Munchies, 60d Hot DQll. G'-tt Hemburgen. MARGARITA NIGHT G'-tt Merv-Im. Chips, Salu for $11 MS. NIGHT Free c.n.tion for Women with en order of their fevorite beverage. PEOPLE'S NIGHT Hllppy Hour Codctlil prtcn, 4:30 . 91 WINE TASTER NIGHT II Any wine on menu ii S1 a 1•1 C We'll open 1ny bottle of your .... AND DON'T FORGET T .. E SUPER SOUNDS OF BILL ERICKSON. APPEARING MONDAY ·SA TURDAYI ~'\ ~ COSTA MESA 3131 Brl~tol Ph. 517~3000 The mystery play opens Tuesday for five con· wutlve nllbls with an 8 o'clock curtain at the Lido b le Clubhouse, 101 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. Reservations JMS-2110 or 613-6170. Political violence (s the subject of Christopher Hampton's "Savages," a story of a man held hostage by a fl'Oup of urban 1uerrll.lu. Marc Handler Is directing the drama, which features Tim Ottman and Wendy Sax In the leadin1 roles. COMPLETING THE OCC cast are Delicia Sampson, Willie Vande, Gary Mares and OCC drama instructor William Purkiss. Curtain la 8 o'clock nightly in the Drama Lab on the Costa Meta campus. Reservations S56-5S27. The television movie "Queen of the Stardust Ballroom" was the inspiration of the musical play "Ballroom," which opens next Friday for a four•week run at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse. John Ferzacca directs the show, with David Anthony as musical director. Roslyn Nehls and Joe Guzetta take the prin· cipal roles, with Lee Childress, Chuck Anthony and a large cast of singers and 'dancers performing. Curtain is 8 o'clock Tuesdays through Saturdays (after next Friday's o~n­ ing) with Sunday performances at 2:30 in the playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. Reservations 494-0743 . THE FIRST OF TWO versions of the new comedy "The Paisley Convertible" arrives next Friday at the Saddleback Valley Community Theater under the direction of Art Winslow. Newcomers Steve Chakos and Lynn Wagner are spotlighted in major roles. Rounding out the Saddleback cast will be Terry Hagerty, Ruth Davis and Lajuana Blan- co. Performances wi ll be given Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. (with special stagings Nov. 3-0 at 2:30 and Dec. 4 at 8) in the theater, 25741-C Obrero, Mission Viejo. Reservations 770-0381. Two local productions draw their respective curtains w ith final performances this weekend -"American Buffalo" at South Coast Repertory and "The Threepenny Opera" at UC Irvine. l. "BUFFALO" OPENS THE SECOND Stage' I season at SCR under the direction of Martin Benson and features Art Koustik, Hal Landon Jr. and Jim Staskel. Closing performances are I· tonight through Sunday at 8:30 with Saturday and Sunday matinees at 3 in the Fourth Step Theater, 655 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. Reservations 957·4033. Tonight and Saturday mark. the end or "Threepenny Opera" at UCI with Robert Cohen directing and Irvin Kimber as musical direc· tor. Curtain is 8 p.m. at the Fine Arts Village Theater. Reservations 833-6617. TtlE CANMIRY LUNCHEON: FEf ~~~:~~~~~~TH Rl5HL Y IAKID YIGITAU QUICHE FRl5H RUIT f9AaMISH '2.95 EARL y DIMERS: SPE~IAL~ OF THE MONTH 5.0CHl.30 MON.~ FRI. FRESH FISH OF THE DAY S6t5 TERIYAKI BROCHETTE HAPPY HOUR: 4:~:00 MON . FRI DRAFT BEER .50 WELL DRINKS 90 FREE CANNERY CLAM CHOWDER UVE EMTERT AINMEHT SUN., MON., TUES. -80881E & Cl YOE WED. Thru SAT. ~EGENO SUN. AFT£ANOON-CALUSA . . ,_flllDRIC WA'URFROffT RiStAUDNT 30IO L8FAYE1TE, ltEWPORT IEAaf llSB¥Anot.e5 71~7~1771 Silver Shadow As smooth as their name ... no matte r what the beat. This highly-favored five-some makes dancers out of listeners. Come see. Monday lhrough Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1:45 a.m. . . ,, ~REGISTRY 18800 MtcAnhur ~kvard, 7~2-877.7 MOVIE REVIEWS ' 'Ordlnery People' shattering 9y80BTHOM~ ,.,lllltA_ ..... ~ ... "0 9'0 tNARYPI OPLE" 11 •n emotionally $haltering e•perlence, largely because of • r•m•rt(able performance by Tim Hutt.on~ He is totally absorbed in the portrayal of a high schooler unable to cope with guilt over the accidental death of his older brother. Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler MOC>te are".hls puzzled parents, JtJdd Hirsch his deep-probing psychiatrist. They are absol utely splendid, though the script is as stacked against the mother as was "Kramer vs. Kramer." The director Is Robert Redford, whose compassion for the characters is expressed in every scene. An impressive achievement for all, especially young Hutton. Rated R because of language. "ON E·TRICK PONY" continues the pop-fame· is rotten trend already explored by "The Rose," '.'Honeysuckle Rose," "Coal Miner's Daughter" and "Stardust Memories." This time the eqo journey is taken by Paul Simon, who wrote the scr ipt and songs and plays a 1960s p rotest singer trying to make a comeback in 1980. While Simon's laid-back style fits his w r yly intelligent songs, rock scene, but Simon's script falls to generate any drama. Llke the singer's estranged wife (Blair Brown), viewers can feel no sympathy for his dogged self-Indulgence. Rated R, wHh rough language and ample female nudity. "SOMEWH E RE IN T IME" Is an appealing romantic fan· tasy aboot a yout"lg playwright who falls in love with an :tctress who starred in theaters 60 years before his time. He transports himself by self· hypnosis from the present to 1912 , and they become lovers unti l time overtakes them . The plot is riddled with illogic, but It works much of the time Credit is due to Jeannot Szwarc's attentive direction and the casting of Christopher Reeve as the young romantic and the exquisite Jane Seymour as the object of hJs ardor. The film· makers obviously struggled w11n how to end the story; they d1dn'tqu1tesolveit. Rated PG. a fling with a Dallas cheerleader. Director John Trent and writer Carl Klelnschmltt have done a slick jObof concoct ing a bitter comedy that Is in reality a modern morality play. After e><· periencino the fleshly pleasures, the husband realizes that his old life wasn't so bad after all. Bruce Dern gives the best performance of his career. Rated R. 'IT'S MY TURN' Jiii Ctayburgh it is too colorless to carry a movie. Director Robert M . Young captures the mind-numbing "Ml DOLE AGE CRAZY" is based on the Sonny Throckmorton song about a man "40 years old, going on 20." He's Bruce Dern, a suc- cessful Houston contractor with a w ife whd pumps up their sex life to keep him satisfied. But that isn't enough. His concern over aging prompts him to trade in his Olds for a Porsche and to have "TIMES SQUARE," producer Robert Stigwood's latest film· plus-record album venture, is an incoherent -not to mention Im· probable -tale of two teen-f ged runaways living the punk dream on the sleazier side of New York City. RObin Johnson is fine as the deep-voiced street urchin who liber ates the pfivileged daughter of a c ity official, also played ap- pealingly by Trini Alvarado. The duo's escapades, mildly amusing at best, quickly becom e bori ng backgrounds for a slick package of punk and new wave rock hits. Fans of "The Rocky Horror Ptc· lure Show" cult figure Tim Curry, who plays a sympathetic disc jockey, will seek this one out, as will rebels alr eady convinced of the film's otherwise unconvincing message -that enclaves of hookers, dope dealers and Porno theaters are fun and safe places for kids to hangout. Rated R . FOR THE HOTTEST ENTERTAINMENT IN ORANGE COUNTY Go to the Nov. 14-15 & Nov. 16 Afternoon • SPECIAL GUEST Nov. 16-17-18 •GEORGE BUTTS BAND Nov. 19-~21 •JAMES HARMON BAND 2406 NEWPORT BLVD. NEWPORT BEACH 675-2244 ELIZABETH l{OWARD'S CURTAIN CALL · DINNER THEATRE PLAYING fUU COURSt DINNER rserved at your table) and SHOW ..,._ s I 1 •s A HOLIDAY MUSICAL SHOiBoAT DANA TRADER RESTAURANT H om e of Fresh L ocal L obster I 6PEN DAILY 11 :00 A .M . \ LUNi:H •DINNER • COCKTA I LS LOISTER SEASON IS HERE!!!! COMPLITI WMCHIOH ( 11 a.m.-4 pm J ( Yz Local Lobster • • • $6.501 COMPLETE DIMMR Fri . Sat & Sun (Whole Local Lobster .. St I .HJ COMP\.ln DIHHB Mon thru Thurs. Oyster lw (Daily) ( 11 a m • 1 ·30 Pm J (YI Local Lobster ••• $7.tSI (Yz Local Lobster ••• $6.tSI DIMHElt HOUIS: Mo. n.r 4 to I 0 • Fri-Sat 4 to I I • S-l-10 .............. L..c••• SpKlal .•. $3.75 Fresh S.ahad Dally COMPLm CATalHG SUNDAY BRUNCH (Complimentaty Champagne) SERVED 10 A .M. to 3 P.M. •OYSTER BAA OPEN 11 A.M.-~30 A.M. 34150 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY DANA POINT (Ample Partttng> Res. 493-2603 ------ With You In Mind ... ,,,.---/ ',, A lot of I i ,,~:· ·::~;) dinner . . . : •f '. • ·; · lf~ l ":it;, . Not a lot of I ~· ••'~,~ .. f' 4ft:, (, dollars ~· ~~ ~-~~ I~"-~..:.~.. ~'l ~~~., . • ' ~~·:·:..: i r.(. ~~ ..... · -~-.. '\oz.iiiiii 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilll• . ·~., ~~~·c.~~,.., .. ·,\~,i.:< At The CAPRICCIO CAFE A choice of 6 entrees with soup or salad. rice or boiled new potatoes. vegetable du jour. dessert and beverag~ng at $4.95. WaJly Ruth at ttfu'Piano -Tuesday thru Saturday ~Beach. Menu Offered 4 to 10 PM Daily ~· Tennis Club By Jerome Kem .. & Oscar Hammerstein II Featunng ... Friui Burr Performances Tues. thru Sun & Sun. Brunch 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana 92704 "°''lip Nonf\ ~ "·'" 0•4'Q1 J Ay 8t ,~._..,, Svn•tuwe1 & ,,.,. .Anhuf Remember th ose great Thanksgiving dinners you enjoyed so much? The Ne~port Beach Marriott invites you to have an Gld Fashioned 1Th~nksdiving turkey dinner with us :You 'll be carving your own turkey and the leftovers belong to you. New~ Beach Our holiday enlertalnment will be the ~~rriot~ famous Marriott twin pianos. · ~ HotelL For 1ntormauon and reseNations. Tennis Club Phone (714) 640-4000 e.,. 6100 900 ...... !)0'1 C.nt•• °'' .. Fflday. Novtmber 14 1980 Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge BROILED HALIBUT Maitre' d Hotel DAIL¥ PtLOT Served with Soup du Jour or salad . rice pilaf or baked potato. Vegetable de Gardiner. SUNDAY CHAMPAG~E BRUNCH I I :30 to 2:30 On-the-mall at South Coast Plaza near the Carousel on the First Level. For reservations call: 540-8822. THE ~SUPERSTAR..· -AWlR1l5S... I Oinnt'r Sho~·s-- Friday Nights Only! Pt'tt' \\'ilkm<' °'' n MIDNITESPECIAL 'Elvis & The History of Rock" llt-1(1111n~ '"' It .11 \11111111< l ur ... 1tn u '\u11 •·''' pl11' "•11i.l.n 1\111•11 h 1..11~ Sho" "·''"' "·" 11 Ill Pl l " T he MICHAEL-DARRIN DANCERS t'tht' ,7 -.u Buffet & Show Opens Nov. 12th from $14.00 for a limited engagement l • - • ,(9 DAILY PtLOt ~!:~~~ fin~,.~~~~~,.~U~,~~~~~~~ ?~.~ ~o~:a·~~ •-.... , ,......... rock covers <extra fine job on Tom Petty well ns ever y upcoming Thursday, Nevins U From 5prtn1neen to •lreet acene In less tunes> actrted -GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES 1 than a weell . A return to local baunts revealed The Metro has a good -sized dant.· floor and . The Foxhunter , located al 17927 MacArthur Specializing In Chinese A Lo Corte Dishes a pair of new ~nlranb In t.h• "bll name" music more impOrtlntly, has toned down the :.leaiy Hlvd . has room for about 300 people. Cost of Lunrh 01nn11r oailv • Food To TakP Out 1ame. ph• a_n ol' Sunday atandby that is sUll disco dffor that infected the place during its !>hows wtll range from S2 for Thursday big ba nd 4715 ch.,_ IOJJ H..., .... •uperb. previous tenures a s Picassio's. a nd late r . n ights to a high of $10 per seat for the Likes of ou"Gf • 750.7171 COSTA MHA "New" la aom ethJna of a misnomer In r.:f· f'ushlon.s (or Facist 's). Hubbard ct°'ectMOttdcrt• ~ 642·7"1•6ll·ttl 1 erence lo Irvine's Foithunter and Newport's More to the new management's credh. 1l Crowds ha ve been heavy, said Nevins. so ' Cate Metro Both club& have been 1around h as resis ted the compulsion to go "Urban n·servullons are recommended for most Sunday ------ awhile, thou&h the latter: recently relocated Cowboy" a wful and i ns tall mechunil·al ~hows (549-8728.>. • (• •> from its comfortable Lido Village locale to bulls. gift shops or backga mmon tables with ! ~~ sterile Fashion Island. buffalo chips. LAGUNA'S COZY WWTE House Tavern .n ,tJ, Sflll" 0..0 '"" et C.pos11~ '"'"-s... ~ • 413~54S : VARIED CROWD ON hand Saturday nig ht. ranging from casual to chic. The new Cafe Metro is located at 630 Newport Center Drive Information: 640-4711 J azz fans probably know by now that I rvine's Foxhunter, a nicely-done d isco dungeon, has inlliuled a big-name jalz series on Sunday nights Trumpeter Freddie llubbarci "a"' in tov.n fo r two shows last Sundav. and nther acts have included Kittyhawk. P assenger. Wllhe Bobo and the locally· based Steve Hooks Band. BOBO IS DUF. BACK on th~ 2.'Jrd. and Fox hunter ~nernl Mana~er Don Ne\tn~ ~aid he 1:. negotiating future d ales with Carmen Mc Rae, Joe•Farrell. Seawind and Lee Rittenour A 17-plece big band. Orange Coast Br ass .......,. ORJlllGE ~ ORIVElll S.."I• At\•',_, ,..., C ,.,.~.,. O.•nv• • sse 7QU 1:A POWERHOUSE OF A FILM • • • . Akira Kurosawa is a leading candidate for the greatest living film director." -Jack Kroll. NEWSWEEK MAGAZINE 11AWESOME ... the old master has never been more vigorous." -Vincent Canby. NEW YORK TIMES "A TRIUMPH ... a work by a master." -Kevin Thoma~. LOS ANGELES TIMES LUCAS anJ FRA NC I S FO RD COPP OLA_ ' present ( ~IJ!F) ~Fl;;;;;;A~ • Tll E SI L\UO\\' \\'ARRIOR. edwards NEWPORT MUI COAST HWY. &MACAITHUI lllfWJIOn. OU f& 644-07 60 .. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT MON • .,..1. 7:00. 1:45 IAT. t :OD. 4:00, 7:00, 10:00 IUN. t:OD. 4:00, 7:00. 8:45 <.Prvt•s up a great mixed-bag of jazz. rock, reg-I ~at· and blues o a nightly basis (local bands rnd M'('asional ou iders >. In t.tddition. a erfec t way lo recover from post-game depressi is to check out the Sunday ... e!>'lion~ that run fro to 7 p.m . ($1 at the cinor J Last Sunday's sets atured more than a '""" .. 11111nin1? moments of ·azz, blues, rock - 1·ven a fusion of Spencer Davis' "Gimme Some Lovin" and Hendrix' "Third Stone From the Sun' from an a rsenal or well-known local musicians -\ rouple of "guests" joined in, but at the re· qUC'il nf Onl• ft( tht' players. no individuals will tw s1nrlc.><I nut Bu!.1call y, they're.> a ll quite talented and h ighly interchangeable parts or the mus ical maria that stalks the coas tline. Go listen. MANN THEATRES 8P1~1r11 •,11 UF "•l" /.~O ••~'• StJNFL G.Vlll ~•6"2711 SOUTHCOAST PLA7A Exclusive Umited Engagement! Art Garfunkel BAD TIMING A Senaual ObHHlon I 00.l I S.-t.JH 00.10 11 Debra Rettln-Olane Lane "TOUCHED BY LOVE" A true 1tory of per1onal trlumph I IS.-l ~ 4M ».-IS.-10 Cle . , , .. m ... ll, • I I I' p I 11 '\ \ t •I I \ ru 'I<"'!> L tJ RBAN OH,GOO! u COWBOY BOOK II s _ >»t4' 100.s1s.-•• ,,,_,i ~.~~ ;a--·'' "°",,.,. 1 00 tu S•t 1 oe.t -OO , ... lO OO •-, ... •-oe.1-00.tu PG "THE BOOGEY MAN" PLUS (A) r.1111111 '""'B ~· l'lll\ \IT Hl..\.S.Ull\ -- 0 (Hl . .:::- Ptue (A) Frt•OOt00 10U SetS111111J• •• 100 t oo.10 00 SHIRLEY MecLAINE LOVING COUPLES PLUS (PG) au ... 110wuroos "GLORIA" THE FIR~T DEADLY _ 1~ [Rl Phu tRI ,__""' , ... _ .. , ...... 1111 "THE 1heonly way FIRST to eurwlwe! DEADLY KILL SIN" IAI ORB£ lf<>W 1'~"1'lllO Ill t .. JIU ¥IMlJU ... ClAYDlmGH •"*11.IMd* it§~ floMC<T~ usnim .. , ... (!) .. ;.if,':'.· ... --.. ,;.:·u, """ OH,GODf ''LOVING COUPLll" IOOKU RESTAUKt'm-fNTEKNATIONAL 1 ,..,...., Dutel! DIMtrt Oriental food lndoneslon lijattofel StMli Shellflah frHh flah ' Ii'(; _,,.__, ....... -----· ·-·· . ....,. IX)··-·- lDWO DS MISSIO• tllJO M&ll IDWOOS Cl•IMA ClllH ll lOW&llOS' Cllll lll& WIST ,, . Cl~lOOMI lllAll• S l~U 'Llli 8 .. ~l~ ~ll· ,.c111c·s Ml WAT Jt OlllYH• ,.,..,. ~·-,,,, @4• 1f.I)) ,., ~t j • f ~ 1 IO PUlfS &ClCIPTIO IOfl IMIS flHUUMlllT OlNNIS CH"latO,.Mlll' ·~ "FADE TO BLACK" <Al PLUS (RI fHI \\\ \!-.[ ,,.,{ PLUS "THE BOOGEY (A) MAN" TIZ .. . PIUVATB RliN.IAININ 'l;F ·-'\ Hl~0'\ ;.-.;o.;.H f lilK THE. \\\ \1-.E:.~IM ·, -. 0 IE! "FADE TO BLACK" ... ,.. f'llf• 111tOOtltl ~ . ··--·@ • AN¢II~~ Ill LAYBUAGH MICHAEL DOUGLAS "IT'S MY TURN" (RI l>~UI GOI OU UAWN a 0 (Al ~ "LOVING COUPLES" "AY t HA.-1(1!'1 "THE "SMOKEY BOOGEY AND THE "THE MAN" BANDIT II" IDOL-l'LUt IA) l>tlll MAKER" (l'O) ' MUSIC Steeling die spotlig~t Life in Pittsbur1rh t~me of new band 11 UM&OAINION Cn-edence Clctarwater bvival, and perhaps Bl"Qff SDriultem or Bob Seaar bav• doae it Wore. M Wt.o an U.. o.-rock n' roll banda tht will apeu for the worklq peoplelD t.be 198GI? One •~b band b the Iron lily Homerocten wbo ball from Plttaburab. record for Cleveland lD&erutioaal Record.I. and write creat rock soocs about the aver.,e man. .. , DON'T CON8lDEa myseU a spokesman for anytbiq1" says Joe G ruscbeoky, leader of the Iron City HOuaerockers. "I wrote ab6ut that type of life, because that's the type of life we're lead· 1n1. "Tbat wu that type of life we knew about at that Umelnourllvea1 and lfitsouncb true lo a lot of people, I guess It's because it is true. "But I guess I'd rather have people consider me a workinc·class person than a rock s\ar, [ __ R_o _c _K_T_A_L_K_] because I'm not really cra.zy about most rock stars." ICH's new album, "Have a Good Time, But Get Out Alive," was produced by Mick Ronson and is, according lo Joe, "~great album. We were really concerned with getting a better production on this album than we did on our first ; we wanted it U> ~oun<i better . .. WE ALSO TRIED TO get songs on it that fit together, that sort of told a little story, that was a conscious attempt.'· Some critics have claimed that the music of the Iron City Houserockers is too powerful to be in fashion. '"I have to agree with that statement somewhat," says Joe. "We're really not in fashion. We'renotnewwave-wbicbis becoming the disco of the 1980s. •'When we started out, we played in bars, and that was hard because at that time everything was copy bands and disco. "IN FACI', Wlll:N NEW wave first came out it was rock 'n' roll that we felt comfortable with, but then it got to the point where it was like New Wave Neo-Nazis; if it didn't have that new wave tag, theywon'thaveanythingtodowithyou. "So we don't get that audience at all. Then we'retooR& B, wehave toomucbsoulfortbeLed Zeppelin-Ted Nugent crowd, we're sort of like stuck between all these different bands. "But I like lo think that people who come to see tbe band do like it, and there certainly is an edge,orananger, to our music. "IT'S lOTIMES BETrER than when we first started; when we didn't know anybody in the re· cord business at all, zero. So now, things are better for us, but now it's adifferentstruggle. "We just feel we have to work really hard to get. people to recognb e us, to buy the record, to come and see lls." Pittaburgb bu never been considered a hotbed of rock 'n' roll In the way, say, Detroit and Cleveland were, but Joe says, "it was a real isolated -Uttle market, and for R & B, it was perhaps the best market in the country. "I used to see Wilson Pickett and Jr. Walker and all those guys every weekend and that was ireat. There wasn't anybody really making it from Pittaburcb. so in that way, we didn't . have anyone to show us the way. "IN A WAY IT WAS BAD, but in another way it was eood because we got to work out everything wit.bout any media attention, and by the time we left Pittsburdl. we were really ready to play. "I don't know if our music is ever going to really come in, but you know, it's never going to die." "Excellent! Percepiive and compassionate. A superlative motion picture debut by Timothy Hunon. who give!> one of Lhe truest portrayals of an adolescent in torment since the long-lost days of James Dean : 1Cenn<1h Turdn, N[W W('l M.1~111•• 1111111 m 11111151 nrM 1111111115 •11r11 w w n~r • •• n W1 o~ IRI ""J!!!Cn• • 1 111111 • ~11 11.G~.,.. n 1MJ 1 m .itt!l!!!!. ~~~::::=;·-~.... llllllml!Cll :~ MU.'11110 PLAU Bru S29·S339 CIMDOMI Oranoe 634 2553 . .,...~. ... .. ....... . IDWUOl' ..... T Newport Buen 6-44·0760 mwuos· CIM.MA wtlT wes11111nsttr 89 I· 3935 lDWHOI' MISSIOtl YIUO MALL M •SSIOfl l;1e10 495-6220 EARN AND LEARN\ o£UVER THE eJISUMJ SOYS ANO GIRLS 10 OR OLO£~ 1 APPl'< TODA' CALL 642-432 --liP!£U!Ml 642-4321 BERLIN/LOS ANGELES BICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION 1980-81 at UNIVERSITY OF CAtiFORNIA, IRVINE. Nov. 22 UC Irvine Concert Hall 8 p.m. Nov. 23 UC Irvine Concert Hal I 4p.m. Nov. 23 UC Irvine Village Theater 8:30p.m. Nov. 2A UC Irvine VIiiage Theatre ep.m. Nov. 2S UC Irvine Concert Hal I Dec. 7 · UC Irvine VIilao- Theatre lp.m. -- In Cooperation with Der Senator fur Kulturelle Angelegenheiten , West Berlin, Germany ' The Senate For Culture) PRESENTS .No-Set Ensemble. Electronic, com· puter, and percussion Instruments featured in this unusual evening of improvisational music by the five- member No-Set Ensemble of Berlin. Tickets $5, $4, S3 UCI students. RIAS Kammerchor in Concert. The 47-member a capella choir, presents a program of standard and contem- porary works. Tickets $5, $4, $3 UCI students. Oskar Schlemmer und Tanz with 'dancers Gerhard Qohner, Jessica Ebert, Terence Kalba, Phlllp Kilner; choreography by Cerhard Bohner .. Based on the work of artist/dancer Osttar Schlemmer. Tickets $5, $4, S3 UCI students. Muslcallsche Compagnle. Nine youno artists perform music of the 16th and 17th centuries on historic musical Instruments. Tickets $5, $(, $3 UCI students. Kreuzberger Strelchquartett will give a workshop demonstration for students and community. Admission free. .. Gruppe Neu Muslk. Contemporary music of Berlln composers. Tickets $5, $4, $3 UCI students. Berlin Los Angeles Working together in Culture, Science and Industry A Sister City Bicentennial Celebration 1980·81 f9R INFORMATION 714 • 133-6371 Fn~. November 14 1980 ~LY PILOT Why do they call it "adultery," when it makes them act like dilldren? tttPRIVATE BENJAMIN' is funny and Goldie Hawn is totally charming." .• ~.~' ... · I . I .~ . i~ GOLDIE HAWN t•Itll~'l1 E llEN.J1\lllN ~ -~~S .. !~!~!E~.t] .....oe..,.,,.., ........ " ................... , ,)05 ~ HIHlllll ~ DRllllll .... ., .... ,_, .. L..,.. -·17'MSO ---~ rdwo11rds '9 '""'"""""·· .,.. .. .. I •11 .-1 - .......... s.. "r;...,.,.#1' ,.., .... ,,,... •ut .... ~ .. ,.J4'l 'W l __ ,,, .. ..-•• ..... ~ .. lOWAllDS' lllllTOL lOW&llOS' SAOOLW Cll STADIUM Dlllfl·IW s.n1a •n1 ~·o 1•u l 1 1 ? •,e 1 !>880 Ori119• 639·8710 f OWAllDS' MUWTlllOTOll lDWlllOS' WDODllllOCll &MC QllAllGI MAll HunhnQIO<I Bi!trh S•8 >36~ !\·•• ~~ •l6'·~ 0•1•oe 631•0310 llO ,_1111 AGCl"IO JOI llWI 1-lllU S-f;• ...... "' ••• .., ... -... • •ltlO~A • WOODBRIDG.£ •--. .,., .. ....-~ ... .--• U \ 04'\ ORAIGE MALL I t i.;,llri i G11o1lh ol l.1nCQln o •••••• 637 0340 l fo10J10 1t~0<•fleld"'" L , ...... r.111 !>Sao WINNER "BEST FILM" TORONTO FESTIVAL OF FESTIVALS "NICOLAS ROEG MAKES MOVIES THE WAY PABLO PICASSO PAINTED PICTURES.'' -~•w1 1a11dPm, "A WORK OF ART ••• MAJUTIC, ENGROSSIIVG ••• VIVIDLY WELL-ACTED ••• STJMULATING ••• SEXY' CAREFREE." Ch 1 I• d hamplin L .\ Tim~' "Thl' mu't thuroui:hh adull OlOI ic t•1 l'r 111ad1• in the f.n1tli'h lall):ll·l)(t' -\\Jt ll'•ln \ \\.1~J/HM' "Uncommunlv hold .. fa'ICina1in1t ... ~ildh un con1·cnlional \irnl," Rocg's timl' ha• lOmr around al last. "Bdd Timin)t· could,lx-thr lonit a"'aitro brcJk throu~h that S('nd'> him into suprr ''Jr tcrriton'. AJ1 Garfunkrl 1tiH·' lht' bc~I prrformantr of hi, career " -\al ron•I l'ublt< R.id•o "Mis' Russell. "'ho ha~ also made mcmorablr appearances in 'Slraiithl Timr' and 'Thr 1.a't T)coon hrinj() lo lwr role a rrc klrs~ ph y'ilalil)' that i' 01 r rwhrlminit." -:1.r" \ork f1nw• "The sheer plea~ure of watching Miss Ku~scll in action ... ls enoujth ... ~hc comes through triumphantly." -Ard1t'r Win11tn \ \. Pihl "As fascinating as it is slrikini: about obsession with male po)sessh eness and female independence cauitht in erotic compulsion. Theresa Russell's por· trail of a woman is stunning." -Juclilh Crl11 S.iurd.1 Rf•lt• "The most dcmandinit whudunll slnct 'Chinatown'." -lornn111 Sun "ONE OF TIIE YEAR'S BEST f·l LMS. DAZZLING. EXCEfYTlONAI. ACl lNG BY ART GARFUNKEL. BE SU RE n > SEE THIS REMARKA BLE J-lLM!" 11• H.1111. ( )111"''""'~·11 P. .. rnt• \\,I\ t 11 ''HI II C.111 \1 f 111-ni·alli b\•aqf\· anc l 111\tH~ ft'\ll'r lht· i1hl1li111h ;ind \inish•r. \11 n1w 'a" ii b<>tll'r than Roci: ... \ 111,J~l \oi I h 11,11,111u11 tan·1 tal.1• 1nur c•1c~ utl llJ11 t'1 l\1•if'l·I "'hrn Ill'' 1111 llw <,trrro \t~ \o;~ O.uh \, ""' . r ht•rr"1 Ru\Sell is un lor)tt'llabh reai. She i\ Jm11r,1I un rnhihit<'ii dnd unµrl'dit lab Ir "11,11..11"1 "ho clr;\l'S Ar C •• irlunlwl into a jralou' frl'OZ)' • f ,.,.," lla11d~1 \ \ PO~l "* * * *,\qriking m1•dilJli11n on lrll'C' and !)1lllt 1.1,I ., Jll!'O' lOm('~ tu mind. RO\')t has a ''·'l!l!t'r in~"" ari'nrs~ 111 hm• film work~." -\r~"1oh Kl·cp your rye on Th1•r\·~a Ru~<,cll. igni(in~ 1.•1cq1hing around hrr "'ith ra"' ma~nrti$m, rcmindinR mt of '\larll'nr Dictricl in 'The Blue Angd '." R.o, RttJ \,ndK•lrd Cutunlni\I Should .enhance ~~·~ reputation dS a pioneer of crotirism on Thrrna R graduat es ( promising starlet st us lo one of those pcdc nls r~r1 cu for overn hi sucte " -Kru.t l\1lll•t11'4lll Pl• bo) \Ill <. \l<ll "" lll~l ~~::~~I ~~~~'~ I ~~~~ ''"" " ollN.'""l"' I >tr-.,"" ,it , ,,,,. .. ., ,1-., \rtt.,,·m ••• h+t••wl llw-........ ,, \ 1, ..... ft .. t. .• ..._j I t.....11. ~ 1 .... 1.t.i.iL 1, ... n I ~" 14, \ , 1111 I•,(_., •. 1 ' "" \ 10 IC, 11111" ~ IU I 'l'I " 14' ' \II l I• lll l1HHl>l 1. ll>ln II HI \I' 11 111\1 \' l>IKI I fl I) m 'I\ 111 \• f(t tll, \U1"'""1tl'•fu-1t -t1~11tt1\l\111l1At .... 1 f 1li!1 .. •I M1 f,,hf,.,~1~"'" ''""J.1\..fo1Mil•••u•\\ f•tW ++t i *,.'•'•• ~C, .. \\\ Hiil" tlll 11\I 111 r ---UCLVSIYE £NGA6EMEN1' STARTS 'EODAY ------11 CO.STA llESA Mann'• Soatla Cout I 714/546-2711 Dally 1:00. 3:15. 5:35 . 8:00 & JO:/~ PM I - ~V l'llOT ART GALLERIES Paper power, creative poten~ials in spotUg•t ·"PAP•• fl!OWIR " wlll be c...,.eted wUh 5peclel perfor· mence events end crHtlw growth work· shopl ttwOUlf\ Dec. 7, starting with• 6 p.m . recepUon Seturday at Art5 Space, 116' s. Cont Hlohwav1 L..aguM Beach. ct\Mf Morera and J m lshll wlll be rtormlno contemporar~ Jazz works as ltors view the works of Sam Costa, ancH Les, Howard and Lorraln .. Marcus, Pieters, Arnold Schrlfrln and Paula Thqne. "O.therlng hours" are scheduled from• to 6 p.m . Thursdays and Fridays for crHt tve people to find st imulus ; In a nOn-competltlve environment. f QUllTLY POWERFUL PRESENTATIONS 1 of Taos, N.M . landscapes by Peter Keefer are belno featured through Dec. s at Galerle And,..., 695 Town Center Drive, Costa Mesa. The artist wlll sign his new collagraph, "Cloud V," from 7 to 10 p.m. Saturday. FLORALS IN OIL AND textured atmosph91"ic paintings will be the subjects of wd1 lectures Thursday when Laura Campbell addresses the Costa Mesa Art League at 7 p.m. at Columbia Savings and Loan, at Harbor Boulevard and Wilson Street and Francis Woodahl Meyers' small ceramics tell of very personal experiences while her l arger works make perceptive yet humorous comments on the human condition. Wurm's paintings revolve around the camaraderie of social gatherings and the way Southern Californians spend their leisure time. Gallery hours are 10 to 2 weekdays. THE SAN CLEMENTE ARTS and Crafts Club's Christmas Fair and Winter Art Exhibition runs from Sunday through Jan. 9 In the Community Center, 100 N. Calle Seville. On opening day only, a variety of handcrafted items for sale, display and competition will fill tables In the auditorium. Sixtv member-artists have contributed to the professionally Judged show. FRAMED ORIGINAL.GRAPHICS, oil paintings and watercolors by award- winning artists will be on the block when Orange Coast College's crew presents an art exhibition and auction at 7 p.m . Saturday at 1801 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, next to Balboa Bay Club. Proceeds will help finance OCC's 1981 row ing season. Tickets will be $2. JOAN MYERS' PHOTOGRAPHIC . ·-.:. •-......_ --:r • speaks to the Westminster Art Association at 7:30 p.m. In the Civic Center, 8200 Westminster Ave. "Desert Series," enhanced by the platinum palladium process, continues at Susan Spiritus Gallery, 3336 Via Lido, Newport Beach. CAMERA CAUGHT SHADOWS SKIMMING ACROSS ROCKY MONUMENT IN DESERT LANDSCAPE 'Trove' by Joan Myers now showing at Susan Splrltu1 Gallery In Newport Beech IN CONJUNCTION WITH THE watercolor exhibition of Masami Teraoka through Nov. 23, the Newport Harbor Art Museum, 850 San Clemente Drive, Newport Beach, Is showing two films, "Ukiyo-e" • and "Art Nouveau" at 2 p.m. Sundays. Admission Is $2. COMMENTING ON EXAGGERATIONS In their "Hyperbole 3" exhibition, artists Donna Day Westerman, Doree • Ounlap-Freidenrich and Norman Tornheim will present a dialogue, "Echo Chasers and Spirit Catchers" at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Mills House Visual Arts Complex, 12732 Main St., Garden Grove. Admission is free. "ALLEGORICAL RELATIONSHIPS" Only the Dally Pilot really tells you what's new In your local community ..• eYery day is the theme of sculpture by Susan Meyers and paintings by Jan Wurm being shown until Dec. 12 in the Fine Arts Gallery at Saddleback College, 28000 1,J.1!iiJ!(.}I Marguerite ~!kway, M.;.;.is;.;s;.;.lon,;.;.;...;V..;i.;.e.:.;io;.;;· .................. --='---==========':t Jean-Paul Belmondo Festival "Le Megnlflque" Jacqueline Bisset "The lncorrtgl.,.es" Genevive Bujold DISTRIBUTED BY (PG) EDP FILMS Inc. I . "IDOL:~KER" ~ =====i "lrS MY TURN"1111 "El.ECTRIC HORSEMAN" c=.. ~ a "PRIVA f.E 1111 • i l .. J~IM'" I "THE El.£.-..ANT MAN" "'°' I "THIE EMPIRE '"°' STR!~!_~~K" "ORDINARY PEOPLE"" I I "rT8 MY TUAN" "ELECTRIC HORSEMAN" 1"1 "MOTEL HELL" 1111 "WHEN THE SCREAMING STOPS" c=· -~ --~ I "SMOKEY • THE BANDIT, PART II" "1941" (POI IC-·~~==>I . .,,. CAii ..,... • . ._._.,~Ollll.9'" Clll •,__~~~~~~---' "AIRPLANE" ll'OI "BLUES BROTHERS" 1111 "IDOlMAKER" "FOXES"(R) AU.DMta ..... °"" ... ,.~, ~ '*""' ,. ,.. •• ..... ""''OllOUNO MOVIE RATINGS FOR MREN1S AND YOUNG PEOPLE "'"..,..., ... ol IN,.,,,,,. • 10 ........ -"°""'""'"""""""""' t'f"D.._ ~ b' ¥'19W"I O'f INlll Cftf'ldtwl -ON STAGE -FRIDAV . SOPRANO MISS GEORGIA LEIGH SATURDAY TENOR JIM MARSHALL DAVID COf'HN AT ~ KfYIOAllD NOfRISva.RYIN lfijj- ORANGE MALL 6 '"'''" S.OUIP'I ot t.ncoin O••~v• • 637-0340 ~ ORANGE ~ ORIVE IN San'• An• f'rwy n••r Ch•pm•n D••nv• • 5511· 7022 ~ Fou11u111 nun '!7 Clllllll ., ..... ...,.1.tt01"9•' F°""'t1Wt Yl i9'f • lla..,50() Lf:c . .,cj !!rnff ii 'oM(" ttrwt S> 11 r.-0 11 Gtc.t ._.._, '*" ..... t ... n 1-.l8'3 USI THI, DAILY PILOT .... ,T IHULT .. ------=-----:-•TART• T'ODAV ---~~~- ••tel DIUCTOIY 642·1671 ... HI •u UA 990·4022 *COSTA MUA Edwards Cinema 546·3102 fOllTM• YAlllY •YtMl MISSIH fl(JI OIANCE Founfain Valley Dr ·In Woodbridge Cinema Viejo Cinedome 962·2481 551 ·0655 830·6990 634.2553 • 35mm DOLBY DIAICE *WESTMINSTER Stadium Drive·ln Cinema West 639·7860 891 ·3935 ...... •C.- 11J/~)1 4~IO n UYU Ml nn llNUTM nil c'". ,. "" lOM, -w ALUOATCM 111 ,,,,..,,_,_, ..... IO:M __ ""_ ... HIVAn UNJAMIN1t1 l 11W:»J:4M:IS.l•M nil STAI WAIS \AOA COfmNUU TMI IMPlll Sftll(IS UCK ll'Ol .. _IT NO PASSU" '7 0 -DOI.IT IOUHO'" 121~rOtoJ1MM1IJ·lOi4S OCKDll M&WN IN , •• van llNJAMIN 111 U 1:I0-2:J0.414J•7:-:IS.1 l:U --~·-,ma­"CMDINHY "O'LI" 111 I 1:~-J1MM1IJ.IO,l0 "ATUl.ll,ML- IT'S MY TVIN111 11::I0-11J0.4:)0.4:-1»IO:M .. I "PRIVATE BENJAMIN" (R) • • • ••• .....,,.., ... 00 494 1'>14 ,,, 7-11 IJ L.---...J s.~ °i ~ oo'.~~: )0 .. ,. •• Mll'•lt 494 1'>14 "IT'S MV TURN" Mdy$1·0CM •$-tO·O s.~ 1 ,..., Q0.4'""4·~10-00 PACIFIC THEATllfS OlllVE·IN SWAP lllE£TS sr•t f(N fGUtll IUU l -lf'f .. O , .... OAr ,, HAAIOll llVO OlllVE·IN 6 OllANGE OlllVf·IN I IM 10 J ,. O fUl OAt I l\.1"0Af "Ill, ... ,., IUft0.0$ a1 A.H "ltW l ftDIU• ecMM•-· NIVAn llMJAMIH111 P\UI 00eN0 IN ITfllrN I u· •· "'\' ,_. tw1. '""' •• •• ... ,."' I , , I I 'TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS ...__.,,.._ . ..-. .. IU.~ Wone.r Wo"'•" go11 ~ ti U'9 Wdat IO ~. __ .. b · ...... Mqlllft by Ille H6alt I TIC TN:J DOOGM •rA•t•H Father ~ WJtlea • pr•CNlatMM felt• home !Ohla118W • THI llNNY Hll.L IHOW a.My It ·~ Of... Pl .. ..... lo • ~11 ttory of-4'oyll Intrigue. I~~~ "Star1 NuGINt Fur~" I == ~ MJl.l..Uft wacoue tACK. KOTTE" - I TeleriSiOR Friday, November 1 , 1980 8 '490MOVIE * * * "The OodlllMI Saga" ' ( 19771 Robert OeHlfo, Marion Brendo An atten>pt on "godf1th4H .. Vito COtleOne'• hie Ignites • gang war end drew1 hl1 previously elool eon Michael 1n10 e Ille of etlme (Pin 2)(R) 0 G aJ MOVIE • • • "Calllornla Suite" (19711) Alan AkSa. M1ggie Smith. Several couples become lnvOlved In odd and humorous situations during 1helr 1tay In one particular 1ulte In a po.ti hot et ID MERV GRIFFIN Guests: Ubetace. Yarnell & Scott, Gary Shandling, Karen Akers. Fernendez. Pete Barbutt1 fl) m WALL STREET WEEK • "Happy Blrll'lday To Us. Wall Streel Week's 101h Anntversary'1 TUBE TOPPERS NBC e 9: 00 -"The Godfather Saga." The second of three parts int.his · two-movie special with Marlon Brando in the title role and Robert DeNiro as his son and successor. ABC D 9:00 -"California Suite." An all-star cast is featured in the movie version of Neil Simon's comedy about visitors to a Los Angeles hotel (photo at left ). KOCE 9 10:00 -"Sabotage." Alfred Hitchcock's 1936 suspense thriller about a saboteur who accidentally kills his brother-in-law with a homemade bomb. Guests. Andy Wltllems, Je1n M81Sh. D PRISONER: CELL BLOCKH I:«>. MOVll • • "Dt. PhlOM RiMt Again" ( 1172) Vlnc9111 Prlc;ie, Robert °'*'Y Doc- tor Phlbet IMn:t1el E9Y1>t tor an ellxll' wtlk:t'I wlll restore life to his dNd wile 11 hr., 30 min.) 1:80. MOW! • • • "Virginia City'' ( 1940) Errol Flynn, Miriam Hoplllna. Se>IM from the North and the South 1ttempt to outwit etch oin.r Ind obtain 1 qu1nt1ty • ol~ ~ llelO In VII· gl_nla City. (2 llra •• 25 min.> 1:56• News 2:00 I COMEDY SHOP MOVIE * • ~ "01 Love And Oealre" ( 1983) Merle Obefon. Steve Cochran A wealthy woman attempts to leave her sordid pall behind by marrying the man ahelovM 111 MOVIE ONLVPILOT --·=-1 -.AAFrwt 1.-00 ...... OOMMtMTY '1!IDMCK 11 Hoel. F~ Del Rio. c\ ·UNMMnY ~~ t:151Alft ::.':~ Flt.Ml THAT TfACtf ll ·~180HNU~, THATS CAT ~ 9 lr8YOUA •T IU8INE88 ;l I qAVEY ANO OOl.IA,.,.. 8PeAt< OUT "I AOMPEA AOOM CAPTlOHEO A8C 0 NEWS Cl) ADVEHTUAE8 IH OtCi 0 PAINTIHO ;6 7:00 8 MARLO AHO THE t) MAGIC MOVIE MACHtN&) D OOOZJUA / ' OYNOMVTT HOUR 1 8 PACESETTERS 11 • OOOOTIME8 Theim.a'• ll~ turn• out 10 be old enough ~o be her father • DICK CAV£TT B°"' 'Suite' 9:30 fl) SACRAMENTO WEEK IN REVIEW Host Murray Fromson. Followlng ll VIOient shot· gun attack. Karan lies Mfl· ously Ill In the hOspHal 8 9 FRIDAYS Stanwyck, Ronald Reagan With lhe help of an tndlan. a girt tries to protect her property from a ruthless land-grabber (1 Ju.. 25 min I • • • "Notorious Genii.- man" ( 1946) ~· Hernton, uni Patmer. A playt>oy's expul1lon from Odord beglnS a witd spree 1hat ends In tragedy 12 hrs ) Host: Ray Gonzales • 9 8C008Y 000, ~ Gu"t: Joe McGlnnlu . WHERE ARE YOU? -:tt (Part 2 ol 2) , • S-2-1 CONTACT(A>Q Cl) M*A*8"H B.J. r9C*VM a visit trom an old coti.;e friend who proceed• to play practic.t .Jok" on the M·A·s ·H members. Bill Cosby (left) and Richard Pryor find there is no love lost in their tennis m atch in the movie "California Suite," airing tonight at 9 on ABC, Channel 7. m SNEAK PREVIEWS "Changing Hollywood Sex Roles" Rage< Eberl and Gene Soskel look at hOw Hollywood has reversed the tredotoonal sexual star· eotype of men. women and romance II OUNSM<>t<E A tamlly 11 held hostage by the relatives or a kHler to prevent them from 1estlly· JrlQ at hi• trial 0 THEFBI "The Babysttter" m NA TIOHAL NEWS 12:40 0 HOLL YWOOO HEARTBEAT Host Bob Welch. Guests Blondie. AC I DC, The Twtiters. Gary MyrlCk, Joe Jackson. 2:300 NEWS 3:00 m MOVIE • * 'h "'Finl Spac;nhlp On Venus" 11962) Yoko Tani, Oldrlel< Lukes In 1980, eight sclen11111 discovers a prograsllva Clvllizallon on lhe planet Venus (1 hr • 30 min.) I HOT FUOGE •If ~EALTH :~ Cl) AOUL T JOURNEY .,, <~ 7:30 8 OUSTY'B q; I BARNEY MIUER 7:00 CBS NEWS I NBCNEWS HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie's advlca In his newspaper oolumn almost brings an end to Pot1le and R11lph'1 lrlend1hlp. G ~BCNEWS 0 JOKER'S WILD 4D M"A"S*H A'adar 11 accepted 10 the "Famous Las Vegas Writ- ers School" and begins recording his impression.a of the 4077th m BARETTA 0 FAMILY FEUD 8 SHANANA Guests: Canny and The Juniors. I TELETONE NEWS FACE THE MUSIC ALL IN THE FAMILY Mike crattlty gets out of taking Gloria to a party so he call go skiing with the boys. 18 MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT Ci) VOTERS' PIPELINE Host. Jim Cooper. CIJ'P.M. MAGAZINE Adelalde Bry. psychoth- e<aplst. author "Directing The Movies 01 Your Mind.'' Frustrated tn h11 efforts 10 nell e crooked narcotics agent, Blfetta resigns 10 be free to stalk him 8:00 8 CIJ THE INCREDIBLE HULK fB OVEREASY "Women In Mld·Llle Tran· S•tlon" Guests. aulhOr Bel Kaufman, socioloQlSt L1lll- an Rubin O m MACN£1L I LEHRER REPORT CIJ TIC TAC DOUGH 9 MERV GRIFFIN 7:30 fJ 2 ON THE TOWN Hosts Steve Edwards and Melody Rogers vlllt Gu•· dat1)ara The Hulk Is mtstaken for an alien by scaantlsts and tak- en 10 a secret researcn lacility to be studied. (Pan 2) D SIEOFNED ANO ROY: SUPERSTARS Of' MAGIC The maste< illusionists per- lorm teats or wonder In this spacial taped in Las Vegas le1h•rlng a 1ty1ng llger, a disappearing ele- Phant and other trtcks. Channel Lbf ings 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles 0 KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles • KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 0 KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles (]) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ·TV (Ind) Los Angeles !Ill KCST (ABC) San Diego ID KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles • KCOP-TV (Ind J Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles G KOCE· TV (PBS) Hunlmgton Beach , .... 1 .......... 'YES, stR' SAYS 'COMPANY' STAR Suzanne Somers, husband Al•n Hamel Suzanne returns to 'CoIDpany' By JERRY BUCK LOS ANGELES (AP) -Actress Suzanne Somers says she missed three or the last five episodes of the ABC-TV comedy series "Three's Company" because or injuries and the str~in of the 10-wed< actors' strike, not as a ploy to get more money. Miss Somers announce<j at a press conference Wednesday that she would return to the set Thurs- day despite the fact that her contract differences with NRW Productions, makers of the show, have not been resolved. ALAN HAMEL, Ml~ Somers' husband and manager, said at the press conference that she pulled a back muscle a nd broke a rib during a performance on the "Tonight Show" several weeks ago. He said her injury was the result of tension, not a fall or body blow, and occurred just. before her TV series was resuming production. "She was forced to miss several shows and then she decided to take two more days of rest," Hamel said. "They (the prdducen) interPreted those two days otr as a _way or leveraging the negotiations. 'Jiley elected to imply or infer she was faldna It." NBC spokesman Joe Bleeden said be was present when Mias Somers appeared on the ''Tonight Sbow" and added. "I recaU no injury. No·one baa JDeDtion.ed it. •• HAMEL SAID NRW Productions bad offered MIH Somera "four fl1ures'1 per episode, IUl amount he calJed an •'insult." He satd Mt11 Somtra would atar fn a CBS aerlet .. the moment we can cet. her out of 'Three's Company."' M-.Jor TV aura typlcalty can command $25,000 an epilode and up, lDdustry llOGrcet •IY. A spokesman for NRW ProducUona was not immediately avaUable fGf' comment. 8 MOVIE • • • "Too Late The Hero" ( t970) Michael Caine. Cllll Robertson A British patrol Is chaMld by Japanese troops alter they discover a large group of en*'!!l planes (2 hrs I G l!Jll BENSON 111 MOVIE •'h "Man Friday" ( 1975) Peter O'Toole, Richard Roundiree. Based on a novel by Oanlel Deloe The Shipwrecked Robinson Crusoe tries to teach "c1v1- lwed" behavk>r to a nauve blade man (2 hrs.) ID P.M. MAGAZINE • MOVIE **'~ .. Mayday At •0.000 Feet " ( 1976) David Janssen. Oon Meredith In a str119Qle for a gun, a killer d1S4bles an aorhner (2 hrs ) 8) 28TONIOHT T oplcs a wrap.up on all the Issues lnvotvlng veter- ans and thllr lives (Part 5 of 51 ~ SACRAMENTO WE!K IN REVIEW I Host Murray Fromson 11:30 8 aJ) l'M A BIO GIRL NOW Diana has to choose between completing an important report or gotng to Becky's ctass pro1ec1 day 111 school ID RAMSWEEK Host. Barry Tompkins fB ~ WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 9:00 fJ Cl) THE DUKES OF HAZZARD (Season Premiere) Boss Hogg persuades Luke 10 enter a boxing ma1ch against a proles11onal lighter 10:00 8 CIJ CALLAS J R . paralyzed In his hos- pital bed. continues to lhwart Bobby's attempt to run Ewing 011. DO NEWS Q) NATIONAL NEWS m BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL m MOVIE * • • "Sabotage" I 19361 Oscar Homolka. Sylvla Sidney Directed by Allred Hrtchcock. A man engaged In sabotage activities ace.- dentally kills his brothet- in·law with a self.made bomb (1 hr .30mln I to:30 m ID NEWs t 1:00 I) D U Cil ®l NEWS 0 HOLLYWOOD SOU ARES 0 NEWLYWEOGAME (D M•A•S0 H B J becomes a sur111gata father to a Korean lamll)I when the young daughter seeks medical assistance ror h~ lather ID ONE ST£P BEYOND 'The Slone Cutter" A weird prediction ot deattt 1s made by an old tomb- stone cutter m THE ART OF LIVING Guest· Dr Da•ld Bohm, professor ol physics at the University of London. 11 :30 I) ([) CBS LA TE MOVIE • • "Billy Jack" (197 t) Tom Laughlin, Delores Taylor A hall-Indian loner and lhe head of an experi- mental schoOI lor troubled Chlldren s1and up against the brutahty ol a small town (Rl 0 TONIGHT Host. Johnny Carson ID MOVIE • • ''t "Clary 0 1 A Mad· man" 119631 Vincent Price Nancy 'Kovacic A French magistrate finds hlmsell the victim ot demonic pos- session and urges to kill 12 hrs I ID IT TAKES A THIEF Al Mundy t1nds double 1rouble In the world or black candle. Incense· burning mystics fJll m CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -Ml>NIGHT- 12:00 D TWILIGHT ZONE 'The Long Morrow" 12·30 0 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Hosts Bony Crystal and Susan Anton Guests OaV1d Bowle Yes. Con Mclean. Fred Knoblock, Korgls. The Busboys, The V•pors D MOVIE • • • "Caltle Oueen Of Montana f t9541 Barbara JOHN DARLING (]1) CAROL BURNETT ANO FRIENDS 1:00 m MOVIE * • • "We're No Angels" ( t95S) Humphrey Bogart, Aldo Ray. Three escaped convicts take over a French shop 12 hrs > 1:100 VIOEOWEST BACKSTAGE PASS Guests. Santana, Plasmas- hcs ®) AOAM-12 The officers hall a black marl<et baby transaction and uncover a suspicious ptll program at a college 1.151) NEWS 1:30 0 THE LONE RANGER "One Jump Ahltad" ID MOVIE * • l'1 "The New Interns" 11964) MIChaet Callan. Bat· bare Eden A lour$0tlle ot new interns ad1us1s 10 work1r19 at a large me1ro- p0111an hosp.lat (2 hrs . 15 min.) 3:10 0 NEWS 3:4&1D MOVIE **'h "Affair Wllh A Stranger" ( 1953) Jean Simmons. Victor Mature. Divorce seems the only alternative for a young couple until they adopt a child (2 hrs I 3:550 MOVIE • • '" "We Live AgaJn" ( 1934) Fredric March, Anna Sten. Based on a novel by Leo Tolstoy A Russian prlnu defies the traditions ol nob1hty by his Ill-lated love affair with 11 simple paa54nt girl (I hr . 35min) 4:000 MOVIE * * "We Olve At Oawn" I 1942) Erle Pon man, John Motts A Bnllsh und-•111 dernOllhon 1eam makes pr19ar111ons to S4b0t909 II Nazi warship (2 hrs I 4:30 m NEWS TAE.EHOUSE • IMO BLUE MAR8l.E !? 8 0 PLA8TICMAH I ; I. BABY Pl.AS •! 111 OIOGl.ESNORT HOTEL 1l ID ELEMENTARY NEW8o11 m SONRISAS • : fib VEGETABLE SOUP • 11 ()) l<IOSWOR~f:! ~ 8:00 1J CIJ MIOHTY MO' ISE 't HECKLE & JECKLE 0 FRED ANO BARNEY MEET THE SHMOO • D LEAVEITTOBEAVEA-~ G ®J HEATHCUFFANl1'• DINGBAT ·• 0 ROLLER DERBY ·-: ID MOVIE , * * * "Man On A String'": I 1960) Ernest Borgnine\ Kerwin Mllhews • I ID SPECIAL PEOPLE ft) ONCEUPONA CLASSIC /\ "A Tale 01 Two Cities" 11:30 fJ Cl) TOM ANO J~RY· ~ D THE RIFLEMAN " 0 @) THUNDAAR THE , BARBARIAN m INFINITY FACTORY ',/o 8ll RE80P (RI The ·world prepares for The Answe~ t LOS ANGELES (AP > -Friday, Nov. 21. Circle the date in red on your calendar. invite all your friends over and make sure the TV is work·' ing: that's when the world learns who shot J .R. Ewing. The assault on the dastardl.Y oilman played by Larry Hagman on television's "Dallas" may not be the crime of the century. but the finger- ing of the culprit was unblushingly described by CBS Ente rtainment Pres1dent Robert Daly as "the major event or the season " ALTHOUGH THE long.awaited "Who Shot J . R." episode will be broadcast nationwide on Nov. 21. not all interested Americans will learn the answer at the same time. AN HOUR LATER, the program will start to air in the Mountain Time Zone at 9 p.m. local time, and finally -a whole three hours after thei r East Coast counterparts -West Coasters will get to see it at 10 p.m. PST. theshow'susuallimeslothere. Daly admitted the delays could possibly reduce the viewing audience in the western half of the country if people call up -or are called by - their eastern buddies who already know whodunnit. "But l think that the episode is s uch that there is going to be a tremendous interest in seeing it," he said. ..THERE'S NO DOUBT it's better if th~ don't know. But 'Da llas· gets a 40 <Nielsen rating) share of audience for normal episodes.·· CENTER OF STORM Larry Hagman as J.R. paign begins Nov. 15. i "We'll just be telling P,e<>Ple yie event of the season is here," he sa)d. "I think on the local level you'll tee an awful lot or promoting done by the affiliates." i• Jn any case, Daly figures the s will set the recnrd for the Jar t ser ies episode a udience sim y because there are more televis sets now than in 1967. ;" ·: "IT CREATES A tremendous ~x­ ciiement." he said. "And it definitely rubs off, at least for a short period' of time, on the overall schedule~t brings a lot of people to TV To normallydon't wa tch TV." •· And for at least the night ~he episode is broadcast. Daly suspecff it will ta.ke a lot or people away f9>m other leisure activities. ·~ "I wouldn't want to be premi~~ng a movie that night." he said. • In fact, British "Dallas" fans -at least those who don't mind burning the mjdnight oi l and then some - will be clued in before Americans in the western half of the country. East Coast and Central Time l.one audiences get the word first. viewing the progra m simultaneously at JO p.m. EST and 9 p.m. CST. At the same time, thanks to a satellite reed, the show will be broadcast-by Bri· tain's BBC -that's 3 a.m., thei r time. Despite any possible resentment by westerners tired of having to watch many sports events, newscasts and other so-called "live" happenings on it ('Dallas') was on Sunday or Monday MIRAMAR THEATRE . . .\'l;> 110',f, WEEKEND PROGRAMS Frtday. Nov. 14th Box OMc:. Open• 7 P.M. 7:30 "Mlptof" (A) 1:15 .. ,..,.ntle" (A) 11 :oo ''Gimme &Miter" (R) telltwtnt "The Rotllng Stones" M .. etsl3.90 S•tJSun, Nov. 11-11 Box oflk:ie opene 11:30 AM 12N~n••lfM• "tne.mattonal YelWt"(llG) 'Starring Tatum O'Neal 2:00 ''AllJgator" (R) 3:4S "Piranha" <R> 5:30 "AJllgator" (R> 7:30 "Alllgator" (R) 9:1S "Piranha" (R) tape hours after they occur. CBS an-whentherearemoresetsinusethanon So I bl 1· h · ' ticipates the rating for ''Who Shot Friday. it would be very good.'' ve va uo e goso ine s opp3 J . R.? .. will be as large or larger the locally advertised vol tha n the most·watched TV series IN AN ALL-OUT effort to achieve available only in the Oro episode in history -the final show of its predictions, the network plans to Coast's hometown newspo~ David Janssen's "The Fugitive" pro-run what Daly described as a "uni-the ! gram in 1.967. que" series of promotional TV spots .. • "It could best that," Daly ~aid. "l~r~th~e:_"~O~a~ll~a~s_"~e:!p~is~o~d~e:.:_. ~Th~e:...c~a~m~:._--~=================~!- See An Entire Community of RJchly Decorated Manufactured Home.I 'tbrs·ahead llomeJ. designed for Mobile Ho(lW Commun!· tlti br ~ur own tndMdual lo1, IMll ope') ~ur eyes to your famUy's futurc. lllelt)Ael Don't miss ltl tltlt"--1"11 tll:I ............. ......... \lallk» ..... """' ................... 1'1oa,F'ft l'fOoll·• p.m., $.Al. IO a.1111,9 '-"'".SU... II» ... ,1 ,_.., Mlilt• .ss.oo • ....,, '-••7S. UMlt. Aeol. Plue the Greatat RV Show on Earthl .................. ~ ................... - A look at orange county's new settlers ''Voter's JI Pi.Peli·ne" :J ~ Jim Cooper and his guests discuss southeast Asians (l In orange county Tonight ) . · 7:50pm I ' Cle DAILY PILOT ~.~10.14.19llO • .. . Making sense out of dollars a financial strategy is either to 'increase, start or protect our nest egg . . . Most women don't know where ..... • 11 • ... •• lit .... • ti .. '"I. • .. lit 1. \ to b~g_in ... Most women let their spouses or fathers make decisions about money ... but that is changing . '· . " 1'.0-· ' ... .... , . ,, \ , ...... J"•• '' I c• I • . "'' . .. ... I 1h l ·-... ' ••• I• I.I' . ,, I •• .. ' •II .. ,.., ,. '" -"' .. 4 .... " "' ... "'' ... ' I ,, ' ~ I• i •• I• ~· " .. .. ,, .. ,, .... , "'· ,.,,. ' ~ . ,, . .. ,.. ,,.. ... ••• •'ltOJ ' .,,, . .., ~(I <" . ,, ... f Or·) ,t. it ..... ,, . • 0 . ... J ..... 1 ,,~ ... ,., "'" "" ·;: •. l >O. ... By JlJDITH OLSON OtlMDallyf'li.tSt•H Question: If you work for an employer who has a retirement plan, and quit, can you re-invest your pension fund in a tax- free account? Question : Wh at h ~p pens if you purchase a second trust deed and the bor- rower defaults? · If y_ou know the answers to these two quest1ons, you 're pretty smart about money. They were among topics discussed. at a recent seminar for women hosted by Newport Equity Funds, "For Women On- ly: Facts and Fashion" or "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About In- vestments and Money and Didn't Know WbotoAsk." During a morning.Jong seminar. there were talks about insurance. investment strategies, retirement plans and 'second trust deeds. TBE"PURPOSF or having a fin ancial strategy is to either ''increase. start or protect our nest egg," Ms . Tompkins said. Most women don't know where to begin because "in the past women haven't taken a positive stand in getting out m the world, epecially in terms of invest- ments," she added. Most women let their s pouses or fathers make decisions about money , Ms. Tompkins noted, but with more and more women working and heading households. that is changing. ''The best way to le am is to gel in- volved,'' she s tressed. Here are some ideas from the speakers. P eggy Carmich ael of General American Life Insurance Company, talked about• 'Ins urance for Women.•' SHE SAID women now buy insurance to protect their families, which is a change from the past, since men tradi- tionally have been the ones to be insured. The first step to buying insurance is to figure out what you've got and un- derstand it. "But consumers in our society are at a disadvantage ," Ms. Carmichael noted. "The insurance industry hasn't made it understandable." The next step should be establishing a need, she said. "There's no good or bad. It's what you need." Insurance programs should be re- viewed periodically, she noted, since policies are eroded by inflation. "What you bought in 1967 probably should~ in· creased by 130 percent,·· she said. INSURANCE SHOULDN'T be viewed as an investme nt, Ms . Carmichael stressed, since there will be no great in- crease in cash value. She doesn't recomme nd borrowing against policies because ' 'that defeats the purpose. It erodes the death benefit." . ·Attorney Corrine Adams·Bell, address- ing "Vestings , Wills and Probate " said t~e n:st step in estate planning sh~uld be fi guring out the extent or your holdings . With large estates, $250,000 and up, the goal is to defer taxes for several genera- tions. she said. Thal can be done any num~r or w~ys, including tax-free gifts to children, incorporation, recapitaliza- tion (giving common stock in your com- pa_ny lo yo':I~ children), investing in private annuities and setting up trusts. MRS. ADAMS-BELL said that som etimes it's worth it lo go through pro- bate tocutorr creditors . When real estate is involved a decision should be made by couples whether to have_ the property in joint tenancy or com- munity property. P lanning is necessary, she noted because "without it, you can lose 75 to 100 percent of your estate." Kathleen Mc Devitt, a broker with Mer- rill Lynch. talked about "Basic lnvest- menlStrategies " She drew a pyramid, then said the most conservative investments should be the foundation. such as a home or other real estate or corporate or municipal bonds. Stocks are the next level. "You should decide with stocks whether you're in it for long, medium or short range, she said. "Put a limiton,Your profit." OPTIONS TRADING is the most risky and this she teasingly described as "legalized gambling." One possibility for earning good in· terest is a "money market" fund. which . is available through a brokerage. This is like a mutual fund but consists of short- term government paper "It isn 't insured," Ms McDevitt said. "But you have access to your money on a daily basis. There is no penalty for withdrawing lt." Robert Ridgeway from ADP Pension Services talked about "IRA, Keogh and Corporate Plans." Anyone with no corporate retirement plan can put up to $1,500 a year in an IRA (Individual Retirement Account) ac· count, and another $2SO per year can be a~ded for a non -working spouse, Ridgeway said. The Keogh Plan allows more of a con- tribution, upto$7,500per year, he added. FUNDS FROM a corporate retirement plan can be trarutferred to an I RA acc<.llllt after employment is terminated within 60 days, Ridgeway said, but no more funds can be added unless you either go into business for yourself or start working for a c~mpany without a pension plan. He noted. if you work just one day in a year you have to wait until the next ye.ar to be eligible to start or add to an IRA ac· count. Barba.i;a Tompkins. of Newport Equity Funds, wnose topic was "Trust Deed In· vestments," said the important thing about money is to "do something on a regular basis -and get involved today. • · With today's high interest rates . she noted, just a small amount of dollars. if in- vested on a regular basis and left. to ac- crue interest, will multiply at a surpris- ingly rapid rate. HER COMPANY does nothing but set up "second liens" on property. a topic which she said used to be rather· 'shady.'· "Second trust deeds used to be used 'more by people who had trouble getting loans elsewhere,•' she said. "But then in the early '605 banks start· ed giving second trust deeds and now it's okay to talk about it at the dinner table. In fact, it's a smart thing to do. '·Today. here, most borrowers are well-to-do people who use the money to buy additional real estate." Second trust deed s are s afe in California, Ms. Tompkins noted. because or the state's foreclosure recovery system . If the loan is not repaid, a foreclosure can be filed and the property recovered after llldays. "In the event or foreclosure you could have money back plus interest or a nice piece of property." Second trust deeds are available for as little as $5,000, Ms. Tompkins said, &fld I they will bring at least 15 percent interest I and sometimes as high as 18 percent. _J :;~~ementary students dig history assignment ."", "' ";'. Joyce Roebuck, principal of ~,the Ernest Gisler Middle School .. ;n Huntington Beach, says her ·~students really "dig" history. ,,ft's a literal statement. Jll ... During recent weeks, pupils in Robert Lent's social studies class have been taking shovel \,and spade to a makeshift ,.,rcheological site on the school •._g.rounds, recovering skulls, ~ones. c lay bowls, arrows, k!i'fltchets and primitive tools. • ~ What mysteMowi civilization left these artifacts? Lent's 9'1,igprninc class, which hu been ~bUrylQI the Items for the atler- "JlOOn students to discover. •.,tf• .. .oo•-Mornin1 pupils draw up "treaaure mape" of the site, ta.-merty the location of a porta· ble school buildlnt, to suJde the afternoon archeololi•ll in their ""'tfearch for the past. w •lr lh. Roebuck said atudentl uomay plant a 1ardeD on tbe alte 11 ,Jllic• tbe educational project la u eompltted. "'vcLent eaplalne.d that the rtcreal.ioa ol an arebaeolotleaJ ' . :dll'' • ••·wled to "tie tbt put .... #Ml. tbt pr11• tot.tiler• tlle "Judeata' miDdl IO that hlatory ls :!".-otJustlomedry aubJed." '~ I . David Stack (left), Danny Hanan end Morgan ~l#ams examine 'affifact.' ... I I I I I I Broke and writing to stay afloat, Frank W. Snepp Ill works at paper-strewn desk m his Washington apartment. Life under penalty Former CIA agent Frank Snepp should be financi~lly comfortable. Instead, he's broke, in debt and on the outs with his former employer. By SID MOODY ARLINGTON. Va. CAP> - Just hours. if that, remained. lt was Die Gotterdammerung, the twilight of the gods, twilight, finally, atlheendofthe tunnel. The CIA s tation chief in Saigon sent a valedictory message to Washington before smashing the equipment: "Let us hope we will not have another Vietnam experience and that we have learned our lesson. "Saigon signing off." THAT SAME SPlllNG ni&bl in 1975, a helicopter lifted out of the flames and the clutching hands of those l eft behind. Their Snepp works out with a daily jog. screams were an appeal and a curse, together. screams that still search and destroy the sleep of one of the passengers on that flight. Their discordant trespass jerks him awake. Frank W. Snepp Ill h as dreamed another of what he calla his "sotmdmares." One man's voices in the night are too personal, too gossamer to be the concern of the justices of the Supreme Court of the United Stat.es. Nowhere are they beard in the somber, juiceless pages of United Slates v. Frank W. Snepp III. docket No. ~265. which found him culpable, in ef- fect, of "faithlessness" to the security of his country. TB08E VOICES neither in- criminate nor acquit Frank Snepp before the bar. They are hearsay. Frank Snepp wrote a book about the last moat.ha of Viet- nam entitled "Decent Interval." It chromclet diplomatic and in- telligence fumblln1 and the abandonment of thou1ands of Vietnamese 1'bo worked for the CIA and other a,enciea. No one has ques~ ttl accuracy or ar1ued that J.t revealed teerets. But the CIA. for wtlom 8lnepp Nrved two tourt ln Saison. auea becaUH he dl4I aot submit hla manuacrlpt ac'~publlcatloo review ln ee wltll ua oatll be blld ~ at a.-.t twice. 8Mpp fOQbt all tbe •llY to tbe ~upreme C1ocart, loet and bu been penalized $140,580 so far - the amount is dependent on bis royalties and the book is still in print -something o f a landmark for a private citi&en. He is now broke and $40,000 in debt because of the penalty. Snepp says he wrote "Decent Interval" because he had come to believe that otherwise the story would not have come out. He says he intended no "ir- reparable harm" to the CIA whose purposes be still supports. BE Dl8DAIN8 ex-CIA authors like Philip A1ee, -.rho named names. Those who decry the Cl.A would find no ally in Frank Snepp, which. may account for why· he is alone, writing furious- !)' on a novel and a book on bis travails simultaneously, writing to stay afloat in bis $411-a-month apartment here. Snepp is 37, bright, handsome, a North Carolinian raised in the cavalier tradition of the Old Con- federacy. An ancestor, Gen. J ohnstoo Pettigrew, led the left flank in Pickett's charge at Get- tysburg and was killed iq retreat from there while attacldn& a Union sharpshooter with only bis pistol. Snepp's father, a Superior Court judge back home, wu a World War ll Marine who even today ttas an aversion to beaches. A JekyU Hyde mixture ol the South's chivalric code and Snepp 's desire to beat the draft led him to accept a professor's recruitment into the CIA in 1968 . That September 16 he signed an oath s wearing .. . . . not to publish . . . any information or material relating to the Agency, its activities or intelligence ac- tivities generally, either during or after my term of employtrient without specific prior approval by the Agency." That was the first step towards docket No. 79-265. Snepp got to Vielnam because some colleagues volunteered him as a practical joke. Nonetheless, he fought a good war. He survived a hand grenade thrown at bi.a car that has left him deaf in the left ea r . A d esk bound analyst specializing in North Vietnamese intentionS', he nevert.beleu con- stantly toured the countryside, becaD;)e skilled at inte~ation and at briefing -U.S. con- rreasmen, journalists and even South Vietnamese 1eoerala. WHEN IT WAS ALL over, Snepp was awarded the In· telli1ence Medal of Merit. As soon as he arrived lo Saigon, Snepp bad decided tbe war was unwinnable. "but I tt,ou1ht tbe 1 outcome was modifiable." When Snepp saw how hit report.a were belnl edit- ed or ftled away. he says, be · became increaaln1ly uneasy that the truth wasn't 1ettlq baclt to Wuhinlf.on. .. BS TllOtJGlll' TBS CIA, of all .,endes, lbowd aeam. .froal Vietnam: the thou11nd1 of native eroployea left beblnd, the cb .. and c:onfUetlq _...... at th• end. He wrote a 15-.... report eaUtled .. Sad Oam••-rw' thouPt • f\aU-1eaa. .. .,._ ae- <8ee un, .... cu> --· I I t ~J FEATURING MotateCarlo Gi n4 Allen Cleft ) and Patricia Spi elman in· spect gold and silver charms designed by youths at Childre n's Village, USA. The charms are among items for sale Tuesday at Mont~ Carlo Night, a benefit sponsored by the Newport Beach Chapter, Project (01, to benefit Children's Village. For de- tails, call 544-6316. [ _o_o_r_o_sc_o_p_e _ _,,) SATURDAV, NOV. 15 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <Mar. 2l·Apr. 19): You attract peo· pie to you with their questions and ambitions. You display ability lo s trike chord of universal appeal. TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): You gain op· port unity to take up more independent course of action. Superior makes way for you. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Good moon aspect coincides now with educational pursuits, spiritual insights and ability to overcome dis· lance and language barriers. CANCER (June 21 -J uly 22): Expand horizons; open lines of communication -you are on right track despite complaints . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Study fine print - revisions ar e necessary and renegotiation of contract could be part of your personal scenario. Al-Anon helps Wife Sisters, parents th1nk she's cruel DEAR ANN LANDERS: My In· laws read your column r~llgiously. With luck, l m ay be able t.o gel through to &.hem My husband, thelr son, Is an alcoholic. l have been attending Al· Anon and co unsellng services for several months. Now l am able to t reat my husband dlfrerenlly. I re· ruH w do many things I used to do for him because I realize that unless be Is forced to s ufrer the conse· que nces of his drinking. he will never be sober. It is heartbreaking to watch the man you love rail on bis face, but J know I must -for his sake. His sis· ter and parents think I am stone- heart.ed and cruel. I wish I could say to them, "If you really loved him you would cart your carcasses off t.o Al·Anoo and find out how you are con•ributing to his ill- ness." Please, Ann, back me up. No matter what they think, I am -A LOVING WIFE IN CHICAGO DEAR LOVING WIFE: Here's your letter -not oaly for yoar in-laws bat for a ll mothers, fathers, wives, hus bands, sls.t ers, brothers and ~ children who think tbey are dolag tbe alcohoUc a favor covering for bJm, cleaning up after him, lying to bis bosa and accepting the consequences of bl• drtnklag Instead ot maldng bJm accept responslbillty for himself. Al·Aaoa teaches you not lo pamper the drunk. -u gives you the courage to do what you must to help get the alcoholic: off YOUR back and on bJs feet. Al·Anoll ls ln the phone book - and It's free. Get going. DEAR ANN LANDERS: May I respond to "Bible Scholar" who tried to m ake lefl·handed people feel bet· ter by telling them Jesus Christ was left-handed? AB proof. he said, "If you will look closely at the picture of Jesus carrying the cross. you will see that the cross is in his left hand.'· l would like to ask that moron who held the camera and took the pie· l ure? Doesn't he realize that no biblical picture is a photogr aph? And he calls himself a "scholar!" He'd better go back to school. -A UT· TLE LOGIC FROM PENSACOLA ·Ann Landers I home as well as the upkeep. In re· turn, they promise to leave the place lo m e. The res t ol the family th.ink it's a great idea. l believe the burde n should be shared by all three children, and the house should be left to a ll ot us - with the underslanding that it be sold after both parents pass on and the proceeds be split three ways. Deep down I know I am resentful or the way they have treated me all these years. and I don't want to be a palsy. My wife says if I give in I will be trying one more time to be a good lit· tie boy so they will like me better. What do you say? -WISH IT WERE DIFFERENT IN MEMPHIS DEA.It MEMPIDS: I believe your plan is fair and honorable, aad I think you.r wtfe scored a bllll'a-eye. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I had no idea how serious my ~eight control method was until I read about it in your column. I was one of those crazies who used to eat everything in sight, then force m yself to vomit. I took your advice and went to the Overeaters Anony mous. Lucky for m e they let me joln, be~ause r was clearly off my rocker at the time. T hank you , Ann, for informing millions of people about that terrible psy.chological disorder and what t.o do about it. It saved my life. - R ECOVERING IN HOUSTON DEAR HOUSTON: -'lthoac• there are many excellent welgllt·IOH groaps, Overeaters Aaoaymoaa seems lo have lbe beat resalla wtu. people who s uffer with ballmla. Thanks for giving me a chaace to aay it again. PUaLI NOTICE "ICTITtOUI ._,.,.... fte'nTMMtl ..,_..u;--- NNM H ATIMSllT .... ITAHMlfllf TM , .. ._ .... _.... Uf Mlllt fM ........... ~ It tltlllt lllAI• Ml-6M.: -" N AT I 0 H & ... IE,.. E. G v II GlltUllSTAl(I! L ro .• 21 lt&SIARCt4 co . tt1 De ... ,. or,, ANACAPA PlltESS. a. ""-t °'. N-"'18'«11. Ce. '2.W kite • °' ~ llM<A, CA '16'0 ltey J. loyd, ttS.A MelodY ........ J .... Or.-, )lel7 Clttw ~ .• So C..te llMM. C. ~ L..-, CA *11 .,.,.., G.. ...,., •• , , ........ i.. Tftlt MIMff ti C*\dU(llM ., ... 111- C..11 •\ ,.__ ._,., C.. to21' flwleluM. ~ J G«Vle, •12 CreMll. """''' J ... Gr-lfltlOll IM<l't. C4 '1"'6 Tiii~ ._..,,_. WM flltO wll" IN TlllS lll#St"9H IS tolWhlCleO OY C-1'1' 0.r't 01 Ote/IOll Counly on Ck· ll"'lled pet!MfWP, ._, 11. IM ,,,_~tie I ""'•u Tlllt iUlltlNlll w .. lllN wlll'I Ille PUC>ll.,,._ Or-to.ti 0.Uy PlfliM C:ouftly C:lerti ol O,.~ County <kt. 24-ll, Mov. 7, If, I"° .,...... o ... ,.,,..., u, ltll). " • .,,7J '---- ··-Or•n99 Co••t O•lly f PlJBLIC NOTICE .,"llOI Nov. tl.2t,OK.S.1990•.Q7-t0 ~ ------ NOTICE--OTICE OF Ol!ATH OF Q ENTIN W. BEST AND dF PETITION TO AD· PU•LICATIOH NOTICE OP N•OATIYIE DIECt.AltATIOH THE COSTA MES.II PLANN ING OEP.llATMENT HAS PROPOSED TO ISSUE A NEGATIVE OECLAAAflON AEGAROING THE ENVIRONMEN· rAL IMPACT OF THE FOLLOWING PROPOSAL I. Dllt ... Jt t1 ,.,.,lrOKI 1 13,1SO IQU••• toot. 2-~lory. 0111<• NllOlno Wtll't • par'll•I Wb14tr•M•n PllfklnQ O•'•O•. •ot•l•d •I 120 P•ul•rino A ............. ,.,_. The Nt91llve OKl•r•llon will "" <Oft•lcltreo IOr ld09!1on °" °' •lltr Novt"'ber u . l'MO, For lyrtl'ler on· lotmel1on, Ple•M c.111 U. Plann1n9 0.pertment at 1110 7S4-S24S Pllblllfled Otet19e COHI 01•IV P1lol ~OV.U,IM ~ PUBLIC NOTICE MINISTER ESTATE NO. A·106600. To all h eirs , beneficiaries, creditors and contingent creditors of Quentin W. Best of Laguna Hills, California, and persons who may be otherwise Interested In the w ill and/or estate: A petition has been filed by Helene K. Best in the Superior Court of Orange County requesting that Helene K. Best be a ppoint· ed as personal represen· tatlve to administer the estate of Quentin W. Best ..OTtCE o"SALE (under the Independent OP UAL P11tOPE11tTY Administration of Estates s v P ~T:~:,v:T~'tt•R T 0 F Act>. The petition Is set for CALIFORN IA, COU NTY OF hearing in Dept. No. 3 at ORA NGE, NO. A·IOS70I. Ell•t• of 700 Civic Center Drive, R_,, Golovnin R .. n . •u vwvoioc1 West , in the City of Santa Mlc.,.11 Golovnlft, oeenwcl. NOTICE IS HEREBY G•llEN 1"61. A n a • ca I i f 0 r n i a 0 n M.lbfe<t 10 conllrm111°" by the abOve December 9, 1980 at 10 :00 enlllltcl S...rlor Court, on Nowmoer a. m, u. '*·or t11erea11er "'""'n ,,... ume IF YOU OBJECT to the ellowecl by lew. u.e ""ders1~. "' ec1m1n1,1ra1or ot '"" eot•t• OI Robert granting of the petition, Go•o•ftln Reew. oecns..s, w111 ••II a1 you should either appear ~;:;:~· :,i•,::•:,i;:,~~·i:::r,~:~ at the hearing and state 11ere1 ... 11tr menliOMd a11 r1Q111. 1111e your objections or file :~~=!:~~10:,.:: ~~~".:;.':.,~.!; written objections with the ell r19111. uu., •nd '"terttt 1,,.1 ,,,. court before the hearing. Ht••• 111os ecquored 1n <lddlll°" 10 tn•t You r appearance may be 9! dtc-.c the 11nw o1 his death.'" in person or by your a t-'"", .. ,...,.,~, ru1 Pfoperty localed on tor,ney. lhc County 01 Or•"9•. St•t• of I F y O U A R E A Calllorn••. oe.crlb@cl ~loll~. Lo1'alTrllC1?ta1,a•S1>c>WnOft1 CREDITOR or a cont· mllCI '1!Gordlel In eo.... 12. P-1• OI inge t c ed"t f th d MhcellefteOUS Map1, recorcU of n r I Or 0 e e· orenve County, c.mornl• ceased, you must file your Tt1er~11.1ru1prope•·w 1scom· claim with the court or moftly reterred 10 llS 31' H1millon present it tO the personal Slrwt. CAl$1a ~. C..lllorn1a Tiie wie is wo1ec1 10 cunen1 tkus, re Pr esenta ti ve by the cowftllftf~~11ons.rntr1c11ons.r.s-court within four months er·otlons, rillf\h, rt!IMS OI ••Y. Ind from t he date Of first "~;;:;::,;,~· oe SOid °" • ., ··.iu issuance of letters as pro· u·· ws11. vided in Section 700 of the Bid'\ -,_..,. .,. rnvileo '°' m1~ P r o b a t e C o d e o f ~be"::..:'~\:;,:;.!:": .. ~ California. The time for J vot-o1 Klno.1 & A.-rwn .• , filing claims will not ex· 1or ... ,1 tor Wid lldmlft1str11tor, •' .ooo pi re prior to four months DAIL. V PILOT PUBUC NOTICB ... ...,, lfO.,ICll .. TitUIT .......... .... Oii ...--. ..... ,,:••-~ lllOPl.G tN'llftT ... lff ANO~ AUOCIA~IOH ea Wlr ........... Trvt• _.., .... _....,. .. 0... tf Trv•t.._..,_._11. ltJt,u hl-'"""!ffl--' ntt, .... ,.,,_... .... Officlel---. ~.,: Melle c. ........... U.Cil ..... ~ ... ~--·-~T..--. It YUer t, lfl tile _,,IClt el Ult c;.o.IMY "e<.•r•r OI OtMllt Gtuflty, SC* fff c.llternle, Wll..L Mii.i. AT PUeLIC 4'UCflOHTOt41Gt4HT llOOIR POlll ~SH'"'*-.. ti-• .... lfl I..,,... -· IM t,_ Ullilljf S.-l tt! 1"9 '°"'" ..... _,_ .. l1'e Or-.e Gtuftly _, ~--. Clly ef '-ta Alli, CAiif*""--llllt+rt11t. llllt -I~ leru1 C-lllClleMf-M~..., II Y'I" oer ul• OMcl 01 Trtal lfl t ... ~'f' 11t11a1e• Ill M id Cevllty llM Slll .. oeacrlbed •: -1Xt41llT "I"" et· l1Kl'leclller9tOaftdmMflNl'll'leNOI. lllH181T I Order No, ristil7 The l•nd referred to lft thla Gu•r•nt .. ii '" ... '"' In IN s ... t. Of C•lllornle, Gou!llY ot Orenoe, City .. Newport llHcil, -I• clttcrl-•• •ouo.,, • P.llRCEL I: Be911v11no •t • po4"' '" tl'le w...- '' ''"• of !M 100 tool ltrlp of I~ ducrot>ed In lhe deed from A. J . Cr_,...,., -otl'lefl. H Tru~ ...... lo Soul....,,. P.c1t1c R111ro.o Com· P•ny, reGorclMI O<t-r 14. 1'11 111 bOOll -'OS. Hoe tsO Of 0.0.. rKC>f"IJ.1 ef Or•nve County, Celllorft11, 41>1..,t No•lllerty thereon, 40 ... IMI trwn ti• North~ ,.,,., of tlle p0rc.et ol, 11 ... dncrot>ed 1n lllat cerl•ln Indenture O•t•O AP<tl II, 1 ... 1. recorded Jiiiy 30. 1'41 Jft -!Ott, .,.... 5G OI OHki.! Record>, 1n Ille otOc:e of Ille C:-ly Aecoroer ot said county, thence Nort!Mrly • ._ w1d We~rly 11119, Oft • <u•v•. cone•.,. Eatlltly l'lev111Q • rad1u• Of 191•.61 Ifft, • dis!AlnCe of 40 ~• tfft to• po.nt. tl'le<Ke E•sterly 11on9 • redlel llne to wl<I cur,,., 6tA 1 .. 1 to • patnl In Ille Westerly 11119 of P•tcet No. I dHCrlllecl In lh•t Gert.in tnoenture dalecl W..y JI, ltlS, re<ordecl November 20, 1935 In -1'2, p..-ts of 0111<1•1 Recoroers. lft the ofllu Of the County Recorder ot se1d COYftly , 111eno Southerly •IOfl9 Ille Wnlerly line o, ti•kf PMcel No. t, on • cwve, cone••• W1>11r1y. h1vlno • redlus ot ?•IS.OS teet.. doslence of 3S.•7 IMI IO tne P01nt ot • reverv curve; UMnce !>oul~erly al0ft9 tilt. w .. terly line of ~•Id P•rc•t No I on • curw. c.onc•Y• Ea•lerty, l'levlft9 a redlu• of 1144.~ IHI , • dlSlanu Of J.~ ... , 10 • l)Olnt 11\at 1$ di•'""' Nortl'lerly ,,..., ..... , .o 1 .. 1 lrom the NorlllffSt cornu ol llM p1rce1 OI tend oei.crlbed lft u ld tnoen· lure recordlel '" -'°"· P<1Qe Sil OI 0111<1•1 Records; tl'lenc• Westerly •1ono • r.aiel llM to Wid curve •I ••st mtfttloned "°'"'· 10 fMI 10 tt>e Point of tte91nn1nv, PAllCEl.1 1.01 3 1n Block SJZ of C1n11 Se<\lon, Newoort S.Kh, •~~non• ~Pre· corded lft bOOll •. -.. ot Mis· celleneou. Me4>i, •K«dl ot Or•noe Count•, c.111orn11. . The it rat .ckttffj, ...-Id othtt <-otft. mon O.Sl9Nllan, 11 ..,,, of tl\e ru1 prooe•IY O.SC:rtbt<I -IS purporte<I to De . l•O•·l•l I NewPOrl Blvd., N•wt>Ort llHcll, C..lifornie. Tf1e u-~ TrllSIM dlKW.1-any ll1blllty for afty incorre<IMU of IM s1r .. 1 -HS -..,,., (Orftrnml O.S19ftet10ft,1fefty,s/lown-.ln. VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22): Gain indicated through written w1Jrd. Utilize powers of percep· lion. Select qua lity material. DEAR UTrLE WGIC: Thanks for the message. I'll tell him when he comes ID. ~-ray tip . MecArthu• Boulevaro, Suite 1000. from the date of the h'ear-Newport BMtll, Gllllforn1• tl..a. or mey be llltl<I with ,,.. (Wrk of Mid .ng noticed above. S•ld wl• will be ...-. 11111 .wlllloul covtn•nt °' w•rrM'lt~, tACH"HS Of Im-plied. "'~"''"II 1111•. PoHHSlo<!, or encumbran<.~s, to Pl., t,... rem•lnh'9 prlntl.,.1 sum ~ tM note<•> secured oy seld Died of Trust. will\ lftlere~t t~rton, .u Pf"0¥1ded In u•o nolat•J, 1dv• .. ,es. II ..,,, unoer IM t•rms ot \•td o..ct ot Trus:t, ftfl, ctwrges. •nd uoenH• of tl'le Trust" ..,d Of in. trust• ''Hied bY ..id Deed ol Trust, tor lht lt'llOlll\I rff'Oft•Dly t111m1tN LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): You could receive gift or luxury Item . Be receptive, diplomatic and include family member in s pecia l accolade. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You gain more "working room ." Restrictions are removed. S-'Gl'ITARIUS CNov. 22-Dec. 21): What started as a hobby could develop into profita ble enterprise. You're given added responsibility. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You finish long·slanding assignment You gain in psychic and actual income. Burden is removed. AQUARIUS (J an . 20·Feb. 18)-Make personal appearances, highlight originality, in- dependence and willingness to take a chance . PISCES (Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Follow through on bunch -your intuition serves as reliable guide . You "wake up" with answers. OE~R ANN LANDERS: I am a middle-aged man with a good wife and five nice children. I've had con· siderable success in business. The problem is my aged parents. My older brother was always the favorite child. When he married, his wife and their c hildren becam e favorites also. My younger sister has always been unha ppy (and over · weight ) because she never rtteived much attention from Mother and Dad. Now that my parents are getting on in years, they want me lo lake on the responsibility of the taxes on the ir <AP> -Here is a health tip from the U.S. Office of Consumer Affairs: If your doctor or dentist orders an x-ray, ask for an explanation of how it will he lp with your dia1nosis. Generally speaking, x-rays should not be taken unless they will be of some help. Let the doctor know about any similar x-ray exams you may bave had. Keep a record in your wallet for an easy refere nce list of past x-ray exams. Routine or screening exams might not be nttessary as part of annual checkups or employment require- ments. • • • Life under penalty Recept,ion for artists <From PageClO) lion" report would be rorthcom· ing. It wasn't. Several journalists Snepp had known in Saigon had told him: "You had it right in Vietnam. Why don 't you do a book?·· Why not indeed? Snepp says the CIA and the Justice Department have tried to portray him as a mercenary who wrote for the money. Snepp says he wrote because the agen· cy wouldn 'l. classified. ''I have no question Frank thought he was legal," says Mark Lynch. his American Civil Liberties Union lawyer. a lre ady s pent advance. A federal judge in Virginia found for the CIA. Snepp ap- pealed , mentioning his First Amendment rights t.o print un· classified information. The ap- Frank Snepp had s aved up.._ j>ellate court upheld the verdict about $15,000 in Vietnam wber£'. lor the most part but did say a he had l a k e n scarcel y a constructive trust only applied weekend off in four years. He to disclosure of confidential in· a lso had a $22.090 advance on formation -such as a Chrysler the book from Random House. e mployee, for instance, telling Early on the CIA had learned he company secrets to Ford -and had been talking with the New Snepp had not been charged York publisher from a former with such disclosure. girl friend of Snepp's at the Nol wanting a jury trial where Newport Beach a rtist William C. Gilpin and seascape painter Robert Wee will exhibit three works in a reception and show Saturday from 4 to 9 p .m . at Laguna Originals Gallery, 330 North Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY SUperlor Court or Clehwreo to Elinor Y 0 U MAY EX AM I~ E J . vot••· per_..11,, •• •nY "..,. atter the file kept by the court. ::,o');1~:;:,,:iC::'.!1'.'"'' nollGe •no If you are inte rested in the ne P,_..,., w111 be so1c1 on 111e estate, you may file a re-•011ow1no terms: o\11or1>11'1 <~Ind quest with the court to re· f)llrtly crecllt. ltle tenns OI 1ud1 credit . . 10 tat ~bl• to ,,.. l.W\Clef••_., ~e1ve special notice of the -1o.,. ~'°'Court;''" perc ... 1 inventory of estate a ssets of lfl• •rno .... i to accomp•ny ""' and of the petitions ac-~·:.~:'1o ':;:':' ..,'~~~,;;t~.,!11; c o u n t s a n d r e po r t s tM uit"" -Suptrlor Court. Tun. described in Section 1200 -•t11>0 -m.lntenanu u-.-•. of the California Probate ::: ,:~:":"~,,':.~~~: ~::::,; Code. •~ ol ll'le dlte of ccnflrm•liOft ot Ille ..... Latham & Wa tkins At· 10 ~:Tec~s:::'11':':~..:': ~r,; torneys at L..lw, SSS South of.,. or-contlr1N"9 u1e Flower St., Los Angeles, OATEO: -1, ,..,_ Ca. 90071 SALLI E REESE SMI n4. • edf'Nnlstralor of u. .. tMeOlll'te ~ clltctdent Ell•rJ.V- ef •t .. DEL & AMDElltSON ·--"•Lew _Mee __ _ S....t• N.,._t .._.,,CA.,_ Put>llM...s o..._ Colst Oelly Pilot Nov I• IS.11. l'IO d61..0 PUB~C NOTICE NOTICE OF DEATH OF THOMAS L. BLACKMAN, 10 .,. " ... ·™·" . The b<l!Ntlct .. y undef Mid o.ed of Tru\I Mretolore u ecuted elld de· livered to IM under11_.i • wrlnen Oe<l•r•llOfl ol Oeteull -Oe- lor S•••. •nd •· .written ,.otice of Oet•ull -EIKllan to Sell. Tiie un-der .. 9ned c•uHd s••d Notice of O.t1ull -EIK'ltOft to Sell lo be re corded 1n the eoounty W'hrrr Uw rt•I or°"" rt y " 10<.<ll eo. O•I• Ckt-17. ,_, Pwoc>IH ln .... tment & loWt A.uo< t.• t ton as Mod Trustff By Corl F Enoel...,dt, Allomey '" Fec1 .... Sente-.c•81VG., S...l•C. lllwrly Hills, CA 90111 f1131SU.9MO lllll ~ Put>l•she<I Or-C.O.st Daily Polol, Oct J1, No• 7. 14. I-·~ ,. __ ,_ ............... .., aka THOMA S LEON P111111.-0renvec.o.st0.t111P1101 BLACKMAN AND OF PUBLICNOTICE Nov u. 1•. :zo. 1"° ·~ P E TI TI 0 N T 0 A D · -----------• ST I o.1"n PUBLIC NOTICE I MINI ER ESTATE NO. NOTICE 01' PILING OP SAVINGS -----------. A·106592. AND NOTICE OF DEATH OF' T ~ . a I I h e i r s , !~~= ~.-~:.,v :.:.L~tT!~ .... VICTOR WANKOWSKI be nef1 c1.arles , creditors pllc•tlon flu bffn filed with 1,... AND OF P.ETITION TO and contingent creditors of DEPARTMENT OF SAVINGS ANO ADMINISTER Es. TATE Thomas L. Blackman akaiLOAN D.v HOME SAVI NGS AN O T 1 LOAN ASSOCl.llTION, 3731 Wllslllrt NO. A·106S32. homas Leon Blac:kmao Of Bouieverd, Los Anoe•es. c11ltornl• T 0 a I I h · N e w P o r t B e a c h , '10010, •or permlulofl 10 Ht•1>ll1fl • b f. . . e d1 .r s • California and personsl•1c1111v11.or1"""''m"""''•t•v1c1 .. 11y ene IC 1 a ries, c re 1tors ' . . ollhe 1n1..-wc11on o1 Br111ou1ree1 """ and contingent c reditors of who ma-.: be otherwise in· Anton Bo111e .. rd. 1dJ1un1 10 '"' victor w an k ow ski of terested in the will and/or South ca." P1au RSC. cuy o1 cos~ estate· Mu1, County Of OreftQe Uni .. , N e w P o r t B e a c h , A ·tit" h bee f" •••••d •-le ,...rl"9 w111 .:.. 11eld California and persons pe ion as n •led•• ,,... ·°"'9<1....,,t'• Olf•u ., 10 oo who may be otherwise in· by Es~her Blackman in the • m., °" 111e '"" 111y of o.c.m1»r terested in the will and/orl Supenor Court of Orange "'°· •• .oo Soutl'I commo,,•••""' t t County requesting that •v•,. .... Los A-1es,c..111orft11t0005. es a e . E TIM llppltullan ,, CJC>eft tor put>ll< on Before leaving the agency in early 1976 to do his book. Snepp signed another agreement: "I WILL NEVER divulge, agency. secr ets might have lo be aired, "DECENT INTERVAL" came out in late 1977 and sold well. The CIA sued Snepp. not Random House. the CIA tentatively offered to settle for $60,000. Settlement for money would portray him as a mercenary, Snepp felt. He re- fused. A petition has been filed st.her Blackman be ap· •e>e<llOft '" ecuoro ... u •It",,.. c-by Florence Wankowski p ointed as personal m1u1-·sr99111e1,.,,.e1e1111erott1ce in the Superior Court of rep~esentatlve to ad· ::~:::~~~1:,~:=::'.~': ~~========~Orange County requesting minister the estate of south Commot1wH llh Ave,..,., Lo• that Florence wankowski Thomas Leon Blackman Anoe1u, c1111ornl• 'ooos. 11u1 be apPo'nt d 1 (under the Independent 1-..11 ... -JSO s.n-st'"'· s... W....Y•W..t ....... 1'22"-tliw••& Cute Me-Mi -HI· I I H -publish or reveal ... any classified information, or any in· formation concern ing in· telligence or CIA that has not been m ade public by CIA . . . wtlbout the express written con· sent of the Director." That was the second step. The government says Snepp wrote "Decent Interval" "Deliberately and surreptitious· ly." Well, he hadn't been a CIA ·s pook for e ight years for nothing. The CIA says it had to find out if its secrecy agreement would stand up in court. "With Snepp, we had to take a stand." said a spokesman. The CIA did not claim "for purposes of this action" that Snepp had revealed secrets. It sued instead under equity law normally applied to trustees of estates and such. Snepp, the agency claimed in essence, had betrayed the CIA 'a tnist in him by not playing according to Its rules. Therefore, he had done "irr e parable h ar m " lo American intelligence and its image. "I wanted vindication on the legal and moral issues. I decided to go down in names if need be." He appeal'4 to the Supreme Court. And went down in flames. • e .as persona Administration of Estates Fr•"cisco, ce111orn1e u10• 14UI representative to ad· . m .-minister the estate of Vic-Act)'. T~ petition 1s set for wr111 ... 01>1Kllon• or ot.,., ooc11-tor Wankowski (under the hearing in Dept. No. 3 at mefth releveftl lo lhe •PPll<•llOft Independent Administra· 700 Ci.vie Center Drive, ~':;'.~.;,!;~;:,110,':.=:!;:e:.!: tion of Estates Act). The West, tn the City of Santa p11cen1. HOME SAVINGS ANO LOAN j~~=~~~~~~~~ r:tltion Is set for hearing An a , Ca I 1 f o r n i a on •ssoetAT•ON. ftot 1•t•r ,,. •• De t N 3 t 700 C. i December 9 1980 at 10:00 December~.'"°· II. pUC>llc 11Hrl1>9 P . O. a IV C ' " l'leld, .,.y P9r_, may •-•• and Center Drive West in the a .m. ,.,,.~. •" or•• st•1-n1 d\lr1110 •11 c I t y 0 f s a n t a • A n a IF YOU OBJECT to the •nlOUftl of II-""'"""' by Ille ..... "9 THE VOTE. last Februa.ry. c l"f . De be 2' granting of the petition oltlur,wlllcflln llle c-oteny~ a 1 om1a on cem r • 1 • w11o 111, """ 111ec1 prior wrtnen ollle<· was 6·3. The majority round 1980 at 10:00 A.M. you Should e ther appear llonaorotheroocu..,..,,tsl"O be ll"''' lb l Sn h d · d ed do "ir IF YOU OBJECT to the at the hearing and state edtono1mon 111enum1n11tes1nour• a : epp a lll e ne • Antique Show "ranting of th• petition your objections o• file i1on. or •uc11 ~ .. u,,,. ••"'-Yoe repa rable harm, thus providing .. .. I "tt ob" ti Ith th •llOwH by,,,. llMf'lno officer. fo ..... him the title of his book on the you shoUld either appear wri en iec ons w e 1erm1,.. wi.111er • ac11ec1u1lld Merine Case·, had set htmself up as at the hearing and state court before the hearing. 11u 1> .... •••ved, 1e1epho"• t,.., Huntington Cenrer your objec tions or fTle Your aJ)P&arance may be number itetN •bOw""' ... 11er ''-' judge Of what was or not Mall tod1u thru in person or by your at thru butt,.eu dllV\ prior lo tl't• ' written objections with the • • · sclled\l1ec10e1e. claasified instead of the CIA .__ _______ s_u_nd_•v_.__J court before the hearing. tol'ney. PUC>l•.-0r.,. eo.11 oe11y Pltot. "with its broader understanding Your appeara nce mav be in I F Y 0 U A R E A Nov. 1•. 21. '"° •sowo or what may ... be ... Iden· person or by your at· ~RE DI TOR or a cont · PUBLIC NOTICE tilled as harmful" aad that the torney ingent creditor of the de· h d .. m.... 1 F · y o u A R E A ceased, you must file your "'CTtnous Mn!MIUS "Every time 1 came back to my apartment I was afraid I'd find they had burned tbe manuscript." He kept Xeroxed ~opies around town, used pay Phones for key calls, met secret· ly wlth his ed itor in Central Park ;.n New York. He knew the CIA bad assigned a case officer to h.ini. government a a compe......... CA e D 1 TOR or a con . claim with the court or tUMa ST&T&MallfT 1 D-'llAGES WOULD BE in the r ight" lo protect not only tlngenl credltor of the Cle· present It to the personal Tfl• 1o1'-1no ... ._., .,. .... ,,. form o( a "COMtnJCliVe ln.lst" CIH&ifted Information but "the ceased, you must flle your representative appointed w.1;;:::~$&T tNTUIOltS, >11• SNEPP INSISTS today that he reJt he did ool have to submit so long aa be reveale d nothing which would require Snepp "to appearance (stress added) of c laim with the court or by the court within four ""''-SL, •111, eosi. MeM.'c... disgorge the benefits of his faith· confidentiality ao essential to the present it to the personal months from the date of ~ i lessness" -bis JSroceeds from effective operation of our represen.tatlve appointed first Issuance of letters as 5 .. ,~~=· ew .._,-. "Decent Interval" lncludln«i the fore ign lntellifence service." by the court within four provided In Section 700 of ~ 1. DMM11, u L•.-, .... .----------"-.·--~------------------months from the date of the Probate Code of ...._,tMcl\.c. ...... first Issuance of letters a s Callfornla. The time for ..!::!, =:: t~'" ~r • Dentist tools around rrovlded in Section 700 of filinQ c laims will not ex· _,._,,. '· DllN41• . he Probate Code of plre prior to four months '"'' ._,... -111et1w1tk 111e Callfornla. The time for from the CS.te of the hear-:;.~e1 0r.,...c-t1•<k­ flllno ctalrns wm not ex· lno noticed above. Pi-plrt prior to four months YOU MA y EXAMINE P-*1"'" 0r-. c.MI o.111 ..... fromtr.edateofl hehearlf19 the flle kept by the court. 0<1.u ........ 1.i.,21,._ ~ DAYTON, COhlo> - By day, he's Dr. Morrl5 Goldberg, s uccessful dentist, but when the aun 1oes down. he'• llH, toollftl around in a fanc1 car and~icking up people for a ce. For '15, oldbet-1 - he call• bit nightlmc p,er1onaltty ,M1x 'beca ... that'• more of a tllaufteur'1 name" -providn two hours of red-carpet ltmous lne Mrvice. He'U drive puseniera U)'WMN wtthln a 3(). mU• ,_.. ol DaJt.on ln either one o r hia two Rolls-Royces -a $50,000 1966 Silver C loud Ill formal sedan or a $35,000 Silver Shadow standard model, P eople som eti mes don't llke dentists, but as a chau.rreur, "ev-. e r y b ody loves m e ,'' Goldbel'IHYs. Now'"°" \banner youneedttae tntormanon printed ... ,, ... r In t"9 .. ii11£w11i111IM .. "il"'il .. I .. Today fhru Sun tht Hunlinoton Centef Mau. Outttlndl119 collec:tlonl from 90 dHlefa Mao ,,.. tvlluatton d6nic. 405 fwY . '"°" Bl¥d .• H.8. noticed abow. If you art Interested In the YOU MAY EXAMINE esUlte, you may flle a re· PUBLIC NOTICE) the file kept by the court quest with the courl to re--~ If you are Interested l n th9 celve 5PfClll notice of the "~~~!:::."::' .~ estate, you may file a ,... Inventory of estate assets . T11• ••11 .. 1"' ... , .. "' ••• ,.,,.. quest with the court to re-and of the petitions, i c· """,.. .. ea: I I I I co u n" and r t PO rt s TAAllUCO CLl!ANlllS, UtU '1 • ve !J!K"of• ~t tee of thets cMtcrlbed In Section 1200 ., ... •-·'"'Ille• c:..tm nvtn ..... Y •~·a • HM of the C.llfomla PrObate ,.,,~';~::.,=. ~\•:.~ ~c:, ~."': ,r:t1~l:":or·t·; Code. C•llltflll• YHlll an;-1rm described In Section. 1200 ~· Clrclt, H11'14"'-" 9MdlJ Ce of the Callfornla Probate IHI.,. aMI Prkt, Inc., '"'' ....._ 1t c....wc'9CI " Ill• c.. . Att•rHY• at ·Lawi HU ,..,-.,, IH'*-d .. w ... 1. ~ D.t-MKUll & Day Ptall"*' It., Wtt hit ='-~CM~ .... ., .. u.. atlt''H': Ottlu ... 11717, Santa Tllll MW ~1., .. .._ _ I t r e et S :·. t t A AM~ 91111; tel: (714) ,_,., OHtt " 0r-. ~ • .. ~CAtm1 ' 641"TR1 ~ta.••· · ,• , ........... C.-Ollll do.it,..... ........... c. c.... Delly~ • ,..., .... °' ....... c... o.i.Yt':-... 1, a,'' ,_ 4'1,.. ,....,, IJ. 14. .. :if' .,.._ ,..,, 14, JI, a O.C. t. ,_ .... , . associated 8 • ~ > £ IJ ', IJ [ Al ~ 0 Q S • .;.. f" r •1 " ! t-~ I A TOUCH OF WIWAMSIUlt«i Turtlerock Highlands 2 sty 4 Bdrm on view lot. wi st.utters. hardwd. Warm & tasteful. An e xceptional piece of -property orrered at ~.000. Q.ASU'lm HOUH Ad vutln rt m1y pl1ce their Ids by telephone 8·001 m toS.30 pm Mond1y Lhru Fndey II to noon S.tunby COSTA MESA OFFICE • 330 W. B1y 142.5878 • HUNTINGTON BEACH 17875 Buch Blvd ~l220 LAGUNA BEACH I • 10Z7 N Coast Hwy Lliwia Buch 41M·tMM • NORULCOUNTY dial rree~·l220 ~ ..... ....... o .. dllne for copy • kill• Is 5 :30 pm lht di)' btfort pu b llc e t1o n . uce91 for Sundey • Mond1y £dl1ton1 when 'f1dlint II Salurdey, 12 Po a.AS .... -..noHS BRRORS· Adverllaen 1bould chfl:k thtfr ad1 dilly • rtport erron '8imtdlately THE IS.'ILY PILOT anumea ~blllty for tilt flrat lilcorttd lnMrtlon only. • CANCEu.ATIONS: Wiien lllllln1 an 1d be blrt LO make I record of Pl• KILL r:UMBER ~nn you by your ad tiktr u n!Celpt of your cu t<ellaUon Thia 11111 n11111ber mu1l b e Jreaented by the nnil« In uH or • '«l.lpute. ·. CANCp;LLATION OR CORRl:CnON or NEW A D B S F 0 R £ !UNNINO: very effort ll made to W or cwrect • new 1d tt11 II• llMn ordered, Wt we c..,.. parantee '6.do 10 until UM Id bll .,.,..,.... 111 lhe paper. DIM £.A.UN& ADS: TllH• Ml• are atritll.x ~II .. ..,,_ by mall H1 H• of our • NO ,._. CIC'llerl. IM: I p,111, rrlclll)" .... offtf'I • ti ~a ll Ill bt'lllCll S DAILY Pll.07 enet Ille ti.Ill lO lfy, ... ~Of r.•'··· •• ,. llfW•nlMtMet, H4 to •••• 10 ,., .. • ............ ~ '" • •II m t'-...... ~ r.o ... .-. 0.. .... TOTAL VIEW WATER & LIGHTS OM of 0 ..... ,...,...., o•ttri• II .... ptri wttt. a VllW OF IA Y, OCl.AM I •l91tt ll9lth I• Coro•• tlel Mor. 11,.cl.My ._... 4 ...._ .._ wftll Fr.cit ........... kw ......... 11..td md gn-•r· Cite hg 2 ..._,...... .... ...... ,,. .. ..., .... ct.t-1 $491,000. A WATEIFIONT HOME W/SUP Hew o• · tit• ••rket I• • 'rf••t• camu:uAtf. Wod. brick. ..... I.....,. _.. a pet feet c-..0 for lllh J IMcl. ,_.,.._,~I.,.. 1""9 ...... ........ ...., roo-. Pm•....., ... yow °" ~ & IOAT ~. OwMr- wMI ouht wttll &•c .... SH0,000. fH. ON WATER -OPEN SPACE VU Lo .. t, redtcorahcl 4 IMtl e.-. z...e.ry ......... t.adt4 ...... Mnk9 .. . .................. ,.... .. ....... bed. dick. w• to poo1. .._.. a~ $249,500. 631-1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. • REAL ESTATE S.•. R"'1.a1 Pr01Wnv M.tnapnwnt 2436 W Co.a11 Hwy 315 Manrw Ave NN1P<>rl Bu ch &Ibo.a laland '11·1400 67Mf00 Lingo Rul&un EMERALD IA Y LEASE Spec..., wMtew....,. Ylews .,...._ ............... . .... comt. 0--...... fw ....... ,... ........ 4 ...................... prf•• ca Sty of lu11.W lay. OHwetl _, $1000 ...... PRIV ATI MONARCH IAY TM1 It ... J 1M•11• ..._ J••'•• It••• w•ltl•t for. H•rtlwootl floors, •••••• •••••••· ......, ..._. re•• ......................... •. ,... -............ .. ••ti M••rlty ::==• • rl•llt• ........... .c.. ie ~ ,_ ..., 11 0,000. c ..... fW -lf••kl .... ........ ..,....,..._. 644-7020 MIWPOIT llACH .............. _ ....... U..fllnt I MOW IS THE TIME for job seekers to check the Daily Pilot Help Wanted cluslfication. lf SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114-631-6ff0 the job you want is not -------'.'--- there you might consider ~r you're ~ang or orfering your services selling, Classtf1ed ad- with an ad in the Job vertislng will get your Wanted category. Phone messa1e to the right peo- 642·S6'78 pie. Call Today! 642-5678. ma en ab I Irvine realty A SUBSIDIARY OF THl:: IAYINE COMPANY TOWHHOME LIYIHQ. -$91,000! Charming 2BR. 2 bath condo. Large assum able loan. Owner motivated. Absolutely immaculate. Three years new. Delightful starter home . Close to s hopping . Must see to appreciate value. Berit Mitchell 642-8235. <Q-11 ) JASMM CUB! The popular 3BR Plan 5! Split level with decorator touches. Custom shutters. quality mirrors and fixtures. va ulted ceiling. family rm w /extended porch. $349,500. Cathy Schweickert 642-8235. <Q-12) 712-1414 Hl..a7H Woocbidqe (.,,.., i44-6ZOO Harbor v-,.,,, .. BAYFRONT Private pier and float on famous Harbor Island. 40 foot frontage. Older traditional h ome . Magnificent grounds and trees. $1 . 780,000. 1714) 673-4400 121 JI Ua.2121 HARBOR «is Coldwell Banker ~S•UADAUft Rare 4 BR. 3 BA . Air-conditioned e nd unit. Near pool & major greenbelt. Quiet, lovely street in the beautiful Bluffs. Marvelous family home with fireplace & formal dining. $219,500. INN.WPORTCENmR -. 644-9060 I ...__._I ~-L..-1 . 1 ~_,.M...,;O;...;C;...T;....;E---.. . I I* I I I· P L M B. t ,,,.. ~---------- WAIATI NOMI a IMCOMllJ71.IOO Prime East Coata Maa location near 21st "Tustin Ave. You will .-ve this charming separate 2 Bdrm bome of redwood sldinl on wide lot, plus two 2-Bdrm income units. A beautiful woodsy private patio w/BBQ and huge expansive apa. Quiet. peaceful & picturesque. Call for appointment. wmn M. TAYLOI co.. IMLTOIS , .... ,.,.2 .. 1,..11 .. J1 0 2 ....... . MllWPOn ~ M.I. 644-4910 -_ ....... ·---.. / PAU •ISTOI. Gr eat 1 bedroom, 1 bath adult condo in convenie nt close·to·South Coast Plaza location. Serene surroundings that include meandering walkway!$ a nd streams filled with tropical fis . Features include built·in bookc e . oak parquet bar and gas and ater are paid! Priced at just 169.500,, REALTORS,675-6000 2443 East Coaet H'91lwey, Coron.a del Nu °!N-E HAVE41 OFT1'.~JJ~T.P .. ~1NGSINTOWN * * OM THE SAMD- AT THE BEACH** New 3 Bdrm 3 bath condos, security gate. •• 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE K.UflFS mTt NISH Ate SPAlll I• Nt:wly Decorated Three Bedroom End Unit, With Wrap.Around Patio On Lush Greenbelt. $210.000. IW(CHJ) SAM JOACjMllH Lovely Endi:Jllllt Two-Level Townhouse On Golf Course. Two Bedrooms . 2~ Baths. Conversation Area With Wet Bar. New Camel Color Carpet. Parquet KJtchen Floor & Entry. Only S195.000. OCIAN & IAY V11W Two ~arge Bedrooms. Two Baths. Fireplace In Living Room. Gated Community With Most Beautiful Amenities In Newport Beach Similar Two Bedroom Recently Sold f"o~ Much More. Make Offer. Sl99.950. ·--·······-·· 759-91• #2c...,. • .._ .,._.,,..,c .... · TAR GA'ZEK11 ._. i;...::..:;::..:..:.:.:..,__ __ Jll CLAY A POU.AN M ,_ o..I)' ~ G.u. ~ V Acc•uli"I •• t'-• J:t.,.. To dev•IOP m•no9e for F"doy. t90d ~ conapond"'ll IO numbe<> of )'Oo" Zodloc butt. 1'9n-··-·-·-...... .,_ ....._ .,_ ·-. ._ .. -,,_ ,,_ "" ,._ ,._ "°' "-,._ ,.,.,.. ·-.. .... ·--., ... .... ::.=.. ·-·-•o.. ·-11114 NNcnl l . UAL.TORS 6.U.1111 IASTSml COITA MISA: M111t a J ,_ -,._ fer ,..e ........ I ....... J ................. -: :c: ... •········ ....... ...... ....... COU OF MIWPOU llAl.TOllS Jiii i. C...t Hwy .. c..-....... 671-1111 ..UC• S 10,MO OPIM SAT/SUM ,....,... J udae for yourself! 3 Bdrm retreat "La Falmilla", 1450 sq.ft.. is one ol the nicest on the market. Premium lot with view. Central air. eo\r'd patio. Upgraded thruout. Beautiful I Quick occupancy for qualified buyer. Moqthly pymts $501 PITI. Owner/agt. 1),A-nNCN4 714-fll-1234 ...._ -C.cl.M. laOADMOOlt + .tlw. :;••• loc•tl•• ••••• tit• ro1•aar..._.,......._.. 5-s to ........ Cl ,, ,... -' 9'• •• ••· Sitml1tl -.... • ....... 4 ........... 3 ...... ..... .... roof, ..... c .. ., .... e*y. Loh of wood ....... Cl I a h le C--. Offaetl _, SHl,000. -II.IQ.AMT llACH HOMI. W• to ............. ce,.... 3 .... 21/J...... ..... wltlt • Medlterr ••• flolr. Spectac•l•r •••••t •lews. CoHlderolll• owHr fl•..c"'9 ......... 2744 E. COAST HWY. COllOMA DB. MAR 759-1616 rAllCIHllAI THE 1~ NUMBER TO SEE NEWPORT IEACH OFflCE 2043 Westclff Dr. 17141 646-7711 LO.M. SIZ.100 Means -Back On Market. Buyer didn't quality. His misfortune may be your blessing in disguise. Magnificent comer location, 3 bn, 2 car garage, trees. plants & lots more. IT MUST BE YOUR DAY .' .. CALL NOW ! ! #277 WOULD YOU ...vi YA-f!HA StJ,000 - That's right!!! They're still around ... but not for long. You've simply got to admire this beautiful 3 bdrm cream puff, with it's lovely yard & gardens. Located close to frwys & transportation. Minimum down, CALL NOW. #249 Walker Blee Real Eatata VIEW VIEW 'VIEW ......... IQM Gf9t IAT/lll•AY I .. No expen1e a pared ln' tbl1 -co•saleteb rebuilt bome wltb c~ 1pacloua Bdrm 1ult•, fam rm, formal din, bnatfut rm. ldtehlD to d9l1* tbe mo1t Nltieular. a frplct, llrtek paUot vJiwine dlieb, a c;ar 1araae. Breatlatalaa .tewt of bQ, ocaa and 1peelaeul• ,.....,, Too mU7 ._._ to a.& ..... be .... '115,• r.. , ...... 0 , ...... I ' ~DOWN a... .. .,~. --.. ..._.•lU Nip .._•lwo.184lrm •mM .,._lea P"'l.000 ..... .,_ ---~INT ...... JP NANliQt .. VtlW l •.JM,HO Rid; Aadentte. Rll r ... 4M40 --r---- FliER .,....._, Oonle• del Mar Two J Bdrm uolt' M0,000 c town. Owner will carry lbe balance -.oao . .BKR. 813 IS.50 OHL Y I ILOCK FROM THE 141ACH7 Yea, u nd it 's only IZal,000 for this Newport Beach d uplex. Upperl.fnlt,2Br.1Ba tow.r llrut, 2Br, 2Ba Both un.1ta have blt-lns ld1dm1: bu new paint andoe•·carpets. CAI .L now before i1tiagone! CO,i1T A MESA s 105,000 Huge comer lot, lg 4 bdrm family ho m e . Oversiz,? garage too! Owner aa.~ sell now. GI) SEJ11~ COVE PROPERTIES 114-~•31-6990 DHperat. No Qua l. 20K Down 3 + 2 Bea ch Area. Prin. Only. 638--4 980 AGT IMVESiTORS -I OWNER MUSTSELL . 3 BR 2ba l'IOme. Assume 9% In. or ss1.ooo. owe 2nd TD. Full price $78,000. Prine only . S48-B8 WATE1RFIOMT $20,000! D :1SCOUNT on , this clean, .large 4 bdrm, 1. 2i,, batb, 2 story home. 2 F\replaces. shake roof. I large red"' ood deck to waters ed ge. Lots of stor-.ae c abioet1 an prqe. This week only $311,500! J NCLUDING LANDI ..._I toy Prop. R"'"°" •67~ .. 7060• 4Bllt 2 BA+ Counnerclal over 40• comm., uses OK'd b i> city. Asking •.ooo .. t..owest priced 4 BR In 'IWeataide Coat• ..... OPENS..~T/SUN Noon-3 · 1154 W. 19th St. Coif PlacenUa>. Aet.MH·M74; 642-7636 MO 91 llAUPYIMG Owner ~'wlll carry all flaa1u:h 11 I lat • 2nd ,. 'l'D'•I Cv ttom hocneJ Br. fami&J rm • POOLI Of. I fend at. $135,()00.1 -.ma. ~ .;;;;iiiii1~;';;;;;;-;-;-;;1 4•J:va1e,211y I : :.'J,.r:-'~~! t.&a .... u.. Owner may· .,... ,_ amala.r hOme .. _ ..... ··~~~··· ~\e-mt ., :::::;i;::=== --.. . ~ HHI" Iler 5* .._... ,_ '* tto.H Per'* Ftldey, NoYember 14. 1980 OM.v-,.., •. ll ....................... •···•····••·····•······ .......................................... ~···· ...••.............••... .-.....,, ~· 1111 e 1u.. lllJ e11utl IOU C... .. M .. I OU ColteMeM IOZ4 ......_,_,. ~.._h 1041 'H1 ",_Slit ·•4' ······················ •••••.•.........•.................•..••............. ~................ . .......................................................................................... . IMYllTO.S WAKJDUPUX COIL•l,All Ir""-1044 ._.IMO... ~ ~ ... I L.-c>llU Newly remodeled traditional atyle 8 bdrm, 2 bath home featurtni large recreaUon room & 2 paUos. Living room bas auractve beam ceillng. firepl41ce & french doors leading onto brick pa tio. New kitchen bit-In appliances. Close to tennis courts. u ndy beaches & clubhouse. Can be sold fuUy f umlsbed M20,000. IAYNON'r We have several fine homes with pier & slip IALIOA ,..,~ • Quality oceanfront triplex. 4 Bdrm. 2 bath each unit. Excellent income. $1,300.000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR i·ll t'."y~1d1· U11111· NH b l') 61 6 1 216 RUBY AVE. LARGE ASSUMABLE LOAN $495,000 WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATE s..i.._ Rtnt~I•. PrOP"llV Ma,..9<1nwn1 24·36 W Coa.t.1 Hwy 31~ Mar1nr Ave Newporl Heach Balbo.> l•land '31-1400 67U900 INVESTMENT SEMINARS . Lesn How To ln•est 111 Income Pao dKing Pt open, With Little Or Mo Money dowt1 L..... tax ..... ,,.,..,... L ... 19ow to fr11 ~ c ..... for 1 ...... _.,,..,.... • -.... O...u ..... of YOllr ..... , .... BECOME Rnancially ,...,......, ............... ed (7141 964-5433 Salw*J Mcn-ftl:ber 15 ... 12 Ho01t Refreshments will be served llLL WOODS REAL ESTATE THE 1~ NUMBER TO SEE MEWPORT HILLS OFFICE 2'70 SAM Mt6UB. HIYI 1714175'·1501 DIRTY DAW61 Bring paintbrush and broom and save $'$$! Older 2 bedroom cottage on R -2 lot! Zoning creates development pote ntial ! Only $95,000. •WATIRRONT PAIAOISI• Charming 3 bedroom home located smack on the ocean with private stairway to the sandy beach for your enjoyment! This exquisite residence is offered at only $790,000. .. • •st1,ooo• • You will be a.mazed at thia home located Ln THE GROVES. This unique residence features 2 bedrooms and a den, formal dining and <?Ver 2000 sq ft ot Li vlng are.a. ' W• laave a11um. In· ..,_ -.-000 b t Qiu= *• Jba. + •••••••••-•••••••••••••• ••-•••••••• ,,..._ bom lb n.att ._, CH o den.• ~ Allum•· 'Mltw .... View SHllC to llllC.~n. 2;~~ lou.~.IM·ta83 bleiolinSIJUOOt17-M51 NORTHWOOD 3 Bdnn J Ba.lb. apaclo.u -...eoAct. PAii study, w / vaulted cell· COM con A61 &<> DlllCT TO 5'ltM HOMI 1np. wood noor, built-in $111,• 1111 IAt llDIMON LARGE LOT ................ fUUIR UAL TY 546-0114 PLUSIMCOMI 2371 OllAMfHAVI. ~aalHtlc uaumable bookaMJva, Hie entry. OR I ~Rll I INlth home ~ ol !:. Wiison. loen. lntereat at t .14'.. dlbriih! roomcustom7 .. ~~n & =·~~~~~~dre~:tt:~ ~~~:rd~besma::::,'. ~ ~5 f:.'::Y 'nint. NtAIL lo-lawqrtn.) + a 2 bdrm new copper plumbhtl with desirable atrium1 T• cotta1e. Anyway you larte yard home. Only eJesant Italian Ule ano p• •CE describe It, It's charm· Sllt,900. Also hH dbl pbab carpetlnc. WalklDI .,.. "IDI, up to date and sannceandfireplace •k PIOPaTllS• beautifully located. 0eotury 21 Gold CoHt 10,. q •.M P.M.I o ' o f I I Priced at '280,000. Realtors Ml-1188 CALL roa DETAILS '44-7211 RARE FIND •-:. I .... ' ': ~ t,f .. [I 1 .. M:IG •• llTNIWOU l.o¥tlJ I .... I baU., a&ory laome, ftaturt.a.;. fanDal clbUaf room Mlf fUllll1 room, I pa"°') separate 1reeaboaar DIW paint ln and out. ,.,.. at mt,000. c »Wt ... ~,$ -HERITAGE Rf /\U ! JHS -. ~'',J.'()(l'J $10,000 DOWM 3 Bd or 2+ den home OCIHIROMT PAIK & •/mo. for thia fine 2 w/blt·in kitchen. 1% Ba. -!Br, cabana Ii trlr, sub· ............ ~ brhome.8fl·l010. patio and much, much • **TRM.IVB. ~:C,:1~~7'!~,._; pvt W••fl ... W.-~; RJty World, Cap.a ssoc. more. Priced sensibly at Beautifully decorated tilo. (T • ........ pier· WM9 .... O.C. • ' --------•I 119,500. Call Harry to and m • I n t a I n • d $11, • <714> 4t9-3llUI By Paceeetter Romes 1 Dalebout B &Beach R~ Estate Sp-y-1-la_s_s_. _l_m_m_a_c_N_a_n--1 see. 631-12&6. = ':o°!~· ls~~ o.:::!~d~=\ br. ~:!..! ~;~~~ tucltet w/bonus rm. & conditioned, has 4 1 be upper, 1 br lower, completed. 0~1i Jrrplcs on qt. canyon. BdrmJ. 3 Baths, over new crpt, fresh paint. c\llCom 1 .. tur. lnchada 80% loan avaU. at REALTORS 3lOO sq ft. atrium, and beamed ceilinas. frplc, latp imater •uite wiu.. I I l/4o/o .,_ Polult 1026 lmb landacapina. Showa dininl area & encl. patio. hydro-whirlpool Jett'4 MH4SO. like • model. Call for C¥fered for onJy Sl44,000 tub, fOl'lqlll dlninl room; WESTCLIFF ••••••••••••,••••••••••• appt. · FULL PRICE! t•rden room, cuato QWet, secluded local.ion. ~~ ••••••• ~!~~ [g)\li..-..1brld-MISSION REALTY ftreplaee with converd Clmtom built home with nvuu •-494-0731 lion pit, 2 car 1ara1e.• a put assemblage or E-SIDE DUPLEX RealtU __ HA_Tl_&l.A __ S_S_? __ • 17'lt38' private dock wiu.i, .. elegant features. Four Two J Ir. U-1.t.1 • 551·3000 water • electricity!,_" 1 b d "" Then don't look at this Some optional colo · s pac ous e rooms -$142 500 Investors tt2tBnranu Pllwy.lr11hw 3Br, 2~Ba 2600aq. fl. selec.tionstillpoulble. .:. eadl with INDIVJ DU AL n 11 • aa 1' E "'LTY custom home with lots of Pri........... "'-BATH. Formal dining .---• 2 dlx duplexes in Dana ·---' ,.. .... _ .. _ ...-..,315,000 ~: room. Family room . 546-0114 Pt. Fireplaces and wuuu • ... ......,ws. Ocean O,..W/5-1-1 0 Complete flnan.cing. balcon.lea. Seller will H · ./ IEST IUY view. 1535 Morningside IOO Hc.W l.a.d Dr. ~.ooo. sist in financing. $165,000 WALNUT S9UAll liiiiiiDriii. iiiS3115iiii.oooiiii. ii&Wiii·ii17iii2ii1·iiiiiil Cato1 Rolf Alt 831~ • 631-7300 M.I . tlW CONDOS each.Submit offers. Nice21tory 2 Bdrm "C" c• • .. h Shownbyappt.daily : IASTSIDIC.M. plan. Freshly palnted .•~g ac 2512 Santa An• Ave. D ... Pt. Hotne ceatra1 alr. Priced below Cottogt. 4 bedroom 2i,, bath.,oompanblesalesforim· Walktobeach&town P11' 1lm~ 2 BR, 2~ ba, contemp. design. $118,000. 646-5096 646-6093 sweeping ocean view med. actlon.186,900. I Sl75,000. Completely relurbllbecl' rrom livlna room and Cal 6•~·7211 · FlSHlNG REALTORS one blk to beach. Y~ bedroom. Wood-~ldlng j I 497·1666 own the land. Great/: EASTSIDE DUPLEX and shake roof. Submit I fma.nclng. $199,500 ;, on corner Jot with pool. terms.1195.ooo. 1s PE C T AC U L AR ~S~~./ l ~~~ ~e:;t'!:n~ ' in oonhD~~LJ=o~h End. '~V ~ OPEHSUM l-5 orhome'nincome. **1£DllED! Pelectforthepersonw.ho 75t-9J21 I 2515 IST AVE Centw;r..~17221w1estcliff ZD>sqftoll""urlousli"v. wants a home and an -~~~~~~~~~ Location offers view. ....... wi .... come I- I privacy, seclu.sion & --------PCooinplt Niguel Co!'do ~A! ~~0Bd°,!Oar°~e~ L..j.. 7 VllocJ-l.E. FOISALllYOWMIL parking. Terms offer ONGOLFCOURSE m ex'.2 Bdrm, Vaew.1 attached h ome i s 49 -1461 Giant 5 Br. 3 Ba. Oilly I nexibility&seller 's belp. Fronti ng S .A .C .C . CornmurutyPool Tennis ..,69500 Oner wil~ So act!! Thet,e two viewl Beautiful 2-stocy, 3Br, '· possibly the only exam· SPECTACULAR -' · w homes ood b t 3Ba, 2frplc, solar water Courts, J11 ~u:u1 , Pvt pie In the prestigious . . •.• carry at $1500 monthl I are a g uy a Gat~. 5 Minutes To Woodbridge F.atates with ... VJeWI & Catahn~ s~· with $20,000 down. No.. S565,000! htg. Im mac . BK R : Manna. Agt. $104,900. •private pool. Call now I ~can .be yours an thts. credit needed. (714 ) 17 WUdgoose Ct. I 540-5010. 640-QM.9 159·9100 toseeltenjoy' immaculate 3 bdrm S.l.954. Newport Crest 2 bdrm ' $194 9oo home. Well located in a~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; end unit. Close to tennis Ccw:t: f ChanMf' [UjJ · g o o d f a m I I y & pool. Assumable loan Ranch styled beauty sura VIEWS ~I \\\lodbrldge I neighborhood . & com-MEWPOITHll6HM;, &will consider ???? Now nestled on large lot, sur-4 Bdrm 2 Ba. Reduced Re I pletely refurbished in· C~IMH SLS7,000. rounded by fruit trees. $1.S,000. a IU side ~out. Good owner Thi• remodeled home,, MAURYSTAUFFER Has3bdrm.sandisrichly FISHINGREALTORS 551·3000 fmanclDJ.$219,000. futures: added mutel'~ SEA UON REALTY decorated with wood and 497-1666 I tUOBarnau Pk•y,lrvla~ OCEAN VISTA bdrm and famUy room, &1 673-5354 earthtones . Fres hly A lovely 2 bdrm condo fireplaces. hardwood painted and new carpet Hatl" le h 1040 SbarpWalnutSquare2br, doae to pool & elevator. floors, new copper POOLSIDE I lh_rouchout. Greenhouse •••• .':~~•••~••••••• reat.loc. end unit 551·4182 ~Uonal 180 degree plumblnl. new roof. RV window. Owner may help for appointment vtews & gorgeous sun-accaa and much. mucfr' IHNOVIMIER? with ruiancing. $117,900, ~DOWN I sets. 2 atory, fireplace. more. Owner will beUt Why Not" ASSUME TARBELL REALTORS. No qualifying. Nr beach. LEASE/OPTIOM deck. S2SS.OOO. witb the ranancln1. ot> 8 ~3 LO.AN Onlyi Call~l720 New luxury 2 sty, 3 br, DeerfteAd 2 br, 2Ya ba,1 ADIFFMEMT fered at $181,900. cal). Sl13,SOO for this. 3 Bdrm ONLY $20 000 Dn ::t12~1a ~~gt/ r:1 o . patiod .. frpll3, ntew90pOainBt.k5% UFESTYLE 540-Wl i . charmer "'.Ith heated ' • wn. $l • · r . Asmalllbdrmhomeina pool and fnut trees. Call ~no 8:.~m~b~~ ?-:: llmOdown. no qualifying, 67S-Oll5&646-S264 quiet rural setting but now~S370 ift cpts copper plumb'. $166'7/mo. 3 br. 2 ba lux. 1 within walking distance 1':=======~ A i.ng. RV, 'ctetatched 2 car townhome. Nr beach. TUl'Tl80CI to beach At town. $110,000. II LLSTA TE gar, formal dining, re· ~· 9'0·1217. 951-6011 NEW LISTING, Presi· !'I'..., t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ mod kltch. concrete (Mike). dent Home. Plan 70. ..~._~ ...... REALTORS driveway. $92,SOO. Call llG ·~SUM 1 ... I Panoramic view on large • A(•'•>"' Tony 714 /730·1222 ~ .W"'O. comerlot.4Bdrms.com- WAKE UP AMERICA Owner/Agt. Completely refurbished 3 fort able family room. Br 144ba home in Hunt. formal cUalnc room and 3 and see thlls beautiful MESA VHDE Och. 1 mile from ocean. car 1an1e. Near com· new 3 Bdrm home with Brand u s tudy, family rm . 2 SALEIYOWHER newMpp ances. mmlty r::.' and tennis. 17141494-1177 fn>lcs, spa and comm. 0,.. Sat /S.. 1-5 Cactw f 21 /S.rf Ml0,000 ee. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml pool. ASSUMABLE 21575tr0Rllaoli 97'-1050 lilal'IT LOAN . $219,000. Call 2Story 4 bdrm+ den, 2"'2 lllALTY 1161STEI !179-5370 now. baths, large formal di.n· MUST SELL! 642-1200 ing rm, eating in kilch 4 b r • 1 ~ b a . g d . i--------- ALLSTATE 1 REALTORS Location, Loccrffon Old Corona del Mar. Ex· cellent investment d~. 3 8dr & 1 Bdrm, corner lot. Offered al $237,000. 644-7020 ebt~.!00 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w /bui ltins. Bonus rm neighborhood, hom e with Franklin stove. 2 warranty plan, Sll0,000. covered patios ( 1 Bkr.16'7S-Ol8S. 646-5264 w/spa). Lar1e corner lot RX-·-PER' with shade and fruit uo vr · trees. RV access. Price Good neighborhood, and terms negotiable. needs paint & TLC. OWC tst TD. amortiied Home wa rranty pro· over 30 yrs with 5 yr gram. 4 bdrm. l:V. ba payoff. Move in cond. Sl07.000. Bkr. 675·0185. S4&-8001 ,_646-__ 5264~------ IYOWHER ASSUMABLE Beautiful 3br.1~ba . xlnt Super 4 bdrm. 2 bath area. 2 bllts to ocn. dbl with BONUS ROOM. that gar, b\lilt·ins, cpt/drps, 1 includes pool table. New yrs. $130,000 20% dwn or ceramic Ule. drapes & cash962-9761 cpt'g. Sl.91,SOO. --------- So Calfonlla Rlty 546-5605 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THIS IS IT Here la a home with ~ious comfort and y ol space to grow! 'The latte bonus room of· fers enough space for family bobbies and recreation. Plus 4 bdrm. 2Ya ba & lam. rm. and an exceptional cul-de-sac locaUoo. _ • -.a--a I 052 ft-T wi-~-./OPB4 DAILY Owner hu1e beautlrul TUR '.I' LE R 0 C K ... 523CAMPU5"-IRVINE ::;::::;;:r.:: ......... w91-owmoa11 216 My-$495,000 Country Home. Oak Beautiful 3 BR, 2ba. w.: With 35' lo .. Sllp I Colll.s l"-d floors· Pella windows grt Broadmoor home-facl~g L..,.. leacll · 1 048 MOMUCH SUMMIT 3 Bdrm upgraded 2300 sq SI, I 00,000 loc. 75Hi016 park. Up1raded. move·tn •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ADULT COllllUNITY ft.petio townhome. 2 car cond. $169,500 incl 'g Auume 90,000 at 10V•%. prase, walk to bay. As· WatwfroatjW.a..y EASTSIDE. 2 charming land. Xlnt t erms . FAHTASTLC =raded, end until, aumable loan. Owner ( '7Ut00 houses 00 large lot. on _~_196_1______ AMAMCl9'S vtew. 2Br, 2Ba, ask· will help fanance. Seller --------•I quiet realdentlal street, Breathtaking view of iDISl47,000. sayabrlngolfer. 752.1920 LOUIUCHl'EL =fft!:~~gri:~~o: **Sltll£ STOIY ~1 .. ~~~~.'f;1':n1at~ °/1';1~5:/::,';,5 ' Ci)UAIL ~~:S Co.6'2-6368 4 BR-211 sa n ~1t~u1~:~1; i::::. 1•21a ,. ·cE BRAND MEW Ideally located In the den, family room home. ~ Sales & l..tal1 3 Bdrm, 2~ ba, 2 level. California Homes area Amid towering pines. LARGE ASSUMABLE . PIOPIATIES .. · 229 MmiM Av I I this customized plan haa Beamed ceilings , com· LOAN ATt%! 675-lJJ I • • country kltch, micro •loan balance of 112.000 pletely redecorated. This 3 bedroom • .2 bath 10,.. n l:JI P.M.I '• wave, 2 car 1ar w /opor. at 12% interest with moo· 1231,500 mountain view bo me ·--------Low densit y . Prime r ddi I J Cape Cod Duplex. fUWlCinl avail. Builder thly payments or $848 eaturea an a t qea --------$299,900. Xlnt terms . has2left. and uawnable. Askin& spe.1140,000. 495-1720 IWFFS Owner /Agt 644-4144, 347E.18thSt.Costa e •FRONT ROW• !:!.;.~~.~!~ .. ~!~ _::~:-:~ 1e~~~~y btflgO ~~~:~'.7;:.:~~J; F S 1 4 Bdrm, D.R. encl patio. 12'75,000. Open Sat• SuJ1, ~Ina e By Owner. OnlySlll,900! 12-5. 8S3 Vista Boni.ta.' r._,c ._·,~!bc!bdr13)~~~!~ C .... ~17/~-•~t WOODUIMI <WHomno:e 2BBErACHr.e ·dllwoobollde &.9 .... t 1055 MIM872. .... --• .. . .............._' & ·--.. • ··········-············ --------daya, eves fl wkenda New Townhouse! 2br. ded1, cedar ablkea, Mo 9w1r.-., Beautifully Decorat~ 1 ~. Allume 182,000 lat. TD at 2ba. 2 car 1ar. frplcl hardwood int, frplc. HURRY! Low down P•Y· fQol home. 3, or 4bd,._ ' GOOD INYISTM'T 1244~. Owner will carry OW!ll/ stove, d/W. l3G •• CTl4> 4lt-•1e ment. OWC b-alance. 2~ba 2 frplc., sao.°" I Penineottqe 001145•70 2lld. with '30,000 down. :::f !:s ~°v':B!e~11 !::i · Huie executive home. dwn, a,000/mo. 541-tl'Jl;i 1 lot. SBr, 2B• + apt, all Eaa~lde. Brandywyne ~.1'1J.M15 1""'9 1044 n.. ++. Prine. only . .;;~~mmiiiiim;;l~ nmted mo/mo. Bu.y to Condo. 3 Br. 2~ Ba. --"-.......;:;...,_ ______ , •••••••••••••••••••••'• Broker. 953-1220 keep, live-In or develop. $135,000. Call A1ent ......_Vlefo 10'7 Low dn. low int flnancln1 Gl.s.103 for lnfo. •••••••••••••••-••••. ~:'!r.~~·~~;~~ierl. For Sale By Owner. macnab / lfVlne f1S.ll80 4bdrm, 3ba. pool, jac. RV It acce11, muter s uite f88 II C-.,W. 1022 w/Wetbar, new carpet. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mtncti" pool dvplea + 2 mood ..uta. Prlmt loc•· Boa. •.ooo ........ cuatom drape•. North C.M. $145,000. To be ll.st· ed next "9ek for 1155,000. Call 546-0l21 Owner/Ast. OpeaSat/90.12-4. POOL AMO YllW .... TIRIACI A C!ICl&7 a Bdrm, fonn•I 10°' DOWN diDlnl rm home •Ith /0 POOi aDd hfsbb' txpanda· 1 OolY 1114rm1 'l MUI tM· We ¥Mw of barbor la t•I•.· Zoneo R·2 with -. A new btlllt at fOOiD for ,.tal. Jut re I cinly-0001•. I ctut.cl .. OOO&oMlll Call1 CAiJ:QUJcg , ... 1 , ...... 12.. I I /Jn '~' I I , ,' I {'\' 1 , I j[ i' I I ' /\ •',' I \ : ' / ~ ---- A IU811DtARY Of THI IRYINE COMftANY Ill HOMI IM UMtVMsn'Y ,Alll Upgraded home situated acroH from large greenbelt wtremodeled kitchen and many custom features. Walking dlatance to ahoppht1 - assumable loan -owner will help with financina. Priced to sell at $159.900. Lorraine Reid 551 .. 8700. (Q·l3) r., - ...:-_/ 1 DP ey PILOT ' fr1dllw. Hownlt* 14, 1911) a.er •HI l:at .. e• • ..... ....___ • ._., al -' J. ~ · ' .. ....................... .....u.t.r.I~ ~uwwww_ h:d Mn nU.fw I a I~ ._ ........ . t "t II WI lier WI ~ .... ...... ...._ 2000 ;;;;;·~·., .. ~ ...... e:·.:::::·.:::·M·· .. ····)·::.·: .... ·.···::.:.::····J-:J·.· ~········-···J·J·.·~. ~· ... ···~~~ ·~:i!ii····........... ...................... ....................... ............... &&& ........ , • ...... ~ .._. I06t S.Q1u• 1116 ..._.He•.. .. .................... ..:i:.;;.;•o••;;c,4 .:.::·::::Bt••••:::•••:Jo•••l• ••••••••••••••••••••••• :"..:=~~··p•:::·~~~·,• .. , -f -•.••i••-,-, _;;.~ •••••••• •••••-•••••••••••••••• ,_,. 1100 IUM S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~'"&:· ;::.~ •. v;1" NnlaJBrJBaCoodo. wr;,7ba-;,~t· ... r_!.,•.,•.•,,.• ... 11,~f,__•' Cil'FlllUtOlll ....................... w ..... 1c1e Cot .... ta ••-1 1 '-Y'JVIJ car••• w1-r 1eoo .. t .. d l .,..., ,..fa&IB OUAIU>ID -~ . " .. _mow nler ,.... tMOtmo .. , laat -,_ • •Ci•ea 1•r. poo , ...... .._ ar,. w•a-.. •a OOlfllUNITY PAClllC _,.. eGDdlticaa, ln~ome • JJJr~/mowi.ter Acleenlai '75-05M: • ft,fipk, microwave. atr. dUlloute ..... llHH .... kite.._ a mute;• -· -, ........ H lto,IOOyr.Price s.ooo. wat.rt.-i&malnc alnl)e •ty. 1110 mo. MMm.CallAdA.Uwtr ........_, frplc, J pa"'-,' ' --=·-.... t.•' lloee • lhe _.,.. ~yment $1 ,000. ReaJton ns.aoo 3Bdrm,2Ba.Oceaovlew. •'lmor~ AM It '°4800. Jt lln .,.... ._ t:-'.,. .._. ::--:. ~~~:{. ::= ~~~; baluce.alU~. C.W .. Mw JIZJ Ilk to beach. Lr1 yard.,....._ •• _. JJ40 psclay. = =~f.~ ~ ... ...., ....._ av•U fwl aU U. l\Mel iD lua. beta. family room home. ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll0'7S/mo.1'15-0ell •••••••••••••••••••••• Deelfltld 2 br, ''°' b1, avail Jan. ITStl/mo. flllill • mo lartaara So. Cal Uvlnt Steam FwuUc ocean view. ~.__;i~1.&€.HOU ~ ON THE BEACH 2 br, 1 ba, w/d, atove. s Wia to ocean. Eleraot 2 p a t I o , f r p l c • m.-r Ce• i. 1 , 1 1 •" t bllda. l frpln, 2 apas, 3 o.lnble ead unlt wlt.b ~> 2 Bdrm duplex, view, refril nr CametJon Ave bdnn, fem rm ft den, waaher/dryer, new -""-_....--• .....__---11,1.~ ,......._-..i, c.,pr,Sil,J~t.omeof lqJt .,.llo aod cover"ed Eat.alelnv•st...i.ents avall. 'UI 12/15. Agt. Pa.rte 'no pell luae ss75 ('725 mo). Pluab erpu, DeJnt. IUO mo. 8*5314, ·-:::., -· 3 ..,... 2 ba -the r .. turea. t"or t be PQRb. Or" .. \ flnaoein1 "' "' Faye. &tC).980() mo iat lut 't200 clean· 21,\ ba, cedar ft glan. ~ Bkr. + -prdn hdme. Nr aeledlYe buyer open ivailable.90000 :m:tW.CoutHwy,NS • ' • Obi car pvt far, lulJy . comm.pool,teanb.New 9a.L ~ i.. W1U ba beld from ' · '45-6646 Uptraded 2Br, 28a houae inadep.115-97. malnt. yd. Adulta, no Univ. Parll CONDO 2br, paint, crpl.I. fJZS/mo . ... lite NMd.a .,.,, llAll4PM Thuu·Sat. •---------w /p i'lvate yard & •Small l er. Yard. UUI ~.lnQuireat527 l8tb. :;a.em;1!..t'for';:!fJ•c., ...,(owaer). Owaer. lttpa lo r.tOD Realdence. 4036 ASSUMIVA cuport.ll'JS/mo.Avall. pd Privacy Good 4 St. 714 /960·8331 or _________ 1 Glll/IQ.PluaforC$tm Calle Loulu i .C . $7,SOODOWM Uvu July l5tb <neaotia-sl.ngle or coiy couple. 981).Q31. Woodbrtd1econdo,2br+ 12Br-2 &..Pool,casrport.z -A.ail Priced at sno.ooo . 548 ·UO, SaoClementeduplex. blel . Betty K err : $C50.'No pets. 549·3232, HOME.SFORRENT denorSbr,l~b~chlld ::-~-mo. ~u.lta :::-.. ~'::~?'~:; S:::. 1fJ.~J8.1IJ!J:.Y F.P.su~.900.&U·8484. 673-UBl. 841·1480. 3 Bdrms. $525·$550. OK.tm,IM-mt vea. ......:._ peta.tlM · ta'JJ -.... ·or"414a ONTHEBEACH eo.taMHa 32z4 Fenced yarda and Woodbriqe!'atates"Lln· 3 uunu, 2~ ba tCllWDbm. ... C••-1071 s.114.PL!X 1 ar duplex w/frplc ..... ~ ................. gauses. Famillea colo".,,.,2~ba. lmmed. Oeatral Lal Nl1uel loc. 9J OWHl:R Harbor View •••••••••••••••••••••:• IRVINE · nrE GROVES Assume u % loan. Ex· -.SO/mo. 640.9900. Aak MElA VERDE. 5 Bdrm pleaae. Kida .t pet a occupancy t750 /mo. Avail lmmmed. Poat. Homes. 4 Br. 2~ ea ..._.,.. HUMTHS 2Br, 2Ba, A/C, 20x24 gar. cellent Anaheim loca-for Faye. 3 bath. POOL.' Reduced welcome. Call 964--or 6«).23ilf0 me/Qllt. .-rstmo. Wlllon hm. Rm Spa Country Ofl94HOUSI tl!5.000.0WC12%or exch Ucxl. 2·3's & 2-2's. 11 X H9 rt• 169 to 925/mo Waterfront 973-297lA1t .,nofee. R h S J 1 •WeiuR.E."3·27SZor French . Lola ll y a. •• Nov l.e-Capi.strano for Condo or hse lo iJ'09I $230000 Sell or wpor ocn l Homes I .6311400 anc o an oaqu n. Dl·llJJ -. o c t 731 0"'99 tr-.a..· 'or bo' ua·· Aaent ••••••••••••••••••••••• • nc. · Condo, 2 lrt bdrm, l \.liba. Clasay Model on 1olf UL.-•-Vl-1-1.•utomlsed. 644·5965, Valley Mobile Ho me ~~~le n Y · ~ ........ ' " .. I llh I k h _ y...,... lZ67 .... _,. Park. Dowft payment1_VWlll __ f_a_it_. _____ -t 714 /957-4025 . E ves UDO ISLE BR DUPLEX. Eastside f~5 ~:~~ \~~l.8~r;:: ~zywayate~~ er!:d ••••••••••••••••••••••• can be financed loo. Lov · ltodl Property I lSO 529-380t, C<!mp~tely furnis hed 2 ba. dishwasher, patio. 9fl2.-00l8 new carpetint. earth 4Br 2Ba, tardenf'r iDcl. t41WPOITHllGHTS ely rurniabed home, ....................... with everytblog you gar. S480. 675-0562. · •-2 bdrm den wet :-t ... v memb ·Ad-'•-,._,. .. HO""" C:..a '""' I Bk need. Remodel-.. •· de· ....,._, • • LaSe • · • wu ot"""'°hearv nice •h""o·m•emson, ..,..1·73·~£.e'::.' we come. r. • "'GU ... "' SHO•Es """ .,. S bar frplc •110 mo ..-lerred 911 m• -"' ~---"A -. 2 UNITS coraled. 3 Br, den 2 bath. & . ide duplfx. 2Br, yard, l Ir, J ... F.. la ~ · • · .,...., · · · _.. J!lll!!ipborl. Quiet street. TWOCOHDOS ?ri.~!~r-~o!imR~}o:~ Hpt.HtL-.o. i=· MRJ~o~5ty6.161Bill ~~ q~ e! s_t1r eel . 11\replatt, stove, reJrig, CO.LONY Sh HOMEPORRENT pmtla1 &y View, no pro· 2 Bd h 0 Sale By Owner S9000 Ttr1111: Owaer wilt y, r, .. ...,,,. n . va1 . now. dishwasher, covered bdrm . I . arp 3 3 Bdrm. $5.50. l'eaeed bieem with O.C. Airport. rm eac . woer . .-ulmto. 1st & last + see. -•'-_,,. . am1 e fam. home yard and I I J1' n-No a or condos, id boulht other property & tin8096eve. ecl w'C,90/o dft. Only 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, PeoUJ. Pt. Joen497·5402. _.... -tmo. M2-4946, with new earth tone ara e. . am..., --" ....,.000 h ~11 .S 0. home. Mo lo mo. or ~194.131-9800 Aarpetln'4 decor , pleaae. Kida 8: peta • schoola close must l>Cllo ..... eac ........ ---rty t 400 ~ .. welcome eau-. 2511 or by Av•-finep"",,.2800 .... 493-3500or493-7492 •• ..,.... c•••6 .. 4-721 I winter lease. $675. Ocean view/city lights. leve&on, f~e, 1ard. • -~A· ,~ • -J •v.-~· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,._ "' brand ,,,.,_u ..t DO ee 67J.2ll3. new 3 br, 2'h ba. For lease 3 BR 2 Ba, 2 car water Inc ... SO mo. .... • aq ft, I level home In a SPECTACULAR OCEAN Re s t a u r a n L f o r .., ftne location. Call owner VIEW Sale/Lease Seats 130. IEAUTIFUL all posa i ble x tr as . prage w /opener. A tru-644-2932. 3Bt,2Ba coodu. t45481t i•y-oo...1T BJO/mo. 964-3466 ly lovely home. 1 mile to 3 Br. 2 Ba. Unattached. C.Omm. pool/1p11-All10 · By Owner. 2800 sq. fl. 5 642-8010or642·5266 A "' " ...... ch. -p f d J Vlllaa -~ .. · lutll ~ .... , MESA VERDE _.. .-.. ro ·a u ta Newly decorated Good ·.._,me llG CAMYOH :: ~':n~n l:f:~ J~~~ ~-16QO r=~r O~ w~::. e~~3; 4Br, 3Ba. Fam. Rm. wet ~~C!l~Ml~~lla at locatioo. Access to pool, 497·3034 ---- 20utttandin1 Properties Pt.Harborfromh1ghon ••••••••••••••••••••••• A-"'V•LLEY dock for 45' boat. 4 bar, prof de c or & • ~eo.f:ft No pets. Nice 4 bdrm. Home. lnExclualveBlaCanyon. a hill in San Juan ..-..--"" bdrms. 4 baths, Im-lndscpd. 3 car gar. Lovely3Br2Bahome1~ · Located on quiet street. Area Off era Beauty, Con· Capistrano. SS0.000 in up· LAGUHA IEACH · Near new 4-Plex. 2 bdrm. maculate. $2500/mo. G a rd e n e r . S 9 9 O . mi. to beach, 9640. Call HOME FOR RENT Near school & sluopplng. venlence, Privacy & grades. Assumable 960059.FT. 2 bath each unit with WaterfrontHomes Jnc. n4mG-l804,644·7367 962-1940. 2 Bdrm.~. Garate. A/C.$100permo.'Walker Security. Cl) M agnifi· financing. $337,500. 3380l 14 Leased commercial-fireplace. enclosed patio. Realtors 631-1400 FamllY pleue. Kids & &Lee5Si-4477. cent 4 br, 4 ba Custom Avenlda Cali ta . San industrial units located garage. $165,000. Bill 2Br Cottage w/garage & Dwntwn. Comp. remodel. pets welcome. 964·2568or ---- Home on Golt Course. Juan Ca P i 8 l r 8 n 0 • 00 one of Laguna.'s main Grundy, Rltr, 675·6161 Ne w Po r l R i v i e r a yd, lO min to bch. $450 , 2Br, frplc, patio, gar. !7J3.297l. All. no fee. SPoolBr .. '~..:.For. Din. Rm. S·paAious Glamorous 71~1-"""'5 highways. Building re· Townhouse. 38r. JBa. mo. Adlts. no pe ts . Agent531H>875 _. '" ' · • .....,....,, · Balboa Island Cape Cod Fully furnished for 631-4889 Woodbridae Condo 3br sa.-412811 ~:!·~:S o~::1'::,~~~~ _,--.-AM-----,-0-8_0_1 ~~nJe!';~~l~~rt~~~~ Duplex. $229.900. Xlnl winter visitors. 4mo Clean & Cozy. 3 Br. 1'12 cstm decorated. Xlnt ---- Golf Course. (2) Lux· ....................... want out, ofrering very terms . Ow n e r /agt . minimum . S725 /mo. Newer 2Br, l i,.<,Ba , dbl Ba . t i,.<, miles from Loc.*"50/mo.673-M32or .... ,.,..._.. 3269 urlous 3 br , 3ba Sl4,900YEH! attractivefinaocingona 644-4144,833-3212 548-7689. gar,bltns,adlts.nopets , beach. New carpet . 76G-1988 •••••••••••••••• .. •••••• Townbom~. Lae R~ms, Vacaot ·lhis3bdrm, 1'12 total price or $575,000 HUNTBCH.4PLEX • !_!S!_mo. 642-7261 , fireplace. No pets. $575 WOODBRJDGE-3B 28 CoeaCHAllMB Jfilb Ceilings, Private ba, dbl gar is a great withS166,750down. Under5yrsold. $245,000 ...... ~shed .,_.ol<Rol !!:4o~W.!,llker & Lee famrm,nrpoot,r!ism!: 3 Bdrma + den , Patios. 3 Car Garage stster. Grab pbooe for Realooomics 675-6700 OWC a t 12 3 . Agt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 bdrm, fenced yard. at· ,.....,,_, · 551·211'1S,SG-1188 beautifully appointed $90,000. appt 536-0123 GtMUal l202 tached gar child/pet ..._.~-14 3Br TwnhH f I home w/3000 .sq. ft. LAJOUAIROKHS eer'itury21 Gold Coast HEWPO --....................... OK 90 642-0857 tt.tia• 3242 Oni w / rp c, Avail. 11/lS/IO up to 1 1032WALL ST. Rea.Jtors 548-1168 ltT IEACH 84 HIDE UNITS Sharp 3br + den. 2ba. · $C mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dr v;w:lty rPks4o.'7~ "!~ year leaae. l\1ent • ~7~~~: ·,--.-.... ------,-0-9_0_, !t~ Ct!.v': 5.;;~0":,i~ $3,250,000 ~ood area, S6SO + dep. 2 Br, little ~ule home.1Lce 2 ~. 2 ba, fam SPM ppe _67)._._7300 __ . _____ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• home. Conspic uous ly D o wn pa Y m e n t eta982-9311.968·5696 w/gar, in pnme E.slde room,~ !'OOm, Pool & ••41 NEWPORT C REST ---------j-.---------i 1 led Old N rt Sl 000 000 Ask for Bill . loc. IMO. Call 962-7940 all amauues. $750 mo. .._. ~· 3bdrm, 2~ba. crntdo, dbl 0% 1 T 0 oca on ewpo · · 14 UNITS 5'.everal houses available 213 ·323-9500 eat. 2318 ••••••••••••••••••••••• elec ld ba.r al' to ~b. \1~ pl~ pen. 4 CHARMING, Blvd. $250,000. Agent. 11,'l yrs old Make offer m Orange County: 2br S450 aduJls, 645-8103 no days. Eves 714-840-7380. OZY OCEAN FR ONT srrWJ'~e.::..;:~e:-pool: b b . -..HTFUL 631·7300· Ask for Ted: . C.M. 3 Br 2 Ba $695. pets, 333 E. 21st St. 30 lBr, lloblle Home, knot· lamia etc ms. 3 (b~i:!tree)~· ':.~or;':,~~ Laree 4 Bdrm. 3 bath + , ________ _, DAVIS & CLARI( S.A.3Br2Ba $545. MGR. 3 Br. l'h Ba. Condo. Nu typinelnt, frplc, pvt bch. evea. 23 LUctf~JJ~ family r oom, 3 c ari---------11111 S.A.3Br2Ba $595. . cpt, drp, pnt, pool. adlt.aoo.ly lllOOmo (714) ,_ 12851<. 1.9-25% dwn. S38K garaae. beautiful pool Choice CorMr Lot 151-1666 Ftn Vly 3 Br 2 Ba $650. E.S1de Costa Mesa 2br S5'75/mo. (213)399-6441. 411&-lll& · · ~ HomeSat1iSun __ . __ due 3/85, bal 12 yrs. 7101 and spa. brick BBQ. Prime area of Newport GOOD INCOME Whelan Property +den hse, .lge bath.uew '"* 1244 Harbor View lllomes, =~~M~~~n daily. Shows li.ke a model. Of. Beach. Useable 2000 sq. 4 BrNr bch $150,000 HB Management. 953-1667 co~p~et~ kJlchen, sto~~"1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ '1!w ~ Br~den, 4 3bdrm, 2ba .. tf:am rm, fered at Sl9T,500. Call ft. bldg or plans for 10,000 6 Units $15() 000 LB 3 Br 2 Ba , Garden Grove. retn .d n ry rlml ·W • lrvlne Northwood "The Da ' . 00. o pets. new cfl)t, paint , drapes, Be _ _, d 540-1151 sq ft bldg Agent · ' cps. rps . wa paper. • _ .. " Del 1 B 1 rt ve,att.6«·72U. •too. lie, 6·14·SH5, aut wat.,uront con o. . . . . 4BrNrbchS200,000NB frplc, 2 car gar, encl. a 1c, gar. nice y ard ...... es .. u~e r o ·•---""'--------• 2bdrm, l ~ ba. s pec. 1-631--7300--------i 32Units. $75(),000 lngl. yard S.S75., S & L S300 Adults small child ok-no ! End uo. it with. frplc .. Oceanfront I u x u r Y . 644-1817. tacular view from living Most under9 X gros~. dep. Sec. dep. 542-3597 pet ' 'ss""I 1 t/I t waterways, tennis, pool, 2bdrm 2ba spiral stairs ••--• & t bd s. ""' mo s as etc Call wkdys 544.1434 f . '1 • d k • room mas er rm SUPER INVESTMENT 847·8516 898-5526 llc6oalslmtd 1206 1200 cleaning deposit. wbi<isB3l-~l4 . r P c · e c • OCEANFR•O•NT : 3 patJoe, pool, sec bWg, un-1---------• TRIPLE NET, 10 YR 646-2971 · washer/dryer, yearly. Bdrm, 2 ba, b1i1ck frplc, derground prking. Slip,~..........__._-&-1o91 LEASE, building re· 8 UNITS. Costa Mesa,•••••••••••••••••••••••---------EXECUTJVEHOME m..5522.835-&455. lge front pa•tlo, very great financing $235000 ..... _._.._-model owner financed al 11"~ 1---------Eastside Duplex. 2 Br. 1 TurtJ Rock R"d b clean 6 j ail Forpvtsbowinits.s-i961.' •-•••••••••••••••••••• ~cedl981>si!Jl~ inc. Priced r igh t . BKR YEAllLYl&ITA&J Ba. gara1e. encl yard. 2~ t! 3 1 ge 3 -~·Oceanfront luaury Pen· rum =IJ'•• ~~;. ---'-----'----CL.EAN3brbomeinquiet mo. . . . Agt 979-4383 Little Island: Large 1 RV parking No pets . . • car gar, ava1 . thouse, 3bdrm, 2ba, or um.•-mo aru. 110.000 dwn to as-646-4380;642-4447 Bdrm apt, unfu r n . immed . 979-2560 , fr PI c • de c k . yrlylaeorwill i:ooaiderl ranl.UffS sum. paymt. of $590. Call Cottdomhtiluns/Town-Lots for Sale 2200 Gar(Sml car;ssoo. $450. 645-2:994. 8Sl.()610, 851·3965· washer /dryer, yearly. IJlDI rental. ~I Brad.851·709SOwner 8-esforsol'e 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Beautiful 2story 3 Bdrm 4 Bdrm & family room. 2 Orangetree2 br hme. or 1 IFJr>.5SZZ,1135-66SS. BEAUTIFUL. VIEW : ~ l Yrs Mew """""'--.......... E..tate ••••••••••••••••••••••• •SACllFICE• oome, unfurn. dbl gar. baths, breakfast ar~a. br + den. No pets . ..., B Ad I y d Harbor View Hom-3 ~ Bdrm 2 b h F I ...,.._.--... BEAT THE patio, close to So. Bay. f'l)lc. corner lot. qwel -""/mo. pool, tenni·s ... 15. 2 r. u ts. ar • ~ .. • at · or ma •••••••• •• •••• ••••• •••• ail S'1 ......, fnlit tna. 1IO Canyon Bdrm. 6 ba. POOL. tl500 -dininJ rm. Spectacular Mabl.tto.. RENTSQUEEZE! Orange County . Dana Spaciousrooms.SUOOin· :::8~~12/1/80. SO 511-3la5,7-..&63Tom. Acres. Spanely furn. pa-mo. prestig~ home. Close lo ForS. 1 I IOO Homesfrom$63,500 Point. Ocean view lot. clutil. ---------Orangetree condo, 2 br, 1 _Zll_tm-Sm ___ . _____ , everything. Parle Orleans offers an Only 165,000 for lot with ...._ ,.__ C--..&-W.. f __., u~ • PET ........................ affordable answer to the approved plans. Owner. IA YFROMT RIEHT A.LS ,,.-w ~•°"' unuu ba, r47frig. teonis els , I 8 8ALD IA y"'-~ 1 RED CAR Juan Capo. SSS.000. 2 high cost of renting . and n4J638.1614 Several Available Now Beautiful 3 bdrm. 2'"i pool, Jae. etc. w /deck. "'----' .. -f 1 lltC. 4• 31· I 400 754-1202 Br.28a.1480 sq.ft.8 yrs. the ioflalion -f1ghting 2·3&48drms. balh.2 frplcs.dblgarage 12/1,$495.675·9229 ~~vi r;1 ror !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' old. A.gt 541·5032. benefits of owning your 3 Arch Bay, Panoramic Wmter leases from S795 w /opener. solar hot . --~ ew 0 rv ne HAllOll llMI own oome at prices from O c n v ie w . Te r m s Yrly leases from S800 water Move In today' Available now. 2 Br 11"1 Ba Owe. 4 Bdrms, lg rec 111 llftll(Y DOWN OCEAHFtlOHT just 163,500! The "city" $219,000. Agt . 768·2963 or $750 nio. 642-4623. lrg townhome in Wood · rm. «M-0029 Mapillceot 111t!W 3 br, lllun 10% Dn OWC balance un-location in Orange is 499-4857 Lou lniDlhl & Assoc. bridge. Nr park. schools, Fabulous ~an View. 3 view, coado. StlC. $1,SOO. Alaume $205.000 in loans. der ban.It rates. 2 BR, nr great . close to major 675-3331 lge New 3Br. 2'-'lBa CON-shopping. 5.52-4368. Bdrm. retreat. bonus 641).tlMS. payments S2100 m o new mobile home in freeways, Fas hio n VacantLotSO'x224'South DO. 2car gar w /elec . 2 ba .. idsOK A 11 ·---Muatqualify. 3Br. 2'°"'Ba Treasure Island Park. Square , t he Mall of Side or Ellis. Between open, micro. gas bar·b· S67s. Beautiful 4 Br. nn. •,. · va TH1•111F•S Fab··'-··-vt b h & que, small pat1·0 .· w/d <Greentree) Comm. 12/1. lat/last $750/mo, -Condo. 2,000 sq fl WU\loll vu. P c Orange, Town and Coun· Goldenwest & Edwards Charmi B 2 B = .. ti 3 ...,_ Call J' Th . ng2 r a , year-hook-•m, w /w cpl & drnc , pool. No pets. Close to 213/9riM·N21 ous • IJ~O es1 642-41891or645-4462 ......... im omas Lry & business complex· m Hunt. Bch. S30.000. ly seoo pr mo + utiL .... .,,~ school 1133-2~ betb end WLit TI4 /499-3816 es. The modern. adult 21J.273-8808 Avail Jan l . Agt. 673.4062 I d/W, avail immed. 1695 · 3307· OCEAN vu, ha 4 BR 3 Ba, wtth pvt paUo ,00 "Tbe MIWPOITSHOIES condom inium s are mo.631-n00.857-2302. T\IRTLBOCICGLEH no pets, $1200 mo. Greenbelt" Jn our 2 tits from oco, corner OWN YOUR M.H. SPACE available with one or two MAGlllRCENT ,.,.. __ ,_ 3 B 2 b f I _,, _,... -....... ~ orl~ A ail ...uE FARM bedroo v.,... ...... g r a. rp c. Mesa Verde, 4bdrm, 2ba, SBr. 3Ba, 3 car garage. ..,,.,,,....,; ...., . .,,...,. area. '' ·now lot, 6 Br. newly re •" ms , patio or deck, llOO/ I at Al/. ... SM> decorated, grtat family AGENT (714>642-8JT7 deluxe built-in kitchen. moyr y. frplc, lrg y ard, nr (408)988-1.234ext2l4. ~New 2bn CONDO· ~ ' 1 · IM'r HlflQNT SITE RealWattors.erfroot Hom6e7s3r_n6900c. llome. Only $175,000. carpeting, drapes, mir· """"' schools. c hi ldr e n Woodbridge. Walk lo View,Tennia,stpatoocn. ---- Owner497-5125 rored wardrobes 1n Ell 1 1 Th A h welcome. S57S. ~-2748 lake. shops. theater. lot. decorate d very HartmrV!i9wlloai•.38r, UDO ISLE The Best Value. Price re duced by SlOOK. Extra large lot. 3 Bdrm + sep. ID-law qrtrs. Way below munt at $325,000 firm. Ope.n Sat/Sun 1·5 223 Via Ithaca . C/21 HewportC..-ter 640.5157 TRY $50,000 DH Weatcliff beauty! 3 Br, 2 Ba, pool. s pa. OMC. $200,000 at 12%. Prin on ~.~.Larry '57-1711 s..a. .... 1076 ....................... .EXCITING. master suite and muc h Ba~ uaS~euth r~!gu~~ . ....._PHmMlo 3207 after6pm or anytime on Large 2 Br. 2 Ba. 2 car plush, $800/mo Fred 2 be. DeW cpt. dt1l9 • more. The quiet park Securlty gate communi· ••••••••••••••••••••••• )llkends. aaragewithopeoer.Ceo· Gibson 559-9400 or palnt.lyrlM.5411-3755. c--1-11 •--s urroundings tn{'l udc Ly w/pvt streets, beach. Bdrm. house on Point. tral air Ava1·1 12 1 $615 499-SCllO 11·-ba.-t .;. I 3 ~--, private rcrreat1 on . tennis courts. & club Availyrly.SB00.675·1771 Mesade1Mar,3 br.2ba ~ · ·. · .. ,,, 3 ...... , .... pu, Beautiful customized lawn,,, nowers. a central house. Airport. yachting. or675-3890 Agt. home, lge pool. service . 2bdrm. 2be. view. 3 declla. br, 2~ ba, 11n. rm. 24 'a60' Viking Home. plaza, and all the charm "·hln •. If · incl. S700 /mo . $500 W,...__VIK-Gra utilincl,l&OO/mo. $ll00/mo.6M-41M 2Br. 2Ba & enclosed oltheOldN < 1 "" I .. go mmutes r-.11tr-leach3218 d ""'"•n -...--..,,... 4n..:2137 ----ew )r e11n11 V ~ -image............ 2 Bd condo. •"'2"'/mo. .,... · 0 •YCR-·Br".'l>a,frml porch. In Laguna Hills f'r h Qu S h away e ry rare op·••••••••••••••••••••••• _ .. ..n .otoi>& ~ , nicest 5 star park enc arter erl is portun1ty Courtesy to .._ Ba.,,_ I bit 3BedroomCondoln supe Avall.now.Call Rogeror AVILLAina1ated com· dloin1. encl ya.rd . quality A & C Propert1e11 'lelllna brokers . Price ':"'· l~ . up c. ·n f)-ed. SS&-9400 _......., arde I <JD358). condominium conver~lon 1 1,495 ,000 O wner dishwasher, stove. dbl Eastside location. Hug munit y . All re c ... ._.._,, 1aer10c . Htwport leach community today• 2131682.3305 or wknds gar. waler & trash pd. master s uite . (am ily facilities. 2Br+deo. S850. llOllOmolae. M4-&Z2'7 •st e.., le ToWft Park 0Tlean11 7141-3070 Xlnl area. Duplex. S525. room. fireplace. Pool SPACIOUS HOME in Nwpt J:ltb, 4 br, ;! ~ ba. 3 12a.55 2Br, lBa, front 660 So GhaaHll~ 1 blk 1st. & last + $350 dep. sa1.1ru1, Jacuzzi. etc, etc IO'lftl' TAB. 3 Br. 3ba car pr, aardencir, PP. kitchen. Home to have north o f lb•,.._.... tt t•D•Mri, Adults. no pet s . etc,largeprivategarde ,.,~w., .•. L -25.6'5-toll new exterior supplied by Grov• ~..-..-y _. 2400 n41661·0282,213/6198·TI78 pat.lo.$750mo.646·«77. •BCTALS -..--·--- seller. All for 120.0IO Or--. ftr............ ••••••••••••• C.0..cMIMar 1222 2br2~ba +den $950 497-1761 llattW Cbannel. :z Br. 2 (DGM&4). l~caM~·~C[!nl~l!-~!!!'.,;~ l'JlfPIWMSPRINGS-2 ten· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Small Bach. Pad. Frplc 3br JV. ba S600 3 •50 Ba. Mh ins, patio, dock. ClASSIC n 11 co nd os . furn . stove & refrige. No pets 3br21/• ba 1825 ~Nit • I 1ara1e. waabet• /dryer MOllUHOME IY OWNER M7,700 '89,900 Owner · ol Hway, 2 br. 1 ba, lg S260/mo. 548-6680 3br2~ba $1100.$1400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hook up. 1125 3reufy. San Juan Cape>, 2 br, ~21183 or P.S. 325-7321 lvg rm. frplc. lg kit, no 4br2~ba SllC)().$1250 NICE 3 br, newly painted ~975 SALES ba, 2 car 8•T, Nik for Art pets, • lg patio, 2·car gar Sh a r P 4 8 r . N e a 4 br 2~ ba + bonus l850 • ~~ home in quiet ---------- Z706 Harbor, Ste 206·A 182900 00111072 ------tsso/mo.6«·7710. M.V.C.C.Small chlJdre 3br2ba '800 netpborbood, fncd yrd, Newport Shorea Canal 540.5'17 ' CM of CCMMty OK. Eneida garden in Laguna Village lam rm. 9125. Avl. 12/U Front. 4bdrm, 3bac,. newly Drlftwaadllllffs i----------o..e.x.s/ llOO r.-.,.rt, 2550 Sol~~~:i!!.~!!i~tBr, service. $725. Davi 3br2ba Tuatinl850 orearlier.Call:837-0365 decorated,pool,t·enoi.a,2 EXCLUSIVE UMh S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bourke Realtor548·9950. Kids & pets okay HOME FOR RENT blocks to ocean. 90_:z.41613. SAN C L EM ENT E C I A H S I D I ••••••••••••••••••••••• San ote110. near Mh11ion 2ba or can be made into 2 CONDO ILIG4HCE ' Ray, 3 Dr 2 Ra house li11l· Br ii desired. SAUNA, KIDS/PETS OK 3 Bdrm. '550. Gara1e. Beaut 4bdrm, 3ha, no lla1nlflcent 180 deg. Im 24ldl0 Homette, va· ...-raw VIEW eel al ... llOO. Viian~. nu frplc~ paUo, wasb/d.ry E-Side, fenced yard Family pleaae. Klda • rmlDUmance, prof decor. white wat« vlew ... walk cant, t~ plush & """"' c1J1* ft fteab Ealnt In/· uae. S695 /mo 536·1453 11r1ge, 2 Br., $545 peta welcome. Call IUIOO/mo. l b&od: from to NDd ... brand new 3 bea\tifd. Country Club lllft.EX uut. Need lo 0/31 my Agl. 842-2510, 84&-4848. ---or 9'13-2t71. Ast. beecb. 59-479 . • 81t ... 1at.e 1ua.rded w /ln· setllnt for lhe dis-~ tqully II down on ONTHE BEACH ....__,__....... 1226 nof•. --- t•com ... pvt pool and crimlnalln1 (SM4963) I.Slit.I In Ccleta Meaa or 8 d 1 t 1 --NWPl'CREST·I BR Jacuaal.. Offered at cau-...,ror~~ .... ____ 20°' DOWN '~v• .. •r. vicinity. 146·1307 1 r up 0 w / rp c, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............. 3JIZ ~ Ir, trptc, I ba, ~.i!DO· _ ~ JO ., ISSO/mo. 640.9900. Ask OOPLEX: Xtr1 tie 38R ·--••••••••••••••••• fam. rm, bar, t ennla, A.W •II n4 ·-... a.. ror Faye. 2Ba lower unit. Pluah if 11 d t cl -i $750.175-toOU n..-;m·-554-7070 12% lllT£1£ST PAUIROOK h' cpta 6 drp&. Fenced ..S73CAMMDad_ttVlftl ~!c..uft.Y4 .J..:r.:,.:e s':"VJ' -·• --- IYOWMB ar.a. "Pher". Xtraal I!_~ Romoea $115,000 -.m,Sat/8uD 12·4 2-Spacloue 2Br Unlta. Situated Oft l acre, this , b , adults, $725/mo. yard, aome ocn vu. close w/eentral air coed, ~ .,..., 4 r. 3 Ba. $13, 900 Owner will finance al Spanlah H. aclenda de· lrplc, cpt/drpl to bcb • abops. 1$85. Pb wuher /dryer. rante. Port Be»yal. V l•w of 12a40 + npando, 2Br 12% for 10 years. Prteed lloed wttb diatlnctloa , 7a.8868 41&MIO,-.zzn Collete park home 4 ntrts. Avail No• 15 oe ocean • llltbt ll1lau. .,.__.... , .. t ho 6-" I ed often over llOO sq.fl. of 2 br .....___ f I 2 bdrm, 2 be, comm. pool, f.ur .... mo ' Bt ·t~ Ba .. ,_,,........, w... 0 1 >P· to"°' mm ·Only cUllom liv1D1. The Mis· -· rp c. -car Neer Marina. 3 Br, 2 ba well kept and l11118caped, yrtJ leaM at -mo. ·orcl · ' H• · P'al,vacant.aoodcond., $142181 alooUleroolaodm08aic prap. l900 mo. Daya bous.•. attached car. 1•rdner. SUO leaae, Call Dave audle, Newa.dfi Nl11bt-bt new carpeting . ~ tile la kitc hen and &to.llllO,EvesM0-1519. Yard.-4t3-3471 74·642·6724. Call Adm..-.. vln'. a•. Botb avall. ('1..7116-t7). Pleue call ~1·2246 or r ~ ,,_.., HJJ at MZ-400 -Dec. LIL Ouadful area, ,.,_.,_ "1lffr Melille Hwa ~319 Bkr. beUnoml are but 1 ew'Sborecliffa 2 bdrm, den. • y_.. lUJ at hn per day . · .,.,,._ 3244 pooU1 ...m. _.. .. sm. --~~.,· 514-7070 of the amen Illes . Submit on children & •••••••••••••••••••••••• . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---- 1: •• WNllWATllVU muoo. ....,, •• 200 mo A•t '""'·N-co~ -1 i.2•1 Dpb au: • ., hall ,~t ar coedo, ate pa to SAN CllMIMTI RID CAIPIT -· .... · ,. ' • Ll&Ac. .,.... · ... ""'• • • ba. trple. In !Iii ewport .. • t 11 t d Dlll'llA Tl 7 I .. 7Jt-••4 • 87J..53.St. 3br, 2~be. Prof decor. ' b , ~ -mo ,., ... -••ca. • •• • e . MUST SILL 2 New Duplexea from ..... -• ' fplc. A /C . A tt •• r manna I lrVlne ·-· ....... . ··-· ti 'l:" .. Hwy ....._ V • c a n t J 4 x I o Slt5,000. A.uumt loan al Qitof SMh 12 or 3Br hie, furniture W/f11*118r. Comm pool fl " 4 br, 2 ba, .,. bch, pool, 'J.412 Golden• .. t , '72 , 12~1der ete-4414 ,...,.rty HOO avail, S750 mo. 505 tamla.lmmedoccuf.No f881tg t_.., QIO/mo -ITtl + • 4fJ.41 I btaWl.ful .EJ Toro area or .. :::::: ............ ~.673-0727 ~:..zsau. 551· 111 . __., N. Sbont1 . AnU l•UCID part.(JP91U). '........... 40AecenicOre1on Cc,.1t. SIU/mo. 2 Br. 1 ba, ' Dec I. UT-15.U or o..r ~for qulcll ....,MelilleHw• ~ ltOO ll«trklty, fenced, out· modemw/Swedlshf'rplc. '1f01111!8P'ORRENT A IUaatDIARY 0, --. .... ,1 lloatapettacular 114-7070 ....................... atepclto• vi ... accea•I· nr oce1n . V•cant. 3'1s4Bdrma. -.S0-'59S.l THRl9'VeNICOWANY llrlbaClOtUC!• on lie ,...,_ lD a.c. SplC!loua Howet.obemovedtoyour tM.owner"2-:M99 &40-UT1 Gareau. Famltles LIASI IN II....._ •ooded lot .. ,/rdwd -Sq ft Eaec bom lot. 3 br, 1 ba, atuc:co ex· · pleaae. Kid• • pell ...... J •.a ..... ruiu, ,..!; (Jlif'l'llE Bl!ACR·lloblle ~· ~pproa. u yr• Florlch. B• ham•. COND02 br. ~~ b•1• tux· welcom•. H4·2HI or Se veral homes furnlahed 6 dldal. tlricll ••lb, lie •lfrpk-Dlei. Hom• aar, roawood old.Sounclcond. I will re· Colorado property. 7 ur. mutr aulle/rrplc. m.st Aat 00,.. unfumlsheir; priced from •1.-0. peta. • Jd. •ts .... 'im ;_, • • ..,:: deck, cedar 1hallcu, root. llOOO, ,Pim movlna Hrea, totall pecllaae. MC. • full rec. fac'a, · ~...;_ ,· 234 to $12SO/mo. New lWtnll -a-. ..... •• te w /penllio••• hardwood IDt. frplc. CClll.l .... zs.. Call for mGh lntorma· •• Tsz..cMllO. • -r I f "._..... UDO LIDO a bd ,• •••-Oor•eoua Sit.too. IUIP n a•> lion. 754·06H evea. · .. •••?•"•••••••••••••• dally. Ca I or up-tq-date · rm. ~ 'Jlltllled atrl u• ...., lllCOIM Property 2000 4*-2151.da)'I. llnlue Ternce a bctnn, I HOME l'OR aDT information. :tTmo. -;1:~: .,..a~aU, beautiful ....................... bltb. larte fenced yard, 4BdrmCGadotuO lll.a7H -., ....., .._ 6 11usr SELLl .... ...... wood. noon. be•m ceU· o....,.. ramlly pleue. ••l:f:' ,0:'::'1!-:: OC&U.aoMTPAllC 2houeesoo2duplea lota. 1 h • 11 ZIOO ..., a frplcl. SllOO mo. kldt~ welcome. 7U.1414 Your rrieecf 1 aed = ftaUNll.•u.aoo .. ~~_ai1ballaanow•-!".Lr3• ·~u~ C.JI. Beat offer ta1tea. :.::...-.. •Ho••••••••••d.... ..... ~.Mt.-t C1i11 • or tq.lfn. ~ v., c.-. "'" · • '*' CL...,...ta .1.,.... •-Liii -"' l°"lloanclnc.Own/AI\. -me lra • oo_..._ ........ -""'f...... ·•••· ~..a•~ll wt.ea l••1 ••• bc:M, PoGI • flthta1 p r. to.-Lee aa.. RuoUn1toe • .._ ':.a .. i °'-.-CL.I• ....... _ --tu 1''kl tHell. n.,"11 911,iOO RMP. ''14 > · lcb. •/•eu1aable ID• HW f H • t • --~tutwlt.bDaU1 «110..-0.... tell, .. '" '"" tt ..... Want Ad "-uh.a MJ.$f7 116W 0 v .. ad. ta..,. PHot Want Ada. -_...._..._I' ·.--.... . " e t Q I ~ :. )' d • 11 •I I "1 ltUia........ '· °'fetw .. 1,_.,1AM4 Af I 1•1U...... Afalwalau.fwa. . A, l,_.•ttu.fwa. ApwlW•hu.fwa. ' Fr•.~n.r 14. INO Doflll.Vfll&.OT • ....................... ·················•••••t ••••••••··••••···•••·•• •••••••••••••.......... .........•••........•.• .•..•••..............•. ' Ml ......... ,,,,, .... ,, kuh 11•1 C..OtWW. l12l C..Mete M24 0-PM.t llU L..CllpM .. ech ll4' .,.. ............ ~v ........... 4HO Oftlce..... • ~..::;:;:;~· .. I ,~~;~·;1·;1r~ii: =:;i;;.~;.;.·::.:·. ~;··~ ..... ~ .. ~~· ;:::.:; ............... M;;~~:v:.;:;::; ;;:;.:;·w-·ii;;· ;;:.;::;;;;;:;;~~~· ;;;:;;;,:-~~~.; ••• P 11 I JI ,,_ ..--- -""' new ...,.. ,... pa t. £nci .. .,. ... 3~t ... 3-~!,· .~rpn It Br. pool, •1arade, SS2S ••••••••••••••0 •••••• lwlll2 -.1 wt/•~. i ftouclal fait. 'Hl:.1. v • r • a • Adltt, Wair sos E · llri•. · d /w, refri1. ~.-• -'"' ~,, IUJU~ .... • -,.... -.u, ._.. .. .....i cio..to ~.ana.... ,..,,.._llOO.tA.wt,aec. pr.,nopeta.M!Smo.251 qL••·a.oG.,... ' mo.-..ozn. VenaJJlu adult atudlo wlllt llQO, Golf, tnnlt, .._ AltmStl· .......... WllllDO D• 175-IDl,lfUl'fl. 11th Place, Apt. B .. • Mode hi I d corxlo. fOf' au... Pool. ek.'73-1*. •II. -··-,. .... I .. _ ba" vtaw Ml-.0.akforPam tt.w.t..gf•leece. 3140 t mD, haoph st belate ' th•hhwN.11W'dH1ate. us.ao aq. fl. Cnul nr, • -· • 0~ .... ,, • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ap • ws r. l·ns. Refria. •some furn. in· •bdrm. Iba coodo on Ul1la pl. rro. • aap, m ..,.. ... vUla I br dldlra, -watr, .-S yr· a BB, 1 ba, dea, sharp. 2 Br l~ Ba apt, 1ood loca· Brand new 1 & 2 Bdrm. carport, mature adult, cl. MOO/CDO. CaU Realtor, Nortb SboN of Tahoe. W. lab. SL C.11. Tom .... IM. I frpka, PoOJ: ~ tor Coollle A ~a "J:.!ta~~ lion. Z.lly, Pierpoi.ote Condo.. Puol, rer •. Apt. will be abown BobHlndtun at f'2·1'36. "'1.ly rum. 5/mlo from Sl•llllO. Jauul. Wult'lllf Ir call : l ·IU·51158 or ~ spa, leonl1 1ara1es. Sun l2Pm to 2PM. •'5 Uno ans. call Mr. Hof· North Stu. "°°/wkly. ------...,.i--- l:Mtit. -.. m 2lll 8&ACHPRONT INN Low i..,.aeao 2br wro. utll pd, Adults t2'13) -.1202 dys ; cnu Cypress M. au.+ utll.s. fman5'5·1857. 95'7-3Z21Bert. Medlcalorofflcc • --.. -._..... vaiw ~rat•.-.> up wlt ---6'Ul03 no pet.a, 333 E. IMZ-472Jeves. ~Hiit llSO Lido &eue.Down'°4ft uaa ~ ... rr~.o Oceanviewltfrpk,2br.' ..... ~. UGR3D Winter Rental . ...,.,, Mo. 3 ....................... e 2 Bd 1 Ba ln nice Isle Bayfront. 2 br. Beach. 151 •• :,rt . • --.J Plan •\all ba ..,.,., ' t ~~ '"' _.,., ~C ._ area. *"95/mo. Ca ll den, 2 ba. aaody .. -ach. -··1-0 Amplea\vl • --" • _,mo, o qwe ' Bdrm. 2~ Ba. Condo. .ree ... New21tory 1 Jaaft-:;1·'""" A... ...., _... ... • • U /,l 11000 1110 lie Z br,lba,wial.errentaJ, ooo·amkr.~. Lp2br, sar, w/d . new Ocean & Bay view, 20 •. Vaeworlake•hllla . ........, ............... &•· frplc,t500wll.S'TS·Ol20or parllln1. 0, r : ........_ prqe, avail. Nov, 16, ___ __;....;_...;..... ___ cpt, no peta, 2178 E . boat slip. Comm tennis C/alr, d1hw1hr:. pool, BAYFRONT, 2br & 3br, 67a..Z375. •·ml. "8 li l I .. r II k50/mo, adulta only !Caetew.t. 1124 Plauotla $.00 I mo I W h aauna ipa tennUJ S550 ... i --~~ -------It-.--• ~ IP t · eve £ u meJZZt ••••••••••••••••••••••• courts, poo . aa er I 2is. • · \ · new pat os, _,.,ex S950. Bl& Bear•Br•Ba, garage, C411 OeJwc.e Sult.es, 11100 batha. full oar 1ar ~YDICOI. SfS.7'983 Dryer, 2 car garage (21.3) ..mal\5. caJIBob752·2266. aU amealtles. Sleeps 12. sq.ft. AC, ampl ~~ltJtll Eut bluH . H25 /m o 2br, 2ba, crpt, drapea, yr 1 Br pd 1 lbdrm refrig bal gar w/elec. garage door LclcJiMoMlguef JISJ PS to be h 1 7U54&-3'793 1 pct. 28M E Cat W"' ~Jtor6'0-4389 J.y, 115(). Day1 548·9341, · IU • enc gar, ' ' ' · opener. Private patio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac • year Y · · · ,, eves-.2848. dtwaaher, pool. Adults. adu.lts, no pets , $300. new carpet Will ton 2ml. from beach. 2Br, 2Ba lge. 2 br, 1 ba, frpk. ltaRtdt to SW. 4300 m.-oo ' Illa~ View..._, -----:~::--:-·t-=842>-=-507'3:.:..:..::;_______ 6'5-98S7• 548-429l. slderfum. 642·1603. condo. Adults only. Pool lft.Ua. 673·3148 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• "THI" sl J IA ll8d Mn, •tr a l&e Colt•W.M 3724 2 ... t .. Apt Sharp E. Side unit, im· & rec. roo.~. 237 32 2 br, 1 ba, ii,; blks beach. Moving? Avoid deposits & DICUTI. VI SU..- beautlrul yard . Nice •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Newty decor. Gas pd, med. avail. lrg 2 br, 1 ba, Hillhunt. U01t U or 4. frplc, beamed ceiling, cut living expenses ! u• family area, kid• OK. no Stunnln1· large l ·Br· encl far, pool, d /washer. new carpets. $45-0 mo. Call 213·860·2067 or MOO 1173.6422 Profeaalooally s ince Fullserviceotficee'et pft.s.;.,!8001 7~r1!I!J· Jerry garden apt. pool. rec. Adults. 642·5073 1.st. last + $250 seturity. 714-54l·6346. '-'--·-------19'71. Ne-;c_i~~nt .. 1 m.1.v ; _. -· lfta. S38S. 110 W. 18th.r---------All.~·0701 ... rtle h ll'9 Versailles dlx 2 br. 2 ba, HOUSIEMATES i t NeWJIOl't Creat 180 de1 St. l .. Towwhame FOURSEASONSAPTS. • 1 & 2 8R Patio Apts. ·=~ ... c:c; ......... frpl•. wet bar, all am· 932.4134 Pl.Ali 't spectacular Oc ean & l BR 1 bath, utU pd. Quiet ~:~1f :e~r.'. •~so ~t CoupJe, no pets, 2 br, l"'z • Dishwtshtn & eeo·s =~'i:,;ailable now, _LOOKJN ___ G_T_O_S_H_A_R_E_?_1 EXICU'TIVESUrgs Catallna view. Al loca aduha,oopet.s.$295/mo. d /washer. Adults . ba twnhse. Patio. pool, ,p00r&Rtc.Room PAllNEWPOIJ WE MATC H ROOM· ''1.'hereiaadiffereM.." tJon. front row 3 Bdrm SJOOdep. 548·7889 6'2·5073 MOO. 73SJoAnn642•1602. • Garden landsuping I Dl ln'll(NJS lmmac. 2 Br 2 Ba , frplc, MATES! 7141752_02 ~!! w /111aster suite All ,..,YU"' few steps to beach yrly. ,.,,.J builUns, pool, tennis Bachelor Apt. Furn .• no MESA VERDE home at Large l bdrm. $2.85. Quiet •Jot to Buch & Shops CaJIB7J..250'7 152·9'75 2082 Michelson Dr.NU spa. Leue. $l100. Prine cooking Sl2S/mo. mosphere. 2 & 3 Br dlx building with beautiful 1---------;mi Buain C only. 541-7813, eves. Aet. 00-3780 apta. No pels. 546-1034 landscaping. ADULTS COUNTRY CLUI 1 Bdrm, vacant. Stove, Fem. roommate. Wood-ess nt.r;:U u.. OVER 35. No pets . LIVING IN refrig. No pets. n o bridge Townhome. Non· ATTIMTIOM!..ld ~BLUFF '"""''*'°"leach 3740 Spacious Family 3 bdrm. LEEWARD APTS. 2020 garage. S330/mo. Agt. smkr. 20s or 30s. Avail "--.....&-,a~ 5 Bdnns or 4+ den. Big ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 ba. $395, 2 bdr m $340. Fullerton Ave., l blk E NEWPORT 548·1168 Ott l. 559·06S2/9Sl·0820 ~ --1-r view. New cpts, drapes H.l's FtNEST Playground & pool. ol Newport Ave. & l blk BEACH ---------M.rchmtC~ paint & Beautiful! 'Kids SpanlahF.5tateLiving! 5e·9SS6from12-7PM. So.olBay.631-0397. ----------Villa Balboa Condo, new Roommate wanted t Elegaotbldg.,in hei:of OK. no pets. Sl.250/mo. Beautiful park-like sur· LUXURY LIVING Beautifully located I & 2 An adult community on I~ 2Br" pool & rec rm, share 3Br house in C.M · Hunt ing ton h , AvaUoow. Alt644·1156 roundings. Terraced In quiet Adult Complex. Sparlllingclean2 Br. S430. Br. $330 & up. Child OK. the Back Bay. Spec ruce view. 260 Cagney Jacuzzi. $2SO + util. w /spacious offi - pool. ~nken gas ~bq . Spacious 1 BDRM. APT. Fenced yard, utils paid. Gas inc Id .. No pets tacular Spa, 7 swimming ln. S700 mo. 675·3007 5'8-8410 eves. skylights, wetbar, ~on· 4 Br. 2 Ba. Nr bch, pool, sparkl.1ng fount a ins . Dishwasher , fireflace, Refrig. Small child OK. 842·1652 pools, 8 lighted tennis 2 B Adults Fu Female Rmmate Wanted ference rm, M< per'Wll"ft. tennis, mo/mo $795 + Spac1ou~ .room s . cathedral cei iog , ~~.J!!S0·r !!'!.08W.allace ----------courts, bi.ke trails, put· <X"r~urn ,$350nope~21 ~ to shr Condo N.B/Cdm Plus, super 2,000 sq.ft. secur. Newport Shores. Separ.ate dining area. balconies,pool&spa.NO -~ .,....,,. TENNISANYONE? Ung green. Bachelors. 1 · · · medical bldg., welh_ap. Avail Dec l . 963·6682 ~alk·~ closets, h.ome· PETS. 1395 mo. & up. EASTSIDE New 2 Br. 2"2 Ba. Condo. and 2 bedroom~ apart· nilh. St. 645-4718. av a i I n ow $2 5 0 m pointed at 75< per , ~A ft. like k:1lchen & cabinets . MESA PINES Din. rm .. Micro-wave. menls, and townhouses ls.. Cletntnte 3876 644-TaW For details caU.t Hrbr. View. 4 Bdrm, 2 ba, newly decorated. $'995 in· cl gardener . 55t·4288 Walk lo Huntington 26SOHARLAAVE. CCMllltryWoods trash compl., elec. gar fromS449.00permonth ••••••••••••••••••••••• REDCARPE't Center. SPMC 549.2447 1 3 Br, study & den, 2 bath, opener. Tennis, Racquet· Sa OnJ Jan;iboH1r1e1e1 ARt d Studio a~l with ocean M/F needed to shr 2 Br 2 . .v 2 Bedroom·unfurn. $480 lri·level, frplc, sk"l:f.' ht, baU pool J'ac sau No l n oaq1.11n s oa . Ba C.M. apt. S225 pr mo. 893•1351 •t. 1 • • .. na. 1714)"•• 1900 view. E ec. furn. $275 .,, 3BedroomTownhouse Stunning, large l Br deck&patlo.Nochil ren pels.lor2Kids0K.S750 .,..... mo.SeeMgr,J32 Encino utilpd.556-0289aft5. _ 688 sq. ft. well lo~ted Big Canyon twnhse. Lux "* unfum$.515 Garden Apt. Pool, Rec or pels. S64S mo. Avail. mo. Call 964 ·2566 or Oceanfront for Winter ln,Apt C,S.C. Fem. roommate lo shr North Costa Mesa Q(pce. ury 2Br. 2Ba. Spec Adults.nopets. area. S3SS. 710 W. 18th. Dec. 15th. 180 E. 21st St. 973-2971Agt no fee I Ren ""· . h d •-Park next to your clpor tacular golf crs. & lake Utilities Free! St. Days 646·4262: eves ·· · lals ... um1s e "'un· MOVE IN IMMED. spac. 3 br, 3 ba CdM hsel . _ · . Se 2 T ' ,,.r-. • ., L I fum.Brolter.675·4912. w/2 fem. med students. Fully equipped. w1th view. p. car gar. en· I ~"""""'· ove y 2 & 3 Bdrm Move in immed. Freshly t / b els & nis, pool. spa. Lse · LAQUINTAHERMOSA AVAil... now. 2 BR, pvt Townhouses . ~ara ge , OCEANFRONT painted & cleaned. 1 & 2 S300 760-1323 carpe' a c, ca in $900/mo. 644 -2416 aft 16211 Parkside Ln, 1 blk 1 . deck overlooking golf C EASTSWIDE d patio. laundry fac S450 & 4 Br. 2 Ba. Duplex. Wood Bdrm, 1 ba. S29S·S36S. · st~redagce llRTea s oHn~bboly lPM W of Be h 3 blks S f ,....,.,....,,. new cn•r & pa1nl __._. oo s -..5 Call 2 96 Ref Lovely furn. master b pn c . a om, ai: r . I . ac • . o ~~..... ..,... . __ ... ' ..,, . 13/5 ·7202 or beam ceilings carpets. rig optional. Carports ,., Edinger. S42S mo. CaU 546·5880, Very spacious l br loft 714/960-7347. drapes, alf buill·in s & laundry rm. Walk to w/balh, Mesa Verde pool Baker Professional ~fUg· Versailles studio condo. 847·5'41 askforBillor Pam apt with patio. No beach 498.-4209&496 3233 home.545·5105or557-753 957-1900. ' Adults only . $500. chlldrenorpets.$405 mo. THEWHIFFlETREE Enclosed garage with · · _ .. 3b 2b I I I · 2 B 1 Ba , .. "" t $425 . I washer/dryer Furn. or 1.L . '"" 5:30 . 770.2313,or768·5600. Agt. r, a , ove y ge unit IO r . . -"" 0 . Avail. Dee. 1st. 180 E. Luxury Adult units at af uni Sl500 I d ..-. rrs· new, ocean View . 4-plex. Clse to ocn, tennis D/washer. garage. 1 21St St. Days 646·4262: for~ble living. 1,2 & 3 occ::i,~~cy. TSL %~:;,t split leve.1, 3. bdrm .. 2.ba Corona del Mar o(fifes, M/F shr 5 br: 2 ba hse. lst fir & 2nd fir walk:up. C M. Spa Nr So. Coas Easy access & park.ing. Plua & fwy . $225 + 1/ NO lease req. Reas. UDO ISLE • 28r, 2Ba, frplc, elec. gar. door, l950/mo. 675·6948. ~.or 793·•955. courts. & jogging trak. 548·3394 eves~9543. Br. Well decorated. 642-l603 · apt .. bwlt·ms, carpet, S650 16672Algonquin . Olympic size pool. light· · ---drapes, 2 carports. laun· 846.5111 or 846.5531 K. Easts1de 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. No 2bdrm, 1.,.,ba, adults only, ed t . J dry ·u ..,_ .. Ill. .....r. Incl. gas. $.575, 151 closed gar, gd E side kenrusli. court, acuzz1. NO FEE! Apt. & C.Qndol fac1 ty, adults. no utils. 641·4193 rates. 752·1830 . ~---------1 ""' ,,....., par 'ke landscaping 'I rentals. Villa Rentals. pets, $.500/mo . lease. + dep. 851·9647 loc. $425. 646-2280. From $360. 846-0619 675-'912 Broker Av a i I. Nov . 1 7. c a I l For rent w /option to I"._ 3744 · bd I h B B ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2bdrm, l 'nba, blt·IDS, pvt 2 rm, lba. $400/mo. owner. 714-642-0138 pure ase. 5 r . 3 a . deck gar $450 lse only lbdrm, lba. $360/mo.1 OCEA....,.FRO ..._. Apt. to shr, Dana Pl. 2Br , :.JOsq. ft. approx Prjvate 2ba. St. wht male. S2 bath. Frwy convenint. mo. 1st /18$t. 493-0987 Near N w p. Fr w & canal front. l blk to ocn, 28.r. lBa, adlts, pool, ten· 7ro-04ss0;760-0409. · Encl gar. pool, jac. 4091 " " ~nts hrnished comml.mlty pool. tennis, rus, S5SO mo. l yr lse. West Bay St. 3 Br. 2 ba, duplex com· or u..fwftished 3900 SUOO mo. Call Barbara :>48-0412 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, frplc, gar, I pletely refurbished. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 968-4234 • Bristol. ~25 mo. A. ail. 12·1-80. 765 SL Clair ~te Shr 4 Br 3 Ba hse w /pool. #0. Costa Mesa. 645~ jac. frpl. non·s mkr,1----------675-6840 'Newport leach 3769 1 nrSo. Cst Plaza. No pets Large Bach. Built-ins, • 1 & 2 BR Pitio Apts. ~~{~Y l e a se $895 •••••••••••••••••••••••! $550. 644-1103 carpets, drapes. Near • Dishwashers & BB O's Seawiad Village Dana Pt. $300. 661·2293 START ,8 f .'., S.aAna 3280 Large 3 Br. 2 Ba. 4·Ple x.1 Fairview & Baker. • Pool& Rec. Room Large 3 br, 2 ba, patio. New 1&2 bdrm luxury ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio, garage, n e wl _545-__ l882 __ . ------• Garden landscaping r I dsh h I d adult apts in 14 pl•s 3 Br lux condo, nr S.C " Brandford Condo nr S.C. I carpet. 1040 B Valencia. Bike to beach. 2 Br. 2 Ba . • Jog 10 Beach & Shops Plaza, 2 story, 3bdrm, $48S.Nopets.54S·7983. I Bullt·ins, garage. $450 rp C, w r, new y e-cor . S650 m o . Agt , from $415, 2 bdrm from 673-9060. $505 + pools, t ennis, plaza, S250. Shr util ,J•, 546-5284 545-6010 RIGHT ;;! l .,.,ba, dbl gar, pool. lrg Avail. now. freshly p8'nt· _mo_._646-4 __ 925_·-------.r-1 patio area, immac. $525. ed 2 & 3 br apls, J.D I NEAT&CLEAN t SEA waterfalls. Quiet 2 Br. Apt. Garage, for cooking paid. From ponds! Gas & heating San Fem. shr 3 Br hom w/working mother & teen nr Fas h . I s l S250/mo. 644~173 with ...... Offlc. at Udo Mariwci-1\ 968-92:22,842·6349. Property Management. Westside 2 Br. 1 Ba. 8br, 2ba. frplc, 2 car gar. 1 751·2787. Private fenced patio .. F NVIHONl\1F N T <)(iJ7 H.irndlnn H H patio. pool pets. 1801 Adults , no Diego H. 15th. St Frwy drive North on $450 I Beac.h to McFadden then Viti~ t:.'l •. 1 SC Plaza area '600/mo 2 Br. l lh Ba Townhous;. S425mo. Avail. now Calli---------- S200 sec. no pets 497 4924 YEAR·ROUND FUN: I Adults. no pets. $395 mo. 556-65l6 MARJNERS WALK ~JG2 4SOO Newport Heights 642-7340. West on McFadden to Sea wind Vi 11 age Will S hr m y plus h . spacious H B hme .l Micro, frplc, '-.i m1 bch S26S 111cl a II 536 8090 Spec1o l ro1es ,f ~ l~ed by Dec IS 1osr eves/wknds Social Ac11v1tres 01· 646-9507 Lg 2Br, lBa. nr Mesa recr"r •Free Sunday V de Sho ·1 D I Lrg 2 Br 2'"2 Ba From lBr. Coodo, plush cpls, & *'-· All Adult, no pets. 2 Br. 2 17M )893-5198. Ba . From $425. Pool. spa, Rooms 4000 refrige, d /washer 1ncld 1290 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Quail Meadows condos nr Enderle Center. 2bdnn, 2ba. frplc, din area, pool, jac, tennis courts. beaut rec center. landscaping. SS50 with encl yrd & patio SliOO. Call 833·8700 days or ~I eves. 1298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Story twnhse, A/C 4 bdrm, 21,; ba, pool. spa Garage. Kids ok. $620. S!&-1835 eves & wknds. 558-1300 ext 2464, ask for Nancy. Avail. now , 3·4br. 2ba. new crpt. new paint in & out, 1645 w/gardener . &If>. 13S8. 846-5792 Hames FwniaJM-d or """"'9islwd 3 3 0 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •New 4 Br. 3 Ba. 2 Story. Frplc. Near Chapman & Hwy 55. Orange. $795. No pets. 549-3232. 641·1460. Brunch• BBQ s . Par SPACIOUS 2Br adult apt. er ps, avai ec · S475. t•es •Plus muchmore ~beam ceilings, lots 2912 Peppertree. s379 Lrg 3 Br. with yard SS75. Roommate to share apt . ..........•........... Across N.B. Golf Course. 21..0-1 200 Sq. Fr. Up 10 I mo. Free Re~ mo sse-4718 857 2898 Near Hunt. Harbour. OAEAT AECAEATION: wood. Incl. frige. No · ' · ~ non·smoker, $185/mo in· Tennis• Free Lessons pets. S38S/mo. 673-8803 or EASTSIDE Nu kitch. 2 br, cl u ti I . C a 11 Lind a Lag\ma Beach Motor Inn. ~. 985 No. Pacific Coast BEACON BAY. 2 br, 2 ba ~· Laguna Beach . Wei Bors 1 (pro & pro shop). i 548-7356. l ba, lmmed. No pets . 2 Br. garage apt Quiet , 642-01.98 . Health Clubs •Saunao VILL.AM·DERA $375.631-6155 Adults pre fe rre d -----------l 675 a552 ~ apt of BAYFRONT .. Weekly Kitchen home, terlllis avail. utils available. Low winter Worerfronr Serr1ngs' H S --Hardwood fl oor s . N r Spectacular view. Securi· -V ~ yoromassage • wim-2 Br, 2 Ba. gas stove & NEW 2 br, 2 ba, frplc, beach ~"" r""-7838 -ming 011v1ng Range d h b · 1 E 1 · -.N • ...,., I ty gate. Harbor Ridge .. Ch . . ,;oc incl. $780/mo y r I y · I rates 4!H-~ 675-86&1 · M, nonsmoker no drugs • s w r inc . n c gar .. paUo.Nokids,pets. Lg f 5145 /mo + I ite 01.ce. private_ o_ince BEAUTIFUL APART· ~rages. Childr.en OK. $4.50. 759·1914, 494·2962 DELUXE 2Br 2Ba. l mile Npt Shores. across from e urn or uofum room avail 1mmed w1lh!!c MENTS: Singles 1 & pe . · -· 1 . ex· to beach. AduJts. no pets "' -ct g offices. Npt h. ls .... en Ut I~ bch. Bach •-2 Bdrms Ill nice C.M. 4 br home housekeeplllg. 760-9307. . · . · · 2 BeCJ rooms •Fur cepl lights. 2324 Iden. 1 bri frplc, crpl, drapes, $450/mo.960-4145. fromS34S.640-S078 KJt. wash/dry. Fwy, col 3Br, 2Ba in Newportl S200 pr mo. lease. qm. n1sheel & Unfurnished 642-1213 paUo. $310/mo. +se~ E . Spacious & Private lbr. ~~07~:: 5~5 deposit. Heights Female, 20·30. ~tible professsional fie· •ACJull Llv•ng •NoPets PrNE BLUFF APTS ~~dulls. no pets 3~·:~·1~~·rd:=~~rg:; apt 1n the Bluffs. No Employed & n eat sired. 645-4212 • MoCJels Open Claily Spac. 2 Br. 2 Ba Adult children or pets. $550 N B 0 c ea n fr o nt I S2SOmo. 631-1532 Pri 1 ---...U .-9 to 6 Complex. Patio, view. lbr unfurn .. no pets, no SS50+dep. 213 1587"7779 851·0494 wtkitchenelte $260 /mo. me comer oc P to Oakwood frplc . enc l gar., gas c hildren. $280 /m o Luxury 2 Br I '-11 Ba. blk Ltll pd 2306 W Ocean Lge br, ba. shr 3 br hse.1 4.500 sq ft. F\Jll service, Garden Apartments s tove. dishwsr. s pa, 642-3780 from beach, $45-0. 216 6th ••Versailles Luxury !Br, front673-4154 fem 21+ . nonsmoker. modern. glass blilg lndry rm. From SSOO. St 960-9027 or 894-8761 view. pool.spa, secure. Back Bay area. N. B. $20< 646-6303. Newport Beach/So. 1700 16th SI IOover a1 •61h1 (714) 642·5113 Newport Beach/No. 880 Irvine 131 •6th• (714) 645-1104 SPMC 631·6107 l Br. Stove, refrige, pool. $WO mo 760-8390 Elegant Suite Fashion I '>':I n s 642 3738 --------,.., gas paid. Adults. ref's. 2 br. den, 2 ba condo. New · Patio, $395/mo. Gar SSO. + u 1 · · NEW EXE~ SUITF.;i Nice new adult lBr & 2Br $310. Call 646·0983 carpel, drapes. frplc. 2· BAYFRONT-VJEW non-smkr640-6594 Rm.mte needed to shr 2b BESTO.C.ft:>CATlOi'I garden apt. for rent . 2 B Co d SC car gar priv 11'atio. rec Newport Tower condo. 2 . CondQ, Call 559·6927 afte 200 N. Tustin Ave. I •min. Garage. 642·5569. •Pl rSA nT o '!ear I ' facil. ss00,840·1137. br, 2 ba, sec., pool, docks fUJc?m & pvt bath, It. kit 4:30PM S.A. & Nwpt Fwys . Lge aza. . enms. poo . ayail. Overl~oks Lido pnv. Nr UCI & f1 uo.r, prof decorated oft•s. 2bdrm, 2ba condo near spa. S480-S500. No pets . $t75. lge. cheery 2br , 2 ba , Village, Catalana. Lease. frv!ne Poo l. tennis ROOMM ATE NEEDE Receptionist. tele phone S.C. Plaaa. pool, rec S49-3232or641·1460. blt·ins, nr ocean. great aiO/mo. Days 76-0-1933. avail.552-7566 f<X" olde Laguna Beac serv. xerox, conf. h n. room. laundry. all bit· ms area. No pets. 833·3307 eves 548 9094 h v t & refrig, water & gas pd. 2 Br. l~ Ba . Adults. no -· · LOVELY ROOM c armer. ege arian, Sec serv avail fq>om '-----------'I Kids OK, no pets ssoo pets. S500. tst. &: last + NlCE Adults l Br. patio, Near Hoag Hosp. 2 Story. $275 pr mo, pvt bath. nonsmoker S2SO incl uti S275 mo Last month ftee mo. 645--2016 dys, 499·3736 S200 secunty. Will show pool, garage, frplc $315 2 Br. t y, Ba Ommg Rm. patio & tel Xlnt location. 494-1297. ___ w/6 mos. agreement·' Prestigious Versailles eves &wkends. Sun. 1().4 at 205 Ogle St mo. 842-9583, 642·5251 L.aundl)' hook· up $485. Dana Pt. Refined person. Lar Bd E d 953-0937 ----------e. 213n80-7836. 642 6629 noo·smkr_ 493.3115 ge rm m asts1 e ----------condo. 1 mini br. interior .... ~RT 1 Br cottage. sml yrd. 3 ·· · Costa Mes a House lSOsq ft uround noor,'all decor. & furnished UART;ENTS I & 2 bdrm, S32S·S418 +-blks from beach. S315 pr 2bdrm, $.500/mo. M /M. Room·shr Ba with t furnished $170. 645-9970 util paid~ SllO/mo Total (213)941·2372 . sec. Fenced ya rds. mo.30612thSt.546-3576 Walktobeach.avail12·1. K itchen , laundry Eve. cost.(TI4)840-1964 1 Br. S2SO + utal. 2 Br adults, no pels Inquire Owner/Agt 559 5164 eves privileges. Eves 545·4554. 1 Orange. New exec home, ~erupt:~U:,Tkil~=~er~~·~~ :z:·,.,1:'~t!!::ly.No 2035 Pomona 208 . $:115. Lrg 2 Br. 1Y2 Ba. · · · Sl70. Woman seeksmaleroom l?.Ssqf\,groundnoo~.,au 4 Br 2ba, 3 car gar, ' · MS-5433 garage. 7731 Ellis B. 1 Br Oceanfront Sl.200 mo. yr. mate to share 2bdrm utiJ paid, l200/mo 'Ull81 micro, mod bltns, xint l ba. $425/mo winter. :MSOJ:i:~'!s~lvd. · also.847-1901. ly lse. 4 Br. 2 ba. frplc. Room/kit. priv. wanted. twnhse ln Irv Has al cost.840-l964. '--. nr Or•n"'e Hi'll R••t. 1525/mo yrly. Utll incl. ----------Close to shopping & trans. -""·m or unfurn Agt M /non smoker C M am men ·1t 1· es Non ...., -... ~ 1_fTT_S._5_7_1o _______ 2 Bdrm 2 Ba, Townhouse. 2bdrm. lba, gar, adults. UTILITIES PAID ;oo_ll99or67S.6160. . N.B. ar~a. 493·WO. . ' smoker. likes ca ls, prof l•----------915-.;...' m.. __ 3'84_____ E side 2 yrs old ••90 ref. $350. 546-S833. •CONVENl ENT md 20's up, tenms op NEWPOIT CEHTElt C llllldu•t111ts Neu Beach. Ni~e 1 BR, . ' ' ~ . C.. H •QUIET l..arge 1 Br. l Ba. Unfum. Vacafiolt R...tals 4250 · I u.fwwl .... d 3425 newly detorated. Open 557-4700 ext 2312 days. ISTMAS CAS •HEA'fED POOL SJ25 ....................... l1ona . $250 + u ti I . l man executive ofo.dtlo't .. ••••••••••••••••••••• house Sunday ll·2 at 305 640-24216 eves/wk.nds. nus ad can be worth SJOO For adults over 25, no Call 838·8081 ""'~ I 559-50S2 Ive. mess. entrdressan. csae'1oprmesot.ig!~."!~ • 32nd St or call 536 9922 2 Bedroo · 1 to you 2 Br l 'h Ba t;ts. l Br. from $34S. 2 Mvv" •A N VIEW ...... .._ New 2br + deo 2Vzba at · · m In super oca· TownhOuses, poo. I, laun: ~sT .... EW..,,.RT VIL' ... S Female roommate want orS86-1177 .._.. .,__ E t •-· SHORT TER tioo. Carpeted. Adult on· r. 2 Ba. $425. 16072 Spr· .,,..,.; " ..-v -ed to h 4bd h ,._ ________ _ .... -. .. .-x:.:. n ry, ....,nots, M ~· gas & water paid. ingdale, 840·1065 before Lge 3 br, 2 ba upper apt. TIHHIS ClUI s are rm ouseJ·---~-----~~~·ur:~ly& ,;;~~·~~: FUm. 3 bdrm, 2 ba apt. ~: W:.c:m..~~7~ ant to 6 mos. S400 to 6PM. No pets.. *675. mo. Agt..I Near Palm SpriJlgs.1·2 & :~~~ ~~~·1~z:'~~·e~. GROUND FLOOR t1 avail. late Nov, 962·9757 Weeklyormon_tl;l!Y. $4U. Hiatli!'tcJon 675-8170. 3 bedroom villas avail&· CAMPUS&QUAIL lfter6PM Agent, 67.S-8170 2Br. l~"Ba . 610 Jo Ann St. OLIVE TREE te.tiow 3842 '""""· 3 Br. 2 Ba. Apt. ble. Weekly' m o.nlhly 646-1372eves. 1200sq rt at 90< ~ . No children. Small dog ......, and all 7 1 hted ,._ '" Univ. Park 3-4 bdrma 2.,., Luxury new fum ashed 2 considered. $410. mo. 2190College,548·7367 ....................... Block to beach. Enclsd annu y . ag -9'" FULLSERVICE bdrm condo. Near Hoag 642-7344 CONDO. 30• boat slip. Bay garage, patio, all blli I UPnis courts. Close ,to far •...t 4 3 50 Mullan Realty 540-~ be. great Greenbelt Loe. Hospital. 1·879-2174. · MOO mo. 1 bdrm adult con· view. 2+den, prestigious ins. Adults only. no pets. 1f'a n c h o MI rage 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _____ _.:_ _ __J,....__ Tennis, pool, apa avail S400-IWS. 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. do w/rec. racll. 559·5591 Huntington Harbour . Yr I y . TS L Mg ml . Restaurant Row. Agent, SgJ , suitable for storage. 2300 SQ FT. ·lt l2/U750PP552·1311 U>vely 2 br. right across Carpets, drapes, pool, att4pmorlv msg. S.1050 mo. R.H.R. Agt, 842-1603. (114)32JM097. E side location $40 Beautiful refurbi1\Ld Avail, lmmed. All new Crom beach, $650/mo. ln<iry rm. Im med. oc· 1 Br, patio, w/garage, 731 673-7300 "CALIFORNIA" 545-«>10, S46-52.84 low cost omce sli:re pl~h 2 br condo o'look· 96&3263. cupaocy. Adults only, cat• W.18lhSt. $350. 646·6725, lntne 3144 L;:p,:x.31 Bh~~s~ ~~oe~ Private & group areas Ing fowatain It courtyard, Versailles Condo OK. TSL Mgmt. 6'2-1603. 64().9800. Ask for Faye. •••••••••• ••• • ••• ••••• • With b t If I Palm $.,rings 2 car garage for rent. Vic: Ideal for compute,..~· in ulet ,,,_ i Sin I .._ Ba d d It oceao. eau u Iris 6: 3r d. St. Cc:tM . seardl. design, etc. -• Q VIAD e, across I e $4.SG-$49$ 2 Br. l~ Ba. DmmPoW 3126 1 ot 1 coo o. a u s, view. S7S01no. 675-8018 ' $15/mo. 758-0173 RlOtrl' REALTY from Harl Park. A II 552-174', &31·7765 Twnhae. All bullt·ins. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool, tennia, no pet.s, The Condominium Rentals t79-8S33 ..a adult. "50/mo. Must see. Patio, yard. Lndry rm. l & 2 Bdrm. Garage, Lakes. $47S. 548-6357 2bdnn, lba, yearly. upper I Costa Mesa, 731 W. 18th--------....,.-- 660 S. Glassell, #12, Sm child, sm pet OK. D/waaber, clean. Close ORANGETREE, lbr, lba apartment . decks , LwturyCoodominiums. st. S4S. single garage. NWP'TNOMTA 4'7-.5880. Immed. occupancy TSL bea c b. From $34 5 condo end unit on water 675-2897, 875-3504. Completely Furnished. 641Mm5, 640-9900. Ask for R.&n' ALS ra Brand new· 2 Bdl"m. t \.'J ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mgmt. 8'2-t803 ~5153 Alt. 5PM. Mr. TenniS court.a, pool, Jae: WESTCUFF 2 bdrm. 1..., Cowllry Club Setting. Faye. 2 Rental Spaces Approx. beUw.lcarprtl'a.Good ..... , ...... 3107 lBdrm.DeJ~eApt·New Blain.· Avail 12/l. $425/mo. ba.Town.house.IS3Smo. Golf,TenniaAvall--.. __ .__._. 4400 S501q.ft.arup.lnch.1.tln1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• irrt u""" 1 able ts 1 1 R l ~.......... . .. ~ ... ~ •-~so T.:~so Santa Ana loc., no pet.a. 4rapes, clean, roomy, lbdrm apt $360. 2bdrm -·· -. Adult.a on y, no pets . 1728 a pee a a es ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... _, "' -~ $'50. Ph 675·1171 or Br. 2 Ba. Deluxe. quiet. Mature attults. aptMS0.586-0741, ....,._leach lt41 BedfordLane.$48-7533. forourClieotaonl,y. Newport Blvd. ;a la .,,._,A-. ::er:;~:,eioG':i':f:· iJ':,~ $325. Security u oo. 768·'541. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Br Lwtwy Penthouse Weekly.Moathlyaod Maa.5"11hnager':' lbr, lbe pool, ar shopplna. s...... ~:/ f:; Ftat~";r 2 Br. 2 Ba. Pt. Niguel Con· <kean111 l"Ollt, 2bdrm. 2ba. Ve~alUes. Near ocean: Weekend Rentals. ...._.. • ....., o tr15Jmo. La,(UDa Nlauel CM · · · · do. W11her/Dryer. Pool frpic. deck, $850/m o. Comp. redec. Vu of lush Call : l714;328.-11 ~Aire• •1•~• , ..................... .. .... 911.o418 .,M• JIZZ · · 6 tennis . ssoo mo. Ultraolean.<&W7·1725. crtyrd ft nn. Sec bldg. "~lll!llilt111 1Nstorelcoltlcesp-_ee-.i Ci:iNJ>o&mALSec. Br Fr 1 t t Laree newer 1 Br. with 4G-6700or881·352e Bachelor apt beaut. pool. IY'!_'i_rec fac. S5SO CAnn:DRALCANYON ~=--: re.MOnablera~. ,._1"_ •• P~_cr!ci~t' • v, aaraie. Adults, no peta. Br U ocean vtew p~ 1arden mo'.All.,790-8817. COUNTRYCLUB· ~--.,.._... SOOto2700~Ml Gile l:'Gol, Spa, Tennl1, ........,.q ... a, no sam S.4788 13 ,f1, ba_, lae v rm ttl ' 1 ., ..... _....' MESA VERDE l)t..• lllr,Jaenrbeb,1'90/mo. pets. llf15.3Z2 HeUotrope · · w /h'l>lc, 1ar. ss2s. se nc. woman pre· Qlff Haven 2 Br. l ba, ~ "I"' DrM•2112orlM%·4'14 Ave.87MOGN .Openl1·4 112 Br. 2 Ba. l'ownhouae. Martham~.•IM-3872 ' "°°·~ S300·5. h1>1c, cpta/drpa, stove. 1=Nes:~E.~ 2 Br 1 Ba So or PCH FrplQ, balcoa.y. M50 mo. I 2~bdrm, t~b•. frplc, Ofder adult., no pets MOO 36-517 Cat.Jtedral 54ir._4121 1-c.llllo lbr, I\.\ n•, adults only ·S,OO /mo· 1 Cal11314110 Kathy or VI· 1f:a: ~alr~~ c,~a5~5~. aar. ocean/canyon view. yriy. 5'8·5308 Ca9')'00 Drive .-·h• -/mo C.11. for :::.for 541-~bett-•. : vtan, l *.a&n · ·:pvt road. U U /ino . 1 hcMeltom beach. Lrg ~ PaltnSprio1•. ICOU.C .. TM 'N81CM,upto 4700a~t\ caUSl7.-Mr. Zet ry I Br nice clean clote to l ! -~. 28 r, fretbly painted. ~'::!te:!it, W IT t •vall al prime co Ir. -=••• ....... r1 Jbdrm, Zba, pvt a.hop • 'tranap. Pret.,2br, 2ba, $630.1br,1 ba, T\Qycott"'•e 1 br walk to . •1mo.-.ma. I .............. ~ t7Ut 6 Newport 8 d. tv--...-• bteehacc:aa,openbfam j I I 50 1.i..,. $330. Dlshwub er • -• ' 1 -.-..ivaaultH -.-.-. ...... •••••••••••••1 ~el Un•. •&ts I m o . e ma t +. '..,, ttovt. ell·J.m baacb, empl. adu t, no Vllla Balbo• Condo. 1Br, 1 LfeB&t Bear Cabin ill ......... tolat.lan. Wltb1-·-'-'~-----"'4l11"-- .... ..._.. 1706 i •au. I rr5-mt -do11, $315 Incl. utlls den, 8ay vfew. '700/rno., Pool table. color TV, 2J complete aupport Newport ltC)(k.rnSto ._ ...... •••••••••••••• 1 jAduJt I 81 2 <Ba, lr1 1Shu-. 2 Br. l~ Ba. Super •tm 752·2•04 dn . 5'2·5'71 trpk, .ap. &4. 54$-911 .-vlcet. omet. Nr (*t omc .._ =l£S. ..UI lacl. ,1 Br;'J'!-&tov.• retri11.n- 1 cloNte. drapes, Ira ncl. Q:lado. Quiet. lflnl ~eaa Cbmf~l 2 Br. 2 BA. 2 ev.t/ I TYtmt-oea1 air. Jerr)'IU/411· ~ . c .. lu1 •d2.1..'!t loc. p.Uo. pool, 1420/iao., view. '230 \.\ u1J11 . frplu-. lar11 dect, ~ what you want Ln ,,_. wtaa& JOU want.la I · . , mo .. -... _ MMOJ~-· m.2111. ..,.... ..... ~ Da11.yPf1otc1uamtda. O!if PUata..m.cta. 1W•Adlle.lpt Ml·M1• w..a.w._.. • e t D d .. . .. , II • 1l .. 4 OM. Pl&.O) ffidal ....... W,.1• ' ;~! • .;Te. 11.J ,.: >: 1.1] .~ i J"Ll ,:· 1'1 ;-11r:· ) ..;! ~ . ... > ;,, ~·~· 11 t . t, h:; I .~ IJll I .;:•~· ~ -.. ~lili'1 ---........ .~ .¥ 1 ....... I' c I • ~ .. M ~ "' -lllMM .. E •• •••,•••,••••• --·===••••••• •• .... ••••••••••••••••• !~~!.~•••••••••••••• !~.!.:••••••••-•••••. :....!!!~••••!••••••••• :.:._f.:£~~••••• "™A·P'l~llll~':'!!ll••••••• ,. _.,, !l· 1r -r ~ ... ,I U aetl . •••• .. •••• ...... ••• .. •• lw ._.U ._1• •A&TIMI loeUeper •1 111 6 ...._ cleu. D..llC.'T'alClAN·Prictd l:lpei......._. 9d/ mubt· w.a& a &&ALLY a.&AN hllldq•P...,... Pal•ter, aHaoaable I' 'Z'• -, ....... llf.mt ·~ Tu •'-•n per wuk Otllr "dlH••ft . wlatl rtatlll·free utlmate on 'nl ....tive •I m9dla JIOUS&? Call Glqham Prcl. won. ~ .... 1. Ratel all Ruel work, I.._ n.-w Plual•I" a...l~hftfor CfClll.-~C1-•• ~or .... lljobe. ..-perieac. will create Glrl,.,_all,M5-5lZI Rabl ... e.547-Gll "-9ee1Uolla....,. C& 9McJl al• , •IU ••all IH laeu u llv, 4'a rm. Ma SU. A\lfl ~..,.. 17s.o351 print ada. mul&ellnl/ aiu... ltUiliOt will clean ~. New C.ramic Ule I•· ,, ..._. rm sr • COl9et. sio cbrl .-. ..._.. radio •l'OU houM ..-1 Aoo R f "-at/int pellltla1 by prov.. •p,.ara~e • ' ,. _ ---· ~ a. ~ .Uainate pet 'hp Q.aality, J>epeodable newaletten'. broeburea Bnace ";$99f · e '· Richard Sinor. St. lie. SIJ/ROU..INSTALL.£D nt. a,.. . .,..._ .. fi ~ • • .... ..-.. • ..:............... odar. Cpt r.paJr. JJ Yl'9 s.niee. a .... Ratel. 18 MdP.R. c.urrs-uao . . Im. Try me 83f.W5, 24 l create CUilom UP · ••t .• ··••••l •. ~ .................. o.iu .. s.wlroaaear.a upw. Do work myaell ynaperieeeti.531-S065 I' ... ,. 11 Exp. lady to elean your hn ......_..a111 . .-.orao :i-,,.. G • .• ~AllAICE a.t................ a.rs.5Sl.0101 .. ••-•·I .... :::. ................ home.Reuonablerates. AGAPE FORCE ...... /ltJllt ;~~grv 1-'tl ..... -.rr21 w.o.r.earpetclea.oe~. ••••-................. Home la:aprovea;nent. n -.100lorMS-9292 PaintintCompany . ....................... c::w..k'ftlelerYice. tfaiHd tedaat:f"!':f C·t:rdtt u I Sleam Clea 6 Upholl. ell• •JM.... ~1eer. Penctn1. tbmeca..aiq+ ... +what1 3GeneraUouot i9tucco 6 PWUr Patclt, n. all. .... _, befoH ...._Mni-. AJlworll .. ua.u..tt•..ttU..t.\t.!.t.! .. Wort par. Tnlell llount Law o 8 • r v l c e. ble.131.uN Ca118udl 'nstuff Pailltin1 Excellence no jcJlt too 1m. quick 6 lllm•aftepm, Chat8e. · ~ ••tr r••· ~~mJ'lfm urit....,,1' ~.=:•s>e rree Est. delp ror hire. no Job t.oo tor-..ia. SU·OIM 53M'701 cleenMS4m.MH111 f,..s..,1ce , ~. Gery W lion , l't•-.J.n::L.1 C1••/C••u• .nall.Chrta. '7q41e1f••1 ExteriorPaintin1 Ne9tpatcbelfttenurea ..................... .. Illar. Mf..aotT ••••••u•••••••••••••• Ga.rdenina/Lanchcapin1 494-1154. t.•••••••a••••••••••••• Speciallall·1t.ucco re-,,_.... ltJ..14Jt TRmJCDatGN: ..... C.,.•1r J'OUDd1Uoa1. retalnln1 Tree Trlmmlnl 6: awn •novat1n1 pair. waterproofina· OrnHlHtal pruoint • ......... •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• wall1. 1lab1, patio•, Removal, II~ Clea.o· JAOC OF ALL TRADES Ber m u cl • " S t · aandbla1tln1, custom •Ptildl ............ Sculpturinl, toppl'n•, DJ1"9ays. Pe.r•tna lot CUSTOlllNTERIOR block Ir brlck. Lie. Up. Free Eat. lnex-Plumbinl, eJec, beattna. Aulwt1De lawm. Dave work , competitive ADTypn 5at·7113 thlNlln•, removal, 1en . E'"· Sealcoatlnf. CAllPENTllY ecz:mr:54M30t,v1. pmalve7S2-1.M9 oddJobt,~ -.-Jafter4PM pricea.Lic.bonded,inl. P.O.lea••• cleln--..141-lMI Alpbalt. 841·48 1 Bylay 142·110t Coecrete work-patios. G d I Cl • lf_l....g U•t-FJ 142·8005 ....................... Tl~ -'cl REllOl>EL/REPAIR/ dftvew•-etc Freee1l ar en DI eanup •· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... a..-.aoaa~v•"'• -·· ··-· ADD. quality work. 2nd Dmnla~lU . Tree trimmln1. ma~ Ha~M"Dum Jobi Valley lluoary. Custom RALPH'SP~ING nu-.-._. '" ....... ••••••••••••••• • a.:.••••••~•••••••••••• 191 bklr. lT yrs lo uea. laMIDce. Free est. Amit AairorRaJdy. . ftnplacea, Brick. bloCk. Prompt.2'brl, lic.,neat, =E~!,OOC:.~:r 'IUl'Oll=·llatb, Sci, Ea1. • L Lie. llr . Palombo CllllfC.. ~4 ~ ...... Quality work. ""'·llSM701 _, • SludJ ffabftj, 1 • 11 tttloa. my home. anytimeta-l3l4 ·-• .. ••••••••••••••••• Uct3111a2 913-2:925 , -.GNOorl44_...1 '11,541-15iOFrSS. tt' care. Sprinadale Child care, my C.11 . ..,_.Cle••• Haul·move-clean·up.Con· ColleleStudeotexperdin .. ,..., T"""~ ' r , H.B. Mt-4718 FATIIERf&SON ::::e..'c::'~reachool ~~~~v~6 crete removal. Dump Brickwortt/SmallJobl :::.m. any job for leas! ......... _ .................................. . 0.u BABYSl'ITING Carpentry, new &: re· · wnrenova · · truck. qui.ck aerv. Newport,Coatallesafr B-Slll Repair • Reroor. i\ll r.t aceurat. t plD& oa • .)lly home, near Victoria, model. Plana. 847·7168 Cut ector •V.YLOWntCES• f0.'1631 · J.rvtne. 17s-3175 evea "American Paintina " ~1bln1lea·rock • IBll Corred/~lects:ic, C.ll.lyrlrup.142-8482 HEYl l'maUllaround (SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• On Land1cape Main·11au11nc service 1~ ton Cu1lom brick, atone. Decor" Reaid/Comm. -compo-tar.Free other MCl'etarial wort, •byalttin1 w/home al· yrs>.Forcarpentry,cau Room add., remodel, tmance.Freeeat.21yra truck.We~d.rs lrwin· block, coocme, stucco. Free Eat. all work ell.541·5lllOPin.AvaU. bu1ine1& lettenf .re- '· >moaphere. Hot lunches. Al675-GIM. ~-=Lie. con-up.Georp,50-201.S. dowis. Call Lester Rell.Freeeat.SO-Nt2 iuaranteed.646-1'60 IOC>flM6 ~~· etc. Karen. creative play. Call CUSTOM CABINET & HAULING 5f7-0U7 ........ DAVE'SPAJNTJNG ALI.TYPES/REPAIRS V'L••· a..11t1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~10-S. Home Repair. lnl./exl. t1 l gCwfnlctlolt Clean·ups-HauUn&·Treel NOJOBTOOSMALL ....................... Servin1Area9yrs P'JtEEESTlllATES Charftenov ~-3'749 G«lc:cmtr,rouodatiouto Trim 6 R e mo va l · ORLARGE' Fr Movina? The Starvina Moat reaaonable, in-CallBob,541-07• •• ~vlns Daycare, my · ftnilh.Llcftlna.'96-6811 Gardenl n 1. Dom i,1 · eeest. , ........... Vic. 34th st. /Bal. r-a Senlce Drywtl Dave. 545-8046 Colle1e Student• have sured, Uc'd. 5118-8425 · . ...,..... -r"'· 631·tll0 srown. 1ame ad service. New 6: recovers. Repalr 1peclali1t /1tay-bu1y prictS. Reliable. 541-GIJ12 ''Let Tbe Samblne la'' Call SUmb.ine 1'indow Cleaninl. Ltd. 541-a$3 9'1.8l NB. 675-1708 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Haulin&. cl ea 0 • up 5 , #T!Jt-aslm.141·8427 Reas. Price lnt./Ext. • ''61..-I' bl b b ·u Why Pay 1tore prices. :::•H••••••: .. u•nn YARD WORK, clean·ups, garages, yds, junk, *a a...•-I Freeell. Bay area. Cuat. ~ "'" re ia e a ys1 er Buy through Carpet ln· ._.., lellture • acOU1tic. pnmlnf, aprinkler. In· trash dirt brubl tr ,,_,...,_.....en work.~Jack ·'&vall Mon·S~t. Call at a 11 er . I s e 11 Free eattm•le. Kevin stall/repair, hauling. tri~ ed~r m~v ee:· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Balboa Roofinl Co. The Roaftnl Co. for the coast Free Eat. Get one while PRO WINDOW W ASR Home ft Commercial Free !lit. Steve 6'6-~7 I~; ~wn art 2 . 30p m . WHOLESALE (cost>. 875-90llB,15'73-l.SOS Fair prices. Uc. Chris ~ e e . TendetLovln1Care PACIFIC PAINTING ~ • · Will brin1 samples. Free -.sm lot d.laabled person, my Dependable. prom p t ·c· . est Work guaranteed l4yrsSo.Cal.Roomadd1. CM ho e $850/m sen. Serving all 0 .C. ; 'ff&ve ~methmi: .to sell '! AJaO carpet layed &: re: ~ homes. comm '!. !Have something to sell? Have spmething to sell? Wby. rec:.~ate in l:~ Call abt holiday rat.ea, it's hot. 673-674.3 Have something you \\:ant to sell? Classified ad)i-do Call 642-5678 it well. 642·5678. , ~. Oass1f1ed ads do 1t well. paired. Jay.754-tWO Lie #C31111CM4. 532-5549 I Classified ads doll well. Classified lids do 1t well. hoapital? 146-l078. David -.S11Slorl39-ll86 Want Ada_ Ccnnzrtlal lndilstrial Rental 4500 lll•1lfw.t MclMy to a... S02S Lolt & Fowl SlOO '-HR Ila 5350 '91 .... 5350 Http W..ted 7 I 00 Hltp W.tecl 7100 .,...... 4475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Op:p.1 ......, 5015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••.•••••••••.••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• J1t1H••••••••••••••••••••• f ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fowld. Ladies aold nn1. PRE LAW 1tudent needs AW> inecbanic es.per. on -.a.•-\i..,srroRE South Coast 1635~ ft _at 28' sq _t. com-INVESTORS WANTED Lowell r•lea ·~•ilable-Newport Beach. Call 125.000. Will do anything FOXY LADY DIUun or ToYot• Good -" ·'·1llhy. i.a1una Beach. merc1almdareamC.M. JoinsmaU1roupinbuy. Free conaultallon. No 673-8ll07anddescribe. Leaal. Contiden tlal ~ALLONL; ~y•bmeliu.~2434 Receptionist neeclecl ~or 1,..,1111+ sq ft. SSSO/mo. l.sl &: Userul fo~ _storage or in& control of under C01t·oo obligation. loan . OVM. p .0 . Box 3242, full aervice ~Ye 1,. lllll 494•3993 s hop fa cthtles . Call valued public co Is in· quot.es. 1st, 2nd, 3rd s, re· LOST: Australian Sheep-N.B. 92111113. VISA MC AW> Mechanic: vw Ex· lalon in one ol tbe lop 1/ •• · 64.2-2B28or548·9035 itiating acquisiti0n pro-finance &: AlTD's. No dot Fem "Kali" C.M. * t7Z.1 IJI * perience Req. prr or malll in O.C. Loada or l· .Very attractive unit. p-am.Steve714/646-73'74. min I m ax. Creative area reward 730-6250 ext M1$$AG( Ftr. days 64.S-7SS9 eves benent1 ! Pleaae call ••'=~::.•hi~·~~~ F~!f B~~ s~t.~~: MaMyto Lo.. 5025 ~~~=~ease 239 Be pampered with a ~!!.~~-~~-~?~.~ 675-73'2 ,,,:-,_...,.__,nM_._. ------ l "1ln&. carpel . full bath.I Avail. 12·1-80. 675-1380. -••••••••••••••••••••• u.t: Black Shepherd, vie personal relaxina Amomot.ive WOIKJMei~ °"50 mo. Turner Assoc.. 64M262. MoMy W..ted S030 Laguna Beach. If seen or mHaate by 12 of the pre· ~DING: ~e wil: SALES PERSONS MAia S'nUSTS .._UTT ./NEED ••••••••••••,•••••••••• found call 494-2558. West lirla ln Southern g1~e ~s:ore ss ton a_ Men or women earn u.a..1. In _ __. ..6 a-..:... ... _"'r"~--------J---jl t/ REWARD' c i·r 1 J · Bartmdin& ,fr Cocktail . ~-_,.. -· '''1 1 _hlallewtal 4S00 -;;::;::. RYH Need SS0,000 for 3 years. . ,:..:.. o~~. a Ope: cl~!~: Services for Your Holi· while you learn. Up to lna _mana1er. alH 5 ·;1••••••••••••••••••••• Willpey 16%_. Secured by FOUND: sm blk t wht ~-7 d .. v· day Parties. Jeanne. $30~. monthly 81 a 1tyh1~1 ror our p~o- 1!iOO ~ft lndustnal space, ....... a/M.C. Atlintis Health ~ rnnge benefits in salon. Guaranteed 1al . ....................... ./MONEY 21ldT.D. Don.s9S5-0909 male. Shepherd m ilt, -m. •YI• wee... LS· 6'J'3.31M quallfied aaleaperson. 1re111ve run 1erv1ce :-. .. w/2 offices. 2 bath. lge Oppoi t.uty 5005 Molt JAJI.I, Trwt w ht I t an fem a I e • · Spa, 2112 Harbor Blvd, T......e S450 Vf!r/ pleasant surround· top comm .. pd vac., aci'. fiM. door. 1240M Logan....................... Deicli S035 Doberman blk /tan ea.ta Mesa. 645·3433 Br-....................... inp. Call Alan Magnon vlDCed trainina by our • .~CM. 540-9352, 646·0681 Liq. Lie. on gen. Orange • ••••••••••••••••••••••• female. Malamute male. Ing _thi~ ad for your •3 TRIPS 2 PARTIES· FODtiac/SUbaru 549.4300 traftl:inl atyle Cliredon . . ~sq ft, next to Irvine C.0.(714)646-2823or (714) Laborador male . specialJltl. KIDS CHRISTMAS Grutopportunltyforad-' .(edustrial Complex at 32H99S Sattler Mh). Co. Newport Beach Animal W EEK .RESERVE Atrr011011VE vancement. Pleue call .. ,f!Twys 5 & 40S. Multi le· , CREDIT MO All types of real estate Shelter644-3656 FIRST LADY NOW-751-4535. 54.9-3107 LOTMAM ~1116. • ... oant bldg. $850/mo. Marilyn's Cleaning & PIOILEM investments since 1949. Lost: adorable long-&CCM't.~1. fiUU Ume. Respon.alble, &>at Toolin1. All pbues. Tenn negotiable.Ample Maintenance Co. for W&JrdTDlo.11 ~~TDdllc)ht haired gray/wht c at P_...0-Cen. la,u':=~ rmature pelrsolndne~ded Pl .. ;, work, ji11. pat· parking.675·5880 . sale.548-8444. t71-6S31nt55I14S .-.-1 -·r flr--9K-or spec a ulles . - '•.... • Arr.,:g~b~ 64Z.2171 545-0611 ~"1~s:.~~ ~-c.r":;t~e~ * 972'-1345 * ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rererencea required. term. Experience re· # • ,,_ I LL. SOOS BusiMIOp' s . 5005 eo.t ..,_ Lo..1 Oceanfront. on 11 /7, MC• VISA Accepted Sdu alt & _,_Call Steve Harvey for an quired. Apply 3401 W. ... YJP 1 WMY porlwlity ColtiforT.D.'1. COVER GIRL , 11 _1._ 7005 appointment. v Fordham, Santa Ana, u••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... A Mortgage Broker . M 953 REWARD 675-4394 -• -IOY CU ... a mmi :-:..:.......... ._, Ainerican tg ·4141 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------~ l;;;;iiiiiiiiiiii;;;;~-.. -~ Lost. Gray Cocltateil. I * OUTCAU * Bia ri& drivers needed IOU.S IOYCE IOOIOC•R .....-= _ -...;::::::: YOU CAM IE Widow has m<>!'ey for 2ND Family pet. Vic. Calif. & 953-0718 MC/VISA G« a Class l lie now & D4W lnaurtDCe aaency needa or•-EWITH ... T.D. No credit c~eck. no Nebraska Lane. CM (714) 975-1107 ext 41 fo~ 64" 1..444 responalble peraon lo -..v" ,.. pnlty. For action call S.·:M86 •• info v-v AGT67S-73llanytlme · SPJU'nJALREABIN~S . •AUfO•dlle. baDdle riyroll· L-= Healtll Food BANI WIUIUY Folmd: Golden Retriever, lOUn-lOpm. FUily Uc d. Now enro1l1n1. Costa AteLaAS .. ! = t~ible ... ,_ I & Store Fem., vie. Fairview/So. C-1298 OI' 412-9034. L815 lleH Christian Pre-to won lDdepeDdfttli -2nd TD's· 2-6-~tt.TD'S Coast Dr. CM. 54().4298 s . Camino Real, Sao. school. $29.50 /wk .1 G«Mtror1•1atthe~· Salary co~.,~ A MCCeUflll t I tu ID • .... _..... Or fund new TD'S. For aft.6. Oem. Includes hot lunch & Car! ~eat ~vy stor~ lD w/experieoce. Call LiD- I • 11101 pl J cahr _....._Price lect d11 immed. quote. ·call TOMMY'S s nacks. 846. 54 2 3 es.cit.1n1 Airport In · da· 9D-CJM1 ·, eacelle•t leeae plH • t•n•tey I.EDUCED ~TU W.l.C. AGT (714)752-8261 Found : presc ri plion M6-S10 • duatrtal complex will --·---·-·-----ti 5 t t 40 S..tt-.... glasses, &7th on beach. OF NEWPORT . add 3 com b lnalioo IOOIO( .... op ere 0 •· •• 1 p.raeH. nwl'i.5200 S20,800. 12%. due 7 of 83, Nwpt Beach. 645-4339 ESCORT Jalla Wmhd. 7075 sa)espersons oow ror EZ AH rAh '-...t .,..... • a..lp 2D"h. discount, yield 24%. 752,93118 ....................... slrai1ht sell " lease. fUU.CHAISE ,, I flll•ce. $485,000. C91! 631-1400 AstrorLinda F1ynn lg equity 2nd TO on Found: 8/mo old black Practical Nurses. any Geoeroua pay 4t demo With experience in F.q.u:=~nder beach triplex. 760-1179 Lab mi1t, female.C vie TOUC~~:ss shift, dot ref's. 831·7200. plan. AU!A>~ct'rrence =~~r;~:.ft'! , • Baker & Fairview. .M. ~Z211.116l-3177. not rect~re • u pre· U-'-• corp lmmed Private party has well 897-3798. XllRS. 752.0917 Yioul aelllai helpful. See --. · · .. ,,. tr' ~ I ' • ' I I r ' I I I ,.. I (l } I:: I ''t ltfl lb· • WATERFRONT HOMES, INC REAL ESTATE WAHr SSS FAST? Sal¥•, Ren1.ol•, Propvrty Mondgonwn1 2436 W C06•1 Hwv 31S Marin<t Ave Newpor1 Be.,ch S..100.. Island 631-1400 '73-6900..,j Any amt-lit. 2nd. 3rda· Ila. terms-call noJN ! E. Starr-964-6133. •OVEMIER , MID-WEEK SALE For Private Parties-Only NOW through NOVEMBER 30th You Can ..... A Oaniflld M To Sten On T ..... W•••• or Thunclay andlun .7DAYS FOR THE PRICE OF 4. I ~· ~ 1 I NO REBATE FOR EARLY CA~L~ TIONSl I ::_ Oean out the closets, kid~' rooms, & ~, ga~ -take . advantage of this great ,. sale by turning your unwanted Items Into ~:.cash. · • t1 . • ,, :.. !OFFER LIMITED TO NON OOMMERCIAL AOV£RT18ER8l I ., ~ 41 I f I• t -'. ' 1:. ' l ~· . CALI. THI DAILY PILOT ADYISOI TODAY I 642-5678 secured 2nd TD for sale Htlp Wmhd 71 00 Sale9 lier. 10 All to 4 PM OpmiDc pbooe-...STI . atdilcounl. 975-1176. Orange&: while male cal. ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.turday ls Sunday. ~ • •a•c•••/ Pen CR alt/ Loet&Poliulcl ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 1 1 um.ts 5100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• " Now You Can Sell More with Dilly Piiot PENNY PINCHER A OS Still onl)' S2. 3 lines ror 2 da~·s only St a day. 34c a hne Green collar w/bell. Vic. ...,c, .. _, Accounts Payable & HOWAllDCM•,... Arcbitedural P'irin .. as Eastblufr.644-1166.' ESCOITS Receivable &: General DcwdsQuallSU. immed opeoiq for full ... llA.1. -~1.0180 Of rice in F . V. area. NEWPORT BEACH auw· '" S4S-43l3 cbarp bookkeeper eap'd C .. /Cltecka · -AW> in accowrta receiv•ble AMbpfMC/Yh• Acc1•t1P.,.w. Tbrtrty Rent·a·Car is ~:.atbPl1•:~a:i cO:: Alt$W(IS Immediate openin& for now takinl appllcallou Ghetto -Comet -exper. accounts payable ror lot man Is rental bmefH.I. 714-549-713' Blimp-Bother _ Psyc.hlc Comultaliona dfft. 10.key by touch. aemta. male fr female. llOl •tt .. BROOM Jack • Good opportunity with Experience preferred. Ir HOSTISSES You should see how 1 ____ 556-__ 11_7_1 ___ 1rowlna co · Ca 11 tMa not necessary. Good mw:h complaining goes UTTLIAMMIES Bordler'a Nursery Inc. benefill. Able to work Apply in penoe~·F, on in our omce. The sug-7Zll Irvine Blvd. Irvine. evenin11 Is weekends. 3-Spm. ADdeDl 11 er, gestion box is a convert-ESCORTS 7l4-s.5MZ2l. Al.lit foe Patsy or Dirk. 3I07W. CoutHwy, N:B. edBROOMcloset. Al.lll~rCredlt All·pw-po•e. clerical & S.91.Sl. CM'rr·c~E Cardi Accepted t*Pbone. Syn ore. ex· AaubAdi.aty ol E.F. Rut- Found at OCC. male -.18'76 per. desirable. Good pro· Babysitter needed for 1~ to• 11 currently in · Australian Shepherd spect1 for salary & yr old boy. lly home 111 tenlewlnt qualified Pup. 556-5530 Days. Wealthy H .B. bus •· f9llOG'ibWty increases CM, 1tartlna Dec 8 . ....-lnterell.edintbe 646-~Eves. neuman seekin& attrac· for mature. qualified 7:1SAll-S:50Pll. until fteld of ftnancial plan-tive """"'g lady for after· Dec lJ. Hn will be flexi ~-Full or part Ume LOST Wh" ,~ penon.546-0ll06. ~ T ·~ ._ . : Do1. tppet. D0011dates.SIS-9'98 ble tfter ~ lJ. op pa;, m.~aa.ooo part time. cram w /dart features ..,..... HOapital for lovlna m alu rt Full time: unlimited. on race. Dana Pt. area. Grand Openlna. Men • Bather, cleaner needed. person. Call Debbie m.2'712. Reward.493--0872 Women, tor relautlon fr P'ulltlme, indudlna 1117-2111torinterview. _:.;_:;...:.....;.:;:;,;__ ____ _ ltlmutaUon try "Touch we ......... Some froqt • ·~ ..... -ST. OU Found. Nr. Von's Mkt, olClau Musaae & Spa" pmera1 help. Apply "ov. ~· SJC. Small blk fem. l85Z5 Beach Blvd, H.B. 13 • H 6 lT, 10.m-3pm, BankiDS MAMA•• Cockapoo. 493-7036. 53&-9172. We accept all 1333 Avocado. Newport ATM TB. I H Position open ror ~1 -----------1 credit card•. open 7 Beach (Newport Center Immediate fullllme areulve m1r . 1n LOST: Blk cal w /white days. , beb1nd theatre). OllllliDa for teller with 1tatewlde, multi-1\qi:e l hr oat Is paw a . ATll back1round. Es.· operatkJD, Oraoce ~n-REWARDI 541-6322 SINGLE? Meet sincere. Apartment Manager : celJmtbeneflll. ty. Carpel exper .. ~c. Ad\•e rt1se one or more items valued up to SIOO. Each a dditional line is onl y 60c for the two day s Sorrv. no co mme rrial ads allowed Charjte ---------1 people·llke You! Low lhture couple to Calif. Canadian Bank Euell. pay, boaua 'pro- . u.t: Diamond weddlria Fee Call DATELINE-manap 21 ,unite. Free .. Jamboree Blvd 1ram, profit 1hariaa, rinl. 5 diamond aettln&, fnlel00-451·33'5 Apartment. All ulll•-Newport Buch medical/dental .... ·1•• • Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your Bank Americard Visa or Mastercard. For more inrormau on and to place your ad nil 642·5671 b Ir th 1 tone r l n g • Au.... paid + small income. 7sz.«MI aUowuee. Call colleicl: (ParadoJt it.one) yellow DIAJIVl"u WANTED: ~ IUD Newport Blvd. Coeta --------~ fw.N~• , eold. vie S.C. Piasa or carat or laraer, private ...._Seellaoa•er. CAIPll'TOWM , Albertson• In La1una party.for cub 540-0208 . Bankbal -a -21 J-466-7171 ~ Be h. le t AIMa"Mr. remale. Hn. ·--·--------ac P ase re um. re· Ski miDded cule looting tAll~:aoPll. 13.50/hr. PwmaDmt. hall Ume 5~ --------- ward. 494-SZZ2. ro .. remale with same. Small abop. H.B. Noa· day ..-. ft part Ume. c........ " Found: Tu II. Hukle MS-9Z. amaker. Call ror appt. Ellpert:.,c.•terred, ~ ., tu wW cubler -r-· " type doc. nr 7-11 1tore, INTROSPECJAL ea.D.Zl. Int backfJ'OUDd. T1~ rtr • Pff f'.00/hr. No.l..al.'9M183 11.MSAGESlOW/AD ltaurbly ...... Xlnt beDef1t1 • Wlmdl '541 llKArdnlr Leet&,_.. 5,100 ...... __.._ youns 11 Gold. llfYSTICllASSAGE Jntne.bued electrooic aclvaacemenl. Call 11¥4.1SJ.nOO .9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r......u ir~ ~ "--t A Ret .• vie. Euclid Is -~ • na cllltltbut.ol' needa full or m.-. EOE CAS ... 9a&.tr.llUS17 LADIES .. Enjoy Lu pa.rt Ume cable ••· -.--... -lln t be ....tlb' people. CGatact -• ·--~ • . . . Fl .. 11 gs Found: ama.ll brn F doa. :::;;.!".W~t:, :C,~ 8Db Tracy, llon.-Frl. ~ '~!!!',' _ ::-= ,;;":'·i ';; ~urt/Viata del Oro. _,_,. IAJl"5Pll.54IMllM. .......,._ ......... _ ... ••• Rlma Hardware, 111 lllr rKr MMJ.D,7•1JG . ,.,......,..,. f«Ted. C11 ~ r•1.1. Mlllltnt 11uacer. ,. rr. e.11Gr 11.. 1 f'olmd: Gltl'1 blcycle, call .a.YDAHCB s.a.t Clerk Ftr. Ptr ....... C.......... 1 1'.a. for partlH or ror a OYllllr' , .,... to&cleaUfy. 11 d d 1 llatun. ID 11Diq1M clock •Malt. I •... _1671 142,.,., peraona &e Danhcl 1n1 lhop at Fullloo lll&Dd. P.n•at• IHtb fll' w ..,.,. --------1 bell.Ytrtm. • a . •oE ••-··_... Found: White female 8Dlldor5!?:0CIW· •1115. ... · · fl_ tin ..... -------..; German &Mpberd, vlc .a.•••n.a..-IABMAID -We Ila•• a fullth e. IAlll • fouod • pet? Call lflmUDltoe Beach· I'. V. ..-..Y'S -· _.. • t\ Dl&llull..UC. Xlllt P, a ,... .. ,..atloa t ~ a Anlm1I AuhtallCI ...... -..au. .................... : . ~-11 °"*'· ... -' ...... our ..... "'' 1.AJtcut.117-1171,Mof ... FOUND: LODthalred Re I 1 ll at lo a or nn,.,.·a Lat•• RJlll llAUJYOfll,ATOI 6 womell't tlolla •1 ·~· Call t 1 lot Ct.lbuatuaa, aeasl•· ·~c tectmlquet. atore. Mutt be ea· lllArt&7lllt w/fallowtai· =._ i='~r ,.. -=·: .. c .. r~a Av':• Terrier mis, •••111 TN .. •• po rt, •o• •ch perl••eed I• better ' l•I•• a11hU•c.e ....._ •· • -... , · I ...... ~Coetapoo • aerape•t c roup. _., tea41·t.o-... r .......,.,,, :!I:. C : ... ,..,~ •. -1 Oceaofro.t •• bo• ;.;.., • Cata • Kit· ..... , ... ..-uwur. A-.b la =-'inc it • r-' ·--....... UWAJU>m..-Jlliiiiiii.._ ___ ~ ,._ 10 Maa8ii Ila· Al9lY la ...... : llr. t1na. Adopt a 'pet 11 .. Amtia, 1m111.atoa 1 Yalber. 41 Paa II on l..Cllt; t.a. Oermao lbep lnlne Animal Cau Pt f t ••' PwtfoUo fOI' P1rtrwaJ Pla&I or uU1 ltll~&M&t ltlllll._::~--:r.-• •~ ~ll • 1 ,,. R.8. aru. Reward. OKI•. Oftll ewrJclaJ ,, 'd-'°"'*". IPll· ---.. ·:! ft'nlllS!!,S_ -=-ama;_lerllfl · 4!:--·~====~======~==::;=::;;::::;:::::::~:::=:·~-=:··======~~=NJ== .. ==·~111-==•==''==~~-==1M.J714,.=====-=========:::i-TPll~? .. ~~ ... ~~·~ .. ;.aat~~:E--:::~ . ~~.__ .• t ' ="I 11• ... • A.M.tll .. , ..... ...,, •• ... •• ..,,.. ....... '"t.. • -• '-' • -~ .. 't:' I I I I I 1 I . I I I l i '\.._' '\ ............ 7111,twaW..tM 1IOOW.w..w 71to~W..._. 7100 ~-....... uie Mef;W~ 7100 .. ~."' Ff-.~tMtrt4,tte0 ..... ~ ~-.. DM.VPILOT ,Q ~ ................. ~ .........•...•.... ~ •................•...................... -.;:-................... .......•..••........... \ - IL• • ~--' c • I l>D'TAJ,, AllT. Rner W.llCllTAIY .... ~Df~!a!!!.CE WalwD .. lpir lletltaolc. Por•llD '* ~w..-. 71M ... w..... 7100~ MiliW ..... r".-'l•H~ I ,, -IALa. llft .,_1'ecll •fi •· .... lll c 11 --1 -COO· llodlll .._.. eJpr Mu.t dome1tlc o•a b•o• -................. ;;r-................... ~ ........ -. ...... . •=..111 ..,...., ._ ,_·1e.-.•• ~.au.. -OD..\.".,..::•:: laet~ wor9rl•I wltll Mye portfolio. Coll••• tooll, ,.,· 50"I. of net --.:.-:: ,-~ .... tom.t.f.ool:iq fw SALB · • ('"· •• lnlae -.H.a.MI •II c ... u.a. 0,.•l•I• for ~.d9tailwor'6 1rad. Jnlae uea. ret.. The Auto Repair PIESSllAI . ••tureuPes''d•...., WI ~y~ •t m ............... o.&.al A.IMaLaal Part tat..u ........ ,. .. ~·paid n.!~,~~· --Silop.DTAvoeado,C.M. IJ •r:1 I P!Uoa. (llllat be :!e~::·•ct ••joy ...... .,. ... typln1' ~ .., ...... UI -· MS.UM --I • falt:n .,,. .. nu fOf 'val .. part ,; U... ....nw., RDA ~ • ab ' Fff. ApplJ la per1on JAM'fOIJ.AL . fw doable w II Hanh buo ele1ut hlth tll a cl rl,ik.• • -pr•NL Salary open. Uou1 A.WI ';:: 1;·. llon·Frl at Buden'• Full tlae. Work In Mdcal Aaallt. froot of. Jim d'fMt prw. Apply fMlllm aaloD. Richard .r!.... co ':!, • • l:l'IW9 .... UJO cmllfUl «"HdWMe wlU be PtltCootrol.J41-.SS70. beautiful D•aa Point ftee. fW 8 .P •• eap Pf'•· In perton between Ouellette Saloo, 200 'ttlW:. · ~ ,H, U .. ' •' '""-•lei ReeepUonlal· ..... k>,..POedtoefut· r~ -• u .. 1 Ct rt Jfartlor .... .,_brplua "'1ed, maU ,_11m• o(. ---Newpiwtc..rDr,N.8. llilh'Mea ...... a1at m . T"T. M .,.. _.... irvoi t ltll ...,_r ... nw1P. • e •I bmeftts APPb'ru.lhr11 flee lllaaa1er · J51 =c...t ..___ ... : 11 . 1 • ' ' Ul&JJ + buefHs, Mlf·IG&UaUve, be depea. Nov. 24, l.~m l.30, Co. 3'701 Dua Drive, N.B.111113. JIO • =t ·-.._.,.....Ofc.-M•a.:... Cublera, :Jl. Htat.aodla1·••c.llent --:.....:-.: .:ve Wareboua~. 1ta~t!n1 FtL DU. ·Not Marina Hoepltel Rd, St~ 111. ---;;:-~tter;"Ai~h• t J MA.UITI W dabM • laa¥9 IOOd com· mlneachday~ 1433· Duaftmt. Costa llesa NrOC alrport, no Sb tlOO Apply ao1 No. Han,or ,_..,•an alfta •mle.UOO lkllla. Salary Gw:ral KENNEL MIDICAL Eaual 0nnnr Employer Ad Ao, N. 8 . to Sl.250 l'\alltl1oe TOW'D 6 Couaty llPUTY CL-t commenturate ~ltb n. ..._ .. "CW. fa Hard, dit\)' won. Morn. RIC~OMIST ~-• 1 .0 • .E. Oraue J'aabtoci hi• Npt Wt,.. ••to inau.1e· a.uqtt-1 .. .., becQrowad. Xlat. fnnge ..w!_. 1 '--. __ ...._ per wk. "'->' ~·w ,.6 lrW..hnonneU1ency l'H1ifon Sq1&are La ..... ...,,iaiaa from I IMl ii;tb twftt. paclia1e. Con-----.. .._ --._. ~-lf'OUp. · PrlntiDa •E.11th.eo.talleaa Habraoueod reswneto ....._ ffMlar U':J Court haa tact Sbaron Raalna ' Walt.en/WaJUeuea. fuU =t•\=.:,ue~ 1;."::i 'Lalll'a.16'7-'300. OflPSITPltASS Sult.ZN .. ~147~ executive omces 151 ·a· lrA1'('1'ACAIEltRT I 1mraed. openln1• for TW~·1'1Uorappt. Ume 6 part lime. Must tieSset6RJP.T.. OPllATO• St.1'11Ua_, C.U II•• I meo • women. II you E.O.E. II /F have at leaat 1{c"· uper. have auto. 55'7·eol0. Delivery between Coeta Gol"en Weal Colle1e, Rental Ateot, very buay IACIC SftHT ~ 11~~ar tna::r.m~~we:1\ed ..... CID :!~~~~5~1~:!.~l~r •IYPUMCH :--•11Lawndale.Mon.· ruzif~3S~/mf·/lnt. amce,Ucenaereq. femlalMatu,.. l.af'8&8Ucb ... m,a ~ .. e!!! .... ~n1 ,en.,~ 1a. alC1'llOIAM a·»5PM llllurance •ency needa 1,.a12t. _ o~i m5orn1n,1 .!~-:.._ s. ,,_ncMu eFrll5 "94.fililM. • R-Y:lrf..W c ... :-.. , ex . -or · · Data Entry Procea.or to .,. :-•• on .. at. at • .........,.. ..... oo.. . -·~ .,..... ewit. E.O.E. In com mere la I, In · .. Ill. NIDAY workdi.n!ctlyunder Data 5PM. Apply u1eo Placen-Contac:t C.OUt Commun!· l&fTAL A•BfTS Put Ume. Varied dUtiea, ~~l=~r con· needed to •~•ht Proce11ln1 llana1er. tJaAve.,C.M. ty Colle .... 1370 Adams ~JU1P/fpoeltlona. LAl\IDABcb.497-3800 Kuntiqtoo Beach Dock bandLSbore boat ---------1 --.-. No sellinl or Eaperlence helpful. Modelin i 1 Ave. C.M. 821, 556-594? Budtet·Reat·A·Car SCTIY ..,,~1.....,,. -11•·• ---clD P/f 1ilDGliiu, muat have lluat ty,. at lea1t I. commerc as, before SPM, Nov. 21st. 919-1121 1~-•• , ... -.&J ~. parWme. Mon. _.._... ....... d $5wpm. Stlluy com· f'Uml, extras. Need new E.0.£.M/F. Typlni 75 wpm/SH IO ---------•1'a. IJ.4pm. Boatin1 Grwery6'onClerk ....,.11an&penoaaljt.yan menaurate w /ex -faces. All aces/types. Pri . • Restaarant, now hinni. wpm . R .E . Mctrt . ,.. ... -........ dental a11t. Qllerience nee. Contact Pbone~lO ability to meet and talk . n4-95'7·020'1. ntang-Want to be a sandwich maken & food Flnuce exp. bel .. ful. \AV\&ftD&Uic. l)drmaater. . topeop4e. perieoc_e. Paid company Pressman in Web Of· Salary commeuurable ........ fWlorpartUme BALBOAYACHTCLUB Exp Floral Deugner AAMCO benefit.. Call Art : Need attractive & faet ? Full time. Min. prep penona, if you're to expr . Bancor 1ome es per neceu . 87S-l51S wmted, full/part lime, TRANSMISSIONS SIG-ONL meraetic person to flll ace: 20. Will train. Apply conadenlioua •Ad depen· Moneate •Loan. Llada lAlunaBeach.414·~17. ccmeiDwithexpforpro-Apply in person. 174SL ANDS CAPE ourTourGuJdepoeition. Pennysaver, 1660 dable we need you. Tuwnaead.714/MO-tm "8 ... m ... ~ creuive shop with car-NewportBIVd. CM. FOR.Ell•"' Full " parttlme, xlnt .. _ __., CM 'Wkdys 8·4 apply in ---------Clerical PUOPla.ATOI . ~ "~ ri trade & . "'~ ..... -.-.ua, · · peraoo. Stonemlll Ter· SECRETARY Qualified structural .:._iefcw Di~~rs. GUAltOS Lloyds Landscape Co. =~~°"'· 493-6606 race.29lSRedhlU. Lq\ma Hilla area. llon· draftaman needed. F1oyd Ca f\Jll • part time. All c~. residential, high e c · PltOGIAMMEI Ftl 1-3:30. $700.alOO. Call E. Weaver Engineering, mp. are.u. Uniforms fum'd. quality standards. 2 yr Need Sales Represen· ANALYST Restaurant-sandwich SabinaUJ-8900 . 3839 Birch St., N .8 . Exp paper hang e r Aces 21 or over, retired minexper. Sl_.050to $1350 tltive for vacation pro· maker. fOQd prep. Prime --------- 5i5&a550. needed, male/female. welcome. No e~per. nee. per mo. startin1. Call for gram. Youoi & en· TIAIMH area supplier of good s.cr.t.t...._.tal OUmH& Call after 8pm J I m Apply : u n 1 .V e rs a 1 appt.646-7441 tblaluUc people with an c·u food to Irvine corporate Immediate opening. ...-.. '""' Protection Service, l~ • community, near O.C. H ,.,. t ' a..IC""L.P/f Architectural design .,,._._,, w ........ St .• San•aAna.ln· LEGALSECRETARY •Wlmoblle. No exp.nee. eavy 1 1ga ion ex · "' ...,, • aio t SlOOO ll 760-3400 Airport, needs s>e@ple for perience. Good skills, Won after noona, lite drafter, 3 · 5 yrs exper. FWd Representative. On terview hn: 9-12 & 1-4 , Hlghly·sltilled & ex· 0 pe~ wee · si mple food prep, stron1 organizational typin1. uaembllng Newport Beach ofc., a temporary basil lo ex-Mon-Fri. perienced in plaintiff's 4113-M27MlkeBulick. sandwich malling & abilities. Initiative 4t brochlll'ea. mail order 6Ts.6llO change converters for HAllSnLIST personal iQjury. Salary Newspaper Delivery, LA PIOOFIEADH counter help. No exper. willingness to take ) etc. Call Cathy Lester: DRJVER descrambler units. Must open. 0 .C. Airport area. nmes to homes in Nwpt Medical exper helpful. nee. Mon.·Fti. 8·4. Call responaibllity essential. IGWIO. Deliver bakery products h • v e de Pend a b I e Top professional to take 9fs.Gl65. Bch, 3: 30AM·6: OOA M. St art P I time • ca II Hal or Susie, M. F , Excellent benefits . .......... cal to supermarkets. Early transportation. Wi 11 overt cofm3P~':_te tmifalnage-• __. .r--v T--"5() to 9500 mo. 548-8441, Phyllis, 7l4·9'19·6176 557-6232. Salary open. CalJ Linda i ~ t A 1 men ° ...,au u new ~ ~.. .......... 1 646-Ht.3 Russe 11 c o I I e c t ......... ~yCW.ls I ~~1~4~;: after-~~l:i,r:~erPC~bl~T.~~ stores. 6U·Ull6 eves, 13S-4160 I P/time, 7days, 2hrs/dai· RESTAURANT help 213/556-2000. Interviews ' ,__ .OW...-.llCJ: 901West16tbSt.N.B. S.0.38S7moming l.5ALSICIETAIY HIGH'f AUDITO~ r,:. :~iv:er:·w~~~: needed. Day or night,, inNewportbeach. TYPIST. Must type Driver. exper. needed for HAIRSTYLIST Minimum ol 3 years ell· FUU time & part lime. l.atunaBeach.494_8496_ cooks & cashiers. Apply' 55wpm accurately. Must delivery Ptr & sales on FLOR AL Design e r lmmed. opening for perientt. General prac· AA>iY to Cindy. Surf & bet. 2·4PM, Long John SECRETARY ~ beavail.11·1S-80through wknds.545-2144. needed. Newport Beach femaletocuUistyle "hi! tice.5'6-68CM. Sand Hotel. Laguna Silver.3095Harbor81vd, Forsman medical ele mdolJao. area.6'5-7846. & her's" hair. Must be Beach. 497-4477. QUALITY ASSURANCE CM. 1 tronics company, nea 1'all Ume8:J0.5PM DRYCLEANERS: Lic'd. attractive & personable. Legal Secretary HUISI DES SUPERVISOR ocean. General office II . .-.._ detail-oriented .._.._-"th exp. F/time. n.<>RJST •1 °-"" au.rant dut 1 • -to cov-r broad .... ..., ..,....._ -· License & exper. req'd. "' lmmed. opening avail. """" .... .. Pleaecalltor appt: Pressers, silk le papts, DESIGN ER F /t i me . Toni, 638-l293 Must be pleasant le or· 7-3:30, & 3-11:30. Country for a qual'd. person w 13 Ill. JACO .+f.J4 j spectrum from detail ES F /time, P /Ome. Gd. salarycomm~w /exper. ----'---------l pniaed,3-4yrsexp. in Club Conv. Hos p . yr s . min . e xpe'f'. 'Tr typing & word · a.o11I TIME salaries, bonus. Calli DELIVERY F/lime, as· ...... -STYLIST t t 1 80100 S..3061 25•52•-p Rel., processing to ad Now hiring parttime da)'atil6PM,673-4920 sistinsbop. nAtR pa en aw. . wpm . . w/Sampliog procedures. & .. OZ ministrative duties. Ask ulea & assistant Apply In person: Hairstylist at Assistant lyping,80shrthnd. Sl,300 MUISISAIDES mech . inspection & l.aglmlaHlh fcwTerri. ---· trainees. Call 111E""' ""WER MILL needed at Michael Gar· & up DOE. Call Ann. 7 to 3 30 C rt mi~inspection & able Ptr dau., no w~k-n .. -, 5-0I --ruv risoo's. Call642·6470. ~.Coastal Person· : · e · or exp. t I .. bl ~v '""' " ~ CAI.I. 64 45 foriaUrview, 642·1231. Flectranics 101216 "A" Adams, H. 8. __, ..... 2780 H bo pre:l. Cowltry Club Conv. 0 aoa yz .. pro ems. xlnt pay le training. App. ____ __;_:...___;__:._ COLLMI STUDENTS Won full or part time aelll n1 electronic calculatora. micro· computera, • related prodlacta. (Retail Sales) Knowledce ol computer Kiencea helpful. Good ~ • benefits. In C.M. caULev: 540-1530. 11e1 .. ency, ar r Hal 5'&-306l Re Ii ab i Ii t y trend ly betweenZ..5pm. S..•l)lilHr F1owerSbopneedsdriver HAIRSTYLIST Am -81 .. Cll p. . analyaia exp. is impor· SECRETAIY C -~ 11_1 tr . . lso d · bilious, sharp self NEVERAFEE E.0 .E. N1.rs~ tant. Only those SALISFASHIOH 1 Bahia Corinthian V-.Ctlt -ooe-ucr ·~ .. a.tnee, a e-s tarter who want Club w &.i Requires BSllE or signer. Top wages . something different. . qualified, pla. call: Mrs. Fr• Pl' aalea in fine ' . l>-9PM. ed. n. BSEEoreqaaul~nt pl':'I ~11/parttlme. 645·0093 Dependable car a must. Live-in compaoi~n . ....._.Al•s _ ~ckat714-581·3830for women's apparrel store _6'4-_9530 __ . ___ ~-- 4 . 5 yean expenenc.e lD (II.rs. Camp). $400 + per wk + ti~ female. Couple ~Ith $3.75/111". n:· ID Nett r 0 r ~. 0 pd Secretary to CEO ad- en1ineeri.ng p_lanning, Front Deak Cl k potential. Guarantee~ elderly ~r. Pnvate We will train. 8 paid -~tr:iua°i. m !~. ~l1°n°i.. m in i s t .r a t i 'v e . coat eatamahog and .. ....a~ c· derSu, rfex~'. min for right peraon room, board, salary, holidays, beginning as ICP'T/SCTIY benefita.Appt:&M-7lOO. km~h_e..'°.~~.!~alr'..nbutook ·. foreeuting or manufac--rrv to m Y. • RB. C 11 A k a14'10. Lovely home. aoon as hired, benefits. __ ....,..., _, ~ turin1 techniques. Must ~n~ Hotel, Laguna I forW~ 957:· s Corona del Mar. No Bayview Convalescent !:r:!:bl~P;!!tn~Y~~~ SALES OWleoging opportunity. have 1ood working ac 497-4477. ' · smoldng.Refs.559-4455. Hospital. 2055 Thurin, with 1 ff' Uyou"-aggr ... aiveand Salarytol24,000.Colllns COOK: Ni1htahlft.. SS hr to start. Contact Paul. 04-0800 knowledge of product . . HARDWARESALES . CM. Mrs Farrell · root o ace ap· .. f... f ..... In •---,.i.. San N" 1 techniques . Will Furniture ref1n1sher . . to.DRepnsent~tlveafor · · · · pearanceforwellestab. looldng ora uture re· ,__.,, 0101 icoaa supervileandcoordinate wanted. Soi;rie e~per., Apply lD person. R~on Mort1age Brokerage. 642-3006.E.0 .E. small company. Salary tail m1mt w/good co.1_Dr_.N_.B_. _____ _ COUNTER HELP, Dry Clean.int Plant. Days, fUU or part time. HB. IM6-'1311 scheduling of special neeeaary. Will traan . To Hardware, 1024 Irvine Liberal Commissions. NUl"'Sinl netoUable. Call Warren benefits apply In person C\9lomen requirements apply: 642-4100. Ask for <Westcliff Plau) N.B. R. E . License req . Certtfled al&&5-7861 9un to llam Mon thru Secretary, local church, or computer systems Lee. HELP! Ml-8GO ~~ •1..1.-Fri.StandardShoes, 3077 mature.~· t_rpln. • 14 ri s 1 ,_..... ... ._ So. Bristol C.M. tramcnb1ng skills 1m-::.:oo =-uye~: TJ:~ IGALS GUYS lneedsomebody.HELP, LUMCHHB.P . $4.00/111". . REALESTATESALES ' port.ant. Exp necessary. to the neareat State TRAVEL not Jwt anybody. Full Homewives, students or 8 paid holidays, ~gm· U you are interested in Salesmen CalU31·2880. tJ _, · t/ty · t -•-1 u • ....._ •• hir-.. making a change or , .... Rau ... TIOH \ COUNTH HB.P Employment Office. · NaUonal firm now has me ·"'""~oms pis · hardworlters, Plck up ""' ...,.,., ""' "''" "--Secret Sandwich a hop. Mon.. OOI'003. 061·010. Ad paid opeainp for several neat SC hr. You'll love youi cash for Christmas, no benefita. Bayvl~w Con· seeEnc a new career in Earn ~ + a week, no 11'Y Fri. Hours open. An· forbyemployer. peopietouaistmeinmy job.ApplyTuea thruSat. exper oecesaary. Plexi· vaa.eeat Hospital, 2055 RealEatate,callandasll credit tum downa, exp •TIAYB.• . tbony'a Dell, 17811 1~~~~~~~~~ NA11<»nnDETRAVl!!L Dua PoUrt Ilario• Co bk scbed..U.O. for you. 11Nrin, C.M. Mrs. Far· for Jot.a or Vody at Cole preferred, wlll train. Trade-show produfer ~ Slllt A 1 1: PROGRAll. No apeclal 24701 Dana Dr. Dana Won 1~12 hn per wk or rell: 142-3505. E.O.E. of Newport, Realtors. S.11-4501. bal Immediate ope•i -..io.. • • rv. ......... quaitlcailoa needed but Polnt. man. We pay $4.00 per Ordereten, part or F rr. m.ssu SALIS rAITTIMI tor rupoosible, h · COUMYBHELP ~~u·~~h~~-~~f!:: ur::!=.toie~:.:,~ HBIWAMTED ~~i:l e'l!JA>wSo> Jlfusloperatetypewriter. ~A.5 -Sl.50WK+ =:~1:.~:$! No Exp. Nee. Pays 3~yn.exper.67s-6110 Areaa •return. All We are now accepting Bristol at Redhill : calculator4tcashr~g.ln l boys -GIRLS · MEN · eoodwithdetails,abl•to $Ill.JO, 4lhr week. Call tnmportaitioo • lod1ing applications for a full 96'7.a117 office supply business. RealE.t.tte WOMEN. Flex. bra .. coordinate various fu.c- 67MIMO or 3401 E. Coast escaow MAMA-.u fumiahed. 2 weeka ex-time posit.ion in our re· -+-= SUS/hr, Mon·Frl. Apply SALARY wort or. home, fun" re-Uoos. Travel involved. llwyCdll. Do you have a strong peosea paid in s tate ~ad tdept. T1elephRone u ""CHINIST !! penco onlMy :_ MSosele 23 ys W'TO 524 OOO warding poa. wherehyo 1 u Xlot. co. benefits & foUowing -proficient in trainint prosram. High "' coun er sa e s . e· ~ nest. 2205 am t. # .1 • earn S while you e p pleasant working COQd. ochan1es. AITD's, con· IMlY' • cuual condition quires good spelling, T,..._r.et.wred H.B PbooeWorll· others. Neat & rel.iable Contact Personnel · COUNTER Person. dry cleaners. Will train, 56-lOIS tnctl, etc., but lack co. make this extrememly gramme r · & Pen Some shop ex pr. for · n--~t!~ ~eq only. Mr. Ryan, 963·0106 n4-54&-4834. • support 6 backing. desirable for the younger manahip. Must enjoy small mf1. firm in Order Desk Girl, answer nca& c rt!9. Managers earn Sl,OOC --------=--Pouibly 33 year old Bay set. FOR IMMEDIATE rneelina lhe publlc. App· Irvine. Call Riley for telephones, some fillng. Xlnt QPpty to work Ul a mo. Secretary, Laguna Beach a.mt.er Help Ecrow ia someone you PLAC E II ENT CA LL ly Pennys aver. 166( appt. 9TIM080 Must have gd handwrit-fast growing N-:pt Bea~h Church, ldnt typing, 1e· &abway Sandwich Store should talk to for Or. Co. MRS. WISE 750-1000 ext. Placentia Ave. C.M. ing. Call 8·5 Picwick Real Eatate Firm. Air SAUS RETAIL cord (70wpm,) keepfllf now accepting applica-Airport area mg mt posi· 101 MAIO OI HOUSEMAN Paper 549-1157: conditioned olfices. Xlnt career opportunity stills, telephone recep. tiona, all shlft.s. We want tion. Great package for ---------1 HICKORY FARMS 642-3030 For an appointment to in nutrition sales. Grow· tion. Call for intervlew dynamic, hard working, rilht person. Call F. R. GARDENER WANTED Need1 packers-days. . Order Processor with hear our offer on your in& chain of r e tail '1M·7SSS .. l"elpomlble Individuals. Becker, 5'7·5625. Ex:perienced gardener & O.C. Airport a.rea. 'Til l'tlAINTENANCE MAN good telephone voice. salary call Don Now! ! vitamin stores need out· ---------lo return we will give __ __;. _____ -l handyman on Laguna Christmas. Call 775~. ~schedule, $3.50/hr. some typing, congenial BSl-1666 going enthusiastic nutri· SICIETAIY nex schedules, great ISCIOWOFFICER Elltllle. Exceptional op-Jan.Keeptrying. Full/part time. Tom ~ oond. P.O. Box tionorientedsaless>e@ple F\illtime8to$,type50·60 starting pay, complete New independant es crow pe>rtunity. Uae our loola. 64S-0222. 276. CdM, 9262.s. Real F.atate for our O.C. storu. Some wpm, general office tr-i-1n1, pre-uniforms, company iD Woodbridge, Must have A 1 re. HosUel/Cubier, exp, eve college, knowted1e of won. Paid holidays & am 1~--forqualifiedof· # shift. Apply in person, ..,. ......... ~ER' Painter want e d . •PRIME• nutrition 6 sales exp benefits ..... 50hrtostart steady work + paid ._.... 1erencee. Write Ad #695, _..,."',. R . b 1 0 .., vacations. an exciting fleer and secretary. Daily Pilot, Box 1S60, Ben Brown Restaurant, Fulltime. Experience eapo n csl 11 ew WO A very active Newport ~ary but we will lrvioearea.641-0477. --iDcentiveprogram.i Must havdestroh nd&lfollow-QiataMeu,CA92627 3U08Coast Hwy, South nee . Mon .·Fri ., transp. a a yn e . Bch office, 1003 com· train. Salary starts at ·--------· --~ 01 an an e ex· Laguna, 12:3G-9pm. Please sub-646-3226. mission, rent S350 mo x $800/mo increasing to Apply in perso~ 14~20 changes. Salary com-G.1 Ofc.ja.cept mil brief outline of past p•1~ s•LES 12 . SC200 per yr. Are you 11000/mo. For interview, KNEJUY Be• c h B v • menaurate with ability. Small company near HotelDesk Clerk,exppre· work experience le """' "' paying your broile r call 838·8202 Mon-Fri, A.II• Weatminster. xbbeoefita.AskforMr. ocean needs mature fened, apply in person. salary Hpected to: Ad Part tJrM. Tues. 5 lo 9• more? Ask fo r Bill 9:»-5PM. fte1iater today for IOt'al Count«Help,P/l'orFrr. Kadao.151·9575 penon with miD. 5yrs. Holiday Inn, 3131 Bristol #810, Daily Pilot, Box Wed. 9 to lPM. Some &SM&. ---------1 temporaryauignmen.\ 'I f A St. C.11. 557-3000. WO, Costa Mesa 92626. e 11 p . K e r m R i m a , Kmta-'1Cleaners. 186 E. me SICIETARY gen 0 c. exper. C· U-...&.... ...,,,,.,. ff bo -/SEC Sales 551 nn•5 ltlbSt.548-Ut3. ADMIM.ASST curate typi1t, SOwpm. HOUSECLEANERS RAlLMARKSTORE Bi:dc8:' ~ ar r ltlC_., 'Y ~ Front dealt telephone re-To work for Janice's MAN AG ER C P I . . . Heavy phones. t yping, 1IAINE£ "'---Help wanted in TOSll,000 cept ion. Xlnt. c o . D.---4y Ann Pff' 13 R d f . f filinl, handling mail or-CT\ -~ To buay president of benefits. Call Elly : ·~ · · · · < etire > or rehe dera. Start: S200/wk. r-listrict ·L'n-_ Deli. Full time/ Part 1rowin1 mf1 . and &&5-3132. n.:fr't.8?S.~l4. min. ol mini-storage PAaTTIMI CaUJan.L.at7S4-0t91. JWI 11 Ume. Exper. preferred. ~related buainess HouukleanlDJ service sites in Santa Ana. Pa.IMGS M _m._Z113 __ ·------• ID 1'11lln, non-smoker. General Labor. Part time. ~-1eUc girls for (p/tlme work). Call . Ach&lla over 21 with out~ RECEPT /TYPIST ~If flMf'OllAl!V PUISOftNIL SUMCU 372l lirclll Strfft ... .,.,. .. odt Counter Help needed. llal\&res organisational Golf club atora1e. Pvt. Ptr or Ftr needs OWll Roger 752-12M, 9 to 4, atandlna attract iv~e Newport 1\iach Law ftlllJ PILOT lame retail exper. pref. abilities, be initiative, club. 6"-5404, ext. #26. tranap. Top money of· Mon-Thurs. penona!lUe1 who eojo Firm-requires good UN Mor Sat. sunrise. 8W· and willlDaness to take -... I o-c1 fered. 96'7~138 u---.-~th kids ..... rx phone manner " good Thia hl1hly successful -. ........ _ .. ..._ 18 reBP0111ibi1IUea. Send re· -.. m -·~· ... typing skills. Must be ex· local h _______ _.._ ............. uat""' or aume to Box 816, Daily aftce llana1er for aolo HOUSECLEANING WANTED. MATURE 250 tietwe!n ~=16P~. l:!enced. Xlnt. saJary & openiniawrc:-r~al::e ~: :;;:: 549·0641, E.0 .E. ~POCal~lS80.Costa ~t coll~,·~·1Prrae!eurartee· SERVICES, eat.abliabed, ~ .. ~~el~~~P~~u~: A.MforLori. •-~~fll!,._7~;:_83d3·3837 . the circulation depart· Dlllvery peraoa wanted. Ptr, muat have td clrtv- ... reeard. 133-1183. DlmcwwUaton Atll'acti•e female de· IDOllllraton wanted to idnd*9DeW1naclr food ID local aupermarket1. Pies bourty won. part or Ptr. Call (710 ... 1900 lorb!Wview. -· -· .. -.. ... "" '-I • has full-time open Inga --~ c ... t naa '°' -. ... runl on. ment. Basic skills will Experience & 1klll1 forhardworkinewomen in nice Eaatalde CM Piiot eotailaupervialonoflOto IXICUTIVI helpful but not eatentlal. w /oppty for advance· area. Resume le local RECEPTIONIST 14 year old boy and girl SICIDAIY '950/mo. 40hra. M·F . merit. So. County area. ref. req. Exp. pref. To EaualOppOrEmPloyer &ayCPAfirmnearO.C. home delivery carriers . Rapidly expandin1 PleueHlldreaumetoad a.19 apply, please send com-Airport looking for Areuol'lupervislonwlll NewpirtBeachflaancia.I 00#117,DailyPllot,P.O. pleteraumetoadno.812 ~I penon with front office be delivery, collection ftrm ha an immediate Box •iseo Costa Meu, Houae«eeper wuted, lov· o.lly Pilot, P.O. Box ,. ••!Ii appelran-ce , bubbly aodlale1. need for an executive CAICl!lla. ely Balboa PeniD. home. 1560, Costa Meu. CA personality. Heavy SeJected applicant wlll secretary. Excellent GENERAL OFFICE 3 aehool a1e children. '1l'llla ltll I 1711a, CM =· Ute typing. Call receive liberal starting akiDa and ablUty to or-u.&..-Npt Ctr law firm Mull be exp houaehold 64Z.062 I : m.8312. 1 al a r y , re I u l • r l y pniae a mwt. Al lea1t 4 __. man.acer le poueaa xlnt ......,... acbeduled railes, bonua yean eaeculive office Mekin1 1eneral office nl Call '73-7143 after Calual wear atoN need• PASTl-UP ReceptJooiat Secretary OIJPDrlunlties and many aperte.ce required. Ex· clerk. DtatlH include · 6 wkenda a 1 re11 I v 1 1 t 0 re fot me Brothen of O.C. Mnae benefiU such .. Clla.m IJ'OWtb potential. ~catlq, mail room epm · manaser. ex.p only. For ~preferred,or SoDM eve work. Call -.. .. ypalddent&land -..-..1~-,.-... TOIS ~ 11 z openUoa ~'" room wUJtrain. FuUUmePMl· ...... _ ---_ _.. -.._ect ary vonek, · • JlouMkeepln1. cookin1, iDfo Cn4)7'1o.lm uk for lion. Co. bmefita. Apply _...... t.lth plan, lf'OUP life in· fot te1 demoa, local Am• r I c • D Hom e duties, etc. Please call childcare. Pvt. room. Mlkior Bob. auran~e. vacation and l&ont, top pay. Call 11Grt1aee Corporation, Ll&AmaDutcber. 79-aOO. Good •Alary,iD Irvine. . IDpenoa: 1•PlacenU• ftecoeptlonlat needed to alckleave. St•rttno •New Bu8'neH AC cc or d I ft t to, Celhf .... 9uelMee onct ,.,., ........ c:.-(lee. t1'to0 to tl'UO) ell! ..,... .......... WlilM••' ' "" .. '· • AdllJouo ~ "'"" ..... tt••-5 -wtttl .... C""'Y Clefti .... .... "'" It """ reur II••• 111 • a ob I a wk day a : Ne• port Be a c b . EDCllab apeuini. Mary..._, Plut Malter •.12 Aw.,C.11. _.....our buly phones Company vehicle la 1.-.zi-MT. nf.'lSISlS. •••~ -1 ~ .. need you. br. J years experience, PASTM#' • 11'9et ow clieDta aJont f\a'niabed dmlnl work· ..:~~~~;.iiimiiimiiiiiii'-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I ---. ~ aiffm.OOaft • mwt be able to read with aome Ute typln1. ialhoun. ~ ~ =~~ · · . blueprlata, co11truct Part Ume penoa needed AaaN apply to IC.at.le at Appllcanta muat be over Caalaier . ----~-.-. .... A He• '" •"'e"T t "•' 9uoiMMle~ f"• .............. , ' i ! I ' ' .:' (. ., OFFIE 'CASIEI Enjoy workin1 u Office Cashier ln Slavick'• J•welera. Duties Include verif~~Daalet bale~es. dotq daily I tranaactiom, di1bur1tn1 fund• •nd other related duties. Excellent Com~ Benellt.1 Packqe. CONTACT Mil. McDmMOTT 17141 644-1 JIO SLAVICl'S q .............. ~f1 ~r, ,,\ ·~ i-.. -.._....__,_.: ........ 11. HOUSEKEEPER. Full wooclla plup fGr' boat.a ~~ ~ lion. 6 Newport Home Loans at. have a •ood clrtvla1 - ---...w .. -A·-lm1 ed ---.. I ri ·-· No exp. Dff. App· ....., ___. __ ... ""be t 1tartla1 lndlv. for •I tlme ~·· ,.\m late1 •"--. to u 11ep al.I ly: Penny1••!!.t 11180 • ·-11 muu nea ap· ...,..i om~ pos Gd °'**'I· Waces~totia· to determine type • PleceatlaAve.,..,• RectepUoniat Ptr monat, pearla1. Houra are l>'lliaa. DhoMe • '1111ni l ble.-...r7or ·tl2S. 'dimea1loa or wooden -·-•roa nlc• frotat om.ca ·~· rc=!1 ~!' ~rf~'. r.qur;eci. Out1taodlna HOUS• PAR-1· frame to be comtructecl, ~ ---t B -II '*Dpei ... Uoa la exceU. 6 ..,,..,.~ uat plumb nale, power Wll.,.. M • W'f ~ • mm · •Y Solmovertlm• ll av• •· I co. bea.ftt1. Pltaaant. ~l. to ~. ~ e:!iOD I ..... clrWa. Tab ad to -· Swt.t ...... • =-;.,v~~~~~ ~~'~:, r~ .... qualified .lnhed 1 wortrln• eavlr@nment, f .,..., •0 · 11 t Dt1re1t St ... Employ-....._ -"'" ·----•-a.ara•-it Ccmlact:........ or I. /D c ,n • mtDt offlc•. DOT _•..;.;;..~.:..... ... ·------i ----I .,,_.,._ OUU.: eo..la1, clean - -.... ,. ..... -·'A for 64J.JOIJ clrC'UlatJlon bu1lne11 -•-,..-... 1 --~--_, _... Receptlonl1l/CHbier, COlllact t.bt Dally PllOt at .... C_.,• ln1, to lena1. Sal•l'J !\Jw emploj•. ;· ·'-.. f H •11 lloD·f'rl, ,... GenraJ • w. Bay, Colt.a II•• JmU ..act.U aouu. ~~· """4• UDlted '\. · • G,.,..., eompaaJ b.t• ..._ enc., permueat w.. 1.0:aM.11 or all•r lntM. llT·.U, EOlt Pally, 5*57• ..-wY SHOP ..... GfllU, ,_. ~·V· wltlt MDflta. typi•I ... dallY. '•lliliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiia.j1 am loakiac for a penoet ~ P~ ~ = ~·• l".reod. Oeaeral 1twpa1 phoH •kill•, Alk r. O.. Williama or ~Wed "-... eftd .. _,...,Ill""""""'' r•ur .......... "'-·t llll•ot ,.,. .. , ,.,111to ~ ........ .,... ............ __... f"• DAILY PILOT .. ~ ................ .... ~ ............... t. ho.-... IM ,. ....... , I; . • '1 ,.,.... .... .......... • f-: t: d .... , . .,.... .. .... , _.. Or•11t• Ce1111tr.::."''··• ~ ...... .....,..., ..... 11 '' e111 •• 111r ••"''"'"' tfftt•• 9t .. I r~ pt.1110 Ute LIQAL 119~ ......... i lat, llf for •Ofl I i .._Who ...._ a .iee1 iN.u~ · ........,. "' plUllllUll Wtll o.c. YllCA, na KanOoddard. I Wheo yoa cau ClWllled I plMie to live •wllla owit1 ~atucta belp(W. •• .Gmleld Ave . H .B . AA:s()pponuaity toflaceanad, fOU'1'9u· ._.., '*-• dUlq MD U)'OUw~,_..advtrtla· ""''l..~c1 .... aalary lft4m.-1l79f U._)"OU_W_an_l .. your-·a·d-ve .. n.-1:._· ·-I aured or • hl.adly to 1* ovw lillllp1. Oe· illl '° reach I;· alia-X..~·f ,_.. no an ......., 1 I 1a1 mntac• t<J ru111- ••Jcome aacl i•lp In ca11loaal eookl•I 6 _..·~~lower ... =~.'j •,,,...,. looll nnt l U'1C*"N...._IWabet•1 mon people at low·~ ...,. ... a .... --. '" ....., 10'll' ad 1or belt ...,......., ror • mH ooat, • la ""'-• . la a.e-.11.. WW 1fllW ... • ,_ ._, ft8t to : *'· Claulfltd la ll l!t.!' .. t r""•H. Call No•J wile, .......... N .... ..., .... , ~Nowt -7' --~. '~-.--........ , To plMt l ......... ..,ao, .... , _to-· Call Howl • .....,. owatrw.. ... ,.. ~---· ~ Jr; -,_,..,all...,. "="I _.. •arnrw. .._. -.-; ' -." • i , •• •\ * ~ = t • .. .., I I.-- ...... -·--... ~ -tr> answer~ phMe? / u~uwer It/: ~ice w~ ~n~ '14'r a;I ... -------------,--... . ....._ . .,.... / • . . A Daily P.ilot ad number will appear· in your ad ... we take your messages 24 hours a day ... vou call in at your convenience during office hour;s and get the responses to your ad ... For more information and to place your ad cal I 642-5678. 642-5678 DAILY PILOT I ........ w...... 7100 ~W..eH 7100 1010 cc;=· a Iott 1040 ,...... IOSO ...... IOSO ,....... ..IO ...... w_.... 1100 .. ....., " ••••••••••••••'"•••••••• I ••• 1030 ................. ._ ••••• •••••••••••••••••······ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• --;i ••• ...... ...••••.........•.•.... ... .....•...........•. ~ ·-•-••••••••••••••••• Waltreues aeeded. llu1t Sttn Uprt Frteaer lYr .. ~-·•4•••••••••••••• Male Lbua Apao pup * I BUY * * Top quality rum: Exec:, Three piece aectlliaal, ••SICllrA•S• * Tow Truell Ori ver1 be over 21 Apply lo akl •· Wuber Is Ekt a.u • Howell dlovle l2wkl xlnt pecU1ree al * desk 3b11" dlnln1 rm with ottoman oed re-~ ....... /~/No8b*1UOO ~t ~~~:~9!'r:: peraon, mis Newport Dryel'Sl25 Ell.144-5141 =.::~ 8 P~J. 1 uner/canad. Che'73·572S ==.!o"':1tr~it set. pecan ~d. 2 lvs 6 ~lerial .ZS. OOlc/a.cpt/BrtteSH,400 ....... Blvd. C.M. PMw=le wet-bar refril. ,,_ .. Y• ICMS MUorSICLLfor You chn, buffet, hU uea *"- S.C/Sbl0/En1114 • .00 • Xlnt cond S7S t ...,._ llt'a w tao.nm • ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAST8S AUCTlOM ~ area nai. mile:. 1ml llde KOfcti:eo/Oun$10,IOO Travel A1ency. Ex ·~:!'!'.!~........... Mo.705i. 'Llllun leuea, 2 U1ht llbiedGennan Shepherd 64616H&IJJ.,-US :;:2 oc:~al tabl:•· ~~~~id•' • ~:~t~l.e£{5E bu::fJ:' s~1:::!~~·0: ........ IOOI Admiral aide by side =n::.:::r~;::: C:ln~1old lo good Ne 1 r new b r 0 w n ~ ~/fr:~edpcm~r'!.o'i. ~~~~~II zlpptrlnedl. Jm..llllO/Free d f ••••••••••••••••••••••• .-.n-_,,_, Ith It · ..... I ~ cabinettler!Q 541 2402 -·-...-coven. • 1~~~~~~~~~ Computer train• . or r-nnnl w e· t•• ... mm te -p l'ril'r-Y4)1(!"M"'."BelgJum -DMll&laY4--.i pe, Uvin1 · · ooncl.541-3385. $150. full al&omat.ed top N.8 . WESl'lllNSTER mailer. Need a some 1-, llmm wide an1 e. Sh r d I · bl Ir room set 4r coffee tab1' ~ueoak Hoosier SSOO s...Mry,lhec.. freer oppty. In raat· ced Npt. Bch. Invest· firm. Requires top locat.ion. Immed. open· ABBEY wortr . .,.m.ma. All mrloMd la apeclal rn!:uer-a e 3pcdblbectaet,loveaeat: Nearly-new Frenc~ Q b . = d Ina. 714.ai-BCMO ANTIQUE MA.LL Kenmdte truher/dryl!r, cwMtm !Jue.~,.:' In· y . barstooll,673-2398 Prov: mr.flmn. dreaser .~,:.~:m. ~ a e" TRAVEL CONSULTANT 0aUy UMS, Fri 10-9 IQld. IOOd coedlt(on. P2S cat6tt. y .SSI 18/mo AKC Britt.any Twin Barcaloun ger " m1ht, stand, $275. tlble, 000. ... ta- NEEDED. rmmed. open-CbedTueaday forboUL~l.32 Vt+ttar 95-2115 mm soom Spulel, DM1le. free to gd Recliner Chrs. High Gramma 1 port. sewln1 ble w/butcber bloell1top. · (shtbnd 90, typing Sound professional ., maturity & cor· te bkgrnd. helpful. Int ror a1ent exp. In U7Sl Westmlaater Ave. IO 15 lea., bOO, •Int cond. home " b 1 g Yard · back, rattan, w /beige mach, 955. 675-Z33l eve. l!O. 53S-«114 or ..... l. U-... ~1-•· l Good Garden Grove M4·6103 Amtl.a .-. -..L __,., -"'-On.I • .1.:i ""'""""' • sa es. ••••••••••••••••••••••• _,_ • ..,....... y .. moe. new Kine Sz Xt.ra nrm inner ~r table " 4 caaln salary w/benefita. Call General Hardware: l6$8 c.ls 1031 Puppy, white, Shepherd retal.l '700/ea Sac. $300or s p ri n I m ~ t tress wroqbt lron but, 1: Tim. 714-839·3061. 11039 · ........ , S..w/S.... Superior Ave. coata ....................... mix, male. To good bolhl550~1 eves w/matcblng coll box s~r-couch, all •Int oOnd. 1: 640-0123 Warner Ave, FV. Today t.bN Sun. Hunt· lleH Sat. Nov. Uth ToP QbaUly Rbnatayan bome ... -11'16 41e Formal Dining Rm lnp, never used, ~till ManyotberlteJM 100d to _... ________ TYPIST Needed: Erll· lntton Center Mall. lOAM. Took, ~bdware. Kltlenl. papen. ahots, . ble Cock·A·Poo to w/lOUphol. Chairs $1000 pitted. worth 1520 and xlnl.545-309. SICIETAIY cienl, Reliable, IBM Beach Blvd./San Dle10 Electruelc1. '14 ~Toh t:~~·· Ir $150/ea a:: home Female Call F\rmVe.ryClean646·2971 delive.ry $238. Cash only -------- 3PM-8PM Selec Elec. P /T , F /T Freeway Pickup, 4 cyl. Portable 881·3'71S ' &l().Q'1 Queen 1iae malt &dMJdpr· P.. h rth d .....,1006 air comp. acalea IK Iba. !f:ij 1040 PURNJTURE-must sell· New 6• Hide·a·bed. , __ 4'pl ti 3 .... or . nos o an , ...;..,....~.:..;_.;__ _____ 1Privat.e Collection avail. cs.anFunt.U'l. ltV•aid· . baby grand piano. .._ a orm, licants need above Typl.at Sat & Sun, 8am-5pm, U.. Ir Pinball Machin~ ... ••••••••h••••••••• 1050 bldeabed. 2 s wivel $400. sbeeta, matt pad, •lao verage s pelli ng & 17m2WellbankLn.Spr-Slielvin1 . H11bt1 '.ttJ!mloNoP\Jps.AJCC.••••••••••••••••••••••• rockers. desk, much 548-6783 ora nge veltet ammar skills, word n..+v+ien lngdalelrTalbert, H.B. Showc .... ,etc .• etc. Champ alre. 11/F . Pet" CAPTAINS more. N.B. 631·2383. Antique Vel vet rust ~pread. Make ~r. sing background f"l...,l s b 0 W . pvt pl y . w·-·-Dlning set, genuine •a· pful. 752-0234 TJlllS" l/ ESI'ATEANTIQUES 2ll/9T ll46aftl"m .-ua _, ....._.,_ ....... ·--hold with a c-lounge chair, like new. ple gd cond 4 cbaln I Circa ~1900. Lincoln PUBLIC n1RNITUR£ 77 • r · FOR 5 •LEI ";;:,~ri";;'"', Sal & Sun. 8>.6'2·0116. ~ 2 leaves. Mapa. «Ou'. 1 desk Ba hel Id b Oii ••c •-1••1b Sprinter --. • __._ TV -~. xlnt ..-d. T-setter ' C: or B e y ····n * nn r.n u Beautifully fin ashed 8 8 m · 5 Pm • l 7 9 3 2 Brown hlde·a·bed COUCh ""'"' -• ,....,.. Jr"' ' side. xlnt cond. 63H402 ...., =~=m~ .~;~~ natural wood; bookshelf Wellbank Ln, Springdale $75. Also trash com. 5M59.a 44. App't dl~ · Ant. v· t · s r ,_,.. 7:30PM 0 p M beedboard w1th mirror. & Talbert, H.B. pecter. 494.5101 oms. Evening Shift. At least 70; aque . ac orian ° a Bedroom. dlnlnl room Ir Call alt · 5 : 3 · 12 drawr pedeatal (no -------- wpm. Top pay ror good! needs fixing M75 call Sat liviftl room fum.lture. Lg tGIMJ. need f or d re as er ). When you call Classified King Waterbed, bkcase: 4x6 cocktail table, 80" individual. Ou~ ~nefit~ OrSun645·7444 sAtmoerriacaaen ~ oa~ [f :e~ R E A I> y F 0 R LARGE king.al.zed bed In· to place an ad, you're as· hdbrd, frame, he ale~. la.mp table. antique wb. ==~4t~cr!cittU:f~:. MARBLE top Commode Wurtit.Rr piano. roll top CHJUSl'ltAS.2 week old eludes beater, liner , s ured or a frie ndly SISO. bkcase, wall unit Velvet sofa & lov-.at, Apply ln person between $250. Marble .top Table desk. le cowter, lg atock Qiaer~et puppies, roatnu " padded rails. welcome and help in t300965-3383 bwn velvet cordaroy M d S2'75 Both Circa 1850 •~LOTS OF ... ,. IUA ....... evea Must tell ASAP ... mov---rdinr your ad for best couch, lamps & Uabt flx-9 am · 5 Pm on a Y · · of new pal.nt • -· _...,.. 1-•! ._/belt offer. Call -v Trade ,·our old stuff ror •·-75" m 1 bvlf t d 64&-4225 ~ .... _,., response. Call Now.' .... _, a · e • rtDun 6440510 aCy t ~. Blall4!t Hound Pup twks M).55Z'7or646-445l&ask 6425678 new goodies with a muchmore.S'D-Z..502 es. · oos Ornate Oak. Dbl China SAVISAVISAVI Clidfotuletoaoodhome forExt.?at. --·-------Cla,.sifiedad.642·5618 KaySt,BalboaPenin. ·ty Offi /C DalJPHot Buffet, Position tab, We honor BofA, MC, &l.Slf fety. s1~rd1:::::: I 330W.BayStreel Delux Roll·Top w /chr, Caabler'1 Checks 6 ~;__....;..._ _____ Alllot,Mew 9100 A.tot, New 9100 Aatto1,New 9100 ,N•w tloo e Nortb Campus, Costa Mesa,CA92626 Oak Signe t Edison Caah. NO PERSONAL Adorab .. Cocker pups,•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••··~·· I • lne. llPM ·7AM . 6'2·4321 Phono. Mantel, Floor CHECKS PL£ASE! AKC,~f.male/female, ·• * * ** * * * * * * * * * * * *******ft nds. & Holidays. F.quaJOppor Employer Model Nat'I Cash Reg Food available. ltema $150 up. Father Cham· ly rate: $7.88-18.64 Valet Parking Attend. (9draw), 4pc. Oak Door djec;ttoeresale. M pion.557.eo50or9'79-40!M. ~% shift differential. 1' "''---/Men, Ptr. Full Set (bevel Crystal). pp MASTllS AUCTIO ........... Ml I t ........ ~.. 83Hl956 201S~Newport Blvd CM .-. .. auera, " a ure, ~have certiricate or I time help wanted for ex· m.mz 64&t1181 AK C . 9 I w ll .s . tftmpletlon or arrest , I elusive re1taurants In 5 Shield-Pressed back male/female. 3 Rare !!).arc h . seizure & O.C. Must be depend., Oakchairs.Xlntcond. 1020 Blach, 2 S /P . de · rirearrns course. 831-4850 able to work days, gd 646-8665. •rein wonned. 2 shots plua t.w8·5. with people. Xlnt pay. • ..... ••••••••••••••••• PanQ vac. $175. AMSC Women encouraged to ..... men 1010 Tri-wheel S chwinn roember.646-5237. SECYRECf'T apply. Ca II Ange I's ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/basllet, $100. Our ad agency. needs a Valets Inc. ror app't WestinghoUlle ~6 cu rt 536-0214 BLOODHOUNDS AKC selr·starte~ .with g~od <n4)558-4822. frost free rerngerator X..sPupples·champlon recpt. qualities. T yping I S!OO/bstofr. 673-4(MIO Ladie's bike. Schwlan liam, abandut wrinkle must be 70+ NB area. Wa it ress/Irvine. w ill Cruber, new, $ISO, P .P . relen'eDOWn0.1185 !6.>2414. train ine xpe rie n ced rtr refrlg SBO. Elec range I Evee548·5"'1. Service Station Allen· persons 2 ope nings ,1 S75. WasherS40. Scbwlnn51---'20" Web AKC Shelt.le M puofppyh.110 lunch 11 .;.,.m closed Suni 960-4609 I .,_.. · wb, sable. lots w te. dant. Full or part time. ·~,... · co Racer 20". Like new. Clft be shown great pet Chevron Station . 3000 & holidays . Arter 9:30am GE 161b Washer & Eltt· 83t-f12IO. M$-'Mll3 • · F'~•-"e c M 54$-5556. tric Dryer. "ood cond . .... n w. . SJ&.151Sal\er SPM .... 1w.tenahlOll lRJIH Sm'ER u m06 --Shipping · Full-tim e W~MI w..t.d ·--·• .. •••••••••••••• male, A.KC, shot.a, He 'd. packaging & shipping. "11.1 time. Exper. only· Chrome towel ban and as oe•nw No exp. nee. Costa Mesa, Apply in person 3-SPM. lfy~·re looking .ror a bet· paper holden ,. 40% Wl· _;_;_·-------1 No phone calls. The J oily ter job, you won l want to der wholesale. Approx. ~. Roger. 400 So. Coast miss th~ empl.oyment lmately 5.50 units. Bullr. Shoe sales. run time With Hwy, LaW!a Beach. COIWDN tnClassifled. sale only. 646-fOll6 or w/out exp., or will lnwl. Good co. benefits. Apply in person 9am to llam Mon lhru Fri. Stan· dard Shoes. 3077 So. Bnstol. C.M. STATIONERY STORE an Cd M needs saleslad y I' time. S days. X Int. wortung conds. Especia l· ly rine clieotele. Phone : ti7> l010 for appt. Stocltboy HICKORY FARMS Do you like to talk on the phone? New office opening soon near Orange Cou nty Airport . Cred it card marketing. No experience necessary. Call 9AM-4PM. CPM I llt-4JJ.U41 , ..... 10)0 Mu1t sell. 1100. beaut merked I/mo female AlMtaa Malamute with Dutroom miacellaneoua pa"ra • all 1 hot1 . equlpmeel. 3 lldt trays. m4121 s.fe lilht. For black and ---·------• white dn.elopln1: 1 ~ Male~ Cocker Spaniel. gallons each A " 8 COD· .. mm. old, PS cent.rate. 3 1allons nx S:.· '221 concentrate. 4 pints ---------1 hardener concentrate. Alfbu l Yf'. AKC Male F\nt sao takes all. tis, Toy Poodle f'em Wht ~ lmol .•. SS'7-t3t7 WANT ACTION? C1autled Adi 842.5878 WANT ACTION? Clasaifed Ada 64.2·5678 A *********************** BIS WEEK'S SPECIALS YOUR CHOICE ••• .IL'ST A FEW EXA!ff PLES: •• •UICK REGAL . 'M CORVIETTE STINGU \' (119409) '8444 WAS llllS NOW9NI.\' IBBN"38l '8999 WASIHN NOWONL\' St.ockboy for warehouse ""::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:::::!=====~~~!!!.L.---------L---------, needed. Jan. 775-4669. I '77 •lllai ELECTRA PARK AVE. ~~~~'3999 '79 SlJBABlJ •RAT ~~~~'~444 Keep trying. Slock person for ceramlr ,f:o. Stodlroofft ••••• Growing company near ocean needs person w apt.ltuck for detail & accuracy in stockroom of Marine Elec. Mfg. firm. Lile lifting. stocking, counting part.a. flllln g or· ders. Will train Call 64S-3632for appt. Student. need a parttime job? U :J0..4 wkdys. and some Satdys. If you're t'OllScientious and depen. dable. Now hiring for food prep and counter servers. Apply In penion. Stonemlll Terrace. 2915 Redhill. TB.LEIS For Beach Branches. Experience req'd. Xlnt. salary • benefit.. Apply Pwlonnel: HalTAallAHIC 721 No. Euclid, Anaheim 981·3IMIO .. E.O.E. ~ OlL COMPANY needs dependable penon who can work without 1upet'Vl1lon--ln Coata Y e •f · Co n ta c t customen. Al• unlm· PQl'Unl, but maturity la. We train. Write K.Q. Dick , Pre1 ., Sou tb weatern Pe\roleum, Ft. Worth. 1'1. 71101 All Aboard For Our Christmas Gift Train I An •••Y wey to Mtl your Chrt9tma• Gift ttema. .. NOWeNL\' ._CHEVROLET MONZA (442ZEO) '5888 WA81a9S NOWOM.\' ,,. OLDS CUTLASS DIESEL (215XOM) '7444 1t'A817W N8WONI.\' '79 CHEVROLET a>BVETl'E ~.,...10 99!!!. NOW ONI.. \' ' d .,_ UNCOLN VEUAILJ.a ~~~ •• '844·4 NOWONL\' '78 all:VBOLET EL CAMINO w.::~'4999 NOWMI.\' 918 D89QIB ASPEN ~~~J •• '3991!!!!!. N8WML\' d ... ., ....... ...... NOWONL\' .. '78 CELICA LllTllACK (166ZHN) '4999 WASll•S NO~OM.\' '77 DATSUN ate ~s,:~ '44 .All .All NOWONL\' ~ ._ TBllJJIPB TU (1AP0225) 11 I!!!!. .... WASSIZ.-, .. ~ NOWONL\' '79.IAQIJAB X.NI. \ =~:·13,999 ..,. •111cK a1v1DA ~5::~:. •• .a I!!!!!. I!!!!!.~ NOWOM.\' TDOYd ,• 'TmUnL.UT • A81JN.eNL\'l . . I. t •• , ' • I M at )n I ~ IHI le.-.. ..II.. S-. 1011 .. , C -IOIO..... .....&Org.1 I090 ,_.,ldly,Nowm~r 14, t980 OM.Vflft.OT ft -••••••••••••• l~e•e:'i•••••••••••••••• • ._!!"•••••••••••••••• t•• .. •••••••••••••••••i I t m 1.tt 1011 ....................... IMh. M•I ' -... . 1 Caddy 1poke whee ....................... A Chrt t a p t JA•H Power 9040 ...... P....-.-f Qll9Jllr.• ........ ,. 1 01!,!,1• lalaJ lltl llulu.ramlly lfa1a r•m1. 1100 for both. OONN Dlredortrombone Yaim~ n::.:o El:~:ne Serftce t 20 ............................................ .. tare t.a.elllre Cl--•• M C.11. Ill v .. o.r.,. laJe. Sat -.-1 ... azo ~c .... ExceUentcon· wiUI 28 auto rhythm• ....................... lt' Chris Craft a 1938 P&NN YAN la,01r , • ........ u ' N M11'4Pll, lhl a.a.arle VIDEOPONGOAME dldcm,Sl00.11M05Zalter 1teyboard1·hH ev~r· MARINEELECTRJCIA.N dutic, ort1. 'tt1ruout, ~A enllMn' ... WUI Hll a.. ..... llt • ••· ~.: .. .C .. !~ MHa. Orr a.ll·la·Table Sl50/trade tPM. ythin1. l/yr old. II~ ~~~r~·,i~l ~900 or trade down, al IDboerd, • out4ri•• a4lll N. ....... llllW •lie. '71 -• /,_aru. m.-Evenln11 Manhall 100 watt auper new. cott $3,450. wtu lak e make otr. 448-2115 . lllalllem. ao• twlD ~ .·~:r=:t:QM=,.. 11111111 D ft • inore. SDmlthlq fot everyone. UHd Office Furn ~-brl~· um Hm~~~ tz.'50. P.P.6411.0181. ~~.. tOJO 31' Silverton Ji1ybrid1e .,...,..._, lilt tll. I •au...e&. lf11. SHH Vla De AIU•· . • ~ ...... new. •~-., ca.a.... " _, ••• u • .: ... Pl1ff ....... ..,... I .......,. C SJC Fri Camera Nlkormalt. An· UMd-. lbaaeaeledric -..... I l •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• '78. N.B. 1 p avall. Tww ..... cMaael.iportfta , Clllll9 talllM. • W 06.-oar.,. SaJ,e, Art •Sat yn. . . Uqi., etc. $41·1813 1ultar. Profualonal ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78-.55 hp Chrysler OB. 3.5 225 H.P .• Avon /mlr. gen. Ult SM,500, ••I• pri~ .,... . .._., •t priata, fra•H. Tull . andletaforLATlmesSOO model with 'free of Lire Techlca ski boola, men'a, hrs, like new , $1000. like new with many Dt.D. •• llDlla ._.. ..... -ta a r a , I l ll • D • w S... ol CentW'Y s family Sa 9.341 ~ aolng up to Jhe neck. slae t. S/yeans old. $125. 542-9060 ·xtraa. 140,SOO. PP. IPC)l1ftaber. i..t ....... --p; __, ......._.~ eld.Wrw'a/ad c~lDt. 4N HDd St., Nwpt. =m i61.9417• eil. Woodcraln bMy with lr'JS..4410. • .. b 644-7872 , 751-1311, aaleprice•.ooo.a.•u I t •c .. 1 yu old 11.-.,deccli"baa,llA· Slllllwlllt.SUO.lto4 • bard •bell case. ssoo. S••rfllltGeech 1094 108 AvQo sport oat _~_n_oo_. ______ 1 cn&Mr.llttllT.500,aale e.. slat coact: 111uJ craft 111pplle1. 17' Ladder. 2 twin beds, ~ •••n•••••••••••••••••• ~=~~~~~s,.:C, w::;.~ .73 35• Fibet1lus Luhn priceU,IOO.I0'°'*9n.· l ~-llall ~. ~~·~~. ~·· 1'\aU alu 1reen nau1. bed•·Ranch Oak, can WAUOF Used Dlyina Equipment· oond. 1175 631-3280 Ask with Flybrldie. tw" dll, ahere1'1•, fKP.or" Uaa1'1S1',1,•te'. • •an -s:::=:_ ... Dc-HaBp. iofabtd •TS. Round bunk or trundle . 2 SPIAKBS Women ~SmallNylonJJ forJelf generator. ihower, Im --r, · · walDi ln Rancbo comer desks, 1 • • Wet Suit. Regulator, · ~ Mt900 SSl.oaJ 2U·5U-JIH da1•. •-•Ill lroa WOiQ. ut ~\al dln 1 dnl iool lwin bed. En· (2)C.binets3 x4 ea.w/4 Gauau Dive Bag &--.. Power 9040 .. .,..,_' · m.&au.avea. ·--•--_..;~-----• • •fl leaf. 4 Black • .,_ 11 · f ... hld 12" Sptrs. ln each. Value .,_, • .. --. or,_,,_,., "' laalr. ottoman, Q•D•o• .... LE-Sat/Su walnut -.1 .. ta1 chairs u.n:: co ect100 o ,... ,.1300 M l S 11 •375 ........ baProTan. 751-8967 ···~··••••••••••••·~··• -·~•-...... ime. ~ c;. gn n. _.. drpa-Off wht-various sz. 2 • us e • · 3 3 V I K I N G 7 4 Make your 1hoppln1 sa.L -luma •-a tlllllw/dryr. E·A ehr, wtr m. Saturday, 2405 16th chests, elec guilar & ~912Z7Terry Lefthanded?Go~clubs.S tou.rnbridge, teak pulpit. eaaierbyWlioltheDaily DallyPUotCl.ualftedAI. ..... DI t.W., 1 leaf, I bed frame, blkt, baby St, Newport Beach. amp, new bamboo SX?O Land camera • woods, 8 lrona. an red & rishequlp, 2 stations, C02 PUotClassified Ada. to.5171. 1 daain. UH cub . itm.. boy'•. women'•• (CASH ONLY> Please shades. , end tbls. Molnar strobeli•ht. wh\ bag, good cond. system, twin Crusaders. --L 9560 9160 M.S..519. a.1'1 elothes, cW"lalna. euutree~. .. /Sol bi d "' ni0-0213 MU50. Newport Yacht ~• Trucks becll..-, woven wood• - ' Sall w omon n · 536-•l7 Exchange675·1800 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• =·-• hr b ... -1A-.4prskibools.Misc. c-1096 ..-vat c · • 2 w \ • loll more · 17995 :.."t:d "-d·~rator Items. Office, ,_._.A --~ I""' VIKJ..,G '79 tw/350 bar· 1tool1, new Gillman, Irvine. lh 1ta11d .... 1065 ~;-Ou; ,....., .,dpt... 1015 .............. ~............ .,, · ...... elae BBQ. mucb•---------1• .. •••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Swap Meet, Village of Crus. FWC, 1 .S gen.· mee. m 11111 ' . Woodbridge Sat Nov 15 VHF. fatho, sumlog, · D R 1 V E W A y Coucb, microwave . For Sale 8 Camper Shell Wanted. Used IBM selec-Sam-3pm 'stonecreekl to urn bridge , slaJI ·<lllll'1 C.mpal1n bdrm CHRISTMAS SALE· tablet;-stereo, bdr set. $200. After SP-M Ca 11 trlc typewriter. caJI Flement.,:Y parking lot. shower. Reduced $89,500. '-.,.UOW • wlllte; bed sat~ M :30. 2142 B.1 hmefum.Call493-2687. Dave642·4853 646-4121. Nwpt Yacht Ex ch ~110 dra'wen, •· an.,. Ave .• C.lf. Pre· Jewelry 1070 Gorham Old English TJlS.to comp, level 11. TV.n~ 1091 ._01_s-_U100 ______ _ .. , cba1t w /booll Cbri1tma1 ltem1, lon1 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• Upped 8 eight 7-pc place ~ O~ I~ a c c e,: 5 • ••••••;••••••• •••••• • • • 3 2 • 8 A y L I N E R . ah If. UOO. Rustle ~ Chrl1tma1 records. Man's HK~ yellow gold s~ttings, + serving I · -0059a ·4· TV Suobridge, ·so. FWC .......... SlOO. 2 cbalr1, Chri1tma1 edition• ol bracelet. 10. nu11et tex-pieces. -.SOO valued over ftwts 1017 Volvo's, auto pilot, sm _ .. !1rO!f.h~0~o:. ma1aalne1, co1tume ~w-ed curb liolt. ~eaau~; ll000.4Z-4517 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DECODERS dwn or trade·take over --jewelry, unused cos· 1111 13mm in width, 8 G.E . Obi oven with Male CANARY (Singer) I payments . $49,500. • alua mllsing, metiCI, needlework kits, leqtb. Secured with a brushed metal finish. and Cage. $50. 840-3680 Newport Yacht Exch. trli Mlle deco items. dlahu, books. ap· concealed box clasp, SL50 Crallsmanhvyduty 545-0372 w•uo., 075-1800 I Pl'tc. firm. 21814 Ocean pljancet, plants. 1 maple with • figure 1 . safety radial arm saw $175 A r . I llnd. Cd.II. coffee \bl, 1 recliner clup. Total weight is Both in re at sha e' "-' & C>nJ-1 1090 SPEAKERS ua Chris Craft Seaskiff. cbn. etc. Woman's short 30.IZ pennyweiaht.a. Ap· Gl~ g p . ••••••••••••••••••••••• (2) C.bl..net.a 3'x4' ea. w /4 35'. TS, OCFB, RD F, $ .. :•lout dresser neece lined fur coat, praised over 13.000. Sell . Kawali Grand. 5'9" black. 12" Splus. ln each. Value VHF. $32,950. 840-5914. : JI.way mirror • never worn, 1 pr $60. latSJ.&'50.548·6446. .Japanese 7.7 caliber rifle. $4 ,300. 640·050S or SUOO Must Sell S375. . · ••• dbl bed S.00. Cherokee lalld.als wom Diamond Earrings 50 CUstom stock. Collec-631-4635. ~9227Teny 43'.Gran Mari.ner 967.000. I part41me on J week tour. + y /G, approx. lca~al tor's item. $150, 631·6266 ~SALE• 25" COLOR TV $148 Shp ~ 111;',% $50,000 loan ·1 .. S-. 1015 115 woman'• wool coat di soli · 11 50 87 JI( • · av a 1 I ab I e F u,11 Y ..... -,; .. •••••••••••••• _.:.. i r • a taire a o . '. . CARPETlNG Approx 200 John Brimhall's annual l Year Warranty equipped Perteet live- __ ....L • ...._ or war.!'. wea or & .62. 540-0208 sq.yds-3 yrs old-Like new. r-.holiday piano & or-642-5340 aboard. Pvt pty. 534-1505 1 ~ ol aU kinda availa-I ~S:::::&J ... =-.---1 .... ~ l ble. IAM·? Sun. 14381 Ill Rolex. Date Just. new. ong price Sl8.50 sq yd. gan sale. New Grand Stereo Am/Fm RDA·860 or~2254 on boat. Wtllber Pl. Westminster. HUeil •AIA•I SALi Stainless steel & gold. All for $500. 644,9199 P=·& S2 ,99Sj 00 .. New cus ii 8-track •player & '78 36ft dbl cabin um rtite ' ...... Prlcedto1ell Bestoffer. 752·7919· Jolm Wayne tennis mem-~off.~:,:~~~~~ ~r. BSR l~ntable. Loaded. 14Shrs. Peter's I c;.n,. Sale: free stand-F\amiture, antiques, Lin· Must s e 11 . -Cu s lo m bers hip, best offer· to50%off. digital dock. 4 speakers 1 Landing slip 11229 1714) I inl ltowe '50. oven $50. coin pictures, dl1h.es, diamon .. d ring, 3.86 c.t. m-83118, leave message. 31'1 South Bristol Xlnt. 1275. ~3532. 774-nOl or 1714 I 359 1236. 1 . Bt6t1-•· Solex moped ~·clothes, beautiful like new. Appraised m Two new Levelor mini 751·1121 New 1.enith B&W 13" TV. 30' JEFFRIES F /8 , SF. Stai. Truh compactor mink •~le. Ubmblrlella l9'l8 for 112.000. Make of. blinds 4S 'hx23. $20.00 Gulbransen Rialto organ 900 or best offer, must twn chrys microwave 95.JC9creamtableSSS. stand• um re as. fer Cal1AdAnswer#31S ch.' 702 . • see.in-5880 ·• CB Ph&• misc. aoodiu . Oraan stool a& much al ·642-U>O 24 hrs per ea 4t6-1 2 Leslie s pkrs, xlnt · oven, DF. VHF. .1 Sat/Sun 1·4 . 2096 mucbmore "'·~ • QUEEN . lid 8 cburch.646-1078 25" Quasar console TV fatho. Totally re·• s.turclayonly .....,. size so rass . . color works ood 1225. furbished. S26,200. Weltmimter Ave, CM. 312 Santa Ana Ave'Heavy 14.I< Man's Om.ega Heact.=,ard $225. c:J Upright Piano Beautalul 631...001 g . Newport Yacht Exch l Bet. Santa Ana/Orange Newport Heipla I Watch Bullocks /Tif. over~ new. Very g . G_olden Oak Case, recon· ___ 6?5-UIOO clfllat St. MZ-2588eves 1---------1 f , •$3200 Sell Sl cond1tlon. Electr.1c ditioned,tuned,newkeys 25 .. ZenithcolorT.V. ---------•• ...._ :is:, Typewriter $35. Older ~ SllO 25' W /Craft Nova of -: so. CAI.$., ANS WR TOTRUCKING EXCELLENT '81 SELECTION! •Y2 TONS-•% TONS•4x4s• • 1 TONS • CREW CABS• Brand New '81 GMC V2 TON LONGBED 6 cylinder. 3 speed. auto. trans.. gauges 11600T) ( 1GTCC1406BZ5000069) 55981 PLUS TAX t. UCIMSI niak CbristmH, &real .._. aale, present.a for eue;,w, beautiful lthr b a11 , belts • •AIAM SAU model lo good.condition. I IM? 3fi1o fshore. twins. s/slp. S.S. I satNovl.5 la -4n Call Saturday and Sun· 1978 Rhodes "88" suitcase . props, VltF. Cutty, head., 1111111 . 'o(mll r:m .._...__ 1010 day after 12 noon . piano, dnt cond. $850. Have ~omethino 111 sell"' Ur. etc. $12,800. Call An· : • Must dilpoee a 1le~s ••••••••••••••••••••••• n.-975-4233 " from aale of mountain m.31154 MUST SELL. -"'-=-''"-------_9~~1'1ed Jds_do _!t well j dy 645·2963 or 752-0687 • home . Dishes . U..A .. TA&S 1 I I ~ 1alore. Nylon ... book packs. &mnJa clothes + lothi.Dt. Sat /Sun t -4. 11216 Foxglove silverware, cookware, fromyourlMlllness card. Woa, New 9100 ......_ M•w 9100 ..,.,, M•w 91001Alltos, M•w 9100 Alltos, Mew · 9100 • M•w ..... linens, knlck·ko•cks, Send one card for each •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••f••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ... clothing • more. Low tac plt11 one spare. We , .• prices!! return permanently (Ulllbentty Pit.). Irvine. Ml Be1onia sealed attractive tag • Costa Mesa strap. meetln& airline ClrfSuallower between 1.D. requirements. Pre· A.atlquet,· collectibles, Bear6 Fairview vent l08s •theft! For a fura, aeeeuories • , penona1bed tag enclose pluta, movta1 family --------"""-!wallpaper. fabric or i..,. sio.ooo worth to Garate Sale. Bar1aios "Day Glo" paper • we ..U.W69ua,8am-5pm, Galore. Sat• Sun lsth • will back • trim your 17* Wellbank Lo, Spr-lab. 20121 Bayview Ave. tap. Or try two cards bltllWe6Talbert,H.B. Santa Ana Hel1hts bedttobac~ 56-3543 PRJ(; ES: Jnlae, 11 DeForest ---------1 12eaor3/15 <TralMaeo, Remington> Cl40Clit-•I 4/St.apS1.80ea. -~ • lull~. lOamApm ltW ia-boal Plua much, lllUll ll.ltea. lilll'' IMl&ema. mudt morel I famllles. J.OormanSl.40ea. m E. WUaoD, CM. See Sale&Tulncluded s..o.a. Sele, Sat .• Sun. Dlme-A-Une. NOCARD? 10.I. 117 Tanana Pl., Draw your own or send C.111.-.3431 Frplc, toll cluba • bat. name, address. phone & refrla. toaster, ice we'll mate one card per Prl~ to tell-leaving ...._ Sat. • Sun. only. 1-5. Plcnic table 6 be1ttbe1, mature hse pldla, Z bar 1tools, Head 1ld.1, Au1trian boots, mite. b1h·d Items • daddn1. 3105 Villa Way, . N.B. (NW corner 31st 9L) 'Sew. mach, clothes, bikes, IOlf clubs. Waterbed. Ilise. Df>I oven stove. s.t. only. lt721 Elmcrest I.A.SB Nelfbborhood garage 1a e . Furollure , boulehold item1. Iliac. 8D'block. Jardines Dr. RB.Bel. Sat/Sun, 11 ·4 . 423 BltDDla. Cdll. Kn1 bed. caalll Farberware lri II. S \lre cooker, misc materlal1, 6' yel bellcb, 3' seat, llllM.9QOdies. Os9lt Sale: f\arn, 6 ap· -.... 121~ lltb, HB. &lllN ..... •oVK-IN SALE. Near ..., wHbr/dryr, dbl iiobr blk 1la11 Nfri11freeaer. pool ta· blej d la tn1 rm Ht w/d ' •a, J.plece anU- CJ• matchinl br set, ltd apeaken, bed1, ...... CO .. •UNITY SWAP 111:rr lat 11-1 Newport Hll lc~ool SaDta Ana ~"'{!!UlN.8. In• • Gv•I• Sale, 11&.M.lllll,t-U. Collee· Ubltl, f~I=~ , JOU aame it we 1'12 Saa Drtft Dr, 111111 o.,.,. Sale, maay ••• lt•••· lo\1 of •:-&:.•·Coma Seel .. . Im! CoMtell•-.. IA B.8. <'Yorktown •• 1""'1it). 'fY, 'l/lllM fana, lf.1pd, ............ -. "" ll, •.•• 211 .... ,.i ...... cnaber, matt/1prin11. UC. AddJ51 each. mile. Sat. • Sun. 11·3. Send cbect or money or· 1577 Miramar, Balboa derto: Pm. NOT PllMTIMa Dbl bed •/bookcase hdbrd, silver coffee P.O. Box 15IO Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 MrV., ad' beveled edg CERAMIC plate 1la11 mirror, TILl11$9UI boob, lampa, pictures. sxe", 25< per pltte. Paint many h.lbld Item• • ar llue your own tiles. dal!dq. Sat. only. S.S. Good for ceramic shops Z2'1 Goldenrod. Corona or private parties to use dtJ Mar. your artistic abilities. SM-15.13 Patio Sale, Sat. ooly. Lots.1---------1 of silver • turquols Loft 1•u•• j e w e I r Y • s t e r Ii n g Send IOIDeoae you love a ftatware, platel a& bowls. bouquet o1 30 multi col· all Ill Sll/oa. Much misc. ondheliwn balloons tied hlbld • collectables. with ribbon & your own 11S-US.S420IRiverAv. al peuonal mesaage . 43rd • River on the Perfect for every oc· Channel, N.B. CH ion. We deliver. m-M1I SAT. 11/15. tAJI to 4PM .1--------- Teakdesll. 2drawer fll Snap-on 1ide cab. 3 cabinets, standard & drawers, 1 shelf, locka· legal, TV 's. 4xl' alum; ble. frame window compl, $140 7M·S137 w /screen, picture . frame., 1lauware Chrome Motocr011 bike more. H Ashwood . flZ. We.tern saddle, Irvine. S5Z·Ml'l $1.65. 6G-3001 "1fn. • everytbiog els Elec. Guitar • cue loads of everylhln PeaveyT-80. brand ne~. Sat/Sun uss Win · SOwattVoxAmp. Boya wsnen . A' CM S5T-17'7S 10 spd Schwinn bike. -~--------1 New 1tu.dent'1 des k. auiatma• ti.ma, palot, walnul.144--0Ml door, plct-. boulehold J--'-• -· ----....... cWblat. ftl, Sa ...,. ~-spa me~-68111l. 78HudsoD C )I benbip, best olfer. LC>&S, -------·-·-·""1 55S-Z314 aft. e. 4llO pba albaa,a, plant.a, misc: ...na, machlne. Wa1hlDI machine SJS. ' Electric Oryer 950. Pln1· ~;,..~· 81 Pongtabletl50.S41·7174 1'lnMwe 8eddle Skis camping equipment. win. • • • dow a1r coodiUoner un· !le. S.ttatn. lOAlf to UIUAI bedroom rumlture, 4Pll. 1 lllpplint Stream. • -.. .. v other ltem1 for eon. Turt.lerock Dr. • ·-Syeamon Creek. Irvine. uJe.CallMS.5Ul. 7SG7 Hoover upnpt vac. DS. Aatlqua 1tlD wicker IOla Floor waxer, S3S. TV • dWJ' SUS Kitcbe p6q pone 1ame. Zenith • · MW TV, '90. Oriental calllMt doors 2 ror a . nap, uUcau.e. mlrr'or1. • S' copper • bra11. OBO. Ooucb a loff·M8l SISO,~ f/11...0 ..., SlOO, S atra lrl CEIUNO FANS ddoM Ualal 91M for al l.Y-lla ~yea.. Clouout, dl.-play tuD a 1111. udl tnlla mod*, Soaly, Sl.50-SSOO. tlOO. Lola more. 112 IJWDlill.lpm. Wiii Ata' nc, I.A. Ba lfa1navoa 1tereo • ... ..,, 10-lpm. t•ratabla wltb atand U, ~.matt• 1pr-llemodtll•1 Sala, '-SIJS. ,_ar.r, IOfa, 8.alllm. lofu, ch•ln, dllltl' 6 ...,.._ auto lull c1r .... anon. plc c.n. ...u l1ua t•· bllW, roct... tra• Me 1{1 old bat 1ood rodl, mactlclDe eaMMU ' Befit pill to:=:.~ uaort. dl1hta :;....t:Ui:~ ~.,,..._ ......... :::·:r.·.,... --lrfll.3011. 1 .Cll. ...... 1111 OrHa a Oelf dwba, Ml • cart, .... ....., ol M wabtut dretMr, 1r .. n .Ornd1.••· ,. clt•lr, woma•'• lea sm: ... liiiii wltn • ....... a WlDBHter P\loe CIMalfled Ad. ....nn.. m.-. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • DATSUN 1981 PRIC~S 1981 DATSUN 510 lnduCllS Calff. EmilllOll & Ff9iltll. (Sef. Hl..At0200613) SUOOUTl'D ,,_CTO#f'f UST PfVCE $6139 ............................... 1if 'tiA"TSuN··31·a··\ 5 3 3 9 lnduClft Cell! Emisaion & $ F~ (Sef FNIOOOl7~) ~~T PRICE + l'. ••• ~ -~ .......... . 1·991··0ATSuN··210 ····$··········4·· 3 lnetucM CaHI. Em1Mlon 6 4 ~~78UOl174SJ • ~ 6 ~~- FACTO#fV UST Pmef -....... •• ___ ._ 'HECK YOUR CLOSEST DEALER LISTED HERE-GET THEIR PRICE IN WRITING. THEii COME SEE THE VOLUME DISCOUNT DATSUN DEALER ~· ,,, \.°':) M• lflhll IWVA ·~J fi'J : I NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY YOUR F YOU DON'T IUY YOUR CM FROM l*:K~DA,.. YOU MAY BE PAYING TOO MUCH! DATSUN!!! GAi GUZZLERS ACCEPTEDn:o. PAID 1'011 OR NOT J.~!t~.J~~!LLi.r 16.99% ALHAM&AA DATSUH ANAHEIM DATSUN AACAOIA OATSUN, INC W-'ll Y TUCKER DATStnl. IHC BALDWIN OA TSUN CAHOGA DATSUN COSTA MESAOATSUN CUL VER°CITY OAT SUH OOWNEY OATSUN, INC. 8AEADATSUH ZUOATSUH ~DAY*-'" GAAOIN GAOYE DA TIUtl ~ALfOATtuN HAMOR OATSUM. IHC ~ USED CAR BARGAINS 'Te DATaU• 'Te DATaU• 'Te DATaU• ltllDll.DLJL 111HlaCN. 110 aTATION WAOOM ~&.~ '3111 !r.:W:'7' •3995 ·=··~ '5991 ~rs:~) '71 DATIU• •11 DATaU• '71 DATSUN 11t•Dll.lml -.CN. 9111M/aCN. ~-·tlll =;ar=•4495 ·~~~•3995 • '71 DAftU• '79 llOZX '79 llOZX .... lml w CN. ~ ••• 1 ... '2111 :::..:t=: '1411 s.,.._,,..,1191 ,..... ~ . ' ;- DOT DA TS\Jtj. IHC GllllAH DA TSUH FOOTHM.l DATSUN. INC MOON DATSUN l~ llEACH DATSUll OOWNTOWIH A MO TOM IWEJ!IAI. DA I SUM. INC UNM.llSAI. CITY OATSUN.INC NEWl'Oll T OA TSUN 0UAUTV 0A ISUN ~TS l'ASAOlM Ot\T'SUI IOVnl MY DA TSU.. IC IAllWIOK WOIUS, INC e ftldlVNrNo>mbet " 1_, llMh.W 9060;1oeta.Sllpt/ ttet•tlM ... 1 t140 1tw.:;:YCtn/ (4WMttDrhn tHO IMMIW.M4 •,~-....;;o...;...,....;.;;;.;;..; ______ ....:,~:!.;.:.=:;:.:;=..:.:...:.::::. ,•••••••••••••••••••••••1 DocJaa t070 ,••••••••••••••••••••••• Iv t.rt 9110 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••·•-.. ••••• • .-------------...;,,;; _____ leah. '••~ ,040 a • O..JPPER SLOOP. '73 ••••'•••••••••••••••••• • ~b Mooed. 100 ml. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'G.JEZP ftiap. Gd. eolld. PIDI_....--: _,, ! ....................... w/\rlr. pop·top. drop Iha moor1 1 llkelMW, w/loelr, acceu, 'ID SUZUkl TS·250 1200 •·* or belt offer. -~ ,,, j 'M CMt Q-aft twin VI Mel, 9'700. Nwpt Yacht Need-~t, t tm._...191 ml llke new. MUST me9alUPll / I <..i.v. JU'a, d.bl plank, Eubl'JS.llOO I ~ a . llOP!D Suab11r1t Red SDLGOOO.f'JJ.tTa '7' lrowD Ch• v, w•MTm 11 IMp-to-.,._, etc Sell. llD' LANCER IMO tall ria TOID09 11Jot SIOO/OBO "'15 ~ OT115 street Suburban lllot Lo ml llR I W 1 &nda fot auto or truck. atoop.dlJ,whl.st~reo.lnt Moorin1upt.o.O'offLJdo. IU-OH , 09 ·1320 a.ck·ElecStart·5•.,..l A/C lltt · ..... ,; !Macllet AUow••uv11rl•'<1 n10tothome,etc Dlckor halyarda , SU .9SO . ll50mo.Jerry, Rlcbard SharplWIOW.SOM Mat.I, bd brallta. p/1. toH .. dvU.,...elaue '~.m.ml,9'T9·2134 _.Newport Yacht Exch 813-2549. ttal::!dn/ ma. eaatrol. hd rad., ortftd9.~~ .... I u · MOOalMG ' l'JS.1800 .... 5pMd & 5'--len • I so '72 HONDA 150, 2'JK m l. bd .-.al«, 41>tal hold ~· JH' ~ I · + bo t SW 9010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gd. eood. llovi.D1. muat tank + Z5 1 al aux. 111'adu-.1111111·r-~=--- 125 000 ~ 631 42861':: r~ C~ ~1043~ ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••'1110 Huaky 2SOcc O.R . Mll.412-'7GlaftSPM am/fm/1tereo/ caa1/CB. ' - -~Y eq ppe · Y 11' COBALT Mercrwaer, Like NEW condltlon ! '79 Yamaha 12.S Enduro 2 bd ball, locklnt dlf .. hd '79 Vikin& twin daesel,1 :Ves • R2·500· 642'2466 1/0, Lohn. 1a1 saver. Muat sell thl1 week ! 172ml.ISSO. • en1 cooler, hd trant radar, etc. ~· sf. superb· super clean. Cuatom tarp 11400. SM-21119. 175-5'154 eves coo&er. tuned exhautt, bd cond. PP. 815"11651. :is• Venture Cat & trlr, & tandem traiaer incl'd. All 11 t 1 5 wlnc,h, trlr hltch"840-tlSI ~====~~~-I mustsell makeoffer Wkdysat\8,848·9194 ° orcyc e . wap '74 Honda CB360T. 1ood1 42' ·UNlfl.JTE F /S, '80,1 646.2185 · S · 9090 Meet, a.Upm, Fri. Nov. cond. 1450/best offer . '78 Cherokee , 111pe r T .... two dsl. custom galley loah. ...... 1'. All indoor apace 7Sl·9582 clean, 60,000 ml, many M I 111>. 2 heads, radar. etc. 40j2S' Coronado Sloop new ••••••••••••••••••••••• available. Oranae Co. xt ras. SS . 000 I 0 B 0 . ...,. I hn De*· 125(),000. Nwpt Hood onner Well Main-Dry 1tora1e available. FairGrounda, C.M. 24 hr '76 Honda CRZO Mot.o·X, 642-CZ PIM . Yacht Exch 87S·1800 t!Uned Balboa Slip avail. Newport Dunes. 1131 info, &31·5118. very Uttle use, S3'15. For Your(Jart &-ioo:"675-4&67 Back Bay Dr. NB . 631-1430 '79JeepCJS,loml,sllver, .-.....•Aa..t&SOM ....... ltftt/ · 644.()510 '79'vi1Triumph gu racks. Take over _,......,..,._ C.....-9050 SANTANA27HONDA Bonnevllle750cc MUSTSB.L ~yment.sMll·S393 U.C• U1rc.-y ....................... Outboard, 4 Salls, Com-T1 • iportatloft blk, Pert, Or11. Cond. "18 Honda Hawk 400cc, Tnldls 9560 aDIHarbor Blvd. Exp Sallon Only. Sail lS pass, RDF +more ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must sell. 780-9S39 xlnl cond. Any reaa orter •••••••••••••••••••••••! Coltall... S.O.M30 wkends yearly on a $12,000 673·8096Eve. Aircraft fl 10 i8 Yamaha 400 Enduro accepted. 493·4440, '69F250 WeP.., Newport 30 out of Hunt. _ ...... SI'-/ ••••••••••••••••••••••• street le1al Xlnt cond _548-_26_19 _______ , Harbor for $100 monthly.---. ..-. · · V·8, automatic, power OVER Call eves & wkends Docks 9070 ~ ~ech Muskete~r. onlySOOOma. S700861-0179 IU8> yz 250G. Excellent sleerin1. belt.er see thla. (2Ul:s82·2'74 ••••••••••••••••••••••• nudlame 150 Lycoml'?I , . 1 cond. $1275/or best ofr. UB72009) -leek _;__ ____ .__ 12' beam up to 40' long 3 e n g • 2 Com . n a v s 7S Honda. XL 175. Like 988-5210 For Your Good I llUFISH MEXICO I blocks irom Fun Zo~e. ! transponder. 848.2509 art new. 1300m i. t875. . n.a., $1795 VW, PoncbeorAllCti Charter in h1.xury aboard Pwroraail. $325. 559.7499 t 5PM. 714-492·2215· Motwtto.s. s•1i I ";:l... Ford staterms. all acco~. in • Your fri e nds and Reftt 91 20 new, "seldom ridden. . . Westminster 836-4010' ~ UDI 60' Sportfisher, p~l. lcm,1rs,Sde/ 1'7SHonda. XR 7S. Llke1 .~.e.~ ..... !~.~! 5440GardenGroveBlvd. I cl. m.~als. F~r the BIG ' neighbors use Classified •••••••••••••••••••••••1 s.oo. 714-492·2215. 'IR~. :f \11x~e?/~;:; v:;~ CoutRl"!.y I <NE or leisure c~uise I when t h e y h a v e Cmpr for long bed truck, S27S/~k ~W /mi · '79 SRS Loni Bed Xlnt at Bayalde'Drlve lfilw1onMUun1 you want TIM! fastest draw in the call. 67S-2960So. Calir. something to sell. They'll I SIC, new jacks, window 750Honda, ·640-8585· Cond Casa, RED, $4950 Newport Beach 173-0800 te..U! Classified ads dol West ... a Daily Pilotletassified Ads your one· tell you how well it boot. sips 6, sac $900. $1100 . _493-_537_7 ______ -t ~Well.&U-5678. l ClasalriedAd.642·5678. : stopahopping~enter. 1' workedforthem! ; 646-8652 549·4919eves. 173 27' Winnebago, air &1 ..... ,._ ..... bed k 1 t Premlumpricea ' I i 1enerator, self cont'd.j ""~'."""er ,ma ex n I paidforanymedcar ....._ ..... HOO A..tos. N•w 91001Autos, N•w 9100 Autos, N•w 91001 Autos, Hew 9IOO Autos, N•w 9IOO 52,000 ml awning new trailer, $100. (foreign or domestic> ~ I ••••• ••• • • • •••••••••••• • ••• •• • • •• • •••••••••••• t • • ' I ,,.r. .. r...., .............................................. I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ··········••I tirel. Mu.st sell. a ,ooo, t '""'~· in 1ood conclition .. ll -080.556-7723 :international truck & SeeUsFint!~ •• f ,. '79 BROUGHAM. 23 '1 trailer, 35'. A·l shape.for bunkhouse aerodynamic older truck, motor Just = ~-full fibergiass. Sleeps 6.: ~· Gas .. ss.ooo .. Also[ • fUll rear bath. forward 20 seml·traaler. sin1le1 : lffil-~ lounge area. beige ex-' axle. $1500. Also welding I · terior w/beautiful camel bed for ~ ton Ford P.U. • ... . . I .,. 847-2203. Slater & ; mtenor. EYt;·level ove1_1 . Gothard. H.B. ~888 llarbor Rl\·d. ,._ 8 cu. ft. refng. Dash air 1 (."osta :\It's a 540-0330 &r roof air! am/fm /8trk,1•75 Chev o/4 T. 42,000 mi,1--=--------- cruise control, s t eel! xlntcond. in&out. 534001Wanted Honda car, = ... -.. -.. - I -.. .. ., .. • ... .. •• ~ .. • ... .. -.. : .. .... -.. --.. -.. -:= -.. • • -.. • .. -.. - • : - = "' • ---! = --• • .. -• radial tires. 6,000mi. 11 orolr. S4s-e&l8 • ~72. N-600 with blown owner. Cost $23,900 new. I qme. 531-8801 sell for: $17,900. Afl.1'73 Datsun P.U., like new; 6PM: 714·731·2080. : withshell. 52,430 mi, ask·I..._ .... orted • . · ing $3000. Call after 6 onl ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64 Cort~. dual air. front' wkdays , anytime on1Alfaa-o 9705 whl dnve, runs well. wkends: SSl-1181. ••••••••••••••••••••••• '6500. 548-6646; 542-5200 I I FINAL ALFA ROllEO AuloSerlice Parts , '74 Ranchero 351, air. pb. 1 Cl.EARANCE & A tori 9400 I ps, + xtras. Sl300or bst ALL 'llOB MUST GO! CCft e s offer. 548·89'78. ' "W•'-n...-"-'" eeeeeeee eeeeeee•eeeee••t I ~a .:;;' Ll"'C'au.11 SSAVESAVE $ ;vcm11 9570 ; WITH USED PARTS t •••••• • •• •• • • • • • •• • • • • • Imported car parts I 1977 FORD l A~~~iLv ; Fl~O VAM 101 N. Manchester I Autom~t1c trans ., fac-1 Anaheim 776.9900, tory. air cond., p~r .• ---------, steenng & brakes, crwse~ 1911 SPIDERS t&ENOW!!! BEACH IMPORTS 1418 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 4-c=eed z control. h eavy duty! -r lram., dual gas tanks, ---------tr.smission custom roof & complete:Allll 9707 Also miscellaneous 240Z, j custom interior. Low•••••••••••••••••••••••• 2J80Zpart.s miles! l OF A KIND! '75 AUDI IOOLS 768-5837 Best o ffe r ... M U S Tl Imiamite sunroof sedan . SELL! call after 6 PM w/automatic, air, etc. Autos for s. ! please. TI8· 1076 O r I I i n a l f i n i s h . ••••••••••••••••••••••• I '7 I vw v .... ( l.39PEN ) IMPORTANT I . $2195 NCYI'lCETO 14 cylinder. 4 s peed o! JIMMARIMO READERS AND . AM I F M . sunro of , . • ' • .. . • .. • Tb.e price of items\ ...._ RS95 ~l!kce "" I ADVERTISERS I IJ7lHNTl 'I VOUSWA~EM ~~aT: t':!e ~~~~~~:, 'S:?a.t Foret 14Z..2000 la classified advertising! 5440G~rdenGrove Blvd .. ·74 Audi Fox xlnt ID ~ columns~ not include I Westminster 636·40101 rnileqe. Good cond. Pvt I any apphcable taxes. . S part .. UV\ 641-8954 ; license, transfer fees , II> Dodge van BlOO. P I . Y· __.,. • fUW>Ce charges. fees Corl P IB. auto, 2800 m1. $6900 '77 AUDI i ~ poll~oo ~on trot de· S7S.S292 The Fox . Sun roof . vtce certifications or de· '7B Ford Van. new eng. artomatic sedan w /air. g aJ~.~u~entary ~re· new trans custom mt. cassette, Lovely condi· para~ c arge~ yn ess $2900 / rr' 549.4919 lion. <5791'WA> C otherwise_ spec1f1ed by. eves 0 er· $3295 t the advertiSer. l . JIM MAlllMO • Alllll•H/ · 77 Dodge, 17-24 mpg, vs. VOUSWA.a4 ' • c:aillsiCs 9520 l 4 spd OD, cruise. ps, pb, 18711 Beach Blvd. f ••••••••••••••••••• •••• S3llOO. 631-0208 _ HUNTINGTON BEACH ! 1970 CADILLAC 061 Ford van. Good Mech 142-2000 • COW'I DE VILLE mech. cond. Needs body 0 38,9117 onginaJ miles & work. $250. Call 493-0901. '73 Foa; t d cond. ·, loaded! Must be the best SUIOO t example of this model in Alllol W..ted 9590 892-8129 4 Oranie Co. 1 previousj••••••••••••••••••••••• 'llMW t71 I ~ owner & perfect ! WEPAYTOPOOLLAR •••••••••••••••••••••-~ (TIOAVA). MorloP used cars.foreign, 1 $3411 domestics or classics. H . your car Ls extra clean. II CREVI ER THEODORE ROBINS FORD 10b0 HARBOR Bl\10 COSTA MESA b41 0010 I I SANTA .... 1 le I 835•3171 , THE UlTllllllR OIUVINO MllC ..... I see~us FIRST! & 1 ST • 110A~Y . ·1 •USED IMW1• '46 Ford Woodie, restored "I "'Or-.. C.-. '72 2IOO'l w w /air (2061) Sll,000. ALSO '29 Model 292S HarbOr Blvd. "73l.OCS 4 spd. (0558) A Town Sedan. 4 dr.i COSTA MESA '74211JO'ltiia/r (03321 restored. Ideal for stu-979-2500 '7S211JO'la (0035) .. i c .. t. at e-dent. Sl0,000. 675-6161 . '77130csl opd. s /r Co.I) COLLECTORS! .. 1962 WE IUY '76211JO'l1/r41p.(1578) ie '71 ma alr, (St•) e-81.ack Linc. continental. CLEAN CARS '7'9330i 4 apd. sunrt c•n> White intr. t..ow mi. orig AND TRUCKS '713a0la. air ceoes> owner. Xlnt cond. See to '79SMa4apd (1M4) appreciate. 837 ·1333 I '79S21la 1/r <•15> '40 Ford deluxe Coupe. CloMd s .. d.,. . Show cond. 327 Chevy I ~ COUMTY'S e n g I n e . $ 7 S O 0 . 1 OLDHT 714-4f2·2215. I & ·so MOTD wire wheels. ..Q.H IUYER x.lnt cond, $10,500 Firm (213)51'2·3735 Top dollan for Sports Cara. Bu~•· Campers, S&lea-Service-Leasilll I _._---' A ho AakforU/C MGR -"' ,...._ n k ·~ ll' llJ i:9 " • 'S RED. 54 MGTF, perfect. 914'•· Audl. ~c-... ._ ... eomp na..,..,.., s w JIM MARINO Rolls yce Bll,V stopper. $15,900. 875-1957 lStOJamboree I· ·-.......... ,A Ford sports VOUSWA4HH NewportBeacb MO HH JI -...._. 18711 Beach Blvd. coupe. Sharp. Best offer HUNTINGTON BEACH ~ e OW!' 95.000. 540-4819· I 142-2000 i IOI Md.A ..... 1M1 Packard. 160. 4 dr; I tourinl sedan. Complete. TOP DOI.LA & ready to assemble. PAID FOi Refurblsbed chassis. &000 & CLIAM new wirinl. etc. 92300. 1 • \ -• 54MMI; MZ-5200 USID CAISI ' lllON. Beach Blvd. '· I LA HABRA 4WlllelD1hn 9550 ; cslll.No.olSAPw7> •••••••••••••••••••••••! . l71411ZZ·ll ll 77 PLYMOUTH Sunday by Appt=a Trail Blaser Hardt op I 1 1-..liiliil•llili•-lii• V-41, automaUc, steeri.n1. · --.:;..·------wide map and rubber. t"7t 5Hl. lee 1re1a. Lo Lo mllel oo thla beau-. j 1howrm cond. All op- ty. <.SP)) I e.e. MeM 641-1700 1 tlon1. Hm p 1 : T OL ' Mttl · ! -SD/rno. tr7-lllCll. i JIMMAllMO , WANTED! ;'71 m lee 1m air. ll- VO&MSW A•B4 l LU inodel ~oyota1 and . loYI. c;....te, ;lnt cO... ll7U Beach Blvd. i Vol v o • • C a I I u • · tbruOut tlaOO gu.~ HUNTINGTON BEACH TOOAY ll! ~ · ' 14Z.20IO . . . 1"11 ~Chief. im·I .a:.::io:.;_1:-11 ~. coedltloo. 11.000 -!090•· . DMI. ••· m.ma. 1 . ._..::::&:! !Sellldl~~-'42·5111 .. --~~~,- .............. ·-· ............. ._ .................... .. •••..... -i............. ········'-·-·····-·· .............................................. ······················· CN.\' PlDT • 11.W 0 DJ w ........... ,.94 .......... ,.... .......... rte4 I Frt~.~1'.INO ................. ~?~.~ ~ ............. ~~??.~ ~ ........... ~?!.~ ~!~~! ............ ~??~ ~-:!~.~~ .... ~!~.~ ~.·.~~."!:!....... .. .... ~r~ ....... S.:.1~.~.~ ._ !_tM ....... 111 .......... '11--., ..., IWahi, "rZ Jacuar XJ.e. Silver. ,!4MAZDAPICl.UP 71 ....... 2400 I ~:!~.'-~••••9740 ~••••• • 9744 P pll fJ949 _...1 • .1-.4 •+ .... ..uat.. valve llaclt Interior. iclnt. v1 ,000 miles, SUP.ER ..... • ............ ---.......... .. -... ,... _. !Meter. Job . 1 I• t c 0 0 d . emd. 15.00Gml. With ol' Q.EAN! I (.ml) Lovely dleeel Mdan. only '1awteu ..al. 'TO, both 79.... oaAMl&COUNTY a..; lmllllltlf'X> -'°90.au-.. 1. w l tho .at mob l 1 e SIJff M,000 llillN. aux tank, tops, Wblte/Bllt Int., Wire .w'"1a, ca11ette. ~DIEi telephone . U ,000. ntomatlc, loaded! amlfm auto a/c cruiae <mvtV> A&T •OHARIO ..... 9717 11441-2115. • ~ "111t'"'-• (074111) S7ttl p /1, p /b, il,t.SOO pp lllff , .... Hit =:~ ....................... '71XJ124dudn. HONDA-JIMMAIUMO 131.aM ~ ?.•"6f•• ,,.. .. ~ atACH ""' YOUI Low~ilea1e ,llAutoCenter Dr. YOUCSWA... KB '71450 SEL Loaded! llONDA. . , .......... ~ iQilift ~· aa/flD , NJ..... SllOO. irn 417·1S25 Irvine 136-7600 11111 Beacb Blvd. Tan/Brown lo mi! Buyer ,llAutoCenter Dr. .-MOWlf ··•.::.,.. t Ollt.t•ICOAST .._...._ 9734 '74 Mazda. Good condl· H1JNTINGTONBEACH wum.be~l.59 Irvine uo.7900 -•CHI~ -·.. 7' NAIDA ' ~D & ••••••••••••••••• ••••• • tion. One owner. $1800. 14J.JOOO 1974 M ..,.. ....-v-.. &Mill• adul mil•• on! ~ 111' ••• Ghia, new eno. •· eau..-.-u . ere. 2804-dr, all op· '77 MGB. many xtr11, .. Dove-__. '" Qlllt..U .. r-Mlt mt, =r OLC 1 "" .. • --...... ., Sed tJOlll. brand new, l6900 xJnt CODd. D500/or bet -..-*NM. 6'a•6'e/out, . A r con· HIAJMJUAITHS pai.nt,beetotrer. ' . 74 --.. ZIG an, aun· or beat offer, finan. air 4N-D>8 NEWPORTBEAC -All/fll,a.,.157,., *'aa&GO <._, =Y!I! 131·2034 S> RX7, silver w/blk ant, nd, A/C, AM/FM. runs avail. AK for Mark or · 1 ___ 7_1_J._otO __ o_~- Pttl A • • ..._. 9711 leu than 1000 mi: SSSOO. acod. needs tires, S6SOO Jeavemeuaae, 752.7084 Opel 9746 'nClifrt.-.e..t.SIJOO, *NAHieO Sift 9"MmM or beat o ffe r . PP . · •••••••••••••••••••••••Porsche II f ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 73 rr: -~ ' e a a ter •r.m on YOLISWA... SALISlalSRVICE • ...... RX ·G · "° l -.. t.... -742 730P&COUPI •••••••••••••••••••• wlllfap, ••~t me on I 79MAJ.DA <JIU 7 S. Mint. Salver ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... :111-•lt . · 11'1U•aeh8hd. OLD MOllLI 12,000 actual miles on blue.Sspd,air,sunroof, '77 ,Mercedes 240D. 1 .77 MG &lid&el lo A&&omatictrauml11lon, '71t14.M,OOOori1ml, m· .. -.-II, v~. "·•pd. ~1fJEACH MOMOA thla lovely GLC. Air con· mao. AM/FM. make of. owner. $13,000. mileage askinl s3soo =~\~m~) ralley mac, best offer. A er -· • GMCftUCKS dit.loot.oo! (12003) rer.67S-2282aft7pm. 493-53116 -.5673.' 531·58t7 afte~ · _95 148-7415 . ._ ....... loob lood • .._ B!Ollarbor Blvd. $3991 . ...,. 'Me ~ II 9pm. .., -· .. 541 JH4' • DMIUD Roa ... ter, runs COSTA MESA u .... M ... •IMO Lose somelhiil!I valuable? uu """"'· must se •I-"--------f1nanclnJ Available ~...... · · ' well. -or belt offer. H0.9640 --Place an ad an our Lolt SJ.800 or beat. 499.5213, MGI 9744 COAST UMI ---------•Jlmm..m. YOUCSWA•IM a nd , Founa columns. 4N-8M8 aft. s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• AUfO laOlllS c.9 t717 , -'71-AACCOID 187118e•eb81•d. • Th•tnhe,.peoplelook ~llGBGT goodeond---Bl d ·-•••••••••••••••••• 7S-40K mi, a/c, newl HUNTlHGTON BEACH when they've found an SELL idle items with a sun roof 'rblt eng ' COSTA 11ESX · .... MIW br.U.. ll1Dt cood. Xlnt AutomaUo.air,(876ULB> 14J.ZOOO itemo(vaJue. Da.UyPilotClasslrledAd. 646-0790;839-348S . 6•1 •ot? '11 Olk a dr ori lnt. 9t7SO (213)923-0543 $5199 • -r10:-'ltr:~s~: .:-,;..,:~auto, air. nu: ~ ?-&.""'-'. ~·-~~ .... '! .. !~~ ~ ... ~:!: ...... !~~~ ~~·-~:.~ ....... !~~~ .... ~·-~:.~ ....... !~~~ ........... .,..,., radials, 31X nti, immac.!j · HONDA. ..... S1SOO. 545-4477 eves. II Auto Center Dr. 97ZO l lrvine 830-7600 ·--••••••••••••••••• '711 Dataun sio. 2 dr. radiol-----------11• 77 DATSUN & air, immac, top mech.' '77 HONDA ·: 1; IJ IO cond. 1»3066 ACCOID MA1CHIACK "16 Dallun 8210, blue, xint S cylinder, s speed, sun· Aulomatic t.ramm1Hlon, cond. l2800. ~. AM/FM. Must see air;..._. (Z'7UEK> 552•4307 this~UMX> 1'Mnc~:!~ailable ~ ........... ~?~.~ -..ff!5 COASTUMI '67Ferrari330GTC. Garde G Bl ' . ..t MIJO llOIBS 29,000 mi, mint cond. =tminat!r rov~.4~~0 ~-Harbor Blvd. 631-0800or645-6367. · ,'--------- :;. (:arrA MESA. ·Rat 9725 '77 ACCORD . ~· 611-4017 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sspeed, air, am-rm, <499 I• 77DATSUM '1lFtATl50 TMY> $4999 Dynamite F·lO. 2 door, COMVRTIILE ··-.. -! front wheel drive, 4 4 s peed , m ags, "D--l!Jt.dzf•, I speed, radio and heater. yellow/black. (176HML > ~ T' -~ •I . (UIM) $1175 . • . HONDA 1 . $249,S F\oancin1 Available 18Aut.oCenler Dr. i .JIM MARINO COAST LIME Irvine 830· 7600 I VOUCSWA•.. AUTOlltOIHS Wanted Honda c a r , llTU Beach Blvd. 2'06 Harbor Blvd. 1970. 72 N~ with blown I _:~GTONBEACH COSTA MESA eogine.531-8801 ~ 14J.2000 631-4017 , ___ . ----- HONDA CIVIC, 1980, like I 71FtAT 121 SEDAM new, 14,000 mi, ss.0001 33,000 miles, EXTRA 080. '73 Olds Cutlass '77DATSUM '(L.o~ely 200SX sport ... ~. Automatic, air, .... <K5SWP> . .. PffS '·.· ............ 0 ., ~ .... llTU Beacb Blvd. lllJNTINGTON BEACH 14J.2000 74DATSUM 710 ....... ~(9191.Xl ) '''" , Q.EAN! ! (580836) Supreme, xlnt cond , 1J. $1900080. 631-2383. ~?IA"'"-• SILVER l.919 Honda 4 dr. HONDA'. LesS than 11,000 mi. Uses 18Aut.o Center Dr. re1. 1as. A/C. htr., 4 Irvine 830-7600 spla. AM/FM tape deck., '71FtAT121 cnaae cntrl, orig. ownr., wirewhl caps, lugg rack, I 4cylinder,4 speed,33,000 pert. cond. $7 ,650 . miles. 673-5089 1 $3'499 '75 Honda .Civic Wagon; ~?•tUI.• . HONDA. 18AUTOCENTER DR. IRVINE 830-7600 Am /fm cass. Nu brks nds minor body wrk $1295 675-9887 '7SCVCC S8M mi; S1875. 673· 7770 '74 FIAT U. TC WAGON ---------<1 Runs Great. Gets Good 1976 Honda Civic, 5 spd. Gas Mlleaae. 67,000 orig A/C. good cond. Pvt par· rmles, new brakes and ty. 1 ownr. 839-8306. trua. Can be aeeo at ........ 9710 Mobil StllUon ConMr of ••••• .. ••••-•••••••••• .•-~·~-'•• ~;,:fo!c ~~:. '64 Mart n. 3.8 Salon, ~ Mar' .,.....;080640-2691 re.stored A to ~. • UNCoLN·MERCURY . -white/red leather & atr. · llAutoCenWDr. fmd what you want in 20 + m.p.g. Ed West Irvine 830-7000 Daily Pilot Classifieds. _71_~_..;....·_21688 ___ . ___ _ ._a.Mew HOO HOO ~ ••••••••••................................... •EW '80 DATSUI PICKUP UTILITY IED '5995 Cab & chaals w/17 n. utility body. Extr• duty. (80· 1308-224847) IEW '81 DATSUI 210 '4842 AM/FM, 4 spd., 41n· dercoa~ prevent-a- theft stop·a-nat. (81~ 131 -080722) $7.17 per DAY That's ALL you pay fora 30dayad in the DAILY PILOT SEIVICE lllECTOIY DO IT NOW! 64~5671 ' • DOING ".,-..·: BUSINESS .::: UNDERA .. .. ,. . FICTITIOUS NAME? If rou h•N juet flied rour new Ftctltloue 8 1nln••• N•"'• •nd hew• not ret ......_d It for publlc4ltlon, P'HM don't lort•t th•t Ill• thnltetlon I• 30 d•r• from nt• of fMlne. The DAILY PILOT Wiii publl•h ..,_,, •tMement fO ! $31 .50 . Our cfrcul•tlOn lnducle• Ille entire Or•nt• CoHt .,.. •ncl ..... notlc•• •P,.•r In .. , edlttone. In order to •ubmlt rour •t•t•ment for publlc ellon 1end •11t1ropft ... copy •nd • check to THI DAILY PILOT. ,.0 . Bo• 1MO. Coet• ...... CA t2121. We 'N do the ,... For lflfor"'•'*' llll04lt lefl81 •Cl'f•rtlelllf pte•M ull t42-4321 ld. m . USITHI DAILY PILOT "FAST llSULT .. SllVICI DlllCTOIY , For Result Service Call i 642·16)1 j W .JJI ._ ____________ ... , I "1s Your Profession ' , HOMt REPAIRS? f Did YCJU know you can pla"' • cl•slfled ad In • tbe O.lly Pilot Sel'\'ice Dlrtttor~1 (Or a whole • month for '\s little , .. 1 fl'UT per day? For more · lftformation, rail 642·5'78 ' 4 speed transmission. bucket seats. power front disc brakes & fully factory eou1pped. ( 109533) 1981 TOYOTA ,; COMMERCIAL CAB/CHASSIS With 6x10· heavy duty stakebody. Ideal for gardeners. plumbers. construction uses. etc 1001914) 57781 1976 YOUCSWA ... W'B1PMALIA CAMPll 4 cyt. 4 ~ trant .. radio & full camt>ef 9QU1pment Lootls NEW 763PUUJ 1977 PLYMOUTH •••ow 4 cyl 5 speed trans . side stripes. AM FM radio & wsw radial tires 594TZTI 1'79 CHIYIOUT . LU¥ 4•4 fllCICW 4 cyl • 4 li>Nd trans . full camper shell & whtte spotle wtleel$. 4x• fun'• 1P92030) 1971TOYOTA COttOUA J DI. SIDAM 4 cYI . automatic trans.. steel radial tires & more• 336VAGJ 55499 HEW 1981 TOYOTA PICKUP Eou1pped with 4 spee d trans . tailgate panel. rear step bumper & Del Bar mirrors 1001886) 55641 1981 TOYOTA COROLLA WAGON EQu1pped with automatic tranSmtSSIOn. rear window wiper. MPX radio. carpeted floor mats. wheel well modllngs & pinstripes 10406711 1980 VOLVO 242GT SPORT COUPE Power steenng. power brakes. custom factory alloys with low profile Pirelli radials. wheel welt moldings. Fabric guard & sunroof (VC24245A1-186031 ). 59511 197' CHIYY LUY "LOMG wt9B. IASI" P.U. 4 cyl auto trans radio camper shell w rear seat. vinyl int wsw tires & low miles' 292575) lt71DATSUM Ull HAtcHIACIC 4 c;yl.. 4 speed trans.. AM FM slereo. body side moldings. pi n stripes & •steel r&<t1als 97•TOEl. 197' DATSUH 4 DOOi SI 0 SIDAH 4 cyl . 4 speed trans . factory ~" cond , AM FM radio. tinted glass & steel radl1ls. Looks NEW • (503XUI). IALEI OEPAATMENT HOUA I. Mon·Fri 9em·9pm Sat eam·&pm Sun 10am•?pm l!RYICI & PARTS DIPARTMINT HOURI I J . • . t • . \ • • ' =· ~ -11 ~ ci :J Id· er ID )Q 1r, as es !S, D· J. ce a ~ re it , at he ~ se lC- he le- an bk tea In~ \.n· of ~ the at ·= ter- apt. rby ~ 1rol .,. , air, ta and • Super aharp • M7t9 ~A•alablt COAnLIMI AUTOlaOMMS .. Harbor Blvd OOS'l'AM&SA 611-4017 AMtol, lmport•d ...,. ..... ,..d ........... ...... .•.....•..............• ....................... ......••••............. T....... 9767 Tri..... 9767 ¥_'•••• 9770 Valllw..-9710 ....................... ····••···············•• .................................................................... . ·rr Clullc TR4A IRS, •Int oft VW DAStB. Yr Baja, IUIU'f, aew pale-VOL YO ' •••••-••••••••••• •••• ..... •••••••••••••••••• ---------BRAND NEW d r I v e tr a In. • e w Lcwe!y •door delue ata-t,.._, nau 1ood, $1900 •17....... "n • wt.el *i~ wa1on 'Tt COrotla, top shape, TRIUMPH aeoerator, tires, wire Uon wap. 4 apeed, air, 'J90.U'11 SALB. S.YICI ...... alnt co.cl. beat otrer. p&a.tripln1, •poke whls. wh41el1, must sell ! putCODdiUoA (1~) ----------1 ... ..-I tlJ .. IJI. MH'11t MOOO.SSIMOO SPITFIRES LEAVI NG STATE _ $4tti '70VW 8-.ja. new paint, ,.....91• aae l2000/0BO 556-0IM3 JIM..,. ... •io..1o new Ura, new rebll en1. OVER8ltAI DELIVERY -t II T9fille 91'5 'Tl Cellca, whlle, Sspd. fo'ROMONLY -"'" xlnt tnl. Sl800/0BO. EXPERTS ...... 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Am/Fm stereo, air. xlnt '70 TR6: Looks and runs VC...SWA•a. ~1.M4 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 79 TOYOTA I cond. SMS0.19S·L97S. $49 9 9 xlnt. $1995. 962·8068. Aft. 18711 Beach Blvd. ---------1A1U •I •111t91AUl T I Coa<>LLA 1 . 7 7 T t C 1 . 6. HUNTJNGTON BEACH '74 Super Beetle, sunroof, VOi. VO 'I.A car• 4 &peed radio 0 y 0 a e I c a -14Z..2000 x1nt cond. ~. u--bor Bl d and heat• Loveiy con AM /l'tl Tape , wire Llf\back. Xlnt. cond. '77Triumph Spitfire, ask·---------613-"'40t llMn.111" "· diUun.!4NVCOI I wbeell .• air cf"(· am/fm radio. Heater. 19914) 1ng S5.000. Very lo '74¥WDASHER --.5-9-VW--1-U-5----1 _64._°Wo:~~:467 11991 aULomatic tranam 11 on, air, auto trans. Shade mileaae. 988-5673 , Only 44•000 miles on this JIM MAllMO liunew. <4'Wf> louvers, low mileage. UP TO sa&S8&7 after 9pm. deluxe 2 door station CLASSIC! OIAMGI COUMTY VOUSWA•IH $4595 _644-687 __ e_._____ '76 TR-7. air. Am/Fm' 8· wagon. 4 speed, radio ~r~8~=·a:::~ VOLVO 'T7 9US. sJenna meta.Ille, 18711 Beacb Blvd. s-..tFord '73 Corolla S.pd. Stereo. $2000 track. lo mileage. SJ.49S. andheatU~rsLIO) pm EXC..USIVELYVOLVO J\l'll'OOI. llhr. air, CISI HUN'TlNOTONBEACH .,~-o•rdenGroveBlvd. 88Kmlles.$2000/0BO. 661.019'l ----------·-1 a-tV 1 r.-al *""'""" 23" ... _ 1422000 .,.,.., .. ---·----~ JIMM•11 .... o Ma>.es ovo ~ er ....,,......., 6'5 r5, 675·""-• -----w-·-•--ter 636·4010 84.2·S464 ,,. " '66 VW Cowbug, nu eng, in Oran1e Coun•vJ ..,.uom• '65 TR4A Targa top. good I VOUlSWAGIH cstm paint & Int, very BUY or LE~E •vu, new motor, lo mi .... aoyce 9756 '7lTOYOTA '79MA%DA OFF'''' cond.$1700. 187ll8each81vd, clean $2000/0 BO. And DIRECT needs lnt. So&800 FIRM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Deluxe 1600 wagon. 4 12,000 actu.I miles on ____ 64_2_·2S94 j HUNTINGTON BE'ACH TR6. 962·S622 ) _ 646 :r702 "'1 DEALER IN U.S.A.· speed. radio and heater. thla lovely GLC. Air con· • • • 142,.2000 -~·,·~· ~.~~-~,~.·~ a o .. 'GT .a•••~too1 11.2003> 79-Spltfire. xlnt cond. 16K •75 Bus, xlnl cond .. -• -· -• -• -· 1v .,. ml, radials , stereo ... 2 • ·1acoNVERTIBLE blue/wht, AM /FM tape. loys, 8~~at~~e~ltton CARVER JIMMARINO JIMMARIHO ~e~"..a1 ~~J:~P~~P:!~~ 544-0508. Like new, 24,000 mi. ract.A/C.nutlres.loml.I -9ll.Sa/no lwd, konis. al ~ ROY ean. (......,$1495) W.UUIJ s"1995 (ON SOME MODELS) •A 00 ltereo. er ROLlS·ROVCE VOUCSWAGEH VOUSWAGEH license &t doc. fee. Ad-Volllwogea 9770 moo. will take vw in MSOO. 760-1631 10120 Garden Grove 1 Clli& AJloy, 6xlS, 5 apakti. 1MtJ•mMn9 18711 ~ach Blvd. 18711 Beach Blvd. vertised P.rice does not ••••••••••••••••••••••• lrade.1·77~8520. DUME IUGGY ' G.,... .:~· U .. tltOI "tiestotrer. New,_,a .. c11 U1.........nJ TONBE•CH HUNTINGTONBEACH include dealer installed '80YW••ttlTCO....,V .__.... n u'"£...... " · RA " • '78 YW DASHER New Everything Make 960-4645 142-2000 1 .. 2.2000 opt.. d . '7 d ... ltlV\ ClOSfO SUNDAYS "' &/~~;)... 5 1pee , a &r. am · rm O y n am It e 4 d oo r otrer631·4229 0 164 4 door se an. _,.,., '72 Porsche 914 Convert! Saab 9760 ,71 CBJCA ~·~ cassette, <oaJEST> hatchb~cll sedan . 4 .. 10 vW Bug body Goodl good coodJtion. 631-7439 blew/2to""'&cover Im· Tri•-" 9767 CALI.830-7600 s........i. atr. stereo. fac-. . eves64.S-730l days ,... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' · -•r• ~ I t & g mac cond. Ov~rhauled 19105• •1 5 sPeed. liftback. 2'.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·-~ '77YWD•SHER tory sunroof. Only 29.000 g ass, ms . wmn 000 mi ago. l owner. -miles, M UST GO !! ....... ..__ "--amitede::xe1unroor miles on this beauty . S325/olfer.552-8222.~ ·=v~~~~nywf:Jx~~ Ice o rrer 645-8077 TUllO. (&Wl'WR) •7•T•IUMPH 29125 HarborBlvd. u r u (196XJV) '68VWBug,gdcond, I d •..1•99 Dynamite s pitfire COSTAMESA hatchback. Automatic. $4995 pendable S2.650 firm. 6426245 ys a..ae. ... OW! _. ... P .... •aclean. <""..,..X A> JI RI O bestorrer. ...,,.._.....,,,. ~---· · · .--.." ~ ~~ ~~ roadster. Great condi-... AL& ~· MM• .... ._'""""' avca.a I........ ~ -~,. . 979-2500 $1995 ,,. " ss7-7798. ------Por 912E. loaded. Cull SOA g,,a._.., - -lion. <838UJX> VOUCSWAGEM 1 - 7, ext 289 days. or SB.ICTIOH! . HONDA. Slt': i JIM MAllMO mu Beach Blvd. i2 automatic stick Bug. AuhK. Used ~m..J1t1l2 eves. 18AutoCenter Or. JIM MARINO If you want your advertis-VOUCSWAGEM HUNTINGTON BEACH gd cond. S18SO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'l.SCTarga, $24.oooor BEACH IMPORTS Irvine 830.7600 VOLKSWAGEN ing message to reach mu Beach Blvd. 842-2000 s.0-1935. GeMral 990 I • 0 "' Dove Street '""'11 Be h Bl d more people at lower HUNTINGTON BEACH 1 . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• "*t offer. (714 )497-2871 NEWPORT BEACH '78 Celica liftback. a le.I HuNTING;6N BEACH cost. Classified is lhe 142-2000 1'800ieseJRabbit,dlxmdl.l 69 Ghia, s uper. clean, '74 LTD Station Wgn, '71 t'.dr897·2S38. 752-0900 am/fm. auto. 842-2000 way to go! Call Now! -. . loaded w /xtras. Only must see. $3000/(trm. Maverick, '64 Rambler, Qa;;;t Ads Call &l2 5678 9'79-3073 • 642·5678 Class1f1ed Ads 642·56781 4100 mi. S7500. 637 ·6863 I 640·7013. _ small trlr Cor gardener. ~ os, New · 9800 Autos. Mew 9800 Autos, Mew 9800-l~utos, Mew 9800 Autos, New -9800 Autos, Mew 9100 ·~ vw Van . 7 pass. Darkj '63 European VW. Near _642-_9_183 ______ _ ::=•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••u•••••••••I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• brwn/tan, l3 ,000 mi. Gdt shOw room cond. $2500. AMC 9905 ~.. cond. sm0G. 494 ·9456 Ori ---~2681 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DATSUNSFOR 1981 BIG STOCKS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY WHILE THEY LASTI CHOOSE FROM V' 210's V' 810'1 V' 310's V' 200SX's V' 510's V' 280ZX's RAY WILDE (GEN. MGR.) IOI WILDE (OWN ER) OW-A-DA nuN DfAlJ CALL 558-7811 . ) BIG SELECTIONS READY TO ROLL • SHORT BEDS • KING CABS •LONG BEDS • 4x41s EVERY CAR LISTED BELOW NOW SPECIAll Y CLEARANCE PRICED . SEE THEM ANO SMILE! 12 Mo./ 12,000 Mlle Ser¥1ce COfttroct A vollal»Je On Mott Used IMports '76 .... 121 4 cyl 4 speed. radials. vinyl interior. white. great t1111e economy car Priced below bluebook. !JKCML) 52580 '76 Opet .z ur. 4 cyl 4 spee(I, radials. luggage rack Gold exterior priced to sell. saves gas. ··Special of the week• 1833SGVJ 51890 . '76~Htch. '71 12 I 0 G.X. Hatdl 4 cyl . 4 s peed. steel radials. custom rear deck rug kit wheel covers body side moldin gs. luggage rack. blue. low miles small down. 'Test ~5 3661 '79 0.... JIOD c:,.. 6 cyl 5 speed, 11r AM-FM tape N issan ma g a. p1ns1npes btue low mllea. 1 owner 12 mos 112.000 miles. servi ce contract available t692WZO) 59889 '76T.,.._w..,.. AM·FM stereo 4 speed new steer radial whitewalls. low miles. new oa1n1 Stk #6189 4 c y1 auto. air. wneet covers. vinyl interior bright red new tires. low miles, oreal price 1284PURI 53160 '77 .,.._ 1210 2 Dr. 4 c yl 4 speed new w1111ewalls w11ee1 covers. vinyl mtenor. tuggage racl{. bocty 1101 motd1nos. road ready. small paymenta 1839RXC) 53176 52983 '7' D.._ 110 Z Dr. 6 cyl . 1tt.1tomat1c . air. power steering. AM-FM stereo. steel radials. Stiver 13.231 miles 1 owner. · Hurry won't lastl"' (397WZO) 55999 eves 497-3598 .77 VW Bus, sunroo-r.-lo 1967 Rambler American, -----2·dr. 6-cyl, $700 or offer, '73 VW Bug. xlnt cond. rru. xlnt cond. ~. 545-7836. SS2·4307 ---------$3,IXXJ --- -luldc 991 0 548·6446 ~·12 VW BEETL,E Like ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·74 VW A I Th ng l New Mu s t Sec $2995 '65 IUICIC ~ap~ co i 5.57·5947 I JO.SOOK m1. on g pnt. xlnt• ---I SKYLARK cond 2 tops fiberglass &1·70 VW fastback, 12200. ! You must see this car. surrey $5000 546-4343, perfect student's car 1NNB638) eves __ _ 1 494-5189 I Rnlv $1288 I '65 VW Sedan. runs goo<L:'73 VW no enRtne, $350 ~Ford I S895. 179 E. 18th St. C M 1 Has been rolled 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. ~·1487. ----1 751-0689, 548-5824 Westminster 636--4010 '80 Rabbit Diesel L ·79 Convert River blue ,79 RIVIERA llKm1, all Absolutely loaded 1 metl. Su per stereo & the goodies! $9300 Call SB?AO 494·2!'~61 cass. Xlnl $7950 !Jl ~183 wttdays 8-4 996-9751 1 ·1 1 411 Wagon. Or1gi.70 VW. Sqbck lmmacl·77 Riviera 2 dr steJ'eo I owner Campi svs r ed I cond New paint tires l · I I ' t ' ...,,_ d $2750 8:r7 2181 . . . a Pe • a o P s . ! mJJJt con · · · I custom striping, auto. P!OO/OB0.968-4763 I arts _ __ __ runs great. Must see. I ® I f3200. 631·6266 Cadillac 9f I 5 : \., ------...................... . 1 \ 6 / 72 Bug, rblt. perfect pain-•77 CADILLAC ·1 1 l 1n t. A M. /FM c a 5 s Beautiful sedan devllle 1 S!,4~ Lag661 3982 w/only 24,000 mil~s . •73 VW Bus. ~d cond. tape Loaded! (812TSI) deek. S2SOO JIM MARINO 64:>-9796 VOUCSWAGEH' -Hop in for . a test drive. @~M.~ . 511-4100 131)1 ... -"°'°' G...-°""'~0rire ·73 VW Bu~. 1 ownt>r. F M • c·asselle. g reat 1·ond j Must sell S!2001 h~t ofr I 857 :?AJ.1 ev~s '78 VW Dsl Ra bbit. sunrf. dual tanka, tape deck. 546-2855 1 ·68 Bug. xlnt mech cond. needs mt v.ork1pamt. I Sl.500 best offer 968 6122 I --=-1!·75 Bug convt Yellow-. 71 VW bug. new lire!'. black top. new paint. new I , stereo. rebuilt engine t op. mint cond Lo $1850.6316039 mileage . P P Orig .-----· owner. Days· 546·6654. 60 VW Clean. runs i: real eves & wk ends· 752·6360. $1400. 1.8711 Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-2000 YOUR #I CA,DIUA_C DUl:RsAiP ... OflAHGE COUNTY! SALES. SERVICE AND LEASING /It()() H.Hh,11 Hl\\I c "~'·' '"'' '>40 'llOtl CALL545-6760 i'68 VW Bus A M /f'M '56 Cad. 63,000 orig mi, -, Cassette Stereo. Reb. xlnt cond 11800 or best CherryCollector s l.965 Trans miss ion Good orfer.64S·js16 , Karmann Ghia Firs t Cond. Sl850. 962·8SS9 Sl!OO Takes ( 11653·4124 ---'79Seville Diesel Anytime If you're not reading the -little ads in Classified, '66 VW Sundial Cm pr you're missing a lot or I S900 newsy information as 498·4082 wel I as some great buys. All extras + moonroo( & xtra fuel tank. Call Answer Ad #3 46 . 642·4300. 24 hrs. Autos, Hew Autos. New 9800 Autos, M~w -WEEK-END SPECIAL - 1981 -HONDA ACCORD S SPIED HATCHIACK R.i!I•• llrH. rtmolt sldt mlrro". rear win oow wloe' defOOOfr $6299* SM5319C024n5 ARRIVING SOON -=-ALL NIW. FOR '81 HONDA CIVIC 4 DOOR Spacious ' door styling, radial tires, appearance group, tachometer. Civic fuel economy. COMPARE HONDA AND SAVE .,..,. ..._, ....... .,.._..., .... , He., 41c .... ... price •..a.fact '9 ,,.... ........ thnl I MM I 9100 • • • . • . • .. • > • • t p ' •• ~ ~ ~ is; ~ • d bi 14 -<- " • .. " .. . . lO r. u • ••• ... s. --ce a lli re ll, at he Dlt se lC· he le- an Dk tea ID~ ter :he >es ew AS >rs . \n- of !ft the t at 1= 1ter- apt. hrby -ftre ·lrol .,.. •, ...... ~ ...... UIH W..UMCI Friday November 14 1980 CWLY PILOT OfJ ............ -.... ..................... ............................ 7 ... I.I "•• tt11 =. 'a tt11 .................. ~!! .. ~ .. "!"':""'~·.•.'-! ......... ~!~.~ ~ '''' SC 111•••••••••••••• •••• •••••••••••••••••• •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. ....._ lla/IUl air• lo 'll •AllMOMT •19 O&.OS CUTLASS '10 P'tNTO '79 HORIZON '77 T,_, A• ..._ ,nu• to Hll WA-H Oieul full p ower A l"\lnabout or• waion. s •Pffd. air, t wo tone. Powv atffriD1, brall ... ---LOADED! I <2Z2XUG 1 mAllt see. (M'TYOM > (77SVKS> window a, Pow•r door ~v.a. ·~,·!!!·d po.· mwu·.~ .,.,, . Y•r c•·1·ce M-t" locks. rear window d• •tt c..,_ DeVUlt , • ~ ...... -· §.-~ ~~ .-;_,1 R fc,gger. 18 MPG with 403 ' ..... 1 1 ••111• ••UO ... I i.,. ..... ) ~ )ll""UI'...... uaa5 ~---~t.d:fe« V8. AM /FM I t rack . Praa~ tta TU I o r ~u '""1'1 ~ T ' ~.. ~ ,.,._ •• UNCOLN MEl€CURV 5-Mf Ford LINCOLN-MERCURY . 516-1415 s...t ,_... 16 Auto Center Dr. S640Garden Grove Blvd 16 Auto Center Dr. ·-:'..~· :a::~t to:~· liMDOardenOrove Blvd lrVine 830-lOOO Westminsler &36-4010 Irvine _830..:7~ '72 Pontiac Station Wgn, ..... PIP 640-IMll w.tmiMter tJe .. •OlO "79 Okla Delta 88, cstm .73-Pin -"" be f '75 l'L YMOUTH all pwr, rW1s fine. Good --crulaer 4-dr wago n . to . ..,.,.., or sl 0 mllea1e $600 OB O C • 9917 •ca.mpel',l f ,OOO orcm1. AM /FM radio, air . fer. VALIANT t!M-9283 · -·• .. ••••••••••••••• Aff, 1ood cond, daya cnise control. pwr door 644-5389 after 3pm_._ 6 cylinder. automatic, ---------- e'1·1Dl, ov• _.·7866 locks,burllaraJarm. V·8 '76Pillto,autotrans, power s teerin g. air. '69 Gran Prix. Good "nO...re. VI, 4 bbl,·~•· ,.,,,, .. ,,. 1leNO I trll. ••••· racllel Urea , l•ad•d. A /C , UUO. 1Sl44lr aft .• ..,7 -....1 "'T •1'K · .. 950 Sl' .. "' AM/FM tape, only 29.163 Transportation. need m. -... et\&. w-mi, •• · """" miles IS09ZERl ~WA.OM CallS'fS-5292. 559·5149. lie work. ~751·4542 V-1. automatic. power •73 OlDS CUnASS -7 1 PINTO --$2475 ·n Grand LeMans. Xlnt lteeri.nt,alr,only33.84S Hurs t s h ift. coupe. WAGONS SuftsefFord cond. 30.000 mi. $3800 'N C...ro. auto trans, mile&.. (158TJI> (882WFK) All 4 sold with 1 year 5440Garden Grove Blvd. obo. 840-5490 aft 5pm, P • *· Id tires. vinyl I ..... Only $1799 2 0 , 0 0 0 warranty . Westminster 636-4010 '79 Trana Am. Lo mi. ............. d mUeare. .._ ·-~ 'SYZ WC I ..... a ,000 mi. Attrac· ft1S5 "D-.-'!J6f~,,... ( 305 · 7 74 • ftontfac 99&5 Joaded W/Joodies. See It dw'-lde• l2 • ~ T' SSSSPL.308RYX> ••••••••••••••••••••••• tobellevelt.WkdysAftS, tibkeon.r.~tio1 .. 135. s-.tford uNcoLN-MEf{cuRv From As LI As ·eoftONTt•c 1-848-·9_UM ____ _ G_...._ 81 16AutoCenler Dr. W Trans·Am w /only 7000 'Tl camero. Mint, must 5440 .... '-nGrove vd. lrvine 830-7000 ("')395 '19Grand Prix. 6~ycl. PS, ~· 5f7·Ml4 or144-4908 We-tn>IDlter 83S-4010 Pinto 9957 L~....t. Ford :;'!:~-:S·1~~~'d1t! ~~tg:~=~ PB, radio. air. Im mac, bu •t ttJO ,_,. 9940 ••••••••••• ••••••• ••• •• _....., (S2AYZDJ platJnum paint, red int., -" ............. ,.......... 5440GardenGroveBlvd $7695 17Kmi.estatesale,SS2SO -·-••••••••11••••••• '71.ft.•""....a""D"" 76 Pinto'. auto. 4 cyl Westminst_er 636·4010 JIMM"Rl....ao OBO.M0-6710 -CHIV "'1 '10 •-ro..-"' 44.000 m1, new pa int. "' "' ----• UY6 4 door, autom~lic, air. mags, AM /F M c11Ss ·77 Pont Lamans J50('U VOLKSWAGEN l"tutderbird po wer s teera n g and S2400 979-8169 cruise. air. auto. tilt. ex 18711 Beach Blvd •••••••••••••••••• ••••• COUPll brakes. (3S6TRC> • rood $3700 575,9395 HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 Thunderbird. 2dr. air. :J''•'':'':;'r :•; Sl49' 14.to<.H•w 9100 Auto•. N•w 9800 842·2000 ... pb,et<. 1800. ... -_644-0J~ <Sar. \, SHfll ~ ~ill~ ~ C .. Yf'Olet UNCOLN·MERCURY no..AQuallSt,s 16AutoCenter Dr. NEWPORT EEACH lrvine 830-1000 113-0555 •1tLTD '1' CHIVY 4 door, V·8, automatic. power s teering. air. c..vlnl c ream i n co lor . 4 cylinder, 4 s pee d , (S74WBQ) ala'eot_.,.. (797XWG > ~!~ailable ~~1 1 COAST UNI S440Garden Grove Blvd. ! AUTOllOIHS 'Westminster 636-4010; 21191 Harbor Blvd. COST~ MESA 'S> nESrA 3.000mi just· 6Jl·40t7 like new $must sell $C500 1 ----------1 or take over payments '. ?fCHIVETTE $147/mo call Ma rtha 1 4 cylinder. automalic. I 4!M·36'12or497-54S4 ; like new, must see. ,71 FIESTA. ! <..WSS> . I ~815 Red in color. Musl see. 1 ~ I (601UML) : 5440G=Gr:: Blvd. I ~j1~5 l; Westminster 636-4010 5440Garden Grove Blvd. sa us FllST! Weetminat.er 636-4010 : We have a .nod selection '89 • 'TD 1 60M of N E W-6 US E D · "' ' owner ' ' i COH1'4fll CHEVROLET awnclleta! I ~t cond. S850 /0 B0. 1 I '77 GRANA.DAS ' All 3 Granadas sold with I '-'>-I I ·'l••I H:\•) ' r--i ' ,, ~ " \ S4~ 1200 1 1 year 20,000 mile war-1 ranlies . (863TMK ,I ---------»?SOA, 880RKTJ I ?IMAUIU WA90M V-1, automaUc, power lleertnc. air cood., musl ... (51DO&K) $1495 s-.tFord 56e0Garma0rov. Blvd. 1hltmimter lll-4010 "JS llclllte CUlo Landau. ISO VI, air, Am /Fm lllereo, elec windows & ..U, cnli.se control. ful- ly io.ded. SllOC). 841-4105. 71MOYA 2 door. V-8, eutomatic. air CCllldit.iooin&. V ·lop. AM /Fii, only 38,633 mllee. !Ol3VNH> $3495 s...tFord 5M>Gardeo Grove Blvd. W4!11tmiuter 636-4010 ''18 Moosa, 4 cyl, new l'8dial llres. 3 lpd. 45M. 91JOO. 492-2736 frma ,As Low As S?495 I s-..tFord 5440Garden Grove Blvd. I Westminster 636-4010 I '64 Ford Falcon. a50 644-8803, 556--4.&CS '71 LTO WA4'iOH I V-8, automalic, power steering, a ir , AM /FM tape. rack. cruise, 9 , pauenger. only 35,584 I miles. (47SRZR l Must See! 1 s..n.tFord I S440Garden Grove Blvd. Westminster 636·4010 9945 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 MARI( tll 'F\llJ power. 71,000 miles. SHARP! ! <840637 > ~?t.tlelH NEW '80 PINTO 51 IS!OOMTH 2 Or 5eaan Fron! O•SC CU4 .. l!S Plectroo•c 1qn1t10., 'actii. & 01r1ton 11eerin11 \1ee1 bellf.'O rad•a•s detu•e whPel cover1 anct mor('• Ca~n 0"'-" -~29~ 77 phi\ taJ< hcense & <JOc tee \600 00 <IOw" 11 II> 00 '°' 48 ,..,.,,,,,$ Oelll'rlO oav once -\612000 APR 15119% 1113610 1 S•• 25461 MEW '80 FAIRMONT 515 l~OHTH A11''->mdht han\ pNr "Stei-t•nQ & tr\#nl d1...: hra~e" '•""eO Q~..lS\ !.'P.e! Oellt:.'O r~l,,)l't raclt J (11n,r,n srPPflnQ tntJ m"''° ca"' 011eo -~89 rn 01,,~ ta. l•cen\(' & d"< f Pt' '600 00 nn"'" \ 151 ?4 '''' 411 mcm1•" 09fer1Pd Ply QttCP Sl659 52 APR l 'I 99'\I. '152974 St~ 2394 MEW '80 T·BIRO NEW '80 FIEST A 5 133!~H l Or t1.\IL"Oo£" rron1 "'"e~• 011..ie r.1cJ.. 1 CNn11 n srrPr1nq .. tePl ~Uec' radials 0""1' hont n1-.t DrdkP\ rear w111C1ow WU>f't wa,l'IPr & moo.) (' asn 0"' (' -S4886 88 plu• "" hte,,se S ooc Ip(' S600 00 Jown 1133 15 for 48 montns Oeleflec! Oily Ot1Ct1 -16119 I 70 APR I$ OK 3S6690 Slk 2450 MEW '80 MUST AMG 5 152°~" Pf1V¥P' •rN¥mq & ,,,.,,., "1• ·'~ Of'd.,P tmHtQ Qltt'\' rac'" \ CJ1no 1r1 "1llHH1nq '\tee1 bf'llPO r .~,,.1 , !, .. ,.,.p NhePt 'ove-r4' A nw1u• Cash Ofl(P -c.a;•,,,, ' ... OIUI ta> to(;ensr> " '1<Y-fr•o> <600 ()() OOW<\ \ 1 52 03 tor •8 mo,,IM Oefprrr>O Pay pnrr> -<78Q7 44 APR !'> 99' "'818 St~ ?bJ< MEW ·so GRANADA s221s~~OOW s 14so~~DOW STICKS STICKS Fro"I M'\eet <St•ve .t iwhe@1 •"de0Pncten1 5U$oension tACiii & p.ruatl stee<•no tron• ""c ora•es ~tCt'I bellttd 'ad1at\ l1nteo w11lQsn1elrt & more• SAVE GAS 1981 LYNXGL 13381 PBMOM. +TAX lUM -$AVE MONEY OR 1981 COUGAR 17832 PRMOM. +TAX Orie,. CoR ..,._ ltfllcl<;el WJO. TOC.I NY· l!Wftls ..... sr. UceftM '1U. Vou N Y • ..,_,l'AlflU Of $141 ... ltK!locling .... Tol•I .... 119111°" SIO, ue." °" •Pllf'o••• Of c rte II. LUii OtielMI ...... 11'41. It~ UIOO. T- NY"'°"' 9'012. U<elll9 sn •. Vbu "' .. peymeno ot ""·02 lnc1UC11"9 .... Toi.II-. ll~tlon $11A72 Pli~ClleM oPlloll. IPA 44HWY. 28CtTY IPA 19CtTY 27HWY. •NO DOWN PAYMENT • FREE LOAN CARS DURING SERVICE •FREE DETAIL EVERY 6 MONTHS • FREE CREDIT CHECK MEW 3-DOOR HATCH BACK 9!! THE WORLD CAR ev Ill BUILT AMERICA TO TAKE Oii THE WORLD! "71 Chevette, f spd, rm stereo cus. $2400 /0 80 . f'lS.21127,645-41216 LINCOLN-MERCURY 16AutoCenter Dr. lrvine 830-7000 f r1w,, ld' (fa J 4 .(tP._.rj. d ,• •ITclffC llve'1f•..r(' lf.ln~ 1114 no.,.,_,, '"urv -.01+r ooncn "'"il' 'HI wrtAPI air ~"t1rt1f"\rniq-1"0f't1'"11 Ct>nrrm l\Y FM 11 lrdC .. Otfllm111m ·' •1n11 .. ,..,flr" & m.,cn mo-r-108814 <it• ~t.•t> Autom.111r. ,,,.,, m•'i,,,.,.. p .,.,.", ,~..,, 1q ~ •1n ' 1 o· "'' 1•·• .-..n ... ,.,, t•r c.r1""10 0-N' A"• ·J~ 't'VS '"''*H1 ·1tJ·., <111"'' \rhHl mutrJr "i qt11'~ NhflPl (••-."'' ~,ro·PI bPll~ I t"1 di JPl"H ' H !If> Jf 1rtm i ..,,,,.-n.•t 167'>\J• ',Ho •• ~ .. CMll proce---S5482 50 l)IUS IU Ind hcllnM-'1 000 oown 1139 ff lor 48 monlM Oefe<r~ paymen1 onc.-177111 !52 An,,ual Ol<Cl"l'Ve re•• 1s 15119' 11907S Slk 00381 IMMEDIATE DEUYERYlll 'nSt.Wq. Radlo-A/CPB· ~Must aell by Sat. Xlnt Coad -.S.54.5-3827 '11 Monte Carlo. Air. amlfm ltereo. SZIOO. to..-iS '77LIHCOLH MARI< V f\lll power. must (866WVX) ~~d5 5440Garden Grove Blvd. "7t lloate CUlo, pb. pa. Westminster 636...tOlO Hto. air, slnt cond, llJ00.1'15-.51156. ;'• Turbo Corsa. xlenl CllDd. 2 alep paint job, lllkinl sasoo. MZ-•s. 'II 4 cir Chevy Nova~ AC. BIB. etc. Red •/red • plulh int .. Sood driving. ....,, 541.-.e; 642-5200 Q;,. 9925 ....................... MARKY Z1 ,800 mi's. Xlnt cond. Pvt pty. New one cost lll,000. '685(). l..eSS than I blue bk. 642-9998. I "79 Continental Town Car . , White w /wht leath. intr . '! 4500 m i. SlS,000. Call 7«Mal2 "78 Linc. to'1Vllcar, 41K . i l.J.kenew. ~.7~ . 197 Ovyaler N.Y. new 1 ____ 846_·_29_12 ___ _ • llllllGI', Urea, runs Xlnt. Ma- .... /offer'll0-1351 •••• ~:••••••••••••••• .,. Imperial, Loaded A/c 'Am/Im Sacrafice SSSO. P. P. '1Mltl or 115-ll06 ORANGE COUNTY'S I lJNCOLN·MERCURY 1973 FORD PIMTO RUNABOUT • 50eed tran,mos~·on D•I •" & AM FM A Q<e~I hfllit • Qt' 985H T P SI~ 22~~ s~ 1978 FORD FIESTA • ~oeeo 1ransmos~1on oucke1 \f>ats S oac••ll" ano rao1a1 tnes Ford' ""''!1194 cnamo• !>71UOW Stk P449• 53288 1973 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME Au1omahc •rains air cond owr steenn9 & vinyl f 10 Snows m ocn TLC Gfeat rran\p0t131ton' 907 JNH St11 PU 66 1970 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE Th·~ o"8 nas ONL v 39 967 ong1na1 mites & I> •~dOO' One 1><ev1ous owner & on oertlC1 cono11t0n• Mull oe lhe 1>1.i •~•~or tnrs model on Qtanoo Counlv' 770AVA1 St• Ol6A1 53488 1966 FORD MUST ANG COUPE V8 & automahc lranstnt$St0" A one ~r car 'Wolh ·~ tnan 68 ()()() ongonal mtleS• This car woulC:: make 1 sooer 1nvestme,,t• TClV!>•51 Slk Pu n 1 BEST OFFER 1980 CHEVROLET CHEVETTE ln15 gas"""",,.,• 4~1r11ns . bucw• sea•s & •s oarely brollen 1n .,..,., teu """ 5 000 tntles' 8S5ZPAI !Slk UIOllAJ 53988 AutorTleltC !rans air cono o-Stell'\"9 brand new 111es & iow motet' Sotod lransoortlttOll' 403121 Stk P4371) 1979 PONTIAC IOHHEVILLE AutomeltC «rans '" con<I o-11_,"9 etecltte Mndows vek>ur 1nt1rt0r & -v low m•IH' PftceO lo .. 11 FAST• !'>20Y8Vl rSlk PU60/ 1975 FORD t-IEW FORD MODEL 11A" CLASSIC REPLICAS NO EXTRA COST! , CaN 1•11 ttlO AMEST I . DEALERSHIP I 1979 FORD MUSTANG "TURBO" COBRA 1980 BUICK SKYLARK 1979 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX T·TOP NOO "ST AKEIED11 CHOOSE YOUR OWN PERSONALIZED CUSTOM TWO-TONE PAINT FROM OVER 50 ORIGCHAL FACTORY COLORS. ....................... 1'12UMCOLN llAU:OPFER m..aou c...... tf32 ~~,.~- UNCOi.N-MERCURY 11-11 Auto Center Dr. SD Fwy-Lake Forest exit -•••••••••••••••••• IRVINE 'Tl lavntment Sliver 110-7000 MAY. Spedal. LG, •pd, 11.9 ml, art11aJ• llt.1M111..... tfSZ ' *· luper Clean I Beat ••••••••• • • ••• • • • • • • • • • Clf.-<114> aMl• "75 MUSTAN• {71 T -TOP, white teyllnder. power steer· J,.,_,_ bat. All power. lne, air cond., must see ·-mL .. 100. <Com· <BYZI> ' Jllll'll wtlla MW Vette'a at $1995 ' -..!!! • . .!!!J Immaculate. ~_.. _ _. .. .......,.., « A.Dawer Ad _...,......... tm,11111'1. MfOGardenGrove Blvd. W.mlotter 8»-4010 • cv1 • soeect tr1nsrn•ss1on oowet sreem'9 AM FM caue11e TAX M1cne11n1 w ttn alumrnum wneeh & tow mitt~' fTIWOT Front ""'-' arive' 4 cyt eng•ne aulomartte rrans ~· !Jukes & Jess '"-" 8 000 motes 1677ZEWI 1$1~ P44511 Au1omtloc 11an1 '" conO . 1111 whell. cruise c:on••ol stereo,.,., •led windows, owr seal loaded' •II• 7Wl(Ml!Srk OOOAI 18 II bed. 4 ~ lr•n111nt-. -''"""II· tl9c:I~ llftg•t• •nd VltY '°"" m11ea1 A reel""°"'"°'"' C1X111041 !Slk 4A09H SHMOD .. !LS MOW OM DISPLAY! .. i .. ONT .. AUeM•IT SPECIAL '22.95 1981 Honda Accord Retail Price $6909 SPECIAL SALEPllCI 56349 TlflS WIBee OMI. Y! A ir conditioning, 5 speed, power moon roof. rack & pinion steering. (7435) ORDER YOURS TODA LU.ICAt'IOM -OIL.._,_ SPECIAL s 12.05 .._.cw, EMISSIOM SIEltYICE AMO SAFETY CHECK 'I 9.90 SIEltVICE OPEM SDAYS AWIBl 7:30.S-.JO ~cs. 6-/\ ----·~~ :~~PRICE $1268 s7759 SALIPllCI 1981 Honda Civic 1500 DX HATCHBACK RETAIL PRICE $6168 SPECIAL SALE NICE 55679 TlflS WEHee OMLY! 5 speed, 4 cyl .. air cond .. rack & steering ( 1067) ntlS WBIHD OMI. Y! Air cond .. 5 speed, ra c k & pinion steering (7435) FANTASTIC SAVINGS ON QUALITY USED CARS . 1977 AMC PACER WAGON Auto. trans .. power steerlng. air. Extra clean (498TWF). 53495 1978 TOY OT A SRS 5 speed, stereo. Looks & runs like new (77090). TWO 1978 FORD COURIER PICKUPS One 5 speed & one auto.. air. Both are absolutely beautiful. (IN340 10l. (IM39983). 1979 SUBURU SEDAN Automatic transmission. air conditioning. stereo. (048XZM). 1978 V. W. RABBIT SEDAN A uto. t rans .. air. stereo. Low miles. (804VZL). 55595 1978 DATSUN 200SX 5 speed. stereo. Super clean. ( 141 TWT). 55495 1978 HONDA CIVIC Must see to appreciate! (146WOU). l 55995 1980 CHEV. CR' ATION Auto. air cond.. power steering, power brakes. 13.000 low miles. (940XHX). 5U95 FOUNTAIN VAL TALBERT AVE t; l I 1. VOL. 73, NO. 31t, 4 SECTIONS,• PAGES TWENTY•f'IVE CENTS. \ State ltulds 8296,000 dile ff~untington •r aoam Maas• ... ....,"" ..... TM lta&e. controller'• office la hol4t•1 t.et sns.ooo in revenue dM to t.be clty ol Huntineton Beacb ln a controversy over atate bailout money that the city reeelved when Proposition 13 wu •JPrOVed by voters. COlltraller Ken Cory contends that u...tintton Beach received an overpayment or $'706,000 in atate MiJaut money because of an alleged underatatemHt of bow much money waa on band as of June 30, tm. The withboldiu of the $291,000 in motor vehicle liceDH renewal funds, due ia lbe city Tuesday, was the first step to recover the funds. But state officials said today that the money sWl m.ay be re- leased if city official• can pro- vide coovlncine arauments that they complied with ttate regula- tions . "We haven't received anythlnl conclusive yet from Huntlnston Beach, however." said Ralpb Martines , a supervllor ol auditora. "We will bold the rgoney a couple of weeb. If •·e 1et con· vinctna arsumenta that the city has a valid polnt, we would then release it." However, both city and at.ate officials said the basic dlaagree- ment has not been resolved. State officials claim tbat the city ~rted it bad $2 million in the general' fund on June 30, 1978, when the correct amount should have been $4.8 million. Tbey wd the city set aside money for accrued vacations, sick Jeeves and unappropriated reserves in a separate account when it should have been in· eluded In the city's total re· serves. Cit y Administr a t or Ben Arguello contends that the real source of the controversy de- pends on when the city took the action that set the money aside. He s aid the Cit y Council earmarked the separate account before the Pro pos ition 13 deadline. However, minutes of Ci- ty Council meetings ~on 't show when the actlon was taken. The meetings abo aie tape recorded but the recordln11 don't show the ac;tioo eltber. ap. parently because of meehuical failures. If the city fails to win i.ts areu-1 ments . it stands to lose future revenues such as ciaarette, highway and local sales taxes until the full amount of $70l,OOO is repaid, state officiala said. 1 Fund charges flayed . OMly ..... ~.., .... kJI O'o-tl CONVICTED KILLER. PACES COURT BEFORE HIARING Thoma• Pugh J•lted deaph ••rtler ball •PPfOW•I Convicted slayer agrees to jailing By DAVID KUTlMANN Of -o.lly ...... Ila" Convicted ~urderer Thomas Floyd Pugh, allowed to remain free on bail after a jury found him guilty of the slaymgs of lwo Huntington Beach brothers Wed· nesday, agreed today to turn himself in lo authorities. Pugh, a member of the Hangmen's motorcycle club, told report.en he agreed to be jailed pendina sentencing Dec. 16 to avoid any accusations that he threatened witnesses who tesUfted aaalaat him during bis Oranp Calmly Superior Court murder trtal. "Thia protects him from false char1e1L." defense attorney . Harland Maun said. I l!ven thioqb be agreed to give bilmelf up, Pugh continued to maintaln hla Innocence and said IJ• lntend1 to fight for his fnedom th.rough the system. He admitted. however, that Coast Weatlaer Falr throufh Saturday. Lowa t.onlfht 45 aton1 the coast, 52 inJand. Highs Saturday •to 74. IN•l•ETeD~'1 TM "ft,..,,._r Opml" "°'° C01C.1 a ,,..,.,...,. Su f I U'• IOOrlll tltf prk• of ad-tnfmon cd UC ,,.,,._ on Pa,. Cl. •••• ...... CM ........... . .............. ~·I .... :r..:cu.u In• ... CM the thought had occurred lo him that it would be easier simply to flee but, be added, "It's not my style." Brawi said he will make a mo- tion for a new trial during the Dec. 16 sentencing hearing. Pugh could face a 25-year lo life state prison term for his convic· ti on. It wu revealed during a bail review bearing this momin1 that a key witness ln Puah 's case bad claimed she received a threatening phone call the day before Pugh wu convicted by a nine-man, three-woman jury. The panel convicted Pugh of two counts of murder and two counts of kidnapping in the 1178 disappearance of brothers Charles D. Taylor, 20, of Hunt· ington Beach, and Allen Taylor, 22, of Santa Ana. According to testimony, the two men were kidnapped in March, 1978, by two armed u - sailants who said they were police officers. The T1ylor1 were the ball brotben of an out- law motorcyclilt known u Ryan Baker, with whom Pugh had been feudinl. Allhouela Pu&h told Superior Court Judie Jerrold Oliver that be had no latent.ion ol neem, If allo"Wed to nmalD free on bell, be alJ'Md lo be jailed IO that M could not be blamed for any threats aaatnst several key wtt- neaaes. · Pugh bad been allowed to re- main free throuabout h1a trta1 on $150,000 ball, which Oliver did not increase or revoke after tbe defendant's convi~Uon Wednel· day. . At that time, the Judi• aald the law requires that "reucma- ble bail" be Mt and he beUeftd the $150,080 bail for Pulb na reQOIUlble. However, Oliver called · today's bail review bffriq after\ reeelvtq information from a cUatriet auoney'1 lavatt1ator that wttMA Naney Arrop, w$ WH ~tbeTa,~ were ud wbo klllio <._ ILAYD. P•ll Al> Anthony, Diedrich prosecution By FllEDEalCKSCBOEMEllL Of .. ....,Hlll .... Attorneys for Orange County Supervisor Philip Anthony and former Supervisor Ralph Diedrich charged today their clients, facing felony charges re- lated lo alleged campaign fund laundering, are victims of "tn- vidiouaproeecution." Berger new principal at Marina 8y PATalCIUlENNEDY ........ p..a..... . P~ul .... er. ,.._.r PfiPetlN of Fo.&eln Valley Rip Sdloo( lS betDI tnmferred from apeeial ualpment to ~e principal of M artna High SdKdan Oec.1. He replaces Robert Barbot. 34, wbo t. rmicnlnl and takin1 a job ln printe Industry, acCOl'dinl to a cllatrietapoteswoman. Berser wu hired in 1915 and <See asaGt:a, Pase AJ> Funeral set for HB actor foe Karbo A funeral service for millionaire character actor, author and mail order en· treprebeur Joe Karbo, wbo died tapin1 a TV show Wednesday, is scheduled Sunday at 1 p.m. in Costa Blesa. Rites for Mr. Karbo will be in the chapel at Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Memorial Park, followed by scattering of the World War II Navyveteran'auhesatsea. A familiar figure in the Sunset Beach area where be maintained bis ocean front view office for yean, Mr. Karbo and bis family lived in H~cton Harbour at thetimeofbildeath. He wu lt.ricken by a heart at· tack while filmin1 a KNXT personality interview at tbe home, and bad been under care for a heart condition for some time. Despite hil various enterpriaea, including marketing of the famous early bow-to ho<* ''The Lazy Man's Way to Riches," sold by mall with a $10 money-back guarantee, Mr. Karbo was active in community tbeater. one of bis fintlovee. He WU Ulo 1919 president of the West Oranse County United Way fund or1anlut1Gfl and in 1• ran umuece11fully for Hunt-lnftOD Buch City Council in a bid forciYicaervtce. Survtvora include bl• wife Elisabeth "Bett1" Karbo and Steve Karbo, ol RedoDdo Beacll. He U.O leaves IOU James and Timothy nana1an, botb o1 Hunt- lntton Beach and Rick P'IM&1an, of Lons Beach. Survlriq dauahten include Sandra Karbo ol •enlo Pirk, Sara RJder ~ San Jote, W)Dana · •'Noni'' Karbo of Haatlqtoe Beacb Md Katbleen PeJder ot NewYOl'L l'ow 1f111Mfchildna allo 1w- vtve Mr. IU.r'M, wboee IDOlt re- cent book,,.. wlllml= titled ''TO Hill1 Wltb tM I What Aboutll•udYou.BaM'" OfflcleUDI at laDday'1 HrvlC91 wlU '9 Dr. "-rJ Kalil· muiiaeloaef...U,frt9CI. A ~are ... directiGD GI_... La ... Memt 011•• ..__...Pull llortwJ ......... ,...,.:' .... ... 1ald laltlall1 tbl .... ...., ............... Defense attorney Thomas Crosby, representing Anthony, said "a two-tier enforcement system is being utilized'' by state oficials in applying the Political Reform Act of 1974, the statute un· der which Anthony and Diedrich are charged. Crosby. of Newport Beach, s aid local elected officials, such as An· thony and Diedrich, face criminal sanctions for alleged violations of the act, while elected state of· ficials, such as assemblymen and senators, face less legally troublesome civil sanctions if ac· cused of similar violations. State elected officials who violate the act and are punished, Crosby said. "get a fine and half of \'erg short reign Miss World 1980, 28·year-old Gabrielle Brum of West Germany, quit her title today. . .i-:ss than 24 hours after winning it in London. Her resignation came shortly after she said her 52-year-old Los Angeles boyfriend, Bert.no Bellenbaum. a film cameraman. was "not too pleased" with her victory. 82 million planned For FV Upgrading A $2 million loan pro1ram aimed at upgrading Colonia Juarez, one of Fountain Valley's oldest neighborhoOds, has been established through an auee· ment between the city and the Bank ol America. Under Its terms, qualified ap- plicants can obtain 90 percent financl.nc for up to 30 yea.rs at the bank's beat market rate to purchase or to refinance and re· habilltate single-family homes in this area. Larry Clark, manager of the Bank of America's Fountain Valley branch, said the bank normally offen only 80 percent financtna on home loans. Clark, who will administer the local pro1ram, said the bank aho will reduce tta processln1 fea on tbele loans. The bank alio la coordinatin& a home Improvement loan pro- lf•m with the city, which allows Colonla Juarea residents to bor· row money at I percent interest for rebablUtaUon meuurea auch •• rof1f NPain, new wlrinl or plumtiAns Improvements . Thia t. abOut half the 1DW.t of eonv .. ttoaal lmpro•ement loau, ftlcb are ~I about 11 peneat, Clart la.id. TIM dlf. fer .. H 11 made up tbrou1h federal Houaln1 and Urban Deveklipmeet fund admlniltefed .,, U..dQ. ,.... atfeeted ....... baedld ' OMt., ...... .._._.. LOCATION OF COLONIA Shedecl •re• on nMtp by Warner Avenue on the north, Ward Street on the east, Calle Independencia on the south, and Calle Zaragoza and housln1 tract 6165 on the west. Tbe Colon.la Juarez commun.l· ty waa flnt settled some 50 years •80, primarily by Im.ml· ,rant Mexican farm workers. Many homes in th1a aru atill •.are owned by thae lmmtsranta or their descendants, city of. ficiala aay. Tbe city wW screen appllcanta for tbe home Improvement loans, which .,.. paNd mainly to lower ud mlddl• lDcome famW.. 'invidious' it is usually suspended." "But not local officials . . . they get charged with conspiracy . . . perjury.'' Crosby asserted follow· ing morning court appearance in Santa Ana. During the appearance, Oranae County Superior Court Judae Claude Owens set Jan. 5 as the <See CllAJlGES, Pap AJ) Bank heist suspect questioned . ay PIDLSNEmE&llAN . Of-~......... . A aoo.pouact Lu Vesaa ~ who was arrested Wednesday --suspect in the $50.000robberyol1· San Juan Capistrano bank is be- ing questioned in connecti.on witlJ a stri.Qg of Southern Californi4 bank holdupathatdetectiveshan dubbed the "Miss Piggy" heistS because of the culprit's belly build. The woman. Karen Jenks Mapes, 27. is a suspect in the rob- bery Monday of the United California Bank, 8902 Edinger Ave .. Huntington Beach, poli~ said. In that incident, witnesses told police, a JOO.pound woman in her mid-209 told a teller-she bad a gwa in her purse and fled with $3, 700. FBI spokesman Jack Jack.son said Ms. Mapes and her sister, Donna Waddell, 33, also of Las Vegas, are suspected in robberies reported in Orange, Los Angeles, San BemardJno, Riverside, Ven- tura and Santa Barbara counties. In all olthe banks, surveillance cameras have ph9tographed a tubby, gun-toting woman dUring robberies that have netted more than $75,000 s ince August, authorities said. The arrests followed a holdup at 8 :30 a.m. Wednesday at the California Finl National BanJt branch in San Juan Capistrano. In that incident, an obese woman brandishing a rifle ac- costed the bank manager as she arrived at work, sheriff's de- puties said. A second holdup woman followed the pair inside. The women bound bank employees, then spent 40 minutet cleaning out the vault, in ~ vestigatorasaid. Ms. Waddell was arrested after a deputy spotted ber car on th& San Diego Freeway. Ms. Mape8 was taken into custody 1 few hours later at a motel in Loe Angeles County, investigaton said. Orange County Sheriff's Lt. An- dy Romero said "In excess ol SS0.000 and 10me weapons were • <See PIGGY. Pase AJ) HR firemen quell blaze A fin! that orlslnated in the bedr~m of a condominium at 5461 1.11amond Drive, Huntineton Beach, was quickly extiD&ullbed by fireflsbten Th&ll'lday after· ~ noon. ' · · HunUniton Beach Fire Capt. Ro1er Hosmer said a paaaerby noticed the blaze ud summoned ,....,..,.._.at 3:11 p.m. The fire wu bro.aaht under control wit.bin ftft IJ'llnutee of thelr .,. • rival, he said. Th• occupant of the eon· domlnlum, Jolan -SHHr 'bJ':: home at tbe tlme of tbe , but wun't l.njured, ..._.Mid. 0 .................. . '° t ... ltnletun, .... to ... eoe ... . I TAIPEI, Talwan (AP) A •lfOftl earthquake Jolted iiliii1IMiiia Md eutHD Taiwan today U4I pnllmlnary ....-ta , Mkl people lled Into th• all'MU ln panic but did not indicate 1 ....._.I.here ..... cuualU• or dam•••· TM ~al weather bureau aald tbe tremor. re....,.na I .I oa U.. Rk:ihCer aeale, occurred at t :rr p.m. (5:3'7 a.m. PST), and I•" tM epicenter u lt mU• aoutb of Uu, la ..,tern Tahwu. It ... ._. an afterabock of undeteraUned ln&eulty a minute later. 1 , ID Tokyo, tN Japaneae Central Meteorolopeal A1eacy ..-d lb aelamocnpba recorded the quake but d1d nal dlterm.lae lta inteuity JmmedJatelJ..- Tbe Richter scale la a meuure of around motion u re· corded on aeiamo(l'aphs. Every increue ol one number mum a tenfold increase in magnitude. Thua a readln1 of 7 .5 refteeta an earthquake 10 limes stron1er than one of t .5. 1111"ft' ... ,,.. ltold lte•lflflP" -._ BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP> -Three Beltian youths ter· rorlaechight school children and two adults In a bua for houn to- day. then were grabbed by authorities who freed ltle boetaces. a radio official sald. Tbe kidnappers, who had demanded radio Ume to air their ~views, moved with the hostages into a radio studio, where authorities s uddenly switched off the U1hts, told the cbi.ldnft to run to safety, andgrabbed the threeyouna men. the official said. Noone was reported injured. The youths commandeered the bus at the small eut BellJan town of Vielsalm and took it to the Catholic lnatitut du Sacre-Coeur school, where the children were forced aboard at gunpoint, police said. / Did ... iwrt aditlil •rarial -a"dP1 w"? CJNClNNATI (AP>-Joseph Paul Franklin. an avowed racist who has pleaded innocent to charges of killing two black men In Salt Lake City, admitted in a telephone conversation that be was 1 involved in "racial murders," a newspaper and TV station re· ported. But Franklin's attorney in Salt Lake City, Stephen Mccaughey, said today his client denied the report. The Cincinnati Post and WKRC·TV in Cincinnati quoted unidentified police sources as saying that Franklin made the admissions during a telephone conversation with his ex-wife. Anita Can1en Cooper, and her mother. who live in Alabama. The reports said Franklin: who is white, "admitted being involved in racial murders." Sftl. Baker 1hrealen11 refa1Jatiot1 WASIDNGTON (AP>-Senate Republican Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. said today that if House Democrats insist on undue dominance or key committees, Senate Republicans may do the same thing. Baker, R· Tenn., commented on a statement by House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, D-Mass .. that he would recommend retaining the current party ratio on the Rules. Appropriations and Ways and Means committees. Man involved in birth of E',....P~AI CHARGES ••• I I mystery tot? "firm date" for the start of a pre- liminary hearing lnto the cam- palp fund laundering allegations against the prnent and former county superviaon. I Irvine! police investigators believe a man assisted a woman . behind a bush n ear McGaw -'Laboratories in Irvine as she eave birth to a girl who was im· mediately abandoned at the scene. ''The passerby who was in contact with this woman is described as male, white with blonde or reddish blonde hair and may have driven a compact pickup truck bearing some type or company logo, .. police in· · vestigator Mark Hoffman said ·today. '•1 •1t ia thought that this uniden- . tifled passerby may have tried t o help or comfort the mother sometimel>eTweenll:30' a.m. and '10:30 a.m. and again between 1:30 p.m. and S p.m .. " '· -'Police Lt. Bob Lennert said ' this information was obtained from an informant who called 1after hearing about the healthy. 'abandoned baby. .. , Crash kills truck driver A Sl·year-old delivery driver ·was killed Thursday afternoon 'When his van collided with a d.ia· dbled truck on a freeway transit: ion road in Seal Beach. •• A California Highway Patrol spokesman said Jose Moreno of Los Angeles suffered internal in- juries in the collision with the · truck that was partially stalled in the left lane or the road. The accident occurred at 5:40 p. m . on the transition road between the San Diego and San ' Gabriel freeways. Moreno was pronounced dead on arrival at Huntington In· tercommunity Hospital. ORANGE COMT ' H1I' Ironically, the date coincides with the date Anthony, defeated in the Nov. 4 election by challenger RogerStanton, wtllleaveolftce. Anthony and Diedrich were among a group of Orange County political figures charged on three separate occMions of violating provisions of the Political Reform Act In U176 political campatens. including Anthony's successful bid for the county Board of ~uperviaors. J According to transcripta of county Grand Jury proceedings, Diedrich sought to-become the county "power broker" to fill the void created by the downfall of Dr. Louis Cella, once the dean of power in county political circles. PIGGY .•• recovered after the arrest Wed· nesday." FBI spokesman Jackson coo- fi rmed the Bureau has been searching for a woman fittlng Ms. Mapes'descriptjon. A "Miss Piggy" suspect is believed to have robbed one bank. a Security Pacific branch in Mon· tecito, near Santa Barbara twice withlnthreeweeks,heaald. Agent Jackaon said FBI in· vestigators concluded the string of robberies involved-the aame female bandit because "her pro· file seemed unmt.takable" ln the surveillance camera photos. Further commenta on the ai%e of "Mias PillY" "would be in- delicate," FBI Agent Jackson said today. Charlotte Carrino weeps as she tells reporters in New York that her husband, Chri,, is aboard missing freighter "Poet." Coast Guard is continuing search for ship. f'rfHtt Pagr . I I BERGER ... became the first principal of Fountain Valley High School; But since July 1, 1979, he has been working on curriculum and in· struction at the main office of the Huntington Beach Union Hi gh School District. Berger; 58, was the center or controversy in 1979 when the dis· trict announced il was reassign- ing him away from the campus he had directed fo r 14 years. Hundreds of students, parents and teachers s igned petitions and packed school board meetings protesting the change. Student petitions presented to the board in June or that year in- cl uded m o r e than 2,000 signatures. Following an emotional, two. hour board meeting packed by about 400 people, the trustees de· cided in a closed executive session to go ahead and transfer Berger. Superintendent Frank ~bbott explained that the transfer was for the gOod or the district because Berger would be a valuable asset at ~edistrictoffice. But protesting teachers and parents speculated that he was being transferred because Foun- tain Valley High School was slow in implementing a state.financed School Improvement Program (SIP). District officials denied it. The SIP system is supposed to at. low a student to work at his own pace to establish his learning level and ability. The unpopular transfer of Berger ;s one reason cited by the District Educators Association (DEA) in its r ecent call for the fir· ing of Superintendent Abbott. SLAYER ... tified Pugh as one or the a bduc· tors, told him that she had re· ceived a threatening phone call Tuesday. Pugh denied today that he had made any threats to the witness or that he had any involvement with whoever made the threats. "l have not bad any contact whatsoever with any of the wit· nesses in this case,•· the defen- dant said. Before going into Oliver's courtroom this morning, Pugh told a reporter he had only want- ed to remain free long enough to visit his mother in Kansas City for Thanksgiving before being sentenced. He said she still did not know of his conviction. Oliver had indicated this morning that be was considering raising bail and prosecutor Paul Meyer told the judge that he believed ball did not appear to be appropriate considering the seriousness orthe case. Dual role for Grier proposed An 11th-hour compromise plan designed to clear the way for dual appointment of Margaret Gier as director or both the county Human Services Agency and its Mental Health Department was delivered to members of the Orange Count y Board of Supervisors Thursday. The four-page proposal, pre· pared by 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley, was viewed as a last-minute attempt to quell the controversy that erupted in the m ental health community over the dual appointment recommen· dation. Mi ss Grier, now HSA director, has filled the mental health leadership position on an interim basis since the resignation a year ago of Dr. ErnestKlatte. Riley recently proposed that M i s-s G r i E: r r e c e i v e t h e r esponsibility on a permanent basis, arguing that the HSA direc- tor is a proven administrator who is sensitive to the county's mental health needs. Prior to her appointment as HSA director, Miss Grier was the county Probation Officer. l1B lifeguard set/or Peru Huntington Be ach city lifeguard Greg Crow has been selected as one or 12 Americans who will travel to Peru Nov. Z7 to participate in an educational program sponsored by the Peru Lifesaving Association. Crow, 25, will be one of eight men and four women members of the United States Lifeuving Association who will teach and exchange ideas on topics such as cliff rescues, river rescues, lifeguard training and first aid. He .will remain in Peru through Dec. 6. Crow, a city lifeguard for five years, represented the National Surf Lifesaving Association last year on an exchange tour to Auckland, where he served as a lifeguard on New Zealand beaches. " Iranian tJJJSet thaw halted · SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - Aftef revtewlq cluaifled doeu· meats from the department. of state and treu\lry a federal judge hu temporarily ha\ted ac- tion on 20 corporate claims seek· tn1 an estimated 8CiOO million in frosen Iranian uaets. U.S. DMtrict J&ac11e Robert F. Peckham aaid be rranted the IO·day stay on a government "su11est1on of lnterest" req•t that "all further proceectm,. be stayed" in an effort to help the ho8ta1e criat.. The State Department baa sought deferral• in about 230 other claims in a dozen other st.ates against the Iranian as- sets. estimated to total • blllion. The ruling Thursday in San Francisco broqht the govern. ment petitions to public atten-tion. In Waabin1ton, spokesman Joe Reap said the move wu made so that lecal action "would not prejudice our efforts to obtain the release of the hostages." He said that to his knowledge, no judge has ruled on the validity of any of the Ira- nian claim cases. The Iranian government has demanded that all claims against its assets be dropped u a condition for releaaing the Americans held hosta1e for more than a year. The assets were froaen by President Carter after the hostages were taken, and many U.S. finm and lndividuala went to court seeking compensation for losses they suatained when the iovemment of the Ayatollah - ........... HAL TS IRAN CLAIMS Judge Robert Peckh•M Rvtroii"ah Khomeini came to power. "It is the position or the gov- ernment that 'judicial proceed- ings at this time ... would create a serious risk of prejudic- ing the continulng efforts of the United States 11overnment to re- solve the hos tage crisis," Peckham wrote. Peck.ham's action came JQ.. days after Carter declared in a televised statement that "any action taken by our government will be in full accordance with our laws and our Constitution." Same-sex dance ban target for appeal By DAVID IWTZJIANN °'*Deity ........... A Santa Ana lawyer who represents two teen·age homosexuals says he will appeal an Orange COtmly judge's de- cision to uphold a same-sex dance ban against male partners at Disneyland. Attorney Ron Talmo said Thunday be believes Superior Court Judge John K. Trotter Jr. was wrong in saying that the popular amusement park could enforce regulationa that pre•ent homosexual couples from danc- ing. Talmo's two clients -Andrew Exler, 19, and Shawn Elliott. 17 -were kicked out of Dian«yland last September after dancing together on the Tomorrowland dance floor. Both are admitted homosexuals. · 'l believe the court bas erred," said Talmo, who will me his appeal with the Fourth Dis- trict Court or Appeal in San Bernardino. Trotter, in ruling from the bench Thursday, said he could find no evidence of sex dis- crimination or infringement of protectable rights in the case. In denying Talmo's request for an injunction against Dis· neyland, the j ud1e said, "I think their reasons are logical and supportable" for having the dance ban. •'The infri ngement is minimal," he said. Oisnevla.nd attomey William ,, Bitting said homosexual patrons have complete and open access to the amusement park and its numerous attractions. But Bitting said there was not a single case that showed that same-sex dancing was "protec· table conduct" under the law. Trotter said that while there could be absolute freedom of beliefs, there could be no similar absolute freedom of action. "A line has to be drawn," Bit· ting concurred. He later told reporters outside Trotter 's courtroom that Dis- neyland officials go to great lengths to preserve the family atmosphere of ltle world famous amusement park and that admit· tanceisdeniedtonoone. - "As I s~ thJs case," Trotter said, "I don't believe there's dis- crimination per se. Further, I think societ¥ has to expect con- duct be controlled . . . " T a lmo a rgued that Dis- neyland's policy was not "a se.x· neutral policy. It is a sex-related policy." He said there was no proof that male dancing created any s pecial security problems at Disneyland and that in other cultures. such dancing is con- sidered the norm. And disputing Trotter's con· tention that sex discrimination was not involved, Talmo said the only way the rule could be ap- plied is by identifying the gender or the dance partners. ,,,,,,,,"'" ,,,, DAILY PILOT TM 0f'Mrtl CoeM 0.1, PU9'4 wUft wtwc .. tt <-Ill-l/W --·· 11 -·-lly IN Or-C.oHI ,_.,,,,.,.. '°"'""Y· 5-••t• Dining and travel spotlighted Smtday 1 ALL IS NOT THAT MEETS THE EYE • • • -··l ' • t • I • I .., ........... .....,.,_ -··· ,..,....., l'tlO.y lor Cott• -· -pot1 9 .. Cft, H""liftOI°" •••<hi lll:ow"t•1ft V•lt•Y1 I rvlfte, t..•I'-'"• -1\f-ft COttt A 11 ... le r .. tOMI odll""' II -·-u-•• --·•• n.. .... ,,.., ... -itfli"I. jlllMI 11 •t DO W.tt 9ay $4•"1. P 0 • ~~·J~~~~C.11 ... '."•-·-"·-,. ........... ,,.,,. .... ,_ ,_ ... -EdltOf ""::,.:.~;.. 'TJ: 0-..H.'--A•tltlMI ~11141 Edit« --WIHtOr-~· .... ., .............. ()Mee • .. -tllf'l' .. K" ..,._.., Moll.,..,,....,.,.o to•1'0- 0ffte" i._.. It.Cl\! It'll Nt COHI H ....... , c;o.1. -.. w.1111 .. f4 ... t 1 T1t111toH(714)..._, a••••• ~....._MMnl , __ o. ..... c-,°""""""''" .... , .. ~ -°'=-~ . ."J"'' ..... :s.= IM71er•., --;:,:m,.-flll II•~ "'H II« r•tir.-v( .. •OMV\ t .. c.t•t ,.#,,UUteft •f ._,.__. --·-,,_ ,..._ ...... ,.,,. -· c111f9t10le. ~Ill" 14'-MI .._,._.ltfl tr ,_,, , .. , ..... _ ... ,/ ltY. -..... _,,..,. ll'llllury-lllMIM• ..... _..,,, Such pleuura u fine dinin1 and resort travel wlll be ex· amlned ln Sunday's Da1ly Pilot . TA8'1'ED TELL -What pull ·frime beef, atuffed poultry and fruit pies in the "aourmet" cate1ory? A Dally Pilot survey or coutal •hOPI reveals why more people are pa1laa pre· mlum prices tor food . PA.ADllB L08Tf - Contlderlna a vacation in Jamaica but turmd off by the ialand'• recent elee tlon hotUUUet? Doa't worf1. The nat,vet have 1tarted two penonal procrama to make your visit the frtendll•t ever. Slaff WrlteT MJchael Pulrevlcb pro. "Idea the detalll. • &•O&AaLS T&IP - Realtor Jim Wood '• lO·day I (~UNDAY'S BEST) C!!1 odyasey across country started when be not.iced a bus ln Corona del Mar headed for New York and ended when he croaaed the flnlab line of the marathon ln Manhattan. He tells of taktnc the train and bitcbhlkin• to make eQda meet in a diary that alao describes fatclnaUns peo. pie he met en route. WA& OF WO&D8 -Should the United Statea be alrint ita poJltlcal cWftculUes behind the Iron CUrtain? Several opiniom are ~preeaed in an Attoelated Presa analyst. ot t.be Voice al Amerlc!a 's broadca1t1 on American policy reaardint t.bt Iran crllt.. ~ J663 ,LACENTIA AVlN\Jl • where It concerns the purchasing of carpet-in0 · A pretmtlous store front surely Isn't the answer any mor• then est•bllshments th•t feature' rldlcutous low prices with padding end lnstallatlon Included. What's the answer? Alden's! We'll open your eyes to a carpeting con- cept unexcel led I · ~ET US PROVE IT! .. , 'HONf 6A6·•831 -6•6·235l . . . -DM.YPILOT r fleeing solar systeDl ,! :.,.~._.. Pal~lte• Uy away from '9( ....... Voy ...... l 't'e . ,.~. aboH the ' riDO OD U. ftnt ~~ el trtp oai ol tM eolar WID.• rr aftytblq, tbe lnfol'lbatioo 1atllend la tbe put day w b••D IDOre apectacular than 'f bat bad beeA prerioualy re- cetved at Voya1er'1 Saturn fty- ·~~ headquarters at the Jet ropultlon Laboratory in ...... llllaaiDI team leader Brad· fdrd Sin6th announced nverai ._,.. dnelopmenta witb respect . t~" la turn '1 rla11. Smith, a ttteraa of botla tbe Man and I tt-mluklnl, could barely . lili Ida excitement. . , , c8Mat ~all belq in,,.such 1~te fll edphorla in any ol the ~ o r planetary miaalon.a." he tad. The peculiar braided ap-\ ,,_.,inef of the F rin1 sWl re- nultm unexplained, and it now fHtl 11 CR4TERID IUllFACI Oft SATURN MOqN, •MIA Dlemetera of l•roer crnera •boUt 41 ""'" 1· ••••• that the thlrd inner tfraM la also braided, thoqb not aa t11htly. He also said tclentiata are now, unsure whether the ring is braided all .. Coa.st park ba~kers fret Lame ducks may shuiii as.ide.c81easure By STEVE MARBLE D-Calil., an author of the. park Cranston's aide, "and they'd Ot•DeMr,....SUtt bill, said the prevailing feelina Juat"8 IOOft put off moat things Proponents of a bill seeking in Wasbiniton D.C. tlliJ week ii · lo next )'Ui', lin the park bill." creation of an 11,000-acre na-that the lame-duci aea1iOD 1rill ·He addlJd that Cranston will tional park al~ng the Orange be completed without mudl a -tty ,(0 puab the bill through next Coast fear the bill will be pushed lion on pending items tbat bat~ wefll. aside during t!te U.S. Senate's financial strings attached. . • .·A SJ'C*esman from Sen. S.I. lame-duck........ "The Republic ... just waat Id ~ ..... Office predicted U.e An aide to Sen. Alan Cranston, get out of there, • • s a I a · e-dQCk session will break up '9 1'amlbgivinl with ftO BC· 'F ' b . d ti8)i the bill. ree· us r1 ers ~'The bill, ca1Un1 for expen-mtve of $38 million to acquire lant1 to piece together the park ff• 1. . . + eavlaJabed as stretching from concern 0 1cia S .' • -~~ .te~CbMarw~ p1:s~!i ~: By JEBllY CLAUSEN Of-o.lly ,.._.Si.ti Newport-Mesa school officials are pleased with their plan for charging students fees to ride school buses this year. but they are c;ooce(Ded about the num- ben of cblldren rid.Ing tree or at reduced rates. ·Earlier this year, the school board offered free and reduced- f a re rides to children from families that couldn't afford lo pay. School officials believe those eligible are the same ones re- ceiving free o r lowe r -co st lunches in district schools under a federal nutrition program. HOWEVER, DISTRICT of- ficials have no way to determine whether applicants for reduced bus fees really are members of low-income families. Federal law prohibits districts from reviewing free-food pro- gram a pplications for other purposes. The reason'! To pro- tect individual privacy. · In a report to school trustees, district Bminess Manaeer Ray Schnierer noted that bus tidership has dropped only 27 percent compared to last year and adjusted to dec lines in enrollment. BUT, 8£ NOTED, of the 1,838 bus riders, 26 percent are using free or reduced-fare passes. "Our projections, based on ex- periences of other districts, bad predicted only 10 percent would be in these cate1orte1." Financially, though, Schbl~re; reported, the program fa Just about oo target. "We have coUe~ a total of JQ.239 as or that da~ <Oct. 31)," he noted. .. , .. IT WAS THE desire of UCe . . . (board) that paid bulin• would generate 4lPPfOXlmatefy $250,000 in rev~nue for th~ 1980-81 school year. ·'It appears we wlll come close to the desired fi1ure," he said. The district has been hit by declines in enrollment on which state funding is based and by Proposition 13 property tu cuta and court decisions allocati81 less money to previously "wealthy" districts. SEVERAL PllOGRAl'IUI have been t rimmed, teachers aa other school personnel laid off a nd other money-aavin1 measures taken. lncl\lded la Ute student-paid busing plan "'bi~b is designed to cut district~ for transportation In ..a~ imlf school year. · ' , ,.. ...., . . ! • Figures co~pqett 1'r . Schnierer show the. lbC?ftEI riders are reitste~ )i1'• Beach schools. ~ {b" •r hand. snost free and r '9Ced· fare riders are enrolled in Costa Mesa schools. the House lut a um mer. Tbe house bill was authored Harbor Li b)' Reps. Robert Badham, R· ODS 1"fwport Beach, and Jerry Pat-t~~ ~'!11t!· Parks Sub-add $20,000 committee hearin1 ln Santa Ana last month, the word being to eye bank paued by Democrata was that, --- If Ronald Reagan were to ~ ea.eted prfltdent, the bUl'a Thanks to a $20,000 donation f1ltoH mtlbt be dim. · from the Costa Mesa Newport President Carter. last Sep-Harbor Lions Club, an eye bank tember, said be would sign the and sight saving center is ex- park bill when it crossed his peeled to be opened later this desk. Now, polltlclans say, month at the UC Irvine Medical Carter may be long gone by the Center lo Orange. time tbe Senate finiahes dealing The funds to help establish a w•th the bUI. program for corneal transplants, 1'be aide in Cranston's office, research and pathologic studies U.ouah. said the Senator boesn't was raised during the Lions lee Reapn u beln.1 anti-park. Club's annual Fish Fry. , "It's bis state, after all," the ' The eye bank will be in- Senator's spokesman said. "We augurated next Thursday at a don't aee Rea1an as being anti-dinner at the Tale of the Whale park, but 1ettin1 the funding Restaurant in Newport Beach. U.fPu•h may be another ques-The transfer of delicate eye tlo&.";T"' tissue, which must be used for Pel'hap. tbe tar1est obstacle transplants within 72 hours of blockln.c tbe bill is the negative the donor's death, will be the review It received from the Na-major f\Ulction of the eye bank. tional Parb Service and the Of. The bank will be made avaHa-nce of Mmi'a1ement and Buctcet. ble to eye sureeons throughout '!'.be parks service hun't con-the country, officials at the •i~ the p-rk as beinl high medical center said. The center .Uat. ill priority to warrant ex· also will be the site for research ,.adlture of federal funds. projects to study ways of pre- ' Pr .. ldedt Ca?Ur's promise to servin1 eye tissue for long kip 6e part bUl was seen as periods of time. the Mitt possible route for stir-Information regarding eye tint the bill around the donations can be obtained from roadblocu set up by the parks the ophthalmology department service and the OMB. at 634-5761. Reservations for Water fouls Upper Bay next Thursday's inaugural din- ner can be made by calling the same number. Laguna Hilh district flow continuing 4 l&a•fer• UalYerlltJ ,,. ..... , ••ll1n 8eMer 18 a feertll ,., • t ........... . uc ....... ~ .... a 'ra•l•lell•t. tat•'"* la ... , .... , . .,... ...... .. aeM9l .._la• waae~ &lae la••eMal ef •••*" •tan ,..... ' bil moon's 1ueoua cloak. The other S.tumian moons do not possess appreciable at- mospheres. A fact tbat snaUy simpliftea pboto1Tapbina them. Rhea, which two days a10 was thou1ht to be aim liar to * .. * Jupiter'• mooe, Ganymede, look• qulte different, wi • '•houlder to 1hou1ct.r er•'-• inundatlq ill brllht anelent rain. And Unr Mllllas, wlth diameter of only 300 miles, mal'Hd by a huce crater near one quarter lta aiae who formation must have near shattered tbe moon. The era • which wraps around t. e spherical surface of Mimaa, 1 the lar1eat Impact crat r relative to tbe aize of the planetormoonyetseen. Voya1er 2 will fiy by next ye for a closer look. * * * Era closes in U.S. space explorations When the roar of the powerful Titan III rocket that boosted the Voyager 1 on its trajectory to Jupiter died away at Cape Canaveral that early September morning in 1977, an era in unmanned planetary exploration also was coming to an end . Few missions are planned for the near future. For a \ world spanning scientific community that had thrived on at least one U.S. planetary mission each year since 1963, the upcoming four-year ruatus in celestial encounters between 1982 and 1986 comes as an unpleasant reality. THOUGH NO NEW PROBES will be launched for years, the two Voyagers still have jobs to do. Voyager 1 will not visit any more planets. Its swing un- der the southern hemisphere of Saturn threw it upward out or the plain of the solar system.along a path that will even- tually carry It, ln several million years, to nearby stellar neighborhoods. · · It, alon1 ·with its predecessor Pioneer 11, will be tracked to the edge of our solar system and possibly far beyond. During this time it will not be retired. Though its cameras will have no t&Tgeta, the instruments that detect cosmic rays, charged particles, and magnetic fields will be kept busy. A milestone for the durable craft will occur ' when it crosses the sun's own "bow shock" somewhere J around the orbit of Neptune and passes into the interstellar i wind. j VOYAGER Z WILL NOi' have such an easy lif~. It is scheduled to make its rendeivous with Saturn in late ..,, August l•l. following the paths blazed by Pioneer 11 and Voyager 1. Then, using the slln1shot maneuver, it will ;f head toward the January, 1986 meeting with Uranus and ,.. . its nine newly discovered rings. Three years later, in August, lB, lbe tireless semi-intelligent robot will make a • close inveatiaative run by the solar system's eighth U planet, Neptune. Aft.er that it. too, ,riu leave the sun's domain, keeping in touch with its maken on earth until eitlter a~ critical ~t component faik or I~ distant sipal •ecades from now -fades so far below a whisper Jhal it is lost in the co.nlinuous i background noise of the cosmos. !·t{f .. '1 Stanton, Nestantle · accept aides' pay : ) • .. .111 Orange County Supervisors- elect Roeer Stanton and Bruce Nestande say they'll accept an offer to pay their aides to begin setting up their new offices next month. Tbe two men won't take over their positions until Jan. S, but the ex:lstini supervisors agreed Wednesday to budget about SS,000 to help the newcomers get settled. Both Stanton and Nestande said the move will help them serve their districts better dur- ing the usually hectic first ween in office. . Nestande. who comes to the county Hall of Administration lo Santa Ana via th~ state As- sembly, said he will send his chief aide, Ronald Roeen, to coordinate the transition in the 3rd District office.. Public Announcement Supervisor Edison Miller J'u be leaving. Miller, who lo~,~ Nestande in June elections. sug- ges ted Wedn es d ay ttl;H Nestande hasn't see m ed u - terested in county affairs. .~, lo an interview Wednesday,Etf· ternoon, though, Nesta.pcje shurugged off Miller's "cynicaJ attitude." He noted that bo~ Chairman Ralph Clark has-iJI· fered a deslt for Rogers in hi5l%f · flee. Nestande said Rogers ~-­tually will go where there i.§:.lle least "1amesmanship." • The 3rd District covers .!he east side of the county running from t.be Anaheim Hills south._to Mission Viejo. It includes TWlin and El Toro. The tst District includes F~­ ta ln Valley, Garde n Gro)e, Westminster and parts of Sqta Ana. -: ' I I I On Nov. 6th, 1980 Raciti Jewelry Company Announced Giving Away $100,000 In Discounts On All In St"~0 Items. To Date, There Have Been $83,470 In Discou:"t s Given. - • • R(9ti dtvkl'!f Compang 0Dfdl lMfllf'I • Appnl&tng • "-Pltlrlnt • PVdwtlfng ... Ne.t11rt ~ • COIM Miu, CA 92621 c*1 646-7741 _, •J I I OAll. PILOT H I f Ju• .. ting ~ ...... ~ T-~~,I ~ M ... lal•e Let's sit this one out ON<:F. AaOtJND THE n..ooa: Thank 1oodnn1 It's lhe savants up at Oianeyland who now cet to decide wbat sexes get co-mtn1led oo lhe danee floor of the Malle Kinadom. and not you or me. What a will . All this comes about becluae the Dianeyland folb have 8 rule that says wben Upoft OQe ol tbelr daAH f'loon, the boys ha:ve to dance with girla and the ,Ula bave to dance with 00)'6. This dictum s urfaced heavily at the Jlacic Klqdom last fall when two teen-aged guys Sol evicted from Tinker Bell 's domain when they tinkered with that rule. The boys sued. ONLV VESTEaDAY, Oranae County Superior Court Judge John K. Trotter Jr. declined to issue an injunction against the Mickey Mouse gang on the boys' allecat.lon that the rule was sex discrimination. Thus pending a ppeal to higher jurisprudence, the Dia- neyland folks can continue to rule on what kind of people can dance with what other kinds. You need to sympathize with their plight in this a we some task. HA VE VOU EVER SEEN the con1estion on a dance floor at Disneyland? All those kids are out there making Industry surge • continues WASHINGTON CAP>• -'!be nation'• lnduatrial production llll'Ced ahead by 1.1 percent in October, the thil'4 atraJctit mon- thly caJn and tbe larceat lD· creue in more than two yean, the 1cwenunent reported today. The lmproveme,nt ... broadly bued, wttb heavy rroduction in tbe auto •and atee sectors, in- d u 1trle1 that bad b een particularly bard bit dwinc the receaaion, which appears to be over. THE f'EDEaAL Reserve Boud reported that lndustriaJ orod~ bu lncreued 4 per- cent alnCe July, npandtnc 1 per- cent in AUl\llt and 1.3 pereent in September. Despite the steady improve- ment, production at U.S. fac- tor ies and mines rem..U.. 4.4 percent below the level in Sep- tem ber 1B79, the board said. NATION /WEATHER New sub missile /or Russ , WASIDNGTON (AP> -The U.S. Navy aaya the Sovleta are tulinc a new a ubma~ioe­ launehed miu lle that cOGJd strike deeper than anything in the American aub neet. It may have greater ranae. helter accuracy and more power than ~Y of the current Soviet aubmi r lne-launcbed missiles, whlcb' are Just belnc matched by the U.S. Navy, officials said. THE NAVY says, without elaboration, that the Soviets may be experiencing difficulties in their night test program. BUt officials indicate they expect the Soviets to overcome those prob- lems and eventually deploy the new missile, with a probable range greater than 4,500 miles, i n tubes aboard the ir giant Typhoon submarines. ·' .~ And private economists of- fered words of caution in in- terp~the report. ''The economy ii weakening a1ain and there won't be much additional improvement in in- d u at rt a I production," said Lawrence Chimerine, head of Chase Econometrics Associates. Tldns Sep.orated All''#.,.._.. ,The U.S. Trident missile has a range of about"4,500 miles. That is roughly equivalent to the best the Soviets now have in service. the SSN-18. Giving an unusual amount of detail on Soviet missile develop- ments, the Navy said the first Typhoon sub was launched in September al a northern Russian shipyard and that the vessel is the first of a new class of "extremely large" undersea craft representing a new design. ii i ,, " ,,, ' • • . l f ! • I l "Sure I'd /tu to dance, Harriett. but you know tM RuJes." hke 1umpmg jacks at the same time. Sometimes lbey dance together. Other limes they leap off so~. orbiting the noor upon their own. oblivious to the fact that lbey may sUJJ have a partner out there somewhere, looking for company. In the confusion. what if two of the wrong kinds of peo- pl e come togethe~? They may find themselves on the ejection seat at Space Mountain. . WHAT IF SOME UPPER classman mistakes a chap in 'a Scottish kilt, who was taking a break from his act on the Tomorrowland stage, for the love of bis life on the crowded dance floor? One clutch and he may oot only gel a knuckle sandwich , but the boot to boot. Clearly, this dance segregation chore is more difficult than it might seem at fi rst blush. ' · Disneyland may need more than just a dance floor monitor. They may need an umpire and boxing referee out there too. The Magic Kingdom operators say the reason they want to insist that boys dance only with girls and vice ve rsa is so they can maintain "a unique family at· mos phere" at the park. THAT'S GREAT. You guess that means if a couple of rotten little brothers pitch snow cones at each other and mess up the other's ha ir with cotton candy, that's the usual unique family atmosphere. Any parent would recognize it. And it'll be up to the parents to separate the scrapptac little rollers. But if those two grubbies start dancinc with each other. Disneyland's Keystone Kops will swiftly move in and take charge oft he separating. Well , you suppose it's probably still okay to skip hand- in-hand down the sidewalks of Walt Disney's Main Street. Just be sure you look up evfl/¥ now and then to make sure whose hand you're holding. THE INcaEASED output was based heavily on consumer goods, but hi&h interest rates and persistent, double-digit in- fla lion are dampen ing retail sales, particularly of high-priced items, Cbimerine said. "We are looting for slower growth in the months to come," added David Ernst, of Evans Economics in Washington, D.C . The 1.6 percent increase matches the gain in August, 1978. Before then, the largest one-month spurt was a 2.2 per- cent rise in August 197,. OUTPUT OF consumer goods rose 1.2 percent in October, reflecting a large gain for dura- ble goods, but almost no change for non-durable items, the report said. Automobil~ were assembled al an annual rate of 6. 7 million unit.a last month, up fn)m a six million ye•rly pace i-n 5ep- tember. Production of home goods - s uc h as appliances, carpeting and furniture -advanced 1.9 percent in ·October, although output of these items remained nearly 9 percent below year: earlier levels. After three months of little change, production o'f business equipment increased 0.7 percent in October after declining 3.6 • percent during the recessionary f'pring. I PBODUCTION OF defense and space equipment again rose sharply in October . Output of construction supplies advanced 1. 7 percent, somewhat less than during the two previous months. } Reflecting the sharp downtllm in housing during the recession, production of cooalruction sup- plies was down 12 percent over the year~arlier level. The October report a lso showed a sharp 3.7 percent in- crease in production of durable materials such as basic metals. Non-durable materials jumped 2.S percent following similar large boosts in August and Sep· lember. 2 die in blut SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador (AP) -A remote-controlled mine on a bridge blew up Thurs· day as a truckload of policemen drove by, killing at least two, authorities said. A witness said be counted elcht uniformed bodies, and police said a dozen officers were injured. Jeanne's demise near Gulf coast alert, but storm u:eakena IJ.S • .Saaaasw111 T rot>K•I SIOlm Ju,_ '"'"•d •"" 9rew ... .,..., IOCS.• o••• IM Gull o• M•a6co ' coot we tf'rt otf ttw f ,_.., COlll, ~ fonc.asler' w •d In. un .,_, N-r \Corm •-•"'d to .,. l•lhft9 •i»r1 G•I• -nl~, •nl<fl had ptOMPl· .., stor""""M l.OU!ti...• r~l<l ... lt to "91n l• .. "'9 <«Nstel 1-t>\ •r>d D<• IHI'• tor llOOCltnQ, -•• ••lllOr•"'n overn19111 .._.,.,, 111911 110.s <Oii· II-to POM • llllHI to low lylnQ COHt•I ., •• ,. Tll• llwrk•M ani.r ,.,po/Mo llWll •I I •.m . .i-·1 <.enter •H eDOVI IU mlla1 "''of 9rownsvlll•, Teau . EIMWMr9, • •lnl•Jr storm - tow•rd Netlf•JllA -IC~WI, IH \" 1"9 up to • ln<lltt of \now •lonq co1or•oo•1 l'ront A•noe. o.-y ,... Del•..., •• ._ .... 94 MOll!lh rro1•v II W.. oo nOI n. ... ,Ol.11 l'AllO'' b• ~ 10 0 I'll Ulf O•fOto r tt m and fV"'• o.n., ftlll O• qth., .. td $elllfO•• ,..n 'luroO•v If 1&11 dO ftOI ,..._., •• ~ 10(W Oy 9 • l'I\ call MIO#• I • a"' •"'1 ~°"' COOV ... ~ Cit 0.hvlltUKI l.~ ..... _,.., <>Ht•lld ...... "-S«r- s.111 ...... . u ... .. C.t•llM On.,.rlO lll'•lm $tlritlel !Mlt•AN 61 ·ll .0 jll ., .. M » •S lS .. .. ., J4 10 n ~= ,. " -. •... ., ..... T'OOA"r l«oMl\ltll 12: .. ,..m. u S.COll410w l ;'lp.m. O.J l'trttltftll ~lntl­SKCIMltltft SKoM._ &ATU•MY 4. Ua,m. ·····"'· l :•p,m. •:•11,m. IUNOAV 4.0 J,0 4.l o.s fllrttllltfl •:•a.m. ~.s fllrtltew IO:S4•.m. J.4 1KoM111911 ar•11.m. u ~low t0;1'p.m. O,f hllrl,...:Ua.m.,tett4: .. p.fft. 1111-.n rl-It; .. ""'" Mtt !0154 •1'"· Natalie qeft) and Valerie _Wackler, Siamese twins joined at the spine, are shown with their parents, Rebecca and RandY. Wackier, before surgery performed today in Dayton, Ohio. The operation was moved up after Valerie reportedlv sulf ered brain death. 4 children blamed for fire killing 5 ASHTON , Mich. ~AP ) - Four c hildren who were in school when a fire killed their parents and three siblings have reported they were the victims of child abuse -and one of them has confessed to setting the fire, police say. ll may not have been the first lime the children fought back with fire, police s ay. THE YOUNG s urvi vors told police they had been abused b.y t.beir parents~ a nd one of them had been abused Monaay morning before the fire . "I think they were las hing out at their parents," said Osceola County Unders heriff Harry Browne. "But I also lhin1c they never stopped lo eive a thought that the outcome would be what it was." BE ANNOUNe-£.D that the fatal blaze in .J rural house near here on Monday was the work of a child who confessed to a uthorit:ies Tuesday. The ch.ild lit one fire atop a dresser oo one side of a bedroom and another on the bottom of a set of bunk beds, blocking the only escape route, Browne said. The child then left for school Monday morning with three brothers-and sisters, he said. About 25 minutes later , the house was in names . T he children had set other, unreported fl.res in other dwell- ings where the family had lived, but someone in the family had always managed to extinguish them, Browne said . New Store Opening CANOGA PARK 21721 Y•n Owen It. "IT IS ESTIMATED it closely approximates or may even be larger in size and weapons fit than the U.S. Navy's new Obio- class submarines, which have a s ubme r ged dis place ment of about 18,000 tons," the Navy said in response to questions. "It is believed tba-t t he Typhoon will be capable of car- r y ing al least 20 a dvanced- des ign s ubma rine -launched ballis tic missiles." the Navy said . Each of the United States' Ohio-class subs will carry 24 Tri- dent missiles. According to naval estimates, the first ship of the Typhoon class could begin sea trials next spring, which would be a bout the lime that the U.S. Navy expects to accept delivery of its-firs Ohio-class s ubmarine, which will be equipped with Trident missiles. THE SOVIETS' SSN-18. which can hurl three warheads eaeh at widely separated targets, went into service two years ago. Ac;ross ttte street from the,...,. Co. The Arnold Palmer Golf Sweater From Robert Bruce .... -- It's 100°/o Orlon links, shape- retaining & always great looking. Navy, brown, tan, p. blue, grey, yellow, rust, white & burgundy. \ -. ttwu w.&. tM, , ....... L.A. 1 104, • 1N 38.00 LT-2XT 1XB-4XB LOI MIM • 3rct l a..tnt W e ___. 217 N. ...... Av.. Nelll IO Aotllrl90n'1 MN1Mt .,.,,NU.t..._ .. o..oi.,....,. • 1astt.1a....,.HM...,,•1MS.m ... • .,._._.~Pleza-­ IMfA AM.,. a. Metot ... tlMldl ""'T,..,,y .. ...,. • WWI& •• 511 WMtmlMW Mell,,,.., to'"' ~m ........... H11t1ot a OrlillOltflOrpe '""''• • ce 1oe nut tGPd 1t., IC""91"9 •t. ''°"'a.. .... ,,.. ~ 11U1A ..... 10 QTI "'*-MIJtllWWI e Ult WO a10 ,._.It ('141 llMln .................... _. C.ALIFORNIA Killer challenges ·state's death law SAN FRANCISCO I AP J Th• state Supreme Court has been uked by • cunvicted double murderer lo change its mind and overturn the &tale's death pt'nalty law. (..____If A_TE_____..) The request came on a petition for rehearing filed T h ursday by Earl Lloyd Jackson, convicted of killing two elderly Long .Beach widows in 1977. In a decision Oct. 23 on his case, the court ruled 4-3 against Jackson's contentions that he had faulty counsel and that the state's 1977 death penalty law violates the Eighth and 14th Amend· ments The petition presents similar claims. The new petition could possibly set the stage ror a maJor aeatn penalty challenge before the U.S. Supreme Court. Jackson was convicted of the autumn 1977 killings of Gladys OU. 90, and Vernita Curtis. 91 The apartments of both women had been robbed. c,...,.,, b11r11Pr11 11ot kla1.,,.......,1 SACRAMENTO <AP> The cross burners at Sacramento High School were merely pranksters -not Ku Klux Klan mem -bers. police report. Officers said that six students of the school have been cited for malicious mischief in connection with last week's burning of a nine-foot cross on the football field. All are 16 or 17 years old, and while, but none has any KKK connection and none gave any motive. police said . .Hon 11ought in slayitag SACRAMENTO <A P > A 23-year-old man is being sought for investigation of the gunshot de ath of his estranged wife's boyfriend, police r eport . Detective Lt. Hal Taylor said Thursday that Walter "Bubba " Beachem is believed to have fired a .22-caliber revolver at the vie· Lim , AJvin Blakely, 36. at the residence of wife Gayla Beachem, 20, from whom he had been separated about four months . . 4tM.-hool IH•yeot I .-d HAYWARD. <API -Pare nts of students at Longwood Elementary School say they Wlll keep their children home until they are satisfied about safety conditions at the school, which was evacuated last week because of fumes from a roof-sealing sub- stance. The Hayward School District reported a 40 percent a bsentee rate at Longwood Thursday after a group of parents posted m ers in the neighborhood warning of possible dangers . .~Of1er g.-t~ br.-ak MARYSVILLE CAP) -A 60·year-old man who admitted slay. ing a neighbor has plea-bargained himself into a minimum 15-year sentence. A representative of the Yuba Co unty district attorney's office, Fred Schroeder, who agreed to the plea bargain, said Thursday it . was doubtful that there was enough evidence to s how premedita- tion, which is required for a conviction of first-degree murder. John Henry Crawford was to have gone on trial Wednesday for first-degree murder.. But the char ge wu dropped 1n return tor his pfea of guilty to second-degree murder. ., Di~w"~~ kill~ ••ltildr.-11 SAN DIEGO (AP> -A rare genetic blood disease known as FEL with onJy 36 cases reported in medical history up until 1976, has ~laimed all three children of a Lake Elsinore couple in the past 17 months. Bill and Angie McClanahan watched helplessly as one by one FEL savaged their family, taking 16-month-old Timmy, 5-year-old Scott and last week, 4·year-old Shannon. __ 2nd Illan sought in Rihicof f tleath VENICE CAP I -Al'thorities .continued to search today for a second man wanted for ques - tioning in the shooting death of Sarai K Ribicoff, the niece of Sen. Abraham A Ribicoff, D-Conn .. outside a small French restaurant here. Ms. Ribicoff. 23, a writer for the Los Angeles Herald Examiner, was shot in the chest during a r obbery Wednesday night as she a nd a companion, John Shoven. 33, were leaving the Chez Helene r estaurant. Shoven. a p rofessor of economi cs at Stanford University, told police that the shooting occurred without provocation after he had handed over his wallet containing about $200 to two men who emerged from the shadows nearby. Police arrested one man, Frederick Jerome Thomas. 21. of Los Angeles. an hour later at Marina del Rey's Mission Mercy Hospital, where he was being treatec;t for a gunshot wound to the left hand. Ms. Ri bicoff was the daughter of former prom- inent Har tford, Conn .. attorney Irvin g S. Ribicoff. Her family said memorial services would oe held Sunday a t Emanuel Synagogue in Hartford, with ..burial following at the Stephen Wise Cemetery in Hartsdale. N Y. 01\. of contract ends PSA strike SAN DIEGO CAP) -Thr eatened with being replaced, 500 striking Pacific Southwest Airlines pilots and light engineers have approved a new contract, ending a 50-day work stoppage that idled 4.400 airline employees. The 30-month contract includes a 35. 7 percent wage increase, retroactive to Jan. t. At present, pay ranges from $10,000 annually for a second of- ficer to '87,000 for senior captain . Limited night service bet.ween San Diego, Los Angeles and San Fr l\ncisco resumes Sunday and w~ll be expanded during the week, a PSA spokesman said today. PSA shut down service Sept . i2s when the flight crew members walked off their jobs, hailing 242 dally rughts in fo ur states and Mexico. A spokesman for the Southwest Flight Crew AasoclaUon -the flight crewmen 's union -: said m e mbership was "very oppoted t.o the contract" but accepted It by a major ity vole. Antique Show . Huntington C.nter Mall toctav thrv Sunday ... ,~''""" " • .,, ...... ...,, Ooo- tC1tt ltnr• ,...,.,,.., •w ••••• CKT••r.141•1289 ,.,.._. .... -..... ~1 .... c.....c...._ ,. ........ .,.., ... .., ...... ._.._._.. ~ ----,..,,_. _ ----· Frtday, November 14, 1980 H I F ~LY PILOT .I.) Attorney asks baqJ .. ., on 'talk --: 'i R EDWOOD CITY <AP> -Tbe attorney for Luis Rodriguei wants t.o make s ure that sia~· ments be ma de while In J!il before the slayings are not usedln the trial. 1 Rodriguez, 24, is charged with m urdering two officers of ~e California Highway Patrol rn December 1978. San Mateo County Superi~r Court Judge Joseph Ka resh sajd T hursday he would rule on t~e request next week when the trial resumes for its third week. The bodies of Wi l lia,-n Freeman and Roy Blecher wete found beside their car on In- terstate 80 in West Sacramento. Rodriguez' defense attom er. STRIKING WORKERS PICKET OUTSIDE LA CITY HALL Impact not expected to be feH prior to weekend David Weiner. said stalemeJlt.S that Rodriguez allegedly ma'e prior to the slayings while \n Sacramento Coun ty jail on another matter were prejudicial not only for their content but because they would show the j ury that the defendant had pre- viously been in jail. 5,600 walk off jo~s Yolo County District Attorney Richard Gilbert said Rodriguez (who at on e time lived Jn .Garden Grovel allegedly told: a friend the day after the killings that he had been hassled by police and he had "downed two of them." .Some de.fy corirt orders in IA: .face finPs Members of two clerical un- ions. the 2.900-member Engineer and Architects Association and the 1.200 member Superinten· de nts Associat ion, also were striking . Vacation ending LOS ANGELES (AP I Garbage pileups, fe wer pol- icemen on the streets and more downtown traffic jams were pre- dicted by city offi cials as the city's second strike in history neared completion of its second day. City adminis trative officer Keith Comrie predicted the s trikers 5,600 of them were off the job Thur sday -would go back to work in three or four days. supervisors took over traffic control. sewage plant main tenance and computer opera tions for the city of nearly 3 mill ion people. Police officers had to fi ll in ror striking jail security employees. But trash collection came to a halt when two.man crews for j us t s ix of <la5 garbage trucks re· ported for work Thursday. The. Sanitation Bureau had a total of 1,319 employees off the job 77 percent. Local 347 and the Engineers Union both were acting in de· fl a nee of a no-strike order i~sued by Superior Court Judge Jerry r acht. SANTA BARBARA (AP> Ending a fiv e-day vacation at his mountain ranch, President- elect Ronald Reagan was to re· turn to Los Angeles 'oday . (In a late development today. city ~ claimed m embers of three unions were returning to work. But union officials insisted that was not true). The unions taking the job ac· lion represent a total of 10.000 workers, and union leaders said more of their members would call in sick or just fail to show up as the strike continued. Two unions were striking in violation of a court orlJer the cityobtain ed Wed· nesday. TH E STRIK ERS, who in- clude d garbage collectors. engineers, mechanics who main· tain city car s and computer operators. represent 28 percent of t he work force m the nation's thir d larges t city. City offic ials said work T h ere was an 80 perce nt absentee figure for street light- ing personnel. 60 percent of the city engineering employees. 59 percent of street maintenance workers and 38 percent of the Ha rbor Department workers "If it extends a couple of weeks it could get to be a real nuisance to the com m unity," said Comrie. ''It's just about like we expected for the first day We would expect pret-ty good participation <in the ,str ike) for two or three days. After two or three days they'll get tired . and start coming back." COMRIE SAID those off the job Thursday in the wage dis· pute included most of the 6,400 blue collar workers represented by Local 347 of the AF L-CIO City Employees Union. Pinched by picture SALINAS <AP> When Monterey County prosecutors dropped charges of pinching women's bottoms against John W .. Edgington. he got his picture in the paper. But because of that picture in the Salinas Cali fornian, Edg. mgton has been c harged with the same violation in another case. police say. Edgington, 25. was charged earlier this year with two· counts of battery after he allegedly pinched women al a local. shopping-center. However, both cases ended in mistrials, and: the charges were dropped July 15. • But when his picture appeared in the paper that day. a Salinas woman called police and s aid the man had pinched her nine days earlier. The Monterey County District Attorney issued another war. rant Sept. 16. and Edgington was arrested last Thursday. He pleaded innocent in Salinas Municipal Court Thursday and faces a preliminary hearing Dec. 12. He is free on SSOO bail. I ~fl _//tf/ ,__ fl1111ffr-/* fa _/ )(f/(!l~(I/ (//ri1/J11r-1J /980 di L ook ~c:f/t df ofida.; Exci.fa:mE:.nt 'JE:.atu 'l.i.n9 'Jfu 'Jaj.cination of Cfai.1.lnza~ YJ'aj.t oVew 'D£co'l.ationj_ th'l.oughout tfu cA/1..a[[ SOUTH COAST PLAZA I \ . :• ' l 1 I I , I I I I'. o .. ngeCoast01llyP1101 Edlioftal Pge ....... -·~·-A-~:::::~::::.1 ... ':.:".:.:::-~--------1111!11111--...... ---------------------- ~·. Smoothing I-th for new officials ln Wuhlnaton D.C., at a coet of several mUUons of dollan, atalfa ~ work:l.QI to ensure a 11DOOth translUon laetween the admlnlatrationa of Pretldent Jimmy Carter and Prmident-elect Ronald Rea•an. But Waahiniton II not the only place in tranaitlon. In Oranse County, two new supervisors -Roser Stanton in t.be lit SUpervisorial Dlatrlct and Bruce Nestande ln the Jlrd -will take office Jan. 5, reptacin1 two defeated in· cum bents. . Plans are now ln the works to help both freshmen 1uperviaors enter office as smoothly as possible. In decided contrast to Washlniton, where everything teems to cost millions of dollars, Orange County tuperVisors have appropriated a minimal amount -•,ooo -for the transition program. This will co\ler the salaries for aides for the two incoming supervisors for about a one-month period. 'lbe transition proeram was proposed by 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley. It was unanimously approved by the board despite some negative yet predictable com- ment from SUpervisor Edison Miller, the man Nestande defeated. As Riley pointed out, such a transition program ap- pears justified given the critical decisions facing supervisors early in 1981. Chief among them will be ac· ti on on the master plan that will control the future de· velopment of Jo.hn Wayne Airport over the next 10 years. TheJllCcess of the transition program, of course, will depen<lon the actions and attitudes of those involved. The elections are past. Those who are now in power should ex· tend a welcome to those who are arriving. And those who are arriving should be gracious enough to accept it. S o viet roadblocks It was hardly surprising to find the Soviets trying to pull the rug out from under the third Helsinki review con- ference now stumbling along in Madrid. The 35-nation Conference on Security and Coopera- tion in Europe is supposed to review compliance with the 10 principles governing conduct between states as set forth in Helsinki in 1975. The Soviet Union was among the 33 European nations signing the Helsinki pact, along with the United States and Canada. No one really anticipated full compliance with the principles which covered, among other thing=, h man rights, communication among nations, remova o vet barriers and nonintervention in the internal f ·rs of other states. But it was hoped that focusing world attention on these principles might at least have some beneficial ef· feet. In the Soviet Union one immediate result was the emergence of a whole new group of "dissidents'' who kept calling attention to their nation's noncompliance with Helsinki. Several of them already have been ap· prehended and jailed. But the most blatant defiance of the pact was the Sov· iet invasion of Afghanistan -arguments that it asked for Soviet "help" notwithstanding. These issues, of course, are what many members of the Madrid meeting want to discuss. And they're just what the Sovi~ts don't want to discuss. So for nine weeks the Soviets fought lo keep them off the conference agenda, and to reduce the entire session to four weeks. Other members wanted six weeks of general discussion, followed by six more weeks of proposals for new ways to implement the Helsinki agreement. Finally, in desperation, the Spanish foreign minister simply called the conference lo order without an agenda. Meanwhile, in Moscow, President Leonid Brezhnev has denounced what he calls attempts to tum the con· f erence into a "forum for cheap propaganda." With or without Soviet cooperation, the conference should go on. At least the delegations will have a plat· form from which lo air their views. And if no further ac- cord can be reached, it will clearly be the fault of the Soviets. Races help the fair Racing fans will have one more chance to follow the thoroughbreds when the Orange County Fall Fair race meet opens at Los Alamitos next Wednesday. The 12-day meet, which runs through Dec . 1. will of· fer 11 races beginning at noon every day except Tuesday. The betting crowd will be offered six exactas each day and the popular Pick Six wagering that can pay handsomely for a selection of six consecutive winners. The Fall Fair race meet. authorized by the slate after much opposition froJD the major race tracks, has been a bonanza for the OranJ{e County Fair. which de· pends on the racing revenue to finance major fair ground improvements at home base in Costa Mesa. Last year's meet netted more than a quarter of a million dollars for the fair. So take a short ride to Los Alamitos, have fun at the parking lot fair, place your bets, if you're a bettor, and help build the county fairgrounds into a major recrea· tlonal center. • Opinions expressed in the spaoe above i18those of the Dall y Pilot Othef views expressed on this page are those of their authors and ertlata. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Dail y Pilot, P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321. --Boy d/Cleopatra a1L.M.BOYD Yount a.d.y, let'• ,_, you ••lat JOW' eyebrows and '°"" .,.., ... a stark black. And you daub tbe u~r Udl lill• black and tbe lower Uda Mel> tnm· Tbere you baft it. You've made '-P your face HIC\.b' .. did Cleopatra. AC· cordinl to the record, aucb ll lll• maAD•r in which she ,UHd her coemetlca. No profe11lonal ba1eball rlayer can be pald more than 2,400 per seaaon. That's what the National Lea1ue rule stated. El1hty l'UJ'I a10. You lmow a cro11 betwMD a Jackala and a mare pro-chac• a male. llut nn you , aware tlia a Cl'Oel M\W"'1 a ttaWoD 9Dd a jenny producet • biDQy? II aQ)' a mu ba1 worked for JO yon ba tM Kimberley Min•~ of South Africa without evn n1ht1 a 1 diamc,ncl,. l'm told. ' t Jack Anderson Intelligence security shake n WASHINGTON -The recent exposure of tormer CIA •cent David Barnett'• sellout to the Soviet Union ls ~Y one chap&er in • 1tory of treachery that Ml 1haken the Ame rlcah In· teW1ence community in the past four years. And more revela- tions can be expected in coming monlbl. Besides Barnell. tbe public has already learned about three o t h e r Americans who so ld secre t doc u· ments to So- vie t In · telli gence : William K a mp i le s , Andrew Lee and C hris · t o ph e r Boyce. The public has also been told about Lhe reported death of the top American spy in the Kremlin -code·named Trigon -whose cover may have been blown by a White House of· ficial's careless remark at a Washington diplomatic party But what the public doesn't know is that a major s py scan· dal may be develo ping, its pro· portions unmatched since the exposes that rocked the country afte r World War 11. The J ustice Depa rtment as investigating several cases involving leaks or sensitive information Jo the So· viets by U.S. officials and private individuals . · BECAUSE MORE positive proof is needed, it would be un· fair to name actual names. But here a re the details. given to my associate Da le Van Att a by sources in the Wh ite House, the Justice Department and the in· telligence agencies. -Some Carter administration officials are under investigation by the Justice De partment for sus pected espionage on behalf of he spies up0n now know who ttnd wha t be Is. -A ranking RoQlanian dip· lomat who d e fec t e d l ut F e bruary has given CIA debriefers the detail• of a wtde· rangina Soviet es pionage opera· lion baaed in the Romanian Em· b assy In Was hington. Code· named ''U berty." the network was de1lgned to penetrate the federal government at various levels . Each target had a code name : Congress was "Oregon," the White House was "Amazon" and the State Departme nt, with sardonic Russian humor, was "Iowa." THE ROMANIAN diplomat had easy access to half a dozen De m ocratic senators and at least two Republican senators. More alarming, t hough, was the the Soviet Union. One source said there are files on "at least three" such cases, and there may be as·mahyas'Hilf a aoz'-=-en=-.-- -Intelligence sources charge that a high-level White House of. Cicial recently blew the cover of a CIA agent who travels in an East European country. So far. the agent has not been warned that he has been compromised and that officials of the country Earl Waters Romanian's identification of a former Senate staff member as a purveyor of intellige nce to Romania. He was employed by a senior Democratic senator. -Finally -and potentially mos t dangero us -i s the Defense Intelligence Agency's concern that a Soviet "mole" may ha"Ve penetrated to the highest levels of the U.S. govern· meot. and now has access to closely held White House in· formation. A top-secret DIA report re· cently concluded that "a definite change in the Soviet under· ground nuclear test program OC· curred in 1978 toward testing in· crea singly high e r ·yie ld de· vices./ The significance of this chan.(e lies in the fact that it OC· curred shortly after the United St a tes secretly ch anged its ......... method o f measurlng the sttepgth of Soviet nuclear t,!sLI / in such a way that the Ruaalana could explode bigger bopiba without vlol a ting existlDI t reaties. The DIA analysts de= cied this was ''more than cotn- cidence." and pointed to the hair-raising possibility that in· fOrmatio n about the new measuring sys tem bad been leaked to the Kremlin by one ot the very tew high U.S. officials who knew about it. ADDED TO THE c a ses already made public in retent years, the Investigations cur· rently being pursued paint a grim picture of our nation'• in· t e ll igen ce sec urit y . The Rus~ians appa rently have ex· p er1e nced little difficulty recruiting greedy or gullible Americans to provide mtlllary secrets the Kremlin wants. And while Barnett was . well paid for his treachery -$92,000 -and Lee and Boyce collected more than $80,000 , the KGB doesn't spend more than it has to. It paid young Kampiles, for exam ple, only $3,100 for price- less data on the CIA 's most ad· van ced satellite s urveillance system. Footnote· The White House was panic·s tricke n a t the thought that the Barnett scandal would hit the front pages -and s tay there during the pres· :idential campaign. The Justice De partment, therefore, sat on the case for several months after the FBI obtained a con· fession from Barnell. But I got wind of the story. a nd calle d C IA Dire ctor Sta nsfield Turner. Sen. Birch Bayh, D·lnd., and William G. Miller, staff director of the Senate Intelligence ComTJ\ittee. Realizing the story was about to blow up in their races. the Carter people handed it to The '.'lew York Tames an a version carefully calculated to make the Justice Department look good. .Justice, meanwhile, str uck a plea ~argain. with BarnelL The d ;.image -co ntro l m ission worked: Unlike Alger Hi ss, whose case dragged on for years. Barnett was quickly con· signed to the back pages without e m barrassing second thoughts -a t least. not before Election Da) Law would target c ar rep air rip-o ffs Recognizing that automobile service and repairs have been a fertile field fo r · 'rip-0ff" a rtists in recent years. cutting deeply into the budgets of the average auto owner, Senator Robert Presley is taking action which he hopes will be a major step in elimina ting the problem. In fact he recently announced that an a dvisory commiltce fo r med b y h i m b as almost com ple te d work on the draft· ing o r a leg is lative plan whic h will provide C alifornia ns with expe rt and reliable auto r epair work in s tale certified repair shops. Judging from the make-up or his broadly based advisory com· mittee it would appear that he has indeed hit upon a workable scheme which will benefit both Charles McCabe the public and the legitimate auto reµairmen For, .cooperating in the effort lo d r a ft t he legisla tion are representatives of the California Service Stations Council. the Na· tional lnslilute for Automotive Service Excellence, the Motor Car Dealers Association. the auto m echanics unio n . the Automotive P art s a nd Ac · ce!>sories Association, the as· soc1ation of independent garage owners, the triple A auto clubs. some law enfo rcement and con- sumer council officials, and a couple of UC professors. THE PROBLEM of finding re· li3ble repair men for t he auto is not new. It is one which started with the era of the "horseless carriage." At first it was just finding someone who offered the service. Soon however everyone with a monkey wrench, pliers and a ballpeen hammer had become an •·auto mechanic ... They set up little garages with a gas pump in front. With the advent of "'service stations" many found it advan· tageous to also offer auto repair services It wasn't long before motorists learned to their sor· row that m any or these self· appointed auto mechanics were incompetents who didn't mind charging h.igh prices fo r their faulty work. ENTER THE automo bile clubs. Early on. the triple A auto clubs commenced a certification pro gram for garages . Their AAA sign served as evidence of reliability and competence. The clubs interceded on complaints and the garages which didn't live up to the certificat ions found themselves remov.ed from the list of approved garages. Although it has worked well ove r the years for its members the AAA program has never fulfilled the need for the non· members. Public complaints of r e pair services provided by those outside or the program re· suited in the state stepping in me years back to establish the Bur<'au of Auto Repairs to in· vest1gate complaints and seek legal actions against those over· charging or performing raulty work. This effort too seems to have fallen short of the need. WHAT PRESLEY'S group is now about to propose is a volun· teer certification program pat· terned after the AAA clubs' ·•ap· proved repair shops" program. Based upon ~tandards fo r facilities. equipment and com· petency of the mechanics , the state would certify the establish· ment. Regular inspections would be made. The program would be entirely financed with the fees paid for the certification. Says Presley, "The rationale of our plan is that certified shops would get more business and thus encourage the others to raise their standards to get into the system The plan would be entirely voluntary and would not req uire lax funds " Value of sex education programs still doubtful There ls a serious questjoo of whether in fact the people OI the Planned Parenthood persuasion have not created the problem or teen-age pregnancy that appears so to cencem them, and which impels them to press their views upon t.he children ot California. I have long fell that the early tralnlnl ol Sex Ed as a matter of altltude and life llyle rather than slmple b l ololY 11 -more likely to •n c r101e aexual activl· ty • !DOOi the very youq. Cblldren are curious, aa we all know, or they wouldn't bt children. Tbe lmJ>Ulle to find out what you can do with your body after belnl told ts st.ron1 indeed . I am neither a aclenU• nor a btoaoctat. I alto know tbat the weakllt form of ar1ument II the arpmMt from autborlty. But in -m.U.n like Su ~d there 11 really DO other appeal. r.' onl~ ' rem otely authoritative study on Sex Ed and teen-age pregnancy was made in 1972 by a working party of the Royal College of Obstetricians and GynecolotiJts in England. The English are a littler cooler on these matters than the PSll>lonate ideologues of Planned Parenthood. THE CONCLUSION of the wo rkin g pa rty : Practically nothing is known about the et- (ects of sex educaUon pro1rams, e.ilber lo regard to the (uture bealth and happiness of the in· dlvldual cbildren or In relatlon to unplanned pregnancy. "It was su1&ested that wrona· ly ortented -sex-edueaUon could be havin1 a result wblcb wa1 the exact oppo11te of what it waa de- 1lred to acblew, in that ll wu arouatnc curioeity and the detlre to elU)Otiment. Tbe rapidly r11· ln1 (ncld,nc e 9f unplanned pre1nanclet ln the younc •I•· fde:.~. Clvet some s upport to thla Charles Rycroft, a di•· tln1ubhed Brlll1b psyebolollll. 1ee1 the unplanned preinaney pr~blem 11 one of enauriGJ \bit the child is not confronted with more than its capacity for anxie· ty and vigilance will enable It to master. He believes it Is lmpor· tant to avoid lhe child being con· fronted with and puzzled by things it is not yet ready to un· dent.and. ,. THE REAL QUESTIONS are: ls sex instruction ln school or 1roupe appropriate? ts it helrfu1 to individuals and usefu lo society? My wholly falllbte answer to both questions is No. SeJC in· atrucllon should bo s trictly tormal, aa in tbe bome; or strict· ly lnlonnal as in the atreet.8, or both. lo the end everybody learns where babies come trom, and what sexual intercourse 11, and I think they learn ll better In lb• home aod in the 1trffta than in achoola that wlah lo ret a . 1peclallaad view of Mx acrou. A pamphlet put out by The Rtt,0..l&le Sod9t1 ln 8rtgla and · 'rrlU•D by a London educator, K.H. Kavanalla. wtm baa bad W'ldl e~ce ID a lfrl• London comprebentlve school, sums the matter up very well, in my opinion· 1 "PARENTS SHOULD be f~ more vigilant. They must see that sex education material ls sensitive and dignified so that the natural modesty of the child is preserved. "Parent.a should ensure that they are given full explanatk>fts ot the sort of lnstrucUon elven, and Insist that it la set in the wider context of family life -emphaaizinC the need for love and reaponsiblllty In human re- laUon.shJP1 and the upbringiftl ol children. "At the governmental leve.I there 11 need for action. It should be enacted that sex ln· st.ruction should not bt liveh by repreaentatlvea trom any or· 1anlaaUon which bN a d.lntt or indirect interest in lb• tale or cilatrtbutlon of contraceptives. Tbe 1overnmeat •bo~ld alto eoa. ced• pie 1ame rtgbt to ,.._. at t.beJ .h.Joy ln reU~ lD· 1tructl n -th• rl1bt to wltbclraw tbetl' chlld"1l hm 8'1 lrwtruttlon clu111 lf ~ wt1b." ) ,. Caast Year He•etewn . D•lly N••8•••er EDITION VOL 73, NO. 31t, 4 SECTIONS,• PAGES TWENTY-FIVE CENTS LB school delay .retaliation · vowed ay STEVE MITCHELL ... Oell't .......... \ Latw1• Beach school Superin· tendent Robert Sancbis has breatened disciplinary action tllaould a fac ulty association follow tbrou&b with its threat to bold up an accredit ation program attbehipschool. Laauna Beach Unified Faculty Auoclation membe r s voted earlier this week to stall an ac· creditation review of the high school unless there ts immediate action on at.alled salary neaotia- tion. • Last month teachers and ad· mlnistratorsdeclared an impasse in salary talks, and both sid~ are expected to meet Thu~day with a state-appointed mediator . But teachers said they won't turn in results of the Western As- l'erg short reif111 Miss World 1980, 28-year-old Gabrielle Brum of Weat-, Germany, quit her title today. . .less than 24 hours after winning it in London. Her resignation came s hortly after she said her 52-year -old Los Angele.s boyfriend, Benno Bellenbaum. a film cameraman, was "not too pleased" with her victory. Judge halts thaw of Iranian assets ..... ~ HAL TS IRAN CLAIMS Judge Robert Peckh•m '1an, youth arrested in cocaine bu~t A 33-year-old transient and 17-year-old Newport Beach youth were being held on druC charges today rollowtng their ar-rea~ by Laauna Beach police Tbunday. Police said Dennis Lavoine Helem, 33, described as a trualent, was arTeated at Main Beach Park at about 5:30 p.m. alter lnvestlgat.on arran1ed to purchase a half ounce of C?OCalne for '2,JOO from the man. Ofllcen arrested the youth about 15 minutes later at a NrVice ltadon at 1251 N. Cout lltabway. PoU~ ta&d earU•r ln UM net tbey recetv;ct a tip reiardlng co-•aia• tramc anid that led ln· ... Ucaton to co"htact the youth at the tentce atatlon. lDYeltiCaton tben reportedly '9aad• «intae\ wUll U.lem ahd 1rr.....S to buy a hlf 1ram ol ( ... COKB, Pat• A.I) l SAN F RA NCISCO CAP) - After reviewing classified docu- ments from the departments of state and t reasury, a federal judge has temporarily halted ac· lion on 20 corporate claims seek- ing an estimated $500 million in frozen Iraniaifa!Rt.S. - U.S. District Judge Robert F. Peckham said he granted the 90·day stay on a government "s uggestion or interest" request that "all further proceedings be stayed" in an effort to help the hostage crisis. The State Department has sought deferrals in about 230 other claims in a dozen other states against the Iranian as· sets, estimated to total $8 billion. The ruling Thursday in San Francisco brought the govern- ment petitions to public atten- tion. In Washington, spokes m an Joe Reap said the move was m ade so that lega l a c tion •'would not prejudice our efforts to obtain the release of the hostages." He said that to his knowledge, no judge has ruled on the validity of any of the Ira· nian claim cases. The Iranian government has demanded that all claims against its assets be dropped as a condllion for releasing the Amerieans held hos tage for more than a year. The assets were frozen by President Carter after the hostages were uken, and many U.S. fl.J'mS and indJviduai. went to court seeking compensation for louea they sustained wben the government of the Ayatollab Ruhollah Khomeini came io pow•r. Flower shop looted .. in San Clemente Bu~ave broken l.J)to a San e' Rower .._,, tak· ln1 a Rower refriteraUon cue valued at $3,000. Ellen Mahoney, who operates the CrllDIC)D and Clover flower 1hop at 1111 No. &I Camino Real, Mid tM heavy rerr1,.a- Uon box w&1 taken t0m.UrM Tuesday nJl)lt. soclation of Schoolt and Colleges Accreditation report, which was s up posed to be handed ove r to the high school principal today. The accreditation report -an evaluation of the high school pro- gram -is due every five years. The report serves as an outside evaluation of high school pro- gram s to determine areas that are workinll e((ectively and those areas that might need improve- men t. · The document bas been pre· pared by teachers a nd some ~lassified employees and was due to be turned in to high school Prin· cipal Robert Hughes todax. In a prepared statement, Dr. Sandus termed the faculty as- •sociation's threatened Job action "inappropriate." He said the teacher action, in his view, would be s ubject t.o the filing of unfair labor practice charges with the Public Employ. ment Relations Board, "as well as possible disciplinary action." He didn't speciCy what the dis- ciplinary action might be. 'Faculty association president Dave Hagen said this week's job action "comes as a result of our frustration and an1er" over the stalled negotiations. Teachers are seeldnt an 8 per- cent pay hilte this school year, and an increase next year Ued to the Consumer Price lndex. But district negotiators have of- fered a 4.S percent r.aise this year, and an 8 percent hike next year - if there is no change in the slate's financing picture. ' Fund charges flayed Anthony, Diedrich prosecution 'invidious' By FREDERICKSCHOEMEID.. OllMOelly .. l ... S .. ff Attorneys for Orange County Supervisor Philip Anthony and former S upervis or Ralph Diedrich charged today their clients, facing felony charges re- lated to alleged campaign fund laundering, are victims or "in· vidious prosecutiqn." Laguna • project appealed State Coastal Commissioners will bear an appe.a.L.'.thursda.y from two Laguna Beach resi- dents to block a permit for storm drain and sidewalk work at Maib.~ch Park. The eomm.Lnloo meeta at 9 a . m. at the Shelter Island Marina Inn, 2051 Shelter Island Drive, San Diego. The city of Laguna Beach ia seekin1 a permit to replace sidewalb, install a storm drain system, and construct curbt and gutters near Coast Hil(hway at Main Beach Park. The estimated $100,000 project would replace an existing lG-to 12-foot-wide uniform concrete sidewalk. A turnout adjacent to the highway would be finished with a curb, gutter and sidewalk around it. The storm drain would reduce flooding on the south side of the highway near Broadway, city of- ficials said. But physician Gene Atherton and John Gabriels of Laguna are appealing the South Coast Regional Coastal Com- mission's approval of a permit for the work. They contend that the project would remove an eight-foot strip from the park and state that the work is unnecessary because there is a boardwalk paralleling the highway. Strikes averted WARSAW, Poland CAP) The Polish government h as avoided a showdown with the country's biggest independent labor W\ion. Union leader Lech Walesa called of( plans for na· tionwide selective strikes after the Supreme Court ruled the un· ion 's charter need not include a clause affirming the leading role o( the Communist Party. .. Col. Harland Sanders, founder of Kentucky Fried · Chicken, w~ reported today to be ln cnUcal eondlUon with paeumonla In • Louisville hospital. Defense attorney Th omas Crosby, representing Anthony, said "a two-lier e nforcemenr system is being utilized" by state ofi cials in applying the Political Reform Act of 1974, the statute un· der which Anthony and Diedrich are charged. Crosby. or Newport Beach, said local elected officials, such as An· ----------- Tears of grief thony and Diedri.ch, face criminal sanctions for alleged violations o( the act, while elected state of- ficials, such as assemblymen and sen ators , face less l egally troublesome civil sanctions if ac· cusedofslmilar violations. State elected officials who viol ate the act and are punished, Crosby said , "get a fine and half of ............... Cha rlotte Carrino weeps as she tells reporters in New York that her husband, Chris, is aboard missing freighter "Poet." Coast Guard is continuing search for ship. ---------- Same-sex dance ban target for appeal By DAVID KUTZ MANN Of tlle Delly .. li.t S~tt A Santa An a lawyer who r e p r esen ts two tee n-age homosexuals says he will appeal an Orange County judge's de- c ision to uphold a same-sex dance ban again s t m a l e partners at Disneyland. Attorney Ron Talmo said Thursday he believes Superior Court Judge John K. Trot\er Jr. was wrong in saying that the popular amusement park could enforce regulations t hat prevent homosexual couples from danc- ing. Ta lmo's two clients -Andrew Exler, 19, and Shawn Elliott, 17 -were kicked out of Disneyland last September a fter dancing together on the Tomorrowland dance noor. Both are admitted homosexuals. "I believe the court has erred,'' said Talmo, who will file his appeal with the Fourth Dis- trict Court of Appeal in San Bernardino. / Trotter, in rulin& Crom the b4\nch Thunday, said he ~d fl\\d no evidence 9f sex dis· crimination or infrlncement of protectable rights in the cue. In denying Talmo's request for an injunction aaainllt Dis- ney land, the jud1• tald, "l think lbelr reuom are lotlcal and supportable" for baviq the dance ban. • 'Tbe lnfrlncement 11 minimal," he aald. Dlaneyland attorney WIWam Blltiq Mid homoM1u1al patront ha•e oomplete aad open access tb the amusement park and lta numen>Ut attracUont. But Bitttnc ••id there wM not a aln&le case that showed \hat Hm•·HX ducln1 wu "proqe· table tonduct" .-r the law. Trotter aaid t.Mt while there could be absolute freedom of beliefs, there could be no similar absolute freedom of action. "A line has to be drawn." Bit· ting concurred. He later told reporters outside T rotter 's courtroom that Dis- neyla nd of(icials go to great lengths to preserve the family atmosphere o( the world famous amusement park and that admit- ~ lance is denied to no one. "As I see this case." Trotter said, "I don't believe there's dis· crimination per se. Further, I think society has to expect con· duct be controlled . . . • Talmo argued that Di s· neyJaod's policy was not "a sex-• neutral policy. It is a sex-related policy." He said there was no proof that male dancing created any 'Jipecial security proble ms at Disneyland and that in other cultures, such dancing is COO· sidered the norm. And dispuUn1 Trotter 's con- tention that sex discrimination was not involved, Talmo said the only way the rule could be ap- plied ls by identifying Uae gender of the dance partners. Bandit gets 8600 itt Viejo bank heist An armed man weal'inc , mlUtary fat1*1Mt robbed a lllis-. 1lon Viejo bank ol '800 'l'bunday and eKapecl on foot, an 0r_,. county Sheriff'• 1poltesmaa tald. The sun -..nc1 tbe Pactnc City Bank at 21111 Mulrl ... Blvd. at about 12:• p.m., wan- dlahed a hanctaun aDd MIDMded tbat a teller band over the mon•r tn her eub dranr. it is usually suspended.'' "ButnotlocalofCl cials ... they get charged with conspiracy . . . perjury," Crosby asserted follow- ing morning court appearance in Santa Ana. During the appearance, Orange County Superior Court Judge Claude Owens set Jan. 5 as the (Sff CHARGES, Page A2) Bank heist s11Spect questioned By PIULSNEIDERMAN OIU.Delly ...... , .... A 300-~ Las V~gu ~o~ who was arrested Wednesday u a suspect in the $50,000 robberyol a San Juan Capistrano bank ii be- ing questioned in connedlon with a string of Southern California bank holdups that detectives have dubbed the "Miss Piggy" heists because of the culprit's hefty build. The woman , Karen Jenks Mapes, ZT, Is a smpect in the~ ber.y Monday of the United CaUComia Ba nk, 8902 Edinger Ave ., Huntington Beach, police said. In that incident, witnesses told police. a 300-pound woman in her mid-20s told a teller she had a gun in her purse and fled with $3,700. FBI spokesman Jack Jackson said Ms. Mapes and her sister, Donna Waddell, 33, also ot Las Vegas. are s uspected io robberies reported in Orange, Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Riverside, Ven- tura and Santa Barbara counties. In all of the banks, surveillance cameras have photographed a tubby, gun-toting woman during robberies that have netted more than $7S,000 s ince August, a uthorities said. The arrests followed a holdup at 8:30 a .m. Wednesday al t he California First National Bank branch in San Juan Capistrano. In that incident. an obese woman brandishing a rifle ac- costed the bank manager as she arrived al work, sheriff's de- putiess~d. A second holdup woman followed the pair ins ide. The women boun d bank employees, then spent 40 minutes clea ning out the vault, in· vestigators said. Ms. Waddell was arrested alter a deputy spotted her car on the San Diego Freeway. Ms. Mapes was taken into custody a Cew hours later at a motel in Los <See PIGGY, Page AZ> Coast Weather Fair throu&h Saturday. Lows tonight 45 alone the coast, 52 inla nd. Highs Saturday 88 to 74. INSIDE TeDt\V The "Thre~ Opera" no10 cost. «JO pent'Uet. See if it'• wprlh the price of ad· mittion at UC Irvine on P* Cl. •••• AtY-~A .. ...... .. ..... ..,. ... =. I "A: ~ CtMtl = .,, ... ........ • ...... M aaM I Ct4 ...... , .. ,, II FI eD• at1 MIU IJJI Cil I ... d I C. AmL..-. Cl ...... C6oot ~ ....... .............. M ~-n ............. t .,,lt/CU,11 ::1: ~ 5 .. ., .......... I ........ ,'.C. ,.....,. CA ==·· t..: "' \ •.. I r ·1 . t 1 .. Quake jolts 7!ai,1can; people flee in panic TAJPEl, Taiwan (APJ A 1trone eertbqualte joUed norUMm aod eutem Taiwan today and preUminary . reports ••1d ~ nect into lh• •tr.et. lft panic but did not indicate •Mlhlr lw. were u w'aJtJea or dama1e. •I TM central wea~er bureaw 11.Ad the tremor, re1l1terio1 S.9 oa the RicJd« 1ule, occurred at t :IT p.m. cs:n a.m. PST>. and 1ave the ep&~ter u 16 mU. IOUtb of llan, In eutem Taiwan. ft Hated u altenhocll of undel.eraWMcl intensity a minute later. Jn Tokyo, the Japane .. Central MeM<>roJoetcal A1eacy said it.I aelamo1rapbs recorded the quake but did not dete rptlne lta intensity immediately. The Richter acale I• a measure of ground motion as re· corded on aelJmoft•Pht . Every increase of one number means • tenfold increae tn mapltude. Thus area~ of 7.5 renecta an earthqwa.lle 10 Umea stroo1er than one of 6.S. 11tl"ft' .... ,,.. lteld ll••t...-.. ,,_ . BRUSSELS, Bel1lum <AP> -Three Beltian youths ter· rortzed eight school children and two adults in a bus for hours to- day , then were gabbed by authorities who freed the bosta1es a radio official said. ' The kidnappers, who had demanded radio time to air their views, moved with the hostages into a radio studio, where authorities suddenly switched off the lights, told the children to run to1alety, and grabbed the three young men, the official said. Noone waa reported huured. · The youths commandeered the bus at the small east Belgian town of Vielsalm and took it to the Catholic lnstitut du Sacre-Coeur school, where the children were forced aboard at gunpoint, police said. ...... , •• ,,, ... , ..... ,, .... ,, .. flltit ~ ffft ~"i"' NEW ¥ORK CAP) -Anita Bryant, 'who once led a major campaign against homosexuality. now says she's more inclined to say ''live and let live" as long as sexual preference is kept in the cloeet. In an interview in the December Issue of lhe Ladies' Home JoumaJ, she said, "If I had to do it over, I'd do it again, but not in the same way.•· "I could see that a lot or people got involved in the crusade (against homosexuality) who had a personaJ vendetta against eays. They harbored hatreds," she said. "They were as wrong as the gay extremists were and they're going to hate Anita Bryant now for saying that." s•y 11t111 ••ght Dope profits seen as escape funds LOS ANGELES CAP > - Authorities searching for the elusive_spy Christopner Boyce theorize that he financed his escape from a Callfomia prison last January by dealing in dope or counterfeit money. Thomas Kupferer, head of the t.os Angeles-based task force formed to a pprehend the 27· year-old fucitive, said that Boyce may be doip1 the de~ lo dru11 .,. bo1us mobey himself, or may bave set up an operation for othen to carry out. •'We have reason to believe he was on the periphery o! drug dealing before hi s arrest,'' Kup· (erer said. He added that con- Man involved in ~irth of .. mystery tot? Irvine police investigators . believe a man assisted a woman behind a bush near McGaw ' tabo.ratories in Irvine as she .Jave birth to a girl who was im· ·.mediately abandoned at the .. scene. " "The passerby who was in contact with this woman is described as male, white with blonde or reddish blonde hair and may have driven a compact pickup truck bearing some type of company logo," police in- vestigator Ma rk Hoffman said today. "It is thought that this uniden- tified passerby may have tried to help or comfort the mother sometime between 9 :30 a.m. and 10:30 a .m. and again between 1 :30 p.m. ands p.m .. " Police Lt. Bob Lennert said this infQJ'mation was obtained from an! informant who called after heafting about the healthy, abandoned baby. tacts made in prison might also have been useful to Boyce in set- -ting UP-a narcotics operation after his Jan. 21 escape. Prior to his escape, Boyce had contacted his Tustin attoney, William Dougherty. in seeking to obtain sports gear such as trunks and sneakers. Boyce pro· mised to send Dougherty a list of items wanted. The Oran1e County lawyer never got lbe list. Dougherty said he had no aoklln1 that Boyce was planning an escape. Boyce, from Palos Verdes, was sentenced in June 1977 for his part in selling highly classified information about the U.S. satellite s urveillance system to the Soviet Union. He had access to the information as an employee of T RW Co .. which had a <feTense-contract to make spy satellites for the CIA. Boyce, who reportedly has been spotted in such diverse areas as South Africa, Mexico City. Louisiana and Colorado, made a local call last month lo Robert Lindsey. a Los Angeles· based reporter for The New York TI.mes, Lindsey became a friend and confidant of Boyce while writing a book on Boyce and his accomplice, Andrew Daulton Lee. 28. Kupfer er takes credit for bringfni the young fugitive out of the cold by widely publicizing the recently formed task force and challenging Boyce's ego. "We felt that because of his psyche he had to establish some kind of human contact , and our profile or him indicates this challenge was something he would enjoy. respond to. He would enjoy a cat·and-mouse type of thing." The call produced several Im- portant results, the investigator said. , .......... ~. ~HARGD ••. ''flrm ...... fw the it.art of a pre . UmJnary bearing Into the cam· palcn fund launderiq aUe1at.1ooa acaialt t.be praeat and former COUDtYluPel'Yisors. lronicaily, the date coincides with the date Anthony, defeattid in lhe Nov. 4 election by challenger Roser Staoton. wW leave office. Anthony aod Diedrich were amoac •croup of Oran1e County poUttcaJ flgurea char1ed on three separate occuioaa of vlolatlng proviaiontofthe Political Reform Act in .une poUtlcal campaigns, lncludiftl Anthony's succeuful bid for tbe county Board of SuP.,e rvllora. Nccord.lng to transcripts of county Grand Jury proceedinp, Diedrich sought to become Ute county .. power broker " to fill the void created by the downfall of Or. Louis Cella, once the dean of power in county political circles. State Deputy Attorney General Gary Schons said Diedrich's aJ. leged desire to ascend to power will figure prominently when testimony is given in the upcom- ing preliminary hearing. "It's not merely a case of violating the way the (cam· pa ign f inancial. disclosure> forms are supposed to be filled out," Schons said. Anthony has consistently maintained be did nothing more than improperly complete the forms. He later corrected the errors. Crosby said he will attempt to introduce evidence to bolster his claim that Anthony and Diedrich have been the victims of selec- tive prosecution. T he attorney said that if he has to, he will s ubpoena all elected offi cials who have been accused of violations of the Political Reform Act by either the state Attomey General's of· fice of the state Fair Political Practices Commission. "There are several dozen." Crosby said. Schons said his office wiU at- tempt tn bar the introduction of such evidence during the hear. ing. , • "There are procedural bars to him putting on that kind of evidence," Schons asserted. Schons said the apparent dis- similar treatment of elected of- ficials under the Political Reform Act may in part be due to the fact the Fair Political Practlces Commission is r el-ativelyyoung. - ''They've changed the way they've handled cases over the years," Schons said. f»IGGY .•. Angeles County. investigators said. Orange County Sheriff's Lt. An· dy Romero said "In excess of $50,000 and some weapons were recovered after the arrest Wed- nesday." FBI spokesman Jackson con- firmed the Bureau has been s earching for a woman fitting Ms. Mapes· description. A "Miss Piggy" s uspect is believed to have robbed one bank, a Security Pacific branch in Mon- tecito, near Santa Barbara twice within three weeks, hesajd. Agent Jackson said FBI in- vestigators concluded the string of robberies involved the same female bandit because "her pro- file seemed unmistakable'' in the s urveillance camera photos . Further comments on the size of "Miss Piggy" "would be in- delicate." FBI Agent Jackson said today Pentagon pleads WASHINGTON (AP) Defens e Secretary Harold Brown has urged the Senate to make major changes quickly in a House.passed military money bill to avoid a "serious and de· biJitatlng impact·' on the Pen· tagon's ability to carry out its mission. The effect would be a $1 billion increase. O"ANGI'. Co.\11' L SC DAILY PILOT Dining and traVel spotlighted Sunday ,._..._ IClllOf' .,_,. ---~ ..... ,,. .. ,... ~" .... '""-Mot ........ Eo110< L89Ufl• ae.cll Offtce 10t1 NO c..141 H .... wty ~uch pleasures as fine di.nl.ng anct ·resort travel will be ex- amined in Sunday's Daily Pilot. TABl'Eti TEU -What puu prime beef. stuffed poultry and fruit pies in the "sourmet" cate1ory?° A Daily Pilot survey of coutal abopa reveals why more people are paying pre· m1um prices for food. PA8ADl8E LOST! C on1iderlng a vacation lo Jamaica ~t tunMd off by the Island'• recent electlon boatUltiet? Don't worry. The n•llvea b~ve atart •d two pertOUI Jll'OCUIDA to make your vlalt tbe trleadli .. t ever. St.aft Writer lllchael P ukevlch pro- videe tbe~. •••o•ABLE Tali' -Realtor Jim Wood 'a lO·day (suNDAY'S BEST) odyssey across country started when he noticed a bus (n Corona del Mar headed for New York and ended when he CnMJaed the flntah line of the 111arat.boo in Manhattan. He tells of taking the train and hitchhiltlna to make enda meet In a diary that also deltcrtbet faaclnating peo-. pie be met en route. WAt Of' woaos -Sbould the UnJted States be altilll U.t political dlttlculUea behind the Iron CUrtaln7 Several oplnlona are exp'feued In an Allocialed P re11 ana.lnla of the Voice ot Amerlc• '• broadcaau on Am•rican policy recardlnt ~ Iran cr1ala. ,·, 1lppoiftted James A. Baker Ill has been tentatively s elected by Preside nt-elect Ronald Reagan to be Whit~ House chie f of staff, a ccording to the Was hington Star and New York Times. Baker , 51, is a Houston lawyer. lhial role for Grier proposed An lllh·hour eompromise plan designed to clear the way fo r dual appointment of Margaret Gier as director of both the county Human Services Agency and its Mental Health Department was d eli vered to membe rs of the Oran ge County Board o f Supervisors Thursda) The four ·page proposal. pre· pared by 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley. was viewed as a last-minute attempt to quell the controversy that erupted in the mental health community over the dual appointment re(•ommen- dation Mi ss Grier, now llSA d1rec·tor. has filled the men ta l health leadership position on <in interim basis since the resign,.ation a year ago of Dr. Ernest Klatte. Riley recent~; proposed that M i s G ri e r r eee iv e th e responsibility on a permanent basis, arguing that the HSA direc- tor is a proven administrator who is sensitive to the county's mental healthneeds Prior to her appointment 1'S HSA diN!dor, Miss Grier was the county Probation Officer. COKE ... cocaine for $60 on Wednesday. The investi~ators set up the second purchase from Heiem Thursday and lhen arrested the man and the youth The police were assisted by narcotics investigators from Newport Bea ch and Fountain Valley. Heiem was taken to Orange County Jail with ba il s et a t $15,000. The youth was taken to juvenile hall in Santa Ana. Cancer help set The Saddleback Community Hos pital Can cer Cent er is establishing support groups de· signed to help patients deal with options available to people with cancer. Those interested in further inform~t ion may call 770·3696. Re~ee 'need attention' By STIEVE MA&BLE Of .. Olilft',.... ..... Victor Palmieri, Jn perba111 one of his final ~eechea aa President Carter's r~fugee al· fairs coordinator , told a Newport Beach audience tbal it's time for the United States to stop doine nothing about It.a re· fugee problem, ''So far," Palmieri told mem· bers of the World Affairs Council of Oranie County eathered at t he Sheraton Newport Hotel. "we'v.e handled tpe refugee prof>. lem 10 our great American tradition by doing nothlnt -and so far that's worked: "But it won't work any longer. It's lime to get serious." Palmieri, noting he'd likely be searching for a new job when Ronald Reagan takes office, out- lined a tough enforcement pro- gram he claims wiU be reeom· mended next spring. That program, the Stanford Law School graduate said Thursday night, would include beefing up border patrola and punishing businessmen who employ illegal or undocumented aliens. "The way we've been dealing with the illegal flow is simply not to notice it," be said. "So, it's become your problem -a loca l problem." But Palmieri s uggested the refugee problem and its history. that dates bade to the founding of the United Stales, needs un-derstanding. He said that the· 'disorderly and chaotic sight" of Cuban ref. ugees pouring into FJorida last spring changed American views on immigration and raised .. the old hysteria that has always ac- e om pa n i e d the s ight or foreigners coming in." Palmieri, appointed by Presi· dent Johnson in 1967 to help head up a civil disorder committee, said it's not hard to understand why people want to come to the United States. He said television and other communication forms has given everyone In the world a ••vivid g limpse" of America. That coupled with ··an enforcement polic y that 's n e ver been serious" has made it easy and attractive for people to enter. ··And the reason they can come across the border isn't hard to figure either," he aaid, noting lhe'"l>udget for the border patrol along Mexico is less than the police department's budget m Baltimore. The prevarnng reason for im· migration. he said, is mainly family reunion. He used last spring's now of Cubans into the country as an example . · ·rn the early 1970s you had the 'freedom flights' and this year families that had been separated all this time were able to re- unite. Nothing the Coast Gurad and nothing the Army did was going to stop it." Palmieri suggested critics of refugees escaping to American s oil should remember that allhougt\_lhe short-term impact on this country is negative. in the long run it's positive. He said his- tory has shown that immigrants us ually settled in quickly and got to work. work. Asked if a better approach lo stemming the now might be to help other nations establish pro- grams to keep potential refugees from fleeing. Palmieri said such .. ;"' a policy could have problems. "Ma ny qf lhue l esser· developed countrie• have re- 1imea where distribution isn't equal," he aald. "Helping out mlahl only make the rich, richel' and the poor, poorer." He fi&kod that Amertca might do itself a favor by granting am· nesty to lon1·tlme lUe1al aJiem in thlJ country "to pull them into I.he system." Al~. he aa1d, iuest worker proararna could help ·'but the labor unions have been totally hostile to that." Ckmente would end overpass San Clemente officials will ap. pe~r ~ore the State Coastal Com m1.Ssion Tuesday to seek a permit to tear down the dilapidat- ed pedestrian overpass al Trafalgar Street. The structure has received tem· porary repairs over the years. but, a structural eogineer recent-ly termed the overpass as unsafe and in need or replacement.· City offlClals wuuJd Hke to con- struct a concrete structure s pan. ning the railroad tr acks at the popular ''T·Street Beach,•· and they· ve hi red an engmeerin.g firm lo draw up plans forthe new over- pass. The city has received $100,000in s tate Coastal Conservancy grant funds for construction of a new overpass, which would provide access for surfers and beachgoers lo the strand south of the municipal pier. Another $100,000 is expected in s tale funds to complete the proj· eel. which city officials hope to gel under way early next year. If approval i~ obtained from the state coastal panel, the city plans to construct the new over· pass adjacent to the old one. thereby aJJowing pedestrians ac· cess to the beach while construc- tion is \D\der way. Coastal commissioners will consider the request Tuesday at the Shelter Island Marina lnn in San Diego. Two injured in car crash Frank Medeiros Jr., 28, of San Clemente, apparently fell asleep at the wheel of his car early to- day. California Highway Patrol officers s aid. The resulting crash about J a.m . on the southbound San Diego Freeway near Del Obispo Street in San Juan Capistrano left Medeiros and his compa- nion, Victoria Lynn, 24, of San Clemente, hospitalized. Both were listed in guarded c ondition al San Clemente General Hospital. Highway patrolmen said Medeiros' car drifted off the right shoulder of the freeway, then swerved across all four lanes and s mashed into the center divider ,; ,,,"' ,,"' ALL IS NOT THAT MEETS THE. EYE • • • / • . . . Where It concerns the purchaslno of carpet- lno. A pretentious store front surely Isn't the answer any more than establishments that feature' ridiculous low prices with padding and i n~ta llatlon Included. What's the answer? Alden's! We'll open your eyes to a carpetlno con- cept unexcelled f LET US PROVE IT! Orange Coast· EOITION I VOL. 73, NO. 319, •SECTIONS, '8 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 1 I c I N 1:.WENTY-FIVE CENTS -Official chides U.S. over refugees By ST£Vt: MAaBLE °' .. o..ly f'U.. 1\Mf Victor Palmieri, in perhaps one of his final speeches as President Carter's refugee af- h Ir s coordinator, told a Newport Beach audience that lt 's time for the United States to stop doing nothing about its re· fugee problem. "So far," Palmieri told mem· bers of the World A/fairs Council of Orange Count y eathered at the Sheraton Newport Hotel, ··we· ve handled the refugee prob- 1 e m In our great American tradition by doing nothing -and so far that's worked. "But it won 't work any longer. It's time to get serious." Palmieri, noting he'd likely be searching for a new job when Ronald Reagan takes omce. out- lined a tough enforcement pro- gram he claim$ will be recom- l'ery short reig1a Miss World 1980, 28-year-vld Gabri~lle Brum of W~st Germany. quit her title today .. .less than 24 hours after winning it in London. Her resignation ca(!le shortly after she said her 52·year·old Los Angeles boyfriend, Benno Bellenbalim, a film cameraman, was "not too pleased" with her victory. • Airport noISe foes wary of 'cures' By STEVE MARBLE OlllW 04111f Polel ll•lt Newport Beac h residents , treated to a 20-minute slide show Thursday on proposed develop· ment at John Wa yne Airport, said they remain skeptical of pro· mis es that l.ne a1 rpOrt and the jets flying out of it will become quieter. "The noise level is intolerable r ight now," said Clarence Turner. a north Newport reside!'lt. "1 can't even talk to my Wlfe across the room." Turner, a long-time activist in battling airport expansion, said claims by airpor t manager MurryCablethat more daily com- mercial flights can be allowed as quieter aircraft are introduced, doesn't make sense to him. "According to the noise read· ings," he continued, "the new Super 80 jets were quieter at the ·airport but there wasn't any dif- fere nce when it got ove r Newport." Man involved in birth of mystery tot? Irvine police investigators believe a man assisted a woman behind a bu&h near McGaw Laboratories in Irvine as she 1ave birth to a glrl who was im- mediately abandoned at the scene. •'The p'asserby who was in contact with this woman is described u male , white with I' blonde or reddish blonde hair and may have driven a compact ptckup truck bearin1 some type of company 1010." police in· YHti1ator Mark Hotfman..1ald tClday. I "It II thouaht that this uniden· Ufted pauerby may have tried 'to help or comfort the mother •metime between 9:30 a.m. and ~:IO a,m. and a1aln btt~ J:IO p.m. and 5 p.m •. ·• Police Lt. Bob Lenn'rt said ~· information w11 obtained ~m an Informant who calltd :after bMrtq about the healthy. ltdoned beby. ' Newport resident Vin Jorgensen said the quiet jets, namely McDonnell Douglas' new Super 80, are as bad as the "noisy" Boeiog737's. Cable, saddled with the task of explammg the recently released mas ter plan for the airport to noise-weary citizens. was direct with his response. "Unless you get to the point where you just want all com- mercial operations at the airport to stop, this is a good plan," he said of 1.~00 page, 15-pound master plan.' Listenin~ to his presentation Thursday were members of Newport's aviation committee, city officials and a handful of resi· ct,,nts. The basic goal of the plan is to accommodate the growing avia· t ion demand while reducing noise impact on residential areas beneath the takeoff pattern - Santa Ana Heights and to a lesser degree. Newport Beach. <See AIRPORT, Page AZ> Crfllt-•I Col . Harland Sanders. rounder of1 Kentucky Fried Chlcken, was .reported today to be in critical condition wlth pneumonia In a Loulsvute hospital. 11 , 1J mended next sprlng. That program. the Stanford Law School graduate said Thursday night, would include beefing up border patrols and punishing businessmen who employ illegal or undocumented aliens. "The way we've been dealing with the Illegal flow is simply not to notice it," he said. "So, it's become your problem -a l<'cal problem." But Palmieri suggested the refugee problem and its hlstory, that dates back to the founding of the United States. needs un· derstanding. He said that the• 'disorderly and chaotic sight" or Cuban ref· ugees pouring Into Florida last spring changed American views on Immigration and raised "the old hysteria that has always ac· co mpanie d the s ight or foreigners coming in." Palmieri. appointed by Presi- dent Johnson in 1967 to help head up a civil disorder committee, said it's not hard to understand why people want to come to the United States. He said television and other communication forms has given everyone in the world a "vivid glimpse" of America. That coupled with "an enforcement policy that 's neve r been striou.s" has made it easy and attractive for people to enter. ·•And the reason they can come across the border lsn 't hard to figure either," he said, noting the budget for the border patrol along Mexico is less than the police department's budget in Baltimore. The prevailing reason for im- migration. he said. is mainly family reunion. He used last spring's flow of Cubans into the (See REFUGEES, Page A2) Fund charges flayed Anthony, Diedrich prosecution 'invidious' By FREDERICKSCHOEMEHL OlllW041ilJ~llelS141tt Attorneys for Orange County Supervisor Philip Anthony and former Super visor Ralph Diedrich char ged today their clients, facing felony charges re· lated to alleged campaign fund laundering, are victims of "in- vidious prosecution." Forum set on growth for Mesa ByJERRY~LAUSEN OIU•O.llf ~l ... 5t .. I Costa Mesans are expected to turn out Saturday afternoon to argue the direction their city should take in developing over the next two decades or so -no growth, slow growth, moderate 1rowthor full speed a head. The city's Planning Com- mission will discl.l.SS the growth is· sue and other plans for the future when it meets for a public hearing at 1 p.m . intheCityCouncilcham- bers. 77 Fair Drive, to for m general plan recommendations for the City Council. The public hearing follows a general plan workshop attended by about 75 interested residents two weeks ago at Orange Coast College. City planners note that while the planning document is actually com posed of three sections and six overall goals, the paramount issue is just how big and dense Costa Mesa should become. Some Mesans argue that the current population, about 81 ,600 · living in 33,650 housing units. already is too big. They advocate putting the brakes to develop· ment. Others argue that Costa Mesa is in the heart of an expanding com· mercial-industrial zone and that employees are required to fill ex- pandingjobopportunities. The re- sult, they say, is a drastic need for more, less-expensive housing. Planners. wtro offer se\leral op· lions to all issues to be dealt with in the general plan, have laid out some projections or future growth possibilities. By the year 2000. Costa Mesa's population would reach 91,000 if the City Council decides on a slow rate or growth. By setting policies and passing ordinances toward that direction, housing would grow to about 37 ,500 units and the cl\y would provide an employment base for 63,800jobs. By following a medium growth (See GROWfH, Page AZ> BostagelMae Defense attorney Thomas Crosby, representing Anthony, said "a two-tier enforcement system is being utilized" by state oficials in appl ying the Political Reform Ac.t of 1974, the statute un· der whkh Anthony and Diedrich a recharged. Crosby, of Newport Beach. said local ejected officials, such as An· '\ thony and Diedrich, face criminal sanctions for alleged violations of the act. while elected stale of- ficials. such as assemblymen and senators, face less legally troublesome civil sanctions if ac· cused of similar violations. State elected officials who violate the act and are punished, · Crosby said. "get a fine and halfof O•llr ~II .. Sl411f P- RESCUERS PULL VICTIM FROM WRECKAGE Another craah on Irvine Avenue curve• In Newport Newport teen hurt as car overturns An 18-year-old woman, injured late Thursday when the car she was riding in flipped over a cliff alongside the Irvine Avenue curves in Newport Beach, told of- ficers the car 's driver crawled from the wreckage and fled, leav- ing her pinned in a nd bleeding. Kim Linderman of Newport Beach was rushed lo Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital following the 11 :30 p.m. mishap and treated for a broken arm a nd laceration. The victim told officers the driver was a man but provided no names. Police said the light-colored Volkswagen bug was headed north through the darkened curves on Irvine at a high-rate of s peed when it suddenly spun out of control. smashed through a fence and tumbled 20 feet, landing in a ditch. A witness told officers he rushed to the sid e of the cliff. spotted the crumpled car but saw nobody leaving the scene. Decision mulled WASJU NGTON .CAPl -Rep. John W. Jenrette, convicted of bribery in the Abscam affair. says he'll announce Monday whether he will resign from Congress before its lame-duck session end:.. Talks of trial· revived BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP> - The head of Iran's political par· ty has talked again about puti Ung the American hostaget on trial u leaders of the revold- tionary re1lme di1cu1111ed the U.S. response to Iran's terms for tbelt releue. ' Ayatollah Mohammad BeheahU, the leader of the lslaml~ Republlcan Party and the president el the Supreme Court. said II the Iranian i1ov· ernment declcla W••hlnston'• reply ls unsatisfactory, the Ma· Jlia. Iran's parliament. will have to decide whether the 52 Americans should be tried u spies, the Tehran new•paper Entelab reported Thunday. P rime Minister Mohammad All Rakal conferred Thunday with Ayatollah Ruhollah Kho- meini. the leader of the cevolu- liona ry re1ime, and Tehran Radio said they discuued "cur- rent evenU," includint Iran's war With Iraq_. But It WU U· 1umed they also discussed the American reply, which was de· livered In Tehran Wednetday by Al1ertan officlalJ. Government ofllctals were re- ported to have dilcussed the re- ply ln meet Ina• all day Thunday. The Americ,n reply has not been made public, but U.S. o(· flclal1 1ald it contained a pledae not to ln.t.erfere in lran'• attain and exJ>lanaUoni of the le•al ob- • • stacles· to Immediate fulfillment of the other conditions set by Khomelnl and the MaJUs: the freeina of more than SI 6iWon in froze& Iranian usets, cancella· lion of all American claims a1alntt Iran and the r~um of the fortune which the la&e Shah Mohammad Reaa Pahlavi and his cloent relatJvea tranaferred abroad. l'io eumbiit 1een WASJUNGTON <AP> -Prest· dent Carter 11'11 Israeli Prime MlnJst.er Menachem Be1ln H Y the MldeHt peace proceu sbould conliDue. it is usuaJlysuspended." "Butnotlocalofficials ... they get charged with conspiracy . . . perjury,'· Crosby asserted follow· ing morning court appearance in Santa Ana. During the appearance, Orange County Superior Court Judge Claude. Owens set Jan. 5 as the <See CHARGES, Page A2) Children's theater • ID Irvin ? e. Irvine School trustees wiU dis· c uss the possibilit y or establishing a 350-seat theater for uae by school children at their board meeting Monday. Su ch a , theater would cost about $1.9 million. according to Dave King, director of facilities for the school district. In a report to trustees, King said he based this estimate on the c06t of a 350-seat theater at Mission Viejo High School The school district has more than $6 million in bond money to build educational facilitie~. in· eluding buildings for perfoi"ming a rts. trustee Gordon Getchel said. Getchel said the trustees may discuss the possibility of the school district entering into a joint powers agreement for a theater. Sadd leba c'k Community College and the City of Irvi ne were to enter into a joint powers agreement to build a theater on Saddleback's Irvine campus. but a lack of ready cash blocked the agreement It might be possible for the school district to enter into a t h r-ee-way agreement wi th Irvine and Saddleback to build the theater. Getchel said lrruh victinis' bodies arrive DOVER, Del. (AP) Spec · tators and the honor guard shivered in the chill y night air as a C· 141 landed with the re· mains of l3 U.S. airmen killed in a practice mission in Egypt Families of the 11 men and two ·women were not at Dover Air Force Base when the transport plane arrived Thurs- day night after a 91"2·hour night from West Germany Coasa \\·eatber Fair through Saturday. Lows tonight 45 along the coast , 52 inland. Hi ghs Saturday 68 to 74. INSIDE TODA~ The "Threepmny Opera" now cost1 400 penn~1. See 1f 11 '1 wor1h the price t?I ad- m1uion al UC lrvfne on Page Cl . Qqake jolts Tai1am; people /lee in panic TAIP£J. T•lwao (AP) A 1tron1 earthquake Jolted northern ud eu~m Talwu today a.od p,.Uminary ,.ports .. d PIOOle nect into the lt.rMU lA pule but dJd not lndleate whether lhere were ta1ualU. or da~e. •I The calr•l weather buna&a aald the tremor, re,Utertn15.9 OD U.. Rlc~r scale, occurNd at 1:17 p.m. (5:37 •.m. PST), and 1.ve the epiCMter u 11 m.llel aouth ol llan, lD eutern Taiwan. It listed an .tlertboels ol llDdttermlfted intensity a minute l•ter. In Tokyo, the J•paa .. Central Meteoroloaical Aceocy said ill aeltmotrapbs ~ordecl the Quake but did DOt determine iu lnten1lty l mmediately. The Richter ac•l• LI a meuure ot lround motloo u re- corded oo se~mo•r•phs. Every lncreue of ooe number means • tenfold i:ncreue in m•gnitude. Thus a reacllq of 7 .s nnects an earthquake 10 times stronger than one of e.s. .,,.,.... ,,..,,,.. hold 110111.,,.,, ,_ ._ BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) -Three Belgian yout.bs ter- rorized eight school children and t~ adulta In a bus for boun to· day. then were grabbed by authorities who freed the hostages, a radio official said. : The kidnappers who threatened to blow up the children and bus bad demanded radio time to air their views, 'then moved1 with the ~tages into a radio studio, wbere authorities suddenly switched off the lights, told the children to run to Hfety and grabbed the three young men. Fng agai11 hla•rd fnr 1·~1ic•lc• pilrtfJI CIUNO (AP) -One man was injured tod•y when the ce· ment truck he was driving through a fog bank plowed Into two other trucks that had collided a few moments before, the California Highway Patrol said. . It was the second serious fog·caused accadent in the area this week. · t k t k The accident started at 6:10 a.m. when a an er rue. car- rying milk pulled out of a driveway al the lndaburu Daary .on Euclid. a two-lane blacktop road in a rural area dolt~ wt~h dairy farms, according to CHP Officer ~asey Boss. . A ~1g dump truck and trailer hit the rear of the malk ta~er, d1sabhng -both vehicles and blocking the roadway," Boss said. Frmeral set forHBactor .Toe Karbo A funeral service for m i llionaire character actor, author and mail order e n - trepreneur Joe Karbo, who died taping a TV show Wednesday, is scheduled Sunday at 1 p.m. in Costa Mesa. . Rites for Mr. Karbo will be in the chapel at Harbor Lawn· Mount Olive Memorial Park, followed by scattering or the World War II Navy veteran's ashes at sea. A familiar figure in the Sunset Beach area where he maintained bis ocean fropt view office for years, Mr. Karbo and his family lived in Huntington Harbour at -lbetimeofbisdeath. He was stricken by a heart at· tack wbJle filming a KNXT peraon•lity Interview at the bome. and had •n unde~ cue for a fieart conctidon for 'some time. Despite his various enterprises, including marketing of the famous early how-to book ''The Lazy Man's Way to Riches." sold by mail with a $10 money-back guarantee, Mr. Karbo was active in community theater, one of his first loves. He was also 1979 president of the West Orange County United Way f,und organization and in 1968 ran unsuccessfully for Hunt· .ington Beach City Council in a bid for civic service. Survivors include his wife , Elizabeth "Betty" Karbo and Steve Karbo, of Redondo Beach. He also leaves sons James and Timothy Flanagan. both of Hunt· ington Beach and Rick Flanagan, of Long Beach. Surviving daughters include Sandra Karbo of Menlo Park, Sara Rider of San Jose, Wynona "Noni" Karbo or Huntington Beach and Kathleen Felder of New York. Four IJ'andcbildren a lso sur· vive Mr. Karbo, whose most re· cent book was whimsically titled "To Hell With the Kids. What AboutMeandYou, Babe?" Offi c iating at Sunday 's services will be Dr. Henry Kauf. man,acloeefamilyfrlend. All arrangements are under '· direction of Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive Memorial Park Mortuary although family spokesmen bad said initially the Neptune Society would be in charge . Fro• Pa,~ .I I REFUGEES ••• country as an example. "In the early 1970s you had the 'freedom flights· and this year families that had been separated all this time were able to re· unite. Nothing the Coast Gurad and nothing the Army did was goingtostopit." Palmieri suggested critics of refugees escaping to American soil should remember that although the short-term impact on this country is negative, in the long run it's positive. He said his· tory has shown that immigrants usually settled in quickly and got to work. work. Asked if a better approach to stem ming the now might be to hetp other n•tions establish pro- grarqs to keep potential refulees from Oeeiq, Palml..t aaJd sucJi a policy could hav, problema. •'I(~ pf tbHe lesser· de•eJ counttte1 h•ve re· 1imes where distribution isn't equa1 ," be said. "Helping out might Only make the rich, richer and the poor, poorer." He added that America might do itseU a favor by granting am. nesty to long-time illegal aliens in this country ·'to pull them into the system." Also, he said, guest worker programs could help "but the labor wlions have been totally hostile to that." Yachts even in Mazatlan Two Class A yachts in the 999-mile Los Angeles to Mazatlan race were ap. proaching Caho San Lucas today with prospects of the usual "parking lot" under the lee of Baja California. Secret Love and Ragtime were sailing almost dead even with 21T1 miles to go to the finlsb. <See earlier story. Page 84.) \Veather forecasts ror the reach across the Gulf of California were encounging, with a 10-knot northwesterly in prospect. That would put the lead yachts at the finish by late Sun· day. Handicapped leaders today were Sixpence, Dust Em, and Pegasus. _._ ......... \ Da11r ,.,._. ,._"" "'••lclr 0·0-11 CONVICTED KILLER PACES COURT BEFORE HEARING T'homa• Puth Jelled deaplte earller bell approval Convicted slayer agrees to jailing By DAVID KUTZMANN Of 1M Dell' .. .._. S!Mf Convicted murderer Thomas Floyd Pugh, allowed to remain free on bail after a jury found him guilty of the slayings of two Huntington Beach brothers Wed· nesday, agreed today to turn himself in to authorities. Pugh, a member of the Hangmen's motorcycle club, told reporters be agreed to be jailed pending sentencing Dec. 16 to avoid any accusations that he threatened witnesses who testified against him during his Orange County Superior Court murder trial. • 'Tbil protects him from false chargea," defense attorney Harland Braun said. Even though he agreed to give himseU up, Pugh continued to maintain his innocence and said he intends to fight for his freedom through the system. He admitted , however, that the thought had occurred to tum that it would be easier simply to nee but, he added, "It's not my style." · Braun said he wi ll make a mo· tion for a new trial during the Dec . 16 sentencing hearing. Pugh could face a 25-year to life 1 sta te prison term for his convic· tion. It was revealed during a bail review hearing this morning that a key witness in Pugh's case had claimed s he received a threatening phone call tbe day before Pug}) was convicted by a nine-man, three-woman jury. The panel convicted Pugh of two counts of murder and two counts or kidnapping in the 1978 di s appearance of bro thers Charles D. Taylor. 20, or Hunt· ington Beach. and Allen Taylor. 22. of Santa Ana. Same-sex dance ban target for appeal By DAVID KUT'ZMANN Ol U. Dell, ,.,,.. S!Mf A Santa Ana lawyer who represents two teen -age homosexuals says he will appeal an Orange County judge's de- ci s Ion to uphold a S'ame-sex <!ance ban agains t male partnen at Disneyland. Attorney Ron Talmo said Thursday he believes Superior Court Judge John K. Trotter Jr. was wrong in saying that the popular amusement park could enforce regulations that prevent homosexual couples from danc· ing. Talmo's two clients -Andrew Exler, 19. and Shawn Elliott, 17 -were kicked out of Disneyland last September after dancing together on the Tomorrowland dance floor. Both are admitted homosexuals . •'I believe the court has erred." said Talmo, who will ftle bis appeal with the Fourth Dis· trict Court of Appe al in San Bernardino. Trotter. in ruling from the bench Thursday, said he could find no evidence of sex dis· crirnination or infringement or protectable rights in the case. In denying Talmo's request for an inj unction against Dis· n eyland, t he judge said, "l think their reasons are logical and supportable" for having the dance ban. "The infringemen t i s minimal." he s aid. ,,,,... P..,,e A J CHARGES ••• "firm date'' ror the •tart ol a pre- Umiury heartq m&o 1M e... P•ltn tunda.unct.ri81 a0.111t1an1 •aalnst t.be praent and former ~O!Hltys~perviaort, Ironic•Uy, the date colacldet wltb the date Anthony, defeated la the Nov. 4 election by ch•lleqer Roger Stanton, will leneofftce. Anthony and Diedrich were' amona a group of Oraoee County political figures charged oo three separate occasions of vtoJatlng provisionaofthe Political Reform Act in 19'76 political campalpa, includint Anthony's succearul bid for the county Board of Supervisors. Accordlnt to transcripts or ' county Grand Jury proceedings, • Diedrich sought to become the county "power broker" to fill the void created by the downfall of Dr. Louis Cella, once the dean of powerincountypoliUcalcirclea. State Deputy Attorney General Gary Schons said Diedrich's al· leged desire to ucend to power will figure prominently wben testimony is given in the upcom· Ing preliminary bearing. f ·ro._ ,.age ,., I AIRPORT • • Cable says the noise reduction can be accomplished and allow for daily flights to be boosted from 41 to SS by 1991. And that wiU be ac· complished, he says, by forcing airlines to purchase quieter iets. ·'It's a positive step to get those really loud jets; those screamen out of the airport," Cable said, notingbe'dhavenoqualms tak.ing all an airline's routes away if they didn'tcomply. Asked what assurances Newport residents had that fulun! politicians would stick to the master plan, Cable admitted that Newport likely "won't ever get anything in concrete." "What's going to happen 10 years from now?" Cable asked hims elf, "I don 't know. If the de· mand for aviation grows and Newport bas to fight all the other Orange County cities -Newport will lose. ·'The realities of it are that political factions are having a dif· ficult time biting the bullet and that's why they dream up silly things like putting an airport in the ocean-which will neverflv. ·· GROWTH ••• path, the city would increase to 105.100 residents by the year 2000, contain about 45.100 housing units a nd provide some 71.000 iobs. High growth policies would re· suit m a population of 107.600 resi· dents. 46,500 homes a nd nearly 90.000jobs. The general plan is divided into three elements for ruture plan· ning : the environment, develop- ment and land uses. Goals are to be set in six areas: conservation, environmental quality, building and develop· ment. social and economic stability, improved transporta· tion systems and effecUve land use. Planning commissioners are expected to begin forming their recommendations for the city's future before Saturday's public sessionendsatSp.m . But, city planners note. the commission has tentatively set asideSatuqtay. Dec. 6. as the date to clean up any loose strings in formulating the recommenda· lions it will pass on to the City Council. .... How did Boyce escape? LOS ANGELES (AP) - Autboriti• searchlna for tbe elusive •PY Cbtlatopbel' Boyce theorise that he flnaocecl bla escape h'om • Callronlia prilCm last Juuary by deaUnt in dope or counterfeit money. Thomu Kupferer, bead of tbe Los Angeles-butd ta1k force formed to apprehend the 27· year-old fu1ltive, said tbat Boyce may be doin1 the dealinc In drugs or bogus money himseU, or may have set up an operation for othen to carry out. .. We have reason to believe he was on the periphery of d.naa deatlng before bis arrest,'' Kup. fer,r said. He added that .coa· tacts made lo prison might a1ao have been usetul to Boyce in set· ting up a narcotics operation after his Jan. 21 escape. Prior to bis es c•pe, Boyce bad contacted his Tustin attoney, William Dougherty. in aeeking to obtain sports gear such u trunks and sneakers. Boyce pro- mised to send Dou1herty a list of items wanted. The Orange County lawyer never got the list. Dougherty said he had no inkling that Boyce was planning an escape. Boyct!, from Palos Verd.es, was sentenced in June 1977 for his part in selling highly classified information about the U .S. satellite s urvei llance system to the Soviet Union. He had access to the information as an employee or TRW Co., which had a defense contract to make spy satellites for the CIA. Boyce, who reportedly has been spotted in such diverse areas as South Africa, Mexico City. Louisiana and Colorado, made a local call last month to Robert Lindsey. a Los Angeles- based reporter for Tbe New York Times. Lindsey became a . friend and confidant of Boyce while writing a book on Boyce and his accomplice, Andrew Daulton Lee, 28. Kupferer takes cr edit for bringing the young fugitive out of the cold by widely publicizing the recently formed task force and challenging Boyce's ego. Biddi,ng uxir heat.s up for Air Cal A· multi-million dollar bidd.lng war for control of Newport Beach-based Air California was unfolding today in a San Diego courtroom. U .$. District Judge Leland Nielson was expected to con· sider bids today from Miami· based Air Florida and two Orange County developers - William L yon a nd Hersh Hopengamer. Pacific Southwest Airlines, which bad threatened to out· muscle and out-bid the others, pulled out or the battle early to-day. Air F1orida came in with a $29.S million bid while Lyon en· tered with a $38.5 million offer. After each offer is read today. each party will have a chance to verbally up its bid, court of· ficials said. The court has controlled Air CallfomJa, a growing regional the permitted daily flights out of Wtn Wayne Airport, since its parent company, Westgate California Corp .. fi led for bankruptcy in 1974. OfllANOI COAST DAILY PILOT s Dining and traVel spotlighted Sunday .ti" .ti" ,,,, ,,,.,, ~ .. ' ,, ALL IS NOT THAT MEETS THE EYE . • • ·-·-p,.,J .. ft1 ..... ~, ... ~..:.~M=- ~L-. ,...i--.-..... 11 .. Office• C..t• -... >• W.•I hy "'"' .._ 8"<~ '°'' "•· , .. ,, ........... HMlll"'9Mll ih«~ 1117' INCfl lov19wMe T...,....,e (114)MMll1 ~ Actvettl .... M2·tr71 ,,_ .. ~c·•­-.... Such pleasures u fl..ne dining and resort travel will be ex· aminedin Sunday's Daily Pilot. TA81'Ea8 TELL -What P'da .prime beef. atuffed poultry and fruit piet ln tbe "1ourmet ·• c.rte1oiy1 A Daily Pllot survey of co .. tal sbopa reve.la wh:v more Jllleiople are paying pre· mium prices for food. PA&ADISE LOSTf - Considerlna a vacation in Jamaica but. turned off by the hland's recent election ho1tllitiea? Don't worry. The nativH have •tarted two penonal Pl'Olfaml to make yoUJ' visit the friend.U .. t ever. 8tatf Writer l(Jcbael Putevlch pro. vtda thedMalla. M £MO&A8L8 T&IP - Realtor Jim Wood•• lO·day (suNDAY'S BEST) , . • . Where It concerns the purchasing of carpet-· Ing. A ~entlous store front surely Isn't the answer, any mor._ ..ttMin establishments that feature fldlculous low Prices wtth padding and Installation Included. What's the answer? Alden's I We'll open your eyes to a carpeting con- cept wiexcellec:U · LET US PROVE IT! - DEN'S ·········••\••••• . ·installation. cu•tom drapsr1•• Unolewn • wood floor 1663 P~ACENTIA AVlNU~. • C9_S~A MESA, CAllf. 92627 • 'HON! 646-4131 -646·235~ 1 WASHINGTON CAP) -Tbt U.S. train at.oellptle la aa- dereolng one of lbe •harpeat recluctlou ol reeeal U..~ mainly because of lhi• yea.r's drouaht·redudd eOllllilf harvest and continued bllh demand from us.rs. ..:i The exact d.Jmen.tlOftl ol th1I sralD drain wW not be 1 known for many moniM. And lta Impact onl.raln =) prices, livestock feedlnc. irocery prices an • WUma t the nation's economy also Involves a good deal ot ~ · ture at this time. · 1 • ., ii • ' But the lalef!t crop production staUstlct ~ llMa • week by the Agriculture Department contlnue4t to ~­ that over the 1980·81 season the grain situalioo will. Ila. 1• Usht. .,... • n FARMERS PRODUCED A record wheat crop M :t year befqre the full brunt of summer heat and droueht ~ its toll. 'But com, soybeans, sorghum and maqy otJIMr crops suffered greatly. ·mi This fall's com harvest. a keystone for the con:Ullf. year in ter ms of livestock feeding and exportt, WMJ slashed at least 17 percent ftom the record crop of 1979, ac· cording to the latest surveys. .., .. As 'it has been for many years. crop producUcm> elsewhere in the world also ls vital lo the intereatt afr farmers and other Americans. And thls year's world irain output has declined significantly from earlier prospeeta.l including allowances for the reduced U.S. ~arveats and al poor crop in the Soviet Union. ( ""' ALL OF THOSE AND many other factors have a bear- ing on the demands -and prices -that will be put ""°" U.S. grain in the months ahead. ; Another factor will be the 1981 winter wheal crop. I~ was planted earlier this fa ll and, especially in parts of t)M( Great Plains, has suffered from lack or moisture. : Meanwhile, department analysts are tryin.M ~ d~ termine how much grain will be needed in the comlnll year , how much will~ left over a year from now, an.-...b~ prices may stack up. ~ • PSA vowing more 1ninority attendants • • . • I I I SACRAMENTO <AP> -Pacific Southwest Aini.net has agreed to recruit more male and minority night atten: dants. • The state Department of Fair Employment and ~ ing reported this week that an agreement bad reached by the state agency, the airline. and the feder1 Equal Employment Opportunity. Under the agreement, the airline will distributf Sl00,000 among 22 persons who have complained since 197f that PSA refused to consider them as flight attendants, ~ It will award anotber $175,000 to any other men cs minority women rejected during the last few years. PSA also agreed to set aside at least $250,000 to de velop a recruitment plan to get a flight attendant staff thal is about 20 percent ma le, 14 percent Hispanic, and 6'12 per cent black. St~k•I" Tier Spotllglu +I ·~ ., ... -1 -.,.., . "' ·~ + "' +I +l\oi l pt1 a11d Doarn• NEW YO~K (API -The foOowlno llst -llW New Yortc Stoo E11e"-1toc1ts encl W«rants a..t l\ew oone 1111 lhl MOit •nO down U. mmt -on Pttcfflt of cller199 ,_.....l OI ¥DlutN for TllU"4•Y· Ho -urltlet trMlng be'°"' SJ ere Incl· .... N*l encl -~ C'*'119l Me IN di~ 11e1-ttw 11"9Y!Oul <!Mino orlG• •nO IOd.ty'J ~~m. prlo. N•rne L~I 01C1 Pitt. 1 Soeffy Hui 1~ • 3~ Ujl 1'.J 2 Ollowt8nkr 1''" • l\l'I UP IS J l Mor•~ ts • J Up ll 6 4 Ol«'lerCo wl IJIN • 1\1'1 Up 11.I S ~'""'" pf8 59 • "'-Up 12.1 t HIMllWS"Y 1~ + 1"" Up 11 4 7 PSA Inc n 3114 + r.. Up 11 1 I Ter..trne In """ + 511'1 uo 10 I • SPS TKll ,..... + ~ Up 10.1 10 AmeHess pf 211 +211 Up 10.S 11 PIM! 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N -M .__,.,. 12 -I \o\ 1A ,~ 51 -1 U ~rl .--\o\ »Y"tew --- 1~1iu 1.1 s.t s. s, 5.2 s.o ••• ... °" •.1 ; 4.6 ••• ••• 4 •• 4.4 0 4.1 '·' 4.0 2:8 M H H WH•T HllElt DID Due to late transmisslotl today's I I sting will noJ appear in the Dally Pilot\ COPl'•r ,}.._.,,~ tenh • dHtln•ll°"'-LeM4~S<enl••PQUn<I. pound, u.s. f Zinc l'l'I>-~ <•nl• • pound, CMll...,r90. Tiii M Ql1J MelalJ WH• (Gml)Otlle lb. •1....,1-.. 1Henh. pound, N. Y. Mercyry "410 oo Dt• 11-.11. l'l•h-141"14U ll'OV oz. N.Y. i I .SUt•ftr NEW YORK. !API Hendy 6 ~ ........ Silver 111 SOO, tiP tO OI E n Qelll.,d UIYer l ll d O, UP SO,Oe 1 F•broe•tto '''""' llt 4U, up t0.°'4 Gold QMDtaliO"tl •v n. ASIK .. ._ PrKJ S.le<l90 -Id OQlcl ll'ICM IOCS.y: ~: ,,_n111Q llalnQ 16U.10, off 16.SO. ~:•"...,_,"~'no s.12.so, 011 t•.JO. P•rh: ettemoon ll•tno ~."4, ~ 51.44. ~r•IMll_,, ll01119 141 s '5, o•I 11 U. Zvrtc~. !el• .ii.,.,_ 11a1no 1611.00 • oil U IO, 1414.00 A.il<90 H•MY 6 .. _, M•llno proce 1612.JO. °" ".so • ... ,_.., Mtt11no Prl<e '612 IO, oll st.JO. ...... ....._, IAOrl<•t90 11'1« '6ll.'4, off 1u • If you bOught a new mattress without shopping the ads in the Dally Pilof, you lost both time and money . I Bedding to ndce sleeping a dream at price• you can afford Is advertised routintly . In the Dolly Piiot. The best place to buy or Orange C.oatt, Is the DAiLY PILOT ... I r ~ I t i I l ;· t I I DAA.V ~Lor H I f NO~ FAULT LOVER'S LEAP Britain tVf•11ders Will prince .-• < marry soon? LONDON (AP) -Prince Charles, born to be King of England, turns 32 today and may soon l marry a kindergarten teacher' making $240 for a 'three.month term. In another lif<', s he 's an aristocrat with a big country place. SpecWation is raging in the British press that the eldest son of Queen Elizabeth II has already ·popped the question to 19·year·old Lady Diana Spencer, and some report their engagement may be annowiced on the future king's birthday. Others sue1est news of the betrothal may not come until spring. According lo the royally-watching press. Queen Elizabeth approves of Lady Dia na. who teaches at a private school in London's Pimlico district. SHE IS THE YOUNG EST of four children of the 8tb Earl or Spencer , former equerry to the 4&1eeo, distantly related lo the late Sir Winston Olurcbill and the owner or vast landholdings and •e of Britain's great s tately m ansions . Affectionately dubbed "Ladi Di" and "Dishy Diana" hr the British press. she is a pretty, slim woman W1lh short blond hair and 1s sa1<1 to oe s11y, unsophisticated, not pushy and a fan of outdoor ac- tivities. London gossip columnists r eport her tight· lipped responses to rcporteroc; have impressed the royal family and incre&1i.ed her chances of becom· ing a royal bride. Like most Britons, she is a member or the Anglican Church of England The monarch is head of the church. THE PRINCE WJLL HAVE ::i sm all, private birthday party at his 18th·century country house, ff.ighgrove, in rural Gloucestershi~e. Lady Diana seems certain to attend. , While the palace stays silent and the nation W.ita, photoeraphers dog the two, who are careful Jifot to be seen together. · On Wednesday. Lady Diana went shopping and returned to her Kens ington apartment with a parcel. The reporters hounding her doorstep asked II it contained a birthday present for Prince Cb\rles. Lady Diana merely smiled. LATER SHE TOLD reporters approaching her on the street "I am merely out for a walk" and declined to say anything else Charles, mea nwhile, was touring the Universi· ty of Wales when he was asked by an onlooker "When are you going to tell us the good ne ws, your Royal Highness?" He replied: "l won't be saying anything. You will have to wait and see." The two stayed apart at a private party at the Ritz Hbtel the other night, thrown by the royal family to celebrate the 80th birthday year of Queen Mother Elizabeth. LADY DIANA'S INVITATION convinced manytbatshewasCharles· chosen one. She was a weekend ~uest last summer at Balmoral, the Royal Family's favorite home in the Scottish highlands. She joined the prince there for fisblng and shooting, and recently cheered him at an amateur steeplechase. rAClftC VltW MIMOllAL rAIK Cemetery Mortuary Chapel 3500 Pacific View Drive Newport Beach 644·2700 McCORMICK MOltTUAltllS Laguna Beach 494·941 5 Laguria Hills 768-0933 San Juen Capistrano 49S-1776 HM108 L.AWM-MT. OllVI Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave . Costa Mes.e 540-5554 NIC!,..•OTMaS MU. .. OADWAY MOtrTUAIY t 10 Broadway ColtaMasa 6'2-9tSO Beat• Noticn l'ITZGERALO l(ATHERI N E LILLIAN Fl flGERALEO ru1aent of Cost• Mts•. C• ''"'" 1911 • mov1no her• trom WHl VirQll'U,. P•1.Md: •w•v on November 13, 1080 She l:l surv1tit•O by a dBUQllter _rqa,..t F~n of Cos111 Mts~. C• 4no A "°" EO .,•ro F111:oer•ld of lt)Qtewood, C• .. 2 gr•nocn1tdr1n GraveucM Mrv•C•~ wtfl llt ne10 on S.tu•cuv. NovtmO.r IS, 1990 •I 10 OOAM •t tne He~l>or Lawn Mtmo191t Park Servlco Ul\der Ille dlr1<11on ot Hart>or 1.1wn-Mounl Olive Mortu., y of C.OSte Mew S·MMU... SHll'TEL JACK SHEFTEL, reSldenl ol Senta Ane, Ce P•-•w•• on November U, 19'0, $urvl•td by nl• w ife Mery •nd t l•fers L.llll1n 8 Ouroft 01 Los Anooies, Ca , 1no MH Goroon of L1ouna Hui.. C• Or1w1id4I vrvicott wfll be n.ld an Sund1y, Novemi..r ••, 19'0 at 11 OOAM 1n lne Pa<•fl< VI .. • M1mor1•I Park Ctmettr'I'~ New port Bt1cn, de. wlln FleDC>1 RObert Berom•n olflcte llnt. P•c111( View Mortu41ry 01rec1ors. 8Al.LINGEll M AllCELLA [LI ZABETH BALLINOeR, rewaent of CO.II M1w, Ca. 1111« 1t50. Pu-away Oil No•· tm!Nr I), 1'90 She 11 tu••lvt<I by her l•nlMtncl Mayr1e1 W Balll"99r of Co.le Maw, c. .... Mf\ Mayf,.. w. 81111~r. Jr. or 5-n ~. c. .. d•llOhttr N0<m1 S lett 1no\ of Sta n tol\, c .... • e r a11oc1111 o r e n a11d 2 o•••• ttlndCl\lldrtfl p,,Olt MMll(tt Wtft lltfd 11nc1er 11\e dl•e(Uon of HarbOr LA•n-Mounl 00"9 Mtnulf't. $40.HS.. ..... HI NRY Ii. &•ta, l"lt-1wty on NOottmlltr It, , •• lorn In St. I.CHiii Mlno11r1 on,.....,.. f, t.00 Rtlleltnl 01 NtwllOtt tMeO\, c.t. IOf tt yttra. He WU Ill Kl,.. Mfmotr Of Ult Ifill lflCI M .. onlc Lf1119, Ht t. Wt¥1vta 111'1' 4 <lllldftf\, Ilk~ Efllt'Of LAii \llQjtli, N .. toa, Oonal4 Erbt OI Car111M10, C.,. ,....,.. l ltlt of~. l(ll"f"n , Ltll'fltr .. , Nt.llOfl hMll, CA. 11 •'•"tlcllllartn •na I .,.,..,,;no c.M""911. Ill'..,_ Cl"ffNfllM!. ftt91uM lnclltrefofarr~, •• 0 l(ATHl.ll!N C.111 HMoNI), , __ away ti! ~f 1 , tW t i Mr rri- lcltnCe In ~ MtM,. C., Ille llW•t btf'n 111 ,_.,. • .,.i. Oft Jl#le If, 1tu. l!lt ••• • -f« ~t Of ,..., adult Ill .... It ~ "1 • tit!« PlllO ""''"' . ,....,, ,,,,, ..... ~""" .. .,, .............. ,., ltf9HM' =~ =·~:·1~c1~:.~= •• Ct"'9"fY· •hrrlll l•l•nf, WW.. """""-flre(li.,. • ., .. ..,...,. inlltll ... Tvtlllll -...-~ .... ~!'"""~-----~ W.ttctilf °*'91 ,,...,_, .. c:. .. ! ...... ......,,.. fffJn••~d •• ... PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTI TIOUS IUSINIEH NAMES TATEMENT Int fotl-l'IQlle(Mln 1lOOln9ousfntU PACIFIC MINERAL INOS , 1911' W•letv1tw 1..11 , HUllltnQIO<'I 8HCll, CA ., ... I Fr~M S L..11 Viol•, II• S. VudUQO RO •l.G•-""<1•~.CA•ttOS I nua bYMnft' '' ce>n<hJct.o oy •n 1n.-01v1du•t Frt nkS LA V101• Th•' \~lern'Mtnl w•t hied with the County C1or• al Ot•not Countr on O< 100.rlt.1'80 Ft- Pu11111""" Ct~ c ... st D•oly P1101 ~OY /,14,21,19'0 '31 ... IO PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIESS NAME STATIMIENT In. 1011ow1'1Q Pll""" 11 clol"ll 11u.i MS\•' SEA BREEZE, S41 W 1t1n St .• Coll• Mew, c.. t2U7 ROMndo Torro. 217 s SprvCt. Sentt Ar\I. C., t77Cll Thli builtw\i •ti ConctY<tlld b'I' •n •n· dl•ldv•• Rosendo rorre\ Tiit\ "•temenl ••• Ill"° wllll In. Councy Cletk al 0<.-.00 County°" De· \ PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTIOUS IUSINESS NAMI. STATl.MENT Tnt IOflowl'IQ per'IOf\ 1\ dorno ou"· ""'~ .,: DIVER DAN'S, t:IAS C•Orillo P~r• Or • M I. 5.Mta A,.., C• 91101 Oenttl Ruut11 HOu\man, IJOI Caorllto Pork Or . M S, S.nl• Ana, Ca '1101 Tiii\ bll~•ntt1 •I Condv<ltc! .,. ... 1n dlv10u11 o.n1et Ru\Wlf HOU\tn.tn T "'' \l•lement w•\ ttled w1ln t~ County Cltrk of Or•nQe County on Novem-s. t'itO 100.r?'l,1'80 Fl-F14Nll Pu1111.i.a °'-c:o." Dally P•IOI Publlli.G °'"""" C.O.•I 011ty P•IOI Del Jt,Nov /,14,Jl,1'90 •~J.IO Na•~·~~ --~ PUBLIC NOTICE FfCTfTIOOS IUSINESS NAM£S"ATEMl£NT PUBLIC NOTICE -----fnt fOllOWlnQ Det\On I\ OOin 9 DUU FICTITIOUS IUSINESS ntss u NAME STATEMENT CARLSKl1'1 ISi.1U remp1e Pl•tt. The largest building in New York State would be n a m e d after o ut goi n g R e publi ca n Sen . Jacob K. Javits, .un- d e r a bill to be •in· trod u ced b y Sen . Dani e l Patri c k Moyn~han, D-N Y, in Washington.· fhe toUow•nQ Pt:r\On' •r• do1nQ L•Qun• Be.en, C• 9'2U1 l OUt•nt\I ., Gt'tQO'V P4ul C•'''°"· ,. , An•" I HE WINDSOR COM PAN 1 s Sf . L•Qun.t BHcn. C• 91.SI WtM fret"ton. trvuw, CA t11 u Tn1\ bu\llW\\ '' (ond\iCted ov an '" lroine Jews slate party The Irvine J e wis h Seniors group will hold its second ann u a l Hanukkah party at 7:30 p.m . Dec. 18. Senior citizens. their children a nd grandchildren are invit· ed to the party at the Irvine Senior Center . 3807 Sandburg Way, Irvine. For information call Isadore Schneider at 551-9162 o r Mic key Williams at 754·1~4. Law voided FRESNO (AP·> A Fresno city ordinance requiring that charita· ble organizations have a fily li cense LO raise funds has been declared "overwhelmin~l y" un· constitutional by an ap· pellate court. "Seve ra l state and feder al de· c i sion s have well established the applica tion of First Amendment protections to charitable sol icitation s ," t h e s tate's Fifth District Court of Appeal ruled. P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS BUSINEU NAME STATEMENT Tl\~ fOllOWmQ l>"f""1 •l OOlllQ bu•• f'WU ai· S M S. SPORTS CA RDS, 5121 Sperro• Or . .-.unth'\iQton Bt•crt, C• 91M• Steven MICllHI Sl•lll, 5111 Spar raw Or , HunUl'Qton Bt~ll, C. '1M9 T1111 -•non ts cond\K led by an In dlv1dut1 Sfewn.Slanl Tlltl llall< ..... I WH llllHI wltll tho Countv Cler• ol Or•noe Covnt• on November S, t'llO ,.,_, Puotl•Nd 0.anQO c:o. .. Oally Pilot Nov I, 14, ll, 11, l'lllO Ute) 80 ~--- PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS IUSINIEU MAMIE STATEMINT Tiit followlno person• ••• do1 no 11<1slneu1" WARMINGTON·TUSTIN, LTO,. 16Sfl '41>te Awn.,., trYIM, C.tllornle ,,,,. Tiit R-rt P Wermtneton Co I• Cellfornta <0<potet10<11, 16H1 Hele Awn..., trvlllt, Calilornlaff714 Tlllt l>lltlntu I• conaucted by • 1lmtt9d 11oe..-wp. THE R08E,_T P WARMINGTON CO. W.J.Pllllnlll, SKretMy Tnlt t141t-' wa• flied wUfl u. Collnlv Cit•• of OrMIQt County on O< IO«»tr U, 1•. P147111 P11llllltl'<ff OrMIQt CMtt Dally Pilot O<I. 14, It, HOY. 7, 14, 1'90 ~ PUBLIC NOTICE Jfffre'I' D 8r19Q\. i West Trenton, t O•v•Oua1 1rv1ne, CA 9'l114 Grevory Paul C.trl\On B•r~r• Ofe~tvu 8riOQt, ) We\1 Tn1, \tatement wa~ filed with tnt' fttnton, Irvine. CA '211• Cou,.tv Cler> a1 Oranoe County on 0< TMi bu\tM\\ " conaucted by·• tot>er 16 1.a ~,..,., 1>o>•l~f\n1p • Ft41JI• Jell"'Y 0 6r109• Putlll~nt<J Oranll" Co.st Delly p,101 Tll" \lol.,.,,.,nl WU 111..:1 will> IM Nov It, 21, 18, De< S, l'lllO HSI> !JO Coun1Y Cler~ al O••nQO Coun1 y on Oc loller 2~. 1990 FU'215 Publl\hed Orttn~ COtUI D••IY P1101 Ocl JI, NOY /, 14 )I, 1980 019•80 PUBLIC NOTICE HUNTER 6 YOSS Attorneu at Law •-l'alr<llllCI Or .• Sutt• 100 l'ffl Olfk• lo• llt71 lr'fl"•· '.illoml• tl71J Tel: 17141 US-llMf Publ"n.d O.•noe Coast Daily P1fo1 NOY. 14 21 11 _!>e< S 1990 •.lbl..0 PUBLIC NOTICE Ll!GALNOTtCE NEWPOllT·MESA UNll'IEO SCHOOt. DISTRICT Nelke fn¥lll119 ll~h NOT ICE IS HEREBY' GIVEN IMI tho 801re1 ot Educttfon of lf1t Newport Mt'<I Unified SchOOI Oislrkl of Orenoe County wlll r..:•lve ~ .. ltd Old• uo 10 1 00 p M on ,,.. J•tll d•Y Of Novem~. ,..,, •• lhe ottlC!e 01 w •d SC.flOOI 01slr ~1. IOG•lecl 01 1857 Placen· 111 SlfMI, Cost• Mtw. C.llfornta, el wlll<" 11,,,. wld bids will o. puo41cty -119<1-rMCllOr. SPRAV BOOTH ANO SHEO,.RAME All DkK .,t IO llt In K C«dfll<t Wiii\ COl1dlt1on., fnttr1Kllon1. end S9t<1Jf<•· flonswlllcllere,_onflte In llltoff~ of lllt Pur01a1lno Otr.clW OI Mid sc.- Ohtrlct, llS7 Pla.otnll• Sl"ff'. ~ta Mew, Cfllf0tl\l1ttaii.. !IKll Dicletf mull WCll'l\11 • Did *' POtll In lflt IO•m al • Ctrtlhtd "' C.•lller·• 0.Ck or • -equot 10 "·000 (Ont ThouUrcl OoflMtl, ....0. peyellltt lo Ille °'*' of the N•wport· -W Unlllte Sc:-Oltlfk l. lfl tflt t,,.111 of llllwrt to '"I" Into well Con· tract. lflt ~ OI Ille uwck wlll llt IOrltllfd to H lll SC.flOOI Ol•trlU Of Ottn .. COUtlly, ' No tlddfr mev wlll'ldf-Ill• 11111 '°' • perio.i OI tor-ty ,, .. N.SI 0.Y• aftM t"" Cl.tit Ml for tflt _,,1110 lfltreot, PUBLIC NOTICE L.OSANOIEL.ES JUDICIAL OISTlllCT 110 N9rtll ~•M A'N11111t LtsA..,....,C.llfenolatotU PLAINTIFF: FAMIL.IAN PIPE .. SUPPLY' co .. INC ... C•llfornl• CO(• ooretton DEFENDAN T M G B AS· SOCIATES, INC. MICHAEL G BRUBAICER. ooes I lhrOUQll XII, In· cluslwe, SUMMOM$ CASE NUMal'.11 -.S7 NOTICE! .,,_ IWIW lttfl -· TM court m•Y 41t<l4e _.,.,.. "" wl-t ...... , "" .. _ ..... -· .,.. .......,.. wlll1l11 • .. yll. ,_,_. .,.. 1.,..,.,...,..,. -w. AVl$01 U-... .-.. .,...,..... El tr-,..... etcltlw <#Ve u-. •lll•~le •-•-u• . .....-. •• dttolre ...... ._ LH ta l11 .. ,.,.... ci......-...... . ti "°" wl"' lo -• the advice of en •llorney In 1111• maltl<', '°" tN>llld CIO so promplly to tllet l'Our wrllttn rt.illOflM, If •fl'f. ,,,.Y lllo flied on lime $1 Usltd -· >Ollcltar t i Cot1Mjo 119 un ·~ en Ktt •""""· deDerto 11actrlo l11mtal•lemtnlt, d• HI• m•oere. w .._ .. etocrlte, ti ,,., alQUf\<I, .,..._Mr reolllre • llemPO TO THE OEFE,.OANT A tfvll <omP••lnl .... -n lllH Dy IN Ol•ln- 1111 t9•1Mt you. If 'l'Oll •1111 lo 0.lencl '"" fl•ttull, r<N mutt, wllllln • day• all•r 11111 wmmon• I• '41rwe on '°"· file wltfl lftlt <Nn • wrltwn rttponM 10 111t c.mpt•fnl, U-• you a. "· y011r •1 ... 11 will Dt 1111•,.d on tt> ollullon of tilt pla1nllll, •ncl tlllt co11rt may 111w • j~I ... Intl you ror "" relltf *"""°" 111 1111 <OM011l111, Tiit '"'Cl ol 1'.d11cet1on of 111t N•wPtrt•MH• Ulllfltd S«lool 011trr<1 wlllcfl CO\llCI rttllll Ill .. ,.,,1:111 Of rtMr¥n IN rlllflf to ttltcl eny or all ., .... , 111(11111 of ,.,_Y or II ty or llck and not llK"WllY tcC'•PI tllt Ollltr rtlltl reciu .. 1.a 111 Ille tom. 1owe•I tld, Afld 10 waive ally In• ol•illl i.tlMllly 0t 1rreovlarl1y 111 eny llO ,... Oi'Te01Jiiiy2. ,_,, ctlVfCI, Cl.ARK I(. SAi TO, OA'T!D: Ho...mller $, 1 .. , Cttrll NIWPO•T·MUAUNll'IJ O ly fll.M 0.UCtur, :=,0J!!:;~ oao•u•:rv'l11u.c1 Clll!WtN A...., ...... OW.• HM'WY Pllfltt, ................ .. ~. Olr.c• =:'•c.a.•11 OMI .....al11 r•1 1111)......., 1'111111 ..... Or ... CM• o.lfy l"IMt ............ Or-. C.... Ot11r ..._ Ntv, p, ,._ t• 4*-(0 NO•. tt.>1, .. 0tc S. I• 4.StMe PUBLIC NOTICE l'UaLtC HEARINGS WILL BE HELO I Y THE COSTA MESA PL.AN• NINO COMMISSION AT THE CITY' HALL, 11 flAIR DRIVE, 'OSTA MESA, CALll"OllNIA, AT 6:JO P,M, 011 AS SOON AS POSS IBLE THallaAl'TIER ON MONDAY , NOVEMlallt4, IMO. REGARDING THE FOLLOWING APPLICATIONS I. z-Eac.C141n Pem'tlt lE-.. 7 •ncl Ttnt.illvt M.ap Of Tre<f TT·I0918R for Jimmy 8. and R•O.«• A. Brooks. , ... New H•~lllrt Orlvt. "'' Condi Ilona! use "9rmlt for .... unll ton dom•f\tum wU" "'•"•"t• from r• Quired ..... setback •nd ........ 101 <ub-dlvlllon lor con<10mln1um purpcS4s, l0<•ltd ti '20 ,,. West 11111 Street, In an R1 IRJ "9ncli"9l •-EnY"on men111 Oetermln•llon Negahve Otcltratlon (R·7t.06. R 1'-t•I J. z-Ea<~ ... ""'II lE-170 1tld Tent.ii,,. P••<tl Mac> S-tO-»o lo• Fred Fabft, •uthorlled •oent lof Rlcllerd W. Roulft~. I .. ) Cl\ur<h StrMI, IO< Parctt Map to <•HI• two perceh with • verfan<• lroM mlnumum t!Le rwcivlrtll"tnl. IO<•teo II 1 .. 1 A61 end I~ CllYr<n StrMI •nd • .. l Ntwpor1 llo<lle¥arcl, In • CUFll •-· E11v1r~1a1 Otltr"'ln4111on u1mp1 J, z-IEu ........ "9""11 Zl-11• 1t1e1 TtntaUw ~ ot Tttcl n 11'2• lor C A S °'"''_.,' C0<CIO(allon, aulllorl19d '"°'"' '°' Tony H1nc:tler, )02) Cot111r A-.... LK ....... IQ< Conollk>Nt UM Ptrmll for • 1wo unit condqmtn111rn with • v•r1tn« from at te<lled perkln9 requlrtm.nt •n<I Ten· ••II•• Map of lrecl tor • OM IOI tllb- 01 .. 1.1011 IOr <on<IOmllllll"I Plltl>OMI. loc•ltd el 1'14 Anehelm Avenue, In •n ,_, !OM. l!nvlrMmtnlel O.tumln•· 114111. Utmot. .. .:~.~~~r!:.' ;::-,.:::.io:~;: ;~:~ at "" ottrc. Of u. 11'1.tlllllflt eeper 1 mt111. Room MO. n P•lr OtlV., CCl\ta MtN. C•lllOf!ll., COS'TAMtM l'IJ.HNIHG COMMl5SION Rl<fltrtl Cttt'-n, CNlf- CMfltt w. ·~ .. leuNrytlltl ~·-'"'-MIO 1"1191..,_. Or .... C.tl OtJfV l'lleot N ..... u.1• ·~ GENERAL NEWS I OBITUARIES PUBLIC NOTICE PlJBLJC NOTICI