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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-09-29 - Orange Coast Pilot• • ••••• DRllGI COAST YOUR HDMITNN DlllY PAPIR rul ~CJ AY S~PfEMtH:R 29. 1~81 0 F 4 A NG E c 0 u N 1 y I A I IJ tH~ ..... A ... ' I .... I . ' Slaying suspect a-.. •ts to being in forest By F BEDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ... o.lty,.... ..... Thomas F,rancis Edwards has told Orange County Sheriff's Department investigators he was in the Cleveland NaUonaJ Forest for three days after the fatal shooting of one girl and the wounding of another before de· ciding to leave for Maryland where he was arrested Monday. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Edwards. who was interviewed at length wter his arrest. said he left the forest area 20 miles east of San Juan Capistrano about the same time that a sheriff's Special Weapons and Tactics team descended into the area. . At that point1 according to Hart, Edwards arove his camp- er-equipped pickup truck to Los Angeles, abandoned it in a parking lot orr the Santa Ana Freeway, left his dog, Brandy, HAVE FAITH IN THEIR DRIVE The Rev Bill McLaughlin is ready to c hauffeur Maile McGregor a nd Mabry Steinhau!-. to the me mbership coffee for the Women Associates of L:C Irvine Interfaith from 10 a.m. to noon Tuesday al th<.· Newport Beach home of CCI Chancellor and Mr~. Daniel C with a local resident, then boarded a bus for Maryland. He was taken into custody without incident by two sheriff's investigators and Maryland law enforcement aut-horities after telephoning an inmate at. a prison where he once served a term. The inmate notified a warden who in turn co nta c ted authorities . II art said it could be as long as 60 days before Edwards, who has told investigators he will fight extradition, is returned to California where he is named ln a $500.000 arrest warrant. Edwards, 37, is charged in the death of Vanessa Jberri, 12, of Lake Elsinore, one of two girl.s shot without provocation Sept. 19 near the Blue Jay campground in an area of the forest near El Cariso Village. Witnesses said a man drove up OMty ""'_..,, ~ O'o-11 Aldrich. The completely restored 1928 Rolls· Ro~·ce touring model. a ppraised at 545.000. 1s being offered for ~a l e at S39.500 to benefit the Interfaith Council whil'h lakes c are of religious needs of s tudents on C'am pu~. For further informa t ion on the car. phone 833-089 1 250 seize d as Diablo protest e nds Victims will meet Bandits h it Irvine firms SAN LUIS OBISPO <API Authorities arrested about 250 demonstrators and a diagram error forced engineers to ball the loading of nuclear fuel as the two-week protest siege of the controversial Oiablo Canyon power plant came lo a halt. "We 're very relieved it's over. It's going to be refreshing for workers to be able to go to work unimpeded and without having to go past a line of sheriff's dep- uties," Greg Pruett, a Pacific Gas & Electric spokesman, said Monday. The Abalone Alliance, which organized the two-week protest, has said it is ready to oppose the nuclear power ~lant with dif- ferent methods, including com- munity demonstrations and sup- port for court action. The pro- testers' campsite near the PG&E property will remain open for about a week to allow jailed protesters to regroup for the return to their homes, an al- lia nce-spokeswoman said. More than 1,900 people were arrested in the showdown, with a bout 250 being plc-ed up out· side the plant Monday in what demonstrators said will be the last day of the blockade. Among those jailed were rock singer Jacison Browne and actor Robert Blake. Browne, who wrote and re- corded such songs as "D'octor My Eyes," .. Take It Easy" and ·'The Pretender,·' had been re- 1 eased just last week after pleading uo contest to a Sept. 18 charge of trespassing at the gate. <See DIABLO, Page AZ> Reagan sets press meet WASHINGTON (AP> -Presl· dent Rea1an wW bold a news conference -hJs fourth in eiaht moo\ha-at 11 a .m . PDT Thurs· dayJ lt wa.a learned today. Tne 8elaion ls expected to be held in the Eatt Room. An an· nouncement of the new1 con· f erenc.e was expected later to- day. Tbe preitdent's lut oewa con· rerence 'Waa on June 18. Two ill boys set for Dis n eyland • LONGVIEW, Tex. CAP> - Two young boys who live conti- nents apart but suffer from the same rare and deadly disease, will get a chance to meet each other next month while enjoying the fantasy of Disneyland 'Donahue' show c ritic apologizes SALT LAKE CITY !AP> While apologizing that his group's attack on television talk show host Phil Donahue wasn't backed with facts, the founder of the National Federation of Decel)cy says it s till might boycott the sbow's sponsors .. The Rev. Donald Wildmon, the federation's executive director, publicly apologised to Donahue Monday during a taping in Sall Lake City of the popular daytime show. The segment is to be broadcast lat.er this year. Wildmon said figures used in a news rdease criticizing the "Donahue" program were not based on any research of the show. But Wildmon repeated bis con- tention "Donahue" deals too fre· quently with sexual topics and portrays abnormal sex in a favorable light. Four Chidgo members of the federation issued a news release Aug. l cal.lint Donahue a "sex activist broadcaster," claiming that many of bis programs "are sex shows'' and that moat of those promote abnormal sex. The 'roup threatened a boycott of sponsors for "Donahue ." Wildmon said he hadn't seen the rete'ase before it was issued, but had to accept responsibility for it. "Donahue" has dealt with such topica aidncest, birth con- trol, abortion, rape and homosexuality in the 11 years lt has been ayndica\Cd nationally. The program, Which alao has focused on non-sexual topks and l.nterviews wltfl celebrttl•. bu won a Geor1• Foster Peabody Award and nine Emmy awards, includtn1 one this year H Outatandlnt Talk or Service Series. (See APOLOGY, Pap .U) SeveraJ private citizens and an airline will send 9-year-old Mickey Hayes of Hallsville. Tex- as. and his family lo the California amusement park. He will meet 8-year -old Fransie Geringer of South Africa there on Nov. 29 Both lads s uffer from pro- geria, a rare disease which ages its victims prematurely. Almost $700 was contributed to a fund established at a Longview bank i n early Septe mber. Braniff International has offered to fly the Hayes family to Lo,s Angeles free of charge. Any leftover money will be donated lo the Sunshine Founda· tion, a Philadelphia organization created to help terminally ill children realize their dreams. The foundation is helping bring the South African boy and his family to America. Ted Key, a father of three from nearby Tyler, Texas, volunteered to pay for the family's accommodations In Disneyland. One of Mickev's wishes in life is that he would be taller. "tr a child's greatest prayer is to grow taller. then it is the world's obligation to see that he has a box to stand on," Key said. at s ame tune Irvine police omcers had just res ponded to a bank robbery Monday when they were called to the scene of another holdup at a savings and loan a few miles across town. Police sajd that about $20,000 was taken from California First Bank, on MacArthur Boulevard near Main Street. at 11 a.m. by two men, one armed with a handgun. As police were al the scene of the first, they received a call that University Park Branch of World Savings on Culver Drive near Michelson Drive had been robbed of an undetermined amount by a lone gunman. Police say the two robberies apparently are unrelated. No one was injured in either inci· dent. authorities said. ' In the first holdup, two bandits entered California First and or· dered customers and bank tellers to line up against the wall. One of the men scooped ca·sb from the tellers' drawers and the pair escaped on foot, police said. At the savings and loan, a lone gunman waited in line and then told the teller he he had a gun and it was a holdup. He escaped on foot. Golfers using guns Swine ravage Santa Rosa links SANTA RQSA (AP> -Ram- paging swine have ravaged the roUing greensward of the Oak- mont Golf Club, prompting the genteel sportsmen into a shoot- ing war on the links. T he Great Pig War started when golfers discovered that the normal hazards of the 36-hoJe course were supplem,ented by plga, one a 200-pound boar, whlcb tipped up six fairways and aprons, accordlng to Rick HanseJ), assistant ·course uiperintendent. The 18th lalrway was almost destroyed, Hansen sald. The gotten took to JUDI, and tbe porcloe body count bu rt.sen to .even. ' "It's been almost a dally oc- c urrence the last couple of weeks,·• he said, noting the "divots" are an unsightly and unexpected h3%ard. "I've lost a lot of sleep over this ... says Hansen's boss, Mlke Clark, who does the shooting with his son Bob. As many as 60 wild pigs have been sighted by residents in the hills beside Aonadel State Park. The Pla move toward the golf course, center of a large res- id en tl at developmen t , when their food and water supplies run low. Pigs have roamed the oak- studded hlllsldes for some 30 ' <See PIGS. Pase Al) lo a location near where Miss I berri and Kelly Cartier. 12. aJso of Lake Elsinore were standing, called to them, then fired several shots from a .22 caliber gun. Miss Jberri died two days later. Miss Cartier suffered serious head injuries. Then, witnesses said, the man sped off in a truck matching the description of Edwards· pickup Two men who gave chase were able to observe the license plate number and notify the sheriff's department. Sheriff's personnel spent more than three days combina the rugged wilderness for Edwards. descri~ as a "mountain man" and "gun buff." Hart said Edwards admitted to investigators that he was in the forest during the height ot the search. Edwards thus far has made no <See SUSPECT, Page AZ> Proxmire ends $1 trillion debt protest WASHINGTON !AP> -Sen. William Proxm ire. D-Wis .. ended his marathon protest of a bill to raise the nation's debt limit over $1 trillion today and yie lded the Senate floor after 16 hours of virtually non-stop talk- ing. "Al least I have made a rec- ord on what I think is a great watershed in our history," he said Proxmire, as he had promised he would, relinquished the floor at 7:27 a.m. PDT rather than de· lay consideration of the debt ceiling meas ure, which is needed to allow the government to pay its bills in the fiscal year that begins at 12:01 a .m. Thurs· day. He said he would offer an • amendment to hold the debt limit to $995 billion, requiring $60 billion to $70 billion in ad- ditional spending cuts or a tax in- crease. Proxmire began is talkathon about 3: 15 p.m . PDT Monday, say ing, "It i s a clear responsibility that we go into painstaking d etail " before pushing the debt limit over the trillion-dollar mark for the first time. Through the night and into the morning. he railed lo a nea.r- e m pty chamber agains t the legislation sought by the Reagan administration. But unlike filibusters in the past aimed at blocking or slow- ing action, Proxmire said he would not try to use the tactic to prevent an expected vote on the bill. The debt limit bill, already ap- proved by the House. must be senl to President Reagan's desk by Wednesday night to keep the government from losing its authority t.o borrow. The ceiling or $1.079 trillion would apply for the fiscal year that begins Thursday. The cur- rent debt limit Is $985 billion. Proxmire, by relinquis hing the floor. allowed the Senate to r esume consideration of an amendment by Sen. William Armstrong, R-Colo .. that wouJd give Re agan the power to withhold appropriated funds. subject lo a congressional veto. 'No prog r ess' in Gromyko, Haig talks UNITED NATIONS CAP> Despite nine hours of talks, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr: said today that he and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko failed to make any progress in reducing tensions between the two superpowers. But they agreed lo try again next year. The officials met for five hours Monday, following a four- hour session Wednesday. The . first meeting produced agree· ment to begin arms control taJb Nov. 30 in Geneva. After the second meeting State Department spokesmar1 Dean Fischer said they c:overed "the full range of international and bilate ral Issues" anC: "agreed t.o continue their dis- cussions early next year." The spokesman said the next meeting wouJd probably be held in Geneva. Asked if the talks had led to a reduction ot tensions, Hail Hid, "No, r don't thlnk so. I think t.be ~rlod ahead will have to refieet whelhe{ or not these discuuioas will have made a aubatantlal contribution.•· . During an appeaunce on NBC'·a "Today Show," Hale aald there are still "a number of is- sues that divide us." F..'VDS 16-HOl.'R PROTEST Sen William Proimzre S toc k s post r e cover y afte r scare By The Associated Pre!IS U S. stock prices edged hjgher today, extending Monday's gains that had quelled fears of nea r -panic o n markets in Europe and elsewhere around the world. The London and Tokyo s t ock markets . meanwhile. made strong re- coveries today. In New York. the Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 9.99 points to 852.55 in the first two hours of trading. On Mon- day, the Dow index fell more than 14 points at the ... opening before rallying lo finish with a gain of 18.55 points to 842.56 - its best daily gain since March 25. The Japanese market, which closed before Europe's opened, gained .back all its losses. re- cording its biggest one-day rise after its worst single-day decline in history Monday. The Nikkei Dow Jones index of 225 major s tocks, which lost 302.84 points Monday. recovered 320.56 points lo close at 7,357.68. In London, brokers raised prices sharply as soon as the market opened. By midday, the Financial Times index of 30 in- dus trials had climbed 18.1 points to 475.6, more than wiping out Monday's 17.2-point loss. "It's a big bonanza," said one <See STOCKS, Page AZ) ORAllil COAST 1111111 Mostly cloudy tonight and Wednesday morning and partly sunny Wednes- day afternoon. Highs 72 to 75. Lows tonight 55 to 6.5. • 111181 TlllY The Rol'IU .avot Ch.ir %4-7 win ~ Clw Bears "-fore prtl'J)Qnng /or the Clewbtd Browna. See aton.1, Poge Cl. llDll .... I I • --~. = ... a ....... ..=M :-:'-~ r.':'s * '= ~­,..... ~ -... ---M A.I • • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /T ut1d1y. September 29, 1981 ,. ........... Sec.retary of Defense Caspar Weinberger points out the size of the N1zhmy Tank Plant in the Soviet Union supenmposed on a map showing a huge chunk of Washington. D.C. Newport man guilty in fraud By The Associated Press A Newport Beach man was one of two men who pleaded guilty to charges stemming from an allegedly fraudulent Sl million scheme to sell un- qualified securities to investors which involved land in R iverside County. Clark Paul Woolridge, 33, of Newport Beach and Louis Kelem of Carlsbad e n tered their pleas Friday in San Diego Municipal Court under a plea bar~aining agreement. The two men and W. Guy Cobb, 45, of Valley Center. Calif., were charged in a 72· count indictment involving bilk- ing investors. Prosecutors say victims were led to believe they were buying into a limited partnership that was secured by 143 building lots Cobb allegedly owned in Sun Ci· ty in Riverside County. Cobb is described by pros· ecutors as president or . Dover Equities. an investment firm in Escondido. which was allegedly represented as building homes in Sun City Prosecutors say Woolridge a nd Kelem will be called as prosecution witnesses in the trial of Cobb. scheduled to start next week. Kelem faces making restitu- tion of about $31,200 to 15 in- Hos tages r e leased TITUSVILLE. Fla tA P > - After a seven-hour standoff. two inmates loday released a pair of Brevard County guards they had been holding hostage and sur- rendered without a struggle, a uthorities said . vestors and Woolridge more than $40,000 to about 25 investors, ac- cording to Deputy District At· torney S. Charles Wickersham The pleas could result in pro· bationary terms and fines up to S3,000. From Page A1 STOCKS • • • London broker ... After the panic rush to get out on Monday, it looks like a panic scramble to gel back in today .. However. volume was light, and another broker observed. ··There's caution on both sides and the market remains very nervous . The game's not changed ... In Hong Kong, however. an at· tempted rally failed and the Hang Seng index dropped 27.06 more points after falling 105. 75 Mon day to 1.245.26, its lowest level of the year The selling wave that hit Tokyo and London s truck New York for the first 30 minutes of trading Monday, but the American market soo n stabilized in heavy trading and surged to post s ubstantial gains on the day. Stock prices around the globe were under pressure in part because of concern over whether the United States budget deficit can be controlled to help ease in- te resl rates. analysts said. There was also uncertainty over Britain's ailing economy. the threat of r~ession in several countries, and a dire prediction by American market analyst Joseph Granville. From Page A1 DIAB LO • • • Blake, star of the "Barella" TV series, had escaped arrest when he participated in a sea as- sault early in the protest. But he was arrested when he joined the blockade at the gate Monday, San Luis Obispo County Un· dersheriff Arnie Goble said. In downtown San Luis Obispo, 17 women were arrested for trespassing Monday after they moved into a PG&E office buil~­ ing hnd attempted a sit-in, ac- cording to Abalone Alliance spokeswoman Mary Moore. Fuel loading at t he just- licensed atomic power plant was stopped when engineers found mistakes in a diagram used In analyzing t he facility's earth· quake resistance, officials said Monday. The problem, discovered dur- ing a design review Sunday, in· vol ves discrepancies in a dia· gram or drawing used in stress analyses of hangers that support pipes for the "residual heat re- moval system," said Dick Davin of Pacific Gas & Electric Co. PG&E built the $2.3 billion twin· reactor complex near San Luis Obispo, about midway between Los Angeles and San Francisco. S6me modifications of the plant may be necessar y. authorities said. Demons trator s contend nuclear power is particularly uns afe a\ Diablo Canyon. which is three miles from an offshore earthquake fault. They also say their pro tes t proves it is vulnerable to sabotage. 3 plead innocent WARTBURG . Tenn. <APl - Three black inmates have pleaded innocent to charges in connection with the stabbing or James Earl Ray . ,. .............. A 200-pound boar lies on the 16th fairway of Santa Rosa's Oakmont Golf Course as a golfer plays through. The boar was shot after several of the beasts destroyed part of the course looking for food. OR Gf COAST Daily Pilat Thomas P Haley Pl.Ott.,_, .,..a CP\•I E •«u' ·• 0 01( ~ Robert N Weed Pt...olftt Thol'las A Murphone l•IO' M1cnMI P Hervey __...Ootec .... L ~'I S.:nulti 0..-flflai-tl-• l\eft,,eth N Goddard Jr Cwc-~IOI Bemetd Scftulman o..-~Hlf>' .............. Cer«M A. Moot• .......... Clasalfled advertising 71 •1U2·5UI All other departments ••2·021 MA IN OF,ICE UO WP\t 8•, ~t CO\t• M,,. (A M•t1 •d•r\\ Ao• I~ (9'1• Mt\• (A, •1•1t (OOY"Qf\I "'' O••nOt (ot\I P\.IC>t•\"+nq Como.Inv NO n~w'-\10,.f'\ +110\l•.tl1nn" • t1 '"' ··~· ,..~th, Ot .t(f ... ,,.,.""'"'' ,..~,.,,f"I '""'"' b• ''(ltn<1tJt"'d "''UtOut 0•( '"' ,..._,,,,,,\~(\t 1 OU••1qht r·•l\oo r ~~f tJftd (I•\\ JM"t-.. p.111,, .ti { G°"f-' !Ylfl'\.lt (. A'•ftU'ft•A u~ 1 u ..,, \ul>\"'P'""' n, • .,.,, , ' u mt1o"'"'*' th m•il '\ \0 "'Otti"'h "'11•1,.r 9 d1 1rtl•"•U1M ' , ... C)O {''Oft'"''• From Page A1 PIGS ••. years, the remnants of a pack of 30 domestic swine which broke loose and headed for the highlands. . But the problem has become so severe this year that the state Department of Fish and Game, ·aft er inspecting the golf coune, gave the club permission to shoot the pigs periodically. The meat is turned over to c haritable organlullons, Hansen said. • Report on Russ released Booklet called essential to shaping of U.S. forces • WASHJNGTON t API Under press ure to make further cuts in m ilitary spendine. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger released a well illus trated, 99· page booklt>t on Soviet military strength today The report, however. adds ht· tie to existing knowledge of the Soviet Union 's might. While its figures on the grow- ing Soviet arsenal for the most pa'rt mirror earlier asi,esi,ments, Weinberger i,a1d in an 1ntroduc lion that an understanding of the Soviet Union 's strength ··1s es- sential to the shaping and main· lenance or effective u s and al· lied armed forces .. The booklet'i, message of a growing Sovit•l threat. echoing earlier administration stale ments. comes amid sentiment from some congressmen for cuts in military spend ing beyond the $13 billion President Reagan called for in the fiscal 1982-1984 budgets. Weinberger said last week that even those cuts hit "vitally needed area::... and that con- i,:resi.men calling for greatt>r decreases "were wrong and traglcaJly wrong ·' The Defense Department booklet does not contain a specific comparison of US Soviet military strength It doei. contain a profusion of charts. photographs of Soviet weaponry, and even dramatic color paint mgs showing huge Tuµol ev jets swooping across the skies, tanks grinding along, and missilei, aloft with paths projected lo the United Stales. The charts and 1llustrationi, doc ume nt a growing Soviet military machif)e particularly in aircraft production and deployment of nuclear warheads but most of the figures Ctre from earlier U S. assessments or from groups such as the In t e rnational In st itute fo r Strategic Studies in London The newest information seems to be that the Soviets now have 250 medium-range SS-20 missiles with 750 warheads d eployed worldwide, includrng 175 mis s iles carrying 525 warheads op Al'WI ........ Shoo I inq ncl 1 m J\ ell!/ Ca rt 1er 12. lier /wad c11et>red m1</ ha 11daq1•r/ /111q~ .\lclrs/111 ('11r111e . motlier 111 Ke/11/ .\ sln111 cluss111<1/1• l 0nTll'S\t1 I ht•rr1 d11r11111 l 'mw"'"' .~ l1111('rci/ 'it'fl"lt I' ... From Page A1 SUSPECT IN SLAYING • • • statements about the sh0<>tings. Hart said Edwards· truck was found in Los Angeles about four hours after hi s arrest. Hart said. based on information investigators in Maryland obtain~ I The burl\ former Costa Mesa resident 1; being held at the Prince George Count) .Jail pcnd 1ng extradition pro(•eedings About 200 i,tudcnts from Lake Elsinore Junior lhgh School were among those al the funeral for M 1ss I berr1 Monday in lht' Firs t United Pres byterian Church, including her friend Kell~. \\ho" as released Monda:- from a M1ss1on V1t•Jo hospital Ousted man claims bias OAKLAND <AP1 A young male librarian has charged in a suit that his female supervisors fired him hecause he is a man. He seeks $.50,()()() Randall Irving. 28. filed the reverse di scrimination suit Mon- day in Alameda County Superior Court. County librar~ administrator Charlotte Dundberg denied the allegations. She said the cbunty has made efforts to attract men into the system She said it has traditionally been a job held by women and tends to attract very qualified women despite low pay. I pos1ll' NATO co untries In Europe An assessm e nt laat January put the number of SS. 20s al 180 worldwide, with 110 deployt•d toward NATO llO\\l'Vc.>r , Richard N. Perle, an assistant dc.>fense secretary, had revealed the newer fieures last week during a discussion of nuclear forces in Europe. Perle said at the time that deployment of 572 cruise and Pershing II missiles by NATO countries 1s on i.chedule with the first deployment expected next ) l'ar. The booklet also says the So· viets are producing about 1,000 fighter aircraft yearly and have dl'ploycd an additional 1,000 long range s trategic nuclear "arheads 1n the last year . Neither figure goes beyond as· sessm<.•nts as of January. Plans for U S defense produc- t 1 on rl·ma1n uncerta in . mt•anYth1lt'. awaiting presiden· t1al dec1swns on such key ques· tions as dt·µloyment of the MX missile anti resuming production of the B I bomber ' From Page A 1 APOLOGY • • Artt'r apolog1Z1ng, Wildmon said ··nine or 10 of the 23 shows "e monitored" since the first of the vear dealt with sex. Some urge·d acceptance or sex prac· tices contrary to traditional Christian morality. he said. The Tupelo. Miss.-based Na- tional Federation for Decency was ·started by Wildmon, who this year also launched the Coalition for Better Television . Wildmon has said the ~oral Ma· jority is a member of the coali· lion. the biggest of 300 affiliated groups nationwide. He said 3,000 volunteers na- ti o n w id c would monitor television shows this fall. and if sex and violence are exploited, a boycott of sponsors is possible. He said consumers have a right to object to programming with a boycott. One member of the a udience said vit!wers can always shut off the television set rather than watch programming they find object1onahle, and was loudly applauded Wildmon said he was con- t'erned cibout the effect of the program-. on children lie said parents might not control the l(•lev1s1on set ··ParC'nt~ ha,·e things to do othL•r than monitor children's programming,·· he said. Wilclmon agreed with Donahue that man:-of the federation's mt'mb<.·rs might wrongly name programs as ··sex s hows.·· Donahut.' said the federation had class1f1l'd a show dealing with hreast ft.•t•ding in that category, "h1l'h W1ldmo11 agreed was in- eurrecl Border cops escape s hots ESCO:'>iDIDO !AP ) Three bordt•r patrolmen escaped un- harmed when shots were fired at 'them during a routine roundup of six 1llcgal aliens. authorities said ""ll 1!. very unusual for agents to he fired upon in the interior of the United States ... said Chief Agent Gene Wood . Wood said two s hots were fired at a patrol car in an Escon- dido parking lot ,. ......... l~rlend1 or Llbrarle1, U.S .A., hu ele~led Wally A•N lo lta board ol dlrtt· tort, the fint black lo Hl"\le on the board. Accordlna to the American Library Auoclatlon, of which the Frteods croup ia an alfWate, Amos 11 u.11.nt ht• succ-. u president ol Famous Amos Cookies aa an lnsplraUon lo others, lendln1 his promotional ability to the cause of wipin1 out lJ . Ut.eracy. He bas been a national apokeaman for the Literacy volunteers of America two years, traveling throughout the country encouraging both adults and children to learn to read. A Sao Francisco instructor was named interim ch an· cellor of the University of Hawaii's main campus in Honolulu. M arvln Andersoa. who bas been interim dean of the university law school since January 1980, is on leave from his home institution, the UC Hastings College of Law. University of Hawaii Presi· dent Fujlo Matsuda an- nounced Anderson would replace Durwood Long as chancellor of the 20,813· student campus until a na- tionwide search turned up· a permanent replacement. Arnold Palmer. honorary chairman of the March of Dimes. poses with Richard Wagner. 5. of Vancouver. Wash .. the March of Dimes poster child for 1982 Bet ween SS and 60 people attended an unpublicized, $500 a plate fund-raising dinner at Yankee Stadium for Sen. Edward Kennedy, D- Mass. Nixons ready to move into new home Former President Richard M. Nixon and his wife, Pat, are expected to move into their home in Saddle· River, N.J ., on Thursday. The Nixons and a retinue of Secret Service agents checked into the Hilton fnn in nearby Woodcliff Lake, ac· cording to hotel employees. For several weeks, the The granddaughter of the late Nlzam of Hyderabad, 011ce considered the world'~ richest man, asked Prime Minister Indira Gandhi for p e rmission to sell h is fabulous jewel collection abroad, the United News of lndia reported. A lett~r from Princess Fatima Fouzia to Mrs . Gandhi said the family • needed the money to pay tax- es, UNI said. Part of the Nizam's $42 million collec· lion was auctioned after his death in 1967 at age 84. Allente BelllmOf'e 81 rm lllQIWn 8oslOl'I BrownnOe OlarlttnSC uauel IN n!Qllt. ffrlY ,,_"'"' -ciw,,_ cl~ wltll OfllY pet'tlel after-OllU90 cl-1111 ..... the coest. Clfl<lnn.tl C·-'91 ... 57, W-5'. CN&llll, Del·FI Wltl Inland,.... In io.. Weter •7. Denver El_....., ,_._11 •Inda u to Des Molnn 22 •Mts wltll 3 to~--,,.,....,. Detroit tenltllt. OtllerwlM, ""'' VMleble El Peto wllMIS .. c..,. -ti to '°"'-t IO 10 Honolul11 1• """ tllll ... _ So<IC-terly HouSIOfl ..,.,,. 1 to3 feet. VerlM!e clouel-~==~e ~---""'-"""-· ------Ke1t1 City V.S. summary • LH V- Ml•ml '"""~'-' -Yon: Norfefk Olll• City Omel't• Orl•ndo Plllltdpllle P'llMnla Sen Olt911 Sen ,rMi Suttle TulM Wlclllta ""''' ........ SIA- Nixons had been staying in a luxury hotel in Manhattan and at the Berwin, Pa., home of their daughter and son-in· Jaw Juli e and David Eisenhower, while workers fitted the Saddle River home with cameras, alarms. a heavy metal gate for the driveway, and underground power lines to feed security devices. San Francisco's Roman Catholic community received a new auxiliary bishop with the ordainment of the Rev Daniel F. Walsh. Some 3,000 people, includ- ing 650 priests and nuns, gathered al St. Mary's Cathedral for the ceremony, which was conducted by Archbishop John R. Quinn. The 43-year-old Walsh re- ceived blessing of 35 bishops who came from around the country and wore the tradi- tional robes and miters. The get-together reported· ly was organized by George Steinbrenner, principal owner of the New York Yankees baseball team, but he was out of town and did not attend. The money -as much as $30.000 -raised at the dinner was earmarked to pay off debts from Kennedy's presi- dential p_rimary campaign of 1980 as well to aid his cam- paign for re-election to the Senate in 1982. Newark Mayor Kenneth Gibson's $15,000 Lincoln Con· tinental limousine became the getaway car for two rob- bers who held up the garage where the car was kept. According to the night watchman, the men robbed him of $250 at gunpoint. They the n looked around the garage for a car and settled on the limousine , which has no markings to identify it as an official vehicle. Low clouds to stay • .. • .. '° f7 ., 65 .. 92 • IO 41 tS 11 " '1 '° 71 " IS t1 .. to 92 14 11 •7 10) 74 M " '° 92 '° ,, 92 75 .. 102 n 65 12 f7 n 74 • .. 65 75 101 11 .. • " u 7t .. 71 n 72 " .. n to .. 71 47 ,.. 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" ti " 15 7• " n ,, 71 7S " 7S 7S 1S S7 71 " ,. 7C 74 n :; Sun, moon, tides ~ TOOAY M Se<O!ld IGw •: 17 P·"'· 0.7 IKOl'ld llltfl 10:52 p.m. •·• Sun Hts •:40 p.m., rl-W....._ day 4:•S t.m. n ""-tMs 7:%3 p,m .• ris. l :OS •.m • 1' WHnnOoy . ~l~::--"~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- u t6 .. " u • • SUlf RIPIRT " u 61 Vetkl•H•m twoy. " ... .. ._.. ,. .. 1-e I ~~ ' .....,.,_, , • Sell Dleet c-ity t 71 ovt._ fer W.•IMY: Uftte ~ • ... .... • , ' ' .... ........ . .. --1 , ,., 1 t 1W t a • t a ,., .., .... w...., ............ We're Listening: •• 1, . What do you like about the Dally Pllot? What don't you Uke? Call the number below and your measa1e will be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the approprtate editor. The same 24-hour answtrln1 service may be used to record let· ters to .the editor on any topic. Mailbox contrtbutora must lndude their na'me and telephone number for verification. No circulation calla. please. TeU us what's on your mind. ----------------·---------_. ..... ______________________ ......................... ---------~-- Orange Coaat DAILY PtLOT/Tund1y, s.ptem~r 28. 1881 Judges get new work Criminal cases logjam brings major reshuf /le of duties By DA VlD ICUTZM~NN °' ............... A m~r reshu.truna of duties for many of Oranse Co~t)''• superior court jud1es la tUl.nl place this week to handle a lot· jam of criminal cues re1ult1n1 from an wiuaually h18h number of felony prosecutions. As many u 19 Judges on tbe 47-judge panel had thelr normal· ly civil-laden calendar cleared Monday to permit bandlina of criminaJ matters awaiting dis· position from as far back as January. Presiding Oranae County Superior Court Judie Robert E. Rickles, ln orderin1 the tem· porary reaaatanmenl of the jurists, said the action was necessary to prevent crlmtnal cases from "stacking up ln the system." Ri~kles said it is the first time suctr action bas been taken in the Orange County court system, bu~ he added, "It's still too early to punch the panic but· ton." It is expected civil cases pre- viously being handled by the re· Gas heating bills to rise 25 percent WASHJ.NGTON (AP) -Even without a speedup in the decon· trol of natural ga~ prices, con- sumers who heat with gas will be paying 25 percent more this winter than a year ago, a con- sumer group has predicted. The Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition estimated Monday that 60 percent of households who heat with gas will pay a total of $398 in fuel bills for the five months from November through March. That compares to a national average of $313 during the same period in 1980-81. If President Reagan is suc- cessful in getting Congress to ac· celerate gas decontrol next year, consumer s can expect to see their bills jump to $627 for the 1982·83 heating season, a 58 percent increase over this winter, the coalition predicted. "Home heating costs continue to rise at a terrifying rate, far outstripping inflation," s aid William R. Hutton, a coalition official. "The Reagan ad · ministration's plan to accelerate this cost increase by decontroll- ing gas prices is cruel and un· realistic. Most of us simply can't afford it.·· However, an industry group, the Natural Gas Supply Associa· Ilion, said its own estimates foresee a much s maller increase of 12 percent in gas bills this winter under current law and a 20 percent increase under ac- celerated decontrol. Under a 1978 law. the price of gas discovered after 1976 is al· lowed to rise monthly unW Jan. 1, 1985, when all controls on this "new " gas will be lifted. However, price controls wilJ re· main for the approximately 50 percent of "old" gas flowing before 1977. The Reagan administration is studying a plan that would speed up decontrol and remove price restrictions on all gas by 1985. The administration's economic studies forecast smaller price increases under accelerated de· control and predict that by 1985 prices could actually be lower than they would have been un- der the current pricing time ta· ble. The coalition study found a wide price disparity among dif· ferenl regions of the country. While the study projected heat· ing bills of $618 for residents in the New England s tates - highest in the country -it said r esidents in the s tates of Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas would have bills of $210 this winter, lowest in the country. The states of Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin lwill see the highest percentage inc rease in gas prices this winter, jumping 30 percent to $518 . the study predicted. The study blamed the projected in· c reases in part on r ecent purchases by pipeline suppliers of "deep" gas. gas found below 15,000 feet which is out from un· der all price controls. Orange Tide benefit for service clubs A fund-raising walk·a·thon is scheduled Saturday, Oct. 17 to benefit the American Red Cross, the Youth Services Program - and any other service club that gets involved. The event is scheduled for 9 a . m . on Skypark Circle in Irvine, where participants wiJI be free to walk, jog, run or roller s kate as many quarter-mile laps as possible in one-hour. The event is billed as the Orange Tide by the s ponsoring Orange County Chapter of the Building Industry Association of Southern California. Last year, the group raised $7 ,000 for the two organizations. Home from my .. African Adventure.. . . and 1ust In time to celebrate our twenty-second anniversary in the store. It was wonderful to have so many friends of long standing visit us ... end greet some new friends too. It has taken me a wttlle to recover from the jet lag . . . thlrty·four hours from Nairobi to Newport Beach . . that Is one long trip! Africa wes worth It though end I think I have to rate It as one of the mos! exciting and Interesting places I've ever visit~ We went f irs t to Johannesburg where we had a tour through a diamond cuttlng plant. We also saw a factory where they were carving Vet'dlte, an interesting stone that Is unique to Africa and found no other place on the globe. I 'brought home a few pieces wh ich we now M¥e on dllf>l•y In the store. I also found aome Suglllte and Artloaatone carved Into lntereatlng animal flgurea. Our first mine vlalt wee • 0'*18 of ln•rgold Wtlen M Mnt down Into the Crown "'ne. It requlr9d thet we ctr.- In protectlw, wat.rproof Ollr with hard hat• and boota • To spur interest, organizers are encouraging other non-profit groups to take part by promising 40 percent of the money they raise . "For example, should an out· side group raise $1,000 in net proceeds it would be entjtled to keep $400," said Harriett Harris, chairman of the BIA's communi- ty involvement committee. Participants are to raise money by soliciting pledges for ev«:ry lap walked , jogged, s prmted or skated. More information may be ob- ta in ed by ca I ling Margot Carlson at t he YSP office 540-6921 . ' 6EA1 WISE Marv Barr. C-ert1fled Gemologist u1l1ned Jud1es wW be put on the back burner for about a week. RickJes' action w11 prom~ •n pa rt by the fl1.ln1 ol about 800 criminal complaint• by tbe Orange County Diltrlct Al· torney's office between Karch and May. I n a normal lbree-mooth period, tbe number of filin11 l1 usually about 750 c11ea, or 250 per month, accordlnt to E.B. Cornelison, supervisor of the county clerk's criminal section Another ractor in Rlcldes' de. cision was District Attorney 1 Cecil Hicks' move to no loneer plea bargain with criminal de- fendants and instead go to trial. Rickles said the D.A. 's policy , was a complicating factor for the moment but that judees, in assessing each case individual- ly, would likely encourage some form of bargaining to expedite • cases where there were neither aggravating nor mitigating fac· tors. Rickles, presiding judge of the superior court since January, explained he was merely tryin1 to manage Limited manpower u best he could. Before the tem- porary rearrangement of duties, he said, 10 judges served on the criminal panel with occasional help from other jurists. He stressed that civil matters would not be neglected in his at· ' tempt to wiclog legal channels on the criminal side. Seven judges were continuing to handle civil cases Monday and three additional protem jurists -lawyers acting as judges for an interim period - were assigned to the superior court's busy law and motion calendars. Many civil lawyers learned of the change Monday morning as they checked the dockets in courtrooms wheo they arrived for hearings on temporary or permanent court orders. t\dele Elliott, executive direc- tor of the Orange County Bar As· sociation, said she knew of the reassignment of judges but had not heard any comments from membei:s of the group. Rickles said he would re - evaluate the backlog situation at the end of this week and decide if it was worthwhile to try the temporary reassignments again. Neither the presiding judge nor other court offi cials could explain why the number of criminal complaints in March, April and M ay rose so dramatically. Cornelison s aid the number or filings has since returned to normal. t He explained one reason for the logjam was that criminal matters from as far back as • January had been delayed unW : now, reaching the trial stage ; along with the new cases filed , before the summer. It is required that a case go to trial 60 days following arraign· ment proceedings . But Cornelison said defendants can waive their right to a speedy trial, contributing to the delays and eventual backups in the system. Kimberly and got a big knot on the temple and a gorgeous black eye. My travelllng companions were members of the American Gem Society end we were guests of the OeBeers firm. "They took us out to Cullinan Yttlere we spent the morning down In the Premier mine ... 2700 feet down! It was very lnten$tlng and exciting ... and a little frightening u they were doing a lot of blasting Yttllle w. were down there. "They took us to the Oe8eef'a Country Club for lunch end then on to Pretoria for an afternoon of sight seeing. We went beck to Kimberly fCK the night and the next day went down Into the Bultfonteln mine for an exten•lve to4r Yttllch Included all aspects of the diemond recovery operation. Next we ft.'# to c.-own where we made the H••rengracht Hotel our deadquarten for the following four deya. We had been 1cheduled to vlalt the Alexander Bly operattona but ~of the South Nrtcen raid• I nto Nambla It wH decided that It might not be wl• to go Into th•f .,.. • thle time. n.. II a lot of w.-l-.d In the gold mining proceaa and It I• tometl!Ma pretty alippefY underfoiot. We h·ad two CHARLES ff. HARR We epent thoM daya ¥Wttng \tit C.,. of Good Hope .,_. the lndlan OcMn meet9 the Atlantic and thete I• .._,. a good gait blow! no ..• then the Groot Conetencla vineyard• and on anoU. dey wie ioott the cable car up to Table Mounteln. ' ~1tt In our party thllt day. One of our group fell and broke a thumb and another wrenched a knee and brou hie ......_ .. ~. We flnt.hed the "rule ___, __ ._•-a... of "''"" the next day Wlhen •----1• '""' ...,. t one of our members fell In I 7 .. A lnM, WallclH ..... M•"11•rf ... .. Mort ··African AdventUNa'' '*' cotUtm • ' '. A4 s Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /TuHday, September 29, 1981 [(]ffiU~ 00[~] Guilty plea spy trial • m JACKSONVILLE, Fla. <AP) -Former U.S. Army Warrant Officer Joseph G. Helmich Jr. has halted his spy trial by plead- ing guilty to conspiring lo sell top-secret military communica- tion lnformaUon to the Soviet Union between 1963 through 1980. Helmich, who resigned from the Army in 1966, had pleaded innocent to a four-count es- pionage indictment on July 16, one day after his arrest at his home in nearby Jacksonville Beach. Monday. he approached U.S. District Judge Susan Black with bis court-appointed attorney. Peter Dearin1. and entered the change of pJea. Helmich admitted to only count one of the indictments which charged him with a lone- lasting conspiracy that began in 1963 when he walked into the Soviet Embassy in Paris with plans to sell U .S. military secrets. The judge dropped the other three. charges and re- cessed court pending sentencing Nov. 15. At that time, Helmich was with the U.S. Signal Corps and, according lo testimony last week, was on the brink of being court-rnartialed because of bad checks. Shroud authenticity 'favored' by pair .............. NEW YORK <A P ) - Evidence strongly indicates the Shroud of Turin, a long-time subject of controversy, was the ··actual burial ga rment of Jesus ," conclude two re- searchers who say they ap· proached t he evidence with skepticism. not proof, but it does s how that the literal, physical resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth is by far the best explanation for the physical, chemical, medical and historical facts," Stevenson and Habermas say. Pedestrian in Miami's Little /Javana makes way through water after 11-inch rainfall. Although some people may be shocked that the book concludes "an intervention or the supernatural" in formation of the image on the s hroud , physicist Lawrence Schwalbe, a team member from the Los Alamos National Scientific Laboratory, adds in a foreword : Victim's wish Christmas for friends In "Verdict on the Shroud," a book to be issued Oct. 15 by Ser· vant Publications of Ann Arbor, Mich., the researchers also say that the ancient cloth offers scientific evidence for Christ's resurrection. The authors are computer engineer Kenneth S. Stevenson of Dallas, spokesman for a team of about 40 scientists who ex- amined the shroud in 1978, and philosopher Gary R. Habermas of Lynchburg, Va., a project cons ultant, write: However. not all the scientists involved in the Shroud of Turin research project are in agree- ment over the findings. and proof remains lacking. ''The converging evidence is "Stevenson and Habermas have rightly remained cautious in their interpretation.'' And noting that scientific con· clus ions about complex phenomena usually are "judg- ments of probability," a theory that offers the most likely ex· planation of the observed facts, they add: ·'These probabilities strongly favor the authenticity of the shroud as evidence for Jesus' death and res urrection." KALAMAZOO, Mich. <AP) - Ornamental snown akes. a yule tree and greeting cards decorat· ed her hospital room on a Sep· tern ber day. Nurses sang carols. During her 8lst stay at Borgess Medical Center. Aneita Spence decided that an early Christmas would be her "chance to give something to all t he peo- ple who have been giving to me." On Wedn esday the 17-year-old victim of leukemia said goodbye to the friends who called her by her nickname. Clancy, and on Friday awoke to tell her mother s he knew she was going to die Four hours later she was dead. "Christimas is a celebration of friends." Clancy s a id at t he Escort, Lynx owners line up Hundreds aim to avoid recommended ban on fuel BOSTON (AP) -Hundreds of car owners showed up at Ford repair s hops throughout Massachusetts Monday, hoping to get a defect in their vehicles fixed and avoid a recommended ban on gasoline saJes. • "They're out the door and up the street," said Vinny Scarnici. service manger of Dave Dmger Ford in Braintree. "We're going to run out of parts soon." "We have been bombarded with phone calls,·· said service manager Mike Nish at Wilm· ington Ford. Mutual Ford Inc. in Springfield did 12 repairs Mon- da y morning and found a "panic" among motorists. The car owners lined up at the repair shops Monday after the Massachusetts fire marshal sent letters to local chiefs asking them to persuade service sta· lions to refuse gasoline to owners of 1981 Ford Escort and Lincoln-Mercury Lynx cars un- less possible defects in their fuel tanks have been fixed. Marshal Joseph O'Keefe con- C:Ontestants pucker up for 'Whistle-off CARSON CITY, nev. <AP> - All those pursed lips observed in Carson City over the weekend weren't due to budget cuts or the stock market . They belonged to competitors in the Fourth International Whistle-Off, touted by the Carson City Chamber of Com- merce as the only competition of its kind for serious practitioners of the art. Whistling styles at the event ranged from the trac;J,itional pucker to "lip whistling,· where one contestant's mouth re- mained locked in a wide smile while high notes issued from some mysterious place below his throat. After two days of pre· liminaries. Nancy Foran, a school secretary from Yakima, Wash., was awarded the Grand Champion prize -an 18-inch high metal whistle. ''My third grade teacher was a whistler and my mother took me to her for lessons," Mrs. Foran said. "I've been whistling ever since." Among the finalists was Dan Bernstein, of Riverside, Calli., who wore bananas in his ears and was accompanied by a buzz. ing Medfly tooting a kazoo., Bernstein, and the "Medfly,''" Mitch Hider, of Port.land, Ore., took first place in the novelty class. Another promising contestant. Simon Argevitch . crammed eight cigars into bis mouth and still 1nanaged to whistle. tends that a design error makes some of the cars fire hazards. George Trainor. a spokesman for Ford Motor Co . which has recalled 125,000 of the cars to check for the absence of a ground wire on fuel tank lubes, said the cars have a design problem that could caus e an "aura of heat" at the opening of the gas tank, but not a fire. Trainor labeled the fuel design defect "a minor concern which, 1f reported properly, s houldn't cause too much of a problem." The fire m arshal's letters ask service station atte nd ants to check with the car's owner before refueling an Escort or a Lyn x. "If it was built before Dec. 12, 1980, and necessary modifications have not been compl eted, the vehicle should not be allowed to be fueled ... the letters say. O'Keefe s aid that while he and local fire chiefs have authority to remove station licenses for s afety reasons. it will be up to t he chiefs to enforce his recom- mendation. The fire marshal had s uggest- ed that stations require drivers to carry letters proving that the changes have been made. But he later changed his mind, calling that suggestion impractical. "I think they (stali on o perators ) sh o uld make a diligent effort to make sure that these corrections have been made," he said. "They're going to have to ask the person in the car, and if he says yes, he'll have to take his word for it." Placing a ClassifieO. is twice as easy! JUSt SBcY 'biarge it" you can use your V,ISA or MASTER CARD to place a DAILY PILOT Classified over the telephone, including 8-Day week ads. Call (714) 642-5678 11111 Piii The Orange Coast's largest marketplace ' I gathering. "I see other people, adults on the third <cancer l n oor who are going to die So many of them sit down lhere in self pity and wait to die 'Tm not going to give up. I'm happy . I am at peace with myself There is a difference between giving up and accept· ing" Mrs Spence. whose firs~ name also is Aneita. got a gold locket fr o m her daughter as a Christmas present. She said Aneita awoke about 5 a.m. Fri· day and "she said. 'I can't ex- µlain. You wouldn't understand But I'm not feeling any pain.' Then 1 said, 'Close your eyes,· and she did and never woke up ag ain.·· Aneita "really wanted to be there for the Christmas party ... s aid Di.ane White, a nurse on her floor. "I think she rallied for that.'' Aneita was from the vi ll age of Hickory Corners and was a high s chool senior at Gull Lake, about s ix miles northease of here. She 1s survived by her mother, a lab technician at a hospital in Battle Creek, and her father. Al v1n. Mrs. Spence said she spotted her d a ughter's trouble fi ve years ago when the girl com· plained of fatigue. .. J thought she might have mononucleosis," Mrs. Spence s aid. "But when I looked at a sample of her blood under the m 1c roscope . I kne w what it was. The hospital's chaplain. Sister Marie Beaulac. gre w close to lhe girl during her 4' 2 years in and out of the hospital. 81 visits in all . "The other day she was com forting a mother who recently lost her son" to cancer , the chaplain said of the girl. "She told her . 'I'll take care or him until you get there.· " From seventh to 10th grades. Ane1ta attended school part- time. then was tutored at home. She continued schoolwork until s he passed a g raduat ion eligibility test a nd one of her Christmas presents a surprise was her diploma. IT'S NOT COMPLICATED ••• Save M9-f1e)' And Earn , Tax-Free Dollars The Easy Way! 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CALIFORNIA 91617 Making Banking Ea•ler For You ' • Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Tuelday, September 29, 1981 Ch11rch man sentenced Singer gets five years in bogus commodities scheme SACRAMENTO (AP > -A church choir stn1er has been sentenced t.o nve years in prison ror mulennindln1 a bogus com· modlties tradin1 office into which m penons put $537,000. Michael Wayne McCluskey, 26, who started by persuading fellow church members to ''in· vest " $3,000, was sentenced Fri· day by Superior Court Judie Rothwell 8 . Mason. Mason called McCluskey's or· ganliation, Capital Invest.ors, "a diabolical scheme that toot life savlngs from an awful lot of peo. ple." McCluskey had pleaded guilty to felony securities fraud. Mason also Sfnlenced three aJ. Snake trap spares harmless ~pecies DAVIS (AP ) -Professor Walter E. Howard has built a better trap -for pit vipers. The noose closes around the prominent lateral lobes of. the back of the triangular head. le1ed associates in Capital In· vestors: Michael Hudak and Kevin Jay Madden, both five yeara probaUoo and reaUtutioa of $5,000 each, and Edward Lee Griffith, three yeara probation and $500 restitution. The Sacramento Bee quoted court reco'rda, state reaulat.ora, prosecutors, attorneys and vie· ti ms Sunday as a aytn1 McCluskey-was ft.rat given '3,000 on Dec. 13, 19791 by fellow mem- bers of the Calvary Baptist Church in suburban Citrus Heights. .,. ....... Pit vipers in the West are mostly rattlesnakes. Else·wbere in t he United State s they are mostly copperheads and water rtioccasins . All 1>0isonous. Humans who have tested the trap with their fingers have found that prominent knuckles can likewise be snared. Persu;uling a snake to poke his head into the tunnel is sim· pie : "You can make a little drift fence to guide it. Or put it along barns or fence lines, rock walls and woodpiles -wherever there a re rodent trails." McClus key's father, Clovic McCluskey, a lawyer and state workers' compensation Jud&e in Stockton, was tipped by a parishioner and demanded to know what his son did with the money. Michael 1ot a friend, Martin Wallner, 25, to pose as a ficticlous broker named Troy R. Jacobsen, with wbOm the money had supposedly been invested. In a meeting , Wallner persuaded the original investors that the money had been invest· ed . Wallner later cooperated with the prosecutors and wun't char ged criminally. He entered a "civil compromise" to make $3,000 restitution. DUARTE PROTEST -A San Francisco policeman c hases anti·EI Salvadorian de· monstrators off the side wa lk in front of a hotel where E l Salvador President J ose Napoleon Duarte stayed. Thousands of de· monstrators loudly chanted and toted signs .4 Sunday denouncing the leader of the war-torn country Howard, of UC Davis, says the trap won't victimize the non· poisonous and harmless -or perHaps even h e lpful buJlsnakes, garter snakes or gopher snakes and the like. Plans to stop Russ revealed The trap takes advantage of the triangular head of the pit viper. A small box of wood, metal and wire mesh, the trap contains an interlocking wire noose. ''The snake enters a small tun· nel. Its progress is blocked and it tries to back out," Howard said in an interview. Howard said he is also think· ing or trying lo condense an at· tractant out of rodent cage cleanings. "We know the snake is attracted by odors," he said. What if you catch a pit viper but decide to turn it loose? Howard says you grab the snake as near the head as possi- ble and work off the noose with the eraser end of a pencil - carefully. Michael McCluskey pretended to be speculating in the short· term commodities market. He soon had a doien young men and . perhaps two dozen pretty women on the staff, with oflices in suburban Fair Oaks and Rancho Cordova. Apparently few of them realized there was anthing amiss. SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUALITY SHUrrERS Designed, Finished ~ Installed - 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY .•. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or548-1717 HORWOOD MANUFACTOIY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa. CA 'R.6'El Lifeline Telephone Service What It Is and how you can get It. If you're a residence customer of Pacific Telephone and you make a limited number of local calls a month , you might be interested in our Lifeline Telepho ne Service. Lifeline allows you up to 30 local calls every month for 52.50 plus tax. Each call made over the 30-call allowance is extra. (The 3lst-40th calls cost 10¢ each. Every call over 40 costs 15¢.) Installation, telephone sets, and other services and equipment cost exrra. SAN DIEGO (AP) -The deputy commander of the U.S. Rapid Deployment Force says there are strategic military plans t.o prevent Russian troops from invading Persian Gulf oil countries. "We have drawn the line at the northern end of Iran," said Air Force Maj. Gen. Robert C. Taylor. "Ail I have to do to stop the Russians is to shoot the lead tank in the column" on roads in the mountainous area near the Caspian Sea and Iran's northern border. Speaking at a meeting of the San Diego Chapter of the American Defense Prepared· oess Association, Taylor de· fended the Rapid Deployment Force, declaring, "we are not a Ito public affairs event; we are a ~ real force." "Don't sell us short," Taylor said. "Things could go right for i... us and wrong for them. Look at the trouble the Russians are having with those Afghani reb-~ els. And that is a bunch of ragheads with rifles. I am going to have some West Pointers out , there with some good equip· · ment." .) o\ I , . ... .1 t. l Lifeline is available to residential customers only in most areas of Los Angeles and San Diego as well as Orange County, Bakersfield, Riverside, Fresno, Sacramento, Santa Rosa, San Francisco, San Jose, Stockton, Modesto and ADJUSTED INCOME. JOINT RETURN $50,000 $35,000 $25,000 i $20,000 parts of the East Bay, Peninsula and Marin. Want to know more? Call your Pacific Telephone service representative for details. @Pacific Telephone STARTING A NEW BUSINESS? I • Accordng to Cal"omle lull••• and Profeuk>nt Code (Sec. 17900 to 17930) all person• doing buelneH under a ftct~• n•me mutit fMe a ttatement with the County Clerk •nd heve It publl•h•d four time• In a newtpeper Mrvlnt the erea In Which the buelneN It located. The ttatement It r....-bf lew end la MCffaery In pt0t9ctlng rour butln•.. name. Mott bllnb ,..._ proof of tHlng to open ~~merclel eccounb. The DAILY PILOT provides b04tt filing and pubNcatlon ..,.... We hn• aft the necHHry fenlta and malnteln • dlllJ ""*-to the Orange County~ . ..._.,_, bf one of our oon""'9nt offtcet or pMM tM &..!GAL Dl.PMTMINT ~. bl. 332 '°' .... lntonutlon encl tonne. ESTIMATED TAX BRACKET 50% 40o/o I 30% 25% . WHAT YOU'D HAVE TO EARN ON A 25.22°/o 21.02°/o 18.01°/o 16.81°/o TAXABLE INVESTMENT TO EQUAL OUR NEW TAX-FREE ACC-OUNT• "1lw ,.~on this M"<'O\lnt wiB i.. ?'O'llt ol the~ in~t yield on on~yt"•r U S. Trusury bllls; rat~ d•tfnnined monthly. Aix-figure• are btM<I on 12.61'tt, da•nntned by au<tion Sq>!. 3, an<I on currmt t.1• t.abln. Subttllntial lntttHot Pft"llty and lotH ol tn~ptlori for early w1thd,.wal Tu-break for Gibraltar"" sawn! You may exempt from Federal taxes the first $2,000 in interest on a joint return or $1,000 on an individual return. Minimum deposit is $500. Available Oct. 1. To earn your maximum tax-free interest at the current rate, deP.05it $15,860 ii you file a joint return or $7,930 for a single return. Your savings GIB will be insured to $100,000 by the FSLIC. Free serviees. You can use your tax-free savings account balance to help you qualify for Gibraftar's many free services: safe deposit bOx, travelers checks, money orders, direct deposit, notary public and many others. SAVINGS Alle19 OW!"• billlbit Miian • '9 offices ltatewide HUNTINGTON BEAOI: I'll Huntington Ctr. I (714) 898-9666 LACUNA HIUS: 241.eO fJ Toro Rd. I (714) 951-8454. RJl.Ult1UN: 25.5 W. Olwetdtotpt Ave. I (714) 871-61Dl NEWPORT BEACH: 2'00 W. Coast liwy. /(714) 6.Jl-l6ll e 1911 CAlrelW s.¥1.-and Lo6ft ANc>NtJon SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO: :n8l7 Dti Obilpo St. I (714) 49l-~ SANTA ANA: 3925 S. Bristol St./ (714) m -7580 14 Santa AN Paahion Square I (714) &lt-0'717 f . M Ot1nge CoMt DAILY PtLOT/1'uad1y, September 29, 1981 THt: F MILl' CIRCt8 BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "Hearing that rain makes me feel friendly, Mommy -as long as it can't get into the house." "No ooe's going to practice chip shots on MY rug!" '9·\R'9ADl'KE by Brad Anderson Jl"DGE PARKER 00 'OU t<.NOW WH~ "A\AU\N(HE " 15 OOINGTO ~E AN E5PECIALLV f)(ClllN0 MOVIE SAM 7 IT LL ee THE Fl~T PIC1UF-E RANDAL L FORe>E5 WILL MAKE IN ~ FOUR 'EARS' G.\Rt'lt:l,D WMERE l':>"IT WRrTTEN I MAVE TO ACT LIKE A CAT?~ Wl-N CAN'T I AC.1 UKE. A M 005E INSTEAD? ACROSS t Stered e Uglymerti 10 Idiotic t4 ltOlated t5 Herculel' c.ptlW te Aot1ert - 52 Complelns 54 Coemlc mua 58 Time of )'Ml' 59 VllOclty et Seer<*' 62 Derting 9·29 l<AYO!.' I1V£ LOOK£[) ~VERYWHERf TOO BAD KAYo's NOT HERE ! I MADE SOME TOLLHOUSE COOJ<IES ! UNITED FMture Syndlc91t Mondty'e P\m1e Solwd 1 2 3 4 14 &3 &di heroine li'otiot!....., ~--~~lill &4 b'le 86 LAICerll«I ee0wr ... 87 NtwYork lalMd 21 Vanity C1M 44 S9ll'ft 2t DealrOUI 4t German 30 LO\llld ~ ~name 34 Aeeltcevl.. 47 Clovtn 35 8Mebllt hit 48 8tllel 3e lmpottune 49 Dignity 37 Cdoted 50 lnllpld M Tender.,..; 53 Contemplate 2 WOfda 65 fMelen 40 "Ryln'• , ... £...-'' M JICOb'a eon 42......... 57 °"""god ., MllfMIP eo °""" by Ferd & Tom Johnson _ __,,... WHY DoN'Tq~A IHINK TO LOO/<: IN TH' BATHTUB FOR ME ?1 ~~~.Jr~E d/ I PEANL'T8 I READ M Fll~ST TWO CHAPTERS OF YOUR NEW NOVEL .. THEY WERE TERRIBLE ! NOVELS SHOULD BE FUNNY. SAD, WITTV AND EXPRESSIVE Tl'" BLE• EEDS SHOE fH 15 CAN'I BE. AAPPENIN(, TO ('(\£ ! 'M' BRABBLE I HAVE Ne:VE:R Sf:EN THAI 6-UN 1'E:F0~5! fHE 600\ 15 AU. ()€[!)RATED f"OR -mt: HQME(.Q{V\IN(, ~ct ... AND IM HANGING OP HER£ ON "rnlo DUMB ROPE wrm THE. D£CO~A1lONS ! Editor's ~ : We lt \nc.Drrec.t.\'i st.~t.ed w\sh to apo\oq\ze. for a that. ovr c.olleqe's ps'{- '-'ipoqraphlc.al error \n a c.ho\CXN profes~or, Or. recent 8rt\c\e. ~ M'(t'On f\1>rber, had rt-! centl'( lost h\s 1if ~ ,s r sav\nqs at-the rac.etra<j, ; r. i [,jf i M 0 OR.SMOCK MY MOM WAS ou-r OF "iOWN -rHe C'.AY >-WAS e o RN, s o HeR. s1s-reR HAP Me ... FOR BETTt;R OR fOR •OR8E WHICH M.AKeS MES MY OWN Nf:PHESW .' by Tom K. Ryan '(OU L..fAVr; HE~ OU"f OF "T'HIS! b Jeff MacNelly ~"°"'~""".WM:l•t o..t,....,..,.,Ttt'ffrfl by Err11e Bushm1ller NEVER MIND INCLUDING A SARCASTIC REV IEW ·~lilN.£. C> ,.,._,_,.~ oc 6.n-•u.ER by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk I'VE HEA~D OF B€1N(; A (.l.l4L.L.f l.DlOER BOTIHIS IS ~IDIC.UL.!XJ6 f by Kevin Fagan by George Lemont CAN l= HAVES A S I P OF= w HA-rESv eR. ,..HA-r 15 ')'t)(.)'R5 PRINKING? by Lynn Johnston WELL, HE.RE. IT IS. -THE S~ASON THAT I HAIE. COME. ON,ANNc! lHE KIDS ARE IN SCHCXJL, Tt-\E. AIR'S COOL, THE "~EJ\VES ARE l"M NOTTALKIN(;. RSoUT AU-TU MN, DUMMY! 17M TALKING AOO'Jf FOCJIBALL '--· .. '- 'Tuf\NING ... ~ • __ ,___._ • Orange C9aat DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, September 29, 1981 Diana given • • silver frog by Charles 8ALMORAL, Scotland tAP) Ola.na's prince guve her a frog. The car driven by the new Princess of WaJes is sporting a oew hood ornament -a silver frog , gift from her hus band, Prince Charles. The frog, spotted by the British press when the princess visited the home of ... l>uchess Anne of Wes tminster, adorns the hood of the princess' silver Ford Escort. Reporters outside the duchess' home shouted questions about reports that the princess was chafing under the restrictions of royal life. Her response was a negative shake of the head and a burst or giggles. Diana also visited a village school" in Achfarrie, Scotland. Teachers said the princess, formerly a part-time kin · dergarten teacher, chatted with the 7-year-olds and gave two of them piggy-back rides PG&E plants kill fish More than 500 million fingerlings sucked into cooling pipes SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -"The chance or one of Lbose forced to make modtrlcations, Two Contra Costa County power fish growing to an adult 111 one ln termed by Arnott "very difficult pl anti; kill milllons of yowic fl.sh a m 111 ion.·' said PG & E and expensive." each year, according to a ~rt spokesman Harry Arnott. "No Th 1 be' t di db which also says t he plants evidence has been available that e report s mg s u e Y h r · b members of the state Depart-probably aren't responsible for t e number o striped ass ment or Fish and Game, the declining fish populations available to sport fishermen s tate Water Quality Control nearby. would increase ir the power 0 More than 500 million young plant intake losses were re-Board and the Bay· elta Study h aid team. fi s h each year are s ucked duced," es . through debris.screens into cool-.. PG&E must think that the "We are skeptical of PG&E's J·ng pi""S at Pacific Gas & Elec-conclusions" on how the plants ..-average sportsman is an idiot if ff th r· h l tl aid tric Co. plants in Pittsburgh and U a ect e 1s popu a on, s they expect people to be eve Vh d · k f y · h d Antioch, and most of those "Mh uld Pete a w1c o as an ~ that the striper fishery wo are killed, according to the re-not be affected by the loss of Game. port prepared for PG&E. more than 300 million baby "We certainly are not going to State records show that the bass, .. said Ken Fraser. presi· take PG&E"s analysis at face population of striped bass has dent of United Anglers of value," he said, but he added, declined by 70 percent and that California. "We also are not in a position to of salmon by 65 percent since take a cursory look and say that 1912 in the San Francisco Bay-"If I were to kill that many they're wrong." Sacramento Delta region. fish, I'd be in jail," said Daly Salmon and striped bass both City conservationist Ralph The Pittsburgh plant, built in live as adults in the oceanl. but Atengo. "But PG&E has a 1952 and expanded several times r eturn to fresh or braulsh license to kill. They're playing since, Is responsible for killing water to lay eggs and there they. God." about 468 million fish a year and s pend their juvenile period. the Antioch plant for 80 million. But the PG&E report says that If a state board finds that the according to the report. The decline probably can't be tied to plants are ravaging the fish plants are by Car the largest in the power plants. population, PG&E could be the Delta region. ~~~~~~-~~~-~-...:....:...:.....!::...::..._.:....:....:~~_;_;,,~~~-~~~...:_-=-~~-=-~__;__;;;__;_;~--'--'-~ Before you buy any make of car, call ~-I'll save you time & money. Benefit from my buying clout I pur-office. low overhead No salesmen. chase cars in contract lots of 1 to no commiS6ions. Get prices from us. 100 for corporate fleets We can ol>-any make of car Then compare for tain substantial savings for quah-yourself. (And tell your frien~s.) tied individuals_ We do the price Call. 9 to 5. Robt Hixson Equipment shopping & haggling. Ours is a busy Co. ask for Virginia. 714 645-~. -~ ....... POINTING NOWHERE Salinas Hi gh School Principal Babe Huber ponders arrows in front of his school. where Caltrans was putting in turn lanes on Hig hway 68 when a few arrows became confusing. although amusing. to motorisb Anyone following the arrows would end up on somt•body·.., lawn as there·s no street there. DIVORCED? Tune Alone does not heal all the wounds DIVORCE RECOVERY \WRKSHOP 8 hours only! 40% off Help, Support and Guidance for any divorced or separated person Six Tuesday Evenings Oct. 6 -Nov. 10 -7:30-9:30 St. Andrews Presbyterian Church Newport Beach St. Andrews Road at 15th St Across From Newport Harbor Hrgh S 15 00 Regrstratron For more information caU: 631-2880 9:00-5:00 Mon...fri. HOME RECORDER •~emote• 2-4-6 Hr •VHS Video Recorder •Same as Magnavox 83 10 •Same as Ovasar 50 15 OPEN STOCK ONLY *538 non ~-"\. ...,. .,,.,nccN J-~~, Ota~ 1/, r -~ COLORT.V. ~-·. -YI ... • _:...--i t ,·· . ~ SA~/ SL ~ _,•2131 w/trade WE SEU MANOS OPEN SUNOAY 11 s _...._~m'1 TELEV1SIONS MOVIES COMPLETE *MOVIES* OVER 1000 TO RENT All LlllST RELEASES •BLANK TAPE '11" •ACCESSORIES VARIETY ANAHEIM NEWPORT BEACH :n:i SO EUCLID 149 RIVERSIDE DR PH .776-8711 PH.548-2213 ----- ·C:t r· .. ,,~ 0 · ®" ,,..--,~~' -v 1ews '11 '~·. ~~} <;'lJental HealtJift.J ., .~· By GERALD WINKLER, O.O.S. \f.) IRRIGATING DEVICES Recently. the "'ater pick or oral irrigating device has become popular How do they work? The water pick cleans teeth by irriga- tion with tiny jets of puluting water which clean around the gums. between the teeth and under bridges where the toothbrush and even noss sometimes cannot reach. The pulsating water jets. flush out tood particles from dif t icult-to-reach ~pols where food collects . The dental irr1gator Is not recommended for small children. but for children over 12 years with orthodontic bands. the devke is invaluable In flushing out food particles Some dentists have reservations about the use of a wuter pick de pending on the condi· lion of your teeth and gums, i.o 1l might be wise lo check with your dentist who is famiUar with your particular condition before buying one In any case. re- member that water picks do not remove plaque only food . So. 1l is to be used as a part not as your whole cleansing process. Cerald Winkler. O.D.S. · and .\ssoclates 1401 Avocado. Sult~ 54'5. Ntwport Beach Phone: 5*-4100 L.M.Boyd ,in{~r,:; Dai" Pil I 14k gold and ~ diamonds ~ For one day only, we've added $250,000 w~rth of 14k gold and diamonds to our regular stock Our beautiful 14k gold jewelry includes chains. charms and charmholders. bracelets pendants and rings, some set with semi- precious stones. In our Fine Jewelry Dept. Reg. 10.00 to 255.00, sale 5.99 to 152.99 Save on diamond pendants, earrings. cocktail, engagement and men's rings. Choose solitaires. diamond clusters or diamonds with other precious stones. all in 14k gold settings. Our Diamond Counselor will be here to tielp you. Reg. 150.00 to 1295.00. sale 89.99 to 776.99 Wednesday only September 30 Huntington Beach 12 noon to 8 pm ... Some lllustratlons may be enlarged to show detail. Styles shown may vary by store. Wed., September 30: Huntington Beacn •Adams Ave. at Brookhurst St. \ ' t ' ---~------~----~--....... -~------------------... 1?---~------~----~--------------------------------------------------------------. Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Tue1d.ay, September 28, 1881 Law restricts plan for county airport There's a scarce resource in Orange County. but one that has nothing to do with mining or manufacturing The resource is the 41 Jet de partures permitted daily from John Wayne Airport under noise control Policies established by Orange County government. How to divide up those flights in a manner that is fair to the commercial air carriers that want to serve Orange County and in conformance with a 1978 law to increase competition among a irlines has been troubling coun· ty airport officials for more than 18 months . Five carriers want to servl' Orange County AirCal and Republic Airlines. pointing to the investments they a nd /or their predecessors made in Orange County. naturally want the lion's share of the flights . Pacific Southwest Airlines, Fron· tier Airl ines a nd Wes t ern Airlines. also want shares of the market. PSA has been the most vocal in that regard. bringing a lawsuit against the county to win more than the two departures a irport officials were initially willing to grant. PSA prevailed . U .S. Dis tract Court Judge Terry Hatter la~t Friday rejected a county ail'l>Ort access plan that would have al· located nights under the follow- ing formula · AirCa l. 23.5. Republlc. 11.5. PSA. three. and Frontier, three. <Western would have been evicted from the airport because county officials aren't s atisfied with a program it has advanced for meeting noise redu ction goals outlined in othel' portions of the plan. l The Judge indicated that the county 's plan discriminated against PSA by giving 85 percent of the permitted daily departures to only two carriers. AirCal and Republic . While he seemed to leave some room for the county to cpnsider the two airlines' his- torica l investments in awarding flight allocations, he made it clear that any new plan county gove rnment o fficials s ubmit mus t be far less weighted toward the long·standing incumbents. Regardless of what might seem to be the right thing to do. the simple fact is that the federal law deregulating the airline in· dustry prevents much by way of favoritism. leaving county of. ficials with little . if any, ch01ce other than to d evelop a new plan that gives mo re to those on the 011tside who want 1t. New gol.d rush risky ··You s hall not pre~s down upon the bro\\ of labor thb crown of thorns. you shall not crucify mankind upon a cross of gold ... With th a t hi st ri onic lan guage. William Jennings Br~ an made the gold s tandard a kc,· b~ue in the 1896 election. To· da~·. 8.5 years late r . the Reagan .1dministrnt1on 1s c·ons1denn~ a return to sOml' form of gold ~land· <trd in its fi~ht to heal the sick \merican econom,· Gold ha.., an unden1uble n1agic about 1t. but we hope thl· White House doesn't rush into '~ fl a t c o u I d b e l' c o n o m i t' quicksand. A number of ·~upply-s1de · · C'conomists who hl:lve the prcsi · dent ·~ ear bclie,·e a golci ~tand ard 1s the uni\' ..,ure t·ure for in flat ion. But other experts see serious t·ompli cation~ with re\'i\'ing this 1el ic of earl" 20th centu n l'tonomic polic)·. · Studying the tomplex issue b 1 he 17·membe r Gold Commission. <.1 pres1dent1al panel The rom m ission is havin g a difficult time r esolving differing ,·iewpoints on t he m atter. a nd ma\' not com pletc lh 'itudacs unt1i next '>Um · Oll'L Despite ih importance. the gold issue and its ramifications are probabl~· \'er~ bewildering to a great man) people In the simplest form of a gold "tandard. the dollar would be directly backed by gold A fi xed price per ounce would be set a nd greenbacks could be traded for a set amount of ~old he ld in re!'>ervc ,by the federal go\'ernment The theory 1s that pa per money would have the bac king of an asset with intr insic value and whch b uni versally acceptable Under this ~ystem . the m on· • cy s upply could rise only if the suppl~ of gold rose Such a s~·stem was used to regulate the currency before World War I t.:nder pre~ent practiCl'"'· the Federal Rcsen·e regul:.Jte~ thl• mone~.-supply. It sounds a~ if 1t could be ef· fecti\'l' But there are ~eriou!'> drawback!'> One is th<1t control O\'er the mone) supply would be left to llw ,.:.Jgarie!'> of world gold produc t aon Durrng a rcces~ion. when it might be nece~~ar~· to incre ase I he monc~· s uppl y. recover y could bl' hampe red if the gold :-.uppl~ remained static Another objection 1!'> the.ct much of the wortd·s gold is mined in South Africa and the Sonet L' nion two countrie~ not on th(' best of terms with the C S. Either could do considerable damage to :.J gold·based econo my by stoµ pang gold :-.ales -or u~ing the metal to soak up dollars. Also. ··gold bugs.. overlook the fact that gold m ay not be a:-. tough a discipline as they claim . In 1934. Franklin Roosevelt took the L'.S off the gold standitrd in order to h el p fi g ht l the l>epre:-.sion . L~·ndon Johnson and Richard '.'lixon further reduced the rnle of gold when our bal a n c e -of -pa~·menh problem.., threatened to drain the go\'ern me nt·s gold re'ier ve. We hope the administration will thoroughly cons ider these difficulties before pushing for u renewed gold standard . A-; Treasurv Secretarv Donald T Regan has wisely pointed out. th(' allure of gold will not provide the · quick fi x .. for our sick eronom~·. as the s upply s iders '>eem to believe. Extreme caution should be the watchword. Op1n1ons expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Otner views ex pressed on trus page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is inv1I ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O .. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone 17 14) 64i·4321 . LM. Boyd/Smog not.e ll isn't true that swift winds keep cities at high altitudes free of pollu- tion. You know about Denver's sometime smog. Mexico City way up there is likewise afflicted. It's said to have one of the •rimlest metropolitan air covers in the world. m fact. Surrounding mountains cup the filthy float. Q. Where do Mary and Robert rank on today's list of most popular names? A. They don't , research reveals Latest roster of leading names for babies includes Jennifer, Kristin, Amanda , Sara , Matthew , Christopher, Jason and David. No Mary. No Robert. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat No member of Great Britain's Parliament can die legally while at a Parlimentary session. If stricken there, a member is carried from the chambers even before a pulse is taken. Q. Where's the world's highest golf course? The lowest ? A. Highest -Leadville, Colo. The Mt. Massive Golf Club. At 10,100 feet. Lowest -ln Death Valley. Furnace Creek Golf Club. At 217 feet below sea level. Who said the game of basketball is a contact sport? The U.S. Supreme Courtsaid it. In a l980decision. Thomas P. Haley Publisher TltOmn A. Murpltlne Ed itor BarNr• K,.lblch Editorial P~ Editor J • All-year sessions wasteful 1 n mid·Septem ber the Legislature concluded its 1981 session after a run of 289 calendar days Actually. Speaker Willie Brown, by stopping the clock five minutes before midnight. extended the Assembly session one and a half hours into the 290th day. He then cast doubts as to its conclusion by suggesting the solons may be called back into special session before the year's end. Ir you are puzzled as to how you crowd 289 days into a year which was only 258 days old at time of adjourn· ment, add 31 days for last December which is when the 1981 session con· vened. That was part of the full·time Legislature plan adopted ten years ago. Meeting in December. the public was told, would expedite the work AND EVEN though tbis year 's session was spread over more than 41 weeks the legislators actually met only 130 days during that time. lo addition to the Christmas. East er and summer vacation recesses. the solons took three day weekends regularly throughout They would have taken more but if they recess longer than three days the $50 a day tax-free living allowance stops. So by limiting their weekends they are able to collect the $50 a day seven days a week throughout the 289 days except- ing for the three seasonal recesses. This gives them a neat Sl.500 a month tax free augmentation to their regular $28,000 annual salaries for most of the months of the year . Many of the 130 days the Legislature did meet were short days. Usually they meet briefly at noon on Monday and wind up with a s hort session Thursday morning. This gives those from the sou them part of the state ample time to rl y 1n Monday mornings and fl y home Thursday afternoon. THEIR WORK HABITS clearly dem- onstrate that there is no need for full· time annual sessions. But for the fact the legislators have become enamored with the easy money. the tax free $50 f; ~ .. ; IARl WATfRS ~~- per diem allowances, the lawmakers themselves would be proposing a change to limit the length of sessions. The propos al, adopted in 1966. for full· lime annual legislative sessions was put to the people on the basis that the st ate's popul a tion, then about 16 million, had become so large that it re· quired the full -time attention of the legislators. The truth is it was only a ploy lo justify the increase of legislative salaries from $6,000 to S16,000, a pro· vision which was part or the s ame ballot proposal. Th at the argument the population required full-time sessions was a hoax c an he seen by the fact the Texas Legislature to lhis day meets only 140 calendar days every other year, Its population of 14 million 1s nearly that or California's in 1966. While Texas is one of only about a dozen states which still meet only once every two years, all but about 15 states have strict limitations on the length of sessions, the average being less than 60 days . And some without limitations nevertheless discourage procrastination by s hutting off the legislators' pay after a specific number or days. none extend· ing the pay more than 120 days. That unlimited se ssions tend to postpone legislative action on critical problems has been well demonstrated in California. It was the failure of the Legisla ture to deal with the property laxes which were forcing people out of their homes which brought about the Proposition 13 initiative. That is but one example And procrastination is just - one of the adverse results of the unlimit· ed sessions. THE FULL·TIME sessions have turned t h e Legislature into a bureaucracy or its own as hundreds or employees run around dreaming up un· needed and unwanted legislation and hundreds more ··politick" for their employers and themselves. The year· round sessions have driven away the "citizen·legislator." replaced by full· time professional officeholders whose sole interest is that of entrenching themselves. This overpowering drive to retain public office has turned the legislators into a pack akin to hyenas preying upon the lobbyists in their fierce purs uit of campaign dollars. The whole scene has become a dis· grace to California and it is time to end the boondoggle. This can only be done by limiting the sessions, returning to a biennial Legislature. It will take an in· itiative action to do it. Union leaders denied Poland entry WASHINGTON -AFL·CIO president Lane Kirkland was forced to call off, at least temporarily, his long·scheduled visit to Poland to attend the reconvened Solidarity free trade union congress when no Polis h visa was issued LO time for his scheduled departure. There was no official comment from AFL -C IO headquarters where spokesmen said "we are still waiting for the visa:· But unofficially, the labor movement's foreign policy spl!cialists interpreted it as part of a major Polish government crac kdown against out· siders. Irving Brown, the A FL·CIO's man in Europe, was informed in Stockholm that his Polish visa is no longer valid and that if he attempts to enter Poland for the Solidarity rongress he will be de· ported. A similar message was given the representative of the International Confederation of Free Trade Unions based in Brussels. KIRKLAND HAD planned to take a train from Was hington to Montreal. from where he was scheduled to fl y to Europe. thus honoring the U.S. air traf· fie controllers strike. The second half of the Solidarity congress began in Gdansk Saturday. The Polish government long has been unhappy about Solidarity's close links fr_r:_. f-VA-NS-/-ND-VA-1 -~ with the AFL·CIO. accusing Kirkland or s eeking to undermine Poland's com· munist regime. In fact, he has privately urged Solidarity leader Lech Walesa to prevail on his colleagues to restrain their rhetoric during the second half of the congress. Specifically, Kirkland urged no more denunciations of the leading role of the Communist Party in Poland. Invitations to Kirkland and other Western leaders particularly rankled the Polish regime because their coun· terparls in Eastern European com- munist nations were not invited to the Congress. Like the AFL·ClO, Solidarity contends that there are no true trade unionists in the Soviet Union and other communist.bloc nations. THE POLISH Embassy here, follow- ing its usual procedure. had no explana· tion for failure of Kirkland's long. requested visa lo be iss ued. But coupled with increasing difficulty by Western journalis t s In getting visas, the crackdown on entrance by Western labor leaders s uggested a closing by the Warsaw' government of its window to the West. That might have been done mainly to impress the Soviet government. which has frequently accused the Warsaw re· gime for being too soft on Solidarity. The more ominous explanation might be that Westerners are being kept out of Poland in advance of a Soviet invasion. But foreign policy experts doubt the Warsaw regime would have advance notice or any decision by the Kremlin to use force. Rabid partisans only har1n their causes I don't know about you, but I've been a "leaner-againster" all my adult life, and don't think I'll ever change that way . Whenever I run into someone who espouses a particular position with SYDllY HARRIS great intensity. 1 automatically lean to the other side. And not just to be con· t.rary. Jn the raging abortloD controversy, for instance, most of the "pro-choice" arguments seem so insensitive that they make me want to join the rt1ht-to·life committee; whUc at the same tlme. most of the rl1bt-to-We polemics are so rabld that they prop l me in the dl:tte· tJon of Lbe abortlonlsts I crtE TIDS only as a recent exam· pie, but it ls an old story Put me ln a nest o( rld..icala and I start soundint Uke Bill Buckley (God help me>; and when l am nnounded by econom1c royallall, .. you would think I helped Karl Marx write the Manifesto. Each faction an· noys me for its obvious -to me, at least slighting of the valid arguments on the other side. It is all saints or sinners, nothing in between. to these people. But In real life, motives are mixed, truth is not the exclusive possession or of any single group, and there are usually three sides to every question -the two ln conflict, and a middle ground. This is not to say that a middle-of·the· road position is always desirable or cor· rect: sometimes it is simply the product of lodecislveness or timidity or tepidity. The people who favored slavery were wrong, beyond a doubt, and you bad to take a stand ooe way or the other. But most matters of policy are not so morally clearcut, and, as Uncoln re· marked on another lssuc, "The subject is dutlcult, and eood men do not agree." The rabid parUsans rar~y. it ever, think that the subject Is dlmcuJt., or that tho8c who oppose them can real· ly b well·meanlnt men. Their realltY has no hues, only black and white, tood and bad. No ranatlc con sideu hhnHlf 1 fanatic, or calls himself one; this is a label reserved for people with strong convictions we do not share. But we may know the fanatic by three signs: Cl l be ascribes evil or uely motives to his opponents; (2) he smells a COD· spiracy against himself, and (3) he de- nies any possibility of a "gray area" on the subject. Most causes are hurt more by their .Proponents than by their foes. Will lbc two,cent lncreaae ln •• tu buy better roads than the HTeO-Cent ' gas lax dJd u.nckr Brown'• appolnt.td Caltran.s chief, or will t\ be Jut more wasted money? l Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 29, 1981 ~--------------------.... ---------------------------------------------~ Book order refund on I • its way Capris , Mustang . recalled Bend. Kan. 87~. Your order wUl be shipped Immediately Apparently. thete·WM 1 prob· lem with Fuller Brush deliveries ln the Newport area, and other readers who may have had the same exper1ence should take the steps outlined above to 1et their orders filled. We the People ACT, was sentenced to three years in prison (Qr falling lo me tax returna and filing false withholding certificates wlth his employer. DETROIT <AP) - OriveRhall problems have prompted Ford Motor Co. to recall 1,369 o f Its 1981 Ford Mustangs und Mercury Capris. DEAR PAT DUNN: I a.e11' an order for a 'extbook to Holt, Rlnt>hart and Wlmton in J ufte 1980. I Wall told In mld·Dffc:mber that lhe book was out or istock lndeno.tttly ud that my back order had bt-co canulc:d. My tbree letters rf'questlng a refund hue been . l1nored. Wou.ld you please try your luck get· tine tbe $17.31 rt'fu.od due me? R. E., Huntington Beach It's on it..s way with profus(' apologies from the publi:stier. Beller pay klXeJ DEAR READERS: The new tax bill passed by Congress has somethiftS to s ay to Illegal tax protesters: Watch oat! In order to avoid stiff penalties and criminaJ prosticutlon, Individuals should re· view their W-4 Forms. The law states thJtt employees may not claim HemptJon from withholding unless they had no tax Uabillty for federal income tax In the prior year and anticipate no liability in the current year. In addition, the number or withholdin1 allowances claimed on the W-4 Form may not exceed the number lo which the emplo~ee is entitled. All employees must certify under penalty of perjury that the facts stated on the W .4 Form are true. Ford said the vehicle's t 1 driveshaft.s may be too 1 lone . I f so, the 11 driveshafts will have to ~tting the bfUJJhoff DEAR PAT DUNN: I placed an order with a Fuller Brus h represt-ntative July 23 and paid $18.92 by check. My check was cashed the next day, but I've never received m y order. The Newport Beach number ror Fuller Brush bas been disconnected and my repeated calls to the Santa Ana number, which just bas a recording, have never been ans wered. I hope you can help me! Beginning in 1982, em~ who file a false W-4 Form with their emtloyers to avoid income tax withholding will face a $500 civiJ penalty and a criraillal pemtty of $1.000 and a year in jail. Currently, th* civil penalty ls $50 and the criminal penalty is $500 and a year in jail. KHAOAFY "SICK" I talian journalist Oriana F'allac1 s aid sh~ would have killed L i b \: a n d i c l a t o r '.\1oainmar Khadaf\ dunng a meeting with him ·'if I had had the guts to do 1t · She said Khadaf\ 1s "C'linicallv -;irk:. and .. a murdert•r · be replaced because they could damage a . 'i transmission seal. caus· • ·Got a problem'' Then wnte to Pot ing tr ansmission fluid to leak T he driveshaft prob· lem was "not a safety con('ern," said Robert E.V .. Newpo.rt Beach The f'uller Brush division manager ad· vises you lo send a copy of your order, the representative's name. your receipt and the front and back of your canceled <'he<'k to· Fuller Brush, Customer Servi<'e Department, P .O. Box 1247. We~lpurt Addition, Great T he need for •tiff er penaJtits came about when earlier this 1ear several organizations were advising indiViduals to stop paying in· come truces. They instructed their rouowers to claim excessive withholdift& allowances or exempt status on the W-4 Forms they filed with their employers. The Internal Revenue Service took quick action against tbeae illegal protesters. Lee B. ' Hall, a director or a tax prot.est group called '-1. Vunn Pat will cul red to~ gettmg • the answers and action you need to sol~ 111equ1t1es m government and ,.., • business Marl yo-6'r questions tu Pot Dunn. At Yoiir SenJJce. Orange Coast Doily Pilot. P.O Bo.c IS6fl. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As many lelter11 as possible will be answered. but phoned inquanes or letters not mcludmg the reader's full name. address and busme.,s hours' phone number cannot be considered This column appear.~ dall11 e:r cept Sunday11 · H. Transou, m anager of / th e Ford Parts and ., Service Division service engineering office. The <'ompany said it would pay all costs in· volved in the repairs and reimburse <'ar '• owners who already have paid ror such re· · · pairs ., With Your Own Desktop Computer! s2495 • 48K Memory • 306K Disk Storage • Compact, Attractive One-Piece Cabinet Put a TRS-SO Model ID on your desk to improve your personal productivity and save time. We have ready-to-run software for flhancial planning, elec- tronic filing, and word processing (printer optional). ASK ABOUT OUR LEASING PLAN, TOO I 1 Ji SEE IT AT YOUR NEAREST iR I· I [•Jf I y I, t! RADIO SHACK STORE, A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION COMPUTER CENTER OR PARTICIPATING DEALER PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL STORES AND DEALERS For The Orange Coast ITALIAN VILLA NOVA 3131 W. Coast llw~·. 6~2·7AAO AU major crPdit"card'i. Italian cut~tnl' On•r lnol..rni:: Newport Bay 01nm•r ~crv<·d nt~hl ly until J a m P1uno H<11 n anqurt f'ac1htles ALI SI O'S 1670 Newport 642·8Z93 Master Oiarge, Baak of Amerka l'he best in Italian cuisine. Live en· tt·rtarnment nightly. Banquet r.1c1htiC's STUFT NOODLE 215 Rivt'r!tide, :\t~wport Beach 548· 7418 Re~1.111r;int Writer:,· Award winning Re~1.1111 :int for 1 he past 4 yea,..., MEXICAN TNT TACOS N' TEQUILA 3300 W. Coast Hwy. 548·2224 All major cr C"dlt .card' Happy hour 7 days 4 i p.m Sunda~ Brunch 10·3 with complime ntary champagne Lrve ·entcrlainml'nt CAMI NO ME X I CAN RESTAURANTS Irvine Ave, 9 mesa Dr. 146-3228 Brookburst at Adams Huntington Beach M3·t'748 :\l;u ~Jr1tas and GREAT Mexican food. 14 Pet.ll~ menu Weekend brunch. To go packaging Lunch & dinner everyday. \lo!.l credit cards AMERI CAN AI RPORTER INN HOTEL Mediterranean Roo m 18700 ~tacArthur Blvd .. I rvine Speclallzing in.Continental Cui.sine 7 days a week Fc1.1turlnJ,t Sunday Brunch 11.J 1\11 major credit cards accepted Reservations 833-2770 ------.. ~-Save money and shopping time. Dllhl .BI._, Read the ~I, nllll FF? DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642-5678 B Diego Federal makes Tax-Free Savings simple! Simple as I, 2, 3! I We guarantee you the higher tax-free yield-either Oct. 1st or Oct. 5th! Tax-Free Savings Accounts o pened Oct. lst thro u g h 4th will earn a yield of 12.61%. However. on Oct. l ta new tax-free yield will be announced. It will be the yield for Tax- Frec A ccou nts opened Oct. 5 th through Nov. 1st. If you open your Interim account now, we'll guarantee that your Tax-Free Ac- count wiJI be opened at the higher of the two yields-eith e r on Oct. I t or on Oct. 5th, depending which date provides the hi gh e r y ie ld . M eantime. your Inte rim account* deposit will be earning a rate that's hig h e r than the inte rim rate advertisedt by any Cal- ifornia bank or savings and loan (with assets over $2 billion). And if you d~cide Tax-Free Savings is not for you, you'll be able to get your principal and interest out of your In- terim account i .. •itlwut penalty ... right up to the day your Tax-Free Account i to be opened. 2 Exclude up t o $2,000 in interest from federal taxes! San Diego Federal's insured Tax-Free Ac- count will enable you to exclude up to $2,000 Based on a Tax-Free yield of 12.61% If 1-joint rna!IW YOUf tu bnlck~ ,_., --h : •Ill likely bto: (Oieda SdMdUle TC. line J ol 1-1990 ttt•rn) SJ.4.600-SJUOO JM m.~m.JOO J7'l --- SJU00-545,800 4J'J, S45.llJ0..$60.808 ~ $60,GONIS.600 54~ --- \-ov •ould ha>~ lo nm this t•u~ .)'ldcl: 18.S41f 20.02'l --- Z2.12'l -- 1'.7~ 27.Al't • lneenm •ccount backed by U.S Government Secunucs. It 1s not 1 .avin~ .cm11n1. nol insured by the F.S.L.l.C., and IS nor 1u·.frec I l\dve msed 1n a maJOf newspaper on the day you open your ln1enm k'OOunl in interest from federal taxe if fi ling jo intly. up to $1.000 if filing individually. At the an- n ou nced yie ld of 12.61 %. couple filing jointly can deposit up to $15.860 and earn to- tally tax-free interest ; individual can de- posit up to $7,930. Your tax-free yield is guaranteed for the full 12-mo nth term of the account, an d your savin gs are insured to $100,000 by an agency of the federal govern- ment. 3 Free Interest Checking PLUS '" with $2,500 balance! When yo·u deposit $2.500 or more in San Di- ego Federal' in ured Tax-Free Savings Ac- count, you receive Interest Checking PLUS free of service c ha rge ... and that o pens the door to 24-H OUR TELL.ER service at over 60 locati ons s tatewide. and to TELE-PAY, which enable · you to pay b ill by phone! ••Money Management News" FREE! Visit San Diego Federal today. We'll si t down· and explain the benefits of Tax-Free Savings-plain and simple. We'll a lso give you a free copy of our .. Money Ma nagement News," highlighting the benefits of Tax-Free Savings a nd how the new tax law benefits you and your savings. At San Diego Federal. we make Tax-Free Savings simple! For a ll current rates, call RATE LINE Coming Nov. 1st! Higher 6'J, Passcard Account Coming Dec. 1st! (D) 552-8855 E1citin1 new IRA-PLUS Account Uading the way with Tax-Free Savings/ " . , an a ... . .. 4 I I' ., ·' • f • t -') ' f .. 'f.. .. --,._ ---...., -~-~--------------------..... ----....................................... ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfTuHday, September 29, 1981 11 'l·SI>.\ Y -EV~­•:001•• NIWI CMAAUl'8 ANGEL.I TMASUAI HUNT M"A"8°H Fiamed n--114H Ctete Robefll vlllt• the 4077111 IO< • r~ on tile IMllngs ol Ille peoj)le II "IOnecl there ., HAWAII FM!-0 e 11> !LECTAIC CC>MftANY (A) CJ) CUNEWt 0 A8CH£W8 Q!NICNEWS ·~ D 8UU..8EYE m WE.COME &AcK. KOTTVI The $-lttloga decide to b•nk, up and 1ee11. lhel• IMUllM OUllld• Ille walls of Bucllanan (Part 2) fl) KCET NEWSBEA T Ill!) 8TUOI08EE "Friends" Explore under- water caves, v•lll a New Hamp1llira town wllara klda In trouble are oen1110 help and a secona chanee (R) (J)Q!NEWS @) 8ARHEY MILLER Wo)o finds 1111 love Ille lllOQl"O and 1111 concern mounllng wnen tna pres· surea ol n1s tob cauae him a aena111ve emo11onal problem PETER ALLEN ANO THE AOCKETTES The Rcx;keUes Join s1noer Peter Allen on staoe at RedlO Chy Music Hall 1n lhla muSlcal spec;1111 l,'tMOVIE • * ·~ 'Honeysuckle Rose" ( 1980) wune Nelson Oyen Cannon Whlla on lour a Te11as country· weslarn s1noer t>ocome5 Involved with Ille seductive d•UQlller ol hit s1dek1ek even lhouQh he sloll IOves h11 Slay-•l·home wile PG' 8:116 f) EDITORIAL 1:00 U C88 NEWS Q N8CNEWS D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN ln91>lra1oon Point 1s se1 lor demoUllon lor 8 new free- wey ott-ramp 0 ABCNEWS NAUTICAL TREASURES Diver s lJI mg up part of ''" andent ship hull in .. The A1H·1t.•11t M.mner-." toni~ht at 9 nn Chun nt•I 28 wf\lla In New York tor he< 111nar·1 remarrieoe 'A' ZJMOVIE • * • "Quo l/adis" ( 1951) Rober1 l lylor Deborah Kerr A Roman atlatocre1 gelnt Nero·s dlslevo> wllen he falls In love wllll a ChrlS· 11ano1r1 7:30 IJ 2 ON THE TOWN Featured a Los Angetea ctlurch where your lan1a. &IH c1n be loGled out v1&11 mastermind •oenl Ken Kr1oan. find out what hop· poned to lhe Richard M NlaonMuaeum I) FAMIL V FEUD 0 LAVERNE & SHIRL.Fl' &COMPANY Aller someone SlealS Shir- ley's POOdlO skirt and Lev tl'ne s swee1111 the 01rts become po11ee deco)-5 U EYE ON L.A. Fealured e•plore lhe changes ahead on lhe Jex· uol lronller ol Ille future, a look al women In a man t world, the Oeloraan sporls car C1I MATCHOAME tD M•A•s•11 tiawkeye and Trapper, wllll an assist from Reder make up a fk:tlllOul C&P· ll•n 1n ordet 10 donate his salary 10 an orphanaoe ti) TIC TAC DOUGH Eli) MACNEJL I LE>iRER REPORT '1i) NEWS (J) P.M. MAGAZINE ®) YOU ASKED FOR IT 1H, RACE FOR THE PENNANT 89rry Tompluns and Tim MoCarver recap dlvlslonal oeseball s1and1nos ana 1nlarv1ew some of Ille game's IOP players Btua Angel• put IOQ8ther an all allow, Chef T otl makes 1 1oma10 ••lad, Vicki Lansky discovers unde< a d0118!" ~I 1tem1 ti) MOVIE • • • · Tne S1epford Wives" ( 19751 Katnar1ne Roea. Paule PrentlN A young Connec11cu1 11ouae- ... 11e will\ modern ldNa ts appalled el lhe robot·ll~e accuracy and 1tranoe $miles w1111 wlllell neigh· borhood wives lulllll the<r domestic duties fill COSMOS ''lhe Shores Of llla Cos- m1< Ocean Or Cert Saoan takes viewers on a spec· tacular lllQht throuoh space 1n a slmulaled sctentllk:ally accura1e 1our- ney helfW•y lrom tne edQe ol the known universe to Ear111 (AlO EI:) NOVA Computer•. Spl86 And Provate Llvea' The banellls end po1en11al hazards broug11t at>Out by advanc- es in computer technolc>Qy are 1nves11Qe1ed O (HJ MOVIE * * "Mlddle-AQa Cruy" 11980) Ann·Maroret. Stue. O&rn A feKH developer's sucoeulul )ob and lus- cious wife menaoe 10 drive him 1n10 a mid-hie Ct15'S R I SJ BIZARRE JoM • Syner shows you thongs stranger than lrulh, 1a1g« lhen Ille. and Lanier 1'1an any1111no you·va ever seen In lhese encore pres- en1a11on1 lrom lhe Sllow time Bizarre library l,'tMOVIE 0 YOU ASKED FOR IT G) THE MUPPET$ GuNI Twlooy 11:00 IJ Cl) MOVIE ;, •YI "Tile Heerse" t 19110) Trish VenOevere. Jo5e(lf'I Collen A sertes of blurre end 11owty1no e•i>«HlnCeS dr1ve a youno schoolleach· er 10 lhe edge or insanity 'PG ti) JOKER'S WILD ED OVEREASV "Seit-Esteem" CO·hOSIS Mery Marlin Jim Harlz Gues1s James and Gloria s1-•r1 o EI:) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPOAT Cl) TIC T,AC DOUGH ®} ENTERTAINMENT TONIO HT (B THE MUPPETS GuNt Ario Gutllne (C)MOVIE "' * * 11> "lha Prosoner Of Second Avenue ( 19761 Jack Lemmon, Anne San croft Based on the play by Natl Simon An edver11s1no e.xecut1ve loses 1111 )Ob and hlS sanl1y because of Ina recession and the llechc Manhatlen pace PG' HBO SNEAK PAEV1EW: OCTOBER Hu1b11nd-and-wlle comics Jerry Slllle< end Anne Meara introduce Iha mov· les. specials and sparls evenlS comino 10 Home Box Office In OctObef (0Hot0VIE "'"''lit '11 s My rurn ( 19801 Jill ClayDuroti MlchHI Douglas A bril· llanl ChlC8gO m•lll prol•· sor realizes the problems 1n her llv&-ln relallonshlp when 11\e finds a new love CHANNEL LISTINGS EJ KNXT 1(£1-,,t fi) KN8C t NH(' 0 KTLA 11 110 1 (I) K/\13( 1Allt t 0 KFM A 1r11..,1 0 KHJ TV lhttl I a:>KCST !ABU (I) KT T v 1 I nl1 1 Cl) KCOP TV 1 lml ID K(f l PttS1 m KocE , Pu.,,, 0 1 t; C; It f s 0 ~ * ;, "HIQh Noon Par1 Two Tna Re1urn 01 Woll Kane" 11980) Lee Mafors. David Carraaine W1ll arid Amy Kane make ttieir hrs• v1s11 10 Hadleyv1lle since 111e tamed ounlo9ht and find 11 on the grip ot a boullly· hun1ono marshal (RI U ~PROJECT PEACOCK The BIO S1utte<1 Dog A 11ve-foo1 1111 Srioopy dog touches lhe hves ol those wtio hnll 11 at1e1 •I bt<om~~ separa1eo lrom 11a own8f (RI 0 MO\llE ,. • * Tobruk f 19671 Roe;~ Hua5on Georoe Peppard 8nt11h and Gar man an11-Niu1a blow up German fuel "1pploes 1n Tobruk 0 @) HAPPY DAYS Fonzie 1nv11es the Cunnlno· hams to dinner at Chachfs mol~r s humble aperi- men1 (RI 0 MOl/lE • * • • ··zieoreld Fothes ( 19•6) Fred Aslaore. Judy Garland From heaven Flo Ziegfeld envisions a revue wolh every ma1or star pl&y· ino a par1 tD P.M. MAGAZINE A prohle 01 San Diego Zoo spokeswo man Joan Embery. a loo~ a1 how lhe Ott I • r I Ii Hll(I I llU ft ... WI lo! ~h "l , tWlk'iJ 11 '>l'NI '-ttu>wt1nl•, '-\(" 11 ~•'t I l"tH• N• w N1twor• 1 1:30 0 @; LAVERNE & SHIRLEY Laverne and Shirley's lor- mer drill instructor goes AWOL and pllCheS a tenl 1n 11\e QtrlS apar1~1 tRI Ci> ALL IN THE FAMILY Edith II blamed for negt1- genc;e when she 1s the last pe<s<>n •I lhe Sun5h1ne Home to be w1111 • 1one1y old lady who wanted lo die 0 MOVIE • • ''> ·Cerny· ( 1980) Jodie Foster. Gary Busey An adven1urous youno woman 10tns a carnival lrouoe ana learns aboul the hidden emo11on1 and frus1ra11ons belllnd 111e surtece nappmess ol 111e pe<IOfm8tS R S MOVIE • • • Th-0 Jerk" (1979) Sieve Marlin 8e<nade11e Peters A ChtonlC ICt-·UP makes m1111ons on • weird 1nven11on only 10 lose 11 all 1n consumer damB{ltl suns R t:OO U ~THE SOf>HISTICA TEO GENTS Nine members ol an atll· le11c-soc1al club reunite aller 2!> years 10 pay lrtb· ule to theu IOfme< Cc.ltCh and mentor (Pen t) O ®J THREE'S COMPAHY A case or 1n1ste1<e11 1dent1ty lends Jack a job as 1 ctlel (R)O tD MERV GRIFFIN Youno And Te1en1ed Entertainers" Guetls Garv Coleman. Oanlellfl Brl1ebol1 Tammy Heung. Mary Shore, Cindy Peca Eddie Frias, James Marc;et ED ODYSSEY "The Ancient Merlners" uno-•--tlrehMOloflet• ..ooNl'VOI IM fffttoP• "*'' Of elllOlklitdlno 11\d I.hi ll¥M Of andlnt ... flt. .,. from tllf.. an!pe that u ni! In IM Medlt.,Y111411n ~··Q The Shofaa Of The CO.- mlC OCMn'' Or Carl Sagan 1•11" vie-1 on • spec. 1ecu1er lllQhl throug11 apac;e In 1 •lmutett<J. aGlanllflU"y ICCUtate IOU' nay llallw•y from the edge 01 the •nown unl118tM 10 EM1h (R)C;) I LC)MOVIE • • • * "Tile Emlgran1a I 1972) Mu von Sydow, Liv Ullmann A s ... adleti ~Ml llllllly endure the hardlhlP• or fl0t1tlat Ille wll8n they come to "merl· ct 111 tile 19th can1u,., 9:30 8 9 HAM' TO HA~ llle H1tt1• ln-ttgate Ille mytta1loue dNlll ot a ctoee friend at • haallh 1pa (RIO • ON LOCATION "Pee-Wee Harman" Paul R.ut>ens crMlec:I and 11ar1 In thll sellra OI • 1950'• kkldl8 show IBP«) et Ille Roay In LOI "noefM wHh lhe lmprOVIMllOnll trou,,. TIMI Groundllnge 10:00 I) CJ) UNIT 4 An en11-1error1tt strike torca at1emp11 to ,,.. • oovarnman1 olflclel lrorri ravoluOonarlal GDG>ll?i> NEWS f1ll PRESENT£ .. Alberto Salazer" Tile winner ol Iha 1980 N....,, Vora. Maral"°" 11 prol11ed l:'tMOVIE • ... 'NaS1y Habns' (1977) Glenda Jackaon. Mellna Marcouro Several nun• In a Philadelphia convent become enmeallec:I In a Watero•te·llke scandal es a new Abbess II about 10 be appointed 'PG' \l CHARLES CHAMPUN TAU<SwrTH ... "Mervyn LeRoy" 1o:20 (l) MO\llE * * * "5-nt Like Old Tlmea.. l 1980) Goldie Hewn, CIMtvy Chase A s<>lt·haat1ed lewyat Is torn bel-n her h0pela$1 8X· husband· turned-bank tObber and her UPllghl pt"41111 husband who Is running lor Cellfornla 111omay ger>ar al 'PG· t0:30 m NEWS Cl) INDEPENDENT NETWORK NEWS ED FAST FORWARD "Medicine" Genette enoi· naerino. microsurgery. dlaonosuc and applied medk:lne all connect man wllh mect>lnaa EI:) OOYSSEY "Tiie Ancient Mariners' Underwater ercnaeoio01111 r8CQlll1rucl the deval~ mant ol ah1pbullding end the lives of anclenl saelar· er• from 111rea alllps thal sank 1n the Medlterraneen lhOUSllnds or years aoo O rH RACE FOR THE PENNANT Berry Tompkins and Tim McCerve< recap d1v1s1onel baseball s1andlngs and Interview some or the oame's top players ~PIPS Comedy Is • vllf)' tunny lopk: wllen David Brenner, Andy Kaulmen, Robert Klaln and Sieve Landes· befQ 091 IOQ81her al Iha nlQl\lspot wllere 1nay •II got their s1ar11 11:001) 0 0 CIJ ®)!B N£WS 0 SATURDAY NIOHT Gueits Ari Garfunkel. Jesse Dl•on Singers, Phoebe Snow 0 NEWLYWED GAME G) THE JEFF1!R80NS ti) BEHNYHILL Aa host ot • QUIZ SllOW, Benny WK 10 preseo1 • t>eau11fu1 blonde W11h a ho4· lday tor lwo ED DICK CAVETT Guest chairman ol tna FCC Cllarles Fems IA) (H)MOVIE * • ,. "Seams Like Old Times" ( 1980) Goldie Hawn Che\ly Cllue A sol1-hear1ed lawyer os torn belw&en her hopeleu e>.· husband-turned-bank robber and lie< uptlQlll preser11 husband who 11 runn1no lot Calllornlll allorney oeneral 'PG' (0 MOVIE *''I' Tiie Ecatasy G1r1s· ( 1979) Leslie Bovee. Geor- o•ne Spelvln. An 8111ng mu. llonalre st1pul1les In his wtll th81 Iha live youno 11e.r8818S in line lor hit money will be slrlckan lrom hit 190acy Should they eno•oe In sexual misconduct S MOVIE 11 * .. Assault On Prec:lnC1 13" 11976) "uslln S1oker, TUBE TOPPERS NBC IJ 8: 00 -•·Project Peacock." A big stuffed Snoopy dog helps its new owners . KTLA e 8:00 I ludson 1:tnd George World Wur II movi~. "Tobruk." Rock Peppard star in a KIU 0 8:00 "Z1egfield Follies . f'red Astaire and Judy Garland star In a story about the great shows KCET @ 8:00 and KOCE 9 9:00 "Cos mos." Carl S1:tgan takes viewers on a flight through space. Oatwtn Jotton Polk:- end conv1e11 ere fOfcecl to Joln together to prevent • 1_...ege gano lrom com- pletett occupytno • police 1tatl0n. 'R' 11:30 U CJ) ALICE Allee taltea • llnglng )Ob et I •OUQll nlQlltclub end winds up b8lnQ .,.,estec:t and ch••oad will\ aooctt- 1~. (R) Ua!TONIOHT Guest h<>at Joan Rivers Gueate: Erm• Somback, JamesCoeo 8 ®' MICNEWS NIOH'TUHE 0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL t8 THE 000 OOUPLE oac., davalops an ulcer and ~ Fall• for tt G) ONEITEPBEYONO Ntgnl 01 AprH 14" A new bride hae a 1errllylno dreem ot drownlno tn Icy ooeen wa14H &:) KCET NEWSBEA T ii) CAPTIONED A8C NEWS l,'t PETER, PAUL ANO MARY Tiie popular lolk trio ol the 801 Is _,, performing t>oth otd end new me1attal, tnctudlng lhe cteu ic "'Leaving On A Jal Ptana " -.:_--MIDNIGHT~ t2:00 D MOVIE • * * "Horror 01 Oracul•" \ 1956) Pater Cu1hlng. Cllrlsloe>her Lee 0 ®J FANTASY ISi.ANO " Wot1d War I bull l!Qhl• Ille Rec:t Baron, and en BQIOQ woman lemporarlly raoeJns her youth (R) 0 MOVIE * * * 'Donovan s Reel" ( 1963) Jolin Wayne. l ee Marvin GJ M0\11£ * • • · Walkabout' ( 1971) Jenny AQUiiar. David Gul- pllll CIJ ROOKIES fJl) EXPLORING LANGUAGE (C MOVIE • • * 'h My Soayouard ( 1979) Chris Makepeace Adam Baldwin The ne'# kid el n Clllcego hlQn schoo4 makes friends wtln lhe schOOI outcast end together they 1tand up 10 Illa c;ruel gano wtlteh had persec:uutd lhem bolh. PG' ZJMOVIE * * *'A 'GIOrta" ( 1980) Gena Rowlands, John Adames A former gull moll becom8S lhe prolec· IOf ol an orphaned 6-v-&r· otd Puerto RICan taroeted by 1na un<lerworld lor the lnlOfmatlon he carries In • ba11ared briefcase. ·PG 12:051) CJ) MOCl.OUO 12:30 Q Q! TOMORROW Guea11 Eddie Rabbllt, Pa111 Davis ED CONTEMPORARY HEAL TH ISSUES 'The Heetthy Am8flcan Myth Or Rael11y? ' $)MOVIE • • "Return 01 lhe S1reet11Qh1er" Sonny Clll· ba ·R· 12:46 (}j) MOVIE • * The P11or· (1980) Frenlt Converaa, Cllfl RobenlOll. A p11o11um1 to drinking to ~ tile unhal>e>lnea ol hi• ~­ rtega and the tru111e110n of hie car-. 'PO' 1:00., INOUEHOEHT NE1WON( NEW8 0MOVIE **'/\"The HaarM" (1980) Trial\ l/enOevera. Jo9411>ll Collen A -•es ol blurre end h0fr1lylng e.cparlanoae drrw • young ICll<>olteactl- ., to the edge ol ln1anlty 'PG' 1: 10 8 MOVIE * * "To And A Men" ( 1972) P.,,.,... Sue MMtln, Lloyd Brldoes (II) NEWS 1:30., MOVIE * * * "LIN" I 19452) Dolo- res Hert, Stephen Boyd A Dutel\ detacllve ettempta 10 m•k• up for hla negn .. gance by punllhlnQ an ••· NLti 1:4688 NEWS G) MOVIE * * * "Beel Tiie Oavtl" ( 1954) Humphrey 8ogllfl, Jennifer Jonas. t:llO 8 MOVIE • • ··Run. Paycllo. Run" ( 1966) Gary MarrlM, Elga Anderton 2:00 U EHTERTAINMENT TONIGHT a NEWS (C)MOVIE • • •·~ "Bloodbrothers" ( 1978) Rlcilard Gere, Tony Lo e11nco A young man det .. 10 brHk lemlly trad· Ilion by working In • h05Pl· 1a1 ward lor cllltdren rallier tllan In tile healfY con11ruc- 11on buSIMU 'R' {S)MOVIE "StU<:a And The Shao-Lin Kuno Fu·· (1078) Bruoe Leono A menial arts a.pen MIS oul to avenge tna dntll of 1111 Irland and tutor. 'R' 2: tll U EOITORIAl. 2:20 I) MOVIE * * "Kin Me. Kiii Me·· ( 1976) S1e111 S1evens, Mtellaat Anderson A poltce 1nvestioa1or perSISll 1n probtng lnlo tile dHlll ol a sclloo41eacher. aithOUQll her auperlors lnslat thal they already have the killer In custody 2:30 8 NEWS 2:40 NEW8 3:000MOVIE • • • * "The Slunl Man" ( 19110) Pelar O'Toole. s ieve Rallaback wen1ec:t by Ille potlGe, a dlllurbed Vietnam ve1eran finds an unsure h8Y8n on • movie set wh8r8 • World War I eple 11 being lllmed. 'R' S:~tD MOVIE ·~ "Tile Phantom From 10.000 L.eaguM" ( 1956) Kenl l •vtor. Cathy Downs ~MOVIE • * • 'h "Wise Blood" (1980) Brad Oourll. Amy WrlQhl An emollonally detacned preacher con- tends wtlll • llandlul ot pec>pM. Heh 01 ~ went• 10 axplott him tor a dille<anl reaaon 'PG' S:40D NEWS 3:46 D MOVIE * • 'h "Commendo' JOHN DARLING • • (1 ... > ltewerl Gtlltlf8t, Ootlelt °'". .. (J:) lllOY9 ••• "Motel Hell" (1H0) "otY Ctlhoun, ... 111 Unka. '""* lmltt\ UMI 1111 bedl'*9 lftOMI to pro. M e Ind ltttlft lht dlMP but hlgll quellty ~I he need• f()( hi• 1841Mga buelnM&. . "' 4:90 THI MGM l'TOl'WY "HollywOOd Hanel~" Wt-dn4t•da1,.• IJayt h11e Mo.,lt-• -~­ &:00 (%) * * • "Seema Ukt Old Tlmea" (1980) GOldi.t Hawn, C'-'t Cl>ue A aoh-'-'led tewv-II torn 1>81-her hopeleae ••• hU•b•nd-turn•d·b•n- robbar end her uptight Pf-I hulband WOO la runrtlno for Celllornl• 1t10<nay general. 'PG' 6;*0 0 • * * "Simon" (19801 AIM Arllln, Auetln Per>dla- IOtl Sdentlall et 8 bi:z81T• ly mladlr8C1ecl think 1enk convince a bumbllng col· Miga prof-1he1 lie 11 an alien fTom OU1er ~ •PQ' t:OO (C) * * • "Manny' a Orphen1" ( 19110) Jim Ba1tar. Malaehy McCour1 lhe boys at en orpnenaga risk their chetlty fund In an attempt 10 llalp their ._. coacn P•Y back • $40.000 debt to the mob (J) * * "Tuclt E118tlUI· tng" Frec:I Kaller, JOlepl\ MacGulra A young girl meats an lmmol'tal family known .. tile Tuck•. ·G' 7:30 CC) • • "Sparkle" ( 1978) tren• Cera. Lo11etta McKM During Ille 1960s, three bltlCll alltars lrom the gha1to become mullieel aupart1era. bul eventually eutt4H from tile presaures ot 1tardom 'PO' 0 * • * "Alrplenal" ( 1980) Rober1 Haya. Julie HBQt!rty. Aller 811 eJr11nar·1 crew falls 10 IOOd poison· lnQ. 8 nerilOUI formef war pllot II preaMCI lnlo -- vtce and mull contend wllh on-board hyaterle. a tacrellve C011trol lower and ctlclle-lltlad memorlea ·po· 1:00 • • • "Across Tiie Wida M1aeour1" (1951) Clerk Gable. Rk:ardo Mon· telban. A bend of lur trapper• enters Iha unchllTted 1an11ory 01 the Slaell 1001 lndlan• wnara they ancount4H I hotllle clltef and hll w81rlora t:OO 0 * * "Oh God I Book II" ( 1980) George Burna, SUUMl8 Platllatte. God ra1urn1 10 Earll\ and choose• en lnnocan1 youno girt 10 spf118d tile massaoe lh•I He 11111 exists. tllougll slle ls the only person wllo can aclu· ~-Him 'PG' t-.30 (~) * • • * "Resurrec· hon" (1980) Ellan 8Yr11yn, Sam Shepard. Aller a neBt let al auto eccldent. a wom- an lln<ls lhet Sha Ilea tile eb01ty to heat 011\ers bul Is perMCuted bealt.IM ol her reluaal to Claim a divine lnlluanca. ·PQ· 10:00. • * 'n "ludly L~1·· (1950) Bowery Boys CJ)* *'h "EVIH)' Whlcll Wey But Loose" ( 1978) Clint Eu1wooe1. Sondra Locke A 1wo-1111ec:t truek· ar and Illa orangutan com· panloll take ott In purtult of• prelty country--tern lloget 'PO' 11:008 **'A"ClladHanne" ( 1940) Henry Fonda. Doro· thy Lamour m •YI "Law1ela Front kif' (1935) JOhn Wayne, Shalla Terry 11:30 Cl:) • • "Barracuda" ( l978) Wayne David Craw- ford. Juon Evers A COi· lege lludenl tries 10 prove e cllamlcal company 11 secretly dumptno IO•lc wastes lnlo • 1own·s water lupply --, .... , •• .,. "lofftMtt .. " OM;J-Kan Mtldel\, ,....... . •••• "~AltfllY iMrn" ( 1N Tl HelV'I 'Clflda. Lee J. Cot*. (%) • * * "KlnO IOI0-1110 n' e Mlt1H " (tUO) O.t>ofall Karr, ltewllt1 O<enger. A wfll1a Nini., guldea a patty t111°"0h d81'keat Alrtca In ~ Of • WOtl\811'1 ~ 12:300•• "t1Ml"l1t11) John Baluehl. Toehlro Mlfunt, Ahtt the bomblllg of ,.._,., HwOclf. 8outllam Callfoml.I GIYllarw ...., ""'· 11.,., pettonnal f..c1 wl1tl unbrldlad !*lie 10 ,_. of • J~ lttec:ll In ''*' _, bedlywd 'PO' 1l00 (,C) •• "8petkle" ( 1914) Irena Cira, Lonette Mcl<M During the 19508, trwee blaal! .... .,. trOlll the ghetto become mutlC* IUl)«tl81'1, buf ••erllual'Y "'"., lrorn the pr_, .. ol 1tardom 'PO' {I) * * * "Ac;rOM The Wida Ml1aourl" (1961) Cllltir Gable, Alc41rdo Mon· 1eJban. A band of lur trappera an1era the und\arted taffl1ory of The 81ackloo1 lndlana wt>ar• they enoovnt4H • tioatlla Chief end hi• w11trlot'1 1~ CZ) * * * "5-nl Liiia Old l lmea" ( 1980) OOldla Hewn, Chevy Co.N. A eofl·haarted lawyer 11 torn be'-h8t llopaMae ••• huaband-turned-benk robber end her uptlQht pr-t lluabend who la running for Cetllornle auornay gan«al 'PG' 2:30 g * * 'h "ShOol The Sun Down" ( 1980) Cllr11topll« Walken. M81got Kld08f. In 11136, fput dltj)areta mla- 1111 UM en old map to Meroh lor burled QOld. ·po· ~:OO(C) * * "HIQll AIM Don· key" Thf.. rnltchl8YOUI clllldran attempt to f\lda • donkey In their hlgll·rlM apartment 3:30 II • • • 'h "To Ca1c11 A Tl\181" ( 1955) Cary Grant. Grace Kelly. (S) *. "Tuck EverlUI· Ing" Fred Keller. JoMph MacGulra A young girl meats en 1mmonal family known u the lucks. 'G' (1) * •• ·~"A Dey In The Oealll Of Joe Ego" ( l072) Alan Bates. Janet Su1man A couple. whose child auttera from convutalon1. con1emplelN mercy-11111. l~.·R 4:00 (<:)**"A HorM Celled JMler" A youno girl ahares an e•treordlnary bond wt1h Iha old horM wtlot'n Ille reacues hom re11r-1 4:30 0 * • ··F'rom Holl To Ille· 1ory" ( 1979) Geol"ga Hamil· ton. George Peppard Four Irland• lrom dlllerent countries musl leave Pails 1n 1939 to llglll for their lndlVldual counlrlH In World War II 'PG' 5:0011:) * * * "Manny·1 Orpllan1" ( 198<l) Jim Saker. Malachy M<:CO\lr1. The boys e1 811 orphan.ge rtlk lllelr cllarlly fund In an auempl 10 help their aoccer co4ICh pay back • $40,000 debt to Ille mob • * "Sacr9t l/altey" Hugi\ Keena-Byrne. Neigh- borhood kids help old man McCormack th.,..,, Iha .,,,. lelna wno are lreudularltly Hsening Illa tllalono hO!'na In tile sacr81 valley. 11:20 (%) * * * "5-ns Like Old Tlmea" ( 1980) Goldie Hewn. Chevy Chua A sott-1-rtec:I lawyer 11 torn between lier llopatau ax· husband. turned-bank robber end hat upttgl\1 pr_,t l\Ofbancl wno 11 runn1no lor Celllornla attorneyo-.eJ 'PG' 11:30 * * * U. "Wise Blood" I 1980) Brad Ooutll. Amy WrlQht An emotlonetty det11<:"8d praachar con· tends wltll a handful or people, aectl ol whom wants to aKptol1 him for • dlttarent rMeon. 'PG' by Armstrong & Batiuk Mi WAY-Chapter Five Locking bacK, l £ind that ~ to college in tne tumultuous GfXties realty h~lped to raJse my cai~tousnee!> and awareness! 1 rea.li'zed tha.t 1 was bet,inning to question the old vslues that I 1180 atways uxen for granted In fact. I a.lmost vrent to Woo06t.OCK, Wt my Fraternity w~s havint a. rush partY th~t weeitend an01 cru.ldn't get aw~y! 'Sophisticated Gents' shows old club ties STOP By FRED ROTllENBERG A~ Te~ Writer NEW YO RK "Sophisticated Gents ... lhe first miniseries of the new tel evision season. is a compelling story of camaraderie and loyalty that explores the f eel ings or me mbe rs o r a neighborhood sports-social club at a 25-year re- union. Taken from the book "The Junior Bachelor Society" by John Williams and a TV script by Melvin Van Peebles, ··Sophisticated Gents" on Channel 4 tonight at 9, Wednesday and Thursday is rich in believable and spirited characters. They make "Gents" super ior to the more lavish "Ma· nions of America" that has a three-night run on ABC starting Wednesday "Sophisticated Gents" has been collecting dust on NBC's shelf, and an industry insider said the delay stemmed from trepidations that an all·black story would not sell NBC denies this, claiming that the networks have finished products In search of time slots all the time, The plot centers on a reunion In the old neighborhood for a testimon.iaJ to the coach who steered the Gents right. Chapple Davi1', a boozer, womanb:er and numbers rUM.er with a heart of LA.uMA ...ntoOIST ART CLASSES St.nlng Ma.Oct••r S ,.. ..... a. 494-6211 RUFFELL'S U,HOLSTERY · S.nfr-1,•M ... lt1J KAllOl ILYD. COSTA MISA-5.4t.l 116 , gold, taught his boys to stick together. on and off lhe held. and cope with the outside world. Eight of them learned their lessons well , but one, Moon, played by Peebles. is a pimp. Moon gets into serious trouble with the law. Whether he'll show for the reunion causes concern because the group knows a sleazy neighborhood cop named Swoop is looking to bust Moon and ruin their party. The corrupt Swoop was rejected by the Gents 25 years earlier. ''I meas ured everything by what you dad.·· he tells the character played by former football player Bernie Casey. Tonight's two hours -Wednesday and Thurs- day are an hour each -are the show 's strength: how time treated the "Gents." They gained their great~l fame in football ; if it had been basketball. the cast would have been more manageable. Since It's hard following nine characters, here's a scorecard. Bubbles <Paul Winfield) was the leader of the Gents. He stayed home and bum a nice, warm family. Bubbles and Cudjo (Rosey Grier> are laborers. Shurley <Casey) also stayed in the com· munity and manages the local bar. Snake (Thalmus Rasulala> moved to the sub· urbs and married a whJte woman. He's a city com· f ot Clua1fkd Ad AC110N Call A OAA.Y .... 01 AO..Vtsol '4f-U7e HOUSE OF TAILORING Al TfRATIO N<, HHI µ(~ .\ wo,.o ,... \U rn l s r r I l i ~ ~ : ·' F. I q : li."'1-~• l •••I ht ,_, •v\•I missioner who tries to forget his roots. Dart <Raymond St. Jacques) is a bisexual singer. He works in Europe, exiled there by a powerful sponsor who caught Dart in bed with the wrong woman. BURGLARS! INSTALL BURGLAR ALARM '181.00 Chops (Robert Hooks ) looks the most troubled. He's under the thumb of his petty boss and IRO .... SIDE Complete anguished by an unfaithful wife . Clarie (Ron " • 3 openings i>rotected O'Neal) is light-skinned and guilty about blending SECURITY SIRVlCES : ~~1~e ~~tor into the white world. His wife looks down on the Pholle 8· 12 A..M. • Panic button Gents. 631 0679 •Complete installatlon Ralph <Dick Anthony Williams) is a successful -• AdditiOnal senso,. $85 playwright. nervous about his show's opening and ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ returning to his roots. They're all drawn back to check out each other's wives and remember a high point in their lives. "Why go back?" says one. "Because I'm a Gent." The need to belong and the loyalty that bind even 25 years later are dominant themes. It's also a bittersweet story about dreams and measuring up to expectations, yours and others'. The cast, particularly Winfield, is first rate. The relationships are warm and human, and there ls genuine caring for each other which transcends • time and contributes to the suspense. Shores lnteriars ~•I• Ce••trdal ._ M30AVOl\SL, ~ Newpottlk.al'.h -'' Ml ·m5 •••••••••••••••••• • Put •38 to work In pay • • TV Movies, eam • : f19,456 In 4 yeera. : • for broc:tlure call: • : NEWPORT·PACIFlCA :• • N7....a Ii•••••••••••••••• ... l HE WANTSYOU TO HAVE HIS BABY Daily Pilat TUESDAY, SEPT. 29. 1981 CAVALCADE STOCKS MOVIES 82-3 87 88 Stringent requirements make it difficult for U.S. winemakers to sell product overseas ... 85 a J 0 Kl tch e n Swingers just a band of senior c utups, HOMESTEAD, Fla <AP> They'll probably never have a gold record, and it 's doubUuJ they'll even make the charts. But there's no big band around toda~ that can possibly have m ore fun than the "Four Seasons Kitche n Swingers Band " And if their music doesn't grab you. the home-made mstru· ments these retired citizens play surely will catch your fancy. ~1lher way. slick around, because whenever this trailer· park hunch gets through playing ------------- F ar111 grows Aztec food for l1e~tltl1 MAXTAWNY. Pa. <AP> On a 30 acre farm in a valley c r adled by gentle hills. r e- searche rs are plying their trade 1n e fforts to brin g to the American publtr the food of the Aztecs. a nutritional gram that scie ntis ts SU\' has more food value thun rorn. rice or wheat. On a patch of about five acres grow the amaranth pl ants, their plumes ranging from maroon- scarlet lo dusty rose. from rust to pale gn~en-gold. at shoulder height in t·ontrast to low-lying patc hes of \ cgetables and ~rassland It is here that Rodale Press, Inc . publis her of Prevention. Organic Gardening and other magazines. experiments with select1\•e breeding that aims to take the amaranth lo a place alongside corn and "'heat in the nation's grain fields . ·'These are at the stage of de velopment that t•orn was a few hundred yf'an. ago," explained Ch arles "Ski p .. Kauffman. coordinator of new crops re sear ch for Rodale "They a r e on ly semi· domestic They need a lot of <>e lection and breeding to make them behave as a crop should behave:· Kauffman said. Thl' work at the Rodale farm 1s being complemented at perhaps 35 other sites by re searchers who sec a bright futur<· for amarnnth. known tc most Americans only through its legendary form of the Old West th(' tumbleweed. Health Valle} Natural Foods of Montebello. Calif.. plans lo put a cereal co ntaining amaranth on lhl' market in Oc tober. billing 1t as "the m ystical food of the Aztl'<'~ · · Centuries ago 1n the Aztec em· pire of Mexico. the plant played a double role Along with corn. it former! the basis of the Aztec diet Rut 1l also had a religious sign1f1cance. a<'cord1ng to John N Cole. author of "Amaranth.'' a book publil'ihe d by Rodale Prel'is During the war god festival. Cole says. a huge statue of the war god was made of amaranth flour dough and seeds. then s hat· tered for its pieces to be eaten by the celebrants 0 In Mexico, the source of the seeds obtained by Rodale. a gov- e rnm e nt program lo domesticatc> the amaranth may have pulled ahead or the work here. according to Ro be rt Rodale, chairman of the board of Rodale Press. The Mexicans. Rodale said, a lready a re grinding the seeds into baby food and mixing it with com flour to increase the nutritional value of tortillas Amaranth enthusiasts say the plant contains a protein not found in other grains. The com · bination of amaranth with other grains could provide a complete protein diet without the addition or milk or other high-cost animal proteins . It also grows well in semi·arid conditions that require irriga- tion for other crops. And . ad· vocates say. a maranth is not subject to pests and diseases that afflict many other grain crops . The work or Rodale is lo brei!d an amaranth plant that grows to uniform h eig ht . making machine harvesting feas ible, and lo develop special varieties suitable for varied growing con- ditions and varied uses. inheritance OK'd DAYTONA BEACH. Fla. c AP> -A man sentenced to Clve years probation ror manslaughter in the shooting death of his wife will be allowed to inherit her estate, the 5th District Court of Appeal baa ruled. The court overturned an order disquali!ylng 60·year-old Eugene W. Nable from the in· herilance. there's always a party with plen- ty of liquid one band member re· fers to as "sauce." The band began three years ago with an idea by Belly Alex- ander . a cheerful S3·year-old widow from Prosperity. S.C · 'l heard of a band like this out in Orio, so 1 went through the trailer park and I got 11 volun- teers the first day,'' says Mrs. Alexander, the band's director. S h e a nd her friend, Lotte Schafer . a SS-year-old Bangor, Maine. widow, dream up strange·looking ins truments that • produce even strange r sounds. The band boasts 53 pieces - and that's the limit, says Mrs. Alexander. "There's so many who want to belong that we've started a wait· Ing list." The "Kitchen Swingers" fame ha s s pread con siderably because of the entertainment they provide, gratis, for schools. nursing homes. hospitals and beer parlors. "We've even been invited to the 1982 World's Fair in Knox· ville, Tenn.,'' boas ts Mrs. Schafer. a retired m oney· counter. That's understandable. After all, where can you find a big band today that includes such "musical" instruments as a gut. bucket, a commode-a-phone and a kitchen sink. For the unin- formed. the latter requires two musicians to produce the correct sound. "No one has fun like old people," says Lela Riffle, a 71 -year-old former real estate s aleswoman from Akron. Ohio. She 's the lead washboard player when th<' otht•r rour shO\\ up ll<'r hus band. John, 111lt'nl his working life a~ a mamlt•nance man in Goodyear s at•nisp:.ice division Now the 77 yea1 old re t1ree plays the gut bucht or 1f someone elSl' has l<iken that 1n strument. thl• ~} rophone The gut butket. explarn-. Mrs Alexander, cons 1!->ls of a <~ 'tnng from a bass violin 'lrung t11 Jn old galvanized "'ash tub The gyraphonc is made b) ..ttt:.ichin~ a kalOo to the ni:trro\\ t·nd of a washing machine agitator w c.tnda Chapman used to bt :-a I es woman in P i ttsbur1h1· and, like most of the band, says, I never played any musical in· strumcnt in my life." Now. she plays the chimes - an array of telltale liquor botUes fill ed with varying amounts of l·olored liquid and hung from a rod Th<• g r ou p would be in · rnmpll'te m1thout Beula Zage, a 70 vcar old former Washington, I> C. resident who proudly plays ~ the commode -a -phone. This • wind instrument is a combina-, t 1un of an old toilet seat and a kazoo It's vital to some or the m J re hl's the group plays . · • 1 ve just got to be the wind· • J 1est person on earth," she says t: "'1th a laugh. S<·nttv Farwell and his wife, \1 Jrguent<'. are the virtuosi of the kitchen sink. He plays the sink p:..rt and she's at the end of thl· attachl.'d spray hose. I k 's in charge of the instru· ment. <idmits Mrs . Farwell of• Hi('hmond. Va .. "because be gl'b to carr) 1t " Thl' grewµ practices at least 1>nce a week. usually at the park 's recreation center. ID·! variably. other residents brbll' ~ folcl1ng t·ha1rs and serve as c·hl'enng section ' V. hen do we start drinkin \ t·lh onl' ruddy·complexio n·t1 rl'l' as ht-unfolds his chair. · Wl· all need a little sauce to J.!t·t going, laughs Mrs. Schafer as s hl• fills an empty Anin1al aid grant HALTIMORE CAP) -Johns llopkms t.:niversity bas received SI m1lhon from the Cosmetic, J'o11l't r) and fragra nce Associa· t 1110 Inc to find alternatives to IJb111 atory a nimal tests n 1t1c17.ed by animal protection groups The grant will fund tbe Betty Alexander leads some Kitchen Swingers band members at Sunday practice owi,...,.._ .Johns Hopkins C e nte r for . \llcrnatives to Animal Testin1. • Top interest rate s boon to savers WASIONGTON <AP> -Amid all the evils blamed on high in· ter est rates is an unexpected ble ssi ng for millions of American savers who are best- ing inflation for the first time in years. With consumer prices rising about 10 percent a year and in· terest rates on savings available al 17 pe r cent o r higher, Americans who can set money aside are pulling down the highest reaJ r ates of return on their savings in U.S. history. The interest·rate boon for peo· pie who have savings and no need to borrow money reverses an economic trend during the 1970s. when innation decimated savings because the rise in con· s umer prices far outstripped in· terest rates. While lower·interest accounts are still in wide use such as pa ss book s a vi n gs payi ng perhaps 51·".z percent -m any savers are earning far more by other means, such as money- m arket funds. So. while President Reagan, business groups and would be CONSUMER home·buyers lament the high cost or cr e dit, the nation's savers can take pleasure in their good fortune and hope interest rates slay high. ''Millions of Americans, pa rticularly in the older age brackets, a re e njoying - perhaps for the first time In their lives -high market rate or return on their savings," said Reagan's chief economic ad- viser, Murray L. Weidenbaum. ing tile budget by 1984. High rates drive up gov ernment spending to pay interest on the federal debt while driving down government revenues because of a slowdown in economic ex- pansion that seems s ure to re- sult Among the most visible win· ners are the nearly 10 million investor s in money.market funds and the fund managers. Virtually unheard of seven years ago, the funds have become the fastest growing investment vehi· cle of the 1980s, with assets of $160 billion -more than double what they held at the start or this year. The funds pool investor sav- ings to purchase Treasury bills and other short-term securities unavailable to small savers. The average fund is paying more than 17 percent annua l interest. Savers also are bu ying Treasury bills directly or buying bank certificates of deposit that pay rates based on Treasury bills . Some of those yields are running above 18 percent. lndividuaJ savers are not the only beneficiaries of high in· ter est rates. Investment bankers who have organized high-yield money- m arket funds are profiling handsomely from the explosive growth of the funds the past two years. Cash -rich companies that have no borrowing needs can net a higher return at less risk by s imply investing in money- market funds rather than taking a chance on a business venture. Mo~ economists conclude that everyone will suffer eventually if high interest rates prompt a severe and prolonged recession. If that bagpens, "I don't think anyone is going to be much of a winner," said Mike Laub, chief economist for the bankers as- sociation. • ....._ o._ '1 .f )~ ., 0 1-J D 0 E. • I ' . Buela Zage. 70. pipes away at her commode-a-phone dun11g practice of the Four Season Kitchen Sw- ingers. The wind instrument 1s a combmation of an old tmlet seal and a kazoo ·'There are winners and losers from high interest rates," ob- serves Alan Greenspan, a New York investment consultant who was the Ford administration's ch ief econo mi c adviser . "However, there are many more losers than winners." The biggest losers Include! homebuilders, reallors, home sellers and home buyers -all of whom are suffering because of record mortgage interest rates approaching 18 percent. Savinas and loans are another 1roup of major losers because they are stuck holding so many low. interest mortgages while forced to pay top rates for new Cunds. U.S. had informers in inte r nment camps? .J the destination of all people be· ··1 want to empbHl1e tllat I The Reagan administration also is a loser because of what high interest rates are dolna to the president's plan for balanc:· CHICAGO <AP > -An educator. presenting a 1943 let- ter addressed to FBI Director J . Edgar Hoover as evidence, says that social scienllata acted as FBI and Naval Intelligence in· formanta at Japanese-American internment camps durint World War JI. The aoelal 1clentists were hired, it was aUeced, to study the cultural patterns of the ln· terned people and also to spy. The letter was submitted by Peter T. Suzuki, University or Nebraska professor of urban studies, al public hearings by the Commission on Wartime Relocation and Internment of Civilians. The letter was from an· thropologist John H. Provlnse to Hoover, and 1a1d arrangements had been made to tell the FBI ing relocated from the camps so social scientists. lncludiQ1 m that surveillance could be main· antropologisls, did not tr talned . Many J a p a n ese -covert ~nformation about American s m oved to the dividuals to anyone at all,'' Midwe:;t because they were not said. allowed to return to their hostile Suiuki bad aaid that West Coast communities. "analyst routinel.Y passed~ The social scientists were ports to an F81 a1eat part or the war relocation cen· representative of Naval ters, denied the spying allega-telllge~fe" about ao-called 0 dil- tions loyals. ~ . -----.....-~--------~....----------· m Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/TuHday, September 29. 1981 CAMPAIGNING - Greek actress and politician Melina Mercouri offers rose t o Greek Orthodox priest .while cam· paigning' in Piraeus. A member or the Panhellenic Socialist Movement. s~e is • seeking re-eleclton as ~ Parliament deputy in the Oct. 18 general e~~ctions. \ v .. .J NEYER WAX YOUR CAR ... AGAIN ~I T! 3 Year Guarantee FOR t ... FORMATION CALL 754-6404 MING AUTO BEAUTY CENTER 1520 f'OHDUOSA A ft.., COST A MESA THERE'S A GREAT SEASON OF SKIING AHEAD . . . Newport Ski Company would like to invite you for a night of fun that includes ski movies, informal fashion modeling, hors' doeuvres, beer. wine and a k>ok at all the new merc handise for 1981-1982! ednesday, September 30, 1981 , 7:00-10:00 P.M. your friends at Newport Ski Company 2500 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 714-631 -3280 •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE Transcendental Meditation® Program Ushering In The Age Of Enlighrenmenr Jn This Generation Video Cassettes fo r Sale or Rent * No Clubs fo Join I * No Membership Fees I 1,000's of movies IN STOCK SP•CIAi TlllS •••K '~ To 5'' !69!! 549'5 wllile tll•r laat ' How China halte d VD DEAR ANN LANDERS: I read with in terest the column in which you stated that Dr. George Hatem, an American-born dermatologist working in the People's Republic or China -a country or nearly t billion population -eradicated veneral disease. PLEASE elaborate! How was this ac· complished? Why in heaven's name can·t it be done in our own country? I heard on TV recently that Acyclovir promises to be a cure for genital herpes. but it will be two years before this drug will be available. Help is needed NOW! Can you o{fer an optimistic and/or comforting report? Please tell us how VD was eradicated in China. It sounds too good to be true. -UPPER MIDDLE-CLASS W.A.S.P. Dear U.M.C.W.A.D.P.: Flnt: The American Social Health AiJ!iOClatlon has the most recent and reliable information on genital herpeti. They have Informed me that Acyclovir has been overrated and overpromlsed. It helps reduce the discom· fort of genital herpes In some cases, but It is not a cure. And now about Dr. George Hatem, the American dermatologist and bow he eradicated VD In a country of then 800 million people: In 1974 I went to the People's Republic of China as a member of a mecllcal delega· tion and bad the privilege of meeting Dr. Hatem. I bad read about this remarkable man, and through Mrs. Lois Wheeler Snow (wtio lived m Switzerland>, the meeting was arranged. Over lunch in the Peking Hotel Dr. Hatem told me hJs rasclnatlng story. In 1933 Dr. Hatem <Buffalo·bom and educated in North Carolina> went to Shanghai to study tropical medicine. He became involved with Chou En·lal and Mao 1'8e-tung and joined the Communist Party. VD was rampant and ~overnment , Allll WIOEIS services for the poor were non-existent un· der Chiang Kal·ithek. The Co mmunist leaderli decreed that an infected population could not participate in ''the New Order ... They declared war on VD and made Dr. Hatem the commander·in·chier. He marshaled his forces -thousands of teams of "cue finders" -who weDt from door t-0 door, taking blood samples or everyone. Those who were lnf ected were unde r orders to be treated. The principal distributors or the di~· ease <prostitutes) were rounded up, told they were out of business and would be given exams lo determine what line or work they were best suited for. Some would be school teachers, other ractory workers, and still others would be sent to farms. They were also inrormed that anyone caught practicing her old trade would be severely punished. <Like ~hot.) The effort was successful. Co mmunist!\ do not fool around. Jn a totalitarian state people do as they are told. When I asked Dr. Hatem why we couldn't do what he had done in the United States, be replied, "in a democracy the people could refuse to be tested. They would sue the government for invasion or privacy. An Am erican policeman could not ring a doorbell and insist that everyone in the house take a blood test." When I asked Dr. Hatem ir he believed there was not a single case of VD in the en- tire People's Republic or China he replied, "When foreign ships come in , there is sometimes a small problem. But we keep a close eye on them, and is cleared up at once." I believe him. Her dream cerealized I don't know how in the world you can expect nations to reason together when you cannot get five people to agree on one breakfast cereal. At the moment. we have 37 boxes of cereal on our she lves -all open. Some snap. Some explode on impact with milk. Som e puff up. Some die from the humidity. All attract ants. I have a dream. A dream that before I go to that big utility room in the sky, every box of cereal on the s helf will be emptied. I'VE TRIED IT before with little suc· cess. "Hey gang, how about polishing off the Chock FuJl of Pimples?" "They're stale." · "How about the Cavity Flakes?" "They get caught in your teeth ... "Anyone for Shredded Natural Bran Harvest Nuggets with no preservatives?" "111AT'S FOR old people who have nothing to lose by eating sensibly." What this world needs is a one-size-fits· all cereal. A cereal that would fight sog, fortify you with vitamins. talk back to you from the bowl. contain a 194-piece plastic EIMA BOMBECK AT WIT'S END replica of a Civil War battle and keep you regular. For some unexplained reason, a box of cereal is something a woman cannot throw away. I can throw away a box or baking soda that has been in the refrigerator for three years, a box or raisins that has en- tered the Twilight Zone. or a clove or fresh garlic that has gone to live with Jesus. I cannot evict a 32-ounce box containing two tablespoons of Captain Clown Krinkles. YESTERDAY, I decided to do something about t he 37 boxes. I crumbled the stale Bran Brittles and sprinkled them over a casserole. I baked a cookie out of the leftover cup of Fruit Lips. The purred Crunchies I made into a necklace. The two remaining bite-sized Fun Wheats I made into earrings. I was down to 33 boxes wheR- m y husband came in with a box or Early Morning Chewies. I'm losing the battle. Leo: Credit overdue Wednesday, September 30 ARIES <March 21-April 19>: You'll have opportunity to display creative talents. Relationship is intensified - romantic involvement dominates scenario. TAURUS CApril 20-May 20 1: Low-key approach aids in avoiding family conflict. Emphasis on legal documents. views of others and dealings with another Taurus. GEMINI CMay 21-June ~): Play wait· ing game. Adviser may be misinformed. Insist on clear definition of terms. Self· reliance now is necessary if you are to ad· vance. CANCER CJune 21-July 22>: Imprint style, realize that involvement is serious. Focus on intensified relationship, creativi· ty, added responsibility and opportunity for increased rewards. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22>: What had been out-of.reach becomes available. Business transaction is near completion. You get credit long overdue. Aries, Libra and another Leo figure in scenario. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: New ap· proach brings desired results -path smoothed by access to confidential in· formation. Accent also on special rela· tionship, where it is and where it ls going. UB&A <Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Emphasis on collections, taxes, ability to locate articles whlcb bad been lost or stolen. You 1et credit kins overdue -one cloee expresses love. SCOllPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21>: Sense of .perception could leave aomethln.I to be de· llOIQSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA sired. You obtain inflated view or situation. Plainly, a review is necessary. Abstract principles of justice are involved. Em· phasis also on doc uments. rights a nd permissions, marital status. SAGITTARIUS CNov. 22-0 ec. 211 : Study Scorpio message. Restrictions soon will be removed -you're on brink of im· portant discovery. Cycle high despite ap· parent delay or setback. Details unravel and you'll glimpse complete picture. Revelation due. · CAPRICORN c Dec. 22-J an. 19>: Clash of ideas proves stimulating. Member or op- posite sex provides. challenge, lends spice to life. Wish will be fulfilled in unorthodox m a nner. Gemini. Virgo. Sagittarius persons fi gure prominently. Travel plans solidify. AQUARIUS CJan. 20-Feb. 18>: Focus on domestic areas, career. income poten- tial and locating item that had been out-of· reach. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio natives figure prominently. You'll be asked to ac· tively participate in civic project. PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20 >: Whal ap. pears abstract can acl~ally serve as rella· ble guide. Lines of communlcaUoo open - you'll receive·long-dlstance calls, l11\1Ua1e and distance barriers wtll be eliminated. Law in spiritual sense is empbulled . .• , .• ,, By PHIL INTEALANOI of Laguna Beach ~ ... , ...... ~ . ...-.. .. _,...._ "Anc~ I was rushing to YOUR otrice with an idea wh09e time had come!" PEISONALl1f Q.&A. BY MARILYN AND HY GARDNER Berle pact packed in Q : Whateve r happe ned to Milton Berle's SO·called ''lifetime contract'' with the National Broadcasting Co. signed whe n he was king of TV with his Texaco Star Theater? Is he still collecting? A: No. He's now low m an on the un· employment rolls. insist his pals Norm Crosby, Tom Lasorda. Jan Murray, Tom Bosley and Buddy Hackett. when they learned his pact was packed in just the othe r week after a 30-year run . Still active in the medium he breathed life into, Uncle Miltie laughed a ll the way to the bank for 30 years to deposit checks that added up to $200,000 per year pay -play or no play. Thinking back, he went for the deal at the time because he realized that since his programs were performed live. that new word .. residuals" hadn't been born yet. He a lso said the 30-year contract was based on an actuarial table that showed his life ex· pectancy was only 69. When "der Tag" ar· rived he was 73 ... I guess." he last- laughed. ··that I cheated them out of four years. Also, the $6,000.000 was considered a tot ot money rn those days. but it would be just petty cash today -especially if you are a hot baseball player who can bat. field or p itch better than most. You'll have to excuse me now fellows." he concluded. "I've got to get into uniform'" Q. Did former Hell 's Kitchen tough· guy Rocky Graziano <now a celebrated thespian > once explain why the muggers of his era were more respectful than today's thugs? A: Yes he did . "Our guys," the champ said in what we sensed was with a bit of pride. "never mug~ed anyone over the age of 45 ' .. Send your questions Lo Hy Gardner. zn care of the Daily Pilot. P.O. Box 19620. Irvine. Calif 92714 Marilyn and Hy Gardner will answer as many questions as they can zn their column . but the volume of mail makes personal replies 1mposS?ble P01 SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT PLEASE CON SIDE'~ TME FEE'L.INGS OF OTHILRS- E SPECIALL.Y 01=" THOSE WHO WOULD NEVER TELL. YOU HOW THEY FEEL . OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO Side order of fun asked SAN FRANCISCO Out there in one of those Clem ent St. eating places so ad- mired by the restaurant critics, J ohn Angell ordered poached salmon with the sauce on the side. It came drowned in Hollandaise .. so he sent it back, only to have it reappear covered with yellowish globules. "Who wiped off my fish?" de- manded John. "Nobody." said the waiter ~tiffly. "The chef WASHED it." T here are more bores around than when I was a boy, Fred AJlen once wrote. and also more restaurant critics. These statements are not mutually exclusive, nor meant unkindly Thanks to the influx of ever more col· orful people from faraway places with strange-sounding entrees. the world of San Francisco eating. always wide-ranging, is more complex than ever from East In- dian to Thai. Venezuelan to Vietnamese. Cambodian to Cuban. WE NEED P EOPLE to tell us where to go. and to explain what we are ingesting and why it is making us sick. Thus. every publication of any size now has at least one restaurant critic. a wine expert or two, and several financial advisers to tell us how to pay the checks on 36·month loans. The critics themselves have become big busi- ness. most of them writing about the sa'me places and each other. and bandying iden· tical phrases. Alexis Melteff's Law "The number of glowing adjectives on a menu is directly proportionate to the restaurant's d istance from a large city." T hat is not too wide of the mark Most of the good S. F. eating places have no-nonsense menus, some of them <such as Jack's. Sam's, Tadich's > printed daily. Onl y the prices change. The phrase I dislike most on menus is "cooked to perfection." Most of us sort of expect that. I DON'T WANT to sound snide about restaurant critics. Theirs is a tough job. But the one thing they never seem to think about this goes for movie and music critics. too -is th at most people go out to have FUN. An experience. Some excite· meat. A little .. action." for want of a better word. Good food is the most important part of dining out. of course. but then comes the atmosphere. the famous face across a crowded room . some beautiful people beautifully dressed and aJso having fun. The hard-working critics have uncovered som e good dishes in some nice little places with Formica-topped tables and bad light- ing. and more power to them. but t his is not what it's all about. Unless you're a critic. TRADER VIC'S is fun. and has .been s ince I first met the Trader about 45 years ago in Oakland. The old guy is a marvel. still cooking up something new this latest hamburger is a ·'Vicky-Poo" once his nickname topped with cheese. ham and PAPAYAl. Nobody needed the critics to .. discover'· Greens in Fort Mason : word of mouth made it overnight. FUN IS WHERE you find it. and you find it at the Gold Spike and La Pantera and Capp's Corner, along with decent food. Ch ez Michel is a beauty. L'Etoile is glamorous. expensive. electric with showy comings and goings. The critics prefer pork baJls in a storefront restaurant out by Ocean Beach. and have a nice trip. BUT THE CRITICS are right to go on sear ching for the unusual. Take' this. please, on the menu at the Red Lion Motor Inn in Eureka: "New York strip loin steak pressed with crushed peppercorns and selected spices and topped with seasoned Maitre d' " ... Those old waiter captains are the tastiest. especially with "au jus sauce.·· may it drown in Thousand Is land Dressing Pill won't slow aging DEAR DOCTOR: I have a confession to make. I'm in my beginning menopause. I faked symptoms to my doctor. I said that I'm depressed and nervous; that I have terrible sweats and hot flashes. This was my way of getting him to agree to prescribe estrogen pills. Why do I want to take them? Because I've beard that they slow the aging process and restore the vitality of youth. Besides, I'm fearful of getting wrinkles. I bear that estrogens prevent all that. · Now that I've confessed, I wonder U I 'm being stupid. I suppose I should be thankful that I 'm comfortable ln my menopause. But I'm selfish. I want to stay as young as I can as long at I can. -MRS. G. DEAR MRS. G.: We have no desire to call some readers stupid -but you said it, we didn't. As you say, be thankful your c ha nge is s mooth and untroublesome. Besides, as one recent report stated : "Es trogen cannot sJow the aging process, or restore youth, vitality or sensuality." You should know there is potential danger in taking estrogens -especially in T rou1 HEALTH OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN large doses for years. There's greater likelihood of getting endometrial cancer C of the uterus). As a genera) rule, women should not take estrogen treatment if they have ir - . regular bleeding; cancer of the uterus. breast or kidney; liver disease: a history of heart disease or stroke; or a history of heavy smoking. When a doctor believes that estrogen therapy is essential he will prescribe it th small amounts, over a short period of time. And he will monitor his patient to make sure that cancer is not sneakihg up un· noticed. According to one recent estimate, of almost 40 million American women in the postmenopausal stage, about 2 million are now using estrogens. Many, we hope, do not think they are swallowing Fountain of Youth pills. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 29. 1981 •• ROW, ROW, ROW THEIR BOAT l 'ounsts row a boat through stret>l!-. of do'' ntov. n Lorarno. Switzerland. Sunda~ aftl'rnoon to ............. gt>l bC1rk to tht·1r hotl•I Thl· hi gh lt·\·p( of the lake m tht> Swiss rl'sort floodl'<l lht• d<rnntown et rl'a. following n •t'l'nl hl'~l\'.' rams YES, FOR EVERY MOVIE YOU RENT DURING SEPT .. YOU GET ONE WEBER' OPEN 1 DAYS A WEIEK TOTAL DISCOUNT WORLD em SCREEN T.V. 333S.EUCUD PH.nM111 NEWPORT BUCH 149 RIVERSIDE AVE. PH. 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Floor Preparation & Custom Covelng Extra Look fOf tnls special CliSPlav. JoeNBI,()ESEaGABPBTGo ~ "fVnnu"ly °'""'«! -<>t°>1C(' -11119 ·• COST A MESA 751-i324 2927 SO. BRISTOL !~ :._-:; (One Block So. of Baker} s.t. 1 O..I ALSO IM: LOSc.,ANGELEJ' LONC BEACH .. -~ --__ -........__ ____ "--"""-~-..__..,·~ .... Orange Coat DAILY PILOTtru"ldly, September 29. 1981 -----------;:;============~====-~=::=-=~=======~-------DEATH NOTICES He realized GOULD J>OROTHY M. OOULO, b l d raldent ot Newporl Beach, ut er rnam Ca ror the past 22 yean. • ~ Pa11H away on Stptember H, 1981. She la t urvlved by her d•1&1Chltt Joan Rav or DINUBA <AP> -Ltke Iota ol little boya, Huch Newport Beach. Ca., ion BeMett Imitated hla movie hero. Jamu Mitchell or LOI Anaeles, Ca . brothers Edwin Bryant of Laaune Hilla. Ca. and Thomu Bryant of NeWIJ()rt Beach, Ca .. sister Florenct1 Patchell of Lal(una Hll111, Ca , niece Patricia Wilcox o( llllnois, 6 arandchlldren and 2 arut-arandchJldren. RecltaUon or tht1 Roaary will be Monday. September 28, 1981 at But Ben.nett dJdn't dream of becomlnC a ru11ed. romantic tt1ure like Humphrey 8o1art or Clark Gable. He wanted to become a butler like Arthur Treacher. "I remember Arthur Treacher 1n the movies the suave, debonair £0111.sh butler," Benaett said in an interview. "I was told that when I was 12 years old, I used to hold a tray ln my hand and play like l was a butler." 1·30PM at Our Lady or The years passed, and Bennett grew up to be a Mount Carmel Catholic managementofficialwithaconcretepipeflrm. Church, Newport Beach, Ca. Graveside services will be But at the age of 42, he decided to fulfill b1I held on Tuesday Septf'mber lifelong dream. Bennett contacted a vocational 29. 1981 at 11: OOAM at Holy consulting firm in San Franclaco, told them "I Cross Cemetery . Los be b U r milli •1~" d Angeles. ca. Services under want to a u er or onau~ an won a --the direction or Baltz lriaJ position with Mrs. J . D. Zellerbach of Crown· ,r1J Bergeron-Smith & Tuthill Zellerbach Paper Company. noi Westcurr Chapel Mortuary "The first evening, I prepared the table , lm- or Costa Mesa. 6411 9371. bl I th ht " B ett aJled "B t h SIEMONSMA pecc a y , oug • eon rec . u a e ELVIS UNVEILED Fans of the "King of R ock and Roll ... Elvis Prester. were at the unveihng or a bronze statue by Jon Douglas subscribed to by an organization called "Elvisly Yours .. -which will donate it to a public institution in London. GRACE G SIEMONSMA tapped on the table. 'Bennett,' she said, pointing to formerly Grace Stanyon or I the s alt shaker. The monogrammed z OD the salt Laguna Beach. Ca. Passed shaker was turned 90 degrees off. It was not facing away on September 26. 1981 her, and or course it was not proper ." .-----------.-----------.,....------------------=.:.-===.~---------Survived b y beloved husband Clarence. a brother Despite lbat shaky start, Bennett spent five Elmer Smith of Washington. years on the Zellerbach estate before becomine 2 c9usins Bessie Feeney of head buUer for Jack Warner of Warner Bros. Pie· Elsmore. Ca. and Pauline lures. There, he supervised a staff of 19 in a Bever · aq Durflinge~ or Oregon. Th.e ly Hills mansion that "was so laree that l got lost ' Antique & Auto EARL'S l UM8t .. C)oltl! A TINO , .. ., Wat., Heelil'lt '9t l •1 }1 /f\ .. .................. • Put •38 to work in pay • tt• :ritttie• • TV Movies. earn • \ • : $19,456 in 4 years. : • For brochure call: • MEEDHS.P? But Be nnett missed bis mrlfriend, Ruth, who Show & Sale coST.uom641-1289 ' Rosary will be recited this twice in the first week that I was there ... ~.5m e.venm~ al 7:30PM at St '-•'t'f .. ,.....,.4-,.,,, .. ," ,.,, n . j( .. II c,,,. .... M.-.lil""'I •('W'f Arr .. -ao· Catherine of Siena Catholic dg11 Church. Laguna Beach. Ca. a&~ with Mass or Christian g~g Burial on Tuesday. Sep· (ill< tember 29, 1981 al 11 :OOAM &-,.,. .............. _ Help yourself to a Heaping selection of QuaU/ied Hopefuls tn the DAILY PILOT HELP WANTED ADS : New;~;e~~~FICA : I w ·1 NE SALE •••••••••••••••••• also at the church Inter ul ment will foll ow at Hol~ Sepulc he r Ce m e tery . Orange. Ca. Mc Cormick ., 1 Mortuary, Laguna Beach lo directors .qs WAX DAHL "11 S SIE WAXDAllL. res1 $dJ dent of Santa Ana , Ca. since 1945. Passed away on Sep· tember 25. 1981 She was an i9d aide with St. Peter's Church. OOfr Ca Santa Ana, Ca She 1s In survived by her daughter~ i& ')Ruth Johanson of Santa ni . : A n a , C a . C I a r I s iho E a s t e r b r o o k o f L a k e '(I>• Isabella. Ca a'nd Agne~ D 'Entr e m o nt of ' f1 ; M a~sachusetts. Services will 001 be held on ~onday. Sep· tftiv tember 28. 1981 al ll.OOAM ""' at Harbor Lawn Memorial 000 Chape l with Re v J ohn Wilke r o f St P e ter s 01 !I Catholic Church officiating J'.>lit Interment service s im .o') m e d i a t e I y r o 11 o w i n g lsn Services under the direction i 10 of Ha rbor Lawn Mount lfJI?• Olive Mortuary of Costa Mesa 540·5554 DEATHS ELSEWHERE CA IRO, Egypt <AP I Mohammed Rlad, 57. a top Egyptian diplomat and former slate min1~ter for foreign arfatr~. died Sun da} HOLLYWOOD <AP1 Television producer-writer All an Balter, 56. a three· lime Emmy nominee for his writing on the ·Mis- sion Impossible" series. died Sept. 23. HOLLYWOOD 1AP1 George Bilson, 79. former producer and screenwriter who wrote short subJecls at RKO Studio from 1946·1953 and was in ('ha rge or lratlen al Warner Bros ~fore that. died Sept. 23 PASADENA IAP) T he Rev. Louis H. Evani., 84. the crusading minister who m ade the llolly wo od Presbyterian Church the largest of its denomination in the world. died Sept 21. He .was named one or America's "\2 Outstanding Religious Leader~ .. by Li fe magazine. PACtftC VIEW MIMOllAL PAllt Cemelel"'f' Mortuary Chapel-Crematory "· 3500 Pac1f1c View Drove Newport Beach 644·2700 McCOlMICll MOITUAlllS LaQuna Beach 494·9415 LaQuna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Capistrano 495·1776 HAUOI UWM-MT. OUYI Mortuary • Ceme lery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5-40-5554 "8CtNOTHHS NU. NOADWAY ~TUAJlY 110 Broadway Costa Men 642·9150 IALn••BOM SMITH & TVTHIU WISTCLW CHANL 427 E 17th SI Costa Mesa 8•8-9371 worked at the Zellerbach estate, so he left Warner MtSSIONvl4!J0495·0401 afler·rour months. Huntington Center _,c. ........ c ..... ,,.~o ti•" ... ,,.., •I ••• ,., l"••r I After a stint as confidant for an oil distributor, 1---F.;..ri.;..t;,;,,,h.;..ru=--:S;..;:u;.;.n;..:. • ...;;Oct=;.;.· 2:.-4...;.:.. !-----------1 he spent 21,o'J years as buUer to Spreckels Sugar heir John Rosekrans in San Francisco. He served art connoisseurs from France, dukes and lords from England and the sister of the King or Spain. CUSTOM FRAMING ART Even though Be nnett found being a buUer Pt1n,. "quite an enthusiastic experience," he left E~hlnp domestic service in 1976. s.rlflraplre UfltOflraphe "Ruth and I wanted to be married and have a ReproducfloM Poeter Alf U mlfH EdltloM home of our own in lieu of serving other people," t----------r ----------, he said. I 30% 20% They returned to this Central California farm· I 0 Off I OFF I ing area where Bennett was raised, and he HE W' AN y5Mrt)ln n I CUSTOM FRAMING I FRAMED ART I became a special projects official with a fruit cold M V \,W~ I w.co..p0n I w/Co<.Jf»n l storaHis~ecompanhy. . d TO HA\/E HIS BABY '--------""HS ~-twt . _______ _. speec precise an his diction perfect, My '/SA' VISIT OUI GIFT '°""9UI Canll ~ Bennett said he could revert back to the discipline _ HO••s sum 1011 wm· of a buUer again if he c hose lo. ro ~ _,..,..,.._ ...... -. . . •r ___ -Horltlw...iT-c:...w "I've never lost the feeling, the flair, the MOH.-Fm. IM s avoir-faire," said Bennett, now SS. "ShouJd I ever --~ SAT. 11•5 (714) 544-047 5 <:ASH & CMRYOHlY. SAVE 30% A.ND MOREi ST ARTS OCT. ht. CBW HOURS 9-9 • " 11 .. ::-...:!,. 548-931 wish to return, it would not be difficult." ,# Next to Jewelry by Remy During nine years as a buUer, Bennett most ~--------------------~========~=~~==============~L--------­e njoyed "pulling on parties and serving the beautiful dinners." His status did not make him feel inferior, Ben- nett said. "My position was as a household manager, not just a servant. My position was one of professional s ubservience, not one of emotional subservience." Joggers replacing ponies for wagers SINGAPORE <APl -There is no parimutuel window, daily double or saliva test. Jus t a cluster of oriental Damon Runyon characters standing near the reservoir's pumping station trying to look inconspicuous while s tudying lbe human field. The gambling addicts of Singapore have dis· covered jogging. And each evening they bet thousands of dollars o n runners exercising around a reservoir. Some put money on themselves to circle the 4.3-mile track in a specified lime. Others handicap and make side bets on joggers who are unaware money is riding on their speed. The impromptu betting went largely unnoticed until the New Nation exposed It this week. The ne wspaper said tho usands of dollars change hands at each session. In a tongue-in-cheek editorial. New Nation commended the ingenuity in finding a fresh gam· ble -or punt as the British say -now that the soccer season is over and horse racing occurs only on weekends. "How and where else is the poor, deprived bet· tor going to pass his time? Try the Pandan Reservoir in Jurong. About 100 punters gather most evenings at the reservoir to place bets on local Sebastian Coes and Steve Ovetts, who, unlike their British middle-distance counterparts, are not averse lo competing with each other on the same track for a fe w dollars ." Coe just broke Ovett's record for the mile at a meet in Zurich with a time of 3:48.53. Ovett's lime was 3:48.i.>. "Credit should be duly given ror an effort, though misguided, to make life more exciting in Jurong and jogging a less routine form of ex· ercise," the New Nation said. The newspaper described one onlooker in street clothes who, "convinced that he could make fast buck, simply tucked his long pants into bis socks and set off in his high-heeled leather shoes." The new sport hasn 't escaped the attention of the police, who say they will crack down on gamblers who bet on joggers. MOTICa CW All'PUC.ATION flOlt PtCTITICIUI MIMNall CMANO• IN awteanMIP OP NAMa ITAHllHNT ALCOftOLJC .. ,, ...... u caM•• T ... follOwllll ...... 11 dDlflt ...... .. at1 ....... , TeW!MmltMeyc-.ni: l e ) THE TH9'ff MAGI Cbl NfUC*, Tlloe TN, W£STa9'00«, NINTH HOUSE, 1JNl Pwilell Orcle, Mu•I L•m, 19021 8111Mrd St,...t, """"lftttenlieedl,Cel......,.tao ,,...,tel,. Vetkoy, CA flM -.._iy. f111eu1e11 P:.e. ••'""· U '4t 1111 lo 1"' ~ .. Mceflelle P11rl1e11 Clrclo, H11111l"910fl .. Kfl, aowr ... CMtnll ,_ •••• Of'P IALE CellterllleftMI' 8 ff9' & WINE CPV8. P91tMIHSI to Tfllt ......... It cOftdlKted by.,. 111- H ll o lcllell< llonr• .. • •1 11111 dlv .... t. hlllenl SllWI, ~Ml Valley, CA I!.__ ,,,V ........ ft1ta. Tiii• ........... -,. ... "'"' ... ~ ...... Or .... ()Dest Delly ~ C-ty Cloffi., 0r..,.. Cewlty ...... Setlf, 29, "'1 0 '1 .. 1 ..,,. .. , D, 1'71. TAX FREE ANNUAL INT EREST!* C:Ommercial Credit's avers Thrift Certificates. Up to $2,000taxfree interest Plus a cash bonus. The greatestwayforyouandAmerica to fight inflation. Introducing All -Savers Thrift Certificates from C.Ommercial Credit. One year, $500 mini· mum thrift certificates that allow you to earn up to $2,000 in interest tax free. if you file a joint re- turn ... and up to $1,000 tax free for individual returns. The interest rate is the highest allowed by law. This high. rate is guaranteed for the one· year tenn of the thrift certificate. And C.Ommercial Credit will add still another great incentive ... $10 cash bonus for thrift certifi · cates from $500 to $5,000. $20 cash bonus for thrift certificates of $5 000 or more. So what's iood for ~ca is sensational for you. Purchasing an All-Savers Thrift Certificate helps reduce iriflation and strengthen our econ· omr. through an inaease in personal savings, while you get up to $21000 tax free interest an· nually-plus cast} just ror opening your account. Don't put it off. Use the attached coupon to apply for c.omrnercial Credit's great All -savers Thrift Certificates and YOU and UNCLESAMwill have a lot to smile about. AvaiJabletoCalifomiaresidents only, beginning October 1. ·t:;.f!!~~~.~"'~;;~~.~Mr!!.~·::it~:t:-,<.T\4::~~·t!.':'n11 .. """ ,. ... ,two t•• ..... """ .. "' ~------------------. I Here's my check or money order for an All·Savers Ceruficatt in the amount of S . I Type or Account : D lndividual O Joinl Tenancy I In the name<sl or ___________ _ My Signa1ure ____________ _ Co-Owner Signature----------- Account Address ___________ _ City _____ State _____ Zip ___ _ My Social Security/Tax 1.0.#-------- I I I I I I I I I Phone I I I • COMMDcIALCmrr 1 ·... OOMMEROAL CREDIT PC.AN.INOORPORATED I -----------------~ ~ 650 8. 81\d!hunt 1ie. ll2804.17141774 6140 C-.. .._, m FM! 17th St. 9".M2'1, 1'11418" 8?00-H~ ._., lem&Qilden Werot St. 92647. 17141847 mt ....._ ~ ~Allc:la hrbwy ~•fWI ,,., .. 1 ._..AM. 1224 EM! 17th Stft'd 92701,171415'7 ~l • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 29, 1981 .. Wine trade bottled up Vintners complaining about foreign barriers By IACK 8Cll&EIB•AN SAN FllANCJSCO (AP> -A bottle ot wine retaillna for S4 ln California sells for $18 In Japan -an example cited by the state's bllllon-dollar wine ln· dustry of International trade barriers against wine produced In the United States. It takes 21 pages to detail the complicated taxes, label re· qulrements and other roadblocks foreign countries i>Ut In the path of U.S.·made wines. The United States, however, is virtually an open market for wines from the rest of the world. U.S. restrictions on wine are found in one sentence : A tariff ol 37"41 cents a gallon, ancf a label listing the percentage of alcohol. In contrast. here are some foreign requirements, in addi· lion to duty and taxes: -The European Common Market requires an import license for each shipment, and any member state m ay veto such a license, ban.nine the wine for the other members as well. -West Germany won't let Paul Masson u.ae its proprlet.ary name "Emerald Dry" on the label, which must Indicate the potential alcoboJ of the wlne. -France does not allow the words "produced and bottle by ... " on the label unless the ex· port license bolder grows 100 percent of the grapes. -Italy demands the date of the grape harvest on the label, in Italian. -Wines to be sold in Quebec Province In Canada must be labeled in French and English. -Mexico imposes six taxes and add-on charges and de· mands three bottles for the Ministry of Health. U.S . winemakers look on Venezuela's rules with particular di.'smay. That South Earnings take dip for Newport firm A vro Flnanclal Services Inc., Newport Beach, reported net earnings for the first nine months or fiscal 1981 were $54.5 million, down from $83.6 million earned in the first nine months of 1980. Included in the results were foreign exchange losses of $7 .3 million in 1981 and gains of $9.1 million in 1980. For the third quarter, AFS net earnings slipped to S24 million. compared with $29.5 million for the 1980 third quarter. * AlrCal is offering, effective immediately, a $36 fare between Los Angeles and San Francisco. San Jose and Oakland. The "Moving Sale Fare" is in celebration or the carrier's move to its new location at Los Angeles International Airport. There are no restrictions, and the price will be in effect through Oct. 31. • American Educational Television Network Inc., Irvine, announced that more than 250 cable systems throughout the COLLECTORS COANEf' BRIEFS country, including eight or the 10 largest multisystem operators, carried its inaugural program this past weekend. AETN is the nation's first television network dedicated to the exclusive pre· sentation or continuing educa· lion programs, primarily over cable systems. * A Fluor Corp. unit is develop- ing secondary recovery systems for the Belier Field platform off the Ivory Coast , Africa, which is jointly owned by Exxon, Shell and the Ivorian government. Value of the contract was not disclosed. Fluor Ocean Services Ltd .. London, w i ll provide project management, design, engineering, procurement and cons true lion-man age ment services. The project will add water-injection and gas -lift facilities to the existing platform that was completed by the unit in July 1980. American nation requires eight certificates, a bill of ladlne. 18 product and label samples, a power of attorney. six visas, a certlllcate of ingredJent.a and 14 copies of various documents. California produces 70 percent of all wine sold in the United States and 9Z percent of U.S. wine sold overseas. A record 10 million gallons or California wine are expected to be shipped overseas this year. But last year, while the United States exported $30 million in wines, foreign producers shipped nearly $700 million in wine to this country. Edmund Mirassou, fourth· generation patriarch or California's oldest winema.king family, says: "We're only say· ing if they. any other country. build up a trade barrier against our wines, then we should do the same with their's ... parity - equal treatment on both sides of the fence." John De Luca, president of the California Wine Institut e. representing more than 400 California wineries, also com- plained of foreign barriers. California is still suffering what De Luca called "the legacy of prohibition,·· when from 1917 to 1934 the U.S. wine industry went dormant and emerged as a "baby" competing with coun· tries that had been producing wine for 1,000 years. The big ~i,-pr__oducing coun· tries -FN!fce, Italy and Spain -came roaring back into U.S. markets, gaining trade con- cessions while refusing to make their own, he said. Until only re· cenlly, he added, foreign pro- duce r s believed that if Americans wanted good wine, they would have to buy foreign labels. De Luca said that viewpoint is changing because California wines are showing top results in European blind tastings. California's reputation is evi- dent in a more academic way. The viticulture and enology de- partment at UC Davis, is famous for research into new var ieties. France, which pro· duces some of the world's greatest wines, also recognizes the school's excellence and is s ending its experts there in an effort to improve French wines. ......... OFF THE GROUND The Boeing Company's first 767 commercial passenger airplane makes its first takeoff from its plant in Everett. Wash. the twin-jet aircraft is the first new Boeing airliner to go into production since the 747 in 1966. Union worke rs biting bullet 'Chrysler syndrome' leads to wage cuts, freezes WASHINGTON CAP > - American union members, wor· ried about pricing their bosses out or business and themselves out of jobs, increasingly are swallowing pay cuts or wage freezes. Wayne Horvitz, former direc· tor of the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service, says the combination of increasing busi· ness woes and the desire ror job security is causing the unusual round of wa~e concessions. "I think there's probably more of a long-term trend here than we give it credit for," he said. The latest to accept a wage cut was the 20 ,000-person workforce or Pan American World Airways, which is struggl· ing to stay sol vent. Autoworkers and Teamsters are likely to ac· cept lesser contracts in order to help their industries stay com· petitive. "We call it the Chrysler syn· drome, and we view it as a very serious threat," says Thomas Russow or the United Food and Commercial Workers. "There's got lo be some assurances that if these concessions are made, we have some kind or job security. "Unfortunately," he says, "everyone seems to be jumpin~ on the bandwagon." The trend is s ure to please the R eagan administration, which believes that big wage settle· ments hinder the fight to tame inflation. Since the auto and trucking contracts are the largest to be negotiated in 1982, wage con· cessions are sure to dominate the year's labor contracts. Auto companies want the Unit· ed Auto Workers to moderate its wage demands to help the Big Three manufacturers compete with the Japanese, which enjoy lower labor costs. Nearly 120,000 truckers have been laid off because of rising non-union competition among freight haulers arising Crom de· regulation of the industry. The national trucking con· tracts do not expire until March 31, but Teamsters leaders have agreed to early negotiations on a new pact which will be drawn to avoid further com p etitive erosion among the unionized firms. No one expects the large auto and trucking contracts to cut as deeply as the new agreement Pan Am forged with its employees -a 10 percent pay cut. Airline spokesman James A Arey said the wage con· cessions, which run throuch 1982, are expected to save Pan Am $200 million. Employen hope this will help Pan Am stay afloat. The Pan Am situation is fu from unique. Me mbers of more than a dozen unionized employees or Consolidated Rail Corp. have ap- proved wage concessions in the range of $200 million to save the federally subsidized Conrail. Leaders of the United Rubber Workers approved a concession in a contract involving employees at Goodyear Tire Ir Rubber's Topeka, Kan., plant, in which union members will work weekends without premium pay. Several unions at the Philadelphia Bulletin accepted m ajor contract concessions with management to pump new revenue into the afternoon newspaper, which is striving to remain afloat. And a new pact between Pulitzer Publishing Co. and 11 production and editorial unions at the St. Louis Post Dis- patch includes an 18-month wage freeze. 11 ... e-·---·-.... .... c:.........,. ...._a.-.. Hottest ne w m1t1•1 l"vel marketing plan ..., ... Kr .... rr.-_..,_. .. , .. ~ .. L.Nh ..., .... , .. ,. ,._ SllUS ...... '"'so-a... m•• -... -c:--.,....m4t-t······· .... ·····• • Put •38 to wort( in pay • • TV Movies earn • • • • • $19,456 in 4 years. • • For brochure call: • : NEWPORT-PACIFICA : Spirulina Seminar Instant natural energy & weight control programs Holiday lnn-COSta Mesa-Wed., Sept. 30, 7:30 pm guest speaker -Michael S•soa. Irvine Health Center ,. '"Spil *• -AC.._, ft...,.ctln" by reservation only 857-4775 -• 957 .. Z•Z • f •eeeeeeeeeeeeeeel I._------------------------------------- 383-Acre boating lake 2 Marinas 7 Sandy beaches IS.Hole golf course 12-Acre equestrian center 4 Lighted tennis courts 24-Hour security guard Homes $85,000 and up Canyon Lake is only a hltle over an hours drive from LA or Orange Coun1y Homes. Condominiums Lots. Acreage All on the lake or w1lhtn a short walk. II Canyon Lake 1sn·1heaven.1t son the way. To gel there.1ust call Lighthouse Realty- the unreal real estate company CANYON LAKE Sold through Lighthouse Realty (714) 679-6881 • If it f loats, chances are you'll read about i t in the Dal Pilal1 642-4321 t.---· no one can pay you more interest than Bank of Newport on the new ta][ el[empt ''all-saver'' certificates So why not save at Ban.le of Newport where you know you will get the best service and. of course, you will also have the satisfaction of helping the economy of your own community. On October 1, 1981, Bank of Newport will offer a new "TAX-SA VER" CERTIFICATE of deposit that pays you up to 70% of the average yield of a 52-week T-Bill and allows you up to $1,000 in interest, tax free; up to $2,000 tax free for couples filing a joint return Imagine that! All those great Ban.le of Newport peISOnalized services and the new ''TAX- SA VER" CERTIFICATE available from your nearest Ban.le of Newport office. Since, legally, no other bank, savings & loan or thrift can offer you more interest on a ''TAX-SAVER" CERTIFI- CATE, it certainly makes sense to save where you know you'll be getting the best banking service available anywhere. Three lOC.O.ont in Newport a.ch: hcUk: Cout Highway at Avocadof180.8000, no.er at Sixteenth srr.../8'8-8333, ThJJty-Second SU. at LeFa,.ue/e71-e333. { .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuo1aay. S•ptember 2.9. 1981 --~-...... ·-l111a11••• 1r•11•I••••• ••• AllOO M IAOO 1110 \!MON U.MitY, Utt W.tl ""'4'-'• ..,..AM.CAmO' --llO'l"ICIOt'IAl.I Of'UAL...-.l•TI' AT ... IVAHt.A~ ........... , .......... c-rt ........... c..li..,,.., .... a.-y .. Or .. 111 Ille llllalt•r •I II\• Slat• •I WAL TUI tURlltO, 0.0.*' NOTICa ti HallllV OIVIN ti.ti ti. ""*""""° wlfl Mtl at ~•lv•I• ..... to,,.'""'"' .... -·~. aullll•<I I• ce11llrm•t1e11 et ulf luc>ff ... Geut\. .,. "" ..... ,,. ..... ., e4 O<t-.. t•t al "'99fflu Of l(LllN t. cur1.•11, ""~111 L• c1~ 1ou1 ... wo.1u1 .. w , 1""-· Collft. ,., ................. $W'9 .. C:.tllenll• 1VNl10llCOVltTOll nta "A Tll Ot' CAU li'04llf IA ... ,,.. CIOUWTY Of'~ .. Ct9lc c... °""" .... ...-.CA""1 ~lal!ltlff Ml lll01Tl4 WILi.i ~01111 VOUNOii II. IN!vlfwala Wit.I.I AMO VOUNOlll tNVaUMINU "· Oa'--HA~~···UINO,l•UCIJONI~ llllllvl~ ~Lll'OllNIA IMVllTMl.HT LIAllNO COM ~ANY, INC • (.erplllt.11, -Oott I 1-. •• lft(M!W F '.I ... "CTtTIOW I USIMIM MAM41tTATlllMMT TM ,.....,,,_. "rW11.1 .,. H i ne ...... ,.. .. ; a•OOHAUl~l~l .. 111 ...... L•M . H1o111tlngt_, 8oacl\, C.lllOflllt ,.,.. a ltll•r• A J ecllme n, ltttl 1te11e•r '--""· Hunt111eto11 •••ell, c a11i. ........ Mtrlly11 0 JOClllflen. '"" ll•111•r t.eM, Hu111tn9ta11 aeecll, c:.i1ton1lot1Ml Tllla MINU la COllOUcteO lllY t ..... ,.1~111 MarllYll D Jacll~ Tllla .....,_.. w-. fl-wl .. "'°' '-'"~of o..,. c_, °",..... 1 .... 111er t .... , I tlW .,..,,, '9f1ltWM rw,_ It rt• 111 ..... rai a•: A IAKlllV la-...•· JWOO I I Toro lloacl, II TerQ.CA"'8 taOI, a ll "' rl.,.., 1111• eftd lnlwetl Of u10 ""•""'•' h time Of e1ee111-•t1 Ille t!Q.M, title encl lnl.,•t 11\M IN .,,,. fllJ-1 nt.•l• " Mid -...... ,,., e<.,,,.. IUMollill09tl 1"11911.,_. Ortntt Cotll 0.lly ~llo4. MOTl~I YW .... ._ -1'1le 5-t. U, 1t, 9 . Oc.L •, 1•1 411111 .. t ........ -....0 Illy Ille w .. lf'll.__rt al .... tocatlan It' Pl.AL' v •v .,.r111tein fl 1 .... er • ...,.,,,.,~ <-' _, --............. , _____________ _ uNl lllllk '"'"'"" It ln1.-d 10 Oll..,,.._,.. •I Ille 01110 ti Ul!L llCllOW, JOllO Crawn ., ~arllwey, L•ow11a Nltu•t, •"'• t1tn °ton on ., •Her OC· tO, t••· - ---at IN porwn ...... Cit!"" Moy IM fll• It II FAllElt, EKtVW •11114' CtO I Etc.-10110 Crown Velltv wev, •t01, L.eOUN Nl.,el, CA . Ille lell er., tor llllllO ctalmt by ( ............. '"OttCICMf "· "" II I• 0. -In ... NY llelort tht mmettort clet•-ltleO a bove T£05-. 11.1•1 ltletr'CID M. ladll 51,,_ Wrotl-lllY IM-lr.,s;f.,IH otl"'" 0r-. COHI Dolly Piiot. . tt, 1"1 42.UI PVIUC MOmE IMll •r In eOdlttool to IMI flf HIO • CHMd, el llw time of .... tll, Ill -t• •II 111e un.111 ,.., 11t•rtv. 111-..t .. 111 Ille C-IY of Ot~oe. Sl•le of Co1llor111., s-rtl(vl«IY •terlllled •• tollo••, i.wtt UndlvlOed --NII lnleretl In I.ti 14 of fr.el l.Ut Ot lltr mot1 l'KOt.-0 In •-115, "-' 11 to to. tncho11I ... Of MltOtl-~. r9'0f'ch Of Hid C°""IY • .._. COtl\moNy known H 2U• San Jue11 t.•ne, Cotl• Meu, C•lllOllll .. Ownor of o ..... •1"111111-o,,. !'•II,,.._, wilt join ... i. l•rm• rt1 w1e <•lll In 1-.i1 mono ot the Vnllecl St.tlet on c~tlrmellon ol ule, or part <•th •no l>•••11ce •vlC1e11ccG by not• H fU rtd by Mor19•~or Tront O..Oon Ille II"-· ty '° '°'°' l•" w een• ~ •""""'' blO to lie depollt911 with \llcl, 81cK or ot!er• to be In writing - wlll be '•tl'ted •I .,,. etoreulCI Mii<• et •nY time oil ... llW llr>t pubU~tlOll llereot ...a t.lort Clett of wle. .,.. ..... _. .... .,..,..... ....... .,.. ............ ...... ....... It you whll to _.. "9 ..,, ... of a11 •ttor'lley Ill lflls IMlll.,, Y011 "-IO .. •• 11romt1llY M IMI your wrlll•n t•WIOll ... It.,..,, may Ille lllM Oii limo. AVllOI Utlllll .. .... ... 1 t . II.,.... --..... C9111r• IH. ..,. . ..._ ... -.-u .. _ .. _.,.. ...... L.N"' 1-.-... ........ SI U\1.0 Otwa IOll<llM el COllWjo cllt Ull ·~ 91\ et1t Hullto, *«lefl• hec•rtO 111meolatam•nl•, cl• Hit MtMrt, 1U ~iU MCrllt , •I hey .............. wr r99l1trMe. ll•rncio I. TO THE OEFENOANT A ctvll <omPl•lnt """ -lllect b'I Ille ptol~ tiff _,.,., you. It yov """' llO -·ncl thla l••wll, you mu1t. within • dilya elter thl• .....nmam is ,....,., on you. Ill• with 1111• cown • wrln.n r•- to Ille <omol•lnt. Unleu yow dO 10. '°"' a.t•ull wlll be •ntered on ep. pllcatlon of uw pialntltf, •nd 11111,ov'1 MOC MOTlC( PICTITIOU• aua•M•M MAMS ITATUUNT l 11• tollo••nt oorso11a •re ootne llv•lnn.•n · MOllNINCUIOE WOOOS Ill, L lO., ._._, llM<ll lloulnard, H""t· l"flOll 9N(ll, Ctlllonll• ... , H•tlOr Mattt<h. l•IU 8tocll loul•varcl, Hu11llngtoft •••<II. Callfor111.t...O ENA 0t...ioornen1 CorporallOn, • Callfor11la corpor•llon. 1'1•2 l•e<h 8oul•varo, Hunllnglo,. Beoc h . C•llfOf'lllO t1M1 Tlllt l>utl,,." ll <<><10uCloO by • tlmlwo .,.,,,...\/>Ip f.HA 0.wlopnMnl CO<J) O.•ldMeu1.,, Prelldtftt Tiiis Ua-1 WH Ill_, wltll Ille County Cler~ ot Of•-COVfllV 011 Sept. u. 1•1. '"""' lfOTICe TO CONTllACTOlll CAUJMO P'Oll 8 1DS DoloG lllll Hid do~ of St~•mber, 1 .. 1 ICllNeen G<irn .. y E•~lllor o4 !tie E •lat• of Mid OtOOont may enwr • l~I ~111.11 you lot Publl\lwG Or-. Coast Dolly Piiot, Ille relief~ Ill IN (Of'llpiallll, S.pt. U , n, 1'. Ott S, "'' ._,.I whlc" coulO rnull In o-rnltN'neflt OI ol Oltlrltt: NEWPOAT·MESt FIEOSCHOOL DISTRICT ONdllN 2 IS o'tloO p "' OI Ille Gay of Oc......,' ,., e Of Bid Rec•lpl 1151 P"tteft\lf Gotta Mt>A, CA .U27 l•<I lclotnllll<•llon Ntmt. A I A C OtTIONING REPLACEMENT A ANDERSEN SC..001. l"t t Pl-o rw on Illa. ltil Pl•unll• St; Cost• INM, CA ana ?MS &e•t St C Mftt,CA TICE IS HEltE&V GIVEN llWll •....,_med S<hOol District ol Countv. Golllornl•, acllnQ l>y tllr0U9ll lh Gov•rnlno 8oaro, •lno lltr r•terred t o •• SllllCT," •Ill receive uo to. l>UI lal•r -, ... .00 ...... 1.11.a 11 ..... • lllOI"" IN •w•rd of a contra<! tor he .OOW pro)« I. 01 "'°'' IM recel..., In llW ple<t llflea -.... -"'°" bo _,,.. Plll>ll<ly ,_ •-at tl'le -.. time and pie<•. •<II blG mu'' conrorm •nd 11t w lo Ille contrec:t Gotw,.,.nb h Old lifltll IM accompanied by """Y referrta lo In Ille conlrtotl Meftb -by ,,,. 1111 o4 pt_.i ontr«ID<'t. DISTRICT r-rw• IN right LO I any or oll Dias or to wa1 .... •nY ulwlllet or tntormellllel In any ~ In tlw l>klcllnQ. OtSlRfCT llO• ol>lalntO lrorn Olr«tor of the Oef>artmont ot In rtol ltlllalloM Ille general .,. .. 11 rat• of par diem wege1 In Ille Illy In wtll<ll 1111• wort Is 10 oe .,....,. for .. <II crefl or type ol man ~ lo 1u cut• 111e con I. T .... rtlft ore on Ill• al Ille Tll ICl olllce tocoted •I 1151 e11ll• St., CCKta Mew, CA t?UI t ,,..Y be oblalneo on requ.st A of ..... rein ""'" lie Poil.O •• ol>sJte. ICW90Dll'IQ tc:hedulo ol per Glem ' It bo.a _. a -kl"11 Gey or (I) "°"'" l N r•tt tor l\0410..y ove'11me -" >NII bt 11 leHI •nd-1\ell I sl\011 bo ....,.lory upon the CON· Tll CTOR lo whom Ille contract It , --ony ... 1>cc1n1rac1or r "Im, to pay not Ifft 11\oll ,,.. speclll.O rattt lo •II workmen loy.O by them In rne uecullon of Oflltact. ~....., wl~ow M' Illa tor rloO of forty.fl,.. (~jl d•Y' afltr 1t "°'for IN -"Int ot Old,, payment bOnO ana • pertormen<• •111 .,. rt<!Ulncl prlOr lo UICU IN ~Mre<t TN payment llOnO IO In Ille torm '91 lortll In IN ac:tooc.,,,_u Governing Board e.,, OorOlh' Harvey Fl~ l'ur<NsJno Olrtctor lllllMO Orango Cooll Oalty Piiot, 29, Oct.•. ltll dl"41 PVIUC MOllCE .. OTICIE TO CONTllACTOH CAU.IMG FO• llDS $efl80I Olsttl(t l>IEWPORT·MESA UNIFIED SCHOOi.. OISTAtCT 814. OMdll,. 2:00 o'cloc• p m 01 Ille l¥!h 0.Y of Octoc.r, 1911 Pl~oof &Id Receipt· IUI Pl.centla SI , ¢M\I Nina, CA .U21 ll~le<I IGenlllk ellon Name HEA1'ER REPl..ACEMEHl f't«.o PIM\s 11• on Ill• 1•11 Plecen- lla a , COlta Mtw, -2'1115 &e., St., CotO ~. Calllomla HOltCE IS HEllE8V GIVEN 11\el Ill• ellove-nem.o ~"°°' Ol•trlc 1 ot 0r""9t Coull!¥. Callloml•, K lint by •lld 11\r-h 111 Go••rnlno 8o•r0, h•rel111ll•r ret1rr10 to •• .. 011-'rRICT ... w111 recelw up tt>, Dul Mtier than Ille •llo••st.11.a time, we 1114'"" Ille eworo of 1 contrtct tor -PfOll!CI I "'-11 IM rec.i..a In Ille pie<• Ide tHled -w. eno Sll•ll 111 -""" •"' ll\tl>ll<ly -•loud •• ,,,. •t>o••· sl•te.t lime -Ill••· T"°"9 wtll IM• N/A OepoMI r41qut...O ler t•<ll "' of blG oocumtn" to over..,._ Ille ,.,..,n In gooO conOlllon wlltlt' N/A dllYi elttr Ille bid 01MtnlnQ Oott. 14<1\ l>IG mull conform t nG be r•"9"11"" to Ille <ontrec: I CIO<u,.,.nts I.Cl\ bid ~II bt e<compenlaO by IN MCWlty referred lo In IM cOMrKt de(IHJWfllS -by Ille lltl of pr-0 """'*'tractioo 1flo OISTlllCT ,..,.,..,.,Ille right lo rel«t elly or •II blO• or lo w•I•• any 1rr9t111Mltlel or 1n1..,. ...... 1111.s 111 •11r ~ -It\ .... llldcllng Ttle OISTRICT llH OOtalntO from Ille Olrector of the o.per1me111 01 In· tNflrlat ._lllellont Ille Ol,,.rtl prtv•ll· Int "1'ett of °'' Glem we9n In Ille ioc•nty In wl>l<h ti.h --'' to IM lllitl'fer"'9G for N<h craft or ty .. or ._.,,_..,, to ue<ut• Ille <on· TheM r•ltt .,. Oii 1119 ., tht 11 ICT ofll<• touleG al IU1 P~ SI., Colla Mew, CA fU 17 C ..... ,.,.y be o«JCalfttCI OI\ rtque>t A C._, of tlwM r .. K 11\all be PMt•d •I tMie-llW. ICll"l90fll0 K_,. of per oi.m •• ~ -• _,_Ing Gey of '" """"· n. r••• lot llOlkNy .,.-"91'11me ..on; JMll "" at least n,..and-"-lf It INll 119 .......a.1ory -Ille CON· TttiCtTOfl to -Ille contrec:t It ~. wld upon any "'"'~tra<IOf' ~ lllm, lo gay not IHI 11\en IN Mtlt 1111ttllled retes 10 011 WOf11....., ~.,... 11y uwm In Ille ue<utlon of """...,Vact. ,.. ~may llffttlclfew hi• bid tor e ,....., of 1orty.11..,. 10 ) days attff ......... 1111 tor IN-'"11 of l>lda. .II. "7"*" IMflO -e portormence lltllllJ wtll • ._irwo prlO< lo UKI>- * "'9 contrac1, llle payment bond • In u. '°'"' Ml forth 111 the c •t•-"-~Boord • Oorettly H-y Flt/Wf. • Putt-1119 Director ......... Or .. CM•I D•lly Pit ... *9'fi "· ()(! •• ,., 017~1 ... PllX "811CE ICLEIN &CUTLI,_ An-y .. el•UW w•-· IMll'IQ of ,,_Y or praperty or 1 Other relief ••<1utJ1eG Ill the Com· "'IUC NOTICE mt ,.._.II I.A 0-•t'W'f • Sit. •n ,,,.,_ .... ca .... , Publish.a () enot Cootl O•llY Pllol S.pt 7', lO, Ott •. 1'91 on.11 ruauc NOTICE . ..._ NOTICI OP' IALI OF llEAL f'ltO~lltTY AT ~,_llfATE SALi -AlttaS IA .... S-lef C:-rt ef ... 5'.ale at Cat1"9n1ta,.., t ... c:-.cr .. 0r- 1n the M•llor of lhe E•l•h ot JEAN NE E. Kl!iZKO. 0.C:NW<I. pl•lnt OAlEOMOr 21, t•t ~A I r-II, Cler' J Oobr •. Oec>uty MACl(IY A AL~lltT IJ1tl Ill~ on ... 11111• 7'7 5 ... rMOll 0..a, Ctltt.nol• •HU UIJ)MI .... Publl..-Or•noe Coosl Do lly Piiot, S.pl U , 22. 1', Ott •• 1•1 QUI PUBLIC MOOCE N~ UMITED STATl.I OllTlllCT COV llT. CENTllAL OtlTll ICT Ol'CAL.,O•MIA (.&SI MUMa l a CV .. I tne SUMMONS CONTtCOMMODITY SlllVICES, INC,.o 0.W_,..<e•-·-· ~LAIN • TIFFI$) n. VICTOll H. 8AQOOTT. alM ·-H NAll~O OAOOITI, OeFIMDANl TO lHE ABOVE NAMED OEFEH· DANT NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tlWll Ille unO.rsl~ Wiit .. 11 al Prl .. lt Seit, lo ,,_ hl(lhetl ono best bl-r. JUbltCt to conllrmellon OI ••10 Superior Court. on or •II• IN tlh Goy 01 October Itel. et IN olftu ot KLEIN & CUTLER "10 ~Ill La Clen•o• 8oulu•rG, Suitt UI. lnolcwooo, County of Lo• Angeltt, Stele o4 C,alltornla 'IOJOI, oll llw rlglll, tlllt tnG lntcrftl o1 HIG 0.UOW<I al Vou lrt IWttC>y """mofteG all<I ,., Ille llmt o1 GHlll eno all 1t1e rlghl, tltlt quirt lo --KRANITZ. COM· anO lnllfl'll '""'.,,. ttt•I• ol WICI .,.. PAR ET .. SAR ROW, Profuslonal , .. , .. flt\ uqulrld by -•lion o4 Corporetlon, pl•lntlll'• ollorncy, .... or otllerwlM, Oilier 11\en or In ecldl· WllOH •CIGrtU h 4'2' Wllohlrt lion to '""' 01 uld <1e< .. >e0, •I ,,,. Boul .. ero, Suite 100. I.CK Al\9fle•. CA 11 .... 01 outh. In -to ell ,,,. ccrt•I 90010 on •M••r to the compla l111 real pr-rty, \llUlled In Ille County of •l\lel\ '' ,.,.....Ill\ .. ,..,.o -yov Los Angtles, !.IOI• ol C•llfornla, within :IO day• alter wirvlc:• of 11\ls partl<ullrly a.w.rlllllcl H rollow>, ,.,. wmmonA ""°" you, .. clullv• of IN wll Gay of ...,,IC• II you tall to Go '°· UncllvleleG -.f\011 lnle,....I In to JuG9m1111 by O.laull wlll IM lakell 1• o4 Tr art i'11 ••per mep rccoroeo In -oaln'1 YOU for'"' r .. 11'1a.ma.....a 111 800~ ••~ P-• II to 20, lnclu\lve of Ille complelnt MIHell.,,....> ~. rec.orGt of H'<I Ol'lEOAprll ll, 1 .. 1 County, mort commonly •nown •• EDWARD M ICRtlZMAH, )134 San Ju•n L•R4t. (Oita Mou Cl.ERi( Calllornl• 0w .. r of Olt\tl unalvl-8y line er-n, on•·h•ll 1nter.-1 wlll join 1n >1le. o.p..1y Cler• Terms ~ ule <••II In 1 ... tul money (SEAL OF lHECOUllT) ol IM Unlled SI-'"""" <O<lllrmat1011 Publl~ Ora<t0e to.ft 0.lly Piiot, ••II. o• part "'" •nG bolo nct Sep1 22, 2'1,0<1 •. U. , .. , "n .. 1 tvlGenceCI b y note ucureG by------------- Mor19e91 or T rusl OHCI on (lie proper· ly Ml tolCI len portent OI •mount b lo IM dePoilteG wllll l>IO 8 10> or olltr• to bt '" wrlltnt ano will be re<••..., •I Cl-. etoreHld offl(I •I ony urne ell•r tt.t flrtl l>Ubllutl"" 11ereot onG lleforo dlll• of '819 0•1.0 '"'' "'" City ol S.ll'len\-. 1•1 K•lhl"" O.rn'9Y E)(eculor ol ltle E•t.lte of MIG DK-nl KLEIM A CUlLEll Aner ... .-·UW mt So"'ll I.A 0-11 .... ., ~to. Ul .... , ..... ,c. ..... Pvbtl"'9G OrAnQ!t Coo•I D•l•y Piiot Sept Ji, lO. Oc:t •• ,., •111" '1Jll1C NOTICE NOTlc;I INVITING 8101 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN llWll ,,,. &ooro of TruslMS ol tllt C.O.st Communlly Colltoe DIS11 IC1 of Oran91 c.ovnly, CalltoonlO. wlll r•ul .......... blOt up to 11 00 • m .. Tut1cl•y, Oc· tol>•r 13, •tll at '"• Pu"lletlne D•P•rlm•nt of H IG coll-dl"rlCI loutco at ll10 AOom• Awn .. , CMI• Mew, Calltoonl•. •I W11lc11 time aolcl blGA win Ill publlcly -"'"° and re.a for. PURCHASE OF A SINGLE TUBE >l ·RAY GENERATI NG VH ll, ORANGE COAST COLLEGE At I 1>10. we 10 111 In e<tMGanu wllt\ Ille &Id Form 1n,1ruc11on1 and Condi llOll' 1n0 5c>e<llk all0r\' WlllCI\ •r• now on lilt onO may IM M<ured In Ille Offlet ot Ille Purcl\MI "II "'91<11 ot ... 10 coll- Gbtrl<I. Ee<h lllCll»r mull s.ul>mll with 1111 1>40 • Ctihltrs <heck, C•rllllecl <heO. or blGOtr'• bOnO mode pey•l>I• II) !tie order of 1111 Coell CommUllllY Coll-Ohtr I <I Boe ro ol lrusteo 111 a ll 1mounl not len .,_ 11 ... perc•nl U%) of Ille '""' bid al 1 O"'rtllt• lllel IN blOOer •Ill .,,,., Into Ille pt'opoiOG Conlr.cl If IN , ...... Is •war~ to him. In ltle event ol 181fure lo ..,1er In- to •u<h Conl/atl, II• P<O<etOi OI Ille cl>Kk wlll l>t Iott.it.a, or In Ille c..,. o4 • llOnO, the lull wm tllef9ol w lll lie torl•ll•G 10 wld ,.,.,_ Glitrkt. No blddtr """' wllhdr-1111 t>IO lor • perloel ol torty·fl ve IOI days etar IM Cl•I• Ml tor lllt -nlnQ tllereof lll• 8oor'O ot lr1111.,... r ... ,..,., .,,. prl•ll•QO ot ,..le<llnQ .,y anO 111 blOI or to waive .,,.., l,.19ul.,llles or In torme1111~ In M\Y blO or In tM bidding NORllMH E WA T!iON s.c.,..,.,,., Boord of Trust .. , Coo'1 Community Colle9f DIJ1rkt Put>ll""° Or-Coast D•lly Pll01 s.tp1 n , 1W1 m1 .. 1 PUBLIC MOOCE FICTl'TIOUI IUSINIU MAM• STATIM•MT Tht lollowlno 1Mtrwn1 •rt Goln11 l>u•lntUOJ II) C ALl,OllNIA BEST MO._lGAGE HO 101, e 11"'11•0 pertnwsl\lp; C2> CALIFORNIA Bf.ST MOll TGAOE NO 102, a limited pannertlllP. (J) CAl.IFOllNIA BESl MOltTOAGE NO. tOJ, a llmlt•d INMl'lertNp1 JOI E. 17111 Str .. 1, Suitt 214, Ce\le _,.,CA '1tf1 CAl.IFOllNIA IESl MORTOAG£ COAPORATl()fj. • C.llfomla <·0<1MH'•· tlon, JOI E. 1111\ Slr'ff\, Sult• 11', Cotte ~M.CAm27. Tiii• llusln.» Is conchl<l90 by • cor• POrtllOll . Corp Celllor11I• Bui Morte• .. c ... 111 w ea11ey. Cl\elrm ... of IN Boord lhl• ltatiJ"'9111 WH Ill• wllll ~ (OUl\lf Clertt "' <><•nte County on S.01 ....... """'" ~utHI-Or-C-1 Delly Piiot s.01 n. 2'1. <kt•. •l. , .. , .,,,_., Nil.IC •me '1JIUC NOTICE SV~lltlOCll COUltl 011 CAL.,OllMIA COUNTY Oii OllANGI lnth•M-of Ille AHll<ellon IJf 111 ,. TOOO MICHAEL AL811ECM1 .... , ..... by MARV JOWI LSOH ForCllangoeo4N..,,. At leDl OllDE• TO SNOW CAUll FOii CMAMGI OF N-1 MARV JO WILSON hel flltO a pall· lion In tllls court tor an O<'dtf a11owl"11 oetlli-r 10 <"°"911 his no,.,. from TODD MICHAEL ALBRECHT to TODD MICHAEL WILSON. II •• htret>Y orO.rld 11\el •ti pa.--.. lntarttt.O In lht l'nlft•r etor ... 10 •P. pee, ~ this court 111 09por1,,,_I No. J II lllO CJ•IC C.nt•r Orlve WH\, Soni• Ano, C!Mllornl•, on Ott. 11. t•t, et IO:JO o'cloO • m., -llwn •ncl lllert ,,_ c .. w. If ony llley l\e•a. why aolO petition '°' ,.._ of ,.. .... i1'ou IO not lie tr alltecl. II It tu,_, orcler.O U.01 • "'9Y of tllls order to -<au• be publlllloO In Ore ngo Cout Oe lly Pllol. • 11•wt11aper Of 99neral clrcul•tlon. ~1>11 tlwO 111 ti.ls county •I i..11 OllC• • -~ tor IOU< COllMtullv• -It• 11rlor to the Gay IJf •alO heorlng. 0•1911~.10. , .. , RonelOH P,.,.,,.r Judgltoflhe Superior Court Publl-0r-. Cooat Dolly Piiot. Sept u. 22. 2'. Ott. •• , .. , ..., .. , ruauc •me PICTlTIOUS 8 UStMIU MAME STATIMINT 'f 11• tollowlnv p.,wns are 0011111 .... ,,,,.u .. CllllC CE NTER DRIVE APARlMENT ASSOCIATION, 1011 EHi IC-Avenuot, Antllelm, CA t7llOS ILOEFONSO RAMOS ... 2' EHi 1'111 Sir.ft, Santo Ano, CA '7101 JOSE G ESCANUEl..A, 1121 Soulfl Dl•mono, s.nt. Ana, CA. SALVADOR CARAl..TOt 2112 Norlh A-. Ot0"9t, CA. WALDYR A P IZZOTTI. • Wllllamiburv, lrwl,,., CA '2714 SONIA MATILLA, ti ... Kirwin Clrtle, FCIUMaln Valley, CA. FRANCISCO FEARER, 121 Soulfl H· llnolt , •4,_,.lm.CA LUIS TEJERA, inn F .. lllerlllll Rood, T ... ttn. CA '2MO. ISRAEL PRADO, 12 Tloer 1..a ... lrvlM , CA '2714 EVEAAOO OOOOV, 12 .. WHI Raymer, s.nta A"41, CA. JOSEPHSlOCK.SllSHo...ywooel t..ane. Anohtlm Hiiis, CA RANOOLFO M FERNANDEZ, •140 South All•llllc loulevord, Mey•-· CA'07to Thia OUIJMU la conoucttcl by • 99neral P«tner""lp Fr""'l•o Ferrer Tlllt -WM flltO •1111 IN County Clerk o4 Ora,... COUlllY on Sept. "·, .. I. fl1711• Pubtl-Or-(.OOSI Dally PllOI, Sept U. 2'1, Ott.•, ll, 1 .. 1 '17MI NIUC llDmE "c;TITlOUS 8\nlMIU lfAMI STAftMIMT The fllflowl"I ,..._, 1$ ..i119 llllU. -·•: CH 111St.H£N OESl~NI, ... Stolfl.. drift Wey, ~ leach, C.ll~a '*' Irwin ""-h. qea lpl11•rllt Wey, N.....,, .. tdl, Caltfernte '*" Thlt ~It ~~ Illy an Ill Gl•ldv•I, ttWtn ~-·Jr. TlllA ~ -111 .. wttll lflt Counly CWll of o..,.. C-Y on-. t .... 11trloLt•1. P1,...I Pul>tltl\MI Or.,,.. CO.II Oally PllOt. >etlf, IS, Z2. 2', 0<1. •• 1 .. 1 esHI Pl(TITIOUI au11 .. ... NAMllTAT'l .... T TM foti.wl119 ,.,_ la "4lte ..-. NHH: O P:P'ICe SVSTl llllll S~ICIALISTS, HU Prlflttltft A_ ........ ... Fr-L ._..,..• ... ~l~tt.1. W.Mfl'll ........ GllllwNa ·- lll('TITIOU' IUllN._H N~I 5TATIMINT Tiie 1011ow1no """"" '' oolno l>u•I· n•1~ •• RVlE WAY, 1407 Ot l•wart Str•••· I'· Hufttlngton 8u<ll, CA ., ..... GLENN WAYNE WHIT TING TON, 1-01 0.1.twere S1r .. 1, # 1. Hu~tlnoton 8Hch, CA·~ Tiiis -•,.u I• conduc:lecl oy on lncllwlduol. Glenn Whlttlnglon n''' Jtattn-1 ••S 111.0 """ ,,,. County Clerk o4 0<•"9' Covnly on Sotpt. "· •• , 1'111111 Pub"'"'"° Or-Coast Dally Piiot, S.pt 22, 1' Ott • I), lt'1 O~I ru1uc MOOCE fllCTITIOUS IUllMIH MAME STAT•MINT Tllo foll-lno perton• •tt Going """"'" .. IUTTOH A llOW!i, 11• ··o .. E ... 11th Str .. 1. Cott• '<"Ct.a, C•lllornl• n.21 Patricia G u•rr•O•. I I w Sycamore, A•<OCll•. Collfornl• tlOOt Joan Pointer No • Rooo11 Cl , Ntwll0'1 8e«ll, C•llfomla •2'U lhll l>u1lneu Ii conGuc l•O by e 99,.r•I penne~lp Petric!• Guerrelte Thi• •lo-I ... lllld •"" llW C....,ly Cle"" at Of-COUlltY 0" ~ t•m!Mr I•, 1•1 '17- Publl\lwG Or-Coott Do lly Piiot, S.01 u. 21. 2'1. Del •• 1'91 .cMO .. , ru1uc MOOCE lllCTITIOUI IUSIMIH MAME 5TATIMINT The tollowlno per$on• er• Golno °"''""'' .. MORNINGSIDE WOODS IV L TO .• 1'1•2 Batch lloulevoro. Hunt lnglon IH<h, C.lllOr'ftl• tllMI Hector Marsech, •••U 8••<11 8oul•.,or0, Hunllneton &tech, Cetffornta ~ ENA O.......,_I Corpor .. lon, • Calltornl• corporation, 1'1'2 Bee<t\ 8oul••er0, Huntington Beach, C•lllornla t»O EPiA o..,.1opm9n1 Corp 0.•IO""-irlf' PrHIOtnl Tiii> sl•-1 WM llltCI 'WUh llM Cou"IY Clen. ~Or-CouMy 011 ~ l•m!Mr "· , .. , Fl1'6SJ Publl\lwG OrAnQ!t Cotti Dolly Piiot, Sept. U, 12, 1', Ott 6, 1'91 .07'~1 lllCTITIOUI BUSI Ness NAME STATEM£NT Tht to11owlne """or" •r• doing llUllMUH' (Al E F ELl..IOTT PUBLICA· TIONS, (8 1 HOMER T ELLIOTT, I SH I Computer Lant . Hu11tl1101on 8•e<ll,CA .... F P. PUBLISHERS INC. a Celllo1nl• corpor•llon, IU41 Com puttr t..ane, Hunt1noto11 &tech, CA ., ... This """"°" It c-..Clecl by• cor- porellon. F P Publl"-rs. Inc J-W Fl-n. Execull"e Vk• Prn Tlllt •t.11-1 .... tlfecl "Ith Ille County Clert of Of•-Cou"iv on Sept .... ••1 F11"JA Pu1Hl"'9cl Or-Cotti Delly PllOI, Sep1 72. 7'. Ott •, IJ, 1•1 117M I PVIUC NOTICE lllCTITIOUS IU51NISS MAM£STATIMINT TM tollowlne "''°"' •r• oolno l>uslnen••. SV NSEl MOUNTAIN EH· lllROHMEHlAL, •OOt S•othor• Orlvt. N~ kKll. CA t'M4J FRANCES NEWMAN, •OOt S.a&hor• Orlw. N•WCIO"I &ea<ll, CA ., .. ) RICHARD WHllEMAN, lUt E .. t Roncllo VI ..... Fulltr1on, CA t?U3 Tiiis !Mnlneu I• conOu<ttCI by • cieneral P«tnenllip l"rencet N.-man Tlll1 ~ wet llflCI "Ith llw County Clerk o4 Ot•noe Cou111y on S.01 ••.1•1. II llllll P11t>lltl\tCI Ot-Coe>I OallY Piiot. s.111. u . 2', Ott.•· n, ••1 •112 .. 1 PVIUC MOmE "CTITIOUI IUSIMeU MAM•nATUHMT TM rot-"'9 Pit'-11 Oolnt llU'JI· MUH. lo) ICE PICK PRODVCTl()fj$ 1111 JAllllES HARMAN BAND, HOI Ww"'r Ave-, Jul .. 24. H._.,lftOlOll ....... Cellfol'lll•..,._ J t ,,_ Gary ttarmen, ""'' Jef-l•rto11 Ltn•. HUl\tln91011 8 H ch, Cetlfotl\la nM7 Tht• MlNtit la clr'OU(IH llY •11 ln- Glvltlll•I. J.,...•Herman Tlllt • ..._.,. WM flltill wllll llw ~y ~"' °'-c:-.ty 011S. ..... berU, t"1 ,.,,.. Publltl\MI Or .... CO.II 0.lly Piiot. s...1. u, 22. n. 0c1. •. , .. , .on-411 NU llTICE lfOTICS OP f'U8UC IALI 0' ... lltOlfAL ~llOP1l•'TY NOTICE IS HEll£8V 0 111eN llwl on Oct-•. 1•1. •t 1:00 11.m. •I J.USJ o.t.ny Peril ltoecl, Ga1111tr- IM<ll, Caltfontl.t. Seti Otoao teo1 -hPPIY wlll llll4cl • lll*k .... Of II•· lurH, ln..nltry, "u1,......1, olllet lurnltur• -eQUlprnent • .,.,_., -perty ol ev•ry tlnO •lld 11ature llMW-to CaflfWllle Uniform CMll· mercl•I COO. ttof ellO • S.Cvrlly "9r-.. IMl'll 119'-5'11 Oteeo Tool tlld .......,, ellll Defler\y Avto ,..,..., '"'· • 4. » v a a e 0 , es . c 09 Lll81. IA•u•• tu.ua IMelL Liebl Microdata chief Gary E. l.lebl has been pro mott:d lo the position ot presl dent or Nt?wport Bea.·h bosed Microdala Corp. In his new role Liebl will r eport directly to Board C:huirman Donald W Fuller and will become 3 member or the boa rd of di rec tors. The <"Ompany's two operat mg division!) (domestic and in- ternahonal l will be consolidated and will report to Liebl through the ex isting exec ut ive mano~ers .. l.indQ Baillie, a 22·year res1 dent of Newport Beach, has been .ippointed membership director of the Newport Harbor Area <·ham ber of Comm erce. A former supervisor al Newport BeaC'h's Marriott Hotel and an act1vit1es director at the Balboa Ba y Club. Ms Baillie is to be responsible for recruiting new chamber members • Bill Matthews has been named Vic·e Presidenl/m a nager or Orangl' County-based Heritage Bunk's Lake Forest office The offi ce will be located on Lake Forest Drive in El Toro and is scheduled to open an early Nov ember. Matthews was most re· cently vice president/manager or Eldorado Bank's Leisure World office and served in a similar capacitv with United OVER THE COUNTER MUTUAL FUND ON THE JOB California Bank ( Jo'ln;l In· terstate Bank>. lie is currently working o ut of H eritage·s Airport office in Irvine. Mal· thews lives In Mission Viejo. • Williard F.. Staub, assistant vice president, Wells Fargo Bank, has been assigned to the Southern California Consumer Credit Service Center at 2333 N Broadway, Santa Ana. Staub previously was assistant vice president at the bank's Orange County Airport office. • Scott Morey has been appomt- ed ci>mmercial/mdustrial saJes representative for Orange Coun- ty Title l>ivis ion of First American Title Insurance Co .. Santa Alla He lives in Santa Ana. • Patricia J . Engel of Newport Bea ch has been named West Coa s t representative for the Freelance Photographers Guild Inc. or New York, the country's largest agency for photog- raphers . In her new post, Ms. Engel will be responsible for lhe r ec ruitment of new photog· raphers into the guild and act as an agent for professional NASO LISTiNCS photographers lbroughout Cul1fornia, Nevadu , Colorado and Arizona. ll Charles L. AbU'ta hu Joined Browne Vintners Co. as Orange County manager. He had been a sales rt presentative in Orange Co unty ror dis tributors of alcohol products for the past 18 years. He lives in Huntington Beach. • Gary Weaver has been named director of marketing for Dis- neyland. Weaver has been with Disneyland since 1972 and his previous duties have included a tenure as manager-marketing administration and , most re· cently, manager of compensa· lion /personnel services • Victory H. Pacurar has joined Pacific Hospital of Long Beach as assistant administrator. He was formerly project director and assistant associate director of support services at UC Irvine Me dical Center He lives 1n Fountain Valley. .. Suzan 0 . Kosub has been ap· pointed manager of Ho me Federal Savmgs and Loan As· sociaton's Huntington Beach of- fice, 2111 Main St. She lives in Anaheim . N-Spo<Syst 0•-g RobVtn AMdP s Tr111111L ' s.,._ Carolin o EmplrO MorchR• AMOllllS E11~s OreQMI l lurtioe • s.aon lrenlP Q > Mlllroo lW'1Ea z ... i.c tndEI t PCAlnl Acle<LI> S.orcll un OV-• Cuuc e O.tSy wt M•Cll<C Meoad91 Ull'S 1..0tl CllG • • l\oJ • • 114 ~. l\4o ' " I• • > . . ' ISl/t • Jiit , ..... '" .. 1•V. ~ "" " ,. • JV. 4V, .. " ll" • '" S\I. • "' ~ . " 11'1. • '"' u ..... 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I 6.tt " . • Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Tueaday, September 29, 1981 s 'NYSE COMPO ITE T RAN ACTION OUOfAT ..... ll•~uoa , •• ouo• , ....... •O•• M IOWIU, """"C .... •onow DltlOlf •1110 (IN(llllllATI u oo ••CJt••••••b •t"O•flD '"'"' 11100AlllO1111nu11f .... ,,.. ~ ~ The battle of the brands · I "' tf you regard th e business world as a bone race.: you tend to check out who's winnin1 or losln1 ln the • fight for your dollars. You Uk~ to think that the.., brands you buy iue wlnnera. 8ut hero ue some rank·;' lnaa which mlght su.rvrise you: Folger's, a Procter & Gamble bra.nd. has; forged to the top of the ground coffee market, d.ia·· placing the longtime leader, Maxwell House.,, Folger's is reJ,>Orted to be doing 28 percent of the bU1i·1 ness to Maxwell House's 24 percent. However, General Foods. the Maxwell House maker, continues ~ to be the overall coffee leader with an array of brands that Includes Sanka, Brim, Yubao and", Maxim. Contac. a product or SmllhKllne, an oldllne 1 Philadelphia Pharmaceutkru house, has lost it.s grip,., on fiut place in cold remedies, having been shoved as ide by NyQull, whose maker, Rlchardson-Vj,rks, runs those heartwarming commercials featuring the whining, wheezing husband who needs to be rescued ,. by his smart wife. NyQuil has been pulling down 20 percent or the dollars spent on cold remedies. Contact gels 14 percent. Don't feel sorry for SmilhKline. It bas the hot· , test new prescription dru1 around in Tatamet, u antlulcer agent whose aaJes have allyrocketed 1lnce ', its introduction four years a10. Tatamet'a worldwide a sales In U180 were $860 million. It bu displaced • Valium as the top-semn1 prescription dru1. ·) -What's the best-selling headache remedy? I Anacin'! No. Bayer aspirin? No. Excedrin? No. The • winner, in a rom p now. is Johnson & Johnson's non·~ aspirin produC"t, ~ Tylenol <availa-_ ble in tablets. \r ~ capsules and Ii-•1 , quid ). T ylenol 4 , ! has come from .. --·-··---------~~r~h~e ~r~=~~ lllJll lllllllTZ or what's called 1 the "analgesic market." Left in the lurch are Anacin < 12 percent). Bayer (9 percent), Bufferin (7 percent> and Excedrin C7 percent>. Bufferin and Excedrin are both made by the sa m e C"ompany, Bristol-Myers, home also of Clairol. Ban. VilaJis. Tickle, Windex and Drano. The big winner here is Clairol, still the ., 1,. dominant brand in the hair coloring business. ' -The lop-selling liquor brand in the country is, : " believe it or not, Bacardi rum. 1 -Eastern Air Lines carries more passengers .' than any other airlin~: 39 million in 1980. But Delta 1 Air Lines makes more money than any other airline: ' $130 million after taxes in 1980. · -Colgate-Palmolive, a company best known for its toothpastes and detergents. none of which now rank in first place, happens lo be the largest seller or brand-name rice, thanks to fielding fi ve different 0 brands out of Texas· Carolina. Success. Mahatma Bro wn, Make-It-Easy and River. However, the ' ~· largest single brand in the business is Uncle Ben's, ' the product of a peculiar company called Mars. , ! 1 which sells more candy (M&M 's, Snickers. Milky ... Way. Three Musketeers l than Hershey and competes ~ in the pet food market under the Kai Kan name. ,:: -The leading cough drop is Hall's. m ade by .... Warner·Lambert. The top-selling na me in the plastic trash bag market is Glad, which comes to us from the chemical " giant, Union Carbide. -Totino, a Pillsbury brand, headS the frozen pizza market. Mattel claims 10 pe rcent of the $4 billion U.S. toy business. ~-r STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS +I • l t/• ,1.,. . '"' . "· • 1t'e . ' . ... '"' + "' + ''"' + '"' ..... + "" NEW YORK CAP) Fl,..I Dow .IOMS avQ.-1~ Mon<Ur. ~-2t "' S OCKS H i...w c.... ~ ,.- lO 111<1 °rir SO :t:s 801 .. M2 5' • 1i]'!~ ' JO Trn m .s1 >O.~ l2'.11l4ol 71+ t.n IS VU 10013 101.0J 9'1.7S 101.:ll-O.'IJ' U Stk 315"'6 327 71 JIJ.11 JU .'1 + •i lndUI •,091, Tr•n . . 1,'31, • Ullll I ll, U Slk 1,J47,SG9' ~ • WHAT STOCKS DID lo!EW YORI( IAP) Sep 2t • AdV•MHI 'OO:l. Ol<llMd .s• V:.'l4r.ru~ ~' -llllJlll , New tow1 5'0 WHAT AMEX lllO •. ___ ~ ·--~ .... _..-~---~-......... -----...... -------. .......... -..................................... ~~.~tl!'S~.'-'.sl!!All!!IQI Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT /Tuesday, Septembor 29, 1981 Play big on nostalgia, talent 8)' TOMTIT S ............... The brt1hteat note.so rar 1n the new communi· ty t heater season has been sounded at the Newport Theater Arts Center with the plza11-packtd tribute lo llollywood't1 golden days, "Th GrHt Americ•n Ba"·kstage Mwskal." With t-qual measures or talent, energy and shfer showmanship, six performers and a piano pJayer provide a first rate renderine of this minl· ~•slcal 31mcd at thf' nostalgia crowd. It's all ~lpped together autHully by director leen Fishbach, whose INTERMISSION odspell" was the class o the county last year. Structured along the "D11mes at Sea" and "42nd Street" lines but 1it•red more toward the Hollywood Canteen era of th 1-~orties, "The Great American Backstage Musical" is at once a gentle spoof of those times and a glittering entity in its own right. Its timeless theme, making it big in show business, is dusted o{f and polished splendidly in a thoroughly enjoya- ble production. The ha lf dozen cast members are well chosen for t~ir assignments, and ensemble work is im· pressively enacted. But standout honors must be bestowed on Priscilla Regnier Sanford whose strong voice and overflowing comic energy are establishing her as the Barbra Streisand of Orange County. Her comedy solo. "Crumbs in My Bed." is the high point of the show. · Kevin Burke presents a sterling caricature of the ambitious-but-conscientious songwriter who'll sell his tunes but not his integrity. His lady love. the ingenue catapulted to stardom, is lusciously packaged in the sparkling personage of young .Shari Anne Moskau, a gal who may be destined to match her character's achievement. Fred Mattox deftly handles the role of the comic second banana with a winning demeanor and swift timing. Dennis·Bryan Coppens Li a bit soft, but effective as the nice-guy rival for Miss Moskau's heart, while Laura Pryzgoda injects a fin e Continental flair as the worldly English music hall s tar. UA MOVIES Biea 990 4022 lDWAROS NEWPORT ~ewport Beach 6 4 4 O 7 60 EOWARDS HUNTINGTON TWIN Hunt1nq1on Beach 848 0388 hlWARDS VIEJO TWIN ~ISSIOll V1ej0 830 6996 EDWAROS CINEMA WEST Westmins1e1 89 t 393~ ClllEDOME Orange 634 2553 ,.-.< .. <• Hl·WAY 39 DRIVl·IN Westminster 89 t 3693 MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE n. ~~QI,,... ''(a'tfl.1310 ... ~ ~ IOOUf N ILlllM,.. ()I ,.,.,,.. COl'ffJnf '°' .,., ..... 9 i>I" ,,,.,, f;h#I0'9'1 ' For Ad Action Call a Dai~ Pilot AB-VISOR 642-5678 Fay• Dunaway __,EDEAAEST (PG) 6 00 8:30 10:45 I·-· 6 :00 1:00 10:00 John Belushi &rvf'Jf~AL 6 00 1·10 IO·IS IWOhJhOn•r v ,,,. I Sound Jt Ot1ve 1n B•tow VuLH AMC:-' rac:ho 1, VOUf t.pMklt If no AM car ted•o with tqmhon CC!l'QOI y POt•ttOn. bf I y0..., own AM port•b•~ ONLY WHEN I UWGH IRI ms Like Old T1meslPGI Ryan O'Nul SO FINE (RI & Blazong Saddles (RI 8 111 Murray on STRlf'ES IR) ARTHUR IPGI I 11 JOHN BLAIR BELUSHI &. BROWN CONT INENTA L DIVIDE A U"lllVERSAI l'ICTURF JOMl\y 8tetll ~:,'!r.-"" 1 ... 10 H•rr• (Of't•l•n<• l>uQueU• • . l( .. lll l11'1W • htl-.U11 PflKlllo 11..,.W leolfWol .. . . .. .. , .... ._. .... .... o.w.1 .. 1ry ... ~· • l.0111'• .. ry ...... Keri Keany'i. choreography gives the show a high professional gloss while Terence Alaric pro· vides the musical accompaniment. playing by ear and keeping the tempo brisk. The satirical nature or the show is underscored beaut1rully in the opening and closing numbers, particul:.irly the rormer when the cast collects to proclaim "Nobody Remembers the Opening Number " They'll remember this one, as well as the frenetic "I Got the What?" the melodic "Cheerio." the pseudo-romantic "News of You," the vuudevillian "Ba-Boom!" and the torchy "I'll Wail ror Joe," the latter another star in Miss San ford ·s crown. For an uµbeat evening of delightful entertain· menl and (if you're old enoughl fond memories. check out "T he G real American Backstage Musical." playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8 and Sundays at 2 through Oct. 18 at the Newport Theater Arts C~nter. 2501 Cli ff Drive. Newport Beach • BACKSTAGE Selected scripts by local play wrights wall be read on stage at Orange Coast College this fall as part or a new program designed to promote original works -if you'd like yours considered, :.end it <with a stamped . self· addressed envelopel to Jack Holland at OCC's Literature and Language Building , 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa 92626 Students are being admitted to South Coast Repertory for a discount lab of $5 if they purchase tickets for the evening's performance unsold afte r 5 p.m . (Or noon on matinee days) .. call the box office at 957·4033 for further discount details ... A REVEALING COMEDY (So10tJ 1?<t. EUWAROS \S" WOOOllRIOGE ( ...... ,_. ... ""'I• ••u•~ _,,....,_. Ht,)11.M a6 lDWAllDS \II' llflS YUOOK .. f\t, • ' ...... ,. .___...;.._. -" .. '"" M p __ u_ a: 0 m a: c( :c: Li.J :c t- LL. 0 "' c z :::> 0 "' 0 w a: IU t- "' Elliott Gould 'thrilled' to take stage afte r 15 year hiatus in movies By JACKIE HVMAN HOLLYWOOD <AP) -After e 15-year hiatus, Elllott Gould, star of some :.> films -lncludin1 "MASH" and "Bob & Carol. Ted & Alice" -ia back on the stage. And, for the rlrst time. the Broadway veteran is treading the boards here In the heart of movieland . "I think basically it's the same everyplace," said Gould, who opens Oct. 9 for a five-week run at the Huntington Hartford Theater in Nell Simon's "Come Blow Your Horn." "I think basically an au· dience is an audience." Th<! production arrives here after a month's engagement at Burt Reynolds Dinner Theater in Florida, and Gould said there has been eome in· teresl in laking the show on to Broadway. Whether he would stay with the show, he said. "depends on where my pictures are at in development." Unlike in those long-ago days when he starred on the Great White Way in "I Can Get It for You Wholesale" and in a touring company of "luv," Gould admits he no longer has to worry about im· press ing "important" people. ·'Other than my friends who are producing this. I really don't care what anybody thinks." he said over lunch at the Brown Derby, near the *BARGAIN MATINEES • Monday thru Saturday All Performances before 5:00 PM (Except Special Engagements and Holidays) LA M19AOA MAil Muodo 01 l o1ec1on1 LA MIRADA WALIC·IN 994·2400 ... ___ CAii.,. 'ARTHUR"'"' ................. t. .... ,e:a "'"'" • 1&•• ..... ~ "MIMMIE OU.REST"'"' ..... ,. ....... ,~-.. .... ,, ... _ "RAIOEAS OF THE LOST ARK" I ... ,,,.. ........ _.., ...... LAKEWOOD CENTER WALIC·tN .,, .· ... ,, ,· , ... "NINETO FIW" .._.,., tM."•·••1 l_,,_,lt.M.UI.-'"' "THE CANNON8AU. MJN" ""' -· .,,. ... t:M.._.. -... -.,·.- "'All o·..,.L ·MCI!-" "SO FlNE" 1111 11;9. I a . 41 •, e;aa. ~ 19'"_. Faculty 01 Canolewoao 213/531·9580 'RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" I ......__ .... .,., _ 1,.. -DOUlt ...._ "ONLY WHEN I LAUGH" 1111 ___ ,,,. .. ' ••• , .... It .... ,., , .. _. "THE CANNON BALL AUN" tNI .......... "NINE TO FtV£" '"' ,., •... "MEL BROOt<S' HISTORY OF THE WOlllLD PAll'T I" 1111 .... It ... .,,. ···-I "YOUNG FRAHKl:NSTflN" 1._ ---_______ ...._ _________ _ LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAllC·IN K:Jcull'i Al Del Amo 213/63 .. ·9211 ..... 0 ..... .AA.Ca ..-:. "SO FINE" 1111 t161.J ........ : ... I; .. ,f'; .. ----..-------VICTORY" 1Nt ,, ....... .... ··EVE OF THE NEEDLE" 111) .• , ... LAGUNA "STRIPES" 1•1 II M, t•.9;11 "TARZAN, THE APE MAN" ltll . .•. ., ....... so. COAST WALK·IN South Coa1t H1woy ol l roodwoy 494-1 514 AtT .. n _ .... .__, , .. ., ___ _ "BODY HEAT"' 1111 ..,_, __ IAT .,.. I"''· 4 • .,.., t.a ,., 1 lO ·• 1: lS ,....,, ,,.,.. • ••• IMPORTAN r NOTICE • CHltOllUt UNDER 12 fRU' "''"' '"° W•'"" M11t ffuw fu 6 JO • Sat $wtt ""1 6 00 ,. C•Hl-~1 SOU'IO • '1lV• UI CAii llADIO IS fOU• S~ If !;() •M CAii l\AOtlJ Willi i(lljrTl)ll -ca:SSOllY IOSrTl>ll -BlllHCAM llOllTU\.f l•AU QllE.A ~ l30 ON A# MOIO ANAHllM ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ''•••av 9\ at l emon St 879·9150 -·M--TO -llCIUl.JI -· TO ..,_, 'PRIVATE LESSONS" 1•1 ,,._.st 'ENDLESS LOVE" 1•1 Cll•t II SOU•O &U!NA PAllK BUENA PARK DRIVE-IN l•nca1n Ave Well ot Knott 121· .. 0 70 'OUNIAIN FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE· IN Son O••oo ,,..,., OI t100U1u .. 1 (SO I 962·2 .. 11 W!SI MINSl!ll a.OH&• ..... ·------"CARBON COPY' IN! -'TAKE THIS JOB AND SHOVE IT" IN! Cl•! "SOl.lllO ..-.on .. "i:Miiiin'Aw-. - .~ ...... ,~ "l(AAMEA ve. KRAMER" ,,.... l'Ult 'THE ELECTRIC HORSEMAN" t I C••• h WUftU ,,, .. u .... -..... ..._ ..., ... "CONTINENTAL DIVIOE"' '"" -'THE JERK" 1•1 ... llOl'T ""'_, CAii ..,, "AlllTHUR" IN! -'STRIPES" 1111 C1H( II SOI.IND Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE IN •l AllO"llUl•MCllW- "SO FINE" l•l ~w "BLAZING SAOOLES" 1111 CINI II SOUND • .,.. au•• •••.,,._.. "MOMMIE DEAREST"' 1N11 ~w "LITTLE DARLINGS" fill CINI II SOU!10 lil tl .lllll• LA HABRA Dml IN '"'"°''°' ..... " toocn ... 0 6 ""'"°' INO I "AM AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON" lfll ~u. "'HELL NIGKT" 111) -••.u·----"CA"80N COPY" 1Nt -"TAl(I! THll J08 ANO 171-1162 IHOVI tT" 1Nt 81JIN.l ~•II~ LINCOLN DRIVE IN a"'""··· a 1.1.••· .. a••-•· .. "MOMMll =MIT" 1Nt h~co•n .t.•• W•ll ol Cnolt "UTTLI OA9'UNGI" 1111 121·4070 ----- (1'1.At.1 .f ORANGE DJllVf IN "HllTOlllY OF THI WOlllLD PARTI" 1111 -"T .. FINAL CON'LICT"' 1111 .A"it 111A~ , a,1•• ~ A"ll MISSION OOIV( IN liOIOOf 11¥d -Mcl- 77•77JI Sonto •~o '""' • S•o!• coileo• 558·7022 ---AU.-DOI OE•LOI AL.80M>TADOS 11! 'N T!~i * l, ,,.4 (t1 /. ~I WARNER DRIVE IN CON I L MOM> OI C:UWAI WOI~•· ......... ,, o• .. OCll ll•o U7·3Jtl "'°° "' CAllOAD 642-4321 Di'f1ct <Yr coii.ct, Illy Piii to nibxri~ to pr hom~town ~. tM ... famed lntcraectaon of llollywood and Vinti and across the street from the theater A serious mun "Sometimes people tell me I'm 1 little moro "·but l don't mean to ~"l who occas1onully surprises with a Woody Allenesque witticism. Gould nevertheless clearly delights in his publi c. He cheerfully grants an 1&utograph re· quested by another diner and thrills the atdjacent table of women who have been stealing glances ror the past hour by stopping after lunch t.o clown with a flower from their table vase and pose for a snapshot. Gould, who won an Oscar nomination for "Bob & Carol" and stars in the new Dis ney film "The Devil and Max Devlin," said he had been consider· ing returning lo the stage for several years and was finally persuaded to do so by longtime friend Warren Berlinger Berhager directed the produc· tton. which also stars Lou J acobi and Alice Ghoslley. Gould said he was partly influenced by the fact that neither his wife nor his three children - who range in age from 8 to 14 had seen him perform live. and by his desire to test hi!> more mature abilities on the sta~e. "I was thrilled to be back." he i.a1d 'J believed I could do it. but I didn't know " • . DlilJPllat TU ESOAV, SEPT. 2', 1981 CLASSIFIED Costa Mesa High's Onassis Nixon made the season's biggest play ... C2. RainS frustrate Chicago Bears It was best effort of the season for Haden , defense and entire team By JOHN SEVANO Of tliM Dally l'I ... S\lft CHICAGO For those fans who thought the Rams had problems. they should be sentenced to a day of having to watch the Chicugo Bear~ in action. Unfortunate!). the crowd of 62,461 here at Soldier Field. and a national television audience, were forced to do just that Monday night And the performanct' was ~o bad the Chicago fans turned to booing to express their displeasure while television junkies, it was presumed. Wl're smart enough to change to another channel Indeed, the Rams' 24-7 win here against the Rears made Chicago look as bad as, wt•ll, the Rams did against New Orleans two Y.eeks ago. "It's unexplainable, so don't ask me," said Chicago wide rece iver Ke n Margerum of Chicago's problems. "It certainly isn 't any fun playing when you are playing like this. It's very frustrat- ing " Margerum wasn't the only one who was frustrated The entire organization from Coach Neill Armstrong, to running back Walter Payton . to quarterback Vince Evans. to owner George Halas were equally perplexed. "l reall y don't have a whole lot to say. We got beat and we looked bad in gelling beat." said Armstrong as the Bears ' record dropped to 1·3 for the season. Of course. the Rams may have had something to do with the Bears' inept performance. Playing their bt!st game of the season both offensively and de fens1vely the Rams made it 2 O against the NFC Central Division <they beat Green Bay a week ago> to e ven their rerord al 2 2 ··1 thought the defense did a super JOb," complimented Pat Haden. ··and that certainly helped · · It also helpl'd that !laden put together his best outing, too. The Rhode::. Scholar. scorned by thf' media and fans throughout the month of September, looked relaxed and confi dent in completing 13 of 29 passes for 210 yards and no interceptions . '"Maybe it was my devil-may·care at t1tude," said Haden. "'All I know is that I'm tired of trying to prove m yself. "We won and that's the important thing .. !laden and the Rams not only won, but they looked impressive in doing so. lladen boldly moved the Rams lo a touchdown on their first possession to get thl' momentum going and the de- fl•nsc did its part by holding the poten· l1<.dly dangerous Waller Payton to 45 yards 1n 17 ('arries and forcing Arm s trong lo ut 1l 1ze three quarll'rbal'ks. It wasn't until quarterback No. 3 M 1ke Ph1pp~ that the Bears were finally ahh.• to put some points on the board lall' in the fourth quarter. · 1t ·~ nol the coaching," defended M ar,ger ym, the Fountain Valley High (See RAMS, Page C4) K t'll .\tnrgern m Whit e So x e linri.nated by Angels •I ~· ClllCAGO t AP J It 's all over · for the Chicago White Sox. · ,,.,,w,,......... A 6 O loss lo the Angels Mon- da) night made it mathematically impossible for the White Sox to earn a berth in · thl' American League West m 1 ni series playoffs With onl) five games to go, Chicago is now seven games behind the div1s1on leading Kansas City Royab "I WOULD 8 E less than hont•st if I tried to act like I ac- cepted 1l ... White Sox Manager Tony LaRus1'a said "It's impor- tanl no"' lo keep our sights on "'hat 1s more realistic our ch:inC"cs to finish in the first divis ion ·· Without being too specific. La H ussa attributed at least part of his team ~ demise to a lack of hitting in the second half of the s plit season The rt'cord show!:> that m the serond half. the White Six, as a team. hit 2G6 goi ng into Monda.)' night ·s game In 48 games. the Sox ~cored 195 runs and 181 RBI with 42 homers. Monda) night's loss came on l he heels of a s uccessful road trip for the While Sox. who won their last four out of five away from home Ram naming back Wendell Tyler picks up a good gam before being brought down by Gary Feric1k 1/eft 1 and Carl r;kern nearly mterc<?pfs a pass Hut the road victories were nut enough :ind Bill Almon, the team ·s be!-.t second·half hitter Y.1th 314 put 1t best Fred Dryer a no-show in Chicago · We had a lot of opportunities Ion~ hefon• this . so this is nothing sp •c1al. Jus t making it (Jff11·1 al. so to !.peak .. OON BAYLOR and Brian Downing drove in two runs ap1C<'l'. Rod Carew scored two runs and Mike Wilt hurled a six· hiller for the Angels. Cosell , ABC politely tell ex-Ram they aren't interested in a television interview ClllCAGO The Gr eat Fred Dryer Press ConfE•rence that was supposed to lake place here Monday night turned in- to the Great Fred Dr) er No·show. The lawyers explained that even if Dryer was to win his suit: it would only cost the Rams between $200,000·$400,000 five years down the road. And. that's assuming the matter isn't settled out of court before then. RAMS JOHN SEVANO Kemp: el l have Kemp come down with .. um e m y~t e r1011 ., ail m e nt like mononudco~1s so he can be placed on injured reservt'. Witt. 7·9. had four strikeouts and \\ alked one as he earned his first carel•r shutout. Reportedly, it was Dryer who ap- 'proached ABC and lloward Cosell with the tdca c,f an interview. and 1t was ABC and Cosell who pol 1tely told Dryer they weren't intcr<',led Actually, the l'nllre Dryer saga may never be known. That ·s because 1t may take up to five years for a Dryer suit, if there's a !-.lltl. lo <ippear in court. Anyway, Georgia and General Manager Don Klosterman, following the lawyer·s advice, called the NFL office to make sure they had its backing before giving Dryer his release. though, thus the entire Fred Dryer af- fair will probably be forgotten shortly The logical ans wer would appear to b<.' 1c 1 bec ause 1l doesn't figure anyone would pick up Kemp not with most quarterback situations around the league solid and Kemp an unproven oommod1t) Another option could be a trade, but as assistant ge'neral manager Jack faulkner explaine d The Angels scored their first run in the fourth when Carew led off with a s ingle and stole s econd He took third when Dan Ford grounded out and scored oh a two·oul error by Chicago third baseman J im Morrison on Baylor's grounder • • • It was out.,1de legal couns el that rec- om m endcd to thl' Front1eres that Dr) er's c·ontract may not be as binding as they thought. <ind the ris k of releas- ing him wouldn't be that great. After they got the OK sign is when they signed Dan Pastorim and said goodbye to Dryer. There seems lo be little else the de- fensive end can do now except maybe get an injuncti<ln against the Rams for breach of contract That's unlike ly The Rams ' biggest problem now is deciding what lo do with their s urplu-, quarterbacks It appears the Rams have four op· lions left to them· a l trade Pat Haden. bl trade Jeff Rutledge. c 1 Y.a1ve Jeff 'Th<·re are 18 teams with three quartt•rhacks and 10 with two Those te ams with three quarterbacks are set The Angels added a run in the s ixth when Carew led off with a walk off Dennis Lamp. 7-6 . Carew took second when Rick Burleson grounded out and scor<'d on a two-oul single by Baylor Eric Woods Corona del Mar Corona del Mar High, with three straight victories. hasn't had a football season begin that way in 10 years. And al the core of t he Sea Kings' s uccess is quarterback Enc Woods. a 5-9, 160-pound senior, whose passing behind the blocking of tackles Todd Parker and Steve Blatte. guards Pat Duddy and Glenn Rogers and center Dave Stassel. has given Corona del Mar the complete look. Woods' outstanding play earns him the Daily Pilot's Player of the Week honors. Woods completed 10 of 15 for 160 yards and a touchdown last week in a 14-6 victory over Caplst.·ano Valley and he is now 24 for 39 for 386 yards and 4 TDs in three games. Eric Woods "We knew going in he was a good athlete," says CdM Coach Dick Mqrris. "I'd attribute the success of ou.r quarterback to two people -Dave Holland, our offensive coordinator and Gary Guisness. our quarterback-receivers coach. There has been a lot or individual Instruction ln- volved" Woods has yet to be s acked and bas only been forced to scramble once in three games. and he's made the most ol his blocking with pin-Point passini. (Sff SEVANO, Page C4) Atlanta's e lder stat esmen speak up Niekro, Perry blast spark~ younger players over Dodgers ATLANTA CAP> -With criticism from elder s tatesmen Phil Niekro and Gaylord Perry ringing in their ears, some of the Atlanta Braves' younger players say they haven't thrown in the towel Aging pitchers Niekro and Perry have both blasted their younger teammates re- cently. saying the Hraves were playing as if they have given up. Atlanta was eliminated Sunday from the National League West pennant race. But Glenn Hubbard and Rick Mahler say they haven't given up. Hubbard broke out of a hitting slump wUh three hits, in· eluding a triple in the seventh to tie the game, and Mahle r yielded only rive hits in seven innings as Atlanta edged the Los Angeles Dodgers 2·1 Monday night. The victory broke a four-game losing streak for the Braves. who had lost 11 of their last 14 games. "When you know you're out of the race you get frustrated," Hubbard said ··eut I stUI bave a lot of pride. I want to win. Even ii you can't win the pennant you still want towln." ··1 don't thlnlc anyone has fiven up," Mahler •e.Jd. "We're all profes!lonals and we'll glve our best in every 1ame." The Oodgers took a 1·0 lead in the second on a home run by Steve Garvey. who said, · ·1 was wondering 1f that one run would hold up " It didn't. After Da le Murphy led oCC the Atla nta seventh with a single. only the fourth hit off l,os Angeles starter Jerry Reuss, 9-4. Hubbard sent a drive to right field scoring Murphy with the tying run. "I saw the ball get past the right fielder." Hubbard said, ··and I said to myself. 'I've ·Jn a year that is _not typical by any means. I grit my teeth and do the best I can for one inning.· -Steve Qen1ey l{Ot to l{et three on it'." Hubbard then raced home from third when rookie Matt Sinatra singled. Mahler struck out four and walked none before being relieved by Rick Camp. who pitched the final two innings and earned his 16th save. Garvey'·s home run leading off the second, a drive deep into \be stands in left field. was his 10th of the season. He was taken out of the game afterwards. Manager Tom Lasorda used some youn1er players and reserves as the Dodgers, NL West rirst-half winners. get ready for the playoffs. "In a year that is not typical by any· means. I grit m y teeth and do the best I can for one inning," Garvey said. "My philosophy is to play every inning of every game. But l know what he (Lasorda> has lo do." Reuss also said using younger players is something that has to be done. "You can't call up young players for a month and use them in only one game:· he said. "We couldn't do It against Houston because they are a contending club. I guess this was the right time and place." But Reuss pointed out: "There's such a thing as momentum and we need to get it going before we got involved in post- season play. You can't turn it on and off." The Dodgers returned for a meanin1less game today with Atlanta before eominl home for another pa1r of meanln1leu games with San Diego, then cloee out the regular season with Houston. Since the Uodgers already baYe a mlftl· playoff series clinched with their "claam· plooship" of the flnl·balf ol the ..._, .t.hey can thank the fates -bee.-ti .spilt aeuon bad not beeo farmed, not now the Dodlers would be 1tttlq .fiat aames behind CinclnnaU la the W•t. t • a ' Enviable philosophy = enviabl~ record From AP disp1tches John Gagllardl of St . John's [i] College is not one of the better-known C • college football coaches in the nation -but In his 33 years at the CollegevilJe, Minn. campus. he has put together an enviable record. Two weeks ago, Gagliardi won his 204th game to vault to No 11 on the all-time winning list among football coaches. His r ecord is ?04 -68·7 and he's one of 13 NCAA football coaches in his tory who has won more than 200 games . But lhe ~tarthng fact of this story is that Gagliardi ha~ no scrimmaging at a ny time, no blocking sleds. no tackling dummies. no t ackl· ing in practice. no playbooks. no squad meet· ings after college classes begin, no play-calling fro m the bench. no assistant in the press box with telephon e to t he s ideline. no athletic scholarships <true with all Divis ion Ill teams), no grading of players by game films, no weight training and no running after practice. Also. Gagliardi does not cut any players, he tries to get evt'ryone 10 the game at some time and ht• ash the players lo call him by his first name. Not many or his pl ayers have gone on to pro football. but ht> likes to point out that many have lJecome doctors, lawyers. educators. priests or Ph D 's Quo te of the day Washmgton & Let• football coach Gary "F a lcon" Fallon, when notified of a com · plaint by his players that there was no hot "atcr 10 the dormitory "The next thing you knm\. the~ 'II be asking for soap." Aikens, McRae. Leonard spark KC Willie Aikens and Ha l McRae hit Iii two run homers and Dennis Leonard pitched a fn·c hitter, leading Kansas City lo a 6 1 triumph over Minnesota Monda) 10 Aml•rican League action. The win put the Royab :1 1 ~ games in front of the Twins Mark Brouhard broke· up a scoreless battle with his Sl'C'Ond home r of the year and Pete Vuckovic h f 1 rl•d a three hitter. le a d ing M1l\.\<1Ukee to a l ·O victory o\'er Boston to boos t the Bn •w<'rs Into first place in I he• E~1st d1 vision by a half· gam(• over Detroit ... Ed· die Murray drove in four run!>. \\tth a double and a homt• run and Benny Ayala had a two run homer as Balt1morl' defeated Detroit , 7 3 Jorge Orta drove in Aikens three runs and Miguel DUone scor ed thret.• to support the six hit pitching of Tom Brennan and s park Cleveland to a 6-2 VIC· ton ovt·r thr ~l'\.\ York Yankees ... Mark Wa.g ner's threl' run double gave Texas an early lead and thl' RJngers held on to beat Seattle. 6·5 FClrmcr Mate r Dc1 llu~h star Dan Meyer hit a l"o rw1 homer for tht.• Mariners. Cards top Expos on Carter's blow Darrell Po rter belled a two-run Iii double to highlight a ft vc run upris· ing 1n the fourth 10n1ng that gave St. Louis a G 2 triumph over Montreal Monda~ night. cutting the Expos' National League East lead to om• half game over the Cardinals Elst>where. Art Howe's bases· gave Houston a 2 I vic•tory over San Diego. The \\<In t.·xtendt.•d the As tros' lead in thl' West division to 21'2 games over Cincinnati r\I lla rgesheimer and Greg ~inton combined for a four hit shutout and Je rry Martin hit a two-run homer and scored twice as San Fr<1nc1sco cooled off the red · hot C1nt·innati R ed s. 4·0 Center fielder Lonnie Porter S mith, hitting in his 17th straight gaml'. had two singles and a triple and scored thre1..· runs lo lead Philadelphia to a 12·4 win over the New York Mets Steve Hen· derson dron· 1n three runs to back the pitching of Dave Ce1sl'l and Randy Martz as the Chicago Cu bs defecited Pittsburgh to s plit a double· header The Pirates won the fi rst game , 4-0. on Rick Rhode n's four hit s hutout . · Baseball today On this dall' in baseball in 1963 : • In thl' final g<ime of his 22·year career, Stan Musial of the St. Louis Cardinals went 2 for 3 for his 3.629th and 3,630th career hits as the• Cards nipped the Cincin· nati Reds. 3 2. at Busch Stadium m St. LOUIS On lhts dal<• in 1954 Wtlhe Mays ~aved the game with his ramous over the shoulder catch of Vic Werlz's long drive and Dusty Rhodes won it with a pinch hit home run off Bob Lem on in the 10th inning as the New York Giants deCeated the Cleveland Indians 5·2 in the World Series opener at the Polo Grounds Mo nlrC'a l firs t baseman Watren Cromartie ts 28. San Diego outfielder Gene Richards is also 28 Ainge says he's through in Toronto Danny Ainge, looking exhausted Iii after taking t he red·eye from California to New York for the start of the Toronto Blue Jays-Boston Celtics court battle over his contract, said he will retire (rom baseball regardless of the out· come ,of the trial. "l don't plan on returnjng to Toronto no m atter the outcome," Ainge said. Tete'vision. radio TV: Baseball -Dodgers at Atlanta, 3 p.m., Chaniiel 11. &ADIO: Baseball -Doctcen at Atlanta, I p .m ., KABC (7118); Anaets at Chicafo. 5:30 p .m., Kr.!IC (710) Hockey -Kinp at Catcary, 1:•_e.m., KP&% ClUO) . • • • • • @ 4 • 0 • " 6 0 5 0 0 6 6 g 3 NiXon 's 90-yarder higlilighted big plays · Bl& play• were 1t a premium last week for Oran1e Coast area prep football players ln terms or y ar-dage, but there were plenty enouah to keep Edlaon, Estancia, Corona del Mar. Marina and Irvine on the Uftbeaten lbt. , The bl(Jlesl was Costa Mesa's Onassis Nix· on's, Who ran 90 yarcU for a touchdown on the kickoff return to elve hls teammates a 10·7 halftime lead ewer Los Alamitos. ·(Last weelr't bll pt111 of 50 yards or more) 90 -Onusla Nixon <Costa Mesa>. kickoff re· turn for TD 73 -Scott Stier (Huntington Beach), TD run 56 -Dan Blanck <Laguna Hills>. pass from Bill McVicar S~aaon 90--0nassis Nixon <Costa Mesa); 80--Lance Martin <Corona del Mar); 77-Todd Williams (El Toro>. 7 Scott Stier < Huntlneton Beach>, '71 Orea Locy C Mater Dea>; 87-J eff Prand1efl <Marina>; 68-Ro n Maler steln I Marina); 58-Curt Wenzlaff <Estancia> ; 56 -Dan Blanck I Laeuna Hilla>; SS-Da mon Swe uy <£J Toro>. Tony BeN <Capistrano Valley), Steve Patterson <Corona del Mar); 52 -craig Rakhshanl (Edison>; SO-Kevin Beres <Miuion Viej o >. Eddie Nun es <Westminster>. BUI Bright <Corona del Mari. Eric Reinholu <Ocean View>. <Last week's ilallatlcal leadeu> Rushia& 1. Herb Campbell (Westminster), 22-226 : 2. Curt Wenatarr <E s tancia>. 17 ·132 : 3. Ke ndall Newson <Saddleback ), 10·112 ~ 4. Scott Stier <Hunt· ington Beach ), 11·112. Pas slog 1. Greg Selby <Ne wport Harbor>. 18·24 ·0. 225 yurdb. I ·1'1>. 2. Jlrn McCabJ ll (Estancia). 11·32·1, 199 yuru-,, 2 1 o. !i Enc Woods <Corona del Mar>. to 15 2. 100 yurds. 1 TD. 4 Danny Arm1tron1 <Sad· dlf'b&l'k >. 8 lG 2. 158 yards, 1 TD ; 5. Evan Chnlml'l's '1.ugunu Beuch ). 11-26-~. 144 yards, 1 TI>. ti Kt•n l.thtlu <Marina >. 1116·0, 131yarda,1 Tl> 7 Kl•n Mu1<11 1 Ed1son1. 9 14 O. lZS yarda, 2 TD R1•C'f'lvlng I HolJ B..rry 1 \/t·wport Harbor >. 8-87 ; 2. Abel Cadwla 1J::sta111·1a 1, 7·112. 3. Bob Critchfield CMarinu1, 5 72, 4 Mike Ray (Huntington Beach), 5 fl2 . 5 .Junuc· i\1kl'n <Estancia>, 5·61; 6. Jeff Frands,·n 1M.1rin:.i 1, 5 47 Scoring 1 ('u1 t W1·111lurr <Estancia>. 18, 2. Herb Camplwll 1W1· .. tm1n.,tl·r1 , M i-- 1 ( •Mt • J lllf'nlOl• foeACOO COMINIO LIGHTS 8 mg. "tar". 0 8 mg. nico11ne. fll HRS I~ 111~. "tar · I :1 11111 r111 01111c, o\ 11er c1gare11e by FTC method. Where a man belongs. Camel Lights or Camel Filters. Experience the Camel taste. .. .•· \ Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/funday, Sepeember 29, 1881 C8 ·~.,_..,..,..,.., ...... .., ... ..,..,..,..,.,. .................... ..,..,..,..,..,._ ........... ..,..,..,..,.., ... ..,.,..._ ... ..,..,..,.,...,...., .............................. .., ... ..,.,...,...,....,.w ~ . . ' . ~ AMllUCAN LIAOUI AMetal, Whhelo1 0 CAU ..... A ctou.eo arlu• .. , ..... c;e,... i. • 1 I • hn\zrf a S t 1 o ,_.,,_ • • I t • ....1 .... ~ J 0 0 • =~-: : : n Halrttoil H 40 0 0 GrlCll 111 4 1 1 t l111lnsk Oii 4 O O o Dowtllne If • o 1 J Nr-.. rl • o t o ....... id llOOO ~ ... Cf <0 1 0 P"911M1t ll t I 0 .. IMl t 4 0 I 0 LW.lt lla o O O O Ml"l111Jll 2 Ot o Mol .... rllf\ I 0 0 0 .. ,., ... lll> 0000 Al'"611 u > o I O TMelt llll • I 1 fotala JJ 0 • 0 ._....., ..... C..llltrtll• -101 ~ Ollt -.o -000 ....... I-Merri_, loe-CAll ...... la •. Cllk-.O 1. $9-hr--. c-. Al-. $-$qui'"" c:........ , ....... lllO w111cw,1 .. 1 t • o o t • Qlc.a9t l.Mlll ( ... 1•) F•r-r Hkkey • J 0 • J 0 • t 0 2 • t 0 0 0 T-1 &A-4,t2' ....... ,, .... , l(an•H City 020 101 002 ..... It 0 Mlivwtota -100 ~I J 1 L.toftarf end Wat,_; H•-. c._, C71 •nll WyMgar. W-L•M •rd, 12· I 1 L- Ha ... ns. >4. Hlh-«anwt Clly, Alll9f!S I 11). M<llH C1l MIMHOt.a, £119 .. (SI. A-J,U. l...._•,'¥'-1 New Vorll 001 100 0.-J • I Cte•el•lld no ooo ••-t 11 1 RauKMI. LellotM 121, Frellff 171 tl'd C••-; a--Hauey. w -ar...,..n, 2·1 l -11 ... Klltl, •• , HR-H•• Vorll. JAClllOll (1JI. A ...... ,IM. Or ..... 7,T ...... I Balllmo-. 004 010 200-7 7 o Detroit >00 000 000-J 10 O ltalmer, Stewart CU and Oempwy; Capu,iet o, Lope1 CJ>, Klftney C71, Rotll1<1tllcl Ill ...., P•rrt111. w -st-•'1. 4·7. L-Ca11<1aalo, l·I. H•s-9alllmore, Ayala CJ>. Murrey 1201 A-M,9'1. .,__,, ....... Boston 000 000 ~ a 1 MllwaullM 000 000 lOx-1 S o TaNN -~; Vuckovk ll encl SI~ "'°"' W-Vuckowk h, 14-4. L-T-..e, >10. Ha-Mll ...... H , ar ....... rd (21. A-11,SJ.4 .-' ............... . hHI Oii 020 ~ 14 0 Seattle 020 000 >00-s n o H-ycutt, Comer 171, Mercer (ti, Kem m •"" ~ti; Allllott. Gleaton m -Flrova . W-+toMrcwtt, 11.._ L-A~t. ..._ S-l(ern !SI. Hlls-s .. 111a. Me yer U I. aoc111e c•>. A~,., •. NATIONAL LEAGUE Brave• 2, Dodgers 1 Lot.....US ATUlfTA S.a lb 11-lt kcl Balter II JolWISln 10 Weiss_.. Gar••Y lb Mtrtfll. MtldNrf Yeteff c Tilomet• "'"''fl Lncln !llfl Stewert p TOltfl •r•... ...r•ll • 0 0 0 Harper rf • O I O • O O 0 Lin.ares 11 • O O O • O t O Horner lb l O O O 3 o 1 o Roy1tw lb o o o o ~ ~ ~ ~ Cltmbls lb 4 O O O 4 O O O Murpfty cf J I I 0 3 0 I O Hubbrd 11> 3 I J I J010 Slnat,.,c 2 0 1 1 J 0 0 0 AUflp u J 0 0 0 1 O 1 O Malller p t O O O I 0 0 0 JK•by PU I 0 O 0 O O O O Camp p o o o o J3 I • I . Toltls tt 2 6 1 ~ .. .-.. LOI 4 ..... 0I 010 000 000-1 Allt11le --10a-2 OP-Lea .,.... I, Al ..... t I. LOl-l.ot An9e1es s, Atlante s 29-B•Ur. J9- Hu11Nrll. HA-Ga,,,_y CIOI. LMA...... Ill' H a 1a II IO ••vu CL. .. 11 7 • 1 2 , s-ert I O 0 • 1 A--MMllK (W, 7•1 I 0 4 C..mp (S. 1•) l I 0 0 0 0 Wlt-R-. T-l :JO A-J,-. F lalT•AMI ,..,._ 4, Clllle I Chlc990 000 000 ~ 1 O Pltttbu,..,, 102 100 00.-4 e I Gr llfln, Cevdl ll (0 . Hernandea ISi, Tldrow Ill anct Bleck-II, RhoOen •l'ld Nlco1le w-Rllode<I, M . L-Griffln, J·S HCIOMD•AME c:-. J. ""'"" 1 (Ille-020 010 000-J I I Pllllburtlfl 000 001 000-1 S O GelMI, Mtru t•> .,.., 91a<kwtll, '--· llebfftNll ISi, Teku4w Cll and lteN W- GelMI, 1~ l-L.ong, 1·2. $-Martt UI Hll- C~lct90, --UI. A-3, ... . O'-...... . Sen Fr enc !Ko 020 002 GOO-I t o Cincinnati 000 000 ~ • o HargeslMlmer, .Mlftlon (I) and Mey, PH1ore, 1!49ten <•>, ltrlc• Ill -Nol.,. W-H•rtes,,.lmer. 1·1. L-PHlore. 4-l. Hll-Sall Frt11el1CO, Martin (I I. A-12,"4. "'6111et11.Mttt• New Yorll tOO 120 OC»-4 11 > Plllltdelpllle 005 HJ 00.-11 12 I Lynell. lAatll C>>. 8ollano !•I. Sear ... (41, J-ttl. Mal"INll I•>, Harris Cll -Slffrna; Nolet, 9runtar ISi. OV'lll- 1•> end --... M«et-. w-ow•st-. .... L-L.,.,c:ll, '-S. A-20,40:> ~ ....... -,_ ,..._, t I L.anl#Of'11, ....... Pet I-•, $Mttle ... 1141'111. a.._ P4arerow. o. .. ctl'd 01.._..~,oH ZIMI, Seen .. Gtot19r, Mllw-- Mum,..,..,, New Vert. "•my,'°'"'" Ollwor, Teiaa M•dloO , Pltuburtll Row. Pllll ... lptllt .... .,.~ Grllley, Clnclnnell Buckner. Clllceoo aroo1t1, N .... Yori! ScllmlOI, Pflll-lpllle May. 5.., l'rtnclKO Concepcion, Cine lnntll NFL Rama 24, Beara 7 SC-~ o.an.n " l'lll\. -•• .Slo .. m m .>i. ·" 101 - " """ au m '" "' JU 311 .31~ JIO •• •• LOS Angeles 7 l 1 1-24 Chicago o o O 1-7 LA Tyler 1 run (Corral kk lll LA-FG Corral 24 LA-Irwin SS punt return !Correl kick) LA Tyler Ir..,, (Correl lllO I Clll Wllllam1 1' PU• from Phlpp\ CNlelMnkk kl A •2.•I TN"' Statlttka LA l'lrst ClownJ 20 Ru111t .. yerct1 3S.1M Passino yercb 19S Return v•rcts .. PHM$ ll-29-0 S.C:U lly -Punt.I ~ Fumllltt-'°'1 1·1 Penaltl•'"YenH 9-tl Time OI ~ 21:01 ,,......,St .. htiu (Joi 11 »ti llS ,.. ... ie.. 1-2) ~,. ,., ~93 )I SJ RUSHING l os Anoeln. Tyler 11-41. l ryeM 16-42, G<amen l-IJ. H-n ).J, J. TllOmH l·l . Oenntrd l·l Clllc990, P•'flOll 17·0 , SuNy ICMO, A .. lllnl,4, Ha,....r 1.0. PASSING -Los Angeln, H•den t).2'..0.110. °"'-· E••M •~>. Awlllnl 1-1 ... 1..-. PlllcliPI 1·12..0.IGI. RECEIVING -LO\ AnQeles, Tyler '"4. O.nnero MJ, w_., J·it. Miiier J.JI, '"'* l·lt, ary...,t 1-t Clllc990, Peyton 7.111, Sulley •·>t. Wiiiiam\ >·IS, Her per l·t , BaK ll"-1 l·J. COLLEGE Top 20 Th~ TOP Twenty In Tiie AuocltteO Press cot'-loott»ll poll, wllll llr•l·Olete •otH In perent,,._, \Aason't rec.on! - lolel oolnts. t So\ltllffn c.l IP~) 2 ·Pe"" St. CW.I J h 1tn Cll 4. Plll$bur91 s. Okl.....,..Cll t. Norlh C.-ollnl 111 7. Olllo SI. t. Mlcllle-n •. Mlu lulppl SI 10 lrl(lllan V"""9 ti Al-u WesNnQllon 1l 0-VCa 14. Clem"'" IS, So. Metltocllst I•. UCLA 17. Miami. Fie. 11 low• "·Ark- 20. low•SI . NFL standings NATIONAL CONFER ENCE Western Division Atlanta Rams San Fran. W L PF PA Pd. 3 1 109 62 .750 2 2 96 80 .500 2 2 83 59 .500 New Orlns 1 3 44 85 .250 Eastern Division Dallas 4 o 109 S8 1.000 Philadelphia 4 O 93 40 1.000 NY Giants 2 2 57 56 .500 St. Louis 1 3 74 100 250 Washington 0 4 60 119 .000 Central Division Detroit Minnesota Tampa Bay Green Bay Chicago 2 2 87 71 2 2 79 94 2 2 68 70 l 3 69 105 l 3 61 85 .500 .500 .500 .250 .250 AMERICAN CONFERENCE Western Division W L PF PA Pct. San Diego 3 1 138 110 .750 Kansas City 3 I 107 99 .750 Denver 3 1 89 54 .750 Oakland 2 2 63 45 .500 Seattle 1 3 58 77 .250 Eastern Division Miami 4 O 97 55 1.000 Buffalo 2 2 104 so .500 NY Jets 1 3 73 117 .250 Baltimore 1 3 70 122 .250 New Eng. 0 4 73 104 .000 Central Division Cincinnati 3 1 102 95 Pitts burgh 2 2 108 98 Cleveland 2 2 65 87 Hous ton 2 2 63 72 .750 .soo .500 .500 COUIQI ITANOtMOI ftM:Htc·10 lyv s.ait 0 1 ... St. ..... ~ Wyoml"' Hewell Utall Galer-SI. UT flt Air l'orct °""' M9-•&. l Wl.T ... .._ ••••••n's , •• , •• ,,u t • 0 J •• ,t • 10• ,,."' .. 0 I t I t t ~ W ... , ... ,,, • • • • J ... " t t O J tt•ff 0 1 0 lJ0'-1" 010 IJ0 .. '1 ~AM ..... •llWl.T NN 10 0JJOUn oo t 1 1o nn 00 0 ,, ... "" 0 00 l t0 t411 000 JIOto:tU OtO O •OI01l1 WAC (Mt 4110- WLT WLT H f'A to o 000111sr 10 01ooua tOO l )O IOO ICll t 0 O J I 0 IS tO 0 0 0 t • 0 • tt OOO >t O ICllU 0 ' 0 0 ' 0 ,, tJt OIOOJO IOll• 0 , 0 0 J 0 41 .. Community coll•O• tehedule IAll-•17:a,_"'.,_..tt ..... I 1.ATUaDAY ~---· Oran1119 CAMI at PaYIMN S.dCI !Metk al LA Solltll-1 111 Oolditn West •I Loa Anoele• v e tto Ventur• el ~on Cl.SO) Senta ~.•I WHl l os A .... 11 JOI C•ny-•I Mir.COOi• (t JOI -r-1tet Mt San Ja<Nllo Ill Sent• AN at Los Anoele• CC F1111er10flat 9elenflelcl R lveralde at Dnitrl Glendale •I LA Hel'bOr Mt. SM Antonio •I fl C.mlftO c.<rllos at Sant• -.iu Groumont et Pierce Sen OleODMew•I L-BUCll CC C 11 ru • • t Sa<\ a.m.tdlfto S.n 0"90CC el tmperl•I Valley H•ncotk •I Rio Hond9 T •fl el E•ll LOI Anoeles P•lom•r ., Anl•'-V•llt Y High aehool achedule tall t-•I 7:a IMIHI 91WWIM ..... I THUUOAY S.•V'-1A- E1l•n<I• .. Saddlel»ck .. S•llle An• IM>wl Corona 091 ,,,..r •• un1,..r111y .i lrvl-f,...,.. u..,_ K•l•ll•YS E19er ... u ., V••-·· C..OllWYIAatW VIiie PArk Wf. Cenyon •I El Modtn• N_ ... _ Ocu n V-'" S..nt1Y Hiii• et Buitn• Perk Minion V1elo " Ranct>o Al•mlto1 •• 801"'0'-Sonor• vs. lA Mlr..U •I IA H•llf• G•nuh• ••· lAOUN Hiiis et MIHlon Viejo S• .. nN ••· 8ueN Per~ •I l • P•lma Park Anehelm el Geroen Grow ,lllDAY s.avi...~ Co>I• ~et Newoor1 HerbOr I r•lne •• El Toro•• Mlulon Viejo E,..ireLe._ Kenned\'"' Lo.r• '1 lA Palm• Perk CypritH" El Dor-et Velencl• c:..oiwyu ..... Or.•nge et El -... Foothill " SA velloy el !.A Bowl Sent• AnA el Tu\lln _.._ EOIM>n •I Mllllk•n Hunt1"91on Buch •I 8ol'9 Gr•-Com pton •I Westmln\ler L•auna llHCh .. MAQnoli• •• wuttrn Oen• H•lllvs 'W-lctQeet lr•lne S•vanna at 8~ P•rk P1one•r •t FuHer10" Brt•.Ollnd• 11 La H•bra Monrovia., Bl•hoo AMII Bl>l>OP Mont~ry el M•rv Ster l'ont""" el St P•ul C•pl1lr.,,., ValltY vi Santi-at G•rclitn Grove MOleor .i S... Clemente SATUaDAY e...,. .. u.,... P•cllk • "' LOS Alem ltos ., WHl•m N ......... FO\lfl taln V1ti.v " S.l"Vlt• M La ,..,_ P•rk Crupi "' ,,,..,., Otl •I Satlla An.a llowl WUltrn"' l..ol AmlQDS el Garden Oro,.. V 1lencll ••· TfoY at Fullertofl La Puitnle n. la Quint• at Bolw c;,..,.. l.Oi AmlQDS ~~ WHlern at G6r-c;,.,,.. Deep Ha fishing Nl'W~ CArt't UMMel -n angten: 10 IMln . '1 me<llerel. '1 tlOnlto. coa....,·1 Le<U rl -41 ant'•" ltl bonito. S calico 11eu, 6 \Mid beu , •1 meek.,., OANA WHAaP -10 angten U t»u. 1:15 mackerel, 710 bonito, 11 rotk llMI OCIANSIOI ... •nalers S1 llOllllO, ,, UlltO beU , • Yncl beU, t2t rock ""'· '3 ma<keret SAN DIEOO CN&M L1"4l"I• 'lllMr· ma11'a, P•h1I L•mal -11 englefl' t0 '(ollowleil, 123 llONIO, 17 beU, .. rotk Ill/\ LONG l lACN (lelme11t "'"' -II •na•••~ 110 -.110, 110 rocll ""'· 1 .....s beU (OMNll'I ~I -2t -len 107 bOnllo, 11 ullco beu . 2 Wnd w u . JU rock fish SEAL llEACH 70 1nglet'I 140 rotk cod, •cow cod, llO bonito, t llnt1 cod, 3 Wiid beM, S cattco beH. 20 meekerel, t 'f•llOWl•ll MOallO IAT IVlrt'• L1"4latl -It anQlors: 20 albe<or•. "rock cod, • 11119 cod, 11 •,!d ,_., 1" bes~ ************* . .. • • : JOHNSON & SON : .. • « • .. • • • « « « Presents ... it « • « Patett.·~ .. ,. • • « • • MR.'s • « Pick of • • • « The Week • . .. •-14.0tAc::::-'''"--« • SUNDAY • ,. ...,.,o-.,. .. It c ............. ._ ... a.111 ........ Mte1o « Rama .,.. Cllk ... M ""'-t..u « ouer It Ot ll•tatll. LWla "' Jt o..-'"at HtW V•k Giant• ! Clevel•nd ... ICan-cityM_l,..and -.. w .... .. rMCltCO at Watl\i119lon .a. .._ CIMIMMI......... -.. ..- f'lt ........ •-Or-• >it ~atOll) ... o.tl'llltat ,.,,,.. ..... « • N ... Y_,. J9b at MIMI! « Jt. SH nle .. $9'1 CM..-... .._ ......,..0-... ? .... Allafltt at ""._llfti• CCII 1, • 11.m. > il .. ~************************************** : : Pete's Pick · Se ~h : : at Johnson ' Son e I j e . : Johnson & Son EXCn'ING ~ : u~';::~:;'!.,. * ••• I 82' S * : • COSTA leSA · • ~ •••• ~!~!!!! ••••••.••••••• ~~!~~~~.~~.'!!!. ........ ; •-ta.· rt • • ..,.... .11 .... ~ ........ M,laf TMlll, ................. Ill ,._.._ rll I• Mo. Mio -W I '-Ill .... M. .. ,. Wfft'-1 ....... HKll9'M, lta-rllta Ill eM ffl- Nell'ttfl, •IJ .... 0-Hirt ... , W , ltltf W.IUr-'--'9, W , ..._,._Wini-• Ill Balboa YC lllf'TCMal • INlllT A TIO.AL -M. •I. H . ~'""" Ill -w.w..•l NH&. .....,. ....... tt-. l ..... "'-' llcllell .. tt I laCilt. JK Clft,_, IVC. J $0WWM, Gwlfrey LWO. *-"...,., vc. ~nt-• t S.-, ~ ~ 1c vc. , 1w11111, 0 10 •-· acvc. Tllltll I. '9ml·~lollt, 11.-rt VM'T lllel. IYC, t . CfelY llQtlh, Pwl Kelle'f. )I Ya(. Sfll•lfl -S.W•v. Doft HOiiy, UCI""· I. .. IMMlft .. """-. ,..,..._.. • ...... c.ete-Y 1\ltf ... at HY llleMlft NY 11.,._n "' ~lla41tl~la al ••at ...... f'leH. NJ V-atWIM ..... T.,..,,.. Ill o.lrell "..,.,.,.. .. 0..-MlldrM , #IM( llrnmel, UC1'4-L.POA moMy teectera ( ........... , J9A-c-..... ···'" llt,71t Madrid Qrand Prix C•IMM!r._,.....,, ......... -11 ..... M•rk Ol<llton d9f Vktot Pkcl, .. ,, M. n -11. ••an ~ Ott J.-ii A....-no ... 1, •I, P•btO 11.tt trfa def. llk ardo lce1•. 1•. • l . JOH Lvh Oa"'le nl def . Cerloa Cultllen, .. , ... ,. c;.11r1et Urpl .,.,, P•teel POrlu, •·l. •·t ; Joaklm N1ntrom cMI 8tfMfel FrllJ, .. J, M ; Frencloc;o Fer,... d•I Hens Sl~ton. 1 S, M Tranu"'9rlea Open (el S. l'r-laHI ............. ,. Eliot h lbC"9r def. Brien Tueller. w , I•. CT•llKher wins '32,000). U.S. Women's Indoor Ca1--..........,,Ml..,.I 14"•11-Sl ..... Bonnie o.ctultll ftf U llle Al .. n, W , W , • • 4, J ull• HerrlnQlon clel. Jo11<e l'Orvntn. 1 6, 1·5, .. 1; Bart»ro Potter clel. Su!IAn Rollln'IOfl ... 1 ... ,. LUC:ll Romano• clet. Kim Jo•,.•· .. I, U ... ,, Pam fff9\lercletl def. Leigh Ann T'-"PtOR, .. ,. 1·5. PHftUI Louie Clef l(lm s.n.», «, 74, M Women HIGH SCHOOL ~ IHCll Ii, UltlftnitY J ........ IC•rvn Wiiiette ILi oef. Bek.,, W . clef l efetlvre, .. I. d9f I UINYI, •·2, Kell Wiil- ILI wOfl M , 1·S, t ·2. Jenda Il l ~ .... k , ....,, ... De11411• Smllll·Conkey ILi def. Otl••r·Zerlletf, M ; Oel Mlddleton-~t. •·l , ctel. Brechl\•w- Wlnlersteln .. 2. l'ork<Mll-Godfrey ILi IO!I J t , won •·'· loll 2 •. Scllwer Ulleln Hollend -l·S, 7 S, l°'t , .. ... ,.r....., ltt110tfl"91 o-c.-i1 J ... $~ Nt11Cyt.-~ Amy Alejlll Mlty llttle Kallly W""-111 Htllls Stacy J -llal«k s.Mr • .. ..,,. .. Peltr"- Sanfra.._. 0.114>1eAllltln OetGe,_ J-IAle• S.nfraPalmH Petty N- Catllr a..,- Cerotyft HNI Merle,,.FIWCI letty l(lne MyrtVM- Kellly Poll-ell J..clyReNllll 0.111>1e 111a-v JaMI C-.S 0•1• llnlqwjSI ttr .. o ·al'Mft 411ce Mlller l ef'Wra- Allc• Rlllmtft Penny Pull PetM•Y9rt ClrHIY 14111 Jerilyn 8rltl Jlldy c1 • .- ~,. $pwl.IC11 Cettly SllMtl JulleStangH Susie McAllltlar leUISotonwl VIOITMer JoAnnw-.. Sllel .. y..-ln Mar1heH...,, SUvla 8ar1CllKCNll ''"'' Morw C.ttty Hllie Vk kl F•,..,., KelllyMMtln M•ry o..,.... a erbera Ml lf al\le 11',11• , .. ,. llUJJ 1 .... •tia• ua,m IOd,141 .... m tt.n• .. ,..., '°·"° •.. ,. "·"' ll,tlJ U,!Ot n.m Jt,'71 S.S,)41 ,.,I,. .,,,.,, 0.111 •7 )01 .,,. 41,2'7 •.m .... 0 ... 1 ... ti• 42,tm ... ,. 41.301 41.J'I) 40,"'4 ··'" 40,lll ,.. •.m ,.,.,. )t,JS7 ,,., ... ».• JJ,"7 n..a 30,4'3 tt.i. 11.0fl 11 ..... JJMO 1•.ttS ,., .. 2S~7 Monday·a tranHcUon1 ..... .,. .. u. ,. .............. .._ ....... OENVEll NUOOl!T$ Sltneil 8111y MC Kinney, _.o, to• m\llll·y-<8fltratl ..OOTIALL NalllNl,......ll.HIW SAN DIEGO CHARGE"$ -Activated Jolln W-otk, ,...... Welwd Don R-. cleffllSIYe- NOCl(IY ............... y ........ COLORADO ROCKIES S.nl Tr•vor J oll•nMn, cleltnMm""; Jack Vallq....,11•, <:enter . .,.., Ron Delorme, rlOll1 wino, to the Fort W..,.,,, Toaan1 of t"9 Genlrel HotlltV Lettue Sent .JoM Glbtl, clefitn...,,.,, tl'd 8r1n1 Kleulo. lefl wl119. 10 Flint •"" Muskegon ol '"' lftle•n•llonel Ht<kO U'9U•. f'""9Cll...iy RtlNMd 0.W Otlkll encl G•ry Diiion, Cflll•n , Rot> J~, rld'fl wl"Q; Pet., Slur_,, left wing. NEW YORI( I SLANDER$ -Au...- l(ev l n Devine, Bruce Andret, Nell H••rrllw, I.MN 51.,1.,, Sftane Tur,,., tfld l'rank BHIOl't, 1-erds, Sle,.. SloY-•k ll. G•rlh Mec:Gula-n. Scott How111n -Grtl'll Ftgtrllelm. unttn. Rancly Johnston, T Im l otkrldge, Darty Regler, Kelly Devis, Peter Stat>IYk e nd Mike Lolll•nco, .,.. le flaemen, •ncl ROii Holl•nd •nd LorN Mollellen. goaltendtM, lo lndl•napotls of ttw Cenlr•I Hoc.key LH9ue WINNIPEG J ETS -Ruulgnecl JOlln Bara well -Jim Melon, clelenaemen. to the Tul!.41 Ollen of the C.ntrel Hotuy L•A9U'· Ruul~ Eo U yton, -II•, to -Fort WeyM K-IJ of me 1n1ernat10NI Hotkey L••oue • Area high school f oothall log SUNSET LEAGUE Ediaon 13·0) 22 EI Dor id!> O S.ntaAna Jl El Modena Oct 2-.1 Mllllken Oct. •-Meter 0.1 (ti OCCl Weatmlnsler (2·1) ti La Quint.a 0 • Pacllkt ll 14 Newoo<1 H••tlor 7 Oct 2-c.>mpton I n 10 Oct. l~rlna (tlWMtmlnsfer) Del. 2>--0uan View 111 HBl Oct t-.11.-BMcll WlllOfl Oct. l t---Oc••n View (el H81 Oct. 7>-HunllnQton e.ac11 Oct.19 Eellson (atOCC> Oct. 29-Wttlmlnster 1•1 DCCI Ho• .._..Huntington a..cr. Nov U -Fln V•ll•Y , .. Bio A) Fountain Valley (2·1) It Sant.a Ana Vallev 21 El Tcwo l St P.,1 Del l -Servil• l•t La P•lm•I Del ·-.. ··-Oc I t5-tt Hllflllngt°" tke<ll Oct n -Mtrlna I•• OCCl Ocl. JO--Oc;ean v .. w fat Wm'1rl Nov.• t Wntmlnoter Nov •-Fountain Vt lley Nov I). Menna SEA VIEW LEAGUE Corona del Mar (3·0) 14 Huntl"91<>11 BH<"ll • 0 A2 Coront clel Mar O 21 u Caplotr-Valle y • :1 Oct. 1-Unlvertlly lat lrvlnel Oct. •-Elt.ancla (ti Nt""'°rll Del. t.._s.ctdlebe<k let Newponl Oct. 11 El Toro t•• Mlulonl Oct. 29-trvlne Ctl Newoortl Nov. •-Coste-" (al DCC> Nov. I~ <•tOCCI Oct. 2 El Toro (et Mlu lon Vlejot Otl. 9 Saddteback Oct l~UIMew Oct l l -.t N""OO'I Herbor O c I 2'-CdM ( •• Newp ort H•rbOrl Nov •-E.stencl• No• ll-Onlvenlly Newport Harbor (0-3) 3 Merlnt JS 1 Cypreu 21 10 Westmln1i.r u Oct 7 -COiie -w Del 10 El Toro (et MIU lon Viejo> Ott 17 UniVl l'\llV Oct n -lrvlM Ocl 30-Est.anclt ltlOCCI NO• 6 SacNlebecll Nov 13-<orone c1e1 Mer <•I OCCJ Saddle back (2· 1) 7 Buetw1 P•r'I< • 0 Min ion Viejo I 11 La Hatira , 1J Laguna Beach (0· 1·1) 13 Irvine 14 Elslnort Ocl 1 -MeQnofl• 111 Western) Oct 9-LosAmlQDS Oc I t ..... oa..a Hiiis Oct 1,_.t S... C .. mente Oct. ~t C.eplllreftO Vallev HO• • .._Mln loft Viejo NO• 12~ Hiiis (Al MVI Laguna Hilla (0-3) JS ,,.,,.,. • E1tenc11 1 Unl,,.,..,ty Oct l~(elMVI Oct •-u Quint•,., MVI Oc I t.._s.n Cle""ltlle l•t MVJ Ocl. 2,_., Mln lori Viejo Oct 30-0.... Hlll1 1•1 MVI NOY. S-C.OOV•llev lel MVl NOY 11-t...tQuna 8eacll (el MVI Mission Vle)o (3-0) 27 Tustin 7 !>tddltlle<~ 7 El Toro I) " u J1 • , 0 0 Nov tl-Edlson lat Bia Al Del I Estancle lel !>"Bowll Oct 9 I lnt;ne Oct 1-Rencho Alem llo1 l•I Costa MHa (1·2) o Sent.a Ana ?t Huntington Beaeh (1·2) CorON del Mar u 11 Santi..,., o 11 I• Lo• Alamllo• Jt 0 El Oor- IS Lo1Aml90S u Oct. 1-.1 Newport HarbOr Oct t-.t 8of'9 Grt- Oct t -San Clemtnta Ocl l~l'ourltaln V•lley Ck I.,,__.. W~m1nster Ocl »-MoriN NO•. •-Ed ison Now. ll--Oteen View Manna (4-0) 21 CHiie 1iuwe111 o JS Newport HertJor ) 0 Bolw Gr.,,.,. O 14 l'ooltllll " 0(1. 2~ye 0c t. t-Mllllllan tel Wn\lr I Oct t-Edilon (al Wn•lr> Oct 23-FounUiln Valley l•I OCCI Oct >o-.1 Hunllr>Qlon B~e<ll Oct. I-University (al N.,..OO•ll Oct. 1.._.1 lrwl,,. Oct 11 s.ctclleb.Kk lei SA Bowl! OCL JO-El To<o Cat Newport! Nov 6 -Corona clel Mer (el OCCI Nov. tl Elltnela lat NewPOrtl El Toro (0·3) 14 Capllilr-Velley 11 ti l'OUfllelfl V•lley 1t 0 MiUIOll Viejo 1 Oct. 1-ll"Vlne (~I MVI Oct.·~ Harbor lat MVI Ck I. 1' Elltnel• (el OCCI Ocl.27 Cor'OneclelM•r telMVI OC 1. JO.-C0.1• Mesa (al NewPOrtl Ho•.• .tinlwr~IY (al Min ion I Nov 12 -SacNIOOKk C•I SA Bowl! Estancia (3..0) Oct t.....c.GM l•I Newport> Oct 21-<mlt -w let SA Bowl! Ocl >0-Vnl~lly , ••• ,.,,,,., Nov. 6 el Newport H•rbor NO• n Et Toro .. , !>A Bowll University (2· 1) 10 Norw•lk o 0 Tullln 1 I L99UNHllls 1 Oct t -Goronaclel Mar (el lr•lnel Oct I -Costa Mew (II Newoorll Oc I. 17 -al N""port HarllOr Del 2:1 E~le (al lrwlnel Ocl. JO-S-lebeck Cat l"'lntl Now •-El Toro (al MIUlon) No• ,,_.I lrv!M SOUTH COAST LEAGUE Capistrano Valley (1 ·2) 11 El Toro u O E1perarue 41 • Corona deC Mar u ~:· ~--!f"~lll Grdn Gro-.) Oct l~iulonVlelo Botw Gr-1 Del t -lndlo (lp m I Oct l.._..C~lr-Vallo Oc t. 13-L..aouN Hiiis Oc I ...... ~"Clemente Nov.·-· ~BHCll NOY. 13--0tna Hill• San Clemente (0-3) 1 l'ell~ O CoroneclelMar • Estenc1t Oct 2-Mtyf•lr Oc t. 9-~I Hunt11>9ton Beeell Ocl.16-leQuNIHll11letMVI Oct 13-L..aouN O.acll oc t )1)-,Wnton v 1e Jo Nov I ,., o.ne Hiii• (I p m I NOY IJ-Caojstr-Vtlley OTHERS Mater Del (1·2) It Collon • Do• Puet>IOi 14 LOI Altos Oct 3-CrtiPI let SA Bowl! Oc I 9-Edltori let DCCI Ocl IS-Servile Cat SA Bowl I Oct ,,_,SI Peul 0 " 11 Nov 7--0c•"" View (II Wn<lrl NOY. 1.)-.al Wetlm ln•ler ll Cypress u J~ LttunaHlll1 6 Oct H-•t Dana Hiii• t I p,m l Oct lO-lAQUna e.ech Nov. S-i.-Hlll1 (ti MV) NO• ,,,_ •1 Sa<\ Cle,,.,.,,I• Oct 79 Bishop Amel fel SA Bowl) Ocean View (0-3) I P•clfka 0 La Oullllt t CYP'ft! I~ •• .. Oct I Su""Y Hiii• 111 8ueM P•rkl O:t 9 -at WH ltrrl Oct. , ..... w..tmlnsler (II HBI Oct U -Edlson Ct t HBI l•t JS Sen , .. ,,,...le • OCI I s.ctcllebec:k lat SA 8-11 Oct. t-(;dM fat N-1 Htrlle>rl Oct 1.._EI Toro !al DCCI Ocl 1l-Unlv....i1, l•l lrvinel Oct. lO N--1 Herbor !OCCI Nov 6-.11rvtne NO•. 13 <olle Mesa (ti NewPOrll Irvine (2-0·1) Dana Hiiia (2· t ) tl M69"0li. l 6 Mlulon Bay 1J 10 BHMll 0 Oct 2 -·· <•t ''"'""' Oct. 9_,,,..'ff•lr (119•11flowerl OCI It etL.eQvnaB .. <11 Oct 2•-C•Pl•treno V•ll•y II pm l Oct JO-l'ounllln V•llo Wn>trl Now 1-Mar1n• Cal Wnstrl NOY l,_.I Huntington a..ch 2t Ltt...,.Hllls ll Legune Beac:ll 14 V•lencla 1S ll 1J Ocl l0-L.a9<1N Hlll1 (et MVI Nov 7-San Clemente t 1 p ,m I No• 1)-et Mlu lon Viejo Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Wes t Division Kansas City x·Oakland Minnesota Seattle Texas y·Chicago Y·Angels W L Pct. GB 26 21 .553 23 21 .523 23 25 .479 21 26 .447 20 25 444 20 28 417 18 27 .400 East Division Milwaukee 28 20 , 583 l'h 3"'1 5 5 6'-'l 7 Detroit 27 20 .574 112 Boston 26 21 553 1 ~ Baltimore 25 21 .543 2 x·New York 24 23 .511 3~ Cleveland 24 24 .500 4 y-Toronto 20 23 .4~ 5~ x-Firsl·half division winner y-Eliminated from playoff contention ~y'•k­...... , .. CN~O ICt!>WI 61Y t, Ml,_1CIU I Cl-land'· -York 1 ea ttlmore 1. Ott roll J Mll•-M I, 8"1., 0 fuH 6, SHllJt S Oflly OtlNS sclleelultd , ... , .. ~ .. A ... I• (1(1-0.11 at Clllc~ tTrovt •11. n Ka"' .. City IWrltlll l·Jl et MlnnHole (WlllltlMMl Toronto (0entY•·tll •IOakl-tNorrlt tMI Hew Y-IOulelrY 11~1 at ( .. ,..,_ 1ci..w.,. .. SI, n llalllmoA IM<Oreoor lt·.oll II Otlrtll !Mertl• lM).11 •ostOll (Tomi W I ti .Mllw94111M (Mat.. HI. " THH (""9dltfl ... l .. SNtlle ClaatlM >ll, II NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Houston 31 16 .600 Cincinnati 28 18 .609 2\~ San Francisco 27 19 .587 31h x·Dodgers 24 23 .511 7 y·Atlanta 22 24 .478 817 y-San Diego 13 35 .271 181,2 East Division Montreal 26 21 .553 St. Louis 25 21 .543 'h.! Chicago 22 24 .478 31f.z x·Philadelph1a 22 24 .478 31"'2 New York 21 26 .447 5 Y· Pittsburgh 19 29 .396 71J.i x-Firsl·half division winner y-Eliminated from playoff contention _.....,..,ac_ Allanta2.~I Plll.stllwtll •t, Olkaoo~ll Plllladelp Illa 11, New York 4 Saft FrMCIKO 4, Onclnnall 0 SI. LOIAlt '-Morltnel 2 Hovs Ion 2. Sen ()Iago I T_,.,._.. C>Meen CW.ICll •J> et Atlante (McWllllamt "''·"· New v-(Falc-).JI al Pflll-lplll• lllllvt• 1·>1." C~ktVD CKreve< ,,., ti ,.Ill_., IQ, Jtnn M l,n Safi l'renclllff IHollend 1·Sl et CIM ll\f\tll (Ltlbr-1-11, n " Moltlr-' 11..ee H I .t St. UIUlt CAM!lolar 7~). n ian 1)1990 (WI• M l M H-IOll CK-•41, JIM MARINO No• !>-Notre Oeme ltl SA a-11 Nov. 13 -el 8 1"-Monlgomery Woodbridge (0·2) • Ora19 LUl/\efen 1 1 O•k Ptr'I< It Oct. 2-0.... Hiii• 1•1 lrwlnel Oct. 10-1..A Bac>tlll (el lrvlnel Ocl 11-St. Galle•l•v• t•t lrvl,,.1 Oc I 24 W.slern Cllr. 1•1 Ont. Cllr I Oct JO. •I OnUirlo Chrl5lian Nov • el Veller Cllrlstien NOY 1.a-R-let trvln•I OUTST .ANDING VALUES! IRAHD MEW 1981 vw DIESEL RAHIT FACTORY STICKER S794S DISCOUNT $950 SALE PRICE S6995 (2838) 12117591 IRAHD HEW 1981 ISUZU PICICUP FACTORY STICKER $6571 Dl~COUNT . $513 SALE PRICE $5995 ( 1276) (702738) IRAHD MEW 1911 vw DIESI&. PICICUP FACTORY STICKER $6571 DISCOUNT $513 SALE PRICE VOLKSWAGEN-ISUZU 11711 IEACH IL VD. HUNTINGTON EACH CALL 142·2000 .. ... ' l 1 Orengt CoMl DAILY PtLOT /T'UMday. S.pttmber 29, 1981 Lakes, new look for Rancho SJ Seven revamped holes open with tourney Oct . 14 Wh n the Rancho San Joaquln Goll Courte stares IU nuw-look dtbut Oct. 14, aeven ntw holes wll come into play that Include three new laket and a complete new look. Members have been wa1Un1 for almost a year to play the seven new holes that are aH on the front side (2 through 8) and the opening day will also find the Irvine City champion5bip being played on the course. In checking the new layout with pro Matt Smederovac, he indicated the course wUI be 6,419 yards from the regular tees and 6,718 from the championship tees with both~ par 72. The Southern California Golf Association rated the new course last week and this Is the only group to play the new holes so far. Results of their find· ings are expected momentarily. Here's how the new holes will play: No. 2 -170-yard par three. This one has a new fairway and new greens. No. 3 -A four-par that is 325 yards in length and runs about where No. 2 used to be but a little farther out. A rather short hole with no dog-leg but an out-of-bounds on the right. No. 4 -A new par-four, 375-yard hole. No. 5 -A par.five that is 545 yards In length. .. This is probably the toughest hole on the course with two new lakes coming into play," says Smederovac. One of the lakes is near the green and will force an accurate pitch shot to the green. No. 6 -A 405·yard par.four hole with another lake near the green. No. 7 -A 360 yard, par-four with the tee shot over a lake. No. 8 -A 180-yard, par-three with another two-shot over a lake lo a new green. Nos. 1 .md 9 are the same as they have been and the back nine remains the sam e with Smederovac and head pro Howard Whiteside stat· ing that they are in the best shape they have been in for a long time. INCIDENTALLY, if you would like to play the course on opening day for the seven new holes, contact Or'. Ron Grossman at 752-7774 or Whiteside at 551·5522 to get an entry blank. The $40 entry fee includes green fees, electric cart, dinner and participation in the prizes for the winners. Competition will be in three fli ghts. ( 1 > Championship; C21 handicap ( 13-and·over): (3) Calloway for those with no accredited handicaps. Entries should be returned by Oct. 8 according to Grossman, president of the Irvine Sports Boos ters who are sponsoring the event with pro- ceeds going to the Irvine district school athletic programs. Guests already signed to play in the tourna- ment include broadcas ters Bob Starr , Dick Bass, Joe Buttitta and Fred Hassler with others expect· ed to be added in the near future. F'or those who wish to attend the dinner only, the fee is $10. The tournament will have i11dividu al foursome starting times Crom 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. with the field limited . Times will be issued on a first· come, firs t-served basis . • • • chasing and tippling touroament Mooday, Oct. 12 with a shotgun start at 12:30. Marlin McKeever, former USC and pro- fessional football star, will serve as master of ceremonies for the evening gathering. Ruth Dillon is the golf chairperson with scores to be calculated on Calloway, low gross and low net. Over 90 trophies and prizes are being offered to winners In· eluding a pair of round-trip licketa to Las Vegas by Air Cal. For further inform ation on thi s one. contact the Newport Center Association, s Corporate Plaza Drive, Newport Beach, 92660, attention Bonnie Parker. Or call 644·1885. * • * THE THIRD ANNUAL speech and language development center golf tournament wUl be held on Monday, Oct. 12 also. This one will be played at Alta Vista Golf Course in Placentia with a noon shotgun start. The tournament will be followed by dinner and awarding of prizes in the evening. For further ln· formation, call 831-3620. • • * THERE WILL BE last.minute openings for the Will Jordan Memorial tournament at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club Wednesday according to chairman Joe Costello. "We have cut the entry fee to $50 which includes green fees, electric cart and dinner," Costello says. .. We will have openings at the course on Wed· nesday or they can call me al 540.7500 to enter." In the recent seniors tournament at Costa Mesa, conducted by the men's club, Vic Conrade, the oldest player in the affair tied with Ross Dixon at 74 on the Los Lagos course. Conrade, at 74, won the event on the fourth ex· tra hole in a sudden-death playoff. Conrade won the Los Angeles city championship more than 50 years ago, in 1928, to be exact. And he almost shot his age with the 73. Low net went to John Enwright with a 64 with Clay Peters second at 65. * * * CHIP SHOTS -The Southern California PGA I\ alter /1111111>11 1s1111 the /1111.~<· 'ah<11·e '· h11t ./11!mn1e ./oh11son wck him 1 below1and11e fuml>les .a~•...,.... IRVINE COAST Country Club will be the is offering membership affiliations for those who would like to help promote golf in Southern California. A $15 affiliate membership includes a subscription to So. Calif. Golfor and a SCPGA directory.atlas; a membership card, bag tag, de· cal and USGA rules of golf booklet. There are also $25 and $100 affiliate memberships available. Con- tact the Southern California PGA Affiliates, 3740 Cahuenga Blvd., Suite 104, No. Hollywood 91604 ... Danny Bibb regained the Big Canyon Country Club men's championship recently with a 73-71 ·79-71-293. He edged fellow former UC Irvine star Gary Singer (295) for the title. Bibb had won the crown in 1977 and again in 1979. From Page C1 RA_1'JS COME HO ME A WINNER • • • and Stanford graduate. ''It's a matter of the µlayers and the offensive line working together. "rm e mbarrassed. l don·t like losing like this, t•s pecially on national television. It's not fair for a gu) "ith Payton's talents to continually get the c bleep! kicked out of him. I'm frustrated and I'm not getting hit like he does ... Cornerback Pat Thomas admitted that hard· hilling is part of the Rams new defensive philo!>ophy "We want to classify ourselves as hitters," said Thomas "We 're going to try to damage some people if we can·· The Rams did more than a little damage to quarterback Vince Evans. running back Matt Suhe) and split end Rickey Watts. All three of· fensive players had to leave the game after suffer· 1ng a viciou'> hit And. only Suhey survived to re· turn as Evans left the game in the first quarter with a bruised right shoulder Ccoincidentally of a l'lean Thomas tackle! and Watts with a bruised knee. ··The offense played good,·· added Thomas, · and the defense made the big plays when they had to. We shut them down on first down and forced them to pass. And then we got a strong pass rush that forced them to make errors Cone in· lerception and two fumbles>. .. We're starting lo come around real good now Everybody has a feel for what is going on and we're making a lot fewer mistakes now than we were three weeks ago ·' Without question. the Rams needed a game ltke this. It was good for the defense, good for the offense. good for the coachi ng staff. and good for Haden And. the liming couldn't have been better Sand run e t Saturday A four mile wet sand run from Newport Pier to Balboa Pier will take place Saturday, beginning at 8 a.m. with awards to be given in 12 separate divisions There will be age divisions fro·m 14 through 50-and-over for both male and female runners. Registration fees of $6, which includes a T· shirt, can be turned in with entry forms, available al 1007 Nancy Lane. Costa Mesa. For information , contact Rick Harris at 642-3209. No need to travel all over town lo look ror garage sales ... you'U find them right here in Classified. To place your garage 1, sale ad, caU 642-5678. ) .................. • Put •38 to work in pay • • TV Movies, eam • : $19,456 In 4 years. : • For brochure call: • : NEWPORT·PACIFICA : • 957 .. 282 • '················· HE WANTSYOU. JO HAVE HIS BABY with the likes of Cleveland. Atlanta and Dallas staring the Rams in the face the next three weeks. For Haden. in particular, it just might be the game he needs to start rebuilding his confidence. .. I felt good.'. said Haden, "but I'm just going to go out now and do the best job I can. I can't worry a bout what they're going to do anymore. "If it's going to happen c gettlng pulled from the game>. it's going to happen." And, it won't have to happen at all if Haden continues to play like he did Monday night ... or the Rams can somehow manage to schedule the Chicago Bears for an entire season. From Page C1 SEVANO COLUMN •. and those with two generally don't want another one.'' * • • If a quarterback is dropped -and it's only a matter of time befor e one is -the question arises as to what position the Rams would choose to fortify. A quick answer might be the defensive line. but don·t count on it. What the Rams feel they need at the moment Is a legitimate kick-return specialist. Unfortunate· ly, there are none available, accordin g to Faulkner. And, as for defensive linemen, there aren't any of those worth adding either. Another possibility being pondered by the club ~ould be to bring someone off the injured reserve ltst. The Rams can't do t hat, though, until Oct. 10 when the mandatory four-week waiting period ex· pi res. So, for the time being, the Rams will carry four quarterbacks. • • • Pat Haden on Dan Pastorini's presence: .. Dan and I have no problem. In fact, he's been very helpful. I think Dan feels awkward, we all feel awkwa;d about the situation. "All quarterbacks are critiqued. With Dan around I'll just be critiqued more closely ." • * * Ken Margerum. on the Bears' offense, which produced just 223 total yards Monday night: "The offense isn't that difficult. The one I had at Stanford was more complicated than this." And ... "There's no doubt I can play here. l was up against two of the best comers in the league tonight and I was able to get open more than once." Unfortunately, nobody threw In the vicinity of M argen.u:n all evening . * * * Margerum not~: The wide receiver, who led the Bears in receptions during the pre-season, baa caught only three passes in four regular season games for a 16.0 average. Margerum: * • * "With the talent on thla team you can't count us out yet . . . but I don't know what our problem ls." • • * Pastorinl: "I'm Just happy to aet a second chance. Remember, I w11 cut from a team that aald I couldn't play football anymore." And ... "There's no confuaton here ," be 11ld of the qualUl'beck 1ltu1Uon. "The only confwllon J see ls what I ....S ln the papers." "S., team I've ever been on has had con· troveiii'.1'1lia one iJ no dilfereot from any otbert. JIWI. •Md ecmtroveray lD Oakland lut year and Oolr •t ..... tltey did ... scene of the Newport Center Association golf ball Terry Donahue Donahue in quandary LOS ANGELES CA P l -After having two days to think about hi s team's 20·7 loss at Iowa last Saturday, UCLA Coach Terry Donahue could find only one positive thing to s ay about the one-sided setback. And it really wasn't all that positive. ·'Better that we lost to Iowa than to a conference opponent," com mented Donahue at his weekly meeting with reporters Monday. "l don't think that in this particular cloud there is a silver lining. What can I say, we got killed. It was a disaster ... About the only aspect of the Bruins' performance that pleased Donahue was the effort of the defense. but only for part or the game . "It's really difficult for me to give you a real assessment of what went wrong at Iowa," he said. "Probably you don't have the time. I can't r emember hav- ing an ortense so totally dominated by a defense. Our de· fense played very well in the first half, it kept us in the game. "We just didn't get the job done. There's no other way to put it. I'm extremely disappoint· ed and somewhat confused. Our offensive breakdowns covered all positions. It was a total of·· fensive team effort, it was not isolated in one area." The Bruins. who fell from sixth to 16th Jn the natlonal rank· ings, gained only 121 yards in total offense against the 18Ul· ranked Hawkeye&. T hey had averaged 33 points and 443 Judi ln tot.i offense in wtMing lhtir first two games. ''l think ll was a ~ombln1U'"' of things," said Donahue. Only six days left in divisional races . Second season winding .down From AP dispatcbes With just six days remaining in baseball's second season, the four .divisional r aces are wide open. The four first-half division wi nners -the New York Yankees , Oakland A's , Philadelphia Phillies and Los Angeles Dodgers -have all qualified for the divisional playoffs. If any one of those teams finishes first in the second half or the season -the Dodgers will not -then the team that finishes second during that ball will qualify to meet the repeat winner In the divisional playoffs. The American League East has the biggest logjam at the top with five teams within four games of t he f irst-place Milwaukee Brewers . The Brewers hold a half-game advantage over Detroit with Boston l 1h-games back and a half-game ahead of Baltimore. NEW YORK and Cleveland are 31h and four games behind the Brewers, respect! vely, but they would have to win all their remaining games just to have an outside chance at taking the second-half title. The Yankees h ave five road games left, Cleveland seven home games . Milwaukee, Detroit, Boston and Baltimore all have five games left. The Brewers, who will play S3 games in the second half of the season -one more than both Detroit and Bpston and two m ore than Baltimore -will have a home crowd behind them for all five games. They are s'Cheduled to m eet Bos ton tonight and Wednesday and con- clude the season with a t.hree- game weekend series with run- nerup Detroit. The Tigers finish their home season tonight and Wednesday with games against Baltimore, which returns home for a three· game weekend series wlth the Yankees. KANSAS CITY holds a 1 ~­ game lead over the Oakland A's in the AL We st with seven games remaining. Minnesota ii 3~·games out and meets Kansu City in two mutt·win 1ame1 lonl1ht end Wednesday. If KansBA City sweeps tboH games, It will ca.aallfy for the divisional play-off9 bee ... Illa. neaota cannot ftnlah elleM fl them ln the 1tand1np fW the leCa.Jd teUCID. Kaqaa City muat a1lo plar tbree IAllMI wltb Oalll ... IM two wttb Clmland. Tbe TwlM 'rinish the seo1tson w ith three games at Chicago. The Montreal Expos hold a half-game lead over St. Louis in the National League East with both teams having six games left. THE EXPOS and Cards will play each other just one more time -in St. Louis tonight. The Expos also have two games with Pittsburgh and three with the New York Mets, all on the road. The Cards will play two at Philadelphia a nd c lose with three games at Pittsburgh. Chicago and Philadelphia are 31h games out, and any com· bination of three Expos wins and Philadelphia or Chicago losses will eliminate them. The Mets will be eliminated by two Expos victories or Mets loss. . The Houston Astros hold a 2\i:i-game lead over the Cincin· n ati Reds in the NL West with the San Francisco Giants 3Y.2 games out. AJI three clubs have six games left. The Astros, who will play five of their final six on t he road, will play 47 games in the second season -one more than both Cincinnati and San Francisco. Houston will have two games at Cincinnati and three at Los. An geles, while it m eets San Diego at home tonight. The Astros maitc D\tmber to eliminate Cincinnati ls four, and three with San Francisco. Ca88erly 8hine8 in cr088 country · RIVERSIDE -Catherine Casserly was the top fln.lsher for UC Irvine's women's cross coun- try team as she placed 22nd out of a field of 70 Saturday at the UC Riverside'lnvitatlonal. UCLA, led by freshman An· nabelle Villanueva, a former Fountain Valley High standout, won the team tiUe with 29 points, followed by Loni Beach State with 50. occ trhunpha Th e marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678 Median incornt o/ l)ojly PUot /amm• tzctf'tll 134.000 ci Jlft)r. Your ad reoc tht county'• mo!t cflluent buying dience . CLASSIFIED INDEX .... ... l4e.Mt,., Wt ....... .., Wt ..... .., We ...... ,., Wt ....... .., We ....... ,.., Wt ....... ,.. .. ........ '9tWt ." ····•••··············· ....•.•.....•................................................•••......••••.....•.....•••.......•••.....•..•••••..•. , ........................ ,..................... . ................... ~ . . . Cii1Mrel 1002 ~ 1001 <Ht... 1002 ~ 1002 lt•rel IM2 l•c.e IOOJ l•r4 IHJ l1wr4 10ti •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .................................................................... 1 LEASE OPTION S20.:1!!~~J~wnu STAIT SMAIT SU,750 Stl.100 le Plact l•r a~. Call 01 ASSUME w111 rarry 2nc1 and w111 CclM $224, tSO l..Z LOT COSTAMISA 642·5678 MttlS(S rot SAL( l.>'IW<•l K.H• .. hl•l'd t\fJ .. M l*tl1""'\tllf t •tii'\At•"'-' tk .... ··--""·"' "•• , ..... ""'" , ...... , .. ~-.. , .. . h...,..,,.,i.Jh \ ....,.IA.(1olliti kttH h ln1tw ........ 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"'•' \ •r4huf'I kf"~'•I k eoflltl\ tu '"•rt (1_,, ... , ,.,, kll'rtl Uff1u H•nt•l fhil\IHr Ht"'"' l"°'611iU1•I M"M41 ""°'4111" ktnt•h \\ •"'"j "' ... ""''•"' ux111tln11loall$w1thon provide add1tlon11I Only steps to btautiful PUJSumaJlhomtlhal ly 542,000! Ncwporl rinancln& help on thl~ Corona deJ Mar beach! nted1 fWn&! A 1reat 8eautlflll l 11«Y 2 Bdrm 2 b•th ~ ln <"Mt• Meu. 2 car attached a.race. Grut locatioft, call for more detail•. &46-23U Be a ch own t' r 1:. lovely, bdrm homt' with Just red\lt'td szs.ooo by buy for buJlder or :~~ desperate, Prtv11w pnol, •Pnrkllna pool. Only motivated owners' AJ· •tarter ~l·bFHI AC/VAii , .. , spa and padc!Jetenn1:1' 4 Slli,OOO Call now aume 11'4'.4. First Call terms 1v11 a e. a •••• EQUAL HOUSING luxury bdrms A rare op m mo. now 1 87~ Riahl Now! ~2313 :~ OPPORTUNITY £irtunily Call 6734WO A !§ ~:~\~~::ad r!~_i_(\!i_l_ LALE~LfiT}lOATS E Ora~;i;.~yrs :~~ v er l 1 s e d 1 n l h 1 s - -·--~--" exptrience. Call for Info. '"" newspaper is subJeet lo Winter Retrnt. Oasis in ENGLISH C01TAG E and rates. 1 1"'.,"'• the Federal F11r Hous the s N l Id 2 9.a. I 2 . un ew )r o ~ BR. ram rm. open • 1w10. ing Act ol 1968 whirh bdrm + den. 3 ba, rum beam clas. loads or used ::~~ makes it Illegal to ad wilh cathedral re1hng brk. & pool t.oo! owe ,.... vert1se "any prererence, Indian Wells Racquet w I s15 000 d 1 11,•,., hm 1lat1on, or d111 Cl b p I s on Y • wn. u . a m prings s.s 7088 ""' cr1m1nation bued on Home overlooks 14th -race, color. religion. Gotr Hole al the Indian Homeowners & investors. ""' sex. or national origin, Wells Golf course Pool 30 Homes & Cond~ for "" or an intention to make in front or home i-:x sale S2500 to S.10.000 :~, any such prererence, cellent loc Sl95,000, n down 1,2, & 3BR s As· '~" lim 1lat1on , or di~ money dn to qualified sumable loans Low :·,:: cr1m1nallon •· buyer Will ronside Pa} ment!. fur com- 1,., trade ror urul in Coron plete info call Owner ~~:' This newspaper will not del Mar Call John Broker. 8.51 m1 Agents ~:.;, knowingly arcept any Bellam,r 7~·6955 Welcome H•• ad vert1s1ng ror real --------.(-~~~~~~~· ~~:· estate wluch is in viola $8000 DOWH!! '..':.; . .!!?nofth~law-'-EURO••N Bring paint brush & ""' --------ru broom to save SS$on this ;:: MANOR HOUSE 3 bedroom hxer in quiet EltRORS: .AdYertlsen Cos la Mes a are a 11 , MoWdchtcktMWodt Magnificent 6 bdrm , Creath•e seller ~a)s ._,., dolly Clftd report tr• view, mansion 7200sq ft "Sell' .. 759 1501 or ~:· "°" hcwneclahty. TN with 7 baths, 5 £rplcs, 752.737:1 ·.~ D.AIL y '9LOT -·-• large wine cellar. spec· , ---lacular 20· high entry, ·:~.: liability for tfw fi"t circular cobbleston • S ISi( DOWN • DESl9.An! 4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home Assume tu-balance loan owe straight note. SUCCl!S5 REALTY -549-~ $93,500 13.6% Terms! No qualifying! A fantastic afrordable home with privacy Cov ered entry, formal llvmg room, added ram1ly room with bri ck fireplace. 3 huge bdrms. 2 bath. very private rear ya r d . Price only s 129.900 Call 546-2313 tl4fid THE REAL ESTATERS THE REAL ESTATE RS THE REAL ESTATE RS -------Want Ad Ral&lta e.z.5179 Want Ad Help? SO.M78 IHYISTOl-S OBJGHT ~UME IV.% loan or 90% ri.nancing available at only l2V.%. A lot ol house · s bdrm, 2 ba. On ly $109,900. Call now 979,5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS DESERTID CDMFIXER with spertacular ocean view, sunsets! Now reduced $40.000 by motivated sellt'rs. 5 Bdrms. Huge ramilt room Assume 9~'1 Firsl ! 3 pnvate beaches Only $318.000' Call 673-SSSO THE REAL ESTATERS REStOENllAL REAL ESTATE SERVICES It eM.D IA Y -THI UNSnLI lHAT HAS ffBYlHIM• Surrounded by trees, steps to beach, pools. tennis, and park. this 3 BR. 3 BA . home is unconventional and great fun . Designer hardware, cathedral ceilings, secuirty system, spa. sub ze ro refrigerator and many other outstanding features. $7l5,000. ••: Incorrect inurtlon driveway on one rul H.ARIOI RIDGE !"" only acre Special feature ts An exquisite orrering: ·-------• {~:· · huge count!") club :.1te Elegant & spacious 3 Walker&lee RHl lstate H 9·1SO I OfllH WIDMHD.A Y z.5 l.ALIO.A ISUHD 111 ApoleM -$450,000 •·••-------•I entertainment room bdrm + ramily room, 1 ::·;· w1lh 2 rrplcs. Now ui1del).________ lev. home w panoramic •.• .' Hollses fot' Sale ronslrucl1on * 1 ,.,,,, DOW ... • v 1 s la 0 r ha r b 0 r , I • •••••• ••••••••••• •••••• v-10 " "" Owner WILL CARRY coastline. ~an & night :~:· GtMral I 002 Rick .Aldttttte 2nd on lowest priced 2 lights Presl1ge. rom· 1 ',1_.~.·.··.· •• •. ·c·a··N··N·E··R·Y···v·1·L·LA···G··E··1 Rltr. Denloper bedroom unit 1n com rort. luxury & security. I 7 31-4444 plex Quiel. private loca-Reduced. now $739.000 lion As:.umahle low in <Owner ftnanc1ng 1 Agt. TllUX Three 2 bdrm. 2 bath furn units. Steps lo beach. Good s um mer winter history Priced at S39S.OOO. 675-1752. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 ''' 3 lots with ranlast1c1 -~~ ~-~ I lerest loan1 759·t50t or 640·5560. BUSINESS, INVEST· separate approved plans THIHIOMG 152.1373 l-11111!!!~~!!!'!"!!1111!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!! MENT, FINAN CE for res1den11a101 er eom TOW""40ME? associated 8PC •£11 > llEA,1011S Htot\l~'' Op~ri Hu .. 1rw~, \\ •flff'd '"'""''""'"' ('J,ii•"' '"'"""'"•"' ... ,...,. \\UM\ tu l.<Mn \hA»o\ \\4nttd \\1wlOW:•,lh ANNOUNCEMENTS, PERSONALS & LOST & FOUND \nO•IUft•' ftlf"fll'I> c., , ... ,. l1J•l '11•u~ ..,,.., I; t hUf'K1 ''"'"'"'lill\ '-'• •••• 1 .. ,~ ,,., .. , SERVICES EMPLOYMENT & PREPARATION "-Chl.111" '"""U• tlOh J~~.ahtr-1 lft-1&; ~'"'rd \1 •• MERCHANDISE \1"4t'~!.i4. ''iv'~·· • \Wiih•-" kfll\•ln ttv1ld1n-. \1 .. 1 ..... 1 I•'™"••·• t~i.i·I f'lw "' l ..... ....... t tf"t-HJ '''" hm'Uhnr- '••'••" '• ... H<tt't-" H1111.1"''',i•l•lf1t•11il J•"'"''' Liu'"''"'~ \l.c-h1n1 ,, \l1 .. 1.-ll•l'l40U'> \l1 .. itU.tt1r1••" ~.u1•11l \l•"tt•l ln·Uwn '"' , .. '"' •w•'•4 t14w•1 l'n• l'••ni*"'' "'"'"" """"", .. \I •• h.h1 'P"tr1•fli. t,hoQ• "Uf"f" Hr .. 1.-vt "'•' 14,, , .. •P"' h H•J•" U1• t 'lrrt BOATS & MARINE EQUIPMENT t,f"f'ftt1I ttn .. 1 .. \1411fll 't'f\U t f'o•t .. \1.lfU\1 l •lltil' Ho .. t. .. P1..,.rt Ao., .. M..-N I"'•'"' ~\<o.'411 Hluh '\l•V" IJt"'' l\J. .. t .. Vt'd4 ~. tvwt ...... ,. •• , TRANS'11RTATION "''''"" l •mp.i-r .. , .. ,... Hi 11 Uf'f"trtt \ttr\ \lobtlf' lh1n1 .... \IOlur t qh • "'""' \ltiur ""'" "9tt H• "i 1 r •llt" 1f "' "' Triulf"r" I Hht\ .\wtn """ ,__,. P1uh AUTDMOBltC 1tt11w1•I \nlt4\U ~ \ l.t •»II • k~ff"4111n\tf1 ' I ~'fl· Ho1~t H'"'' '"''h""'"'''''\ ''"'i-.' '"'"" \•h• Lt.,.,. \wtV"lli°".HUt+I AUTOS. IMPORTCD ._,r,Wllf \11.t U11MI I , ..... \\;,)'''' lh.-11 , Willi t~fi" ~~~ ti.1 llonil.a J ..... , J11'\"-'H fr\At 1n..itrn hhi • \C.it•l11 \11 h1•h M. n "'' \Ct1t4 H••t l'.1nh '" ~ ... ,,.. t'11h1fl• tt.-n.wll M1 .. I. Ku 11 "'"'' !W•h '4.1l1oi11u lu\u•• l111111n1ih \1~k"""''"' n \.,h .. ,,.., ... ,,,. \Ml Hwu ~ AUTOS. NEW AUTOS, USED \ 1o1•t1ll.t1 lttffttflH l"h-·\tol11 ttU\\ltl \1..nt°t 'o•htM"t•t-• '''''''"•' \,1M~41 Utst~1 ...... .. ~.,..,. .. t ttt•olA 111 ... ..,,. ~ ..... ,, .. ,, )1,,.1.n. 1H.ti-tnuh1h· l'W11 l1hmo1t01 l'u11l1"t tf\.u11ih ""' t I,_. For Clauified i\d ACl'ION CaJla .. ~ Daily Piiot AO.VISOR IG-5871 '"' merc1al 2700 sq rt Call the specrnlists al .. 1. building per lot ap the condominium in ::.~. proved. $210.000 per lot rormat1on cenler :~.. 673·6776J!..~~" Touchstone Realt} Walker&lee Real lstste " ... .. ... ... THE REAL ESTATERS COST.AMES.A CH.ARMY 4 Bdrm 2 balh doll house Lays on one or the areas largest lots . Custom decorating and • remodeling makes this a :;;, value at $124,000 Hurry' •· @ SEA COVE ::: PROP£RTIES JJ 4·6! 1 :..6 !_90 .. ,. .... ·~· MESA VERDE $123,900 .... 20'i Down. 0~11er may :~ c o n s i d e r ca r r > 1 n g ~··• financing' Super sharp 3 :;:· Bdrm 2 bath home wilh .... large back yard & patio Least expensive in area Call for more details. .. ,., 546-2313 "'"' lal -1 ., .. , .. ~·.11 '111111 . .. ... '" ..... , 1)111 •1j ~I 1•1 • ...... tli•• \r1"11 ... "' ... .. , .. .... ... ,;.,:., l,,!.J 1 • .:: •• ,-, .,,,,, •!fill f ... I •·I , .... ,,,,, ... . ... •1'<• .... ,., ,.,.,! ........ <r•'it• W.1 THE REAL ESTATERS cars.bikes' 'skateboards· tr ucks"baby carriages· tea cart s'trikes rollerskates • w alkers•toys ·wagons•··· scooters'hot rods• coupes· trailers'hard tops• , If it's got wheels, you'll move it faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels into cash. ~ Cadillacs to Go· Cart:. Whale\'er the rad Roll ·em off the mark el With a Classified Ad Cati Now! 642 ~8 7S9·1SOI Have something you wanl lo sell? Classified ads <!Q it w~I 642·5678 OPEN DAILY 1 to 5 P.M: 2331 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach NEW EXCLUSIVE VIEW llJME Panoramic close up •iews of lay. ocean Cl4'd nicjht lighh. SpocicM. opett Clftd pohfttiaUy formal home with large ll•ilHJ room. family room, fomlal dininq room plus 3 bfllrooms, Mart,~ both master suite and 2 lorge •iew decks. Me-eds de- corating, but has all the basics. $795,000 fff. BALBOA ISLAND--iEDUCED!! Lownt priced 2 led cotlocp, COft•eftiettt to • Just steps to lcry and VilocJt shop- piftg. Sl 19,000. 6 73-6900. WATERFRONT HOMES,1..,c RI Al F TAH R••', r, ,. ,. ]~41\ '' t ,~,, tt"'' ~''""""'''' f1,.1,t1l1 631·1 400 q, '-1.11 '"'A-. fl.tllw•• l.J,,11d 673-4900 .ACllAGI -M.A,.A Y.AWY Two 40 + acre parcels. near Calistoga, with excellent building sites, 360 degree view. a forest of trees. in cluding redwood" Sli5.000-S190.000. Contact 8111 Bcnb. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 '~~:::~' S©RJ)µ-~ £!rs-:::: llfito4 lty QA f I l'OUA.N 0 Roorro"90 lettet1 of m. f0<1r l(IO"'bltd -d\ ti. low to f0tm lo... ""'Ille WO<d> I V E 0 0 I I I' I' I I I VAHER , 1· I I I I I 0 A T R y I ! I I J 5 I ; I HOE CE R I I I I I' I Who uys we're not Qelllno more for our money wllh lhe poslal rates? Why only last I week. our mailman -. 0 C-'-'• "'-chwt~l. Q\IOlt4 by l1H•"f "' rli. m·0o119 -d \'QV dr.elop frOl!I tl•P No 3 ~ i :~~~~~(~Emn r r r r r I' I' I f) 't:fC!~'::lt imm '0 I J I I I I I I SCIAMUTS.....,. .. C._...,_1300 SELL idle items with a Daily Pilot Class1hed l01. ~ e 1'tiuo •' 4 lt>b Ad. 642·5678 _ _ Classified Ads tE 110111 ILllKS CD. OVER 57 YEARS~F SERVICE CH.ARMING lurux + I.AC HROI UNIT Situated Best Central Area Costa Mesa. Ideal For Owner In One Unit. Other Two Units Help Make Pay· ments. DRASTIC PRICE REDUC· TION. OWNE R ASSIST FINAN- CING. $150,000. Call To See Im· mediately. NEWPORT SHOllES Cozy Three Bedroom Home In A Young People's Location. A Fun Place To Live . Rented For $750 A Month At The Present. Priced At $130.000. Appoi ntment Necessary. But Easy To Show 759-9100 uc_,. .. ,._ ., .. t ..... ". "" .. ' ~ 4"+t ... M C•·•· .... <""lot .. , .. ... -.08'+9d"!• ,,,.., .. , 11 " .. ...,,. n •&••"" , ... , \J Y•.i ''""'" ~Got·• "... ~ ............. ~w.,...-. ... .._.,..-"" 'MIC-.• '40-... M..,..C..- .,. ' r•..,c~·· 11\l .. •--o " \tw•J _,...,. ..• ,.~., ··~~ .. _, ••C..-c1 <>-· ., ... ...,, ft,lffi)Oh .,._ ·'~· ., ....... .,.,., 11$utpttM .. ~ •JO (JNrotnl STARTING A NEW BUSINE~S? ACCOfdlng to C1llfornl1 Bualneta and Prot.Nlon~ Code (S.C. 17900 to 17930) all ptraon1 doing bualneH un~r 1 ftc:tltlou• name mult nte • 1tatemtnt with the County atrll and hn• ft publl1hed four tlrnet In 1 ntWlpllplf MfWlg tht lrtl In wttlch the bulfntu 11 located. The lllttment la requtrtd by l1w ind 11 MeelMfY in proe.cttng your bu1lne11 n1me. Moat bena ,..,.,_ proof of filing to open cornMtrcl1I 1ccountt. The DAILY PILOT provtdts llofh flllng and publtc11lon terwlcet. We hive 111 th• ntCHHtJ form• ind m11fttaln I deity NMct to ttll 0renp • County eounttouM. Either *P by OM of aur conwnltnl offbt cw pMftt ttMt LEOA.L DePARTMM MMU1, bt. 332 for mcn lftlonMtlon lftd ..,_, ·~ BEAUTY IN NORTHWOOO ~Iu lti~· level 3 BR. 21 ~ BA den & fam. rm for dramatic livin~. Highly upgraded carpets. window trNJt'.' ments & wall CO\'t'rings \\'rap around 1>atio A lo\'el~· home. Assumable loan~ S175 non Call .\1arian Hanson 551·871WI 1C52 ' ano C D D 0 E 0 V l M I £ M A I l E N C J S S 6 A U R P B 0 l M E E I N A S T M V T R A C T R E A H J A T I II C £ W £ V l l 6 T S B K I D S 6 R T S I I U I S W 0 C 0 S 0 E 0 l P £ R S U A 0 E C A 0 8 Q A R l B I 0 6 A Y A 8 N S K A R v 0 u ~o AH 0" RT l TM D TT w T P E L D II T W W H C M K I 6 D C R V E R U E D S L Y I U ~ 0 N T 0 S 0 S C I 0 A I T E S R l U C W U 0 K I A 0 £ H l W W Y K V A 0 l I E R 0 E N P w v 0 T E L s [ I s r " 0 ' "·' a $ w QHANRMTLCNEllAElllUM B 1 I T £ 0 U 0 £ V ·I A T E L 0 T H l P L T K 0 M R 0 C U 0 E M D L J l U R : .... --llllow ..... """"'· ..... ...i, ......... « ........,, find ...... 111111 It Ill.; 1111 OIWllll Tun J low lndl11t Twine ti = ,:. =t StooP !Mbmit Yllld Tomonow:D~ THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS DAILY PILOT srtCT ACULAI "YaSAILUS" COi. , Lge cor. site on Big Canyon gol~ course. Dramatk foyer. 2·Sly Liv.._ Rm. Formal Din. Rm .. 4 Bdrms, 4t,.z · ba. Pool & spa. $950,000. WISUY H. T.AYlOI CO .. UALTOIS , Zif I S-J ..... tlllloed •• NIWflOIT CINTlll. M.1. 644·49 I 0 ;: . I DOCIC NOILIM IMI _____ __ HIWPOlf llACH7 60' dock "2 story Hunt· ln&lOD Harbour home. 4 Br, 3.,• Ba., ram , din, bortua rm. Estate s11le. M99.080 R E by Lucia 1·'94•. CUSTOMIUD H.ARIOl ltOGE Lovely 4 Bdrm Laotre· mont model with 400' ad· ditlon. Formal dining. 3 bath• $169,500. Owner will carry. m>.000 ·------- ~· HDUCED Sl,000 Best ptit'ed and best financed In Mesa Verde ' 1s tb1s charming re· : modeled 3 Bdrm, r1mil)'. room home. on quiet cul de sac strfft. w1RV ac cess. Very mot i\'ated, owner will carry large ' 2nd ror qaahfied buytr • $141,000. 759-1616 DOYEi SHORIS UHIBJIV.AIU 4 Bdnn. S\.'t bath master piece. Sweeping views or 8.aclt Bay, harbor Lights and mount.ain s Cuatomized irr evt'ry 'Way. Indoor 'outdoor pool, spa. sauna. Owner Mil clfrry lllle fillancing too! <AU now @ SEACOVE fflO,.TlfS '" .. ''·6990 TERMS. THMS! . 3 Bcinn, 2 bath. Laguna • Beach home with spa, wet·bar and lovel) oeean view ' Pl'frecl • ramily living. o~ ner • r1nanrmg available at : Wk ! S299, SOO _:: DrtDinner Dress j Baby Doll & llyette 7537 i,~B~ 0 a s as , , 2 5 .. . " *1 Oran e Coal DAILY PllOT(Tuetd1y;Sept1mber 28, 1981 I • • • ~.~.~UUOU ~~:::.~.~ ....... ~.~.~UOUU ~~~~~ .... ~. ~:-;~~~!~ ............... It ' ,.,Wt ...... ,.Wt Hw.t.... .............. ................ • ....... w....... '"' =.._. ....... .._ ..... , .. _ ....... .. •••••••••••••• .. •••• ....................... i..~;;;; ••••• ~. ,_Wt •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ••••••••• ... •• .. ••••••• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ,_ I I p.-a. JJM MlwflM.... Jiff I .. l•.11 t• .. ....._ 01°0·~·, ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCP. .... ••••••••• .. -••• .. .._.. 6 W... tOJ• NOfTHI .AN FRONT New DOY•SHOllS ....................... ....................... y1t• "'l!!IQA ••••••••• .. •••••• .. • •••••••••• ............ •••••••••••.. 1· •~ lloduJar .,.....,. 'tom·•. Pool, Ja--·• over•~.. 1Uet 1t RV ........ "'bUi -_.,. -• • ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~" .,..,. I" .... \,;\U,U IUUla . ..... ......_,.,. ..t-·~ P•alc llrf BtautJful 4 Bdrm MIS ltaffd land, 3 pvt bells. bay G11uy Or Formal OCUN MPJB to Huot. Bd1 •uoo. Luaur-v .,.,.,_:d Duplex. Buyt>r who I l•OOM built L1Joll1 m•I. on 2' hr hnlrlty, lllh na d in rm .• 2 frplca C1ol4! to bd\. 'nWl 11 dbl 21J twobtdroot11•-. •• UMDAISLI Exe tine opportunity ' Wide channel vlew rrom spectacular architectural d i1ned 4 bdrm. 5 bath. pool home. Slip for 2 laree boats. Sl ,495,000. offds 0,1 tncomt .. MW YllDI qwet cul de sac, pnde ot pier from *14.$00 lO'l 118$.000 t~ 542 25!0, wldt la on an ovtnlwd Deewt 4H. r1bulou1 otean abelter. Frool 11011 3 3 Ult batbl, pool, apa ownrr•hlp home to down _499:1111s M4..SU cornerlol.SSUrpark. A ltWi '1400 Ylew. lhld ur•lre bdrm, fplt, Jac, 3 ba. &JU,000. S1tT,000uaum Golden Weat Estates ~ ,.....-muattolC!t. (SD74'7) ....................... '2000~.:oa::l ~ mini octan view. RHr B Ownf"r '79-9789 Lu1e family room with THtaUFJ MULHIAIH PALM sr•••s ma: . . UA!t3bdrm,2ba Under 1 BRcondobtlowmartct. wot bar and coay Pl.AH"X.. llWTOIS Appro1 5000 aq ftp I T h 1roundptin1for4c11n $20,000 dwn, 117/8": 30 llreplace. Owner wall 3 bd d' U MOl·IU~"'" .,.1t1le, beat area. ant11t c own Oil.It, 1()1'{ d 1 helpfiunee 1229 000 rni, •n rm • v. ...._.,,~. r. ocean vlew, lrplc, ever· bl n. !_rrt asaum11 1rJoao asaum 546--11183 • • rm . f1m . rm . f /P, 2\t 17 ) 5 7. to waUed • ptad, wlll con-1thlnl fun116ed. -UDO ISU HOMES Fe lured on Home Tour5 this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm. 3 bath hon'.'e. newl.y redecorated. Priced to sell quickly at 5475,000. Must see. e. IJIC •• ,100 per mo b 1 I Ide ban • ooo Iii .,....... Priced at 9350 000 Dnve a. xlra ar&t porce II.In • r exc ae. • . ...,.o_. 1 .... eo.........,.111=1..__ __ _ b • · PASTMOYI IRVINE COVE'S tubwtcenm1ct1Je walls lU 1701 OCEANFRONT Ilk 714 POlnaelUa 11 you Ownt>r pack'111 and wlJJ iPLENOOR & noor. 4 covcrfd patio An"ilolOUCus 0 !f!e!trl! haa IY OWtB O.luxe s Br. 2~ Ba. 7S2~ll the owner •t finance this 4 Bdrm £1\Joy prlv.11ry & i1pc~ areaa Pnce mo.ooo. S~ sla.thed nrice :::_ .. ·an"•. Beautiful 2U41 2 br, 2 Ref'1. 1JJOO lfo. Avail. Costa Men North home 17TH AT PROSPECT tacular ocean vlewa down. u1wne S40.000 lat ,... WUUlt ... ba, 1 yr old mobile thr u l ·lS.82. '1S-tta2. 41R + POOl-This quiet cul de u1· _'TUSTIN, 73Hlll Crom thl! • Bdrm 3 Ba trust dted at 71!t'~. Xlnt Perteet st.uter home, S home. Loe. In pre llJ/4" FIXER home 11 looluna for a home with lou of p•tlos land least' ~.00 per star park. 28r, 2Ba 8 ti• I H It 1-"'='-'~==----- Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plus lge ~ecreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money. Camlly I Will consider No Quall/yiq. Low lnl & deck~. Posalble 8eller year. Can't change Wltil beauty. (JCJUUl 12). "'· • 0 UI e r • ee Bay front Udo bland. Irv lne Terrace 11001 14"'-loan 'or7 '/"'II"" w1'th loana. Super tBr. fam f' year 2003 l•"' lnt only MULHll!..a.au C.:.tatet lnl Radocho. c, A. 3bdrm ·winter rental. home needs TLC but Is -ff)t S o'' " ... homew/Po01. Betlarea. inanclog avail11ble. , .-,. . ~" 111tom an acap na 6754'6· (?13).wtMa. priced below n1arket J US 2 .ooo down' 178 blu1 PriceS950.000 044·7020 2nd trust deed due IWTOIS aurrouods this lovely ..=.:~~·-"-=-='-==-- and owner will nnaoce. Puuy Move faiit 500 8'8.0709 11188·87. Call owner for MobileHaMIDIY. home with a view ........ U.fa lrb1d New lishog! Call Greo buyers.CallS40-11Sl '".. 1044 e appt. dally alt" 11 am. C714JSZ7-5900 Drastically reduced ...................... . Aatle·Rltr. 1~.122J • ···R·:·N··c··H···5··n···u····· Lf·n O m4> .'J46.S860 trom u ooo. owner e ... ,.., uo2 PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT Panoramic bu y & otean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm . 3 bath cu~tom home. 3700 iiq. ft. featur- mg manne room Sl.385.000 RVM~ GORGEOUS OCEAN VIEW Fantastic 3 BR home with spa. 3 pvt beaches, try low or no down pay. ment Try equ1ty shar· iog w seller Hurry• , ._, • HERITAGE . . RF.ALTORS 80/o DOWM Large Costa Mesa con do, 3 Br Z~ Ba. wet bar. 2 car 1ar1ge aod much more Full price SJ.28,500. " g '!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I anx.loua to ttlJ at $37,9$0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Home with unique terms ""'&'"' HEW PORT CREST Cannery Village, 1.hlt loc. & wlU uny short term $275 San Clem lbr 14811 & cond1t1ons Newly Owner, pnced lo sell + OMC. adult parkcharm· a r. 1-f16-134. S3SO lbr Dana Pt! IM07 painted, ot"w hot water - - ---terms 3 Br & Den. io1·1 pacioua·o nly n.--r----. S»S2brCMhomel 16454 tank. near new diti · Sale or lease option new ssg.7456 SSS,OOO·call 64.2-6173 or --,~-, 2500 S395KB2br,Jar. ,_.. hwasher. 4 Bdrm on cul So Laguna SM lll1on 84&-5096agt. ._,.... .. , U.ZS! Nwpt~! H3l2 f'-. IN VESJ'ORS••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• U.ZS'CapBcbZbr' td81 de· sac an popular Ranch mansion '-<lf\S1der trade '30.000 under market! Ca••lf'dat untry Charme.r ... Spec· "°°;San Clem. Mt%4 WEST OCEANFIONT Triple.lt units. xlnt fina ncing $600,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 11·",.·,.d,(J,., N!I blSblol I 'j EXTRA URGE LOT ·Thi~ h~gh income legal triplex is a rarity in Old CdM. Each unit has a 'fireplace and neutral decor. Owner will assist with financing. $337.500. Fee. U~l()Uf ti()Mf~ REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 Eut CoHI Highway, Corona del Mu , WI HAYE 50 Of THI HST LISTINGS IH TOWM REALTORS '75.5511 LOAN ASSUMPTION: CDM dupl.x with good filmtc'-9-Eodi ..wt l bchl 2 battl, f•lly roo11t. CloH to nerytltl119 at S42t,500. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 2515 E. Coost Hwy., Corona def Mor 675-5511 PIYAHDSUP Two units on Balboa lsland-35 ' on the waterfront. Excellent owner financing. Call for details. 642-5200 A PETE BARRETT .. REALTY 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 13.5% IMTBEST 1or.-down, cute cottage. 3 BR 2 Ba , full lot. SJS0.000 Ownr / agt. 1·66MMi93 FANTASTIC BUY Remodeled 2 Br + bach Rea l cute Lowest price on Island. ~.000. Cenhwy 2 t Locldtort ?.6)..H!L_ - -------• 2 BR I Ba house + 2 BR 1 Uqsl.,._W. 4 Br. one.sty. ram rm. comer lot. Owner very motivated & will rreate your terms on this Spyglass beauty Pnced at $459,500. RCTaylorCo '.l1' )'>00 Ba apt DOVE PROPHTlES Ask for Lawrence 7~·11 11_ - Capistrono ltca I 018 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORECLOSURE Steal 11 • Holder of TO wants to unload 1m mediately 4 Br. faro rm. newer. ocean vu. Total loan S224,000 661-2990 M!:. Qlns, 963-5535 Corona del Mar d\Jplex. 2 BR 1 Ba + l BR I Ba. So or Coast Hwy, DOVE ll'ROPERTIES Ask Cor Lawrent•e 752:5lll Co1taMftG 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• TENMIS ANYOHE!7 Wimbledon Vtllage near new ! $186.200! Co m munity tennis. pool and spa. Spacious living area. cathedral ceilmgs, 2 BR. private master suite, exciting arch1tec· lure. Assume large low 111teresl loan. Move right LD' Call~G:m COLDWeu BANl(C!RC -l~-tOM EHTEIT AIMEIS DBJGHT USTSIDE Assumable VIR rm anc 1ng available on this charm1ng, 1Jght and airy home. Featuring 4 Bdrm, plus family room . enclosed courtyard. lovely back yard with Ko1 pond Ask 10g $188.400 For ap pointment to see. rail 540-llSl ·~~HERITAGE • • REALTORS TR .. \DITIO\r\L J~L\IJ\' 631°7370 FIEEDOM HOUS E 3 Br 1 Ba. large yard S95_,_(l0Qnnnnnnnn641 ·IY763 By Owner Two 2bdrm hou!les on I lot. $t30,000 Assumable 1"~ li.t 'I' D owe ~arry 2nd 20th & Pomona . Ca ll ~kdays ~nly : 640.7464 Th•YalutShows VA terms and a nex1ble se li er make this in>· marulate 3 Bdrm. fami I} rm home an one or Cos ta Mesa 's best neighborhoods A great buy Full pnce Sl25K 751-3191 area Approx.1900sqft TDs or ' Call P11ul 2400sqft.3BR,l!BA Im-Property 1600 tacular3Br, warm ur,· Re~timesS3l-'SSSJ'te Select new carpets 49\15648_ _ mac te!"631.5476 ••••••••••••••••••••••• grades. pvt toe. Lovey w/purchase Call for de-LOCJWM1 N9'tf I 052 Sio.ooo REDUCTION ' SUPEI SUPEI trees. $114.900, Bkr ..... hlmd J2N tails • •• • • • • ••••••••• •• • • • •• H b v h 919 Sunset ccu ed 848·0709 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ar or 1ew ome · 1111 • zon Charmln&2br I bl bouse 2 WITH A VIEW M o n a co Mode I MG. Try auto repair, lg o.tofS.. wilb front y~ 00 &ood e--RANCH Hf.\LfY SSl 2000 THl.-tHG TOWHHOME? Cull the spec111lists at the condom1111um in -form a lion cente·r Tourhstone Realty 963-M>l 2GOOO TOI.AST Condo w/l/u short drive Professionally decor11l· 120xl40 lot, ~mall, bld1. Property 2600 llland location. S750 mo. tobeach&onlyS20,000to ed shows hke model. Actnow-woo_tlast. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Xlnt le&M oppty CaU assume existing 10": lhgh assumable 30 yr ChuckSp1Uer, rllr INVESJOIS _ Lyn675-8283.. loans ! Priced right loan. 12.51oan Lock box . 631-12166 Ownr1Agt Greg Astle 1860 Port Wheeler ..... r-... lJ07 Mtwport leoch I 06t ••••••••••••••••••••••• WEST OCEANFRONT Triplex. Xlnt terms & prime localion $600,000 Afilt_.. 675-6161. _ $235,000. Owner I Agt. ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• 837·9540or700.9S96 Choice Texas New. custom, luxury 3 br Investment bome, 1 block from Opportwlilies Avail. Ferry, 4 frplcs, jac, 2..., Individuals ba, gar. M~io.mo or yr- Small Groups ly. Sl2SO/mo. Can furn. Syndications 736-0682, 988-3CliO , ....... .,....... . S 194,500 $212,500 Small Comm~rcaal ,Bldg. d •475000 & land. 60xl2S lot. Oft • , Newport Blvd. 641-0763 67S..177 I Co.do•l•l.,..s/T ow• Prof Interstate Property ltoustsfw .. 1700 ManagementAva1I 3 bdrm, 2 ba, 2 car gar, between Bay & Beach. $1000 pe r mo yearly. 1st It laat req + cleaning. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5•111 owtll a.v"t. deposit .. ChWdren OK. no Irvi ne, California Home, 4 Bdrm , 1 story, ''ery Reduced lo $128,500 1120 Pacific Cst Hwy pets. Av! 10/1.S. 2 H 2 IA CONDO 2BR. 2BA Condo. 1 yr Huntingtoo Beach 67s,.2916 dean At end of tree· --------hned pride of ownership cul de sar. 13.875 down to VETS or seller will ai.- SISl the fmanc111g. Only s~.soo 752-1100 I THE REAL ESTATERS d new. Highly upgraded. Calif. 9:2J648 2 Br 1 Ba, f"'lc, yr'lv, A jacent to Newport Tile. Wall to wall 7149'Ml57 .,.. f. Crest area Sea Wind carpets. Wall paper "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ adults, no pets. Av11I. Section Sl23.900 Good 1---------i La ndscaped, enclosed r= l0/15. 673-a'iS terms. ll'EHINSULA patio. Pool. Tennis, Jae. lmc:G t.1, ,__, 2 br, utlls pd, t675/mo.113 Roy Mcearc., Rltr. ll'OIMT DW'l£X $91,000 +assumable l.$l. ro•" 2700 E. Balboa Blvd. 541-7729 One of the very few 13518"'c-Open Fri.Sat & ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67J.53SO 1.!!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!l!!!ll-!191 duplexes w1thui the cov· Sun. Or by appt. 32031 PIESTIGIOUS Coro.a dll W.. lJJJ enant or Peninsula Vi.a Tonada_ San Juan CUSTOMHOME ••••••••••-••••••••••• * *JUST LISTED OCEANFRONT Point. 4 bdrms up with 3 Capo Off Alipaz. corner In Fallbrook, with 7i., 2BR , "Honeymoon Cot· BY OWNER balhb , 3 bdrm & 2 baths of Del Obispo Agl acres producing grove. tage" Canyon view. ·Yillogt er.ft f'ree standing 4 Bdrm New cusl bit 2 !>ty . down & a 4 car garage on Pac If i c Company All amenities. Spec· stove. no pets, adlts, SllSO 1 .._,rt College Park home French Normandy JBR ananglelot 498·5640,498-5020. tacular views rrom all inclardnr.67J.1'64 w• w pvt spa, bg rumpus & den home Can be l'!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I rooms. Many kinds of 3BR 2BA n.. v· Charming 2 edroom rm & space galore An split S895.000. OWC 3711 family rrwt Pvt party . . ~ean 1ew condo nestled in a park· enterta1t1er'sdelight ~ashore 67J..M?S ~ff/ will trade /finance w Pool Beautilul! $2000 bke setting Formal din Sl~.900 "'n Sdt 1100 20% down. ,465.000 mo . Lease Option mg area. family room. Trade Luxury Newport ••••••••••••••••••••••• 700.7287 I a r g e f 1 rep I a re . [UiJ home on 1, acre for In 12 Units Costa Mesa. 1·72a·l813. --------Wlll\dhrldnc lll!lll'!!'~l!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'j 4 Br home w/180 deg Complete recreation 11 come UniLs or? Equ1ty 1 -S600M , SJ.2SM do 10%. lttal&.. ocean view.SISOO/mo in· factl1t1 es $141.000 A Really $280,000 Act now' Net $500-0 per year bci..p 2100 eludes all appliances. must see'(;all979-2390 000 Broker Co-Op. AAent Oc•~DllpWx 631 ·2150. 2043 -2049 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 700.1891 TorW,Reafton 1tw lhrranra ~:·~~.lr.it1r 6lHSl6. IZO/o _w_a=1=1a=c=e._____ SOUTHLAGUMAeo.t --~M ____ l_2_2_4 No MONEY DOWN NEWPORT CREST ih~b a~~lamt,:tduleprlem"s wr1athn lncotne ll'roperty 2000 Gated Eatate area. 3000 •••••~••~••••••••••'•• LEVERAGE' Abs o I u t e I y pr 1 m c • " " ...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• sq rt. Fantastic Ocean Brand new 2 Br. Condo, 2 MUST SELL TODAY! • r ormer model 3 BR, U .A.IL 1ew. "" ecora . 2 Ba. 2 car gar. w/elec. Spacious 4Br. 3Hu, nr Tb1s beautifully appoint-Jbalh. master suite Lowest price on the A yrs ~.000 Palm Spr· door, frplc, dishwasher. beach Will carry total ed 4 Bdrm Northwood w pvt retreat overlook bellrh Close to shop. pi .A.CE iogs,La.keAm>wbeador micro, washer & dryer, fin ancing payable al home features its ov.n mg Lennis court. pools, ping. pier Excellent buy I.A other Real Est.ate condo pool jac balcon No * * L• be <J!\SU me at 12"{ J 9 V' p-1 d ted 12•,,.; $197.SOO Agt pool, spa, and separate and spa Good ai.sumo forapprecuil.J-On PROf'HTIES•• or house pets: Avail. immeJ: $750 SHAZAM 963.4759 play yard Owner says ble loans 499·3f70, 551-8215 Mo. ~2253. Ir) small down fh1s C/21 He--'C..tr IUNTS P•LMe-~s F I Ex condo Family fWl in East.side $10,000DOWH!! seller 15 genuinely -.,.-• LessthanS30,000prurut, A ....-&U...,. or ease: ec. . 3 Costa Mesa. Formal h\-Sha rp 3BR home As motivated Take advan 640_:S357 less' than 25~ dwn, IO'l-Approx. 5000 s q ft br, 2~ ba, front It rear 1ng and dm~g rooms. sume S86.000 first owe tage• Just redurt>d Lo Mob on Offff! int. on lst TD. 10,,", ml. Es t ate. best area. pvt yard, spa & pool. Nr separate ram1ly room. Rem a1nder Sl 18.000 S239,000 Huge 5 bdrm, 3,, ba. 00 2nd. OWC low interest walled & gated, S:JJ0,000 CdM Fwy. Av11L Oct. 15. Par q u e I f Io ors . 851 7181 Brkr over JOOOsq n Westchff r--------•I 3rd. e~ity. $800.000 total. _9SS-__ 27_00 _____ _ r "" 1'"' 'bum"' °' d•o "" '"d' V"w (~i) 11\~ldbrld"' 64UJJ8 LOOK Quail Place Properties 1-'·~3_.-0-=-188=------Love I y. 2 Br. 2 Ba _ pallo and yard Large condo, Jbdrm. 2'1ba "' 752·1f20 H.tl.gtwtt.tio.. East s1de, carpels, comer lot. Owner 11.tll Prine Only Owner Realty I ff•R&Ol •r• ·No ocr•MnoNT Luxury condo on the drapes. h-ups, eoclsd help. Low interest 12131S92-4184 ·51 :JOOO I " h>LA UU1rft M"'KE "'N~I water. 3 bdrm . 2i.., ga r $700. No pets. financing Ord} S14~.ooo -., · 3 Bd 2 b lh " "" vrnriOK. baths. 48• boat s"p le"•• Savage Wilde & Co. CalJ S4S.o:nl TRl-LEYB.COHDO lr.tlRarranra p~ .... lnin~. OPPORTUNITY g:ira::: mulll~le'~n~~r avail. $429,500 SI00,000 ~67~S.~9006"-'-"-------- No down SI OS.ooO -Prime 4~'Xl4 0' Only $650 .000 Call 3 Income Properties. equity. Will trade for 3bedrooms,2storycondo Pnme IO<'ation S40-3666 SOUTH IRYINE I waterfrontlot with ex1 I 645 9161 Easts1de Costa Mesa. home, condo. or H + huge patio + family COLDWeu BANl(C!RC Whela :-Jew on ma r ket 3 ing pier and sl'ip fo 45. Owner wall carry j.L7141o.,,_t . room+ fi,_.lace Ten-n bdrms, 2 ba''-·. fam1lv r · Pnc-.. tosell' --............,~='-----! ·~,.. u"' yacht Pnc-of S2 300 000 "" nis courts. swimming rm . fireplace Beau11ru1 ·" • · Real Estate re mod eled home tnrludesrlearedlot.ap. I New 4200sq.lt.homeSo. pool , sauna , jacuzzi, Custom landsraping. proved plans a nd NEIS. ~~·' Laguna. So. Calif's best :U.44netc. $750 Mo. Assumable flnancina permits for a luxunous 5 view Sl.100.000. Will " Bdrm 5 bath Frenr h 343 RIVIERA DR. DEL G $152 500 trade for lnd/comm /1'0· I HTFUL OWHERWILL ' · Regenry home w1th •_!!111-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!111! Sharn2Brhouseonlower D ... YID D c .. 9 LSO... r: C.:lJHTI tl11Vl TJ II' co me propert v Call · .. EYEFULL FIMAMCE A • ""' " many extras Sl0,000 Total Cash Own '+ V ""° Paul 497-4844or$5648. Eutside. Garage. No This 3 Bdrm, 2 bath Ch,arming 2 br Npt Hts REALTOR 833-9293 TenM A•ail~ $2,000 per mo. 5 BR 3 Ba, 714 fi41 076.1 dogs. SSSOmo. Avail Oct. home is spic & span The home. with allev arc Heritage Pa~k J'b;-2 -,-; Call Pacesetter II om es graC'ious 2 sty. Back Bay 292.1 College A\ l' Magnificent CdM Oceao 4. Ca 11 Wa Y ne a gt. added family room R·2 lot lots of potenllal ba . DR . fam rm, frplr, for de1a1ls and appoint area Tall shade, over-ro,tJ ~lesa. CA view Pool Home . ...;646--=-88=16=------creates a beautiful Submit• patio. pool. S77S mo ment 64&.5002 s1 Zt'd lot S26S,OOO HlO 000 _,, • 2 Br. 1 Ba. Ccindo. Mesa 700 """• 0 5 4 6 S880 ..., ' · -..,OOO equity courtyard entry Near 631-2242 ..,,.,.. w n e r . T d Xchange ror~ Verde. Child OK. New 631 7215 ra e Luxury Newport .. __ _ So. Coast Plata. Flexi-MINT " evs home on ~ acre for In· 1~--7'""00."-7287= un.vr. S§?S. 83:Hl974 ble seller says submit on $5000 come Units or? ~~wty a-... Back Bay area Condo for terms First lime ad· CO..,..DITIOai.J s LAC taa 4 Br 3 Ba 2 " " DOWN 280,000 Act now! •••••••••••••••••••••• "' se . . car ;~~1\~ed Sl27 • 900 with local.Ion to matr h 4 LEASE OPTION 6 MOS Broker Co·Op Agent tto.ft FwlllilMd garage, tennis court. bd rms . 2 •, h;i Dix Vil la Balboa 631-4516. •••••••••••••••••••••• spa.pool.completely re-'~H~ =~ ~g Townhome 111V1Uage11. lelboo 1.-.. JI modeled. IS50 Mo. Ref's .i>-• ~ Donoll'oiftt 102 Univ Part Numerou~ ~ ~Erfs~f1lJJA1L vO~ --------•••••••••••••••••••••• req ui red. No pets - -" ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• upgrades UlSide and out 'f/¥l\~/fLJY p 0 R T U N IT y a t 91 UNfJS C• ... ...._ 544-8071, ~1. Ocean Harbor View Superb \'lew and {{/J<l(-1 I & ~ Brand n w · (1700 Sl29,900 Rae Rodgers. Winter rental, fully furn e spacious NEW LISTING 2000sq ft 4BR. 2BA 2 pnvary $174,900 Seller HOMES rltr&3l ·ta;6 114-7 l'ltx.n t Patio. 6 houses from S sq rt ) 2BR. 28A. Dining "'SSUME I I .S010 st ry New!} rmd Id offer111g generous terms l"!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!![llm Bay .... Cl\. rm /study. Multi·leveled " 1' w/new k1t r h & BA lohelp you purrhase -------_,., townbome frpl ult INT. $25,000 dn Assume ex NEW VN"V Low Down m-4158 ed ce11in..;. Poole. vaspa. o:.:.!..--.a.. c-L•. -· . . loan w/less than 20"'r isling financing $1725 _ _ .. ._.-.--$850mo.673-Ml8 dwn. 4 yr new home with mo. S2SO.OOO full price ff lRDRD RI""( WIMTll llHT A.LS E. SIDE-lo't Blk from Irv 3 Bd & 2.5 Ba. dimng rm. owner broker 85 l.:_7777 ,. DUR ua SUPS 11 2 Br UtUe Isle ss,so ave. 3Br, l!Ba, new cpt.s ••••••••••••••••••••••• rrplc. on cul-de·Sar Calli .. ~-----.. Just hsled 3 Br 2 ba. NEWPOIT Tax Wrtt..off 4Br 3 ba 2slry Sl900 ' paint. lg yd. 2 frplcs. 434 IEGOHIA ~~~erberts 11 · rltr. OCEAN & ff lDBQR R E N A I SS A N C E HBGHTS ~cast &crow PossiWt Blyfrt 4Br2\.;ba 11200 p mo. 63UB1 • New elegant 4 Br Vic M MODEL Outstanding lkrs.&Prillcipab WaterfrmtHomes lnc. 38r.Coodo21o't Ba.Near CoroftadttMcr 1022 torian partial vu, PANORAMIC VJEW view with great £inane B R A N D N E W w-.... 67Utoo S.C. Plua, frplc, a/c, . ownr contructor finan Custom Spanish coloniul inf' Pri~ for immed. EXCLUSIVE LISTING pool, Jae, tennis. 2 car RE.._ LT 0 RS avail $575,000. home reaturing 4 bdrms, it523_C.otPUSJ)a~/RVIME. ~aa~ :itbb. .ooo. Agent. on this lrg gorgeous 3 Br ltldc 1yWS ,..... JI 07 gar w /opar, 3 patios. &.USEOPTIOH 1·-------• ---------i 3 baths and center • 675·2311 64o.76i home Has it all ! 714/766-7292 ....................... f76Slease.541Mr709 . .. or buy this fixer in ex-CdM C..,_,.D..._ US courtya~d with fountain . Laguna ltGCh 1048•"'!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!! 0 W N ER W r LL 3 br, 2\4 ba, winter, Mesa Verde 2 br t v, ba elusive Shorecli ffs on w ,.... J T USJED Dramatic stauied glass ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1= FJNANCE w/23~/r dowo. l"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! S6951mo. 005 Montero. carpets, drapes, stove, poolsizedlot.Feeland :i RR ~a~Mgguest 4 BR l~ ba, seller windows. oversized wet ALot I•-------• S270.000. C.M. TRIPLEX. good l·879·S99l,213-3:JS.·4696 gar.~mo.lst,last," be creative, owner Is motiva'ed. Term s, bar, dumb wailer. OPEHHOUSE area assum loa owe 2br.winter,SSSO/mo.114 depoait Adults prel. owner's Unit. Plus 2Br ' For• 1 --READY TO SELL'. Th15· . • . • n. • E B I b anxious. Private beach. Terms. Terms. Call jacuzzi bath.Coastltne & --~ DAILYl-4 pncednght Prin nl · a oa Blvd . 549-9740. · Askl·noMCA,000. rental cottage All in 'kl 7 harbor v1"'""S from I acre+. bldgs1te.geot B d HEIGHTS CHARM ER BL-.. o y. l-8'79·S9'11,213-335-4696 M-a Verde.beau38R,2 "..,.,,, sharp cond w/excel loca-quic Y 52-s.99 ~ "' ly slopt g 1 h rt ran new condos in has 3 8d w/bn' o.ht area ru • 979-4:113 -"" D.M.W.1WltJtr lion. Owner will carry alm06t every room + n parce so Costa Mesa located et den. ASSUME LOW CostaMesa4-Plex,allun· Coro..dltW. 1122 ba child ok $825 mo 76o.otl5 lge 2nd TO. Best buy in s P a c I o u s w e I I distance from tennis & 2277 Pacific Ave. Great I NT ER EST LOAN its are 3 BR Z Ba. nr So. ....................... 673·5050, 540-WI r only landscaped yard As-beach Ownr hag to-financing, great buy! ......... 900. Co"•t Pl•u. ''ON 1llEBAY" Westside 2 Br. 1 Ba. town or S280,000. sum a bl"' loans a nd eluded plans for custom ......, .., --L i I I 644-721 I TERMS.TERMS owner fi~ncing availa.1 villa $~75,00-0. Spec-Come & see. Redhill RA E RODGERS. rllr DOYEPIOPBT1ES 1,~xBur ous 1 evek: 1 .. ~~· House. encbd garaae. Ddet:xJut tarula • Realty,67J.7300. 131-1.288 Ask for Lawrence ..., a.1ou.rm« ttcrom, P•llo, w/d hook·up, Bnv & Beach S 12,000 DOWN ble. St.300.ooo. MtSSroe;REALTY 7si,5ru fabulous view. comp. carpets & curtains. No '""1 buys this 3 8d 2 Ba Whoa & Wtks lt.E 494--073l $5000 DOWN fUJ"ll . Avail abort term. pets. S42S +atturll)t. Red Estate E.side home tor S118,000. 4fJ.2752 -.. 11 Loh for S. JZOG .... l!SOO=<-=M::.::o:.:..:. 7:.::»-~1~•~--I sa-5442 or 710'5G9 Do.,.~~ES zoned a.2. Call Bob Cbarmiog3bdrm,2bath w11 eueoptionth1SNpt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1_.____._ ll4I =-"::".""......._...._......__=::......- Y ~ Mil l'k f d 'I + guest apt No end Bch condo. Buy ror 4 af'r-o( land N-....rt -,.....--EASTSIDE cute 1 Br cot· E j th b COM • US&C 631 .• !.r:~or etai 5 f"-"~ • ....___.. I 0 .. 0 Emarald T"rTa""'. ·Walk .., ... --.... n oy e upper ay ---:-·~'." ......, nu --~~ .. " .. .." $129,900 111 six mos lsti----------1 Beach. OK for Condos, •••••••• .. •0 •••••••••• taae. 1emi·furn., nict view and night lights. Above beach, below I · · ••• .. •••••••••••• .. •••• to beach. AMume loan. time offered. Excell. op. Office or Medical Bids. Wh!tew1ter vu Emerald nei1hborbood. SUO lit, Quality built. four Ocean Blvd. Semi priv *CONDO* Owner wtllbel~fmance. pt'y. Call Rae Rodgers. OHMt-IHll!ltlte 641-0763 Bay 2 Br 2 Ba +Loll· lut 4r aecur. Mary, bedrooms . family Rd. Out o/ tralfic. 180 ~-~LL.Via-" S29S 000 p l Rlt rltr.631·12Jlll ••••••••••••.-.••••••••• tennis-pvt beach pools. 157.2040 room. Gourmet kltc~n degree view Ocean & --_._,,,,.,. 494.7578: e.g en, r, ..._...._, .--------l1350mo.A&t4N-1177.s =-'=a""'r ~l.:.:~:....Ba-.-,rp-lc-. 0-/W- Owners moving North. Jetty from every win· Nr beach. 3 Br. 1 yr old. --~----For Wt I t 00 S.5 ACllS Mt--'.... ) t 6t bit-in 1tcM, dbl car pr', Motivated to S'"ll dow.Proplmeh1'ghtlde. Assume 12W~ lo ! No Lower3ArchBay Sweepino .. -...... tru........ ..,..... " · I $247 500 pp N ••••••••••••••••••••••• "' WllUlm ""c:u ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool . patio, encl . S237,000L H.orS37J,400 Oblelnvest2yn.Clear, Eastaide f\xer Upper, 3 quat . 2 •3 • o M)'Loss)'OUl'Gain. OCEAN FRONT·New view of Capistrano BAYCREST 5 bdP'm bacltvard, aprlekl•r incluclin.I .. _,,, land incl. Sl,250.000. br, 1 ba,sru.. tow~ tin. a{ s. 1 /833 ·1369. Must sell, 4BR. ocean .. ...., I Ty H Vallev. •~at ..... among ho ' "' .,.., ,.... d 213 1831 57• · CANALf'RONT ... vuu ar pe omea, , &.....: ~ mew/pool Lv-yard system. saoo w/pool 631·7J00 M.I. OWC. P/P Appl only i lJJO.OOO.A&t.6'2·l523 w ys. . "4 view.bch hse.203dwn. 2patfostot!Qjoylheout· leaaedland.3pYlbcba, expensive homes. Just S2000. Ltbo"'iSLE aervice. Water pd . ~ii=====i:1 (714)673-§Sj!S,6'13-2210 ICollegePk.fixerupper.3 eve!. Bal. AITD Pvt ply. doors + movelo andlive 24 hr aecunty, f11hing minutes from Dana charmlna 4 bdrm. 2 Marauerit!SAt.• tll Duplex. won't last for 1 br. 2 ba, fa m rm. HAID TORNO -499~·3-14-4-----cond., In this 2 sty 4 BR. ~er from $34,900. 1()11,{, Point Yacht Harbor. bath, imrl1 redeeotated Ealttidt 2 bdrm hoult OMTHllAY buyer who needs $110,000.0WC$1>,0001st LOWINTBIST QrPOITUHfTYt 2 !pie's, ste111 to pool, ~wn.nuus Ses6~1udedyet convenlent. $1800 mo. Yearly. 8111 with "baracter. Dbl 1 " TD ...... '"'"A... be .,5,000. Attractive G-·-.ay -i... .. Beautiful bayfront home neeauve lo + shelter. , · ...... ......, ... Jo~xl1tln1 7.9% 1't with to own home In Laguna ach & tennis. Owner Trailer at pvt bu cb, terms. 1----!'ll!U"-=:.u.1 &.:"'=-·~·· __ aaraae. larte Y•rd • withHnd)'belch-'tboat Price •<.cM>. 5% do. fl-.!! U% 2nd. Minutes to with most favorable wiJltalelstor2ndTD Treasu r e Isl and , mo.atolNorat.~ slip. LoYtly dtck " Larre assumable. Mon· M"U miles ot blue pouodln~ terms. Skyliahted 38r 2 for equity. $245.000. Laeuoa Deb, $8500. • BAY VllWOON00.2Br 0..PeW -•.1 patio. Utt ' c~ 3 lhly rental Inc $J42S. 3 8clrm. P'reedom Home •url. Tilts low malnt. story. Oesparate owner Rlch1rdSowtrs. Rltr 499-381 " 2b1, nlctb turaltlted. • ... bdrm + dftl. 2 bath. Drive by SH Mariaold w/frplc . Bd"'lfuUy up· Townhouse w/1 BR den uys "SELL" .. AO try Gwen Henry See. bld1. tuno1mo1rty, i:,;•; ........... ,, openbtamcelibs.brick COM. Uinterestedcall. araded. $114,000, with or2ndBRl~BAhlghly a.ny rldlculolll offer!! 714-~4· M _ a. kK. Jd1da.lbr. BBQ. 2 car pra,e + John Bellamx7U.E ~rma. Superb. Jup1raded lw a poola. S285L .ooo. These .. utue,. adar reall1 Y!_IJ.A IALIOA.1 er + .,: uw, :_ ': ;r:: U1RA PAIUUNG !I A P11dqaa..i&dadt.1 1tu11I. t eonla.1 .,..'-I.I wor .. ! "o n the -·I" Illa. Pftlf ...... .,.. -nt.Jlll, baraal• at tsts.OOt. u e111 • cllaliQ& rour .RED,. .. ~ clubboute, wet bar, au 4 '·17'1 tbouuacll" otW "°' toratt4 .,... .... , Oner/AIB&lrNllTor Dllcm. Gf¥e • 1 caU ~• for euy llv1n1. Open SIM Ill W. lfta Wllo are ""'· m.Mt. "•'II do the rut. . 754-1202 S.l/Sa 1-5 '7• Vfrde Make 10"' st.op_pl~s reular uaera of AOtTtlmor W'•lfNfl ~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!l:!l:lll:::=~~~b=====~~l Mar Bh. SIJ.1800 or e~b,_..&bf~ Claained. Call our ad . ...::o:; ...... ir:a...&~----f • ~.,_ ..... Cor• ~ '~!!:!!:~1 _____ ...:._,i.:::;:PUot:::C~llllifttll:::=::Adl=::.==.U!!!!:J•llt,!!ti!!!!, __ __.~~!!kd!!~~lllll!!!!!!ll!!J!llil~ .... !!!!!!!! f ' , Orange Co11t O~L Y PILOT fTutaday, September 29. t 98 1 * ra11 111~"' c-..........., Drywtl HIM r11.1. ·····~················· •• .-.{;; •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •• :::?.~~ .•.•.•••••••• tml'lll 611WICI & SOM !Shampoo ' tlram clean DRYWAWACOUSTlC HOME IMPROVSME!'ff ~ Buildtn&nce li4T I Color briJbtmtra, wht 14 Yl"I UP NlY Uc'd " R 11&1 .. !!l Addlllons. rtmodellni1. <'rpll 10 ml.n. bleach. In u J.32-Mtg EPAIR, PLUMBl~G, '' f.''"'· F.-•t. Rtaa. Hall, Uv/din. rms Sl&; . -Ul'ptntry, elec, tile hALL)OO y .ic~#SIOIM2 549.allO j ava room SUO: couch 8tctrtclll Re11. 1''rte nt No job (ora HUf1''MAIUrSON SlO: cbr E. Cuar elim u•••••••••••••• ....... tooamall.845-l1 a>~yad Add Rtrnotkl ·P 1 petodor Crlllrtpair ELECTRICIAN. prired Carpentry· Masonry .. h Cabinets R •t 06 lS yrs exp. Oo work naht. fru at1mate on Rooflnc . Plumbin& DM.Y Lie • · "~ ..mrutr Rds. 5310101 larieoramall~ Dryw1ll ·Stucco Tile N.OT · Noli&ea~ampoo · 39M21 81 _!te odel, l~ s ...... Spedlht StltnSl)e('laliat. Faat RESID /~IUf'L COMPLETESERVIC~ DI.::,.~, Cultom carpentry, dr .fi'rcteL.rsl. ·1 IUll!JyBt1&1UJ1ed.Nojob Carpentry, lite, elec. OOITNOW • deck11.patioll.JS.COMt. c-;.....;c.cr... t sm .631· concrete, plumbing, Co Nobody dots It bet R--•...__._ H painting Free eat A .. forS..-. ter' l 1c'd & bonded ...................... _,,w.,.. y F ' C II J CONCRETECONSTR i ••••••••••••••••••••••• S our OailyPllot ~~11est a oe. Patao• walkwuys CERTIFIEOF1REARM Carpentry-Electrical Rev~~~~~Y -· -driveways, block walls: INSTRUCTORS teach Plum bin&· Paintin& C..,...tr wood decks. patio over· all aspect.s ol land&un 0 v or Mlle . 641·5671,ed ll2 ••••••~•••••••••••••••• hao s. Refs. defense. 847·5'7. I>&D HANDY ANDY ••1!11!!!!!!!9!!!1!!!!!!!1!!!!1... GEN LCARPENTRY -THOMPSON 'S Garde... Comp!. home repair. oo ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways, parking lot repairs, sealcoaling S&S Asphalt. 631-4199 Lie. ASPHALT REPAIR Sealcoaling . Striping Comm tres1d Freeest Lie. -397362 ~5·8181 Chil~ Care Days, great playyard. 3 years and Id r. Karen~~2«> labyllffillg ••••••••••••••••••••••• Babysilling, my home. I yr & up, nr V1c1or1a, C.M. 642-8482 &16~7~ Babysiller avail my home Mon-Fri full or PIT Ex pd mother, baby proof home, frd yd, daily activity Call Karen 631·5632_. _ I NSIDE~Ol!l'SH?E CONCRETECONSTR ••u••••••••••••••••••• .lq!tl~ small. 675-7312 Fast, efficient service Lie ll39:m:I 642·M82 CLEAN UPStLAWN •HOME REPAIRS ~82M p-1 "" .__ __. p · M11i.nteruwt·Landscp &dMPROVEMENTS• Complet.t RemOdeltng oo ..,..,c,... auu atJos, Freeest. 642·9?07 Reu. Fretesl. ~()(23 Rtslrl comm. New or Muonry,Sport&Tennis old look. uc'd 17 yrs an Courts Lie. 374067 Bob Cleanups TreeTr1m'g HGlllMJ M P I b 851 1966/847 7078 · H1uling ·Maintenance ••••• •••••••••••••••• .. area r a om o NOJOBTOOSMAL_L_ _Arrue~14 962 8314 Haul, cleanup. concrete Fre~ch drs, hdwd floor!>. Brk & Blk. Lie. 351449. Tree tramming & re· removal Dump Truck Dale. home963·8767 moval, clean·ups. trash _ Quick serv 642·76:11 moulding, shelving Ans 8J5.2l828een2313 hauling & maintenance, DUMPJOBS R ough & C1n1 sh ----~--i:--Re 67"39 Complete sen•1ces. Fr~t! •CEMENT WORK• mowing.as_._.,,_~ & Small Moving Jobs est Bonded lic'd Driveways, patios. floor TREES Call MIKE646-1391 644-4015__ lllL831·6266, 493·2637__ Topped/removed, clean HAULING & DUMP CU)lUm Carpentry -All c.r .... lc Tl. u_ps_Jawn renc>V. 751 347§ JOBS. usk for Randy. work done by owner •••••• ••••••••••••••••• E x p G a rd en e r 64HM27 Kil .. bars. gar, storag11. Hansens Ceramic Tile, cleanups. tree tram . HoulinCJ!a.....,t Guar 6i~.h}t9-l~ floors, shower6, tubs, maint l''ree est Pete _ Jerry S67-7568 CG?d Senlca call afl~P.M.,.557 ~ 641·1096 TREES SHRUB TRIM •••••••••••••••••••••• Chiid Cort Getterol Senicfl Garage & yard clean· We Care Crpt Cleaners ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .J!J?S. F~est ~7-8271 Steam clean & uphob DAYCARE Air Cond/HHtM HAULING Student has Trurkmountuml Special lo working RQ!!...~11634aft ! lge truck. Lowest rale Work &U'!L 64S-.1716 parents. $31.90/wk CM. H ...., Prompt. Call 7~·1976 Y f d 646 5423 ... ,inan Thank you. Jo_hn. our rten s and -· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -neighbors use Classified DrywaH JACK OF ALL TRADt:.5 CLE.AH UP YOUI ACT when ~he Y b ave ••••••••••••••••••••••• Plumbtng,eltt, healing HAULINGj25 631·199~ 6o meth1ng to sell. ALLTEXTURES& Od<flobs 638·4068 They'll tell you how well Drywa II. Clean & de pen· ---AM-Arowtd H..&.tc) it worked forlhem ! dable Re~. 631·2004 __ Want Ad Results 642-5678 548--.. H1•1dln'l1 ....................... ROB1N'Sa.F.ANINO Servi~ thoroulhJy ~ Want a REAUY CLEAN HOUSE? Call Gi.DJ}lam Qirl fm mt. !HH\23 Expertise houlektePin1. aupJ)liH furniahed, ln!4~or11\y. l\S'7 ~ Clean Up Your Act Co Houattl.w\lnl. apts & otrl . '11 · t.m LET THE MOUSE CLEAN YOUR HOUSE C I Clearun1 houses. reas prices. i1nt rtfs. Mnla~:B»l•·l0:30) SCRUB·A·DUB prof. housecleaning service. Reas , reliable. refs Call Jean, 631-5016 ...... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• BRICKWORK · Small Jobs, Newport, Costa Mesa, Irvine, Refs . 675-3175 Frplcs-Patios-Planters for a )ob dooe nght, Lara 7@:9m8 eves EXPERT BRICK & M uonry. Small )obs & repatrs. Frplc facings Refs. SS1-4SSS, 760-7074 HAIT MASOHIY Brickwork. bl«'kwalls. wood fences Concrete patios . comp lete lanruca pes. Lie. 368294 646-1597 Mo•'-9 • •••••••••••••••••••••• •A· I MOVING• Top Quality. Special care in handling. 25 yrs exp. Competitive rates No ovtr1ime. '@)= 13.\1 M.•lilt ,....... " •• , ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •AB C M 0 VIN G MtCOR.MACK PLMBO Ex~.r . prof., low rates All Pa1t1UD1·111l WA> t!li R£PAIRUlEMODEL Qufck. eattful ~rvire. SHO Neat, complete St0p.,a1•. Beu. ratet. 5SZ-CM10 1™ut~s~ U,t,J~ 875-9194 -STARVINGCOLLEGE f.ilt.housepilntinaonly Rep1pe1, au Imes. re· l>'1'UDENTS MOVING Wedothtjobrlg.ht' modeb. new const St co. Lie.~ Lj: Pa1ntln 894·~ Clair's Pluanb1ng 1,k lnaurtld. Ml-&427 COLLEGESJVDENT ~ 64.S-350:! WAT OROW! Exp Int/ext Job Cor Drains from 110 Main •Two Brothett Moving~ 1 ! Al • ~lll3l -from $15 Plumbin& re- Prompt Courteous CJu1thly pta U>we:st rates wr11.re~ .... IP- Servire 9~7·0500 or lo 0 C Neat. prompt .__._._/It--* S40-IM8 serv.848-SJS.71.S :-=:;:~;:i:::-••••• PADDEDWAGON 1~!11~XTR..1ps~l~_Gt General ''ontn1ct1ng, Movers • "' r n . ..: CAI home lmprovement11. Careful. c.owteous 646-1007_ Also damage repairs lat •!!d Cheap. 497.:m_ OL YMrlC PAIMTIHG .£!.m work ye 89.a.9798 PaWitc) INT/EXT. FREE ~T looflft9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HIGH QUAL. WORK ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fall Spedal. ext/int LQWJ\~T~ SS4·19C!J BALBOA R00f1NGCO ~ting Prof Ranbl lnlernat1onal Pa1nlln& Also skyllg.hlll& esl. Stevd'7·~.L lhgh QualllY lnl/Ext plastennf! PAlNTING-C\JSTOM Free Est. 556-163.! EreuaL _ §73-11143 work, 25 yrs exp Many Painting & paperhane· SprWdtn local reJs Lie. '403!Ml. lllg, Intl Ext. 30 yns an ••••••••••••••••••••••• Booded, UlS'd. Free est. area, color matching SPRINKLER INSTALL Hutchisoo. 963-0011 specialty. Rers. 497.3121. Repair & Yd Clean-ups Fine paantinJ by Richard Sinor Ltc, 11\S. l3 yrs of happy N. B. custome~. Thank YOU. 631-4410 LAR RY 'S PAINTING Int text. 5 yrs exp Reas. free est 645-9383 INTERIOR/EXTERIOR Residential/Comm 'I Reasonable & Fast ~ INT / EXT P AINTlNG Xlnt work. low rates ~ .. 1: 27831700. 9S(XI CUSTOM ll'Tl'/EXT EXPERT SERVICE LOW RAT~ NU.:_BROOK642·1403 RALPH'S PAINTING Ext/int-Reas-Prompt. Lc'd. Free est. 964-~ _661 1135 Landscaplllg 645-~7 Saint Laumit&Sons ~ Best tn Paint & Paper ••••• •. •••••••••••••••• ~·0850 _ 631·1351 TILE INSTALLED PaperincJ All Kinds Guaranteed ••••••••••••••••••••••• Refs John 893-lfl67 The Paper Hanger, Prof Trtt Senlce mslall Oe<.'Orator qual ••••• •••••••••••••••••• Free_m ~ve547 ~1 JA n 11lH CARE "6ter/Repair Complete service and •••• ••••••••••••••••••• stump grinding. 10 yrs Neat patches & texturrs _gxJ? La~ .. Ins 640 9~ ~est!-893-1439 AMERICANTR~:E INT EXT PATOIWORK SERVl<.:f. Restuct'OS Textures ~ 1193 f REE EST 64~~ HEED HElP? PLASTER PATCIUNG Help yourself to a lnl ext l> yrs exp Heaping selection or Neaj work Paul_Si!S-2977 Qualified Hopefuls Find what you want tn inlheDAILY PILOT Q.a1!r_e_ilotClass.!fieds HELP WANTED ADS ,......., . .................... .. PrivaLf •K~rt ,.,., by CredftlllaJed t.ther. Moat aubJect artaa. Your ·~'"':.::..=Z!:I...__ lnd1vlduallzed ;f."'' in shorthand. t n1 " Qfficfsktlls.§U l DRUMMERS Prof drummer 20 yr up Paul Wllll1m1 . R11hteou1 Brothen, studio wotk Lll"lteo operunp for Mrioua yna students!.:. . .:::1S::.;l ~t----w-..w Cll•m 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oraainul Wuldow Wuher Avit3brhome. S3S S31·76'98 -- "Let thtSunshine In" Call Sunslune Window Clean1n Ud ~ WINDOW GLEANING Comm 'II Resid 'I Free est. Jim, 631-1918 WINDOW CLEANING Res1d'I specialist F!"_~t Alex 64.S-•741 The 8lcPlt Marbtpla on tilt ar..,. COMt DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS Yo.i Can Stl II, find II, Trade ti Wirll a Wont Ad '642·5878 ) Classified Ads are lhe answer t.o a successful garage or yard sale! It's a better way to tell more ~le' _____ _ HMMS U ....... llwd "°"'" u .. ~ Houses U1tfwwitlled ..,.,.... ..... FwNslltd .,.,..... ..... fiwNslltd Apor t1.M11ts l.Www. .,....... ..... Unfwn,, ..,..... ..... lJwfurn. ..,...~ Apm ......... u.fwla. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 0..Poilit 3226 MiH iOft Viejo 326 Hewportleod9 326' lalboaP..._. 3707 Hewportleadl 376'1CostaMesa 3824 Dano Point 3826 Hlllltil'igtOftleoclt 3840 H•ti.,tmleoch 3840 Hlllltiitgtonleadl 3140 •••·•···•·····••··••·•· ..••.•..•...•.•...•.....•..........•....•..••••.••.•.•...•.•.....••...••..••..••.••.•.•••.. , ..•.•.•.••..••....•...•......•..........•..•..•.••....•..•••...............•••.....•••...••• ····~·················· 2 br 2 ba view. condo, 3 IJ~ME FOR RENT BLUFFS 3 Br. 3 Ba Winter Renlals 2 & 3 Br 1 BR Versailles pool LUXURY DUPLEX 2 IR I la Patio MARINERS WALK 1"1 Block to Belich 2BR, Spacao~s 3B~Tor;:,~use washldryrt.rerng SS25 rm. !650 Fencl'd Fam. Rm. New paint & Bach apt. Clean· jac sauna e.ym' 24 h~ 2 Br 21"2 Ba dble gar garage, yd, kids ok $495. 2 & 3 B T , h 2BA Adults S-175 124 apt rg Yf 1 car a t. 714 496-5980. yard ~ 1 garage Kids & $1150 Mo 644·2300 __ ~.6786 615-0318 sec.' .. uard $&so sll·&666 1650 sq ft. wilh evel') 964.5927 AplS Patros ov.n 1°u~e _20th Sl~.! ~11149 Kr. a hr '0ry rhoop k c • 11!-...-..a....• v~ I pets we rome S4>2000 B SHOR.,..,. =-=== ----:..J> =:..=..:: xtra huge rear yard ---~ I • ~mg e "' "as er er ups. ,._..-alft -1 32341 Agent nofee AY .,,.,.Lg IBr + I br apt for 1 person, on . . . h. RV Ad I H~leoch 3840 double car garages. Spacious apt avail now Children welcome Nr •••••••••••••••••••••.. ' -. den, fr plc, garage. new the Bay, $400/mo yrly, Junior Bdrm Versailles wit gate u ts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• near Hunl Harbour Bachelor t & 2BR Hunltngtoo Harbour 3 Br ho_me. avail 10 15, Hew port leach 3269 paint, cpts, pvt area no_J1ets 675-4533 Rec fa c $4 95 Mo ~3·6336, 642·9666. -Ch1ldre~ OK 840 68(11 From S325 • Close to $725 mo 84CHi807 __ nu painl carpet $790 •••••••••••••••••••••••' S795 mo 645·4636 or . 644 5369. 548 ·8636 , 2 Br. I Ba Pool. garage L~~t~A~~i~~Ear-HUNTINGTON BA y G G & S 0 F w ) Hlllltift""-mo . .963-2778 __ Sea\ 1ew ~Br 3 Ba, family 1 631·6229 Wiftter Rental 751-9110. Owner/A ent No pets. $46.5 Mo. 1395 A , CONDO Balconies. paltos, JJOOls, H~;;· H.tiltgt•leoch3240 rm.diningrm,ocean& IAYFRONTLE.ASE 2bdrrm.\ba. SSSO SHORTTERMS Baker.~1-0763Btwn9·1. ~~da~~i~v;,n;~01~~l~d3 2 Br 1,, Ba Patao. jac, lenrus. lndry fac .................. !!.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• night light views Pool & Lrg 4 Bdrm nu carpel ~~rm~ ba SSSO Beach rentals by we.?k Mon-Frt__ Olympic me pool. ltght-carport. wa)her dryer H U N TI N G T 0 N Deluxe Adult Bayport HOME FOR RENT tennis sum pr mo I paint thmt, shp for 3 Bdr: 2 baanft SS75 ~month A.J!...675-8110 Stunning large2 Br 2 Ba ed tennis court, Jacum. mcl Water & trash patd GARD ENS 4901 Heal JIB Condo Oulstandaog" 3 Bdrm. $700 Fenced 40-45' boat 1mmed oc· 4Bdrm S$82.S 1 bedroom rum. all ulal Garden Apt. Pool $435 k lk I d C-Omm pool Adull.l>. no Bolsa Chtrn & Heil Penthouse View yard & garage Kadi. & Waterfront lease, 4 Br 41 cupancy $.iooo pr mo ocean!\ 1200 pa id l house from Mo. 710W l8lh:Sl ~r ~ e ~~ s~~pani: pet.s S525 + S.SOOdepo~1t 846·1323 Overlooking Hunhngton pets welcome 5452000 Ba,f:umlyrm.top con Ca11Llovd675-6670 · wale r S~SO yearly Easts1de2 Br1 Banear H~l auti Ii: an Agen~nor~S4S-2000 Rtacf¥.Mo•tift! Harbour 2BR. 2BA Agenl,ooree d1t1on .dockfor40 boat Harbor~V1e14 Homes. 646·«19 schools, oo pels S425 846·~19 2 bdrm . Iba 7794 Clean 20drm. I·'• ba SISOOmo Boat sllpavail 4 BR. 2 ma to beach, S6SO Sl900 Waterfall. Gazebo. Koi 3 bdrm.2ba. aUracovely Mo. 631·61.SS Newman $450, Isl. lahl Huntington Landmark through Peters Landing per mo + S8SO dep. 4 Br 4 Ba. clean & sharp. Pond. wooden root· furnished. nr. ocean. 10 •2 Br.1 Ba S39S 2 br, S3SO + S3SO dep. mo.._d~. 642 4431 ev cond o Slack wa!.her and <2fil592·3584, 282·1136. Avail, Oct 10.84()..5648 next lo tennis & beach bridge. lovely exec 4BR. mos. 5.673-9060A t. 1 child OK. no pets 2265 Crpls, drps Bit-ans. nr Spac 2 br apt. kids OK. dryer 2 patios. v.etbar Laguna leach 3141 Sunny 2br town chalet• SlSOO mo Remax or Npt 3• ,BA home w separate Wantec rent.al apt. NB. •, D Maple, 645-9494 _ shops. All adult. no pets pallo. S405 mo 1st. last bit an gas dble oven and ••••••••••••••••••••••• Hardwood rtoors warm Bo_b or Dovie 759 1221 guest a pt. SHOO mo. Corotta cW Mar 372 blk tb beach 3 BR. 2 Ba. l Br I ba, adults only. no S9J.4~ 17381 Keelson me a ch range 2 car gar $600 Oreans1de of Hwy, No lh1s s.195 deal! 119646 7~·0279 ____ ••••••••••••• .. ••••••• gar, $600 Av I I Ol l pels S360/mo 644·7722 Have something you Slater l !162 38 3 7, per mo !st and last + Lag 2 Br I Ba. adults on- Or if its better by lhe WESTCUFF ILUFFS. VIEW Small sludJo w fuJi ba. 552 15l!1 __ --J!!l'.! wanl lo sell~ Classified 831·930~ SJOO sec deposit Call ly, S700 Brian Johnson beach designer 3br. w l t & h 18 I blk to b & bch Mesa Verde lmmed or d d l II ., • ., ...,.,8 1714 l 759-4381 As k for 494-7554, eves 497-1561 marble·llled ba! Picture Lu x u r i o us r ou r On Back Bay, 2 Br 2t, ap ·St re rag. ot r ay · a S_JU_we_._.,..._.,,.,, _ Classified Alb _ 642-~78 Mr Bang__h.am t wndws! SS2S. 119628 bedroom. three bath Ba. Den. Condo 2 car j?la~ 673-6223evs_ S400 mo_ yrly. Orean cupancy. Spac 2 Br 2ba YL Renlimes631.4555 Fee_ home Beamed ceilings garage. frplr Sl300 Mo Costa Mesa 3724 fr.onl lBr. $500 mo. apt, bltins, frplc. gar. Nr ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• In llvlng room and faml 548-0767 wanter JONES RLTY shops & transportation . ----• • •••••••••••••••• ••• • 673-6210 • 2sly.3br.2 ba condo,nr ly room Secluded pool 1800~ ...... VIEW _ __ AdllS no pels S49S. • shopping center . s11eyard.Spacerorboat ~ 546-MO!I • 8 DAY WEEK SPECIAL S550/mo No prts or trailer Sl850 month Seawmd,3br,2ba. very Lgel BR.pool.adlts.oo • • •• 752.7493 yearly basis Agent pvt Xlnt cond No pets U11fwwished pets S3SO. Hmt~ 631.7300_.__ ___ Gdnr mclc s1soo AvaaJ ~0ts;...,~l!_? Newport Bl ....................... 646·7319;67J.0884 • 8 Days 3 Lines • 8 Dollars • H--L:::.-3242 10 20 all eves ....., . .......,.,.wn8&5PM GtMrai 3102 I B . ldin 1·1 ~ ...... .---NEWPORT HGHTS 1157.0377 --- -· I r inc g u 1 s ,,.,..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Like new custom built --·----LCIC)IMG leach 3748 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prefer single • It's easy to place your 8-Day Week Class1f1ed by mall a nd It • Across from water 3 lh b d San c~ 3276 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S27S San Clem studio 962-7940 • cost I sa th t I d II d I T I r r Bdrm. Avail lmmtd ree e rooms. two •••••••••••••••••••••••Furn lux studio.spa. TV, wall ulils paid ' •4981 ----d----S JUS -a Sony a 0 ar a ay 0 qua I y Or th1S • ,. $900 yrl> 846-4457 & baths. rormal dining 3bdrm. 2ba . walk to maid service. phones. Plus Nwpt Beach guest $2SO 1 br pix tn quiel • special Offer, YOU must be a non-commercial user offering • 846·~ ~~~en E~t~~g s~~ ii!~ beach, golr. tennis. No Sl25 wk.~9!1-2227 ~~use wtutal ~ 16312 :~~te;0,:fptre~orre~~a~ • merchand1se for sale up to S800 per ad. and the price must • ~ 1"i.. 3244 month. yearly leasr ~~· 5675 492 7913 art •5Si~H1 :R S~UfD OF ne': a~rr.u~ces e~~a~ ref. 954 W. t7lh 548·0358. be in your ad T he cost s tays the same whether your ad ....................... 63l·7300, Realtor ---W . ' rp c, gar ulJls me S375' 1153'1 IBr dplx gar pvt yd wtr • needs eight days selling time Or JU St One • P •TIO HO E ---~-•Nr beach. Nace 2 BR 2 1nl~ mo. 494·51S4 · & 1 'pc1 N. ·$300 "" M E Bluf condo 4 br 2 • ba. Ba ocean vu f'plc No --Renumes 631·4SSS Fee e ec . o pets • • 2 Bd + den, A l', 83SAm1gosWy#8.SlOOO t$ 494-8727 · HewportlHdl 3769 tc6oar.-... 1 mo.673·TI37,642·3filL_ garage. fresh paint. 2q.541.44fi0,S41·48l3 w~ -----••••••••••••••••••••••• 380 136 Albert Sl .. 11c 2Br, e Use one word 1n each box About 4 words make one e avail. now Adults on!) eU-kepl 3 br home $500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc, t 1"2Ba, SS.SO mo SlSOtmo. Fred Gibson HtwDOrt Crttt features cracklln~ fpl c lfJch Yearly 3 Br. & 4 640-2004 e c lass1f1ed line of type Minimu m ad is 3 ltnes Please print • 3 bdrm. ~1., ba Newport modern dream kitchen r · 6 7 S · 9 7 9 1 & • plainly • 559·9400 co ndo in q u 1" l & many other xlras! /585-2111. SP AC I OUS 2 BR . neighborhood nr beach 114924 Also roomy 2br Bach $365. 1 Br I Ba ADULTS Beam clngs. • Amenues incl spa, pool. retreat' Qwetarea,only Bay Sade.~ Adults, lrgk1t.servbar,refrige. r------------------------------, • lighted tennis courts. $400' Gar + new apple no pets. Savage Wilde & S425/mo No pell 2256 • • $72S. 3 BR Orangetree Patio Hme fresh deror. gar opnr. adll comm .. all amenities. No pets saunas,24hrsec.Now 114924 Co.675-6606. Maple, 548-7356 & • avail at S900 per mo Renlimes 631-4.SSS F!!_ Yearly 2 bdrm, lg deck. 2 673·8803 • • Call Bruct"llSI 2269da, 5-\J•• YEAJMIOUNO F'Uft: blks lo beaeh SS25 Easts1de I BR. Uhl pd, • • 8Sl-2205evs, wknds_ Capistn..o 3Z78 Social Ac1t~111es 01 Burr White Realtor Inc quiel tocallon. No pets • a LUXUIY IAYFIOMT ••••••••••••••••••••••• rec1or. Free Sunday 675--4630 S32S mo Call 540-1154 $ 8 00 • 3 Br. 2 Ba. wilh boat slap BEAUTIFUL CONDO Brunch • BBO s • CorotHI .L...I ..... _ 3122 ask for Dave M • • • ----A I Oc l M 3 br, all extras. newly Part•es • Plus more uon _. E.ASTSIDE NORTHWOOD·3Br. 2Ba a~a:naliesl. ·si~oo ~": crptd. pool. paho, 2 kids GREAT RECREATION ••••••••••••••••••••••• • 10.60 • bpme. Beautiful UP· Broker67~4912 OK. $590/mo. lst. last, TeMtS•FreeLessons W2ablak. lodpbchlx.· ~aurie.tS3900Br ~a~~d~yB~~~/:~el~~~i'. • • graded hse on pvl cul·de· - ---A 1 831 9303 <pro & pro shop I • 2 ,. 13 20 sac. S87S mo Agt l\yle Beacon Bay. 3 br, dock. ~81 · · HealtllClubs•Sauna Child OK. no pets. Drive No pets. Call for appt • • • 552·6111 tennis. 2 yr lease. SHOO, Tustill 3290 • Hydromassage • by only. 719 Heliotrope TSLM mt.642-Ui03 1 __ lt«h--3248 ..!,efs req 675-8617 ....................... Swimming • Gott ~ail 10/3. 972·9406 1 Br. House. older. V1r • 15.IO • :::':':':": •••••••••••••••• Big Canyon Townhouse 3 3 BR. pool. lge palio, dbl o .. ving Range Lar«Je, attrodl•e tor1a . S300 per mo large • OCEANFRONT Mobile Br 2•, Ba on golf gar .. qwet nbrhd. 1750· ~!~~e~~~ ~P:!~ 1 bdrm with fireplace yard. 979·1~-Add $2.60 for each 1ddhlon1l llne for 8 times • Homes SIOOO mo Dbl course Fantastic view ~646-43!0 room~. Furnished DR , LR, porch. dis· Large studio. newly de· • • wide.499-~16 from all roo ms Weshftiftster 3291 &Unfum11hed•Adun hwa sher. stove. Newly corated. Pvt patio .• Go rgeous. This is the •••••••••••••••• ••••• •• Lov.ng • No Pets • I ands caped S6 so . Easts Ide location. No • co.or narest unil in the de 3Brhse,pets.kids0K,lg ~ooelsOpenOa11y 675-6611 pets Perfect for • Publishmyadfor8daysstarting • Spectacular Ore an velopmenl Fireplace. yd SOSO mo 9 lo 6 newlyweds S3SO mo. V 2 B 2 ba pool j Lg 3Br. 2Ba. lower. 3 blks • iew. r co-op an wet bar, • acuw. 631·2246 Oakwood to bch. dshwshr, soft 5411·0908. Classification • South Laguna. full) garage. extensive •3Br. 2Ba.dblgarage, Garden A~rtment• wtr. patio. S8:iO mo Jae Bachelor l br, pvt ent •• furnished. Avail yrly. cus tomization Ava al lam rm . lg fncd yd 1700 673.81s7 new decor. utils pd. Name • wlnterorahortlerm immed SI~Mo Lease mo + fTOO sec 14361 N-port S..Ch N. patio, kitchenette, avail • • Waterfront Homes lnr lease option possible Purdy Sl 843-&354 880 lrv•ne ~1 '84' 1 br + den apt. S32S. lsl & now. t'IN\_ /mo. 645-6S99 ta A 63H400 _ 955.1400 days. 760-3670 -· 17u 1s45·11 tast&depo6it. ~-,. ddress e •BEACH HOUSE* Cozy eves Coada•l1dwm Newport Beach s. 631 ·4271or673·3342 Lge 1 br, l ba, refrig. OW, • lBR.frplr.beamedceil· -E•SllLUFf U•fwNshed 3425 1100161hS1 1oo••rtt•6•M 2brlbaadults,nof!tsor WtS1de, avail now, City Zip Phone • C rt rd S L "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• (714)642·5113 w/bds •• .,, •·t ast .... $38$/mo.640-1897 • •1• me. ou ya ag 4 bdrm. 2i., ba. ramaly · ~. "" ' .,.. L Ch M 0 • mo.49~.-Be one of the lucky few.. SlSO. S/D ge 1 BR, DO pets. $350 • eek or enclosed D " room. fireplares. Clean Rent 1 Cost Mesa's mo. Ca....,.... & laundry · · • Top OF THE WORLD n a Oceanfront Neal 2BR. 675-8303 • ...,.. executive home Avail NEW EST gated 20 $600 M w· Ad 1 llS1·2175 • Ch d t 5 br. 2 ba. dm. area, now Sl,fl50mo Towohome VILLAGE o inter u l Cost.Mete 1124 $36 arge my a 0 : • stove. ·washer/dryer 642-5161,640-8107 COMMUNITY. 2 •-3 Bt . .§7~3382/213-795-3018 •••••••••••••••••u•••• 5. 1 BR, gar, R/O, • b k I d · .. ex; NFRONT •. refrig, drive by then O # • 00 up, gar .• enr · Y • Yi 2~ Ba. um -1800 sq. tt. E~ . 2 "' 4 Br. NEWLY DECOI. call. 136 E. Bay St Exp 1000.964·1661alt.6 m._ LareJe en Home of pure luxury.Garages, Avail. Wanter. Weekly/ 1 Br gas pd, encl gar 54 533 •• ·----• - NEWER 3 BR. 2 Ba. din· Spacious and open 2 hydro-tubs in master Monthly. 67J.7873. d/wuher. pool. Adulta I· l; evs646-232S I , Ina/rm, den and fplc. story w/pano view of s uite. formal dining 642-5073. • 0 • # Exp. •• Walking distance or the Bay & ocean. Lg 3 Br. rooms. wood burning WI..,.... •-••s be b P""Mand hUd din rm , fam rm. "1-IUl:ll"'ll•-21r. I laAM IAY ........ BS L ac . ~ ·c ten 52000/mo 631.1400 fireplaces. micro-wave OCIAl'ROMT <fas •-• ~~~bs~·:oo.·,~~ Waterfront Homes, Inc. ~:~!: ~:1te~::ant 2bdrm.lbathS475. ~ci1~.~-~~. d.!h~: SPACIOUSlBr. • r::::.:.::::-wfLL-PAY T HE P OSTAGE -::.::::-.:.::::i • on the O<"eanaide of hwy S"GLASS LUSE living only 15 minutes 3 bdrm, 2 bath $625. Adults. 642-5073. 1 i • f. In North Laguna. Both S2200 pr mo. for a 6 Br. from Fashioo Island. 7 l lrTo•••• Cathedral ceiling, wallc • : 11 ll I NO POSTAGE ' : • " are vacant. . 494-7~1 4\.lt Ba house with grul 0~u~e~·J· ~Ina~ Newly d«-or. gas pd.. ~-:~c:::: ~~~ecepa~~: • 1 NECESSARY : • !; Ele&ance achieved! views . Gardening N. · t 1· us east encl car., pool, dawhr. garage, pool •· taundry • 1 If' MAILED I • ~ Fam. home nr the sand service Included. ewport B vd. &t ao. of Adults. 642-5073. Mso "' 1 ' II extras! Plush D.M. MlrlW ltJtr San DtleSglo"""Frwy Stathrt· Spacious 2 8r. I Ba. facility. Mo. .• l UN tTIENDTSHTEATES Q, • ~ :~~~tts,;~;ouf~j1u;: 7'o.otl5 ~t~39• 241: o~':ng~ Steps to Ocean, tennis. Laundryfac .. poot.s.ws. m w.s.ySt. • ! ~ .. · • :: eq ui p ped kltch le NEWPORT TERR~CE Ave.,C01tdfesa. Jog, bike. 2-~~.t.2 BA, 548-M 646-9883 f BUSINESS REPLY LABEL •J• landscaped &rounds! CON00-2Br.2Ba,view. NtwportCral.2BRCoo· Wntr$550.6'1~ PllYACY&OUllT • w >. ~ Only M50 ! Must see' gar,nopets,Wtrpcl.S625 do. OcunView l800sq 2bdrm,2ba,fireplace, l Llkenew u ,2 &r.Apt.s. East.aide . Large 2 er ... i F11ttf Cl.ASSPE1ut11T HO u COSU MUA CAL1Foi-H1A :t • l$469 mo. ft3-7T37, 642·3073 ft. SlOOO mo. c•r 1ar. on ocean. Week· w/gar or carp>rt. tip or natural wood celliQIS at >i • • R Umes631-455.Htt UDOlSLAMDStlO.O &46-<'22 ly/Month1Y.97\9172 down,bak:ollyorpetlo, cabinets, 2 covered •£ lllOSTAGlWU BEPAC:l8YAOOflEs.s€E g. LefnM N9s l2IO JBr 28•, 2cu1ar. Now VersaUJa lBr, fum/un· f:I· •t•· bbq, laundry, part ln1 spaca, 2 cov· • ~ Orange Co11t Dilly Piiot ~ • ....................... thru May12.w.1sza. ~ • .-.,....11...., cum. $53$/""10 mo. yr ·~~ .~.!~u.~~. ~actuarp-e ep~. ~~·P:i:i:i .. Da1·1y ,,., , t I "' ... 4 bdrm. 2 ba Vallty View •••••••••0 •••••••••••• round. 21~19:2-3468. Eve. mdl ,,,_, • m • ~ • Ho-.iae.cFl.ttplaced. built Qure~~!sS::':!11se ~~ ..... ??~ 842;:~~FJCSUNSET ~1~:i .N~fso ti:,r!~ ::~ar1':4r~~%.u!:J e ~ f e ?J ins, Al ·carpet. r•pes, on •reenbelt. Muter .... b ........ to .... 1 .... lbd-, VJl."W 541-2447. SSl·lM01 I I enelosed yard. 2 car 8d 9 2 bdrm• .,... ""'• -01 .... o;;n • 1 Box 1590 1 1.,a1e, gardener. Cou· rm + men ' ~arkin3. utll pd. Vrb'. u stepa to 111\d. LI 2 111£ SEVILLE 2 Br. 1 \.t 2 Br. &tovt •ref rite. S'2S • 11 • ple wlth upto2~hildren Z'h ba. p~a~.:: '390/mo. 675·6876. bdrm w/carr:rt· bal. Ba. Ad llla, new rrpta, 110· Adult&, no peta. 1330 W. Bey St. 1 O.l , Nopftl! Avail Oct. rruA:!er Ad 1272. P'·3740. ldry fac. ~ inc ~ dratpea.1atclo,11'a1r•, g--.. t1ld1 1 Br. 1'1......... • I Co1t1 Mt11, ca 1212• •, 2. "50 mo/lttM. CaU M24I02'1n OC!ANraoH'f dellltt 3 I· 11 wa tr P · I ·•· ~~ • "" v ea.om. 8r.U a.ftooplc,2cupr, SILL id• tt.w .ntb a UM~!" wort, GJv•t ft11ced • 1 I WutA• CallMWm =:l:.~Daib' ~.•Inter. u~o. f:.1~ CJaaallled HH ..,tnta AH .:m. tacld utna. ••••llellllellllllllll•l•t•I 552-4246 , t e Coi&t DAit. Y PILO'rtrutlda , StpCtmbtr 21. 1811 for furtlttr info1111fion rtflnlint 1drtrfisin1 placement in the Sc•oofs & lasfrudions Dirtctory coll Louise Griffitft, 642-5671 11t 3 I I ART CLASSES Sl!Hlt Tflllljl DrowllMJ • 'ciWi.g CHILMEN TEENS ADULTS Classes designed for the serious student. Progressive Art MaJor? Fine Arts area. lyE:htt~ Noted Artist or the lmpress1orusl School. B.A. Univ of Am . Ol1sl Art Po.st Grad For irtfOl llMIMofl Cdl: 644·5485 AparhMtlts u.funt.. Rooms 4000 I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Mtwporl ltodl 3869 Easts1de Costa Mesa ••••••••••••••••••••••• N1re large room Oceanfront for Winter wlfrplc Pvt eolry Pref. Hentals. Furnished & C 0 L L E G E G AL . uofum Broker 675·4912. S3001mo. lst & last mo NO PEE' Apt & Condo r~646·3.T15aft5pm_. _ rentals. Villa Rentals I· Employed Gentleman 675·4912 Broker Kitch priv CM area PARK NEWPORT Hotels, M~; 4100 COUHTRY CLUI ••••• •••••••••••••••••• UVIHG SEALARJ( MOTS. Bachelors. 1&2 bedroom Wkly rentals now avail apts & townhouses. SI 12 & up. Color TV Prom S.SIO 644-1900 Phones 1n room 2274 IBRPEN'IlfOUS EAPT Newpor t Bl vd CM VERS;\ILLES Nr 646·744S beach.:J600, 8310300 Li ve at Newport Bearh 2 Br 2 Ba •, blk to bch t P C II > SIOO weekly Yrly,gar,adlts.no~ls Pi n e Kn ot Motel $600 + ulll 67!">-1706 aft .i 645·0440 _ _ JIMMIE DEFORE DANCE CENTER DA>C•-CHOHO•ute MASl8TIAC .. TAPP·JAII BALLET MODEIH HEW FALL CUSSES TO RESERVE SPACE! 641-8403 3723 lllCH, MEWPOIT IEACH The Pl-ivate SChOol oedlcalect 10 Acaclemlc Achievement. TriditiolW 3 R's Small Classes Sollld Study Habib Gr·K-8 Transportation • ExtendedOay ID PIESlll ·SCllUl Learn How to use Wang. IBM OS& & Olsplaywriter X.rox860 Cll (714) 556-&IM t1 ' 11,,,.., ..... .... .,.,. ......... s 3 ... IA1'4 MOU MOMIY Become a Word Processing 5Ptclalist Excellent Careet Opportunities WORD PROCESSING AND INFORMATION SYSTEMS 2232 S.E. Brittol-Sultt 108. Santa Ana. C1 92707 ... ....,...,,.......,_.........,_,..__ ..... ". ~~$»~~ T All YOUR LISSOHS ~ FIOM A ra0: 'I Mu.sir lnstruruons Band/Orchestra instruments. Keyboard I Percussion 'Guitar Classical · Pop \\ Folk · Rock • Jazz ., ~Country A.FndeilWtSt.lot 2052 Mtwport llYcl Co1taMtte 151-16l3 1 -~PAGE SCHOOL ,__,_J OF COST A MESA GrOWfh With Honor-72nd Year .__ . AGE 2 THAU GRADE 8 -:-ENROLLMENT NOW IN PROGRESS REASONABLE RA TES NON SECT ARIAN rft1 llOll. MU IAT. l ;JOA.M. TO TlltVougllonFomlly 1:30P.M. Ull\11..0 All nt (lllA~I ('.OUlljlY IN ('()iU '-!".& Ann11's Day S cllool &Nurs1ry ................. • ,.., ~ • Oe; c... -'vee , ... Crab • M..r' Olnc""'t • r M>•' t' o.-, • ,,...,.. &o11 ·11•• l-"". r ....... "lfY·Pttl'QIOullO HCMllS: 6:10 .. 6.-t4 1110 HIURIN • COS I A MESll , ..,_ lltv • \llOone ,..,. 1 BALLET• TAP • JAU. • TRIM TO RHYTHM 1 AEROBICS , CHILOAEN • TEENS • AOUL TS ............... ,.,. Clones [ Tap yow tn.bltt ~ J tHl.J.~~ nen 1o si..,,,,.,.!.!..,'l:C'I,. IMcat -962°5440- JOLEE MILLER VI I( Al ll<Al\jl'\;1. I 11( fl()N as openings for students of all ages and levels . Graduate Westminster Choir College, Princeton. N.J. 546-6985 ~~1~eP;11~~11 ~~~h,: ~~-~~}~~.~ .. !?.s.~ ~~!!>.~ .. !?~ ~~:.~~ ..... !~.~ ~:.~~ .... !~!! ~.~.~ ...... ?~ ~~!.~.~ ..... ~!.~. -,,:,c:t.! Weslcliff loc S6SO mo OCEANfRONT2 &4Br Exec. Hunt. Harbour .. -I WORK ! You get paid' REWARD !Lo5t foxTer ••••••••••••••••••••••• da675·3412ev644 9842 Avail Winter Weekly home needs 2 room· MEWPORTCIEHT~ ,__,..vw, Need working capital rier, white w/brown & Jobs Wcmhd, 7075 -----y Monthl} 67J.]873 mates M/f 30+ Call Prestigious: full service UECUTIYE now! 35% return on your blk spots. vie:. Harbor ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUR IUCH & ~A New dlx w f 2 br condo 841-4750. EXEC orr.c:es. lnc:lds SUITI . 645-71alevs. btwn Gisler & Baker. Exper male practical 2 Br sharp. yrly $650 Kon a. HI avail wntr P 11 g h l a~ lend en l · s rcpt, sec, xerox. under· Several officell avail. Ul CM ~S-6880 nurse. basic home nu rs 2 Br. hugederk. furn or wk!.Ll_easn1!!1_)~67S-0604 dream . female non· e.round plt'g, telex & an· full service ex~. suite BALBOA ISLAND LOST Young male dog, ing care. Good cook, reg t~uPRg~~¥v llawa11 Golfers Paradise sml oker to sblhr lbeuxurhy ~~:l~~cor conl rm. ~~:~ O.C. A1pport. PrhnefRYfthnenf blk/lan .. med s ize .-Q.rdiel ~128 \714} - MANAGERS Condo 2BR. 2BA $39.00 c ean apt on e ac · · Comm'l/Units Shepherd v1c Victoria & OC Computer manager 675·6173 673n.,,,. per day 499 1671 Balboa Penin Compl EXECUTIVE ........... 4450 S 98 000 l t Monrovia.CM S48-7829. Student will tutor High ~ .o1.~ ( u r n . ~a r a g e . 4 · • •l rac ive u".c""" School Math, Geometry. .... h d .. f I SUITES ••••• ············-···· financing. ...... oR\N l IEDROOMS R--'ols to tL-4300 ws r ryr. rp c. etc.. lN For store Ii office space Stephen Compass FOUND: Pit Bull· Brindle ..Af.&tbra. Dave, 642·6724_ 2 I "THS '"'' ~ etc. 2Br. 2Ba. $450 mo. at reasonable rates. / gt 1 Sh h d "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• includes util .. hse.keeper HBITA«iE 500to4000~Ft. exc 1 . mae. eper mix $675 MONTH Cut lt\•ing expenses! wk 673 1531 ., ••• Comml/lnvestmenl Div g o I d f e m a I e 1:!9 3Sth St. lower unit. E~lab l i s hed 19 71 once a · · · .---MESAVERDE R Geo.ElkinsCo Chihauhaua m1x-blk & "tint cond Avail now eves. Jos New luxury office space PLAZA 644:7500 tan male. Blue Point 121JJ966-l71l Featured in Time Mag. Mature responsible MtF. in Irvine's busiest lS2SMesaVenSeE.C.M Siamese female cat -La r ge CI I en l e I e over 30 to shr Mesa center ' Easy Frwy ac· 545-41 l HOT DOGS Newport Beach Animal Penlllsuladuplex2 Br 2 Personal attention & Verde Apt furn except cess. Avail. now' Call FREE STANDING Shelt~r.6#-~ Ba frplc. year lease careful screening Time ror your rm. ~5.5107 for details. Retail Store · Best beach Good location. Lots of Isl . & last 675 491 2 Saving! eves/wknds. 551•1231 64MZlO location in Newport• potential SIMl.OOOTerms Broker HOUSEMATES S750 Mo. 116 23rd. St. 645.4203 645--llOJ W F.STC LIF'F 2 Br 11 2 832·4134 fem ale roommate want * DB.UXE OfftCES * J67rn:S..:!41~85~.J6'73-llil!.!40QllL. __ ll:-:'"'-""":-:----'=-==:~ ed Ocean front apt $191 No I """-to Lo. 5025 Ba Townhouse Adull~ 1213, 934 7943 1,2 & 3 room. ease re· Ground F>oor, 600 sq.ft . ..._y Lost. Tortoise, 900 block. Oak St C M. Lost around 9/25. Reward 645·6363_. - Rex.Hn(Taltwts lntelltgent. dependable woman to assist you· Photography Int & Land.scape Design I M rktg of New Products Property Management Remod. & Upgrading of 1 Resid. /Comm Property Xlnt refs. Bonded Write Ad •947. Dally Pilot. Box 1560. CM 92S26 only. no pets.~ Mo · ay oommate -· quired. Adj. Airporter toilet. carpeted, close in w••i•d•o•w••h•u•••mone••••Y••to••1•0•a•n• Lost: smal l female 1728 Bedford LanC' ContactServices.. fwtleentoshrw MIF Hotel.83J.32'Z3.9-l2. 1716AnaheimClf$295 sbageyDisneyDogfrom 548-7533 L a r R e s t RG a y Hse "':tpool . 3BR. S300 $250 Up. Hunt Bch. WISTC" -.a•u for RE. $10,000 up. No 20th St. C.M Cluld's pet. ---- Q b b d ( Ma le female oom inclut11.84&-1Sll7824ast.Ref Ca rpet. drapes. air. Wf'T'AllWA creditc:heck,nopenalty 642·8905. Male aide/companion. 111et2 r,1 a.rea yor male Service 1n So. B c:hS4228.34 700sq.ft.--"shopnow Call Denison Assoc d · 1• r St ( be h C l.f G R C ( l I 17301 ea n:uw Found ' .. ___ Apso 1~1 exp • estre5 u\le·in o ~~O. 1~~ I~~~ & ~~t n:eds 117PM or ren a fem lo shr 2 Br apt, at· . . . avail High tramc loc ..:67:.:.;J.:..7:..:3~1=--l -..L------1 female .... ,;; Tustm & 9So~·t3063. sX~~~~s open Re~_l·fi2ll_ C213)6J0.3040. tractive. furnished. 1t 17THSTUIT A&t :llSl,SJOO. Mortg•ps. Trwt Estber,C.M.64.5-8994 _ --.-,,___ ____ blk from beach. 'til l COSTl.MESA O-L-.._,~R ..... 4500 "--=.a; 5035 Housekeeptng Job want I Br condo. SSSO mo. ...1ri · -tnW __. SCUIUTS ed L In II I Great loc Ocean Blvd. 6 14 82 DXI. lsl. last + 2 or 3 room ui ice suites ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 1ve· . sma s1 ary \' e r s a I 11 es. (' a 11 c 111 c I of rk u ·1 u <C'> ......... CdM . frpl c, court yd. $100 secur req'd a Al • P enl.y P g. h 1000 sq ft with O/H d.oor s ....... u..o Co. .1!.!ll!e~~~- :!ll_830·2:!2J Richard S325_ 9SJ-6717. [73·471.6_ w __ ayne 675-8334 --incl. Avail., now. Call Top location. 1295/mo. .....,. AUNl[DS uaa.. W--L.....1 7100 N H H 2 ---R 1 67•6100 All types of reaJ estate IWftU • ...,.. --ear oag osp. story' wanted 2 f'emale Rmmls Christian F lo shr big 1 ea onomics ~ 675.QSl investments s•Ace 1""0 D1·v1·de-Raven very nice 3 Br 2 Ba " N Cost M 250 ft · Id ... """"' •••••• •• ••••••••••••••• frplc. d w. laundry rm toshare3 Br home near house m H.B. o pets .a esa, ~·. · PRIME 2500 sq.It inc: S~ill Tardy-Encore -IOOKICEIPSl/ garage S620 Mo Adu lts. ocean 1n Hunt Bch S275 + de . 968-3880 s~dte.7~~5~mo·1~~1s ~~· office space, Light in 2'1d11h ARRlVED l.CCOUMTAtifT t 548-0Zll (' o 11 e g e s tud en l s F.Malt Ho•illMlhs 7r71 .3350 · · dustrial unit. Next to 642• 171 54M 6 I I Who says we're not get· N t B h no e s. --· welcome S22S Mo in· · · John W1yne Airport. Ung more for our money ehw P tor If ea ck Lovely l br Versailles clds all utils Call Beach area. Excellently BAYFRONTOfflCE and 55 41 405 Fwys. WEPAYnfEM~ with the rvvo:tal rates' Arc 1tec ura irmsee . do Ocea n ·u Furn.Pool.tennis.etc 1 _ ..... 1262 F TD' •. t ,...., Ing full time book · r o n · ' anytime 96(). 71!!4 S250 lo $300. 964-11029 or 500 feet. janitorial, park· Aval . im..,.,... 975-or your s .. no es. Why only last week our keeper / account an l ~i-~~~~· Call Sandy. Shr Beautiful Npl 644·2583 ing,etc.760-9440. ~nt, ll259Q.ft. S400CmMo. AtDenn~7~ mailmanARRIVED. Knowledgable in ac Heights home Overlook· WANTED 2 Mt f --ts Airport·6 offices + lg 1355 Logan. Ill. · ----=:.:..:...=.::..:=-----Found small dog & Pek· coun~ payable, rece1va -1 Br. Duplex. 3 blks mg the Bay & Ocean. rmm divided rm. 55< sq ft . in· 675-5116 Prime Prop. Bluffs. Pvt ingese Dog. Vic. North ble. monthly state· .beach All1 ullls pa9id. l.rg BR & BA. Non· t5o13s7hr 4~ho.,!!e'" H.B. cl. malnt + util641·8070, e&..-4550 res Condo wants sttond H.8.891·3llB. menls, payroll cor· ~45 year Y 644 84 4. smking mature male mo . ...,......_,eves. "'hrs -...,... TD. $30,000 1 yr. Xlnt d porale tax forms Good .. ..., 9 9 ..,.... ••••••••••••••••••••••• Foun English Setter, .,,....l 1 · $350&$400 646-~--M/F 20-l5toshrA·Frame Share 2 ore suite In pre· Garage/st«age 12'W X rate&. Prin only. Mr white female with black typing required call Nwpt. Hgts 3 bdrm, 1 ba f' to shr 2 br condom H.B. Condo. CM. pool. gar.. stigious airport area. 375 3S'D. Near NB Post Of· Foster 752·88'1l specks. Vic. Euclid/405 be l we en I 0 and 3 du P le x near If o a g • w same Tennis. pool. S225· 646·4702 aft 6 sq. fl. for details call f1ce. 6'2·2006. Second &Third TD/'s. Exit, 9·26. 968-2763. 644·1581 ___ _ beaches & shopping. W D S275 + i, utils & Karen 851-6226. W..tMl 4600 Tom ~F=ou"'""n"'"d-'-'"B-..la.-..ck=--La-'-'-"b-m-a-l-e.1 --------•] SS25~e Sl1·2122 -den_673·4743 ____ G'tr°V! "VOID ~_u R-..... Ms..1100 v · I d · 1 · / Account•ng L for ~ 4350 ,_ """'" ..,., •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• 1c n 1anapo 1s u• 2BR. Ulll paid. S650 Isl M P lo shr lge house, """ 17th&Tustin SA 2nd. T.D. on Owner/Oc· Ma nolia.9-26 968-2763. llLUHCiCLERK last & sec S200 Before 6, C M S200 mo utils pd ••••••••••••••••••••••• copied up to. $50,000. lrvme ad agency needs 67_3_11_66_._Af\6,556-669_3_ Mat.ure pers~ns 25·35 s~....... 0~:1u:~c;! COIPOIAn A ent64Hl216llan lme. ~~~r:~d o~~=\~:r:~. gd. billing clerk. Must 1 bdrm oceanfront 5450 yrs. 548·6614 e~s _ on Balboa Peninsula Mike Supple953-4040 PRISW'I' 3 year 2nd, S40,000. 16o/r white under chin. Sun have bk pg. background. mo. All ut1I paid Call Wanted . p 10 shr pvt next lo Fun 1.one C 10~ n interest. Monthly pay· Brooks & Cst Hwy. L B be versatile, accurate. 10..4 pm ,67H642 home 1n C M. w same x20h fl) COSTA MESA Desires to rent quality ments. diac:ounl 20'h-to '94·5650. nex1ble &detail mtnded. ~ FwNthtd ~· ~9-9847 642 4546 573.2943 673-~30 Furnished. $175 lo $250. r u r n i 5 he d h 0 m e . show 28% yield on prime -F-~d ~har--1--k-I 10 key by touch & gd or Ullfwwislltcl 3900 M~;JS.45~Sbr.-2ba Small dble gar .. E. Costa utll. incld. CallMs..9161 Sell500al. yrly or option Irvine property. Fred t~':. ~a~ b:3an:;:Y50~: typing skills ~·d. Will ••••••••••••••••••••••• hsenrSCo PlazatFrwy SMe5sa. slor5a.'3e 0°0n71~· 17THSTlllT lo pur c b1se. No GibsonSSS.9tCIO gery.C.M.area.54&·8862 ~~/~~~:.~.~: M~~. S E A W I H D Spa S225+share ut1ls 6 7 / mo · · COSTAMISA children: no pets. Will Exch. $400K equity in tnCMtah 5350 mos. lease. Isl. last + 846, ·7414 . "'""sq. 'l of individual Cumilh ruwu:lal refs. $Mill. So. Lag. home ror '!!!B!!!!!r!!!!!e!!!ckl!e!!!!!. 7!!!!!52-!!!!!!!!61!!!!7!!!!!1 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' VILLAGE S I C ~ I N B TD c II p I ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.ec 641 ·491L _ _ mg e garage m osta orfices, Ir reception. con· Prerer Udo or . . your s. a au EJECUJIYE New 1&2 bdrm luxury f with 2 daughters 13 & 12 Mesa. SSO mo. ference rm. reasooably area. Contact Secretary, ~·5648. ACCOUMTS REC adult apts in 14 plans I wants to share your SSl-2175 priced call, Pam. CLlll( Bdrm from 1465. 2 bdrm house or find same CdM Offlct R.... 4400 Realooomlc:a 67~6700 (714)975-1152. wkdays, ' •••cm •I/ * SllTE * Hospital Corporate of· from S53S, Townhouse MI F w child 00·3842 ••••••••••••••••••••••• D-'-..... •5pm. r~. FD' • 24 Hour ~RTS fice. Familiar with col· from S610 + pools. ten· Rmmale wanted for up· 1617 Wutclif(. N.B. Want ~ -953-1 zz MC lectlon procedures, in· n1s. waterfalls. ponds ! stairs 38r. 2Ba bch (ml financial inst. 7000s.f. 500 sq.ft; prof. decor, ....................... sunnce co & sell paid Gas Cor cooking & heat· dplx. in Balboa Penin. lst. Ooor. A eul541·5032. oc:eti.anb·~•'!~ 3 rooms • ...._,/.,,,,_/ A •••eo•-•• 5100 For totals~ reduc:tloo accounts. Call : Irene ing paid From San 1 pa o. UJ.IW .. , ,._. ••••••••••••••••••••••• & relax1ti0n massage . Ruiz. 640-8950 Diego Frwy drive North N B Yr y S367 mo M~ VBYSHAIP! ....................... Earn $50 an ht on TV. Steve 10-8,548-2817 CAPABLE PERSON TO on Beach to McFadden ~J.•732 ----'EHIMSULA $700/mo.Call:644-2'260 ....... NewestCaliffld -Baby Attractive Ladies would HANDLE ACCOUNTS then West on McFadden Promontory Pl penlhse. Spacious exetutive of· MI OfffCIS o..16 w 1 500I Oil Wrestling on cable love to party w/you. Call PAYABLE & cash re· to Seawind Village poss PT work for re-rices ac:l'06S from City •1• olfi .1 ••• ~l°i ................. TV . The Covered LynnorLaurieanytime. porting for luxury Ql4l893·Sl98. _ _ duced rent. 631-6000__ Kall. All services avail•· 2 prem um ces avai · S w l m m In I Po o I W1 on. s.56-207'1 953-'3U Laguna Beach hotel. ROCNRI 4000 F w 19 yr old child. Shr ble. 'optional'. From 2Z Prime loc .. n:k c:=· Chemical Service Busl· Lott & ,_.. SlOO Bent:fits & congenial ••••••••••••••••••••••• wtsame. Up to $400 mo sq.fl. up at reuooable wood ~~p a~' neu. La1ua Niguel ••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••••• worlung atmoephere. Laguna &ach Motor Inn. Days. 640-6800 Eves rentals. No lease re· ::U, ,;,_m ft t'si 25 1A!a. No exp neceuaryl Biil: 49H8116EOE 98.S No. Pacific Coast 857·9188 qu1red,rall673-30m persq f\ ~iui:rtKJtt wiU t.raln. li0,000. Ful Advertising Assist. Hwy . L1guna Beach. M IF to shr 4BR Duplex. THI llGHT au1He0a. amount ~ Wiii net F• ADS Ener&etlc, strong office Dally. Weekly, Kitchen Oceanside or Balboa SPACI :~~,~·1. •. i°'t':: pr ocedures. detail a\'allable. Low winter Blvd. S22S mo + utll. THE~_&ft' Rrtll' m &K mrr person. llOO. med. Int. rates. $5294 675·1105 """"1 a.ae1.0lll M1' rKI. ·SZSl. , kr. B~lboa Inn S90 It up Npt prof M 25. Shr 2BR l'llCI p~~=~ BEAUTY SHOP equip. Cll: •u•u•uh•oH AppllcaUons now beln& weekly. K1tcllennette. a pt across (r Bch •UAIAMTBI SHER TONHOl'EL ment and fi.mlrtl for PSYCIDC · ESP taken (or f\&rnitlln de· ocean rront. 675-8740 w 1.M IF Under ~. noo· 300 to eooo Sq. n. Prtme l2At 1q ~ In pluth. fu.U a a I • • I n r I u d ea : '4J.M11 READINGS livery drlvm. Xlnl driv-0~; too.cc. Pool. non· smkr. 1st & la,,t. $2162.SO W1terfront offlctt In eervl« omc:e bldie!o~· Hydra ullc cbal r1 • by AMANDA 101 rttOrd rtqufrtd. can smkr. ll70. mo. 642·1714 Newport Harbor with pr•lve SINWlb , h1 lrat1lln1 1tatlona, Loal: wbtlt female FREEQUF.$TION Moo-Fr1. BAM to tAM, ~ 10. t" ehr buut.Hull.)' decora.t· bo1t all pt avaJ11ble. 0q1 file noon in mlrron, balrdryend Slamete mix w/bei1e ' ANSW£R£D BY ... ..s.~1.,,.m:.=.:..... ---- v' "''T Yt.bl•ttrt.r.n.r edl\senr0CC.96f.4M70, Phauloacliltohpecial ~r1u:'; J)lut~ i, tbampoo bowl• Ill bm ean, tail It back, PHONE "'""'Ho···· pY1 ........ -.. lt. 7S4·88'70Alk fOfJay amenJUtt. Terrtftc leu-be&coe ... s1.1s1-ft for =....,.., CUii, blue ara ........ to CALL17M131NOWI People who need Peoj)lt -No ,._ ·-• -ln~termtaowa¥allablt. ., aO MdaNn. "Llll'v71,*1Jf4. *. •••.•••••••••••• Tllat'twbattbe ""1.•• Female non-s moker. C1 IT'""•u1 J '"· Contact owner I OaJI .... ...... ~ ... --o•nytMW,_ e!-·--room CdM home. S3llO .._,, J dind1y. c had: 811 r.na1e Lab Wb.it• male, a. Mtill ~ .. _,. ~·~to Jell? Mo. 7.._, after 5pm (714 67W66 8albaeP b 11 frilnd~Soatt. SDVICIDIRICTOllY -:?~===~~~~·~~•t::na~::..J nda11. m.a 'm·• tnu ... , - PIANO LESSONS I Your home. Popular/improvising. Ju111tard trained. B.A Degree. I wnte my own arrangements fOf beginners. (714) 549-7521 S.tltS.... ,,,,.. StuOt:f"H 1mprhvttment Cflntr1 N('Wpo<1 Beacn C A 642-9088 Help W .ted 7100 H.tp W ..e.ct 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Assemblers YOU'LL MAKE IT HERE AT GRADCO DEN DOKI. INC. We are a progressive manufac lurer of sortmg devices. supplying brand·name copier companies. locat· ed 1n a great Orange County area Right now, our manufacturing de· partment needs several ASSEMBLERS. IC you have a minimum of 6 months factory ex· per1ence. can work from schematic plans and are familia r with the use of small hand tools for electro-mechanical as· sembly work, we would hke Lo talk to you. Hours are 8 am to 4:30 pm Monday through f'nday Let's help each other make it. Call Jerry at t714ls:i6-9650. or simply stop by for an interview. Either way you will find out more about the com· pellt1ve s alary and benefits our friendly company has to offer AUTOROUTI Need Part Time Person to Deliver Daily Pilot lo Newport Ueach, 7 days per week. Hours : MoothruFri Approx. 3:30to5:30P M Hours : SaUrSun. Approx. SAM to7AM . Earnings approx S4Z5 per mo. Call Bryan Holland. 642·4.121. F.qua.l Opportunity Employer. UIYsmB Grandmother.type. 3 eves /nights wk, for 3 yr old girl. sleei>-0ver ac· com modations avail. _1a una Beach. 494·5951 Banking TELLER Posiffot1 ~ •"°" h1 Hwpt lcll for CarHf' oriat•d WY w /prior ,.,... ill o bHk or sGYil19s & ..... Wt offer the HC· CHifW llPPlc..t mt .............. W .. OS,_ for od: •011ct.etlt. Coetoct 115 ftOW to upon flw potsibiltiH. G RADC 0 / Applcoffom btiRg •· DEHDOKI, ;;t.~C:,. btwtt IOI.Mo INC. 17141 4030 W.Cliandler 631-9205 Santa Arul. CA 92704 Equal Opportunity C ITIZEHS ""'!!!!!!!!!!!lllllllll!!!E!!!m!!!!!p!!!!!lo!!!ye!!!r!!!!!!!!!!!-I F ED S AV IM Ci S Ir -= LOAM 1.SSISTAMT MGR. Responsible person over 21 to help manage busy llOO W. Cat Hwy, Ml EOE&MFH p1na parlor S-6 evenings '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! per week. Some exper. ·-------• in fast food &t o r management preferred. St arting salary com · mensurate w/exper. Ask for Mary or Al after 5pm . ( 714 )546-:1163. AUTOM<mVE . PARTS COUMTllMAH Dealership or foreign auto parts experience preferred. Call Glen for an appointment lOYCARVB ROUS ROYCE 1.HDIMW 640-6444 SELL idle items with a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. LOAM PIOCESSOI Local Newport Beach Savings & Loan has il'(I· mediate opening for 'a loan processor Cooven· llonal Real Est.ate loan ex perience required BUSY OFF1CE. Salary com mensurate with ex· penence f'ull insurance benefits & paid career apparel. Please call : Ms Denny Parisia 71~ Newport Balboa Sa vines 1100 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach M/FE.0 .E. WANT ACTION' _J:lass1fed ~ds 642·5678_ KIDS-STUDENTS NEEDED Earn 13().SSO per week. Trips & Prizes. c.a .... Qm~t.tlJt.0601. .. ~ ~~.:....... . ... , ......... ~ •••••••••~!!:e!.. .. !~!! ~~.~~ .. , .. ?!~ ~~.!!~ ..... ?!.~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT {Tuesd~av. September 29. 198~ .. W..W ,. 1 I r er eonHatlOI\~ G&m DIM'fAL HHttlruptr/llve-lo ' PAITTIMI W....., 7100 W....., 7100 •Ip W..t.ct 7100 .................... • mu olflc1, r:!i• • ~11 7 w-.. E•P•r ol'Ulo Ut .. tant belp tll'I for acUve 5 yr ••••••••••• .. •••• .. •••• ••• ••••••••11••••""" ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ~lr)' Oub rt· . • ... am "'°l ror flali.tlmt potltll)n. oldlalovel)'Jt'\'lnthome Penoo to delm•r Dally Sala SICtlTilY Wu1trtu. t>Xpt>r tn 11 I 1.1.1.mtto:Hm.,c _..' :>. Pri teltlr. 111 Xlnl 111·-. l....--111.1. ~ ll·SSS._Jeµ Pltot111toroutelnSoulh am.a.LEST"TE HIC•OIY•.a.•us kl Ill Al I) ::-Dv N 8 .. • v 1·1rl n 0 C M -1 .,..... 1 "&"nl ·-a. 7 dau1 ""f liA "' ,.._,.. Bu•' 1 "• rl ofr11•c-, nr r c or 11 r ewport fl(n, ' • · •••.J£M . Hou•·'":c/0 -b-ltl"t .... "' .... ' ~ Op • II ... ' • b hi• •" . ~I ml"~' ..... .,.,., -ca -,. ~ .. •10F1ee1AU ·Ls p ly to ~ eourm.... 111ume 842.41S7 bu• U)' lllll ,. "'' c.ur.a. -~"r't· --NOD·• -"'1th•r1nd Wff.. • r ~~~ I d •. ,,,. f o r B II r u w II --"' DIMTALASST .. r .. Hours Moo thru Fri w.a.Ufttft 00 ... ' " r II CASHJIRS '°'""T /CIT · Syrboy Room.board+ Approa 3 30lo5 30PM Ant5¥ holidays Flex Hrs Rr~1.1ur lllut. !IHU.. l w1ntedfor1'4owaalt ln hJe:tlt'1lltd CRT CARRY Part/time, back olne.. u lary 875·3UJ ' Houn. Sat' Sun Ap Faah10.!!.lsland 8'2·0$72. HCUTAIY Hwy.,So l..b1un N pt Bch ti Ir •hit Qlti-ator ..AtQW. I* Mon . 6 W • d So. Comt' to lhur11on. Most C ER ~r eo...• 1 "or atJat ' lYPiu. 10 tq .ckSet Ir FOX La 11 u . 419 UU, prox5AM to 7AM ~;arn wantl'd area In So Calif SALES MANA Potlu & Brumfield Dav W.ted. Gf-oarY • \aowftd fl .UI ~.s:NrV 7 HOUSBC~ approx $425 ptr mo buyt r's l.'ao •frord 10 lmpoplbledrtam, sorn.. ~ lwy•r C.... eeclui te)QIM: """""_.. ORIVERSWANTED Sud Ir Sand Hotel. Call Mlkl' Bub h 111 p ay Cid I Lar ry e"per necestary, mu.'t AMF,1.-.. Growth'opportunil lftli C11hltr Jtlltlon ,. ... ~l •• l'all ... an,,,1, \ ALL JOBS nrr g ,., --'-1 )1ome de-H 0 u s e k eep I n II 642·432l.EOE Wh1tes1des. li albo• be prime motivator. Ha..s •n O()('QJng 1)0 our mall thn.rnlll' lol' f'l ahlOft laland Relatl " ' " "'lA nu.t 11!~rvmU~ ''UM ES. Supervisor, ruaht llhtl\, ---..... ---· Island Rtalty 813-8700 h111e Income' Phonl'. Wes t (.'011~1 ll1•1e1onul ~··~Kl d1a111 i\IJ llt!f)ll ·S:::. !aperitftce prt-· '----lrvlo:&Ne..,......rt areas. ~flrl time $4 l!S hr TRUMP CARO Cor p S ;i ln (lfc (011 a cunlad•·lllJI l'J , M ... t ......... 11. ' -,... n"lih"·Spaot•h PAITTIME 7148516283 S~trd.rl) Octcr ··014A1111'"r1t"l'tl • --....... • dln II c• RalC "'l '1 4 2 s + m 0 J e llS • • • .. ''r .. w SU""fYli<>~. work Reeept 1on1st for l'Or ,, .• l Ml"\ h!I~" "" ~ n • b tVel ' naendr l'<XP• I roortn.1 co ~ " ....... ~___ 1peakln1. 497-4471, l'Xl "' ' ~ 5.a.1 R!l!U.A.lol ... ooruanu or " ' "'"'"'I', Ntt &4i~O t..oolaJ fc>t r«lred con S.U•t -.... 365 P /llmt' even1n11s & porute headqua rters, ,..__..... pro\ltn al.uhty to !11•111 """" ... O.F. traclOr ,_rch)tect who Mi11Jor Irvine company DRIVERS Croll COW'llr)'. i _ Be h EOI:!: weekends Supcrvisan11 Joe 111 ed in N ewpurt Exp 10 concrtte rol\St w outside l'Olllact & lYVC' Wt• nt·l•cl ht•f1)' Sl1om>1 .... "' ... .....ii ...... k No ~ecial Uc. reql'd ..., Wla _ac_ tho door to door llUlr• Center PBX pulsr ex p & acce.ssori~. Draw & 50 + WPM Prrviou~ !?~ with .i pltas1111t vou• r .. ., ... ,.,. .. --Cit u ..... e _,. WOI' , I t t It I p 0 i I I d ( d I · .. h I ""A" I unus~rt,'SAL-l UM o(fa, Ht$ nolbJe. profeuional lrldMdual Mac l'tlOI' Yacht.&. 1831 IHVMOIY crtiw or youn~ll.'1'1'. ~lt I e;t' rrre .1.,.1 IYV ng comm,. 673'...-, -per pn·fr·rred. hut not 1:111111 Pl't\Onll II v •• "'~I or "p;~ A;'34 •s.1'kry open. C.Ompany 'to join lhtir very lon ly Placmtia M a CllmC cell t!nl caroao«ii. for ell g rooml'd non Sales-Men & Women ON' f o1 A11111 c.all Gull' l'an .il~o ty~ wlll ftJI t r llJ """'· ,.,,. • ~~1t1 Insurance t olfi TM I ln Co h I ed per11un with ab1hty to 11moker Salu ry com uo11a •HOMES at l.1111 20 30 hi" pr w1c l Crown H.ard•ll"I t t• A I c '' ll<'O,..Ol'I e t'e. re aECTltCIAM rv e r u mm mo11···ate Van or lnroe 111rnsur11lr Wtlh 4'X "' ~ 17 4Ji1.f1' il.503 ""'" 5114 Ir • W ...... W'fi~R.. ro •oar n it. a will be a a~•t deal of In All opening or expenenced • " New & resale Afforda I ~ -""'· · ~-~!!... I 164l·i;;2. for appl/ln· ldn terfacin1 with }II !i-!!!..~:,:.1Utd. ,1nvenoto,ry. Conlrolol Clerk car ~;:d~r~~~nb c::t!·f~I~ l' ~·auF. ~~ tl !~ hie housing in Orang(• A do~IA:ll f) rt WORDTY"~sTESSO ••••••••• epertmtl!U '° S*i .. oo Small shop offers pd 0 pc 5 10ven ry re· 213 427 Z756 EO F. p 0 1 n t mt• n t A R {.' County Complete traln· vo•nt t•nwur 0 n CAS11£1S ~.lb~aklasr&luntb will be busy a nd bolldaya, medit'al & covordslc }'s cosGtosoadles,..ion Am1·r1l·11 tl H •18SO inJprogram.High com t-;(IE Cnrporall' Rl'Jll) In • ~ t'., ft'r-. ra m 1 l Y interesting. Company vacation to M poMlble ... \. !'art time graveyard & E 0 .1': M ~·111 m1ss1on-h1gh demand seekm~ v.urd pron,i.m M rest111rant. San J uan h a 1 out at 1 n d In g seH-starter willing to benefits. Salary nl!gutiu· evenings, answern•¥ product high volume SECRETARY t} P"I 1-·u11 & 11 111111: TaTI . Capljlh'ano CaJl493-llM8 ben efits a nd says work. Call for appt. llle withexperience Call serv1crnoexp.n~e mtn REC9'TIOHIST ofc WE NEED YOU" forpubhc rt?lutiort'<drpt 1-:xpr h1•l11lol S.al.irj! on-Fra. 11l1ryisopen 7 U ·911 2 (l eave 154·1931,askforWayne lyptogrequ1red Peclatric Exper orwtlltrain Call orOC' Ad Aiienry E' t 1Jmrn 1•n,ur.1tr li'1 COC* lh........ m sa e1._.__ L .. c.~ C1111 _631-01401.W~ Satonl> !Hol2 Mar,orae Mulhearn per n •q F.xr~llenl l>P llrndtb 1111 1• t":.r.ot MARKE."TS •·or 2nd li:ardSblftl '72·"11 Estimator Exper F t i me PAYROU/OATA l'.313!163 Mo b i le Home Di v rng skalls_979-700IJ rnu..pht•re l'<tnl.1rt ·'' I =o~~~d~~ly5~ Want e d . Roof ing Capistrano Gardens CONTROL Garl f'r1d a).exr:ienenced. S27~(7!!!_527SOOO F~rguson!l7~1UMlll4 1. Starting 14 up lo k50. We promote to tnllll&e- ment & Sf.C>ervisioo f?Qrn within pm . C a l abas h Tl............... estimator. Oki expand· Nursery.32136 M1guellto Prestigious Laguna :.mall mfi: s hop, SALES N i':~:OEU lll'Uilt•f'1·11ok Ra r-. mg company. Looting ~~· Niguel land d~velop La1o:una N11:ut!I, near SD * •SECRETAllES• * JIJPI> now JI l J ~"h <\ ~µrant, 171 E. 17th his beaullfW fashion for individuals wllo are EG"• !l!m!IOY ment firm looking for f rw> & Aveo Pkw} Newport Beach leading Pres S80acct$16.800 l:o. Sun~•·• lit h .11 j WANT ACAREl:"R? oata a Island company seeks a familiar with the coo-L -'"""-special cand1dah• wit h Answer 11hont":>. invo1re. J~eler~king p/l1me llel'e pl T50, Fun$10.200 1'1•t1·r~ l.und1ni: ~" t•\1• I 'COOIMCATOI bright lralllee who has struction indu.stry. No One girl office. some the following sk1lb order ma hmallt ~·uu ur e~ee w~l"versed in Genufftce 1'6'412.000yr 11c1 5!12 i\Jli11r,.1ti tNU!:t ~ Coeta Maa • S17 W. Wilson St 6.11·96<& .... e.-... u. someaccount1ng roofm'a e"",._.SaJarv/ legal experdes1red.bul St 11 Ire p T MI C'R O ~a les &offtcepro· Exp C~ultanlOurs 1,.1•11 tJ ;! z,u:;;J.i;;~ pre classes and wants to c 0 m:;, 1~1 ~"o . o a'll will tram qualir1ed .ip ;at~~nt~x::r::sU:~~c:c & p RE t' 1 s JON s w 1 SS ccdures Mon, Wed. Sat Liz Reinders Agy, lnr 11· 11 w•111 ,., no 1''1' I ~. 4&~u week for grow and learn This 642•7223 ror appt. pl icant Salary com trade union knowledge -19!1 ,1508 613 9334 -I020 lhrch ~t '64£0 E ~~101~'.~\;rt'~~n;t.1~;r' ll'P fi· 4 ·""'•'"s. r,, ~h ... Oct. neat company hu Its mensurate with exper •Data Proces!.1ng ex Salespersoo. ladies high Newport/833-8190 Free '"111 ""'3 .i:i:i:t ~ m ........ a "" ..... ,.., d 1 t r Factory Trainee, J>rint· Nonsmoker 67S-l024 RECEPT/ECEC ... "'" Laguna Beach' 494-9233 5th Federal orricea own spa an o s . o ang & packa•tng. Co. . per ·CRT &operations . f<1shion swre. Npt Bch Me--hOftcl•e ! downtown La~•· 8-S. other ~oodles. Starting paid beneftts. l dav work ~~~I ~cretary w/exp m •Lile typin~ G reel pubhc. answer area Salary + good SECRET ARY R.E. '... , Wed• oil. C -•tect : salary tof750. ~~ ---~ .. r-Cml Ut & Family Law. .~1ust·be oruanitl"d phones, typing for R fo: bene_fjls C_all644 7100 · •••••••••••••••••••••••> HunUn.gton Bndl 96z..9ll8 Penonnet Dept. 537-4840 ... .,..,. w.,.... ••r,_, --Se d & S l " ,, Land Developers In ex -Secretarial pos1t10n Ill •-ti 8005, Mftllo toe. .0. 9J. I ...._ JalllMtl Mark'. re:. G~~~e& M:rf~{ &consc1e11t1ous ecutlve suites nr 0 c SALES PERSON Photo acll\l' ~ewpon Ccnll'r ';:'..~~~·'·•••••••••••••• ~l~b• Olfcs.100 971-ttJS FOODSERVICW 1600 Dove su llS Benefits + plea~ant Airport Require~ xlnt lab graphics house re· Realtor's orflce Front :! lira" twm l><••I' tor 1 513429.9495 working cnv1ronm1m t skills andfronl offa ce ap 11u1res outsid e sales offlre pos1t1on rl'<ju1re' kml(• ll,i\11.iml fu1t 1 . Wanted PIT earlr. AM .._.._19~ LOll'tlOTCHIM Uquor Store: Stocking & Call Chm tme for in pear ance Health in· person Photographic good telephonr 1oret' t'hina Kl 111 SKOll l h·art counter .. ,~for -...-nl l077S.MAllOI Cash Re0 1sler ex-terview:83l ~J background required t _vp 111 0, S H & ap '""!!!!!!!ll!!!!!!ll!!!!!!!Ml!!!!!!!l!!!l!!!~I ""' l er..-A " .. -'"' 5.a.~.a. ......... per ience nee sary. 1>ER"'ORM EllS -. Salary t com Ei1pe r "earalll't' R1•11l estate ·"' t 0 Pr•v1oos exnar1en"" " ~ surance 752 5181 "' !H'u 7!1'11 "' ~nu --.-. P in would be n1'ce but not "'"'.-"'""' r " U k l' b 'l'" 1''1 > CAT ER ING Ser vice f!ef'S"•, ptppil,y Donul!i. ne"essary Th er• a~-(Harbor al Carriage) over 18 Apply ween 8 Eastern Oru011 Smgani: RECE:l'TIOHIST only apply lrvane Photo rxpericnct• helpful but a 11 11 1ri•1k L'~,,;. ~1-:-•1·t·h"I 1 nee d s rood prep '854Jl!Ptln.CM •nm' .. heavy liftin; as-13 blks No. MacArthur) & J weekdays 1888 Telegram Co need~ fo'or challenging N B graphics. 17851 Skypark. not r~~enli al Prefor "'a cm· """'' 1 • ~ k •A b P 11 "" "' • 97' "747 Placenlia,ColStaML>sa. S1n oers who lo1·e to tour orftce Light exrv•r. SteG lrv111e7!12·6484 local residtnl Fm an ""~hh.l!ttnS'i~.t.31 ~l!I i wor ers. ... .r. ul' • co•~ Hira • ,this is a large company .,, " .. ~ r " tam e , 5AM ·l.30PM. "".''Ila _,... . d the ii ts 1 Apply lOllm·Spm Live 1n Apprec1at1ve perform m pubht· \1u~t req Good typanf(. spell SALESP/TIME 1er'1~w l·all :'\1n; l>vhl i\nllqur· wall m111t11 fl '.tt Lor i's Kilche.o )077 Ajgrtt51ve. energelit IJl ma sac ge f am il y s days re · have gootl smgmf( 101Cl' ang & grammar essen-WesleyN. Taylor Co. tJll hand Lani-d Onu Harbor Bl.. S.A. !iJ9:t"147' l\IJP' needed u:runedlal~· :heavy. The company MANAGEa ferences, O<'ean rront & reliable transvorta 11al Onh level headed lnstore offil'e supplies bolton 644·49 I 0 b n I Id J "~ SI ooo . forappt. ~forfuUorp/Ume ~ offer~ a very good Must have food service ~1591. tion Call Mon Fri 95 andn1du;ils need appl) 9am to 1 or 2pm Good -545 3115 ._,. tidn No exper. ~-We benerat pat'kage and bl ---670 212 Travel '""nef1ts to "-<'Ond .. expenencc pre· SEC'Y LEGAL R 11 ·• CHECDICAI needs a rew gd drivers.1 493·8888 I ......... s experieo~ and be a e LO ... "' c• a91( ·I . "" "" r e r r e d b u l n 0 I • Ct•nu111t' ra~~ ,\n1 rCtn'\ ~""' wil trm. "''" Ian at salary will start •l $700. to supervtSe personnel. "'" lo5R Pac1r1c Submit resume Estab :"\pt Center la v. rare sel. h<'rl~n ..,. t•lt'1"" Roney Baked Hams 5am to l :~m Moo. Ulru GI CU ha s .1 mm ed PHOTO PACKAGE to T Lehr. 24872 Tim necessary Appl) in rirm nee<b exl)t.•r lt•!!al log~ Wht t'olonaul rrpfl ... 6Y-9QOQ. ----Rita Jol!Moft Fri.Salaryopen fltame opening. llrs l PRINTER 1>4!rwood Way. El Toro person See John. Coasl secrt!l<iry "good l~p S200UIHl ti75 tl.li'5afi S UMT•HELP 972-"55 8:30 s 30 Exper Nord Mdl3or KodakS 92630 orr1 ce Supply 2121 1ng, dtl'lJphonl' &. CLASSIFIED' CO SLICER helpful.butnotnec Con P rinte r. ~;'\:p pr er HarborBlvd-"-C.M:_ shorthand skalb Hedi Appliances ~')10 ADYEIS )l)pmo6am. Sal ar Sun Po11ion control person: tact Steve: 556-3110. I perm F' T Ke} po!ol f{ EC EP'T'IONIST E~lale lilll(illlOO 14 t'm •••••••••••••••••••••••• Winchell's Donuts, 2SJ ,.a.\ _ .., lh Look , lion. ,1deo anal"tlnlt full time pos1t1on to SALfS.l/nME h land ... 1 ..,. 11,\RBORAll~ .. \ r ...... ~,. "'-·-M-.. 9am lo5:-..,..m.-oo. Ml mg .or tnlerestrng , h & g at Th Lo An I T p as1~ on ...,c II 1\l'l'l.l ''.''•'l'",SL'f'\'l(.L t-lltt "-·~i?h.i\tU!ll4 .,.... lmportanl company m Th 6 12 t .nh T exp helpful Colorsenst' an~wcr p ones re" e s ge es ames Salar) rnmvt·lll1\t' n.•-.r. r' r ~ D .. -'--ftaftlEIS 1Newport Beach seeks ur. am lo noon part Jme JVV· ypmg. people I.ate l)ptng & JO C1rculat1on Dept l'Ur· 640 6960 \\('bu~ UM'(I apphanu·' The ClaSSl·fiaed "·pt of CWT 11a' -" S un · W i 11 tr a 1 n · no shorthand required req C'ompellll\'I.' v.J~e~ ke• b) touch r""u1red re ntl y has pos1 I ions Wt• •ell ~eco11·1 • ••uar•! tbe Daily Piklt hu.'lni. ~~.~e:J8J~~~1':ero~P~~ ~P::s~~ei;"farc.,a; rf~lgl ~.50/br 20 hrs. per week includes ~~~ P:~f~k~~ht ~~~~I~· e ,/p pref G~;d <:o. available in sales as a SERVICE STATION AT appha~n~ u 54g JOT;1 opetUng ., weekends. Offi ce on 10 I 30 On Site Photo btner11s. medical •nll represenlall\'e You'll TEND<\NT P llmt' eH·~ 00 one of our leJephonf' Uvery drivers. MllSt be partmenl. This is a FOODSERVICE Coast H .646-7431 Call . Rusty r eltl·an eam an hourly wage + & "kend~ Neat aµ I BUY APPLIANCES Sales d_,_ 1be ,.._...... 21 with 1ood driving re-lot more interesting WOKKER MAINT ENANCE, elec gBrla~h1c~ 3303C II arbor R ei.t a u r an Is In t.' generous commissions pea ranee & haucl v. rit Ll'!t 957 813:} ..,...,., ,... • ...,. c}!d• & able lo work hu 11 sounds as they Fo dwtch nd salad vu. c.5. ommer<·e A 1 """''" n we se•k sho"ld e""',.. r. san a lrical plumbing, pa mt Park 1714 JS49 9322 Call 9~7 """l. ext t""" mg PP ~ '"'"" •• ev. po Old l>ul r unmn" t: E ::11·. '" "' u"".!.t e emn '"" Starts from file 1n many different bly ad rood ~re " &.o7iJ ""' Bl d (. M ,., telephone sales.·befab .... a "".•A_./hr + 0 . .,.. App· ·•a ys It .1s also a assem. a · ing, carpentry, exper T v · · _ rer $12r. t ti upr1o:M' . h .,.,,... ...., -parat1 on iam l ru A I s Production Parkm 11 & RE·CEPTJOHIS f I' I' lo ly""'4.S-'aod an ri . necess . PP Y an .. L'ALESWOMAN. mature. Sl-:R\'ICl':AllMIN rt'l'lt'r '1 110 .. ~ -.. -ly(dai1y atler 5pm Me & artlng.pomt to better 1:30pm Mon. thnr Fri. "''emente Inn. '"" Ave. handling h061er~ Full TYPIST .., a ple.a~ant penonalfly. t rl 's '11B. l7t b & h l n gs -1'tb1'n the ... OOh "" LMI tame pos111on L.·n.,11!..h apparel exper I M Ha ir l nin~ l:.n1it1nt• di~ tl40 l5llt Class r1~ or lele......,_. ,. w ... I r £spland1an. M/F EOE .-" Immediate ope ning 111 h d l b h I " \''I 1 I 1 "" · """""' • Un C.M' t'Ompa y Sil tarts speaking Crystal Crea loan brokeraf(e ro Size S op. Stea y pa n ri utur a~ 1mme1 r rt'l'll r • 111 puu • ~l~sel~~~ff:.~ Delivenes., Eve w_or_k_1~ lat ~ with a~c~llent CLEAN UP AND lion~ A~el 631 s.ll4 ansv.er telephonl'. ~reel t1m~,_S4l ~ upenin~ for t'itpt•raenc1>1I v. hilt' I r :1.lnt • unal , c e 11 e n t c •m p any -lllvail oov/ Good Pa)' lbenefits MAINTENANCE Manicurist p time, 1duys,2 hr!> tla1 p11bllc. uod lite typing Sandblaster exp. Avply ~alrl r •1111> prt1t'4''<.or $2St1 ti IS 511~ · be oer1ls 1nclud1n o 497-4188,~ _ Rita JallllOW Spm lo 9pm Mon. lhru l~layClub Iv AM dch\'er~'. Li\ Call Kalle~9lSO Wood Art.2:.>S West 2nd 1 1 prc!tt'~:r,"'1 ·arra0nt~ HefnJ!t'IJlor '" "'"·ill· • Fri Salary open leaily SalocM • · Santa Ana 5't2 2343 1' aim' "' .,, \'I.' " r~ lu.H• t. f. :.'t'18 l u rt n•• medical. dental, life ift. Delivery person. 979-HSS 1 s n 0 w h 1 r i n g a Times SHIU v.k l.J~un.i Restaurant order:. 1ndud111~ rl'lah'tl rroM f>nwi•r ~:nrr ,1111 surance. etc. Sall ey AllenBeck Florest OTHERPOSITIONS manicurist part time Beach.494-8496. Na l e t1 nJ I' lr 1trht•n C'hool Noon Supervisor rurre~ponrll·or1· lt'lt' 111 w.irrant' si;·, commel\IUJ'al.e with ex· 645-3604 ___ AVAILABLE Excell won111g rond1 P/TIME EVENINGS persoonel full & P lime 11 1 ~ 1 1 s d a 11 } rullov. up & L'u~tomt'r Ll:ilhoa fi75 1.m~ perience PLUS grut ~ll very~lfl'eh;;;;; ~ Appl) in person. Mun SJ 95 hr A nde r~en bilflnf(s Mihl l\Jlt' & commission program. U pe oa.~r !for psrty l o t e r n at Ion.• I FREE PRE·SCHOOL lions. Call . Tues.Sat Counsetinc) F r a . Mag I l pun Sch<!QI• 700.]400 -o Per a I c· I ti k r' "\e"' Tlwrn111l111 I~ l(IJ'' you are ambitiO\al and re~~al litbl'e: tull or co r por a tion with In CM In exchange ror.._5411112!!!!!·009~2'!J!!o!!!!ycel!!lllll!.!'!!ll!llll-YollfhC~ Re~taurant,Sl' Plaza Sec Legal. Xlnt ski lls rilkulator c;,1 •. ,, a:ooktvp w griddh· ~1, waot 10 be paid for your p/tllW Ind Sat Must headquarters near J ohn mothers heJ . 152-SS2S r Adul~ with outstanding REST"U"' ... ~ req 80 WPM. Sal Neg bt'nd1t~ 'alun iw1:1111;1 hf•lllt•r ~ltll 1x,1: 1,1 It' efforts. please call for know Npt Bch Irv Wayne Airport ~ks a Gas station Attendant. MECHANIC ·~hltoraecnlJ10v)e ~orsrko1nn:h~,'','1sh D a' b e': r &" ~ Inc SoleJ>!Ctner 673-9201 b7Le 1''~3111ohr c.t'e'(n~ i •l•:u.1ml 1.. ~t: 14lt;un !->1· • i;,o, anterview. CL areal F~; ·~:t b r !~h t att r ~e ti ve M/F, 1'1th some exper. With orwilhoulloOl.s. w " .. " , .,. ~ " u ., • Persmoel f>ePC• J · U · u1d1V1duaJ lo join their P'ull & Pitime. lmmed. 646-83!!!.._ 10 15 ) ear old }11uthi. bartender ApµI) JI SECRET ARY alt Wa) nd>t.·minj! l'un Rerral! ~IK~ ~ ·"h" &l2-432t Ext. nt ca ev rapidly growing staff. . ~ MECHAH9C F:venmgs 6 ~ pm Call Th I? <: o u d Earl h for elet: contr actor troller l'hark" E Snuth dnt'r l!ii' 1auj!1 d" ORANGE COAST HLIVBYDID;tmS 'l'bis company has an ...,Qpemo .644-""----642 4321 e\t 343 Re,taurant.210Nt'wport (;t?n ore. A R. A P, Cumpanv. I' 0 llo~ h..i :hht-r. SI<!\ t'J D •ILY PILOT . l'llm~) p/tlftae ~n out.stand.mg benefit and GENERAL OfFICE Mac Gregor Yachts 1691 between 2 pm and 5 Ccnli'r Or, Nfl pa yroll. hilling, l.'xper 191., .. In tilt'. Ca !127l:l 046 58-18 ~ ... bl t d ' k d . k Placentia CM_ - -k r \ d l r = 330W B S ,ing9 "'*"• t Of e· vacat.onpac age an as Heavy fi gure wor p.m As or, n rea RE~·rt\L'HA~T Cater v. con ral'tor pre SHIPPl ... G&REC Ponal!l .. ilt~hv..i~hri 111.. .. · ay I.. 1ivery dri•m M!At be a beautlrul place to Must be prohrient ID MF.OIANIC 1 REAL ESTATE ml! fi rm has nvenrng for I Bener11s. gd starting . " · 111.11 "2rMi CostaMesa ·2l wrthgood driving re spend yourday Salaty rigures.lOkeybytouch, MacGregorYachts.1631 rc,pun at1ult LOoperale ltalary Call for ap ~111111111•• 1-.\pericnu ifiOfl.Sc•• EOE MF > card & able t1> work lO S15,600 bookkeeping or acrount-Placentia~ Costa Mesa I SALES Jlolla rl auto ~hcer & p ·1 resume 642 J482 ht-lpful llul v.111 tr.1111 I CLERICAL POSITION evenlngs1 Starts from • ..._ 11810W mg ex per. hefpfuJ. lite Medical A.ss1.stanl Rack I Thi~ 1s our 36th \ear ~e11 learn portion control Kathy Costa M e~a Silli 53-14 \\ a'hcr dr)N Fnr.:ul;mi· me easec • .50-... f + ll~. pp-97• HSS ty ping. P y or · orfice exp for us) .. F:xp pref 1ut \\Ill tram Secretarial Shapptnl!. pJr kar.:1nl! nt'" ••t)(J ""'' .. 1• P/ti. Pl all t *•hr A ~""' Op 't r ad h i n " r 1ne So.u lhe rn t • !'up tll Thi• 1101· l1k' Clencal d 'I Pin•. ITth &< pany benefits. Informal k n o w E K jJ & Perhaps )Oo .... ould en thru Thur & 6PM to Club Wed through Sun )JesJ i;.155421 Wa!thn & l>n1•1 .... hlf• 6JH 2.S4 C.M .:...-..-4.,Uy1fter5piri.Me& .,_ vancemnent. Xlnt com· Laguna o rrace Must California hnme~ 9 30AM tu 6P~1 \Ion o rr1ce Manager 1'1 t I (lime w1ll tr;i1n ('oslil " .... ·~-II·' ClasSl.fied . ou i n .. C. M Al so C'-' T,.... office. C.M. Call Millie Venapuncture_«._ ·22636 JOY 1oinm1it a fmn Jcltn• 1PM Sun 979 0747 for 644 9SJO SIC :ll "A 1 F:SPF:R!-.tl:I: ~ anl' bt'!>t s.•.u1 11111\ Bristol & Ml.'Fadden. An accurate ''5 typing _!fler 9arn:f>i&S.=51KlO='--I in luxun residential .ippl Lon\K1IC'hen --· •· "" • # • • !lmuohl t'••!tSant;i \n.1. Cl•rkT-t-S.A. _ _ speed will land you a MEOICALASSIST arl!a~ surh as Big Ca RETIREE for bearh SECRETARY 1 1 ~c1t-~~41nr. C\1 • , "" n;n,,,.... pos ition In one of Gari Friday. PT Morn-Front & back EKG s. nyon. Sp>~las' Hall P" r k 1 n I( 1 0 l OPERATIONS · ' (,;i~Sl1tll·. 'M 1,, •• 11 .. ai ,· 'J)ftlf91 Offi•~ F ashion Islands most an gs Friendly voice Vena puncture. typani: In 1ne Terral·e. l.1mla 1714,846 11414• 1146.8086 EXECUTIVE i-:>.µenenc·t'l.I ~tm·k ro11n1 tlllmn The Classified Ad vertts· E•perience<t. highly beautiful companies Ea er to Learn. ~6887 64S·J720__ Isle, etc "'' l') Look mg for vers<rlale ~ parb roun1t·r flt'_r,1111 mg Department or the inoti•ated and pro Ple ntv of r oom for HAlltSnuST Medic.al Asst If you are presentl) Jl' career m111ded. mature ! 1 p11~11111~1 , ''' ''. Daily Pilothas an opeti· llfessl-u office is seek advaneement as Uus ts Exnorienced F'ront or 11,e an real l'state:.alei.J top notch ind1 v1dual ,54 1~~1 f h.11111 ingfor arespons1ble.en· i~ lotelhgent well a laroe ao a head MANICURIST .. ~ do \ouhavt•1mrnc'<hate SALES wath xlnltyp•fto &steno Thomp~on thusiaslic person as ~ualitled .. 'j)ersonwith ex· organiz~uon"Tbere will Ora nge County's 111 ~f!sta~x~~;:y 1~fr~~ & unlimited Jnl's~ tol COMMEICIALl.i. sk1llsfor ope;~t1onsex-Supen1:.111 S)'lc111~ clerk trainee. Must haft n 11 enl aceourrt1nt: be a vanety of dutJes, ~i'~~n~&fESALON HUntangton Beach Xlnt the president "' ~our Tired of selling houses 7 ecul ive Salar)' com Dept Si 35 ltt•r hr :\lust previous office ex· secrmnll l!nd htut1an not just typing. Salary ~8177 salaTy for excellcnl co mpan) or1shl'h1'1den days a ..,.,eek' We need mens urat e wnh ex· ha\t"l)r exp mcul·hor perience. If you ellJO.Y relations *ills to lake to S800 worker 848-_ lllJ awa) in an aion tov.er one hren!tre lo learn the peraenre & skills Xlnl hardw.irt'. 11l11mh1n1: working with numbers. 6n acifve part in manag ah JQ• MR HAIRSTYUST/CUTI'ER remo\ ed from lhl' scene skills to manage. broker company benefits In and t>lectm.11 anstalla u n type and use • IG-1og ~vr ~t!IS office needed immed FIT at medical Our president 1s al'a1la commercial real estate rormal orftce in C .M t 10 n 0 r , •1 ti ho a" key adder. we will trai• E xc e.l \ent• beft'efi t72-H55 p T busy shop. worit IHSUllAHCE ble Do ynu nrP'1 ,1dt11 ln rume from mgmt Call Millie aft er 9am· SuJ>('n ·1sel!employee\& youforlhispoftllon:Ex· pt c ~age i ftclu d es w Kids & Adu lts llLLIHGCLERK t1onal tramtnl! to help 1A hlle you learn Super 645.5800 , 1A ork \\tlh "ithout c e I I e n 1 c 0 m Pa 'l Y 111edleaJ Insurance, S1 T,.nt 964~. Advanced Health Center vou mcrea.~e \'our t'.trn be nefits. lire m~urancc. J -ed ·, w , d r a v. 1 n I!~ l'H r or m beo er its inc I ud in • 1>111'-ac>n~ II qualified No pre\lous expenence HAii STYLIST in Newport Beach has an in gs• health ansurancc & den· Tushl mogv t i~qtouarnt~d plumbml! t•l 1•1 I r.1r;tl ~~~:!'. ct;~ft ~f~i~c/f Ne•pott~ needed If you l'&n type. Some rollow\na. f riend· Immediate opening fo r ~~~:;~~~~~ ;;,ra~l~c~~I tal plan Contact Ken. wit~nlhe eci.!saraed Alls. engmc & rn1:1~h.1nu :ii an etc. Opportunity for act..L-jj;;;;;; .. __ -;;; T his large Fashion ly atmosphere. John an insurance balling profit from our color 675 6700 They're the easiest way slallation~ lak1• :id to vaocement. CaU for ap., Island com pany wall Kent Salon: 2-6212. clerk. Some knowledge video tape IJ~trng & sales -lo find JUSt the items and nean''>l St:Jk f.mplm ,_ • 1~.. advance you as you can H d h d olinJuranceb1lling&ac h h Sell idle atems 6425678 · .....,,, men! sen11r nffln• in pointment wt mterv~. fir All ActioA accept responsibility ome ai e 4 rs per ay cou nting procedures training proj!.ram " 1(' _. services you n~. Oran~<· l'uunt) IHIT 642·4321. ext. m. cart for young woman h 1 f 1 b 1 not essen we reel 1s lhr f1nt·~t I •1 p•1 ' .. .,c 381 013 \•I 11.1111 f•ir Or~ Cocnt They have outstanding confined lo bed 642-2434 ta~f uMus~ be able t~ a\'a1lable II y I DI .................. "._ li7'emplo\'er ' • • D~_Pilot D=~PLt :~"!:aa~l~;irs~ez 8-Sda ------• communicate assert1\'e :,.~na:~ ~ :u~~ri11~~1,~<'. . : · Teac~Wanted 330 W. BaySl at $700. ly & effectively with Ill· Just headquane~ · · Toddlc•r pro"rana Eel'. Costa Mesa. Ca Hotel surance companies and .. Equal Opportunity , ·aa llNJ1>1r l4fWPOITIUCH patients. Excellent fr We have opemngsfor.a Sall'~ &exp v. tuddler' l"'l Employer _.._ .,. '72·"55 MAlltlOfHOTa Inge benefits For in rew highly mot1va t('.d Tra1·nee s11san,64U-fll<20N II . U 1 'l 1 cr71 · ........_ t e r v1e w call Alice persons "ho haH• a de T"'"CHrn Yo1,1 don't need a gun to ~W .._, G....-C...... sire to bl! more sur • • M EA l;1' "drawfast"wben you ~ We haveover 40 Excil tng estabUshed Tom p kin s cessful Foran in For01str1ct an~er needed F:aily ·' mfj po ltlo • available in 71 471 4·97S·0700 EOE "h ldh od I t place an ad intbe Oall.r • -s n~ hotel has Immediate op-1e rv1ev. appnintment Thi~ haghl) Sl:JCCessfol local.n Wljpaper ' 1 0 · e emen <rr} Pilot Want Ads! Call W ON" a Im os l e ver Y job po rt u n a ties for ex-/F ---with the sole owner & bas an opening for a trainee in the t.'redenllal or child d~ now -642-5678. ClasatfedAds642-S678 function imaginable tn p e r i e o ced genera I Models needed Alltypes founder, call Wrsley ~ c1rcula11on department Basic skills 'elopment perm 11 3 •••••••••••••••••...,_••••••••••••• t he bank and S'L cashier. The successful Meo, women &children Taylor 1A1ll entail supervi~1on or 10 10 14 year 4 hrs a day School age • ind ustry. candidate wilJ be a seU Noupnec.548-7762. Wesl~~N. T~Co. olcl bo\ and gi rl home delivery l'h1ldcare renter <.:all • Clllt r-starter. have an •P· N\Jrsing R ALTO earners· Areas or supervision Wiii be 552 S618 • -· J . d r fi k dehven. rollectaons and sales. • '72-Hll Utu e or igures, 10 ey Non certified aids S4.oo 2 111SanJoaqumHill~ Sele1·ted applicant v.111 receive li~ral Teacher'sAide : experience. previ<*S ex-per hr Excell. work mg • Newport Beach starling ~.ilary. regularly scheduled For I rvme pre-school • COflllnllftffy Sa"""' perience in handling conditions and benefits ~44-491 o raise11• bonus opportunities and many p 'T & f fl'_SS2 7494 • bp funds aad be al home in EOE. Bayview Coo· ---~-----fnnge benefits such as company paid • Gr o wi n g b an k ing 'an accouotin& al-velescent Hospital. RE. IMVESTMEMT dental and health plan. group h(e TELEPHONE • l'OO'lpany s~ks mature m011phere. 6(2.350S Carol • in)urancc, vacallon and sack.leave SOUCITOlS • 1ndl\ 1dual wllh bank We offer excel I. co Earn while you learn. Company vehicle 1s furnished during •• : ClEAICAL • • • • • • • • L O,,P.I< .. ·· 1.arf,!•· upnl!hl Ir rn>'r' rri"1rr1•1· "1th '"' i.. C'lr.1n S2m 751 2'J,,1 HOT OFFER!··~ COLDCASH f • Get J.25 for ~our 01wr.1 hie seronct rerr11iterat11n .. 11·, ro,1ini: \Oii uv tu , $141 11r 11ll1r.• " \ 1 .1r 10, ·: 1•h·ilri1 hill, Duoal~',: \ •1111 tlJIO'l ,1(111~ 'Ll1Jnt( 0 I di ll(1•1,1tM lll IH\t' uf thr. l'hJJlll•'' li•lr'fi lu•low ·· g l'l ii II' i:t' 1 IJ t a 11 d '.. ! ~1111th1•rn 1'.tl1f11rn111,~ r:th\flll \\di IJil) \llU S25, ,4 'HUI ·lun.tllUll "In~ de •• 11111 llblt' (' n't.' JlllkUp h~ I thl' d1:int1 ni" 'l•l'i'l:tld """' t'Xf'lrl" Uu·rml11,. , IK l!IKI ••;. l h1ldren' llo,r11l.1l • ~ of llrt•nl!e Count} .... ill 1972 l21'l '\t \ IOt't'nt d1• p illl I 11111 f.JJ '1190 ·, ... :. The Salvation \rm\ " 1714 15-li 001 l).'1 Admiral Mde·b' ~1d1• :i•·: dr. ire water in dour,'fA like new, '285 S.'12 7115 J> ELF.CTR ll' ()fl \'f'H 4'>•• yrb old Xh11 rond1t111r( 2 Gold colnrrd $175 641 1672 • • This 1s a srncere ~ 1to ~actt an tn· dividuat interested fi'ml>re thin.Jiit a job. We are a large naliont C:Omp91J which operates In the Ne~ lit~ ll'M. We deal stnetty In hf lttvtci' bualneas. Wt ofter the fol lowing benetftJ: • U L finance company benefits.including a Cree P..t .... offlc. H E R I T A G t: working hours. Need IS immediately lo : o r n e al 1 t u n 1 o n meal per shill. Appt1 in Typ e. rite, an s~er INVESTMENT w 111 Apphcants must be over JS.behave a ~0°:r~ e~rsiat e;;,~n !~ug ~~~~: !Zi:s '{.~~· ~:i· • background to v1 s1t penon 9AM·Noon, Mon-phones. Hrs rtexible. tea ch you crcal1\'(' good driving record and neal ~AD J c.AD .. oc 1 • existing customers in Fri. Pinonnel Call Nancy, 7s+§ML ran an c in g, 1 OJ l F: x appearing. Hours are generally 11 AM dents J 9. Mon-Fri No """8Sl or.............., : >8 •• their homes and hel p M"'ll-~ changes. anveslor de to 9 PM. Monday thru Fraday. Some selling. Call 966·0151 Stove, Cull s1ie raniilP1! ,. ""'""'a. PART·TIME H ELP I fie 1 Cl ..a. S ""'"' • perform bank services. velopment & roum1elin g overtime is ava !able. a ~ l.P.'.!L ean. wo ... s tcood IVl'T • Ext'ell. benefals and 900NeW11C>ft~terOr. WANTED, Sand wich Exper cou nselors. r e If you are guahfied and interested m Typist Ceneral Office 548·8SlJ M84485 "111 ! gn>v.1.h potent Starting NeW)llOftBelch Shop located nr OC ceive l00%comm.Theas learning the circulation busioess Tape transcription Freezer.'-' older upn2hi .. ·1 ,-, ,, : salar.v to Sl.200. ~qual °'J;rEmployer ~~~it ~~1~ ::~ft an unusual oppl y for • ~~:c~f~~ ~:~~/11~0ka~:iorw ~Y2 Wed, Thur. Fn. Edanger clean. workii good. S1f~; 1. MAJOR MEDICAi.ili~ • Call:C.,.., 2,831=321M8*forJoyce right person. Confiden· Pl\1 dail.\". & Ne wport F'm•way. S481151JorS4114W 1 1' • 9724'955 llal Inter view. Call Ask forDonWllhamsor KenCoddard. Mrs Hoskin~ ~8333 W:ishet, <'lean. work~'!; PROGRAM • ~~ot dealt, Clerk I Clas.silJed Ads.-your one-Vince~. After IOAM good s95 ~8 Ml3 im,, • ~· COMPANY & EMPlQVEE RETIRE· : lbcrow SK,..~ Cubler. ·Career op-stopshoei1i91center. TYPIST At'curale. JS 548 4485 Lt • i,..}~.f!'T & PARTICIPt9'10N '"°", •• Beautafol S&rL in beach portunity ror right [n· ,. ·ry ,.,. Reid Sales Supe~ wp~. general nfftce Dryer. gas. rlenn, WOtf(6e, • ~ • • I 0 ca l 1 0 n 5 e ek 8 divldual. Muat have : II . I .................. ····~. I lhJVI duties.~ J9il2 l?OOd SSS 5411 ~13 or.:a. ! ~ COMPNfY P~IO V.OllOfJ • experienced ' person nexlble bra• deal •Ill Limited openings availabl~ In the T YPIST RF.<.: El' 548 4485 '"' • );, ANNUAL SM.MY ~EW 1 : oompan~· noltd for Iona wtt.b ttt. public. Sxp oo Orange Coast areo. for selr·motivated, • TlONIST P R & fund de· w I\ s II F: n , 0 Ry r. R'.f;eJ • 6. EXCElLENT stAATIN9 StftlMy 1 lmn employtta NCR '200hdp(\11. Please career oriented individual who can v e I o pm en l de p I Avocado Hu vv dUlf'H : ($11 ,000to$12,000) • • Ctl:CGf'l'J apply In person . PART JIME EYENJCS work with Field Sales People. Train. Personable. organlud GE.S200 Ptur l•U • • t72·tfSJ Newporter Ion. 1107 motivate and gel results. Station se tr·sta r ttr Varaerl 67~ ";"• • l ~ • Jambonelto!dNB. We are presently seeking adults wllh wagon or van necessary. Exceptional r upo n sl b i ltl l es _ • fyou cons1deryeurMUto• and : pluuot personalities who would be earnings, plus job related bentfila 5516s wpm. EJC.c e ll. Refngerttor •Dtt I : energetic lnd lvldU.I, )11111 _., be In-• HOUllC&llt•S • intwated ln working in Sales & Promotion available for the right people. U you benefits " oppty lo ad Gd cond, $100 •!ca • )erested in talking to• l1"t ~!On It • to ~ork for J.nite'1 with Delly PMot Carriers 10 to 1$ yem old: can produceresulu . not JuJl tallt aboul vance. SanlJI Ana area. &u-8W .., .. 1 • • ror an tce:0unf1 rtee,__ cllrtl : k.,.edy -., 4/da11 UnUmltecl earninp available to riibt person. • • it. call 960.o894 for interview. Ask ror 546.5780 Great Refri1t Sm whltt'9 : , , : w'Hk1 Hpm.1{5.t$l4. Hrs: S:30PM to 8: 30PM , Monday thru Mr Chance. --VETERINARY Olbson top Crtt.r 14C~'..on • For a persoh• Ind ~-tlll ltlllrfilw • Houaecleaners·•odtl Fndey. Some Saturday av11l1billty For ~C:...t HOOPIT/\L Gd tond 64.\ SI~ .~, : t.all • ' • bomet • ftul deamlpa. a~menl, caJI. 6'42·4321, ask' ror Ben • • Kennet wort ' general Nearly new Calotk d - • • : Car. •II*· anlJ, •lllr. Wi . 330 ,y .... S .. -t uslstal\t f, rull time hwubt r, blt In n~ : t 1t1 • e Ml·7!ff. 11"'1'9 Mon·Stt, 6 hn. Min 111 64$ leMlftlP ~ff • 714 s ·~·~7S!la0 ' :' ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Costa Me50, CA JI 8ner1et1c non Maytas w.-; • Ke1 : ~ ~ : f6l6l•K.l.A. HOUSl<LUHDS to .•• 330W.IAYIT'..!•COSTAME~~.t212' • Equal Opportunity~ • _!m !.tUJ!!!ne. ·1511. mort Htny~ul t ~ ". • .... a.. .,.,, •tr,s.-.sm ·. AHIQVAl.11l'l'OltTUNITYl.M1'W'l'lll ... : Cleumtd Ml,,.,.. brytr ..... =·=·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~~·~~-:·•;.·~~~:.:: .. ~·~·-·~·~~~~~~::-:-:-:~-::-.:~-.:~~~~.r:::::::::=:::;:=~:=.J....:'~-···m·•·~····~·~····~····~-;;.·~·········~···~····~····~·~····~·~····•· .. ..L·~··~·~·~··~·~·~··~·~·~··~·-·~··~·~·~ .. ~·~·~··~·~·~··~·-·-··-·-·-··-·-·~"-·-· ·.l.~!:!·~~~!!!!~:1.~1111~~,,,!!:~~~ .. !!!!~~~ J • ~ Orange CoaotDAILY PtLOT/Tuoldoy, Soptombor 29, 1981 "'Ci..""' 9070 !~.'.' ............ !~.~! ~.'::.'!'!!.~ ....... ~:·.~-=~ ...... ~~~·.t:':~ ....... ~~.~~~ .......... p •;s;;;; Nit .... ... Pth 8017 ..................... ~. "72 t•hc.wy •lep van, low G...,., '701 Mada 9731 Yolkaw..... t77 Ctdflec ff ti , ........... ,, .. , • ,,, .. , 11,11011,.... • BOAT SUP Up to 30 ml alum body $2200 ....... ,.. ••••••••••• ••• • ••• ••••••••• • • • •• • ••••• 1 "••••.•••••••••11 •••• ••• • .............. , ·· • .................... ••••••••t1•u.......... 8albo1 lal u llboat pre "'"'"'.388' 111 • ' •• '73 vw "US 7 K ··; MIY•US1D t1 All StMIBltd Ca1e.S~I\ .,.., ... 11,, .,j)m. ·111 Dt<lurtan, ~I'd. blk '76 M111d11 RX~ w nl'v. 0 " 1111~ 4) 77 Sevtllt• C11d • Q" bdrm "140, bunka Lovely Wlckerchl!\tlDjl t1U.0nU\pedntal,175 :f:IO Call afttr t/17 1972 ford Cou.ril'r Nl'Yt lnl. lo rn1 12!1.00U tran' 11m (m 8 Irk 11ri11 mtll"I Nu PWIJll. nu Moonroof lthr lnt, 111 "'-it 10.peed, doo, d!JMlW S.110, IOla t lbl SU. hln bed SW, Yellow 8rMJttd t.ove . , paint. spok1i w 1 t l'I 67~ Mii fl~ Mt Ill bi.rk •<'11.l 11r1 1(11 "tr u Ro i off er aee&anUIOO. louaut uoo M ll bac k p a ek f 1 o, Bl~NO 1 SUp. W.M , Nwpt lkh. run a 11 ood N l'l'd 1 IMW t1 IJ M .. , '7lf M re S2MIO Olm or 646 293'1 ·~· t reuea/box aprlnu camera/unit SLS. A I xlnl ota n 11 C h e 0 k d 1vall. 10 1 10131, '300 brikes 11soo roll l'\t-~ ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• •• ~~!~................. tr11dt ' Clil •roltt 9920 W hpeect Brilbh Im· Twin '80. full 90, Q~ ~n~· Amaion. Tamed & lo~a. ~1'!3l~5'.'4 l•41 644'~ Wt! Mt't'tor &11 .~11 ~orS46 U.<n •••~•••••••'•••••••••••• _. UkeoewSU5 . 130.llORE!!TT l Save SUI New Rull.tllc ble Muat uc $200 Newport 11111. powerbo11l. 73 ttanclwro ll.lllt rnrnl Any llooDfldt•IJt>•I COO~~S 60 ~ ,vw lclt & r1aht *Ca..•. 'U • 17 h ln .. _... 1100 m1ple SCT "" , .. _, l S3S-$llO up lo 42' S220 W1L\11n v.1th shtll, SWIO l .ill l'omt' St~ L', 1'odll' '' vn' ' door• 13 Ml door ~ t -.,.,... A 11 "'a"'n"' CUI ape -t-61311'911 ' EXCLUSIVE 4'iH'h W~km styh• whl CcrY_. ti • II ....... IOJS tr:P~!'.~·~hH\J ~' dref(adllowt/DolAb)' ':!.~ d!gltlall 8btRabblcll' 1~r ('WlhlCl'Ol&S •-..a... s~ totO a~i:n 631 C..1111 ~'k ru1 ~ MAS~RATI rims tor SuJ)l'r HceUu Nt'W J Car Waj(Oll Air. •-••••••••••••••••••• • b"" u cce.,_ me• wn • t le --.. I: $20t11 ~!1144 11ulom11lic lran&. pwr ., ft~ooo•v6.. l!IJh a ""l:S.S40-7Q!ll C202 It normal t•PH SllverMartln.MSUlO •••••••11• .. ••••••11•• Y•1 t570 DE'"~SHIP ~IE•Nin"&brakl') radio "' AA ~ Co h 1 h Co.t = SAC Sl7S/bat -~ ••••. ••. •••. ·••••••.... "'~ '73' 1 flu, or ..rni:t• \\hilt' • 4' 'Iona XJntdeck ur • ovesul. c '"· f Koo' Cock1too.lwersulp)lu, DIJ$TMAI'( SAD HA.CIC . \\t·ll 1M1wr •lll}'°'hl•rt' :.u11111of 7 IJ.t!"t'nl(tr tilt wh1•f'I, murr ' ·.~ly Save al ~/ft ~12117 -~:r~~te:a~e=b! W 63l·3'49_,_ Monthly boat & R v. !HJOUll 11 s 211iu2 Mur11ul·t1lt' !'kw> BEACH IMPORTS $2'lSO 495147$ ONLY s799s 111.., 1"ruh lolld arr1vln1 ouom1n, S300 o r AK sbde proJ 3 yellow crested lame UR.NI 74 < 'h1·$~~k \ Jll IMW I in the \\nrld i ~1 1 r h. "'' \\ l' \ha u~ t S\\1•1•the11rt' (46771 . :IJ&-~an1t1me~ 2 M 0 w a l er b ed otr t Yr Old S(ar's elec Plw1 & OnJ-1 1090 sto,.ae for any Size. 24 M l~'l()fl Ylt'JO 1148 UowStr1•1•t l'IOO vw Squ.ir~·bk. Ot'W HOWARD ca.. • ..-. tJNl Bricks. ~ Each ~'i:,u~lful. Sl':8 ::1~ typewriter w/case $1$ ....................... b r s er u r ll y. r r <>e ·~~a~u~td ~~:~o~~~~:~1ri;~ \\!'.RY PKW' 752..0900 paint. brk) rutt' 1tood l>u\l• Quail Sti. ... ~Y,l'°°-Clean 840 r you . • 81r1a1ns • CaU 6'~Wl5 Conn Or1anboant1que l1unch1n11 " WIMhtng 6451170 I 1 ~:X 11'st'WY I 1009 llarllurllhrt $1400 N4Z7 190 NEWPORTtH:AC'H ._......__144-21'-S • --- -art U!_m white, 2 lley ards 18 prlVlleges Newport 831 ·2040 495.4949 631·7170 71 VW \Im S:l500 ~:11..: 133-0555 ~Illa. ie·~'8·s. 115.00 Cocktail tabll', elegant So~d M ahog:k";trhen P.eda l musical varla Dunes llJl B11t·k Bay Must St'll 1 "'1!1 l.l<xl i.tl' \ ;111 I C'IOt.l.J Suuda}:i 97 .. 0 11.000 rni. lll'Yt dutdi '(. laar.Uor $25.00 Glau lop. 3X5 $280 cabinets + appUances lions $350 Ba I boa Dr Newport 8earh ('U:;tum 111t. xlnl 111nd MtrctcHS ... .. (;ti rnnd ~Ill !JtOIZ --' _,131..()324 ~H29S --~· 675-66SS 675·971S --644·0510 $3300 S-lii 51)114 Sl 000 000 ....................... 1978 SCIROCCO -wooo• "'TH~-Queensiu M1llress & Pin Ball Machine Bally SPINET Piano New Alltos Wcmtttd 9590 ' t I . NC' ~·<>lllt ,111 , l'hampt1"0t• Eclrtiun , -Box Springs Comp . Sha rrer Bros Asking ••••••••••••••••••••••• ltl\t'lll r} s~.1.1.L 'I " . .. ,.,SO•t 0 •boarda/bund.le, w/hdbrd $100. 7~·025S ~ht96~.~9 ~fi!/;:"~ ..l!!QQ,~&·~ _ Tra111portatloft Wf;J'A Y1'1>J>l><ll l.\ll j OFNEWBMW'S WEPAY ~:~:i11!.~.~1r£t·at f'und l b ndl .6'G-9885Jim ~er 6PM _ &wl.-ds. p Kimball Sw111ger soo 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for tnp u~1·tl 1 .ir' :-..ilt•, .ullt Ll'a\ln1• .11 TOP DOl..UJt SS .0 0 Lii c fr ....1-/ r l . II J k l' 72 Heetlt' ~1111 C"ltnd. Ill'\\ 4 Must Sac. Brand New Liv -. ----keyboards (lfll Pedal ~"· -Oft'll(ll I CI01t•,111 , Ill ('OnlJ ... 1111\t' (11111'' r~ I .• J(' .urnn •••••••••••••••••• rm lbls lamps pictures 12 Aqua Cat. new sail ~645-Ull5 Rtftt 9120 t'la~Sll'!> H your rar '' l't'llt'nl "n 11·1 .i11ll 11o11 h l JIM SLEMQt.IS tf3~~l'<~ul:~11J~\~ t•di '.X€ESl:fO~ Pups. AKC. bunk bd,curio' ~Best ~6yopoe w~',~:f'r S ~~~c Beaul -19*/ Yamaha or-••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.x,!,rs11T , l'lt•u11 , 't1· u' I rll-11t I IMPOttTS C\&IS\P stre. M/F. Pet & Offer. 5S3-1041 ___ 770-4052 · gan, never used, was 101 • Camper i''our Stur ' r " 1301 Ouail St ti2 Bui( "\Int l'arnl & ;1~1~.i~.ft~ ~ t Y · 1 pc Waln~ BR ~et Incl S~edtSh ·rrplc Sl.2S Oak S2,9H w111 s .. 11 fo r ; ;~~r~~er~~f 1 ~ .st~r1 8 ~:1~~~h''.~~~:~i' 1~1.~l\~ll~ 'nu~~~l'.1\l'll ;:;;~\.1~~~};~r~;;; · <m<erou,... L>k<O<• <hoi• S65 G' wood .l!.l!!O '4+<0l4. Bo""'·-"'"''""' ~k' I t1llwr · firw l'Jr' 111 t'A tiH f'l . """' 111:1.S mut1JI . FllA PIOIUM? ~OO OB0 75l·Z496 -shade · . 673·3600. Ston. R~. Sleeps 6. In excellt'nl 1• U1 nt · 1t1111on I l'O hrh, C'lutd1 11:11nt , PEST FRE,E e lec· Matching l~veseat & Electro Airless PalntGun lor 1095 condition 1900 Ca ll <' • '111 '7'1 240 ll. \Ulll11C1f, autn nial!:. & tin·' .\ ran• • ~oak~lly1 rids your sora. brn plaid, only $150 $45. Culligan Water Sof ••••••••••••••••••••••• bet ween IOam 5prn .,1 11 or..,. c_.., 1 Wi• .ilw hu\c' J lt·Jw ~J~~~111~~;K1'1'Ll';~·.11'~~1' Jl''°'t'I MIL\t ,l•ll b} 111 ~ , lme o al .crawbng & for both. SM-4566 __ tener $IOO ~2141 BEAUTY SHOP equip· 631 7657 1 oOllJJ n\ 1 h,11 ll'.t"'' 1 111 111 •. i 1 • , 1 -, .i 1111 SJ500 OBO ~~ 93!15 Y I n g 1 n s e c t s 8 r o w n I 0 v es e a t . .. -· --meat and fixtures ror h k r .. SEE US FtRST! We hll\'f 1 Hood i.elt't'llun o f N i-; W & t S E 0 l'h I IJ ' CQt.IMB.L CHEVROLET ~llJrlx1111;,c1 l'llC'iTA Mt~-;.\ 546-1200 197M C'ht\ lmpula 4 dr \ C. I'll PS. R<rdru E>. 1·ellt'nl power. gfl•a l ITI t ll' a.: 1• SJSIKI 1191! 6073 .1ft1•r Ii J>e.r nently. 635-8028 malching recliner & ot Ce.1lln~ Fan·Casabell~ s a I e Inc I u des : ~!!~~~.~~ ... !!.~~ ~'.~u~~~ :::~d ~:,L~ F;11~1;~',j· 1 H!il ti~2G '80 VW Oashff lie . toman, $175. (1 ) h1-f1 in ~ICloria~ .• Antique edl Hydraulic chairs. 1980 8atavusmo~.xlnt tltllon;.il mfur111,1t111n Ull i.11 JOU ( () 1111''1'1 1>1ewl E··m·llt•nl 1·11naJ .'13 n11•\\ '""' IJ:llnl ·SHIH TZU pups AKC cab ~ tton, 52 .bl~des. re hairstyling stations t•ond S350 h·:"in,:pll'J-'l'<.ill S1lll•r llluc· ""'I \\lit' JJ 0011 m1 111 \ll't. 1hru1n• t1rl'~ c;uolf _,.' d Cash. J ' · • · -verse, 4 tulip lights, was · h · d · .. h I • t tJ I nk 111••t.1ll1•· 1·Ju1" '"rl ~".~.,·1 r 1"111 I t s·• · 1111 711 Che•\1 Ch1•\ l'llt' Sl!~JCI C1wxl 1~Jnd1t1011 Ii-Iii H 123, ;ifl IH 1 ~ --.a up. . on y. Sora. pecan commode @Take 1.2S 730-0086 mirrors. air ryers, 760-8500 71 t 97:! 1;;,11 711 ~.I 'Ifill ~ 1•1• ., '"' ;1 , • • u .., "" .. ,. ,, 1n ~.1 ___ _,,,6Jl.:_,93al='-end t able, AM F M · sha mpoo bowls and Wh p M ., XI . t,1" hwll1lll'1 Sl:J.f><"' OllU7rill(W10 1141!1824,t.15~2 t AKC Irish Setter pups radio/ record player in Rem. elec. typewri~er lounges, display cases, MXpeda.y Mo~~e Xtr~i/ f ot:q:1wi<l1li•al a11rti;11od l 1!17111!11 ·70 Bui; 1un1cn ·\'11 --------• sbow ,orpet,all shots'. cabinet. Call Laura. $150.Counter szrefrige allsupp!Jesand more. Eves&!6·seal$2!15 :if\f'r ~alc''l'f\11•1·"'' ·711\ltlZ:.!~1111 ''IHI ltkt: \\'hllt:.15.~iJ1111 l'r·rft.'ll lllllll • wormed 12 wks ready 759·9282 $1~. Alum ladders & Call 6Jl·!n~ or, after fl. & Ill'"' 'lt.2'•1 rnnd 5.lll~'ill1•1l''> • ' ------m1Sc" 493-0087 calJ 898·""""' Motoberane ..... rf ('Ond : to IQ. $100. :117 E 18th, Sofa, love seat, chair, ot· ---" ----""""--. "' ' K-IU HI to I 'KU lt.\11111'1 UI t :-. ~.I I • * 1 • • House D C.M. an lime. toman, ()()(fee table set Fridge, S250 Washer. $75 TV, Radio, 300 mi on reblt eng, j 1:1 1:111 SU' Full I'\\ r ~llH M1•rn·o ll1·1g1• l!lh j .CLAS>SIC. AFQ}lAN Pups AKC $200. 546·8973 Dryer, USO. Corner unit HIFI Shrto 1098 !,lk~Oyi. 6:~:,.8.~~ wt~lds 6 SALES-SERVICE4.E.A~1NG unmof 1 """'' 52.INNI I \I I Onl' .;1,01111 I' I' 0 1•1 "'/{~.A Top Ch G · ds' ----w1table. $75 644-5800, •••••• ; •••••••••••••••• , _...,_.~ ?oa w '" SANTA ANA , rni ""' '"'"' .!~ 51"1 1;.12 ,17511 11~111a ... n.l'' F amp ran ire. DaNshTeall ext 7332 Home548·8809 BeautifulColorTV.2 yr 79 motoberanr. ·<lnl 714/835-3171 llllll\"l-.\~.11 4amouseap.~:..7Eo~qlutsite Hshld fuU Couch, lov Hid~. 1:ke new. wrnty FrAe delivery cond. 1000 m1 S350 or CLO~EOSUNOAY Kiil hllll ih Si irrn·lu, lo.Hlf"rt '' JI\ \f,\GEI> Beaut Bit AKC Ger ~ea!,. bdrm set 846·7824 $180 I BM typewriter. 1148. ~6·17§6_ st o er !>46 Wi7 The Most bcitinq Ill'" :.~I\ 1111 lu.ul1·cl ht'Jlll'r,,. l111o1'l'l l'd 1111.-. 1!1111~ fantasltt" • • ~... "' be (( 11 :-.1.l t.rn 1.111 11i.. .. I IJ,I. Ill'\\ \\t'ht·r l'arli l SIIOO SU~~.!'·b~ P83ulp·s7~J1~~ Mchaepslte$1r35oc.kP,!adnrachweesrt ~y1poeowr1~e~.n ~2a51 Stereo components, re· Motorcydet/ PortOfYour ');!liOIMl li73i.'UJ 1l·111'·'~ull1~!.' ~~~'l'" 497·4 189 '""' """" ...,, or ~--ceiver , tape deck. Scooters BMWPurchoseOr t5lr.-I ll .,.,N t.•olh 111 'llH•r ~sm t...11.1J ~;82 · of drawers Sl.50 Stereo Washer Dryer, Sl25 cassette recorder, ••••••••••••••••••••••• l•o••C-· .. "'8• \lnl ioruhlluu l'rt1l"l lu 6~1 \\.1.:1111 g1~11I h1tth 111111 -"""~=------2 spkrs, cass. & IJ.Lrk. each BMW Prtable TV, turntable big !tpeakers '74 Honda Motoreyclt' 19K "' "" -.. 1 1 ff Cocker Spamel pups new 150. 963-4000 W . Side by side fndge, new cond.' Men , m lies Perft't'l i•ond Mel ren BMWll "'" 21\o i·ompl "''lorf'1I 1 111•1·1 s i·ni.:ua· >l''l u i•1 AKC. M/F bulf. $150. 7 -----t.'I?~ ~S-8798 ........ nlS a .. l'Jll .1fl 71'\I, 71'0 !jjffl M2 ti71l:I art ~ ;Jl k t I 641 1672 Obi bed ~ Couch $40 = --SS2· _!1000 549:;!158 I Buy Or Leaie . 1,1~c .., • • . •u 1 ... 1 r 1 w a,.verycue. . , . • MEMBERSHIP ----WE PAY 8 0 ----Plant ''"'"' \111hr.11•1t1·1tr\•1 I''" ,un~10 "'~·." C 'lTalt H W'lh' Brass/glass tbls, etc, Stereo cabinet. soltd Suzuki 400 Enduro I025 lt urr~ . 1,11111 \lnttuncl ~1111111 \( !>It-rm ...,Intl' ~111 an e er 1 etc.642-8905 Newport Beach Athlettr wood Banaly 3 piece Mr . Xtra knobb) Xln1 TOP DOLLAR I 4t 522 533 3 ~s·• J""f; l>obe pup, F. 3 mos. no Beaut wood rum dr set Club 150· 644•7968 . No room 846-0503 <:_ond ~ ~ 0277 • i~u "~ · · • '" .645-02:84 S400,bedsS200,chairs& Carpel·wool shag, off ALT EC Stonehedge 67'TRIUMPll 650 FORUSEDCARS ORAHGECOUMTY'S ti!U1KM:1.1,:1\Int111~.S. Volvo 9772 Int to Y• 1045 lamps $.5-$20. 640· 1059 whl~e. xlnt cond. 145 sq Spkrs lrke new Cosl Clean. Gd Transp 1 ALAM MAGMOH OLDEST ;,~'1, '~:;~·~,1~1 '!~;~.~'ti' ...... ·· 1 •V•• 0 •L••V•O••D·-::·L-:;.•• ..... i~ ................. 2 Belmont Barbe~ Chairs yrds. al $Jani 646-ll~ $400 each, Sell both ssoo .1800 548·6466 I POMTIAC/SUIA.RU $'t, """ Cl\ Chihuahua max female, 4 42x30" Mirrors with 2pc sectional S295. s· 84§·~1 ·10 Honda 175 CL S300 2480 HJrborBl\it 111'11 ~'l•Viu 111111 l'<IHA;>;Cf.t'Ol '\n approic 6 mos-sweel wood frames. best offer c iron tub S8S. pedestal 18 in Philco Color TV Needs some work COSTi\ \1 ~;.'iA J:li -.s25 "' ~ri:i o"m I -~--'~::.=..7,_,,649:=-. 645 29n smk $100, Iba sink S35 N d S 546·01_16aft 5 PM 549-4300 549· 1457 I 111 "H i•1 :11111-,11 '"' SALES, SYVICE FR.t~ long haired k' -------499 3105 ice coo 175. S.ilt' ~·1\11·1• I '"1 111a: :wou • '·"h nr ,,.11 A.HD LEASING lens 6wksold. tt-Home or dofCkice·belaut Pal~ trees . ate col 675-8793 $ Ot '74CHOINI DA 100 Ad PORSCHES Roy Caner.Inc. j2,S,1M•t i•~1 .,,.., o\ ~:RSE.\S DELl\'F:H' 673-5175. partner's es . wa nut . pnv loats & M..-I I a Ansv. er WA....,...ED llol" RoH't· 1nrn MG 9742 E~PEHTS _ burl hi·gloss. matrhing lection, potted & estab r-.:--' 11544, 642·GJO .. 24 hrs n' I '-lle.t 1050 bookcase&31thrcha1rs 40 15-gal cans, 35 5·gal .. ,...,........... .78 S k RMl25 Allo\\ u~ lhe11p1w1rt111111' 1~11.l,rn1l•11t1• ...................... . ....................... 5S6·4564; 644·5642"'" __ cans. Rhap1s Humahs & ••••••••••••••••••••••• . uzu 1 · "!"er to l'Ons1dl•r th1• pun·li;1'<i' :'>.1•\\ J>Orl lk•.11'11 t•lll i.111 EARLE ll<E · I BUY Excelsa up lo 16' hgts Gftterat 9010 ra ced . S500 <all orlrade11111l)our .. 1t•Ju iM U\1\\' .t.'I~ ,1111 .. ,1111 VOi.VO .... ** Che~ry Bdrm, 5!~eper. Also Chamador ea ••••••••••••••••••••••• AnswerAd ~543 · r orsrhl' Ch1·1·i.. ... 1tht' ,111111 .imlm1,1 '"'"' l:l!i6llarlM11Kl\cl Good used Furniture & chairs. tables. T\ s, etc Species up 10 20· some WANTED' 642·4300, 24 hrs Toda)• 1 ir,, \11 s 1 -.. t 11 COS"TA \I ES:\ Asr!V:nces-OR 1 Wiii W1lldeal.494·1~e~ Cycads" 2131698-1336 Boat Tra11erfor24'Sk1p YAM 175. KAWA 125. ~ ~ ~l[>t)(I 1i1:1 ihHi IMMACULATE!! 646·9 303 540-9467 se SEU.forYou Garog•S. 8055 crib elegant ltaltanSSo J_ack 557·1566,17570.~ll BULTACOiZ>Not streetJ ·f"f)j;-~tft D t 9720 '69MGCGT6CY 71;:!tl [)L,ill.r•tJ rnal(~ 114ASTllSAUCTION ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• Giri's 10 spd SSS 'uprt National Children·s Org . 64leg5a11496S l99 earh or ofr '" l,, ~ .,-•• ~!!"!'................. ln,ult-&.11111 'lt•n·o ~upt·t i11111l SJ.'i4M1 4 6 lll-9625 Qn sofabed, loose pillows. e~ 494:0328 non profit. needs your _ • • " .... • • • -a • • \l1•1h P1•rl1·rt • • II.)~ I Ii;; new S350. 2 gm livmg --gift of boots. cars, land ·75 Ka wasaki 250 dirt '' ' · ~ttur 7J l'Jp 1·1a~ td tm ''911 n11 St;!l5 I' 11 5'15~ 77 El l'am1n11 l'lil~'" .111 \ltJ' 'I:! 8l1Jor IK·'t 11rfl'i 5-lli IOJll I Corvette 9932 •••...........•........ S;1m 'J" time .i 11111~· ~:I\ .. J ht! Ull Ill'\\ II ! 'cil\ f 11 t•• l'ljUlp!Jt'IJ "llh I 'lh'l'rl ur JUlom 1111 I ran,01 '"'on 1:10577 REil 13m~ w111n. 1011;;3SJL\'ER IO:llQi HEH,r 1113t!IJ2 l!HO:'\n. OeSA#FIS ~ . I IUY FURMITURE chairs S2:S Ma hog dbl Student desk. S95" Color etc Liberal Lax deduc" bike Needs Mmor Work '" "• •' " · i>6 im 497 ·4189 i7 l 15 'A a!lun 'l" k .11r Lea 957·8133 bed sle Sl.2S. Antq. ladies TV SISO. Stereo. Sl25 lion advantages 12131 $400 080 754 0255 Mier I 11't) itr11MI 1•11111t. S50f~J IOI S El Cammo R1:u1 KING INNERSPRI NG Oak desk $145 Anlq. wht Couch & Love Seat, SlOO. 930·0552 6PM WE BUY t.11 '15!12 li:ll lJ;7(1 SJn \"lcmentt- EXTRA FIRM tt W'cker r Ak $50 End & Coffee tables \ 1 R B""'L' II CLEA~CARS 1)11\\\ Hl!-t\lu,1,1·ll1m HJJ0S!!l1 1!12~MI ma ress 1 .o'er More For Info Call A 'ON Redcre~t I 755 "'"r,\t'l' ent n set. never used. worth 963·4090 _ 645.4174 wrth ~lthuut 2 h p rond $1500 AMD TRUCKS I rm•cl1,11,·h ~;.!too OHO Dodqe 9935 CHEVROLET $530. sacr. $248 del. Hontt 8060 ~ P ool T blL h J ohnson OB S800 962003.5_,892!19(XJ 1 ~·1 \l<,H Suvcnnr ,ontl ti-1211121 ,···•••••••11•••••••••••• Never used queen sz .••••••••••••••••••••••• S75rs Tim cT : ~f~· 846:0021 '77 Yamaha XTSOO En \II \1 .tll olllf'" IAI LrJ Autos, Used 'ill l>od,:1'. lll'ed.., 1,11\t' wortb $399. cash only Patammo reg 1. Horse · e oc · loots M • duro Xlnl cond Man)' \1 1 \Int liu\ s1;·1~11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Joh S2m 'Im IJ:•t Jlt1·r $218 del Usually home Gelding Western Bolh woric well Eves '. annt 9030 Xtra!> Must Sell '"~1 211 1 H5 lulck 9910 5 31! -quatauon msmpron ----••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,.. ·I ill 21SllZX 2 • .! b mo:. n1•\\ 1Porscht 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• rd 4 754-7;® E · °C"'-1n 840·3320 Eqt111pfMftt '"5 390 I Fo 99 0 MUST SB.L Del Mar. Perfect youth 2 Ka ngaroo Skins Great 200 ft 3 8 chain $600 300 'l!O llonda 500cc Dix I ,\!o.,.um1 '"' ,11 ~11 mu • •• • ••• • ••• • ••• • ••••••• ·~, 1111 ... k c \•nlun I.Tl> •• •••• •• •••••••• •••••• • ·Mahoga ny Dbl. Bed show h~rse. $2,500 Size ~~~s~1;x,w~.~grngs. lb dingy oa;its, $125 Mantcond.SJ690 \11dt)\\ll 5.'>.'l 11~~· 1969 POl"Sche912 I ~rlr. Ii nl lt1t1dl'li Ii :w. l!l'ii Capn Ghia \'6 \ c· w/mattress Night stand 7·9 Equil. swt & chaps -· 642·5879 644·5244 543 9246 HIGH IUYY 1:t l> \ l'il ' •tuZ ..., 11 \ f< I' \1 ,1 i.. , I mi Si~OO •ii I tli:ll IJi\llJ \\I F\I t'il'"~ttl' rJ1t111 &r d~uer w'match Like 642·91Q2-·----l\bani5 ;opdspd24 .. 27~ ~· Re;d Manual Sewing MotorH~.Sdt/ To11 tlullar., In; S111•n ~.\n·ll.1 111 1·01111111011 \\I ~\I Sl•~t1 .~'li12fi Codilloc 99 151 :-inrf S.!\l!MI. 1 oew. Must see to ap· HotlMtloldGoods8065 "5 s . · machine SJ75 S·L ~ Rettt/S'--9160 (.tr, Bui!' t .1mp1'r' m.11!" \m hn. 1·\tr1' ~·'''" 1 •••••••••••••••••••••••i ~12 .t!)( p~1ate Only $1000 or •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• Llltle Girls Bike. S35 Wmdlass' ~·Cl\ 642 5879 ·--r I !111 ' .\ur11 ' 1131~251I"'1:.ll 11;.x ,., "' 11111 __ _ _ _ _____ -. CO..,TEMP' .. Tl..,G Mercury 9950 b ( " Hot tub never used -L-..Y·_ -••••••••••••••••••••••• . I r ' . • . .... ..... .... es t o feL Marra Chrl1hnas~ial $125 Juk B b L k loat p 9040 RENT 22· Lux Motor \~~ n1 l I \l<,H i:lll\"l"l \ 1:•1•1 -------------CADILLAC' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6 31k'fd797 a f l 6 PM Shop early and save 1 Sev.."Mach 1 ~ ~~ •••• ~; •• ~":::........... Home. sips 6. St'lf ronl JIM MARIMO ·11; mr·~ "' ,01 ur 1,.. 1 ut \\, "lll'l'IJhii· 111 j,.J,.,., i!1 ldr \'an'I 111p \utu wee ays, anytime Queen stainless steel ---" -·----clnt cond PP &IOl!Slj5 I VOLKSWAGEN hr !tli 1111• BEA.llTIRJL!! for 1h 1· ht1'llll''" 1., lulh t·quip(X'CI .lrnmJi wee.llends. lf 00 ans"' er wa lerless cookware. . PartMr W..tecl T • T - ' 7 I 18711 Bea1·h llhll i~ !IJ!-11n "'Ill/ • ,1111 I tlii Pnr,C'h~ !112 •·•·Utt\ t• & prn1<·"11mal ii_q; 842:! pJetse keeptrymg 81 air House Cut lerv STOHIES TICKETS 24 Sea Ra~ Sundanrer rotten, ,,,.el 91 O H U:-JTI l"C'TO:i.. H L\c 'fl \t · \\I n1 ,.,1,0,. ,1111 • • \f et'h r1·rf1·1·1 • • lar~ c:-1A>con Mustan9 99 52 20 t S98 I A d d I • · 5 VHf , outriggers. bail ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 1 • ~-_,""'" ao as, new. . AV· mguar oor a arm 41-3554 1 k NB Sr Sl.2S 12· lravel trailrr 842·2000 • 11nd S-11"~1 ~\I 1,i.:! S.UXMI Of Htw 198 1 ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• eseals. S88. Sleepers. andmuch.muchmore' an t iP· mo0+ S600 ;; .!Kii/ .i,,1.1 .,nrl 497-4 189 Coditlocs I :o \l u,1.1nl! ur1~11al $199. 1ACTO~Y 957 5708 ~all (714) SSI 51122_ Paul Blame Henri earl~ ;~~~ E,? ssr.~ a S45·41:11 WE MEED n1.1i::-.ur )!Wei I 1111.t How In Stock! ""' n1·r 1111·1!1'11.< 1 .• ~~e:.1 . Kr:oe1Mer Oarush walnut Model hom.e. furnrture 011, 24x48. Tahit1anco,e, -MARLIN-BOAT I Kenskill 14-. sips s. xlnt YOUR EXOTIC S5!11~1 1'11 x.1.1.I \ R ""'7'» din.table &6cha1rs,up· new oak filing cabinet !315.673-6223evL_ _ 2 . L h th t . ml It wgt S750 OHO &BRITISH CARS "iH llllll '•:! ,,11,. ,, , ~tJ'Ji.1¥Wt:h04 (~:'.,\J )Bl(l.~( .. \~, ;;;1;111:1 on..: o\\nt'f lu l right buffet. good cond. cradenza. paid $875 sell John Wayne Tenn1S Club t:wer. u ~ ~~ bestu~r 642 682o · 1111 fn 1,, tJI••· "·'~' ~·· ,1~11 \ 1 , 111111 \II • " lu.id1'll 1mma1 r onrl ~rer.549·1355 $475 Rattan table & family Membership fer 673·7l!S -• ~EWPORT 'ht1·i"k "' l'\t1•I ""'I \lt.1• \Int m .rll "'·"' Sl!li.> iW l!l'lti Simmoru lude-a·bed sofa. rhaar set, paid S460 sell Best orfer 644-5369. -Allto SttYic.e •. Ports Ji;.'""' 1111 ~.21111 c .di Lo 1111 1.,.,111111;, rnuntr, hK :'llu .. IJO~ ~ :'II (j1J like new, ll.50. End table $275 Simmons queen sz 673·5897 Shock Newport t>lectnr & ACCf'Ssortfl 9400 MPQDTS li75 ll!ll~I lii.1 t!!Ci"I .\11"1 'l'll lht .. 111·1·k \~di nmd 51200080 It limb $3S S5l·907J boxspring & mattress. -packet Hard top model ••••• • •• ••••••••••••••• ~ 1, 11-01 .. · ·. paid SSOOsell S250.NewTourmalarne Mink. New July '81. Sl3,99S SHELL for To~ota 1..ic 11.1111 \ut11 tr.1n• l 1h )Jr l'\l pt) !lj!'>llllll "'" 1 l'U\t'mc~'aGt' Chi~d 5 del~gh t. fire Kohler Bidet with Stroller length. size 12 ShockBoats.673-~ longbed or sim1lar .:uod 3100 \\ l°o«-'lll\\\ •t·r1Jn E\1..th-111 111nrl 1">.i 1 ~ ~111 1i.-o 'f>!!l'uupe1k \1111· :!llr Oldsmobile 9955 eq.uie bed. lights. tares, pohshed brass fixtures . Like new. Days 842 8166. • 2~.M at th e;-s 19 56 cond ~""" 645-825A \I'\\ pon llt'.11 h ''31Mt o HO t'' ,. "l.1111 ' run~ ~re<rt ~,....,., tlHO • •• •• •• ••••••• •• ••••••• 11u1es Must see S800 ev4 • 675-11""' • -f""'V. • I 11' -i· • i. ' "" 1 Nf.t4'7 paid $1200 sell S600 Call "'"'---"' Fly bridge Cru 1s er, 4 new Sears lm!ll S20 t'a 3 1142 !Wll'> c ·' ·" 1 11 1 '"' 1,, ... Jll.i Kl •111 :-.1 · l.11 .:.1 llr.rnrl h4J Iii I I 75 ST A.RARE 2 0 . ff d h 846·6836~ --Ml1c.awo.a. bristol. 2 heads. shower. used SIO ea F78 x 14 WA~eo '· . \ II ·I I ' II n II 'I t II Ill'\\ tll'\ 1·r fl'l!"l1•n•d rJtl jj ~ ... , 111·· SXIH)(I Sl\11~1 642 !lJl'lb versl u e c airs, hwtlry 8070 W..ted 8081 ~~.IXX> 846 9060 _ S52·Til5 "I llJt1 hlu1c~. \1111 runnrni: 1•l,1trnu!'" 11111,1lh1 1 .. 1 .. r ·~1\1 ~· 1oq1upp.~t Xlnl i';' R~nr\ ~Ill l.o.ul~d lpea~~·rl ~arv· ed4 waoontd1qu&e •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••••• .. Partnerwanted'26'Penn VWTransaxlelR S \\ c1 L\.atl'lmo<Ml,1'.'".n,tlJl:.;11111 inn1Jf bfMI ru.1~ \\h" "1"Jlh1•1 '"'·~r1'"' ,"~' ivnrl 1'1'1>1-1;2511i,1•, ~nun Sunrnuf I' I' " ' Good I 320pl y SF Olsl 1979 l . & les RO o \Os u' .11n m't1·11~• n·.111<111 ,1,1 r111111 '1 .~~•.um h'Ulllt' h•;i"' n -!I "'52.lS:!:! cl11i~,S.SOeach.Garage d ndves~menMt k BALBOA an NB Ii . SI"' m" JOltlts ax 51750 TODAY '" 11111 .. dr·lr11,11•1 "''" ;,.11,c11;,11 .... i..1h' r.1.11111:••1 1:.1·1lor,·1".1 •l1.u.·1·l"f11r'~ S-1·on Sal ccn 9133. ramon s lll ans 14 l * * mac . s p. '" mo. 6" joantner cump $125 k r 1 \I " "' n -i <>LOS C'ut Sup " • '"" ~ k d O l>r;i 1'"· llt'\\ Ii.ill a 1·' n111nth,'"1th•"•\11ll<11••1 ' • .. •" rang, $280 14 l +equity ep., ys. 644~6591 " r~ "''" \llSTSfll I I d So . J>Csect.lonal$75.4 Walermanpen &pencrl *nay* 730·6620,evs,s.57·9327 Sl.ti5't 7141'•i2 lt.:!I ·"1 RollsRoyce 9756 unrlrr \\h11l1•,al1· S.1-ltkOHc)it2~2 1·;~ wo".en seated. lad· set. 1'2 oz gold. Sl90. Dft . '78 Sea Ray Express 26 A.lltos forS. ::, 30pm ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• iS2H3ZI i a dtr~ark chairs, made m ~M lo 12PM 673-~ *ewe* fl. Top decks buffed out. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t-_T_O_Y_O_T_J>._._vo ... t ... v .... o,_-4 Fiot 9725 A' 1 DEA LER IN U.S.A I ;;; :-.l'llJn Rur1' j!OClll Pinto 9957 I t ~ 1 Y S 2 5 .e a · 5 14 CT GIA rated md Dual 470's. Xlnt cond. JM PORTANT ''" Harioor l hd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ma1 nel.'ll minor 1111w t .••••••••••••••••••••••• Overstuffed chair S25. DIAMOND. W tJ Ii ~I. local ~. On). Newbot Teak &lnt.Cur NCYrlCE TO Co•t•M... '78 1214 H.1lb 1;11 i11111I fR~ROY ' "p Sl;;u r" 11 1' I""'" ""''"•·k "I End lable w/drawer S4S. Superb cut! Only $4500 Co. b111i11Hs Mall renlly Npl slip Prob R EAOERSAND ,,._ •O ·t lOl o.S 4o.u .i $2.'>IMI or 1 .... 1 llJ} U.t>' [ ~ CARVER 711 HSI li21G rund Oni: owner Sk~ Ba 67~9715 PIC Reta.II "alue over wlahH to pwrchaH New owner wlbe perm ADVERTISERS -, I S:l'll! 1 \\ k n•I hlut: S91Nt OHO 1r~111-11;0 lMNlSH IMPORT 9' teak dble Joan~·3640eves 1.1.C . 1Ml'llbership. milted rent slip S26.IXX> The price of at ems Top Dollar ~111 sG75 • ' 11.r ~2ol~Sm~~:;£ I \.i:t ;,o~~1 ~1 \~:::a~''.;r;~ ·1" Ii l'M Sofa. bOt used, exquisll Mia .,._ 80-10 Cal wit~ 9.5, Jack. Firm 972·4500 Arter advertised by vehicle Paid Hondo 97271 L :!"~rt ewn !Ilk lllk ratini rool ltlk ·71 1'1 :'\TO wr~ t'lt'an, Less'than \otSllOO. • ••• ~ .. •••••••••••••••• 17 I 41972-2104. 6PM 963·1053_ dealers in lhe vehicle ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ lthr mt Wm• \\hi~ rrui runs ~rt':it. a~k111R ~IO SS2·TI1S CO N O O ON T II E class1f1ed ad\•erl1!>ing For Your< ar • VISIT YOUR CtO\fO SUNOAV\ fir mah. •h i:u;ircl' 1111 l2 '1 PG s.i5 ~ Wa~.kg si,xlntcon· lo•elalooM WATER an btfl San columns does not in JOHHSOH &SOM mal· .um m1 Stti54kl jPOfttioc 9965 do. Cuhonly. $175 Heh um Bouquets de· WFantedlh · Tbep !-.etChler11 "A.. Otego, sea gOU1g cruts elude any applicable LI c*-Mer ORANGE COAST Subaru 9762 l).lO 862i i ·•••••••••••••••••••••• 673-2312 live red. Perrect for or e eps1 a eoge mg hull w/hseboat com taxes. hcense. tran~rer 2~~ Harbor 1ft~ H ONOA •••••••••••••••• ••••••• . Hi :-; t'' r 11 t' ~ u 11 I ·13 Lr mans Sporh Cp•• ID>t bi'd eabed $75, sml every occasion.673-4419 Game. <Under the Caps tort. Bristol cond 43' fees. finance charges. Ct>'lla Mt-~a !°)ltl";Jli:i.t 'lll I "hrl'I llm1' \\,icon rl(1u1pprd lmm.11 i·nnd \\h1lr \\ hlue ant ne"' leCtioaal aota SlOO f ir REDWOOD 2X6'S or Sofl Drinks) WiU pay long. 2 state nns. com fees for air pollution rnn HEAD~ARTERS l.tk(' 01'\\ s.5950 \lu-1 St'e 1·ng 1·arh. \Int rontl •--p ....... s•-consol• $100 to the person who pletely ""'WP for wknd lrol device ceruf1cauons W• PER TO AV.II. I. I'"' ("'7~ SIN"' 6"3 ....... ~ ...., -~~ "' 4· to 20' long. Xlnl deck· flndsooe.~·5372 Ir ving. ~home lux or or dealer documentar) .. "' ., . tl!l711-12.1 """ ' . ....,.. -Ing. f resh load arriving l h OVE UNIVERSITY Toyota 9765 'tlCJ SE\'11,u : Whit t' 68 GTO. l'lll'm rnnd, "I Qn kl Sa ft u -tc-J1 coastal cP<•;•ing. See to prepara ion c argcs un· lwlodli S·\l,•'"&S"F'.l'VI<··· Sl6"' . u ue oriental sz wee y ve al SS'/ ,...... 1111 ....... I lh · f' d , ""' ' , ••••••••••••••••••••••• J!<\ro ro11I lnJtht•t '"' a•d. brand new . . 1-fn••llts 8013 apprec ......... 000 or lrade ess o el'WISe spec1 ie '72 (' II 1 l ' J im 646-988Sanytime ... ..,,. b h d · ForY"ur(',<wwt OLDSMOllLE oro '1 iorn 11·1: 22 nuo mrh.'' SIS i!'!tl 193~11 ' · ....................... for 4SOSL. real estale or I e" a Ven!3er '' "" a3< 25 po c r~t t 00 3"c BEAUTY SHOP " • p t H-...D.. .. ~. m " '"" ~·oit1 951 9392 •''A'· 9<1 SJ.<."J V•9a 9974 u.1. equip-Brand New Pearl Snare money Ca 11 ( 714 ) •-"-/ V W. orsrhe or Aue 1 """ A • 11....,2 < 42 · ~ "' ·• .. KidaW. SlOO. desk &c chr ment and fixtures for Drum New Ludwig Atlas 4J3.17Z3 c'l:;;ic.a 9520 GMC TRUCKS 1 3 "" "1 da>~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1150. v. seat SSO. gld s a I e · In c I u des · Snare Stand. $100/both. Century . varnished with ....................... •Wk'fl8= 2850 llurhor Bl\'ll Trhamph 9767 197!1 Cad cp de Vt lie Lan ·74 K11mnback $800 Runs ch t .882..am. Hy d r aulic chai rs , 673-9482 465 Olds. Must ·sell VW p'oRSCJIE 'L'lll COSTAMES1\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• dautop,"'1rt1whls.lra.8 good Xlnt trans <.:all . a>1p&e wood early hairstyling stations. n II 932 ,.ETTIEST " 540-9640 TRi COn\'Crt. 6M m1 \Int track. teal green 31.00() Da\I at64.S 1919_ ~ID di.niog set & mirrors, hai rdryers, Bundy ute. exce · con· · 673-1· '57 T•D 445 E Coast lhw;" rond, maroon. Jlf, ~ m1 Xlnt $4000 and a!> ·;4 Veo. lo mi. nice int . buttb .~1893 s ha mpoo bowls and dilion.SI~S84.9 loah.Sal 9060 INTOWH! a1Bays1deDnH; 'i9 Preludr Lolldl<tl 6449592,631 "26'i0 sume 24 $200 pmt.s auto.gdtrres.runsgood. loun ges, display cases. •••••••11•••0••••••11• IEST OfFB! Newport Jjcuch 673·~ S6t00. Sell itllr itemi> 642 5678 494 41!8.1 $800 ~7 6J.l8 lfqletJ(utch~.Only 9 allsupplies andmore. Cerwin Vega L48BC 18" 15' Cal. needs sails. S.'il 1148 mo .id. Moving East. C11l 631·97~ or. after 6. folded horn. Xlnt 300 Single piece mast ~. (OOSlJKZ) Premium prrces llO Hond3 Mt'Ortl gnod Autos, Hew 9100 Alltos, Mew '800 Autos, Mew 910Q 2S46 Santa Ana Ave., call898·6809 wt! S250best.645-1170lv Call after m.642·9217 paadforan) u.~edr;ar rood ~1.200 851 n5!1i ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••,••• I foreign or dome~llr 1 1 F . V. Racque t CI u b ms 12 rt Kile with trailer and rn good mndation cays 675 72.JR e\'etl tiret1me membership, Bundy clarinet used I all accessories Ex· SeeUfi f'irst' '78 llon1la C1v1r . """"' xlnt racililies. $800. mo. $195. Chord organ cellent condition. $'750 brakes, Michelin~ 963-69e6 ISO. ~s.8938. best oHer or tra de pJtnt. \\'arT motor u\-n New run size bed, rom· OffktFw•uv& 536-~:1767§1!4 _____ ~~~~~~~""""-=~ hu_ul 7608160CtlM plete, 2·pcs, ~. Securi· E .... p••llt 8015 28' Classic P28 sloop, UNO Ford Sedan Deluxe. Mazda l y wi ndow guards. •••••••••••••••••••• .. • Volvo dsl w/choire Npt concours tror>fly winner. S', GUii It Oak Tu .di· lS-. 750-5832. Large executive desk m oor ing . SIS.500 f~und up rtsloratlen. Uoul toltee table. Uke Lawnmower Top ol line w/chalr. $495. 661·1313 12 500. 851-6228. aew.1,IOO. ~size McLain. $1 00. AM 631-1716 21' Vent~ w/traller, 3 '29 Model "A" ford CO:·~ ':;'·211tah 644·9060, pm 673·8585 Type writer, S mith sills. new Seagull mtr. DELUXE. Re plic a We • 1•1-·dn{ s, Kay. C or o na po rtabl e. manyxlrl.DanaPtdry Manycustomfeatures. plia-.,wr l •I ts Pool ta bit and juke box. rt t. . 548>7234 storage avail s.1800 da 5S2·5200Carol oJtfJ(; •200. Kathi Both lint cond. 1295 ea 3M Copier.New. (714) 131-SIZ2, 838-0'14 •~Drtttt 9550 • ~ f'l5-&327 ""S .... .,. $1000 ev. Vf ·~ , ~-'---------!······················· H bed, l lSO. G ri=din 645-1295 41' TA RTAN 0H·1bore '80 J aep CJS. Loaded _,. XI l reeo·at · or occ. 1·1 k h. R d "' • -· n cbaira, /0 80 all. cru1:1 DI etc a atr, w/XtrH. AM/t'M 4CV, IZ55. Medici.De chelta. SU ea. MUST ~a 1 SSB. omni, VHF, etc. 24MPG . t!IOO. l~l wood round 5 USA map. t7S. Mir· ~ Brl1tol cond. 1105,000, ~ I dlala1 ta ble ror, 54138'1, bev•led. ~. ~::•prle~~:~~~urn. 11 ~~ ~mapblt lb10 1 · Xtra Heavy Duly Winch. •I Ital, f15. Gd Purple queen velvet IZ0,000 uvwu. ou e f or off road Vehicle ~ad, SIS. Fold.Ille N E W S A N Y 0 U • 75e0 50. ~ 1-S . truacnblr, -QWla. Have somtLblal to tell ! WANTAcnONT ~a.aor__, lti.d .. do lt ell. ecum \ ....... .--..-- WllUY USEDCARS&TRUCKS COME IN OR CALL f'Olt NU Al'PUISAl Corrn1cr-OeLlllo CHEVIOUT 18211 BEACH BLVD HUNTINGTON BEACH 147"'°'7or s •·llll 9738 ANNOUNCING 1982 MAZDAs IN STOCK! RX7 's GLC 's 626 1s READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! AIAHEIM MIDI 601 S. MOM II.YI. (114)51121 l j . ' t I ••••• DUJJll COAST . YOUR HlllTDWN DAllY PAPER T l Jl '-.U A Y ~t t-> I~ MIH H .''f I 114 ! I ) •• A N l. l <..: (J u N I v I A I • I ..... A "' I "' ' ' . Slaying suspect admits-"fo being in forest By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL O(_o..y,... ..... Thomu Francis Edwarch has told Orange County Sherllf's Department investigators he was ln the Cleveland National Forest for three days after the fatal shooting of one girl and the wounding of another before de· ciding to leave for Maryland where he was arrested Monday. Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said Edwards, who was interviewed at length after his arrest, said he left the forest area 20 miles east of San Juan Capistrano about the same time that a s heriff's Special Weapons and Tactics team descended into the area. At t hat point, according to Hart, Edwards drove his camp· e r -equipped plckuQ truck to Los Angeles, abandoned it in a parking lot off the Santa Ana Freeway, left his dog, Brandy, HAVE FAITH IN THEIR DRIVER Thl' Re'" Bill '.\1cLau~hlin i~ ready to chauffeur '.\1 aite ~1cGregor <.ind '.\fabr.'· Steinhau-. lo the member~hip coffee for the Women ,\s~oc iate~ of l 'C Irvine Interfaith from 10 a .m to noon Ott fi a t the :"l e wµort Beach homt.> of L'CI Chanr<'llor and '.\1r~ Danit'! G with a local reside nt, then boarded a bus for Maryland. He was taken into custody without incident by two sheriff's investigators and Maryland law enforcement authorities after t e l ephoning an inmate at a prison where he once served a term. The inmate notified a warden who in t urn contacted authorities. Harl said 1t could be as long as 60 days before Edwards, who has told inves tigators he will fight extradition, is returned lo California where he Is named In a $500,000 arrest warrant. Edwards. 37, is charged in the death of Vanessa lberri, 12, of Lake Elslnore. one of two girls shot without provocation Sept. 19 near the Blue Jay campground in an area of the forest near El Cariso Village. Witnesses s aid a man drove up °""".,... ...... ".....a O'o-tl AldrlC'h. The com pletel~· restored 19~ Roll~· Ro~·re touring model. appraised at S45.ll00. 1~ being offe r ed for ... a ll' ~1l 539.500 to bc·nefit the Interfaith Council whi('h t:.tkc·~ earl' of rl'lig ious nl't'cb of studcnb on campu-. for rurtht>r 111f11rmu t ion on the ('<.Ir phont> 833·0891 250 seize d as Diablo protest e nds Victims will meet Stoc k s post r eco ver y afte r scare SAN LUIS OBISPO <API Authorities arrested about 250 demonstrators and a diagram error forced engi neers to halt the loading of nuclear fuel as the l wo-week protest s iege of the controvers ial Diablo Canyon power plant came lo a halt. "We're very relieved it's over. It's going to be refreshing for workers lo be able to go to work unimpeded and without having to go past a line of sheriff's dep- uties,'' Greg Pruett, a Pacific Gas & Electric spokesman, said Monday. T he Abalone Alliance, which organized the two-week protest, has said it is ready to oppose the nuclear power plant with dif· ferent methods, including com- munity demonstrations and sup- port for court action. The pro- testers ' campsit e near the PG&E property will remain open for about a week to alJow jailed protesters to regroup for the return to their homes, an aJ. liaoce spokeswoman said. More than 1,900 people were arrested in the showdown, with about ~ being picked up out· side the plant Monday in what demonstrators said will be the last day of the blockade. Among those. J~ed were rock ,sinjer Jactspn .Browne and actor Robert Blake. Browne. who wrote and re- corded• such songs as "Doctor My Eyles," "Take It Easy" and "The Pretender," had been re· leased Just last week after pleading uo contest to a Sept. 18 charge of tres passing at the gate. (See D~LO. Pase A.2) Reagan sets press meet WASHINGTON <AP> -Presl- detU._ Reagan wiJJ bold a news cc.rue!W)~e -)U fourth in eilbt months -4f1l a .m. PDT Thurs· day, it was learned today. T he ae11loo lJ expec~ to be held in the East Room. An ao· nouncemeat of the newa con- ference wu expected later to- day. The president's Jaat new1 COO· ference was on June 16. Two ill boys set for Disneyland LONGVIEW, Tex. <A P> - Two young boys who live conti- nents apart but suffer from the same rare and deadly disease, will get a chance to meet each other next month while enjoyi ng thf fantasy of Disneyland. Sen. Proxmire e nds protest on d e bt limit WASHINGTON <AP> -Seo. Wi lliam Proxmire, D-Wis .. ended his marathon protest of a bill to raise the nation's debt limit over $1 trillion today and yielded the Senate floor after 16 hours of virtually non-stop talk- ing. ·'At least I have made a rec- ord on what I think is a great 'watershed in our history," be s aid. Proxmire, as be had promised he would, r'elinq~ished the floor at 7 :27 a .m. PDT rather than de- lay consideration o( the debt celling meas ure. which is Qeeded to. allow the government to pay its.blUs in the fiscal 1ear that begin5 at 12:01 8.)'ll. Thurs- day. ' ~ .-kl be would offer an aniendmel\l to hOld .the debt s limit to $995 billion, requiring $60 billion to $70 btlliqn In ad· ditional spending cuts or a tpJD· crease: • \ • Proxmire bepn is l~ about 3:15 p.m. PDT M~; s a ying, "It i s a c lear responsibility that we go into painstaking detail" before pushing tM debt limit over the trillion-dollar mark for the first time. · Through the night and into the morning, he railed to a near- e m pty chamber against the legislation sought by the Reagan administration. But unlike fllibustera in the past aimed at blocklng or slow- ing action, Proxmire aald be would not try to use..the tactJc to prevent an expected vote on the blll. The debt Umlt bUl, already o- proved by the House, muat be aent to Pretideot ba1ao'1 desk by w ednelday n11ht' to keep t.be covernment from losln1 lt• autborlty to bonow. Several private citizens and an airline will send 9-year-old M 1ckey Hayes of flallsville, Tex· as , and his fami ly to t he Ca lifornia amusement park. He will meet 8-year-old Fransie Geringer of South Africa there on Nov. 29. Both lads suffer from pro· geria, a rare disease which ages its victims prematurely. Almost S700 was contributed to a fund established at a Longview bank in ea rly September. Braniff International has offered to fl y the Hayes family to Los Angeles free of charge. Any leftover money will be donated to the Sunshine Founda· tion, a Philadelphia organization created to help terminally ill children realize their dreams. Tbe foundation Is belpinl bring the •South Afrfcan boy and his family to America. Ted Key, a father of three from nearby Tyler, Texas, volunteered to pay for the family's ac commodations in Disneyland. ' One of Mickey:s wishes In life is that be would be taller . "If a-child's greatest prayet' is ~o grow taller, then it is the world's obligation to see that be has a box to stand on," Key said. By The Associated Press U.S. stock prices edged higher today, extending Monday's gains that had quelled fears of near .panic on markets in Europe and elsewhere around the world The London and Tokyo s t oc k markets . meanwhile, made strong re- coveries today. In New York. the Dow Jones average of JO industrials rose 11.32 points to 853.88 in the first four hours of llradlng. On Mo11· day, the Dow index fell more than 14 points at the opening before rallying to rinish with a gain of 18.55 points to 842.56 - its best daily gain since March 25. The Japanese market, whlch closed before Europe's opened, gained .. back all its losses, re· cording its biggest one-day rise a fter its worst singh~-day decline in history Monday. The Nikkei Dow ,Jones Index of 225 major stocks. whlch lost 30Z.84 points Monday, recovered 320.56 points to close at T,357 .68. , In London, brokers raised prices sharply as soon as the market opened. By midday, the Financial Times. index of 30 in· dustriaJs had climbed 18.1 points <See STOCK S, Page AZ> Golfers using guns Swine r avage Santa Ro.sa links SANTA ROSA (AP) -Ram- paging swine have ravaged the rolling greensward of the Oak- mont Golf Club, prompting the genteel sportsmen into a shoot· Ing war on the links. The Great Pig War s tarted when golfers discovered that the normal huarch of the 36-bole course were supplemented by pigs. one a 200·pound boar, which ripped up six fairways and aprbns, accord1n1 to RJcx H anae n, assistant course auperi.ntendent. The 18th fairw•Y was almost deatroyed, li&n1en said. The fOl.f era toot to 1Wli, and the porcine body count hu rtaen toaeven. "It's been almost a daUy oc- c urrence the last couple of weeks," he s aid, noting the "divots" are an unslgbUy and unexpected hazard. "I've lost a lot of sleep over this," says Hansen's boss, Mike Clark. who does t he s hooting with his son Bob. As many as 60 wild pigs have been sighted by residents in the hllls beside Annadel State Park. The Pio move toward the golf course, center of a lar1e res· idential development, when their food and water 'supplies run low. Plgs have roamed the oak· studded billsidu for some 30 (See PIGS, Pa1e Al) lo a location near where Miss lberri and Kelly Cartier, 12, also of Lake Elsinore were standing, c alled lo t hem, then fired several shots (rom a .22 caliber . gun. Miss Iberri died two days later Miss Cartier s uffered s erious head injuries Then, witnesses s aid, the man s ped off in a truck matching the description of Edwards· pickup. Two men who gave chase were able to observe the license plate number and notify the sheriff's department. Sheriffs personnel spent more than three days combing the rugged wi lderness for Edwards, described as a "mountain man" and "gun buff .. ' Ha rt said Edwards admitted to investigators that he was in the forest during the height of the search. Edwards thus rar has made no <See SUSPECT, Pagr AZ) Wayne Airport faces loss of U.S. funds Once again. the federal gov· ernment is threatening to deny Orange County gover nment funds for improvements at John Wayne Airport over the issue of how the cou nty intends lo regulate which airlines serve the facility County airport officials have been advised that a $1.4 million grant of federal funds may be withhe ld unti l the county "d e monstrtes satis factorily" that it is complying with federal laws requiring that airports be opened to new and qualified jet air ca rriers o n a non · discriminatory basis. lt was slightly more than a year ago that the Federal Avia· lion Administration made a similar threat with respect to a S4.5 million gr ant for purchase of a parcel of land o n the airport's west side. T h e county eventually re· ceived the money a fter a tem · porary access plan was ap· proved that permitted two addi- tional carriers, Western Airlines and Frontier Airlines, to join AirCal and Republic-Airlines in serv ing the Orange County market. But the dis pute between the county and the federal govern· ment over the access issue has flared anew. A permanent ac· cess proposal regulating how flights would be allocated was s truck down Friday by a U.S. District Court judge after at- torneys for the federal govern- ment argued that the plan was unfairly weighted toward AirCal and Republic. The two carriers would have been permitted to keep 85 per· cent of the permitted daily de· partures from the airport for a three-year period. According to a condition con· tained in a grant document, the county would not receive the $1.4 million for acquisition of two acres of land near the airport pending the outcome of the lawsuit fil ed over {he access plan. County air port officials in- terpret this as m eaning the county would not get the funds unless it capi tulated lo the federal government's demands 'No progr ess' in Gromyko, Haig talks UNITED NATIONS CAP> - Despite nine hours of talks, Secretary of Slate Alexander M. Haig J r. said today that he and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko failed to make any progress in reducing tensions between the two superpowers. But they agreed to try again next year. The officials m et for five hours Monday. Coll owing a four· hour session Wednesday. The first meeting produced agree· ment to begin arms control talk! Nov. 30 in Geneva. After the second meet1n1 State Department spokesman Dean Fischer said they covered "the fuJJ range of internatJonal and bilateral issues " anc'. "agreed to continue their dis- cussions early next' year.•• The spokesman said the .next meeting wouJd probably be held in Geneva. · Asked lf the talks had led to a reduction of tensions, Half said, "No, I don't think ao. I think the period ahead will have (o reflect whether or not these discuaalonl will have made a substanUal contribution." During an appearance on · NBC'• "Toda)' Show," Ha.le uld there ..-e 1tW "a AUGltMr: ol la· aues th.at divide UI. '' on the access issue. "They're asking us to admit were g uilty" of not following federal airline deregulation laws. one official said. Airpor t o ffi c ial s were scheduled to decide this after- <See AIRPORT, Page A2> Sus p e ct's his tory r eveale d One of two men being held in connection with the stabbing death of a 20-year-old woman has been identified as the form· er husband of another woman who reported the slaying victim m issing fol lowing an evening visit to a Laguna Beach night spot. David William Leitch. 22, was married to Tracy Leitch for about two years before they were separated in early 1980, ac- cording to records on fil e in Orange County Superior Court. Their divorce . became final in August. Leitch, of Laguna Beach, and Thomas Michael Thompson, 26, of Orange . were a rrested separately over the weekend at Los Ange l es Interna tional Airport in connection with the d ea th of Ginge r Lorraine Fleischli, who was last seen alive at the Sandpiper IM in Laguna Beach the night of Sept. 12. Her bdy was fou nd in a s hallow grave near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station two days later. It was clothed and wrapped in a blanket. According to investigators, Mrs . Leitch and Miss Fleischli went to the bar after dining at a Balboa Island r estaurant. In· vesligators say Miss Fleischli, who lived with her parents in Mission Viejo, had been staying temporarily with Mrs . Leitch at a Galaxy Drive residence in Newport Beach. Law enfor cement officials said Monday that Miss Fleischli was seen with Leitch and Thompson at the bar. One in· vestigator said that Miss Fleischli and Leitch had known e ach other for se\leral years. Investigators thus far are re- fusing to disclose a motive for the slaying. They s aid that Leitch and Thompson had driven to Cabo San Lucas al the tip of the Baja California penins ula, and ap· parently were attempting to re - tur n to the United States when t h ey were arrested at the airport. IRAIGI COAST Wl,1111 Mostly cloudy tool1ht and Wednesday morning and partly sunny Wednes- day afternoon. Highs 72 to 75. Lows tonight SS to SS. llSIDI TDIAY I The Rama aaoor their 24·1 win over the Beara b(Jor~ ·prtpa~ for the Cleveland Browru. See 1tor'U1, PG{lfl Cl. llDll AIY_..,.. M .,_ ........ L.M..... Al = ::: =:--a.:; =r.:::... .. ...... ,. ·:=::I • ::. = .. • • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, September 29. 19S1 . Indian jetliner hijacked by armed Sikhs ~ INDIA JET HIJACKED Plane lands m Lah11re LAllOR£, PakiRtan IAP>-HJ- ~ackcn forced an Indian i•Ulner trom New Delhi to Lahore today, where thtiy released 46 of the 117 people aboard and demanded ln· di a free a jailed Slkl\"indepen- dence leader, Pukistani officlaJs said A Si kh extremist group in lndla called Dal Khalsa claimed responsibility. At a news con- ference in Amritsar, the croup na med the leader it wanted freed as Jamall Singh Bhindranwale, arrested Sept. 20 on murder charges. It also demanded India pay $500,000 and tree all Jalled supporters or the Sikh indepen- dence movement In exchange ror the remaining hosta1es. Ooe ot the hlJackera told an In- dian-Pakistani negotiating team that the aircraft was seized to galn publicity for the Khalistan movement which demands a homeland for lndla 's 13 mWlon Sikhs. Those released included women, children and one man, the husband of an aiUng woman, the s pokesman said. He aaid he did not know the number o! hl· jackeraaboard. . United News or lndla said there were 11 huackers on the plane and tl\at they had dauer,, which Sikhs are allowed to carry on domes tic Indian flights. Security police cordoned off the aircraft after 1l landed without permission from the control tower in Lahore. 12 miles from the Indian border. The plane ca rried 111 passen~e rs. including three Report on Russ strength rekased WASHJNGTON <AP> Under pressure lo make further cuts in military spending. De fense Secretary Caspa r Weinberge r released a well illustrated, 99· page booklet on Soviet military strength today. The report, however, adds lit- tle to existing knowledge or the Soviet Union's might. While its figures on the grow- ing Soviet arsenal for the most part mirror earlie r assessments. Weinberger said in an introduc· tion that an understanding of the Soviet Union's strength "is es- sential lo the shaping and main- tenance of effective U.S. and al· lied armed forces ... The booklet's message of a growing Soviet threat. echoing earlier administration state- ments, comes amid sentiment from some congressmen for cuts in military spending beyo'nd the $13 billion President Reagan called for in the fiscal 1982-1984 budgets Weinberger said last week that even those cuts hit "vitally needed areas" and that con- gressmen calling for greater decreases "were wrong and trai?ically wrong ... The Derense Department booklet does not contain a s pec ific comparison of U.S.·· Soviet military s trength. It does cohtain a profusion of charts, photographs of Soviet weaponry. and even dramatic color paint· ings s howing huge Tupolev jets o;wooping across the s kies, tanks gr inding along. and missiles aloft with paths projected to the United States. The charts and illustrations document a growing Soviet military machine -particularly in aircraft production and deployment of nuclear warheads but most of the figures are from earlier. U.S. assessments or from groups such as the In- t e rn at ion a I Ins titute for Strategic Studies in Lon.don. The newest information seems to be that the Soviets now have 250 medium-range SS-20 missiles with 750 warheads deployed worldwide. including 175 mis- s iles carrying 525 warheads op- pos ite NATO countries in Europe. An a ssessm e nt last January put the number of SS- 20s at 180 worldwide, with 110 deployed towa rd NATO However, Richard N. Perle, an assistant defense secretary, had revealed the newer figures last week during a discussion of nuclear forces in Europe. Perle said at the time that deployment of 572 cruise and Pershing II missiles by NATO countries is on schedule with the first deployment expected next vear . The booklet a1so says the So- viets are producing about 1,000 fighter aircraft yearly and h.-e deployed an additional 1.000 long -range s trategic nuclear warheads in the last year Neither figure goes beyond as- sessments as or January. From Page A1 STOCKS 'D h ' TI/ h From Page A1 ona ue ,, s . ow DIABLO. • • • lo 475.6, more than wiping out Monday's 11.2·point loss. "It's a big bonanza ... said one critic apologizes London broker ... After the panic rush to gel out on Monday. it looks like a panic scramble to get back in today." However. volume was hght, and another broker obser ved. "There's caution on both sides and the mark.et remains very n e rvous The gam e's not changed." In Hong Kong. however. an at- tempted rally failed and the Hang Seng index dropped 27 06 more points a fter fall ing 105 75 Monday to 1,245.26. its lowest level of the year. The selling wave that hit Tokyo and London struck New York for the first 30 minutes of trading Mo nday. but the Ameri ca n mark et soo n stabiUzed in heavy trading and surged to post substantial gains on the day Stock prices a round the globe were under pressure 1n part because of concern over whether the United States budget deficit can be controlled to help ease in· teres t r ates, analys ts said. There was also uncertainty over Britain's ailing economy. the threat of recession in several countries. and a dire prediction by American market a nalyst Joseph Granville SA LT LAKE CITY <AP> - While apologizing tha t his group's attack on television talll: s how host Phil Donahue wasn 't backed with facts, the founder or the National F ed e ration of Decency says it still might boycott the show's s ponsors. The Rev. Donald Wildmon, the federation's executive director. publicly apologized to Donahue Monday during a taping in Salt La k e City of the popular daytime show. The segment is to be broadcast later this year. Wildmon said figures used in a news release c riticizing the ··Donahue .. program were not basl!d on any research of the show But W1ldmon repeated his con· tention "Donahue" deaJs too fre· quenlly with sexual topics and portrays abnormal sex in a favorable light Four Chi cago members of the federation issued a news release Aug 1 calling Donahue a "sex activist broadcaster ... claiming that many of his programs "are ~ex s hows" and that most of t hose promote abnormal sex. The group threatened a boycott of sponsors for "Donahue." Wildmon said he hadn't seen the release before it was issued, but had to accept responsibility for 1t "Ponahue" has dealt with such topics as incest. birth con- trol, abortion, rape and homosexuality in the 11 years it has been syndicated nationally. The program, which also has focused on non-sexual toptcs and inter views with celebrities, bas won a George Foster Peabody Award and nine Emmy awards, including one this year as Outstanding Talk or Service Series. Arter apologizing, Wildmon said "nine or 10 o( the 23 shows we monitored" since the first of the year dealt with sex. Some urged acceptance of sex prac- tices contrary to traditional Christian morality, he said. The Tupelo, Misk.·ba~ed Na· t1 onal Federation for Decency was started by Wildmon. who this year also laun ched the Coalition for Better Television. Wildmon has said the MoraJ Ma- jority is a member of the coali- tion . the biggest of 300 affiliated groups nationwide. He said 3,000 volunteers na- tionwide would monitor television shows this fall , and if sex and viole nce are exploited, a boycott of s ponsors is possible. He sajd consumers have a right to object to programming with a boycott ............. A 200-pound boar ltes on the 16th fam.ooy of Santa Rosa's Oakmont Golf Course as a golfer plays through. The boar was shot after several of the beasts destroyed part of the course looking for food ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Tnomas P Half"I' P~tn.t encl Cf'li•t f .,.. .. 1 .,11> 4'"'' .,., Aot>ert N Weed ThoMas A Muroh.ne lo'°' Michael P Har1tey ...,...,."11 t'·•K•O< L Kay S.'hultz ~o1 0.-....... Kenneth N Goddard Jr c.c..i ...... °'"' 10• 8efn1rd Scn11tm1n Ooo...- Ctnvl ..... LOOS ~~ Cerot A Moore ........ ., C1usll1ed lld11er1lslr19 7141642-ffJI All other departments 642-4321 MAIN OFFICE J1' 'Nf'"ll 8"11'1 \t ( O\I• M f!>,. (_A M•tt •l'ltt'"'\ f\oa I \rtO tO\t• Mf'\I (A fhlt OO•'·Q~t ... 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"""'' \ "' ).JI Wl>\I fl•t 't,..•I P 0 fl<I• t lite C o\t f MP,,. •'•'"'''I• •ltl• From Page A1 PIGS ... years, the remnants of a pack of 30 domestic swine which broke loose and beaded for the highlands. But the problem bas become 10 severe this rear that the slate Department o Fish and Game, after lnspecting the golf coune, gave the club permission to shoot the pigs periodically. The meat is turned over to c h a rilable organisations, Hansen said. r • • Blake. s tar of the "Barella" TV series, bad escaped arrest when he participated in a sea as- s ault early in the protest. But he was arrested when he joined the blockade at the gate Monday. Sa n Luis Obispo County Un- dersheriff Arnie Goble said. In downtown San Luis Obispo, 17 women were arrested for trespassing Monday after they moved into a PG&E office build- ing and attempted a sit-in, ac· cording to Abalone Alliance spokeswoman Mary Moore. Fuel loading a t the jus t· licensed atomic power plant was stopped when engineers found mistakes in a diagram used in analyzing the facility's earth- quake resistance, officials s aid Monday The problem. discovered dur· ing a design review Sunday, in· volves discre pancies in a dia· gram or drawing used in stress analyses of hangers that support pipes for the ··res idual heat re- m oval system.·· said Dick Davin of Pacific Gas & Electric Co. PG&E built the $2.3 billion twin· reactor complex near San Luis Obispo. about midway between Los Angeles and San Francisco Some modifications of the plant m ay be n ecessary. authorities said Demons trators contend nuclear power is particularly unsafe at Diablo Canyon, which is three miles from an offshore earthquake fault They a lso say th ei r protest proves it 1s vulnerable lo sabotage. P o le ask asylwn MONTREAL CAP> The Polis h passenger liner Stefan Batory sailed from Montreal on Monday minus several dozen Polis h passengers and cre w members who are seeking asylum in Canada. children. and a crew of slx when ll left New Delhi, United News said The hijackers shouted sloaans on J._he lndlan Airlines Boeing 737 be(ore demandJog the pilot Oy he re after it departed New Delhi, about 275 miles southeast. United Newssa1d. The Sikh independence move- ment wants an independent na- tion carved out o( Punjab state alon1 the Pakistani border, where most of the 13 mi Ilion mem- bers of their Hindu sect Ii ve. The plane left New Delhi a t 12: 43 " m. local time 1: 13 a.m. PDT for ·a domcatic flight to Amritsar . the Sikh rellalou1 center. and Srlnaaiaar. the capitlll of Kashmir. 1t was comman- deered shortly atl r It took off from New Deltu A senior police official in New Delhi said one of the hijackers was Gajeodra Singh, a Slkh ex· tremist. and said he threatened one of the pllots with a sharp knife. the Indian news agency satd ............. Shooting victim Kelly Cartier. 12. her head covered and fxwdaged. hugs Marsha Camie. mother of Kelly s s/om classmate \'ariessa lbern. dunng_ Vanessa ·s funeral .c:er v1ce From Page A1 SUSPECT IN SLAYING • • • statements about the shootings. Hart said. Edwards' truck was found in Los Angeles about four hours a fter his a rrest. Hart said. based on information investigators in Maryland obtained Cana da wins bid for co nstit u tio11 OTTA WA 1AP > -The Supreme Court ruled in a his- toric dec1s 1on Monday that Canada's law -but not its tradi- tion a llows the federal gov· ernment to press ahead with its bid to transfer the Canadian con· slilution here from Britain The 52-page judgment said the court was not ruling on the con· tent of the federal conslitut1onal package but rather on the legali- ty of the action V .S . trade deficit a t 18-mo nth h igh WAS•UNGTON !AP> -The United States recorded the big· gest monthly foreign trade def- icit since early 1980 in August. the government reports, as a strengthened dollar hampered ex p o rts and prompted Americans to buy more foreign products. The value of imported 011 was up 22.1 percent in August. T he burly former Costa Mesa res ident is being held at the Prince George County J ail pend- ing extradition proceedings. About 200 students from Lake Elsinore Junior Hi g h School were among those al the funeral fQr Mi~ lbern Monday in the 1-· i r s t l' nit e cJ Pre& b yte r i an Church. mcluding her friend Kelly. \.\ho was released Monday from a Mission VieJo hospital. From Page A1 AIRPORT. • • noon whether to s ubmit the grant agreement to the county Board of Supervisors for con· sideration at Wednesday's regular meeting. The two acres of land. located 1n Costa Me!la near the intersec· tion of Clinton Street and Airway Avenue. would. if acquired. serve as a location for new facilities for ·so·called fixed· based operators who provide service:. for airlines and private pilots. Four s uffer shock LIVINGSTON <AP > Fcur Livingston residents s uffe red severe electrical shock when a television antenna t hey were in- stalling on a roof s lipped and fell across a 12.000·volt power line . • I#~ Arnold Palmer, 1wnoron) c~of lfae March of Dimes. poses with Richard Wagner . .S. of Vancouver. Wash .. the March of Dimes poster child for 1932. Former President &ldaa,. M. Nboe and his wife, Pet, are expeded to move into their home in Saddle River, N.J ., on Thursday. The Nixons and a reUnoe of Secret Servlte a1euti checked into the Hilton Inn in nearby Woodcliff Lake, ac- cording to hotel emp'°yees. For sevet'al weekl, the Friends of Libraries, U.S.A., has e lected Wally Amos to its board of direc· tors, the first black to serve on the board. According to the American Library Association, of which the Friends group Mi an affiliate, Amo. is Uling his success as president of Famous Amos Cookies as an Nixons had been staying in a luxury hotel in Manhattan and at the Berwin, Pa., home of their daughter and son-in· law Julie and David Elseni.ower, while workers fitted Ute Saddle River bome w.ttb cameraa, alarms, a &lea vy· metal gate for the ftrfveway, and undersround ~er lines to feed security devices. i1Uptration to others, lending his promotional ability to the cause of wiping out ii· literacy. He has been a national spokesman for the Literacy volunteers of America two years, traveling Utrou1houl the C<>tmtr)' encouraging both adul'ts and chitdttn to learn to read. Mfftly dDWr _..,.. end ........ fey mernt,.. end perlly 111n11y w.-....-y.,..,._, Temper4lur~s c...... ... 9S loll .. llt, 72 1111111 ........... ,...., ... ., .......... l'I Mtlll••--·· EtM...,... lftM ¥ffla .. ..,.... 111rou1• tenl1111 •st••I wul le tlUtllwett lO • 11 """ ~­Soutllwetlwty ...it 1 lo i feet. ven. .... ( ........ ~ ........... ... Le .. ,. . . ., ... , ". .. " .. " • •• . .. 10 ,, Coif! We•• The 11andd1qbter of the late Nha• el B1 .. r11ta•. QPc• conalderld tbe world'• rlcbeet m:., asked Prime Mln11ter I a G .... l for permlulon to ult hit f1bulou1 Jewel collection abroad, the Onited News of India reported. A letter from Prlaet11 Fallaa Poul• to Mra. Gandhi said the family needed the money to pay tax· et, UNI Hid. Part of th Nisam•a $t2 million collec· tlon waa auctioned after hit death In 1117 at afe M. A Saft Francisco Instructor was named interim chan· cellor of the University of Hawaii'• main campu1 ln .Honolulu. Manta Aaienoa. who has been interim dean of tbe univenity law school since lanuary 1980, it on leave from his home institution, the UC Hastings College of Law. Unlvenity or Hawaii Presi· dent F•Jl• MatHcla an· nounced Anderson would replace Dllrwoocl Lo•I as chancellor of the 20,813· student campus until a na- tionwide search turned up a permaneat replacement. Between SS and iO people attended an unpublicized, $500 a plate fund-raising dinner at Yankee Stadium for Sen. Edward Kenae4y, D· Mass. The get·together reported· ly was organized by Georce Stelnbreaner, principal ewner of the New York Yankees baseball team, but he was out of town and did not attend. The money -as much as $30,000 -raised at the dinner was earmarked to pay off debts from Kennedy's presi· dential P.rimary campaign of 19fl0 as well to aid his cam· paign for re·eleclion to the Senate in 1982. San Francisco's Roman' Catholic community received a new auxiliary bishop with the ordainment of the Rev. Daniel F. Walsll. The 43-year-old Walsh re· ceived blessing of 35 bishops. Some 3,000 people, includ· ing 650 priests and nuns, gathered at St. Mary 's Cathedral for the ceremony, which was conducted by Archbishop Jelul a. Qulna. •••• t .. ' V.S. 1ummary M fl .01 u d -= -.en --....--· -11 .. ...., ,,..,,. Getttrel end _.,..,,. ~Mk~""°""'---·-· tO!Hy, wlllle relft lllto feH -Ole NlllMnl lip f/11 Teus Md mr-tlUt...,... '1Wtdl. Scett..W ,..., -,_.. .... 1111 nortMrn Peclflc <Mii, Ill• _,.,.," ...... .-111 ~ -KfOH~MelM. Sil ... -<...,....,. _ -Eftlleflf -. lfld ,,_, U. ..... enf mld·AUe nll< coo11 to tll• _,,., .. -< .... , •• ltoclllel ..... ArlHM. • T•m!lffetlwft ef'OUfld lllt -Ion •rlY ._., ,.,,.... ,, ... lll Ill ~­ lllrf, ..... IO M In .,.._.., Ark. Hurr~ ,,_, ltt •"*...,_to IOI "'"" IM amt cleulfllf • "INIJor llllrrlc-:·-•Jlllldefto....., ·-"'"'-'....,.It ..... --c.-r Au.Mk ...... ... .... -._,.er.. ......... Ill -'-.'' Mid ~ ON (lerll et IN Netloflll "urrl<eM (eMw ... Mlernl. California to 7S .46 • 0 ., 11 .. ,, 11 SI ., . ·" •t G " .. u. tt M . ., 70 ., Sho••'' S.o••o._o,, Ouh,4f•jf BimIIJ -·• za• ............. l'tloeftta ,.~ ~·Md.Mt. ~.___Ore. ·-Sett Lei!• SHttl• " ., .. J7 ts w . 2' SI LOUii " . .... r7 n .. ,. '1 ., .... 11 .. tS ,. ., " 11 .. .. . ., . . .. •f .. ,. 0 ti .. 10 n • $1 ft .. u 61 17 " St ... Tempe II Ste Merle s.--TlllM Wnlllfttlll Wlclltte lllf llPllT MW .. Jt 71 iS .. .. 11 .. ,, .. JS M ... , ,, ., n ., . ,,. 11 " • SS .. 65 ., " " " TJ .. . " 11 M '1 SI SS n SJ " SS 0 ,,. 4J .. n • ,. ., ,. "' ti to n es u • 71 17 7S .. .. • rs • rs ,, 1S n 11 .. JI • .. " 1' " r. " 1' as n I . . . ' Orange CoHt DAIL y PtLOT trueeday. S•pt•mb•r 29, 1881 Judges get new work Criminal cases logjam brings major reshuffle of duties 81 DAVID KtJTZMANN .. ...., ..... aaataned Judaea wUl be put Oft the back burner for about a week. I i I ~ A m~r reahu.ttUnt of duties for many of Oreo1e Co:ifu' 1uperior court Judau it • place WI week to handle a lol· Jam of criminal cuee ruult1n1 from an unutually bt1b number of relOft)' ~cutlou. Prealdtn1 Oran1e County Superior Court Judie Robert E. Rickles, In ordertna the tern· porary reaaslcnment of the Jurists, utd the action w11 necessary t.o prevent criminal cases from "stacklng up ln the system." . Rickles said It is the tint time such action bas been taken in the Or•n1e County court system, bu~ he ad4ed, "It's still too early t.o punch the panic but· ton." Rickles' action was prom~ •n part by the fllln1 of about IOO criminal complalntl by the Orange County Dl1trlct At· torney'1 office between March and May. d A• m&QY u It Judsea on the •7·JudJe panel had tbelr normal· ly clvll·laden calendar cleared Monday t.o permit heodllnc of criminal matters aw•llinl dia· position from as far back u January. It ts expected civil cases pre· vlously belng handJed by the re· Gas heating bills to rise 25 pereent WASIUNGTON CAP> -Even without a speedup in the decon· trol of natural gas prices, con· sumers who heat with gas will be paying 25 percent more tbi.s winter than a year ago, a con· sumer group has predicted. The Citizen-Labor Energy Coalition estimated Monday that 60 percent of households who heat with gas will pay a total of $398 in fuel bills for the five months from November through March. That compares to a national average of $.113 during tbe same period In 19f!0.81. If President Reagan is suc· cessful in getting Congress to ac· celerate gas decontrol next year, consumers can expect to see their bills jump to $627 for the 1982·83 heating season, a 58 percent increase over this winter, the coalition predicted. ·'Home heating costs continue to rise at a terrifying rate, far outstripping inflation," said Wimam R. Hutton, a coalition official. ·'The Reagan ad · ministration's plan to accelerate this cost increase by decontroll· ing gas prices is cruel and un· realistic. Most of us simply can't afford it." However, an industry group, the Natural Gas Supply Associa· ~ion, said its owrf estimates oresee a much s maller increase f 12 percent in gas bills this winter under current law and a 20 percent increase under ac· celerated decontrol. Under a 1978 law. the price of gas discovered after 1976 is al· lowed to rise monthly until Jan. 1, 1985, when all controls on this ·'new " gas will be lifted. However, price controls will re· main for the approximately 50 percent of "old" gas flowing before 1977. The Reagan administration is studying a plan that would speed up decontrol and remove price restrictions on all gas by 1985. The administration's economic studies forecast s maller price increases under accelerated de· control and predict that by 1985 prices could actually be lower than they would have been un· der the current prici.ng time ta· ble. The coalition study found a wide price disparity among dif· ferent regions of the country. While the study projected heat· ing bills of $618 for residents in the New England states - highest in the country -it said residents in the s tates of Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma and Texas would have bills of $210 this winter, lowest in the country. The states of Illinois, Indiana, ! Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin will see the highest percentage increase in gas prices this winter, jumping 30 percent to $518, the study predicted. The study blamed the projected in· creases in part on recent purchases by pipeline suppliers of "deep" gas, gas found below 15,000 feet which is out from un· der au price controls. Orange Tide benefit for seroice clubs A fund-raising walk·a·thon Is scheduled Saturday, Oct. 17 to benefit the American Red Cross, the Youth Services Program - and any other service club that gets involved. The event is scheduled for 9 a .m . on Skypark Circle in Irvine, where participants will be free to walk, jog, run or roller skate as many quarter-mile laps as possible in one-hour. The event is billed as the Orange Tide by the sponsoring Orange County Chapter of the Building Industry Association of Southern California. Last year, the group raised $7 ,000 for the two organisations. Home from my "Afrlc1n Adwnture" ... and just In time to celebrate our twenty19Cond anniversary In the store. It was wonderful to have so many frleOO. of long standing visit us . . . and greet some new friend's too . It hat taken me a wtiile to r9CO¥ef from the jet l11g . . . thirty-four hours from Nairobi to Newport Beach . . . that Is one long trip! Africa was worth it thouQh and I think I heYe to rate it as one of the most exciting and Interesting places I've ...., visited: We went first to Johannesburg wtlere we had a tour through a diamond cutting plant We also saw a factory where they were carvi ng v.rdlte, an Interesting atone tt\llt 11 u,nlque to Africa and found no other place on the globe. I 'bto"9ht home a few pi.. wt\lch we now hwe on d18play In the 1tore. I •Ito found aome Suglllte and Arflcaatone carved Into ~ng animal flgu,.., Our flrtt mine vlalt Wiii • OU-ta of lntergold wnen we went down Into the Crown Mine. It 1"9qUlred thet wed,... In proteotlw, waterproof a-- with herd hat• and boOts. To spur interest, organizers are encouraging other non·profit groups to take part by promising 4-0 percent of the money they raise. "For example, should an out- side group raise $1 ,000 in net proceeds it would be entitled to keep $400," said Harriett Harris, chairman of the BIA's commun.i· ty involvement committee. Participants are to raise money by soliciting pledges for ev~ry lap walked, jogged, sprinted or skated. More information may be ob- tained by calling Margot Carlson at the YSP office 540·69'll. • &EM WISB Mary e.rr. Cert1f1ed Gemo1cxi11t .. In a normal three-month • period, the number of fillqs ll usuaJly about 750 cues, or 250 per month, accordlnl to E.B. Cornellson, supervisor of tbe county clerk's criminal section Another factor in Rickles' de- cision was District Attorney Cecil Hicks' move to no tonier plea bargain with crlmlnal de· fendants and instead 10 to trial. Rickles said the D.A. 's policy was a complicating factor for the moment but that judges, in assessing each case individual· ly, would likely encourage some fotm of bargaining to expedite cases where there were neither aggravating nor mitigating fac· tors. Rickles, presiding jud1e of the superior court since January, explained he was merely trying to manage limited manpower as best he could. Before the tern· porary rearrangement of duties, he said, 10 judges served on the criminal panel with occasional help from other jurists. He stressed that civil matten would not be neglected in bis al· tempt to unclog legal channels on the criminal side. Seven judges were continuing to handle civil cases Monday and three additional protem jurists -lawyers acting as judges for an interim period - were assigned to the superior court's busy law and motion calendars. Many civil lawyers learned of the change Monday morning as they checked the dockets in courtrooms when they arrived for hearings on temporary or permanent court orders. Adele Elliott, executive direc· tor of the Orange Oounty Bar AB· sociation, saifi she knew of the reassignment of judges but bad not heard any comments from members of the group. Rickles said he would re· evaluate the backlog situation at the end of this week and decide if it was worthwhile to try the temporary reassignments again. Neither the presiding judge nor other court officials could explain why the number of criminal complaints in March, April a nd May rose 10 dramatically. Cornelison said the number or filings has since returned to normal. He explained one reason for the logjam was that criminal matters from as far back u January had been delayed unW now, reaching tbe trial stage along with the new cases filed before the summer. It is required that a case go to trial 60 days following arraip· ment proceedings . But Cornelison said defendants can waive their right to a speedy trial, contributing to the delays and eventual backups in the system. Kimberly and got 1 big knot on the temple and a gorgeous blllCk eye. My travelling comp1nions were members of the American Gem Society and we were gueata of the DeBeera firm . They took ua out to Cullinan where we spent th• morning down In the Premier mine ... ' ~ feet downl It was very interesting 1nd excltl11g ... end 1 little frightening as they were doing a lot of blaatlng wtille we were down there. They took ua to the Oe8eera Country Club tor lunch and then on to Pretoria for an aftemool\ of alght aeelng. We went back to Kimberly fOf the night 1nd the next dey went down Into the 8ultfonteln mine for an extenelve tour which Included 111 11pect& of the dl.mond recovefY operation. ~t we flew to Capetown where we made tht Hterengracht Hotel our heedquartera for the folloi\llng tour day1. Wa had bean acheduled to vlalt tlae Alexander lay operatio.. bUt blcauee of the South Alt'to.n raid• Into Nambla It WH decided that It might not bt wlae to go Into that .,.. Ill thle time. TheN It • lot of wnr uaed In the gotd mining proc.ea lfld H la aometlmes pratty allPf*Y underfoot. Wt had two 900idtnta In our party thtlt dfff. OM of our qroup fell and ..,_. a thumb and another CHARLES ff. IJARR We apent thoet deya vtaiting .. C..,. of Good He>pe ... tM l~tn Ocffn m.-a. Atlantic and ther• It alMJy9 a OOOd ,... blowing ... then the Groot Conatal\ole vi~ Md on etW>ther dey " D* the cable car up to TM»I• Mountain. •tnched a knte tnd brdllt hla .....---·--. w. flnilhed the "rutt --....... ... al thtte" the nt•t dey...,.,.. ~ ........ hidffy. ... ...... , one °' out membtrt 1911 In '"" a ......... Wahltf .... ... ~ .. .... Men "African A~" '*' ooturnn ... I \ I /1 ------~------------------------· H /F Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Tueaday, September 29. 1981 [(]ffiTI~rnm . Reagan to nations: don't rely on U.S. WASHJNGTON <AP> -Presi· dent Reagan told the annual ,meetin& of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank today that massive foreign aid isn't the key to prosperity for the poor nations of the world. "Unless a nation puts its own financial and economic house in order . no amount or foreign aid will produce progress," Reagan said in prepared remarks. Reagan spoke before an au· dience of finance ministers and central bank governors from 141 nations -many Socialist -at the official opening of the annual meeting of the Bank a nd the Fund. Solidarity 3eeks radi_o, TJI control Six Flaga aale to Bally approved NEW YORK <AP> -The Penn Central Corp. and Bally Manufacturing Corp. announced the companies have reached agreement in principle to sell Peon Central's Six Flags Inc. subsidiary to Bally for about $140 million. The purchase price in the transaction, scheduled to close in January. would equal the net worth or Six Flags at closine, ex- pected to be about $140 million, the companies said. Terms call for payment of $75 million in cash in January and the balance over three years, including 16 percent interest. A~WI ....... Another Iranian cl~rgyman slai·n . BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP > - Another top Iranian clergyman was assassinated today by a left· ist guerrilJa who walked up to hjm after a lecture and set oCI a hand grenade. the official Pars news agency said . The as- sassin's hand was torn off in the blast, and a security guard and a student also were wounded, it s aid. Pars said the victim was Ho· ja tole slam Abdulkarim Has hemi-Nejad , secretary. general of the ruling Islamic Republican Party in northeastern Mashhad. He was a ranking clergyman, and like other assassination victims before him was loyal to Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini. Pars said Hashemi-Nejad's lecture was delivered at the IRP's headquarters In Mashhad and that angry demonstrators surged through the streets of the city after the assassination de· manding revenge. leftist auerrillas. The Majlis, Iran's parliament, sent a message of condolence to Khomeini which said, "They take away a tal' every night and yet this grief-stricken sky ls filled with our stars.'' Pars s aid. Several weeks ago a leftist as· sassin strapped a grenade to his waist and set it off in front or the Friday praye r leader in northwestern Tabriz, killing the c lergyman. himself and six others. Pars identified both assassins as members of the "pro-U.S. Mujahedeen Khalq," the leftist guerrilla group blamed for a three-month-old urban guerrilla war against Khomeni's fun· damentalist Moslem regime. The regime announced the ex· ecution of 119 more leftists Mon· day. raising the official total to 993 in the' ttftee-month-old period ' GDANSK, Poland <AP) -The independent union Solidarity re· leased a draft program today calling for its own TV and radio stations, an end to censorship, more access to the state media and control over the courts and state enterprises. Further flight cutbacks planned CASH FLOW Debo rah Hall. 21. of Phoenix. was !'>urprised bv a First Interstate Bank aut<>m<1t1 c teller machine as she mad e a withdrawal Instead of the s.lO shef requested . :\11ss lla ll was s hO\\e r rd "1th 257 r n sp S20 hilb SS.140 worth "If courts don't move the peo- ple will rise." the demonstrators ch anted, according to Pars . ·'Shed the blood of the monafe· qin." Monafeqin. Persian for "hypocrites," is the term the Khomeini regime uses for the Tehran radio said 57 guerrillas were 'put to death for partlcipat· ing in the street fighting in Tehran Sunday. 52 were execut· ed in Isfahan. and 10 died before firing squads in other cities. MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The Federal Aviation Administration plans further cutbacks in com· mercial flights to deal with the air traffic controllers' strike, FAA Administrator Lynn Helms Bank offitials said thC' inc ident was thl' first and thankl'll Mi ss Ha ll for reporting the malfunt'lion Meanwhile, Iraq denied Iran's claim that lnmian forces lifted the siege of the oil refining city of Abadan. But an Iraqi military s pokes man admitted that the besieging force pulled back from the north-south highway to the city Solidarity delegates also were asked to support a proposal call- ing for the ouster of Polish media chief Stanislaw Loranc. The proposal was introduced by Krzysztor Turowski, a delegate from the central city of Lodz. says. · The FAA will order com · mercial airlines to reduce their flights by an additional 5 percent Dec . 1, Helms s aid Monday before addressing the National Association of State Aviation Of· ficials in Minneapolis. Split trial sought for Hinckley Although the Iranian govern· ment did not issue its Abadan victory claim until hours after the fighting broke out in Tehran Sunday. parliament Speaker Ali- Akbar RafsanJani charged the Mu1ahedeen Khalq "created dis· order" to undermine the effect of the regime's military s uccess. Attorneys plan insanity defense in Reagan shooting Grumman in suit to block takeover NEW YORK (APl -Grum· man Corp., one of the Navy's biggest suppliers of fighter jets. filed suit in federal court Mon· day to block a takeover bid by LTV Corp., but a top Grumman official said the action might be dropped if LTV presents a better offer. The antitrust lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Westbury, N.Y .. was described as "no sur· prise" by LTV ChaiTman Paul T hayer. Thayer said from his Dallas headquarters that Grum· man officers are wrong, and they cannot win an antitrust suit." ON THE MARCH -Civil rights activist Dick Gregory begins an 80·mile walk from New Orleans to Baton Rouge after ending a 70-day fast. Monitored by medical equip· ment. he hopes to s how hunger strikers the value of nut rition. Car owners line up for repairs BOSTON (AP> -Motorists forming long lines at Ford and Lincoln-Mercury dealerships in Massachusetts today aren't necessarily eying the latest models -they're having their cars· faulty fuel systems fixed so they won't be turned away at the fuel pumps. Owners of 1981 Ford Escorts and Lincoln-Mercury Lynxes are reacting to a warning by the s tate fire mars hal that their cars may be a fire hazard. Racist sentenced in two alayings SALT LAKE CITY <AP> Terming Joseph Paul Franklin a man who does not accept s ociety's "moral rules or re· ligious rules." a judge sentenced the 31-year -old avowed racist to two consecutive life terms in state prison for the sniper slay- ings of two young blacks. Third District Judge Jay E. Banks told Franklin, "It will be my recommendation to the state Board or Pardons that you never get out of prison." Spy pleads guilty, awaits sentence JACKSONVILLE, Fla. ! AP > -J oseph G. Helmich Jr .. a former Army officer who ad· milted he sold military secrets to the Soviet Union, could get 10 years to life in prison for his guilty plea to a charge of con- spiracy. U.S. District Judge Susan Black ordered Helmich back to court Nov. 5 for sentencing on the c harge. Helmich at first pleaded innocent, but switched to guilty Monday in a plea bargain. lraniam march NEW YORK <AP> -A dem- onstration here by some 100 Iranians marching in support of Iran's war effort against Iraq resulted in a melee in which eight police officers and about 25 other people were injured. Two people were arrested. WASHINGTON <AP l After acknowledging for the firs t time that John W Hinckley Jr. shot President Reagan, lawyers for the 26-year-old de fendant are planning an insanity defense that would include a s plit trial with two juries The defense dec1s1on means competing psychiatris ts could have ~ major role in Hinckley's trial. testifying on whether or not he understood his actions were wrong Were l-Linckley found innocent by reason or ;nsanity he would be sent to a mental institution until a Judge ruled he was no longer dangerous to himself or lo others bet<iuse of mental ill ncss. Hincklc•y could faC'e life U.S. grossly 'unprepared' for oil cuts WASHINGTON !AP> The United States has m <ide little progress since the 1973 Arab em· bar go and 1s s till "grossly un prepared" to deal with a major d isruption in oil imports. the General At·counling Offi ce said. "With the exception of the re· cent buildup of the Strategic P etroleum Reserve , the Unit ed States is no better prepared to deal with significant reduction than 1t w<is during the 1973 011 embargo,·· the investigative agency of Congress said in a re port Monday prepared fo r Sens Edward M Ke nnedy, 0 Mass .. and Charles Percy. R·lll The GAO said the government should "make a det ermined commitment to emergency pre· paredn ess now . while oil markets are slack " Noting th~t the Emergency P etroleum Allocation Act ex pi res Wednesday. the GAO said the United States has no plan for an e mergency boost m oil pro· duction; no adequate plan for use of the StrateJ!iC Petroleum Reserve; and that the emergen· cy oil -shann~ program may not work. The report s aid that with ef· rective domestic and interna· t1on a l planning, the relatively minor loss of Iranian oil suppUes in 1979 and 1980 ··would not have caused the price hike which seve r e l y damag e d th e economies of both the developed and undeveloped nations .. Placing ~ Classified is twice as easy! Just sey 'bharge it" you can use your .VISA or MASTER CARD to place a DAILY PILOT Classified over tbe telephone, including 8-Day week ads. Ca~l (714) 642-&678 ..., .... The Oraoge Coast's largest marketplace \ imprisonment if convicted of c·nm es m the 13-count indict· ment If the request for a split trial with two Juries is approved. the first pa11 would be devoted to tt•st1mony about the s hooting of the president and three others :\larch 30 The second phase would be the atte mpt to prove llinckley innocent by reason of insanity. It 1s unllkelv the trial wi ll begin until December In their proposed stipulation t•ntered in federal court Mon· da~. the defense attorneys wrotl' ··on March 30, 1981. "1th in the District of Columbia. .John W Hinckley Jr. fired a 22 caliber handgun and struck Ron a ld Re aga n . Timo thy McCarthy, James Brady and Thomas Delahanty." Hinckley was captured at the scene of the shooting outside the Wa s hin gton Hilton. where Reagan. Secret Ser vice agent McCarth v. p o li ce offi cer De lahanty and presidential press secretary Brady were w o unded . Brady remains hospta11zed. Because of the defense de· cision, Hinckl ey's life history, including his obsession with ac· tress Jodie Foster, probably will be presented during the trial. Before the shootings Hinckley h ad written he would "get Reagan" to impress the actress. "'When they became certain that the victory of Is lam was certain at the battlefront and they could not foil its military significance. they began creat- i n~ disorder." he s<i id Be s Truman fair KANSAS CITY. Mo CAP> - Former firs t lady Bess Truman, 96. was in fair condition today at Research Medical Center and responding well to treatment for a mild stroke. Save MQDeYAnd Earn Tax-Free Dollars The Easy Way! Open An All-SaverTax-Free Certificate Account· At Citizens Bank No Financial Institution Pays A Higher Rate Of Interest! Relax. Watch the account grow with a high rate of interest. In one year, enjoy the tax-free benefits. It's that easy. OUR TAX-FREE CERTIFICATE ACCOUNTS: ... Earn you the highest interest rate permitted by law. .. Earn up to $2,000 tax-free interest when filing a joint Federal Income Tax return, or earn up to $1,000 tax-free interest on an individual return . . . . Are insured to $100, 000 by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation . ... Solid Citizens. Together, That's Us! CITIZENS HARBOR AT BAKER • --COSTA -MESA. CA-LIFORNl-A 91626 TELEPHONE: (714) 979-4200 BANK..Jlll' 11THATSANTAANAAVENU£ -TELEPftONE: (714) 97MIOO . -= • = COSTA MESA. CALIFORNIA 91627 Making Ban1c,tn1 EHier for You • f • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Tuesday, September 29. 1981 Prosecution time longer Brown signs bills increasipg statute of limitations SACRAMENTO <AP) - Prosecutors wlU have six years instead of three to file cbar1es of sex crlrnes. under one of numerous bllls signed by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. Also signed Monday were bills to raise private rlnanclng for poverty -law programs threatened by federal cuts, in· crease disability insurance benefits, give ~ome banks a tax break, and restrict the re-use of kidney dialysis filters. On sex crimes, Brown signed measures increasing the statute of limitations: A 8303 by As· semblyman Byron Sher. D-PaJo Alto; SB209 by Sen. Milton Marks, R-San Francisco. and SB276 by Sen. Omer Rains, D· Ventura. for drunken operating of a boat or water skis. The legal-aid blll, SB713 by Sen . Nicholas Petris, D· Oakland, wilt allow lawyers who administer small, short.term trust funds to pool them in in· terest-bearing accounts supervised by the State Bar. The interest will be used for legal aid to the poor. potentially replacing some .of the federal runding that would be lost lf Congress and President Reagan take Reagan aides' suggestion to abolish the Legal Services Corp. The disability bill, SB347 by Sen. Bill Greene, D-Los Angeles. laps the bulging, employee- supported Disability Fund to in· c rease minimum weekly benefits from $30 to , $50 and maximum benefits from $154 to $175. Brown, who has cited the state's revenue shortage In op- posing virtually any blll that would cost money. vetoed one measure, SB146 by Sen. Jim EJ. lls, R-San Diego, that would ex- tend the state's bottled-water tax exemption to one small com· pany that is now excluded. But the governor made an ex- ception by signing SM99 by Sen. Ma~z Garcia, R-Menlo Park. To induce banks to locale a type of operation called an in- ternational banking facility in California, the bill offers tax ex- emptions that the state Franchise Tax Board bas estimated at $3 million a year. . ......... LIZ APPLAUDED Singer Sammy Davis Jr greets actress Elizabeth Tay lor and her husband. Sen. John Warner of Virginia. following her Los Angeles opening µerformance in .. The Little Foxes ... at a reception in her honor · State kids above test averages SACRAMENTO <AP> California'• colleae·bound hl1h school seniors scored hiaher than the national averaees on the 1981 Scholaatlc Aptitude Tesl, otriclals report. State Schoo~ Superintendent Wilson Riles said Monday that • In mathematics, the Callfor· 1 nians averaged 475 compared to the national average of 466. In the verbal portion of the test, the Californians avera1ed 426 compared to 424 nationally. On the test for standard writ· 1 ten English. the Californians averaged 42.6 compared to 42.2 nationally. Riles issued a statement say- ing that the national average on 1981 mathematics and verbal tests remained the same as the year before, but the California scores climbed. "California students have re· versed a downward trend that was first measured on a stale- by -state basis in 1972," he said. The current three-year statute for rape has been criticized by prosecutors, who noted it would not allow them to prosecute s ome notorious rapists - "Stinky" of the Berkeley area, and Sacramento's east-area rapist -because their last known rapes were more than three years ago. Smoldering coal due to low grade boom? The national SAT scores began a steady decline as fltr" back as 1963. Riles said California's decline was faster after 1972, dropping below the national average for the first time in 1976. But it started up faster in 1979. The new six-year statute, ef· fe clive Jan. 1, cannot apply retroactively to those cases. however. On other crime issues, Brown signed AB1613 by Assemblyman Howard Berman , 0 -Los Angeles, banning weapons train- ing for paramilitary groups who ·plan to use weapons in a civil disorder. and AB1463 by As- semblyman Gary Hart, 0 -Santa Barbara, increasing penalties LOS ANGELES (AP > -A boom in steam coaJ exports may be contributing to a rash of prob- 1 ems with Orient-bound freighters stranded in port with their coal loads smoldering, a trade association suggests. Three freighters loaded with low-grade, high-sulfur coal were anchored a mile offshore or Los Angeles wharves today as U.S. Coast Guard orCicials monitored temperatures inside their holds. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642•5878 Captive. ahark held weakening RANCHO PALOS VERDES <AP) -A l·year-old female great whlte shark caught last week by sport fishermen is re- portedly weakening in a huge tank at Marineland, dimming hopes that she might become the first of her species to adapt to captivity. The unnamed shark - believed the only one of her kine! in captivity right now -may be sufferin~ from an injurv inllict· iii!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~ SHUTTERS CUSTOM QUALITY SHUTIERS Designed, Finished ~ Installed - ----------- 28 Years Experience Manufacturing Quality Shutters FINEST QUALITY SHUTTERS AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TODAY .•. AT FACTORY DIRECT PRICES! Call (714) 548-6841 or548-1717 HORWOOD MANUFACTOtlY 19n Placentia Avenue • Costa Mesa, CA 92627 Lifeline Telephone Service What It Is and how you can get It. If you 're a residence customer of Pacific Telephone and you make a limited number of local calls a month , you might be interested in our 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 allowance is extra. (The 31st·40th calls cost 1()¢ each. Every call over 40 costs 15¢.) Installation, telephone sets, and other services and equipment cost extra. ed by the fishermen who hauled he r in last Thursday and brought her to the aquatic park in southwestern Los Angeles County. Stirling seeks state off ice SACRAMENTO <AP > - Republican Assemblyman Dave Stirling has entered the race for state attorney general saying, "Our criminal justice system is ' in a shambles " Stirling, 41 , Cirst elected in 1976 from the Los Angeles sub- urb of Hacienda Heights, told a news conference Monday that th e liberals on the state Supreme Court are largely to blame for the condition of the criminal justice system. Mae West home hit by looters LOS ANGELES {AP) -Ava- cant San Fernando Valley home owned by the late actress Mae West has been repeatedly looted over the past three months. it to Lifeline is available to residential customers only in most areas of Los Angeles and San Diego as well as Orange County, Bakersfield, Riverside. Fresno, Sacramento, Santa Rosa. San Francisco, San Jose. Stockton, Modesto and ADJUSTED INCOME. JOINT RETURN $50,000 $35,000 I $25,000 ESTIMATED TAX BRACKET 50% 40% 30% parts of the East Bay, Peninsula and Marin. --I I I Nationally, the College En· trance Examination Board said the nearly one million seniors who took the test last spring • averaged slightly worse in the standard written English test, which was added to the SAT in ' 1975. Jus t over 100,000 California , seniors look the test. That was 36 percent of the 1981 graduating class. In 1980, 102,717 Califor. nians took it. $20.000 I I 25% I Want to know more? 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Moet blmlat NqUI,. proof of flllng to open M~:Mrclat accounta. The DAILY f'tlOT provtdee both filing and pubtlcetlon HrvtcH. We heve ell th• necHtary form• end malnt.,n e dally ..mce to the Orange County eourthouM. EttMr Mop by °"9 of our c::ome"69M offlcH or phone h LEGAL oePMTMINT MM321, ht. 332 for.....,.. lnfonMdon and tonM. -------~--- Tax-break for Gibraltar1111 sawrsl You may exempt from Federal taxes the first $2,000 in interest on a joint return or $1,000 on an individual return. Minimum deposit is $500. Available Oct. 1. To eam your maximum tax-free interest at the current rate, deJ>05it $15,860 if you file a joint return or $7,930 for a single return. Your savings Gm wiU be insured to $100,000 by the FSLIC. Pree services. You can use your tax-free savings account balance lo help you qualify for Gibraltar's many free servi~s: safe deposit bOx, travelers checks. money orders, direct deposit, notary public and many others. SAVINGS Assets mer 4 billion dollars ·'9 offices itatewide HUNTINCTON BEAOi: I'll Huntington Ctr. I (714) 898-9666 LACUNA HILLS: 24260 El Toro Rd./ (714) 951-8454 RIUF.RTON: 2M W. Orangethorpe Ave./ (714) 871.-6101 NEWPORT BEAQi: 2700 W. Coast Hwy./ (714) 631-2611 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO: 'JJ817 Od Obispo St. I (714) 493-5011 SANTA ANA: 3925 S. Bristol St. I (714) 9'79-7SlK> 14 Santa Ana Fashion ~I (714) 8.}4.()717 Dally Piiat TUESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1981 CAVALCADE STOCKS MOVIES 82-3 87 88 Stringent requirements make it difficult for U.S. winemaker s to sell product overseas ... B5 HUNTINGTON BIACH I f DUNTAIN VllllY Laid-off teachers hack to work J ,. Fountain Valley rehires most of those on tenure , probationary status The Fountain Valley School District has rehired all but one or its teachers and professionals who received layorr notices last spring. Jac k Ma hnken, assistant s upe rintendent for personnel. said enough people resigned or took leaves of absence to enable the district to rehire its laid·off employees. · · 1t just so happened that it all evened out." he said. The lone professional who is not returning took a position in a n other sc h ool di s tri ct , Mahnken said. The rehirin~ affected proba- llonary and tenured employees A teacher or professional hired on a probationary basis must work three years to achieve tenure Because of budget constraints and declining enrolltnl'nt. the district, followrng state rt•quirt> m e nts, m ai l ed prelam1n1:1r) layoff notices in March to 10 employees or these. the distract was able to rehire nrne this fall ··vou have to gave out the notices, and you hope it balances out,·· observed Mahnken "We were fortunate · Il e said some' of the rehired e m1>IO)t•es ha.ve received dlf· fer<·nt work assignments, but non e received a decrease in pay. In <·ontrast to the Fountain Valll'y employment situation, of· f1crnl s an the Huntington Beach l 'nwn lligh School District an· nounccd recently that they were f o rced to employ 30 more teachers than were needed this fa ll bccaust• not enough layoff notices were mailed to teachers last sprang Al s o . fe wer h ig h sc h ool teache rs resigned or took leavei; of ahst>nce than the district had ant1t1pated. ~ \• ·~ More pupils to paf..:i for bus serv ice ? Some llunlmgton Beuc:h High School students who got free bus service to school last year ma) be requ1 red to pa) 75 cenb a da) for the same tran:-.portat1on this year. Last session. all students Ii v ing further· than three mal es from a Huntington Beach l'nion High School District campus got free bw. service But in a budget cut t hal e l iminat ed two drivers and s aved $80,000. district offi cials restricted bus service this vear to students living at least "rour miles from a school On Tuesday. about 70 parenb of pupil s living further than three miles aW"c1y from llunt ington Beach High School ap pealed to district trustees to re· mst1tutl• the bus service. Thl• parent:. said they feared for the ir t•htldren ·s safety because the s tudents wert, + rort·crl this YCl.\f' to walk through· • the unlighted and undeveloped areas near Central Park in the earl) morning and late after- noon:-. Di strict omc:aals say about 100 ... tud e nts lave an the a rea bounded by Staler and Talbert <•V t'nUt'S and Graha m arrd S pringdale s treets, which is bet"' ecn 3 5 males and 3.9 miles from the Huntington Beach cam· pus Distract officials also a re con- sidering allowing students living lt•ss than four miles from the ('am pus to ride the buses based on available space. .,. o.lty ..... ~ .. , C.....IUn SOCIAL CLIMBER? Shaun Wallace. 6. discovers you should always he ni<:l' to peopl<.' on ~·our way up because you never know whom ~ ou might meet on the way down. Dori Gazso. Anna <rnd T om Fekete. hot tom roY+. and Shaon Gates and R~ an Stt•t·h go t ham n it 10 a good s tart hefore giggles collapsed the P.ffamad on a Costa Mesa lawn. N ew species of cockroach found in Irvine, Viejo :--1 \1·1-.tl .i.11. 11 I "l}..r11.111t1" 111 J rll"\\ .111d p11!1 1111.dh ftlilfl" h:.irrnful 'f•t·1·11 s h.1\ 1• b1 1·11 tit" t"tt\ 1•1 t·d 1r1 Ir \ 1111· 111d \lh,J<>n \·11 111 ;tlld 111111 t,lh lfl I Ill' t It an gt ('01u1l\ \1•1,11 1·11,1t111I l>rt11l'I di t· Ill "l'itl "'' 111 11th1•t ... , ht '>111111\ I I I \\ 11 I ' I "t 11,11'11 • ., naltH' to thl' humid conditions ,!long the Gulf Coast and as 11:-.ua ll v found in hot. damp pl Jt'e" · mosll) indoors -said Fn·d Re ams . educational 1·11orrhnator for lhe vcclor con· trot dastri('l Among its favorite laving con- Alcala lawyer gets newsboy killer c ase l'lw t.rn u 1 ,, h11 d fto ndl'd con v1 c·t l·d 1"111ld l\1 l l1•r Hocfn e v .la1111·' \11'.d.1 h;1-. 111•1 11 -.1"11·1 led lo 1 eprt"•t 111 l<nlf!'rl .I .1t•l\,on Thump"•ll. tlw \11.d 11•1m man a n ·u..,t•d 11( l\1 d11.q 1p1 ng J nd s l 1 .1 n i.: l 1 n i.: .1 I .! ' l' ,1 1 11 I d nt•Y. "l).llJl'I d1•li \ t'I \ ho\ la<,t Augu-,t N o rt h 1 1 r a 11 }! 1• C 1' u n l y M u111 t 1p.tl I '11u11 lud~·· l>ave R at'11 .11 .q1pn111 ltcf lu..,lin lav.H•r .luhn I> Barnell to the ca s~ Monday .ludgt• Harh also s cheduled a prelan1inaP ht.>armJ! for Or t :10 from the casc because the pros- C'Cution witness. who shared a 1<111 cell with Thompson, once was r<'prcsenlcd by the public defender, c reating a potential confhc·~of-intcrcst s ituation. Similar circumstances led to Ba rnett ·s apporntment in the All'ala case One of the inform· ants who testified in that case. however. recanted his testimony a year later Lawyers for Alcala have appealed the matter to the Calfornia Supreme Court. Thompson . an unem ployed electricaan who has spent all but 13 months in prison since 1969, is c harged with murder, kidnapp· mg. sodomy. lewd conduct and s pecial circumstance allegations that could lead to imposition of the death penalty. ditaons are sewers where the in- sects are apt to pick up or· ganisms in their intestinal tract that can be spread to humans by contam inating food s upplies, Beams said. In contrast , the Or iental cockroach. which as the common N E W EAGLE D avid Thomas Maloney. 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. James D. M a l oney of H untington Beach. recently received his E agle Scout award s pecies in Orange County. pre- fers to Jive outdoors and isn 'l the disease-carrying problem of the smoky brown, he said Because the insects are easily transported in crates and packages . Beams s aid the smoky browns may have spread to other parts of the count~ as well. "I wouldn't be surprised 1f we have infestations elsewhere.' he s aid today T o find out. he is askin~ coun- ty residents who suspect they may have the s moky brown cockroach to ca rry or mail 'Quiet' jet tests due at airport? De monstration flights of re· search jet aircraft said by one observer to be .. unbelievabl y quiet" may be conducted in early 1982 at Orange County's John Wayne Airport. The demonstration flights are being sought by Supervisor Thomas Riley, who recently viewed the aircraft at the Na- t iona l Aeronautics and Space Admini st ration 's Ames Resear ch Center a t Moffett Field, near San Jose. •'I am extremely excited about the possibilities and the potential that this new aircraft type would provide lo an airport · with the noise impacts of John Wayne Airport," Riley said in a letter to other supervisors. In the letter, Riley requests permission to negotiate with NASA to bring the research aircraft to Orange County for demonstralion flights . "By having the opportunity of actually seeing and hearing the aircraft in action, it is clear to me that we are, Indeed, on the way to developing an aircraft that will provide a ll the passenger comforts of today's jets without the corresponding impacts that jets have on sur- rounding communities." Riley said. B arn t• 11 \\ ,1 :-. l h l' t' o u rt appomted la'"\ 1 1 v. ho n•pre..,ent· ed Al<:ala duri111-h1.., h 1 1othl~ p U h la C' I 7 I' <f () I ,Ill J.! I• (" (I lJ n l ) mu1·df'r tn al 1r1 HIKO Alc'ala was evt·ntuall\ 1·onv1t'lt•cl an<I s<'nt lo San Quentin ., fll•ath Ro'" for th1• 1979 kidnap murd<•r of 12 ycar- old Robin Samsoe nf lluntangton Beach Single parent classes set at G WC Al Ames, NASA is conducting tests of the so-called Quiet Short· Haul Researc h Aircraft. The project h as been unde r way s ince 1974, according lo a brochure Riley cir culated to other supervisors. The aircraft is unusual in de- sign in that its four high-bypass jet engines are mounted above, rather than below, the wings. T hom pson ·s "·•'-!? h ears sevt•ral s1 mil aril tt'" lo I hl' Alcala east•. incluchng th1 p11t1•nt1al use of J111lhou..,1• informant testi mony against thl' \n<th('am mnn Until Mond.1y, Thompson. 35, had been represt•nlcd h} Mike Giannini of the Oran~e Ct'unty Public D<ifondt.'r "orrace Aul munn lm wus r emoved A fou r·part series on single parenting will begin Friday at Golden West College in Hunt· angton Beach. The workshops are scheduled on two consecutive weekends: 7 to 9 p. m. Fridays, Oct. 2 and 9 In Administration Room 209, and 9 a m to 4 p.m Saturdays, Oct. 3 and 10 in the community center. The Friday m eetings, for adults.only, will focus on family relationships and communlca· tlon . Participants may bring their children to the Saturday sessions, which will Include group sessiops, lectures and a family beach picnic. ..__ ______ ,, Coordinating the workshops will be Mary A. Bruggeman, a marriage. fa mily and child counselor who raised two sons. Admission is free, but enroll· ment is llmlted. Pre-registration is required. For more informa- tion call the community services office, 893-6250. According to Riley and other county officials who traveled to Moffett Field one week ago, the airc raft ls able to take off using about one-third of the runway distance or conventional short.- haul jets and produces far less noise because of its fast-climb ability . :-.amplcs to the vector control of- fice 111 13001 Garden Grove ~ Blvd , Garden Grove. 92643, 971 242 1. If poss ible, the r ockroaches should be pre- served in alcohol , he said. "It 'c; not a deadly serious situation:· assured Beams, "but 1t would be uncomfortable if they contaminated any human 'I food -.upphcs · · Amo ng the dis eases the cockroaches are known to carry 1s a moebic dysentery. he said. The smoky brown, as its name 1mplt1.•s. 1s colored a reddish brown and 1s about 11"2 inches long Distinguishing charac- teristics are long antennae and v. in gs lhal extend to the tip of its body The Oriental species. on the other hand. has short wings that don •t cover the body. Smoky browns, in fact. can fly ; Orien- tals ('an·t , said Beams. The first smoky browns were <i found a year ago in Mission vte-· JO and the roaches have coe- tmued to show up in severalt hpm es in that ne ighborhood east of the San Diego Freeway, said ··; Smoky browns also have been 1 found in "one or two" homes in Irvine northeast of the Santa Ana Freeway near Culver Drive, he added. So far, vector coqtrol workers have been dusting outdoor areas a nd sewers with boric acid to , kiU the cockroaobes, he said. A commercial fogger spray can be used indoors. Resident.a wWl lo-·' restations, however , should probably .call a peat control service, he added. T he insects don't multiply quJckly. It tak.es 5S days for an egg capsule to hatch, Beams said. "ff we can catch the infesta- tion while it's still in its develop- ment stage, we can eradicate it.·· said Beams. I M Ht' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tu11day. September 29, 1981 ! DEA TH NOTICES t· CAMPBELL employe.i ot the Sff'a Candy u 0 0 R 0 T H Y J E A N Company for 40 yeara. Ht la CAMPB£LL. paued away 111rvfved by hie wlte Ruth on September 77. 1981. S.,. Leuner , dauahtera Toby waa • rt11ldent ol Hutltlnaton Rubin and 1'helm11 Foskett Beach, C.. Survived by her both of GardHi Grove, Ca h v 1b1 nd Norwood A . and Marchi Clark of Buena Campbell. IOM Norwood R Park . Ca., her brother Campbell ol La Meu. Ca Millon ol New Jersey and Oennla W. C•mpbell of West 11 Is o 6 & rand c h I Id ren . Loii An&eles. Ca. and Uruct Steven, Lisa. Scott, Jeffrey, A Campbell or SJtn Fran· Jon al ha n and Karen c l s c o • C a . a n d 2 Graveside services wlll be araodchlldreo. Prayer held on Thursday, October 1. Servlc:es will be held on 1981 at 1 :OOPM al Harbor Wednesday. September 30. Lawn-Mount Olive Memorial 1981 at lO:OOAM at Ollday Perk. Services under the Brothers Chapel. Interment direction of llarbor Lawn. private. In lieu of rlowers Mount Olive Mortuary ot the family requests dona· Costa Mesa. 540-5554 Mtmorial liolpltaJ on S.p- tembtr 17. 1981 . He Is aut· vlved by hi.a mother Selina Hyde, and hJs wire FrancH O'Neill or La1una Buch, Ca .• 1 dauiihler Rond• O"Nelll ot LufUn• Be•ch. Cit ond 1 brother Bill O'Neill ol San Muino, Ca. Ht owned lhe Sall Chevrolet Dealership In Laguna Beach. Ca. Rosary will be recited on Tuesday. Sep· tember 28, 1981 at 8:00PM al Ray Family l..a&uha Beach Mortuary, 976 S. Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach, Ca. Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Wednes- day. September 30, 1981 al lO:OOAM al St. Catherine's Catholic Church, La1una Beach. Ca. Ray Family Laguna Beach Motruary1 directors. ELVIS UNVEILED I~ Fans of the "King of Rock a nd Roll." Elvis Presley, were ' at the unveiling of a , bronze statue by Jon Douglas subscribed to by an organization ca ll ed ··Elvisly Youtzs.. which will donate it to a public institution in London. lions be 11\ade to your ruvorlle charily. Directed by O'NEILL Dilday Brothers Mortuary PAUL R. O'NEJLL. resi· Buch and Talbert, Hunt· dent of Laguna Beach. Ca ington Beach. Ca. 842·7771. Passed away a t Hoag COUGHLIN ... MARIA ELENA Rf COUGHLIN . resident or r Newport Beach, Ca for the "' past 10 years. Passed away on September 27. 1981 She 1s survived by her husband Norman. her daughter Corinne, son Wiiiiam. all of Newport Beach. Ca .. mother Eva Vega of Mexico. sisters Guadalupe and Gloria Vega, Eva Varker and Viola Vega. all of Mexico Mas~ of the Resurr ection will be on Tuesday, September 29, 1981 'l.L al lO ·OOAM al Our Lady ... ., Queen of Angels Catholic •n Church. Newport Beach. In· 1tl terment ser vices im llt. mediately following BallZ i.>.!l Berl{eron-Smith & Tuthill vi Westclirr Chapel Mortuary of Costa Mesa 646·9371 ELLIS ERNEST WILLIAM EL· LIS. resident of Corona del 8 Mar. Ca Passed away OR 'M September 26. 1981. He is survived by 2 sons John E. q Ellis of San Diego, Ca and M E. Wilham Ellis of El Paso, 911 Texas, 5 grandchildren and 8 great -grandchildren -r.., Services will be held Wed oc nesday, September 30. 1981 '.$ 1 at 2 :OOPM in Pacific View _,, Chapel Paci fi c View nJ Mortuary. ~ewport Beach, ..r... directors. ,WI GOULD .'/ DOROTHY M. GOULD. resident of Newport Beach. "' Ca. for the past 22 years b-Passed away on September dJ 26. 1981 She b survived b' her daughter Joan Ray of nc Newport Beach, Ca . son m James Mitchell of Los ,., Angeles. Ca. brothers .ii Edwin Bryant of Laguna U. Hills. Ca. and Thomas Bryant of Newport Beach. ·~• Ca .. sister Florence Patchell rl 1 of Laguna Hills, Ca , niece Patricia Wilcox of Illinois. 6 grandchildren and 2 great gr andchildren. Graveside services wi ll be held on Tuesday, September 29, 1981 at 11 OOAM al Holy Cross Cemetery. Los Angele~. Ca Services under the direction of Baltz Bergeron·Sm1lh & Tuthill Weslchff Chapel Mortuary of Costa Mesa. 646-9371 MELILL MARGA REI E MELILL. res ident or Huntington Beach. Ca Passed away on September 26. 1981. She was a clerk at Orange Co ast College for the past 10 years She is survi ved by her husband John. son Joseph Callahan of San Bernardino. Ca ., daugher Maureen Callaha n Rhod es of Anaheim, Ca . sister Theo Scott or Illinois and 3 grandchildren Services will be held on Wednesdav. Sep· tember 30, 1981 at 10 OOAM at Harbor Lawn Memorial Chapel with the Harbor Star Cha pt er of the Order of Eastern Star officiating. Graveside services will be held at 12:30PM at Oakdale Memorial Park in Glendora. Ca. Services under the direc Uon or Baltz Bergeron-Smith & Tuthill Westcliff Chapel 1 Mortuary of Costa Mesa 646·9371. LESSNER ISADORE LESSNER. re· 1 sldent of Garden Grove. Ca. I Passed away on September 28. 1981. He was an r.ACIHC VllW MIMOll.AL r ARK Cemerery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1!1c View 011ve Newp0rt Beach 644·2700 McCOIMta MORTUAlllS LaQuna Beach 494-9415 LaQuna Hills 768-0933 San Juan Cap1s1rano 495·1776 H+HOI L.AW~MT. OUYI Mortuary • Cemetery Crematory .. t 625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 ,_CllaOTHIH 1&1.•0ADW.AY MCMITUUY 110 Bfoadwav Costa Mesa 6'2-9150 IA&.TZ .. •HOH SMn'H I TUTHl\L WUTCUff CH.AP'll 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 646-9371 PlllCI ..OTNllS SMITNS' MOITU.aY 627 Mam St ~nt1nqton Beach 53&-6539 ..... Jets 'scramble' off East Coast An incide nt in which two Air Force jets were ordered into a .. scramble" off the Vlrglnla coast was lhe seventh time this year such action has been necessary after two Soviet aircraft crossed into this nation's air defense identification zone, of- ficials report. Antique & Auto Show & Sole r EARl.'S \.0MtMN0•HrAflN0 ... el ............. "' •' ~ . ., .. ., ... . ......... ,......., "'""' ... '\;f p f r ,.1 •I•~• ~ftAl~'t 11 ft\.lt Ai .. ,. COSTA MUA641 ·1289 t.utN....,,.twd MISSION v~.ICA95-0401 MEED HSI? Help yourself to a Heaping selection of Qua Ufied Hopefuls m the DAILY PILOT HELP WANTED ADS "" ......... .................. • Put '38 to work in pay • "• =\iUtte• : TV Movies. earn : \ "' • $19.456 In • years. • • For brochure call: • : NEWPORT-PACIFICA : I w ·i ..... E SALE • 957-0282 • n '················· CASH& The Soviet Tu-95 Bears flew into the zone about 225 miles east or Norfolk, Va. Monday. said Air Force spokesman Maj . Robert Nicholson. The Soviet planes flew eastward before the Huntington Center pilots or the two F-106 fighters sent from Langley 1---F_n_t_hru_,_S'"-"-u_n ..... Oct=;....;:;.2-4~ . ....__ _________ 1 19n C•l'P!HtO C•~•tr•no fl•" Oie90 ,,_., •• ..,.,.,, ~••1 I CARRY ONt.Y. SAVE 30% ANO MOREi STARTS OCT. ht. Air Force Base could identify them as recon· naissance or bomber versions of the turboprop· ']:::)£.'din~ ga£&.'l.y CUSTOM FRAMING powered Tu·95. * ART ClUAR HOURS 9-9 A rocket of East European manufacture s mashed into an armored police vehicle in Roman Print. Catholic West Belfast, killing the driver and Elcttlnfll seriously injuring the man beside him. police re· s.rlfrepM LntlOflrephc ported. Reproduction• Pcnler An Um/fed Edltlont They said the missile tore through the side ,----------T----------, door of the Land-Rover as it patrolled the edge of 1 1 30% OFF I 20% OFF I the Aodersonstown district. M/R\n n I I Allied Corp. says ~ts planned dumping or HE WANTS v~~ : CUSTO~J!AMINC I FRA!~IL ART l 177,000 tons of hydrochloric acid in the Atlantic TQ H A\IE .HIS BABY L-------1Xf'IHS ~-15 .. 1 ·-------~ Ocean 15 miles orr the New .Jersey shore. ten· M v VISA' VISrT OUI GIFT IOUT1QUE CIMTll -- tatively approved by the federal government, will -HOURS sum ion ~· cost 25 to 50 times less than other common dis· 'PG e» _.,. ........ k.... · · · ·· -· MOM •• RI. ICM Morttiwoocn-c..lw posal methods . S.AT.11-5 (714) C.41.41 ft.4175 • Tl 11 "' =-....:~,. 48-931 U.S . Environmental Protection Agency of· -'"'~~"'"~ ~ ficialss~dthespecial permitforAfliedwou~ be ·~~~~~~N=e=x=t=t=o=J~e=~~•r~y=b=y~R=e=m=y~~~~~~~--------~ one of two such permits in the country for dump-1----------------------'- ing acid wastes in the ocean. * South Africa's national rugby team headed home today to a jubilant homecoming and praise from its government's editorialists despite the OC· casional violence on its controversial U.S. tour. More than 100 heavi· ly geared police guarded --------- t h e Sou t h A fr i c a n p LACES airways terminal at Keo-n e d y International _____ _ Airport in New York City as the Springboks team boarded a jet for the flight to Johannesburg. There were no protesters at the airport. * A quarantine has been ordered in Holtville and the s urrounding Mexican border area after a pet skunk kept with four dogs turned out to be rabid. The quarantine order affecting dogs and cats was issued by Dr. Lee CottreJJ, Imperial Couty health director. He said leash laws will be en· forced. * A highly flammable toxic liquid spilled when two t rucks collided on Interstate 10, forcing closure or the eastbound lanes at the Milliken Avenue off-ramp in Ontario for hours, a California Department of Transportation spokes ma n said. Liquid methylene diph enyl di·isovyanate began leaking from a tanker carrying 2,000 gallons of the s ubstance, said Caltrans spokesman Bill McKinney. * Pope J ohn Paul II today named American Bishop Paul C. Marcinkus acting president of a powerful commission that runs Vatican City's day- to-day affairs, the Holy See announced. The pontiff also elevated lhe. 59-year-old cleric to archbishop. it said. Marcinkus. a native or Cicero, Ill., replaces Italian Cardinal Sergio Guerri as head of the Pon· tifical Commission for Vatican City affairs. Guerri reached the Vatican's mandatory retirement age of 75. * A 19-year-old Maryland man decided to help himself to the $300-a·day presidential suite at the Saha ra Hotel in Las Vegas but there was one s mall problem -he wasn't registered. Scott Allan Joy o f Wheaton was arrested and charged with defrauding an innkeeper and possession or burglary tools Croom keys) I accord· ing to police record~. * A seventh person died as a result of a collision between a train and a gasoline tanker truck in Birmingham, Ala. Lonnie D. Price, 25, of HunlavUle, Ala., was burned over 90 percent of his body when flames engulfed four cars waiting at a train crossing Sept. 15. llOTIQ OP A""-ICATIO. "°" Ptennous • .,.. ..... CM.-.INOMll•ttMUPOfl llAMenAT•MtlNT ALCOMOUC • .,, ..... LIC•NH TIM followlftO ,_... It dDlflO IMnl· t.»41 MMH: Te-.. ttM9y c:.ic.nt: l•l THE THltEE MAGI 11>1 NEUOM, ,,_ Tiii. WESTaltOOK, NINTH HOUSE. 1*2 Pllrlt• CJrcle. Mwel Lem. 1•1t •vsller41 SlrMI, H1111t..,_.,. a..ctl, c.tlflllnlle tlM7 fl-Piii Velley, CA tl'M -.... y. El11etlle11 f<.a . l•lffll, 1St41 1111 .. t111 ~ ti AM;••llc lll'vr1te11 Circle, Hllftfllllt.,. a..c11, .._, ... c;.Mrol fW "G'" Oflf< SALE c.tlf9rllletlM1 aEElt 6 WINE Cl'VI. "EMISESl.. This ....... It<~ 1W.., ~ H ll elcllell< lleHreeu el 1Ml1 Cllvldloel. ...... r41 MfWlft, ~VIM~, CA E~f<.v . ..-.. .,._ Tiii• .. -..... -..... w!tfl .,. ..._. .... Or .... CMst OClllY ... ~ C-ty Olftl" Or .... c-.ty ...... s..t. It. "" 461-41 i.tftlliler n. 1'71. ,.,,. .. , "''*' ... Onllet OMst Delly "'''"· ~. 2', Ott. 6. IJ. •. 1'11 cal.., TAX FREE ANNUAL INT EREST!* C,ommercial Credit's avers Thrift Certificates. Upto$2,000taxfreeinterest Plus a cash bonus. The greatest wayforyouandAmerica to fight inflation. Introducing All-Savers Thrift Certificates from Commercial Credit. One year, $500 mini - mum thrift certificates that allow you to earn up to $2,000 in interest tax free, if you file a joint re· tum ... and up to $1,000 tax free for individual returns. The interest rate is the highest allowed by law. This bi.Rh rate is guaranteed for the one· year tenn of the tfuift certificate . And Commercial Credit will add still another great incentive ... $10 cash bonus for thrift certifi - cates from $500 to $5,000. $20 cash bonus for thrift certificates of $5 000 or more. So what's iood for ~erica is sensational for you. Purchasing an All-Savers Thrift Certificate helps reduce iriflation and strengthen our econ· omr. through an increase in personal savings, while you get up to $2 000 tax free interest an- nually -plus cast} just for opening your account. Don'tputitoff. Usetheattachedex>upon to apply for Commercial Credit's great All -Sivers Thrift Certificates and You and UNCLE SAM will have a lot to smile about. AvailabletoCalifomiaresidents only, beginning October 1. ·=~~~:~·.f'"''~!~~!~~!.~·;:q-t..1:~' T1:':;~~~;,,t.,.,_, "'""•hr to"'""""""' ,.------------------. Here's my check or money order for an All·Savers Certificate in the amount of $ . I Type of Account: 0 Individual O Joint Tenancy I I I I I I I I I I In the name(sl of ___________ _ My Signature ____________ _ Co·Owner Signature ___________ , Account Address ___________ _ City _____ State _____ Zip ___ _ My Social Security/Tax LO.# _______ _ Phone I .____,___... ....... ~""~ CRmrr ! '- COMMERCIAL CREDIT PLAN,INCORPORATED I -----------------~ 1 Sorn ao·nanae' bft reaeetee,•o • -~-------=-------....._- Orange Coast OAILV PILOT/Tuelday, September 29. 1981 H t F OMPOSITE TRAN ACTION tUOfAT._. r,.-cLuo• ••&OUOll , ....... 'tOl•,MIDWUT .... ,.,,(, .... 10\lO ... O&TIOl t &1110 (IOl(llll lOYI uoo IXCll4 .... 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' t:t ' ::::· Artists P-roduction1 says it baa •L • C: sw.-" bYMr11 ;!5.,!..~ >"'• 11ihM ,~ 1!! +·411-.. . * ""'•-. • · 1 u• 1 •1~ a1reed ln prlnc.lple lo be acquired by '' ~1',: !!'" ~ ·9'i ~ ~·, S:~ • t 11 ~--=·~,_. i,.~ I !l l• ls JI:';:!~ M a a cot Jndua trlea Ltd., an -c-c -" ·• J • 1 ~-ii 4 fi"IC. ~ '1 IC. +11'1 Australian company It had sued two W. Ille ~ ·: ,1$ r;-1: Ir I.It • i\6 jt :.. =I .J1 J • : ~ ="''• 1 111 r ! 11: ti .J ~ '.+'. "' weeks &go. ur ' :r: ~ .. I ! ~ f:i' ~ : .. = . ii ·~..,-· 1fl. '1 ; ~ Flrsl ArtltLI President Edw1n Hol~ !1' . • . 1 ._: t: f.fJ ii ,, 1 +··· Jj ~ j:' ... ! = u f! m• . ~·, ·! W to,\• 111 ly aald the •1reemenl called fOT :r.3···:; I .:· fi~· : . 1] :' "'1 ~;1 •,,. :, ~ m.1 .. 1., '"' ... _ M11cottopaytll.•••bareforFtnt • 'tt 1 : ' f •... I ~~1 " , :; .t Im:::,; Ar~· outatandinc •tock and fOf' tJM • ,. • : • • • '~ -: • -1 t MJ ff:! \? lawawta to be dropped. ~ I ·~ ~ The battle of the brands I ' lf you regard the buslne11S world as a horse race~ 1 you tend to check out who's winnlna or losln1 In the fight tor your dollars . You IUte to think that lh• br;ands you buy are winners. But here are some rank· in gs which might 21urprlse you · Folaer's, a Procter & Gamble brand, h~ forged to the top or the a round corre~ market, dis· 1 placing the longtime leader, Maxwell House. Folger's is reported to be doing 28 percent of the busl· • ness t o Maxwell House's 24 percent. However,. General Foods. the Maxwell House maker, contlnuea to be the overall coffee leader with an array ol brands that includes Sanka, Brim. Yuban ancl I Maxim Contac, a product of SmithKUne, an oldline ' Philadelphia Pharmaceutical house . has lost Its grip : on rirst place in cold remedies, having been s hoved aside by NyQull, whose maker, Richardson-Vicks; runs those heartwarming commercials featuring the whining, wheezing hus band who needs to be rescued by his smart wife. NyQuil has been pulling down 20 percent of the dollars spent on cold remedies . Contact gets 14 percent. -Don't Cecl sorry for SmithKline. It has the hot• test new prescription druc around In Ta1amet, u antiu.lcer agent wboae sales have skyrocketed alnce 1 • its introduction four years ago. Tagamet'a worldwide 1 sales in 1980 were $860 million. It bu dllplaced ~ Valium as the 19p-selling prescription drug. -What's tbe best -selling headache remedy? Anacin? No. Bayer aspirin? No. Excedrin? No. The winner, in a romp now. is Johnson & J ohnson's non· aspirin product, ~ Tylenol <availa· ble in tablets, \; ~ capsules and Ii · , quid ). Tylenol ..4: i, has come from 411-•a..;~-•-------~~~h~e ~r~=~t llLIDI lllllWITZ of what's called the .. analgesic market. .. Left in the lurch are Anacin 112 percent), Bayer (9 percent), Bufferin (7 percent) and Excedrin (7 percent >. Bufferin and Excedrin are both made by lhe same company. Bristol-Myers , home also of Clairol, Ban, Vitalls, Tickle , Windex and Drano. The big winner here ls Clairol, still the ,. • domina nt brand in the hair coloring business. -The top-selling liquor brand in the country is, • • believe it or not. Bacardi rum. -Eastern Air Lines carries more passengers than any other airline: 39 million in 1980 But Delta Air Lines makes more money than any other airline. $130 m illion after taxes in 1980. Colgate· Palmolive, a company best known for its toothpastes and dete rgents, none of which now rank in first place, happe ns to be the largest selle r of brand-name rice. thanks to fielding five different brands out of Texas: Carolina. Success. Mahatma Brown, Make -It-E asy and River. However, the largest single brand in the business is Uncle Ben"s, 1J the product of a peculiar company called Mars. which sells more candy <M&M ·s. Snickers, Milky Way, Three Musketeers> than Hershey and competes in the pet rood market under the Kai Ka n name The leading cough drop is Hall's. made by Wa rner-Lambert. -The lop·selling narhe in the plastic tras h bag , market is Glad, which comes to us from the chemical giant, Union Carbide . -Totino, a Pills bury brand. heads the frozen pizza market. -Mattel claims 10 percent of the $4 billion U.S. toy business. but a Minneapolis food company. General Mills , has more than that in its array or toy ' companies: Parker Bros. <Monopoly. Ouija, Nerf>. ' Kenner <Star Wars Toys. Strawberry Shortcake dolls, Play-Doh. Easy Bake ovens), F'undimensions <Craft Master paint sets. MPC plastic model kits, Lionel trains>. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.•r STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES .. .; NEW Y0111( IAPl-S.lel, ,,..,._., prtce Mel rw1 <'*'911 of Ille Ill'"" ,,_, edl,,. Hew YOt11 Sleo £1tc'*'99 1-. lradlllD M l!Oflelly .. ,,.,.,.. , ...... '1 Enon" s 12t,SOO 1 llM IJ0.000 S1toreeTec11 140,.00 Amer T .. T 73S,SOO Sony Coro 632,200 Mo1111 s m. too T-y s SJl,300 LT\/ C0tP St3,200 O..Pont 41'.+oo SO\ltllernCo 4.Jt,IOO GenTell.EI '2•.tOO "'9rtln M •.t00 ~ro11 ' •1.soo .,Jn I »1,SOO ct corp •11400 AMERICAN LEADERS •I • tfJ. •2" . "'' • v. + 1'~ ,, • \'I '" . ,.. . '"" . '"" • t'l'a . ~ HEW YORK CA.Pl-Sal•, -.y prlC.e allO ,.., cllalloe of Ille te11 moll active Al'Mflc_,, 54oc-EllCflenGa I•-· 1recll119 Mlltn#llV M'""" INfl 11. 09mePtrl I 714,tOO tt"O + t" e Oll 4.Sl,JOO I + \I, II 411,.00 74\1, ' "1 ~ Ho m;,.oo ~ : 1~ =-~~ m:~! 1lv. • ",., HOu()llTr 1'6,;;J IV. + 1~ 01.lrk Air 110,100 111. • Yl TUbOSMO ' ISi.JOO J • '"' Ftfm11tOll 10,tOO II" • tV> Pel. Up IOJ.t Up 11.3 Up t7.t Up 11.4 Up t61 Up U.S Up !S,0 Up 1'.) Up IU Up 11·· UP I ·1 UP I Up 13. Up 12,J Up 12.1 UP ll.9 Uo 1.7 •re....,._.., ' '"' .... MH.•. -~ ........... ,ttey ... ~--....... ---.. ,.... I.I....., ... ..,..... .. ,, .... .----~.-..., ........ tlftltS.• fewr<t: o..11·.,._. NEW YOAKIAP) Final Oow·Jontt ••tl \11 1or Monoo. Sep. 21. ·C.I STOCKS 1 0-H._ I.Aw C.... ~·· JO il'ld l tUO .. u s I07 .... 142.5'• t , \':. 10 Tm m ,st lU.M 126 11 :iu.11 + t. tS VII !OOA::I 1010l tt.75 101.H-0 .• \ U S1k 31S 4' 121 71 313 ti n•.'1 + •1 I' I"°"' . .. '.. .. •.Ott, i1r.~ .. '.. . . '·:f~ ,,, U StlL . . . .• 1.l.t7, ~ WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK CAPI Sep ?f W>!l\T AMElt DtO NEW YORK Today '" ..,, m l'°I J Sto CAPI Sip 2t Toda~ )I) ltJ ... ' 131 ~ METALS cenh e PolllWI, u,~ C•11"r ... ._. ...... CIH llMllera. u..i-... cenu a-""' 1.ltte '9V. '*"'a pciuncl, Otll.,...O . Tia 11,rcl ~1 W-~...._ite 111. •-'-r.-ce1111 • ,.._, H v. ._..KW'f ~.00 per !Ifft.. 111atl-~-00 l l'O'f OI ..... Y SILVER •"'i e«. ._,. ~~ .... ~ I , .. .~ Handy & H.....-. St.OJ pet' troy -· 'ft\ nl1 u (2 HI F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Tuesday, September 29, 1981 Kerwin Bell's injury KO's him· for season F ro m AP dii;patc hes Kansas University sophom or e 5l Kerwin ~II . a graduate of Edison c. • H 1gh S<!hool "'here he was the CI F Div1:.wn 1 Player of tbe Year after leading the Ch:trgers to the CIF Big Five Con- rerencc c hampionship in 1979 and a firs t team Big Eight selt.•ction as a freshman. is out for the season with a knee injury. Bell, injurec.J in Saturday's game with Ken· lucky in the fi rst q uarter, lore ligaments in his le ft knee and is expected to un- dergo s urgery this week The l!J·year-old had one of the mos t s pectacular s t ar ts by any freshman in the history or the Jayhawks and was named the Big Eight's Offensive Newcomer of the Year lifter rus hing for 1,114 H1•// ) ards. more than any rookie 1n H1g ~:1ght annals, breaking Oklahom a's J oe W .1shmgton ·.., rt.•tord I k ru ... hed for over 100 yards six times and had a 216·) ard performance against rival Kansa:-. Stall' Ill' ""~ tht.• nation's 13th leading rus her. Bt.•11 \.\<s-. the ... ub1ect of controversy this past :-.pnng \\hen ht•\\ as dismissed from t he team by l '0:11·h Don Fambrough for disciplinary reasons , but \\ ,1:-. later n•instated. Famhroug h':.· comm ents on Bert : "Kerwin has .i f;.mta ... l1C' C"areer m front of him . When I ~a" Kl•rnm un film I knew he belonged on thal bl .dong \\1th Cale Sayer~. John Hadl and J ohn H1~g111:-.. and Kt•rwin is ('Ven better in person." Quote of the day Wa-.hington & Lee football coach Gary "Fakon" F allon, when notified of a com- pla 1nt b.\ h1~ players that there was no hot \\ ,1ll•r in lht• dormitory "The next thing \ 1111 ~rum . tht·.\ ·11 be a!>kmg for soap." Aikens. McRae. Leonard spark KC n illie Aiken' and Ha l McRae hit Ii 1 \\ o run homt·r~ a nd Dennis Leonard p1tl'ht·d u five hitter. leading Kansas Cit) to a H-1 tnumph over Minnesota ;\londJ) 111 \meriran League action. The win put lht• Ho)ab :JI• game~ 1n front of tbe Twins ~lark Brouhard broke up a scoreless battle "'1th h1-; :-.t"l:ond horner of the year and Pete Vuckovich f1rc·d a three·hitte r . leading M 11\.\ aukec to a 1-0 victory ove r Hoston to boost the Brewers into firs t place in the E<ist division by a half. game <Jver Detroit . Ed- d ie Murra) drove m four r uns "'1th a double and a home run and Benny Ay ala had a two -run homer as Ba!timon• defeated Detr oit, 7 3 J orge Orta drove in Arkt•ris three runs and Miguel Dilone ~rnn·d thret· to ... upport the six hit pitching of T om Un>nnan and spark Cleveland lo a 6·2 v1c· tor v mer thl· Nt'W York Yankees ... Mark ·Wa·~m·r·-. lhret• run double gave Texas an early fe<1d .ind the HJngers held on to beat Seattle. 6-:; Ft>rmer :\later Dei High star Dan Meyer hit a two run horn<'r for the Marine rs . Cards top Expos on Carter 's b low l>arrell Porter belted a two-run Ii doulik tu highlight a fi ve·run upris· ing in tlw fourth inning that gave Sl. Lou1-. a ti 2 tnumph over Montreal ;\l nnda) night. cutting the Expos· National LcaJ!ut· Ea!>t lt•acl to one half game over the C:mlinals Elsewher e. Art Howe's bases- g a Vt' 1 louslon a 2· 1 victory over San Diego. The win extended the As tros' lead in the West division to 2\.'.z game~ over Ci n cin n ati Al llargeshe ime r and Greg Minton combined for a four·hit shutout and Jerry ~1artin hit a two-run homer and scored twice as San f'ranc1sco cooled off the red· hot C1n c1 nnati Reds, 4-0 __ Cente r fielder Lonnie Portl'r S mith, hitting in his 17th s traight game. had two s ingles and a triple and !-.Cort•d thrl't' runo; to lead Philadelphia to a 12-4 win o\·er !ht· New York Mets _ .. Steve Hen- der~on drove 1n three r uns to back the pitching of Da\ c Ge1-.el and Randy Marti as the Chicago Cub-. defeated Pittsburgh to split a double- hl'a<for The Pirates won the first game. 4-0. on Rick Rhoden's four-hi1 shutout. Baseball today On this da te in baseball in 1963: In the final gam e of his 22-year career , Stan Musial of the St. Lou.is Cardinals went 2·for-3 for his 3,629th and 3,630th career hits as the Cards nipped the Cincin - nati Reds. 3·2. at Busch Stadium in St. L OUIS. I On this date in 1954 : Willie Mays saved the game with bis fa m ous over·the-shoulder catch of Vic Wertz's long drive and Dusty Rhodes won l l With a pinch-hit hom e run orr Bob Lemon in the 10th inning as tbe New York Giants defeated the Cleveland Indians 5-2 in the World Series opene r at the Polo Grounds Montre al fi r s t b aseman Warren Cromartie Is 28. San Diego outfielder Gene Richards is also 28. Telev1s1on, radio TV: Baseball -Dodgers al Atlanta, 3 p.m ., Channel l l. RADIO: Baseball -Dodgers at AUanta, 3 p .m , KABC (790); Angela at Chlu10, 5:30 p.m ., KMPC (710). Hockey -Kinas at Caleary, 6~20 p.m , KPRZ (1150). __________________________________ .....;. ____________________________________ __ Nixon's 90-yarder highlighted big plays Big plays were at a premJum last week for Oran,e Coast area prep football players In terms or yardage, but there were plenty enouah to keep E d ison , Esta ncia, Corona del Mar. Marina and Irv ine on the unbeate n list. The biggest was Costa Mesa's On assis Nix· on's, who ra n 90 yards for a touchdown on the kickoff r eturn to give his teamm ates a 10-7 ha lrtime lead over Los Alamitos. (Las t week'• bll plays of IO yard.a or more) 90 -Onassis Nixon 1Costa Mesa >. klckorr re- turn for TD 73 -Scott Stier <Huntington Beach ), TD run 56 Dan Blanc k <Laguna Hills). pass fro m Bill McVlcar Season 90--0nassis Nixon (Costa Mesa); 80-Lance Martin <Corona del Mar>: 77-Todd William s <El Toro1, 73 Scott Stier <Huntington Beach >; 71 Greg Locy (M ater Oei>: 67-J e H Frandsen <Mar ina>; 68-Ron Malerstein <Marina >: 58-Curt Wenzlaff <Estancia >; 56--0 an Bhmck <Laguna Hills>; ~ Damon Sweazy <El Toro). Tony B~ll <C apistrano Va lley). Ste\>e Patterson (Corona del Mar): 52-Craie Ra khs hani <Edison >. 50 Kevin Be r es <Mission V1ejo1, Eddie Nunes (Westminster ), Bill Bright <Corona del Mar>. Enc Reinholtz <Ocean View). (Last week'• s taUstlul leaders> Rushlnl 1. Herb Campbell (Westm inster I. 22-226. 2 Curt Wenz:laff <Estancia >. 17-132 : 3. l<endall Newson <Saddle back ), 10·112; 4. Scott Stier <Hunt ington Beach>. 11-112. Passing I Greg Selby (Newport Harbor >. 18·24 0, 225 > ilrds, I TO, 2 Jtin McCahlll <Estancia>. 13·32·1, 199 yards, 2 TD. 3 Erk Woods <Corona del Marl, IO 15 2, 100 yard~. I TD; 4. Dunay Arm 1tron1 <Sad· dlcba(·kJ, 8 16 2. 158 yards, 1 .:ro: 5. Evan t'hulmt'nl cr .ugunu Beach!, 11·26-2, 144 yards, 1 Tl>. ti K1•11 l.~111Llo 1 Marina I. 11 16 o. 131 yards, l Tl> 7 Kl'n Ma1or 1 Ed1son1. 9 14-0. L2S yards, 2 Tl> Rt•celvlng 1 Hub Bcrrv t N l'W port Harbon. 8·87 , 2. Abel Ca(•hola 1 1':~tancia 1, 7·112 . 3 Bob Critchfield 1 Marina1, 5 72. 1 Mike Ray I H untington Be ach>. 5 li2 . 5 Jan11t· A1kt•n 1Estancia1. S-61 ; 6. J eff Frandsl'n • M.inna ), 5 47 Scoring I ('Ult Wcnzlarr 1Estanc1a 1. 18. 2. He rb L.11n pl.It'll 1 Y. ''!'ttmin.,H·rl, M -~----,--....... ·-··--LIGHTS 8 mg. "tar". O 8 mg. nico1me. FILTERS I~ mq, "1ar" I :.l mq 111co1111c. ilv per c1ga1e11e by FTC me1hod. !. f Where a man belongs. Camel Lights or Camel Filters. Experience the Camel taste. . . , .. .... .... ( .. ., . ;.:. . t?FS?P]'2 ?&' ea $2 7Pt?·a tan sacanrssn a a ....... ~ .. 11~11~ l'llllt TUESDAY, SlfT. 29, 1981 Stringent requirements make it to sell di j ficult for U.S. winemakers llGUll lllCH /SDUTH COAST CAVALCADE STOCKS MOVI ES B2·3 67 68 product overseas ... B5 Arch Beach home builders face hat draw By JOHN NEEDHAM O( .. Detly .......... When the building moratorium in Arch Beach Heights expires Thursday, Laguna Beach of· ficials say they'll be drawing names Crom a hat to decide who will get their construction plans reviewed first. City planners say at least 15 property owners have ex· pressed an interest in obtain· Ing building permits when the m oratorium runs out , a nd another 35 to 50 landowners might seek permits in the near future. Those showing up Thursday to submit plans with the city for re· ,Hit-run I suspect • gives up A Costa Mesa man identifying himself as the hit-and-run driver whose Volkswagen bus allegedly struc k the motorcycle of a Laguna Beach High School youth Sunday, leaving him in critical condition, has surren· dered, according to Laguna Beach police. A police s pokesman said Stephen Lee Conway, 32, volun· tarily turned himself in Monday upon the advice of his attorney. Meanwhile, Roger Sewell, 17, re mained in critical condition to· day at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo. suffer· ing from massive head injuries, police said. S e we ll had s lopped at a crosswalk at Mountain Road and South Coast Hig hway for a pedestrian s hortly before 6:30 p.m. when his motorcycle was rear-ended. police said. School aide enters plea in theft rap Richard Bellanle, director of s tudent activiti es at San Clemente High School , has pleaded innocent to charges of stealing class rings from a dis· play case at the school. Bellante, 29, is charged with two misdemeanor counts or tak· ing the rings and possessin g stolen property. T hrough his attorney. Bellante entered an innocent plea at his arraignment on the charges at South Orange County Municipal Court in Laguna Niguel Thurs· day. The five stolen class rings turne d up at a ~an Juan Capistrano pawn !>hop two weeks ago. They had been on display in Bellante's office al San Clemente High Sch110I. Since hls arrest, Bell 1nte has been s uspended from hi s job by the Capistrano Unified School District. He has been employed at San Clemente High ~chool for six years, according lo district officials. Bellante's trial has been set for Oct. 28 Bandits hit Irvine firms • at same time Irvine police officers had just responded to a bank robbery Monday when they were called to t he scene or another holdup at a savings and loan a few miles across town. Police said that about $20,000 was taken from California First Bank, on MacArthur Boulevard near Main Street, at 11 a .m. by two men, one armed with a handgun. As police were at the scene of the first, they received a call that University Park Branch of World Savings on Culver Drive near Mk belson Drive had been robbed or an undetermined amount by a lone gunman. Police say the two robberies apparently are unrelated. No one was injured in either inci· dent, authorities said. In the first bpldup, two bandits entered Califo'rnia First and or· dered customers and bank tellers to line up against the wall. One of the men scooped cash from the teJlers' drawers and the pair escaped on foot, police said . At the savtnis and loan, a lone gunman waited in line and then told the teller be he had a gun and it was a holdup. He neaped on foot. view will take their chances in a drawing, according to City Plan· ner Kyle Butte rwick. The first names picked will get their plans processed fi rst. The Laguna Beach City Coun· el l imposed a building m oratorium in Arch Beach Heights more than three years ago because of the length of time it took fire and other emergency equipment to reach the area. The council said no new homes would be allowed in the hillside community until an emergency fire access road was completed, linking Arch Beach Heights with the Top of the World communi· ty, which has a fire station. Las t week Mayo r Sally . . • Bellerue, with Orange County Supervisor Tom Riley. dedicat ed th e $276 ,695, mile long asphalt roadway Completion of the road means had to chug up the steep hillside from the Agate Street station at the base of the hill. which took 10 to 15 minutes. N egotlations with the county In a split vote the council decided not to impose phasing plan the owners or about 175 legal building sites within Arch Beach Heights now can apply for build· ing permits for new homes The ridgeline road allows emergency equipment to get to the congested hilltop residential a rea from Top of the World in a matter of two to three minutes. Previous ly, fi re equipment and lawsuits between the, city and property owners at one end Of the fi re road delayed its COO· struction until last May, when it was approved by the council. T he 12-foot wide emergency route runs along the ridge between the two communities. Gates have been placed at each end lo prevent oubhc use. SUMMER CROWDS GONE Laguna Beat'h residcnb li\'ing above 'itenic ~oss Stre<·1 o.lty ~ ,.._., .k ... ,., ·- Reach h c..t \'t' 1 he rock' stran<I to th(•m sel ve-. aj!ain a:-coolt•r autum'n \\'l'Ulht•r ~t'ls in The stipulation came after res- idents in both hilltop com munities protested public use of such a road, saying it would lead to a majo r thoroughrure between Arch Beach Heights and El Toro Road along Alta · Laguna Boulevard, something neither community wanted. The land a long which the emergency road runs 1s a 20-foot righl·of-way granted to Laguna Beach by the Aliso Vitdo Co. The majority of the costs were picked up by federal revenue sharing funds, which were set aside for the road. Fearing the completion or the fire road would bring a flurry of requests for building permits from property owners in Arch Beach Heights. the City Council approved a construction phasing plan which would have Umlted building in the area to avoid clogging s treets and creating ex· cess noise. However, in a split vote last week. the council reversed itself and decided not lo impose a phasing plan, allowing builders to proceed with their projects as soon as their construction plans are approved by the city. Council members opposing ci· ty limits on new construction said in view or current high in· terest rates. o nly a s mall number of property owners would be seeking pf'rmats. Laguna weighs coastal plan Laguna Beach Caty Council members will again take up the question of the city 's con troversial Local Coastal Plan when they meet tonight at 6 o·clock at City Hall. 515 Forest Ave. L ast week the co uncil l>Qstponed further action on the plan after a lengthy public hear· ing which lasted until after mid· night. The proposed plan incl udes open space provisions that some com munaty landowners say in· fringe on private property rights. The landowners have t hreatened lawsuits over the plan. As the coastal plan is now written, development in vacant hillside lands in the city would b e broke n down Into three categon es: No new d wellin~s could be bu alt on lands m excess of 45 per· cent hillside. One dwelling would be al· lowed per acre for lands with between 30 a nd 44 percent hilb1de. Two homes could be con· strurted per acre on land with 29 percent hillside Council man Howard Dawson said the proposed Local Coastal Plan would allow only 225 new homes on the remaining 1,000 acres or undeveloped hillside land in the city However . proponents or the open space provisions say limit· ing the amount of development wil l help to maintain the "village atmosphere" in Laguna Beach. U nder state law, a Local Coastal Plan mus t be adopted by the city and approved by the state Coastal Commission. Alcala lawyer gets newsboy killer case The lawyer who defended con· vict ed child kill er Rodney James Alcala has been selected to repr esent Robert J ackson Thompson, the Anaheim man a ccused of kidnappin g a nd s trang lin g a 12 yea r o l d ne ws paper delivery boy last August. Nort h Orange Cou n ty Municipal Court Judge Dave Bach Jr. appointed Tustin lawyer John 0 . Barnell to the case Monday Judge Bach also scheduled a preliminary hearing for Oct. 30. Barne tt was th e co urt appointed lawyer who represent ed Alcala during his highl y publicize d Oran ge Coun ty murder trial in 1980. Alcala was eventually convicted and sent lo San Quentin's Death Row for the 1979 kidnap-murder of 12 year· old Robin Samsoe of Huntington Beach. Thompson 's case bear s several similarities lo the Alcala case, including the potential use or ja1lhouse informant testimony against the Anaheim man. Cnt1l Monday, Thompson. 35. had been represented by Mike Giannini of the Orange County Public Defender 's office. But Giannini was removed from the case because the pros· ecut1on witness. who shared a jail cell with Thompson, once was represented by the public defender, creating a potential conflict-of.interest s ituation. Similar circumstances led to Barnett's appointment in the Alcala case. One of the inform· ants who testified in that case, however, recanted has testimony a vcar later. Lawyers for Alcala ha\'c appealed the matter to the Calfornia Supreme Court. Tho mpson . an une mployed electrician who has spent all but 13 months in prison since 1969, is charged with murder, kidnapp- ing. sodomy. lewd conduct and special circumstance allegations that could lead to imposition of the death penalty. New species of cockroach discovered lie is accused of killing paper boy Benjamin Lee Brenneman of Anaheim. The youth·s body was found near Rancho Palos Verdes on Aug 26. Thompson h as pleaded not guilty to the charges against him . Potentially harmful pests found in Irvine and Mission Viejo Several dozen cockroaches of a n ew and potentially more harmful species have been di s· covered in Irvine and Mission Vieio ::ind offi cials in the Orange Cc;umy Vector Control District are in search of others. The smoky brown cockroach Newport man guilty ln fraud A Newport Beach man was one or two men who pleaded .guilty to charges stemming from an allegedly fraudulent $1 million scheme to sell un· qualified securities to Investors which involved land in Rlverside County. Clark Paul Woolridge, 33, of Newport Beach and Louis Ke lem of Carls bad enter ed their pleas Friday in San Diego Municipal Court under a plea barl{aining agreement. The two m en and W. Guy Cobb, 45, of Valley Center, Calif .. were charged in a 72· count indictment Involving bilk· Ing investms. Prosecutors say vtcdms were led to beUeve they were bu)'ins into t limited oartnershlp that was secured by ·143 building lots Cobb allegedly owned in Sun Ci· ty in Riverside County. Cobb is described by pros· ecutors as president of Dover Equities. an investment firm in Escondjdo, which was allegedly represented as building homes in Sun City. Prosecutors say Woolridge and Kelem will be called as prosecution witnesses in the trial of Cobb, scheduled to start next week. Ke lem faces maklng restitu· lion or about $31 ,200 to 15 in· vestors· and Woolridge more than $40,000 to about 25 investors, ac· cording to Deputy District At· torney S. Charles Wickersham. The pleas could result in pro- bationary tums and fines up to $3,000. is native to the humid conditions a long the Gulf Coa st and is usually found in hot, damp places mostly indoors sajd Fred Beams ,. educational coordinator for the vector con· trot district. Among its favorite· living con· dilions are sewers where the in· sects are apt to pick up or· ganis ms in their intestinal tract that can be spread to humans by contaminati ng food s upplies, Beams said. 1 n contrast, the Oriental cockroach, which is the common species in Orange County, pre· fers to live outdoors and isn't the disease-carrying problem of the smoky brown, he s aid. Because the insects are easily transporte d in crates and packages. Bea ms said the smoky browns may have s pread to other p.arts of the county as well. "I wouldn't be surprised i.I we have infestations elsewhere.'' he said today. To find out. he ts asking coun· ty r.esidents who suspect they may have the ll m oky brown cockroach to carry or mail samples to the vector control of· flee at 13001 Oarden Grove Blvd., Garden Grove , 92643, 971 ·24 2 1. If pouible . the cockroach es s hould be pre· served in alcohol, he said. ·'It's not a deadly serious s ituation," assured Beams. "but it would be uncomfortable if they contaminated any human food supplies." Among t he d isea ses the cockroaches are known to carry is a moebic dysentery, he said. The smoky brown , as its name implies. is colored a reddish brown and is about 11,iz inches long . Di stinguishing charac· teristics are long antennae and wings that ext.end to the tip of its body. The Oriental species. on the other hand, has short wings that don't cover the body. Smoky browns, in fact, can fly : Orlen· tals can't, said Beams. The first smoky browns were found a year ago in Missic>n Vie· jo and the roaches have con· tinued to show up in several homes in that neighborhood east of the San Diego Freeway, he said. Smoky browns also have been found ln "one or two" homes in trvtne northeast of the Santa Ana Freeway l\ear Culve r Drive. he added. The Insects don't multiply quickly. It takes SS d•Y8 for an egg capsule to batch. 'Quiet je~' testing due at airport ' Demonstration nights or re- search jet aircraft said by one observer to be "unbelievably quiet" may be conducted ln early 1982 at Orange County's John Wayne Airport. The demonstration flights are being sought by Supervisor Thomas Riley, who recently viewed the aircraft at the Na· tional Aeronautics and Space Admini s tration 's Ames Research Center at Moffett Field, near San Jose. •'I am extremely excited about the posslbllitlet and the potential that tbis new aircraft type would provide to an airport with the noise impa~u of John Wayne Airport," Riley said 1n a letter to oth9f 1upenilon. In the ~tar, 81191 l'efl...tl permlslioo to late wttb NASA to ..... reteareb aircraft to Oruce C4•l1 for demonstration fllahta. ' m L Oran~ eo... DAIL\' PILOT/Tueaday, 8 ptember 28. '881 L. CAMPAIGNING Greek actress and politicia n Melina Mercouri offers rose to Greek Orthodox priest while cam: paigning in Piraeus. A m e mber of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement. s he is .. seeking re-election as Parliament deputy in t he Oct. 18 general elections NMR WAX YOUR CAR ... AGAIN Mns9 IT! 3 Year Guarantee FOR INFORMATION CALL 754-6404 Mlt-IG AUTO BEAUTY CENTER 1520 ,OMDHOSA AVI., COSTA MlSA •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE Transce ndental Meditation® Program Ushering In The Age O f Enlightenment In Th is Generation Video Cassettes for Sale or Rent * No Clubs to Join I * No Membership Fees I 1,000~s of movies IN STOCK 8P•CIAi THIS •••K ''9· To 5"~ s49•s .11;1e ""' ,.,, 1 -· How China halted VD DEAR ANN LANDERS 1 read with m terest the column in which you stated tha t Or. George Hatem. an Ame rican-born dermatologist working in the People's Republic of China -a country of nearly 1 billion population er adicated venereal disease. PLEASE elaborate' How was this ac complished? Why in heaven's name can't it be done in our own country'! I heard on TV recently that Acyclovir promises lo be a cure for genital herpes. but it will be two years before this drug will be available. Help is needed NOW'. Can you off er an optimistic and or comforting report'! Please tell us how VD was eradicated in China. It sounds too good to be true. UPPER MIDDLE-CLASS W.A.S.P. Dear U.M.C.W.A.D.P.: Firgt: The American Social Health Association has the most recent and reliable information • on genital herpes. They have informed me that Acyclovir has been overrated a nd overpromised. It helps reduce the discom - fort of genital herpes in some cases, but it is not a cure. And now about Dr. George Hatem, the American d ermatologist and how he e radicated VD in a country of the n 800 million people: Jn 1974 I went to the People's Republic of China as a member of a• medical delega. Uon and had the privilege or meeting Dr. Hatem. I had read about this remarkable man, and through Mrs. Loh; Wheeler Snow <who lived in Switzerland>. the m eeting was arranged. Over lunch in the Peking Hotel Dr. Hate m told me his fascinating story. In 1933 Dr. Hatem <Burfalo-born and e ducated in North Caroli11a > went l o Shanghai to study tropical medicine. He became involved with Chou En-lai and Mao Tse-tung and joined the Communist Party. VD was rampant and government @Allll WIDllS i,ervich ror the poor we re non-exbtent un· der Chian g Kai-sh e k . The Communist leaders decreed that an infected population could not participate in "the S e w Order." They declared war on VD and made Dr. Hate m the commander-in-chief. He marshaled hh. forces -thou!'>ands of teams of "case finder!'>" -who went Crom door to door. taking blood l!>ample!'> of ever yone . Those who were infected were unde r orderi:. to be treated. The principal dbtributor!'> or the db· ease (prostitutei:.> were rounded up, told they were out of bu!'>ine!'>!'> and would be given exams to determine what line of work they were be!'>l !'>Uited for. Some would be school teacher!'>. other factory workers, and still other!'\ would be !'>ent to farms. They we r e abo informed that anyone caught practicing her old trade would be severely punished. I Like !'>hot.> The effort wa:-. :-.ucces,rul. Communbh do not fool around. In a totalitarian !'>late people do as they are told. When I asked Dr. llate m wh ~· we couldn't do what he had done in tht• llnited Stales, he replied, "in a democracy the people could refuse to be lt·~ted. They would sue the government for inva:-.ion of privacy. An Ame rican policeman could not ring a doorbell and in~ist that l"\'t'r~·one in the house take a blood test." When I a~ked Dr. Hate m if he belit>ved the r e was not a s ingle ca!'><' or VO in the en · tire People's Republic of China he replied. "When foreign ship!'> come in, there b sometimes a ~mall problem. But "e keep a close eye on the m. and is cleared up al once." I believe him. Her dream cerealized I don't know how in the world you can expect nations to reason together when you cannot get five people to agree on one breakfast cereal. At the m oment, we have 37 boxes of cereal on our shelves -all open. Some snap. Some explode on impact with milk. Some puff up. Some die from the humidity. All attract ants . l have a dream. A dream that before I go to that big utility room in the s ky. every box or cereal on the shelf will be emptied. l'VE TRIED IT before with little suc- cess. "Hey gang, how about polis hing off the Chock Full of Pimples?" "They're s tale." ''How about the Cavity Flakes?" "They get caught in your teeth." "Anyone for Shredded Natural Bran Harvest Nuggets with no preservatives?" "111.AT'S FOR old people who have nothing to lose by eating sensibly." What this world needs is a one-sne-fits- all cere~. A cereal that would fight sog, fortify you with vitamins, talk back to you Crom the bowl, contain a 1,94-piece plastic ERMA BOMBECK AT WITS END replica of a Civil War battle and keep you regular. For some unexplained reason. a box of cereal is something a woman cannot throw away. I c an throw away a box of baking soda that has been in the refrigerator for three years, a box of raisins that has en- tered t he Twilight Zone. or a dove of fresh garlic that has gone to live with J esus. I cannot evict a 32-ounce box containing two tablespoons of Captain Clown Krinkles YESTERDAY, I de ci ded to do something about the 37 boxe!) I crumbled the stale Bran Brittles and s prinkled them over a casserole I baked a cookie out of the leftover cup of Pruit Lips. The puffed Crunchies I made into a necklace. The two remaining bite-s ized Fun Wheats I made jnto earrings. I was down to 33 boxes when m y husband came in with a box of Earl~· Morning Chewies. I'm losing the battle I Leo: Credit overdue Wednesday, September 30 ARIES <March 21-April 19>: You'll ·have opportunity to display creative talents. Relationship is intensified - romantic involve ment dominates scenario. TAURUS (April 20-May 201 : Low-key approach aids in avoiding family conflict. Emphasis on legal documents. views of others and dealings with another Taurus. GEMINI <May 21-June 20 ): Play wait- ing game . Adviser may be misinformed . Insist on clear definition of terms. Self· reliance now is necessar~· if you are to ad· van ce. CANCER (June 21 -July 22): Imprint style, realize that involvement is 6erious. Focus on intensified relationship, cre~tivi­ ty, added responsibility and opportunity for increased rewards. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22): What had been out-of-reach becomes available . Business transaction is near completion . You get credit Jong overdue. Aries. Libra a nd another Leo figure in scenario. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): New ap- proach brings_ desired ·resultfi -path smoothed by access to confidential in. formation. Accent also on special rela- tionship, where it is and where it is going. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 >: Emphasis on collections, taxes, ability to locate articles which had been lost or stolen. You get credit long overdue -one close expresses love. SV08PIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Sense of . perception could leave something to be de· llOIOSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA sired. You obtain inflated view of s ituation. Plainly, a review is necessary. Abstract principles of justice ar e involved. Em- p h asis also on d ocuments. rights a nd permissions. marital status . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec . 211 · Study Scorpio message. Restrictions soon will be removed -you're on brink of im portant discovery. Cycle high des pite a p- pa r ent delay or setback. Details unravel and you'll glimpse complete picture. Revelation due. CAPRICORN I Dec. 22-Jan. 191 : Clash of ideas proves stimulating. Member of op- posite sex provides ch all enge, lends spice to life. Wis h will be fulfilled in unorthodox m anner. ~Gemini. Virgo. Sagittarius persons figure prominently. Travel plans solidify. Mt{JAlllUS (J an. 20-Feb. 18 >: Focus on domestic areas, career. income poten- tial and locating item that had been out-of· r each. Taurus, Libra. Scorpio natives figure prominently. You'll be asked to ac· lively participate in civic project. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20 ): What a p- pears abstract can actually serve as relia- ble guide. Lines of communication open - )lOu'll receive long-distance calls, .langu11e and distance barriers will be eliminated. Law ln spiritual sense is cmJ)basiied . -, ,. . . ... ._ ..... IRllNI .. ' I llllJNlt TUESDAY, SEPT. 2', 1911 CAVALCADE STOCKS MOVIES 82-3 87 88 make i t t o sell Stringent requirements difficult for U.S. winemaker s product overseas ... 8 5 New species of cockroach found Potentially harmful pests found in Irvine and Mission Viejo Several dozen cockroaches of a ne w and potentia lly more harmful species have been dis· covered in Irvine and Mission Viejo and orricials in the Orange County Vector Control District a re in search or others. · The smoky brown cockroach is na tive to the humid conditions along the Gulf Coast and is us ua lly round in hot , damp places -mostly indoors -said F r ed Beams , edu cation a l coordinator for the vector con· trol district. Among its favorite living con- ditions are sewers where the in· sects a re a pt to pick up or · ganisms in their intestinal tract that can be spread to humans by con taminating food s upplies. Beams said. In contras t , the Oriental · cockroach, which is the common s pecies in Orange Count). pre fers to live outdoors and 1sn 't the disease-carrying problem of the smoky brown. he said Because the insects are easily t r ans ported in c rates and packages, Beams !>a id the smoky browns may have sprl'ad lo other parts of the county as well. "I wouldn't be s urpnsed 1f we have infestations elsewhere." he sa id today. To find out. he is asking c·oun- ly residents who suspect they may have the s mok v brown cockroach to carr)-·or mail sam ples to the vector control of flee at 1300 1 Garde n Grove Bl vd .. Garden Grove, 92643. 97 1-242 1. If poss ible , th e cockroaches should be pre served in alcohol . he said "It's not a deadl)-serious s ituation ," assured Beams. "but it would be uncomfortable 1r they contaminated any human food supplies." A m ong the disease!> thl' cockroaches are known to carr} 1s amoebic dysentery. he said The s moky brown , as its namt> imp lies. is colored a redd1..,h brown and 1s about 11 ~ mchc~ long . Distinguish ing c harac teris tics are long antennae Jnd wings t hat extend to the tip of its body. The Oriental species, on the other hand, has short wings that don 'l cover the body Smoky browns. in fact. can fly. Oncn tab can't , said Beams. Thc first smoky browns were found a year ago in Mission Vie- Jo and the roaches have con· l1nucd lo s how up in several homes 10 that neighborhood east of thl' San Diego Freeway, he s aid Bandits hit Irvine firms at ame time I rv11w polil'c officers had just 1 t•spond<•d lo a bank robbery Monday \\hen they were called Ill I hl' Sl'Cne or another holdup at a sa\'1ngs <.1nd loan a few miles •H'f!h'> town . l'ollcl' said th;.it <i bout $20,000 "as lahn from California First B;.ink on ~1<.1t'Arthur Boulevard m·ar Main Street. al 1 l a.m. by l \\ o nH'n ont· armed with a h;.indgun A.., police w<•re at the scene of the flf'sl. lhl'\' received a call that l n1vers1iy Park Branch of \\'orld Savings on Culver Drive nC'ar M1C'hel son Drive had been robbl•d of an und e termined amount h:. a lont' gunman. l'ol1n• say the two robberies .1 pp~1rt•nlly art' unrelated No on(· ",1.., tnJur<.•d 1n either mci- d1·nt, a11thonl1<:~ ~a id In lhl' first holdup. two bandits <•ntt•n·d C'alifornia First and or· il1•r1·d custo mer~ a nd bank ll'llt•r.., to llm• up :.i gainst the \o\Jll llnl' of the men scooped 1·.1:-.h from till' tl'llers· drawers and tht• pair c:-capl'd on foot, pol 1l'l' ..,atd o.11y ~-~-.,, cun.. SUrr SOCIAL CLIMBER ? Shaun \\'all aC't'. ti d1sco\'e rs vou s hould alway:-. bC' ri1c·l' to pl'oplt• on _, ou1 v. <I .' up because you never know whom ~ ou mi ght meet on th(• way ctown Dor i Gazso. Anna and To n' Ft>k<·ll' hottom rem . und Shaun Ga te~ anrt H\an St1•1·k l!ol him oll 111 a ~nod ..,l <.11'1 b<.•tore giggles collapsed the p~ ram1cl on a Costa :Vt esa lawn ! 'Quiet jet' testing due at John Wayne Airport • Demonstration fli ghts of re- search jet aircraft said by one observer to be "unbelievably quiet" may be conducted in ear ly 1982 at Ora nge County's J ohn Wavne Airport T he demonstration nights are being sough t by Supervisor Thom as Riley. who recently viewed the aircraft at the Na- tional Aeronautics a nd Space Admini s tration 's A m es Research Center at Moffett Field. near San Jose. · · 1 am extremely excited about the possibilities and the potential that this new aircraft type would provide lo an airport with the noise impacts of John Wayne Ai rport," Riley said in a letter to other supervisors. In the letter, Riley requests pe rmission to negotiate with NASA to bring the research a ircraft to Orange County for de monstration flights . "By having the opportunity of actually seeing and hearing the a ircr aft in action , it is clear to me that we are, indeed, on the way to developing an aircraft th at will prov ide a ll t h e passenger comforts of today's jets without the corresponding impacts that jets have on sur· rounding communities." Riley Historic fire hell monument revived Huntington B each officials to move prized item to Lake Street station By PATRICK KENNE DY OI -Dally,. ... S\aff The old Main Street fi re station in Huntington Beach has been dem olished, but city officials a re keeping a pr ized piece of fire equipment that hasn't worked since Warren Harding was president in the early 1920s. The citv's first fi re bell is to become a historic monu- ment at the new Lake Street Fire Station. expected to be com pleted next month. The cast iron bell was purchased by the city from a Los Angeles foundry in 1909. just months after Hunt· ington Beach was incorporated as Or a nge County's sixth city with a popul at ion of 815. .. It's one of the first things the city bought and probably is the old'est piece of equipment still a round.·· "It's probably the oldest piece of equipment still around." says Bud Higgins. city historian and for mer city fire chief. The bell was mounted on a 20-foot-lall wooden tower wit h ropes hanging down from t he double clappers inside the stationary bell. It was used to call the volunteer firemen into action. "When the clapper s hit that cast iron it didn't sound like a church bell," Higgins said. "It was a banging noise. But the town was so quiet in those days, especially al night , that you could hear that thing for miles." Behind the tower , located in an alley off of Main and Wa lnut streets, was a livery stable housing the volun. teers' horse·drawn hose cart. "The first guy to get to the stables was the only one to get paid for fighting the fire," Higgins said. "He got two dolla rs ." The bell tower also was the s ite o·r the city's fi rst jail. a n open air. 7·foot·tall steel cage mounted inside the tower on a 3-foot-high-platform, Higgins recalls . "When anyone got arrested they were put in the cage until the st reetcar came to t ake them to the Santa Ana J a il." He said the streetcar arrived hourly. In 1922 , the tower was taken down and the bell put in· to s torage, Hi ggins said. It gathered dus t until 1939. Then it was mounted on concrete to serve as a monument in front of the newly built Main Street fire s t ation. A bronze plaque with the names of the 17 volunteer firem en and seven paid firefighters of 1939 was set in the concrete. By then , the coastal community had grown to 3,738 people. Today, the bell monument stands in front of a vacant field on Fifth and Main streets that used to be the site of the old fire station. The bronze plaque was pried off by vandals last month. City officials say this week the monument will be lift- ed by crane and taken lo the new fire station al 530 Lake St. But the mold of the plaque and a record of all the na mes have been los t. The old plaque will be r e placed with a new one honor· ing all firefighters but bearing the names of current city officials . "I remember most but not all the names of the crew in 1939," said Higgins, who was one of the volunteers then. He later was city fire ·chief from 1950 until 1967. "Only about six or seven of that group are still alive," he said. Higgins mused that firefighters of 1909 would hardly recognize their sleepy coastal town that now has a population of 170,000, seven fire stations and 130 firefighters and paramedics . ------ said . At Ames, NASA is conducting tests of the so-called Quiet Short- H au I Research Aircraft The p roject has been under way s in ce 1974 , according to a brochure Riley circulated to othe r s upervisors. The aircraft is unusual in de· :-.1gn 1n that 1ls four high-bypass J«.'I engines are mounted above, rather than bl'low. the win~s. According to Ril ey and other <'ount~ officials who traveled to Moffett Field one week ago, the aircraft is a bl e lo lake off using Jbout one third of the runway _ ..., ............. 1Huntington Beach's historic fire bell monument ~·all tbot'1 left of demolu hed Main Street fire station. The monument ho.f bun defaced by vandals, but city oflicial8 soy it will be prewr.wd . 11 111111 ClllT CAVALCADE STOCKS MOVIES 92-3 87 88 . .. Stringent requirements make it difficult for U.S. winemakers to sell product overseas ... BS .. Newport Center foes wrap up petition drive ·A SECRET AFFAIR" Cou11c1/num Paul llummel FEEL "STEA.WROLLED" Councilman Don Strauss Heights annex plan shelved in Newport Santa Ana Heigtits residents who say they want to sell their ho m e s to com me rcia l d e - velopers and get away from John Wayne Airport. persuaded the Newport Beach City Council Monday to put off steps toward annexing the unincorporated area . "I'm not sure why Newport would want to t a ke on this blighted area anyway, .. s uggest- ed Heights resident Richard Truefreh. "The only lhmg that can help Santa Ana Heights now." he told council membe rs. "i~ total re- development." Truefreh told council members he represents mo re than 100 Heights property owners who are interested in selling out to develope rs. He said his group is called ABCOM. which draws its name from the fi rst letter of five s treets in Santa Ana Heights . ·'The people in the Heights love it there," added Bill War- ren, a horse stable owner. "but right now 1·d like to get enough money to take my horses and leave.·· Newport council me mbers were ready to vote on whether to begin annexation procedures on Santa Ana Heights when the AB- CO M group showed up According to city offi cials, petitions bearing signatures of 51 percent of the Heights proper- ty owners have been received. These petitions urge the council to annex the count y island in or- der to help preserve its residen- tial quality. The council agreed to put orf the annexation issue for a month to give city offi cials time to de- t e rmine which group really represents a majority of the pro- per~y owners. ·'This group has just given you the best reason possjble why you should begin annexation," SUI· gested J ack MulJin, a Heights resident who said he favors pro- tecting the residential quality of the area. ··w e don't want our communi- ty de f i led b y a bun c h of speculators out to make a quick buck,'' Mullin said. He said that if the issue was put to a vote, the pro-residential group would win. Truefreh said there a re six de- velopment firms he's aware of that a re interested in purchasing property in the Heights. He said his group has hired Newport Beach a rchitect Bill Ficker to represent its interests. Ficker 1s a member of a 13- m e m be r comm ittee charged w ith s t ud y i n g land u s e a ltern ativ es in Santa Ana He ig hts fo r the county. He couldn't be reached for com- ment today .. ..., .............. CENTERPIECES SHOWCASED Newest china. crystal and silver patterns will be used by 30 department and specialty stores for "Designs for Dining." to be shown from 10 a.m.'to 3 p.m. Wednesday in four beach area homes. Joan Sue Betson and Helen Koberstein check over details for this fund-raiser for Children's Hospital of Orange County pre- sented by its Cinderella Guild. The $12 tickets may be purchased Wednesday at 1310 Galaxy Drive. NewPort Beach. \ Meanwhile, council members face media on 'private' luncheon By STEVE MARBLE Ot•o.MJ ........... Opponebt.s of the controversial Newport Center expamlon pro- jec t sald today tbeJ have force th& rt 1te~ CKy ap~bered~ e slcnaturea to Council to· 4 the expansion project or t lt to a citywide vote. Members of the referendum croup, which calls itself RAP (Residenta' Action Plan ). said they planned lo turn in their Rttitlons to t.Jlle city clerk'• office lat, today. Bobby Love ll , a le ader of RAP, said she was uncertain bow many si«nJtJres had been coUecte4. bul "we're well over the mark." !fhe croup needed to come up with 4,235 signatures of reg- tstered Newport voters by Sept. 30 t.o qualify f9r a referendum. Ttie tjty cleric's office said it could takt up to a month to count and check the signatures. (f the city clerk 's office veriries the signatures, the coun- FELT .. E.'VCOC.:RACED" I rvine Company's Robert Shelton • cil must either rescind lt.s ap- proval oJ the Irvine Company's $123 million expansion project or put the issue before Newpott Beach voter. bl a special elec- tl.on. "It's • el our flands aow -· it's up to the clty council," said Mrs. Lovell. She aaid, though, that the ft.AP group would prefer that the councU simply rescind the project and let it go at that. Meanwhile, a s petitioners were preparing to turn In their signatUJ'es, four Newport council membel'll and two Irvine Com- pany offlctala were meeting with members of the media. Mayor Jackie Reather said ahe caBed the press conference this morning to ''clear the air" on reports of a private meeting between three council members and Irvine Company executives last Aug. 24, the same day the council approved the develop- ment firm's expans ion project. Attending the press con - ference were council members Evelyn Hart, Don Strauss and Paul Hummel as well as Robert Shelton, an Irvine Company vice president, who ls a former Newport councilma n and city manager. At issue during the press con- ference was whether the private meeting was proper and whether all seven council mero- bera were informed of the meet- ing and what went on at the meeting, which was held at Councilwoman Evelyn Hart's borne. Mayor Heather stressed that the private meeting came after the council had spent more than 10 hours deliberating the ex· pansion project in public. She said that following this de- bate, it was clear "we still had big problems." ·'Word came down to me that the Irvine Company wanted to talk with us," said Mrs. Heather. "There's nothing il - lefal with three eouncil mem· bers meeting with the Irvine Company. "It was near lunch and we de· cided to meet at Evelyn's -her house ls cleaner than mine so ... " Mn. Hart deRnded inviting IT WAS.\"T IL LEGAL .'vtayor Jacl.1.e Heather Mayor Heather and council col league Ruthelyn Plummer as well as Irvi ne Company Presi- dent Peter Kremer a nd three other executives of the fir m to lunch. "It was not a secret meetin g and r don't kn ow why it's been blown so far out or proportion ... she said. "I don't feel bad about it .... But Councilman Strauss. who said he learned of the pri vate meeting two days later in the n ews paper, said that he con side red it "a secret meeting " "That was no pl ace to hold a meeting," s aid Strauss. "and tha t's lhe whole problem. that'!> the whole issue." Strauss said he believes "set lle me nts" were made al the private meeting He added, "I felt like I was steamrolled and that's why I'm upset. .. Councilman Hummel also said he was not informed of the meet ing and considered 1t to be "a secret affair." 0.11, .. , ... ,.,,.... ltf l'•t•k• O'~ I OU.\ T FJ·:1-,·1. HAD C111111c1/w11111u11 Er ely11 liar/ T he Irvine Company's Shelton said he considered the meeting to be legal and ethical. but "if "l' had il to do over aga in rm sure we'd do it differently." lie sa1a following the private mc<.•t in ~. his firm fe lt "e n- couragt•d but certainly didn't kno\\ wh at the council was going to do ·· What t he council did was ap- prove lhe Newport Center ex- pan~1on plan "1th the conditions tha t the Irvine Company issue a stat<'ment opposing expansion of John Wayne Airport and agree to C'omplete a portion of a new road at a date earlier than pre- VJUusly planned Both of these issues were dis- cussed at the pri vate meeting. Mesa planners back Bristol project Homeowners expected to appeal split decision to City Council By JERllV CLAUSEN 0t•o.11r .......... A long.fought batUe to eon- atruct high-rise buWdlRJIS near Montgomery Ward ift Costa Mesa culminated in victory for developers Monday night. The city's Plannins Com- mission voted, 3·2. to approve a pair of six-story buildings on four acres on the east side of Bristol Street. just south of the San Diego Freeway and north of the Montgomery Ward building. City planners conjectured, however, that area homeowners will appeal the split decision to the City Council. James C. Gianulias is a spokesman for Bristol Plaza, a g e neral partners hip head- quartered in Newport Beach that has been trying to build high -ris e structures on the parcel for nearly two years. Previous prooosals included a Mesan gives Belf up in LB hit-run A Costa Mesa maa ldeatUytng himself as the hit-and-run driver wboee Volkswagen bus all•redlY struck the motoreycl~ of a Laguna Beaeb High School you lb Sunday, leamg blm ln critical ceMitlo., Ms sunea· dered, aec9rile1 to Lacuna Beach pol&n. A police spokesman said Stephen Lee Colaway, 32, volun- tarily turned hJmtelf in Monday upo• Ule adn~ of hia att.orney. ' Meanwblle, Roser Sewell, 17, remained ln cHttcaJ condition to- day at Mission Community Hospital in Mission Viejo, suffer- ing from massive head injuries, Pollcesakt. Se111ell bad atotped at a crosswalk at MCMmU!h Road Wld South Coaat Httllway for 1 pede1trtan •"""1 bdon a:ao p. m. wben bit motortyd• wu rear·-*d, police aald. 14-story office ·structure denied by the Planning Commission. Next. Gianulias planned two buildin&s, one seven and the Sawyer-Watson. C.C. Cla rke and Lynn Van Aken voted against the condi- tional use per mit to exceed the The structure would 'set a precedent' for high-rise construction other nine stories tall, in the area restricted to two-story structures. The Planning Commission de· nied that proposal. Gianulias ap- pe aled the decision to the City Council and then changed the plan to five and s even -story s t r u ctures when h e met neighborhood opposition. The council turned down the plan anyway. Monday night's proposal gained affirmative votes from Chairman Richard Carstensen, Walte r Davenport and R. two-story height rul e and allow some construction in a setback are a. Clarke and Van Aken ind1cat· ed they agreed with planning staff members who said the structure would set a precedent for high-rise cons truction south of the San OieS!o Freewav T hey also agreed the buildings would adversely impact traffic flow and would throw shadows ;over homes and pools in the n eig h boring Brookview con d<>minium neighborhood Jrraignment due in auto thefts case Two Ot'ange Coast brothers are facin1 arraJ111ment Oct. 13 after their arre1t in a multi· agency raid on a Costa Mesa auto parts di11ributonhlp that inveati1at.on say masked an auto theft and resale operation. Investigators from eight law enforcement agencies armed with a search warrant enten!d Pro Fab ~uto and Auto Parts Distributors, 3042 Enterprise St., arresting LeO F. Shulz, 31, of Huntington Beach, and Anton Shult, 41, of Coet• Mesa. Lt. Wyatt Hart of the Ora.nae County Sheriff's Department said lnvestl1ators believe the Shulz broUlers were oper.attna ~ auto theft and resale network that specialized in small trucks and sporty compacts. Vehicles, Hart uld, were stolen bfouebt • the mduatrtal park bUJldinC where 1•eotU1ca• tiort 1nltabera were removed Ind repla~ wttb mamben from de· moll'thed velllcla of a similar lype purchased from salva1e . yards. Once outfitted with the n e w numbe rs. th e s tol en vehicles were sold, thus general· ing income for the ring. Hart said. The two men have been re· leased from Orange County Jail on bail of $25,000, Hart said. Both were initially charged with grand theft auto ~nd possession of stolen property. In addition to r ecovering several vehicles, including a Datsun ~Z and an expensive Lotus Ford, Hart said the buUd- 1 ng yielded s cores or parts believed to be stolen. Hart said about $250,000 In stolen property was recovered. Agencies participating io the seven-week long investigation, prompted by an anonymous tip to Investigators, included the sheriff's department; police de· partmeots ln Santa An•.t Westminster, Huntinaton BelKh and Costa Mesa ; Cl'lttfOt.tQA Highway Patrol; Department of M()tor Vehicles, and the Na- tJonaJ Auto Theft Bureau. Brook vi e w Co ndomin ium Ho m eow ne r s As soc iation lcadt'rs were s plit over the plan Mond<I\ Some members ar gued that the offlce·('Om mercial towers would be more acceptable than pr eviously announced plans for a multi restaurant complex on lhE.' property Others aq~ued that the build· ings would block the sun, create t r a ffic bo ttl e necks and set dangerous precedents. Commissioner Davenport. who moved for approval. argued lhat the s1x-stor)" buildings provide a gradual structural height reduc- tion from the 10 to 18-story build- ings in Segerstrom complexes north of the freeway H e al so p r e di c t e d that s h a d ows f a lling o n the Broo kview tra cts would be minimal. Police grill youths over vandalism Costa Mesa police are ques- tioning youths who live in the Ka iser Middle School area aft.er vandals caused more than $1,000 wor th of damage to the school Sunday Police sa id a hall window bad been broken with a beer botUe. Vandals who entered the build· ing through the window. leaving blood on a piece of jagged &lass, scattered flour, rice and baking mixes on the kitchen floor, in s inks, In ovens and on wanning plates. · Officers said chlorine bleach was poured over meat In a freezer. Graffitl had be~n sprayed on every exterior wall or the ctm· s;ws. polic aid, •i,~,s silJtne windof "T •lA 1 The damage was t~PJ>ed off b~ a large ijld Naz\ ftiiUka · pain\ecs on a concrete baaketbalJ court, one officer 1ald. lllyPllll TUESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1991 ( CLASSI Fl ED CS \ Costa Mesa High's Onassis Nixon made the season's biggest play ... C2. RaIDs change Bears into Cubs It was best effort of the season for Haden , defense and entire team By JOHN SE V ANO Ot .... o.lly ...... 1\1" C HICAGO For those fans who t hought the Rams had problems, they s hould be sentenced lo a day of having to watch the Chicago Bears in action. Unfortunately, the crowd of 62,461 here at Soldier Field , a nd a national television audience, were fO{'ced to do j us t that Mond ay night. And the performance was so bad the Chicago fans turned to booing to express their dis pleasure while television junkies. it was presumed, we re smart enough to cha nge to another channel. Indeed, the Rams ' 24-7 win he re against the Bears made Chicago look as bad as. well . the Ra ms did against New Orleans two weeks ago. "It's unexplainable, so don't ask me," s a id C hicago w ide receiver Ke n Margerum of Chicago's problems. "It certainly is n't any fun playing when you are playing like this. It's very frustrat· ing." Margerum wasn't the only one who was fru~trated. The entire organization from Coach Neill Armstrong, to running back Walter Payton, lo quarterback Vince Evans, lo owner George Halas were equally perplexed . "l really don't have a whole lot to s ay. We got beat and we looked bad in getting beat," said Armstrong as the Bear s' record dropped to 1·3 for the season. Of course, the Rams may have had something to do with the Bears' inept perfor mance. P laying their best ga me of the season both offensively and de· fe ns ively -the Ra m s made it 2·0 against the NFC Central Division <they beat Green Bay a week agol to even their record at 2·2. ·'I thought the defens.e did a super job," complimented Pal Haden ... and that certainly helped." fl a lso helped that Haden put together his best outing, too. The Rhodes Scholar. scorned by the media and fans throughout the month of September, looked re laxed and confi · dent in completing 13 of 29 passes fo r 210 yards and no interceptions. ''Maybe it was my devil-may-care at- titude," said Haden. "All I know is that I'm tired of trying to prove myself. "We won and that's the important thing ·· Haden and the Rams not only won, but they looked impressive in doing so. Haden boldly moved the Rams to a touchdown on their first possession to get the momentum going and the de· fense did it~ pa rt by holding the poten· tia ll y dangerous Walter Payton to 45 ya rds in 17 c a rries and fo r c in g Arm s t rong to utilize thr ee quarterbacks. It wasn't until quarte rback No. 3 - Mike Phipps that the Bears were fina lly able to put some points on the board late in the fourth quarter. "It's not the coaching," defended M argervm. the Fountain Valley High <See RAMS, Page C4> All'WI..,..... Ken .\-Targerum White Sox eliminated by Angels CHICAGO CAPl -lt·s all over for the Chicago White Sox. A 6·0 loss to the Angels Mon· d ay ni g h t m ade it mathematicall y im possible for t he White Sox to earn a berth in t h e Am e r ican League We st mini-series playoffs. With only five ga mes to go, Chicago is now seven games be hind the di vis ion-leading Kansas City Royals ''I WOULD BE le s s tha n honest if I tried to act like I ac- cepted it, .. White Sox Manager Tony La Russa said. "It's impor- tant now to keep o ur sights on. what is m ore realistic -our chances to finish in the first division." Without being too s pecifi c, La Russa attributed al least part of his team's demise to a lack of hitting in the second half of the s plit season. The record shows that in ,the second half. the White Six. as a t eam . hit .266 going into Monday night 's game In 48 ga mes, the Sox scored 195 runs and 181 RBI with 42 homers . Monday night's loss came on the het!ls of a s uccessful road trip fo r the White Sox, who won t heir last four out of rive away from home. Ram running back Wendell Tyler picks up a good gain before being brought doum by Gary Fencik f[eft J and Carl Ekern nearly mtercepts a pass. But the road victories were not enough a nd Bill Almon, the te a m ·s bes t second half hitter with .314 put it best. Fred Dryer a no-show in Chicago "We had a lot of opportunities lon g befor e th is, so this is nothing special J ust making it officia l. so to speak ... DON BA VLOR and Brian Downing drove i n two runs a piece. Rod Carew scored two runs and Mike Witt hurled a s ix- hitter for the Angels. Cosell, ABC politely tell ex-Ram they aren't interested in a television interview CHICAGO The Great Fred Dryer Press Confere nce that was supposed to take place here Monday night turned in- to the Great Fred Dryer No-show. Reportedly, it was Dryer who ap· "proached ABC and Howard Cosell with the idea of an interview, and it was ABC and Cosell who politely told Dryer they weren't jhterested . Actually, the entire Dryer saga may never be known That's because it may take up to fi ve years for a Dryer suit, if there 's a suit, lo appear in court. It was outs ide legal counsel that rec- ommende d lo the Fr ontieres that Dryer's contract may not be as binding as they thought, and the risk of releas- ing him wouldn't be that great. Eric Woods Corona del Mar T he lawyers explained that even if Dryer was to win his suit. it would only cos t the Rams between $200,000-$400,000 five years down the road. And, that's assuming t he matter isn't settled out of court before then. An y wa y, Georgia a nd Gen eral Ma nager Don Kl oster man, following the lawyer's advice, called the NFL offi ce to make sure they had its backing before giving Dryer his r elease. After they got the OK sign is when they signed Dan P astorini and said goodbye to Dryer. T here seems to be little else the de· fensive end can do now except maybe get an injunction agains t t he Rams for breach of contract. That's unlike ly JOHN SEVANO though, thus the entire Fred Dryer af- fair will proba bly be forgotten shortly • • * T he Rams' biggest probl em now is deciding what to do with their surplus quarterbacks. It a ppears the Rams have four op- tions left to them : a ) trade Pat Haden . b) ir acie Jeff Rutledge: c l waive J eff Kemp: d l have Kemp come down with s o m e m yst e r io u s a i l me nt lik e mononucleosis so he can be placed on injured reserve. The logical answer would appear to be 1 cl because it doesn't fi gure anyone would pick up Kemp ... not with most qu arterback situ ations a round th e league s olid and Kemp an unproven commodity Another option could be a trade, but as a ssistant gener a l manager Jack Faulkner explained ··The re are 18 teams with three q ua rterbacks a nd 10 with two. Those teams with three quarterbacks are set <See SEVANO, Page C4 l Witt, 7-9, had fo ur strikeouts and wa lked one as he earned his fi rs t career shutout. The Angels scored their first run in the fourth when Ca rew led off with a single a nd s tole second. He took third when Dan Ford grounded out and s cored oh a two-out error by Chicago t hird baseman J im Morrison on Baylor's grounder. The Angels added a run in the sixth when Car ew led off with a walk off De n nis Lamp, 7-6 . Carew took second when Rick Bur leson grounded out a nd scored on a two-out single by Baylor Atlanta's elder statesmen speak up Young players respond to criticism from Niekro, Perry who s aid, "I was wondering if that one run would hold up." West first-half winners, get ready for the playoffs. Corona del Mar High, with three straight victories, hasn't had a football season begin that way in 10 years . ATLANTA <AP) -With criticism from elder statesmen Phil Niekro and Gaylord Perry ringing in their ears, some of the Atlanta Braves' younger players s ay they haven't thrown in the towel. It didn't. After Dale Murphy led off the Atlanta seventh with a single. only the fourth hit off Los Angeles starter Jerry Reuss, 9-4, Hubbard sent a drive to right field scoring Murphy with the tying run. • 'ln a year that is not typical by any means. I grit my teeth and do the best 1 can for one inning." Garvey said. "My philosophy is to play ever y inning of every game. But I know what he <Lasorda> has to do.'' 4 nd at the c ore of the Sea Kings' s ucce ss is q uarterback Eric Woods. a ~9. 160-pound senior, se passing behind the blocking of tackles Todd Parker and Steve Blake , guards Pa t Duddy and Gle nn Rogers ·and center Dave Stassel, has given Corona del Mar the complete look. Woods ' outstanding play earns him the Daily Pilot's Player of the Week honors. Aging pitchers Niekro and Perry have both blasted their younger teammates re· cently, saying tbe Hraves were playing as if they have given up. Atlanta was eli minated S unday from the National League West pennant race. But Glenn Hubbard and Rick Mahler s ay they haven't given up. Hubbard broke out of a bitting slump wtlh three hits, In- cluding a triple tn the seventh to tie the game, and Mahler yielded only five hits in seven innings as Atlanta edged the Los Angeles Dodgers 2·1 Monday night. ··1 saw the ball get pas t the right fielder.'' Hubbard said, "and I said to myself, 'I've ·In a y ear that is .not typical by any m eans . I gri t my teeth and do the best I can for one i nni ng.· -Steve G•nrey Reuss also said using younger players is something that has to be done. "You can't call up young players for a month and use them in only one game." he said. "We couldn't do it against Houston because they are a contending club. 1 1uess this was the right time and place." But Reuss pointed out: "There's such a thing as momentum and we need to get it going before we got Involved in post· season play. You can't turn it on and off." .. . Woods completed 10 of 15 for 160 yards and a touchdown last week in a 14·6 victory over Capistrano Valley and he is now 2' for 39 for 386 yards and 4 TOs in three games. Eric Woods "We knew going in he was a good athlete," aays CdM Coach Dick Morris. "I'd attribute the success of our quarterback to two people -Dave HoUand, our offensive coordinator and Gary Galsneas, our quarterback-receivers coach. There has bee n a lot of individual Instruction ln· The victory broke a tour-game losing streak for the Braves, who had lost 11 of their last H games. "When you know you're out of the race you get frustrated," Hubbard said. "But I still have a lot or pride. I want to win. Even if you can't win tbe pennant you still want to win." iot to i et three on it'." Hubbard then raced home from third when rookie Matt Sina tro singled. Mahler struck out four and walked none before being N?lieved by Rick Camp, who pitched the final two inn1np and earned his 16th save. The Dodgers returned for a meanin1less game today with Atlanta before comln!C home for another pair of meaningless , games with San Diego, then cloee out t.he regular season wltb Houstoo. Slnce the l>Odgers already have a mini· playotr series clinched wlt.b their "cbam· 1 plonsblp" of the firtt·half ot the aeuon, ,they can lbw tM f.U. -beeaUM if t.be .spilt seuon had not been formed, rilht now the Dod1ers wouJd be aittinl fou.r 1ames behind Cincinnati lo the Wat. volved." , Woods has yet to be sacked and baa only been forced to scramble once in three games, and he's made the moat of bis blocking with pin-point paaslnJ(. "I ®n'l thlnk anyone bu liven up," Mahler said. "We're all professionals and we'll give our best In every 1ame." The Dodgen took a l ·O lead in the second on a home run by Steve Garvey , Gar vey'.s home run leading off the second, a drive deep into tbe stands in lert f ield, was bis 10th of the season. He wu take n out of the game afterwards . Man ager Tom Lasorda used ~me youn1er players and res erves as the DodJttS, NL • IUISI CIAIT YDUI HIMITlll IAllY PIPll UkAN<.JE C OUNTY . C A LU·ORNIA 25 CENTS Slaying suspect admits to being in forest By FaEDERICK SCHOEMEHL °' .. ......, ......... Thomas Ft'ancis Edwards has told Orange County Sheriff's Department investigators he was in the Cleveland National Forest for three days after the fatal shooting of one girl and the wounding of another before de· ciding to leave for Maryland where he was arrested Monday Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart sa1d Edwards, who was interviewed at length after his arrest, said he left the forest area 20 miles ea.st of San Juan Capistrano about the same time that a sheriff's Special Weapons and Tactics team descended into the area. At that point. according to Hart, Edwards drove his camp- er-equipped pickue truck to Los Angeles, abandoned it in a parking lot off the Santa Ana Freeway, left his dog, Brandy, HAVE FAITH IN THEIR DRIVER The Re\' Bill McLaughlirus ready to chauffeur Maite McGregor and Mabry Steinha us to the membership coffee for the Women Associate:-. of LiC Ir vine Inte rfaith from IO a.m . to noon Oct 6 at the '.'!ewport Beach hom e of LiCI Chancellor a nd Mrs. Da niel G with a local r esident. then boarded a bus for Maryland. He was taken into custody without incident by two s heriffs investigators and Maryland law enforcement authorities after t e lephoning an inmate at a prison where he once served a term. The inmate notified a warden who in turn c onta c ted a uthorities. Hart s aid it could be as long as 60 days before Edwards. who has told investigators he will fight extradition, is returned to California where he iB named in a $500,000 arrest warrant. Edwards. 37, is charged in the death or Vanessa lberri, l2, or Lake Elsinore, one of two girls shot without provocation Sept. 19 near the Blue Jay campground in an area or the forest near El Cariso Village. Witnesses said a man drove up .............. -.....-.0'0-. Aldrich. The completely reJtored 1928 Rolls-Royce touring model. appraised at 545.000. is being offered for sale at $39.500 to benefit the Interfaith Council which takes care uf r e ligious needs of students on campus. For further informa lion on the car. phone 833·0891 250 seized as Diablo protest ends Victims will meet Stocks post recove ry after scare SAN LUIS OBISPO CAP> Authorities arrested about 250 demonstrators and a diagram error forced engineers to halt the loading or nuclear ruel as the lWO·Week protes t siege or the controvers ial Diablo Canyon power plant came to a halt. "We're very relieved it's over. It's going to be refreshing for workers to be able to go to work unimpeded and without having to go past a line of sheriffs dep· uties ." Greg Pruett, a Pacific Gas & Electric spokes man, said Monday. The Abalone Alliance, whkh organized the two-week protest. has said it is ready to oppose the nuclear power plant with dif· rerent methods. including com- munity demonstrations and sup- port for court action. The pro· testers' camps ite near the PG" E property wi 11 remain open for about a week to allow jailed protesters to regroup for the return to their homes, an al· liance spokeswoman said. More than 1,900 people were arrested in the showdown, with about 250 being picked up out- side the plant Monday ill what demonstrators said will be (he last day of the blockade. Among those jailed were rock singer Jackson Browne and actor Robert Blake. Browne, who wrote and re- corded such songs as "Doctor My Eyes," "Take It Easy" and "The Pretender," had been re- 1 eased just last week after pleading uo contest to a Sept. 18 charge of t respassing at the gate. <See J>IABLO, Pa1e A2> (, ,, Reagan sets press meet WASHINGTON (AP) _. Preti· dent Jtu1an will bold a news cc.nlerence -his fourth in eJibt mooU. -at n a.m. PDT Thurs· day, it wu learned today. 1 The session iJ expect*1 to be held ln the Eut Room. An an- nouncement of the news COG· lerence was elfpected later to- day. · Tbe pr ldent's tut news con-ference wu on June 16. ,ti.· Two ill boys set for Disneyland LONGVIEW, Te x. <AP> - Two young boys who live conti- nents apart but suffer from the same rare and deadly disease, will get a chance to meet each other next month while enjoying the fantasy of Disneyland. Sen. Proxmire end s protest on debt limit WASHINGTON (AP> -Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., ended his marathon protest or a bill to raise the nation's debt Limit over $1 trillion today and yielded the Senate floor after 16 hours of virtuaJly non-stop talk- ing. '·At least I have made a rec· ord on what I think is a great watershed in our history.'' he said. Proxmire, as he had promised he would, relinquished the noo.r at 7:27 a.m. PDT rather than de- lay consideration of the debt ~ceiling measure, which is needed to allow the government • to pay its bills in the fiscal year that begins at 12 :01 a .m. Thurs- day. He said he would offer an amendment to hold the debt limit to $995 billion, requiring S60 billion to $70 billion in ad· dltionaJ spending cuts or a tax io- c rease. Proxmire began is talkathoo about 3 :15 p.m. PDT Monday, saying , "It is a clear responsibility that we go into pai.nslaklng detail•' before pushing the debt limit over the trillion-dollar mark for the first time. · Through the night aod into the morning, be railed to a near· empty chamber against the legislaUon sought by the Reaian administration. 8ut unlike mlbu1ters in the past aimed at blocking or slow- tni acUon, Proxmire Hid he would not try to use the tactic to prevent an expected vote on the blU. The debt Umit bill, already ap- proved by the Houae, must be sent to Pwwldenl Reagan's desk by Wednetday nltbt to keep the government from loalni IL• authority to bort0w. Several private citizens and an airline will send 9-year-old Mickey Hayes of Hallsville, Tex· as. and ha s famil y t o the California amusement park. He w ill meet 8-year-old Fransie Geringer of South Africa there on Nov. 29. Both lads s uffer from pro- geria, a rare disease which ages its victims prematurely. Almost $700 was contributed to a fund establis hed at a Longview bank in early September. Braniff International has offered to fl y the Hayes family to Los Angeles free of charge. Any leftover money will be donated to the Sunshine Founda- tion, a Philadelphia organiiat.ion created lo help terminally ill children realize their dreams. The foundation is helping bring the South African boy and his family to America. Ted Key, a father of three from n earby Tyler, Texas, volunteered to pay for the family's accommodations in Disneyland. One of Mickev's wishes in Ille is that he would be taller. "If a child's greatest prayer is to grow taller, then it is the world's obligation to see that he bas a box lo stand on," Key said. By The Associated Press U.S. stock prices edged higher today, extending Moltday's gains that had quelled fears or n e ar-panic o n markets in Europe and elsewhere around the world. The London and Tokyo stock markets, meanwhile . made strong re- coveries today. In New York, the Dow Jones average or 30 indus trials rose 5.33 points to 847.89 in trading to- day. On Monday. the Dow index fell more than 14 points at the opening before rallying to ftnish with a gain or 18.55 points to 842.56 -ils best daily gain since March 25. The Japanese market, which closed before Europe's opened. gained ,back all ils losses, re· cording Its blggesl ohe-day rise after its worst single-day decline In history Monday. The Nikkei Dow Jones index of 225 major stocks. which lost 302.84 points Monday, recovered 320.56 points to close at 7 ,357 .68. In London, brokers raised prices sharply as soon as the market opened. By midday, the Financial Times index of 30 in· dustriais had climbed 18.1 points (See STOCKS, Page AZ) Golfers using ·guns Swine ravage Santa Rosa links SANTA ROSA CAP) -Ram- paging swine have ravaged the rolling greensward of the Oak- mont Golf Club, prompting the genteel sportsmen into a sboot- log war on the links. The Great Pig War started when gotfers discovered that the normal huards of tbe 36-bole course were supplemented by pigs, one a 200-pound boar, which ripped up six f alrways and aprom, accordlna to Rick H aneen, assistant course superintendent. The 16th lairway wa& •lmost destroyed, Hanten said. The golfers toot to rum, and the porcine body count bu risen toaeven. "It'• been almost a daily OC· currence the last couple of weeks," he said, noting the "divots" are an unsightly and unexpected hazard. "I've lost a lot of sleep over this," says Hansen's boss, Mike Clark, who does the shooting with bis son Bob. As many u 60 wild piss have been sighted by residents to tbe hills ~Ide AnnadeJ State Park. The pijt!J move toward the golf course, center of a lar1e res- ld en tial development, when their lood and water supptles ru.n low. Pi&• have roamed tbe oak· studded hillsides ror some 30 (See PIGS, P1se AZ> to a location near where Miss lberrl and Kelly Cartier, 12, also or Lake Elsinore were standing, called to them, then fired several shots Crom a .22 caliber gun. Miss Iberri died two days late r . Mi ss Cartier s uffered serious head injuries. Then, witnesses said, the man sped off in a truck matching the description of Edwards' pickup. Two men who gave chase were able to observe the license plate number and nollfy the sheriff's department. She riff's personnel s pent more than three days combing the rugged wilderness for Edwards, described as a "mountain man" and "gun buff." , Hart said Edwards admitted to investigators that he was in the forest during the he ight of the search. Edwards thus far has made no <See SUSPECT, Page AZ) Wayne Airport faces loss of U.S. funds Once again. the federal gov- ernment is threatening to deny Orange County gove rnment funds for improvements at John Wayne Airport over the issue or how the county intends to regulate which airlines serve the facility. County airport officials have been advised that a $1.4 million grant of federal funds may be withhe ld until the county "demonstrates satisfactorily" that it is complying with federal laws requiring that airports be opened to new and qualified jet air carriers o n a n o n · discriminatory basis. It was slightly more than a year ago that the Federal Avia· lion Adminis tration made a similar threat with respect to a $4.5 million grant for purchase or a parcel of la nd on the airport's west side. The county eve ntually re· ceived the money after a tem- porary access plan was ap- proved that permitted two addi- tional carriers, Western Airlines and Frontier Airlines, to join AirCal and Republic Airlines in serving the Orange County market. But the dispute between the county and the federal govern· ment over the access issue has nared anew. A permanent ac· cess proposal regulating how flights would be allocated was struck down Friday by a U.S. District Court judge after at- torneys for the federal govern- ment argued that the plan was unfairly weighted toward AirCal and Republic. The two carriers would have been permitted to keep 85 per- cent of the permitted daily de- partures from the airport for a three-year period. According to a condition con- tained in a grant document, the county wouJd not receive the $1.4 million for acquisition or two acres of land near the airport pending the outcome of the lawsuit filed over the access plan. County airport officials in- terpret this a s meaning the county would not get the funds unless It capitulated to the federal government's demands 'No progress' in Gromyko, Haig talks UNITED NATIONS <AP) Des pite nine hours of talks, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. said today that he and Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko failed to make any progress in reducing tensions between the two superpowers. But they agreed to try again next year. The officials met for five hours Monday. following a rour- hour session Wednesday. The . first meeting produced agree· ment to begin arms control talkE Nov. 30 in ~neva . After the second meeting State Department spokesmar1 Dean Fischer said they covered ''the full range of internaUonaJ and bilateral Issues" anc ''agreed to continue their dis- cussions early next year." T he spokesman said the next meeting would probably be held in Geneva. Asked ii the talks had led to a reduction of tensions. Haig said, "No, J don't think 10. l Wnk the pertod ahead will have lo reflect whether or not these d.lscuulona wlll have made a aubstanUal contributJon." Durln1 an appearance on NBC'1 "Today Show," Hal111ld there are 1tJU "a number of la· IUU t.bal divide UI. '' on the access issue. ·'They're asking us to admit we re guilty'· or not following fe de ral ·airline dere gulation laws. one official sajd. Airpo rt oHi cial s were scheduled to decide this after- <See AIRPORT, Page AZ) Suspect's history revealed One or two men being held in connection with the s tabbing death or a 20·year-old woman has been identified as the form- er husband or another woman who reported the s laying victim missing following an evening visit to a Laguna Beach night spot. David William Leitch, 22, was married to Tracy Leitch for about two years before they were separated in early 1980, ac· cording to records on file in Orange County Superior Court. Their divorce became final in August. Leitch, of Laguna Beach, and Thomas Michael Thompson, 26, of Orange, we re arrested separately over the weekend at Los Angeles I nte rnalional Airport in connection with the d eath of Ginge r Lorraine Fleischli, who was last seen alive at the Sandpiper Inn in Laguna Beach the night of Sept. 12. Her body was found in a s hallow grave near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station two days later. It was clothed and wrapped in a blanket. According to investigators, Mrs . Leitch and Miss Fleischli went to the bar after dining at a Balboa Island restaurant. In- vestigators say Miss Fleischli. who lived with her parents in Mission Viejo, had been staying temporarily with Mrs. Leitch at a Galaxy Drive residence in Newport Beach. Law enforcement officials said Monday that Miss Fleischli wa s seen with Leit ch and Thompson at the bar. One ln- v es ti gator s aid that Miss FleischJi and Leitch had known each oµter for several years. Investigators thus far are re- fusing to disclose a motive for the slaying. They s aid that Leitch and Thompson had driven to Cabo San Lucas at the tip of the Baja California peninsula, and ap- parently were attempting to re- turn to the United States when they were arres ted at the airport. DIAIGI CDAST WIATHIR Mostly cloudy tonight and Wednesday morning and partly sunny Wednes- day afternoon. Highs 72 to 75. Lows tonight 55 to 65. 111101 TODAY Tht Rami !4VOf' tMir 24·1 win owr the Beora ~fort prtparlng for the Cltvtkand Brown&. Set lforits, Page-Cl. 11111 · .............. MmW.... .. = ...... = ............. ,... _ _. .. -"' IF' -: --.. --.. IRlllil COAST ________ _,.. __ .._. __ .... ._._...,.. ________ ~~- ' llffyl'lllt TUESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1'91 CAVALCADE STOCKS MOVIES 82-3 87 88 Stringent requirements make it di/ ficult for U.S. winemakers to sell product overseas ... B5 Newport Center foes wrap up petition drive A SECRf;T AFr'AIR C111111c1/rrurn Paul II 11111 mf'I PE f;L ··STEA.WROLLED .. Councilman Don St rawis Heights annex plan shelved in Newport Santa Ana Heights residents who say they want to sell their homes to com m ercial de - velopers and get away from John Wayne Airport. persuaded the Newport Beach City Council Monday to put off steps toward annexing the unincorporated area. 'Tm not sure why Newport would want to take on this blighted area anyway," suggest· ed Heights resident Richard Truefreh. "The only thing that can help Santa An a Heights now." he told council members, .. 1s total re- development. .. Truefreh told council members he represents more than 100 Heights property owners who are interested in selling out to developers . He said his group is call ed ABCOM . which draws its , name from the first letter of five s treets in Santa Ana Heights. "The people 1n the Heights love it there." added Bill War- ren. a horse stable owner , "but right now I'd like to get enough money lo take my horses and leave." Newport council me mbers were ready lo vote on whether to begin annexation procedures on Santa Ana Heights when the AB- CO M group showed up According to city officials, petitions bearing signatures of 51 percent of the Heights proper- ty owners have been received. These petitions urge the council to annex the county island in or- der to help preserve its residen- tial quality. The council agreed to put off the annexation issue for a month to give city offi cials time lo de- termine which group really represents a majority of the pro- per~ v owners. "This group has just given you the best reason possible why you should begin annexation,·' s ug- gested Jack Mullin. a Heights resident who said he favors pro- tecting the residential quality of the area. "W e don't want our communi- t y d e filed by a bunch o f speculators out to make a quick buck.'' Mullin said. He said that if the issue was put to a vote, the pro-residential group would win. Truefreh said there are six de- velopment firms he's aware of that are interested in purchasing property in the Heights. He said his group has hired Newport Beach architect Bill Ficker to represent its interests. Ficker is a member of a 13· member committee charged with s t udying l and use al t e rnati ves in Santa Ana Heig hts for the county. He couldn't be reached for com· ment today. Deity ........... CENTERPIECES SHOWCASED Newest china. crystal and silver patterns will be used by JO department and specialty stores for "Designs for Dining." to be shown from 10 a.n,. to 3 p.m. Wednesday in four beach area homes. Joan Sue Betson and Helen Koberslein check over details for this fund·raiser for Children's Hospital of Orange County pre- sented by its Cinderella Guild. The $12 tickets may be purchased Wednesday at 1310 Galaxy Drive. Newport Beach. ' Meanwhile, council members face media on 'private' luncheon By STEVE MARBLE ,,. di must either rescind its ap-°' .. ...., ._.... pronl of the lrvl~ Company's Op~•f the controversial $123 miliion expansk>n project or Newport C4!nter expansian pro-put the issue. before Newport jec t s aid today they h ave Beach voters m a spedal elec- gathered enough signatures to lion. force the Newport Beach City "ll 's out or our hands now - Council to rescind the expansion it's up to the city co~nctl," said project or put ll to a citywide Mrs. Lovell. She said, though, vote. that the RAP group would prefer Members er the referendum that the council simply rescind group, which calls itself RAP the project and let it 10 at that. (Residents' Action Plan > said Meanwhile, as petitioners they planned to turn in' their were preparing lo turn in thei.r petitk>ns to the city clerk's office signatures, four Newpo!1 coonctl late today. members and two Irvine Com- Bobby Lovell , a leader of pany officials were meeting with ' RAP, said she was uncertain members of the media. how many signatures had been Mayor Jackie Heather said collected, but "we're well over she called the press conference the mark." this morning to "clear the air" The group needed to come up on reports or a private meeting with 4,235 signatures of reg-between three council me mbers istered Newport voters by Sept. and Irvine Company executives 30 to qualify for a referendum. last Aug. 24, the same day the The city clerk's offi ce said it council approved the develop· could take up to a month to ment firm's expansion project. count and check the signatures. Attending the press con - If the city c le rk 's office rerence were council members verifies the signatures, the coun· Evelyn Hart, Don Strauss and Paul Humme l as well as Robert Shelton, an Irvine Company vice president. who is a former Newport councilman and etty manager. Al issue during the press con· fereQCe was whether the private meeting was prope r and whether all seven council mem- bers were informed of the meet· Ing and what went on at the m eeting. which was held at Councilwoman Evelyn Hart's home. Mayor Keather stressed that the private meeting came after the council had spent more than 10 hours deliberating the ex- pansion project in public. She said that following this de- bate. it was clear "we still had big problems." "Word came down to me that the Irvine Company wanted to talk with us," s aid Mrs. Heather. "There's nothing ii· legal with three council mem- bers meeting with the Irvine Company. "It was near lunch and we de- F EL T .. E.'ICOl..'RAGED.. cided to meet at Evelyn 's -her house Is cleaner tba.n mine so ... " lrvme Company's Robert Shelro11 Mn. Hart defended inviting ·/TWAS.VT ILLEGAi. .'vlayur .JacJ..;e /lt.>atha Mayor lleather and council col- league Ruthelyn Plummer as well as Irvine Company Presi· dent Peter Kremer and three other executives of the firm to lunch. "It was not a secret meeting and I don 't know why it's been blown so far out of proportion ... she said ... , don't feel bad about it .. But Councilman Strauss, who said he learned of the private meeting two days later in the newspaper, said that he con· sidered it "a secret meeting " "That was no place to hold a m eeting,·· said Strauss. "and that's the whole problem. that's the whole issue ... Strauss said he believes "set· tlem ents" were made at the private meeting. He added, "I felt like I was steamrolled and that's why I'm upset " Councilman Hummel al!>o said he was not infor med of the meet· mg and considered 1t to be .. a secret affair." ' o.u, ro• "'9la., r..,_, er.._. I DO.\' T f'EEL BAD .. C111111C"1l1mman Evelyn I/art The Irvine Company's Shelton said he considered the meeting to be le~al and ethical. but "if v.e had it to do over again I'm sure wt•'d do it differ:ently." He saiCI following the private meeting, his firm felt "en- couraged but certainly didn't know what the council was going to do .. What the council d id was ap- prove the Newport Center ex- pansion plan with the conditions that the Irvine Company issue a statement opposing expansion of John Wayne Airport and agree to complete a portion of a new road at a date earli er than pre- ' 1ousl) planned. Roth of these issues were dis- cussed at the private meeting. · Mesa planners bac~ Bristol project Homeoumers eXpected to appeal splir decision to City Council By JERJtY CLAUSEN Ol .. D.i" .......... 14-story office -structure denied by the Planning Commission. Next, Gianulias planned two buildings, one seven and the Sawyer-Watson. C.C. Clarke and Lynn Van Aken voted against the condi· tional use permit to exceed the A long.fought battle to con· s truct high-rise buildings near Montgomery Ward in Costa Mesa culminated in victory for developers Monday night. The city's Planning Com- mission voted, 3-2, to approve a pair of six-story buildings on four acres on the east side of Bristol Street. just south of the San Diego Freeway and north of the Montgomery Ward building. The structure would 'set a precedent' for high-rise construction C ity planners conjectured, however, that area homeowners will appeal the s plit decision to the City Council. othe r nine stories tall. in the area restricted to two-story structures. The Planning Commission de- nied that proposal. Gianulias ap· pealed the decision to the City Council a nd then changed the plan to fi ve and seven -story James C. Gianulias is a s t ru ctu res wh e n h e m e t spokesman for Bristol Plaza, a neighborhood opposition. general partne rs hip he ad· The council turned down the quartered in Newport Beach plan anyway. that has been trying to build Monday night 's pro posal hi gh -rise structures on the gained affirmative votes from parcel for nearly two yeJrs. • ·. ~Mnaa Richard Carstensen, Pre~ou. WOOO!tl~ ihcluded a.· f!Wltet i-{.D•~~p•,•rt and R. two-story height rule and allow some construction in a setback area. Clarke and Van Aken md1cat· ed they agreed with planning st aff members who said the structure would set a precedent for high· rise construction south of the San DieJ:(o Freewav They also agreed the buildings would adversely impact traffi c flow and would throw shadows ;over homes and pools in the neighbor ing Brookview con dominium neighborhood . . . ,,~-(-. . MeSan gives Arraignment due self up in • LB hit-run in auto thefts case A Costa Mesa man identifying himself as the hit-and·run driver whose Volkswagen bus allegedly s truck the motorcycle of a Laguna Beach High School youth Sunday, leaving him in crlUcal condition, has surren- der ed, according to Laguna Beach police. A police spokesman said Stephen Lee Conway. 32 Yolun- t.arUy turned himself in Monday upon the advice of his attorney. Meanwhile, Ro1er Sewell, 17, remained in critical condiUon to· day at Misaion Community Hospital in Mission Vlefc>, .uffer. Ina trom musl~e liead Uljurtes, police said. Sewell had stopped at • cro111walk at MountaJn Aftd lftct South Cout Hl1hway for a pedestrian 1hottl1 before 8:'9 p.m. wbetl bia motorcycle wu rear-ended. pOlice said. Two Orange Coast brothers are (aclng arraignment Oct. 13 after their arrest in a multi· agency raid on a Costa Mesa auto parts distributorship that investigators say masked an auto theft and resale operation. Investigators from eight law enforcem ent agencies armed with a search warrant entered Pro Fab Auto and Auto Parts Distributors, 3042 Enterprise St., arresting Leo F. Shulz, 31, of Huntington Beach, and Anton Shulz, 41, of Costa Mesa. Lt. Wyatt Hart of the Orange County Sheriff's Depa.rtment said invesli1ators belleve the Shula brothtt's were operaUng an auto tbeft .id resale network that 1pectaliled ln emall tntcn and sporty compacts. Vehicles, Hart aald, were stolen; brought to the lndualrial ~ark buildinl wb.,-e ktentlllca· dod numbers were r•moved ll1Cl • replaced with numbers trom de· mollabed vebicles of a slmllar type purchased rrom salvaae . '· yards. Once outfitted with the n ew numbe r s, the stolen vehicles were sold. thus general· ing income for the ring. Hart said. The two men nave been re- leased from Orange County Jail on bail of $25,000, Hart said. Both were initially charged with grand theft auto and possession of st olen property. In addition lo r ecovering several vehicles. including a Datsun 280Z and an expensive Lotus Ford, Hart said the buUd- i n g y ie lded scor es or parts believed to be stolen. Hart s aid about $250,000 in stolen property was recovered. Agencies participating In the seven·week long investigation, prompted by an anonymous Up to investigators. included the sheriff's department; police de· 1 ~artm ents in Santa Ana, Westmlnater, Huntington Beach aftd Costa Mesa ; Caltrornia Hiihway Patrol; Department of Motor Vehicles. and the Na- t ional Auto Theft Bureau. Brookview Con dominium Homeowners Association leaders were split over the plan Monda) Some members argued that the office·commerc1al towers would be more acceptable than previously announced plans for a multi restaurant complex on tht> property Others argued 'that the build· mgs would block the sun. create tra ff1 c bottlenecks a nd set ciangerous precedents. Commissioner Davenport, who moved for approval. argued that the s ix story buildings provide a gradual !>tructural height reduc- tion rrom the to to 18-story build· ings 1n Segerstrom complexes north of the freeway. H e also predic t e d that s hadow s falling o n th e Brookv1£'w tracts would be minimal. Police grill youths over vandalism Costa Mesa police are ques- tioning youths who live in the Kaiser Middle School area after vandals caused more than $1,000 worth of damage lo the school Sunday Poli ce said a hall window tiad been broken with a beer botUe. Vandals who entered the build· ing through the window, leaving blood on a piece of ja11ed elass, scattered flour, rice and baking mixes on the kitchen floor, in sinks, in ovens and on wannin1 plates. Officers said chlorine bleach was poured over meat in a rreezer. Graffiti had been sprayed on every exterior wall or t.he cam· pus, police said, and across some wtndowa. The dama•e WM capr*f Oft by a large blatt NHi awatlka paint~ on a concrete baakitbaU court, one officer said. Otange Co111 DAILY PtLOT(T'uetday, September 29, 1981 N W..,. Nt1 ~" "-1 \ol.. IOI \ol" Nel \a••• Nel .. t .... CIO~ C,. f.:.1~ (IO .. 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But here are some rank· lngs which might surprise you Folger's, a Procter & Gamble brand, has forged Lo the Lop of the ground coffee market, dis· placing the longtime leader. Maxwell House . Folger's is reported Lo be doing 28 percent of the busi· ness to Maxwell Ho use's 24 percent However, GeneraJ Foo<ls. the Maxwell House maker. continues lo be lhe overall coffee leader with an array of brands tha l includes Sanka. Brim, Yuban and Maxim Conlal', a product of SmithKline. an oldline Philadelphia PharmaceuticaJ house, has lost its grip on first place in cold remedies. having been shoved aside by NyQuil, whose maker, Richardson· Vicks. runs those heartwarming commercials featuring the whining, wheezing husband who needs to be rescued by his smart wife. NyQu1I has been pulling down 20 percent of the dollars s pent on cold remedies Contact gets 14 percent. Don't feel sorry for SmithKline. It has the hot· test new prescription drug around in Ta1amet, an antiulcer agent whose sales have skyrocketed alnce its introduction four years ago. Tagamet's worldwide s ales in 1980 were S860 million. It bu displaced Valium as the top-selling prescription drug. What's the best-selhng headache remedy? An acin? No. Bayer aspirin? No. Excedrin? No. The winner, in a romp now. 1s Johnson & Johnson's non- aspmn product. Tylenol (ava1la· ble m tablets. capsules and Ii quid ). Tylenol has come from nowhere lo cap lure 30 percent of what's called • MllJDI MDllDWITZ the 'anaJges1c market." Left m the lurch are Anacin <12 percent>, Bayer <9 percent>. Bufferin (7 percent) and Excedrin t 7 percent! Bufferin and Excedrin are both made by the same company, Bristol-Myers, home aJso of Clairol. Ban, Vitalis. Tickle, Windex and Drano. The big winner here is Clairol, still the dominant brand in the hair coloring business. The top-selling liquor brand in the country is, be lieve it or not. Bacardi rum Eastern Air Lines carries more passengers than any other airline 39 million in 1980. But Delta Air Lines makes more money than any other airline · $130 million after taxes in 1980. Colgate-Palmo~a ompany best known for its toothpastes and d ents. none of which now rank in first place, ha ppe s to be the largest seller of brand·name rice. thanks to fieltling five different hrands out of Texas Carolina. Success. Mahatma Brown. Make-It-Easy and River. However. the largest single brand in the business is Uncle Ben's, the product of a peculiar company called Mars. which seJJs more candy < M&M 's. Snickers. Milky Way . Three Mus keteers) than Hershey and competes 1n the pet food market under the Kai Kan name. The leading cough drop is Hall's, made by Warner-Lambert. The top-selJing name m the plastic trash bag market is Glad. which comes to us from the chemical ~iant, Union Carbide. 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