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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-10-01 - Orange Coast Pilot... .. 'Wimp' .of man aequitte~ in ·wife shooting (See story below)· - .. Controversial -Mesa sculptor at _it again (See Bl~~! .. attempt fails * • • • • • ORANGE COAST YOUR HOMETOWN DAil Y PAPER THURSDAY . OCTOBER 1, 1981 O~ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS 220-pound TNT bonili kills 30 m· Beirut BEIRUT. Lebanon <AP l A .car packed with an estimated 220 pounds of TNT exploded in a PLO-controlled neighborhood in West Beirut today. Police re ported at le<.tsl 30 people ki lled a nd 130 wounded, but <1 Red Cross nurse s aid the death toll might be as hi gh as 50. Police said the car·bomb ex ploded near the offices or the Palestine t,.1berat1on• Organiza tion's top St'curity chief. Salah Khalaf. known by the code name Abu I vad The blast tore facades off buildings , s plintered telephone poles. set off fires and turned about 110 cars into piles of scorched metal Pol il'e said n o n l' o f the woundl·d wert' ranking members of tht• PLO The PLO, 1n <.t state· mt•nt through its news agency, reported 18 dN1ths without iden tir) ing thl•m , and s aid there wPrt' 24i P a les tinians and Lebanese wounded. Mohsen Ibrahim. s pokes man for the 13-m1ht1a National Move ment leftist umbrella group al lied with thl• PLO. s aid al a pr ess conference later that several commumst militia mem bers were klllt·d lie blamed "Is rael and its agents in Ll'banon." indirectly referring to nghtb t Chnsl1an ml11t1~s. and promised to "strike l.>aC'k in the s<1mc m<1nner and in the appropriate plaCl' Abu lvad wa:. not in the office wht.>n the explo~1on occurred. the PLO said. lie was later seen touring the dcvast<1ted block. Till' bomb strandt•d re:-.ident:. in 1:-.olated rtoors of h1gh-n~e huild1ngs. tore C'offce shopi., s andwich s t:rnds anct s mall markets to hits , and hurled mutilated bodies of several strt.>l'I vendor:. dozens of yards from their st;rnds. .. Evervone here is afru1d that "hole buildings will ... oon col lapsL· · !'\aj\\U Sha"af. a Lcbanesl· fkd Cross nurse help ing in rescue oper:Hions said "If this happens "l' "Ill have a catastrophe · There \\e re no immed1att• claims of rc:-.ponsibllity for the bla:.t. the latest against PLO targ<.•ls in Lebanon s1nl'l' a l'ar bomh Sept. 17 killed 25 in Sidon All prcviuui. bla.-.ts Wl're claimed bv the Front for the Liberation of Lebanon from Foreigners . tmt the PLO <"hi.irgl•d the group \\JS an Is raeli front. A µoli ce s pokcs m<1n , who det11ned to be ident1f1cd for !>CC'unty r cai,ons . "as un<1blc to :.a v how close the latest ex plosi1Jn was to ly<1d's offi ce But he :.aid gu<1rds ut the PLO of fi C'1al 's three-:-.tor) headquarteri. in the low 1nto mc /\r<.tb CSee HLAST, Page A21 Spectacular storm socks coast Marines conduct pot hunt By GLENN SCOTT Of ti. o.11, f'li.t ''-" A Marine Corps screening pro- gram is under w<1 y al the El Toro Ajr Station to discover who is smoking mariJuana. About 1,000 Marines will be test ed each month. Thei r urine sa mples will be s creened lhr"ugh a new ~bl e unit de· signed t o quickly indicate whether the Marine has smoked marij uana in the past week. said Gunnery Sgt Dick Blumster. Marines whose positive tes ts A re reconfirmed 1n a Navy laboratory in San Diego will be e nrolled in educational and treatment programs aimed at discouraging marijuana use. he said . Participants whose later tests are negative probably won't be sanctioned. but. for those whose tests continue to be positive. Blomster said: "That's a new ball gam e." Chronic marijuana users. he said. could be discharged from the corps. Blomster, who works in the base public affairs office. said the Marines have other pro· gr ams for alcohol abusers and users of hard drugs Although-the corps has had other tests that sometimes in· dicate marijuana ...... use, the new process is t he fi rsl to a1 m specifically al the s ubs tance Marine officials ordered the testing because they believe that m arijuana smoking is common in the military. according to lst <See POT, Page A2 I .Cops calm Campbell, Tucker spat SHREVEPORT, La. <AP> A loud argument between coun- try music sitJgers Tanya Tucker and Glen Campbell in a hotel here was broken up by .Police. ·authorities said. Sgl. Ri ckey Spier or the Bossier Cit y police said Wednes- day he had to threaten Campbell with a rrest early Saturday before he would leave the hall outside Miss Tucker's suite in the Le Bossier Hotel. Answering a call by hotel management, Spier said he saw Campbell beating on the door and shouting obscenities. "We told him, 'with all due respect, Mr . Campbell, you're going to have to settle down or we're going to have to treat you with th~ same respect as anyone else'." Spier said. " 'We're go- ing to have to take you to Jan·." Of'1ceu th e n escorted Campbell to a room on another side of the hotel, he said, adding that. no cahr1es were (iled alkl no wrttten report waa made on the lncl~t. I Flashes of lightning punctuate the storm over the Orange Coasl as October arnves with 3 4 of an inch of rain. Ali's 'Tornado' blows out · Crane too small; Mesa sculptor will try again Friday By JERRY CLAUSEN Of tlle 0 .. 1, f'IMt Su" Costa Mesan Ali Rous han 1g· nored a Superior Court order Wednesday that prohibit~ him from erecting his big metal sculptures and tried to put up a 60 foot-high "Tornado " · The attempt failed. Roushan had ordered a 30 or 45-ton crane lo raise his fourth metal sculpture. The crane peo pie sent a 14.5-tonner. Rous han and crane operators worked from l 30 to 3 p.m. try. 1ng to lift the seven-ton sculpture in place on its concrete founda lion T}icy finally gave up. ··1 JUSl don't want nobody to get hurt... said Rous h a n af lerward. "I have a 45-ton crane coming down Friday. now " Roushan 's American Civil Li berlles Union attorney con- cedes, though, t hat the Iranian immigrant could be in jail by then. An Orange County Superior Court Judge 1s scheduled to rule today on City of Costa Mesa' c harges that Roushan is in con tempt or a restraining order pro· hibiling any construction at his 1550 Superior Ave. metal shop. Thul order followed the city's suit demanding that Roushan re· move two other sculptures, "Wat erfall" a nd "Butterfly Wings, .. p'ut in place despite or- dinances restricting structural CSee METAL, Page A2l 'Wimp' of man claims abuse Court grants acquittal in snooting of wife MOUNT CLEMENS. Mich. <AP l -Described by his at· torney as a "wimp" and a "milquetoast,·• a 31-year-old man who claimed he wa-.abused by his wife has been acquitted of shooting her. A Macomb County Circuit Court jury acquitted Joseph Dudzinski. 31. or Gibraltar of at· \tempted murder and t wo counts of assault. 1 Sherrell Dudzinski was shot In t he back Aug. 27 , i980 at a mobile home owned by a ramJly friend, John Cooper of Harrison Township. At the trial, -torney. Ronald I IP Dudzinski 's _!lt· Gold11teln. llld • his client felt oppressed by his On the day of the shooting. wife because "she wore the Dudzinski picked up divor ce pants In .the family." papers filed aga,jnst him by Ms Dudzinski was upset becaus~e: Goldstein ~aid. The couple his wiCe spent "a great deal·o! ~~separated two weeks earlier lim e " with Cooper in t he three a nd Mrs. Dudzinski had not al· months before the s hooting, lowed her husband lo visit the Goldstein said . couple's two children. "Sh 'd · ·t hi'm <Coo rl . "'Th~ divorce and t~e denial of al lea~t t~ic~as~ week," <foid-v!sita~1on. was the main factor in stein said Wednesday. "At least ~~: d~mlu~~ that brought out all once a week s he stayed over· • nger a~d prompted the night with hJm Dudzins ki would s hooting. said the attorney, h · h adding: ave to go. out and get a •m· ··He was drunk and didn't burger white s~e was cooklng know what he was doing. He In· dinner for John. tended to say 'goodbye' and klJI In testimony at the trtaJ, both hlmsett Something sbe aald set Cooper and Mrs. Oudslnskl de· him off.'" nied that they wer• romantlcaJly Mrs. DudziMkl cried when the tnvolve.d. verdict was returned. 'All Savers' get mixed • reac t ion ..... """ NEW YORK CAP > Customers lined up at the doors when some of the nation's banks and savings institutions opened tod<.ty as the high-interest, tax- free All Savers certificates went on sale. Some financial institu· lions planned to stay open all weekend to handle orders for new accounts. But other bankers said busi- ness was no greater that'\ ~~al and concluded investors were wailing to see if they'd get a higher return on a later offering or certificates The All Savers that went on sale today pay a yield of 12.61 percent; late this afternoon the rate for All Savers ercective Monday will be set by t he Treasury Department, based on its monthly auction of one-year Treasury bills. ··w e've had a lot of calls this morning, a lot of inquiries." said Grace Sc hmidt of Bank of Vi r ginia in Richmond. "but most o( them seem 'to be wajt. ing" until the new rate is an- nounced. The auction was to take place today. with results announced tonight. To accommodate that, banks in many istates planned to stay open late and open up Saturday and in some cases on Sunday, to give customers a c hance to buy CSeeSAVE!l , ••1e A2) £1 I death weather related B y STEVE MARBLE Of , .. D•llY f'li.t Sutt The season's firs t s torm moved inio Orange County in s pectacular fashion Tuesday. brightening the s kies with li~htning and dumping nearly "~ of an inch of rain. The electrical storm knocked out power to more than 17,000 customers along the Orange Co<1s t and several areas today were still witho ut power. In Laguna Beach. lightning s truck a tree in the 400 block of Cliff Drive <.tnd charred a power pole on Gaviota Street. Traffic signals at the busy in· terseclion of Dover Drive and Pac 1f1 c Coast Highway in Newport Beach were knocked out dllring the storm and east· bound motorists today found themselves snarled in a traffic jam backed up nearly one mile. In Anaheim, David Mendoza. 16, was electrocuted at 5 a.m . when he brushed against a metal guard rail on which a 12 ,000 volt elec t r i cal transmission line had fallen. Police said they theorized that the line fell to the ground after being struck by a bolt of light ning. ,. Police said the youth and his father were attempting to put out a s mall grass fire that broke out near the guardrail when the incident occurred. T he boy's rather was not injured, police said In Huntington Beach. rain ca used flooding on Newland Street near the Edison power plant and traffic had to be re- routed "ll 's safe lo say we had a lot of weather," suggested Hunt· ington weather·watcher J . Sherman Denny today. .. You'd have to be drugged to sleep through the storm we had last night," he commented. "My land. it's been a long time since <&ff STORM, Page A2) DRANlil CDASl WIATHIR C hance o f s h owers decreasing to 20 percent tonight and near zero Fri- day. Partly cloudy tonight and c learing Frid ay. Hi g h s 74 lo 78. Lows tonight 58 to 65. INSIDE TODAY John Gibbs of Costa Mesa lave1 for $'fked -like 140 mph in ~ hydroplane boat. See story, photo, Page Cl. INDll • .. • • • • • • Or ngeCoastDAILY PILOT!Thuraday,October 1 .1~81 · Corigress approves einergency spend hill ·after 'deadline WASHINGTON <AP 1 Alter debatmg past its m idnight dead- l 1 n e , Co ngr ess t o da y authorized an em ergency spend ing bill for the federal govern· meot Uiat includes liber alized tax b r ea k s a nd v i rt ua lly a uto matic pay inc reases for sen~tors and representatives T echnically, t he government went broke when lhe 198 1 fiscal year e nded a t midnig ht and President Reagan ha dn't s igned th e s t o p gap b i l l to fund numerous agencies and depa rt- ments Rut few disr uptions In \ government services were ex peeled . The House a p proved t he bill b) vo1n• vole m ore than an hour beror e the deadline. When the Sen ate followed s uit . voting 64 28. about a half hour mto fis'· cal 1982. the bill was sent to Reagan. ~orkers. unless Congress reject- ed them Me m bers of Congress earn $60,662.50 a year While member~ of Congress wer<• voting them~clves a break. a c·ourt was conside ring whether lo take one major pr ivilege Jwa.' T he comm on Cause lo bby a :-.kl'd a fedcr11l court lo declare thl• 206 year-o ld fr a nkin g privilege. w hich provides s pecrnl low mail rates for me m· bers of t h e Hou se a nd the Senate. uncons titutional because 1t 1s being used to prom ote the re-elections of incum bent con· g re:ismen. From Page A1 BLAST • • • L1n iversity ne ig hborhood dis· cover ed and defused another car rigged w ith m ore th a n 100 p o unds of e xplosives a few minules a fter t he first mid- mor ning blast n11ht' u1rcs the seal of approval to (In old poolmntc-. 11·11111/t'tf , Hit 111111 11 , 11 "It! 111 Sew D1e~111 this week I l is designed to keep money a\'ailal>le for federa l programs through Nov. 20, w hen e xperts ~stimate most if not a ll the 13 rl'~ular approp riations bills will be• approved. fl was not known whether the bo mb was aim ed a t lyad 's head· quarters or the adjacent offices of Lebanese lefllst militias aligned with the P LO. a n el asks Jree \. . A '' 1d 1 '"I' d.111111 ng n al1onal 1• • '11 "1•11l 1on ... ha\•e 1: • 1 11 1111'.1111rq.:ll''~" re<'om· 1111•111i. •I 1 .. d.I\ th.it delegates be 11 1111' '" \ot•· as tht•y plea~e \\• 1<1 11t11rn('nd lhat a ll de· 1, 1 .11. lo•· 1u•rm1tkd lo decide l111 1 '"t' .1 1 thl· time of na- t1 1111,il ''"II\\ nt1on hallot1ng ... ~.1 1d 1111· n •port of the Duke l 111' • 1 -.11' F11rum on Pres 1den· 11 I '\ 1111"1.1 11011 ... .. T his mt"ans freeing the <11· legates from the r equ1n•ml·11t that tht•\ vote autom al1talh 1n accor da.lll'e with the priman vote in thl'ir s tate or the in:.trut lion or candidates." the revort said. "This also mea ns that the !'i.111 d 1da t e \!.ould no longer ha\'C tht' right of approval ove r the i.l'll'l' lion of an y d elegates.·· the forum said. "The delegate sell·<· lion protcss would once again conve • t 1ons 111•1·111111 • I I•" I\ 111111·11 '• I h1 r 1 I"'': • 1 ·1 t 11 11,1\ lllll,tl "I 11 t1 I I lh1• lllll"l 11"'1"' 1111. .ii I l' I 11 .r I l \ I'... I " I ti I ..,, -.11·m H111 1t .i" 1 ,, r•·.,11il·t11111 111 .,. p11111. 1• .111 p;11gn (>l'l'ltid ,I I t1\1• , J I ,111' aclnpti•d lo\ Ill• I lt-111 11·1 t I 111 nnl I nl1111•1 d Ill I I It ·" Cl 11)., .. • • f'I' •I I I rtlo\·c ha1 n•·r -. to 1•1111\ \'Ill d•ll par t1t·1pal11111 1,.,1t.il11.1' 1111 "' l ot' a l p.11 '·' •'.1111·11~ 1·s .111d ,, tll 11 111.1111· 1h•h•gall' 'otalll'-for 111.11111 p<tll\ 11ft1t·t'r.., and m<iJor jlll Jil II' 111f11·1.af.., 'I 111• n•p111t 1:-. lhl' first frnm "\'\ 1·1 .ii µ;1111+., 1nl'iu1hng t·om m1-.-,11lfl-. "urJ..ing "1th1n the Jl,·puul1ea11 .10d D1•moerat1c 1i:1r ttl'"'· ... 1ud~ ing r!'f11 rm of the p11 ·-.1 dt•nt1;rl r111n11nat1ng ... ystt•m 11 \\ 1 ... lw.111 1 ti h~ Tt•rr ~ Sanford . l'l"l'''d1·nt nl Dukt• t'nivl•rs1ty :111<1 fornwr 'l:orth l'.irolina gov- Prn111 and 1111 ... ut·cessful pres 1d 1•nt 1.11 t·a11cl1clate Ht.•eausC' the bill w as n 't ap pro\'ed before the deadline , con ~re~~1ona l o ff1 c1al s n ot ed . fL•deral Jud ges a pp are ntly will n·<·t•ivc an unplanned r aise. The "'"ting judicial pay ceiling l.1pi.t·d <it midnight. a nd courts have ruled that action a t a la ter . t1mt• lo reimpose a cap is un t.·111b liLUl10nal. The f inancial ben e fits for nh·mbers of Congress in the bill indudl>d Repealing the $3,000 limit 1111 l he tax deduction for living 1•\penses in Washing ton Lifting the current S25.000 It 11111 on outside earne d mcom e "l.'nators may collect in a year. I louse members would continue to be rest ricted t o 15 pe rcent of their s alary, about $9,700. Althoug h h e strongly d enies the ch arge. the 48-year-old Jyad, a co founde r with Vasser Arafat of t h<' P LO's main g uerrill a group. Al F alah. is re ptued to ha\'C been t he ma s termind or the .. Black Septe m ber" terrorist group that c•t• r ed out the 1972 mas~acre of 1 Isr aeli athletes at the Munich lym p1cs . Ambul an s w ith walling sirl'ns rushe victims from the seen(' of t he blas t a s rad ios and louds peaker vans a ppealed fo r blood dona tions on both sides of the so-called ··gr een line ·· fron· lier that d1v1des post-civ1l war Be ir ut in lo Mosle m a nd Chris· tian cities. !_rom Page A 1 ~·rrO R M Transmitter aids arrests Ileginning in a year , giving tongression al pay r aises equal to the a m o unt r ecomme nded an- n ua I ly by a presidentia l com· rn ission for white-colla r fed er al PLO spokes men claim lyad is on Israel's most wanted hst for h is a lleged connectio n with .. Bl.irk Septe m ber ," which was also res pons ible for' the 1973 siege of the Saudi Embas~y in Khart oum , S uda n . U.S. Am - bassador Cleo Noel J r ., a nd de p- µt\ c hief of mission George C. .\1 oort' were executed in t hat at· tack. along with a B e lg ia n d iplomat • • • I ' 111\ lh111g llkt• that " De vice attached to eagle h elps probe o f killings Robbins paid during trial I 1 \\11I1 I I 1 •1d1·11l s uggcs led that ti th1· 1ti11nch>r .. il wai. like 1.. lt·1 p 111 a IJO\\ ling al It 1111111,11' l111m llw Lus Angeles \\'1•atlwr J11111·au hl:imed lhe un- P'I'"' l•·d -.1111 rn on a low pres· :-.111• '11•111 that worked its • I l f•• 1 nast Thl'\' said the ~' 1 1 · 11d111 1•d ·unstable air .. \•11111 l">llll•d 111 the lightning oil I II I 'I ..i 'I" ,\ 1. "" 1 h 11 l .tU officials pre- "' 1 1." pn •-. ... ure .,\stem '' 111 t11al mm<' ea!>t and • 111111plt•lrl,v gon<' by 11 11. 1.. ' •1 rn hrought Southern c .d11 ' ·, 111 ,, r.1111 .,inn• April ., , 1111·1.il 1111 111 Southern I 1 1 111 Ed1•11n .,<11d \\Or k 1 1 • ,, \\111 J..1 d th111ugh the night Ill .11 1 ill•'lllJll to r "'tore power in l l1u it111 '1111l lkal'l1 Fountain \ d h 1·" t •,,, • ., .. and :-O:e"port B1 " 11 . '1'111· 1 ..,,1 1d t ht'llll wer e nine' 111 1·111 1 1111t•1T 11pt111Jll beginning ;11 .! ,, m .incl that hy day light to- ;d .•' tht'l l' werl' s till 3.000 ('t'J<.;t om1·1·o,; w11 houl power. _ In rlw 1111111corpo rated com· 111 11111 ., . .., 111 O;ina Point a nd J..ii.:1111.1 '\1J!uvl 1,000 hom es \~1'1 1 ' 11),11J..1•d11111 Iii •11.11" n1mmunit1 es: traffic • 11 11.1 ·''re· knoc·kcd o ut and }>111 f.!I 11 .d.11 m ... wt•re triggered. l'·d 11 P 111 I aguna ~;,i1d 17 h111 i.:I 11); al.1rms \H•r(' set off I Ii• 1.1111 ''h1c h reportedly t 111 n1·d 111 11.111 Ill arc•as of Santa ,\1 ' •· 11I1·d .r thundering stage .1 h ' ! .Ill .1 m and kepl up a ··t• 111\ d• "npour for nearly an 1111 1 1• .11h1·r off1<·1als said H 1 1-. .,, Jll'l"ll'<I tonight and !'.t I h I• r11 J.1~ illor 111 011 le ader's <'tnul i I ion u orse "\I I l.\KE C'ITY <A P > \!• '"" 11 <'hur1·h Presiden t !-.1 11 111·11 \\' Kimhall, 8fi. re · 1 1\1•1111 • lrnm )o.kull s urgery. has 111 ~ 111 ... 11Jft•r111 g gastrointestinal hi• .. c1111g. his ph)sit·ian said. 1, 1111 ball . ron:.idered a prophet f,, 1 ,. t 7 million members of tl11· • hurrh of .lt'-.us Ch r.isl of I "I r tlc1.v S<iints, underwe nt ~ 1111 ... urgt'I') Sept-5 and had 111 •' 1'Xl'f't'led to return home in :! "•·ek ... - ORAN E COAST LONG BEACH <AP> Fii.h and Game a uthorities. who becam e s uspicious a fter a radio transmitter attached to a n eagll' s topped moving, have three su ... pects in the d eatl) o f l he protl'tt ed ra re bird. .. We have three s us pects and we're going to file a complaint against them. I don't want to sa\ more so as not to jeopardize tht• case.·· Capt. Bill Sherlin of tht• California Departrrrenl of f'1sh and Game said We dnesd av Their identities will not he n· leased until they ·are forrnalh . cha rged within. a few day:.. h<· said . T he bird was one of a g roup taken lo Santa Catalina Isl.ind t he la st two years in the hopl.'i. nf re -establis hing e a g les o n tlw C ha n ne l ls la 11ds wher e they had on ce been s o numerous The bi<ds. i mpo rted from Washington . ea ch h ad a s mall radio transmitter attach ed to il R ecently, a wildl ife exp ert m o n itor in g t he birds n oticed t h at one transmitter had not been m oving . Sh eriff's de puties and U S and state wildlife a uthorities tracked t he transmitter to a dum p on the island . where they found the carcass or lhe eagle with a 22 caliber bullet hole in it. The rt'· 20-CENTER This 1:-. till' <. s t amp. w hi c h tht• r o ... 1.tl Ser \'iC'l· will issue follm\ 1111- tht..• ~O\ 1 rate..inc-rt><.1~t·111 :!11 cent:. It will be u~t·d u111 ti the n·~ular 20-cent ~t<.imp-. ar~ 10,~ued Daily Pilat ClualflHI ad11erti 1ing 7141642-5678 All other dep1rtments 642·432,1 • -1-... .. rt... .. "•' I t. N W PP1l M ~ .o'I P Harv••v tiA. ...... 10, .. ,, I K 1y 5• hull/ .. ,. .. fV , ... ,....,, ~ • 'f\1'1• 11 ti Goddard Jr . . ., ...... ..,, (11•rniir<J Scf1ulma11 ..('loll• .... Cm•'"' H Loos .. _ alot<I< CArOI A. Moort II ,r_ .. MAIN OFFICE lt•Wll',lt\•w!.t (°'tllMl"'-4 (_& M•• •rtlf••'" l'o• ''6oi,l (. "''• ~..-,. C • •1•1• l\o"' •Qhf I'll 0•-tnQI' l IM\I Pvt>h\t'l•nQ Como.n y N('I Id 'fllllll ''''"I ' 11\lf ~f ' I f l+U1ftl nl,•1f• I r 11t ,. ,, . ..,,, "' •. ,, ,, •.. ,, b• •. 0'"" JI,.' ~JP. • ,_. t P,. ,..,., "-f I"' "l~f ,,.,,. ,.,,~ IA p 1 t,.q; r• °1 U I• ¥•'A I Alif 10\ ~ UP\ 'U I((\ \,jh..,, • I • f1., ,., 1 1 • ~j ~-o-.1n1" " fh ,,,,. I \\ \0 '""'n•~ • • • 1 "• '1• ,,,I'\ 11.1""' '' lt ~,,,..,""-' VOL. 74, NO. 274 ...,. __ _ .... ~ .. . .. mains hJd :q1p .i1t•11t1 111·1 1 p.11t1all\ 1'.tlt n ti\ pl t•d:ol• • v.·e lounrl Cllllll ·h ·f •I I• d tlH'rt· to 1dc:n 11~ 1t "" 311 1 .1~1· S lwflin .,J11I - Othl'I l'\ llll'IH"C h·d .111l l 1t11111• ... to till' thn·t· ... lf ... IH'l'h Ip. "' f1 1'1als v.1111ld 1101 ... ;1 \ \d . 1 'h1• l'\ Hlcnt'I' "'"" 1 h•·I •. ~;1 I From Page A 1 p.11 l'rtl mot I\ 1· tor thl1 s hooting II\ tlw 'oun1t a dults \\ho \H·re ,Ill L':-Oll<j Eag lt•:-an· µrolel'ted under bo th ... 1ak and fpc.J eral lav. In C'.il1f11rn1.1 . thl' killing of an t•.iglt· 1s punishable by up to SI .11011 f1m• ;ind a y~in the 1 uunl ~ 1ail \ 1 LOS ANGELES <AP I -Stale Sen. Alan Robbins received S650 111 living expenses for legislative work during pa rt of his sex tria l. the Da ily J"ews in Los Angeles reported today. From Page A1 POT ... Lt. Don Donaldson SAVE RS r l(BUT. • • Robbins. -0-Van Nuys, was a c· q uitted July 15 of nine felony sex c harges involving teen-age girls. The t rial lasted seven weeks . The News quoted Robbins as sayin g the $650 r epresent ed the regu lar S50 per diem for 13 days in which he felt he put in enoug h time onJegislative work, both al home and in the Capitol. to qualif~· "With 99 pe rcent accuracy in illegal drug detection. we expect about 4-0 percent of those tested to s h ow posit ive results Cfor marijuana 1," Donaldson sa id in a written sta teme nt. I ht• \II S.I\ 1•1.,, .II '' h < I till' h11!ht r r.r!P I I~ F1r:.t '\;,1t11111:rl H.1111.. 111 IC1"1"n planrwrl lo \..l't'I' 11" 1·. lo1 • 1111•:. op1·n uni 11 i p ni F1 1d,,, I • ~l • ,, 1 u ... 111m1·1 .1 .,1,01 ,,; • r• I 1 ; 11 Ill'\\ or flld I tJ l' '( 111 ,, II I I ill lllllJ.: 111'\\'I q111 .Id IL! <·u~tomL·r., 1111 111 \\ 1, 1, 1 I l 1• rn.i~ Ill' l11glwr. ma~ 111 I••·• •'l In \Ll.snt:i. 1·11:-t1111H•r:-. "''11· 11m•d up to 1.11 lhl' '""nl!11 11 .. k this m or n rn~ at s t .11111 11..d federal Sa\'ill.E!l> & L11,1n I-~·clP1 ;J t inn . .., J HI "i 11 l' 1 a I "1· r v 1r1 •" l"o11rdin.il111 <; 11•1111.i H111 li1• ... 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I a l t n r 11 , ' \l ,. 1 r \\'1.')o.lf'<'ll'h of S.1nta An.1 ... ;1111 Wt>dnC'scl,1y ht• d1111lit ... l1 h dwnl \\ill go lo p11I lh.11 .J11dg1• lloh1•r t F1t1.genilcl """ ruk I h11, '"'" 1111 Rou ... han ':-. h ('hillf 'J lt.11 1s, Wcs lrcH'h acid ~ it 1h1· 1urlgc rules al all Sup1•n o r l'ourt ta ... t•S ,1rt• hac klog!!c•tl . he noted, and ht• w'ill nnl suhmll !ht• Housh.in ca<;e lo u prd te rn jlld~c Houshan alrcath ha:-, his fifth metal !>('lllpturc on .the drawmjt boards. It is C'<tllcd 'l'1•.1rnck · a nd will be the las t 1n th<' 1•ne1o • he said "But if govl'l"flflwnl's att 11 ude doesnl chan~e . I m gmng to build anolh~r t•alled ('on ct•µI o( Government' at that (Ind, he said pointing to fhe renr of his properly 'That'll IJe a 250 foot h1~h ~loodsucker. Goverm nl'nl h as n µroblem , and they take 11 out on lhc ~oplc " . > BanJ.. l k ·sa1d the tax free mcen- 11\l' tole! him Presumably. you. ean t hist•." In l>allas I.arr~ F White. as - -. 1st .111 t 'l<'L' pres i d ent of lkpuhl1<· Hank. said s ales of All :-;,l\'C'I'" -;houlcl drciw about 250 ·11'-101rn r-. tocla' and the bank q 1.11lrupkd 1h ·staff to handle l lw dt·mancl l n C'ulumhus. Ohio. Renee lla<1s. sen11Jr branch manager m t hl· Rucke~c Federal Savings and Loan offitr. said : "In t he last fiO minutc•s. we h ave opened ao; man\ acc·ounls as we normal- 11 <111 rn ·four days " Highway fund cut WASHINGTON CAP> Heed · mg Preside nt Reagan's call for a f urther 12 percent cut in gov· e rnment s pending , the Senate En vironment and Public Works Com mittee cul $1 billion from the 1982 federal highway aid pro· gram. OCTOBER 6th, 7 -9 P .M. T esting also will be instituted at lhe Ma rin e Corps ' Tust in He licopter Air Station a nd al Camp Pend leton , said Blomste r. "We have been concerne d about m arijuana <use l for some lime." said Blom ste r. who noted that the failure of a sold ier lo perfor m a duly or care for a piece of mac hinery can have i~ plications on others in the unit. ' He said the ne w procedures of· fer m ore accuracy a nd economy than in pre vious tests . ~ OCTOBER 7th , 10 A.M. -5 P .M. You won't want to miss this showing of t he elegant Cybis Collection. Here are four beautifully crafted figures that make up j ust a part of that collection. " ~urette." 8 114'' high. from the "Children to Cherish Collection:· limited edition of 1.000. $725. "P rince Brocade.'' Unicorn Head. 141/2" high. on base. from the "Fantasia Collection." llmlted edition of 500. $2.200. SLAVICK'S Fine Jtwalln Since t817 Where the btst su~ begin. ... '1 ... Fashion Island (714) 644-1380 • ~ llKI\ Abel CirNter Los Angllll •Sir\ £MlgD • Lm ..-.... " .. H lcky. Drummer Boy," 5" high. from t he "Chlldren to Cherish Collection.'' open collection. $295. "~Eyre,'' 12" h!oh. from the "Portraits In Porcelain Collect:lon." limited edition of 500. $975. \ -- AP ........ Actress Catherine Bach appears to be topsy-turvy and cut in two as Mag1cum Davu1 Copperfield reaches in to tickle what seems to be her feet It was during a tapmg of an illusion m Los Angeles for a CBS special to be aired Oct. 26 . Reagan doodles as debt rises While Republican con - gressional leaders talked with Presidenl Reagan about the defense budget and the nation's trillion-dolla r debt ceiling, the president's pen was busy. Were those notes he was taking ? No, t h ey were doodles -sketches of two male faces and one female - on a White House notepad. He handed them to Senate Republican Leadedl'oward H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, and autographed the paper . Baker displayed them to re- porters and photographers after the meeting. I'\ Comedian Flip Wilson ap- peared in Torrance Super ior Court a day early and a judge scheduled an Oct. 16 hearing for pretrial motion~ on drug posses:.1on charges. Wilson was arrt'sted last Ma rch at Los Angeles Jn . The Kimbell Art Museum in Forth Worth acquired the painting .. Don Pedro de Barberana y /\parregui .. by Spanish master Diego Vt>laz. que z, museum director Ed- mund P . Pillsb ury · an nounced. The painting 1!. a full length oil port rai t of a Spanish court figure. It measures 78 by 44 inches and t('rnat1onal Airport a n d charged with possession of cocaine and hashish oil. He ha!. remained free on $2,500 ball. Wilson was star of NBC's "Flip Wilson Show" in the early 1970s . was painted around 1632. _ "This is one of Velazquez' grea tes·t paintings in America and. among those. µo!.sibly his fines t full- ll'ngth, .. Pillsbury jiaid'. The painting wAs acquired from lhe private collection of the I ate Georges Wlldenstein, "'ho dbtained the work in Europe in the 1950s The price was not disclosed. Slight _chance of rain •' t.IM. OWmitM !OWi U ... 6l COHl•I ._.,___ -Yell~.,_ -In -40s moun-UIM. 1 •• ~ Coastal LIOlll -vMI-wlnclS lllraugll tonlQl\1 exceci1 -st '° MIA"-"t I to 12 '"oil cturlne Ille .,.._ - IOUI wind QlllSb U to JO IUlots -II· bl• 111 vlcl11Uy of ,.,_"'-"•· Wenerly ~Is 1 to J i..t. Pet'lly Temperatures cloudy wlUI • -1--• ""°"Oh lolllohl. V .S. summary ...... y ·~ AmorlllO Anclloraoe ....... 11 .. At!Mt1 AtlMtc cty .. '""'°"' a1rm1......., Northerly winds swept coo l e l1n1el"Cll '"""'" across Ille Gr••I f'leiM ., •9o111 Wedn•~Y. wtllle lle••Y rotn lllt .....,, IOml •r-Of Ille G<NI l.allet Md .,_ ..... Ill• Hortll1111 ...... 1.nc1• CHI ........ -•Iller Md -'IY c......., slllft. TemperetYAS In H.etoslle -CNrtstflWV wutern K•Mff ... ,. 111 tlw Ml, ~ wlllle re..tl1191 In IN «>s lllt tM ~ nortllern flt.ins end up 10 tllrw ~ chos Of rot11 f .. I In -eroo.s If ._ == Grut Lllln.. New Engl-• ....._ .. _ ... r o Ool-l't "fl" 111 lh• 40s °"" 50s. 111 ,,. South,,.... Oeflwr 111111 were ,...,. 90 11ong Ille G..it =-='"" CoH t. Soulll Florldl> e•perleflcecl ._ 0..lllttl 1 dlra""-s -• ,_ "-" i.lt Ill El P--.111ern T~s. F•lr WNttllr <.,... F1lr- ered mosl of 1,. w.at. •ac:9Pt llDr • Hortfwd ,_ th.....,.morma -Ille dlttort .... .,.. Southwest °"" In •Mt~me Soutlllrn :::::"'" C1lllor11l1. on Todey -rs ...i 1 ,_ ~ l~lls dlrstorm..,....• eQl«19d to 19f'•ed JOCklll"11o .crou Ille Otllo Volley end 1"9 Greet ~-~lty LlkH Into -Envtancl. Mor• wl• ~ ly SUllered lflundltnt"""I -· IW• Uttte = dieted ocross Ille Sovt"-st, wlttl Loul lllo 1 .. n11y tlll• Kroll Ille Soutll, lM ~~I.I Plolns, Md ow Wltlt C.1t. Ml 1 TemptHIW"• ~y r1ft9M Ml:"" MlllM from .0 In llllerN t'-wt F•tla, MIM., ~ w St p to" In P.im Scorlnos. Catlf. ,..:Vui. California Sovtllem c.llfom141 will lie !Mftly c lou4y "'""'811 k ld9y ,,_,,..,. Wit!\ 20 perunt ~ Of .,.._, w 9lwl>- dersiw-s. 0.C19•1ftt cleudt- Frld•Y---.. Or •nee County 1119'11 wlll lie 111 1'ls lod•Y •nd Frldey. ~ S1to65. V•lley lllQfls Wiii lie 11 to IS. l-. SlloM. Mo.,111elnt wlll h••• •••I to northeast winds 20 to JO mtlll dK,_ 1119 lonl9"1. HIGM .. to 7S. I.-. 46 to ,., Horlllerft dltMrt llllfta 74 te 14. L-1 SS to 66. Seut"'"' ~ '""'9 •tooS.LoMlft .... Horthent Md Otfth'91 CallfwNe wtll lie llH"'"""" l'ri.y o•• fw clOudy 11119111 -.tfl cenlr., IKtlML Hortlluty winds 111 Secra met1t• Valley..,_,,.. t ... y. Extended outlook COASTM..JlllOUtl'TAlll A••AI - l'otr..,. mlN. H'911 ~....,..Ill U.111 ___ , .......... land ¥alleys .... '" -"' - .... °"._ NewY«tt Nor10lk Ollle City OINfle o.. ...... Pfllt~ ,.._,. p~ ptfeM,Me PttlM,On lllettlf City 111- lllkllfMllll Saltl..etle s..ta. "Loull M P-T ...... StMeM9rte llATICNI HI LA SS n IS S6 u .., ... lS 15 4S 17 '° " .. . ........ . .. "' (!!!!) ., S6 ••.• ~ !: ~ ~~ -\h•••'' \•0•10"0'• Oulw4e4 " '4 ., n annm --· === S3 J7 7t u M 42 13 54 87 S3 ,. SI ,. 52 '1 M St'Olt•M r .. t•• We1hlnotn Wlcllll• " SJ Apple v111.., 87 u B1hrtll~d S6 .. Berllow '1 «I B .. umonl 'i M Bio e .. , 41 l.t Blythe 60 40 C1tellna 61 40 Culver City • 61 t"l"ono • 72 l.akt Ar-Id M S3 L1nc11..,. 1'1 '° LOllO hoc h •1 .&J Los A119111os '1 TJ Mary1Ylll• l'I 61 Monrovl• t3 .. Monl-llo 16 SS Ml Wll-. ., " ""'" .. 13 71 ......... ,, ~kh '' S3 01'9M1d SI S3 Ont er lo 86 4' Pelm Springs ., M PencHM u •7 Pe to Aoblos 75 SJ Rlver1IO. l'I 70 Red 81\ltt n Ml Red-City • 71 Reno " u Sacrem..,10 • n SlllllH M SI Sin 8ernarolno S6 3S Sin 01.., 11 .. Sin Fr•ncltc:o M O SlnJoae 70 32 S.1111 Ana 7' 4' Sl11te 8Mbtr• ~~s s.111• Monk• n If> Stooton '1 11 Te'-Valley • 11 Thermal 41 a T0<rellC• \ " '1 II " "' .. 71 90 u u • 7l ,. ., 70 13 16 11 • .. ., 74 ., 11 ti " .. 79 ., " " .. 10 17 a ., n 71 14 IS " 70 " f7 ., .. n • .. '1 Amtlerdem .. AlhellS &•nokOk Le Beirut 54 Betor.O. S9 &.rll11 M Bruue is SS B'Alru ._, Ci tro 70 Copen"-9tft u Oubltn 60 Fr•11ktvr1 50 G•n•v• "" Helaln-1 .. HonoKono M Jer\lwlem " Jo'bllro 60 Kiev SI Lim• "' Lisbon .. London 70 Madrid s• Manll• U Molltreal s• Moscow ., Hew Delhi sa Nlcotl• •2 Ports SI Alo . M Rome u Seo Peulo J2 SlftOepor• SI Sto<kllolm '4 Sydney 61 T•lpel 67 Tel AYlv "' i~:to ~ V•nc:o .. wr 41 Vl..,n• '° SI J2 .. ,, ACIQlllCO hr~ Blt'mllde llleoot• Curocao "'"'°" Gu..S.l•I•• PAN AM "' u ,. '° " n M .. S7 t 1 SS ff M " " 11 ., 75 7S '-' IS .. 75 " S2 ., " fl .. 102 70 70 '° u n ., .. n S1 " n "-•s .. a .. ,,. ., 47 .. 70 so • Jt • " ,. M ,,. so S7 .. S1 43 75 JI • 70 .. Sl 70 S1 " ,. S1 54 75 .. u 43 • ,,. Mt Le ., n • 11 11 70 1'0 G ., ,. SURf REPORT o .. 00t1- '° n a " '° n Su~ moo~ tides ' 19" .... J , I I .... Mm , J s s , ......... . .... Mu .,., • 1 , .. ' 2 w J , s 2 I - TOOAY t<lnt tow ''''°·'"·· '·' Ftnlllltfl 11:1ta.M, S.J SKMd low 6:11 "'"" .. , Sufi -•:• p.m., rt.. 6:47 a.II\, ,._... ... MMft Mb l :M p.m .• 11 .. t :M e.m. r--..,. .,.., ..... ......, , ........ ~ -We're Listening... · Whal do you like about the Daily Pilot? What don't you Jike? Call the number below and your messaie will be recorded, trmnscribed and delivered to Ute appropriate editor. The same 24 hour answering service may be.used to record let- ters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must Include their name and telephOne. numt>Cr for verification. No circulation calls, please. • Tell us what's on ybut' mind. 642·6086 . . Orange Coaet DAILY PfLOT/Thursday. October 1. 1981 s 43 /· Ed Wards call -def ended Chi~/ public def ender says contact with StfSpec t ethical Bf ?REDl!;llfCK SC..'HOEMEHL .... ....., .......... 'O~an1e Count y Pub llc Defender Ronald Butler aays bis office was ethical and followed the law when contacUng Thomas Francia Edwards following his arrest in Maryland in connection with the slaying of a Lake Elsinore girl shot at a Cleveland National Forest campground. Respondi n g t o criticism leveled by Sherill-Coroner Brad Gates, Butler cited a 1971 State Bar of California opinion holding that it is not improper for a public defender to make contact with a person accused of murder to d etermine If the person qualified for and desires services of a public defender. Buller said Deputy Public Defender Michael Giannini was doing just that when h e telephoned Maryland authorities Monday tn an attempt lo r~ach Edwards,, 37, a forme r Costa Mesa resident. Giannini said his first call to Edwards was made mol'e than six hOUJ'$ alter Edwards' arrest by Maryland authorities and two Orange County Sherlrf's Depart- ment investigators . That call was intercepted by one or the in- vestigator s who, Giannin i claimed, refused to tell Edwards about it. Giannini said he later called the jail facility where Edwards wu being held and l~ft a mess age for Edwards to call if .. he wanted to.· tjdward!4 called rJlbout. two h(>urs later. Gia!mini said, and asked for representa lion. Sheriff Cates clatmod In com- ment!! lo reporters Tuesd1ty thut the public defender's entry Into the case resulted in Edwards declining to give further state- ments to investigators and de- ciding to fight ext radition to California. Butler s aid disc u s sions betwee n Giannini and Edwards were protected by the attorne) client privilege and that he would not comment on them. "H Mr. Gates wants to speak on all these things and he's mude a number or erroneous statements to the pres!> -I'm not going lo respond." Butlt:'r s aid. Butler said he and his staff had no qualms about contacting Edwards bec·ause there was a "99.9 percent chance that he would be our client" based on f actors th~ would indit•ate Edwurcts._ could not afford a private attorney Those factors. Butler said. 1n eluded the fact Edward!> wa~ liv· ing out or his truck . had rccE.'nlly been divorced and had no stl·ady • job. Butler said Edwards is far more than just a possilJle su~ peel in the shooting death of \'a nessa lberri, 12, at the Blue Jay campground 20 m ile~ ea~t of San Juan Capistrano, becau~e of an arrest warrant iMBUed Sept. 22 by South Orange County Municipal Court Judge Blair Barnette ,. Gates. contacted followin& Butll•r's pres:. conference, said the public d e fend er 's office should not have becom e in- vo lved in the c ase prior to F.dwttrds' return to California. "Whal they've done 1s restrict \ • u~ from doing our JOb ," Gates bUld He dechn'-'<1 to revea_I how mut•h information invesl1gaton. ti;;d obtained from Edward pnor to Giannini's te'lephone calls. The s heriff said the infor· malion was given voluntarily by· Edwards after be ing advised 'M:veral times" of his rights, in· d uding the right lo have .an at· tome~ Gales also said hP d1dn 't put much ~lock in Uutler':,, use of a !.late bar opinion lll bac k up the cla im that contact with Edwards was appropriate Gait's pointed uul that such 0µ1nwns do nut have' the force of la'' Butler t·onceded al lhl· outset 11f tht• press conference that he ha~ received ~everal call s from pl'r ... on~ l'rillc·al of his office·.., act ions. "Onl• mdicatt·d lhal had I been an t.•lectl·d offi('1<.1l. there would ha' l' lx·en· an in-,tunt rt·l'all.· Butlt•r ~aid l 'nhkt> the· s heriff, 1Aoho 1-, t•lecled. th"· public de fendt•1 1s appo1ntC'd Pure wool vested suits. Strirc". rlai-d<., hcrringbnnec... ~olid~. lndud1· ... dt><ligm·r name .... Reg. 250.0p now 209.90. Our most famous brands suits. Re~. _l,..lS.00 --1 2 S.00 now 339.90. Pure wool sportcoats. RcK 1.\5 00 now 109. 90. Wool flannel slacks. Reg. -1-.~o-s-. .so now 39.90-46.90. Raincoats with l'ir out liner .... Reg. 105.00 now M.90. . Silverwoods t45 FASHION ISLAND, NEwPORT BEACH 844-2424 ,, \ • s Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Th\Jrtday, Octob•r 1, 1981 . ~filU~OO~l Econoinic outlook mm Analysts say evidence gr owing that things aren't so hot · W ASIUNGTON (AP> -The nattonal economy, stunash tbtou1h much of the year, ii un- llkely to show much Improve- m ent !n the next few months, ftfW 1ovemment. figures have ln· dicated. Commerce Dep~rtment of· flclala said Wednesday the Index of Leading ·Indicators, which is d estined to forecast future trends, dropped 0.5 percent in Aueust, the third decline In the past tour months.-· Using a t e rm that n ow dominates analysis inside and OPtside government. Commerce economist Theodore Torda said the new report signals ·'con- tinued sluggishness." A bit less formally, private economist Sandra Sha ber said the report provided "extra evide nce for the widespread 'View that things are not so bot.·· However. both continued to say that they expect no severe r ecession, Just more or the same at least through the end of the year. torda noted that the lo· divldual tax-rate cut takes effect tOday. And although individual tax reduct-ions may be small, .''some or that ls going fo be spent," he said. Consumers, who ha ve held up relatively strongly through the year, may well "continue to keep the economy treading water" rather than sinking, Torda said. . Ms. Shaber, who is a senior econo mi st f or Chase Econometrics in Bala Cynwyd, " Pa., said the tax cut won't put . Inmate's pregnant wife mum on status STARKE, Fla. (AP > Theodore Bundy's wife is preg- nant and she says "it's nobody's bus iness" how s he and the Death Row inmate managed it. Bundy, convicted of three kill· ings in Florida, has been at Florida State Prison s ince July 1979 except for a trial in Orlando last year. Prison officials say physical contact between in· mates and visitors is forbidden. Carole Bundy told a reporter for the Orlando Sentjnel Star that her child is due this fall. She li\LeS and works near the prison and sees Bundy frequent· ly in the prison 's "visiting pa rk," an area patroled by guards. · The Bundys were married in a bizarre courtroom episode on Feb. 9, 1980, when Bundy was being tried for murder in the s la y ing of a Lake Ci t y sc h oolgirl. Whe n h e wa s permitted to question his then- girlfriend, Carole Boone, Bundy asked her to marry him. She ac- cepted and Bundy said, "I do hereby marry you." Miss Boone had arranged for a notary public to be present in the courtroom, and officials later sa id the marriage was legal. It was the same day the jury recommended that he be execut- ed for his third murder in Florida . He had earlier been convicted and sentenced to death for the sor ority house slayings of two Florida State Univers ity students. • 'l It's a new direction ... a totally new approach to comfort. Gfovesoft, all-kidskin moccasins with a cushioned arch. Designed to take you places quickly, comfortably and fashionably. Bombay• Available in sizes 5 lo 11 In narrow and medium widths. #54 FASNOM ISUMD, HIWPOIT llACH 17141 '44-422J much new cash in the hands of American wage-earner s But s he said household income has been holding up prettr well anyway and s hould continue to do so, especially if inflation con- tinues at a relatively moderate pace. Making a positive or one of the economy's worst negatives, she also said interest-sensitive in· dustries such as housing have hit such a low point that "any further damage shouldn't hurt the overall econom y very much." Construction and sales of new h ouses have fallen to near· record lows this year , and in· dustry spokesmen expect little recovery until long-term interest rates decline from current rec- ord highs. The broades t meas ure 01 economic growth -tnflation· adjusted gross national product -declined at a .1.6 percent an- n u a 1 rate in the April-June quarte r And Com merce economists say the earliest in- dications are that it declined slightly again perhaps at a 0.5 percent rate in the quarter that ended Wednesday Top officials , such as Treasury Secretary Donald T. Regan . are no w c,ay1 n g economic growth may well re- main basically flat through the end or the year The leading indicator:,, index had fallen 1 7 percent 1n May and 0.8 pen•ent in Jum• before rising 0.4 percent in July July's gain had earlier been r e p orte d as a 0.1 p e rcent decline. and the new Augus t re- sult is also subject to later re- vision. .-T he bigges t. factors in the August drop were a 1.5 percent increase in the labor layoff rate and a 5.3 percent dfcline in in · n ation-adjusted new factory or· ders for consumer goods and materials, the report said . SOVIET ICBM LAUNCH SHOWN .\rt1~1 ·-. n·ndering depu:b what l aunching of a SO\ 1et SS-19 lClnI from Ru:-.-.ia to t<1rget:--1n tht· l"llltc.•d Statc.•s might look Ith :Phl' SS I ~ '" l'l!Uipped with multiple. i ndep endentl ~ . ~ . ,.,. ........... ta rgl'l able-re Pnl r y vehiclt'!. The rendering "iJ " rl'lea:-.c.d b~ l " S lkfen!'le Department. Thi· mi-;!'lill'" l'l'IJOl'll1<ll~ ha\ l' impro\·ed pa~·lo;.1d :.tt'l'lll'Llt'\ • Judge quits in fit over law ) ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. IAP> -A judge who res igned r ather tha n impose a state-mandated Jail sentence on a N<1vy veteran says the law reminds him of s tatute:-. enacted in Nazi Germany "It doesn't salve my conscience one bit that when I'm called before whoever my j udge is going to be after I'm dead and gone, my defense is going to be • 1 did it on someone else's orders ... District Judge Gi!ne Franchini s aid Wednesday "That de- fense went out with the post-World War II Nurem- berg Trials." Franchini is at odds with a New Mexico law mandating a jail term for defendants convicted of 'using a firearm in the commission of a crime. "There is a difference in degree as to this and what happened in Germany 45 years ago," said Franchihi. Fra nch1n1 . a 46-year-o ld gradu a te of Georgetown University Law School and a practic· ing attorney for 15 years before he became a Judge, said President Reagan's proposal for man- d<1tory prison terms for felonies committed with guns won't cun· the nation's crime probl~ms . On Monday, the day Franchini announced his resignation. Reagan was in New Orleans bo6sting that proposal before a group or police chiefs "It won't prevent or deter crime," Franchini said . "All the prison sentences and all the judges in the country have absolutely zero effect on the crime rate. ··we don't prevent anything. We impose punishment after the crime has been committed We are at the end of the line." TAX FRF;E ANNUAL INTEREST!* #27 MAIH snar . .-LH>MllA 121 Jt Jl2·H 71 .. .. Come and be enchanted with Huggins Amalfi Collection e;\~ Dress Sandal The shapely sling in a sleek sculptured style. I\..., Black or Navy Kid similar style in ... Ta.upe or Black Lizard ~ . ~ ~ 4M~ SHOES 99Fashion1918nd ... 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COMMeROAL CREDIT PLAN.INCORPORATED I ~-----------------~ ' A ........ 650 S l'n•.iwr<e St. !rlaM. 17141 n 4 6740 C.... • H1111thctAlot 8-11. lfi075 (',;tkttn Wet11 Sc. 112647.17141847 7771 M • S-. A .... 1224 t.I 17th Strt« 92701, l I . r Oranga Coast DAILY PILOT!Tlluraday, October 1, 1981 S ~5 ·A ~------------------------------~~------------------------~--~----------~----........ __ ..;,_ ____________________ __ -. ~illU~ Mileage sy~~m urged Man sues J city over 'sex bias' [ SANTA MONlCA (AP> -A ' 44-year·old man has filed a sex discrimination suit against the A cily because men are barred Crom a newly forQ>ed com· Solon says 1'f,an could encourage lawmakers to economize SACRAMENTO <AP> -Pay· Ing le1lslators mllea1e instead or livin1 them state·leased cars an 1uonne credit cards could encoura1e them to economize. a RepubUcan lawmaker says. ''It's ~mazing how economy- minded you ,become when you're ~ying the gas yourself." said insemblyman Robert Naylor, R·Menlo Park. who has been paid mileage as an experiment. He hasn't figured out exactly how his plan compares finan· clally with the normal system tor legislators to get around, but "from a personal standpoint it works very well." Most llf the 120 legislators get a state.leased car that is sup· posed to be used for legislaUve tipsiness. The state pays 90 per· cent or the car's lease cost. up to $265 a month, and 90 percent of the gasoline cost on a state credit card. A few lawmakers don't take state·leased cars. but use state pool cars when they need one. Naylor a year ago had a mea sur e that would have scrapped the car·and-credit· card system for one ln which legislators would use their own cars and be reimbursed for travel al 15 cents a mile'. The Assembly Rules Commit· tee rejected his measure, but gave him permission lo try it and report back on its success. He said he plana to make hls re· mission on the Status of Women. .n port In February, a year after he Besides fiJing the s uit , Howard 111J started. Goldberg said he bas filed an ap· .UI He said In a telephone In· plication for membership on the .m tervlew this week that when he com mission. >n bad a slale·leased car, he tended .. , a m a fir:m .believer in the 1b l<> have the state garage fill the Equal Rights Amendment. and car with gasoline at top prices, --'this action by the city jus t plays while he now will search for a along with the whole dlserimina· ·iil ··cut·rate, self.service station" lion thing," said Goldberg. "1'he }~ to fill up his 1979 Ford FairmQnt, ordinance lhat created the com· "I also think in terms of a car mission perpetuates the myths "1 on~wouJd order and drive. you that we're all raised on that iA would lend to go for ·a more some things are supposed to be :iq economical kind of car'' if re-done by men and other things ceiving only mileage. a re s upposed to be d one by »b "The system they have en-women " llO courages people to order less Feminist attorney Gloria All· J!j economical cars and use them red, who filed th e Supe rior sfJ less economically," he said. Court suit on behalf of-Goldberg, •111 He thin~s he's lost some added. "This ordinance sets a mon ey~ause of the low 15· dangerous precedent that could •9 ~elief organization sends food -to Poles cents ·a ·mile rate he's being be used against women in the t1J paid. T he r ate is t hat low future when they are told, in ef· because of a slate law limiting feet. ·Men know best. ... reimbursement to that rate for Under the ordinance pas:;ed ·l state employees who have ac· by the city council, the com· cest to a pool car. mission is to be comprised of · The Rules Committee put a nine members. all o f the m $3,000 cap on his reimbursement women. MONROVIA IA P ) -World Vision. one of the largest Chris· tian humanitarian agencies, tias joined a Swedish church in an emergency shipment of 25 tons of food to Poland. for the year and. he thinks he The suit seeks an injunction J' empty shelves in the markets , won 't get that much. A decla r ing the ordinance un· and the.people that are s uffering lawmaker getting the $265 "a constitutional. Ms Allred said. most are the children and the mont.h for a lease spends $3, 120 .. If the ordinance is held un· elderly." .. for the car alone in a year. constitutional. then it will be up •1' The Stockholm City Church of He also finds hi s experimental to the council to decide whether .. n "Where thousands of people lined up to buy food , there are now no lines because there is no food in the stores, .. Pat Chavez. director of World Vision 's office in Stockholm, said in a state· ment released here. Sweden has joined World Vision syst em mpre conve n ient to amend it or pas!. a new one." .d in sending $40,000 of wheat nour, personally when he's using the .... ,...,._ Ms. Allred said. .a butter , sugar. cornmeal and car for a variety of purposes, MEOFLY CHECK ENOS Qui:irantinl' Jn .. pe<·tor \\" .\ S<.1 n .. This has given me a certain ot h e r food s tuffs to local such as legislative, political and dtJ!l' of :\lt Sh<.1sl<.1 h;,1pµJI ,, roll~ ;rn·a.' ..i -.1 >P .... 1gn al ml'dfl~ insight into what 1t feels like to 11 1 churches in Poland. personaJ. With a state car, he ehl'ckpomt nt.'ar Salinas With the 1981 IH1n·L'~l of nwdfh be discriminated against," said !'i The last shipment in t he proj· said, he might not bring it to hos t crop~ almu~t fl\l'I'. offit·i.il..., -..;11CI thl· ...,pn·•HI 111 lhl· 11) Goldberg, a marketing consul· ·~I eel, which began in early Sep· Sac rame nto if so me of his ...,l'('t will ht• hallt•d at lt·.1-.t ll'lllJJOl"tnl.\ Lant who previously taught math bl .. Rationing has been imposed, but how can you ration what is not there?" Ms. Chavez said. "There are rows and rows of tern ber. will take place next week's events were political and at two New York high schools lq week . But W o r Id Vi s 1 on he was being conscientious. With that were all·girl institutions m spokesman J im Jewell said. his sytem, he just keeps track or Jack Anderson rev"eals in the Da1·1y P1·1a1"" whc•n he joined the Starr and "We are committed to ongoinJ the mileage that's business· · changed to co-ed whale he was •ol shlpmentslo P~and." rclaUd.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~there di Shores Interiors aesldetlll•I • Commerdal ~ 2650 Avon St . ..._ Newport Beach -r 642·Z25S ---· Truckload Plant Sale Huntington Center " daily thru Sat. 15 varieties direct- fro m-grower. large 6" $2. 88 IRONSIDE SECURITY SIRVICES ,.._. 8-12 A.M. 631-0679 STOP BURG&;ARS! INSTALL 8URGlAR AtMM tsas.00 Complete • 3 openings protected • Central monitor • Audible horn • Panic button •Complete installation • Additional sensors S65 Pay No Income Tax . 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(AP> - Prtmlllve tools dlseovered near honts of a mammoth ln a Ntvada desert may mean man roamed the northern New Wor&d 20,000 years ago -thousands of years earlier than traditionally t)('lieved, archaeologists aay. "The potential ls there to push uack th~ date for man's entry "t)nlo the New World by 9,000 years," said arc:haeologlst Bllly Clewlow, who led the exP.edition ll\is s ummer. "You have to realize th.is is preliminary. but we're qwle excited about it." Enthusiasm or the scientists who made the find in the Black Rock Desert was tempered With a note of caution because of ea rlie r controversy over apparent discoveries or early man. Clewlow said tests run on a tooth from the 15 ·foot-high American mammoth found in the desolate northwest Nevada real® lndlcate it'• about 30,000 yeara\>ld. • He said two crude atone tooll, of the tne used by early span to scrape hides, 'were found with the mammoth bones. Two doaen other artifacts were '*'nd scattered around the site. 'I< "We're dolng more teats on some otfier skeletal parta and on some veeetable matter, and if this date bolds up, there should be no question a bout lt, · · Clewlow said. Clewlow said tbe orthodox v~w ls tbat "man didn't make bis appearance In the New World until about 11,500 years ago." Don T uohy, c urator of anthropology at the Nevada State Mu se um , which co-sponsored the dig, said there ~ave been problems In the past with determlnin( the age of Before you buy any make of car, call me. I'll save you time & money. Benef 11 from my buyiflg clout. I pur-office. iow overhead. llo salesmen. chase cars in contract lots of 1 to no commissions. Get i--ices from us, 100 for corporate fleets We can ob-any make of~. Tlltn a>mt>~e. flJ tarn substantial savings for quali-yourself. (And tell your frie~ I 1ed individuals. We do the price Call. 9 to 5. Robt Hixson Equipment shopping & hagghng Ours is a oosy Co. ask for Virginia. 714 64S-41Dl. 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S699 6~ ~, •• ".'~~ . .. ..... s 9 9 9 teeth u¥i bones becawae "some of them tend to date older than they really are." · H o wever , Tuohy said C lewlow's find ca n be crosa·checked for verlflcatlon. " Clewlow ls a priv a t e consultant and head of Ancient Enterprises Inc ., ln Santa Monica. A former chief archaeologist for the Nevada State Museum be is viewed as a n e xp ert on Nevada ardtaedlogy. Besides the early date -at a time when the greatt Ice Aae WIS ending ...... the find also jndlcates what Clewlow describes as "the f irs t positive a ssociation between man and mammoth west of the Rockies." 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' H• ,, lnd rTH\~ ~ Jl lNI< m '.\\ I \ 11 I<°' s17c19 ""' •"•''"'' tn \ nN. k tr.j il(l\~I( LADJr ..._~ m c 1 .. 1" s15<>9-17 ,.,, , • '"'" 1"'tnC'f'lt of L ,1 ... v ~11 """' "llJr-. ii 11' lllilh•'I~ 8RITTA'NlR ~-, r-= l l ,~ I I _,.., .... ---~--~--·-···'""·~··-· ..... .__...~-................... ~ .... -~.~,~-......... 1!!!!111 ... !!!ICIO~ .. • • Orange Coast DAILY ~ILOT /Thureday, October 1. 1981 -..- Drug found to lessen heayt ~ttack damage HOSTON I AP 1 Researchers trn'.. found lhal a clot·dlsaolvln1 mt.•11tcuw protects people from the d.1ma.:t· thut usually follows heart at· lul·ki., und S<iY th~ discovery could profoundly chnnge the way doctors trt•ut \'1t•llms of Amerlca's leadlnt kalh•r 'I thank at has great promise," Dr. J ohn to: Markis said of the treat· 111t•11t ·1 ('Ontinue to be reinforced by "h,1l \H' ve seen." M ark1:0. Hid the approach, which is bl•i n g :-.tud1ed at several medical cen· ters t:ould have as dramatic an ef· frrt on lhl· treatment or heart disease :1, tht· dl•velopmenl of coronary hvp.t~s surger y more than a decade a10. ) With lbe tftfrapy, doctora are able to dissolve 61ood clots th.at block cor- on ary arteries and starve heart mus- cle durillg heart attacks. Wheo bl is nowins again, the heart mus e functions normally without app n~ serious damage. Heart attacks are the nado s tlad· ing cause bf death. The mencan Heart Association esU ates that they kill 641,000 Americans a year. The latest study, conducted at Beth Is rael Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, was published in today's New England Journal of Medicine. / . Jth., treatm e nl. called 1n rocoronury thrombolysis, was first u11~d in ·West Germany three years ugo. OOCtors insert a catheter lube into the victim's leg, thread it throu~h an artery to the heart and then release s trepokinase. a medicine long used to dissolve clots . In the Bos t on study, do('tors performed the procedure on rune pa- tients within an average or three hours after their heart attaaks. The blocked arteries of all nine opened within 20 minutes . Then the doctors gave the patients a radioactive mat e rial called thalltum·201 This s ubs tance is ahsorl>OO by living hearl muscle but not by tissue that has died. The result.s showed that heart-tis· sue· that had be-0n blocked by the clots was working normally ln seven or the nrne patients Without the tr"<rtment, their heart tissue would hav.e-been in danger or dying because of lack of blood. I n their report , the doctors said the treatment "represents an ex c il1ng new approach to tb.e treatment . of a cute myocardial infarction" <heart attack ). Their study is the first to show that heart tl ~!'>ue s urvives after this treatment. I ..--~~~~~~~~~~~- Groupe yes <inti-porno • . ca1ripaign I Y\;C'UOll RG , Va c .\I'• Moral Majority will 111ounl an anli- po11t11).!I .1phv campaign 111 '' ,, •• ,, u~ing legal, 1•1 c11n111111· ;.ind political Jll'l ":-.llll' instead or.a p111 11anH·al ;ipproach, a s pokl.'~man for the group .. \' I he hard stat1sllcs 'lt•1\.\ that where these lllt ... llH'SSl'S (that s ell po11111gr..1phy 1 are al 111\1 c'CI tu proliferate. the t.1' ha-.1· is eroded . the 1· 1 1 n11· rat(' rncrea ~es .rnd s t riclly from an 1·1 onom11· and aesthetic ' '"'' p11111t we think it 's 111 thl· hC'st interest of 11111•s to t•ltminate these l-.111d s ol l'stablishments, .. • ;11cl t 'al Thomas. vice pc ""'«ill·nt for com 11111nll«1t1ons for Moral \1 ,11onl~ :\lor.11 :\1aJorily will pt l':-.s fo r prose('utions undt-r l'XISting local an 11 p11rnogruphy laws . '' h1l0h Thoma~ said are 11 11 1 h l' 1 n g e n f o r c e d "111oslh due to ch1cken- lw.1rtt'.d law e nforce- 111 ,. n I o f f 1 c e r s a n d 111<1 gt· ... l he org;,n1zation also '' 1J I •·m·mir;.igc members ;1 11 d ' 11 p po r l e r s t o llo\ l'ntl grocery. ('Onve- n11•11 1 t' .ind bookstores ,1·ll1ng puhl1cat1ons 11 l'<•ti-.tdl'rs pornographic 111 11hSt'l'lll' AP s tory on banzai race erred I OS ANGELES <API .\ Sept to Associated l'r1 ..... s story in the Daily 1'1lot about "b;mzai rac- 111 i.: · on C'a lifprnia h•~~h" •1.v-. misrepresent I'd tht• circums tances 11111IL·r \\h1ch it was at lwrc·d and contained :-t·\·1•ral inaccurately at 1r1hu t Ptl quotation s \ I 11 • 'o nu• passages \\1 t c· h."ed . without 1·1 • cl11 o n a Januar) ..11 t tdl· an New West 01..1gaz 111e. The story gave the er rnnl'ous impression that an \ P n •porter had been 1n a rar hurtling along a (';il1forn1a highway at :!Oil m ph l'hl' run described and 1h" quote .... from drivers \\ c•rc• Pl<'Ce d together 11·0111 ..... , t•ral interviews .11111 11'11111 the magazine .11111·!1 and did not oc- ' 111 .1:--rl1•.,n1 b<.·d du ring on" run 111 :1 d c11ttc>n , some q11e1lat ions attributed to C.ilif•1rn1a ll ighway I '.1 t 1 11 I S ~I L a n ce ~.I ll'kson were obtained nut from him but from 11th1•r-.. in the patrol. The cfth<·r quotations from Fr ll"k-.on came fom the '\1•\\ Wl'-.t article. l'ht• ,\ P became aware of t ht• discrepancies ,1ft<'f inquiries by the Lo!-. Angl'lcs Times ffi=Tittie WINE SALE CASH & CARRY ONLY. SAVE 30% AND MOREi ST ARTS OCT. 1st. CRlAR HOURS 9-9 t -~·bd· 10.11·11 -· .. NoBa · Or Sav· s dLoan " -Pay You . ore! e -Saver -Maximum tax savings. Highest possible interest on this form of iuvestment. And a Personal Banker™ to help you make the most of both. 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Or that it's possible tn transfer savings from certain other Wells Fargo certifica tes to the Ta.x·Saver with 110 penalty ? Important decisions should be inform ed decisions. And thats where Wells Fargo offers extra help. l . A Personal Banker to see to your personal interest. Your nen.rest Wells Fargo Bank has a financial pro· fcssional who can help you answer these questions personally. A Wells Fargo Personal Banker. who can help you with a "Tax·Saver Benefit Analysis" that shows you whi ch fom1 or combination of savings best suits your individual financial situation. If you elect lo invest in a Tax -Saver Certificate. your Personal Banker can even arrange to take care of all the details of the transfer for you. And of course. continue to keep you infom1cd about thi.,gs like interest rates and" maturity dates. We'll Reward you for saving taxes. What'~ more, at Wells Fargo your Personal Banker can help fit you out with the impressive array of services known as the Golden Reward.CV Keep a minimum $2.000 balance in a Wells Fargo Tax-Saver Certificate. and you can get valuable banking services, including interest on the fund s you use for checking, with no ::,erv ice charges or fee. Substantial interest on your savings; maximum tax benefit; the safety and convenience of a major bank; and the financial know -how of a Persona] Banker; plus lhe mo!:>t comprehensive service package of its kind: the Gold en Reward. Onl y une outfi t delivers it all. The people at your nearest Wells Fargo Hank will be glad to tell you all about it. "', .. ,, ... •' Wells Fargo Bank l 1.-h"titl 'l1(Jt11.ft•w..., u-.11111 .. urY..4.tnlldl •n":.fec-\t ~•Alty·''"' 1r,r1rttw1;1 111..,, ••U•!l!l•I~" .I lld 11 II ~-,1~ WTfhtJr.iw,Ji ~ °''"' o..i TO HEAD INS '.'lorman Braman. 4H. of Mittmi. has been nominated b\' Pre"ll d ent R('·agan to bl•come head of Im m1grut1on \.Ind :.:atur;.1li1.at1on St·t' in· .J 1. s Or11nge Cout DAii..'( PILOT(Thurtday. October 1. 1981 Newport faces new expansion dilemma With tempers still warm over the Newport Center expansion project, a nother development plan has come before the Newport Beach City Council. This plan likewise promises to be controversial. It calls for construction or 288 condpminiums and more than 700 ,000 square feet of industrial and office uses on a 75-acre parcel of land in West Newport. The plan was filed by Beeco Ltd .. which owns some 500 acres on the west side of the city. Most or the land ls dotted with oil wells and is expected to remain un- developed until the late 1990s. Specifically. the area pro- posed for development is inland of Pacific Coast Highway and just west of Newport Crest, a condominium community. The acreage backs up against Costa Mesa. A group of West Newport residents. calling themselves the West Newport Legislative Al· liance, say they're concerned that .the project will bring too much traffic to Pacific Coast Highway. The group is asking that the developer not be allowed to build more than 100,000 square feet of industrial racilities and no office buildings. Further, they .say they favor only light density for con· struction of homes. Hancock Banning, president of Beeco. contends that much of the 75 acres is unsuitable for homes and that's why he wants to build offices and indus trial facilities. Council members. who opened public hearings on the proposal this week, say it will likely lake at least two more hearings before they are ready to vote. Although both sides up to n ow hav e remained polite. there's little doubt that this de· velopment will produce a few fireworks before all is settled For starters the city needs to focus on the concerns of the resi- d e nts about traffic in West Newport, and the develaper must s how that his project will not worsen conditions there. Athletes need study Huntington Beach Union High School District officials have decided that if students want to participate in after· school activities such as sports. marching band or pep squad, they must-maintain a minimum academic average. At present , the dis trict doesn't have an academic re- quirement. School officials are studying what level should be de- manded of extra -curricular participants. • The main thrust of the con- cept apparently is aimed at stu- dent athletes. The other after- school activities covered in the proposal were added at a recent school board meeting almost as an afterthought. It's a good and timely idea for school officials to demand academic accountability from student athletes and others. Lately, it &eems that some athletic programs in. the district may be ove r .s had owi n g classroom education. .._ This has become a concern because of controversies sparked by students who transfer to di f- f erent schools to play sports. Although the district doesn 't have an academic requirement the CIF does require high school athletes to at le~t be passing four classes But this isn't very stringent when it ·s realized that the state rule allows players with four .. D .. g rades to play sports. rt seems the CI F require- ment isn't enough A district should be able to educate its students weU enough to pass courses with an average '"C" grade. If a student falls below a .. C .. level. he s hould spend his time after school doing homework. rather than playing sports or cheering on the team. Police guidelines wise Under new guidelines adopt· ed recently by Laguna Beach police for handling public in- e briat~s. persons arrested on charges of drunkenness in the city may be headed for a hospital bed rather than a jail cell. The new plan provides that people round injured at the time Qf their arrest on alcohol-related charges would automatically be transported to ~~th Coast Medical Center in S6ubp Laguna. And in som e cases. those not injured would be ref erred to the 26-bed alcohol care ui;tit at the hospital. The new rules follow the death of Robert Gary Wardman, a 35-year-old Laguna Beach spa salesman. two months ago while he was being held at the city Jail on a charge of public drunkenness. An autopsy s howed that Wardman died from a severe • s kull fracture. an injury. that was not detected by paramedics dur· ing an examination of the un- conscious nian outside a city bar. where he was found by Police ly- ing on the sidewalk. Wardman was taken to police headquarters and placed in a cell to sleep it off. However. 9•,2 hours later he died of his injury while being rus hed to South Coast Medical Center. Police oHicials say the new rules on how officers should han· die inebriates were under dis- cussion before Wardman's death. The new guidelines appear to be a s incere attempt on the part of the police departmeht to prevent a similar incident in the future. Police departments in other a rea cities would do well to follow Laguna's lead and r~­ examine their policies regarding the treatment of inebriates while being held in police custody. Opinions upressed In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit- ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 15'!0, Costa Mesa, CA 92626-05'!0. Phone (714) 642-'321. " L.M •. Boyd I Line of succession Q. Law prohibits all those ln1fne of presidential succession from being together at one time. So which of President Ronald Reagan's cabinet. was refused •dmlttance when the President gave bis first address to Congress? A. Secretary of EducaUon T.H. Bell wasn't refused •dmittance, ex· actly. At the end of the cabinet. suc- cession line, he •lfeed to slay away, that's all. Couple ol eye doctora In reHarch fastened stripe of filter paper to the lower eyelids of m coUe1e ICUdeota. Eacb w11 checked dter five mlnutes. The len,U. ol the damPMQ ORANGE COAST llllJ ,......"""·'"\II: .. .,. __ .... ............. _J II i9; ._c..11-.u ., ' on the wick paper showed each sub- ject 's volume of te•rs. Let your old suspicions be confirmed. The young women wept almost twice u much as the young men. I' Was George Gobel ·who desc?bed Inflation as a time when you h~e to work like a dog to Uve like one. Q. Do Insects close their eyes when they sleep? A. Insects never close their eyes. There will be 53 Thursdays In Ulla year. It began on a Thursday. And every year bas $3 of the days it beginaon. • • No place for ex-presidents LONOON -When American fighters shot down two Libyan jets over the Mediterranean last monlh . an American living here said :"''l d(>n't get • it. Reagan wants to put neutron weapons in Europe, but he knows Euro- peans are nervous that he'd use them for no reason -that he's trigger happy. So we go ahead and start shooting dowo planes for the hell of it. It makes you wonder where Nixon is when we need him." Richard Nixon, in fact, is in a hard·to· find government issue office in lower Manhattan. In a long conversation we had there recently. I learned that the former president does indeed have strong and intelligent views about such things as the defense of Western Europe. But he doesn't want to make any of them public right now for fear of being accused of undermining Reagan, and not many people seem to ask him privately -certainly. I got the distinct impression, not many people from the White House. T HAT'S A SHAME, Henry Fairlie said the other day in The Times of Lon· don. "They lead rather purposeless and even pathetic lives," Fairlie wrote of Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, our trio of living ex-presidents. "No one really has any use for them." Noting that Nixon is involved In a dis- pule over whether his papers will be plared in a library at Duke University, Fairlie critadzed the self-righteous ac· lions of anti Nixon professors for "what begins to seem hke persecution." The British columnist offered the opinion ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~'-" ~ ·•i . RICHARD RIEVIS that the former president's ignored counsel would be obviously valuable "to the necessary <'ontanuity of ,foreign policy ... BUT AMERICANS, he continued. liked to begin lh1ngs "by wiping the whole slate clean " Even if there is something worth knowing on the slate. So. Nixon and Carter are both left alone writing books to explain the many mis- takes each made -sometimes because they ignored the s late or history or never talked with anyone who made som e of that history. Jerry Fqrd, who never could stand being alone. is enter- taining trade groups and Chambers of Commert'e with $15,000 and $20,000 lee· lures. Carter did, however. get his name in the papers recently by going to China --and climbing the Great Wall. "There is something at fault with the system," Fairlie said, "in which ex-presidents have to go to China to communicate with their own countrymen." There is indeed. We sometimes forget we are all on the same side. It's amaz- ing that presidents and ex-presidents don't even seem to share their "book" -in the sense that baseball pitchers have a book on the strengths and weak· nesses of opposing hitters -with each other on the personalities and predic- t a bi Ii ties of other world leaders. Meanwhile. Menachem Begin or Leonid Brezhnev continue to get away with try- ing some of the same old tricks on each new American leader THERE IS A reason for all this. Each new president wants to s tay away from his predecessors because he doesn't want to be contaminated by their political unpopularity. Inevitable un- popularity, it seems. We are destroying our presidents -Dwight Eisenhower was the last one to complete two terms in office. One or the reasons each new one may be doing so badly is that reluc- tance to talk to any old one. If that keeps up, Fairlie pointed out, ·"there could someday be a small regi- ment of ex-presidents alive at the same time." None of them talking to each other. of course. Wilderness a gift to next generation To The Editor: Some or my happiest childhood memories are of going to a Wilderness Girl Scout Camp in the mountains of Pennsylvania. The beauty, quiet and joy or being in the mountains is sWI with me. For this reason, I am concerned about two bills currently being considered in MAILBOX the U.S. Senate. These bills are radical· ly different and concern the future management of national forest and na - tional park roadless land. ON ONE HAND, Sen. S.I. Hayakawa is pushing a bill S. 84.2 which designates NO wilderness and would set short deadlines for congressional action,· after which even areas already recom· mended as wilderness would be opened to logging and other development. On the other hand, Sen. Alan Cranston introduced the Cranston-Burton Wilder· ness bill S 1584 which designates certain magnificent lands as wilderness and permits development of other lands. In these days of stress management classes, noise and air pollution in our urba.n areas, and just the dally pace of life, one of the greatest places for re· newal and reassessment of what's im· portant is being able to get away to a wilderness area . It will be a priceless gift to our children 8lld grandchildren and it's free! the right of any citizen to own and de- velop property but in fact it requires the resources of an Irvine Company in term s of funds to provide the technological defense of their right to do so. and the individual would be at a loss to c<>pe with the unreasonable demands. The plan as ltJ>proved a llocates 60 per- cent or that land to •·open space" and 27 percent is an outright "'dedication" I confis<'ation ) for a park. It is this kind or acti v1ty that converts \ postage stamp lots to acreage by in· hibiting surrounding development. enriching the owner of that property at the expense of all others. The environ· mental "ze.I .. is not matched by fund,. to compensate property owners for the cost of the property. maintenance. and taxes. and property affected is not only vacant lan~ut existing structures that require pellft'its for renovat-ion or re· modeling, or even replacement after disaster. If readers feel the same concern I do please write Sen. Cranston and Sen. _ Hayakawa and express your viewpoint. THE SUIT filed .. on our behalf?" simult~eously imposes additional staff and legal expenses for both of the gov· ernment bodies to be passed on to the generaJ public as well as those of the Irvine Company that will have no choice but to pass their costs on to the general public. The "friends" want to dictate further the use of only 40 per· cent of privately owned property. and detail the kinds of facilities to be availa· ble to us. and anyone can see the costs that will be added to any housing con- structed and the consequential elimina· tion of most of the general public from home ownership. A few privileged resi- dents will be able to enjoy the Irvine Coast. The environmental movement is well funded and well organized and this is just one example of their impact on the rest of us MITZI CURRIE Lawsuit costly To the Editor: The environmentalists are at It again, this tift)e calling themselves "Friends of the Irvine Coast." and would have everyone believe lt is under attack. Thus, their suit for an injunction lo in· hibit implemt!ntation of the develop- ment plan ol the Irvine Company ap- proved by both the Orange County Board of Supervisors and the coastal Commlaaloo. Both of these bodies hne staffs but the former la elected and the later appolnt.ed, seemingly responsible unto themselves and notoriously of the '•en vironmentallat'' stop 1rowth persuulon. It a~peara the "Friends" are "inctnled" that the Co taJ Com· miasloa rejected the r endation of tbeir own staff and pproved the plan, but thll writer 1u1 all tbat com- m i,alon 11 well awar of Increasing puf>lic awareness and oncem for ill abu.H ol power and diar ard of proper- ty ril}ltl. THE PIAN WAS not approved on a wblm,:but after acruUny ol yearsl Our basic American precepts would i.ndlcate TEDDI ALVES Art needs support To the Editor: ln your Sept. 17 issu~ you reported that tbe Los Angeles City Council has enacted a zoning modification to a llow artists to live and work in buildiniS located in commercial and manufactur- ing zones. You stated that, ''the council unan· I mous ly passed the m easure that council president Joe Wachs said would help the dty become an international center for the arts." · What a refreshing and intelligent ac- tion! Artists tend to starve a lot until - • l.rt1t'r11 from reodl!r& orl' ait'lcome Th# right lo rondmst lcttl'rl to /II tpOCt <11' rltmin<ilt-litx-1 1s rrsrrocd. LeltE'rl of JOO word& or lt>.u Will ~ gmen preftrmu. All trtttr& mu.ti 1ncludt 11gnoturl! and moilmg ttdd•tU but Mnu'I moy bt> witt&Mld "" rt• qurst 1( 1uf/1c1t"t rtOJon IS opporf19f. Po,.lfJI will not tJc pubh•h~d. Ltttn• "9QW bt lelephontd to 642-6086 Natnf aJtd plaaM number of th# contribillor nvm ~~on /Of .venf icotioll purpo&l!a. if ever -they achieve success. <Vin- cent Van Gogh never sold a painting!) and recognizing the importance of art's contribution to a community's cultural and l{ltellectual growth the Los Angeles cou n~I moved, wisely, to make the cr eation of art easier for the artist with a simple zoning change. CO MPARE THAT enlightened response to the know-nothingism that motivates Costa Mesa's City Council lo not only not try to help artists in this town. but to actively and vigorously try to destroy the completed accomplish- ments of Goat Hill's premier artist. Ali Roushan! At a time when the National Endow- ment for the Arts is trying to "save and preserve arts and cultural environ- ments" by launchinJ a nationwide sur- vey of folk -art structures -"hand built, large-scale and often bizarre monu- ments and environments, such as Simon Rodda 's Watts Towers, .. the petty bureaucrats at 77 Fair Drive are trying, contrariwi se, lo destroy Costa Mesa's only qualifying pieces; and trying to jail the ·man who against all odds and despite the city's worst efforts has persevered to achieve their completion. I watch, embarrassed and helpless while our cultural commissars try to destroy what the enlightened L.A. City Council and the National Endowment for the Arts are trying to save. Whal blind fooli shness their arrogance of of- fice has led them into. What a shame. J .P. PALMER Article of/ ends To the Editor: As a Jamaican residing in Irvine and a regular reader of the Pilot, I feel it necessary to comment with disguat on your article -Jamaica's "Where rum comes from" by Stan Delaplane, Sun- day. Sept. 20. Not only was the article p00rly writ- ten and lacking in relevance, but com· lng from a newspaper columnist, ter- ribly juvenile and void of substance. He remarked on two occasions that "the people are black" what did this naive reporter expect them to be -green? Y.A. FISHER lllllYHI lt'1 P«fecitly pouible ror a child to ban a hip J.Q. and 1ti11 not rulll8 UM tne value ol a pa .ad a ma. r.1t • -.- • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thureday. Ootober 1, 1981 . Pirates prey on helpless Vietnam ~oat people ... WASJllNG'r<>N Th~t t' was u time. early ln th1i. n.1tiun '., h111wry, wht•n tht.• Rarbery piruA., • ., lerrori1t•d h1•lpll'~' nu~n·hant shjp., ln ttll' M l'<IJlt•rrunt>an oncJ ht.•ld lht• t•n•w., fw r .msom Ttw \.Jntll'd St;tlt•., ,,•nt St1•11lwn lkt•;ttur. Q -JA-CK-AN-D-IR-SO-N -_ -id with a detachment of t S Marint::;, t1· put a slop to lhl' p1ralt'' dt•predataons l'l'CilSeli orr Libya should have no qualms ubout taking on the Inhuman scum who art• lerrorizin.s Innocent reru1ees In the c:111r or Thnlhlnd. ND THERE Is no doubt of the need lor a c1tmpai&n against the Southeast Asian pirates. About 3,000 Vietnamese a month make it to refuaee campa in southern Thailand. Few, lt any, women rt•ach Thailand who have not been ra ped by at least one gang of pirates. The small boats are at sea for days, and som e are attacked as many as a dozen times \, . \ n Englis h-speaking t_ietnamese iuurnallst who was on one of the boats described tfle ordeal to m y associate Donald Goldberg: "THE SEA PIRATES a ttacked ua like beasts of prey devouring l~mbs. They took everytbing. They used a palr o ( scissors to take out the golden teeth. Blood fllJed the mouth and spilled down the victim's shirt. They raped, before m y eyes, the girls they selectedc mostly 14-and IS-year-olds. One 14-year-old 1lrl was raped successively by one pirate after another ." Some or the young girls are taken away by the pirates. ne ver to be heard from again. Many 'used to be taken to Ko-Kra, known as "rape island," where I pirate crews •topped to abuse the re· fugees at their leisure. The Thal navy finally stationed a patrol there. Reports are heard dally in the refugee camps of women and elrls who were raped liter ally dozen!! of times; of pirate crews promising to return with help, only to come back with more pirates instead, and of r"fugee boats be· Ing pillaged and then sunk with the wretched witnesses aboard. DESPITE THE unarguable extent and bestiality of the etrocities. Interna- tional efforts lo protect the boat people have been minimal. Thailand, with 10,000 fi shing boats and 1,100 miles of coastllne to took after. doesn 't have the naval strength to do u proper job. Many or the p ir a tes are fis her· 'man who havl' turned to brigandage as an escape from hard times, and the 1 Thai ~overnmcnt is not enthusiastic about prosel'utang it s own people - especially when the victims are Viet- namese, whose presence has been a burden lo :rtia1land The situation shows no sign of im- proving anytime soon. Talks scheduled d among Thailand , Malaysia and q Singapore on th(• pire1cy problem have , 1 been pos tponl'd indefinitely. Other coun- , tries have not taken any initiative 1 t 's lime the lJ1Htcd Sl.1\t''-> found another Dccat~ir lo i.w,•t·p lh1· Gull of 'fhailand clean or the p11 ult•-< who Jlrl'Y on helpless Vaelnum,Hw bo1H people fleeing their troubled hom eland It 11> a I ucky refugee boat that makt>b 1t to Thailand without bl'1ng attack<'d. 1ls pathetic passen~l'r1> bUhlt'l'lt'd LC• ra1H.'. robbery a nd niurdt'I II\ thl' '1111n1., crews of the t·arrwn p11 .all' -;hip., ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------..... -------------------------------------------------·· . . Brown's inflllence on st·ate courts will relnain " i With only 15 months left until his term t•nds. many are beginning lo count the d.iys until Jerry Brown is replaced as i.:nve rn or . Many hope for new l~adershlp to rescue the s tate from the disasters brought about by Brown's ad· ministration. But his actions will in· fluence the course of events for many "ears into the future. determined governor. as well as strong- ly independent legislators, to counteract the liberalism with which Brown has imbued the courts. To understand the extent of the legacy Bro wn ha s visited upon i .. THE REAGAJ'li admuui.t 1 atJOn h.1., rn adl' terrorism 1b No I fore1~n polac·y target Th(' y cspcratt•, unurmt•d boat people ilre in din • nl•t•d of µrote('lion rrom the cov.ardl) Thai l'ors<11r-. If the U.S N<1vy were lo set u1> a pirall' patrol in lhc South Sl•a:-., Auwnta \\11ulci re gain iL-; hislorie n•put<.1t11111 J'-p1 otN·tur of lhl' defen .. l'lebi. • Prt•s1dcnt ffragun ... 111111111 orclt•r tlw Navy lo blov. thl' ~t·a1w1ng terrnn ... i... out of thl' water So far. t lie· l ' S f'ffort ha~ been stncll) a pot·kcl hook n·nlurt• \\;l' have given lhl' Thai )!11\ 1•111nw11t '' ft•\\ m1lhon doll;.11'., to du th1· Juli B111 the Thais· anti-paran u1wr<1tion h.t-. bt•en ha If hearted at hc!-.l · It as true that those be has put into ad· qiin1stralive pos itions of power can cfu1<·kly be replaced. It is also true the polarie~ they have adopted can be 1·ha~ed JUSt as promptly. r;., -I 9 EARL WATERS The Thais !'>1m pl:-\\Ill 111·H•1 tlu lhL' JOb. \.H' mu ... t do 1t 11 111 .,dH ''-.\n ad mrnas trnlaon that m-.i...lt•cl 011 d1·ft•nclmg the frl•c:dom of thl· -.t·:t!'. "rth mn ul t"<· WHAT CANNOT be c ha nged for years lo <'om e 1s the influence he has had in 1-hanging the direction or the courts. <;'"en the trend the courts have taken in rt'L'<'th years of legislating by judicial fiat. that influence will now make the c·ho1ce of both his successor and those to ,1•rve an the Legislature more important than ever before. California one need only know he has already appointed a total of 680 to the courts. This is the greatest number of judges ever appointed by a s ingle gov· e rnor. The awesome numl'>er of judicial ap- pointees may be surprising since, when taking office, Brown s aid he would veto any bills creating new judgeships and for many months steadfastly refused to fill court vacancies, telling the judges to Fo r it will take both a courageous and PARKING LOT SALE SAVE 25o/o 10 70o/o DECORATIVE HARDWARE, ETC. ONE-Of-A-KIND DISCONTINUED ITEMS BUYERS' GOOFS SATURDAY~OCT.3, 1981 9:30 A.M . TO 4 P .M. 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At that time he and his legal aide, . Tony Kline, had a scheme for drastic changes in the entire judicial system. As it tqrned out Kline, a carpetbagger from New York who got here by virtue • of being a Yale classmate of Brown's, misjudged the power wielded by the judges over legislation affecting them. Neither tbreats nor cajolery swayed their opposition lo Kline's proposals. Kline finally threw in the towel and scrambled to a safe seat on the superior court from which he hopes lo leap to the supreme court. Unable to bring about the wanted changes by direct action , Brown achieved som e by installing Rose Bird c h ief justice where. as head of the judicial council, s he has ' made .new rules to fit part of the plan. And the passage of time is bringing implemen· talion of the full plan closer by reason of the great number of judges who now owe their positions to Brown. When he took office there was a total of only 967 judges in the state. excluding the justice courts During his seven years in 0Cf1 ce Brown has s igned ' legislation creating 115 Judgeships for a ' total or 1,182. lie h as just signed a bill creating 15 more appellate justices as ' well as some cre ating ne w superior and municipal Judges. Retirements, res-1 i~nations, e111d deaths have enabled 1 him to appo,nt many more so that as it now stands 57 5 percent of the state's judges v.ear tht' Brown label. WHILE IT IS bad enough that any one person should have the power to place so many on the courts. the 1 greatest influence wall be that of those / on the higher courts . Brown already has t appointed four of the seven supreme court Justices Exactly how many of the 59 appellate JUStices ht' has appointed was not disclo!:.ed by has office. But the addition of 15 more is sure lo give hi m a m ajority on lht• appeals courts. • N ... ---------- ... •. .. •' If you're looking for checking with no monthly charges. look no further. With Bank of America s Combined Balance Service, the money in -"" your Tax Free Time Deposit can help you meet the balance required to get checking. even Interest Checking. free of monthly charges E- Jo find out If a Tax Free Time Deposit is rigtf for you. come into any Bank of America branch and get our free report and worksheet. If · tax-free savings is for you. Bank of Arrierica ts the place to sigQ up. Tax Free Plus, a big plus from Bank of America. , l ,, ·' ~ -. o a e u z 0 0 .#¥4 """''-" Orange Coast OAILY PtLOTfThuraday, October 1, 1981 .. • -ree L ( ' You must ~n your account by Saturday to get the higher yield! 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With a yield of 12.61%, couples filing j ointly can deposit up to $15,860 and earn totally tax-free intere t; i~divid.uals can deposit up to $7,930. Guaranteed yield ... insured safety! The yie ld a t which you open your San Diego Federal Tax-Free Account is guaranteed for the full 12-month term ... and your savings are insured to $100,000 by an agency of the fe?e ral government. 12.61% tax-free equals a much higher taxable yield! In or~er to earn as much after-tax inco me as is provided by a Tax-Free Acco unt paying 12.61%, you wo uld have to find a n . investment paying much higher interest on a taxable basis. And the higher your tax bracket, the higher the taxable yield would have to be. This chart shows the taxable y ield you would have to earn to equal 12.61% on a tax -lree basis. . ... 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For all current rates, call RATE LrNE -(800) 552-8855 Coming Nov. 1st! H igber 6% Passcard Account Coming Dec. 1st! Exciting new IRA-PLUS Account -San Diegqv!:~~~!!! 1 ·~1 • \ · Leading the way with T~-Free Savings! ~ .... Mm......, hit It ..-i .... Vlete!Llpu Hilla Hl32 C.. IL 77UJ.41 S.. ca...tt ........ f'lcit 41Mllt W Afilllt 0. ..,,_.It !AM .... Uflll ..... Jm2 C.... ...., MW1r 4tU2ll "'-"" ludl 5 ~ "*11 '44-JAS Sall,..~ 32302 C.... C111lllrw Ml-tlt7 ' . ~ . I ,, ""Nat. THU9'1DAV, OCT. 1, 1911 Christopher Reeve says Superman comic books were off limits to htm as a boy. See Page 87. D I , ·CAVALCADE COMICS . TELEVISION . 82·3 B.C 86 Crash. victim died twice; poli~e expose plot · Failing auto dealership inspired elaborate insurance fraud scheme SHINNSTON, W.Va. (AP> - Police had never seen anything like it: the corpse was slumped in a burning automobile but the surgical incisions on it in~icated the body already ~ad been em- balmed. There was little doubt arson was involved. Two five-gallon cans of gasoline were in the car; so were two whiskey bottles with traces of gasoline inside. Shinnston Police Chief Donald Book said it remindea him_ of an Alfred Hitchcock movie -an apt description, for investigators eventually concluded that a body snatching had occurred in an elaborate scheme to fake a death. The way the puzzle's pieces fell into place was worthy of Hitchcock. Police traced the burned car. found Aug. 17, to Royal Chrysler I It reminded chief of q Hitchcock movie Inc. in Shinnston. They traced the corpse to an empty grave in a neighboring county. problems got lo him." Two days after the burned car was discovered, police found Miller. They tracked him to a Morgantown tavern and found him hiding in the rafters. He bad changed his llitlir color, police said. Miller, 40, was arrested on charges of writing a bad check. But he was held on a $50,000 bond as the grave-robbing in· quiry continued. The next arrests came in East View, a community 15 miles south. John Molisee, 24, and Ronald Johnson, 20, were charged with ·'disinte rring a human body," a crime punisha· ble by twovto five years in .prison. Both pleaded guilty last month. Johnson and Harry A. Wiant( 24, of Gilmer Station, implicated Miller J ohnson testified that be, Molisee, and Miller, dug up the grave. Wiant made a state ment to police acknowledging he torched the car. • 0 The body was that of Timothy M. Fitzwater, 21, who died July 19 in a motorcycle accident. The trail led back to Royal Chrysler. According lo the statement1 which was entered into coun records, Wiant said Miller told him he wanted to make it seem he had died in an accident because he had financial and marital problems . Miller's watch , ring and St . Christopher's medal were placed on the body the night it was burned, Wiant said. It all began, Wiant said, when he stayed briefly with Molisee. Molisee's sister and wife teased him about someone named • "George." He later learned they were talking about a corpse. Neal Fitzwater, brother of "double death" victim, stands in front of troubled Royal. Chrysler auto dealership. Fitzwater's family lived in apartments over t h e ca r de.f!.lership. And its owner, Jerry Milltrr, had vanished. Mos t of Shinns ton's 3,000 resi- dents (igured Miller's dealership was in trouble. No new cars had been delivered for weeks. Its s howroom e mpty , Royal Chrysler was the picture of a failing business. .. He did all right the first year," recalled Aubrey Nuzum, who sold the business to Miller in 1977. "But the interest rates and the Chrysler company's · 'Enchanted' island so'd LONDON (AP) -The Scottish wes t coast island of Eilean Shona, which inspired James M.-"'" Barrie's play "Mary Rose," has been sold for $005,000, realtors said . The scenic , 1,300-acre island, with red deer, salmon and sandy coves, is home for only eigbt people. It was bought from Mr. and Mrs. Digby Vane by an agricultural investment com· pany wbich plans fish farms there. Eilean Shona is Gaelic for "happy island." Barrie's play was about a childhood dream or an enchanted island. "They asked me if l wanted to go along and make som e money," Wiant said. "I asked what they were going to do and they wouldn't tell me. They just said I'd meet George.'' Wiant said he was paid $150. Molisee, his sister and wife were indicted along with Miller and Wia nt on arson charges. · Molisee, who once worked for Miller, said his sister was dating Miller. She also worked as a part-time bookkeeper at Royal Chrysler. And Neal Fitzwater says his dead brother knew Miller and Molisee's sister. None of the defendants would com menl on the allegations ex· cept Molisee, who says he does not believe he is guilty of arson although he was present. Miller .. who has bee n charged with grave-robbing, is scheduled for trial on the charge in January. He has not entered a plea. Offi cials said Miller carried the usual insurance policies, and prosecutors s ay there is no evidence he took out added in· s urance to supplement the policies namin g his wife as beneficiary. "I think the guy fe lt some responsibility for his family," says Trooper Boyd K . Vanhorn. "He didn't want to go to just a simple bankruptcy because it wouldn't leave hi s famil v anything." Suspects in grave-robbing ca&e are (from left) Harry Wiant, John Moluee and Jerry Miller. 'Bible discipline' aid or torment f~r .. ~ids? ~ CORPUS CHRISTI, Texas CAP> -He was a · farm boy , rooted in the Texas soil and reared in the family ways of a lime when parents didn't apologize for spanking their children or reading the Bible. Most arrivals, many facing criminal charges, , And Lawrence Levine, head of the Pima Coun· takes food with him when he pilots his single- are literally dragged to him by parents and would ty Public Defender's program in Tucson, Ariz., engine aircraft around the country to preach. When he went to Baylor Universit9 lo study theology during the Depression, he took a cow along to swap for room and board. Even today, be says he still packs a lunch when he flies his single-engine plane around the country. , He's a preacher and a pilot. And he's asking God for $10 million more to expand his embattled child care centers, which have landed him in jail twice while earning the respect of judges, a gov· ernor and a host of followers. The man is the Rev. Lester Roloff, a fun· damentalist Baptist minister who preaches a philosophy of "Bible discipline" in broadcasts car- ried by more than 180 radio stations nationwide, and practices what be preacbes at his centers for children addicted to drugs or alcohol. The state bas tried to license and monitor Roloff's homes since 1973 when some parents visit· ing their daughter at bis Rebekah Home for .lirls complained to the Nueces County Attorney that they saw a girl whipped by a bouae parent. A misdemeanor charge against the house parent led.to news stories and attempts by welfare workers to inspect the homes. But Roloff refused to allow them to enter and said he would go to jail or close the homes rather than allow the state to set guidelines fot bis operation. Since that incident, eacapees from the homes, which are encircled by a blah reatraininl fence have complained that beaUnp, mi.treatment md withboldina of food were common and that children were "brainwubed." Roloff denies the alleaatlona, aaylna the cbUdren are treated no dltrereaUy than be.. wu wblle ll'OWfni up on a farm at tiny Dawson, Tex· .u. He-said tila home mlnllten only to "terminal ·cases" of adults and youq people addicted to dru11 and alcohol. r- lie or do anything to get away, the minister said. said after a three-day visit to the homes in 1978 Roloff contends his methods are 90 percent ef- Roloff's operation was squl by court order for that they seemed e ffective for rehabilitating fective if a child stays at one of his homes at least three months in 1979. Bible-toting preachers and youngsters. a year . They include a diet of 100 percent natural parents formed a human chain to lock state "I have to admit that. to a degree, there's a bit food mostly grown on the farm , plus daily Bible welfare authorities for four days before the shut· of brainwashing that goes on in the whole proc-reading, individualized classroom instruction, no down. ess." he said. "But they're cleaning out what was rock 'n' roll music or television. He later solidified his argument that the state there and filling it with sometJUng more accepta· Recalcitrant children are put in a "lock-up," oversight violated the constitutional separation of ble socially." or giverr a spanking, followed by a hug, he said. church and state by switching ooeration of the Judges in several Texas cities and from There is no lasting physical harm he added fi r-~ i h' .,Arizona have sent errant youths to Roloff for re· ' ' · facilities from a non-pro t corporal on to is R bT . h h l 1 th t t t "Everyone that comes m hates it," said people's Baptist Church before teopening the un· a ' itatlon rat er t an sen enc n' em o s a e Roloff. "They wouldn't think about coming. They licensed home Sept. 15, 1979. reformatories. He moved his Anchor Home for Boys here And Texas Gov. Bill Clements, Republican, either handcuff them or sedate them and drug has wn'tten to White , a Democrat, criticizing the them heavy in order to gel them in. But you from Zapata, Texas, and now has the Rebekah, Id 'l kn th 30 d I t .. · dr h d th attorney general for appealing Mathews' ruling. wou n ow em ays a er. Anchor and Lighthouse chil eh's omes, an e City of Refuge for alcoholic men and Jubilee Home White, meanwhile, says he's appealing the case Eighteen-year-old Jackie Loden of Alabama, a for troubled women at the same location. . because it's standard practi~ for his office to take resident of Roloff's Rebekah Home, said nine District Judge Charles Mathews of Austin, decisions involving. constil'ltional questions to m onths ago her parents dragged her screamiq who made a personal tour of the facilities, last higher courts. "I'm being kidnapped" t~ough .the Atlanta April agreed with Roloff's Jj(>SiUon and said the Roloff, who refers lo Clements as "Brother airport and brought her here . minister did not have to have a state license. Bill.': seid he and his supporters helped make Cle· "Wben•l cad\e ·here I weighed 90 pounds and "l came away from that pface that day and I ments the first Republican Texas governor since had been doing speed for two years. I was skiMy, just said to myself, 'U all the facilities of this kind Reconstruction. Clements ran against former At· frail and pale," the robust youngster said. "I waa in the state of Texas were operated by Lester torqey General John Hlll, a Democrat and Roloff in the psycho ward two montha. I sold drugs to Roloff, we wouldn't need any state laws,"' foe , in the 1978 election. young kids and I turned my little sister on to her Mathews told the courtroom. Roloff, who raised mone)"'(or the $15,000-a·day first joint and cocaine when she was 11. I was in a Texas Attorney General Mark White has ap-child addiction operation t.hrou&h b1I radio broad-bad state of depression and shaking all the time. pealed the ruling. casts, said in an interview his "bible discipline" Now I feel gr:eat, like a new person." ' Ironically, Mathews on June 7, 1976, bad sent succeeds with errant children and adults when Mias Loden said "Hiihway to Hell" and Roloff and three of his superintendents to three state-nm facilities fail. "Hell's Bella" were her favorite rock son11 until days in jail for contempt of court for refullnl to al· He estimates be savu taxpayers at leut ~· she wu "saved" by Roloff. Now she doea not miQ low welfare inspectors into the homes. Another million a year by taklna care of the 700 people rock music or television or jun.It food and would judge had sentenced Roloff to five days lo jail for housed on his 557-acre farm and nearby not allow her children access to them, abe aald. contempt only 10 days earlier. Lighthouse Boys' Home -at no char1e to tbem or "Now J make 1trat1bt •A'• ln ac:bool, '' 1be But Mathews wu not the flnt to be impressed their parents. smiled. by Rolotf'a methods. Roloff denies alle1at1om that he la pock.Uq Durlna itJDtl totaUq ~. 11111 Loden Te:sa1 Ranier Rudy Rodrl1uea, who in· money, aaytn1 it costs blm'nearly S2 mlllion a year said ahe waa apaalled tline u--. _, lutbt& veaUaated one of Rolofra. boys' bomes durtn1 the in radio expenses and the rest soes to operaUoa ot , more tban two mlautel . court battle, aald he was. the homes. · ••And theJ INaed ID• udi ....._" _ ..._ , "I whip my kid• when tb~ need lt," • He aald be ha• no inaur~ce aavino or &octal Al tor ber mlid, iM ..w; ....a a Hlill .... Roddcuea said. 1 • Security, lives in a house built by bl• lrteftdl and clea ..... " • .. •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE SPRA ED - C an ud1 un n t..'\\ :-. nwn CO \'t'r t heir mouth-. und n ose s ;1:. au Au:; t r alian qua ran t in l' official .;pr a.'-. th e in t e r ior 111 a C an a di a n Armt>cl Forces plane on ~·r rival in Mt..•lhourtw A board art: Pnnw :\1 i n 1 s l e r T 1 u d t· .i u a nd hb part~ ''ho a1 r ived fo r the Com monwealth I h.•a1b ol Governme n t nwt'l ing P ilot advertis ing is good business for Amer ica n State Bank. 'Doily Pilot help wanted ads have consistently brought us the best personnel." Lucille Kuehn Community Relations, American State Bank Newport Beach 00-IT-Y OURSELF ... ............ -~ mo1kalcl~ AND SAVE Sale ends S unday. Oct 4 SHOP MOSKA H:L S FOR -ALL YOUR WEDDING PARTY CRAFT ANO FLORAL NEEDS A. STRAW WREATHS 1 O" ... ~~decorated .. BB' 12".14" .. -..... 99' 18", 22"........ 1.66 Assorted DRIED FLOWERS reg 69 & 99 66' bn 2" SATIN· BALLS I Ol A ri?q 3 ')Q 2.88 B. STRAW BROOM Unt:fecorated Approx 34 · lono C. 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SPIDERS, WITCHES • TISSUE DECORATIONS, STREAMERS & MORE CE._,.ITOS T A"ZANA 11n1H•-oua 12n1111.111s \.A IMRAOA SAN OllOO l.A •IA 12111..._...l C7t•IHMHI 17U}4U-SM7 T°""ANCE 12tJ) 37''6741 llCPNOtO() . ,,.,,.,..,,, Less ·a '~ig bleSsing' .-DEAR A!'SN LANDERS I'd like to !\a\ a word to "N Y.C .... who asked vou if those bust develo per ads in the m ag'azine wen • on l hl' level 1 hope she will gel s m art and accept her "underendowme nt .. for the ble~smg it 1~. I speak from l'xpen ence only J have too much. rather th~too httll' Since 1 wa s 13 I have been ogled. whistled al 1rnd propositioned by men T here seems to be a general belief that all over -endowed rcmalei. are part.' girls. sex m am acs a nd jusl plain pushovcr!\. 1 hope ult wom en who yearn fo r .mort• than Mothe r Nature gave them will ac:c:ept t heir s ma ll d imensions as a ble-.sing. I en vy them. TOO M l'Cll OF A GOOD T iil NG DEA~ GOOD: Thanks for the me~~age that less b more. A pox on tho!'.e w ho be lieve it'!\ what'~ up rront tha t c:o un b . DEAR ANN LANDERS llad to la ugh at "llim and lie r ·· d oubting the 78·year old uncle's abili tv to fa ther his :i9 vear-olcl wife's twins Rem inds ml' of a · storv I heard I hope it ·s not too n <.tughty to pnnt An old 'f'odger. ut most 80. ma rried a young woman of 30. After scvt'ral month~ he visited his doctor. l'Xpres-.rng concern th a l his wi f c had not 'et c·om·e1 \·ed She wanted a famil y T ht'. doctor told him. .. Pe rhaps you'd better takt· in a board er · • T h e o ld m a n looked "I t h im in credulousl\' and as ked. ·Arc 'ou '>lire that will help'."" "Oh . ~·cs ... said tht· dot'tor. ·11 never fails ... Seve ra l months went bv and one da' the old m an called up the doctor and. tn ~ \'Oice fi lled with exc1temenl. -.aid . ~h w ife is pregn ant al last '.. · The doctor said. "Did ,·ou takt• m,· ad vice about laking in a 1»oarcfe1"' · · ·0 11 . q ANN UNDflS yes. replied the old m an. and -,he 1s pregnant. loo'.. 1 LAUGHED AT THI~ ONE JN BATTLE CR E EK ' DEAR CREEK: o did J -40 year!\ ago in Sioux City -but it':i ... till sort of fun· n~. a nd not too naughty to print. <I h~pe. I DEAR ANN LANDE RS: Ma y I give you a different viewpoint on being f a f'? 1 \\e1gh 200 pounds l'm a person who enjoys food If I ate ever;.·thing I wanted. I would weigh at least 300 pounds. I'm a professiona l woma n and my in · c:omc is impressive by today's standa rds~ \'es. I am m ar ried. but mv husba nd is not ,·t:r y cx<'iting and doe~n ·t ·do much for m ~ ego. Our children a re grown. a nd I believe we· Vt! don e a good job of re a r ing them to b1..• independent. respeclablt> c it izens I enjoy my work . but it is demanding <1~d stressful I feel a s if I a m carry ing ;J big load by working a t such a diffiC'ult job and keepi ng the house going. too. Being fat is my com promise with life . AN HON EST ST ATEME'.';T PROM ON· T~\RIO. CA LI F'. DE AR HONEST : Life did not de mand tha t compromise. You made it becau!\e rou fe lt entitled to indulge yourself 3!\ a rewa rd for a ll the ha rd work. Ir you are content and your doctor sa.\·~ it'!'. OK with him. I'm not knocking it. 'Tis season for serv!_ng · The re 1s a reason v. h' moro humor col umns ha ve not been v. riiten about t he un nua l church Chri:.tma:-. b<.izaar It is because no one ha:. e\·er been able to frnd humor in it. As reluct a nt as I am to ffi l•npon the word Christmas t hb l'arl\'. thb l!'i the time the a nnu<1 I hazaars get i11to gear Thev art: st aged lo bring lo\·e and harmon~ through k i n d C h r i s t i <.1 n d l' e d s a m o n g t h l' pacishioner s if the chaif·man h<1!-i to bend a few face:. on i-elf·ccnlcrl'd bodie'> lo do it HOW ARE BAZAAR chairmen select ed . vou ma\' ask. T he,· are chosen from soft.. m a tronly lumps of compassion who han' the bad luck to go to the restroom wh ile nomination!'> a r<.• being made When tht:~· return. 1t 1s to rC.'i.Ounding a ppla use and shouts of. "You'll make a wonderful chairm an' If ~·nu need me. just call. .. The \'Olt'l'S are all unlbtcd For t he nexl se\'eral month!-.. the c hairm an must con \'ince parishioners that "Bl essed an• those who sa' \'C!-.. for thev could inherit not onh the · earth. hut the \\hole stin king bazaar·· • SH E MUST CONVINCE et1C'h one thev have -been researched a nd are c hosen ro·r basic t alents and skill!> Lucille Fronk. crafts booth. w hose hus b and has no desire whatsoever to get his car in the gaFage since last yea r when flMA IOMlfCI AT WIT'S END he pin O\'er 185 bleaC'h bottles being saved for piggy banks Evelyn Weiss. Pitch and Th row game. ,,·ho:-,c husband 1~ a n attorne,· a nd handle d the lawsuit last year regard(ng the b roken black boa rd. .. Sonya Flippe r. Cake Walk chairm a n. who wai. overheard a l a reception for the new m inister to whisper . "If I couldn't bake a better cake than thi:.. I'd sell m \' oven .. and will never open he r mouth again DEE DEE OORMAT, '\;u rser". who ii. alwa~·s pregnant anyway and as;um e d to Jo\'e childre n whe n in fa ct she doesn 't even Ion• her hus ba nd. F'r<.1 n ces F ir m wag . T e lep h one ch airman. who is childlesi. a nd has <H'Ce!\!\ to a phone. Evali ne Rumschussle. Antique Booth . bec<Juse it takes one to know one Elaine Hensen. publicity. who o nce saved the life of a columnist who owes her. Ah yes. one picture of a Chris tma:. Bazaar chairm an is worth 120 sermons . ·Top 10 hit with selves Q. I know that lhb wa~ a "meaning· less" publicity plO)' c created by the editors or Forum m agazine) to na me the "10 Celebrities Who Most Love Them sel ve~." But curiosity impels m e to a!\k who we r e the "winne rs " or "lo!\er~" or t he poll. Could you check a nd give me the rinal re· ·suits? A· Glad you asked ' George Steinbren n~r . the boss of the :"Jew York Ya nkees. was the winner and new ch ampion of the love-thyself person a lity . "No body ... ex plained editor Alber t Z. Freedman. "hire!\ a nd fires with mor e <;elf -confi dence than St ein brenner ... President Ronald Reagan (who was No. l on las t year 's lis t 1 dropped a notch. wh ile te nnis cry baby. J ohn Mc Enroe. cam e in third. Ac tress Brooke Shields ran foui:th with Liz Taylor a close fifth. New York's M·avor Ed Koch a m bled m ...... sixth with Reggie i ackson scoring seventh followed by Muha mmad Ali. Sugar Ray Leonard a nd Secr eta r \' of State Ha ig respecliYel y tied for 10th with F rank Colulllns listed Readers h ave been asking about the publication schedu le of columnis ts in the D a ily Pilot CAvalcadc. Monday through Friday. Herc is \he schedule : · Ann L~s a nd Hor oscope. daily Ermi Bom beck. M6n~ny. Tuesda~· a nd Thursday. Herb Caen. Tuesday a nd Thursday Hy a nd Marily n Gardner, Or. Peter J . Steincrohn. Art Hoppe. Stan Delapla ne . Cha rles McCabe and Hugti Mulligan . on a ~pace available basis . . .. Pf ISONAllTJ Q.&A. BY MAR ILYN AND HY GARDNER Sina tra . The origin a l No. 10. Bo Dere k. didn't even place or show. which give!-. you some idea of how blind some judges and vote rs can be' Q: When was the last time in a. nine- horse race that the e ntries finished in re· ve rl:le order -9,8,7,6,5,4,3,2,l? And what are the odds on this happening again? -A. Williams, Coconut Grove, Fla. A: We hope you all live tha t long . but t h_e odds are 362,880 to J. the University of Mi a m i's Math. De pa rtme nt informed us .. c Note : The ra ce resul t we quote occurr ed at the Calder Race Track in Holly wood, F la .I ... ar. <Jrlando A. S.atli.Ua, the book write r who's lo ng been a contributor to na· tiona l m agazines. has always been o ne or our favor ite humor philosophers. He re are so me of his sayings : "The best way to sur- p rise your wife is -freque ntly ! .. And, "If the cost'l of ba by sitters goes u p a n1 higher . it will be cheaper to raise teachers· salarie s and le ngthen the school hou r s!" · "Tbe trouble with s itting on top of the world ~that O\.Q" planet is so unsteady!·· ~ ~ ••11• By PHIL INTERLANDI of ~una aeach HOIQSCOPf BY SIDNEY OMARA Gemini: Play • • wa1t1ng .game Friday. October 2 ARIES (March 21-April 19 >: Emphasis on exciting changes, prospects. Scenario dominated by communication. emotional involvement and plans for travel. TAURUS <April 20-May 20 1: You could be floating on sea of compliments. Avoid being beached by false flattery. Someone wants something for nothing you could be prime target. Protect self in clinches. GEMINI <May 21-June 201 : Avoid fa ll- ing into speed trap. Applies on and off road -someone is trying to trip or trick you. Key is caution. patience and willingness to wail for right time. CANCER (June 21-July, 221: Focus on practical issues. responsibilities and re· alization that relationship is for real. Another Cancer and a Capricorn figure prominenUy. Emphasis also on health. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22 1: Round out pro· ject -you're being tested. judged and evaluated. Accent on change. travel. varie· ty and intens ifie d re la tions hip. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 1: Key i!'. knowing when to close transaction. Don't attempt to overkill. Focus on property. fresh concepts. original approach and new contact which leads to creative adventure. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22 1: Idea s come into focus -you find practical uses for what had been considered abstract con- cepts. Intuitive intellect serves as retiable guide. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 211: Ele ments of timing, luck blend and result in solid profit. Focus on personal possessions. s pecial collections. interest rates and greater income potential. SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 22-Dec. 21 1: Barriers come tumbling down: you take definite strides into future. Position 1s strengthened. st yle and talents gain greater recognition. CAPRICOR.N I Dec . 22-J a n . 19 1: Analyze clues. detect ~ubtle nuances and check behind scenes. Clandestine con- ference could be on agenda. · AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18 1: Em· phasis on friends. hopes. wishes and re- union with family member. Adjus tment in lifestyle also indicated. PISCES <Feb. 19-March 20 1: Superior defines terms. lets you know where you stand. Accept facts as they exist. not mere- ly as you wish they mfght be. HERB MEN OUR MAN IN SAN FRANCISCO His slogan easy to keep SAN FRANCISCO -What would we do for items without Ma rvelous Marin? . . Author John Grissim tells us about Vain Lyon right, Vain of Stinson Beach. who does a brisk business waxing cars by ha nd fo r the ritzy Seadrift crowd. His slogan: ··tn by Nine. Out by January.'' Observes Grissim happily: .. The pace is comfortably slow her e in West Marin·· . . . Paul and And y Bonapart think we should record fo r pos terity that the Tam High football team is getting into s hape by practicing yoga to disco tunes. Since the team was 0-10 last season, the coach is ob· viously desperate . . . But for high-level whim~y. how can you beat a standard mailbox atop a 20-foot pole labeled "For Air Mail Only., .. Andy Blalock noticed it in Novato. SOMEBODY 11.t\ been eating well the la!,t couple of days. Wh at Somebaddy did was break intp the Night Bird van while it was parked outs ide the Sansome St. Brasserie and made off with 37 smoked quail and 20 lbs. of smoked Oregon trout. ~ight Bird is the ··exotic"' poultry and meat place on Divizz that peddles wild pheasant . rattlesnake. lion and other in- crediblt• edibles. The late Lefty o· Doul having been a local baseball hero. and his Lefty's on Geary being a temple of the s port: s up- posedly. Good S F 'ers Flo a nd Chuck Hurley went in there. hoping to watch the Giants and Dod ger~ over a snlrck and beer. Ins tead. they found the three TV sets tuned to football .. Left wouldn"t care ... shrugged a waitress ... Bes ides. vou shouldn't watch the Giant:-. while eating· ... SNOOPERSCOOP : Author Curt 1 .. Helter Skelter "' 1 Gentry and Gail are dissolvinu theiI:)mar·riage. .. Five years with Gentry and J. Edgar Hoover is too much for an~·bvdy .·· s ighs Curt. whose de- fin ili\'e book orr Hoover '··The Secret F'il es·· 1 will be publis hed by W.W. Norton next \'ear. Frank D1 Marco Jr. heard these con- troversial words during prime time Sept. 4 on the local NBC affili ate: .. I feel sorry for those ti red. overworked. underpaid con- trollen; in the tower ~ ... but don't get excit· ed. :vlr. President. It was Burt Lancast er in the ol d movie ... Airport.·· TALKTAIL lounge: "'That"s tacky ... needled John J oss. looking at the ··My Other Car Is a Rolls Royce·· license plate holder on the beautiful burgundy-and- ~llver Rolls owned by Renn Zaphiropoulos. founder-Pres. of Versatec in Silicon Valley. Zaph: ··t agree. it IS tacky But ·a friend ga "e it to me and my other car JS a Rolls,.. ~DD INFINITEMS: At Pe rry·s. 0 .J . Simpson spilled his Bloody Mary all over himself. prompting Bartende r Jim Baney to needle ... Rejoining the Forty Niners'! ·· POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT Pe.rhaps the worlc:ls onl~ purpose ls to 9ive me so~t hi''\9 to th.i,.,,k about. Glasses vs. contacts DEAIJ. DOCrOR: I know I need help. My eyeslitK-bas become so bad I can't read the names and numbers in the phone book. I've recently turned into my 40s - the age when nearly everybody begins to complain about their eyes. But my proble m is this: I've always dlsllked·the idea of having to wear glasses. Charge It up to vanity, mostly. In addition I'd be misplacing or losing them most of the time. Shall r, instead, consider wearing contact lenses? -MR. 0 . DEAR MR. 0 .: Why not take that problem up wi\h your ophthalmologist ? It's time for an eye checkup at your age . You want t'b ma~e sure you don't have g}aucom~r some other· condit1on that· may be interfering with your vision. As for wearing contacts, you know it is no longer a dubious experiment. Millions of Americans happily wear these devices. They now come i.n both hard and soft varieties. They may be single vision or bifocal types. What's important is to have a proper fitting by an eye specialist. The majority of wearers use the hard type contact lel\ses. They provide a sha·rper vision. The softer lenses are more comfortable, but require frequent, careful clea nini. DEA& DOCTOR: I 'm a lleavy smoker. T 10UI HIAL1H OR. PETER J. STEINCROHN I want to quit because I realize cigarettes, in one way or another. have a terrible ef· f ect on heaJth. I'm already beginning to wheeze a lit· tie. Don't know if it's e mphysema or my heart signaling It's getting tired. Our local medical society ls putting together a program to help smokers give up the weed. But I doubt If It's worth the ef · fort. From what l 'v.e b~ard. n:iost people begin smoking again. True? -MR. G. DEAR MR. G.: Jn some cases. yes. One recent study re ported that the average stop-smoking campaign induces from 25 to so percent of a group to quit. And af~er a year, 75 percent of these may have reht. Hut m another group. using special in- ducements to quit, about 40 percent quit and did not restart after four years. When you consider the. health benefits, Mr. G., I believe you should participate In the program your local medical society is offering. It wUl be well worth it, lf you hap· pen to be one of the fortunate ones·who qult and stay that way. Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT/Thul'lday, October 1, 1981 i .. MIC"O COMPUT!A CHESS Kathe and Dan Spracklen of San Diego .. assisr · their· Ex- perimental Chess Challenger System as they play in a Hamburg store against Kevin- O'Connor (right 1 and David Levy of England .. ~ ....... using a Chess Champion ~ark V. The game was the fin a l round of the second Micro Com- puter ·che~s World Champions hip for com- m e rcial a nd experimental s~·stems BUTTONS AND BOWS GRAND OPENING OCTOBER 2nd STORE OPENS AT ,10:00 TO 9 P.M. Grand Opening Special Fri. and Sat. 20% OFF All ITEMS IN STORE FfATURING: T .. ROMANTIC LOOK IOICKERS-ALL COLORS UNUSUAL ACCESSORIES YVES DANIEL DESIGNER PANTS ANNAZAPP MINI SKIRTS I 79D E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 645-6731 M-W & SAT. I 0.6 THUR.·FRt. t 0·9 ci.n·--··it· ~ "· ~ ol' . ,, n~ 11:s 1'~.tt~ir~ ~.-:f;e mi.-. i11 :-N ""':1 Yt.1!4;;.. (uri~mil Caf{a Mhc -~ QI ~1(9 ,j'J -::1s i::..,1,d PutltHl'g Cake ~l:it, ,, ·or. r1<a:. . :'.ho~tli<ito fro~tirrg Ml~ • INDIANA,.OLll ?J I' i g 1 .. ~ , , I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thuraday, Ootobef 1, 1981 \ K. We're a lot biggeF:-- The new ABC Lumber will be the largest independent home improve- ment center in the area A com- n~ds .. immediately w e· re also a lot better And we're back' It's a philosophy we feel vur y comfortable with So stop by and see the new ABC lumber ·prehensive selection of hardware building materials and home improvement items Our huge indoor lumber department wtll also be the largest around Whether you're a "do-1t-your- selfer ... handyman independent con- tractor or commercial account. ABC Lumber can service your A knowledgeable statt of pro- fessionals to assist you Full-service capab1lit1es. Professionally mer-~ chandised departments 88 parking spaces and easy loading accessi- bility And exciting directions like our new 1ntenor decorating center With the same friend ly hometown service that's been our trademark since we first opened We like to feel as though we're a part of our com- munity not just another resident To us, our customers are everything Without them we might as well stay home A lot of things have ·changed But more importantly a lot of thing s are the ~ same ,,. .. '""~"-·' rlllUC NOTICE Ns.e5U1 l'ICTITIOU5 aUSINIS5 NAMI STATE,,.I NT Th~ follow1no "''°"' •re OotnQ bv~lneu H DIVERSIFIED DEVEl..OP,,.ENT COMPANY, '70 So 8rl1IOI Str .. I, Suite 101. Coste ~--. CA m1' RANNEY E DJl"PER. 11 No U Sende Soul" Uqune. CA m n EOWMIO BACH. tlU '-•de•• VII· I• Drive, Full•rton. CA n.31 T"I' bv\lnen I\ conchKt.O by • ~ ... , •• pet1nen/llp E-rclB«ll, o-er.11".,,,,.r T"I• stet-I was 111«1 wlltt IN County Cieri< Of Orenoe County on Our ability to purchase on a much larger scale translates into higher quality merchandise at extremely competitive prices So. we treat them in a very spe- cial way To be there when needed. To help when asked LOOK FOR THE ABC LUMBER GRAND OPENING OCT. 9TH! 140 East 17th Street. Costa Mesa. CA • (1 Block East of Newport Blvd ) • 646-3261 rtflUC NOTICE ruu ~-~_.,_nc_c __ l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS l'tCTt110U5 a ustNISS l'tCTtTIOUS aUSINf.SS NAMI STATIMl!NT NAMI STATIMIENT NAMI STATEMENT fh• lollo•lnO """""' .ar• dolno Th• followlno .,.,.ons ere dolno Tll• tollowlno l>e'"'"" .,, doing buSl,.H• H l><nll'ffS ••. business •• HI SOFT'WAllE, us Peulerlno, FOUNDATION FOR HUMAN SLAVIK FOUR INVESTMENTS. "Pl H·lOI, Coste Mesa, C•lllornl.a SUllVIVAL, "°7 lrvlM Ceflter Ori ... , A GENER"l PARTNERSHIP, tt7S2 n•n Sulle 102. lrvlne, C..llfornle t:l71• M•cArthur Bout•verd, Suite I tO, Al•••ndru 1\1\ot•ru HS Peulertno, T ln.otlly R Twombl1 , 011 Irvine. C..hfornle'171S OorclltHtr, Coron• do l M•• J •m•• D S1evllt, Men•tlno ::.~. H·lOI C~t• -••. C•lllornl• Celllornt•m~ Ge"f••t Perine•. ••~lllonou, Irvine, Sltl.t,,. IMrcN,,.,, SS~ Peuterlno, Wllt y 8 Jollnson. 217>> C.elllornleffilS •r•<••nrldt•. L•tun• Ntgutl, Jolln H Sla"I .. , Pert,,..., •t'........,.. :,:~. H·lOI, Cost• -••. C..tllornl• C..llfor"" ~.Irvine, C..hfoml• ma ). T"ls ~I•~ 1>y ef\..,.. P•ul A. Sl•vllt, Per1,,..., •tt ""r Tllll l><ISIMU is COflClucted by .t 'lncorpor .. ect -letlofl 0-t,..., a pie S.0-. trvlne, C•l"oml• 9271S v-ner•I pertnen/llp. __...,.. suwn """Sl•v• Tnist, J -D Ale-u Mti.ru Timoel? R T-y Sl•vlk Truste. Clo t'7S2 "'-'Art- PUIUC MllTICE PUIUC NOTICE rulUC NOTICE rtllUC NOTICE SUf'IRtCMI COURTOI' l'ICTITIOUS •USINISS Lwn.t l'ICTITIOU5 aU51NIS5 CALl!l'CMINIA, COUNTY NAMI! ITATIMINT "CTITIOUS aUSINl'.SS NAMI'. STA TIMI NT 01' ORA.NOi The IOllOwi"ll pe,,_, II llOlnQ .,.,,, NAM( STATEMENT Tiit rotl0w1"9 I»'-.. dolnQ °"'' CAS« NUMalER A·U.,t4 neu •• ff\t following per'°'" ••• doing MU•• In tM -ol IN """'ke tion of ARTIST ALLEY, tO)t Soul" Co .. t llUSlnelS.tS PRO AIR. 321 WelnUI Avenu. LEE RANDAL 80LLETT, • Mlnof, lly HfQllw•y, ~IM«". CA tt•SI R V EX C H AN c; E' • 4 J J Sult• 0 , fuslln, C.atllornl• •2'IO DE8011AH ARNOLD, His Pertnl, TONI KIRKLEY BOVEE, n N Whlm1n1ttr Avonuo Wtstm1MI•' Ml<-1 J L-ICW'. 50 F.tllb<'ooa l'OR CHANGE OF HAM£ StonlnQtofl, Soutll LA9YN. CA m 11 C.thlOl'"no• ~ lfrv1nt Cel>forn,.at1714 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE This b<Nnes1 Is Conducted by en Ill· L• MU• A I/ c.~nltr • In< • Thi> IWSlnPU '' COOc:lucletd by •n Ill FOR CHAHGE OF NAME dlvlduel C•lllornla 'orpor111on Wu tm1nster d1v1du•I LEE 11.t.HDAL BOLLETT •• Minor. TONK Bowe C.•lltorn•• ~ M.ChHI J L•nv•on .. , DE8011.t.H ARNOLD. Hit P..-ent This slelemem ..... filed "''"' IJw Th .. "'61 .... , •S <onGu<l•d bV. (Of Thi> •1•"-t .... filed With tM lie• 111.0 • pehtlon In tl'll• c.ourt for e n Co"nty Cl•rlo. of 0r•"9P County on "°''"''°" Countr C'9r1< OI 0r'""9t' County on ~ r •ll0"""9 ~ltloner to <"•"9P S.pt t t, 198t L• Mtw II V vnlo• Inc ltmDet IS, l .. t 111'1"•' "•'"• from L.EE RANDAL 1'17111' J W Cl•r .. 1-l't1'7M aOLLETT ID BEAU LEE AllHOU> Publl-Or-CoHt 0.llJ PllOt, E"'K V1<e Pres14lenl Publl-0r•"9P CCl<KI Oe11y PllOI II Is _..,.~eel tl\91 •II.,.,_ S.pt 1'. OU. t, I, U, t"I 41,._.1 fll•S stet-I w.ts 111..0 will> ltw ~I 11. 2•, Oct t 8, Hiii .07W I lnler•stlMI In tM rnetter etorewld •P' l--------------I County Clerlo. Of Orer>QP Count• on Sep- Sept. t1, 1"1. T"1' JI.._ Wti 111.0 wl1tl U. Tllli 11-.....t w .. tlleel wl.,, tM Boulo•nl, Sull• t tO, lrvlno, Celltwr.t• County c .. rtt of Or•noe County on County Cle-'< OI o...-. County on s.p. '27H 1'11MJ7 Auouit 2•· '"t ,.,._ tember 11, 1"1 This ~lneu '' conouct.o by • Put>!t"'9d 0r._ Coast Delly Pltot, Publls,..., 0r..,.. Coast °"'Y PllOC, l'l 1M't Qene<el ~':':f Slnllt pHr _.,... lllir court In o.pertment temller •. t'lll PUIUC M011J No 3 •I 100 Clvk c.e-Drlw Wut, PlllJC -~( '11014'1 ____________ _ S.ftte ...,,. (.elHoml•. on Oc-r lt, Pu1111-0<..,90 C.oest D••lv Pilot, Sept. 1•, Oct. 1, I . a , "'t · '20>-tt Sept 10, 11. >•. Ocl. 1 t"1 '°1Wt ~b;~~ ~~-~ 0•11Y,;~; Tiiis •tet-t w•• I fled wtttt ti. lWt. et lO JO o'clOclt •.m , -1"911 NOTICI OF SAL.E 01' Sept 10, 11. 2•. Ocl t, 198t •Ol-0.at •"4 t"41rt -<•use. II any tlley A Vf.SSIL. VALUIO AT ... v •• """Y Yid peotltlofl for cl\e19t of MOttE THAN Pit l'ICTITIOUS aUSINl'.SS HA#E STATl!MINT TM totl0w1ng per-. 1• dolnt tN•I n•u t.t MOC NOTICE l'tCT111ous au11,.11u NAMI STATWMIENT Tiie tolloWl"9 penon b dolr19 tovtl· ,..,, ., E NER G Y C O NTll OL CONSULTANT, 137' Santa An• Ave11Ue, c.an.. MeM. C•lllornl• t1'71 R•Y-Elmer ltumsey, 2f1A Sant• An• Avenue, Coste Mesa Ce1Hornlet1'71 Tlll• butl,.M 11 c~ by en In dlvlduet Raymond E Rumsey Tiiis ._......, WM Iii.ct wit" !tie County Cleni OI Or•noe Covnty on Seo- lem ber t1 t"' 1'11910 Publl"'9d Or-Coest Oe lly Pltot, Sept. 17, >•.Oct t,I, IWt •t».at PUIUC NOTICE NMIMT l'ICTITIOUS austNIEU NAMI STATIMINT Tiie loll-Ing .,.rsons .,. dolno 11u11nen••· JWRCO. 102 Eest Ocean Fr..,t llalboe, CA "'6 t JAM!S W, llE"D. JR., INC., o Callfornl• COl'POl'•llon, 101 East 0 <•.,, l'l'Ollt, B•lboe, CA "'61 J-W R-. Jr., CEO This 11.-..-1 was filed wltll n,. County Clerk 01 Orange County on A119 27. t .. I. ,,_ Publl•lwd Ore19 Coe•t Delly Piiot, Setil. ti,"· Oct t.1. ,... 41J0.4t PUIUC MO'TtE l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU NAMJE STATIMIENT T"41 toll.,..lno ""''°"' are doing bullnesses: J & II CONSTRUCTION, tUS Whit· tier Aw,.., •·13, C.t;a ""'"6, CA '16t7. STEVEN L. JOHANNES, 2211 Orange A-, Cott•-· CA fto6t7. JEFFREY S. ELSTEH, J206 Net»rasu, c.te -·CA .... Tiiis bllslntts 11 ~oncluctlfd by • ..... ,.1~p. J & B COftltNctlofl 8y;S-L.J - Jeflrey s. I lsten This s-t was flied with -Co~inly Cieri< of Or•-C-tv on s.pt. "· '"' P1"712 l'ICTITIOUS aUStNIU l'tCTtTIOU5 •ustNIU NAMI STATIEMIENT NAMI ST~TIMINT T"• 1011-•no person• •rot oolno Ns.4a1• • bvslnn• M TM toll-Inv persons are dolno AMJ ENTERPRISE!>, 17l01 lie.ch buslneu ... Bout•verd, Huntington B••c". MESAWEST.1IOHemlli-Sir•t, Callfornl• ~ Corte Mew, C:.l"orni• 9:1U7 Wlll••m F Se lln•rdl, 11S51 R•tlre..,.nt SECUlllTY COM· 8 rookllurst, Apt, U , ~unt1n9ton PANY, • PARTNEllSHIP ~ S.ech, C•l"ornl•.,,.... of MARSHAU. .. STONESTR!j:f.~. Rl<l\ercl E J-. 1~ AmwtO. AL V C E 5 . STON ESTREET, Drive, 0.ne Polm, C:.llfornle ,_2t CHA ALES 11. DOWNS, afld JAME T"h llustneu Is <orlOUCtad by • DOWNS eta CHARLES R DOWNS, gener•t _,,.,..hip. 7 ti Soulll Brootth11rst, An•ll•ln., Rk .... rd E J <Kobs c.IJIOt:nl• ._,. Thlg •i.1-1 -• 111911 wilt> llw T"ls bu1ln•11 I\ con4ucttcl Dy • County Clef'lt OI Or•nge Counly on Se!>• v-neral .,.,,,,.,.nip tember ?2, l"I CNrl~ R Downs 1'111111 This stei-l was llltO with llw Publl"'9d Or-Coesl 0.11., PllOI, County Cieri< of Or•noe c-w Ofl Set>· S.pt >•.Oct t, I, Ii, 1W1 ,.lrMlt tembtr ti, t'8t l'ICTITIOUS •UllN•U NAMI STATIEMINT Tiie loll-1"9 "9"°'1 ls dol"9 bull· ------------- MU as l'ICTl110US aUSINISS "NGL.E RS CENTER, "' North NAMI! STATIMIENT NewPOrt 8oulevud. Newport &eec:,., T lie lollowlf\O persom are dolno CA t2'6~ 11<11lneu a-s llOBERT ELMER ELLSWORTH, SUNSET FL.OWERS, 1617t P<telfk a Hol,,_, Newport &elldl, CA Co•s t Highway , SunHI 8eacll, 663 Celllornle '117C2 This l>vllMH Is C....0..Ctoed by ... '"' Jeclltelfl 8rlall H ... ,,,, ,.., Kern dlvlclu•I Drive, Huntl"V'on Be<K,., C.11,.,,.,,le Rotl9rt E. Ells-111 926'9 This statement WH 111911 with the Rut" Anl'• Herrts, ~'2 Kern County Cltrl< ot Or•-County on Drlv•. Huntington .. eel\ Celltornl• S.PI n. IWI ' t"49 1'17t• T"ls ~""'Is conducted by en In· Couflty c .. r~ 01 o...,,._ CollMy 5-- t•mbe r 2'2. 1"t 1'111 .. Publt\hed °''""119 Coett Dally Piiot, Sept 24, Oct t, I, IS, t"t ...._.1 .l PUIUC MOll:E l'tCTl110US eUllNIU NAME ITATIEMIENT Tt>e ,...._lne pe,_ IJ oo•no bllll· nftlH: . CAUTHEN'S CONSULTANTS, 201JP S--, Hum! ........ ec:ll, C.l.,onila..,.. Marlott Dolio••• C..ut...,., 20101 S"orewood , Huntington •••<II. C..llforni.t:a.. Tiii• bul'-h c~ by •11 In· dlvldual MarlOll~ This s-..t was Iii.a wlltl tM eo..nty Cieri\ Of Or•ntie County on Autllst 24, 1"1 ruauc NOTICE l'tC'T1110UI auSINISS NAME STATIIMINT Tiie loll-1"11 person• •re dOlng b<dln•s .. A B CEIL.ING, 311 Coronado. ... -. Celll«MnMt Brian B. NelMn, 10fj W•llace, Coste Mesa. Cellfwnl• "'17 Su-M Anglin, 117 '--· Balboo, Celltorni41 '2!Mt Tiiis ll<l~lneu Is concluctlfd by • ............ -....p . eri...-_. T"IS ~I WM lllec> with .... Counly c1en. flf o r.,. C°""ty 011 599· PubllltlOO Orllft09 Coett Delly Piiot, dlvlOUal Sept 14, Oct t, •• u, '"I 41177 .. 1 J <Klltelfl Brl.,, Harrb •n.•r IS, 1"1 1'1197M Tiiis stet-I WM 111911 wlltl "'" PubllShacl ~ .... Coast D•llY Piiot, Ml.IC NOTICE Cou,,ty cten. OI Oronve County on Sap. "'-t l7 i Ocl 1 1 w .ot .. tember n , 1'8t ...., · • ... · • • 1 t t 1 l't114M Publl"'9d Or ..... C-SI Delly Piiot, ruauc •TiE Mme shoulcl "°'be 11'-eG. NOT IC~ IS HE RE BY GI VE N II ,, lurt--l"-1 • COPY Of pursu.ant llO -llan• soo. 50t, SOI s. SO? lttls order to "'°"' <•UM be llubllshed end SO:J of ttw H•rbor & N•vll)etlon II\ Ille DAIL y PILOT, • --per of Code of ... Stet~ OI C.llforn1•. Ille un oeNra l c~UlellOft, l>Utllllhed in 11111 der.lgned DE ANZA BA~SIDE county .. leest once • _... for ...... VIL.LAGE Will Hll .. publl( •uctlan <OMeCU1h•e -s prior ... ,,.. clay of •t 300 E Coe•I Hlghw•y, Nt•POri Wiid ,...,.lno. • Buell, CA '2MO .i 9 00 .am on the Dated 5eptemtier tS, t"I '"" dey 01 Oc1-1'11 ltw toll-1"9 A-Id H p,.._r OeKrlbed -rtv: lo wlt Judge of ttw 5-rlor Court YHr Ol bael t975 lllls..,. --... M•I<• OI boet Gl•tron 17-.. A~ld._1_ J~ Motor/Id . CFeOtOF'T I ,_.. e -Hull no GLA».UIMl~O .. _.. Y•hf. c:.. tl1W Seid Hie Is'"' the purpow Of s.ils T..__(714)tMlfAtl lying llen of th• undersigned for Publillwd Or-Coest Delly Piiot. •tor.to-IMs In ltw emounl of SIO oo Sept, 17, 14. Oc1 t, I, IWt 4127..i t-1"41r Witt\ <OllS of fMlvertlli"ll encl u..,.n-ofwi. Daltd this tllll dey Of September, rulUC MO~E "CTITIOUS a USINESS NAM~ STATE,,.ENT fh• followi ng ~,.sons •'~ CIOtnv busln@'~S ~ FREEPORT REAL ESTA fE :191• WHterly Pie<~ Suol• 101, Nowport B•ech, C..lrtorn•a ~ Fr•epor1 Funch hK. , • C.•l1tQf'n1• corPOrallon, J'lt' Wuterly Pleet Su)lt tOI, Newl)Or'I 8eecll, C.ah1or~ tar.QI T Ills ~l""U °' <OOc:luc:leCI b• .t (CW OOf'•t•Ofl Freeport Funds In< P A ~ PrHlot<\t l "'' 'lt•tenwint w•' fllfld wn" trw County Cterk OI Oronve Counlyon S.O JUSTIN RAYS, t600 WMI C0t0JI -.,.y Newport B•«h, CA 9'663 llA'I' ROH.AL.0 TR0JJILLO, )2; Vk lori• COit.a-ta, CA n.ll This bvll-IS <ondt.Kteo by •n 10 dlvldu•I R•y R T rullllo T hlS stei.ment w•s ~led wllh uie County Clerk of O•anoe Co.inly on S.pt U, '"t 1'17t 74' Publlt'-0 Or-C.oest Delly P1lol Sept 11 1• Oct I I t'lll «>71 .. 1 ruauc NOTICE LW'1• NOTICE 01' PElllONAL. tember 22, l'ilt 1'111-Rf.PRf.HNTATIVf.'S t .. 1 Pullll"'9d Or._ Coesl O.ally Pilot SAL« 01' REAi.. Sam Nlllf1> Sept 24 Oct I. I, tS. t91t •209.-t PllOl"ERTY AT ~t "lllVATE $.ALE NOTICe 01' TRUITIEIE'S SAL.E Publfshlcl Orangr Coest Dally Piiot SUPl!RIOtt COUllT T .$. No Ul77·5 Oc1 I '"t ruauc NOTICE Ol'CALll'OllNtA AMERICAN TITLE COMPANY •• .., ... , COUNTY 0' duly •PPOlnted Trvtttt under the SAN Olf.00 tollowino dHCr1--ot tfust WILL. PUIUC MOOCE NOTICE 01' TllUSTEl'S SALE CME NO. iu 1S7 SELL AT PUBLIC ... UCTION TO THE T.S. Ne. Jt9't 1,, tllt Maller ot the Est•t• of H IGHEST BIODtR FOlt CASH l'ICTl110USauStNIU NOTICE IS HEREaY GIVEN. thet MARIOIO ICOS!IMANN, Oec•n•d IP•Y•bl• •I time of Hie In I.awful NAMl ITATIEMllNT Oft W•.,_y, Oc1oCler ... '"I .ti NOii(• IS twrl>Oy g1votn lhel MARI OH money of IN United Stein! ell rlg,.t, TM followlng .,.,_, is dolnv bull· 9:00 o'clOc~ .a.m. of .. Id do, In IM of -. E I Ml ICH, as AOminlslr•lrtA of !tie tlllt •n4 lni. ... st conveyed to •nd now MU H ! lie• of REAL ESTATE SECURITIE!> Hl•l• of MARION KOSSMANN. de l'Mtld by II unoor Mid DMcl OI Trust In ICE V A EAL E ST ATE, tH2 SE RV ICE, loc•ltd at 2010 Nori" cu.ea wlll. on or .. ,., Oc1-r •. .... propertv ...,._r OH<rlbed H•mllt.on A-. Huftl.lnvton h«h, Broeclw•y, Sult•*· In Ille City Of ~n t .. t. sell •I P<IV.tl• HI•, to,,,. flttlllffl TRUSTOR· H""ROL.D NEWM.t.N C..lllornle.... I• An•. County OI 0.•"90. Stat• Of .and beU Dl-r. under '"' terms •nd and GAi.. NEWMAN. llusband .. nd w"• Ilk,,..,, ltaf'TI Melt•-· m3 L..a C•tllorni• conditions nerc!tn menhoned •nd wi.. ••lolnll.....,,l• L ind• Court, Newport 11••<11. BELL TRUST DEEDS, INC, e J.Ct to confirmetlon bf ltw •bove BENEFICl ... RY HOWARD L C..llfornletiMO C•llfor'nie corpor•llon, as duly·~ ~nt l ll•O Court el 111• ofl lcu ot ABEL,• married men, n "''sole and R.IC. Melt•-POlnted Trvst" undtr •nd purw.ant to L.OWELL. & AIHHUR, AllorMyl for MP•••t• P'-rtY T"I• --t was 111911 wlltt Ille the PQwer of sale conferred In thet cer-llw AO minlsttalrlx .ti 600 "B" Str•t, Recor-Fet>ruery 2'. t"I H Instr. County Cler1l OI Or .... c_.iy on Se!>· lain 0.eo of Trust euc uteo by Jullen Suite 1200 Sen o._. Celllorn1.a "210t, 31SS2 In -t:i..t -ID OIOfllcl•I wmber to, t"l Toole,• mMrleCI men'"' n ls so .. •nd .all the uoi.t. lllle, lni.rnt, end esi.te Re<oros In tfle olfk• of the Rec-r l'l~ sep•r•l• ,,,_,,..,, recorcled Maren 2•. ot I"• ctecHwd, •no .all tne rl911t, tltle, of Or•noe County, said -of 1ru1t Publl-Orange Cout De lly PllOI, '"t, In 8ooS t,... of Ottlclal Rtcords Interest •ocl nt•I• lhel the tsl•te of dH<rlbes l!MlollowlnvP•-rty. Sept.17,2•,0ct t,11,t"t ., .. 1 of ••Id County, .at P•O• ••••. """RION KOSSMANN dece .. ed, L.ot loM Of TrKI No t07, as per Mee> Recorder's 1ns1nmwn1 No ~t by ot"41r 11,.n, or •n -ltlon to llwit of the recorded In -21 p_. U•• ol Mis· -111' MOTi:( '"""" Of • -.Ch or dtl•ull In pey decu..a, •I !"« """' of ner cte•th, In cell•neout ""-"'· In the offl<• of the rvvuv m•nt or performance of uw o«>lloa· •nll to •II 11\et certain rMI property county r~r of Hid coumy. lions wcured t-y. ln<ludl"ll ltlet sllu•ted In the City OI Ne•Po•t Be.ch, UOVl•LldoNOl'd,N-rt a..c11, MUNICIPAl.COURTOP: brH<llordefeult,Notk •ofwlll<h WH County of Or.anoe. C..a tlto rn le, Cellfomi41 CAL.tl'OtlNIA. COUNTY rtcorcled J ..,,.,lt, t .. t. in -14t03ol dfftrlDed as lot~ "(II. 11.--..uor common•· Ol'OltANHIOUTH Offlcla l Rec-Of Y id County... LOI 13 In Bloo. of RIVER SEC· l'ICT1TIOUS au11N•U NAME S"TATaMINT N.-1. Sept. l4, Oct. 1. I, IS, !"1 4t74-41 •Ion.lion ll -above, no werr•flly ORA.NOi! COUNTY peoe 110, Recorder's tnrtru,.,..,I No T ION, In llW County of Or-.. St Me PICTITIOUS •USINllS Is given as to Its c-le-u or cor· JUDICIAL DISTllllCT 2m6. WILL. SELL AT PUllL.IC AUC· of C•lllornle, al P9f mei> recor'ded In NAMl ITATIEMINT rectneul" MlGC-Velt.y ... _.., TION TO THE HIGHEST lllDOER 800• 4, Peoe lS ot Mlscell-ou1 Tll• lollowlnv CM•sons •r• 001r10 bullnenei Piil.iC MOTl:E Tiie fOllOWlf\O person• ••• dolno TM beneflclerv under said Deed of 1...--N'-4, c.. fM17 FOR CASH, lew1ul ln«WIY Of,,.. Unit-M•PI. re<or~of S.id County r...stneuas. Trull, by rMIDn Of• br_,, or default PLAINTIFF. TOM HARPER dba ect States, all pay.ote at the time of This Ml• is subjKI to current .... ._ OIVERSIPIED INVESTMENT COMP ANY, 710 south Brl•tl>I s1.-. Suite 20t, Ollla -... C:.lltorni• ••• C"erleJ Terr,19Ml .. edl II-, Ceplttr-8Mc,., Gallfoml• •- R•-Y E. Dr-•. n North Le Send•, ScMll ~. C.llfoml•"'" This lluslneu h condUc-by • oener•I pef'tMrshlp OllANOE TVPING SIEllVICE 8Y In the oC>llgatlons sec:ured t!Wreby, LAGUNA I UILOERS SUPPLY Ml•, •II r'9flt, 11ti. •nd lntereSI now covenent~. c-lllOM restrictions, re· PICTITIOUI &l.IStNaU IC.AT AND ASSOCIATES, 1111 W. lleretotore auc:utld -delivered to 0.El'ENOANT Jo+1N DAVE LEA, held by 11,es Tnnt•, ln-totllet re· se•vatlOfl,, rloflls, r!Qht~ of war ...... NAMI ITATWMINT (.ft~ A--. Suite E, Or-. CA ti. undtr119ntd. written Oecte.-.tloll CHRIS PAGE, PAT D.t.VELER, DOE •I propertv ,,, ..... In said County •ncl menu, and .. 1111ng encuml>renc .. Of Tiie f81iowlnG oerton 11 oo•no DUii .,..., of Del•u!t -Demand for s.te, end I t"'°""' OOE X, lncluslw St•I•. dncrlbed as toll-•. L.ot • of record ,,.., .. , ___ ..._ It A T"ICI , P.O. Bo• u~. written notice of llrHC" efldof etectlon SUMMONS Tra ct No. 9:93, as per map recor-In Tiit t•r-and conClltlOM of tale ••• RAIN~EMOO&L811S, 3t2t Or..,.., (.A ftM7; nt s. P•rto Vine, to C.UM ... ~ to •II ulcl CA$£ NUMBER 1QS01 B-117. P-• II -12 of Mii· u~ In ,....,_,, -y of ,,. United .. ~ ... Ori,.., c0Me MeM, CA t'l6• Ore"91, CA nM1. p.._ny lo Mtlsfy Mid oOll9atlom, NOT I CW Y• llllw .......... Tiie cellefl-.a ~. Records of Or-St•tes OI Amer le.a of part c-.no ER IC E . LINDROTH, JIU This lloalMts 11 conducted by •n In-efld tftarHftlrtlle u"*"lli9Mdcauwcl C-' _., ............ .,_ ....... County. pert cr.011, llw ler!Y"Of sue" <•.Olt lo hrmude Dt'I .. , c-ta Mew., CAN• dlYldtlel. said notice of -<" -of elKllon to ,_ ..... ....,,. ....., V-,........ Tiie 1lr•t eclctreu or ot/Wlr common be ace-able to IN Admlnlstretrl• J OHN 0 . SIMAN, H U i:iotte K • .t.. TAKI be Recor'd911J-12, t"l es .... tr. No ....... a .......... -•wa..U.. de'49netlon, H .,,y, of tr. ••I pr-· and IQ IM Covrt Ten .... c ... t 11°""1 ef Sll'MI, .... ....,,,, CA-Tllll ~I was lltect Wlltl .,.. ... 1 ... bOOt. IAOft -..0, ol Yid Of· ...... ty ...... ._ dncritleO Is ""'--the •m--to accom-y ,,. -l'WlllfWcl Or-COHt Dally PllO\, P•rlNr Cl\arlff J T•n', 0....fal S90(, 17. 2'4, Oc1 1, I , t"t _,..1 T"I• N-We$ flled wll" IN MUC llTl:E County Clent Of 0..,.. c-ty.., Sep- tember 11, IWI Thh INMM M Is con•c-by • Ca.Mty Cieri< at Or•-County on fkl•I Rec.onts. If you won ID -~ llw .,,,ice of "" ID tie· ttl He-c1rci.. Colt• Mesa, •nd '"• bal.anct to be paid on '°"' .....,., ...,~ s..i. n. 1"1 Seid Mle wlll i. rnedt. !Mii wll"°"t •ttarney In !Ills metlM, 'l'OU Wvld do C..lltornle. llrmetlon ol t.I• Oy trw Couf'1 Tant., Eric E. Llllclrotll "'n• co ... nent or wa"1Nlty, •-•er Im· H •tiromptly ao t"•I ytur •rltten TM _...,_ ,,...et>'f e1ac1elm• refits, -•ting •nd rn.alM-• ••• "Thlt ......,_,, -• fll.O wit" floe Publl.atwctOr.,..C..stOallyPttot, plied,~ title. po--· w re-•.H..n-,,m.y11tllled0tttlma.. all ll•Olllty lor .,Y lllGorre<lnH• In ""'9'-Pff"'l"""of""41t#OC•ec:· l'ICTITIOUS aUSINIESS Geuftl'V Glfftl Of Dr•nge C-ty on s.,c. u, Oct. l. &. u, '"' ._., eflC\lmw-, to pay Ille ~Int AYllOI U.... M '* ........... uld atl"WI ..,,_., or othe< common cepl•l>l• to llw pure,...., shell lie pro-...,._ 12, ltat. prlfl<lpal tum Of h -(II aa<urect •t ,,..._.,..... • ...., c-.. IH. OHltn•tloll. rel.OasOltheO.teol tlla ~onflrm.tlon l'IJMal Pvbllslled 0rafll9 CoHt OallJ Piiot,, s.pt 1•, Oct I, I, U, t"1 '211 .. t The .::, ':!!,~'!!no .....,. l't114'7 Ml.IC llTCE Oy w lcl o..s Of Tl'llll, wlttl ••-• •• 1111 ••fiffcl• • ...... , ... ue. s.ld .... will be..-wltllout w•" Of salt eurn1 ... 11on OI tltle, .-i,. ..... "' PllUt .-Ta l"ulllllflad or-. Coast Dally Pllotl. In Wlcl l!Otll-Wllll • .-..-. "_.,, .................... ~ ta ,.,,ty, ·-"' ............. "'"" of (OflVOMC• ....... till• 1 ....... ~. £"""""" Ll!I! ENTERPRISES ~. 24,0ct. •••• ,,, '"' ., .... 1---------------r tllelitft'MOI Mid DMO Of Tnnt .............. _...... mi.. ,.._ion, or efl<utntlrtfl( .... pollcy • .., tcanster ....... •"-II ... et J "'' '-------------1-------------PICTITIOUS8UllM8M t,.s, c11e,... Mid--· af.... ~I \Ulad ..... Mikiteref-jOtll Mlltlllt ... prlnclllal OtleMe Of IM llH e_yoent• <11 Iha ~"f<hU,t tr ~~ttnPUS °'""'· "'-" e .. c,., l'ICTITIOUSaUSIN•U ....... etMllSITATeMaNT TrvstM""Md ef'<llle tl'lllb ,,.._,., ~ "" •....-.All ..... ......._...., .. .,...., ... ...,. .,...,._ llf<ilfW lly ovrc~s. ~ JO,._;. ·-. oec: IZI W. Mll"Ol!J, NAMtl ITATaMllNT ...._ TM ............ ..,_s ate 0.1,,. J,elif l)-.cl -Trvst. $e10 1M wtll .. llecerlo 1-.1ea-Ma, 0. ule Mlcl 0.-et TNll, wllfl i-twtt •fld llld• tr offers •rw l11vl\ed i.r !fits Seflt• .._;'C"A'~ · ~ ~~~•f"f An..i ~•: ...., on ........,, onow a.. 1•1 • _..., 111 ~ ncnte, ,i ... Y. ttfttf """'as-"*' hr.lfl; Pivt ,,.roperty ef'd rrnnt 11e In -11.,.., ...ct Tllla~s lsconO\lcllldt>v•"ln-..,,IMHa: CALlflCMfllACDAITAL (I I CAVALCADe; 111 I AD· t:OOp.m.etttoe~A-M• ....... ,,...._,.....,._.tlemtlll . .Oveft~S, If any,...,., the ltrn.s wlll be received •t Ill• olfl<H l'f dlvlclu•I. NET l>EVSLOPMl!NT co .. 1744 COMMIMtC* • DL.eaACX DAILY f'ILOT; Ill SAN lrllM• tQtlle Civic; c.-.... kllflf. t, TO THE D .. 11!NDANT· A CIYll .,.., .......... ,,..,,,tan '41Ch ..,,,_, I.OWE LL • AltTNUll, •n.ftevs .., JdlnJ«eM Ml. Ctlff-.1 Circle, '"-telfl V••tay. ... •• OCllAN •1.vo., IUtT• ,,., ci..•M~NTE/CAPISTllANO DAILY EHi C"-"611 A-. '" ... Clly of c-l•lnt .......... fllell.,"'" p1e1,,. ...... PIOii ..... ,...,...-........... Mid Aclmlnl'1r .. rla, •I -.. , .. ,,,..,, Ttlls .._.....,. was'"fll9ll wilt. !fie CA tt79. &..Olle~,CA_, f'llOT; W l'ILOT ADVEltTISUt; Or•"99,C........... !Ht ... llwt 'l'OU II-With•_...,. t!M TNAle -Ol IN tnnb ,......., Suite t100, $MDlatO,C.IKO"' .. Ultl, (*11 NET Dl!VELOPMl!N-T COM· '*"'9CllOf't"'9en I S ) OllANGE COAST f'ILOT Al l!Mtll'naef\MlnlU.I P<*"4rtltft tllhlawtult.YllOlmutl.wlttlln ••Y• OY H id DMd Of TNtt, Tiie t•tel ., IMY .. "'" wtlil Ille (letlt .. C:-ty of Or• .... C:-ty on l'ANY, •Cal ....... ~eller1, f1d4 TO~UI Nil NIUIUT ADVl!.-'r-.S•ll; 16) f'llO"T PltlN ef thh llCltlce, tM t ... 1-1 ef V1t en.r tlllt -la W...O.,, y.u, •-I .. Mtd ...... ..,., llKIW!fle hPtrlOf C~11r1 •" O•llw4reO to =~~ MATTtl• Mt Clll'-d Ctrc ... ,._...,,Valley, c.ttl'r9119-...... J. 4 TINO, .. 'l'lfMt ••Y Stt'Mt. Ceola UnP•IO .. 1 ... c •• , , .. ""••"•" .... Wltfl.,..-'. '"'""' ,._._ , .... Miiiy estltM ... foes, ct.arett MAltlON Hl!IML.IC;H, _,_.I.,, et -~._. ..... tel CAtnol, IW~ ......... Ottlrkt M9M,CA""1. -~ur.O_.,ttle.-.,.~ .... Of .. t110 ~ Ufllots"" • ... ant • .....,... of ... TndtM, al 1119 an\' tJ,.... .... llr14...-twt•ett111~ &.9.......,CA_ Tlllt ......... hc __ .,.c... -.u ....... c..tr OlllANOIE C04ST f'V•LISHINO tl'lllt .... ~ cwts, •"'""9H. rwr ........ ""' ... .....,., .... 11,,. ••• 111111•1 pVl>llc•tlall •• lftlt -k• .......... INlll .......... T9il JllJI..-porattofl. C-ty...........,, 0tllr4'1 No. U af COMf'ANV, e ~ ~•"911. tnd ... _, I& $2».4 .. tl. To .... l~tltn .. IN _...lltfff, Ofld Ws ~ Ne41ce, It ill,..,.tt. Tiie ,...., It ~ • ,...._ 9--~ fttJtlt' NET OEV•l.OPMENT COM· Qr""'9 0Mrtv 11t1t fllert A#I~ m West a.,, ....... (.tlMll ....... cA l9rml1M IM ....... lllcl,-,o111Ny<ell IMf MW a ~eeMIR ..... • Dai.cl: S 1 1•r M,t•t ......... ~---.. ~-..~ OillY ..... f'ANY .... Mi"10 (0.C-$.0.) •• Mm'lt .... ,.,. 0141 m...... ... relief flllMMIO"' -~.. .. .. Trwt °"""'Ille. ' ~ ~ ........... .... 0r :' ... , ~A.~. h llo e j.t" IM .. w.t« _,Ill TNt---ll~WtCitl" Oe ... t111t1 .... 11,1'11 wtlkfl~,._.tlll-"'...,_.OI ·~-............ -~ ...... ,,_ ... W°_. ........... w.t•, ~ Dr ...... ......., (tll• ,.,.... AMllllllCAN TITll! ...... t•"'96'-yw ~or IJ TIWllM ...... TIM .........._t -flt9d Wiii! Ille ""°"') ._ ........ wllo MN« lMANOa CO.UT COM•6"Y etMr ro1141f ,_... II\ tl'9 ~· 8y: lllMI ..... l ~,-='-;1T;·~~=;~;: C-Ctef'lt ot Ort1191 c:-ty M .,.,, tM ....-ty HYMI 111 8Mc" f'Ut&.lltONO~AHY .... IAIOT.,.._, ,..1'11 ---~ _. .... • ""· ·~ 11111 Ill .. Cl ft ........... ~~!_:_l~"!L.. .. _, ..,,. 0, ~ ~ ~,, 1tl1 I C"'"'""9tMMiU19'. M • , lfWW&t a MR·~ ......,__......,._ ~..... ~ •• ....,. ... Clfftc Ila .... .... ,_ ~ ~ tvnMr I~· ... .........., ey ... enNotu, ly._,,_,....._,DeiMy IMA&JO.J ...... , !!;• ~OLP..... 1'-1-..41 <efltltl Hll«y 8elro,, Tllh.....,... -..._...._ -...._....._., ~ .... ~M,IMC. .. .......... -·· ............. °' ... o-ity ........ Ot*1<U, ClllJlty ~ .. °"""' c-ty... ~............. ............ -........ .. • ..... ..... ......OfflQ .. 9'1?,.......,Vefte'n ..... u..... .<:A......_. I ................... ._,.. Pf1MM c.rtlferMe..,.,,...014) ... "'9, ..,,._ • ,......_ W.-..... C.. .. 1 ,_. C1te ........... CllM• o.tly "9t. "-flllW 0r-.. o-t Daft1 ....... ........... °'9tt8t c.-Ditty""'-......... Or-.. C'.-ll Deity ............. ~ CIWl Oellf...... ...........--..---... _,~=---·;1.·...: "'1 .Wt ..._IO,Ou.t,l,1"\ .-; ...,n,14,0d.1,e,ftll .,_.. ._..l4,0d-1,a.tt11 m1•1'"" 1t.f1.-.0d.l,tt11 -.et --.M.DIL1,t,;M. · • .... Phones Signal s DEAR PAT DUNN: I'm bard or beanac and even though I turn tbe phone volume as loud as posflilble, I still can't alway1 bear It ringing. Maybe you can find out lf the-phone company has any solution to this problem. P.E., Newport Beach Contact Pacific Telephone's handicapped s.ervices by phoning (800 > 242·4565. A phone_ company spokesman says that the following devices are available: a gong or especially loud bell that can be heard over high level backgr~d noise, a lamp indicator which s hows when the phone is ringing; and a signa lman. Any lamp that's plugged into this unit will flash on or off each time the phone rings. If the lamp is off, it flashes on and vice versa. F act.s about, fiber - DEAR PAT DUNN: I've read a lot about the benefit or having Ober In the diet, but I don't want to pay extra (Qr high fiber bread. Which foods have a lot or fiber lo them? L.T., Costa Mesa Fiber often 1s advertised as if it's a single entity, when actually r fiber" refers 'to a number of complex substances derived from plants. Their identifying feature is that they are not broken down by tl'le digestive juices of humans . We do absorb some fibers, however, through partial digestion. Cellulose, he micellulose. pectins and lignis fiber are found in the cell walls of plants, and non-cell wall fibers are in plant gums, mucilages and phytic acid. Whole grains wheat bran in particular -are high in he micellulose and cellulose. Other foods which are good sources of fiber are dry beans and peas, nuts, peanut butter. cabbage, carrots, celery. leafy vegetables, apples, oranges, dry fruit. and other fruits and vegetables. Whole fruits and vegetables are higher in fiber than iuices. <:ur 1J prnhlem" Then wnll' Ill Pat l>unn l'ol u·ill cttl red tape yl'llmg the cini;u•••r.~ and aclwn 11ou need to .w1l11t' 111t'quit1e.~ m gout>rnmt'nl and nustness ,\fail II"'" questwns tu Pat nunn Al }'11ur St'rL'ICe. Oranyt' <.:oast f)nzly f'lltll P CJ /for W >ll ('u~ra \fe~a I A 92626 As mun" 11'1/1'" o~ po!.\lhlt' IL ill h1• 11n.~11'f'red bOt phoned 1uqumt'!. err letter~ n11t mclw.imq the reader s full name. ruldress and h11smes.\ hours phone number r a111w t ,_,., tonsideretl This cul11111n nppean daily er Cepl .'i11Tl(Ull/\ Robots answer? ATLANTA CA P > -Since people aren't listen· ing to the human voices giving instr uctions on the automated transit system at Atlanta's airport, of· ficials are exper imenting with using robot voices. "It sounds like R2D2 talkinz . It's not as pleasant as a human voice. It does get your atten- :ion ... said Airport Commii;sioner Geor ge Berry. Synthesized voices being tested a1 Hartsfield Atlanta International Airport include one that sounds hke R2's "Star Wars" buddy, C3PO. and the computer Hal from "2001. .. Turboline r s r e tire d CHI CAGO <AP I Amtrak is retiring six French·built Turbolincrs purchased for S25 million because they are too expensive ~o operate. a r<1ilroad spokeswoman said: The trains. introduced in 1973, oru:'e were used on runs from Chicago to St. Louis. ~lwaukee and Detroit. but only three remain in service on the Chicago-Milwaukee route. They will be replaced by regular Amfleet trains, the spokeswoman said . She said the Tur boliners were well.received but no longer at· tr acted new riders ~s they once did. HOUSE.OF TAILORING AL TERA TIONS fOR MEN & WOMEN SO COAST PLAZA 540 8491 Low"r L"•"I by CorowU'I ilUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY · Sa•• ~a-s, 110 aqaift lt22 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA MESA -541·1156 Tuna Delight Sandwich 53.10 Newport Beach 1400 Polciflc Coasl Hwy Now Serving Beer & Wine . IS Convcrnle.nl Locations #5020X42 W Si ti . ~ \' MEN'S 26" MONTEREY CRUISER. 7888 A good looking bike with 26"x I. 75" Balloon Whitewalls. loam type grip handlebar and coaster brake. flam red finish """' .. JORDAN ~ ~ ~ @:;:'? PICTURE J6o1 Pi HANGING ADHESIVE PICTURE HANGERS I ~ KIT ~~~ HOME m FASTENING KIT 29t 6·PAK ... 61031 I #1520 • These'll come in real handy if you like to collect art, lik e I do. ( Varga, lJ:, J Playboy, P eanuts, e t c.) RECORD A CALL WITH FREE ROTARY DIAL DESK PHONE 13997 #60t\ A two cassette telephone answering system that g1 ves callers 20-40 seconds for a message. Will pick up on lust nng or up to the tenth ring. Accepts up to 120 messages. ~ CAMMON CRAii RALF LOUVERED BIFOLD ~_,.,.........___,,,, DOOR PANELS 12.xSO 1477 1Sx80 1677 16x80 1977 18x80 2277 24x80 257 7 Made nghl here in the U.S. of A. Un fin ished standard blade bifold door panels. ((hate mom mg 1t'ssoearly. I lhink I'll go back to bed.) TEAK PARQUET n'"' TILE . I ~x!"Tile Gel a rich. worm looking lloor with leak parquet. (Parque1? Well. 11 doesn't matter which s1deyour bread is buttered on. It still lastes thesame.l WATER HEATER BLARKETS fits up to 40 gallon 4 97 Fits up It' 60 gallon 5 97· 1 guess we all like 10 be patriotic and save e nergy but when 11 comes right down to it we hke to save money on our fuel bills more You get a choice of colors plus a 20 year warranty. Three bundles will cover about lOOsq. ft. EMERGElfCY-1 PORTABLE nRE ESCAPE LADDER . TWO I 3 88 ~-··-~« STORY .i-'-'.. JI" _, w Hang ii right over your windowsill. Slee! • steps have a non·shp coat mg. (Might be a good idea to work oul a fire drill with the family.) BLACK & DECKER .ilbBBYCRAn'ER WORKMATE 1666 .-#79-02~ ~ Just nght for lightweight projects. 8" vise jaws open to 3" and its work sur('1ce hits from Cl" to 45° forwdrd. . BLACK • DECKER I I 3 SHEET DUAL ACTION FllflSIDNG SANDER 26~! Blade a nd Decker makes one of the be1t. This one goes from oibitol to straight line. flush sands on three sides. JOlDfSElf 'S SPARE TIRE 57• 10 oz. #3522 For tube or tubeless tires. (Definition of a vampire. The fella that yells, "Strike three you're out!") PRESTON£ SUPER nusH • REFUND OFFER 1 sl 22 oz. Buy now and receive a $1 .50 horn Pres tone with a mail-in coupon. Coupon and details m the store. (Gee, we got some good deals this time.) ' VALVOLllfE MOTOR OIL JO WT 73•or 10Wt40 WT. 83 t QT. Time to check the old oil. (I'm letting my aon drive tbe car ... he's too young to be trusted as a pedestrian.) BAUL-IT-ALL PICK UP RACKS ••• IRTERMATIC TIMERS Even your closest neighbors w1l l have a hard hme telling when you're a way from home with these timers All three have a manual on-o ff s witch (What no 1okesabout old timers?) CORDLESS mti:R .. . ~ ~ Plug you1 lights or appliances inlo 1h1s and 11 will tum them on at preselected times each day ~~ -~ SUPER COP ':_ f.. VARIABLE-nMER This one's a 24 hour timer that turns your lights or appliances on and oll at different II mes everyday MASlf:R CONTftoL 6~,~ You get up to 12 programmed on-off functions per day with this 24 hour timer. 5Vi" CONTAllfER MUMS ~OR NEW GUllfEA IMPATIENS ~OO~E I 4 9 EA \fllii~!\ I Boy. if I could r WOJJld have a grea1 time with this one writ mg Rf'/ puns bul [won't do it. It's )USt one of those things I've outgroan. KELLOGG'S TOPPER 242~U .FT. Blended tor seed co\oering. top dressing (gee. l wonder if it'd be good on salad) or mulch. Contains nitrohumus. GERMAIM'S PENTREX Fertilize your lawn, flowers. vegetables, and trees. This stuff even gets the nutrients through the hard and compacted ao1 la . 3 88 cAL 8 FOOT 4" REDWOOD ~~!~~!le~g~~I~ ~--= your garden. (Indigestion is the failure to ad1ust a square mea I to a round stomoch.l 4 9C RED DEVIL LIFETIME CAULK AND SPORT WATCH OFFER . I ' 177 '11 oz. Buy two tubes and with a mail-m coupon you ca n get a Merfs-or a Ladles' Spart Watch for$4.95 plusSl.95 postage and handling. Details in the store. Sl9.9Sva lue. hours. minutes. seconds. month.date, .. \ , I ------/"~~~~~~~-·-·----------• Orange Coast OAJLY PILOTIThurtday, October 1. 1981 ... 1 ...... OHAN.Sa ANGll.I TMAllMI HUNT M"A•a•H ltwnped by • Cf-d ,,...._, Hewtl~ radlae a ~ buddy lor ~ but hll call 11 lnt•pteted aa a medlCal enwgency. I HAWAII flWa.O • ILmDTNC l~.A MICNIW9 N9CNIWI c::MAMJI. THIE L~COUOAA MONEY ~~KS -Ted Lankford and Donna discuss the $50,000 .. he gave to mobsters on "Knots Landing" tonight at 10 on Channel 2. An orphaned cougar kitten It rllaed by a lumberman IHllM Ille cat '-ii Iha call ol lhe wlld. (Pitt 2) .MOYIE * • ,_. "Th• Co11lc1n Brotllere" (llMI) Douglu Palfbanlll Jr .• Ruth War· rldt. Two ~ twin• eap8tated ., birth !all In loY9 with IM tame woman wNle eYenglng Ille murd« of tl'lelf parenll, l::tO Cl) CHAN..-CHAMPUN TALKS WfTH MENYN liAOY l::tO.~ WE1.COMe aACK. KOTTP Wlllllnglon gell a job that E.petaln \houglll ha lltd In Ille bag. I ICCET HEW88EAT ITUDIOIEE "Mustangs" Join eome Colorado cowboys In I wlld mu1tang roundup; ride tube9 down Ille Farm- ington River In Connec11· cut. (R) Cl)QINEWS Ill IAMEY MIU.EA Wiien I womtn l>realla I Into a men'• bat~ to confront her mlNlnO lather •"• • 28-y98' -Ch. Ill• lelueat to edmlt ,,.., lier lat,,_ landa them both In l:llllhe ='' 1:00 cee NlWI ·WC.NEWS HAPPY DAYS AGAIN A l>Nu!IM woman lakM ap Int-I In Rlclhle ...,.,, lie ecc:omoaniM H6ward 10 a oonYenllon 1n ClllC:a· t. AlllCNlWI OU AIM<ID FOR IT lltl~ 4 au.et: Jim Nel>ora. I JOKP'I WILD OVEREMV "Welgtlt Control" Co· t'loeta: Maty Mertln. Jim Hartz. GuHt: Valerl• Harpar.Q • MACNQ. / LEHRER NPORT Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 ENTPTAINMENT TONIGHT 8 THIE MUPftET8 Guttt: 8eYwl)' Sllla- CR) eota ..... MPORTI PMSENTI; THE IHOP-Al'IOUNO IHOW Toplea Include: eoaps, twMktut cetttl; Ice cream Ind motorcydea. al) HAMMER HOU8E Of- HOMOR Cl) GMAT l.ADIE8 Of- OOUNTAV I Hoet: Tom T Hall. Guttll. Lynn Anderton, Donni Fargo, Lecey J. Dalton. CI>~ • * * "8-N Uk• Old TlmH" ( 1980) Goldla H.-i. Chevy Chua ~ aoft·'-led llW)'e< 11 torn ~ ,,., lloe>elell eJC· hu1t1and·tu rnad ·bank robber and ,,., 11911gt11 SW-I husband who II running for Calllornla 1nomey ~·'PG' 1:IO 8 2 ON TME TOWN f'ealuted: • day l>tNnd· "'9---at Dodger St• ""'"1: a 1oo1c at a Strip-A· Orll'l'I; ••plor• La Jolll'• msyt•lou• caYel I 8 FAMILY nuD LA\l'EAHe & 8HIALt( &COMPANY Slllriey WW\11 a contt1t that anm'" ,,., to a llorlty· , moon weekend at a o111ay hotel 8 ~ONLA Ffflured: I trip IOU!h of Illa t>ordar to En1ar1ada; a loolt at Ille l>Oomlng home 4Hllarlalnmant bullneu: • repon on alcohol fuel. IJ MATCHQAME G) M•A0 8'H H1wkeye writ• to 1111 111her detalllng. among other llllngs. Radar's a11empta at pauing a high 9ChOOI exam and • tudden cooling ol 11fect1on1 bet_, Frank and Hot ii • TIC TAC DOUGH MAQEl I LEHRER REPORT 61) NEWS (I) P.M. MAQAZJNE di) YOU Aat<ED FOR IT CHl IHSIOE THE Hf\. Hoel• Len Dawaon and Nick Buonlcontl pr._,t lllgllllgllla of crltlcal g-. analylla and pre- diction• of upcoming ~ 1 .. 1111'1 IM NFL/ 1:00 II Cl) MAGNUM, P.I. Higgins II kldn1pped despite the ll'lltallatlon ol a ,_ MCUrity l)'ltarn. (R) 0 8MOV!f • '.+ "The Harlem Glo- bCltrottera On GIHlgan's l1land" I 19811 Bob Denver. AIM Hale Jr The Harlem Globcltrottere· pi.na crath- tands on the tiny Pacllle Island wnare GHllgen and 111• friends are marooned (R) 0 MOVIE * * \.\ "Foeter An<I Laurie" ( 1975) Petry King, Oorlao Harewood. Two New York Ctty po1ic.ntn are tragl· cally killed !o.M lmbush 8 1!1 MORl<AHD MINDY Mr Blckley'a SOtll birthday party turns lt\lo an •xehenge of ~body'• MC(ett.(R) 8 MOVIE ** *"" "Our M1n Aini" ( 19116) James Coburn. Giia Got.n A Merel agent .. catted In to traclt down a group bent on oontrofflng Ille planet'1 wealher. • P.M. MAOAZIHE A bellind-the-aoen. look at TV's "Dellu"; a profile ol Senator Edward M. Kennedy; Joan Embery exptor .. animal mytl\I; Dr Wuco on hlecups euow • • * ·~ .. Rosemary' a Baby" ( 1968) Mia F1rrow, John c-vet•. A young woman la hMrlfled to dls- co-..r lllat ,,., hUaband llU promiNd their unborn clllld to a coven ol wltchff. • TAAINIHQ 0008 THE WOOOHOOM WAY "The Advanc.. Stand, Sit AndOown'' II> IHEAk PMVleN8 ' Roger Et>arl and Getlt Slakal review "~ Oear•I." "Only Whan I Laugh" and "Contlnental Dlvldt." (C)MOVIE CHANNEL LISTINGS f) KNXT ICBSI D KNBC INBCI 9 KTLA llnd l • KABC IABCI Cl~MB ICBSI 0 KHJ-TV llnd I e KcST IABCI • KTTV (lnd.-f e ICCOP·TV (Ind.) • KCET IPBS) e KOCE IPBSI • O On TV l Z TV H H00 C IC1nPmax1 • (WORI NY . N Y 11 (WTBSl l IESPN) $ g <t < Sllowt 1me) Spotlight ABC wins race for w~ekly ratings NEW YORK CAP> -ABC won the piime-time ratinp race for the second consecutive week, even though NBC scored heavily with programs [eatur· ing two ol the network's biggest -stars, figures from the.A.C. Nielsen Co. showed. Ten of the 20 highest-rated programs in the week endin1 Sept. 27 were on ABC, including a "Monday Nlcht Football" gam~ between Dallas and New Encland in lhe No. 2 positron. --• NBC, ln contrast, listed only three of the Top 20 •hows, but two of the three highest-rated. "Johnny Carson's 19th Anniversary Sbow" was No. 1 for the week, with a rating of 28, and a second NBC special, "Bob Hope's All-Star Comedy Look at the Fall Season," flntahed third. Nieben says tbe acore for Caraon's special means of all the nation'• TV-equipped homes, 28 percent AW It leU& part ot the procram. ABC'• ratina for tbe week wu lt.5 to tt.1 for Cll 11111 JA.1 for NBC. Tbe n«worb 1ay that .._ • • ..... .,. pri..,..tlme minute ~w1n1 Ult~, II.I perc• ot Liie country's bomea with ~ .... t...ttoABC . ...._ Of U. •.£llt::1·nud •bowl nre l.n nm. foUr ID -to U. &alreil llllbetl· r • . • * * * * .''Tiie Spirtl Of 81, Louie" (1es11 Jame1 st- a11. Murray Hemllton. In 1921. ttMwttt A. LJnd.. b«gl'I btComtt the '"' mM 10 fly none1op IOf'ON tM Atlantlc ac.-i to Par· II. ©)MOYIE * * "The F04Jftll Wlah" Rober1 Beltlet. John Mell- Ion. A lllher la told that It aon, Sean It going lo die and ttiel to ""61• the ... , couple OI monlhl .. fuHlll. ~=-ble.'G' * * ·~ "Somewhet• In Time" (UNO) CMat°"'* Reeve. JWI• Seymour. Ot>ettNd wlt11 Ille portrWt of a 19th-Century llcir .... a mod«n-day New York playwright u-llypnoail to travel back In time and • mee1 ,,., . ·PG· ct MOVIE * * * "The Hound Of The Baakanlllea" (195111 1'91• Cuahlng, Andre Morell. A mystarioua curM l\aUn .. Mell generation of • noOla Englllh flmlty. 1:30 8 1!1' IUT CW THE WOT A retired 9001\ghtw talt• a job ti a OOOk In Iha Square 09al Saloon. m AU IN THe FAMILY Edltll'I lllfortl to r9nl out Illa ~· Old houM rttult In ,_ 1'196ghl>ors '"'' the ldorea but Arc:Nt lbhora. • IHfAf( PMV1EW8 Roger Ebert tnd Gene Sllkal review "Mommle O..r .. t," "Only Whan I Laugh" and "Continental Divide.'' tr!) POfmWTI IN PASTU CR)MOVIE • * •;. "Where Tiie Buffalo Roam" ( 1IMIO) 8111 Murray, Petet Boyle Journallll Hunter S. Tllompeon uatt hit UnorthoOoJt. rep0t1lng t~IO-tome of Ille major polltlcel and IOClal _,II of Ille late 'toe and eerty '70.. 'R' 9:46 CI> 'T' '"°"1 IUIJECTI 9:008(1) ....... A young dc>cior thOwe romantic e'ltentlona lo Mary u lflt undergoea a mld-1119 crilia. (R) 8 111 THEW.NONI CW A.MENCA Proaperou1 In PNladal- ptlle, Roly marrlaa Rachel: M II folnad by hit Slater Deirdre. who. oonYlnced ol the dMth of O.llld. matr ... anottw man. (Par1 2) I MERY GNA'lf AEfl.ECTlOH8 OH IOOY IMAGERY A laat.paced Yldto oollage ••plor• the IOdal and lllalorlcal algnUlcano.. u ....... the -•tieyo .... ment1 of taahlon and body or!IM*ltllton. ID NA8tMU.1 MUleC GtAall: IHI Tlllla. Mary Lou Turner. 'Boxcer Wlllle, MundO Earwood. (%)MOYIE * • * "The Graat T- Dynlmlt• Oh-" ( 1918) Claudia Jannlngl, Jocelyn Jonee. Two lernale bank robbers outwit pOllce and rayaga '"' male~ with t>tazlng lhootouta, dynamite blull and outr• ~ dlagulttt. HO-THIE~ APf'l.E8 "Moving Ou1" o.c. ,_ 1ona111-and ldult .llzlld reaponall>llltlel wtien ... IM-llOme. I!) MAOC Of' OIL PAINTING ··Redwood Grove" (C)MOW * * '"' "Straight Time" (1978) Ouetln Hoffman. Gaty eu..y. Ari ex -con flllfll-wtlillOpo ...................... Min--~-... ........... , ... ... • "1"9 c:Ndrlft" t 1MOI ............. Oii ....... A etr•"fl rac11oeot111e ~ """' • .°"" °' IClllOc*NldrWI Into lftllf• deroua~wtltl .... Ill~'"' -·(I) ICNOTI LANDIN9 --lfley OOCIC)Well with an NI lrMllClgatlon ol IN Ill .. wcwtd, l6d end Oaty ..., .... ..., ..,. '"' ••™' '°"•TICATID G9fT8 On IN llllal nlQltl of t119 '9Ufllon. "" mlMlno genl ~ Mlltlng °" • -trontallOn '*-lliln, ... ,.... of .... dub and '"" ~.no .,..,.et• hlM ol lftl#dlr. (Part 3) 1~·c:= "Pat E\lltng: An American Oreern" Jim Utwer 1oo111 MtM~Oll Jamaican Immigra nt rlO'fded • "" i-1 hlgll ICfloot belk .. ball play« In ... country. • (ll)MCMI • • "Up Thll Acedemy" (1NO) Aon LtlClman. BM· tiara 81011. Tll• wer· ~ commandWlt of Weino.tg Mllllery Acec»- ""J II no matdl fot Ille ~tlfa .. _olled ttwa. 'R' Cl.lmAMI Johll 8Yl'W .,_ you llllngil ltrllflOI' ltlan ""'"· "'99' """ ..... Ind unlW tllen anything you'w --· 10: 111 CID MOYIE * * \4 "BNbell•" I IMO) Rober1 Redford, Yaphet Kotto. A~ warcMn unco-• wide· IC>fMd CC>fN9(1on wftarl ... tnt.,. Na 1-'Y Malgned prl1on po1lng u an Inmate. 'R' 10:a01 NIWI INDll 11 ICllNT ~ .... • QIQMNG ftAIMI: MA\L.~ .. THIE ,._ Thll documentaty Inter· Ylew9 lhOM who ,,.,,. mowa from an urban -lo tlle rvrlll MC11on ot Am«lca, whO voice tllelr 1-t ol Ille OfOWlll In pop. "'8tlon In nwlll areu. • THIE LAWMAQM Correapondantt Lind• Wenllelmer and Collie Rober1• join Paul Duka tor WI up-to-tile-minute tum- mary ol COngraulonal actlllttlet. (I) 1.N'F-4-TMON A comedian lloal and lour comic cont•tant• who compete agaln1t on• anot,,., .,, teetuted In thll 1.N'°91190!ed comedy game lhow. (l)MOYIE * * * "8-na Ult• Old Tlme1" (19801 Goldl• H.-i, ~ CllaM. A IOft·'-ted lawyer 11 torn ~ ,,., hoQeleaa U · llu1ban d ·I urn ad· ti an II robber and tw uptight ~· l'lueband whO 18 running lor Calllornla attomey~el. 'PG' 11:00•e•Cll111 a NIWI • IATUN)AY NIGHT au.ta: &tflaf Pf\llllpe, Altdy Kaufman. I NIWLYWID GAME THIE JC 0 C ilONI ....,tll.L. Benny porttep • quldl. Change artle1. • l**CAWTT "European Journallllt loot! Al America" a-at.: Henry Brandon. Nlcole Bernheim, GUia Bllu«. (P8t1 1 of 2)(R) a THIE TOM COTl\.I 8"0W "Lhltng With Cena«" A 5().~-old tennlnal can-'* patlel'lt ~ how ,,,. 18 conq to terme with ,,., 6-. Cl) THIE AT\NIT A llG LN'O'Off Ave of ...... ~ Y°'IOO c:omlca ... loOM with ll'lelf lunnlelC ,.,. In thle ~ ·~· **°" "The Out1lder" I 191111 8terllng Hayden. Cfalg Waaaon. A young ldMlle1 tr...,... to Hort'*'1 lf9IW\d to join the lriah Rt9Ubllc'I ltruggle for ~·R' 11:ao . Cl) QWCY Whan • joc:lttiy .. found trampled to death by • "°'"· Quincy tuaC>eCl• murder. eQITONIGHT ~ lloet: OeYld Stain- l>efg. Guaete: Beverly o· AnOek>. P9I« Cooll. e 111 MIC NIWI NlllHTlM I LaT8 MMRA DIAL THIE 000 COWL.a Fallx'I pet pan'Ot lak• a turn lor Ille -· and 09C8t ofl9r9 to handle IN burial llmll IQll't* .... .. TUBE TOPPERS KHJ e 8:00 -"Our Man Flint." Jam es C-Ol>urn stars as a super spy. KCOP e 8 :00 -"Rosemary's Baby." Mla Farrow stars u a mother who produc~ a real llttle devil. KCET 9 9:00 -"Reflections on Body Imagery." A presentation on fashion and body ornamentation. KOCE 9 10 :30 "The Lawmakers." An up-to-the-minute sum· mary of Congressional activities. e ONI IT8' llYONO "Tiie Stone Cutter" A • weird prediction o4 death 11 made by an old lomt1- 1tont °''"·· I KcaT NIWUIAT ~MIC NIWI (C)MOYIE * * • ··Couain Coualne" t 197& 1 "4ane etw1a11ne Bat. raufl, Victor l.anowl. Two Frendl ,.,.._ wllf\ mid- dle Cleta VlllUM IUIC)eci !half clMldren .,. having an attalf'. 'R' (ll)MDfOP'AL -Ml>flGHT- 12':00. MOVIE • * •;. "Cynara" (19321 Ronald Colman, Kay Fr.,._ ell A Bl1Ulh baffla1• -Illa ...... •batnc» .. • !Ima lo take up with a glrl from tile wortllng dell. •Ill VEGAt An ••·Miii America ~ the victim ot an extortion plot. (RI GMOYIE **\.\ "Hall On Frlaco Bay" (1955) Alan Ladd, Edward G. Roblnaon. A former policeman la ralealed from priaon and NII out to clNt hll name. • MOYIE * * 'When Tiie legend• Die" ( 1972) Richard Wld· mark, Frederic Forr•t. An orpnaned lndlan boy dlall· lualol'8d by the connMng wtllt• main whO Introduced him to rodeO llt• 11rlk .. oul on hie own to become a tot> rodeO etar. • ..aoeaa W..,.._ II aaked to rnu- qu«acle .. a prl90Mt at IM State Pnaon. ·~ANO OAQNRATIONI (ll)MOYIE ** "1941" (1919) John Belulhl, Toelllr~ Mllune Aft• tM bombing of'"-! Herbor, Southeln c.)iio,. nla dvllana and mMttaty perlOtwltl reed with unbri- dled panic IO -of I J~ •ti.ell In !half own l>adlyard. 'PG' Cl)MCME * * *IA "Lady Singe The Bluet" (1972) Olan• Roaa. Billy 0.. WllllMl'l1. Tiie alt•Mttly ...... ~ !(ag- lc C8t9" °' bk-. ~ Bllll• Holllday. wlloH addiction to drug1 lncreued .. ,,., popularlty did, It tr~. 12: 111 Cl) MOYIE * * * \.\ "Glorle" (1NO) Gena Rowland•. John Ad-. Ito former gun moll blc:olntt Ille protec· tor ol an orphaned g.)'MI. old Puerto RlcWl targ.ted by Ille uocMI WOl'ld tor the Information lie can._ ln a t1antr9d brielctta. 'PG' 12:a0 I a TOMOMOW ~OR.MY HEALTH lllUU "Whal MotlYet• Humwi 8aflevlor?'' CID .... THIE NF\. Hott• L9n o.waon and Nk:ll Buonlc:ontl pr-t lllgllllgllt• ol crltlcal g-. anal)'lla and pr-. dlctlona of upcoming c:on- ttetl In tM NFL 11::40 8 ~ THIE MINT Simon IMtM -hal been llnpar9onatlng Nm and ..u out to dieco'tar wtiy. 1:00. INDll BaNT ..-TWOMNIWS 1:108 MOVW *. * .. .._ Of CAl'dt" (1 ... , 0-ge Pec>Pwd. tllgel' st-An Anlerl· can In Perla llelpe to •iciioM • revotut k>nary 1:11 IF-=oup. 1:JO MOYIE * '-' "Forbidden HMven" ( 193t) Chatl.. Farrell. Oharlott• Hanry. An Am«· lean dancer trlea to main- tain dlecretlofl In her IOwl elfalr with I wall-llnown Btttllh polttlcal now-. .MOYIE * * "ONth Smllea On A Murderer" ( 1973) Ewa Aulln, KllUI Klnalll. A young man tarnpetS wftll the 1upernatural and attempts to reslor9 llfe 10 llledNd. (C)MOVIE * •. ,.. "Phan._,, .. (197111 MlchMI Baldwln, Angus Duncan. A 'YOUt1Q mao'a lnv .. llgellon Into Ills brot,,.,'1 death laadl Nm to a 1.,,or.ftlled ll'~d and a llnlet« mortldan. CID 00t ICM.Al MACMTHUft THIE D9WfT QENIML Hal Hottwooll nanatM tlllt documenlary exploring MacArthur'• powerful charact• that l>Olll mllda arid Otltroyed hll car-0 MOVIE * * * "ll'a My Turn" C 1980) Jiii Clayburgll, Mleh... Douglae. A l>ril- llwit Chicago math profea.. aor reattzea tlle problems In lier llYe-ln relatlonal\lpa wtian the find• • -IOwl wt\lle In N9w Y or1I lor tw lather's remarnaoe. 'R' 1:llOI NEWS 2:00 ENTIRT~ TONGHT • MOYIE **'" "A Lil• For A Ula" ( 1913) Jam" st-art. Tyne Daly. A 1tudent aul- cldt during a coll-a• atr-uperlmenl leads to the murd« ol one ol IM p1ychlatrl111 who had auo«v!Md tM experiment. ~~= *** "Ouo Vadll"•(1951) Rot>arl T a)'lor. Deborah KtN A Romao ar111ocra1 galna Nero'• dlalaYOr wtian lie , .... In IOwl with • Chf'la- '"" glf1. l:IO'l IDn'ONAl. ~ MOYIE * * "NUONI Buahwlck· .,. .. (1"8) l;loward K .... YYC>nne De Carlo. Confed. aral• •Pl•• become lnYONed with 1 man who It tupplylng QUN 10 ,_. 2-.IO i:'9 =-Cl) WHATS UP AMENCAI Take a lhor1 loolt at Iha 11..... ol midget• and dwllrle; ""61• • , .. , "'" with Iha world'I 1•1911 ,. bike; crlldc Ille mysterlel of a mil ~: ride the rtng• with nplrlng ~ 2:161 NIW9 8:00 MOYIE "Sin• ()I Jtnbel" (1954) Paulette GoddMd, George Nader. • MOYIE * * "Beaat Of Tiii OMd" ( 19701 John A1hlay, C....lt Yarnall. A mad doc1or 1bducll • Y°'IOO rep0t1er In C>f~ to •xl*I· menl on lier body. JOHN DARLING ( ' •ao.w •• "~" 11MOI '9111 MldlMI GI.._, 8- Hotlft. A •OUO ol ,,_... IV • petiente. ..,_.,, • pt\olllM, .,. 1'1111'-.d 9000fcllne IO tMlr lnclMcN-.. ._... .", .., .... l:IO YOVtl •• '"TN Gottlon'' (1116) CN ... oP'* L•, ,._.., C'**'f. A ~ INtl llncl .............. ~ ,_.,.. Ill wtllctl .... *'" Ume.,. 1!11-ned lo It-. (C)YOVtl * * * * "The 8plf1I Of SI. louM" ( 1ff11 JM*·--.,,, ~ey Hwnllton. In 1~1. ~ A. Uncl- Wgl'I ~ 1119 llrtt main 10 fly non.tot> 911<- the Atlentlc Ooeen to p.,. It Cl)YOVtl ••• 'A "The Higfl Ntd The MIOflty" I 1954 I John WeyM, Cl ... Tre\IOf. An • .,._ wltll 22 ~ 9«9 eboetd ~ Into csen- 99' en route 10 San Ff.,.. dloo. ._. MCMI * * "The Unflofy ,,_ .. I t9541 Peuiette Goddard, Wllllem 8~. Aft• a ~ ·~ trom 'hOmt, WI amr!MI~ la dlamayed 10 INm tll•I lie'• a !l'kne mw• ~. Frida•'• Daytl•~ /tlo.,le• -MORt•tG- 5:00 0 * "The Children" (1990) Martin Shaker, GU Roget• A strange radloac· tlYt cloud turns a group of ICllOOlclllldren into mur· derOUI tomblel with l>iack lingernells 'R' 5:06 CZ) * * • "Tiie Grc1at Te•- •• Dynamite CllH•" (111781 Cleudll Jennlngl. Jocelyn .10M1 Two ltn\lle t>Mtk rol>t>er• outwit potlce and r1vage Ille male popu- lace wllll blazing shoo-• touts. dynamite b&Uta and outrageous diagulMI e:oD CC) * * * •;. "The Prlaonar Ot Second A...enut" ( t9781 Jack Lemmon, Anne Ben· croll e..ed on Iha play by Nell S;mon An tdV«lilil'lg ••ecullve IONS l'lll job and hi• aanlly becaUM ol Iha r-.sion and Ille llec11c MW1llallan pee». 'PO' l(} * * * 'h "WIN Blood" (1980) Brad OourH. Amy Wright Ari emotionally delechtd preacher con- lends with a handful of ~. Mci'I of whom waoll to exploit him IOt a different reuon. 'PG' l :IO 0 * * • "Return 01 A Man Called Hortoa" ( 1978) Richard Harna. Gale Son· dargaard An Engllatt lord return• to America When he , .. ,.,, that Ille Indiana who Initialed him Into tllellr tribe have Iott the ir modest pre1erve to trllPi*'J 'PG' 1:00 CC) * * •;. "Tiie Prince And The Pauper" (1977) Marl( Lt1ter. Ollvw Reed. A prince and a l>CIOQar boy change dotlles and ldtntl· lltl In medieval England. 'PG' ~ * * "Chandler" (19711 Warren Oat••. L••ll• Caron An ••-security guard, now acting u pr1. v1t• eye, 11 Mt up tor a murw frame When he ace.pit WI llllgrlmtnl 10 , ~d a 1tatt'1 wttn.a. t:00 l\t * * "The Pilot" ( 1980) Ft1nk Conyers•. Cllll Roberlaon. A pllol turn• 10 drinking to ..cape the unlleppll'ICIN ot Illa mar. rlage and the lru1t11tlon ol hlaur-. ·po· 10:00 ., * * "Mr. H•x" ( UM8) ~ Boys, Lao Goroay. CC) * * * * "The Eml- ll'Wlll" ( 1972) Max von Sydow. Liv Ullmann. A Swedllh peaaant lamlty andura Iha hard11\191 01 lrontltr Ille wnen they ~ to Am.lea In the 19111 century. (I) * * * •;. "Tiie High And The Mlgtlly" ( 1954) John Wayne. Clair• Tr9Vor. Ari al,.,._ with 22 ~­oer• aboard runs Into dan· ger ali route to Sen Frmn- claco. 11:00 8 • • \.\ "The Graat lov- er" ( 1949) Bob Hope, Rhondl ~ •• "' "llUndy...,.. Alone" ( tU•I John WllYflt. ARiena Veiugllll • ** "Tflundarblrdt To The "--" (1Nt) Tfle pllOta o4 IM .,.otelly equlpl)N rOCllM elllpl ,,,_., M¥t Ille .._ of ,. MnOer• lr8Pt*f Oii • ~·r~·o· tla • * * '-' "Tiie lrothan Rico" I tt61) ,.lcllard Conte. 01atWM Foet• A FIOl'lda ~ llm1 for the top 1n Ille 111tmsm 10 pr ....... t • crime eyndl- ~· from mur•lng Illa bfot,_ • • '* ** "FOf9igll lntr10U9" ( ltHI "<>berl Mlteflum, ~ P1199. Alter e pr... aigerll'I ..althy l>ou.. d.... lie cMCldea to ln-t'Ottt IM mW1'1myetarlc>ut1)4111. Cl) * * * ,_. "WoodllOGll" I 1970) Oocumenlaty. Many of Ille top ~ gr°""' ol lht lite 'toe perlOfm at IM lamou1 rodt eoncart held In Bethel, ..... Yorll, In IHe 1:00(.C) *.*\.\"My Body- guard" ( 11179) Chrl1 M1kapeace, Adam Baldwln TM ,_ llld at a Chicago high I CllOOI """" ltlendl with 1119 Khoo! OUIC#t and loge411- er they •land up to Ille CN· .. G9"ll whlell had per- secuted ttiarn tio111 'PG' CS)** "Cllandlel" (1971) warren Oata1. L••ll• Cerol\. An ••·••curlly guard, now acting aa prl- v•I• eye, It Mt up for a murder Ir-wtlerl ha acc.pll an auignment 10 ~d •• , ..... wllntta. 2:00 Ill***'"' "BuffalO Biii And Tiie Indiana Of Sitting 8ull'I Hl1tory LMac>n" ( 111711) Paut NtwmWI, Burl L1ncaalet An aging lludl· '11.,, Buffalo Bill. Mtla 1111 legend• and tor• to wlde- t)'ed 1ourl811 at hit own Wiid _, ehow. 'PG' 1:00 (C) * * •;. ''The Prine. And Tiie Paupe<" ( 19771 Marti Lt1ter, Ollv.r ~ A prince and a beggar boy change clOll>tl and ldtntl· •-In medieval EnQland. 'PG' a: 111 Ci) • * •;. "JallllOuM Rod<" ( 1957) Elvtt Presley. Judy T yter A Y<>Un9 P"9- ~ IMtns to play tM gvl· ler. and alter hi• raleue. climb• to ttardom. 1::30 8 * • •;. .. Apartment For ~"I 1~) Winiam HOi- den, Jeenne Cra;n. A pro-'"'°' oH.,. hi• 1ttle to • student 1nd 1111 pregnant wile for housing. CS) • * • "Return From Witch Mountain" (111771 Bette Davia, Christopher Lee. Ito ~-mad an110- cra1 and Illa greedy lamale Cohort 111arnp1 to exploit the supernatural al>IH!les ol two dllldren lrom ouler epace for tllel< own evll purpoMS ·G· •:30 0 • • * "Return Oi A Man Cded Hortoa" I 19711) Richard Harrie. Gale Son· dergurd. An Engllall lord relutna to A"*'lce when he learnt lhal the Indians whO INtllled llom 11'110 thalf trlb• have lost tll•lr moda1t prtserv• 10 trappar1 'PG' &!GO CC) * * * •;. ''The Prl- Oi s.cond lto¥enUe" ( t978) JICll Lemmon. Anne Ben- croll. e..ed on tM play by Nell Simon. Ari adYarllslng •xecutlYe '-Na job and 1111 eanlly l>ecauM of Illa r-..lon and Iha llec11C Manhattan ~ 'PG' {Z) • * •;. "Starduat Mam· orlea" ( tlleO) Weooy Allen, Charlotta Rampllng. A auc- ceufut dirllcior •-a peraonal crlals aa lie tries to melta tome m1f0r decl· alont In l'lla 111• 'PG' ll:JO CID •• "Whit• Watflll Sam" Keith Ltr9en A mountain man 1r1,,... IM Nortllwell wltll Ills l!Ullly searehing tor Ille grnt white -•er rOUla IOUtll. 'G' CS) * * * "Bella Are Ring-ing" (1980) Judy Holllday, Dean Mar11n A thy and lmpre11lonabl• young ans-1ng ~operator ~ lnlatUllled with a charming ecriptwrlt• by ~strong & Batluk MY WAY-Chapter Six r-----~------------~~----~ All thrOU'1lout my adult 1ife., I~ atways tried to brush alter eVi mw ... ~ 13\.lt I haw to adrntt ttiae are times When l!ll rucah Stra1'ht ~k to wt>!"K. from lunch wit.h.OUt taltinf, time to btt$1l 1 JOHN BLAIR-~ BELUSHI & BROWN t:ONTINENTAL QIVID.E·~-.: -~ A UNIV~SAL l'ICT\Jltl . . .. ·. • ~ • • • • • • • ... • .. • • .. • • • • -a comic book s11 a k er. l'1 SHELLA ALLEE r-" ............... COLUMBIA, S.C. -Chrl1topher Reeve, better known to m any these days as Superman, hya coml,c books were forbidden hlm when he was rowJn1 up, an d he had little more than passing wu~ness or \he fictional hero that has made him star. Reeve sald his parents rorb1tde television in elr home and comic books "were something you tole on the bus OD the way to camp." When he got the part or the fantasy character n the movie "Superman," Reeve said he had to ead a lot or comic books. "Collectors from all over the world sent me omlc books," he said. "But that didn't do me ~ch good. I felt it was necessary to change the h'a racter for the '80s -lo blend the traditional tth a modern approach.·· Reeve. who has done a "Super man" sequel *BARGAIN MATINEES• Monday thru Saturday All Performances before 5:00 PM (Excepl Special Engagements 1nd Holidays) lA MIRADA MAU LA MIRADA WALK·IN TIC lll08T l'Utl ........ CA'l llUY .. ARTHUR" IN! ,, ................ I:~, ... ... --"NINE TO AVE" ""· ~' 2 M, 1-M, ,.,, A 8TAll 4 .. a.MO . AICI A lllOTICll. • , _,,_ lt'M. O:M. l'M Cfl'Qf "MIMMIE OEAREST" lf'GI "THE CANNONBALL RUN" ll'QI ti tt, J·U, I ... 9:11, 19:41 ,-.._.., tJ'll. 4:.M. I H ~ --..... na. ... ,. ti .. -KA""'IOfll POftD • iiM'W lWN IN i --- "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" I •••• o ,....~ • .iACK w.,.oc,. ll'GI .. SO A NE" 1111 " ... I ... k:JI. ,. ... I tt ... I •• 4 •••••• , •• LAKl:WOOO CENTER WALK·IN foev•rv 0 1 Cotidlewood 213/531·9580 .. , ,• '• 1• ··•••• ;·· "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" I ,.....,... '""ao• · c1un 10cMC>tO<. CNI ,._OOUIYsn..o "ONLY WHEN I LAUGH" 1•1 t ti, I H. t; ... f>'tl, te:• ''THE CANNON BALL RUN" !NI ............ "NINE TO AVE" Cl'GI a.,1::'9 "' LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WAll<·IN focully Al 0et Amo 213/63,·9211 .. VICTORr' '"' ..... ..-.- "EYE OP: THE NEEDLE" 1111 ... ,. LAG UN.A COW1WUOU'9 ,.,.. ,,._. ~--------"MEL BROOKS' HISTORY OF THE WORLD PART I" 1111 ' ............ . I "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" tl'Qf -···- ..... 0'-A\. • .MCK. ...... "SO A NE" 1111 n" 1 .... o •4&.•• 1•.u 'STRIPES" 1•1 U M ..... TARZAN, THE APE MAN ' 1•1 J ....... . SO. COAS;wALK·IN South Coos! H1woy ol l1oodwoy 494-1514 1'anc n -Miw. ...... , .. __ _ "BODY HEAr' (101 ..,...,... , ....... .. ... , ....... , ..... ,. ... ,.,._ .. 0 ... L •.MOC W.t.AOIN "SO FlNE" r•1 ..,...,,. , ... ... "''·.,.. , ..... ···--..... .. hln<.·c lh<.•11, '•"ti a third fil111.., l>t'llO! wnttc11 J111I 11 he fecli. 11 b ,1 KOO<i >(·1 lpl. ht• ""I ... t;11 m It "It'!. i111p0Ft11nt thut 1l lw ~111•1! lhut It l11 1•ak new grou11cl lhoit 11 ha-. ,, litlh 1)1 \\hat \'1111 ,., peel and "hut \-OU don I t'\f1•·1·1 lw '><11d Rt>cve \\ho \\Us 111 South l'.11ollna t.111in~ scene:-. for .111 1111c·oinln~ I'\' film Sl'rlt"• l11r ch1ldr~n . '111<1 lht• Super111;1n rnl<' has had .1 ph~nomen.il l•fft'<'I mt tu-. l'.Ut't'r "II µul nw on lhl· m.1p ' 111 -..uirl "ft 'p1l•kl•d up the pact• of '°' 1"111·1·1 :1hout 111 ' ... 11, If I hadn't played Supl·rm.1n I 11 ... 1111 lw l'fimb111~ 1111 Rroadw,1y <1111111rr lln•.nh' a; Des p1ll· lht• diarn<·tt•r '4 1'4>\\l•rlul 1111pa<·t on h b life. Het•v1• -..ml Ill' ll1w s not \lt•w II ..... tt mundah• 111 set nn t•,urnplt• 111 hi.. p1•1 '11 11 ti lift" for t111· you Oj(St('J·, \1 ho 11loh u h 1 m "Tht• \\111 Id 1:-. loo 111~ .1 pl.11·•· \'ou l"Jn 't .,, through lilt lil·ing a s\ 111(Jul, h1· -..11d -UA MOVIES Broa 9YO 40 EOWARDS filWPORT Newp{it1 il•· ,, • (J EDWARDS HUN II HG TON l WIN HuOMQIM • 1' EDWARDS VllJO TWiii M1!1Sti>tl v.1 ~~ EDWARDS CINt MA WE ST we.,tm" 11 • 11 CINEDOME O<aoQP oJ~ ...,.,<. Hl·WAY 39 DRIVE Ill Wes1m111\1r1 • ,,q • MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE I'" ,,,, ... fi=i1 A l A ~,.,. .... IPGJ ~ .. ~-. • If t • ,_,. ' I- . ~. ALL ~: 11t ~ Alf H 1 1~ 10·1 r1,r Hi[ ~f'.Al '.J' II V f (()f'lf L:f ' ' • ONt-Y MtE'-I I "UOHI RI ti \)0 B :?O 10 35 1.tHt V WHEN I LAUGH IRI I~""' I • Q!_d T '" ,(PG I "ONeill SO J INE RI & 11 1 ., s~ndli>\ tRI le:. l'ON;;~:= DIVIDE !PG) & 1111 JERK tRI l ~:r.g~~ I t <>HOON IRl 8-tm'L-IRI r=-. ~ I • \On Ford RAIDERS Of 11-tE l OS'f ARK (PGI E'c""" From Ah:dtru(PGI ~--====:::i I U II Murrd~ m STRIPE$ lR) Al1THUR lPGI URIVE \NS OPEN I .JO N GHTLV • \, Undeior tlFREECJnlinlHotad Or.u ~1 Wor "'7 rto bcrfr lli • \ 11•\ N it iun&l l .... I It It It l\ t 11 Ir t.1.111 \ ., ',. I• lmr:1111aa1111llll~Em:jm13~I !~J6~' .l:1C11'Jll!lll!lllll!l!flll!!l!~aclo...lll~.9. .... fll!.~"°!fl ....... ~"-~·~~M~-ca:::.IE.l. / ANAHE•M ANAHEIM DRIVE·IN ''••..,OY 91 al lemon St 179·9850 -·--'°-___ ,._ "PRIVATE LESSONS" 1•1 ~"ENDLESS LOVE" .., C1Nt fl SOOllO BUENA PAl1K BUENA PARK DRIVE-IN unc:o111 Av• west ot ~noh 821·4070 ~OUNIAIN FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE· IN tson D•ego Jrwy ot l•oo~llursl (So) \ 962·2411 W!SIMtNSTEll "CARBON COPY" fl'OI PWa .. TAKE THIS JOB AND SttOVE IT" IPCll CINI I sou~o _..MT 4'U.O.W. ow-. - 1-H 8T"CYUM "KRAMER va. KRAMER" r- PWa "THE ELECTRIC HORSEMAN" I CINl ,, :.UUNll .IO .. K w • AICI .._ • .., ... "CONTINENTAL DIVIDE" ll'GI l"\.ua "THE JERK" 1•1 , .. .., fll'UM ..,., CAN euy "ARTHUR" fl'QI l'l.U9 "STRIPES" 1•1 Cl"I JI Wll"O HI-WAY 39 DRIVE-IN ho<n &••O So u• GJtotn Gfo.-t f•t""'O" "" ... ____ _ "SO FINE" II'> l'W9 "BLAZING SADDLES" (II) -I "AM AMERICAN WEREWOLF IN LONDON" 1111 Nia "HELL NIGHT" "'' CIN~ F1 SOUND :1Nl Fl SOUND -+----.;._;__...;.;,..;;_;_ ___ -t-__ ..... , .... ,,...Of~-El'·~~ A All • • A ... "°,·• AICI A _,,,_ -.0 -TO 'fOU "MOMMIE OEAREST" CNI "PRIVATE LESSONS" 1111 PWa -"LITTLE DARLINGS" 1111 ' "ENDLHS LOVE" ..,, CIH( " SO\lllO • l.'INt •I M llD • lA H-"811-" LA HABRA DRIVE IN l"'Off ... ot"" o -· ew. 6 KooltOf INC 171-1162 81JI NA PAio LINCO LN ORIVE·IN ltncoln A•• Well ol Knoll 121·4070 ~~ 'Jlo'.A.t•'·• -~ •M• AllD-MllfT-a "CAAION COPY" ll'GI -'TAKE THIS JOB AND SHOVE IT" ll'GI A ITAll • l.l•NO ... AMIA •TICA .. , "MOMMll D!AAHT" ll'lt 1'\119 "LITTLI DA"LINGS" 1111 ORAN GE DRIVE IN So••o A•o Frwy • SIDie C otlege 551·7022 . ' -.... ITO"Y OF THE ~LO PA"1' I" 111 •• .... • .... • • "• "'• A • WARNER DRIVE IN ... MERYL STREEP JEREMY IRONS 4 KARF.L REISZ 111J1 "'llf E ru.NCH UWl'f..NAWS WOMM • LEO McKERN HAROUHINTER JOH~ tOWLf.S Wl OAVlS LEON CWRf. MRf I. RHSl R -":'': .. ~ -· r"'°n1rw.,11Mwo 11o•'KW11' -•• -~-. umredAlttsls .... • -·• 111tHo0\,Lt~ \ltl1t\1t. \1 1110,f«!.llll 4\1 ... \,'\fTll \ STARTS TOMORROW NEWPORT BEACH Newport (714) 644 0160' ORANGE C1n~o1.11e 634 255:1 .. • ' . l ffhursday. OctohQr 1, 19ij1 ( ----~~~:'}i+~~--~ P0~8i ~ a nd the 70th Anniversary of Long Beach ,,. .. L.t fl \1'1!.F ~J N <i •• ~ ,\: 1 J ( .n u to ~ pm J ·s t· lU· E E. I I RE F.\~HL\ ,\ D o\Y AT T H E PORT IS , WORTH \ l.J FI:TJ ME OF MEMORIES PORTEXPO '81 . • I' II \ h11llll'>llill1111l fl111l.f 111g ' 11 1 rli .. , Pl.11.1 Ill 1~1· I h ( \ 'lllHIJ I I II 111.I II I 111lor111.il 10011 tll ,t ~I 00-l I t'\I. -I 10 ~PoRT 11111,0F \lll•JLDNG ~BEACH ' :';:. . .. \ 4 3 Orange Co11t DAIL. V PILOTf1"hurad1y, October 1, 1981 • Stoppard's 'Night aiid Day' opens at Saddleback College ay ?f TITUS ' No fewer than 10 other producUona continue •• ,.....,. thtlr respedlve ena1a1ement.a on Oran1e Coast .. Ude of local theater openln11 beains to re· sta1ea thl1 week, with none clo1ln1 over the ced~ thb w k with only one new production arriv· weekend. They are; ln1. Tom Stoppard's "Nl1ht and Day" at Sad· -"All, WUderae11" at South Coast Repertory, Clleback Colle1e. 655 Town Center Drlve, Coeta Mesa C9S7·.033>, : ~t you presume lt haa somelhln1 to do with playln1 nJ1hUy except Mondays at 8 p.m. with Colt rter, be advised that the play focuse11 on weekend matlnees at 2:30, through Oct. 18. journ lstlc lnte1rlty In a fictitlowi African re· "Brt1adooa" at ~bastlan's West Dinner publlc. ll's described as a "hard·hlttin1. explicit Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente C 492·99~> jlrama recommended for on stage niJhlly except Mondays al varying cur· ,nature audiences." ---------taln times through Nov. 8. Performances will llJlllllllll -"Tbe Marrta1e Go Road" at the Harlequin be liven Fridays and Dinner Playhouse, 3~3 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Saturdays at 8 p.m. and _________ Ana (979-5511 ), running nl&htly except Mondays at Sund&)'S at 3 p.m. for two varyinl(curtain times unlil Nov. 15. weeketids. closing Oct. 11, in the main theater on -"Guys and Dolls" at the Huntington Beach the Mission Viejo s ampus. Call 831-4656 or 495.2790 Playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue, Hun· _fo_r~t'"~e_t_i_nf...;.o_r_m_a...;.tl...;.o..;..;n..;... ----·--·-----_,-tington Beach (847·4465), "continuing Fridqs and Saturdays at 8:80 tbrou1h Oct. 17. -41'1'1M Great Amertcaa Backlta1e lluslcal" at the Newport Theater Art.I Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach C67S.3143>. playing Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m ., Sundays al 2 p.m. tbr..ough Oct. 18. "Same Ttme, Next Year" at the Laauna Moulton Playhouse, 606 Lagu~ Canyon Road, Laguna Beach (494·0743 ), on -slage Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8 p. m. (and Oct. 11 at 2: 30 ) until Oct. 17. "Cheaters" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, on the Orange County Fairgrounds (754·5159), running Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 until Oct. 10. -"Middle of the Night" al the Westminster Commwtlty Theater, 7272 Maple St., Westminster (995·4113>. continuing Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Oct. 10. -"A Turn tor tbe N.arM" by the Ml11lon Vlt· jo Playbouae at the San Clemente Communlty Theater, 202 Ave. Cabrlllo, San Clemente <880·9262 Qr 492-0465>, playlna Thursdays throuih Saturd,y1 1tl 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. until Oct. 17. -"Tbe Women" by Showcase Production~ •l the Westminster Auditorium, 7571 Westmlnsttl\ Ave .. Westminster <894·67861, on staae Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 through Oct. 10 with a 3:30 matinee Oct. 11. * BACKSTAGE The Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse is conducting a beginners' dance workshop for actors and singers hoping lo t'\One their talents for future musicals ... the classes are held from 7:30 to 9:30 each Monday, w1tn registration information available at 7S4·5159 ... 30 gallon trash cans ··~··I plenty of ,... to ...... Auatproof atorege shed• with 45" door end locking handle. lncludn floor end ahelf. Chooee from White or Ivory with Avocado, Woodgrain or Gold. ...,.,..., ._ mTMUTim ~ S'aJ' ....••..• z•• ••air ........ Ml.• 6'11' ......... Zll .. t'all' ........ 408 .. S'alt' ........ Ill.II ll'all' ....... at.• 8" Wiii mount llltdlen tlUCll 8" wellmount kitchen f1ucet with 7" to 9" female ad)uatment from Price Pfl1ter. #827-280. Reg. 33.88 Wei .. lbootl Wiii All-purpoee IOlderlng kit #Ith flnget1Jp MleetlOn of high or low output. eom.. pect, belanoed pt1tol grip M200. 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Reg. 4.98 ..... ......... ... dlllf-.. --- Deodorize your room• end ruga with Atrwlck Carpet Freah. Simple to uae with your v1cuum. 14 oz. Reg. 2.89 I •@• F'LUIOMAS TCR. INC spred Ille satin F1moua latex flat wall paJnt from Glldden. Beeutlful flit finish acruba clean, ataya color feat. E11y water clean-up. Reg. 11.99 I l to Illy In hot I w111t' J_ 30 -gillon water hHiu wUb . .,..,,~"""' : I eavtng a.mpereture ahut-ofl. 114'' • • .. D1ilyPllat THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1981 BUSINESS C7 H ere's an athlete who knows where the library is. CS . Costa Mesa'a John Gibbs races across a lake in his hydroplane boat in which he won t~e 5-liter National Champio~.:ihips recently. This guy gets his kicks fron1 speed . --He's Costa Mesa's John Gibbs and his biggest thrill i s racing boats at ov er 100 mph Bell hack • 1n town for now Ker win Bell is back in town to- day and as much as he misses hi s family and friends in Hunt- ington Beach. he'd probably just as soon be back in Lawrence, Kansas. Bell. the former standout run· ning back at Edison High, had a fi ne fresh ma n year as t he University or Kansas' leadin g running back last year . lie gained 1.114 yards and was nam ed to the Big Eight a ll· conference' team He also was voted the con f erence 's Newcomer-of-the · Year. Bell continued that pace in the first two games of this season, gaining 188 yards in two games to help the Jayhawks to a 2·0 r(•Cord. By EDZINTEL 0(-o.lly ...... ''-" Litl'r Hydro World Championships at Davton. Ohio last month. llis average enough, l don't even think about being Marion Beaver. a former world hurt or killed ... he says "I'll be thrown c hampion hydroplane driver. was from B UT EIGHT minutes into last week's game agains t Kentucky, Bell twisted his knee while run- nmg with the ball and just like that. it was goodbye Bell. His wife doesn't exactly approve of his spare time habit but then if you kn ew a n d li ke d John Gibbs, you wouldn't either was slightly less 103 m ph. Gibbs has difficulty explaining the sens ations that run t hrough his body during the course or a rive-mile race. Everything is going by so fast. he says. that 1t seems like one big blur. out someday. but hopefully, I'll be Parker and 'provided Gibb!-. the 1n - smart enough to survive." flucncc needed to s tay on top of the Team doctors diagnosed the injury as a slight tear in the medial collateral ligaments or Bell's knee. He is due to be operated on early next week in Los Angeles by Dr Clarence Shields. the Ra ms ' orthopedic doctor. Bell is definitely lost for the season. Thus far, Gibbs has been plenty grueling world of hydroplane racing s mart He's never been seriously m-Gibbs' tale nt prompted the:OMC JUred. although he's been thrown -from Corporation <owne r of Johnson and Gibbs.·~. of Costa Mesa, has this thing for speed. Ile craves it. He also has a certain reverence for boats: ··it keeps you on your toes." Gibbs JOkangly says Then. in a more serious tone. he adds. "Yes. it's dangerous. I lost a very good friend in a race re· c·ently " ,his boat on several <it•casions. Evinrude outboard motorsJ to hire him T hey've been his life since he was a youngster, growing up along the shores or the Colorado River. Gibbs began his racing at the age of as a fa ctory driver and te~t pilot for 13. Mils fi rst taste of compet1t1on w:i:. m their racing program s m all stock-engine outboards that It allowed Gibbs to t ravel the r ace So naturally, Gibbs is into fast boats . ranged in length from 12· 15 feet. circuit across the country and provided From there. he graduated to the 280 him invaluable kno\.\ledge in hull and How fast does Gibbs think fast is'> How about 140 mph? That would seeming!)• put a damper on the outlook of anyone·s life But G 1 bbs marches on. Class outboard hydroplanes Growing propeller development up m Parker. Ariz., Gibbs had access to T oday , Gibbs 1s ap p lying t he Bell 1s expected to be granted a no t-her year of e ligibi lity because he was injured in the third game. The decision rests with representatives or the Big 8. Once t bey approve it. the NCAA wi ll have to approve it - and probably will That's the kind of s peed Gibbs at- t ained in settin~ a course record at the 5 "I've been do1n.R it 1 racing l long one of the busiest boat racing areas in knowledge in his own propeller com- the world. _<See MESA's, Page CJ) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~__;~~:....:..::..:._~~~~~~ .,.. Reese is the f ungo king · -An~el coach, now 75 , says he won 't retire By WILL GRIMSLEY A~Sjleci.IC.01&"1 •1 I There's no category m the baseball rec- ord books for such items as t he most fun goes hit in a season or consecutive years of putting on a uniform. But. if there were, Jimmie Reese would hold both marks - carved in s tone. undisputed and unmatcha- ble. "l guess I've hit more than 2 million fungoes in my time," says the tall , silver- haH-ed coach of the Angels "It's hard for me to remember a time that I didn't have to rush to t he ball park." Reese celebrates his 76th birthday today. He will observe it as he has for the last 64 years, with a bat in his hand. There's not a man alive who has had a longer. unbroken association with the game . "Me, retire'!" he repeated a question over. the telephone from Chicago, where the Angels closed their series with the White Sox before moving on to Texas for the season windup. "Guess they'll have to tear this Wliform off me." No one is so inclined. Reese, once a Yankee roommate of Babe Ruth, has becom e an institution. one or the most respected and admired men in t he sport a lthough relatively unknown outside its en - virons. Certainly, Lou Gehrig's 2,130 consecutive games a nd J oe Di Maggio's 56-game hitting stre ak are towering deeds that may never be dupli cated, but for s heer durability a nd faithfulness to a game Reese's career is on a tier by itself. Los An~eles-born, Reese started as a bat boy for the old Angels in the Pacific Coast League when he was 11 years old. There hasn't been a break since. He lugged bats for six years. broke in as an infielder with Oakland of the PCL. did a brief stint m the majors with the Yankees • and St. Louis Card inals, then took root as a minor league player and coach with LA, San Diego, Seattle, Hawaii and Portland before returning to the majors as an Angels coach 10 years ago. His specialty is hitting fungoes. He may be the greatest fungo hitter who ever lived. "He is so good at hilling fungoes," says Tom Seeber g, director of public relations for COMMENTARY the Angels, ··that he has even hit fungoes to the batters as a batting practice pitcher.'' ·'Not any more," says Reese. "Seven or e ight years ago, I was hilting balls to Joe Gordon in the cage and he almost took off one of my ears. You can't have a screen fo r pro- tection if you're delivering the ball with a bat. So I vowed, 'No more.'" A ramrod-straight six-footer. Jimm ie is always one of the first at the park and one of the last to leave. He makes all the road trips and participates in all of the Angels' outside activities. He is more than an orname nt. "I keep active and take 80 vitamins a day. 40 at breakfast and 40 at supper," he says. "For a hobby, I make picture frames. l don't sell them. I give t hem to my friends. It keeps me out of the saloons." I Reese got a good tas te of saloons when he was a rookie breaking in with the Yankees in 1930, a roommate of the Babe. "Sure. most of what you read about the Babe is true," he says. "He wasn 't a hell- raiser but he had a full social life. He was a popular idol and had many friends. A fine person, very generous He would dole out $200 and s:JOO without batting an eyelash and the n qui bble over losing 10 cents at the pool table or $1.25 playing bridge." For a ll hi s baseball longevity, Reese <See REESE, Page CJ) The Angels· J1mm1e Reese celebrated 111s 76th birthday todat; Kansas, with Bell 's replace- m e nt . s opho m o r e Garfield• Taylor rushing for 135 yards and two touchdowns, went on to de· feat Kentuc ky, 21·16 . T he J ayhawks are now 3-0. their best st art since 1976 when .they won their first four games. KANSAS HOST S Ark ansas St a t e Saturday a nd though Taylor gave an indication last week that he could be an able replacement for Be l I. head coach Don Fambrough 1s con· cerned. ··To lose a ny player 1s a tremendous blow," ·F ambrough said . "Unfortunately, it"s a part of football. I wish it wasn't bu&. that 's the way it is. We'll just have to overcome Ke rwin's loss ··At the half <last week I. I thought the heart had been cut out of our footba ll tea m . In the s ho rt time Ke r wi n had been here, he'd become our big-play ma n -one coaches and players looked to. Now it means all of us will have to work twice as hard to ma ke up for his loss." Sop fio m o r e qu a rterback F rank Seurer, a teammate or Bell 's a t Edison where together, they helped the Charn rs to a CIF Bi~ 5 title in 1979, s aid that Bell 's inj ury won't mean the end for the J a~ha s. ''Early were hanging -our heads an wondering-what the h eck we were goin g to do w ithout him," he said. "But a fter Garfield (Taylor> made some good runs. we reafized we could make it without Kerwin. ~ ··1 hale lo see him gone for the season but it happe n ed and we've got to make do with what we have." l n compa ring Bell and his <See BELL, Page t:2l Royals take a big first step to World Series H e llye r gets CIF • • pos1t1on Hellyer Karen Hellyer , the hig TYSuccessfut wom en's athletic director and field hockey coa ch at University High School. has been named an administrative asslstant in the CIF Southern Section office and will assume her new duties Monday. Hellyer has directed the University pro· gram lo a top spot in the Sea View League as well as CIF competition. The 'Jrojan field hockey Ceam. uncte1' her guldan<f~. has been a perennial CIF contender and last year won the CIF championship. · The girls' cross country progn m has been among the best in the CIF and other sports including volleyball, basketball and softball, have grown under her guidance. Hellyer Is taking over the position vacat- ed by Margaret Davis who moved to the st dte CIF office recently. "I'm real excited about it and I reel it's a great opportunity for me," said Hellyer. A strong advocate of field hockey on the high school le vel, she was among the leaders to keep lbe sport on the a1eoda when soccer was first propo1ed and later •dded to the calendar. ' Cincinnati wins a 'must game' to pull within a half-game of Houston in NL West From AP d1spatcbes The Kansas City Royals, who have clinched a pl ayoff spot with a 48-51 overal1"-record. aren't in a celebrat- ing mOOd yet. After all, they've been in the playoffs five times in the last six years and have won everything ex- cept a World Series, so the idea of a pl ayofC with Oakland for the American League We.s.t. c ha m - pionship doesn't stir their emotions. "No champagne yet," said George Brett in the subdued Royals locker room after-they beat 'lhe M1nnesota Twins +2 Wednesday t o assure the playoff bl!rth. ''The champagne's still on ice. After we get to the <AL) cha mpionship game, maybe some then. Then some more for the World • Serles." Kansas City could sttll lose the second·half title to Oakland, but the Royals can finish io no worse than second place behind th-e A's, the rlrst· hair wiM ers. Kansas City now has a l "11-game lead. The Royals, despite their dismal 20·30 record in th'e first half, have re- d eemed thems elves with a 28·21 mark since play resumed after the strlke. ''Everythlna is Startin• to click ror us." a1d Larry Gura, w,ho pitched a ·~ four-hitter to extend Kansas City's winning streak to four games. ·'The hilling is coming around and t he pitching has been solid the whole time." In other AL games. Mtlwaukee bombed Boston 10·5 to move Into a., vi rtuaJ tie for first place with Detroit in the East, Oakland shut out Toronto 3-0, and Texas tripped Seattle 3-1. New Yo rk -C l eve l a nd an d Baltimore-Detroit were rained out, but only the Orioles-Tigers game was rescheduled -for today . !n the Nationa l Lea~ue.' bard- charging Cincinnati moved lo within a half.game of Houston by beating the Astros 5-2 in a game that took o /1 a do-or -die atmosphere for the Reds. Elsewhere, Montreal regained first place in the E ast with a 3-2 win at · Pittsburg._. wblle St. Louis was los- ing 8-5 to Phila<telphia . "This was a ·must ' ballgame for us ," said Reds third baseman Ray ·Knight, who doubled and scored one run in Cincinnati's come·from·beh1nd victory. "It's like <Manager> John Mc Namara said. tonight was our most import.ant game of the season. "Now tomorrow becomes the most Important game of the season. It's rlcht there ln front of us. We've got. lo go out there and get them." • r The Reds, who have won 13 of their last 16 games to climb back into con· tention. broke a l ·l tie with two runs in each of the sixth and seventh in- nings for Mario Soto. 11 ·9, who went eight innings for his third con- secutive victqry - Secon d baseman R on Ocster scored the go-ahead run in the sixth and batted in a nother in the seventh. as rive Reds players figured in the ~coring. . Base aDr aces ~la 1Ccnw 1Clty Oelil9ftd Al.WHI W L Pct. oe 1' ,, S71 U JI .SU 1111 KANSAS CITY UI -Awey 11): Ocl. I 121, Glcvclend ._ Ul: Oct. 1, J. •. OMllllM. OAKLAND CJI -Awer J Oct. t, J, •.IC-• City. Al.b• w I. l'Ct. .. ,. 10 .• " ti ,. ,, ,, »I 1111 0 1n •o1T 1•> -Awey llh Oct. t, a, 4, MllWIW•. HOIM {II: Qct I, ... ltim- Mll.WAUl(llll Ill -"-()I! Olt t, >. 41 Octrtlt. 801TON (J) -A•o Ul: Oet. 1. a. 4, c; ...... ...-. "It was a game in which every· body contributed.'' s aid Reds out· fi elder Dave Collins. "We've been doi ng that for some t ime now. I think that's why we m ade-our move "Both or us <the Reds and Astros~"' ' ' knew this was a big game. It wasn'\ like the seventh game of the World Series, bl.It 1t was an important game for us." W L PU ea Houston J I 11 .m ClndftNill IO II .W Ill S... ,.,lllKIKO '1 21 '.f61 M HOUSTON 141 -Awer W : Ocl. I, Cll\c"-11; Oct, t. J, 4, I.OJ A1191i.1. CINCINNATI 141-H-141: Oct. 1.-; Oct. t, J, •• ··-· SAN """"CISCO w -A••r (0: on. I, ""•"'•I 14ofnc m: Oct. t. a,•. SM D"91· NI.Ile .. W L Plrt. ea MoflllWI 17 tt ,a I "" ...... .. tt ... ~ ll•f'flll..._• ta U Art M ....v.. , ....... 4111 •T. &.OUll 141 -Aw•y (41: Oct. 1, P'tlt ........ ; OU 1.1, .. Plllllu• MONT•b&.. 4') .-Awey f'11 OCI. t, ,,_. '""'9111 on. a. a. .......... l'>itl&.AH&.PMIA C•I .o. ._.. ltt: Olt. 1, M. U.; Oct.t. a. • CNca9I. • .... ~~ '~ -...... (4)t on. '· 09allt: Oct. 9;'1. .......... ' ~---------------~----------~---.. ......-.. .. -..,.;.----------~~-o_r_a_no_e __ c_oastOAILYPILOT/T~h~-ur_s_d_a~y._o_c_t_o_b_r ___ ,,_98_1 ________ .._. ______________________________________ , i\.i11gfl''s pact details rnys tery to Celtics Twtns can't overcome Hurdle Cllnt llurdh.· hit a l.lt•t '"'" t• t"' 11 run homer and •~arr) (1UU Jllll'hcd I four hitter u~ Kansas Cil.v clincht:d ,, s pot In tht> Amertt'Url l.cus:u1• W1•\t m101 pl11~11rr "1th u ~ 2 ''1ctun 11v1•1 \111tr1•'"''t.1 Wt:dnesdu~ IJ urdl(• ~ homer 1 J1111• 111 the fo111 th lnnlnl( off F.-rnando Arro, o &incl .. na11111•1I ;1 :.! <! tie while: Gura. 11 7. \hi., toul'ltl·d up ru1 .1 I\\" run homt•r t;y Pt•tt' M•ckaoln m 1 ht· .,.,,·011d I h• .tllov.ed 0111\ tY.11 .111'-'I•·~ Jfh·r thut , I 11 ht t lnul tunt'UIJ tx•f11r1• lh1• pl 1),>frh 0 a I.. I '* n d ~ '1 1 k 1· '\ o r rt" to~ .. erl ,1 thn·1· h1llt•r J :- Oukland won tl" fin.ii r1•,; ulur M'a.,1111 11111111· J.!JflH'. 3 O ov,•r Toronto ltoh l'tcdolo l 'rom \I• dlspatch~s hit a h«1d11(f h1Hnt· run in tltt "\EW YORK Boston Celtics • > th1nJ 1011111~ .111d the ,\ ., l'11·,11lt·11t Hed Auerbach testified addt•tl tw11 llJttl t' 111 1h1• f11u rth \\ 1•dm1Ml.1~ he had no knowledge of lfurclltt ('harli1• llou.:h pt1·~ '"' 11p "' rntt-rcsl in Dunny Alnge's no· his rourth l'<mst•rutiH· , 1cto1 ~ .is l 1•x.1i. lldt•,1tt·c1 l1."l1.i·t ball r<'-,tnct1on in his contract when he Seattle. J 1 Rohin Vuunt h1sht•tl four l11b .11111 "' 1fl1·tl him last June 9. scored three time-. u11tl Cecil C'oopN l.11111 k1·d 111 ,\111•rhat'h was the first witness called to lhe three runs to lhH't' lhl' H1 t'\\l'r" ~I ti" 1ukt·t· ... 1.ind an the bitter battle between the Celtics trails Detroit tw JUSl 1 h n·1.· l)CH'1·11t u~t· po111i.. .11111 hust•ball's Toronto Blue Jays. Ainge, 22, is Milwaukee took ad\ Jnta~l of 1 h1• I 1i.:1·1 ~ attempting to get out of the rainout anti moved mto a uc fur r, .. ,, ,, 11h three· year coptract he signed Detroit by nolchin~ a 10 5 vtc·tor) o\ "' 1111• t.111 with the Blue Jays last Sep--·-------------tern ber. whic h included a -.____,,,. $300,000 addendum prohibit- ing him from playing pro- ress iona I or recreational basketball. I n hi s t es tim o n y , J\ uerbach acknowledged re- 1·e1pt of a Fe bruary letter l11 11h111h sent to the 23 National 11 ,1,., 1h.lll A'isoc1at1on teams by the Blue Jays, '' 111·t. 111-.tru<'led them they would face a legal t 1 hi 1r tht•\' drafted Ainge \m·rh~l'h '\aid he didn't pay much attention 11 1111· ll'llt·r "We were busy then," he said. \' 1· \\1'rt• tn mg to win ... \ut•1 hal'h told the court he spoke with Ainge '"' t ''o on·as1ons before the NBA draft and \ 111i.:•· mforrm·d him he was natte red the Celtics ,, 1 11• 1ntl•n•stl'd in has services but that he was t111dt·1 l'linln.1 <·t to the Blue Jays. \ 111gl' thl'n contacted the Celtics after the t ,1ft lt'lltng them he'd had a change of heart 11 f \I ,.., now interested in playing basketball. \1111.:1 daim.., the Blue J ays' president. Pe ter II.I\ .1-.1 H·rhally freed him from his CQntract d11 111~' .1 Jurw meC'ting. Gll,rncJ ler heading'for San Diego l h1· '\t•" Orleans Saints traded [i] '' 1il1 n•n•l\'t'r Wes Chandler, the c • 11111 d pl.1H'r taken in the.1978 Na· 11 111 ·it Foot hall League draft, to San Diego Wed· Ill d.t\ Ill f('IUrn ror two high draft choices and , 1111 ht r "1<lt• rc('e1ver , Saints ' Coach Bum l'hi U11'' ... 11d Chandler was the third New • 11 I•· ""' J'ILI) l'I' s hipped off in the last two days, I' h 1II1 po., r ul light e nd Rich Caster and cor· 1 • t..11 h. Ril'k) Ray Tuesday . . Running t• ,. i.. ltuh Carpenter agreed to report to the New , •• t.: 1;1 .111ts t·nding speculation he would end 1 p1 , 1 <il'l'l'r Carpenter. traded Tuesday by ' , 111 ll 11,..... promised Giants' Coach Ray I'• l.111, lat· "ould report .. Lyle Bla<.'kwood '' H 1u tl•rms "'1th Mia mi Lyle is the older ,, thl· Dolphins· starting stronJi safety 1·1111 Bl.1(·1.wood. Quote of the day Coa<·h ('harlry p,..11 on Fl11111l.1 ... 2•1 7 11,.., lo M1ss1ss1µp1 SI.ii• 111 \\hll h tlw t:,11nr.; com m1tt1•cl "'' IUI llll\'l'I'' 1' \I I\ I h111 , •I roach clrcam., <ihout 111 1 hor 1111 <111•,1111 .,,. night man· ha1J1wn1•tl out t lwr 1· Soto hurls Reds near top of West Mario Soto '>t'a1l1·n·d li\1• hit' ~ lhrough'e1ghl innings, I h1•11 ~:111 1 t•lit'f help from Tom llumt• as ('1111·11111.1t 1 defeated llouston \h•dn1•s1l.I\ ~ :! to move y,1th1n J h<ilf g;rnw ut lit.-\,tro., 111 1111• N a t ion ;i l L. ea g 11t• W 1 ·' l f"f'i1 i ~ Kt' ~ 1111I11 " slammed hi~ fourth horner ol th1 ,,. 1 1111 111 •II•· third mnang and Ct•,ar < t•dt>no l1·cl oil !111 seventh with his fourth hon11·r hut th.it ",(., .ill tht.: \,1111., n1uld n1.111.1i , 11fl Soto Gt•ot).!t' foo .. tc•r h1l .1 .1111• JIH 111 lh<• filth h1'> ~hi ,lf th" S£'il'>00 .11111 l1'.1111n1 11 • Hmt Ot•,tt•r 1g111t1·d 1111' 1!1 11 i•o uhl•.1d 1.dl.'t.111 th1· .1,111 "''" a 11".1111111 l 11pl1 lt••th11•\ • l'Olt', h,1-.i•' l11,1d1 •.f \\ .tlh. Ill th1• "'\'1·11th f111n•d "'"' 1111 dLl'ltllll~ I llll I' \t11Jol l t ,ii \\t'lll li.ll'k 111111 IH 't J.J.11 '' II Soto tht· E:1sl \\llh .1.1 :! \\1 11 .'1 1'11 tsburgh Larr) l'arri~h h,111 l'ill ltt·r d11 ll t·d .1 two·run tnpll' r111 llrl· Exp11-11ov •.• 11.ttl ~drJ ll ahead of St L11u1s 'I /It' < :1nlt11.11., h.1d 1 four gamt· "'inning .. 111•al. 11.1pp1·d ·•::-l.111111u· Smith knocked rtt a pair of tutb "1th t ,,,, l·1b scor ed once an d "i lol e a ha,1· I 1 j ,.,1d Phil<idelphi;i to an x f1 lnurnph Spar I.~ I \ It·, 9·5. y, as llw \\ mnt•r . y, hllt• Hun RN•d t•.11 r 1 ! h eighth sa\'l' Rob llornn·, 1111 r I h111111 r 1 r i.1 two days .md Dale 'lurph\ ·, "''c1111d I<• 11 days bal'kt•d thl' t•1ghl hit p111 111111• •if I a r 11 McWillfams as \tl.1111 ;.1 t1111111·tl !' 1n I 1.11: 1 1 9-2 . 1..-1• Mauilli'.., •lilt 11111 ''"f.!lt• 111 ll tl'' !!ti inning ht'IJJl'd tlat• '\;1·\\ Y111·k \lt'l.., ~h .111 1111 Chicago ('11bs. 2 I From P agP C 1 ritt burns Anfiels BELL .. • • 1111 \1.<l \l'r Even repL1 <'t'nJ1•til ~··1111 r .,,., 111•11 · 1 II• tll Burn.., ha-. pitched 111 111 11111 11:.: 1 ban any other 1 " \\hit•· So" hurler. he r • t. I t 11 1 ·<I The White Sox scored seven of their runs in the second inning. with Greg Luzinski pic ktng up two of his four RBI and Wa) ne :'llordhagen hitting two singl(•., and scori~ a run. Luzins ki l<Hcr · hit his 20th homer. ..,rn11lant1l''>. I 1l1111k 1,,., ' 1 qu1C'kl·r anti ,1 lt.11 d1•1 1 1111111 r 11111 Garf1l'lcl rs 111 ... 1 ·" g1111d , 1 t1lt1•1 and h1· run 11111111 hh I 1,1 ' 11 .di 11red." tht' 22· I Id: ha11tl1·r -.a id after \11i.:1•I Ill :1 Wedncs I 11 t <•<"1 I hope t get I '11111d,1\ II I pd dwd ~IX m- il 1 1 ht• \ngels r t.1 .ind upped his ,1 ii ,., 1!'17''" 1nn1ngs 1 ... 11111 ).; 11111 I 1 q • lo bring_ 11111 t•1t.1I lo 108. the •ht'"I 111 thl' American 111 .11ltl1l111n . ht• is tied at f hi· most complete 1 t llH ,1j.!o p1teher All seven runs came on six s ingles and a little help from the Angels. "ho committei!l two er rors Burns al lowed seven hit... struck out rive and walked none Dave Frost. 1·8. was the loser Bobb\ Grich h it his 21st homer for tht• ·Angels. tying him for the American League lead. The Angels close their season this weekend with a three-game series m Te,as. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ·F L standings \; \TIO'\AI. CONFERENCE n1·,t1'rn Oivbion W L PF PA Pct. AMERICAN CONFER•:scF. Western Divis ion I \'t' got • ompll'lt '111 1d1 111 ,. when <;.1rf11·ld 1' 111 t 111 11.1111• lit• ' ,1 ..:notl 11111111•1 \\ 111·11 ht• p11t his 1n1nd h• 11 ·• Sa11I r .t\1111 \\hu '''"1 11.,. .J a\'h<t\\ l\s 1111< ""'\ ,. p ·" , 111 tht.: gamP 1 ,. I '' 1·••k 1 '' :1• 1111 the -.rclt:lt111· "111 11 11 h. 1>p•·1w1t and I knl'\\ h• lkfl ·' .1 111 trouhlt: I h:111• f111 11 111 h.q1111 11 111 an\ hod\ W1· ;111· ,..11111J! l • 111"'" hrm hut I ft·l'l th.11 1 1 Jn tll'lp . A<'N1rding to a rdt'.1• 1• f, om the l.Chool. nell ... hrnthC'r fJ11111 u fres hmnn, rs listed as a 1,,1 .. k up lo Taylor, 3loni: \\1th 1r .. ,ft111,111 H an C) Fields *****•*'***•* ii -• • • : JOHNSON & SON : • Presents .. -... * ' ,ml.1 3 1 109 62 .750 San Diego Kansas City Denver Oakland Seattle W L PF P,\ Pct. 3 1 138 110 .750 3 1 107 99 . 750 + • • • ... r .• 111.. 2 2 96 so .500 • 11 I 1 .1n"1'co 2 2 83 89 500 '• ,, flrlt•.an-.~l 3 44 85 250 t :aslern visi !I ti I.rs 4 0 1.000 I'• l.11klph1a 4 0 93 40 1.000 "\', C:1ants 2 2 57 56 .500 I I lllllS 1 3 74 100 .250 3 I 89 54 750 2 2 63 15 500 1 3 58 77 .250 Eastern Division Miami 4 0 97 55 Buffalo 2 2 104 50 NY Jets 1 3 73 117 I 000 500 250· ... • • • • • • « \ 1 1 n·pon 0 4 60 119 .000 Baltimore 1 3 70 122 t ·entral Division New England 0 4 73 104 250, .000 • Pete th~ '1Gttek" : • • • • • • -tr I •1·1 roil \11nn1 'ota I .1111pa Hay r;11•t•n Bay ( h I•' ,t).!11 2 2 87 71 .500 2 2 79 94 .500 2 2 68-70 .500 1 3 69 105 .250 t 3 61 85 .250 Centul Division Cincinnati 3 1 102 95 750 Pittsburgh 2 2 108 98 .500 C leveland 2 2 65 87 .500 Houston 2 2 63 72 .500 S4lllMY'•CJ-c1 .... 1..,.,.ot ·-· (CN,,,..I ~.I P m .) 8elllmot"• •I 8ut1e1o Clllc-.ot MIMH«• O•ll•t ti St. Loub CCl>e,,,..l l, 10 • m.I G•fftl S.y .ot lllew Y«ll Gleflts IC•n~t City .ot ..._ Englaftd Sen Fr-IKOMWetlll"lltOfl ClnclnNll .ot Houston PllUIMtfl et Hew Ol'i.- 0...,,... et Olllll- • • • • .. • • • --~-·~-----· 0.t roll et TMIPlt 8ay ....... y_..,,... al llt\latn4 Sultluts.t~ _ ..-:.= MeMeT'•-Afleflt.MPlllMMlltlpfll• ICNMttll 1,,p.tn.I *************************************** NFl!s Pick of The Week ·•SUNDAY • Rams· over Cleveland ? Pete's .Pick See The : at Johnson & Son E' "'CfT-JNG : Johnson & Son Al 1 i .. • • • • -! bincotn-Mercury * fll• '82'S * • JN6 MVIC'PaYD. . . • • _. . AT JOHNSON & SON : 30 " ' I • • ************************************** ' " Baseball today lllJ th1' d.ilt• 111 IJ.li!>l'bull m 1001 · N1·"' York Youkcl' 11lugger ltoger M1tru1 lwraffil' tlw first man In moJ<ff leaaue hlA· tor\ tu l11t 61 h1111H·rs in a single season H ht• lwlll'cJ No (il off B<>ston's Tracy Stullu1<1 1n u Io Yonke<.' victory over the lh'd Sm. On this tlulc 1n 1950 U1t·~ Stsln's thre~ run homer m the 10th 11111111.: oH l>on Newt<>1nbt.• e nabled the l'lril;"ldphrn l'hillies to l'linch the Na· t1unal Lc.·a~ul' lltlt• with 1:1 4 I. last day v1c ton uvt•r tht• Br<>0klyn Ood~l'I'!). The Phlls wo~t Id not win unother leagut> pennant for :JO' 1.•ar., I oda~ 's htrthday: Pittsburl(h infielder Vance Law lb 25 Angels hook up with Spokane The Angels have signed an agree· • nH'nt with tlw Spokane Indians of the f>.u·ifll' Coa't League for player de· 't•lupment, the American League club an· nounc<·d Wednesday The Angels were formerly a fhliated 'with Salt Lake C1tv. Tht' Angeles have a lso sig.n~d Marcel Lachemann as a minor·league ins tructor. Lachemann, whose brother Rene is manager of the Seattle Mariners, has served as pitching couch a t the University or Southern California 1 he last three 'ear:.. His rirst Angel assjgnment will lw .as c·a rnp toordinalor with the ('tub's en· 11' 111 llw \111ona lnstrutl10nal League Ladwman11 had an active career with both 1111' Kan';"" C'1t \ and Oak land A ·s where he com· pl lt•tl .1 i I n·1·11rd and a J 45 earned run ._) \ ,., .t).!l* Sunday's Rams · game to be shown Tht• l.o:-Angel es H ams an.<' •• 1111111w1·d \\'l·tlnl·:.tJay that Sunday'l. 1!.tnlt' with C'h·vt•land is a sellout and '"'' ht• ... h"'' 11 on c·hannel 4 al 1 o'clock rrom \11.tlw1m St.11h11rn It marked the ninth con· ••'t 11t1\.1• H.w i.. home gam e th<1t has been sold 11111 1.11-. ,\ng1•lcs Kings' captain Mike \l uq1h\ "111 lw 11111 of uct1on about lour weelcs .1ft1·1 'l" i.:t·n this wt•ck to repair a torn lateral r·,1 rtll.1gt• 111 h1-. l<·rt km'l' The JO-year Na.tional ll11t·k1•\ l.1•;1i.:11t· 't·l<'ran sustarned the tnJury 'i1•p1 ~:1111 a11 1·,hil11tion Jlame . Lafntte Pin· t':l' h1·1·am1· 11111\ the third Jockey lo pass the ,, 1100 \' 1n ni.11 i.. 111 thoroughbred r acing when he l'""t Pd' a -.111 pnsl' win 1r1 the seventh race Wed· 111'sda\ al tht· O:.ik Tree meeting al Santa Anita. l'111<"il\ Sl'lll 1•<1 a hoard Wander. and the v ictory put h.1m <it :1 pli.lteau only achieved by BllJ ...,hcwmalwr 18.05!:1 \\otos 1 and Johnny Longden, "ho n•t lrt'<l '' llh 6,032 victones . South hon•.1, onl' of tht• smallest countries in the \\ 111 lcl \\ "' l'hnsen a-. th<· host for the 1988 Olym- ptc·-<. wt11le tht· Winte r Olympics were awarded to l'alg<ir~. 1\1 IJC'rta T he Detroit Pistons an· 1111unn·d tht· ''J.!nang of form er Notre Dame ;;tar KC'lly Trijmc·ka to ,, mull1 year tnnlract Telev1s1on . radio T\" Nn t'\t'flts st•heduled. RAOIO: B<tst'b:tll San Diego al Dodger~. ; ·w p IT) . KABC r790>. Hockey Vancouver at Krngs 7 20 pm . KPRZ t.11501 Biggest game faces Hooton LOS ANGELES (AP l Burt Hooton , the Lo Angele:. Dodgers' vekrun r1ght·hander, may pitch the biggest game or the sea son as rar as the l louston Astros are concerned. Hooton is scheduled lo start against Houston Sunday, the final game of the regular sea son, and it l'Ould be the decider in the National League West's second· ha lf race Hooton h urled seven scoreless innings in Wednesday night's 1 O loss to San Diego, running his scoreless inning ~treak to 16 "Tommy (manager Lasor da l gave me ever y chance to win," Hooton said of the game "But it JUSl didn't happen." ... THE PADRES BROKE the s<.'ore less tie against reliever D ave Goltz. scoring two times in the eighth inning. They filled the bases on s~c· ccssive singles by Terry Kennedy. Broden ck Perkins and Luis Salazar Tim Flannery knocked in one run with a sacrifice Cly and pinch-hitter Jose Moreno singled home the second. Lefl·hander Da n Boone. 1-0. earned his first major-league win with two scoreless innings or re· li ef, and Gary Lucas preserved it with his 13th s a ve. The start of the game was delayed more than two hours tx>cause or ram and did nol end until 12 30 a.m For Hooton. the scheduled starter in the fourth gam e of the NL West mini·se_ries. the game was a continuation <>r his !>trong pitching: He shut out Houston 3·0 on four hits in his previous start and allowed the Padres only two hjts in seven innings Wednesday mght, facing the minimum number or batters the first 6% innings. "I'm back to where I want to be conlr!l}·wise," said Hooton. who missed a turn and was 1neffer· live earlier this month because of the flu. "It's a whole lot easier pitc hing when you're not wild " IF THE SECOND·HALF NL winner has been derided before Sunday's game. Hooton will pitch five o r six innings even though the game is me an· ingless. "If I don't pitch. 11 would be more than a week between starts," he ~a id "It's tough to s tay s harp .when you don't pitch more than that." Goltz. 2·6. took the loss The Dodgers c lose the month with a 13· 15 rec ord and have lost nine of the ir last 12 games. The gam e was n early called because of the on and·off showers that began late m the a fternoon The game did not start until 9:44 p.m T~ere .ha~e bt>en only nine rainouts at Dodger Sta dium in its 20·vear history. and none since Sept. 5. 1978. · Fernando Valenzuela. 13·6. will make his final r egular season start tonight when he faces Fred Kuahaulua, O·O Schubert narned U.S. coach Mission Viejo Nadadores coach Mark Schubert has been named head coach of the U.S. swim team for next year's World Games, July 31·Aug 10 in Ecuador. UCLA Coach Ro n Ballatore was named Schubert's assistant Five other assistants will be selected following next year's Wo rld Cham- pionship trials. July 13· 18. OUR ASAP , , WILL YOU TWO WEEKS ER. i:1 l.audcn.Jalt:. Miamr Chicago Each way with round trip purchase. 521 Each way wiih round trip purchase. • Bo!oton, New York/Newark, Philadelphia, Washington, D.C. NO ADVANCE PURCllASL NO LENGTKOF STAYBQU!lill' ... AE1m!'llN~1~L Good new~. Yo u 'vc got a chance to clo~c that big deal in New York. ·1omorrow. _ --8ad nelW~. Vou'r-e in Los Angel~. Take heart. Continental Airlines' ASA P fares can fly you to the East as ... oon a!-pos.,ible from Los Angeles In ternational. Burba nk or Ontario. for a whole lot less than regular Coach. With none of the Super Saver wait. No advance purcha e. No length of stay requirement. or time deadlines. But 'cat~ are limired. All IJl'IU aTY AT llO IX1U OUW. When Y"u fly to any of our ... .ASAP cities in the East, you c-an return from-anyone of the orher cities at no extra charge. Which could be very helpful , especially if you have a chance at another business deal. In Boston. For reservatiom• or.more infonnation about ASAP fares to the East, call your company travel departmcnc, travel agenc or Conti11cntal. .. I Orange Coast DAILY P1LOT(T'h1:i1rsday. Oclober 1. 1981 Is first win awaiting Golden West Satur_da):? • Rustlers, Saddleback to face winless opponents, but Orange Coast may be in tough against second-ranked Pasadena •1 c uaT 8EEDEN °' .................. ·Goldett Wetl Colleae faces what will no doubt be it.a euleat non·coriference opponent, Orange Coast is pitted. a1aln1t another state powerhouse, and Saddleback should be in hilb s ear a1alnst a team \hat has not scored a touchdown this season when {he third week of community colle1e football kicks ofl Saturday. GWC. 0-2 with only 13 point.a to its credit against tough Bakersfield and SanLa Ana, travels, to LA Valley. where the 0-2 Mooarchs await. OCC, coming off a 24·1'4 defeat to then-No. 1 r anked Saddleback, finds it.self \ij) against No. 2· rated Pasadena on the Lancers' field. Both games are set for 7: 30. And Saddle back, 2·0, but unspe ctacular agains t OCC, travels to LA Southwest for an after· noon game Cl : 30 >. Golden West •t LA V•ll•y The key to picking up victory No. l of the 1981 season is a little mor e · intensity.· Rustler Coach Ray Shackleford says. • "I know we need u win badly, and I 'm sure they <LA Vullcy > do too," says Shackleford. "I don't Uunk we played necessarily terrible football again!ll Sunta Ana. But we do need a little more emotion whHe we're lmproviDB on techfflques." The Rustlers showed a potent offense (400 yardsl in their 21·7 opening defeat to Bakerfield. but GWC couldn't do anything right against a ve ry good Santa Ana squad last week In a 37·6 setback. "We're working in the r ight d irection," Shackleford l'onlinues "We've been in this posi· tion before <openjng the season with two straight losses>. so we're not at the desperation point yet." LA Valley, meanwhile, dropped its opener to College of the Canyons. 18-9 and then suffered a 20·6 setback to Compton last week. The Monarch quarterback duties a re shared by Victor Tavares and Kelvin Hodrick, a pair of freshmen. and both do most of the rushln( as well as passing. CWC counters with Sam•iello. who is a better quar~rback than his 8·19·1. 101 yards stats from last week would indicate. . Elliott St~wort Aiello Shackleford has indicated he'll insert Fred Crissinger into the backfie ld with r egular Todd E l· Uott who ttas collect ed a healthy 216 yards on 31 carries in two l{am es. 'Tm sure 'we could have gone out and/found two teams in the state who could have given us wins, but I'm not' sure that would accomplish anything," Shackleford adds. "The pre·seeson is here to he lp the kids Improve before league play bt>gtn!\ That's my primary conc~m " Orange Coast at Pasadena .. Pa11adena looks awfully good They have the biggel:lt team we will face this year," says OCC Coach Oick Tucker. "They look hke a pro team, and I've never -seen a JC $Quad ai. big as that 10 my 20 year:. of cociching." So. for the second week lo a row. Coast enters a pre season contest as the soUd underdog Last week. the Pirate!. ..,taycd true to the role m a 24· 14 sl!tback to Saddleback. but Tucker came away from the game encouraged. "Our kids c11me away from the game feeling good about themsel ves They played well • and showed improvement," Tucker says OCC's defense, ranked second 01 the South Coast Conference in total yardage <215 average>. third against the rush 1901 and second agains t the pasi. I 125> will have to contend with a high. powered Lancer squad which has put 107 points on lht' scoreboard while giving up just nine. Area girls' teams appe ar as strong as ever Tht· Lancers are led by quarterbac:k Steve Vermuelen who has connected on 2<> of 26 passe! for 159 yards in a 38·0 victory over the Cal LuthC'ran JV team and a 69·9 explosion against Eastern Arizona. Pasadena Coach Harvey llyde s a ys OCC sh<aildn't be taken lightly lfl' "Saddleback was at times very fortunalt.> against Orange Coast last week," Hyde says. ·'I think they <OCC> played one helluva ball game They're a much improved team ... Orange Coast to defend state cross country title ; Sea View League tou gh a gain y Ever wonder about the continued success of the girls' s ports program in the Orange Coast area schools? 'I.OMEN'S SPORTS It seems that yea r-in and year-out the girls in this area are consistently among the best in both lhe CIF Southern Section and on the community . coll ege level as well. HOWARD L. HANDY · For one thing. the coaches in the area work hard to achieve success and the girts apparently have the ability to develop into top contenders in virtuall y every sport. This fall is no exception. Take the Orange Coast Col~e women's cross country team under Coach Go'rdon Fitzell. for In· i-.tance. F1l1:ell has lhret' runnen who fi nished third. fourth and fifth in the state meet returning. Barbie Ludov1se is thE' No t runner on the team and re· cently won the Las Vegas Invitational meet to provl' she is in s hape again this season. The Pirates are defending state cham pions and Fitzell says of this year's team : .. It is equally as tough as last year. We have strength coming back and some good new people. coming j n. Our limes right now are faster than they wt're last year." Mari Gibbs. a graduate of Marina High. is also in h~r second year and finished fourth in the state mcl'l last season with Lisa Gonzales fifth. This trio glVl'i-. f.'1tzell a strong nucleus. If that doesn't sound like a repeat for tbe state title. where e lse will you find a better nucleus? 1 k also has Kelly Ringer I Edison l and Susan Zahradnik 1Corona del Marl back. Joanie Eifler is the 'fo ti runner this vear and is a returnee a fter a year or learning to run cross country. She didn 't run "' high sdiool. From Page Cl MESA'S JOHN GIBBS • • • pany in Costa Mesa. He is one of only two he can think of in the Los Angeles are a , who build high-performance boat propeller s~ i-.Le ms. Gibbs moved to Southe rn California to work for Ron Jones Marine. Jones designed inboerd hydroplanes. including tbe world champion unlimited hydro, Miss Rud weiser, recognizable from ' telt•v ision commer cials . Since opening his own busi· ness, Gibbs has not only con· tinued his r acing. but has become one of the finest boat · builders as well. Two years ago, his fi rst 5·1itre bu i l t b oa t won the N<H"lh Amer ican and Canadian titles. setting a Canadian speed record of 97 mph in the process. The engines of the 5·1itre boat arc n early id entica l to the engines used in Formula AUan· tic race cars. The motors cost approximately $12,000 -or at least th ey used to . Gibbs' -engine, the one with which be won the world title, cost him abou t $7,000 to build. The horsepower difference between his a nd the $12,000 engine is sub· stantial. Gibbs has about 450 in his. com pared, t o 600 for the lar~er en itines. John Gibbs But Gibbs has perfected the performance factor of his boat. The e ngi n e . built by Bud Gilbert. considered by many to be the bes t in the business. 1s powered by a Chevy engine. Gilbert is a former champion spr int car driver and partner with Louie L:nser of the famous racing Unser brothers. Baseball standings AMERICAN L EAGUE West Division Kansas City x-Oakland Texas Minnesota Seattle Chicago Angels W L P ct. GB 28 21 .571 25 21 .543 22 25 .468 23 27 .460 21 28 .429 21 29 .420 19 28 .388 East Dtvlslon Detroit 28 20 .583 Milwaukee 29 21 .580 Boston 21 22 .551 1 ~ B!lltimore 25 22 .532 2~ Cleveland 25 24 .510 3~ x-New York 24 24 .500 4 Toronto 20 25 .444 6 ~ x-First·half divis ion winner ....... , •• 1c .... Clllcqo 10,-...... a Kanws City s, Ml-..ta t O.llland J, Totalllo O Now Yor11 ot Gltw!Md, ~.rein aol~ et Detroit. ptld •• roll\ Mll•-ie 1Q,'-'onS Tuost.5Httlo 1 ,..., .• ca-. KonMI City ls.tlttortl ., ..... o.lo M l .. Cleveland ,...,.,., .. 1 _ GIYM M l, 2 eo111 ...... fO Mllnll'WI f~S) et 0.tnlt ,,..,., 10.11 NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Houston 31 18 .633 Cincinnati 30 18 625 1 :i San Francisco 27 21 563 311 x-Dodgers 25 24 .510 6 Atlanta 23 25 479 712 San Diego 15 35 300 161-i East Division Montreal 27 22 .551 St. Louis 26 22 542 ' 2 x-Philadelphta 23 25 .479 31 2 New York 23 26 469 4 Chicago 22 26 .458 412 Pittsburgh 20 30 .400 71"2 x-First-half division winner ............ 1c ... 2.~0 \,._... pNo I, St. L0<.tl1 S ~~ "'-. t, Pitts-oh 2 AU..,t.9.f, Sen F'ronclsco 2 Clfl<IMMJ s • .._..., 2 H-Yor112'; CM< ... I , ... , .. ~ Son DI ... CKuollouhlt O~I ol D .... ,.~ (Vtlonrue!O l:MI. n HMiatoll IR'(llft 10.SI al Cll"IMOU CS.renyl HI S.n ,.f..clxo IAlounder IO·Tl et All.,lo "' N~llro T•l,n St. Louls·IK-.. s1 ., l'tllledelllfll• cc;,.rnqn lM),n MeMIWt (9uml .. 71 ft PlttJ11Ur011 l"Tllftt t-41, • ,, C11~ UM rd ~.SI 01 How Vor-IS•on 0.21. 11 From Page C l R E E SE ••• can t look forward to a fat pension, a luxury of t he modern ballplayer. 'When I broke in. there wasn't .any such thing as a pension.'' he explains. "Whe n I joined the Angels 10 years ago, I was past the 55-yea r age lim it a nd couldn't qualify. But the veteran coach is never neglected; in fact. be is pam · pered by his admir ing as· soc1ates. This was refl ected earlier this month when Rod Carew threw his annual team pa rt~ at this home in Anaheim. Reese. wtio Ii ves alone in Westwood. begged off. saying, "I'm afraid my old jalopy can't m ake the SO· mile trip." Carew. insisten t, got Don Baylor to pick up the team's· fa vorit e fungo·hitter. Whr Reese arrived on the scene. c rs were parked t.'verywhere. One of them was covered by a canopy: Before the feast. Reese was handed an envelope contain· ing a set of keys and sent to look over his shining new car -the gift from his legion ot friends. Jiappy birthday_. Jimmie. and keep those fungoes flying • OUTSTANDING V.ALUES! I RAHD HEW 1981 vw DIESEL RAlllT FACTORY STICKER $7945 DISCOUNT $950 SALE PRICE 56995 t2634) ( 184699) I RAHD HEW 1981 ISU%U ftlCKUft FACTORY STICKER 16471 DISCOUNT SA..s:=~ICE 11 52!!c1o1 7l IRA ... DHIW 1911 'IW DIESEi; fttCKUP--FACioAV STICKER $1345 DISCOUNT ~ISO SALE PRICE '7195 (2706) (1 94498) Sue Zika CCosta Mesa ) is the top freshman on the team and is currently No. 3 on the squad ahead of Gibbs. "I have nothing but high praise for her ... FitzeU $ays. On the high school scene, the Sea View League proba bly has the strongest group of s chools of any league in the area. University. with Teresa Bar· rios and Polly Plume r o n hand. appears head·and· shoulders above the others. But Corona del Mar won the Division 1 race a nd Newport Harbor the Division 2 race in last weekend's invitational at CdM. * • • THE STRANGLEHOLD Corona del Mar and Newport Ha rbor have had on the high school volleyball scene may be at an end Both are in the Sea View League but one or both could miss the CIF playoffs this year with a fourth place finish . At the moment, the team to beat is Irvine High whe r e Kim Ode n is the star. Coach Mark McKenzie's Vaqueros won the 16·team Orange County tournament at Westminster last weekend by defeating last year's Sea View League cham· p1ons. El Toro. in the finals. T he Vaqs are 3·0 in league play and l ·l in the pre·season. losing only to potent Laguna Beach in five games with the score of the fina le, 16·1'\. "Kim is an exceptiona l'player , .. McKenzie ad mils . "She was invited to work out wHh the U.S national team but e lected to attend a four-year sc hool next year ... It talces almost total dedication to play for the U.S. national team an d the girls can't play for both a school team and t he U.S. squad simultaneously a nd accomplish their purpose . On the community college level. it was Golden West and Or ange Coast in the finals of the recent tournament at GWC with the Rustlers winning the decision in \hree games. 2·1. The key to the contest will be the Pirates' ability to play solid defense as they have in th~ first two gan11.~!>. and the ability to move the ball, -;omething tht'~ 't• had trouble doing ' Saddleback at LA Southwest Gaucho Coach Ken Swearingen isn 't too wor ned about the Cougars' offense <LA Southwest has yet to score a point m two games>. but the defense may make things s ticky "They do have a good defense They've got :.om e big kids and s uper team speed." Swearingen stlys ·w e·re going lo have lo do a better JOb or blocking their lineba<:kers Orange Coast'~ lineba('kcrs arc still runnmg around wilh clean Jerseys ·· S~earingl'n Ii> referring to the ... urprising job the Pirates did against his hsghly·touted offense. That offense will be guided hy Lance Stewart Saturday The former L<Jguna Reach trigh QB has the starting ass1gnmen1 !.ince -.ophomore Davirt Key once again 1s plagued by a blood clot m a bruised thigh -the ~ame problem thal sidelined him last vcar Swc~nngcn says he 1i.n •t quite sure what to ex · peel from the Cougars · "In their first gamt' they ui-.ed a spread of fense. Then they went to a wishbone in their second game But after the firs t half. they started us ing a split back We have to be ready for evE'rythsng. S\\l'Urtn~t:n :-.ays. The Southwest <lcfenSl' has held its own 1n two games. lim1tin~ San Bernardino \'alley to threo field goals in LI 9.0 defeat. Of Long ~ach cc·s 18 points against the Cougars. only one was the result of a touchdown bv the offense. "I dop·t ·know what their ~oal line defense looks like. because no one has ever gotten close to the goal line against them ... Sweann{en adds INTRODUCING THE MOST UNCONVENTIONAL CONTINENTAL IN fORTY YEARS. THE TRIMMEST. NOST ELEGANT \ONllNENTAL EVER FASHONED INTRa)LJCINS TR~ LUXURY, THE 1982 lll\COLN TONN CAR . FASHION St-0/vS IN THE 1982 MARK VI 'rOJ ARE INVITED TO VIEW THE NEW 1982 LUXURY CARS AT 'rOJR UNCON~ERCURY DEALER'S. Johnson & Son L.incoln-Mercucy 2626 Haroor Blvd. Costa Mesa, CA 9~~26 '~\l;K ~tt 1'•' I' . I I - \ Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThyraday, October 1, 1981 , l~~~':~.~egat~~• p~~~bt ~~~nd w~~~,~~~ub ln San ~?k: !7~rS I ... ,,.,.. ....... ....._ a fleet of PllRF yachtS"°leuth on the Diego expects a lar'e contingent Capistrano Bay Yacht Club will The usual a1enda of fall reaattas ls club's annual Oceanside Argosy from other areas to compete in its host a special open hoUJe Saturday on tap in yachllna areas throughout Saturday wtlh a return race on Sun-annual Ensenada race for lntema· ror Dana Point boal owners who Soutbem Calllornia this weekend as day.· tional Offshore Rule, PHRF and would like inrormatlon about club s allora take a respite before the start There Is no ~ily scheduled In Southwest Handicap ratings. The membership. of Loa Anaeles Yacht Club's popular race starts f<'riday . ,_ Frank Vranicar. membership" Harbor Series later this month and -, the start of Lona Beach Yacht Club's ~ SWYC will also send a fl eet of director, bas pJaMed the event u a l,OOO·mile La Pas race In November. IKJA'DNG ·. powerboats south Qf .the border in the special opportunity for people ln· Three local yacht clubs have ' ~ccompanylng pre1hcted log race to lcrested in the yacht club to meet events scheduled for the weekend. Ensenada. and talk with officers and members. Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will lhe Los Angeles ~Long Beach area. Ventura Yacht Club holds the T he open house will be held send Performance Handicap. Racing Al Marina del Rey the mosl impor-spotlight up north with the fifth race between 5-8 p.m . at the club Cacility, Fleet sailors <>Ut on the seventh race taot event Is the Sidney Sabot na· of its Blue Water Series on Saturday 35302 Del Obispo in Dana Point of the Angelman Serles Saturday tional <'hamplonship regatta Satur· That's the abbrevia ted boating Harbor. Additional information may and Sunday; Lido Isle Yacht Club day and Sunday out of Del Rey Yacht schedule for this weekend along the be obtained by c~ing Vranicar at will stage its Fall ~egatta• Sunday, Club Orange Coast. 531 -4635. ERICKSO N TO SPEAK Former UCLA' and Los Angeles Lakers baske\ball star Keith Erickson will be the featured speaker at Trinity United Presbyterian's First An· nual Father-Son sports banquet, Oct. 13 at the church in Santa Ana . Since he retired from playing. Erickson has been an announcer on television. He teams with Chick• Hearn on Laker telecasts. The dinner will be held in the Fellowship Hall at 6:30 p.m .. a.My ...... IWI "'99 Unrversity·s Ron Ratchf fe faces Cd \I 111111qlit Tickets'are available week.days at I.he church office (544-7850). The church is located al 17th Street and Prospect in Santa Ana. Sea View action begins - CdM faces Uni; Estancia meets Saddleback Sea View League football action gets under way tonight wllh the two top contenders-Estancia and Coro- na del Mar -drawing road assign- ments. Kickoff is al 7: 30, as it is in three non-league games involving Sunset League representative Ocean View and South Coast League teams Mis · Smyths on way to· def ~nding Prindle title HONOLULU -Rarl,.dY and Suzi Smyth of Huntington Beach .. were well on their way lo defending their national championship in lhe PrindJe "'16 catamaran class Wednesday by winning the first two races of the championship flight. Winds in the qualifying races Tues- day and .tfte championship races Wednesday were in the 15·25 knot range with heavy seas, causing several of the boats to capsize or pitchpole on the downwind laxes. Richard and Gretchen Loufek of Newport Beach, former champions in the class, placed second in the opener and fourth in the second race. Winner in both races or lhe siJver or consolatiop flight was Marvin Frace of Fullerton. sion Viejo and Laguna Hills . Al the Santa Ana Bowl will be un- beaten Estancia, which enters with a 3-0 record, the No. 5 ranking in CIF Southern Conference circles and No. 4 Orange County rating Coach Ed Blanton's Eagles put their atlack1 up against lhe fastest team in lhe league -Saddleback High's Roadrunners. wilh Kendle Newson's running and the speed of receiver Scoll Malcomb the major concerns for Estancia. Curt Wenzlaff is Estancia's bread 'n butter in the running game, the Orange Coast a rea's leading scorer with eight touchdowns in three gam es. Corona del Mar's 3-0 record is on the line against University in a game at Irvine, with quarterback Eric Woods matching passes with University's Tam Eilerts. , Eilerts directed University to an 8· 7 decision over Laguna Hills a week ago to give the Trojans a 2·1 record going inlo league play. Tonight's schedule Estancia vs. Saddleback at Santa Ana Bowl Corona del Mar (3 ·0> vs . University (2·1 l~t Irvine. Ocean View (0·3> vs. Synny Hills 0 ·2) at Buena,.Park Mission Viejo <3·0 ) vs. Rancho Alamitos (2·1 > at Bolsa Grande Ganesha (\·1·1> vs. Laguna Hills (0·3) at M.ission Viejo First race resuJta: =lllN -1 . .-~ Smytll IHUftll ...... 8Ncll); 2. ~ (.......,, .. .,.,;a. ,...._Sn\MllMfl ' GWC tops Gr o ssmont ' -); f.. Devi. LYlll (Hewelll; S. -..rt a.I"" (Mat~. su-l"lllN -1. l!Mnlft Fraca ll'llllef1on); 2. Silllw SIYI"~>; a. MdSillltl~ IMkflleM>; '-JOe LeceMlle l<:Mol9 Panel; S. 8111 Hef"Mftdtl l~I>. Second race results: Geltl "'llN-1. "Mdy Smytll (Hufttl .... Oft BH<ll); 2. Oerr SMderlOft (A11tlrelle); l. Herold Hu1Clllfl9S (H .... I); '-llk.ll«d l..Oufell IN--l IMdll ; S, see ... a-t(Att-). Sii-l'lltM -I. Mwvlft l'raca ll'illler1Dfl>; 2. Joe Leutef .. l<:Mol9 P-1; l. Jeck ~Iller (Mk ...... ); 4. Pe..I Mof1IM IS.ft Fer--); >. DINI AcWINft IMleml). • Irvine, Uni win easily Behind a balanced scoring effort in which eight players scored, Golden West College Jeepr its waler1>olo re· cord unblemished with a 15·4 non- conf erence victory _over Grossmont in the Rustlers ' pool Wednesday. · Carl Sayler and Brett Delvalle tallied three goals for Golden West. now ~:(>. Tbe Rustlers play at Cer- ritos Friday in their next outing. DIVORCED? Time Alone does not heal all the WOtllds. DIVORCE RECOVERY VIRISllJP Help, Support end Guldenoe fof any diVOf'c.d or ..p.ret.d ,.,.on. Six Tueeday Evening• Oct. CS· Nov. 10 -7:30-9:30 St Anllrews Presbytm CllUrch 111.,.rt ... 8t. Andrew9 Roed et 15th St. Acroee From Newport H#bot High 111.CJO A11l1tflli0n =- ., I' I I ) iii ·-- BasketbaU tourney slated A three-on-three indoor basketball tournament is scheduled for Loa Caballeros Racquet a nd Sports Club in Fountain Valley Oct. 17 with five divisions or play available. Entry fee IS $20 per team. Further information can be obtained by calling Chuck Cam- pione (557-A967). E. *TRI EJUU.'S "-~•MfAtllOQ -·---5• "'"" 1•Jt&• !>••--<.• '~ 5,..,., ., "'°"" °°'°' fC.U SJC»f• ,....,nt w-°"" "'••I Cotl.a-841·1289 ... ..._ _ _ .,_,.,5-0401 -c-~ is--...-.. .... ..,......,. RAMS VS CLEVELAND 12131463-1101 IAsl& for S•doyJ (7141 752-0960 S.alOll Tick.ts A•aHable Memory 1s the thing that remind s you or something you forgot · without telling you what il is. ..... To many folks. the ideal occupation is one that doesn't keep them OC· cu pied ••• The phone company employs over a million people. That Includes the one who tells you to go and look it up in the directory yourself ••• Medicine has become so specialized that if a head cold moves into your chest . yo u h ave to change doctors. • ••• If you want lo find something that gives you a higher figure ror your money than last yl!ar. step on a oennv '""''" ••• If it'sgot wheels, you'll move It faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.call 642-5678 and a friendly ad- viser will h~lpyou turn your wheels into .cash. ------------"'-=• • Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Thureday. October 1, 1981 Cl ~ Barker is ·from lost. school of. thought Former Newport Harbor football star works hard in class as well as on the football field ~ BY EOZINTEL ., .. ......, .......... Remember that tireless adafe, '!.l'o 1et a good job, aet a 1ood education"? Well, that proposal apparently fell on some deaf ears otrer the past couple or years as evidenced by a certain number or student-athletes (e>r is It juat plain athletes?> in our country's colleges and universities. . The Pac-10 became the Pac-5 when those same alhJeles were caught with their football-catching bands in the cookie jar. ln pursuit or No. 1, schools like USC and UCLA would s top at nothing to make s ure their All· Americam bad the grades to remain eligible -whether they had them or not. For these ~ull-wilted olmroda, gelling a good job meant. landing a position with only one company -the NFL. No resume was required, only 4.5 speed and the abiJily to get open on a post pat- tern. • AN EDUCATION? Ob heck, that was for the brainy guys you saw in the library every day on your way to the weight room. Everyone knew that an athlete caught studying would be heavi- ly taunted by his fellow jocks ' ( For that reason, Don Barker chose '(Jc Davis. For him, being juat a foot· baU player wasn't enough. Certainly; Barker had what It took coming out or hleh school to play at a "major" like USC, UCLA or Stanford. But he lacked two things -size and a weak mind. An AJl-CIF linebacker bis senior year at Newport Harbor ffiah. Barker thought the coll~e recruiters would cascade upon rum io ttls final year, ms But because he ·stood 6-0 and weighed just 190, Barker was passed over. · Only Stan(ord showed interest' but with the kind of enthusiasm it showed, Barker thought it would be better to go to Davis. Besides, he says today, Davis offered a "good education." Can you .imagine a football player saying that? .. Davis' doesn 'l offer any scholarships and that's good because it means that everyone on the team is there to play," Barker said by phone Wednesday as he prepared himself for the Aggies' game against Cal Poly I Pomona l Saturday. "I also wanted to g~ away from hqme and yet I didn't wari,l to get lost in the shuffle. This is a college town and I like that. You feel like you belong." Barker c learly admits that athletics is secondary to aca«temics al Davis. But that doesn't mean football is n 't serious business; especially for him. ' As middle linebacker for the Aggies. Barker must combine athletic agility with quick reactions. Thls year. like last when he was a junior, Barker ls the defensive signal caller for Davis' com- plex pro 4·3 defense. also commonly known as the Dallas Flex. H's a tough defense to play because of the various formations played off of it But when it works, it works well' as Davis has demonstrated. Going into this year, the Aggies had won 10 straight Fat-Western Conference championships and hadn't lost a conference game since 1973. Defense has always been Davis' forte and now, Barker is the main component or that defense. "Don has learned our system as well as anyone could have," says Davis' de· fenslve coordinator. Bob Foster. "There are two gaps he has to fill -on each side of the center. "Don's not particularly Cast and he's a good but not great athlete. But he has good strength and he's steady . he makes very few mental mistakes." M e ntal 1s the key word for Barker Often limes, he 'll have to make adjustments after the ball is snapped, reading the direction of the now of play. "Don 's finest attribute Is that he's a eood listener," says Davia head coach Jim --Soaker. "He's a charis matic leader. "WE WVE TO G£T a person like Don who can play consistently. We can rely on him and trust him lo do a good JOb every wt>ek '' , According to Soaker. whose 10-year coaching record at Davis is 83-25-5, the school orrers three draw cards lo the prospective student.athlete, any or all of which lured Barker : . I > Academics. Of course. UC Davis is the third largest UC in the system. And whereas in 1906, when the school was founded as the "farm branch" of UC Berkeley, it now offers majors in law, engm~ring and administration among other curiculums; 2> No scholarships. As funny as it sounds, th~t's a positive factor. It brings the "charismatic leaders" like Barker lo the campus: and 3 > No spring training UC Davis has no spring training because. as Soaker puts it, "We believe in the Ivy School philosophy that you come here to gel an ·~ education first." • ~ .A NOVI! ) ·~ vi r. ·11 ... , ... ' .... t .. I ~ .,., ,,, lJ >I ·h •• . "/ .·r 'i: q ' :t'. 111 111 '" oi " '" •\) " 'I ov 'ti Q ·J ~ •I I ' >I J-: YI JI> .w ') l &s .. l1 • ·~J ..w dO 111 a1 •01 ,. . i rlJ 1rit 'l'( "' lo •ti .va L!) lo .?I ) 1 ' . a. ---~ ------- * Orange Cout DAILY PILOTf!huraday, October 1, 1981 .-------------....... --------------.... ~-----------------------------------------------"--------------------------------~--~..;_ ______ __, • ~ •• •• NATIONAL LeAOUE PadfH 2, Oodgere 0 IAM DtaOO • Lot ANO•'-H ........ -~· .. O.Smlll'l,sa • 0 0 0 S.11, tit 4 o 1 o lo,.llla,211 1 0 1 o Ltnclra•,d • o O o "lchrdl)ll ) 0 0 O Golb,, o o O O AuJon1,cl J 0 I O l'~ter,p o o o _o T.K•nncrv.c 3 0 I 0 MarVlll,lf • 0 I l' Wl19ln$,pr 0 I 0 0 GtNey,1111 ' 0 0 0 GWOMlt,C 0 0 0 0 Jotlftlln,111 t 0 0 0 Perklnt, lb l I 1 0 M•IOOIMl,lf 1 0 0 0 S.lnar,rf • o 1 O Moftday 11 o o o o Fl•Mry,.. 2 0 0 1 Mltcllel{,11 2 0 I 0 Fl•eo•ld.p I 0 0 0 WalH,H 1 0 0 0 Bau,pn I O O o Guerrer,311 J o 1 o O.Boone,p o o o O SCloscla,c s o 1 o , J .Moren,l>fl 1 O I 1 Y••9tr,pll 1 o o o L11CH,P 0 0 0 0 TMmas.M 4 0 1 0 HMtofl,p 2 0 0 0 lradlty,11 o o O O Totall 2t l • 2 Totals Jt o • o Sc_...,,......_ S•n 01900 000 000 OJl>-2 I.OS Angel" 000 000 ~ OP l.os Angele1 l . LOI -S... Olt90 S. lo5 Angeles a. 18 -Martll•J.!...llo -Hootcro, G"!Oldl SF Flanntry. S.n 0.... IP H • •• tt SO Flreo.,od S S O 0 2 I 0 8-IW, 1-01 t 1 0 0 I Lu<•• IS. Il l 2 0 0 0 O Lo1A ..... t1 Hool on GolU IL, 2·61 Forsttr T 2 47 A 7 .,, 1~ 19,407 , 0 0 4 2 1 0 0 0 """'"'·~· 1 • 0 0 l I St Louol 000 IJI IOO-S 10 I Pflll.Oell>f!la OCXl 100 lh_. II 2 Forsell. Littell (41, Sykft CSJ, Keat '"· O•Leon Ii i , Sutter 171. Olien Ill and Porter. ur50ft, LYI• (61, Rffd (II encl Mortl•nd W Lyl• Ct-S). L-Ot~ 10-1), S AHd 181 HR-Pfllledelphla, Scllmldl 1n 1 A 21,m . E"-J, f'lr-I Montreal 200 000 100-1 7 I P1mo..r911 ooo 011 QC»--1 s o Gullickson, Ae.r-. 171, Frynllan II) - C•rte•, Soiomon. Sc11rry 111, Takul,,. Ill and Nlcosl•, W-Gulllck•on 11·11. L- Solomon 11·61.'S-Fryman (11 . Hll- PlttsburQll. Nlcotl• 121. A-S,tl•. •-s.~I Houston 001 ooo ICJ0-2 s 1 CIMll\n•li 000 012 10•-S 7 I A11111e. LaCon• !61, Smith 111. S.mlllto (ti •nd Ashby, Soto, H11m• (ti and Nol~ 0 '8err1 Ill. W Soto lll·tl. L-R""I• IUI. 5 -Hume (131, HA-Houston, Reynoldt 14), C•dono 10 . Cinclf"•tl, Foster 111l. ,.. 14,"4 ......... G'aMal San Fr•n<IKO 000 100 001-1 t J All•nl• 110 020 41•-' 12 I Whitson, A-1-111. Tllfts Ill -111 .... ly , M<Wllllams a"d Slnatro. w - McWIUl•ms (2·!1 L-Wllltsan ( .. ti. A HR-s.n Fr•ncluo, Leon•rd (41; Allente, Horntr 1121, Murpny llll. A-2,n4. -.i.c:-. I Cnoc •90 000 100 000-1 I O Ne• Yono 000 000 101-1 7 I 81r<1, ~rtJ (t i. Herna.-r Ct ) and Oevts 8 i1c ~wei1 l'I . Puleo, All•n 191 and Sturns W Allen (7·SI. L-Martr IS.71. J A •.•ll A.tllMJCAN LUOUI Wflhe ... 10,ADtetel c.ALl ..... A allCAeO .. ,.... . .., .... PtwtU .... H • 1 1 t Le, ..... If • e I I J\lr'-. M J e I 1 Hiii • kMl't, Iii t t 0 t • < 1.. I 0 0 0 ,.,..,rf •ttO l«tw~•lllt .. ylw, ,._ • t 1 t '--·<I 4 t o t ,. .... , .. O t e t L'"'Mlt.• 4'I 4 2 2 4 Otlcll, a • t a I Nr-.n~ rf 4 I 2 I =~<lot I ICIMQ,rl OotO ct4t0t 1'1111,C 1111 HMMft, 4'I I 0 O O Mlll'llMI, If t t O O Lllntell, a I 0 0 0 SqvlrH, Ill I 0 0 0 Lovl9llo, • • 1 t 1 AllNlll,U II I I hteh D I t I T°'el' D 10 10 t ._...., ....... c.11 ... r\la lOO IOI •t -J Oii<... 11'0 -•-10 t -~ ,_,., OP -Cel"-a t, Clll<-.o I. L..Oe -CelllOtllle J, ClllW90 S.Jt -Grich. Hit -L.u&lnslll CJIU, Grlcll 1111. 'Sa -0.-..lftl, Lovltllo, Lol'IOA. S -hull"ft. SI'-~ c. ........ l'rtsllL,1 .. l J•fffftoft Mehler Cllk..- IP N a•• tt IO 111> 2 s 4 , 0 ·~ I S 2 I J 2 0 0 0 1 0 e urns cw. 10..1 • 2 o s HoyUS. 101 J 1 1 t o WP -Jeffwsan. PB -l'•rou•cro. T -, ..... -1,614. .._.. ........ . lot'°" 00> 000 200-s " 1 MllW•uk•-11' 147 OOll'-10 II I Hunt, SUnloy UI, ~I 151, ,__,.. 171, TudOr ltl encl All•nson; c a1ciw.11, ler11ard Ill, Larch 141. H-16), Eestwly Ill,,.,...,.. (ti -Moore. W-L•rcll (J.t). L-St.,.I~ llNJ. A-11,472. 11-..na.--..1 T •Us 000 JOO 000-.1 4 0 Sffttlo 000 000 100-1 I 2 H<Mltll .,,., s..nclbwg, Bannister, Or- 10 end lulllng W-Hougll 14·11. L- 1.,.•ls.., (Ml. A-S, UI. ·~•Is I, TWIM 2 Kanws City 020 JOO 000-S 16 o Mln,,.sota 020 000 000-2 4 O Gura -Wat,_, Arroyo, Vetellc (4), o·c-111. ve.--m ...., Lauc1r>er. W-Gura 111-11. L-Arroyo 17·101. HR- Kanus Clly, Hurdle 10 ; Mlnne~ota, M.l<kanll\ <•>, A-U,tOO. •.. '· ··-,,.,., . TOfOfltO 000 000 ~ J 1 o.111...., 001 200 OClll_,, • I LHI, McLAueNln '" ...., Wlllt1; Norris encl H-. W-Horrh (12·9). L-Laal • C7· Ill. HR-Oaklal\d, P lcclolo 141 A-11,144. Top 10 , ............ ) AM•alCAM L•AOU• I Lanstord,.,.lllft Pa<lorell, SHttlt G llltoft, Detroit Hargrow. a. .. 1- H•l\defton, Oelll- Zltk, Sffttlo C~r,Mllw-• Mumpllry, New Yorll R•my, 1o1ton 11 ... tt.~Clty 0 At R H flilcl 101 N 61 IM .DJ 101 JM " 11• .327 ,. 274 • " .:115 " 314 '2 '0' .m IOS 411 17 131 .all " l'6 41 110 .Jlt 103 -70 11'1 ·'" n llO 42 ,. .JIO 17 "' JS 110 •. JOt IS 131 Je.102 .-.._._ Tllom.s, Mllw-.. , 11; Oridl, ......_ ti; Armas, Oelcland, 21, Murray. lalUmort, 20, E.,•m, llostcro, 20, LUZll\slll, Chicago, 20. ._.....,," Murr•v. e.111..-.. 72; ArmH, Oekl-. 11, 0g11.,1e. Mllwaull .. , 70; Evans. lottcro. H . Wlnlltld, New York, •S. '9tcllil'I It DK..._I Vuckovkll, MllwaullM. I~. Comer, Ta•· H , 1·1: Tor,.r, lostor1, W ; o. Manl,,.r, llaltlmon. 14-S; Clear, Boston, 1-J; HoY'. Clll<ago, 1-J; McGr_.., laltlmote, 12·S. ..:;.TIOIW. "_..ue ...... fin -..i.e .. ~ •• .,. .... .Je ..... -........ ... ..... I .. .. tMCllNr,Ok... t• .. 41 ta .117 tMw,~ ,, _. .. IU .I,. 1<""11«, ~1 .. 11111• 1• "' '• no 111 lr.-1. New YeA t4 M2 II 10t .110 -.v. S... l'r_I_ tc )II • 9' ... CNfftar1M,-..V..1 "Ut • t• ... Griffey, C:WWWlll " ID N Ill - Htl"NNU .... LAUlt "JU .. '" ,., ..... _ kll1t1 ... ""''"'"""'· "' Otwltll, #IMM. rttl, U 1 Kl..-. IMw v-. U ; ,. .. ..,. Cln<l11nt tl, 21; Htfldrl~k. II l.oult, 1'; Clari!, lell l'r-IKt, 17. ._ ...... ,. l'ttter, C:lncl111\all. t7, Scllml dt, "'111•.,.l"'I•, H ; lucll,,.r, Cllluet, 11, Car tar, Mtntr••I, •S, M•llllaws , Plllladel~, '5; C:-..-clon, Clll<lftNltl, '5. ...... lti.cllleMI S•••tr, c;1.,ctnnell, 14·2; Carlton, Plllledtlpl\la, t>·4, Cemp, Allentt. f.J; H11me, C:lnd11Ntl, t.l; Rl\ollefl, Pitts~. 9·4; ••••I• 0-.trt, t_.1 Val•.,-lt, DMeen..tk. SANTA ANITA W•DflllHOAY'S •HULTS ,, ...... ., ........... _..., Pt•IT RAC•.•tur~. Loom Jet l~l\Cay) 6.IO 4.20 l .10 Oecoded IMt;CM-.) S.20 '·'° YHst c.u IWlr\lafMIJ •.oo Alta r-: Qu9Uflcelloll, 5Porclcll, Tur... 1"9 W"-lt, St•• Pel, SI-. In. Tlltl•; I :09 VS. HCOMD ltACa. 6 V. lurloftet, Ol<•lv (Oil.,_) 1.40 4.40 MO SueldMdt (Htwl~I UO UD lrlar Hiil l.ld ISlbUlel 4.00 Also ••cad: Al\llqu• Ruler, Panlolo, Tlwatre "O'/al, lrigflt Isle. Time : \'114/S. U OAIL Y DOUtLa IMI pakl U..'°. TNl•D RAC•.• rur,..._. GNll<'I Sport tC.S.-al 11.IO IO.IO '-10 Slwlntll\ IMtCMf'OflJ S.411 J.IO DH•r1 EnYOV (Hawley) S.CJO Also raced: Court Compliance, lnseercllof. Crystal Staf', Tul•r, Suell • Gtnllem.t1, Ebony lltON•, Good p,_n.,, llaOll-~.Stereotype. Time: 1·10. l'OU •TM ltAClE. 6 ..,. turloftet. Prl.,tt• Ro.ti (Ullflaml 32.10 12.eo '-411 Honcllo Notor IToroJ 1.«1 uo l'ormal Pride IOel-..uay•l J.AO Alto r-..cl: Scoring Oltotr, It's a Sllarn, 8reve Llttlt Nell, Hawtialre, Rally On, None Too Soon, l'llppln Biii, Laleclot, W••tem. Time: 1:164/S. ,.... Pl"" uca. 1 "" m1i... Master~., 10.1-....ve1 •.OO 1.40 Uo l'toltn H-10'1tegal 6.10 UO Approval (MtCMranl '·'° Alto racecl: MaJest k Gour1, Sw119, Y- Royal, s.,....1, Vlncar•. Time: 1:424/S. '5 •XACTA 11-21 paid "4.SO SI XTtt RAC•. 6 twtongs • PrlMe Soellllllund tCe•taMIMI IS.OD l.uOy Legitnd I Oelaflouuaye I OH·Wldllow IPttlC•YI o ... E,_lw ILIPllaml OH-DMdtlNI for INW. S.IO UO 7.20 J.lO ud 2.20 Alto taced: Rite 'H Fly, ltr .. I" 8al<ony, Swett Alld Natural. Tlmt: t:to. s•V•MTH UCE. I "" mllH . Wal\der 111tnc..,1 IO.<IO '·'° 4,00 8ruSll Througll 10t1-..-ve1 S.40 UO Petite Maid ISU>lllel 11.00 Alto r/Kad: Suzerainty, ~Ynt McGuire, Ocean Sunset, Op•IUcence, Leading Oan<••· 8Hc1tcombln9, Casa Estrella, Trapper's.,._,, Tltfle I :44 l/S. '5 •XACTA S.2 paid ll:M.00 12 Plat SIX IS.1-1-l+SI paid 116,161.40 Wltl'I •19'11 wtmlng tlcll•h 111,,. r-•sl. 12 Pkk SIM c.omolatlon paid 1120.20 wltfl 174 tkkeO (four hor•sl. Fishermen being lure d Irvine Lake, nearby waters well-stocked Al> the fall months approach, the 1nlere~l or most outdQOrsmen turns from frei.h and salt water angling to hunting. but perhaps the best over all fi-;hi ng lakes place during the month of October. OUTDOORS JIM NIEMIEC •tont llACI. • ~ "'lefltl \twf>. 1<1111.,. C~l I• IM 1.4t ACll't s.c .... IMlH.,.._I I• I.a MINH~CHtwltYl S.. AIM rltCMf: ll•y CINll. lwlll llrf. ~ .. '°'"••II, L.t PltlCllt, Mtltlllc, Wl119ftC, TIMe: l 'IH/S. Ml .. TN llACl.•~tur .... 1111111 leveWIMIUft(C-. ........ 1 11• 1.Jt S.Jt tltconti ,........,, IUt IM I 0.. S....., ISllllllel IUO AIM ractd· Ml Olllmotra, llold k.,,.., l.11111 MIMI<, I '•II In L.t ... Damerlt«<ta, llllN Hllfl, llock SOlll, SN Ctn't Ml" Time: 1t14 l/S. U •XACTA C>tel _.Id ~.IO AtteMMCt: Jl,IU HDIYWOOd P•t1c W90lfaioAY't •HULTS en. .. ,,.._ ... ,....__...,, Pt •ST llACa. 0... mlle I»'• Plaurvllle IPar'llwl S.00 i.• >.• El Tortnto CTodd Ill UO '-• Andy's~ ICroellelll II .• Ala rte .. : Tiie Comedy A•-. Qui(k Urry, lirinl9fflll••tl, Mr Joe I .• RerWll "I< .. Otll'I ~ Rlllly OlaMa. Time 1:.ft 4/S. U ••ACTA IMl palcl 111.10 s•C:OMD RAC•. OM mlle pa<e. Mlst•r G CLigl!tllllll .. J.40 1.40 IM •·AMY'• Timoltly (T0911 Ill s.• 7.JO •·Andys s..tar (OcMilwtel S.IO 7.JO •-<OUPlad tfttry. AIM •«ad Pooclllt '· Otwn Son. """ lesllc ~. Jibe Ho, R H•len, T•-ahall, l.acly Slule Time: 2·01 J/S TNIROaACl.0 1\tmlletrot, Cedar Otvlln IBaylmtsal 4.IO 1.40 2.40 Holy Cord (Sllerrtftl 1.IO UO Bold St-CWll/IMdl UO AIM rtc:M. ,._rttllt, Ho ltt, Wiii Ht .. ~. StormMeMaft09r Time: 2·02 SJ lfXACTA CM I paid W .SO. l'OUaTN aAC:a. Ont rnlla trot. Kut• MarkenJav CAublnl 1.40 S.40 -<Go Smoky R ... CLl9'11111111 6.00 4.40 Nol ... H-vtr llayltHl 9.40 Alto rac:act· UI 0r900fl Mnle, Lalin SIM, l'r19rant Mier.le, Otar Sir. C.ugohl S...- lng, 0•-. It E Todd. Tim• 2:011/S Pl"" aac•. Ont mlle pac•. Clalre<M*' IAndtrsonl 4.IO •.JO 2.eo AndyS Cllnt IKU9bltr) 11.IO S.20 Ahwall"" Monie,.., CStwrrenl 4.IO Alto raced; Monterey Br•ie. Wiid CMd, To LI••, Hl.Wlltrs Babe. Dot wa .. e, Flying Tonya, Stars Beoy Time: 1;021/S U •XACTA (4-11 paid 17'.SO SIXTH •AC•. Ont lnu. pace. Shady 0•11Todd Ill 7 .'° H111Ulri OuOot IAulllnl Scior1y Old Al I Trembley I J.00 uo 2.IO UO MO San AA-AIM r~.O: Wonderful Spall, ~ .. s. S-11. 1t Arvo. c::ommoo11ty ~ Tlme:2·p1 SE VE NTN llACI. Ont mil• pao. Logan1 OrMm IP•rkaf'I J . .0 t.IO 2.• lrandlng lrcro CTeulerl 6.20 4M ROMll• H-wr (Hudon) 2.to Also •-..cl: Hit And Run, Crulwawey, Country Uleell. Flylng lo•car, 5-f 1ue M, Satins Pl~. Time: 2:00 l/S U EX.ACTA tM I paid $76.$0. U Plat SIX Cs+t•Ul palcl U,IM.fO With nl ... lklo.tt• (llM '-te1I. $2 Piek SI• COl\IOl•tlon pelcl U0.10 with 12' tickets (five horse.I. EIGMnt aAC•. Ont mile pece. TlltGelWH(AnderlOft) 12.00 4 00 2.• Master Jolla 15/laf'rtftl J eo UG E•traordl11ary llaY.i,HI 1.JD Alto rectd: Cloud Over N, OK's "llsty, Try My l!loet, Golda Meir N, Kflr, DNftS Stone. Time: 1'"4/S. IS EXACTA <•21 paid sas.oo. NINTH RACl.Ontmlle pace Scooter Key I Par Ur l ll )0 s 20 • oo Almetos 10.-...,.1 J to J w l'r<KIY Stllll"9r IG""'°YI t 20 Alto racecl Pretty T-11, Callnul, True Trlcl1 C, Master V•I .... Free Par-. l'lnal Sweep. W•t•r polo COMMUNITY C~LIO• ..... ....... ca.-... Gr-2 0 I I 4 ~--1 4 J I IS Ooldeft w.tt Korlnt. Syler J, Otlvalle J, Cll•cOft 2, J9fllllns 2. taker 2, N•dY 1 Hemllton 1, 0.Vkll I HIONICMOOL C....-.. tt, U•hrenHy J Unl,,."'ty I 0 2 2 S Coll• MeM J 2 1 • 10 Catlt Nina -Ing· c:..11110 •• H119hff , A!Mly 2. Pld .. ct t. ...................... , SaddlolMKk I 0 1 I ).. lrvln" 6 • 6 7-U lrvl,,. ICOl'lng: Klingerman 7, Crotts 6, 8-n a, Pierce I, Corle« >. 1<orio-1o.1 1, Wetal 1, McC:-.11 1. c--.. ..., ''· •1ta1tele. E•l-la 3 1 2 I t c ....... Cltl Mar , , l ·-" CorOM del -teorlng. Jtcobs s, Im lleffll,,. 2. MDn'ow 2, Temple I, Ttylor I Eslancl• acorlng: Ireland •. O••k• J, laldlngl. CroH country NIGH SCHOOL. lnoh D, c.te Mesa J2 I. ~ Ill, IS:OI; 2. H-•rd ICMI. IS t7, I. MMllatl Ill. U :U , •. Whll~ lll. IS:U ; S. Medllla (CNll, 15:41 , 6. Levy le.Ml, 16:0.; 7. "kt (II, 1':07; I. RIYH Cll. I•, 12. t . Mc lean ICMJ. 16: 17, 10. Hern.,>der ICMl, 1':*4. Uml-uty 1S, ....,_.Na,._ U I. Heslevlll IUI, 1'.49, 1. OMlls (U), 14:4'; J. Moorn IUI, 14: ... 4. K-1 IUI. 14:4'; S. Jack CU), t•:SJ, 6 llerg INHI 17 :00; 7. GrHnbere•r IUI, 11·u , 8 Calloway (NHI, 17:16; t . Evans INHI, 17:11; 10. Rkll (HHI, 11::14, Women HIOMIC~ a. ....... "· ,,,,.... " I. Wolfe (CM), 11:5'; 2. IC•llY ICM), It S. J. Ch.I..., ICM), lt:07; 4. C:rtckel ICMl. 1t:11 : s. '--m. 1t:is. Uml__., 14, .......... Ha.-W 4S I. larrlo& IUI. 20:12; 2. ,._ 11.11, 20.J:2, J. Arm_,_ IUJ. JO:D ; '··~in.. IU). JO:M; S. VM Skllle (NHl,20:41 .. Women'• volleyball COMMUNITY Cc>t.ll!GE Orange C:O.St <Mf. Pa,...,.ne, ISf, ISll, , .. ,4. '&'a Mitelt•O G"tnd P rl1 ···~·· ..... , .... _._.,,.., .. J0.11"' NV\hDf"t1 J•• O\f HIO .... t•'\ .._,1 l •, 6·4 lw"' l fl..,. d•I 1,41,, 1•1 Urpl • J, • t, ftrn•' ""'" dltf • • •'ti: tt<.u t .,,., .. ,, • O; J• ,,., r IUot ~ Mn '~ • I • • •• ,..Or• li•L•lf "1t" .. ~••• •K•• · ) 6·1 Aftdrt \ <.-.,,., O.• A.19' '-•" fnt 1 •I • l JOW LOt.#1 ~•$f l1.1'~ I "'"'llt"' I \ •• IS M•n ei. 1uo.1rn.1men1 <•t .......... ,,..,. ...... , t.Co"lill_ ... ,..19' Gi•nr ~ •• , l~ i I ~· • I e " J • j 8ridn f•.W-r.t J0-11 ll"'U t t .,.,,, flilt•"-"' b9c•u\• al""'•"~ • HIQh Sl Plool ""''"'"" Mott .. °"" II C•t>O " ..... I ~· ... S•rmtento 1M1 OH Mt hf' 1 t. • '"f Countl•• • 0 ttft .-.11lw\ / ~·, 1f'lttv MO> ~0'\f l 4 W< l• .. • t. MU t Ht~t A •• won" "'l • Wedne~d•y .. l .t11:..u;11oni. IA\K"8&LI Hi1hvrw1 ..,..,.,.,..,.." • ,...,. 1i1thon DENV£ h ,._,VC.(,t 1'\ -,,,~ "" A•onto w~~•ntt ••ww•rf1 • n'"'" ,,.., con l rdtl of.~fO-1°rt\lot1!. ,,,,, .. a ,. ... ., Lf'l>dQ"'" ,.,., "' "' .... lhal :.,.., tf'I'""• J4,. Wt t It,• rn,. ,, ,, ba,., .. !.-"I ..,h .. 1 WP\ ,,, C>•t'90 'll:iJ g, •• , ........ ~ la .me.ea ,...,., . } ''' ct Mark ..... d\ ltnd 9r,,l!ft\ 10 ~· '¥,..., 0'41'\(f'(J •IJ'~to .. \..,•l"I( "'"" ' t.tnl l.akei.. '>treams and ocean waters are extremely productive this month ..ind lhl' crowds are down from the 'a ration months just passed. Irvine Lake is one of the most· pro· ductive trout waters in the Southland Jnd ~1bo produces a good number of C'Jtf1:-.h and bass limits to regulars '1:-1t1n)! the nearby lake. In int• will close Oct. 26 for a few \.\eeks and then re-open in November \.\1th a tremendous rainbow trout qock1ng due. Currently the lake is µroducing some good catfish and 'i>as'i action. but there will be some pretty .steady except during the mid· dle of this week. This past weekend in a tag and release tournament for private boats fishing a radius of 40 miles from Avalon, some 85 marlin were hooked, tagged and released. The bes~ction is still taking place in the are around the 209, 181 and 267 spots, ith some boats heading out to the 43. Spot. Little activity is taking place during the week, but this weekend should again show a fair number or mnlln being taJcen by no one can pay you more i nte r than Bank of Newport on t he tax exempt ''all-saver'' certific trout also netted prior lo closing due to cooling water temperatures. At the Santa Ana River lakes, cal· fi sh are hitting v.ery well with maekerl'I . stink bail a nd night era wler!> accounting for the most cah The!-.e fish are averaging about two to three pounds with some larger f1:,h being caught in the 10-pound class. THERE ARE A FEW lakes in San U1ego that will be good this month, \.\tth perhaps San Vicente leading the w ay when it re-opens next week. This lake has produced many big largemouth bass durin~ past Oc· tobers and usually carries good fi s hing into the winter months. Other Jakes in the cities chain are closing for the winter with the exception of the trout-stocked lakes that should give up good at'tion for planted bows. L<1kcs like Vail, Henshaw, Skinner, Cuyamaca and Dixon will be good for mixed fishing until cold weather sets in and angling pressure should be ex· tremely light. Big Bear Lake is rated slow, although there ·are some nice trout being caught in deep water off lhe points and near the dam. Bus, cat- fis h and bluegil action has fallen off a l the high altitude lakes. ' Al Silverwood, fishing is fair for bass · and trout. The big browns 9bould start moving up to shallow water and there should be a good number in the five lo ei1bt:pound cl ass taken by trollers near the marina. Newport boats. • There is still some good fishing for local party boats _.fishing out of Davey's, Art's and Dana. Some yellowtail, bonito, bass and other as· sorted bottom fish are accounting for the bulk of the catch. MexJco fishing is starting to come alive now ' with cooler weather pre· vailing. A couple of summer-type hurricanes this past month kept angl- ing of'f, but there are some marlin and sailfish being taken from the east Cape ar~a. cilong with wahoo and roosterfish. Dolphin still seem to be scarce. Co r ona d el Mar storms bac k for polo win Corona del Mar, trailing 7-4 in the third quarter, stormed back )Vith .six unanswered goaJ.s and· de!eal~d ~tanci-. 11·8, to highlight high school water polo action Wednesday. Tbe Sea Kings (2-0 in league and 10-3 overall), tied the game, 7.7 at the end of-the third 11uarter, then with Larrf Jacobs and ·David Imbemino Jead1ng the way, outscored the Eagles, ,..1 in the final quarter. "We played one good half (the second)," said CdM a11istant coach Jjm Turner. "We beat them with the IN THE lllGH SIEaRAS there la counter-attack in that half." · ood d •-L. Jacobi wu tbe leading scorer in ~till some I . stream an ..... flab· tbe came with five 1oals. Jim mg for trout tn all areu. 1"lh tbl Ireland led lltaDda (1-1 In league) help or hea~y 11t.oc:kln1 " bvpb,. bi HOrtna ~.lour. br~ t.rOut m the June ._... Loap, At lnhlt, U.. Vaqueros bU'tied this ls the bot spot, Lat ..W llmlta lad...._~ .l!if tD un tbelr Se• View w•r< ...,_ oa '""" .-.1-to;-S""M'OftnU . weather to Ille • keJ ,..,.ID ....,. l !"·-ar.i= led t11e' way wttb will be warm and• , .,..... Ila · ,.,..., frolll here ::e~;-...,. * .... a 11J lid Clofto with could cbUe ~· JI! = rt • ..,;, CMla Meea d•mped 1torm1 pa11tng tJllitllllla. 1--... cm tbt ~ ot · , M ~ u m°:.. ... ..,..'7!;' ,::-•b H11~· titre• 1oala. Tbe eaae..--. ..._.. .. 1.1111 ....... • So why not save at Bank of Newport where you know you will get the best serv1c course, you will also have the satisfaction of helping the economy of your own com1 n October 1, 1981.BanlcofNewponwillolferanew 11TAX-5AVER" CERTIFICATE of di:-p. pays you up to 70% of the average yield of a 52-'Week T-Bill and ctµows you up to!£, interest, tax free; up to $2,000 tax free for couples filing a joint return. Imagine that/ All those great Bank of Newport ~nalized services and th<'-n •• SA VER" CER1'niCATE available from your nearest of Newpo~ office. Smc~ ·. •l""' other bank, savings & loan or thrift can offer you more interest on a "TAX-SA VER' C CATE, it certainly makes sense to save where you know you'll be getting the be~t service available anywhere. .. l • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT!T'hur1day, October 1, 1981 Investment firm -untler attack ' Newport Eq:µity Funding facing involuntary bankruptcy, lawsuits Last Monduy, Newport Beach attorney J . Eugene Cannon. representing seven investors from Newport Beach and El Toro, petitioned for involuntary bankruptcy against Newport Equity Funding Inc. oo the con· tention that the company's in· ability to meet payment agree· ments threatened his clients' $60,000 investment in a second· mortgage trust . Next Monday, Laguna Hills at- torney Rob Sall is holding a meeting of investors in another Newport Equity partnership to · discuss possible action against the company In this case, ac· cording to Sall, 16 investors in two partnerships lost $268,000. On Oct. 8, attorney Barbara Ge llman returns to Orange County Superior Court to try to make permanent a temporary re straining o rder against Newport Equity and to have a receiv e r appointed . Ms Gellman's clie nt, Corrinne Adams, claims the firm cost her $22,000. However. the action by Can· non in federal bankruptcy court tukcs jurisdiction ovur 11tute pro· ceedings, according to ·Santa Mona ca bankruptcy attorney Chuck Morrison. Morrison said an automatic rei>trainine order is forced into effect upon the m ing of the petition, whether al was for voluntary or involuntary bankruptcy Other parties inte rested an Newport Equity include the state Department of Real Estate a nd the state Department or Corporations. both of which are investigating the company Cannon ~l a imed the firm planned to sell a $240,000 llollywood Hills home Tuesday on which the second mortgage was 1ssued Tbe homeowners were $120,000 behind in pay m ents. he said, and the company refused to cover the debt as it had agreed. "Under their agreement with m y cliepts, the corporation is· s ued inde mnification agree m ents stating Newport Equity would make up payments on the trust deed if the borrower didn't make them," Cannon said. ·'They also said they would make up tlrst mortgaae pay ments to keep pfoperty from be- ing foreclosed and they didn't." The complaint, filed in federal bankruptcy court In Santa Ana, alleged investors were told last week that the house would be sold Tuesday unless they came up wj\h $120,000 to cover the payments. "They told creditors in ref· erence to the foreclosure, 'It's your problem We don't have the money so you'll have to lake Cafe Of It yourself,' }.aid al· torney Ted E c hve rria, who worked with Cannon on the peti· lion The filing, Echverria said, automattcally prevents the sale until the case is heard. Accord· mg to Cannon, Newport Equity must rt.•spond lo the petition by Oct. 19. "My situation is very different from the one Cannon is involved with,'' Sall said. "Here, proper- ty was lost in foreclosure. and the investors lost everything. ·'The partners were notified of the loss of their investment Aug. 25," Sall continued. "but the property was in default Crom ... F e bruary on . The partners didn't find out about It until April." One source close to the In· vestigatlon who preferred to re- main anonymous , said , "Securities laws are designed to protect the non-sophisticated in· vestor. There has to be a sub· stantlaJ disclosure.'' As of June 1980, Cannon said that Newport Equity had issued $29 million in trust deeds on property worth between $150 million and $200 million, using cash fro m about 1 ,500 in-' di vlduals who were promised a 15 percent or better return at the time Barry Walsche, who joined with Cannon in instigating the bankruptcy proceedings, said the move was made to force the company to submit a financial statement. Walsche was re· tained by Cannon to contact the firm to ascertain the company's financial positions, but was de· nied access to company records las t week , Walsche said. Newport Equity officials were unavailable for comment. Milk price support hike goes through WA SlUNGTON <A P l The Wisconsin Democrats Reps both Lhe House and the Senate The increase. if permitted to Reagan administration has lost Robert Kastenmeier and David late Lod1!y, although some mem · take effect. would cost the gov· its fi ght to stop a tempor ary but Obey de la Garza and bers have indicated they may e rnment between $7 million and costly increase in milk price Republican committee me mbers try to block the move. A similar $10 million a week in price s up· s upports scheduled for today. William Wampler of Virgina and atte mpt to s top the increase p o rts. a ccording lo USDA But membe rs of Congress hope Paul Findley of Illinois obtained failed Lo reach the floor an the analysts . to roll back the increase quickly authority Lo put the bill to a vote Senate lask week The emergency legislation is "It may take several days," today Rut Rep Tom Ha rkin, 0 -prompted by the fact that the • .,.,,....... said Rep. Kika de la Garza, D· Staunchly. supported by Pres1 Iowa , t· hair man or th e House has yet to act on the new ROLLER OERB:V :\llC'hael ConC'a nnun of Stoughton. \l a:--.. Texas, chairman of the House d('nt Reagan and Agriculture Agriculture subcommittee on 1981 farm bill to replace the ex· ,.11,,<·\,..., ., ~t ·,ic.·k 111. i>a·int 1•011 ,.r. tube.'" ut lh" .·\m"nc·an Brla..,h Agr itulture Committee . "We're Secretary John Block , Findley dair y i~s ues. said the ad · piring commodity price support ·-· ' " ·' '-" JUSl rying to be responsible and and other top members or the man1~trat1on should have re· programs. I 1111p.111\ Ill Bt lll'ktnn. :\fa~~ From th1~ anj.!lt•. lhl'~ look save a few million dollars here Agriculture Committee have aliled it faced this prospect With their expiration, a milk 111111 ,. 111--l• "' l'r -.11.l'CI roller ~kale whec.•b and help the dairy industry to proposed l'mcrgency legislation weeks ago and dealt with it then price support program approved ..-keep it stable." to block a mandatory increase in through normal legislative chan· by Congress this summer will Dal•1y Pl.IOI Arter a House vote Wednesday milk price supports scheduled nch llarkin s aid Congress take effect. requiring milk to be F'o/lowyourteam ~the __ on_a~r_o_11_b_a_ck_b_i1_1 _w_a_s_b_1_o_ck_ed_o_n __ ~_r_t_o_d_a) ___________ s_·h_o_u_1d_n_·_t _b_e_r_o_rc_·e_d_~_··_b_a_i1_o_u_t __ s_u_p_p_o_r_te_d_a_t_1_5_p_e_r_c_e_n_t_o_r pro~edural grounds by two They hope to get approval 1n Ronald Reagan.. parity COLLECTORS CORNER "~• Cofn• a S•e.l'l'llP• Qokl & ... et ..... , 0.tCI Clow s.ut.1t Sllvw Cl. St.14 t(' uo•rr dnd\ Mao1~ l•a-•s ~ PtSO\ '<> ~···••8.q, .... ,.., J.MUCI MSUe "41.U MSUJ t.m.:ts t.M4.U ~ .• SMtS.• i ffi =t'ittie I WINE SALE CASH & CARRY ONLY. SAVE 30% AND MOREi STARTS OCT. ht. CfUAR HOURS 9-9 rY h Sal• Ends I ~ v ti') I O· I 8-81 ©~ \)i 495 E. 17th St · -COSTA MESA All DRUGS EVENTUAll Y LOSE THEIR POTENCY D'f Twry Grant, R. Ph. SJ Exposure l~ heat . dampness. or the sun ran do quirk d amage Medi cines given by a dropper are subject to contamination each lime the dropper 1-; re-inserted into the bottle Follow these general rules Mos.L opened Ii quid :. s hould be destroyed after a few weeks Ointments last about six months and tablets and caps ules about one year Any medicine that changes color. develops a sed1 ment or appears to have a mold should be careful ly d estroyed. Do not throw di sr etrded med1dnes in the trnsh can to tempt children· Empt) contents first YOUR DOCTOR CAN· PHO(llE US.whe-n you need a medicine Pick up your prescription 1f shop. ping nearby. or we will deliver promptly without ex tra charge. A great many people entrust us with their prescriptions May we compound and di spense yours? rAH LIDO PHARMACY Fre. .,.. • .,., .' n,....,...._, I ... .,.. ..... '42·1111 ~ .. Jewels by Joseph purchases diamonds, gemstones, gold and silver from private indM· duals and estates Careful examination and evaluatlOn by our experts. Highest pnces paid 10 9 daily. Sat 1~ Closed Sunday. Phone today Ask !Of Beny Grace OI' Eric Zalaskus. I\ TMOtTION Of 11\U~T FOi\ 0V[I\ 60 YEAM. Jt:WtLS by JOStPH South Coast Pfaza, Costa Meu • ~ ·-l'OCIVlll --· ___ .. __ STARTS TOMORROW CIWAllOI IAMUMCa .. .... " (I Tot0 $11 HIO --... lllU CDWAllU ••n• -Ylljl 4H.ttto CHll loltM HO 1444 ...... -MIT ........ ~ c:aTl9 .._ .. , Je)S c......,.t1t•••l "'"an..,. ar.,.. IJ'.tnt • r -EM S...... 5"" Al 0.t> _,....,... .... M UI 4010 _ ...... ar.,.)M10U / ' - will pay you ~EACH MONTH--... TAX,,FltEE Starting October I . Coast Thrift Tax-free Accounts will <.•arn int ere t at 12. 61 % per annum. l'p to $2.000 of your interest earnin~1s on this account tu<' .Tax-Free ii you file a joint return. :\married couple will b<.· able 10 open an account for as much as S 15 .860.43 and receive an interest check for S l<i6.<i7 l'ac.:h month rREE from fedt·ral income tax. '--.. Check th<.• irucrest rnte you'd haw to earn wiih out a Truc-f'ree Account: "' -Tht• 1n1,•r'''' r<1lt' II 1·1111r t.1m11\ \our 1.1.~ IH,\• k1 I 1111.1 1\ h.wt• "' n •n•11•1· 1m ••rn•· '' pr11h.11>ll I' 111 nt·I I:! Iii ,1f1t•r 11·1h'r.I! 111tnmt· 1.1~ '' S:lP PPO 11r lllllrl' -o(I .. ( 2;; '..!:.!''., s,:; ooo 10 21 02" .. ;;,t\ IH Ill lll IX 01' s:w 000 ..!H Ji -;2 ~1 :;1100 .!.'J.' lh 17 • SI 0 .llPO .!Cl" .. I\ 7h", " 'i :;oo IH I:; ~>'4'' l11uh .. ,1.,.,,, ,,, f'r't .. \nt•.\h.h1ll•.111l111"1l'l..,fl1'' ''' lf'hr ''''' ''1-•i 'I ,,,,-11 '''•'·'•h "'''"'' m. n1 , ., 1.1 ''" "'" ,, ,,, 1 ' ltt , .. ,,, u.11 ... , .. 11 1'1t 1 \1• 1 t•, ,.,._ ., , 11••n 1,H\ l\·n.,lh ,,,,',\fl\ \\llh+h.H•·• ,\o~I , .. ., .. , 1.\\. '•'"'J'IH•I\ • ,,,,,,.,,, \ ,.\ ·•'· 111 +ollh A person filing~ single.' return will receive a monthly chl'Ck for S83.33 interesl Tax-Free on an account of $7 .930.2 1. ... -1f a tax-free account does not fit your financial planning, ask about our other high yielding ceryificates with Interest .... paid monthly. N..APort leach (Home Office) 17 Corpqrote Plaza (714 ) 558-4848 • I ' - H•m•t ' (In Ramona Plozo) 13'8 E FIOrido Avenue (714) 652-3022 Orange Cout DAILY PILOTfThur•day, October 1,J981 J Avco Thrift gives everyone the chance to earn high interest. You don't have to have a big account to feel welcome at Avco. And it doesn't take a lot of money to earn high interest. We have plans to fit everyone's needs. And people wh04dn make you feel at home. So come on in. Our people will put you in the best company. 14,.50"' Term Investment Certificate lnve~1 as hHle as $500 for as shon" 11nw ilS 90 day> (In 1he ~en1 of early w11hdrawal mait1mum 1nleMSI paid Is bf)'(, I • 11nnual rale of m1eres1 annual rail' ol in1eres1 Passbook Account • Earns from ddh! ot dep0s11 ln1ere~1 com pound .. d daily paid quarlerly Minimum d1!pm11 S25 This 1s a ltm11ed offer. 3vailabll' 10 Cahfor rna rl!s1dents onlv Ra1es subiect to change on 11 weekly baSIS L2!!AVCO THRIFT 25252 Cabot Road Laguna Hills. California 92653 (714) 581-1700 620 Newport Center Drive. Suite 101 Newport Beach. California 92660 (714 ) 644-9490 ALL FICTITIOUS NAME STATEMENTS FILED IN 1976 MUST BE REFILED IN ' 1981 - , and those with changes must be republished at t _ime of refiling HERE IS THE LAW· <Busi ness and Proiessions Code) .. Sec. 17920 (a > Vnless the statement expires ear her under subd1v is1on t b ) or (c l. a fie titious business name statement expires at the end of five years from December 31 of the year in which it was fil ed in the office of the county clerk. Sec. 17917 (b l Subject to the requirement!:> of !:>Ubd1n~1on (a l. the newspaper s elected for the publication of the statement s hould be one that circulates in the area where the bus iness 1s to be conducted. Sec. 17917 ( <c ) Where a new statement 1s required because the prior s tatement has ex· pired under subdi vis ion fa J of Section 17920. the new statement need not be publis hed unless there has bel!n a change in the information required in the ex· plred statement. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION REGARDING FILING AND PUBLISHING CONSULT YOUR ATTORNEY OR CALL THE ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT LEGAL ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT .# (714) 642-432, . Ext 332 Pilat ' • 4 ,, I Labels for used cars? Pros and cons cited in government regulation of market By LOUISE COOK ._ ........... _ Rilling prices for new aul omob1le11 m recent years have boosted the used·car bwo· ness. and the government 111 try· Ing for the third llmti lo regulate the market. The effort goes back to 1973, whe n tbe 1''ederal Trade Com· mission started an lovestigalion of th~ used·car industry. But the attempt has been strongly op posed by dealers who say the proposed rules are unnecessary a nd expensive. Sales of used cars. meanwhile. have been growing steadil)f 'If Figures from the Motor Vehicle Manufacturers Associa lion show that in 1970, about one.fifth or the money Americans spent to buy cars went for used vehicles. By 1980, used·car sales account· ed for one.fourth or the market; total spending on used cars last year was more then $15.5 billion. The ma1ority of the sales are between individuals, but the FTC says.·more than 10 million used cars are sold by dealers every year. And it s ays con sumers simply do not get enough information about lhe condition of the cars they are buying The latest FTC attempt at regulation caUs for a .. Buyers Guide" label on every Ul.ed ccir sold by an independent or franchis ed dealer. Th~ label would have to include informa lion of warranty coverage Dealers would have lo lis t major defects which they know about And consumers woul~ be en couraged to ask about potential, problems with thing~like the sus pens ion s ystem or the brakes. The rule was published Aug OVER THE COUNTER t:!t: .. k¥M9' lllbbGo lllrdSon 111'1cllr lllyvoor 8-1 llrwTom ll110llM llllffel1 eur .... pS CNl Fin CPT I C.IW1Sv C.nredH C.C.E" ~~l','11 c.reep CftV!PS Q\erlUv OwmS s Cllt1HOU I a.mu• ClleiVll Cllllll«I Clrtko CltzSoG• CltzUlA MUTUAL FUND 14 1n the Federal Reelater . Con1trw hu! 90 days lo veto lh~ plan. If there Is no vefo. tM regulation 1s expected to tAke tf fret In about six months. The National Independent l\ulomobile Dealers Association has promised lo right the FTC - 10 Congre1111 and in the courts CONSUMER The trade group already has :.pent more then $100,000 to de· lay the regulatory effort -an mvestment which it says has s aved dealers millions of dollars. arguments involved Bl\CKG ROUND : The first µroposed rule came in 1978 when the F'TC staff called for man· datory inspection of vehicles by u~ed-t·ar dealers, with the re· suits posted on window 11tickers. The full commission rejected the staff plan, but suggested volun· tary ins pections ins tead. Dealers would have been re· quired to post. on each car. a list of 14 mechnkal items, ranging from engines to tires The dealers would have had to describe each ite m "OK." meaning it had been inspected and passed; ··Nol OK," meaning it had been 1 ns peeled and failed: or "We don't know," meaning there had bee n no inspection . That '"plan · was put forward in 1980. There we re more arguments. more h e arings. more lobbying tn Congress. all leading to the rule which was issued on Aug. 14 . Tl l E PROPOSAL The "Used Car Buyers Guide" would start with a warning ··Spoken prom· 1s('s a re difficult to enforce. Ask the dealer to put all prom· NASO LISTINGS I isea lo writing." It would liat the major mech.nical and aale- ty systems of the car: frame and body. engine, transmlaalon ·and drive shaft , different.lal, c00Un1 system~ electriC41 syatem, fuel system, brake system. steenn1 system , s uspension 11ystem, tires. wheels, exhaust system and accessories There would be space for dealers to list warran· ties if any for each part ot the car, along with a space for a descripUon of "major known de· feels." There also is a place where dealers can state th al they offer no warranty at aU, that the car is sold "as is" and the dealer makes no written promises about Its condition. The reverse side of the guide would list possible problems for cons umers to ask about and <'heck. TllE INDUSTRY: The dealers say that requiring them to list ·'known defects" could create an implied warranty, even in cases where they state that the car is 'being sold "as is." They say a listing of known defects could be interpreted as m eaning that there are no other possible prob- lems. They also question the term "major," as king who is to decide what is "major" and what is not. '(he independent automobile dealers. group saya the rule is so vague that it "leaves both the consumer and the car dealer at a loss as to where the responsibility of one begins and the othe r ends ... More and more di&putes will wind up in court ... Legttimate dealers will have to inc rease the price of their cars d ue lo the ad· ditional costs of inspection and insurance . DOWN' 1..01 .... R '"' ~ '"' s-,._ , ..... 1 \1) t~ 1V. "" '"" 1'.t.. , .... s 111'> , .... ,. ..... IM '"' '"" ., "' 1 '"' 14 °" 4 Jlio -1\lo ·~ -'"' -"' -" -"' -I -~·· If. ... -v. II. .... "' ... .... -JY> -1 -Vt -"' -1 -'Ill -VI -,v. P<t. Up IO.O Up S1.I Up J1 _j Up U .1 Up U.• Up U.3 Up JO.I Up 21.6 Up 26.7 Up H .O Up J.S,O Up 25.0 Up u.J Up tt.7 Up n.• Up 22.6 Up 21:4 Up 11.4 Up 20.1 Up 20.6 Up 20.0 VP 20.0 Up 20.0 Up 10.0 Up It.A P<t. Off 12.7 Off 20.S OH 16.1 Off IS 2 Off ,, •• Off u.s Off 11.S Off · IU Off 10.S Off IU Off lO.O Ol1 10.0 Off t.S Off ••• Off " Off t I Off •. I Off '·' Off ... Off ,,. Off 7.A Off 7.1 Off 7.1 Off ... Off ..., Off •• 7 Off .. , .. > ' .. ( Orange Coast DAIL V PfLOTIThurlday, October 1, 1981 s NY E COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS OUOTAflONlll"IC~UOI HAOUO• fMI l"llWYO•• MIOWUT, IOA(.,IC ..... IOUOM OeY•OIT t.•o CIMCllOIAfl STOO llCMANOU AMO lllllOtl110 I Y THI MA$0 A•OtM$Tllllf • ~ Advertising: It still pays While many companies were hurling in. 1980, It turned out to bt another good year fo r the advertising business. Even when you're In trouble and sales are slumping and profits are dhsappenrinf(, you j ust can't whack away at your adv~rtising budget. People mieht forget who you or,· "Lf't':s see now. Chevrolet. . . Where do J know that name from'> .. General Motors. the maker or Chevrolet, lost $762 million in 1980 as 1ls car ~ales in the Untted Stutes skidded from 6.4 million to 4 4 million But CM's ad budget held steady at S316 mllhon. ahout the same as 1979. Ford Motor lost $1.3 billion tn l980 as its U.S. car sales fell from 2 million to l 4 m1lllon But In an effort to buoy those sales, Ford increased its ddvertising from $215 million to $280 million. Even Chrysler, its back 111 the <Aall , with a 1980 loss of Sl.7 billion. came out ~w1)lg1ng, lifting its ad budget from $118 million to $150 million. F}gures on total spending by the nation's 100 leading advertisers have just 1'een released by the weekly trade paper, Advert1s111g Age, which totes them up every ~ year. In 1980, these 100 com· t·, ~ panies spent $13 ) billion on ad· i ~ vertising. They ··-"""'"-%._ _____ _ ~r~~~~:~t f~~ MllJDI MDSIDllJZ the advertising you s~e on network television. more than half the commercials you hear on radio, and nearly half the advertising you see.in magazme .... The 10 top advertisers m the land during 1980 (and the proc:Ugious amoun~ (hey spenu were: Procter & Gamble 1$650 m1llion 1. Sears. Roe buck ($600 milllon1 Gener.ii Foods 1$410 million >; PhiJip Morris t365 milhon1. K marl 1$319 millionl: General Motors IS31fl million 1: R J Reynolds 1$298 m-illton 1 /\mera<.'a n Telephone & Telegraph 1$259 million >. and Warner Lambert IS235 million). or course these blockbuster dollar totals do nol mean that you are being bombarded by a lot more advertising messages these days Advertisers are victims of inflation, just as you and I are Earlier this year Daniel J. Krumm. the president of Maytag, complained about the rising cost of advertis ing. "lo 1976," he pointed out. .. a JO·second network commt"rcial on popular program ...... u<.'h a ... "M A·S·H" or ''The Waltons" cost Maytag about S2f.i,OOO Today it is double that amount, $52 ,000 .. There were some interesting :;1delagllJs to the Ad· vertising Age roster of 100 leadin~ adkert1sers. to wit: Hershey made the lop 100 li st for the first time. ranking 93rd with total spending nf S41 million Hers hey used to be famous (Or notorious in the ad in· dustry l for not believing in advert1 ... in~ ll ... uccumbed in 1970 after falling to second pla<.'e in candy bars to Mars !Snicker s, Milky Wa y. MS)r S. Three Mus keteers. M&M 'sl -The'24th largest advert1~cr 1~ none other than the good old U.S. government. which spent a total of $173 million. up 18 percent over 1979 as the armed forces intensified their recru1tm~ efforlb -While they dominate lhc Top 20 lists when companies are ranked by sales or profits. oil firms do not even figure here . The only petroleum company lo show up among the 100 leading advertisers is Mobil. which ranked 18th with spending of $195 million. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORK!API Flr1<1I Dow Jonn a v9• for Wed ~ JO NEW YORK CAPl·S-1~ •• weo. P<I<• ~ net <Nnot ol !Pie fltle•" most edlv~ New Y0tlt Stock E•<lle~ luu.s, trMll~ n•llonally et ,,_. Ulan $1 Amer &. T 111,JOO S1"9 • .. s .... ~ Kii m.ooo :12.. 11• IBM S?I,~ ·"4V. • 1 9_!!>star 9 Sll,JOO 1911• I .. c;sr1.~:. ::~: ,*~ ~ CMltSo WH1 194.ICIO ll<V. ~ Enon ' 310,700 JI v. WarnrCom llot,000 Hllto + 1-.. ~ummn Cp l62.~ 33V> 1'o Burr9h1 366, 900 )0•4 '• AmBdcll 315,IOO lOlle '~ R~Alr JOt,ICO S'~ '• Martin M D,600 .. .,. • " S<l'llumbr9 s 299,:ZOO s2v. V. AMERICAN LEADERS u~~w~~PK 9Aq~-N~tot to1~w1110 "" STOCKS 0Jl9'! Hlell L..ow CleM Cltti lO lnO ..._ ... ~,,. 839 &I ... , 98 • 1.0'I 10 Trn 3'19" JSJ~21 3-11 11 UO OJ.-O 9' IS VII 101 J1 101 1' 100 68 102 11 • 0 S9 6S St• 11' OJ JJ1 O'I 11193 lJO 18 • 0 •S ~'!_us J,•7•,IOO CM~ !r,;;: 6S St• •.6S..90G WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK IAPl Sep JO AOvenc~o 0.clln•o ¥~~·,~r.!~ N•w hlOh~ New lows Wl1A I AME a OoU Too.ty ' 1 .. 1 .. 377 1171 2 ~ NEW YORK IAPI S.p JO METALS roa:rr 169 I .. 110 • •• Pre\I 'l"Js l66 Jll 1112 J '1 PrtY o~i, 113 16( 77S 1 14 C••Hf ,, ...... ~ cenn • pound, u.s IM~ti"et~ l.eH40-.. <~llePOUnO 1111< 4911. centl a l)OUllCI. O.llvered TIA '1 ,.... Mel•l5 w .. t <-lie ID .,_. tile New York Stock Elt<IWlft9e noch end .,..,.,,ts _, "-,,. QGfW up IM mott end dDwll ttot most i..s.ct on r:.r<enJ.C:: .. <118119t reoe,,, .... of \lolume ""'"'1_..,1..a<e<1ll•~.N V • + Ho s.curltlft lrectlng llelow '2 ••• ln<:I· udld. Net end per~ d\MQH .,. ttot Jl"•,..n<• ~ -prevlOvs <10ll"9 prk• -~:~I<•. Heme I.Mt ChO Pct. 1 ~nPort 11'1< •s + 17 VP 60.7 2 Arcete 2f)f 4$Vt + I V> Up 2J.O l WeSllNetl t l2"-+ Jl't Up 20 4 4 OllMllw P' 17 + 41/'J Up 20 0 s l~ Pllenn ~ + '-Up tt.• 6 CttlMllw QI 4''1t + 1V. Up II S 7 Purlll\ Fell! ,,~ + 2-Up IS.2 • Simm Pf'K 13'-+ l"'-Up 14 7 t ~11Ele< 11,. + 'g Up U 6 to PSA In< 21V. + 2 Up 14.l 11 FlulYFi QI 11:\4 + 2 Up IU 12 Coettl llf9 Jn. + 4 Up 1).3 IJ PuClll< lrid JV. • Up 13.0 4 Gl<IWstF" t 10\'t + 1~ Up 12 .O ls Je-l<or 3" + 'II UP 11 1 • Unlver Cp UV> + 2Y, Up 10 9 11 PennGent ooi:'s + ~ UP 10 • Heme Utt Clll Pct. 1 GllSU 4.52Pf " -6 Off 11 1 2 AM 11111 r -~ Oft tU : ~~ .. ~ .... = •r; g:: ::t S EIOlllH•ll JOV. -1'41 Oft 7.4 f ~E1'3 11~ = : 8il :·~ t MOifSJ, H -t~ Off 70 f StoUVC Illa -~ Of! 7,9 tO ""°"El t tll/'J -I Oii 1>.t 11 OeflMAJ!! lt\4 -I 'to Oft • 1 12 Ci.\IEI " -J Oii • • u 0... It rec 5"' --Off •.3 Ii Olalfll I.Miii I* -'-~ 6.0 ,, Geertlllld VI-\ -1~ I t.0 11> USIUly llW ti .. -.. I •.O 11 Oll'Ytler wt t -)It Qt1 U liftl£11J~A~I -~k .. lat~ •f eolll e•IM, ~ wltll ._.,., ""~· .,.....,..... • .,.,. ............. u. .. ._. ._., 1 tny w., MIL•, 141 "-00. Melltua • '"'· u ....., .... '"1.00 ... ... ----~ ..... ""'oz.,'*'• ....... tewee: o.. . .....,. Mer<1trl' '431 00 per lleO. r: i ... Pletl-MJll.OOl~'r or., N.Y ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SILVER NEW YORK (API Handy a H8NIWlll sllver W9ClllKday '' 100, up to.070 !noelllerd Sliver O .OSO, up $0 070; leltrluted sMwr 5' nt, uP to.07S COLD QUOTATIONS ., ...... ., ... ~; "*1'1inv 1111119 .. u .JO, ott u 2S . U.._: .,.,_ llalnv "1tl.7S. off IJ.00 Perls. eftemoon 111111111 $$17 .... WCI ,It.a.. l'r•ll4l_,: $41'.Cl, ott ,S.90. Z•rlcll, 1e1e 11.i,.. t.'M.00, 011 '3 00; '41.00•""" Ha1111., a Marlfta11 : only dal1y quote .. " 15, off SJ 00 l-'Mnt: only CUiiy q"°'e t.'21 IS. off U.00. • ........... only CIAlly QUOte ftlH'IU1ed MSO. 1', ott SJ. IS SYMBOLS Orange Cout DAILY PILOT fT'h ur1d1y, October 1, 1981 Conoco Mrees to · merger STAMFORD, Conn. <AP> - Conoco Inc. shareholders have o'verwhelminaly approved a $7 .8 billion mer1er of the nation's ntnth-lareest oil coinpany lnto -Du Pont Co., culminating the largest corporate takeover In u .s . hlb'tOry. More than 99 percent of Conoco's shareholders voted In favor of the mer1er, which creates t.be seventh-laraest U.S. industrial concern with ~om· bined assets of more than $21 ~llllon. A certificate of merger was being filed with state authorities in Delaware. Du PoQt's shareholders ap- proved tM merger Aug. 17. A bidding war for Conoco was waged this summer with Sea- gram Co. Ltd. and Mobil Corp. locked in the competition. Although Seagram lost out, it ac· quired a 20 percent stake in Du Pont. Left unanswered is whether Seagram will gain con- trol of seats on Du Pont's board of directors. Inflation has support Suburbanites classed as 'closet beneficiaries' NEW YORK <AP ) - Everybody hates inflation, right? Poll Uc al leaders and the e lectorate, producers. con· sumers -everybody. Like Iago in Shakespeare's •·Othello." it represents pure evil, and whenever it appears on our economic stage, the au· dience hisses and boos as one. If all that is true, though, it's strange we have had so little luck for so long trying to subdue it. Surely a country that could send a man to the moon ... That's just the point. say some observers who have studied the problem. Inflation turns ~ut to have a very large body of sup· port. It isn't a readily visible one. to be sure. There is no Society of the Friends of Inflation. with a Washington lobby and a large public relations staff. Without consulting the Congressional Record, one can state confidently that nobody has stood up lately in the House or Senate to plead inflation's cause of services are discussed healed· ly, ending with the clarion call, ·something's got to be done about ill' ·'Then the discussion turns to property values, af)d the two faces of suburbia become ap· parent. 'My place has doubled in the last X years,' or 'I bought this for Y in 1972 and I could get 2Y now .... or words to that ef· feet. Devoe says he doesn't mean to single out suburbanites as in· Inflation's cause has been the ''escape from the terrible in- security of the marketplace.'' nation's only silent supporters. Just about everyone who has learned to use debt to capitalize on the shrinking value of the dollar has an interest in seeing it continue. he says. Congress to do It." John Case. a Cli(1lbrtd1e. Mass .• economic Jourimlst, aays in his book "Underslandlna Inflation" that there ia a rut and effective way that tnnauon could b&brought' under control. It would consist essentially of stripplne away all the 1ovem· ment programs, re1ulatlon and safeguards built up over the years, abolishing everything from Social Security and un- employment compensation to the Federal Reserve Board. Such measures. says Case, would help produce an economy in which the forces or the marketplace could push prices doW-n as well a s up. Un- fortunately, he says. "a rree: market, competitive. dog-eat- dog uncontrolled capitalist economy is nobody's paradise. "Businesses, facing prices they can't predict and markets they can't control. fear !or their economic health. Workers, 'without control over their wages or their terms of employment. fear for their physical health. Those who can't work fear for their lives." Du Pont. which ranks as the nation's largest chemical com- pany. paid $98 a share for 45 per- cent of Conoco's stock and ex- changed 1.7 Du Pont shares for each remaining Conoco share. for a total of about $7.6 billion. U~der the merger agreement. Conoco will operate under exist- ing management as a wholly owned subsidiary of the Wilm- ington, Del.-based chemical Co!J)pany. FOCUS ALTERED Dr. Harold Hubbard. d1ret"tor of the Solar Energy Research Institute In Golden. Colo .. :.a~·, that budget·slashing and staff-cutting ha~ re ,·ampL•d the internal structure lo place le~s e mphasb on poltc~ -m<1kmg and more on lab work. Dr. Lawrence Kazmer~k1 'background • l'hl•<:k:- d ata on lab project Some of inflation's most ar- dent supporters would be the last lo think or themselves as such. says Raymond F Devoe Jr .. an investment analyst at the brokerage firm of Legg Mason Wood Walker. ··This schizoid tendency is quite apparent at suburban cocktail parties, .. DeVoe ob- serves. "Increases in school tax- es. fuel oil. gasoline and all sorts ··or course government is a major beneficiary of \nflation," he adds. '"Tax·bracket creep· is a way of driving people into pro- gressive tax brackets, designed for the very rich. It thus raises government tax revenues without the necessity of going to In Case's view. the chief cause of inflation "has been the long, tortuous and largely successful escape from the terrible in· security or the marketplace." If Americans' feelings were really single-mindedly set against inflation, Devoe main- · tains, .. it wouljl have ceased to be a problem a long time a~·· - MAtL BOXESl • 2 4 HOUR PICK-UP To Place your "Fast Result" Service Directory ad .... Call Now e AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY e lOW AATES COSTA MESA AREA 642-5678 ht.122 760-7000 , SICK AND TIRED? IF SOMEONE VOU LOVE IS HURTING (And you are hurting too) Because of ALCOHOLISM or other chemical dependency Learn how you can help now! 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With Answer age. you may 6e out of reach, but you'll never be out of touch' / Earnuoto 1ax~1rae interest at Perue1ua1 savings Peroe1ua1 will oar rou 12.&13* or more on one-rear, 1111-lree cerlilica1es Through Q.ctober 3rd, the yield on a one·year, tax· free certificate is 12.61 %. On October 5th a new yield will go into effect, which may be higher. Sign up with a deposit of $500 or more by October 3rd and Perpetual will make sure you get the higher of the two rates. If you open your account on October 5th or thereafter, the new rate applies. A couple filing a joint federal return can, with a deposit of $15,861, earn the maxi- mum $2,000 tax-free interest. An individual with a deposit of $7,931 earns $1,000 tax-free interest. In many cases savers can transfer T·certificates to a Perpetual tax·free account without incurring any penalty. This includes deposits currently held at other s.vings ins~utions or banks. It isn"'t necessary to transfer those funds because we'll do it for you. Simply bring us your old certificate. It's all part of the famous Green Carpet Treatment. If yovr famlly Income lt1 $50,000 or more $35,000 .. $2.S,000 $20,000 or less Your federal ter Yov would llna to 111'11 !Illa bracket proOably It: tauble r1ta to equal tu·frt1 lnterut• at l'tr1>4tual1 50% 2512% 40% 21.01% 30% 18.01% MC. 25% 16.8l% Main Offtce: 9720 Wllshlre Blvd., Beverly Hiiis, CA 90212 274-6066 or 272~65e • w .. twood Office: 108$fWllahlre Blvd., Lot Angel•, CA 00024 474-3503 • Larchmont Oftfct: 250 No. Larchmont Blvd., Loa Angeles, CA 90004 462-6483 • Norttwtdge Ofttoe: 18640 Devonshire Sl, No!1hridge, CA 91324 3e0-"232e 4' CMog1 ~Office: 6400 Platt Ave., Canoga Park, C~ 91304 ~141 • ful*'°" Oftloe: 3334 Yorba Lindi Blvd., Fullerton. CA 82831 (714) 883-1200 • ~ hech Office: 163'4 San Miguel Drive, Newpor1 Beech, CA 92ee0 (714) 84().1934 Al...._.,.. ..... ...,,• 111& ta I ,.a " am mm Mr .. u1t1ti..i. ...,.,.. ... ,,.,..,,,. 11 ......... _I) ~p,_., l t«nt\ff") Loh t r).,c' lomfnt'rn.t Vr•rh (ondt1ft'UfMUft'U1 SI.It" lllit>lt• .. l nol• ~I• tlw~ lo bt M o\td I""'"" Propom lndvMrntl Pr~r•\ 1,;A,l.,!wl• Mollillit lln..,. Trlt Vt\ .. M-• u.._n Rl"<V\ ~~~~~'Y':a, Ot.M-' "•tt Ptuip lftrw. ~ >·arm~ (,ro' r' Hnl t:,,,,, t .. •th•nat Ht•l t'..,htr 'A-artl.-.1 RENTALS t~)f'\.ltff"N\tr.ptj llovM" lolurN\h.0 Uow"" t wUlVf l f'I ,Of .. Oft'llNUM\ •vn t....,_tNum" l 1t Tc..Mou't' h1r-. r ........... ~lnl U\,aptf>'\" t'urn 1.111111~1 Aph t'urn Aph lMurn ~,._,.,,.°''"' 11-.. llown • !lo.rd llal..t. MGl<h GvnttlOl'nit ... ._,mnwr M ... nti.I"' \ M'llM)ft Hrnleh Jlfnti.J"ll.O~ .. ff' C•r•I"'' fur Hfnl Ofhct H.tn.tal lu>•f'H>'\."1 Rff'lhl l.cl~t1•t Rtt'tal ....... ,, lltftl•h lldkd \hv M•nt•I, IUSINESS, INVEST MEllT. FINANCE KuWlf'\\hPIA>'I ~'''"',.'"""tft'I lft\~tmtnt (_)v1Mt \ lft\f'\•mtni \l•ntf'd 11 ... ., lo ....... MlN'' ... n1.td M•.irtUlf'' TO' AHMOUNCEMENTS. PERSONALS & LOST & FOUND Atlnwnnmtnl' l •r Pool ..,., •• 'lAI~" '-' lnund Ptf'411\•I .. ~••ltlu,.... r,.,,1 SERVICES 'c'rHu• lhrtcln"' EMPLOYMENT & PREPARATION V k ll'lh t.utrurtll!)tl Joft\li •l\lt"lt "·'~" ·•'"" \J ' t MERCHANDISE Anht41W.., APV*uar.'°' Aun ion ~l\tk'' Kwkt1l'lt "•'"''•"" t •n•'•" £ t;q"-1.Jtmo m I.th ..... httlO'OU •\;rn1tutt (1llfalt'~lf' ll<lf"f\ lkN~(;t•.Ah ,,.,.,," l..1\ntot~ \f1Mht1M'O \h"'fll•nrw' \h"""•""°"*' "•"'•"" \1111\.ff'.I hn.UuMt-Al OffK'i' furn&. •.qui~ p.,., Pl•nt. A Or11•n' ""'"""· )ht hlnf\ ""''"'"4t '·nod• 'tOl't Mf"'ll11.1r»nt U.ir f~·t.ct.o .... -. "f'fl'V BOATS & MARINE EautPMENT • lif'f'M'f1I Bo_.., ~hint Mf'u r b h ,M1mM t:qu1,1 &t11b Po• .. r 8o1b Mud t h•rt•r lloah~•I float, Sh~ &» h ~~·!oil• Hool•'ltor&ll• TRANSPORTATION Alrcr•n ~%·c~~t """' MObtki' llomt' \louwt°\«" .. , vr.r.ii1r' MDlor llm' S..I• Hetnt Tr.t11ifr, Tr1,,1 Tr•,.,._" t Mn' Awto """'f"" P•th AUTOMOBILE 'tt'l'IC't.tl AA1k1\H'' ll~n• Mt"1 ft'•hUtl \ t'hlt If'._ i~~~' ~~·.!·t~··· """h \•I\.' At.t,ol.A".,1111ni.:. \~v,Wantf"•t AUTOS, IMPOITED ltt'fM'U I \II• Mufnl'u \1ijtl Au<tt1n Hr ... t1•\ ~II" ~:r.·· l>•lt""" h ·ft•fl .,,., I .... ,. J•j,!Y•' J<ft> .... K•rrn..nntauoi M•"'• Vvtt t11l11~ tt.1n1 ll\, .Ill.I! ·~' •'IM•·ta .... ib:,vt , ... ..,iw Kt'ft•wh Mutt-lht)•t' Mn\•t !ti.11t1il1 ~tMru r.,,,.. , ... .., .... \.Mk-••.:•• \uh" AITIS, ID Thursday, October 1, 1981 , Looking for a van for work and pleasure ? Be sure to check today 's listings -classification 9570 . ·--------------------------------------------------~ ........ ~.~ ........ ~:~::.~~ ........ ~.~.~ ........ 1~.~~ ....... ~:.~.~ ........ ~-~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~.~~ ....... ••• ,.. IOOJ ... ,.. 1002 .... ,.. IOOJ .... ,.. 1ooi ..... ,.. . 1002 ....... 1001 .... ,.. 1002 ...... ,.. . laooz ···········!··········· ······················· .. , ..... ! •••••••••••••• f ••••••••••••••••••• ;.l •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• IQ IUI 11111 :: EQUAL HOUSING I~ OPPORTUNITY , .. I@ , .... -llltt ............. ~ All real estat e ad· vert lud in tbla newspaper Ls subject to the Federal Fair Hows- IASTSmlCO.O Nearly oew tuwf1.1l'1 decorated, bt11.1tlhll patio, J Br 2 Ba. lusb 11nd1c1pi.q. Sll0,000. ~~ fgl Red Estate MISAV•DI Two story. Four bedroo1111 Quiet cul-de- · aac location. 40' solar beatinc pool. BBQ and sbulfieboard court. Near schools and shopping. sw.ooo. Ul-7300 M.I. 1040 llllii llllM 1•1 , .. '"'" Ufi' rGlll IU!ll , ... inc Act~ 1968 whlcb 1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii:iiiiiiiiiif makes ll illegal t9 ad· II vertlse "any preference. li mitation, or di11· cr\minatlon based on race, color, religion, IWll jlllJ ,...., sex. or natiooal origin, 1:m or an intention to make 1))1 any auch preference. :: limitation. or dis· {: crimloation." l~.MI :.;: Tb.ls newspaper will not , 11c.i knowingly accept any ~ advertising for real hUt estate which is in viola· ~1-=tion=-"~"-"'the"'-=~~-~·~~--1 ~,-........ _ ... _ .... llW 2IW BIOIS: A.t.ertiMn ............... cw,•;:;:.~ ron I . Tiit DAILY Pl.OT •1 • 11 hMlty for ... tint l1c.rrtcl htttrtloa -,. ll!N la>J u.. :i.A lm llW UZ$ ls.II• JRll. llO• ]IQ) ... :: , _______ _ tlW :: H-..forWt ~· ..•...•.....•..•....... !: fiwrd I 002 Uf(t eeeeeee•eeeeeeeeeeeeeee ..... !: I ..... l4lil CE llDIU ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS Of SERVICE MESA VEIDE Beautiful ·Contemporary Home In <Asta Mesa's Best Area. Features Include Five Large Bedroo~. Two l!npressive Fireplaces, Gorgeous Living Room & Family Room , Skylights, Wall Coverings, Wet Bar. Good Assumable. Price. $223,500. IUfi CAHYOH VIEW! Beautiful Ve rsailles Model On Quiet Cul-de·Sac. Wide, Winding Stairway -.Wit h Spectacular Suspended Walkwa y Overlooking Marble Entry And Spacious Living Room. Elegant Features -Garden . Kitchen. Den With Fireplace, Huge Master. Suite. Highly Landscaped Garden With Paddle Tennis Court. Great View ! Special Financing Available. $875,000. 759-9100 uc.,. ....... Me.,.tC...... Find out about the higb. earning real estate sales career opportunities with THE REAL EST ATE RS. Licensing ;::::::::::::::;::::;;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::=. school fees completely refund able to school of your choice. Extensive sales training. For in· _formatioo, call 751-6191 HAUOllMI ,.,1o Ao exquisite offering: .. w Elegant & spacfous 3 ;: bdrm + family room, 1 -lev. home w/panoramlc ~ vista or harbo r , = ~:t~neP=e~ ~~'!~ ,111, fort. luxury Iii security. ,,.,. Reduced, now $739,000. ::: (Owner financing). "'Agt, ~llO 640-5S60. ~I~ ""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~!!!!I ,,~, ~ ""' ""0 HO OUALIFYIMfi S25,006 down and no .,,.. qualifying ror this lovely ~: 3 bdrm cul·de-sac home. """'' Only $129,500. Call DOW ~; ~.:5370. =:ALLSTATE R.EALTOAS c L .. l 'If I A y " I T T c R c u y S L K 0 L A I S C V M H ~t R C A T £ S P T £ l T R l I 6 0 N U A A I L I R A Y N I T A C I F I L A U Q A £ M V N A M T V A M I L E U £ T A C I I Y C NE O·P X C ( L l X EHR 0 E TACIFAAVACMRP ~XOIMR E C Y 0 l I P T Z R J E J I F R R M S R N R l I I I T H T R U R V 0 I I A 0 E R E L R L T l t T A V R l R T l N l C N t Y T I 0 I N T P 0 S V A Y l 0 H C T E E N T P E A E U R C L C A T l I YSARVYS I TOOOEEEUSYT Y l N 0 Q S l C A T t N £ T N Q E S l ADENXYAPEMTR lMA LOUC : .......... foNlrd,1111111·. .-1, ... ,_, Ot ....... Find ellfl 11111111111 It !ft. p ~ -Alllllty • = TM £-.¥"' u,.in. : --~ ~ SUI llowy T OlllOf1'0W: Atmollplln viui ~·,~ ASSUME n'•O/o LOAM "';.:::::::;~;:;;:;:~;::==::::=::;:-:-:-'. '"'' Owner will carry 2nd. ~ ~;~ No qu11Uyiog. Nicely »•Lt decorated 4 bdrm home ~J. with lots ~ amenities . »"•' Only 1128.900. call today ~~ ~wo. ~~ ALLSTATE ~; REAlTOAS .1 .. Wii) r.5" ifiSi' vi•• """ rltl) ITC? Y.1¥ t11l .... STARTING A NEW BUSINESS? UMDA ISLE .,/) ~ Exciting opportunity! Wide channel L.ol' view from spectacular architectural . designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1,495,000. UDO ISLE HOMES Featured on Homes Tours this lovely traditional spacious. custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath home. newly redecorated. Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm. 2 bath plu s lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam· ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best pri ce for the money. PEMIMSULA POINT IEACHFIOMT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featur· ing marine room. $1 ,385,000. WEST OCUMFIOMT Triplex units, xlnt financing $800,000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR 1-li Bo 1,.d, O''"" NB bl~ 6161 LOOICIMG fOI AM EXCmMG IMVESTMEKT? We have just li sted three buildings in the Cliff Haven area of Newport Beach. Each has three-two bedroom. and two-one bedroom aits. some with patios, all with garages. and situated in a lovely neighborhood. Very good assumable financing. Each building offered at $410.000 . FEE. A sensational investment. U~l()U~ ·ti()M~~ REALTORS. 675·6000 24'3 Ea11 Cout Hlghw111. Corona dtol"Mar .I Wl HA Vl SO Of 1'* HST LISTINGS IH TOWM PIOHaTI REALTORS 67a.HI I LUXURY DU,UX, SO. Of HWY. Two ........ 3 .... 2 .. + ...... ~ .... .W.•ltw of oc--. ~.,_.I. Helt mt. Adfoc ... to I"-Ttm1ee $449,500. COLE OF MEWPOIT IEALTOIS 2515 E. Cont Hwy .. C--c'-' M• 675-5511 You don 't need a gun to "d.raw fast" when you place an ad in lhe Daily Pilot Want Ads! Call DOW -642-5678. Get GREEN cash ror WHITE elephants with a Classified Ad Call6G56'18 ·$20,600 DOWM!! • NEWPORT HACH • Spacious 4 bedrooms in prestige area. Anxfous owner Says try lease /option , land contract or ? ? Call 759· 1501 or 752· 7373. • 100/o DOWM• Owner will CARRY 2nd on lowest priced 2 bedroo m unit in complex. Quiet, private location. Assumable low interest loan ! 759-1501 or 752· 7373. $8000 DOWM!! Bring paint brush & broom lo save $$$ on this 3 bedroom fixer in quiet Cos ta Mesa ar ea. Creative seller says ··sell ~ .. 759-1501 or 752-73~. NEWPORT HACH OfffCE 2670 Sc. MHJ-f Dm~ • 1714) 759-150 I 17 14) 752·7373 ·~ Walker &lee Real Estate MAMACilMENT Orange Co. area. 15 yn experience Call for info. and rates. HJ.al 2 • SIHDOWM • OM1MllAY Beautiful bayfront home with sandy beach & boat s lip. Lovely deck & patio. Lite & cheery 3 I L 1 0 H A s I bdrm + den, 2 bath . open beam celling. brick I 11 Ii I I BBQ. 2 car garage + · · · · · · -DESPIRATI! 4 Bdrm fba pool home. Assume hi-balance loan. owe straight note. EXTRA PARKING !! A I bargain al $595,000. I 0 S I P E Owner/ Agent 67~9187 or 1 I I I I 67~7060. . I succ~ REALTY 54&-7991 OPEN DAILY 1 to 5 P.M. 2331 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach POOL-PA TIO--IEAIJTIFUL a.dKorahd & l'ffCfy for occ .. •cy. Chan.llMJ l bed., fOf'IMI 6'.ra. Fnttct. doors I MW cNfalfl HI°""""""'' 0..... wfl IHM/optloft. $235,000. 631 -1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAL ESTATl s.IH, llf.ntol• P•-rtv MdNgrmtni , 2436 W C~tl Hwy 315 ManM Aw Ntwport &ach &!bod lwnd '31-1400 '7J.6t00 Dir De9'TlpMA1. IUY OM UDO ISi.it 4BR home w /center courtyard, French doors, hardwood floors, beam ~ilin~ . Street to-street location on lot and a half. 3-car garage. $5~000 incl. land. ¥oung/lmbenillfo (C55) LUXUIY WITH sacumrt Beautiful Jasmine CrN home located on lovely wide greenbelt. 3 BR, 2~ baths. Total privacy in security gated community .. 9,900. Madeline Crawford 81414 ~_c__,,t ,....c ..... H__,Y...-11 !:! The old cookie far never p11d I' I; I I 18 percen1 In 1nieres1. bu1 . _ . . when you took money out. .---------. there wun't a-. I CROTER I "---,, -I -,, -, -"I 0 c-P••• ,.... ct-v<\i. Qvotod . • • • • • bv t.11"'9 '" ,... ...... no WOid L-..L-~-'--'-~-' .,,..., 6-lop 1 ........ op No 3 bolcM A PRINI NUM&Uro lEll!RS l' ~ IN lH!Sf SOUARES • .. UNM'.RAM&l£ l£Tl!tS TO I V GH ANSW!I • rrrrr r1 I I I I I i I SCIAMUTS Mlwen ill Ct.1ifldtioil 5100 THE BIGGEST . GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS WI ~11 '1 \ TAYLOR CO. HLALTUH~ c,11111· l'•·lti VACANT·YIEW·AtOOOUS Panoramic view of bay, ocean & sparkling lights. 4 Bdr~. Lge family rm. Formal din . rm. 2'h Baths . $395.000. Submit offer on price and terms. Owner anxious. See any time. WESLEY H. TAYLOI CO .. lEALTOIS 2111 SanJ ..... HlllRood NEWPORT CENTER, M.I. 644-4910 MESAD&MAI WELL FI NAN CED Huge high ceilinged family room adds much to 3 Bdrm home All fixed up ! Assumable Isl and owner will carry 2nd TD SlJS,CXX>. 642-5200 A PETE BARRETI ·.. REALTY ~ 7ff.1111 MOllLI HOMES Lido Wafttflotd Cozy 1 Bdrm. large bv in& room with fireplace Great year round liv1.11f or weekend retreat S59.500. 759·1616 DOCK PIOILEM IM MEWPOIT HACH? 60' dock & 2 story Hunt ington Harbour home. 4 Br, l o/• Ba .. (;im. din. bonus rm. Estate sale $699,000. R.E. by Lucia 831·~. from pbald1nt. tweed, f(annel lo c1tamin1 silk and satin. f0d- hpu11 and M1eet-are a maior IJltme M!JWhtie in almost any fabnc. Sn thtm now and save' Pnnttd Patttln 9112. Miws bst Su• 23. 2, 2~. 26~. 28 30. 32. S1zt 26\li JOCl'purs I 718 Jtrdl, !>4·111Cll. b"~ I 318 S-4 $2M "' .. ,..... ~ ..... ,...,. ... ._s.. ...... IMT.I. .,,...,. °"'· 442 D.ity "'°' . m llll 11111 St., ... ,.,.. in 11111. l'tllt ... ADOl(SS, DP, SUI 114 mu NUlllH. Wotk1n1 woman' Looa StNrt. tit $111111, dms fol less-ww a waid- tVbe wrlh °"' NEW FAu.·WINIER PAITERN CAIAl.00 Coupon lei free S2 Pl!lttn 111SIOt-fQUr cllotu! SW ~r· Allca#f •. u .. iftt'; ..... ,., ...... -·~-..... • REH TORS JASMlME CllEB Drastic price reduction· seller will liquidate below market & fin.a.nee. Former model·3 Bdrms, large ffmily room, tile jacuiu off master suite. Now S349,500. Guarded community. D.M~Mmt.IUr 760..0835 Start now-mike lOIS ol sparkltng Xmas trim\ Stnn& bt~s 1nd PtJllulD thin wire to mal.t thne labulous Je-irtled Chnstmas tree tn~ QutCk. easy tun lor the lamtly to !04" 1n on Pattein 1489 d1rec· hons IOI 5 01naments S2.00 tor each pattern Add 50• uch pattt!fn for PoSfl1e and handltn1 Sud le: ..... Nffdlecfllft Oetlt. 1 OS Dally P1toe .. 1'l, Old °""" Sta., ""' T-'. llY lOIU. ,riltt .._., MMs. zi,, ,lttn ..... -1912 lheclltcnlt ~ 3. het jlattt!IAS ACl$ldt 110 btSt 1.cl.tts dolls. quilts mort1 Knit. CIOclltl. lmbroidef S no All .CWT IOOU • .SZ.08 tldl ...... ~*­... ,....~~ 1H-MI & a..°" ,.. J4.-M'tlia ......... . uu..-..... Qllililc UZ.Qlift~ ISi.Md a llici • 12'-0rid ••• blJ , ...... lzt.f ..... ,...,.,. Qlilts l5111riftr ~ """" m.,., .... ll"*W ..... ma. art" 111101' t 11~-­ llJ.Na ..... Ul ...... Art"..,.. c.w ii:-, Oum Cout DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Oclober 1, 1981 THE fA'lll l ' CIRCt.:8 by Bii Keane "They' re water towers. One's for hot, and the other's for cold." ,..\R,.:\Dl'KE by Brad Anderson to., •IGGEeaGE by Virg il Partch (VIP) "Shh ·· He was up late last night.'' "He has two speeds ... fast and full speed aheadl" • 1 JUST WAAT JOEY TO SEE HOW YOOR NOSE 1WITCJ4ES WHEN YOO-EAT A CARRO'(." Jl'DGE P.\RKt:R G \Rt'U :l,D DOCTOR, I'M A~l\AIO MY CAT ICO HAVING' A NERV005 6REAKC70WN ,.00~ ,. l Ll~I ~S ~OLD STILL, SWEETIE --I MADE" A L-ITTLE BET WITH 'THE BOV5 AT TEDDY'S ACROSS 1Got -- dal 5Weepon 10 Of • period \4Ch* 15 Therefore 18Mt.. Tumtr 17 Portllded tv WlnecftY 20 8eltll ,..;; -~ ·~f:~J~> ~~~G~' ~\:)!. ~ S).-,, - 63A~ve 64 tapltll lmployee 2 WOfdl ee Young Nimon 117 0ecamp UNITED Feature Syndicate Wedll9ld1y's PUZZie Solved 118 Grtl1 Berrier hlllilll~:i:+.:otil ·~~~ laland 89lnMC11 70 Ciit 71 Bttdcen 21 H9ldy 23LMGOd 25 Plllntlngl DOWN 211GIWI '3Ct~ 1f~ 34 Auptur• 2 Clntdlen 35 Aoof J*1 rebel Louis ~i;,.l 9rft~~ 3 7 Well pet1 "'"-' 1.:...11 1!!.111 mc.1::.£:.Cl.::J 38 Olnutle 3 Code tor "A.. 22 Rurll felt IM~ ..._ 4 MOit dllnp 24 Off. WOfklf 49 ~ 31 Nlw YOfll city 5 ltreell plain 211 Supporta 51 Rtlutd 4f -... -• e Incite 27 Memento 53 Gre¥t ..a> 43 MultlcdO!td 7 COftlplttloN 28 ''*"be 55 Parent 45 ~ I CMmlCal 29 Purpoeee M Ctvtlrymen· 48 ,.. pr• 31 Vlolenl Vet. 41 ... t Mltlh ~ 32 Aomen ~ 57 OrlPf drink 10 On flt e.ct1 ...,. 33 s~ 58 Precipitation 52 Wftl 11 tt 10 ~ ~ Gtrrnenta 80 Alptoow s.u111181W 11 Fiii co Sins et ez.ct1 "* se CM1P .-: t2 l<lttY 41 PoeMe f2 ~ 1..-" "" .,..., "" Ught ooet• es ''TM Haity • .......... ttOlleenl 47 - -- _ .. by Harold Le Doux , by Jim Davis by Ferd & Tom Johnson EWT WH,AT IH,AT IT'S WILL l NONE O~ 'T~LL IHE ~oYs? THEIR BUS/NESS .' IT'S WHAT KEEPS TME. WORLD 60IN6 ... ~ 50 'THEY SAY . SO '(()lJ KNOW OMO SEUE'IES IN lHE .&ALANCE OF NATURE ? TtMBLEW EEDS voo-HOO! "1tH SXPRBSS MAN! .. THE CITY TQOK DOWN THE PARK SIGNS SAYING NO BALL GAMES, NO FISHING. NO SWIMMING, AND NO PICNICS SINCE -,t)LJIRf 601f\JG- iHA1 WAY, PROPiHIS G-ROCE:lt{ LJS1 OFF Ai 1He GeNERAl.. SIORE! NOPE---THEY REPLACED THEM WITH THAT fT~K l ' "l~K•~RBEt\ ~ --------. .......... iME 5ruDENT COO~l REAU.<.i' DID A NK:.C JOB OF DECORATJ N6 1'HE (;I.JM FOR -mE HOME. - COMING ~NCE . f>ARR4! A1"1't!N1"10N, PL-l!ASE!! M~S. c:>uc:>c..eY IN WA~P SIX HAS FINAC..&,...Y PO%BP OF=P .' WOCJ&,...P 1"He!! GUM FAIRY PC..t!ASe! f'tBPOR'T" 1"0 61!!RIA'T'RIC5 ?II ... U~ S1'EVE U~&FOO'f-· BALL Tt1AT~1ANNE, MA'{Be '/OU COULD GET IN~ESfED , IN IT100J t' ! r l ! M 'lam; l""Sl.>PfJc5SE so by Tom Bat1uk by Kevin Fagan Orange Cout DAILY ALOT/Thurlday, Ovtober 1, 1981 .. Forhen ptf'i61d lo bargain SACRAll&NTO CAP) -Tb• emplo)'HI of local ,ovenuneata wW be ablo to oefotiate for the rllht to require aU employ"' to Joln t.bel.r uni on or pay a fee, un- der a bW tiped by Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. In a ceremony with tbe leadera of labor un· tons, the De mocratic sovemor called puaace of the ''a1ency shop" bm "a real victory ... for the riglfta of worklns p eo pl e" and "a teaUmony to the re- n e w e d vigo r o f o r - 1anJzed labor.'' NEW IN GREETERS -While most orrices h ~ve receptionists. this Tokyo office of Sanrio Co. Ltd. greets visitors <it the en ......... trantc "ill:?--L:niko. · a talking um corn and An acency s b o p , a type of unloo s ecurity agreement, requires all employees to e ither belong to a union or pay It an amount equaJ to ita m e mbenbip fee. <.i T\' cumera Settlement offered • Ill • swt / ' Riverside County would pay f or scientology church raid sheriff's department raided the misaion and seized records in J une 1979. The bill, AB1693 by A ssemblyman Curlis Tucker, D·lngle wood, will allow local govern· ment unions to negotiate for an agency shop, but w i ll not r e quire lt. /<' Public school teachers already have the right to an agency s hop ; state employees do not . The bill goes into ef- fec t next year. Homes bought by syndicates 87 TllOllAS D. EUAS "' California butlden are J.lvinf a way everylhln1 from new can to fr~ Interior decoratin1 service In their eflort to fiChl the real estate slump brou1ht on by the high-price. hi&h·lntereat com· blnation. But even •llf'ffSive salesmanship cannot put m oat Callfornla ho~es with.lo the price ranee of m any prospective buyers . So a trend haa be1 un a1a ln ln CaUlornia real estate -single -family residency s yndk aUon. Syndicates, or groups of investors w1Lh a alnate managinc partner . have long boug ht ever y- lhinl from football teams to apartment buildings. But only in the last fe w m ont hs have they tumed again to single -f amily CALIFORNIA" hom es ln a big way as they did in 1975. The sam e forces FOCUS d riving m an y fa m ilies o ut of the bome-buyJng marke t make group purc hases of single -family homes increasingly attractive to buyers with about Sl0,000 or so apiece to invest. Like the re al estate boom or the mid-and late":l1r70s, those forces ar e being fe lt first and m ost strongly in California. For home prices in the major California cities are the highest in the na- tion, averaging m ore th an $150,000 in even the most ordinary neighborh oods. Combine d with r ecor <Y'mortgage Inter est ra tes, the prices often produce monthly payments in the $3.000 r ange, far too h.igh for most families to afford and well beyond the r ange of small in- vestors, who get fa r less in monthly rent receipts than they pay in taxes, inte rest and m aintenance. But even under the high-price , high-interest conditions, single -family California hom es still look like a prim e investment. Ther e has never bee n a major re~ estate bust in the nation's lar gest state; even "slumps" usually a m ount to little more than tem porary plateaus. .. Once interest rate5 cdl'ne down to 12 per cent, 'DI STANT M~~ Rodney V. stckma"r' &lwstage says return like movie ST. LOUIS (AP> - Eight months a fter the end or h.is 444-day ordeal as a hosta ge in Iran, R odney "R oc k y " Sickmann says It's a dis· tant memory. ·'It was like a m ovie -h ere you are in Washington, D.C., with your name up on signs, people throwing yellow ribbons . . . and thea the next minute you're hom e," Sickmann said. RIVERSIDE CAP) -T he Riverside County s heriff's de· partment has agreed to pay the Church of Scientology $15,000 to settle a Sl million civil rights suit. After a series of court hear· lngs, gr and jury sessions and suit !j., the records were returned lo ltie church. Charges against ri ve church members were dis· missed for lack of evidence by a Ri\terside judge in March 1980. ty fire inspector to "spy for him'' by purporting to conduct a routine ins pectio n of tbe c hurch's River s ide mission. Church officials contended that the ins pection was a ruse to "case" the mission's layout in advance or the Sheriff's Depart- m e n t ra id whi c h netted thousands or church documenta. you 're going to see $150,000 houses go up to $200,000 ___ Mll ___ lllll _____ , quickly because with the a ver a ge worker's monthly incom e increasing by 11 percent a year. the m onthly payments will be no greatef a burden eve n at the higher price," says Frank Ra msay, a Los Angeles real estate cons ultant. ''You 'r e s h a k i ng P r esiden t R eagan's ha nd and kissing . Mrs. Reagan and the n it's over. You'r e b ack in W ashington , Missouri, doing the same t hings you did befor e you left. Sometim es it's a lmost like it never happened ." By seWing the suit, the county admitted no misconduct. The $1 million U.S. District Court suit arose out of a 1979 sheriff's investigation into the church's Riverside mission. In· v estlgato rs contended t h a t church members were operating a loan fra ud schem e, and the Tha t same month. the church sued for $1 million, charging civil-rights violations. The s uit alleged that a sheriff's detective s olicited a ci· Last week, attorneys for UM church and the county me.l with U.S. District Judge Robert II. Takasugi. He suggested $15,000 as a settlement , and both sides agreed. NW5067 NOTICE OF DEATH OF WILLIAM H . LLOYD AND Or: 'ETITION TO ADMINISTER &STATE NO. A·11049I. T o all he i rs , beneficiaries, c reditors and contingent creditors of WILLIAM H. LLOYD and pers ons who may be otherwise Interested In the PIU MOttE PUIUC MOtt£ Piil.iC Illa wlll and/or estate : .... fl lCTITIOUI auSINHS A petition has been filed ,.~i:=soillu · tountCOAST NAMUTATIEMIENT fllCTlnoutaiiso•• by DOLORES M . LLOYD .. STAT•.,..NT aaaouaun Tl•• ro11ow1"9 ~''°"' ••• dol11v NAMS sTATIMaWT In t he SYperlor Court of Tr.~ 1o1 1"9 ,., .... , ••• cSo1119 .,.,..,.. ... ..,. 0•n••CT 1"111".ssu TM 1011ow1no __.is do"'9 ~ ORANGE County request-IMIAl••Hus: MUlll ... MAaO 111 DANAE CORPORATION, ,..UH . ,.AYVA.t4CIO cu1-~we.•c. MOnell~iou•uc LTO .. •I.• c.111or111e Limited ,.. ANGEL PLU Ma iNG, 114 lno that DOLORES M. Her,( ta .. Plaaa Slloppl119 c ...... ,. NUJtl• TO CONSID•• p. r' "tr." Ip ' ' , I 0" NA E s. ..... Strwl, CoslAt Mne, Ca4"°""8 LLOYD be appointed as Culv .. onw,lrvlN.Callfomla'*4 TM•oaMITINOOflA CORPORATION, LTO .. •11 .• ,,.,, personal rep esentatl t ~=:-~~~.':! ~":~ :=:o:.~: ~~~~:~~~?.~~~~~~!.;!;p~ ·:·:~ ~~~=~"' ".::: :91'tl~~5l~ r~. ts~~v~ t, This ...... I -..c1 CAMMO. ... , OANAE CORPORATION, LTO., •IV, dMOVel. lrvlne CA (under the I ....... I c Oy. CCW· NOTICE IS HEAE•Y GIVEN !NI • Celll0tm. UmlttCI Per1htrs/llp; UI LAWIS PKll de A:.-, .Ad I I tin- . --stlot Inc -s..... c.tll Air 0.Wlltv -...... DAHAE CORPORATION,LTO .. •V.e This JIM_,,. -fllM --.. pe'"""'' m n stra on 11 ,, tt s w' vi "'"'Olstrtc1 _..,. lklMd w11111o1c1 C•lllor"'• Limited P•knerVtlp '"°° count y C...,.ot0r..,..c-.ey911_. of Estates Act). The peti-P'"ldeftl • • . •YM, u. pullllc .... ,,no •• t :JO •.m. on Felrchlld,SultUSO,INln.,CA.;JlS. ltmber2t,1.,. tlon Is set for hearing In This 11a'""9nt .... filed •lttt IN THUASDAY, HOVEMll~R 1', 1tll In DA NAE CORPORATION, • ~ Dept. No. 3 a t 700 Civic ,._,,.1 ,.~~ ... ,.._ c--__ .._ tN._,,ofSo.lpeMt._., C.,.mti.rsa1 C•ll lornla corporttloft, tUOO "-·•u-~0r ,.._ • .....,,_,.._._ ;;;;;.,.~U"~t.i "".,.. _ .. .,~._,... 11 Civic c...... °''"'•·Santa A,,., F•lrthlld,Sul1t2io,1 .... 1,,.,C.A'27U. ~v ..... -... _ _,,n-. Center Drive West.L Santa • ,.171714 c.1........., • ,_,., tM ., .. 11,.. of Tr.is llWrtHS 11 conci..c1ed ov •<or· Oct. 1' '· "· 22. '"' ._., Ana, CA 92701 on uctober Pvt.111111M10r.,,..eoafl oe11v Pt10t .,..,._._ ... __.lon .,,•c-.. PO••llon -·-28, 1981at9:30a.m. Oct 1 • u 12 1"1 ~i .ileftc• ... • _._. ... '°' •1 PEN· 0.-CotPOF•tlon r--. "9HK IF YOU OB.JECT tot .. -. • • • • NWALT COltflOltATION. UO N-OouolaiW Bulley, '"" ••t•1tl• ,.,_., OrMOe, cam ... n1a. P.....,_1 fllCTtTI-.. .......... granting of the petition, currently ...,.11,.. In wlolatlon of Thi• 11J1temen1 wts 111eo with the -· ..... -. •Id Ith ----------AlilelaoftMSooltt!CofftAlr Quallly County ci.rk 01 Oraf199 Co•inly on NAMaSTAntilSWT YOU Snuu e er appear M•n•e•mant D••trlct Ru les eno S.pt. ,,, ,,.,, '"-fol""""'9 .--'' dllMe ~ at the hearing and state Aetuletlons. aule 20) requires• fll711t7 ""',·.:~EPENOIENT TAAV1EL IH your Objections Or file ----------It IO~--._irtt _,.. PuOll111eO Or ... CoHt Oally Piiot Wrltt-obj.,.tlonS w'1th t .. a fllCTIT10USIUSIMllll ... In ---Q wltll ..-cttlad , ..... Ocl I • IS n "" •n1 .. i DUST RY. 227 Pino!•-. lnl.... .... ~ '"" MNMSTAT11M .. n tleMofMldpenntt. · · · • ceutornla'271' court before the hearing. The to1_1,,. __ , ar• dol"9 AcoPY9'tMpRttlOfl ls•••ll-to< ----------1 Go l• An11• H111,, ... 121 Your appearance may be MINSus: IMpeetllwl •.,. offl<a °'..,. Hearlnv PUil.JC NOTICE p1,....i-.1.-. eei.._..m1A In person or by your at-sou™ ~ METRO NEWS, ... "' Clen., .,. Eftt Fltlr Drive, El This bllllneM I•~.,, ...... .., T_,, Center 0r1 .... c.t• ..... MMI•, c.1...,,.,.. -., "",..,..,.."' e11w1oua1. torney. ca111orn1a..v 0tt1c•, "'° Easl aa11 11tMc1, 'A-1m. NOTICE OF DEATH OF Gayle""""""'"' I F y O U A R E A Mic ..... ·-Le-•. Jr .. m ,............ JANET LEVER BAETZ This ~ •• Ill .. """ .. CREDITOR or a co t Marin• Av•11u•, UIOoe h lend, In ........ --· .... ., ettend -aka JANETTE L. BAETZ County Clef1lofOran.-C.-.ty...S.. n . Catlf0f'llla'*2 '*9l1ton1or-11t..,,tate,,....u t1 AND OF PETITION TO te<n1Mr1'.1"1. ·-lngent creditor of the de-,. __ .JoM Lewie•. :m Marin. "-....,..._ n 11 '-"*' -••II· r->'0-ceased, you must flle your Avenu•, a.11110e is1eno, ce111or111e .. n -.......a,_.......,.,_ to .,. ADMINISTER ESTATE Put>lllMdOr..,.. C.... OWt't Pta.t, claim with the court or ""2 ...... ,.. .._,.five davs 1Mtore -NO. A-110516. 0ci 1·•-15.n.1"' •••1 present It to the personal Tiiis buslnau Is cOftdllc~ed Oy • llaerlnt.. T I I h · ..,.,.1__.,,.... oa&H: ~21, 1t11 o a e • r s , NaS Illa representative appointed M.a.u.1er,Jr. tountCOASTA1• be neficiaries, creditors by the court within four Thi• ...._. •• Iliad w1111 "" OU.AUTYMAMAO•MIENT and contingent c reditors of ' fllCTmousauMN.. months from the date of =~;~.~0r7 c-.1vons.p. 0111:,~c::.::::,>""0 Janet Lever Baetz. a ka NAMUTAn••T first Issuance of letters as ,.,,_1 .,._.,Clift Janette L. Baetz and TM 1o11ow1ne ....-" .....,. Ml-provided In Section 700 of Pv1111_0.-_c.11 0a11vPtklt, P'*41"'8d 0r-.c.11 0a11v P110t, perso !ls _who may b e ,,.,'..~i..EH PlllOMOTio..s. 2019 the Probate Code of So investo rs h ave begun t o make joint purchases of the kind or homes they used to buy singly. Most of the sing le-family homes bought by syndicates have negative cash now -the dif· fer ence between expenses and r ent paym ent -of at least $100 a month. But tax benents and the pr o- spect of large profits when the syndicate sells off the hom es m ore than m ake up for iL Groups of Californians either unwilling or una- ble to m ake the la rge down payme nts needed for hom es in their state have also begun sinking money into ho mes in othe r Sun Belt cities. Houses in Hous ton, Phoenix and Las Vegas . among others, cost a bout what California homes did five years ago. They are appreciating steadily between 11/• percent and 3 percent a m onth, even in the fa~e of h igh mortgage inte rest . And the out-of-st ate investments also feature lower negative c as h flow. since monthly re ntals in other places a re fa r closer to the old s tandard of 1 percent or the purchase price. Are there disadvantages to syndicated home buying? Appare ntly ther e a re few for the investors in syndicates with sound m anagem ent. But the new syndicates help keep hom e prices high by providin g buyers at a time when interest rates might othe rwise be driving them do wn to a r ange that more would·be owner-occupants could afford. And that m eans the trend will not help solve the ever-worsening California housing crunc h. .. ~ On Fr iday, Sickmann, a former Ma rine guard at t he T ehran e mbassy, will m~rry J ill Ditch, a hom etown girl he dated w hile on leave just before h.is assignment to Ira n . Anothe r (ormer hostage, P a ul Le wis, w i l l se rve as a groomsman. T he couple pla n to move into a h o m e Sick mann bo ug h t in Overland, Mo., using his back pay as· a down pay: ment. Sickm ann works as a salesman for a St. Louis r adio station. ·'Some of t hese guys j us t want to sit and talk about Iran," h e said. "It's nice to know people are interested , but it h urts my business." Veterinary technician plays suftj,tortitJe role DEATH NOTICES Oct. l, •. u.n. 1•1 on.et Oc1 '· 1W1 •23MI ot.herw1se interested in the co11on s1ru1. N••P••t 1uc11, Callfomla. The time for will and/or estate. ct11tornl•'2M> filing claims wlll not ex-A petition has been filed 11••tt MotTls thleft, IGlttl CelWI plre prior .to four months by Donald 0 . Harwood , ~1• N••port a .. c.,, C.ll..,..•• from ttle date of the hear- By JOYCE L. ltENNEDY Dear Joyce: My daughter, a senior la blgb school, wants to become a veterinary technician. Could you send me a Us t of 1cbool1 offerlns pro- 1ra ma! I'd aho like to bow if jobs are readily avaUable and what the pay la. -8.E., New York, N.Y. CAREERS Esq. In the Superior Court Thi•_.._ 11 c~., 911 tft.. Ing noticed above. MIELlll (-Af}.lheim. Ca.. liister Theo of Or ange County request-dMclllal YOU MAY EXAMINE Ing that Herbert '!iarclay Th•• .. .=:·!:"'....-""" .. the file kept by the court. Baetz, Jr . or 1n the ceun1v 0artiot 0r.,..~ ... s..-ltyouarelnlerestedlnthe alternative Roxen~ Baelz ,.,,..,., •>. '"' ... "',., !State, you may flle a re- Jacobs a s spectal. ad-Puo11,....,0r.,..eo.Da11.,~. ~uest with the court to re- MARGARETE. MELlLL, Scott of Illinois and 3 resident or Hu ntington grandchildren Services Beach, Ca. Passed away on were held on Wednesday. September 26. 1981. She was September 30. 1981 111 a clerk at Ora nge Coast lO ·OOAM at Harbor Lawn Oollege for the past 10 years. Memorial Chapel with the She is survived by her Harbor Star Chapter of the husband John, son Joseph Order of Eastern Star of. Callahan of San Bernardino. riclating. Graveside services Ca .. daughter Maureen were held at t2:30PM at C a 11 a h an Rh odes or Oakdale Memonal Park in mlnlstrator be a ppointed 0c1.1, •. u ,22, ,., 41641 :elve special notice of the Your daughter , above all else, as per~~al representaJive inventory of estate assets must be an anim al enthusiast. Not to administer the estate of ..C-1111( !nd of the petitions, ac-only will she cuddle furrv kittens, but Janet Lever Baetz, aka :ounts and report s •.z Janette L. Baetz (under Norics ,..,., .... 08 :tescrlbed In Section l200. s he may also clean t he cages of th.e. Indepe nden t Ad · a101TUt•• lf the California PrObate boist e r ous St . Berna rds or a d - m1 n 1stratlon of Est ates NOTICE 1s HElllHY 01vtN _,. Code m inister medicine to som e s harp. Act). Ttlt7 petition Is set for :;1~,.,~~.~~~ Davids. a.tty, Attorney toothed gerbils . . hearln.g .'" Dept. No. ~ at ,., COUMll, P.o. eo11-. c... Mne, It Law 1155 Cfvk CMtter Working under the supervision of a 700 C1v1c Center Drive, ca11ton11an.a.011«....,.."-'-Drive West Santa AnA ve te rinarian, technicians m ay give Glendora. Ca . Services un· ------------.der the direction of Baltz ~;;t·d,~t:~nf~t6'n °Jc~~g!~ ~ .. :'::1:' ;;;.·: :.."':'.;.~ '!i CA '2703; te t. < 114> em ergency first-aid treatment, col· r.ACIHC YllW MIMORIAL r.AalC Cemetel)' Morluarv Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pacific View Dm1e Newport Beach ~-2700 McCORMa MOlTU.AllfS Laquna Beach 494·9415 Laquna Hills 76&-0933 San Juan C&p1strano 495·1776 MAllOa LA WM-MT. 9(iYi' Mortuary• Cemeterv Creire tory 1625 Gitter Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 ,_Cl•OTMlllS ~..O.OW•Y MOltTUA&T 110 Broadway Costa Mesa 642-9150 IAL.TZ ... OH SMl1" • TUTHtU WUTCUff CHANl "417E 17th St Cotta M4tN 848-9371 Bergeron-Smith & Tuthill Westeliff Chapel Mortuary of Costa Mesa. 646·9371. LE.SSNER • . , .. Oldder to .... _ "" 111111 • tM Ctty l36-tM'7. I . k x d d 28, 1981at9:30 a.m. c•••lt'•°"'°"".._,,....,._.. PWlllllMI 0r ... °'"' oai1y ,.1'°'-eel specimens, ta e -rays an o IF YOU OBJECT to the 11me.11101wi1t11e1M11c1V....-tMf :>ci.1.u .1., ~ laboratory analysis . Som etimes they ant. f lh tit' r..a •loud_, n :• .. "' .. or .. -t ·1· i t · l ISAOORE LESSNER. re· gr in9 o . e pe ion, 1.,., .. ttar .. iwactlc..._, • ,.~. s e rl 1ze equ pmen , prepare anama s sident of Garden Grove Ca you should either a ppea r OclMitr "' 1.,, lfl 1t1e C-N °"""' for surgery and do surgical nurs ing. Passed away on Scpte,;,ber at the hearing and state .,.,., CllY Hat•. n "* 0r1111e. Cllle Veterinary tec hnicians usually are 28, 1981. H e wa s an your obj~cti~ns o r file ~':0~1'=8·~~,.':;':;"\~ people content to playsupportive.but employee of the See's Candv wr itten ob1ections with the PAINT THE CITY Ofl COSTA"''"" neve rtheless, essential roles and Company for 40 years. He is court before the hear ing. POLICE au1L.D1HO. _,.. have no ambition to become a doctor · ed b h' 'f R th Your appearance ma y be .r.001t1oN1 wta .. .,. -"'C.... .. •• ou1c:au1 CLRAA1.-o. • . surv1v y 1s w1 e u mev .,.. ......., et 111e ~ .-.. c.e. -. ...._ c:.. -.. CA f l · edl i di to Less ner. daughters Toby In person or by your at-Purc r.asl'lll Agent. 11 ,._., Ori,,., ""'· . o ve ennary m c ne, accor ng Rubin and Thelma Foskett torney. cost• Mffll,c.t...,.,••..,..• OALOlta Dl*>ntlA cu10, Dr. J oseph Gloyd of th_e A~rican both of Garden Grove. Ca .. C RIEFO YTOORU AR E A ~~~~~ .. ~tt1a .. ~= ::..~ ~"! ::.,~-..._.c.te,.._,CA Veterinary Medical Association. This and Marcia Clark of Buena I or a c ont-... ...,....._ .......,91\tM-. TMI......_,.,~.., ..... ls important to know for the student Park. Ca .. her brother.1J.>gent creditor of the de-•"-•lt11 tt11ei.i 1tHnN--.rMftN ..,._,_ cons ide ring training in veterinary Milton of New Je~ey a <:'eased, Y.ou must file your 0.::~':.'::'~1 .... "., "'"...,. TMt =..~ ..... """ .. tec hnology because these studies a lso 6 grandc hildre n. claim with the court or .,..,,1..,,. .. M1f9r!llfttM-..<~ c:-ty CIMI.,. 0r .... c:-.,.., ~t li bl to ed tional Steven, Lisa. Scott. Jeffrey , present It to the personal 11on1. Any_, a11 ·~ •.,. ._. "· ,.., app ca e uca pro-J o n a th an and Karen representa tive a~pointed '"'111ut1eM ,,_. • c...,,., ,...,. --.....-..-....__...,!.f#lft,. g s that prepare veterinarians. . . b th t It 1 f 1n thebMl.11N1te11urettMtflll1llM1 ..._ ____ ,,,. ........ Some technic ians get on-job traln-Graves1de ser vices will be Y e cour w n our , .. m 1,. ,,. 9"Clf~et._ 1111111 .. ._.11 .... oet. '·'"" .,..; held on Thursday. October 1. months from the date of ar.-tttotretectlou•••· ln1, but the s cope of what they lea:rn 1981 al l:OOPM at Harbor fir~ issuance of letters a s 11ac11 _.. 1111.tu ... """ .. ,.., fla.l 11111 ia not as broad as the training stu- L11wn-Mount OUve Memortal provided in settlon 700 of :=:.==.-.:,.: denta receive ln two -yeat programs Park. Services under the the probat e c ode o f 11 111uldlst1yec....,.._.,....,.. •ec:htionwa• offe red at vocational schools, col· direction of Harbor Lawn-California. The time for -•., ...,.,.,,_.. _... u. •el\ ..,...ttATIU•"1' legea and universities. Mount Olive Mortuary of fl111no c11alms will not ex-:......::..:=:.::-:--..= ~ .... ~ ,.,._ .,. Stbdles show that jobs are as plen- Costa Mesa. 540-5554. p ~e pr or to four months must t11n. If .... •1• II lty • (1) OANAll COA,.OllATION tiful as bunnies. Althou1h some PEYSER from the date of the hear-.-i.-......, ............... LTD. •VII,. CeflterMll Lift i' .. LAWRENCE CORDON ing AOtiQCS .t>ov.. ~ -lNMll*.,. ............. Pulaeoi-1 •• tu DAN~• Yetednuy teclmldana find ioba w WJ PEYSER resident of the YOU MAY EXAMINE pertnert .... ,........,... If.. Oll,.OllATIO ... LTO., •VI al flrma, research facilities area for lhe past 24 years. the file kept by the court. = '!i:t.,-:i":'=:: .!. DA~ c=ll~M':'t~ ~ and ani , the majority Passed away on Septembef' If you are Interested In the ••• t~ ................ •v111, • ca11ter111e &.1"'1t worka in veterinarians' offices. 28. 1981. .He was a vet~ran ot estate, you may flle a re· :.,~ '::: .. -.=: ~.: "'.:·~~~~~~~~; ~:~ .. 0~r. • Industry generally pays hlgbest the Unite d States Army quest with the court to re~ ""• u,uu-11-1": " .. ....._ Cati..,.... u....... ,..,._•1 m salaries, but technicians tend to pre-Wor ld War II. Survived by celve special notice of th• ,,_ve,,,.. fldlt.,.......... .. •• co.t'OMTIOM_, LTD., x, f lb 1 ri ·-~ pb of h i• dauahter Karen of Inventory of esta te and of ~=.:::::::.•=-.=:: ca1~~t::'··~. , er e people-<> enwu atmoe ere Davis, Ca., sister Carol the petitions. accounts and "'c..., ,.., ........ ._ .. s. lhe vet'• olf\~. SpeaklD1 of PlY1 it!• Cha~r ol Atlanta. Georgia reports described In Sec· n=:..: , .. ,.,,.....,.. lie....,, OANAI COOOllATIOM, modett enouch to make you wish for and mother Evelyn Peyser t I o n 1 2 O O . 5 of t h e T .,.,. c..YC:...-:':; c..., .. c-. -!.~:::.:'~--~~.·c~ ~1 a IOOM that laya golden e111. of Mount Vernon. New York. Callfornla P roba te Code. ..._ .. _ .. ,... .. ,.,....., TMa--.11c.._•0 ,u... New ·vetetinary technolo11 Servlcea will be held on Donald D. H•rwood, flsq, ..... ,... ..._ 1radua1el are aver•tlnl "·'°° ID· Thursday, Octi>be't' t. 198\ al Harwoect & AdldftMft 0c1"'.l*':'Or9'!9tcwtMtt>~ 5'"".:" nu ally. The pay ran1e for all •:OOPM at H1rbor Lawn-P.O. lox 1907 · '· · • veterinary tecb.nlciam La rrom ST.SOO that's integr al to the job, s he'll prob- ably de rive gr eat satisfaction from helping improve the physical well- being of the anim als she works with a,nd contributing to the e motional peace of the anim a ls' owners . READER SERVICE· Would yot.1 liM to become a vetennary technician? Gd o leaf let , "'Your Career in An•mcll Technology," and an eight-page Ult of uhool! offering accredited program.t in veterinary technology courtesy of tM American Vetennary Medical A•JOC'ia· tion To obtain both, send a JS.centa stamped. self-Oddreued. long white en- velope with your request to Joyce Lam Kennedy at Box 1560, Costa Meaa ~. Ask for "Veterinary Technician." Soccer violence up in Poland WARSAW, Polan.,d (AP) Violence at Polish soccer .m at.cbes is in c r easin g and beefed -up police patrols have not been able to curb outbursts by fans who attack each o the r wit b meta l rods, brass 'knuckles and chains, the official PAP ne ws a gency said. ''A visit to the soccer stadium dur- ing a league match is becom.inf an , increasingly larger risk," t.he aieacy said in a commentary. "Thla pl.,ue • , • i& getting atronge~~ the -*·" Standarda not met NIClllOTMmS IMITMI' WOaTUAa'f W ~nSt f-tlntlngton 9uch 538-&539 llo unt Ollve Memorial Newport INctt, C.. t26'J Tillil........,. -.,... ..... to SH eoo annuallY Chapel. Sttvlces under the {114) ..._1J13 c.ity °"'.,.Or-..~ f ' da _... ' mU --•..a.. a. dlrec:Uon of Harbor Lawn· PubllShed Orange Coast, "· ""· " I )'OW' u ... ter can • • -t " Mount Olive Mortuary of Dally Pilot, Oct. 1, 2. 8, ,......°'919c... o.ltV,..,. tbe nip• and 1cratcbea from COAta Men. S.0-5554• 1981 ~1. t,a, u.a. lllt • .-et frltbtmild pets and U. dh1)t work . ---J.----1 ~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~it~~~~~~~~~~ -.... '" 4 • 4 5 3 5 Si !6442 9 IM * Cout DA1LVPILOTIThuractay,October 1, 1981 Hwet,_W. ~,_W. a.-1........ Olitf'•Hl&t• HMMtlWswltr4 "-ttU.fw,.._, ....... ILiir ....................... ·············-········· •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ............................................. . ........... ~ ........ ..._.,_Wt .......... Wt ............. ....,.,. .... lt6t Me~~' lt6t t~\'J: 11 It ..... ...... C .... ...._ • JJ~ ~~ ............ ?~~~ •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••M••••••••• •••• ••• .... •••••••• .....-J4H ''''"'''''''' •••••• •• ,.. tOOI C .... MtM ' tOl4 ...... tU4.,. I044 MtM• Of11rt ecr111 .W ............... •••••• ...... ••••••••••••••••• Lovely I Br 2 Oa , Npw :rR R Unlvtr•llJ ............................................................................. -............ Hi.a• I.,...,,, a~'b&. ~-" OC!ANPRONT New 111 1tu ....... iaVNiw f!atl• dt, carp•••. rark L't ml&oUCl.•rts, N I W C 0 N 0 0 By Owner ~ lbdrm "......... liJ O'ter3G0011q f\. W•lcUtt. JtfNITS Walltobtad1 llloduJlr 1)119 Homa, bQJldab&t lot ~ X 110 drapH, fl llPI, fndsd No flt'la fJURJtV' •1' ••• llST STARTI~ AT IN,SOO bouHtoaliot.l ta1,000 A•h-I -'418111 FL!XIBLt TERMS ltued land,Sp\llbcht, ,anwtk lnve.t Ul.500 1ar 1700 No Pt~• 8462!5() Low lnter.t fll\ant'la\j. A.sawn1W. It.\ Ill T.D. UnlYHllly ltlt -UI0,000 Call •ll 24 hr at<'\.lnty f11bin1 .. Sn111 Walde ' Co IElllll. 13\411 Ml·t•t.ut OWC carry 2nd 210U1 • Fotdtlam2:10011q ft, 48R DOl• 5HOUS Nor l hr up R E pier from uc.9oo t~ -17&-toOI 1841'.U --. Pomona CaU wkd1y1 t\t8A Fam rm, fotmul Pool, JacuuJ overlook 1l4/t42~orm Hiil down m llUS °'p~~utr 2•00 3 ~rooms. Zsiory condo 3br, 21.tba Rm .... Dll.IGHTFUL onti 640 ,..,. dlntn1 o.corator home bay Galaxy Dr Formal --~ h Uo f II 4br, 2ba 1*25 .... IYl:FULL ----Spa, Many xtru din rm , 2 frplc1. lef...._llwe>w.r CaMtryVWage,xlnlio(, ....................... ~ u.i: ':tt~:c't'a~.: •br.3b• l800 IM MIMl'r CO. Thlt 3 Bdrm, 2 bath MOJH• ... S$$-85l3 owntr ~~:.~ fee l42·2Sl0, Lr& •BR. 4AA homt OMC, adult parttcharm· ,IOO. Shup 4 Br Dbl 1 m 1,. RlllOr RI!>' 1133 8600 "..,._ " n --. Slt!pl eway from pvt Ina 1pH1ou1-on))' frplc,b!.tlol.Nameyour nlS courh, swtmm•llj home~1p1c ,1panThe BYOWN"n NOITNWOOOS ------btacbe• OwntrwiUas· m ,ooocalJ 6426173 or a.Blu~ pool. sauna. Ja l'u111. Jrv1ntCro~ts3bdrm.2'• 'n111 lncl"l'dlbb be11outUuJ home 1tands alon' an auperb qual i t y, crahamanahlp 1,.11nd eleaa.nce. •'abulous use oC masonry, WOods and sta11ned elas.'i, loaether with exqulaltt d"corat Ing ·make lhla 11 very sperlal ral~ce which alao reature. brealhtak- ina viewa from almost every room 6500 i1q rt, 4 bdr m s. 6 baths, 4 fireplaces, wine celler Special 12~ f1n11nc1ng available llck Aldlntte lltr. .,. • .,.,. 731-4444 Ca.try Charwltr Located 111 backbay Newport area toned for horsts, 3 Bdrms, 2 811, loaded w1lh charm from the oak peg & groove floors lo the custom master Bdrm suite As sume low interest loan and owner wall carry large 2nd Full pr1re Sl63,900 addtd family room ""' WUT\' HAii• ~I HAD 1 t'-,_ Ill 846 uww,,."' rtr , ttr $7SO Mu ba. fain rm, din rm. air crulu a buutiful ~~hac~U: 4Br, 3~~..'u nr lmmeculatt 3 Bdrm Wl.M S1'l n "1*"C11dl or w ...._~. mdln, '--. 6'6 4477 <'Ond Pnv yd Comm courtyard entry Ne11or "'." ~ 'over e... ... nc .fme 00 qulet cul de He QPp(ITUNITY con1Jder lradet Shown OCUH Ufft.H G,.•n 2700 343 RIVlt;HA UR pool. ll•nn1r., Jilt', nr So Coast Plaza f'lrx1 -financing payable al n No th oods Pl h by •PPl ~ Prln only. 2 br, 2 ba, llx18 encl ........ ,.............. • 2 Hr 1 Su L(Jndo Me11a •hop. 11chb . Jrrrtwa1 12·~ .. $205000675-7104 r w us ss:to,000 Princonly.Ron 11 • ..,.,. blcsellersays-ubm1l on _,,,__. ---carp"t• uod c ustom Prlmf' 4 S'X140 ' Jackaol'IJ porl'h Adults. :s ma PllS11GIOUS Verde Child OK Nttw .cMimO tcrma Ft~l lime ad MnaV.,. draperlea thruoul. llugc watttrfrontlotwlthexl11t ptt&. Co2'h Meu. CUSTOMHOMI decor~ 833~1 ~JJOO vtttiud Sl27 .900. A STEAL' patio with soothing ipa. in& pier and slip for 45· 5-6456 In Jl'allbrook, with 7~ Brand new spac1ou11ll700 l.,_o ltoeh l241 7$2-1700 48R, 281, Neal & Clean Many extras plus low Ill r11cht PrieeoU2,JOO,OOO MEWPOITSHOlllS l.ovoly 24X60 2BR. 28A. acres producing grove sq ft 1 28R. WA Oininit ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'll!J~~·ia SU3,500 w/10% down lereat usurnable loan includes cleattd lot, ap O. .. c:...i tam rm, 2sheds. fndge, All amenltieis. Spec· rm/study. Muh1 ll'\'1•1t"1 ocF:AN~'HONT Mobile ----s-4L -12·3/8% financing. For Sl67,000. proved plans and $2'9,000 wuh/dry. Quiet luxury tacular views from all t-0wnhome frpll'. va ult Uu111l'~ SIOOO mo Dbl • ;_ -Sale By Owner. Pnnc permits for a luxurious 5 675-1771 HB 5 star Adult Parkt40 rooms Many kinds o( cd ct'lhngs l'ool. bp,1 wide 400 :lll6 -Only 966·UWU ~6PM . Bdrm 5 bath French +I Pool, sauna, jar family fruit. Pvt party $850 mo &iJ.!M91! co.or SHAZAM NODOWH Regency home with Ownrr ule. 18601 will tradclfin11nc<' w E. SID E ~ Blk from Ir", S1>H'l1t cular 01,,8 0 Family fWl In Eastside many extras Newland 199. 962 1.234 20% down S411S,OOO 38 28 111,"A rnts 4BR Mesa Verde llCHne TenM A•ailable siSoo or bst ofr Sacrifice MP·lBl3. ave r, n, .. · \'tt!W 2 Hr 2 ba co op in Cosla Mesa. Formal liv· Owner will do shared 17111 AT PR~l'~:CT Call Pacesetter Homes tod S S c & paint. lg yd. 2 fl').lil',. South l.ui.;una Fully •ng and dining rooms, equi t y p r ogram Ts N ay pare rent. u .. IHlhhltit ~mo6.11JOOI Curn1sheJ 1\\a1l )rly, separate fanuly room, w/qualif1ed buyer U'TI •7313111 ~~n~e~G~ndappoinl AdulutM!_&l2~7. b~ 2100 38r Condo21di11 ~l.'ar winterorshorttcrm P 8 r q u e l r I 0 0 rs · Prine only Bkr i58·3327 LOW ••••••••••••••••••••••• S C Pla111. frvk, J l'. W iih•rfnlflt llornl:'s Inc fireplace. charming ask for Ed DOWN 1600 SOUTH LAGUNA pool, Jae, tenru~. 2 <·ar 6JI 141KI pallo and yard. Large ---• ... EWP,._,, CIEST 3 p lt"• • l ' • c comer lot Owner Wlll Beaut1Cu! 4 Br Home. " ""'' Gated Estate area 3000 gar w upnr ·• v" • 81-:ACll llO st-;• oiY htlp Low interest O<'ean view, xlnt terms. Owner will help carry VIEW s~ rt. Fantmic Ocean S765 leasc 549 tr10'J IBR. frpk 1~.mwd <'t'tl l l 2nd TD Take over exi~t The most beautiful vitw C-2 LOT View. ProC decorated 2 Ml:'Sa Verde, bi.'au 3 UK. 2 an.: t'ourt) Jrd S Lat financing Only Sl45,000 mor gage pa Y men s mg loan on th is lovt!I> 4 SS95 mo -195 4-1Hti Call 645 Oll3 $1000 per mo S219,000 bdrm home with pri\'al" m The Crest uw11ts you H 1g h trafhc rounl. yrs. $549,000 Palm Spr ba child l)k SK25 mo Call 548·5366. spa in Tunle Rl)(•k CJll in lhts 3 bdrm Wllh 62.6X307 lot Existing ings, Lake Arrowhead or 673 smo, ~ TOI' Cff TI IE WOHLlJ retreat plus 3 baths house on property. Flex· other Real F.sLate condo }Yeshide 2 111 1 llJ 5 tn 2 ba , d111 Jrca COU>Weu BANl(C!RC MESAVSDE CONDO · SlS,000 down Excellent financing. owner may carry balance on AITO today Cor more m/orma D,ALi,lllJ.'ltf!.u· Decorated in the finest able uses Owner wall or house Uouse. encl<.d garn~i· sto\11' wai.hn dryH lion J tit CA.X ll.C/ taste-Assumable 12"1% consider carrying Isl 499-341U, S51-82J5 pa r10 , _£?r'hnok up , hookup, gar . en«I yd loan. Hurry• Just 1isted' TO Asking Sl99,500 Call Magnificent CdM Ocean l'arpcl) .~. l'urtJm) '\o $10011 964 1661 :aft 1;prn HOM~ S40.1151 View Pool Ho me pets $425 Ht'l'Urll\ NJo:WF.H3llR.211.i,d1n S510.000. $250.000 equity 548 5442 or 7711 ~ ing rm . dt!n Jnd fpi< Redhi ll~ Realty 1 ii:~-~:w11 at 12%. 2 Bdrm, doubll' Xchangefor'> EASTSll>E l'Utc 1 fir c·ot Walk inf! chstanrr of tilt:' ___ 762:_7=.!87 tagl'. i.rm1 furn nm• lll•:tch l't:b and l'h1ldn•n neighborhood ~130 ht 01\ Si,tMJO mo in Thrl:'t' last & !>ec•ur Man Arrhllay.OH.StZSOmo NEW LISTING garage, terrifi c area olE:HHOUSE ASSUME 11 .5% Asking S95,000. Call DAILY 1-6 R...tal1 857 2040 1in thl' oceanside of hw) IMT. ~1151 Brand new condos 1n -----•---ismall Commerl'ial Bldg ••••••••••••••••••••••• loan w/less than 20% Costa Mesa located at HEWPOITCOHDOS & land. 60'xl25" lot HousesFw1lislled 3 Br 1'2 lia. lrplr U \\. dwn 4 yr new home with 1+513 CutPt15Dl·lRV114E1 2277 Paetlic Ave. Great Starling at S93,000 we ~wRQ!.t'Blvd. 641«1763 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bh 10 stove. dhl c•ur .:;u , 38d&2.5Ba.dmlngrm, financing, great buy • hu ve studio s t o 2 Co11do"'l"l""'~Town-lalboalaa.d 3106 pool patio l'rH I rrplc ulde s C 11 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~1 Come & see. Redhill bedrooms Exclusive L-·--afor 1700••••••••••••••••••••••• b k I kl Curt' ~~;be~· 1~~· rl~r 'Stt RP E/SIDE 1 Lo9u11a leocll I 048 Realty, 673-7300. area of Newport Beach •• :::'!!':'••••••••••••••• 1---------s:;ll'~~rcSl!t~yr~n 110';,~ 631·1266 3:Rownersunilt~l~tx2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -111111111~11!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1 All have,g~ assuma 1---------1 WIHTERR.EMTALS ser11 Cl' WJlt?r pd BR. Owner financing ALot ble loans .x:curaly plus Reduced lo Sl28.500 l12BrLitlle lsleSSSO Marguerite541}J66b S235.000. Devin & Co For A uttt. THE ILUFf all the extras that co me 2BR. 28A Condo 1 yr 4Br 3 b.aZslr)' S.900 Tnhme b1 level. fpc 3 Hr. 00.·636& lacre ~ bldgsile.gent--PL.AH .. X" lltlthcondoliving. new Highly upgraded Bayfrt4Br211ba Sl200 Jbapm ,11 i·nrlut S795 D 6 I> sloping parcel short 3 bdrm, din. rm .. hv I Tile, Wal l lo wall WaterfrontHomes ln c 851 .9990 ano PoW I 02 · dlstanre from tennis & rm , ram rm , F P. 2'-'J rarpets Wall paper 673-6900 E S d JR 11 1 1 Ssak..111: ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• beach Ownr ha:. 1n ba, xtra la,...e parcelain Landscaped, enclosed 1 e r l a !: " A __ ,.,. Ocean Harbor V1e"A b • ., 11 lJ Pool T k id~ pets 0 1\ A\Jll S80,000 at only 12'1 m-, 2000sq ft 48R ZBA 2 eluded plans fur l'UStom tu w reramic llle wa sl pa o . enrus. 1ac. lolboa Pl'lliMMlo 3107 No\ 1 ~ mu ht ~ lerest There's nlenly of s tr y Newly. rmdld l villa S175,000 Spec & noor -I covered pal101""'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!11~~ S91 .000 +assumable lst. d &1:i:n67 " th tacular '1rws ' areas Pnee $230,000, 5"'< = 135 '8'1 Open Fri.Sat & ••.••••••••••••••••••••• e_p country charm in .1s w new kitch & BA MISSIONREALTY down,3ssumeS40.00015t ~ Sun Or by appt 32031 Winter Rental. 3 bdrm 4BrN"Aptk1n..r,1 1'11nrln newly decorated 4 Bdrm $25 000 dn Assume ex 494 0031 trust deed at 7"2"1-Xlnt Via Tonada San Juan ho.use 111 Balboa S700 mo tt!11n1i. pool JJl ·'' .11 1 1n '\orth Laj!una Holli an• varanl Ag_l ·19~ J~I ~:lt•j!:J 11t'l' ,tt'hl l'V~'d 1 f.im home nr tht-sand "' all l':\lra ~· !'lush , . .,rp1•1s throul1hout. br1rk fl)ll' full}' equipped lutcb & land:.l·a ~ll'd 11ruuorh' Only SliSCI' '1u~t ~e<'' •>16!1 llt'nllmt"'i li31·45S5 Fcl' Ckt!all \It'"' OOUSl' I br 'A )lt1d10 Steps to hearh SSOO mu llfJ Sli'; Hewport leocll 3269 home lorated on a quiet 1st1°ng f1nanA1n~ S17"' M1chae1Reahy673~ 1 5 8 S"~11 Homeowners & Ln\lestors I street 111 Mesa del Mar mo. $250.000 fu I price arm111g 3 rm. 2 bath f I Ob ..1....1 3 2 6-12 3397 '" "" Ch bd land lea~e S853.00 per ~~~~~~~~~ Capo Off Al.ipaz. corner --. I > t I "" mo 30 Homes & Condos for Better hurry! 751-3191 owner brolter851 7717 + guest apt No end year Can't change until o De as po A gl COt'Ofto _,Mar 12 ••...••.............••. ~·a\ 1{·~ I U1 3 Ba re.mil~ rm dinmi: rm. •ll't'an & mf(ht hghl '1e"A~ Pool & lt'n111~ SllOl pr mo I $2 E Id T w lk year 2003. 14"} mt. onlr Pa c If 1 c Co m Pan Y ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 br. 2 ba t loft eundo sa e SOO to SI0.000 .-.2 BR BEACH-HOUSE mera errace a 2nd trust deed due 498-S640,4.98-S020 "ON1llEBAY'" brJnd ne" h1"hl.\ u11 down I 2 & 3BR 's As· lo beach Assume loan I ft " sumabie' loans Low Owner/agt. will carry al Owner will help finance 1986-87 Call owner for LOVE A GRACfOUS -----1111!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!1 Luxurious 1 level, 1 Br graded. ,1111 \lt'"A ol Payments For com 14~, S25.000dwn Selling $295,ooo Peg Allen. Rltr, appt. daily after II am SETTING ~ Dt.Dlexts/ 11'1 Ba. gourmet kitchen, watt'rfallS 2 rar Kar "A I plete info rail Owner price SJ.25.500 Sl.24284 4947518 (1141346·5860 Magnil1 cenl har bor 01tihS• llOO fabulous view. l'omp Oj)ener;Sn.s 95?9212 Broker, 851.7777 Agents TERM~TERMS 4p99er2986mo Prine & int OCEANFRONT New 11111!1!1911~!!!!!!!!!!!!~!111 views enhance this 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• furn . Avatl short term MESA. VERDE ~ome - -s 12,000 DOWN -·-.----i\1odular Type Homes. HEWPOITCREST beWl~,,rooa )~a:.UUJ3 bfatulhb hlaorn;:ee 12 Units Costa Mesa SlSOO Mo. 7S9-1002 4 br. 2 I.la . ram cm :! b Bd B H ' ...... •-L I 0 .. 0 UI '" . " ~"'V\M. $' ... M dn 10'7,. L-·--L 3148 uys this 3 2 a '*' :rnpOR~ .. leased land. 3 p\l bchs, Owner. pnced lo sell+ yard in law quarters ....,., ......, -~~ ~ car S?ar. rrpl<·. nfl Oc11:.a.ura~ E.side home for $118.000. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24 hr security. ft.Slung terms 3 Br. & Den d . fl . d bl ,· · . . N el SSOOO per year ••••••••••••••••••••••• pat 0 k d 01\ ~ 1 ~""' c an a or a e mane· 63l ·2150, 2043 2049 Whitewater vu Emerald 1 · 1 !> • IJ'' D•-o Zoned R·2 all Bob HARD TO FtND s•er from S34.SOO HY : 559-7456 m· a $369 900 ,.., 7020 ma v t) e S 112 f1 m 11 """"' "'ll 'k r d I .... ' ........ Wallace. Bay 2 Br 2 Ba +Loft 966 056· .. Owner w 111 1· 3 r r Y 631 ·l266, rltr Existing 7 917, lst with Sale or lease option new SJ0,000 under market' lnc:OtM Property 2000 tennis-pvt beach ~Is RENT TO IUY \\ Jll'rl runt lcic.e. 4 Hr I f!,1 l.imil) rm top ('(In d1 t1011. dot•k for 40 boat Sl!l<Kl I Ile I Ba. ;.lean & sharr> nc·\1 to tcnnb & heach StMKI mo l{emax or Npt Hoh nr Ou\ 1e i:iH221 ml 1 en or eta1 s LOWIMTEREST own 499·:1116 JNV1'SJ'ORS !!! • ., Magnificent views Up 15'7, 2nd: Minutes lo So Laguna SM1ll1on 2400sqfl.3BR.2BA.lm· L1"ngo ....................... SlJSOm_QM.~·1111 2 Br 1•,1;111 roe!e: fd.r:r·m~ :a~~lt miles of blue pound into: mansion Consider tradr marulate' ! ! 631·5476 ~ MA.KE AH OFFER! OCEANFRONT I BR . p\11 Agent 5.Sh 651b ' WESTCLIFf surL This low ms1nt TDs or" Coll Paul SIO.OOOREDUCTION1 R .. u ... n po1nl. Spertaru lar Lu\ur111u' four Completely furnished 1 2 dlts S'""'I Easts1de 2BH. ll'Ol'l'd For winter & summer Jownhouse wl) BR den 499·5648. .. Har bor View home. 3 lni'ome Properties. views, or a ;,;n patio AdulL~ ~o p1•b ht·droom lhrer bath rentals Owner has left or 2nd BR 1 ·~BA highly BUY ,, IN1'ERf:ST an M on a co Mo de I S-Cl----"-I 076 Easts1de Costa Mesa. ~mo. 499-~15 S450. hi ld!>l + ill'µ homl:' Bt-amt-d ~e1hnl!~ '--------• upgraded has 3 pools. 2 B r . l B a U n 1 t p f II d t -· ~ o 11 ... _.,._.,. •---L 3169 111 II\ in.: room and fam•· state Brang offe.rs 1-ro ess1ona y e<·ora ••••••••••••••••••••••• wne r w1 ea rn ,_ .. ,....,,---.. 646 10711 1, ru<im "·'clud.,·' pool Priced at S7SO.OOO SHARP USTSIDE i a c u z z 1 le n n 's · w W H IT EWA TE R ed shows like model S Priced to sell ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• "" '""" 1>-f1LEX clubhouse. wet bar, all VIEW Sl3.000 cash. xlnt High assumable 30 yr 20,000 DOWH BA y c REST s bdrm B 3l' k Ba' "'' w °" r me prd Spar<' fnr boat ONLY 15% DOWN for easy living Open financing Live here or loan l2 Sloan Lock box Walk lo beach, charm / 111 home wlpool. large yard Airport J. br 2 bJ rl' 11r 1ra11t·r Slll'ill month associated BROl<ERS--REAl TORS lOJ1• W iolboo b' l Ja• 1 Sat Sun l·S 97fi6 Verde ran rent out Brian 1860 Port Wh eeler ing 2 BR. l''l ba homr JA S2000 LIDO ISLE loier gar b1i: )Jrd ll?t HJrh ha'1' \,i:ent Owner will finance to Mar Bkr 536 1600 or Johnson 494 7~1 or evei. $235.000 Owner Al!l Fpl<". 2 car garage. only NEICC'C D charm 1ng 4 bdrm. 2 p3llo, S7SO t>t2 9542 631 i300 qualified buyer Well 968·8341 497 1561 A.Kl 837 9540or 700.9596 Sll8.000 ~ bath. newly redecorated Lrg t'Xt'l' 5RR 3fl \ fam E Rluf rondo 4 I.Ir 2 '•Lia loca~. good lookm g 6 N Q--Llf Lo --CharterRlly&tnvesl Cl)fllltlH1\J Ill(. St800 mo. Yearly Bill rm pool. uJrdcnl:'r u~• \m1"~w, "" $l1100 units + 4 car garage + o ua ymg. "A int Open Huusc. Sat I S. 2635 "" 83 1 -" .,.,., """ " 10,.i. ample puking Below loans. Super 4Br. fam Solano Wa). LB New LOOK 496 8lu.or l·88ll ill ~• 071i3 Gr.undy,67s.6161 $1250 mo ARI Jud~ 213!'>41 4161);!'>-li 1813 "° llX gross home w pool Best area Jbdrm . 21~ba. great 1 ~ ~"lz., 1·u11t·1:i· \11• !17!15370,54().761.8 I BA YSHURES ~BR.3B \ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cal Now 644-72 I I Sl78.._SOO ... bkr8484109 ocean \'tew. lease opllon ocuuFRONT I Pride or ownersh1 p, ('u'lJ \It''·• I \ BA y VIEW CONDO 28r Dono Point 3226 II om(' \rro~s r rom 13.5% IMTEIUT • ~ trvint _ I 044 possible $425.000 Edna l;M 1 orean view. xlnt arra 2ba. nicely furnished ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 Swim Beach Sl450 mo l()<k down. cute collage, • s ' • ···R·-:.·H··c··H···s·TY···L··E··· ~SS~~~~~ ltealt) & 3 Bdrm 2 bath 2 l'Sr I owe s~.500 Sec. bldg Sl200 mo)rl) 2 br 2 ba \lt'A rondo. 213 J85 2176,213 441 ~ ___ l...§6l·0093 1w ___ ... ...., ... 11t.1' .._ Homewithwuqueterms LCIC)llltoHkJltl 1052 Onlv S650 000 Call 496 Bl22or8Jl·8Sll co me Units or' Equll) den. I'• ba Prof de . 3 Hr 2lla v.1thboatsh11 :J.~2 o!!~ !~~I lot. " "' garage. mulllple.zonmg Chaner Rlty& Invest Th:~~ ~u~~r5cr~~~r.: VILLA BALBOA I Br t I ::t~1t;~r~I! S52.' LUXURY UYFROHT & cond itions Ne"A I) ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-9161 · -Santo AllO I 010 s coraled with woods fowlto111 V*'f 3234 \\ail 1 kl tst "an\ Painted. new hot waler 2 WITH• VIEW ••••••••••••••••••••••• a280k·000c AOct now 1 • s 500 1 > ••••••••••••••••••••••• aml•n1t1es $35011 \lo FANTASTIC Buy "' ro er o p. Agent views. l mo yr Y HOME FOR RENT "riik"r "i< ,91 .• JUSTUSTED tank, near new dis Condo w vu-shon dme Great 631·4516 Waterfrontllomes.lnr 14 Bdrm POOL 5950 " ' ""~ ' Remodeled 2 Br + bach Real cute. Lowest pnce on Island. S325.000 hwasher.4Bdrmon rul-tobeach&onlyS20.000to ..... ._........_ .... _ 631 1 .. 00 I o., ... ,,n l''I' 3 11r dc>«k 4 BR 131• ba. seller de sac in popular !tanch assume exisltn" rn•, 0· "'•-1•11h"'l~f • .. . l'eni·ed ~ard & j!araJZe ",:an'n" t,'r·l~ast-. 5171~1· l l d T ... wner w1 e p inance Kids & pets wrlrnnll' ' C...twry 21 Lockhart __ 9l)-H47 mo l\'a e · erms. area Approx 1900 sqfl loans' Priced ri0 hl i'*-'--lf 12""" r .. fsr"'ri 6i.5u"ll T T C 11 . .. ... .,.,, ...... au I u ~room 98 UNITS 545 2000 Agl'llt, no rer ' " ..,., erms. erms a Select new carpet!. Ownr Agt Greg Astle. •-1111!!!11!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 1 ,2 bath co nd o VILLAIALIOA quickly 752·6499 w purchase. Call for de· 759·1221 Prestigious location. (I 4.7Pleies1 Luxuriously appo111l ed Huntington leach 3240 EASTILUFf tails. Sl0.000 Total Cash Own. Community POOL' A lwobedroomsoroneand ....................... 4 IJ!lrm . :!', ba . fam1I} Coplstrc:w.o leach I 018 1:.1 t;!fl l fj l!!?Vf:M S2,000 per mo. S BR 3 Ba. slea I at only S83.000 den Fabulous Ol'ean HOME FOR fl t-:NT r()(•m fire11lat•1•s Clean --···---·~-!!IA gracious2sty.BackBay View this charmer to VeryLowDown view. Maid serv11•e 4 lidrm S700 ~·1·nl·1•1l 1 •·'<(·1·11t1\1> h11mt• ,\,11 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FORECLOSURE Steal il ~ Holder of TD wants to unload 1m mediately 4 Br. fam rm, newer. ocean \IU Total loan S224,~. !!§.1·2990 Easts1de Fixer Upper, 3 3rea Tall shade, ovrr· day•Call"""2390 Ow1MrftHchCcnlt! 2000 per month So< .vard & oaran<• l\1cb ~ nuw Sl.5.'iiJmo d I l $265 000 "'7 "' " f;.I" 5161. li40·8111T br.lba.spal0'~'7<fin t'Wwportleodl 106' s ize o • ,·TOf'bel,Redton months lease 631-7300 pl.'ls wel,•om1• ;,.1;,21w ' CoroN def Mor I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4341EGOHIA New elegant 4 Br Vic· tor ian parli3l vu. ownr cont~a finan ...!Y!lJ! SS 1..§..!l CDM S Above beach, below Ocean Blvd Semi priv Rd. Out ol tra/f1c. 180 degree view Ocean & Jetty from every wm dow. Prop line high tide Obie Invest 2 yrs Clear, land incl Sl.250.000 OWC. Pf P Appl only (714) 673-~. 673-2210 - 41R +POOL· FIXER Irvine Terrace pool home needs TLC but 1s priced below murkel and owner will finance. New listing' Call Greg Aslle·Rltr. 7S9-l221 R&1M~ S120._000. A.Kt 642-1523_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 w n er 5 4 6 5 8 8 0 · Si..Ell Realtor Agent, no h~ College Pk fixer upper 3 901 DOWH 631 nisevs South LCICJIMCI 1086 Tax Write-Off Fantastic Townhouse. 4 UR. 2 m1 tu l>l•;uh ~~II br , 2 ba, fam rm 2 GOOD owe W~lcUrr 4 Br 212 $5000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fa.stbcrowPos~ orean view, frplc. ever-per mo .. SHfifl dt•p Sll0.000 OWCS80,000lst TOLA.ST Ba. only $279.SOO :4orm DOWN YottGetn.tKey lltn.&rriRcipals ytbing furnished S895 AH1il,<k1 111 K41151;4K TD. 642 LS23A. Irvine, Calilorrua Home. & Kasey rllrs McKinley LEASE OPTION 6 M~. to 9th St Beach with this WelcoMe Mo. 7so.9117 Sunn' 2hr to"An 1·half'I l BR condobelowmarkl, 4 Bdrm. l story, very 6.11·1266urS4S-6492 Dix Villa Halboa sparkllng 2 8Rwithtile 1706 OCEANFRONT Hardwood noors v.Jrm S20.000 dwn. 11-718'7, JO clean. Al end of t.ree-w p a r t 1 a I v u bath. wood noors, den, aldl ~ Deluxe S Br. 21, Ba lh1s $395 deal' •!lfi41i yrlo.!_nassum 546-1883 lined pride of ownership SENSATIONAL OP· Crplc. ~ra ge and a Refs Sl200 Mo Avail Or 1f its betti.'r h\ lltl' cul de sac. SJ.875 down lo p 0 R T UN I T y a t charming ~uesl w11t Be 7 I 4/76 7292 lbru 6· 15·82. 675·9932. beach, des111nrr Jhr "A SUPER!! 3 Bdrm. Freedom Home w frplc Beauufully up- graded Sll4.000, with terms Superb ,,,. RED CARPET IL 754-1202 FREEDOM HOUSE 3 Br. 1 Ba. large yard s~~~~~. ~~~J63 New Crystal Cove Con· dos , 2 master suites, Oreplace, close to ocean 1932 MEYER PLACE. Open Thurs -Sun. 12·5 631-4~.J or 631 :.4732 s t. SI 0,000 DOWN!! Sharp 3BR home. As- sume $86,000 first owe Remainder. S118.000 851~18l~Br~k.r~·~-- VETS or seller "Aili as· Sl29,900 Rae Rodgers. creative wJnnancang 2131446·6684 marble llled bJ ' 1'11·tun• stsl the financing Only rltr63H266 S2'7LS.OOO Ylll-1.E •-.t...fort....t... 220 lBR,lblktoocn.cable& "And"A ~·sszs =91\ZM s~.soo. 752-1700 OCJ9MI •--r Mn> ~ ulil pd. No pets $435. Ren11m~G3l ~s.r,s fo'l't WESTOCUHFIOKT 497-1761 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wmter.548-1425 2~t~.3br 2h;icnnclo nr THE REAL ESTATERS THlt«IHG TOW""40ME? Call the specialists al the condominium 111 formallon center Touchstone Realty 963-(8;7 * *JUST LISTED Free standing 4 Bdrm College Park hom e Triplex X.lnl terms & 4 acres or land Newpart h 1 prime IO<'ation $600,000 Tustift I 090 Beach OK for Condos, $ 0 P P 1 n I? ,. t•" c r ~.(e.!!!,67s.6161 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Office or Medical BldR HMSHUnfwftalted 550 mo "" pch 64 1.0763 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i52 i49R JOINT VENTURE NEWPORT PUCEfUL ---General 3202 Spal'inos rl1•,1n "'"" INVESTOR HEIGHTS PIJVACY ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>t'nch 3 nr :1 Ba s12;. NEEOEDforsharp38r $359,500 S.5AClES S275SanClemlbr 114981 Muf'i46-1141 condo or 3 Br house-your Tucked away in North Sweeping. WlObstrucled $350 lbr Dana Pt• tt6407 ... ,. ... R 1,. '"CH B R A N D N E W Tustin FooOulb. 1s this view o f Capistrano ~""52brCM"-me! tt6454 "'""" .. ,.. choice S7SOO mm1mum. ...,., "" J bd 2 b 1 .. EXCLUSIVE LISTING Sp acious 3500 s~ fl . Valley '~ated among $39cHB2b 11""•6 rm . ll ne"A' 111• Ca ll for details John · """"' " r. gar .,.,... coratcd. lot.~ of llh• ·sfi.',o Marshall.rllr, 631.1266 on this lrg gorgeous 3 Br home Lovely poo on expensive homes. just $425! Nwpt house' 116312 960 69 home . Has ll all ! nearl y lh arre minut._es from Dana S425 !CapBch2br!ll498l I 2 OW N ER WI L L Redecorating needed lo Point "Mehl Harbor. SSOO! SanClem3br 114924 HuntiftC)toft FINANCE w/23'7.i down. make this magnificent Secluded yet convenient. Reflmnes6.1HSS5 Fee HorbOur 3242 S270,000 country estate. fan-S695 ,000 Attractive 1•1-...1 3206 ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/pvl spa, hg rumpus ---------READY TO SELL! This HEIGHTS CHARMER has 3 Bd w/brigbt area den . ASSUME LO W INTEREST LOAN . $229,900 tastic financing &Yaila· terms '> -w t h I I' s · •••••••••••••••••••• ea e r y >U ) ble w1lh only 75,000 Charming2br, l ba house wat~rfront condo, 2 Br rm & space galore. An entertainer's delight $186,900 21121.\COHDO Adjacent to Newport Crest area Sea Wand Section. S123,000. Good terms RAE RODGERS , rllr 63J.1266 down. 35· boal shp /\v:11l 1m with rroot yard on good Island IO<'ation. s1so mo med s1oso 84li ~655. Xlnt lease oppty Call 84~ 4457 Lyn 67S.Bm lrvltte 3244 don osen rL.Jtr o~ Coro.a def Mor 3222 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• PA.TIO HOME Cot .. Met0 I 024 53 dwn or trade View ••••••••••••••••••••••• condo. 3bdrm. 2...,ba. Roy McC.-clt, lltr. 541-7729 ~bridge Re,lly 551·~ 1m Barn nr 1 Pli • ~ . In l•f' j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! R&'M* 17TH AT PR~PECT TUSTIN, 731·31ll A r>im1on or 2BR, "Honeymoon Col· 2 B d + den . A C. II arbor ln\Plllment Cb. lage" Canyon view. garage fresh pa111t. OtMr IHI &tatt stove. no pets, adlts. $850 avail now Adults o TIMMIS AtCYOHl!7 Prine. Only. Owner. Wlr.1bledon VUlage near -'1""2~13 ... >.,.S!l"'2'-.4"'-184"-'-· --- new! Sl86.200' Com TIJ.LIYB. CONDO * *LEVERAGE! 0 ifc:.c:1 munity tennis, pool and No down. Sl08,000 spa. Spacious living Primtlocation.S40.3666 erea, cathedral ceilings. 2 BR. private mastt'r suite, uciting architec· lure. Assume large low interest loan. MoVl' rtght This beautifully appoint· New c ual. bit 2 sly, ed 4 Bdrm Northwood French Normandy. 3 BR home features its own & deo home. Can be in!Call ~~ Whelan pool, spa. and separate spUl. S88S,OOO, OWC. 37U playyard .CWOer says Seashore. 673-6578 ~~11. l:'d~ try sma_ll down. This Tradt Luxury Newport HCa ~-:0· seller ~• suulne.ly ~on r,t,-.cre for In· --------motivated. Take advan· come Units or? F,quity Tohme, bl·l.evel, fp.c, 3 tase! Jmt reduced to szso.ooo. Act now! Bfl, 3 ba pnv yd, micro. $239,000 Broker Co·Op. Agent upgrade <:RIC 10% dn. 631-4516 so;. CASH DOWN Realr~ A~~~~ycp~~r!e I 2 Br. Condo. Owner 11'9,ooo . .,, . ..., [~i)'1bodbrld11t ------.---------· ---- financed at 131.13 . Prln· 551·3000 Former model. 3 ~R. =====:t!:~=== clpalsonl)' ..:• arr1nn " ... '·'"''"~· 3b1tb, maater 1u1t.e ...; , Afent · 556&SIS w/pvl rel.rat overlook· •---------~-H "t PA-'--2 ~ Ins tennis co1111. pools, Uttlt fl lhJ!! •GOVERNM ENT '" aae • .-.. .,.,r and sp1, Good mum•· Cl-1fltd Ads lrt reallr, LOANS • bit, DR. fem rm, f11>IC, ble loans. small "peoplctopeople' Po.alble S~dwn, 12·1'1' patio, pool, 17?5 mo. C/2I ...,.,..rt saJea calla with b11 N · Int ratf , 311 yr Ins, kee 76G-83141 6 aden•tp and bll rt · Info. SHOO DOWH •---"-'"""-"=""-- aulta! To plan your WOILDllA&. ASSINf.21~ Have tomt thlol you cl......, ..t. call today llTAll JBr 2 Ba, cul·dttac, want lo M!I? Cluailltd ..,.,.,. 1 Bkr 754-nn ada do it ftll. tu-st?s, $50,000 and you can own prime duplex, steps lo ocean. exc-ell financing. Owner will help. Owor/Agt. 498-2883, 67$§74.9 aft 7. • CANAi.ROM? 4 Br. 3 Ba. Bonus Rm. Beautiful cond. $275,000 or trade equity for? 842-1067 ....................... incl grdnr. 673-146' S7SO mo Fred Gibson MobiltHOMtt MoWltH-SPAC IOUS 5Br. 3Ba. ~-9400 For S• I I 00 Part! 2300 formal dirum, ram rm ............... •••••••• •••••••••••~•••••••••••• w/wet bar. grdnr Incl OCUH IUEll:S Trailer at RV park, Va blk Avail now. $1200 mo to Hunt. Bch. SS,800 ~-160-83ll. Cl.ose lo bch This lg dbl {213)944·Sl53. 30:et"-'-"e"'""A=n...'"----v-·----wide is oo an oversized --· · "':-.:a~ 1ew corner lot.SStarpark.A Ma .... Dtttrt, P . B~aul.!ful. S2000 Br. family .. rm. dbl musttosee. <SD7467). lttorf 2400 na o.t 'a-'~ l>PITo'! garra~. M\t'r'al·alr.t)Vl MULHR..a.a.... • • ...................... ,_,_100.""-=~------yd, COlTlm ~I &; SJ)l, 5"U'" S700 mo Avail 1mmed REALTORS IY OWNER Cotta MtM 3224 Suzee Maller or Jo'rcd MOllUHOMI DIV. Beautiful 24.x48 2 br, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Gibson. rltn $59-9400 (71 "'' 527• t ba, 1 yr old mobile Brandnew28r.Condo.2 R&1M~ .. ' hom e. Loe . In pre· Ba, 2 car gar. w/elec. --.-A·WMllT----•111--------1 tll1lo ua He r itage door, frplc, dl'hwasher. lfllUIH IEDUCIDll!l Ett1lel In Rancho, CA. micro, was~r & dryer. OWY(I Ill.DO Anxious owner hu Cut lom ludscapin& J>OOI, Jae, balCOf\Y, No n slashed price thousandt. aurround• this lovely ts. A;~ lmmed. f7SO S72S. 3 BR Oran1tf'tret> Muat 1ell beaulllul 4 Perfect a~ home, 5 hom e with a view. 0·54 · P.tio HITlf fresh deror. Bdrm 4 beth home with atar park. 2Br, 28a Dru ttc11ly red uced For leu e: Exec:. condo. 3 1ar bpor, adlt comm . boal doclt. Asking pnce beauty. (l(Jlllll-12). from 144,500. Owner br, 2~ ba. front at rtar all amenities No peb Sl,13S,OOO. Try l250,000 MULHWH arulous to ltll at S37,t50 pvt yard, spa• pool. Nr su.4i'6 down. Submlt orfeu. ae. .... ·rots ' will ClfT)' abort term Cd.M Fwy. Avail. Oct. u. NORTHW001>38r. 28a Dan Bibb. uu. veer. ~5134· 2700 hom e Beautiful up •~:-...~ Ml7 .. 14t s"-21 Rf°"oo· The tu u.t drew lll the ll1ke your •hoppln1 1radedhteonpvtcul ck· __. .• ' .. Wat. .. a 01111 Pilot tultr ~y lllinf lht Dally 1ac. $87S mo Ait Kyle Cluallied Ad. Na-Vll. PilotCWlifted Ada. m .. 111 SPYGLASS LEASE $2200 pr mo for a 6 Br I'. Ba house "A1lh ~rt>at \ 1 e w s Ca r!l c n 1 n J! 'en u·e includ£'11 D.M. Monhol Rttr 760.'0IJS -.;f:WPORT TERRACE CON DO 2Rr 2Ra '1e"'. ~ar no pets \\tr pd 3fi2!> mu 6i3 iiJ7,&l2 30i3 BLL FfS 3 Br 3 Ila f"am Rm NI:'"' paint St ISO ~o 644·23tKI PARKSmlHG Qu1<>I end wut to"A nh~r on 11rct?ntirll \IJ~le1 Bdrm + 2 more Mrm-.. 21> bo . 1111"1. p:atm :-o;u- 1wt~ $675 Call &14 !ISM or An~"'er Ad :212 &12 4300 24 hrs BA YSHOR ~:5·1.1? IBr 1 dt•n, frplc. 11aral(e. new )la1nl rpts. pvt area $795 mo 645-4636 or till fiZ29 IA YFRONT LUSE Lrj? •I Bdrm. nu carpet paint thn.K1ut, shp for 40·45 boat 1mmtod or rupanc) S-1000 pr mu Call Lloyd 675 fi6711 llarhor V1rw llomes Waterfall. <~azebo. Ko1 l'ond "Aooden foot llr1dgc\Jo.vcl) exer 48R ~ft/\ oome I.to !.eporate guest apt 5'400 mo 1ss-0219 I , ILUFfS. 'ttEW On Back Say. 2 Br 211 Sa Den. Condo 2 car garJlge. frplc SlJOO Mo S48-Jl16L...-...,..-~~-_,.. • ·~l>fGttEfYllW Seaw1nrl, 3br. 2blt, very pvt· Xlnt rond No pelr. Gdnr Incl $1500 Avail 10 20 Ca ll eves 857 0377 EXEC HOME HAllOIVlfW 4 Rr 2.., Ba. Family rm, Om rm. Z300 sq It Nn pels Sl700 Mo Orivc by f1r~t 1806 Port Abh1<' n1ll 7$2 6499 4br . 4ba homt 1n 81yshorta Avail bl wttk 1n Jan. S1aoo mo I yr leaH Ron J ackson $56-1800 c' '---y J \., -------· .. ,...... c.,..s..... ..,.... ,...... w ••• ,., ,....... ,..... Tit Fiii ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................................................................................................................... --;;;~l ............................................................ . m, Ballyallttr av all.• my ·WtCartQiltCeaMrt ALL TEX't'\JRESll HOME UfPROVEKE.NT Town ' Co" n l r 1 BRICKWORK: Small PAINTINCT-WSTOM Palntlna ' paperhan11· Tll.£1'6f'ALL£D SftalL home Mon-Fri Ml or Stnm~lun•uphola. Drywall Qun ' depen REPAIR, PUJMBING, U o m • m a 11: e r 1 , Jobi, Newport , Co1t1 wort, ZS yr .. xp. Many tlna. lnt/Elt. SO yn ln All Kindt. Gdlnnt.Md. S P IT Expd motlier, Truc~rnountwlil dable. Rt'u 631·2004 carpentry, elec, tilt. homemaket1 ' home li&eu, lrvlne, Re ra. lout rtfa. Uc. f4G41 area, color matchln1 _Bef1. •lMT ... 1:,~}.~-~'1 baby proolhome,fcdyd, Wok uar. "6-1'716 DRYWAWACOU~'TIC Reu, rm esL No job health aides to work 176·317§ Bonded.lnl'd.l"reeest. ~clalty.Ref1.49'1·Sl21, TrHStrrice ·-·-1..;;I! d!llY •~tlvlty C11l Shaml)OO •rt.tam dean 14 yrs exp Vully llc'd., toum1U ~2811 w/tbeelderl.y•dlu bled Ff}llca·P•Uol·Plantm Hutcblloft,113.wll l·lW --••••••••••••• .. •••••••• for a Kartn 83£·!132 C.olor b~, wht tnsured. -Carpe try M tn their homes Call us at For a job done rl.&bt, P\ne pal.ntlna by Richard S11.11l Lainnt •SOM TREE OfSlONS 301nct.y ad Wiii 81b)'llt 1'1\1 home crpu · 10 ml.n. bl 1cb DRYWALL TAPING Roofi~I Plu=~ 836-1'20 _ _ Wf'ry~taZlleve1 SJ.nor. Lie, lint. 1J yni o1 Best in Palpt• PaPt"r Prunln&,Sculpturina nt.he Cotti M•a, pleue c11l Hall, Uv/dln. nm $U, AJI tNlure& & acouatic, -m'ywall -Stucco· Tile HCMIHC..... EXPERT BRICK & happy N.B. cuatomert. 631..,.00 Top, Thin. Remov1ll, DALY ~:1.SO'J~te _ 1v1 room tUO: couch fneest.Kevlnf76 ~ Remodel. J.B 840-999<1 ....................... Muonry. Sml.ll JObs ai Tbankyou. 631·'410 ,.,.,.. C~ao-up.63H$t3 Pl.en' Lovin& ~of 2 will S10; cbr ~ Gun elim -COMPLETES ERVICF.S ROBIN'SCw:ANING ttpalrs. F'rlllc fadnga. t.ARRY'SPAJNTlNG •••••••••••oo••n•••••• 1---------s.-1t care for your child. pet odor. Cri>t repair lltdrkll Cirpentry, tit .. , ·l~c. Service a thorouebly ~1-45.SS, 71JO.ro74 Jot/ext. 5yn eap The Paper tta.n&er. Pror '""~ Id -Th alt lpm or 11J 15 yra exp. Do work ••••••••••••••••••••••• " ""' I bOl.IW 540-0857 Ins II Decor tot I JAYE'Tl&CAll DlllCTOIY wknd, F.&ai, Barr1nc1 m tell fa.£U.01qJ F:LECTRICIAN prictd concrete, plumblni. c ean . HAITMASOHIY Reu. free est. 545-9383 ta . • • qua . Complete servlre ind DOJTNOW! & Culver, Irv. C11rol N0Steam/N0Sh1mpoo right. lrM estunate on palnt1n11 f'ru est Wint a REAU.Y CLEAN Brlckwori, blockwalla, lNTERIOR/EXTERl~R Free est. SUveS4H281 stump grindlne. 10 yn Alt'-5-dre ~2-9522 StainSpeclalist. FHt tarse:ornnallJobs. 95J..82M HOUSE' Cl.II Gineham wood fenrea. Concrete Re.aldential/Comm I l'tetttr/I..... _up Llc. lns.640-t90I Your DaHy Pilot •..n..a..._ dry. Free Mt. ll39·1M2 Lie. •396621. 673·0358 Carpe;;lry 1'J~tncal _Girl Free est. 6'5-5123 p a t i o 1 , com p I et e Reasonable' Fut •••••••••••00•••••••••• -Service Directory _ _...... --"'"""-'...;;....:...;;.;:;..:::=...=-= -R E.51D /COMM 'l Plumbing Painting Expert11e housekeeping, landscapes Ur 3611294 953-825.S Nut patches' tc.xlutu A't1 ERICAN TR EE R ••••••••••••••••••••••• ROBERT'S CARPET ' D ulk 1 • f 1 h d ,... <&t G __. "~ 14lt SERVlCE epramllUve 11!..EIWIC"&S-.. REPAIR Restretch. re· Highly qualified NOJOb aveor"' _e._964-1917 supp tu urn s e . _.1_, INT/EXTPAJNTlN ...:..:.~~WM:.:.:..•-"-'-''-......---~, ~--- 642·5'71, nt lll w " """ too small 631 2004 •HOME REPAIRS trustworthy,957-8003 -Brlck·Block-O>ncrete Xlnt work, low rates. lNT/EXT PATCHWORK eul. Id .. -s111· ,.,. 1""'7 ID... all re!)Aln . 673-8490 - . . -11""' _,,., y...a-....1.. "'• , ... '" ---Fi ......, ff & IM PROVl::MEN"J'S• Clean Up Your Act Co very reu. Uc, llonded. ~1.,,,..., ...,........, Restuccos ·Textures .,._, Acc.._..,_ Additions, rernodelin11. C....t/eo..u.h .. ~~=.:'!~ ... ~~ a.t. 1145-0423 Housecleanln&. avu & Bob 548-7~/$9906 CUSTOM INT/EXT FREE~ MS-11258 ..................... .. -·-., plans. Free est Reas. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ''ERTIFIEO !o"'RL'ARM M AINTE""°~CE~ offices. 631-1993 Mo•'-EXPERT SERVICE PLA.,.,.ER PATCHING Private expert tutorlna ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie 13UIM2 53-2170 CON CR ETF. CONSTR "' " "' ~"'AN ITTn.i• _,, ""'' by Credenti&led tucber ACC'ro Coram. bust . PR --Patios, walkways , INSTRUCTORS leach Mile tepatt"S, oojob too LET'nlEMOUSI:: ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOWRAT£S lnt/exL:.lyrsexp Moil subJtt'I areas qtrhu. sales tax. FIS HUFFMAl"UrSON driveways, block walls, all 11spects of handgun small or too big, from CLEAN YOUR HOUSE * A·I MOVIM4h NU-BROOK6'2·1403 Neat work. Paul S.S-2977 Yo_!J[ home. 846-380l Co mplete office .serv Add Remodel -Patios wood decks, patio over· defense.841·39n_._ rarpentry to yard CallSue,851-6878 Top Quality. Speciil RALPH'SPAINTlNG ,._.1119 J!otl!!J. Reas. ~O.~ Lie~:=· Re~~ hangs. Reis. 116.1-~ G.,..RilMJ mamt. Steve 1142-9383 Thorough & Reliable care ID handling. 25 yrs Ext/Int-Reas-Prompt. ....................... l~:i;~~'::~. ~~t~m~ Prof Acctng Financial, -THOMPSON 'S ••••••••••••••••••••••• H...Aa-fo~xper1eoced Good rers. exp. CompetltJ ve rates. Lc'd. Free est 964-5566 McCORMACK PLMBC office skills. 641 0678 Bookkeeping Services RtflMHW Specialist CONCRETE CONST It CLEAN·UPSI LAWN ••~••••••••••••••• SSZ·9g21546-~ No overtlme. ?» 1353 All Painting-int kSO ext REPAIR &r Rl::MODEL DR U M M ER S Pr 0 t 213·~1~..114-6461751 Custom carpentry, Lic.11393.'m 642-8482 Mamlenance-Landllrp H11ul.rlea.nup,concrele SCRUB-A DUB prof •AB C MOVING S650 Neat, complete Stopp.ages.Reas rates. A$pllalt decks, pal.loS J.S. Const Pool Deck& and Pauos, Free est. ~9907 removal Dump Truck. housecleaning service Ex per., pro(., low rates. Free est, refs SSl-7292 Lie. 11294378 f!S-9194 ir~ ~ ~e~ ~~I f~ ~x::. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Co. Nobody does it bet· Maaonry,Sport&Tennas Cleanups 1'reeTrim'g Qu1ek~rv 642-76311 Reas., reliable, refll. Quick, careful service Ext.housepalntmgonly Drains from SIO. Main Righteous Brothers. Driveways, par.king lot lt:r ! Llc'd & bonded Courts Lie 374067_ Bob, Hauling · Mamtenanct DUMP JOBS Cal!_Jeao,~1-~1_6__ 552·0410 Wedo thejobriaht! from SIS. Plwnbmg re· studio work Limited t=<epa1rs . sulcoal1ng free est. Call Joe, 851-1986/847-7078 Arrue~8414 _ &SmallMovingJobs COLL£0ECOUPLE STARVINGCOLLEGE LEEPalnting,B!M-3449 purs,repiee.642·9033 openmgsrorsenou.syng S&S Asphalt 631 4199 S59·~l NOJOBTOOSMALL Tree trimming & re Calll11KE646·1391 Will clean your home STUDENTS MOVING COLLEGE5'F\1DENT Re.ode~Rtpalr .!!.\!.dents. 751-4672 Lie _ C.,_ttor Brk 11 Blk. Lie. ~1449 moval, clean·ups, trash HAULING & DUMP Good, dependable, refs CO Lie. rT124·436. Exp lot/ext. job for ....................... Will tutor high school ASPHALTREPAIR ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dale,home96J.S76'1 hauling&ma111tenance, JOBS.asktorRandy, SteveorOebb 842·9383 lnsured.641·8427 less!AlexSS2·0031 General cootracllng. math.algebra. Seakoating·Stripini: GEN'LCARPENTRY Ans.83S-2lS2Beep 2313 mowlng Re~.673-]953 64J.IH27 PERFECTION PLUS! WATCH OS GROW! Quality ptg. Lowest rates home improvements. --'GIZ-&724. Commtresld. Free est lNSIDE & OUTSIDE TREES Houi-'Cle• _ Exp'd. dependable. Any •Two Brothers Moving • m o c. Neat, prompt Also damage repairs. lst Lie aJ97l62 645·8181 Fasl.erflcienlserv1ce Cff'OIMc Tlt J"'....,,rryn7_7u;,;r ty_gework Us~~·l850 P r ompt Courteous serv 848·~.63&-7149 classwork.Lie.~ W l.tdowCMMg ~ 953--825S ••••••••••••••••••••••• Toppedfremoved, clean 't;" ..,.,,, JUO s ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Child Car~ Da"s great H · 1 Reliable Homemakers erv1ce 9S7 ·0SOO or l"'T/EXTPAJNTING It-a... w h " , · Complete Remodelmg aosens Ceramic Tile. u awn renov._751 3476 TREES/~liRUBTRI M 540 8448 •• -·-.., Original Window as er playyard, 3 years and Resid. comm. New or floors , showers, 1ubs. Gwral lce1 Garage & yard rlean· will clean your home or ·--L1c'd Refs. Free Est. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avg 3 brhome, $35. _Q]der. Karen 00-42{{) old look. Lic'd. 17 yrs in call aft 4PM, 557·8280 ....................... ups. Free est S.S7·8271 apt. 760-1793, 835-6049 PAOD~ WAGON 646-1067 BALABOI A -~<>fff~tsN~ CO 631·7698 labyMttMg area Mr Palombo ChlldCart ----GeneralHousecleamog overs Ol.YMPICPAIMTIMG so .... y g "LeltheSunshine ln" ....................... Air CoM/H..tiltca HA ULING Student has Reliable . References Careful, Courteous plaslenng C 11 Sunslune w·odo 8abys1tlmg, m)' home, 1 962·83..!.4 --...................... , ~, 54()-8634 art 3 lge truck Lowest rate Own.Jrans. 962-0510 and Cheap. 497·4056 INT/EXT. FREE EST Free est 673-6743 a 1 w yr & up, nr Victoria. 'French drs, hdwd noon.. ...... DAYCARE H ..._ Prompt Call 759 1976 LmNhcani.n P-'-"-HIGH QUAL.WORK S-"""1_:_ --Cleaning, Ud. 548-~ C.M 642·8482i&l6·57S9 moulding, shelving S_pecial to working •• O:::!.~............ Thank1ou,John •••••••;?;.;' •• ••••••••• .::;::? •••••• ,........ LOW RATES 554-1903 .!:.:':.~••••••••••••• WINDOW CLEANING· Peoplew~need People ~o°mupre~:rv[c~:;r'!e parents CM.646·5423 JACKOFALLTRADES CLEAHUPYOUllACT TOTAL JOBS. Masonry, Fall Special, ext/int International Painting SPRINKLER INSTALL Comm'l/Resid 'I That's whatthe CHILDCARE Plumbing, eleclril'al. HAULING-$25 631-1993 cement, drainage, pamtiog Pror Rsnbl. HlgbQualily. lnl/Ext. Repair&Ydctean·ups. _F'reeest Jim,S3l-l9l8 DAILYPILOT est. Bonded, h e'd Myhome,nex.hrs.CM heating Odd JOb!> -sprinklers. low \Ollage Freeest.5uve547-4281 Free~l.SS6-1631 Landscaping. 645-5597 WINDOWCLEANING SERVICE DIRECTORY 644-4015 area Tan 54()-9915 638·4068 Al-Aro.cf H..&.q lighting. OeMJS 642· 1845 Hive sometbltlg to sell? WANT ACTION? Sell things fast With Daily Resid'I specialist is all about' Sell idle items 642-567~ Classified Ads 642-5678 Classified Ads 642-5678 Jim, 548-3964 Want Ads Call 6'2·5678 Classified ads do 1t well. Classifed Ads 642-5678 Pilot Want Ads. Free est Alex 54>474 i Aparluri...ta fwRisMd AporltHttb URfum. Apart!Mtth u.tw.. 1 Apartatttts l.WllnLr' Hohlt, Mot.ts 4100 letttab to~ 4100 Office • .., 4400 Office ...... •4400 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Me"'POrf lffdl 3269 lolboo lslmd 3706 Mew~rt ltodl 37 6t Coda Mesa 3124 H.m..C)foft leach 3140 Mewport leodl 1169 Live at Newport Beach NB prof gentleman will I 7TH STREET IALIOA ISLAND ·················'·····1······················· ···········r··········· ..................................................................... (P .C.H ) $1 00 weekly. shre beaut home w/m/f COSTA.MESA Private orfice (Or rent --------Balboa Island t Bdrm Oceanfront. Neat 2Bn 31rTowtllhoae 2 br, S350 + $350 dep HEARIEACH&IAY Pi ne Knot Motel. ovr30S375.71JO.<llOO. 20r 3 roomofficesuiles. w t balcony to s hr furnished apt SS50 mo S600 Mo Winter Adult Newly decor. gas pd , Crpts. drps BIHns, nr 2 Br sharp, yrly S6SO 645·0440 Female 2S-35 to shr w/ F. AIC. plenty of prkg Ulil wt other artist S260mo. HAltOIOR RIDGE 4 Br Kensington w view S2400/mo. Winter rental 67~1831 213-795·:1>18'-encl gar, pool, dswhr shops. All adult, no pets 2 Br, bugedttk. rum or S4llMMf' R..... 4200 C M S 2 O 0 Ca 11 incl. Avail. now CaJI 851 9794 Cu~e small 2~,S l~~· OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br Adult! 642 5073. B9HB94 fJu~R~~~~ ••••••••••••oo••ouoou Answer Ad W 4 9 5. Realooomics 675-6100 ._..H R..W 4450 RCTaylorCo winter renla 6 Avail. Winter Weekly S11ac1ous 2 Rr 1 Ba MARIMBlS WALK MANAGEijS Newport 3 Br 1 house 6'2-4300, 24brs. Costa Mesa, 250 sq ft ........................... . 675·0349 Monthly. 673-7873. Laundry rac, pool. S395 2 & 3 Br Townhouse 675·6l73 673-0364 from ocean, parking. F w/child 4 will share suite. Sl75/mo. ULils In· Retail Store . Best beach <J40 C)l)()I,) lolboo ,..._.. 3707 Steps to Ocean, tennis. ~9S56___ Apts Patios, single & 3 IH>IOOMS Wk I Y av a i I now 2BR, home HB. S300 util cld 779 W 19th St location In Newport! ••••••••••••••••••••••• jog, bike 2 BR. 2 BA. LUXURY DUPLEX double car garages. 2••THS 675·6TI5 111cl.SJ6.0794 Til-3350. S750' Mo. U6 23rd St. 12 block tobeach, lbdrm, WotrSS.SO 673·3596 near Hunt Harbour -V ...&.1 a~ 4250 M o smkr 21+ Lrg BAYFRONTOFFICE 675·4185,673-1401 farkmg, util pd Yrly. --. 2 Br 2'-'l Ba dble gar t:h1ldren OK. ~6807. $675 MONTH acvnoe .,...... nR D·c .. u .N .,·I k --------• 2 bdrm 2 ba ftreplace 1 165-0 sq ft with every St low •••••0 •••••••••••••••• 38 · wn. O ,. a es. 500 feet, janitorial, park Store for lease 750 sq. ft, .IGC•uv......., 390 mo 675 -6876 ' · . · HUNT INGTON BAY 129 35th , .er unit. OCEANFRONT 2 &4 Br. $300 t util.644-4713 in ""'""" 534_3740 · car gar, on oceaK. Week xlra. huge rear yard CONDO xlnt cond Avail now. A 11 WI W kl . -. . i, etc. 760-9440. prime loc. C.M. S275 mo. Luxurious. Three · ly1 onlhl .978-9172 with RV gale. Adult)! 2 Br. 1'"1 Ba Patio, !!131966.1711 va . nter ee YI Single Mom m Irvine ,<\jrport-6 offices + lg 646·404ldaxsonJy. bedrooms. Two tfaths OCEANFRONT deluxe 3 Versailles I Br. fum 'un· $65S. 673-6336, 642·9666~ h Id "'."'" Monthly 67J..787J ___ wants rmmte $200 moo· ~li.ivided rm, s.s< sq ft in-Store for Renl. l34 E. l9lh Richly decorated Muted Br 2 Ba frplc, 2 car gar. Curo SS35 $510 mo yr 2 Br l Ba !'ool, garage car,powrt ,t w~slrerh ryedr PBemnsrulal duplex 2 Br 2 New dl.x w/f 2 br condo thly, child OK. 552.9224 cl maint + utal 641-8070, St C M. S650 mo. Drive tones 3000 square feel deck, winter S850 round 21J..792·S'69 Eve No peL• S46S Mo. 1395 A me a er"' as pai a rp "· year lease. Kona, HI. avail wntr/ DANA POINT, share 24·hrs byCALLS48·7259 Ove rlooks lOl.h tee or 673-6640 642 4957 Bal<"r. c•1.""63 Btwn 9 I, Comm. pool Adults, no lsl. & last 675-4912 wklv seasn Slkl 675·0604 h us av-·' now Bill If $J50(I h -"" Uf pets S525 + S500depos1l. Broker -""-"'-0 e, lllJ, • Shar~ 2 ore suite In.pre· lttditStrial ....... 4500 gYoeacrolyurselease. #m7 oRntue I br apt for 1 person, on PACIFIC SUNS""" i\lon·Fn. Anent no fee uc 2000 ·-. Hawaii Golfers Paradise 831-1257, 496-2969 sug1ous "'""'rl area. 375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• the Bay, S400/mo yrly, . VJ EW "'' •2 Br I Ba S395 " . . ......,. . W ESTCLIFF 2 Br. l '-'J Condo. 28R, 2BA. $39 00 FEM ROOMMATE sq. fl. f;;details call 1000 s~ fl with O/H door Grand Valee Open Sun no_pfils 67~ 1 ) Block to Beach. 2B R, Ba1. ('f'ownhouse.t~ .. ~dMults per day 499 .1671, To mov·e·lll· Nov. l, for 85 day I 5 To see rall 15 steps Lo sand Lg 2 1 child OK. no pets. 2265 2BA Adults S475. 124 on y no pet.s ......, o 1·6226· Top ocation. S29SJ.4fio. 631 ·7300, Realtor WitttwR.,... bdrm w carport. bal, DMaple,64.5-9494. 20th Street 53&-8149 172S Bedford Lane 581-6380 nae~ 2 br house on AVOIDHIGHlt&fT '675-6251 • 2 bdrm, l ba $550 ldry far ulll me S6S5 I Br dplic , gar, pvt yd. wtr Spacious apt avail now. ~.7533 Lrg Big Bear cabm. Pool EIS1de C.M. ~/mo. + l?th &Tustin SA PRIM£ 2500 sq.ft . iotld 2Bdrmta,.,ba SS50 851.·9417 &elec.pd.NopetsS300 Ba"helor 1 & 2BR. · table,colorTV,2fpks utlls. Te ri, wkdys Onl NICE ffl 1. h 1 SClll Cle-.. 3276 ' Quiet 2 br, 1 ba, ready for SI 4/Y5 69 6 979 7474 631 4718 y IP ! o ce space. 1g t n· ....................... 2 Bdrm ~eanft ~ J~~·~r Rdnn. Versail.les mo. 673·7737,642 3073 From S32S • Close to occ. Steps from beach. eeps 14· 71 -~ · 1 · ; eves · · 300toll00sq rt duslrial unit. Next to 3bdrm. 2bu , walk to 3 Bdrm 2 3 S rue $495 Mo 136 Albert St . llC. 2Br. G G & SD Fw y S650, lsl. last & sec. R..tah.tosi..e 4300 M5/uFrroshurndCinMg5Hle. F.enNciecde MikeSupp!ellSJ..4040 John Wayne Airport, beach. golf. tennis No 4Bdrm ocean.I\ 1200 644 -5369. 548 -8636, frpk. 1"'28a. SMC> mo Bakomes, pallos, pools, Refs 642_-6217 and 55 & 405 Fwys pets. S675 49'l·7StJ af\ 751-9110. Owner/ Agel!! 640-2004 Jae. ten nu. lndry 'fac 1 8 r condo, 1550 mo. 0{;:;li:~~;·;;;~:;!00 yrd. S210. 00-8978 p C~!J ~MESAS Avail 1mmed. 975-1.262 3pln Wmterrental apt. NB , ''2 s p Ac lo us 2 BR H U N T I N G T 0 N versa ii I e 5 . c a I I Es t ab I is hed 1971. Si11jle 25 to~ washer & ut~f11~ctd.cat~91:· Rent, 1125 sq.ft $400 mo. •Nr bearh llfice 2 BR 2 blk to beach 3 BR. 2 Ba. ADULTS Beam clngs. GARDENS.4901 Hell HS 2131830-2323 Richard. Featured in Time Mag. dryer. S200 mo, small de-1355 Logan. • 1. CM. Ba. ocean vu. Pplc No ga r , $600 Avl 10 I lrgkit.servbar.refrige. Bolsa Chica & Heil Large Clte ntele . posit,642-8104 17THSTREET 675·51_16 __ -552·1539 -----$425/mo. No pets. 22S6 846·!323 Lovely 1 br Versailles Personal attention & ProrM /F2JO.:.lyrs.share COST• u"'rlt ~!-S· 494 87Z7 con do. ocean vu. "~ StorOC)t 4550 Well kept 3 br home S500 Ma ple . 54 8 7 356 & Spac. 2 br apt, kids Olt 1525, mo Call Sandy. careful screening Time spacious 2br. 2 ba 4500 sq. fl. or 1t1dividual •••••••••• ... ••••••••••• 673·8803 patio S405 mo, Isl, las£ ,, .... 6149 Saving' Balboa Island apt. rfi & pt G l2'W X features crac:khng fplc f urn IBR apt wisundeck ~ HOUS11:.U•JES 132 •~ .1 J h o ices, reee 100. con-arage storage od dr k I h f f r 0 t "'•STSIDE 17381 Keelson <Beach/ """"' 5 + ~ ut1 s o n rerence rm, reasonably ., •. D. Near NB Post or. m ern eam 1 c en or rent or mo o c ~ S 1 ate r > 962 . 383 7. Nwpt Hgts 3 bdrm, 1 ba a:rz,.41:w 851·0834 9.5, Eves & priced call, o>01 & many other xtras! S450 See on Sat or Sun 2 Br J Ba. poolside apt . 831.9303._ ----duplex near Hoag, wkods 67s.7974. R 1 mi 6756700 fice.642·2004. __ 114924 Also roomy 2br 212 '" Opa I laun!1ry rm .. close to all beaches & shopping. ·Gay Roompiate, ea 000 cs · Rewtot5 W..ttd 4600 retreat' Qwel area, only Island No pets Call for appl Spacious 3BR Townhouse $525 lse 631-2122 C-0nt.actServ1ces' . Gen1CJH Dfti91 Pia.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• $400' Gar + new appk Costa Mesa TSL Mgmt 642 1603. apt Lrg yrd Dbl car 2BR. Util pa.id. $6.SO. Jsl L a r .i e s t G a Y for..... 4l50 SOO sq.rt. pror decor. --------• 114924 b ba r OW g a r . f r p I c . MalelFemjfle ~oom· ••••••••••••••••••••••• · 3 R 4S551'' ....................... Lgel r.I ,rerig, . Washert()ryerhookups. last&sec~.Berore6, mate Suvice in so ocean view. rooms. enlimes_63l __ ee CASA DE ORO 3102 W /Side. avail now . Children welcome. Nr 673·1166. Alt6,SS6-6693. Calif. G.R.C. for rental Stor·~ patio, builtins. S0ttJuOfl ALL UTILl't'IESPAID •••••••••••••n••••••n S385i m.Q.,_64().0097 Huntington Ha rbour 1 bdrm oceanfront S4SO needsti/31~3040 on Balboa Peninsula VEIYSHARP! CORPORATE PltESIDEHT Copistn.o 3278 S275 San Clen:i 1 studio S36S 1 BR. ~ar, R o. 1725 mo ~61MY7 · mo All utJl paid Call · next to Fun Zone 00\.z ft S100/mo. Call. 644-2260 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c b r w all utils paid. !1498! rerng, drive by then 10-4 pm, 6151642 x 20""' ft) Desires to rent quality BEAUTIF'ULCONOO om pare e ore you Plus Nwpt Beach guest call l36 E Bay St Reo~Ye itt! -· Male 35-45 sbr Sbr. 2ba 673·2!M3,67J.39:.> H.I . OfffCES r urn 1 s hed 0 r u n. 3 br. all extras, newl} rent Custom design house w1ut1l ~ 116312 541·5331 evs646·2325 Clean 2 bdrm, 1:1.. ba 2 Br lBa, S600 yrly Opn hsenrSCoPlua/frwy. Single garage m Costa 2premium officesavail. furn is hed hom~. crptdi pool, patio. 2 kids features. Pool, BBQ, Plus· Irvine hideaway, E~ Lar 2 B Huntington Landmark beams. steps to beach. Spa. S225+share utils. Mesa.SSOmo. Prime loc .. new carpel, Seasonal. yrly or option OK. ~590/mo, Isl, last, cov'rdd d~ar~ghe. lsurh· new aprliances, air & astts1 I wood rli r&; condo.Stackwasherand 2113/la~.! • ., Balboa 641-4913. 851-2175 wood noors, sky lights, to purchase . No sec.Avail 831·9303_ roun e wit Pus utilsinc S3'7S!ll5347 na u_ra e1 ngs dryer 2 patios. wetbar. 1 ......, . ......,; Promontory Pl peothse. open beam ceilings, ale. h d landscapmg Adult hv· Reotimes631~ Fu ca bi.nets, 2 covered bit in gas dbleoven and Modem 3 bdrm, 2 bath, """S. PIT work for re-Storage garage. $40/ 944 & 892 sq. rt. at Sl.25 c II ren. no pets Will Wn t.illdfto 3291 ingat1lsbesl.Nopets. park1Dg spaces. 2 COY S600 f I dsh hr 1 ,,..... Near 17th. St. 3'3 persq ft CallMarkKiki rumish financial refs . ....................... lBrfum $4-45 lolbooP.-..0 3107 ered balconies. utiht1es range 2 car gar rpc, w ·garage ducedrent.631-6000 Cabrillo,C.M.548-9516. a1673.m. Prefer Lido or N.B. •3Br, 2.Ba, dbl garage, 2Brrum. S520 ••••••••••••oo••••••••• paid S600M~otenlial per mo. lsl and.last+ house from beach S800 F w/9 yr old ehild. Shr Sm caror.Slorage.Safe& -=-~~=o...----area.ContactSecretary, tam rm. lg Cncd yd. S700 365 w Wilson, 642· 1971 Bach. S~. 1 Br. 1 Ba rent reduction ,.or light $300 sec deposit Call mo. Yrly, 675' 1642· w/same Up to $400 mo Se CM MS AIRPOIT Pam. mo. + $700 ser 14361 --Bay S1de. $450. Adults. manager duties. Plsrall m4>. 759·4381 Ask for Apor+Metllh FtnhlMd Days, 6.40-6800 Eve~ cure. 673.m-i EXECUTIVE (714)975-1152, wkdays, Purd St 848-6354 SUS CASIT AS no pets Savage Wilde & S.Sl-1660. Mr. BID ham --or Umnllhed 3900 857·9J88 SUITE • S.5pm HOME FOR RENT Furn l br apt S345 & Co. 675·6600· 2 Br stove & refrige S425 * S475 3 Br 3 Ba. Pool. •••••••••••••••••••••••. Mlf' lo shr 48R Duplex Offlc• lt..td 4400 Several offiees avail rn I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ 3 Bdrm S625 Fenced up. Encl. gar Adults, no Yearly 2 bdrm. lg deck. 2 Mo Adults. no pets pallo Ki<b OK. No pets S E A W I H D Oceanside or Balboa ;;~;W;;~cljj(."N~B~W~~; full sej"vice exec suite ...-.1/ll!Yed/ yard & garage. Kids & pets. 2110 New&portMBI. blkslobeachS52S ~~-646·9666or960-7484. VILLAGE Blvd. $225 mo + util. financial inst. 70005.r. loc. nr O.C. Aipporl. flltmce pets welcome $45·2000 ~·4968btwn8 SP . BurrWhite Realtor lnr Eastside 1 s;:-;;;eds 2 br.2ba,crpt,DW,encl 675-1105 752-0869. ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ~!!!.noree-'-S3751mo Deluxe Mobile ---675-46:.> work, private fenced ~ upst11rs. Nr beach New 1&2 ~rm luxury FshrbeauWullydecQral· 1st.floor.A ent5'1·5032. Co.do...Jnimns Home Mature adults. no Corona def Mor 3122 yard 1375 meld ulils . 842·1m2 adult ,aptS m 14 plans l ed hse nr OCC 966-3470 MIEWPOIT Fwltithtd 3400 pets. Quiet, secure 1991 ....................... 536-4192. H•~lw ~~ ~~~s;:;,,~~~~ 75'·8870AskforJa ' Pa.csuu ....................... Newport Blvd 646-8373 Walk lo bch. Quiel 3 Br 2 Br I Ba. E.side adult HorbOtr 3142 from S610 + pools. ten Fem a le non-smoker, Spacious executive or- 3bd rm , 2ba . tennis. LOC)llltOleach 3741 2b~. dplx , gar. S9~. apt. oo pets, $4 50. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ols, waterfall"I , ponds' room CdM home. '300 fices acl'06S from City security. 12 mi 10 bch ••••••••••••••••••••••• Child OK, nope~. Dri ve 543_5479 Deluxe Adult Bayport Gas for coolung & heal· Mo. 760-05.\3 after 5pm Hall. All services availa· $850. 960-1005 Fum tux studio, spa. TV. by ~nly 719 Heliotrope Condo Outstanding iog paid From San wkda s. ble, 'optional' From 225 ----maid serv1re, phones. Availl0/3.972·9406 CUTESTUDIOAPT Pentho use View Diegof'rwydnveNorth Exec Hunt Harbour sqrt. up at reasonable Ca.do....._ Sl25 wk 499-2227 L aHracff Great East.side location. Overlooking Huntington on Beach ~ McFadden home needs 2 room· rentals. No lease re- U1tfwflllhed 3425 M.wportlHch 3769 t :r ·with Cire~~ace uul incl. Avail lO/L S290 Harbour. 2BR, 2BA . then West on McFadden mates M/F 30+. Call quired,call6i3-J002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DR, LR . porrh. dis r mo. 640-2.98l SlSOO mo. Boat slip avail to Sea wind Village. 847-4750. THE RIGHT n-r the I k f lbr E tside, small but through Peters Landing. (714)89"5198 Re~~e I~ Costuac 'e::·s hwasher. stove Newly cozy w/lots or neat (213)592·~.282·1136. ,,. Mature responsible M/F, SPAGE d landscaped S6 50 wood Ad.Its only 1345. • _ _._ ll 1 ROOMt 4000 over 30 to shr Mesa THERIGHT NEWEST gale 20 675-6611 · 551_1660. Logmto.-4 •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• VerdeApt.Fumexcepl NEWPllT BEACH PRIME LOCATION ACR<liS FROM SHERATON HOTEL 1249 sq Ct in plush. full service office bldg. Im· pressive Sparush decor. antiques, Lile Ooors. In· l erior plants & balconies. Sl.15/sq ft for 3 yrs Contact owner directly 645-687 Town home VILLAGE ...... •.•••••••••••••••• Laguna Beach Motor lnn. for your rm 545·5107 PRICE COMM UNlTY. 2 &3 Br ds r 1 Br utils pd. $370. Oceanside or Hwy. No. 985 No. Pacific Coast eves/wkods. GUAIAMTHD! MEWPOIT 21-i Ba 1600 . 1800 sq. rt . to bch ., hwsbr' so t carport. Quiel adlts, no Lag. 2 Br I ~a. adults on· Hwy' Laguna Beach. Female roommate wa.nt· 300 to 6000Sq. Ft. Prime of pure luxury. Garages, wtr, pallo. $8.SO mo. lse Pel s 383 W 8 a Y · ly. S700. Bnan Johnson Daily, Weekly, Kitchen W aterrront offices in EXEC SUITES hydro-lub3 io master 673-8157 548·9516 494·7554. eves 497-1561 available Low winter ed. Ocean front apt Slil Newport Harbor with Avail for sub-lease m suite, formal dining 2 brl ba adults, no f::ts or 2 Br 1 Ba. Upper Apt. a l. rites. 494-~ 213 934-?Kl boat slips available. one of Npt'sexclusiveof· fi!!~:e::.~IC~-r;~~~ ~:,:;~~~es~: ~~5·,r~:· ast + r:01~t~~~millon. 2bdrm. ocean view, spec. Balboa Inn. S90 & up Fu::t~P~.~BR. ~ ~~u::::~¥:~f~n:!!~ ~~~d~~~~le:~tln~i~: ovens, fenced patios & rec1or • F'reeSunday o•....,_, . tacular ~I. walk lo weekly. Kitchennette. incl util. b tlut. Ref eludes; • recept/phone yards. Privale .. eleganl Brunch • eeo 5 • r Nice 2 Br. l Ba. Cottage bch/shoppmg. $650/mo ocean front. 67S-8740 84&-~ log terms now available. coverage• Kitchen• living only 15 minutes Parl1tSo Plus more w/garden. S750 mo. pa 10 S4SO + 2 Br. 1 Ba in 4-Adults, no pets. 551•2331 · E-;;tside Costa Mesa. Fem to sbr 2 Br apt. at· Ci(l7l Tlod4J•y6!7r .662 UUI • janitorial • 100 rrom Fashion Island, 7 GREAT AE<:RfATION. Mon-Fri 9-5 Plex 25· 963-6.SSl aft6 M.weorf leedl ltH Nice I a r g e room tractive, furnished, ~ .,... free ph«ocopies/monlb minutesloSC Plaza or Tenn.s•Freelessons BR 2 BA patio Nwpt Hgts,lgelbr,lba, .................. ~··" w/frplc.Pvtentry Pref blk from bucb, 'Iii lottSlptA•ll.w.! •Ampl~perlting•Secy O.C. Atrport Just east or 1pro & pro shop>. 2 / d S 00 · stove, sm. yard, water Oceanfront for Winter co LL E G E G A L . 6114182 $300 Isl last + ... BM,,_,._..._ Serv avail. For viewing Newpoct Blvd. & so .• or HeallhClub.t•~u03 w gar en, 7 mo. . 370~ LaPerle Ln. Rentals. Furnlshedc& $300/mo. Isl & hast mo-1100 ltCW' •. req,d. Call "11:" -• ~·-call Qualified Services San Diefo Frwy. Start· • Hyd1omusage • 673·6622M.on·Frl,9·5 5. 760-0759 un!um. Broker.67s-491.2. r .646·3375all5 m. W1 ne676-83:M ~T£~c~~ ~:~ _,l_,n"'-c""al:;.;:m.:<Tl:.:..:....::.:..:;40:...-__ _ Ing at 1000 a month ~~~~;~:rig~ Goll lo'.! Aca~. 3 bdrm, 2 lbdrm, avail Od. 15th. NO FEE! Apt. ' Condo New redec. Pvt BA & En· Chriat1an F to shr bl& rcpt. s~L xerox, wider· llACH flOMT 631 -5439. 2473 Orange ba.oceanview. Quiet single person, no rentlls. VillaRellta.ls. trance. HS F 18-25 non hollff in H.B. No peta. around pa'g, telex' an· OfftCllLDG Ave., Costa Melfa. :~~~ ~"i!:~. Callm.'1942 hall S350/mo. Newport 67S-49aBrolte.r ·am . 250. 5»-0794 $%75 + $50dep. 988-31190 tlque decor. cool. rm. for leaae. PCH and 18lh N.-~~ ~·~ Cott.MIN l.IJ.4 &a."2-... Ar tist/Photographer WANTED'2 M/F rmmt.s _.644......_·7 ..... 188...._. _____ HuntBd1.31..'?001q ft.80' do. Ocun View. 1800 11q lt-~•Mlll ............... •••••••• "4iS lBR, fridge. Adults Studio.~ blk to bttth, 2 to abr •brhome 1n H.B. o~•l'W"IVI NNN. Avallrwv. i.t. f\. $1000mo. Lmng •No Pels • MIWLY DICOI. no pell. Immac. 731 "C" & b th · s ~"• 142-S8Clor847.QA .... _..., Models Open 011ly w lath St . ..._........ rooms a • IS lS 1f7mo. -.-eves. s•ll'W'Rlr _._ I Br. IU pd, encl gar ""~"o' Good ll1ht. SJ65 Mo Ult~ '°° 1q ft back office CM New Luxury Condo 9108 d/wuher, pool. Adults 4 IWHA)&TOH B1cbelora,1'2bedroom W7-30?7or$279'7. MATUllPllSOM IN multi-use. Sp1ee In t.ra2BR.1~.Gar11• 0411kwood 6'2·5073. lbdrm, crpts, mini· apt.s&townhoulel. Newport Heights . 3 bdrm home on \he HmTAH lrvlne lndu•t rl1l nr open tr. micro-wave, Oenttn Apert~• J Ir. I .. ._. blinds, aar. sharp. S37S. From $$».flOOO 644·1900 Femalet, 2 rooms 1vaU ;::r toahare'"1h laety. P\AIA Airport. Perfect for lrplc, pool Ir spa. mo Newport leech"· Newly decor. C:u pd. Qwner: ~2lM2. 1 BR PEN1lfOOSE APT. In house. 1280 each ff"* after I New luuryotrlcupace artist.7~per ft ..... .. Oppothwlty SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Swimming Pool Chemical Service Busi· ness. Laguna Niguel area. No exp necnsary, will lram. SS0,000. Full amouot req Will net 140.000 + Call Collect. Mon -F ri . 9-6 P M. 408-867·O111 LOSING LEASE, quit· Ung bustoe55. aelting out ALL supplies and fix· lures including: Display cases, wailing room chairs , Beauty Salon hairdryers and hydraulic chairs, mir· rors, shelves and pla.nta. Abo, make.up, shampoo and hair products. Ca 11 631-9'754 or ar~r6 BALBOA ISlANI ,,.... ........... Comm17Unlts 1498 ,000, attractive rlnancing. Stephen Compau exc/ast. Comml/lovestment Div. Oto. F.lkilllCo 6 7100 mo. M$-400. 880 11v1n1.. ••1 t6thl -cl tar """" dsbwr V E Rs A J LL ES N r ID Ir du' J b uiu t ---=;.lllt:=z..... __ WESTCLIFF-NB {7i')M>ita. ~u ., _.., • .... 3840 btacb $l)O 831·1XJOO Pto11lrH.B.QtwTrrpk , eet'llet! FAIY Frwy ac· -------Be l.200 ft 2 BR 2 AdUltt. MbW7t ....................... · ' f.22S utlll Ind W-4450 cesa. Avail. now! Call B•~u~plc, ~~i~a rm, 11~~ ,=1~81~> PllVACY &OUtlT nttWHWUTIH 2y8i 2 Ba.~~ to bch. wknd orafU ;aO. fordetaU.. rerr11. AdJt.I, no peU. (714)842-6113 Lib ne• 1 a &r. Apta. L\IXUl')' Adultunitut 1f· wlt'~ 11s-1'-M.FJ .... _._._ 4100 M/F tolhrN.B.3br, Zl!J llHHI HM2JO 1114 w/car or carport. Up or fordable UYtna l.2 • 3 -duplex, t blk to be1cb, don, balcony or patio, Br. Well decorated Verullles, spacious 2 ,...................... ~ + llWI, avail Im· •DIL.UDOf'9CIS• Dlflt11t.... HOO • .... ...,, llOOI, 't!~l l1undry, Olympic t11e pool, li&bt· bdtrm, 12bb~-~~ty SIALMI M01a. 1.26 I rooa1. No ..... ,. ......... "............ Hellyourwlfto• luah 1 udlCl.P· ed tenpla court, Jacuui, 1a e, c u • ......_, ~ .. •n Wkb rentall now avail. Barcaln ahopptri rud qlllred. AdJ, iAJrporter ="!&'~-~ HeaP!q..-UOOof Inf . MeOll up. llltll"t part Jib landlcapins. vtew.$7~llf7 SIU Ir up. Color T\' t h e llttle •cl • In Hottl.ap#P\t~ -~ 9UIY QUll&dllofff\all IMflllta. NO PETS.... Motl bt1uti(pl bklf . in _._ Phoaa la room. m• CIH•lfltd re1ut1flJ. UH ur.· But. lcla • • l'fo AY'IU Oct IDt.btDAJLYl>llm Plua1 H50 R1rJa , H B., Find •bat~ In Ntwporl Bl•d C ll Aed l''' flad . wh t CDllj , !';Eila'''· T~Uf;pji;;;;'( H.ILPWANTIDADI Hta.4 . , O.Ur1>lk!&_ W-7MI •n fat. 1_ • _1 . ' 'i \:: Ori Cout DAil Y PllOTITllurlday, botobor 1, 1881 ~!-. ..-: ... !!~ ~.~~ ..... !!!«!. ~~-~ ... !.~ .. ~~~ ..... ?!.,~~.~ ..... !.~!!'~~~ ..... !!.~ -~:!!JI. .. ,!!!.'""""'-"'"'!?'".,, ,!~ .. ?!_., ~!.~ .. .?!!! D~tr:!';.:'~: ta~~';.. tt=~.t'f,~'jt~ N ..... IMlll -~=vlol ,..._,_I.WI ............... ...,'°' RAvtN'OAPARTY I A~ff Cl9 MUil bow CJI,. but !IC!&Wt~~~ driYe. lllO ,_ IDOllt.b. ........ c.cu':-:ao cloQJe1 POSmGM1"'9t '8t, Lakt Anowlilt1d Jarlucllaf 6 food NlONlA'fOI y_, eNlltwc:W ,_ YIMC.WDrtwW'1 Ut. =_..!,._ IN·tOM, -PIACT.tl•lll ...._, IWI time, 11109.. Stw., ...... ld_.. lo .._. •..,. ... ttc. urvlce. '1·2141, Automotive~ luopeu nhlu •.•drt•NC1-1 llrl1..p/ tot H~ NMdtd for lamed. rrl. l1periffce ,,... local~ID•~ UU>IH·UU or preferred. Xlal tom· re1taur11t la 0111 Zi:'J'•Alio . ofttttwon, 1• Surf• Saod Hotel, placement w/pvt d11&1 ferred but wlll ttaill tedff. t.rtt.GrJ Xbst. *.!IE* paay beoltb. AU lot Polat Mu1t bt 11• ...... mvd. • tt. lhltlll. SUO &o H 0 u 1 t k • . ._ p 1 1 g p1tltat1 lo Orao1t. Call 164.wtO. Alk for commla,-6 boout W... Debbt. Jwlloa, "'"" Pttitaced • ~bit ot .t.art.. P'-t apply ID kpl"bar ~ dlft, Newport ' L11uu pro1ram1~ 1oocl Co . .-;1. tJt&.e. 1121 M ••---Old1 Cadillac. HUI ruoala1 a kltcbu, Dellvery/Warellouu penm, 'l'\m&t at m1 part u 111 1 ~. H hr. artu. Dull• lacl. It •tc·•••• 'ltllt/'/·twWtwW be. a.flu. AODIY.: Pto· ;;;;.,·~;;;:;. ~w Camino C1pl1truo. Phou 4H·UU or .,.,.._,aper. for~ Nptortllnl.C.M. l!a1ll1b '• Spullb aanl.11. mul ~ M;-Aj.";1";:.. froat a111ver .o·Pl.tttatJa ,., u •• •·No ClfOl\ESUNUlllTED WltlDiNlS\llL 1 9JcALPOSmON ~~~~~ :rs.ru~:~ ·~-~~-otnce :aklag . .,"477, est. =-r-~1+2 day office apptarHet to AttCMoretll·HMJl, ~ :.:.:~:~: Ptrua~I to comm'! ,P/llme. "--tc.U how Npt. Bdl., Irv., p;;c•edu'ree7°dtllll . £0! relier. Good ulary, c:'=-~· =:.: SaAH /"" AUTOIOU11 p1ac.1. C.ll. a,... FCf' •PPl penclO. •.med. laa. roomU.,ud .. ntypay. urlou1 o(flce .dutlet. NMd Put Ttme PtrlOll Clerteal Put Umt exp. ~L Nolttmkr. IMYIMJOIY MAS1'llS Seod rttumt to auao • to Deliver De.Uy Pi.lot In lypltt, . phooel (llh•1. D&IYllY .... , G11 tlaUoe Alt.ndant, c:&.m HIA.LTHCAll Aue>. PO Bo.l llDO. Npt Newport Ueacfl. 7 dlye 1m1U bw1 ~c. nur lmmtd._ttLllDI qr.n· Mir, wttll aome upcr lrvlne Co. bu lmmed . .., EOE M/F -=Bc=h..::...O=.__----j7~~~on tbrd'ri. C?;ri~~~f""· ~J.~1dnnn~~~t ;!:/~~med =~~~::·= ~-6 LVN'1, UC9'110MST 1..z.:::.::.11:=.J~~~~ Approx. 3:30toS:30PM. Cl ' .. a.a-~ 21 with tood drtvta1 re-O..ral to ,[."t Inventory ~· •Ill slllfta. Call D.O.N.: ,....,._ -----~"""""-----• Roun: SaUaSun. Cl _!IMTIW'U cord • able to work $aid eon1lrllctiOG help !°o 1 ~ e~ ~0~1d*co • _Ma-_ 7714. Satool,y. t&ol2 Approx.5AMto7AM. en1 Trainee tvtalaaa. Starla from needed. Good company benefita Salaryne ot.la· Nurikla ai.aa Earnlna• approx k2S S.S.50-$4/br. + U119. App-benefttl • YWOl'ltbil at blewitb.~ce' Call Noo ctrWled aldl $4.00 llC~/DIC. ·----~""-7075 per mo. Call Bryan The Cluaifted Advertil· l.ydd.aiJ.1 after5pm. Mt6 m01phere.'3.50perhrto 75'·113l Mk fer Wayne ~hr. Excell. *OC'kina Greet pubOc, an1wer --H.oU1nd. MMrll. Equal ln Departmmt cl the t I Plan, 11lh • atart. A~ In DerlOO -· -. cond.ltiou and beoeflll. pboafs, lypinl r RE AU typ11 o1 al ntate ()pportwsky Employer. o:uy f>Uot bu an open· Tutlo .• C.11. Al10 only SEDA.STJ.,\NC 150 JAHrTOIPAITTIMI EOE. Bayview Coo-Land ~~In ex· lnveatm.Ullnetlt4t. _ ....._,......L-L. lnaforareapaNlble.eo· Brl1lol 6 lllcPaddeo, Ave.Pico.SC. lmmedlateopenins fora velescent Hoapllal. ecuUve 1wu. nr o.c. s,.d I~ Ill rwa. ~ •-IAIYSITTB thu1lulic penon u S.A. h n Ito r to work N2·a505Carol. Airport. Requlret 1lnt JMTDs lnlelll1ent, df9endablt for 2 childftn (1 It $) clerk lrainee. Mi.t have Delivery driver aad ..... Qtotr J weekendl, day 1bil\. For otflce akilll and fnJnt offlce •I>' +42-JIZI H MMl 1 womantoullltyou· Mo!l;,TUeS·Tbura·Fri. prevlou1 orflee U • tr. aloH. llooaU1bter1 n..i...a.,a. Interview call: Mike VI e lrtflridft pearance. Health In· W! PAY'l'REMOST Int.• L1ndlc1pe Design 8.'5_. PIU'13·5190 periuce. It )'OU ttijoy nd colltl t 1tutnh CurreaUy bu o9allnP vlanl. , Must be &ood with oum-1urance. 7SHll1 For your TD'• ' notes . Mrkt1P=at'Jcsuru Rankin· I working wtth aumben, welcome. EuUy earn available 7141641-lJll EOE M/f !>era. Full Ume. apUt llC.noMST At DtnAleonA.11« can type ud UM a 1~ Slo.$15 per hr. Call after JAMrTOI 1bift afternoons oH Property KIJllg~ment key adder, wt will train 1 PM. El Toro Area R1lelgb R.i.1.b H01pt lD 964-2239 uUor Mi.lie For cballeo1lng N. B. mmt. Remod. •UISlndlDaor TB.LER you for tJUt PQlfilon. Ex· 951·2142. or Garden s.c.tfJCh9'CI New r1 n--dl lw. a.n tour office. Usht exper Seeond•'lblrdTD/'s. Resid./Comm.Property celleot compaoy Groveat-41115 F/T(raveyirdshilt. . poed --. r req. Good t)'Pinl, apell· Tom Xlntms. Bonded. PoUtioa ~ .... beoeflta locludlog DIMfAL j~rilior: .. :~Frid.:. PART ma lady WIDt· in& ' arammar elleD· l6Um ~r!!~S::~b'M= I• Mwpt lcll for medical, dmtal, life ln· E1per ortho uaiatant Tempo~sllion . day 1hlft. Xlnl frin&e :1re~clln~~~~riiX~~ ~vi<J'11J.. le~i:~ 2Dd. T.O. uP '° '50,000. ccreer Oritlhd .... aurance, credit u.nioG, for full·tlme position. evenlnp ' 1 weekend benefits pk1. for in· for Bo1Uq"paper. Travel beneftU &o So. A • Nl .... an me .... 1 Id / w/..&... •--M • etc. ()ppcmalty for d· XlDt 1•1•-6 beoefita. eta .......__ tervlew call Joahua (714)m.Q75 J>eclfic. Submit raume 3 year Znd $40000 16~ .a e • ! co~panion, ,........ ..,...... vancemeat Call for .... , y,n..,..~•must. Wblak in ' • . up .. destttS live.an or It••• or •'--& polntmeot iot lntttvlew 8"-1~ ey: (714>6'5·5707 to: T. Lehr, 24872 Tim· terut. )llOGthly pay. out. ulary open. eves •• _,,.. 642_4321 m. 2'T1. • Dental H-••• E.O.E. M/F berwood Way, El Toro =~=~2:m~ ~7-30'3Xl45 ~ locm. ~· C.... OITHOIDAASST IAM-4:30 PM, m1&1l be L••c .. Dell111r PAITTIMI _,,92630=:::.:.·------1 Irvine property. FredHouaekeepingJobwanl· Wt offer... PW E1per . n~eded , 1bleto1peak£nallsb. Exper . F /tfme . PersontodellverD11ly llC.-t/SIC'Y ibeon ed.Llve·In,smallsalary tM ._.••c· 330W BaySt chalrslde. 25-30 Capistrano Gardens PUotautorout.elnSouth Goodtypllllakills. Exch. $400K equity in M111ie552-D2eve 1 Cft "c::flt. .W CostaMesa Ca hrs/week. Pleu1nl Nuraery.321.38Mlfuelilo Llgunall"ea.7daysper ISl..a.55 SMLll.So.'ag.hom•forGrandmother type •:r: l • Equal Opportu~lty work~&oond.lllon.s.Xlnt Rd.SJC.861.atl. week . ..,. "' Gd _ .. 1 w as,._ for-. Em ..... y•• beoeftta. H.B. Rose, Hours: Mon tbru Fri. llC.-TIOMST PEPllYS ........... ... _. •SALISPIOPLI Mllllt IPYOULMI SALIS.YOUU LOYI PIP IOYSl Takt advaatqt ol th1t 09portunit,Y to jcM oae ot the oaUOo 1 le-1inl auto partl retailenl Mrvieoe c:etllel'I. We olfet an ex· cellent stattini ulaty and 1 bmet\ta pmcbJe Uut lncludel cUtcount.s pajd vacatioal, medical and life Im., bonus ptao. pen1ion and more ! S 0 U N D lNT!llESnNGf LET'S GET ACQUAJNTEI>! ApppEfiOys IUJllMdl .. ci Wnl ' t :,Ce. Equal Opportunity f;mployer M/F your TDs. Call Paul woman. . """" nurs y ~ C--" t ~ -8'6-2888 LEGALSECRETARY Approx3:~to5:30PM -...:·y ~. e x P I d r 1 v e r I h s e Hct_... -•c Clerk/Druptore mature ' Exp. In civil litigalion as H s •-s A '' n• 4f •• --==-.::::=-----! care/chlld/elderly/gd • llOW to uplor9 .._ per100 FIT or' PIT gd Driver tow truclt.nat bed domestic law. Salary ours: at .. un. P· lmmedlate openirlf in -.-. ref. (213) el203 -111blltlr= houn. •H 757c, exp. Over 21 Wlth &ood L .... c-prox SAM lo 7AM. Elm loao brokerage co. COMJiaetAL I.I. '•••'1 h/ -r"-· -,,_. " DRIVING record .,... open.5'M878 approx .. $425 per mo. anawer telepbone, greel Tlredofaellin&houses7 Pert 1•1/ W...t.d 7100 c•-., c to T · · A"I t~B f Legal Secmary w/expin Call Mike Bush al public, ud Ute tvning. days 1 wedt? We need Loll Ir,.... •••••••••• .. • .. •••••••• &-ac.,._ ~ K• 7 11 ll ~7 W d 111 m OWU1.1 75l·l5l5 M O o · F r I Civil lit Iii Family Law. 642·4321. EOE Jr li l ..... "'"t'1'""'d L..&...-• , pm· am. e , DRIVERS WANTED 6 30 ..... 12 ""Pu Call: K1UeN0-@59. ' ·ooe cemeeto earn....., ••••••••••••••••••••••• ACCc;>UMTIMG fC ..,_ I AM-Tbun, Frf. SC/hr. 87!5 Early momina home de· : """'' :..., •· Send resume Iii Salary skUJ.a to manaie, broker •n1•c1 h 51 Ameri ca. W est 3' c.. P1ul1rl n o. C .M . livery. L.A. TIMES Please call fM an ap-req. Geil.er Iii Martin. PAITTIMI RECEPTIONlST commercia.lrealestate. •• .. •••••••-•••••••••• Telephone~.isseeking (714) 751-4652. lrvine6Newportareu' poiotment. 9:30·5PM. 1600Dovesul.35 Crew Supervisors, work PAIT11ME Income from mgmt ~:,.~'fhrad ~BTV1by •En Acclnounlmg llClerk. 631 9205 CLERK TYPIST Entry· S425 + mo. Jess : Monday thru Friday, LiqC uorbSlottR :,Stocking II P /time evenings as IECEPTl-..IST ~~efi•~~. '"~~ur· ~~~~ . .,...... aper. ~yro .· g~n. : level position for re-54fr0235. 145-7358 II eg sler ex. weekends-Supervisina ""'" ~".1: .. "'L.~~~ ~:.:. Oil Wrestling on cable led&er posUD& 1nvo1c· tr _..... perience necessary, .... door to door 511-We are leekil1I 1 Part ""' ... "-""""' • UCIJ TV T be Covered ing•A/P.CaJivetma: CITl.,~S ~n ypedf°i"'"'rfr°r'· DRIVE~Ctolacountry. overl8.Applybetween w.. u Time Rec=l•t to tal plan. Cont.act Ken, W1 oa. ~2071 (714)147-7797. ~ ~U:e c~ m ~ ed No 1pec11l He. req'd.1 GENERAL as 3 weekdays. 188 cr~r or Y~· ~·· handle tht In our f7S-C700. Freebusiness/prlv.par·CAPABLEPERSONTO FED SAVIMfiS • 50_55 ·Typio&lreQ rt M1cGreeorY1cbl!,16311 TMl ... ..,C ... Pl1cenli1,CostaMesa. ~rs~~t~~n~bi~y~~ Executive Offices, u !!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ty claasified list, new HANDLE ACCOUNTS LO.ul phone~~! !1i!~t Placentia, Costa Mesa CUrrently bu openings Live in. Appreciative motivate. Van or large well u uailt with other eubUcaUann&-1140 PAYABLE & cash re· llOO W. Cit Hwy, Ml Contact (714)544-7981 fo; B.ICTllCIAH available. f 1 mi l y 5 days re· car is needed. Call clerical~. Frool of. WOMIM'SCIMTll I porting for luxury 1 1.ic1Uan. 5 yra min. exper. AH ferencea. ocean front MediaMercbants flee appearance and Pttp talin .. L•a. u~a Beach bot~I. EOEUfFH C 0 Mp AN 10 N f 0 r phases, m ./comm./ind. ~.._.., · ~"91. 213-427-27S6EOE pleasant phone ma.nner med.::.~. i.o!·~t Bene.fats • congenial $Udren,pre{erstudent, Sm~ll shop off~rs pd F/Tgraveyardsbin. UVE·IN Aide/Practical Part time graveyard• amust.tloul'lareMoo· abortion. All met.bods of workln~atmosphe.re. S 1fternoona/week. Own bolad.1ya, med1c1~ & Nurse. Mature. non· evenings. answering day lhrouab Friday. birth control avail. 24/hr BUI. 497-1896 EOE Banting trans. $50/wk. Irvine. vacation t.o ~P?051ble ....._.. amkr. Room, board + aervice no exp. nee. min. 9:oo A.M. to2:oo P.M. beJ line Sfl·MIS 1lllll 979-7900 752-8711 self·slarter willing to Temporary position salary. Pvt. home. Hrs· typing required. Pleue call Terry Taylor · · A.ssemblera Contractor. work. Call for 1ppt, eve.ninp Iii l weekend PM .. 5·7 or~+ wknds. Call: 63Hll40EOE. for~ap . tmentat. sc•lll I ~ FULL TIME Expandina roofing co. 7 5 9 · 9 1 l 2 ( I e a v e day. experience 1 musl 645-0lln. 714 557.fll I lllSUl.J YOU.LL Position avail. in our Loollnd for ..... ,_. ....... mesaage). Lo•o..1c•-w P4YIOLL/DATA ' MfWr9t' SoutbCoastPt.uaomce. • ,_..~ ""'" H••-""'" WiRA COMTIOl OH214 INllU.J MAlll! Pleaseeontact: tractor/archltecl who ILICTIOMCSP/J GICU has imme d . Island-Polle-Aiu; Kathy Amburgey can handle new work, forskllled6--sk1lled 8 AM_.::.> PM. m~l be rJllme openinf. Hr s Prestigious Laguna Cynic-R«tor _ IT <714) 540-4066 take offs. Hrs flexible. or we train applicants able to speak Engliab. 8 : 3 0. 5 : 30. Ex Per . Niguel land develop· PENALTY HERE Salary opeu. Company w/ good math back· helpful, but not nee. Con-ment firm looking for The old cookie jar never . CAUfftMllA benefit•. Insurance. ground. Calif. Air Na· Please call fM an •P· tactSLeve: 5.5&3110. special candidate with paid 18 percent In in· Ullftl Profit sbarin&. Call llonal Guard. Prior poi.ntment. 9:30·5PM. Look' f . . thefollowingaldlls: terest. but when you AT G RADCO/DEN· fDDJ 642-7222. for appl/lo· military helpful. Call Monday lbru Friday, Inf or interesting •Strong payroll incl re-·~.. out th Al terview. C 1 n d Y Gehr Ing 645-7358 part time job. Typing. lated tax.es, insurance" ....,. money . ere DOKI, INC. We are a no abort.band required. tradeuniooltnowledae. OS~N1S SP UK TING GOODS 3300S. Fairview St. SANTAANA EOEM/F w .. n·t •PENALTY. progressive manufac· Snilllp & Loe COOi 714ff19·7363 20 bra. per week includes •Data Processing ex-Lost & ,._. 530 lurer of sorting deVJces, 695TowneCeote.rDr. NEEDED· Broiler coot Esumator 511LFllOAY weekends. Office on per.-CRT&operal.ioos. Restaurant ....................... supplying brand-name Costa Mesa, Ca 926216 apply now' at CJ. Flab,; W ~ n led. Roofing 5/days, lo..3:~. Answer Coast Hwx.146-7431. •Lile typing Nit e ·ti me kit ch en --------copier companies, local· Equal Opportunity Co, sunset Bch . at ~•tor. Oki expand-phone, tyCt pricing. MAtilCUIJST •Must be organized personnel full & p/Ume. edCo in a greaRit. Orange Employer Peler1 Landini. No exp ing co!Dpany. Looking ~.~II~ ween 9·11, nNded for progressive &conscientious. Apply In penon, Mon· FAia. Inf unty area. ~t now. oec. sn otM6-0623. for ~d1vid~ who are ~-~-Benefits + pleasant Fri . M 1 g i c P 1 n VWl9 NN our manufactunng de· Barber concession : 1 COOK breakfast l lunch famili~r ~ the con· HAJISTTUST ~1uty al.Ion in Irvine. working environment. Restaurant, S.C. Plau. IK fl(( partmenl Deeds several man office private exp. f ·I struction ind1.mtry. No needed for """'resalve 7_..· Call Christine for in-RESTAURANT. Caler· NK ASSEMBLERS-Country Club. Send r~-resta!r~~i. S:n mJ~a~ roorms ~xp ~·Salary/ beauty ,u,;-i;i• 1rvine. terview: 831-01. ing ftrm bu openina for Cal: If )'Ou have a minimum sDume to: Ill Big Canyohn Capistrano. C&lJ 493-1J41 ~ g:.:.s~. Ca 11 Exper'd pr#.157-t686. Manicurist PERFORMERS respoo. adult lo operate _, tbs ( r. Newport Bue , Moo·Frl. ·. Hom ... ai·~-.... _ ..-r day , .... ._Clllt Eutem ~=--Sin' .nng Hobart auto. slicer • .,_ a 1 . "_.,., xecu ave ecret1r7 care for YOl.llC --man ............ S.. Telegram Co. needs urn port on cootro . or ·~ Join the LoS' Angelesr Tlmea Circulation team Iii adapt your work schedol'e lo your lifestyle. Won 5/hrs ia day in I nmes CircuJ1· lion sales office near your home II have more lime for your family, studies or leisurely perioda. We pay hourly •commissions. LOS ANGELES TIMES 1375 Sunflower Ave .. C.M. S4CMJ30l ' .a• .. "-71 I "' 6, mon actory el· C l'f .,.,.,..... E l' S .. uc: •on ,._.. _., VUIUI• .. ~. I i I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! pe~ence! c~k ~rom ~ COOi E1llblisbed Orange coofmed to bed.. 642,2434 1 s ;;:"'b 1 r ing 1 Singers who love lo Exp. pref. but willtraln. R~AR~! LOil Fox Ter· ;!miW:~~ U:°us:1J AuWlmit Mon .. Fri. days. Apply in County Bldng firm. 8-Sda manicurist part time. perform io public. Must 9:30AM to 6PM, Mon. Equal Opportunity ner, while !/brown &r small hand tools for forbusyNBsa.lon.Call person. weekdays 5.g Shorthand required Excell. woridnJ condl-have good lill(illg voice thru Tbur. It 6PM to EmPloyer blk 1pota, vie. Harbor electro.mecbarucal 15. P m • C • I a b 1 a b Send Resume. PO Box HOUSICWJBS lions. Call: Tues.Sat. &r reliable lnnsporta· lPM Sun. m-0747 for Sales btwn Gisler ' Baker, sembly wort. we woold IOIEIT & TA noa Restaurant, 179 E. 17th 17SC8 lrviDell7U Prefer Cll' or driver's M2..oc»2 Joyce. lion. Call Mon· Fri. 9-5. •pet. Lori'• Kitchen. HICIOIY FA.IMS CM.~ like to Ulk to you. Hours 646-7197 St. Costa Mesa. FOQD SERVICE Uc. $5/br with ex per. 1_67=.=..0--=12::..:12::.o·-----• Retail Opp'ty to sell gourmet Loet: Tor1rue, 900 block. are 8 am. to 4 .~ pm. llMDllY COOIJMMATOI tOll'sllTCHIM Fullor et/Ume.960-3'7&6 MASSlVSllrlECn. Prestige Womens shop in ASSfSTANT foods ' gifts for Oak St. C.M. Lost MondaythrougbFriday. Need outgoing self ASSISTANT' 10775.HAllOI HOUSICW'BS Must be 1tlnctive and Cdm. lfusthavesincere MAMAGa holidays. Flex. Hrs. aroWld 9/25. Reward. starte r . p/lime for 2yearsclericaJexp.pre-SANTAANA to work for Janice's havtpleu111tperson1li· interest in Quality Ap-Fully experienced in FuhlonWa.nd.64.2-0972. S4S-§363. Let's help each other variety of duties. Print· ferred. 4 days I week for (Harbor at Carriage) R•&&edY Anos, 4/days ty Apply in P..f!l'llOll only parel. Send replY Care of QUI Ii ty women's Ip· s~L-•·Uo..I Found: Uwa Apso (?I. make it. Call Jerry at ing, N.B. 644-8232. 4 WHka. Job starts Oct. (3 bib No. lb cArthur) week, 8_.pm, 67~2514. 12· noon to 8 'pm. Clrcl~ J Moon 177F Riverside pue I. P!,,ase call Exp. (; c:::; const. female. near Tustin &t (710556-9650. or simply lldlpr/bper 5lh. Federal offices t7f.0747 Housecleanera-model Mas11ge & Health Spa. AveNB92&63 (714)557«111Dor afiply in Either, C.M. 645-8994 ~~~:: !C:y 8;0:.."~{J~T;d For progreuive CPA downtown Laguna, 8-5, Apply 10lm-5pm homes &t final cleanups. 2501 E. Pacific Coast PllMT'IMfi rc~;i~za~r. El iott'a. :,~~= Draw II Found: Orange tiger· out mo~ about the com· farm in Fashion Island. Weds. oU. CaJI collttt: Car, exper. onJy. SS/hr. Hwy. 360 AB Dick operator. - alriped male kitten, cetiti ve salary and Call Cheryl 640-1335 Mlclln Inc. P .O. 93, MANAGER 642-7444. ' Mature motivated pa rty top quality work only. RETIREE for beach Sales-Men &Women while under chin. Sun. Alpha0H45301 Must have food service planules,_,..,leforBee M 1 n 1 g .. men t P • r king I~· MOIUHOMIS enefils our friendly CASHIERS 5'" ·-......,. ,._.,,. " N Brooks Iii Cst Hwy. L.B. has to ff ...._.,........, experience ud be able HOUSECLEANERS to Line F11hioos . Xlnt responsibilities. N.B. (714)8464414, 846· 6 ew Iii resale. Afford•· ;:~·harcoaJ grey kit· company o er. ~~~~ ~hu~ i:!~n~ ~~~\~o~~reh'"~rp 1! ~.!~':':.°°~ 15/br. PIT, car. 645-5123 ~:rnd:'o\e~~~n\~·~ .. t 644-1233. eves. ~'r;~~~Or:!!~ leo, bu had neck aur· GRADCO/ areas.644-4460 donut abop. Apply in Fri.Sala.ryopeo. Houaekeeper/Blbysltter. ment714·5S'7·2Gll p~.he,.1:.= ;r:i~ inf pro(1am.Hife:com- 1en. C.M. aru. 548-8862 DENDOKf, HOUS~RSALE..S =· ~~>' Doouta, Noo-smobr. Father and M E<llANlC $.UO per hr. to stut. . For Classified Ad :r!:~0c't_~1i~\ v~. 'i1u•,:: LOSTD05 INC. Full or P/time. Apply: cftl-Portion= pen-Oft. Syrboy. Room. board+ Witborwitbouttools. Call:m..amEOE. A~~N ofc. WE NEED YOU!! 13 ytar o6d maJe, red· 4030W Chlodl~r Crowrl'Bardwatt. 1024 ~·-..,. 9amt.o5:30palMon.thru uluy. 175.3793 • 646-13lO P/TIMIM•tlS Experor willtrlill.Call dltb/brown, medium Santa~.CA lrvine (Westcliff)NB 1tOrangeCou.-y'1mOlt Tbur. 11.m &o 12 llOOCI sz:Hg! MIDlCALASSIST C •i ~~~ Marjorie. Mulhearn· size, blind eye, awolltn CATE RING Ser vice un111~al bot doe stand. Sun . Will t r ain. Front Iii back. EKG'a. Y.-ic:.rt.n Mobile Home Div. ear. Iola of furoo back Iii EctuaJ Opportunity needs fo od prep . Fulltime · 14M017! 14.50/h.r.. Venapuncture, typing. Adllltl with <Mllltaodinf 642-S678 527.seoo (n4) 527·5800 taU. REWARD. 648-0327. Employer workers. $4 hr . Full Ded1c1ledSitter for I mo. • 645-1720. attractive penonalities WANT ACTION! Loll: F . Little Golden time. 5AM·l :30PM . .trl. Weekend olShls FOODSERVICE • If It's got ............ who eo;oy WOft:in& with ClusifedAda642-5678 long ha i r ed Dog. ASSISTAMTMGI. Lori's Kitchen, 3077 u.s. rovidedl47·ZZ36 WORKER • handles Experienced. Front of. 10-15 year old youths. D. 11•1y ,,., ....................... :. REW ARD! Responsible person over Harbor Bl .. S.A. 979-0747 DBJYBY DllYaS For sanchridl and salad you'll grab nee. Extemlve typina. Eveninp S.9 p.m. Call 5414149 21 to help m1n1ge busy for appt. lmmed. p/lime open-uaembly and food pre-• Plaat.lc Surgery office. 642 · 4321. ext. 343 Found Small All Black piuaparlor~evenings CHIClaCAI inl• available for de-paratlon. Sim tbru a sale Huntinston Beach. Xlnt ~ween 2 p.m. Ind 5 Dos. Red Kerchief per week. Some exper needs 1 few gd drivers. livery driven. Musl be !~30pOO/mbr Mon. thru Fri. I fast-1·n ulary for excellent p]b.AskforAndre1 around neck. CM 1re1. In fa st foo d &/or 493. 21 with aood driving re-"· · I 'IO'I worker. Mtrll33 SS7-8110 m1n11ement preferred. cord ' 1ble lo work CLEAN UP A.ND Daily Pilot Fouod:Fluffygray &wht Starlin& ulary com-CadillacstoG<>-Cuts evenio11. Slut.I from MAINTENANCE I classified Fo~~~~:CY Io. 1.1.tMY!STMINI' small cat. Dys 631·7548, mensunte w/exper. A!k WbateverUle Fad $3.50-$4/hr. + ti1>1. App-Spm to 9pm Mon. tbru _. tall Eam while you learn. eves646-21M7. Vlc.C.M. for Mary or Al after Roll 'emoCfUlemarket 1Y dally afttt5pm. Me• Fri S 1 I auS. needs experienced front H E R I T A G E Found : Pet Bir d. St Spm.(714)546-93. WithaClusifiedAd £d'a Plzu. 17th • . aaryopeo_ 642·5678 fo~ic; ~~~.se:'!_ INVESTMENT will JoacbimSchool.548-l7S3 Auto Cal1Now!M2-5678 Tua OTHERPaiITIONS i J~Ue t 1 _ _. ... -1 t each you creative 8:30to2::.>Mon·Fri. IODYSHOPSIC'Y ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• AVAILABLE iu ~~t:: C:.~;.i~!. ~~n.~~~!~'inv~~~!r ~~: FOUND: Nobel McCaw E~periencenec.Contact • • Have 1ometbln1 you lion skills. Apply CSA velopmentA:counsellng. in NewportBeacharea. Make Wa~673-0900 : CLERICAL ! want to sell! Classified Inc. 17801 E. 17th Stl Exper counselors re· m.7s 1 X83. • • ads do it well. GG5678. T u a t i n o r c a I ceive 100% comm. The Ls FOund kitten. under six Automotive : LO OK : 714/ll3MCQI. E.O.E. an unuaual oppty for months, femaJe, tiger CLBICA.L • • Model.a needed. All types. right penoa. Connden· 1lripe<I, oo collar vie Sales clerk, light boot· : : Men, womt114r children. llal Interview· Call Pomou 6: Rea Schls keeelna and clerical • • Noupnec.~Tl82. ~V!!in!!ce!!54fr!!!!!!!!!_,!!!!!!!!!_!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~ bac ground required. • This is 8 sincete effort to rMCh an In· : llOVER·DRIVER, ex· Pen••• USO XJnl company benefita. : • per'd. 11e 23-~ w/good •-------Aslifor MarySmlth, Al· • dividual interested in morethanj&.atljob. • driving record . Call IEALESTATI ••••·;;~··••• leo Olds Cadillac. 28332 • we are a large natlorwl company which • g 4 1 . a 4 2 7 . T H E PIOFISSI,.,.,.. ... 1 .r UU..llll Camino Cafiatrano. • operates In the Newport Beech 1rM. Wt : STARVING COLLEGE ~ * Sl1E * Ll&un• Nigue · I: deal strictly In the a«Vial buline.. Wt • STUDSNTS MOVING W AMTID 4115-GIOO 8ll.QIOO • otfet the follo'Ning benefits: : COM ANY. • .,_ Come &o t.1'111 ac:Uon. ll(lll 24Hour llCORTS ManYE • • "' • • ,_,..paper delivery LA wanted area in So. Calif. tlJ.1122 MC/Yltt PAITS • : Tima '° home on Ba.I. buyer's can afford to Forlot.al.U.reduction COUMT81MAM , : t. MAJOR MEDICAL INSURANCE Pto. 1550. per mo. P•f · Call Larry • rtlautlon mauase. Dealership or forelfn • PROGRAM lor•lW Wbateaidea, Balboa Ste!t 10:4.M-2117 auto parts experience : 2. COMPANY & EMPLOYEE RETIRE-Hne ~ &o sell! Wud . m-1700 AUtad.lve Lldiel would preferred. C&lJ Glen for • MENT & PARTICIPATION PA(). Clualtlecbdedolt welt ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ , loft&oPl"Yw/,ou.C.ll anappoiatmml. • GRAM -Piii , ,hJuorJ.amie~. :&lf=J i 3. COMPAN YPAIO VACATION . H •mm~~m"""·~. • A .. IMW • 4. A~NOAl SALARY'REVJEW . : : 5. EXCELLENT STARTING s.uRY KIDS - •• : (S11.ooo to 112.ooo) STUDE11..1T. S If you consider yourlllf to bl 1 tClbtt Ind " • : energetic lndlvldu11, wt would bl In· llJEEDED ~ In talking to you. Thll poettlon It f'.'11111 : for an 1CCOuntt r~IYlblt cler'k. ' e : For 1 personal and oonfldlnttal lntlrVllw • mil • • • i 714 533-7590 Elm $30-IBO per week. Trips & Prizes. Ctl'9*. a.,, 111n.ue1 . .. PAIT TIME Mm We are pr .. ent11 11ellln1 adult• wttll pltuaat p.auonallt111 who woold be lotertlted ta wortilq la Sala • Promotlae • wltJa ~1 Plot Carriera 10 to LS 1Uft Did: l Udmitecl earniap nallablt &o rtcM ,._, Ht1: 5:10Plll to t :IOPM, 111-., ~. " ~. Some -SltUl'daJ a"'1a11Wt7, hr =~t, call: N241. lllk lar In ~ . • . OAANGI COAIT DAILY MOT J . . Trainee For District Mananr !!115 highly succe~sful locii~..Plm uaS an openln& for 1 lraanee an c:lrculation department. Basic situ will entail s1ti>ervlsion of 10 to 14 year old boy anit girl home dtlivery carriers. Areu or supervision will be delivery, collectJons and sales. Selttted applicant will receive liberaJ •~l salary. r,aularly scheduled rmes. bonua opportunities and man)' fringe benefit• such aa company paid dental and health plan. group life lnturance, v1c.1Uoq and sick leave. Comeany vehicle Is furnished during worting hollr1. Applicants muat be over 18, hlvt 1 &ood drivins record and be neat 1ppeartna. Hours•~ 1enerally 11 AM &o 9 PM._Moad1y thru Friday. Some overtime ts IVtll•ble. U you are quallfied and lnterelted in learnin1 tile clrcul1tlon bualne.u cont.act the Dall1 Pilot at D> w. ky, Co1ta Maa before 10:30 AM or aft.er-2 PM daily. Ask ror Don Williams or Ken Ooddatd. ReldSilS ... Umlted OPIDlDI• avaU•bk bt the Oranae eoa.t area, tor Mll·madvac.d, catffr orltatM Individual wbo c1a wort wilh Field Sales Pec>pk. Tram. motlv1te aad get reeult.t. Sl.atloo •llOO or•• ~aary. ~ ~.1~aa. 1plua Job related ta avautble' 1ar tilt rllllt people. ,_ ~ ~ ......... Dtt J~f t.llk .. call: .._. tw lnt«vltw. All s . Oaot. <I I ~ ·······••e••··················· ... . ••Jt:,fl~~~-.: .. . ...............•...................... ~·· • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ., ' t -, .--. . • • , ••SECUTillES•• Pres/~cctSl6,800 Recept/1'50/FunSJ0,200 Genomce/TS<il2,000yr Exp Consultant Ours Lia Reinders Agy, Inc. 4020 Birch Est '64EOE Newport/833-8190/Free F+ ., '"•o•I lrl\t,lm1•nt • •111 , 1 1111•·11ch 10 .\Ian~ Hr r 1 $ ° K 11 1 1 ;. \~ .111• I! HI JX'l1 fv J•t'llt • I I I 11/ ~·uld (·1!111 \\ .. 1 '1 t11\\l 1 .. 121'\1t:n2!lm h ot'• oil 'I 1:1\ ralltl r11il 1 •• 11111 " • 1111'1 Wht & S '1 C11 S11I < llMJ I , ' . 'l ,.,, f•' ••• 1 1., I ~111 :-d f .. r ~\ l~l<I •Id f.Jl :lf;OI l \ I LI 1.-1(,Q .. ~k. lur :::.t.-\4 Ill •11n Buuqut-1• •l1 I '!:'.ft •I Per.Jell fLl t l r. H\'.l.lMOn 673 ·111" REDW OOD 2X6'S I 111 1• •" :>QfJ ... qu • t ........... .. (; ntra 8 ) I I 1 1 .. 'll lung Ji.Int""' 1 '"~ I r•·'lt IHJd arr1 .. '"•II} !-.m•· •I 55 '' I 1111 •l.l6·'18115 an~ um1• • -~--sa.:!!ll:ll.i--I' 111~·l'i1, u:.\sf: 11u,• MUST SELL '-' , I I 'IH'~'· ' •ti 111 • I I I I 11µph1·' Mid f" t1 • .. mrlu<lini: Jl, I l ,.,L.,C~ "'"I H I 1·hd I r, flt'.1 U0 " 1 I• · h;ur<ln • r-. jlllf Ii ti i I 1 lh,;1r., 111 I I "'-'"I'S an<! pl;111l \" m 1kt' up \harn1~•1 , 1 ,,,11mdu1t<. '.1111.11 'li':'t4u1 ift1·r h, K<ll f;kcfl I \ It,,. q11• I 1. I !It'll Jlll'ffil t'f. I \ Ii I I 11 It t 11•, 1 • I 11 r .Ul l' 1 ,Jh •11 \ 11 l .r J ~ \J1llqut> t'th '.l I IJJt>, rt \ 1 r,,o 1 11hp hghr-. "' 1 >..~tJ I alt.~ S)l.I. iJu V'.111< ( I •I • I\ I"" 11 Luau~r ~" rt n~ \I 1rr lat11t •r 111 :g I 'tN: < .'JJ "3,l,1• " , ~IJI• \.11mcr 1r ~75 1)41 • 111 ll1.1nt' ~llj •!Iv ...... P!!ts .... 1 ( r.tlLOtnhur .day Oclobm I 1981 ~~-~'. .. ! .. ~~~.01'~~.·.~ ........... !~.~! ~~!~~~ .. : ... ft 11 \1111 1H 1:\11 S 1rn 1 • Ion ~ G ... ral .f701 \11 Fl x ti ·~ I !!Ji ll htl ()Ol 011 $3400 ................. ,.~··· • 1 il.'l~ !1~711'17l,1'~1 ·c1·• '81 Oelnn• .. n .,,pt .blll 11!t l11vNaSJH ~lrilrvtld int lo n11 UQ.llOU 1110~1 1•11 Mn• l'wt par 1.1$ Ill _ I~ f.1 ' liU(o Aldi f707 111 • I 1•111 ~·~1•1h·1 I' I •••••••••••••••••v•••• (lt1t"I I 111k~ 'IH. l•IH •74 Audi rox. I ~""· 1 ~'"'Cini! & b1 1k1~ J~ t.75 frr1•w11y m1l1·~. \llllN ~ 1m de11n, S2.-W 11 1 •!l!R - k.1 ~ d ... ''"'' r·u IMW ,9711 I 'I so ~In~· .h. II '.'J M :'111, ...................... . ''""'°"''' ••• 1111 { 1111 I " I• -.1ltl .al .f·~orl Hit' l'•h j l'lilili '.au• 111111 Sat . 0('1 rf1~1 , u111I :I lllu n 17$11 ~k\ f'.1rk 1981 BMW'-CLOSEOp.1 ~ ,,,,, ... 1.11 117 I./; ; 1 1111111., 1 ·~ ·~ 1 ••• r.d1 ·ru, '"'', 11n1lo ~''""'" \I 11 1 l>ll 111·~ p:unl hall 1•1 11:! 7 I ,1 i $ ':I fl 0 (I fl 0 ,1 \11'11 fi'~I I Ill .. 11 Ill SAVE!!· ... 1;t1r.1.,.1 Von' 9570 • .-IH ~1tth l•••••••••••••••••••~t• 1 I , 011 I' I' 111 cl ~.r11n11l11 ~ Su).)Cr HUGE SELECTll»f Sales and Lras11tg .at N>ml}Ct1l1\t' µr1ce1 Ex cellent 'i!rvit•e ind p~fl~ de pl '" ri.. ' • \ ,11 1:, II• Ill ~I II•! 0110 't •, P\t I\.:' IJ '11 Ii .... t'.'11 \4• 9590 Good st•lt·rltun of \frtt VIOU~I) O~Til'tl HMW & other Crn1· <'Jr' In ex cellt>nt l'''' d11to 1 II \l f ;i II i I • ',\ \ I I l:, '.\o ,,,. t'l I o .t 11 11 oi r 1M~'\' fll ~ " t )Hi'lll I\ >I.I '.l'.!lf; ,,1 fll I (l(t,' ,,, ;~,,!, '• ..•••..•. ... ,11•1 •n ··~···················· " l '. \ \ l 11' I lPI j \II 1111 "I 1)"11 'JI ' r 1ro I) 11 '''''"'•flt or • •'"''" lJ Tr.ur • ar l l> .-'l 1. r 11 "11 1 • u ~ I Ill" I B~~ Butr.k ~ a1 nO OftQPC~ WE PAY .u •· •r l OP DOLLAR J"'11n1i. FOR USED CARS II I •' I I ... LAN MAGHOM 'r ' 11 / !'OHllAC/SUBARU •·"'I •11lb l•11 111, I c.•l!I 91 :O ' "", \ \H.'> \ ••••••••• •• I 549 4)00 549-1 457 •I 1 It I ,. PORSCHES WANTED 'Ii• ~. ''"' \II o" u~ Utl' op1,.1rtunil) " 11:11 ,,, • "ll'11l1•r 1111· pu11 hJM' •r r, lo 11 ••I \11ur 1 l1•an re Parh I ' ,, , ·l~l rh1•1 k 1111 h L'~ .\01"1t'$ 9400 l oi.J} -----r .. . .• ·~..... c--::; lJ f} 'U1§Q H "" I \ '\.:5. {( ~ ·-r:t? ,1: .• uu11 ..... ~'" II IJ '\\/~t •I It , I • 6JC HU ll ~ t•I tu•r - ••t • t Jr c WE BUY CLEAMCARS~ AHO TRUCKS • ti'4 I J:..3 Sale •. e I. •••ee e ••• \ .. I :• I 'I< I lt."'\\I• "'I.ii" •, ; CONMILL. · .. CHfVIOLET ' 21281Urbor Blvd •. ' Ca;J'A ME..:;A ' . 54'-1200 I I HIG"f IUYER ; ' !ffiJllP I h~ I ' \t1;11 JIMMARIHO VOlkSWAGEN .• JI 11, •• , 11 HI\ J Ill '11' I, I'!>!'. Ill·\( II 84i-1000 WEN~EO ""OIJR EXOTIC l IS~ITISM CARS ~WPORT L!M.PORfS -· INC We ah.1> nun· J luue t•ompany 1h11t le;ises other maxes vr autos • trucks and \an.' For ad· d1t1onal llllormat1on on leasinii pluse rail 714 972 IZlO 714 661~ • I For 11 gt>Od d(;d I .rnd g.ood :tfh•r '<JI~ ~erv1et• sec. CREVIER SAl.ES-SER\llCE-<.EASING WS W Isl SANTAAN" 71 4/835-3171 CLO§ED SU"'OAV w .. Meeto1 Beat . Any Bonaf1de Deal "''"' &"'" 'J SADOt.EB.AeK- IMW 28402 Mars:uentr P><ll\)' ~hSSIOO \ICJO A\'ER\ PKWY t F:XITH'WY 1 831-2040 495-4949 Closed Sun<la~ s s1,~~gi~oo OF MEW BMW'S S11le) and I ea-,rng at l'Om pet1L11,. f1fl[l'~. Ex lCllent "'r le ;,nd parts tit pt Good selccuon of J>te v1ou~ly ownt!d Bl\QV & other fine car.; in ex cellent tond1llon We al~o ha»e a lease t·ompany that leas.es other make:-or autos, trur ks 11nd \:ms For ad· d111onal 111fo1 mation on leasing plt'·lw uill . 714 972 1r.11 711 661·9611 For a gWd <le,11 Jnd&.uod $ale:. sen·1ee sec : CREVIER SAL ES-SERI/IC( '"'EASING 208 W. h i SAi\ TA A"'A 714 /835-3171 CLQSED ~NO~Y Tht Mod &citiftcJ Part Of Your IMW Pwd.aw Or Lta5t~~ McLaren BMW !! I "Y Or L.eoH IJ Our Phone Plcln! (714) 522·5333 OR.ANGE COUtrrf'S OlDEST $,. Sdlcs !'>d\ in· Lea~ing Roy Carv~r.lnc. Rolls Rone RMW l.>4 0 Jamlx>ree 1'1•wport Heueh fl.1ft6444 '78 B\1W 32(~ xlnt rood, auto Jm fm ""~s, )le~ 1 irel> :.11 S1 S F;LL S9SOll 64:i 'ifK. •• _ .o , • «J I B14\ "1:1'"l••r! I\. I• h. 'II !~~~~! ............ !.~!~ ·········•·•·· l.1 'ti ,. \ l"\1 I \ I · l~I Ill'\ \\ 1•11 h I lo \I ht• I "~ -ic!t.;NUl!I' •• ~ .. , ... 71 l JEEPS•• 1·h~, IL\I<' l ltor l 101 ~ For 'l 1 I •• I J 11 1_.,rt'•I <\in I~ llUOOorij! m1 I S62000BO 64347 9560 •••••••••••••••••• _Counce Nt.w •rokl.' wheel~. 11011 Needs ~l.500. Call eves n 1 N C.11 n .. ·1tornallc. 6 1 ' ,., I .111 •HHI ~1)110 l'all !179 2584 ••t• M-...lhcl Cotta Mtte "1-t•o•lOIO<"HOHH Toa Dollar ~aid I I I llJf (,If DatJUl'I .••...•.•........•.•••. .,. :J I . • ATLAS CHRYSLBl.ft. YMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 5-46-1934. 3 blocks south of San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd. Complete bod)' shop. Sales Service. Parts. Set'vioe Dept. open ~ay thru Fr"'ay 7 30 AM. to 5:30 P.M. and 8 A.M. to 5 P.fs1. on Saturday. • IEACH IMPOtrTS 848 Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel 752·0900. Call us. we'll!i the specialists for Alfa Romeo. Peugeot & Saab • THEODORE ROllMS FORD MocMrn sales. service, parts. body, paint & tire depts. Oo"'J)9tltlve rates on lease & daily rentals. 2060 Harbor Bfvd., Costa Mesa 642-0010 or S40-8211 JOHMSOM & SOH UHCOLH MHCUIY 2126 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-5630. 57 Yura ol laendly lamily Hrv1ce -Orange Coun!)''s otde91 Lin· cotn-tArcury dealership. <:-. I •• MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • ti4EWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the triangle of Jamboree. Mac.Arthur & Bristol behind V1ctor11 Station. Sales. Serv1oe, Leasing & Parts Fleet discounts to the public. • MAIERS CADIUA~ 2600 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9100. Orange County's Largest Cadillac deeler. Sales Service. Leas· Ing . • DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUIC8("'°"'1Ac-MAIDA Sales • Service • Leasing 24888 Alicia Parkway Laguna Hiiis 837-2-400 llU. MAXEY TOYOTA use CARS 19202 Qeac:h Blvd .. Huntington Beach, 962-0829. Outatendlng selection of used cars for immediate dellvery. And while on Beach Blvd .. stop by our new car facility up the street. • ALAH MA~HOH l'OMr'IAC-SUIAIU 2480 Harbor Blvd., Coata Meu. Tel. MIM300 s.i-. Servlce .. leulog. "Mr. Goodwrench." •• HOUH Oii IMPOITS MllCmll•ll w.. ......... Leia9lllt -Manc:heeter 8tvd.. 8uene Part! (on Santa Ana Ff'MwttY). Tak• Beac:h Blvd. offramp -sharp right on Menchee•r. . a.AL MIA-CEDES (213or 714)137·2333 • • I 01 LONGPRE POHTIAC 13600' Beach Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. 892·6651 Orange County's oldest and largest Pontiac dealership Sales. Service. Parts. • UMIVEISITY HONDA 2850 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9640. Mile South 405 Freeway. Sales, service, perts & leasing. • SAMTA AMA'DATSUM 2001 E. 17th Street, Sar1ta Ana. Tel. 558·7811 . Your• Original Dedicated Datsun Dealer. • MIRACLE MADA We've moved! Our new location is 1<425 Baker Street. .Cost. Mesa. Tel. 545-333-4. Stop by & visit our brand new showroom and lff whx we're the #1 Mazda dealer In Southern C.llfornla. Sales •. Service. Petts and Leaalng. ALLIH·OLDSM~C SUlilu-GMC TIUCICS San Diego Fwy. at A.very Exit on c.tnlno Caplatrano In Laguna Niguel. Tel. 831~ • SAM DI SANTIS CHIVIOUT •Ot 8. El Camino AMI, San Clemente sai.t. Servk:e, Le.ang And Pa.u Orange County'1 NEWEST Ctwvroiet dealer: "Growing Your W~." Eidt El Cemlno off-nmp. 831.(JllO ·~-tsoo COSTA MESADATSUH 2845 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel 54(}.6410 Serving Ofange County for 16 years. 1 Mile So 405. SUNSET FORD, IMC. (Home of W1lhe the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd • Westminster. Tel 636·4010. • FttAHIC PROTO UMC~CUIY Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a . week 7:30 A.M. lo 6.30 P.M. 848-7739. • COHMB.L CHPaOUT .2928 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mela. ~ 20 years NNlng Orange County! Sales, IMling • .-vice. Cell 5<46-1200: special partt tine: 54e-9400; body snop line; 764-0400. • -CHtcK IYBSOM POllCHl-AUDl-YW 415 E. Co-asr Hwy .. Newport BMch. 673-0900. Th• only ONl8'9hlp in Orange County, with t~ three grHt ma.kn under one rooH · • • IOY CAAYM IOU.S IOYc:.INW - 1&40 Jambot'M Aoed, N9WPQrt a.on .......... ~ s.v1c:.. Partt And L ... lf'lo. HER INFORMATION, OR TO BE · PLACED CONTACT . YOUR DAiLY ' PILOt ·REP. 22 •• ........... ··-------~ ... --..;----...---- • DRANlif ClllT THURSDAY, OCTOBER I , 1981 . . • • -. ... • • • • • • YOUR HDMfTDWN DAllY PAPfR ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 Cf:NTS -,. '· Marines test trOop~ for marijuana at El Toro By GLENN SCOTT Of .... Dally P'IN4 Sutt A Marine Corps screening pro· gram is under way at lhe El Toro Air ·station to discover who is smoking marijuana. About 1,000 Marines will be tested each month. Their urine samples will be scr ee ned through a new portable unit de- signed to quickl y indicate whe ther the Manne has s moked marijuana in the past week, said Gunnery Sgt. Dick Blumster. Mannes whose positive tests a r e reconfirmed in a Navy laboratory in San Diego will be enrolled in e ducational and treatment programs aimed at disC'ouraging marijuana use, he said Participants whose later tests are negative probably won't be s anctioned, but for those whose tes ts continue to be positive, Blomster said: "That's a new ball game.'' Chronic marijuana users. he said. could be discharged from the corps. Blom~ter, who works in the base public affairs orfice. said the Marines have othe r pro- grams for alcohol a busers and users of hard drugs. Although the corps has had other tests that sometimes in· dicate marij uana use, th& new process is the firs t to aim s peclfically at the s ubstance. Marine offlc1als ordered the tes ting because they believe that marijuana s moking is common in the military, according to lsl Lt. Don Donaldson. .. Wath 99 percent uccuraC'y in illegal drug detl'ctwn, we ~xpecl about 40 percent of those tested to show positive results <for muriJuana >." Donaldson said in H written statement Testing also wall be instituted at the Marine Corps' Tustin Helicopte r Air Station and at ..Camp Pendleton, said Blomster. "We have been concerned about marijuana fuse> for some . time." said Blomster. who noted that the rallure of a soldier to perform a duty or care for a piece of machinery can have im· plications on others in the unit. He said the new procedu'res of fer more accuracy and economy than in previous tests. "The onJy people ll's going to ups et." be said, "are those who a re smoking marijuana." Spectacul~r storlll socks Oritnge Coast AWACS pressed by Haig WASlllNGTON (AP > - Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. formally presented President Reagan's proposed sale of AWACS radar planes to ..., Saudi Arabia today, but two senators who heard hi s closed- doo r briefing dis agreed on whether a breakthrough has been won to s ave the sale from congressionfll defeat. ··My conditions have not been met yet," Sen John G Jenn, D- Ohio, told reporters . 'He refused to '&ay if he believes they still can be met. But Sen. Charles H. Pe rcy, R- 111., chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. which Haig addressed in secret for nearly three hours. said he believes there are '·new as- sura nces" from Saudi Arabia to overcome the issue of joint U.S.· Saudi manning of the planes Percy. who has repeatedly re· fused to say whether he supports the deal. said the Saudis had of- fere d "certain written as- surances" to meet U.S. concerns about control of the radar planes and the intellige nce data they gather. . ·· 1 think great progress has been made." he told reporters after Haig's secret testimony. Specifically, he said. the period during which Americans would fly on the Sl!udis' A WACS as trainers would be extended beyond the scheduled 1985 end of the training period. Later, in a public statement, Haig said Americans would fly with the Saudi A WACS crews in- to the 1990s. · On Monday, Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger had suggested at a congressional bearing that training could last until 1995. "The presence" of Americans on board th~ A WACS past 1985 "will be of a significant nature to assure joint responsibility for t~ operation." Percy s aid 'All Savers' get mixed • reac t ion NEW YORK (AP l Customers lined up at the doors when some of the nation's banks and savings institutions opened today as the high-interest, tax· free All Savers certificates went on sale. Some financial institu- tions planned to stay open all w.?ekend to handle orders for new accounts. But other bankers said busi- ness was no greater than usual and concl uded investors were 'EASTERNERS FIRST TO 'CASH IN' -A4 waiting lo see if they'd get a higher return on a later offering of certificates. The All Savers that went on sale today pay a yield of 12.61 percent ; late lhis afternoon the rate for All Savers effective • Monday will be set by the Treasury Department, based on its monthly auction of one-year Treasury btlls. ''We've had a lot of calls this morning, a lot of inquiries," said Grace Schmidt of Bank of Vlrtlnia In Richmond, "but most of lhem seem to be wait- ing" unlll the new rate is an- nouncecl The auction was to take place today, with r~sults announced tonight D:-''' l'llet ....... "' Lee ... .,,.. I death Weather related By STEVE MARBLE Ot tM Dally l'llet Staff The s eason 's firs t s torm moved into Orange County in s pectacular fa shion Tuesday. brightening the s kies with lightning and ,dumping nearly :\-4 of an inch of rain. The electrical storm knocked out power to more than 17.000 c ustomers along the Orange Coast and several areas today were still without power. In Laguna Beach, lightning struck a tree in the 4-00 block of Cliff Drive and charred a power pole on Gaviota Street. Traffic signals at the busy in· tersection of Dover Drive and Pacific Coast Highway in Newport Beach were knocked out during the storm and east· bound motorists today found themselves s narled in a traffic jam backed up nearly one mile. In Anahei m , David Mendoza, 16, was electrocuted al 5 a.m. whe n he brus hed against a metal guard rail on which a 12 .00 0 vo lt e le c trical transmission line had fallen. Flashes of liglz tn~ng punctuate the storm over the Ort.7"!{/e Coast as October arrives with 3 4 of an inch of ram Police said they U\eOrized that the line fell to the ground after being struck by a bolt of light· ning. 30 killed in Beirut blast TN.T -laden car explodes; death toll may go higher BEIRUT, Lebanon <A P > A car packed with an estimated 220 pounds of TNT exploded in a PLO-controlled neighborhood in W cat Beirut today. Police re- ported at least 30 people killed and 130 wounded. but a Red Cross nurse said the death toll might be as hi gh as 50. Police said the car-bomb ex ploded near the offices of the Pales tine Liberation Orgamza· lion's top security c hief. Salah Khalaf. known by the code name Abu lyad The blas t tore facades off buildings. s plintered telephone poles. sel. off fires and turned about 60 C'ars into piles or scorched metal. P o li ce s aid none of the wounded were ranking members of the PLO. The PLO. in a state· ment through its news agency, reported 18 deaths without idem· tifying them. and said there were 247 Pales tinians a nd Lebanese wounded. Mohsen Ibrahim. spokesman for the 13·militla National Move- ment leftist umbrella group al- lied with the PLO, said at a press conferen ce later that several communist militia mem- bers were killed. He blamed ·'Is rael and Its agents in Lebanon," indirectly referring to rightist Christian militias. and promised 1.o "strike back in the same manner and in the appropriate place . . " Abu Iyad "as not an the office when the explosion occurred. the PLO said He was later seen touring the devastated block. The bomb stranded residents in isolated floors of high·rise building~. tore coffee ..,hops. ~a nd"i ch ~la nds and s mall markets to. bits, and hur led mutilated bodies of several street vendors dozens of yards <See BLAST, Page A2) Housing questions back in city hands City leaders along the Orange Coast cheered news today that a state bill designed to take af- fordable housing authority away from the state Coastal Com- mission and return it to local government is to become law. G o v. Edmu nd Brown Jr. neither signed nor commented oo the bill Wednesday but did clear the way for the bill to become law by taking no veto action against it. The bill, authored by Sen. Henry Mello. D· Watson ville, was greet.ed warmly by officials in Newport Beach and Hunt- ington Beach. Both the coastal cities have been criticized by the Coastal Com mi ssion be ca use local coastal plans allegedly did Ml properly address affordable housing. ·'This is a clear m essage that the citizens are tired of sociaJ tinkering to solve housing n eeds," sugges ted Newport Mayor Jackie Heather. She said the bill is a "clear victory for local government a nd is exciting news." Newport and Huntington of· ficials suggested the Mello bill s hould result in getting the Coastal Commission off their backs on that issue. The Mello bill was tugged through the Legislature by oppo· nents of the Coastal Commission who complained about com· mission efforts to require low- cost housing along the coast. The bill, to become law Jan. l, allows local governments to ex- ercise the authority over hous- ing in zones up to three miles in· <See HOUSING, Page AZ> ,....r Soccer fun~ thief in prison 4 • , . Westminster man starts three years for e1rJ.bezzlement A Westminster man who em- bezzled more than $30,000 from a local American Youth Socc• Orianlzation ln 1979 bas begun serving a tbree·year prison term. Westminster, was the treasurer oC A YSO Region 5 in 1979. Region 5 operates leagues for about 200 youngsters in Fountain Valley and Westmin~ter. Deputy District Attorney John Conley says Sanders pleaded .-uilty but then later tried to change hJs 1f?lea to Innocent. The trial lasted for over a year as Sanders changed attorneys three times, ConJey said . vember of 1979. Conley says Sanders was in· ilially taken to Chino State Prison and could be eligible for parole ln two years. Sanders had told the court that he was heavily ln debt to drug dealers because of his cocaine habit, Conley said. The 'common·law couple were married one day ~fore Sanders' trial ~&an ln August of 1980. Guns t ested in shooting of two g irls Ralhst1 cs te~t:-. are being con ducted to determine if one of several guns recovered from a truck belon).!ing to murder sus- pect Thomas Francis Edwards was used in the fatal Sept. 19 shooting of a 12-year-old Lake Elsinore girl. · Orange County Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt llart said an unspecified number of weapons. including both handguns and rifles. were seized from the camper-outfitted vehicle during a sear ch Wednes- day <See related story. Page A3. I Thl' truck was located in Los Angeles Monday several hours a rt er Edwards, 37. a former Costa Mesa resident, was arrest- ed in Maryland. where he is be· ing held without bail pending e x· tradition proceedings. llart said a s mall caliber weapon was used in the s hooting attack that killed Vanessa lberri and wounded her companion. Kelly Cartier, 12. also of Lake Els inore. Hart said it has not yet been determined whe ther a handgun or rifle was used in the shooting. Inves tigators obtained a search warrant before entering Edwards' vehicle. Hart s aid. Police s aid the youth and his father were attempting to put out a small grilSS fire that broke out near the guardrail when the incident occurred The boy's father was not injured, police s aid . In Huntington Beach. rain cau sed flooding on l)lewland Street near the Edison power plant and traffic had to be re· routed "It's safe to say we had a lot of weather." suggested Hunt- ing ton weather -watcher J . Sherman Denny today. "You'd have to be drugged to sleep through the storm we had las t night," he commented. "My land. it's been a long time since I've seen anything like that." One res ident suggested that with all the thunder "it was like trying to sleep in a bowling al· ley." Officials from the Los Angeles Weather Bureau blamed the un- expected storm on a low pres· s u·re system that worked its way off the coast. They said the system produced "unstable air" which res ulted in the lightning and thunderclaps . Weather bureau officials pre· die ted the low pressure system will gradually move east and should be completely gone by late Friday. The storm brought Southern California's first rain since April 20. Officials from Southern <See STORM, Page A2) Auth<?ril:ies believe E~wards, ORANlif COAST WllJHIR described as a "mountain man" .._ and "gun buff." had been living but of the vehicle for several months after leaving his wire A search warrant also was Ob· tained to permit investigators to ellfil mine a J?Orlion of the South C'oast"Gun Ciub In Irvine, where C h ance of s h owers decreasing to 20 percent . tonight and near zero Fri- day. Partly cloudy tonight and c learing Friday. Highs 74 to 78. Lows· tonight 58 to 65. Edwards worked occasionally as INSIOf TODAY a range master. Hart said he did not know what, If anything, that search yielded. As investigators in Orange County continue to assemble evidence in the shootings, their counterparts in Maryland and John Gibbs of Coata Mesa lives for speed -Wee 140 mph In hit hydropk!M boot. See atory, photo, Page Cl Riverside County a re looking at JllDf I Edwards in connection with II cases in their respective jurisdlcUons. ... To accommodate that, banks (~SA VE!lS, Pr1e AZ) Steve Sanders, 33, -.Jso known as Stephen Patterson, told Orange County Superior Court Judie William Thomson that he used his common taw wiCe'a last nara-e to sign the checks to pay off debts to drui dealers who he sa Id we~ threatening ·hls (irtlily. I Sanders' common law wife, Mary Sanders, a l so of f Judge Thomson denied San- ders' attempted plea ~hailge .and on 5ept. lf senlenced lllm to state priaon tor cashlna 1-4 A YSO checks between June ind No- An oUicial or A YSO Regioll 5 says a bondina comp•nY repaid the organizaUon for money San· ders em~zzled. In Maryland , an investigation ha~ been reopened lnto the slay· ings of a schoolteacher and a 14·year·oJd girl. Edwards was considered a suspect in those killin'gs, but was not prosecuted because some evidence was ti· lcJall)' obttlned. accordlnJ to CSie G\INS, Pate AJ) ~ <. l . . ~ •••• * Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThuradoy. October 1, 1981 Congress approves emergency spending meas11r~ WASHINGTON <APl Alter dt:t>nting pasl l\4 mldnl&hl dead· .line. C onare a todoy outhor1ted an emergency spend . Ing bill for the federal aovern ,1 ment thnl Includes liberalized tux breaks and virtually automatic pay increases tor i;enutors and representatives. Technicall y, the government • went broke when the 1981 fiscal year ended al midnight and President Reagan hadn't signed . the s t OP¥1lP bill t o fund numerous 18encies and dPpurt· mcnta. But few dil!ruptions in government Rerv1ces were ex peeled . The House approved the bill by voice vote more than an hour before the deadline When the Senate followed s uit. voling 64·28, about a half hour in to fis cal 1982. the bill was sent to Reagan. It is designed to keep mohey avalluble for tederul program throul(h Nov 20. wht'n experts estimate most IC not nil the 13" regulur uppropru1t1oni. bills will be 8J)l)rovt-'<i. Decuuse the bill wusn't ap· provt•c.J before the dt>••dhnf', con Ares 1onal off1ciuls noted, foderal JUdgl•s apptirl•lltly will r~ceive an unplanned raise. The existing Judicial pa) ce11tng lapsed at midnight, and courts have ruJcd that action at a later ...,,... .... ~ Passengers board Jira Pacific Sovtln.oat Aif'lmes flight out of John Wayne Airport. TM airline's first /lights at the terminal flfto in and out today. - time to reimpose a cap ls un · con tltutlonal. 'rbe financial benefits for '91tmbers of Conareas ln the bill included: Repealing the $3,000 limit on the tax deduction for llvm.i expenses in Washington. Lifting the current $25,000 limit on outside earned income senators may collect in a year. I louse members would continue to be restricted t.o 15 percent or their 11Jary, about $9,700. Be11nnina In a year. glvtna congressional pay raises equaJ to the amount recommended an· nually by a presidential com· mission for white-collar federal workers, unless Congress reject· ed them. Members of Congress earn $60,662.SO a year. While members of Congress were voun1 themselves a break,' 11 court wa.t considering whether lo lake one major privilege ow1y The common Cause lobby asked a fedcr.il court to declar Lhe 206·1&1r·old frankln privilege, whic h provide Special low mail rates for mt> bers of the House and th Senate, unconstitutional becaus it 1s being used to promote th re·electlons of incumbent con• gressmen PSA · beg~ns ·service at Wayne 5 commercial carriers now operate from airport • Pacific Southwest Airlines, the West Coast's largest airline, began service today between Orange County and San Fran- cisco. The addition or PSA brings to five the number of commercial air carriers now operating from John Wayne Airport. 'l'he carrier initially will operate two flights daily between Orange County and San Francisco. Its flight allocation could change as a result or a legal challenge ·to a county airport access plan now pellding in U.S. District Court in Los north or the existing airporl Angeles. terminal. As part of promotinS the start of service to Orangf An Orange County-bound OC-9 County, PSA is ottering throug Super 80, the q uietest com-Oct. 31 unrestricted one·wa mer clal jet available, arrived from San Franc)sco s hortly fares of $36 to and from the Sap Francisco Bay area. after 8 a .m . this morning. Wednesday night, the sat Passengers were greeted by d Donald Duck, Goofy and other Diego-based airline hoste Disney characters brought to lavish reception at the Balt>Of the airport by PSA ror the in· Bay Club, featuring an array ci ~ugural flight. The plane re· i ntern~tional r?ods, 'a danCf turned to San Francisco at 8:4S band and a s tewa;desse~ am e through the years" fas hion show · · e m.ceed by KABC radio PSA's passenger facilities are ;>ersonality Michael Jackson. I located in a 3,600 square root Dominating the room was 1 modular building located just giant ice scuJpture of a Super ao1 From Page A 1 HOUSING 'Wimp' acquitted • m shooting of wife From Page A1 BLAST I • • land. "We still don't know the effect 1 the ball has on affordable hous· i ing require m e nts until we • analyze it, but it does remove } one of the areas of dispute the ci· ty has had with the Coastal Com~ ).'mission," remarked Huntington Mayor Ruth Finley. Huntington Beach's local f coast al p lan was rejected partially because its proposed I housing policy did not insure that affordab le homes be replaced with low-cost homes. ~ Robert Lenard, a Newport city $planner. said it appears the Me llo bill asks local govern-1 men ts to come up with their own 'set of coastal housing policies. M OVNT CLEM ENS. Mich. CAP 1 -Described by his at· torney as a "wimp" and a ··milquetoast," a 3l ·year-old man who claimed he was abused by his wife has been acquitted of shooting her . I\ Macomb County Circuit Court jury ac-quitted Joseph Du~inski, 31. of Gibraltar of at· tempted murder and two counts of assaull. Sherrell Dudzinski was s hot in the back Aug. 27, 1980 at a mobile home owned by a family friend, John Cooper of llarri~on Township At the trial. Dudzinsk1 's at· From Page A1 ' torne~'. Ronald Goldstein. said his citc:nt felt oppres~ed b~ his wife because "sht• wore the pants in the family.'' Dudzinski was upset because his ~are spent "a great deal of time" with Cooper an the three months before the s hooting, Goldstein said. "Sh<''d go visit him <Cooper> at least twice a week." Gold· stein said Wednesday "At least once a week she stayed over· night with ham Dudzinski would have to go out and get a ham· burger while she was cooking dinner for John " In tl'stimony at the trial, both Cooper and Mrs. Dudzinski de· nied that they were romantically involved. On the day of the shooting, Dudzinski picked up divorce papers filed against him by his wife, Goldstein said. The couple had separated two weeks earlier and Mrs. Dudzinski had not al· lowed her huSband to visit the couple's two children. "The divorce and the denial of visitation was the main factor in his dr~ing that brought out all the anger" and prompted the sh ooting, said the attorney, adding: "He was drunk and didn't know what he was doing. H.e in- tended to say 'goodbye' and kill himself. Something she said set him off." Mrs. Dudzinski cried when the verdict was returned. Viet vetera~ falsely jailed • • • .. I from their stands ··Everyone here is a fr a ad thaL whole buildings will soon col- 1 apse," Najwa Shawaf. a Lebanese Red Cross nurse help ing in rescue operations said. "If this happens. we wi ll have a catastrophe." There were no immediate claims of responsibility for the blast, 'the latest against PLO targets in Lebanon since a car born b Sept. 17 killed 25 in Sidon. All previous blasts were claimed by the Front for the Liberation of Lebanon from Foreigners, but the PLO charged the group was an Israeli front. j -STEVE MARBLE , ~From Page A1 SAVERS DEBUT REACTIONS MIXED. • • LAWTON, Okla. <AP> -A businessm an and decorated Vietnam veteran was arrested on a charge of desertion and kept in military cust6dy for three days until his attorneys p roduced copies of his 1967 honorable discharge, officials said. A police s pokesm an . who declined to be 1dent1f1ed for security reasons, was unable to say how close the latest ex- plosion was to lyad's office. But he said guards at the PLO of ficial's three-story headquarters i n t h e I ow . i n co m e A r a'b University neighborhood dis· covered and defu~ed another car rigged with ~ore than 100 pounds of explosives a few minutes after the first' mid morning blast. ' !GUNS ... :law enforcement authorities • llowever, sufficient evidence }-1id exist to return Edwards to Jilate prison between 1970 and ~977 on a parole violation dwards had been paroled m ., 968 after serving five years on a konspiracy charge related to a ifobbery in the Bethesda area. i fn Ri vers ide County, in· ~·cstigators are attempting to de- ;terminc 1f Edwards may have \,been responsible for a Feb. 4 f hootmg in which a sniper fired ,at :i 13·year-old boy in a tthoolyard in Mira Loma. ' ~From Page A 1 in many :.tales planned to stay open late and open up Saturday and an some cases on Sunday, to give customers a chance to buy the All Savers at whichever is the higher rate. First National Bank of Boston planned to keep its 35 branche~ open until 7 p.m. l"riday to gi\'C customers a shot al either the ne~ or old rate The bank 1:-. run ning newspaper ads advising customers the new rate will be "maybe higher. maybe loy,er .. In Atl<1nla. customer!> were lined up to hat the savings desk this morning at Standard Federal Sa' ings & Loan Federa· lion. said s pecial services • • )---__..;;;,___ iSTORM LASHES COAST. ~California Edison said work. lcrews worked through the night in an attempt to re9tore power in Huntington Beach, Fountain ;valley, Costa Mesa and Newport f Beach. . f They said there were nine i circuit interruptions beginning ~al 2 a.m. and that by daylight to· ;day , there were still 3.000 ~customers without power. I Edison officials said Hunt· ingtl.1n B~ach and Westminster were rut hard. i Employe~s were ~orking this morning to restring 17 power lines knocked down a long Slater A venue just west of Beach Boulevard. another lightning flash at about 4 a.m. In the unincorpor!ted com· munities of Dana Point and Laguna Niguel, 4,000 homes were blacked out. In many communities, traffic signals were knocked out and burglar al.arms were triggered. P ol i ce in Laguna said 17 burglars alarms were set off. The rain, which reportedly turned to hail in areas of Santa Ana reached a thundering stage at about 3:30 a .m . and kept up a steady downpour for nearly an hour, weather officials said. Rain is expected tonight and early Friday coordinator Glenda Rochester. "Ir the number of calls we've gotten this week is any indica· 11on at all, the response should be lt'erncndous.'' she said John Moran, senior vice presi- dent of Rall1iQ'10re Federal Sav- in g:-. & l..o:.11P' Assoc1at1on. ~, pl'oplt• were waiting for the ~ rate und .. we expect the bulk of our act1,·1t\' to come tomorrow " In Nl'~ York, Variety rn agazine fon•ign editor Robert ll<1wkins was one of the first to buy an All SavC'rS certificate at a branch of East R1vl'r Savings Bank lie said the lax fr('c incen- tive told him Presumablv. vou l'an ·t lo:-.e ·· · Coast Guard Petty Officer Pat Gallagher said the storm was blamed for the wreckage of the 29 ·foot sailboat Wind Dance overnight on the rocks at Catalina Harbor. "lie broke his anchor and I s uppose that could be attributed to the storm ... he s<1id, adding that the one man _on board was rescued unharmed. Lightning al so .,parked brushfires in the Antelope and Santa Clarita vallevs and the Angeles National Forest, but flames were easily ex tinguished with th e aid of the rain: authorities said Five lines were downed in Westminster along Westminster Boule'(ard near Golden West Street. a spokesman said. Costa Mesa police said they ' believe a bolt of lighting struck their headquarters at Fair Drive and Vanguard Way al about 2:30 l'a.m. Firemen could find no im· mediate damage to the building, ; but police said their electronic J report equipment was blacked Kuwait oil camp bombed by Iran ~ K UWAIT CAP > Iranian r ~~ts ~':t::.e lightning strike ~ Costa Mesa officers a lso noted f that traffic s ignals were ren· warplanes bombed and set fi re lo a Kuwaiti oil installation 50 miles north or ..l{uwait City to- day. the Kuwaiti minister of state announced. lie said the1e were no casualtjes. dered inoperable along Newport ~Boulevard and 17th Streei by The minister, Abdul Aziz ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Thomas P Haley -.-,\,neit M1iO C"'4fllf l •et vti-. Ottllf• Robert N weed ... _. • ThOl"IH A Murph1ne ld '°' M1ett&el p H•Ncy __ ,,. Oo•~•Ot L Kat $. hultl o.... ..... 0per .. - Kfn"9ttl N OO<td•fd Jr C•t-...,0.. ... tet liffi.,d Scnutm1n ...... Ct*'-H LOO$ ~,..,. C.tOfA:.~ "'-... 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C)ri~ pel tivttt'"'f'4 ,,,.,. f\ ,._, UO W• ,.1 ftA, ,,,.., .. t P 0 l'<t• '"° t n\.f.1 'AIPW ( .,,,,_,,.,., • •h1it VOL. 7~ NO. 274 • llussein, said an a statement that Iranian jets hit the oil center at Umm Al A)Sh, close to the Iraqi border The raid started n fire that was brought under control later m the morning, the statement added Hussein said the Iranian Am· bassador to Kuwait, Ali Shami. /\rdakani was summoned to the Foreign Ministry where he was handed a protest note. The Irani.~ military com· mand in Te"Jjl{n. contacted by telephone by the Associated Press bureau in Beirut, Lobanon, said the Kuwaiti clai m was "a baseless report." Iranian Jets have attacked posHlons In Kuwait several times in recent months, claim· ing their pilots mlatook the Kuwaltl positions for Iraqi military taraet!l. Iran and Iraq have beea at war htce· Sep· tembcr 1880. In Dallas, Larry F. White, as- s i s tant vice president of Republic Bank, said sales of All Savers should draw about 250 customers today and the bank quadrupled its staff lo handle the demand. In Columbus, Ohio, Renee Haas, senior branch manager in the Buckeye Federal Savings and Loan office, said : "In the last 60 minutes, we have opened as many accounts as we normal· I) do in four days." The All Savers offers a max· imum tax exclusion of $1,000 for a single person and $2,000 for couples fil ing a joint return. Congress authorized the new savings instrument to revive the savings industry, which has seen billions of deposits now into the money market mutual funds. The government stands to lose billions of doUars in tax revenue that it would normally receive from interest income on funds placed in taxable alternative in· vestments. "He's not a deserter," John Long, public affairs officer at Fort Sill, near Lawton. said o( Roque Vela of Laredo, Texas. "He is cleared on that." Vela was released from the fort Tuesday. The Army originally said Vela had gone absent without leave on July 15, 1967. But Vela was fighting in Vietnam on that date and was wounded on July 23. Koop def ends right for post WASHINGTON <AP> -Dr. c: Everett Koop, under fire from women's rights activists and public health professionals. says an open mind and a career as a pediatric surgeon make him qualified to be U.S. surgeon general. "I believe my role as a clini· cian has enabled me to see the problems or larger segments of our population," Koop said in testimony prepared for today's It was not known wh ether the bomb was aimed at lyad's head- quarters or the adjacent offices of Lebanese leftis t militias aligned with the PLO. Although he strongly denies the charge, the 48·year·old lyad, a co-founder with Vasser Arafat of the PLO's main guerrilla group. Al Fatah. is reptued to have been the mastermind of th• .. Black September" terrorist group that carried out the 197~ massacre of 11 Israeli athletes at the Munich Oly01pics. Am bu lances with wailing sirens rushed victims from the scene of the blast as radios and loudspeaker vans appealed fot- blood donations oo both sides Of the so-called "green line" fron· tier that divides PoSl ·civil war Beirut confirmation hear~ng r----;:::===============:::c===================-====--==-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~--,-;- OCTOBER 6th. 7 · 9 P.M . OCTOBER 7th, 10 A.M . · 5 P.M. You won't want to miss this showing of the elegant Cybls Collection. Here are four beautifully crafted ngures that make up just a part of that collection. .. %nrtte." aw· hlQh. trom the "ChTidren to Cherish Collection.'' llmtted edition of 1.000. $725. .. ~nnce Brocade,'' Unicom Head. 14'h"hlgh. on baSe. from the "Fantasia Collection." Umlted edttton ot 500 . $2200 . ) s ·LAVICK'S nn. ..... ~1917 Whnt rM btsr s~rfnises bqin. f'_,. llllnd (714) 9"-IJIO• ~ = NaoC...... Loe~·~ Dlilgo•YI • .. jfic~ . Drummer eoy:· S" high. from the "Children to Cherish Collection." open collection. $295. .. ~-Eyre:' 1~~~ri-om the ''Jfortratts In Porcelain Col.lectk>n." ltmlted edmon at soo. $975. _.._ ______ ,.. . .............. Actress Catherine Bach appears to be topsy-turvy and cut in two as Magician David Copperfield reaches in to tickle what seems to be ~ feet. It was during a taping of an illusion in Los Angeles for a CBS special to be aired Oct. 26. Reagan doodles as d e bt rises While Republican con· gressional leaders talked with President Reagan about the defense budget and the nation's trillion-dollar debt ceiling, the president's pen was busy. · Were those notes he was taking? No, they were doodles -sketches of two male faces and one f.emale - on a White House notepad. He handed them to Senate Republican Leader Howard H. Baker J r. of Tennessee. and autographed the paper. Baker displayed them to re· porters and photographers after the meeting. Comedian Flip WIJson ap· peared in Torrance Superior Court a day early and a j udge scheduled an Oct 16 hearing for pretrial motions on drug possession charges. Wilson was arrested last March at Los Angeles fn· The Kimbell Art Museum in Forth Worth acquired the painting "Don P edro d e Barberana y Aparregui" by Spanish master Diego Velaz- quez, museum director Ed· mund P . Pills bury an · nounced. The painting is a full· length oil p ortrait o f a Spanis h court figure. H measures 78 by 44 inches and ternational Airport a nd charged with possession of cocaine and hashish oil. He has remained free on S2,500 bail. Wilson was star of NBC's .. Flap Will.on Show.. in the early 1970s was painted around 1632. "This 1s -1me of Velazquez' greates t paintings i n America and, among those, possi bl y hi s fines t full· length," Pillsbury said·. The painting was acquired from the private collection of the late Georges Wil4enstein, who obtained the work in Europe in the 1950s. The price wis not disclosed. Rain on w a y out? H 1111 Mid IN nurnber °' Eel IMlfl cu.Sloman ettoc-l>y wlde""Hd _,.,...,.._,_.ti-U0,000, Coastal ~ wl.. l>ladAMs r.,.119 from l\ltf • "''_ .... ,_~ CllM\ce of-" de<rffsl1111 to 20 percent tOfllgM--re<o P:rio.y. Partty cloudy IOfll9hl encl CIMrlnt P:rlday. Tiie wt-en -r• attrl~ to 119111"1"' wlklne trOMlonnon end _.11 .... Coa1tol -• lOftlQM, h'9fl ,. fl'rl· CS.y. lnlencl -~ ton19ht, hiell 11 Friday. l!IMW .... "9, ll9ht varloble WlfMj1 t11ro119h tonlglll except wot to IO<lthwnt I to 12 llnot1 .,..,_ With IO<ol wind llllSb POUMlle U to )0 knots In tllt vk lnlty of "'°""" Pf'• ,dieted ttwoll9fl tonight. Wetterly swell 1 to J fwt. Portly c._y with • fews~ tonlohf, Hlgll ....... bllftetecl tllo Sen 01o9o .,.. w...-, llltftt. knockl"I out -r llftft Md cvttlne e1eetrklty. for llP to_., '-Uri In 6,100 llCM'nM In SOf\ Ysidro, !Utlanll City and Bo<· ,.... $tlf1n9ll. Tllo otoctrkot 1torm knochd out tllo Son OI090 Pollco Oo119'11Mnt computer Md compulers •t. tllo N• tloftal '#eMIWr Station at l lndller9'1 Fleld, ,,.,.,.. .CD Inch of rein tell. V.S. aummary lOI ,.,,..._ commuters, meny of them IN to _... 11Ka11 .. eloctrlc alornt Cleekl dlclwl't 00 off, met wllll hlrthar fruatratlon OS at i.est 11"9 lrvcks lllldd9d Md crashed dlltlfto tllt mOf'nlftll. T1111ncttratorMs, h19" winds Ind llH¥Y roln llammertd southern Temperatures Mkll ..... Md ......... m WIKMsln I• dey. Ml<llleaft st-troopers phickod dllnns of -•sts from cor t-aP..AIMny vlrtuolly tf'e entire Detroit fr-•y ,....._ tysltM -~ wotor ~-of AIYIOrlllo lllllftdtrAllnM.. AIM¥11M DetrOft recofwcl t. tJ l11Che1 of rein Atlanta from l I.In. to s -Gr-1114>101 All•"" Cty wn clroftt!IN wltfl J.21 lllC,.,.I. Battlmor9 TM •••vein _,.. opontc1 ot llrml,..,... <>wot.so In COftlral Mlc.llieaft OS .,,. Bl.,,,arO Sfll•••-IU...-Weftt owr Ill 7-foot eolM tlOOdstaoe, dtputlft Mid. 9olton There also ,.., heavy rain In lrowns•lle nor'tlloflt llllnols, -.-rs and Bllffalo th11nderstorm1 <Ontlnued lrom Chortstn SC northern Ml1so11rl lo tht Texu ChorlslnWV PMhandlt. C....,o_ Showers and 11111ndersllowers Clllc..-, 11,,..,.., -IOUl .... m Florldl -Ctn<INIOll -rt Kattorwd fton\ Now Moxko to CIOVtland Sout!Mm <Allfomla. CA1111m11<11 Rain tell from nortlltrn MlnMsoto D•I·"' wth to tl1t ·-GrHt lakes, .,.., It 0o11¥tr lflOWod In Int«,......,_. Falla, Mini\. Ooa Molnn It ••• CIHr o•er m11c11 of Ille O.trolt .-!Malt -1tr OI tM nalloft, •ncl Dulllttl from tlW GrNt BMfft to the llOf1llom l!I Peso Rockies. H•rtfor<I Te"1Ptretvrn onM.incl tho nation Helena ••rly locl•Y ranged from JI In Lor•mlO, WYO .• to 11 Ill MetM\lrfte, Flo. Ml Lo P'<• SS 32 IS 56 .02 IS SJ 1.01 IS n 17 &1 '6 SS .~ .. 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The """" lled ......... of an CALIP:OllNIA lahrslleld Blythe Eureka II FrHn<> 03 Lancuter LO\ A1194!IH Maryhlllt N.-dlH Oa-iand )'1 Paso ROCllH 20 Red Btutf Reclwoocl Clly S.Cremento 01 5allna' Son OltOO Son Fr •nc: IKO Sonia Barl>Ma 5tooton Thermal Ulllah .OA Barstow Bl9BHr 81\hOj) C1t1llt11 la-t Arrowi-d lono Beach Monro•I• Newport BH<h .32 Ontario Palm Sprlnvs Pesacleno 5.ttl Bernardino OS Sen Jost Tllloe Valley Acapulco Ber- le<mlldl Boeola Curacao F,...port Gvadol•I•• G~'- 71 " .. 65 52 11 " 13 11 .. • .., ,, II 57 12 Ml " .. .. 56 17 SJ l l n n .. 71 67 10 St 17 •• 63 .. '° M 6S 4l A6 13 43 70 60 76 M 114 st n St ,, S9 .. " ,. st 12 61 •• so 67 31 "' ,, • " 10 ,, tO ., tO .JO .IJ .06 Lo 11 ,, 70 4l 71 n ,. u lllCll of rain°" La~ bf I•·"'· ..,. ... '-"""' off, .... "'-'leMI ........ 5iwvlco ... -........ Slln, moon, tides ttowt . Siie H id Ille clty'a lnl -lililer'tlfllt11~1wc1en ............ ............. lltfltn ... ,..,..,. ..... aton In ti yo on, .. So11thtr11 ~""1119 ~--0.. ....,.._,.. "-" .... of ... ..,,,. lllOt ....... ................. -.. ,,....,..._.,..._. ...... , 1111111 tllt a-" ret11 II ~Mt •ltftt.,.. 1' llt<Unt or Ion"'"°'· tM WHllW llntco Mid. H .... _.. ·~·--·· ...,,... ..... ..., ........... ~ . ' We're Listening ••• What do you like about the Dally Pilot? Whal don't you like'! Call the number below and your messaae will be recorded, transcribed and delivered lo the appropriate editor. The same 24-hour answering service may be.used to record )et· ters to the editor on any topic Mailbox contributors must include their name and telephone number for verification. No circulation calls, please. Tell us what's on your mind 642•6086 .A 2 6 a s 4 ----- Orange Coast DAILY PILOTrrhursday, Octob'r 1. 1981 H/F Edwards call def ended ~hief public defender says coitact with suspect ethical By FRE DEKICK St:HOEMl!:HL he wanted to. Edwards called arrest warrant l~ued Sept. 22 Ol .. Delly...._,._ about two hours later, Giannini by South Orange Co untv Orange County Public said, and asked for represent&· Municipal Court Judge Blair Defender Ronadd BuOer says his llon. Burnette office was ethical and foll owed Sheriff Gates claimed in com· Gates conlucled following the law when contacting Thomas ments to reporters Tuesday that Butler's' press conference, said Francis Edwards followina his the public defender's entry into t he public defe nder's office arrest ln Maryland in connection the ·case resulted in Edwards should not have ·become lo· with the slaying or a Lake declini ng to give further state· volved in the case prior to Elsinore girl shot at a Cleveland ments to investigators and de· Edwards' return to California. National For~st campgr?u~d. cid~ng ~o fight extradition to "What they've done is restrict R espondin g to c r1t1cis m Cahforma. . . . us from doing our job," Gales leveled by Sheriff-Coroner Brad But 1 e r s a Ld d 1scuss1 o n s .,,. . · d He declined to reveal how Gales, Butler ~iled . a 1977 6t~te between Giannini and Edwards ::;:~c·h information Investigators Baro~ Californ1~ opinion holding w~re prot~c~ed by the attorney-had obtained fro m Edwards that. 1t ls not improper for a client privilege and that he prior lo Giannini ·5 telephone public defender to make contact would not comment on them calls with a person accused of murder "If Mr. Gates wants to speak · to determine if the person on all these things and he's The she riff said the infor · qualified for and d esires made a number of erroneous m ation was given voluntarily services of a public defender. statements to the press I'm by Edwards after being advised Butler said De puty Public not going to respond,.. Butler "several times" of bis rights. in· Defender Michael Giannini was said eluding the right to have an at- d o in g just that whe n h e Butler said he and his staff toroey telephoned Maryland authorities had no qualms about contacting Gates also said he didn't put Monday in an attempt to reach Edwards because there was a muc h stock in Butler's use of a Edwards. 37, a former Costa "99.9 percent chance that he stale bar opinion to back up the Mesa resident. would ·be our client" based on claim that contact with Edwards Giannini saidlhis first call to factors that would indicate was appropriate. Gates pointesi Edwards was made mope than Edwards could not afford ~ out that such opinions do not six hours after Edwa rds' arrest private attorney. have the force of law. by Maryland authorities and two Those factors, Butler said, in· Butler conceded at the outset Orange County Sheriff's Depart.. eluded the fact Edwards was liv· of the press conference that he ment investigators. That call ing out of his truck, had .recently has received several calls from was intercepted by one of the in· been divorced and had no steady persons critical of his offi ce's vestigators who, Giannini job. actions. claimed, refused lo tell Edwards Butler said Edwards is far "One indicated that had I been about it. more than just a possible sus· <Jn elccte~ official, ther:e wouJd. Giannini said he htter called peel in the shooting death of Va · have been an instant recall , .. the jail facility wh~re Edwards nessa lberri, l2, al the Blue Jay Butl~r said Unlike the sheriff, was being held and left a campground 20 miles east of San who is elected. the public d~· message for Edwards to call if Juan Capistrano, because of an fender is CJppointed. ), • silverwoods t45 F.ASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH 644-2424 Pure wool vested suits. Stripes. plaids. herringbones. solids. Includes designer names. Reg. 250.00 now 209.90. Our most famous brands suits. Reg. 395.00·425.00 now 339.90. Pure wool sportcoats. Reg. 135 .00 now109.90. Wool flannel slacks. Reg. 47.50-57.50 now 39.90-46.90. Raincoats with zip out liners. Reg. IO?.OO now 84 .90. .. t s a ... H/F Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfrhursday. October I , 1981 mffiuurnrn Anti poverty agency kill'ed by cutbacks '" WASKINGTON <APJ The Community Services Ad· ministration, which once dJrect· ed the nation's war on poverty. died today. At age 17. it had been ln ill fis· cal health for yeari.. never quite recuperating from the dismem- bering It took from the Nixon ad· ministration In 1973 Solidarity tvarru of food rioting GDANSK. Poland <API A top Solidarity leader urged "radical cuts", in Polish defense spending todb and another un· ion activis t warned that rood riots will erupt soon and tear the country a pa rt l'nless the in· dependent labor federation takes full control or the economy. Reagan announces AWACS sale plan WASHlNGTON (APl The Reagun administration formally told Congress today 1t intends to ,;ell Suudi Arabia sophisticated AW ACS radar planes But a knowledgeable source said the notification did not contain the compromi::.c some senators have said is needed lo save the deal from congressional defeat. Less than an hour after the formal notification. Secretary of State Ale(<ander M. Haig Jr. met io private with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, but the source said Haig could not tell the committee that the Saudis have agreed tQ long-term joint U.S.-Saudi manning of the planes. Reagan signs debt ceiling bill WASHINGTON tAPl The ,.,. ......... KIDS ACT AS PROTESTERS BlaC.'k .\ment·un hm.., ... 1 ;rnd \\ 11 h h;1tk~ to thl· South .\fri<:an Drakt•n-.hl'l"J.! Bo~.., Choir dunnJ,! («111<.'l'rl \\'l11n<.•-,da.'. ;.it .John F K1.:n1~~·cl~ ('t•ntt·r lor t ht• Pl•rtor mrng .\ri... 111 \\ a-,h111gton. I> ( I he l1m.., \\ l'l°I' prnmpt<.•d h.' lh<.'1r INtdt•r-, to d1anl ..,fo,l!<.1 n.., uga1n~t S.1ulh \lnt·;1 'I Tiny Main: town gets jump on buy of. new· Ml-Savers ... BAR HARBOR. Maine <AP> Ea1er to get a jump on their· countrymen, a few 'reaidents of this small Yankee town turned ' out early today a t New England's s mallest savings and loan for the opening sale of the All-Savers Certificate. The tax-sheltered Investment, designed as a saJvation for t.he savings and loan Industry and a means to boost America's sav· ings account, got a warm recep· lion at midnight over hot doughnuts and coffee at the tiny Bar Harbor Savings & Loan As· sociatlon. 8 ar Harbor hotel owner Bernard "Sonny" Cough, 54, plunked down $7,945 .22 to become the first person in the continental United States to buy an AU-Savers Certificate. "l don't stay up this late for no reason." Cough said · 'll 's definitely going to be a big boost for housing," said Lee Freedman, a Southwest Harbor antiques dealer. who put up $1,000 for his certificate. The savings and loan had closed as usual Wednesday af terooon. but r.copened several houri1 later when reporters. pro- spective buyers and townsfolk were invited tn out of the chilly air for snack1 r-and lo wait for the stroke of ,midnight and the first sale of ihe 12.61-percent In· terest, one-year bond. ~n Guam. Phil Flores. presl· dent of the Guam Savings & Loun Association. said he reg· istered the very first U.S. sale. making out a certificate to e l ementary school teacher sa le came at 7 p .m . EDT Wednesday, which was 9 a.m. today in the U .S . is l and possession. Bar ttarbor Savings & Loan, with $6 million in assets. lost between $300,000 and $400,000 in the last year because. rather th an keeping money in a passbook savtng_s account, peo. pie have been •·putting the money into these money market funds that pay a much higher percentage of interest.·· said Norman Shaw. the secretary treasurer. Shaw hopes the All ·Savers program will lure deposits that can be converted to residential housing loans. The statements appeared cer- tain to infuriate the Soviet-led Warsaw Pact further and came as the union announced that L ec h W a l esa wou ld be chaJlenged by three other can· didates for Solidar1ty ·s leadership. Social Security action delayed fed <.•rul government can go more than SI trillion in debt for the first time, a fl l1 r President Heagan signed legislation rais· ang the borro\.\ing limit from S9!l5 b1lliu11 Hitch feared opening Lindbergh files_ • in WASHINGTON !AP l The Senate has post pont.>d indef1mte· ly action on a ball to restort.' tht.' mi nimum Social Security benefit of $122 monthly for near ly 3 million Americans and permit mingling of three trust funds to keep the ret ire ment re ser ve from going broke next year. The House already has passed a bill restoring the minimum benefit, which was eliminated in July as part of Pre s ident Reagan's massive package of budget ·cuts. t•nc;ter tht· new limit the gov crnmcnt now can go in debt up to SI 079 trillion A trillion i!, 1.000 h1llwn . or 1.000.000.000.UOO Khomeini l>ehind /rail plane crash? BEIHL'T . Lebanon IAPl A Tehran newspaper reports that techni('al fallure cau~ed the plane.• crash that killed four top Iranian military men. but an ex· tied guerrilla chief suggests Avatollah Ruhollah Khomeint ordered the plane sa bota~ed. It's a new direction .. a totally new approach to comfort Glovesott, all-kidskin moccasins with a cushioned arch. Designed to take you places quickly comfortably and fashionably Available in sizes 5 10 11 m narrow and medium w1dlhs. FLEMINGTON. N.J . 1AP1 The New J t.'r scy attorney general's office -.ays there may be a hatch 1n opening secret fil es on the Lindbergh kidnapping case to the widow of the man ex- ecutt•d m 1936 for the abduction a nd murder of the fam e d aviator's son. Gov Brendan By rne on We dne!>cla y urged the di s- closure. saying there is "no need to preser ve any security aspecr · from Anna Hauptmann, widow of Bruno Richard Hauptmann. ··we'll do everything we can. sa i d Thomas Cannon . a spokesman for Attorney General James Zazzali. but he said slate laws may bar disclosing some police files and opening the records may set a: precedent for more recent criminal investiga- tions. Byrne said in Trenton that he ··would urge" the records be made available "in an orderly fashion and in accordance with applicable law ... Lawyers for Mrs. Hauptmann fil ed a freedom of information lawsuit and vowed to seek a new trial to presLclajms her husband was innocent when he died in the electric chair for what became known as "the crime of the ('entury." Hauptmann was tried in 1935 and convicted in the same rural courthouse here where t he lawsuit was filed. The 20-month-old boy disap· pearcd in 1932 from the family's es t a t c in Hopewel I where C harles Lindbergh, the first man to Oy solo across the Atlan- tic Ocean, and his wife. Anne Morrow Lindbergh. li ved The first court action by the 83·year-olrl Mrs. Jlamptmanh of Yeadon. Pa .. attempts to force s tate police to free more than 90.000 pages of files aod reveal physical evidence. Despite Byrne's action. the case ··will stay pending," said Robert Bryan. a San Francisco attorney representing Mrs. Hauptmann ··Lots of records have disap· peared from under lock and key. I hope they don't continue to dis· appear:· Bryan s aid. "I 'II really be pleased if that's what is done,"' s aid Seymour Weinblatt, a local lawyer representing the widow. ··our ultimate goal is to af· firm the innocence of Mrs . Hauptmann ... Bryan said. " TAX FREE ANNUAL INTEREST!* 1'54 f4SttOH ISLAMD, HEWrOll'T RACH 17141 '44··42ZJ #1.7 MAIH STREIT, ~HAWIU lllJI 211·5'71 ,I ', '-/ 5/,.,Du s(4f~r /9 s~ Come ond be enclionted with Huggins Amolfi Collection e;\~ Dress Sandal, The shapely sling in a sleek sculptured.style. Black or Navy Kid similar style in ... Taupe or Black Lizard. ~ t~~ SHOES · Newpo,rt Beach ... 759-9551 .. Commercial Credit's avers Thrift Certificates. Upto$2,000taxfreeinterest Plusacas~bonus. The gteatestwayfor~andAmenca . to figlit 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 · tym ... and up to $1,000 tax free for individual returns. The interest rate is thetµghestallowed by law. This high rate is guarantee<t for theone-yeartenn of the thrift certificate. And Commercial Credit will add still another gteat incentive ... $10 cash bonus forthriftce~fi· cates from~l.500 fo..15,QOO. $20 cash bonus.Jar. thrifCcertificates of $5 000 or more. So what's good for America 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 $2 000 tax free interest an - nually-plus cas~ just for opening your account. Don'tputitoff. Usetheattachedcoupontoapply for Commercial Credit's great All-Savers Ttuift Certificates and YOU and UNCLE SAM will have a In the name\sl"of __________ _ My Signature ___________ _ Co-Owner Signature _________ _ Account Addre S----------- City, _____ State _____ Zip ___ _ My Social Security/Tax 1.0.n ______ _ PhoDe-----"""~------i:------ .. . 5 -./' Oraoge Coast DAILY PILOTfThurtday. October 1. 1981 H/F AS I . Brown vetoes controversial 'new cities' hill . . SACRAMENTO <AP> -Gov. EdmuN.t Brown Jr. bas vetoed the hotly debated "new cities" bUI to set up a commission with the power to authorize five new COJJ'I muniUes. Brown ~lso reported Wednes· day the a1'1ling or measures bar· rln1 politicians from usinc cam· palgn donations for retirement pay or other personal purposes, and discouraging environmental suits against J<Jw. and moderate· income ho\ising projects. In u page-lone veto message, the Oe!mocratic ,overnor said the "new cities' concept had "considerable merit," but the bill was "too abrupt and too sweeping to be approved." The measure, AB893 by As- sem blyman Mike Roos, D·Los Angeles, would create a seven-m ember New Communities Commission which would have pl.anning and regulatory power o\ler the new developrnents. functions now held by cities and countils. _ . ll was supported b y de · velopers, in 'Particular Nathan Shapell of Beverly Hills,. who plowed more than $51 ,000 into state campaign coffers during the 1981 session'. ll was opposed by environ· mentalists and local government officials. Supporters said the measure was a way lo provide more low· and moderate-income housing Al least a quarte r of the housing in each new community would h11ve to meet tha\ qualification. But critics saw It as a way to get around loca( I and use · restrictions and growth controls. ShapeH.1cl<nowledged· thal the Roos bffl could apply to a stalled project h e proposed near Thousand Oaks . But state Treasurer Jess Unruh, who would head ihe new commission. said he would not consider an application covering that land. Brown said he vetoed the m e asure ror four reasons: it guve too much power to an ap· pointro commission. contained inadequate guidelines . could place a financial burden on eJC· isling towns and public agen· cies, and gave the Legislature "the essentially executive func· lion" of appointing a. majority of the commission. "Under this meas ure, vast and uncons trained power is transferred lo an appointed, not e lected, commission which would make most of the basic \ decisions regarding es ta bllsh· me nt of ·new towns'," Brown said. "The new community itself , 1 would have none of the usual 11,1 powers to regulate land use and b•, planping. Home rule . .is a pre· ,10 cious democratic herilall?e . . .. 1 The Lcgl•lature can override , "> Brown's veto with two-thirds in 1 ,., both houses, but opponents said . ri 'they thought such a move was im unlikely. Design ·error may delay Diablo opening - -..?. l'l .} 10J SAN LUIS.OBISPO (AP> -As the last protesters arrested at the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant demonstration pre· pared to head t\ome, engineers were trying to gauge the extent of a design erN1r that could de· lay fuel loading al the facility for se\!eral weeks. Low-power testing at Unit 1 of the Pacific Gas and Electric Co. plant, approved Sept. 21 by the Nuc lear Regulatory Com · mission, was postponed after it was learned that five seismic pipe supports al the unit were mistakenly built based on specifi cations for the as.yet un· completed Unit 2 because of a diagr am mixup . evidence or "a ny criminal act" in alleged political activities in· volving members of Gov. Ed· mund G. Brown Jr 's staff. John Van de Kamp s aid Wednesday after a 2'-'l·month probe into alleged destruction of evidence that no member of the governor's staff will be pro· secuted. Airline merge r agreement ended was the second attempt by Western and Contine ntal, both based in Los Angeles. to merge. The consolidation would have created the nation's se,~nth largest airline. Briton held in yacht sttJi ndle SAN DIEGO !AP> A 33· year·old Briton is being held for extradition to England where Scotland Yard has been seeking him for three years in connec· lion with an alleged yacht swin· die. Fly checkpoints taken dotvn LOS GATOS (APJ For the first time in three months. California motorists can travel around the San Francisco Bay ar<'a without fear of running on- to a roadblock a1 med at seizing contraband fruit. The slate on Wednesday aban· doned the 12·week old roadside checkpoint program designed to block the spread of Mediterra· ne an fruit m es from infested areas. Cops cleared , .. ·q~ mi •111 I l• J ·b l•r) 11., ; /I I I '"'· Brow~'s staff cleared in probe LOS ANGELES CAP l -The county district attorney has an· nounced his office found no L o·s ANG EL Es ( A p ) - WeSlfU'n AirUnes, board of direc- tors has voted to terminate its merger agreement with embal· Wed Continental Airlines, which has all but lost its fight to beat back a year-long takeover bid by Houston-based Texas Jnterna· tional Airlines. According to federa l court documents presented at a hear· ing Wednes day, David Carl Michael Pearce is wanttd in England for alleged fraud in· volving $132,000 between 1976-78. including selling a yacht twice lo different buyers. Pearce was ar· rested by marshals at his Linda Vista apartment in San Die~o. LOS ANGELES t AP > The Lo§ Angeles District Attorney's office has determined that two Compton officers acted in self. de fense when they fatally shot an unarmed youth after a high· speed car chase in January. .... .,..._ /I Shores Interiors a'*"ttal • C••"'erd al :._. 26SO Avon St . ..._ Newport Beach ......,.,. 642.2255 ~- Truckload Plant Sale Huntlngton Center daily thru Sat. 1S varieties direct- from-grower, large 6 " $2.88 "This has been a bitter disap· pointment." said Dominic P . Renda. president and chief ex· ecutive officer of Western. It IRONSIDE SECURITY SERVICES Phofte 8-1 2 A.M. 631-0679 STOP BURGLARS! INSTAil BURGlAR ALMM 9585.00 Complete • 3 openings protected • Central monitor • Audible horn • Panic buttQn • Complete Tnstallation • Add1t1onal sensors $65 · Pay No Income Tax In 1981, 1982, 1983 And Legally Recover " . ' Taxes Paid In 1978, 1979, 1980 You can invest dollars already spent , are currently spending and will spend in the future~~xes , into tax sheltered ipvestments that : (Tl- a) average a 510 7c tax write-off b ) are highly profit motivated and c > have a history of positive cash flo w and appreciation ~- Lear n how this can be d9ne by attending a com- plimentary 90 -minute semina r -enjoy some refreshments and gain more fin ancial knowledge in 90 minutes than you have been f'.lble to acquire in a , lifetime. LIMIT.ED SEATING Call Now To Schedule Your Reservation 759-1401 Gerqld L, Komk, Fiflmacial Snvices 359 San Miguel Drive, Suite 110 • Newport Beach, CA 92660 f114 J 159-HOJ • HEROES HONORED \llrt•cl <'.11r1m .... 1 111 Indio !1•11 .ind ,.1 llo\\ ~.\l"I Swafford 111' f'alrn Spnlll.!'--..md1 · pro11dh :d,,.r ,.,. ;•I t'vl\ ing 1 hl' "tall' \kd.il 111 \".ll11r d11111ll! ,1 1·1·rt·1111111" 111 ti S;.H'l'&Jmt•nto l'ht•\ n• ... t'll•'d 1hr1·1· \llllfh, lrnmtrhnrnm:.: 1•ar -<; rwu r Corona 111 \11gu .... 1 • · 1 WONDERFUL WOK WORKS From Korea The essentials for the pleasures of stlr·fry cookery. STAINLESS STEEL WOK WITH COPPER· COATED BOnOM 14" dla. 7.99 STAINLESS STEEL OVEA·THE·BURNER WOK STAND 10Vt" dia. 3.59 STEM OLASS HOLDER RACK OR TRAY From Taiwan Space·saver design to store stem glasses. Holds 12 glasses E~M~M;nmt 2~1:~ V ·WJ;-J!Jl!!b!![P 3· dia. ~... : "· :: . bases. : HEAT RESISTANT CLEAR GLASS JENA TEAPOT From East Germany Beautifully designed glass teapat is complete with glass strainer~nfuser FROM OUR CLOTHING SECTION 100% conoN BATIK QUILTED VEST From Pakistan Comfortable vest 1n splashy ba11k deslg has mandarin necklines. side slits and Quilted warmth. Russet Color r::::;:;;~~~~~-;:; =:::::::i.--__J'-""T""SO-L-ID_B_R_A_SS_N_A_P_K_IN-r--i~M-O_LD_E_D-SO_L_l_D_B_R_A_SS_---1 with Tan Design CLEAR ACRYLIC KITCHEN S·M·L 8.99 ACCESSORIES From RINOS From India PLANTERS From India Taiwan and Hong Kong Nicely polished con· Stunning square or round plant· EMBROIDERED Clear acrylic helps keep tours to add shine to ers to hold plants or treasures. COITON I =:=:=:=;;=::=:;;::~~I recipes In clear view a table. A-II 3• deep KURT A I'. and makes everyday All 2· wide SQUARE WITH From India seasoning fun I ROUND COPPER BAND~-~~~~~ Classic OR OVAL s• sq. 7.33 styling • 17 SECTIONS 9'.4·. >< 13'1•" 5.99 14 SECTIONS NATURAL WOOD COLLECTOR BOXES From Japan To display miniature treasures. Boxes will hang vertically or horizontally. 8'A" >< 10'1•" 4.99 COLOSSAL 1.17 10 99 with em-each 7• SQ • bro1dery ROUND WITH HAMMERED COPPER a· sq. 14.65 detail. 1.57 ROUND s· dia. 5.55 1· dia. 8.33 a· dla. f1 .88 MINIATURE METAL FRAMED PICTURES OB MIRRORS From Italy Ornate. molded frames with glass· covered miniature or mirror to hang on a wall or decorate a mantle. MINIATURE PICTURES · 4 '/t • long .99 each """"'~-NATURAL CANE CHROME PLATED WHIPPER From Taiwan Wh1p111 Whip it well! From Japan Set an 1nv1t1ng, informal table! Dishwasher safe. FORK, KNIFE. SOUP SPOON & TEASPOON Tog• long 12" 99 • each piece long 49 Jewelry • ~~,."1 Section BURI MIDRIB ~g~ BASKETRY From Mexico CYLINDER BASKETS TABLES OR PLANT rom The Phlllpplnes "SUN· BURsr· ~-::..---From The PhiliP· pines 4 SIZES 11. to ta• dia. 1ov,• to 18'/J" deep ~~~I 2.'19 to 5.99 ~ 3 SIZES Ille drum design goes well all through the q~~AlifL:"ouse. Hand· woven burl midrib for center· piece or wall decor. OVAL W.ASH BASKET is· x 23· 2Va • to 4" detk> 5 SIZES i4• to 21-..· di•. 10" dMP 43" dla. 2.99 3.89 NATURAL WOOD FOLDINO ARM CHAIR a ROCKER Flom Yugoslavia Orlglnal STOL design chairs are well-constructed, durable and comfortable. 12'/t. ' 14" dta. dla. 1.73 ·2.59 HARDWOOD a CANVAS FOLOINO SAFARI CHAIR From Singapore Comfortable clasalc Is at home on the hearth or In the Junof9. Natural frame with brown or beige canv11 or walnut finish frame with beige canv11. DIRB TLY ·ACROSS PROM SOUTH COAST PLAZA • IUIHTU WHT Of HllTOl AT 13t3 SUNFlOWD (TAil lltllTOL EXIT OFF 40S FREEWAY) Vl1A • •AITD CM_. f flO m.EPltOM O" •All fN!OI • AlllU"" PMIM Sturdy, durable designs go nNlly neutral lf'I any dee«. OPEN CIRCLE OR CIRCLE DESIGN 16Va • to 19"'. tall _O~N 7 DAY' A WEEK MOI. TO Fiii. 11 P ••• llT.111.M.--. n l.M.-IP.•. . .. .. .,., • '· 1 I I I • • le • ,.. • WF Orango Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, October 1, 1981 • Huntington 'beauty report' premature 1\ t'l't•t•ntlv rt'lrased ll'dl'ral r<>port has td~nt1ficd Huntin~ton Be~H·h a:-. thl· t•n•so1·<.· or the Orungc• Coa:-.t, lurgl'ly because of its C'oastal oil opl'rat 100." While the rl0 J.>0rl isn ·1 com pkttily off ba:-.l'. 1t:-. l'onrlus1ons don't provide a fars1ghtt>ci vtt.'\\ Thl' n•port also i:-. sul>Jt'<'l 1v1>, hao.;rd laq~t·ly on the.• 1.·astwl opin ions of two <·on:-.ulta'ht!'> h1rPd hv I he C .S fiurcau of Land Ma nag~. menl Gruntt•cJ. the offshore a nd on shore oil fatilities in Huntington Beach aren't attractive Hut th<.• report':-. authors apparent!~ "'en· ltnllw1u·c• that bv the end of rwxt \'l'<H'. 011 oµcrat(irs must l'l•:an up l hl·t r aC't . Ul'<:ording to a n'<'l'llt I~ P•l""l'd 1.·11~· ordinun<'l' 1\ttording tu lhl' onlmantl' ;di exposed pipL•lines mus l be <·overed and all pumps mu:-.t ht: paintl•d and '\C'l'l'l'lll'd with frm· tng and lands<·ap111~ The hluffs O\'l't'looktng Bob.a ('hita Stall' Be<t<:h now an· c·m · l't·ed wilh oil pumps and l'Xpost-d a nc1 rusl.\ pt pel llll'S Rul In next :-.um mer. l'il' of f1t1<Jls sa~· th<.• piµl'ltne:-. wiil bl· (·on·recl uncl tht• hlurf-; \nll ht• IJndsl·ttpl0cl \\1th 1:!1 """· 'hnths and trt'l'" lo becoml' a sea-view purk The ft>den1I report has been <.iCt'UM!d of being st•lf -serving b l~ c a us t• 1 l w i 11 be us c d tu evuluall' \\htch 1:trl•as would have th<.• leal'-t lo lost• by dl•velopment nf nff shon· federal 011 tracts. The th eo r y, federal aulhontie:-. :-.av. is that those arcus with l<)w scenic value gt.•ncrall~ have little to lose by 011 Ol'\'t•lopment. 1t 's ironic that most of lh<.• l'rtt1t'1:-.m of Huntington Beach '~ Sl'l'llH' \'alue b that the oil opera l1011" an.-ugl~ More oil develop nH.•nt is n 't going lo help. Th<.• c·on:-.ultanb also didn't ltkl' the c·1t\ ·._ latk of natural bluffs or riitling hill~. Others \\'()Uld dbagl'l'C, . The n .•port gives Huntingto n lkach tht• lowest federal beaut,. marks in lhl· count\'. But man\· n•s1cl<'nt:-. wam a s<.;tond opinion pref cl'abl~· m·xt .\'t•ar after the t•1ty 's hl1<.1 utifkatio11 program has t'o'·.erecJ up some of lhe unsightl~. but 1mport;,int. oil operations . \nd llw report b~ the cons tilt· a nt ~ ,..., 011l' whit·h the Board of t. .. 111<1 '.\1,utagl'nll'llt ought to lo:-.e Athletes need study Hunting ton Ih·at h l 'n111n ll1gh Sthool U1strict offtt·1ab h.i\'l' dt•l'idNI that if :-.tudents \\ant lo µal'l1tq>.1te 1n c.tfll·r "dwol aC't I\ 1tlt·s -.uch as "IXH'h. marchtnf.\ h:.ind or pep :-.quad. I ht·~ must maint:11n a minimum .1 l' t.1clemit· an ·rag<· At p r l' :-. l' n t the <I'" t rt l'I d1H'"n·1 ha\t• <Jn .tl'adt'mll· it· q111 r<'ntl•nt St'hool uffil't,tl" ;in· "lud,\'111g what ll'\'l'I should lw ck man d l' d n f t"< t r .1 t• u r J'I <· u I ~11 part1c.·1p,tnb Thl• main thru-.t ol thl' l'On n·µt apparently is aimed al 'ilU clt-nt al hlt'tPs Tht' other after "<.'hoot <.1el 1 \'it il'" l'll\'t•retl 111 th<.• propp.";il \\<'f't• .tCldcd al a n•l'ent "('hoot bo.1rd nwetrng almost J'\ an aftt•rthought It's a good and time!~ idl•:t l11r school off1ctiils to clt•mancl . 1C'arlem1c ac·1·ountabilil\' from ~1 udt•nt athll'les a nd othl'r~ LaH'b'. it Sl'l'ms th;,it ..,onw athll'lit programs 1n tht:> cl1~tl'1t·t 111 ... ·' b l' () \ l' r s h u d 0 \\' i ll g <·l..i""room t•dutatwn This ha..., become a coneern l>l•c·ause of rontro\'ers1es sparked b~ slucJ<.•nts ''ho transfer to dif f t'rt·nt schoob to plc1)' sports Althoug h the district doe~n·t h<1' e an ac·ademic requirement lhl' C I F dm•s rcqull'l' high ~chool athll•te~ to at leJ:-.t ht.• passing f'ou r cl assc:" Out this i~n·t \'t.·r~ stringent '' hl·n it ·s n•alized that the state l'ltil' alltl\\S pluycrs with rour ' o·· grades to pla~ sports It s1.0l'm!'. the C l F require· mt•nt tsn 'l t•nough. \ distri<.'l sl'loulct be able to l•rl uc· all' 1h -;t udent~ wc·ll enough to p:.i~s c·ourSl'S wi1 h un avcrugl· ··(..'"grade If a studt.>nt falls bt·lm\ a C" ll'vt•I. he should spl'n<I his ttm<.' ,1ftC'r !-.l'holll doing homework . ratht•r lh<tn playing sports or t•hcering on lhl' tea m Campaign funding curbs . . H untington lkach off1t·1.i1 .... ha\'l' n·plact•d <Jn unl'nforccuhlr <·Jm1w1gn nrdtnanCl' "ith <.1 nt'w doc.·um(•nt that appan·nth \\ 111 1-.eep tampaign donation:-. ;rnd "Pt'nd111g from ,l:!l'lt111g out 11f hand The previou" ordinance.• w<1:-. rult"d uncnforC'l'a ble h\' the Oranf!e Count .' D1stnt:I ,\t torne~··c.; offtcg bt'cause 11 was '<Jgucl~· written. Thal m·dinancc also sought lo limit 1nd1\'idual donations to can- d1rlall's for c·it \' otf1<·e The goal of the ordinance. 1:-. lo msun• that a randidnte doesn t l'nd up O\\ mg a political <icht to -;omeorw who donatei-le1rge amounts of ruo.,h lo his <.'amp.1i gn. Tlw ne'' o nhnance ltmth 1n dl\'tduttl donations to S300. st•ts a Sl.500 :-.pending limit on poltllt:.il adwn t·ommiltN'~ working for a cand11h1lt'. and rcqu1rl's that can <l1datt''> report expenclitures and donations in exc;,,ess of $200 within \8 hours before e lect ion day. Besides apparently being en· • loret•able. the new ordmance 1s ~up<.·rior to the older one· because 1t :-.ct~ limits on political action <"<>m mittecs and requires pre· l'leclton public disclosure of a nrndidatc 's campaign income ;.tnd l'xµenditures The former law dtd neither. The new ordinance was ten· lali\'el~ approved b~ all seven council m embers. According to procedure. it will be voted on ,1gain following its second read · 111g next month . If approved. as appears like!~. it will become law :10 clays latl'4 Tht-ordinanC'e also h as won the approval of a citizens· group that has activelv lobbied for <0am p:11gn reform for the pas t three yto;.ir:,,. following th<.• 1978 election which saw one political action commitl<'l' donate m cxces:; of s:m.ooo to a s latt-of five can· rl1datcs for City Council. Next April. four City Council eats will be up for election . as will the position of City Attorney. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. other views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is lnvlt· ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 9262fH>560. Phone C71·0 642-4321. L.M. Boyd I Line of succession Q. Law prohibits all those In llne of presidential succession from being together at one time. So which of President Ronald Reagan's cabinet was rcrused admittance when the President gave his first address to Congress? A. Secretary of Education T.H. trett wasn•t refused admittance, ex- actly . At the end of the cabinet suc· cession line, he agreed to stay away. that's all. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat P11Dll\IW'd .... ,. cwy of '"" v .. , ~· 3)0 W•A 8•v !.I , Co\I°" Mlr\I A04jr.,\ COHHllOf\O.nt• IO 8o• IMO, C0\14 ~.CA '2•7' , _,,.,,,-_ - .... The novel "The Young Visitors:'? sold more t han 200.000 copies in 1909 or thereabouts. No youthful wtiter should forget that. It was the first and last lengthy literary work of Daisy Ashford, age 9. You know those miniature T-~alabelle horses that only stand .nbout 36 Inches tall? Takes eight or them to eat as much as a full-sited horse. Thomas P. Haley Pu bl I sher Thomas A. Murphlne Editor Barbara Kreibich Editorial Page Editor ABSWJTELY! lHHlE ~N'TA~H~ AIRLRAH WIT~IN 200 Mllf.S! • • No place k>r ex-presid~nts LONDON -When American fighters shot down two Libyan Jets over lht· M e d iterranean las t month . an American living here said "I don't ~t!t it. R eagan wants to put nf'utron weapons in Europe. bul he knows Euro peans are nervous that he'd use them for no reason -that he's trigger happ} • So we go ahead and start shooting do\\ n planes for the hell or 1t It makl's you wonder where Nixon is whl'n we need him." Richard Nixon. in ract. IS in a hard Ill rind government issue office 1n lo\\ er Manhattan. In a long conversation we had there recently. I learned that the rormer president does tndet'd have strong and intelligent views about '>uch things as the defense of Wl•stern pull' 11\ t•r "'lwt her his papers will be pl,11•t·d m J hhr.ir) at Duke University, I-;111 Ill' <·11t1<:1w<l tht• :.elf-righteous ac· llo11!'oo ol anti Nixon profc!.SOrli for ''what lwi::1n ' ll! 't'l'm hk\' persecution" The Br 111 ... h rnh1mni .... t offrrcd the opinion ---~ RICHARD Rf EVES 1·; • th.11 1t11· furrnf•r prt•sident's ignored l'uunwl would hl' obviously valuable "to t lw lll'l'l'"!'ooal ~ 1·0111 inu1ty or foreign poltc \ Europe. But he does n't want to makt• tH .. f l\Mfo:RICANS, h continued, any or them public right now for fear of ltl..t•d 111 t11•gin things •·t.y wiping the being accused or undermining Reagan. "hole ,1.111• clean ·· Even if there 1s and not many people seem to ask him ...,.1111l'th1ng \\orth kno" ing on the slate. priyately certainly, l got the distinct So. Nixon .ind C'artl'r are both left alone impression, not many people from the wnt1ng books to explain the many mis· White House ·"' t.1kt•:-t•al'h made sometimes because THAT'S A SHAME, l>Jenry l-'a1rlie said the other day in The Times or Lon don. "They lead rather purposele"s and even pathetic lives,'' Fairlie wrote of Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, our trio of li ving ex·presidents 'No ont.> really has any use for thl'm " Noting that Nixon is involved in a di:-.· tht'\' 1gnon•cl the slate of history or nf•\ t•r t.ill..l·d \\1th an} one who made ;.;11m1· of lh;it h1stur} .Jerry Ford, who 1w\.l•r l'ould s l t111d being alone. is enter· l:.iining trade· groups and Chambers of < '11111 mer<'(: ""'1th Sl5,000 and $20,000 lee lUl l''i I ':11 h•1 tl1d, howe' er. get his name in the pJrit•rs ft'C'<'nlly by going to China and climbing the Great Wall. "There is something at fault with the system ," Fairlie said, "in which ex-presidents have to go to China to communicate with their own countrymen ." There is indeed. We sometimes forget we a re all on the same side. It's amaz· 1ng tha t presidents and ex-presidents don't even seem to share their "book" in the sense that baseball pitchers have a book on the s trengths and weak- nesses or opposing hitters -with each other on the personalities and predic· tabilities or other world lead ers. Meanwhile. Menachem Begin or Leonid Brezhnev continue lo get away with try- ing some of the same old tricks on each new American leader T H ERE JS A reason for all this. Each new president wants to stay away from his predecessors because he doesn't want to be contaminated by their political unpopularity. Inevitable un- popularity, it seems. We are destroying our presidents -Dwight Eisenhower was the last one to complete two terms in office. One of the reasons each new one may be doing so badly is that reluc· lance to talk to any old one. tr that keeps up • .Fairlie pointed out, "there coutd some4fay be a small regi- ment of ex·presidents alive at the same time ... None of them talking lo each other, of course. Wilderness a gift to next generation To The Erutor Some or my happiest childhood memories are of going to a Wilderness Girl Scout Camp in the mountains of Pennsylvania The beauty. quiet and joy of being in the mountains.is still with me. For th.is reason. I am concerned a bout two bills currently being cons1dt'red in MAILBOX the U.S. Senate. These bills are radical· ly different and concern the future management of natwnal fon·.,t and n.1 t1onal park roadlf'sS land ON ONE HAND,,Sen. SI. Hayakawa is pushing a bill S. 842 which designates NO wilderness and would set s hort deadlines foJ' congressional action. after which even areas already rccom · mended as wilderness would be opened to logging and other development On the other hand, Sen Alan Cranston introduced the Cranston Burton Wilder- ness bill S 1584 which designates certain magnificent lands as wild em ass and permits development of other lands In these days or stress management classes. noise and air pollution in our urban areas, and just the daily pace or lire. one of the gr eatest places for re· newal and reassessment of what's im· portanl is being able to get away to a wilde rness area. It will be a priceless gift to our children and grandchildren and it's rree! If readers feel the same concern I do please write Sen. Cranston and Sen. Hayakawa and express your viewpoint. MITZI CURRIE Lawsuit costly To the Editor: The environmentalists are at it again. this time calling the m selves "Friends of the l rvine Coast." and would have ever yone believe it is under attack. Thus, their suit for an injunction lo in· hibit implementation of the develop- ment plan of the Irvine Company ap· proved by both the Ora9ge County Boa+d of Supervisors and the Coastal Commission. Both of these bodies have staffs but th~ former is l!lected and tlle later appointed, seemingly responsible unto themselves and notoriously of the "environmenta lis t " stop growth persuasion. It appears the "Friends" are "incensed" that the Coastal Com· mission reje<:ted the r ecommendation or their own start and app'toved the plan, but this writer suggests tttat com· mission ls well aware of increasing public awareness and concero for its abuse of power and disregard ot proper· ty rlghl'J. THE PLAN WAS not approved on a whim, but after scrutiny of )'ears! Our basic American precepts would indicate 1 h1• rt,:?hl of Jfl\ c1t1wn to own and de- ' 1•l11p propc••I) but Ill fact 1t rPquires the 11•-,mu 1·1·., 11( Jn Irvine Company in t1·rnh of funds ..to provide t h e l1·t•hnolo~1·al dcfensl' of their-ziight to do '"· .111<1 the1nd1vidual would be at a loss \cf <'OJH.' "''lh the unrea~onabledemands. Tht· plan <•" appro\'l•d allocates 60 per· t'f'!ll of that I.ind to "open space" and 27 p1•11·1•111 "' an outri$lht "dedication" • 1·011fl"t'Jtr11n 1 for a park. II 1 s 1111 .... k 111<1 of i..I('\ 1v1t v that converts pO'il Jgl' slo.1mp lots to acreage by in· hil11t1n~ :-.urro unt.l1ng development , 1•1111d11ng tlw ownt:r of that property at I h1· t'Xl>l'O"I' of all others. The environ· · m1·nt .ii l«'.11 '" not matched by funds 111 n1m1ll'n.,alc property owners.for the t'O!>t of lht• property. maintenance. and tUXl'S :ind property affected is not.only 'a(·ant l:ind. but ex1st1ng structures that I l'<tUtrc permit!-> for renovation or re· modt•linJ.l. or ('\'Cn replacement arter d """tt>r T H t-: Sl IT ft I r el "on our behalr? .. .... 1rnulta11t•ou sly imposes additional staH .rncl legal l'"<lll'llS('S for both of the gov- l'rnml'nt lio<l1c:-. lo lw passed on to the general public as well as those of lhe Irvine Company th:.it will have no c·hotce but to pass their costs on lo the general puhh1.· The 'friends" want to d1<'tate further the usl' of only 40 per- l'(•nt of privately owned property, and d1•t <1 ii till' k incb of facilities to be avail a· blr to us. <ind anvone can see the costs that "'111 ht• added to any housing con- strurtcd and the consequential elimina- l 1on of most of the general public from home ownership. A rew privileged r esi- dents will be able to enjoy the Irvine Coast. The environmental movement is well funded and well organized and this 1s ,1ust c>nt' example or their impact on I he rest 11f us. TEDDI ALVES Art /U>t>ds support To lhe Editor ln your Scpl. 17 Issue you reported that thE' Los Angeles City Council has cnac·ted a zoning modifi cation to allow artists lo live and wol'k in buildings locnted in commercial and manufactur· ini:i zones You slated that, "the council unan· 1 mous ly passed the measure that cau.ncil µresident Joe. Wachs uid would hrlp the city become an international center for the arts." What a refreshing and intelligent ac- tion ! Artists tend to starve a lot until - 1f ever -they achieve success. (Vin· rl'nl Van Gogh never sold a painting!> ::ind recognizing the Importance of art's <'ontribution lo a community's cultural and 1ntell<'ctual ~rowth the Los Angeles council movl'd, wisely , to make the • 1 •t "', trorn ,.,.,...,' ••• wtl<omt Tiit rtQ'll 10 t-i.v '-'· "" lo fol -4' ~ '""",..'' tobtt u fHK-\.911H• ol • •0•06 Of '""' .. 111 ~ O•"''" Pttftf9f\t6 All 1911•" m1,.I In • tr110• "OM'"'' •"Cl ""'""° •-•u Dvl -· ,.,... M wollllltlel on roq1141•I •f \llOltf..,I , .. M>n I~ .......... ,....,1 woll nol bl> OUIJH~ t.ttt..-\ "14Y bt lt .. jlN)Md to MJ41116 N•mt tncl ~ n11mM• or 11\t u ntl'IO..IOr "''"' i. elvt<1 '°' •t•1l1l'h0f'I jklfjlo)V\ \ creation of art easier for the artist with a simple zoning change . C OMPARE THAT e nlightened response · to the know-nolhingism that motivates Costa Mesa's City Council to not only not try to help artists in this town, but lo actively and vigorously try lo destroy the completed accomplish- ments of Goal Hill's premier artist, Ali Roushan' At a time when the National Endow· ment for the Arts is trying to "save and µreserve arts and c ultural environ· mcnts" by launching a nationwide sur· vey of folk·art structures -"hand built, large-scale and often bizarre monu· ments and environments. such as Simon Rodda's Watts Towers." the petty bureaucrats at 77 Fair Drive are trying, contrariwise. to destroy Costa Mesa's only qualirying pieces; and trying to jail the man who against all odds and despite the c ity's worst erforts has persevered to achieve their completion. I watch. embarrassed and helpless while our cultural commissars try to destroy what the enlightened L.A. City Council and lhe National Endowment for the Arts are trying to save. What blind foolishness their arrogance of or- fice has led them into: What a s hame. J .P. PALMER Ban glass To t he Editor I hope Huntington Beach will follow Newport's lead and consider planning to ban glass containers on the beach next summer or sooner. A rew years ago, my daughter stepped on a piece o{, broken beer bottle dropped by a careless person. Eight of the 10 tendons on the bottom oS her foot were severed along with at least two main nerves. Anyone who observed the painful recovery -many hours of pain which she a lmost cooldn't bear at times -would never take glass to a beach or pool deck again ~r worse, throw a bottle off a boat. It ta~ a long time to educa~e people about safety. The City Council should be ask.ed to pass a law banning glass at the beach. MARGARET JOHfJSON lillllY lill Re the low beauty rating ,Sven Hun· tlngton Beach Ln that survey of coastal c ities -t.hey should have Seftl ·1t before we cleaned it up. R.M. ,. ... . ... _ -· ... .. ·.• Dllll Piiat THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1981 IUITllliTDN BllCH /FDUNTllN VllllY CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION 82-3 84 86 Christopher Reeve says Superman comic books were off limits to him as a boy. See Page B7. D 0 Few vote hut Golden West has new officers slate By PIDL SNEIDERMAN ot•o.itr ........ Golden West College in Hwtt· lngton Beach bas a new slate of s tudent officers this week, though the turnout of candidates and voters might be considered a bit underwhelming. Three races for student leadership posts were uncontest· ed. In the fourth race, two stu· dents coinpeted. The college bas an enrollment this semester of about 20,000. ~\ _,, But only 182 cast ballots Monday and Tuesday In the Associated Students election. SUll, the college had more luck this year than during the spring of 1980 elections, when no one ran for the presidency or 10 other student senate positJons under a different student leadership structure. To remedy this, the college conducted a special election in October, 1980. In that election, a president Crafts mans hip still alive ODE TO \'ESTER\'EAR : It ':-. good and ple;.i .... a nt. a!-. ~·our faithful. cor'n•!-.pondent lt•arne<I. to get out from undl'r t~·pewritl'r and desk for a touplt· of da,·s and \'Cr1ture out into lht• world of the r t>al cn1ftsmen of our da\ If ,·ou can find tht'm You are rl•m1nded of the ·11111."" b~ ll t•nr~· \\';.Hh\\orth LongfellO\\ "Under the spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands. The smith o mighty mon is he With large ond sinewy hands. And the muscles of hts brawny orms As strong as iron bonds His brow is wet with honest sweat. He eoms whot'~r he con. And Looks the whole world m the face, For he owes Ml ony mon .. WllE~ LO~GFELLOW WROTE tho...,t· line' 111 1842. the \'tll<tgt• of tht• tentral figure .... of h1 .... l'Om mun it~·. a crafhman upon whom the <.·1t11.t•nr~ rl'11t•d ~ TOM MORPHINE ~~, lb repair. create und .maintain the mechani:-.m s that \\Ould form the backbone of a \' i b r a n t n a l i o n :\ n d from t..h c .... mith '!-. !-.land ca m e a proud he ritage of indi\'idual trafbmcn \\·ho maintalnl'd s mall shops and workt•d with their hand!-. 1n gta ........ a nd copper and iron and steel And where. ~·ou might ask. are thoM· proud in di\'tdual craftsmen toda,· who drew their ht'rttagt• from the \'illage smith~· o'r yestl'r~·ear ·• Once they populated small s hop .... in the olcl Remember ttwse iron men7 The village smithies of y~teryeor dowQlown s<.'clor Qi Costa ~esa Or in an old horw barn with a sign that proclai med "Wheeler Rro ...... on Forest A\'enue in Laguna Or nght alongs ide tht.• gent•ral stort· on \lain Street an lluntangton R<.'ach TODA\", THE\' H.\ \'E ,·an\ .... hNl-~ ou mig ht "ll" peel. relegated. you might suspec( to obli\'ion h~· mass produced chrome-plated plastic .. trip!-. anc1 !-.nap-on fa!-lh.:n ers. But are the~· gone·• :'\111 rl'all~ The~ no longl·r st und proud!~· beneath the ,·illage chest nut trct.• on '.\-lain Street. but the,· exist. Fewer in number ... pe rhaps . '.'low relegate'd b~ the planning. wning and rede,·elopment to the back .... treeb Yet you can find them. in a .... mall place off a Plaeentia Avenue alle\ in Co!-.ta :Vlcsa : in ~in ob .... t·urt• industrial zone behin'd the Edbon plant in Hunt ington Beach : out Laguna Canyon Road an Lagun;.i. unde r a pepper. rather than a chestnut tret• They still operate the s mall .... hops and turn our their crafts in the tradition thut built America·..; backbone in ~·esteryear The~· are the sa me kind .... of men who. some decade:-. back. dropped their: toot .... and left their machine!-. and W<.'nt out to wan World War 11 : piecing together :-.ah·age and wiring up broken parts to keep an a llied war machine moving to ultimate \'ictor~-. , AND SO ONL\' THE other day. you \·1s 1t u di l apidat~ cluste r of these little sho.P~. out on a. 'baCksfree{. wnere the craftman·s roof w<l:-. lt"ak~· cor· rugated metal and the front door wa!'> w<irped and sagging. But from the crafts man's lahJe he produced a delicately framed p iece of gla:-;s that had bePn etched with an edged design or beauty. I~ would become a windwing for a cla:-.sic automobile American crafts mans hip may have been rel egated to the back streets. bu.t it lives. ONE OF THESE DAYS. some back door de · scendant or the village smithy will step out of hi!. shop and present us all with a device to solve our energy crisis or c ure our pollution woes . And hjiM stand as tall as the old c hestnut tree. ~ Believe i\. Keep the faith. and vice president were select· ed. along with seven student senators who ran unopposed. Several other senate positions were filled by appointment bee a use no candidates had run from some divisions. The student government and election process were over· hauled during the past year. Elections were moved from spring to fall in hopes of eliciting more student involvement. Also, the 14 stud ent senate positions were trimmed to five. Elected this week were Jeff Nadel of Anaheim, president; Jon H. Liebold of Stanton, vice president; Sandy Haynie of Fountain Valley, public rela· lions; and Bob Barrick of Hunt· ington Beach, s tudent advocate. ' Tami Gilbert of Huntington Beach was appointed last spring to serve as finance com · missioner. Carol Surke-Fonte, director of student development, said she 19505 STYLE The Ocean View High School cast of ·Grease·· rehearse!-. for pl•rformance t.•arl~ nl'XI month In front center are Kathtl' Dangl·r and :\llkt• o -.\ngl•lo From does not believe the low can- didate and voter turnouts reflect an atmosphere of apathy on campus. She said there was little cam- paigning by candidates to draw the interest of voters. Also, she said some students may not be aware of the important role the Associated Students group has played in projects such as the campus recycling center, child care center and legal aid pro- grams. Student interest in elections ha:. been only a bit more pro· nounced at Golden West's sister college, Orange Coast an Costa Mesa. In that school 's spring 1980 election. 1.025 students voted, an Associated Students spokesman said. ln tbe spring 1981 election. 10 candidates ran for five stu· dent leadership posts, drawing a voter turnout of 643. Orange Coast, with more than 30,000 students this semester, has a larger enrollment than Gotden West. the left are Kelli Smaw, Michae l O'Barr. John Masse'" Julie Blake. Debi Schmidt, Steve Cameron , Donna Milnik. Lori Hurzeler a nd Lisa Escobar Two nabbed in designer j ean s the ft Lengthy Onofre hearings e nd Panel faces hardest task, granting of power licenses Two men In their 20s were ar· rested in Fountain Valley Wednesday for allegedly break- ing out the front window of a clothing store and then piling 70 pair of designer jeans worth $2,000 into their car , authorities reported. Police say there doesn't ap- pear lo be a connection between the suspects and numerous other designer jean heists that have occurred throughout the county in recent months. The two s uspects, Robert Julius Estelante. 21. of Santa Ana , and Kevin Charles Power. 25, a transient, were arrested by police at 6:53 a.m., just mo- ments after the burglary A patrolman saw the suspects as they were driving onto the San Diego Freeway onramp on Ellis Avenue. ... By DAVID KUTZMANN Of tlM o.ity ,.. ... Si.ft One of Southern California's longest running shows came lo an end Wednesday The stars were Southern California Edison Co ·s two new reactors at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. "It has been a long case," chairman James Kelley of the U.S. Atomic Safety and Licens· ing Board said. "We still have the hardest part of our work • ahead of us ... What he meant was that after marathon licensing hearings for Edison Co. 's SJ.3 billion reactors three miles south of San Clemente, the three-member federal panel now would have to decide whether to grant low- power and full ·power licenses. ror the 1,100-megawatt units. A decision is expected by late November for a low-power test license and by early 1982 for full· power permits. The hearings,. which began in mid-June in San Diego and ended in Anaheim. covered two primary areas of contention earthquake safety of the huge nuclear power plant and ade- quacy of emergency pl,&.nning for communities within 1017Tites of the generating station. Plant critics had contended in the proceedings that previously undiscovered geologic forma· tions posed hazards which ex- ceeded the seismic design of the facility and that evacuation planning in the event of an acci· dent was elaborate but unworka· ble. Edison specialists and consult- ants maintained that the plant was designed to withstand the largest earthquake considered possible in tht' reg ion and that e mergency planning was more than adequate. Before ending the Orange County portion of the heC1nngs Wednesdav. Kelle,· said that the board wouldi tempt to include finding s the f.e deral Emergency anagement Agen· cy in its final decision. The federal agenc y i s responsible for evaluating the adequacy of off-site emergency evacuation phms and has said it would issue a final report on the San Onofre area by November. Interim findings of the agency issued last June indicated there were numerou~ communications and coord1nat1on problems among agencies which had p'articipated in a test drill in May. Juniors ' w oman of the y ear announce d .\lmo .... 1 .)(Ml gut• .... i.... .1pplJudt•cl "h<.•n thl• .\ ........ 1 .... t;inn· Lcagm• of .:'\e\\ port R<.•ach mtml'd Rarh;ir;.i Kllpom•n ...... Orangl' Count~ .Junior \\'oman of tht• 'a\•ar for arranging ~·outh C'orH·t·rt:-. and rt."OPl'ning a lion.II'~ in Fullerton. Otht·r nominl'l'" for lhl' medal \\l'r<.· \'1ctona Hart. Carol L Clisln . :\l aril' Coleman . Claucti a Collon .. huh Gajkow .... k1 . Ch~rll'nl' lmm<.•11. Chen<.' K<.•r-r. Sht•rr.' Lonf bourrow . .Joann '.\1 :\l a\'o. Charla .\1c:--:eff. Patt'1<:1a Pt•tk :--:unn. lloll,· \'c;.ilt.• and PamEc•la Flo,·d Wilder Procct;ds from the <1" ar<b lunt:hl'On anct fa .... h1on .... h.11\\ perpetuate the l<.•ague· .... t htldri.·n .... dt•ntal hl'alth c1·ntl·1· and child eta~ tarl' t•t•n ter Gl'ILD AU1S FOR GREE~ The Queen of I ll•arh Guild of the Childre n ·., llospitul of Ornngl' Count.' t CllOC 1 ha!-. re!>en·cd El ~iguel C'ountr~ Cl uh for 1h l'ighlh annual golf tourn;.imt•nt Frirla\'. This major furid raiser for th~ j{uild is lrnd,gctt·d for S8.000 to benefit out patient.service .... ·at the hospita l The Sl25 entr~ fee includes luncheon. lee priz<.'"· refreshments. electnc carb. green f CC!-. and. a chnner dance. A !-.hOt -~un siart at noon begin:-. the he .... t ·hall·of· partner!-. tourney. for mort> deta ils. phone 495-148fi AlITUMN IN TRES VI TA A corkta1l garden party from 3 to 7 p .m . Sunday will murk the Barr~·mon· Chapter of the Or ange County Mus ic Center's first ante toward the S50 million building fund for the fufun.• OC''.\1C in Costa Mesa. Tickets an~ S40 pe r ncr~on ror lhe fe:-.tivillC!'> lh~t Will st art in the Plaza ureu of Lake ~fo~sion Vw.10 und mcludt• a tour of three e legant home:-.. Guests sampling the buffet catered by La Cuisine will Qe entertained 11'.\' li ve mu:-.ic Reservations may be made by calling 951·6003 or 770 0411 - .............. ,.... Ellen Kutz presents medal to Barbara K1lponen O!I Don Oliphant congratulateti Orange Cotmty's Jur11or Woman nf the Year BUM0PER STICK R Ot' THE WEf:K : Commit nut or Rov Carver's dealership on the hack uf .• a R~W "Bi·own for Senate ponsored l>~ the :'\al1onal ~l·<trl~ ' Committee.·· A OTHER QUICKIE TAKE: Crcdit...~ttorney Eluine Weinberg wond~rs. ··~oah, why didn't \OU "Wilt th()se flie. wh n you had a chance"·· J .. .. ... ... HI P: Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT /Thu reday. Octqber 1, 1 Gel ,.., Stoppard'S 'Night and Day~ opens at Saddleback College lb TOM TITVS No tewer than 10 other productions contlm1e °'• ~,.....,.. their respective eflaaagements on Oranae Coast 1lti tldt or local theiter openlnas begins to re· stages this week, with nl>ne closing over the ceidt this week with only one new production arrlv weekend. They are: !na. 1'om Stoppard's ''Nl&hl and Day" al Sad· "Ah, WUderneH" at South Coast Repertory, \tieback College 655 Town Center Drive. Co$ta Mesa !957·40331. Lest you presume il has something to do with ptaylng plghUy except Mondays at 8 p.m.· with Cplo Porter, be advised that the pJay focuses on weekend matinees at 2:30, through Oct. 18. journalistic Integrity In a fictitious African re--"Brigadoon" at SebasUan's West Dinner pubUc. H's described as a ·'hard-bitting, explicit Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente 1492·9950> drama recommended for on stage nightly except Mondays at varying cur· mature audiences." ta in times through Nov. 8. Performances will lllJf RlllSSIDN "The Marriage -Go Round" at the Harlequin be given Fridays and 11 111 Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .. Santa Saturdays at 8 p.m and Ana <979-SSll l, running nightly except Mondays at Sundays at 3 p.m . for two varying curtain times until Nov. 15. weekends, closing Oct. 11. in the main theater on -"Guys and Dolls" at the Huntington Beach the Mission Viejo campus. Call 831·4656 or 496-2790 Playhouse, Main Street at Yorktown Avenue, Hun- for ticket information. ----tin_gton Beach (847-4465), continuing Fridays and ·~··· plenty of room to spare Saturdays at 8 :30 throuah Oct. 17. "The Grea& American Back1&11e Muslul" at thu Newport Theater Art• Center. 2501 Cliff Drive, Newport Beuch (675-3143), playing Fridays and Saturd8"!1 at 8 p.m .. Sundays at 2 p.m . through Oct. 18. -"Same Time, Next Veal'.'' at the 'Laguna Moulton Playhouse. 606 LagUJ1a Canyon Road. Laguna Beach (494·0743 >. on stage Tuesdays through Saturdays at 8 p. m . <and Oct. 11 at 2 · 30 > .... unli!Oct.17. "Cheateh" at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, on the Orange County Fairgrounds (754-5159>, runrting Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 until Oct. 10. • -"Middle of the Nlgb&" at the Westminster Community Theater . 7272 Maple St., Westminster · (995-4113 ). continuing Friday:; and Saturdays at 8 ; 30 through Oct. 10. "A Tam for tbe Nur1e'1 by the Mlulon Vie· Jo Playhouse at the San Clemente Community • Theater, 202 Ave. Cabrlllo, San Clemente <830·9252 or 492-0465). playing Thurtdays tbrouah Saturd•ys at 8 p.m., Sundays at 2 p.m. until Oct. 17: -"The Women" by Showcue Productions at the Westminster Auditorium. 7571 Westmioster Av e.. Westminster <894·6786>, on stage Fridays and Saturdays at 8 :30 through Oct. 10 with a 2:30 matinee Oct 11 • CALLBOARD -The San Clemente Communi· t y Theater will hold auditions Sunday at 7 p.m. for "The Second Time Around.'' a comedy about romance between two senior citizens ... direct.or Mat Wallace will be seeking four men and tour wom en for the c·ast at the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 !<ve Cabrillo, San Clemente 30 . gallfln . · .. '\'' '.{ \· ~ ·' I . _ ~ - · ·~r. 1i 1~ ' . .. ....... ' , ,.· -- ~I .'./ I ·~, , ~. r: ... - •' . tras.h .~ca·.ns .: ( ... . • • • • • • ' : • J • •• ... : "' .... •• : • ..... • • • •• 'HeavY. C!tu .. ty 3o:gellofi.tras~can:Won:t warp, rvt't . · · ' · ·or c1atteri Reg.' 9,95. • · ·· ~ · . : : . '. ·. ·. . •. .. . . .. . . . \ : . . ..... . ·a· .·:a····:..·· .. • t •• • ••• : . . : : . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... : . : . . . . ·: .... . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . . ' -. . . . · . ·'. . . . . . . . .· ... . . . . . · . ~ustproof storage sheds with 45" door and locklng handle. lncludea floor and ahelf. Choote from White or Ivory with Avocado. Woodgrain or Gold. llght malles tbe mood how to love the bomb tollet got you down? • . .. ... IWftllT UO la'TAWTIOll lllCUIOQ S'a7' ......... 241.15 6'110' ........ Ml.Ill .............. 291.15 l'11t1 •••••••• 409.15 S'110' ........ 2".15 l0'1lf ....... 431.15 · , .. wall mount kitchen faucet 8" wallmount kitchen feucet with 7" to 9" female adjustment from Price Pfister. #827-260. Reg. 33.89 Weller lhoOts Well Dawn Electronic Light Dimmer gradually dims Ilg ht automallcally at 1 1 9 • finger touch control. Great ii energy saver. Reg. 24.95 r~~1r · J il ~;:.-~ L _ J __ ~J bathe In tranquil privacy Simple-to-Install bathtub enclosure with sale, shatterproof glass sliding doora. Anodized aluminum 7 1 9• frame. Sliver tone. Reg. U 89.95 -. ..,, 4U~ 1 t •, -~· 9;-SU&OORF .h .· .. . ~ ( ·'/# i , !! ;·I\\ .. t.v., t.v., on the wan ' ~ Gusdorf Wall Mount T.V. Stand Is perfect for dena, bedroom• or any room where floor apace Is mlnlmal. The aturdy platform la 28" Other alzea avallable. U The Flea Bomb that Isl D-Con's new and powerful Ilea killer 4•• that"s easy to use and safe. Dou- ble Pack. Reg. 6.99 the n1tural preservallve \ Jasco Redwood Stain & Sealer with natural redwood tone preservea and protects 349 redwood. cedar, fir and pine. Reg. 4.98 ,.n... Deodori ze your room• and rugs with Alrwl ck Cerpe t Freah. Simple to use with your vacuum. 14 Ol. Reg. 2.89 wide x 17-7/8" deep. 3 1 9• ---·#3210. Beg • ..a.96 -• ---- Replace your otd ballcock and 42 9 float with quiet, water-saving Fluldmaster. #400A. Reg. 7.59. spred tfte satin Famous latex flat wall paint from Glidden. !eautiful flat finish scruba clean. stays color feat. Eaay water clean-up. Reg. 11.99 I I I .. j to stay In llot water 30-gallon water hHt.er wlth energy uvtng temperature shut-off. 11411 I 40 tel .... 124.85 w..r. ... 114;91 ' • ·a H t F Orange Cossl DAILY PILOTfThursday, Oc to be r t , 1981 ( Ainge's pact details mystery to Celtics From AP dl!ipatche111 NEW YORK -Boston Celtics la President Red Au erbach testified Wednesday he had no knowledge of or interest in Danny Ainge's no· basketball restriction In his contract when he drafted him last June 9. Auerbach was the first witness called to the stand in. the bitter battle bet ween the Celtics and baseball's Toronto Blue J ays Ainge, 22, is attempting to get out of the three-year contract he signed with the Blue J ays last Sep- tember. whi ch included a $300,000 addendum prohibit· ing him from playing pro- fession a l or r ecreat ional basketball. In hi s t es timon y , Auerbach acknowledged re- ceipt of a Fe bruary letter Auerbach sent t o the 23 Nationa l Bas ketball Association tea ms by the Blue J ays, which instructed them they would face a legal fight if they drafted Ainge. Auerbach s~id he didn't pay much attention lo the letter. •·w e were busy then," he said. "'W e were trying to win." Auerbach told the court he spoke with Ainge on two occasions before the NBA draft and Ainge informed him he was nattered the Celtics were interested in his services but that he was under contract to the Blue Jays. Ainge then contacted the· Celtics after the draft, telling them he'd had a change or heart and was now interested in playing basketball. Ainge claims the Blue J ays' president , Peter Bavasi. verbally freed him from his contract during a June meeting. Chandler heading tor San Diego 'i'he New Orleans Saints traded [il wide receiver Wes Chandler, the 'II> third player taken ~n the 1978 Na· tional Football League draft, to San Diego Wed· nesday in return fo r two high draft choices and another wide receiver, Saints ' Coach Bum PbilliPli sa id . Chandler was the third New Orleans player shipped off in the last two days, as Phillips cut light end Rich Casler and cor- ne r back Ricky Ray Tuesday . . . Running back Rob Carpenter agreed to report to the New York Giants, ending speculation he would end his pro career. Carpenter, traded Tuesday by New Orleans, promised Giants' Coach Ray Perkins he would report ... Lyle Blackwood has come to terms with Miami. Lyle is the older brother of the Dolphins' starting stron~ safety Glenn Blackwood. Twins can·t overcome Hurdle CllnC lluTdle hit a declslve two la;:-.. run hom«'r and Larry Cura pitched a four hitter as Kunsas Cit y clinched a spot in the Americun Leaaue West's mini-playoff . with u S·2 victory over Mlnnel!ota Wednesday. Hurdle's homer came in the fourth lnnlrtJ oCf Fernando 'Arroyo •md isnupped a 2 2 tie wbllc Guru. 11·7, wos touched up for a two run homer by Pete Mukanln in the second. He ullowcd only t wo i.ingles aft('r lhut In his final tuneup bt'forc the plnyoffs . O a kland ':s Mike Nor· rlli tossed u thhe-hitter as Oakland won 1L<; final reg- ula r season home game, 3-0 over Toronto. Rob Pit'clolo hit a leadoff home run in the t hird innrng a nd the A's added two more in the fourth Hurdle . . . Charlie Hough pic,ed up his fourth consecutive victory as Texas defeated Seattle, 3 1 Robin Yount lashed fou r hits a nd scored lhree times and CecU Cooper knocked in three rwu; to 1.>ace the Brewers. Mil waukee trails Detroit by j ust three percentage points Milwaukee took advantage of t he Tigers' rainout and moved into a tie for first with Detroit by notchin~ a 10·5 victory over Boston. Quote of the day Coach Charley Pell on Florida's 29.7 loss to Mississippi State in which the Gators com milled six turnovers : "Everything a coach dreams about in a horror dream or nightmare happened out there " Soto hurls Reds near top of West Mario Soto scattered five hits la through eight innings, then got relief help from Tom Hume as Cincinnati dE!featcd Houston Wednesday, 5 2, to move within a half.game of the Astro!i., in the N ation a l League West. Craig Reynolds sla mmed his fo urth homer of the season i.p the third inning and Cesar Cedeno led off the seventh with his fou rth homer but that was all the J\stros could manage off Soto. George Foster hit a solo HR in the fi fth, his 21st of the season. and team mate Ron Oesler ignited the Hcds' go· ahead rally in the sixth with a lead off triple Rodney Scott·~ bases loaded walk in the seventh forced over the dec1d1ng run as Montreal we nt back into first place in Soto the East with a 3-2 wi n at Pit· tsburgh Larry Parrish had earlier drilled a two-run triple for he Expos. now a half-game ahead of St ~•S .. The. Cardmab had a four-gam1: ... nnmg streak snapped as Lonnie Smith knocked in a pair of runs with two hits, scored once a nd stole a base to lead Philadelphia to an 8·5 tri umph. Sparky Ly le, 9·5, was the winner, while Ron Reed earned his eighth save . Bob Horner's third home run in two days and Dale Murphy's second in fou r days backed the eight-hit pitching of Larry McWilliams as Atla nta topped San Francisco, 9·2 ... Lee Mauilli's one.out single in the ninth inning helped the New York Mets shade the Chicago Cubs, 2·1. Britt burns Angels From Page Cl BELL ... C lllCAGO <AP > E ve n though Britt Burns has pitched more innings than a ny other Chicago White Sox hurler. he say!'. he isn't tired. · I'm not at all tired," the 22- vcar·old left-hander said after beating the Angels 10-3 Wednes· day night. "In fact, I hope I get 1n again'on Sunday." Burns. 10·6. pitched six in- n 1 n g s agains t th e An gels Wl•d nestlay night and upped his <.cason total to 157~ innings pitc hed lie also struck oul five to bring h 1s strikeout total to 108. the second-highest in the American League. In addition, he is tied at five for the most complete ~a mes by a Chicago pitcher . The White Sox scored seven of their runs in the second inning, with Greg Luzinski picking up two of his four RBI a nd Wayne !'lordhagen hitting two si ngles a nd scoring a run. Luzinski later hi t his 20th homer. All seven runs came on six singles and a little help from the Angels, who committed two er· rors. . White Sox Ma na ge r Tony LaRussa didn't feel Burns was at his bfst. "He <Burns> wasn't in a good groove tonight. He was out of synch I'd like to show hi m a tape of some of those pitches he made ... Burns allowed se\ en hits. struck out fi ve and walked none. Dave Frost, 1·8. was the loser. Robby Grich hit his 21st homer for the Angels, tying him for the American League lead. " . . NFL standings NATIONAL CONFERENCE Western Division AMERICAN CONFERENCE Western Division re placeme nt , Seurer sees similarities. "l think Kerwin is quicker and a ha rder runner but Garfield is just as good a cutter and he runs smoothly "I've got complete confidence when Garfield is in the game He's a good runner when h e puts hi s mind lo it." Said Taylor. who won the Jayhawks' offensive player of the game last week: "I was on the sideline when it happened a nd I knew he <Bell I was in trouble. I hate for it to happen to anybody. We are going to miss him but I reel that I can help " According to a release from the school. Bell's broth~r Dino. a freshmart, is hsted as a back-up to Taylor, along with freshman Harvey Fields. · ************* . ,. ,. .. : JOHNSON & SON : Presents ... ... ,. ,. W L PF PA Pct. Atlanta 3 l 109 62 . 750 Rams 2 2 96 80 .500 San Francisco 2 2 83 89 .500 New Orleans 1 3 44 85 250 Eastern Division San Diego Kansas City Denver Oakla nd Seattle W L P•' PA Pct. 3 l 138 110 .750 3 1 107 99 .750 3 1 89 54 .750 2 2 63 45 .500 I 3 58 77 .250 • • • ,. ,. ,. ,. ,. • ,. Dallas 4 0 109 58 1.000 Philadelphia 4 O 93 40 1.000 NY Giants 2 2 ~7 S6 .500 St. Louis l 3 74 100 .250 Washington 0 4 60 119 .000 Central Division Detroit 2 ! 87 71 .500 Minnesota 2· 2 79 94 .500 Tampa Bay 2 2 68 70 .500 Green Bay 1 3 69 105 .250 Chi<;ago l 3 61 85 .250 Eastern Division Miami 4 0 97 55 1.000 Buffalo 2 2 104 50 .500 NY Jets 1 3 73 117 .250 Ba ltimore 1 3 70 122 .250 New Engla nd 0 4 73 104 000 Central Division Cincinnati 3 l 102 95 .750 Pittsburgh 2 2 108 98 .500 Cleveland 2 2 65 87 500 Houston 2 2 63 72 .500 S...y'tO- C ..... leftd M It-la..-t •. I 1>.ll'I I •• 111,,_..., llufl•lo Chic ego et MIMH04a Oallasel SI. Louis (Cllemtl 2, 10 a 11'1,I o .. -e.r et..._ Yen Glenb ICe-Ctty.t..._E,..... • Seti Fr-ltce et Wetlll11Qtot1 CllKIMMI el .._..., l'llts11w'911 el N-OtlNftt 0.~ M 0-lend o.1roltel ,.,.... e.v N-Yft ..... MMl...,I "'lilfti." ""'Oleee ~··--.Atleftte et l"flll.-... le (c;Nnftel 1,• p.11'1.I « • . ,. • • • Pete the .. Greek" * • • . ,. • MFl:s • • * « Pick of ,.. « The Week ,. . ,. « •SUNDAY • • . ,.. • • • .. tr • • • • .. Rams over Cleveland *************************************** ! Pete's Pick See The : at J~hnson & Son E' "'Cf TING : Johnson & Son · "' 11 : 2'~:=~=;.~. * ••• '82' s * It • ,. .. • : COSTA~ ~ AT JQHNSON & SON • 540-5630 .. '·~·~·~ ******************************************' I • Baseball today \ { On tbls date ln bHeball In 1961: New York Yanke• alucaer Ro1er Maris became tbe rtrst man ln m-.jor leacue l\IJ· tory to h.lt 61 bomera ln a aln1le season as he belted No. 61 otf Boston's Tracy Stallard In a 1-0 Yankee vJctol")' •over the Red Sox. On this date In l9SO: Dick Slater's three·run homer ln the 10th inning off Don Newcombe enabled the Philadelphia Phllliea t-0 clinch the Na- tional League Utle with a 4·l . last-day vie· tory over the Brooklyn Dodgers. The Phlhs would not win another league pennant ror 30 years . Todaf s birthday: Pittsburgh infielder Vance Law is 2S Angels h.ook up with Spokane The Angels have signed an agree-• ment with the Spokane Indians of the Pacific Coast Leaaue for pla~r de· velopment, the American League club an· nounced Wednesday. The Angels were formerly ~affiliated with Salt Lake City. The Angels have also signed Marcel Lachemann as a minor-league instructor. Lachemann, whose brother Rene is manager of the SeatUe Mariners, has served as pitching coach at the University of Southern California the last three years. His first Angel assignment will be as camp coordinator with the club's en- try in the Arizona Instructional League . Lachemann had an active career with both the Kansas City and Oakland A's where be com- p1 led a 7-4 record and a 3.45 earned run average. Sunday's Rams game on TV The Los Angeles Rams an- nounced Wednesday that Sunday's game with Cleveland ls a sellout and will be shown on Channel 4 at 1 o'clock· from Anaheim Stadium. It marked the ninth con- secutive Rams' home game that has been sold out .. '. Los Angeles Kings' captain Mike Murphy will be out or action about four weeks after surgery this week to repair a torn lateral cartilage in his left knee. The 10-year National Hockey League veteran sustained the injury Sept 23 in an exhibition game ... Laffit Pln- cay became onJy the third jockey to pass the 5.000-win mark in thoroughbred racing when he posted a surprise win in the seventh race Wed- nesday at the OaJc Tree meeting at Santa Anita. Pincay scored aboard Wander, and the victory put him at a plateau only achieved by Bill Shoemaker (8,059 wins> and Johnny Longden, who retired with·6,032 victories . . Shoemaker tripped and fell unconscious into a swimming pool in Acapulco last week and had four stitches taken inside his mouth and about five on his chin ... An agreement was signed in London pre venting the Austria! Grand Prix Formula One race from being scrapped ... The Detroit Pistons signed former Notre Dame star Kelly Trlpucka to a milti·year contract. Television, radio TV: No events scheduled. RADIO: Baseball -San Diego al Dodgers, 7:30 p.m., KABC (790). Hockey -Vancouver al Kings, 7:20 p.m ., KPRZ (USO). Biggest game faces Hooton LOS ANGELES <API -Burt Hooton, the Los Angeles' Oodaens' veteran right-hander, may pitch • the blgge t game of the season as rar as the Houston Astros are concerned. Hooton Is scheduled to start against Houiston Sunday, the rlnal game or the regular season. and it could be the decider in the National League West's second-ha)( r ace. Hooton hurled seven scoreless innines In Wednesday night's 2·0 loss to San Diego, running his scoreless inninJ( streak to 16. "Tommy <m anager Lasorda > gave me every chance to win,'' Hooton said of the game. "But It just didn't happen " THE PADRES BROKE the scoreless tie against reliever Dave Goltz. scoring two times in the eighth Inning. They filled the bases on sue ' cessive singles by Terry Kennedy, Broderi ck Pe rkins and Luis Salazar. Tim Flannery knocked ln one run with a sacrifice fly and pinch-hitter Jose Moreno singled home the second. Left-hander Dan Boone, l·O. earned his first major-league win with two scoreless innings of re· lief, and Gary Lucas preserved it with his 13th save. The start of the game was delayed more than two hours because of rain and did not end until 12:30 u.m. For Hooton, the scheduled starter in the fourth game of the NL West mini·series. the game was a continuation of his strong pitching. He s hut out Houston 3-0 on four hits in his previous start and allowed the Padres only two hits in seven innings Wednesday night, facing the minimum number of batters the Cirst 6% innings. ··1·m back to where I want to be control -wise ... said Hooton, who missed a turn and was 1neffec· live earlier this month because of the nu "It's a whole lot easier pitching when yo u're not wild ... IF THE SECOND·HALF NL winner has been decided before Sunday's game. Hooton will pitch fi ve or six innings 'even though the game is mean· ing less. "If I don't pitch, 1t would be more than a week between sta rts," he s aid. "It's tough to stas• sharp when you don't pitch more than that ·· { Goltz. 2-6. took the loss I The Dodgers close the monlh with a 13·15 rec· prd and have lost nine of their last 12 games. ·' The game was nearly called because of the on- and-off showers that began late in the afternoon The game did not start until 9:44 pm. There have been only nine r ainouts at Dodger Stadium in its 20-year history, and none since Sept 5. 1978 Fernando Valenzu ela. 13·6. will m ake his final regular season start tonight when he fa ces Fred Kuahaulua . 0-0. Schubert named U.S. coach Mission Viejo Nadadores coach Mark Schubert has been named head coach of the U S. s wim team for next year 's World Games. July 31-Aug. 10 in Ecuador. UCLA Coach Ron Ballator e was named Schubert's assistant. Five other assistants will be selected following next year's World Cham· pionship trials. July 13-18. OUR ASAP WILLGn YOU WEEKS R. 'Ft. Lauderdale. Miami Chicago Each way with round trip purchase . s21 Each way wiih round Lrip purchase. Boston , New York/Newark. Philadelphia, Washington, D.C. Good news. You've got a chance to close that big deal in New York, Tumorrow. Bad news. You're in Los Angeles . Take heart. Continental Airlines' ASAP fares can fly you to the East as soon as possible from Los Angeles International, BurbaQk or Ontariq, for a whole lot less than regularCoKh. With none of the Super Saver wait. No advance purchase. No length of stay requirements or time deadline . But ~eats arc limited . All D1MmY AT• BTU GUMI, ~hen you fly to any of our ASAP cities in the East, you.can return from any one of the other c ities at no extra charge. Which could be very helpful, especially if you have a chance at another busincs~ deal. In Boston. ' For reservations or mo~ information about ASAP fares to the East, call yoiu-company travel department, travel aacnt or Continental. ~Proud Bird CONTINENTAL •• } - Orengo Coaat DAI LY PILOT mlUrsday, October 1. 1981 H /F a..1~ N•t \•It\ ,_.f't •IP" "tttl ''"' ,.._,., \<fin ~tt P ( Nh C.IO"' t "O P £ 110" tlo\f I hQ 1• t r>1n (h,. < ~.., ~ 1 '"'' • •vw c: •OQ 1• 1 hll\ (low Che! l.iOSt 11 <IO : IU ,,..., ~. fll H uq I lo~ ?!.YI • 1• Npr .. t I tl• I o 11.. Hon-on , I I , \o T~mltt 1'1'11~ I• WV.+ \lo \.ol•• ·'' • t ,. 14 r.a l .. ! 1"1 ~Jl~'lf I 2: 18 n ~ .. ====~pl/~ •• 't!. !; : . ~re~:~ I I ~ 1! :~: Wo~tll t25JO • ,: '~. ~ ~t ~J ~I I: l1:: :f'/;\'! I 1) 1t 1iJ ·;~·: ~ ~::: :f 10 M :~ o • • ~~nu; ,.ta ! 1: :f\4 t Iii P E f\O\ < 10.., ~~ f'.l~y ~ J# i~' a ~INrtr f t 1 ~., 1. 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Cultr . ha:. purchased the flex1hl1• urt'lhane :1nc1 s pecialty roam m anuf;Jcturcr Dc•:.p1t1· 11!-> s u ccesses a n d :.ln·n~ths. the bus1ness no longer fits In "II h our OVNBll plans for future grow1h," Haymond H. Marks. presi· cll-nt of Tt•1Hu .•ct> Chemi('als. said Wed fH:'sdti So/ tivar() firm zoooed PALO ALTO tA P ) ~ A S anta .1 CIMa based software company Is be· Ing wooed as a possible acquisition by computer-m aker Hewle ll· Packnrd. llP officials says. The Palo Alto based corporation,• with worldwide saJcis or $3.1 billion in the past fi scal Yl'8r. said Tuesday It ls negotiating t.o ucquirc Software M aoaf(cment Corp .. n prlv&tcly held t'Ompany. 'l'hc purchase price was not dis· closed. und the proposed acquisition Is subJCcl lo LJ:\o appro'1al or SMC • !\hart-holders ~. Advertising: It 'Still pays Wluk many companies were hurtmg in 1980. it lurneJ out to be another good year for tt\e advertising husmeRs. ~vcn ..,hen you're in trouble and sales a re slumping and profits ar e dluppearing, you j ust can't wh:1rk away »l your advertising budget. People might roq~et who you are "Let 's see no w Ch~v rolN Where do I know lhal name from'" . Generttl Motors. the maker ot Chevrolet, lost $762 mil on in 1980 as its car Sit les in the United States ski< rom 6 4 million to .f.4 million. But GM's ad budge.• twld s teady at $316 million. about the same as 1979 l•'ord Motor lost $1.3 billion in 1980 as its U.S. car sal e~ fell from 2 million to l.4 million . But in an effort to buoy those sales. Ford increased its advertising from $215 million to $280 m illion. F.ven Chrysler. its back to the wall, with a 1980 loss of Sl. 7 billion, came out swinging. li fting its ad bud~ct from $118 million to $150 million. ,.~igures on tolaJ spenrung by the nation's 100 leading advertisers have just been released by t he weekly trade paper , Advertising Age, which totes thcrn up every ~ ye :i 1' l n 1980, tht•se 100 com \'· panies spent Sl3 )' ~ - billion on ad · 1 ~1 vert11>ing They ··-·".-%-.. .1------~ ~ c~;~~~:~t r~~ MllTDI llllNITZ th~ tidVt'rlising you :-.cc on network television. more t han half the commcrci:Jb you hear on radio. and nearly half the advcrtio.;ing you see in m agazines. The 10 lop advertisers in the land during 1980 ! and the prodigious amounts they spent> were: Procter & Gamble 1$650 million >: Sears. Hol'l>Uck 1$600 million >: Gene ral Foods <$410 rnillioni. Philip Mor ris <365 million ); Kmart C$319 m1ll1<>n ); Gene r al Motors <$316 million >: R .J . Reynolds < S298 million l. American Telephone & Te legraph 1 S259 m illion I: and Warner· Lambert 1 $235 m1lhoA 1 Of cour~e these blockbuster dollar totals do not mcun that you are being bombarded by a lot more advertis ing messages these days. Advertisers are victims of inflation, j ust as you and I are. Earlier this year Daniel J . Krumm . the president of Maytag, complained about the rising cost of advertising. '"In 1976, .. he pointed out, '"a 30-second network comml•rcial o n popular program~such as "M·A-S..H"" or · Tht-Wallons"" cost Maytag about $26,000. Today 1t 1~ double that amount. $52,000." There were some interesting sidelights to the Ad · vcrt1:.mg Age roster of 100 leading advertisers, to \\it 1 lershey made the top 100 list Cor the first ttml'. ranking 93rd with total spending of $41 million. llcr~hc~ used to be fa m ous <or notorious in the a d in· duslry 1 for not believing in advertising. It s uccumbed In 1970 <•fter fa ll ing to second place in candy ba rs to Mar ~ !Snic kers, M ilk y Way1 Ma r s, Three Musketeers. M&M 'sJ The 24th largest advertiser is none other than the good old Ll.S. government. which spent a total of Sl 73 million, up 18 percent over 1979 a s the armed forces intensified their recruiting efforts. Four Japanese companies are on the list. Toyota ranks 54th with 1980 spending of $88 million : :'-l issan c Dats un J was in 69th with an expenditure of $70 million: Honda placed 79th with S54 m illion in ad~. und Mazda occupied the 100th slot by spending S3l million on advertising in 1980. When you come to the U.S to sell something. you advertise. While they dom inate the Top 20 lists when companies arc ranked by sales or profits, oil firms do not even fi gure here. The only petroleum company to sho" uµ among the 100 leading advertisers is Mobil. which ranked 18th with spending of $195 million. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORKIAPl Fin.ti Oow.Jones •vot.. ~~ocr:CS-· Sep. 30• NEW YORI( IAP l·S.IK , 4 weo. PflCe •nd net cll•noe of the lllleen mcK1 'a<tlve He• York SIOC' E•<NnQe lssuet.. lt•<fl~ n•llON llV at more lllan~I Amer & T 111,lOO ... • !Ill SIOl'ge K h 1'1,000 " 11/4 IBM S2t,SOO S.'A +I Gensler o S23,300 1tv. ,._ Sonr (Of'p .. , ,,oo 16~ ~ CH It C'e } 400, 100 .... v, c.n1So Wttl i :!9~,IOO ,,._ -.-. E••on ' 370,700 ll "• W•rnrCom M ,000 41;\I, •I ~ G<ummn Cp 361.SOO llV. .,.. Burrons 34", '°° JOV. v. AmBdUI JIS,IOO lOV. -Vt R•P<tl>Alr 30'9, 100 S\4 -\f• Martin M lGl,600 •~ + '-Schlumoro s m ,200 St•Ao -Vt AMERICAN LEADERS HEW YORK (APJ·S.IH , 4 Wecl. ptKe •nCI ntl <ll•noe of the ttn mos1 •<1•ve Amerlc•n Stock E•Cl••noe ltSUH, lradln11 n•llONtlly .i more lllen JI. 0omeP1r1 • l".soo 11"' -v. 0.l•prOCI 10S,!! li:\4 , ~ HumacOU o I W, I • SIA> R•hQtrOll 141, Yo HuchBOll Q 1'S,"IO ~ ...... Cllamp HO 133,SOO 2\AI 0.1111011 ,,. 000 16 -~ Francene OG o 12$',400 16 + 2~ St•lctro s 101,soo n"lt. • \4 Weng B ,.,SOO 7tV. • 1tt UPS AND DOWNS NEW YO"I( (APl -The folle•lno 11\1 1110w1 lllt "'-y,,.., Stock Exc11a119e J11Kks anCI w41N'anls lh•I haw OOM iiO Ille most •ncl clown the rnott lllilMd on per<enl ol <h#IOI r-rcllHt Of \rOlu-lor Wed ~. ~~r!~ ~.:1.:~s:.:r:,~~ Jllfe~n<e -tht .,...,,!Out CI051nQ prk• end ~J~prlce, Nemt L.all Cl!Q Pct. I GenPort In< 0 + 11 UP tO 7 t Arc•1• 2r o"' , '"" u p u .o J WaSllH•I a nto • l~ Up 20,4 ' ClllNlllw pf 21 + '~~ Up 20.0 S LCN Pllertn ~ + l'I UP 1t .• 4 ClllMllw CO 4'V. • 71.ft UP tU ~ r.~1.!." ::t m: : ~:: ~, iu t Sunl!le< 11~ • IVt Og 1•·• 10 PSA Inc 2w •• 2'11 VP 4.1 II FleitlVen C» 11~ + 2._ UP IJ,1 12 CoestlCp Pill 37~ + '"' UP IU IJ PUbllck lllCI J\lo + !Ill Up IJ o 1' GldWJll'n I 10\ll + IV. Up U .O IS Jew•lcor 3'14 • " oo 11 I 1• Uni,, ... Cp u~ .. t~ Up 10.t 17 PennC•nt oof.."i + 3"' Up \Ol Natl\& ~ Cllt ~ i 011s1u 4.s2111 1' -• I 11.1 -'M l\tl ... -"' '!'' ~eel I " -•11> .• • Cloroa~ .... -tt .1 S l l9lnHett 20\lo -I"' Oft 7.4 ! ~_, . 11'4 -" 1 1.t m 01 J\lo \ol 1.1 'Is ' ~ u -1~ 1.0 t Stoke II 7J' 114 ,_ 1 .O 10 Arrow'f. • 'Ul'I I •·• II 04tl.lter~ tt\4 -1"-•• I 11 Cl.,,IEI A 4' -l •.• 1J ~· ,., ,.. -" u t• !Alnt 1,1Cff .I~ -'-U I 11141 2711'1 -n• U 1 nv ,,,,, 1n1o -._ •·• I GOLD COINS Nl'W YORIC tA~I -""k" ._ ..... ... ., ..... c-.. c:~ ... .,....,.. pt~ ......... ! t ,,.., .... ...._,..,., ... .... ..... .,. ... ., ............. , ... ............ ,,,.., .... ..., ..... u .•. . ............ (',_, .-.,.., ....... ........ '-v 0-...·""""' lO Ind °t: .. g i1f:1 t.~ .. ~ 20 Tm 1'Ut m21 l'S.S1 JJO.Ol-o." u u u 101.n 1112.» 100 ... 1cn.21 + o.lt U Slk J1t.OJ >32.0t ns. 93 J3Cl. II+ O.A1 Indus . . . . . . l,A24,IOO Trtn · . : . .i ... '. · Tt-4,400 Ulllt . . . 461,700 tS Slk .. .. '·'"'· toO WHAT STOCKS DID NEW YORK CAPI Sep 30 Prev. AClva n<•CI Toda,. ~Ys Oe<llnad 71' ,.. v~i;-,:, ¥11 311 1171 1112 New hl91\s ' J Ntw IOwt SI ., WHAT AMExOO NEW YORK IAPI Sep . .JO ,.,. .. Toelaoy ~i ~en<eo 317 0.CllMCI tt• '(:,,......, IM l.C ... 11r:..n no 77S New h gns ' 2 Htw lows II " METALS S~YER GOLD QUOTATIONS 8J Tiie ,._ ...... ""9.l Se lee...., _Id OOICI prlus llld.ty: I. ...... ! "*"""' flMI ... WU 1'. ~ ... 90, SYMBOLS .. ·. DlllJ Pilat 'Thursday, October 1, 1981 ti '" Looking for a van for work arid pleasure? Be sure to chec'k today 's listings -~lassificatiOn 9570 . - CLASSIFIED INDEX ~:!!.~.~ ........ ~!.~.~ ........ ~!~!.~.~4!'! ....... 1~!.~.~ ...... , ~!~!.~.~ ........ ~!.';..~ ....... ~!.~~~~ ....... ~~!~!.~~.~ ........ G1•r.e I OOl GtMNI I 002 GtMf'al I 0112 GtMr.. t 002 Gt.rat I 002 ,...,... I 002 c;....,.a1 I 002 GtMr.. I 002 ···········~··········· ••·•·······•··········· ·······················'·················~····· ..................................................................... ······················· Tt Plact h.r U, CaU 642·5678 MOUSES f 01 SAU ···flil·f'•' 11.11 ... "1 .... .,.tt • .,. l1rn1n\UI .. ' ... ,,,.,.."' .. " t W'llft• .... \I., '""""• '-''• u •. "'. ,,,., .. tJ 1.,. .. t1111i1.Mauri \ .. 11., U~l'Wn•.,. kt·111 h 1~:~-~1uh ... ,_11111• I 11i•wn• '••1r1' "''""'""'""' l•lil..! ,~. ,...,, EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY :~~ hbl1e.er-1 Motice: :;~: All rtal estate ad· 111411 v e r t1 s e d i n l h i s 1"" newspaper is subject to ::!X the Federal Fair Hous· IASTSIDICOMDO Nearb new tuterully decorated, beautiful P.Pllo1 .a. §s.2 Ba, IU$h lanlfscapina. m:o:ooo. Ddebout Bay &Beoch Real Estate MESAVaDE , Tw o story . Four · bedrooms Quiel cul de sac location. 40' solar healing pool. BBQ and shurneboard court N~ar schools and shoppin11 $185,000 C.orpor • .ur rLu.-Rf' .. tf\ 714 76-0 C)l}) '31·7300 H.I . ~r~~~·,'h '-"'"•"t •l'4'''"'•• ~M• """ :~~:. inc Act cl l968 which mmliiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii; 1.r.. makes 1t Illegal to ad· ~ :~:: vertise "any prererence, .... .,, ...... h "'--.Ah l.uun. \lihttnur~t'f \11,ti.h tl11nw, '•I• m1 mm ... , .... tf.lt "-k: "..., .............. ... ......... ,...,..,." ~ .......... , • .,.,h l t"lnt'tt-" IJ~" If\~ '""lft"lit'f4 htl l'fll'\llffh t1.ndlt8'1ftlUnt"l,111ltio Uuplt1C\'1o t f'll" 11u1lt :~~.:l '~:.~!;','Id lndr.t\lr1.I f•fo'"'" '""'Ire '•I• \t .... 1 .. 111111.-... , ,., .. \l•"""nlhulk•-trt ···~ti•• l'h!I' fflUot•,twnl:' h 1'41 tNtof\l.tt ..... ~, k•ntht"'I to1ftfl\ f,,.," Hr•I t.1t1l•lc< ~\I ~•n•·• ftr.J f .\l411tt• "•Ah·d RENTALS lt...u_... t w1n"ht-d It.~ l nfurn1\~ U·"'""'t""'"'' "' t t.ndtl"•INUnJ'-t "'" l "ondum1AH1i•l"-\ ft! To•l\huu~ t't.un To-n.huu .... , ~ 111 l.Npltt\t'., turn ...... \)_., .. , l 1'1 4pt .. t wrn 4ph\ "'"'" "tA" •urnot t #I kVIJfTh k£.-1"•' ki ... ,d ·~ ... h \ltjfri (_illt',t lfNht 'un1wwt krtil•I \a~•t..m Htn•.t• kf'N•l'l.l11'f\t1f1 t ... ,,._., hir K• m Ufhtr t<r11h1I ~int"'>.,KH'H•l t,.,.h1.,tn .. 1 H•"'"' .._.,_,,,.tr Hrftl•h 'A•f'lt•4 \t.~ M..-m .. 1 .. 1••· limitation, or dis· :','.~ crim inatlon based on race, color, religion, sex, or nat.lonal origin, :~;' or an intention to make ''" any such preference, :~:; limitation, o r dis 1''" cr1 mltlahon." 1,1,. 0 11! ~::: This newspaper will not ,.... knowin,ly accept any ~~:· advertising for real ,, estate wluch is tn viola- ~:;; lion O( the :.=la..::..W:_. __ *~Ill 1--------· ,.. .. ~' lllORS: Ad¥.nisen tllcMlld chtdl ..... ods ~:; daily ... report .,.. :::: ron i 1clahfy. TM II.!• DAILYPl.OT ..... ..... , "' labHity for tllt flnt ~~!: i1corrtct htstrtlH ~:~ Ollly. , .. , ... 1--------·1 ...: .. Ubtt II' HMSH for Sde ... ,. i~n· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... / H""\11 Gttterat 1002 '"'t ••••••••••••••••••••••• !~:'. 1 COSTAMESA :.;: ' CHAIMEI "'' 4 Bdrm 2 bath doll BUSINESS, INVEST· house Lays on one of the MCNT flNANCC a reas largest lots. ' Custom decorating and ~~~;~: ~~':'~1 ::,~: remodeling makes this a :~:~~:~: ::~;.::'.,' "" value at Sl.24,000. Hurry' ""'""u'"'" ; @ SEA COVE ~::;~\.~.:n~7!, ,n, PROPERTIES ANNOUNCEMENTS, 7 r 4·63 r -6990 PERSONALS l LOST l FOUND .\tlflllfW""rn•"'" t ..r JAi,,.4 l..t~..I 't~I• p ,,,..,'•·.unit l"f'f"""'41h """"1,.lt lwt,,. r, .. , .. , stRVIC£S EMPl-OYMENT l PRfPAIATIDN ...,.,..,~ .. tn .. 1r ... t1vn J,1tJ '4 •Alt' f lldvl<•nl..., '"I MERCHANDISE \nl~lf'lt .. \I·~, .. ,. ..... .\url-..n kif \f At-.. ._."1..n.,.\l.t•r.•· ' '"""' "' 4 t q" I n~ n~ t •'' IJ<o ., .... , .. ,"" furMurr ~111r•it-'-•I• ... ., ....... lltlU'l.t-hul'1 ;,1•1111• J''"•t-tn l..\~f•llilt. \1.\ ..... ,, \11 ..... 11.n.-."'' \h.,,f"lldt"t1U ... Y.,.t1• •I \1.., ..... J lft .. Hul\.o n• tWhu• t-wrn 6. t.•tu11• ''""" '"'""'""'"••"" "" .. mk "11t'lll1t" 'Cliff'llf'lit(,flut!., "'-iOft' Hr•1hUt.n4 11 .. , '••ptr. h N-'hofht1 "'41H BOATS l MARINE EQUIPMENT ''""""'"' tio•L" \1.int "n 11" Ru111h \hnn..-t •• ;u111 "'••h vo ... r Ho.ii' Hrn• t h .. ,,.,, "°"'" '\a1t t\t4h'i1P" .... " .. " ~1-..,...i ...... . Kc1ioth~•Cr Tl~SPORTATION r\HCJ•R ( •"H""''' '•k M.1 nl ~ 1 .. ~ \flt , ., .. \J1.tMh· ll11,,1t•· \a•14or l '11 ..... "'1 .. it r • \ltthl( ""I"'"'" Kt·"I y, •• , .. h 1'""''' ff•l ... r' I t1llh \!tit• """" /jl' ,.,.,, AUTOMOBILE '•tlM"lilll \l\lk4Ut II '., .. ., ... , Hn 1 I' 'l"'" \ • t111 h "•'"" H.11 • H1 .. 1 •'At1tl'I lh1ti1 Ill*'>.' \o1-m '"'" lA·o1 .. 1n~ \uh~ V. o1-nh •I AUTOS, IMPORHD \o tk••I \II• Hmflil 11 \1 .. 1i \1M1n u,.,i.' H\111 t'.111r1 , .... U•l"tiOl >ru11u . •' 11 .... 1. J; •11.i J1·~ .. 11t ~.una..m1t1h1J 'fwl11t \41•1+1·111· .. tt.11 l41o ....... tit' I l1 .. tt4r1,. l'•w 11111 ••u4 Ii\"'' "'"'"'' H1,,!1' Kt"''" Nn\t·I ~.uh --...1"'" 110'"'' ''""~ .... \, .. ., .......... .. \11h• UTOS, tffW THIMllNG TOWMHOME? ., .. , , Call the speeialisLS at ... ;, the condominjum in· " formation center ,::: Touchstone Realty ,1i.,1 . DOVEi SHOIES UH~BJIVAIU 4 Bdrm. 3~batb master piece. Sweeping views of ..... Back Bay, ~arbor lights ,.., • a n d m o u.n t a i n s ' 111 Customized in every ' way . Indoor/outdoor ::;.; pool. spa. sauna. Owner .. ,,, will carry the rinancing ~· too!Callnow. '""' @ SEA COVE ::~: PROPERTIES ::·.~ 11-4-63 '-6 990 Mil>\ :::; Find out about the high· ::;:•: earning real estate sales ,.,,. career opportunities ,.,., w t t h TH E R E A L =~: ESTATERS. Licensing =-~ ~~~~~a~ie i:~::::,~e~r = your choice. Extensive ~"' sales training. For in· .. ,., Jormallon, call 751-6191_ HARIOI RIDGE .,1,, An exquisite offering; ::~;: Elegant & spacious 3 .• ,., bdrm + family room. I ::?.: lev. home w/panoramic .,,;,, v i s ta o r h a r bor. ·:~: coastline, ocean & night hghts. Prestige, com· ,1111 Cort.-luxury & security. .. 1... Reduced. now $739,000. :::: <Owner financing ). Agt. •I"•• 640-5560 '11N• '"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ..,,;., ~ HO QUAUFYIHG S25,000 down and no .,,,, qualifying fort.his lovely ''·'' 3 bdrm cul·de·sac home. .:::: Only Sl29,500. Call now ... 979-5370. •1 .. ALLSTATE A.EALTOAS .;,,; .. ,... ASSUME 9'14% LOAM ~;:: Owner will carry 2nd. ... :. 'fol' ,,, .... .•. "' ···•!! ,,,_. '·" .... No qualifying. Nicely decorated 4 bdrm home with lots of amenities . Only Sl.28,900. Call today 979·5370. ALLSTATE AEALTOAS 11••• ,,., •• ..... , ..... , ...... , .. , -..... AUTOS, USCD ''Ill "'\) -.,.u CE IEDllE ILlllfS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE MESA VERDE Beautiful Contemporary Home In Costa Mesa's Best Area Features Include Five Large Bedrooms. Two Impressive Fireplaces. Gorgeous Living Room & Family Room . Skylights. Wall Cgverings. Wet Bar. Good Assumable. Price. S223.500 IUG CAHYOH VIEW! Beautiful Versailles Model On Quiet Cul -de-Sac. Wide, Winding StaiNJay With Spectac ul ar Sus pended Wa lkway Overlooking Marble Entry And Spacious Living Room Elegant Features Garden Kitchen. Den With Fireplace. Huge Ma ster Suite. Highly Landscaped Garden With Paddle Tennis Court. Great View ~ Special Financing Available. S875,000. 759·9100 u c..,. ......... M~C_.... RESIOE~TtAi AEAl esr~tE.SERVICES RARE FINO IN SPYGLASS RIDGE '.\fo('h sou~ht aftt>r Rl·h·cclt•1't' modl•I ~ituated Ill ~el"l'nl' 1>ark ltkt· ... l'll 111i.: Outq;.mcling 'alu1o· I BR ~ Fam Rm Ht.>aut1f11ll\ dt·t·11 rJll'<i '' 11 h man~· uperade~ · 1m:lt11lrng .il l m·\I kit cht·n appltam·t·" I h11w1· "t ll IH'l p fin:rnn· s.t~l.tKHI Fl'•' IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 • STAR GA'ZEK~,:~ 1-..=...cc..:..:..:...,.-.--11 t I\\ A 1,11 I \'\---.----1 uo '~ IUI' II .t .•U(; JI M v..,. Oo~t A"""' Cw.do M Y Auo,d1tt9 fo I~• Sforf V To dt••lop m•\\OQ• lur F,.doy trod ..ord\ c0tft\P'1nchl"W) ''' '""""'°'" "' )'°"' Zod·OC b"'" "O" '"-n...,.... 1 • •• 11¥ ... lU.... ).)flllr.,-.. " ••..a M • )4Ta '"'""" """ ,,,.,. -~( ..... 1'\l'of.>l.ICI 11 ft•r ,~.w"'' •'~'f ·~>(•l.0 ,.~ ION(ll At)°'"''• 'J(,.,_t Oh ,>,.._. u•..., f)~ ... •)~tit .. u• • • ..,, • •\111...-, •• -.P." ••C,..w-'t ....... .,~. • •' 'fg. '""'' ... il'I .•.. ..~ ~~ ~C•ciw "&c:1 .. P., !t9 ........ 11"' ... ,., ,.,, ... n()tr.-ow' " ... .., ... "'Cl ,......... ~, .. ~"·· ~,_,~, "''""' "'So--..... 11.... !tTV•· ... , ~~ ,. .. "i\ )f......, .0Jt;t to~ @GooJ @Mn• .. . ..... u• ... ... w•·~-"" ,,_Hi• -~ ,,. ; M Y•+l"O !l'l)o . " U)~"ll•'* " •1&.<o '°'-• , ... ... I\••••~ ·W·•• , ... ..., ···Mo· IOOI llH•Jt1 .. ,,, ....... ti ... •nt0'll "' ... '°'' ., .. ,.,.... ... , .. ,,.. ... •• .... C:t..·H.,. ... , ("NruftAI l8IC A RNlt POWER llllA 11'' ,, • I\ Qtf """"'f,J) HlJ9 llfl 6160 6/ 'II \(OUK> 0 111(0.,.f Ot rl .. ~ J, .. t ._., I 16 1916. • "''" : •OU U IUl ""' ,:. .... ... ,.~ ... 171H•JO· • ?11-8)~: PIKl\ ,,, .. ,. ,., ,.._, " ) 6 I} .. 06 1Sl990 ; C l M I & f I A Y H I T T C R C U Y S l IC 0 l A B S C W M H R 1 It C A T E S P T E IC T R IC I 6 0 N U A A I L t R A Y N I T A C I F I l A U Q A E N W N A N T V A ,..-1 L E U E T A C I BY C NE 0 PX t ·t LL XE HR 0 E T A C I F A A V A C M R P J X 0 B M R E C Y 0 I I P T l R J E J I F R R M S R N R L I I I T H T R U R W 0 I I A 0 £ It E L R L T l I T A V It L R T I N K C N 1 Y T I 0 I N T P 0 S W A Y L 0 H C T E E N T , E A E U R C L C A T I I Y S A It W Y S I T D 0 D E E E U S Y T Y I M _q.Q j l..~ A T t N E T N Q E S L AO£NXYAP£MTRIMALOUC : .............. ~ ..... ................ Flnd•lllll•i.lft.~ ~ ._ Allllty" = T.i.t ~" ~ = FMei IJliMlldlfl Sidi ,.., T--.A ...... LIHDA ISLE Exciting opportunity! Wide channel view from spectacular architectural designed 4 bdrw , 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. Sl.495 ,000 LIDO ISLE HOMES Fealun•d on Homes Tours th is lovely traditional spacious. l'UStom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. nt>wly rede<'orated. Prr<:ed, to sell quickly at $475.000. Must see. Newlv rl'modeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation roo m & 2 patios. Beam l'l'llin g ~. tircat tor l'nlcrtaining. $420.000 Bc~t pl'i<:c for the money. PEHIMSUU POIMT BEACHFROHT Panoramll' bav & o('ean view al we~c. from prime la rge lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath tustom home. 371)(1 sq fl featur·. 111g marine room Sl.385.000 WEST OCEAHFIONT Triplex units. xlnt financing $600,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Boy\1d1• Or•ve N 8 675 6161 LOOIUMG FOR AH EXCfTING IMVESTMOO? We have just listed three buildings 1n the Cli.ff Haven area of Newport Beach Each has three·two bedroom. and lwo-one bedroom apt.s. some with patios. all with garages. and situated in a lovely neighborhood. Very good assumable financing. Each building offer e d at $410,000. FEE. A sensational Investment U~l()Uf · ti()Mf~ REALTORS, 675·6000 2443 E•~I Con t Highway, Corona del M., WfHAVl SO OfTHf HST Ll5T1~51MTOWM P.ROPHTI MAMAGEMEMT OH lHE IA Y Orange Co area 15 yrs Beautiful bayfronl home experience Call for tnfo I with sand) beach & boat REALTORS 675-5511 LUXURY DUPLEX. SO. OF HWY. Two spociotH 3 '"" 21a + ... llftlh. Upper hat MW-•J.w of oct•. ~ 1poce iR toc:h uMt. Adjoct1tt to lrYIN Ttn'CICe $449,500. COLE OF HEWrotT REALTORS 251 S E. Coast Hwy .• Corona .. Mar 675-551 I You don 't need a gun to I "draw rast" when you place an ad in the Daily Pilot Wanl Ads! Call no~ _ 642-5678 Gel GREEN cash for WHITE elephants with a Classtfted Ad Call 642·5678 $20,600 DOWN!! • NEWPORT IEACH • _ Spa cious 4 bedrooms m prestige area Anxious owner says try lease option. land tonlrat·t or •;·• Call 759·1501 or 752-7373. • 10% DOWN • Ownt>r will CAR HY 2nd on lowest prrcl'd 2 bedro o m unit 1n com plex. Quiet. pm·atc location. Assumable low 1ntere!>l loan ' 759· 1501 or 752-7373) $8000 DOWN!! Bring paint brush & broom to sa\'c SSS on this 3 bedroom fixer 1 n q u1el Co s t(.! ~I ei,a hea Creative seller s a \'S ··Sell '·· 759-1501 or 752· 7373. · NEWPORT BEACH OFRCE 2670 SOit ~I Drive (714) 759-~ 50 I 17141 752·7373 ~ Walker &lee ·Real Estate '::~:~' S© R4U N\ -!!, t. ?}S. -----(4, .. 4 ~. ClAV • l'OUAH 0 lfl!J''o"99 '-tttt• o• '*'• lour tc<o.,blod -d• Il- la.. IO IOI"' foo,1 ~ ... D~ WCJ'cil. and rates sltp Lo\·el} deck & 963-8182 I patio Ltte & cheer) 3 I L I 0 N A S bdrm + den. 2 bath, i-----~-~ * SI 5K DOWN * open beam ~e11lng, b'rtck I j• I' j j DES • .,.. "TE' BBQ, 2 car gara11e + ....._....._...__....__.....__,__, rglA • EXTRA PARKING '' f\ 4 Bdrm 2 ba pool home bargain at S595.000 I 0 S I P E I Assume ht balance loan Owner Agent 673-9187 or .. J_l_l~-1-1--4 owe straight note 675·7060 ...... _...... -"-·--'·-'-· -... succ~ REAi.TY s.t9-7!!J1 \1-~c_...1,....c...,._H _Y..---11 _:: TM old cook•e 1ar neve• pa•<l I~ 15 I I _ 18 percen t •n •n1eres1. t>ut . . . . when you look mo"ey out. OPEN DAILY 1 to 5 P.M. 2331 Cliff Drive, Newport Beach NEW EXCLUSIVE VIEW tllME P.-oramic cloH up •iews of hy, octo• and night light.. Spacious, opeon and potentially formal holtW with IGn)t living room, family room, fonnal dinincJ room plus ) bedrooms, M~ bath IMSttr suite and 2 larqe view decks. Hffd1 decorating, but has al.I the basics. ~79~ •. Q9Q f~ .. POOL-PATI0-8EAUT1Alt' Redecorcrted & ready for occupancy. Chorming 3 bed., formal dift.nn., Fnnch doors & new detoll1 ttrougftout. Owntr will ltase/option. $235,000. 63I·1400. WATERFRONT HOMES,t c Rl:AI ESTATE '1'~ Rrr-141, •'Hlf'f'1'i. M.,~~nl l436 ~ C<ld~I H ... \ NPwi>Oll Bebo. h 631-1400 l 1 s MM111t Aw i!albod 1!1.lnd 67).6900 Dir EXCll'TIOHAL IUY OM UDO ISLE! 4BR home w /center courtyard, French doors, hardwood floors, beam ceilings-; Street to street location on lot and a half. 3·car garage. $525,000 Incl. land. Yotmg/lmbernino (C55) -LUXURY WITH SICUllTY Beautiful Jasmine Creek home located on lovely wlde greenbelt. 3 BR, 2Vl baths. Total privacy in security aated community · $369,900. Madel ine Crawford '152·1414 ----------. lhe•e wasn t a ·••···• I CROTER I i.-.,..,,-1' ..--1 .....--1, ..--I ..--11 o . ..-o ••• ... • ...... o...,•td . • • • _ bt I '"9 ~ thir '"'·U• 9 .,. >rd .__.....__.__..___.__..........,. yOl.I de"e ~ ftOITI uep ""° ) below t) UNSCIAM!lf l(llHS TO vii AN~V.(P SCR.AM-UTS Altlwtn i1t Ctauificatio. 5100 THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS 'LSJ.1-:Y ~ ~YLOR CO. HEA I. TOHS ~111l't' l !Ht> VACAMT·VIEW·AMXIOUS Panoramic' vi<'w ol lrny,"ocean & sparkling li~hls. 4 Udrms . Lge fa mily rm. f'orma I din rm 212 Ba ths S395.000 Submit off er on price and terms Owner anxious See an) time WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 2 I I I Son Joaqim Hiik Road NEWPORT CENTER, M.I. 644·49 I 0 MESA DELMAR WE LL FINANCED Huge high ceilinged family room adds much lo 3 Bdrm home All hxed up' Assumable ht and owner 1''111 carr) 2nd TD. Sl35,000. 642-5200 j PETE ' BARRETT ... REALTY 759-1111 MOllLEHOMES · lido Wottt f1 ont Cozy I Bdrm. large h\ ing room ~Ith fireptac4.' Great year round h\'tnf: or weekend retreat S59.SOO 759-1616 DOCK PROILEM IN NEWPORT IEACH? 60" dock & 2 stnry Hunl ington Harbour home 4 Br. 3..,. Ba . (am. dtn, bonus rm Estate sale $699.000 R E b> Lucia 831:994~ --ON-..~ REH TORS JASMINE CREEi Drastic price reduwon )eller will l1qu1d'llte bel014>' market & finance f ormer model 3 Bdrms largl' ram1I> room, ule 1acuiz1 off mru.ter u1te Now S349,500 Guarded c·ommunity D.M. Manhall Rltr 76~0135 The Newest Pants j Xmas· Jewels! 1.t--... ~~. E@JE 1 489~(). .... I I . t,~B~ I rrom 1awrd1ne l11>ted flannel to &leam1n& silk and saM 1od hpu1s and kntckels are a ma1or theme nerywhtlt in almost any l1b11c Stw thtm now and savt• Prtnled Paltttn 9112 MtS5tS Waist StltS 23 2C 25 26 I, 28 30 32 Stn 261) iodhpurs I 1 8 yards. SC·1nch. kn1cltis I 318 Stft4 $2.00 i. tKh palttfn. M4 50& 1" uch ~" fol ..... 1114 .... ,$elid ta MMIMI llWTlll Pattem 0.,,.. 442 Dilly P1tot ll2 West 1-Sl, llew Yort, llY 10011. rmrt llAMl, aooms. ZIP, Sill •d SllU llUllllU. Wolk•nr woiNn 1 look S1111rt bf sm•I dress fer len-se-a w11d lobe wtlh our NLW FAIL WINl(R PAOERH CAIAl<l' CouPoll IOI free $1 Pttlt1n 1nStclt ~· tllotul Stftd S I ~ All CUfl IOO«S • , $2.00 NC~ IJ5.ll Diil .i ~ lM-l4WQlllll 1w.-.... ~ ··~··" Ws tad ~-ldd 50• eaQ lo! .. llld """"'" ~rarr no.. rna~P LOTS of soarkl1ng Xma\ 1 .. ms String buds and 0'1•1s on Ihm w11t to ma•• th'\' labulou\ J'"'led Cn11s1ri-as fltt lrtm\ Ou1tk easy lun tor lh, tam1ly to 101n 1n on P;ilttrn 7489 duec llOn\ 101 5 ornaments S2.00 tor mh pa11e1n Add soc eath pallern lo• oostaee and handloni Sod lo: Altet lroals Needlecraft Dept 105 Dally Piiot 8o1 163, Old Chtbea Sb., Ntw YM, NY 10113. Print 1111111, Addrm. llp, Palttfll Number -1912 Nttdlt<1.tl Cata1oc; 3 · fret Pilltrns •nildt 170 ~t !KktlS OOllS Qu•llS lllOlt1 ~nil Crochet lmb101dt1 SI 50 AU mrr llOO«S .. s2.oo -~ All Ws ind C.Ulot-1414 SOC mh fOI PoSlJCt and h111dli81. lls.o.llt-'-Cltllles °" ,.,.. I l4-l 4 QlllCl MKIMnc Qll~ti llUIShlOll HolM ~lilll 13Z~tlt On11Nli Ill-Md • llotk Qtlilts 12'-0llicl 'n' Eny f 11M1m lzt..£11• P1tthwon Ql11lb I zt. Tilrifty Cr•llJ f'IMn IZl·Pillew ~ 11&.Qodlel ..... ~ 117&,Attol~ 11~...-...-llZ•P11a .... 111-IMJ Mtl twr,_ C.'-1 • " .... ..., .... , ........ ..... 111 ..... ,... 1 ...... ... l:tr:.'?, c Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{Thursday. October 1. 1981 It t-03 Center ceremony Tuesday Tht-Mary Moore Voc atlonul Center wllJ be dedlcated in a ceremony Tuesday nt t h e R e b a-b 11 It a t 1 o n Institute of Orange County I~ Oranse. Homes ~ught by syndicates By THOMAS O. ELIAS Callfomlfl builders are g.ivlng awity everythtn11 from new cars to free anta,ior dccoralint: "itrv1ctt In their effort to fl1o1h t lhe r~;.al Chtatt• slump brought on by the high 1>rice . high interest c·om bl nation But even aggressive saJe8ma nshlp cunnot put The center ts 8 two-most California homes within lhc prl<'t> runJ(l' of s tory. 12,000-squure·foot many pr6spective buyeri.. So n ln•nd hus bl•uun building where RIO again 1n California real estate singlc-fam1ly c lie nts receive work residencysyndication. training and experience . Syndicates, or groups of investors with a job p I ace men t as . su~gle managing partner. have long bought every .'!!stance. 1 thing fro'!l football teams to apartment bu1ldml-{-. But only 10 the last fe w m o11ths have they turnt.'d 'Client.s include people agair\ to single f amily with developmental or homes in a big way as learning disabilities, they did in 1975. sensory or orthopedic The same fotces impairment, cerebral driving m any families palsy. s troke or head out of the home-buying CALIFORNIA FOCUS /1/,'i/' \\ /' \11•:\Jll/0 I' t/1. I/ \ ,,, I 111t111 trauma. Approximately market make group purchases or s ingle fam1I~ 50 persons at a time are homes increasingly attructive to bu~ er~ .... 1th ab1,11l enrolled in the program. $10,000 or so apiece to invest. s<1y . ., rPlurn li/w lll(JVie A,, ......... a talktni! unH·orn and Guest of honor at the I Like the real estate boom. of the mad a11tl d edication is Mrs. late -1970s, tho~e fo~ces .are being felt.first :J1HI Moore, board member mo~t strongly '':' Ca.h~orn1a. For h~me pn.ces 1n the and long·time suppQrter ~aJor Callfo.m1a c1l1es are the highes t 1n lht: 11.1 NEW IN GREETERS While most offtl·es It a lll'l' \\'It ll l n tko. have receptionists. thb Tok~·o nffit·1· 111 Sanrio Co. Led greets \'l!'>tlOr-.. ~1l thl' L'll .1 I'\ l':111wr.1 of RIO lion, averaging more than $150.000 in even the · most ordinary neighborhoods. ~I I.IHI', 1 \1'1 1·:1~ht lll•tlllh"I .1flt·1· !ht• t•nd of h1' 1 M d;1 y ord1•al ,, .... ,, h11 .... IJJ.:t 111 Iran, • Ill • smt Settlement offered Gets degree Combined with record mortgage inlert'"' I rates. the pnces often produce monthly pa~menr' in the $3,000 range, far too high for. most famth«'' H It d II 1· \ I{ II C' k \ .... 1d..r11;11111 "'"'II ' a (ti.; I Ill I lilt 111"1\ Riverside County would pay for scientology church raid RIVERSIDE <AP> -The Riverside County sheriffs de· partment has agreed to pay the Church of Scientology $15,000 lo settle a $1 million civil right~ suit. sheriff's department n11d<.'d the mission and seized ret'oTds 10 June 1979. ty fire inspector to "spy for him ,. by purpQrting to conduct a routine ins pection of the church's Riverside mission. Church officials contended tbat the .inspection was a ruse to "case" the mission's layout ln advance of the Sheriff's Depart- m c n t raid which netted thousands of church documents. Rebecca J . Balentine to afford and well beyond the range of -.mall 111 was awarded a master's vestors, who get far less in monthl) rent rt•ct•1µ1., degree in public and than they pay in taxes, interest and mainknan<'t' international affairs at -But even under the high-price. hr~h 1ntert>-.t t he University of conditions, single-family California homes :-.till Pittsburgh. She is a look like a prime investment. There ha!> '"'''l·r graduate of Costa Mesa been a m ajor real estate bus t in the nation ·~ High School and UC largest state; even "slumps" usually amount lo II "•" l1k1· a movie h1•fl' \11 11 art• 1n \\ ,1 ·0 lo111µt1111, I> r . With '11111 lldlll!' up on '>lgns, p1·11pl. r hroY.111g yellow r1lth1111.., anti then lh1• n1 ''' m11111t1• \ou're Irvine. little more than temporary plateaus h•tlllC' .... 1t l._111;trll1 '<llfl PVlllC MOTICE By settling the suit, the county admitted no misconduct. After a series of court hear· ings, grand Jury sessions and suits. the rel'ords were returned to the churt'h. Charges against five church members were dis missed for lack of evidence bv a Riverside judge in March lssO NS-15067 NOTICE OF DEATH OF WILLIAM H. LLOYD ANO OF PETITION TO ADMINISTER ESTATE NO. A-110498. The $1 million U.S. District Court suit arose out of a 1979 sheriff's investigation into the church's Riverside miss ion. In· vestigators contended that church members were operating a loan fraud scheme, and the That same month, lhl' t•hurch sued for $1 million. charging civil-rights violations. Th e su it allej<!ed that a sheriff's detet'livt' solicited a ci Last week, attorneys for the church and the county met with U.S. District Judge Robert M . Takasugi. He suggested $15,000 as a settlement, and both sides agreed To all heir s, beneficiaries, creditors and contingent cresiitors of WILLIAM H. LLOYD and persons who may be otherwise Interested In the will and/or estate: ' NMIQll "1CT1Tious eusucns NAME STAHMUIT' ~__, Tt1e followln9 per50fl' ere doln9 IMltl-•t: "AYVA, 14400 Cul.,... Orl¥e. •C, H•<ll•1• Pteie Sllopplno Center. Culver Otlw, lrvtne. C•tlfornle t*4 Morte ~. Int , SSS Turnpl~e StrMt. c:.Mlwl, MA. 01021 I• Oelawa,. ~orp0rellon Tiiis ~ ts ~O<ldu<led by • cor PUIUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 0-Mn& FICTITIOUS eUSINESS SOUTit COAST NAME STATEMENl Alll QUALITY Tht lollow•nQ P•r\on• art oolnQ MANAO•Ml:NT DIST•ICT bu>1ne\~ •• MttA•lll090,"10 Ill OANAE CORPORATION. NOl'ICll 0" ~•Lie LT 0 , 111 • Catllornt• Limited NEA•INGTOCON$1DEll P•rlntrs111p (71 DA NA E TNEG•ANTINOO~A COllPOA ,.TION, LTD •II, e VAIUANCE AND THE C•lllornoa limited Parlnerstup, Ill ADOPTIO. DI' A DANAE COAPOllATION, L TO., 11111, COMPf..IANCI DATE • Calllornl• L•mlttd PirlMrslllp, (~I CA.Sit NO. ft2t.1 DANAE CORPORATION. LTO., •IV, A petition has been filed ,.ICTITIOUUUSINHS by DOLORES M. LLOYD NAME$TATeMuT in the Superior Court of TIM 1011ow1nv .,.,._, "dOlnv llllil· ORANGE County request-"•'-' .. A ANG EL PLUMBING, H• S.nele Slreet. COiie Mete, Cellf«nle 91U7 Lewll Peck ..... S.nele Sl,...I, Cost• Mew, C•lll0<nl• .,.27 Tiii' l>uslowss '' cONtucM<S by en In· dlwldual -•tlOft. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IMI i Cahl0tni.t LomHed PartMrSlllP, ISi Mona 51-I , .... 5ovlll C.oetl Air O...llty Menegt-OANAE COii PORA TION, L TO. II V,. &•rrell S ~ayne Viet menl Ol1trk1 HH<°lftll lloard wlll l\Old Caltfon\14 Lomoteo P•n,,.r>hlp, 1~ IAwl' Peck Tiii' statement wes fifed with thl County Clerk~ Ounoe County on~ 1em1>er 1', "" ing that DOLORES M. LLOYD be appointed as personal representative to administer the estate of WILLIAM H . LLOYD, Irvine, CA. (under the In- dependent Administration of Estates Act>. The peti - tion is set for hearing in President · ' • puDllc i..erlr19 •I •:JO a.m on F•orclllld, S..O•lt150.,irv•ne. CAt271S Tiiis tla ........ I wes fifed with lhl THURSDAY, N0VEM81)'.A It, Itel In DANAE COlk>OllATION, e ~nt Clerk olOr Count on~ Ule Boenl of~v~ Cl\eml>en •I Cil alorn•• corporation 1'1'00 ltml>e~ 25 ltll .,. Y 10 Civic CAnltr O.lve, Santa Ana, l'aorcll•ld, !.uote 250, ,,.,.,,..,CA '1115 ,.,,.,. Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic Publl•hed 0r.,. co.st 0•11Y Piiot, Center Drive West, Santa • ,_1117W Celllllf'nle, to consldtr the ar.,.llnQ of Tll•• l>Uslne",. conouc~d by• cor· • verl.aM.e and tN edaOtlOft of • tom~ oor•tion Oct. 1· •. 15' 22' "" •HHt Ana, CA 92701 on October Publl"*I 0.41n99 Coast O•lly Pilot, pll•nc• --a jlAClpltator ., PEN· oa,_-CorPO<~llOf\ Ocl. '·I, U, n . "" ·~· HWALT co•PORATION, uo Nor111 Oougtu w Bu•l•y 28, 1981 at9:30a.m. IF YOU OBJECT to the Belewla StrMI, Or•nllf, C•lllomla, P•o•Oenl curren lly -•llnQ In wloletlon ot Tiii\ •l•l•-nl w~~ tolt<I '"'" ,,.,. Rule 103 of Ille So.Ith C.oe•I Air O<Nllly County Cler• o• Oranqo> Covnty on Me neaement District Rulu and ~pt n 1'1111 ~ICTITIOUS•USINISS granting of the petition, NAMll sTATEMttNT you should either appear TM 1ooow1nv .,.,._, is c1o1ng 1>u1I· at the hearing and state Reguletlons. Rule JOJ require s • • FllJtH ------------permit to operate encl ,..qulrH -r•· Publo•""" Or•-CO<tsl O•lly Piiot "ICTITIOUS eustNllSS lion In-~ with ~lfled con-O<t I •. ·~ n , .. , OJI .. ; ne\sl~i>EPENOENT TRAVEL IN your Objections or file OUST RY, 211 Ptnutone, lrwlne, written objections with the C•lllornlenm court before the hearing. .. AME STATEME .. T dlllOftt of Mid permit. Tiie toll-fnQ person' ere dolnQ A COOY of the pelltlon Is aveltel>le tor bu'lneu H : ln1P9<Uon at tht Office o1 the HHrlnv SOUTH COAST METRO NEWS, Boenl C-. tUO Eesl Flilr Ori,,., El 4'5 Town C-er O.lw., C°'I• Me ... Moftte, Cellfoml• -•I the Anellelm C.lltllf'nle .,.V Oftke, 14IO Eetl 8all AOAO, Al\ehl lm, Mlcheel Aoeotn Lawler, Jr., m Cellfornle, Merine Avenue , B•lboa l•l•ftd, Int.rested perwin1 ,.,,.Y •II-•no Celllornle '2642 1ubfnlt orlll or -"ten stalemenls al Anclf'9w John Lawler. nt Marine lhl llaerln!I. 11 11 rl'QUHted lh•I writ· Avtnue, Belbo• "lend, Calllornl• ttn sl•""-tl ,,. submitted 10 Ille ., .. , H .. r1r19 Boenl llw days befort Ille Thi• blnlneu h conduc1ed by a ,,.•rlllo. ~rel pwtnenNp Del.cl' Sept-21, 19'1 M. R. L-ler, Jr SOUTit COAST Al• Tiii' IW""'lfnl WM llted with "'-OUALITY MANAGEMENT County Ci.rt.~ Orange Countv on Se9-DIST•tCT NEA•llfO M>A•D ternl>er 1', 1tl1. ly ......, Olli,..,.,.., "111121 ~ Clertr Publl"'9d Orange C<MISI Dall~ Pllol, Pul>ll'hecl O.el\99 Coui Oaloy Piiot. Ocl. I, I, 15, tt. 19'1 •2•2 .. 1 Oct. I, ,_, OU-ti. DEATHS ELSEWHERE SAN RAFAEL 1J\P 1 John Humph re), 72. curator or the San Fran CISCO Museum or !\lodern .\rl for 45 year:.. d1l'cl Tu~ da\' SAN HOSE 1J\1'1 Donald Lee Wartner, "hese invention or the flopp) disc r P'ACIFtC VllW MIMOllAL ...... Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1f1c Voew Drove Newp0r1 Beach 644·2700 McCOIMtac MOITUAlllS laQuna Beach 494-9415 LaQuna Hills 768·0933 San Juan Capistrano 495-1776 HA.llOI LA WM-MT. OLIVI Mortuary • CemtJ rerv Cre~rorv 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 -. memor~ ht'lµ1•rt 'lllll 1·nm put er de\'l•loµmt•nr dtt•d Sunday ~EW ORLEA~S 'Al' I Dr Allon Ochsner, 87. 11 heart surgc~m crt'dil eel "1th first linking smoktnl! to lung cancer in the l!l~ls. died Thursday NE w YORK I,, I' I Romulo Betancourl. i':J J rormer pre,tclPnl 11r \'eocwela, died :'lton11<n Betancourt wast wu:e µn•,1 denr or his homrland from HM5 lo 19-17 J ' h<'<ld of a rcvotutionar) JUnla , then from 1959 lo 19&1 (ulhm tnl! an election H l' NTSVJ LLE.-i\la 1,,r1 0 r Dr. G eorgf' \\., Corner, 92. an Jnatom1s1 whose part 1c1pat111n in the discovery or the hormone progesterone led to lhl' de· velopment or the birth l'Oll lrol pill, died Monda,. LEEDS. Englund 1A P1 Lord Boyle. 58. the first leading Con11en•at1v<' Pai ty politician publicly to pro lest s porting links w11 h Soult\, Africa. died Mond.1) -----------G•v1 e Ann• H111or•n, n1 Your appearance may be P'IJBLIC NOTIC£ I Plnestone. lrvlne, C.llfornle tVI• T111, 1>us1n.ss 11 conc1uctee1 by an In. in person or by your at- dlvldua1. torney. NOTICE OF DEATH OF G•VteAnnHlllvren I F Y 0 U A R E A JANET LEVER BAETZ, Tiiis •••temeni wn flied wllll ,.,. CREDITOR or a cont-aka JANETTE L. BAETZ County CienofOr•-Countyons.tc>-innent creditor of the Ae. AND OF PETITION TO tem1>er1',1"1 '" " ,,,1122 ceased, you must fil e your ADMINISTER ESTATE Publl111edOr•nveCCM1slD•llYPllot, claim with the court or NO . A 110511> Oct 1·1·0 •22·"" 42" .. 1 present It to the personal T o a I t h e 1 r s , PUil.JC MOTICE representative appointed benef1c1ar1es, creditors by the court within four and contingent creditors of ,.1CTITtous eusi .. us months from the date ot Janet Lever Baetz, aka NAME STATEMENT first issuance of letters as Janette L. Baetz and Tne1011ow1nvper""'1,c1o1r191>u,I· provided in Section 700 of persons wh o may be neu,•~·1.E N PROMOTIONS 1028 the Probate Code of otherwise interested tn the cotton strut, Newport 8u c11, California. The time for will and/or estate ca111ornl•9166J filing claims will not ex- A petilion has been filed s1re~~~"N::'~':1 1~~-;(,.~~1~,':.'. pire prior to four months by Donald D Harwood, tt~ from the date of the hear- Esq. in the Superior Court T111, t>ustneu Is conclU<t.ed by •n In· ing noticed above. of Orange County request-dlvldu•t YOU MAY EXAMINE ' lh l H be t B I 8mtM.1111e11 . ing a er r arc ay T"'' stat-• was 111ec1 w1111 -the file kept by the court. Bae l z. J r . or in the county ciertt o1 0r.,. countv on Se9-If you are interested In the alternative Roxene Baetz ttmt>er 11, '"' ,.mwt estate, you may file a re- J a cobs as spec i a 1 ad· Publlshed Or•noe co.it oe11y Piiot, ;iuest with the court~ to re-ministrator be appointed 0<1.1,1.u.22,1911 .,,..,, :elve.special notice of the as personal representative inventory of estate assets to administer the estate of Piil.iC MOTtE :tnd of the petitions, ac· Janet Lever Baetz, aka :o unts and repor t s Janette L. Baetz {Under NOTICE 11tv1T1 No e1Ds jescribed in Section 1200 I h e I n de Pendent Ad -e10 ITEM No.121 Jf the californla Probate ministra tion of Estates NOTICE IS HEAE8Y GIVEN,,,.,,. d A l) Th l . t f ualed Pf090WI' wlll be 1"9Ce1Wd by .,.0 e. c · e pe iti on is se or ,,,. c11y~Co1t•Mew, 1ow11: Tlle CI· David S. Getty, Attorney hearing In Dept. No. 3 at iv council, P.O. eo. 1200, eo.te llNu, at Law, 1155 Civic Center 700 Ci vie Center Drive, ca111ornl• m». on.,. l>efor9 ,,,. "°"" Drive West Santa Ana West In 'he City Of Santa of II 00 • m. on Friday, Oct-14, CA ' r ' '"' 11 """ be thl retpOMll>lllty of 9 2 7 0 3 i t e I. ( 7 1 4 ) Ana, California' on Oc tober ,,,. bidder 10c1e11ver111, blo 10 thl city )36-6607. 28, 1981 at 9; 30 a.m. Clerk'' Offk~ by 11\apr-r•nnouncecl Publltnecl 0..-CO.II Delly Pllol, IF YOU OBJECT to the t1me. Bids wlll be pu111k1y __, enci :>ct t, 2,1, '"' .,,._., t' f th t'f' rHdeloudel1100e.m.,or essOOft gr an 1ng 0 e pe I tOn, tllereeller es prectk.Ole, on Frldey, you should either appear 0c1o1>er 14, 1911, In '"' counc11 Chem· at the hearing and slate i..n, CllY H•ll. 11 F•lr or,,,., con• ----------- your ob1ecl1ons or file Mew,Celllornle,torlhllurnlllll"llof PtCTITIOlneUllNlllS LA80A AND EOUIPMENT TO NAMalTAT•M• .. T written objections with the PAINT THE CITY OF COSTA MESA The ... ....,. --Is ....... lllnl-courl before the hearing. POL1cEeu1LOtNG. -••: Your appearance may be Acldlllonal .... of lhe -lfk•llon• DEE'S QUICKIE CLEAN ING, 156 in person or by your at-may be oe.t•lned •I the Offlc• of 111e C"'• Mne St.-1, c-llNu, 0 Purcllaslna A11tnt, 77 l'elr Orin, nt27. torney. Cost• Mew, CAllfoml•. 111<11 tfloulcl... DALOlll£$ DOltOTHEA C•AIG, I F Y O U A R E A returne<I to IN •1tenUon of Ille City lf6 CHU MeM Sn.et, Coste Mne, CA CR ED To Clerk, within uld time llmlt, In • nt27. I R Or a CO n t · ueled ..,,,.,ope, IOtntlfled on thl out· Tiiis .....,_ la cOftd\K-11y •11 lft. ingenl creditor of the de-,1<1ew1111u.e1c111emN11mt.er ene11hl clwklue1. ceased, you must file your 0~~~r;:a ~;,..11 SPCK.lty .. c,, end Tiiis =:.':. 111., wtlh IN claim With the Court Or every 1tenusset 1ort111n'the1119<1tlc•· Cou11ty Oertt of Ore,.. c-ty Of\ present it to the personal "°"'· Any -ell ucctotlOfts 10 '"' s.t. u, tt11. representative appointed -Ille••~ mvs1 .,. c1eer1y si.Mcl PUWh b th · . f In Ill• bid, -fellure to SM~ e11y ""911.,.. Or ... COMt Deity "liot Y e court within our Item In thl se>eclllcetlOflt ,,,.11 be s.coit.17,24,0ct. 1,1, 1•1 _,.., months from the date of 1rovnds 1« re1«11on ot the blCI. first issuance. of letters a s Eac11 bid "'-" wt tllf'th u.. 1u11 "ded . t• 700 f neme1 -,....ldences of •II .,._ provt in sec ion o •nd P•r1le1 lnterwtctd In the ..._.1. t h e Prob a t e c o d e of 11 111e bid 11 11'1' • <"'-•tlon, stet. t11e PICTITtOUS aulfNttll California. The time for ... muoftheoffken wt1oCM11lgnen NAMalTATa.uNT filing claims will not ex-•1,..mentOftblMlfoftllec~tloft Tiit to11-1r19 PffllOft• ere dolno I I elld .,,......,. more then -ofll~er butlnctu .. , pre pr or to four months musl •I on. II Ill• llld It by • (I) DANAE CORPORATION. from the date of the hear-partnership°" • joint -twe, si.. LTD., •VII , • ca111orn1e Lmlled ,_Cl llOTHBS. ~•OADWAY MOflUAIY -" 110 Btoadwev Costa Mesa 642·9150 DEAffi NOTICES Ing noticed above. 111enemes.-eeldr-ofe11 .. ,.,., Per 111er s lll p; c 21 DAN A 1 You MAY cvAMl .. 'E pertt•tr' encl folnt -lure". If Ille COlll"O•ATION, LTO., •VII,• ,._"' "' llldNI' I~• "'9-,,..tlftetOI •1119 or Cat1fllrftf8 LllftftM "tl1111l"Clllll; m th~ file kept by thl court. •notn.r entll'I' -... .___ -DANAE COE,,ORATtON, I.TD .. If you are interested In the c1er • 11emiow-. ""lllf IMll be • v 111 . • ce111er11I• Limited IALTllB•B~ SMITH & TUTHK.L WHTCUH CHArtt. 427 E 17th Sr Costa Mesa 846·9371 NICI laOTHIH SMfl'HS' MOITVAIY 627 Main St HunllnQton Beach 536-6539 estate, you may file a re-111 111e ... e1-o1a.11100wwltll• Par111ors11111 ; 1•1 DANAf EWELL c1e.ieMtlOll '°''°""" .,_"'9 "DaA COR,,ORATION, LTD., •IK. e S quest with the court to re. 11he 11ct1t10..s nemel"; 11row lOoM, ~llloml• um1-.. ,,.,,,_.,.tp; m ROGER BEN SEWELL. ceive special notice of the -•wor. no 11e11oous -tMll .. DANAE eott~ATIDN LTO., •X. born In Arcadia, Ca on Inventory of estate and of uMC1un10t1"""8l••evr....tr"11tn-ie ce111or11l• Llml1ec1 ilenner111111. April 21. 1964. Passed aw11~ the petitions accounts and :~c:!!" ~,...C::,~:..--:; ~'m. Fllltdll._, MM 190• 1"'..,.· CA on September JO . 19fll in reports de~rlbed In Sec-nem•• of thl ~ .... 99<"9tery, DANAI! CORl"ORATION , • ~i.s1ion Viejo Hospital. Mi' ti 0 n 1 2 o o. s 0 r the Treetu,.,.,et111M1Neor. e e1llor11I• ur11oret1011, 1uoo sion Viejo. Ca lie 111 i;u1 Callfornla Probate Code. T11ec;11yc..unc11otu.c1tvotc .. i. '•lrc1111«,1utttU0,1N111t,CAft7tS. d M4M ,._..... tlle rltfll to rejtct MY Tlllt IMlmiMM It coniN<tM by • ,.,.. vived by his parents Mr un Donald O. Harwood, Esq. or •11 llldt. ,...,..,,. Mrs. WaJter Sewell. brorhrr Herwood & Adkinson ,.., .. ,tNO 0r.,.. c.... Deity"''"-0..-GWpotlltloft Timothy, sister Lnu~a Flory. P.O. Box 1907 0c1.1, 1•1 021 .. 1 .=:,:·•1111ov. Memorial contribution& are NtwPOrt a.ach, C•. t26'3 TNe ......__ -., ... w1tt1 "" requested to the-J\r('adla (714) 644-1312 DAILY PILOT c-1y cim _. o. ..... c-ty .., Presbyterian Church, 1 sl & Publlshed Orange Coast CLASSIFllD ADS left."· '1"· PmlM Allee: Arcadia. Ca. RI)' Delly Piiot, Oct. 1, 2, 8, 841._,. ~ .... ~ce. 0.11, ""~ Family Mnrtu3ry dlreclor:1. t981 4323-81. ....._ _____ ~ _______ Oct. 1,e.1a.n, tttt ._., .. "Once interest rates come down to 12 pert·t·nt. you 're going lo see $150,000 houses go up to $200.<HIO quickly because with the aver age workl'r s monthly income increasing by 11 percent a yl'<ir the monthly payme nts will be no greater a burdl'n even at the higher price," says Frank Ramsav. a Los Angeles real estate consuJtant. Yo11 rt• -,h1.1k1ng l'r1.,.tl1·111 l<lag;.1n·-.. li:111tf and ki-.,ing Mrs Ht· 11-1 .111 anti tlil'n 11 '.; 1 I\ 1 I ' 1111 I l' IJ J l' J.. In \4, ,1:-h111gt 1111 \t 1''-llU rl . tl1111u1 Iii•• .11111 thing-.. '"" did l1d .. 1c• '"IJ lf'fl :->11111 1 111111·, 11 :-. .tlrno:-t (1k1 • 11 11"\t I h.1ppt•111·d So investors ha ve begun to make J01nl purchases of lht' kind of homes they used lo bin s ingly Most of the single·fa mily homes boui,:ht Ii) syndicates have negative cash flow -the d1( ference between expenses and rent payment of at least $100 a month. But tax benefits and the pro s pect of large profits ~hen the syndicate st-lb off the homes more than m ake up for it t 111 "' '"·" S1c-kmann. " f11r1111 1 \t.1nn<· guard .11 lh1 I 1'111 ,111 t·mhJS~\. \\di 111.1rn Jill n1tt·h .. a homc•town g11 I ht• dal<'d \\li1l1 on lt•;t \I' 1ust bd1111 111, "'1i.:11n11·nt tu I 1 :111 .\111t1 h1·r former Groups of Californians either unwilling or una ble to make the large down payments needed ror homes in their state have also begun sinking money into hom es in other Sun Belt cities Hou'''" in Houston, Phoenix and Las Vegas. amonj! others, cost about what California homes did f1\'I' years ago. They are appreciating steadily bet wt·1•n l '• percent and 3 pe rcent a month. even in the fa <'l' of high mortgage interest 1111'1,lj.!I' '"'ti I cw"· '' 1 t I , , •' r ' , • .1 .., a j.!1'11()01,111:111 I h• •'"ltd• pl.in tn 111 II \ I' II I I 11 ,1 h 11 nl I' S11k11 .11111 lo"11hhl 111 (" 1•1 l.111ol \l11 IJ'lllJ! "" l1:11•J.. p,1\ ,1!-> ;t tlnWll l'LIY nu·111 And the out-of-state investments also flo.ltur1· lower negative cash flow. since monthly rent ab in other places are far closer to the old standard or I percent of the purchase price. b Are there disadvantages to syndicated hmn1· buy ing? Apparently there a re few for the in\'Cl>l11r:-. in syndicates with sound management S11 '-111.11111 \\orl-,,., a' a \alt -.111,1n f111 .1 '-,t l.11u1s I .1d11• I ,1t111n But the new syndicates help keep home pnt'l'' high by providing buyers at a time when rnll'r'"'' rates might otherwise be driving them down to J range that more would-be owner-occupants cnul<I afford . Swm· of t hcst• guy!> 111' .. I \\ .1111 lll !"II and l3lk .d1011l lr.111 h(• -...11d ft ':-lllC't• lt• ktllt\\ JH'Opll• .11 1• llll•I< li rl ltlll II hur t ~. 111) 1•11~111,.,.,.., And that means the trend will not help -<oh l' the ever-worsening California housing <'ru nrh NY bank recalling 8 112 percent mortgages Michael Shail says he was shocked wben he opened his mail to find a notice s~ying the Ul:->ter Sa\'ing!> Bank of Kingston, N. Y. was recalling his 8.5 percent home mortgage. "When I got the letter. l died." the IBM programmer from Rhinebeck said. Shail said he has bee n negoliatrng with the bank srnce he received the notice in April. On Wednesday. the bank said 1t wanted 50 mortgages paid orr or rt' issued at hi~her interest. • A TWA jet that developed engine trouble shortly after takeoff returned to San Francisco lnternattonal Airport. and a n air turbine motor popped out when it landed. officials said The motor clipped a fuel line Wednesday as it fl ew out and started a fire on the pavement which was quickly extinguished. The engine trouble and the lost motor were unrelated. and there was no danger to the 180 passengers aboard, Trans World Airlines said The TWA L·lOll was bound for Los Angeles and then London. * Wind patterns the next few days should prevent fish killed in a 40· mile-long outbreak of ··red tide·· from coming ashore along central' Florida's Gulf Coast. st ate marine of- ficials say. The kill, stretching five to 10 miles off sh ore a long M anatee and Sarasota counties, was spotted by aircraft Wednesday. Red tide is caused by a lgae carry- ing a Poisonous toxin that tints the water red and kills fish. • The San Francisco hospital that has served West CoHt merchant seamen for more than a century will be clo,,ed at the end of October, lhe Department of Health and Hamon Services said. The services to seamen, however. largely ended Wednesday. a victim of the budget cuts Imposed by the Reagan administration. A spokeswoman In Washington said the department dcdded lo close the Public Health Service Hospital because tbere had been no reasible orrers from out.st& groups.~The prop· .... 1•1 I ~ ... 11.• .11<1 \\Ill I I \ I I I I 11 I h1• [)1•11•11..,1• I h·p.11I1111•111 ~<'hr:hka ·,1.111· 111•.il rh 11ff1nab are warn rni! pn·g11;mt "111t11•n .ind lit cast fot•1hn.J( m11tht·r-.. 11111 111 c•,11 duC'ks and gl't''-<' -,11111 d11111iµ 1 lw l!l~l hunting Sl';tS1HI lkt';lll'-l' I lt1• 1111-.11 111:1\ ('On t ,1111 !ht• Jll''lll Uk "11dl Ill \\ hldl l'tllllcl 1·1111:-.1• h1rth d1•lt•1•h \\ 1•dnt•.,<I." ' \\ .11111111.: 1·am1• .1flcr ;\:t•hr:i,J..,1 .111tlt1111111 ... d1·1·1d1·d 1.1 JI I 11 \\' t h 1 • , t .i t , • w : 1 I , · rf" \\ I h 11111 1 n g o;1•;1 .... t11l 111 llllC'll ,I, I ltl'dlllt•.( 'i.ttllnlJ\ ;lflt•r IJh lt•-,h -,ho\\Ld Olli\ 11111· or !'i!'i h111h 11·..;tl'tl h • ..111 11.111·-, of the P<''-l 1t·1d1• in f.111\ l 1,•u1• S11n11· \\.111•1 f1 1\1 I 11 -,11·d 1n \lorllana r1•\ t'L1lc·d l11\.1t' 11•\ •·h 111 1 h1· Jl''''"'tde. PLACES foreing off1t'IJh 111 ltl -.t.111·-.. lo t•on :-rfil'I' l'ha11.:1nl! 1 h1•1 r \\ ,tl<'rfowl :..t.•asnn-.. f'uhh:..111•1 H ttpt·rt '1 urcl11d1 ~ arm•d tmla~· h1• will l111111dut• 't'ht• T1ml's or London .ind 1h ,,..,,,.,. pap<•r. ThP Sunda~ r1m1•:, Ii\ i\lo11day If IOI maver1('k Sund:cv Ttmeo; pnn\l'r"> do not call orr a J>:l\ 111 ... pllll .. Liqu1<1ar10, ha:.. la·1•n d1st'ussed and dec111L•d 1po11. lht• ;\u,lralian publish r tol< 11•po1 t1·r-, uft N .1 meet 1ng of lht• 1m1's '.\11·w-..pupc·r' hoard. • Let' County t !-'la 1 off11·1ab plan to va<'cinate 4.000 !>tu dt•ntl< al(ainst measles as fedt'ral llff1cials con- firmed it was the l:tl'gest outbreak 1n Lhc. Unit.set 8lates with 51 ronfirm<'d cases. An official with l11c n11tional Cen ters for Disease Control in Atlanta said Wedne;.day the outbreak among high school stuctPnts was .. disturb ing, .. but would not dcluy the cnc·s target datt• or d1mmuting measles nation wide h) Oet11hcr 19R2 • An Amtrak train struck a .station wagon transportin6t six children to a priv&tt' Fresno Sehool, bul the youngsters nnd th 1r dravcr were not seriously Injured. AU were treated al Fresno Communh.y Ho~p1tal Ud N •, le ased. .. • • • • I v. •, . DUIGI ClllT YOUR HlllTlll llllY PAPER 1 • •. U '.. l 1 A ~· , : 1 ' 11 1 t 1 • •1• OH AN<.t COUNl Y. C ALIFORNIA 25 TS ,t:r·-w;· .. Marines test troops for marijuana at El Toro By Gl.ENN SCOTT "'-Delly Pli.t l\tfl A Marine Corps screening pro· gram is under way at the El Toro Air Station to discover who is smoking marijuana. About 1,000 Ma nnes will be tested each month Their urine s a mples will be screened through a new porta ble unit de· s igne d t o quickly indic ate whether tbe Marine has smoked marijuana in the past week, said Gunnery Sgt. Dick Blumster. Marines whose positive tests are reconfirmed in a Navy laboratory in San Diego will be e nrolled in educationa l and t reatment programs aimed at discouraging marijuana use. he said Participants whose later tests are negaUye probably won't be sanrtioned, but for those whose tests continue to be positive, Blomster said ; •'That 's a new ball game." Chronic marijuana users. he s aid. could be discharged from the corps . Blomster, who works in the base public affairs office, said the Ma r ines have other pro· grams for alcohol abusers and users of hard drugs. Although the corps has had other tests that sometimes in· dlcate marijuana usa, the oew process is the lirst to aim specUically at the substance. Marine officials ordered the testing because they believe that m arijuana s moking is common in the military. according to lBt Lt. Don Donaldson. "With 99 percent accuracy in Illegal drug de tection. we expect about 40 percent or those tested to s how positive results <for marijuana >," Donaldson said in a written st atement. Testing also will be instituted at the Marine Corps' T ustin Helicopter Alr Station and at Camp Pendleton, said Blomster. "We have been concerned about marijuana (use> for some time," said Blomster. who noted that the failure of a soldier to perform a duty or care tor a plece of machinery can have Im· pllcattons on others in the unit. He said the new procedures of· fer more accuracy and economy tban in previous tests. "The ·only people it's going lo upset," he said, "are those who are s moking marijuana:· Spectacular stor1n socks_. Orange Coast Reagan firm on program WASHINGTON <AP > -Presi· de nt Reagan said his economic recovery program will talte time but "we will not be swayed" in the quest ror spending and tax reductions -and added that he will use vetoes if necessary to enforce his program. "I will sign no legislation that would 'bust t he budget· and violate our commitment to hold down federal spending," Reagan told a White House news con· fere nce today.- 1 n a n openi ng s tat ement. Reagan also said that his pro· posed sale of $8.5 billion worth of weapons to Saudi Arabia -a deal th a t faces t rouble in Congress -will enhance U.S. national security without posing any threat , "now or in the future." to Israel. His statement rebuked outside lobbying against the sale, say· ing , "American s ecurity in· terests must re m ain our internal responsibility. It is not the busi· ness or other nations to make Am erican foreign policy." He did not specificalJy men· tion Is r aeli opposition to the AW A Cs arms deal. but s aid the world must know American policy is not trei ng a ltered because or outside pressures. ·'Other count ries must not get a perception we are being undu· ly influenced one way or the other with rega rd lo foreign policy," Reagan said. It was Reagan's fi rst news confer e nc e since June. his fourth as pr'esident He joked abou t tha t in o pe ning the se ssion , greeting r eporters "Welcome to my first annual press conference." It also was the fi rst day of the government's budget year , and Reagan took the occasion to speak out again on his economic prog ram, ooting t hat he had signed legislation to raise the national debt limit past Sl trillion. 'All Sa1'rs' get mixed reaction NEW Y O RK I AP I Customers lined up at the doors when some of the nation's banks and sa vings institutions opened today as the high-inte rest, tax- free AIJ Savers certificates went on sale. Some fi nancial institu· lions planned to stay open all we ekend to handle orders for new accounts . But other bankers said busi- ness was no greater than usual a nd concluded investors were EASTERNERS FIRST TO 'CASH IN' -A4 waiting to see if they'd get a higher return on a later offering of certificates. The All Savers that went on sale today pay a-ytehhJt'tt.81 percent;-late thts a fternoon life rate for All S avers effective Monday will be set by the Tr easury Department, bas~ on its monthly auction or one-year Treasury bills. ''We've had a lot of calls th.ls roorning, a lot of inquiries," H id Gr ace Schmidt o f Bank ol Vi r ginia in Richmond, "but most or them seem t-0 be wait· ing" unW the new rate la an- nounced. The 1uc:Uon was to ta~e place today, with result.a announced toni1ht. To accommoct..te that, banQ <See 8A V~, Pase .U) ' I Flashes of lightning punctuate the storm over the Orange Coast as October arriv es with 3 4 of an inch of T:ain. 30 killed in 'Beirut blast Guns tested in shooting of two girls TNT-laden car explodes ; de<:;Lth toll may go higher BEIRUT. Le banon <AP I -A car packed wi th an estimated 220 pounds of TNT exploded in a PLO-controlled neighborhood m West Bei rut tod ay. Police re· ported at least 30 people killed and 130 wounded, but a Red Cross nurse s aid the death toll Abu Iyad was not in the office when the explosion occur red. the PLO said lie was later seen tour ing the devastated block. The bomb stranded residents in isolated fl oors of high-rise build ings. Lo re coffee s hops. sa nd wich st ands and sm all markets Lo bi ts . and hurled mutil ated bodie s of several street vendors dozens of yards <See BLAST, Page A2) Ballistics tests are being con· ducted to determine if one or several guns recovered from a t ruck belonging to murder s us- pect Thomas Francis Edwards was used in the fatal Sept. 19 shooting of a 12-year·old Lake might be as high as 50. Police s aid the car-bomb ex· ploded near the offices of the Pales line Liber ation Organiza· lion's top security chief. Salah Khalaf, known By the code name Abu lyad. The blast tore facades o ff buildin g s, s p l inte red Housing questions back in city hands Elsinore girl. · Or ange Count y Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart s aid an unspecified number of weapons. including both handguns and rifles. were seized from the camper-outfitted v~hicle during a search Wednes· day. <See related story, Page A3.> telephone poles. set off fi res and City leaders along the Orange turned a bout 60 cars into piles of Coast cheered news today that a scorched metal stale bill designed to take af· P o l ice s a id no ne o f t h e fordable housing a uthority away wounded were ra nking members from t he state Coastal Com· of the PLO. The PLO. in a state· mission and return it to locaJ ment through its news agency, government is to become law. reported 18 deaths without iden-G o v. Edmu nd Brown J r . t1fying them . and said there neither signed nor commented wer e 247 P a les tinia n s and on the bill Wednesday but did Lebanese wounded. clear the way for the bill to Mohsen Ibrahim . spokesman become law by taking no veto for the 13-militi a National Move· action against it. ment leftist umbrella group al-The bilJ, authored by Sen. lied with the PLO, said at a Henry Me llo, D-Wa tsonville , p r e ss confere n ce later that was greeted warmly by officials sever al communist militia mem-in Newport Be ach and Hunt· bers were killed. ington Beach. He blam ed "Is rael and its Both the coastal cities have agents in Lebanon," indirectly been criticized by the Coastal refec-ring to rightist Christian Commission b ecause local militias, and promised to •·strike coastal plans allegedly did not back in the same m anner and in prope!lly address a ffordable the appropriate place . . • " housing. sbccer .fund thief • ID ·'This is a clear message that the citizens are tired of social tinker ing t o so l ve h o using needs ," s uggeste d Newport Mayor Jackie Heather. She said the bill is a "clear victory for local gove rnment and is exciting news." Newport and Huntington of· fi cials suggested the Mello bill s h ould res ult i n getting the Coas t al Commission off their backs on that issue. T he Mello bill was tugged through the Legislature by oppo- nents of the Coastal Commission who compla ined a bout com · mission efforts to require low· cost housing aJong the coast. T he bill, to become law J an. 1. alJows local governments to ex· e rcise the authority over hous· ing in zones up to three miles in· (See HOUSING, Pa1e AZ> • prison The truck was located in Los An geles Monday several hours a fter Edwards. 37. a forme r Costa Mesa resident. was arrest· ed in Maryland. where he is be· ing held without bail pending ex· tradition proceedings. Hart s aid a s m all calibe r weapon was used in the shooting attack that kill-ed..Vanessa l berri and wounded he~ompanion. KelJy Cartier, 12, also of Lake Elsinore. Hart s aid it has not yet bee n det ermined w hethe r a handgun or rifle w~s used in the shooting. I n vestigator s obtained a search warrant before entering Edwa rds' vehicle. Harl said. Author ities believe Edwards. described as a "mountain mah" and "gun buff." had been living out of the vehicle for several months after leaving his wife. Westminster mati starts three yearsjor embezzlement A s earch warrant also was ob· tained to permit investigators to examine a portion or the South Coast Gun Club in Irvine, where Edwards wor ked occasionally a.s a ranae ma5ter. liart11aid he did not know what, if anything. that search yielded. A Westm1nster man wbo em· bezzled more than $30,000 from 1, lQUl American Youth Soccer' Organbation In 19'79 has begun 11ervlng a three-year prlsol\ ter m .. Steve Sandus. 33. also known a is Stephen .Pa tterson , told Orange County Superior Court Judge WOLiam Tbomaon tbat be used hla tommon law wife's lut name to alsn U.. cbecu to .,.f otr debts to dnt1 deaJen who be 1111• were threatenlnc bla lamlly. • Sanden' eommon law .U., 11 a r >' Sand.er 1 , a II o ol Westminster, was the treasurer of A YSO Region S in 1979. Region s operates leagues for about 200 youngsters in Fountain Valley and Westminster. Deputy District Attorney John Conley says Sanders pleaded guilty but then later tried to change his plea to innoce nt. The trtal lasted for over a year u Sanden cbansed attorneys three limes, Conley 1aid. Judie Thom90ft denied San· dera' altempa.d plea chaqe and on Sept. 11 aeatenced him to alatt ~for cubiD8 HA YSO cbecb bll1N91l JUDI Md No- vem ber of 1979. Con'e\ s ays Sanders was~ rttally aken to c firnosu~ Prison and could be eligible for parole ln two yeari;. Sanden had told the court that be was heavily in debt to ~ dealers because or hi& cocaine As investigators in Or ange County continue to assemble evidence In the shootings, their counterparts In Maryland and Riverside County a re lookin& at Edwards in connection with c a ses In t heir r esp ective j urisdlcUons. habit. Oonley said . In Maryland, an in~stigatlon The tommon·law couple were .. has beet reopened Into tbe slay- marrled Gile day before Sanden' ln1s of • schoolteacher and • trial bl&• in Aupst of 1880, t4·year-old 1irl. Edwards waa cons.idend • s uspect In· thole An ~ of A YSO Region 5 klllln11. but w111 not prosecuted HJ• • m.Mltn1 company ree!.d becawi. some· evidence wu U· tibe orpil'llutlon fer mootY · letally obtalnfd, accordtq to den embea.led. (lee GUNS, Pal• 0) . I death weather related By STEVE MARBLE Of, ... Oally P'ilet Slaff T he s eas on 's f i rs t s torm moved into Orange County in spectacula r fashion Tuesday. brig hten in g the s kies with lightning and dumping nearly 3 • of an inch of rain. The electrical stor m knocked out power' to more than 17.000 customers along the Orange Coast and ~ral areas today were still without power. In Laguna Beach. lightning str uck a tree in the 400 block of Cliff Drive and charred a power pole on Gaviota Street. Traffi c signals at the busy in· tersection of Dover Drive and P ac ific Coas t H i gh way in Newport Beach were knocked out during the storm and east· bound motorisLs tod ay found themselves snarled in a traffi c jam backed up nearly one mile. Jn Anaheim. David Mendoza, 16. was electrocuted at 5 a.m. whe n he brus hed agai ns t a met al guard rail on which a 12 ,0 0 0 v o l t e l e c tri c a l transmiss ion line had fallen. Police s aid they theorized that the line fell to the ~round after being struck by a bolt of li ght· ning . P olice said the youth and his fathe r were attempting to put out a small gr ass fi re that broke out near the guardrail when the incident occur red. The boy's fathe r was not injured . police said. In Huntingt on Be a ch, r ain caused flooding on Newland Street near the Edison power planL and traffic haa to be re· routed "It 's safe to say we had a lot of weather," s uggested Hunt· i ng t on weathe r -watche r J . She rma n Denny today . "You'd have to be dr ugged to sleep through the storm we had last night," he commented. "My land , it's been a long time since I 've seen anything like that.·· One resident s ugges ted t hat with all the thunder "it was like trying to sleep in a bowling al· ley." · Officials from the Los Angeles Weather Boreau blamed the un· expected storm on a low pres· s ure system that worked its way off the coast. They said the syste m produced "unstable air" which resulted in the lightning and thunderclaps Weather bureau offi cials pre· dieted the low pressure system will gradually move eas t and should be completely gone by late Friday. ....f...... The storm Drought Southern California 's firs t rain s ince April 20. 0 ffi cials f r o m Southern <See STORM, Page AZ> lllllil CIAST lllTHIR C hance o f s h o we r s decreasing to 20 percent tonight and near zero 'Fri· day. Partly cloudy tonight a nd clearing Friday. Highs 74 to 78. Lows tonieht 58 to M . 111101 TDDAY John Gibbs of Cana Me.a' livea for speed -like lfO mph in hU hJldroplt.iM boat. Su slory. photo, Page Cl . 11111 ". Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Thur1d1y1 October 1, 1981 "Uf I' •" Hillside development plan ruffles owners "'1..u(Una Bl'ach City Council members will continue lo wrestlt> wi th ~city 's Local CoaRlal Plan next w~k. a document which ownl'rs of· undeveloped tullsidt> property say wilt rob them of their ability to profit from dl· velopment of their land. As the plan now 1s written. parcels with more than a 45 per crnt hillside s lopt• would be zoned ,1s open s pace. prec luding anv C'onstruction on the property . · Lands with bet ween 30 and 44 percent h ills ide s lope would be ~iven a lo w density des ignation. a category which· allows onl~ one dwelling for every 10 acres U ndeveloped lands with 29 percent hillside slope would be 1oned for m edium den:-.it v under <'U rrent propo~ab. m eaning two home~ could be constructed per at· re. Councilman Howard Dawson s a ys the proposed Local Coastal Plan would allow o nly 225 new homes on the remaining 1,000 at·res of undeveloped hills ide land in the c ity. Sevt>ral l a ndowne r s have hinte d that they will file lawsuits against the city if the current op e n space provis ions are in· e luded in the final draft o r the plan . If afte r the heunngs, the council believes that the majority of Laguna Beach r eside nts agree with the d evelopment limits in e luded in the plan. c learly it s hould ah1de by the will of local c 1lizen.'-. llowe\'t'I'. tl\t! landowners· property rig hts s hould not be violated for the sake or maintain- ing a "village atmosphere" in the .\rt Colo ny. o r to make other rH•ople's property more a ttra(" t1\'e and more valuable . Launch litter fight Beachgol·rs parking on the inland s ide of Pacifi c Coast Highway across from El Morro He a c h and Cr~·stal l'<H e ap parently can't conrine their trash to their car::. or a rubbish b;.irrt'I. Since the public was fnrmall,\ a llowed to use the prcvio_u!>ly prtv alel~ O\\ne d s trands l a~t ~ummer, trash has been piling up a long the highway. creating an evcsore for local r esidents and beach vis itors who pre fer not to leave tras hv l t'ace:-. of the ir presence Just who 1s respons1bl£' for remo,·ing tht• accumulated bet>r cans. broke n g l<tSs a nd d1scC:1 rded ice ct·eam wrt.tµpers seems to be il m'1ltcr of .1urisdiction Residents in the a rea nmlen<l l ra:-.h on I hl' ocean s ide of the h1gh\\<I.\ 1~ the respo nsibility of· thl' State Pa rks Ser vice. white trash more than 15 feet back . from the inland side s hould. be picked up by the lr\'ine Com· p,an~. oYm er of the property. Debris left within 15 feet of tht· inland side of Coast Highway is µurportedly the res ponsibility o f Caltrans. If each party would just pick up its s hare the problem could be solved . ll appeC:trs most of us will not It \'t' lohg enoug h to see the day "hen trash spewers finally kick their h abit So in the meantime it .,eems little eno ugh to expect that the piled up j unk could be re· moved by those responsible. Though the a rea is not within Lag una Be ach city o fficials could get Lhe cleanup rolling by apply in~ some well-directed pressure. Police guidelines wise l.J nder new guidelines adopt NI rl'cently by Lag un a Beach po licl1 fo r handling public in· t1b ri1:1tcs. perso n~ arrC':-.t(•d on r harges of drunk ennc:-.~ 1n the l'llY may be ht•aded for a ho:-.p1lal hed rather than a jail eell The new pla n provides lhul people found injured ill the time of their arrest on alcohol relatcrl t•h arges 1.\ould autom at1ct.tll~· he lransportl'd t o South Coast Medical Center in South Laguna. And in some cases. those not injured would be referred to thl' 26 bed akoho l care unit al the hos pital. The ne w rules fo llo w the <teath of obcrt Gary Wardman. a :!5 ·~ ea ·Old Lag un&.1 Bc<1 c h s pa sa s an. two months ago while he w : being held al the C'ity jail on a c harge of publt(• clrunkennl':-.:-. An autops:-· s howed that Wardman d1 l\d fro m :i Sl'\'Cl'<' • skull fracture. a n injury that was not detected by paramedics dur· ing an examination of the un conscious man outside a city bar. where he·was found by police ly- ing on the sidewalk. Wardman was taken to police headquarters a nd placed in a cell to s leep it off. However. 912 hours later he died of his injury while bt•ing ru ~hcd to South Coas t ~tedical Center. Police officials sa v the new rules on how officers should han· die inebriates were under dis· cussion before Wardman·s death The new guidelines appear to be a s incere attempt on the part of the police department to prevent a s imilar incident in the future. Police departments in other area cities would do well to fo il ow Laguna's lead and re· examine their policies regarding the treatment of inebriates while hcing held ir police custody. -Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex· pressed on this.page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is invit- ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa, CA 92626--0S60. Phone (714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd I Line of succession Q. Law prohibits all those in line or presidential succession from being together at one time. So which or President Ronald Reagan's cabinet was refused admittance when the President gave hi5 first address to Congress? A. Secretary of Education T.H. Bell wasn't refused admittance, ex- actly. At the end of t he cabinet suc· cession line. he agreed to stay away, that's all. Q How many of the car wrecks that kill people are blamed on rain? A. About 11 percent of them. Fog, another 4 percent. Snow. 2 percent. The novel "The Young Visitors" sold more than 200,000 copies in 1909 <1r thereabouts . No youthful writer should forget Chat. It was the first a nd laat lenethy liteury work ol Oa~sy AshfOFd. ag~9. Couple ot eye doctors ln research fastened s trips of filter paper lo the lower eyelids of 231 coll11e atudenta. Each was checke d a(ter flve minutes. The I of lbe ~mp ... Nl>ll\Nlf "9t~ .. y ol I ... YM' .. lJI .. S.f St , Cost• Mrw ._.,"' con•-• te 9a• 1 J44. Cotw Nltwi, ~ .,.,. on the wick paper showed each sub- 1ect 's volume of tears. Let your old suspicions be confirmed. The young women wept almost twice as mucb as the young men. • There will be S3 Thursdays in this year. Il began on a Thursday. And ever y year has 53 of the days it begins on. Q . Is sports medicine taught in medical schools? A. Not in this country. In Norway it is. though. You k n ow those miniature Falabelle horses that only stand about 36 inches tall? Takes eight of them to eat as much as a full·aised horse. .. How many countries emboss their· paper money with raised dots for.. the benefit of lhe blind? The-Netherlands does. that l know. Q. Do insects close their eyes when they &leep? A. Insects never close their eyes. AMJJltlV! YRE 00~ Alrowl Wffi'IN 1.00 MJLES! • • No place for ex-presidents LONDON -When American.fighters s hot down two Libyan jets over the M edite r ranean l ast month . an American living here said: "I don't get it. Reagan wants to put neutron weapons in Europe, but he knows Euro- peans are nervous tha\ he'd use them for no reason -that he's trigger happy. So we go ahead and start shooting down planes for the hell of it. It makes you wonder where Nixon is when we need him." Richard Nixon, in fact, is in a hard·tO· find government issue office in lower Manhattan. In a long conversation we had there recently, l learned that the former president does indeed have strong and intelligent views about such t hings as the defense of Western Europe. But he doesn't want to make an~f them public right now for fear of being accused of undermining Reagan, and not many people seem to ask him privately -certainJy, I got the distinct impression, not many people from the White House. THAT'S A SHAME, Henry Fairlie said the other day in The Times of L()n· .,. don. "They lead rather purposeless and even pathetic lives," Fairlie wrote of Nixon, Gerald Ford and J immy Carter, our trio of living ex·presidents. "No one really has any use for them." Noting that Nixon is involved in a dis- Wilderness a To The Editor: Some of m y happiest childhood memories are of going to a Wilderness Girl Scout Camp in the mountains of Pennsylvania. The beauty, quiet and joy of being in the mountains is still with me. For this reason, 1 am concerned about two bills currently being considered in MAILBOX the U.S. Senate. These bills are radical· Jy different and concern the future managemeQl of natio_nal forest and na· tional park roadless land. ON ONE HAND, Sen. S.I. Hayakawa is pushing a bill S. 842 which designates NO wilderness and would set short deadlines ror congressional action, after whic h even areas already recom· mended as wilderness would be opened to logging and other development. On the other hand, Sen. Alan Cranston introduced the Cranston·Burton Wilder· ness bill S 1584 which designates certain magnificent lands as wilderness and permits development of other lands. In these days of stress management cla~. noise and a ir pollution in our urban areas, and just the· daily pace of life, one of the -greatest places for re·. newal and reassessment of what's im- portant is being able lo get away to a wilderness area. It will be a priceless gift to our children and grandchildren and it's free! Ir readers feel the same concern I do please write Sen. Cranston and Sen. Hayakawa and express your viewpoint. MITZI CURRIE Lawsuit costly To the Editor: The environmentalists are at it again, this time calling themselves "Friends of the Irvine Coast," and would have everyone believe it is under attack . Thus, their suit for an injunctk>n to in· htbit implementation of the develop· ment plan of the Irvine Compaiu.. ap· pr<!ved by both the Ora.Qge Cc>bnly Board o£ Supervisors and the Coutal Commission. Both of these bodies hive staffs but the former la elected and the later appc0ted, teemingly respomible unto themselYes and notoriously' of the "envlronmentallat" atop arowtb penuulon. It appears the "Friendl" are 1•lftc-.ed•1 t.bat tbe Coutal Com- m111ioa rejected the recommendaUoo of tbm own 1taft and •l>Pl"O"ed tM plan, but WI writer IU'881ta tfiat com• tnluS. • well awar• of lncrftllnl publlt ...,_... and coacena for It.a abue al power and dllre1M'd al proper· lyrt~. • I · tn PIAN WAI not •l>Pf'O"ed on a whim, tiul after tttutlny f1' yunl Our bulc Amerlun prec:epta would lod.lcat.e pute over whether his papers will be placed in <1 library at Duke University, Fairlie criticized the self-righteous ac· lions of anti·Nixon professors for "what begins lo seem like persecution." The British columnist offered the opinion ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~ .._,~~ :11ii .... RICHARD REEVES that the former president's ignored counsel would be obviously valuable "to the neces~ary conltnuily of foreign policy.- BUT AMERICANS, he,..continued, liked to begin things ·'by wiping the whole slate clean." Even if there is something worth knowing on the slate. So. Nixon and Carter a re both left alone writing books to explain the many mis- takes each made -sometimes because they ignored the slate of history or never talked with anyone who made som e of that history. Jerry Ford, who never could stand being alone, is enter· laimng trade groups and Chambers of Commerce with S15,000 a nd $20,000 lee· lures. Garter did. however. get his name in the papers recentl y by going to China and climbing the Great Wall. "There is something al fault with the system," Fairlie said, ''in which ex·presldents have to go to China lo communicate with their own countrymen." There is indeed. We sometimes forget we are all on the same side. It's amai· ing that presidents and ex.presidents don't even seem lo s hare their "book" -in the sense that baseball pitchers have a book on the strengths and weak· nesses of opposing hitters -with each other on the personalities and predic· tabilities of other world leaders. Meanwhile, Menachem Begin or Leonid Brezhnev continue to get away with try- ing some of the s ame old tricks on each new American leader THERE IS A reason for all this. Each new president wants to stay away from his predecessors because he doesn't want to be contaminated by their pol~tical unpopularity. Inevitable un· popularity, it seems. We are destroying our presidents -Dwight Eisenhower was the last one to complete two terms jn office. One of the reasons each new one may be doing so badly is that reluc· ta nee to Lalk lo any old one. If that keeps up. Fairlie pointed out. "Lhe re could someday be a small regi· m ent of ex-presidents alive at the same time." None of them talking to each other, of course. gift to next generation the right of any c1t1zen to own and de· velop property but in fa ct it requires the resources of an Irvine Company in term s of fund s to provide the technological defense of their right to do so, and the individual would be at a loss to cope with the unreasonable demands. The plan as approved allocates 60 per- cent of that land to "open s pace" and 27 percent is an outright "dedication" (confiscation > for a park. It is this kind of activity that converts postage stamp lots lo acreage by in· hi biting s urrounding development, en riching the owner of that property at the expense of all others. The environ· mental "zeal" is not matched by funds to compensate property owners for the cost of the property. maintenance, and taxes, and property affected is not onJy vacant land. but existing structures that require permits for renovation or re· modeling, or even replacement after disaster THE SUIT filed "on our behalf?" simultaneously imposes additional staff and legaJ expenses for both of the gov· ernment bodies to be passed on to the gener al public as well as those of the Irvine Company that will have no choice but to pass their costs on to the general public. The "friends" want lo dictate further the use of only 40 per· cent of privately owned property, and detail the kinds of facilities to be avail a· ble to us, and anyone can see the costs that will be added to any housing con· strucled and the consequential elimina· lion of most of the general public from home ownership. A few privileged res!· dents will be able to enjoy the Irvine Coast. The environmental movement is well funded and well organized and this i!; just one example of their impact on the rest of us. TEDDI ALVES Art needs support To the Editor: In your Sept. 17 issue you reported that the Los Angeles City Council has enacted a zoning modification to allow artists to live and work in buildings located in commercial and manufactur- inl( zoues. Yott stated-that, "the-council unan• imously passed the measure that council president Joe Wachs said would help the city become an international center for the arts." What o refreshing and intelUgent ac· lion ! Artists tend to atarve a lot until - • l.t>tl rr.~ from readtra ore OJelcomt. TM right to ~Qndeh:sc lcthmr 10 fit spoct or t'llmrnote lttwl u rl'.,ervtd L.ttttra of 300 worda or leH wW ~ gitl.n prt/trtnef AU • lettera mti1I anclud1 .ti971<Jtur'\ ond moiling oddre11 but name• mo11 be wUhhfW Oft tw· quut 1/ 1uf fk1t11t' rtaaon fl opporn1. POft~ wtll not bf pubhMfd. Lfttwt "'Of h telephmvd to 642-«Jlf Name oftd plaOIW 11umber oJ tlw co1t(ribt.tor mw! bti ~wn fOJ ,verl/icotlon purpo~t• if ever -they achieve success. CVin· cent Van Gogh never sold a painting!> and recognizing the importance of art's contribution to a commu'nity's cultural and intellectual growth the Los Angeles council moved. wisely, to "1ake the creation of art easier for the artist with a s imple zoning change. CO MPARE THAT enlightened r esponse to the know·nothingism that motivates Costa Mesa's City Council to not onl y not try Ao help artists in this town, but to actively and vigorously try to destroy the co'1pleted accomplish· ments of Goat Hill's premier artist, Ali Roushan! At a lime when the National Endow· ment for the Arts is trying to "save and preserve arts and cultural environ· ments" by launchin_g a nationwide sur· vey of folk ·art structures -"hand built, large.scale and often bizarre monu- ments and environments. such as Simon Rodda's Watts Towers ... the petty bureaucrats at 77 Fair Drive are trying, contrariwise. to destroy Costa Mesa's only qualifying pieces ; and trying to jail the man who against all odds and despite Lhe city's worst efforts has persevered to achieve their completion. I watch. embarrassed and helpless while our cultur al commissars try to destroy what lt'!e enlightened L.A. City Council and the National Endowment for the Arts are trying to save. What blind foolishness their arrogance of of- fice has led them into. What a shame. J .P. PALMER Article off ends To the Editor: As a Jamaican residing in Irvine and a regular reader of the Pilot, I feel it necessaty to comment with disgust on your article -J am aica's "Where rum comes from" by Stan Delaplane, Sun· day. Sept. 20. Not only was the article poorly writ· ten and lacking in relevance, but com· ing from a newspaper columnist, ter· ribly j uvenile and void of substance. He remarked on two occasions that "the people are black" what did lhis nai\te • reporter expect them to be -ereen? Y.A.FlSHER lllllY• It's perfectly poplble for a dlAht IO Uft • blJb l.Q. and atlll DOt ,...... .. ...,.. value ol a pa and a ma. l'.K. llllll lllCH /SllTI ClllT Diiiy Nllt THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1911 CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION - 82-3 84' 86 ----------- Christopher Reeve says Superman comic books were off limi.ts to him as a boy. See Page B7 . D 0 San Onofre hearings ·end; h~rd part lies ahead 8y DAVID KUTZMANN °' ................. One of Soutbern Californja's longest tunning shows came to an end Wednesday. The stars were Southern Cali(ornia Edison Co . 's two new reactors at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. "It has been a long case," chairman James Kelley of the U .$. Atomic Safety and Licens· ing Board said. "We still have t he hardest· part of our work a head or us.·· What he meant was that after marathon licensing hearings for Edison Co. 's $3.3 billion reactors three m iles south of San Clemente, the three-m ember federal panel now would have to decide whether to grant low· power and full -power licenses for the 1,100-megawatt units. A <tecision is expected by late November for a low-power test license and by early 1982 for full- ~\ ),\~ .. Crafts mans hip still alive ODE TO VESTERV E i\R : IL "., good a nd pleasant. a~ ~our faithful corre~pondl•nt lea rned. to gl'l out from unde r t~·pe\.\T tter <1nd d e:-.k for a couplt• of davs and \'f.'nture out into the world of the re<JI c r afts m en of o ur rta' If ,·ou can fmd tht.'1Tl You a rl' r e mind ed of thl' ·11n e"..., hy Henr~· Wud!"l \\o rlh l .ongfellow · .. Under the spreading chestnut tree The mllage smithy stands: The smith a mighty man is he With Large and sinewy hands And the muscles of his brawny arms As strong as iron bands. His brow is wet with honest sweat. He earns what'er he can. And looks the whole world m the face, F'or he owes rwt any man." WH E~ LO~GFELLOW WROTE t ho~e ltne.., 111 18-l2. the nllagc of the t l'ntral figurt>:... of h1.., <.'om munity : a crafts man upon whom the ci t1zenr~· rl'lil·cl ~· ;.-..... , TOM MURPH I NE .54~, to r e pair. cr eate a nd mainta in the m ech a nis ms that w o uld form the backbo n e o f a vib r ant nation And fr o m t h e ~m it h 's :..ta n d c am e a p r o ud heritage of tndi\·idua l cr aft smen who maintained s m all sho ps a nd worked with their hands in gla~~ and copper and iron a nd s teel. And wher e. ~·ou might a sk. <1re tho:..t, proud tn di v1dual c rafts m en today who drew their herita gl• from the village s mith ~· of ~·esteryear " Once they populated sm all ~hop~ m the o ld Rem ember these iron men? The village smithies of yesteryear downtown secto r of Cost a Mes a Or in an old hor..,t• barn with a s ign that proclaimed ··wheele r Bros ... o n Fo rest Avenue in Laguna . Or right a longside tht• general store on '.\'lain Street in Huntington Beach. TODA\', THEY Hr\ VE rnnished : ~·ou might ...,t..., pect. relegated. you might s us pect. to o bit v1on by m ass produced chrome-plated pla stic ... trip:-. and s na p -on ra~l..:ncrs. But are they gon<"' :\ot reall~ Tht·~ no longer s ta nd proud!~· beneath the village chest nut tree on Main Street. but the v exist. Fewer in number:-.. per haps . Now rclegate'ct b~ the plannmi.:. zoning and redevelopme nt to t he back :-.trect~. Yet vou ca n find the m : in CJ ~mCJ ll pl<1t'l' off a Placentia Avenue alle~· in Co:-.ta :\<te~a : 1n an oh:-.<·urc• industrial zone behind the Edbon plant in Hunt ington Bea ch : out Lag una Ca nyon Road in Luguna. u nder a pepper. rather tha n a che:-.tnut tree The~· still operate the ~m all shops and turn our t he ir crafts in the tr adition that huilt A merica ·~ backbone in yesteryea r. The~· are the same kind~ of m e n who. som e decades bac k. dropped t heir tools and left th eir mac hine:-. and went out to win World War II : p iecing together ... alva~e and wiring up bro ke n parts to keep a n allied war m achine moving to ultimate victor y. AND SO ONLY TH~other day . ,vou visit a di la p idaled cluster o f · th~(' li ttle shops. out on a backstreet. wher e t he cranman·s roo( was leak~· cor · rugated metal and the front door was warped and sagging. But from the c ra fts man·s table he produced a d e lic ate ly framed piece or glass that had been e t<;}led wit h a n edged design or beauty. It would b ecome a windwing for a classic a utomo bile. American crafts m a nship may ha ve been rel· egated to the back st reets. but it lives. ONE OF THESE DAYS, some back door d~· s cendant of the village smithy will s te p out of his s hop and present us all with a device to olve o~r energy crisis or c ure our pollution woes. And he 11 · stand a s taJl as the old che tnut tree. Believe tl. Keep the f ailh. power permits. The hearings, which began In mid-June in San Diego a nd ended in Anaheim, covered two primary areas of contention - earthquake safety of the huge nuclear power plant and ade- quacy of emergency planning for communities within 10 miles of the generating station. Plant critics had contended in the proceedings that previously undiscovered geologic forma- tions posed hazards which ex- ceeded the seismic design or the facility and that evacuation planning in the event of an acci· dent was elaborate but unworka- ble. Ed ison specialists and consult· ants maintained that the plant was designed to withstand the largest earthquake considered possible in the r egion and that e mergency planning was more than adeQuate. • ·' Before ending the Or ange County portion of the hearings Wednesday. Kelley s aid that the board would attempt to include f i ndi n gs b y t he F ederal Emer gency Management Agen· cy in Ila fin al decision. The fe d e r a l a ge n cy is responsible for evaluating the adequacy of off·stte emergency Pvacuation plans and has said it would issue a ri nal report on the San Onofre a rea by November. Interim findings or the agency issued last June indicated there were numerous communications and coordination proble ms a mo ng a gent'ies which had partit'ipated in a test drill in Ma y Delly .... Matt .......... GRAZING THE COAST -Brangus and Braford cattle gr aze Irvine Compa ny la nd between Ne wport Beach and Laguna Beach. Brang us is a mix between Bra hma a nd Angus and Braford is a mix between Brahma an d He reford . · Viejo · youth Marine base pare~ts backed arrested in State supports effort transfer to Capistrano district links shooti11g By JOHN NEEDHAM Fall brook administrators are Since the proposed territory A 14-year-old Mission Vi ejo youth was in custody today after allegedly shooting a man in the shoulder at the Mission Viejo Country Club golf course. An Orange County Sheriff's spokesman said William George Paine, 19, of Mission Viejo, was playing golf at the Oso Parkway course Tuesday at about 7 p.m. when the male juvenile, whose name was not released because of his age, reportedly shot him. ,The sheriff's spokesman said Paine was taken to nearby .!14is· sion Community Hospital where he received emergency treat- ment and was later released. The spokesman said the youth was shooting at golf balls from a hillside behind his house, which adjoins the cl ub's 17th fairway, wh en a stray bullet hit Paine . The spokesman said the youth was taken into custody shortly after the shooting and taken to Or ange County Juvenile Hall in Santa Ana. 0tt11eo.tty,....... arguing against the transfer of transfer would also affect about Marine parents have failed to their territory to the Capis~rano 600 elementary school students gain State De partm e nt of district on the grounds that the who now attend classes at the Education support in their fight s chool district cannot afford to San Onofre School on Ca.mp to have 42 acres of school dis· lose state and feder al funding Pendleton, Fallbrook officials t r i c t t e r r itory o n C amp tha t is paid for students· at· s ay the losses to the high school Pendleton transferred to the tendance. and elementary school districts Capistrano Unified School Dis· But the Marine parents say would be in the m illions of trict. the welfa're of the stude nts dolla rs. Parents spok~sman Maj. Bert should be. the ~irst conside~ation. w h e n F ~ 11 b r oo k a d - Ale xander s aid tod ay s tat e and ma tntatn t hat c hildren ministrators refused to extend education offi cials ha ve recom · should not be used to solve t he inter-district agreement mended th~t the trans fer re· money problems.at Fallbrook . which allowed high school stu· quest be dented. . Under a prev1ou~ agreement dents to attend classes in San . The recommendation comes be tween th~ C'.aptstrano a~d Clemente a year ago, the Camp Just a week b~for~ the State Fallbrook distracts. the pupils Pendleton parents kept their Board of Educat.aon as scheduled had been ~lowed to attend San children home from school. to rule on the transfer, following Clemente High School. a public hearing to be held in But a year ago Fallbrook ad-They also took Fallb~ook to Sacramento Wednesday. ministrators decided the district court. But they lost their legal The Marine base is currently could not afford to allow stu· bid and the children were or· within the Fallbrook Union High dents to attend school outside , dered to report for classes at School District in San Diego the district. Fallbrook Union High School. County. Parents of high school F a llbrook r eceives about About 25 high school age stu· students living on the base want $1,700 a year from the state for de nts a r e now l iv ing wit h their children to attend San each of t he nearly 100 high grandparents and friends out· Clemente High School in Or ange sc hool students , a s we ll as s ide the Fall brook district and County. federal funds paid to school dis· ar e attending San Clen:ien~e The parents say ~hour-long tricts in which there are large Hi gh School rather than gave m bus trip to school in FillQroc>k is numbers of military dependents. to the directive, according lo a hardship on the youngsters. Fallbrook administrators say Al exander. About 70 s tudents San Clemente High School is a they don't want to lose that a r e att ending c l a sses in 10 minute trip. money. Fallbrook. Juniors' woman of the year announced Almost 500 g u e~l~ applt.1ud<.•d whc•n the ,\~...,1...,tu m·t• League of '.'le wport Beach nt.1med Bt.1rhara Kilponen <J.., Orange Count~· Junior Woman of thl' Year for a rranging ~·uuth concert~ and re·opening a li brar~· in Fullerton. Other nom inees for lht• mt•dal we re Victoria Hart . Carol L Cli~b,·. Marie Cole man. Claudia Colton .. J ud~ Gajkowski. Charlene lmmell. Che rie Ke rr. Sherr~· Looi' bourrow. Joann '.\1 . Mayo. Charlu '.\tt c:'>ieff. Patric·1a Petk :'\!unn. Holly Ve ale a nd Pamela Floyd Wi ld.t-r Proceed s from t he awa rds luncheon and fash ion ..,hem perpetuate the league's C'hildrim's dt•ntal health t t.•ntl'I' and child da~· care C'e nte r GUILD AIMS FOR GREE~ The Queen ol llear l"I Guild or tht? Chi ld ren ·~ Hospit al of O r ange Count ~ 'CHOC 1 has reserved El ~iguel Country Clu b for tb eighth· a nnual golf tournam ent F riday This major fund.rail>er for the guild i!'I bud~ted for S8.000 to benefit o ut-pa tient serv ices al the hospital. The 5125 entr y fee includes lun{·heon. tee prize:... refreshments. electr ic carts. green fee~ and a dinner dance. A shot -guo s tart at noon begins tht• bes t-ball -of pa rtners tourney. Fo r mor e d etails. pho ne 495· 1486 AUTUMN IN TRES VISTAS A cocktail garden pa rty from 3 to 7 p.m . Sunday will m t.1rk t he Barrymort• ~ Cha pter of the Orange Count~· '.\tt us ic Ce nte r ·s first ante toward the S50 million building fund ror the future OC:vtC In Costa Mesa. Tickets are S40 pe r person for the fes tivities that will start in the Plaza are a or Lake :vtission Vie jo and lncludt• a tour of three elega ntlho mes. Guests sampling the buffet~ J .... catered by La Cuisine will be ente rtained by live mus ic . ' Reservations may be made b~· calling 951·6_1Wl3 or 770~11. ( ..., ............. Ellen Kutz presents medal to Barbara Kllponen as Don <>ltphant congratulates Orange County's .Junior Woman of the Year. I • BUMPER STICKER OF THE WEEK: Cominl( out c,r Ro.,. Carve r ·s deale r hip on the back or 1t BMW "Brown for Senate Sponsored h~· the . ·ateonal lledfl)· Committee.·· . ANOTHER QUICKIE TAKE: Cl'Mlt 11tlome)' Elaie Weinberg wol\derJ. ··Soah. why didn't YOU•Mwal lhoNe flies when )'OU had ~ chance• .. ~ Phones Signal DE~~PAT OUNN : I'm bard of hearta1 and even though I turn the pboae yolume as loud as pos.sU>le, l still can't always bear U ringing. Maybe you un find out lf the pbone company has any solullon Lo th.ls proble"'. P. E., Newport Beach Conta• Pacific Telephone's handicapped ser vices by phoning 180<)) 2A2·456S. A phone company spokesman says that the following devices are available: a gong or especia lly loud bell that can be heard over high -level background noise, a lamp indicator which s hows when the phone is ringing; and a s ignalman. Any lamp that's plugged mto this unit will flash on or off each time the phone rings . If the lamp is off, it flashes on and vice versa. F act.s about fiber OEAR PAT DUNN: I've read a lot about Ute be nefit of having fiber in the diet, but l don't want to pay extra for high fiber bread. Which roods have a lot or Ober ln tbem? L.T., Costa Mesa Fiber often is advertised as if it's a single entity, when actually ··fiber" r efers to a number of complex s ubs tances derived from plants. Their iden tifying feature is that they a re not broken down by the digestive juices o f humans . W,e do absorb some fibers, however , through partial digestion. Cellulose. hemicellulose. pectin:. and lignis fiber are found in the cell walls or plants. and non·cell wall fibers are in plant gums, mucilages and phytic acid. Whole grains wheat bran in particular are high in hem1celluJose and cellulose. Other foods whic h are good sources of fiber a re dry beans and peas. nuts. peanut butter .• cabbage, carrots. celery, leafy vegetables. apples, oranges, dry fruit, and othf!r fruits and vegetables. Whole fruits and vegetables ure higher in fiber t han iuices Vo l unteer cred it DEAR PilT DUNN: I've been told that it's possible to get collrge credit for volunteer actlvilie!.. llow do I go a bout doing Utis? C.J ., Costa Mesa The Council of National Organizations for Adult Edut'ation·~ n 1sk Force on Volunteer Accredjtatiun has developed a series of "I Can" lists to he lp volunteers identify skills fo r which college credit might be given The council's book. ··1 C<1n A Tool for Asscssmg Sk ills At·quircd Through Volunteer Ex· periencc ... includes ··1 Can" lists for 12 volunteer JOb title!> a:. well as other informa- tion about evaluatmg volunteer s kills for edurationc.il credit. The publication may be purc hased for $4.75 from Ramco As· soc1ates. 228 E 45lh St . New York, N Y 10017 /\l!;o, the Educational Testing Service worked with the Council of Nat io na l Organizations for Adult Educa tion on the "J Can" project. and de veloped several addi- llonal li sts for identifying and assessing volunteer a nd homemaker s kills . ETS publishes ··11ow To Get Credit For What You Ha\ e Learned A~ A Homemaker Or Volun- teer . · which ma~ bl• purchased for S3 from : Educational T esting Service. P rinceton, N.J. 08540 • C :111 11 pri•htem • Then u. nte 11> Pat l>unn /1111 u'lll cul red lope getting 'e 1 th1• 011.~"'"" an.cl fJ,.tlOn v11u need to wilt e mr1111111e~ m Q11vPrnment and hu.,me!i~ \lnil 1411i.1.1 questron' to Pat f"1 • Dunn •H Your .'it'Tl'IC'I'. flrnngt' Coast lJntltJ 1'1/nt /' n lfoI 15/itJ CMta 'vf<'~a. CA 921i26 As manu leller\ as pos.~rhlt' u 11/ l>e an.~wered. hut phoned mqumes or IPtler~ nut including the reader s full name. addre~s and lm!irnes~ hours· phone number connor ~ con.~1dered This column nppears dnrly ex cept Sunday' · HOUSE Of TAILORING Al TERATIOMS FOR MEN & WOMEN so com PLAZA 540 849 I Low•r L•••I by C orou,•I RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY Sou h-011tu, "" oqoin 1,922 HARIOlt ILVD. COSTA MESA -541-1156 Tuna Delight Sandwich s3,10 #5020X42 MEN'S 26" MONTEREY CRUISER. 7888 A good looking bike wrth 26"xl 75" Balloon Wbitewalls1.loam type gnp handlebar and coa~ter brake. flam red lamsh """' .. lllll\111 rH Tl Ml M\\\611< "''''' .. ""' ll•ll\I"-~II mlTill 1 L{-Jllm!i I JORDAN ADHESIVE 29t PICTURE HANGERS 6 PAK 1161031 PICTURE 69t HANGING KIT 1160010 HOME 79c FASTENING KIT 11 1520 T hese'll come in real handy if you lik e to collect art. like I do. ( Varga, Playboy, Peanuts, etc.) RECORD A CALL WITH FREE ROTARY DIAL DESK PHONE I 3997 #60A A two cassette telephone a nswering system that gives callers 20-40 seconds for a message Will pick up on first ring or up to the tenth ring. Accepts up to 120 messages CANNON CRArl' HALF _ _,_ ____ _ LOUVERED BD'OLD L lUJ DOOR PANELS 12x80 1477 1Sx80 1677 \ o· I I . . ' 16x80 1977 18x80 2277 24x80 2577 Made right here in the U.S. pl A Unfinished sttmdard . blade b1fold door panels (I hate morning it's so early I think I'll go bock to bed.) TEAK PARQUET FLOOR TILE Get a rich, warm looking floor wtlh leak parquet. (Parquet? Well. it doesn't matter whkh side· your bread 1s buttered on It st ti I tastes thesame.l WATER HEATER BLANKETS fits up to 40 gallon 4 ·~ '597 Fats up to 60 gallon I guess we all li ke to be patriottcand save energy but when 11 comes nght down to 11 we like to save money on our fuel bills more. JODS-MlllVILLE FIREliUSS m FIBERliLISS SBllCLES . " You get a chok:• of colon plu• a 20 year warranty. ThrMbundlnwill co.-rabout lOOeq. Ji· ---~~ Orange CoHt DAILY PtLOT/Thuraoav. October 1. 1981 L .. •• EMERGENCY-I ~~ PORTABLE "" ~· nRE ESCAPE LADDER -~' ~~~y I 3 88 n :;·· Hang 11 nght over your wrndowsill. Steel steps have a non-slip coating. (Might bea good idea to work out a fire drill with the family.) BLACK & DECKER HOBBYCRAllER WORKMATE 16~~25 Just ught for lightweight pro1ects. 8" vise 1aws open to 3" and its work surface tilts from D° to 45° forward. BLACK 8r DECKER 1/3 SHEET DUAL ACTION FINISRIRG SANDER ·26 ~! Black and Decker makes one of the best This one goes from orbital to straight line. Flush sands on three sides. JOHNSEN'S SPARE TIRE 57• 10 oz. #3522 Foz tube or tubeleH tires. (Definition of a vampire. The fella that yells, "Strik'e three you're out!") PRESTON£ SUPER FLUSH 8r REFUND OFFER 1 s1 22 OZ. Buynow andreceivea$l SO · from Pres tone with a mail-in coupon. Coupon and details in the store. !Gee, we got some good deals this time.) VALVOLINE ' MOTOR OIL 30 WT 73•or lOW 40 WT. 83 t QT. Time to check the old oil. (I'm letting my son drive the car ... he's too young to be ttust.O as a pedestrian.) • BAUL-IT-ALL PICK UP RICKS Built tough with heavyduty- ongl .. lron. gua .. tedjolnt•. and c:ab-over truaaea. flack flniah. lllDICll Tlvtu llfTERMATIC TIMERS Even your closest ne1ghbor11 will have a hard time telling when you're away from home with these timers. All three hove a manual on-off switch I What 110 iukes about old timers?) CORDLESS TIMER J Plug your lights or appliances 1n10 this and 11 will turn them on at preselected times each day . .:. : 1 ~ SUPER COP . ~ VARIABLE TIMER .fi 5~,! Th1sone sa24 hour timer that turns your lights or appliances on and off at different times e very day MASTER CONTROL 6~.~ You get up to 12 programmed on·ofl I unctions per day with this 24 hour tr mer. SY2" CONTAINER MUMS OR NEW GUINEA IMPATIENS YOUR 1 ·49 CHOICE EA KELLOGG'S TOPPER 2 42~u . rr . Blended for seed covenng. topdressingCgee. I wonder ii it'd be good on salad) or /\~~;~;:; PENTREX .) Fertilize your lawn. flowers, vegetables, and trees Thrs stuff even gets the nutrients through the hard and compacted sods - 3 88 cAL 8 FOOT 4" REDWOOD BENDER BOARD ~/ - A good flex1ble edging for . ::::::::-:::::; .- your garden .1Jnd1gest1on 1s the failure to ad1ust a square meal lo a round stomach l 4 9 C RED DEVIL LIFETIME CAULK AND SPORT WATCH OFFER 11 oz. Buy two tubes and with a mail-in coupon you can get a Men's or a Ladles' Sport Watch fotS4.9S plusSl .95 postage and hand Ii ng. Details in the atore.1.1 S19,95 vca.lue, hours, ~lQ.'~onds. 1 ~ ~.i:i~.~'-· t .. u · Ot•noe Coat OAtL y PILOT !Thurad1y, Ootober 1, 1881 Noise notifica·tion can ease discomfort < Irvine rtsidents and city of- ficials have every right to be notified before noisy military operations are undertaken at E l Toro Marine Corps Air Station Prior notification doesn't make the noise any easier on people's ears, but it at least lets people know that the situation ~on 't last forever For example, earlier this month ca rg o jets carrying helicopters took orr from the air station and rumbled over Irvine homes . The issue came before the Irvine City Council last week when Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido won council support .of a p1an to send a lettet to the Marines. s tating the city's op- pos ition to noisy operatio ns that could be held elsewhere. It is doubtful the cit~· will be able to persuade the Marines to discontinue required military operations simply for the sake of nearby residents. However. it's not too much to ask for the Marines to a~ least notify the city before causing an unusual amount of noise. Normally. the air station has been very good about getting the word out when extensive fighter jet training e xercises are held over the city. But for some reason notifica- tion was never made on the cargo jet operations earlier this month Marine representatives say 1t will be another six months befor e the noisy cargo jets return to the air s tation. " We ho1>e that by then the Marines will have received the message th a t notification of Irvine city res idents should pre- cede loud military operations tha t are likely to assault the nerves and eardrums of local citizens Pool economy needed Something must be done by the City of l rvine to increase the revenues or decrease the costs of the Heritage Park Aquati ('s Complex. The present drain t he com- plex is placing on city finances b unacceptable. Nearly 2 percent of the city's a nnual operations budget is spent on expenses of the aquatics com - plex . Irvine City Counci lman Larry Agran said last week in a re port to the City Council The figures are startling. The three heated pools at the complex cost the cit v $417.000 each vear to operate. Add to that the Sl83.000 the city s pends each year to pa~ off the bonds noated to finance the $2.2 million facility. and you arrive at a whoppinf total of $600.000. On the revenue s ide . the aquatics complex garners only about $50,000 in user fees each year. Perhaps these should be in- creased. Pool covers. which would prevent costly heat loss in the pools, are one idea some have s uggested to reduce operational costs at the complex. The City Council has told the citv staff to buy a cover for one of 'the pools and look into purchasing covers for the other two. Since we are moving into the fall and winter months. it is ap- P a r e n t t h e c i t ~· s h o u I d a c t promptly on the pool covers. Some cities have found that u~e of the pools declines so much in winter it is a good idea to le ave some or all pools unheated in the colder months. There are a number of wavs costs could be reduced or rev- enue increased a t the aquatics complex. The present poor finan- cial situation needs remedial ac- t ion. Money blocks cleanup .Jus t when 11 up1.H_iare<I the -..1lt-<:logged L'pp<.•1· '.\:cwport B<.1' \\a~ about to ).!ct th l'1r~t tll•:.tning 111 more th:.in a dl•c::.ich.· I hing-. \\ t•nt -.our again . But this Ii rrk then• " no both to hlJme. no polit1 tiun~ or agl'll eie~ al which In point tlw fill,l!l'I' Thl' cleanup p1h '" hetnl.! dd;1~ t·d hec:au~l' ol l'C'onnm1('~ .111<1 l11gl1 intl•n.•:-.t rat <.·~. To bal'k up :1 bil. :\<.•\\ 1><1r1 Al'a t'h cit ~ 11ffie1ub h;,1cl -.pt·nl more lhCJn a ~eCJr putt111J.: together a s..t million ba~· <:lc•o.mup package. '.\<lost of the mone~ "'-"' to come from two ~epun1te -.tatt> funcb. ThL· pro.1ctt. wh 1 c~ mclucll'd parti:.ill~· dredging th<.• ha~ ancl ;,1 deepening of thl' San Die~o Crc<.•k to ~low the flO\\ of -.i lt to the ha' was to get under" a.' th1~ full ~<.>\\port had llttll· trouhll.· getting half of the needed monL'.' from the state Energy Rcsourc.;6 fund But S2 millton that \\a~ to • tome from the Cle<1 n Water Bond .\ct .i!, in limbo . Tl;le probl'em 1s s imply that thl' ~wte ha~ been unable to sell I he c:lcan Walt.'1' bonds becaust• of' high mtere~t rate~ _ (;h·en lhl' opt inn of putt1ni.: I tw l'11ltt'l' c·lc·anup prn.i<.'l'l rm hold 0 1 mm ing ahL·ad \\ ith hulr of t hl• plan. Ne wport CJt~· Council me m - 111.•r-.. tht:-. \\'l'l'k <t)..!l't•t•d lo l!O \\II h I ht' '>l'l.'Onci t'hOlt'l' So. wot'k crews thb fall will m o ,·e forwa·rd with plans to deepen San Diego Creek while C'it~· officials.. keep their fi ngers c rossed that somehow the state »onds can be .... o ld. "llalf ct cleanup .1oh i ~ ht'lll'I' I hun no l'lcanup ioh ." 'iJ~ ... '\ l'" port :\la~ or .Jack ic II cat her Thl' onl~ hri~ht point of this 11nfortu1wte turn of t.•n•nt-. b thal 11 c·o1Tt·rtin• \\Ork 1~ complett•<I in lhl' San Diego Creek this fall. lht• L"ppcr :\ewpol't H:.t \ \\ill ~ot J.!l'l ,Ill~ \\Ill''>(.' than II 01)\\ I' Opinions expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invit- ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626-0560. Phone (714) 642--021. L.M. Boyd I Line of succession Q. Law prohibits all those in line of presidential succession from being together at one time. So which or President Ronald Reagan's cabinet was refused admittance when the PresWent gave his first address to Congress? A. Secretary of Education T.H. Bell wasn't refused admittance, ex- act!)". At the end or the cabinet suc- cession line, he agreed to stay away, that's all. The novel "The Young Visitors" sold mol'e than 200,000 copies In 1909 or thereabouts. No youthful writer should forget that. It waa the firlt and tut lenethy llterary work of Daisy Ashford, qe t . Couple of eye doctors In research fastened strips of niter 1taper to the lower eyelids of 231 colle1~ l\Vdenta. Each was cheeked afte .. five minutes. The lenlth ol the dam~ ORANGE COAST Daily Pilllt on the wick paper showed each s ub· ject's volume of lean. Let your old suspicions be confirmed. The young women wept almost twice as much as the young men. Q . Is sports medicine taught in medical schools? A. Not in this country. Jn Norway it · is, though. You know those miniature fo'alabelle horses that only stand about 36 inches tall? Takes eilbt of them to eat as much as a full-1lsed horse. - How many countries embots their paper money with raised dota tor the • benefit of the blind? The Nethertaod.s does. that I know. Q. Do insects close their eyes when they 1leet>? A. lnMCtl nevu close their eyes. TllMMI P. H•ley Pu blither No place for ex-pl-esidents LONDON -Wh en American fighters shot down two Libyan jets over the M editerranean last month , an American living here said: "I don't get it. Reagan wants lo put neutron weapons in Europe, but he knows Euro- peans are nervous that he'd use them for no reason -that he's trigger happy. So we go ahead and start shooting down planes for the hell of it. It makes you wonder where Nixon is when we need him." Richard Nixon. in fact, is in a hard-to- find government issue offi ce in lower Manhattan. ln a long conversation we had there recently, I learned that the former president does indeed have strong and intelligent views about such things as the defense of Western Europe. But be doesn't want to make any of them public right now for fear of being accused of undermining Reagan. and not many people seem to ask hjm privately -certainly, I got the distinct impression, not many people from the White House. THAT'S A SHAME, Henry Fairlie said the other tiay in The Times of Lon- don. "They lead rather purposeless and even pathetic lives," Fairlie wrote of Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter, our trio of living ex-presidents. "No one really has any use for them." Noting that Nixon is involved in a dis- .. pule over whether his papers will be placed in a library at Duke University. Fairlie criticized the self-righteous ac- tions of anti-Nixon professors for "what begins to seem like persecution." The British columnist offered the opinion --~ RICHARD RllVIS 1-i • that the former president's ignored counsel would be obviously valuable "to the necessary continuity of foreign policy." BUT AM E RICANS, he continued, liked to begin things "by wiping the whole slate clean." Even if there is something worth knowing on the slate. So, Nixon and Carter are both left alone writing books to expl ain the many mis- takes each made -sometimes because they ignored the slate of history or never talked with anyone who made some of that history. Jerry Ford, who never could stand being alone. is enter- taining trade groups and Chambers of Commerce with $15.000 and $20,000 lec- tures. Carter djd, however, get his name in the papers recently by going to China and climbing the Great Wall. "There is something at fault with the system," Fairlie said, "in which ex-presidents have to go to China to communicate with their own countrymen." There is indeed. We sometimes forget we are all on the same side. It's amaz- ing that presidents and ex-presidents don 't even seem lo share their "book" in the sense that baseball pitchers have a book on the strengths and weak· nesses of opposing hitters -with each other on the personalities and predic· tabilities of othe r world leaders. Meanwhile. Menachem Begin or Leonid Brezhnev continue to get away with try- ing some of the same old tricks on each new American leader. THERE IS A reason for all this. Each new president wants to stay away from his predecessors because he doesn't want to be contaminated by their political unpopularity. Inevitable UO· popularity, it seems. We are destroying our presidents -Dwight Eisenhower was the last one to complete two terms in office. One of the reasons each new one may be doing so badly is that reluc· lance to talk to any old one. If that keeps up, Fairlie pointed out. "there could someday be a small regi- ment of ex-presidents alive at the same time." None of them talking to each other. or course. Wilderness a gift to next generation To The Editor: Some or my happiest childhood memories are of going to a Wilderness Girl Scout Camp in the mountains of Pennsylvania. The beauty, quiet and joy of being in the mountains i.s still with me. For this reason, I am concerned about two bills currently being considered in MAILBOX the U.S. Senate. These bills are radical- ly different and concern the future management of national forest and na - tional park roadless land. ON ONE HAND, Sen. S.l. Hayakawa is pushing a bill S. 842 which designates NO wilderness and would set short deadlines for congressional action, after whic h even areas already recom- -m ended as wilderness would be opened to logging and other development. On the other hand, Sen. Alan Cranston introduced the Cranston-Burton Wilder- ness bill S 1584 which designates certain magnificent lands as wilderness and permits development of other lands. In these days of stress management classes, noise and air pollution in our urban areas, and just the daily pace or life, one of the greatest places for re- newal and reassessment of what's im- portant is being able to 1et away to a wilderness area. • • It will be a priceless gift to our children and grandchildren and it's free! If readers feel the same concern I do please write Sen. Cranston and Sen. Hayakawa and express your viewpoint. MITZI CURRIE Laws·uit. costly To the F.d.ltor: The eovironmentalista are at it again, thll time calling themselves "Friends oC· the Irvine Cout," and would have everyone belii ve it la undel' attack. Thus, tbelr suit for an ~unction to In· hiblt im_plemeotatlon of the develop· ment plan ot the Irvine Company ap pro•ed by both tbe Onm~e County Board ol Supervllofs and the Coutal Commlulon. Both of these bodies bave 1taff1 but t.be former lt elected and the latM appointed, 1eemiQlly reepooaible unto tbemaelvea and notorioualy of the .. environmentalist" atop 1rowtb eenu•ion. lt appears Lbe "Friends" a1'e "ineemed" that the Coaltal Com· miulon ~ the recommeodatJoa of lbeb' owa •ta.ff and approYed the plan, but tldl wrtleJ' 1u11e1ta ttaat c:om- mltlloa II well aware of lacrealtnt public.....,... and CODCll'D for lta abuM al power ud dlare1ard ol proper- ty npu. Tll& PLAN WAI not '"'°'ed • a ..... bal .... ICJ'VtiD.y al,...., Ov .,u.lc A1Deftc.UI pnapll woald lDdicate ; ' l the right of any citizen to own and de· velop property but in fact it requires the resources of an Irvi ne Company in term s of fund s to provide the technological defense of their right to do so. and the individual would be at a loss to cope with lhe unreasonable demands. The plan as approved allocates 60 per· cent of that land to "open space" and 'l7 percent is an outright "dedication" <confiscation) for a park. It is this kind of activity that converts postage stamp lots to acreage by in· hibiting surrounding development, enriching the owner of that property at the expense of all others., The environ- mental "zeal'' is not matched by funds to compensate property owners for the cost of the property. maintenance, and taxes, and property affected is not only vacant land, but existing structures that require permits for renovation or re- modeling, or even replacement after disaster. T HE SUIT filed "on our behalf?" simultaneously imposes additional staff and legal expenses for both or the gov- ernment bodies to be passed on to the general public as well as those of the Irvine Company that will have no choice but to pass their costs on to the general public. The "friends'' want to dictate further the use of only 40 per- cent of privately owned property, and detail the kinds of facilities to be availa- ble to us, and anyone can see the costs that will be added to any housing con- structed and the consequential elimina- tion of most of the general public from horrie ownership. A few privileged resi- dents will be able to enjoy the Irvine Coast. The environmental movement is well funded and well organized and this is just one example or their impact on the rest of us. TEDDI ALVES A.rt needs support To the Editor : In your Sept. 17 issue you reported that the Los Angeles City Councll has enacted a zoning modification to allow artists to live and work in buildings located in commercial and manufactur- ing zones_ You stated that, "the council unan· i m o.us ly pas'sed the meas ure that council presi~nt Joe Wachs said would help the clty become an international center for the arts.'' What a refreatung and lntelll1ent ac- tion! Artists tend to starve a lot untll - • Letter& /rom r~,, art titf.com•. T~ nght to condenia lf!tttra JO Jit IJ)OCC or tUminale li~l la re•1rvtd. wctera o/ .100 word• or le11 wtll bt gtllf'I pr•fernce. AU lttlf'Tf maut rnclud# ""'°''"~ Giid tMl11'91g a.ddrttl but name1 ma11 bf willalwld Ofl re- """'' If auflicltttl 11010« It oppornl. PHt'1/ U.U ~ bt ptlbbtlwd c..flrri ..._flit t'ltpltonftl Lo ea.-, Nanw Giid ..... ,..,..,,.,. o/ ,,.. COllirf'*lor ,..,. ~ ,.... ,., ,Vtri/ttoltoll ~· ' ' \ if ever -they achieve success. <Vin· cent Van Gogh never sold a painting!) and recognizing the importance of art's contribution to a community's cultural and intellectual growth the Los Angeles council moved. wisely, to make the creation of art easier for the artist with a simple zoning change. COMPARE THAT e nlightened response to the know-nothingism that motivates Costa Mesa's City Council to not only not try to help ·artists in this town, but lo actively and vigorously try to destroy the completed accomplish- ments of Goat Hill's premier artist, Ali Roushan! At a time when the National Endow- ment for the Arts is trying to "save and preserve arts and cultural environ- ments '' by launchinj a nationwide sur- vey of folk -art structures -"hand built, large-scale and often bizarre monu· ments and environments, such as Simon Rodda's Watts Towers," the petty bureaucrats at 77 Fair Drive are trying, contrariwise. to destroy Costa Mesa's only qualifying pieces; and trying to jail the man who against all odds and despite the city's worst efforts has persevered to achieve their completion. I watch. embarrassed and helpless while our cultural commissars try to destroy what the enlightened L.A. City Council and the National Endowment for the Arts are trying to save. What blind foolishness their arrogance of of- fice has led them into. What a s hame. J .P. PALMER Article off ends To the Editor: As a Jamaican residing In Irvine and a regular reader of the Pilot, I feel it necessary to comment with disgust on your article -Jamaica's "Where rum comes from" by Stan Delaplane, Sun- day, Sept. 20. Not only was the article poorly writ- ten and lacking in relevance, but com- ing from a newspaper columnist, ter- ribly juvenile and void of substance. He remarked on two °'casions that "the people are black" wnat did thla nai\?e reporter ex~t them to be -areen! Y.A. flSHER It's perfedlJ PoNlble for• dlilld t. ... .,. I hip l .Q. and stllJ not ndlll .. tnl nlue ol a pa and a ma. c. • ~· • IRVINI Dilly Piiat Tt-4URSOAY, OCT. 1, 1981 CAVALCADE COM ICS • TELEVISION B2-3 84 66 Christopher Reeve says Superman comic books were off limits to him as a boy. See Page B7. D 0 .... San O~ofre hearings end; hard part lies ahead 8 y DAVID klJT'lMANN ot .. DeNy ........... One of Southern California's longest running shows came to an end Wednesday. The stars were Southern California Edison Co. 's two new reactors at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. "It has been a long case," chairman James Kelley of the U.S. Atomic Safety and Licens. ing ~oard said. "We still have the hardest part of our work ahead or us." What he meant was that aft.er ·marathon licensing hearings ,for Edison Co. 's $3.3 billion reactors three miles south or San Clemente, the three-member federal panel now would have lo decide whether to grant low· power and full-power licenses for the l ,lOO·megawatt units. A decision is expected by late November ror a IOW·power test li cense and by early 1982 for full· ~\ >.''' Craftsmanship still alive ODE TO YESTE RYEAR : ll ·~ good und pleClsant. a~ your f ailhful corre~pondenl learned. to gel out from under typewriter and de~k for a touple of ctavs and n~nture out into the world of the reul craftsmen of our chi,-. If \OU can find tht•m You ;.ire reminded of the · line·.., b~ Henr~· Wad ~worl h Long fellow "UncUr the spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands. The smith a mighty man 1s he With large and sinewy hands And the muscles of has brawny arms As strong as 1r6n bands. His brow is wet with honest sweat, He earns what' er he can, And looks the whole world in the face, ror he owes not any man .. WHE~ LO~GFELLOW \\'ROTF. tho..,t• line-.. tn lR-12. lhe \"illa).!t' of the <:enlral ftJ,!ure~ of ht.., <:om munil~: a crafh m a n upon whom lhc <:1t11.l1nr~· n·l1l•d ~ /"e\ TOM MORPHINE ,~I', Lo repair. creat e and mainta in the m echanism s that wo uld form the backbone of a ,. i b r a n t n a t i o n . And fr o m th e !.mith 's ~land ca m e a proud heritage of indi\'ldual nafbmen who matnlClmed s mall shops and worked with their hands in gh1s~ and copper and iron and steel And where. ~·ou might a~k. ar e tho~c proud tn· dh·idual craft s men toda~ who dre w their· herilagt• from the \'illage s mith~ of yesteryeClr" Once they populated s mall shop!-> in the old Reme~ber those iron men7 The 1J1lloge sm1th1es of yesteryear downl0\\11 sector of Costa Me!->a Or in an old hor..,t· barn with a s ign th al pr.oclaimed "Wheeler Bros ... on Forest A,·enue in Laguna Or right C1 longs ide the genernl store on :\l a m Street m Huntington Beach TODA\', THE \' H:\ \'E \'ant~hed . ~·ou m1J.!ht ...,th peel. relegat ed . ~·ou might suspect. to oblt,·ion by m ClSS produced chrom e-plated plastic ... trip~ a nd snap -on-fa!.t.:ner~. But are they gone" :\'ot rt•all~ Thc.' no longt•r ~land proud!~ beneath the \'illage che~tnut tree on Main Street. but thev exist. Fewer in number .... perhaps. '.'low relegated by thl' planning. zoning C1nd rede\'elopmcnl to the back strel'ts Yet ,·ou can find lhem . in a ... mall place off Cl Placentia Avenue alJe, in Costa Ylc·~a : 1n an ohsc:ure industrial 7.one behin·d the Edison plant in Hunt ington Beach : out Laguna Can~·on Road in Laguna. under a pepper. rathe r than a c hestnut tree The~· still operate the s mall s ho ps and turn our their crafts in the tradition that built America's backbone in \'esterveClr. The,· are the SCl me kind~ of mer. who. some decades back. dropped their tools and left their machines and went out to-win World War II: piecing together .~alY!gC and . ~:iring up broken parts H> keep an allted war machine mov1n-g to ultimate victory. AND SO ~NLY THE other da~'. you ,·is1t a di lapidated cluster of .these little s hops. out on a backstreet. where the craftman·s roof was leak~· cor· rugated metal and the front door was warped and sagging.· But from the craftsman's table he pro.(i.uced a delicately framed piece of glass that had been etched with an edged design of beauty . It would become a windwing for a classic automobile. American craftsmanship may have been r el· egated to the back streets. but it lives. ONE OF THESE DAYS, some back door de- scendant or the village smithy wUl step out of his s hop and present us all with a ~evlce lo solve o~r energy crisis or cure our pollutton wbe~. And he ll · stand as tall as the old chestnut tree. Believe it. Keep the faith power permits . The hearings, which began in mid-June in San Diego and ended in Anaheim. covered two primary areas or contention - earthquake safety or the huge nuclear power plant and ade· quacy or emergency planning for communities within 10 miles or the generating station. Plant critics had contended in the proceedings that previously undiscovered geologic forma· lions posed hazards which ex- ceeded Ufe selsmic design or the facility and that evacuation planning in the event or an acci· dent was elaborate but unworka· ble. · Edison specialists and consult· ants maintained that the plant was designed lo withstand the largest earthquake considered possible in the region and that STUDENT TRANSPORTATION The bike rack!') at L'C Irvine are full these days as s tudents head be1ck lo school ' emergency planning was more than adequate. Before ending the Orange County portion of the hearings Wednesday, Kelley said thal the board would attempt to include finding s by th e Federal Emergency Management Agen- cy in its final decision. The federal age ncy is responsible for evaluating the adequacy of off·site emergency evacuation plans and has s aid it would Issue u final report on the " San Onofre area by November. Interim findings of the agency issued last June indicated there were numerous communications and coor dination problems a m ong agencies which had participated in a lest drill in May. o.lly ..... leff - using leg.powered trans portation About 10.500 students arc attending the university this year Viejo youth Residents warned arrested in • • Harve st F est ope ns Fri day in Irvine links shooting of coyote v1s1ts A 14-year·old Mission Viejo youth was in custody today aft.er allegedly shooting a man in the shoulder at the Mission Viejo Country Club golf course. An Orange County Sheriffs spokesman said William George Paine, 19, of Mission Viejo, was playing golf at the Oso Parkway course Tuesday at about 7 p.m. when the male juvenile, whose name was not released because of his age, reportedly shot him. The sheriff's spokesman said Paine was ta~en to nearby Mis· sion Community Hospital where he received emergency treat· ment and was later released. The spokesman said the youth was shooting at golf balls from a hillside behind his house, which adjoins the club's 17th fairway, when a stray bullet hit Paine. The spokesman said the youth was taken into custody shortly after the shooting and taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall in Santa Ana. Chambe r Afloa t The Dana Point Chamber of Commerce will host a fall mixer on the tall ship "Pilgrim" Oct. 6 at t h e Dana Point Harbor marina. The get·together will begin at 6 p.m. "' .. Res idents in the foothills of Irvine should take precautions at this time or year to avoid vis· its from coyotes, warns Carl Pagano, Irvine c ity animal services supervisor. ·'This is the time of year they have pups," Pagano said , "and they'll hunt in pairs looking for food for their young. ··We had a report of a coyote chasing a deer into someone's backyard and attacking it and we have found dead cats that were attacked," Pagano said. Residents living in the foothill areas should keep pets indoors wh en possible, make sure lids are on trash cans, and be careful to not leave any food outside, Pagano advised. Pagano said that coyotes are both predator and scavenger in nature and weigh from 25 to 40 pounds. Unlike other animals, coyotes have developed an ability to sur- vive alongside man, according lo Pagano. ·'Coyotes seem to be getting more and more bold as they are getting forced lo look for food near people," said Pagano. He noted, however, that there is little chance a coyote would try lo attack a man. Pagano said there was a re- port of a small child killed by a coyote in Glendale. but he noted that is is possible a wild dog, not a coyote, actually committed the attack. Dawn Raisor. a resident of the Turtle Rock area of Irvine. said that s he lost a small pet recently through "ignorance" of the coyotes. , She said she can hear coyote howls al night and sometimes the howls are followed by cries from animal s that seem to be under attack. Pagano said, however. that people in foothill areas tend to blame aJI missing pets on coyote attacks. He said that often pets dis ap· pear for a variety or reasons un- related to coyotes. He also noted that when cats are found dead as the ·result of an animal attack, people usually blame coyotes although the at- tack may have been committed by a dog. Book sale to a id m e dical a ux iliary An outdoor book sale lo benefit the South Coast Medical Center Auxiliary will be he ld at the hospital Oct. 15 and 16 at the lob· by entrance. Sale hours are from 10 a.m. lo 6 p. m . both days. A fireworks·highlighted one· hour performance by the Third Marine Aircraft Band will mark the start of this year's Irvine Harvest Festival at 9 p m f'ri· d ay in Heritage Park. The festival grounds at 4601 Walnut Avenue will feature food and beverage s tands, entertain· me n t . carni va l rides. a mechanical bull , video games and more than 150 booths COO· laining arts and crafts exhibits and d isplays from local busi· nesses The fes tival will be open on Friday to 11 p . m., Saturday from 9 a.m to midnight and Sunday from 9 a .m. to 7 p.m Saturday's events include a pancake breakfas t from 7 to 11 and a JO-kilometer race starting at 8. ' Also lo be held periodically on each day of the festival will be a s kat e board and bic ycle motocross demonstration. · Admission to the non·profit festival is Sl for adults, 50 cents for children 12 to 16 ·and children under 12 are free The theme for this year's Harvest Festival is the 10th an- niversary of Irvine 's incorpora· lion as a city. The actual an· niversary, however. doesn't take place until Dec. 28. For more information about the festival, call 551·3553. Juniors ' woman of the year annouriced Almost 500 guest:-appla udt•cl wht•n lht• i\:-s1stann· League of '.\/ewport Bt·ach named HarhClra Ktlpunc n ... .., Orange Count~· .Junior Woman of thl' \'car for arrangin ).! youth concerts and reopening a library in Fullerton Other nominees for the medal were \'ictoria Hart. Carol L. Cltsby. Ylarie Coleman. Claudi<1 Colton .. Jud.' Gajkowski. Charlene lmmcll. Cherie Kerr. Sht•rr~ l.oof bourrow. J oann :\1 . ~am. Charla YIC''.\l eff. Putncia Pc(•k · '.\iunn. Hoth· Veale a nd Pame la Flo,·d Wilder. Proceeds from thl' awards Lunrht•on and fashwn sho'' perpetuate the league".; children ':-de ntal health t•t.•11 1<.•1· and child da ~ care cente r GUILD AIMS FOR GREE~ The Quee n of llt•a rh Guild of the Chi ldren·~ llos pita l of Orangt• Count.' 'CHOC 1 has reserved El :'liiguel Country Cl uh for 1i... e ighth annual golf tournament Friday This major fund·raiser for the guild b budgeted for S8.000 to benefit out-patient services at the hospital. The Sl25 entry fee includes luncheon. tee prize~. refreshments. electric carts. green fee~ and a dinner dance. A s hot·gun start at noon begins tht.> hesl -ball-nf partners tourney. For more dehtils. phone 49a-1486 -I AUT MN IN TRES VISTAS A cocktail J{ar·den party from 3 to 7 p.m . Sunday will mark the Barrymorc Chapter of the Orange County Music Center's first ante toward the S50 million building fund for the future oc~c in Costa Mesa. · Tickets are S40 per person for the fe stivities that will start in the Plaza area of Lake )t lssion Viejo and includt• a tour of three .. elegant homes. Guests samplinf( the hufret catered by La Cuisine will be entertained by live mm.le. ReM?rvations may be made by ~allinf{ 951 ·6003 or 770·0U 1 -. ................ Ellen Kutz presents medal to Barbaro Kilponrn a• Don Oliphant congratulates Orange County's Jumor Woman nf the Y«nr BUMPER '11CKE R OF THE WEF.K• (.'mtun.: out of Roy Carver's dealership on the back f a BMW ··Brown tor Senate Sponsored by the ~;thonsl ~ed'1y Committee." • AN&rHER QJ)ICKIE TAKE: Credit attCJme~· Etahw Weinberg wonders. ··~oah. ~hy dldn"l ~·ou KW•l lho rtiH when ~ou had a chantt""' ". c Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThursday, October 1, 1981 Qebate continues On new Mesa high-rise off Pe1·haµs pl'rs1:-.tCnCl' will pay Dcvoloper James Giu11ulias. whose Bristol Plata p<1rtrwrship has been eying a f our-acrt• plus p lot near Montgomery Ward as ttw s tle for high-ris t• buildings for two years. is trying again Costa Mesa's Planning Com mission approved hi!> latt•"t scheme two. s 1x -stor\' office a nd commercieil buildings by a 3 to 2 edge Monday night. But c it\' officials belit•\'e homeowners in the area who have protes l~ct evcr.v one of Gianulia s' hi~h-rise propo!>a ls. starting \\1th a 1'1 story prnjcd. will appeal the C'ommiss1on" ch.-- c 1sion to the City Coum·il The last timl' s uch a proposal one culling for fi Vt:'· and s evt•n story buildings was a{h a need lo th<.• counc il. it was s hot down ~ to l. Council nwmbers !>aid tht- struclures were incompatible with existing rcsidl"'ntial an•as a nd lowc r -rbe ... t ructun•s !>out h of the San Diego Freeway . Some council membt?rs also <>bjected to the unlicipatcd im pac:t of an alread~· glutted trnfftc system 1n the Hristol Street P<Jularino Avenue area . The new project does n·t <"hange m~iny of the numbers in \'Oh't•d in t•a rlier s tudies Tht' question 1s whether the council will stav with its earlier dt•dsion one · t h al would allow dl'velopmcnt of a l'estaurant row or go along with those who believe lht• al'eu south of the fret:·wav is read\ for moderate hi~h-rise construction as a transi- t ion from the 18-'>lorv lowers growmg on St.'l{crstrom ' tand JUSt to l hl' L\Ol'th Pcrsistt•n<"e ma~· win over or wt•ar J uwn the homeowne rs fight mg the shadows of tall buildings. but moto rist::. who fight the Bns lol Street rus h -hour bC:tttle l'\·ery day can't be all wrong. An answer to growing traffic burden~ would appl•ar to be the kl'' to the project ExpansioTf, dile mma Wit h tempers s till warm O\'t•r t he :-.Jcwporl Center t1xpan~101\ pr<>Jl'Ct . anulher devdopnwnt p I a n h a s c o m e b e f o r '• t h l' ~<.'\\'port Reach City Courwll This .plan 11kcw1se prnm1st'~ to be conlrO\·ersi(ll It calb for construction of 238 condominiums ttnd more than 700.000 squan• fl·t·l of industrial a nd offiee ll"l'S on <t i5-acre parc<.•l of land in Wl• .... t .'.'!ewport The plan \\as filed b~ Beeco Ltd . which own:-. some 500 <1cres on tht· Wl'SI side of the eih '.\Jost of thl' land is dolled with 1>il ''ells and is t•xpeC'lt'cl lo rcm<.im un de\'eloped until lht· l<tle 1990!-. Specifically. the arl'a pro· µosed for development i:-. inland of Pacific Coast I l ig hwa~ <.ind just west of ~cwport Cn·~l. c.t l'Ondominium communit~ Tht.· .1C'reagt• backs tip a~aanst <.:o~t:1 M es a. A group of Wes t ~t·wporl residents. railing the m sel\l'!> the Wes t '.'lewpovt l.t•gislall\"l' Al lia nee sav l h cv ·re C'On tl'rnl•d that the proje<:l. will bring too much traffic· to P ac1fi(' Co<1"t llighway Tht• group 1:-. asking that tht.· dl· \' l'lopt·r not he <J II owed to build mon• than 100.1100 square feet of 111du-;trial fa<'1hties a nd no offi Cl' buildings Further. they sa y the) l<J\'O r onl~ lig ht dens ity for con -.,truetion of hom es l lancock Banning . president of Hceco. <"ontends that much of lhl• 75 :H·rcs is uns uitable for home!> and I hat"s wh\ he want~ to hu1lcl oltin•-; c.tnc( 1ndu~tr1al t .1c·1l illl'" ~ ' Cou n cil m t•m hrrs. who opL'nl'cl puhlic· ·h earings on the proposal th•~ ,.,·eek. '>3) it will llkclv t<Jkt' at least two more hearings before they urt' ready to \'Ot C Althou~h both '>tdt.'5 up to now havl' r e m a ined polite. tht•n·· .... little doubt that this de vt•lopml•nt will produce a fC'.\ Ii rt>\\ ork~ tx•fort' all is !>ell led For starter's the ctl\' needs to ftH'US on the t'OnCl'rll!\ Of the rest dt·nh about traffic· in West ~ev. ~urt. ;md tht· developer mu~t -.hov. that ha-; pro1ect will not "or"t·n eoncl1tions there Money: bloc k s c leanup .l1a....t \\hl'll II .1pp1·.111•d 1111' -.tit ('(11gg1·d l 'p1wr :\1•\\ pmt H;1.\ \\as about to t!1•t 1t ... ft '"'I ('ll·.111111 :.. Ill m11n· than .i d1·1·,1Ck th111!.!-. \\ 1•111 -.11lll' again H111 Iha-., t1nw tht•n· 1-. n11lu11h lo hl:tnll' no p11l1t1t·ia11 ' or .1g1•1l ties at whiC'h to potnl tlw fill,L!l'I l'lw de<.1nup juh a... ht.•ing dl•l,n t•d ht•C'<lll"l' OI l'l'OllOITil('S ,tncl high int l'l'l'"l l'lll l'" To hack 11p <1 lllt. :\1'\\ port lh-adl tit~ off11·1.t1 .... h;1tl ')H'lll Ill u n· Iha n :1 ,\ 1• .1 r 11111 t 111 t. tngl'llll'I a ~l mill11111 h:1~ d1·.11H1p p.id; .1g1• \111 .... t 111 I Ill' 1110111·~ \\ ..... tu t•om1· from t "" ... v1><1r;11t• "I.Ill' hind ... l'hv pl'lltl't't "hwh 1111 lud•·tl part 1.el l.' d11.·1h.:111g I ht• l>.1~ ,111d ,1 d1'l'Pt'ntng of lht• San Oiei..:o ( 'rt.'l'~ lo s low llw flo\\ of '>all to t ll\' h.i 1 "<•" lo gl't unch.>r \\ ,1_\. th1" I all 'l'\'l>Ort had litth.-tr11uhl,• gt·llang hall of the needed mont',\ I rom tht• state En erg~· Rl'soun·l'' - fund. But S2 millton th<Jt wus to • c·nnH· lrom lhl' Ch·~in \.\.''1tt·1· Bond \1·t '' 1n limbo "'- Tht.· pl'nhll'm ts "1111pl,1 lh;.11 I h1· -.t at1· ha.., bt•l·n unablt.• to ,('!( t lw dt·.in \\ .sll'I bunch hceatht' ol ht~ll llltl'l l'"' rat1· .... t:l\1•n thl' opl1n11 of putting 1 lw t•nt in• clt.•atlllp pro1t·t·t on hold or lllO\ 111g :..1ht•ad \\ ilh h<tll oft h~· pl ;11l. '.';ewport Cit~ Council me m · IJl'I'" t 11 ..... \\ t•ek :t).!l'\.'l'cl lo .l.!11 \\'II h I Ill: "l '('< 11 HI t • hoH'l' So, \\(ll'k cn•ws t hf.'" ft1 ll '~ill 11111u' for\\ Ji·d \\1th pl<in'> to dl·1•p<'n San 0 1t•J.!11 <'reek whale c·1t~ offit-wb k<'<'P their finger" 1·rm.-.,1•d tlwt ~onwlww thl' -.,wu.• l1oncls <·,in lil· "ol<I · I I.ill .1 t·lc.1n11p 111li ,., hl·llvr th.in tit> l'lt•:in11p joh ,a,., \1•\\ port \h1\ or .J :it•kil' llt'~•ttwr Tlw nnl.\ hnghl point of th1-. 11111111 tltll.ltt• t11rn oft'\ t•nh ..... lhut ti l'lll I l't'tl\ ,. \\1>rl.. a... t·ompll'lt•cl 1n ttw S,111 01t·go Cn.·1·1.. th1 -. fall. tlw I 'ppt.'r \t•\\ port B:n "111 not J.!t'I ;i I)\ \\ Ol""l' I lw n 'I l)I )\\ .... Opinions expressed in the space above are t hose of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their author s and artists. Reader comment is Invit- ed . Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626--0S60. Phone (71.C) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd I Lin e of s uccession Q. Law prohibit11 all those in line of presidential succession from being together at one time. So which of President ~onald_.Reagan1s cabinet was refosea admittance when the Pr esident gave his first address to Congress? A. Secretary of E ducation T.H. Bell wasn't refused admittance, ex· actly. Al the end of the cabinet suc- cession line. he agreed to st ay away, that's all. The novel "The Young Visitors" sold more than 200,000 copies In 1909 or thereabouts. Nu youthful writer ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat should forget that. It was the first and la5t lengthy liter ary work of Daisy Ashford, age 9. Q. Is sports m edicine taught in medfcal schools? A. Not in this country. in Norway it is, t hough. • Was George Gobel who described infl ation as a time when you have to work like a dog to live like one. .. Q. Do in.sifts close-their eyes when they sleep!# A. Insects never close their eyes. Thomas P. Haley Publisher Thomas A. Murpltlne E ditor Barbara Kreiblch Editorial ,,ag@ Editor - ----- No place for ex-presidents LONDON When American fighters shot down two Libyan jets over the M edit e r ran ean la s t month , an American living here said "I don't get it. Reagan wants t o put ne utron weapons in Europe, but he knows Euro· peans are nervous that he'd use them for no reason -that he's trigger happy. So we go ahead and s tart s hooting down planes for the hell of it. It makes you wonder where Nixon 1s when we need him." Richard Nixon. in fact, is in a hard-to- find government issue orrice in lower Manhattan. ln a.. long conversation we had t here recently. I learned that the form er president does indeed have strong and intelligent views about such things as the defense of Wes tern Europe. But he doesn't want lo malte any of lhem public right now for fear of being accused of under mining Reagan, and not many people seem lo ask him pri v alely -certainly. I got the distinct impression, not many people from the White House. THAT'S A SH AME, Henry Fairlie said the other tiay in The Times of Lon · don. "They lead r ather purposeless and even pathetic lives... Fairlie wrote of Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. our trio of living ex-presidents. "No one really has any use for them." Noting that Nixon is involved in a dis- pule on•r whC'lher his papers will be pluced 111 a lt brary at Duke University. Fairlie criticized the self-righteous ac- tions of anlt Nixon professors for "what ht'gtns to '>l'Cm like 1>erseeut1on." The Hrit1~h c11lunin1 .. 1 offered the opinion ~ ------------' . ! ,·;. RICHARD Rf EVES that lhf' form•·r prt'~1dent's ignored c·ou1i:.1·I would bt• ubv111usly valuable ··to lht• 1H'eessary tontinuit y of foreign poli ry " IH T 1U 1 t:RICANS, he continued, hhd tn twgin things ··by wiping the whull' :-.l;1lt•, c·lean .. Even if there is som(•thing worth knowmg on the slate. So. Nixon and Carte r are both left alone wr11111g book., to explain Lhe many mis· t akt's e:ich made sometim es because th1•y 1gno11·c1 the slate of history or nC'vcr talkc•d w1lh nnvone who made -.,omc of that h1~lory Jerry Ford. who nt•\ t•r c·oulrl -.tand he1ng alone. is enter - taining trade ~roups and Chambers of Cttmmen.·e with Sl5,000 a nd S20.000 lec- tures. Carter did. howevl'r. get his name in thl· paper'> n•cently by going to China and climbing the Great Wall. "There is. something al fault with the system." rairlie said. "in which ex-presidents have lo go to China to communicate with their own countrymen." There is indeed. We sometimes for get we are all on the same side. It's a maz- rng that presidents and ex-presidents don't even seem to share their "book" m the sense that baseball pitchers have a book on the strengths and weak- nesses of opposing hitters -with each other on the personalities and predic· tabilities of other world leaders. Meanwhile. Menachem Begin or Leonid Brezhnev continue to get away with try- ing some of the same old tricks on each new American leader. T H ER E IS A reason for all this. Each new president wants to stay away from has predecessors because he doesn't want to be cont a m in ated by their political unpopularity Inevitable un· popularity. it seems. We are destroying our presidents -Dwight Eisenhower was the last one to complete two terms in office. On~ of t he reasons each new - one may be doing so badly is that reluc- tance to talk lo any old one. If that keeps up, Fairlie pointed out, ·'there could someday be a small regi- ment of ex·presidents ali ve at.the same lime." None of them talking to each othe r. of course. Wilderness a gi ft to next generation To The Editor · Some of my happiest childhood memories are of going to a Wilderness Girl Seoul Cam p in the mountains of Pennsylvania. The beauty. quiet and joy of being in the mountains is still with me. For this reason , I am concerned about two bills currently being considered in MAILBOX the U.S. Senate. These bills are radical- ly different and concern the future management of national forest and na· tional park roadless land. ON ONE HAND, Sen. SJ. Hayakawa is pushing a bill S. 842 which designates NO wilderness and would set short deadlines for congressional action. after which even areas already recom - mended as wilderness would be opened to logging and other development. On the other hand, Sen. Alan Cranston introduced the Cr anston-Burton Wilder· ness bill S 1584 which designates certain magnificent lands as wild.em ess and permits development of other lands. In these days of stress management classes, noise and air pollution in our urban areas, ~d just the daily pace of life. one of the greatest places for re- newal and reassessment of what's im- portant is being a ble to get away to a wilderness area. It will be a priceless gift to our children and grandchildren and it's free! . IC readers feel the same concern I do please write Sen. Cr anston and Sen. Hayakawa and express your viewpoint. MITZI CURRIE Lawsu i t costly To t he Editor: The envi ronmentalists are at It again, thi,S time calling themselves." f'rjends of the Irvine Coast," and watifcrhave everyone believe It is under attack . Thus. their s uit for an injunction to in- hibit implementation or the develop- ment plan of the Irvi~ Company ap- proved by both the range County Board or Super visor and the Coastal Commission. Both or these bodies have staffs but the former is elected and the tater appointed, seemingly responsible unto themselves and notoriously of •he "environme ntalis t " s t op groWth persuasion. It appears the "Friends" are "lncensed" that the Coastal Com· mission rejected the recommendation of tbelr own stliff ana approved the plan, but lhls writer suggest.a that com· mlasloa Is well aware or lncreasing public awareness and concern for its abuse ol power and disregard of proper- ty rt1bt.a. . TRE PIAN WAS not approved on a "bim, but aftu scnu;tny~ years! 0 u1' basic Ame rican precepts wouJd lnd.lcate tht• r if!hl of :11\\' c1l1zen lll own and de· '<•loµ prnµt•rty hut in fact it requires the n·-.ourCt·~ of an I rv1ne Company in tc·rms or funds to provide the tN·hnolog1ral defense of their right to do so. and th<• in<hvidual would be at a loss lo cope with tht' unrC'asonable demands. Tht-plan a'> ayproved allocates 60 per- t·c•nt or that land ttl "open space" and 27 pt>rcl'nt ,.., an outright "dedication" t ronf1sration l for 11 park It is this kind of activity that converts p1>!-ilage stamp lots to acreage by in- h 1lt1I1ng surrounding development. enriching tht· owneP of that property at the expensl' of all ot hers The environ- mental "1cal" 1s not matched by funds to compcn.,ate property owners for the cost of the property, maintenance, and taxes. and property affeeled is not only vacant land. but existing s tructures t hat rcquir<' permits for renovation or re· modeling, or C\•en replacement after disaster T ll E Sl'IT filed on our ht>half"'" sirnult:11wously imposes additional staff and legal expenses for both of the gov- ernment bod1e~ to be passed on to the gener al public as ~ell as those of the lnine Company that will have no _, choi ce but to pass their eoslc; on to the general public. The "friends" want to dictate further the use of onJy 40 per- cent of privately owned property, and detail the kinds of CacU ities to be availa- ble to us, and anyone can see the costs that will be added to any housing con· structed and i«e consequential elimina- tion of most of the general pubUc from home ownership. A few privileged resi- dents will be able to enjoy the Irvine Coast. The environmental movement is well funded and well organized and this is just one example of their impact on t~e rest of us TEDDI ALVES A rt 11eed s srtpport To the Editor· rn your Sept,. 17 issue you reported that the Los Angeles City Council has enacted t\ zoning modification to allow artists to live and work in buildings ~ocated in commercial and m&11.ufactur· mg zones. You stated t hat. "the council ttnan-. lmously ·pusscd t he meas ure that council president Joo Wee~ said wouJd help the city become an international center for the arts.·• What o refreshing and intelltgeg_t ac· tlon' Artists tend to sta rve a lot unlll - • l.rrtrrs from readtrl ore lllt'lcome Tht rrynt to condense l(>tter11 fo flt fJ)OCe 01 1•/w11noff' lrhf'/ ~ rt.•trved l..tttlers of )00 u•ord~ ur /11~s u111/ tie g1uen prtftrf'flCe All ltt1er11 rnu.~t 1rt(/udt• signoturt 01ld marltng oddrf's,, hut nomt& rnou be Wtthhtld on r1- qu1ts( if ~1Jf/1c1ent reason i~ opJ)Orc"t. Poetry will not be pubUthtd LeUer1 mGJI ~ ttlrphtm d 111 642_. Namt cmd phon# numbc_.r-u/ lht contnb1dor must bf grvm /9' ,Vf"tt/t('nlmn purpost>.t 1f ever they achieve success <Vin- cent Van Gogh never sold a painting!) and recognizing the importance of art's contribution to a community's cultural and intellectual growth the Los Angeles council moved. wisely, to ma ke the crC'alion of art easier for the artist with a simple zoning chan~e \O MPA R E T H AT e nlighten ed response to the know-nothingism that motivates Custa Mesa's City Council to not only not try to help artists in this town. but to actively and vigorously try to destroy the completed accomplish- ments of Goat Hill's premier artist. Ali Roushan ' Al a time when the National Endow- ment for the Arts is trying to "save and preserve arts and cultural environ- ments" by launchin_g a nationwide sur· vey of folk-art structures "hand built, large-scale and often bizatre monu· ments and environments, such as Simon Roclda's Wa lls T o wers.·· the petty bureaucrats at 77 Fair Dr ive are t rying, contrariwise. to destroy Costa Mesa's only qualifying pieces; and trying to Jail the man who agains t all odds and despite the c ity's wors t efforts has persevered to achieve their completion. I watch. embarrassed and helpless while our cultural commissars try to destroy what the enlightened L.A. City · Council and the National E ndowment for the Arts are trying to save. What blind foolishness their arrogance of of· fice has led them into. What a shame. J .P. PALMER Fish i ng re ef? To the Editor: Regarding the destruction and re- moval of the old Coast Highway bridge that crosses the bay when the new one comes into play. it would be nice if the concrete portion of the old bridge could be broken up and-bar ged out to cre ate an a rtificial reef offshore for fishermen. 1 t would be a lot better than chucking it away and da maging all our roadways leading up to the site of the old brid1e. 1 have tried to propose this to numerous peopl,e and they all think it ia a great Idea but they don't know what to do or how to car ry it out. Perhaps some reader of the Daily Pilot knoWI the secr et. GEORGE D. GIBSON I 'm praylnt for rain IO the Balboa Island sldewaJkJ will 1et wubed 4otm. l .S. ~ 011111 COAST , es_a'~Ali ·faih By J ERRY CLAlJSEN r.l>fU..~f't ... lwt Costa Mesan Ah Roushan ig- nored a Superior Court order Wednesday that prohibits him from erectin~ his big metal sculptures and tried to put up a 60·foot-hJgh "Tornado." The attempt fatled. Roushan had ordered a 30 or 45-ton crane to raise his fourth metal sculpture. The crane peo- ple sent a 14.S·tonner. Roushan and crane operators worked from l ·30 to 3 p.m. try ~\ ~,,, ing to lift the seven.ton sculpture in place on its concrete founda· tion. They finally gave up. .. "I just don't want nobody to get hurt," s aid Rous han af· terward. ··1 have a 4S·ton crane coming down Friday, now." Roushan's American Civil Liberties Union attorney con- cedes. though, that the Iranian immigrant could be in jail by then. An Orange County Superior Court judge is scheduled to rule Crafts mans hip still alive O D E TO YEST E R YEA R : It .!-. good and plea~<1nl. <.i:-. )·our faithful ('orrespondent learnt.>cl. to gt•t out fron) under t~·pt'wntt•r and de~k for a couplt· of da\'s and ,.L·ntllre out into lhe world of tht.• real ('raft~men of cn11· da,· If \·m1 c·an find thL•m . You an· rl•m1nckd of !ht·· lirH.»..., b\ llt•nn· \\'~1rl ">\\11rth l.ongfelln\\ · · .. Under the spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands: The smith a mighty man 1s he With large and sinewy hands. And the muscles of his brawny arms As strong as iron bands Hts brow is wet unth honest sweat. He earns what'er he can. A11d looks the whole world m the face. for he owes not any man " WHE:\ LO:\GFELLOW WROTE tho'>l' hill'" an 18.t:?. tht· '1llagl' ol tht• <:enlral f1gun•.., of h1.., com mun it): OJ ('rafhman upon whom t hl' ul11.t•nr.\' n•lit•d r;, • !"<o"\ TOM MURPHINI -~/'~ t o repair. create and maintain the mecha nis ms that ,,. o u Id f o r m t h e backbone of a ,. i b r a n t n a t i o n And from the s m ith "s stan d came a proud heritage of indi\'idual c:rafbml'n who maintained small shop:-. and worked with tht•tr hands in gl<1!-.'> and cop1x•r and iron and steel ,\nd where. \'OU might <1s k. arc.· thow proud 1n dindual naftsmt.•n tocla)· who dn~w their ht.•rtt<.iJH' from the \'illagr s mithy of \'l'Ster)·ear·1 Onn' the~· populated ... m;dl :-.hop-. 111 the old Rememl>er those iron men? The village smithies of yesteryear downtown :>ector of Costa :\'tcsa. Or in <.in old hor .... t· barn with a sign that pr.oclaimed ··wheeler Aros. ·· on Forest rhemw in Laguna . Or right alongside lhc genl'ral store on '.\fain Street in Huntington Beach TOOr\Y, THE \' 11.\\'E rnnishNI )IHI might ">LI"> pect. relegated. you might ~uspect. to obli\'1on b~· mass produ<.:ed chrome-plated plastt(• ... tr iµ._ and snap-on fash:ners . But an.• the) i.:ont.-• :'\n\ rl'all~ Thl'~ no longt•r stand proudly bt•neath the ,·Jltagc t:he~tnul trl'e on Main Stn·et. but the.·~ exi~t. Fewer in number ..... perhaps :"'Jow rl'legated h) thl' planning. zoning and reden·lopment to the•hack !-.lreeb. Yet ~·ou can find them: in a ... m<.ill place off OJ Placentia A\·enue alll•' in Costa ~1 e..,a : m ;.in oh...,t·un• industrial 1.ont' behind the Edison plant in llunt ington Bea<"h . out Laguna Canyon Road in Laguna. under a pepper. rather than a che!-itnut tree The)· still operate the !-.mall s hops and turn our their crafts in the traclilion that built Americ<1·._ backbone 111 ,·esten·ear. "The,· a r e the same kind!-. or men who. some decades ba·l·k . dropped their tools and le ft their machines and went out to win World War II : piecinl{ together -.<11\·a~e and wirmg up broken parts to keep an allied war machine mo\'ing to ullimate victor~· ANO SO ONL \' TH E othe r da)·. you n s1t a di lapidated c luster of these little shops. out on a backstreet. where the craftman 's roof wa~ leak)· CQ!'- rugated metal a nd the front doo r was warped and sagging. · But from the craftsman·s table he produced a d e l\catcly framed piece of glass that had heen etched with an edged des ign of beauty. lt would become a windwing for a classic automobile. American craftsmanship may have been r el egated.to the back streets. but it li ves. ONE OF THESE DA VS, som e back door de- scendant or the village ~mithy will step out of his shop and present us all w\th a device to solve O';'r energy crisis or cure our pollution woes. And he 11 stand as tall as the old chestnut tree. Believe it. Keep the faith. l . Dally Piiat ' ..., THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1981 Christopher Reeve says 0 Superman comic; books I .. CAVALCADE 82·3 were off limits to him as a D COMICS 8 4 boy. See Page 87. TELEVISIO N 86 .... c. • in attempt to erect 'Tornado' today on City of Costa Mesa charges that Roushan is In con tempt of a restraining order pro· hibiting any construction at his 1550 Superior Ave. metal s hop. Thal order followed the city's s uit demanding that Roushan re· move two other sculptures. "Waterfall " and "Butterfly Wings," put in place despite or· dinances res tricting structural San Onofre hearing contpleted By DAVID KUTZMANN Of UM Deity ...... Staff One of Southern California's longest running shows came to an end Wednesday. The stars ,Vjl!re Southern California Edison Co.'s two new reactors at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Station. "It has been a long case." chairman James Kelley of the U.S. Atomic Safety and Licens· ing Board said . "We still have the hardest part of our work ahead of us ." What he meant was that after marathon licensing hearings for Edison Co. 's $3.3 billion reactors three miles south of San Clemente. the three-m ember federal panel now would have to decide whether to grant low· power and full-power licenses for the 1,lOO·megawatt units. heights in the industrial zone to 30 feet. '- R oushan put up a third sculpture anyway. the tallest of the three alread y in place "Volcano" towers 45 feet. ACLU attorney M elr Westreich of Santa Ana said Wednesday he doubts his client will go to jail, that Judge Robert Fitzgerald will rule Thur~ay on Rous han 's behalf. That is. Westreich adds, 1f the judge rules at aJI. Superlor Court cases are backlogged, he noted, and he will not s ubmit the Roushan case toe pro·tem judge .• Roushan already has his fifth m etal sculpture on the drawing boards. It is called .. Peacock" and will be the last in the series. • he ~aid "But 1f government's.attitude doei,n't change. ··rm going to build another called "Concept or Government' at that end," he said potnting to the rear of his propert} ''That 'II be a 250 foot high bloodsueker. Governme nt has a problem. and the) take it out on the people ... A decision is expected by late November for a low-powe r test ticeni,e and by early 1982 for full power permits. The hearings. which began in mid-June in San Diego and ended in Anaheim. covered two primary areas or contention - earthquake safety of the huge nuclear power plant and ade- quacy of emergency planning for communities within 10 miles or the generating station. JORDAN DAY Principals of the firsl annual Willard T . Jo rdan Memorial Golf tourney gather to read a city proclamation selling aside Sept. 30 for the annual event. About 85 golfers paid to e nter the tourney Wednesday and then dined in honor of the city's late mavor and civic booster From left are Harn· Green. Costa Mesa Golf and Countrv Cl ub manager: Bob Wilson. tourney ('hairman . James Jordan. the Jordans· -.on. :\lrs . Ruth Jordan. the former mayor s widow and Costa Mesa '.'vt a) or Arlene Schafer' Plant critics had fontended in the proceedings that previously undiscovered geologic forma- tions posed hazards which ex· ceeded the seismic design of the facility and that evacuation planning in the event of an acci· dent was elaborate but unworka- ble. Banning says wells dictate land use New testing of quiet jet set for 1982 Edison specialists and consult· ants maintained'tw1i't the plant was designed to withstand the largest earthquake considered possible in the region and that emergency planning was more than adeQuate. Before ending the Orange County portion of the hearings Wednesday. Kelley said that the board would attempt to mclude findings by th e Federal Emergency Ma nageme nt Agen· cy in its final decision. The f e d eral agency is responsible for evaluating the adequacy of off-site emergency evacuation plans and· has said it ~ould issue a final report on the San Onofre area by November. Interim findings of the agency issued last June indicated there were numerous communications a nd coordination problems among agencies which had participated in a test drill in May By STEVE MARBLE Of tlle o.Mty ...... Staff The owner of the Newport Banning Ranch told Newport Beach City Council m embers this week that the hundreds of oil wells that dot his land make it necessary for him to construct industrial and office buildings on much of the property. A group of West Newport Beach residents have asked de· veloper Hancock "Bill'' Banning Ill to drop plans for office build- ings and to construct only a small industrial complex. "The number or oil wells on the upper portion of this proper- ty would make marketing of res- idential units really questiona- ble," said Banning, president of Beeco Ltd. Banning has proposed con' s tructing more than 700,000 square feet of indus trial and of- fice buildings on 75 acres of the ranch . Roughl y 230 con - dominiums would be built on a lowe r portion of the 75-acre parcel. away from oil wells. The property, a former sheep ranch that Banning says his family has owned for three generations, iS-inland of Pacific Coast Highway and west or Supe r ior Avenue . The land backs up to Costa Mesa. The residential group, which calls itself the West Newport Legislative Alliance and says it represents 9.000 people. wants Banning to build more homes. Specifically, the group wants the developer to build five res· identiaJ units per acre instead of the 11 units per acre he is re- questing. "We would like a nice mix from luxury ocean view homes t o high e r d e n sity con · dominiums," explained Louise Greeley, leader of the West Newport group. But Banning said much of the 7S·acre parcel is simply unsuita- ble for homes because of the oil wells~ Bannin g did agree to eliminate plans for an eight-acre shopping center at Pacific Coast Highway and t,he as-yet-unbuilt extension of Bal boa Boule"ard. The residential group has pro· tested the shopping center. ' Demonstration fli ghts of re- search Jet aircraft said by one observer to be "unbelievably quiet" may be conducted in early 1982 at Orange County's John Wavne Airport. The demonstration flights are being sought by Supervisor Thomas Riley. who recently viewed the aircraft at the Na- tional Aeronautics and Space Administration 's Ames Res earch Center at Moffett Field. near San Jose. '·I am extremely excited about the possibilities and the potential that this new aircraft type would provide to an airport with the noise impacts or John Wayne Airport," Riley said in a letter to other supervisors. In tht letter , Riley requests permis ion to negotiate with NASA o bring the research aircraft to Orange County for demonstration flights. At Ames. NASA is conducting tests of the so·called Quiet Short- H a ul Research Aircraft. The project has been under way sin ce 1974 . 1 Juniors' woman of the year annoµnced :\lmo~t 500 gue~t~ applaudNI wht·n lhl' ,.\...,:-.bt..im·t• League of ~ewport fh>ach named Rarhara Kllponl'n ~1:-. Orange Count)· .Junior Woman of lht• Yt•ar for <.1rr;mgi11g youth concerts and reopening a library in Fullerton. Olhl'r nominees for tht• med<JI w~re Victori<.i Bart. Carol L Clish~·. ~l arit• Colt'm<m. Claudia. Col ton .. Jud~ Gajkow~ki. Charlene l mml'll. Cht'fll' Kerr. Sherr~ Loof bourrow. Joann :\1 . ~am. Charla ~t·ff. P<.tlrtl'la Peck ~unn. Holly Veale and Pamela Flo~·d \.\'Jlcler Proceeds from tht• awards lun('henn and f;J...,h111n ">ho\\ perpetuate the league·!-. ch ildr~n ·s dentul hettllh (Tntl·r and child da) c<1re center GlilLO AI MS FOR GREE~ The Queen of llt•arts Guild of tht• C hild r en's llospital of Oran~t· Count~ t C HOC 1 has reserved El '.\ligucl Count r) Cluh for 1h eighth annual golf tournament Friday . This major fund·r a iser for the guild b budgeted for $8.000 to benefit out-patient service~ at the hospital The Sl25 entry fee includes luncheon. tee prizes . refreshments. e lectric carts. green fee~ and a dinm·r dance. A s hot-gun !'>tart at noon begin~ the he~t -ball -ol partners tourney. For more details. phone 495· 1481l ~ -\ AUTUM N IN TR ES VI TAS A co<"kta1l garden party from 3 ln 7 p .m . Sunday w ill m<.1rk the Barrym or(• Chapter of the Orange County Musi{' Cent er .. ~ firs t antt• toward the S50 million buildin~ fund for the future OC'.\<JC in Costa Mesa. Tickets are S40 per person for the fe-..tiv1t1e~ that will start in the Plaza area of Lake :\1ission Viejo tind inclutk a tour of three e legant homes. Guests sampling the buffet catered by La Cuis ine will be entertained by Hve musi<" Reservations may be made b~· calling 951 ·6!1>3 or \ 770·0411. ' .,... .............. Ellen Kutz presents meda( to Barbaro 1\1/ponen a~ 01)11 Of1pha11t congratulates Orange County·s ./1m1nr \\'omnn of tlw Year BUMPE R . T ICKE R OF T HE WF.f.K : ComtnA out of Rov Carve r ·s dealership on the hatk of ,u B ~W ··Bi·own £or Senat~ Sponsort•d b~· thl' :'\ational ~fodfl~ Committee ... ANOTHE R Ql:ICKIE TAKE: Credit attorne~ Elainl' Weinberg wonders. "'.'loah. why ciidn·t ~·ou s wut tho~"' rites when ~·ou had a <"hance·•" ---~~~-.-.~~~~~~~~~~~~~--;'~~~~~~~~-I ,. • • " • .. • DUlll CDllT THURSDAY . OCTOBER 1 1981 Marines test tr~ops for. IJy GLENN SCOTT Ot-.o.11, ............ A Marine Corps screening pro· gram is under way al the El Toro Air Station to discover who is smoking marijuana. About 1,000 Marines will be tested each month. Their urine samples will be sc ree ned through a new portable unit de- s ig ned .to quick l y indicate whether the Marine has smoked marijuana in the past week, said Gunnery Sgt. Dick Blumster. Marines whose positive tests are reconfirmed in a Navy laboratory in San Diego will be enrolled in educational and treatment programs aimed at discouraging marijuana use. he said. Pa rticipants whose later tests are negative probably won't be sanctioned, but for tpose wh~se tes ts continue to be positive, Blomster said: "That's a new ball game." Chronic marijuana users, he s aid. could be discharged from the corps. Blomster. who works in the base public affairs office, said t he Marines have other pro· -,, • YDUR HDIRnN llllY PAPIR marijllana at El ToM grams for alcohol ltbusers and users or hard drugs. Although the corps has had other tests that sometimes in- dicate marijuana use, the new process is the first lo aim specifically at the substance. Marine officials ordered the testing because they believe that marijuana smoking is common in the military, according to lst Lt. Don Donaldson. "Wtth 99 pe rcent accuracy in Illegal drug detection. we expect about 40 percent of those tested to s how positive results (for marijuana >." Donaldson said in a written statement. Testing also will be instituted at the Marine Corps· Tus tin Helicopter Air Station and at Camp Pendleton, said Blomster. "We have been concerned about muriJu.ana 1 ~se) for some lime," said Blomster. who noted that the rallure of a soldier to perform a duty or care for a piece of machinery can have im· plications on others in the unit. He said the new procedures of- fer more accuracy and economy than in previous tests. "The ·only people it's going to upset." he said, "are those who are s moking m~rijuana." Spectacular stor1n socks Orange Coast Israel gets U.S. • warning WASHINGTON <API -Presi- dent Reagan declared today that Saudi Arabia will not fall prey to a revolution like that in Iran because "we will not permit it." He said Israel need not fear and s hould not meddle as the ad- m in is tr a lion seek s to sell AW ACS surveillance planes lo the Saudis. Reagan said the sale would enhance U.S. security interests in the Middle East without pos- log_ a threat tolsrae1,.·.·now or in - the future.·· He said the arms s ale, which totals $8.5 billion. .,.would better equip Saudi Ar abia to defend oil fields vital lo the West. The deal will go through un· less both branches of Congress vote this month to prevent it. Reagan said he thought the terms of the sale now meet most of the objections r aised by critics in the Senate. 0•111 f'I .......... '"' L• ...... I death weather related By STEVE MARBLE Of 11M Dell' l'tltll SIMI The season's firs t s torm moved into Orange County in spectacular fashion Tuesday. brig hte ning the s kies with lightning a nd dumping nearly 34 of an inch of rain. The electrical storm knocked out power to more than 17,000 c ustome rs along the Orange Coast and several areas today were still without power In Laguna Beach, lightning struck a tree in the 400 block of Cliff Drive and charred a power pole on Gaviota Street. Traffic signals at the busy in· tersection of Dover Drive and P acific Coast Hi ghway in Newport Beach were knocked out during the storm and east- bo und motoris ts today found them.selves snarled in a traffic jam backed up neatly one mile. In Anaheim. David Mendoza, 16, was electrocuted al 5 a.m. when he br ushed a g ainst a metal guard r ail on which a 1 2 ,000 v olt elect ri ca l transmission line had fallen. ... As for Israeli opposition, Reagan said the world must know that U.S. foreign policy is not unduly influenced by outside interests. ''It is not the business of other nations to make American foreign policy." he said. Flashes of lightnmg punctuate the storm over the Orange Coast as October arrives with 3 4 of an mch of r:ain Police~ey theorized that the line fell lo the ground after being struck by a bolt of light- ning. At his first White House news conference i n three months. Reagan pressed his campaign for new federal spending cuts, s aid his economic program is beginning to work, and warned Congress that he will veto any s pending measure that doesn't fit the bud~et. "I wlll sign np legis lation that would 'bust the budget' and violate our commitment lo hold down federal s pending.',' he said. Reagan -Was asked whether U.S. security would be com· promised should the Saudi Ara- bian governme nt fall to an lran- s ty le revolution. He s aid it wouldn't happen. "I have to say that Saudi Arabia. we will not permit to be a n Iran." 'All Savers' get mixed reaction NEW YORK <AP I Customers lined up at the doors when some of the nation's banks a nd savings institutions opened today as the high-interest, tax- free All Savers certificates went on sale. Some financial institu- tions planned to stay open all weekend to handle_ orders for new accounts. But other bankers said busi- ness was no greater than usual and concluded investors were EASTE'RNERS FIRST TO 'CASH IN' -A4 waiting to see if they'd get a higher return on a later offering of certificates. The All Savers that went on sale today pay a yield of 12.61 percent; late this afternoon the rate for All Savers effective Mond ay will be set by tbe T reasury Department. based on its monthly auction of one-year Treas ury bllls. "We've had a Jot of caUa th.la morning, a lot"Of Inquiries," saJd G r ace Schmidt of BanR ot Virginia In Richmond, "but most of lhtm seem to be watt· Ing" until the new rate i11 an· nounced. The auction was to take place today. with results announced toot a ht. To accommodate that: bankl (8ee al VEU, Pa•I Al) : -· 30 killed in Beirut blast TNT-laden car explodes ; death toll may go higher BEIRUT. Lebanon <APl -A car packed with an estimated 220 pounds of TNT exploded in a PLG;controlled neighborhood in West Beirut today. Police re - ported at least 30 people killed and 130 wounded, but a Red Cross nurse said the death toll might be as high as 50. Police said the car-bomb ex· ploded near the offices of t.he Palestine Liberation Organila- tion 's top security chief. Sal ah Khalaf. known by the code name Abu Iyad . The blast tore facades o ff build ings. s plintered telephorµ:..poles. set off fires and turned About 60 cars into piles of scorched metal. Pol ice said no ne or the wounded were ranking members of the PLO. The PLO. in a state- ment through its news agency, reported 18 deaths without iden- lify ing them . and said there were 247 Pales tinians and Lebanese wounded. Mohsen Ibrahim. spokesman for the 13-militia National Move- ment leftist umbrella group al· lied wjth the PLO, said at a press conference later that several communist militia mem· bers were killed. He blamed "Is r ael and its agents in Le banon.'' indirectly referring to rightist Christian militias. and promised to ''strike back in the sam&o-manner and in the appropriate place . . " Abu lyad was not in the office when the explosion occurred. the PLO said. He was later seen touring the devastated block. The bomb stranded residents in isolated floors of high-rise bulldin~s. lore coffee shops. sandwic h stands a nd s mall m arkets lo bits, and hurled -mutil ated bodies of sevedl street vendors dozens of ya'r.:ds <See BLAST, Page i\2) HouFing questions back in city hands City leaders along the Orange Coast cheered news today that a state biU designed to take af- fordable housing authority away from the state Coastal Com· mission and return it to local government is to become law. Gov. Edmund Brown J r . neither signed nor commented on the bill Wednesday but did clear the way for the bill to become law by taking no v~to action against it. The bill. authored by Sen. Henry Mello, 0 -Watsonville, was greeted warmly by officials in Newport Beach and Hunt- ington Beach. Both the coa~tal cities have been criticized by the Coastal Co m mission because loc al coastal plans allegedly did not pl'o~erly a ddress affordable housing. ·'This is a clear message that the citizens are tired ol social tink ering t o solve ho us ing need s.·· s uggested Newport Mayor Jackie Heather. She said the bill is a "clear victory for local government and is exciting news." Newport and Huntington of- ficials suggested the Mello bill s hould resul t in getting the Coastal Commission off their backs on that issue. . The Mello bill was tugged through the Legislature by oppo. nents or the Coastal Commission who complained about com- mission efforts to require low- cost housing along t'he coast. The bill, to become law Jan. 1, allows local governments lo ex- ercise the authority over hous· ing in zones up to three miles in- (See HOUSING, Page A%) Soccer fllnd thief • ID • prison Westminster man starts three years for embezzlement A Westminster man who em· beizled more than $30,000 from a local American Youth Soccer Organization in 1979 has begun serving a three-year prison term. · Steve Sanders, 33, a lso known as Stephen Patterson, told Orange County Superior Court .f ucl•e WllUam Thornton that he used his common law wUe'a lut name to aim the checks lo pay off debts to drus dealen who be aal'tl were tbrutentn1 hls ramlly. · Sanden' common law wil•a Mary Sa~der1 , alao or Westminster, was the treasurer vember of 1979. of A YSO Region s in 1979. '-Conley says Sanders was in- Region 5 operates leagues for ilially taken to Chino Slate about 200 youngsten in Fountain Prison and could be eligible for Valley and Westminster. parole in lWOJcars. - Deputy District Attorney John Sanders ha told the court thal Conley says Sanders pleaded he was heavlly ln debt to drug auilty but then later tried to dealers because of his cocaine chance his plea to tnnocent. Tbt habit, Conley said. \rlal luted for ove a year. as The \x,m.mon-law couple were Sanden cb1n1ed attorney• three married one day Mtore Saoden' tlmet, Cooley said. l f 980 Judce Thomson denJed San· \rl1 be1an Jn Auiuat o l • dera' attempted plea cllana• and An olflcial ol A VSO Reg100 5 on ~· Jl sentenced hlm to 1111 a bondint company repaid 1tate prCaon for cashing 1' A Y80 the or1aaiaatlon for money Sin· checu betw June and No-dert emBeuled · Guns tested in shooting of two girls Ballistics tests are being con- ducted to determine if one of sever al guns recovered from a truck belonging to murder sus- peo6 Thomas Francis Edwards was used in the fatal Sept. 19 shooting of a 12·year-old Lake Elsinore girl. Orange County Sheriffs Lt. Wyatt Harl said an unspecified number of weapons. including both handguns and rifles. were seized from the camper ·oulfilled vehicle during a search Wednes- day. cSee related story, Page A3.> The truck was located in Los Angeles Monday several hours after Edwards, 37 , a former Costa Mes a resident. was arrest- ed in Maryland. where he is be- ing held without bail pending ex- tradition pr'oceedings. Hart said a s mall caliber weapon was used in the shooting attack that 'killed Vanessa lber.!'i ..> and wounded her com paniolt;' Ke lly Cartier. 12. also of Lake Elsinore. Hart said it has not yet been determined whether a handgun or rifle was used in the shooting. Investigators obtained a search warr;mt before entering Edwards' vehicle. Hart said. Authorities believe Edwards, de1>cribed as a "mountain man'' and "gun buff.'' had been Jiving oul or the vehicle for several months afl~r leaving his wife. A search warrant also was ob- tained to permit investigators to examine a portion of the South Coast Gun Club in Irvine. where Edwards worked occasionally as a range master. Hart said he did not know what, ir anything, that search yielded. As investigators In Orange County continue to assemble evidence in the shootings, their counterparts In Maryland and Riverside County are looking al Edwards in connection wlth cases In their respective j urisdictlons. In Maryland. an investJgatlon bas been r eoptned Into the 111,y· Inga of a tcboolteacher and a 1'-year-old glrl. Edwards wu considered a •uspect in t.hoM kllllnp, but was not proteeuted because somt evidence •• U· leaally aklined. accordlq to <S..G~? .... ,U> Police said the youth and his father we re attempting to put out a small grass fire that broke out near the guardrail when the rn cidenl occurred . The boy's father was not injured , police said. In Huntington Bea ch. rain caused fl ooding on Newland Street near the Edison power plant and traffic had to be re· routed. "It ·s safe to say we had a lot of weather," s uggested Hunt- ing ton weather-watc her J . Sherman Denny today. "You'd have to be drugged to sleep through the storm we had last night," he commented. "My land. it's been a long time since I've seen anything like that." One resident s uggested that with all the thunder "it was like trying to sleep in a bowling al- ley" Officials from the Los Angeles Weather Bureau blamed the un- expected storm on a low pres- s ure system that worked its way off the coast. They said the system produced "unst able air" which resulted in the lightning and thunderclaps. Weather bureau offi cials pre· dieted the low pressure system will gradually move east and should be completely gone by late Friday. The storm brought Southern California's first rain since April 20. Officials from South ern (See STORM, Page A2> ORAllil COAST llATHlR C hance o f showers decreasing lo 20 percent tonight and near zero Fri· day. Partly cloudy tonight and clea ring Friday. High s 74 lo 78. Lows tonight SS to 65. INSIOI TllAY John Gtbb.t of Colta Mt10 lives for rpt«d -UM 140 mph m hil hudroplanc boal. See 1tory. photo, Pao• Cl . I l , I N Orange Coast DAILY PILOTfThuraday, October 1, 1981 .. Newport faces new ' expansion dilemma With tempers still warm ovtr the Newport Center expa ns io n project . a noth er d evelo pment plan h as c om e bef ore the Newport Be ach City Council. This pla n likewise prombes to be controvers ia l. It call s for cons truct ion of 238 condo miniu m s a nd more tha n 700.000 squ are fe<.'t of industrial a nd office u sei, on a 75-acre pa r cel of la nd in West NewJ)ort. The pla n was filed by Beeco Lld., w hlch owns some 500 acres o n .the west side o f t he c ity. Most o f the land is dolled with oil welh a nd is exp ected lo re ma in un· developed until the late 1990s. S pecifically. the area pro posed fo r develo pme nt 1s inla nd of Pacific Coast Hig hway a nd ju s t west of Newport Crest. a condo mini um com m unit v. T he a creage backs up again s t Cost a Mesa A group of West New port r e s idents. calling the m selves the W est Ne wport Legis lati-.:e Al- liance, s a y they're concerned that the project will br ing too muc h tra ffic to Pac ific Coast Hi;hway \.J The group i~ ask1ng t hat th~ d eveloper not be a llowed to build m ore than 100,000 squ a re feet of mdust1;a1 facilities and no office bu ild ings Further. they say the~· favor only lig ht d en s it~· for con struct ion of homes. Hancock Banning , presiden l of Beeco, con tends that muc h of tht' 75 acres is uns uitable for homes and th a t 's w hv he wants to bu 1 Id o ffi ce::, a nd· i n d ust ria l rad lilies Council m embe r s. wh o opened public hearings on lhe proposal this week . say it will likely take at least two more hearings before they a re ready to vote, Althou~h both s ides up to . now h ave rem ai n ed polite. lhere·s little doubt tha t this de· velo pment will p roduce a few firework~ befor e a ll i s settled For s t arters the cit v needs to focus on the concerns of the resi- de n t.s abou t traffic in W est .'.'Jewport. a nd the developer must show th at his project will not worsen t·onditions there Parents helping out Those who t·onlend that 11 1~ inclt•t•d an 111 wind that blow~ no good C'ou ld find ~' moch cum 11t so'l tlN; i n tf1t• '.\ic~vport '.\ll'~J St·honl D1strit·t ·s batt ll' to kerp 1h c:olllic:tive head ahofr f1n:ln<:iall~ t n 1u hied wat ers \-; tl'athNs an· I 1rl•cl .itHl progn1m s ar c c·ut 111 an allt'mpt ''' kt•ep tht> clislnt t ..,a 1ltni..:. man~ p a r e nts un.• rekindling w\ <.1<'tl\ <' inlC'l'l'SI in thl' t•ducal inn 111 Lht·1r l'h i Id n•n. Some of them an• '1L'rdng on .i cl1slrit•t apµoinlt•d <:omm1llc1l ' ded il'ated to 111,·c st1 gating th1• trut• fi nanl'ial stutus of t he dis lritt a nd dL•\·1s ing a plan th<Jt \\I ll oft l'r the bl•:-.t poss1 bl~· t•dm·ut 1011 to ull students with Lh t• 1·t·so111"C'l'~ t l'muining a \·a ilublc Others are divin g into prn1 L't'l~ that offer en r ich ml'nl suh )l'C't<; to s t udent s aftt•r th11..,1· 11l'ms Wt'n' trimmt•d from tht· r <.' g u I a r p u h I 1 c s l' ho 11 I <' u r nt·ulum Still other parents and bus1 1w..,:-.men arl' laun ching programs 111\"nl\"in g bustness and com m uni- t.' in t hr l'Clucat ion al p rocesst'~ .\ncl lhrough 1t a ll 1n di\ 1dual:-. are re-assessing the real gocib of p u blit' educ<.i liun :\lost l•dueators and leaders dosl' to thl1 ~chonl curriculum and finanC'l' arena. though. will <1dm1t that all of tht• l'Xtra effort <·an dn 1·dat1n•h littk to restore thl' '.':l'" pMt :\It:.., a district to 1ls formt·r vnn;..ihlt• r e putation for t'\t·L'llem·l· · That ''ill take awuk ening 111 Sacramt•nto where the Legisla lure m ust deter m ine the value of public educat ion and its ultimate cl i rection nut lht· n.· <J\\ <.1kl1ning anti re d1•clitat inn ;11 the dis t rit't l{'\·el i~ " minor triumµh in the l'~e or the hur nc:ant• that '" hlo\\ ing ltltlt• good through 1 lw c·o;.ist :..ii Nh1t'C1 t ion s~·stl'm Money blocks clfanup .Just "ht•n 11 appc·.in•d I tw "'It doggt'cl l "µpt•r 'l'\\IXll"I B ;t\ "i.I" about to gl'I 11 .., ltr..,t t°ll'.rntnJ.! 111 mun.· I han a tlt•t-.Hh·. t h111 .i..: ... Wl·nt sour agarn Hut thi.., t imt• lht·rL' ,.., nolm<h lo blame. no polit•cian'.'> .,.. agt•n c1l's :..it whi c·h to poin t the finger T ht• tleanup job is bl.'i ng cit' l a~ t•d h1•cause o f l'conomit'" and high intt•n·st rciH•..,, To tiac·k up <J bit . :"'t'\\ p11r1 Rt•al'h l'ih 11ff1c·1ah h,1d "Jll'lll m o r l' l h a n a ~ l' <.t r p 11 t t 1 n i.: togt•t her a S.I mtllton b~1 ~ C'leanup p~t t' k agt• \lo:-.t ol t tw ll'llllll'' ",..., Lo <·onw trom t \\11 "l'p,1rc.111 • ..,t all' I u nd:-. The Pl'Oit't'I. \\ htl'h 1ntlwh•cl 1><t1'l 1all.'· drl•dg m g tht• li.1~ and <i <l t'l'PL'ning of t he San Diego l'rl•t·k to slow tlw fl cm··or silt Ill the lw'. "u~ to get under\\ a' th is f;.ill · :'\c\\ port h:.id i1ttle tro11'lil1· gl'ltmg half of the needed mont» from the sl a te Energy Rt•solll"t'l'" h ind Rut S2 m il hon l hat wa~ to • 1·ome from the Clt•an Water Hon<I \l't 1:-. in limho l'ht• problt>m i~ ..,1 mpl~· that t ht· -..talt• has bl'l'n un <.ihle to sell t ht• cll•an w<1tl.•r bon<I " hrcailM' ol h11.!h i nll'n·~l rate" G 1 n·n l ht• opt t<H\ ol putt m g I ht• entirt• deunup prn.t N'l on hold or mo\·ing a h('ucl with h:.i lf of thl· plan. :'llewport Cit~· Council mem· bL·r.., th•~ Wl'l'k ai..:ret•d to go ''1th I ht• "l't'Ol'ld thoitl' So. \\Ork l'rl'\\S th1.., fall will mon.• forw ard w it h p l an~ to dc·t•pen San Diego Creek while tit' officials keep thc•ir fin~cr.., rros:-.ed that ... umehO\\ lhl' ..,l:.1tt• l1onds t'an lit• ..,ol d . · · 11all a l'll'ttllllµ 1111> ,.., lwl ll•r th.in 1\•> <:le:..inup 101>. ..,,1\.., 'I'" J)(H't ;\l u~<,.. .Jackt<.• I ll'alher · Tlw onl~· hnghl prnnt of th1 .., unlortunalt· turn ol l'\ L'llh 1:-. that 11 \"OtTec·t 1 \"l' \\ or k. 1.., t·omµll'H'<I 111 tht• ~an DtC'W> Cn•ek 1h1.., t<Jll th<.> l "ppt•r '('\\'port B a~ will not J,.!et .111' \\or..,1.• than 11 no\\ ,.., Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Piiot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invit- ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626--0560. Phone (714) 642"'321. L.M. Boyd I Line of succession Q. Law prohibits all those in line of presidential succession from being together at one time. So which of President Ronald Reagan's cabinet was refused admittance when the Pres ident gave his first address to Congress? A. Secretary of Education T.H. Bell wasn't refused admittance, ex- actly. At the end of the cabinet suc· cession line, he agreed to stay 1way, that's all. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat should forget that. It was the first and last lengthy literary w.ork of Daisy Ashford, age 9. Q. Is sports medicine taught in medical schools ? A. Not in this country. In Norway lt is, t}\ough. Was George Gobel who described lnOation aa a time when you have to work U.lte a dog to live like one. Q. Do insecl.3 close ll'leir eyes when they sleep! A. Insect.$ never close their eyes. Thonms P. Haley PubllSher• No place for ex-presidents LONDON When American fighters put~ over w~elher his papers will be and climbing the Great Wall. "There is shot down two Libyan jets over the placed m a library at Duke University, som ething al fault with the system," M e d it e rra ne an las t m o nth, a n Fairlie criticized the self-righteous ac-Fair lie saJd, "in whi ch ex-presidents American living here said. "I don't get t10ns of anti-Nixon professors for "what h ave to go to China to communicate it. Reag an wants t o put ne utron begins to seem li ke persecution." The with their own countrymen." weapons in Europe, but he knows Euro· British columnist offered the opinion There is indeed. We sometimes forget peans are nervous that he'd use them we a re all on the same side. It's amaz- for no reason -that he's trigger happy, ....... ing that presidents and ex..presidents So we go ahead and start s hooting down (-:-.,::-,~ don 't even seem to share their "book" planes for the hell or it. It makes you ~ :J.:: in the sense that baseball pitchers wonder where Nixon is when we need ~ · have a book on the strengths and weak- him ·" RICHARD Rf EVES ., \..... nesses of opposing hitters -with each Richard Nixon, in fact , is in a hard-to-.... ,. P' ot her on the personalities and predic- find government issue office in lower -t abilities of othe r wo rld leade rs . Ma nhattan. Jn a long conversation we that the formN president's ignored Me anwhile, Menachem Begin or Leonid had there recently. I learned that the counsel would he obviously valuable "to Brezhnev continue to get away with try- former president does indeed have the necessary continuity of for eign ing some of the same old tricks on e ach strong and intelligent views about such policy.·· new American leader . th ings as the de fense of Western Europe. But he doesn 't want to make any of them public right now for fear of being accused of undermining Reagan. and not many people seem to as k him privately -certainly, I got the distinct impression, not m~y people from the While House. THAT'S A SHAM E, Henry F airlie said the-other day in The Times of Lon· don . "They lead rather purposeless and even pathetic lives," Fairlie wrote of Nixon, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter. our trio or living ex-presidents. "No one really has any use for them " Noting that Nixon is involved in a dis- B UT AMERI CANS, he continued . liked to begin things "by wiping the whole slate clean " Even H there is something worth knowing on the slate So, Nixon and Carter are both left alone writing books to explain the many mis- takes each made -sometimes because they ignored t he slate of history or never talked with anyone who made some or that history Jerry Ford, who never could stand being alone, is enter- taining trade groups and Chambers of Commerce with $15.000 and $20,000 lec- tures C' a rtcr did, however. get his name in the papers recently by going to China THERE IS A reason for all this. Each new pr~sidcnt wants to stay away from his predecessors because he doesn't wa nt to be eontami-nated by their political unpopularity. Inevitable un- popularity, it seems. We are destroying our presidents -Dwight Eisenhower was the last one to complete two terms in offi ce. One of" the reasons each new one may be doing so badly is that reluc- tance to talk to any old one. If that keeps up, F airlie pointed out, .. there could someday be a small regi · ment of ex-presidents alive at the same tim e " None of them talking lo each ot her, or cou rse Wilderness a gift to ~next generation To The Editor : Som e of my ha ppiest childhood memories are of going lo a Wilderness Girl Scout Camp in the moun tains or P ennsylvania. The bea uty. quiet and joy of being in the mountains is still with me. For this reason, J a m concerned about two bills currently being considered in MAILBOX • the U.S. Senate. These bills are radical- ly different and concern the future management of national forest and na - tional park road.Jess land. ON ONE HAND, Sen. S.I Hayakawa is pushing a bill S. 84.2 whk h designates NO wilderness and would set shor t deadlines for congressionaJ action , after whi ch even ar eas already recom- mended as wilderness would be opened to logging and other development. On the other hand, Sen. Alan Cr anston introduced the Cranston-Burton Wilder· oess bill S 1584 which designates certain magnificent lands as wilderness and per mits development of other lands . In these days of stress management classes, noise and air pollution in our urban areas, and just the dally pace of life, one of the gre atest places for re· newal and reassessment of what's im- portant is being able to get away lo a wilderness area. It will be a priceless gift to our children and grandchildren and it's free ! If readers feel the same concern t do please write Seo. Cranston and Sen. ~Hayakawa and express your viewpoint. • MITZI CURRIE Lawsuit costly To the Editor: The environmentalists are al it again, this ti.me calling themselves "Friends of the Irvine Coast," and would have everyone believe It Is under attack. Thus, their suit for an injunction-to In· h lbit Implementation of the devel<>t>· ment plan ol the Irvine Company ap· proved by both the Orange County Board of Supervlsora and the Cout&J Commilaiob. Bo.th of these bodies h ave atatta but the ro.rmer la elected and the later appolnted, seem..lnaly raponslble unto tbemMlves and notoriously of the "•n•ironmentaliat" stop •rowlh penu111mL It appears the ·•FJ1.end1" • -are "~" Ula\ t.be COutaJ Com· miss ion rejected the recolDIMDdaUoo of ttaeir owa staff and approyed the plan, but um writ.er •Ullestl tbat com· mluloa II well aware of lncreaaln1 pubUe ... .,..... ~ concem for lta abule qi pow.er-ud d.lare1ard of proper· t1 rllllta. ' Tll& ~ W48 DOt aPl>f'Oftd GD I wldaa. bill·..., HrUUar Ol yeanl Our b.WC ~--precepta would indicate the nght or any citizen to own and de- velop property but in fact it requires the resour('cs of an Irvi ne Company in term s or f und s to provid e t h e technological defense of their right to do so, and the indivi dual would be at a loss to cope wi th the-unreasona ble demands. The plan as approved allocates 60 per· cent of that land to "open space" and 27 per·cent is a n outright "dedication " c confiscation 1 for a park It i!. this ktnd of activity that converts postage stamp lots to acreage by in- hibiting s urround ing develo pm en~. enrtchin~ the owner of that property ~t the expense of all others. The environ· mental "zeal" is not matched by funds to compensate property owners for the cost of the property. maintenance. and taxes. and property affected is not only vacant land. but existing structures that require permits for renovation or re- modeling, or even replacement after disaster THE SUIT f1 l('d .. on our behalf·.-· s imultaneously imposes additional staff and legal expenses for both or the gov· ernment bodies to be passed on to the general public as well as those or the Ir vine Competny tha t will have no choice but to pass their costs on to the general public The "friends" want lo dictate further the use of only 40 per- cent or privately owned property, and detail the kinds or facilities lo be availa- ble to us. and anyone can see the costs that will be added lo any housing con- structed and the consequential elimina- tion of most of the gener al public from home ownership. A few privileged resl· dents will be a ble to enjoy the Irvine Coast. The environmental movement is well fundelrt and well organized and this is just one example of their impact on the rest or us. TEDDI ALVES More 'secre t s' To the Editor: I have an admission to make. Recent· ly. l represented an individual before the City Council of the City of Newport Beach who desired to operate ·a Uve-baU receiver within Newport Harbor. Prior to the public hearings on the matter, J had a "secret" m eeUng with Mra. Evelyn Hart and Mr. Phil Maurer of the City Council. I also had a "secret" meeting with Mayor Heather pi;tor to the hearings on the matter. And. u a matter ot fact, I bad "secret" telel)lllone conversations with councilmen, Plum· mer. Cox, Strauss (oo two occuiona) and Hummel. All ot tbeM-.... er-et." COia• versatloos coocerned my cllent'a pro- posal then be.Co.re the council. I HAVE DlY ow.penonal ml1pwap about tome of lhe upeda ol the oro-• Ltl .. ftlr.,,,...,_.., ... ll -, ... , ....... , ........ . ltn lo ltt -·or tlll!liM .. II ... I\,...,..... ~ .. . -·· "' i-1 wlh .. ·-.......... ,,,. *""" 1111111 .... C'"9 litMI-.. 1Ntl"'9 ............. _, .. •tt!IMWI Oft,.,....., If ""''IC-'.__ It....-,, .... . •Ill"°' ........ "'''"''-. ...... """'"' .. ..... ,.,._ ... _... __,,. .. tlM,...... ........ _tw f••rlll<•tttr1 ~ \ posal at Newport Center. However, these misgivings are overshadowed by the a pparent "witch hunt" which is be- ing conducted by some members or the public concerning those individuals or the City Council who met with the Irvine Company. It is the right of the public to lobby their representatives. r condemn those individuals or this com- munity who are seeking to disc redit the credibility and integrity or our elected offi cials. I know Evelyn Hart speaks the truth wh en she says she will meet with <inyone. All or those "secret" meetings and con versations which I had with the me m bers of the council resulted in a "no .. vot e from e ach of them and the defeat of my client's proposal. JAMES C. PERSON, JR. Article off Pnds To t he Editor· As a Jamaican residi!lg in Irvine and et regular reader or the Pilot. l feel it necessary to comment with disgust on your ar1'.1 cle J amaica's "'Where rum comes from .. by Stan Delaplane, Sun· day, Sept 20. Not only was the article poorly writ- ten and lacking in relevance, but com- ing from a news pa per columnist. ter- ri bly juvenile and void of substance. He rem arked on two occasions that "the people are bl ack" what did this naive reporter expect them to be -green? Y.A. FISHER Fishing reef? To the Editor : Regarding the destruction and re- moval of the old Coast Highway bridge that crosses the bay when the new one comes into play, it would be nice if the concrete portion of the otd bridge could be broken up and barged out to create an artificial reef offshore for fishermen. · It would be a lot better than cbucking it away and d amaging all our roadways le ading up to the site or the old bridge. I have tried to propose this to numerous people and they all~. k it is a great idea but they don't ow what to do or how to carry it o . Perhaps some reader of the Daily Pilot knows the secret. GEORGE D. GIBSON 111111• • ,. 111111 CDllT Mesa's Ali f ai/'8 By JERRY CLAUSiN °' .... ~,,..... , .... Costa Mesan Ali Roushan ag. nored a Superior Court order Wednesday that prohibits him from erecting '1is blJC metal sculptures and tried lo put up a 60·foot·high "Tornado." The attempt failed. Roushan had ordered a 30 or 45·ton crane to raise his fourth metal sculpture. The crane peo· pie sent a 14.S.tonner. Rousban and crane operators worked from 1:30 to 3 p.m . try· ~\ ~,,, ing to lift the seven·ton sculpture in place on its concrete founda- tion. They finally gave up. .. I just don 't want nobody to get hurt," s aid Rousban af· t erward. "I have a 45·ton crane coming down Friday, now." Roushan's American Civil Liberties Union attorney con· ._cedes, though, that the Iranian immigrant could be in jail by then. An Orange County Superior Court judge is scheduled to rule Craftsmanship still alive ODE TO YESTERYEAR : It ·~ good and pleasant. as ~·our faithful correspondent learned . to get out from undt•r l~ pewratt•r and de~k for a eouplt• of da\·s ;.rnd n•nture out into the world of the real craftsmen of our c1a,· If ,·ou cun find th t•m You an· r L•mi ncl ecl of tht• ·line"., h~ ll enr~· \V ach\\<>rlh Longfellow .. Under the spreading chestnut tree The Village smithy stands. The smith a mighty man is he With large and sinewy hands. And the muscles of his brawny arnu As strong as iron bands. His brow is wet with honest sweat. lie earns what'er he can, And looks the whole-world in the face. For he owes not any man." WllE~ LO~Gt'ELLOW WROTE tho-..e lint•-. in 1842. lht• \"illagt• of the central fi J,.!un·-. of hh tom m u nit~. a crafbmun upon" horn the <:1lizt:'nn n•hed ~ /-... TOM MORPHINE ~"/ Lo re pair. create and maintain the mechanisml'I that would form the hackbone o f a \'ibra nt n a ti on And from th e s mith ·s -.tand ca m e a proud heritage of mdi\'iduul <:raftsmen who maintained small shops and worked with the ir ht.t nd s in gla-.-. and copper and iron and s teel And where. you might ask. t.tre thnM' proud in di,·idual <:raftsmen toda,· who drew their heritt.tgt· from the dllagt' sm ith~· o·r ~·ester~·ear ·• Onct• they populated ~mall shop~ in the old Remember those i ron men? The Village smithies of yesteryear downtown sector of Costa !\'tesa . Or in an old hor~e barn with a sign that proclaimed ··Wh eeler Bros ·· on f'ore~t :\\"enue in Laguna Or right t.tlong~1de th<.• general ~tore on :Vl ain Street m Huntington Reach TODr\ \". THEY H.\ \'E ,·anishec1 . ~·ou might -.u-. pec·t. relegated. you might suspect. to oblivion b;.· mass produ<:ed chrome-plated plastic sti:+p-. and snap-on fa~h.·neri-. But ure the~ gone·• :-.;ot reall~· Tht·~ no l<mger stand proudly beneath the village che~tnut tree on ~lain Street. but tht·~ exi~t Fewer in number~. perhaps Now relegated b~· the planning. zonin~ and rede,·elopment to the back ~lreets Yet ~·ou can find them . an a !'-mall place off a Placentia Avenue allc,· in Costa :\1e~a: man ob~cu rt· industrial zone behin.d the Edbon pl ant in llunt ingtr.11 Beach: out Laguna Canyo n Road in Lagunu . under a pepper. rather than a chestnut tree. They still operate the i-.mall shops and turn our their crafts in the tradition that built America ·~ backbone m ,·estervear. The,· are the same kinds of men who. some decades back. dropped their toob and left their machines and went out to win World War II. piecing together !--alvage and wiring up broken parts to keep an allied war machine moving to ultimM-e vi ctory. AND SO ONLY THE other day. you \'is it a di lapidated cluster of thest• little shops. out on a backstreet . where the craftman·s roof was leak~· cor- rugated metal and the fcont door wafi warped and sagging. But from the crartsman's table he produced a delicately framed piece or glass that had b~n etched with an edged design ot beauty. It would become a windwing for a classic automobile. American crartsmanshlit may have been rel· egated to the back streel5. but it lives. ONE OF THESE DAYS, some back door de· scendant of the village smithy will s tep out or his shop and present us all with a device to solve our energy crisis or cure our pollution woes. And he'll · stand as tall as the old chestnut tree. BeUeve it. Keep· the f ;lJth. DlllJPllat THURSDAY, OCT. 1, 1981 CAVALCADE COMICS TELEVISION .. Chri~topher Reeve says Superman comic books w ·ere off limits to him as a boy . See Page B7. 0 0 -~ • in attempt to erect 'Tornado' today on City of Costa Mesa charges that Roushan is in con· tempt of a restraining order pro· hibiting any construction at hi s · 1550 Superior Ave. metal shop. That order followed the city's suit demanding that Roushan re· move two other sculptures, .. Waterfall .. and "Butterfly Wings:· put in place despite or· dinances restricting structural SanOn·ofre h e aring c oinple t e d By DAVID KUTZMANN Of Ille D.tlly "'"°' SWtt One of Southern California's longest rµnning shows came lo an end Wednesday. The star~ were Southern California Edison Co. 's two new reactors at the San Onofre Nuclear Generating Statioo. "It has been a long case." chairman James Kelley of the U.S. Atomic Safety and Licens- an g Board said. "We still have the hardest part of our work ahead of us." What he meant was that after marathon licensing hearings for Edison Co. 's $3.3 billion reactors three mil es south of San Clemente, the three-member federal panel now would have to decide whether to grant low· power and full.power licenses for the 1,100-megawatt units . heights in the industrial zone to 30 reel. Roushan put up a third sculpture anyway, the tallest of t he three a lready in place. "Volcano" towers 45 feet. A C L U atto rne y Meir Wes treich of Santa Ana said Wednesday he doubts his client will go to jail. that Judge Robert Fitzgerald wiJl rule Thursday on Rous han 's be ha lf That is. Westreich a dds. if the judge rules at all. Superior -Co urt.....cJlses are ba<'klogged. he noted, and he will not s ubmit the Roushan case to a pro·lem judge. Roushan a lready has his fifth metal sculpture on the drawing .. boards. It is called .. Peacock" and will be the last in the seri es. ht' ~aid ··But if government ·s attitude doesn·t change ... I'm going to build another called ·concept or Government' at that end." he said pointing to the rear or his property. .. That ·11 be a 250-foot high bloodsucker Government has a problem, and they take it out on the people." A decision is expected by late November for a low-power test license and by early 1982 for full - power permits. · The hearings, which began in mid-June in San Diego and ended in Anaheim. covered two primary areas of contention - earthquake safety of the huge nuclear power plant and ade· quacy of emergency planning for communities within 10 miles of the generating station. JORDAN DAV Principals of the first annual Willard T. Jordan Memori al Golf tourney. gather to read a city proclamation setting aside Sept. JO for the annual event. About 85 golfers paid to enter the tourney Wednesday and then dined in honor of the city's late mayor and C'ivic booster. From left are Har ry Green. Costa !\itesa Golf and Country Club manager ; Bob Wilson. tourney chairman; James Jordan. the Jordans· ~on : Mrs Ruth J ordan. the former mayor's widow. and Costa. Mesa ·Mayor Arl ene Schafer. Plant critics had contended in the proceedings that previously undiscovered geologic forma- tions posed hazar.ds which ex- ceeded the seis mic design of the facility and that evacuation planning in the event of an acci· dent was elaborate but unworka· ble. Banning says wells dictate land use New t e sti ng of quiet j e t set for · 1982 Edison specialists and consult· ants maintained that t he plant was designed to withstand the largest earthquake considered possible in the region and that emergency planning was more than adequate. Before endin g the Orange County portion of the hearings Wednesday. Kelley said that the board would attempt to include findings by the F ede r a l Emergency Management Agen· cy in its final decision. The federal agenc y i s responsible for evaluating the adequacy of off-site emergency evacuation plans and has said it would issue a final report on the San Onofre area by November. Interim findings of the agency issued last June indicated there were numerous communications and coordination problems among agencies whic h had participated in a test drill in May By STEVE MARBLE<.::? OfU.Oelfy .......... The owner of the Newport Banning Ranch told Newport Beach City Council members this week that the hundreds of oil wells that dot his land make it necessary for him to construct industrial and office buildings on much or the property. A group of West Newport Beach residents have asked de· veloper Hancock "Bill" Banning Ill to drop plans for office build· ings and to construct only a small industrial complex. "The number or oil wells on the upper portion of this proper· ty would make marketing or res· idential units really questiona- ble," said Banning, president of Beeco Ltd. Banning has proposed con- structing more than 700 ,000 square feet of industrial and of· fice buildings on 75 acres of the ran c h. Roug hl y 230 con· dominiums would be built on a lower portion of the 75-acre parcel, away from oil wells. The property. a former sheep ranch that Banning says his family h as owned for three generations, is inland of Pacific Coast Hi ghway and west of Superior Ave nue. The land backs up to Cost a Mesa . The residential group. which calls itself the West Newport Legislative Alliance and says it r epresenLc; 9,000 people, wants Banning to build more homes. Specifically. the group wants the developer to build five res- idential units per acre instead or the 11 units per acre he is re· questing. "We would like a nice mix from luxury ocean · view homes to high e r density con · dominiums." explained Louise Greeley, leader or the West Newport group. But Banning said much of the 75·acre parcel is simply unsuHa- ble for homes because of the oil wells. B an n ing did agree to eliminate plans for an eight·acre shopping center at Pacific Coast Highway and the as.yet-unbuilt extension of Bal boa Boulevard. The residential group has pro- tested the s hopping center. Demonstration flights of re~ search jet aircraft s aid by one observer to be "unbelievably 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· lional Aeronautics and Space Ad min istration 's Ames Research Center at Moffett Field. near San Jose. ··I a m extreme ly 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. rn the letter, Riley requests permission to negotiate with NASA to bring the research aircraft to Orange County for demonstration flights. At Ames. NASA is conducting tests of the so·called Quiet Short· Haul Research Aircraft. The project has been under way s ince 1974. I Juniors ' woman of the y ear announced Almos t 500 guest~ applaudt•<I whl'n the i\~~1~tan<:t· League of :-.:ewport Beach named Ba rham Kilporll'n a~ Orange Count~ .Ju nior Woman of tht• Yt•ar for arranganJ,! youth concerts and reopening a library in Fullerton. Other nominees for the medal wen• Vi C'toraa Harl Carol L. Clbb~. :\farie Coleman. Claudia Colton .. Jud~· Gajkowski. Charlene lmmell. Cherie Kt•tT . Shen~ Loof bourrow. Joann ~. :\'t ayo. CharlCJ :\'t c:'\eff. Patncra Pt·<:k '.\iunn. Holly Veale and Pamela Flo~·d \\.'ilder. Proceeds from lhtt awards luncheon and fa~hwn -.hm\ perpetuate the league·~ ch1ldrt.'n·-.. dental healt h l't•nt t•r and child day care center. G.µLD AD1S FOR GREES The QuN.'n of llt•art-.. Guild of the Children·~ llospilal of Onrngc Cou111~ 1CHOC1 has reserved El '.'iiguel Countr~· Cl uh for 11' eighth annual golf tournament Friday This major fund·raiser for the guild b budgeted for 58 .000 lo benefit out-patient services at the hospital. The S125 entry fee include~ luncheon. tee prize~. refreshments. electric carts. green fee:-. and a dinner dance. A shot -gun st art at noon begin~ the best·bc.i ll uf partners tourney. For more detail!->, phope 495·1486 ' J\VTUMN. 1N T RES VI STAS A cocktail ,:!urden parly from 3 to 7 p.m. Sunday will rnark the Barr~ morl' Chapter of the Orange County Music Center's first ante toward the SSO million building fund for the future 0C!\1C in Costa Mesa. Tickets are $40 per person ror lhe fes tivities that will start in the Plaza urea of Lake Mission Viejo und includl' a tour of three elegant homes. Guests sampling the buff et catered by La Cuisine will be entertainedrby live·mus lc. • Reservations may be made br calling 951--6003 Qr 770~1. . ( • ..., ............. Ellen Kutz presents medal to {Jarbara K1t()Onen a~ Drm OtiphanL congratulates Orange County's Junior Woman o/ thf! Year. BUMPER TICKE R OF THE WF.EK: Co mln• -out nf Roy Carver'h dealership on the back or u BMW ·Brown for Senute Spon.~orcd by the :-.Wutionul ltedrl)' Committee." ANOTHE R QUICKIF. TAKE : Credit ouorn\!y Elah1e' Weinberg wonders. ··~oah. why didn't ~·ou 1'Wl thole mes wben ~·ou had a chanc._.., .. '· ,, I ~I I Orengo Coast DAILY PILOTlThursday. October 1, 1981 N NY E COMP0 ITE TllAN ACTION QUOTAflCNn INCUIOI l••ono• nll 1111• ¥CMlll ,MIOWl\T, ~•<•'•< ~••. llOttoN OIUOtf AND Cllli(tlll .. 4ff HOO lllCMANOI• ANO lll'OltT 0 av'"' llUO UIO '""""" Dow Jones Final UP 2.28 • CLOSING FIGORE 852.26 ~ Advertising: It still pays While many companies were hurting in 1980, at turned out to bt> anothe r good year for the advertising business. Even wben you're in trouble and s ales are slumping ahd profil.s are disappearing. you just can't whark away at your advertis ing budget. People· might 'forget who you are "Let 's ~ee now. Chevrolet. ... Where do I know lhat name from?" General Motors. the maker of Chevrolet, lost $762 mill ion in 1980 as its car sales in the United States skidded from 6.4 million to 4 4 mi llion. But GM's ad budget held steady at $316 million. about the s ame as 1979. Ford Motor lost Sl.3 billion in 1980 as its U.S. car ~ales fell from 2 million to 1.4 million But in an effort to buoy those sales. Ford increased its advertising from 5215 million to $280 million Even Chrysler. ils back to the wall, with a 1980 loss of $1 .7 b1Jlion. came out swinging. lifting its ad IJutl get from S118 million to $150 million. Figures on total s pending by the nation's 100 ll'ading advertisers have just been released by the wtekly trade paper. Advertising Age, which totes them up every ~ y e a r I n 1980. ihc~e 100 com \"; , panws spent Sl3 I hlllaon on ad · vNlising They J CC ountcd for 75 pe r r ent of the advertising MllTOI IDllDWITZ you see on network television. more than half the commercials you hear on radio. and nearly half the ;11lvertis ing you see in magazines. The 10 top advertisers in the land during 1980 I and the prodigious amounts they spent> were : Procter & Gamble 1$650 million l. Sears . Roebuck ($6DO million>; General Foods 1 $410 million l. Philip Morris 1365 million l. Kmart ($319 m1llion 1. General Motors <$31 6 mill1on l. R.J Reynolds c S298 m'illion l; American Telephone & Telegraph <$259 mill ion l. and Warner· Lambert <$235 million 1 Of course these blockbuster dollar totals do not mean that you are being bombarded by a lot more advertising messages these days. Advertisers are victims of inflation. just as you and I are. Earlier this year Daniel J . Krumm. the president of Maytag, complained about the rising cost of advertising. "In 1976." he pointed out. "a 30-second network commercial on popular programs such as "M·A·S·ll" or ··The Waltons·: cost Maytag about $26.000 Today 11 1s double that amount, $52.000." There were some interesting sideli ghts to the Ad· vertising Age roster of 100 leading advertisers. to Wll llershey made the top 100 list for the first time. ranking 93rd with total spending of $41 million. Hershey used to be famous (Or notorious in the ad in· dustryt for not believing in advertising. It succumbed in 1970 after fa ll ing to second place in candy bars to Mars <S ni cke r s, M i lky Way, Ma r s. Three Musketeers. M&M 'sl . The 24th largest advertaser is none other than the good old U.S. gove rnment. which spent a total of $173 million, up 18 percent over 1979 as the armed forces inl ensified their recruiting efforts . Four Japanese companies are on the lisl T~yota ranks 54lh with 1980 s pending of $88 million . Nissan I Datsun l was an 69th with an expenditure of ' S70 million; Honda placed 19th with $54 million in ads: and Mazda occupied the lOOth slot by spending $31 million on advertising in 1980. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT UPS AND DOWNS AMERICAN LEADERS · METALS L41H 40-4ce<>ts•llOW'd· tlto< '9V. c-s • ~. dellver..i. Tl• t7.lr17 Mt1els WH-c-11• lb Ahofttl-7..-0 cents• pOUNI, H. Y. MMcwy$GZ.llDper flau Piel'-" S*.00 troy 01., N Y SILVER HEW YORK CAP) -HllnO\' ~ Herman sliver Jt.-, wpto.110. E"t•lll•rd Jllver lt UO, up •O 1IO; f.Wlc.mt-.i ..... , fl.«JO, .... to.'"· GOLD QUOTATIONS ay Tiie ~19tM ""9• S.ltct..i -•d 90td prlc.n tooev · SYMBOLS ..