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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-11-09 - Orange Coast Pilot****** M 0 ND A Y N 0 VF M 8 E H 9 1'l a 1 //# ......... Tl~SY -This_ column with a. va~e on top contrasts sharply wath the learung tower of Pasa in Italy. Scientists say the landmark is increasing its tilt each year and the Italian government plans to spend Sl2 million to save it. Carter gets kudos on hostage debate STATE COLLEGE, Pa. CAP) -Opinion molders at the White House launched a multi-pronged atfack during the 444-day Iranian hostage crisis that shut down public debate and focused national anger, a communications r esearcher says. The Carter administration's efforts were the most important factor in shaping public opinion during the crisis, upstaging the news media and the Iranians' a c tions , a cc ording to Penmylvania State Urtivenity professor Gerard A. Hauser. Hauser, an associate professor or speech communication, is scheduled to deliver a paper on the subject at the Speech Communication Association's annual meeting Nov. 15 in ~aheim. "The picture of Carter :: 11011 ClllT WUTlll Patchy ro1 near the coast, otherwise partly cloudy throu1h Tuesday. Highs 75 to 78. Lowa tonl1bl 55. At ~ the Loken won. See Curt Seeden·s account on Page Cl. 11111 • • ...... . __ .. ,__ .. t:":s -~ == ... •• ,...... . --.. --... stumbling from crisis to crisis . . . is not quite accurate," said Hauser. "In fact, the Carter administration deserves high marks for its rhetorical skills." In the beginning, the administration attempted to cast the hostage situation u a national emergency of the utmost importance, urging other nations to take a stand , cancelling Carter's meetings at home and abroad and repeatedly linking the issue with national honor. Then Carter Hoked the hostages to other iasues, particularly na~onal unity and energy independence, Hauser said. Moreover, the admlnistratloo quickly established that some subjects related to the hostqes were not flt for public diacussloo, the professor aaid. "Carter determined from the start that grievances voiced by Iranians •lain.al the abab and t.he United States were inappropriate for public: diacUMion," Hau.er aaid. "He nipped ln the bud any •Ull..UOO or American respooalbWty ... and kept tbe tar1et of, public dl1cu11lon wel1-focuaed:1 the ille1al holding of U.S. ciUleDI." (See CARTE&, Paae AZ> Anti· Watt drive pu1h e d by group ST. LOUIS <AP).:_ Tht Sierra Club will "Jump into tbe electoral proceu" in 1112 u part of lta effort to remoH Interior SftntarJ .Jam• WllU, .tbe H•lroameatal 1roup'1 exeeuu .. dlNdor aar:. "Tiie llll'n au r...., a war eblllt for U.. Ila ll1edaia." Mike MeCloete1 &oN a ... eonfer.ee .......... '& ..... col'pOl'l&e__,llit .. UM 2$0,000 IDMDbln ... tf liliDe leather." y €o1Uilll>i8 ·due for 2nd g~ Cleaned-up pow er units refueled f or Thursdat1 launch ' • CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP > -Worken wearing protective suits filled Columbia's· cleaned-up power units with highly toxic hydrazine fuel today as the ship was readied for a second attempt to make a repeat journey into space. The renewed countdown starts at 5 a.m. PST Tuesday, with liftoff set for 4 :30 a .m . Thursday. The launch pad was ort limits today to all except those involved ln the fueling or the ·s. Laguna fire kills wo01an, 65 A fire in a South La1una mobile home early Sunday claimed the We or the N>me's occupant. Theola Jacobloa, whole ace waa eatlmat.ed at 15 by county firefipten, wu round dead in t h e mobile home after rtrefi1btera 11Dana1•d to extinpllb llallles that destroyed ~· Battalion Chief A.Ula Huard of the county '1re DeparUllmt said firefi1bters found Jil•. Jac9b1on's body after a half-hour fight to quell the rramea. There were no other occupants in the mobile home and no other injuries, Huard said. Firefi1hters arrived at the scene shortly after receivtnc a call at 3:36 a.m. and found the mobile home fully involved in flames, Hazard said. Though there were other mobile homes in clOH proximity inalde the Laguna Hilb Mobile Horde Park on Coast Hipway, no others were damaged, he said. The cause of the blaze bu not yet been determined but it ~ not considered suspicious, Hazard said. Damage to the mobile home and its contents was estimated at $45,000. units, whose clogged filters caused last week 's postponement. The pad wu to reopen in late afternoon after beint closed since the slow, methodical rueline operation betan Sunday. NASA spokesman Mark Hess reported at midmorn1n1 that the hydrazine loading was about ~ minutes ahead of schedule. "So far, everylhlng is runnina along very smoothly," be said. Officials kept watch on a weather front movlnc toward the Cape, but Hess said, "RiCbt now they're saying the weather. 1bould be OK for launch. niat front is expected to move through here Wednesday, and be gone by Thursday." Crews were to work thrdueh the night to service oxyeen tanks and electricity-producing fuel cells and clean up the pad in preparation for starting the count. . On Saturday, the space aaency rescheduled the launch after certifying that the two contaminated units were fllghtwortby after being flushed 1 replenished wlth two new'. utters and six fresh quarts or oil. .If replacement had beea necessary, the flight would have,. been delayed until next week. The two astronauts who will fly the mission, Joe Engle anc{ Richard Truly, spent a quiet weekend with their ramilles at the ir homes in Houston and planned today to review their flight plan at the Johnson ~ce Center there. Tntly was elated that the launch date ralls on his 44lh birthday. (See SHVTl'LE, Page A%) Police fan: Kidnap Vandalism · handling sold him !aw le ft Intact By STEVE MA&BLE o1 .. ...., ......... It wu the kidnappine or his cousin u much u anythl.nl e1ae that turned contractor William Lusk into one of the Newport Beach police department's bit1eat fans. "I came away so impressed," saya Lusk. "The department was so profe11ional, to diaciplinecl. J admired tbat." ll ... 11 fe.an &IO th1I moatb tb•t bll eodailt, J .G. Lusk, wu •••t~•d wbile I•..,_. &lebanl'1 Karltet in Newport and held In the trunk of • car fw 13 hours while relatiYes tried to meet the kidnapper'• '200,000 ranaomp demand. It also was 11 years ago tbi.s month that Luak helped put together the tint police awards banquet ln Newport, an eveal.he_ decided was needed after police safely rescued his cousin and apprehended the kidnapper. ''I remember I was taking a shower when I heard they got J .G.," Lusk recall•. "I wu so surprised that I didn't even react. I just kept takin& my shower." Later that November d~ in 1970, the Lusk ramUy memben received word they were to take $200,000 to the Disneyland Hotel. They were told that if they didn't, a bomb would be blown up at UC Irvine. The kidnapper' said 3,000 students would die. Lusk says bis family contacted former Newport .................. RECALLS COUSIN'S KIDNAP Newport·s WiUiam Lusk Police Ohief B. James Glavu and that arrangements were made to deliver the cash. As police otficers remember -it, the kidnapper never showed up at the Disneyland Hotel but later called the family and told them to take the money to Los Angeles International Airport. At the airport, police bad a <See POLICE, Pa1e A%) WASHINGTON CAP) -The U.S. Supreme Court rerused today to bar states from forcing parents of public school stud~ to pay for school property vandalized by their children. The justices, citing the lack of a •·substantial federal question," left intact a New Jera'y Supreme Court ruling that its state law -similar to laws in every state but Georgia impc»lng aucb parental liability -l1 valid. The precedent-setUn1 value of today's action is far from clear, but at least for now, New Jersey 's Jaw is s afe from chalJenge. Although most s lates have such laws, few bah beeq challenged in court. The justices ere told that fact "suggests- . . . e nforcement of those statutes has p.robably been something less than zealous." But the New Jerse y cour~ noted that school boards in its state "have recently turned tq the statute to deter van:3dd and to cope with its burg costs." A um report by the Nati Institute or Education estimate4 that at that time 42,000 incident4 or vandalism occurred in the nation's schools each month, at an average monthJy cost or $3.4 million. Those incidents were reported as arfecting 28 percent or the country's schools -24,000 or them. Georgia's parental-liability law wu •truck down in 1971, apparently bec~use of that state's policy against imposing financial liability on people not at fault. Similar legal challenees in Connecticut, lllinois, Maryland, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and Wyomlng failed. The New Jersey controvent began when school boards id Roselle and Piscataway sued the parents Df students allegedly involved in 1975 and 1176 incidents or vandalism, respectively. ln each case, the parents challen1ed the conatltutioeallty or the New Jersey law the school boards relied on. Sneezer still · • going atrong , J I I ....... Orange eo... DAIL v '9LOTIMondey, Novemw .. tll1 Press roam unveiled Brady aids Rea1an at refurbished facility . WASHINGTON (AP> -nnal touch•• were placed on th•. .aewly Nl\arblabed Wblte ~ pr111 room today ror 1 te,.IDCID)' that "u to lnclud• tbe rtnt otttelal White HOUH •PPIAl'Mff of prealdenUal,..... Heh retary J amee. S. Brady llDce I WU abot March 30. Brady wu to help Pl'Mldent Rea1u cut tbe rl bbon at a ceremony formally endln1 a lhree·month, tlM,000 renovation of the press quarters in the Wett Wing. , . Except for a rew day tripe, tncludinc a brief visit to the While \ffouae on July 4, Brady haa remained hospitalized since he was •bot in the braln in the assaaaination attempt on Bonin trial testiDlony • continues LOS ANGELES (AP) -A second week of tesUmony was scheduled to begin today in the multiple~murder triaJ of William Bonin, the alleged m.,aatermind in the Freeway Killer sla)'ings of 12 young men and boys. Bonjn, a 34·year·old truck driver from t>owney, and two co.·defendants were charged in Los Angeles County with 12 slayings that occurred between August, 1979, and June, 1980. The Freeway Killer case, so tagged because victims' bodies were found dumped near Southern California highways, involved 44 murders of young males sirfce 1972 , but investigators have said all the cases might not be related. Last week, the seven-man, five-woman jury empaneled Wednesday by Superior Court Judge Wiliam B. Keene, beard testimony from victims' parents and saw gruesome color photographs of the bodies. Pictures of 13-year·old Thomas Lundgren's body were identified by bis father, Russell Lundgren of Reseda. Autopsy surgeon Dr. Joseph Cogan said the youth, whose body was found in May 1979 in the Malibu Canyon area, died of slash wounds and bad been castrated. Ann Jean Macabe idenUlied photos of the bruised body of her 12·year-old son, Michael, and Enrique Miranda Jr. of Bell Gardens identified the strangled body of his 15-year·old son, , Chflrlet, Thursday's witnesses included the mothers of victims Darin Kendrick, 19, and Sean King, 14. A picture of Kendrick's body displayed for the jury showed an icepick protruding Crom his right ear. Deput'y District Attorney Sterling Norris bas said it will probably take four months to try Bonin, a twice-paroled sex offender. Bonin is also cbar&ed with U counts of robbery and a count each of sodomy and mayhem. In plea bargains exempting them from the death penalty, co·defendants James Michael Munro and Gregory Matthew Miley, bolh 19, pleaded guilty in two of the murders and will testify against Bonin. Munro pleaded guilty to second-degree murder in the death of Stephen Jay Wells, 18, of Downey. Miley pleaded guilty to the first-degree murder of the Miranda boy .•• The pair testified that they= entered guilty pleas after learning that Bonin bad given a uthorities information implicating them in some of the murders. Sterling has said he will seek the death penally against Bonin if he is convicted. Munro and Miley could get sentences of life lo prison. Bonin is also charged with seven murders in Orange County, including three covered by the Los Angeles County charges. Inmates maced REDDING <AP) -Shertfrs. deputies say they used chemical mace to control 10 inmates ol the high-security ceJI who "Juel went crazy'' when they saw. another inmate being physically aabdued. It happened Saturday In Shuta County jail. ltequ outa1d• a Waabln,toa hottl. The Dl'tlldenl al10 wu woundtd la Ute pntlre . Tbouab doeton aay Brady, 41, ha• made a remarkable reeo•try, he 11 partlally paralysed OD the left alde and h1I ten ann ll ln a alln1. Deputy preu Hcretary Larry Speak• aald Brady would meet privately wltb Rea1an for about 15 minutel ln the Oval Offlce before the ceremony. At the opening Rea1an will' speak but Brady will n'ot, Speaku said. Brady'• wlfe, Sarah) mother, Dorothy Brady, and his motber·in·law, Mn. J .. Stanley Kemp, wUJ attend. Speakes said a Wblte Houle press aide thought of invitina Brady to au.a tbe ,~­hla docton ''tllou&bt be th• beat tblDI for ilm." Tbe returtUIJ.lq ol U.. ,.._. area lncluded atructural re'8force,,..• OI ea. root tbat 1ovel1UIMD& eniiDMn tald wa in daqer ol eolfap1ia1. The area, which oace ._.... an Indoor 1wlmmln1 pool, a11o received a 1enera1 facelift. wtab pew blue carpetln1. wblt• wallpaperl . ~· U•hUD1 ud a bank of owk·ln chain ln u.e brieflnl room. The preu quartera were vacated dwi.DC the renontioe, wltb reportera aettlDI up temporary otricea in the Old Executive Office BuUdi.,I acroaa the street from the Wblle Kouae. .......... NOT AGAIN? -This time it was just a cardboard copy of the Soviet submarine grounded on a lamp in the Swedish territorial waters of the fountain at Sergei Square in Stockholm. It was a gentle jibe at the Russ ians. whose nuclear-armed s ub ran aground in Swedish waters last week. Longtime Newport citizen succumbs Funeral 1ervtce1 were conducted in Newport Beach this weekend for long·time Newport resident and bwlder R. Stayton Dorris, who died Nov. 5 at age 87. Mr . Dorris, a native of Phoenix where he he lped oper-ate a family furniture bu:liness, first came to Newport in 1913 as a summer resident. He built homes and com mercial buildings in Pasadena, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach, where he took up permanent residence in 1955. A veteran of World War I, Mr. Dorris had a continuini interest in tbe Navajo Indiana of I Thieves get $200,000 in safe heist Police are Investigating the theft of a safe containing an estimated $200,000 worth of jewelry, gold and silver from a south Costa Mesa home late Saturday. Officers said burelara apparently entered tbe house through a kitchen do1gie door, went directly to a guest bedroom closet and pushed clothing otr the small noor safe. Police said the safe, resting on a wheeled dolly, apparently was aboved into the living room and then carried fropl the home, The theft waJ reported by 18·year-old Cbrisiopher Royer Ayou who told '>fricers bis parents, Mr. and Mra. Robert Ayou,. were vacationin1. PoUce said Christopher'• aunt, Marearet Wert of Costa, 11 .... confirmed the vaJut of articles kept ln the small safe that • said had to be carried out by at least two or three men. . Arl1ona'. ·Friends said be Wolild make annual trips to the Nanjo reservations to bring in food and supplies. He is survived by bis wife, Helen, son, Robert of Newport Beach and two grandchildren, Pierrette James of Florida and Mark Dorris of Newport Beach. He also l eaves three stepchildren, Robert Grant of Washington, Alan Grant of Oregon and Susan Duley of Costa Mesa. Also surviving is a brother, Burt OOrris of Arizona, and a sister, Mildred Bonnet of Riverside. The family has suggested memorial contributions to Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. Request eyed SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. says the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission will today consider his proposal for ·•a truly independent audit" of the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant. OftANCIECOAST lllly Piiat a. ...... -.......11.......n Al..._ ••P•rtllle"ta ....._, llADIOfPa ..... .., ... <.-.... CA. ........ : .. t•c.-.... CA.- ~=-.::..ci:r ~==== .... • .... .., ..... llf .... ...... ........... . man poae •• a Luak famUy member and to1d bim to ride u .. calator up and down unW tM kidnapper made contact. FlnallY the kidnapper 1howed up, liked for the ranaoan money and, u police now i.u It, wu wreatled to tbe iround by Chief Glavu hlrmelf. "l ·wu already thlnkln1 about I n awarda banquet for the police,.. Lutk aaya, "but the kJdnap lnddent did lt." Lu,k, wltb encouraJtment rrom Olava1, later beJped put to1ether the 10-4 Club, a IJ'OUP ol · bualneumen who meet annually with t~e Uce chier to dllcuas police lema. "Po ce take a lot or abuae Juat becauae ol the Job.they're Jn," Luak aays. "I'm not 11ytn1 they never make mistakes but I don't think they eel the credit they ·deaerve either. · "Wbe n I'm in a critical situation in my work, that uaually means 1 have to make a quick decision in half a minute or even half an hour. But for the police it usually means a millsecond. I stand in awe of that." Ironically, thia will be the first year that the police department is not banding out any awards. There are no medal of valor award winners and there are no merit award winners. But Lusk says that's OK. He says the entire department will be honored. Along with Police Chief Charles Gross, Lusk came up with the idea that this year the police department sbouJd bold an open house and invite. citizens in for a visit. . ''So many people," Lusk says, "just think policemen give out tickets or spend au day looking for robbers. There's much more than that, of course." The open house is scheduled Nov . 12 starting at 11 a. m. From Page A1 CARTER • • • AP..._.. The space shuttle Columbia. standing on Cape Canaveral Launch pad, is bemg prepared for a blastoff Thursday 1. From Page A1 SHUTTLE READIED I• • • • They will fly to Cape Canaveral on Tuesday, ready once again to board Columbia for the planned five-day flight, the sbutUe's second. They came within 31 seconds of liftoff Wednesday onJy to be thwarted by choked ftlters in two of the ship's three auxiliary powe{ units. The APUs are crucial becauae they drive the hydrauJic lines that sf,eer the spaceship's main engines and operate the landing gear, rudder and wing flaps. The National Aeronautics and "I Space Administration reported. Saturday the APU filters were stopped up by a waxy substance:~ produced by the chemical action · between the units' lubricating· oil, water and a smaJI amount of>- hydrazine that apparenUy':: leaked through pressure seals. · Technicians working nonstoP.i , in three shifts drained the oil • · from the two units, flushed the. 1 plumbing, installed new filt.enil and filJed each unit with three1; quarts of new oil -a special blend developed for military use which costs S5 a quart. · Iranians were depicted by the administration as "politically and morally bankrupt," Hauser said. "They were repeatedly ca lled kidnappers , b I a ck mailers , c rim Ina Is, terrorists, zealots. It was constantly s uggested that the Iranians wanted the crisis to ?:::. :e~at!,~~le~~'.r people .',: "The effect of that kind of H • d t ~· rhetoric is this: How could the USS e in U e 0 e ll{(i;, American people seriously entertain any assertions of : 1 ·> legitimate grievances from s Cali.fiorni·a vi·s u· .. people w.b.o weu_clear..l,y . •-. . • -~ madmen?" Hauser said. "Without the admllaiatration's LOS ANGELES (AP) -. ~r,. They lri&Ded ---~ llani,_..tioa.s. we ntll~ well-nfeetms eyeryone from former .. -he in Arabic, shi in g(lslisfi have l a p.s e d id t d th• .Prest deal Gerald Po rd to and then watched t~~ daU~ post·Vletnam syndrome of guilt Mickey Mouse, King Hussein of Disneyland parade. for interfering in the affairs of Jordan and bis American-born Disney characters like Pluto, another nation,·• Hauser said. wife, Queeo Noor, were to end Goofy, Donald Duck. and Snow "We might have felt that the their Southern California visit White and the Seven Dwarfs'- fate of the hostages, like that of today! entertained little Hamzab, wb~ our Vietna01 veteran · was The r oyal couple was was given to sporadic bursts of really our fauJt." scheduled to fl y from Los tears as his Cather attempted to Lizards OK; snakes los.t MIAMI (AP> -A trio of fanged kidnap victims have been rescued, but five missing boa constrictors remain very much at large. The victims -three toothed, beaded lizards capable of inflicting a serious dose of venom -were round unbanned behind a real estate office Sunday evening after police received an anonymous phone call. The lizards and five boa constrictors were taken from a local zoo's reptile house Friday night or early Saturday while the zoo was closed, police sajd. Angeles to Houston. where hoist h.iro oo his shoulders for a· Hubein will receive a medical better view. .., checkup and watch test firings The royal couple walked down.· of Hawk anti-aircraft missiles at Ma in Street U.S.A. toward, F ort Bliss , Texas, State various park attractions as. Department spokeswoman Ga1hJ c urious tourists sn appet\. Bothe said. pictures. Al one point, Husseiri.1 Following three days in .the . had his picture taken with i;; company of government and Jordanlan student in the crowd .• , buaineu Jeadera and Hollywood Hussein and his wile spent sta rs, Hussein and Queen Noor four hours touring the pari.- spent Sunday like many other escorted by 1981 Disneyland Southern California tourists: Ambassador Willie Van de' they took their oldest son, Zwaag. After their first stop af 1 ~·year-old Prince Hamub, to "America the Beautiful," a sort Disneyland. or m·ovie·in·the-round. whlc4: Dressed casually, the k'.ing, 45, takes viewers on an aerial toul'l and queen, 30, were greeted by of the United· States, the tour. Minnie and Mickey Mouse at w as s po n tan e o us , s a i ct Disneyland City Hall. spokeswoman Sydne Huwaidi. :·~ As the tune "It's a Small The Jordanian monarch an4. World," played, Mi ckey his wife arrived in Los Angeles' gallantly stepped up to the Thursday. Hussein addressee£ queen and kissed her hand, the Los Angeles World Policy prompting a huge smile. Council Friday and taped Q,; · interview aired Sunday on th4f CBS news s how "Face tbi Nation." The king breakfasted with the publisher and editors of the Los Angeles Times and dined wilti associates of President Reagan. Former President Gerald Rt Ford and bis wife hosted a dinner for the royal couple at a Beverly Hills restauranf accompanied by the likes a;{ Armand Hammer, chid e x e c u ti v e of 0 c c id en tat Petroleum Corp .. Georee Shultz. Treuury Secretary in the Nixoa administration , ~nd entertainment figures Bob Hope and Cary Grant. 111 lbe CBS interview, Hu.ueia said the United Stales -,riU eventually be forced to re.._. its Middle East policies bee"8t of I srae l 's refusal to compromise with Arab statea. "' Although the Jordanla6 monarch won no conce11ione during four days of WasOJJlaau;11u meetlno last week with Reatan and Sec r etary or Stat• Alexander Hai1, Rutieln aaJd ~ came away feeUq better about: America's perception of tb • Middle East conruet. . He added that Reaaaa •• 1urpr1Md by bla dee .... pureb••• lo•••' illtl bee MUdlillli .... M altoll lu'd n. -·r- Ions MCMllllNTO <AP> -!1111t Nleroed"''· Ta.., elio feu 1A161la•ure•1 ,,.Ital 1..aoa &Mt Dlmocr.U an_.. .. UM "81 ~....,Ii ........ ~ Ua• IJffl•I HlllO• to , •• ........ , ... , ... ,. ••• ... .... dUfeNM ......... ua&a'*ltt;rolalrae11W•-• du.Utl*r...,_11••. T•••••I•• d••ll and a -A.ad Uae D••oorat1 are ·~ ••••fe'•tff tbat A11e•Mr Tb~ Jawmaktra, called R99t1bllew an tlana...._ to baak bJ .... ..,........ fNm. ..., .... to ... ,...., al &M reetH tat ••• 1appo1ed to eueDUal ftDMclal bWI ...... baM IMted from 9e1t. 11 to Jan. reapporUoamta t la remoYed 4, MM a bllb·••Ntd parpoae from tbt .....sa. blfon dalm: MYiaa *be ltate "I dan't iWDlt lt'1 so6aa .. bt a from a..ctal rula. ver1 poalUvt ••t btrl••.'' a ut .._ ta likely to occupy A11emb!yman Jt0111 Jolluoa, mOlt ot tMtr 11111'1 atteatlGn la R·Fulltrton, H id tut wtet tbat IDOlt MUl8b Md --·1 ol wbea Gow. Edmund Bron Jr. lolMca: rupporUauMnt. .... -called&be:f:lal••lt•. ••,.bllca are ltlU fumln& A aped ... ,._ ta cWter..t about tbe loaded lell&latlve and from a reaular ... aoa lD two ean1rwiaeal Ndlatrlctiai plw way1; lawmaten an Mmlted to tbat o.mocrall pualaed throucb tbe topic• OD tbt 1onn101"1 tbe Ltllllature lD September. proclamation and bUl1 tab Democrat• are mad that effect In 10 day1 lutead Of tbt 8epubllcau are 1eekla1 ead oltbe year. relereadwnl on the plau, wbicb Brown'• proclamatloa lilt.cl complicate aext year'• twotopics: elecUom. -"Le1islation relative to Republicam are incensed that state budlet problems created Democrats have filed three su.lll by recent federal enactmenti •ilb the state Supreme Court and related court actions,·• and •eekln1 to block the -"Legisl1tion relative to t lnterferon tested li s rabies medicine ATLANTA (AP> - Researchers will continue to use Interferon as a human rabies treatment despite its failure to save the first rabies victim wbO was treated with the subetance in the United States, the Centers for Disease Control said. Gaty Sbi)>ley, 40, an American who lived in Mexico, died at a Tucson Ariz., hospital ht September Iller being bitten by a rabid dog in June. He wu the second man to die of rabies in the United States this year. He was the first Atnerican to receive interferon treatment in a last-ditch effort to save bis life, the CDC said in its Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report. Researchers at Stanford University in California and at the CDC b1ve found that monkeys, mice and rabbits iajec:ted with rabies virus had a good chance ol survival if they received interferon shortly after exposure, said Dr. Ken Bernard, a medical investigator at CDC. But the anti-viral substance must be introduced soon after exposure, and the studies have not shown it is effective once symptoms appear, be said. Shlpley_dld not receive interferon until almost two months Iller be was bitten by the dog and be was already very sick. ''The earlier you start after challenging with the virus, the better chance of survivability," Bernard said in an interview. "We have plans to use interferon on two to three additional cues before we draw any conclusions about lt." Rab(ea is almost always fatal, with medical history recording only three survivors. On the average, five people die from the dlsease in the United States each year. Interferon is a protein substance produced naturally by human cells to combat virwa. Man-made interferon haa recently been manufactured using new gene-splicing techniques. ~ ... ·- ' reapporlloam-.\." Tb• immediate bud.let problem WH created wlea lawmakers adJouratd la Septtmber without,....., • bW that ~ CGGform tbe 1tate'1 welfare tllllblllty rulea wltb Rea•aa admlnlMl'atioD cutbecb that toot elfect Oct. 1. Tbat mea•t tbe federal 1overnment 1topped pa)'IDI matcblq fuDdl for people it ao toa1er ocmiden .U,lble, but t.be 1tate baa to kHP up their be.neflll until lt cban1ea lts nlea. Tbe coet i1 about SU mllllon a month . Brown'• Social Servlcea Dtpartmeot, wblcb adm~ welfare, tried to make tbe cban1• lt.aell. But aa .,tOCY under Brown that baa to approve all emer1ency reaulatlona rejected them and a LOI Aqelea Superior Court Judie backed tbat .,mcy. Tbe bW in September;, Alml, r&I\ into opposltlon trom lawmaken who didn't like the cuts . But the author , A11emblyman Bill Lockyer, D·San Leandro, said those formerly opposed now ( (are somewhat real1ned to the neceuity or it, if not the wildom.'' He said the special ae11lon biU will be a ••streamlined version." fbe earlier blU would ban shifted the savings into job traininl and other programs. "Thole are out of the bill just because the savings are gone and we're so deeply in the red," Lockyer said. The bill will 1ive wetfare benefits to pre1nant women, which the federal iovemment does not, he said. That provision is an attempt lo placate those who don't want any cuts. The reapportionment ball of the agenda ostensibly ls to redraw the tour state Board of EqualhaUon districts, a task the lawmakers railed to do in September. · Brown and Democratic legislative leaden say that's all they inten<l to do in tbe special session. But Brown's open wording aroused the Republicans' suspicions. The wording, Assembly GOP leadet Carol Hallett of Atascadero wrote Brown, "leads ua to suspect that your intent ii to sabota1e our cu,rent r~ferendum efforu and tbua circumv..U the will of tbe people on the broader Issues of reapportionment." Skies partly· cloudy Com 1al :Ex tended outlook Tem perature• ... Le~ SI a .ti .... SI 0 .G .. . n • ,. ,. .... n rt a 1S " . " rt " .. .. . ... . .. . .. . .. 11 ..... " . . .. S1 '·" .. 41 •a '1 SI J1 • 11 41 ff JI ,. . ., .. 1S tot .SI .. . 11 rt S4 .. _., 74. 71 • .. .. n ·o 11 61 S1 ,. .. . .... 11 a u 41 S1 • .. .. , ... ., ,. .. . '1 IS " S1 S1 • ,. as •• .. n S1 IS •a .. . n ., u 14 . .. 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MU ~n, moon, tide1 ••• T\IUDAY l'lt'ltl• 1:1U.M. t.a l'lnt 111111 1:a •·"'· •.J ....... !: .. ,."'· .0.$ ._....111111 I: ti'-"'· U ........ : .. ,. ........... 1'1-•:• ...... T ....... ._ wta •:41 e.1111. T.....,, n.. •:1t,.111. ' On probation FRESNO (AP> -A Coarae1old man wbo worked at tbe Internal Revenue Service re1ional center in Fresno bal beea plaetd OD tbJ"ee yon probation for embe&alinl taxe1. R aymond D ou1 la1 11 arab allO wu ordered t o Ji v e time to com manlty ser•lee durla1 bl• HDteDdq lloaday ID U.S. Dlltrtet .__,. ________ ..._. ____________________ ....,...., ______ .....,_..._.eowt. We're Llatenlng ••• WMt do you Uk• aMut·~ Dally Plitt! Wbat dOD't JOU like? Call the number below Md ,._ ••• .. wW bl ,.....did, lf'UHrtbed and d1Hvered to the appropriate ldl&or • ...... same M·hour am..na. Ml'Ytce • ., bt med ID)Wtord a.l· ter1 to tile ...... oa •1 ~. 'llall• "8tlt....,. _... lllehllll the"' name and tel1plaDM ........ for •trtfteaU.. ,. .............. calla ......... ,,,..~r~'::'D NI U1 wbat '1 on your llMftd. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOTJMond1y, November 9, 1911 PELLET-PROOF -Photo at left shows conventional plastic eyeglass lerts. ·worn by mannequin, shattering un<fer impact of air gun pellet traveling at 255 mph. Al right. similar pellet bounces off hard.coated -~ ......... polycarbonate lens. leaving only a nick. Lenses are designed for sports use .and for those with acttve lifestyles, according to manufacturer Gentex Corp .. of Dudley. Mass. Aces relive Great War .. . .. . World War I fliers remember Spads, Sopwith Camels ·· NEW YORK <AP> -The old flier put on his bearing aid and explained how it was to go to lnto the Great War with only 90 hours or flight training -and end up shooting down 13 of the Kaiser's aircraft. George Vaughn, 84, downed more aircraft -12 planes and one balloon -in World War I than any other livlng American. He arrived at Kennedy Airport on Friday along with eight other aces and the last surviving member or the ramed Lafayette EscadrilJe. After getting reacquainted at a reception, the old fliers boarded a jetliner beaded for Paris and an Armistice Day reunion with 31 other former aviators. bolb friend and foe, in a tribute led by the president or France, Francois Mitterrand. Joining Vaughn were Douglas Campbell, 85, of Cos Cobb, Conn., the first American serviceman to down five pJanes and win the tiUe of ace, and Carl t>olan of Honoluht, at 85 the last surviving member or the Lafayette Escadrille. The Escadrille was a group or American volunteers who fi•• with the AJ.Ues before the United Sta~ entered lbe war. · • J was in college and said to my buddies, 'Let's go over and save France,' " Dolan said wilb a laugh. Ke is not an ace, since six of bis eight dogfight victories But "they're s ul"Vivors," said were unofficial. r eli red Air Force Col. Rick They we re also. joined by G I as e brook . a m i lit a r y ' Robert Todd, 84, of San Diego, historian. "Sometbin1 keeps who destroyed five German the m going." planes before he was shot down In World War I . the fliers and captured in 19~8. . , said, the pilot's job was simpler The men des~rabed h1story s vet more difficult than today. firs t great air battles a s -"Then all you had to do wu personal duel~ in whi ch men fl y t he' plane and shoot the were mor e important than guns," said Vau2bn .. ''You laugh about it. You slap him on the back, buy him· a drink and laugh about •t '' i . machines and pilots got close enough to see the color or their roes ' scarves. They d1scussed the relative merits of Sopwith Camels, Spads and Nieuports and recalled comrades killed weeks before the armistice on Nov. 11. 1918. And they showed their age: Ernest Hoy, 86, of Toccoa. Ga., checked out of a hospital and arrived in a wheelchair. Kenneth Porter. 84, of Queens, who d owned five e nemy aircraft, limped a bit. ·'Now," he added, .. everything • is written. down, prescribed and settled beforehand. I don't meau today's pilots aren't great, but ' now it's all in the technology." I Vaughn got his first kill in June 1981. "I didn't see the fellow (the German pilot) and be shot my lail fuJl of holes before I , knew he was there. He thought he'd gotten me and rtew away. But I followed him and got him ." Campbell shot down the first German plane he ever saw on • his first batUe flight -which · lasted 4"'2 minutes from takeorr • to landing,· and came alter he had completed only so hours of flight training. ( They said they were looking forward lo meeU~e German pilots with whom they might ' • have fought. But what does ooe l say to a man who was trying to I shoot you down 63 years aeo! ' i "You laugh about it," said Vaughn. "You slap hJm on the • back, buy him a drink and laugh about it ... Highway fund picture 'bright' LOS ANGELES CAP> -State and fe de ral programs are painting a "fairly bright" future for California's highways, but the story is different for mass transportation, a state. official said . Jn testimony lo the Senate Transportation Committee, Lee Deter said California is facini a potentiaJ transit funding short· fall of more lban Sl.3 billion over the next five years, in part hecause or cutbacks sought by the Reagan administration. '·While the highway picture for California looks fairly briiht overall, both in terms of state and federal funding, the transit picture is not bright at all," said Deter, who heads the state Department or Transportation's Division or Mass Transit. Ke said the state will need to increase its share or transit . funding by at least S830 million over the next five years to meet projected needs. He said proposed federal funding reductions threaten construction of a light-rail transit system ln Sacramento and a variety or transit projects in San Francisco, as welJ as other tra nsit programs. But funding for highways, on the other hand. aooepr11 tn hf' nn the wa up Deter said. "In the highway ar ea, the trend al both the federaJ and slate level appears to be toward sta ble and even an creasing funding," he said. "At the federal level, the Reagan adm inistration is proposing some increases and decreues . . . but in total the funding level is. proposed t o be raised somewhat. .. IC the Reagan tii ghway p r oposals are e n acted by Congress, California will gain a s ubstantial amount of new rederal mo nies for state highways -on the order or S700 million over the next rive years." from for running, court~ or~ just ~;P!-Ctatin~, WfL ~ thi "nik.a: ehoi right fur":/(». ch(X)8(2. fium ecz:wn gnzot e,ty}CLS - oazania > cortcz.z, bruin canvas or lrethtr, oz.ntczr~, wimblcz.lal or tlu tntR.rnatloneli8t. I Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 9, 1•1' • I ~u~rnrn 1Pot raids. cut? , Oregon progr am may be imperiled I ' ORANTI PASS. ON. (AP) - : A fed9ral Pl'Oll'8ID that btlptd five Or..,a counU. HlH mon 1 tban ua mllllon worth , merij.._ from pot farm• th1I I year bu been a rodtln• bit wtth local afllciaJa. , But there 11 aom• queeUoD I whether lt will return for aa , encore becauae ol bud1et cull I by lhe,Re.,an admln.iatraUoD. The ederal Dru• 1 Enforcement AdmlnlatraUoD · a1111ned two a1ent1 aDd a surveillance plane here to ua1lt lhe aoutbwestem counties lD pot ralda. But Mike Wrl1ht, a1ent·in·char1e for the DEA lD Eu1ene, says his office l1n't 1me if the program will even be back in any form next year. "The question is how much money the government la 1oln& to 1ive us," says Wright. "Of course, the White House la cutting budcets everywhere. "If we have the money, we're going to do il," be said. But he says the DEA already la preparing for bad budget news. Law enforcement officials say the program bas been a bil help to snare pot growers who have discovered the climate and remote areas in Dou1las, Jackson, Josephine, Coos and Ct1n1 couati• ldeil for tbllr Cropl. ' "It wu a peat deal ot IMlp at a Umewbm mOMJ wu MdlJ ........ ..,. Doqlal Comal)' SIMl'iff Norm Neal. ''A lot ol 10UJ' OOllDUll and cltJel do not have the m°""' to make a IOOCI. reuoaabla effort to coatrof it.,, be aaya. AuUaoriU• aay about 7,000 planta were confiscated tb11 year ID Doualu Cou.aty, with an eaUmMed ltreet value of more tbaa '10 mlWon. '•We "ere better tban a tbouHnd plants over lut )'Nr'a yield and arrests wen up .00 percent," aaya Stt. J•rry Cberriclt. Plants worth more than S20 million were conflacated in Josephine County, officials say. The number of plants seized la about the same aa 1980, but inflation hu increased the value of the crop, deputies day. In Jackson County, officials also credit the DEA for assistance in the seizure of 6,500 plants they estimate are worth about $6.5 million. Deputies said this was the first year authorities were able to collect such slatiatlcs on pot seizures in Jackson County. Tests slww danger to heart ~ictims BOSTON (AP> -Using a common test, doctors say they can identi!y recent heart attack victims with chest pain who face high odds or dying within a few months. These patients shouJd receive more aggressive treatment than usual to improve their chances or survival, the doctors say. By studying their electrocardiograms -routine measurements of the heart's electrical impulses -the doctors identified 43 patients who were at high risk, and 72 percent of them died within six months of their heart attacks. The risk of death is great.est, they say. if people suffer a particular form of angina within a few days ·or their heart attacks. Angina is a kind of chest pain that results when the heart is deprived of oxygen because it does not get enough blood. This oxygen deprivation. or lschemia , is usually considered more serious if it occurs soon after a heart attack. The doctors say any heart specialist can spot higb·risk patients by studying the results of electrocardiograms. By identifying the high.risk victims, they say, doctors can make sure these patients get the most potent medicines, such as nitrates or beta blockers. Heart attack is the nation's most common k:iUer. Ordinarily about 2S percent of au people who survive a first attack die within one year. The researchers found that there are two kinds of angina, which they labeled ischemia in the infarct zone and ischemla at a distance. The first means the heart tissue is not getting enough blood in the area that was damaged by the heart attack. lscbemia at a dist.a.nee occurs when blood vessels are not providing enough blood to tissue in another part of the heart -by far the more serious because this means that a new secUon of heart bas been jeopardized by the attack. The doctors studied 70 heart attack victims who began to have pain within about three days of their heart attacks. In the 43 who had ischemia at a distance, 44 percent died within a month and 72 percent were dead after six months. Of the other 27; 15 percent died after a month, and 33 percent died after six months. The dome of molten rock in Mount St. Helena' crater continues to grow with each new non·explosive eruption. H U.S. sells warplanes to Taiwan, will mainland China show its wrath? WASHINGTON (AP> -In the irms sale business, it's bard to balance the interests of one customer against another - particularly when new priorities offend old friends. That's one reason the sale of U.S. radar planes and other weapons to Saudi Arabia -over Israeli opposit.ion -was such a contentious issue. Now President Reagan may face the same kind of controversy in reverse, this time over whether to sell warplanes to Taiwan. The deal would be with an old ally. the Nationalists, and the offended party would be the Peking government. But Taiwan, whicb hoped for better days ln a Reacan pres idency, may be let down, despite some very comforting words during last year's campaign. U Reagan follows the State Department's private advice, be will s tall -and disappoint Taiwan, its supporters and those who question whether the United States is prepared to protect small countries. If Reagan listens to bis White House and Pentagon advisers and ships F·l6s or less·advanced 1111 llllYlll F ·SGs to Taiwan , he risks friendship in Peking. Officially, the administration is not yet tipping its band. The government line is that Taiwan's request "is being looked al intensively" but that there is no deadline for a decision. Scholar A. Doak BiU'Jlett says that i{ Reagan authorizes jet sales to Taiwan, there ii "a high probablJity" Peking will kick out the y .s. ambassador. Barnett says China might even try to patch up its dUfereQces with the Soviets. That would be a major blow to Reagan 's strategy of establis hing a network of anti-Soviet countries. But scholar Edward N. Luttwak calls a decision to sell weapons to Taiwan greatly overdue. been reduced -there is no doubt it considers the island an integral part of China. A Reagan decision to send the warplanes to the Nationalists would b e subjec t to congressional veto. This could mean a replay of the tug-of·war over arming Saudi Arabia. The Taiwan a rms issue was not m entio n e d in the communique that set up full relations between the United States and China at the start or 1979. In fact, some Chinese leaders apparently thought U.S. arms shipme nts wo uld be reduced, or at least that Taiwan would not be provided with jets that couJd outmaneuver their own. But former President C~er, on a trip to China last year, aald the Chinese had been told that the United States would sell some de fensive weapons to Taiwan, even though it was breaking relations with the Nationalists. The 1979 Taiwan R e lations Act authorized providing Taiwan "with arms of a defensive character." deliberately or unwittingly, U.S. policy may encourage rather than discourage trends toward a permanent separation of Taiwan from Chini." Doctors • praise C T scans WASHINGTON (AP) -A conference or medical experts has given a sweeping volA! of confidence to the use of CT scanning -computer·assisted X·rays -of the brain. Tbey aaid the technique i1 aaving both lives and money. In a s lap at government efforts to discourage hospitals from buying the costly machines, the experts at a federaJly sponsored conference said the United States needs more than the 1,400 computer tomographic <CT> scanners now in place. Rift brewing in Canada "The United States can renounce neither its friendship with Peking nor its obligation to Taiwan," LuUwak wrote in the Wall Street Journal. "lf Wa s hington is resolute in fulfilling Its commitment to Taiwan, the leaders of the People's Republic wiU no doubt express their displeasure, but they will also recognize that the very act is proof of American reUablJJty." Last s ummer, Secretary of State Alexander M. Haig Jr. went to Peking with word that restrictions against arms sates to mainland China would be lifted. But Chinese leaders, concentrating on economic development, do not st!em · interested. A military mission to Washington has been postponed while the Reagan administration mulls over the Taiwan arms decision. Acute shortages exist iQ some big cities and rural areas with a high incidence of traffic injuries, industrial accidents, gunshot victims and other head trauma cases. they s aid. But they cautioned against "indiscriminate" use of CT scanning for patients with simple headaches, dizziness. fainting sitelJs or minor bead injuries. Constitution pact forcing ha nd of French sep~ratists? By tbe Alaoclated Presa Ten Canadian "Foundinc Fathers" -Prime Minister Pier.re Elliott Trudeau and nine of the 10 provincial premiers - have finally patched together an agreement to establish an all·Canadian constitution. But the process of "nation·building," as Trudeau bas called it , may give a booet to those in Quebec who want to shrink the nation by taking the French·speaking province out of the 114·year·old Canadian confederation. Rene Levesque, Quebec's separatist leader, was the only premier to reject the accord reached Thursday, on the fourt.b day of a conference in Ottawa, after more than a year of wrangling between the federal and provincial governments. The agreement calls for the British Parliament to surrender control of the colonial·era constitution alter first insertlne a charter of r ights and a formula for ratifying future amendmenta. Tbe fiery Levesque, speakln& in French on national televlalon aa the conference closed, accused his fellow French-Clnadian and loqtlme political foe Trudeau of ba.tq "deliberately cbolen to obtain the co111ent of the Enllilh·speaklot prori.ncee • a way to reduce the rltbll of Quebecers." In an ominous 1tatement to reporters lat•, he .Hid tbe effect ol a coutltutlonaJ deal witbout Quebec'• support "could be lncalcul•ble'' for aJl of Canada. Leve1que denouoced tbe cbuur of rtata • an au.et& cm pro•l•d•I ••tODOlDJ. Ill ........... " lllDorttr·a...-ed•catlaa. ,_ a.amp1e,·wo.Jd Dalllfr a Q11Ur law ,......... A BOOST FOR POES? ;anada's Trudeau Englisb·lanlU8ge education. He also oppoaea the charter'• guarantee that Canadl8DI can aeek work anywhere in the country, 'a provision tb•t would ovetrlde provincial lawa Umltln1 the hirtnc of outliden. Gilbert Paquette , an outspoken member of Leveaque'a aeparati1t Partl Quebecois, told reporters it would be "for Quebec to decide" on lt.a con1Ututlonal optlon1i po11lbly tbrouth a provincla referendum. Levesque l01t Quebec'• lut referendum, ln llay t•, when be a1ked for autbortaatlon to take the lint step toward •akina Lbe plOYIDce .......... aauon. He laid lt WOUid ...s more tba• two ce•t•rlta of ee9nomte ••41 polttteal ._ ...... bf A..,.,_,.•adt-. ll•lJ ~·-., ..... ,. ............................... Ule 9N am•1 Ule r ....... majority -five million of the six million people -waa split about even. The PQ bounced back in a provincial election in April, easily winning re.election. At that time, Levesque indicated be might present the separatist option to the voters again in two or three years. Earlier this year the Quebec Liberals, the provincial affiliate of Trudeau's national Liberal Party, joined the PQ in a bipartisan position on the constitutional talks, warnin1 Trudeau against trying to dilute Quebec's provincial powers. Aller an emer1ency caucus ot bis legislative group late Thursday, Quebec Liberal leader Claude Ryan called the Ottawa agreement a "breakthrough" but refused to endorse lt unreservedly. Whether hia party wlll continue its "common front" with lhe PQ probably will become apparent after the Quebec le1l1lature corlvenes Monday. . The Canadian conatltution now ls the British North America Act of 1867, which federated the colonial provinces. The Britilb Parliament tried to 1ive full self·rule to Canada in 1931, but the Canadian.a could not •tree amon1 t.bemlel.u on a method ·of amenc:Una the conatltution. The ccmatltutlen remained. ID the hand• of the Brltiab Parliament, which adopted amendments only at tile unanlmou1 request of tbe federal and provlncl•l 10 v e rnmenu . A recen t Canadian Supreme Court ~ indicated tbat de1plte tbl1 tradition of unanimity, t•• opl)Olltloa of oa.ly One pl'OYlnce -Quebec -lhould not pnvatt lbe Caudlaa Parliament tram aakl::f Britain to rellaqui1b ...~ ol IM ewutuUoe. The fact that Reagan ls getting conflicting advice from the State Department, on the one hand, and the White House and Pentagon, on the other, underscores the divisions within the administration of foreign policy. It also reflects the sensitivity of arming Taiwan. The 17 million people on tbe island are trying to maintain their independence. They want as much U.S. support as they can muster. Eve·n though the communist government in Peking is making no overt move to take over Taiwan -in fact. tensions have Barnett, an early proponent of recognizing the Peking government, says in a new study pu bJis hed by the Brookings lnstituUon that a decision to seU j ets to Taiwan "wouJd represent a blatant example of Insensitivity to Peking's basic views and concerns." Chinese leaders, be says, "would interpret It as a sign that Was hington gives highe r priority to its o ld lies with Taiwan than to its new rela· lions with China and that, Or. Fred Plum of the ComeU University Medical college called it "a national disgrace" that hospitals such as New York's Harlem Hospital, which treats manf victims of violence, lack CT scanners. CT scanners, first introduced ifl this country in 1973, use computers to combine X·ray pictures taken from several different directions, and display the result on a television screen. The technique produces much greater detail than single X·rays. -----DESKS INC.----- SUPER SAVINGS TIME A great buy! 30"x60". 4 drawers Include 2 file drtwen. Stop In today! S.e . this value f«younclf. I Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 8, 1Hf • s ~· ~ffiU~ .Dalke trial SAN F.RANCISCO <AP1 -'A federal Juda• bu certUI .. more than 1,500 law1uit1 u a natlonwlde cla.. actjon for 1 pwalUve damaie1 a1aJnal lbe Dl•ker of tbe Dalkoa Shield coatraceptive. The af m of the •ctlon LI to ' ensure that the COll\pany isn't bankrupted by the clafma -now 10 times ita worth -and th•l the plaintllla, ir a uceessfu1, can share ln Ill award fund, U. S. District Judge Spedcer Williams said. He set a trial date of March lS. Thouaandt of women claim to have suffered such injuries u uterine perforations, infecUom, pregnancies and fetal damages from the aJlegedly defective ·intrauterine. device (IUD) made by A.H . Robins Co. Other defendants beside Robins are the sh ield's inventors Hugh • Davis and Irwin Lerner. About 2.2 million shields were used by women in lbe U.S. in the four ye'rs before distribution was suspended in June 1974. Some 1,573 suits now seek 1 compens·atory damages of more than $500 million and punitive damages in excess of $2.3 billion from Robins. Compensatory damages are for injuries suffered, punitive damages are intended as a deterrent. Because the claims could bankruyt Robins, with a net worth o $280 million, and many plaintiffs therefore might not get any damages, Williams said the most equitable solution was to certify a class ensuring equal access to a recovery fund. The class includes all women , who have made Dalkoo-related claims for punitive damages against. Robins, as weU as au ... plainliCCs in related litigation pending in federal cQurls located in California. That approach is an attempt ·'lo coordinate the plaintiff's national claims for paoitive damages," he said. "While this coordination will prevent any one plainlilf trom receivina an lndl•idu •l windfall punltlve-dama1e award, it will a lao ensure the riabt1 of all plainutts to some proportionate • abare ot any punitive damqe recovery." He atresaed no plaintiff hu a "ri1ht" to punitive dama1es, and noted lb.at the purpose of such dama1es "la lo sting, not kill, a defendant." The action "is a way of s ubduing the monster-like qualities of the ... re~Utive Ut11atioo so much the reault ol our modern t echnolosical society,'' hls 51-page order said. The. cue is not the "pl'Overbial Frankenstein monster posing as a class suit,'' Wiiliams said. If the jury's verdict favors th'e nationwide class and awards punitive damages, the amount will be established as a recovery fund. Each member of the class must then return to her own court for a separate trial on individual issues. All successful claimants wlll then be entitled to a pro-rata share o r the punitive-damaees fund, his order said. Williams added he does not intend to restrict an out·of-state plaintiff's r ight lo sue for compensatory damages arising out or use of the Dalkon Shield. Governor shrugs at chief's insults SACRAMENTO (AP> -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. says insults by his new chief of stare. B.T. Collins. aren't hurting him. Brown said he agreed with the man Collins replaced , Gr ay Davis, who said earlier "B.T. Collins is the Don Rickles of California politics. He's the principal roaster in Sacramento. but it's au meant in good humor . . . . If you haven't been attacked by B.T., you haven't arrived in California politics." Drunk driving f:Iaw 'morass' I •j Tax revenue · cuts state deficit SACRAMENTO (AP > - California's lax revenues dClring October increased ahead of projections for the first time in four months, but state Controller Ken Cory says it is loo early to signal an end to the slate's fiscal crunch. ' Cory said preliminary figures show that corporate and bank tax revenues in October were higher than expected, cutting the state deficit by about $52 million. Retail sal es tax revenues were "right on target" Cory said, while personal income tax collec tions were down by about $18 million. . Figuring in other tax revenues during October, Cory said, the rirst-quarter deficit is expected to be cut to about $200 million. After the first quarter or the c ur rent budget year, which began July 1, tax revenues were off $254 million, leading many financial experts lo project an unconstitutional deficit In the state's S25 billion-plus budget. State financial officials have estimated the total deficit for the current fiscal year at between $500 milHon and $1 billion, depending on projected conditions or the economy. Mexican . re01edy probed ~TLANTA (AP) -Loa An 1 el•• author l ti•• are lnveaU•aUna a Mexle,ua folk remedy UHd to tnat lodl1eet1oa that caUMd lead polaoal.nl in a 4-monlh-old infant, the nat10ftal Centers tor Dlaeaae Control said. The subllance alven to the Infant, known in Mexico as A11rcoo, wu found to be a toxic lead eorppound, the CDC said. "It ii Wlknown at thia time how common the use of Azarcon ia. A survey ta currently In pro1re11 to determine ita availability and use in Los Angeles," the CDC said in ill Morbi4Jty and MortaUty Weekly Report. The infant was admitted to 011 ve View Medical Center in June with a 12-hour history or vomiting and diarrhJ'a and was found to have excessive levels of lead in its blood, the CDC said. The s ubstance causing the illness was identified as lead telroxide after the mother admitted a baby healer had given the infant an orange powder known as Azarcon, the center said. The bloody diarrhea and other sympt oms o f acute lead poisoning s ubsided over a four-day period and the baby was discharged, the CDC said. Health authorities questioned Mexican·Americans about the substance, and found it was used in small doses for treatment of chronic Indigestion and other stomach illnesses. It is readily available in Mexico and a sample purchased in Tijuana was identilied as lead tetrox.ide, the center said. The substance is sometimes used in plaster. Refund d e manded SACRAMENTO (AP> -Slate Controller Ken Cory says he is demanding that the federal government give back $3.5 million in oi l compan y overcharge refunds. He accused the federal government of planning to illegally keep $38.5 million that belongs to California and other states. I · SACRAMENTO (AP> -The smart drunk tis driver doesn't allow the police to cive him any •1 kind ol sobriety lest, even t.bougb lb.al ls sure to cause his arrest and may coat a 90-day suspension of his driver's license, a drunk-driving expert said. '" In a speech at the annual California Trial 1 Lawyers Association convention here, Sacramento Can us. I ' attorney Don Dorfman, who was billed as one of the slate's leadin g experts on d erending ,., drunk-driving cases, described California's tough I new drunk driving law as "a legal morass" that · will be "a business boom" forde(ense attorneys. Dorfman also conducted a how-to·beat-the-rap ··• seminar for defense lawyers, listing ways to win acquittals under the stiffer new drunk-driving laws enacted by the 1981 Legislature and current law. The new law, which lakes errect next Jan. l, is intended to make it easier lo prove drunk driving. It also rt!quires mandatory .tS·hour jail terms for · · drunk-driving convictions and longer mandatory 1 jail terms for repeat offenders. 1 Dorfman told the defense lawyers that while prosecutors thinJt a driver's refusal to submit to • 1 blood, urine or breath teslS is "lanlamount to conviction," those cases really give defense attorneys far more opportunJUes l-O gel acquittals. That is the case under current law, Dorfman .•. said, and it will be even more important after Jan. l , when the new law mak~ a 0.10 blood-alcohol conlent absolute proof of intoxication rather than a "presumption,'' which the defense can challenge. 1 ''You're going to be getllng a lot more refusal · cases after Jan. l,'' Dorfman said, adding that the · important thing is that the driver have a • 1 reasonable-sounding explanation for the jury for " his refusal. '• Refusing the tests give "a wonderful tool" to the defense. attorney, Dorfman said, because it • automatically triggers a move by the Department or Motor Vehicles to suspend the defendant's driver's license for 90 days. But before the license can be suspended, the • OMV must grant a hhring ii a driver requests it, ·: and at tbat bearing a defense attorney may cross-examine the arresting omcer. without the district attorney present. That gives an attorney a preview of how strong the case Is a1ainst his client. Lisllng numer<*S tecbn.iquea to cast doubt on tbe prosecution's case .. Dorfman told the seminar that drunk driving ''ls ap excellent defense cue. "Despite the fact drunk drivers are in disfavor, these are people·juron can idenWy with because they drlv~can, they are afraid they may <klnll one-too any-now and tben Illa aet . arrested." ~.---··-····1 ~ 'LINGERIE PARTIES I II vou haven't ti.d a plffaure party, you have I • milled a truly e11clflng experience. 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LAUGH BREAK -Actress Gilda Radner and actor Gene Wilder paus e for a chuckle during filming of Columbia Pictures' "Hanky Panky'' recently. The movie is being directed by Sidney Poitier . Jobless rate jump highest in 4 years By The Associated Preas As the nation skids toward what many economists feel a a recession, California's unemployment rate jumped to 8.1 percent in October -nearly a full percentage point above September and the highest r ate in more than four years, the state Employment Development Department said. EDD spokeswoman Gera Curry conceded the single-month change in joblessness was "sharp," but she cautioned a1ainst looking at it as a harbinger or long-term hard limes. "We don't like to say a trend has developed until figures show the same outcome for three consecutive months," Ma. Curry said. For the past 18 months, the state's jobless rate bas averaged 7 .1 percent, with the monthly figures varying ~Y only a few tenths of a point in both directions. . ln Septem ber, the statewide jobless rate was 7.2 percent, the same as it was in October 1980. The 8.1 percent rate posted last month was the highest since unemployment reached 8.2 percent in November 1977. For populous Los Angeles County, the October rate rose to 7.S percent from 7 .3 ~r~ent . Nationally, Joblessness jumped by half a percent to 8.0 percen.t, the U.S. Labor Department said. \ or8nge Cout DAILY l'IL,OT/Mond11. November I , 1•1 Oraaae County Sher · lUT~.9naer Ba:ad Gates. who l90Jtt lllrt a clneh to seek re·electloD in 19U, ha• seored con1lderable P\lbllctty for himsell by 1t>ecom1n1 Involved in the case of the man accused of the Cleveland Nat.ion al For eat ca"1pground slaying . of a 12·Year-old Lake Elsinore girl. When suspect Thomas · Francis FAwards was arrested in · · Maryland several days after the. . shooting, it wasn't long before be was cantacted by a member of the Orange County Public Defe'ndel''s office. Edwards, alleged to have fled California to the East· Coast, received some . advice, the content of which has not been disclosed because of the privileged nature of c·o rn m unic a tions bet ween · attorneys and their clients. Gates was incensed by the so·calle(l "earh contact." He ·suggested the public defender's office was attempting to take control of the case. regardless of whether the defendant would qualify for publlc defender aervlcea. The 1heritr •uigeated taxpayen oupt not to have to put up with such behavior. Public Def ender Ronald Butler says wbat wu done was proper. He relles heavUy on a CalUornla Slate Bar opinion which holds that early contact ls permiJsible ln cases where there is a strong likellhood the public defender's office, due to the defendant's lack of money, will receive the case. Gates wasn't satisifed. He• succeeded in persuading the cQunty Board of Supervisors to form a ·committee of attorneys and juages to investigate the early contact issue. The board's action was inappropriate. It would have been muc h better for all con cerned if the sheriff had posed his questions in a court of law, where such matters ought to be decided, than before a political body. ·Miracles need help Advances in the trans- plantation of human organs have been among the most remarkable developments in medical technology in recent years. Spectacular operations like }leart and lung transplants still are widely publicized. Much more. routine, and remarkably successful, are transplants of eye tiss ue, to give sight to the near·blind, of kidneys, to save the lives of those once doomed by disease. and s kin grafts for burn ·victims. Less known. but now also possible, are transplants of .inner ear bones a nd pituitary glands. Soon many other organs will be added to the list. The problem today is finding enough donors to make these remarkable operations possibie. In California, the state is jnvolved through the Anatomical Gifts Act. which sets legal definitions and safeguards for both donors and recipients and provides guid ellnes for law enforcement officers, coroners and funeral directors who may becotne involved in the organ transplant process. In 1976. the state authorized the "pink sticker" program . through which citizens may authorize the use of their body parts after death by attaching an identification card to their . driver"s li~enses. Unfortunately. a recent review of this program indicates it is not too effective in attracting don9rs , perhaps because it is overlooked by law enforcement or m e dical personnel in attendance at accident sites. . In recent public hearings in San Francisco and Long ·Beach, state. Sen. Ollie Speraw brought together groups of expert witnesses to review the state of the Anatomical Gifts Act. The conclusion was that a wides pread public education program must be undertaken to off set the shortage of willing and healthy organ donors. This would include training seminars for members of the me dical profession, including h os pit a l ai de s a nd administrators. e duc ation programs for law enforcement. officers and coroners and better information for the public as a whole. where there still may be so me doubts about o r gan transplant procedures. Also under way is an attempt to coordinate the efforts of the many private organ donor groups in the state. For the individual. the rirst step should be to sign the donor card attached to the driver 's license. The neXt step could be to contact and sign up with donor organizations that can be contacted through hospitals and medical schools. Re moval of an organ or tissue from the body of one human being to save or enhance the life of another no longer is an' experimental procedure. It can be done and it does save lives. Public education and acceptance is the key. Family fight untimely Were we back in Washington, the Allen·Haig feud would dominate our every thought. The Washington Post <and until recently the Star) would banner it daily on Page l. Radio and TV would steal from the paper s but add to the controversy. The myriad federal workers would gossip about it. After aU, what else is back there to talk about? But out here· in the West we tend to look on these things -as important as they. are -with more perspective. There is obvious bickering going on within the oCCicial family of President Reagan belween Secretary of State Alexander Haig Jr. and national security director Richard V. Allen. , · The capital probably isn't big enoulh for both of them. and one probably -will be gone by Jan. l. The question, though, is which one. Reagan, to his credit, called them on the carpet Thursday and told them to get their act together. They should. Both have been criticized for their handling, or better yet, their mishandling, of the $8.5 billion Saudi Arabia arms package. Al Haig h as narrowly s urvived se veral other foot-in-the·mouth episodes, and Dick Allen's recoM is lackluster. There are enough problems in the world to tackle without two important· administration officials sniping at each other through columnist intermediaries. There was too much of that under Presidents Carter and Nixoo. We don't need more of that. t.M. Boyd I JobB & weather Rainy days seem to inapire women · to 10 out and look f9r payroll Jobi, They 1et restleH then, evhlenUy. Wbea tbe aun is out, they must be content wtth whatever tbelr lot. But U ·IOCID a lt clouds OHi', they loot for clump. SUch ii the belief ot the owner ot an employment a1ency who uy1 TO pereent of the· ftm•l• ORANGE COAST A . Daily PilDI . applicants abow up durinl bad weather. llotorilta drlYe a lot futer throulb loa1 tunDe1I Ulbted from OYWbnd than tlaroQb Ione tunnels lltbted from th& afdes. But in thoM 1Jde. Utbted bmllela, the farth• apart the ll1bt.t, the faster the•motorittl drive. TftOIMI P. H•ley Publlsher Tltomn A. MU""IM Editor ------"""' B•rNr'• Kreiblcta Edltorlel P-oe Editor I -.. ---::----- . • i . • ABSCAM -entrapment victim j I l WASHINGTON -The Senate machinery for 1rindin1 d ow n trans(reuors is bumming its Inexorable bum . Caught ln the wbeelworlts is Sen. Harrlaon Williama, D·N.J ., the Senate's lone ABSCAM victim, who has been marked fo r expulsion. Operating the machinery by remote control is Thomas Puccio, the chief ABSCAM prosecutor, who has been funnelllng "evidence" agalnat Wllllams into tbe Senate Ethics Committee. Puccio'• confederate on the committee staff, Donald Sanders, bu been briefing senators in the backrooma. Williams has begged for the chance to , participate in the briefinl• and present bis side of the case. He bu been turped down coldly. The senators want to remove the ABSCAM taint from their institution with as little commotion as possible. WILLIAMS IS euilty. all right. He is guilty of consorting with undercover agents who sougbt to corrupt him while the FBI filmed the scene with hidden cameras. There bad been other congressional performers. who bad walked off the FBI set, thelr pockets and briefcases stuffed with $100 bills pressed on them by the undercover men. But Williams refused the bribe, protestlnJ, "No, no, no. no." Yea, Williams is guilty of appearing 011 the ABSCAM videotapes in the role of a politician on the make. He is guilty of getting himself taHed with the ABSCAM label, wblcb hu become the new buzzword for political corrupUon. He is guilty of having his face projected on the front pages in the same company with congressmen who took bribes. Puccio even convinced a Jury that Williams was gullty. Guilty of what? He turned down a $50,000 bribe. He rejected the G·men's su_ggestion that be illegally hide bi.a interest in a titanium mine. He also refused to have any part of a tax.avoidance sche me. Then what crime did Williama commit? He bouled of b1a lnfluence with hl&b eovemment offlctala. But be was coached by an FBI hirelln1 who assured Williams that the statemenll would be meanin1leas -Juat "b.1." to persuade an Arab ahelll' to invest $190 million in a lltanlum mine. THE SENATOR sougbt n o government contracu; in fact, be had no intention of doing so. Essentially. be Jll:I 11111111 was convicted of dealing in hot air and empty promises, which are every politicJan's stock in trade. My associate Indy Badhwar bas spent months investigating the Williams case. He has found more misconduct by the government than by Williama. For example, vital exculpatory documents were withheld from Williams' attorneys. Tbeae were shown after the trial to one of the jurors, Salvatore Ottoviano, who bad voted to convict Williams. Ottoviano swore out an affidavit, under penalty of perjury, that be would have "voted not guilty on all counts and would under no circumstances have changed my vote to guilty" if be bad seen the suppressed Justice Department documen\s. All it would have taken was one juror to block Williams' conviction. In fact, ~ the other jurors might have joined ln acquitting the senator if only the bidden evidence bad been made available to the jury. The real guilt In the Williams case, I believe. s hould be laid on the prosecution team. Here's the shameful rollcall: Thomas Puccio, chief proeecutor - He spent 13 months tryin1 to draw Williams into a criminal conspiracy. Yet Puccio could cite nothing in the senator's record that warranted an Investigation. Puccio covered up misconduct by the prosecution team and misled the U.S. attorney's office into bellevin& that Williams bad a hidden interest in the titanium mlne. It was Puccio, in fact, who bad the hidden I nterest. He was an unnamed collaborator in a book about ABSCAM. The sales might be hurt lf his bt11est fish should escape from the net. MEL WEINBEaG, convicted con man and perjurer -He was paid by the FBI to pose as the representative ot· a phony sheik. He used all the tric.U of the con man's trade to lure Wlllianls into the ABSCAM trap. Again and again, the senator refused the bait, but .Weinberg kept coming back with something more enticing. Weinberg even produced a forged letter, with Williams' copied signatu~. in an attempt to incriminate him. Anthony Amoroso,· undercover FBI agent -There is sworn testimony that he "lost bi.a professional Judiment ... and began soliciting improper conduct by Williams .·• He tried to put incriminating statements into the senator's mouth. When Williama refused the $50,000 bribe and tried to explain IQ ethics, Amoroeo n.bed loto the room and hllerrupted tbe exculpatory remarks on the pretext that a long-distance call awaited the phony sheik . The Justice Department isn't supposed lo enforce the law by creating crimes and entrapping people into com milting them. For the sake of justice, the Senate should look beyond the Williams case into the methods u.aed to nail him. 1 State aid for rail service now law Although it may prove to be nothing mor e than lip service , rail transportation in California got official encouragement from the Legislature in a measure just signed by the eovemor. The bipartisan bill , authored by Assemblymen Chet Wray <D> and Phil Wyman (R). mandates subsidies for inter·d ty and commuter rail services as a permanent part of future state budgeu. THE STATE currently has been aupplemenUne funding for rail services between Lo6 Angeles and San Diego, as well as the Oakland to Los Angeles run through the San Joaquin Valley. Additionally it bas contributed to \he commuter line ffom San Jose to San Francisco. But these funds have been pro· vided through special appropriattgn bills. The new measure, AB 1010, intends that future fundine will be included in the slate budget as a matter of course. The amounts to be provided will be determined each budget year and will ;·. llll WITlll be subject to the usual le1islative review of budget items. While ll la no guarantee that future Leplatures will approve such funds in the budget or that a future governor will not delete aucb appropriations, the measure is viewed as establl.thinl policy for the continued Reagan views can baf fie Ronald Rea1an ls doin1 wonden for the hearing aid industry. I am sure there are many Americana who are rushing out to buy an ear·piece because they can't believe what California Ronnie seema to be aayin1. Tbe two m01t recent examples are bla pled1e to keep the royal family in 111•11111 power ln Saudi Arabia and teWu the P.OOr ol the workl that free eoterprlae la their path out of poverty. In the first incident at bl• pr ... COIDfennce a few da19 back, ao,nle tald tbe U.S. WUD't loiaa to I-' .Ut happened ln Iran happen to Sauclt Arabia. Wbat doet tbat meanT ID Iran, waliappy lranlana cwerthrn tbe Shah, It WU m lntmaal. dom..UC ...... ~ II tbe PnUdmt folal to Mid the 12nd Alrbome tn to prot.d the Saudi royal famllr ll ~t 8audla want a eh:,f~ ln perameaU HM Roaale for Vlelaam IO IOGO 1 In bis speech In Philadelphia, President Ron said the poor countries of the world should simply do what Americana did -pull themselves up by their bootstr~J>• and le( free enlerprtae solvethilr p ems as we did In America. What baloney. THE PIONBB&I wbo came to America stole much of what they sot from the people wbo owned It before them. They came to a land with enormous natural resources lDcludlnl the richest farmland lD the world . They came from an advanced industrial society ln the mldlt of the Industrial Revolution (Adam Smith's Wealth of N aUoDI and the Declaration of Independence were publlahed in the same year -lTJt). Beyond that, tbe early Americans succeeded lD ~oft the ltaperialllt power that wu ~ AIMI, ft.Dally, It II bardlJ wben tbe U.S. rovemment 1 bllUoa1 1ubtklillac aartculture and .....,.,.. So, ....._ 111)' Marini lt =and I ml1\lnderttood Pr"ldent • or, the Bl1 Wransler on PIDDIJIYHia 11 not too 1mart. I Jalt came back from the-... llJ' ................. support of the rail services. Wray halhs the measure's adoption aa ~. providing "a cost·effective way to . protect California's in vestment in "4 passenger rail service as well as to :' develop and maintain fiscally sound ;!~. alternatives to the car and bus." :: "ONE OF TUE BILL'S provisions • calls for a sensible farebox recovery •• plan forcing paasen~r rail ..-vice to ~;! pay its way or be dro peel," Wray said. _ · Explainin1 the b {), Wray said it <:· specifically provides funds for the rail •. program be appropriated annually ·~ through the budget. ;; Tb~bill also authorizes the Callloraia : Transportation Comlf)iaaion to allocate funds for both capital and operatiq purposes on a project by project bull, requires the California Transportation ~ A1ency to adhere to strict reportJ.ni ~ .... criteria as to the scope and d.lrectJon ot .,: the rail program, and authori1e1 the ;·!. acquisition of abandoned rail lines wtth ;::· potential llcht rail use. :· WRETBEa IT wlll 1ive lmpetua to any Immediate e1panalon1 of rail •• · service in Callforpia or not lt appears to direct the state towards developlaa a mucb·needed transportation HJ"Vlce. Overcrowded airports and iDcreuiq : costs ol air transportation combble to make rapid rail tranalt • Ylable alternative to air transport between CallfQrDla'a major cities. The procrw made in this mode of tranaportatlc. lD Japan, Weal Germany, and more r«entlJ ln France, bu demonatrated the potential for the V .S. Woadw why a. .. u ·1 trytna to atop_, arms race wltfl •u1la •M• be'• ltartJDa ...... ....._., ....... lD .... _ Mlddlet:utT o . .i. ,( a1 , ----------~ .... ------~~~-----.--lml!ll'-----------O-ra_n~g~•-C_o_•~•.tD_A_l~LY~P~IL~O-~~/M~o~n~d~•~Y·~N~o~v~e~m~b~t~r9~,~1~9~81.;... ____ _.. __ ... ,....,,.,A,;.;...,--. Vitamin · ne~d up DBAa PAT OUNNr I llave 9-eard a.at ...... taldq "9 ... .._. ct111trol pW ..... laereHed an• for ,,., vl&a•I•• Hd de•~ M9I r.r ;.. Pleue ll•• me a · ,....... ' I ' .Q.p., Newport>Bead1 $clenUtic 1tudl lndlcate th~t women who' uae oral c radeptlves bav& an in~ need for iamla 86 (pyridoxloe>. foll~ acid <folacJn , Vitamin C (afcorblc acid), Vitamin Ql2 ind Vltamln E . A decreased need for Vitamin A, iron and copper was found. Check with ypur own physlcian befQre starting a aelf-prescribed program for~slble vitamin deficiency. Specific blood s• can determine lf you require vitam • uppfer;nent.s. . . . ' Completion/omu DEAR PAT DUPIJN: I am plaaatac to have a bedrobm and bath added to my houe. My •elgbbor told me It'• a pod Idea to rue a "Notice of Completlon" form to protect myaeH. c .. you tell me what this ls and what tiJld ol p~ It provides? I 1 P.L., BaatlngCoa Beach APOLOGY DUE Austr ian Trade Min ister Jose f Star·ibacher said he intends to apologize formally t o singer Harr~· Belafonle . above. who was a lle gedl y denied ~ entr y to a disco because)le is black. Hondas recalled for rust Ringo· g ets :be st <>1 help n ·rummer's album aided by Paul, George, Stills !f.,~~~ and dlvene, and it wu clear he reaufts In "a unique, hoped the album and aln1le will 1tyJe"' HOLLYWOOD -With more , .. lore~ eellln1 power. Whtie JUnco hu returned to thin a UWe help from frieodl, Does be ftel hla muslclanatUp recordln1, be atlll real1t1 Rln10 Starr bu procluced ~ h ~ 1-i..ed 1 ... seventh album a!nce the a .. u.. H ~· over,,_ am d •ue playing before audiences. Jn broke up. It la titled "Stop and atttntlon paid to ht• former reoeat yean he mide apeclal Smell the Rotes." partners! • P"P ear• n c e 1 -al t b • J • h1 0 bu "That wu true in the first Ban1ladeah concert and "The t • 1 rst •I m alnce "Bad couple of yean of lhe BeaUea. ll Last Wiltz" farewell of The Boy" 18 monlhl •1o: "It •old ln waan'l until I c1me to this B•nd. But he hun't toured al.nee the hWldreds.'' he .. ,. wryly· country that l found out that the Beatles "ave up the road lo "Stop" -"ma destined for a h • better fate, •Ion& with the sln&le ot er musicians admired my 1986. And he bu no plana to "Wrack Ky Braln. ·• After th resume. days ln releue, both qualllled "It's dllficult for a drummer ror the charts. T h e a l b u m because he's in the back o1 the Rln10 got the best kind of stage, and the other musicianl help: Paul McCartney produced COVeT CaTTieS the are up front," he explained . two of the numbers, George "That means you have to find Harrison two (including "wrack m e S S a g e : players who are good enough to My Brain,") Harry NUlaon three carry their end, yet not too good and Stephen StiJJa one. ' ' S p e C i a l to overshadow the drummer." The album cover carries the t h Q n k S • . t O He added the latter with a messaee: "Special thank.a and smile. all my love to Barbar• who 1ot B ba Ringo has returned to England ar Ta.,, r me out of bed to make this a ter a six.year absence. He album and to whom this albuJD explained why: "Barbara Joves is dedicated." The reference ls England, and my three children t.o actress Barbara Bach, whom style. Drummers were asked to are there, so it seemed like a he mal;ried last April. play like I played, and that isn't good time to go back. I used to The Starrs left their English easy. · be restricted on visits to country house to. launch the "Why? Because I'm naturally England (for tax reasons). so I aJbum1 in this country, and the I e It.handed but I p J a)\ could only see them briefly or us ually reticent Ringo was right-handed. I was born they would have to join me ln submitting to a round of left ·handed, but my Monte Carlo. Now they're 45 interviews. grandmother believed that was minutes away." I found him in his Beverly a witch's spell and she made me Did the return to his homeland Wilshire suite (registered as Mr. write right-handed. Now when I cause tax trouble? DETROIT (AP ) and Mrs. Richard Starkey, his go from the trap drum to the .. There'sonlyonetroublewtth American Honda Motor pre·Bealle name) in boots, tom-toms, I have to reach under, taxes: 'paying them. Actually '6 Notice of CofT\pletion (forms available at stationery stores) should be filed with the county recorder wittlin 10 days of the job's scheduled completion. Either the consumer or the contractor. ir designated as an agent, may m~. Once the notice is recorded, subcontractors, laborers and suppliers have 30 "days in which to file any claims of lien; the general contractor bas 60 days. If no completion notice is recorded, the filing period of claims of lien is extended to 90 days from completion of the project. Co. is recalling about jeans, candy-striped shirt with like this." taxes are about the same here 930,0iOO ca r s for goldstarandringinhisleftear He demonstrated th e and in England . But tile TWONUMBERS f\ inspection and repair of lobe. His conversation was o n underhanded reach, which writeoffs are better here." Paul McCartney a possible problem with r:..;;;..;;..;...,..;..;;;;.;;.,~~=;;..:;;,.;=-:..:..=:,_;:;j~=---_..,;.;..:..;...:..:..;;_.:.:...:..:.:...:...:....::._;_.:...=.:..:.:..:.......:~:...:..:::__~:...:.:.::.=.::.:....::.:..:...==:-=.:.:::.:.:_ __ _.:_=:...::.:=:.:..::.:::!,_ __ _ 'C' stamps for U.S. only DEAR READERS: The U.S. Pos tal Service reminds consumers that the non-depominated "C" postage stamps and postcards <costing 20 cents and 13 cents, respectively), which weot into use Nov. 1 are for use within the United States only and are prohibited for use on international mail. Consumers mailing. letters overseas should use stamps bearing "t!nominations. such as a coin bination of 18-cent stamps and other denominated stamps. The supply or "C" stamps will be phased out eventually and replaced by regular stamp issues. Forms free by phone DEAR PAT DUNN: I work during the day and •II\ unable to phone the Internal Reven• Setvke to prder tax forms and pabllcatkles. Now t•at pottage ls zt centl • letter, It doesn't seem fair Ua1t I bave to pay that mach to get Information I need to me my tax return next ye~r. ' t P.G., Newport Beach "' Fort"°ately for YoU and other taxpayers wbO are unable lo make personal phone calls during business hours, the IRS has implemented a new program whereby taxpayers may order forms and publications 24 hours a day. The toll.free number is <800> 242-4585. ... "Got a problem? Then write to Pat \..l Dunn. Pat will cut r~ t~. getting • the a~r• and action you need to • aoh~ 1nequit~1 m gowrnment and business. Moil your questioM to Pat n Dunn. At Your Service, Orange Coo.3t Daily Pilot, P.O. Ben 1560, Co1ta Mesa , CA 92626 " • rusting undercarriages, the automaker said. "The potential problem appears to be limited lo cars driven in a specific g~ographic area where corrosive road s alt is u sed extensively to aid in snow and ice removal," Honda said. Prolonged contact with road salt could co rrode and weak en some undercarriage componen ts. but n o injuries have been reported In connection with the problem , said Honda, which is based In Gardena, Calif. The recall includes 1973-79 Civic models. 1976-79 Accords and 1979 Preludes. Only about 380,000 of the cars were sold originally in "saJt belt" states but another 550,000 cars are being recalled because o r possible ow n er relocation, the automaker said. The company said any necessary repairs will be made al no cost to the owners. SFU record SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A r eco rd enrolJment was reported at San Francisco Stale University . Officials said 24,467 students were enrolled , an increase over last year of 335 students. PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK 1s completing the final phase of Magnolia Court in the beautiful M~soleum of the PacJflc. We still hove choice locations available and offer a monthly savings pion. Discounts ranging from $205 to S68k0 available until Dec. I , 1981 . i al to us now about the advantages of purchasing before the need arises. I ANO MORTUARY 50) Pacific View Drive N~ Beach. Colifornio (714) 6'44·2700 E;lq I.. I J 'J • ··ti J 11. II I I I )II ~I J ;-:in 'JllJ ..:th ')I at First Interstate Bank Corona Del MK f~ Between now and Nov. 17, you could win $50 just for finding out how easy our Dar & Night Teller• machine is to use. Because we'll be inserting $50 bills and $1 bills along with the play money we use to de monstrate our auto- matic teller machine. But, more importantly, you'll find out how our Day & Night Teller machine puts the bank at your finger tips. When you have an account with us, our Day & Night Teller machine allows you to get cash. make deposits, transfer money between your savings account and your checking account, get account balances. and make Firs t Interstate loan and credit card payments. Any- time, any day, 24 hours a day. And at mofe places in California than any other bank. All you need is our First Interstate Bancard. and we'll be happy to help you apply for one. And don't for:~et: the First Interstate Bancard is the ooly bank card that lets you get instant cash at more than 500 Day & Night Teller machines across our ll·Western state territory. See how easy our Day & Night Teller machine is to use. There cou ld be $50 in it for you. But even if YQU don't win cash, you can't lose: ever yone who stops by gets a free gift . Instant cash. It com es with the territory. "" I l'J I 1.) ·d1 ,,,., I ro f (I I 1111 ,~,1 c·: , ll J • I c1 : •. llJI. /'fl •. I 1° (I" l'/11 ____ ._..~----------c Orange Cont DAILY '9LOT1Mond1y, November 9, 1981 rf Hell exists, it must be end of a ... 1c.1on1 review ot data from th• PtOMer apace pro1ram. &artier \11111 WMIE, re1earcben r•veaitd lbere wtrt eartbquakt1, voleaDotl and µp~ Hatbe .• ~ IHI ... ~rt• I jij:,t9ft•I 1ae1..-•M;elll t 'ol •••t * •l1Uor •l11t• •couM* wldle ........ eo Admin11tratlon-Amea RtHarch Center. T htn the vlaltor would tncount•r a mill nu.ct wlth acid and aullvr. ''Jr ~ 1tuck your hand out 11) UU. lbUll, It would :r/ltt.ly bUra ,... band, II .. ' "It'• verr .-oeatra&ed tulfurte acld, • ..,.re.t 1ulturie aoW. •• ft• oloudl srow denier, but tben, IO mU.. above th• planet tlle atmo1pb•re becom11 eomplMl)' clear and rtmalna cl .. r on the planet'• dimly lit awface. On the 1round, - on oo~ic, J{enus ml1ht be tliJappolnted wtth tile view, Toon 1ald. "The 1ky lJ not blue. Jt't aort of a peach color," he Hid. "You don't aee UtUe cloudl =rt by. You Just 1ee a aua , dlffuae, pink 1tow. At al1bt, there are no atan." Nor could people on Venua aee the aun, and there could be no science ot utronoQJy on a planet that hu fuclnated earthbound 11tronomer1 throush th• a1t1. Betide the beat, a vl1ltor to Venua would feel pre11ure about equal to that 3,000 feet below aea level on Earth. The air would be 50 times aa den1e. •'There la some debate on whether you would boU· first or be cruilhed by the pret1un," 11tdToon. The cloud 1y1tem, accorcl1n1 t o Conway Leovy of the Unlveralty of Wuhln1ton, 11 a three·llered shroud with a middle tbat spins about tbe planet once every tour days. The upper and lower layers myaterloualy rotate u slowly u the planet, maklnl one rotation every W Earth day11 he aald. Date from the Pioneer orbiter hb 1hown the heat on Venus ia due to the 1reenhouae eftect. a phenomenon In which temperature Increases with the level ot carbon dioxide. Venus has 300,000 Umea the level or carbon dioxide round on earth. Toon eald th• Earth'• carbon dioxide level could double within tbe next century lf aoclety continues to rely on fos1ll fuel1 , addln1 that the Venus model •hould aerve u a warnint. A doublln1 In the earth'• carbon dioxide level could increase the Earth 's temperature enou1h to melt part of the polar Ice cap. That coul~ ralae the level of the ocean by 15 feet to 20 reet, Donald Hunten, a University ot Arizona researcher who co·chaired the conference, called the continued reliance on fossil tuela "the moat dangerous" ractor facing the Earth today. Armed sentry. fine with them Florida residents pleased with anti-crime measures GOLDEN BEACH, Fla. (AP> -The residents of the affluent Dade County community of Golden Beach say they're pleated that they now have to pass by an armed sentry to get to their homes. That's because tbe •entry la there to let them In, and keep outsiders out. Armed police be1an sentry duty laat week in a new guardhouse alon1 the only thorou1hfare linking this town of 612 people to the rest of crime-plagued Dade County. Six other alreets that intersect State Road AlA were sealed off last month. Residents· appeared pleased that the anti-crime meuurea, proposed 18 months ago, had gone into effect. "Yea!" said Gloria Berdick, who drove up to the guardhouse stop sign and Dashed an OK hand signal t.o U . Ctfll rles Kramer. "lt'a finally atarte4. I'm Vef'Y, very thrilled." Residents and town workers will be issued windshield stickers that allow them to be identified and waved through. The north of Miami Beach was determined to remain an oasis of privacy and aafet1 within Dade County, where violent crime has skyrocketed, by keeping out criminals, curious tourists, joggers and anyone else deemed unwelcome. Dade County's incidence or violent crime rose 96.4 percent between 1979 and 1980, and ill total of 32,221 violent crimes last year ranked behind only much larger New York, Los Angeles and Chicago. By mid-October. 18 burglaries and no violent crimes had been reported in Golden Beach. 4 seen for car price cut despite sales dip Writer appointed SACRAMENTO CAP > - Political activist a nd writer Muriel "Mickey" Ziffren of Malibu was appointed to the state Fair Political Practices Com mission by Secretary of State March Fong Eu. The five -member commissio n enforces state laws on disclosure of campaign contri butions, spending and gifts . lobbyist activities and conflicts of interest. DETROIT CAP> -Despite another sharp plunge in car sales during October and the failure of rebates to attract buyers, industry analysts 1ee littlre chance that automakers will cut prices OJl their 1912 modeb. · ''There's a lot of c:ost preaaure on them," said David Healy, analyst for Drexel Burnham Lambert Inc. in New York City. "Waae costs in the industry are still rising, other costs are riain1 and wlth the ble losses the comparues have just announced for the third quarter or 1981. There's a great reluctance to cut prices and lose even more money." Domestic automak.ers said 11ales feU 26 percent in October from the same month a year ago, making it the industry's worst October sin ce the recession year-or 1958. That news came one week after financial rep0rta from Ford Me>aor Co. and CbrJ*r Corp .. put industrywide lOIM8 for the July-September quarter a $969 million. Sales declined In spite of vwasive reb.ates and o'ber ~ve p"'IJ'aml offered b~ four •( the rive domesliC\ manufacturers. Escept, for a brief a(>an in late Septem'-, tbe .automaten have been uaiq tbe i.ncenthm since early Aufall. Tbe !Wtes ..,lped boost aalea 23.1 percent in August, but by September the effect of the incentives appeared to be slackening. Sales were up 6.7 percent for September with a decline of 0.9 percent the last 10 -days of tbe month, when most incentive proirems ended temporarily. "Traditionally. rebates have been sort of a device you use ·when you've got a temporary problem," Healy said . "Rebates may not be the answer lD a period of prolonge d 1lowdown in the economy.'' Analysts say the effect of rebates has been lessened by their repeated use and the discounts are not enough to overcome the discouraging effect of higher prices. At General Motors Corp. for example, the price of the average 1982 car ia more than $10,000. "The public understands that as long as sales are bad, there is going to be some kind of sales promotion out of Detroit," said Maryann Keller, analyst for Paine Webber, Mitchell Hutchins & Co. in New York: City. ·'You cannot use the same aspirin for weeks on end," added Arvid Jouppi , First Amendment issues eyed Panel would deal with conflicts, back legislation SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -The executive board of a state Creedom of lnformaUon aroup said it will work for establishment of a state advtaory commission to deal with conflicts over First Amendment issues. The commission, made up of memben of Ute J)ublic, also would recommend new te1i1lation on freedom of information matters. The California FTeedom of Information Committee's executive board voted to work toward formation of the public commlulon after a study of a similar commission in New York at.ate. Other states also have commissions that deal with First Amendment problems. OR. GEORGE L. HAJNES. leeding authority in real estate, taxation & investments dl·scueses: • Four basic rules to greater we•lth • President Reagan's recent tax reforms & high return lnve~ment opportunities. DOM'T DIMY Yc>ulal TNS OffolTUMTY T-.-.. I0. 7:JO,_ n.r .. -..1z. 7:H,... .....,... .. ... :Mlt ... JIJllrtilllSt. IHOl. ....... Aft. c..w... ,..,._ ~ . .,. lllTCOUIT PMAMCIM, IMC.. 17141 ff6.HIJ If vou don't want The state FOi Committee represents media organizations and individual newspapers and broadcasters, and ls headed by George Brand, editor ot the Telegram-Tribune in San Luis Obispo. The group's executive board also voted to call oa the legislature to override Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's veto of a bill, AB909, to require public Inspection ot police reports. The board said it will express to California ·a congreaaional delegation opposition to any restrictive amendments to the federal Freedom of Information Act, and decided ·to seek comment from journalists and attorneys on proposed changes in Cali(omia'a open meetings and public r1!cordl aet. Detroit-based analyst for Rooney, Pace Inc The analysts doubt the automake<rs will c hoose the alternative of cutting prices in an attempt to inspire consumer confidence in the n ew car market. Ms. Keller and Jouppi said the higher prices and discount strategy are determined by the companies' need to cut losses and start making profits again. '·Rebates are the logical choice because they are a temporary thing," said Ms. Keller. "If the market turned quickly, they could withdraw rebates and charge the kind of prices they need." "Once price incrtases have been announced, it is easier to maintain them than it is to push them back and then bring them up again" later, Jouppi said. "If .you cul the prices $800 instead of providing a rebate of S600 it would have virtually no eUect," he added "H yqu establish the lower price the consumer could say there's no hurry" to buy. There is some evidence in the October sales figures to support that theory. Chrysler held prices on the 1982 models of some or its most popular cars at 1981 levels but still the company's sales fell 17 .2 percent for the month. The continuing incentive progr.ams also have car dealen worried, mostly about what happens when rebates end. "Tbe dealers aren't happy with the manufacturers' pricing structure,·' ·said Frank McCarthy, executive vice pres ide nt of the National Automobile Dealers Association. ·'The concern the dealers have is that with the termination of the incentive programs , combined with the higher 1982 prices, the gap is going to be a mighty big deterrent to people buying cars." ----"OU.ER COASTER -A section of railroad track near Strelna, Alaska, shows effects of permafrost thawing. which causes the land to settle and creates major engineering problems. __, to drink- Number one to Phoenix, and getting better every day. Now you can fly us to Phoenix for as low as S36, one-way. There's no lower fare in the air. And nobody gets you _9>ere as often or lY. • 1 40 &.111. An 9·401.m. lw 7 00&."' Al. 1·111 m. That's our business MEMORIAL HOSPITAL Call 842-2734 Alcohollsm Recovery Sirvlcn · 301 Vlctora. Strwt c-. Mela, CA mu Approvicl for Mldlc.n as fast. More nonstops than anyone. Fly Republic to Phoenix from 3 Los Angeles are. airports. Choose from 3 nonstops out of Burbenk, 2 nonstops out of On~rlo (with a third nonstop starting November 19, 1981), or 4 nonstops out of Orange County. Get down to businfls with our 'xclusive Business Coach ... Try out our executive comfort at far less than first class fares. Complimentary cocktails, extra elbow room, loads of leg room and wide two-two seating besides. All this for just SBO. Frequent Ftyers•• fly frH. Ask about our super F~utf'lt Flyer program for bonus free flights to anywnere in our domestic route ~tem. It's simple, it's on-going and its all for you. U ISllll\. 2.17p.m 6 !hm. •·•pm. lv. 7:00 •.II\. Al l:st • m , . ...,,.., J4011.m (eft 11/lMI) s:n P·"'· 1:111."'. ...... On!!pC!l!!!!y ........... lw. 7:20 • "' Al. t II• m • 00. "' t :st. m. (<rff. IVOl .. I) ll:4IS1m. (eft. 11/IMI) S:J0p111, l•l011m. II <IO• m 11·si. m. s·sspm 6 06p:m lv 7 J0tlTI Ar 7 2Jam. I 1SplTI I 15pm (('ff. 11/IMI) J.40 p.m, >·42 pm. ........ ,,_..._ .. O!!!!pCO!!!!!y lv 7 OS•m Al. 7 10•m 11 OS a,191, II 10 IJ\'I (tff. llllt/11) 11 ·ss a."'. SIS pm •• JOp.m. t Hp.IT!. (tff. 11/lt.'ll) U .OJpm. s·21 p.m t•pm. '·"°'"' Scheduln end '"" subtKt to ~ Without notoee .. --=--"'-"~,__....~------...---------....... --...-------------~~~~~,.----------------------------------------~--!""9'!"..-._.;,.._.,..-. DallyPHlt MONDAY, NOV. 9, 1911 CAVALCADE 82·3 111111 ClllT COMICS 84 TELEVISION 86 / lrl' o : Beauty beckoning • Ill her backyard Hortense Miller sure knows her posies. And that's no easy task when fl you have between 1,200 and 1,500 11 , varieties of native and exotic 1, plants in your backyard. •r! And while the Laguna Beach . , octogenarian claims she can't L tell one fern from another (or ,, "succulents, for that matter" I, ,. , . she readily identifies numerous f> species on a personally guided tour of her 2.5-acre botanicaJ r garden estate overlooking Boat Canyon. She'll tell you her preferences, too. "I like litUe flowers. Millions and millions of them· -even if they onJy last two weeks," she says. And, she'll tell you, she tioes n't care much for big Clowers. "TaJce dahlias, for example," Among the more than 1.200 nati~ and uotic plants are the bulbtue 1 abope J and ligularia t top J. commonly known as the leopard plant. l Dally Pilot Photol by Lee Payne she says. "They look like bed pillows." Her gardens include native plants such as mesquite and succulents , and the greenery spreads down the steep canyon that denotes the rear of her large property . Mrs . Miller and her late husband bought the canyon lop parcel nearly 24 years ago for $20 ,000. The hou se was completed in 1959 and she began to poke around the ground with a trowel , bags of seeds and cuttings. As the years went by, the numbers and varieties of plants increased lo the point where she was sought out by garden clubs to conduct lours of her place. Three years ago, she deeded the property lo Laguna Beach - turning over the gardens and her two-bedroom house to the city after she dies. And, while she continues to live in the house and work in the gardens, the city's recreation department coordinates tours of ·the gardens for groups ranging from garden clubs to botany classes. Mrs. Miller says there are strings attached to her generous gifl to Laguna Beach. For one thing, the city must coordinate tours of the gardens through its recreation department. For another, the city can never use the property for anything but a garden site open to the public. "If the city tries to build on it, or sell it, the deal's off and they lose it," she says, a defiant grin on her face. "It's a place you'IJ be able to bring your grandchildren to," she says. If you're interested in a tour of the Hortense Miller gardens, call the city's recreation department for an appointment al 497-3311. A male exotic dancer strips "For Ladies Only." See TV, Page 86. -------·--------·----.. - * Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Monday. November 9, 1981 USEUM ON RAIL V1s1tors sit inside ooden wagons that move slowly so pamtin~s an be viewed at the Marais cultural center Paris. Exhibition by 19th century British Quitting Business 50% OFF WEDNESDAY, NOV. 11, 1981 10:00 a.m. thru 4:00 p.m. • Crocks • Clay Cookers • Kitchen Accessories • Jack Daniel Items • Handcrafted Items • Decorator Tins etc., etc .• etc. O'ffnnegan~~ c:uockc~r"'tY shoppe 471 N. Newport Blvtl Ncwpon Beach CA 92663 Specializing in Crocks & Oistinctivl' Stonl'wdre The Alliance ro Save Energy has prepared a brochure mat coorams I 2 simple, 1nexpenSJve measures to take which can cur down your home energy use by 25°'ti That m turn can cut down the amount of money you pay for home rmergy (For exampf8 Old you know that electocal outlets "leak· heat' The brochure will rel/ you how to prevent 11 and save ) The brochure will also tell you aoout easy things to do to chimneys and flues. to pipes and ducts. ro shower heads. to electocat out- lets, to washing machines to doors and win- dows to water hearers Do them all. and cut your Pnefgy use Oy 25·~ The brochure •ANN LANDERS •ERMA BOMBECK •HOROSCOPE Visual aid viewed a rtist Willi am Turner and the unusual method of viewing l h<' \\ orks 1s dra wing a sell -out crowd , Where to go this weekend? PUotWeellendet" ENTERTAINMENT MAGAZINE New look! New size! Every Frtday! For home delivery, call 642-4321 contains accurate diagrams and easy to follow dlfections Take our advice Send tor our tree brochure. The 25% Solution Ir can save you plonty of money Th• Alllanc• to SaWt Energy Box 51200. Wa1hlngton, D.C. 20031 Pled~5end~YolJ1t'Mgy·<;.J•N>g mOflt.l)I ~1t111nqo1ocnme /\/AM£ Ctr'> Sl,.TE DEAR ANN LANDERS : This ls intended to enlighten those bedroom ~crobats who insist that most woman fake it. The writer claims that 90 percent or the moans and groans are "Academy Award performances·· designed to protect the male ego, when in truth they are getting very little out or it. . You s~ould have set the record s traight by informing the reading public that when a woman has an orgasm a light red rash appears on her neck and chest. No rash no orgasm. It's as simple as that. . I am asking that you check this out with the experts, or would you feel like a traitor to your sex if you blew their cover? -MAYBE IT'S MEASLES CIDAHO FALLS1 DEAR MEASLES: You are mistaken at the top of your lungs. That rosy rash you speak or appears on some women when they reach a high level of sexual excitement. It Is not proof of climax. So maybe It IS·measles. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My heart goes out lo the woman in Illinois who has been hooked on Valium for 17 years. She said she felt like a zombie a non-person -and hated the fact that she didn·t have the will lo assert h e r self because chemicals shaped he r personality and ran her life. For many years I was on Valium AND alcohol. I was completely lost. One day w~en I just couldn •t stand myself another minute. I checked into a drug treatment center. That was l wo yea r s ago. I can truthfully s ay that today I am a different person. I have regained my self-respect. can say .. NO .. when I don·t choose to do something and I a m no longer a puppet on a string. There IS help out there for people who want it. They can look up Alcoholics Anonymous in the phone book and check d_rug a b.use centers . Thank God m y nightmarish days are behind me. I hope all those who see themselves in this letter will take my advice and free themselves from the prison of addiction. A LUCKY SURVIVOR IN NEBRASKA DEAR SURVIVOR: You are luckier than you may realize. People who mix Valium and booze are playing Russian roulette. The combination can be lethal. Thanks for plugging the drug abase centers. They do a fantastic job for people who really want to clean up their act. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My fian.ce and I are having problems planning our wedding reception. My parents· religion frowns on alcohol and they don't want anv served. · We have agreed not lo have a bar. but we do want wine so we can have toasts. My fi a nce and I have offered to pay for it ourselves My father made it clear it has nothing to do with money. He sa id. ··r have never served alcohol to m y guests and I am not going to start now ... Unless we agree to toast with a punch he refuses to have anything to do with the reception .. Isn't he being ridicuJous ly s tubborn'! We read you in the Bos ton Globe every day and will abide by your decision. POVERTY-STRICKEN DEAR STRICK : There are worse things than not having wine at your wedding reception. One is not having your parents. Since your father's objections are based on his religious convictions, they are valid. I hope you and your fiance will accept his decision with grace and have a happy wedding. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I must respond to .. Up F'ront in J ersey ... He sounds like the prot,Jd o wne r of a s mart-alec k bumper slacker that reads : .. I may be slow. but I'm ahead of vou ... The national speed limit was lowered lo. ~elp Americans deal with the energy c rlSls, not for safely reasons. The lower death toll was a fringe benefit. If ··up Front" was interested in saving lives on the road. he would be a s trong ad\'ocate of improved driver education. tougher d r iver registration. mandator y vehicle inspection. seatbelt promotion. more e ff1 <:1e ntl\' designed and belter·mamtained "eh1c le.s and. lastly. ·courtesy on the h1ghwa~. So, .. Up Front:· next time someone rides your tail, consider the poss1b1hty that the person may have a legitimate reason to want lo pass you. If you would move over or give him an opportunit~· to go ahead. you would no longer be irritated tw a tail ·gater . STUCK BEHIND . IN CHICAGO 0.EAR STUCK : Thanks for a thoughtfuJ letter, and the opportunity to add a word or my own. I wonder how many of you readers are aware of the way you take out your anger and hostUitles on other drivers. I wonder, too, if you know it could mean months in a bospitaJ or an eternity in the graveyard. The next time you feel like getting even with a driver who has cut you off or slowed you down, or made you miss a ligbt, .stop a minute and think. Is it worth it? If you could walk through the accident ward of any hospital or pay a vislt to any emergency room at midnight, you would get the answer mighty rast. Gomg to.a weddJng'! Giuing OM'! Ot ltanding up in OM? Even if you're .alrtody married AM LondeT1' com,Utel11 new "The BricU'• G~" will aruwn quutimu.aboul today'• weddhag•. For.a copy, •end.a dollar, plw .a long, 1el/raddreaaed, stamped envelope (20 cent• postageJ to Ann LatttUrs. P.O. Bor 11995. Chkago' Ill. 60611. Virtues discovered SAN FRANCISCO -.. Whal is a weed'.''. Emerson once asked. He replie<;I to his own question ... A plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered:· It often seems to me that this query. and its answer, is the story of my life. For the first half of my life, say up to about age 40, I was indeed a weed. That is to say, I never got to do what I really liked to do. I was a plant whose virtues had not been discovered. Lillie did I know that they would be di scovered. and in the most surprising way and place. I knew I wanted to write and I wanted lo write in the newspapers. and there were people who were willing to pav me to do just that. · But the trouble is I could not find people who would pay me money to write for newspapers the way I wanted to write. I wanted lo tell the truth about myselC in the way that Montaigne did, and there weren •t many editors in the market for this kind of stuff. I never did meet one in fact. APART FROM TALENT there was one salient difference between Montaigne a nd me. He had plenty of money and plenty of leisure, and I had to make a ~iving in an extremely competitive industry. So I settled for the conditions that prevailed, a~d wrote what THEY wanted. By the lime l got to 8an t,.ranclSco m 1955. I was a confirmed and well-trained weed. I was glad to take any kind or newspaper job I could get, because at 40 it's ·hard to start a new career in this racket. Through a lucky accident. the nature of which I do not recall, I round a weekly outlet in the late New York Herald- Tribune. I wrote a weekly Jetter from San Francisco that appeared on the editorial page of that excellent newspaper. These were sharp, acidulous pieces that most editors shied away from. . CHAllfS McCAii newspaper l admired mosl. took a little of the weediness out of me. Someone had discovered some use for the weed tha t I was. Then another bit of luck hit me The city editor of The Chronicle. on which I was a· reporter-rewriteman. was on holiday. and his assis tant sent me up to Virginia City t o cover a decidedh· unconventional s to r y . It was a feud between the publis her of the Territorial Enterprise. the late Lucius Beebe. and a rabble-rousing Catholic priest. with a tot of peripheral color including two ladies who sold rocks lo visiting rockhounds. The story had everything and I was lucky enough to know it. I did a series of five on the doings. This was when I began. ·at a . late stage. t o emerge from m y weedtness. The man who discovered the virtues that had not as vet been discovered was the editor of The Chronicle. Scott Newhall. SCO'rr ASKED ME to write a sports column on the curious grounds that I could write acidly and knew nothing whatever about my subject matter, save that I was a Giants fan when I was a kid in New York. I bad the effrontery to tum him down the first time, but when hi$ wile asked me I easily succumbed to her charm. I had never met newspaper people like this, who thought exactly the way I did. The sports column was a s uccess, but l always had reservations about it . especially about the ·tads who owned the teams. They were ~ caricature of late 19th century capitalism, with their reserve clauses and all that. ATHE ALLIANCE TO $AW ENEllGY The editor, BUI Miller. thought they were a llttle reminiscent or H.L. Mencken, and he liked that. But then, as we all know in the newspaper business, the Trib went under, taking with it some of lhe finest talent In America. Included in the holocaust was the Wednesday 2,000 wonlt from San Francisco. So I took a year off in Enaland. and oenuaded tbe ma~1ement to let me write a 1eneraJ eoluma. Tlaat II, a Nlumii ._. anytblq tlaat pc= bl&O • • I cllHonNd ...... :.. .... .-r..&~!.!IM But I had tasted blood. Publicatioll, even for a short lime, in the New Yen '\ .............. ( JOUI HfAlJH OR. PETER J. STElf\4CAOHN Help ulcer heal self DEAR DOCTOR : "Once an ulcer, a lways an ulcer"?· I was brought up to believe It. I recall that my rather had an ulcer for years and years. He complained or it, on and orr, until he died or a heart attack at the age of 71. Wh e n I was in my late 20s, I began to complain or stomach pains -- especially when m)· stomach was empty. I had X-rays which revealed a duodenal ulcer. My doctor put me on antacids and praised me for not smoking. Atter a few weeks the pains le rt and I haven't been bothered since. I'm now In m~· rortles. Is it possible that the ulcer has healed? As I reel good, I don't want to go through the rigmarole of taking X-rays again. --:WR. F. DEAR MR. F.: Given half a chance. a duodenal ulcer will heal itself. It's not true: once an ulcer . always an ulcer. A fair estimate is that 50 percent of such ulcers disappear if the patient cooperates. We don ·t know exactly what produces <in ulcer but we are aware that the ulcer sufferer has a good chance for complete rcco\'ery if he or s he will quit smoking. lessen intake or coffee. take antacids until relie,·ed. and try to lh ·e a relaxed. tensionless existence. Abnormal te ns ion is probably as harmful as tobacco. We recall Se\'eral ulcer patients who impro,·ed within weeks uftcr they came into large a mounts of money. Lessened a nxiety about their jobs and financial condition immediatel~­ nt.'ulralized their ul cers. We are not trying to minimize the ulcer problem. e ntreated . ulcers can produce seri ous complications : he morrhage. perforation a nd obstruction to passage of food from stomach into the intestines. But patients who suffer from duodenal ulcer should be optimistic. Theirs is not an incurable malad\". Gi\'en a fair chance. an ulcer may heal. · Dr. Steincrohn welcomes que1Umu from readers. He cannot answer all indiWluolly but will include those of general interest in thil column. Send your que3tions to him in care of the Dally Piwt, P.O. Bor 1560. Cos-ta Mein. Calif. 92626. I ..,. really interested in the recent survey McCall's magazine did among 180,000 teen-agers who said what they wanted most from their parents 'is more advice. Let me get this straight. Are they saying U.at just because they slam a door on your lips they still want to hear what you've aot to say? Wllat a fool I've beer). I thought when my klds hummed the th.eme from "Ora~" during my lectures or drove off in the ~ar while I was explaining my phil~y of lire. they just didn't care. WE 'VE BEEN ON AN un - derstanding-children kick for almost 20 years now. I don't think there's a mother alive whp does not understand children's fears, their legal rights. what moth;ates them, their sensitivities and their- coDcema. It's been a Camelot of ask-not- what-cbildren-can·do-f or-their-parents- but-what-parents-can-do-for-their-kids. God forbid a parent should swim against ,the Ude. but let me tell you where most parents are cQming from. The No. l complaint we get from kids is, ··You don't trust me ... Wrong. You don't trust US. You don't tr~t your parents enough to tell them the truth and have us believe you. You don't trust us enough to risk our disapproval of anything you do. You don't trust us ~o pull from our experience and youth and understand what you·re going through. YOU DON'T TRUST us enough to share what you're feeling. You don·t trust us enough to follow advice that we gi\'e you out or pure love. You play games with us. Find the evidence. Catch that lie. Where did we really go and with whom'! We fear you. Does that surprise you at all? rt shouldn't. We're afraid if we·re too s trict or too dogmatic. we will lose you to peer pressure. drugs, someone e lse·s liberal mother ... or the open road. Two minds m ee t ing from two generations is-difficult at best. Both must compromise. If we talk too much. we're a nag . ff we don·t talk at all. we don't care. IF ft COME TOO CLOSE to your life. we smother you. If we. keep too great a distance. we lose contact altogether. Probably the only optimism I got out oC the survey was a 17-year-old who acknowledged. ··1t ·s tough to be a parent. I let my Mom ramble on and on when she's giving me ~dvice about something. but ·once I get past the lecture. I usually can niter out a piece or two of good ad\'ice. ·· Ask yourself what did your mother get out of it and you· u just be~in to· understand what parents are all about. POT SHOTS BY ASHLEIGH BRILLIANT ANY GOOD ILLNESS SHOULD BE PL-AN NED WELL IN ADVANCE. Pisces: State ·aims Tuesday, November 10 ARIES I March 21-April 191: Flurry of activity creates opportunity. excitement and significant social contact. Charisma is e mphasized, popularity increases and intellectual curiosity is activated. TAURUS (April 20-May 20 1: Feeling of being closed in is temporary emphasis on confinement. security. home repair and exten~ed discussion with older family member. GEMINI 1May 21-June 201: Emphasis o n change. visiting relatives, s pecial cor responden ce. bookkeeping methods. inventories and tax shelters. You'll be dealing with shrewd persons who express open admiration for your talents . CANCER (June 21-July 221: Home loans. domestic adjustments and family ·planning spotlight scenario. You obtain needed funds , but not through original plans. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio natives figure prominently. LEO <July 23-Aug. 22>: What appears to be a delay or setback boomerangs in your favor. Accent on agility. endurance, determination and faith. You gain access to privileged information, close associate seeks counsel on intimate aff ain. VIRGO I Aug. 23·Sept. 22>: Your position is stronger than might be anticipated. One in authority may aattemr.t to down1rade your efforts. llalnta n balance. display humor and hold u11tt to self·esteem. \'our views will be vlndt~ated. LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 22-.: You'll know what. to cto, when to do It md boW to ltrike -choret Of unlvenat appeal. Your etYol ts synchronize with public needs, responses. Many persons flatter you and they are sincere. s c 0 R p I 0 I 0 c t. 2 3 . N 0 \', 2 l I : Breakthrough indicated as you 're rid of burden. Aura of optimism prevails due to new start, fresh contacts and the budding of romance . Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Monday. November t . 1911 LOBBYING PAYS OFF -Tom Cade. who heads the per egrine falcon program a t Corn e ll Uni vers it y's Labo r a tory of Ornithology in Ithaca, N. Y .. poses with a FMlllS lmulCE _, 54 .. H54 • IJ5-J07 ,,, ......... c .......... w ..... ~....-.. ,... ........ eel .. ................. l99l•Hnwelcw. Al agesjtypn. CS,.C. dl6 •'• ca.11. NEWPORT -PACIFICA (71') 957-0282 I ••••••••••••••• For a..ified Ad ACTION Call A DAILY l'tlOT AD-YKOI '4J0161I AEROBICS! I.Al IHI COMPUTE GIOOMING ON THI FOllOWING DOGS IN AVllAGI CONDITION MINAn.I~ IMAU MIXIO MflD COCllR INIUlla ICMNAUm NXINOUI scon11 ... , ... "A•tU•H YO.• eoxu MIUllOO .......................... r....,,...Cllllllla.,.. ......... ............................. ..... • ""· llllll IWI ..... ,. ...... c..,.. .... ..,,., lllltll .... ....., ......... c...,.,. .. ........ .... ... ............... n. .. CA .... WllTHtoM&.A-DALMAnoN ~ ......... •AUlll POMl•A ... AN 11l've got a ~.\R)IADt:KE TU '-'•ltt'. c1ac1:1 iceberg in my by Brad Anderson \ 81GGEOaGE l by Virgil Paftch (VIP) • ,,., . "I hit• Monet.ya." I • DENNIS THE MENACE Hank Ketchum ~ • ( '1 '\\;2 flu~ \. \. . '-- "I HATE football season!" "I'M~ MTHIS IN OUR FRONT YARD TO MAXE MR..WILSONAAPf>t'~A LITTLE WHILE." . Jl'DGE PA•KE• ~~~~~~~~~~---. IF YOU'RE MY A6ENT, YOU &TTER TALK TO THAT OIREClOR! HE'& TREATIN(; ME LIKE l'M JU&T A ~P ... TO KEEP RANDALL FO~&E5 FROM FALLING . BY THE 610 OF THE FIRST DAY'5 5HOOTIN(; AN EN~0ED LINDA MAY GREER !ii:ETU«MS TO H~R Dfl:E!'l61NG ROOM , FOLi.OWED I f>Y 51D .MITCHELL! ;. tt~~ ON Hl5 FACE! ......,..._ HEY, MOY ... YOU GOf J'f AU WRONO! DON'T TRY TO MIKE euTlER KNOW5 rou·~e THE JIVE ME. &ID! ft.EAL STAR Of AVALANCHf ... 6UT IF FORMS AANDALL'5lfOLE15AN IMPOR· NEE065ilWPORf TAN1 OJE ... ANO THE POOR (;UY'5 TELL HIM 1000 L05T HI& CONFIDENCE! HE NEED5 ON &oclAL YOUR 50f'PORT ! ~CURITY ! I'~ by Ferd & Tom Johnson IMPoRTED F~OM AUSTRALIA? ' by Charle• M. Schulz _________ __, 1 TMH(' SCWCM ~TME·FAST FOR~80TT~ MY LIFE IS 60tN& 8V TOO FAST TtMBLEWEEDI THI! 1Nt71AN Pt=Ace-rnt:A1Y E:XPIRt:S A"f l\IOOrJ 1'0'7AY. NANCY, DON'T BLOW BU38LES INTHE HOUSE GORDO -_.. Ft:NKl' WINKE•aEAN -FAMOUS COMPOSERS - Chapter Ten -Claude Barlow When ClauC.E: r .J..rlow was just a young ocy, nis parents told L_:;, r.e had to gNe up :I.US-C .rnd become .:in ap;:>r1J11tice in BRABBLE I MUO A G.lA!7S ~ Milt' . I Cl•l'1" 6UM fa flU. A~U.V. W~A..,..SOR..,.. OF POC..,..OR 15 Y'Oc.JP't UMC&..e .JASF't!R I MORSAN ~ h1s ur 1c ... e1.s wa.stt. disposal bus i!"le ss ! I ~UV 1'~11-l'7 A~ 'fl)(M\Nb ... 11"s UAL\..'/ '°fll>S1'AA'f1Hls. I "A'f£ SEtllb IJIVt ~l(f; IN ~- lft109Lf. OF \ ~ {"t N\6.Mf . F0•8ETTEae• t•e• WeR8E 01.JT~CE. l& ""NINS RN' GORDON AN' EVERYONE ! by Tom K. Ryan by Ernie Bushmiller C•-·-·~"" by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk ,., . ,, Rubbish! the young Barlow replied! .. .. .. by Kevin Fagan Al.~(,'°' ~'flMt~ 11·~ W0«.1"" rr JUS'f 1"o -SU VJ,V IN "~ fl.IA~. .. .HERE ARE (/ Read all today's tJJ news, every day Local, county, state, national and international events come to }!our doorstep in the bright, ~-light and ·lively D~ily Pilot. .®Keep an eye on ~oeal government No other newspaper brings . you more news of your cit~ council, planning commission, school and college . districts and county ·government. ~Laugh, ery or get · "-;) smart · · Advice from Ann Landers, humor from Erma Bombeck, interesting features on people, opinions, ~ ....... informative columns anQ I comics b~ighten ~, l I your world. ~ ~ Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 8, 1N1 • 8 ·To keep up ·wltll . .-· all that's hapM~lng In your eo1Dmunlty yOu · aeed the . . ·oallyPllot ••• every day AEASOns WHY~ ... ' f1lFollow ·your team ~ The sports action at 15 Orange Coast High schools, three community colleges, UC Ir-vine and Cal State campuses is regularly reported by the · Daily .Pilot sports staff. ~-....1 Keep up with· nation- ally ranked college and pro teams, too! B Save money and dJ shopping time . Real Values on items from apple-· sauce to zippers are advertised every day in the Daily Pilot. Because, the ads are ~rom firms in this area, you save ti me, ef- fort and money. ~njoy your Sunday \eJ·Family Weekly, color comics, . . ' finance, the latest news and features about your: community, your mon.ey and you highlight the interesting reading CtJ""f. ftl+!O packaged in your c-of'A'' vS ··· Sunday Daily Pilot. · F!tMft..'( Enough to read -wceki. and enjoy. Ufl'Tune in to the (/-latest TV logs The latest, most accurate television guide is published each weekday in the Daily Pilot. On Fridays, Pilot TV Log charts the· tu be in convenient., easy-to-fin~ grids. Get into the Dally Pilot I ·1 · p·1at for only •4.00 per •onth. 11 J. I ~----------!.~-~-~~~~~~-~-~~:~~-~~-~~----------· ~2-4321 ' .. 1 delivered Daily Pilot every day: :::::,' ! I .. : I'd like to enjoy the comforts of a home '!. .. ' 111111 _ 1 I . If MAIUO I .~-------Enclosed is $4.00 for one month. u•m~o':,'ms :9-1 _____ _, I BUSINESS REPLY LABEL I 't*"' (L.At441"tAflllltf llllllO u <O"••t\A CA4•J'Oll••• I Name .................................................. o0$UGlwu•ho .. -~, I . 1 Address ................................................. . I c· . I 1ty .••••.•...•.•.•..•.••.•. , .•••. Phone ••.•.•.•.•..... I I 1 Signature .......... , .•....••.........•......•.......... I '"•°"iuuw1Dlstrlct ................... Rate ............... . Orange Coast Daily Piiot Box 1560 Cnu tMM, CA. 92'2' • CI RCULATION DEPT. ·------------~--------------------------~-~----~--------· (:omplefll the coupon ... gh• or tape the 1W9P1tld label on an. envelope for melllng, or c.tl .a.-1. Alk for Clrir.- ~ ( •1rA•l0 H ,...., 11111111 • wlndfati to ........,.. I briM to H«\ry, • ,_. '**Itel to Hot Uill "f,.:,.,~ poller TAC DOUGH lllM»a/LltWA .-AT 09UONtti#MCU •• .......,.. Diane Lane Mf ...... OnlkMll .,. ........, In Edith Wher-.._. .. llOfY tredng • ,_,_ IOI pt'• lrmllltlon from edoe.m1noe to maturity UtftO IN COUrM ol an ....,, wtth • young men Md Mii UllUIU8I conM- ~ MAOAZIHl ""' ~ with llOYW· WI .... Ind lonner MIN ~ ,,.. George; • ~..,-old'• grueling, ........ ~ blt1hdey n1- .-~~s ~ "A Hlllory Of American WOINl'l In Thi 20th Centu- ry" Thi• 11ocument11y trlCM tile QI'~ Of worn- .,. •• rolel In 8\e home, at WOil IOd at play from the eum of the century to the ,,......,, -IMl'urlng e.ICh ""'°"' ~ .. Mee Welt,~ Temple, -..nor RooMv14t and """''"°"'· • M.cAT'f.'AZ 'fhil docwneutery loolCS et die prllon Of Alcatraz. l:OO. (I) PfWAn BENJAMIN Judy~· a laun- dry truck to get beet< to the berriw;ll1 with before tMW t~ pus hi up. (Pert 2) 8 8 UTTlE HOUSE ON THll'MIAIE M lgil'IQ drcua derede\111 •ttemc>ts to prow to hlm- Mlf end the c:tlltdren of • Welnul GfOWI that he Is du111.o • MOVIE * *'h "Frog1" (1972) Ray MilleNI, Sem Elllon. While on I birthday outing, I IMll bent on deltroylng bayou wlldlil• vet• • prll- ent Ill hedn't oounted on wf*1 ~ c:reaturea ttM 14> to l!llKder him and 1111 femlly. G MOVIE **.,. "Mltchell" (1976) Joe Don Belter, Mettln .......... ~cop lhlkl I mePf nercotlcs ..._ In hll quest to deetroy I blc>-dt; dNg t.lfldlcat•. • P.M. MAGAZINE An lnterWlw with QOY9"· nor'• wife ,and formec Mlsa America Pflyllll George; 1114'1 on• pl\oto ~ '°' Oel9ry Mlpzlrle tor • ._ .. ... modell they On-TV LTV HBO (Cl rwtmll IC l (I) <WORl NY., N.Y. tzl (WTBSl (I) (ESPNl (J) (Sflowtlme I e 5POUlgttt • Ceet>le News Network) off C bu a snazzy, sexy women from defecting l'ootball" hunks on the lt.'1 called "For Ladies Channel 4) starring • and a key difference dlOOM with 11111 "glr1 ,_t door" appell; Linde Herrlt VOii Nc:kpecklng In Utlh: Chef Tiii on ullng • pUtry ~. • MOW! •••• "AJ!u OOMn't Llvt ~I Anymor9w ( 197•) Ellen But11Yf\, Krll Kri• tol1erlon A young widow ~ • llllQ!lr·weltr- to eupport hetMlf and her 12-YMt-old Ion. • GREAT PERFORMANCES "Summer" Oline Lene Ind Mich... Ontkean 1te leetured In Edith Wh1r- ton'1 story treeing a t_, • ege girl'• transition lrom Id~• to mlturlty during Iha courM ol an •lfalr with a young man and It• unueu.I conse- ~E • • • ·~ · M1nhattan" ( 1979) Woody Allen, Diane K11ton A polgnan1 look Is tlken 11 tha d1y-to-day evenll In Iha Ute ol 1 New York City comedy writer. 'R' Cl) COME BLOW YOUR HORN Elliot Gould and Allee Ghoetly lllfl In lhll come- dy Play 1bou1 • reformed pl1yboy who llnda his younger brother IOl!owlng In hhl too111eps 0LASVEGAS R1qu11 Welch. Dennis WHYer, Liiiiie Uggems. end Frenk Gorlhln entet- taln w.th Cl'"' production numbeta le1turtng dance, ~dcomedy. 8:30 8 CIJ THE TWO OF US Brentwooa gambles 1way Nan's lood budget money In 1 poller rNtc:ti • ALL IN THE FAMILY A halt we11t thll 111"'8 N9W York ~• nothing com- Plied 10 the trouble Arehle and Edith ere hiving 'With "enother women " (l:i)MOVIE • • ·~ "FOOlln' Around" ( 1980) G1ry Buaey, Annll11 O'Toole. A naive country boy trla 10 win • be1utlful. 1ophlatlcated eollegl COid 1w1y from IMW tn0bl>l"1 flance end her equally uppity temlly. 'PG' 8:'5 CI) MOVIE • * • • "Herold And Maude' ( 197 t) Ruth Gor· don 8uo Cort An 80-year- Old woman ,._ .. en 18- year-old boy OblNMd with deeth in• funeral Pat· lor, and proceeds 10 teach him Iha 1r1 ol llv\no end loYI 'PG' 9:00 11<1l M·A·s·H When a major amvn from headquarters. rumors fly thll members ol the •077th wilt be trenslerred D CllMOVIE "For Ladlel Only" (Prem- lete) Gregory H1rr1aon, LM Grlnt. An upi(lng IC1or WhO ii llfllble to llnd a job In the thMler tak11 • po11t1on u • male exotic denoer. 8 THATS INCREDIBLE F11tured 1 prehlatori<; creetur1 hlmed In the Con- go, a bullet·relllstant cloth; an attempt to 1kl down • neat--·Hcal slope. • MERV GRIFFIN ~ ClOSE HARMONY Arlene Symons, 1 8r00klyn music te1cher. bring• together 1 group of senior .. --. WI•"°"" o4 ~~ """"''' for • unique 1ntet,.._9aloMI J:=:. .. "Vllltor ''°"' ,... Or1W1" ... ~ .... Ml ~--wtlOWM • lnvoMd In • "'*"'"'' .. conYlnold IM o..d men'• r..=·-.· * *** . .,... Uon In win. ._.. (1"11 .,..., O'TOOle. K9tlleflnt HepOutfl tno- lend'• l<Me ~ " '** en ~ deolllcwl ~ .. _ .... oon- temoll ... 1111 ~ormy INlf• rleOe to Ille air~ EleMo!' Of~. 'PO' ·-·(I) HOUM CAW Of. w .. !Mrby Otowt mM- iuene In the ~al to 11111 In the trNlment Of Ol1Win petllntt. . •a.Oii~ Attene s~. a eroo111yn mualo teacher. brings IOOIUW I group of Mnlor di~ and • group of young 1tudent1 for • unique lnl.,Olf*lllOnal chorUI. • AHOY Seven-year•Old Andy Detwtter. who IOl1 both "" arms In • terming accident 6 yeer1 100 but now lunc- tlonl U I nomuil 111111 boy In hie rural Ofllo ~­ty,_ II profiled. Ill ENTIATAINMENT TONIGKf Gregory H1rrl1on dlaa.1-his rOll • 11 • mile atrippef In "For Ledlle Only." 10:00 8 (I) LOU GRANT Rolll COYlfl the CUI of I conlllc1ed ITl\l/derer who won't appeel her dNlh sentence. 811.NEWS 8 MOVIE * * "Don't 8e Afraid Of The Derk" ( 1973) Kim Del· by. Jim Hutton. A YoUllQ couple who hive Inherited en old houM find them- ..,_ ahll'lng .. with - amell creatur11 deter- mined to ~· the wife's mind. • AHOY Sev1n-ye11 -old Andy Oetwller, who I081 both hll atma In • farming aocldent 5 yeera ego but now func- tions •• 1 normal 111111 boy In hll rur11 Otllo communi- ty,_ .. prollled. 0 THI! AOCKfON> ALES Rockford'• 1ttomey P111- aur11 him Into lnveetlgat- lng the murder of 1 ICl'Mnwrlter. <t)MOVIE * * ·~ "Sterduat Memo-rlll" ( 1980) Woody Allen, CherloU• Rempllng. A auc.- oeaalul director 1-. • perlOnal crlll• u he tries to make eorne ma)Or decl- lllOnl In hit Ille. 'PG' ©)MOVIE * • .... "S-The Tiger" (1973) J.cll Lemmon. J.cll Ollford A mldd~ dress m1nulactur1r 11 unable to r.conclle lhe hero-WOf'lfllp of '* youth with the degradlllonl hi II forced to eubmh hlmMlf to In the~ worid. 'R' (l)MOVIE **Y. "Fox11" (1980) Jodie Foeter, ~ ICllll· men. The vlc:tlml Of brotu1n hol'NI and ~ ... ent1, four tMn-aoe glf1I try to eoothe their emotional wound• through drugs and -.·R· 10: 15 ® MONEY MA TTER8 Speclll ~ on per.one! money ~ton toplc;1 ringing from Income tu MV1ng1 to lnveetment Id-. In the llodt tMrket end money matklt lund1 hi offered. <%)MOVIE • • "Pertormance" (1970) J1mea Fox, Midi Jegger. A hood on the run lrom the mob lindl tanciuery In the horM of 1 ~ned-out for- mer roc:lt ltlr. · R' 1 10-.30 ·~ NETWOAK Nl!W8 • KAlAUftAPA: THI! RUUOE The reeldlnll Of l<aleupe- PI on the HIWlliln llland of Mok*li -all vletlml of "the M9V•tlng llcll,_" I or leproey -I.Ille openly about their llvee. 11:00 I a (I) o a NEWS I 8ATVAOAY NIGHT • PAUL HOGAN THE JEFFEAIONS A Hf ... nd-delth lltuetlon grips Iha ~ houee- hold in TV role afterwards does he ask her name. "Welcome to New York," she says. Mary Louise, played vibrantly by Miss Manofr with "Rhoda's" Brenda Morgenstern Brooklyn dialect, brings John to her acting class. Here the movie scores with a marvelous aemlparody or those catty, critical thespians who only recognize talent when they see it in the mirror. Viveca Lindfors, as the actlnt teacher, 1lves a hearty performance. While John's sex life is swingine. his career is frustratingly grounded, even with the support of casting assistant Sandy Green·, played with sweetness and softness by Miss Davis. John needa money to finance his acting lessons, 10 be finally submits to pressure from a friend, Stan Novak <Marc SingerJ, to become a male dancer. Singer stands out as the hip, faat-lane liver and lover who's the headliner at Club Max. His number is to come out in army faUiues and dress down. It's JU5t one of the oubtandin& dllco-comlc aegmenta that include John's inJtia1 foray u the man in a raincoat. John Is self-conscious and awkward, but eventually gets turned on by the adulation and becomes the main attraction to the pantln1 pandemonium or females, in all shapes and slzesi whose barely controlled responH, NBC bopea, wtl be aimUar to tonight's all·lmportant demoirapbic: 18-54, female. The manic energy of the d.llrobln1 dancers ii powerlul stutr,. and the film spends a lot of time there. The real.lam or thb club or fantuy - steamy and nuhy -seems to be captured ritbt down Lo the barett bellybutton. A1thoucb the dla&ocue ii not on the ume bllb plant, tbie ~ l&.UI seu wbere lt'a 1olnl. helped b)' tbl lnmi.cl club tceDll, excellent •etm1 bJ HerrtlOll and Co. and tb• feet that Jobn'a . ' KOC& 8 1:30 and KCBT. 1:00 -"Great -;i>ertormance1; IUmmer.'' A dramaUzatlon of Edltb ....._.., It.or)' of a alrl'• tranaltlon '° ruturltr. KHJ e 8:00 -"lllteMU." Joe Don Baker and Martln Ballam 1tar lD a movle about a detective ~ a dnal ring. KCOP .• 8:00 -"Allee Doean't Live Here Anymore." Ellen lunt>'ll ind ltrtl Krlatoffersoo star tn a movie about a woman who breaks free. NBC e 9:00 -"For Ladles Only." Gre1ory Harrison and Lee Grant 1tar 1n the story of a failed actor who becomes a male exotic dancer. fStory. photo below.I • ....VHIU. 8ellnY ""' 1111 !Mind •• ,_. announoat' • DCKCAYETT oo.t: John Updike. 11:30. (I) oueNCY outnc:yr~urne~°"'vece­ tlon M(1y lo lnWlll~I Ille death of • prominent poll. tloWI. •atTHllUTOf OAMOH Gu1111: Ro.,.n Bllke, Mlrtln Mull, DOfothy Ml)'I. Torn Wolfe. (RI I NlWI IUT CJ# OROUCHO Tltl! 000 OOUPL.a Aftw their ~t II robbed. Feb tlllll Oecer Into moYlnQ Into "8eoutlty Arma." • ONe STEP 19\'0ND "~"Kate MU· well had been notlfted by tl'll NlyY that her hulblnd had died In 1111 Pedllc, but lhe r-.. to belllWI It. I KCET NIWIMAT CAPTlONE) A.IC NEWS 9 A.ICNl!Wa NIOHTUNI! <t)UOYll • • "The Wonderful Cfooti" Oererc:t ~dleu. A y<>ung. "*''*' bull-nlllmln tume ~ook In order to meet the llCpenMI of hll ~ Ind 11111 In love llfltll one ol hll vtc:llma. 'A' ®MOVIE *. * * "()fdlnlly ~ pie" ( 1MO) Mery T.,... Moore, OonMd~ A gullt-rlOdln tlln-lglr trying to pot 1111 ... bldt together lfter 1111 brothlr'I death Ind hll own llMddl 1ttempt r...a-out to hll compleolnt tither end hit cold, rlMl'Wd mother. 'R' • JVOY COUJN8 IH COHCeRT Judy Co4Hne II Joined by tl'll Hamilton Symptiony om-111 end Roy ~ ..,.. In ... ICMd out I*· klnnlnce tlll*I ll'llt -Toronto. 11:'6 ©)MOYIE •**'A "A Smell arde Ot Frllndl" ( 1N0) Bred DI¥- ... Karen Alen. In the 1MOI. the tnendaNp and ldMlllln of ttvee H8rvltd """"'' .. l~ when one of them II dr9ft· ed to ..w In Vietnam. 'R' -MIJflOHT- .... .,.. ....... "Otllflln< p " .... DOl.*AI Cofloll: Dtbbll ~ ~ Uptown a Oowt- 1 :=mo.. ro ~. 9THI~ .... (l)MCMI ........ ,........ ...... """" (1MO) Gotdle ...... a.an 8rennan. A ....... do young womM ....... .,.,,,, Jollll IM """" lolow-lng IM delllfl of her ,_ hulband Of\ .. WllNllll1 er..:. *'A "In Goel We Truet" (IMO) Mitty Fetdman, Altftt ~. A 1111\oe monk .. .,., out Into tM WOtld to r.... moneiy tor 1111 ~letl«I moneat· ,,.,.;·eo~ ~te: Ptll Sllwra; IUthor Ol¥td Halbera1em: Ndlwd Marc:ue. chief eucuttWI Of the N1tm1n·M1rcu1 ...,.,,,_.,. ... ~ Ceral ~-. .MCMI * * * "FIY• Finger EMtdll" (1962) "°8llllnd Autlell, JllCllc ~-. Alt eng191d gtrl'I mothef ~-,..,...'°· 0.-tutar. •in~• ..... .................. .MCMI '* * "Frtolly The 1'ttl •. (1MOI ~ '*'-· Adft- -King. The reoplrlling Of • .,..,.... 4*ft9, dolld 20,,........,...., ttwee mutdera, atVecta • Ylftclo. live klller wtlo knit" ~Ing tw~ 'R' 12:40. (I) HMRY 0 t.00 • WNli. . * ~ "Under Fleet• Stare" (IMS) Gene Autry, Clrot HugMI. A -..0 cowboy mlnee trouble lron1 • ~golddllm. I WEAKOUf NlllllW NITWOMNIWI ,.1= ••• ·~Aw c--· (1t50) ~ Holln, Aon-. CollMn. ~MCWll • • "Thi Alp-Off'' r 1t7') 12:00 e MOVIE £dwerd A!Wt, 1(1,.... **··~And Seddlll'' BIO. A tMO ef ..... (1937) 0.. A"'1y, Judltfl ......... ~ OM Allen. A young -1 deddll .._,_ OW1r ... 000.000 In to keep the r'llnCfl hi ,_ dllmollde. 'A' Inherited lnltlld of lllllng 1:31(B)MCME It. .... "TlrMI Square" • A.IC NlWI (1980) Robin Jotwlon, T~ NIOHTUNE n1 ..,._lldo, TWo ~ ' G MOYIE t-ege glrll beoofne • • * "Cry For Heppy" rod! 'n' rol bllg lldlle In (1ff1) Glenn Ford, Donlld the hist of New Yorll.Cltv. O'Connor. When 1 Ne,,_, pl\otogr8'>11Y teem tak• 1:40 CI> MOV-. up rllldence In • JlplMM * * * "Tilll Ill.le l.eooon" J°OHN' DARLING (1NO) 8'oolce Sllleldl, 0.-lllO''* AIMM. Two dllldr«I ..,_,..,_ Ille """' of .. --.... ~ .......... otlltf alttr tllty er• .....,__. loOtltllt on • deeltted lelaNI ..... 1*E' MO INT'MfAINMINT Greoory Harri eon dllol-. .... r• •• mall etrloper In "For Lldlll~'' 1= • * ~ "Tiit ltMIOtlll ~" (1119) Monica Vint, ~ Giennlnl. • •• "fhl Utile Ore r;ion9" A f1118 of klda, ll-.lned If! lcflflte, reacue one of INlt ltlefldl wflerl t"-~ ere uneble to Clo IO 'PO' 11:00. • + +.,. "Peyton Pl-" (Pll't II (19J7) L.Me TU<ner, UOVd Holen t 1:IO CC) * • "Meteor" ( tt1t) ... n Conn.,y, Natelle Wood A"* 1CM1 and 111119- llen ICllN» ...... Join torcea In an ltttm9( to Wl(CI Off I glint meteCI( trom outer ~. wNcfl It on • difeot cotlltlon cour• with E.lfth. bllo<t Ill ... Oii trtll '°' llVdlrtnO "" ~ .. ~~ ow """' ... die IUtY with '*' ,......."'°" Of '*' l)lllllonM• domeltlo llfo. I e11Mt111 atrlll• 'PO' 1tl00. * • \.\ "LaOy Ublrty" ( 19121 lophle Loren, Wll- HMI OIYll)ll' •PG' .MCWll * * "Tiie Vllll«" ( tt78) Mel ,.,,.,, JoM Hutton. Alt ~ from • dletltll .....,. ~to Earth to ~ an l'Yll ..,..,-Oki tlfl-.OllMllNd toM --~ of • poltllrlul, mllt\06el!IC rll*. 'R' t:tt• MCWll *•'it "Thi Meglc;lan" • (1971) aMt Bl•t>v. Kim Huftler •• ,..... •• "88 a:11 (Z') CHAN.a CHAMPLIN TAU<9WITH ... "Dudley Moor•" a:to(C)r.tc:MI *** ''Thi Big Red One'' (1NO) 1Ae MIMn, Mlt1c Hamill. A lOugll Army --geMC, IMdl lour yaung, lr191q1Wleoold rectu111 Into the ~ftlled Irey ol Wortd War ll combll. 'PO' · (l)MOVll • .. "Rrtengl Of The Mylteron1 From Mera" Ceptlln 8cartet Voll deep Into ~ to ttop the 1 de1dly Myateront lrom dlt1r~ng Earth. ·a· . a:aa CI) MOW! * * 'h "30 II A 01ngerou1 Age, Cynthie" (19M) Dud- ley Moor.. Eddie Foy A men deddll thlt within six ...-. hi wanll to be mlf- rted end tamoua 11ter hi hll WMtld Hffo/ moet ot hll'"9. 4:00. COMMUNITY PAOOAAMMINO T..-sda11•• DaP1•••• Mo11le• -MORllNG- • * • * ''Lltbon" (1t5f) Rey Miiiand, Claudt R.lln9. (%) * * "Tiii Wondet'M CfOOlc" Oerlld Dlc>Welllu. A young, mllrled bual· neMmM turne c:tooll In orc:ter to m1e1 the lxpentll Of Illa bulllnMI Ind 11111 In love With -of hll Ytc:um .. 'R' 1:00 Cl)* *'h "Uttle OlfllnOI" ' (1980) Tllum O'NMl, Kn.. 1Y McNic:hOI. At aummer ~p. two lMn-egl glr!a COITlj)lle to -who wlll bl the llrtt to loee IMW vlrglnl- t.r.:.. 'R' lrt ••"Mystery lllend" Four children atrlnded on 111 illand 111 chued by • hermit Ind dllClOVl1 I CUI ol covnterlelt money 'G' 1:30 (C) • • "HOMe To Sia(' ( t978) Henry Fondl, Michael M«lUlfe A teen- llglr Ulleft her spltHld grandlllher on • trip IO he won't be sent 1w1y to • home '°' the ageo 1:'5 C2) • ·~ In GOd We Trust" ( 1980) M1rty Feldm1n, Andy Kaulm1n. A nllve monk •• aent out Into the world to rliM money for his impoverltmect monast· ~'PG' 2:30 t::'I * * '"r Thi Sp111I S11irc1se ( 1977) J.cque- 11ne B•1Mt Chr1s1opner Plummer A bllulllul deal· mute IS terror!Lld by • myateriOut lu~ler whO lurk• Kl the "1adOW9 ..,,, ound • mg on •leo•nt menSIOO PG 3:00 (CJ••• ·r11e Hide•· waya" ( t973) lnorld Berg- m1n, JOhnny Oor111 Two chtldren run 1way lrom home ond hide In New York Cny·a MetrOPQlltan MuMUm of Art, where they 1:30 <t} • * * ''Thi HIOH-1<e befr....oed by I apirlt- weye" (1913) ~ Berg-Id r9Clule o· !Ml\ Johnny O«en Two 3:25 (ZJ • • ·~ ·rhl Rain Peo- c:fllldten run awwy from pie ( 199) J.,,_ Caen, home Ind hide In New Shlrtey Knight A young Yori! City's MetrQOOliten woman "'' out on 1 ~of An, where they crou-country trip to -befrtended by 1 aplrtt· escape the reeponelbilitles Id~. 'O' ol her m1rr11g1 end l.1IO (I)** "Double Trouble" Impending mothe<hood. • ( 1987) EMI Pr11ley, 'R Annette Dey. A young B<l1· 3:30 0 • • "Chr11tm11 Coel llh helr111 becom11 M ine M111c11" c 19771 1ttrllCled to 1 lllTIOUI Mitchell Ryen. Kurt Rus- Amerlcen PC1c> llnger. sell a:aG 9 * * * "OUtllw Bluet" 'SJ * * 'Revenge Of Tne ( 1977) P9ter Fondl. Su1111 Myate<on• From Mers· Seint Jamn When • C1pt11n &.r1et goes deep country-w111ern singer into apace 10 s10e> the llMll h11 song, 111 .. -()On deedly Myll•rons lrom trl11 CIHPlrllety to destroyong E1rtn G retrieve hi• recording 4:00 0 * • •., l'reaky Friday· rl0/'11 while bltnlng the (1977) JodlO Foste<. Ber· ~·'PO' • bate H1trla. The world It l:IO • * • "Fighting Trou-turned ul)lidMOWn for • ble'' ( 196e) Bowery Boys, moth« and deughter who Adele Jurg1n1 maglellly switch bodlM Cl:) * * "Big Wldnud1y'' ona ratelul day 'G' (1978) Jan-MlchMI Vin-5:10CZ., • • • 'The Blue cent, Wiiiiam 1<111. Three Lagoon I 1980) Broolt• Calltornll boyt enJoy the Shields Ch11stopher IUrl Ind Mind until they Atkins Two children exp&- begln to r11ll11 thll ,_ tl\e pings ot hrst lhere'• more to tile then love whll• d1scover1ng hie wulng ~ their •m and elGh other 11ter they 'PO' .,. Shlpwrec:l<ed togeih« 10:30 • • * "Thi Lonely Trell' on• desened llllnd• R' (1938) Joftn W1yne, Ann 5:30 (_C) * * Bog Wedne9d1y' Rutherford. I 19781 Jan·MiChHt Vm- CI) * • ~ "Unle Oertlngs" cent. W~li1m Kan Three ( 1980) T1tum O'NMI. Kris-Celilorn11 boys en1oy the ty Mc:NlchOI. At 1t.1mmer surf 11nd sand untU they camp, two IMn""OI girts begin 10 realize that comQell to -~ wtll be there'• more to hie than the nr.t to loM her virgin!· waxing down ,,,_., l>Olrds ty, 'R' • • 'PG' by Armstrong & Batiuk r-~~~~~~~~~~~~-. 16 "1 UNDERSTN-10 tT,. SECRETARY HAte, WHEN PRESIDENT REAG~ GA.'JE 1He GO·AHEAO ON !ME NEUTRON 00Me, He SAID 'THAI IT ~u::> 8E UMrTC" 1t> IGiLY c:tlMeSnC U JUST WHAi EXACTl-Y DOES "THAT STATEMENT 'NEl-L ,IAKE THE AIR CO'n'ROLLERS' STRIKE, FOR e:.><N-APL.E ... ----IMPLYf THE WORLD'S MOST COMPACT BIG COPIER I £t1Jgu I~ 1-1200 • F'11~1 20 COjllf''•t~·• m1n11te '>I"~ 11t '"" ,,,.., • Cap.i•'\ I~ 10 I I, 17 lr:<1Qf" C,I/•' • C."I"' " • t I , !Py , W•·• ... ·COIJ~ • ;.;, .;.~~!~ E!!~~~'!!l (714) 540-3234 Ornn(:ln Co,,n1yc; 1>icl11,ovr> ('.;1111"' Oo •• t Aleo In s.n 8ernt11dlno.Alllerslde, (114) 88i·8009 Orange Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Monday, November 9. 1981 'True West ' superb as Second Stage offering Jolin Ashton menace.~ E D 1 Ed 1 Harris m a scene from ··True West·· 011 South Coast Repertory·s Second Stage PBS f ilni conipelling lNDIANAPOLlS <AP > -The Public Broadca sting Se r vice president calls a TV documentary to be shown Nov. 11 a "powerful retelling of ooe man's reaction to the war," but the head of the American Legion thinks otherwise. "Frank : A Vi etna m Veteran." is "a potentially damaging portrayal . . . that will likely reinforce certain prejudices," Jack Flynt. the Legion's national comm ander said . Flynt has sent a letter objecting to the show to PBS President Lawrence Grossman. Sherlock Holmu meets Sigmund Freud THESEVEN- PER-CENT SOLUTION From the •I Besl·Sellin9 Novel Dudley Moore Peter Cook In "THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES" $t>eel•I Discount To Sheriock Homea Society Membera "Masterful,, -L A Times, Shella Benson "Wonderful" -Newsweek Magazine, Jack Kroll --~~~ CHARIOTS OF FIRE i-= A lAOOCOMPAHY ANOWAIUtUIBAOS lllUAR ......... ~o·-.... ·~~C'~ . --·----__ ...,... __ edwards NEWPORT MUICOAST HWY.&MACAITHUI HlW>OJtT00'UT1:a 644·0760 By TOM TITUS 01 .. ....., ........... 1t Hems eons.since the ener11e1 ol South Coatt Repertory and playwrl1ht Sam Shepard were ttnt fuaed ln 1H9 for a dlt11trou1ly lnduleent barrel-scraper entitled "La Turlsta." The growth or both lhe company and the author (now a Pulitzer Prize winner ror his "Burled Child") over the pa1t doien years are strikingly evident In SCR'1 production of "True West" on the Costa Mesa theater'• experimental Second Staie. This 11 a sho~ that wUl 1rab you by the throat and rattle your psyche. The writing, acting and dlr~ctloo <by Lee Shallat) of "Ttue West'' are all superb, an effort worthy of production on SCR's mal11Sta1e for a more extended run. It Is that rarity in the theat~r. an experience one can savor lone after the rlnal dimout. satiated in Its INTERMISSION visceral richness. Shepard oHers us two deliciously opposite types in the brothers Austin and Lee -the former a clean.cut, serious·minded family man closeted in his mother's vacated home near the desert to complete a scr eenplay; the latter a beefy, menacing hulk dredged up Crom the wilderness who arrives to torment hls more timid sibling. It's a classic confrontaUon: Richie Cunningham vs. the slob who peers out from your medicine cabinet and says, "Hi, guy." But even with this humorous delineation, you only lauJh to break the tension, for the potential for homicidal violence looms large, telegraphed in an early scene when Lee attacks Austin suddenly over an innocuous remark. From this point, the brothers stalk each other with Pinteresque pauses in moments where the loudest sounds are those of the crickets outside. Shepard's theme Is a unjversal one, lack of fulfillment in one's chosen field . Each of the brothers yearns to fill the other's shoes -and both try, outlandishly, in the play's two most hilarious scenes. The sight of the cloddish Lee laboring over a typewriter trying to peck out his own story Is as · lurucrous as Austin proudly polishing, and using, the dozen or so toasters he's burglarized to prove he's capable of larcenv. John Ashton delivers not only the performance of the night, but of the year. as Lee, mixing s ardonic smiles with menacing scowls as he asserts himself indelibly into his brother's life and work. One of his best moments comes when he NOT SINCE 'DELIVERANCE' SOUTHERN C OMFO}\! • ~*U-~ EDWUDI lllllTOL Costa Mesa 540·74·U EDWARDS CINEMA WEST Westminster 891 3935 PLITT CITI CEWTEll Orange 634 9282 E.DWAllDI IADOLHACK El TOl'o 581 5880 EDWAlllOI CIMHU CEJITEll Costa Mesa 979·4141 EDWARDS YIEJO TWIN Mrssron Vieio 830 6990 An Amern:an 0~1n11L ~ 'T llJIT IRI In Omm 7:30 , ... o ''TaU• WIST" A 111e, IW Wft ....,_J. e..c• W I.ff INlllt, ....... W u.ttt T"-••• lltM"'t ~y c-H9rwy, ..... -..-r ._.. L.,•1191f, ~ *"<IW L .. ~Hiii. ,,,_... MtlMIW nc:• MMNY'I •I t ............... • •·"'· ......_ ""· It eA IM lilc.M li.tt el .... 11 ceeM "•"IPY• UJ T-'-Dnw, c.tA ...... .. .., ........ .,, .... "tl~T A11•ll" ., " , ., • , ., , ..... , • ,. , • • • .. ......... , e. 0 , C 1411 H•n'lt "'" ... .. • ...... • • •• • ............ Jto!WI ..... l.tvl 1(1"""" ., u•u••••••••••' ., •••••. , ....... "kMrf Drt¥t1 Mofl't •••••••••• ·•••••••••••••••• •••········•••• •••••••• lrttKtfft interrupts Austin's meeting wlth his producer and effectively takes over the scene In a demonatratJon of ~ure staae command. Aa Austin, E. 0. <Ed > Harris modulate1 his perrQrmance from a wimpy cypher to an agoolzingly assertive opponent in the brothers' s cary, psychological game. ffia flnaJ scene, In which he 1oes demonlcally over the edae. is calculated to make the viewer's flesh crawl. Richard Doyle enacts the producer with restrained flamboyance and skillful comic discomfort ln a pair of well-constructed scenes. The final character, the muddled mother or the boys, is a discordant note, briefly supplying the *BARGAIN MATIN••s • Monday thru S1tur111r All PerformancH before 5:00 PM (Elcept Special En91gement1 111d Hoffdey1) I.A MlllAOA MAll Mtrodo 01 Ro1ec1on1 LA MIRADA WAll( IN tt•·2•00 "LOOICER" -_,, 1:et, t 11. ,., _,.., ........... .. ESCAPE Fl'OM NEW Ya..K·· ia1 ......... ,., ........ .. --. ........ _ "PATERNITY tNI ,. .... 'i'.1:•. •.a. ·u..-·-1:11, ...... "' "CARBON COPY I"' , .... , ,,.~ .... .. ....... ,,. .......... 1..-tl LAKEWOOD CENTER WAllC·IH Dml~---1 "SOUTHERN COMFORT·· 111 .,. -··---Ul----·r .. ............ _ f LAKEWOOD CENTER SOUTH WALIC·IN fool.lly Al 0et Arno 213/634·9211 ---· ...... ..ualt· I "RAIDERS OF THE LOST ARK" '"' "''· ., ....... ·--LAGUNA ---·----· "RAIOallll O' T* LOST ARK" "1 ---.......... -...... -.. focutty o t c onol-OOG 213/531·9510 ---·~­"ONU WHEN I LAUGH" 1111 11:9."' ... ,_ _ "OUTLAND'' Ill ···--"EXCAu•u..·· .-i ....... .~Ot'l.o¥SA'9- ··THE LAST METIIO'. tN! 1J-411,, ,, 1:• .. I 11• so . COAST WALk·IN Soutll Coo11 H1woy ottrooowoy 494-1514 .,..._.. .... _..,,...._.ml "TIM£ 8ANDffS .. - _, __ .. ,.-. .. ..., .. ...,_ I .......... , _, 1s 1~ i..eoo-·1· ... •t•s IJl.,ORTANT NOTICE! CMILORlN UNDl i. 12 FRH ! ""' ............. , .... , ... '" 4 30• h t s.. ""' 5:30 ,. Clllf.A SOUND • fOUll UI CAii llAOIO IS '1111111 ~ •If NO UI CAii 11A010 WITll IGNllD ~ llDlll'OI -.-GUI l'OllTUU 1•AU Clltlf.fl ...... D Gii All MOil ANAHlo M ANAHEIM DRl\ll·IN •••••oy 91 ot lemo" SI 179·9150 ---"' .... "" "DEMONOID"' 1111 -"UP FROM THE OEPTHS" 1111 Cltlf 11 SOUllO 8Uf .. A PAl1K BUENA PARK DRIVE-IN loncoln A•• ••" QI Cflott 121·•070 f0UNIAI"' FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE· IN So" Oteoo ffWY 01 l100U1unf cso I 962·2 .. 1 l(aml~--­"SOUTHElllN OOWOffT"' llll -"DEATH HUNT' ia1 C"'I JI $0\/.,0 ..... -.. ., ... -llO'f\.I "OUTLANO" tit! -"EXCALllUR" tlll CINI "~ll ... --.,0-"HALLOWEEN II "'! -"NEW YEARS EVIL 1111 non~-...-.,..,.-..m "TIMl 8 ANMS" "' """' "WHOLLY MOSES!'. ,.., llWHll '"°'f.tr.;f _"' ..... "" 'OEMONOID" 1111 -'UP FROM THE DEP'THS ' 1111 C111t fl SOUIOO ,.~mo c.....-.,. __ ,.. "SOUTHERN COMFORT' 1111 l'\.ua "DEATH HUNT" 1111 Ctltl k IOUtoO lA HA8"A LA HABRA DRIVE IN •~tO!Dllw•-•INa &-bOlll .. 171-1162 8Uf NA PAl1~ LINCOLN DRIVE·IH ll"COlt'I A~• We .. Of •r\ott 121·•070 l>llM<GI ,.. ___ CAllllU'f "A'"14Ut' .. --· CARBON COPV" - ::llff "fOUl<O ---_ _. ...... ...,..llO'f\.I "OUTLAND" till -"UCALIBUR" 111 Cllll II SOUND ne-letrTO- ••HJ.LLOWf.EN II t•I """' "NlW YIAllll EVIL" tlll "DELINOUINT SCHOOLGIRLS' 111 """' "HOLL YWOOO HtOH" "'l """' "GAMES SCHOOL OIRLS Pl.A Y 1111 ORANGE ORIVHN .. ,.....,_ .... _,,__ "800Y HIAT .. 1111 -"PATElllNl'TY""' \A~ ' ..., .. I ... ,,. "'"' MISSION DRIVE IN --·.-n-"ONL Y WHEN I UUGW' 1111 -So" o .. oo lrwy CooolloftO ()II •omo "MIMI UICI OlO TIMES" - •9>·•M5 last piece or the puu le and nicely underplayed by lns Korn. Director Shallut 11 adept both at ataglng violence and th premonition of violence, and s he has elicited rrlghteninaly realistic ~rformance Crom her uctors. Cameron Harvtiy's 1ublle lighting errects bltnd with Lisette Thomas' 1parklin1IY tidy set (which gradually becomes a combat tone1 to provide a superior technical backdrop, "True West" ls one or South Coast Repertory's finest achievements at the fourtb Step Theater and undoubtedly t~e most tm1)re11Slve production mounted on its Second Stage, where It plays n ightly except Mondays at 8: 30 with Sunday matinees at 3 In the group's Costa Mesa complex, 655 Town Center Drive. lt'8 an experience to remember. • CALLBOARD Auditions for the Neil Simon comedy "Come Blow Your Hom" wllJ be held by the Mission Viejo Playhouse tonJaht and Tuesda) at 7 p.m. in the El Dorado Bank in El Toro . director Dick Vara wi ll cast three men and three women from 20 t.o 60 . call 830·2224 or 830·9252 for more details . Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 9, 1981 FIFTH ANNUAL AUCTION WHO . WHAT WHEN WHERE WHY WHAT WI LL BE AUCTIONED . ENTERTAINMENT FURTHER INFORMATION The Bowers Museum Foundation of Bowers Museum Fifth Annual Auction November 14, 6:30 p.m. to Midnight 2002 North Main Street, Santa Ana, California A fund-raiser serving capital expansion for the Museum which plans to triple its curren t size. Bowers Museum currently enjoys the largest public usage of a cultural facility in Orange County. Artifacts, art objects, antiques, paintings, lithographs, ethnic art & articles, oriental and decorative rugs, jewelry, handmade items, condominium and hotel weekend vacations, private hou se parties, tickets to entertainment events, antique automobiles, etc . Jerry Holton' s Jazz Band with live Dixieland jazz. Virginia Donohugh Bowers Foundation 547 -0696 .. I Dally Pilat MONOAY, NOV. 9, 1911 CLASSIFIED C7 IOUTHIRN llCTIOH ... Six local water polo, nine volleyball squads to enter playoffs. C2 . Ray gets shower of beer Malavasi has a birthday to forget as Rams bow, 21-13 By JOHN SEVANO Of .. o.My ...... IUft Sunday, Rams Coach Ray Malavasi celebrated his Slsl birthday. And res, there was a party -two of em in fact. The most significant one, however, occurred shortly after the New Orleans Saints had bewitched. bothered. bewildered and bludgeoned the Rams, 21-13. As the Rams coach was walking through the left field bullpen at Anaheim Stadium on his wav to the lockerroom, he was welcomed with chants of, .. Ray, Ray, go away ," and doused with one full cup of beer, co mpliment s o f a less-than-enthusiastic fan. "For a second there I thought I was back in New Jersey or Buffalo ... Malavasi would joke later. ·•Ray, there's a detective on the phone. They've caught the guy. Do you want to press charges?.. asked team doctor Toby Freemiln. "No," answered Malavasi, ''just let me have him so I can punch the son of a ... " It was good to see that kind of spirit from the coach because his players certainly didn't have any spirit on the playing field. For the second time this season, the Rams managed to save one of their more pitiful performances for the lowly Saints, who have won only three games all year -bul have beaten the Rams twice. THE SAINTS, behind the r unning of George Rogers, Jack Holmes, Way ne Wilson and Toussaint Tyler. ran a round, through and over what was once co n sid ered a proud Rams defense to the tune of 307 yards < 462 if you include passing l. It used to take teams two, three, sometimes four weeks to roll up numbers like that against the Rams. But not any longer. What was once the organization's pride is now their embarrassment. ''It's hard to play gOQd when your team is hurt," offered Malav~I. Indeed, the Rams are pretty beat up at the moment. Key players like Larry Brooks, Irv Pankey, Doug France. Wendell Tyler and Jeff Rutledge didn't play a down of action Sunday. But you really can •t blame pe rsonnel problems on what happened lo the Rams Sunday. No matter who is playing, you still have to tackle and block and execute to win and the Rams seem to have forgotten how to do those things. "Last year, we made the big Delly l'ilet ..... .., •k• ... " ........ . Jewerl Thomas or the Rams tmds some running room dunng second quarter 01 Sunday·s ya me plays. Now teams are making the big plays against us," s aid a downcast Johnnie Johnson. "MAYBE WE DON'T want it bad enough," added the strong safety. "I don't know what the problem is. I know one thin~ we're (Oing to have to start doing is tackling and not give up the big play. "We're reaUy embarrassed right now . Tota ll y e mbarrassed." The Salnta' victory over the Rams was their first sweep of a divisional rival since they beat Atlanta twi c e in 1974 . Conversely, the Rams hadn't lost two games to a divisional foe since 1968. As things stand now, the Rams are 5-5 three games behind San Francisco with six to play. Realistically -and the Rams wer e n 't fooling themselves in the lockerroom afterward -a divisional title seems out of the question at this point. What the Rams have to do now 1s try and secure a playoff berth. Dallas or Philadelphia figures to lake one of the two spots while, c urrently, the Rams are in a four-way deadlock with Atlanta, Tampa Bay and the New York Giants for the other. The Rams, however. don 't exactly have the best part of their schedule coming up. They have to play on the road against Ci ncinnati (next Sunday >. Pittsburgh and the New York Giants, while entertaining San Francisco, Atlanta and an improved Washington team. Needless to say. if the Rams don't get their act together·soon, they just might be spending their first Christmas at home stnce 1!172 . O.lly ...... _.., .. ,.., ....... .. I've seen better days." said Dennis Harrah. "We were good at times, bad at times. and we <See RAMS, Page Cl) Da11 Pos1orm1 p<mrlers /lit> s1111at1r111 rl11r111u tilt' unal 11c11 111111U/P.'i Local boy makes good Dave Wilson has a dream day before lots of friends By EDZINTEL Of -D.ltty ,.... IUft 1t was like the kid who goes away to summer camp and then returns to his hometown to find that nothing has changed at all -everyone still loves him. as he hoped they would. Dave Wilson. who bought some 74 tickets for his farruly and friends to watch him play for the firs t time as a professional football player at Anaheim Stadium Sunday, almost got carried away with all the excitement that went with his personal homecoming. That was no more apparent than immediately after the New Orleans Saints scored their second touchdown en route to a 21-13 upset of the Rams. GEORGE ROGERS RAN the ball over from five yards out then got up and. while getting a hug from the quarterback. Wilson, handed him the ball. Wilson in turn hurled the ball high up into the stands where a bunch of his friends were seated. "I don't know who got the ball and I really don't care." the rookie Crom the University of Illinois and before that. Fullerton College and Katella High School, said . It was nothing less than a perfect welcome home for the first-year player making only has third NFL career start in place of the injured Archie Manning. Wilson. a 6-3. 215-pound passer who set or tied 32 NCAA. 81g Ten and school records at Illinois last season. was selected in the first round of the NFL supplemental draft this year after gaining as much recognition in the courtroom as he did on the field He became ehg1ble to enter the pros when his appeal for an additional year of college eligibilty was rejected qy the courts. Il was ruled that Wilson had played three years of college baJI at Fullerton Coll ege before transferring lo Illinois and thus. had just one year of eligib1lty remaining after the move. WILSON CLAIMED that he had red-shirted his first year al Fullerton due to an injury. however he did 10 facl play parts of that year. In any event. Wilson was an honorable mention All America by both wire services in 1980 and finished 10th in lle1sman Trophy balloting. Jabbar 's milestone highlights Lakers' victory He passed for an NCAA single-game record 62 1 yards and six touchdowns against Ohio State last season and connected for 403 yards the following week against Indiana for 1,024 yards passing in two consecutive games, also an NCAA mark. Anyway. s tatistics Ii ke those were good enough to convince the nothing-to.Jose Saints that Wil son was worth the gamble. But you can credit Magic with an assist in 121-111 victory over Mavericks By CURT SEED EN Ot .. Deity,.... Matt INGLEWOOD -While Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was becoming the No. 3 all·time scorer in the NBA Sunday night, passing Boston's John Havlicek in the process. J abbar·s popular teammate Earvin "Magic'· Johnson was ~oing a little passing of his own. Magic also did a little scoring, a little rebounding and a lot of driving to the basket to spark the Lakers· relatively easy 121-111 victory over the Dallas Mavericks before 9,870 Cans at the ,. Forum. It was the kind of performance Laker fans have been expecting from the third.year forward out or Michigan State. It was also the kind of performance Magic expected of himself. "I WAS JUST TRYING to make a commitment to gel involved in the game,·· Johnson explained after leading his team with 24 points and ts assists. and tying Jabbar for rebounding honors with 10. "I think once I get myaelf involved more I will become more of a threat." The lowly Mavericks will attest to that. From the opening tip·off, Magic displayed the kind or aggressiveness that has been noticeably absent Crom the Lakers' first four gamea, three or which they lost. "I only look seven shots lul game <• 101-99 defeat to Phoenht>. ao t CelL l should get more Involved," Johnson explained. Coming Into the game, Maalc was 1b00Un1 at ..1 a dlsmal 41.4 percent clip (2' for 58). but he responded by hiW.0& I ol 11 qalut the Mavericks, most on drivjn1 l•JUfl· ' "I watched the ftlm1 tJ our game a1allllt r Phoenix lo see just what was going on. I think I haven't done enough to keep the defense off guard. Once I make a pass, I'm not involved in the play. I just wanted lo put some more enthusiasm Into it." Johnson added. SPEAKING OF ENTHUSIASM, the Forum crowd responded with a standing ovation when Jabbar hit a little jump shot in the the third quarter to give the Lakers an 85-69 lead. It was Jabbar's 26,398lh point, putting him in the No. 3 all-time scoring position behind No. 1 Wilt Chamberlain !31,419 ) and Oscar Robertson (26,710 ). "The milestone? It's nice but right now It's not the most important thing," Jabber said afterward. "The points have to be able to accomplish somelhlng. We need a ny win we can get so that we can get back in the groove. "We just have to continue winning now," Jabbar added. Asked lf moving closer lo the all·lime scorill8 mark might influence his decision to prolong h.ls career, Jabbar noted: ''I remember seeing Hank Aaron do his thing and I was happy for him . . . but t.be No. 1 thing right now is to make the Lakers No. l." . WHILE A VICl'ORY over the Maverick• Isn't anythlnl to aet charged up about. the Laken seemed aaUafied wllb their performance.. Coach Paul Westhead, In fact, manaced to uae aveJ'.)' player on the roster -and stuck with several of his aube u Dalin tried to make a bal1tld ran at them. While ad ftn of tbe LUii' .... lrind la double. ftlfUftl, Mlke Cooper~arne otr the Mech and responded with 14 points. and Mark Landsberger added a solid 22 minutes with eight points and eight rebounds. He worked particularly well with Mitch Kupchak while Jabbar sat out much the final quarter. EVEN NO. 1 DRAFT choice Mike McGee picked up his first four points, a pair of assists and a couple of rebounds in eight minutes. Westhead credited the Johnson-led fast breaks and more emotion on the court as the key to the victory. "We got a more consistent effort tonight," he explained. "It was important that we establish ourselves early In the game, and Magic did that by taking the baJI to the hoop three or four times early." The Lakers jumped out to a 31·25 first quarter lead, but couldn't really pull away from the young Mavericks until the third quarter as rookie Mark Aguirre, guard Rolando Blackman and Brad Oa vis stubbornly went to the basket with confidence. AgUlrre, the Mavericks' leading scorer coming Into the game, scored 23 points, while Blackman had 13 and Davis added 12. The losa was the Mavericks' fourth straight and flt\h In their rtrst slx fames. The team boast.a just rive returners from ut year's team whlcb posted an awful 15·8'7 record. In add.lUon, the Lakers went throu1h a perfect 19'0·11 HQOll a1ain1t the Mavericks wlUI ftv• vlctorl•. With tboee tbouab&.1 la lla•ertm nn lndMd up .,.._. Sunday nlpt. ' Now, and especially after his marvelous performance Sunday in guiding New Orleans to its second win over the Rams this season. Wilson has made the gamble pay off. His game stats were not overly impressive ( 11 of 19 for 182 yards and no touchdowns). but it was the things he didn·t do that made the day for Wilson and the Saints Like interceptions. He had none. And fumbles. He had three but recovered two of them himself. "I WAS EXCITED about coming back, .. said Wilson who played twice at Anaheim Stadium while at Fullerton College and once there while at Kalella High. ''In fact, I was probably too pumped CSee WILSON, Page C3) Sunday's NFL corfl's New Orleans 21. Rams 13 San Francisco 17, Atlanta 14 Seattle 24, Pittsburgh 21 NY Jets 41. Baltimore 14 Denver 23. Cleveland 20 I OT) Cincinnati 40, San Diego 17 Chicago 16, Kansas City 13 tOT> Minnesota 25, Tampa Bay 10 Philadelphia 52, St. Louls 10 Houston 17, Oakland 18 Green Bay 21, NY Glantl II Mlaml ao, New 1tn1t1Dd rr cOT• W alblnltcie II, Detroit II 1'1111111&'• ·- • • •-~~--~--_.. ______ .__...w_.. • .-_ • ....,_.. _____ ._.~----------~~~------ ~____,.,~~,_.. ......... ~ • ..--~~~---•.--• ..... •.....,;-•..,.•-=.,.•~•=-urwu-c.-uu ..... •w~c•c,__._. •• _ • .,__..._,....,.. •••• ~-•-.c-=_..•.,.-=.._,.... __ ._.....,... __ _... __ .._,~ .. ______________ _... __ ..._ ______ ..._ __ ..... ~_._. __________ .,...~ .......... .,.. _______ o_,_•_no.,• ... Co._•~ DA&&. Y PILOT/M.J/llo-nd.•.;;.Y.;..·_ Nov_•_m_b_e_r_9.;... 1_ee_1 ------~ ....... ---------------, . ' . North Stars stifle Boston U1ln1 a tlihl dtltn•• whlch lii1 · lncludtd stellar play by 1oal·tender ~ Glllft Meloelle, th• Mlnneaota North Stare stopped the Boaton Brutna lu.nday ._ l ln BOiton. In anapplnt the Bruin.a· rour·1ame w1nn1n1 streak, MlnntlOta scored ita flnt rel\llar-aeaaon victory In 36 vlalta to the • lo1toe Garden alnce enterlna the National Hoc~ey Leaeue In 1967. But the North Stars From AP dlepa&ehe1 • EVANSTON. Jll. -North· • ~ western'& Wildcats, respondlnt to chants ot "We're the worst; we're picked up where they tell olt last A1>rll when they won two games in Boston in eJlmlnatlng the Bruins three straight In the opening rqund ol the playolfs ... Blaine Rtnutthton s<'ored late In the second period to help Hartford tie Buffalo, 2·2. Stoughton scored his ninth goal of the season when he stole the pu c k ore a Butlalo the worst," absorbed their 29th straieb~ football loss Saturday, setting an NCAA._ reeord for major coUege teams. They did it in the style ol a loter, aetlin1 blasted by Michigan State 61-14 in • came ln which the Spartans led 41-0 at hatrume. delenseman's stick and blasted a rlslne shot rrom the middle ol the right faceotf clrcle ... Thomas Gradln scored three goals In a game Cor the second lime this se11son to lead Vancouver to a S·l triumph over Winnjpeg. Cart Frue:r and Ivan HIJnka tallied the other goals for the Canucks . . . Chicago got two goals apiece from Grant Mulvey, Terry 8ukcnnlkl and Darryl Sutter an a 10·4 romp over Cai~ry. Ken Houston scored twice for Calgary, which 1s mired in the cellar of the Smythe Division. When it was over, the fans did• 1'hat any other fans would do for a team settiftl a tecord -they tore down the south goat Pofl, carried It to the east bleachers and tossed it over the top. "I don't feel very good.'' aaid flrat-year Coach DeMis Green. "We were outmatched th' entire game." ..... Green, insisting that the WIJdcets should remain in the Big Ten Conference , said, "There • l~'s Mayer vs .. Mayer in Sweden are three parts to a football game.·• . · ·•Emotional -I thought we were • ~dy despite aJt the distractions and the IUl(ionaJ coverage; mental -It's hard to be perfut Ud there were a few letdowns: physical -'they were just stronger than us." STOCKHOLM, Sweden -Sandy ~ Mayer upset lop.seeded Jimmy Connon 6·3, 6·3 Sunday night to set up an historic final with kid brother Gene in the Stockholm Open Tennis Championships. Quote of the day I' "I didn't pick Georgia. J flipped a.-8ln and Georgia won." -Al1 ·Americaa running back Hersebel Walller._ '•MD"' asked how he decided on his scbeOV: . Gene. the third seed, neutralized Hank Priater's straight-ahead power game to whip his OH·lirqe doubles partner 6-3, 6·2 in the other all-American semifinal earlier in the day. It was the first time that two brothers reached the fin al in a Grand Prix Super Series nent. Bat several brothers played m ajor championship finals before the game's Open Erp. . . Yanks still haven't contacte<tGuldry ~ Ct>nnors, idle one month because of an injury 1>e'tore coming here. kept the Royal Tennis Hall crowd on its feet saving five match poiata in the last two games. LAFAYETTE, La.· -Pitcher Ill Ron Guidry still had not heard Sunday night if the New York . Yankees were interested in signing hlm before the Tuesday midnight deadline. but his agent said he had received feelers Crom a number of Saody Mayer, the 1977 champion here and seeded No. 11 this lime. rehed on his usual serve and volley game agamst Connors. .. But my ground s trokes probably made the difference," he said. "It was easily the best day J 've had from the back court." • other teams. Guidry, 1f not signed by the deadJine. becom,s a premier Type A free agent in Friday s re·entry draft. Gene Mayer, who captured the 1978 French Open do"Ubles title with Pfister. needed just an hour to finish off the Califor nian. First-round ·byes for Irvine, CdM Top-ranked and top·seeded Irvine High and No. 4 seed and Sea View League runner·up Corona del Mar have drawn byes 1n the first round of the 1981 CI F volleyball champ1onsh1ps for women. while seven other Orange Coast area teams are in hrs l round action Thursday. lrvme. the Sea View League champion. will meet the winner of the Dana H1lls ·Santa Fe match. while Corona del Mar awaits the survivor of the VOLLEYBALL M o n tebello -Notre Dame 1 Sherman Oaks 1 game with second round action slated for Saturday. On Thur s da y it 'll be Huntington Beach at Mater Dei, El Toro at Fountain Valley. Pius X at Laguna Beach and Cerritos at We s tminster in 4·A competition. On the small schools level, Inl and C'hnstian visits Liberty Christian in Huntmgton Beach and Newport Christian 1s al Pilgrim High. Games are scheduled to begin at 3 o'clock Thursday unless otherwise changed by mutual consent. Cll" .. A~ ll'lrst r ..... '"'9nNy) I ,...,I,,. .,,. , D.,.. H II ls •I Seftte Fe; St Jol9'lfl •I Torr•nc:•; C.rrll011 •• Wntmlflst.,, PlllOl Verdes •• Avletlon, SI tlernerd •• M-; Colllornl• et Dowf'4y, Phn X •I L.8...,,. 8o«ll. Coton• del Mer bye. Mont.Miio •I Notre Deme; _.....,. llMcll et IMtM Oii; Mlf"e Cott• .. c.llt,_ V•Ort; Et THe •I ,,...,,._... Vettey, It ..... M ~ ... r, Merltlot1M19" et S..I• ia.rtaer•; llM"'9 -..C• bv-. Ctl'•A~ ...... ACIW-M L.8od$vllle; L..05 AmiGM at Tllllln, lJ ~el G9IYon IS.VOllll : ~ .. S..n oeeta.t; •"'""""'9 1..,....,.., .C ~ ......... ; .............. ., .. Al .... .._ All• .. OIMl!i,; C.r91 l,.,._lml -' Loera. O.t .... 0....... •• Or ..... ; ...,_ .. Se.I M~IM; 8w"°""'s lllklgKHllJ .. Alwlleny, E ..... -et II~; Crna .... V•ll•Y .. 11-., All'l•l. OINtU HUI et cs-••; Cypteta •• W•W.\lt; ~ Coetl •\A OclMe. Cl I' U "9Y9fb SI. LlOllY"I .. C..)Oft; OW ..... OH •I Ar1"1•; Wfft OMfN •I El-;..._, et lllwnlde Poly; Tllouseftd O•ks .. ••nti-; Atnt'(O Gr-itl ~; Sllflor• at S.venne, Arvw •tAll8~. M-Onot .. et La HMw•; IA 51 .. n •t VklOt V•l .. y; Wiid C.11 Ho. 3 at~•; Wiid c..rd Ho. 4 •• ••-.tt; Wnd C.nl No. 2 .. JOrder>; '°"°" ., Glendore; Meyf•lr 8' LOf'll~; MUii_.,. •I A~yo. Wiid ure _,.... IT-•y): No. I -....... S!M'I~ ., ""1t• v .. ...,; No. 2 -Simi .., .. ..., .. 5.,. L.ul1 <*ll'O; No, 3 -Nof'ttl l ltl...nl#I et Rodt-s; Ho.4 -Wftt...,.•t Troy. CIF1·A~ AqiilnH •t Rim flf tlle World; 8< .. tey et Covlft•; At-tit llMf1l K.,,.1; .,_,,_et Cllll•o: Et~ .. o..t.lo CIWl1tleOI; YU<u V•llO'f •t Gilllltrel; MMkl411r M lout" Mlli.; WIN C..,, .. o,totT~lnt ... llM. Seftt. P•I• et Soctod M"'1 flf JoMA, El Moll4e .. ,..,_ .... ; A""'° et I,.._; El Sogu,,do 9t Peso llolllH; CNst VIII.,, ot ........,_;MDI-et FllM,._ S.C:ntd He«t. ~rlO .. Vel19Y OW.,_len; WlN C.d NO I et Co ...... Wiid "919 ....... IT..etdeyl: llo I -Wint Brotfl,.... 8t IC.,. V•llOy; Wiid CMe Ne. J -11-1-. .. llllllO. CJI" .... ~~ ltlo HOft<IO iry.; 8ntM•-et VIOWflOlnt, ScMtl9 ....... et Mlytleld; T•"'IM Clw .. IM M WI......,,; 1.IM'latd ...,_; °"'901 Sun et h9fe MOll"lt•lfl; C:SDlt et Hft09'1e; vtti-vo ....... •I A rtyll Ac.8dltmy. 8or o11 by•; M•mmo111 et L •• Vining, MM•NtNI at Flm L.~; Tr-•t 810 Pl,... lnl•nd OwlstlM-' 1.1_,y OWIJll .. ; C.8pl.tr- Vottoy Clv'ftllell .. ltucll .. y; No9j!Or1 Cllrltllall •t ~ltl'lm; Oflft9t L.utlleret1 ll'f•. Georye Stemhrem1er Steinbrenner hospitalized NEW YORK <APJ -New York Yankees owner George Steinbrenner wi ll enter a hospital today "for treatment and possiblesurgery" on his left band, Irv Kaze. a spokesman for the American League team, said. Steinbrenner injured his hand and s ustamed facial cuts during the World Series m Los Angeles. He said he was hurt in a fight with two hecklers In a hotel elevator . X-rays taken of the hand after Ste inbre nner and the team returned to New York showed the owner had suffered two depressed kn c kles. This Week's Special 1980 CADILLAC S EVILLE Factory two tone paint. leather covered seat· ing area and Cadillac wire wheel coven. (369ZAH>. $13.995 CadtlJac Vol~ Ptottctlon ~ AgtNllW4' A~ AllOon ~ 1• ,._ .... All,,_ .... ,.... u... DD TKAT UIAT &II,.._.. WITH ....._. UI Nini. ~~ ·' " " ... " .. ~. . . .. NA~ 1 2600 Horbor Blvd. Costa Meso OIL~ (7141540-1860 ·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 ruture for taxes. Into tu 1helwred Investments that· a > average a 510'( tax wrile·off bl are highly profit motivated a nd c 1 have a history of positive cash now and appreciation LHMI how this can be done by attendin& a com· pllmentary 90·mlnute seminar -enjoy some refreahmeni. end gain more flna nciel knO)Vledge in to mlnulft than you have been able to acquire In a Uf.Ume. . LIMITED SEATING Call Now To Schedule Your Reservation 759-1401 New Jersey earns first victory Two rrH throw1 by •tilt ISi W•••H• and another by a1y Wllll••• broke a tie and iave New Jersey an 89 86 victory over the lndlaa1 P•Hra Sunday nl1ht In the National Baakttball Auoclatlon. It wu the tint win ot lhe MUOD for t.h• Net.a. The Pactra led throuthout UM gaeie Ulllll a fourth.quarter rally by Ntw Jersey forged an 86 ·86 t ie with 1 :15 remain.Ina ... Calvi• Natt a nd Biiiy tay Batet combine ror 26 Portland polnte In the fourth period as the Trail J:)lazers c1me from behind for a 120·116 dectsion over Denver. Portland remain• the NBA'a only unbeaten team with a 6-0 record. After trailing throu1b most or the second and thJrd quarters, the Blazers r1nally took the lead at 99.97 on a Jump shot by Bates, who scored 13 of his 16 points ln the flnal 12 minutes. Bonnett wins in tight finish Nell Bonnett barely held oft • challenges by Darrell Waltrip and Cale Varbo.rougb on the tut lap to win the Atlanta J ournal 500 Grand National stock car race Sunday. Waltrip, tryine ror his fifth straight victory, managed to alip past Bonnett for a momenta ry lead one lap t'rom the end but 8oMett wheeled bis red and white Ford Thuaderblrd back In front to win by leas than one car length . . . Backup quarterback Kevla Starkey t hrew a 3S·yard rour th·quarter toucbdown pass to tight end Tony Gabriel tc lead Ottawa to a 20·16 victory over Montreal In the Canadlan Football League playorrs. ln the other game, a 39-yard touchdown pass from J~ hopae to Tyron Gray was the difference in British Colum bia 's 15 ·11 upset over Winnipee. Television, radio Followlng are the top sports e'lfents on TV tonight. Ratings are: I I I I excellent; ./ ./ / worth watching; 11 fair; I forget It. e 8 p .m., Channel 7 ./ ./ ./ ./ MJIL ..ooT8ALL: Buffalo at Dallas. A~: Frank Gifford, HowaN O>sell •nd Don Meredith. It will be Danny Whlw of Dalles APIMt Joe FervUIOn of the Biiis In tonlQht's ~tc~. The CowboYs on Mtlonal television more ~ any other NFL tHm this year so far, are c"rnntly tied for the lead In the National Conference Eastern Division with a 7·2 record. Buffalo ts 6-3 and heff a game behind Miami In the Ametlcan ConferwK:e East. Dallas Is a 31h-c>CHnt fawrlte with t~ game In Irving, Texas. RADIO Football -Buffalo at Dallas, 6 •·"'·· KNX (1070). . Fou.r Oranae cout aru bl~ lit..._.:~ polo teams are In flnt round acUoe t~ 1981 CIF playolfa unfoJd, whUt two - .cb1amplonJ Ncwporl Harbor and Ediaoo -d ror second round opponenta Friday. · ' Corona del Mar. the No. 3 seed MMI ~-to Newport Harbor In the Sea Vlew Lea...c wtU host Long Beach Poly In the flrlt l"OCIDl, 'Willie Sunset Lea1tue representative Marina alto dr•w• a home aaslgnment, meeting Loa Alamito&. First round tames are schedu.led 1* I o'dodt starta. On the road Tuesday a re Ocean Vie• of tM Sunset League , and Sea Vltw 1Jea1•• representative Costa Meu. Ocean View is at Palos Verdes and ii tbe Seahawks are successful. they'll get a •hot al U.. No. J seed -Newport. Harbor. Costa Mesa is at Buena Park and usu•• t he Mustangs get past Buena Parle • e:rpeditct. t hey'll draw Sunset League champion-.,., 1ritb the eventual survivor pitted most lik~ly •••'-'No. 4 seed Long Beach Wilson. which drew a bye-i. tM first round. Marin a 's potential victory against Loi Alamitos would earn the Vikings a shot at the No. 4 seed <Sunny Hills>. while Corona dtl Mar .. second round opponent, with a victory Tuetday against Long Beach Poly, would be Aviation. The second round in the 32·team eUDlinaUoM is Friday, the third round Nov. 17. The semillDU. are billed for Nov. 20 and the finals will be he'41 af. Long Beach's Belmont Plaza Nov. 25. * * * * * * CIP6·APlayotta t~"t_T_yl H••-1 H¥0o< llY•. Oc.t•n vi. .. et P•los Verdes. T•oy •I Los All011, E S90••nu llY•. S.r1t• Ber be,.. h•, ROWlelld •I Mllllllan. LO\ Alemltos •I M•rlno; Sunny Hllh bye 1.8 Poly •• Coror1e det M•r, Avl•lion bye; HH Wlhon bY•. Downey ot v.,.,..,., Colle Mew •t ·-Por1l, Edi""' t>yo, Mlr•l"4e •I El DoredO, LB Wiison llvo Cll">-A~ IUv•njde Poly ll'tO. 0.. l.wge et 11.-1enc1s, ~O.u•t Hoovo•; H•rnrd et Saft C"°"*"•· Pe<lll<-' M wr; 01-.1e .. Ror••. o .... "'"- •• II-. V•IM<le •I VIII• Perk. Tustin•• •• S..U,,.; ........,., Perk et 8 .. lr, CteMOflle V...., ft Cl•remont, Nortll IRl,..,....l -~ Gorgonlo, U'PI-et •-~I'*; Ateadl• •• MIHIOfl v .. ,.~ Sclflr191etl-;.~·· 1 c.,i. • .......,. I.• ,.._. bye; La a.-.. .. 44 S.rn•, = ~C....-. .,.: ~~~--:r,.= t>r• • Lot A ...... .,..; • w..-: Wlllttlw.,.. ...; '-' Soul" Pa.ado••~· t • Oulftt• .. "°'" *r9' Aeov••; COi....,., ... • .. ' "· ~4· , .. Balle teros wins in Austra~ ~ MELBOURNE, Australia IAP> -S«verimo Ballesteros or Spain fired a closing three-mlde'r•par ! 69 Sunday and scored a three-stoke vi~y lit tile , • $150,000 AustraJian PGA ChampiOftSbip at~yal Melbournegoltcourse. · Ballesteros, 24, finished with a 12·bote toUll of 282, six·under·par. •. • • • 14 ' ~~ri enjoys ._a big payday: His 12-under-par good enough for one stroke victory Prom AP dispatches Tourin.: pro Ed Flori of Sugarland, Texas, fired a ftnal·round 70 Sunday to win the Sootbern California Open goll toumament at Buena Part by one stroke over F red Couples and Peter Oosterbuis. Fiori shot rounds ol 71, 66, 6t and his elosins 1Q t.o 1ive him a total score or 211, 12 under par on the 6 I06·yard Los Coyoles Golf Club course. He c0llect.ed $31,500, th~ third-largest check or his four.year professional career. John Cook. who would have collected a $50,000 bonus if he won, tied for fourth platt wtlb Tom Purtzer, J ack ReM er an<i Jon Chalfee. A $50,000 bonu1 was offered to any of the four winners or Cali!O'mia tour events in 1981 who also won U.ls event. Cook the third·round leader , loat bis advantae~ to Fiori on the fourth hole and didn't m~lle a birdie the rest of the way to finish wit.b a 73 .• Couples had a 70 Sunday and Oosterhuis carded a 69 for their 277 totals. Purtler bad a 6S, low round of the day, Renner had a 70 and Chaffee a 71, giving them totals of 278 along with Cook. Couples and Oost.erhuis earned $14,500 each, while Cook, Purtzer, Renner and Cbartee collected $7,575 apiece. Fiori, 28. was surprised that 70 was cood enouch OD the final day to win the tournament. He took the lead with birdies on the third and fourth holes and then parred the remaining 14 boles. NFL standings "The pin placements were so difficult tbaL making birdies wasn't easy." said I.he two·time tour winner. Fiori led by one shot over Couples headina hlto the 18th hole. a par·S, But Couples m.iued.. Ms chance for a bll'die when he hoollect llis.clrift •io the trees and had DO opportunllt --~a. green in two. Oosterhuls did birdi• a) tD ' tie Couples for secood place ,-: .,. « 4' Cowboys face B1:1f(~~ IRVING, Texas <AP> -The DallU~a· public relations department Wees to-('"alJ !~ Stadium "The Bermuda Triangle o( .. N.,._., Football League ." • ) ~ . The reference. of course, is to Ula--= Florida coast where ships have beelt,~ lost mysteriously. • _ t There has been something spooty"abotat the way the Cowboys play in the stadium'wi1b a ho .. in the roof. Dallas is 69-15 in the stadium si~~its O)>enln1 in 1971, inclu<ling some wild last.minute' victoriea. Already this year, the Cowboys s cored t•o touchdowns in a 31·second span tale in the foerth period to beat Miami 28-27. , Buffalo comes to Texas Stadium t.ifllal t baving lost in its only foray into "'t:'he 'trialllle.1' O.J . Simpson was aboard and the Bills went clown 17·10 in 1976 on a Monday night special. . **** ****·'*"**** : JOHNSON ,.; : . : ~ ... NA110NALCONFERENCE West.em Dlvlaio• • • AMERICAN CONFERENCE • Wes&ern Division • Presents •• : : .. W L T PF PA Pct. San Francisco 8 2 0 225 168 .800 Atlanta 5 5 O 277 189 .500 Rams 5 s o 227 214 .500 New Orleans 3 7 0 129 217 .300 Eastern Division Philadelphia 8 2 o 249 139 .800 Dallas 7 2 O 214 181 . 778 N. Y. Giants S 5 O 195 173 .500 Wuhlneton 4 6 0 210 243 .400 St. Louis 3 7 o 189 303 .300 Central Division Minnf'90ta 6 4 0 230 228 .600 Tampa Bay S S 0 173 163 .500 Detroit 4 6 O 241 223 .400 Green Bay 4 6 0 196 232 .400 Chjcago 3 7 O 152 231 .300 ......... tc.-H-a.... 21, 11-IJ W ........... D, o..r.lt JI Ml.-t •• -!",,....., J1, OT 0..... a., a, NY C>l...a t4 ........ 11. OMll-1• "'41 ...... SZ. ... ~to Mlf!MlllU U. T-..., lt Olk ..... ll-City 11, OT S...l",_..t7,AttMtel4 Clllelf!Mtl .. ._. 0!990 17 a...-U.. cin.t-20, OT NY .Mt 41, a.ltlmwo 14 IHnl• ... ""'9IM't"' ,........,._ 8Wf•IOM Oe41M ICMlwltt 7 •t41 Denver San Diego Kansas City Oakland Seattle W L T PF PA Pct. • 7 3 0 196 149 . 700 • 6 4 0 292 247 .600 • 6 4 0 240 201 .600 • 4 6 0 141 167 .400 • 3 7 0 152 226 .300 • East.em Division « Miami 7 2 l 243 189 .750 -. Buffalo 6 3 0 203 141 .667 -ti N. Y. Jets 5 4 1 232 223 .SSO • New England 2 8 0 234 240 .200 -tr Baltimore 1 9 O 172 339 .100 • Central Division ii Cincinnati 7 3 O 268 193 .700 • Houstoo 5 s o 176 213 .500 • Pittsburgh 5 5 O 209 199 .500 • Cleveland 4 6 0 183 217 .~ • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • t************************************* ~ : , ..... Plcbat $700 REBATES or .. tr .. • • • • • • • '•· MFl.11 Pick• of ' , ... w .... ., . .. It .. • • : p '"" • . ...,,...,_ ..,..,..,.. New Orleans linebacker Glen Redd smiles wltile being hugged by teammates aft er crucial interception. . "om Page C1 WILSON COMES HOME e • • up at first. I was really nervous at the beginning. "But then I was able to calm down. I knew that if we'd play well, we could beat the Rams. And with Rogers running the hell out or the ball and the offensive line doing a fantastic job, it was all really easy for me." the game the following week against Pittsburgh before the Steelers pulled out a 20-6 victory. ~is statistics up until Sunday were typlcaJ r ookie: 45 completions in 84 attempts one touchdown and s·even interceptions for a les~ than medicore 42.8 rating. But Sunday , Wilson was like an All-Pro veteran, mixing up the plays well, audiblizing well and reading the vaunted Ram blitz well. In two previous NFL starts this year Wilson found it wasn't all that easy. ' tf He got the Saints a 7-0 lead over San Francisco , in the fourth game of the season before the 49ers rebounded for a 21-14 win and kept New Orleans in "TWS <NEW ORLEANS) Is a good team, we never quit,·· a very exhausted Wilson said .afterward. "Bum (bead coach Phillips> has a lot of people believing in themselves. Ups ets jUinble e .county ratings The Orange County prep football rankings were stirred up by upsets last week -with four highly ranked teams tasting defeat, creating a shakeup in the lower tlillf of the ratings. ·· At the top, however, things are the same with _Sunset League strongboys Edison < 1), Marina <2> and Fountain Valley 131 recording soUd victories. Tumbling were No. 4 El Modena (21·17 to • Foothill>. No. 6 Esperanza (37-14 to Pacifica), No. 7 Estancia <22-15 to Irvine) and No. 8 Villa Park (7-0 to Santa Ana Valley). This week's big game7 You get one guess. ll 's No. 1 Edison and No. 3 Fountain Valley at Anaheim Stadium Friday night. Other key issues: No. 6 El Dorado meets No. 9 Esperanza and No. 5 Pacifica meets a tough Cypress crew in Empire League action. Orange County Top 10 Daily Pilot football rankings Pos. Team, reeord Next game 1. Edison (9·0 ) Fountain Valley (7·21 2. Marina (8·1 I Westminster (5·4> 3. Fountain Valley <7·21 Edison <9·0) 4. Foothill (8·1> Tustin (4·5> 5. Pacifica (8·1) Cypress (6·3) 6. El Dorado (7-2) Esperanza (7-2)· 7. Mission Viejo (8·0·1) Dana Hills (4-5) 8. EJ Modena (5·4>• Villa·Park (7-2> 9. Esperanza (7·2) El Dorado <7·21 10. Estancia <7-l·l l Costa Mesa (2-7) ".Our offensive line dominated their defellllii, I had so much time to throw and I couldn't belin• ome of the holes they were opening up... \;.. Wilson said that he first found out be would bt starting last Thursday and that he felt unashamed to go to the 10.year veteran Manning for advice. "There's no quarterback controversy here" he said. ' After arriving in Los Angeles last Friday Wilson said that he spent the weekend with ~ parents in Anaheim, trying to stay as relaxed and loose as he could , although that often seemed ~e a n .impossibility. "I was trying to keep my wc1tement under control and all the while, my ~om and d~d were coming up to me and asking, Dave. aren t you excited about Sunday?' Believe me, I was." . "And .then Sunday came and wound up being, as. W1lsoo DJd, "More run than a day at Disneyland." Manning said that he left as much as pouible up to Wilson himself. "l didn't want to be bis advisor," he said. "Besides, I'm new in this coaching system with Bum, too, and I'm learning myself. "Dave and I have had a good relationship. I can tell what he likes and doesn't like to do on the field. He wants me to help rum and I try but the re 's only so much I can do with out over-stepping my bounds ... In sizing up Wilson 's ability. Manning candidJy admits that he sees him as a "slinger. II you give him the opportunity, he'll throw the ball 40 times a game." But Manning, who figures he may return to action in two to three weeks after suffering pulled sto mach muscles in a game last week, complimented Wilson for his poise and leadership. ·'The Rams try to fool you with their nickel defense and blitzes,'' he said. "Dave was a Uttl_, too up for the game but once he settled down, he directed the team like a veteran." lt was quite a way for Wilson to say hello to some old friends. (:,ollege football OUTSTAHDIM& VALUES! "" • Pecmc-10 Conference 1' c.t. .... ~-W L T W L T ,., "A UCL.A 4 I I 6 2 I 2D Ill '41Wellll"9fon st. 4 I I 1 I I 232 IM ~·~-St. 4 1 0 1 I 0 2" 11• USC • I 0 • I 0 ut 110 iilret11l1191M 4 2 0 1 2 0 217 UI art-l l 0 S I 0 ID U1 ~,.,_ 240 2 70 210257 6111om1a 2 • o 2 1 o "' m ~St. 0 S 0 I I 0 121 m ~IOI' 0 S 0 I I 0 10S I• , PCAA eo'nfere,,ce CMf. -.._ W L T W L T ,., "A EJoMSt. 100 •202'3"4 II St. 4 I 0 S 4 1 1IO 160 ecllk u . 2 2 o • s o 122 "' S 9eecll I 2 0 2 • 0 " tn ntsN St. I J 0 J 6 0 JIO 2S2 ullefton 1 • o 1 1 o !U m Southeastern Conference c:.... .... E W L T W L T ,., "A soo ,,, .. ,. soo 71122Sto4 °'"' , t 0 • J 0161 "7 ~ 2 , 0 s • 0 lf6 ,,. ..,....14b 2 I 0 S • O 210 125 ···-I 2 0 S I I 14' 1tt , r: 1 JI JS11U• e!ttKll r I J 0 2 1 0 It\ 11' ~" 1 • o > • o ,., m fll'IMI....... 0 I 1 2 S I 1'6 Dt AtlanUc CoH t Conference c-t. ._ W L T W L T f'f' •A -soo '''* .. leM J t 0 I S 11n M6 c.rolll!e J I 0 1 2 0 2t6 ft f JJO S•Olllltl C.. It. J l 0 • J 0 "' "' .... ,.... I S 0 J 1 0 171 Ml 9"releTedl I I 0 1 t tltlMI ~ • • • 1 1. ,. ,,. Big ElaM Conference c.t. s.- " L T W L T f'f' f'A NebretllA S 0 0 1 2 0 111 12 Olilehome l o 1 s 2 1 24' no Iowa SI. 2 2 t J I I t7S l60 OklahOme st J I o s J o 1• "' Ml-rl 2 l 0 6 J 0 121 IOt Kanwa 2 J 0 6 l 0 IQ 174 ICeftMla SI. I 4 0 2 1 0 ID Ml Colorado I 4 O 2 1 O 117 t74 Big Ten Conference c.t. .... W LT W LT"' f'A MlclllOM S 2 0 1 2 0 -lt4 Wlaconal11 S 2 0 • l 0 214 ID Ofllo SI • 2 o • J o 2n 110 ·-· • 2 0 • l 0 l01 115 llll11ola 4 J O S 4 O 20l at MlllMllOta 4 a 0 • J 0 217 1'S M1c111...,se. > • o • s o 211 m Purdue J • o s • o tu 1"9 l""Ja11a t J O 2 7 O 110 Ml Hort.._...., 070 OtOM• Weatem Athletic: Conference eeat. . .._ W LT W LT Pf' N Hewalf S 0 o 1 0 0 U• 71 Utall 4 0 1 1 I t ltol 12A 8rl9 ...... v,. J I 0 I 2 0 ... "' wromtne J 1 o 1 t o * Ml NewMallka t J I a • 1 1• m S-01-2 4 t 4 4 Ot .. ln Air ,orca 1 • o a s o 1n m THH•ll P-I S 0 I I 0 112 llS Colorado St. O 6 O 0 t 0 tat 8'I Soutttwett Conference SMU THH ., ... _ .. _ .... TeutAAM .. .,,., Ilic. TCU c.t. .._ W LT W LT f'f' f'A S I 0 I 1 0 m 111 J I I ' 1 I 1'2 t11t ' 420 71021114t J 2 1 J I I .. IM J 2 0 J 0 '" , .. JIO 4IU.1tt t • • • • 161 1tl 1 4 1 ,, • .,, . /' IRAHDHIW 1911 vw DIESll. IAlllT F/\CTORY STICKER $7670 4 DISCOUNT $97$ SALE PRl~E 56695 (2983) (177663). llAHDHIW Itel ISUZU 4X4 PICICUP SALE PRICE 57295 (1272) (02088) 4 1peed tran1mlsllon. AM·FM 1tereo & a 1unroof. (149~76) Or1nge Co11t OAILYPfLOT/Monday, November 9. 1981 ~TUMBLE e e e fill&itiilULD alto tee that fhblem1 aren't uart•rback. Pat ol a buee for bl• ftnt nlne week• but thoH who Paatorlnl work taave to admit he er. NCll& tMi& ... Putorlnl's, or Ha4eo '•, ault. Sunday, In ~!!~, Pa1toril)i had no ,... to •ork wlth, the re-• on.wve line wu a· m..,, ... ta.. defense wu a totaJdil ...... . ''Vou'U ~rf~d me pointing a flneer," IOI Haden, "but one penon, DO llDtter' how iood be ll, caa't ••-bimsS'it ... "It'• 0...-•· so there's no aenH ~ lt on," added Paatortlll, Wbo was 15 of 33 for 223 y.,., ,.. touchdown and· foilr ~-•Jwe weren't coo•~• W& weren't sharp, and we b n '9 set better. . "l know *•' sounds clicheish and borilljl1 ~ that's football. We can come back. We have too much tmeet and too many guys who WllMtowin." 'l'taat ~ be true, but.if the Be•• are going to start wianiq, tbey're going to have to solve IOIDe ol their problems ... in.hurry. Tht Rama may be ranked No. 3 in U. N,l"C defensively, but that '1 •blea4ing because they're No. 1 aeainst the pus. Tb91 ~re "No. 10 against the ru1h, but that number l• bound to chante after what the Saint.a 1ccompll1hed Sunday. "I don't know what It was. 1l'1 hard to define," uid Pat Thomas, maybe the proudest of all the Rama. "We hlt people. We bit 'em hard. Maybe they wanted lt I Ultle bit more. We couldn't do wbat we needed to do to win." ''We haven't been able to com e up with the blg play," said Nolan Cromwell, shaking his head. "I don't know what it is." And, that's the scariest part or au. Here the Rams are 10 weeka into the 1euon and they stlll don't have any answers. ·'I'm disheartened." said Harrah, "but we can't quit now." A couple: of mor e performances like Sunday and the Rama won't have to quit, all they'll have to do is hoist a white flag and surrender. Royals lose again on Japanese swing TOKYO (APJ -The Yomiuri Gi'ants whipped the Kansas City Royals 6-2 Sunday, handing the American League baseball club its fourth straight defeat. Arter winning the first two games or their 11-game Japanese tour, the Royals were beaten by an all-star team, the Giants and a Giants-Yokohama Taiyo Whales squad before Sunday's setback. Kenji Awaguchi hit a grand slam home run in a five-run Giants' third inning orr starter and loser Dennis Leonard. Johit He responds • e ID t101e ARCADIA (AP) Shoemaker, th• •• accomplished Joct•1 thorou1bbred raclne bl fully appreciates John Hliii• willtowin. ·'This horse is a tou1h old he reall y likes to w Shoemaker said alter p John Henry to a narrow vl Sunday's $300,000 Oak Invitational on the turf aL Anita. . •'This is as game a horse u ever sat on," added Shoe who now has 841 stakes wins lengthy ridi!1k career. John Henry, too, bas distinguished career, rank the top or the sport's .... money-winners. Spence Bay overtook Henry, who bad led most way. late in the homestre John Henry battled back ahead in the final strides. Shoemaker said he saw Bay move past and, ". . horse responded when I him toandfouRht back. "He doesn't want to be be The wiMing time for mile.s on the grass was 2:23 equaling the stakes record also equaling J ohn Hea w!nning time in the event year. A 6-year-old gelding who sold for Sl,100, John Henry neck in front of Spence Bay wire. with The Bart ano lengths back in third. I \ "'. Ore~ Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday. Novtmbtl' 9, 1~1 I • • ID 8 comfortable stat Montana lias his 49ers San Francisco takes a commandiT}g three-game Lead in the NFC West with a 17-14 victory over Atlanta P,..AP...,.teMI SAN FRANCISCO -Joe Montana threw a palr ot touehdo'"1 paaaes ror San P'ranellco, but the thn needed an Interception by aafety Dwl1ht Hlcka with one minute len for a 17·1' victory over the Atlanta Falcona Sunday for their seven}h 1trai1ht National FootbaU Leasue win. The victory 1ave the 49ers, 8·2, a commandln1 thrM·1ame lead over defendln& champion Atlanta and the Rama, both 5·5, In the National Football Conference West. Their W'IMlng streak Is the lon1ett by an NFL team this year. Steve Bartkowski of Atlanta threw his 22nd touchdown pass or the seuon with 1 :43 left In the llmt!, bitUn1 Alfred Jackson on a 2S·yard toss into the end zone. The F'alcons retained possession or tbe baJI when Kenny Johnson recovered an onside kickoff. A 25-yard pass from Bartkowski to Alfred Jenkins gave the Falcons a first down at the San Franci.co 17. But the next pass, aimed at tight end Junior Mlller, was picked off by Hicks at the 5. Bengals 40, Chargers 17 SAN DIEGO -Cincinnati cornerback Louis Breeden streaked 102 yards with an iptercepted pass to lie an all-lime NFL record a nd quarterback Ken Anderson's passing (ueled a 31-point first-half explosion, powering the Bengals lo a 40-17 victory over San Diego. · . Breeden's return, which came on his first interception of the year, was one of three turnovers that C incinnati con verted into touchdowns in its first-half burst. · Breeden triggered the rout with a fumble recovery on San Di ego's first play from scrimmal{e and his second interceptibn of the game blunted another drive by the Chargers early in the fourth quarter . The win gave the Bengals a 7-3 record and their bes.t start in six years. San Diego, 6-4, suffer~ Its worst loss al home since 1975. and knocked the Chargers out of a lie for first in the AFC West. Oilers 17, Raiders 16 HOUSTON -Houston's bard -luck quarterback John Reaves fobbed a 25-yard touchdown pass to tight end Mike Barber on fourth down, rallying the Oilers to a 17·J.e victory over defending Super Bowl champion Oakland. Joe .\1o1itana Dolphins 30, Patriots 27 FOXBORO, Mass. -Uwe von Schamann kicked his thir d field goal or the game, a 30-yarder. with 7: 09 gone in t>verlime, boosting Miami lo a 30·27 victory over New England. The kick was set up when former Ram linebacker Bob Brudzlnski inter cepted Steve Grogan's pass at the New England 4S·yard line and returned it to the 26. The Patriots were penalized half the distance to the goal line when tackle Dwight Wheeler hit Brudzinski after he had gone out of bounds. With a first down at the 13, Miam i turned to von Schamann and he came through with the winning kick. T he triumph improved Miami's American Football Conference East Division leading record lo 7·2·1. Broncos 23. Browns 20 DENVER -Fred Steinfort, mired in a season-long slump, drilled a 30-yard fi eld goaJ 4: 10 into the overtime session, lifting Denver to a 23-20 victory over Cleveland. Steinfort's kick was set up after rookie cornerback Dennis Smith recovered a fumble near midfield and Craig Morton passed 33 yards to Rick Upchurch, moving Den ver inside the Cleveland 20-yard line. Coupled wlth losses by Kansas City and San Diego, the victory left Denver in sole possession of Reaves, trying to emerge from a star-cr ossed fi rs t place in the American Conference West nine-year pro football career, dropped b·ack with Div1sionwitha7-3record. Clevelandis 4-6. 7:20 left in the game and coolly passed Into the end Cleveland's Matt Bahr kicked field goals of 27 zone to Barber, who caught the pass over the and32yardsintheCinaJ4:18ofthe fourth quarterlo waving arms of Raiders' corner back Lester pull the Browns into a 20·20 tie atthe endpfregulation Hayes. play. Ba hr's tying field goal came with just 29 B be , t hd t h d T . F . h' seconds left. ar rs ouc ~wn ca c an oni r1tsc s Denver running back Dave Preston had given extra ~int put the Oilers ahead and overcame an the Bronc:os 3 20.14 1ead early in the fourth quarter on oustandmg second-ha.If passing effort by Oakland a 4.yard scoring run that capped an 80-yard, 12-play quart:back. Marc Walson. dr ive. Seahawks 24, Steelers 21 SEAT'l'l..E Sfatlle'a Th Brown scored tn a pair ot t yo rd ..,,ns In the tourtfl lN•rter and Pillsburatt placeki r Oavld Trout l'alaaed a 12·yard f(eld oal Ith 18 second• left as the Seuhnwks came Crom bthine,f to be&/ the teelers 24-21. The Seuhawks, 3-7, staged"ttletr vie)Ory on a day when P!ttsburgh's Franco HArris ~came only the third player In NFL history to rush for 10,000 yards in his career. He had 61 yards on lS carries. including a 6-yard touchdown run. Trout, a rookie from the University of Pittsburgh, was trying to tie the score at 24·24 and send the game Into overtime on the Seattle 5. But his three-point try was low and wide to the left. The Seahawks' eame-wannln& touchdown came with 9·04 left on a 64-yard, five-play drive directed by Seattle Q\l arterback Jim Zorn. Eagles 52. Cardinals 10 ST. LOUIS Ron Jaworski threw four touchdown passes. two to Harold Carmichael, to break open a tight contest in the second half and lead Phtladelphaa to a 5210 rout or St. Lows. The triumph left Philadelphia alone atop the National Conference East 1n the National Football League with an 8·2 record. a half.game ahead of Dallas. which plays tonight. Jaworski, who passed for 235 yards. hit Wilbert Montgomery and Rodney Parker with touchdown tosses of 19 and 33 yards in the opening half. I le then connected wi th Carmichael on a 14-yard scoring pass early in the third quarter, following a Philadelphia fumhlc recovery. Four minutes later, the Ph1ladelph1 a quarterback again combined with Carmu:hat:"I on a 38·yard touchdown pl ay. Prior lo J aworsk1's touchdown passes. Jim II art ·s 41 yard toss to Mel Gray a nd Neil O'Donoghue's 21 )Ur<l field goal gave the Cards a 10· 7 ad\'antagc Packers 26. Giants 24 MILWAUKEE Jan Stenerud's fourth field goal of the game, a 23·yarder with 2.36 lo play, ralhed Green Ba~ to a 26 24 victory over the New York Gian~ The Giants. 5·5. who had trailed 20·0 after one quarter. s torm e d back behind second-year quarterback ~colt Brunner and took a 24·23 lead on a 33-yard field goal by J oe Danelo w1th6: 14 left. The Packers. 4·6, sta rted the next series at their 21 and drove to the Giants 6 behind David Wh1tehurst's passes covering 41 yards lo John Jefferson and 17 to Paul Coffman. Stenerud kicked his decisive fi eld goal on fourth down and one. Stenerud 's fi eld goals gave him 301 for his 15-year NFL career .third highest in league history. The Packers butll their 20·0 lead on a 41-yard interception return for a touchdown by Estus Hood, a 94-yard scoring dash with a punt return by Mark Lee and Stenerud fi eld goals or 32 and 28yards. Vikings 25, Sues 10 BLOOMJNCTON 1 Minn. -Ted Brown rushed for 129 yards and a touchdown and Rick Oanmeler kicked three rteld goal& 11 Mlnnesola beat Tampa 6 ay 25·10 and regained its one·1ame lead In the NFC Central Division. Tommy Kramer completed 24 of 41 passes (or 228 yards, including a l·yurd scorin& toss to Rickey Young as Minnesota, 21-13 losers to the Buccaneers in its season opener, raised Its record to 6·4. The Vikings took over the division lead they relinquished las t Monday night in Denver. Redsk ins 33, Lions 31 WASHINGTON Mark Moseley's fourth field goal. a 44-yarder with 43 s~onds remaining, and t he Tunning Of J oe Wi°shington lifted the Washington Redskins to a 33-31 victor y over Detroit. Was hington. obtained 1n a trade with Baltimore prior to the regular season, gained 144 yards on the g round and scored two touchdowns. Moseley's game -deciding kick followed an apparent winning field goal by Detroit•s Ed Murray. a 50.yardel" with 1 :50 remaining. Bears 16, Chiefs 13 KANSAS CITY, Mo. J ohn Roveto dri.lled a 22-yatd field goal wath 1.53 left in overtime, boosting Chicago Lo a 16·13 upset of Kansas City. Roveto's kick. his third or the day, came moments after he missed a 37·yarder . but he got a reprieve when Kansas City's Gary Green was penalized for jumping onto an opponent's back while trying lo block the kick, giving the Bears a first down at the Chiefs' 10. The wanning drive came after Kansas City's Steve Fuller, whose 18-yard touchdown pass to llenn' Marshall walh 44 seconds left in regulation forged a 13-L3 tac, fu m bled a snap and Al Harris I reco\'cred on the Chicago 36 All four Chicago scores followed Kansas City turnovers on the windy. raan-sltck field as the Bears, 3-7, notched their second upset in three "eeks and dropped the Chiefs lo 6·4 Jets 41 . Colts 14 BALTIMORE Quarterback Richard Todd tossed three touchdown passes and led the New 1 York J ets to a 41 ·14 victor} over Baltimore. A crowd of 31,521 in half.empty Memorial Stadium watched the Coils absor b their ninth consecutive NFL defeat followmg a triumph in the' season opener. Todd. who was accused of assault by a New York sports writer al a pr actice session last week, completed 21 of 31 passes for 277 yards lie completed TD passes of 34 yards to Wesley · Walker, 25 yards to Johnny "Lam" Jones. and a l ·varder lo Kevin Long. .,. SI .Toilchclown Crossworcll · 1 ACROSS Answer To Last Week's Puzzle l.6 Shown, Cowboys· 26 OB and Coach star OB Gral\am 11 Jim Thorpe was one 29 Remember 08 13 Cowt>oys' OE Harvey- 14 FOf example (ab.) 15 Any NFL« 18 Driver'. lie .. p.aaport, etc. 17 Six-pointer (ab.) 18 Patriots' DE Tony Mc- Parllll? 31 Apiece (ab.) 32 -the ball (cllctdng) 33 Coach Strwn 35 Fak:on1' C8 Rlcll - 38 Football RN THE SKILL OF A LIFETIME 20 Mlt90Url Valley Conf. team 22 1 Of lie. e.g. 23 Ending with pay 24 Miii West of the flicks 25 "Cheer, cheer for " DOWN 1 San -Chargers 2 Ollera' T -Fields 3 The Fighting Irish (ab.) 4 -and tuck 5 Gridiron unit 8 Cowboys' CB Manning 7 Many, many mina 8 Pronoun 9 OBY. A:- 10 Blew the whlatle 12 OB Van Brocklln 13 Cowboya' LB Heoman 19 tuive a hamburger 21 LB Atkinson'• lnltlala 22 Ollera' RB C&rpei'lter 27 Yards to make fnt down 28 AFC Weal tHm 29 Cowboys' LB Breunig 30 Unapecllled amount 33 ~·· 1tarG Dennis - enthu11Ut 39 Out of - (sputtering) 42 Remember G Augle -? 44 BefOfe, poetlc:ally 45 Chargers' QB Dan- 47 Use the needle 48 DE Rice's lnltlals 39 Fleld- 40 Gold (aymb.) 49 Raiders' KR - Mall hews 50 Mont Blanc, e.g. 52 Pronoun S3 Cowboys' K 45 Kind of kick or safety Septten 55 P1trlot1'L8Steve - 51 Billa' LB -Nelaon 56 Four to make IOyarda 51 Arafat's org. 34 Ex·Chlefa' C Charlie -41 Lions' LB -White 46 Blocking gear for practice 54 Seahawka' OE Anderaon'a lnltlela 56 Vlklnga' WR White'a initlala 38 Falcons' Jenkin• and Lion•' Baker 37 Vikings' LB Jeff - 38 Hell of Famer E Tom - 43 Helarnan RB "-.-0-.t'*O ................ S• loC ''*' ..,.,.._,,..,...,.,,,.,,0- tC ........ -... "°"' .. , .. , COITA-l41•12ft , . .._ ..... -~1 -------............. ..__,. Steve -49 Author Fleming See next ~·a lsaue for solution LEASE .A NEW 1982 EXP! TOllORROW'S CAR IS HERE AND WE HAYE BIG SELECTIONS FOR MEDIATE DELIVERY. IN YOUR SPARE TIME. Want to get into choppers this weekend and get to know them a well a~ that 350,cube you can tune in the dark ? Want to learn which breadboard to change to bring a communicatio.ns transceiver back to life? And h6w to fix it in the field? Want to feel what it's like to pres~ a jov stick and see five tons of earth move? ' the place is your local Army Reserve Center. A weekend a mo nth there can cam you over $7 3. Over $1,200 a yea r, co start, counting two weeks annual ttaining. And thi doesn't include over $2.200 more you 'll earn for the train, ing you can split between cwo ummers. , Not every job skill we teach is high tech. But challenging, yes. If you've got the spare time. we could have just what you 're looking for. lnterested? For more information, call any of the numbers Ii red below. O r stop by. I • Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 9. 1981 • NFL Saints 21 , Rama 13 Sc-'-wo.emn New Ori-O• 7 7-7-21 lo• Ano-i.s J 10 0 t-IS LA -FG C«rol .. LA -O..W..rd 2' ~ from Postorlnl (Correl l k kl NO -G. Ro0tn Jf run I Rkordo klCk) LA FG CorrJtl U NO -G. R-n S n•n (Rlurdoklckl NO -G. R-rs 2 run IRkorclO klckl A • '1,11611 TNmSt..nti<1 NO Firs• .SO-• 26 Rust>es-yorc11 52-307 Pontno yenlS 115 Relurn yards S POUH 11·1M S.c kl by l-21 Punts ~ FumblH-lost 7·1 Pen•llln-y-ll-IOI Time ol ,.,,_Ion :U:07 ,._..,,....., ... me. LA ,. 2).11J "' 0 1s.J:H ~ '"° H 1M7 tA;S) RUSHING -N-O•IH nl , G. R099rs ,.., ... T. Tyler 1·7', HOime• to.•. w. Wll90fl 10·J•. l as Af19e'"· J. ThOmas 11-75, Bry.,t 11·3', Gum.. 1·1. PASSING -New Or1u n1, 0 . Wiiton t t lt·0· 112. Lo• A ngeles, P ostorlnl U·»-HZJ RECEIVING ... ,. OrlH M , W. Wii- l-Ji, Merllens 2•1. &<...,,., 1·21, Herdy M t, G R09trs 1-14, T. Tyler MO, Gn1t11 1 .. , Holmu l·S. Los A,.1e1, 0.Merd •• .,, J TllomH l-11. Bryont >-t• Arnold 2-43, O. Hiil 1·21, Miller 1·11, Gumon HI. Bengals 40, Chargers 17 kw• Ir( O..rten Clncll\flotl 10 ?I o ._ San 01990 O 10 o 7-17 Cln -Curll~ • pu1 lrom Anderson IBreec hkkkl Cln -FG BrH<h Q SO -Chendler U pu1 lrom Foull IBenlrschU kk kl Cln -l(rolder 10 PHI from Anderson I BrHCll kick) Cln Al•-• 1 run I BrMCll kick) Ctn Br-n un lnlerceptlon reium I Br .. cll klclll SO FG Benlrsclllle 41 Cln FG BrM<h XI Cln Johnson 2 run lklO l•lledl SO Chandler SI pe ss from Fouts I S.nlncllke kick I A Sl,259 ,,... ...... , Si.tl1tk1 RUSHING -qnclnnatl, JohnlOft ~. A11<Mtl0ft J.JS, Al.....-~15. A. Grlffl11 •·U. v..._. 1·t . Hororove 2·1. S... Ole90, Muncie 11·t0, J Broou 4-45, Fouts 1·1. PASSING -Cincinnati, Ander1011 11·21·1·11t, ThOmPSon 2·•·0·32, Schonert 1 ·1 ·0 H . Son Diego, Fouts 20·•0+J$2, Cllolldler0.1~. RECEIVING 0 11<l11nat1. Curtis ~H7, Colllns-111 ... ,, Kreider J-41, RMS 2·•· A. Grlllln 2·21, Atuonoer t~. M.L. Horris 1·J. Sall 01990, CNndl .. 11>-I ... su1 .. ).102, Wlnllo• S-JJ, Joiner 2 14, Munc .. t-6. J 8 rookt1·l. Packers 26, Giants 24 Sc-.., O-rt.n NY Glonu 0 u 0 11>-U GrHn Bay 10 J 0 >-Jt GB -Hood • • ll\lerceptlo11 r eturn ISlenerud klekl GB -Lee••l'Ufll relurn CSt-W kk k) GB -FG St-rud 37 GB FG St-rud H NYG -Slllrk 11 pus lrom BruMer I Oanelo II.IO I NYG -"-rlllllS 14 poss from Brunner I Oanelo kk kl GB FGSttnerudU Ny G -Friede 1 P•U from 9,..,,,.., 1Dane10 kkkl NYG -FG Oonelo J3 GB FGSltnffud2J A S4,IJI lfljjM dual Statllllcs RUSHING -New York, Ceprenler 1S.ll, Brighi J.JO, "-"Y S II, Kotar 2·•. &<unner 2-mlnus 2 Grffft Bay, Ellis 2CHS, HuOlebv s "· MIOdleton • 2 JenHn •·minus J, Wllllehurst ).minus l PASSING Hew York, Br11nner u ...... ,,.. GrHn Bay, Dickey 11>-2'·MO. Wllltallu"*~· RECEIVING New Yori!, BrlQlhl ... 7t, Perkins 5·12, Shirk 3·27, Mulledoy ~MO, Friede 2·10. (Mpoonter 2-11, ,,_,,., 1·'· K- t ·minus J. Grun l•Y. Collman •·61, Jellerson l·71, HU<kleby J-7, Ellis J·O , Lolton 2·12 Oolphlna 30, Patriots 27 k••lt'f,..._ Miami 0 • u 1 J-JO ,.. ... lino•- NE -Moroen I 10 0 10 0-21 1' pen lrom Grooen 1Sm1lll klelll NE -FGSmlth27 Mia -FG Smit/> 77 Ml• -FG VOii S<NmeM H NE -a......,,• run (5"'111\ klcll l Mia -FG von S<llomenn 2' Ml• -Vigorito JO run Ivon ScN,,....,, kl~i'. Hatllon 1 run (von S<llOmenn kkkl NE -C:OCllns 1 run !Smith kkkl Mia -WOOdley 2 ru11 Ivon Scllomonn t;IOI NE -FG Smtih 24 Ml• -FG •on S<llom•nn >O A ••.1'7 ,,,..,,_ISIOtlllks RvSHING Miami, Nolh•n , •• ,.. Frankllll 16·71, Vigorito 1·30, Hiii 1·1', Woodley •·•. Moore l·J. New E1101oncl, Collins 17·t0, Cunnl"9110m t-2•. Moroen 1-11, Fer9u10n 2-6. Gniotn 2·S, Totupu 1·1 PASSING Miami, W-ley U ·37·2·2G New Engl-, G,...,. ~lSS ' RECEIVING Miami, "•"'' 1·10 , NathOn S·JI, Lee J.7, Hiii M 4, Cefelo Ml. VlllOf'llo 1·t, wordy 1-7, Giaquinto 1-S. Ne• Eno1a nd, Moro•n S 112, Joh111011 S·6', Cu11nlngl\om S.J7. H•H•lllKk 3-2', Colllnt J·21, T•IUllU 1-11, Ferguton 1-4. Seahawka 24, Steelera 21 k_W......,.. Pltllbu,.,.. 1 14 0 t-21 SHltta J 1 t 1~ Pit -Hwrlt 61'\111 <Trout klckl s .. -l'G Hof'rw•J7 Pit -Mo'-to pess fr-lrMlllew ITroutllk lll Pll-Thornton 4 1'\111 (Trout111<111 Se• -Ooornt1111 44 .,. .. from lor11 ( Htrr•••Jtlclll S.e -T • .,_, 1 run (Herrore llk kl S.• -T. ,,_, 1 run IHarnl•• klclll A-St-.......... IUIMtkl RUSHING -Pltt""''1lfl· Herrt. IMI, Pollord It-SI, Oevll ... u. TlllWMeft 4-11, B••d•h•• 2 ... S••tu•. T. 8 row11 ,....,, Ooor'l,lnk to.a, west 1.21. zom 4-mlnua t. . PASSINO -Plt11buroh, •••d•ll•• tl-22·2·211. s..ttle, Zorn .• 1•u+212. RECEIVING -PlttMiurth, Stettwwtll J.J2, Horris J.23, Pollorf 2·17, O.vls Ml, Mal-t.tO, ni.r-1-a, CUMll\IMm , ... Seettle, T, 8rown 7·6t. Loroent ._.,, Ooor·nlllll 3-12, Sml111 Ml, Tlce 1·11, AUllllC 1-t, MCCUiium 1-4, Jeta 41 , Colt• 14 sc...11yoi..mn Mv Jett B•lllmore NY J -FG Loally U 10,. 7 , ..... , 1 1 0 ._,. &el -M<Mlllon 2 pete from .>-. <WOGO kl<kl NYJ -Welker,. llOM fn>m Todd (L,eolly kick) B•I -M<Mltton I run (Wllod kl<ll NY J -""'9UstYnlM I run (LoOhy lll<kl NY J -J. Jones u pass from TOcld (L•ollv klCk) HY J -L.on0 1 PHI f n>m Todd ( l.eolly kl<kl NYJ -Horpw J n"" IL..Hfty kk kl NYJ -FGL .... y O A -l1,S21 IMl¥MIMISUlll1tlu RUSHING -New York, H•"'9• 10-44, Auguslynlell 11..0, L.onO J.11. Dierking ... u. Newton •·7, RYOll I-minus 1. 8•111,,,_, Ol1on '-SI, Mc.Miiion 11_.7, OkkeY 2·t, B. J-s 1-2, Gorr•U H . PASSING -Haw Yri, TOcld 21.Jl+m . B•ltlmore, e. J-. 24-SJ.1·20. RECEIVING -New Y-. W•lk.,. J.t4. G•llney M7, AUOUl1'fftlall l..J3, Olorlllnt >·11, J. Jones 1·l', N..Con 2-2>, Horper H , l ••kum 1·12, 8 . Jones 1·6, Lont 1.1. B•lllmOf'e, M<Mlllon 11-41, M<Ceul•Y MO, Ol1on :J.U, McColl l-2', Carr 1·2>. 8ur1le M l , But~ HS e .. ,.. 16, Chiefs 13 k••W.,.... Chkogo 7 J 0 S J.-.16 K•n.s.as City J J O 7 t-tJ Chi -W•tts 12 llOH lrom EYAM c Rowto llk lll KC -FG ~ry,. Chi -FG llowlo u ICC -l'G ~JJ Clll -FG Rowto 23 ICC -Ma•lll•ll 11 POU from ,uller IL-eryll.klll Chi -FG Rowto 22 A -tO.M)S t•vNut...-...C• RUSHING -Clllc..90, Peyton 21·70, Meet-17~ 14fty 1•• .• .,.,, J.tt. Ken .. • City, Del-y IS.a, 8. JOC"- 1 ... M, Monfloll 14 1, H ..... 11, 1(-y 2-24,Futlw....i-1. ,ASSING -Ollcaeo. £we111 , ..... n. Ken1os City, Fuller 7·20·1·•· Ke11,..y J.t••u. llECEIVING -Clll<.a90, ...... """ .... Wotts 2·20 .... ,,.,, , ••• K•nHt City, M•rsll•ll •·4 , llotn• 2·U , Smltll t-22, lledSOO 1-11, HodNC 1-4, Del_., 1-'-s l. Bronco• 23, Browne 20 SC.-..,., ....... c1 ..... -0enver Don -FG Slelntort '5 0 1 1 ...... J 7 J 7 )-U Cl• -Mlllor 1 run 18111\r klclll Oen -Welson S P•H lrom Morton CS1elnlo<1 llkkl Oen -FG SC4"ntort 4 Cle -LOOM n 119• '""" Sipe I..,., alc111 Oen -,.,...._ • 1'\111 IStelll+ort kl<kl Cle -FG ..... 27 Cle -FG 8ellr l2 Oen -FG StOlnfor1 >O A -14,8" ........... Slatl .. k• RUSHING -CltWlond, M. l'Tvltt IJ.57, Sipe 3-10, Mlllor H , N-t• Oen...,, P erros ,,_.., Proton 11·?9, Reed 1·14, Morton 1-S, lkKl\Urch 1·2, Lytle 2.0. PASSING -Cltwlancl, Sipe 10-0·1·2'0. Denver, MorWn 21·2:).C).2'1. RECEIVING -Cltwlond, LOOOll M6, M. Pruitt ,.,,,, Hiii 4-G, Nowsomo ,..,, Miiier 2·10, RU<ller 1·2J. Oe1111er, Odoms S-71, Preston 4-61, Wolaon J.SS, Upcl\urcll ,...., P•rros l-22. R .... MS, Etloff M l. EaglH 52, Cardlnala 10 tcw.WO.mn Phll-!pl'lla 1 10 14 21-S2 St. Louts I J 0 C>-10 Piii --.1gomery It pass rrom Jo-WI I Frenklln klC:kl Sil -Grey 4 1 pen lrom H•rl IO'Oonoghwklclll SIL -l'G0'~21 Piii -Portier » "" fnim Jewwtllt (Fronklln klelll Pttl -FG Fr-lln 22 Piii -CormlcihMI 14 Posa from Jo..-1 I Frenklln klCkl Phi -Cannlc:hoef • poss fr.om Ja-WI I l'ronktln klc:kl • Phi -Campfleld 2""' I Fronklln llkkl Phi -He11ry 10 pus from "''°'elk I l'rMklln kkJll PHI -R-11 1 run IFr-1111 kick) A -.. ,G 1 • .......... MMhilk• RUSHING -Plllt .. lpftlo; MonttotnlWY 20-111, ltlmall ~-. ,,,..,,., .. 21. c.mpflotc1 S-11, Ottwr l-7, Smttll M, Ptaarctll 2·mi- •· S,t. Loul .. ,........,, 12-U , M«rll 7·2'. PASSINO -PhltotMtpllt•, J•wettlll ••l4-1·US, Plserclk, 1·1•20. SC. Lowl9, Hott 1•·i.-M "· L-110-S.l.O. RECEIV ING -~ ........... Cotmk,_. s-10,, c ompfl•lcl 4·2', Smttll 1·41, MOnt'°"'"'y J.J7, PartlOr I.al, H.,,,.y l•IO, f~uuall 1.....inut S, Oliver l""lllVI •· St. 1.ouls, Tiiiey ~. Or•y~11. Andlnon J.27, •Green 1-U, MoNla 1-'. · · SCOREBOARD Oller• 17, R•ldera 11 ._....,.,.....,. Oolltefld H-IOll H ... -N) ,rltlCll u 0..-Ni..,2' 0 J 10 >-1' I 1 0 7-11 Hou -~I 1 '"" C l'rlb<h lllckl Oell-Nia.flrO 0.k -Wlllttlfltton 12""' I .... , klclll Oell-ffOa.tltO Hou -8erller 25 .-u trom lleewa l ffrltach kk ll) A -4S,S1t .... ,,...,.. IUlhtic• RUSHING -Ooltlancl, Kint 1J.7', ,,., t09Mfl ..... ~ s-1•. H-loll. ~· ft .. 7,A~ ... 21. PASSING -O.IMCI, Wllaon 1 ... 1M·17S. HOWltM, 11-11·3\+197. ll!C•IVING -0.klonct, llomHv MO. Brocltl\oW >-46, .,.,, Eeghen J.25. H-loll, CMl'l!llMll MO, Renfro 4-a, HOlalon J.ft. Vlk.Inga 25, Bue• 10 1cen""o..rwn TaMHhY MlllM..U MINI -FG OMmoler SJ Ml1111 -,G OMmotor a • 0 J IJ 1-10 J-U MINI -llrown 2 run I Oontn•••· kick) Mlllll -FG Oenmelor 41 Ml1111 -Youno 1 POU trom Kromer ( Doftmeler kkkl T8 -FG~27 MINI -Solety, Wllllom1 IACklH In ...., ~ Ta -Giies I pess lrom Wlltloms l'-9 kick> A -0 ,1131 ............. Statlstka RUSHING -T.,.,.,. h y, Wllllom1 2-20, EckWO~ 7·16, Owens •·•· Wiider 1.J. Mlnne..U, a-Jt-12', a.lbreacl\ 11'44, Youno l-11, S. -le 1-1. PASSINO -Tempe 8oy, Wllll•ma 13-19·1·1~ Ml,...., Kram ... t"'41-2·229. RECEIVING -Tempe 8oy, J-S-5'. House 4-7J, Eckwood 2-1•, ObrodoYlch H , Giies 1·1. l•\1-wto, Sensor a.101, ,,_, I_., Young lH:t, LeGounl 2·25, S. Wllltt 1-11. RelNd 1 ... a.tllrNltl 1-5. 4iefs 17, Falcons 14 tcw.""o..rwn Atlonl• 0 0 1 1-U Sen r~~~ U PHS I~~ ~ ( WWJClll"9 kick I SF -l'O WwkhlllV .. All -Anclrows 1 run ILuckllunl kk kl SF -Youno 3 POH from Mo111011a IW.,.a<hlfle kk lll All -JocU.. U "" from a.rtk-1 ILuck,,_kkkl A -St,1%7 , ........ SUtl9'k1 llUSHIHO -Atlanl•, Aftdrowa 1M1. c.ln S·10, Jecktoll l·S, 8ortllowalll 1-0. SOii Frenclsco, E••l•Y 15·J 1, Petton •·U. Sol-J.11, CIM1I 1 ... .eo.w M , MoM.aM J.1, Hofwl-0. PASSINO -Attento, aortkowstl 2t ·O ·J·U•. 5011 Fr •11claco. Mo111011e , .... ,.m. RECEIVING -Attonto, Jallklnt M M, Alldrewl Wl, c:.ln 4-2A, JoclllOfl 2·2S, Miiiet' 1·12. Sell Fr-ls<o, Cl•rll 7·1•, ~ J..56, E•ll•Y 2 ... Youno 2·f. Hofer 1·21, Cooper 1.0. Aedaklne 33~a 31 aa..w Detroit 1 u • ,......,, Wollll"91on 10 10 J I~ Waall -.....,....on 1run1-..W, kldil ..... -'0 MoMley 21 0.t -kott W. -frc1nWO••• (Mun'ay kkk) Oot -HWto 2""' IMurroy kk lll W•lll -l'G MoM4oy SJ Ofl -Sime 1 run IM.,rroy kk k) Woll! _ ,,,...,_ 6 -· fr-TM!.,,_ lllllftatey kkk) W--l'G-..Cay 21 Oot -Simi 1J""' IMurroy kk kl Welll-Wlllfllngton 12 run IMoMley klckl Oet -l'G ~rrey JO W•lll -l'G Moseley '4 A -n• l ......... SUlll1tic1 RUSHING -Dettol1, Sims 21-!Jf, 8-y S.Jt, IC-..... Hipple J·2, TllOm-1·2. WHlllnttM, W•llllnoton 21·144, lllttlns 12·21, The!"'*'" 2·21. PASSING -Detroit, Hipple H·22·la·l. Thelr.mann, tf.J1·211·2, Waslllntton o+o..o. REC!IVING -Detroit, Scotl •tM. SllTll 2·>4, Nk lloll 1-41, Hiii 1·20, TllomcKClll 1·11. Klnv •• Wot111ngton, SH Y •tu, Maull, J..67, M-* MS, Wnlll"lton ).JO, Wort'lll 1.1•. 8M11c 1-mlnus •· Canadian Football LHgue "ltlT llOUND "LAYO,till Ottew• 20, MontrNI ,, Brlll1h C:OCuml>I• IS, Wlnnlpeo 11 S•M.,INAU Suncloy -Ott.twe •I Hemlllon, 8rll1Sll COlumble et E-ton COLLEGE How top 20 fared 1. Pllbllurlh (~) llHf Rutgers O ·J. 2. C..,,_, lf.0.01 llHI North CoroON lo.I. • J. Sout,.rn c;.e1 c•t..OI bHt Colllomla 21-J. 4 G90flll• (~1-01 beat Florlde 2 ... 21. s. T .. as , ... ,.,,tied H-1on 14-U. 6. Penn State 11-1..01 beat Nor1h CMollN stot• n.u 1. Al11119<N 17·1·1) did not Pl•y •. Nor111 CorOllna IM..01 loll lo Cle- 10.1. '· Ari-State CM.01 bHI S... JoM Stele Jl•U. 10. '°"'....,, Malt!Odkt 1~1..0) llaat Ilk • ~~~· ......... CM..01 lleot Oklol\omO State 54-1. 12. Mk ...... C7·J..0) lleot llllnols 76-21. U . Mloml, Ft•. 1 ... 2..01 lleot l'lorlde Si.to 2Mt . u . Florlde State ( ... l-01 loll to Mleml, Fie, 27-lt . u . Ml11l11tppt Sta te 16·1·01 losl to Soutllerll MIMllllppl 7-6-16. W .... lftfl9n 17.J.0) loll to UCLA '1..0. 17. otolot.N IS.1-11 lleet K-s SIMe a.21. It. Ol'tlo State l ... J.01 IOlt to Ml-IGbl JJ.J l. 1'. Arkan ... 17·2..0I boat 8eylor ••·It, 20. Southern Ml11l11tppl 17·0·11 lleot Mlt.llllltlPI State 7-4. Oak Tree ............... , IUNDAY'l lt81UL Tl (lltUf 114ey lllal It• .. _ .... I '11tn 1tACa.6V1 fyr ....... eo,...1oni <DelaflouMo.,.1 u .20 •.«i uo Ll ... tnlng Sock IHowloyl UO 2 • He Aln'I He.,,y (OllYO'") 2.40 AllO r•ctd: SI SI You, Arront Drive, HonolOI ,.,.lnce1J oe Rouono: Time : 1:16. • SI COtf D ltAC•. 6VI fYl'IOfltS. lm.o Troek Ster 1Scho<1'10 7.00 • . .U J.Glll Wlchd Hlttor IH-n) t .00 4.20 lmm--W I~-IVot_,L.,.l•I J.IO Allt r•ced: Prtncolltn, First 81•0., SourOoutll Pos, Go Tell 8ontlle. Atta 8oy BroOll. Time: 1•15 4/S. U DAILY DOU8La IMI pold $7UO. TMlllD iu.ca. 6 '"''-" AlplM Glory (Howleyl UO 2.IO 2 to OrH mer'a HOllday IC.SI ....... ) 6.20 "'° ire B.., c5*11e1 1.«1 Also recod: Oc••" S-at, Brcwue lily, Souo 8 11, Z.0•1-c.e1 .. Time· 1:10. ,OUllTH llACIE. 6V. furlongs •·Ari Olr9Clor <H_.,,1 1.20 J.40 1.a E.clustw ON (Pinc.YI ,,40 2.IO Unllek~ to -(H-leyl J .. AllO rocect. •<lw<ll. Tlllo, F•ll R-. l otrell, -II 0 Grom, Acll Ack Energy, Premium 09Poall. e -Coupled entry. Time. 1:162/S. "l'TH llACt;. 1 1/16 mites Colecu ITorol J.ao 2 to t.to Delta G'"" CVolon2uetel •.OO 4.00 Relro<klfto CHowteyl "20 Also rocod. Savona, A~ s..nsot. Funny One, M-0-W, Em's Make Up Kit. Time: t:G 1/S. U UIACTA 11-11 pold MO.SO. SIXTH RAC•. ON mile. 81son lay CM<Corr11111 7 .to J.• J.IO Royal Captlw ts-m.korl 6.00 J .o Prospe.-IPl11Uyl 2.60 Also rOCH: Bargeln Bol<.ony, ThrM Ooa, Jet Trawl, V-.>ett Time: 1·•21s. lllV•NTH llACll .• lurlonos. E1cltotll0 ..._., 10.1....,...,.) lmperlol l.HI (P\nceyl l ock •IT-IM<Corronl Also rOCH: ,.,._, 01 ol'/Wlftd l.owr. Time: l:Ol •/S. S.00 2.60 , .. 2 ... 2.60 1 .., 8oa, Home Loi(, $J •XACTA IJ.11 peld ~.SO. U "'CIC SIX ( ...... 1·7·1·31 POld SS-.60 wttll ,.. wlMlfto lk kot.s 1111 llorlftl. S2 Pick SI• COl'ISOl•tlon peld SU.IO with S,001 wl""'nv tlekeU lflw llor-). llONTM llACI. 1"-mil .. on luri. JCIM HOflry (~ ... ) 2... 2.«I 2.10 Spell<e 8oy (Torol 3 40 UO r,. ••rt< o.1ot1o1AM-ro1 2.«1 Also .-..cl: s.,.er Motnant, e-E1t,..._, •·Ootn O'AI~. e-Pltrr.,.11. •-c .... edentry Ttme: 2:232/S. U f;XACTA (4-Sl po+d 117AO NINTH llAC'L ON mlle ll't 11\e ON (VolOM.,.lol t.20 4.to UO Sc>r Ing 0toter ( M<CM•Oll) 4 .00 :UO Prl11cely VHdkt (lltwr•I UO Al.o roced: Mullleon Stew, Trebltorl, WhO'J ~ .. StuPid PINIUre, El Jebet, Aurloc. Time" 1.l5 4/S. "f;XACTA ,,..., P8kl sn .so. Attelldonca· •1,710 Stockholm Open 1 .. s.....,.,s_1 Sotnl,....SI ... Sendy -re• def. Jimmy Connors, .. ,, 4-J , Gone Mover def. Honk Pfister. ... ,, •·2. Grand Prix tournament (a1H0119ll-l _.sS ...... l'IMI V•n WlllllJl<y 1--rll Ed........S-...... S-S (rein ..-nded motchl ..,.... .• s._....,.,,.., Wendy Turnbull def. See>lno Simmonds, ... ,_ ... 0 (Turnllull wlM SI.JODI. .,_., DMW• l'IMI Ann l(lyotnUre-Sftoron Wallll def S..S.. 1..eo-Anne...,....W ,•-4 Kim Cup tournam•ot (ot t_.., U•ty) SI,...._ Bllll• Jeon 1tlr19 def. Virginie Ruzlcl, .... 2 ... 6·1; Virginie w-def. lAslle Allen, M , •·• •·• !United Stelet <Ml Europ...,1, u iu Federation Cup l•tT....,_I l'lnlllwM Renata T-• def. "4erl<I Wllllttcll, •·2, •·•; H-Mondllkove def. Ellsolleltl Ekbtom, ... 2. W ; Jull• $alfllkO•• .,., TIN $Che11r·Lo,...,,, ..... •->; Elena Ell-41• dol Anno-Matte SortnMll, 7·S, M ; - H1l;,,_T..._, def. J llf'( Cl\0-r, ... ,, M ; HO Chiu-Mat def. Owlatl,. MoWIOfl, ... ,, ... 1. Yu LI Oloo def. °'81-O\Ontner-.. M, ... 2 · W8ftl Pint def Po....._,,. ChM<llotn, •. ,·. •·•; Cloudl• PHqu•I• ..... Oet'llH PenotoPOUlos, ... ,, ...0; ,..,,.. OolMH cMf. Anoellllt K•n•llopulo1, •·•, •·J; Orly &l•llttOlk'f def. SuMrlO, M , 7·S; R•UMt 11111omlnl def. YOIMdo s..marno. 1·S, .. I. Camel.Where a man belongs. W1rninQ : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 8 mg. "llr", 0.8 mg. nicotine Ji. per ciprtttl by FTC method. -(_ > . NBA W.ITallN CON,•ll•Mc• .. aclflc DIVW. Portloncl "'-"'• LaUrl Golden Stole S.n 01990 S.•ttl• W L ~t. • 0 t-.000 J J soo 2 , 400 2 J 400 I J .2!0 1 J .J!O Mlfwftl Ol•lll• 4 I too oa Long Beec" V•cht Club ,._~ ... PHRF·A fKtk'-1,GntJo'f (L,SFI. P Hlll'·I -Wo11dy, Oa11 J1\lcll .. llt !AIYC). PHllF.C -~ .. OH, Mac~ J-a(WYCI. CAL·U -~. El-Hickmon c;evc1. Lo• AngelH Vacht Clue» MACHORalMnA J ·2•'s I h poo0k9tnt, M¥Y Grlffl1tl ILAYCI; 1 Maiello,0-k llkMtMM.,. ti ILAYC>. J. 9M ...... St•ll S.r•n- (ABYC) Caolatreno Bay Yacht Olub MIUIOtf Q1t1aS I PHllF·A -I. Martlnl(IW, 0. .. C ...... !CPOYCI; i Tll-• 11, Jim M4' S...cty San Anlonlo Utoh J 2 '°° l ) soo Lucch••I (CPOYCI ; J. St111oer. MIU I Walh•11 ICPOYCI. Denver Kon101 City Houllon OellH ,.... PHRF·B -1 Holo l(lkl, 1110 lleff 2 , '°° 2 • m ' , . ,., EASTlllN CON,EllENCIE A11afltl< DIYlllall '"-ICPOYCI, 1 Funny Feolln, ... t .... -2 .... CC POYCI, J Pull, Tom AfemHll JV. (CPOYC) MORF·C -I. RecklHS, A.O. Kectll'lt (CPOYCI. 2 Flop J•cl<. lllck OrcllMd ICPOYCI. J O.W Harold, Roger RllildDrfl Boston Pllll•dellltll• New York WH lllnQlon New JerMy • • 2 1 ' .too 1 ' too 400 .uo 200 Cofltr•I Dl•lll• 2 1Yil J IB;.~~all t Hole> Kiili; 2. l'UNIY Fffllfl; 1. Martlnloue Dene Point Yacht Club Mllwauk" Oo1rolt Chic.go Atlan te Clevel•lld lndtena l ' l 1 1!0 .toO Ii'> DAMA P'OtNT HltlH I Cleu A 1 Celllor11le Gold, Lie Cilll l J 2 , ·-·-.soo 1 I OPYCI; 2 lnnoveder, Bruce AnO.rlOfl 1 (CP OYCI. J O.W. Herold , Tom Hiii 2 2 2 J """8y's Sc- Ukffl 121, 0.llH I 11 New Jerwy "· lncltona" Portl-UO. Oenv., 11• 400 I V. (Oci:,~) 8 1 Mecklna<, Wet TIIOtnPeOf'I t CPBYCI, 2 Velkyrte 8111 Murroy ICPBYCI . J Rock·H·Roll, Jett -s... R-" IOPYCl T ......... t Gome ClllCOOO at Cle .. lond Lakera 121 . Mavericka 111 DALLAS -n . L•G••d• 10, Lloyd •• Blockmon IJ, Oovl• 12, W C-r t, Tu,.,.. •. Vl11<enl 12, Sponorllel IS, 8rlll-1 Totol1 ... 1'·24.111. LOS AMGILIU KuPCllo" 17, WHlln U, Abdul·J-IS, Jolln.,,. H . Hhton 11, M Cooper u , Land11>erger I, Jorden o, MclCenno 2, M<G .. •. Rembl& J, Brewer 2. Tot•ll n, 11·21, 121 Scwe lty Qooorten O•llH U 2• 24 »-111 1..01 A11gel.. JI 2S 34 31-IJI Tll,....OOiftl goal\ StNnarhl Fouled out -None. Tot•I lou•• -Oallu 22, LO• Angeles JJ. Technic•I• -0011111 Coacll Motta, ICupchak. A f.110. NHL CAM,81U CONl'IEltENCE SM.,-Olvl1I• l!Mllonton Venc-1(1 ... C01or- c.e1eory W LT OP OA Fb. 10 5 0 ., St 10 • 70 50 .. u ••010 a n ,,,., .. ' 2 10 • '° n 1 Minna Mita Clllcato Winnipeg Detroit SL Louts Toronto Horrk DIYl1l• ,,,..,,. • 4 s " 10 7 •JffS) t62S1Sl s I 2 ., .. • I J .. ,. WAL.aS COMl'IElllNCE '•trick OIYIU. NY t1lelldtrs I 1 l SI 42 Phll-llltll• I S I 54 to Plllsburgh 1 1 1 5t 64 NY Rengers • ' 0 41 .. Waslll"91011 I 1J 0 • .. A-Dlwtlla11 8oston Montru l Bulf•lo Quebec Harllord ' J J .... 11 • 11 . 1 3 s " 0 ' 1 o n n 2 • • .. ,.. ~ • ., •• Sc_ Mlnnesoto •. llotlon I Hertford J, Bulf•lo 2 Chlc•oo 10. eo•oorY • Venc......, s, Winnipeg 1 T ....... 'IGotn• O.trolt at Quebec NeWPOr1 Harbor Yacht Club LlkMAN•ll CHAMFIOMSNI' Sklppa" _ 1. ThOmH Omoflund n>; ClluCk 8-; 3 Tom SCl'°O Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club HA•v•n lllEGATTA 10 17 " ,. n 11 ,, 17 " 12 , 21 JO ,, II 10 L-M -LOWiy Aoman, Rowl'f LOl\mOn ~BYCI. S•llM>I A -Mine, Brion HallOfl ISSYCI SebOt 8 ~ones Try, Darrin Fry., IBCYCI. S.llM>t C -Trident, T•ylOr . Tosh I BCYCI Cl•u C 1 Flredrlll, Mike Reor- 1 C POYCI. 2. GOlldoll, Oouo •ncl su ... Jones <OPYC>, J. Clair de LuM, Poul Frailer IOPYC> Clou o Bold For·ties, Ed Cummings t OPYCI ., O•yb ruk, lob G •lts ICPOYCI J S..11 ... IM, Ron M•1-ll• io;:~:,.., urln -1 V•lllyrle; 2. Rock·H·Roll,, Macklnoc Southern Callfornla,.Ooen <•t•-,ortil Ed Flori, U l,.!00 71~7t-276 Fred CouPn . 11•.!00 •t-,...7o.-m Peter Ool-k. '1•..SOO n_,...,._m Tom Purtl.,., $7,S'IS 7~271 Jock R-,'7.S1S '7.,._7 ... 7o.-271 Jofln C-. $7,.s7S 7J..oS.61·1l-271 Jolln C:llott ... t.7,S1S 12•7*71-271 Scott s1.._, 16, 100 11>-11...,1t-m George Arc,.r, U,!00 I0-70-71·7t-2t1 Pet McGowon. U.fOO .,..,.,..,,_., Frank 8-d. M,OU .... n.,....._. Jim Ne••-. M,O•• n*~• Georoa :w-tr1c1g. M,OH ... 7J..7MO-m Hal Sutton. M,OU 7'1-10-71·12-m Eric Belton, .... ,014 7'1-70-71·12-lll Mork o•-•ra. u.200 7J41.JO.n -m Mark Pfoll, '2,600 71-71·74-67-JM Gary McC«d, 12.toO 73-73-71-67-,... Dennis Trlwlw, 52,600 74-71·71_.,-.. l .oren llotlerts, 12.toO 6'·7'1-7 ... 71-.. J °"" McOomlSll, I,,_ 70.71 .... 7.__ At Gel .......... 11.tOO ... 70-1).7._m Ok k ZOiio!, Sl,tOO n -n ·11·7'1--• Oo•• Borr, 11,tOO ... 7NJ·7S-• Jell Ker11, 11,700 7S.111-*n-• U.S . .Japan match (ot IC....,9MI, J-1 BoC>by Cl.,.,,,,..I 6S....11-4t-l71 Alltr• Y-70·10--6Wt-m Jer..y P•t• 10-...n.n-• O.A. Welllrino ... n .... 71--Norlo Su1'*1 .,..,.n.12-• Poter Joe-'7*74-7>-21Z Curt11 s1._ 111-*71-7>-m G•ry Hellberg 14*70-71-.. Ray Flcyd 7J..7N 2-41-• l(OJ.akU Shi-6f.11·7•7>-2DI B•uce Lietzke 70.71-7•12-117 S.l>uro Fujlkl 72 72-6f.74-117 Teruo Suo!N•• ,._......,._., M ......... OUlll ,.,._....71_ .. Btn Cren.,,.w 7 ... 70-71-7>-M IMO Aoki 7J..76-72-71-2'0 Namlo T-1~-n-11-11-m T...., N ............ • 70-J'l.71-72-1'7 LPGA tournament (lt~•.J...-l Petty S-, U>.000 7Mt-71-21J eeth o .. 1o1. '".JOO ,,.,,.,,_,,, Pot Brodi..,, S10,"6 71>-7 ... 74-211 Hollls Stoey, 110,"6 7J..IJ.1J-21t N•yOllo Yot1>ti.awo. s10.... 7).71>-7S-11t S.lly lllll•, '6,100 , •. ,,.,.._ • ., Yuko Morltucf'I, 14,700 75-7M t-ttt SunoMo YOllll"*'.111, $$,too n -7H2-Dt N•ncy Loper-Mallon, LS,200 7MS-7S-221 K•t'1y W111t-1h, u .200 , ... ,,.,._m Tu>.-yu, M.200 7S.7HS-m Keiko "'-twcN. '4.200 7t-4t-14-m Atsuko Hlllooe, M,100 7•·71·7._m Cl ' Rome University Professor Aurelio MUit&, c~ter •. dt&cusaes.ltoly's wote~ ma~ag~ment proble~ durinp a visit to Orange County Water C?istrict C?lftces m F'ountam Valley . Listening m foreground ts Decw Scardaccione. a senator in t~ ltaltan Parliament Fountain Valley hosts Italians 35 visitors guests of Orange County Water District A group of Italian scholars and government officials visited F o un ta in Vall ey to get information that may help them solve a water cris is in their own nation "We wa nted to look at the American system because it bas had some of the same problenu a nd has solved them," the senator said. Tho ugh Italy 's s lie is comparable to ·the state ot California, its population - about 5-0 million -is about one-quarter that or the United States. the water nows away into the sea." The stop in Fountain Valley followed visits to water facilities in Denver and San Francisco. The 35 Italian visitors, most of whom spoke no English, were guests recently or the Orange County Water District , which manages much of the county's underground water supply. as well as the Santa Ana River T h e di st ri ct h as it s h ea dqu a rte r s and wate r processing facilities in Fountain Valley. The visiting officials said 70 p e r cent or Ita ly's water is consumed by agriculture, lS percent by indus try and lS percent by homes. Locally, the Italians were briefed on how water supplies are managed in Orange County and were given tours of the d istrict's wate r recy cline s y s t e m and its pe rcolation basins in Anaheim, where water Is soaked back into underground storage layers. Gordon Elser , information director for the water district, said the Fountain Valley facility regularly receives visitors from nations around the world who wish to s tud)' its advanced te chnology. "Southern ItaJy in particuJar • has a scarcity of water because • or the growing demand that bas followed our economic and social development," explained Decio Scardaccione. a senator in the Italian ParliameJtt, through ~ an interpreter "In Southern Italy, we have good natural supplies of water from riv e r s and from underground aquife rs," said Professor Aurelio Misitl of the University of Rome, ''But in many areas. the streams are not managed properly and a lot of He noted that the Italian delegation was one or the largest international groups to visit the water district headquarters. I Big bucks for small ducks r Minnesota artist creates winning birdhunting stamp •'! WASHINGTON !A PI -The government has things, and there are many, said the Santa Rosa, & turned arl critic , moving with brutal and Calif., artist. r u~c hara~teristi c speed to choose its~ annual A so-called "limited" edition of prinU of last t b1rd -huntmg sta~p and set . u~ a Minnesota year's winner, a pair of ruddy ducks by John S. art1s~ to make big bucks for painting very small Wilson of Watertown, s.o., went for $125 each. It ducks. . . was limited to 16,000 prints. I t needn't have been a duck, mand you, since . . North American waterfowl -including geese or . R1char~ Wilson, a dentist from Castro Valley, s .... ans 1s what is called for in the Fish and Ca_hr .• ~~ s entered t~e contest .. for r<!ur ,rears, Wildlife Service's annual contest. said winning also brmgs the . p~estige that But the winning entry, titled "Canvasbacks" attracts collectors of wat~rrowl paintings. b~ David A. Maass or Waterville, Minn., marked "This gives the artist instant recognition," he the Cifth time in six years that some klnd of duck said. "He can go from a complete unknown to a .,.. as preferred. And. after all, hunters know the person who can sell his paintings for thousands." obJect or all this as the "duck stamp." J ohn Wilson, last year's winner, quit the sign Maass won once before , putting his painting on painter's job he'd had for 2.S years after be won the the 1974-75 stamp contest , said David Klinger of tbe Fis h and For his trouble this year. he gets a pat on the. Wildlife Service. back from the secretary or the Interior and a sheet Maass said his first victory cons iderably of the stamps that m ust be purchased by every upgraded the comfortable Living he's been making hunter over age 16 who goes after waterfowl. as a wildlife artist. But that's not all he gets, and it's by no means "This is a big boost Cor an 'Wlknown artist," he the reason the five judges bad lo speed through said. · 2,099 paintings and sketches -all the required All that is tine, but winning is not duck soup. five by seven inches -to choose the work that will Each year the number of entries grows. Last year grace the 1982-83 stamp. it was.1,507. And the judgment on the paintings "l( you don't have a million bucks ... "began leaves no room for niceties. "1ldhfe artist Lyndly Genung in explaining why he In the fi rst round, each paintine was held up t!nters the contest each year. for about 10 seconds , and each Judge had a The work itself remams the artist's property two-sided sign to indicate his choice. One aide said and becomes all the rage for' collectors or such "in," the other "out." ,.YCI UOTHBIS SMITHS' WOITUAaY 627 Mam SI HUntlngton Beach ~ l"ACtftC YllW MIMOllA.L l"AaK Cerre1ery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1t1c View Drive Newport Beach 6'4·2700 McCOIMICX WOHUA.lllS Laguna Beach ·~·9415 Laguna Hills 768-0933 S•n Juan C.p1strano 495-1776 HAilOR L.AWM-WT. OUYI MortuatY • Cerretery Crerretory 1625 GISier Ave Colla Mesa 50-555'4 PtMCllaOT ... S UU•O.ADWAY woat'UilT 110 Broadway Costa~ 642•9150 Work for 'closet artist' Dental technicians creations useful By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: My dentist keeps pestering me to get a job, saying dental technicians are In short supply. What can you tell me about training and pay? -S.G., Philadelphia, Pa. Are you a closet artist eager to come out and try your hand at creating something beautiful yet u se ful ? De ntal laborato ry technicians do just that. Using written instructions from dentists, they form stone or pla~ter models or patients' mouths to use in the la boratory. Carving tools, pcllshing machines and many kinds o f specialized equipment are employed lo fabricate dentures and make metaJ or porcelain bridges, crowns and inlays. Dental laboratory technicians also produce orthodontic appliances for sltal&htenlnl Jumbled teeth. Altbou&h an anet; a bieh 1cbool diploma ls not mandatory ror = work, Many techlaklana 1et OD· tralnin1, taldnt u.neor four Jan to master thelr erafl. lntrea118SIJ. ~=.r..=-:t:. ':C: you can doe•••'-' JOU '' ~w.:r-" ~~.i~i!Ui CAREERS laboratOry technicians as sales or technical representatives. SpeciaJ qualifications : Good color per ception and patience are basic. Ri c hard Resk, president of the M ag n a Ins titut e o f Dental 1'.echnology in New York City says "We look for people with manual skills and Interests in things like model building, sculpting, painting or needlepoint." The National Board for Certification reports that although trainees may begin at minimum wage, experienced technicians eam more than $12,000 a yea r. With certification, they make conalderably more. Speclallst.a in ceramics may earn about $30,000. If big money's your eoal, alm for management or ownership or the business. The Job mark et for dental laboratory tec:hnJctana is 1mllln1 as broadly u Mom does when she hears you have iM> cavities. As your denUst 1111. the time Is rleht for dental tHluUc:t... Old Jerusalem revived by dig JERUSALEM (AP) -Undee.n.d by riot.I, le.al baUlea and iDternetioaal prott1t1, archaeololitta excav1&1D1 ·the Jenaaalem ol K1U David have revealed a city of areal •Hit& alonc11de areal Poverty. Worken found erotJc flsurlDM from tb• early laraeUte period abowlni that tdolalrY wu common even alter David brou1bt moaotbel1m to lh.e hllltop clty he ma~e hll capital. A.r<:baeolo•llta believe Jen.111Jem nu been in· hablted for 6,000 yean. Tbe latest 12-week aeuon uncovered a wall abowln& the contoun of lbe city ln the 18th century B.C., when the Bible aay1 Abraham wu summoned to the Promlled Land from Ur, in present-day Iraq. Y•A• '* , .. ... ,., , .. ... The dig hu added UtUe to the knowled1e of ancient Jeru.salem, already well-documented in texts. But it "la brlngln1 Jerusalem to Ille," ex· cavalion director Ylgal Shiloh aaid dwinl a tour of the site Wednesday, when di11ln1 ended for another year. "" , .. , ,.., ,.., v••• , ... ''" "" , .. , , ... I ... The dig is south of the hilltop where Solomon built the great Jewish temple. A few hundred yards away, some or the ereat. events In Jeaus'a life took place. -. , 2092 ., Ultra-Orthodox Jews claim Shiloh'• crew ls digging in a medleval Jewish cemetery, and Lbey rioted several times over the summer in defenae of the dead. The controversy led the government to halt the die but it was overruled by the Supreme Court and the excavations continued. The supreme Rabbinical Council bu decided to press Parliament to enact a coalition agreement that would give the council power to ball archaeological excavations. The executive council of the U.N. Educational, Scientilic and Cultural Organization condemned digs such as Shiloh's as "a grave danger" lo J erusalem. But Shiloh said he would conduct lbe flfth and final season next summer "ln the regular way." "We are tryine to draw an archaeological pie· lure of the life and cuJture of Jerusalem from it.a capture to its destruction in S86 B.C. by lbe Babylonians," said Donald T. Ariel, one of Shiloh's assistants. Jerusalem was a Canaanite city of 3,000 people covering a 20-acre hillside when David conquered it in 996 B.C. -and built bis palace on tbe but. David and Solomon expanded the city with public buildings, constructing an acropolis re· sem bling the downtown or a modem city. Close to the palace area, arcbaeologilta dis· covered roomy, well-conJStructed homes with nearby toilets. Houses lower down the slope were s maller, their stones slapped together with mud. ·'These were the slums of Jerusalem," said Shiloh. Among the pottery finds was a shard inscribed in characters used in southern Arabia, document· Ing an early link wilt) the land or the Queen or Sheba . Hostage ntission cost $193 million WASHINGTON CAP> -The abortive effort to rescue American hostages ln Iran tut year coat $193 million, Pentagon ollicials bave told Congress. The officials provided the figure in closed testimony June 21 before a House military appropriations subcommittee. The testimony was released recently . Ninety commandos new into the Iranian desert on April 24, 1980, but the milsion was called oil after three of eight helicopters broke down before reaching a refueling slop. Elgbt U.S. commandos were killed when a helicopter collided with a C-130 transport plane on the way out or the desert. NOTICa TO COWT•ACTOlll NOTICa TO C••DtTOa Ot'8UUCT...,.8• CM.U~ P'04t •10t IS.U. , ..... U.C.C.I Scllool Oltlrlct. Coetl COfftfl'11111lly Notke 11..,_11,,... to credllorl of co11..-OllUk l _ ......... 1 l ld o .. e111ne: t:OD o'ctoclc p.m. of.,. Ille •II""''*"" tr ........ -•I lf>M • t.C ctoy ol ~ '"' .., .. , Ir-It_,. to M ~ Oii l'IOCI of 9ICI llKei.t: OHie. OI Ille ::~~r.::..1 ,,.,.,1, ll•••lnolter PurcllHlllll Allflt, Ma. MotlOfl P91'Tlll, Tiie _,., --..Slllou _.._ Cootl C-lly Colletit Oltlrk l, ol Ill• lnto"*ct lrOflsfe,.rlll t>to: llTO A.S-·-· c.ta MeM, OAVID L. ATENCIO -TEllESA M. ., .... l'rojocl •-tlllcollOft Nome: II ATENCIO, ISOO Actom•. Svll• •2. No. 104', Orone• c ... 1 Col le C~~~~':MlllOU "*- ·-·1-· tlllerior Oflk • ~-ol 1110 111tolldltel lret1tlffoolll or•· ~::l:C:O.-ore°" Rio: Hlll-0..itl WILLIAM J. TATlll, llMt MllT"'* & •-lot•, 11S.1Jllct Strwol, H__., Orlvo. H.....iflllOl\ IMdl. CA ftM. eoocll CA....,; 11u1 •1~. Tllol IN ...-rtY pertllleflt ,._ 11 NOTICE tS HEREIY GIVEN INt ctHcrlllOd Ill fON'OI H : All stock In Ille obo .. .,•1w ~ OIW'lct o trocto. '"""'""' ............ _. .... °'Oft .. c:-.ty. Colllomlo. octlftt by •Ill of ltlM c.rto111.....,. .. "'-" •: onct tl>routll llt 09.,.rlll119 loorct. HAIRCRAl"T 1'1.ANT _. 11 IOcoled 11orel11etter ••lo•••ct 10 •• ot: 15'1.......,WW •2.c..w-• .. OIST•ICT/• WCN rocoi,.. w, IO, CA ttM6. not lolOf' ........ ....,._, ...... time Tiie blillllftl -.-cl by 1119 Mid to•lo4 111411« IN 0-.,., o tMtreci tr•"•ltrorlll •I told toutlOf\. 11: I«.,,. ...... ,,..jKL HAIRCRAl"T Pl.ANT. Bldl INll bo rtaj-111 ... ploq TllOI Miii "'* tr...,...11 l"telldN to IR"tlflo4 ...,..., enc1 ..,..I bO ....,... bo cvn-•ted ol tllo office et: •"ct publl<l'I' nod 010.,d ot Ill• Soeclln Eacrww Com!IM'I'. tnc •• 21a obo••·llMldllmo_.ploc;o, Moln St,..I. 5"119 JPS, Hl#ltlfl9IOll Tllon wlll bo o SI0.00 ctopotll 8Hdl, CA,_.'" or otter Nowmllor required I« Mdl Mt of bid .__It at. '"'· to 911oro11tu tllo rolur" 111 1Md Tllo -encl.--M lflt ~ c-lllOfl Wlttlln 10 dOys •f\Of' ti. bid wllll • ..,,, Cl .. mt "'°" lie 111" 11 ....,,1111e1oto Soocllll Etcrow c.n-y, lllC •. , JllO Eocll bid "''"' collforfft onct M Mol11 Strwt, SUit• •m, H_.....,... ~llwtolllOe.ilrectclo<.........U. 8Ndl. CA.,...., tM l•l do'f fW Eocll llld -.1 bO 11ec-...n1H by llllllf ttotma b'( ""' cr..,tor ltlOll M Ille wcunty rfflrrod eo"' .. COllUe<I Ntombor Jt, )ttl wlllcll 11 Ill• dllC1il'Mllb .... by tM 1111 ........... ~-.,~ .. (_,,_loll Wll<Ofltrocton. NI• "9Clfled OllOW. Tiie DllTlllCT ,__ IM rltM .. So lor • IS ._ to Mid lllloMod reJocl e11y or ell ..._., 10 wolw OflY Tro "sforu(I) 1•ld 1111011fod l'TOIUIWlll• ., ll!fwmatlllM Ill 91\'f Tr•"•l•rwl•l ..... Ill• tollowl111 11141., tn .. lllddift9. ofdlllonol bu1111u1 nomu 011e Tllo DISTIUCT 11M ......... ,,_ ..,_ WIWft IN lflr• yMft toll tlie Director of IM o.,en-t ,..,, "°"E. lndullrl•I ll•l•tt•n• .... """•I OATlO ..--s. "''· '""'"lllt reto OI -.._ ..... lfl Wlltlom J. TIW, tM •.UIY Ill wNcll 11111-" II .. M l,.....T,.....,.. ,_,,,.,,,... r.r 00C11 cr8ft or ..,,. of ~,.,.. er.. c.t1 Deity l"IMC. 1Hrl11"011 ... ,.,. to oaoc1110 tlto NH. t, 1., ......, tMtrect..,,... .... ef'OOft ........ -----------01n•1CT •ffl<• loc:otM ot 01•1. Ad111l11. Troller ,oclllty, CH•I Com1111111ll't Coll• .. 0111r1c1. ,.,. ----------- Af91111 A-. ~A tf' I , C... ltOTIC9W'V1UCMtA•1 ... Mtu. CA ., .... c ..... "''" " HOTIC8 HEREBY II OIVEH ..... ....I_ "" ,......... A C.-. • "'"' ntllt fltorl111 wlll H ltold ty .......................... ~ Olllwlll•• .. lltO City .. '"° ,.,...."' ~· ., w .._ lrvlM 111 ...,,.,,., ''· "'1 ot t:• ..... It ........ •-"ltle*' .. ~ ....... .,..,.., ............ oftlll C8l ,_.., Tiit r• fW ._.._., .. lrvtN Qty C-M ~ .... _.,._._,,to II ..... J.....,., ,....,.... Chi!< OIMlr, IS-oN-oflolf. 1,...IM, ~ lw .. ...,... tf .. ... tt, ............. """ ,,. ,.,,,_ .. ICtlOft Oft ca.... "-CONT~ ....... -a.wee ........ _, •11t Troll• ~""" 11 ••• , •••• 01141 "•·· ... • .... ~"-·'· •trocwr ttMlr llMI. • ,., Ml 11 11 ,...... 11111t c--.. Wtllt .......... IMClftM ,.,. .. Oft ~ ....... 1111191k ...,_ .. -......,.. W *"' !fl .. ftrworfod lo lltt ~1111al11e 119C ..... ef .. '°'*9d. C1111111IHl011 prlw II tllo pttllll< "'~ ............... --~~-..,... .. .....,"" .... ..,.. It• ~ .... ....... .. .. ............... .. ... IJlllllk .__ ..... c8ll ,., A ..................... 14 •Cl of trwlM Clfllllllllllty Oeuwl ... .. ... • 111 .. ,._.1r•• ,,,.," o==•,...... ............... """'"· ••• OWi' c...e .... .... ... .. ... .. """' ... , .... ::::::.:..· '::.·..:;•=-------~~"" "' .. aMrelt mt • • ... .. .._... ... ,., __ ,,...,. Trade '1tNt -.... .....,,._._,,,,.._ HW loodifl wllll 8 ......... 0r .. CllOlt DolfY....... Cluaan.d---. •,""" "'"'i---=--..;.;.-...... -...-... _ .. .... llQ~AA. AMduMT . "·-··-.ss .. .,.. ., ... ..... m1,-., .... ..... 1111.-........... lil/lll1AI 111' 11tt.• uu.-~ sm.-'* ... .,.,. ~-MIO, .. ...... S.WOf"O + , r , • , > ~ • .. .. , ~ ... • " ~. .. (I " t. '· "' I ,, .. II .. .. ... UC NOTICE ..ona Of' ll'tU• Of' 6"UCATI• Nit N ...... TOHTAeU ... A MM9QI Oll'll'tea TMs II • W.W. ._ .... I< 11\at, ..... ledMll MS. 14 of , .. lllllft Md ll .......... -... ..-.1 s.v ..... eMt l.M11 IY1tMI, ll'ectflc ,...,.,., S.Yllll• Md "-Aa.cletlell, 2M e ast 17tll SlrH t, Coate MHe, CMI..,.,,.., .._ llllMI all ._.tlaitlell ........ ,_ .. -La.. 8Mk e.N .. ~ • .-...1 .. . ~8llCll tlfQ ........... ., ... ... ._... ... 'tkllllty of, ... , ... , of ......... .......,.,. .... Tlleu•- 0.11• ._...., ... , Wftll•• VIII ... , n...Mo.lls,~ .. ..,..... _,, .... Ill ··-of ., •r•tH I •f tlle eppllce tle11. Your ---_,, .--.. -.,.. .... llMllM ........ lc.IM'. l'K-of ...,..,_. lfl ......... lo -· tM UWlt ..... "Ill ... --....u... ..-... , , ..... -• M recelftCI lly .. ~_., ....... ,.._, .. H- Lee11 ••1111 •f s e11 l'r••"lsc•, ~ .. 1 .... W~1t. ""· All _....... • dl9ys to tu9mlt C--41 _., ............. -~ _ .. ,...... IS recMYM Ill ....... .., ... ,, .... , ...... ..,_,..., "·""· ..,.......,._ ... ,,...... _,,...-.. -~·-­.... k .......... Nnll 111 Sectklft MU(f). ir.t a ,,__ to._ ceMIWed tt1ll1te 11Uel, It muat lie wrltl•ll, ............. ....,,_.. ...... ........... :11 •--..•• -tw .. .,.,._; 1) IN IPKlflc nwtttn .,.._.•Ill .. ._.tlaiU. or 111 Ille o,._11ca11t's COfftmunlty 9"ke ,_...; J> fadl., IMNdlftt any releva nt •<0110mlc or f111a11cl•I lnform•ll•, wlll<ll 1upport Ille pretest; 4).,.,., tlllww• effo<U ... -............. ~wMcllmay r•1111t lrem o p,rev•I el till• --41cot1M. v ... _., _ .... _.lcatl .. Md oil colftt'Nftll flied ot tfle l'oel9rol -~ ... of SM FrWKI-. ....._.,.,_......,... . ., .......... "' ·-,,_ ~ dltci.w.. If .,... Mw MY .... ._ CMC ....... "'"9 ,....._., OMUc1 .. ~..., Aeent .... ,_ .. -1..--- " Soll l'rMCllc.o. ,...,...., a-... Coast Delly Piiot, Nov.J,t ,,.11 4~. .. ....., MOTIC• TO Clt•DtTOal 011' auut Ti.AMlll'•ll IS.C.. ""°'"' U.C.C.) Notice Is l9rfty '"'°" lo crectlton ol Ille wltM11 IWl'lld lnfttf9rorc.i t-• W ll tr_. 11 ellollt lo lie ...-Of'I peraonol pr•P•tlY llerel1101ter delC)llled. TllO Mmt(S) alld -lflHI IHldl'ets of Ill• lnttlldtd trOlllltror(J) ort : STEVRN C. ™<>MPSOH, .... , lllrtll SI., Ne.....,, llMdl, CA fl* Tiit locoelon lfl Colllornl• 01 tlle cllltl uocutlote office or prlMIPOI llutln•n olllce or 1111 ln1tnded lroftllerot Is: SAME AS AllOVE. All other 11uslpn1 11omn ond edllreun UHd br Ille 111 1e11d1d l•eMferor wllfllll lllroe '"" lest pesl If for 01 '"°•" lo Ille lnltftded lrOl\tferoe ort: HOflE. Tllo -l•l alld llorM oOClreu of llle Intended lre111feree(s) ore: MICHAIL E. SMITH, JO>O Ceslle llK k lltCNld, ~ 9ar, CA tl76$. Tllot tllt pniporty portlnent lleroto Is '"'rilled lfl ......... 01: I' est l'OOd Hol Dot oftd It l«et• ol: 4SI lllrcJI st .. NIWllOfl leoc:ll, CA ftMO. Tllo~'*"' UMd lly IN IOld lronsloror(S) et seld tocollon Is: I N TEllNATIONAL HOT DOG COMPANY. Thot ,.._ llulk trlllllf9r 11 lnteftdecl to lie <en-led ot th• olllu of: ESCllOW ENCOUNTEllS, INC., 11120 loodl ......,.,.., Hufttll\lltOf'I lloocll. CA '2647 .. or ofter Novemllor 11, 1'11. Tlllt llulll lrOllsler It 1ull)9'I to Colll'erlll• Uniform CMnmercl•I Codi Socllell'1 .. Tille -alld ....,_"IN,.,_ •ltll ..-clolmt mar lie lllM It EK,._ ~ .... IM., 17Jlt 8Heh l o111tvord, HU11t1119t011 8totll, CA tlM1 •"'IM lest dl9y for 1111111 clolms Wy Oll'f crodlttr INll M Nevom•r U, '"'· wfllcll ..... ..,.._, .. , llefore tilt constH'llmellOfl del• apeclllecf ...... OATR0......._,4,Hlt. MkMll E. $1111 .. , 1..-....Tr-Mtt ...... ltNd Or .... CNst Oelly Plltt1 N ..... ,ltll .,,..., PlllllClll'AI. ll'alMClll'AI. Y•A1t AMOUNT Y•A• AMOUlfT 1"4 t S,• 1"4 1115-1• • 10.• "" ""-... ···-,... .. ... ,,., • •.• '"1 ...... ·-• 4J,• "" '" .... '"' . ..,... '"' --"" • 10.-.... am.• '"' ···-., --"" • ,.,. ,.., sm.- "" ...... .. N1•-INTEllEST: Tilo '*"' llNll NOi' llllltrwl at o r• or tottt .... fr.N llPOft lllo tole tlltl"MI IMll llOI to .. cMCI '"' 111t -· ...,.... --..!ly Oii JllM I Md Ooc-r I of to<.11 ytflr. ll'AVMENT Said llonds olld Ille 111-..a ..,._ -,,.,-1111ewM _,of .. Uftl ... SC.I• ff Amorke OC ... tffb of .. T,_ref MNWO or ot ony poylfll oeoncy ol MNWO 111 LM.,..._or S. ,,_._., ~: Olk .... 11t1N1s: or N-von.. New von., at ... _.., • .....,.....,, llRGISTllATION: TllO llOlldl •Ill 'N c..-.. Miida ,.....,.._ .. to ,rlnclpal OlllY or t1 to tlOtll pr1M"'°I Mtl lllt...., .,. tM fWfll" ,..._ ...... may lie ''*""'· or lllO llOIMll cfllcllor..,. frorft nt1.tratloft, Ofl Ill ecclNMCe •llll lllO -•llons In the r•Hlutloft ,,...,....,...Ille I-ff h ...._ CALl.A8LE: Tiie lloNIS matwlfle •or lll'lor .. O.C..... 1. tt•I. ....... • -Joel to cell or ,............'°" prior ta ~ty. TM ..,. MMwlfte Oii w ollff Oec......_ I, I"'· or OllY of lllom,,,..., M called.....,.. fNlllWlty -roel9omoct MIN Option ol U. ._... .. ~of MHWOMd _..., DKe1Mer I, I ... , or _. _,, llltonst poymeftt .... ~ Jfior 18 IMllurlty, tll o redem!IClon prke for eocJI ro4"1ftallle --' .... lllriftC1p91 ..,-t lllertof, ..... '""1\llllft ...-i lo "" .. '" ....... IN'lll<• -· fw -" tHr Of' POf11_. INreof lrwn tllo ,_"'lltlOll dlt• ta .. ,......,,ty ..... All or onr portion of Ille llondl .,.tect to coll f'M\I • c.oHect fw ~ ot ... , _ tlrllo. If leto..., ell ot Ille lloftcb are ........,. M _, -u-, -11 ..... lllall lle~onlt lfllnver•~Of-1tf aMl!wMor...,....wltll tllo ._ ...... -bond; ........... '--'· ................. ,., redotl\tlt!Oll lrom •lllllfl • sl,...• maturity"' lol. PUAPOSE 01"' ISSUE: Tllo llotldl won OUlhtwlUd 1or tM oc ....... IOll_. con1trucU..ofwo•r•lld M-rfocllltlH In 1,,,.,_tDl1Wkt No. 7. SECUlllTY: TN lloftda ore lsawd ......-1 • .. ~ Watw Ol•trlct LAw IOlvlslon lJof tN Wotor C....olhSIMoolCol4fwlllel -IMH " paid from Oii ·--lolld ..... '""" •-t DIMrtct .... 1 ., lrom wotor or -cllOrlff ,..,_, • Miii law wMcll, lft .. dlecroUell of lllo llwnt ol Olroctorl, may lie II_. -~ lfl y.., ........ Md a ll l•uble ._ Ill told ,,.,..,._, Olstrkt llloll lie .,. rorMll\ 1i.-" • HMUocl fW l-poflftOftb. (llONO IHSVllANCE: TllO Ol1trkt 11os roc .. ved t ~ lrWl'I MlllA IOr a Munic:lpol llolld Guora11i. I-MC• .... ky ._...._lly ... lrrevoclttlfy ..., ...... ,,. '°""°"t o1 pr1.-1po1 -~ ... 11w ...._ TllO -mlum lor IN .... ky #Ill too M ly Paid lly .. Olllrkt M w ....... t111e Ciel ••• " of Ille __ , LIGAL. lllYISTMINT: Tllo llOtlcb wlM, ......... C1911Ywy ......... • cor111lecl for 11Wn1mon1 UftdW onct ,..,_,,. to tN prowWons of Ille Dlltrkla 5oc11rltlo1 Law, Olvlll., 10 of tllo Water Codo • .._,.., ,..,.. ............. IUCll certllkelloll, In Hie opinion of II-C-1 lflt olltlblllly ot Mid Mlldl, M Ille llm• of hlr '"'*'<a, for tt. lnYftlmOftt of NMlls of -d el or H¥11111t llOM:s, •• IUdl. Is suDject to IN provl11oN ol • 1"'1-lol COdlt of -S.... ti Coll1om1-. Md• It-.....! to lllel elfocl wlll !lo ,rlMed • ........ ....._ tN cor'tllkatlon. T•llMS OP SAUi 111t"'"* ltett: Tllo MHlmum roee llld may"°' ellCOtd 1"' --. pay obi• __.._Uy. Eocll r•t• 111111111• lie a 1'114Htlplo of 1/10 of 1". No IMftcl 111•11 llOor more ti--lnterHt rott, Md 011....,. of IN -mMllrtty ltlell Mor lllo -rot•. l!OUI llOftd ft'IUll ...... lfttlln9t 01 111o rN Sf19Clflod Ill Ille llld from ltsci.te to Its llaod motwlly ..... Ollly-c....,. Witt•,.._..._ Tllo r• on Ollf meturlty or., ... of.........,.. Sfle41 ftOI .. _.. tflml"' hlgllOr -IN lfltorftl , .. Oii °"' etMr lftlbwtty or .,.._ of ..,_,tllft; provldod, .....,,.., lllal lor _,. ....tw1"9 °" OocomMr t, ,,.., - tll•rool19r, "°rote ll\011 lie lower tlle rota llld on tt. ~ m.ewM.,. A••l"ll: Tllo"°'"" may lie IOlct et• prko....,.. to tlloif',., ,,.._or....,. or 1191-ltwlr -...... u~ lllal Olly cfloc-111c1 IMll Mt OllCeOll '"'of._ par vol.,. of Yid-. TM -IMll lie Mid fw ~ ....... All._ -.. ,., l\Ol ... _ell oftlltllofwa-•yoff9f'911tw ........ _.. ........... ..... lllat Ille lllklOor _, -Olld OCuvN 1-.st to IM dMo ef .... ..,.,.,, IN ll"Hftlllft'I,,, tlle dlt<-. II OllJ, oftd Ille~, ... or,...._ 11M to euwct tllota IPO<lflecl ....... , et #lllCll lllt lllCldw ~ .. lluy .... ...... l[aclt _, Jllell state lfl Its lllcf lllO tolol .... lntoret c.a lfl dlllora Md t111e ._. ... net Interest r ... dltotmlrwct tt.rol>Y, #hkh .,. .. • ~ lllf9nnatlve only •lld !004 o port of 1M llld . HlflloSI ...... : Tllo .... w11111e.-..... ._..,_,,._. • ..._..,_, or lllddert C_..,lfle lllo lnternt rote or,.._~ -tN llftMIWft or .... , lllK:-offorecl. II Olly. Tllo hlglln9 llld wltl .. *'-"'lllM lly ~ lllo omaullt of lie premium llltl Ill ..,,, "-· or .... ..,. .....,.... ef .. dflC-1 Ill OllJI from, or edcllfte 1111 _, ol Ille ..,_.. IN _,, to, Ille tote I omourtl of lfltorft1 ""kll MHWO wwld lie,...,.,.. to ,_y ,,_ tM •• Of tald .... to IN --11ve m411Wlty ..... IJlerW M tM ~ rMe or retes apeclflod Ill IN llld. No llld et e -.C-t Ill •-ti •• ... llo COllM..,.., -Ille c-lft'9reSI r-.-!fled In wdl ... M 044 ti .. "°"*Is t"' --. SUlljKI to ...... ~ .. _., #Ill ........ Oft Ille_. of .. lowest rwl 11\Wn-il Coal to MHW0. Tllo~ -"" occrwd......._I I'°"' Ille dlto of Ille lloftdlltotlle .... oldltll..,.,.,,~., • MO..cflr( yew~ lt'91\I of A•tocll ... : MHWO retervft IN rltlM, Ill lb dlilcrotlefl, to rojecl.,.., -ell lllda -to IN Hlenl llOI prolllllllod tlr la# te#Olve.,.., .,.,......,.ty or lnlorl!'•ll~..,,_ p._.. : ,,._.WO wt11 t-.11Ctlon _.,.. lllo..,. or,.... .... llldt net leW tlloll _,,_ CM) llews.,..,. ... UMo --,._,_, .... Ille rocottot .,, ~; ,,.., ... lllat tM _,. ...., • .,.... .,_ .. e~rolloft Of tN lllO<ltled time II lllo .._ tNll 11M llOft II-ta .... ._. of OlrKton notice In wt1Ung of Ille wlllldl' .... of IUdl ..,...i_ Place of ~1-y; FUl\Cb for Payment: Dlll'twy of Mill ...... •Ill M ...... lo lll• IWCCISSIUI 111-r •I J ellrt .. ...,,... c:-y, ,. WltSI Pica lloulevorct. La Antetes. Celllomla, or et MY ollwr pl-..,_•.,.. Ille wcceuful bidder eftCI Ille T,_.,..., of MHWD. Poyll'ION for 1M --I ._ "'-lfl FodltrOI ll-a-,_,. or o-IMmedlatelJ evollalll• lunels, ,,..,_ lllOt ,...-!ft h lwM of 9C:ll 011\er IMmedlalltlt avolllllle ~ "'ldt !loft -.,.,...... llf h T,_ of MNWO ot IMll i.tOllty·fovr 1241 "-'I prior to IN dltll""Y of Ille...._ p..-,e Dlelvory; c-ee&Mtotl tw Utt~: II It •XllOCted 9let Mid llonft wlll IM dell-lo lllO tuc.<Hllul llNlllr wltfllll Wr1y t•I •YI f.-Ille dote of tts OPtloft. to cancel Ille c011troc1 of ~ M ,,._.WO -..1 loll ta e•tCUll Ille llOndl eftCI ..,_. lMm for .. ,_., wltllM llldY I .. ) •YI,_ Ille ctete hor'411 llxed for lllo roc11C>t of llldt.. Mii ia ~..,... .. ~ MdllW Jllell lie ..,.ltted to• retunl of lllo <lloek occ..,....,1111 ltl blL ,_" 9111: EllCll llld, ~"*' •1111 tN -Clllocll. ........ Ill ._ ... env.IOI" addrwsMCI lo MNWO, wllll Ille ..,...._ Md llld <loerly ......... "ProPOWll lor 1...,,.,_.. ... 1 Ol1trk l No. 7, "'' W..., olld S.-..... Serles 1." ... Clltdl: A certllle<I or <•tllltr't Ctwdl Oft. I ............. ., ""'* company lfl Ille -of $40,000, POYlt* to h ordltr ff lllo Ol&Ukt. lftU1t occorn-y todl Pf'OllOYI "• ....,°"" ttl1t Ille...._.,, M aua...,,.., wlll KCef>I encl ,.., lor IOlcf llOlllca "' occ.,_ .. ._ Ille '°""' of lb *· "'° clleck o<~tll\g °"' occeptocl ,.,.... "'111 M ........ Oii -_.cllO• price or, II il'Cll propose! II occ1tttod llut not perlefmtll, UlllelA-" fellWe of performance NII !lo <-llY °"' oct or........., of MNWO, .,.... hll • c•lllH olld .. procoedt melllocl llY MHWO. n-o c-11 ~\ltlll MCll IHllKCetKOd,......,... wm lie'°"'"'",,.......,, C--..•Tua .......... :AIMf .............. ._..,.....,... doll very, .,. -ceu1111 lllddor moy •t0fflnft Ollll .......... ,,._..If lie l11terut rteallled bf prlvoto _,..,,_ __ IN -...._Md dloratt&t 111011 lie *<lor'ld to lie tolloble 111eome Ulldltf' ,,_,,_..'-tu i-. tlllltr ~ • rvtlno of lllO 1n1e,.,,.1 ••-s.Mco or lly o dltdtloll of ..., ledtral covrt, w "'811 lie dlclarod lldMe or•,....,..,, to• tellell lftto acc-1 In comoutlflo Olly federfl Inc-l.exot. tlr lM .,_ Of ..., _,., 111eome ta• •--•eel..........,, to.,.. ..... .,.,...UC.. CtelMt P-..n; ._. ,.,....., EOCll ,,...__ wllt llJe .......... ta .. condlll-ct -MNWO lum lshl111 to tN ,..,.c:MMr, wr-cllerwe, concur,....ly wllll Plrf"'°"' for Ille doll"'Y of ltlo--. • ...._ .... <llMlllt p.-n, toell det"' Illa dole of dell wry: Co) l..ogol o,Nnlon -Tiie opinion of O'MefWllY & Myws ol LAI A......._ Celllomlo, lloftd C-1, ._., .. 1119 Ille Yelldlty ff.,. -~ •talllle lllOt l11tsrest on Ille ._. It ua,..,. '""" lllc*M ._. of ltlo Uni ... S-Of Am•rlu -presatll I_ .. IMOIM , .. '---1UC11 ......... It ... HHl\PI trom ~ Inc-...... of ... SlMe " CelMonl&o lllldltr tr-' 1tote 1-ta:• 1.-, A copy of Mid~ of O'Met_., & ,,.,.,.., C9r1lflff llJ en ofl1cer of MNWO tty loalmlle ....,.._, wltl .. prtfllM Ofl IN Mell of toCll llofld. No c11or111 wUI too m-to IN pur<llo-of sucll prtlltlnt or cor1111callon; lb) A to<tlllcalt .. MNWO cortltytae .... Oft ........ of "" Ioctl, ••llm•I• olld clrc-tenul In ••l•IOll<• llill •••of ...... II Is ...t •-• 111'1 t ... proc.-" ......... •Ill -..... lfl. _ ........ ,_ .. llolldl 10 .. °""" ... -; (<) A cortllkote of MNWO, ,..,_. lly olfkon Ollll ••••• .. ti"" ff MNWO cortllylftt to lllo lol-tne: I U -Mid olflctn Ollll ~tati..e llOVe tltrMd lflt llOndl. .,..tlllr llY foalmllo or_.. .......-. oftd ... t tNy ••rt re.-ctlftfy cfuly outllorlIOd to uoc• ltlo-: alld II> -...,. 11 no lllltollon ltWMtilftOd or I*''""' olf9Ctl"I tt. validity of.,..,..: Id) Tllo rocol9C of MNWO lflO#llle tMt ... ~ JJrlce Of ........ 1nc1uc11111.....,... OCCNld to.,,. deto of••~.,.,..., Ilea....., rocel..,... llf MNWO:Ollll Cel A cer1lllwt1 of MNWO, ...... lly Oii tlfloor " MtCWO, octlft9 II\ 1111 olllclol olld ftOI 11141 ,.,_, copaclty, to tlle en.ct .... at tN ''-ff ... IOlo of IN llolld9, olld et Oii i""" ............ tlltfN .... -lllcNdlfte .. time of h •Ivory ot Ille -49, tlle Ofllclol ~,.........•IN llllNllle llld not CoMolft -Ufttlw l .. tem4111C " 0 f'llMtrlel foci W' -'! to ..... 0 ,...,.,,,. IKt nocouorr 10 m.U .. *"' 1•• "'""4ft. In NtM Of IM clrcum.._ ....., Miid\ tllty _.. l'Mdlt, ...t ............ "'-ct .. ff prtlltlftg ......... #IKtlO-lly MflWO. CUMP .......,..: It II OllllCIPOIM INl CUSlll' _....•Ill .. Jlf1MM Oii U10 ~ M Mllllor IN f .. lurw 18"""' 9'ICll _..,.. Oii Oii~ lleM -- #llll '911POCI llloreto -· c-lltlltO ~ hlr t feltiw. W ""8el ~= _,.,._ "'""' tie occollt an,,.,-,, tf Met "8Y fllr "" ..... Ill oc wltll Ille -" .. purche• c.otroct. AM e..-Of ""'*"" CUMll' numllers Oii Ille Mftcte oM Ille CUSlll' lorVl<o e-... c..,._ fw Ille • ....,_ff NW __...._II lie ,.._llf MHWO. INPOllMATIOM AYAILA•La: 11 ....... tor lftfWMttlell , _ _.... MNWO or 1W c ..... of IN Oftk lol ~ ~ lly MHWO -.ClilNlle tllt llOlldl ........ __....., to: st-&Y__,. Mllftlc .... 1"'11\oftclllt COMUllOl\t~. lllC. '~' WllllNrt ........ .,d s..t•• L• ~ Colllorftlo .. ,, AltOlllMll: Ml. £11 HylOllll MNWO #Ill ,.....1 ... tM wccetstul ....... , ..... Of tM Oftl<IM lutemellt .. llW .......... MNWO. OIVRN 11oY .,.., ol IM llMrd " Dnderl ti ................ W..., District,._..."' Ocllllet u, ttl t. ::-"...!=~ .... ...,.of Otrtc11ntf .M911111111 ....... w .. Oltlrltt Pl*ltNdOI' .... c..-Oelly ~ ............ t"1 .,..... 642-5678 ' Put a fe w words to work /or you r D A I L I y : p I ·L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • --· c ....... 14"'""'-i..t• ,_ -· -OMr· T\>•wt• = -= -= --.... = = .. .. ----:: .. IM .. 149 19 ,.. "" •• ·--,. ------1'111 -- )llt --------:: ---o• Olt .. -- Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 9, 1981 Among~ looking f&r a rental, 70o/o read rtal eitatt cla.llt/W odl. ... CAMYOM '"¥115•1 LH" Paltl .. w. Mlle& Most spectacular Deane Homes model AU r H I eatate ad· on largest corner lot o'looldng Big Cyn v tr th• d lo th I• golf course. Beaut pool, spa & gazebo ::r.r:.a•,t~ ln huge private yard. 4 BR, den , iq Act " • wtUcll formal DR, 4V! baths. $950,000. mat• It WepJ to Id· vert.IM "•pnfereece, WisuY M. TAYLOI CO .. llA&.TOIS . llmihtlo.n, or di•· JI t I S. J......1. ... a..I erlmlHtioe baaed on .--......,.... rue. color, rellalon, ~,_~"~,.""~·~C!IMT&~~~M.l.~~~·~4~M~t~l~O~.·I MS, or DlliilDa1 ortifa, -;:: ot 111 lat.lltion to make H J aueb preference, limitation, or dis· crtmiD1Uall." Tlais DeWIPll*' will DGt 11.oowlnfb 1 . <'ttrt .rr advert 1101 for real tltate wblcb II ln vlol1· tioil of tbt law. HIAT ASSUMUllf 00 t1Ua ~ \IP' IHded 3 Bdrm eoodo. Coly flnfllce ud view of areenbelt. Only .. ,500. Clllnowf79.53'70 'ALLSTATE REALTORS •OIS: .., ....... -·-------...... ._..... "HOISi .. M, _. ~ • PIOPBJ'Y! ,.,. ' ~· n. Co untry ulUna! 4 DAILY PILOf 11 Bdrm, 2 IMdh. R-2 mo. IWlllty ,_ .. ..., 1q.. u{om 1111.ft. of lud. l•cerrect a.aertlH ~:r~~~r~~: ..,. ina. lU'KI Interest. Call for more delalls . SM-23U Ddebout Bay&Beoch Red Estate COIOMAD&MAI South of ~WI)'. Al· tractive cdonia1 style 2 atory home witb lwo bedroom1 plua neat one bedroom wlit In rear. Plnible flnancina. •.soo. 6ll07lM l .... REALTORS '7.Mlll OWMH'S rtlDI Natural decorator wood pane11n& & mantels make this 3 Bedroom & den unit one of the most unique in old CdM + a 1 Bdrm rental. All for $384,500. COLI OF MIWPOIT WLTOIS 2515 I. c. ... ..., .. c.-.. ...., 671-1111 UMlqUllM HCAMYOM Evemhlnl ls beataiful. 4 Bdrm -Bro1dmoor, OPPCINITY TODM&. Motivated Miler .W Mll or trade 1 cboice SpycJau 4 Br on eaner lot. Try tftltiYI \s1DI lach1cUn1 aema. ODIJ . '' RCTc1ylorCo Fllll Needa tome 11.C ._ llu = .......... w. THE REAL ESTATERS ,. ;:;ca.•· auard aates. lo1d1 of poteollal. I Bdrm 2 Bl .... lo .... del llar, dole to parts, acbooll 6 ahop. plna . Sabmlt your lenn.I. A*inl SUIJOO ----- ... Wit -------""' , .. -... --- ....................... ...... 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CHOICllUY! SIM.too Hiahly up1r1ded 2 Bdrm Jnlne Condo. Beautiful wall cover· 1011, levelon, drapes S>hm pool,.,_. rec room. take our nislloa finllldq. Cl1I for de- t.alla! Ml-nn THE REAL ESTATERS .... SIOJ.• 3 Bd rm-lluae back 1•Ml-1n~t for-firat time b111•-daa'l m1u lb.ii cme. Call DOW! SIA COVI l ''°'flflfS 7rUJJ-4tto ------ SI 12.000 CASHOUT! New p ort Beach townhome. owner desperate! ... out! 2 Bdrm, 2 bath. si111Je tiory. A blrp1n ! Call DOW! $41.2SlJ THE REAL ESTATERS lJflllrllOOf OOMt:i ..... ~ .... Reahon, m-eoo0 .......... Owner wtl( any lit TD 1r1 1 It e t ho se g o o d oo this channin& COUil· houaebold ltema you're try frencb 3 Br, 3 Bl oot 111ln1 available to home. H~ floon, IOme othtt family by act. pued wtJMlowa, abtlt· vertlaiD& them for sate ten,2f~,beaut.IW)-lo Cl111ified. Call Dy brick p9tio. .. ,000. IM2·51'11 D.M. Mw ' 11 Br _.......___""'------ 7tHIH . FOi SAU 01 TIADE 98 UtiT APARTMENT BUILDINC CMtcrDlwyt..ctt • Priced to .... $400,000 below l(llprtliMI for ...... . tterow. • o.ty ssoo.ooo .... , ...... ,... .. 4 IDIMS w.1t,._. ... .._. POOL IPA Defer P&rt of monthly --- ASSUM ... I 11 ¥4%LOAM Anzlous teller offera best buy in II•• Verde. 3 BB +f1m1ly/dillio1 room. OD qUllet cul de UC with QV ICCtH . IUt,tOO. Owner will carry 2nd. • Low rwh • 0 V.-cy • W .... Utt ............ "'"" .... & ... write-off. -----LovelJ 2 lklrY home on payment ao this charm· q u I et cu 1 de 11 c . lq Balbod1laiid home. Eastalde Costa lleaa. •=Br Jlf.1616 -----~ .=-c.~ __ _..•.-..... ....... ......_ __ People wbo are .-ma deltped pclDl ud spa. DAILY PILOT 1 en apartment klok lint FwW..,C .. 7 14/760.7292 .,. ... Great ....,..,hie ftnanc. -.a asal!ll-.aos In ClasslOed. Will your !==~~~~~~~~~~= '-•I n-1w .. __ , Call "-,...., "' ad be there? To place ~-.nn-· M2•M18 xou.r1d,call1C-$f11 ---------... -------- ti41flt!4 IAS1Sml SIU.• Only $10,0ID down let.I 10'I into tllia lGl9lly ,. modeled 4 Bdrm home. ~e corner lot, Koi ,11• too! Woa't last, call = (1) SIA COVE .. ' -''°"mES ::: 7 ,, ... , '"'''° -... -----.,. ------nu fill fill flll flit flll SIZ.000 TOTAL DOWMI · 11lll '1 rtallt I A beaut.lli&I prof eukmltJ decorated 3 B drm 2 balb lownbome. Pool, •p• and llllDL A bar11ill, only $1.1J,IOO. 541-2313 ::: Ml\Wmf :: IMl\D = Slept to beach. 4 up • 3 r,: down. 2 baths each. "a hnllah lot winter/awn· ;: mer reotala. Good bi.a- ::• torJ. Pee. Priced al -.... ooo. -t associated '"' t!Sl = ---'"' -.. --IN "" --------.., -----.,. -· !I ll .. • ~ .. • • • .) . ... ' "-.... -.-.. , ft.-~ O'WC ..... ...... CUSTOMM.L IYAMWIU.S Onda9hilll la ._. .... , ........ ,_ ftnfleee. ....... dlah1. Oo u mat '*"-·-----.... ~ ..... , .... 1 .. 1 11• ., ..... , , .. ,.,=.:= OalJ ....... ...... -- R£S10£NTIAL REAL ESTATE SEROICES PllCED TO SBJ. Quaint Island Duplex in best middle of the island locatfon. Fantastic remodel or rebuild potential on Cull size lot. Owner will assist with financing . Best buy on the Island. $325,000. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 CL.WR AH ITH W £ 1 RU SP R 0 S S l M A A M I H S P R I N G A E G , t G A B I S L R I H W E C K L I N S G T H L L C N P E C l H S P R C t R R Y R 0 L I I 0 E D Q U E Y I A R E E Y W E A C A P 0 0 R L Z A E l E T B A A L S U R H I R P S A T Y G T A E E T Z 0 A l I 6 C U S H E L Y A W C H T Y U E T U 0 P S R E T A W H I R L P 0 0 L 0 E T A T L E Z D A A T 0 I L Y Y N E I Y I S E R N Y T H T C C N S E A. LN~THMUEHETWEK IO ll ll R A E S E 0 Y S M R 0 C A C II R A 0 K 8 R E'"'A ..... R-................. -.,, M H II G I R A 0 R U E II T A 0 A l II Y -'· up, k,,. OI ~. Fin:°':: llld timi It 111: P QM MiMnlW... laMrt ~ Miii .....,_, GIY9f4' GllCilr Miftpool $firiftt II IWtl tt.y W• lelt e Mm Grolllld Wits 5"'"' T omomiw: S.. tf 8ln'den FREE 1982 ROLLS ROYCE •• TO THE MEW OWNER OF #41 LINDA ISLE • #I Walla ft ont Hw on"Mtwport Harbor PRICED FOR 9UICK SALi AT AM Unbeltvablt $100,000 below MAI appraisal. Vacant • 6600 sq ft. Weterlront Mansion will accommodate two 90' yachts. lndoor/OUtdOOr PoOI and spa with sunken swim-up bar. Huge mu ter bedroom comma nd • breathtaking view of entire channel and John Wayne •a residence. Marble. mirrors and solid walnut wood throughout. Separate maid 's quarters. Rewarding entertainment and Investment estate. 24 HO UR GUARD GATE Insures 100% MCurity and privacy. et.ve like ataircate "below Wltertlne" lead• to large wine cellar and/Or vault that 'Mii hokt 60 CIHI of wine or GOLD. Seller mutt .. 11 -... II rMrY all financing wUh low down s-yment or wt II tlke 2nd TO for down peyment, or .,... for Income property. Once In I ......... ="""' IO -a "one In the wor1d hon." a.I 1 piece NI~..._ ------... -----p-• • .. ~ ............... ~ ........ • • • • • ... .. • • • • • v u c s o a u s e u a • c • o s • u u a o o o o • u a a ; 0 Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 9, 1981 .._..Mr Wt ...._. IW We He.ttt,.,. Wt .._"For Wt O.... '"'.,. OtMt l"' ht9tt • HM1H U.,..a..d ............................................................................................................ ···••··•·•····•··••···· ••••••···•············· ..........••.•••.•.............•...••••.•................••••••...... IOOJ IOOJ •wNI 1002 c..e.w.e IOJ4 trilllt • I044 Mt.wt.._. 106t ~ t4-. MowttaM.Dftttt, G""'9 UOJ te.t,..._leedl J240 ............................................................................................ ····•··· .................. ~r.~:-.~.............. ,.,, s• 1 too •• ..,. J400 ••••• ••• • •••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• .. ,{ I DllVllY CUTl211 I IA ....................... ....................... llMTAl..S 2BR, l''HA, '420 No • LINDA ISU HOMIS B ul~~T~ lal IS.'! E. Bay IE&at ol20lh, llACH HOUSE Cu11on1 llOlllt1 J1141\u11 Vrorly·WHkly Winier, l>C'll -~ u ' 1 1"11 t', off Santa Ana Ave.) t ijnb uni\ tu rtnl ASS....UU Tm• 1300 111 ;UR. 2llA Z 3,4, 8drrns '• • t tAt•ligt• 11001 fumlly home. Ma in ~cely h land•<'•P•1d4 4 Thu ull Rut h for Salo prlrt 1111s,ooo. BANK RHO-Low down T rma ~5.1100 f.:n-. jACOIS IWTY Ntw 3BR homf ti btu fr c.tiann~I \'lt:W from beautiful rm5 ~on ru '" tmna,atfWM.'llO,rltr You'll lu•e t~u uma to •1Xld Lnlln. low pay 13115 PROPEmMGIS Oou $975 rar1flr ll'lldtllunal, 4 bdrm, 5 bnlh home. Slip t~!w:f1~~~°1~~ a br .. 2 ba . ox.er. wt I• blf' luan Uru L'pllltc, m~'j·d~rr, JB•01att M> huab.-n1Jhut~arK1w' 67S.6l7l Moon fte:y211.W J ftft-! ht rttc bouts. $1,•1~.000 property. Owner will ram rm 'fPI °*'"'' •t:t131 l ~ris" 1 ~~ iro;;I l'ltast bu> or rrnt to> J.'.> htlp onfltl l\ClnlC Onlv rln at 121!( A•enl P •nu..... 1'11rk('1ty1.A>11do ,Willk , ....... __ ,-.J-.~-~107 2 bd ,lb1 ,dbl 11r .l5 • s t 00 c II ' 6'21523 Mv..,._H t l ,..., I 4 1 --~ min walk to ocean No t~l' lul(oon view from S""'Ctacular 13 •5 · a now -IW.JtwS u 11 u,.. ~ l'f'PI • urn · 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... f!uc 1164 2283 •t ... ~ b f7t.SS10 LOW lATIS MOW Vl' •!<lr.-~t-, (p . U'\~umuhh• SH;•p l() Beach ('utei., lltR r ---J:-.r I t'Ctural dl'sign 6 bdrm, 5 ath, A Wby Wiil for themT Moltlltt4-DIY. loan $119,~ 400329ti I Uupln Util pajd Yrl) 48R. R••t, Pool. 1enn11 pluyroorn, durk l'OOm & den. Slip for 2 LLSTATE Owntr ottt(iPa fi.nanr· 1714) 527-5900 Or~ C..ty 2tl144th •l l..\30mn C<>urt 2 ml lo Bfiarh •• (ijr.:,t• bouts $1,350,000 Ina •t Ina Ulan 11 ' ~ * ZERO DOWN * Prop.rly 2500 G731~11flH"3l'M Ph1y Orvund Klm OK REAL TOft8 overall A.ta~ t>xl1t1n1 1138 <t'lllO H'l':'i~ ••• •••• •••••••• ••, ••••, Avull Nov 5th No µet.J Like now 111lllde f: • I LIDO ISU HOMES F'oUiLur d on Homes Tours this lovely bhaaitlonal sp1H·l0Wi, custom 3 bdrm, 3 · buth humc. nt1wly n.'<lt.>corated. Priced lo sell quickly at $475,000. Must sec. ~~eWly remodeled J bdrm. 2 bath plus , lg~ ~encation room & 2 patios. Beam t ceilings Great for famil y living. E>ect.>llent value at $420,000 t1 'lHIMSULA POIHT IEACHFROMT Panoramic ba y & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm, ~ 3( Q.ath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. 1 eaturing marine room. $1,385,000. ~ ,, I ~ BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR J.1 • 'loy'''"' 01<v1• N B 67~ t.161 SPANISH VILWPOOL • •frqulslte properly built for one of the orlglnal Newport famiUta ht tht · I 9201. COrYed wood doors, anti.,_ • ltaded glau, beOlftl, oak floon, l flreplaces, 2 master wihs., pooa, apo , •• Ir •olleyball couri. OWNER WILL CARRY WITH LOW DOWN P.4 YMEHT. SUBMIT ANY OFFH. ,2585 l"in.: Ave, ap.,.. Suit. 1·5 P.M. Reduced to S449,000. 631·1400. : ~CEANFRONT-WILL EXCHANGE • 1.rf~• °" o•ertiu lot. 6000 sq ft. Own.:r moti•oted and will COflslckr any reasonabl.: offer -trades, exchanges, tums. .:tc. Pride of own.:rship. Rf:ducf:d to Sl,950,000. 631-1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, INC. REAi ESTATE "M1ot. R~ttJ, f>t'1C)¥''\ ~f"nlllnt /lJI> W l "·"' 11,., J IS M..r11W Av. Nvwpurr fit..1< ~ &lbod ltl.af\d 631-1400 '7Ut00 CE BEDBBE ILlllS,. CD, OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE FIXER UFftR USTILUFf lndm<iual lloml' Largl' fne •Bed room~ !'>l·parale :\la:;ler Suitt> (;nod Floor P lan \·1ew ~f Cit\ Light.., G r ea t ~:Se1ghborhornl Scho<.11 & Park Close B\ r,...,t Jo:..,trow L1sted ;\I S255 i100 \ .Jm Of :'\e~port " -t;1st1n g WA TERFROMT DUPLEX j;lalboi.J · l.1llll' lshrnd ·· Full Bay ~View From Both l'111ts l'ppcr L'n1l 'Which \\'uuld :Vlake i\ ~-•#.v.·ondertul ()\\nt$1 .. , rn1l1 llas O! ~ Foudr Jktl r111l1lll!> I ~l"' l'I Is F~'h reel •• Re ruorn 111t .urge r on I), ,Patto Sand~ lkal·h . 1 ,I !J r .. , --........ 759·9100 it 2 COfl'O' oh Plcrlo M.:wport Cent.r , .•. ., ... "' .... ... . 1"1;'•~" ....... 111- t ·-.. ., ... u•• .,.,,,.,_ ..,., .. '"'" ~· .. " ~· '••• "' .... \ • y · ••• . .. -. ... ~~ . . .. t ••• .... d • ••• 'Jl ~ .,. ')'4• 1-1" ". .... .. ~1Nio ••I ... . .. ,., .. " . ... .. ,. ... ... .. ,. ,. ... ... ..... " .. , .. ... .. . ,., .. ,,, It• ...... ..,.... '°" ..... ·o-~~"' .,, ... ' .. ...... ~ "' .... .. , .. ,.. .... . ••f9tr!'• ,. .. .. ..... ... ... . .. . •O \ \ .. ., f \tvt .a CAP••COIU< CIC n 4 IA• •I ?_ ~ 1u11.-:= !.'HI_.£ 4QUA•lu• , .. ,.~ ,,, ,, , I ~· 7S.7U9 • AMAtmMHIU.S 115,-. Lu"urlous home on cor· ner lot. 5 bdnna. 3 b11tb.1 CantUe'ter decks, pool, spa & lireri11g Check lhls one out today' Redhill~ lk.:tlty f; ~:; ~:)I It I 3 li>RM STEAL! Xlnl cond., Jrg yrd, good location. ~ 9c~~. Aslnng only $92,000 7S9·1Z21 Patrick Tenore a 759-1221 1006 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ '°" O'MI • .,,.... Oeler part of monthly payment oo this cbann- ang Balboa Island home Iii Hcrdnty, RJtr _ ___::6:..:..7;:,.;S.S.2288,1 6 - Corotta cW Mar I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4341EGOMIA New elegant 4 Br V11· torian partial \ u. ownr lcontraclor Iman avail. $5""'75~,000=·-- loan and lleep paymenl.ll o w M f I w I L L !''or 1111le by owrwr 1 f;oo I Coroea dtt Mer J2J2 Ml 2M5 or $750 PIT. 3 llltrm, UMIVllSITY PAik CAJllY •<j It 4 UR :i HA, t'ntry ....................... 3 Hr 2 Ba. Condo lo "Int hU80 famlly room on 3 br, 2\li ba condo, •m CHOICfCOIHll 1o:iut" tu buy l:ltt' modrl tobhcmwon 11;11•rrlnl 1 CDM~._.-lor All amenila r.w Costa Mesa cul de l411r. roenitles. on areenbelt ON LIDO ' lJ r~ 11 Mh laurwuy of Jurupu . . """""" $700/mo. 91!3 M51 Full price $120,000 By owner <no ugtal r "tfe"t l""utlon, this :l 3Ur. 2 ° llm Y 1iurk ll11l1111otr c·oun1i· Slll.'I" l! hdrm, :l bu, r1tr gicr 1 '--,.2 .... 751-3191 552 9713 ' ' "" Ownt·r will ht•lp >'011 ag o W C l)iwn Lo c ri·aUH· fiJt h11lc·ony lllf' S700 """" ~ ,.,. bdrm horn{' on un t•dru llt>t\1n wllh low low flnuurrnl(orlr.Hll' 1110 SSI 41193 11nu •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• •30Yr 1n .. •/o• ZUR, 2BA, dblt 11r. frplc, enclosed yd. 2 yr old ,rommun1t) pool spa Near S C Piasa 50K do~n. bal $109,900 K, $l,29'J mo P Kirkey A.gt 832·3910 or SSS 2882 llHTOIUCH Approx l~ miles to be•rh . beaulalul townbome Mexican tile entry. fireplace, 3 king sz bdrms. 2~ ba. Huge covered patio. charming mini yard. Near 260 acre regional purk. Great value. only $131.SOO. 645 0303 COLDWC!LL BANl(eRO ENTEUA.INllS DBJ&+n' EASTSIDE Assumable VIR l1nanr mg available on this charming, Light and airy home Featuring 4 Bdrm, plus lllrnaly room . enclostd courtyar..d . IO\.fly backyard wtlh ko1 pond Asking $187,500 For appt to see, call 540-1151 ~HERITAGE REALTORS M•wT~Hamt w1lt1• lol <irt•at OJI do\nMtU~~~.N 1714111!11 Tl90or!Wlt:too7 I Nu~41u1r111,2•1b~ Walk Twnhome,newJbr.Jb;i, No down 9lell portunity to enjov l,11lo WW>AR • n • p<1Uo, gar Park, pool. 831·5731 Al.Ml L1 \llllll Onl)' S lmu.~11 T Out of C..ty 10 hNc h '1ISIJ Fndge. Jar S97S mo &13·9067 frorn dt1hhot1M.' & uc• REAL OIS Property ' 2550 t•nd llJr11i:t 760 0009 .ill COUEGI, ... ., M-L.lltu-Df., '·• WOOdbrtdf1edblgar,3br -llvlUe. -.._ • •• • •••• • •••••••• .. ••• •• dJ 2Story,4 Br. 3 ba 1714) 527·5900 COHOO READY llt•,11 h l.tHng. locl(e 1 Hr ~~; 7~ 17~7: park Quiet SL ptrf rond 0 1 2 l\J 1(111111(l', pallo ~ Gated RV torl&l' Flex (14 nc·11 1 1n" 0"115 in t.07 1 rti. 524 3112 or fin no quah!y SHXIK as-1•c~forS. 1200 )rf'on~H i· $1 !llJO,ooo 5ii4 SJ'J.4 aumable lo.tos llow~l ••••••u••• .... •••••••• L'11ah .,111 hbndlr· flkr prirt Cornell I 14G22 •43•CONDO'S• 71~1 1J317l3 2bdrm. 1111 .. nt1r dl!n, Laurel TheLandOfrlre IS .u:re• reudy to go' SonamaCtyDpb 1'.~1~11 ~;,.~nH•• 54().36SO 2 3 0 I REDLANDS !'111~!4"e1m~ri11~~npl~'.'°"k1111~· cl\nll~nt ((JOI! 011 • J \~\I I '11-t' ft!-. Jo. K S3K below apprsl Wood ' ,.-""''" '"' " orre.. $1 t5 WO .\"um.a bridge S25,6SO do~ n I OOGOWH $575,000 Ownrr bk r bit.' 1'l $1>!1.(l(•i ,11 K 1 , 1•u;111ll'd mmm IH'C>JO Sl399 P+ I mo total 3br IO' DW"4 )1tlt:1 pnct• ti73 2200 antt"re~t 1iO'i1Klf7 it~ '11"•. pool. 1t·nn" Sll50 S24S 1JUC1 owe 90' ''" 1.40 1212 • 2ba dbl 11ar Ov. ner ( 5 th 1 t 1 COf'Nl'lerclal n ) owrt4·r l.JrHI l'un 768 7•6/"'44 ur 'n •YI 1:. ' IL · 1600 '' I run\ 1111";.t• 2111( Ill\ .. .. .. ~ VO , ....... tr •1 I l.1•.i.,f• ()•Jtllfl 1:tt U< Bit p , b.1 rn1m1· v. ~ r09 .... , " ,.. l:,rt '1'Jt1' /\\,111 l><·r I * .• 20% DOWN (plf,, lum rm, & Ul'W .Cfl ....................... 1 n It I '•II\ 111•1•11' "'°'> mu 1;.t. l.J .. l Sloe I phr rn k1lrh Thi~ humt' SUPER. SUPER $25 IMIO <';1.'h to lt.-lr1< :it.· ti r 1 , t• h ~ 7 o t; 12.4''• on balance Su~r. j h11' rl'rl'nll) hl•f1111111111 l.rit IZ0xl411 kll + ~ml S97.ooo Tl>l.il \II "1·~· M.iri:u1:r1tt· ·rall rur like oew, 2 Rd r m 1'1.1 Jnd nl'~ wull lo wJll hllla !ll!ISun.srl.l"M In I 7293ffll4 "'"' \vpt %~tl:l!Olfo:\t'' Nonhwood home I 1·ar111·111111 h11~ ht•t>11 111 du.stranl wned \1·1 uow R h ~ SLSt,SOO ~1ull1•rl 1\11 lhh plus u won 't 111 .,1 C'h111•k anc H, • Co,taMtMa 3224 r \ 1 Gro•.:• 2700 •••••••• .. ••••••••••• •• \u lh 11 I int l11rJllt111 ' :crl(t' Spllll.'r, Uj.,'1 li.'11 t2l)(j 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• «aloillltJ, mount.110 \'11.'V. '''''' r C ~t· , corn~r lot wiJKXX 110111, f llb k RC,.,,.. I dbl rar gar w t'lt't' 0µ11r a roo I lrorn tht• h\lnl( mom & " ., • I R\ k I I ) .ml, C'o.,lu M(-sa lllulb. "' bl'~cr.i p .. r 11111 3 15 a1·1 <'' '''" ·" '" hr .. nd n1·v. 2 Br 2 1111 551 3000 I You mu~I Sl't.' lhl~ p111µ I , lt!V. Sll:>.IJIO \" u!nu u~t:d hrirk !riilt. •e<·uri 19tll lhrr.,H• l'~"'·I""" lo;iµpr1·u.1lt'1l bll' Jo,111 1r.1cl1• t ,._h I\ entn Ji!uh' ~I Mo UPI::\ s \'I Sl "1 !"11'~1 Condominiums flown· ti"' tit:! .~;tMi· I C~Jll 1;11 <r.!.>!l ti-12 ~II O~m likr 2l:l!Ailli253 hovsufouale 1700 FALLIROOK 1><11isn2 VIEW l!dnrho SMn Jonqwn 3 bdrm , 2 12 ba ths, hreplare, vtew, xlnt con d111on Adults. no pets l>OO mo ~L.&13 9293 Nev. Woodbndge Carmel rouage home, Jbr. 2 'i bJ lg lam rm . 2 car ..:.ir wa!)h dr) Near pool &. \pa Agt 848 lS II tDcJo mo SHS>IOOM I runlerock lltghlands $1700mo GOLDEN · PRUPF.HTIES 752 1.589 I BO Dtc)l'ft View! Turtle Rock Prns1denl llnmt' Prime Htlltop Cul de Sar 3BR . 2BA, rum rm. Lmmaculate \~~or teruw. court:. & pool\ nt'arhy $1600 mo l.:all 752 ~12 or lbe hills from this out standing Plan I rn Turtle Rock ll has everytlun~ you could possibly want PRI VATE SPA and pool. fountain in lht" .itrium BreakJa.~1 nook lo~ely ~all co' errng' Don't buy until )OU haH· seen this borne. Call 11" d3y for an appo1ntmen1 LUV. DOV. 'Ii 'o"'1wr mu't ~Jn l.u" Ht·\ li.111.-1" Wn.bufr :! Ur I ll;i Woodhndl(f' JIJR homto ....................... I sdl'2hd luxunronclu lootSlipsA•ail. OnC:t,UC001:1 Jh•lrm ,.,,, l•tl l!JrJl:t 2HJ r.im rm, frplr, $1~~ utio .l11h11 t~ll 71i60 Waterfront <"ummunat~ ~ ba fl<l'•I ,,.., ·":.11111.1 "' .. ,h, r iln •·r ..r1·J µa110, l.<ikl' Pool. Ten agnl 1.2 &3BR ('undo!> frvm ble Ju,111 at IJ ~.•OJ 11 llltcl h;11 ._·,,ml ~5(1 111 ~. l'rl' S!IOO mo $1511 000 lO ~ IJWJ \, Olfl't \lo • 'l"I uni\ '>111 .>1.t2 IWU 1327 569 61!111. Offire SfAVIEW ~OWNER i.um1• lo.1n & """"'r il' "12 ,,,., ,\ , ;o ~.:!'J . iJ!ll~!li, $37'l oou It Jr, Jiu '"t lt11Jn1111'! R1.,, J~t Sh I l ..... •'"2 Real E.tate \r s Cua't f'l;u.i :t llH 2 '\e"' pJrkfronl ro-"o. 2 llJrbor 3 !Ir 11"•• 1lih It t'I a :!!. """ .,<:, II $7•• I '"' ,... 11!-ch-2800 .i ,., iar JJ•llll br 2' • ba Sr ''Cl S. o 2·1lrJ. fJmnra :!foh~ O"l.I Y Slfl,(lfwl llO\\'\ ~ -·r \ ··· 1·1 ,., ~"' • " I ., 1•0 ... ' • 1. 11~ I'~-""l• ~U•VJ ... ,, .... u. t:u .. ri11•1f ~.Ill' h'llOI' \IJt \rlhur \ tlld)I<' '/, ••••••••••••••••••••••• r~ ' ..,.,,. 'ff"'UW</ pwl t•h $1"2> t)Oll J' bd lull rt'( . 121.,' d\ ~ I:, I 'I •It• In ll h .. t' llt'rtlt11(l' Park Condo sum.1hl1• ICPt' hi ,umahlt-O\o\ner \o\tll II \\'t l'l<IJl't.H r\ ., !">i•rurt· l·11 \rtl ''' 2 br 2•, ba. 2 car encl O\l>ntr m.1\ ·~~"t rarn ,t!('ond l'n\ l'h \\\'\I 't \Clll l'•·l' Srni:lc• on!) ~1 ~dr lrplc,p\1patto ... r v. ~nd r .. 11 ·r.,, Jlllll tJll~t>HIOO .!l~"1l'rlo l'\I :>IK'121~ S65o mo 552·1~ tlo .. .,.,7 11.\\r \ \lllf ' ' ~ Dupltxes/ v. \ ~1 P1<11rrnn Lo•~ Home Loquna INCJ. 3248 Clnit1 Sde 1800 S p . .t hdrm ... b.. '4tHer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ ea roperlitt, Ltd r,.mlnf'r 1m h111l~1 $i!15 2 loct:""' f'RO\T ~1ob1le ;~·i~~~;~;.~;.;;~~!· 7 I 4/'73.2810 1 hll•l ok "44 tril! lloml'~ from $50lltoStOOO Westside Luxury I ~~~~~~~~ 12 l nil~. C.:IJblli Ml'~" --------• ·rnH l'4nhou'e c1u1t•1 mo 49!13816 $124,900 ' : A~~umt• rontr.tl't $.'l7o\I 'R~tals '\1·11(hb11rhond $7.:,(1 mo L04JW1a Hills 3250 Upgraded 4 bedroom lf523 C.otPUsDa·IR't'INE 14 )r~ JO', Sl2.'>M tin •~ll '1132 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lamtl} home loratt-d IO (, n r. \ T Bl y I -.; Owner 1)3) 2150 H~;;·;,;,;.:;:;······ \1•V. IV. nh\l' :.>Ur 2hJ. 2 I Heaut1ful Condo a1 311 g re a t a re J ·L-al~h 1048 ~:.\STiil l tr rJr l(Jr µ1101 & JJl' I 1115 3 Er 2 8<1 Lndry P r o I es s 1 on a I I )' 1 .;~:~••••••••••••••••• J u .. t :! milt• lo I ht Income P"°P"rlY 2000,••••••••••••••••••••••• ~"' mo Hh bi~ 1~ rm S650 mo lSt & lasl landscapt.>d pool site 101 1 . W "Tat W _.. Tta ht' ill h th1., :i ~'<1morn ••• • ••• • ••••••• ••• ••• • • lalboa lslewld 3106 ~ llH 2 j1,1 ·:>.Int ramit~ + $300 sec 644 1519 FIVE MlNUTt:S to the "' Ul "''~ \loni11·11 homt' h." ,., M.Al<E AN OFF£RI ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' BF,;ACH'Must seetonp l, EVERYWHERE 1·1llen1trnn'111cl111l111~· • l.Ml(t lllr1h;, q11x1m1 uhrhlf 'lt-;..i \'t-rdt-LOCJW!aNicJ-1 3252 pred ate• All otters con Speclarulllr \.14°~'· d'~urn.1hl1• F1f'•l ""'""' 3 lnc1tmi· l'ruill'rtll I hlk lo h;n Hlt1n' .UcJ ~mJll h•nc·t'd 111 •••• .. ••••••••••••••• .. sidert!d'Call9792390 spr3v.lln~ 4 bdrm: J fm.1111·1111 1 .. r 1 ~·~onti •,·~~t'lllt ,.,,.1J \lt •J \\I> hi:l toh::I I'""' ~5(1 mu UJ\UI 2BH Ortan \"irv. 2BR. bl" 2 I I wr:-T I ·-~ ' ' •14• • .IC>.• Ot'lo\I) r~t'(' S700 p,l T~a.dtors a 5, rp <'l> •· plus l11·.1ut:fu lt'.1t1111•, :!O' • .i,,,,.11 i>v.-nir v.ill lk1llh1111 , .. , llr lq1l1 CdMC..._,Dpb. BAR , beamed reahn~ 11! a hr 11 ~ frr,·pl.111·, 1,1rr, .1 ... p.11111 ""' ''""''" 1' ''Ii· :!llH.~d ,:;ir l'ommu ntt~ 4930202 WittlAll•ciMJ lam rm , lge k11t·h1•n drJmJtll 1·ntr•rnn•, ,., ,, IS ~.m \l!I ,;-; , 111 µ.1110 S5!t:O \l•u 11.11h hk for Marj 3 BR 2ba or 2+ guest an IUDY MOW! huge master sullr F~ 1.-n~" 1• l.11wh1 -•1111 . .: 11111 I 1,' t ,,, 1 ~i'~ u11I pd 1\111' Ptch' Lo~ t-1) Garden home owner's wtit plus ?Br 1EnJOY lhas1ul4JBdrduum, l1m1 paan~tVt' pal~o -\. µod1d <<>n' t'011·11t I<• al11111 \I , , • k. Copi,trano lt:OCh 3118 1 .. 11 432'1 Jl,1 3tld 2ba walJI 10 p\t rental rottage All in home On 11>eU kept qwet s p J & w a Ir r I a II $:!:!'1 <.1~1 • d Y room. ngroom rea v. ror .. nm ml' )or n·cluc1 1 .111 "''" •Ill' N [l&hl:·R ••••••••••••••••••••••• .l fir A clt'laihtod I., rum he3rh tennis. pool sharp cond w ucel "" llupll'~ i:uul h~e pu· rm lg boi<k >rd \ guar. ~oro oo pets, local1on Owner wall ~~r7e;,t9~~ ~4;.51~ ~~~1~'n 135:,·:,0~ REALTY 64~7020 Wll Q lll N n k.'. r 3 1..,o1dt"' rnR 1 B .\ rlo~e to srhb Stablf $8$(1 &31 zrl1 carry lge 2nd TD Best • \ c-n l'\I ... ,;,11 t:\t, I r.-:-.p famal\ onh \\ail Minion Viejo 3267 buy 10 town for only Gold 494 O'TJI I I '•1• 1 "• t1~. I ;3,., ll•lh 1 II.I\ l>n ~;~1 mo 1)4~ 111"1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S280.ooo. 642-5200 20°0 0~1 3'lo 1MT. Li·ngo ·· · ··11• • '·· ·~· r.:!!itt•';"'\" 31111 v. ,fr,k, .l H\ :! Ho,n·~roR RE:i-1 L .o1.o17211 1 11 I \Ii 1 \ .,,.... 3 br. 2l1 bJ. lam rm • ~ Irvine 3144 trpl1 1•nd1,.,t-ol "' dhle J Ud rm~ $650 S6iS I din rm, lrplc 2 car f?Jr 11" 1 ... •• •• ............. ,..... ~Jr 2 'r old rommuntl\ f l' n 1 e d > a rd s & j PETE w opener. (eorl'd yd :1 -BY OWMEa Woodbri""-p11•1I ''"' It 11 f.. 't·Jr f?JrJ11e~ l\1di. & pt'ts • !1 • •. decks"' •M:ean \U 4 >r 1 Ph•\ S2l .llJll lni·om.. ._,... ..., I 1'1:11.1 1,11:,.1 mu v. t'll ome 545 2000 -I old $24•000 '"" l'"'I ·--------l uv.nhu1J\1• It r11 lnr wr.• ...... ~ \ l r -.,, '""' "" !I• lr>Jn on runl1Jtl 1,.,,,. 1 l•lrrn 1 li,i ·~-' ,,,.,., gt>n ,nu ~ ' BARRITT .•. REALTY ~~~-----•' 180 DeqrH ft~w VILLA IA.LIOA 1,1;: 1 Jiit• t 'antpJna :-un '"'"I J.u 1, 11111, ~,.1 1..,., I I \I f{ \ !. llr :! Ba C.:011 LI? E\t-1· great \Jl'~. 4bd $25,000 DOWN CONDO v. ll'l LOAN 2 5000 ~q ft. boost>. 1 llr \ 11u111o: Pl'<IPlt' µc>Uh our Clr·m<'nll· 421~1 "' II mo \\ 0111 11 ;., l .ill de. frpll •'·•r Jf?•· 111M1l lbJ \ C nook fam din. Lg. assumable loans • • " """" 000 1 rt''>llltr• "' ld1·itl :• hllrm 4024!.I 500 ii I 11111 .>11\r. .•• ,2 4 •. l'l'.l I••• .iui•t J •,• _ u,.1 11 <.tis o mo Lake pm. S84S !'>111·2493 Br on l le\.el ('lo.w to ., ' ua -.... · !t01>< , lllJ ror , our 111 M h111111· ~ ' • Remodele4 2 br.. ruce occ On1> $94,900 Call term~ Pnm:tiJdb 1Jnl} Sonoma Cty Opl• L ·-a B--t.. 3 1 .. 8 1 1•1• ·' Jo • 1 M~wporl 8eoctl 1269 Patio' R·2 .... w plan• "-•1 0763 ~·n·•.h ;i~ ·• lla1~1. Opu1~ . OCJ-· CVllOfJ .. ., I .. 3 " b I I '!'A ~ A"l" .. 7221 .,.. (I c·, .. ll•il <n" , l•1rm .,,, 1t'\t'1••••••••••••••••••••••• (or unit $249,S IJO I .. ....... nnlu "l°'l11n1· p.111n r •t · "' ('I" 1111 ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti --------• Ele11anl 3460 Sq Ft Sl4ll llHll _., um.ihl•• ,,1 a1n·s S14\.1Wlll l\"uma , .. ,,, LJguna u .. :1<h :• lv.n~ml' u_Pf?r,1 .'' pr1' Ll'Jbl' exl'I Linda Isle 6 Owner•Agenl MES"'YaDE showplace. So L<tl(unu 12 • 2nd " .1\Jll.1 l1l1·' bflol~l '1lll~X1.11K ,. in bdrm '.?h.1 hou.-.•,11Jll:r '" pr~ 'K.'>I !J!l'lO ~r 5 Ba. formal din. -~1·?~!640-t430 "' 180 dt'gret' nt<'an \II'~ l'nn• lH.'••i h'r"'' 17tn 1 liHi' 7~ hli• fur ri•nl ~um , 11._1 3 hr ~ hJ IU.uutiful 1·om f R 11uarded 1tate. ten· C l •o bedroo rot 38drm2bnlh.fareplat·e. "-., t ·' · I 1 h t n1•bearhroom ror21ra oiy w m 1 .,.,·curtly rn\ a l' url\ t' ,, .!4 L nlt!. I)(' ZJ' down t er 1l11v.11tuv.11 ~ 111·.r r (I r •'l •'l 11m1• K.11 ' .. lage Ocean view One I neat & clean Large lot $629.500. TD ~ OK a\ dn t Colt• fl t> alt.\ o.nual. 1""11" l'. K < \II' "ilt•l'J•~ llollm• lit• Ith \\ '""" S7~1 ~~ ~11,11 t10au. S3500 l?r mo Bob blocktobeach OWC!st Very best ol terms paymrnl OW r J"•h "·~ .,.., ., 1 .,.,. or Oo\lt' l\oop a11t $134 500 • I I t o 11 tr.ti 1titJO .i••nt ... ,:,11 1, 1; :..io ..., ... 1 l 'hJrmani: :1 Hr fo.Jst~ulc• ~~!I 1221 · A ent 631-7300 • · Brok<'r' v.el1•0 0H• ~" ""'' nwn ° ,., R M ,.__._ RJtr S M~wport Bflldt 3169 · ltt-~ml-rl re1lmg' (en1~d Terms!• Jbd 3ba pre oy c.___, • Owner 640· 777 COVINA ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• \iltrd ptot & i·ha Id WESTCLIFF 3 bedroom . stigio u s h ome , 54 .. 7729 8SS201.J 21 llnit!! llThrt't'Rdrm Ll()O ISl,f. <:hJmunl! 1 ~··lrome 548 i8~~ 1 l~tor} v.ithpool.lam1ly oceanside ol POI Agt ---'!!'!!l~!!!ll-~111 LOC)Ufta Hils I 050 I'• lh1, w lri>k~. 4 Tv.o bdrm z• bath Ir" wn tiJI 61114 ~ room, 2 fireplaces. din Colleen 979-0942, or I EASTSIDE ....................... •JASMIMICREH Bdrm and 8 One Bdrm n~ JJJlt~. n.e.v. f\ rt• I MIES" ft.l!lM"R eintcg Sroo1<~~,30P!~~·77etc 851·9698 "'oodland school area. ....Jtt ~...11 R h 'w1mm1n11 pool, loratf'd ie l ·• I ''' "'.,.... "' .,..,., "' ~ " "'""e-ClftC 12 i Ii'° financtn° on (' II(' "w~• ()(Ill 1, rori l'u 1 1 mo l.11\•lu I Bdrm 2 Hn with ---co-'a M-.. I 024 d I h 3 BR 2 ,. on '0 our.e, ·""""'· '\ I 11 II 1 .. ~ ' H ..... pri eo own.rs Ip, $900,000 former model' Plan ~ w J"UmJblt• fmanrrni: .'''.r .' 1 .run .. i frt'~h pamt i:oud 1·arrwt Ba +spar, Ir w lplc 643 2341, l·~ al-~ v. rust.om 'I'll ~u-1101 \RI J Jan,en. 5Jti •wn 1 •S Ii Hit i!<1rdl•nt•r 9t'>I> pr mo .. llG CA>IYOH ••••••••••••••••••••••• I 0% Ow. I 0010 Int Anxious owner will help finan re this newly re decorated 3 Bdrm No Costa .Mesa home Love ly yard, a patio & brick BBQ Full pnre Sl20.000 7Sl-3191 C::. 5El ff T -f-' PROPER 11~ S GET ASTilT Only SlO.OOOdwn and low monthly paymenL~ for tbJs 1560 sq ft rondo in Cosla Mesa. 3 Bdrm 211 Ba. wet bar. Z car gar . BBQ and microwave oven and much more Full price $12B.SOO FIHDOM HOUSI 3 Br. 1 Ba. large yard 000 .......... 641-0763 *GOY"T LOAMS* Pouible ~'l down 12-14% int. rate, 30 yr loans. free 111.fo. Wartdll 5 .. 7777 ·NEAR BEACH 38R, 21,t.BA. $10,000 DN.631§717 CITY LIGtn'S VIEW Nr Beach. $20,000dn. ___ 63_!J.137 __ a.ooo DOWN takt over existing fina.ndng 3 BR 2 81, £~. R·2 lot $115,000.~ CASH TAUS Altum• 1"4' lit, 12Yt't Ind. !atlid!SBRIB1 coo4o. O..er /aaent. ea.2111 .. --.. \ C. lge 13m rm Try 1-·1-:E or 2131112li'149 \\Jnl ~um1•1hin\. \\r.1 1,1 & fa,l, -io '"' Lu\uraous Three 20,.. d Sl39 500 No Down ' :?Br PJt ao .,,. ,. ' own on • ho 2200 ,JIPf r.rl 111 .1 ~ Ar 1\31 i'.Jill bt>drooms T"'o baths Ruth Laurit af?l me. LohforS. T11v.nhou~ 1u111pk11h R•rhhderoraled Muted 646 4380 Sl04 K • pool spa :.auna .... ••••••••••••••••••• furn ~5 ~lei i1,c1 •111; B Toro 32 32 tones 3IXXl square feet D • + l .tkc \rro .. hl'ad loh hir . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll\ torlooki. lOlh tee or ClllaroW 1026 Acllast' Bkr 497.3004 1nlu • .and mJn~ <".tll \\ 'pt \\'kl\ mu i n 11m1rn1HnE.\I " n 1 1 " golf l'Ourw S2790 month ....................... HORSE PROPF.RTY " ~ n ., r b r "k e r 'J 1 '"r~ 1 t•.tri -'.l Hdrm ~7~ ~ <'nct'd SHAIE OWMBSHH•! 4RR 255011 ,1 anc 3..'l:\ 1 i 1 1 q tl 3 :! 1 s 11 Brlrm !213 r 92.11M(>9 ) .ird t.. i:.ir.igc-l\ids & ~;~:~~\.~:!e 0;~ :u':t '350000~ dv.-n owe bal 15 .• 31'. IA. 1213 13-lli 442.t :\tv. pnrl H11h 1'\ll'I' pt-l• v...rl~>mt· :>1~2\)l)ll da) Is To see rail WO MONTH mo 4Yr' f' P 2951\ 4 arn'' nl lJnrl '\'rv.pon tavnal \lt'V. C!Hr lll.i ,\g!'nl nofrt• ' 631 7300 Realtor 2 gR condo earh have 831 l!034l Hl•.11'11 Of\ fur < undo-, ~Ill mo 64&Rffi.5 l bdrm 2 b.i. 2 <or gar ·-----1111!!!!!!!!!!'11!!!!! pvt baths Pat111, pool, I ()(( ....... I "l ·' M.:w__. 8eoctl I 069 '"l 1ltl7'tli.!'r """'a "''R J1r rnnd .• Sto\t• renre 14 Br 2•,. Ba Yearly. all iacu_zzi. Q.wner, 631 6666 ,..... ' ,,. .,. " On Ha) 2 Rr 2 ba I s.525 mo londo. n·~ p!'t;.. amemnes Club & pool Hwttfftgton 11.ach I 040 ....................... \'IST A 2 5Jf'rt' \ 1.,,. Sitt• $12011 month Hh DJ)s 97911574 <'\ 642 4~ lac'i. Good area SHOO •••••••••••............ OC E.AMFROMT ., z .. ,,1 .. 1• 111 uruts "r" 1 IK tin W <tier 2 Rr ?tiJ 8 k BY OWNER Or+-~ :', ~' 1 a,,' I St 1110mi;10 mu Foufttoln Vahy 3234 ro er 675-4912 $15,000DM. RE~LTORS SFR ir TwnhM Xln1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L R Take over lsl $65.500 al New <'lll'I hit 2 51), " 1 lnH.,lml'1tl Will ~t'll l .. •RUna Oceanfr11111 I P~rk hk<' Sell ni: llll! UXU Y IAYFROMT 8!14'\·2ndTOatSL2,600 FrenrhNormandy3RR Buildtr'sl>efite 1 wtt>~m"lrtr.a!le flJ' 2~r2b<1Sl-I00111ov.111t1·1 2"1 BA, Tihu~on l'on' 3 Br 2Bnwathboatshp at 16r~. Owner will carry & den home. Can he I Ubl lol on the llrt'mll'r 'l..19 9265 I \\ aterfront llomr'. Int dommium.\ Nl'v. I' amt Av a 1 I now Man) Jrd 4 yn;, no paymenL~ spUl $895.~.0WC 3711 i.I r<'l't 10 tht> hi•:-1,_________ 631·1400 & l'Jrpetin~ FJmlh amen1t1es SJSOO Mo 3Br 2ba, frplc. dbl gar Seashore.673-~J.!1 ;-.(•wport ll11hlrK.1l111n ;> CORONA DB.MAR I I rm Patio 2 C.rr (;.ir & ' Broker675-4912 Ron Say, Ag\ 979 ~70or DOVEi SHOIES le~al lot:; v. ~, lront.11(1• Pnml'l.ll.'v. lot O\ol'~llf.' 1.100 J br. dr1t. ~· H 2 Pool.962 7470 e_ves_S48 1801 Pool. jacuZZJ Overlooks <';wh 3 uruL., ~llh 11111111 v.1lh e~l·ellrnl rtnan<'lh!l ha. loni: term ~11•~1 HYntingt• leoc.h 3240 OCEAHFIONT Sacrifice Sale Sharp 4 Br bay Galwcy Dr Formal r11ntal inrom•• S.1.SO,UOO 56115.1100 LI DO 3 br. 2 bi.I, lrg •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• HOME onq111et cul de-sac Best din rm.Zlrplcs fllS.000 D.M.MarshalllUtr pal111, St:lso \111 llOMESFORRF.NT 4 bdrm. 2 balh, rom area Asking Sl2S.900 fee I 761).0835 673·9™1 2.3& 4 Bdrms SSSOS675 plelely remodelfd, mak~ofr Bkrll48-0'LQll _6i2.:fS 01 4848 SI0.000 DO~. Sl9SO P<'r Hoan U"""""'shed r c n red yards & I bltn. lrplc. SlSOOmo Seaclilf Country Club S II you 're m the market mo Grac101h'\RR.~1v. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• garages Kid& ~ pl'I., LIDOISU Br, bonus rm Q\uet cul for o beller cnr. be sure Bnr k Ba} .irea Ur. take GHt at 3202 ~ t I<' om e H ~ 2000 IA YAtONT' de·sac Must sell now lo cherk the many aulo~ o'er 111,• Isl payable •••••~•••••••••• .. •••.. Agtont, noll't' 3 bdrm, 1 bath, lrplc. Asking $267,500 Make adverti!ed for sale tn S790 per mu Ask111g I.,_, t _,,,,1 ho 2000 4 BR, 2•sba, 2 str). J car bltns, $8SOmo ofi:_!kr848-0'7<» Classified S260,<IOU 1>31 72 U O't'liU m.,.,. e me. gar. nail now Walk 10 l"iM I 044 l"IM ~ I 044 O'!nr "'' \ ll111w•1 ,,, ~q II 2bdrm, 2hil, den. bcb no pets tl!OO 20271 ll;ir l11tr In\•'''""'"' 1" • Ranrho Carlsb4d 5140 Brent~lone Call' Stan associated ••• •••••• .. ••••.,•••••• ....... ••••••••• ....... Ott.tr Ital &tatt I O 0 n M 1 It u l' I 968 7307 ..... • •• , ....... , •" ... 1 (7141438 0333 N B Ba llROKEllS 11! Ill TOii!, l 01\ ~ l o•b u ··1 •••i . FANTASTIC ~OAH O::irlin1t Ora.ngetrec l'at10 Home, 2 bl~ master bedroom suite::;. High quality carpet & w;,tll <'<>V<'ring~ in sort carthtones, take over high balance lsl tru11t deed Great Terms! Slll,900 Anne Hall 551·8700 <152) Mobtt. HCllMI * NEWPORT IEACH Bark Hay on Gr<11111da ew 3 r 2 rondo. 1 mi For Sale 1100 Res1denllaJ lots Ltvfl Way 4 BR 2 r 2 h 11 from beaches, stovt l-'!!!1!1!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!1!!!!!!1!!!1~ ....................... ready to build. f'rom Modern 2 sty 12.000 dishwasher, 1ar. pool, 1•11111!••••••• 0 C F; A N F' R n N T $130.000 ea w/tenns & sq It lot. $1100 mo Jae • sauna. rec rm Sll50 HlWPOITHGHTS LAGUNA OCH. nf'w aoml~uhortlmallon Co 64577'3,1142·~ , 213865·4tM>,7l4826-55«> Llkenew.rustombuill3 from 129,900, rtnt $400 Op Bkr 714 'llSl 1538 1 3 Bdrm Home. 2 Ra .,m bedroom, 2 bath, formal _nio~3816 d a )' s , 6 ~ O o 3 S 21 WIMTB l&n'ALS Rm . $7~. 91112 ScougaJI dinmg room home. Eat Sacrifice! Lovely lt1ple I pmj wknd.s. & YEA Circle, 11 8 842 ~ 1ng area In kitchen Bay -.i. ba , 2 bd , 1 block Motl9t • DtMrl ILYWSES Ne" 2 bdnn, 2~ bo un vlew.Sl500monlh Ytar rrom beach. 153,llOO. ..~· 'uoo11 Caff'7s..~dtpt laaoon 2 blk burn ly lease 631 '1300 , 960-3429 ••••• ........ •••••••••• fl40·2268, ~5900 Realtor Vile.Ina Mobilt Home Vlklna Mobile llome 2:~~~1u C<lndN. nr heh, (d(>uble I, 24XW. 2~rm, (d<iuhlr >, 24XOO, 2bdrtn, 1140 ~is:'~ wt' 15 2ba, l.IPtr•d '· r nlm 2ba up11r11df~ Palm I U~ ert. 000 Btaul oc ~rt a;s 000 ' Btaut • CLOSE TO BEACH • P~tk on H*)' '14 Gtt l park on Hw).. 74 Great Euc 3 8r 2ba, fam rm, YleW or Mts. & v llcy Vitw or MU ' vaUey f.fPIC'.dinlnirm 9635191 Encl with lost or fo;ncl ~Ith toll o f HOMEfORftENT I a n d • r • P 1 ft I 1 a n d 1 l' '1 p I n a s Bdrm Pool SS.SO Owaer /Ate t o t A t • F' ced rd6 C 7 1 4 ) $ $ 1 0 7 1 8 w n e r / • en ya 1ara1e 71 4 • ~71~ i-:4.1 • 0 I I : ~d~. ':!~· lASTa&lf 3 bdrm, 2 ba home, 111rdentr Ind~ 11200 mo days ma f.l•inf' F.v.a11111S1-• U.Wt 4 bdnn. 2 be. Mwf1' re ••d•l•d l;e11e. ii 1 ........ .,.... nm I f --.~...---...... 11/ e..;.f..... ...c.. ..... -...... tt111 1. ......... . * ~ ......... _ ............... -............ ~ ........ ;;;;, ................ ·--· .. --· ..................... ~ ................ ..-... ..... .. tmNll ............. -....... No .... (llt ... sru Pl'l'l"l"PIOl'LI o ..... ~ HAVUNO-tl1f 1 -lllCIWOll: ..... n.e ......... lkUrd .............. TU.llJl8TALLID irlllR. Yada\llWICINlllA( ltallll1 'IH.hlt ... ~.a c.. ........... lat.,_ a....:. nle. JoM, N..,.-t. C.t1 ...... Uc.ill.U1ftol AJlk!Ml.OwMllld ~JJ llM ~ Complete Undttw1ter Vx.FrM.•• "W ' ftHljiMf;W J'romft.c.ISllN. ' lieu, lrYIH. ltf1 . ...YN.i_._... ln~•r Patc•l•I 6 M · ••• rw I Semte c.,.t/''111t1la11 .............. • •• ,...... n ·•m.c.t. f11.11D Diiim RHtlO =· Ill/tit. • Cwi&omr.MIKTUe at11AIJ.you ~ ............. -• .-......... -.-;;:.-................. -.......... H 1 .... Cutoa lrttk. It ... ,=....._ tllltl&l'llll•mt N9w·lr•rfll·._. fore l1oti'4t1f' I C1tpet l upholalery IJl.OIONlatX uJICNNQu 1•11 •=r.. m.t.Cw.rW,._. '"" lubl rm•Qndttf.911 •,~ad ....................... t It 1 o er .1. fr t e ,.Oa1-.1lll.U/pdl PIOP ALTDATIONS w::l~iwvci.&AN '*h"llLHtM 'amift.-. ~ IOOIU'IU.IWOl.lS "'the IOCIG Lii Stotclaf'llr'd. noor wu· C •* u ROUll?t.aGMM• MAllLl-TD..UTONI LAllY'IPADmHO ·:::.:::::r-~;u.iQ9• ~ .... noon DAILY For am all b111loast1, .,_.. H•ll • Oki. rr.•tilli IHI. IHlall Prt·fab f all s,.da11 lelltlt, """iiliiiiiiiaVJCI ,,...er.fttmfe Pl.Of Jl!l.C~ ew.t/C1111• .......................... .!l .... -.......... IOllN'la.IANIHO !!Jl!.!~fU ·UOI , ,.,., •• drywall. Lk.... mt11f. l .p.&P@n. 1!H74J SllYICI ........ • ...................... DIVWALL/AOOVSTIC BOMl lMPIOVElllNT a.vte.-e .... _ ~-~ ,, TrMs..111 DlllCTOIY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 00THOllPSON'I 14 yn t'lp. N1J lie'd ' llPAll, PW1181HG clttalttwt. ~ "11Gl'e ~..... AU PaADdll·il& ... Mt TOPMTF I ..................... .. DOITNOW! •MW NCBl:l'ECONSTR. lnlv[!d.S3H1t1 btaUn1 ctl'l*ltn e1et' El Hoe d .Rel Irick, itcme, 116d, C!Oll'• NH N•al comtlete .... II ............. 6 THITmllOf\I ... ,_S... Bull .. ~!.~ Ye.Imm Hl·M Dave'• Drywall addl· Wt. rreetll NoJObtoO Jt!i. f:e' ~..,,vc M cr•t•. rrpln, IBQt. lmlft.nta9l·S ~ "'°"· Ut. &ewwterk! ~ YOijrDalb'Pllot """'• N0 ~08100811ALL tlclftl comm'l Ko.uc RaU·fM.1111 IUJ &Mii gauoa drlvtw111. .... .. S.rvlMDlreetoty :1~~.1~~~~~na, Brklr8lk.Llc.D144t. ut1io11. te1tur11. JACKOFAU.TllADES ·w .iie.ta.HHb• c:.t-,... ~, ...... ,.... SIO. JAYltmCAll Rt pNMtllt.at.ivt y 9 UlmNZ M9-2l70 D•l•.bomellH187 ... 1797 Plumbla~trlcal, 8_,:r.:':~ 1':,/U.' Brtck·Block·Cemut ~-::.,1d:;. ~ Pl-i~ ......... ~ Complftf NrVice and 642·161t-tdJ22 ' --Ant.W-U8m2m ......... odd1ot!l·!ll:!!! RaHNJ AMI t ~,! frpl.'1. Xlnt. work. NllS fftokk llt.~JtfM --{J!=:J"'· ... ••••••••I M1eHAUCOM$TI. Ruld. Coocrtte; Alto •• -.................... C&r'l*ltrY·llMODr1 sp.fG..MH · Dtttadable. Pa\ · . ,...~..... ap._._ . ....., Custom homes, tram· &port eourtl. Uc. 374G87. ILECT1UCIAN -Pli* aooftg. Phambiai .... AU PaloU..,. illll NIO nt ....................... , ...... •••ccc•n•th.,111111 . In&, remod, French Bob1H·1"fl!f7.'l0'7J nabt, 1,... eltl_. 00 DrJwall·Stuceo·TBe '!.~1a1 J>Utr Ume1 ... }t COllCreu • .,.._. ~ N~ eompltlt. JIOl'TUa ...................... . A~;;:·~:·;~~·.;;t; doors, sllyligl\ta ai palio C.-Cllt larseoramaUjobl. Rtmod!I· J.B.•-CY.Ma~N:a:..llaaH. Ceramlc'nle·M..., u-•\.nu.llMJIZ POITABLIB me lit leuan: upert mull, audlllna tor _coven. 148-8 ....................... ldc. llMPl f11.W luropeao Cnftlma.a All N d Id ' Fr!t•ti!Mt41 l4f:IOU O&.YWICPAIMIM • IN.Oaoum>SPAS Spaallll/f"rench tutor! small bl.lliw8. Boyd ROOM ADDITION McCl')'llal Cenmic nJe RESlD.ICOMll'L Jobi. Bia or Small. Call ..!u~t a ~a Jlrly ~ ........ INT /UT. P'llU IST. ~pool lieu Verde. 6ff.M7T Wbee~r. CPA,~ SPEClWST OlslinctJvelmtallatlon HlPJyqualilltd.Nojob aft!r1Pll.*:9l nlY.CTlhdridActa-.... ;;:................ fDGH~AL.WOl.I 1...,..._.i.d {f.UpaU . es. Remoddinc,dttks, Uc.~41. 1Z t.oolrlltmtll.Dl-1004 Ceoerallllbltaioanee cyJl,V .. ap. *~I MOne•• LOWR~ --PRUllmlPOOU Speailll lwller will tt· AlrC11•11llll1r/ homes,freeell.John Hauen1CenmicTUe Geoe.ralllal.nt,,repalr, RepainftDeecnt.iQI HOLJDAYSP!CIALS Tqp Quha.!!¥iqS,.clal l.NT/,IXTPAINTIN. 0 f$1:Mor4N4!11 clluae lt110DI with ........ ·HI &6Hl0l Floora ·9»ftn·Tubl deslp, free at. Quality •Quallty•Jlax•51!4 By'l'heHOUSElllOOSE ca,_ IA . Syn IJc d. JWa.. P'ree9t ptaool!at:ber.m.77N ....................... ROOM ADDITIONS Callaf\.4pm,t72-4631 w@.am Jack ot all Tndea Call Gerif1JWllU up. Compttitive rates. * ••1117• * "••rtr tb I uf W .. ... • RESID./COMM'L Concrete&BloclrWalls CWNC.. .....C..... DayorNllllt CLEANlNOKINGDOlll NocwetUp!t.]»IJ@ NELSONSPAINTIHO .................... , ........................ . Free estimates oo larae Dennis~ ··~ ............. ~ ........ , .. ,................. •Jart,m.JOJA • RHld./Comm'I. Alio •ABC lllOVING·l!JtP,. lat-Eat, llu ·Com, :=..r 8::. ·::~=': or small .m.73118 c.,.,., ~.!~"'· Moa.F'ri6da~. CRPT-LIN().WOOD Hlldweed...... Jultorial aervlcu. pnif., low re.. QWck, i~:.:~ ref.. ~e Co. area. 1.5 yra watcbea. G&11' Walcb ....... • .. , ........ ,.......... throvcb y . lnltaUed/tepllred. Uc. ....................... W.!410 etl'!fll Hr?k!· ljiOUO . -~ Call~ iDI Shop No Cit Hwy at Boet ....................... Custom wood patios, :z1s:.ome. N CM . IW.Gr!c•s1q HARDWOODPLOORS QualtlfllouMcle&IUQI STAIVOOCOLLEGE PAINTER 'NEEDS ~ t · or 0 • Caa~oaLlll\ml.-.Z Driveway•, parking lot deckl, wood windows. -UNOLEUlfMECHANJC ClelftldlWued wft.bP...aoa!Toudl S'MJD!NTSNOVJNG WOJUCJOyn.exp:.tlot" n•. t2 Tr~IRIWtlS!!mJi repairs, sealcoatln&. Lk'd. Reas. John or Colllr9C._ll._,.. E1pert, ntt.cove: llat An.YUme.m.48115.A. BeU!-.OUI ~ CO.Uc.fTJ.Jf.411. tit., acc. eel.I. uavl1 '6).11 ----a • S•S Asphalt. 631·4199 jllc:k979.3218 ................... , ... ataaviJla'"'7411 ....... . lmurtd.Ml-Mn PainU!.cln.Sta .......,..,. ,.._ t•RI Uc. Fine finish work. Doors 22 Years Exp. Custom •••••• ....................... !!~~~........... WATCHl!SGllQ!! CUSTOlllN'tLEXT ....................... Ori~:iwb:ic:w~;· ALLSTATEPAVING hung, dec:lts, remodel Homes, Condos, Apll' •••••••••H•••••••••u• Haul elelDllP eoacrete C ti F I •Ran1qt.on6Sam• UPERTSEIVJCE OeoeralCoatrac:doa AvcJbrllome,$15 sRealroaung, Stripine, _Randy, m.s116 Remodta. Bob412·220I CLEAN·UPS/LAWN rem~aJ. owDp Tnack. ,:;::: :eJ.:. .=: t: c as,r.w. ~' NU.ek°~ RAT~1403 :.°::.~:,;~ct:; Pl·W · epalrs. Comm/Res. c..,.. Str'fta C-&..d Maintenance.Laodacp Qlliclrwv.642-7G houut ll. Xlnl re· :r-111111· wort J.J i•i11f "LetlheS...WMIJI" #39'73&2.~8l&l •• .. •••••••00 .. •••••H• C........_Co Freeetl. M2-tl01 DUllPJOBS fereoces. S28-10IO btwn •• -418•• ,..,... _._c.__ C1USumbtoeWindoW' a.,lfftillg We Care Crpt Cleaners Master Builders, custom Cleanups. TreeTrim'c •SmalUlovill( Jobi l :J0.3:30. Aall for BoftllY, MMllc ~ ....................... ..... CJeanh!&. Yd. »IBP ••••••••••••••••••••••• Steamclean&uph~ts. quality, room additions, Haulln1·llalntenaoce CallllllKEMl-1391 Resp. reUred cple wouJcl •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• Tiie PaperHanret, Prol. •••••••••••............ CLEARVIEW Babysittin1. M1 home. W Truckmount!'..n~t3716 Lie. Larry Wendell. Amie 14 HAULING&DUMP like lo care for 1our l'l'beoryl 11;!!':'°1 /SIJbtrof-~..:.~J7u~~l &...ICu• ... Ce. WJNDOWCLEANING HolLuncbes.Uc.Ret. or .. guar. ...,,. (213) 921·6S41, (213) TlllS JOBS,uUorllandy, .home. Dec. 15-Aprtl 30, • DI DI . .._.,. p ' [!ff ..... ""U!:i::.i= -St>ffMllidq la lllate" Chris nm-.... u 5$6.QIMu Shampoo & steam clean. ~-1468 6'1-M27 10danmin.f1HW1 your llome, uy aae. uWALLPAPf:R? s&iaateroola. -or . Babysitting our C M Color brighteners. wht D ~ Topped/removed,cleao •-..a..-_,__ ,orac.551-lm C\lltOm~I F!!telli!Dfl! MUl21 Prof. WlndowCleuiol. bo 1 . & .. crpt.s . 10 ntin. bleach tc-... ..., UJl!,lawnrenov.751-3476 CLIAH .. TOUIACT -~ ,........... Re!ld/comm. ~Z'fl6 .. ....,. Freeell.,qual.aerv. mes, yr up, any· H 11 b /dln S : ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• T .. t J HAULING-._ -.. ·-............ -......... --, OrlQ1eColllt1WU1IDI ruar Tr·RM l7$-0l41 time.642·8482,&46-5759 a • v . ~s 15, GUARANTEED a. a a apa~ese ,... ...... ....., C U S T O 111 ............. , ......... HAN~ING SlO a roll, lleroollQa-Rep&in. -· -IMtt. M.. / ave room S7.50, ~ch Finlshing, Dr)'wall, Nuner)', landlcaP1D1 & TREES/SHRUB TRIM LANDSCAPING Create RALPH'S PAINTING quabty, free Ht., ' f4!.za.s..11p n.lilt Stnlc~" •ct SlO; c:hr 15. C,yar. ehm. Plastering, Palotlne. mainl. Tree lrimmiD&' Gara#ie ' yard clean. a wtique envil'orunent. E1t/1Dl·Bea.·Prompt 1trlpp1a1. CaU Scott BALBOA ROOFING CO. • ......... ~ ......... _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~c;:_~r·;;r.~~ork l FrankDaher.m..148. ~~·~~~~.::l ul)!. ree•US7.az71 4IHf72 Uc'd.rrwtll.114-SSM MS-~ st71ipts&Pluteriq ~;!1~~. Boats Cleaned/Waxed myself. Rcls.531-0101 SELL idle items with a XSB. ! HAU,U. NGIC'LEAN·UPS Have aomethln1 )'OU QvaUtyptl/Loweltrates Clauafied Ad1, your Free eat. '1U743 ....,. Ex .1 ri~7 1111~ Want Ad Help" 6425678 Daily Pilot Cla11iried W tAd n-........... ....,8 Ditt~Sbrubs-~ wut to ldl? Clauifaed lnO.C.Nem.,prompt on~1top shopplo& SeUWDIJfutwithDaily ..... Call ..... .. ves · · Ad. an l\CllWY V'IV""' rtmoy · adadoltwelJ.llG517& l!l'V· ....-./Gl:n4t ttn!e.r. PilotWllltAdl-Wulw .....,5171 "'-"U•fwllillltd ·c~d,:..=~:.d 3425 Af ..... ...,..., .,..,............ 1Aw1w•u.r... +tst• .. •Urrfwa. Af.,.! ... •,•.~1 Jt11.!.•00 ,...._..,. uso ~....., 4400 OMcea..w 44tl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• efe;-••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• UC -... •22 0 ~y ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ........... •••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •• ..... . Mewport leedi 1269 ........................... ,...... 1107 .... 3140 .... ,.,. .... )Ut ••••••••••.............. Palm Spriop Area ()Ion. WT Wtltdifr. N.8. Wam "DIC. SUfTIS• ....................... 110..0F ....................... • .................................. s EA w IND tereyCoamlryChab)COQ• naaadal lut. 7000.J. lnNewrn:.butwo• 3BR. Close to Beach.. THI LUCIT FIW L.u b "-I VI' I ·GE do, >bdrm, Zba, atrium, 1st. floor, A@.5'1.sm2. do n ail ·-Nke. 536-1435. 53U7011 Rent in Costa Mesa's ":a~!!f·2 '."" 1··.;.~1c, ...UTlll PAlllllPOIT w.A furn .• colf•tennia.Dai· w 0 ca av .... after5PM. I N EW EST gated 20 536-l4tl =· y. Adultunitutaf· nYM New 1'2 bdrm lm1lry ly, weekly Ir IDOftlhly MIWrOIT med. 175 Ii 1IO IQ ft. Udo Isle Bay(ront 3BR I Town home VILLAC E • viq. 1,2 41 3 COUMftY adult apta lo W plw. 1 r a t e 1 1 " a I I . '8•M A ~rom SdS. ~-.=. 4ba, den, allacbed 3 car I COMMUNITY. 2 & 3 Br 4BR 2BA trplc, dshnh, decorated. ~ Bdrm from S-. 2 bdrm <n<t>5SM001, Npm, ask Spadoua aeeutlve ot· erellceN rmOC ~ garaae. Pvt. beach. 2~ Ba. 1600· UIOOsq. ft. gar. nr. bch. IBSO/mo. uepool, liglat· ~chelon, Wbedn>om from $570, Townllouse forllark. fices acrma from City ~-~ rport. $2000/mo yrly Pvt pty ol pure luxury. Garages, water paid. court, Jacuni, ~ "townbouMa. from tNO + r.i:· le· •~to aa..-4300 ~;~=~~al~ 548,8221 · · hydro-tubs in master 673-5'719 landscapin1. l'OP!PllOGO ff!.llOO nil, waterfal , DODdl! --. .... ft. up .... reuooable LAGUNANIGUJ:L suite, formal dining CONMclllMlr llll l&lful bide. In Wtllcl"' \ Ou for coatiDc Ir beat· ....................... -. •• OFFICESPACE 3 Br, 2\.'J ba, pool and rec rooms ood burna'ng t I ....-n lo& pa'd From Sao Roommate wamed ~P reotal1. No. leue re· Profesalonal bu.a"ldi•& N T · w ••••••••••••••••••••••• eDel"OIS rai. a · Larr& 2 Br P .. '-Pool ~ · "'•-~.. ' ' ..• _.. call area. ewport errace. fireplaces, mlcro-.wave 2 Br,Zba,bnut.viewof 111,e · _,.,, · DteaoFnrydrtvenwYJ female, ......noker for g .... ~, 173-3002 wilh*aqfttrootmcoa.... S775/mo. Call ~5'13 ovens, fenced patios & bay, private. Ganie. M&-0811 M tt. ffS.M. on Beach to McF..sden spac 2 bdrm twnbte, in UICUTIVE Crown Valley Pkwy with Beacon Bl)'. 3Br 3ba. 18 )'ards. Private .. elegant Re f rig. uoo mo. IA.YFIOMJ llMD Wt1t.oe,MeP'..sden CM. SH5/mo + util. SUITES off·•lreet parkio&. -Cill fl dock, tennis. 2yr lse. living .only 15 minutes 846-0C»li A.lltBSWA.LI Lwr2BR,ZBA.XlnLr& to Seawana Vlllaae. Avail lmmed-Call IN Lin&oR.E.&1730 600mo 675-8617 from Fashion bland. 7 28d s~tobeacb 1686 Towohouae liv rm. 0Yerloolrlas {'114)..,_ Sbelle7, '42·1111 or HmJMll MOWAYAILAIU 3 bdnns, 3· VJ ba, 2 car minutes loS.C. Plaza or Ask for Darren: a1i ~· ,'~e:. 8-1( Sec bldas. Under· 4000 ?SZ-lGS • ....... NEWPORT BEACH &arage. 2 fireplaces, O.C. Airport.Justea.stol 6311266 H bo aroUDd parkiq. Ad11Jt.a, 2 room• szzs. locluda ~ RC ENra den, new paint, drps. Newpon Blvd & so ol • l. ar ur. ~mo.17S.f7?$ Bwta *« 11111. utll. llO-JllS before t :JO New luxury office space COM ME l:C 5U1TI eardener Incl. 11200 San Diego Ftwy. Stan· Nice, clean 1 Br.. OK.....,,. Dl.lplea, lllJllaln. 2 Br, 1 MS No. Padf1c Coast Pll,or-.mt. lo lrvloe's busiest EXECtmVE Yearly lse. 1324 Estelle lng at $1000 a month. enclosed prqe, patio. ...._ Lj Ba f •· N ~ Laaua Beacb F ... ~ • bdrm 3 b center! Eay Frwy ac-Handaocne,...... , ..... ctnc.a•ail·.· r~ -. 631·~39. 2413 Orange 6 0 3 YJ Mar i go Id . .......,.._ • rpac. prace. ear ' · · ..... ,., " · 1 A ail ' Call """ -... • .-....-Lo. 494·9907, 615·7720. -40 commllDi· Udolboppinearea. • • Weekly, IWcbeD brand new NeWJ>ort cas. v · DOW . rv , copy adl.. 6*9084 Ave.,Co6l.1 Mesa. $525/mo. +security. aculate2bdrm, year lease. AduJU , DO available. Law wlllter He i tllla Condo . forcktaU.. sec H 'Pu.Js1 m ,. 2bdrm condo, spec· lBR. Laauna Ni&~el. M&=2'17S. H11otio1ton peta. Malt have rel'1. r!tel·*'52M PP75.Atlll'fwm Hl·IZJI +4MUO ~H~u!(~ J '- tacular ocean/bay view, Pool&jac.M3Smo. Cost.Mela ll24 rt Condo. Aun ll/1.5. Drive by Balboa lu. llO A: up Spectacular panoramic •DIUlllOMCIS• Cell Mow 1714t penthouse. $1000/mo. 832-2217 .-1· .. :;EW····L·,··DIC····OI.······· Fittplaee, built tn au I t.lol, • ..:U~bJ: ii 114"' Chabboue Ave. weelrll. Kitdleuette, view. Q\lallty ,. pref., UUroom. Nolulere-7P.71t2 548--0581. ToWRlao.e " kit., one car enc. sar. ~ 2 car iar. t5'l5 per *.fla. mu r'Olll.l'IWTto aeat • cleao, N.B. tauired. Adj. AJrpotter DEC HOME U.tw.i•d 3525 l Br. gu pd. encl gar Super sharp! DO Santa I mo. lst '111t + D001« NO PBE! Apt. • Condo b deecntad prinle m-aot Hat.el. aw:ZD.1-12. ••tul..w t4lt HA.I.IOI YllW ••••••••••u••••ou••• d/washer, pool. Adults Ana SL Onve .by then d e p o I I t . C a I I rentals. Villa Rent.ala. room,6bath.frplc:.1115. Dau Pt. 28R, 2BA. Rel. $250 Up. Hunt. Bch. ••••••••• .. •••• .. •- 4 BR 2"1 ba ( 'ly 3 br, 2 ba., washer. enc. 642-5073. call for an appotntment. (714)?5t-Gl. Alk for ITs.ellBrobr. lnclda uUlt. f!utalde I Wht 111. uw mcl. SMS lst Carpet, drapH, air. din 2300atrun MS gar .. adults only, i;ec. 21r.lleA.19t 1550 plut sec. Avail. Mr.BID&bam.Calla.s. Oceanfront for. Winter C.lll.f45.0ltll Uut.__, 173018eadl.llG.21M. llTAl.SPACI mo. rg'rlve b:inrst 1806 gate Call Patt -Newly decor. C:as pd. ll-19. 9S7-0701-Acent Unfllnliabed ' b Reotal1. f'w"nllbed ' &le room. share bath, 111 lhr Zbr boule, Nwpt, or I nH S1'mT 1280 IQ. ft. RarW 81¥d. PortAbb!)','call752-6499 AflalMCllhFwwl•ed encl gar .. pool, dshwr. EASTSIDE ASl'84i'i.cri.C.' unrum.Bder.17Mt12 no kitchen, cloft .to I be•cb, au, fplc. DOG e. OST MESA +st.oraae.l500mo . ....................... Adults.642-5013. Country Woods, 2 Br. 2 t•t•tst ... 7•02 •BREATHTAKING beach, llWI lllcld. Sl~. mo.ITU705,5'1-5130 A Realoaomics 87MIOO OCEA.M&MTYU IGINHr lllald 3706 Ba. loft, large patio. ~-~ _ a VIEWS• Savaae. Wilde Co. 'llal IF male t 2or J roomomcuultes. I•••••••• New deluxe 2BR, 2BA ....................... l lrTow •a art SS?S/mo. 190 2lsl. St. Deluxe poolside xtra Adults oaly. 1750 Mo. m-etOI · to eh e 3 ~~·be AIC, plent1ofptt1. UW Storeoromce.1J501q.ft. Great deck & yrd Set 2 bdrm. 1 ba, Patio, park-Newly decor. gaa pd.. 646-11~ days, 645-9543 larce Zbr. 2 ba, bltm, Huie 2 Br. apl. blab on II bd~ pvt beth kit bo.!e~ Costa 'M 1 Incl. Avail now. Call Mesa Verde Afta gale.USO Adults . ing.nopets.Availnowto encl gar., pool, dswhr. eves. dlwhr. lYJ miles beach bact ba)' bluff wltb 2 Prtv. II~ F. S2Uimo. fZ50moKike642-m;11· Realopomics 6'15-6700 54$-4123 1·630·6934 , 642·8808, June 15th $450 mo. Adults.642-5013. TH E SEVILLE 2 Br Adlts, no pets. $6.SO mo. private balconla, frplc, pt-@lafl.5ea!. Share 2 ofc 1ulte in pre-WISTCUffAllA 644·8722 675-6.149 Spacious 2 Br, 1 Ba. S395. w /gar. newly decor. 538-8362 heated pool " loads of Room ud bath. Im ID· Share 2bd 2ba apt. non ttl1ious airport area. 375 ?OO IQ ft retail &hop DOW Nwpt Crest condo, 3 br, Qulet 2 BR I BA w gar-3 Br, H's Ba. 5'25. Laun· ad~lll, cryu. drapes, $585: Super 2 Br. 2 Ba. c:loleta. 74.S Dom1qo Dr. cludin&utilili•. imkr, pool, nr S.C.P. IQ. ft. For delalla call avallable. Hip traffic 2\l'J ba. 6 Kamalii Ct. sundeck. Yrly, avail dry fac., pool. 548-~ bll·ms, pauo. Call btwn separate unit., but nt-Worlf6.UIO. 7I0-111hfter6 IZSOtlUOMC. 75'-7028 851-12211. locatioa. A&tl51-CIOO tmo.962-cm8 12/l $610/mo. 644·9811, Fireplace, pool. pvt 1·563&-4120 area walk to beach, Versailles Comer Pen· Fountain Valley home, Female to 1batt H.Bdl NEWPORT BEACH 5CM t I t WlllllW 41M H---'st.ons 67J.9(~1. pat~o. dishwasher, on 21819"1"SantaAna St&5 child OK, no pets. tboule 2 8r.2Ba.AvaU. kllchenpriv.Batb,pool, Apt.S200.Necotlable'. No.Newport8lvd.180to 1 I. lmm ... a-c,..-2 · bdrm·. den. 2 c~ M_., E.s1de, all In X·lg 1 & 2 16'1"G" Victoria ~10 .... -now' MCA ---~ . 150CP.sq ft. avail. at w I ·············-···· .. •• ... ,.. ._ 3724 Br •arden a"'• From ~ --· . ~· .,,..,., aauaa. -tmo. IA-l.5U 14. " SMrTa M&ml Co For rent or ,.._lOJOO ba. Priv teMls, pool, ....................... • ...... 1 BR •laarace, really PANORAll.ICVIEW z BR z 81 condo, oewly call PM. Nd 11/F Rmmt U.l; HB. 14i.fitc · · sq ft t lorace yard . (pc. SIOO mo lse. ( 1213! Luwv~' $445. S5?·2Ml n I c e ff I b I t n I . Lar1e 2 bdrm. 2 ba, or painted, qlta, fplc, pool, F\arn. pvt. rm 6 ba, util Hae. W /Ire yd. Etc; W--.~--Feaced, locbd pa.td, 598-5646 A,f·,_ 2 Br. I Ba . SUO. EASTSIDE 1385. adJts, HuntinitcnHarbour adltsonly.lm.MS-ml pd., waah/dry, kltcb p!!.-..mf9.GllZ ,., _ _.., aearcomerofRedBlli HarborViewHomes A.Mb•u'°' IM Matramoniocon2nino1. nopeta.m&'m NMl70 96CM370 Lrs2bd.rm,2ba,wfporcb, prh. Walk to OCC . 6A.TIOOlet:A11 ~omc.. etc. Slip. 6 Paularlao, Colla 5BR,3BA,3carGar. L...-S9S ~ 2643 Wallace, Cost: 1961 Fu.Jlcrton.1 BR, neat 3 bdrm, 2 ba, stove, dis· frplc, dsbwth. 1125. IU ~/mo.S.t.m. CONTACl'·' a..-G•v -· Mesa.~. C111·0e..S.c,S1400mo ~ Mesa . 548·1546 .. & clean. $2115, adltl, no hwuher, cpts, drpa. Amlaos Way. N.B. Prof. penon, ref• req. ·---~ DANA POINT 250' Days,8J4.9362 Conttnenlal break asl 631·21SO. eets.613-6372 Fpc. Enclosed patio. 7»-ll14. Fw-n. luxury rm w/lrit., Male/Female Service In Sl7SnDo 500' S350/mo ..,,,,.,,.""""4/ Eves,832.8644 M·F. recreation room. STUNNING latte 1 & 2 2Br2Ba,bakony,frplc, Dble1ar,wuber,dryer OCEANP'RONI'VIEW pool, Jae, am. prka. So. l~~~.C . ~'!'.-Violet Lanter~ ,.... H ..... bd pool, TV, laundr}mat Br 2 Ba Garden Apt 1 ,_,._ , 11 .. _ .. up No-· x Ira ,.....,. • ---_..,.,,.._,e ., .. ._. ••••••••• .. •• .. •••••••• Newport eag1...,.4 rm, Maid s ervice and · · · garage, a ....... ,. ac .. ...,.,... · .,_.. · rooms, ou ... ,.. _,._,__.ULV Yrly.Neatll/FlhrlBR, ..-. 2ba,hugeyard,S700mo kitchenette l\a1lable. Pool.7lOW.18tb.St. adulls, no pets. $415. 111).25112 paint, cbalr lift. Pref. E'SIDE C.111. Very 2YJBA Condo in NB ""nlXICm lu1h111 Drive by~ La Perle Pl, Great conv looiuon. 2277 NEW BREEDAPJ'S. 540-6338 DILIWABPIMIS mdl·ace cP or women. apaeloul! Very private! w/Boat Slip. $600mo. Lo\lftous 313 sf ofOce 0,,1 I If SOOS do not disturb tenants, Harbor Blvd.64.S-4840_ 1 BR with LOFT & 2 Br. enclsd 1ara1e. llOOyrly.642-3112 OWn enlruce. Romey Encl aar. U-40 After uall. for s11b-)eue ID ...................... . then call &Sl-6226 BACH. from $350. Frpl~. Adults, no pets. 1475/mo. SPACIOUS 1 BR Eastbluff1 Townhouae w/trplc. Gal pref. DOO 5Pll. 611-XU oneofNpts. excu.Jaiveof· LOSING LEASE, quit. 5Broceanfrontbome. LocJl-oltoodl 3741 rec room. poof, Jac~J, mw. Wlbon.631...._. Fireplace, walk in apt, a bdrm, 2ba, 2 car lat/last req. 6"·1375 NB, au-r creat vt'-, fie. ~mplexes. Alrport linlbualnm,Hllioeout . I ........ ••••••••••••••• gas & waler paid. I di h h N la No wt di/ r~ ..,_ l I I d ALL supplies and f\1-S750WU1teron Y Furn tux studio, spa, TV. Adults. no pets. 393 EASTSIDE l Br. Newly c o1eu, s •as er,. gar· 0 pe · D !!!! hara. 2bd., 2 be. bouH. c oae · nc u ea : turaincliidiq: 645-3447 maid servi'c"', phones. H iJ•-cM•uc.u 11 decorated Adults no 11ra1e,poof•t1undl')' cllildreo. $850/mo. Nwpt Deb Bact Bay Prolm-.... _,,..__E •Rece pt /phone ""'·play .. a·-.• 11.,, •• " am ..... , ,...,..,.. · · ' fadlittel. · 144-1010. a-1, s1eo,' YI-·" · ....,,.....,._._ •Utilities •Jaoitorlal .,.. .. -..... HarborY•Ho.n fl'Xwk ~2:227 323 E 18tb. 2 B 1 peta. Refrtae. $385 mo. -~ ,,_...., rm room-.. A ....... room chalrs Beauty ~ -· r. car 64.5-0108 Peta considered, adwta 2 Br z Ba, DfW. ntrt1.. 00111molter. Marilyn, -·on·........ •100 free copies/mo. Salon hairdeyen and ExecPortoflnolnPhue Furn.studlo,Laguna. garage, 2 ltlds OK, no Newer2BRZBA,$6.SO. onb'.$425permo. frplc, 00 peta •1mo. •5551. to 1br nice apt, S.A. •Ample park in& hydraulic chain, mir· Ill. F.ABULOUS VI EW! S350Mo. pels. $425. Sien-a Mgmt. 76().1418 0l'54a.86'15 1m. 1 DelewareSt. 179.1574 dya, 642-4t58 Rm In Ice llotllt or OCC Pool,teooia. tr1S + ..., dGtcben •Sett'y serv. rwa,•helvesandplant.s. 4 bdrma, exp fam ff:· '9&-2:227 Co.641-llM. (So.afGarfteldl evea tor reap. empl. non· util.543-Gtl avaUCall: Roxanne AJao m. encl entry, CHAR . Sludlo,fp.,deck,$450/mo. Unfurn 2 bdrm. No evesorweekend! aa.MO'l ---_a.-•mo k er . NI c • Male lo lhr=bome. !!W740 aDdb!:rJ:!':'mpoo CCarldleJnerlnc.ASlt1700mo. no kids. Charming! children or pets. lat. E,,talide3tBIR2•~ooa,2sty, YA Bit to beach, 2 br, voc1'"""e-..-lbr-2 .. ·"',-trpl", nelahborbood. SIOO iocl. my hideaway .2Brl SA·NB area. Pvt office, ca11m;;;4or a oann erman 497-1305 last. MOO mo64$4U3 enc pa o, .., mo. frplc, aar. Adults. $475. • ,.. t -.,. .. utlla 957.-ba all the •·Short Secretarial Opeo Space. after&...,.. A&t.675-6870or675-7698 .... -wport•---'-3769 2 bdrm, 2 balb w/pvt 640-0997 12UtbSt.53Mltt decb, bulll·Ull, 1ar. 100 . wait to bch. $335. Exec desk, credenza, -111t.t.ir11tl"-C"uvOH"""' -. E .... bdrm 1 vt1 Br refrl&, immac. ydatobeacb.Avall.1.2/l. Xlntloc.lrroom,w/pVt m.4W S d .. h 1,,._111!11 ____ _ -.;n; ,. "'"' •••"•••••••• .. •••••••• patio. a"" w P j Oceanfront vu. 2 BR, lm· 1Z7-41th SL fl1S mo. yr· ba, or Hoa1. Ill, oo e c ea... P one i-... Sf, 200 Mo. 3 Bdrm. OCEANFRONT 2 & 4 Br. sink. Lalmdry book-up. Adu ti, no pet1 $365. mac, IWUI)', bltnt, cpta, !y • ...,lCD tltcllep. IM5. •ioas Roommate needed for anawertd. coov prtn1. I W.,, Townhouse on goH Avail. Winter. Weekly / No pets. '475. 761 724CJamesSt.6'1J.7717 drpa IDCln' suadeck clo -plualt new duplex on mo 641·1» 41 yrs a ~.Mler. course. 2~ Ba sep. DR. Monthly. 6'13-7873. Hamilton. Rear unit Z.8. 2 Br, 2 ba condo near So. 1., ' Married cpl' no EASTBLUFF lbr., pool , Q11let worlrlnl man, Oceao Frool Balboa 500 IQ. ·n. M~ Verde Top location. tdjaeent to New ca.rpets&paint. Imm ed. occupancy. Cst. Plua,S.A. Prol. d• t.idi te!U psmi quiet aru, l1QOe adult, r rivate ealruce, etc. Peftlmula. Yeart.y reo-area. Balboa Pavilion. GoM WftltwM. T..,.Co. M.S 963·8112. cor. Pool, apa, aauna, L ·1 bcbm Pier nop!t!llGO/mo.MMm 200/m o . Laauu ttLM7mo.87J:l111. 5'HlZ3 leue. For infonnMion Rea)tors &M-4910 WtMTll llMT $.'!15. Deb, M).OJQ2. *...! .. l u._ G • pooa: OCWlllONJ ........ Lularto. Lllwaa 19ome/ call. s.te.AM J2IO 2 bdrm, I bath, frpk, IAY ... S $6.S0,2br.adultl,nopeta, r ·...-.no ':io...o Avallo.t.J.ll.Spedolai Room ID lat•• llouse, DOD•tmoller/ daaalul ,,._~ .. Lee. Ill~ ....................... ~=hr.~::h bltns 111. Eaatade. Water pd . .f:o.n · • 4 Br 2 Ba. U)lfti t .... c C.M. lmUefromO.C.C. m!!fc. MeHU. Approx. POO n1 otn1 « mil» 3Br, 281, frplc, $700 mo. nn, ' ' SPACJOUSl BR. »N4U51-4171 2 Br 1\11 ea. $liO + saso wui.ert~"'~.,.: Plotmo 15!·• 4 bd, Iba., lo...,.. w/ 2 ;J!au. rut 1 oua callevestwlmd:s r~~2~. Crplc, Larae private patio, Newer 1 Br. Ir C:rnf:· depo11t. Carpeta, Submit 08 6 .............. 41M otMn OD Bal la. ms. "&:,=:::~· l•Ea·dtias··--~--- 54G-431l momo. fireplace,walklocloeet, Adultl,nopeta.m>I o. drapt1, blt·lna. Nr ~~!;, T8L u•" .... •=•=-: m1 o · u lldl 1 1 tl • Mew ....... / Obit. JCMS' iBCOmt Prt. s Br. 2 Ba. Tri·level. Im· dishwasher. garage. &45--5$77 Beadl BIYd/McFaddeo ~....... "Oii ,_,,,_. -ut/aec.a e p . ITS· , ....... ......_ lowt.v!lt. mm1. maallate, Villa.le Walk Po o I Ii I au. n d r Y Aft. AU adult. no'*" Sm 2BR, yrty, tm mo. •100/wt P l .. Kool 11D/8W.m.mG.t. ~ Townbome. Nr S.C. tacilitiet. ..... la~ni1.-UWpd. ~Ulll W PCll. NI F to aln beaut.-deeor. C~forMtt ...... , .. Plua. -. tst. 1ut" lneertftlltbayloco ............_ u.u m:maJtHM -ar, Iba homt, • occ. oMc:ISPACI Oa1 t •r Mil S$lm> m 3"W.BAYST. To-•--..-..-.._ ..... _ 1 ..... ,._.~ Y_,.,onU..bt9ctttum JJ ~'JM.ll10 ._ ..... -•••••'•••-·· .. ·- ;:;, •· d•e . l2tl 646-tlH NEW Zb°NltHOR i::h:."•t.t;;".;.··_;r .b:k:,. i\ik~cii room•. lltcla .• ea: .W'lbriiir~lu. TH"icrn .............. . ....................... Oct•n tront 2br .• 2 ba.. RENT 2 Br. + Dell, 2~ Loft.ed bdrm. 1 i... Ut> ~ '750. 1'5·0120 •·,: r::w +~ Nwpt apt w/mah1re • lroedwt1 ....,_., '°....,. ~ ..._ ~·..:. HOllEFORRENT 1 " a 1 I . n ow . 2bdrm hraue, malu,.. Ba. •Imo. Dbl 111, ~. prtvPlldo. pool, ~ =-~ · ..... ......, •Imo. luch. Cah Anne -t. ldvualltiq1 J Bdrm. tm. Fenced Weekley/mo. wint•r 1dult1 only, no pelt. trpi.!zpool,ape. C..... .... m"4IOIO tm mo . ...._. aduJta, m4IM fw1a.......... Huser, oft.Ille mar. fl'ut~n:" Wo tal yard 6 1arap, Klcll ' rat.es 152~ M251mo. 755 W. 18tb Sl. • w. lllh. 145-2711 IM!!D,. ~worti: • klda. Qaill 6 Man. -hn I Ill Homa In Cdll. <THI.._.. _.._.._._ ... _.-..·_ ....... __ _ pet.a wflcome. 545-2000. Oceanfrool tbdrm, avail W..9507. ........... Jl4I lttl Newport lhd .......... 4JM •mo. . N .. t iso. Coetl Plaaa, A&ent,nof~. now. '35~. ht, last 2 8~ 1 Ba, encl. 1ar, l•tlide-112IA. DltunJ ......... -........... lrttPn •"""•--"•"" ••--•• Ptrftet for boutique, ...... Pa • t 1 • w d · UtJ!.inel. 6'13·l · clean, quitt, adults only wood ct I Ii D.. l Orea.a Vin. Dlluu 161 S. Cl pf1 J176 oc:.r: a: 4 Brj P a~r IBR C• Apt. "'91ftl lllap or oMtea. U .. I • • 1•-ROOPING·All Types 219 W Wiiton •D cabinets, utlUtltt pd. Br.ApU."""1deeorll-........ , ............ " AM · '*17 •tPM. lRPM.ft.--2111 -LI c b DI . ~ .... , • ......... • -rmo""ll• td ...;.JU. .a&..t.---L-..... .. aaGtb.D111l. ---c. 1ua.r. as 5· ,,... mo._.!!! Plf &' I , nrn•l't ~-· •• rm~l""''• oceaa ~ ** ... ** .-.--.... --.. 8UllQ WHITE NAlTOJl l~C ~ o 1, ~I I c 642-8233 t BR. ut.11.flOJOlllllSt • .,_,., MJ6 t 411po .. 1 • ..._pool, .tew, ,'-*7,111 l II I ,..Oe~un• Prof. r rr Jn. W/fOIA .,._, """'~ .::11::..a;:::!!-----NochlJclnn.lmlp«OK. u•H••••..-••-•-1 =;:; t"..r:.'· •• @:llt. ~DI!~ Dia~ ..Ulllc..rwp.llto* rw:r:=::t. ~mo.01·• 1.::,,1 ~~';i~f ... _ rtW ... =:.-..~=: WI>•• ;:.m~ all ....... ll•• ........... -....... 1 ~l':'t"!"... ••.•.• "He. .......... "" ...... 111 .................... . . .... , • 0 JN7 w/utlledral ttfi111, It I 11• ...... VI ll I A ILL 11 ... ._ .. la1llt. etllrTY,~ __ ...... _ ....... frplc., ,.,, pool•.,., ........ --PIJlft9JUI& ... , ........ , ...... " I K;JMll .... M'i"i'~'~";•;u;;;;r•1 2bdrm;aJrl1 Malta, ao pela .... • 1 •.I IL...., -01111,... ... llt. W/ Lii tlt.=iE•"· JlflW ManWR8.lly up. 9"19 rile. mt... --.ll&IW. •* 6 ftl.ltrl fB..oo Mf.IN'1 ... I rt 2 { Orange Co11t DAIL V PILOT/Monda • November 8, 1811 ** AUTODIJ~ .Jal~a._ _____ 1 ..:.=:...::.~~::__--1 Steve'• Detalllq needl ~~~L-Lo 1 t I red m er I e ,.,...., $enlctt 1360 bardwortini, eltan-tut, w Auetrallan Shep nr · ener1et1c fftalltr for ..,.., IOJO Baker/Bear Re~ardi c;;t;:.;;•;t;k;i9i:e9;;• 1loftl .:._.erm .•mploymeot .......... l§HI54H21J)3nG ATA TAEKWONDO mm-latm.a1-4loo. WAMTB» Lott · aold rln& In shape Karatt.t31·151' AUTOMOTIVE tt!!el~ o( ''E", vie. Balboa Tf'9Ytl 5450 PAITS lft. a;_ olf In 3 l!/NB/h:y. fn.1/2! ...... .-................ COUMT9MAM •1 Hoo!t frln REWARD: Glrla I~ 3 Drivin& Seville to Sac. Dealer1hlp or torel1n If need cal N~ apd blte, misalna nr, Sr. Well · 1H1-11. Need auto paru experteoce rb · Ro1ers dell, In CM. Pllffnten to share ex-preterred. Call Glen for . ieai Reward ftlJ over value N6-4l21 an appolatmeat. or bib. No questloOJ Im~ '::I & aOY CA'1Y1a ·Sloo,ooo rrom uted. Seottmental :ir-• aou.saovci' e party, well alue 631·1622 ,..-11 by Or. C\y real v · •• • • •• •••••••••••••••• • Ate ....W . Real eatate Lost · Blt.Bm neer C~}· Sdlooltl --~_jtfi~!;H __ /twrter Ast for BlueCollarREWARD.. ......... 7005 Webber. 544-3175 ••~•• ••••••••••u•'•••••••••• B1bysltter needed, HB BANKING TRI.ER ...... c....... .... ~r .... · aau ~111M1 GREAT WESTERN SAVINGS bu an im· mediate openlna for a TELLER on a F\JLL. TIM£ baaia In our NEWPORT BEACH branch. . ALL JOBS FIEE CLEllCAI. PURCHASING CLERK If you have a yoar'a experience In 1a purchasana dept. please call. This major Irvine compan)' pan to Sl.000 a month. hu excell~nt beneflu and offera an extra week's paid vacation at Christmas. Rft1J•MN1 972·'955 Stc...tory $16,800 Cltrlcd/ Word pro· ett1tr. ?fl Cfl ~ Ira 11ekh11 .re.,oaelble ,.,._, WW&r-. MMC. Sal1r1 eom .... wate wit-eap. Call Katlly T Dental Orthodontic 111 't needed, fuJJ Ume poal· lion, exp. neceaury • NH@ Dental Ortho Recep. lloniat, exper. requlred. Newport Be1ch . H2·2162f. ~· Prore11looala seala1 additional income. (714)Hf.M, Geoerel Allallutatua au VICTOR TEllPORA.RY Nationwide, lone estab'd., )Ge, firm. Top pay, bonus. oever a fee l We need: ITYPISTS --==-• l · Loll med. u. bit. dol w/ Now EnroUllnc: Cbrf4· area, pref. flderly, your ~!.:-----1 red bandana Redlands Uan p, ... .,....._, ...... E Ilse. or ours. 840-2250 aft Trwt ' .... agJUUI, _,, • & 1 to 2 rem prevlous financla instltutlon n · perience or cash handl· 101 experience IJ neceuary. Prior public contact background helpful. Knowledge of 10.key and light typln1 ia required, Challenging variety position with small . stable and 1row1ng compa n} Company requires minimum 5 years ba~grqund plus a s e n s e o r responsiblllty. D ..... Ar 'rli ... front and bad Meded for .new Santa Ana Group practlce. Good benefits and ulary. Minimum 8 montba ex· l>!f. PlusecalJ915'7-8000 ISECRE'I' Alli F.S I GENERALOFnCB /PACKING /~DIBLE.BS I WARnlOUSE· VICTOI Temporar/Servlce Sols lie. N1me BOOMER . ·18th St., Costa Meu. ---------- Vic Fairview & Balter Spec i a I Pro 1 ram . IAIYSITTa ............... Call SCS-5Jo9or~Hl • 646-5423 needed for 2 children, ~aJC:tate Found br/wh Springer Joh W91111d, 7075 my home, Costa Me11 sin 1949 Span. Approx. 2/mo old, ...................... , Area ~17 Rita Johlt1oe 972-9955 Dornesllca S5l-8S20 EOE M IF ce · M. Vic. Indy. & Hunt. Companion aide depen. BABYSITJ'ER ;.;.aMtcW .. ia ill inaton H.B. 536-6974 or dablenon-smoter. Tues lhru Sal 8:»6:30 2-ITDI 960-7709 se.196.1 ~rtf...,... 120-........ ...,11;,.,1..._ __ _ You'U find our saJaries competitive, benefits ex· cellenl. and working condlUona c:omlort.ible. Please applY in person at: THE BEATLES The Beatles found il hard lo make a start and went to an agent I know He was my Brother an Law Now I ran't promise to find you ram e & rortune hke that but I don 'l C'Obl anyt hing and I'll Ir)' Jll.'>l as hard Right now l ha ve Jo b i. fro m serrel.tr)' Sl.400 to trainee al S72S Wh) no( rail~ Competent Person to help w/clllzen 2hu mornlna. 2 hrs eveninJ. 27·28·29·30th of ,Nov. 631-1750Mter3PM. Ha.lrd.reuer wanted wiUa following only. Villace Fair Mau.-.11100 a:la.LL.-'L-:1.3.l~IU.J.. Found: Great Dane, Blue Htlp W..ted 7100 Banking , has money ror Merle M, Poodle, Grey F •••••••••• .. ••!•....... Ta.La Hostess, exper'd, f /time, apply l.n person: Beach House, 819 Sleepy Hollow Ln., L .B. •· $10,000 up. No w/Rlverside Tap. Ttr· Acea••• Newport office seeks et.eek, oo penalty r le r Ml x • 81 k M • Growin Newport Beacb full-time Teller 6 mo. Denison Assoc. She pherd Mb, mostly CPA F'I .. __ ff I S&L or bankinfi exp GREAT WESTERN Domestics. Llve·l.n. M1ture Woman lo care for small boy. Ref Req 780-9333 . tan M 2 Also 2 call ll'm um u m· · Tortois~ abell Manx & medlate Clperlinp for an preferred. For urther Lona haired wbt M individual desirlna information and in-644-3656 Newport Beach c h a I I e n g i n I tervlew call : Brl111 Ta&· Animal Shelter. Found responsiblliµes Pro~ld~ &art 644·'1ZSS Altered M Siamese Cat 2 mg ~c~ung ~ices WISTaH · SAVIHCiS 450 ........ Cllllwbr. .............. CA92UO wks ago Npt Area to diversified cUentel. FIDllAI. ~YIELD 546-1377 Xlnt comp .program & SAVl...S&LOAM I AA/EO£/ll/F 1ovest~ earns F d · bl .. •-h wor~ environment. 4 Corporate Plan Coast '""!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!111!!!!!1!!!!11!•1!!!!!!!!! DIK TD. Well oun . ac. "' w 1te Public actoUntinJ exp. H N B = • $100,000 eqwly male Sheltae. 81.L'Shard ' Send resum_e' Cl~ified Eok'' . . M IF I* B 11 P I t I Uon In custom Brookburat*206a. ad H61. Dail.>' PiJot. 330 -=::;..::;..----..:=..:..:.. ••• Rita Jollnso. 972-9955 494.9701. _72().11'-"07"'-------HOUSEC.l.EANERS Chrl1tl1fl cluntnc Drivers service needs help. Esp. Erp People only. Brina pref., but will train. DMV Readout. C1JJ for P.•.50/br. 6CU10 a~R:z.2':,,,,.. ~S48=-=4Ml"-=----Houleteepel' DllVHS WAMTID Llve·ln. Apprecl1llve Ruponslbie, mature, 11 P'amily, 2 children. yra or over. lncmUve" Ocean Front. 5 day1. advancement. Mon..·f'ri. 6*11411 "pool-& borses.1 Fouod · F Siamese cat W Bay Street. CM I $11,tDJ •• Investments,' tan wl~lact markings. 92627-99113 Binking 1 Non·•moker, good deta.&1 -6143 yng. 631 saro. Accounts receivable IC· Ta&a I for busy office. Irvine. CLERK TRAINEE Excellent m1th and some colleu for l1us high clas~ high rise office No t ) plnic necessary Co mpany ofrers o utst;iod1n11 benefits and i.alary or $800 l o r.111 rt No pre v i o u s w o rk experience necesur)' IJam-5 m. Houaelleeper /Live-In D R Y C L E A N E R S . Spaniab 1pelkin1 OK. Counter Girl, I/lime, Locat reftreaca. Ute w1ll tr1ln. A1k for cook's. etc. Wbds oil. , ....... 5350 counts payable bOok · Local Newport Beach Savlnas & Loan has im· AP/AR , PlYrt>l1. c:oUec· lions. 10.tey, jour. re- C()Cl. Send resume & re- f erences to Box 752 Dai· ly Pilot, PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca 921526 Yvonne: 642-S.. Nf.f107 •-------HOUSEKEEPER . M1ture. Weekends only. lltctw utlc he. Permanent. 541-W ••••••••••••••••••••••• keereer. General office Alm dut es. Npt Bcb localloo. mediate openin~ ror a Company benefits. teUer. S&.L and atalme of des Salary open. Send re- sume to: Mr. Anderson Escoru/Modeli.ng ex~. preferred Ex· ce ent opportunity in a N!.':f'~'::r; to Houukeeper. Live-In. crute a new dep1rt· Help with Mother. M /P & Couples 177F Rlveraide, NB raat 1rowin1 usoci•· lion. Salary com· BKKR·PARTTIME N.B. lnt. Design firm needs Bkkr. exp. In heavy A/P & Safegard Sys. SeH·starter, erri· cieot, non-smkr pref. 15 to 20 hrs/wt., S7 per hr. 1135-~ MC/Visa 92663 mensurate with ex · ment ror a growln1. 175-&1 SELL idle items with a ADMltlSTUTIVE per1ence. Full insurance Rita JohftsCNI 972-9955 medium siztd dally H-•••ar Daily Pilot Classiried SPIQAUST benefiu and paid career newspaper. New maln· MOO per mo. Monday frame computer 1y1t.ecn throu&h Ftiday. 12 noon are -Gripe - e -Galher - PAPER Ad apparel. Plea.ae call· --IBDID Ms. Denny Parlsla CLERlf will be ordered In to 7:30 PM. Must have 714~ n January (most Ukely OWDtrusp. . One 10 Two •e11rs large DEC hardware (714)"'4MSaft7Pll ~9193 ____ _ rully paid off PAIT-TIME 8orgotfl$ undrr S50 orr I~ $100/weekend and up. HEWPOIT IALIOA • He majored 1n m and now he's bl&&est PAPER -V Solurdoy lfl DIME A lll6 Call 552·3173. Army SAVINGS & LOAH Booldceeoer Tustin, full ti nfe. AIR. A/P, payroll, highly or· 1an . efficient. resp .. ex- per. non-smoker Grow- lnl Mfr and Ser related business. Good salary , with specilliud produc· roll e11e ror \'at1r1~ llOll software). Organiz---------ant.,.., ... ,.! "'U'MI Reserve. Be all you can 1100 Irvine Ave .. NB detailed po~1l1on Nt>t>d ing and supervisory IMTBIO.ATOI: 6(2 5678 be. E.O.E. sevHa l H •HS \\Ork ab1l1ty essential t Ee •••••••••••••••••••••• l' x p ,, rt; n r ". but Previou1 hardware ex-PAIT·TIME. compan} 'A1ll lra1n in 1b penence ~ and $100/weetend a.nd up. o"n r~q u1 remr n l!I knowledge ol Ndimen-Call 552·3171. Army EHelll'nl bene r 11~. tary programm1n1 ReNf'Ve Be all you can 8-DA Y WEEK SPECIAL 8 D•y• • 3 Lines • 8 Doll1rs It s easy to place your 8-Day Week Classa fted by ma il and ti costs rust se -that s only a dollar a day• To qualify for this special offer you must be a non·commerca al user offering merchandise for sale up to seoo per ad . and the price must be an your ad The cost stays the same whether your ad needs eight days selling time or iust one Use one word 1n each box About 4 words make one classlf1ed line ot type Mini mum ad is 3 lines Please print plainly . r-----------------------------, I 1~---'-----~----+---~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;~ I 1.1------+-----+------+------f===~ I S 1.00 11-----+-----+----.._ ___ ...... _...__. ........... 'l-----+----+-----+----1---10_._&0~ I 13.20 \t------+-----+----.._----+-~~~-4 I 15.IO 1i.-----'------'-------'----_. ___ ---t 1L.-___ A_d_d_S_2_.60_f_or_e_a_c_h_a_d_d_H_lo_n_a_11_1n_e_f_o_r_8_tl_m_e_• __ --J I I 1 Publish my ad for 8 days starting _______ _ ·:Classification _____________ _ I Name _________________ _ : Address _______ ___:ii;...._ _____ _ ! ~~~ck or M .O. enclosedz~ __ Phone I Charge my ad to: f 0 .. # _________ Exp. __ l o # ___________ Exp. __ _ 111111 BUSIN ESS REPLY LABEL --------------. I NO POSTAGE NECESSARY If" MAILED IN THE UNITED STATES I I I I I I 0 :: ~ .. • beaullful offm:. salar} would be Mlpful. nus be. ' Bookkeeper Full· S900 department will be l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•!!!!lm!!!!•ll!!!!• &32·73'!!0,_ ___ _ • e Cbarae. Leads to asst Rito J•SCNI c b ar I ed w •ti• t ll e ''tlilll* I controller. Ex:&> thlougb 972-9955 responalbllit y to ~ : I ~e:~:1r~~I ;~;:~ CLERK TRAINEE I ~:~~:·:~~·~ ~ • I ~Ask for C Oar· Good math and ~om(' mln1m1I asaullnce al lyp1nJ? ror lhlS starter rrom the vmdor Reply NEW • c·-pos1hon Compan) IS '" toJdfWebeor, I BUSINESSMEN I _ Nev.port Rearh a n~ is a O~eo.t • 0Pf'OIT1HTllS rnendly lo\ el) plal·e to _I)~_,.. Conlect the DAILY • with SouthemCalifonlia ~pend your da)b :ind 330W. Bay St. PILOT for lnfonndeft Electnc. IJyouare: eam \\hlle you learn Costa Mesa, CA92627 regerdlftg the C0""'1 • l.Over21yrsolage. ~.:xrellent bener1ts and (7141642-4321. req uirement• for • 2. Have clean driving starter salary of 5725 The Dilly Pilot ia 10 using • Flctltlout record Rita JohftSOfl Equal Op port unity Bu"neM NetM. • 3. I>esireiulltimecareer 972-9955 Emplyr. Women and 642-4321 4. Willing to work hard. CLERK minorities encour11ed EXT ..... • WE would like lo talk to to apply. • .-. • you. Call for appt. btwn 8 R~ponstble position for & 10 AM, Moo lhru Fri. Ast fo r John Belcher. mature minded person • 2 1 3 / 6 7 4. o 1 1 3 0 r Need Accounts Pay<1 ble, • Accounts Rect'1vable 213/674-3499. E.O.E. -a n d r o m P u l e r • '"!!M!!/!!F •. ••••1!!!!11!! backJ?roun d plus 11 • 1~ re ai;o na ble an ur:ue CASHIER·m1lure exp. typing s peed Good re&iJter pet'5CXI wanted • for holidays starling growth poltnlrnl plus Nov 2l. Call: Snowden· good benef1ti; Salar) • • Miu Sooru. 540-4717 Sl.~ita JohftSOll CASHIER Must be able to wort 972-9955 • Sat. & Sun. Other hrs to SALES PERSON • be arranged. Apply in • person: Kerm RJma Must have pre\•1oui; Kardware, 2666 Harbor experience 1n drnta~ • Blvd., Cost.a Mesa field and worked tn a lab Clerical so underst:ind allov:. • W.-da.tt a nd non prPr1ous • 3. 11 :30 PM Mon-Fri. metals. Aggressi\'e Clencal duties on aduh outlook necessarv to • unll of Psychiatric obtain this sti bte F1cllity. Handle phones, position with growlnM • misc paper work and p• company. Co mpany tienl request. No typing car, Sl.100. base, plus • nee. but prefer some <' o m m 1 s s l on a n d • clerical or medical benefits. bactcround. Position Rita Johftaofl • also 1vail for Sat·Sun 972_9955 • 9:30-6 PM Capistrano By • • liilhiiiieiiiiSeiiiiaiiii~~57~02:.iiiiiiiiiiiii Bea~~,!~ b!~c~Ll~t~ • CL.BICA&. bank seeks experienc.'ed PAITTIMI indiv idual for this • Looking for lnlertstinf interesting position • work? Typing , no ExcelLenH>ens startmg shorthand. Otrice loca· s1lary to Sl,200 • Uon on PCH. Uaya per Cll Carry • weet,SatlrSuii.~7431 972-9955 • Ct.alCAL TELLERS • Work Temporary joba Saving 1 & 1~ o an cloee t.o bomt. experience. typing ~+ • VICKJ HESTON a n d r r i e n d I y • 1' AS&OC. personalities win these Open7:SO.S:I0/54Mt00 positions throuahout • Orange County • Clerical Starling s1lary to ,,. am, /f S9ta. • Local Newport Beach Coll: c-.,.,, • Sarin••" Lolll bu Im· 97Z·9tSS medilte openlq for • • Jr. Clerk lo 1'0iil J•rt Ume dwiAI W.-days. • General ottlce ud stock • • • Daily Pilat ·········· ······ ·..:., .! NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING ~ · GRAPHIC llSIGtO : Immediate opening In the creatlvt Rerv1ces dl'partment now uisu for full·llme artaat. Reqwres good graphic design and 11pat11I sensitivity. ability to sptc type. some lllustralloo or tttboical drav.·1 n1 a bi hty. knowledfeable in produrlion. an understandio1 or mail ad\ertls1ng d"1gn. and ability to mut dead hoes. We're rast-paced but fllo to work for. with an excellent benerrt packJ&ge ~lud.ing dental If you have at least one year's experience In prlnl·orienttd work and a current port/oho, call Carl Tethima at 642-4321. ext 243 to achedule an ~Pointment. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 330 W. BAY ST.,• COSTA MESA, CA, 1212t AN EQUAL OP"OllTUl41TY E•LOYlll , ............................................. · st6WINTs NEEDED ' Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/MOndey, November 9, 1981 ................. ' .. •• ... :e .. ~ ...... ~~ ~!..~ ....... !'!! ........ ...__~ !!.':.~!!.!:!~~ ~.~-...... ~ Al£C(. ,.,. ~'!~ ....... ---~ 1 IUY * Cuadlaa ._. "'*"" Vlkiaa ....., ...a1ot L9014 ....................... WI IUY c arv-** * ,., ............. -. w1aftaet1. wt• adt. hc.u..t cmd. •100. HmmT CLIAMCAIS .ia.: , = a..._.,.....• letall·fUOO, will '11T... AMDTIUCIS SAU • ~---··~• :.t!~1 will a....1•1111 . ltllHIMtl6 IMTOWM ~s,t~ ....., .. I lllWlll ONLY MAitm~ Rtllu• 8-qtltll de· .......... 8"4 tolor'9ll .aJ. comp loc llSTOfMll J-,!l!~----.11a::llll-.I . lM .._ ~tr, I Cal HI llM Ul:ttll llYertd. Perteet for .i. ..... ~ .. •·•-u tdr. 3 HIM (OQAJIZ) ....... • .._., L~~~:.n::':n~~~: 714/AMflU tMWMI ;\~=,_lot ':r.:,:;.-:.w~:r 9: &.UOT. N.,ae. Clua. _. _,.. 1w a... ,.._,. 8""' ill 0 .0. llAi-Al&A lll.P .,..._ hof1I 1116Wa&ed. tm N.-W~. D . 111· .............. ~ APPLWICllDYJCI la --, ~-- THEODOR E ROBINS f ORD MAii •VJ¥.U.lUlld tqYetA19 •;,~ ~NNIUPllNG 2C: ·=..:-~Surfboard. l lt ft Rick IU\Nllllo.t, VHFracUo. laclli..d.-,..._. a ._~...,. • tnlMe. Exp-ma&laia2)TI .!Qctl. iGfD Mt. Df\l~U::: lt.mnlltemd. · Jarua/ 8111 Stewert 2 ..U.. Ne9d eotaMtic Top =~Sport. Gifta """"'.,..... ••P· To.,. u wt '"° HCf .... dtl XJgtcoH.Q .7H=F1 "" Cars, Buo. Campers,~ lcll,\eklllllll!\$. llClllTAIY /PAIT M•lfS . ...,., FritlelalN G• Ca.thee Never ...i .-n 11: ao Jrt Accum.ulitlon Surfboard. 7'2. Small ...... ,,,,./ '$2 MG TOOMllt. Runt t14'i,Aiadl'1 • I •tt.;ll 115. I '• (, 1', I A ~~!\/'I r, l, !• • *" .... -, n•E ,,...,,.... Dr1•.•· ~ -cw oaly MUBrGO!on. ll·SU rue. Good CoocliUoa. ...... to70 Good!-N . AlkforU/CllOR new JM. fl IMI "'fir•.-.,....... vl"1 a -.1. . ,.. a c1e1. ui.uy i.ome. •• ,..~. · ralr~ new l.alh. •· ....................... __ ......;::==-:..--JIM MAllMO vm .... AMYtl,.... --· dtptndable Sec'y ~--·WA . ec. Jll)'taf ....... ..,.. Df.7119 p I "-' I Hf.L, SUP POI WI' 'SZ MGTD. c~•m and YAJ .,SWAGIN llallM·IMlr6t-. • la.Ill brt/wlll; req. _ ec---vn· PW xJat _mad, •• ... or . "' an vnenta run· Sten. I .. _, In NtwPClft 8"tb. 50 sreen Xlnt c.md. •.ooo. -... Vla Otwt~ N....-rt cur.tll>m:exp.w/llAO fYPlft/RlaP'nONJl'l ,Ml!OQ.WMm ~:!te~~~'. nert,1<1>·~':f~c;:O: .,; • • ·1n1 foot ald• Ue, 20 foot ..!l:;z:.:l~·=----HU~~~~~;:~cu~ 8t!d!· · I ~ R.I! termlprtf'd. P /T Jtrm. JOtltloa aern,...atar. aft. Oood IMIMllttlUJ.--Moiu. M · · ....................... b tam , pow tr or 'se Biii Ccmvert. R~ ___ l4~_®0 Salll/Jla.. Call.HPll.9Y11:... =• ... at1. Co. Coed. • Nfa Nw • Lov· LOSING LEASE quit· aail ... priyate '9ldence. Palnt Ntwtop&Jnt.100 MM S!C'Y/llOCKUEPllR ·~~~ ....... e1111:· •. '11M,era. ~a lamb COit, 40 ,.. •• t1a1buaiw. .Miilaiu 8:1li -per month. ml on compl recond WIMllD 'nt..totat•s for rwArcb.il.ctYraU'lrm. ::.,gift WaQer 6 do•. pod 111t.FA£1VRY1fl·ml ,nn.. ALL ~u=·and fix. 6aftet42ap2.m7.17 31HP eq. Oood Cond YOUllXOTIC · ::t000 te ... ,. .., DlJm cond lat -Vaev.m IXQVllfTI Driftwood tu.Na e . • N . PP•WZ 111mSH cus .:J.OW' ... -.....!l HMrlllf ...=1sw dnW.•HHlft. ~Table.ld'wtth 1.:.~!:,~.r~u~~~ ~~•YchC:::,· ::i_~ Newport BoetSlipWant-4Wlletl°'"" tHO • ....::•:-.;; r -· c • ~ 1o1":"' Tu':j 11 .. ft-............ , slw -•· Soloo bol .. ryen oad ed !or O'O•r 25' .,.,.,.,,.., ........... , •• ·~>.,..· .., 11 .... -llr, .. ..-... ."U.'f: ~ WPM . 10 '•~oa frH. ffort111 cot1d. =r; c .. t ...., •PP~ 5*Jll0. hydraulic chain, 11'1r· aallboat.1'7.-t is CJs Jeep. va ai many • <n4Ufl,tf11 • .'1 1 ~ "' ,_.... wtt.b a~oker. Salary 11000 M.!JtM NSt/:f~ ~ :o;. rull lustb mirror, ron,abelvallldplaota. WAMm xtru. S.790I SA' I II ... ,>-' .._ ..-icuoa ..,.., mo .. CPA firm, Colla Near00 ~ !!!"'• ~ ...tale.· ~ea CGld. 11*'1•1 cul '1w. beavy, ~,almake11p. ab&mpoo 45 ft allp IDd 50 ft altp in •--a.~ , ... " WIU •be ~18,ito: Met~. Call Carolt . ·-•-• •tm orif. •• .W Nll m ...... a rproducta. NewportBeecb. •~ •--31oOW Coast Hwy <-for retetl .,.,, It ftct1on lraffk aD4 154-• . . •TON. Call at"'754or S31.f1C7 ....................... ~ h :f"'.: Lal ,_.So ~e:r!'-M purtllai1a1 Send re--..... __.IT IENllOR D.P..CnJC no.toromce.lluatkw· Carpet Nr New Bra after&.__. 80 .. TSLIPSFORRENT '81 Chev 4X4 Silverado1. New=.19'Q';ac ~ 140 . ..-•Lii· ~Ad.NoDc/o "-.... ~ DRYER coo-... 11.ma1ddn1dlr.li Over25ondL"-Soyrd: SDisplayC-.Cl.mtom ~ , ... all extras. w/abel . ----- Bcb. PUat S30 W. '8e.y flllAMC:lm • ditioa.IO.MfM e!MI table. Call Terri Stilllmtt)Jt!U51;1DU Built. Formica. New. NfT. 8CH. 2111 •25 .. 30 • 110.500. 828·8194 or WANTED! ---••¥£•-•I . 1o1 J.580, eo.ta llluat have •11tera S.ar Col•tot leftll 752·11t4, llon tbru Never used. Glau1 35 .M2-41M4 .. 5PJI ..:.7.t.:H=.t..:::1~---Late model Toyoca.s anc S"" P~ •••RPI DecNet. 2 yeuw tralD-aJatcoad ... • Tbyn. YIDIO•Aaie lbelvea witb drawers. BalbdeCova '77 Ford Courier. Xlnl v 0 Iv 0 5 ca 11 n. Loi-.-nm. ,_,....,, 11!& ~ f'°'* rJ::i . . MUSTSIUJ Aaterolda, etc. Below ~~~Pronl • 080 as+~::/mo eond., abdl, alr, lo mi TODAY!!! Cirnelatioa Dept. tvr· 9 I c Dillf rears Refrtl a~ late 11 Uv rm aet, dia rm _.._ ~ 13:295. 145-914 rutty b11 p~tiH• e" e o~n t 0 · aperieace. R.eeearcb &c ' ":V, """-' ,ft, Seara Kenmore wtloleule. GHC73 V 1 e d e q u Ip en t ! leth. SpllCI & 'Sd GllCS1.2lllO liarle /ke available Mi w..., a ~~~.,.:J~~ :::ir. J.a:!=.r ;:i:,.,t• roll. •tas. refri1. anUque bdrm Retnodell!J& ,ale ! SW tOIO Bestolfer/willtrade repraentati•e. va.•u QYlt wont proceuln1 Draft ropGMla &c Y Retrtt fl'Olt free clea aet. AbO many otber J!~"m ~!r~:l~~e 20~~ Taylor Fl'Ollie Frette, 2 ....................... tttm7 ean u hourlt ..,. + helpful. Non smoker. 1e11t J ~~ worti fine suo. S...S~: ltem1. 145-m'J Worth•· aell forSZ25 tube. Hamlltoo Beach '1t Jet ak.il, cd cond. llm .66 Rancbero. Xlnt. New '"~=.=·• ~:':1e.;;i.;.~· 1168501. ficiaJa. SU.125/mo. Coe· _.. Double drop·end Vi~.. 4M-1111M ~:a~o:~1: ~· orbstof~ yalm, bauery, paint. "64._001.,s.0.9467 TOTOTA·YOlYO tact Bob Claaen for Waaller. clean, worh torian sofa, '500. Patio S&.OT MACl•B &router 1112 Deep · rntr .. radiator. S2200/otr. •SICllTAlllS• app't. (714*"3111. lood 115 .... 1511 or \!ble.HS.•2735 Fryer, Bun Warmer, lollh. S.... 9090 0748 SALIS•mbW ,., OVEat Flrrnneeda 541-M lft Sofa. Yelow Tufted 11• aelection~. lO', 25', Hobart Slicer. Beat or ........................ '76 Ford Ranger F·250. llaleorf...;JfHMa LocaluPintheP'ield Take ad t.onearestatate Dryer, 1u, deu, wta Clipp~d Velvet. $200 50' &c St. We deliver. fer. 1175-4734 or come to 4 x 4 • a u t o . SALBPmOM HaveBeltJoba&cP.ople ..;nptoJment aervieeol· lood 175. 54HS1S or 114-Sll!13M415 ll75-1921S. Greenberg'a Deli.704E •YSJllAIE am/fm /casa /cb, For ,._. IWe. p,,., lxpCODIUllaatOUn DOTee 1!~0nnee ~tyd. HH4IS KI n I Si 1 e Bed . C ... wat Balboa Blvd. Montbly boat & RV Por11scbe Red1• mag~, Plaat t•••htdlt UslelndenAa,lDc. -.llT-W>.nupal Retrt1.2yn.aN Jl cu. Frame,lhttreu,&cBox 2111 pc IUll-. lteel aet. TY..... she &isnowpowava1 . • Blrdlr.at'MEOE for "i emger.. fl akle X *le, =1~. --. S~rln11. Good Coad. Tbe ve..., bat. Ideal 1.-=. aa...-.... IOtl stora1e for a.ey size, ~ or offer. 642-6387 lltlpf1l. 1'1t Btsane "--.. -,-.. .-....., ., ..., .--br security, fre e llallar, ta)ihpt llvt. ....... ,....,_..._, .. """' W ...... JWAn '1t0-095 ·Mt-par Chriatlllu~! 1157• ...... ;................ launcbln1 & washln& ltlO DATSUN MS-Jm UM> Over 2t. • m ... H · S.U..Ken..n70•9*r Kilt •ire watertled, lood Pool table with It· Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr. privile1es. Newport IU ... CAI Sales,.__...... •tPPIR certifted ,. perieace. Apply in •dryer, Dtlllda won. taa4.. new mat., ttoo. CalOries.•. wrnty. Fl'ff delivery. Dunes. 1131 Back Bay Air,radlo,c.bromebum· independent .-o a.. 4111toMDpper11' btcb penoa: II llatador, SlOD. G.E. n-. Oom· m.wafU Gl·'11SZ $1'8.646-1711 Dr. Newport Beach. pera. EXCELLENT U.,co c.omm•.c-.• rte aaJln& racbt 4 0 ' 17aNwptllvd. pectoc', IZS. '4 camper Coucll, blVWll and beilt Jobn Wa1t111'tmlia Club Sylvania ?$" CoHole 6"-0510 CONDITION. (8647 ) ~~>• ...-. ~~*:t.d~:ba-:~ ::,:.•,:,, s!:':L. ~~5. cau Art 0 :1 ~cit~m?'·$21110or =:'~'::'1b~: ~~~d~o~;omt:~·0,1r~ nus. s.~::r•AL SAUi :.::~r.:"time store. hllorperttime. .... NJI: s.•-.._., 141.7271 Ta J•1 In SADO ACllMW Tip Ollar Pill w.r.!L OVtK ....... For Your Good VW, Porsche or Audi llmf/a We •eed "'° f&dllo. toataft.SJl.0147 APPl1 21115 Newport Bl, ............ --.... Tt•plul-:sioO A. Welllnston Smith. Son.y U 1n colored ....................... lll·Z040 495-4949 mind e4 reo•I•. 1 ell.. llea'1 ltapd lalel1b 142-2iia . Seucape. '750080 Trinlt.roo. COit .-0 a.at AhNft ti 10 .68 Cb El C 350 fulltlme, "'1\l•e. ~J11aawh• Gnnd Prtl. lrs frame. _.., H40 m .. orS41-0112 ....................... ev amlDO VW·PORSCKE-AUDI FUllAe~r. Pt*t Ume Alea. 25 to =--Gdcpall.Q .trH1125. ~adiu.nal::: :z= Great Bll7! lluat Make RCACoo.o&eStereoeom-Ceaaaa 1rR &-place ~~ans&A.1r,Sl800 44SE.CoastHiwaY .............. I ~eom111..Ca1JRGn T deli :r.=to ua"" u/',•::r II llAtn & S,ue Available la biutlon. Good Coad. 1la1le ~nth DU en4/ atBaysideDnve ltU'Mdalltf ~ ~--o "' · u-o.. .... _. . . c . W.,....__ ~to aeU $125. 7~ prop/ PaiJ!t· Partnership Yw 9570 New rt Beacll 673-(80( •. PulaAeill blanl. •• _. news rada m ...... a o,-~ CW••· •· 1131 N27. Boies. UXlOXt. Alto -.. now foraung. SlODO dwn ....................... ·1' .-,...._ Viii.IA.. RB/t'V l(ta_oe Satur· ll~~U .... * •• 14~~1.11.._. Prom to ZEN111f 25 c;okw ~ &c abare expenses. '80CbevleVanMustsell Wot.1.,.-ted ~ "81.m .... t•b'. ~1.R f.t ~~ .. ·.fltime2 .. 15 • .:..~ day anct.-..., mom· Pfll•-Sf RCAa.lorJlill TV $150. 25•t oU• per Box . llS.GoodconditiolL. 7118-0922 (0(:); 687·9lml Make oner. 136.000 mt, ...................... . ' .-.. .... .., ............... lap. L~cU 10-apeed 'l>lke, W Tabllll, SU. Coffee s.me. 641-7210 eva, or MS-lm <RIV >. dean 9-7986 AIMI ' .._...,. • W.S · or a volunteer We nM a ..__.. .. bte -u_ • .... --dan ... operatet 1uncfMien l'°" = ·~---:iriv •• .,. ta-. · .-...:rowave, J a.cum -=--· ---...,.---.-c-irs. S./ '66 Dodge Van. 225/6 cyl ....................... ~ ---'9'11t4~··~-~f~J• Cdll. all penon . I 5 · ~ •uo. Preedom Pbofte, " KRAn30wmel&.ctio. a:ta 9120 Gd eng &c headers. '78 Audi 500>. 1 owner.: -IQI ,. .. ihll· ...... v..... SUD. Card t able • XlateQ119.Zynold. for RICbobbiel. -r ssoo Very Good Coad. s 63K~· J • ' " u . I, lhn-rrl, .-.,can~ tilt• .... •· • CINlra, f'O. Inrtafty 11"9~ --117$,!6QI c;:-·~·;;·;1;1~r~k :1a~i aunr · • mi. Loaded. MUST~: .. \frt,000 : i:PI. 1~1-. _M210:!Z!a. ~...... !ttM Head Stereo, '175. lliajeatlc Waab. Pal.m Black &c wblt.e portable orsl:,·aide.SlpeS.$500 .... ....._L--'-9510 SELL! ~Finn. Very ;-'.-_.._. Ulf ,.......,.. .30 . .-u.or~-Pl-1093 tree40'farlaadlcap(q. TVGdcond ---, Fair. PP. 640-8246.~ ,·)If ~-~·-. soucnoa !==~£"*" ~R!~EdoaA~, orrer.Jf'lOrw!CV: . . .HUTn ~:.;. wnper fita 8' H•;;::·.;::=..=0· Messages631-7032 ·;~ '1.lld . ..,.,.,,,. Ii Appolotreii91 "1ellla1. --. I .... t .. co H • tiilcftC r ..... , ..... bed to'fe/link $250 700 !_u•r !'91 '"lllWll '71Aid5000 ~lu.b Ll .. o ... , "'• Part·Ume evnin, P &c y-..... • e--eo ta le,afereo conaole. ._ .. 1, I! mt w fusus CK : YMC•LHM? 4 spd, air. stereo/ta,pe .• · lllaae, NB olc. PToven atu •Y ~ 1· r. p/t Mon· Fri J :30-7. -· C1 .. ah ...... ................ l2'CAJIPERTRLR ocau · .... u .., '" con ·........, ! .. -u s rd .... •lh &JUDllJlior ....... ,.. • l15t Ml4T12 ,,..WWW • I • • n. t '80 ....... tA fi d Xlnt d -oeo ·~· pBette doeen only ad 914·2239. Fortlilt and tnddriv· I IA tWa .. IOU Peacb and Brvwn ~al _._........ laMrll ttlCI Stove,si.nlr,alpa4. Safari belg~ wltan 857-2421i ·' apply .... r . LaRue C\l-d w .. ·t .,.,., want in :;";,e-:J:~ m·-• be I Print Sota w/matcbin1 ....................... ..,..,. 6310,.,.. leather int. M111t rond, IMW 971 ""_. • ,..., ... "~ -""" · ·• ..... •••••••••-•-••••••• Wltl1back cbain ~ Worc11tat• ........ Ml5 !!""· • ...... 20.000 mi Only s1.100 ~ f13.4302toda,y. DallyPllotClassifieds. 54J..SS.a Callbet~s. MOW36-m ~lCIQI lla.imeree• ...... S1SO Mot9rfled .... tl40 down. auume bank .................... .. _£X£CllilVE SECRETARY lfG 8QAFIRM LOCAWJ ftl PASMI~ ISLAMD ...... ~; .. , Big 8 tP. ''ideated in Faahiorl ~ is seeking a professional secretar y . Typing 75 wpm, shorthand 100 wpm , capable of working indepen~enUy, well orga~i~ed and versatile. Competitive starting salary and excellent benefits. CALL flOI Af'POIMTMEMT 1714) 640-9200 m.241 EOUAl ~EMPLOYER Relweod 2d aetibtt. s JC SectiGna1 ~ $150. Wordllater"' ..... · SUO w ~~~, ••••••••••••••••••••••• pymts for 3 yrs o1 S298 1911 IMW Mew &••1111 4--30' 1olli! alloradwolid Gius t.op cotfee table · '11 XR 75 Honda, runs permo. CLOSEOUT .......... -.... •••• fene~.bec:t&cfedaf ptt.541-DC For informatb Hnd: HAVEPROPERTV! perf.S350farm .. Call Art: (213l59680days SAVEii 6 I' II ... iaata aUoo availdle. All types ol flll"lliture aD ~~y "!_~ ~ -~.; WANT y ACHT? 7SIM063. (7141 640-~ ev~ • • ••••• .. ··-~ .. ·-·••• Lowest price IW'· Jim IOOd cond. B.e•anahle .... ~.cily,,.._e.llPauu S..P11J .... Ud MeSctll'Cldu. / Alltos W-.ct 95'0 ~:~~a~ ~:u..-==:i m..ttarllSal ~ATAt.olM'llS 714/67J.211t ,...... 9150 ..................... .. ceotlitioem.RD aeta. SlOl/.._tr. ot.te I' Bard....,ed Pram• P.O ... Gll •"•••••••••••••••••••• Wl.-YOUI Oak Batfd ~· Table wood e1ter. doeu. Coadl. nnJ Pattern. l.rvtneCa. t:Jtt ~ P~ lloped-good fiOOD US9 CAI! SlH . Cbatra SHO. •fllir.f'R:Wte¥P NeedUplllolltery.'15. -uMemnolM~ SUlft.US.m'S · sSr.&m Anythin&considered . Roel.er SUO. Drnser W o o d C a r " i n I •..-•• InteruUoul eor,. CAIS MTluc:.S '72 CL350 8oDda. 140t Ml. 1977 thru t.i SlOO.-..T Du,Hcator. Marilu. MEVEll USgD: Sela " R:aftel.Ca. avallabk. llany Hll un· SuperierCond.liOO. ~ Antl•u BIH Witlow UMCI One. 8elJ far., i.11eaeat "'90. Dinette .eiul•1 a der 1200! Call (3121 I 63H<83 cbiaa. 4 lr( ~plat. _. Will ·tae:itftce tor Sl'8, Qn Bdrm~· llat-w-... IMI 742·1W3 Ext ms for in· --~=--~---1 ten A: 1 inilk pitcher. teeo: Witllcable. treu/bo• apnnp: On ••••••••••••-••• .. ••• formation on bow to '1tDTl759' le p . .._,._ u .... uu $130, f~ llD, twin llD. Waled. The Letter "A" pu.rcbaae. Jmmacul751 ~rood. • MORI:.· 1'10e01 For tbe Pepsi Challenle '•·-----!!!!! ._ ........ .. . c-·· · Ktftt site bdrm aet tri...t.. G (U_.._ ... A c ... " r--,-74-.,-'-=.,A----""""'-c--1 •'•-••··--••••• .. • '! · 1 I 11... • 1"''' a.me. ....,.. ....., a,... Tax Deductible dona· "" -- _.. • • I • ~ tlreuer W /mirrora 2 or Soft Drinka) WiU pay liona Boats planes car Ori&. Xlnt cond. $500 . #I i. Or_,. C....ty 2925 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA •-• AIPUA-...• i .. -• .. ••·---· al1bt ~tanda, head· $100 to the person who Ple.Mcaum~ · 54J..27Cll lAI ~ NtlO SIO, Germllt luper boardai incl matt.reases. rmcb oee. 4'7.s:J1Z u· Bolton Whaler 2IO H (2) '74 Hondas. 125cc --LL-=-~~-M9t wwwtftcet ~:O~~.,::ro;. Paid 1~. sell •75; Buytn1 World War II Mercury DIOO · Triala bikes, mint cond, Se.r s Kenm ore ...... Sell 'or .. -. Call also kins Dakota Souvenirs Cub paid. •· • UOOea.5411-27<11 -,, ...., bedspread and shams. E : 11 t ---=.::==~-Refriferator. Xlnt c:cod Jack :87$.JllD;M2.tto5. Paid$Z25,aell$100.Ub ( apecia. f wan ..,.......... '7SHoodaCBS60.LoML ~rf87 •MICI09COPI• nq.W:-Mt4or720-ll_!.~ .:::Rdcs_»l... •: 11.r 90JO Good~~~ .. G.E . portable dis· Bil l llilllpott 111 Remodelina Sale 11.,..,t .... t IOIJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8SS bwasber, wbJte, xlnt tm:CS: Masaiflcau!:·. uv rm fumDOO.din«te -< ... '79 Jet Sti, hardly used, ·so Honda XLI .• As cond. D cub only. 400. Never uaed. Xlnt teo.-.llZJ.3 ...................... , w/toteSUOO. new, must sell, !11:7158 1 I W b ... cond. Retail $lJDO SeU Pecan low cMst $150, ~~::is~w;:: =: ,M»l• 19).Ml. Wb1r poo u er • • 080. W/ctae. BiU, llall 4ble bed, dresser It ner. Xlnt lone/cond. 1.odlac·I Dtns)ly, '4$0. Motor"-. S./ Dryer:.!~ okl, &Int M5-llOI mirror _, new . sell SJl.G2l6 7~bp Jobmon OB. $350. ..../Sttnlp fl60 ~· ~ -:: C4lh IOJI Sl.50. Fabenra.re Rotes FIDDLE '31-20&9. .. ................... .. Fridae:Admiral.ly · ....................... ~antique wicker ~Coadiuo:_•. g (t wblte inflatable RENT: 22'del111mtrbm. Apt am. Rt OllD ta&S. SI a m ea e C at . F . abelf SlOO. All in •llf1 dlnpy. 2 seats, mtr llpa II ad! dial.•· wt. -.3'17, ~1 ext Zl1 Chocolate Point. To lllnt C'OOd mouot . S48-CD +II' mi. PP. &f0.&515 daya Good Home. H .Oe. IOGO ~'fi':,Spinet. Good Dlnlb ,t'ftbertlasa.2hp ......,.._ T ...... t170 Looking for a home ol Htf73' 7' bra. ~ tofa, . can5'.221SZ S111u\1 motor, oars ...................... .. your OW'ft! You'U rind Pllrebred ll81Deie Kit-aood coecL SUO. andior, like new .•. '71 PleaalB"t Craft tml many homes advertlaed tat, I wb old, from Gt-9131 • .,... · trailer, UJ\ loo&. x.lnt WE p .&.y for sak in Cluslfied b!Jeder, 115.a2311. Complete twin bdrm set, with bow. Gd cond. re-'-h. Pewar 9040 cond., slet111 8, used a A everyday. Top Quality CPA klttent. matcbint spreedl $175. ady to pllf. MW. f'1rm ........................ few ti mes S1 ,300. TOP DOLLAR Sales and Leasmg at competitive pnces Ex- ~llent setv1ce and Parts::!• dept : Good selecuon of pre-• . v1ou.sly owned BMW ·• other fine cars in l'X· .f celleot condition • Por the best deals in Southern CaJifonua Come See Us Tod-r' ! & SADDl.BACIC IMW Slam'•· Wm'1, 8ur'1. rtexble flyer sleds. 6TS--5C83 Pst19tr..... '"'997:::..:...·1679=.:.:=------FOR USED CARS ----------------------, llJ5=11iO. MH\l'7 1157-5175 Tr om bone, Pan· Am, J4 ft Searay s D Im· LO-LlNER Zl', self COClt'd Al.AH MA...aM "'-, ... Kini a11e nterbed. lood Gold ediUon. old beauty maculate. ~: $1.30 Arist«rat. seldom used, PONTI .. C/SUl ... •U 28402 Marguerite Pkwy Mission Viejo AVERY PKWY. IEXITSF'WY > tl 1-2040 ··~4t4t Closed Sund s -.,. cOlld. $75. Brown and Sl.50.~ mo •-.. l=NB ·"p + beaut. 1bape. Many "' -....................... bel ....... _ h ...... -1 1 f · " .. 0 " H-..a.;.,_ Bl d KEESHOND Plqle. AJCC. Dell• '"-"rnwl couc y a m a b a 0 r I a n equity d 55'7-11327 xtras DC • roo air. .......,COST.,Auu MrESAv . ,... • _._ II r w. .... and lo'faeat. eood rood. w /Rbt=m acc. new $2950. Located at 2589 v ... mp.u.... I · ret. $10lforuir.SC7·1.IM5 _.. . ' OftT~ Oranae Ave. 1173-6312 ; 549-4300 54f· 457 I b 0 W • p V t p t Y . "vuu. ·~ m t•MKS!fttpm. .....Wt IOll 54"M2 PowwYtJdlt r...:63=1...,·07:..:..::54::..:-____ PORSCHE$ SHIH AKC ...... •••-••••••••••• Acoustic Guitar. Like First clua ahal>e.i., totally '1lllln. U111fJ 9110 TZU .,_..., • Machinery, pipe tools Ir new w/c1111e. $175/finn. reconditioned. rinanc· •••••••••••••••........ WANTED *250 and & Cllll onl¥ · too mach mon to list 8'5-82GI inl avail. Wlll coosider '4 ton S'd' Bed. Xlnt Allow us the opportunity ;c; R~P•OPLE tm FiJ'!lideDr. H.B. -.... F 1 & part trade. Slip avaJI In cond. New tires. $350. to consider the purchase ~!~~T"" 1111n. "-' 10601\1~2 ' eon Newpo=s 1-'~=-·:::i!6:..::18=------r:o~~g::~k00:1~eu~ Groom•~-........................... !.................. T J bdrm ba s.r.tcit.r.... Today! Labrador Punlu. FOlt LEASE two reJ. EXEC . D ~SK + ,~rn~ ':fJ view: lAs: &Acc...-9400~ Blad AJtC All Sbota tllorou .. breda both U1 cndenu, aect I desk, hi SUll 1E 10 s~ LOAN ....................... ·_ ~,,~~ CllamPloa U... sioo: k'!bda&99G10eves. ~J. ptrf. cond. Sac! llucb much better tban addle tanta; custom i.U ~-~ MHIZ7 ......., .. 70 ~.13H111 nn. P /P. (7M-..,S made for early abort __ uD u. UC OLD iiiQiJSH ......... -.... • .. -•• Allawerinl llacbine w. Mk foe: Mel. wblbue Dadae trucb. 13&31K11110t111.0 a....... Z~VADOUDAIJ mnotebrn.lnew, c:C1t 1l I.ll.P. Zl', Volvo VI, llOOer.Hl:P Gato.na.-•wawm .Jwt,.,..Silllm. ltlm, I llortta IU.0., ll50,H llJO,tf!•MI fre•b water cooll111. fwWt • Ptemlumprica m.1~wbd'1 Mllorirw.-.-............ lteNo, fllll • beauW\aJ. ......... -.......... pajdforanyusedcar ...... -.. -~-~"oA~~l~NO ....,.._. ,IK1·!"'9·msw ~=tm' 1rore11nCJrdomestk> Amerra •.!99·-i. ~==' n.... La ale r OMNI f1 • C~ S/F. R"'""'-AND ln1oodt'OC1dillon . ... .. ..._ lrM ... -....... Traucnber trltb foot Lo Hn. Good Gear. or. .,_.,_ SeeUsP1rat! llw b . All CallR. I~· aMiq -.aa. ..., aet *I fera or Conalder ADVDTISEJlS ___._ ...... • 6 ----!~ ..-' A.. _ ... p. Npt Sti Tllt price of Items .._ -_.. "71 s:n= ....-. l:'ne ..... :.. p. advert1'td by vebicle =.,.. __ =~!~.£." ........ _._..._,. -""°"-dealers ID t.be •elllcle _ --;:• --.... .,. aaw, brand Coma1 DnftialTable W.. ..,/ cl1111fled advertl1tn1 ...-. · ... .,. ..._ • Ori&.~ .-..mo. a... tOlt columoa doet not iD· Ml--anj ... l!ft.t · _.ton ........ -.......... elude •"1 applicable Gira••"' • (I), l ,... 1•1 tuts, u~ truster Pll""''i!i+ ..... -"" ...... __ .. ""., -yp-(-, ft•-......... "'' ""°'" Hhd .. -.................. ,._ ............. .._. WRY NOT TAK! A '-fw*J!Ohtiaeccm· C°ll!ltu \ll·~115400:l!IO . Olflr • LOIDfG LIAR, •alt· _,,_ IAY CIUISE Call tro1 dtYlcetertiftcatlona : 04•/ • .. ••1111, ..._.Ill PUPPta for ... AK.C Yacll~ID Couultut• ar dealw doemnmtary -All. ...... _. ft.a. Ref.~ p.u, a1ilo ( .... ) NI pnpanU.. dlltrs• Ull• -........ : ... ,,......... ... . . ... otlMrwfM Jl*.if*t , .. , ............. ,.,.. _.., ._ .... .., •• -..... . ..... ...... bxtbuch!!UMf, .-~ •. latJ ... ,_hll4• "•te4 ----------.... ~ftllli-•-.-lllili Mi A••••• Parrot ......... -... ·--•• ............. I ..... .... .,,,_ ... Clfe. lll·=·,.. ••••-•"H•H"•'"n'9iaaMl'9<aet1aH 11.·•: ... sc•.,.._t •= ~ •ft .....,.. ~ =tJ!'!!I• ~· aa.-... doek , '!ta' ........ BUYir.'.Mo r ... .. • ........ .;;.;;;;. ...... =:... = ~ • ....... ....... --·-All .......... 1 •••• ... ..... -... , Dm ~ t IAlllil• ... ~l!!!!it:::~m~==~~t=~:=~=:::.tiit,!!!:_!i.~Ae!'!I ,!':::'~·b!itr:!!!•=~~·~:= ... =s='1......,;;::z:~T..... a Al:,~ -~ .. ••• Tt.e Most Exdtla.g PartOfYo.- IMW Pwdl•t Or LHMC..Wh McLarenlMW!! 1.,0..Le.t ., ()Ir,...,.., I 141522-SJJl .-. Or•noe Cout OAIL:Y PtLOT/Mond1y, November t, 1911 • ATLAS CHRYSLB.f'LYMOUTH 2929 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa Tel. 546·1934. 3 blocks aouth of San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd Complete bOdy shop Sales Service PlrtS. Service Dept open Monday thru Friday 7 30 AM to 5 30 P.M and 8 AM to 5 P.M. on Saturday HACH IMPOUS '• &48 Dove Street. Newport Beech Tel 752-0900 Cell us. we're the spec1ehsts I~ Alla Romeo. Peugeot. Saal.I & Maaeret1 THEODORE ROllHS F<>aD Modern sates, service. parts. body, paint & tire depts. Competitive rates on lease & dally rentals. 2060 Harb~ Blvd .. Costa Mesa. 642-0010 or ~11 • JOHMSOM & SOM UHCOLH MllCURY 2ei6 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-5630. 57 Years °' friendly famlly service -Orange County"• oldest Lin· coin-Mercury dealership SOUTH COAST DODGI 2• Harbor Blvd .. Cotta Meal.. Tel 54().0330 ~V ~Ice lffc1alist1, custom van conwrtlont. Tel. MATCH THE NUMBERS OH THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES MEWrORT DATSUM 888 Dove Street. Newport Beach Tel 833-1300 At the triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol behind Victoria Station Sales. Servu:e. Leasing & Parts. Fleet discounts to the public • MAIERS CADILLAC 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tel. 540-9100 Orange County s Largest Cadillac dealer Seles Service. Leas· ing • DAVID J. rHILLIPS IUICK.f'ONTIAC-MAZDA Sates • Service • Leasing ... 24888 Alicia Parkway Laguna Hills fZ) TAIMTDATSUH ~c....,. ........ w.. ........ 13731 HarbOr Btvd. Garden Grove. Two btocks aouth of Garden Grove Freeway. Sales. s.Mce. Pwta. Our aim Is complete customer utlafectlon. Shop ut and avoid paying too much! Tel. 554-9000 • ALAH MAGHOM l'ONTIAC·SUIARU 2A80 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Tel. 64g..4300, Sa tea, Service. Leulng ."Mr. Goodwrench · HOUSI OFIMPOITS MHC ... -.Z . ...................... -~ ltvd., Buena Park (on Santa Ana ,,....,,_ Telee Beach Blvd offr9mp -sharp right on .......... aw: MM-CIDll (213 or 714) 837·2333 G G IOI LOMGPRE rONTIAC 13600 Beach Blvd . Westminster Tel 892-6651. Orange County s oldest and largest Pont11c dealership Sares. Service. Pans • UHIVER SITY HOMDA 2850 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa Tel 540-9640 1 Mile South 405 Freeway Sales. service. parts & leasing • SANTA AMADATSUH 2001 E 17th Street, Santa Ana. Tel. 558·7811. Your· Or1g1nal Dedicated Datsun Oeeler. • MIRACLI MAZDA We've movedt Our new location fs 1425 Baker Strfft, Costa M .... Tel. 545·3334 Stop by & visit our brand new showroom and ... why we're the 11 M,azda dealer In Southern California. Sates, S8'Vloa, Parts and Leas!!!_g_, • ALLEM·OLDSMOllLl-CADILLAC SUIARU·•MC DUCKS San Diego Fwy at Avery Exit on Camino Capistrano In Laguna Ntguet. Tel 831~. fit SAMDISAMTISCHPIOUT 401 S. Et Camino AM. 8an Clement. Satea, Service. Leealng And p.,,_ Orange County's NEWEST CheWoi.t dMlef. "Growing Your Way ... EJt1t Et Camino off~ 831-o510 492-tSOO COST A MESA DATSUN 2845 Hart>o1 Blvd Costa Mesa Tel 540-6410 Serving Orange County tor I 6 years 1 Mile So 405 SUM SET FORD. IMC. (Home of Willie the Whale) 5440 Garden Grove Blvd .. Westminster Tel 636·4010 • FRAHIC rROTO LIHCOLM-MHCURY Service and Parts Department always open 7 days a week 7 30 A.M to 6 30 P M &48-7739 0 COMHll.L C .. VIOUT .2828 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Ov8f 20 yeara Mrvlng Orange Countyt SatH, leasing, MIVIC.. Call 5-46-1200; special parts line: 546-9400: bOdy shop tine: 754-0400. •• CHICK IVERSOM POltSCHl-AUDS.VW 415 E. Coast Hwy .. Newport BNch. 873-0900 The only dealership In Orange County with these thrH great makes under one rooft • ROY CAIYR IOU.S IOY~W 1540 Jamb0f99 Aoed. Newpoft INch. MO l t4 .. ..._ Service. Parte And L ....... .. .. .. . . . . Im 11111111 llllJ MR \J~iANlal: COUN I 'r' C Al If uH NIA /S CE:N TS Special session promises to turn ~ty over remap SACR.UIENTO -<AP> -Tbe Leatalature'a special ae11loo that opened s,oday la oxpected to have all the charm and •miabiUty of a fracas between a Tasmanian devll ,and a monaoose. The 120 lawmake~•. c,aUed back by the govempr from a recess that was supposed to have luted from Sept. 15 to lu. 4, have a high-minded PW"J>OH before them: savini tbe state fr.om financial ruin. But what is likely to occupy most of their angry attenUon .is that most selfish and personal ot topic a: reapportionment.· Republicans are sUll fuming about the loaded legislative and con1res,iional redistricting plans that Democrats pushed through the Legislature in September. . Democrat• are mad tbat Republicana are •••kins referenduma on the plau, wtalcb compllcate neitt year'• electlona, Republlcaaa are incensed tbal Democrats bave filed three aulta with lbe state Supreme Court seeking to block the referendums. They also fear that Democrats are going to use the special se11ion to paaa somewhat different plan.a and derail Lbeir referendums. And the Democrat• are exaaperated that A11embly Republicana are threaterun, to refuse to vote for any of the essential financial billa unlesa reapportionment la removed from the agenda. "I don't think it's going to be a very positive 1atherin1," , ; .......... ,. ......... ~ DOUBLE klSs -Irvine Jaycees President Ron Solar gets kissed by outgoing Junior Miss Doreen Ann Lee I left ' and tbe new titlebolder. Teresa Thomas. The senior from lrvine Hi g h School was named Junior Mi ss a fte r a Jaycees-sponsored competition held over the weekend at the school. Columbia refueled for 2nd launch trjt th~ Cape, but Hess said, "Right now they're saying the weather s hould be OK for launch. That front is expected to move through here Wednesday. and be gone by Thursday.'' Auemblymao RoaJ Jobuon, ft -Fullerton, aald last week when Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. caUed the apecial session. A special seaaion ia different from a re1ular session in two ways: lawmakers are limited to the topics on the governor'• proclamation and bill• take effect in 90 days Lnatead of the end of the year. Brown's proclamation listed two topics: -"Leetslatlon relatl v' to state budget problema created by recent federal enactments and related court actions," and -"Legislation relative to reapportionment." The immediate budget problem was created when lawmakers adjourned in September without passing a bill that would conform the state's welfare eligibility rules with Rea1an administration <:;utbacks that took effect Oct. 1. Thal meant the federal government stopped paying matching funds for people it no longer considers eligible, but the state bas to keep up their benefits until it changes its rules. The cost is about $11 miUion a month. Brown's Social Services Department, which administers weJ£are, tried to make the changes itself. But an agency under Brown that has to approve all emergency regulations rejected them and a Los Angeles Superior Court judge backed· that agency. The bill in September, AB799, ran into opposition from lawmakers who didn't like the c ut s . But tbe author , Assemblyman Bill Lockyer, D·San Leandro, said those~ formerly opposed now ((are somewhat resigned to the necessity of it, if not the wisdom." He said the special session bill Nill be a "streamlined version." fhe earlier bill would have shifted the savings into job tc~ eqd other procnmL ''Thoie are out o( the bllJ just because the savings are gone and ww•re so detlPIJ iD &De*·•• Lockyer aaid. The blll will alve welfare benefits to pregnant women, which the federal government' does not, he said. That provision is an attempt to placate thole who don't wa.nl any cuts. The reapportionment half of the agenda ostensibly is to redraw the four state Board of EquaJizat.ion districts, a task the lawmakers failed to do In September. Brown and Democratic legislative leaders say that's all they intend to do in the special session. But Brown's open wording aroused the Republicans'. ~uspicions. GARDEN FLOURISHES -Laguna Beach octogenarian Hor.tense Mill~r ins pects f!owering blue sky vine from India . The plant ~ .......... .,u. .. -· is one of more than 1.200 var:eties growing in he r expansive botan:cal garde n estate overlooking Boat Canyon. See Page B 1 ~ Police fan: Kidnap handling sold him Delly .............. RECALLS cous1N·s KIDNAP Newport's Wilham Lusk By STEVE MARBLE °' .. ...., .......... It was the kidnapping of bis cousin as much as anything else that turned ~ontractor William Lusk into one or the Newport Beach pol.ce department's biggest fans, .. .. e...., away so itnpreued," says Lusk. "The department was so professional , so dllclplined. I admired that." It was U years ago this month that his cousin, J .G. Lusk, was snatched while l eavi ng Richard's Market in Newport and held in the trunk of a car for 13 hours while relatives tried to meet the kidnapper's $200,000 ransom demand. It also was 11 years ago this month that Lusk helped put together the first police awards banquet in Newport, an event he decided was needed after police safely rescued his cousin and apprehended the kidnapper .. V a ri dalis01 law l eft in tac t WASHINGTON <AP> -The U .S. Supreme Court refused today to bar states from forcing parents of public school students to pay for school property vandalized by their children. Tbe justices, citing the lack of a "substantial federal question,.. lert intact a New Jersey Supreme Court ruling that its state law -si milar to laws in every stale but Georgia imposing such parental liability -Is vaJld. The precedent.setting value of today··s action is far from clear. but al least for now, New J e r sey·s law is s afe from challenge. A I though most states have s u ch laws. few ha...i-e been challenged in court. The justices wer e told that fact "suggests . . e nforcement of those s tatutes has probably been something less than zealous ." CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP l -Workers we aring prot ective suits filled Columbia's cleaned-up power units with highly toxic hydrazine fuel today as the s hip was readied for a second attempt to make a repeal journey into .-}>ace. The renewed countdown starts at 5 a.m. PST Tuesday, with liftoff set for 4 :30 a ,m . Thursday. Jet noise tests upset county ''I remember I was taking a shower when I heard they got . J .G.," Lusk recalls. "I was so surprised that I didn't even react. I just kept laking my shower." Later that November day in 1970, the Lusk family members received word they were to take $200,000 to the Disneyland Hotel. They were told that Jf they didn't, a bomb would be blown 'up at UC Irvine. The kidnapper said 3,000 students would die. But the New J e rsey court noted that school boards in its state "have recently turned to the statute to deter vandalism and to cope with its burgeoning costs." A 1978 report by the National Institute of Education estimated that at that time 42,000 incidents of vandalis m occurred in the nation's schools each month. The launch pad was off limits today to a ll except those involved in the fueling of the anits, whose clogged filters caused last week's ])<>Stpooement. The pad was to .J'eopen in late afternoon after being closed since the slow, methodical fueling operation beun Sunday. NASA spokesman Mark Hess reported al midmorning that the hydrazine loading was about 30 minutes ahead of schedule. ~• .. So far, everything is running along very smoothly." he said. Officials kept watch on a weather front moving toward 111111 CIAIT 101111 Patchy fog near the coast, otherwise partly cloudy through Tuesday. Highs 75 lo 78. Lows tonight SS. 111111 TIDAY At least the Lakers won. See Curt Seeden · s account on Page Cl . 11111 .,..,....... ., =:-" : ................ = ...... ru Dr.SQ I * m ==-: ,........ ., ...... Al --... FAA refusal to permit cutbacks at 500 feet angers officials By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of .. o.ltf,........, Orange County government officials a r e expressing displeasure over the recent Woman dies in m obile home fir e A fire in a South Laguna mobile home early Sunday claimed the life of the home's occupant. Theola JacobiOn, whose a1e was estimated at 6S by ~ty firefighters, was found dead in the mobile home after fireU1btera man:i1ed to extln&uiah fi&!Des that destroyed the home. Battalion Chief Allen Huard of the county Fire Department said firefllbten found Ila. Jacobson's body after a half-hour fight to quell t he names. There were no other occupants in the mobile borne and no othel:.. Injuries, Huard said. Firefighters arrived at the scene shortly after recetvtnc a c•ll at 3:38 a.m. and found the moblle home fully lnvolved ln flamet, Huard aald. Thouab there were otber mobUe hqmea in cloee proximity inllde Lbe Laauna Hilla llob61• Holfte Park on Coat Hlpway, nQ othen were dama1ed, be Hid. The ca111e ol the blue hal not yet bem determ1ned bat lt II not conaldered 1uapiciou1, Huard said. Damaae to tbe mobile home. and it• content• ••• eatJmated at "5,000. Federal Aviation Administration jet noise reduction tests at John Wayne Airport. Tbe evaluations, conducted between Sept. 8 and Nov. 1, concerned the altitudes at which pilots of commercial jets should be permitted t o institute noise-limiting power reductions, and the magnitude of those red uctioos. What ls disturbing to county. officlala is that the FAA refused to permit tests of power reducUoos at an altitude of 500 feet -a standard that was permitted at the airport unW January, 1979. . Since that date, pilots have been required to bring their aircraft to an altitude .pf 1.000 reel before cutting back on power. The altitude chan1e essentially doubled the size of the high noise impact area located beneath jet departure tracks. In t he recent tests at the airport, the FAA evaluated three takeoff profiles. One involved thrust reductions at an altitude of 700 feet; the two others involved cutbacks at 1,000 feel. On Oct. 1, Airport Manager Murry Cable requested in a letter to FAA administrator J . Lynn Helms that one of the 1,000-foot profiles be deleted from the test pro1ram and be replaced with an ev.iuaUoo of a (See NOISE,, Paae AJ) Lusk says bi s family contacted former Newport Police Chief B. James Glavas and that arra.ngements were made to deliver the cash. As police officers remember it, the kid.napper never showed up at the Disneyland Hotel but later called the family and told them to take the money to Los Angeles lnternational Airport. At the airport, police had a man pose as a Lusk family member and told him to ride an escalator up and down unllJ the kidnapper made contact. (See POLICE, Pa1e AZ> OUT OP COllTROL -A vlnta1• N1sb Metropolitan waa clemollahed and aother car and a bOat were-dama1ed Sunday momlna when a teen·a1e bo)' lolt control of his car (left) and 1lammed into tbe parked I ' ............... -. veblcltl Md to~led a lilbt pole. Police 1aid there ...e no url•. T6e damaaed vehicles were owned b.Y ff and Carolyn Lamb and were parked ·1n Front of thetr home at 1•1 Sw•n Drive. Colt.a Mesa. R it es set for H B 's H enr ickson A memorial service will be held T uesday for Arndt L. Henrickson, a pioneer oilman and civic leader in Huntington Beach, who died Friday at age 86. The service 1s scheduled at 11 a .m . i n the Pac ifi c View Memorial Park Chapel, 3SOO Pacific View Drive, Newport Beach. During the 1940s, Henrickson served on the Huntington Beach City Council and on the Huntington Beach Rlgb School Board. He was born in Washington state-and spent some of his early years in Alaska. Mr. Henrickson moved t9 Huntington Beach in 1923. He worked 41 years as a pla~ ailpervlsor for the O.C. Field Gasoline Corp . and its successor, Monterey OU Co. During World War II , Henrickson and his late wife Evaene were active in Civilian Defense and the USO. Henrickson was a former member of the Balboa Yacht Club.. He ls survived by his SOM 01\ver R. Henric)laon of San Marino and Thomaa D . ftenrlcbon of Canyon Lah; hil 1~1tera Alleen Ireland an• Gt:rtrude WIDltoa. bo&ll of !Mal 'a.a .. .b; llld fOtlt .,...e.11111• and lbw'~ Burtal wW bl lii PHlllG YlltW llemartal Pmtr. ••••• . Orana-Coa1t DAILY PILOT /Monday, November 8, 1111 Brady aids • I m press room event Pr ess secretary helps Reagan open r efuibishea White House quarters WASHINGTON ( AJ'> -PrealdHtlal preu aecretary Jam .. 8. Brady, 1lvln:ia .. tbumbe up" 1l1n and qulpp , "I mlM mott ot you,•· form y OPHed tbe newly refurbished Wh ite House preu quarters today In hta llrtt official appearance since he waa shot In the head March 30. About uo reporters , photocraphen and cameramen applauded loudly wbeft Brady, ln i wheelchair, was brou1ht to the dais, "Hello, 1ood frtenda." be . called out att..r the applauae had 1ub1Jded. "Jlmt we're all waltint for the day wnen you are back for tood." said President Rea1an. wbO alao WAI WOWlded lo the attack outside a Waablntton hotel. • 'l am , too,•• the 41 -year-old preu Hcretary reaponded, with obvloua emotion ln ~l1 voice. Reasan said he hoped tb• preaa room wiU always be filled wlth "11 much inte1rtty and good hwpor" as Brady brou1ht with him. Flnl lady Nancy Jt•atan 1ave Brad)' a prolon1ed bus and teaaed him about belnl her "V and H," tor "yount and hand1ome. ·' the pualdHt wltnened the hu1 and Joked, "The huaband 11 always lbe laat to know." White Hou.le pre11 aJdea won round buttons that aaJd, '1'he bear i1 back," a refel'enc. to Brady's nlckn1me. Tboup doctors ••Y Brady. 41, haa made a ,remarkabfe recovery, he le partially paralyzed on lhe left aide and Center decision delay seen Newport council not expected to act on expansion Newport Beach City Council members will have their first c h ance tonight to decide whether they should repeal the controversial Newport Center expan.slon plan or put It to a citywide vote. However , it's likely the council will simply delay making that decision at this time. And there's a reason for that. Current election laws are such that if the council fails to continue the referendum dec1sion this evening, it would be foTced either to repeat the expansion project tonight or call a special election within 89 days. But there's a legal twist. If the council agrees to delay making that choice betw~n a repeal or an election, this would give the city up to a year's worth · of breathing room. And the reason for that Is state election codes wllJ be altered in several ways on Jan. 1, 1982. Changes In the state election code would allow the council to put, off the election until June, when it could be tied in with the state primary, or until next November, when the question could be placed on the general election baJlot. To take advantage of these changes, all the council has to do From Page A1 NOISE. • • 500-foot cutback profile. On Oct. 26, only days before the tests concluded, the FAA denied the county's request. According to county orficials, four of the rive commercial jet air carriers servine the airport s upported the· county in its request that the 500-foot standard be studied. Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley is proposing passage or a resolution in which the board of supervisors would term the FAA takeorr profile analysis incomplete. The board will consider Riley 's request Tuesday. In something of a "fall back" position. Riley is also asking that the board support a 700-foot power cutback standard. While not limiting noise as much as cutbacks at 500 feet, the 700-foot standard would reduce noise more than cutbacks at 1,000 feel, according to county officials. The FAA is not commenting on the recent ,noise tests. lts findings will be publicly disclosed at a takeoff performance conferen ce scheduled to be held in SeatUe beginning Monday. As part of its presentation, the FAA intends to release results of a survey of noise impacted r esidents. The sur vey was conducted in conjunction with the takeoff profile evaluation. Representatives of the county and the commercial airlines are expected to attend the conference to comment on the FAA 's findings. Cyclist injured in c r ash with car A 25-year-old San Bemardlno County man suffered major head injuries Friday night when h.is motorcycle collided with a car stopped at a traffic signal in Laguna Hills, according to the California Highway Patrol. A CHP spokesman said Ronald Frank Smith of Bryn Mawr today js listed in serious condiUon at Mission Community Hospital in Minton Viejo. this evening is delay lta decision until after the ft.rst of the year. The succeaaful referendum driv e was launched by opponents of the Irvine Company's plan to expand Newport Center with a new hotel, office and commercial buildings. If the council repeals the Irvine Company project, It would mean the development firm could not resubmit lbe plan for one year. Council members are holding to the opinion that an election should be held. "I'd prefer to go to an election, I think that's wbat a lot of people want," commented Councilwoman Evelyn Hart, noting that more than 7.000 people si1ned the referendum petition. Mayor J ackle J{eather said she agrees an election should be held. Councilman Don Strauss said he favors calling an election but QPposea the idea of lumping it in with a primary or general election vote. · 'l Uke the idea of givlne persona a chance to vote on It without crowding it in with other lsauea," said Strauss. "I think It should be separate from statewide issues or partisan politics." Longtime Newport citizen succumbs Funeral servi ces were conducted in Newport Beach Lhis wee~end for long-time Newport resident and builder R. Stayton Dorris, who died Nov. 5 at age 87. Mr. Dorris , a native of Phoenix where he helped ope rate a family furniture business, first came to Newport in 1913 as a summer resident. H e built h o mes and co mm e r ci al buildings In Pasadena, Laguna Beach and Newport Beach, where he took up permanent residence in 1955. A veteran of World War I, Mr. Dorris had a continuina interest i n lhe Navajo I ndiana of Arizona. Friends said he would make annual trips to lhe Navajo reservations to bring in food and supplies. He is survived by his wife, Helen, son, Robert of Newport Beach and two grandchildren, Pierrette J ames of Florida and Mark Dorris of Newport Beach. He also leaves t h re e stepchildren, Robert Grant of Washington, Alan Grant of Oregon and Susan Duley or Costa Mesa. The ft loot at $31,000 B urglars escaped with $31,000 worth of jewelry this weekend after climbing through a bedroom window of a house in the Mariners section of Newport Beach, police reported today. The crooks, police were told, grabbed a $20 ,00 0 d iamond-decorated watch, a $1,000 set of diamond cufr links and a gold ring valued at $4,000. Abdulla Al ·Saud, who told orficers he is a student, said he accidentally left the bedroom window open. Child s tarts mote l blaze A c hild dropped a lighted match onto the bed in a Laguna Beach motel room Saturday, s parking a fire that heavlly damaged the second-level room, investigators said today. Thirt een Laguna Beach fire fighters extinguished the blaze at the Hamtlton House Motor Lodge, 1435 North Cout Highway within flve mlnutea Saturday morning. Damage totaled nearly ~1000. and a ftre spokesman Hid mree occupahts of the room escaped unhurt. Also surviving is a brother, Burt Dorris of Arizona, and a s is ter, Mildre d Bonnet o f Riverside. The family has suggested memorial contributions to Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. Man walking across road killed b y car A San Juan Capistrano man was killed late Friday night lo Capistrano Beach .when he wu struck by a car while waJking across Pacific Coast Highway, a C1lifornla Hichway Patrol spokesman said today. The spokesman said Felipe Je sus Garcia , 40 , was pronounced dead at the scene at about 11 p.m. Garcia was struck by a vehicle driven by Lisa Ann Barber, 19, of San Clemente just north or Beach Road, the spokesman said. Miss Barber was taken to San Cle mente General Hospital where she was treated for minor injuries and then released, the spokesman said. BB cycle officer r.e mains serious Huntington Beach police motorcycle officer Jerry Fuhrman, 39, r emained in serious condition t oday at Fountain Valley Community Hospita l with injuries he received on duty last Thursday in a traffic collislon. Lisa Ann Ve lk , 21. o f Anaheim, who drove the auto that collided with Fuhrman's motorcycle, was arrested on suspicion of felony drunk driving and possession of a dangerous substance (amphetamines>. ORA~COAST D1ily Piiat c1 .. .,.....e.. ..... 11~ .................... Mt-4111 I •• carrteJhll ltft arm in a allna. R111an and Brady cut lht red, white and blue ribbon formally dedJcatlna lhe prets area. Rea1a.n took the opportunity to announct that be wUI hola a preaa conference at 11 a .m . PST Tuesday. The three-month renoutton coat Sl&e,000. The refurblahlog of the preu area Included atructuraJ relnrorcement of the roof that government enr.neers said was in danger of col apeina. The area, which once housed an indoor swiinmin1 pool, also received a 1eneral facelift, with new blue carpetln1. white wallpaper, new U1htlng and a bank of built-in chairs In the briefinJ loom. From Page Al POLICE • • • Fioalty the kidnapper showed up, asked for the ransom money and, as police now tell It, wu wrestled to the ground by Chief Glavas himself. ''I was already thinking abbut an a wards banquet for the police," Lusk says, "but the kidnap incident did it." Lusk, with encouragement from Glavas, later helped put together the 10-4 Club, a group of businessmen who meet annually with the police chief to discuss police problems. "Police take a lot of abuse just because of the job they're in," Lusk says. "I'm not sayinc they never maJte mistakes but I don't think they get the credit they deserve either. "When I 'm in a critical situation In my work, that usually means I have to make a quick decl.sion in half a minute ·or even ball an hour. But for the police it us ually means a miltsecond. I stand in 'awe of that." Ironically, this wilJ be the first year that the police department is not handing out any awards. There are no medal of valor award winners and there are no merit award winners. But Lusk says that's OK. He. says the entire department will be honored. AJong with Police Chief Charles Gross. Lusk came up with the idea that this year the police department should hold an open house and invite eilizens in for a visit. "So many people," Lusk says, "just think policemen give out tickets or spend all day looking f9r robbers. There's much more than that, of course." The open house is scheduled Nov. 12starting at 11 a.m. Se rvice set for coach Bucciarelli Memorial ser vices wlll be held Tuesday at Riddle Field in Laguna Beach for longtime softball and Little League coach Tom Bucciarelli, who died ol a . gunshot wound Friday niJ(bt. LagW\a Beach police found the 29-year-old coach's body inside his Cypress Street home shortJy before 11 p.m. Friday. A police spokesman said the s hooting might have been accidental. A foreian-made .38 caliber revolver was found ln the home. An investigation lnlo the shooting is under way. friends or the coach are organizing Tuesday's memorial ser vices, which will be held on the baseball field beginning at s p.m. ..,...,.. President and Mrs. R«Jgan welcome presidential preas aecretary Jomea Brady .back to lhe White HOUie by cuttmg a ribbon at hts re/urbiahed quarten. Carter gets kudos on hostage debate ! ., l STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP> -Opinion molders at the White House launched a multl·pronged attack during t he 444-day Iranian hostage crisis that shut down public debate and focused national anger , a communications researcher says. The Carter administration's eCforts were the most important factor in shaping public opinion during the crlsls, upstaging the news media and the Iranians' a ctio n s , acco rd i ng to Pennsylvania State University professor Gerard A. Hauser. Hauser, an associate professor of speech communication, is scheduled to deliver a paper on the s ubject at the Speech Communication Association's annual meeting Nov. 15 in Anaheim. ·'The picture o f Carter stumbling from crisis to crisis '!' . . . is not quite a ccurate," said Hauser. "lo fact, the Carter administration deserves blgb ·I marks for its rhetorical skills." l In the beginning , the J administration attempted to '• cast the hostage situation as a I national emergency of the I utmost importance, urging other ~ nations to take a stand , cancelling Carter's meetings al ·l home and abroad and repeatedly linking the Issue with J national honor. i Then Carter l inked the I h o!ttages to other issues, ' particularly national unity and I ene rgy independence, Hauser said. Moreover, the adminlstr1tion ( quickly established that some '~.·. subjects related to the hostages were not fit for public :i discussion. the professor said. . I Hussein due to end·:: ··-s. California visit .• ·, LOS ANGELES <AP> -After meeting everyone from former President Gerald Ford t o Mickey Mouse . King Hussein or Jordan and his American·born wife, Queen Noor, were lo end their Southern California visit today. · Th·e royal couple were scheduled to fly fr om Los Angeles to Hous ton, where Hussein will receive a medical checkup and watch test fuings or Hawk anti-aircraft missiles al Fort Bliss , T e xas , State Department spokeswoman GaibJ Bothe said. FolJowing three days In the compan)' of government and business leaders and Hollywood stars, Hussein and Queen Noor spent Sunday like many other Southern California tourists: they took their oldest son. 1 \o!t-year-old Prince Hamzah, to Disneyland. Dressed casually, the king, .s. :: and queen, 30, were greeted by · Minnie and Mickey Mouse at : Disneyland City Ha ll. · : As the tune ··1t's a SmaU.: Wo rld," playe d , Micke)t•: gallantly stepped up to the,:: queen and kissed her band;· il prompting a huge smile. .• !' They signed the guest re1isteP1 1 • -be in Arabic, sbe in English -: :• and then watched the dallY, : Disneyland parade. -; Disney characters like Plu\o.. ! Goofy, Donald Duck, and Snow•; White and the Seven Dwarfs , entertained little Hamzah, who 1 was given to sporadic bursts o6 . • tears as his father attempted to• : hoist bim on his shoulders for a · ; better view. · c The royal couple walked dow1( : Ma i n Street U.S .A. toward·: various park attractions aa : c urious tourists snapped : pictures. At one point. HusseiJi .. had his picture taken with a : : Jordanian student in the crowd .. I Hussein and bis wife ss>eni ! four hours touring the park," i escorted by 1981 Disneyland } Ambassador Willie Van de(· i Zwaag. After their first stop a':I "America the Beautiful," a sort: of m·ovie-in-the-round whtcb· takes viewers on an aerial tow: J of the Unlted States, the tout k was spontaneous, aaid ~ spokeswoman Sydne Huwatdi. · · •• t .. ~ Victim hit ···;,I in NB holdup .:; A robber who punched c· i manager for the Wberehoua&.l record shop in downtown c.o.tf' Mesa in front ol the Wella P'ars6 . Bank, at .SOE. 17th St., etcaped t ••ltb a b out U , UO, poll cf , reported Saturday. -· Loni Anderson and Gary Sandy of the TV senes Cincinnati" enter a Beverly Hills night dub for a reception honoring King Hussein of Jordan over the weekend. Strange bedfellows make politicians Businessman John GoJack says he will run against his ex·wife, Mary Gojack, in the Democratic primary for Nevada 's n o rth e rn congressional seat. "I know people will say I'm running just to destroy her. but I cou1dn 't care less a bout her," said the 65· year-old co-owner of the Silver Spur Casino in Reno. " ... I'm not going to bring up our personal life." Mrs . Gojack said her ex-husband's decision would not affect her plans, adding, "I have a public record and . the voters will have the Cinal say." . The two divorced in 1979 after 10 years of marriage. Former President Richard Nixon and his for mer Attorney Gener a l John Mitchell were table m ates at a Wes t c hes t e r CN.Y.) Country Club party to toast the marriage of two long-time friends . Nixon, Mitchell and about 150 other guests ~thered al the black-tie affatr to mark the 25th wedding anniversary of Robert Reary Abplanalp and his wile, JMepbine. Abplanalp, the millionaire head of the Precision Valve Corporation of Yonker$, was a staunch s upporter of Nixon during the Watergate scandal. For a mere $290,000, you can take pos~ession of a palatial Buena Vista, Ca. e.stat~ Ol)Ce OCCUj)ied by. Bllly Car&er, brother of former President Jimmy Carter and Hlf·ll)'l.cl kine ol t.be lood old Mya. Tht hcMlle and eo acrea ot •round• ar• worth over '500,000, accordiq to a real eatate ad aubmltied to the Columbua Enqulr.,, But Can. aad hil wlle, SybU, wlll let lt IO f« much leu to mak• a 1peedy move to Haleyvllle, Al•.:.1 the ad 1ay1. Lut June, .,;arter took a Job u publlc relations representative for Tidwell lnduatrlea, a Haleyvtlle company that m~es mobile homes. ••Ma WUUama at.ar of the ABC television ahow "Mork and Mindy,'' landed in Vermont and dell1bted the nativet with u simple a feat as eating a turkey aandwlcJl washed down by a cold beet. "He'a Juat like be 1a on the televlaion ahow," a aid LHra MacP.l"Mll, a waitreaa who served the actor bis lunch shortly alter he checked into the Tavern Motor Inn in Montpelier. "He was courteous to everybody and he even did a Mr. Rogers impersonation." Alfred a·ruab Ford, the great-ueat-grandaon of pioneer American automobile maker Beary Ford. says be has assumed the name Ambarlllt Daa as part or his plan to renounce the world and immerse himself in the Hare Krishna movement in India. Ford, the nephew or Beary Ford II, the retired bead of Ford Motor Co., said he joined the Krishna movement in 1974 because be found capitalism and communism "meaningless." Ambarish ls the name of an ancient Hindu king who, according to mythology, gave up his kingdom and wealth to serve Krishna. Marion Barry, the major of Was hington , paid $350 to ha ve lunch at the White House with one of President Reagan's top three advisers. Barry, a Democrat who says his relations with the Republican administration have been quite good, won the lunch and a tour ·of the private offices in the White House west wi ng at a fund-raisin& auction for the Horace Mann School. The offering was a donation of Mr. and Mrs. Michael K. Deaver, whose 6-year-old son is a pupil at the public elementary school. in northwest Washington. As deputy chi~f of siaff, DFaver is one of Reag•n·s c1osest aides. Skies partly cloudy A""'-u • Amar II lo JI 27 .JI A .... vllle .. • Coaatal Atlama n u ll•ltlmon ., • llrmlneflm n " Patchy 109 near Ill• coaal, =••d• Q " 61 • otllerwlM partly cloudy lhrou9'1 Botton St 4l Ta.etday. Caastal low». tonltM. 1S llrownsvtle " ., ....,. TIOMMy. waw 60. Inland -ss •""•'° SS ,. l•..,..,7lhl!llllT~. Cllarlstn SC .. Sol , l!IM....,.., 119111 verlaale wlncts Cllartaton WV u • ftleM ..... ,,,.,,.,,. ._. ......... .. t1 IOUlh•HI to .... 1 lo t2 knots ~::::: .. J3 Ta.etday • ...._ wftll I .. 2 loot WIM w-. ~ 1'#941 I to 3 Clnc!MaCI .. .. '.19 fMt. PMttoy ..._ lot rnalflly o...,. Clelire4and 6J •I Ille ._,.., -. Md In all araas ColllmM " ... ... 101111"1. OtharwlM fair tllrougll g::;Ft Wiii .. .. 1.01 SI JI Twtday. Ota:;.._ so 21 Detroit 61 » O\llulll 0 " U.S. 1ummary 1!1 Peto 71 .. 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No drnletkln call1,.,.._., Tell ua what'• on your mind. a Sol •• n II JS u 1J • .. .. IS . ' --- Or•nge Coaat DAIL V PILOT/Monday, No~•mbef 9, 1981 PELLET-PROOF -Photo at left shows conventional plastic eyeglass lens. worn by mannequin, shattering under impact of air gun pellet traveling at 255 mph. At right. s imilar pellet bounces off hard-coated APW.,...... polycarbonate lens. leaving only a nick. Lenses are designed for sports use and for those with active lifestyles. according to manufacturer Gente,x Corp .. of Dudley. Mass. Aces relive Great JJ(ar World War I fliers remember Spads, Sopwith Camels : NEW YORK CAP> -The old flier put on his hearing aid and explained how it was to go to into the Great War with only 90 hours of flight training -and end up shooting down 13 of the Kaiser's aircraft. George Vaughn, 84, downed more aircraft -12 planes and one balloon -in World War I than any other living American. He arrived at Kennedy Airport on Friday along with eight other aces and the last surviving member of the famed Lafayette Escadrille. After getting reacquainted at a r eception. the old fliers boarded a jetliner headed for Paris and an Armistice Day reunion with 31 other former aviators .. both friend and foe, lo a tribute led by the president of France, Francois-Mitterrand. Joining Vaughn were Douglas Campbell, 85, of Cos Cobb, Conn., the firs t American serviceman to down five planes and win the title of ace, and Carl Dola n of Honolulu, at 85 the last s uJ'vlving m e mber of lhe Lafayette Escadrill.e . The Escadrille was a group of American volunteers who flew with the Allies before the United StatP11 entered the war. •'I was in college and said to my buddies, 'Let's go over and save France,' " Dolan said with a laugh. He is not an ace, since six or his eight dogfight v1ctor1es were unofficial. T hey were also joined by Robert Todd, 84. of San Diego, who destroyed fi ve German planes before he was shot down and captured in 1918. The men described history's fi r s t g r eat ai r battles as personal duels in which men we re more importan t than ''You laugh about it. You slap him on the back, buy him a drink and laugh about "t '' i . machines and pilots got close enough to see the color of their foes' scarves. They discussed the relative merits of Sopwith Camels, Spads a nd Nleuports a nd r ecalled comrades killed weeks before the armlSlace on'Nov • ..11 , 1918. And they showed their age: Ernest Hoy, 86. of Toccoa, Ga., checked out of a hospital and a rr ived in a wheelchair. Kenneth Porter, 84, of Queens, who d o wned f ive enemy aircraft, limped a bit. · But "they're sur vivors," said retired Ai r Force Col. Rick Glaseb r ook, a m il itar y ' his torian. ··som ething keeps them going ... In World War I. the rtiers said, the pilot's job was simpler vet more difficult than today. "'Then, aJI you had to do was fly the plane a nd shoot the guns." said VauJ(hn. "Now," he added, "everything is written down , prescribed and sell led beforehand. I don't meau today's pilots aren't great. but now it's all in the technology ... Vaughn got has first kill in June 1981. ··1 didn't see the fellow <the German pilot) and he shot my tail full of holes before I knew he was there. He thought he'd gollen me and flew away. But I followed him and got him." Campbell shot down the first German plane he ever saw on his first battle Clighl -which lasted 4 112 minutes from takeoff to landing, and came after he had completed only 50 hours of Cligbt traarung. They said they were looking forward to meeting German pilots with whom they might have fought. But what does one s ay to a man who was trying to shoot you down 63 years ago? 1' You laugh about at," said Vaughn. "You slap him on the back, buy him a drink and laugh about it." Highway fund picture 'bright' LOS ANGELES CAP) -Stale and federal programs a r e ·painting a "fairly bright" future for California's highways, but the story is different for mass transportation, a state official said. In testimony lo the Senate Transportation Committee, Lee Oeler said California is facin~ a pot.enlial transit fundln( short· fall of more than $1.3 billion over the next five years, ln part because of cutbacks sought by the Reagan administration. "While the highway picture for California looks fairly briJthl overall, both in terms of state and federal funding, the transit pi cture is not bright at all," said Deter, who heads the state Department of Transportation's Division of Mass Transit. He said the state will need to incr ease its s hare of transit · fundln& by at least $830 million over the next five years to meet projected needs. He said proposed federal funding reductions threaten cons truction of a light·r ail transit system in Sacramento and a variety of transit projects in San Francisco, as well as other transit progr ams. But funding for highways, on the other hand. aooear11 tn hP "" the wa up, Oeler said. "In the highway area. the trend at both the federal and stale level appears to be toward stable and even increasing funding," h e said . "Al the federal level, the Reagan adm inis tration i!f' proposing some increases and decreases . . . but an total the funding level is proposed to b e r aised somewhat. "If the Reagan highway proposals a r e e n acted by Congress. California will gain a s ubs tantial a m ount of new federa l monies for state highways -on the order or $700 million over the next five years.'' &om for running, court SfOT"ts or <VJC'lJ1 just s~tatin~, wa. ~ thi ''nika" eho:i rightfbr~. chco~ f\-om ~ gra.at styl<ie- oCJZ.Onia , cortcz.z, bt»in canvoe or l<l.8.thz.r, az.nt<zr oou.rt, 'Wimblcz.to.n or1hz m~tlonali5t . • ~ I A4 H/F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Mondav, November 9, 1981 rnffiU~ffJ~ ' Burma clnef quits, retains po.w:er BANGKOK, Thailand <AP> - Gen . Ne Wln, Burma '• undl•J)Uted muter for lt ytara, retired u chief or state today but la expected to continue makln1 the major deci1lon1. Parliament elected U San Yu, a retired army general, to succeed him. The 63·year-old Sao Yu, a loyal follower of Ne Win , previously held the No. 2 apot ln the state hierarchy as secretary of the Council of State. He wu elected president during ~ay'a first session of a newly-elected · Parliament. U Aye Ko, former vice chief ol the army and newly elected secretary.general of the ruling party, was elected secretary of the Council of State, the No. 2 slot in the state hierarchy. U M1lung Maung Kha was re-elected chairman of the council of ministers. the prime minister's post. Ne Win, 70, bas cited poor health, old age and the desire to see an orderly transition of power for bis resignation. But he will retain the chairmanship of the ruling Burma Socialist Program Par,ty, which b e created not long after sei11.ng power in a swill bloodless coup in March 1982. Observers in Rangoon, the Burmese capital, believe it is unlikely that Ne Win -whose name means "brilliant as the sun " -will defer to anybody else on major decisions until he becomes .disabled or dies. Thaung Kyi, 58, who bad been favored to become secretary of the State Council when the new government was elected, died of STEPS DOWN Gen. Ne Win a heart attack Sunday. He had been general secretary of the Socialist Program Party. Although there have been signs or change in recent years, largely spurred by sizable doses of foreign economic aid, Ne Win's immediate successor is expected to cling to the basic tenets of the leader's "Burmese way to socia li sm," a co mbination of Buddhist metaphysics , soci alist eco n omics and military-dominated one· party rule. But the "Burmese way," NEW CHIEF U San Yu instituted alter the 1962 power seizure. baa had disastrous results. The resource-rich economy was natiooallzed, down to slalll in the villages, with little or no compensation paid. Once one of the world 's greatest rice ex p or t ers. pr o ducti on plummeted below World War II levels. Twenty-two government corporations which tried to ND tbe economy soon became known for corruption and inefficiency and spawned "State Tradlng Corporation No. 23," a popular eupheml1m for 1 countrywide black market that stlll tbrivee. Ne WlD had the m1kin1• ot a popular ltader, but power transformed him. Fearing uaualnatJon -there were aeveral attempu -be rarely appeared ln publlc1 traveled under heavy 1uard ana never 1ave a news conference. He remalnl a recluse, 1~1 much ol bis time in a btaVUy 1uarded lakeside villa on the edge of Rao1oon. Once known u a playboy· and gambler, he banned 1amb11n11 closed night clubs and preached 11trlct, traditional morality. Tbil, however, did not stop blm from enjoying bone races during his many trios abroad . Periodic riota in the country have been put down by force and thousands of ·dlaaenten jailed. ·Althou1b moat were later released, there have been persistent charges of human rights violations. Amnesty lnternational's latest report on Burma said that durin1 1980 lt received "reports of the Imprisonment and torture of b oth actual and alleged members of the opposition." Io recent years, Ne Win has s ho wn signs of mellowing personally and politically. He offered amnesty to Insurgent groups and old enemies, handed out awards and cash payments and took mo r e interest in Buddhis m . This has been variously interpre t ed as aton e ment for p ast deeds motivated by religion, a desire for untroubled final years and a concern for his place in history. AP...._.. CONTROVERSY ARISES -Adolf Hitler poses with mistress Eva Braun in undated file photo. New dental evidence strongly suggests the woman found next to Hitler in his Berlin Bunker was not Braun. a British medical journal reports. The evidence was uncovered bv a research team led by Reider F. Sognnaes. professor of oral biologv and anatomy at UCLA. · 160,000 end strike in Poland province Soviets use sCare tactic against Libya WARSAW, Poland CAP> -A draft agreement will be signed today to end a 19-day·wildcat strike by 160,000 workers in Zielona Gora province, the most extensive regional walkout in P oland since Solidarity was founded 14 months ago, a union spokesman said. ended early today. T he Zielona Gora dispute began Oct. 22 with demands by local Solidarity orficials for the removal of three state far m m anagers for what the union called incompetency. PHILADELPHIA CAP) - Soviet offi cials are telling Libyan leader Col. Moammar Kh adafy -a joint U.S.· Egyptian military exercise this month is a dress rehearsal fo r an "armed invasion of Libya," The Bulletin reports. In a copyright story Sunday, the newspaper said it obtained secret Defense Intelligence Agency documents that discuss a Soviet attempt to convince Khadafy to allow establishment of Soviet naval and air facilities. The Bulletin said Moscow is pointing to the Bright Star exercises -scheduled to involve 6,000 U.S. military personnel in maneuvers in Egypt, the Sudan, Somali a "a nd Om a n -to c.onvi n ce Khadafy bi s dlctat.orship is in Jeopardy. The newspaper said the documents were "based on information received by the U.S. governm ent from foreign mtelligence sources.•· Searchers find Mexican airliner ACAPULCO, Mexico <AP> - Helicopter searchers found today an Aeromex.ico plane with 18 people aboard t hat disappeared after the pilot radioed he was returning to the Acapulco airport Sunday night because of an emergency. A spokesman for the airline said the pilot. Jorge Santiago Mendez, radioed at 10:4S p.m. Sunday·that the hour-long light to G uadalaj ara was being aborted. It was not disclosed what the emergency was. After the pilot's message, contact with the tower at Acapulco was lost , the spokes man added. New government seated in Belgium BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP> - Belgium emerged today from its third national election in rive years with a Parliament divided a mong 12 parties and another weak coalition government in prospect after a lengthy period of maneuvering. In n early complete returns from t he voting Sunday. the centrist Christian·Democrats who led the last government loet heavily in both Dutch·speaklng Flanders in the north and French-speaking WaJlonia in the south, while the conservative Liberals,. the nationlis t Volsunie and the Socialists made gains. Court to stuily information issue WASHING TON (AP> -The Supreme Court agreed today to decide whether the Washington Post should get information the State Department says may jeopardize, if published, the safety ol lwo men Uvtn1 ln Iran. At iaaue is an inte.rpretat.ioo of an exemption carved out ol the Freedom or Information Act, a 1966 law aimed at curtallln1 government secrecy. One Siame1e tuin die•; other 'fair,' BUJlUNGTON, N.C. <AP> - A •-moatb-old 11rl aeparattd from her Siamese twin tbe day an... tbeJ .. ,. born died durtas th• wenead, but btr 1i1wr .... aiDld .. fair coadlUoa llt • Chapel Hill hospital, officials said. ~ Deanna Linda Simpson died early Saturday of what doctors suspect was a liver failure. according to North Carolina Memorial Hospital spokesman Dick Broom. Egyptians urged to aid themselves C AIRO , E gypt <AP > - President Hosni Mubarak, seeking to bre ak a costly tradition or public dependence on government subsidies, called o n Egyptians to a sse rt themselves and stop relying on what the government can do for them. In bis fi rst domestic policy speech to Parliament Sunday, Mubarak appeared to echo the late President Kennedy's inaugural call on Americans to ask not what their country could do for them, but what they could do for their country. Begin stands firm on Saudi plan JERUSALEM CAP) -Prime Minister Menachem Begln said today Israel bas made "the utmost concessions" for peace and accused the European Common Market of pressuring the Jewish state to accept the Saudi peace plan. Describing the plan proposed by Crown Prince P'abd u the "Saudi liquidation proeram," Begin told reporter• Israel bas give n in on some areas and "beyond this we can't make any concessions." Three more banks lower prime r':'te NEW YORK <AP> -Three more m~ bankl lowered their prime lendtn1 rate. tgc:tay by on•·haU ol a percentaie point Lo 17 percent. Cbaae Manhattan Bank of New York, th• a1tlon'1 Ullrd·laraeet commtrclll bank, No. 5 llorfa Guanaty Trull Co. ol New Yon ud Pfo. l• llarlne llldland Baak of Buffalo, N. Y ., Jn•lcbed lb• reduction iniUated IHt Tbunda1 bJ No. • Cbemical Bull of New York. I There was no immediate comment from Was hington officials. According to the documents, ther e are 1,300 Soviet troops and 700 Eastern European military per sonnel iq Li bya , the newspaper said. Moscow is trying to pressure Khadafy to "provide the Soviets with previously denied use of a naval port facility on the Libyan coast and air bases in the r e m ote Libyan desert." FOR THE BIRDS -Pigeon roosts atop pl astic owl in Seattle"s Westlake Mall. ignorant of fact the statue is designe d to discourage winged municipal pests. Army returns to use of bayonet FORT BENNING, Ga. (AP) -Recognizing tbe llmita of technology lo warf ar~. the Army bas resumed tratnin1 infantrymen in one of the m01t primitive means of killing t.be enemy -the bayonet attack. S tarting Friday and continuing for the next 12 months, about 3,000 infantry recruit.a at Fort Bennln1 will fet nine hours of lnatrucUon ln the ancient form bf f ace·to-face combat. "When it boila down to it, tbe only penoo who ca.n take and hold 1round la tbe Infantry aoldler," 1aid llaj. Finley D. Stafford Jr., who htada tbe eeetton ol the Infantry Sebool wbere tra1Dlq prosrams ae written. "No matter bow far llOD• tM techftaloo IN, bt'I ' ot to ltaJ tblre ID tlaat foUale. bat'1 wbat Ulil baJGMt 11 Ill ....... Although Khadafy has been reluctant to agree to a treaty with the Soviets, the documents say •·he may be ready to yield under ste pped-up pressures from the U.S.S.R. in addition to an increase in activity of U.S. military f o rces in th e Mediterranean area." The Bright Star exer cises were planned during the administration of the late Egyptian· President Anwar Sadat. The tlocWQenta say plans for the operation began earlier tbia year after Sadat suggested a possible Egyptian Invasion of Libya to counter Khadafy's increased power in the region, the newspaper said. , The aqcord would end •the penultimate strike in a wa..Je of wildcat walkouts that swept the couotcyfast month, idling more than 2 ,000 and raising the threat a government martial law de~ree to end the crippling job ~ctlons . The Solidarity leadelflhip has appealed for an end tolthe strikes. Mi11tan Podsada, Soli<larity's spoil aman In the province soutli est or Warsaw, told The Associated Press that a draft agreement meeting the local union chapter's demands was hammered out in a "gruelling," all·night bargaining session that P odsada said the accord includes the removal of the farm managers, reinstatement of a dismissed Solidarity leader at the stale farm in the village where the protest began, guarantees of no reprisals against strikers and strike pay equal to normal vacation pay. As the dispute cont inued. sy mpathy s trik es s pread throughou t the heavily agricultura l provjn ce on Poland's western border with East Germany. eventually idling 160,000 workers in numerous jobs. On Saturday, government negotiators declared fu rther talks would be futile. Pregnant woman harassed? False arrest claimed ih prostitution crackdown CHICAGO (AP) -A pregnant woman says she spent 15 hours behind bars and was robbed or $110 after being falsely arrested in a poHce crackdown on prostitution. The woman, ldentifled only as Ellen, 21, said she was on her way to the grocery store when she was arrested Friday night, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. She was among 1S4 people picked up by police over tbe weekend in a crackdown on North Side vice operations. Ellen, who is five months pregnant, was charged with soliciting ror prostitution and was released Saturday on a personal recognizance bond after a check of .her fingerprints by police revealed she had no prior arrest record. EJlen said the incident began when a man who turned out to be an undercover policeman honked and yeUed at her from an unmarked car as she walked down the street. '·He kept pestering me and said, 'Come on in (to the car>. Why won't you come in?' "she said. She said sh~ Ignored the man. but he kept following her. "I finally tol~ him to get lost." she said. SoQn afterwards, a second car pwled up with three officers who ordered her into the back seat, she said. She said police refused to look at her Identification and ignored her when she said she lived in the area and was going to the grocery store. They took her to a police station where she was charged. Her 20.year ·old husband, identified only as Vincent, learned or his wife's arrest about 10 p.m. Friday from a neighbor and went to the station According to the Chi cago Sun-Times, police threatened to arrest Vin cent , w h o was protesting angrily in the staUon. After he was told his wife would be in the lockup for at least 19 hours, Vincent said he gave his wife $110 to post bond a nd for taxi fare before he lert for home That money was taken by two other women who cornered her in the lockup, Ellen said. Police said one of the women was later charged with the theft. Ellen was not released until her husband called a local newspaper and a reporter and photographer showed up at the police station, the Sun· Times reported. Lt . Marvin Dit kowsky defended the police officers· actions and said, ··we d id everything by the book." ----DESKS INC.---- SUPER SAVINGS TIME Agreatbuyl 30''x60". 4drawers Include 2 flit drl....,Stop In today!Sn this value for yourN1f. This contemporary design dak features fully suspended drawers an<( comes In your choice of oak or walnut finishes 30''x60x42'' return. , '21911 Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Monday, November 8, 1881 H/F Trapped div body re~ove PALOS VERDES ESTATES •• <AP> -Tbe body of Job.D Steven Fulcher. 21, ot El Se•undo· wbo became entrapped ln a bed ot aeaweed while dlvln1 for loblter, wu retrieved after an hour'• search by Uae U.S. Coast Guard and other ... rcben. i:. PoUce spokesman Bobble McCurdy said Fulcher and b.La brother-h>·l•w were divtn• Sunday otf Palol Verd• Paint when Fulcher becatne trapped ln about 25 feiet ol water. Ma. ¥ cCurdy said f'ulcber panicked and died despite the efforts of his brother·ln·law to reecue blm. Reclusive trio die in SF lwtel •j: (:! i;~ SAN FRANCJSCO (AP> A :~ Two women and a man who died ;:: in an apparent murder-suicide -~ at a posh hotel were described by a family friend as a reclusive trio "afraid of everyone but themselves." Police on Sunday speculated that the PQSsible terminal illness of Harriette Wolffers, 68, mieht have been what caused her, her son, David Nestor Wolffers, 39, and Audrey A. Whittington, 58, a New Zealander who lived with them, to join in a suicide pact. Joseph DiLeonardo. the ·! family lawyer and a personal friend, said that after Mrs. Wolffers' husband, Jules, died '3\.'.t years ago, "It was like they ~--banded together . . . and were, : · very suspicious of society in general." The three were found dead Saturday in their $150-a-day room at the elegant · · Clift Hotel in the city's glittering theater district. •1• Medfly spraying resumed in north :· r•; L 0 S G A T 0 S ( A P ) -. Helicopters resumed spr;aying areas of Alameda County on war aaalnlt tbe trwt ny. u scbeduleCI for ln Santa Clar.a Solon ay~ racism being-eNirulled SACft Jl)NTO <AP) - AIHmbly aker Willie Brown say• Pr ldent Reagan ls reklndlt racism with bis econamta liciea. Browd: e flrat black to bold the pow speakership, held a news ference before addrea~ the third annual conveb on of the Black Americ Political Association of Califo a on Sawrday. "The agan administration is clear eading along the lines of dlsm g every program of the Jut entury that has bffn geared helping black people." man roped puties · LO ANGELES (AP ) Sherif deputies, employing an alter ive to more harmful meth of capturing people under e influence of the drug PCP. ew a rope net over a nude-an who was blocking the patb a fire truck. . . De ties threw the net over Lero Cornelius Smith. 34, of Los ngeles, Sunday after a dep spotted him blocking the tru on Normandie Avenue, sai puty Pat Sol. 0 uties allegedly recovered an disclosed quantity of PCP in ith's car. He was booked int the County.USC Medical C ter jail ward ror in stigation or possession of p for sale. ,:~ Belief? N ~t ~· in this gane .~ ......... HONORED Elizabeth Taylor. \'eteran movie actress who has embarked on a stage career in "The Little Foxes.·· was h<?nored in Los Angeles Sunday night by the lntem at1onal Fllm Exposition at the Music Center for he r contnbut1ons to ··the art form of the cenlur.' ... Agents seize swordfish SAN DIEGO CAPl -Stale agents have s eized 195 • broad-billed s wordfish worth $90,000 and $48 ,000 in nets aboard six boats which allegedly caught the fish illegally. The boats were chased down by agents or the California Department of Fish and Game. A D FG spokesman said the "drift gill nets" were suspended on buoys to drift with the tide a ft er the season for gill netting of 5wordftsh ended Saturday. ·• L 0 S A N G E L ES (l P > -A who -cares ·how -you . get-to-t ·finish · Ii ne marathon? A siphon-your-own-g reeway relay race? A decathlon of housew ? Yes, folks, they're all part of the 1984 Nihilist ympics. Cal us. "It will be sort of an alt naUve to the Olympics in 1984," said Ellsh hapiro, 28, a nihilism activist who has helped rganlze nihilist art festivals. · Nihilism is defined as the ef that there Is no meaning or purpose m existe . ''l don't believe In anyt n1." explained Shapiro. "Not religion. Not po s . Not any value system. Or any rules and instil ons. Beliefs limit you. Nothing is so absolute at it is right or •1 wrong." The offbeat competition is ing organized by Shapiro, dancer Tobi Redlic and performance artist Molly Cleator in the opes of bringing :• nihilists together. lo, ~·ve got the money to do the things you need to do ... aOO an the things you've been dreaming aboot Every day Commercial Credit helps peopJe with persona) aJXI homeowner loans ... small and large. They've been counting on us for more than 65 years. You can too. We'll fmd a way to help. Call us today. ~~~::::~~=~~~~~:.~=~N ~ COST A MESA • 370 E. 17th Street • 645.8700 HUNTINGTON BEACH • 16075 Colden West St.• 847-7771 MISSION VIEJO •14395 Alicia Parkway. Suite 2E • 770.2651 Alicia Town Plaza SANTA ANA • 1224 East 17th Street • 547·5871 ~-Who gets ;:: of divorc US t O d )' 1------c:..4_11_u_••_•_• ... _•_-_._,._ •• _u._b•_• _'•_£_"•-'b_r._a._"'°_"_"_' ._,_c,_ •• _,_11_ .... ________ _ s' dog? FRESNO (AP> -The pinozas are disputing 1 : only one thing in their di rce settlement -dog .. cus~ody. • I· Lorreen and Albert pinoza of Fresno are dissolving their marria after 22 years. They reached a property seUl ent amicably. but both want their dog, Nellie. A befuddled Superi Court Judge Joh11 Fitch decided not to decide, d banded the case to the Society for the Preve on of Cruelty to Animals for review. Joint cus y is considered a likely recommendation. Confronted with t challenge to her custody. Mrs. Espinoza said. his is a surprise to me. I' had no idea my husb wanted her. "I want full cust y, control and care. I would gladly give Albert r' ts of visitation." she said. · But Espinoza be ves he can provide a better home life. "I have a big kyard. My wife doesn't," he said. "l will appe many joint custody order." MeanwbUe, Ne e, a poddle-sh•HY dog mix, was oblivious to tll leaal battle swirling around her black-and-whi ur. Tbe six-year-old mon1rel Is content to 1 a aoccer ball around Mrs. Espinoza's yard. If vou haven't mlleeO a truly ex different atyl" of beautiful. i. HniaaM to chooM from. ..................... l.MAGNIN , FAl:t CLEARANCE 1/3 TO 1/2 OFF Orlgl"81 Price• Live Well For Lesa· The I. Magnin quality you buy et regular ..prices, you also buy on sale. Tt.t'• whet mak• an I. M1gnin ule different. •Ml·ANNUAL: SHOii SALi 1/3 OFP LOS ANGELES <AP> - Hletorlan-phlloeopher Will Durant, who spent a lifetime wrlLin1 "The Story of ClvlUntlon," bu died at the .,e of M, apparently unaware that hls wife and collaborator1 Ariel, • preceded him in death oy two weeks. Durant died Saturday of a heart attack at Cedara-Sinal MedJcal Center, where he bad been holpttallzed since Oct. 3. Mrs. Durant, 83, died Oct. 25 at their home rollowin1 a long lllneaa. "The story or Civilization," in 11 volumes, wa.a bailed by some critics aa the ·moat lmpreasive history produced in the 20th century; the 10th volume, ·•Rousseau and the Revolution," won a Pulitzer prize for general non-fiction in 1968. Durant started the two mlUion-word history alone, but by the seventh volume the evid,nce of his wire 's collaboration was so great that her name was added to succeeding volumes. She was born Ida Kaufman, but Durant called her Ariel arter the Imp in Shakespeare's ''The Tempest." "I bad reached Volume 7 before I realized that Mrs. Durant was a true collaborator and not alone a researcher and assistant," he once said. "Her name has appeared with · mine on the remainder of the series." Generally. the Duran ts wrote separately on the same subject, then compared and rewrote ror a final version. Mrs. Durant read more than 5,000 books, making notations for her husband. They finished their final work, "A Dual Biography," in um, and Durant had said frequently in r ecent years that he was -ready to die. "Somebody has to get out of the way to make place for new vitality," he said when he was 94. ..So I have a great respect for death. I shall run into It very soon. But it doesn't frighten me at all. I've wondered why the Reaper has waited so long to get hold of me." SUCCUMBS Will Durant He was born Nov. 5, 1885, in North Adams Mass .. one or six c:ti_lldren ·of French-Canadian immigrants. He decided as a young man to study for the priesthood, but be broke with the Catholi c Church -and his family -before making his vows. It was in New York, where he went to teach and continue his studies. that he met Mrs. Durant. He was s ubs titute teaching at a small progressive school. They were married Oct. 31. 1913. He was in his 205. a penniless educator and writer of articles, whe n he began gathering material for his masterwork. He had conceived of "The Story or Civilization" as he lay ill with dysentery in Damacus, Syria. in 1912. He did not write his first book until the age or 40. That book, "The Story of Philosophy ... was an immense s uccess. selling millions of copies and. epabling him to devote the rest orhis life to historv. Always in unquestio nable good taste-and allowing for the widest selection of colorful accessories-the navy blazer is the basis of every leisure wardrobe. Our 3-button model is tailored by our craftsmen of all-worsted and features patch pockets and Golden Fleece embossed buttons. $260 UTMUSHIO 1911 ~&JHJ!kp ~£0ii·_~ J\amtshtng9 for llm. Womtn :~ 8ogs 530 WBST TrH STRBBT, LOS ANGBLBS. ~IF. ~ FASHION ISLAND. NBWPORT BSA ~., 1 NY E COMPOSITE TRAN ACTION OUOlAt1ote•O•c1.11oe l•AOHO• '"' .... YO•llC -~··"'· ~c•"e. •••• "'"OH, DlrtOtf .... 0 Cll•cullltATl UOClr laCMAM•H.t .. •lf'O•flOIY TMI MAtO A.MDt .. UllllT ··- •• Index t:und heats the pros Wbo comlltently outperfortna the proles•lonalt ln the atoek market, mana,_. of the natkle'I b1Uetl lnv .. tmmt accounts? Wbat lDv..tor'• ~ormuce wu up a tull 125 perffDt for the decacM &broush ~ u mU1ured by Staadard II Poor'• lDdex of 500 atoeu, compared with• perCfftt to W1 percent aalns for tb• Dt'Oftu1oaally man•red pemioo accounU? What method of invettlna chalked up ~ a record of never dolnJ wone tbaa the • ,. Standard & Poor's .,. broadly baaed index IYllll Pim~~ of 500 stpcks and 7 usually doing better than the high-paid pros who lnvest pension fuod1? How can this outstanding record In lbe stock market be achieved without traditional management, with oo lnveatment advisory fees -and under the supervilion of one 29-year-old woman with the help of an advanced computer system? Answer to all the above: "INDEX" investing, initially launched in 1916 and finally coming In for deserved attenUon. This Is no more and no less than a no-sales-charge mutual fund which invests In the Standard & Poor's 500 stocks -a dlversificati9n that no individual could afford the commi11lons lo acquire. It's so completely mechanical tbat a computer can do tbe entire job of calculating imbalances and buying or selling what's needed to keep tbe Index fund a mirror of the S&P 500. A single woman, Melissa McGinnis, keeps an eye on the computer as it buys or sells automatically. It's completely ''passive investing." The Vanguard Index Tntst was the first to try out the theory of passive investing. It began with oriJy $11 million In assets In August 1916, and bu rrown steadily to today's total of $100 million. AJlboutb Vanguard is still the only fund offered directly to individual investors, otber index funds have come into being in recent years. Batterymarch of Boston, one of the top money management firms in the United States, put.a major segment.a of its large accounts Into Its own S&P index-matching service. Wells Fargo Bank bu a fund, with about $2 billion In pension fund usett, which matches about 495 S&P stocks. The American National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago also bas an index fund and some large corporations have their own in-house "Index funds" for pension investment.a. The concept of an index fund wu probably first suggested by tbe Wharton School's Irwin Freund. Nobel Prize economist Paul Samuelson next proposed in a column tbat someone ought to start one, and when Vanguard started it.a index fund, Samuelson bought tbe fund for his grandson. Burton Malkie l, the head of Princeton's economics department, liked the idea in his best seller '·A Random Walk Down Wall Strttt," and be later Joined Vanguard's board. The lndex fund idea precipitated by academlC• caught on witb highly educated, young profeuiooala who are not typical stock buyers. The fltll aurvey of Vanguard's index-fund holders showed tbat u a group they bad tbe bJgbest percent of postgraduate degrees of any fund group; the highest percent of peop.J,e in professional occupations; the highest percent~ under·35-year-oldl; the highest percent of under 556, ancj the lowest percent of retired people. Melissa McGinnis bas been with the index fund since tbe concept of passive investina became a popular subject in the mid-19708 and a computer program was i:leveloped to mirror tbe Standard & Poor's.500 stocks. Sa1s McGinnis: "Tbis is a perfect way for investors to participate in the market." It's back to the darts, a newspaper pa1e of quotations and a random throw of the dart at any stock it happens to bit. There you are! The darts pick out a list of investments u unprofeuionaUy u can be imagined. The pros pick out a list with all their knowledge. And who comes out ahead consistently? The random dart thrower . . . Gold metals quotations Gold By Tiie Auocla&ed Pren Selected world gold prices today: ~: morning rixing $430.10, up Sl.85 . .._.,.:afternoon fixing S429.7S, up St.SO. Paris: afternoon fucing "36.41, off Sl.19. Fnmldut: $432.98, up $2.94. Zlll'idl: lAte fixing $429.00, bid up S3.00; $432.00 asked Banet.rat Harman: only daily quote $429.75, up $1.SO. Enplbard: only daUy quote $429.75, up $1.SO. Engelhard: only daily quote fabricated $451.2', up $1.S8. Goldooins NEW YORK <AP> -Prices late Friday of gold coins, compared with Thursday's price. Krugerrand, 1 troy oz., $450.SO, up S2.SO. Maple leaf, 1 troy oz., $448.SO. up $2.SO. MexJcan 58 pao, 1.2 troy oz., 154-4.00, up $2.00. Au.strtaa 100 crown, .9802 troy 01., $4.29.SO, up $2.SO. SOurce: Deak-Perera I NEW YORK (AP> -Spot nonferrous metal prices today; , Copper 11 ~-84 cent.a a pound, U.S. destinations. Le8d 36 cent.a a pound. Zmc 46-4SW• cenU a pOUDd, delivered. Tia •.2061 Metall Week composite lb. AJUWl•m 76-80 centa a pound, N, Y. Merelll'Y $422.00 per fiaak. PlaU.•na $417.00troyoz., N.Y. $9.145 per Lroy ounce, .Bud.J tr Rarmaa, ooty dally :iuote. - - •• I •• .. ,, ' \ ' ~ I f 11 t, l Rome University Professor Aurelio Mmti, center. discusses ltaly's water management problemi during a visit to Orange County Water l)i$trict offices in Fountain Valley. Listening in foreground is Decio Scard.accione, a senator (n ihe Italian Parliament. Fountain Valley hosts Italians 35 visitors guests of Orange County Water District A group ·of Italian scholars and government officials visited Fountain Valley to get information that may help them solve a water crisis in their own nation. The 35 Italian visitors, most or· whom seoke no English, were guests recently of the Orange County Water District, which manages much or the county's underground water supply, as well as lhe Sant.a Ana River. The di s tri ct ba s its h e adqu a rte r s and water processing facilities in Fountain ValJey. "Southern Italy in particular bas a scarcity of waler because of the growing demand that has followed our economic and social development," explained Decio Scardaccione, a senator in the Italian Parliament, through an interpreter. DllTH NOTICIS BUCCIARELLI COAC ll TO M C B L'CCIARELLI F riends request that friends and acquaintances gather ror a mem onal serva<.'e al Raddle Field an Laguna Beach on Tuesday. November 10 at 5PM GO LDBERG ''We -wanted to look at the American system because it bas had some or the same problems and bas solved them," the senator said. - Though Italy's size is comparable to the state of California , its population - about sb million -is about one-quarter that of the United States. The visiting officials said 70 percent of Italy's water is cons umed by agriculture, 15 percent by indus try and 15 percent by homes. "In Southern Italy, we have good natural supplies of water from rivers and from underground aquifers,'' said Professor Aurelio Misiti of the University of Rome. "But in many areas, the streams are not managed properly and a lot of Mo r tuary. Costa 540-5554. the water flows away into the sea." The stop in Fountain Valley followed visits to water racillties in Denver and San Francisco. Locally, the Italians were briefed on how waler supplies are managed in Orange County and were given tours of the di s tric t 's wate r recycling s ys tem a nd its percolation basins in Anaheim, where water is soaked back into underground storage layers. Gordon Elser, information director for the water district, said the Fountain Valley facility regularly receives visitors from nations around the world who wis h to s tudy its advanced technology. He noted that the Italian delegation was one of the largest international grollPS to visit the water district headquarters. DEATHS Mesa. ELSEWHERE HENRJCXSON A R N O T L H EN RI C KSON , or Huntington Beach, passed away Nov 6, 1981. Sur vived b y so n s Oli ve r R , Henrickson. of San Ma rano and Thomas D Henrickson TEL AVIV. Is rael (AP! LOL'l ZA GOLD BERG. resident or f'ountaan Valle). passed away ~o' 7 She ts sun ·aved by her husband :\l o rde<.'ha1 or Fount ain \'alle~. sons Roaz and Dan Goldberg. daughters Orath and Galla. 'l is ter Ruth l 'nger. Grave~ade serv1r<'!i v.ere held Sunday. lh1rbor Lawn-Mount Olive Memorial Park. Sen ices under the d1recl1on or ll arb<H Lllwn Mount Ol1 vC' Mortuary 540 5554 Tatum ol Santa Cruz. Ca .. 2 brothers, 1 s ister and 5 grandchildr en Graveside se r v ices were held on Monday. No\'ember 9. 1981 al 9 JOA M al H'arbor Lawn Memorial Park with Rev Don Kutz of the Corona del Mar Congregat.Jonal Church oHiclattng Services under the d1rect1on o f Harbor L a w n . M 0 u n l o 1 i ,. e o C C: a n )" o n L a k e . 4 Mortuan or Costa Mesa. g r 3 n d <' h I I d re n . 4 540·5SS4. • great ·grandC'h lld ren , 2 MaJ Gen Avrabam Orly, 51 , the former admm1strattve coordinator 1n I srael i -occupied terratones and one of the first paratroopers in the n at 1 on · s army . d 1 e d Sunday N EUMAN sist ers Ailee_n Ireland and SltANNON CA MBRIDGE. Mass. <API Jan~ R. Pike, 51. a sc1entiriC' researcher whose battle with cancer became t he s ubject or a Public B r oadc asting Se rv ice pr ogram . died of t h e tii11ease Friday. HILTON HEAD ISLAND. N:uc lear arms "/reeze urged Re:tohatlona are 1ehedw.ct Lo ao before Lowa meetlnp in OW LJ•• and l4me la Ca•eeUe.& uraio1 Conare11 to call for • frHie on the producUoo ot nuclear arm• by the tJllllM Ila ... and the &o.1.t u ..... Memben ol tbt AHi 't Nuclear Arm• Freeze Committee hope thelr etrorta will be the 1tart of a n.atlonwide referendum orterloa 1upport to President Reaaan for talk• on nuclear dilarmament with the Sovieta. The Old Lyme Lown meet.in& lJ atheduJed for Nov. 23. A tentative date of Dec. 4 lJ aet for the Lymem~Ung. • A mild earthquaJce shook western Teaaeaee, causing no injuries or damage, the U.S. Geoloeical Survey saJd. Don Finley of the aurvey 's National Earthquake lnformatlon Center in Goldee, CoJo., PUGEi said the tremor, measuring 3.0 on the Richter scale, occurred near Dyenbllr«, on tbe edge of southeast MJ110Grt'1 New M1dttci 11ef1mic zone. That zone was the scene of the .strongest recorded series of earthquakes in the nation's history in 1811 and 1812, before the· Richter scale was used. Artershocks from those quakes continued for several years, Finley said. * A fireball brightened the sky northwest or Fresno for an hour arter a tractor ruptured a natural gas line. However, no one was injured. About five million cubic feet of gas escaped before valves were shut off at the rural s1te Sunday evening, Pacific Gas & Electric Co. reported. Tractor driver Jose Luis Bedoi, 21, of Buroa, was ripping land for a vineyard when his Caterpillar D·9 punctured the 12-inch gas line. .. Workers cleaned up from a smoky fll'e that forced the evacuation ol the Memorial Hoap1ta1 of Southem Olc.laboma, while doctors visited their patients at another hospital across the street in Ardmore. Fire investigators said they did not know what started the basement fire, which sent dense smoke from burning plastic and paper throughout the building. The hospital's 80 patients were evacuated when the fire and smoke were noticed. * Fees for using the Pan1m1 Caaal may have to be hiked in 1983 to offset money lost to a new oil pipeline being laid between the AU .. ttc and Pacmc oceans, the head of the Panama Canal Commission said. William R. Ganelli said the pipeline near the Costa Rican border could cost the SO-mile-long canal $45 million a year at current rates. The pipeline is supposed to go into operation in a few months. Ttte Panamanian government started building the pipeline 275 miles west of the canal this year after spirited debate over its economic and environmental impact. * Criminal charges will not be filed against a ment.alJy ill woman who wrote herself and others more than 200 threatening letters in the guise of "The Poet," authorities said in Wlcblta. A 2Yl*year investigation ended Oct. 1 when police confronted Ruth S. Finley, 51, with evidence she had written the letters and lied to authorities about being harassed, abducted and stabbed. She confessed, police said. · • Police turned down a rabbi's offer to pay a destitute woman's SS breakfast bill and jailed the woman for nine days al a cost to Merrimack County (N.H.> of about $300. "The taxpayers paid considerably more than they needed . . . to support this woman in a more digni.lled manner," Rabbi Arnold Fertig said in Concord. ''I don't see how the ·problem was solved by keeping her in jail," he added, saying the woman needed counseling. :\t ALCOL:\1 J SllANNON. re~adent or Corona del Mar, CA P assed u v.ay on Novem ber 6, 1961 lie v.as 11 painting contractor for the past 30 .rears. havm11 h ved 1n the harbor area sin ce 1938. lie 1s i;11n·1, ed by has "are Luelle He IS prrC'ffie<l 1n l'leath b~ his son Fred Also S Ur\l\ed b~ h1 <; dau hter Elizabeth R OLGA NEUMAN. resident Gertrude Winston both or or Costa Mesa. Ca. Passed Long Beach. Mr . llenr1ckson away on November 5. 1981. has been a r esident of She has been a m~mber or Orange Count) s ince .1923 t h e New p 0 rt H a r b 0 r Durin g the early 1940 s he Lutheran Church s ince Its ser ved on the llun~ington inception. She is survived by Bea<'.h Cit y Cou ncil a nd her daughters Clara Lutz. Hu ntington Beach Scho~1l Dorothy Schlichen m eyer Board. dun ng WWII with his und Ruby Southworth. sons lat~ wife Evaen.e the; were Marlin Mark and Haro ld ac tive in Civilian Defense N e u m a n . a I s 0 1 l and the USO He Is a form e r g rand c hildren a n d l l mem berof theBalbo.aYacht great g ran d chi Id re n . Club. As a boy he lived for Ser vices held on Monday m a ny years 1n Ala s k a . Novem"ber 9 1981 at llAM al Me morial services 11 AM, the Harbor 'Lawn Memorial Tuesday. Nov 10 Pacific Ch apel with Pastor Roger V 1 e w M e m o r 1 a I Park Berg or t he Newport Harbor Chapel. inum ment Pacific Lutheran Church officiattng. VI e w Memo r 1 a I Pa r k Ser\'IC't'S under the direction Pa c1r1c View Mortuar ) or Harbor Lawn-Mount Olive directors. S.C. <AP> Jonathan Oanlels, 79, editor emerit us t----... -•• -.,..-""-c---i------.,.-.-'111'<---- of The News and Observer ,._ nw ......,.. '"'11. P1HCI llOTHHS SMfntS' MOITUAIY 627 Main St Hunhngton Beach 536-6539 PACIAC YllW MIMOllAL P Al I Cemetery Mortuary Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1f1c View Drive Newport Beach 644·2700 McCOIMtal MOITUAlllS Laguna Beach 494-941 5 Laguna Hills 76&-0933 San Juan CeptStrano 495-1776 ~ LAWM-MT. OUYI Mortuary • <:emetery Cren-etory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5-40-5554 rtMc1 .. on•s -...NOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway CoataMesa 642-9150 C•ll f .42-lt11. Put • ,.,, words to .. rk for or R a le ig h . N c .. and 1--,.-0-Tl_C_•_TO_C:O.._T ___ ACT_ott_l __ ,. __ ll_OT1_CS_TO_C_•_•_D_ITORS __ _ rormer press secretary to CAUJ"""' ••ot OP HUl THNSP•• President Franklin D sc11001 Dlatrlct: eo.aa com"'"""' ca.ca.•*••u.c.c.1 R It d'ed F' "d I' Coll ... OISIJ1ct Nltllttlt......,llwnlocAdltonof ooseve . 1 n 3\' ~e a1e1 Offdli..: t:• rctoc• p.m. of ... 111e wltlllfl ,_,.. tr-'-hl 111e1 • also w r ot e 20 bo.ok s, tstu,o1~.tt11. i.w1111ram1er 1a.-..ito11e-... 1nclud1ng "The End of Pia<• of aid Reulpe: Oltk. of the 11•rao11e1 properl" llerelfl•fl•r Innocence" and "The Time Pwdl&tlftt "-""· ,,., Mw!M ,..,,...,, detc:rl ..... CNtl cem_,..11., Coll• 01.Crlct, Tiie -ca> MCI ...,.. ..... __._ Between t he Wars.. 1210 A~ A-c..a. Meu CA•• th 1-ftded ,,.,.,.rwc11 we: '26.26. ' • OAVIO L.. ATENCIO.,,.. TEllESA M. Profecl hle11tlflcall0fl Name. at ATENCIO, U .. AdaMI, $vile #J, No. 10'6, Oreflt• Cout Cello Cotla"'-9,CAftUi. Work for 'closet artist' •-•tor•, 1'*"1or Offk• ,,.,,,...,,. Tl'•• -<a> .,,.. 11vsn. ...,._ Profec·I. Of Ill• 1-"*«I IUlltfff' .. (tl Mo: Piao Pl-en Oft Ille: Hlll·O..lel WILLIAM J. TATER, ID! Mon1Mac .. Auoclata, 11J..nnll SttWI, N Orin. H~""91\ 9Ncll, CA ..... 8Hdl, CA ftlMJ; C1UI 67W4G. Tllat .. -"Y pwtllMM ...._a. NOTICE IS HEllE8V GIVEN !NI O.tc:rl .... lfl ...., .. ea: All tlec:tl 111 "'9 a _ ___, Sclloof Olatrkl o Ir ... , llldurft, .....,_. 8"d .-cl Or.,, .. c:.n.,, Calllomla, actlftt 1ty wlll of OIM clWlaln ........._"-a: a11d lllroutll Ill Go\'erlllft9 8Nrd. HAIRClllAl'T ~NT Mf II tocatw Dental technicians' creations useful By JOYCE L. KENNEDY Dear Joyce: My dentist keeps pestering me to get a Job, saytna dental technicians are in short supply. What can you tell me about training and pay? -S.G., PblladelpbJa, Pa. Are you a closet artist eager to com e out and try your hand at cre ating something beautiful yet u s eful ? D e ntal laboratory technicians do just that. Using written instructions from dentists, they form stone 'or plaster models or patients' mouths to use lD the laboratory. Carving tools, polishing machines and many klndt o f specialize d equipment are employed to fabricate dentures and make metal or porcelain bridges, crowns and inlays. Dental laboratory technklans also produce orthodontic appliances for straigbteoln1 jumbled teeth. Although an asset, a hl1h school diploma Is not mandatory for flndinl work. Many technicians get on-Job training, takin1 three or roar yean to master their craft. Increasingly. 1tudents are preparing ln two-year vocational programs. Once trained, you can document your 1bllity throutti letting and certUlcaUon by the NatJonaJ Board for CerUftcat.lon. Dental technJclana ftnerally work In commercial labl, mOlt ol wtddl are located in larse cltiel or popuJoUI ......... Othen ftnd Jobi ln dentlsb' offtcee and hoapttall. llanuleetwera of cleotal ......... end equipment al10 blre deatal CAREERS laboratOry technicians as ·sales or technical representatives. Special qualifications : Good color perception and patience are basic. Ri chard Reak, pres ident of the M a gn a Ins titute of Dental Technology in New York City says "We look for people with manual s kills and interests in things like model building, sculpting, painting or needlepoint." The Nati o nal Board for Certification reports that although trainees may begin at minimum wage, experienced technicians earn more than $12 ,000 a year. Wlth cerUflcalion, tbey make considerably more. Speciallsts in ceramlca may earn about $30,000. 11 bl1 money's your goal, aim for management or ownership of the bualnesa. The Job market for dental laboratory ~hnlclans ii srnilln1 u broadly .. Mom does when she bears you have no cavtUes. As your dentlat says, the time ls rlaht for dent.al technlctan.a. READSR SERVICI:: W°'4cf p ~ more "9jorrnaffoft. ®otd opport....,._ jra Urltal lecllnoloow? 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C ALI~ OHNIA 25 CENTS SACRAMENTO (AP) -The stale Senate, a half hour after convening in special session, passed an emergemcy bill today to conform California's welfare regulations lo federal changes to save $11 million next month. The vote was 31·2 for the blll, SB lx by Sen. Alfred Alquisl, D-San Jose. ll goes to the Assembly. Alquist said the bill would have tef be passed today by the Leg1slature and signed by the governor so counties can change the regulations for December welfare rolls. ·'This bill merely speeds up the pro<:ess. lt makes no substantive change In the law. These regulations will be changed in 90 days whether we take any action or not. But we will lose $25 million IC we don't act now," he said. Legislative leaders plarined to work on a companion welfare bill, to refine Ute changes and add some st«le benetlts for preenant women. later in the week, with public hearings. Senate Republicans voted (or the emergency bill, but there was some doubt whether Assembly Republicans, who are upset over reapportionment, would cooperate. Even before the 120 lawmakers convened on the governor's orders for the special sessions, county supervisors held a news conference asking for the emergency bill. Republicans are incensed that Democrats have filed three suits with the stale Supreme Court DMly "91111 __ .., ..,.,__ ,,._. DOUBLE KISS -Irvine Jaycees President Ron Solar gets kissed by outgoing .Junior Miss Doreen Ann Lee cteftl and the new titleholder. Teresa Thomas The senior from Irvine Hi g h School wa s named Junior ~1 ss after a J ayC'ees·sponsored com pell lion held over the weekend at the school Columbia refu·eled for 2nd launch try the Cape. but Hess said. "Right now they're savin~ the weather should be OK for launch. That front ·1s expected to move through here Wedne.sday, and be gone by Thursday." seeking to block th e referendums. They also fear that Democrats are going to use . the special session to pass somewhat different plans and derall their referendums. And the Democrats are exasperated that Assembly Republicans are threatening to recuse to vote for any of the essential financial bills unless reapportionment is removed from the agenda. • "I don't think it's going lo be a very posili ve gathering," Assemblyman Ross Johnson, R-Fullerton. said 1ast week when Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. called the special session. A special session is different from a regular session in two ways: lawmakers are limited to the topics on the governor's proclamation and bills take effect in 90 days instead of the end of the year. Brown's proclamation listed two topics: -"Legislation relative to slate budget problems created by recent federal enactments and related court actions." and -"Legislation relative to reapportionment." The immediate budget problem was created when lawmakers adjourned in September without passing a bill that would conform the slate's welfare eligibility rules with Reagan administration cutbacks that took effect Oct. 1. That meant the federal government stopped paying matching funds for people it no longer considers eligible, but the s late has to keep up their benefits until it changes its rules. The cost is about Sll million a month. Brown's Social Services Department, which administers welfare, tried to make the cbaoees itself. But an agency under Brown that has to approve all emergen cy regulations rejected them and a 1..-~ Superior Court judee backed that agency. The bill in September, AB799, ran into opposition from lawmakers who didn't like the c ut s. But the author , Assemblyman Bill Lockyer, D·San Leandro, said those rormerlyo pposeanow <<are som ~what resigned to the -necessity of it, if not the wisdom." He said the special session bill Nill be a "streamlined version." fhe earlier bill would have shifted the sav1Dgs into job traininJit and other proJi(rams. ·'Those are out of the bill just because the savings are gone and we're so deeply in the red," Lockyer said. GARDEN FLOURISHES -Laguna Beach octogenarian Hortense Miller inspects flowering blue sky vi ne from India. The plant Detty -"--~ LM ,..,_ is one of more than 1.200 varieties growin g 1n he r expan sive botanical garden estate O\'erlooking Boat Canyon See Page 81· Police fall: Kidnap handling sold him Detty ,..._. S'8fl -- REC ALLS COUSIN'S KIDNAP Newport's Wilham Lusk ~~!!V~~RBLE It was the kidnapping of his cousin as much as anything else that turnecj contractor William ~usk into one of the Newport Beach police department's biggest fans. "I came away so impressed,'' says Lusk. ''The department was so profes sional , so disciplined. I admired that." It was 11 years ag-0 this month that his cousin, J .G. Lusk, was snatched while leaving Richard's Market in Newport ~MM~~~lf'tmk1)feeark>r- 13 hours while relatives tried to meet lhe kidnapper's $200,000 ransom demand. It also was 11 years ago this month that Lusk helped put together the first police awards banquet in Newport. an event he decided was needed after police safely rescued his cousin and apprehended the kidnapper. Vandalis01 law left intact WASHINGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court refused today lo bar states from forcing parents of public school s tudents to pay for school property vandalized by their ch1ldren The justices, citing the lack of a .. s ubstantial federal question," left intact a New Jersey Supreme Court ruling that its state law -simuar to laws in every state but Georgia imposing such parental liability is valid. Ttu1 p~R~nfl-va--- of today 's action is far from clear, but at least for now. New Jersey 's law is safe from challenge Rites set for HB's Henrickson CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP 1 -Workers wearing protective s uits filled Columbia's cleaned-up power units with highly toxic hydrazine fuel today as the ship was readied for a second attempt to make a repeat journey into s pace. The renewed countdown starts at 5 a.m. PST Tuesday. with liftoff set for 4 :30 a .m . Thursday. Jet • noise tests upset county "I remember I was taking a shower when I heard they got J .G.," Lusk recalls. "I was so surprised that I didn't even react. I just kept taking my shower." Later that November day in 1970, the Lusk family members received word they were to take $200,000 lo the Disneyland Hotel. They were told that if they didn't, a bomb would be blown 'up at UC Irvine. The kidnapper said 3,000 students would die. A memorial service will be held Tuesday for Arndt L. Henrickson. a pioneer oilman and c1v1c leader in Huntington Beach. who died F'nda) at age 86. The launch pad was off limits today to all except those involved in the fueling of the units, whose clogged filters caused last week 's postponement The pad was lo reopen in late afternoon after being closed since the slow, methodical fueling operation began Sunday NASA spokesman Mark Hess reported at midmorning that the hydrazine loading was about 30 minutes ahead of schedule. "So far, everything is running along very smoothly." he said. OHicials kept watch on a weatber front moving toward ORAIGI COAST WIATHIR Patchy Cog near the coast, otherwise partly cloudy through Tuesday. Highs 75 lo 78. Lows tonight SS. 111101 TDDAY At least the Lokers won . See Curt Seeden's account on Page CJ 11111 i 1 ... FAA refusal to permit cutbacks at 500 feet angers officials By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ofllteo.llYl'tllCMaft Orange County government officials are ex pressing displeasure over the recent Woman dies in mobile home fire A tire in a South Lagupa mobile home early Sunday claimed the life of the home's occupant. Theola Jacobson, whose age was estimated at 65 by county firefighters, was found dead ln the mobile home after firefighters mann1ed to extinguish flames that destroyed the home. Battalion Chief Allen Huard of the county Fire Department said flrefi1hters found Ma. Jacobson's body after a half-hoW' fight to quell the names. There were no other occupants ln the mobile home and no other injuries, Huard said. Flreti1bten arrtYed at tbe 1cene abortly after recel'rinl a call at 1:18 a.m. and round the moblle bome hilly lavolYed ID nam•, llMard Hid. T•••ll tbere were other ...,.. ._.in cloM proxilBltr ......... Lapna Hllll ...... a.le Pmft OD CoUl .......,, -........ ..,. d•••••· ... i1f. .... GI lbe blUI liM DOl ,. .............. llllMt fOlllidlNd MQlldoal. B•grd ••••. Dim••• lo tM ....... bome •l!f rt1 eonteall ••• -·~·-· Federal Aviation Administration jet noise reduction tests at John Wayne Airport. The evaluations, conducted between Sept. 8 and Nov. 1, concerned the altitudes at which pilots of commercial jets should be permitted to i n stitute noise-limiting power reductions, and the magnitude of those reductions. What is disturbing to county officials is that the FAA refused · to permit tests of power reductions at an altitude of 500 Ceet -a standard that was permitted at the airport unW January, 1979. Since that date, pilots have been required to brin1 their aircraft to an altitude of 1.000 feet before cutting back on power . The a ltitude change essentially doubled the size of the hig h noise impact area located beneath jet departure tracks. lo the recent tests al the airport, the FAA evaluated three takeoff profiles . One involved thrust reductions at an altitude of 700 feet; the two others involved cutbacks at 1,000 feet. On Oct. 1, Airport Manager Murry Cable requested in a letter to FAA administrator J . Lynn Helms that one of the l,OOO·foot profiles be deleted from lhe test program and be replaced wilb an evaluation of a (See NOISE, Pa1e AZ) OUT c# ltOL -A vl~e Naib ~ .. demolllMd anour.r ear W • boat .. ,. daaaaltd Sunday llaornAni -. a ...... .,. bcw ~ tontto1 or hil ear ~ > IDd llamm.ct lntO tbe park Lus k says his famil y contacted former Newport Police Chief B. James Glavas and that arrangements were made to deliver the cash. As police officers remember it, the kidnapper never showed up at the Disneyland Hotel but later called the family and told them to take the money lo Los Angeles International Airport. At the airport. police had a man pose as a Lusk family member and told him to ride an escalator up and down until the kidnapper made contact. <See POLICE, Page A%) The service is scheduled at 11 a . m in the Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel, 3500 Pacific View Drive. Newport Beach. During the 1940s, Henrickson served on the Huntington Beach City Counc il and o n the Huntington Beach lligh School Board. He was born in Washington state and spent some of his early years in Alaska. Mr. Henrickson m oved to Huntington Beach in 1923. He worked 41 years as a plant supervisor for the O.C. F'ield Gasoline Corp . and its s uccessor. Monterey Oil Co. During World War II , Henrickson and his late wife Evaene were active in Civilian Defense and the USO . He nrickson was a former member of the Balboa Yacht Club. He is survived by his sons Oliver R. Henrickson of San Marino and Thoma s D . Henrickson of Canyon Lake; his sisters Ail~en Ireland and Gertrude Winston. both of Lone Beach; and four grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Burial will be in Pacific View Memorial Park. _,_ _____ ------------------- Orange Oo11t DAILY PILOT/Monday, Novtmber 8, 1981 .11!"' ____________ .....,. ________ ...., __ ,_,,~----...... ------....... ---------:i---.., N / •• 1 NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTION Q\IOlAflONt INt\.UO• fHOllOll ., ...... YO•IC.MID••n. ,.Cl"C· ,. •• 1ono•. on•o1t ... o CINCIM"'"'' ''00 latMA!leHA•lt HN9tlOey l .. l lllAUAlllDllll.Tlllllf Ntl ..... DOw Jones Final UP 2 .76 CLOSING 855.21 Who consistently outperf ormJ the professionals In the stock market, managers of the nation's biggest investment account.A? What lnv'9tor'a performance was up a full 125 percent for the decade through 1980 as measured by Standard & Poor's index or SOO stocks, compared with 88 percent to 97 percent gains for the professionally managed pension accounts? What method or investing chalked up ~ a record of never doing worse than the Standard & Poor's ~ "" broadly based index IY''llA PDIJf~ ..;.,.,.. of 500 stocks and L ~ ~ usually doing better than the high-paid pros who invest pension funds? How can this outstanding record in the stock market be achieved without traditional management, with no Investment advisory fees -and under the supervision of one 29-year-old woman with the help of an advanced computer system? Answer to all the above: "INDEX" investing, initially launched in 1976 and finally coming in for deserved attention. This is no more and no less than a no-sales-charge mutual fund which invests in the Standard & Poor's 500 stocks -a diversification tbat no Individual could afford the commissions to acquire. It's so completely mechanical that a computer can do the entire job of calculating imbalances and buying or selling what's needed to keep the index fund a mirror of the S&P 500. A single woman, Melissa McGinnis. keeps an eye on the computer as it buys or sells automatically. It's completely "passive investing." The Va.nguard lndex Trust was the first to try out the theory of passive investing. It began with only $11 million in assets in August 1976, and has grown steadily to today's total of $100 million. Although Vanguard is still the only fund offered directly to individuaJ investors, other index funds have come into being in recent years. Batterymarch of Boston, one of the top money management firms in the United States, puts major segments of its large accounts into its own S&P index-matching service. Wells Fargo Bank has a fund, with abol!t $2 billion in pension fund assets, which matches about 495 S&P stocks. The American National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago also has an index fund and some large corporations have their own in-house "index funds" for pension investments. The concept of an index fund was probably first suggested by the Wharton School's Irwin Freund. Nobel Prize economist Paul Samuelson next proposed in a column that someone ought to start one, and when Vanguard started its index fund , Samuelson bought the fund for his grandson. Burton Malkiel, the head of Princeton's economics department, liked the idea in his best seller ··A Random Walk Down Wall Street," and he later joined Vanguard's board. The index fund idea precipitated by academics caught on wiUl highly educated. young professionals who are not typical stock buyers. The first surve)l of Vanguard's i!'d~x.:..fund ~!?M~J:.$ ... lb.9.~~~~jhaLaLA...._ "gfouptfiey-·naa Oie .. lUgllest percent of postgraduate degrees of any fund group; the highest percent of people in professional occupations; the highest percent of under-35-year-olds; the highest percent of .. under SSS, and the lowest rcent of retired le. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS SOLD COINS 14&W YC>t!K tAftl -~ .... ,,.,._i(;" ,..., .. .., ,......,. wt111'hlwliAY't.llf • I .,..........,.,.., .............. .. ......... , ............. u. .. Mellkm a,_., t,t tr9' ttr, UM ••• '-.... ..... ,., __ ,.., ,,.., ......... .. ....... METALS c.,,., 11'-·14 onu 1 po11no. U.S. dffU11at1on1. Lt ... Uftb. pound. IJIOC ~14 cents a pouncl, dlll"'9,..., Tl• sa,Dl Metals w-cotnpeall• lb. AIW11t'-7"40 ttflts a~. N Y ~8" S<m.00 Pt• ll•Sll. ,i.t"-nl '417.00 lt01 oi:., H.Y. SILVER ••. us,.., troy-··"-'."-· .,,,. dally Q<IOI•. GOLD QUOTATIONS L..._: mornl,. llalnt '430.10, ""i1.e . L ..... : ~fll(lngMft.15, llfl tUe. ~aft.I t"'-flal ... t4JUI, Off SI If, ,,.....,1 Mii .... -.~ .... rwtc•: u. 11.1,. .. tuo. ~ .,, u.oo; t1n.oo ..... M•••Y a Mar11t••: 0111, dally quott M2t.7S, \!PSI.to. •......,.: Ollly ... u, quote .. ,,.7J, -. SI.SO • .......... , Oflly dally eUOla l_lc...., M.51.24, _. ..... SYMBOLS