HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-06 - Orange Coast Pilot..
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IUlll CUil Ylll lllRlll llllY Ml
WEONESOA Y , MAY ti. 1981 ORANGE COUNTY. CALl rORNIA :t5 CfNTS
Bill· promotes chastity
Strong backing seen for U.S. fund-ed 'pro-family' clinics
WASIUNGTON (AP> -A pro-
posal to spend federal money to
promote "self-discipline and
chastity" amon1 teen-agers is
speeding toward a vote in a
Senate committee.
··When youn1 people engage ln
intimate physical relationships
before they are ready or willing
to take on the responsibilities of
marriage or child-rearing, they
jeopardize their own emotional
or physical health," said Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R·Utah, chairman
of the Senate Committee on
Human Resources.
With Hatch's support, the
•
N -I I
leeislation drafted by Sen.
Jeremiah Denton, J!,Aft., is
scheduled for a vot-rl>~ _full committ~e next W~n!jttay.
Preliminary lDdlcationa are it will have widespread support.
Al a time of federal budget
austerity, the Denton bill would
provide S30 mlWon for continued
operation of 27 cent~ra whose
functions would be redirected to
a "pro-family emphasis," in·
stead of helpinl pregnant
adolescents or young girls seek
information or birth control de·
vices.
$ ('II ('II
Other centers could be added
later.
The Reaean administration ls
proposing to cut specific federal
funds for the centers.
Specifically, Denton wants to
prohibit the centers from refer·
ring pregnant -teen-agers to
abortion clinics.
Teen-age girls also would be
required to get parents'
permission before being pro-
vided birth control information
or devices.
Local sponsors of the centers
would be encouraged to find
ways to spend money lo "pro·
I I~ ! i --'72 41 A . '75 41 Rt. '80 41 Ftt. 9/80 41 Flt. 10/81 41 Flt~ ..... ~~~~~~~--..... ~~~~~~~~~~
• 41 takeorrs per day averaged annually
:PSA threatens ftirport
Though granted access, airline balks at conditions
By F &EDE&ICKSCHOEMEBL
Ott• Delltr .........
Letal action on several fronts ia
~naMfered a certainty in the
wake of approval by the Oranee
County Board of Supervisors of an
air carrier ~cceas plan for John
Wayne Airport.
Several airllnea aren't happy.
Nor are the Federal Aviation Ad·
mlnistralloa and the Civil
Aeronautics Board, the two
federal aaenciea that oversee air
transportation.·· r Under the plan approved Tues-
day by a unanimo~ vote, Pacific
Southwest Airlines, of San Diego,
will be permitted to begin Oran1e
County service Oct. 1.
PSA was granted two of the 41
Jet departures now permitted dai·
ly from the airport. The two
flights will be created by reducing
fiight allocations of AirCal and
Republic Airlines, two offourcar-
riers now operating in Orange
County.
Though it will be permitted to
enter the airport, PSA is not
satisfied with the plan ,
particularly its provision to
guarantee that the carriers now
operating at the airport -the so-c ailed incumbents -may keep
their existing ru1ht allocations
for a three· year period.
At the end of that pel'lod, the
airport would be coruidered open
to all qualified carriers.
The "grandfatberio1" of
nt1bt., u officials refer to the
1uarantee, "will not withstand
legal muster," Dennis O'Dell, a
PSA vice presi dent told
supervisors during the two-hour
long hearing that preceded action
on the plan.
"There are many, many legal
fronts on which this wUI be
challenged . . . successfully."
O'DeUwamed.
Also displeased with the plan,
and concurrinl wlth remarks of a
CAB representative, was Douglas
Holmes of Continental Airlines.
''Two years is two years. We'd
like to start operating (at the
airport) now," Holmes told the
board.
Ava Kleinman, a CAB attorney
who flew from Washineton D.C. to
attend the hearing, claimed pro-
visiona of the plan run counter to
the federal Airline Dereiutation
Act 011978. The intent of the act is
to increase competition among
air carriers by reducing the
federal government's control
over routes and rates.
In addition to crit.lcizinl the
1randlathetiq of ruabta alloca·
ilona, Ma. Kleinman said federal
officials also are concerned about
the '1-rugbt-per-day lid on de·
partures, a rule preventing car-
riers from serving destinations
more than 500 miles from Orange
County (with the exception of Salt
Lake City), and a regulation pre-
venting use of the airport runway
by aircraft welghing more than
95,000pounds.
She urged county officials to
"sit down with our staff and the
FAA'' before actin1 on the apace
plan.
Ms. Kleinman's comments
evoked anger from Supervisor
<See P8A. Pase AZ)
Quake rattla
Seed Beach
An earthquake measuring 3.2
on the Richter scale rippled
through Seal Beach Tuesday
night but apparently caused no
damages or injuries, authorities
reported today.
The quake, centered four
miles east of Seal Beach, oc·
curred at 10:57 p.m., accordin1
lo a spokesman for the
California Institute of
Technology at Pasadena.
Local police sald no damages
or injuries were reported. Qf.
flcials of the Seal Beach Naval
Weapons Station IUtewtse report-
ed no disturbances on the bue,
which stores weapons for the
Pacific Fleet.
mote sell-discipline and chastity
and other positive family-center
approaches" to reduce adoles-
cent pregnancies, according to
the language of the legislation.
The bill would apply to all
teen-agers but with priority
given to those 17 and younger.
The only major similarity to
the centers as they exist would
be to provide information and
advice to pregnant teen-agers on
adoption agencies.•
Denton, chairman of a sub-
committee on aging, family and
human services, held no bear-
<Stt TEENS, Pase A%)
Sculptor
attacked
in Mesa
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of .. Daily ...... , ....
Costa Mesa welder and metal
s culptor Ali Roushan was at·
tacked late Tuesday in a parking
lot to the rear of his Superior
A venue shop by three men carry·
ing an assortment of weapons,
police said.
Roushan, who suffered four
head cuts, managed to fend off the
men and later received stitches al
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital.
The fiery Iranian Immigrant,
center of a controversy over three
tall metal sculptures he raised in
front of his shop without final city
planning and building depart·
ment approval, said his as-
sailants all spoke Spanish.
He told police he bad just re·
turned to bis living quarters at the
rear of his shop, 1550 Superior.
Ave., when two well dressed His-
panics knocked at his back door.
He said he couldn't understand
what they wanted but stepped into
the l• when they moUoned for
him tocomeout.
A third man, Rouahan said,
came up from his back and
slipped a string around his throat.
"I knew I was being attacked,
then," Rousban said this morn-
ing. "I didn't panic, I just started
fighting."
Roushao said he was bit several
limes in the bead with a gun,
later identified by police as a
simulated .4.5-callber pellet gun,
before he tore it from one as-
sailant.
Police were called al 11 :30p.m.
by residents of a heighboring
trailer park who heard Roushan's
screams for help.
Witnesses said they saw three
men pile into a yellow station
wagon and drive north on
Superior Avenue as Rousban
stumbled from behind his shop.
later
Officers said they later found
the discarded gun, a flash light,
,screwdriver, straw bat and
blood, most of it from Rousban's
head cuts, in the parking lot.
Rousban, .known for his running
battle with city authorities, had
nothing but praise for police, their
orom ptness and their concern.
"I'm feeling_ ereltf good this
morning," he observed. "I could
have been choked to death. Thank God."
Roushan said be haa no idea of
why the attack occurred. "It was
all pretty strange."
Judge bars letters
to King's gay lover
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
Judae haJ aranted a request
from tennla atar'Blllle Jean Kiili
to temporarily bar her former
bom01Uual Jover from 1eUJnc
some 100 letters that Mn. Kiftl
, wanta to keep "forever private
and COGftdentiaJ." •
Document• filed b)' Mrs.
Kln1'1 lawyer alleae tbat
M arllyn Barnett bad been
threatentn1 for two to three
years to pubUab penonaJ letten
Mra. Kini wrote to ber durtac
tbelr affair "lf BllUe Jean IClq
did DOt stve MarilYD Barnett whet lbe wanted."
T b e documents uy Ma.
Barnett claimed abe bad been
offered 115,000 by UM NaUCllW
Enquirer for rt1hta to IOIM 100
lettert whleb Mn. Kln1 wrote to
her durlftl their love attalr.
Neither Ma. Barnett nor her
lawyer could be reached, and
there was no Immediate com·
ment from the newspaper.
In an affidavit filed with her
requ .. t for a court order Mn.
K1n1 aald, "I wrote tbe letters to
Barnett witb the intent and UD·
derat.andlna that they were and
would remain forever private
and conftdenUal."
Ma. Baraett, 33, wbo became a
parapletle bl a fall lut. rear. la
preulq Mn. Kini In a ao-
called pa.Umoa.y •uliit ior lifetime
aupport and for a allbu bome,
wblcb abe nld ahe Wal prom·
laed when 1be and Mn. lttq
wereloven.
After the lawsuit wa1 ftJedt
Mr1. K.ln1L 31, admitted lut
week tbat tne bad a bomoaauaJ
(lee'TENNIB, Pa1e AJ)
t
...
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'SLEEPING BEAUTY' FACELIFT -Scaffolding covers the
face of Sleeping Beauty's Castle at Disneyland this week
while the structure undergoes its annual refurbiah1n1, in·
eluding paint touch-up, replacing s hingles and application
of 14-karat gold leafing to spires and turrets. Castle en-
trance remains open.
Murder charged
in inmate death
Five Orange County Jail in·
mates have been formally
charged with murder in the
d"atb of another inmate who
was attacked in an Orange
County Courthouse holding cell
late In April.
According to murder com-
plaints ftled Tuesday by the dis-
trict attorney's office, the al-
leged assailants were Gilbert
James Lovato, 23, of New Mex-
ico; Bill Leonard Frisbee, 30, of
Orange; Kirk William Smyth,
29, of Torrance; Phillip Senteno,
32, of Baldwin Park, and Arthur
Ruffo, 25, address unknown.
The five were charged ln the
death of Michael Charles Bot·
toms, 22, of Long Beach, who
had been accused of murder in
the stabbing death of his 19-
year-old wife in an Anaheim
parking lot last June.
Cops continue
search/or
miSsing boy
No trace bu been found of an
8-year-old Huntington Beach boy
who disappeared asl Wednes-
day after presumably fieeine his
fouer parents ' home in
Anaheim, police said.
Gabriel JamC!a Mahoney was'
last seen when be left Palm ·
Lane Elementary $chool in
Anaheim, wearing oran1e pants
and a -blue and belle atripedl
pullover abirt.
"Nothin1 baa panned out,"
said Anaheim police detective
Roy Records. "He left on bla
own, so presumably he's aroud
the beach area."
Police believe the t.b1rd arader
may have nm away lo an at-
tempt to retu.m to bis mother'•
home in Huntlnaton Beach, aft.er
belna removed from the home
by th• county social services
dept. •
Oabrtel la four feet, four
lncbu, '10 pounds. Anyone wltb
aoy lnformatloa ll ur1ed to call
Anabelln police 1t .... 1N8.
Safety toughened
Bottoms was found un-
conscious on the floor of the
basement holding cell of the
Santa Ana courthouse on April
20. About US other inmates had
been In the same cell with him.
Bottoms was taken to UC
Irvine Medical Center in
Orange, where he died about a
week later from head and neck
injuries.
During the Initial inveati1a-
tlon, sheriff's officials said they ·
believed more than one inmate
had been involved In the fatal at-
tack on Bottoms.
Lovato is presenUy standtn1
trial on separate murder
charges in superior court.
Frisbee and Smythe al.lo are
currently on trial on assault
charges involvin1 attacks on
other Inmates in the jail.
OrliinaUy, they had been arrest-
ed on robbery charges.
Senteno and Ruffo were taken
into custody on separate robbery
char1es.
In addltion to the murder com-
p 1 a int, Lovato, Frisbee and
another inmate, Ralpb
Casteneda, U, of Santa Ana
were charged with attemJ;ted
murder tn connect.ion wJtb yet
another assault on two. blaet ta.
mates a week after Bottoms wu
found Injured.
llAICI ca 101111
Fair throuih Tbunda1.
Lows tontibt ln the IOI.
Hleha Thursday TO alGftl
the cout, 75 Inland.
111111 TllAY
T"-Y-..1 C1N .. fNll
agah• lntght to /ace l lN
A•ll. ~ ltorWt, plaol.ot,
Page DJ.
11111
LAS VSGAS <Ar> -An OI'• dlnance lmpo1lnc toqb retroac·
tive flre aafetJ r.quinm..U on ·1!11!!1~ ......... _ ... __ _
b11brtae hot4lt bu been at.opted • •
_........__ __ _
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4 $I A Q ·--·¥"• i .1
A2 • • • • • • Orange Coast.DAIL. Y PILOT /Wednesday, May 6, 1981
---~------::;__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....J ............
WEAK KNE~D? -Lenore ~en berg, the U.S. chief of pro-
tocol, curtsies before Prince Charles on his arrival in
Wash.ington last week. The act raised questions in
Washington as to why the nation's official greeter curtsied
to the prince, prompting comm'ents such as .. Didn't the
Revolutionary War change all that?" For more see Page B4 . . '
$850,000 uni/ orms
help Amtrak pride?
WASHINGTON CAPl -Amtrak employees have
$850,000 worth of new uniforms t9 help give them what an
official calls a "'sense of pride" while the passenger
railroad faces pressures to cut its budget.
"We had a severe morale and attitude problem," Rima
Parkhurst, Amtrak's vice president for passenger services,
said Tuesday. . .
The decision to buy the burgundy, navy blue and beige
uniforms was made las t faJI before the Reagan administra-
tion took office and began pushing for cuts in Amtrak's
federal subsidies, according to Ms. Parkhurst.
From Page A1
P SA NOT SATISFIED • • •
Thomas Riley, the chief propo·
nent of the plan adopt-ed by the
board
He said the comments dem·
onstraled an "utter disregard"
for residents who Ii ve near the
airport who are subjected to
airport noise
Brown ready
to fill court
SACRAMENTO (AP) -End·
ing a four·month search for new
Supreme Court justices, Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. will an·
nounce "one or more'' appoin·
tees today , a Brown
spokeswoman says.
There are two vacancies on
the seven-member court, one
caused by the death of Justice
Wiley Manuel in January and
the other by the resignation in
March of J4Slice William Clark
to become President Reagan's
deputy secretary of state.
Press sec retary Cari
Beauchamp said Brown would
release names to fill one, and
possibly both, vacancies some
time today, but he would not be
available for comment until a
planned speech this evenin( on
a Los Angeles television station.
'Bombe r ' escapes
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
man carrying two attache cases
-one of which he said con·
tained a bomb -forced bank
tellers to turn over approximate·
ly $27,000 In $20 bills, then fied,
leaving the phony "bomb"
behind , police said. Sat. Ron
Hanson said bomb squad of·
ficets found no explosives lnalde
the briefcase left Tuesday at a
United California Bank b1'nch
in suburban Reseda.
OAANOE COAST
In large part, the CAB's com·
ments were echoed by Gerald
Bo~en. an FAA representative.
"We believe it is inappropriate for
an airport operator to take action
which frustrates the clear
purpose, objectives, and intent of
the deregulation act,·' Bogen said
in a lf!tter lo county officials.
While officials declined to open·
ly speculate on·the possibility of
lawsuits, one federal official said
privately, "Litigation is likely,
very likely.''
The adopted access plan will
work in concert with the recently
approved airport master plan and
Airport Noise Control and Land
Use Compatibility plan.
The county is striving to reduce
overall noise levels by 7 .S decibels
on the Community Noise
Eq ul valence level scale.
The access plan requires that
all carriers serving tb~ airport,
during the first year the plan is in
effect, insure that 25 percent· of
their flights are flown on quieter
aircraft.
PSA. AirCal. Frontier and
Republic will meet this require-
ment through the introduction of
the new DC·9 Super 80, an aircraft
said by the manufacturer.
McDonnell Douglas. to be quieter
than the DC-9 30s and Boein& 737s
now operated at the airport.
Western Alrllnes, which bas no
plans to purchase the Su per 80s,
wlll attempt to meet the n6ise re·
ductioo goals by retrofitting its
fleeLof jet with noise suppression
devices.
Under the approved plan, the
airlines must submit within 60
days their proposals on how to re·
duce noise.
If th1outcomes or the plan are
reallz . overall noise levels will
begin o drop within a year.
Within three years, it la anticipat·
ed noise levels will have dropped
sufficiently to Increase the 41
fllaht per day Ud.
D1i~y Piiat MAIN OfflCe
Thomae P Haley
~
Robert N. Weed .........
~. Thomu Keevll ,_ .
Thoma A. Murphlne _...,....,
ONrlee H. Loot ......... ........,..._
f::d Sctlultnan
~==" Kennett! N. Oodc*d Jr ~"""""
UI WHI ..., SI~ Colle Mtt.e, CA Mell.,._. hll U .. , C•le MeM, CA._,.,.
,.,,,...,. ,., o...,.. , ... 1 """''.i.4"' ~ .... 11tw1 111W1", lm1t1reti.n.. ectltMlel l'Nllt•r w ••
Yfr11H"-tl Nt"el11 NY IM reprff<KH •lllHNI
IC!« lel IOHWllU .... *' tff't'rftllt e• ... r
Thousands DlOllrD Sands
R i oting gives w ay t o stone-thr owin g in B elfast
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
(AP> Thousands of mourners
filed past Bobby Sands' open
coffin today in his family's small
row house in Belfast. In the city's
streets. anti·Brilish rioting gave
way to sporadic stone-throwing
by Roman Catholic youths.
By early afternoon, the city of
363,000 was the quietest it had
been since the 27-year ·old I RA
member's 66-day hunger strike
ended in death Tuesday at the
Maze frison outside Belfast.
In the Maze. three other fasting
members of the Irish ReP.ublican
Army's Provisional wing grew
weaker, an·d all 440 jailed IRA
men pledged to continue hunger
strikes until Britajn yielded to
Sands' demand for political
prisoner status, the Republican
Press Office said.
.
Thatcher's refusal to yield to the
prisoners. They issued a state-
ment, also signed by a Welsh na·
ti on a lis t member, that said
Saqds had died because . of t.he
Conservative government's "in·
traosigence'' over the demands.
There were renewed sporadic
disturbances m Belfast earlier to-
day following overnight rioUng
which spread lo Dublin.
Up to midnight, 22 people were
reported injured, three of them
critically, in the doling th.al
erupted in Roman Catholic dis·
tricts of Belfast and Londonderry
It was the worst violence in two
weeks of daily disturbances,
since it became apparent that he
was determined to die and that
t~e ~rltish government would not
give an.
Security forces were prepared
for worse violence after Sands'
funeral Thursday and the end or
the three-day mourning Ptriod
proclaimed by the IRA. But the
riots had not spread to Protestant
districts, where militants vowed
to fight if attacked.
From Page A1
TENNIS •••
aUair with Ms. Barnett, but said
the affair has been over for
some time and said she had
promised Ms. Barnett nothing.
Mrs. King and her husband
Larry, said their 19-year mar:
riage was stronger than ever.
The office issued a statement it
said was smuggled out of the
Maze tn which the prisoners said
that Britain would never "rob
us of our principles. There are
many Bobb Sands in t o loCkS-an we .will conITnu~e~to.._-4-~~~
Ms Barnett had been living in
the Mal ibu beach ho use
purchased by the Kings in 1974.
The King~ contend that Ms.
Barnett"s lawsuit was prompted
by-their reqoat tnaTshemove
out so the house could be sold. die on hunger strike if need be to
safeguard those principles."
It was not clear if the prisoners
intended to carry out a threat of a
mass hunger strike announced
Tuesday by Sinn Fein, political
front for the I RA. The front said
Tuesday that 70 Maze prisoners
we re prepared to join a ·hunger
strike, but no final decision had
yet been made.
On Tuesday, Prime Minister
M argar el Thatcher declared
again that Britain would n.ever
grant the rasters:·<iemand lhat .
imprisoned IRA members be
classified as political prisoners.
Mos t leaders of the opposition
Labor Party supported her stand.
But today in London, 11 Labor
me mbers of the 635-seat House of
Com mo us broke with their
party 's s upport. for Mrs .
From Page A1
•••
ings on the legislation before
sending tl directly to the full
Human Resources Committee
for a vote.
But his views on morality and
sex have been developing s ince he
re turned from a North Viel·
namese prisoner of war camp in
1973.
During his election campaign
last fall. Denton said, "No nation
can survive long unless it can
. teach its young to withhold in·
dulgence in their sexual appetites
until marriage."
Denton was elected with help
from the fundamentalist Moral
·M ajorily organization, and an
aide who worked on the legisla·
lion, Karl Moor , is a former
s taff member for Moral Ma-
jority.
ln an interview last week,
Denton said one of his goats as a
new member or the Senate is to
contribute to a public · dis·
cussion on the wisdom of ·'such
re latively new developments as
the sexual revolution."
Denton, 58, said he expects
c riticis m for pushing s uch
legislation.
Nonetheless, Denton said he is
going ahead because "the faml·
ly is the basis of·our continuing
as a country and probably as a
civilization."
IRS sa ved
from g unman
OROVILLE <AP> -A 54-year·
old man protesting -a back·laxes
order was arrested with a
loaded rifle he said he planned
to use in an Internal Revenue
Service office. authorities re·
port.
B i ll y Jo e Sanders or
Forbestown was booked Tues·
day for Investigation of carrying
a loaded weapon, a .32-caliber
rifle. in the city limits.
Butte County Undersherirf
Richard Stenbera said Sanders
reportedly was threatening to
use the rifle on the IRS, which
claims he owes $4,500 in back
taxes, interest and penalties.
Lost hiker
found h e althy
SAN DIMAS <AP) -A 2t·
year·old hiker. who lived on
nolhlng but salamanders for
.more than a week after he was
crippled by a rau, was found in
the rugged terrain of the San
Oabl"iel Mountains.
An astonished and 1urprisln1·
ly healthy Ray Lagrandeur of
Norw&llt was found Tuesday ly·
in1 next to a creek. He was
rescued by membert of tht San
Dlmu MountaiD Rncue Team.
..~ ........
A hooded youth lighta hi$ Molotov cocktail from the burning fuae
of o second during spoTodic rioting in Bel/cut ofter the death of
hunger striker Bobby Sands.
Johnny Carson back
on 'Tonighl, Show'
BURBANK, CAP) -Wtth a
r eso unding "Heeeeere ·s
Johnny!" and a hearty "hey-
oh," Johnny Carson returned to
the "Tonight Show" after a
three-week absence caused by a
writers ' strike.
Carson appeared Ii ve Tuesday
night ending a string of reruns,
as a result of an agreement
reached last week between the
Writers Guild and splinter group
of independent producers.
"Thank you very much," he
told a stud1o audience that gave
him a standing ovation Then he
quipped: "I needed four writers
for that line "
that the "BJ and the Bear"
televisi on s how had b een
dropped from the fall season
because "the chimp <Bear)
couldn't handle the double chore
o f acting and writing the
scripts."
Carson ended his opening
monologue with his us ual in·
troduction of guests, joking that
"psychic Tamara Rand will be
out here and predict there will
be a writer's strike."
The reference referred to Ms
Rand's purported "prediction"
of an assassination attempt on
President Reagan, which was
actually videotaped the day
after Reagan was shot Carson left the sho.w April 13,
l wo days after the strike began.
saying it was "senseless" to con· Car o lina s h a ke n
tinue live without the writers
who supply the comedy lines H ENDERSONV~LE , N .C.
that make a s ubstantial portion (AP > -No injuries but some
of the "Tonight" show. light damage was reported when
But the entertainer was in fine' a minor earthquake rumbled
form upon his return Tuesday beneath much of western North
He observed, for example, Carolina, officials said. ~~~~~~---'~~~~---"~~~~~---'-I
fn the court documents filed in
s upport of her attempt lo block
sale-of the personal letters, Mrs
King said, "Had I been of the
belief or understanding that
ther,e was any possibility that
Bar'helt would publish these let
ters to a third party. f would not
have sent them to her."
lf the letters are published.
the tennis star said no amount of
money could reimburse her for
the damage she would suffer.
Superior Court Judge Thomas
Johnson set a hearing for May 14
to d etermine whether a pre-
liminary injunction should be is-
s ued to keep the letters from
publication.
The court documents indicate
a behind·the·scenes struggle by
Mrs King's representatives to
head off the lawsuit this year by
arranging a financial settlement
with Ms Barnett
Mr s King 's bu si ness
manager . James Jorgenson,
said tn a state ment accom-
panied by a canceled check that
he paid S4,000 to Ms. Barnett's
attorney, Joel Ladin, in March
to make sure th,at the letters
from Mrs. King to Ms . Barnett
were not published .
But after the check was de·
li vered to Ladin, he said, the at·
torney phoned and announced
"The deal is off."
. Not greedy;
gram nixed
INDfANAPOLfS <AP > -A
high school senior who already
had won a $30,000 college
scholarship has refused a $10,000
award so someone else can go to
coll ege.
James D Laughlin, 17 ,
became the first person in the
hi s tory o f the Eisenhower
Me morial Scholarship Founda·
tion to tum down an award. He
had already received $30,000
from a corporation, and said he
decided over the weekend to
avoid "gluttony."
Spring Upholstery Special
Continues
All of our fine lines reduced for this event
* SUPER SPECIAL *
Woodmark's
famous
crewel wing chair,
The Tree of Life
Ciolor choice:
Spring Tones or
Blue and Wh ite Tones
Velvet Outside
reg. 519.00
SALE39900
L------....---~·-·~··11wrt. ~-------.. La1randeur, who went on
vaca&.kln April 28, wu reported
mluins by colleaauu at • TORRANCE COSTA MllSA UtS Newport Blvd. (71') 6'2·20SO
Sav·On Qrq Store ln Bell. He 23649 HawthOrne 81vd. 1
LAc;uNA BEACH
l4S North Coesthwy. (71 .. ) .. M.!51 waa taken by hellcopter lo (213) 37t-127' I CLOSED SUN~AYS I FoothlU Presb"erian Ho.~tal ._ ........... _. ...................................... ____ ..._ ...... .._ ________________ _.
lDOleDdai'a. .,-
\
\
\
J ean Harm, in prison for
murder in lhe March 1980
kill i ng of Dr. Rermaa
Tarnower, plans to watch the
NBC movie based on her
trial, a spokesman for ~
New York Department of
Correction said. .
The spokesman said Mrs.
..
Harris. serving a sentence of
15 years to lire in the state
prison for women, would
watch "The People vs. Jean
H&rris," a three-hour made-
ror-TV movie that begins
Thursday night.
The movie, taken from
transcripts of Mrs. Harris'
trial and s tarring Ellen
Buratyn as the former
private school headmistress
convicted of shooting the na-
tionally known diet doctor,
concludes Friday night.
After Secretary of State
Alexander M. Hale Jr.
finished testifying before a
House subcommitee chaired
by Rep. Clarence D. Lone, D·
Md., Long .said he wanted to
say a wOFd to Haig.
"Thank you, Mr. Stale·
ment, for your secretary,"
,.....,_ ....
Will these tittle birc.U heed the state's beckoning and settle in Upper Newport Bay? Least tern at right
offers a /Uh a1 port of mating ritual.
Long said. ---Valley man nanied -Will terns
de~!~:1s;~~kac:~~sss~~~"f~ to a1·rport board .flock to O r ange Co unty's Old Jj
Courthouse during filming or Back Bay? :· A~WI ........ a TV movie\ "Sizzle:" Terri Welles. 24 , a former airline stewardess
who has been named ·Playboy magazine-' s
Playmate of the Year, smiles at her husband,
Los Angeles Kings hockey player Charlie Sim-
mer.
scheduled for airing in the BY O.C. HUS'ilNGS
fall. -Of-Dallyl'tltllSIMf
·.
'·
I
1.l
HB's 'Maverick'
BJ's 'guest'
Huntington Be ac h Coun-
cilman Jack Kelly better
known as the actor who co·
starred in the "Maverick"
telev1s1on series of the 1950s
still occas1onally appears
on the tube
At a City Council meeting,
Councilwoman Ruth Dailey
a s k e d If
anyone had
wat c h e d
Saturday's
"BJ and the
B e a r ' '
telev 1s 1on
show in which
Kelly made a
gue s t ap -
pearance
.. I did .. ' ULLY
said Kelly, smiling, waving
his hand in the air
.. He was the bad guy,"
quipped Mrs Bailey. "just
like h~ alwa~s is."
'Tm innocent. chief." said
Kelly to police chief Earle
Robltallle, sitting near by.
The Archbishop. of Can-
t e r bury, Ro bert Runcle,
celebrated a Cinco de Mayo
Mass in the East Los Angeles
barrio in honor or the an·
niversary of Mexico's VIC·
to r y over the occupying
French army in 1892.
As mariachis played dur-
ing the Mass aJ.,,the Church of
the Epiphany.~uncie urged
the congregation to pray for
Irish Republican Army
member Bobby Sands, 27,
who died Monday in a prison
in Belfast. Northern Ireland
after a 6.5-day hunger strike.
Former h ostage Biiiy
Gallegos has been-eating
more than the two meals a
day he got from his Iranian
captors -and it shows .
Marine Sgt. Gallegos has
added 50 pounds in the 3~
months since his release
from the Iranian embassy.
"I've put it all on in the
w r o n g places ," said
Gallegos. "I haven 't had
much time to exercise "
Gallegos. 22, is one of the
52 Americans held hostage
for 444 days in Iran.
Miss Anderson stars with •·
John Forsythe in the two.
hour "Movie· of the Week"
segment for ABC about a
country girl ·who gets en-
tang1ed in the .Chicago un-
derworld of 1927.
The movie is being pro-
duced by Aaron SpellJng
Productions.
FILMS IN COUNTY
Loni Anderson
·:.West tO he sunny
:; Scattered showers due over Eastern third of U.S.
. l
wastal ~ather
Smell crelt edvlaory outer coesl•I
••l•ro Point Conception 10 Sen
Hlcolu 111-lor northwest wlncls U
10 2S knots wltll • 10 10 loot combl11H
HH lllroueh tonight El$ewher•, 119111 ver,_. winds b«oml"9 wes1
to sou111-.1 10 10 11 1tnou In elt•r·
noon. I lo 2 loot Wfllerly •-II. Morn· 11111 low ,_,,." bec:omlne mostly
"""''In..._
U.S. summary
A co1<1 lranl """*'"-•rs tllrougll
lhe MluhSI~ Velley Oii T-y.
1<enerl119 .,_,.from LIKlltlene to
Mlchlgen. A •-ti.u-rstormt 1111 Ille cenlret Gllll C.O.sl
Nortl!wly winch s~ the Grul
Plell'IS, but """'Y 11ti.1 llfougtlt lem-
per•turea lnlo Ille 60I In the O.ltote1
•ncl Mol\t-
Mlld wuther ruled •lone Ill•
Eestern •-Cl encl e few llglll
lllowe n mowd lllrougtl Ille Pecllk
Hor111-I.
Tempereturn •round Ille nelfOll at
mlddey Tundlly re119ed lrom • low
of 4.J In lelter, ~ .. toe 1111111 Of ti I"
Cren City, Fl•.
Scettered s11ower1 •"Cl lllun·
d9r1torm1 .. ,.. .. peeled tocl•Y over
the E11tem INrd ol the n•llon, wllll
rein 'l)f'e.il119 ecr011 111e l'lor'lllern
AoOy Mouflt•ln1. The Mlul11IP911 V•ll•Y Wiii be mostly CIOUdy, lhe
SovthwH I -WWtl CN1t wlll heve tllfltllhM.
". ~ ( • -" ...
lIIlIIm
Guity w9ll to soutllwftl winch 10 to
JO mpll In Ota.ts •I times.
Or•nee Coul\ty ,.,, .,.P«I highs 10-
dey •l>CI Thundey 11'1 Ille -· '°' elOl\g Ille C-1, ,_ IOI lnl-. L-s
lnlheSOs.
lnlWld vell..,s ""'" heve highs bOlll
deyt 111 Ille '°'· l"Owt 11'1 tfle SOs.
Mounteln1 ,.,, ••P•<I IOC•I
l!OrlllwHterly wlllds IS to u mlltl. Hlgfls In Ille tot, lows U to •S.
Hort,,.,.. dtlert lllllM 1S to 15, Iowa
111 Ill• SO.. Sout~n dtMrt llAtllls 15 to •s. 1-1 In Ille tOs. Northern •nd C.l'llrel Celllornle
cen Hpec1 INIClly coeslel '°" Cloueh
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8eltlmon 72 ..
llrm lngflm n St
llamerclt .. " l ofM ., ll
llotlOI\ SJ ,q
8rown1v11e " .. lullelo 76 51
Cllerl1ln SC .. 13 ChArl'1nWV a 47
Clleye,,,,. St 41
Chl<•eo .. •• Cll\c:lnMll 12 " Clevel•l>CI 74 SS
Columbvt 7J u ton11111 enct Tll11radey mor11ln9. D•l·Flwtll ,. 6$ Oll1erwlM lelr lllrOUClfl Tllu...Oey. O.nver .. u Werml11gt,.... Ot1Mol1W1 71 51
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F•lrtloelllt> .. • Hertford 71 " H•I-SI " lieATION H-lulu .. 6$ • AllNny 71 SS Howtofl .. " AIWllW n S4 1 ...... 11. ., 42 AIMrlllO 7S 51 JltCUftYlle .. .. AMllor ... w 42 J -ev 6CI • AtlleYllle a SJ 1le111 City ... SI
l lllrougll ~'• el!CeOt for let• f nlgflt -eerty moml11t c-1-
Soulhem Udif omia surf report .... -1
....
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........... .... -.... 1 1 IW
1 I IW
I 2 • I 4 \\ ' 1t J •
We're Listenin'! .... ~·
What do you like about tbt Dally Pilot? What don't you Ukf?
Call the number below and )'OW' meua1e wUI be recorded,
lranacrlbed and delivered to the appropriate editor.
TM aame at-hour auwerint aervlce may be used to record
lellera to the editor on any topfc. MaJlbox contrtbuton must ln·
elude lhelr name and telephone saumber for verlflcatk>n. No
clrculatlan calla, pleue.
TeU ua what's on your mlnd.
..... \lteft .. 61
Lllll• Aoo 7) '2
LllllllVllle 7t '2
Memplll• 77 .. Mleml ,, n
Mllweuk• 62 u Mpl .. St.P ... so Huhvllle a J6 Hew Ori-.. .. .. H-YOf1l ,, S6 Norfolk " S4 Okie City ,. J6 Omehe '5 .. Orleftdo " S2 Plllledphle ., S2
Plloeflhr '2 61
PltbburVfl ?I so
Ptlencl, Me st ..
Ptleftd,Ore SI a Aepld City " 40
Reno .. u RlcM•-7J • S.11 L•lle 7S u s .. 111• SI 40 SILIKllt ... SI
CALIPOIUllA
Apple\1•11.., 71 41
lelterafleld ,. Sl .. ,.,_ " S1
l eeumont n Jl
8l98Hr ., 26
81•MC> ,. 41
Blyth• '2 ..
CelellM .. S4 ~I Centro tO SS
l urffle SJ 41
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L"AneeMa 7a • ,..., .. ,,,. .. 71 so
Mtlll'0¥1e 15 .. MoflteWllo 7S ... Moft•rn 6CI ..
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... t tfU ,11\. ............ 111.,, ........... .... :.,....... .
David Prebis h of Fountain
Valley has been appointed to the
Orange County Airport Com·
mission by Supervisor Roger
Stanton.
Prebish is chair man of. the
Fountain Valley Parks and
Recreation Commission. He also
has served on the city Housing
and Community Development
board and the city Committee on
the Handicapped.
The airport comm1ss1on ad·
vises the county Board of
Supervisors on aviation matters,
primarily those involving John
Wayne Airport. • • •
Lt. Gov. Mike Curb will be in
Orange County May 12 to spend
an evening with his backers in
the Grand Ballroom of t he Dis-
ney land Hotel.
Tickets to the fund-raiser are
going for $500 each .
The evening will get under
way with a reception at 6 :30
p.m . followed by dinner al 7:30
p.m.
• • •
ORANGE COUNTY District
Attorney Cecil Hicks, who has
been getting out and about late·
Jy. will make another speech
May 13.
This one will be at a luncheon
meeting of the Balboa Bay
Republican Women. Federated.
The meeting will be at the Irvine
Coast Country Club. • • •
MEMBERS OF THE business
community w ill greet As·
sem blywoman Marian Bergeson
May 14 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Fluor
Corp. heajiquarters in Irvine.
The fund-raising reception will
feature Dixon Arnett,
economist, Rose Institute, Clare-
mont College. Guests will in·
elude Assembly Minority Leader
Carol Ha llett, State Senate
Minority Leader Bill Campbell
a nd Ernest Dron e nburg,
chairman of the State Board of
Equalization.
J . Robert Fluor is chairman of
the host committee which in·
eludes Jim Cavanaugh, Bob Clif·
ford. Tom Elli ck . Walter
Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHRIES
Ctrtified Gemologi1t, AGS
DIAMONDS
LI boJl't btat /rimd'
A recent rtatlonwlde survey
shows that single m en are
becoming more interested in
wearing diamond jewelry . . .
even to the polnt of askin1 peo-
ple to ~Y them diamond gifts.
In fact, sinele men are acquir-
in1 diamond jewelry at twice
the rate of married men, abd at
half the rate or alJ women. Moel
of them buy the jewelry
themselves, but a growin1
number a re being given
diamond gllta. II this aurpriaes
,you, consider some other
aspects or the aame survey:
men are becomln1 more recep· live to special desiper clothing
and such tbblf• u dlaUncUve
furnilhtnca ln baebelor apart-
ment.a and men's offlcea. Tbole
who are expert ln •ueh matten
tell ua that all ol th1a ta part of a
1rowln• feelln1 amon1 men
that they should auert their ln·
dlvldual personalities and
masculinity. Such a movement
la said to be an olhfaoot ol Lbe same ldDd ol comctou.mesa ln
women. So, no wondtr men
hne diaeovertd dlamoadl . ·. .
th• ladl• led the way there,
tool ..
Delly ~flee Slaff ,_.
JOI NS AJRPORT PANEL
Valley's David Prebish
Gerken, Gavin Herbert, Don
K oll , Peter Kremer , Bill
Langston, Don Livingston, John
Rau, Pttil Reilly, Glen StiUwell,
John Virtue and Bill Voit. • • •
DR. CARLOTTA MELWN,
Governor Brown's appointments
secretary, will speak on "The
G ubernatorial Appointment
Process in California" May 15 in
Santa Ana.
The Orange County Women
Lawyers group is co-sponsoring
Dr. Mellon's appearance with
the California Women Lawyers,
the Women's Law Institute end
Women 's Caucus of Western
State University's College of
Law, and the Orange County
C hapter o f t h e National
Women's Political Caucus.
The meeting will be at the
Saddleback Inn a t 11:30 a.m.
Lunch will be served at noon and
Dr. Mellon will speak at 12:30
p.m .
Lunch is $7. Your check must
be received by Susan Katzen,
695 Town Center Drive, Suite
1000. Costa Mesa, no later than
May 12. Make the check payable
to Orange County. Women
Lawyers.
By STE VE MARBLE
o<u.e O .. ly ,..lee 5t.fl
Attracting least terns to Upper
Newport Bay has been singled
out as a chief objective of lhe
managers of the bats ecological
reserve, the State Department
of Fish and Game said.
So far they've had little sue·
cess at it.
The terns and several other
endangered s pecies r ate in a list
of goals and objectives the Fish
and Game Department has com·
piled.
Known as the draft manage-
ment plan. the document out·
lines goals for restorin,g the bay
to its 1890 condition and for at-
tracting wildlife. The plan also
sets goals for attracting peo-
ple but to a lesser degree than
birds and other creatures.
More than a year ago, Fish
and Game officials constructed
a white sand breeding site on
Shellmaker Island jn the bay in
hopes of attracting t he least
tern.
The breeding site is equipped
with models of least terns and
has a foot-high electric wire run-
ning around it, to keep dogs and
other non-birdlovers away.
But the small bird. known as a
finicky creature, appears to pre·
fer setting down in places like
Bols a Chica in Huntington
Beach or along the runway at
Lindbergh Field in San Diego.
But Fis h and Game offi cials
s ay they're not about to give up
on the little bird or their man-
made breeding site in the bay.
Jn fac t, they say, It may be de-
sirable to establish other such
sites to .give the terns a selec-
tion.
"T he best you can do is offer ,"
suggests Ralph Young, a Fish
and Game official.
It is estimated that 900 pairs of
the tiny birds fly north each
year from South America to
California . San Diego, Camp
P e ndleton and Huntington
Beach are listed as favorite
least tern stopping spots.
Fis h and Game officials, as
staled in the man agem ent plan,
say they hope to "optimize"
c lappe r rail a nd Belding's
savannah s parrow populations.
0
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-·-
"I
Otange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedn .. day, Maye, 1981 NATION
TrOops take oil camp
Rightist leader held in Bolivia; hostages freed
SANTA CRUZ, Bolivia EAP)
-Leaders of Bolivia's milit.ary
regime debated what to do with
ultTa-rl•htlst leader Carlos
Valverde and six of his men to-
day following their surrender at
the Occ1dental Petroleum camp
they seized in an attempt to
replace the ruline junta with a
more conservatfve govern·
ment.
.Army troops occupied the
American oll company's Tita
camp in southern Bolivia Mon·
day and freed 36 employees
Valverde had-taken hostage two
days before. One casualty was
reported, the commander of the
army forces. The government
said be was wounded seriously
wh4'n a gu.n-ms~liarged "ifc~idert
tally as his men were collecting
the tebels' arms.
The hostages included one
American. Leonard Davis, an
Occidental technician. His
hometown in the United States
was not immediately available.
Valverde had threatened to
blow up Occidental's oU and gas
field ne ar the Paraeuayao
border unless President Luis
Garcia Meza and th~ rest of the
junta resigned Monday after·
noon. The rebels demanded
establishment of a transitional
civilian-military government.
The army took controJ. of the
-eamp two hours bel'Ore the
deadline., apparently following
negotiation of an agreement
with Valverde.
A government statement said
· ·'While ·the'" arms -used· -by the-
re be ls were being collected, one
of the weapons accidentally dis·
charged" and wounded the com·
mander of the 8th. Division, Col.
Gary Prado Salmon.
bullet hll hlm in the lower back,
went up and penetrated a lung.
Earlier reports said
Valverde's rebel band numbered
about !iO armed men and they
took 52 Occidental employees
hostage. Government sources
said these initial estimates were
incorrect.
Garcia Meza and the other of.
ficers who overthrew the
civilian government of Presi·
dent Lidia Gueiler last July are
conservatives, and Valverde
s-upported their coup. But re-
cently h.e has been charging the
junta with being ineffective, cor·
rupt and involved in the boom·
ing illegal traffic in cocaine.
Medfly spreading
DOGFIGHT RAIDED -Officers with riot
batons keep order as some of 42 suspects wait
in bloodstained dogfight pit following policf'
...........
raid in Stacy, .Minn. The raid culminated a
year of undercover work by various agencies.
A goverment statement said
VaJverde, the president of the
Falange Party. and his men
were taken to La Paz, the
capital 330 miles northwest of
Santa Cruz, "where investiga-
tions iJ1to their ties continue."
A friend who visited Prado in
the hospital said his condition
had stabilized. but he was still in
intensive care. Doctors s aid the
SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -
State officials say they have found
a female Mediterranean fruit Oy
in San Mateo County. It was found
in a trap in Redwood City. some 20
miles from the center of the
quarantined zone of infestation in
Santa Clara.
Sex, death backstage Tor Mother's Day •
Scandal surf aces in opera murder trial
NEW YORK <AP)-Jurors in.a
rape-murder case are getting a
glimpse of the Metropolitan
Opera House that can't be seen in
the elegant theater -drinking,
drug use and sex backstage.
Back.stage emplo)'ees, testify·
ing about their activitid when
. violinist Helen Hagnes Minti.lts
was slain at the opera house, re·
, counted beer drinking and drug
use -marijuana, stimulants and
cocaine-before and on the job.
THEY ALSO described
backstage areas where
stagehands often sleep to avoid
. work and told how co-workers
cover for missing or tardy fellow
employees.
The investigation of the killing
of Mrs. Mintiks, who was bound
and burled to her death from the
opera house roof last July 23, also
turned up evidence of "old"
semen stains on a "drapery" and
on paper towels found at the Lin·
· coin Center theater, a doctor
• testified.
Craig Crimmins, a 22-year-old
former stagehand, is accused of
second-degree murder and at·
tempted rape in the death of the
31:year-old musician, who
vanished during an intermission
of a ballet performance attended
by some3,000people.
In bis opening statement in
state Supreme Court in Manhat·
tan, Assistant District Attorney
Roger Hayes sai4 Crimmins
forced Mrs. Mintiks to the roof,
stripped, bound and gagged her
and then "kicked" her down an
air shaft.
THE TRIAL enters its.second
week Monday. During the week;
jurors are scheduled to see a
videotape of a confession Crim·
mins made before his arrest last
Aug. 30. Defense lawyers say
Crimmins made the confession
under improper coercion.
Much of last week's testimony
came from Crimmins' former
fellow workers.
Stage carpenter Thomas
Gravina said he and Crimmins
each bad about nine beers, snort·
ed the contents of several am-
phetaminecapsules, and shared a
marijuana cigarette befpre the
eveningperformanceJuly23.
Gravina, 23, said Crimmins
was "feelingtheliquor," butitdid
not impair bis ability to work. And
Gravina said personally be can
work after drinking and smoking
but doesn't "make a habit" out of
consuming as much as they did
that day.
GRAVINA, WHO earns $500 a
week as a carpenter, testified
Crimmins bad asked him in
August to tell police that he had
seen Crimmins "sleeping in the
back" that night.
Gravina said he had already
· UMW coal strike
marked by violence
By &Ille Aasoclated PreH
· Long-time friends have
· become foes. Armed men gather
at night to launch dawn forays
against coal companies that
have become bristling
fortresses, complete with hired
guards who flaunt rifles as if
· daring the nightriders to attack.
. A Wild West navor bas spnmg-·
· up in many Appalachi-an
coalfield communities since the
· United Mine Workers went
' on strike 37 days ago in a con·
tract dispute. •
l In rural eastern Kentucky re·
cently, meri could be seen going
f about their business with re-
volvers strapped to their hips.
l Non.-unlon coal trucks were
traveling in armed convoys,
many with euards riding t "shotgun" as if the bie vehicles
• were the stage coaches of the t last century.
I SOME LAW enforcement of.
ficers in rural coalfield counties I have begun to admit for the first
. time that they lack the means to
maintain order. Some hue
become so fearful of possible re-
percuaaion.s that they've elected
to stay in the backcround rather
than take a touch stance.
"We're between a rock and
hard place," ii bow Pike Coun·
ty, Ky., deputy Jobn Huffman
describes the situation.
So far, no 90e bu been kllled
in a dozen or so s hootouts
between union pickets and fl90·
union 1uards and truckers.
However, se~ral men have aut-
fered f\llUlhot woun& in eutem
Kentucky where union and non-
union forces are about equal and
+there most of the violence has
occurred. \
Kentucky State Police Com·
miulo'ner Merion Campbell
acknowled1es be can't
1u1rantee an end to tb• violence. He said ao at a recent
m"U.., witb 200 DOD·unioa coal operaton. tome ol wbom 11ld.
they had beaun· earryln1
ftrearma and were pnpa.red to
take the law Into tbelr own
..... ll...Sbe.
a.a.e eoal operator• I•
fl
Kentucky and West-Virgjnla are
complaining that autlorlties
have failed to enforce court in·
junc:tions and that state police
always seem to arrive after the
shooting is over.
Two Kentucky state troopers
were on band recently when UD·
ion pickets and non-union
truckers began exchanging shots
on an eastern Kentucky moun·
ta-in. The troopers, badly out·
numbered. dived for cover.
Later, when the shooting bad
ended, pickets told reporters in
the presence of the troopers that
they had better get off the moun-
tain beca~e "there's no law up here." -,
Governors in the c"al states
have taken various approaches
to the problem.
In Virginia, which bas a right·
to-work law, Gov. John Dalton
bas sent extra squadB of state
troopers to the coalfields to pro-
tect MO·union mines that have
continued operations .
IN KENTUCKY, Gov. Jobn Y.
Brown aroused the. wrath of non-
union ~oal operators recenUy by
saying he would not l''baby sit"
theff'-m-ines. -&entuck.y state
police announced contlntency
plans Thursday for dealing with
incidents, includi.nl the posstbiU·
ty of brlntlna in additional
forces.
Pennsylvania state police
spokesman Tom Lyon says
there's no set strike policy in the
Keystone State.
"If there's a violation, then we
act," be adds. "We're not atrike
breaken."
West Virclnia's state troopen
have taken a walt·and-aee
stance. Under state law, they •~ forbidden to u1i1t either
party ln "any labot trouble or
dJspute between employel' or
employee."
Thta 11 an especially aeuttlve
problem In Weet VlrSinia, wMl'e
lW"D·Of·tb• century sovernon
LWed lo eall out tM •WUa to
Quell "mlnen' rebeWon.I. ''
told police "no.one was missing"
from the stage crew that night,
a lthough he knew differently. "I
lied," the backstage worker said
under cross-examination, ex·
plaining stagehands routinely
coverforeachotber.
that tut
"We all disappear" from time.
to time, agreed former backstage
supervisor Fred G. Collay Jr.,
who testified Crimmins vanished
at about 9:15 p.m. that night -
just before police believe Mrs.
Mintiks met her killer.
Collay said Crimmins told him
July 24 that he "fell asleep on a
rear wagon because he wasn't
feeling good," though the mov-
able stage is "not the normal
place to sleep."
ANOTHER stagehand. electri·
cian Vincent Donohue, startled
the court by announcing that not
only had he snorted cocaine at
work July 23, he had used the drug
just before testifying.
The 31-year-old said be knew
Crimmins bad not slept in a locker
room, as the defendant bad told
police. because Donohue himself
was there using cocaine that
night.
And Dr. Robert C. Shaler, who
said tests for semen in and on the
victim's body were negative but
inconclusive, testified a
·'drapery" and three paper
towels found at the Met contained
seminal fluid. 'fwo blood groups
were identified, Shaler said, in·.
dicating the semen was from at
least two men.
The samples, he said, were
between "one and two months"
old, but "could also be much
older." 1be towels were labeled
'" B • deck.'' "fire extinguisher,"
and ''bottom of ashtray," ap·
parenUy indicating where they
w~refound.
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Orange Coast OAtLY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 s
Bodies to he exhumed
Year-round school.s increased
LOS ANGELES CAP> -Due to overcrowded
: conditions, a plan has been adopted to double the
• number ol schools used year-roqnd.
: Starting this summer, the. number or year·
round schools will jump from 45 to 91, the Board or ~ Education voted Monday.
: However, the plan was met with vociferous
: disapproval by Mexican-American parents and
: community representatives.
~Broun on television : . S~AMEN1'0"'(AP> -Gov. Edm\lnd Brown
: Jr. says be wiJI describe his anti-crime program in
: a televised speech tonight.
; Brown's office said Monday that the
Democratic governor would make the speech from
: his Los Angeles office, and it would be available to
· radio and television stations statewide. . ~ Reactor leak told
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Leaking radioactive ! steam bas delayed plans to restart the nuclear i power plant at Rancho Seco, a spokesman for the
· Sacramento Municipal Utility District s aid.today.
· Utility spokesman Brad Thomas said radioac-
; tive steam began leaking Sunday at the rate of
~ about 5 gallons per minute. which he described as j "very insignificant." .
Body freezers .sued
Cryonics chief denies promising preservation for ever
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The head of a society
that froze bodies so they could be revived at a
future date bas denied that he ever promised to
preserve the bodies forever.
Robert F. Nelson. former head of the now de-
funct Cryonics Society of California, admitted at a
civil fraud trial Monday that bodies were allowed
to defrost "simply because the society ran out of
money. out of people to help and just the energy to
go any further."
The families of four dead people are suing
Nelson's society, claiming they paid to have their
deceased relatives frozen in cryonic suspension in
the early 1970s, in hopes or having them thawed
and brought back to life in the future.
The theory behind cryonics is that when
medical technology becomes more sophisticated,
diseases that were fatal to these people could be
cured.
The families allege that Nelson 's society cul
off the supply of liquid nitrogen used to keep the
bodies frozen in capsules, and aJlowed them to
thaw and deteriorate.
Nelson said the society had hoped to bring in
enough income to establish trust funds to keep the
bodies "in perpetuity." but had fallen far short of
that goal.
Nelson is the author of "We Froze the First
Man," a book about "profu.sing, .. which, he ex-
plained to a jury in Los Angeles Superior Court,
means replacing a dead person's blood with a
"biological antifreeze" to protect the tissue from · T'axabl -1-s up 9 J dJ d l damage caused by freezing:
be exhumed. a ulboritJes will attempt to retrieve
an additional body 1lven to Loma Linda
Universlty Medical Center aa a 1peclmen. He•
added that two other paUenta, buried ln New Mex·
ico and Minnesota, also may be retrieved.
HOLLENHORST SAJD "relatively hith quan·
tities" of a common drua were found in two bodiea
at Perris and one at Bannlni. but he would n.ot
confirm reports by another TV 1tatlon, KABC in
Loa Aneeles, that the substance wu LJdocatne, a
local anesthetic administered intravenously.
He had indicated, however, that the substance
generally is quickly metabolized by the body, as is
Lldoeaine, and that medtcaJ omcaau were tryma
to determine if residue or the substance is stored ln
any human organs.
Dfkes said that because of the speed with
wbfcb The drue disappears from the body, it was
important to move quickly on the exhumation.
There remains a "possibility" the substance could
still be found in the bile or liver of some ol thoae
patients, he said.
On Monday, Hollenhorst would say only that
.. there are commen symptoms shared by most of
those who died including the fact that they died in
the intensive-c~re units"' at the two hospitals.
But he did say the drug's manufacturer bad
.ruled out a "bad batch of medicine" lo the deaths
;md reRQrted the batch they checked from at leas!_
one hospital .. was all right."
PacTel seeking
new rate hikes
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Pacific Telephone
Co. has now asked permission for rate increases or
more than $1 billion so, it says, it can cover costs
of m eeting new federal regulations.
The request before the California Public
Utilities Commission could mean as much as a 15
percent monthly surcharge for all customers as
well as other added charges, the utility a.id.
The company made the request ~ooday .. ln i~
petition. the utility added a $252 m1Ulon. hike tn
telephone rates on top of a $794 million mcrease
sought earlier. Pacific Telephone said it needs the money to
comply with a Federal Communications Com·
mission order affecting the way the company ac-
counts for telephone installation costs.
Under the new FCC ruling, installation costs
must be treated as a direct expense instead of a
gradual dissolvement of a company expense.
If approved by the PUC. reJldential customers
would pay about $5 more than the current rate for
basic service installations and business customers
would pay $10 more for Installation or basic
service.
LAX terminal OK'd : .fj e S~ 80 Or 8 0 pay The families of deceased cryonics victims
SACRAMENTO (AP> -Taxable sales jumped Claire Halpert, Marie Bowers, Louis Nisco, and LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Board of Airport
• 8.4 percent in California during HIM, but continued LOS ANGELES (AP) -Nine or 14 landlords Gaylord and Mildred Harris, are seeking refunds Commissioners has approved designs for a Sl24 , high inflation meant the saJes volume actually sued for illegally keeping deposits and cleaning or of nearly $4-0,000 they paid, and $500,000 each for million termina l at Los Angeles International i dropped 6.1 percent, the state Board of Equaliza-otherfees have agreedtopay atotalof$35.7S0incivil emotional suffering, and $10 million in punitive
'lion reported. penaltiesand$59,000inrefundstotenants. damages. Airp~~~k on the international lP.rminal at the west
; The tax-collecting panel said the California Deputy District Attorney John F. Lynch filed the Defendants in the suit are Nelson, his society, end of the airport is expected to begin later this year
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Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wedne&day, May 8, 1981
'Private' justice can
sidestep court delays
lt doesn't require 3 .-cre1tt deal
of perception to reallze al can take
years to settle a civil lawsuit ln the
court System theseda~ s.
The backlogs of civil uits only
seem to grow thicker by the day as
a litigious dtii<>nr~ wants iU
grievances in court .
In an attempt to leapfrog this
buckJog. former ju~es as well as
lawyers in Cahfornta including
several in Oran~c Co unty have
been taking ad\':tnhtge or a cen-
tur y -old s.t atule . The almost-
forgotten law permits opposing
parties in a legal dispute to submit
their case to arbitration. thereby
a voiding the otherwise congested
legal channels or the conventional
court system. :.rm meams dueling parties
m erely sign a contract agreeing
to abide by the decision of the
arbitrator . or so-called private
judge.
As a means of a llowing
lat1 ga1tll> an avenue to speed y
judgment, the private j udging
syst~m has obvious ment. Cases
can be settled in a matter of
months lnstead of years .
But it also raises questions.
One in particular concerns
secrecy from public scrutiny.
No record need be kept of such
cases and sensitive matters that
would normally be settled in public
court now can be -adjudicated in
secret.
Another question is whether
private judging is merely u way
for the we ll-to-do to sidestep
normal court c hannels rathe r
than wait in line with everyone
else.
Supporters of legal arbitra-
tion, however , point out that
private j udging is one way to
wttd "Out eases for-settlement
that would normally take up a
public court's costly time.
P e rhaps with the new
popularity of arbitration, the
Leg is lature can r e -examine
statutes to ease concerns about
private justice.
Oil battle joined
Testifying before a con -
gressional committee. new In-
terior Secretary James Watt said
a slate's role in offshore drilling
matters is "purely advisory" and
that stale objections can be over-
ruled by a simple finding that a
state's concerns do not refl ect the
overriding national need.
Those views soon may be
te"ted in court.
The state of Ca lifornia, led
by c;o\'. Brown and a coalition of
c11v1 ronmental groups, is going to
tourt in an a ttempt to block
Watt's proposal to open up to a
million acres off the coast of
Northern California to oil drill-
ing.
Secretary Watt set off the
ruckus by deciding, shoJ1ly after
he> took office, to overturn the de·
cision of former Secretary Cecil
Andrus to exclude five offshore
California tracts from oil leasing.
Andrus agreed that environ-
mental and commercial concerns
in the areas offset what appeared
to he a rather limited amount of
oil that could be produced.
The lawsuits will attempt to
delay drilling in the Santa Maria
ba~in, scheduled for leasing this
month, and to head off planned
lease sales in four other Northern
California basins Point Arena,
Bodega, Santa Cruz and Eel
River.
The suits contend that an en·
v 1 ronmental impact study pre-
pared for the lease sales is inade·
quate; that oil exploration in cer-
tain areas could gravely damage
the multi -m illion-dollar com -
m<•rcial fishi'ng industry; that oil
install ations could adversely af-
fect the tourism business upon
\\hi ch many coastal communities
depend; and that drilling would
be inconsistent with the state's
Coastal Zone Management Plan
•
which already has been approved
by the federal government.
State Atto rney General
George Deukmejian is working
with the governor's staff on the
s tate suit and the National
Resources Defense Council is
lea ding the environmental coali-
tion.
Separate suits are expected
to be filed by several of the af-
fected counties, which include
Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo,
Santa Cruz , Sonoma. Marin,
Mendocino and Humboldt.
The oil exploration would
take place in fed eral waters
beyond the three-mile limit, but
the state contends the planned
lease sales have not given suffi-
cient consideration to the state's
needs as required under the
federal Outer Continental Shelf
Act.
In announcing the accelerat-
e d five -year offshore leasing
plan. the Inte rior Department
st at es that complete environ-
mental impact studies would be
prepared should the exploratory
drilling result in commercially
promising "finds."
The department further notes
that, "If Limited oil is found. the
potential for e nvironmenta l
damage from a spill declines pro-
portionally."
This must be small comfort
for the north coast communities.
The need for development of
new energy sources cannot be
denied. But that need, as the
suits contend should be weighed
against pote ntial permanent
damage to irreplaceable coastal
areas, a matter that apparently
does not interest Secretary Walt
nor the oil companies now suc-
cessfully pushing for extended oiJ
lease rights.
Opinions expressed ln the space above art! those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-
pressed on thi s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment ts Invit-
ed Address The Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1S60. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71~)
642·4321
L.M. Boyd/Shakespeare's ideal
Q Did William Shakespeare
describe his ideal woman?
A Repeatedly At least, many of
the women he wrote about bad
similar characteristics. Black bair,
black eyes. blue veined breasts, a
breathless way or talking, and a
peculiar manner of hopping instead
of walking.
Q Can you verify the claim that
the toughest boxer who ever lived
was 11 fighter named Lamar Clark?
A. No, sir , can only report Mr.
Clark set the all-tlme coruseculive
knock~>Ul record by deckins 44 oppo-
nents m a row. But Archie MOOfe ~d
a lot more damage than that with 136
non-conse<'ullve knockout.a during hla
career.
Ten families were caUed a Ulhin1.
And 10 Uthings elected a spokesman
called a reeve. These reeva met
periodically to figure out what waa
best for all the titblngs put to1et.ber.
Their overall group was called a
shire. /\m talking about the Anglo-
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
Saxons in the A.O. 800s. And thls ex-
planation is prelimina ry to our
Language man's report that "shire
reeve" gave us our word "sheriff."
Quick, name the only land animal
that gives birth in the waler. The hip·
po, the hippo. Tbe female hip:
popotamus delivers in an unusually
rapid manner, might mention. A live-
ly moment. And the 100-pound baby
bobs to the surface for its first
breath.
There they sit, Sweden and
Finland, aide by side. In Sweden,
most of the butchers are men. In
FJt>land, most are women. Why this
dllference?
The content.Jon th.at men tend to be
more boneheaded ls an Insult offset
by the claim that women are more
likely to be son-headed. None t.oo
complimentary, these plain facu, but
they are true, physically. Men's skull
booea teem to calcify mot"e readJly
than women, uy the medicot. ,
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
Tho~s KNvll
Editor
Barbara Krelbk"
Edltorlal Page E~itor
' .
0 4 a a a a a a s ca cs SYS ... .Ji!Z
Conflict doubts shadow Watt
WASHI NGTON -During his con-
firmation hearings, a reluctant Interior
Secretary James Watt agreed tp take no
part in department decisions on cases
brought by his old public-interest law
firm , the Mountain_.States Legal Foun-
. dation.
Thal promise, howeve r, has not
stopped Watt ~om laking actions worth
millions to big corporations that con-
tributed money to the foundation. Since
tt141"1on-profit foundation depends for its
existence on such contributions, Watt
appears to have violated the spirit if not
the letter of his pledge.
What makes this important, is that the'
Mountain States Legal Foundation has
championed the view that more federal
lands should be opened up for develop-
ment. Up to the day of his swearing in.
Watt was an articulate spokes man for
this view.
Within two weeks after taking over
the Interior Department, Watt reversed
past policy and opened certain West
Coast offshore areas for oil exploration.
Not surprisingly, among those who have
expressed interest in drilling rights are
Chevron. Shell and Exxon.
IN THE PAST two years, Chevron
donated $10,000 t o Watt's former
foundation; Shell contributed $.1,000 for
1980-81, and Exxon chipped in $5,000 last
year. Cnl.Jcs might be forgiven if they
suspect the big oil companies cast their
"bread" upon the waters and are hop·
ing to get it back offshdre.
Another case that Wall is reportedly
acting favorably on involves the Utah
-__ G.
~ JACK AIDIRSOI
Power and Light Company, which 1s
also a contributor to the foundation
that Watt set up. The utility wants the
Inte rior Department to OK a lease-
exchange on coal-producing federal
lands. Approval could mean millions for
Utah Light and Power.
In a private letter to Watt on April 2,
the General Accounting Offi ce cau-
tioned the secretary against approving
the lease-exchange before GAO has
ti me to submit a report on the deal. ··An
unanswered question," the letter noted,
is whether the exchange "would result
in leasing non-competitively a prospec-
tively highly competitive tract."
A spokesman for Watt told my as-
sociate Tony Capaccio that no decision
h as been reached yet on the Utah Light
Gunplay fills the • news1n
T U LSA. OKLA. -Like m os t
Am erican newspapers the Tulsa World
gave Page 1 play to President Reagan's
first interview since being shot. Speak-
ing with the authority of a victim,
Reagan said he still opposed gun control
laws, that he didn't think they could
"make a difference." The Reagan story
dominated the main news section, sec-
tion A.
Section D was "Family." The lead
headline was "Fighting Back -Women
Take Matters Into Their Own Hands."
The story began: "They refused to be
victims. Recently two Tulsa women
shot and killed alleged rapists who had
broken into their homes . . .
0 LAST YEAR WHEN a series or
rapes occurred ... gun sales to women
increased dramatically and have ~n-
Unued to rise ... Women seem to be
fighting back ... The following ex-
plores some of the methods."
"Sand Springs Woman Relies on Tae
Kwon-Do, Dogs, Guns" read the
headline over a story that began:
· 'Torchy Wolfe has packed a double-
barreled shotg•,m and a .38 pistol for
years ... "
·'Experience in Past ls Reason for
Weapon" was the headline over the
story about Cyd Gordon. a 26-year-old
bank teller, who said: "Some of my
friends are policemen and they've told
me if somebody breaks into my house I
should shoot to kill ... I know 1 could
and I will."
The Family section also pointed out
----'i1 RICHARD RllVIS 1 'i ).
the procedure for buying guns from
stores -"fill out a questionnaire." Or,
if you are buying from an individual,
"the gun owner may register it with the
police but is not required by law."
In section E. the sports pages, The
Sportsman, with stores on E. 41st and in
the Woodland Hills Mall, advertised
eight handguns and "New Shipment Ar·
rived -Riot Shotguns.··
A .Z2·CALIBER "Tackle-Box Pistol"
-something like the cheapie used to
shoot the president -was $49.99. A
.25-caliber automatic -"Repeat of
Sellout" -was $59.99. A .22-caliber
automatic -"Excellent for Ladies" -
was Sll9 in blue steel, $149 in stainless
stee~. Visa and Mastercharge cards ac-
cepted.
lo section F, the locaJ news section,
there was a story on the trial in Table-
and Power proposal. He also assured us
that Watt "has a national job with a na-
tional perspective," and insisted that
the secrelf)ry "has severed all ties with
Mountain States."
THIS MAV WELL be true. but there's
a problem here : At his confirmation
bearings, Walt made the surprising
claim that he didn't even know who the
contributors to his foundation were.
In the hope of enlightening Secretary
Watt, I'd like to list a few 1980 coo·
tributors to the Mountain States Legal
Foundation who have either litigation or
other actions pending with the Interior
Departmnment.
In addition to the aforementioned oil
companies, the list of donors includes
the Arizona Public Service Co. ( $6,000).
Consolidated Coal < $2,000 >. Boise
Cascade ($7,500). Burlington Northern
($4 ,000 1. Gulf Oi l ($1,000 ). the Adolf
Coors Co . 's foundation ($35,000 ),
Phillips Petroleum ( $2,500), Amax
<about $5 ,000). Amoco Foundation
($10,000), the Rocky Mountain Oil and
Gas Association and the Mountain
States Fuel Supply Co
If Watt really wants to avoid the ap·
pearance of a conruct of interest, these
are cases he should be keeping an eye
on. I can assure him that I will.
OklahoDla
quah of Mrs. Sharon Clark. a teacher
charged with second -degree murder in
the shooting death of Mrs. Sandi Quin-
ton at a boys' baseball game.
"Two of the witnesses will be called,"
the newspaper reported , "in an effort to
show Mrs. Clark was distraught over
statements by other mothers about tbe
playing abUity of her 11-year-old son,
Robbie. at third base."
"On JuJy 15, witnesses said, Mrs.
Clark threw a cup of motor oil ..
some of the oil hit Mrs. Quinton. who
started scuffling with the larger Mrs.
Clark. • •
"WHEN THEY WERE on the ground,
-Mrs. Clark shot Mrs. Quint.on once
through the heart from close range, wit-
nesses said. Mrs. Clark purchased a
.22-caliber pistol five days before the
shootin~ death . So it goes. The point Pres ident
Reagan was trying to make back on
Page l was that carrying a concealed
weapon is already against the law in the
District of Columbia, where be was shot:
It is in Oklahoma, too. So what difference
does the law make? The point that I-and
others -would like to make is that new
law is worth trying if it discourages a
John Hinckley or a Sharon Clark from
walking into a shop and buying a pistol to
solve their problems. .
New game shows \rime can he exciting fun
In some cases. if you are incred-
ibly fortunate, you may be able to
hold your own. Let us say you "Park in
front o( bank in order to avoid long trek
to car while carrying large sum of
money." This brilliant tactic advances
you six spaces. The next card though,
may read: "Bank robbers steal your
car for getaway; go back six spaces."
Just as the Depression spawned
"Monopoly" and World War II gave us
"Risk," so have the present times
created yet another new fun game -
"CRIME!"
The rules of CRIME! are relatively
simple: Each player begins the game
--i' IRTHIPPI ~.
with $50,000 in cash. a house, a car, and
v a rlout items or personal property.
Unlike Monopoly, the object ls not to in-
crease your woaJtti but rather to keep
as much as you can or wbal you've got.
Elements of Rialt are also involved u
you advance around the board by pick-Int a card from a pile labeled
"Chance," A typical example of takln1
a Chance ml&M be a card rudin1.
"Vlslt automated t-eller alter 10 p.m."
That wUI coet JOU 1100. Good fortune, however, may amUe on
you aa well. IAt • aar )'OU dnw a card
wblcb reecll, "t.a:Dd Oil Free Parkia'
Joi; l*t mua~-" wtu. luck. tbere •lll
be 1 s-taeript addln•· "You t.alt mus· ,., WoacCepc.lQI r.o.u... ..
Naturally, you can take precau-
tions in hopes of increasing your odds
for survival. Many players invest
$15,000 in an elaborate home alarm
system. That automatically advances
them six spaces. Unfortunately. this
m aneuver doesn't always pay off.
ONE CARD reads: "Gerbil escapes
from cage and sets off alarm system.
Police, searching the house for burglar,
discover ski mask, airplane glue, spray
paint and gram scale. Go directly to
Jail. Do not pass Go. Do not collect
Burglary Insurance."
Or: ''Alarm system mallunctiona ;
starta microwave oven ·l burns $16 leg of
lamb t.o crisp." Or, s mply, "Bur1lar
steals $15,000 home alarm syatem."
Other precautions may shnllarly
back.fire. For Instance, one card says:
"Your superbly trained pitbull shows
contempt for a loser by sldina with
burglar; you rtquire 18 sUtches to close
nasty wound ln calf."
Or: "Your attack cat attacks friendlY
neighbor.•· Even wone: "You Mace
1uspicioU1 character at door carrylq
1u1plcloua.lookJA1 packa1e; you are
aued by 'F1orlttl TeJearaph Delivery
service." OooverH1'; "You ne1ll1enUy
approteb It.ranter In dart alley to 11k Umt: you 1et Ka~ "
\I
We ll, so il goes . Tb~ appeal of
CRIME! is that it embodies all the
thrills and excitement of real life with
the chance to emerge • winner.
The winner, of course, ls the last
player on hia or her reel with bus rare in
his or her pocket.
No wonder there'• "no booor amoo1
thieves." The crtminal wbo ·•nau1• on
Ult other &~ta Ule liabteat a.en~.
l'.K. • ._,°"'_ .... ..,.... .... "' ............ . __ "' ..... -..... -...... , .... .,... ........ ......., .... CHl!y ...... .
I ,
NATION Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 A7
Boarding home closed
Inspector probes allegations of abuse and neglect
MIAMI <AP> A judge hu or·
dered the closing of a boarding
home after a lOl·year·old resident
claimed the owners locked her ln
a closet while an inspector
checked for alleged overcrowd-
ing.
The state Department of Health
and Rehabilitative Services al-
leged in a hearing that Carmel
Glemaud, who runs the Paradise
Boatding Home with her
husband, Josef, drove Rose
Crooks to another house and
locked her in the closet to hide her
from department Inspector Joe
Dooley.
Two other residents claimed
they were sent to a public park for
the niebt before the April 3 inspec-
tion.
Dade Circuit Judge Mole Ten-
dericb on Tuesday issued an
emergency injunction to shut
the boarding home , saying
the remaining four residents
should be moved out as soon as
possible. Another hearing will be
held later to determine whether
the home should lose its license.
she calls Mrs. Glemaud "my
mother, because she takes such
good care of me."
Mrs. Glemaud also testified,
but was not asked about Ms.
Crook's claims that she was
locked in a closet. However, the
boarding home owner said she
had made repairs to the facility
demanded by the department.
Andrea O'Brien. SO, earlier told
state officials that Mrs. Glemaud
'It's a hell of a life to be
old. I wish to God I'd die
tonight.' '
gave her $2 for )unch and sent her
to spend the night in the p81'k with
Ellen Noble "so they (state of·
rlcials) wouldn't count us."
Ms. O'Brien said it rained some
that night, but she and Ms . Noble
Dooley testified that he was in· •
hid In a playeround shelter "so
the cops wouldn't pick us up.'' Ms.
Noble, who ls described as being
in her M>s, is now in a nursing
home. Ms. O'Brien has been
moved to another retirement
home. State attorneys said Ms.
Crooks, who lives on Social
Security and Veterans Ad·
ministration benefits, was among
11 lo 14 peopl~ paying ~rs.
Glemaud $3SO to $450 per month
for room and board.
"Several times people from
the ombudsman committee or
the fire inspectors had reported
seeing more than six clients
there," Dooley said. "When I
went to check, I was told that
some people were being hidden
in another house.·'
Dooley sajd be went to the
ojher house, where Ms. Crooks
later was found, but saw no one.
"When I got there. they
( Glemaud and her sister) kept
me waiting at the door for 10
minutes and then conducted me
through,'• he said.
REALLY SNOW JOKE -Mullan Elementary
School students of Spokane, Wash .. got a real
spring surprise. Rob Payne, Scott Malmin,
Dustin Bender, Bruce Baclan and Dusty
vestigating reports that Mrs. Oil obstacle .. n,moved The "Nell Greene Mother's Day Glemand. licensed by the state to • ~. provide six pe(°)ple with room, Memorial" is being honored May 9.
board and personal care. bad 1981 in Fountain Valley, CA. in "Mile
crowded in more than that. · W ASUJNGTON CAP) -The oil drilling in the basin. S p k • • f Dooley said he also w'as in-Interior Department has re-As a result, Interior Secretary q U are a r -C 0 r n er 0
vestigating allegations of abuse moved a key obstacle in ad-James Watt can now decide Brookhurst/Warner at 11 :00 A.M. All
and deteriorating conditions aL ministration plans to grant oil whether to offer oil companies are invited in Nell's memory as wife,
the Paradise. and gas leases off the Northern the option of exploratory drilling Mother and educator. The Brent Harold Long, the attorney for California coast in the Eel River# in the Eel River and the other
Mrs. Glemaud, put 72-year-old Basin. basins off Mendocino, Somoma. Greene Scholarship Fund-Irvine
Al' .........
Gurkowski made the most of the rare
snowstorm. They had lo work fast. though,
as the light powder lasted only a few-~ours.
------------
VERY COMPETIT IVE RATES
ON a EAL IUITATIE IM a ... T.D.'1
• Lona 1enn w u yu,.
• Sborl lnm ~ yH,.
• Sw 1111 lolln lo • maottN • Min 110.000 lo11,000.000
• S.(urod by real alld .,. ....... 1 .,._.,y
Thelma Mosher on the stand. The The department decided it is Marin. San Mateo and Santa High School on Walnut St.
woman testified that she received not necessary lo issue a new en-Cruz counties. Watt has said he 0 RANGE COAST EQUITY FUNDS
goodcareatthe hom e. vironmental impact statement plans to issue the decision next Morris Lewis Greene Days-851·1840 /Weekends& EvH-759·1553
~M~r_s._M_o_s_h_er_t_o_ld_t_h_e _co_u_rt~th_a_t ~_to_a_s_s_es_s_po~te_n_lia~l~d~a~m~a~g~e~f~ro~m~~m~o~nt~h~.~~~~~~~~~J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.i-~~~~
The Best
Keeps Getting Betier
Mother's Day. May 10.iJvehuourvuybesl
An AJa.akan Kina Crab Lea dinner wtth
steak or prtme r1b ... at a tp«Sa1 Mothers
Day prtct.. Br1na huyowM!I. Or Mnd hawtth
a Stuart Andcnon'1 Gtf\ Cattftcate.•
Q
just opened:
Abercrombie & Fitch
Coming soon:
Bai.Ley Banks & Biddle
David Orgell
Haiigen-Da2.S
]. Jessops & Sons
l£ Sportsac
Miller's Outpost
Rizzoli's
~ .
BLACl,( ANOU8 R•8TAURANT8 ..
"StuAtt Anderson a Clfl eat1nca1a •ood In OYtt 7 s IOCllllOM. SOUTH COAST PLAZA
Avallabl1 In any da\Otlllnatlon.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY• SANTA ANA • 0AAD£N OAOYE For more store Information, call 54&8682
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 NATION
MormOn Church voices MX system opposition
TAROl!TED -
Caltrans Dlrec·
tor Andriana
Gianturco is the
focal point again
this year of a
move to
eli mlnate her
salary from the
state budget.
Foes accuse her
of mismanage-
ment.
...
SALT LAKE Cl'J'Y (AP> -Tbt
First Prealdeoey of the Mormon
Church haa lUued a 1tatemeot oppoe·
Int the MX mJssUe and pleadlnt wiLb
the natlon's leadera to flnd an
altel'naUve lo the Air Force'• pro-
posal for baaing the system ln Utah
and Nevada.
"Our raLbers came to this western
area to establish a baae from wbJcb
to carry the gospel of peace to the
peoples of the earth," the church's
three-rnember 1overntni body-said
Tuesday In o rare statement on a
political issue.
"It Is Ironic. and a denial of the
very essence or that aospel. that in
this same general area there should
1981 LOMP,L~~TR!OADS ER
10 DAY -10 CAR SALEI :
• ELEGANT
• EXCITING
··UNIQUE
5750REBATE
LONDON MOTORS LIMITID
6111 VAN HUYS ILVD .. VAN HUYS 12 IJI 111·2444
Director et Ctlltf. w.t·n.Mc ....._·'7141140.Htl IAflw 6 p.a.J
be co"'tl'Ucted a mammoth weapona
eyatem potentially capable of
destroyln1 much of civilization,"
nld the statement from church
President Spencer W. Kimball and
h111 two counselors, N. Eldon Tanner
and Marton G. Romney.
The Air Force baa proposed build·
ine 4,600 bomb-proof missile bunkers
lo the Great Basin desert, each
linked with airport runway-strength
roads &<> massive transporters could
shuttle MX missiles between them.
Some 200 multiple-warhead mis·
slles would be houaed lo what the
General Accounting Office estimates
would be a ~ billion system. Hun-
dreds of look-ellke dummy missiles
TODl'S FLEISCHMAN'S
VODKA QIN I 75.UTER 175-ML
659 849
CASE OF 6 39 54 CASE OF 6 50.49
would be interspersed with the
armed rocketa in an effort to keep
the Soviet Union euesaing about the
location of the actual missiles.
"With the most serio\15 concern
over the pressing moral question of
possible nuclear confli ct, we plead
with our national leaders to marshal
the genius of the nation to find viable
alternatives which will secure at an
earlier date and with fewer hazards
the protection from possible enemy
aggression which is our common con·
cern," the 2~-page statement said.
It Is unusual for the church to take
a stand on a political issue. Kimball
has said the church only takes stands
on what it considers to be spiritu(ll or
moral i.saues.
The church's opposition to the
Equal Rights Amendment ii an ex-
ample or what Kimball conslders a
moral i,ssue.
President Reagan has appointed a
review panel to study MX baaln1
alternatives. Its recommendations
are due thls summer and Reagan is
expected to make a decision on MX
basing in August.
The comment period on the Air
Force's dra!t environm ental impact
statement ended last week following
a series of hearings ln Utah, Nevada,
New Mexico and Texas. All four
states hove said they don't want the
M X based within their borders.
SCORESBY KAH LOA BAILEY'S
SCOTCH LIQUEUR IRISH CREAM
1.75-ML 7»ML 750-ML
1021 aoa 1Q61
CASEOF661 .62 CASE OF 12 96.96 CASE OF 12 127.25
KEG BEER Quality
you can
see, touch
and ·
LIQ<.JEURS BOITLE CASE GREAT FOR SOMMER PARDUCCI WINES BOITLE RETAIL CASE RETAIL
For Ev~ Room
Open Daily 1()..6 p.m.
Friday 'til 9 p.m. rely on.
Country China
Hutch
Mother's
Day Special
$998.95
For Country
China Hutch .and
Solid Oak Table
with 4 Chairs.
No 1ub1tltut1on1
Complete line of Fine Oak
Furnishings
Dining room eet. Living room groups, Office furnlture1 Bar &
Barstools. Bedroom eeta. All Bathroom fixture• Pul Chain
Toilets and Caplnet•. Chinas, Hutches. Buffets. Hu .. era, Gun
Cabinets. Mirrors. Lamc>a. Hall Trees. etc.
RETAIL RETAIL BLOCK & POOL PARTIES
Southern Comfort, 750-ML
Jagenneister, 750·ML
Frangellco, 750 ML ... .. . . . . . .
Irish Velvet, 7SO.ML ~. . . .
Yukon Jack, 750-ML
Kamora, 750·ML . . . . .....
Drambuie, 750·ML . . . ..
5.74 63.72 Cabe~et Sauvignon 750ML BUDWEISER 11.45 127.20 Chabhs 750 ML . .
4.40
2.95
2.90
3.19
4.86
3.30
2.95
3.19
4.24
48.00
32.18
31 .60
34.76
53.00
36.00
32.18
34.76
46.20
3140 11 .92 129.95 French Colo~ba_rd 750ML
1 t .89 132.08 Mendocino R1eshng 750 ML
6.46 71. 73 Char~onnay 750·ML
6.41 71.15 Chenm Blanc 750 Ml
1/2·KEG
BUDWEISER
202° 13.35 148.24 Burgundy 750·ML
14.08 156.46 Z!nfande! 750ML 1/4-KEG
10.53 116.95 Pinot No1n 50ML Galliano, 750ML . . .. ....... ..
Greensleeves, 750 ML COORS
BOURBONS
Ancient Age, 1 75·LITER . .. 12.20 66.50
Cabin Still, 1 75-l/fER . . 10.35 57 .50
Early Times, 1 75-UTER . .. 11 .62 64.56
Ten High, 1 75-UTER .... ..... ... .. 10.91 60.50
1.W. Harper, urER . .. . 7.80 86.60
Jack Daniels, LITER.. 10.7 1 118.97
Jim Beam, 1.75-UTER 1 I .92 66. 1 5
Old Charter? Year, 1 7>UTER . 15.03 83.48
Old Crow, t.75-UTER.. . 12.42 69.00
CANADIANS
Black Velvet, 1.1>UTER .................. 11 .43 63.49
Canada House, 1.1s.UTER ............... 11 . 7 4 65.1 9
Canadian Club, 1.1s.urER ............... 1 7 .41 96.90
Canadian Mist, t.75-LITER ................ 11.45 63. t 8
Seagram's V.O., 1.75-LITER ............. 16.76 93.09
Canadian Lord Calvert, 1.75-UTER t 2.05 66.95
Seagram's Crown Royal, LITER .... 15.621 73.55
Windsor Canadian. 1.15-urER .... : .. 12.59 69.90
RUMS
Appleton, 750 ML . 8.29 92.07
Bacardi Qold Reserve, 750+\L .... 9.61 106.58
Mt. Oay Eclipse, 750-Ml .. . . 8.3 1 92.22
Bacardi Lt. or Dk., LITER ...... 6.64 73.58
Bacardi 151 Pf., UTER .. . . .... . .. .11.29 125.34
Caatlllo Lt. or Dk., t.7,.LJTER .. . .... 9.01 50.00
Myaers's Jamaican, 1.1,.UTER ...... ) 7.14 95.21
Ron Rico Lt. or Dk •• 1.1,.LITER ...... 11 .32 62.89
TEQUILA
('uervo Oold, 1.1,.urER .. : ....... 14.72 81.76
Cuervo White, 1.1~·LITER ................ 13.28 73. 74
Cuervo Qold t 800, 7»ML ............. 10.06 11 t .75
Montezuma w. and a., 1 7,.UTER .11 .17 62.01
Montezuma W. and O •• LITER ......... 6 .20 68.85
Pepe Lopez Gold t.75-LrTER ............ t 3.04 72.44
Puerto VaUarta W. and 0 ., 750-Ml .. 4.61 51.20
Don Emmo w. and a .• 17,.UTER ... 9.73 54.06
Don EmDlo w. and a .• LITER .......... 5.56 6 t. 79
Bauza White, LITER . . ... . . . .. .... . . .. .. 7 .60 84.48
Sauza Gold, UTER ..... ... .. . ............ 8.48 94.16
Two Angers White, LITER ................ 8.29 92.07
wo Fingers Gold, LITER ............... 9.14101.50
errandura Anejo, 750+\l ............ 14.40 160.00 .
FRANZ IA SEBASTIAN.I
WINES MTN. WINES
1.5-UT. -BORO<.INDY, 1.'4JT.-CHABUS.
292° 1/2·KEG
COORS
202° 1/4-KEG
HENRY WEINHARC
33os
1/2·KEG
HEINEKJNS
6500
1/2·KEG
UTE
2aoo
1/2·KEO
LOWENBRAO
3335
1/2·KEG
MJCHELOB
3615
1/2-KEG
MJCHELOB
2130
l/4·KEG
MILLER'S
2aoo
1/2·KEO
OLD MILWAUKEE
2015
1/2·KEO
PABST
25so
. l/;l·KEG
~: SCHUTZ
/2604 .• 1/2-KEO
... PLUS DEPOSIT
t
PEDRONCELLI
Cabernet Sauvignon, 750ML 3.67
Zinfandel, 750-ML ... 2.75
Rose Wine, 750ML 1 .85
French Colombard, 750ML 2.63
Johannisberg Riesling, 150 "'L 3.30
Chardonnay, 750 ML 4 .84
Gewurztraminer, 750ML 3.60
FIRESTONE WINES
Pinot Noir?SQ.ML. 6.05
Rose of Cabernet 750-ML 3.23
Cabernet Sauvignon 150 ML 6.05
Gewurztramlner 750ML 4 .45
Johannisbe.rg RiesUng 1so.ML .. .4 .45
JOSEF HAUPT WINES
Zellar Schwartz Katz 750 ML .......... 2. 79
Piesporter Mlchelsberg 750-ML. ..... 2.79
Liebfraumilch 750·ML . . . .2.07
Schatz! 750-ML . . . . . . . . . . .... 1 .69
CRe3TA BLANCA WINES
40.00
30.00
20.13
2 8.60
36.00
52.80
39.60
66.00
35.20
66.00
48.40
48.40
30.45
30.45
22.50
18.50
French Colombard 750ML 2.34 25.52
Chablis 750-ML. .... ... 1.90 20.68
Grey Riesling 7SO.ML 2.34 25.52
Oewurztraminen 50ML 2.99 32.56
Chenln Blanc 750ML 2.34 . 25.52
Pinot Chardonnay 750ML 4 .08 44.44
Petite Slrah 750ML .2.34 25.52
ZlnfandeJ 750·ML .2.34 25.52
Cabernet Sauvtgnon 150 ML 3.43 37 .40
LONE STAR HENRY
BEER WEIN HARDS
12 OZ .• 12·PACK BEER
363 120Z .. 12PACK
WARM
399
WARM
SIMJ WINES
Chenln Blanc ?»ML ... . . . ...... 4.84
Oewurztramlnen 50·ML. . . . . . . . .5.65
Johannlsberg Riesling 750ML ....... 4.84
Plnot Chardonnay 750·ML . . . . ..8.07
Burgundy1»ML . . . ..... .2.82
Zlnfandel 'OOML ... ....... ... . ....... . .5.64
Plnot Nofr1»ML .. . . ...... 6.35
Cabe.rn~t Sauvlgnon 750-ML ...... 7.26
Oamay Beaujolais 7»ML ............. 3 .83
Rose of Cabernet 750-ML ................ 3.93
53.24
61 .53
52.80
87.95
30.69
61.55
69.25
79.15
41.75
42.85
> J PRJCES ... EFFECTIVE
MAY 7
lliRU MAY 20.
RHEINF\.UR, CHABLIS BUROONOV. ROSE, RHlNE 1981
HOURS
247 10 At<!\ TO 8 PM
MON. THRU ~T.
10 At<!\ TO 7 PM
SUNDAY
WE ACCEPT VISA ANO
AASTtR
7 I 4<96CM3''7 CHAAOE
21082 BEACH 81.VD Cl.ROS
~RACH
..
'I
I
\
...... .. .... "" .....
t
I •
•
PRICES PREVAIL:
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
~lire·
Blooming Colors
CHANTILLY
GIFT SET
A uNt Ill let ""'1
Eau de P1rfum Spray Concentr1te,
(.I&) with Spr1y Mitt (J &)
•u..r ..
c IE A ,,,6' .... ,, u .. "'""""
CONCENTRATED
COLOGNE ATOMIZER
(J/I IL) with LAVISH
COLOGNE BODY
SPLASH, (1% a.)
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6th. THRU SATURDAY. MAY 10th.
Create a look for
every mood you
feel 2.10 MAX FACTOR'
JOv'AN
NIGHT BLOOMING
JASMINE
~
SPRAY COLOQ• SPUY COLOGNE CONC(lfTIATE COlOQtE
2u. 2ez. ~E 5.00 u 9.00 11.00
~---:V~·
TABU
· The mysterious oriental fragrance that
puts a spell everywhere II touches:
IPUY COLOGNE DUllm POWDD
1.1 u. 4 u. .
5.00
JEWELRY
FLOIW.DESIGM
PENDANT NECKLACE
;:::~ ~~~eu~:1~!n &ll 1 OH
floral designs. te
FLOIW.DESIGM
STICK
PINS
F\OIW.DUIQll
LOCKET
NECKLACE ..,..,.. 9.95
NECKLACE wit~ .-STONES
WRiN6s 7 .95 a
REVLON
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UTWAL SNAY
COU:IL4.95
TOPSY/TIPS
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Wonder''
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1& 3.00
WITH Fl£E Gin OF
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0rang9 Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHd•Y. Maye, 1981 NATION
Shucks, says H~idi, oyster gulping a snap Demo
choice
BURLINGAME <AP>
A 21-year-old Concord
s tudent was elected
B MIRACLES
Henrietta Crouch
Top mom
boosted
by kith
NEW YORK (AP ) -
Henrietta Jean Wombles
Crouch of Topeka, Kan ..
had two surprises.
First, she was named
Mother of the Year at
t h e -4 6th a nnual
con venti on o f the
American Mothers Inc.
Then she learned that
all of her eight children
had been let in on the
surpl'ise and had come
sec r etly to see h e r
accept the award.
Mrs . Crou c h , 62,
b e s p e c t a c I e d •
si lver-h a ired , and
wearing a lave nder
dress. gasped and wept
when s he heard her
name called as winner
of the award and saw
her children. bearing
armfuls of roses, gather
around her at the dais of
a banquet room in the
Wa ldorf-Astoria Hotel.
Her husband, Dr.
William II . Crouch.
found out about · the
award and arranged for
all their childre n to
arrive in time for the
a nnouncement.
In the coming year ,
Mrs. Crouch said, she
... every day , she's
our mother of the
year.
will be asked to speak
a r ound tbe country
"llbout the jmportance
of motherhood and the
home."
Amy Crouch Boege,
22, the Crouch es '
youngest child, said the
a war d wa s "long
ove rdue .... It 's
someth i ng we ha ve
always thought of her
every day of our lives.
and every day she's our
mother of the year."
Crouch said he had
mixed emotions about
hi s wife 's award
because she would have
\0 be away often, but
added : "She'll be doing
so m e thing that's
meaningful to her. The
purpose of this (award)
fits in with what she's
been doing over many
y~a r s fostering
family life... ,
Mrs . Cro u c h wa s
chosen from 50 mothers,
each r epresenting a
s tate. According to
American Mothers Inc.,
the purpose of tbe prize
is . 'to emphasi'Ze tbe
moral and s piritual
qualities of American
motherhood and its role
in the home."
As par t of th e
selection process, all the
ca ndid ates wer e
required to give a
three-minute speech to a
panel of judges .
Mrs. Crouch said she
told Uie judges that she
had participated In
"God's greatest miracle
(childbirth ) el-gh t
limes."
She also told them
abo ut h e r mo s t
rewarding experience as
a mother -that of
seeing a son , tlrat
conaidered borderline
retarded but later
d1a1nosed to have
dyslexia, graduate from
college and become
successf\ll In his chosen
career.
Widowed twice by the
age of 25, Mrs. Crouch
was married to her
current bu.band In 19'8.
She hal been active in l 'volunteer work as
' prt1idmt of lbe Parent
Teacher Or1ani11tion
and a Cub Scout den
molber f« many yeara,
but ber ml)or lntentt la
th• pnveatlon al blrtb
de f ect•. Sb• l•
c oordinator of the
Topeka Genette • CounNllnC Center.
PORT CANAVERAL, Fla. <AP> -
The world ls Heidi Harrelson'a
oyster.
Ms. Harrelson Is not ooly the
fastest oyster shucker around, but
also she's oo her way to acquJrinl
the iotemalional crown for eaUn1
them, too. Ms. Harrelson, 44, an employee of
Buccaneer Bill's oyster bar bere, is
the certified world shucking cham-
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In assorted
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ASSOltTED
CERAMIC
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pion. She took the title ln Ireland ln
1979 -tbe first woman Lo do eo -by
1buckln1 24 oysters ln 59 seconda.
neu Book ol World Recorda. amoothly. So she sampled another
Ms. Harrelaon'a claim to fame two dozen and soon was booked.
bo1an 12 years a10 when Georae While she preps for a record, she's
Kirvin aavo her a Job at bls rorraed solJle thoughta on the She also can consum e 43 doien
oyaters In 15 mlnutea, or In a "sprint
for speed," six dozen ln 60 MCOnda.
She will 1et a chance to make ber
oyster-ealina prowess oftlclal In
December, when she tries Lo beat the
world mark of 218 oysters lo tlve
minutes before ofllcials of the Guin-
Apalachicola oyster house. creatures.
She h•d nevtir seen an oyster Asked by ''Tonl1bt Show" host
before, mucb le11 eaten one. J ohnny Carson tut month ii oysters
president of the
s tatewide Ca liCornia
Vo ting Democrats .
Melody Howe Weintraub
won by nearly a 4-1
margin over Ri chard
Overhouseof Santa Clara
"I didn't want to eat it," she con-are indeed aphrodisiacs, Ms. Har·
fe11e1. "In my whole life, had never relson replied:
seen 11uch a terrible thlna." ·•J ohnny. anyone who needs
To her a1tonl1hment, it went down oysters for help is no good anyhow." Co unty
~~~~~~~--''---~_.;;;...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
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IATH OI. NAILi 1.71 ~ 3.49
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HAMILTON BUCH HAND MIXER
Contemporary kitchen
assistant 3-speed
~D UU.MNa 12.49 ~·--:.":'.: 2.00
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Has SUI* pushbutton
steam power •• SUNBUM
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The electric razor that shaves as
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Has sljde on/off. tone. and volume
controls (Batteries no1 included.)
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BLOOD PRESSURE TAKEN
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Ho1 air fnot hot 0111 ,
"explodes kernels into
cnsp. plump pulls of corn
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WITH BAG OPENER
Opens any size or shape can
Splits open bags. pouches &
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INSTANT CAMERA
Aim & shool camera with
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Contains stand with
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3.29
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CIUll 2 u. 3. 79
SPECIAL I
.I
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NATION Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6. 1981
Power push CALENDARS
SAN FRANGISCO
(AP) -Pacific Gas &
Electric Cb. says it plans
to increase its power
generating capacity by
building four s mall
powerhouses and raising
dam capacity along the
Mokelumne River.
Taxpayer still short-changed by giveaway
• C•ll 642-5871.
Put • few words
lo work for ou.
WASHINGTON CAP> -Rep. Oan·
ny Smith, R·Ore., didn't know what
to do with 2,500 calendars sent lo his
office shortly after he took over in
January from defeated Dem<Scrat Al
Ullman. So they just gathered dust.
Finally, Smith began mailinl them
to barber shOps and beauty parlors in
his district. as well as lo for.mer
Ullman constituents who had written
and asked Cor them. But Smith added
a note.
"I hope you wlll enjoy lt because,
as a tax.payer, you and I helped foot
the bill for it," he wrote.
The 1981 calendars, printed with
color photographs of scenes around
the nation's capital, sell in the
Capitol souvenir stand for $1.SO each.
Each House member 1eta 2,500 or
these calendars every year lo send to
friends, contributors or cons tituents
at a total printing and mailing cost
to the government or about $1
million .
In 1978, the House voted lo stop giv·
ing themselves the calendars But
b~cause or a technicality. the ban
never took effect
Why didn't Smith just turn the
calendars back to the House?
"T hey are doing ~o good sitting in
my office and turning them back in
won't get your money back," he said.
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stoneware locked
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lading & cn1ppu•o
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gill L<ll 0 lfl,IUdPd
2.49
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I t.. TOftO -IU?I "octlftetd ...... Mll ltON VtSJO -nm .. ...,.,,.. 'by.•
IANTA ANA -Jt1' '°""' ....... l bfft • -I
All
ACCUSED -Actor
Karl Malden and
American Express
Co. have been s ued
by man who s ays his
Mexican vacation
was ruined when he
lost travelers checks
a nd co mpany
wouldn't replace
them. con trary to
what Malden says in
TV commercials.
Paper
reveals
author
WASHINGTON CAP)
"A book cr iticizing
Army leadership in Viel·
nam was written by a
Florida professor who is
a part·lime National
Gua rd chaplain, rather
than a senior Pentagon
officer as the book's
publisher claimed , The
Washin gton Pos t re·
ported.
The newspaper quoted
Cecil B. Currey, a his·
tory professor at the
Uni ver sit y of Sou th
Florida in Tampa, as
a cknowledging he was
the author of "Self·
Destruction: The Disin·
tegr alion and Decay of
the United States Army
During the Vietnam
Era."
It was published this
year by W.W. Norton &
Co. in New York under
the pen name "Cincin·
natus."
Th e book jacket
d escribed "Cinc in ·
natus" a s "the pen
na m e of a military man
who entered service as a
private in Korea and
rose through the ranks
to become a senior field·
grade offi cer," adding
that "he ls currenUy as-
s igned lo the Pentagon."
However , the Post re-
ported that according to
military records and a
telephone interview with
Currey, the a uthor did
not serve in K,orea and
left the Army in 1955
after a two.year tour .
Since 1965 he has ser ved
part·time weekends
plus two weeks a year of
active duty as a
chaplain with the Na-
tional Guard and later
the Army Reserve, the
story said.
In 1978 , C urre y
qualified for a reserve
pos t in the c hief of
chaplains office at the
Pentagon.
The Post quoted Cur·
rey as saying he and his
editor at Norton were
concerned that "no mat·
ter how we presented
the biography" accom·
pa nying the book, the
quality of his credentials
"would stand In the way
of gettin g a serious
he aring for a n impor·
tant message."
Currey declared in the
book : "The old, old
refrain that the Army
failed because o f
political and social un·
rest at home is still the
theme song or the upper
ranks. The fact ls that
the military disaster in
Vietnam grew out of in-
eptitude at the top."
Honor told
David Alan Butcher of
Costa Mesa was na m ed
to the bonor roll at
North Texas S t a t e
Uhlverslty ror the fall
semester.
Truddoad
Plant Sale
Huntington Center
12 luah verietlee
••ow CAQOOP 0 !$ sos
+•a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. M ay 6, 1981 GENERAL NEWS
Michener promises
~a shorter book'
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -
Author James Michener baa
promised .that his next book oo
America's apace pro1ram would
be 1ood oews to bis publisher
and readers who don't like t.oo
many pages.
"It will be a shorter book and it
wlll not start four million yean
ago," be said wit.b a smile at an
awards cer e m on y lo the
Pennsylvania state Capitol.
Mlchener's novel "Centennial"
opened by tracin1 life In Colorado
before the dinosaurs.
Michener did not disclose the ti·
tie of his balf-finlahed new novel,
but did describe it as "not science
fiction but the role of space ln
American society in the last 20
years,
"I'm on the advisory council
that supervises the National
Aeronautics and Space Ad··
ministration so I've been working
in space diligently the last three
years," he said. (EEPING IT SHORT
Author James Michener' t . ~
HARBOR CRUISE
&
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714 '75"-7122
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HERE IS ONE LISTENER'S
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IMPROVED, BRIGHT I
BEAUTIFUL CONTEMPORARY
MUSIC ...
\\ . . thanks for telling us the
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HUNTINGTON BEACH
Ansel A'dams:
Photographer
Program airs Wed., 5-13
"Ansel Adams: Photographer"
sketches an Intimate portrait of the
artist when It airs Wednesday, May
13 at 10 p.m . on KOCE, Channel SO.
A montage of friends and rugged
scenery provide the backdrop for the documentary ln which Adams speaks
aboUt his prolific career as artist,
conservationist and teacher. The
show follows Ada ms to the Yosemite
and Sierra Mountains he loved a,nd
captured In striking photographs. He
tells hoW he took the famous Yosemite "Moonrise" pldure, and
displays an album of Yosemlt.
photographs he took on his first trip
there as a chlld.
· From his home In C.rmel,
California, Adams talks about the devetopment of photogrephv as an
art form, and reveals some of his unusual darkroom techniques.
Interviews with friend and artist
Georgia O' K"fe and photographic historian Beaumont Newhall are also
featured. The program repeats Saturday, May
16 1t 2:30 p.m. . ·
• , •• +et
RESTAURATEUR -French
fashion m agnate Pier re
Cardin bas bought a con-
trolling interest ln Maxim's,
one of Paris' most famous
restaurants.
Cops to rjde SF hu~es
Mov e approved to curb mounting crime r ate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -At
least 29 uniformed San Fran·
dsco policemen wlll soon belin
ridina Municipal Railway buses
and get paid overtime for doing
It. The city Board of Supervisors
has approved a transfer of
$245,552 within tbe Police
Department to place officert on
city buses in an effort to curb a
spirallne crime rate on the city.
owned mus transit system.
Police Chief Cernellua Murphy
asked for (be lunch traufer ,
telling the supervisors, "It ls
evident that stron1 measures
are required to restore the feel-
. ine of safely to those uaing our
transit sy1tem."
Munl has its civlllan security
force which has been criticized
as ineffective. Following a leap
in Muni crime incidents this
year, Mayor Dianne Feinstein
ordered police undercover of·
flcers aboard the buses.
Henry Friedlander. a police
spo~esman, said the civilian of· 'I= •• • •
fleer• made only 150 arrests in
1980 while the undercover of.
ficers have either cited or ar·
rested more than 1,000 people
since February. ,
Murphy said the 29 unUormed
officers will work on buses each
day through June, when he will
announce formation of a new
police division with 50 sworn of.
ficers to protect Munl
Meanwhile, Murphy expressed
hU! opposition Tuesday to the
Guardian Angels, a private
mass transit protection or·
ganizaUon which announced it
might open a unit ln San Fran·
cisco. T he organiz.alion sends
youthful members on troubled
tr a nsit routes and offers free
protection to riders.
A leader of the Guardian
Angels said Tuesday he wanted
to organize a chapter in San
Francisco to help deter crime on
streets and public transit.
Ron Pohnell, a leader of the
Los Angeles Guardian Angels,
said he planned to arrance
meetings with city officials ln
hopes of gaining their coorr•-
tion. It would take abou 2~
months to screen potential mem·
bers and train them. be said.
Ms . Feinstein said following a
recent visit by another Antell
representative that such pat.roll
were best handled by police who
have specialized trainin1 in
public safety.
Rod Bartholomew, a deputy
general ma n ager of t h e
Muni cl pal Railwa1, said that while .he was willing to meet
with an Angels representative,
"I'm not sure bow to take It."
Food supply dc;>wn
ROME (AP> -A U.N. report
says Third World food output
grew much more slowly than the
number of empty mouths during
the 1970s. It predicts a sharp in·
crease in chronic hunger during
the 1980s.
Bulock'$ South Coat Plaza, 3333 Bristo/, S.M. (714) 556-0611. Shop Mon. ·Fri. 10-9:30, Sat. 10-6, SCJn. 12·5.
Bullock's Mission VlejO, Mission Viejo Ma#, (714) 495-311{ Shop Mon.·Frf. 10-9, Sat. 1D-6, Sun. 12·5 .
I
j
I
l
------
Daily Pillt .
WEDNESDAY, May 6, 1981
FEATURES 86
MOVIES 88
TELEVISION 89
------···-... -·------··---. .. ...... ""'"""'·· ... ~ .. -.. -.... .
Alcoholism costs
business plenty:
$60 billion
See Bll
0
D
New breed of n~e eDlerging in nation
More militant, active in quest
for better pay, mo?;e respe<;t
By the As1odated Pre,M.._
When Ann Twomey' deci<ted to
become a nurse, she had what
s he. thought were pretty normal
expectations -a chance to aid
and minister to the sick.
• 'J really thought the patient
would be my top priority." says
Ms. Twomey. "I relt it would be
,anJmportant thing to do. l bad a
true concern for the sick."
But, Ms. Twomey complains,
she soon found out that the pa-
tient was not her top priority,
that she became instead a robot
on roller skates passing out pills
and performing housekeeping
and clerical tasks as we ll.
"THF.RE WAS NO chance to
sit down and talk with a patient,
to go over his disease and ex-
plain things to him or his family.
There was no lime to use what
we bad learned in school."
That was 10 years ago.
• Today, Ms .' Twomey still
nurses part-lime, but she spen~
most or her time as the paid
president of the H ospital
Proress1o nal and Alli e d
Employees of New J ersey, a un-
ion affili ated with the American
Federation of Teachers, AFL-
CJO.
She's led four nurses strikes in
the state and recently exacted a
good contq1ct for co-workers at
Englewood Hospital. Besides
higher wages, the contract pro-
.
"I mortgaged my career
for my education to
become a nurse, and there
I was on the picket line."
bibils the hospital from moving
nurses from one area, such as
pediatrics, to another very dif·
ferent field, such as intensive
care. It also picks up a good bit
of the tuition for both full and
part-time nurses if they choose
lo further their nursing educa-
tions.
Nurse Twomey, with a near
classic beauty and a soft voice,
is one of the growing number or
nurses throughout the country
pushing hard for greater pro-
fessional recognition and better
salaries.
And no handmaiden to the doc-
tor is she.
"WHEN A DOCTOR asks me
if there is any coffee, J tell him
I'll have mine with milk and
sugar," she says.
Conditions are Improving, she
says, but attitudes of hospital
administrators have changed
very Uttle.
"They still remain the father
figure. If your father says you
don't need a raise. you don't
need a raise. They have always
treated us as naughty children
caught misbehaving. We knew if
we complained, we werl! going
to be punished. The administra-
tion has always had the attitude
that it wanted to teach the girls
a lessoo.
"That," says Ms . Twomey,
"is the biggest proble m in nurs-
ing today."
Not so, says Nichola Ver-
rastro, executive director of
Pascack Valley Hospital In New
Jersey, a hospital struck by the
nurses last year.
"We certainly don't have that
feeling," says Verrastro. "We
don't agree with unionization in
a hospital setting, but we have to
live with it. We'd like to see it go
away, but it seems to be here to
s.tay.
"IF ANYTHING," continues
Verrastro, "they'r e the ones
who feel like little girls because
the-y-now they 'v e done
something naughty. They have
left the patients and they have
been instilled with a sense of
dedication to those patients."
Ms. Twomey notes that under
federal law, a hospital must be
gh·en 10 days notice Ir a job ac-
tion is planned.
"The public doesn 't un-
derstand that. They think we
have just left the patients one
morning. When it comes to a
confrontation such as a strike,
we are helpi.ng the patients~ The
so-called 'normal' conditions
may be dangerous because of
the understaffing.''
Problems of understaffing are
aggravated by a shortage of
nurses, estimated'al 100,000 na-
tionwide, ~d this in turn often
leads to more required overtime
than nurses find acceptable.
•Hospitals, grappling with con-
stantly rising costs, find nurse
recruiting expensive; a survey
by the National Association of
Nursing Recruiters in Pitm{l.D,
N .J ., found it costs an average
or $731 to recruit one RN.
Average recruiting per hospital
during 1980 was put at 140 reg-
istered nurses.
THE SHORTAGE ALSO has
produced an upsurge of agencies
providing temporaries, which
some say can be detrimental to
patients, not to mention the
m orale of staff nurses who may
find that the here-today. gone-
to morrow per die m workers
earn more than they.
Scores of strikes and sickouts
-unheard or until recent years
-have hit bospitall acrou the
country. The American NW"line
Association has no precise
figures on the number of strikes,
but says it's growing.
A handful or Ohio nurses re·
cently marched 56 miles in near-
zero temperatures lo dramatize
the longest such strike in history
-more than six months long
when they walked. The nurses at
Ashtabula General Hospital are
de manding a closed·shop, an un·
usual issue to be so central in a
nurses labor dispute.
This increased militancy has
not escaped the attention or
traditional big labor and some or
these powe rful unions h ave
begun a courtship or the women
in while, many of whom refuse
to wear the symbolic cap.
The American Federation of
Teachers (AFT> announced two
years ago it would actively
recruit nurses and. in fact, hired
away some of the starr or the
American Nursing Association
CANA ). The ANA, through Its
state affiliates, has been the col-
lecli ve bargaining agent for
most nurses.
WHAT IS HAPPENING in this
enormous field of health care,
the largest by far with some 1.5
million registered nurses,
900,000 of whom are workin1?
"We've grown up," say the
more militant.
They can tick olf a shopping
list of discontents, starting with
low salaries for physically and
emotionally demanding work.
•'Toll takers make more than I
d o," says Manh·attan nurse
Diane Cimino. .
A survey in a professional
journal, RN Magazine, said that
in some parts of the country a
s upermarket cashier makes
more than a nune.
Working conditions, they say,
are poor, there is little chance to
use the skills they have learned,
little chance for advuceme!U
and lastly -but perhaps the
most 1alllng -the failure of
doctors, administrators and
even nursing supervisors to
treat them as professionals.
Perhaps j ust as important in
this almost totally female pro-
fession -less than 2 percent are
men -was the rise of the
feminist movement itaelf.
"MORE AND MORE fields
have opened up to women. With
the same education they can get
into something that pays a great
deal more money. With a UtUe
more e ducation, they can
become lawyers,•' says Joan
Kalhorn, herself a lawyer with
the Ohio Nurses Association.
Yet the appeal -indeed the
call -of-nursing is not to be dis-
counted.
Take Loretta Hanley, a nurse
who, rrom a career standpoint,
did a lmost the opposite from Ms.
Twomey.
Ms. Hanley had worked her
way up in the business world to
become executive secretary to a
bank president in New York. ·
She had a good life -vaca-
tions in Turkey and Greece one
year , in Europe and Central
America in others. A poised,
tall blonde woman, she waa
always smartly dressed.
But she had always wanted to
do nursing; in fact, she has
spent many of her leisure hours
doing volunteer work.
•'I know this sounds as
hokey as it can be, but it was
just something I always wanted
to do. I wanted to help people."
In 1976, she dipped Into her
savings, got some school loans,
and after four years at the books
was the proud possessor of a
baccalaureate degree as a reg-
istered nurse.
During her first month on the
job, nurses in New York City's
hospitals s taged a wildcat
strike.
"I · morteaged my career for
my education to become a
nune, and there I was on the
picket line."
Yet it's not a decision she
regret.a, although some might
~nder why. ln 1976. she earned
$16 ,600 as an exec uti ve
secretary, and she'd certainly be
in the $20,000-plus range today.
Instead, after going into debt
and studyine for four years,
she's making $15,000.
She rpoonllght.a as a private
duty nurse once or twice a week,
but there are no vacation trips
on her agenda -and lots of tuna
fish sandwiches and chicken din-
ners.
Loretta Hanley still smiles.
"I KNOW NOW that vrhatever
I've done during the day has had
some benefit. You're constantly
thinking. You have to be so
aware. You don't get emotional-
ly attached to the typewriter."
Ms. Hanley, hungry for ex-
perience, applied for and got
what might be one o f the
roughest jobs in nursing -the
intensive care unit or one of
Manhattan 's larg e city
hospitals, Bellevue.
But she finds some things
about nursing that make smiling
difficult. Although she considers her $15,000 aalary meager, she
Is even more miffed that a much
more experienced nurse In this
complicated and critical land of
tubes and wires, machines and
moniton, lights and buzzers,
makes only a few dollars a week
more.
Like Ks. Twomey, she is an-
noyed by attitudes of officials,
up to and includin1 New York
City Mayor Ed Koch. When the
wildcat strike that introduced
her to the world of nurslne
ended, the mayor couldn't resist
a lltUe comment.
"It wu u if he were saying
'C'mon back, atria. You were
mt1behavin1 but we'll foretve
you if you come back.' I wu
very otrended by thts attitude."
IRE ALSO DOES not like
other profeulonall to refer to
ber preparation for her second
career u '1tralnln1."
"We were not trained," 1he
aay1 flatly. "We were educated.
We were tau1bt to think, to ... 1uate, to l"IMOft."
Sueladllcontent hu 1pawned a
yarlet1 of acllvllt 1roup1
~tbecountry.
A llanbattan-baaed 1roup,
eallin1 ltliell "Nunea Network." publl1bes a aew1leuer aad malDIJ trlee to ralae the eoe~
1doulnell ol other DW'HI, uk·
lnl them to Wllt.e aad demand lbelr due u profentonall oa a
job.
Jt may ~· lronle tha~ ~b~
' ---~l--
Nurse Ann T1DOf'MJI fn heT olfi« at Englewood, 1:'.J. H~ -
where aa paid prendent of tM Ho.,,ttal ProfeHtonal and Allied Emp~ea of New Jeney, w rpendl molt of heT time. She haa
led four nurses strikes, and recently e~ted a good contract for
co-workers (which included better saJa~sJ.
leaders of this group asked that
their names not be used in print
for fear of reprisals from the
hospitals where they work.
Reprisals, they say, can be
just subtle enough so that they
a re impossible to document.
"YOU CAN BE written up for
having a bad attitude. How do
you fight that?" says one
member.
Rose Hauer, director of nurs-
ing at New York's Beth Israel
Hospital, feels that nurses are
belng oversensitive.
"I don't know how true their
fear of reprisals might be. As a
private citizen they c an say
anything they want. or course,
they cannot speak for the institu-
tion."
"Nurses are where teachers
were back in the fifties," says
Ms. Kalhorn of the ANA. "There
is a built-in resistance to uniona
and to strikes."
Lesley Kuykendall, a labor
fie ld re presentative for t he
ANA , say s the attitudes of
nurses have been changing.
•'The nurse who put the
hospital above all else, above
her own family, ls a vanishlna
breed ," she says. "Realities are
setting in. They are realim•
they are employees, too, and
have rtahts."
Kelvinator settles
sex discrimination
DETROIT (AP) -A aex-diacriminaUon sUit aaa
Kelvlnator Inc. has been settled out of court, but two wom
involved say their share lsn't enough.
U.S. District Judge John Felkens approved the sett
ment, which provides $275,000 for the 77 plalntllf 1 an
$200,000 for their law>:en and court coeta.
The women bad claimed they were di1crimmat
a1ainst ln pay and promotl<m. ·
The award avera1es SS,5'10 per plalnwr, but the 1
ort1lnal plaiQUffa will be 18Wn1 u much u '31_,toO eac
and 39 wUl 1et just $250. each.
Two of thole women protested the aetUement, but
judge approved it anyway.
'
I
I
\
'
I
I
Coastal ..
'confession?
BACK AT HOME BASE: One thing nice about scurrying
around the countryside, willy-nilly. for a few days is that you
can get away from a couple of things. Like the telephone and
bill collectors.
~as. you must sooner or later return to productive labor.
Or at least make it look productive. Just look at this pile of
clippings on my des k that stacked up.
Here's a fascinating one out of the Washington Post. It re-
counts how recently, former
Vice President Spiro T.
Agnew's one-time personal al-
t:--\ torne{ actually testified
-IO_M_M_U_R_P_H_l_N_I m'r, ag•;HEru::;::'.1 ~·::~E
_ W. White, created somewhat of
a s tir when he told the Anna polis court that Agnew admitted to
him that he took kickbacks while in public office.
White, in his testimony, quoted Agnew thus:
"It's been going on for a thousand years. What Jerry and
Bud told you is true. Matz is grossly exaggerating the amount
of money involved. He only gave me $2,500."
You have to admit that sounds like good old Agnew. He
was always a<:cusing somebody of exaggerating something.·
Nornially,, attorn~ White would llave never been able to
testify against his former client, under the cloak of attorney-
client relationships, if Agnew hadn't first started blabbing
about hls plight in a book.
THAT CAUSED THE JUDGE lo rule that the sanctity of
the attorney and his client had been wiped away. He ordered
the lawyer to testify.
The little fascination h~re was that White claimed in his
Agnew. with &ome admirers. in Newpqrl during Nizon years
testimony that Agnew's confession c~me in a ''conversation
right here on our very own Orange Coast.
White said the conversation took place in February of 1973
in Newport Beach.
This stretches your memory back a fe w years.
THUS FOR THE SAKE of pure research (which Agnew
used to allege no news hack ever did>, the old files of this
sterling journal we r e pulled out. The big headlines of
February 1973 for our region involved a heavy series of
rains torms . A lady from Huntington Beach named Wyn
Sergeant was drawing ink because she had assertedly mar-
ried an Indonesian cannibal. News of the returning Vietnam
POWs was heavy.
But then on Feb. 5, there was an announcement that
President Nixon was planning his first visit to San Clemente
since re-election. Press Secretary Ron Ziegler announced a
cancellation the next day. Then Nixon left for San Clemente on
Feb. 8.
SPIRO AGNEW ARRIVED in Newport Beach after an
eight-country Asian tour and set up lodgings Feb. 9 at the
Newporter Inn. He met and reported to Nixon the next day, on
Saturday.
Then the vice president departed for Palm Springs to play
a little golf with Frank Sinatra.
Did Agnew make his admission to attorney White during
his brief one-day stopover in Newport Beach?
IF SO, IT WOULDN'T be the first scandal to rock that ad·
ministration that had its seeds in Newport Beach.
Remember Ma rtha Mitchell? She claimed the administra-
tion bullyboys held her prisoner in Newport.
There sure was a lot happening around here in the Nixon
years.
More millionaires now
-thanks to inflation
W ASHI?ltGTON (AP) -Inflation may be pinching pocketbooks of
many Americans; but it's also in-
creasing the number of people who
earn more than $1 million a year.
Figures released by the Internal
Revenue Service show the club isn't
all that exclusive anymore.
Those for 1978, the most recent
available, show that 2,041 Americans
filed individual federal tax returns
with adjusted gross Incomes of more
than $1 million.
The number is undoubtedly higher
by now, with rising prices and in-
come from the last two years of
double-digit inflation pushing more
people into the millionaire bracket
designating the wealthiest ol the
wealthy.
The uns figure was actually a bit
less than the 2,092 estimated by the
IRS last June, but it was still well
above the 1,776 reported for 1977. While those taxpayers were report·
lng incomes averaatng just over $2
millioo;52C,071 other Americans filed
forms showing that they either
earned no income or their louea ex-
ceeded what money they did make.
People at those extre mes ,
bow ever' rued fewer than 1 pereeJ't
of the •.'17 million returns wblch IRS
estimated it received for 1'78 taxes.
Total a<tjusted 1ross income for t.be
nation'• tu ruers was $1.3 trillion, up
from Sl.15 triWon ln 1177. the JRS
ft1urt1 lndtcated. Those fi1ure1
break down to an averac• income of
Sl4,50I in 1971, up from th• $13,812 of
l.f'7'7.
About 3:5~ percent of American.a
repo~ earnint• bet,.een s,u.ooo
and SS0,000 that year, with the big·
gest groups being the 12. 7 percent
between $15,000 and $19,999 and the
9.5 percent between $20,000 and
$24,999.
There were 15.9 percent between
$10,000 and $14,999, slightly less than
22 percent between $5,000 and $9,999
and 24.8 percent under $5,000. That
left about 2 percent at $50,000 or
above.
Total taxes paid added up to $),88.23
billion, an average of $2,740 each for
the 68.66 million Americans wbo had
t axable income. Taxes had averaged
$2,474 per return in 1977. accordine to
the IRS.
M lllionarles' taxes aveJa1ed
almost a million, too, with the IRS
puttln1 the figure at $988,326 per re-
turn. ·
Judge affirms
picket rights
MARTINEZ CAP) -School
employees may picket the pla.cea
where school trualeet do bullnela, a
Contra Colt.a County judfe hu ruled.
Jude• David Dollin lifted a pre·
llmlnary lQjuncdoo the school cftl.
trict bbla.lned to block U.e Dickttlftc.
Picketin1 be1an when
netotiatlons broke down between
tbe Plttaburc Unified School DlaU1ct.
and lbe Calllomia School Employees
Auoclatioo.
NEWS FEATURES
Huntington Beach
PLUS STORE
We sell first quality and discontinued
m e r chandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the
item s were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
Effective 518111
The Graduate
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
20 Inch Craftarn.n
ROTARY
LAWNMOWER
was •219"
NOW
S16499
SAVE 55%
with correction
was '26499
NOW s19499
SAVE s7ooo
19pc.
ROUTER BIT SET
2'1292
s57es
Sold Separately NOW
s2999 SAVE 47°/o
lluntinl{lon twar h
90-iS t\dam'
\dam!'> & MaJ!:noli a
(714 1 96:12666
f .a I I A (J i1J111 f " I '"f/,,M .. l~"I •.-·If 1
Manual
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER
was
'6799
NOW S5Q99
EASY FINO
HOME SHOP
CENTER
Over 1300 pcs.
was s1799
NOW
sggg
SAVE44%
WINNIE THE
POOH
MATIRESS
was
s4999
NOW
$2500
SAVE50%
STORE HOURS
1111-.f'Tt.tt:••lf s uw•y tt.-·lf !ltuHlayll·•Slf
\,I.. ahout
..,,.a,., t•rt>dit
plan,,
Cuisinart
at an unbelievable price!
Three models
Three days only
, Thursday, friclay and Saturday, May 7.9
ALL WITH REVOLUTIONARY
NEW EXPANDED .FEED TUBE!
SALE
DLC 10E ...................... 99.99
LIST
130.00
185.00
260.00
DLC SE ...................... 14'.tt
DLC 7E ...................... l tt.tt
also
Cuisinart Cookware 1
Cuisinart ~: lj
Accessories
20%
off
CROW• HARDWARE~
• ... YTMM6YOUWAMT .. AMAIDWAllSYOU
Westcliff Harbor View Center (tormertv Rion) (formerly I~)
1024 Irvine Ave. 1614 San Miguel Dr.
Newport Beach a Newport Beach
'4Jr.11 H 644-1111
'
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NATION
ADDED TO LIST -
Qooald Eugene
Webb, 52, who is
sought in the murder of a Pennsylvania
police chief, was
'-dded to the FBI's
''Ten Most Wanted
ugitives" list this
eek.
....
bis able-a
I
pupils
~ought
•
SACRAMENTO <AP >
-The state of
California is launching a
$250,000 "public aware-
ness" campaign saying
money spent on educa-
tion for the handlcapped
iJ weU spent.
• State schools Superin-
t'en dent Wilson Riles
!flid the program will
9-ave nearly SS00,000
~cause the old "aware-
ness" program was to
cost $710,000 this year.
The federal government
pays the cost.
S.I Includes Flot &
Fiiied thee ta & co ...
MUil, llG. 27.tt 2t.M
eumnn. no. J4." 26. M
mosn. 111. Jt.tt 31 .M
L'HERMITAGE
S·PC. FINE
CUTLERY SO
SPECIAL IUY
19''
Hom Siker, French
Chef's Knife, Rooat
Slicer, Ulllity Knife
& Poring Knife
lWNUlll llG. 1t. tt
14~? But Riles' press
secretary, Vic Biondi,
acknowledged that the
savings result from-the
disbanding last Sep-
Lember of the county
groups that ran the old
~rogram. t.JJ
1 Biondi said the pro-1
Jram , which begap
ebout four years ago,
~ad generally ac·
~omplished his purpose fo seek out handtcapped
phildren in each county ~nd tell their parents
~hat services are
~vailable. f He said the new pro-
~am, from now through
J eptember , will be
pimed partly at the
tame parents and partly pl t"fie general public. -
~It will use radio and
elevision announce-
ents and publications
to say money for handi-
capped students is "an
In vestment, it 's
;vorthwhile, it's well-
Jpenl."
• A fo rmer poli tical
Eampaign manager, An-
~ re a Jepson of San
'Francisco. has been
hired to run the pro-
kram.
Riles reported recent-Jy that the major pro-
gram for the hand1 -
ta pped, the Mas te r
IPlan ror Special Educa-
iion. faces a $101 million teficit in its first year
ecause costs have been
igher than expected.
~ firm given
~ ~anty
~rective
; WASHINGTON (AP>
The government has
rdered Montgomery
ard & Co. to place bin·
ers with information on
roduct warranties In its
stores and put up.
~gns in "prominent loca-
i on s " d-i r ectlng
ustomers to them.
The Federal Trade
ommission order
lghtened the Impact of
n administrative law
udge's order direclinl
ards to put the sips on
very cash register In its
tores.
The case is the rirst to
eceive FTC decision un-
er its pre-sale written
arranty rule, which
ays all warranties of·
ered on products costing
ore than ns must be
vailable to customers
fore the purchase.
Wards, maintaining
at It has complied with
e law, said lt will •P·
al the cue to a U.S.
ourtof Appeala.
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12-IN. MIRRO SILVERSTONE
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KODACaOR II
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 •a
24% LEAD CRYSTAL ,
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\
114 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 8, 1981
APW ........
NATION
Making a curtsy call
W ashingtori wondering how she could stoop so low
WASHINGTON <AP) -
Spokesmen at the White House
and State Department have
moved firmly to stem a budd.lnl
controversy over queat.\old ol in-
ternational conduct that have
bad Washington atwitter for
days.
Simply put:
What ln the world was the of·
flclai 1reeter of the United
Statea government doin1 last
week when ,he curtlied before
Prince Charles of Britain?
Didn't the Revolutionary War
eliminate the need for that?
Would there be a reprimand?
Those questions were raised -
and some acid commenu volun-
teered -in a series of letters to
Washington newspapers from
readers put off by photographs
of Lenore Annenberg, the U.S.
chief of protocol, bowing to the
prince when he arrived for a
visit.
presa secretary Larry Speaku
-"not being a protocol expert
or a "fool" -declined to answer
Initially.
Then apparently overcome by
a desire to be fortbcomin1,
Speakes recalled that Mra. An·
nenber1, wife of a former am·
bassador to Britain, bad kisaed
the prince when he left:
"She covered both ends of the
spectrum, a curtsy and a kiss,"
he said.
"Let's hope be doesn't come
bac k again.'' one reporter
called out.
At the State Deputment,
spokesman David PaHa1e at-
tempted a suitably diplomatic
response to.similar questions.
The United States has no
established c urtsy policy, he
s aid, adding that one's response
in s uch a situation might depend
"on whether or not you have a
trick knee."
bowin1 at the waist, rUJllilil8 up
and throwlnl ones arms around
him and 1lvin1 him a bll Id.la,"
be said.
"Mn. A,nnenberl'• reaction
was a 1esture of courtesy, no
more, no leu," Pasaa1e aald. "It
waa a 1esture without political
impllcationa. It waa a gesture
without political 1i1nificance. It
was • penonai one.
"And a1ain lt was a gesture ol
courtesy -from which I un·
derstand ln old English the word
curtsy comes."
Vets picketing
MISTY MORNING Fishermen ease their
way across Tappan Lake in I larrison County,
Ohio, as the dawn lights up a mist over the
lake on a recent spring morning.
When the questions bubbled up
Tuesday al the official White
House press brlefinir. deputy
"I suppose a variety of things
were considered s uch as sbakioi
the hand, nodding of the head,
FRE.SNO (AP) -Veterans,
some in wheelchairs, vow to
picket the Veterans Adminiatra·
lion Medical Center here until ill
affiliation with the University of
California Medical School at San
Francisco is ended. The 1roup
contends that patient care has
declined and the death rate in·
crea sed. ,.,, ,,, "•• ,,, , ••• ,, ..
22 A&E
RV AWNINGS
Call us and you II see what we mean
I ree installation at your home All
s11es and prices available
•
• We're mobile! • All work CJ11C111 CllttHd! • S.,..,ltHJ Callfof'lllo RV
pcirU tine• 1975.
• P~sonall1ed, professional
~it _ ~Ice
lfJW[llCl,:'fj See us for woven woods, enclosures,
storage pods and leveling systems.
"One CaU Attd You'reConnd"
15998 Mariner Drive
Huntington Beach, i~• ~/ 1213) 592·2193 I 714) 84U424
May is nATIOnAL
HYPERTEns1on monTH
At SAV-ON we care about
your blood pressure. So, during the
month of May we will be having ...
FREEILDOD .
PRESSURE CLINICS
•
SATURDAY,' MAY 9th. & 16th.
1 :30 tO 4:30 PM
\_ _/ .
• Blood pressure taken by trained personnel.
• Free literature concerplng your blood pre11ure. •
•subject to~aupply on hand
WIN
A FREE Pl PEER HOME
BLOOD PRESSURE MlllUR/KIT
We've come a long way
since our first shopping
center. For example,
there's the new Wood-
bridge Village Center.
A home for over 50
s tores and services,
including restaurants
and a 5-screen movie
theatre.
It's an exce11ent ex-
ample of Irvine's con-
tinued growth toward
the goal of becoming
an energy-efficient,
economically-ha lanced
city. Growth guided by
two important factors.
The City's farsighted ,
living General Plan.
And concerned resi-
dents from the commu-
nity, City government
and The lrVine Company
who work together to
make it happen.
We may not always
see eye-to-eye on eve ry
detail, but the result
has been, and will con-
tinue to be, a city that
gets better to live in
every day ..
Projects like the new
Woodbridge Village
Shopping Ce nter
continue to bring the
residents of Irvine the
security of a substantial
tax base and the •
energy-saving conve-
nience of shopping
close to home. And
there is much more to
come. For information
on this growing new
city, please visit or call
The Irvine Company
Info rmation Center.
Culver Dr. exit off San
Diego Fwy. (1-405). To
comer of Barranca .
(714) 551-1500.
•
Good planning ..
....... shopping dose to home. \ \
. I
•
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
Come by for a personal
demonstration of
the Bank of America
VERSATELLtR™
automated teller
machine, and
enter our
you're in business! Come in for a per-
sonal demonstration and learn about an
easy way to do your banking. Want more
information? Dial 1-800-362-7152.
Get a demonstration at any
of these Bank of America
branches:
San Fernando Valley
•4123 West Olive Ave .. Burbank
"Try It Now"
Sweepsta kes.
Look at the prizes
y6u coutd win !
Grand prize. ""t----"1~ •.8363 Topanga Canyon BJvd., Canoga Park
Princess Cruise
fo r two to M exico.
Seven enc hanted
days aboard a
luxury cruise ship. A sun-
filled tro pic vac_ation. lnclu,des
a luxurious outside stateroom, food
and entertai nment aboard ship, plus
connecting air fa re~
Special drilwing-prizes. .
TV, cameras and radios will be awarded
each time.
Two drawings: May 29 and June 12.
1st prize: SONY-Trini tron 19-inch
c-olor TV
2nd prizes: 5 Pronto11 Sonar Plus
cameras from Polaroid.•
3rd prizes: 100 SONY AM/FM rad ios.
Daily cash prizes.
You might w in $2, $5 or $50 j ust for try-
ing our VE RSATELLER automated teller
machine. Thousand s of cash prizes will
be awarded at random every week.
Pushbutton Banki~
easy with us.
~-......
Soon you will be able to
bank from 6 a.m. to midnight
every day in the week. A nd it's as
easy as making a call on a pushbutto n
phone. Insert your VERSATEL 4P card,
enter your ID Code, and
• 16944 San Fernando Mission Blvd.,
~ Granada Hills
• 6600 Laurel Canyon Blvd.,
North Hollywood
.. 16144 Nordhoff St., Sepulveda
•.13700 Riverside Dr., Sherma11paks
• 18337 Venu -a Blvd., Tarzana
• 7060 Sepulveda Blvd., Van Nuy~
• 6100 Topanga Canyon Blvd., Woodland Hills
Orange County
• 1701 E. Katella Ave., Anaheim
• 5640 E. San ta Ana Canyon, Anaheim
• 1141 N. State College Blvd., Anaheim
• 290 S. State College Blvd ., Brea
• 8968 Knott Ave., Buena Park
• 3333 Bristol St., Bldg. B, Costa Me~a
• 17430 Brookhurst St., Fountain Valley
• 1901 N. Euclid St., Fullerton
• 1821 West Orangethorpe Ave., Fullerton
• 9591 Chapman Ave., Ga1den Grove
• 3166 Admiralty Dr., Huntington Beach
• 15672 Springdale St., Huntington Beac h
• 299 O cean Ave., Laguna Beach
• 11262 Los Alamitos Blvd., Los Alamitos
• 26821 Trabuco Rd ., Mission Viejo
• 4101 MacArthur Blvd., Newport Beach
• 1016 Irvine Ave., Newport Beach
• 500 Newport Center Dr., Newport Beach
• 3444 Via Lido, Newport Beach
• 345 East Chapman Ave., Orange
• 2680 North Tustin Ave., Orange
• 160 E. Yorba Linda, Placentia
• 31872 Camino Capistrano,
San Juan Capistrano
• 801 North Main St., Santa Ana
• 1500 E. Warner Ave., Santa Ana
• 2127 E. 17th St., Santa Ana
• 13341 Newport Ave., Tustin
Los Angeles County
• 2049 Century Park East, Los Angeles
• 11 50 Glendon Ave., Los Angeles
• 1101 Westwood Blvd., Los Angeles
• 182A Del Amo Fashion
Square, Torrance
·ship is Bn11sh
Registry. Tickets are
not transferable and are
invalid if resold. Tickets do not
cover hems of a personal nature.
Winners under 18 must be accom·
panied by parent or guardian. No transac·
tion necessary to enter. Vold where prohibiled
by law. Sweepstakes details al)d entry Information
available at most Bank of America locations in the San
Fernando Valley and Orange County.
)
------------.-----~ .............. --........................................................................ .. ·'
Hand-carved carousels endanger~d species l By IN&MENDEl.SOHN
•••• 1 llR ..........
Wbat ls made or wood. la painted more colors
thao the rainbow, has thousands or lee• that never
10 anywhere, Is found all over the United States
and Is dhappearln1! _ •
The 284 hand-carved carouula left ln
America provlde the answer to this particular rid·
die. But the subject of merry-10-rounds raises
more questions than might be supposed.
On the National Mall ln Waahlncton. D.C .. a
carousel la once a1aln splnnlnl ln celebration of
thesunnydayaoCspring and summer. More than a
decade ago, a carousel was placed there by the
~ecretary or the Smithsonian lnaUtute, S. Dillon
Ripley, asa "living extenslonollhemuaeuma."
BUI' EVEN A.S the carousel In the nation's
front yard whirls merrily, an omlnous trend con-
tinues across the country. Once, thousands or
carouaeb wer• to be found on Amtrica's fair-
grounds, play1rounds and t>eaches. They wertr
bright lures dan1lf'd at the end of at.reetcar lines.
as trolley companlH built amusement parka to
encourage riders . Today, a fraction of these hand-
carved wooden treasures of yesteryear remain
And thenumberdimmishe yearly.
For the last seven years. 10 to 20 carousels
have been lost each year~ In most cases, they have
been dismantled . the indivlduaJ animals have
been sold off one by one. Barbara Fahs Charles. a
Washington. D.C .. desigMr of museum exhlbi·
lions and an expert on the history or the A meriran
carousel. calls the t rend "seven year s or bad
luck."
Most people love merry-go-rounds because
they rode them as children. Ms . Charles became
interested in carousels when she had o ne for a
downstairs neighbor. She li ved for a lime in an
apartment over the Santa Monica Pier carousel,
made fa mous in the movie. "The Sting "This 1922
hand·carved piece or Americana is currently be·
ing restored and wjll reopen soon. ·
OFTEN, HOWEVE"., a rarousel's fate is
quite different. "In the past decade, carousel
figures have become highly collectible, easily
tripling in pr ice -with the more unusual or finely
carved rising the fas test." Charles says ... As the
demand for figures has increased, whole operat-
ing carousels have decreased in significant num·
bers."
Is there reason to mourn the loss or m erry-go.
rounds in America? Would a child's ride be that
much missed? The fact of the matter is, the
carousel was not created for children. Kids and
carousels got together relatively late in the
carousel's long and colorful history
D.C. Muller carved this elegant cavalry 3teed
for W H. Dentzel Co. of Philadelphia.
T he earlies t known visual record or a
"carousel" is a l,500-year-0ld .l}ya.antine bas-
reli ef depicting riders swinging_Witbaskets lied lo
a centerpole. Down throueh ~enturies, the
carousel was knownfbY • maD-y names and in
\'ar ious rorms in such far-flung parts or the world
as India, Turkey. Europe. Mexico and America.
The first carousel recorded in this country
was made in New England around 1800. But the
carousel indus try got its real start, a lbeit a rocky
one. when young Gustav Dentzel hung out his sign
in Philadelphia "G.A. DENTZEL, STEAM AND
HORSEPOWER CAROUSSELLBUILDER -1861."
In 1870, Denlzel took his first carousel on tour
a nd stopped a t Richmond. Va. A group o( boys
gathered round, but instead or hopping aooar<l,
pelted the carousel with stones . When Oentzel pro-
tested to police standing idly by, they informed
him, "Mister. if you want business, don't ever
Walking is good • exercise
By JOHN D. ROSEN, M.D.
Dear Dr. Rosen,
My doctor says I should exercise. I don't relish
Jogging ... do you have any ideas? M.L. COSTA
MESA
ANSWER: I am a great believer in walking.
ASK THE DOCTOR
Walking at a brisk pace is as healthful as jogging.
By the way ... I have ne ver seen a smiling jog·
(JAC:K ANl>•:RSON 1 011•11 .,.11_.
REVEALS in the -~
ger They somehow always look like they're in
pain I Don't gel me wrong. There 1s no question
that running 1s a te rrific form of exer cise l .
For those living or working in the Newport
Beach area I s uggest the walk around Fashion
Is land.
On a s unny day there is ample opportunity for
people watching I would recommend incorporat-·
ing the walk with the lunch hour.
Dr John D. Rosen. a practttlonn in Newport Beach.
welcomes your queations. Mail requests to A1k the Doc·
tor, P 0 Bo:r 1560. Costa Meia. 92426.
GIFT CERTlACATE
For: Mom
From: You and I
Free
"Beauty La.ch"
• ~natural ~cosmetics
So. Coast 'lcno
SaksWlftg
540-3332
With P1;1rchase of Mother's Day Gift in Any
Amount.
Good For:• Personal Skin Analysis
• Natural Cosmetic Styling
Is spelling a huge ene
del
Spelling Is the key to language and effective communication. unfortunately, most executives don't know
how to use this powerful tool.
Or. Richard Archer plans to change all this. He has developed CONCEPT SPELLING-a revolutionary
new approach to teaching and learning spelling. Or. Archer has determined that there are 50 basic
concepts upon which the English language is built. He has distilled these concepts Into 1 O fundamental
principles whic~ he believes are enough for everyone to use to spell welt.
You •re Invited to •ltend a FREE INTRODUCTORY
WORKSHOP
• Thurtday, May 7
• South Coast Plaza Hoeel (San Pedro I San Diego rooms)
• 7 p.m. to 9 p .m.
Dr. Archer wl(I peraonally conduct th• workahop and e>Cplaln Concept Spelling In more detall.
For further 111Jormat1on call 851·9255.
•
'The Flying llorses' of Watch Ifill. R.I. have
thrilled children for JOO years
play· Marching Through Georgia· in the South · ·
A! 11ew for'ms of power became available,
carousels were turned first by steam. then by
electricity. Once. they were even turned by
coconuts ...
On the occasion in 1894. an American merry-
go.round salesman, Joseph D Guinn, a rrived in
Tahiti with two carousels powered by steam . only
to find that no wood or coal was available to fuel
the engines. In his memoirs. Gumn wrote, "We
fired with coconuts. I stayed there 40 days and did
very well taking in as much as $625 in a single
day."
. The carousel business in America was indeed
profitable in its golden age from 1880 1930. In this
period there were at least 19 carousel·car ving
s hops. Each shop ha d its unique style. and its in-
dividual carvers had their signature touches
Or course. in the true American spirit. an idea
was "borrowed" now and then. "Carvers took
:.tyles rrom each other. They crept under can-
vases to see what othe rs were dolng," says Nina
Frale)', a carousel restoration expert who began
her c8'rffr at age 10 palnUng fences tn her father's
amusement park.
Carousel carvers had a ereater job cut out for
them thltn sculpting the blocks or raw wood they
faced. They were challenged to create instant fan-
tasy. Before choosing a steed, a rider would de-
cide what role to play knight, princess. cowboy,
circus performer or hunter. The carvers created
mounts for them a ll.
The special carvings on an old wooden
carousel are detailed, fanciful, orten historically
accurate and always on the right side of the
animal. ~ecause American carousels turn coun· ter-clockwtse, the right side, or "rom ance"
side. fac_es the onlookers and t.ba approachin1
rider. There was no point in wasting all that
work on the side nobody would see.
The Philade lphia Toboggan Company
carvers created horses with historically correct
coats of medieval armour and weapons . Master
carver D.C. Muller was a sludentorthe American
Civil War, and his militar y horses wear authentic
cavalry gear One Dentzel tiger s ports a full·
length portrait of Teddy Roosevelt stalking his
prey. pince-nez and all.
Carver Marc·us Charles lllions adorned his
horses with portraits of the fa mous such as
Abraham Lincoln and himself; at least one of
his horses bears a se lf-portrait. Another Coney
Island car ver, Charles Carme l, honored his wife
with such a portrait on horseback. Charles Loolf
created total carousel environments. He designed
buildings with stained glass windows which cast a
glow on brilliant white horses with gnded manes
and trappings encrusted with mirror~d jewels
thal,· caught the l ight The whole was a• giant
kale1doi;cope.
THE "BROOKLYN Baroque" rose-bedecked
steeds or carve.rs Stein & Goldstein are massive,
aggressive chargers with their ears back and
teeth bared. Herschell ·Spillman carvers created
smaller, gentler creatures that would appeal to
children One such delight. a frog, was outfitted in
a Jacke t. bow lie and short pants ... Colonel"
Parker 's carvers gave their all with Americana.
fl ags, eagles, Indian heads. six shooters. sun·
flowers and corn on cobs
The golden age of carous els ended with the
Depression as parks closed in response to the fail-
ing economy After World War II. amusement
parks and merry·go·rounds expenenced a brief
r evival. but by that lime the art of the car ousel
carve r had largel} been lost.
•
• 1,
Singles set general meeting
ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a gene ral
m eeting at 8 p m. Saturday in lrvme For inform a
lion , call Ann at 751 -0291.
PEOPLE SAMPLER get acquainted social will be
held at 8 p.m Friday in Costa Mesa For informa
lion. call 12131 828·8949.
SINGLES AND THE LAW is the topic of a daylong
seminar al 9 a .m . Saturday in Santa Ana. Attorney
Gayle Posner will lead the discuss ion sponsor ed by
the Man-Woman Ins titute. For information. call
667-3097
-
Free to I the Publle
FOCUS ON
CO MMUNITY HEAL TH
CO SPONSORED BY
PACIFICA COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
ANO THE
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA SOCIETY
TO PREVENT BLINDNESS
GLAUCOMA
TESTING-
1VISION TESTING
WEDNESDAY, MAY 13 , 1981 I
10:00 A.M.-12:00NOON 1:00-3:00 P.M.
LECTURE BY
DANIEL J . SJGBAND, M.0 . 12:30 P.M.
(Please Bring Discarded Eyeglasses
To lielp Others Who Need Assistance)
WYCLIFFE GARDEN APARTMENTS
18765 Florida Street
Huntingtnn Beach. California
For Information Phone 842-0611 Ext. JSO
SI NGLE SET INTERNATIONAL will have a
.. Person to Person" social at 8 p.m Friday m
Anaheim. Forinformation. call 738·5806
SINGLES CALENDAR
PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS Huntington
Beach Chapter will have a slave auctfon and wine
party at 8:30 p.m Friday In Garden Grove. For in
formation. call Gerri at 964 5296
• v
• v
• ...... • • v ...... • v
~
~ ~
e
~ ~ . . . -. A time honon>d tradition the Red Plate A perfect
gin for Mother·~ Day becau~e she deserves special
attention Onl) sis.so. $ y ~ ~ e ~ ~ e $ ~
~, ~ Su the Red Plate at ~ e ~ ~ Sister's Gift Shop *
~·~ -:: ~ $ 6058 Warner Avenue ~ * ~...._n Huntington Beach $ $ Or dial <114) 848·9-400 to order $
Buy ~a 'Hl~koh Farms ·Gift*
Find .
the whole
Peanuts
9ang·
everyday
in the __,Piii
M2e4321
WE'LL SHIP IT FREE!
We'll handle all the details and
even enclose a personal greeting!
Choose from a wide selection of gHts
in our store. N6w thru May 1 O. 1981 .
&42-0972
WESTQ.IFF PLAZA ~
l
·FEATURES Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6. 1981
JA-friend to the fri~n(lly sltj~s PUllUC NOTICE
NOTICIOP TltUITll'I IA Le LOAN MO. VARllATO/JONU T.LNe ~J
PUBUC NOTICE
"" ... 'IC'TITIOUI 9UllNIU MAMl ITATaMINT Tiie tollow1110 P•''°"' tr• .. Hit II•"'"•" .... 0£AR ANN LANDERS: You are tbe bett
•ree to set the moat att.enUon. I failed to do tltlJ lllt year but mtde up m)' n:Uod to do tt to-
4ay~ •
To all the pilot.a. co-pilots and Oiaht atten· danta wbo fly lhe alrw111 of lbe worlcf: J wou.141
ltke to express my appreetaUoo of your ~Ola,
•xpertise and au the other qualities It taltn to
do the tremendou1 Job you do every day -
taken for granted by many and completely
ovel'1ooked by some.
1 rve &ad t.be privilege of flying on aevtfal ._,ng and some s hort flights, and I have nev~r
~eased to be amazed at the technology and
•ldU. required to get those laree craft off lbe
cround, into the air and down again without a
fll•hap.
• I realize I am not expressing this very wel11
•ut I want to take this opportunit,y to thank an
or you tort.be great job you are dotni. -D .J.
Dear D.J.: I happened to be aboard a TWA
011b& to New York wben I read your letter. (J
••ver &ravel without a briefcase fWed wltb ... U.> Yod't letter was so llift I alked tb.e ru1ht
atteedant to give It to tbe captala. Here ls a
eopy ol lala responae:
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Tballlt you for the
"
1 lAlllU
opportunity to read the leUer fro• tbat 1ratefuJ
pusen1er. Not Ollly tbe pauen1en, but we ln
the cockpit teed to take oa.r work for granted. It
becomes roatlae like moat oUler jobs tbat bave
a 1100 ol 11amoer, bat the rootl are la tbe
routine. In fad, the roattoe bffome1 bortn1
af&er awlll.le aacl lbe procreu of &ecbnology
keep• demaacllac le11 od lea of ••· Aflet'
senral U..Uaacl houri la the air It l• dltflealt
not t9 beeome romplacent.
'l'llll 1t wlU' .,._ let&er )'OU altar~ wltb H
Wll IO ~flliU. It JI CflttfYtnC to be .re·
minded occaaleeally that someone appreciate•
wllat we do. 'naak you, AftJI Laaders, for mak·
Ing oar day a Uttle brtlbter. -Capt. Jake Rast,
TWA Flt. 321/2
P .S. The reverse of tlala p~per la a TWX at· tached to our weatber package ud lt'I at limes
like this tbal we really eua oar keep. -J .R.
Dear Readers: The TWX was lbe weather
report. U a.Id of llll'baleaee ud UmtWid vtslbW·
t1 abeH.. Wile-1 fffd Jt, I waa •re a11J.a r•
mlnded ol &lie eDOtmM• retpoulbWt1 tbete
alrllne pllola have. Tbelr AW ... Jlld1m•t are
a maU« ol Ute. I, aoo, am k gratdal pauea1er.
DEAR ANN LANDEltS: la there some wa)'
you can get the message across that people, \ID·
less invited. are not welcome on weekends -
especially between 5 and 7 p.m.?
We have some close relatives who ti.ve
Callen into the habit of showing up just as we are
about to sit down for supper. Then there ls a
mad BCTamble to reset the table apd provide
enough t hain for everyone. Stretchl"' a D)eaf
to feed 10, when it was prepared for six, is no
joke.
I know we are not the only ones who have
this problem. Can you sugsut a solution? -
tRAPPED .
Dear Trapped: Yea. EUber grow some 1au
or quit complalnlng. The next time lbe locuta
descend, let them sit awhile and lbea say, "It'•
get.tlag near supper tS1ne and I'm 10rry we doa't
have enough for lour extra. Please phone ID ad·
vance nest time and le& us know whea you are
com lag, 80 we can be prepared."
. \.
NfWPOl'T' HOME LOAN, INC •• '"'' •HIO!nl•d Tr11•IM 111\fer IM loll ow lne 4"C r lbeO dltecl of lnltl w 11.L 1ELL AT PUauc AUCTION fO THE HIG Hl!ST 11001~ POR CA$H llMIY•ble et 11..,. of lll• Ill l ... 111 _, flf ... Un*" s..-.1 ell r1t111.
tlll• •lld ,_, (_ .. 10 --lleld by II llnOw wlG DMct ol T,...1111 \M P'°'9rtY ,.rei...tter 11tterllled: TRUST uR: GEO RGI! LIO VAll RATO. JR. end SA NORA VARRATO, llU-..s elld wllt tl IOllll ton ... h
tl!NEFICIARY: DOROTHY M. JONES At<or-~t-ber ll. tfllO •• In· ,,, Mo. S16» Ill~ IJ1H,.,... w ol Oflldel ,._orti Ill m. CJlll<t of II• Recor-. flf 0.-C-y, Mid -
of lrull -rlt.l -fotlowlflv pr-trlY Percel I . Lot u of Trect Mo. 1301, In Ille clly ol trvlne1 COUllty of Oren91, St•lt ol c.tt!-•· H ~ tnep ~ corded tn lloc*, J14, "'911t J. J 4llCI Jot MIKell-~-In UM offk• of Ille COllnty rKOrdltr Of ..... COUllly E1cepll119 lllertfrom oil oll, oat, mlnerels -l>ydro<erllon 11111tl•11Ctt In •nO Ullder wkl •-. bul wlt~l llle r19111 of WrlK• lfttry 10 • dltpUI of JOO ••••. meuured from Ille 1\lrlec• lllet90f es r.--111 ~ rec.orctecl 111 ,...... llUI, ~ 1141, offkl•I rec:O<d 01 wld Orot11119 Counly. P.,ctl 1 A non·uc1111lve •P· 11<1rle11•nt .. ,,,,,_, for tM ,...,_, ti 111 for111 In enO oyer Ille telKI OIKrlbecl In Ar1kl• V, Se<Uon I ot .... ,
AUTO CANTER MACHINI!, LT 0., SI Auto Gelllff DflW, 9ul~ A, Ullll 1, l,.,IM, Calltof'lllet2'U P•11I aee114lrt•11, lilt l •tl IUHll, ~Im, C:.tftorftl• t1IOJ O•ltorl l\lrU«, ~ OlllllOf Dfl .. , Rl• .. udlt, c..llloml• tat Tllll ""11ne.l la Colldveted a, • llm"ecl ...,V.,..,.lo P.vl ......... 11
""'• m .. "*'' •• 111.a w1111 ll• Co1111ty Clt rt. of Or.,oe to1111ty ., Aprll 11, lt'1 ,._
l'A1t1t•• A '"ANltLIM lotlat4~Aw. ar-...c:..tMiM P11llllW.O Oralltt C:0.11 Delly l'llot,
AP.II Jl, Jt, Mey6, tJ. ltet 1-..1
PUBUC NOTICE
..ICTITIOUI 8UllNIU NAMllTATIMINT Tiie lollewlftt ,__ere dell\t ............. , Ill JORAOCO NO, 300 EAST, LTD. IJI CAL IFORNIA JOJOIA WIST, LTO.,
lll7 e1rt11 M,_t. S..lto IS1 , N-.ort t o.cll, CAii'°""" HMO JORAOCO NO. I EAST, INC., · M•••d• c..,_.11 .... I Eaa\ ""' lltMI. R-•... vllOe IHllll Tllll bull,..H 11 COllOll<tecl •Y • llmlleo pttt11enllltJ. '
oont
Jor-• NO. I E .... I"',
~M. O<lmm, ........
Tllll ...._,. WH fllod wlUI tlte Counly Ctorll ol o..,... Gewlly "" Aprll 11, ltl'I.
(
University women meet Thursday
<trtoln declor•llon ol covlft.,.11, con· dlllon1 -reslrlcU01u recorded M•l
10, ltll In-.... 1. P-00 Jl7. oflkl•I rtc-s, es ..._.,llJ''llOlfU ort"OY"·
:~::~·~~~i.~i::,;~~~~J.~t P•O• n. olll<l•I rocord1 ol S•ld Orengo Counly
Ht? RtlNI, Irvine, CA 917 u
'111 • "'"' ·--or <Ommoll "" I llQn•llan I• •-n •bow, no wo,,enty
,, ..... ,R.k~e;o .. ~ .. u· 1•Qooa111t.Wte• lltw,.,t9Mdl.CA-,, ....
PutlMI"*' 0r.,,.. C.O.sl o.lly 1'1*-
APf 11 1', llMy '• ll, 20, 1•1 :tm41.
I . C~ PISTRANO VALLEY CHAPTEa of the
~erican Association of Retired Persons meets at
2 ~30 p.m . Wednesday in the Hot Springs Dance
HaU , S2S>6 Paaeo Adetanto;San 'uan Cirptslrano.
Fpr mote information call 661-6957.
~
O)tANGE COUNTY ACTIVITY Directors Associa·
tlbn meets at 10 a.m. in Mile Square Park in Foun-
'
CLUB CALENDAR
tain Valley on Tuesday. For more information call
963-3225.
AMERICAN ~IATION or University Women
~eeta Thursday at 9:30 a.m. ln the Laguna Beach
Congregational Church, St. Ann's at Glenneyre.
For more information call 492-5980.
I
NEWPORT HAR60R PANHELLENIC meets at 2
p.m . Satutday in St. Michael and All Angels
Par ish Hall, 3233 Pacific View Drive, Corona del
, Mar. For more information caU 673·?146.
HUNTINGTON BEACH BRANCH, American As·
sociation or University Women, meets Wednesday,
May 13, at 8: 15 p.m. in Home Federal Savings,
Seacli(( .,Shopping-~enter. Huntiflgton Beach. ·For
more information call 963· 7093.
QUILTERS GUILD or Orang~ County meets at
7: 15 p. m. Wednesday. May 13, in the Cafeteria of
Peralta Junior High School, 2190 N . Canal St.,
Orange. For more information call 828-3082.
SOUTH COAST IJTERACY Council meets at noon
Friday in Republic Federal Savings and Loan,
30212 Crown Valley Parkway, Laguna Niguel. For
more information call 581-7695.
PACIFIC COAST ARCHAEOLOGICAL Society
Leo: Finish important job
Thursday, May 7, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
. ARIES <March 21 -April 19): Needed informa·
ti on is obtained con cerning security, safety
meas ures, home·appli ances and property values.
Older family member makes major concession.
Gemi.ni, Virgo, Sagittarius natives fieure prom·
inently. Read!
TAVRVS (April 20·May 20): Family member
is sincere but could be misWormed. Forces tend
HOROSCOPE
to be scattered . Messages, calls. short trips
dominate aeenda. Libra, Aquarius, Gemini
persona play key role&. Money picture is brighter
than orlginaJly anticipated.
GEMINI <May 21 -June 20): Obtain hint from
Taurus message. Special terms concerning invest·
ments come into sharp, clear focus. You locate
article that had been lost or stolen. Aura of
romance ls part of scenario. News is received
wbicb highlights financial prospects.
CANCER <June 21-July 22): Aceent on power,
intensified relationship, achievement of major
goal. Cycle high and your judgment is on target.
Capricorn and another Cancer figure prominently .
Money and love dominate scenario. You'IJ win!
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Important project will
be completed. It is time to let go of past. Look
behind scenes for solution to dilemma. Temporary
delay actually works in your favor. Consolidate.
Take µtventory. Communicate with one confined to
home ar hospital.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22>: New approach aids
in rulf1Ument of hopes. desires. Social gathering
results in significant contacts. Scenario highlights
improved finances. special career opportunities
and a "romantic interlude ... Take lead!
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0cl. 22): Follow through on
hunch. Reliable guidance .received by h'teding "in·
ner voice.·· Focus on dealings with authorities.
career. standing in community. Yoµ'll participate
in special promotion. Employer is on your side.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 2U : Good moon
aspect coincides now with abstract principle of
law. publishing, education and a "spiritual revel&·
lion." Holiday spirit could prevail and includes
possible travel. Gemini, Libra, SagittariUI natives
figure prominently.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Hidden re·
sources come into focus. Be aware of details, pro·
tect possessions and refuse to give up aomethlng ur
value for a mere "whispered promise." Aquarius,
Scor pio, Taurus natives figure promlneatly.
Perceive.
CAPRICORN <Dec . 22-Jan. 19): Accent on
legal proceedings, evaluation of important rela·
tionship, public relatioqs and m arital status.
Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons play important
roles. Defer to wishes or one close to you. Play
waiting game.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Diplomacy
wins day. Means avoid forcing issues. What you
seek could be handed you on proverbial silver plat·
ter. Emphasis on employment, dependents, pets
and vitality. Follow through on knowledge regard·
ing nutrition. health.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Creativity and
romance dominate scenario. Accent also oo
speculation, excitement accompanying change,
variety o! sensations and travel plans. Another
Pisces figures prominently. You could have luck
with the number 7.
Bullock's sets Danish festival
Tbere'U be a festligholdese May 14.
That's a Danish festival.
Site or the celebration wiU be Bullock's South
Coast Pina store where Jette Engelbrecbtsen,
faablon coordinator or Dansie International Desicns,
will demonstrate her color·bright table settings,
styled for American dining but wilh a Danish flavor.
A~ participating in the celebration will be
Mlcbelle Oc:cbiogroaso or Modem Bride magazfue,
lio ...tll show color slides of outstanding din·
erware and cookware and offer advice to engaied
ouples in bow to participate in bridal re1iatries ao
fl'/ don't end up with five toast.en u weddine elfta. f.,-aonnel from three California eateries; $can·
slwwslated
Ora.nee Coast College's annual sprinc student
rt show will run May 20 through June 11 in the,
CC Art G.allery.
Tbe 1allery ia open Monday throu1b Friday
rom 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., aod Monday and truesday
venlqa from 1 to t p.m . Ad~ JL£cuta
e &allery I• located ln t.be college's Art Center
mpln. A naptlon for lhe art.latl trill be held on Wed· ~. Ma>" JO, from 1 tot p.m. Refresbnaenta
II be Mnecl. For lnformatlon about tbt 1bo•, pbone ...
~-rity 'offioor8 sei ,
· .. n . SdwUd ... ha ~td &bat~obert S\eele baa IM... elected pneh1ent ot
4lWDOl'l Qaafter al NatiaUI CMrttJ Leape. ~ c··o. tM bMrd al dlncton will be Mn. llclaaN
... c1a, rnembenhlp; Mn, Antboay TUiiy, WAii
aacl m•••i Nr1, Do. A61uon, Tlclktoell•r coordinator; Mn. Jam .. H. Cuuausb, pbllQ.
U.ro11; llra. Robert 8 . lllla•, recor•la1 aee~; llln Dnld C. Hen111, corraPoQdla1
MC....,; lln. H_,,. 1'.~, UNIVffi lln. Jolm C. O'DoaMU, ,.,Uamin&artan; ana lln. ,,.. RobeJ nom,.. Md Kn. Zdwanl a.r.., nat1oa1I comdJ ,.,, K mtiti••·
dia, Griswold 's Inn and Anderson's Pea Soup
Restaurant; wiU demonstrate their s~cialities.
Ronald Speisser . Scandia's executive chef, will
demonstrate how to prepare some of that Los
Angeles restaurant's most famous recipes.
Griswold's, from Claremont and Fullerton, will
serve cinnamon roUs and coffee and show ofrthe bak·
ing skill or its personnel with a traditional many·
tiered Kransekag ( Danjsh wedding cake).
Executive Chef Royale from Anderson's, near
Solvang, will cook and give away a pound of split
peas to cUltomers as welJ as its recipe for Gule
Aerter (1plitpea soup).
W>odwind seminar
The Clarendon Woodwind School will present a
seminar July 5through14 at ChrislCollese ln Irvine.
The seminar will include woodwind ensemble
classes; mast.er classes for nute, obOe, clarinet and
bassoon; concerts; lectures and participant
performances.
Tuitlon la $200, with an addlUonal eharte of f15
for bousine, and applications ~U be \cceptecl unUI June 1$. Adml1alon is llmlt,d to ._,p11canta over tbe
, age ol 17, with exception• made le 1P9tfal caaea.
lnlormauoo and appllcatlonl ~a vaUa ble from
Susan Pries at Christ CoUege, 1530 Concordia,
Irvine .
A day 'With pros
Sludenta wttb an lnlettlt ID Jounall•m aod te·
lated Rekll are invited to ata.d 40/l DaJ With Ute
Proa" Saturday at t.be Advanced Health 9enter,
NewportBeacb.
1'be procram wllJ be boated~>' memben of th•
CaWonda Pl-. Women, Oraae Couty Dtltrtet,
wbo wUJ lhare u.elr nperienc11 ud lalpta la the
1rea• « aewapepen, mqulDM, palblle rel•tlonf.
bUlt.a•commllDkaUoMIDd~ • i • ...... LI lAW'Hled In IU CH
Ylr'ltnla'l'Nhatm41!. •
I
meets at 7:30 p.m . Thursday, m the Bowers
Museum Annex, 2202 N. Main St .• Santa Ana . For
JllOre information,call 960·037!l.
HUNTINGTON BEACH Depression Glass Club
meets at 10 a.m. Saturday in the Women's Club,
420 10th St.. Huntington Beach. For more informa-
tion call 846·3792.
MOTHERS OF TWINS Club of Orange Coast area
meets Wednesday, May 13 at 7:30p.m. in the home of
Dianna Nyhus.
BETA SIGMA PHI, Orange Coast Council, meets
Saturday at 10 a.m. in the Long Beach Elks Club.
For more information call 523-5166.
LA~ WIV ES of Orange County meets Satur-
day al 8~30 a.m. in lhe Science Lecture Hall o!
UCI. For more information call Anna Freeman at
835-9171.
" ol••n es to lb con>pMt-u or <O•· r.cl11eH) "" Tiie -fl<lery Ulldltr Hid Deed ol
PUBLIC NOTICE
I ru,1. b~tofl of • broad> oo-cltfeutt · Ml 7*7 In 1111 l~tlon1 1e<ured 11\ertby, NOTICI Oft SALi OJI llorelolort -uted ...., dltllvorecl to •11.AL,.ltOf'lltTY AT 1111 1111jfer"911ed o written Oe< .. ret] ,.RIVATaSALI
ol Oe"T•utl -o....-lor S.tt, .and A·ttlJ .. wrmen "°'"• ol brM<ll olld of otectl 111 Ille loMtter of O• l!tt•I• t i to <•UM Ille-"'-" lo .. 11 wld WILLIE GLY NM .ROIEltSO.., ProPerty.to wt11y .. 10 Obllgetlolla, and O.cuMCI.
'"'"'"" Ille undorilgned ,..,..., Uld flt,Olk• I• ~ .. ...., Ule4 - -nollu ot 11reec11 •nd ol tle<tloft to be cltral~ will •II et Prlv.-. Mle, to RocorcMcl J-y IJ, 19'1, 11 ln1tr Ille II..,_. --...,_,, ,..Ject to No 119» In -11911, Peoe 1143, of cOftllrmetlofl ol u ld ~lor c-1. ••Id 0111<111 Recor di. Oft or olWr U.. IWI uy of Mey, ltl'I, •t S•ld .. le wlll De meclt, but without Ill• olflct o1 VIRTUE & SCHl[CI(, covenent or .. .,,.,.,.,, ••P'K.l or Im· INC., 11 ~•to Ptau, ..._,, plloa. rt<)Ardilljl 1111•. PC>Stauloll, or • lee<ll, County ot Or.,.., Stet• ef on<uml>rMKn, lo PO uw r..ntlnlng IC:.lllorl)I•, ell the rltlhl, tltlt end ..._ pronclp•I """ ol Ille noltbl M<ured terKt of MllCI ~ et Ille time of by wld 0..0 ol fruit, with llllorest •• IM•tll -ell tlw rlofll, Ull• tnf Jft-ln Hid noto prov1CMC1, odvan<.e1, II any, t••••t tllel the nt.ole of uld ~ uncltr tne terms of Hid OMd or Trust, 1111 ecqul..O by o,1eret1Gft of 1.., ... ftH , char~> tnd upen111 ot tM otllerwlM ...,_ ..,_ « In eddlti.. ..
1 rullH -ol llM ln11ll <ruled by IMI of Wiid dlt<HMCI, et ttw ti-flf Hid Offd ol Trll1l dHlll, In-to ell Ille cen.!11 ,..~ S•ld >&le wlll De ,.Id Oii T-y. perty lltioetecl In IM Oty of.,.,,_..,,, Moy U, 1'191 ti II 00 A.M. ti Ille Office County of Or-.., State of ~llfonllt, ot To. Service Compo11y, lonk ol porttculerly OtKrlbed 11 tollows, Amtrlu T-, Suitt 1110, One CUy 1-11; ---------------==-----=::---!Blvd Wnt, O•onoo. CA Lot 1 ol Traci Ho ... '"IN City
interiors
1
______ by Valle'
question: We ore mov1nq ro
another state and will be in need
of on interior desiqner. Do yo.i
suggest that we start w1fh o firm
here or wot until we get to the
new locu11on?
Answer: It is best to slort "'11h o firm at your new
fofolt0n. Coif o design fitm thai does turn Irey"
designmq They will di~uss yo.¥ new home and needs.
They II olso toke into consoderatt0n what you will be
raking with you. I hen if ony problems arise. both you
and the designer will be 1n the some location. If you
contoc• me I will gladly recomrrend the n<frt firm.
Hoving o decorating ?"oblem? Send it to us.
1..terion by V •• lftc.
1127A Wetlfclff Ori••
Newport leach. ~. 92663
0.. cko\.cy>e< will r:in\wer ~oo• problem• "'
the ~·· e&tor> No P~ne (011, -Pleo•e
WHAT A VALUE
ONE WEEK ONLY!
thru Sat., May 9
Elegant, versatile, dass1c sling
by LIFI STRIDE
• Black • Bone • Grey
• Navy • Wine • Rost
• Red • Camel • White
recJ. U.00
"
Al lh• time ol tho lnllltl l>Ubllcotlon ol A11-lm. c-ty of 0r-.., Sl.ICt OI Of 11111 notice Ille IOI.II ·-· of tM C•llfornlt, .. per -rec...-. 1 .. unp••d IMlltnc:e ol Ill• oblio•llo11 look tO, P•OH 14 111d 1S of Mis· H<ured by tM obovt dnc:rl-dMd of ct11•neo .. Meot, In Ille Ottt<t Of ow tru1I •ncl tlllrrwled <Olla, 1xpenw1, County Reconlw o1 u1c1 C-y
Ind tdVt~l t> $11,179 11 'rnof'I C-Y ,._ .. : IDa W. To cltt¥rniN IN -no l>+CI, •-Co11nectlcut Avenue, An•ll•I"', m•r C•ll (TUI u1.-. Cellloml• Dolt· April 14, 1''1 Tiie ~y ll to Ila llOld Oii 111 .... NEWPORT HOME LOAN, l1"b•1l1,uc:ecit11lollll•. INC Terms ol Ml• cflll 111 i.wt111 -Y
u Wld T ru•IH ef the Ullllad ~Of\ <onll,,,,_.19ft ol 8 T 0 $ E Av I c E ..... or per\ <•111 ..... •••••<•
OY u ••lclenct cl by note u c.,red "' C MPAH ,, -rt .... w Tr"'I Oeedon Ille~·
-"' ,, to told ... IHll ... to -... ft. By Cllrl1 T •lahA. td Wllll bid. AHhlA>nl Souotory 81cf• « Oll9" to be In Wfl~ eM wlll lie ,__•I tlw atoreMld elflU
0... Clly 81Vd. Wul. •t atly lime ~ -tin t ...-.1u1 ... 0r.,., CA 91W ........ Mdi.twe-. ol ute.
11443W• Tiie UlldenieMd ,..,_. Ille ...... . to rojoct eny -all bids. Pubh>lled Orenot Co .. 1 Dolly Pilot Dated tN1 21\11 day o1 ,.,..II, t•t APrll 22, 19 and M•y 4, Itel I ot I
1161-411 ~.:' 10 _,., .,. .,.._ '0"11"""'
PUBUC NOTICE
AM•m NOTft.a OP TauST••'l IAL• OTDNo.'"1 .. :UT,.._I SU MWEST IAMI(, t Calllor11l1
Je.,...R 51w,_
E..cwb of Ille Wiii CJIWll410.C-t Pultll.,_. Or-c-t Otlly l"llOt, Mey S, 6, 12, ltl'I tin.ti
PUBLIC NOTICE
Corporetlon, formerly SANTIAGO N-72365 llANIC asf1111,ePl)Olll1e0Tru1 ... unc1e NOTICE OF OE"'TH -1111 followlng CltKrlbecl -of lru.i "" ......-WI LL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION JOSE ROSAN, •k• JOSE TO THE HIGHEST 8100EA FOR ROSAN, SR . ANO OF CASH IPIY•Dlt ti lime of H ie In • 1ew1111 ,._y ol the u11lt•d SlllK) •II P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A-0 • rloM. llllt -lnlWHI COllYeyecl to MINISTER ESTATE No ... Ind now IWid Dy II under wld OMO o1 A·101630. Tr11st In '"' property ll•r•IMlter T 0 a I I h e I r s ffKrl-. 1 TRusroR GENE e POWELL,., beneficiaries, creditors 1111me,,1e11 rrw11 and contingent creditors of llENl!FICIARY ; SANTIAGO Jose Ros an aka Jose 8AHIC, • Catllornl• corperetloll • Recor-Oct-"· m• .. 1ns1r. Rosan, Sr. and persons No. mo., 1<' -1•1. pqe ,.., of who may be otherwise ln-Off1c1a1 RKordl In IN Office of 111e terested in the will and/or RKoroer ol 0r"'9t Counly, ••Id -o1 '"''' OtSGrlbK ,.,. 1011-1no pre> estate: pertv A petition has been filed All 111•1 ,.,..,,. .. ,,., lli...i.o in 111e by Charlotte Mae Rosan. In Sl•t• of Catllorni•. County of 0r .. oe, Clly of __, 8etch, dltKrl-~· the Supe rior Court of foll-s: Orange County reqU4'StlnQ Ac0ftdomln1um'-MC1o1. that Charlotte Mae Rosan PA.,CEL 1: unit Ho 11 •~ , .... n -_,1_ be appointed a s personal 1n 111e condominium p1.,. rec.or-., representative to ad· October 2'. ,.,,,In -k 11n1. 1>'91 minister the estate of Jose 11~~it°~~~~ Re<ords of Mid •-•y. R o s a n , S a n J u a n
A11 undlvlcl90 -e111MY·1111rd 111u1 Capistrano, Ca I lforn le 1n1ernt•••te<1e1111n,omM011111 u.. (under the Independent
'" lnt.,.•M in '"" 10 tM '°'""""' •r .. Administration of Estates of lot I ot tr4K1 N4A I.I ~ ""ti llltd 111 , ,
D0011 J74, ~ Jt to u. 1nc1t.1•h•, o1 Act). The petition is set for mltetlleMwl maps, rKorcb of wld hearing In Dept. No. 3 at ~~1~~~· :i~~~ 1~.;'111~,=:~ :~ := 700 Civic Center Drive c1«1ete41011 o1 co-11, <Oftdltlolls W e s t , S a n t a A n a , _, rHlr1ctlOM re<or-Oii O<IOMr California 92701 on Mey :tii~~7•R:o~ !!'~~1~:i.,°'1:; 27, 1981 at 9: 30 a.m. "Oe<tetetl0ft"1, -.,.y 1men0ment1 IF YOU OBJECT to tbe or•1>,..ut1011st1>ereto. granting of the petition,
::!!~3(11 .. """ _ 111 yot uths~d 1elther dappeet r II/I,. P«1klllerty Ml forth 111 IM •r11· 8 e no:Clr nQ an S ate 1-----------------------1<•• •nlltteo "euemenh .. of tM your objections or file ft<11re11on _.., u.. -""" ne.01111 written objections with the hi 1n s11<11 ertlct• er11111ec1 •• 101~: court ..... ore t"'-.. _e""IAn "ulllltlH'', "Mttien-t alld tllC~«.11· ...,., '""' lnJ ' ,,.. m•nren .. ,_.,. ... _,... Youra~rancemay~n
MA y IE Al.SO KNOWN AS. 22 SH person or by your altorf'lllY. lltillldOrlw,
Mew~IHdt, c:.llforllt.. -"111 ut,.....,._ ... tomrnon• I F Y 0 U A Rs:: ... A 111111a11°"11111own=lnowerre111, CREDITOR or a co.At· 11 olwn •to 11s c _. • cor· lngent creditor or theo.M· , .. ,_,.. ~ T,,. befi.tlc1¥y ""*' 1414 Deed of ceased, you must flle r Tru1t.DY'-ot•t1rHCt1or•tw11 claim with the cou or 111 .•11e e11.,uon1 H<urea thereby. present It to the persmftM )'
llereto,_.. •»<.,.... -dltllver..i 10 representative a~lm Ille _......, a Wfln.tl Oecltretleft
of o.f...it _. OeftlellCI .., $Me, ..-by the court with n wrllten llO!lc.e flf broec.hftf flf etoclltfl months from the det&. 10 c•11M 111e wnow.itflff to .. 11 ..., first Issuance of letters• :Tt'.:~~~.:!t~ rovlded In Section 700
u t41110tl<• of bn9<11 tn4I ot •••t1t11 tt f he Prob• te Cod' of.• ... re<o.-.CS J-...ry "· 1'tt. H '"''· California. The ti~ fofC Mo. '"*'· 111 Moll tJtTI,,... .,.., Of flll ~ I Ill l • u hlomc1e11t«on11. ng c.a ms w no x
s.w Ml• wtM • '"*·.,. "''"*'' plre prior to ftur moMh eo-.nt ... yrwi1.,, • ._.. w '"'· from the date of the heilr !':'~::=:.-~':·Yi::--'~,,:. Ing noticed al'Ove. .r
_.-1nc1pai1..,,,., tt. fltttl•I _.. YOU MAV EXAMl""'~
.-, .. to OM DI Trwt,.....,. ,,..,._ • the file kept by tht COU~· ::,:',•:~ ..... ~~,:{: If you are Interested In c
'"•· ,,., .. ""' • .,... .... , '"' estate, you may tile 1 Trwt .. -., ._ 1M11a t,.... .., quest with tht court to ...-
MM OoM • rr-.L Seid .... •111 .. celve spedel notice of H '' 11e1ct ... _.,a, twt,a n.• •·"'~ .. I .. :n ~ __. ..... e ...
tM "''"' •·-.. OwfWlell .,,.... n,,en ..,. ... na,. •~ Oeelll tervlua, 1.00 •· M.-;felr end of ht petitions, aG-"":::9i:::;.:::-:i,;. -.."" c o u n t • • n d r •po r ti ~ ... _ .. .,...., .... .......: .. • .. ,Mte ., w. -..."" __. .., deK~lbed In S.Ctlon td pecla a rear• sav ngs. .. .. '"""1Y • .... ......, .... ot tht c.1110m11 Probe
May 6th thru 13th. =.~;.::-.:.::.C~":': CocM.
Pro Curl, touch-up ................. ,., ... . o.•:•l••.•• brush, reg. '7ts, sale •ets w~r...,.1<
Curling Irons, reg. sen.sale •SH ':~~~OIAN TRUil
Mini Irons, reg. '7", aate 1811 ~l:.casco""°AA''°" R9GIS HAIRsrYi.JSTS =~-::-"· " ~ .... ....... "" .... ......... Or-c.... '*'',.. ...... ,-. .. U I
• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 6, 1981
Vaudeville preserved in LA
By Y ARDENA ASAR
LOS ANGELES (AP) -RJpt now lt'1 • falrly
W1Prepossessln1 comer or downtown Loi An1ele1
..... not quite Skid Row, but 1t1ll witoucbtd by the
flurry of development that hM bNMaeht lltamlnt
hllh·riaee to the financial etnttr atveral blockl
away.
Yet In between the neon·llt motel• ud Hedy
old bulldlngs that llne moet of n,ueroa Slrfft
between 9th and Olympic, Mllt L.ar1en la alowly
~t surely tumin1 another noetalalc dream Into re·
•Illy with the quaintly named Socltt.1 for the
Preservation ot Variety Arta.
"I cannot P•N an old bulldlftl •lthout wanuna
to restore ll," confesaes the not·qultt ~year·old
showman with a ruerul amlle. "lt'a only lucky that
I can't aet 'em all."
More tbn a rew Pffpl• mlaht dlaaa"' with that last statement, 1lnn the popularity of
Larsen's ~vtou v ntuft'S lftto tecapturtn1 th•
past. Eifhteen yeara 11~ th aomeum._ ttltvlalon
writer and hla brother tsUl took • dtt= Vic· torlan manslon in the bean ol HoJly and
transformed It into the Maile CuUt, the only
private cl11b !n the world catennc to ma1lc loven.
Several years later. ht stocked an old movie
theater in Santa Monica with furnJablnas from
another old film palace and the Mayfair Mu1lc
Hall wu born, offerirtg British music hall fare ln a
traditional settinc. •
With the four.year-old Society for the
·Preservation of Variety Arts, Larsen Is hoplns to
revitalize vaudevtlle in the same way, or at least
keep its memory burning brlahUy.
Behind the dignified if aom.wba.....,.undown
facade of lhe society's headquarters ls a treasure
trove of memorabilia ranginJ from the predictable
library crammed with literature on vaudevlUe
and its greats, lncludlr\i a 100,000-joke t•I file
alphabetized and cross-referenced by subject to
the offbeat writer Gene Fowler's collection of hats
belonging to the likes of John Barrymore and
·former New York~ Mayor Jimmy Walker, W.C
Field's trick pool table complete with limp
euestick.
But lhe Variety Arts center is far from a
sterile museum. There's also a l ,200·seat main
theater which has featured everything from con·
temporary revues arid college film festivals to con-
certs by such rock stars as Rickie Lee Jones and
the Police; the smaller Tin Pan Alley for lectures
and acting workshops; a huge ballroom.
restatJrant, the Theater Roof Garden; and bar·
lounges dedicated to Fields and Ed Wynn.
All are decorated with period pieces -
posters, sheet music, furnishings inherited from
such old landmarks as the Earl Carroll Theater on
the Sunset Strip, from which the famed celebrity
autograph wall has b~en acquired, and various
viatage odds and ends like an old camera collec-
tion, a Wurlitzer juke box, a scale model of the
mutinous HMS Bounty and an early "magic lan-
tern" slide projector.
"And whether you're enjoying a show, a drink.
NOW Pl.AYING
OUllll Ctntaomt
634 2~
.. UIOll "LIO OUllll
MUI Lorfffl, the 1howmcm whole preoccupation
with ~ l«J to thf SocWtv fur the
PN11rvaHon of Vari1t11 Arts.
a mul or Juat browslna. a trip to the Vartety Arts
cent 1' t11 a bit t1ko a lourney back lhrou1h time,"
Liaraen sayll. "The p ace should have the feeUn1
lbat you're 1oln1 to the Gotham Club In New York "
And ot l'\l&ht eapeclolly when ladles must w~ar dresses and 1entlemen are expected to don
tlH and jackets it does.
"It's o kind of a personal Interest that got a bit
out o( hand. I s uppose,·• Larsen says of his mania
for diversions that were in style decades aao.
Son ot u criminal lawyer who gave up bia prac-
ti_ct> to hec.wJle.JtJuU-ilme.. magicla.n-.along...wit~ the
rest o( his family, Larsen grew up tra vellng with
the Larsen Family Magicians.
··Because of playing all these old resort hotels,
I loved old mansions and chandeliers, and I just
got used to it," he said over drinks at the W.C.
Fields bar.
"It seemed to me that everyone should Uve in
a maru1ion. '.;..he added. .. .
TV courtroo~?
NEW YORK <AP> -With a recent Supreme
Court ruling opening the door lo covering
criminal trials with television, Dan Roberts. na-
tional sales manager of a manufacturer of pro-
fessional video products, sees TV playing a big
part in the courtroom or the future.
"News coverage is just the beginning," says
Roberts. of the Professional Video Division of US
JVC Corp. "Co urts are also using video to record
and play back testimony, and lo document
personal injury.
"It is not illogical to predict a 'video
courtroom' of the future," be adds. "This
courtroom wouJd include portable cameras and
videocassette recorders to record the action, and
mon itors to display testimony and taped dem-
onstrations."
~""~~~~~ -~ E0.1rOs Vtl)O l wtn SLlOoum Ot111e·ln
830·6990 639 8770 NOWPlAYING
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644·0T60 Conem. West Costa Mesa 549 33~? Orange 634 2553 • P&UU 891·3935
ACCIJ'TD NR TWI aulUIUT NO PASSES ACCEPTED FOR THIS ENGAGEMENT
PAm PAGE
!MA1tt1111In11.• WW 11-it~.111• .. 1-"~
11* W l.4lr lJ> &> 10 JI PM
CONNIE HAINES
R~RTA SHl!RWOOD
Md l0t \'OUt ~ danllnt~
RAY ANTHONY & HIS ORCHESTRA
ODIN TUCUK A HIS ORCHESt'IA
JOHNNIE "SCAT"' DAVIS BAND I'
. ATLANTIC CITY teU.s the melancholy atortes
oC the eainbling town's loaers. Burt Lancaster once
worlted the rrtnaes of t~ underworld, bUl now I•
reduced to runnine qumbers and aervldne the
shrewilb widow <Kat~ Reid) of a 1ani lord.
Suaan Sarandon worka at an oyster bar while
learnine to become a blackjack dealer. Their lives
chanae when her husband shows up with a stolen
supply ot cocaine.
Frenchman Louis Malle is an accomplished in·
terpreter of the dreams and delusion• of American
smallUmers.
Mickey Gilley heads
• top country artJSts
Best-selllng Country-WeslerQ retords of the
week based on Cashbox ·ma1a&ine's nationwide
survey:
1. "A Headache Tomorrow," Mickey Gilley
2. "Pickln' U~ Strangers," Johnny Lee
3, "Rest your Love on Me.'·' Conw'U' Twitty
4. "Falling Again," Don Williams
5. "Hooked on Music," Mac Davis
6. "Leonard," Merle Haggard
7. "I Loved 'Em Every One," T.G. Sheppard
8. "You 're the Reason God Made Oklahoma, ..
Frizzell & West
9. "Am I Lolina You~" fionnle MUsllP ,o; "Ronun Mrss ssippi," Charley Pride
-·-..... -... ----KING 0, THI MOUNTAIN (..0) _......_Mt •tt"M ... , ___ ... _._ ....
.._.,,. 1:11, ... 1un. .......,. l:tO ..._ ._. e..e
IM,.OlnAIH NOTICE! CHILDIUN UNDllll 12 flllUi°
\ 3 NRT 0, n.::.NOSAUQ 1..0.
I NO AM CM .. ..._Willi ltftlll., M:~1 9tffll ,..., Own AM~
t'f\--.~· NIOHTHAWKI C") -THI HOWUNCI UU •
----··· f'NOA Y TI411• ,_. I C"I -MY IM.OOO'f VAUNT'tNI (Ill) . _ __, __ ···
"'IOAT ""\2,.1111 ,_.I (Ill)
., aoooY VM • .INTH•
ENTE RTAIN~ENT
ACTRESS BROOKE SHIELDS, right, :pos~
with her mother , friend and busines
manager, Teri, in preparation for the•NB
TV special "All -Star Salute to Mother's Day
to air Sunday al 9 p.m. The younger Shield
credits her rapid rise to st!£.!!21!LJ9..-..=e.-_ ......... _
mother'-s"'advtce anlf ~uppo . 1
-. -... -..-. _ __,..._..... . ....... -----· .. -
...._EVB•1G----
Ml1••--...-WOMAN
Wond9r W-"""' -.. twiJ ..,.._ lfld .,_
to "°" • terrortlt O'OU9 hm kidMc>PlnO 8._ and ""* ~t oMdele. I T1C TMl D0UetC
eooe>Ttim
~ promilll to ._..
IMo • ~Mdgiad hum-
E unlaiia ~ can
• out .... ~
llllm\.
• • 8.8CTllllC
eot#NIVCIQ ~QllNRWa 0 MCNIWI
aa. I JQK8rl Wll.D ....VHILL
HOT PURSUIT -Jack Klusman (white
jacket), Robert Ito (left), Joseph Roman
and Peter. Virgo are on the trail of a
murder suspect in "Quincy" tonight at
10 on Channel 4.
e.My'a Wt'alorl Of "The 1 Darll flllMlbe< Fluhef"
.. ~ Jba blggaaj Ilg ...,Of ...
• Kc.T ii.tillHAT
• ITIJOIO ..
I 'Samc>lilf" SI. LOUla ldda
operae. • pizza petlor: CN-ceoo 01rt Scouta p1ey wtth
.,, EMtN>all (RI
9 MMaY MIU.ER
~la '91uctant to~
·~~lhabeat
.... h Illa MMOMd ~
7:GO I Qll NIWI NecNIWI
HAPPY DAVI AGAIN
Nc:He ~ lr9edom of
Iha pt.a above lriandlhlp
.... ha pl.-10 pPOM
Fonzla'a l>Mf IWw phobla
In a tront ptiga 11ory.
1 =
J • 8TNE'8 ~SAN
MtMCllCO The ._ of anleul and art-
io-e become entangled
when • ltrea1 attlll 111111
-trom hltrWtudlD wfl idtM I
and dlaa.
• OYEAIMY
Guea1: Merle Haggatd. (RI
G MACNEIL/ LEHMR
MJllOln' (I) TIC TAC DOUGH 9 MlllV ONff1N
G""t1: Kai Rudmll\. Tiie
C aplaln and Tennille.
Roaanne CHh, Kenny
Rankin, Boomtown Rat•.
Tha Whl1pere, L1uren
Wood.
1:t0 8 2 ON THE TOWN
Hoat1: St-Edwarda,
Melody Rogere MHt
tome ~" gtouplaa
who follow Ille elhletH; en
lnlllN!ftr with Glenn Yat·
l>Cl'ough.
I FAMll Y FEUD
SHANA.NA
Gueat: Della"-
8 HOU.YWOOO
IOUAN8 8 rrACE THE .,...C
8 KNXT 1CBSJ Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles
• KTLA 1lnd , LOS Angeles
G KABt· TV 1ABCJ Los Angeles
Cl) KFMB 1CBSI San Doege
D KHJ· TV (Ind I Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABCI San Diego
• KTI'V (Ind I Los Angeles e KCOP~ TV C Ind t los Angeles e KCET:· TV I PBSI Los Angeles
11!) KOCE· TV tPBSl Hunt1n91on Beacn
..........
-Roi iJPI ~taa hat
)Ual11fW1t9d dlYof'ce.
• MACNIJL/~
MJllOln'
D THI 11.AACH '°" ALP•NDlft THa GMAT
·111e Young Lion" Jamaa
Muon llol11 11\11 '9-Cf•
A\IOn OI 11\t Ultaotdlnaty
tlfe of tlla man hlltorlllna
have celled the WOfid'• or .. te11 IMder Nlc::holu
Clay 1lan. (Part 1)
(l)P.M.~
An automobile that can fly
Ill• an airplane: S..ltle
taaldent• who 0<ganlzed •
mc>ney·Mvlno food co-op
MIO 8 (I) a.ai
'
Enoa beCOmaa • on9-man
police !Otoe wflan an 9')1-
0efnlc ol "Blue Au'· 1trikaa
!he depart"*lt. (RI
DNAL ~
Featured· female prize
flohtere: • handlcappad
IO<MI ranger; • man who
playa Iha Ylollrl In I men' 1
room, a fa11val fOf • noto-
rloul 1911\.<lantury madam.
• MOVIE
• *Yo "Flit Of Fury tt"
(11110) Bruce LI Afler
many~ In Japeon,
• young man ratu..na ~
to China to Ntlle down.
• 9 THE CMIATUT
~NHERO
One of Ralptl'1 •ludenll
beCOmaa the prime ., .. pec1 In • _ ... of ..,.
doulllrea.
• MOYlm * * * "Fltlwllly" I 1H1) 06ctl V1n l)ytla, lafbafa
"9don. WNe .. _,_..,..,.
~ '°' "" .• ptlllanllVO-
plo old lady "°' tMflzino IN II ~ pannlleM
~ 10 IClfMd her
~
• ALL N ntl 'AMIL Y
A INdy ...._.,, '-1 ...
Ardtta Into llgnlnO 10<
ooelly llurnllull aiding 10 ,,,_. ._. IOaa.
• MOYll ****"The HMnbrw IUd'' ( 1972) ()wt.a Olo-
dln. CYoll ~d The
llOI~ plarll of • cou-
ple ot young Jewlah
MWlyweda 00 _,., wfMNI
the gtOCMn dacldea he
wwltl • ,..,._,.... tor
Illa -bride.
• TVAUCnOH
A 1116-by-ptlone extrav•
ganza ....,. anythlnO and
~· wlll be -tJoned 10 tne ~ l>ld-
der. l:IO. P.M. MAGAZINI
An au1omoblle that can fly '*• an 111rp1ane; S..ltle raaldent1 who 0tganlnd a
mone)' ... vlng food co-op:
Or. Julian Whltafler .,,.,_
IOfM weye to get protlan;
C1M11 Tai pr-aparaa C'*-
11eQ411able9.
• THI HAu Of' rrAMI
-..!!~ ........ '... CMMa--
Dumlno 1tan In • -
perl«manca .. the leg-
endary Caaey Stangel. col·
Of'fvl and unpredictable manaear of both the New
YOftt Yank-and New
Yortl Mata.
H08(1) MOWI
"The ~ Bandit"
(Pr.,.,.,.al Ralph Waite,
.hllla 8cwMIO Tiie lrue
atory of Father Bernatd
Pagano, I IOOlally con-
C4WMd and contrOwnlJ
pr!Mt who wa atr•ted
fOf a _... of ltlckupe, "
dramatized
D Dlff"lllENT l'1l'()t(H
Amokl u-the Drum-
mond panlhOUN 10 hide •
9CtlOOI chum who 11 laced
with being -I 10 an
O<pl\enage.
e a~
OMAM
Cuey tmlll In loYe with a
woman tan yeara older
than him.
• MUIV QIWflN
Guae11: Kai Rudman, The
Captain end T1nnfll•.
Ro11nne CHll. Kenny
Rankin, Boomtown Rall,
Tiie Whl1pat1. Lauren
Wood.
• TVAUCTIOH
(CONT'D)
9:30 D THI FACTI Of' un
Tootle fella In loye 10< the
lint rime. (RI
ID HIM TO MAKE
MU8IC
A blogrllpl\IC po<trlllt of
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednelday, May 6, 1981 -TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ t> 8: 00 -··Fitz willy.·' Movie
starring Dick Van Dyke and Barbara
Feldon about an elderly dowager who
continues to live in quiet luxury while
unaware she is penniless .
KOOP Q) 8:00 -"The Heartbreak
Kid." Charles Grodin and Cybil Shepard
star in a movie about a newly married
man who falls in love with another
woman on his honeymoon.
CBS U 9: 00 -''The Gentleman
Bandit." Dramatization of a true story
about Father Bernard Pagano, a social-
ly concerned priest, who was arrested
for robbery.
nztlWk ~an It ~
eel. (RI
10:00 •. QUINCY
Two l>fotller• 0tganla •
vtglanta oommlllN In an
ellott to atop crime In thelf 1
nelgl\l>OmoOd.
8G•NIWI e a V'EQAI
o.ti takaa Charge or a
bizarre .. IOtllOfHTIUtder
caN lot 1111 French detac-
llw friend. Nfchola1 Rlm-
__ baiud. ---l 1cuo l ~
NETWOAK NEWS
11!) WOAlD SPECIAL
"The Rad Army" Tlla
llrenglhe and -k-
of Iha RuNian mlllU1ry atA
uam!Md.
11:00 8DDCI>O NEWS
• 8TAATREJ(
A huge machine la ram-
paging through 1pace
dNttoying 1111 In Iron! of It.
and the Enterl)f'IM 11 lerll
lodealroyll
ti NEWl.YWED GAMI!
• w·A·a·H
Chwlel la eure he had •
gr .. t time In T<*yo. II he
could only rwnamber whit
he did
.. KHNYHIU
Benny makas • aupermar-
kat the 1tage 10< • comle
l>all9t~.
• TVAUCTIOH
(CONTD)
11:30 • (I) MOV1E
••• "Damon Seed "
(1977) Julie Cllrlllle, Fritz
Waaver A lcient111'1 wlta
I• lleld prlaoner by • com-
puter which hu Mleotact
lier to bec:ome It• mere
and the mother or 111 Child
CRI
D TONIGHT
Hoet· Jol\My CM&Oll • tll-A8c NEWi
NtGHTUNE ti LET'S MAKE A ,DEAL m KDINeTH HAGIN
., IAMTTA
Ton·{• panner bec:omM
detpOrldan! titer ltlUlng a
bandit In Mlf-del«tM who
turn• our to ba nle brother G CAPTIOHEO A8C
HEWS
12:00 U MOVIE * • "The Htnged Man ..
I 19651 Edmond o ·Brlen,
Vera Mii.. The Mardi
Gru II !he~ of a gun.
man·1 allempt to 1venge
!he murder of hit friend
D ®l LOVEBOAT
"Third Wheal" Elhe4 Mer·
men. Bob Cummln91.
.. Grandmot11er·1 Oey ..
Nanelle Fabrey, Barry Nel-
t o n: "Second Siring
Mom" Beth HOWlll'ld, Ken
Berry !RI
JOHN DARLING
II GUNIMOKI
A IOYHICll rou•l•bOul ,_I lynch mob....,, ha
accidentally 111111 • populat
young COwhand
• Mll8ION:
lllW'Oellel.I
The IMF antara (quatQflal
Alrle;a 10 CN811 an atmy of ,,,.,_ ...
• CAPTIOHID A8C
NIW8
12!30 G TOMOMOW
Ouaat: Tina Turner
• OHi STU MYONO
"Emergency Only" Arthur
~ attenda a Mantlat·
tan c:odl tall pany wl'9f • •
-~I lor1elll 1111 Mura.
• PHILoeoPHY
1:00G NYCHC PlllNOUlt~ ntE
WOAl.O MYOHO
Hoe11 Damian Slmpeon,
Stacy Hunt .
Directed by Charlel
L~on A woman lfl4f
her two c:hlldfan -t•'°'" Ind bt • peyc:ftopalhie
lllllat In p<eacher'. Qlll ti.
a, .. ...,I HEWt 1:00 MEWi
1:41 MOYll
• • "8.0 .1. Pacific"
C 111641 Rlehafd Attantldf·
OUOh, Eve Bllr1ofl Five alt·
c:rutl 1<1rvlllotl atrlllldall
on an laland being UNd JOf
atomic: teatlnO gtepple ~
Ille probllml OI 8J1latence
1:1141 .-WS
4;00 MOV1a
• • "Fraulein" ( 11161)
Dena 'Nynl•, Mel F ... ,...
In the dOllng daya ol
WO<ld Wat II .• young Gar-
man girl la reunllad woK
the Ametlc:an officer whom the Nd _.... halpeCI le
~·
• wov• Thur•da11'• • * * "Ship Of F0011 ..
119651 Vivian lelgh. • ., '.Dayf hwr itlovltt~
Simone Signore!. A motley
auortmenl of puMngetl -MQRHl«i -II forced to ehar• cloM ---
quartere whffe trawling 10
Bramerhallen.
• IHOEHNOeHT
NETWORK NEWS.
1:10 8 MOW! * • 'h "Tha Min Who
Hauntact HlmMll'' pll711
Roger Moore. 0101
Georg .. ·Plcot A bu•I·
1-.naD ~ U>al Illa
uact double II li¥1ng hll
Hie 10< him and 11 doing a
batter job than he could
hlmMll.
1:30 • MOVll!
• • • "Ju11 F0< You··
(19521 Bing Croaby. Jane
Wyman A l1mou• lhaillrl-
Cal proeluoer alrUQOIM to
llnd time '°' his two ,..,,.
ageehlldr«t
1:468 NEWS
1:'60 NEWS
2:000 HEWS
• MOVIE
• • 'h .. w 1111e Wilen Doc·
10<" (19531 Susan Hey·
ward, Rol>er1 Mitchum A
mlulonary tlYrM In Alrk;a
worf11 dfflgan!ly to gain Ille
r~ of Iha netlvaa
2: 16 8 EDfTONAL
2:208 MOVIE
• • • 'h "The Nlghl Of Tha
Hunter.. pll55) Robert
Mitchum. Shelley Winter•
11.00. •W"Healh M1~ ,
I
Sklea" (t93~1 John Wayne,
Sllella Tetry. A cowt>Oy
trlee 10 reeooe • younu
lndlll'I glrl from kldMPP8R
w11o ar• 1fler lier Inherited
wealth.
1
11:30 8 * • * .. Harlow" !Pall
I) (19651 CatrOll Bakar,
MattJA.-8aleMI. A-Holb;-
wood 11.ne1 t1ecornaa e111-
1111111cJnec1 Ind 1um1 to •
Ille of alGohol.
-AFTERNOOH~
12:00 •••• ··0per111on
Paclllc" (1951) John
WayM. PatrlGI• !"U'· . ~
1ubmarlne commender
controls hi• ~.-with lm-
ltlesa devollon ,
1:00 m ***'A .. 1n1ermeuo·
( 1939) lngrld Bergmll'I.
Lellle Howerd An lnt.-
10111 a1111r develop•
~ • marri.ci oonc.t
vlollnlti Ind hll daughlllf"'I
mualG tucher
s:ao 8 • • • .. Call Me
Bwana" (t963) Bob HOl)ll.
Anita a<t>erg. An ..,ll'Of·
••pl0<er llnd1 romence
and danger when he 11
aen1 10 Attica on • Merel
government mlillon lo
find • 59ece capsule
111ning portrays Stengel with wit, warmth
~1 MJ~L QQJ:J((AN ... .,.., ....
j&lat that I get a Uttle hard
el ~ iometfmt1. Casey lj psel was to tbe English
· aflguage what a bowling ball is
to the pins -you could never
.tell which way the words would
fall They called it Stengelese.
S engelese wlll be spoken 1t1~1ntly tonight ln the Hallmark ll U of Fame's third public
e evlslon special of the year,
itfifYIEWS
; •:b .. uey Steneef" starr ing · =-•~es ~n1 as the redoub· thlli baseball manager who
• died ln 1975. 'l'he show airs at
8:30 p.m. on Cban.nel SO.
Durning tackles this role with
clltfa'r relish &Jld 'plays it =Uy. His affection for his
translates into a warm,
g performance. a "l~ could be that '°'"' •te>riea are f cl{~1'fattng around which IOmt ar1
11Jt. ond aome not true which ftJe'l'I 'ii: not 1:ractl11 ""' an11mort
engel loved speaking before
a 'Cl'OWd almost as much as be-a ine ln the dugout durine a World
Serles win, and it is in that ele-
TUNNING"
Ca.&ey Stengel, apeaker of "Stengeleae."
menl that scriptwdters Sidney
and David Carroll have placed
their hero foT the show. The set-
ting ls a Glendale Chamber of
Commerce event in 1965 and
Stengel is the keynote speaker.
<After his retirement, Stengel
became vice-president or a bank
in thatfootbills ~ommunity>.
Other than a brief introduction
by a stereocypical Glendalian,
"Casey Stengel" Is a one-man
Everyone here is crazy ...
everyone else is cracking up •••
t
show. He tells jokes and stories,
dons Yankee and Mets caps and
jackets, shows s lides of his
favorite players. But it isn't
necessary to know baseball to
like the show. As Stengel. Durn-
ing never gets technical. His ex-
p I an a ti on of a ba seball
manager's job, for example, i~
_ SHOWTIMES-
Weekday1 7:00 & 9:30 P.M . I
Sunday 2:00-4:~:40-9:00
to know •·when to do this ancs
when to do that. which is a very
important thing."
Stengel talks of his days with
the Yankees and pitchers who
could "throw a lamb chop past a
wolf." Under his management .
that team netted 10 American
League pennants and seven
world championships. ·
He was fired in 1960 and went
to the New York Mets. the worst
team in the history of baseball.
.. Our first game of the year
was April to. 1962." says Durn-
ing as Stengel, .. and it was our
best game We got rained out.
Up to then we were undefea\ecl-..
~'john8i]ver~
1 Fish& .
Chicken · . ~ Dinner :
$2.49
Our crispy flsh fillet from the icy ,
North Atlantic and two boneless
whitemeat Chicken Planks® ...
with fresh cole slav.i and golden •
fryes, that's a wtnnlng combl.nation.
r:J:OiigGjohnSi}ver~ ,;
SEAFOOD SHOffES
JOtl tMrttwltr&C::.-Mee9 •
Just South of San Dl9g() Fwt. Ac:ro9 from Fedco •
,
'
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••• Orange Ccast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 CONSUMER:i
DEAR PAT DUNN: My brother·ln·law
sells life insurance and he's been trylna to
talk me into buying a family income policy
ever slnce my wile and I had our first baby. I
would like to rind out what this type of polic)
offers, but don't want to have to listen to a
big sales pitch from my brother·ln·law. Can
yo~ fill me in?
P.M .. Costa Mesa
Family Income Ufe laauance, deslped
for an lndlvldual policyholder, 11 a comblna·
tloa of pehnanent and term lnauuce. In acJ·
41tlon to the permanent Insurance, HCh
pollclea normally provide that If the
pollcybolder should die wlllle lbe term 111·
aarance ls stUI In force, the beHfldary will
receive a stated Income each moatb for the
balaace of the term period.
For Hample,, a $%5,MO famlJy Income
policy mJgbt provlde that lf the poU~rbotder
l boGld ~e wUhln ZO years -after the poUcy la
Issued. bJa famlJy would receive $%5, ... In a
l•mP sum, plu a $250 moot6Jy Income for
the remalnder of the Zt years. Bec:aaae the
family lncome feature la combined with a
base of permanent Ufe lnsarance, the cost la
smaller than if these were issued as separate
policies.
Tax, forms reviem!d
DEAR PAT DUNN : My father passed
away last month, and I heard I may have to
(jJe a special form wilh the Internal Revenue
Service. Can you explain what this is? I'd
also like to find out about the federal govern-
ment's residential energy credit program.
When does it expire?
P. W .. Huntington Beach
Form 706, "llnJted States Estate Tu
Return," is required to be flied lf your
father'• gross estate exceeds $175, ....
The resldenUaJ energy-credit program la
baaed on the cost of Items installed after
April 19, 1977, and before Jan. 1, 118t (re·
iardleas of when the Items are actually
purchased). See Publication 903, "Energy
Credits for lncllvlduals" for all the detaU..
Classics get break
DEAR PAT DUNN: After reading your
Consumer Closeup article lhal included in·
formation about the price of car insurance for
antique and classic cars. I've been wondering if
these older cars have to be equipped to meet
current anti-pollution standards, and is a
special license plate required?
T. J., Huntington Beach
VebJcles of hJstortc interest are DOt re·
quired to have any motor vehJcle pollution·
control devke except for devices &.bat were re·
quired for such vehicles by &.be Pure Alr Act of
1"8. The Department of Motor VehJclea laaaea
special ldentiflcation plates for motor vehJclea
manufactued after tm and tboH that are at
least %5 years o!d.
• "Cot a probum? Then write to Pat ·
l Dunn Pat unll cut red tape, gttting
._ the an11«r1 and action you need to
•
solve 1~quilie1 in government and
bu.siMu. Mail your queationa to Pat
Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coaat
Dail11 Pilot, P .O. Bor 1560, Costa Me"1, CA 92626. A&
many Utfn'S (11 pos&ibie will be 01'$l«T~, but phoned
inquines or letters not including IM rtodu's full
name. address and btuines& hours' phoM number
cannot be conndered Thi& column appears daily ex-
cept Sundays."
HONOR DUE -
Television talk show
host Mike Douglas
will receive the Na·
tional Brotherhood
Award 'for work for
charitable and
humanitarian causes
on Thursday from
the National Con·
f erence of Christians
and Jews.
ALAMO, Tenn. (AP)
-Cletus Pritchard's
casket is made of solid
cedar and is lined with a
quilt.
He says it's "real
nice" but hopes be
doesn't have to use it
anytime s oon .
Meanwhile, Pritchard
and thousands of other
people are s pending a
lot of time looking at it.
Since the deluxe
casket built by Malcom·
Thompson was placed
on di sp lay in
Thompson's woodwork;
ing and antique shop a
week ago, about 4,000',
people have come in to I
adm irethe curio.
The project began
some months back when
Pritchard was watching
Thompson build an or·
nate clock cabinet from
cedar
"If I could afford it,"
Pritchard sa id to
Thompson, ''I'd pay you
to build me a casket.·'
Thompson, 60, agreed
to donate his labor, and
neighbors passed the hat
to raise enough money
to pay ror the m aterials.
The casket has
handles all around, a
pyramid double top and
walnut inlays on the
sides.
Pritchard, a lire-long
bachelor who celebrated
his 80th birthday April
11 , spends many an hour
gazing at it.
"It's real, real nice,"
he said, "but I don't in·
tend to need it for at
least 10 years.''
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
&42•54518
NIPON BOUTIQUE
'S FAntastic Dresses
PIERRE CARDIN
COLLECTION
Sport Dresses
FRANCES HENACHAN
Meet representative Elaine Flom
Sport Dresses
·SILK DRESS
COLLECTIONS
'SFAntastic Dresses &
Sport Dresses
Informal modeling
of summer dresses
from 12 noon to 3 p.m .
~lh ( Olhf l'la1a, I 111 #lr1'1ol 'llf~. ( O\la M~
j '
• l
WINE CELLAR
AND FINE SPIRITS
PlllCES IFFECTIVE THlOUGtt SUNDAY MAY I 7ffl ...
BLUE MUM ' LOUIS
reg. ss.2s s319 MARTINI
1so mt 177 CAIERMET
WllllL SAUVIGMOM
STAMFORD 1~·-reg $5.25 750 ml
CHAMPAGNE -·-$
367 reg. $399 $249 \i.:_:
750mt -
OPEN DAILY
8 A.M. TO
11 P.M.
495 E. 17th ST. • COSTA MESA
PHONE (714) 548-9314
z ! ~
$!! ~
t ,,,,, 51
•
"' 1itttl'
,
P AC1f1C. COASI HW"
..
With reasonable minimums and shorter terms
so you don't have to tie up your money for 21h years!
Commercial Credit now offers :'iloney
Market rates \\ithjust a $1,<XXl minimum ancl
a 3 month term for our "90 Da~· Wonder''
thrift certificates. And onl v $.500 mmimum for
a one year term Or, if you 'want pa.c;shook nex-
fhility, we pay 8.50'f annual interest com-
pounded quarterly (8. 77--; yield) on Super
Thrift accounts of $1,CXX> or more ... 7', annual
rate (7.1~ yield) on $.'300 an d up.
. These plans pay 25't to 45% higher inter-
est rates than Federal law allows on compara-
ble plans at banks and sa,ings & loan associa-
tions. Call for our current thrift certificate
rates.
And if you need to withdraw early., you'll
earn 6'1, annual interest. By comparison,
banks and savings & loans require forfeit-
ure of up to 6 months' interest, so you could
actually get back LESS than your original
investment!
Send this roupon to open an aC'count or for
more information. A\'a1lahle to <'alifornia
n..>:.;idcnL" only. ,..------------..., I \ •,. I '11 hk1• m<IN' 1nforrn111111n I
II• n•', 1tl\ rhl'('k ur mont·~ orflcr f•N' $
I l'l.1n :1 fnt~lh~~ I .\·ear · Sup..r Thr1f1 I
r, 1•· J !lltl1\1dulll Q.loint T1•n11nn I . rJ1'n1'\tl'(' O <'<t'1K•r111t-. I
I . ,,, '"111"• .... , I , ....... ''""' I '" ........... 1 •• n,__ I
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\l"""" "''''""" I I 1'111 --('A 'l.tfl --Phrlllt' I I \h :-;. • 1.J ;-;. !Ml\ ITIL\ I I) .. I
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f <'<>M~rnH.ClAL CREDt'l'PLAN , lNC<>RPORATF.r> I .._ ___________ ...
• N
0
0 • I
A
... ' I I
I
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• ..:
• •
.
~ttle nips business
iJ .S., alcoholism research spending cuts ·hit, at county meet . ts>' SANDIE JOY jOfllllitDMIWNll...,. t_ While alcohollam cost
l"merican businesa and industry tteo billion last year, the fecler-.J
:sovernment plans to redu~
1-pending for alcoholism re-
r"earcb by fJO percent.
) These figures were releue4 at
ta press luncheon Tueaday in
:Santa Ana hosted by the Na-;uonal Co.uncll oa Al~bollam's
·cnange County chaJ>t4r.
: Criticizing the pfanned. spend-
~ng cuta as "archaic," CQWlcll
:Executive Director David
;Larson noted that· alcoholism la
·the No. 1 disease In the United
!States.
! "ONE IN EVERY 10 persons
iwho drink appear& to develop
:the disease," added Or. Mais
:schneidel', council board Te lUi'fmili~ wllo lndlcated-a
: breakthrough in alcoholism re-
~search might be under way.
: l\ecent research has suggest-
~ ed that the portion of the brain
•that has to do with the appetite
'might be the area that also hu ~to do with alcoholism, Schneider
~said .
,. Purpose of the luncheon was
to introduce the local press to
: actor Dana Andrews, a recover-
• ing alcoholic who will speak
•May 16 at the council's annual
·fund-raising dinner at the
Anaheim Marriott Hotel.
Andrews said his purpose in
giving speeches was to heighten
public awareness of alcoholism
as a treatable disease.
TO EMPHASIZE the affliction
• is a disease, not a moral
: shortcoming as some persons
SEEKING AWARENESS
Dana Andrews
think, Andrews said, "You CaQ
deduct.every dime from your in·
come tax that you spend in
treatment for alcoholism."
So, he said, the federal gov-
ernment recognizes it as a dis-
ease.
Awareness of alcoholism and
Its treatability are growing"
s tronger, he said, "but they
aren't anywhere near sufficient
to gel by. We just have to keep
pounding away on it."
He added, "SO percent of the
people think it's pure stubborn·
ness that a person wants to
drink and gel drunk. It's a dis-
iExpansion planned
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Praising the decontrol of oil
prices, Standard Oil of California
• officials said they have increased
' planned capital and exploration
• expenditures this year by $400
million.
Board Chairman Harold
Haynes, who retired Tuesday,
said the company plans to spend a
record $4 .6 billion ln capital
·spending and exploration, a 28
percent increase over the 1980
level.
''As a result of our strong em-
phasis on exploration and de-
velopment of energy in the U.S.,
we have r~versed the 10-year
decline in our domestic natural
gas production and we are an-
ticipami, reversal this year in the
13-year decline in our crude oil
production," Hayneuaid.
eP.•e problem , not a
paycbological problem, and doc·
tort are now rea1izin1 It."
Sald Andrews; "I tblnk it'•
mi1hty important that the public
is aware of the problem• related
to alcoholism," which be said
costa the nation as mucb u the
naUonal defeme budtet.
Reservations for the council
dinner at $50 per person are
avatlable-1>y contacting the
council at 835-3830.
Domestic
car sales
deer.ease
DETROIT (AP} -April car
sales by U.S. automakers feU 1.3
percent from the same month a
year ago, with the domestic
companies losing ground as im-
ports claimed 28.7 percent of the
U.S. market. according to com-
pany reports.
The five major domestic
manufacturers said they soid
533,724 cars in April, compared
with 540,680 in April 1980. Im-
ported makes accounted for
215,309 sales durin1 the month, " up 6.6 percent from 201,930 last
year.
The imports' market share
was an April record.
Chrysler Corp. r eported a 51
percent sales.improvement from
last year, selling 71 ,843 Call in
April against 47,470 in the 1980
month. Ford Motor Co. sales
also were up to 123,807. 8.9 per-
cent more than the 113,682 sold
in the same month last year.
But sales by General Motors
Corp., American Motors Corp.
and Volkswagen of America fell.
GM sold 309,666 cars, down 10. 7
percent from 346,812 in April
1980 ; AMC sales fell 3.6 percent
to 14,514 from 15,050, and VW re-
ported sales of 13,894 cars, down
21.3 percent from 17,666.
"It's just a conUnuation of the
same trend of increasin1 import
share we've seen since the mid·
die of 1978," said an auto in·
dustry analyst who requested
anonymity.
~~··· 11\.-MSATIMO
EXE UTIVE SUITES -·-....... Ill loc 217 .. 7
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lm2C.-~
jaH ..... ....,. "" •• ..., .. .....,I
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NEWPORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
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In Business To Make Buslneaa Happen
At Creative we have the money you need.
Loans from $25,000.00• for any business or
investment purpose.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, May 6, 1981 •••
PRESIDENT OPTIMISTIC
MGM's Alvin Benedict
Bright reopening
seen by MGM Grand
....
LOS ANGELES (AP} -
Reservations are stron1 for the
MGM Grand Hotel, due to reopen
in July alter refurbishing that in·
eludes a multi-mtlllon-dollar fire
safety system, aaya Alvin
Benedict, president of MGM
Grand Hotels, Inc.
"We're already booking con-
ventions into 1987," Benedict said
in an intervtew ... Our bookings
are up 10 percent over last year.
We have booked over 40 conven-
tions into the hotel since the
tragedy.
"Unfortunately, we have not
been able to answer many of the
questions because the ongoing in-
vestigation is not finished," be
said. "The building department's
report is not finalized. The fire de-
partment'a report ls not flnallied.
We have hired a series of fire lJl.
veatlgatora and engineers to ln·
vesti1ate the fire for us and their
report ls not finalized. The ul·
timate decisions on the cause .will
come after they have finished."
Tbe Grand baa lnatalled
e labo rate fire alarm and
sprinkler systems throughout the
hotel, Benediet said, with a
typical room to contain four
sprinklers that can deliver 65
gallons of water a minute.
A central computer -will
monitor all areas of the reopened
hotel, he said, and a new ve.tUa-
tion system that can empty the
hotel of smoke in 10 minutes has
been installed.
.Teleplwne rate hike
gets FCC approval
"We hope to take whatever
stigma that might exist today off
the buUding;"ile nid.-11 W~dort't
think there is one, especially since
we're striving to make it the
safest building in the world.
Benedict, 57, foUowed his father
into the gaming business more
than 30 years ago, working at the
Last Frontier, Desert Inn and
Stardust Hotels before joining
MGM . He says he's never
regretted the decision and his
enthusiasm apparently has
rubbed off en bis children.
WASHINGTON <AP> -The
Federal Communicaliorui Com-
mission, despite some internal
doubts, has voted to aUow pro-
posed telephone rate increases to
take effect aa previously
scheduled. .
The unanimous decision,
reached during a hastily ar-
ranged emergency meeting Tues-
day, will allow the American
Telephone & Telegraph Co. to im-
plement rate increases for at
least two types of long-distance
service just five days after the
FCC releases the text of an opi-
nion raising the company's
authorized profit margin.
That opinion, raising Al'&T's
authorized profit margin from
10.5 percent to 12. 75 percent, is ex-
pected to be releued any day
now.
AT&T has said the higher profit
margin will allow lt to raise its
rates for regular long-distance
phone calls, private business
lines and WA TS service by 18 per-
cent each.
After proposing the rate hikes,
the firm asked permission to im-
plement the increases with less
than the normal 90 days notice.
On April 24, acting chief Joseph
Marino of the FCC's common car-
rier bureau -acting on behalf of
the commission -granted AT&T
"special permission" to use the
5-day time schedule for the
private line and WATS rate hikes.
A decision on the regular long.
distance rate boost was delayed.
The commission subsequently
received three petitions for re-
view. challenging the legality of
such a short formal period for
comment. The issue was further
clouded Tuesday when the FCC's
staff split over whether the com-
mission had actually voted yet on
tho profit-margin increase.
When the FCC met behind
closed doors April 6 to decide the
matter, it voted to instruct the
staff how to write the order. not on
the order itself, argued John Ingle
of the ge11eral counsel's office and
Frank L. Young, the legal assis-
tantlochairman Robert E . Lee.
That distinction could change
the legal interpretation of what
the commission has done to date,
the two men said, and a 30-day
notice period sbOuld begin only
after the order is issued.
"It's an exciting business.
There are a lot of people who are
in business today who are bored.
This Is one business that's not bor-
ing,'' he said. "I have three
youngsters, two or them college
graduates, and they've all elected
to go into the gaming business. I
have a daughter who's a dealer in
another property and a son who's
a floor man in another property
and a nother one who's the
supervisor of a parking lot in
another hotel."
Benedic t thinks legalized
gambling will come to other cities
besides Atlantic City but doesn't
see that as a major threat to Las
Vegas .
· 'l personally feel that most
major resorts in the United States
by the 1990s will have some kind of
casino gaming. Providing those
areas don't develop too close to
Las Vegas, I see the town
continuing to grow as it has,'' he
said ... Atlantic City hasn't hurt
us. In fact, in many ways It's
helped us. It's introduced more
people to gaming."
KDCM taa.t
FMSTERED
Where you deal directly with the
Lender and not a loan broker.
Dear Radio .,Listener:
•All loans secured by a combination of
rea~ and personal property.
<M25 JAMBOREE ROAD • SUITE 180 • NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA 92660 (7141 762· 7923
' ~ Annual Yield
No MlrWnwn lok>nc•
lnterett Pdd Dav In/
Day OUt
Compounded OaMy
Oedtted Monthly
Thftft av Mall • we pay
pottage bOth ways.
T·• AccOunll • Plue /4% lnt...11
$10;000 Minimum • ..... It Month.'Y
Auett ov•r $140,000.000.00 S."'lng C1//tornl• o~r • qr11rt•r cMtury.
CenYetllentLeelll1111
Tonance
18208 Prc*te 'Ave.
(21l)lll·l010
Qange
1111 E. tcat11a Me.
(714) "7-DOO
We have been programming contemporary beautiful music; with a bright new
presentation since February 28th. If you have missed us, tune in. We are stereo
103.1, Orange County Music. •
We want to share with you some of our listeners' comments:
the music is happy."
it's great. and I like the technical quality."
KOCM gets sn 'A' ... We just love the music."
thanks for telling us the songs you play."
the announcers add a human touch, and give artist and title."
the tim9 span you cover is perfect ... from oldies to recent music, using
a wide range of arti!t!."
I enjoy htJaring more vocal selections."
. just had to call to tell you I love the new Music!"
thank you for giving tit/es of selections."
I've just discovered your station, end the music is the best l'v9 evtlr heard."
KOCM has th9 right balance of music."
the new music you play Is 'right on'!"
I'm sitting here enjoying you music and your 'new' style."
thanks for the enjoyable programming."
the musJc you're playing is fantastic .·~ you've broken up the dulln9Ssl KHp It up/"
I
These are ju't a few of the comments we have received. ff you haven't heard us,
listen to our presentation of contemporary beautlful music. and let us know
what you think. We are KOCM; Orange County Music.
57 FASHION ISLAND
NEY/PORT IEACH, CA 12880
(114) 844-2727
•
•
J
'
..
--------~__....-·--·---.... .,..... ____ ...... -------..-----
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, May 8, 1981
1'fany options open to investors
By l.OaJAN PeT&Y
Slnce t.be listed option ma.n.t
came into existence in 1m,
thotlsanda of investors have dia·
cov~red at.rategies to auament
tho•e that tM.,y bad employ~ in
the past.
rf o longer are investors limit·
ed \o tr1dlUonal proceduret of
buying stocks
thef hope will
aprreciate
wh le ( H ·
su'°iog all
the. downside
ris-. Through
the listed op-
t l 0 D I
marketa, you
C~n DOW
he4ge exist· NTH
Ing portlolios against declines,
possibly increase the income
from your portlolio and add ls·
sues at what you feet are advan-
tageous prices . In short, opt.ions
offer a multitude or strategies t.O
those willing to explore new
avenues.
fo the next three columns
writing calls, writing puta and
otb'er option strategies will be
detailed. Rewards and rlsb in·
v0lved1n selfing aiia uyini op. -
tioos will be outlined. But first, a
caveat. U your investment
choices have not met your ex·
pectaUons ln the past, optiona
wlU not, in and of lbemseJves,
make you a better investor.
They can reduce your risk. They
can increase your flexibility.
But they are not a panacea for
all investment ills.
Options have been in existence
in varous forms for hundreds of
years but they have achieved
their current popularity only
since the introduction of tradlnc
In listed options ln 1973.
An option gives the buyer the
right to buy or the right to sell
an aaaet at a predetermined
price (strike price), for a pre·
determined period of time (ex·
piratioo date).
An option to buy is a "call,"
an optioa to sell is a .. put." Each
listed option contract traded
normally covers 100 shares of
common stock . The pre-
determined price and date are
set by the exchanges on which
that particular option is listed.
Puts and calls are the only two
types or options and there are
only iwo possible strategies you
can employ with either: YOJ1 can
b~ them.01'. w\ t.l\&m.11,Q»'Der.
lnere are many sopfilillcar.e<! ·
variations on .the two basic
themes.
HAROLD KENT GARY RANDY
MILLIONS TO LOAN
~•w unst
$10,000 to $1,000,000
2 ND • 3RD TRUST OH O LOANS
Pro~ Funding
90 Days to 15 Years
• SWING LOANS
• 2N0-3RD T.O. LOANS
• Resldentlol Spedoll.st1
• Apartments
• Commercial
• WE IUY DISCOUNTED T.0.'1
• We help structure notes
IOf maximum SOleoblHty
• i('~tf 1>1<1 !.t>ar~i:/i1/ult<1y -1i1t-.
llCfNSIO MOllTGAGf lOAN llAOICBI
CALL 714/955·1055
~ Moc:AllTHUR llOtUVAllO
l(()U FINAHCW IOWU!S • SUITl 470
N£Wl'Oll1 MACH CAllfOl!NIA 926'l<).
In lbe parlance of the trade, moment.
aellin1 optjom la "wrillnl op-Tbls liquidity allows both
Uona." parties to cloee out, or offMt,1 Fint tbe bulca: their orieinal tran.aactJon a,t a
You abould decide what ap-lime of their own choosln1 and It
r.roach you want to take del*NI· baa made lhe old traditional
DI upon your 1oall. You should over-the-counter oPtiona market
choose atrat.e•let baaed on your almost obsolete.
fll\anclal situation, needs, and The principal attraction of
objectivea. You sbouJd also ~ad buyin1 options results from
the Options Clearin1 Corp. leverage. Tbrou1b the use of an
prospectus before doln1 any op-option, the buyer alms to make
lion transaction. $100 do the work of $1,000. The
Like llated stocks, lilted op-typical caJl writer (seller) ls
lions are traded on nationally re-seeking two ends: additional ln·
gistered securities exchanaes. come from his portfolio and
At present, optiona in approx. possibly some downside prottt·
imately 225 well-known stocks lion aaa.inat price decline in bis
are listed for tradine on various holdings.
exchan1ea. In the column, the call buyer's
Llated options have stan-objective will be written about
dardlzed expiration dlrtes and-·and the procedure used by the
strike prices. ThU standardin· call writer detailed. The lmpor·
lion of contract terms allows op-tant point Ls th•t options can af·
tlon1 to be traded in much the ford you -the investor -an
same manner a1 common added degree of flexibility.
stocks are traded: open trad·
ing and continuous price report-
ing of option transactions show
both buyer and writer (seller)
where they stand at any given
( L..orian Pet'll u an account U ·
ecuhve at tM Santa, Ana office of
·MerriU. Lvnch. PUrce, Fenner &
Smith Inc.)
.,, ......... Anti rust Chief
hits f aimess role
W AS.HlJ'\q;I'ON (APY ~ ~e
nation's new chief antitrust efi·
forcer says the Justice Depart-
ment has contributed to a doc·
trine or foolish fairness that has
reduced some consumer prices
in the short run but has driven
quality and variety out of the
American marketplace.
ford M. Lltvack.
Last year, Litvack brought the
first felony charge ever ror-
vertical price-fixing, charging
Cuisinarts, the manufacturer of
expensive home food processors,
with using coercion to prevent
its retailers from offering dis·
counts on the devices. Cuisinarts
pleaded no contest and paid a
$250,000 ftne. Its food processors
are now frequently on $ale at
discount in retail stores.
LIGHT TOUCH -The six-layer polyester film "sandwich" is
a solid state membrane keyboard introduced by Honeywell.
The keyboard is thinner than a fingernail at .032 inches, ~Q
the dots and lines are conductive ink patterns, screened or).
two plastic layers which transmit electronic signals wh'en
the membrane is flexed by the touch of a traditional keytol>.
· Undoing the harm he feels bas
been done is one or the primary
goals of William F. Baxter, the
51 -year-old economist and
former Stanford law professor
recently installed as assistant
attorney general in charge of the
Justice Department's antitrust
division.
Baxter is concerned about the
area of antitrust law called
vertical violations. That means
mergers or certain pricing and
selling agreements between
manufacturers and their dis·
tributors and retail dealers are
generally outlawed.
For instance, a television
manufacturer may not force de·
partment stores to· stick to his
suggested retail prices.
Baxter's view represents a
sharp turnabout from the direc-
tion taken by his Carter ad·
ministration predecessor, San·
Georgia seeks technology ·
OVER THE COUNTER
ATLANTA <AP> -Gov.
George Busbee is on a three -day
California trip aimed at luring
bigh·technology industry to
Georgia, an aide said .
Spokesman Duane Riner said
NASO LISTINGS
""' .._ Helmlh< 5" HwatPS
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17"' '"" Hyatttnl 24i..o • OtlFerro 1 .. al 'lit IMS Int »Vo 21 OtterTP 11 Pllt tnlrollld JV. I PCA Int
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2 '"' J...,lb'f 24V. 2' PenaEnt
1'YI -Jerico a 2.-24"" Pentair Dllt UYI J lflyFd ~16 " Potrtl l I"'° 11 JOSlynM » »YI Pettibon
lt\11 lO l(ol.SI Ji1 16\lt 11-PlllloNol I I )..J2 Kolvar JY, 2 .,l, Pl«ceSS
M M'4 Koman D" D Pln111'11> II 12 KmpAm 15" U PloflHIB J Jiit Kay...., ._ Slit Pta1tlne 21 Z2YI KollJ'S¥ , OY> Poult
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the goal or the trip is to en-
courage research-oriented com-
panies to invest pqrtions of their
research dollars into an ad·
vanced technology development
center al Georgia Tech.
,._
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Make H er Heart Blossom .
COl.LECTORS
CORNl!R
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GOLD & SIL VER
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Give Flowers
For Mother's Day, Sunday, May 10.
Say "thanks a bunch, Mom:• With flowers on Mother's Day.
Send a special arrangement. Or a fresh, green plant.
We can deliver anywhere in this area or almost anywhere
in the world through 16,000 affiliated TtleAorisu.
So call or come by soon. And show a tictle motherly love.
.... a...... ..._Cl .• , .. " ..., ....
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BANK F INANCING
NOW AVAILABLE
(71 4) 55Ml50
South Coaet ptaze VIiiega ____ ...
CAc ___ C.."-'1
Auto & Homeown.,rs
)/::;• Quotes By Phone , ..... .,
154 .. , .... ,,,, IJl-J4J1 ,,, .. .....,..e .........
Truckload
Plant sme
Huntington C.enter
12 lush varieties
leNIKI IEIMNlll EnrOev Enr~hd
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Pi~hJ111t_ 14474 Culver Dr. IRVINE
·WE DELIVER
YOUR FULL
SERVICE
FLORIST 3 6",... ... .28!
"
Open 7 Days 1eleflora 857 -1111
Flowcn Do It.
SIO,OC)O to Sl,000.000
Interest ontv PIVments on loans based on eQUttv tn tlomes. un1u. commerctal, or raw land. swing LOans-w~n no montntv
pavmenti-also avallable. 714/955·2602
DAILY PH.or
CLASSIFflD ADS
942·5878
CO MMUNITY HOME LOAN, IN €.
1401oovunu:r,5U1T1100, N£WPORTHACH.CAUFOltNIA9U.O
UCENHD M<>ttut
......... ~·
a s 5 5 -______ ........_.._.. __ .....,..... ... _____ _
s 813
YOUNGER . T he average age of ne w
shareowners in the recent survey period was only
35. 7 vears. In startling contrast , the average age ?f
Lhose who became shareowners before the mid
'70s was 50 6
HOLDING SMALLER portfolios of stocks. The
newcomers owned stock worth $2,065 at the census
date vs. an average portfolio worth $4,915 held by
those who became shareowners earlier.
IN LOWER INCOME groups. Newcomers re-
port household incomes of $25,880 in comparison to
$28,550 among earlier entrants.
MORE LIKELY TO be in white-collar Jobs !65
vercent vs. 56 percent) in comparison to blue·collar
jobs c 16 percent vs. 11 percent>.
LESS LIKELY to be housewives. retirees ~r
not employed for some reason <onl.y 18 percent 10
these categories against 33 percent m these groups
among the pre·l975 shareowners>.
Of course. you c:ould have guessed some .o~ the
findings without any census to confir".' your op1010!1s.
With women so firmly entrenched m the. U.S. JOb
market place today and in positions of higher and
higher authority, it is logical for wom~n to ~e not
only investing on their ow!' but also ~~nng t? m~.est
in their own names <that is the new mgred1ent in
the mix)
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
HEW YORK(AP) FIM I Dow J-\ •"91-
HEW YORK CAP • S.IM, T-y price 1°foc~':"4"'· ,,,.., 5·
•ncl Ml CNnoe "' the 1111 .... moat .cllw <lP9n Hlgll Low CloM °"'
Hew Yon Stock Eachenile IH•,.S, tr.OI ... 10 Incl '13 07 •7'.JI "4.S2 •n . ..._ • •1 M llOft•ll1•tmorel'-tl IO Trn "41' 411,IJ M t> •11 '2-5'.IS
IBM I 111 200 57"4 -'-S Ull IOl.• ICM 54 10l It 10> -O.JJ Gen Moten ·IJO;JDO Sit\ -1v. 5 St• 11' tS Jn •2 J71 JO »• It-J.17
So111 c...,. -·-'"" --... -· .. . . . '·-=722.!!! LTV C4'1> .a. tt.. -.... UUlt Am.t TfoT Uti SN -l'.:! r1n 1 --
f UOfl at. •™ .. • U Stk . .. .. .. .. .. • .. .. 1,-S-H Utll ue,100 17VI -"° "~:~r..:"' m:: m~ :.: WHAT STOCKS DID
SHrtR-ft!•: :;: -:: HEW YORK IAP) Ma' S ~t7o~l~n m'.eoo ~ -;,111
AIJIUchflcl !?{·•200 ;r-+ ~ A4¥•ncecl lepet. Cp -• -O.CllNCI Citicorp Jtt,AOO 2.._ -~ Un<ll•"90cl
To1el I•~
Htw hlgll& Htw lows AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW VOAK IAPl-S.I .. , T..etdey ~!«
encl net c-.. Of lhe l•n most e<Uve
Am•rlCMI Stock E•< ... ._ 11..-. trMlne 11ellonally et more 1"-' ll
Hucls8011 11 194,700 ~urtlnt wt 131.tOO lnttrum Syt 111.-DorcllstGas 101,JOD 1n11 BnknOt t7 .000
HouOllTr '4,toO GIB .. "-1 IS,100 DomtPetr 11 14,100 Cha mp Ho u ,sco
Peradvrw ••.SOO
-'"" -IV. -~ -~
WH .. TAMfX OIO
METALS
T~'
T_.,
<431
10J m • ,,
Pnv. ~ ,,.
IM II» • ..
'-11~'1> c ... u. pound, u s 0..11-
"°"' t.• .. •centse-ncs.
11"4: 4JV. c.nts • pouft(I, O.ltver tcl
Tl• M.Ull Mete!\ w .. k cornpoMI• ID A,_m._ 16 ,..,,, t ~. H y
Mt,.c...-, $oUO.OO par lletll,
Pie ti-..as.oo IN>y ..... H v
H•nclJ .. Hermen. JIO.• -'"'' -··
GOLD QUOTATIONS ,. .... .,
~: morntno 11•11111 Ml .. 15, oft t lO.U.
L ..... : ette..,_ 11111111 Ml•.U, off U.U.
Perlt1 .iv,._.. ll•l"G uoo .... off tlt.24.
Pr--.: lhdllO M17 .!.J, Off P "
hrk•: let• •fl-llalnt MU.Ill, Off
ts.00, M71.00 -· ' M•••r a Mer111.1a: only c1a11v '""'' M1'.JS, Off '5.li .
.......... ! .... , clotll' .......... , •• u • .,.,
'5.25.
,........,.., only delly -· tet><IUted MU.JO, off U.•.
•
I
814
l
I
..
---------~~~--------------._... ______________ ....,. ______ .................... , ... ~s .... •1•2•1 .... a .. ~
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
\
Lower tar. New filter. Satne great taste.
I .
I 20 Cl~ETTts .___~----
' ---
I
VANTA l
lOOs .<
I I
l
• t l
j
l
l
'J
t
J
~l_ ..
20CIGAAflTIS _,,
I -
f
!VANTAGE
ULTRA LIGHTS
• .
I
t
I l _~ lltro Low Tar 4mg
.------.....__ . ...._
New
mg
ULTRA UGHTS1 4 mg. "tif. 0.4 mg. nicorine, ULTRA LIGHTS 1001: 5 mg. •tar. 0.5 mg. nicotme. 1v. per ciglrttt1 by FTC method.
t
llllJPllll
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1911
USING HERBS
SLIM GOURMET
C9
C12
---------------
Peach Keen Muffins
can give a special
nice touch to your
Mother's Day break/ ast.
There's an elegant simplicity
about baked puddin1s and
custards that mates them the
perfect dessert choice for many
a meal.
Essentially a combination of
milk, eggs, sugar and flavor-
ings, puddlnes and custards
combine richness with delicacy.
The recipes given here feature
sweetened condensed milk,
which eliminates the need for
cooking the custard mixture
before it's baked and assures the
velvety-smooth consistency
that's a hallmark of these
desserts.
FRUIT-GLAZED BAKED
CUSTARDS
3eggs
1 (14-ouoce) can sweetened
condensed milk (NOT evaporat-
ed milk)
1 cup water
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
lh cup red currant jelly
2 tablespoons orange.
flavored liqueur
1 tablespoon cornstarch
Fresh strawberries or other
fresh fruit
Preheat oven tO 350 degrees.
Jn medium bowl, beat eggs; ,stir
in sweetened. condensed. milk,
water and vanilla. Pour mixture
into six 6-ounce custard cups.
Set cups in shallow pan; fill pan
with 1 inch hot water. Bake .S to
SO minutes cir until knife Inserted
in center comes out clean. Cool.
In small saucepan, combine jel·
Three level table.spoons of llll·
sweetened cocoa plus one
tablespoon of shortening <liquid
or solid> equals one ounce Cooe
square> of unsweetened baking·
chocolate. Here are quick ideas
that don't require specific
recipes.
Vo as many elegant
restaurants do -roll lee cream
balls in coca.
-Dust cocoa li&hUy over sun·
daes, parfaits, ice cream cones
or frozen popsicles.
ly, liqueur and cornstarch. Cook
and stir until jelly melta and
mixture comes to a boll. Cool to
room temperature. Remove
custards from cups. Top wit.h
sauce and "fresh strawberries.
Refrigerate leftovers. Mates 6
individual custards.
BAKED ALMOND PUDDING
'4 cup ftrnlly packed lltbt
brown sugar ~ cup (3 ounces) blanched
slivered almonds, toasted
1 (14-ounce) can sweetened
condensed milk (NOT evaporat·
ed milk)
1 cup ( lh pint) whipping
cream, unwhipped
Seggs
lh teaspoon almond extract
Additional toasted almooda,
optional
Preheat oven to 325 degrees.
In 8-lnch round cake pan,
sprinkle sugar; set aside. In
blender container, grind nuta;
add sweetened condensed milk,
lh cup cream, eggs and extract.
Blend thoroughly. Pour into pau.
Set into larger pan filled with 1
inch of bot water. Bake .S to 50
minutes or until knife inserted
near center comes out clean.
Chill thoroughly (about 3
hours); turn out of pan. Beat re-
maining cream for 1arnl1b;
top with additional toaaled
almonds if desired. Refrieerat.e
leftovers. Mak.es 8 to 10 aerv·
ings .
dinners.
-Add a spoonf uJ of cocoa to
ice cream aodu, frosted.a and
shakes for extra richness.
-Mix cocoa with su1ar and
instant coffee, then stir ln hot or
cold milk. for a fast "mocha."
-Blend until frothy: non-fat
dry milk, cocoa, crushed ice and
a touch of sweetener -for a
dieter's slush. ·
Richness and del~acy are combined in Fruit-glazed Custards and Baked Almond Pudding.
-Make ladyfinger
sandwiches with chilled whipped
topping or custard, then driule
with cocoa to dreas up family
-Muddle lh teaspoon of
cocoa with instant espresso cof.
fee in each demllaue cup,
before pouring in boillne water,
to finish a special meal in style.
-Use a little cocoa to cut the
sweetness of canned frostinp.
If you're single, or the ooo-dietin1 half of a
couple, you might have ret1igned yourself to tbe
notion that making dessert for one juat i.sn't
practical. Most recipes ierve a minimum of
four, and unless you're having a party, that's
simply too much. Besides, unlike other dishes,
many desserts don't keep well.
Here's good news: a trio of festive chocolate
recipes that let you end a meal in style. All are
easy to make, starting with unsweetened cocoa.
(You don't have to pre-melt cocoa which saves
time, work and meas.) Since cocoa la hilhiY
conceqtrated, resuJta will have a deep chocolate
flavor.
Individual Brownle Baked Alaaku be1in
with a fudgy cake base. (Left.over brownies
make great snackln1 ·and theee do freeze
beautifully, wrapped in foil.) Crown each
square with a scoop of ice cream, cover with
meringue and tout in a bot oven unW browned.
A Pot-De-Creme couldn't be simpler to put
to1etber. Blend all in1redienta, pour into pretty
cups and chill for a aumptuoua, creamy dessert.
Chocolate Souffie for Two ls worth a Utile
extra effort, but not difficult if you follow the
. clear, step-by-step dlrectiom. Serve thll to cap
·a celebration dinner or by Itself with coffee and
liqueurs.
INDIVIDUAL B&OWNIE
· BA.KEO AIA8&A8
~ cup 1hortenln1
1 cupaugar
1 teaspooo vanilla
1 en 1 en yolk
2 tablespoons milk
1 cup all-~ nou.r
~ cup ....,eetmed coeoa
~ teaspoon bakial powder v. teaspoon salt
~ cup chopped almondl
2 1coop1 mlat-ebocolate cblp ice cream llertque (see below)
Chopped or sliced almonds for 1arnlab
Cream 1borten1A1, aucar and vanilla ill
small mixer bowl unW lllbt IDd fhdfJ. Add •a.
... yolk .... milk• bleed ...... Combtne flour, cocoa,~ powder, aalt and almondll; edd to
creamed m1xtun and bind well. Spread batter
nen17 tn sreued f.l9cla ...... pu. Bue at
llO d.,,_ for 25 to IO ml.Dutel or until browaM
,.111 away from pan edl•· Cool ta pu. Cut lato
t 1quu.. To make JIMUYldual Bronle .laked
AJaakas, place two brownie aquarn OD •·
\
greased baking sheet. Prepare mertn1ue. Place
scoop of ice cream in center of each brownie;
cover ice cream and brownie completely with
meringue. Garnish with chopped or sliced
almonds. Bake at .SO degrees for 4 to 5 minutes
or until meringue ls lightly browned. Serve lm·
mediatelr Two setvin11. (To make additional
aervlngs. Prepare additional mertn1ue and as·
semble and bake as directed.)
MERINGUE: Beat 1 elf white anCI ~tea
spoon cream of tartar in small mixer bowl until
foamy; gradually add 2 tablespoom auiar and
continue beatina al hlgb speaed unW mertnsue
forms stiff peaks.
POTS·DE·C&EME
1e11 ,
'4 cup unaweetened cocoa
'4 cupsasar
2 tablespoom butter
2 tablespoom abortenine
\le teaspoon vanlUa
~cup bot milk
Combtne e11. cocoa 1u1ar, butter, 1horten·
lne and vanilla ln blender; blend until smooth,
1crapln1 sides of blender frequently. Add bot
milk i blend al hip a peed until 1mootb, scrap.
ln1 11dfs of blender occaaionally. Pour into 4 de·
mltuse cope or 2 custard cups. Cover with
plutic wrap and chill at leut 2 boun before
aervtnc. Garnish with whipped cream, ll de·
sired. 2 to 4 aervtn11.
CllOCOIATB 80VFn.E roa TWO
2 tableapoou butter
1 tablespoon plus 1 ~ teaspoons all·purpoee n~p umweetened cocoa
~ teaapoaa aalt
~cup milk
~ teaspoon vanilla
2•1110ib ~cupqar 2••• whites 1 tablelpoop IQ ...
Gl'MM bottoms of two tndJvtdual IOUtrle
dlabH or cuatard cup1. Cut a lea•tb of
alamtnum foil to ftt around eaeb di.lb for a tol·
tar; f°'d lnto tblrda lenstJawtM. GrMM oae aide
of eolian and tape to oat8lde of eacla clllll. sr•ued akle ill, allowtq coUar to uteDd 2
lncb• above rtms.
• Melt butter In 1mall 11ueepu O'fer low
beat; ........ nour. Remcwe from beat: add
( ... Daa&&T, .... Cl)
Br°""* Baked Alallra, · Pot·Df.Cmne 4nd Chocolate Soul /le ~h or1 • ..,,._. Jor tndi~ aerving•. •
I •
l
.. Cl Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedneada)\ May 6. 1981 FOOD
Kids can make entree
Mother's Day, that
one day of the year
when everyone makes
that extra·special effort
to please Mom. From
glfls so painstakingly
chosen, to meals where
Mo m 's the guest of
honor. so ahe doesn't
have to cook -even the
young es t family
me mber want.a to help
make Uris -~tebratlcm
the best ever.
When It comes to the
menu thou"h. It ~sn'l
easy to tlnd ll recipe
that's simple enough for
children to prepart'. yet
tastes food and satisfies
the ent N' hunlly Pt"tuls
of Lovt• for Mom Is one
r ectpt' th•t mc.-asures
up
T h\' \'UY to nuke
meatloar mlxtuN' Is a
flavorful romblnat.ion of
ground br-t'f. sour
cream. mush~ potato
fl akes . a t ouch of
nutmeg. and thnt conve·
nient all ·in ·o n e
Mexico is
seafood
supplie r
Most people think of
magaritas, com tortillas
and f r es h c hi les ,
mangoes and jicama as
imports from Mexico.
but they don·t always re·
alize that Mexico is one
of the foremost nations
in the fisheries industry.
exporting bi llions of
dollars in seafoods an·
nually to the U.S .. J apan
and European countries.
Not only is Mexico the
supplier for over half
the shrimp consumed in
the United States but 1t
h as also become a
source of many other
varieties of seafood.
In addition to frozen
~shrim p, Mexico exports
fr ozen and c anned
abalone, sardines. tuna,
lobsters. scall ops,
g rouper , Pacific snap-
per, calamari and other
species indigenous to its
waters.
WITH LARGE coastal
resources or its own.
Mexico has in recent
years Joined such coun·
tries as the Un ited Stat es, Russia, Japan
and Norway and Peru as
leading volum e pro·
: duce rs of fish.
One of the objectives
of the Mexican govern-
ment's fishery develop·
ment program , which
commenced in 1971, is to
increase Mexican con·
sum pt ion of qualit y
seafoods at reasonable
prices. Results of this ef·
fort a re apparent to vis·
itors to Mexico who-re·
port more and more
seafoods are now
feature d on most
restaurant menus.
T HE RE IS a growing
a ppreciation for native
Mexican style of seafood
~ preparation, with first·
• time visitors always sur-
• prised to learn that each
geographic area of this
vast country has its own
different culinary style.
E ven the same basic
dish can vary from re-
gion to region as local
ing r edie nts are in-
troduced. .
F o r e x a m if I e .
Hua c hinango a la
Ve r acruzana (Pacific
Snapper Veracruz Style)
which originated in that
seafood producing town,
i s today the most
popular Mexican fish
dish with slight varia·
lion s for differen t
locales.
Acapulco is noted for
cevlche, an appetizer of
marinated fish, and also
for the green salsa, or
sauce, made from
tomatillos, small firm
green tomatoes with a
distinctive acid flavor.
TH E MODERN Mex·
ican cook knows and
u.aes the abundance of
fish that the country'•·
two Jong couUlnes pro-
duce. Since it la not too
far from eltber coast to
the major cities, one can
upect to find a larce
v a rlet y of fish a nd
1be llflllr in au of t be
larcer cWes and reaorta
of Mexico.
You now can prepare
three t raditiona l 110· lean 0-.h .,,_at bome,
b7 beau.a, new frosen
entl'MI JUlt Introduced
lnto local IQPennarteta
lD tH froilD food MC•
UGD. Sea BaN Acap•lco,
Cod Veramaa Ud lellpo
per La Pa• are each ,....
pared with • Laity, yet mUd, 1111ee. They come
ln lO~unce pack11es .
seasoner, o nion ·
mus hroom soup mix.
Using soup mix means
youncaters aren't
bothered with all the
measuring of s mall
amounts of s pices usual·
ly required for season·
Ing a meatloaf ... they
just open the envelope.
The p et~l -s hape d
crusts are quickly made
with refrlaerated but-
termilk biscuits. Just
separate them accord·
Ing to package direc-
tions and press into ln·
d ivl dual -siie d
casseroles.
~oth Mom and Dad
will think petals of Love
for Mom tastes a bit like
stroganolf; the kidJS will
think It's juat plaln good.
PETALS OF LOVE
FOR MOM
2 'p a c k a g e s ( 8
ounces each) refrigerat·
ed buttermilk biscuits
1 envelope onion·
mushroom soup mix
1 pound ground beef
"4 cup sour cream
"• c u p m a s h e d potato flakes
v. teaspoon ground
nutmeg
Preheat oven to 375
degreH:
Separate dough ac·
cording to pac kage
direction s . Into 4
greased 2 -c up
casseroles, place 5
clrcles to form petals;
press to cover casserole
bottom.
Jn lar1e bowl, com·
bine r emaining ingre·
dlents; pack into pre·
pared casseroles. Bake
35 minuta or until done.
Makes 4 servings.
Petau of Love for Mom
ta good Mother'• Day
entree that'• simple for
the k1ds to make. The
individual meatloover
in petal·lhaped crwt•
are mad e with
ref rlgerated buttermilk
bi1cuit1 and a mizture
of beef.
GREATER SAVINGS WITH EVERYDAY LOW PRICES INSTEAD OF A FEW LIMITED SPECIALS.
,
SWEETHEART .,329 STEAK
BoMtflS Bondfd flffl RIO Eyf
T-BONE .,268 STEAK
BOnofd Bfff lain
PORTERHOUSE 2 78
STEAK
BonOfCI llttf lOin lO
TOP SIRLOIN .,268 STEAK
BOne!f'is Bon<lt!<I Bttf Lotn
HARVEST DAY
BREAD
(lluck WiJ900 or
Country llOao lt OZ LC>af
.69 ~ts
LADY LEE
BEVERAGES
11egu11r or Diet 9 Ravon
1l oz (Ml
.19 ~ts
SPAGHETTI
SAUCE
l..lely lM J2 01 Jlt
1°9~~ts
VAN DE KAMP'S
DINNERS
Melllean • .S Vlrlft~
'201 ~
.79 ~
BOUNTY
TOWELS
Oeantld Off Assonld
IS Sf' llOll
.69 ~
ROUND
STEAK
~s Full Cut BOnOfO llttl
.,169
TOP ROUND "199 STEAK
~s eonoeo llfff
BONELESS "199 TIP STEAK eonoeo 1tt1 11ouno
BLADE CUT 1 09 ~U£K STEAK lb
"' ~
"' ~
ANTHONY'S
SPAGHETTI
J2 Ot Pleg
1°9 ~1n
SALTINE
CRACKERS
l.3<1v lff 16 oz Box
.SS ~~n
PARMESAN
CHEESE
ICfaft ~ateo e oz can
169 ~.ts
COTTAGE
CHEESE
l..lCIY lff 3l Oz Ctn
TEN HIGH
BOURBON
80 Proof 1 ?Sltr 8tt
999
• HO
Umin
KRAFT
CHEESE ' ~ Otlu•• SllCfO 1201 PllQ
LADY LEE ...... 109 FRYING 53 BACON ~~~S~~~" soucnernLo • s11cfd
E-Z CUT .. 2s8 DRUMSTICKS .. 114 CUBE STEAK OR THIGHS
BOnOedBHf Frying Cn•Offl ~~A
GROUND
.. 128 CHICKEN 139 BEEF
1'($1 Ht> Plrg or Mort ~~~~! ~~~~~ST~0 Does Hat EXC('f(I 30"' Far
COUNTRY STYLE1 29 PORK LOIN .. 129 SPARERIBS ROAST
RlO Ena P<>t'-Lotn l b sor101n Cur •vg Wf19nt J ux
-:s ~-
D'ANJOU FRESH BOSTON
PEARS MUSHROOMS FERN
US HO 1 lllPf. LO Country Stano 8 Oz Ptcg 6"PO!
.49 .69 298
WHOLE RED
WATERMELONS ONIONS PLANTS MAKE WONDERFUL
Red l!tpe ICut lb 211 Lb Beu FOf COOkOUtS lb MOTHER'S DAY CIFTSI
Atso available are 6" FIOrfbUnda
.19 .49 R~ 6" Mums Affl<an VIOiets
and fr~h cut flowers Srtol> early
for best setectlon•
Our Jilftel "O(t<IO\ PQll(y ~artCH\ CM.I ptlCt\ •D bt P'ftfU !Vf
Wf"ClnftOIV MaV stn r'f'Wu fWSO..-y ... 11th 1M1
\......, -.~.) ..
.f1m/lo
LENITA
PANTYHOSE
All NUOf saocllllfoot
AUO<te<I ~
1.67 ... •
VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARE
lotton llegutar. Heflla4 or
Extra Strtngt11 10 01 8tt
Lower prices overall. -.... ____ __ -.......-··-----·----
"'::=..---=---
~ ----.............. .... --·, .... --·-----
---·-
ITOflll ONN
&Wl,.'t •....
----·-·-------~--·--=-----___ ,, __
produce meal ........... .. ...
-·lrlglll ._.. 98•• . ..,ke'"'9 8,lt •••d1Yllfle
llfll T.. rlh
•.•• 79•.. t:on
... 69··· ....... . ... ... ....... ..,k roast •••• .... .. 3 •. $100 ............
------. 11•91 ........ . ...... .,
•••• llft • ..... 29• •. .... ......
=nr:.·-·1
••'-4 •. t100
i:W:'to1at0et · 29• •.
-~-'•ttOO .onions ..... , ~ · ....
leff•• 29~. ::~ "9•
••Ir .... ..,.. .. . $19.9.. shrimp
. ....... ......
• teM
fish
11111hroo111 99• •. hafthlll lleak _____ _;.._ .... ..... ~ ....
W1 Ill ""' ,.. ..... ..
. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 C3
$149 •. •r1tlllt IJ t•. plre. ea plRR ,... tt.1•
$1 49 •.. P1':fli"•-i' Ill· tl.M $169 · 11 r rmlng a •.
*1 49 •· :\W ho..., , ... $Mt .... , "I·*'·" £.., .., .. .......... ~...... "' ..... :i:!.1 . .•• $115 spro..... eere1I 12 •. ..,. ......... ... '-'••..... ..,... raisin ehl.. 111. ts• 4 •. 69• .....,
ra• 1l11101Nls .... ts.49 •• •229 •. ....... _.less raisins .... tt.• $129 l:·
"I· •2.7t
....
rain'-trout $179 •· Produce
fresh from
the fields
daily .
..............
.... h.,.., hreU t •. 89• ... .. ,. .. ,,..
$159
vitamins
...... ~ ......... 611-4414 .
. 11111 .,,.. .. 0 ... ... ..
tllSI 114111 AM •• ,.... .._.,.
\
Orange ~ast DAILY PILOT/WednHday, May 8, 1981
Muffins are for Mom
Wbat better time to To make tender 1ood the kitchen, lt will be d • & re ea . Combine
1bow Mom you care muffins, lt'a Important your turn to try Peachy peaches, eqs, milk and
tban on Motber'1 Day. not to overmix tbe lnsre-Keen Mufftnl. oil ln •mall bowl; mix
A lel.lu.rely breakfaat dlent.a. Be aure to mix PEACHY llVFFIN8 well. Combine remain·
featu.riDI Peachy Keen dry lnlredlenll only un-Ont 18-ounce can lna lniredient.a in larae
Muffinl will certainly be ill they are molateoed. JI allced p11cbH, well bowl; add peach mix·
appreclaU!d by Mom on you are a "new" cook, It drained, ftnely chopped lure, mixini Juat unW
ber day off. They are ml&ht be a aood Idea to 2 e111, beaten dry lnaredlenta are
quick and euy to pre-have an adult belp with ~cup milk rnolateoed. Fill 12 paper·
pare felturlna conve-the fliiat baklnc step. 2 lab l e• Poo n 1 Uned medium-shed muf·
nieot pancake mix and a Serve these muftln1 ve1etable oll fin cups ~ full. Bake at
can of sliced peaches. bot from the oven. Mom 2 cupe ort1lnal pan· 315 decrees for 20 to 2S
Before you launch out wlll be ao pleased. And cake mix minutes or until golden
on your cooking adven· y o u w 111 h a v e t h e 1" cup 1u1ar brown. Cool S minutes ln
ture, aet Dad or another aatlafacUon ol knowlna '14 teaapoon cln· muffin pan; remove to
adult's permission to you pleased he r on namon wire cooling rack. Serve
----~· _..___....... •• a ......_..l
FOOD
A ldlurel11 break/cut f eaturlng PtoehJI Keen
Muf finl 1hould be op-
preclated by Mom on
her day.
use the kitchen. lt'a a "her" day. Of cour11, ~ teupoon 1od1 warm. Makes 1 dozen
1ood idea to read the _o;;...;n;;...;c;.;;e.....;y:..;ou;,.;.;.,,'v_e_cl_e_a.....;ned,;___u.:...p __ H_e_a_t_o_v_e_n_to __ n_5 __ m_u_rt_lna_. _________________________________________ _
whole recipe firal. The
ingredients are ones
your Mom just m ay
already h ave in the
kitc hen . Convenient
original pancake mix
not only is areal for
makin1 pancakes and
waffles but shows off its
J
versatility in recipes
such as this.
YOrt8 SAVES YOU NOrtEY
EVERY WEEl...Ci11llllWl1~~J •.
Spice up
your menu
with Iamb
Put a little spice in
your dinner w i th
Spicy Lamb Stew. It's
aure to be a favorite
for it combines chunks
of tender lamb, bits of
tomato, onion and green
beans in a savory sauce
that's s.easoned with cin·
na mon and orega,no.
This ls au especially
good menu choice for
those who e njoy lamb
but can't always fit it in-
to the budget. For a
small family. half the
slew can b e frozen
before the green beans
are added.
The National
Livestock a nd Meal
Board points out t hat
lamb for stew ls one of
the most economical
lamb cuts available , yel
it offers the same flavor
as more costly cuts.
SPICY LAMB STEW
2 pounds lamb for
stew, cut in 1-inch pieces v, cup flour
1 ~ teaspoons salt
li4 teaspoon cin -
namon
'At teaspoon pepper
3 tablespoons cook-
ing fat
1 cup waler
1 small bay leaf
1 can (16 ounces>
tomatoes
1 medium onion , cut
into wedges
i.'J teaspoon oregano
'>4 cup water
2 packag e s (9
ounces each ) frozen
green beans
Combine flour, sa!J..
cinnamon and pepper;
dredge lamb cubes, re·
serving excess flour.
Brown meat in cookin1
fat ; pour off drip-
pings . Add 1 cup water
and bay leaf to meal,
cover tightly and cook
slow l y 20 minutes .
Remove bay leaf. Drain
tomatoes, reservina li-
quid. Add liquid, onion
and oregano to meal and
cook s lowly, covered, 1
h o ur. Blend reserved
flour with ~ cup waler
and use to thicken stew.
Cut tomatoes i nto
pieces, add to stew and
continue cooking s
minutes. Cook frozen
green beans according
to package directions;
drain and stir into stew.
Makes 6 to 8 aervln1a.
PO&& CAJlVING CUES
To make lt easier to
carve a pork loin rout,
the National Live Stock
and Meal Board recom-
mends having the meal
retailer aaw th e
backbone free from the
rib bones. The backbone
should not be removed
but abould remain at-
tached.
Before the roast la
brou1bt to the table, the
backbone abould be re-
moved by cutUn1 cloae
alone the bone, leavtn1
as much meat on the
rout u pouible. With
tbe aide includlna the rib
bones faclnc the carver,
Insert the fork in tbe
top of tb• roast and
make allcea by cutliD1
clote alonC •acb tide of
tbe rtb bonee. One 1Uee
will contain the rlb, the
next wlU be boaele ... ••• GOLDEN GAaNl8R
Whether baklnl 1
allceL half or whole ham
for alaner, add canned
,,,., •• ,,_. 1UCM11 tbe last
half bour of bakln1.
Drt11le t!lem lltbtly
wltb m1ple ayrup, or
brown 1uaar mixed lo
Wet ayrup conaittencJ
wUb 1 little of tbe
plaeapple ayrup and
mutant.
GROCERI ES
~Ma...,tne
Vek:~rape Juice
~s:;:, ..
~~1=J=apears
i:g~ed Wine Vlnepr
~~ ..
~cg:~i::.,.
.79
159
.66
108
.56
.81
.75
v~Ralllna .89
D:lu..~&CheeM 101
J:et-.... Inn 149
,,
•
.67
251
.26
.89
}43
]69
.99
·.43
.49
L&J98
MEATS
~M«l~-eom:ll'lllOIH>-LOSnd 98 ISOneleH Rump Rout ii -.1
TAa.LQ'IO~ Lain Stewtng Beef UI 198
Y~M!.!lCllWJTY-vl'flJJLrl\O\ 184 i.un uround Beef P•ttlu
~T;1:1ta LA 248
~'W'O--~O«IOI 209 Fam11;y Stuka IA
;.~&;:ta=: IA 248
m= L&24a
f:~s:'m9dc:ka 1& .69
SERVICl." SEAFOOD
3':4.::J.n:h Fllet L& 179
~~~369
i'Et of Trve Cod 1& 2 29
DELICA fFSSEN
~~ .43
tOt m.-•t'\JWClllS J.....,,.W Yoturta .33
~ .. J59
,.~~ .... .98
&-.:.rr"°..naa. 169
&.....r:tS::.~ 139
PRODUCE
f'U..l.Ollal'!-W~GllOWi.
Fresh A.ap•,..au•
~&q:.h
irecrf>-et:~•APf>Fe.
~Ptneapple
~'"~-Oii ureen union•
~1'$1'"~ Hewelln Pllpll)1I
~.29
U1 .89
U1 .39
.99
U1 .29
eu .17
La e69
HEAL TH f, BEAUTY
LIQUOR
~~ 1099
~~~ 799
~--*"~ 329 l.M.Tll
~~Cll . 229
~'hT:.rbOn 1169
~Mt.a.le 349
SAVE WITH
EVERYDAY
LOW· PRICES
AT VONS
J23
VONS BAKERY
tf.;Zn Bread 119
~:.rtT.ped Cooklu 219
~Cake 285
PLOWERS FOR
MOTHER'S DAY
COLORRJl ~NO 449
r !'OT l"Ol.D>~
129
J:49
i'll 99
FROZEN FOODS
tar ~-l\StOl!Ta>l'Vl\1()11$ 189 Imperial Premium Ice Cream
~~e Cool Whip .83
UOLPO<O -~W·•-OCUT-67 B•nquet Dinners •
ELEGANT STADU.E98
PIATWARE AT BIG
SAVINGSI
ITEM OF THE WEEK
DINNER PORK.
/f L'RE0 .. 89
· IA.::.49
'sun .. tnYelleJ ,.,_ M111111la6,T~
~ ... ,.... .................
______ . ......,,. _____ ....._,~
FOOD
\
Env~lope contents
By MU11N SLOANE
Dear Supermarket Shopper -Several
weeks ago J read your suuestiona to help
companies eliminate some of the problems
with their refund offers. Here ls another sug-
eestlon that I hope you will add to your list.
When a comparty sends us coupons in the
mail, it shouldn't print on the envelope
"valuable coupons inside."
I sent in my proofa of purchase for an of-
fer that promised me n worth of coupons.
Guess what I found inside the envelope with
this notice on the front in big bold letters?
Nothing!
Obviously. my coupons were too much of
a temptation for someone. How can we get
the companies to send us our coupons in plain
envelopes? -Dorothy S. from Orlando, Fla.
DEAK DOROTHY -J hope that all of
the customer-relations people who tell me
that they read this column will carefully con-
sider your good '8dvice.
Dear Supe rmarket Shopper -Why
would several supermarket.I, all within a
2-mlle radius. offer double coupons for
almost 100 consecutive weekl and then
eliminate double coupons within a two-week
period? -Puzzled from Middletown, N.Y.
DEAR PUZZLED -Double coupona are
a form of price war.
One store ln an area offers to double the
value o! manufacturers' coupona in an effort to talJe customers away from the competi-
tion. the other stores are forced to Join in,
and the double-coupon war ls on.
We shoppers benefit from Ulil competi·
tion. But, like other types of prlce wan, dou-
ble coupons must eventually comf! to an end.
When one store 1ives up, lbe othe11 are
usually more than willing to go back to busi-
ness as usual. So, t~ best pblloeopby for
sho}ters Is to s imply enjoy double-coupons
while they can.
REFUND OF THE DAY
Write lQ the following address to obtain
the form required by this offer : Signal
Save25«Pon
2 lbs. of Imperial®
------•25~ 11115 17&219 Ii··············
• fl,p--;A; ;;~;;~;0;--15c ..,,
HORMEL PATTIES: HAM AND CHEESE. MILD
I PORK SAUSAGE OR HOT PORK SAUSAGE. I
Crooer: Hormel llill redeem this ooupon ror ISC plus 7C hand Una provided you
I and your cus&omer have complied with the terms or this olftt Any other appllcatlon I
con511tutes fraud. Invoices showing pun:hue of sulTident stock to cover coupons
redeemed must be shown on request Coupon void where prohibited, taxed or
I restricted. Customer must pay any sales tu. Offer good only In U.S.A. 1b redeem I
ooupon, mall to Hormel, Box 1877, Ointon, Iowa 52734. CaJh value l/20C. '
1b coruumer: Caution! This coupon may be redeemed only with pun:hue
I of the Items called for. Any other use constitutes fraud. Your grocer may not redeem I coupons without your proper purcliase.
I UMITONE{'OVl'()N 1'1'11 PUACK/\Sf I
Of'f'l!RF.XPIRES 3 7bQQ 703351
I l &PTIMIDl.1111 _J L....--------
REALVA~UES
on items from applesauce to zippers llllll lllL.f
are aavertised every day in the ~I r .. 1
~ -
I o,
• • 0 0 "p f4 ·-,.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
a big nothing f
Mouthwash •1 Savina• Offer, P .O. Box 6612,
Maple Plain, Minn. 55348. Send a stamped,
self-addressed envelope with your request.
This offer expires Sept. 30, 1981.
·----~----~---------------------------
r--~-----~------------------------------,
09lt\0'[ OOOiE
Get that ~Uogg's Bran new feeling and ...
SAVE toe
' N • . FOUR RECLOSABLE
"KEEP FRESH"™BAGS.
Keeps dampness out ... the crunch in .
Only Premium Saltines have "Keep-Fresh"
Reclosable bags. So the last cracker stays as fresh
as the first. Premium Saltines. The cri sp,
fresh bite that goes with eating light.
rw """-:.-
1
---ONAlllSCO. INC t•I -------, SAVElSC I .
I
I -,
I
ID (.! ___ _
ON ANY 16 oz BOX OF I PREMIUM SALTINES.
44000 J.02440 ----------,
·1
I
I
JScl
-::.I
___ ...
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 8, 1981
Onion popular
world arotmd
More than tacos ....
Mexican cuisine Is
more than tacos .
Although this popular
snack rnay be Mexico's
best-known contribution
to U .$. menus, the food
of Mexico ranges from
haute cuisine to earthy
peasant fare, from fish
to fruit to nuts, and in
the past several years
more and more of Mex-
ico's great dishes have
bee n appearing on
2 table s poon s
chopped fresh parsley
1 clove garlic,
chopped floe
By TOM HOGE ,., ........ ,_ ......
P eople may complain
that a raw onion m akes
their eyes water and
does things to t h eir
breath. But of aU t he
vegetables c ultivated
around the world, It Is one or the most widely
consumed.
It is also one of the
most versatile . Onions
are eaten raw, Cried,
boiled and creamed, to
mention a few ways.
And they are a key in·
_ gredient and seasoner in
soups, salads, stews and
oth e r di s hes t oo
numerous to mention
FROM THE loudly as-
sertive garlic clove to
the delic.ate chive shoot,
various members of the
oiuon clan are us uall y
within reach of c hefs
when they a re preparing
a meal
Uncooked. the onion
gives a lift to a wide
range of foods from the
robust hamburger to
that most precious of de
heac1es. belu~a caviar.
An) onwn tan be eaten
rav., hut the mo s t
popular arc the mellov.
S µani o.;h a nd Italian
vanchPs.
l<'rom a n<.'ien t times
the onion. a member of
th«' lily family des pite
P 0 P l ' L A R P 0 R K
f'l('KS
11 ..im v.as the most
popula r porl. item con-
su m e d 1n th e f ood
!t{'r\ 1(·e industry. ac-
cor ding to a rece nt
stud) l'om1nf! in second
''as bacon. followed b)
l)a u:-.age c.t nd then pork
(•hops Tht•se arc but a
fl'"' of thl' pork cuts that
provitk t'X<"d le n t e n
l r et•s for nutritious
mt•nu s. b o th 1n
r 1· s t a 11 rants a nd a t
home. points out the Na-
tional LIH' Stock and
~t·at Hoard
FROSTEV GRAPES
FOR GARNISH
l)1p <;mall <:lus ters of
frc.,h imported v. inter
g rapes in beaten egg
white then in granulated
'>Ugc.t r Allow to dry for a
f{•y. hours until fi rm to
the· t<>Ul'h This lavish
Jnd t.•as) g arn1!.h for
h:.im or turkt.•y <.'an be
clone a coupll' or days
.1heacl
.\l 1 x 1 • t• up or ange
m ;i rm iii ..itlt:. 1 ~ Lt.•;Js poon
prl'pan·d mu ... tard a nd I
('Up grf'Cn or red grape!>
togelhl'r Sprt'C1d O\'l'r
lop of ham shce the lcist
20 minutt·s of baking
its pungent aroma, bas
been popular ror many
reasons, medicinal in·
eluded.
IN THE 4TH
MILLENNEUM B.C.,
Egyptian slaves build·
ing the Great Pyramid
at Giza, are rep()rted to
have subsisted largely
on onions, garlic and
radishes. As the years ~!I-I passed , the Egyptians
came to worship the
onion> and believe it
warded off the plague.
American tables.
Here are two de·
lightfUI Mexican dishes
you can serve on Cinco
de Mayo.
The onion has long
been believed to have MEXICAN CHICKEN
medicinal properties. WITH ALMONDS
Th e ancient Greek (4-6Servlnp)
physician, Hippocrates, 1 cup finely chopped
d e c 1 are d that l h e onion
vegetable was good for 1 c Io v e gar l ic.
t he s ight but not too minced
'.4 cup golden raisins
1 cup strongly
flavored chicken stock
1 cup dry white wine
3 cups cubed cooked
chicken
1 cup blanced whole
almonds
Hot cooked rice
In large skillet, saule
onion and garlic butter
unli I s oft. Add taco
sauce, parsley, raisins,
chicken stock and wine;
cook over moderate beat
20 minutes, stirring
often. Add chicken and
s immer 10 minutes
longer. Stir in almonds
and serve immediately
over rice.
SPICED GARBANZO
BJ:ANS
( 4 Servlng1)
v. teaspoon oregano
1 tomato, peeled and
chopped
2 whole J alapenos
en E sc1beche, stem
ends removed, chopped
2 teaspoons chili
powder
1 can (15 ounces)
Garbanzo beans ,
drained
Salt to taste
H eat oil in large
s kille t. Add onion,
garlic, oregano, tomato,
j a I ape nos and chill
powder; cook over low
heat, stirring frequent·
ly, a bout 10 minytes or
until most of the liquid
has evaporated . Add
garbanzo beans and
salt; simmer. covered,
20 minutes more.
3 tablespoons salad --:;:::=======~-
oil beneficial for the body. ~ cup butter
By the time the Mid· 2 bottles (7 ounces 1 medium onion.
die Ages rolled around, Mexican Chicken with Almonds cmribfM1 fruit and nut1 with meat. e ach) mild taco sauce chopped fine
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
642•5078
onions were used to cure -----------------------------
dog bites and the sling I of "venomous worms··
During that era. peopl e
used garlic as a charm I to ward off ~irits, dis
ease and vampires.
TO THIS day, some
scientists believe onions
h elp keep down our
c holesterol level and the
danger of heart disease.
The yellow or white
g l o b e onions, mos t
popular in the United
States. make a fine in ·
gredient in main course
dishes, s uch as this
onion pie.
3 cups thinl:t sliced
onions I
3 tablespoons butte r
112 cu p s plain
yogurt
'" cups plain yogurt
1 2 cup heavy cream
2 eggs. beaten
1111 teaspoons salt
'" teaspoon pepper
'H teaspoon each
g round nutmeg and
ginger
9·incb p ie s h e ll .
baked
Saute onions in butler
till soft and golden. Add
cs II other ingredients to
onions after rnixing
well. Tum into pie shell
and bake in preheated
450 degree oven for 10
minutes. Reduce heat to
350 degrees and bake 3-0
minutes longer. or till
kn I fe blade inserted
com es out clean. Serves
6 Good with dry white
,wine. well chilled
For the best in gourmet
cooking. order your copy of
·· w1 Recipes" from Tom
lloqe·s Gourmet Com er
Send S2 to Gourmet Comer.
50 Rockefeller Plaza. New
York.NY 10020
'
0
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Soled s;,.
LIQUOR BUYS!
,...,,,,_.. 9 ~ Cut-Up Fryer ~~: .. 7 ' .,;:;,.·Star-Kist Tuna rr;: 't.: 89' ~acardi Rum ,.':,, :.::'999
Bottom Sirloin Steak.,..,...:r,'="" .. '258 C-t>Sanwa Noodles ":.: ~~ 19' ~Ancient Age e; 1.Z'10"
fresh Beef Brisket ~ • 5189 C-S>Riviera Ravioli ......, ·~ 59' ~avlana Vodka .. ':.. 1:1699
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PremiumGroundBeef .. .!"'~ .... 1178 ~Hunt's Tomatoes:::::~69' C-i1Colony Vin Rose 2J:.'500
Corned Beef Brisket .J:'".;:."c.-• '1" ts &>Safeway Water=~ -39' ~lue Nun l--3:::. 111 00
Pork Steak .:.=-...:. '1" ~30 Slice Bread ... ~. 1
.'.: 59'
Sliced Beet~lver •·=: • '1" ~einzHomestyleGravY~59c
Premium Franks-....-!..~1149 ~C&CCola ~ =99'
Braunsch~eiger t::rS" ... 98' ~Edwards Coffee
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FRESH PRODUCE!
White Rose Potatoes ~'. .. 29'
Green Cabbage '"t..,'"' • 12'
Red Delicious Apples I::, .45'
Golden Bananas = .29'
Italian Squash '=' .45'
Fresh Cucumbers .=. -25'
Romaine Lettuce ~-a..•100
Peanuts T""'1:"" ·~'1"
DAIRY
~
Lucerne Yogurt • .. IS:. 1109
Cheddar Cheese :E':t · . '1"
Lucerne Cottage Cheese .., '1"
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• 14417C......lh-.... W ........
-
FOOD
Salmon With spicy 1auc-e i! elegant diln.
Dish is unusual
Ajide Salmon <salmon
with spicy sauce) is a
beautiful and elegant
dish. The salmon sauce
contrasted with crisp
lettuce and vegetables is
mos t unusual and de-
li cious.
1 package enchilada
sauce mix
1 can (8 ounces>
tomato sauce
1 medium onion,
chopped
5 green onions. in·
eluding tops, chopped
1 stalk celery,
chopped
3 tablespoons olive
oil
3 cans (7~ ounces
each> salmon, drained,
bones and skin removed
Seasoned salt, to
taste
Seasoned pepper. to
taste
3 boiling potatoes,
pee led , cook ed a nd
Quartered
2 ears corn. cut in
2-mch pieces, cooked
3 hard-cooked eggs,
quartered
6 ounces Monterey
Jack cheese, c ut in
wedges
'h cup c hopped
parsley
Crisp lettuce leaves
Pitted ripe olives
Prepare enchilada
sauce mix according to
package directions us-
ing tomato sauce .
Reserve some green
onions for topping ;
saute remaining onions
and celery in olive oil.
Add salmon and pre -
pared enchilada sauce;
bring to a boil, reduce
heat and simmer, un-
covered, 30 minutes.
Season to taste. To
serve, arrange potatoes
and com on a platter,
pour salmon mixture
over and garnish with
hard-cooked eggs and
cheese wedges. Sprinltle
with parsley and green
onions. Place platter in
hot oven 5 to 10 minutes
or until cheese is melt-
ed. Serve with fresh cold
lettuce leaves and ripe
olives. Makes 8 to 10
servings.
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
Nutrition helps afflicted children
By JUNE &OTB
It's gratifying to learn
that many members of
the medical profession
have turned from drug
control of hyperactive,
autistic, and learning
disabled children .
·tnstead, attention is be-
ing given to improving
the nutritional intake of
these children to get
them in good physical
balance. Usually, they
improve.
One doctor who
specializes in the treat·
ment of exceptional
children bas been using
thls approach for many
years. He is Dr. Kenneth
Krischer of the Florida
Ins titute of Ne uro-
. Dynamics in Plantation,
Fla.
In a recent interview,
be explained, "Many of
these children come to
me suffering from food
allergies, poor diet prac-
tices, and the emotional
problems that come
with being different
from their peer group.
We detect their possible
food allergies, revise
their diet to inc lude
highly nutritive foods,
and use vitamin and
mineral s upplements to
get them into bette·r
balance." .
Sometimes it is a prob-
lem to get the parents
lo improve the qua lity of
the food for one child,
when others in the fami-
ly are conditioned to eat·
ing foods that are high
in s ugar and low in
nutrients. This kind of
resistance is easily over-
come when t he child
shows improvement in
behavior and skilJs as a
result of a supervised
diet.
Ge nerally, the first
foods that are eliminat-
ed are all those that
have artificial coloring,
artificial flavoring and
high sugar content. For
some unknown reason,
these children crave a
great deal of candy,
cookies, soda pop and
other high sugar density
foods . Many of them
show a sensitivity to a
common ingredient
such as wheat or dairy
products, and if that is
SPECIAL DIETS
so, there IA a great deal
of education necessary
to enable the parent to
provide adequate
calcium and vitamins
with substitute foods.
Kriscber recommends
a diet that is high in
natural foods, including
fresh fruit and
vegetables. Snacks
should consist of fruit
juice (diluted with plain
club soda if a fizzy drink
is desired) and cookies
that have natural
sweetening and more
t han ordinary nutritive
value .
H~re are some snacks
that are recommended
for all children who are
thoughtrul about their
health.
CARROT COOKIES
i,.; cup oil
i,.; cup honey
legg
1 cup whole wheat
flour
"-'l cup wheat germ
U.S. offering booklets
on nutrition, labeling
Fo o d labeling, ste p -b y -step
nutrition and apricots intructlons for six basic
are topics of recently pork cooking m ethods
published materials for plus complete lime and
food-wise consumers. temperature tables. lips
INFORMATION o n
reading labels on meat
and poultry products is
Included in a booklet
prepared by the U.S.
D e p a rtm ent o f
Agriculture. The free
booklet can be obtained
by writing t o th e
department a t it s
We s t e rn R egi o nal
Information Office. 630
Sansoma St., Room 702,
San Francisco, 94111.
PAMPHLETS listing
acceptable foods for
persons following a
calorie-controlled, fat
modified or sodi um
res tric ted die t are
available at Vons stores.
The pamphlet is called
· · N utri-Guide. · •
on selection, care and illustrations for
carving and wrapping
cuts for the freezer. For a
fr ee copy, se nd a
large, self-addressed ,
stamped enve lope to
Facts About Pork, De pt
CTC, Nation a I Live
Stock and Meal Board,
444 N. Michigan Ave.,
Chicago, 60611. J
60611.
* * *
F or a lo w-calorie
salad, cook one head of
Chinese cabbage (or
celery cabbage ), sliced
into one-inch lengths, in
boiling water to cover
for one minute. Drain
and toss with two table·
spoons each: red wine
shortening
i,.; cup honey
'"' cup chopped nuts
1 teaspoon cin-
namon
'I• teaspoon nutmeg
v. teaspoon sail
Combine all Ingre-
dients in a large bowl,
beat at low s peed of
electric mixer until mix-
ture is crumbly. Spread
over bottom o f a
greased 9 x 13-inch pan.
Bake in a 375-degree
oven for 25 minutes.
Cool and cut into 2 x 3-
inch bars. Makes about
16 bars.
title of a folder offerings spicy brown mustard. -"FACTS About Pork" is vinegar, soy sauce, and ~~~~~~~~~~~~;;=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~~~-..,..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.-~~~~~~~~~-
~"J'~" It'~ gonna. be a. gre~t ~~
SAVI
OR KILLOGG'S BORIY ct RU! COB11 l'LAKIS.
Here's a great opportunity to
see. hear and taste why Kellogg]
1::!2MY. & Nut Corn
Flakes '" cereal has
become so popular.
Is lt because you can
see real chunks of
peanuts right on the
flakes? Because of
the delicious
crunch you can
hear when you dig
in with your
i...,.'-0 1 ........ '-
spoon? Because of that tasty
combination ot honey. nuts and
corn? Probably all
three. Use the coupon
below to save 25¢ as
you enjoy Kellogg~
Honey & Nut Corn
Flakes. the cereal
with the flavor you
can see. hear and
taste.
----__ ._ ___ _
Ehh90'[ OOOWE
36000 l.0'9'+'13
(
A hint pf
secret spices. ~ ........ -...
The richness of
real sour cream . A pinch of oregano.
IN NEW KRAFT®
HERB and SPICE D~ING.
Tum on a new taste-a taste
that's the most exciting yet. Real
sour cream combines with an
adventure in five savory spices.
lnere's nothing quite like it! And
there's nothing like saving lS.Z on
your first adventure.
I
I : 15' 21.DOD l.1072~ 15'
-------------------------L-------------~---~
•
•• • 0 • • • 0 • ·---••••• s ¢ a e
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT /Wednegday, May 6, 1981 FOOD
Don't sabotage your reducing diet KITCHEN CHECKLIST
'
Eatlng out needn't
sabotage you r
weight-reducing diet,
says J<'yce Kn oll .
dietitian at th e
University of California,
Sao Diego, Medical
Center.
You can cut the
calories in a restaurant
Sauce
• • IS spicy
For a hearty Mexican-
style meal serve an en-
tree ol Ham and Raisins
in Spiced Sauce.
HAM AND RAISINS
IN SPICED SAUCE •
Cl Servings)
4 fresh, frozen or
canned corn tortillas
Cooking oil
2 cans (4 ounces
each) taco sauce
~ cup c:hlckeo broth
2 tablespoons red
wine
.,._ teaspoon allspice
1 cup raisins
3 cups cubed cooked
ham (about l1"i pounds
l ~ tablespoons
cornstarch
2 tablespoons cold
water
Cut tortillas into thin
strips and crisp in hot oil
in skillet. Drain on
paper towels and re-
serve.
Combine taco sauce, I chicken broth, wine and
allspice; cook over low
heat until hot. Add
raisins and ham; con-
tinue cooking until heal·
ed through. Blend corn-
s tarch Into ham mixture. ,
stir into ham mixture.
Cook until sauce
thickens . Serve im -
mediate ly, garnished
with crisp tortilla strips.
1
and accompanied by hot
cooked rice.
Stre tch .
budge t
During this time of
rising prices and tight
budgets, an entree that
is economical yet unique
a,nd delicious is indeed a
rare find. So it's little
wonder that this budget-
s tr etching recipe is
named Pork Treasure.
Pork pieces, usually
cut from the economical
1
shoulder section. offer a
wealth of valuable
nutrients, points out the
National Livestock and
Meat Board. All pork
cuts contajn high-quality
protein, B-vitamins and
minerals, including iron
and zinc. Pork's con-
tribution of thiamin is
especially high.
PORK TREASURE
2 pounds boneless
pork
t tablespoon cooking
fat
1 medium onion.
chopped
1/4 cup flour
2~ teaspoons salt
V.. teaspoon thyme
11• teaspoon. pepper
1 ari cups water
% cup dry white
wine
1 package (10
ounces) broccoli spears.
defrosted
1 package < 10
ounces) corn, defrosted
Cut pork into % to l ·
inch pieces and brown in
fat. Stir in onion. Com-
bine flour, salt, thyme
and pepper and sprinkle
over meat, stirring to
blend. Gradually add
water and cook, stirring
frequently until
thickened. Stir in wine
and cook s lowly 5
minutes.
Cut large spears of
broc coli in half
lengthwise; arrange in
rectangula r 2-quart
utility dish. Place corn
on top of broccoli. Place
meal and sauce over
ve1etables. Cover tight-
ly and bake in moderate
oven (350 degrees) for 45
minutes. Makes 8 serv-
tn11. •••
To make frosty winter
1rapes, t he Imported
Winter Grape
A11oclat.ioo suggests you
brush them with thawed
lemonadt concentrate
and place in the freezer
an hom"' or two. Sprinkle
wltb snnulated sugar
btfoN ..-Villl . •••
meal almost painlessly
if you follow her sensible
Ups on eating out:
• Order roasted.
baked. grilled or broiled
meats. Avoid .gooey
casseroles or mixed
dishes with gravies or
sauces.
• Ask for children's
portions. if possible. Jf
not. leave part or your
food . Overeating is j ust
as wasteful (and mort'
harmful) than leavlna
food on the plate.
• Choose a green salad
instead or a cream soup
when these are tht'
aliemalives.
• Ask for oil and
vineg ar dressing in
cruetti, and add them
sparingly to your green
salad . JI dressing Is
pre-mixed, ask that ll be
served on the side, and
apply it with a light
touch.
• Ask for a dlsh of .. au
jua" from the meat to
hnve with your baked
potato, tnstead of sour
cr<'am. huttor and bacon
bltll. ll s surprisingly
dcllciouf ! Also, eat only
half of that blg Idaho
spud.
• Beware of snacking
from the bread basket
while wailing for your
meal. Calories' from
c racke rs and bread
sticks add up quickly.
Sip water instead.
• Don 't take the
dessert simply because
It -comes with the meal.
Buying nev: clothes to
accommodate your
wider girth is more
expensive than declining
a high-calorie item.
• Sip club soda with a
twist of lemon instead of
a .nixed drink before
dinner.
Tips for spicing your fish
There are many waya
to season fish, beginning
with a simple sprinkUng
of paprika and advanc-
ing to more elaborate
sauces and stuffings.
Here's a basic checklist
from the test kitchens of
the American Spice
Trade Association:
For broiled fish :
sprinkle with pa rs ley
flakes, paprika, freeze-.
dried c hieves, or an
herbed butter seasoned
with di ll, thyme or
oregano and a dash of
garlic powder.
F or baked fis h : a
bread crumb and celery
stuffing flavo red with
onion pb'wder and mar·
joram or thyme.
For poached (isb :
water. o r water and
white wine. &J•iced with
minced onion, bay
l eaves, black pep.
percorns and parsle'y
flakes.
Some other herbs used
in fish cookefY are basil,
fennel, sage, rosemary
a nd the blends curry
powder. chili powder
and pouJtry'seasoning.
Whichever way you
decide to spice it. re-
member that fish re-
quires only a short cook-
ing period just until it
flakes easily with a fork.
Lower Prices OVerall
M(»ther's Day Flowers!
Choose From Many Varieties .
Corsages , Chrysanthemums , African
Violets , All Red -X Priced .
l'ROZD HILLCMaT ORANGE
JUICE
$
60, 75 OR 100 WArr
4-$
BULB PKO.
All QUANTITY •IGHTS
llUOIVED. llO IAU TQ DEAL HS
011 FOii llUAlf Ofl COMMRCIAl USE.
8UTlERMILK OR ~ .. 39 COUNTRY STYLE 5J1 FRESH ... PlllSIURY BROCCOLI BISCUITS
Cr+&• Ht Romaine Lettuce
lllfltllt• °' B! Green Onions
ao ""' • • ~ Sm irnoff Vodka
lltt Or l 19M !l! Dos Equis Beer
llftlAA llOH. WHITE CHAILIS IUlllUllOY Oii llHNfl
AlmDDl•T. WllE
IHI C.. C.Mlitll !l! Canned Milk
~ Fr0~lrcrici<li11
.... 29
... 17
9.99 I 1S4u en
• u ... •3 •Ill
~ Ma1
;g;rine 2 •boi •1 CIA&
Ht Corn Muffin Mix 4 as . .,' 1
-.. A¥11tftllflf' ~Pecan Twirls 4 1c1 •1 .. -..
30·0al. Sou ~Glad Trash Bags 2 10·Cl •s ••o
REGULAR
7·UP 21-lra.S] ITll. _..,
' •.01 Mt"" " -H! Crest Toothpaste
m_ l ... CI 11. , ... .., "'"
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IOtllY 0111 OJ lACH llfll !'UACHUlO MU II USIO Ill IHf COll,UISOlll IJ IH(IA
IOIAl IS lOWll IAlllG YOUA ll(ll!l(O llAUll IASKll AHISIU Ill'( AMO IHI OIHll
SIOAI S 1'111CU 10 llAACll IAUll AMO Wl Wiil ,., •Ou UIPll IHI OtHIAlllCI
lllCA8M.
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WEO MAY t THllU
TUES MAY 12 IHI
AS•ORTEO OR WHITE
NORTHERN BATHROOM
TISSUE
4$
ROLL PKO.
SMALL CURD OR LOW fAl
JERSEY MAID
COTIAIE
CHEESE
FAMILY PAK
COUNTRY PRIOE FRYING CHICKEN 8 g THIGHS OR
DRUMSTICKS LI .•
°"""' ~ Fabric.Softener
"' "&' H! Cheerios
MARKET I ASKET
A•ElllCAI CHEESE
FOOD SLICES
» 71<01 .., "' ..... ~Zest Soap
t·OI '1lf ~French 's Mustard
,,_ ....... .,..,.
Clll1.lr '"' flt Seasoning Mix
·~ "',..-111111111 .... .,...,,.,....c_111
Jtml 's Burritos
•
·3 11-u.$2 Olli
2 15·11 •3 ~-..
""'1 0 .1
fl! 5·;n~ Hk;d 9H ;;nn
~ Cehs~~k Roast
, .. 99
lb 1. 98
lttl t~wcl lllWNef C... ~ Boneless Family Steak • 2 .1 8
M"'" 81011 rn o sin Ht Sliced Bacon lb 1. 29
-Oill.filtl141ft;Ml~llt1 fOOHMUMOI
FiiEDOT GOLDEN 15 5 g g
CHICKEN ,,:,~. -·,
/ ·
• ------......
;_F_OOO------------------------------------------------------------------------------°'.;...;..•_ng~e~C~oa~s~t~O~A~IL~Y~P~l~LOT:.;.;.:,!'N.:..:.:ed~n~es:.:.:da~y~,~M~a~y~6~,1~9~8~1--------------..:::::
jGet ready for sun
f By MITLIKELLER
• Summertime 11 t almoat here. Are rou prepared for ts
. be.autlful bright sun-
shine that will spotll1ht
every wrinkle, enlareed
l pore , pimple ,
blackhead, patc h of
rough skin?
If you prefer win-
tertime.J.Mfter lightln1,
you may need some new
beauty ai~. Here are
some natural ones which
are so old that they are
new.
For soft, smooth skin
from head to toe, apply
Cucumber Cold Cream.
Galen (cl30-200 A.O.)
gave the formula in 155
A.D., but you can make
it in a crock-pot. It con-
tains no preservatives,
only pure ingredients.
Apply a layer over the
face ancj body; especial-
1 y heavily on fe e t .
hands, elbows.
Then, soak in a steam-
ing bubble-bath for 2.5
mi.nutea, adding hot.
water every 5 minutes.
Apply steaming towels
to the face. R e move
cream with gentle soap.
root of cucumber. USING HERBS Since you can no
tonier buy cucumber
root•, you'll have to
Spread rosemary In 1row your own -or find
layer on pie-tin. Place in a sympathetic farmer.
preheat«t oven on broil Dry the roots; crush
to bum and blacken the into a powder. Then
rosemary. Cool, cruah; ·follow Dr. Langham's
blend with an equal advice:
amount of aalt. FOa FACE WlllNKLES
Rosemary salt was re· -1571
putedly Cleopatra 'a "Mlx (2 tablespoons)
(69-30 B.C.) favorite Powder of Cucumber
dentifrice for keeping Root with ( 'h cup boil-
her white teeth gleam· Ing ) wate r . & waah
Ing. therewith (allow t o
STSAWBEB&Y-MINT dry ); & was h agalne
FACIAL with other cold water, & ~ c u p r i P e do so thrice or three
str awberries days; then anoint it (the
y, c up pee led wrinkle) with f i ne
cucumber slices Powder of the Root &
20 fresh mint leaves (heated) Hony three
Puree in a processor. d ays."
Apply to fa ce, neck, To heal pimples, apply
chest, shoulders. Allow freshly squeezed onion
to dry; rinse with cold juice every 30 minutes.
water. Apply skin toner; To shrink large pores,
body lotion; liquid from apply milky liquid from
Vitamin E capsules. heavy r ibs of lettuce.
Substitute ripe, peeled Dry natutally; rinse;
t o m at o es f o r t h e apply camphor ice.
strawberries on To prevent acne :
alternate days. every day combine 1 'h
Celebrate Mother'• Day
with a special cake. Hata
Off to Mom Cake haa
wholesome flavor of an
oldtime made-from-
scratch cake with a bat-
ter fragrant with the sun·
ny-sweet ta.ste of fresh
oranges.
Lightly rub Rosemary
Salt over n(>Se and chin
to remove blackheads;
over rough heels and
elbows.
Beautiful Ninon .de cups cold water with 14
L 'Enclos (1616-1705)· c up dried rosemary;
complained, "If God had boil S minutes. Pour into
to give woman wrinkles, heated bowl. Cover your
He might at least havtt head with a towel ;
put them on the soles of\ steam your face. Wash;
her feet." Ninon spent a a p p I y as tr i n g en t.
l i fetim e avoiding Eliminatestarches,sug-
wrinkles. One or her a r s in your diet. Eat
Hats off to Mom with cake
Follow with an icy
shower, a brisk rubdown
with a heavy towel, a
Strawberry-Mint facial.
You should see im·
mediate improvements.
Continue procedure d ai·
ly over 25 days, then 4
times a week for beach·
perfect skin.
GALEN'SCUCUMBEll
COLDCR EAM-155A.D.
l pound cucumbers.
peeled, minced
1 p ound m e lo n
(papaya ), peeled ,
minced
1 pound white lard
(butcher )
1 cup milk
'h cup minced mint
leaves or 1 teaspoon
mint extract
Si mmer ingredients,
excluding mint, slowly
in crock-pot on low, or in
double-boiler over pilot
light. for 10 ho urs
without boiling. Add
mint for last 15 minutes.
Strain thrdugh line n
cloth into bowl. Cool
overnight. Whip
thoroughly into froth.
Bottle; refrigerate.
ROSEMARY SALT
lh cup rosemary
.Salt
secrets was powdered fruit.
Moth e r 's Day
brightens up the already
beautiful month of May . . • Dessert for one and gives us a celebra-tion that is most truly
(From P•1e Cl> o u r o w n . . . f o r
cocoa and salt. Gradually blend in milk. Cook motbet'S &rJ! special -
and stir over low heat until mixture boils and and each mother is dif·
becomes very thick. Remove from heat; add ferent.
vanilla. Carefully press plastic wrap onto sur· A wonderfully visual
face and cool to room temperature. Beat egg tribute, and delicious lO
yolks in small mixer bowl; gradually add ~ cup boot, the Hats-Off-To·
sugar and beat until thick and lemon colored. M 0 m Ca ke has the C full bl d b l · · wholesome flavor of an are y en c oco ate mixtures mto egg o ldtime made -from-yolks. Beat egg whites until foamy In separate small mucer bOwl with cJean beaters; gradually scratch cake with a bat·
add 1 tablespoon sugar and beat until stiff peaks ler fragrant with the
form. Carefully blend chocolate mixture into sunny-sweet tas te of
egg whites just until blended. Pour into pre· fresh oranges. d di h l d. h · aini Made in two pans, one pare s es; p ace as es tn pan cont ng 1 an inch wider. the cakes inch hot water. Bake at 350 degrees for 60 to 65 minutes or until cake tester inserted near edge are layered to give the
com es out clean. Carefully remove collars. hat a brim. The decora-
Serve immediately with whipped cream. Two lion can be as frivolous servings. or dramatic as you like.
--------------------Orange slices malce a
SAVORY SANDWICH
Chop bits of baked
ham a nd mix with
mayonnaise, prepared
mustard and a little
pickle relish. Spread on
whole grain bread. top
with a canned pineapple
slice and grated Ched ·
dar or Swiss cheese.
Broil until heated .
* * * You can keep a bunch
of celery cris p for about
a month: wet a tea towel
with cold water, wring it
out and wrap around the
stalks. Place the bunch
In a plastic bag and
store in the vegetable
t r a y o f y o u r
refrigerator.
fine band around the
top, and fresh flowers
add a beautiful touch of
delicate color.
Orange-Strawberry
Chiffon Pie has a lighter
than air filling in a yum·
my coconut pie shell
lined with strawberries.
Fresh orange juice lends
citrus·sweet Jtoodnesa to
1raditions ••• start at your-dinner table.
IRVIIE MEAT CO.
Shop here only for quality.
because that's all we carryl
8€f.F~~
~lAMP!!tJtaf~
11!'6~.
LOCATED AT JEFFREY AND
IRVINE CENTER DRIVE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MON.·FRI. 1~7 SAT. 1()..6
SUN. 11-6 562·7988
the filling whjle grated
orange peel gives it a
zest that fairly sings.
HATS·OFF-TO-MOM
CAKE
1 package Cl8 or 19
ounces) white cake mix
Orange juice
1 tablespoon grated
orange peel
Orange Filling•
Cream Frosting••
1 orange thinly
s liced
Prepare cake mix, ac-
cording to package
directions, substituting
orange juice for the Ii·
quid called for on the
package. ~dd orange
peel. Tum 3 cups of the
batter into a greased
and floured 8-inch round
cake pan; turn remain-
ing batter into greased
and floured 9-incb cake
pan. Bake cakes in a
350-degr ee oven 30 t.o 35
minutes for the 8-inch
layer and 25 to 30
minutes for the 9-inch
layer. Cool 10 minutes;
remove· cakes from
pans. Cool completely
on wire racks . Place 9·
inch layer on serving
plate. Spread top with
-·-----=--·· '
Orange Fil Ung•; spread
'h cup Cream Frosting••
over the Orange Filling.
Place remaining layer
on top; frost tops and
s ides with remaining
Cream Frosting. Cover.
Chill at least 4 hours or
ove rnight. Arrange
orange slices on cake
j us t be fore serving.
Decorate with tiny,
fresh flowers, if desired.
YIELD: 8 to 10 serv-
ings .
•ORANGE FILLING
1,1, cup sugar
1 1h t a blespoon s
cornstarch
113 cup orange juice
2 teas poons grated
orange peel
In small saucepan
combine sugar and corn·
star ch. Stir in or alilge
juice. Bring lo a botl
over medium heal, stir·
ring constantly. Boil l
m inute. Remove from
heat ; add grated peel.
Cool. Yield: W cup.
.. CREAM FROSTING
1 cup heavy cream
y, cup aour cream
'h c up confec ·
tioners' sugar
IA teaspoon almond
extract
In large mixing bowl
combine all ingredients .
Beat at medium speed
un t il frosting is o f
spreading consistency.
about 4 minutes.
YIELD: 3 cups.
ORANGE
STRAWBERRY CHIF·
FON PIE
'h c u p s u gar ,
divided
1 e nvelope un -
flavored gelatine
~ teaspoon salt
2 eggs, separ ated
l 1h cups orange
juice
~ teaspoon grated
orange peel
14 teaspoon vanilla
extract
Toasted Coconut Pie
Shell•
1 cup sliced, fresh
strawberries
1 orange, peeled and
sectioned
Whole strawberries
In medium saucepan
combine y, cup suga r,
gelatine an(S salt. Beal
egg yolks with orange
j ui ce ; blend into
gelatine mixture. Stir
over low heat until
gelatine is completely
disso1ved, abo ut s
minutes. Remove from
heat. Stir in orange peel
and vanilla. Chill, stir·
ring occasionally. until
mixture mounds slightly
when dropped from a
spoon. Beat egg whites
until sort peaks form;
gradually add remain·
ing 1,1, cup sugar and
beat until stiff. Fold in
gelatine mixture. Line
bottom o f Toasted
Coconut Pie Shell• with
s l iced strawberries ;
spoon gelatine mixture
over berries. Chill until
fi r m . Garnis h with
orange sections a nd
whole strawberries.
•TOASTED COCONUT
PIE SHELL
14 cup butter or
mar garine
2% cups shredded
coconut
In large skillet melt
butter; stir in coconut.
Cook over low heat, stir·
ring occasionally, until
coconut is lightly toast·
ed. Press evenly on bot-
tom and sides of a but· l~ed 9-inch pie plate.
Refrigerate 30 minutes.
•ff . ~)99 CtllJeK ROAST...... ~
P.ii'Sl•COLA ....... ~ier ... ~ "'O&· UM ~I"
I
-... • -----------..... ·-c-------· ....... ..-----------· ---·----. -----_..,,. ___________ .,.·-·--............ 11111 ........... "'"
t:t• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 8. 1981
..
Freeze pork
Wben (reeling around
pork ror serving on a
bun, shape It first into
patties. then separate
each with a double
thickness of wrap and
stack before wrapping,
s uggests the National
Live Stock and Meat
Board. Or if loaves and
other dishes wi ll be
planned for the f\Jture,
packa1e in portions of
s uitable size, Frozen
ground pork should not
be seasoned befo re
freezing since the navor .
of most seasonings In·
tensiftes during freezer
storage.
Authc;>r favored dish
Picadillo 11 a colorful 1 cup red wine tborou&hly. Brin& lo a
dlsb adapted from an 1 cup r al sins. boll, reducebeatandsim·
Ernest Hemin1way plumpedlnwater mer, uncovered, 20
favonte. 1 small 1reen bell minutes, stirrln1 oc-
PICAOILLO pepper.chopped casionally. Add green
1 pound lean around Brown around beef; pepper during the.tails
beef drain fat. Add remaining minutes; cook just until v, te11poon aarllc in1redlent.s except green heated. Makes 6 serv·
powderwlthparaley p e p p e r ; b 1 e n d ings.
'4 cup minced onion
wit h art'en onion fl a It ea
1 p11ckuce Mexican
rice 11e&\aonlna mix
Pinch of leaf
orcaiuno, t•ru11hcll
Seuaoned u lt, to
lHlt.l
Stuu1oncd l>tipper , to
··-···--
~~~~~~~·~~-:==================~luslc 1.--~ .......... --~~--·nau; Pilat D ~
Fix a fiesta
Our Mexi ca n
neighbors are fiesta ex·
perts. They know how to
•h ave fun with a
minimum amount or
fuss.
Great food, good
friends and an ample
supply or margaritas or
sangria are all it lakes
Add so m e lively
mca r ia-ehi music and
you've got all the mak·
ings for a great fi esta.
Everyone e n joys
tacos, burritos. tostadas
and enchiladas -foods
that are run to eat. sim·
pie to prepare and inex·
pensive. These are all
factors to consider when
planning a party.
Serve one or all or
these favorites for your
ries ta. Begin with
guacamole dip served
with tortilla chips.
A crisp green s alad.
Me xican ri ce a nd
refri ed beans are
pe r fect accom p a n i·
m ents. Pla n to serve
buffe t s tyle a nd l et
guests assemble their
own tacos and tostadas.
Keep dessert simple
by offering whole fresh
fruit or a fruit compote.
Fiesta foods a re even
better when they' re
served on a festive ta·
ble. Use a multi-colored
se rape o r brightly
s triped cloth as a base.
Green plants accented
with cotorrur paper
flowers make a lovely
centerpiece.
Use colorful platters
or paper plates for the
food.
All of the foods can be
prepared ahead so that
you can relax and enjoy
your celebration.
lcey ideas
Here's a fruit salad
that's great any time or
the day. Toss c hunky
c ling peaches with
miniatur e
m ar-shmal lows and
shredded coconut. Hold
together with a little
m ay~n alse or s our
cream . If chunky
peaches aren't on your
supermarket s helf, sub·
stitule c ling peach
s lices. ••• Sometimes a good
dessert is needed in a
hurry. Pick up a bakery
cake on your way home.
Top it with drained
canned fruit cocktail
folded into whipped
cream. This makes a
pretty ye t. s imple
dessert. • • *
Desserts are run to
serve, and this one is
especially good. Drizzle
hot cling peach slices
(drained) with a big
spoonful of butterscotch
topping . Spoon into
desser t dis h es and
sprinkle with chopped
nuts.
* * * A colorful ice cream
topping can eastly be
made with canned fruit
cocktail. Drain the fruit
cocktail and drizzle with __ ..a spoonful of jam or jel-
ly . Spoon onto ice cream
for a cool, colorful and
refreshing dessert.
RIB VS. LOIN
What is the difference
between rib and loin
pork chops? Both are
cut from the loln section
a n d co nt ai n th e
backbone and loin eye
m uscle, explainl the Na-
tional Live Stock a nd
Meat Board. Loin chops
alao contain the ten-
derloin muscle that la
separated from ·the eye
muscle by a T-shaped
bone. Rib and loin chops
ca n b e u sed l n -
terchanaeably In most
r ecipes, however rib
chope are \lied for atuf·
lln•~ • * ..
'PINEAP.PLE AND CUNllDSIES
8andab rout turkey
(or ddck•> wtthlf..den 1UH1 ~cUMd ap-
pl_• Oii top ~•llcH of
JMlltd a 1nberry aauce.
Qian Doily 8 o.m to I 0 p.m lltnit 119htt , ... ,~
No Soi.t to O.Olen. Tiilt od only t ffec:ttYe ol H119het f l Roncho
ond H119het Udo
WI WILCOMI FOOD ITAMlt IHOltltl•I
48 01 i(nud•en
APPLE JUICE
5Lb
MAHATMA RICE
DOWNY FABRIC 1on1N1•
~IMPERIAL
~MARGARINE 1·l8.59l!T PKG. 2
• Pk Corof\et P11nh 6 PK l 2·or Con•
BA TH ROOM TISSUE .89 WELCH'S BEVERAGES 1.75
7 or Knud1en
REAL WHIPPED CREAM 1.09
.49
36 or Ind 20 Off
MRS. BUTTERWORTH SYRUP 2.29
.69 9 or Crondt
TORTILLA CHIPS 2 '1 0 1 Moruchon
INST ANT LUNCH
S.2-02. HG.·MINT ~1 LARGE ~ INCL. 30• OFF
IAVI 57' \~e .~ CREST ...
. 8 lb Come n Get It 3 7 5 fl Pk Sw"1 Ml\1
s 12.~
1.49
4.59 1.39
2 .49
DOG FOOD •
I I oz Normol Dry·01ly
PERT SHAMP001n<1 n ·off
'l or Reo UnKented
SU RE SOLID Inc. 25 Off
1.69
1.46
COCOA MIX
8 01 lleo Freeze Dr1ed Coflee
TASTER'S CHOICE
• or lleo Un.cented
SURE A/P 1.81
KESSLER 1.75-UTER
BLENDED WHISKEY . ......... 9.98
33-0Z 99c INCL 15 OFF
I 75 l1ter·Ploin Lobel
SCOTCH. 9.99 1 5 liter
FOLONARI IOAVE 3. 98
Frf'\h l<'O" for K Sobs loin 2.89 BONELESS PORK CUBES LS
Swnt & Sou• Chow Mein, ~op Su<'y
LEAN CUBES OF PQ K l8 2.89
fr,.sh Armour" Center Cut 1.89 PORK LOIN CHOPS LB
STUFFED
PORK CHOPS
FRESH DRESSING BUTTER EGGS
FRESH LOIN CUT
LB.1.79
Fruh 21•
ROMAINE LETTUCE ,_ .............. EA.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF lOIN
NEW-YORK
STRIP ... s'.~:~.~~~~-99
f1e\h Armo..,r' Ver1be\t Center Cvt
PORK LOIN ROAST
Frf'\h Armour 1 Ve11be•I Boneless
PORK LOIN ROAST ..
t8 1.79
l8 3 .29
Frp1h lh1Ck (.,1 101 8olo,~ or B80
PORK LOIN CHOPS
Armour 1 VP"b~1t lo1n Cvt
CROWN PORK ROAST
FRESH ARMOUR'S s VERIBEST
FARMER STYlE
SPARERIBS
La I .99
l8 2.89
19
LB.
Fre\h El Roncho E II Rond1 Style
PORK SAUSAGE l8 1.29 THICK SLICED BACON LB. I .09
FROZEN DEFROSTED ALASKA •'M s3a9 KING CRAB LEGS......................... LB.
RID INAltltl•
Moffow 'Jror•flll Oefro\ted 1..01 loch
ITUFRDCLAMI
SWEET
HAWAIIAN
PINEAPPLE -
c..,. .. , Ctitl f101•n 0.ho~••d St•o'-'
IWO.DFllH 18 4.99 II I .89
s,°' • 1
-Hdy lo fol,..,,.,.,.
IMOKID HALIBUT *ta 2. I 9
GOLDEN COACHELLA
RIPE RUBY RED
PAPAYAS GRAPEFRUIT
Col~ ... 1511> •o<~ •
BOTAN RICE 9
'
9 f()()CS fJF Ttt£ fJ~£LVT' ll 01 Co• w.1 P0<
• •H0'1tms.....oovceom BOILED SQUID .59
.as
.SS
8 ) ot ltt 1(1~\~on "'~ ...
SOY SAUCE 1.S9 7 01 P\9 f~oto ~,..,...,
SESAME COOKIES
1201 '°"•· 49• IOlor llo•-"'°'o WOllTOll TOFU
le or lo• !Codo -~-o
SWEET RICE FLOUR
1'"9a. Fom. Soro lM MUI CAlll ...................... 2.19 4'·01. Leo'• Sl1Ctd •na11 OF TUllKIY ........ 1.29
....... ~'!.}~ Ml<rO_ .. ,
NPC-............................ 1.29 lto'Uiil H1111het Ch11nli • •n• C•IH ...... la.2.63
24-01. Homtode Mild Cwrtd 9 IA ... K•AUT ......................... 8
1'·01. *•"°ld'1 MocorO!tl or ,. "TATOIALAD ................... .
FOOD
PfcadJUo i$ adapted
from a /avonte duh of
author Ernest Hem-
ingway.
5 or Swon1on
CHUNK WHITE CHICK EN
'12 01 Ko1he1 'H ot Polt1h
HEINZ Dill SPEARS
COMET CLIANllR
.79
1.09
l•OZ 35c INCL • OFF
leon Ooe1 Not b CPf!d 22'4o Fot
EL RANCHO GROUND BEEF te 2. I 9
El Roncho R"q 01 Hot
ITALIAN SAUSAGE l8 1.49
l8 1.49 El Roncho Pork & Seo•on1ng
BRATWURST
FOSTER FARMI
GAME HENS AVC WGT 2.5 OZ GRADE 'A'
FROZEN
DEF ROSTED
Crl•p Slicing
CUCUMBERS .
La.89C
.. ................ EA
PltlGU IH lf'NCT
7 DAYS
MAY 7 Tl4W MAY \3, ltt1
=--~-·-
I ~
..
f
/ ·
·----·-----~ ----·---._.,-·or:---------... ,!"'"_ .. , ___ ... ___ ..,p_, __ , ___ ·---·-·""'·-·-... -... -... -•• -~ .... ·--·-·'"'·--... 119 ...... 119. __ ........... "4CC.-
FOOD Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6. 1981 Cll
H if isn't cured, it isn't ham; instead, it's pork
There are smoked
hams, canned hams,
glazed hams. bone-in
and boneless ha ma .
whole hams. ham slices
and shank or bull por-
tions.
With so many choices.
it might be hard to de·
cide what kind ot ham to
purchase.
A ham is a cured hind
leg or a hog.
If it isn't cured, it isn 'l
ham; it's a leg or pork.
"Fresh" ham is an ex-
pression occasionally
used , but i'ncorrectly
describes the product.
Some people also incor·
rectly refer to pork pie·
nic shoulders as picnic
hams. These also are
cured and smoked, and
cost less per pound, but
they tend to be less
tender and contain a
larger percentage or fat
and bone than a real
ham .
CURING is actually
the addition or salt, and
usually nitrites, to pre·
serve the pink color or
the meat. Nitrites also
prevent growth of the
bacteria, Clostridium
botulinum. which causes
the d e ad ly botulis m
· poisoning when the ham
is not refrigerated.
Smoking adds a dis·
linctive old-fashioned
flavor to a cured ham
Today. m os t s moked
hams are also full y
cooked, but be sure to
read the label. If the I
ham does not say, ·· Ful-
ly Cooked." do not pre
sume that it is. Cook any
ham that is not labeled
"Fully Cooked" to an an
ternal temperature of
160 degrees. If a ham is
already cooked. it needs
to be JUSt h eated
through to 130 degrees
for serving hot.
All hams that a r e
cured with a salt brine
absorb some moisture
during curing, but all or
part or the moistur e
evaporates during the
sm oking and cooki n~
process.
I F THE HAM returns
to its original weight in
the processing. it will be
labeled "bam."
If It retains any of the
absorbed moisture, It
must be labeled "ham
with water added."
Ir the weight gain is
more than 10 percent. it
must be labeled "imita·
lion ham."
Many consumers pre-
f er the lower cost per
pound, as well as the
tenderness. moisture.
mildness and a less pro·
nounced salty flavor
that results from the re·
tained moisture. Be sure
you read the label to
know what you are buy-
ing.
Smoked hams may be
purchased whole or cul.
bone-in or boneless .
Who le hams usually
weigh between 15 and 18
pounds and yield ap-
HORS D'OEUVRE
Warm brie cheese for
just a few seconds in a
microwave oven and
serve with crispy-cold
fresh imported winter
grapes and butter
crackers.
SCHOOL SNACK
Have a bowl of fresh
imported winter grapes
in the refrigerator for
the kids to nibble on
after school . Mor e
nutritious than sugar
treats.
ZINGY GRAPES
Suprise your guests
before dinner by serving
fres h imported winter
grapes that have been
marinated for several
hours in gin. Serve it
with picks .
CONDIMENT SALAD
Cheer up a chicken
salad with fresh import·
ed grapes. Shred cooked
chicken into cente r of
bed of lettuce. Surround
with clusters or grapes,
sliced cucumbers, a lit·
tle flaked coconut and
bottled chutney, in dil·
ferent aection,a like con·
dlmenta. Serve 'fVlth
seasoned yogurt.
THIAMIN roa PEP
A• a part of a well·
balanced diet, pork con·
trlbuta many Important
vltamlna. One of the
moat ouutandlnt. ac·
cordlna to the NatJonal
L've Stock and Meat Bond, ii the B·vltamln
tbiamln. Thlamln l1
called tbe "pep "
vJt.amin lot it la needed
for a healthy nervou1
111tem. Pork la the 1,ad·
IDI source of lblamln,
~ontalnln1 three timea u much u any other
food.
proximately 20·30 large
slices in addition to
many small pieces for
ramily meals.
A butt portion usuaJly
weighs between 5 and 8
pounds. and a shank
portion weighs 7 to 10
pounds.
the butt portion, since
there is a bit more bone,
rat and skin.
The ham hock is
usually pre-cut by the
butcher in self-service
meal departments. This
means that the shank
bone has been cut a few
inches from the t!ld of
the s hank. Just i;,finove
this hock from the large
shank piece and use to
make bean dishes, a
heartY. stew or with cer·
tain cooked vegetable
greens.
Center cut slices are
very convenient for
small families or for
just one meal.
A ~-INCH SLICE
weighs about one pound
and serves three to four
people. You can see ex-
actly what you're buy·
ing and there is little
was te. ll may be the
best choice for busy
households, s ince the
slice can be quickly pan
broiled and served with
a simple glaze. pineap-
ple , canned fruit or
fresh fruit sllces.
Boneless barns ,
sometimes called buffey
buffet ham11. have had
most or the external fat
removed before being
shaped and enclosed in a
casing for processing
The small amount of
fat and uniform s ize
makes the boneless
hams ideal for slicing
for buffet ser vice. Yet,
there is just enough fat
to keep the ham juicy if
It Is baked and served
hot.
Canned ham:. are
cured but seldom
smoked.
Boneless pieces of
cured ham are trimmed
of excess fat, vacuum
sealed in cans, then fully
cooked A s mall amount or gelatin (one teas poon
or less of dry gelatin I
usually 1s added lo the
can before sealing .
yourself These JU1 ces
combine with the gel a tan to cushion the hani dur
ing shipping
The gel ii. flavorful
and nutritious and can
be used an glaze recipes
or a s a s toc k The
gelatin in included in the
net weight stated on the
label.
ham A ham that i11
served as purchased
without further cooking
yields 2 to 3 ounces more
lean meal per pound
than one that is heated,
since additional cooking
always c auses some
moisture and rat loss.
IF ONLY a portion is
needed , the shank por-
tion usually is preferred
because it is easier to
carve due to the shape
of the bones. It also sells
for less per pound than
DURING processing,
natural juices cook out
of the hams. JUSt as
when vou cook ham
When purc ha s ing
ham. plan on three to
four servings from each
pound or boneless ham
or center cut s lices; 2 to
3 servings from bone-in
Ham remains a good
('O ns umer value. lt is a
tasty meal that can be
the basis for many hear-
t y furnily meals
especially when you 're
looking for variety in
your menus.
Freshness a V~lue •• that's Ralphs
Double Coupon
Limit One Item Per Menufectu,.,.• Coupon
end Limit 3 DCM1b6e Coupone Plf C::uetomet
C::CMApon E~tlve May 1 thfu Mey 13, 1111
«••
Double Coupon
Pr...,,1 lfl•t c.oupo,, •Jong 11t1tn any on• Man1.1fKho1rer1 C.nl1-off
covpon end get double 1he 11vtn91 .. n~ 1ou pvrchate tne item
Not IO 1nc::tude ~111de, h.. 0, 0'0CMY PU'CP'l•ll COVPo,,t 0'
e-.ceec:1 tne vaJue ot 1ne •fem E"ch.1det liquor tobacco and '1u10
milk ptOduct•
Limit One Item Per Menufec:turert' Coupon and Limit 3 Double Coupone Per Cwtomer
Coupon Etfectlwe May 1 thfu M1y 13, 1111
Double Coupon
Limit One llem Per M1nul1cturerc' Coupon
and Limit 3 Double CoupoM Per Cuatomer
Coupon Ert.ctlve M•~ 1 thru Mey 13, 1111
Patti Jean
Frozen
Foster Farms or
Zacky Farms-Whole
USDA Choice
Beef Loin-Bonele••
Ralphs-Fresh
Hot or Sweet
Cornish
Game Hens
Fryer
Legs
per lb .• perlb .•
Ralphs-C hilled-100°/o Pure
Apple
Juice
l!l!tl IB-112 gal. S ctn .. •
Assorted Flavors
~ohnston's
Yogurt
•.aoz. S cup•
•
..• Western Hearth-Asst. Varieties
I f'I """" · -4· -........ Var1·ety .f · .~ ~ I ':,.
-_J ..... _. • 11/2 lb.
.t ··. • .... · ·. loaf
Duncan Hines-Asst. Flavors
Cake
Mix ,,.. ct1k• mix when you
buy 3 •nd m•H
. In offer. Detall•
•t ell R•lphl ......
11'h oz. box •
Prlc• effective Mer 7 thru M•r 13.1981
_Top Sirloin
Steak
per lb.
Value Pack
USDA
CHOICE
• I
59
Fryer Wings
Instant-Lemon Flavored
Italian
Sausage
per lb .•
79
per
lb.
..
. 59
Nestea Tea Mix 4 oz.
jar
119
Frozen-Chicken or Turkey
8oz. 29 Morton Pot Pie pkg ••
12 oz. Cans
PLAIN WRAP. Beer
Super Floral Values
for Mother's Day
Cymbldlum-Orchld
Coreagea
I" Size
Tullp Plante
l"SIH
Hybrid Llllea
I" Size
Mum Plante
l "SlzePlantc
Hydrangea
HCh 1.79 • Fr.eh Cut
Tu Ii pa
eec:h 3.99 Fr"h Cul·M~rvu•rll•
Dai1ie1
Heh 4.99 Frffh Cut
Carnation•
•ec:h 4.49 ''"hMlxed
Bouquets
HCh 5.99 Decoret9d
Violet Baskets
Ralphs the off l~ial
Supermarket of the
bunch 1.29
bunch 1.49
bunch 2.99
bunch 2.99
•ach 2.99
Los Angeles Btcantennlal
"lA 200
Ad•ertteed "9me In , .. 9d ere IM NfM pric• or loW9f lft •II etor" lewlnt• ralct• to Ofevloue wffll'• .-11,n. Pflce. or 1191 da• Pf* "'*• ,. ....... itn." etMf IMft .....,.,..., Pf~ fMJ "'Y to lftlllel price redUotton ••clualve Of ed•enlMd or PfOM•ei•Mf
• 1711 Sf._ CISTA llJA
DI & CMflll PISll • •&BCll tM-. all -1• IUCI Cl.Ba AT .....
. -
............ ~ local OOfl'IJllll*'°"' oaut ...... Of ........ locaMon. price•.
• mE. ..-lllS· 191 -aa. ..,_. lbCI 1.-. .. aa&il ... RW. _,_. •llllim.--1142 1 .... W•lf.ACI
17211111Sf .. 1ISTll CISTA llJA -M & _.. ._.. alllf
'
15471 l •cw11, IUIW1U
STm ~ 1-11 lllJ, N S..,
....
£12 Orange COast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 FOOD
µght cheesecake, sundftes seasonal delight
81BUM&ACUBON8 aervlogs, 110 calories wlne and bolling water SLIM GOURMET SUNDAES froz e n s weetened s trawberrles ; leave These U1ht desserts each. in a covered nonstick 1 cup pot cheese or strawberries or raspber· whole If small. Puree
fteaseuonaldellght. KOT BLVEBERR\' saucepan over low beat. unc reamed cottage riea frozen berries in the
ries. if desired. Makes 8
servings. 110 calories
each.
I
Flrat la a casserole SAUCE Heat to boiling. Simmer Makes approximately cheese Beat cottage cheese, blendt:r or food ;>ro-
cheesecue that's airy l pint frozen un· 1 minute. Blend starch 2,,_ cups, 10 calories per YI cup part-skim ricotta and vanilla cessor and pour over Colling all cheeaecak• 1 ~I a souffle, delicious sweetened blueberried and cold water together; tablespoon. Leftover ricotta cheese together. Set aside. fresh berries. stir until looeri -America'• mo•t
,arm or chilled, as-ls or 'h cup swet:t con· stir Into simmering sauce· cln be refrtgerat· 1 teaspoon vanilla Ir using aerosol light coated. lurunous deuert1. de·.
opped with fresh fruit co rd win e (or u n -s auce. Cook and stir un· ed a'nd reheated. Add a 1 cup whipped Ught whipped cream. spray it Assemble dessert in a caloriud. For rtdpt• and
<>r hot blueberry-wine sweetened grape juice) tit sauce simmers. little bolllnc water it it cream Into a 1 -c~p measure. glass Lowl or individual diet tips . aend a •tamped,
sauce. 1/4 cup bolling water • thickens and clears. needs thinning. 1_., cup low-fat lemon Gently fold U1e whipped glass goblets: first the ul/-addreued envelope
YOGURT SOVFFLE 1 t e a s poon cor· Spoon over warm Here's a simple cot-yogurt . cream Into the lemon cheese layer , then the and 50 cent .. lo SLIM
CHEESECAKE nstarcborpotatostarch cheesecake or use aa a tage cheese and fruit 1 pint fresh yogurt; don't overmix. fruit. and finally, the GOUR.MET CHEESE +
Crust: "4cupcoldwater dessert topping for lee combination that's strawberries Setasidt!. yogurt-cream. Garnish CAKERECIPES,P.0.Bo~
6 tables Po o n s Combine blueberries. milk or frozen yosurt. <'&lorie Ught: 10-ounce package Wash and hull fresh with a few whole ber-824,Spona,N.J.01111. cracker crumbs or .~---~~~~---~~'--~~~~~~-"-----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..;;._~-=---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--''--~~~~~~
mat.zob meal
1 teaspoon apple pie
spice or cinnamon
l \.2 tablespoons diet
margarine
Filling:
~ cup pol cheese or
low-fat cottage cheese
4 tablespoons
•ranulated fructose or
•ugar, divided
' a,, cup low-iat lemon
togurt
2 eggs, separated
l ~ teaspoons corn·
Starch or potato starch
USA. a round glass or
ceramic ovenproof bak·
Ing dish or casserole i bout 8 or 9-inches
across and 3-inches de·
ep. Spray the inside
liberally with cooking
spray.
Fork-blend crust in-
credients together. then
spread on the bottom
and partially up the
aides or the casserole.
Bake the unfilled crust
in a pre heated 350-
degree oven 10 minutes.
Remove from the oven
and lower heat to 325
degrees.
To prepare ~he rilling :
Combine pot cheese with
2 tablespoons sugar in
the blender or food pro-
cessor (using the steel
blade); blend complete-
fy smooth. Add yogurt.
egg yolks and starch.
Blend smooth.
' In an eiectric mixer
bowl , beat the egg
whites until peats form.
Add remaining 2 tables·
poons fructose or s ugar .
and beat until stiff.
Gently fold the pot
cheese mixture into the
beaten egg whites Pour
the filling into the crust.
Bake, uncovered, at
325·degrees l hour or un·
til set. Turn off the oven
heat and leavie the door
ajar . Allow the
cheesecake to cool in the
oven 1 hour.
Slice it into wedges
and serve warm or
c hilled. f ro m th e
casserole in which it
was baked. Makes eight
Fish dish · .. ·is .. Sp&Disii .. ,.
A new Mexican frozen
entree features fish
fillets In a mlld yet well
flavored red Spanish
sauce. Cod Veracruz is a
hearty single serving
ioa,.,.ounce package that
can be cooked in 25 to 30
minutes in a 375-degree
oven or microwaved in
about nine minutes. with
no defrosting needed for
either method.
It i.s a complete entree
with a tomato, onion.
green chile sauce right
on the fish fillet, ready
to cook. A sort corn
tortilla is packed un·
emeath the fish fillet
r added tex41re and
avor.
There are two other
t.texican entrees in the
frozen line. Sea Bass
"capulco. boneless sea
l>ass fillets, with a mild
creen (verdel Span1sh·
ftyle sauce generously
opped with Monterey
Jack cheese and Snap·
per La Paz, Pacific
'
napper fillets in a red
panish-style sauce with
atural Cheddar chee~e.
Otre accompaniment
ls the popular
quesadillas. cheese-
ortilla turnovers, which
an be served as an ap-
lizer or lo go along
lth the easy-to-fix fish
inner.
QUESADILLAS
1 package snack· _,1lae llour tortilla• e ounces < ~ cup>
bredded Monterey Jack
cheese
1 small can diced
lid ll'eftl chiliH
t cup oil for fryln1
Place tortlUa on a flat
udace. Place 2 table·
poons cheese acro11
ach tortllla. flreu
bee1e down and top
llb 1 to 2 teaspoon•
Iced cblllea. Fold
ortlllu ln ball, lurn
1•• under and presa
••ther d,a.ily. Heat olJ
1klllet to -detl'ffl. ,.., ........ q&*adillaa
t OH Ume UDUI brown eadt lkte. DralD oa
per towela. Sent hot.
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Daily Pilat
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1981
COMICS 04
OCC captured its second
straight baseball
CLASSI Fl ED 06 title Tuesday . See D3.
Bell hopes to ret1~rri to Kansas
~
By ROGER CARLSON
Of""' .,..,, .........
taken a beallng, alont with bis
shoulders and thighs. when he fulfilled
bis promise by rushing for more yarda
than any freshman in Big Eltbt history.
special football shoes not with the managers. 32 times m games.
Kerwin Bell, the former Edison High
football star who tore the Big El1ht up
as a freshman running back ls flndlng
out the facts of life these days -as a
collegian. you're living in a fish bowl.
Will it become a give and take sltua·
The scene exploded into a verbal ex·
change and the res ult was the team's
No. 1 back was sent away.
tion? •
Bell doesn't think so. "I haven't reai•
ly thought about that,'' sayf Bell. "I'd
like to return because of the things I've
done as a freshman. Especially. when something is hap·
pening outside or das hi ng for a
touchdown or picking up some of the
1,114 yards culminated in your first col·
lege campaign.
Th e 5·9, 190-pound sensation for
Kansas University made a stir recently
when he was dismissed from the team
after missing practice, created when be
got into an argument with an assistant
manager on lhe practice field.
"When I read about the accounts of
this in the papers in Lawrence, I felt
dumb about it," ~ell said in a telephone
interview this week.
"Something that small -it seemed
very uncalled for -on his part, and
maybe mine, too."
. What happened, according to Bell,
was that he arrived at the dressing
quarters and requested his shoes. But
his request was put off and after telling
hls ankles and toes taped, found the
buses had left for the practice field.
"I need to talk to Coach Hadl <John
Hadl, the offensive coordinator> and ex·
pect to sometime this week," says Bell.
"I 'm just going to finish out school
and see how things go. I hope to come
back here thisfaJI."
In the event the Jayhawks feel they
can do without Bell, the University of
Texas appears to be Bell's option.
··My mom and dad told me to hang in
there and it's for me to decide. Frank
<Seurer >. my roommate, has said about
the same thing. to stick in and aee how
things come up.··
Bell took teammate Frank Seurer's
car to the practice field, wearing tennis
shoes, and when be arrived, found his
Bell reveal~ -.he wears special Oak
shoulder and thigh pads, in addition to
the shoes. The special equipment is
needed to help absorb some of the
bumps and bruises an I-back sustains
during the course of a year when he is
called on for carrying the ball 38, 35 and
Reflecting on the blowup, Bell adds:
··We had an argument the previous
Saturday and l know they knew 1 bad no
other shoes to wear. it really ticked me
off. It was bad enough that I was late
coming down.
It stemmed from the unavailability of
Kerwin's special shoes, shoes designed
to protect sensitive big toes. which have
"This is nothing that can't be worked
out. But, yes. 1 suppose things could get
Kerwin Bell CSee BELL, Page DZ )
Baylor finding groove
Angels' DH is leaving April miseries behind him
By EDZJNTEL Ot .. Del.,,.......,.
April showers bring May flowers.
For Angels designated hitter Don Baylor. that
pretty much sums up how this spring has come and gone.
"It's a new month. April's out of the way,"
Baylor said Tuesday night as he gladly accepted
his first chance to appear on the Angels post-game
show.
A season-long slump that brought the former
American League MVP to an emotional low and a
batting average of .056 as recently as last Friday
has apparently wilted.
BEFORE 35,lzt FANS at Anaheim Stadium
Tuesday night, Baylor went three-for-four. drove
in three runs and smashed his third home run in as
mal)y ni ghts to give the AJ)gels a came-from·
behind 6-2 win over the New York Yankees.
Baylor, now hitting .118, believes that the
storm may have finally ended. It's time to
blossom. And with ott)ers continuing to struggle at
the plate, the Ancels can use his fertile bat.
"U I get hot, I can carry this club," Baylor, an
11.year veteran with a lifetime .267 averaee said.
"Then, others will start to contribute too, Uke they
did tonitht."
For the Angels, losers or their la.st three and
five of their last six before Tuesday. the victory
was a much·needed lift under the circumstances.
Bill Travers, returning to the mound after 11
days with tendinitis, started and threw a no-hitter.
UNFORTUNATELY, TRAVERS faced only
one batter. He walked Willie Randolph on four
pitches, none of them coming near the strike zone.
Manager J im Fregosi paid Travers a visit after
the walk and sent him into the clubhouse.
However, from the third through the seventh
inning, Jefferson retired 12 straight batters before
Graig Nettles singled.
Don Aase finished up to post bis first save of
the year with 211 innings of shut-out ball.
"I FIGURED HE < Fregosi> would call on me
first," Jefferson, who picked up his first win
against four losses said. "I'd never want to come
in cold like that again. But I love to pitch for a club
like this because you're never out of it."
Jefferson, who was a starter when the season
began but was sum moned to the bullpen after be·
ing shelled for five runs ln 1 Y.s innings aeainst
Milwaukee tn the opener of the home stand,
pitched for Toronto the last four seasons. Hls best
record there was in 197'7 when he was 9·17.
"It's been a tough adjustment going from
starting to relieving," he said. "I bad the ball run·
ning pretty well tonight, but when you don't have
your best stuff, then you've really got to pitch and
try to hit spots."
Baylor singled with the bases loaded in the
fo urth inning to tie the game, 2·2, then slngled in
another in the fifth.
Bobby Grich followed Baylor's first single
with a base bit to drive in the decisive run.
THE ANGELS SCORED a run In the sixth on
Rick Burleson's single and Brian Downing
homered in the seventh, his second or the year.
"Hitting an occasional home run Is nice, but
sometimes there are situations when a sln1le is
what's needed," Baylor said. ·''I felt very com·
fortable at the plate. Jim <Fregosi) and I have
been working on my stance, opening it up."
The three RBI gave Baylor five in his last
three games after he had driven in only two runs
in his first 18 games.
0.llY ...... ,......, •kllllnl It .... Jessee Jefferson worked 6'!'.t innings. giving up
a run in the first on a double by Dave Winfield and
another in the second on Barry Foote's home run
to left field.
His slump in April came to a head when Angel
General Manager Buzzie Bava.si was quoted in a
story as saying that Baylor was not a hitter. Lou PinieUa stares at second base umpire Bill Haller m dubeliej as Haller called PinieUa out
<See ANGELS, Page 02) on Rick Burle1on'1 tag.
Win/ ielJ, is just getting his feet wet
And there's no pressure when you make $170 an hour
It may be that when you're get·
ting paid $170 for every living
hour during the next 10 years or
your 29-year-old life, problems
are a bit easier to deal with.
That's Dave Winfield's envia·
ble posit.ion. The gifted outfielder
for the New York Yankees who
became the richest paid baseball
player ln history when be inked a
$23,000, 10-year contract during
the winter, has come to expect the
expected.
Noone told him be wouldn't be
under a lot of pressure after he
1hook hands with Yankee owner
George Steinbrenner.
JIUT WHAT Winfield couldn't
have expected was the kind of
VH'bal fire be received last
weekend in Oakland.
Tbe source, Billy Martin, is
known for his way -or lack of ·
••y-withworda. What Martin said during the
aecond iame of a double·header
hil A'• were ln the process of los·
ins was that Winfield, in effect,
wasn't worth his price in peanuts.
"Winfield's iot the 1af\est bat
I've ever seen for a IUY 6-8,"
Martin said after' the Y •nkees had
twepttbetwinbUl.
WIHJ'IELD HAD an RBI in the
ei1htb lnnlnt ot the MCOOd tame on a bloop llnlle, and Martin, ob-
Yloutly up1.t by Uie double lou,
let IOOH a vwt>al attack.
"I can't believe tbe cuy _.e\I.
~ mllUoa <•l•> for biWftf a doubM ~e t.Ut," be NJd.
"Oeor1e Steinbrenner <tbe
Y ankeee' oWMr) muat be klllnl
bit f .. tbert. From what I've
lffll, t.'1 not. tll•l SH•t of a bit~ ....
Earlhlr, with WIDftekl at bet,
II art.ID Mood CID lbe top IWip ol tbe
•u1out .napa, a towel, bldle•t·
lq he tbOllCbt all ot Wlnfteld'1
lllta wen bl.Helen. Whllelakiu bau&q pradke at
AaaJMlm 9'a411lllll tbe otW ~· Wbaftilcl r.n.c:t.ed OD II artln I
eom.-Md • IUt life ill lbe
BrQUZOOtltutfar.
~
"Yeh, I saw him (Martin)
over there Cby the dugout>." Win-
field said. "Wait'U I start hitting
the ball. Then you'll really see
blood -on the Oakland in·
fielders."
I'm up there hitting for an
average. You'll see, by the end of
the season, I'll be up there at the
top with the leaders."
• the pitches I saw ln Oakland were
questionable. If a pitcher's cute,
he can get away with it. But if it
becomes flagrant, you have to
bring it to the ump's attention."
Winfield said the comQ)ent
made by Martin ··wasno bigdeaJ.
You have to expect that from Bil·
ly. Basically, It was a lotofscuff."
WINFIELD MADE these other
observations: ON PIA YING in New York:
As he walked from the batting
cage after hilting some crisp line
drives, Winfield looked up, s miled
and said, "See how much It's
bothered me.''
Winfield says that he is a line
drive bitter, no doubt about it.
"The balls that go out <of the
ballpark> are balls that climb out.
On the difference between the
American and National League
strike rones: "I think there's a
difference but it's early to tell for
sure. I don't know 60 percent of the
pitchers in this league so I don't
know what kind of pitch I'm going
to get most of the time. Who ha.a
/,he advantage? Neither of us."
"The fans can be tough. They ex·
peel the Yankees to win. But J
think that's great. I don 't care to
ll ve there. I love California."
On the pressure to deliver: "I
don't call it pressure, I call it a dis·
traction. I've been able to deal
with it. I talk to all the writers but
there comes a time when you have
to shut it off, to go run and catch
and do what you're being paid
for." -By Ed Zln&.el
On the growing suspicion that
several pitchers are throwing
spitballs: "I'd say that some of Dav~ Winfield
Dodgers driving Lasorda to begin fast
Phillies'-stirringcome-from-behind effortputsLos Angeles down, 8-7
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -All you had to
do was loot at tbe faces of the two
manaiers after Tuesday's nitbt's
Dod1en-Philaclelphta PhiWea tame and
you knew ln.stantly who won.
'Pblllles mana1er Oallu Green had the
smut look of a IUY wboee team had Juat
demonstrated Ill clau.
Dodtera mana1er Tommy Laaorda
looted u lf be needed a do~.
The PblWee rallied for a pair of ninth·
lnnln1 runt to beat tbe Doqen, 1-7, for
their fourth 1tral1ht victory. It wu a
tame ~UPI and downs for both 1ldel. Tb•
Dod1.,.. led ear),y, w. TIM PbilllearalUld
to 10 abelld S.-2. Tiie ~ came bact·
with ""la th• elpt.la to lead 7.f.
TBS PlllLUD, llOWnD, picked up
one ra ln lbe _.,... ud dlloM two blt oea ln I.be aintb.
Lalell'U lat bMiDd bll cleM .. bud OD
UM lhlt ol Ml faee ad m~ WW4tl'I
to repoNrl' qutttloa1. It'• oalJ 11.,. and
he appeaNCI detOlate °"' U. Ima ol 1
1ame.
Someooe ftDa11y uked LMiiU MW be
felt ...........
''WUt do 1CJ:19· llllak J loot llb tlda '°"· bee&Ule I'm Jubilae.dT t l ~
"We just blew a 1ame. We Juat lost It.
That's bow I feel," Laaorda declared. He
wasn't even eatin1, a ritual after a 1ame
for Luorda.
The Phillies' ninth started with a walk to
pincb·hllter Del Unaer by Bobby Cutillo,
on TV tonight
channel 11 at 4:30
lhe 1crewball·throwln1 reliever who was
trytn1 for blJ third aave.
But Grq ,/Jroa forced l.1DMI' for the
first out. Pete RoH dr9w a walk to place
runners at ftnt and MCC>Dd.
•1&E 9CllmDT THEN LINED a dou•
bl• off tbe left fteld wall ICCll"lnc Otoll to make lt 7-T. Luorda br'OUlbt ln SWve
Howe, Wbo badD't allowed a nm ln 10 In· a.ID••°"" eiPl 1•m•. HOW9 ......-aUJ walked 0U"J Mal·
thew• loadt'1.o U.. baa•. MUftJ Tri , Wbol• •llbtb lnnlq lead· otf ~bad Nduffd tla• Dod.-'8' lead
to 1-e. Mt a HM drl•e to ~ ft.tdw K• Landreau, a11d Ro11 scored oa tbe
NGttftee Ir to ... tlM .... .
ft• ~--~ .... tM ftnt -Lanclnaua 1 1la1l• and Dul\J Bater'•
RBI double. They made lt 2-0 in the third
on triple by Landreaux and a sacrifice fiy.
The Phillies flnally reached Dod1en ·
starter Bob Welch ln the sixth, scoring
four and lmocklnt him out. Pitcher Larry
Christenson walked, Greg Gross slntled,
and Rose was hit by a pitch loading the
bases.
MIKE SCHMIDT WALKED forcint ln a
run, and Matthews unloaded a base clear·
ln1 double for a •·2 lead. The Phillie•
added another ln the seventh on an RBI
double by Roee.
Tbe Dodcera had 1one ahead in the
eithth when they kayoed Phlllle.' sun.er
Cbrl1~. Dave Lopea 1ln•led, stole
aecond and acored on Landreawc'• slnile.
Tbat. broueht in reliever Ron Reed.
Dusty Baker •!nCled Landream to t.blrd
from wbere be aeored on • puaed ball.
.ut.r 8te¥e Oarve:y atruck out. Ron Cey
d011bled borne Baker with the \)'1nJ run.
Pidro Guerrero then Wlloaded his tbArd
bome run ol tll• aeuon and IM N11•I• l9d'7-I.
WIMD It wu all onr and nlne pltchen
had tioUld, tbe PhlW•' 5puty Lile who
worked U.. ninth em.,_ed Ute winner (2·1), and CuUJlo CO·S) th• loeer.
Exploding
Celts do it
to Houston
BOSTON CAP> -After rally-
ing from a 3·1 deficit for a
drama-packed seven .:;ame vic·
tory over the Philadelphia 76en,
the Boston Celtics appeared ripe
for the taking.
And the surprising Houston
Rockets were on the verge,pf do·
ing just that -until the Celtics
exploded once again like horse
racing great Silky Sullivan down
the stretch.
After looking over their
s houlde r s, for most of 40
minutes, the Celtics charged
from behind Tuesday night for a
98·95 victory over the Rockets ln
the opener of the best-of-sevep
series for the National Baslfft.
ball Association Championship.
"Houston came out ready to
play and 1 guess we were sWl
thinking about what we did list
week," Boston veteran Chris
Ford said.
"I wasn't emotionally up for
this game because of the P~
series," forward Cedric Max-
well said.
"We were very hesitant wttb a
lot of thines we were doinf,"
backup center Rlck Robey
added.
However, Boston Coach BUI
Fitch blamed early turnovtra
and f allure to apply deal red
presaure on the Rocket. for tile
Celtics' nffd to rally fro a
14·point deficit, and t.hen I
82-87 and 88-tl in the fou
period.
"There waa a little letdo
far as the adrenalln 1oes.
don't t.b1nJI: it WU Qy bll
tor," '1tcb tald. "We Just
over tbe ball too oft
Fortunat.ty, we b~• the
and 1ot lolt\I."
Tb• Celtiia, wbo thrived
pr ... un la botlal UM
did U.. same la lt l•
toriee In a row °"' t.lae end. they klllad ..
bope1 with lh9 fut W.ak·
-
- ' -.. --.. ------.... ----·---• -----------·-----...-... ....-.-·--------·-·-· ... --·~·-·-........ ..--~---.,.._.._ .... :---~------·--·---........................ 191!§1!11115 ... -..... -... . -Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday. May 6, 1981
Wills isn't ready
• • to give up JUSl yet
From AP dispatches
SEATTLE -Seattle Mariners Ii Manager Maury Wills said Tuesday
there is no reason to panic, yet, even
though the Mariners have fallen into the cellar
in the American League West.
"I still like my team," Wills said at a meet·
ing of the Puget Sound Sports Writers and
Broadcasters.
''I won't stand up here and make excuses,"
he said. "We didn't expect to win the thing. J
figured on playing .500 baseball. There's still a
chance to do that
"We're not depressed. The sun's going to
shine. We may not s~ it here in Seattle, but it'll
be there. Nobody's depressed. Jf you were on 1&
major-league learn. and you were 5-and ·17 and
in last place, you wouldn't feel too chipper,
either "
The team actually was 6-18 after Tuesday
night's loss in the Kingdome to Milwaukee.
Wills discounted suggestions that he may
be under pressure personally
"No, no pressure at all," he said 'Tm not
going to let that happen to me. There's no need.
There's no pressure . Concern. of course. If
there was pressure. l probably wouldn't have
shown up today."
Wills drew laughter when he commented on
the possibility of a baseball strike later this
month. "I haven't even thought of this strike,"
he said. "It might be a blessing in disguise for
me Gosh. hurry up strike "
Quote of the day
"My wife said, 'Where have you been''.
and I said, 'At the ballpark.' She said,
·You're lying."' Pawtucket Red Sox
pitcher Luis Aponte, recalLing what hap·
pened when he gol home in the wake of the
2·2. 32-inning marathon between the Red
Sox and the Rochester Red Wings, the
longest game in professional baseball his-tory
Hendrick plays long ball with Braves
George Ht-ndrick and Darrell Ii Porter belled successive solo homers
with one out in the fourth inning,
powering ~l. Lou1s to a 4·1 triumph over Atlanta
behind Lary Sorenson's seven-hitter to highlight
N_ational League action Tuesday .. Elsewhere.
Pinch hiller Willie Montanez singled home War-
ren Cromartie from third base with two out in the
ninth inning to lirt Montreal to a 4.3 win over San
Diego Alan Ashby's pinch two-run double
with two out in the top of the ninth lifted Houston
past the Chicago Cubs. 4.3 . . Tom Griffin, a lasl·
minule replacement for Vida Blue, allowed four
hits in seven innings and knocked in two runs as
San Francisco built a 9·0 and withstood a seven-
run rally by New York to post a 9-7 triumph over
the Mets. Griffin, 2-2. was replaced in the eighth
by reliever Randy Moffitt. Moffitt and anoth"er re·
Ii ever. Fred Breining, were chased in the midst of
New York's big rally in the ninth before Greg Min-
ton came in to s hut the door
ROGER CARLSON
Gross perfect in OakJanc:fe victory
Wayae Grou and Dwayae Ii Murphy hit solo home runs. and Oros•
also doubled twice and 1ln1led ln a•·
for-4 ~rformaoce to lead Oakltnd and
M lke Noni• to a 6·2 wln over Detroit t.o hlghllaht
American League action Tuesday ...
Elsewhere, J obn Wa~an doubled leadlne off the
seventh Inning, went to third on Dave Cbalk's
sacrlrlce and scored on lerry Gro&e'1 sacrifice fly
to lift Kansas Clty to a 2· l de·
caslon over Boston. Earlier,
Gary AllflLIOD and Glenn Hoff.
man rlP.P.ed consecutive
doubles in the 12th inQ.ina to
help power the Red Sox to an
7-7 victory in a game s us-
pended at S-5 after 10 Innings
Monday night because of a 1
a . m . American League
curfew ... Leon lloberts
smashed a three-run homer as
Texas whipped the 'Chicago ' Grou
White Sox, 6·1 ... Rieb Dauer drove in two runs
before being forced from the game with a rib in·
jury as Baltimore edged Minnesota, 3·1 , .
Robin Yount drilled a three-run homer as
Milwaukee disposed of Seattle, 4-1 ...
Cleveland-Toronto was rained out and will be
played as part of a double-header July 19 ...
Oakland's Matt Keough, a Corona del Mar High
product, was honored as the Pitcher of the
Month for April.
Islanders sweep Rangers; gain final
Mike Bossy scored two power ~
play goals in the first period to set a '
NHL record for most goals in a re-
gular season and playoff combined as the New
York Islanders cruised past the New York Ranger~. S-2, to sweep their semifinal Stanley
Cup seners, 4·0 ... In other action, Dino Cle·
carelll scored three goals and set a NHL playoCC
rt;cord for rookies, sparking Minnesota to a 7-4
victory over Calgary in their semiCinal series.
The North Stars now own a 3· 1 lead in their series.
Wall resigns as Surf coach
Peter Wall, coach of the NASL Surf for the
past two years. resigned Tuesday. Surf Presi·
dent Bill Dawson said he expected to make a.n
announcement today about a · replacement for
Wall .. Tbe WQmen's Tennis Association has
urged BUlle Jean King to remain its president
despite her admission lo a lesbian affair with
her former secretary. In other moves Involving
King, NBC-TV announced it would retain her as
Its color commentator on Wimbledon and other
events. while E.R. Squibb & Sons Inc., disclosed
it was dropping King as a spokesperson for its
vitamins ... The Toronto Blue Jays say they
are interested in signing reliever Doa Staolloue
if he can prove to them over the next few days
that he is able to regain his form.
Television, radio
Following are the top sports events on TV tonight. Ratings are : I 1 1 excellent; 1 1 1 worth watching; 1 1 fair , 1 forget it. n 4:30 p.m .• Channef 11 I I I
DODGERS BASEBALL : Dodgers at
Philadelphia.
Announcers: Vin Scully, Ross Porter and
Jerry Doggett.
The Dodgers will sent Burt Hooton (3--0) to the
mound to oppose the Phillies' Nino e,plnosa
<1·1l . The Phillies, with a run In the eighth and two more in the ninth, earned a come-from-behind
8-7 victory over the Dodgers Tuesday.
RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Philadelphia, 4';30
p.m ., KABC (790); New York Yankees at Anoels,
7:30 p.m., KMPC (710). .
THURSDAY TV·RADIO Baseball -Dodoers at Philadelphia, 7:30
p.m., Channel 11 ; KABC (790).
Weaving some gold
-~ He's a man walking a tight rope, one that re·
aches t.o the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles
and which will consume the next three years.
Huntington Beach resident Monte Nitzkowski,
United States Olympics water polo coach, the 51·
year-old who fias put half of his life into the
fortunes of Long Beach City College, knows it's
just that and expounds on the Intricacies of putting
together a world power.
"We have to weave a cloth of gold and each
thread is important,'' says Nitzkowski, a coach
with a gift of communicating, which can't be
anything but a plus for American water polo.
The United States finished fourth at the recent
FINA cup tournament at Long Beach Slate, a
verdict reached by one-point losses t.o the Soviet
Union, lhe champion, and Cuba, along with ties to
runner-up Yugoslavia and Spain. and capped by a
rousing 12· 7 victory over Hungary.
ALSO SNUFFED BY the U.S. were the
Bulgarians and Australians, but that wasn't very
significant.
Many who witnessed the action felt that
maybe the U.S. team bas more to worry about
then just the competition, scheduling conflicts, the
loss of five stars from the 1980 juggernaut Clnclud·
lng our best hope, Gary Figueroa) and other polen·
Ual pitfalls.
International officiating leaves a lot to be de·
sired. If Switzerland could produce all the referees
it would solve the dilemma, but the Swiss don't
mess with water polo.
So, you're saddled with referees with a lot at
stake and at times, their calls appear blatantly
crude In trying to steer the verdict one way or the
other.
Itis, after a ll , a European game.
NITZKOWSKI OFFERS no crlticlsm -but he
offers a solution to potential problems.
"There's only one answer -to 1et so damn
1ood. orticlatln1 won't or can't affect you," says
Nitzkowski. "fl's a perilous road. We can do
everything n1ht and still not win. But of course.
wt can't think in those terms.
"1bc secret to improvtn1 is lo score more
n1tural ioats. the six.-on-six 1ituaUon1. In t.h.ary,
that's &<>in.a to hav~ to be done often. It was our
phtlosophy tn Munich (lb ·72 Games> and we did
it.
"ll bolts down to lhe ruor'a ed1e. We have to
become so mentallr at.ron1 we can take the •am• oot of the refet'eel bands. The Ruala.n.s did Just
tb& in t.bil lOW''IUltnlJJl."
The equad at Loni B.a~b St* lul week LI
\flrtuall)' the team which wtJf repreaeal the U.S. lD
t.be '14 Olympict, wltb a pouibJe ~·or two.
IN 'IRE WINGS t. another 80a1Je II lt bftoma
nee.....,. and N1t&lownt ,_,, tbal optlon doet
oot ccmcero him.
"Jack Graham (now at USC , formerly at
University High in Irvin·e ) is our next goalie and
he's a good one. When he comes up to the national
team it won't do anything but help us."
Other potential c.ttan.ies lie simply in whether
veterans return -most notably Figueroa and 6-7
John Siman.
Nitzkowski makes no predictions. but if you
listen between pauses. it's obvious this in an area
that would virtually double the United States'
chances for. ~old in 1984.
What lies ahead boggles the Imagination con-
sidering Ute problems for Americans in. amateur
status.
For the balance of this year there are three
more weekend training sessions. a Yugoslavian
tournament in mid-August and a possible junket to
China.
Things warm up in '82 with the qualifying
tournament for the World Championships in
February. Cuba has a lock on one spot, Ecuador
also is lockei6 in as the host of the World Cham-
pionships, leaving one other spot for a western
hemisphere entry.
Training with the Yugoslavians, the Can-Am·
Mex tournament in Hawaii, more training in Bel·
grade and Budapest before the Tunsgran Cup and
training with the Italians precede the World
Championships, where hopefully, the U.S. will
have qualified.
In '83 it's the FINA Cup in Rome, the Can-Am·
Mex and Pan-Am Games, plus training with the
Italians.
Then the big year -the Tunseran Cup,
another tournament of some sort, training and the
Olympics.
"The tournaments are for the mental aspect,"
says Nitzkowski. "The training Is for the
muscles."
FOURTH PLACE at the Loot Beact\ tourna·
menl doetn't really shake any rattles, but the
potential ts obviously pre.sent.
In l&e4 the United Statea finl1hed m.b at the
Olympics. In 1988 Nitskowski appeared and helped
1ulde a ftfth place finish at Mexico Cit y. Tben the
lg?6 team, under Nillkowsld's dJrectlon. won the
bron~e medal at Munich.
The Amer1c.ns were ranked No. 2 ln the world
ln 1979, but the boycou or t.ht Motcow Olympfn
killed blgb hopea. •
So. a rou.rt.b place finllh with a brand new
team 11 plllcant. More eo la the fact tbe world
powers haTd.b blew lb U.S. out ol Lbe waw. Tb•
Sovlett' marlin In an .. T dedltoG cam• OD a U.S.
mlatake. .And Spaln •ot ltl Ile wkb a elmu.r men·
taJ m1'take providln• th• ctitlft"eDC9.
Nltlleowlkl'1 crew la leamlaj -It would be
very SCD"Pria1nl lf anolbe.r dterr] ple.k.r buru LM
Vanb.
From Page 01
ANGELS. • •
Bavasi aaid the reason a trade
l that sent designated bitter Jason
Thompson to the Plttsburah
Pirates was made was becau&e
Bay tor couldn't play the outfield
BAYLOR, FURIOUS over the
quote, walked into Bavasi's of
fice on April 16 and unnounced
he was retiring. However, hours
later. Baylor was back in un-
iform and has remained silent
on the subject ever since.
"I've been taking extra bat-
ting practice the last few days
and it's helped," Baylor said. "I
made certain c hanges like mov·
ing my left foot more square to
the pitcher When you're hitting,
you're not aware of things like
that. But 1 was worried about
everything
"I'm not hooking the ball foul
anymore and that's good.
"Lately, we haven't felt like
we could come back after being
down.
"You know I made a state-
ment earlier today that we did·
n 't have the killer instinct
needed to win. Tonight. the guys
proved me wrong."
AMO•L NOTaS -Tonl9'1t'• UllrCI 9-.,, .....
I011r-t-Mf'f" !\ti rookl• rlllf\l·l\endw -.
Witt LMI fclne YMll• I.ti-~ Ron Goui«y
U·U !Mii Tre.un ••• o .. lo i. eumlnuel l>Y
Dr. L•wl• v.-'"'' momlne. Freoow ..io u..1
!'le II•• no lntenllon• of movl1>9 0... All• IO.i1
ERA) Into II\• •l•rll1>9 rotation to repleu
Trever• ti i..·1 un~t '° pltcll f0< aWllllt . "MM
h••n't had'''"•• u ••tarter. Mt'll llAIY In ll'le 1)9n wl'lert 1111 •VengtlU are," l"reoosl Mid • Vanll" oulfl•-J«ry ~Y utended Illa
h1ttl1>9 •trMll r,.ldey to 1• QAmea . : ••
C.ruw h In• mlt'll """'P of Ill• -n lit'l M•·tA
In hll I••••• wt• Tiit A/1991l .,. now S-10 ..
Anehelm Std..,.,, llN• 'f•••. F0<,.,.r Y-
UIClllF\9 .... YOll -·· WYI lhel 11111 llU wllen t>e Wei pleyl1>9 0..'11\9 Ille lt40s, lOt -.0., uw name Of ow oeme Ii •1111 plkl\lnQ -•
f•rue .• ,. IOt Of_ .. -·· ... 11 .. tlwtl ....... -•••• wlnnlnQ eo ._ _....,,u. -...... 0011>911
w1111 Plttlline •nd CIUltf\ta,'' tlle Hell Of "-
.. 10. ··-tlloll'l _,.., It'll l•k• 1111• chll> te 00
lllh .......
Carroll's hit
lifts U CI, 7 -4
Carson Carroll"s two-ou~ two.
run double in the eighth inning
broke a 4-4 tie and UC lrvme
held on to beat UC Santa
Barbara, 7-4 , in Southern
California Baseball Association
play Tuesday.
Carroll's double to left-center
scored catcher Ron Elliott and
s hortstop Mike Nagle, who had
singled and walked. r espec·
lively.
Jos h Randall, 7-5. who came
on in relief of starter Cas Soma
in the top of lhe eighth. pitched
the final four outs lo record the
victory. .
Carroll finished his day·s work
going 3-for-4 with a double, two
runs scorf'd and five RBI.
Nagle also had three hits while
teammates Lee Granger, Mark
Stowell and Elliott has two each.
After Carroll's double. it was
Granger's single to score Carroll
that provided the final margin of
victory.
The win improved UCI's rec·
ord to 28-19 overall. 10·11 in
SCBA play. The loss dropped
UCSB"s mark to 26-26·1 over.
5·15·1 in the SCBA.
GWC dealt loss
Fullerton scored two runs in
the top of the seventh and made
them stand up as the Hornets
beat Golden West, 2-0, in non·
conference women's commwtity
college softball action Tuesday.
In high school play, Edison
(17 · l > won a forfeited game
from Fountain Valley, 7-0, when
the Barons used an illegal
player in the fifth inning.
SPORTS BREAK I BASEBALL
Bucs, GauchoS
capt11re crowns
GWC knocks Harbor out of first
Orange Coast Colleife wrapped
up its second straight South
Coast Conference title with a
narrow 9'-8 decision at San Diego
Mel;a lo highlight community
college baseball action Tuesday
In other area play, Saddleback
clinched the Southern Di vision
of the Mission Conference with a
6·5 win at San Bernardino and
Golden Wes t remained tn a
second round tie with Rio 1 londo
in the Soulhern Cal Conference
with a 10-9 verdtcl ovtr visit·
ingLA Harbor.
Here's what happened
OCC9,SDMeaa8
Kevin Sliwinski hit a solo
homer in the second inning and
a two-run shot In the fourth, and
Ed Farrell blasted a two-run
homer in the sixth as the Pirates
overcame a 6-3 def1c1t to post
their 13th win in 17 outings 1n the
South Coast Conference
Farrell's shot, over the 402
s ign in center, ca me after San
Diego Mesa had walked
Sliwinski to open Lhe itimng
Jack Reinholtz. 1n relief of
starter Don Smith. picked up lht•
victory Mesa used five singles
and two walks to score fi ve runs
in the fourth inning and <:hast•
Smith.
The wtn upped OCC's rf'r<1rd
l o 2 9 · 6 o v e r a I I M 1· ' ., •
m eanwh1l e. dropped to 22 11
overall . 9 8 1n lh~ SC"C
Saddleback 6, S8VC 5
Ben Amaya went the d1~t:1111·f·
for the Gauchos to 1mprovf· ht~
record to 8·2 for lhe yt·a r
Amaya, in allowing <>nly lhn·t
earned runs. lowered ht !! F.RA to
l. 70 He also strurk out sevt-n.
giving him 61 lo lead the con
ference.
Rusty Evans provided the big
stick for the Gauchos as his two
out. two-run double staked Sad
dleback to a 3·1 advantage and a
le ad they would never re
Jinquish.
Mike Breslin added a pair of
insurance tallies in the top of tile
ninth with a two-run double
Bob Gray, the Gauchos' center
fielder. went 2·for·4 with lwo
runs scored and three stolen
bases ..
The win improved Sad
dleback's numbers to 14-8 in con·
ference. 19-13 overall.
GWC 10, LA Harbor 9
Third baseman Jack Settle
belled a two-out homer in the
10th inning as the Rustle rs
knocked LA Harbor out of a
first-place tie in the Southern
Cal Conference
OCC, Rustler
r ecord victorie
Kris Kroyer and Michelle
Oeyden combined for 42 points
as Orange Coast College
whipped Pasadena, 74-65, in the
first round of the women's state
community college basketball
playoffs.
In other action. Golden West
got 30 points from Timi Pitzer as
the Rus tlers edged Hancock,
87-83.
Second round action resumes
Thursday with Orange Coast
playing Fullerton at Golden
West College 16 p.m. >
Settle hit the first pitch thrown
to ham by left·hande r Roch
McCune and he sent 1t over the
390 sign in left-center.
The Rustlers actually made it
hard on themselves when they
couldn't hold leads of 6-0 and 9-6.
LA H3rbor finally parlayed
three singles, a walk and a error
into three runs in the eighth in·
ning to tie the score at nine.
Larry MacArthur, who is on a
tear. led G WC going 4-for·S, in·
eluding a tnple and three RBI.
The hits raised MacArthur's
average to .413 tn conference as
he's collected 14 hats in hi1 last
20 at bats .
Wes Collins also went 4-for·S
with two doubles, while Keith
Hall went 2-for-~ with three RBI.
Rob Meyers picked up the win
to improve his conJeren.u rec·
ord to:t-1.
From Page 01
BELL ...
worse f guess I don't know.
C'oarh 1 Don> Fambrough just
said h1• would leave it up to me."
famhrough , who wa s
r atapulted into Coach of the
Yt•:ir honorc; tn the Big Eight
following the exploits of Bell and
Sf•UrPr thf' b1gge~t one-two
rrf'-chman package of the 1980
1·r1ll1'J:t:tle scene, has stated·
The.-mr1'>t important thing is
our foothall program There can
be no one individual above this
te<1m or the program here.
K erwin Rell must prove to me
that he wants an opportunity to
get an education and play foot·
ball ror the Unive rsity of
Kansas··
Bell says he doesn't feel he
has been treated unfairly and he
1s not unhappy he chose Kansas
O\ er such national powers as
Oklahoma, Texas and USC.
Nor does he see lh1s situation
affecting the Edison lligh con·
nection with Kansas.
Edison has sent fi ve players to
Kansas in the past two years -
the others being Bill Malavasi
and two forthcoming freshman
Frank's brother, Troy, and
Kerwin's brother, Dino
And, Bell is aware of what lies
ahead when be presumably re·
turns to the fold for fall practice.
.. All the sportswriters will be
back and I'll get the same ques·
lions again. 'Whal happened in
the s rmng' ,"he says.
Small starts,
then saves OV
Orean View High moved into a
lie for third place in the Empire
League chase a nd knocked
Loara out of first in process as
the Seahawks edged the Saxons,
7-5, in prep baseball action Tues-
day.
Bill Small, who threw a no-
hilter in the first four innings for
Ocean View, had to come back
in in the seventh inning to save
il for Wayne Carlander.
Carlander. who entered the
game in the fifth inning staked
to a 3-0 lead, actually had the
margin increased to 4·0 belore
Loara touched him for two
walks, three single and a triple,
good for five runs in the bottom
of the sixth.
Baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Division
Oakland
Chicago
Texas
Angels
Minnesot.a
Kansas City
Seattle
W L .Pc&. GB
21 5 .808 -
12 9 .Sil 6h
12 9 .571 6"'i
12 14 .462 9
9 14 .391 lO "'i
6 12 .333 11
6 18 .250 14
East Division
Cleveland 10 5 .667 -
Milwaukee 13 8 .619 -
New York 14 9 .609 -
Baltimore 11 9 .550 l a,.;
Detroit 10 13 435 4
Boston 8 13 .381 5
Toronto 8 14 .364 51~
T-ra~
........ -Y-1 • .... _,, w-... 2
Cl•wlend .. T4"'911lo ''"· relftl •ot-I, I<.-Clly 7 (It lnnl,.., c~
Of MOllM'f•~ .. -.• ltel\ta City t. ._.an I
Ttu1 '· CNu90 I 0•1ll6IMI .. o.Ht,
MltwMIMU 4, IMIU. I
T ...... 19-H_ V_ IOOll«yi.Jl tt ....... IWllU•ll , ........ , .. .,.._ a.n •t Tw•M IT-..,,
Ml ......... IAnwWMI •I .. ltlfnefe ,,,_._. ... ,
ClllGUtt 19-1·11 el Tt ah (Ourwif\J<U a..-IE<W1oluY f,l) el 1(-CJIY I'--• ,..,,
DetNltlWllClol._J)utOeeil .... (1 ............ 11
Mllw .. • IL.Mcllt·tl etSeenlUl,..,.,_NI
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pc&. GB
Dodgers 16 8 .667
Cincinnati 11 10 .524 3111
Atlanta 12 12 .500 4
Houston 11 13 .458 5
San Francisco 11 15 .423 6
San Diego 8 17 .320 8 1~
East Division
St. Louis 13 4 .765
Montreal 15 6 . 714
Philadelphia 16 7 .696 -
Pittsburgh 8 8 SOO 41'2
New York 6 13 .316 8
Chicago 3 17 150 11 ''1 , ..... .,.,k_
~11-lpN•l,~I
H O<i•IOll 4, C/llc.ete I
MOftt'"' 4, Seti ~I S.11 ,.r...clwo t, Hew Yllr'IL 7
$1. L.Ollll 4, All.lint• I
P11t1tlurQll •I Clntlllnell (PCICI,. rel11I T' ....... ._
0••1•n IHoolon l •OI e t Pll1ladt1p111•
(li11PI""• Ml Howa'*' lll•yen 1-1) el (NCAIOU (~Ill C>-U, d
S.11 Dle9o IEl<lltlllttl" .. , 1-11 et _,, ...
111ml• , . .,
Piii ........ lk"''' Mii et Clnc ....... I , ..... .,.. , .. ,
kn ..... _IKO (WllllHtl 041 ., ..... Yen
llUC..,.., ).I)
AllMll* (li'IH'ry W I .. $L l.Ullb (~II M l
I ' ~
Tf\ACK I FOR THE RECORD
FV grabs
21 berths
in prellluJ
By ROG£• CARLSON
Of .. CMlty .........
Fount.in Valley Hlgh's depth
and talent-loaded Barons tuned
up for the Sunset League track
a:nd rteld champlonshipa aa ex-
pected Tuesday -dominating
the prelims at Huntlngton Beach
High.
; The Barons of Coach Bill
ThomP-'00 awept to 21 qualifying
lierths in the running events -
ted by a hurdles and sprint corps
th at threatens lo make a
shambles of the finals field.
· Friday's finals begin at 7
o'clock with the rield events,
followed by the first running
event at 7:30.
The Barons. with a perfect
dual meet record ln league play.
are gQing for a rare sweep, hav·
i.ng already logged team cham·
pions hlps at the Beach C1t1es
lnvitational and Orange County
Invitational.
"We'.,re j.ust looking for every-
one to do bis best Friday." says
Thompson. "We've had things
happen to us in the past. there
have been an awrul lot of thirds
for us (in the finals)."
The Barons haven't won a
league title on the varsity level
since 1971, playing second fiddle
to Newport Harbor and Edison
in the past.
.. However, Tuesday's ground
work for the finals indicate
nothing but laughs for the
Ba rons Friday.
The 330 low hurdles field , led
by J im Fast's 39.1 went l·2·3·4
for Fountain Valley.
Steve Southward 's 10 2
&qualed Ri ch Brim or Hunt-
ington Beach in the 100 ; and the
high hurdles FV crew went
1·3·4·5. led by Soulhward's 14 2
Other standouts Tuesday in·
eluded Edison's Jon Buller
<l : 59.3 880 and 4 · 19.8 mile):
FV's Rod Emery (49.6 4401. and
Southward was the leader in the
220, too, with a 22.8.
CdM, Unl
stage
prelim war
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of .. Delly ...... Staff
Things went about as expected
ill the Sea View League track
and field preUminaries at Irvine
High School Tuesday with the
Corona del Mar Sea Kings plac·
ing lS in the finals and Universi·
ty 13 in the seven events staged.
Shawn Gallagher paced the
Corona del Mar attack with
a meet record clocking in
the 1,600 at 4: 18.2. He also
placed second in his heat of the
800 at 1:57 5
For University, Mike Fiscus
posted a 50.5 in the 400 and Dave
Anderson had a 23.3 effort in the
200.
Costa Mesa won both ends or
the 800-meters with Victor Her·
rera posting a 1:57.3 and James
Allen a 1:57.9 in the two heats.
Estancia had little to cheer
about but Derek Pearce had the
best time in the 300 hurdle race
at 39.5.
Polly Plumer, the defending
~.tale gi rls champion in the 1,600.
pmited her running to that race,
then toyed with the opposition
'nd sprinted to the finish line
ahead of Costa Mesa's Vicki
Kelley with both posting a
5:12.1.
Plumer is suffering an injury
to the bottom of her heel. mak-
ing it painful to run. She exert.ed
j ust enough pressure to hold the
lead throughout the race, then
held off K~lley's challenge in the
stretch.
Laura Mllls. also or Unlversi·
ty. breeied to a 14.3 clocking in
the low hurdJes and will compete
la three field events Friday.
The running finaJs begin at
6! ts Ji'riday with the first run-nlng event. Field events get un-
~r wayat3.
MV runs away
from field
~ . .
"' "
AMERICAN L.EAGUI!
Angeli S, Y•DllHI 2
N•WYOlUt ......
Rft41pl>,21> l I 0 0 M\lpllry,d 4 0 I 0
Wlnflet4,H 4 0 ) I R J<kJllAI 4 0 0 0
W•t-.lb 4 0 0 0 Plfllellll,'1 2 t I 0
o.tftbl•." I 0 0 0 Nettles.a 4 0 I 0 Foote.c J I I I
Oenl,U J 0 0 0
CALI "°"MIA
Clrew, lD aw1e111,u
DanFrd,rf LY,.,.,<I Bay1or.-Down1ne,c
Clar -.11 Grl<ll,2'1
Heotoll,311
.., .. .,.
4 0 0 0
4 I 1 I
4 11 0 2100
4 0),
• t I I
•OOO 3 0 l 1 4 I 1 0
Totah l2 1 7 , To~h lJ. II •
Sc .. W'•""" How York 110 -OOl>-2 Calilol'ftia 000 JI I 10._.
OP --Y0tk 2. LOI -..... Y9"1 S,
(.lhlornl• 7 28 -Wlr91eld, Burle ... HR -
Downlnfil 1211 -IS) SB -R_I,.._
....... -If' H llall aalO Ul'MkrwooCI IL. ~I 3 S ) J I 1
Bird 1\'> 4 2 l 2 2
CHlro 11'> 1 I I 0 I 1..aAoclle I 0 0 0 0 I
Trove rt 0 0 I I I 0
Jefler'4>11 (W, 1,.1 t~ t I I 0 0
.Aen IS, I) 211> I 0 0 I 2
Trove,. pjl<lle<I 10 I O.tter In ltl
T. UMtrwoodl>itctwd to• ... u .. , In •Ill.
Balk Jolfe<lan. T -2.,.. A -U,t,.
Angel averege1
IA TT I NO
AB II H Hll 1111 ""'-
H•rl-3 I I 0 • .m
Harrh 19 J • I I .116
Burl._, 104 10 n , • .JOI
l.yM ,. II 16 s .. 277
Ford 93 IS JS • IJ .M
011 50 1 1' 0 s ltO ,., .. .. .. JS 0 10 w
Gnch /I IJ 11 J 11 .z:>t
Oownl1>9 " 1 I] 1 1 11i
HolllOft '° • 11 I 4 .toO
C•mp.1rwrt~ lt 4 J 0 J .u• a ... 1quer u • s 0 I tu , ..... .. 0 1 0 I Ill
8oylor 1' 1 • 4 I "' Patolt II I I 0 0 Otl
Toi ah ~ 107 1'S 11 ., lll
f'ITCMIMO
If' H II SO W·L lllA
A ... Aenlr(o
Son<het
ZeM
Witt
JOllH'4>11
Hauler
Tr•vers
D'Aqulsto
Tolelt
.,.., .. ' 7
ti ,, 1 ,, .. .,, .. • • '1 50 13 It 11•• 13 • 1S n\'t JJ • • Ill'> 11 10 • ,.,, ,. s
10 " • • 2lO 223 7• 100
•USf'ENDl:O GAM•
RMS.lit, .. yeh7
1-4 O.Sl ••• ...
C.-2 HS
).J J.14
J.t 3.11 , ... Ut ••• 4 61
O·I ...
0-4 11.60
IJ.14 l. ...
Bo•1on 001 010 110 00:>.-. It o l(on~'s City Oil 000 001 OOJ-7 .. t
ludo<, si.n1ev 111, 811r9m.ler (11), C-
l m .... d All..-. G•I•, WrlQ1!1 u>. Qui-·
D•rrv Cl> and Watllon w -Bur9,,,..~
(1-4) L Qul-ry 10·21. S -Clear Ill
HA K•M~Clty,Otls(I). A JS ...
11•Guu11 GAME
lleyals 2, ltM Sea I
Bo•lon 001 -OOl>-1 • 0 l(enw1 City 000 100 10•-2 • o
T..,ano. ~II ctl -ScMthll, G"'a
-Grol•. w Gura <•2>. L -T.-tO.•I IA -ll,IOI
•-s•.-teS.al
c 111u90 000 001 MO-I t 0
Hu• 000 003 Jla_. t I
8oum90.-ten, Hoyt U I, H lch y (7),
Farmer tll -Fl~. Darwin. Comer ttl
and Sunoberg W Darwin t ~JI L -
Baum941nen 11 JI HR ToQ•. "-•
111. A -IO.J"
OriMea J, Twles l
Mi-. toe 000 001-2 7 0
BolUmor• 110 000 OChc-l S 0
Erick"'" -But•r•. F•-eoan. StoclcMrd (ti. T Mar1irwr t•> and Gr-m, Oempwy
(I). w -Fl ... ~ t•JI L -Er•o-
ll·l l s -T. Martire& (l) HR -Ml-SGIA,
Ward m A -11,0...
~6,Ma"MA I
Mllwauk" 003 000 010-. I 0
SHllle 001 000 000-1 6 0
vuoovlc,n, Au(IUttlne (1), 1'1"99rs m Wld
Simmons: OIHlon, Anderton <II .. d Nor·
ron BulllnQ (I). W V..cko\llcn CM> L -
Gluton 0 •4). S Fl1199r1 141. HR
Mllwauk•, Vownt (J) A -S,°'4.
A'U , TI .. nt
Detroit 100 000 001-J • 1
Oelllond 000 111 a.t.11-t I 0
Aott"'ll, a.llty C61 and Perrl11\; Norris
""d HHlh, W Norri$ W L -Aoz..,..
(2·>1 HAS OaklanG, Muri>lly CSI. Grol&
m ,., 11,ns
NATIONAL LEAGUE
PhllllH 8, Dodger1 7
LOS ANGELES .. HIUU,.Lf'MIA
•rllM •rllM
L-•. l:D 4 I I 0 Grost, n S l 2 0
Landru,cf 5 J l 1 Row, lb '11 1 1
Ballet'. If • I 1 2 " Scllnldt, Jll J I I l
Gantey, ID 4 0 I 0 MelUlwt, 11 c 0 I l ~:·r:r." ! : : j Trlllo, 21> • I l l
SclClllCla, c • 0 0 O McMldoll, cf 4 0 I 0
Auuell, u 4 O I O -·· " • 0 0 0 Wel<h, p 2 0 0 0 *relM,< • 0 t 0
GolU, p 0 0 0 0 Cllrstntfl. p 1 I 0 O
JoM11", Pfl 1 0 0 0 AHd, p 0 0 0 0
Fors Mt, p 0 O 0 0 Lyle, 11 O O O O
51•••11. P o o o o Vnter. pti o o o o ?,~~~~.~ ~: ~: L. Smlll\,pr o o o 0
Total'S 3' 1 11 ' Totelt ll 8 • 8 ac-iw1--..
LO. A"991a 101 -OliO -I
Pllll-ll!fll• 000 00. 112 -I
Two --wlnnlnv run KOAd. OP -Los AnQeles 1. LOB -Loe A,._
S, Plllledllpll!• 1. lB -.. ker, 'frlllo, Mal·
tMws, Roliil, Cty, C•tll,., Schmidt. 38 -
Lend,....,Jt. HR -GU.Net'• m. Trillo m.
SB -R-11. "--S -Lopft. SF -
Ball•r, Trfllo. u ........
We1c11
0o1u
l'orst..-St•••rt c .. 111 .. c1..w 1
S H ... -.........
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I I 0
"t 2 I
.... 0 0
I\/) ' , \I\ 0 0
• ••• to . ' ' 0 0 0
I 0 0
0 I 0
) ' I 0 I 0
Cllrllt-1 4 I
--, , 0 LYie CW, Ml I t 0 0 0
Wel<h llftc:Me .. 4 ei.ttitn 111 IM 611.
Cllrfa--'tdlecl te 1 Mtlert i.i IM~
HIP -h Welch Cllou ). W,. -Cllll•t-,.. __ ,.._ l -2:-. A -
21,141.
Aetww•.c:..a
-·--200 ....... Chi<... --...a •• J, Nie*" D Sr!tl"' 111 .,.-..._,,.., ....., ft): It"*"*', L. Sfnllll (I} _. a1ec.-..
W -O, lmlll 114>. L -I.. tmttfl (M), A-1,on.
•
Top10 c ........ -.,
AMl&lllCAN L.aAOU8
.... "~t. 11"91.tOf\ a.it•-JO .. 10 •. '12 J1t11. S.•111o u • u as .au
Al"'°", CH<... JI 11 II '1 ,JIO Dllll, Cle,..._.., u d S U .'51
VtfYtor, Cte...e-IS ., ' ,. *
Armn, Oellltllel :tt IOS 16 J1 .JU
Cow.11-, ~t JO J7 1 M .ast
let'llUoNI, Oil(AIOO JI fl II 11 ,M
Alk•n•, 1(--City 11 ti • JI ,)44
w11111 .. d, ..._ Y0tk n a ' • .a.1 .._ .. _
Armaa, O.lttMd, t, SlntteiOft. 8•111_..,
'· Zltk, SeMue, 1, 'l'llomeo, Miiwaukee, t; OH""· ......... •: SM•ll..,, Mlnnet«a,t. .. _ ..... ,.
Arm~. 0.kl-, U; L-, A ...... , 1';
Sm•ll•y, Mlnnetota, 11; ()olfwlt, Mltw-..,
17, M11tllfly, OHIMICl, 11; G~, Te11a•, l7
NATIC>ttAL L•AOU•
0 Al • " ..a.
Colll"•· ClnckwYU 21 a 10 '' .in
Rose, """-ICllll• U ff U 3.S ·* FIVM, Hew Y0tk 20 .. t U .Jll
HellderlClfl. CN<eeo 21 11 1 • .»4
Hern-., SM Fren<lteo 24 9J 12 )3 .l5't
Rolllu, ~ JI II •• " .254 YOUft91>1ood. New Yoni 14 44 4 U .141
MOrola, CN<ogo IS O 1 1• .MC
Mlldlock, Pi~ u SJ s II .MC
Met1110WS, Pt\11-lllftt• 20 tt u n .m
Mclrl• PNia.klNe I) • I 1' ..m
a ...... ,~ ll '3 II JI ..m .._,_
Scllmldt, Ptllltclelpltla, t . D•wson. Mofl.
lntal, S, I(~, Hew v...-. S, HH>dr1<11.
St LOUI' S, J, Cl'\IJ, "°""°"• S. ..........
ConcepcfOfl, Clncl""•tl, U ; ~c,.mlft,
Phllaeletpflla, JO; o.no.y, ~ 11; .._
......... ~ 17; Mll'llh't. AllMlta, It.
College
UCt,,,,_1,UC s.Mae. .... e4
UC S.nta e.ni.rt 101 010 010 IJ 0
VC lrylne 210 100 O&a-1 u 1
Fulmer, Ma9plong Ill and Ferraro;
Soma, R.....,.11 m -Elliott. w-R-1. L Fvlmer, 21-Merk, Tho mu, Seuer,
Da•ld !UCS8), C.,roll !UCI).
SCBA 1tandlng1
Ca l Sl•l• FIHlenOfl
Loyola
L°"9 BH<h Stale
U olS....DMoo
UC lrvlrw
P1t1>percllrw_
Ce l Slele L.os Anoetet UCS.nt.a~-· T...._y'sk ....
W L
It 3
11 •
II 10
10 10
10 II
10 II
1 I•
S IS
UC Irvine 7, UC s.nt18¥bora4
Cal Stole FuUartOfl I, ""-rdlnt l
T GB
0
0 • 0 1
t I 0 •
0 I
0 II
I 13
Cal Stai• LOO ""OelH 4. l-&eecll SUI•
J
Unlver\lty of Sell DI-I, Lo.,o4a 1, ,.,..., .. -.
UC Ir.Ille OC Ce4 SIOCe Ful-
l onv IM«:ll SIM• et UC S....la Borba< a
P•-dlne 91 Gii Stole Lo. AnQelet
Unl•enlty .. Seft Ole9o •• LOyOI•
Other1core1 C..I POiy Pomon ... UC A lnrMde I
Alu" Poclfk 7, Blola•
USC U,CllStoteNortl\r~J
Community college
CW .... (Malt, SM O'-MeM 8
Or-Coast 010 214 100-• 14 O
S.n oi.oo MeM 001 S40 020-j • 1
Smltll. A-1 ...... llJ U I -DI•; Fez-.
Dreher m, ROOGer• C11. JaOm..., C9l ertd
B•k•r W Aelnll01t1. L-Oreller. HA'-
Sll•ln•-12, Ferrell !OCCI
~W...lf,LAM-rt
Lil HarDor 000 003 JlO 0-9 • l
Golden west 011 040 lOO 1-10 11 I
O•l•lorA, c:-(/), McCune <71 and
Finley, Stone, M•llOe 16), Gomei 01.
M•Ytrt (II -Schulz. W-M•Y•rl. L-
MC(11"9. 18~11ns 2 CGWCI. C4tl'\~ (Hl
H MocArtlW• (GWCI, P•Y•tt.a CH) HA~
S.111• CGWCI, 8'111ock (H).
trMt <llt,S...,...,... .. s
S-•1>9<11 00) 000 012.-. t S
Son let'.......:11,... 100 000 111-S II 0
Am•y• -1rwln, L••I• -Febelo, Merste11 et> 21-th •"'· eresllfl (SI.
Frey0er 1581
Southern C•I Conference
HCOND ROUND
GolclenW..1
AloH .......
W L Ga
7 2
LA Heroor
LCKIAnoel•C.C
S<lnl• MOfllc•
('fPntU
Ee•I LA
LASoul-
T-y'lk-
1 2 • > • s
J • l •
J • • > • 4 .
GolMll W..110, LA HllrDor 9 I10 IM lnotl
LA Soul_, 4, S....ta Monie• 2
Los ARQela CC II, East LA II
Rio H-14, CVP"'fl S
11MlnM'f's o-• Golden W!Kt M (yp,..H
Alo Hondo ot LA HtrllOr
LA Sout'-tt el Lo. A11geles CC
EHi Ul 91 Sent• Monie.•
South CoHt Confer•nce W L oa
·oranoe Coast 13 4
OrrltOI 10 6
SonDl-MotM t I
S....la AM • I
Fullertor1 t I
MI Son Antonio I 9 S
Groumont 1 16 11\IJ
clln<lled conl•ttn<• ct1om11lontNp,
T-y'Sk-
OrangcCMolt,S..DloeoMaMI
FullertOfl t , C.Wrltos S
Mt S.... AntOflloS. Gr~ J
nwMay'•O-.
Full.,_ 411 Oranot C:0.11 Mt Sen Al'llorllo at Cerritos
S.nl• ,.,.. at s.n ~Mew
MtNlon Conference
90'.ITM•llN DIVISIC*
'S<ldcll-11
Soutllwestwn
Soll Dteoo CC
P••-•r
W L Ge ...
~TH••N DIVlllON
Cltr11s
Son 8 erMf'dlno
Rl•ersldt
Chatley
II 10 ?\II
10 11 ,..., ....
u • u • -
12 10 . ,.
• clln<ll•d SOutllern OIYlllon (llom•
pl.,sl\lp. , .... ,..le_
S.ddleboc:lt •. s.... ..,,..,dlno s
C"•fley 6, S.. Ole90 CC S
Rl .. r1lcle 4, Pelomet 2
Soulh-tenl 12, Cltr111 11 ~..,. . ._.,
A l"°rslde •I Sadcll-11 Cllru1 •tP~
SoulllWMtet'll .i Cllalfey '°" DI-CC OC Son 9ar...,dlfl0
4
!rnpket.eegue
Kai.II• L.eer• OtHflYleW
LKAlemlta
Ke_.,.
Cypreu
...... It ,
II J 1 1 1 • • • • 4 t M
111 ~
• 4 .. + • 0 q :w • 0 .. • • 0 u 0 0 F 0 • .. z+ w
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. May 6. 1981 oa
Hit" kMol WNMT i..a.aeua f'lt8LIMJ
(M a.MllHltlill •• -, .... II I leuO!wor• Cl'VI, to.2. t
1•11 (Mil, 10 S, ) Grell (Ml. If t ; 4.
lettlOft CIEi. IO.I; S. 0. JetkMft tl!l,:tt.A;
(lloot 11 I, ltfm !Hll, 10 t, t _,_ CM>.
10.4; J. Soefmo (f'V), 19 J; 4 Tr..C (W), I0.4
tM -1,_.I 11. ltll'll !HI), 2U, 2. Hen"'f
(fl'V). Jl.1; lllNI 11 1. ll'le'V ll'V), t2'; t
O. Jee ...... (El. 2) 4, :a. Oroff IMI U.t ;
CllHI JI I. !ieulllw .... ll'VI, t1.I ; 2 Trw
<WI, 2U; ), Me<-(M), 21 7,
440 -(,_.. 11 2 DMl•Y (FVl, SU; l.
JIMIMI IHH), SU, a. Vela (W), JJ.00. (llNI
21 1, M. Jec•Mn Cl!>, tO,t ; 2. H•rrv Cl'Vl, ~l.J; J.Gt-.!H81,SU; CM_.Jl 1.l!mwy
Cl'VI, ff.6)2.Matlloy Ill SU.
llO -( ... I 11 t. R-(I), l:jt.J; 2.
Plecllot.a (M),~:~U; s. Morton CW). 1.,, •••
4. M-(!'VI. 2·00.1; (Met 21 I Buller
IEI, t:5'.J; 1. WOiverton !El, 2:01.S; >.AA-
cl•non C FVI, t 02 t , 4 l!lllngboe !WI.
2·01.t. Mlle -111 .. 1 II I Butler Cl!I, 4. 1'.t, J.
ErlcklClfl (FV), 4 .. I , l. PIMt (Ml, 4 at 1.
4. C•ll-•Y CNHI, 4:41.t; CMel 1) I ~
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2. Cllrb-tFV), 11.4, .. l!vollt (l'IH),
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(Ilea! ,, I. a.ylOt CIU, U.J, 2. Fall IFVI,
IS.J, l ~.-. (FVI, 1'$ J; 4, (Urcla (HI).
IS.t.
llOLH -llw•I I) I Foll CFVI, >t.1, l
Al99ln• IW) .Ot, (lie .. 21 I (lwlsl.,_.
(FV), Jt.t, l Fullr....,, tM), 40 •; J R•
preclll CWl, «l •, (llHt JI I Andr-t IFVI.
,. .•• 1 0..leY (fl'VI ,. •. J. V•n Dorw-
(H8), 40.t. Total Q""llll•rs l'o11nt•ln Volley 11,
EdllOfl 10. ~tmlMltr ~. Marina I. H..,t.
1119100\ llOecfl I. "-Jt "..-, 4 ,
S•A VllW .. 11.LIMINARla'
IM I,,,._ Hltll k-1
100 -IFl"l Mell L\fllervor <ETI, 11.S, J.
Eldrld119 (ETI, II.I; J. ,,,,_,_ CVI, IU;
•. BrlQl!I (CdM), 11.8. <Second .,..I) 1441,,.1,
(I), 11.>, l. Far90 CCdMI. 11.S; l . ~rtln
((dM), 11.6; 4. Alllo CC.Ml. 11.t .
200 -(l'lrst Mall I. Anoor'4>11 (V). JU; 2.
FIKlll !Ul, tU, l. Gonlrt (I), U .I. (S.C-
l>e•tl 1. Far(llD !CdMI U.?; 1. Herrlt Cl>,
JU tTlllrd ,_.II I Lyt>oroer (ET), 2U; 1.
Brockington Cl>, 2J 4; ). Martin ICdMI. 11.•.
400 -(Fl"t 119•1) I. l'IKu• <u 1. 50.S; 2.
Cul .. r CCMI, S1.4, 3 MHd (CdMI, SU; 4
KnowHOft (E1I • U .1. (Seconcl ll••ll I.
B•ldell (ET), 50 6; 1 HOmer CUI, St.S, 3.
M<Gull'lllHI CCdMI, SI 1, 4 Heord (ET),
~.1
100 (Fl"t lle•ll I Horr••• ((M).
1.S7.J, 2. Gallegher (COM). I S7 S; J. S Emery (U). I S1.I, 4, COIQ<llll !UI, 1:01 I
(S.Cond "90CI Alltfl ICMI, l.S7 t, J l""OM
(I), I 511. J Oeelo• CUI, 1:00 0, 4 Ande.-
CCdM), J·OO.t. '·'°° -IFlm M•ll I Goflogt>er (CclM). • 11,1 t~ rec.Md), t Ollloult (II 4 Z2.0,
l. Scott Emory <UI. 4 14.8, 4. S.tt..-lt.
111. 4 U. I !Second llffl) I Loa er,,. (CMI.
4:21.S. l ,.._.,., <UI. • 111. J McCOrtt>y
(EJI.). 4 lU· 4 CAllle ICdMI. 4 1S 0
llOHH-lFlnt Mal) I.-'-' (II, lt.O, 2.
Herbel (CAIMI. 16 I. J Smllll (bl I. l•.S, 4
Grego (CM), 17.6 IS.C-,_., I Eldl'IOQe
!Ell, IS.S, 2 l(lmball !UI. IS•. )
Klfnol>eM (COM) .... o. • lecllmen (UI, ....
)JOLH -IFlnl llHIJ I Greoo ICMI, ,, .. ,
1 HHrd (ET). .0 4, 3 KlrnOell (U), 40.1; 4
Herbel CC-I, 41.4, (Second llffll 1 Pltar<•
!Etl ), ,. S. t Allfll (CMI. 40 l . J Eld<lclee
(ET). 40 I, 4 PltlHiOI\ ((dM), 40.t .
Quallll•ro Corona del W..r, U, Unl,,.rtlty,
U. Colla Mew, El Toro, l,...,(ne I , E•i..n<la, •
SOUTH COAST "lllLIMS
(•I~ 8Hcll Hltll kllMll
100 -(f'lrsl 119•11 I. Gleed I OH). 10.7; l
F-(LH), 10.l, ) Bryant (CV), 10.J; 4.
Brown (MV), 1,0.J; S. Oe<kco (MVI, 10.J,
!Second llHll I. l(erllO (MV). 10.t. t . A
Borwn CMV), 10.\, J. Tl\orlOft ILBI, 10.t ; 4.
Hope (1.H). 10.7.
110 -!l'lr'll Mell I Fox (CVI, 22.1; l C
lrown (MV), 21.t ; 3 Nova" IOttl, 24.1, 4 Hope (Vil, 14.t. (S.C-Mllll 1 G....,
!OH), l2.t, 1 Thortofl (LB), U 7, J Bryenl
CCV), U 7; 4 A Brown CMVI, JJ.1, S.
Wllllams CVil, 24.2.
UO-IFl,..1 Mel) I Monen IVil, n .•. 1.
Moflell ll81, st.•; a. Edwardl CSC), Sl.1. •
NOYak IO•O, SJ.2. (litUftd llffl) I. -(L8), S2 t , 2. Treut (UO, !.l.t ; J. Wllll-
(LHl, $4.1; 4. S<-l•ld t MV). Sc S; S.
Cleytor (MV), 54.•.
--(1'11"11 M•O I Geyer (LB), 2 U.O, ?. J•11sen IMVI. 1 04.t . ) l'lalcller (Ott),
2.05.t; 4. ~<SCI, l :OS.I. (S.Cond-11
I 11-1 CL81, ?.Ol.1. 2. Mefflll (L81.
l OJ.t; J. 0.Y10r (MV), l OS.I; 4. ~IHI
CMVI, 2:0S 2, S. V..,..,. COH), t :tt 9.
Mii• -,,.,,., .... u I Howord (OH),
4.tl.7; 1. 01or1 (MV), 4 21 '• J. ~mb CVil,
4. H .7, 4 Slllellfl t MV), S <n.O ISe<efld
M-11 I. HOO!Jkd Ill), 4 l3 ), l Slmt ( OHi,
•·40.2, l. ~(SC), 4:.U ), 4. lclw.,f't
(MV), •·0 .7, 5. Mllte (MVI, 4 ... 0.
UOHH -(First Mell I ThorlOfl (Lii,
u .e; l """"' !LHI, 14 '· J Sllenaull (CV). 11.>, 4. T._n ILHI. 11 • (Second,,..., 1
KertlO (MVI. IS.S, ?. CMl-HI CSCI, 1•.1.
J. Klfl9S-CCVI, IU, 4 Aottenbef°9 (LH), ,.,,; s. Smllll (l..H). 17,4.
J30LH -(Fll'$1 Mllll I. Thorton CL81.
40.t ; 2. l(lngJlon (CV). 41.t . >. Norrnen
CMVI. U.O. (Second .... II I, KerhO IMV),
40.2; 1. 8rOM> (MV), 41.t; I. OWl-'ll
<SCI, 41.1. !Tlllrd llHt) I. ~IV IMVI. 41.2; 2. Tra<A (lHI, 41 I ; ), Slleneull CCV),
42 ••• LJ -(Qwa111i.n1 I. l(lc• (MV), tl-4\'t, 2.
Ve rner (MV), 20.6\11; 3. Mert•n (LHI.
20-tVt; 4 Wl-r IOHI, JO.I; S Trlnll..,.
(LHI, 1 ... 11 ..... , t. Heynlt (CV), 1 ... 4\'t; 1
Cooper CMV), It-IV.; I. M<El ........ y ICY>.
1'-0; 9. VIII ....... !SC), 1•1111t; 10, HoDMn
(DH l, l .. S\Q.
T J -cou.iui.rt> I Trlnll~ (LHI, ~.I.
Trelll tLH), O..._.,; J l(lce !MVI, 41•J; 4
Verner !MVI, 4'·lllt, S. lrown (MV), 41·1.
• Mar..., !l>41. 41.0V.. 1 Hovnl• (CV>.
40-tllt. I -on (OH), J7·10, • VlllalOv ..
!SCI. l1·J'lt, 10. 0.ylCMI IMVI. :...11, 11
Oeecllef"CMVl. .. \11
PV -(Qwallllers) TNIU.. <LHI, ""°""' CMVI, Mc-CMVI, McElllallh ((V),
0.j-CUO, G.iy IMV), Verbecll iOHI.
Carroll (MV), *-· (MVI, e.te.,,..-.v>, M<Louglllln CCVI
SP -(QuellflerSI I S•""ey CCVI. SMVt; 1. l ..... l (CV), Sl .. \11, J Wes1erlloold
t(V), •1Vt; 4 A-CMVI, 41.f\'t; S.
Hud'4>11(MV),41-3; t. HoOloll (OHi, 4S.IOI'.
1. Boet,.,.,. CCVI. 4~\11. I Sc,,,,_ ISCI,
'4·S~. 9 Fer9uHn (LH), 0 -t-; 10.
Ga"H.tfl (Miii il-~ OT -C<Mellltersl I. W.Sterlleld CCVI,
110·10\'t, 2 SwHnay (CV), U7-1Vt; J .
H11dso" (MVI, IS0-2; 4. Heryung (CV),
1'•·111'1, S. Frl<ller (LH), UO 10Vt; 4
HoblOfl COHI. tao.t; 7. Glen ..... IMV),
12'·4, I . OllerDe ln CCVI, 124°81'1; '· Scllroecler <SC>, 121 .. YI; 10. Ed CLH). llM.
Women
HA v1aw r11ai..1w Ma111H
lat,,..._ Hltll ldlMtl
100 -CFlr'll llNt) '· "· Rot•n IVlL 11.•; 2. Price ICMI, ll.U (Second-I) I. H-
mell (I), tt.7; L McK•-(CAIMI, 11.7; a.
11. It ....... (U), II.I. CTJll_. llNll 1, l(ellty
(I), tU: S. R•ll• <VI. 1),1; J J-
Cc.tMI, 11.4. tot -(Flrtl l'aetl I. ltMilf'I• IUI, ts.I; 1, MtK-le.Ml. it.r. (~ llMI) t •
Tr•mrnell (I), ~ s. Wiii...,..., (l!.M.>, n .o; ,, Clartl (ETJ, VA. (TillN .... , I.
Price (CMI, 216.71 L ltOlltem (ET), M..li I.
R ... llt tV>.at•.
400 -(Flnt ..... ) I. It-(lfTI, a.e;
J. Woll-CEA.I, tU~ J Kellefor IC41M.1,
h tl.O. ca.cw Mell '· ..,~ ICMI ... ,. 1. Wiii..,_ (Ell.), l:tU; J. LM (I), 11• ..
CTlll"9 llNtl 1. M<l'.ntn CeTI, t·• t ; t. v ...... (I), 1•01.S.
--lFl"* llNtl 1. lt.tlOY CCMI, t 1a11 J, v._... 111, !:tU: a. llU CCMI, 11&1;
4. CllerMf'I UI, 1119 ... I~ Ilea() I.
lte11tlllen CCdM), 2: 1'.4; 2. ltt\.f-ll:OMI, 2:11.J; a. ....,. CCMI, t•tt.I: 4
~t <•A.1,uu.
t ... -(P'l'1t l!Mtl t, "1-(IJI. Sitt;
J, ltMI.., (CM), S:tt.1; I, JAii• (c.MI, SI .... ;
•· ""'11llM tCMIAI f, ltJr. <~ ...U I. •• ,., ... <UI, J:f'~: I • ......,_ (OIMt,
s :H .t ; a.~ CVl, t ltl.t, 4, w
er-(CMl,•:tt.a. ~
IM.H -tl'lrtl .._, I. Mllll CUI, IU; 1. '--m • ....,. a. ...,.. can, 1M, "' ,.._ .... , tlet.l, ,._,, I~ llHtl I,
~ ••T>, 14.7; t. TWW Cl), 1U; a. 0'0-111aTl, ".A: 4. ~ lc.J, JU, OW,11"""1 c:..w ,.... ,,,,. u.--.
ty, •• c.r--... •: ., ,.,_, ,, ... ci.s.
1~8), 17,I, ~, O.O• ((YI, t1.2, i• -rlt
ILHI, 21.1 440 C~I,,_ _, I. Owt-ILll, ,..,
t C11mln CIC>. 1:01.J, J. Ta!Wler CCVI.
l:e:t.t; 4 .._.. ILH!, I OU C~ ... .....i I l ..... <CV), I 'IJl.), J Mlitllftl' IL-8),
I ti t. a. MW!~ (LH), I.OU, 4. lr-
ILll, l :&J, S Wllllemt (MV), I ff.t .
•-tflrtl lleell t, .._., !CV), J ·D.I,
1 OIJ.., IL81, 2 14.S, J. HOllf\Oa IL.HI,
J:26 S; 4 Wlifl...,, (MY). 2 •• CSK ....
llNll I. 0...t-IL81, J 11 I, 1. 1(-
(0HI, J;JU, J. Rkllard• (MYI, t •. 1, •·
W•M'9r (MVI, J SJ e.
Miia -CFll"il 119•11 I Sflott (MVI, S Ja 4,
J DlllOft IL-91, J.'7 4, >. H-.e (Lii, S.41.•;
4. Ken'*" IOHI. S ~.O, S N•CJM CCV),
t .01.S. IS..C:-neetl I le ..... ((VJ, S'fl,A,
) ...... <1.81, S:2U, J. '#1111-(LI ),
•.Ol.I; 4. Tedd (LHI. t ' 16 4, S Clleet-
CLH), •:1U. u -1 Heivn.n ca.o. 1~'°"'' 1. ,,._
IMV), I~; J. l'egr.W (Lii, U 1~, 4.
War11er CLHI, IS~llt; S. Cllupllt (MV).
·~J\4, •. !kurm (LB), '""""; 1. H••Yllfll !(VI. 14-1114, t. 9onKlll CLBI, 1..e, t. Poole
(LI0, 14oS, IOICero(MV), 14,-0\11,
SP -t. Cl-ts CSCl, 40,.s;w., 2. Norton
(MVI, ,._.Vt;~-L MlllM ICY), at.WI; 4. D.
M•tos CCVI. a.J.S, s. Weenlo ILB), J>.J; •
Wondr•lh CMV), 32•1"'1, 1. V111111et.a (CVI,
Jl_.W.; I. Armsi.._ (MV), J0--0, t. WOiie CCVI, J~1. 10. Nel_, (LH), , ... _., ll
llevos C~>. U.. ot 1. Norton CMll. i.$-611>, 2 c.._1
!SCI, ltt 1, J. _r_,, (MVI, 101.f; 4
Ween111 ILBI .......... s. Wolte ((VI,,,., .....
t . Annal.._ IMV), 92·9, 7. Kuiper (L81,
11 .. , e 0 MlllM ICVI, 11 .. ; t. Simon (l>4), n S"-, 10. Sotkeris <CV>. 11-1
Toum•ment ot Ch•mplon• (al_Y_I "'"'111_.SI ..... Heine GuntNrdt def. ROii HIQM-r, .. ,.
• l. •·a, ~rlo Menlner chi Merk Ed·
mOtllOn,~2.•-4
S.C..lt-51 ..... Frlu B...,..,l"'il -Vitti Garulaltls, M.
7-S. J-1..u11 Clerc del Jotln Flt:lgerald, ~3. 1·S. Elloc Tensc11er det. Jaime Fllkll,
M, •·•; Brien Te«ller Clet. Tom .. Koch, .. J.
'"" lalan Taroc1Y del. Eric Fromm, 4-t, 7 .. , •·I: ""'9el Glmlne1 d<ll. Gia nni Ocl-. ~· '"'; Cerlos l(lrmayr dll JOfln McEnroe, ~·7·6,(o.2
N•tlon'1 Cup
(et DwaMl•rf, Wed ~y)
HtrOICI Solomon IU s .1 Clef Corredo
Bueuulll Clt•ly), 1 s. S 1. • 4; Sandy
Mayor (U S.) dal. P a vlo Berlo
lucc l l ll•lyl, 1·•· •·•, P•ter Mc
N•m •r• (Au•lralle) def Roll Gehrln•
(WHI Gafmetlyl, M , •.J. Ull PIMer IW.•
Gafmany) def Poul McN•me• (All\lrallo),
7·S, M , lven Lendl CC1eci-1o .. klal def
Jose Hl,.-rti CSCMln). .. 1. ~•. ,...,,_
SmlCI (CLe<'-IOYUllo) def Ma,....I Or-
CS1Nln), ~I. M , Gulllermo VII• !At111~
llMI det. Pltr HjertllYlll IS-nl. ~3 • ..0,
Eduardo 8engoo• CArge,.tlnal del Klell
JOl\anl-. IS-). J-4, 1·S, •·l --s1 ... Srnt.,.__yer CU.SI Otl 8.,un1U1
Merlo c.ieu111 (Italy),'"'· .. ,, McN•mat•
IClm Werwlclt (Au•lr•ll•I del. Gehring·
Kl•u• E__.d !Wttl Garmenyl, .. 2. 1·S,
LOndl·Sm•CI ICrec~ov•kl•l del, Gellrlet
Urtl·Fet'-L..,. (Spain). M , 6·1, Vll-e ... _o (Algenl1N) del. Hjernvlll Slet ...
SlmOflH~• cs-.. 1. ~·. 6·2.
IRH ~-US., J.0, Well Garmany, I 2. Aus1rello. ?·I, llOly, O..J. Blue G,_
Cteclloslovelll•, u , ArgenllM, J.O, Sooln.
Ol, Sw-.C..ll
Perugla Open. champlonahlp
let f'onllljll, IUIYl
f lntll_SI .....
Kelhy Ho<velh leods Kalhy Aenoldl, 4-2
(poJlpoMO-1.0 r•lnl.
Perooc:t Trophy tournament
lot Cllktlnter •• ,.. ..... 1
l'lf'MllMlldSltllMl
Mar• Vinet del Jonal""" Smith, 6-1, ~l;
Tony Gr-.n d<ll. Robert Relnlnoer ... 1.
t·J. Rey-..-. Maril Cu.~3.•·•: Dev•
SchMlcler def, Roi-Stodlw, 7·S, •·2; RQrf
C ... ppell -· Jof1n Wllltetonl. M ..... J.., GunMruon def. Fronk Puncec. , .. , •·l, 7·S.
Men'• tournament
SECOND ANNUAL f'llO IMVITA TIC.AL , ......... ~
o-tlf'ftwe ..... ,. .... , ..... " ...... Meo-id def El-IM, :M, M , W , LeMI\
cret GOOd, 1·•· 4·•, .. 2. Emerson clef
FrMm.,.,M ,M
coueae
!'CAA CMAMf'TC*SMI" CUC~---•>
...... Doy """"" -l~flMI Jim Snyder CUCll al. Rkllel"d CMI_,
(Son JeM,s.t,),A-4 r9brM ICMC-_.._
1111 .. nklol
Mo.l~FlMI o .. 1d Sefbet IVC S....la Borllorel del Jim
Slall9fll (IJCll. M . H , M .
No.> SI ..... l'lMI
John Savi-IS.n JOM SI I Hf Plttet'
Feney IL""9 8e«ll St.I. M , ,_.
Mo.4Sl ...... "IMI
R-• Sflel>ord IL.onll 8eacll SI.I del. Ed
McPnerlClfl CUCll, "'· w, • ..,.
N•. s """" 1'111111 Rob Nel10n (UCll def. Grev Wllll•m~
I Fresno SI.I, '"4,6..J.
.. •.• ~"IMI
Glenn B••SSIRQIO" (Son JoM SI.I def
Oeve Nlcl\OllClfl ( L.on9 8eacll SI.I, •·4, t·I
-1 Oelllill• "IMI Sny<Mr.Sloughl CUCll def. Hen" MoraveC·
11111 Nordl Clono Beecll SI.I, $-7, ..... w .
.... lo..l•l'IMI
Roger Sllapltr6-Rou Httsler (L-llNCll
s1 l ctel L.arry &arnett-Grev was,..,. cue
S.nla B~ol, t-1, .. 1, ~ •
-)~f'IMI
O•v• S.11»1·0.Yln Scor1..-s cue SMiie
Barbu•> del. David Corl•· Tom Slocllftl
( FAl'\0 Sl.l, 7·S, ....
Hole UC lrvlne wins Ille PCAA Gllam-plonllll~ wllll ~ points L""9 Beech State
Wel we-M JJ. Olll9r'I' J (llel UC S-a
Berl>llr•, S... Jose State, 2', S. Fr-Slalle.
11; • Ulafl Slate. t ; 1. <II•> University of
>'e<lllc, Cel Stal• Fullenon, J.
High achoo! AUAUNS£f LEAGUI ....... ,._
Miile llOllf•, JOIWI G-lel, Jett Bor-.:1
( Huflllll(lllOn 8eKll), J-MY•"• .,_
Myer•, Tim Macres (Newport H•r-);
Oeen OllOfl. M'tlH Matles, Paul He n-.
Brad PlltMr, Cr-'9 N.-(EdltOlll; 1111
Houseol (MorlrWll. ...... ,._
Leo C9""1-. O•,,. euc11e11e11, Mark
Sell• (Fountain V•ll•yl; Andy Androwt
IHuntlnQIOfl &eaclll; Gory ClloW, RAfldY
H•ll•Y (~rlna>; 8C>b SnnchOll, Mar1.ln
Pa•lt-(Newpnr'I H•l'tlorl ; Kendell Sim-
mons (Edl1on); Ric herd Kosel, Brian
Kell•-(Wfttmtnsterl.
N8A D'•YOffa ~•me,..rr .... , .. , ..... .._, ,.....,..kw. lo•t.,., __ .,
~,. . ._
""''*'at '°''"'· n .......,.,.,o-
8•00t'l9t-IOll ......, ........
lotltwt.CMou•l.,
T-y,Ma;lJ
Htu•IClft .. 8o<wt, 11 (11 M<ftMl'YI
~-y.~., ..
801to111M HOUSIOfl, n Ill llO<HIOl'l'I a-.v.-..,11 loloualan et lcKIOll (ii MCe.-yl
Com1m1nlty college women
iO. CALlf'ORNIA "l..AYOl'n or-.. coe.174, ,. • .....,.. u
OllAMOa COAST l(rover JI, ltowoll Ml,
0.yMn ?I, -jrwr O, Do Aroll•I t, Torr9i J,
Mllrk It, Carroll 0, KennedY 0.
f'AtADeNA Morrow t>, Mallov n .
MCCiain I, Gltit.r '· Q\Mrles 14, LY"" o,
IC11u1 O.
H•lttllnt 0tA"91JC-t,U·1'
Tolal laul• Ot-Coast II, Pe...0.M
11, FouledOlll ,...
~W...81,M-'U ODLD•N WCJT -Gii t , KrlllorlM IJ. KrlflV
I, P•ndle-, 10, Scllleulet' 14, Pitier JO, Hall4.
HAN (;()Cl( Smol ley 2'. D•"'91er I. Coltey
t , Kertlllnt•. FHl 10, Oownerd 11,Ma'°" l'-
H•lltlmt Hancoc•.•S-.• Total lo<ill Gelden WHI U, Hancock Jt,
Fouledo.11 Holl IGWCI
NHL playoff•
SmM1"1MAL llOUNO 1..-.. s.-1
T ...... y,~IU
NV 1\1-" S, R ..... rt 2
MIM..ota 4, C..IOMY I
T-... y.~ll a
HY l•lenden7,NVRenot"l
C•l941ry J, MlnneMll.a t
SatwMr, May 2
HY lalenden S, NV R•notrs I
s-My,MayJ
Ml,,,,_. t , C•lgety 4
T-U'l''•k-MlnnelGla 7. Qlgary 4 (Mlnne.ol• leelh
Mrles. 3·11 NY 1,1..-n S, NY A ..... rs J (NY 1\1-
de" w in-'" "4) T~y'sO-
M 1 NWIGla al Col90f' y. n .... .,.,0-
C••cta•Y oc MlnnelOU, n Clf MCttury> T_.y,May12
Mlfl-• at Calgary, n (II neceuaryl
PGA 1tetlatlc1
t """°""' """' ) ) •--Drivltlt Olstaotc:• 1. Dan Pofll, 27'.4 yarcr.. 1. Biii ~.
?7S., l Frfd Co<.tple•, 21S.J. 4 Tom Punur,
114.1. s °""° Qulgley, 214.7
Ori,, ........ ~'" l'•lrwa'I' 1 C•lvln ..... la, IO'l. 1 L.arry NellOft, .7S7. > Biii AO(Jln •nCI Jacll Renner, .7 ... s TOM
i<lle. ,,,.,
0-1 ............
1 Bruce u.u.... 7t.4 2 Jollllny Mii..,,
131 ). Jim 51,._,., .n1 •· Scott W•t•lns,
711 s --...y,.716. ,., ___ ,,_,._
I Bud Allin, 2' SS l Tom w.n ..... n .S1 l.
8ern•Y T-lOn. 2' St • Alan Teple,
18 " s Gory Mct.o<d 21.71 Scer ... L.e.-rt
I Bru« Uetne. 6t.40. 2 Ray FIOyCI, ...... J. Tom IClle, M ti • J°"""Y Miiier .,,. T..,,
Watton, 70.0S -.,._ .. __ ......
I. Tom W•liOI\, .l .. J Bruce Ll•trte, .10.
J J err,y Pole, ?JI 4 Rey FIOyd, .lll. S.
8erneyT,_, m
• .... Le..,.
I lruce Llet:rke, t ?. Br..ce OouQlau ancl
Kellll Fer9ut. 1 • BobOY Wallet, Biii
ttr•tzt'1. Mllr1c HaVH, Jim srmons, Geor9t
Arc Mr -8-y Clamotn. •
~ • t . "
Women'1 eoftb•ll
COMMUNITY COLL.Gii
".--2.~w .. 10
Full•""" 000 000 1-1 C I
Golden w .. 1 ooo ooo o-o 2 >
Cftv•I--Alley. Delp and Rk llard ..
HIGMSGHOOL
• .,_ 7, ~Vall.., t Ci.1Wt)
MIR.hoCllU,N..,.,..Ha-J
Hufllll\Q!Oft 8e41Cll 800 IJO 1-1) 8 j
H .... pon H-Oil 02b 0-I t S
8«1'10ft -C-, Gr-r ano A-
38 c-
Ck-V._ J, lAoS Al-It• t
OcHn V-000 000 003-3 I 1
1.os A1am11oa -000 000-0 J t W"lle Mid S.la1ar, c;o.-dt 111\d M<Nary.
28 Wl\lta, T'lltei.rt COii. 38-Rlly ti.Al
High achool ranking•
c u •TOf',.
4-A
1. ••-; l . Al(ltlelll; > Manu; 4. G.,,,.,
'· Ar<ecllol t. Tll\lln, 1. Pecllka, I . Sontll AM; •. _., Parll. 10 S.n~ • .,..., •. ...
I. St. JoNpll (l.Alllowoodl; l WHtef11, I.
L• Habra, 4, L8 Wiison; J, Burrouglla
(Burbanlll. •· l!I Dor-. 7, ~.., Dll; 1.
SovaMO; t . so.ith Hlll1; 10, l"'tM.
Misc.
•••
. -... -...... --,. .. -~ .. ,,~~~ ,,....., , ... ..,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
TH£
t ',\MIL l'
C'IRCl'~
by 811 Keane
RIG GEORGE
.. , ...... ,, '·
by V1rg1I Partch (VI P)
"They forgot to put the lid on yo\Jr sandwich." "You ,.attn, of course, that ont of 0111 wron~."
,.,\R,.ADl'K•:
.
C) lle1 U..todl..a.•l yno)UW n
Hank Ketchum
-.:~ S-(..
., ___.
·l-.' ,, j•
• ' I I t I ' ~ ,, t I
" 'Bye, Mr. Wilson! I'm "Mama, Marmaduke wants to wash
his pet frog off..." "SURE he can smlle. Watch!" goin' home now!"
Jl'DGE PARK•:R
DON'T Ful\Gf I. J\D~fY
... WE WANT YOU AND MA6Cil AT Olil' HOME
FOR DIHNER fJAlURPA~ I
WEt L N THERE'
IT WA5 A WONDERFUL LUNCHEON
A~6EY' YOLI HAVf ~CH LOVE! Y
FRIENDo' JN THE TWO DAY!J l'VE
MEN HERE, I FEEL l.IKE A
DIFFERENT PER!>ON I
6 .\Rt'lt:l ,D
I
JTM~V~ 5·0
MOO:\ ,. l . l~l,l '\S
-·,AND A LAKE oVEP. W~lL, IF WE C,A.N'T
GoTOiHE MOUNT,AINS,
I1LL B~ING IHE
MotJNT.AINS To us!
IHE:RE , Mfl. t>oot>Lf.
43 Pop
44 Kick
1 Expectorared 45 Vie
5 Actor Rich .46 Excel
atd -48 Cloud-n1nei
9 Hit he.rd 52 Bani$hmMI
14 Gentlt 58 Logging toel
15 Tric* 57 Much the
18 Rlng'#Orm same
17 Perfumt 58 Catch
18 CIMaily 59 e..1 bldly
19 w Htnl 60 Setted
rlt\09 81 Hllr growth
20 Ate 82 AdJUtlfll
21 N ArMt 63 ConC*nlng
bird: 8-4 Ptfllln POtt
2 word• 65 Rind
~A11topart
25au. DOWN
~
H '·--$\In.
day Atltt·
38 SIMtn gue'1
1 Blulltr 42 Elpled
2 '"".,, town 44 Mom or Pop noott''
27l.lnblaNd
ft SPfllt
32 Sho,>lllk
35Af>C*lt
:M EmplOytt
37 -&ay,OR
--~ Alvtt
atAow
40l.IM~
., YclMN unit 42..,
3 Mkf 11 -45 o.c.nt
4 TMct· Prtf 27 Pass out 47 But l•t
5 Pflnl DOOi• 28 0"1's si..ter .48 F'or•I deity t--.,_.,_.,_,.._
• F«llllltt 30 GrNt Fut 49 l°"""XVl'a
7 "Thin M•n" 31 Qratll wtt.
cenint 32 ACflMOl\IOUI 50 Givt oot
I Comc>uttlon 33 Shrub OfnUt 51 ln.#9'ftt
9 VtltfM 34 AtllrOtd ~· 52 F'tctt
10 lnltflOf tmony lllm' S3 °""
'' """'"" 2 WOtdt 54 9.,,,, Pref. 12 Lttlttt 35 Hvrt $5 Com.,.net
1a AtdUC4I Pfll1 31 ltyond. Pftf. " Drop belt
by Harold Le Doux
by Jim Davis
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
IHAT1LL COST
You ANC?THEEt 0 MoNTH'S ~ENT ...
cc;caqc •. w c•+e zcc csus7c ti ... o secs a 'W
P&\Nl:TS
AH. UTILE FRENCH
COOHTRY LASS, I SEE
'{OU HAVE 6ROWN FOHD
OF MY 6ROTMER ...
PfRHAP5 'rtXJ HAVE A
SISTER AT MOME WHO Ml~ CAAE TO MEET
A 8AAVE FLVIN6 ~E ...
by Charles M. Schurz -
A COO"N? AN
Tl'HRl.F.• :•:OM
AS YOU
t<~~"ll41S
CL.INIC WI:
PEW.WITH ArfMW ,,,,.Ne' ...
WHY IS PETE THE
PAN~ANDLER
W EARING
THAT..,
GORDO
t'l'NK \' "INKER BEA:\
HE ALWAYS
DOES THAT
DURING
BASEBALL
SEASON
AUNT? A fl.AWJIMMA?
by Ernie Bushmiller
---HE TELLS PEO PLE
HE'S A PLAYER
WHOSE CONTRACT
WASN'T RENEWED
o---...-.-
0 'K:l)J.D.J..,
_.._.~·· !t
I liA6/J!K Wml ,__ ___ J /ll.CS6r
~f 1-::==:J J
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Batiuk
CX>U KNOW ... lJJlfHOUi
((¥.{ 6L.A5$Eb ...
AND WHEN 'THE L..l&HT
6TRIKE.5 fYV..I FACE JU5T
RIGHT ...
I R£ALL4 DO KIND OF I ~ ERi~ £5iRA~ •.
BRABBLE
'tOU KNOW, wttl9'1,
!»M:f1 ~~ I l&loN0£R WtN
fltt "' cou.t~. 1 NA~. ~A1' AM I OOIM& It~?
°"· t 1'1ltMK 'fl(A'f '~
No«MAL ... 'fl(& SA~E.
~~ftOH~ RUN '{'"~
~'4 MINO .
FOR BETTER OR t'OR •o Kii
HOL.Y COW, ELL'/, 1fiERE1S NOW WHAT 00 You
A OOUPLE OF WOMEN $0\'POSE ~LO MAKE. A
WRES1\.ERS CDlRE.Ck WMEN
~TV.} . WRITT"0FIGHT L\KETHRT?~
' r
l !
by Kevin Fagan
"' racr. 1 •'ffM .,.°'._ ~1' '4WR& ~Nb ~W.!
\ . .\
~--~~~------~----~~~~~~~~~---~~~~-~~~~~~~~--.....-..-.1•----------
I-
I
SUPPRESSOR -. Immune defect
cancer link?
ATLANTA (AP> -Cancer t>atie ni. -and
even some healthy people -bave something ln
their blood that blunts the body's natural defense
acainst tumor cells. researchers have said.
Scientists at the Untve:rstty of Mlc bJgan have
acovered a "suppressor factor" that hinders two
types of cells in the body's immune system from
attacking and destroyln1 t umor cells.
The ln:unune syatem t. the body'• lntemal de·
tense aeain.st infection. Tbere is growing evidence
lt ls lnvolved in cancer defense u w e ll
Or. SlanJey A. Schwarts, a pediatrician at the
Ann Arbor, Mich., school, said the suppressor fac·
tor w as found in s mall quantities in the blood of
most people . But levels were two to three times
hither in cancer patients and in a few h ealthy
olunteers.
SCHWARTZ DESCKIBED the research re-
cently t o the convention of the Federation of
American Societies for Experimental Biology
bere.
Some 10,000 scientists attended the six·day
meeting. Sponsors say it was the largest scientific
meeting in the world.
Schwartz said the s uppressor factor may help
explain the ''vicious circle" suffered by some
cancer p atients, in which the a bility of the immune
system to resist the disease actually d ecreases as
the si%e of the tumor inc r eases.
' IN A SERIES OF experim ents, Dr. Madha"'.an P.N. Nair and Schwam found the s uppteSJor fac-
tol' in 11at1ents with canoen of the colon, tectum,
large intestine, small i ntestine, bladder and lung.
T be scien tists added a l>'lrified extract of blood
to an artificial culture in which cance r cells were
erowing along with two immune system cells -
"natural killer" cells th at attack tum o rs without
need o f antibodies, and "antibody-dependent"
killer ce)ls which rely on antibodies to r ecognize
the tumor.
Blood fro m healthy people inhibited tumor cell
killing about 20 percent, the scientists found. But
b lood from cancer patients c ut it by 40 percent, on
average, and as much as 60 percent in some cases.
THE GREATEST INHIBITION was from in-
testinal and bladder cancer patients, the ~cienlists
1 said. Lung c ancer patients had the least.
T he two scientists theorize ttiat the s uppressor
factor may be a natural means of putting the
bra k es on the killer cells, Schwartz said. "Un-
bridled killing m echanisms, if they go astray,
would become pathologic •n themselves." he said .
But the scientists do n ot know w h y cancer pa-
tients -and even some healthy people -have
more of the factor, Schwartz said. It may be that
the tumor induces the factor somehow. Or it may
t>e that people with high levels of the factor are
more likely to get tumors .
The scientists may try to follow people with
h igh levels of the factor to see if they have an
added ris k o( cancer. he said.
I
~ankruptcies
I increasing
I By The A 11oda&ed Prus
The bankruptcy business ts booming and
I creditors are complaining.
The recession Is partly to b lame for the grow-
in g number of people who are going broke. B ut
lenders s a y a revision in the bankruptcy law -
and advertising by some lawyers -is equally
responsible.
The c hange took effect a little m ore than a
year ago. In gen eral, the new law allows debtors to
.keep more of their property when they file for
bankruptcy. It also makes it easier to wipe out
your debts witbout actually going banknapt or pay·
ing back all the money you owe.
THE NATIONAL C ONSUMER FINANCE As ·
sociatioo, which represents financ e companies.
l\as started a campaign against the revised code.
The group is public izing examples of people who
abuse the l aw. lt is warning that lenders are going
to be much more car eful with their money.
1 1
"The c urrent abuses of bankruplc)' must be
stopped," says E .C.A . Forsberg, the c hairman of
tbe board of the association , in an article In
"Credit,'' the g r oup's magazine.
F orsberg cites the
case or an unnamed cou-
ple with a aross annual
In come of $78,000 who, he
says, eliminated $22,000
in debts by Ciling for
tOS ANALYSIS
• •
I bankruptcy "when alternatives were possible for
them -alternatives that wogld have allowed t h em
to meet their credit responsibilities."
H e also writes of what he c alls ·•a rash of
lawyer advertisi.oe offerin1 bankruptcy counsel."
Forsberg adda: ''Muc h of this advert.lslng is mere·
ty an offering of service. But ls it proper for a
lawyer to advertise that aoing bankrupt 'Will not
harm your c redit?' It'• happening."
PVBLIC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE ·
•
PtJBUC NOTICE
·~---~------~ ITATa•WTOfl At.A•OO.Mllft
OtlVHff
PICTIT10UI IWll•atl •AMa TIM tetiowlne .. ._ Mt...,...__..
llle UM ef 1!141 fl'ctJtl-llUtlfMU !\ti""' IHSfA TUHI •U •• •tN Q'.llj119'r
,.,,._, ~·~ IH(ll, Calll'OMl.t ..... ,.
Tlw fll<lt,IW• ... MMU He-,..
l•trM lo -•• Ill .. 111 0rMte c-1rOftJ-'f1'. 1tn, LIWIS M, MRTZA. UH S1111cres1 "°"· ANMll'll, CallfOf'nle t•7. Tlllt "'*-we• ~onelu<lecl by Ml lfllllvldua1.
l.IWlU-' #lt\tUa Tlllt stet•nwnl w• lltecl wllll IM
C•llftlY C .. tk ol 01at10!9 County on ""'" '°· 1•1 fll ....
flubll-Or .... CoHI O.lly PilOI,
APfll 22, 2', INY •. 13, 1 .. 1 1tlM1
PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,...
fllCTITIOUI IUll••U
lfAM& STATa M••T
TIM hMlowlng --la dolnt buM· ....... :
OR ANGE a. CAIRILLO, I. TO .. U4
le•t 11111 ltr .. 1, 5.,11. 117, Cotti
MHa, C1llfomle Ht21.
CHARI.ES SPILLER, Jll., 214
IHI 11th Slr .. I, Sult• 117. Cffll
MeM, CallW'llle ta.21.
This ...._lft9u la <911du<l9CI by 1 llmltH ,.,,..,....P
Cllel1ff Sol IMr. Jr.
This -WM Ill .. wltll Ille C....11ty Cllrk of Ounge Covnty 911 Aptll JI, 1'tl rt....,
Publlllwel O.enot Coe11 O.lly PllOI,
""'" 2', Mey •. u. 20, , .. I 21122 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
4 0.. 4 ' 0 • • u 4 ; ca 4 4 •••
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
PUBUC NOTICE PlJBUC NOTICE P U BLIC NOTICE
P U BUC NOTICE P U BLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUllUllNIU r1CTITIOUS •us1111au PUBLIC NOTICE
NAM« STAT•MINT NAME STATIMIENT
Tiii lollowlftt ,.non 1, GolnQ ltu~I· Tiii IOllOWtnQ 1191.on I• 001119 b11~I· fllCTITIOUI IUllNIS.S
lllU ••· lllU II NAMI STATIMl•T TAl·COUNTY fl0RTA91.E X· BARBARA S C LEANING Tll• followlnv persons er• dol~ lltAY, Ut s .•• , ......... Fvll•rton, SEllVICE. 2•10 C.Vllon P•ac•. ~ .. O..SllllUH;
Celllornll ~I ,,.. .. , C1llfornl• t2'2' J a. c u H 0 II " G II 0 u N D Al<,_., INIC04m CodtllnQ, 1'~ BAAB.ARA MARIE DUNCAN. ENGINEERING CONTRACTORS, IOI Mary90IC1, Bloomlnglon, C•lllOflll• •h lO c arllo11 Pleet. Co1l1 Mu i, S...lll Anita Dtlw, Sull• ICIJ, o.enoe.
'23t• Celllornll m». Calltorni. ttW.
Thi\ Mtl•IU I• (oncluc•d by ... In· Tiii• IN~""' Is tonclu<l•d Dy ... In· c. "· WHEEl.E.llt. 201 '°"'" Alllll dlvlCluil. • dlvfd.,al. Drive, SUiia 103, 0.-. Celllornl• Aictwnl ,,._lcolm C.,...1119 Barbera Oun<an .,..,
Tiiis •\t-1 #IS tlla<I wllll 11111 Tflll slat-I w•s lilod wllll IN G a. G EHGIHIE ERIHG CON·
Councy Ci.rll OI O.an91 C.U!llY ... c.o .. nly Clerk OI Oranoe County TlltACTOR$. INC.. a ClllMrnla cor·
April U, 1"1• rl .... M.trcn 2•. t .. I. ,1S656l porallon, 106l Tuler• Drive, c; .. 11
Publl"*" Or.,,._ Coetl Delly Pllol, PuDll"*" Ot-Coell Di lly Pilot, ""ew, Calltonlle n.».
Apr. 1t, Mly •• IJ, zo, 1•1 191M1 Aprll 22 29 ,.,.y •. 13. 1 .. 1 , ..... 1 Tlllt bu$111111 h '°nducl.O b'f I ' ' geMfll pet1Nnlllp.
PUBLIC NOTIC E PUBLIC NOTICE
0 1.GENGIHEERINO CONTRACTORS. INC
J.,.,.. B. G•ll•<""r,
-------------
PUBLIC NOTICE
P UBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS •UllHHS NAMI STATIMIMT
Tll• lollowlno o.rlOfl.I •r• oolno
DuslMU •s
9RANCHl~G OUT, ... C1pllal s1r .. 1, C0611 Maw. Cll1torn1t tMt7
ROBERT J a. MARGA RET J
HAMMOND, ... Clpllll Str"I, Cotti
Me .. , C1lltoml• t1'11.
tllh buslMu " cona .. c lid by •
oenerel perltWrslllO.
AOC.fl J H•mmond Tllh "alt"'9nl ., .. Ill.cl wllll 1 ...
Counly Clerk ol Oran09 County on Ajlrll 20, , .. ,
1'16'tM4 PuDI,.,.,.., Otll\09 Coast D•lly PllOI,
Al)t'll 22. ?t, -y •. IJ, 1 .. 1 lt71 .. I
PUBLIC NOTICE
Prffl4'Hlt fllCTITIOUS IUll•ISS
r!CTITIOUS •USIHISS PICTITIOUS •USINIESS Tiii• Siii-i w .. lll.0 wllll -NAME STATIMl•T NAME STATIMENT MAMIE STATIMENT co .. ncy ci.rk ol Otat1oe co .. 111, "" Tiie foll-lno _ _. II 4o"'9 !NII
Tn• IOll-•1111 perMlll I• OOtno INll Tiii --•1111 """"' " doln9 JHAI• Aprll 21, ,... ne.a ••• nauaa. MUU: ,._ HA LLMARK BULi.iON COM·
¢0 04QZ4$Q .
* OS
PUBUC NOTICE
,.CTITIOUI IUll•aM
....... STATaM&•T
lll• i.lltwint ,__ .. •1111 ....,
lllM et• TOP TUNE NO. 1• .... , .Clll\tM
Awnw , H1111ti119ton 1u<11, C.1119'\'lle
·~1 l.•wll M Malu, SJti t..ncrlll
AM41, ~Ifft. C.lltorlll• J'"'l•-"'9'tla~Dy M I•·
Gl'flOual
l.ewlt M /Ntie Tllh •loelltnenl wet 111.ci wllll \IW
County Clerk ot Oran09 C:.U11\y 911 Aprll 10, ltll ,.,....,
Publlthld Qt-CNtl O.lly fllloi,
April 22, 2', May•, IJ, 1 .. 1 1-.1
P U BLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUS IUtl•IU
NAMa ITATZMIMT
Tiie lollowlng persont ere fllllt
IKl•ln•u•t OEMOl.OGICAL TECHMOU)OY,
UOO Brll:IOI Sl•Ht. 5"11.e m , e.t.e
Mua , cetlfoml1 t2'» Wllllem ER Al<llarda, IU•
Baltarlc O.lw , Coate -w. Cellfet'llle
tU2' Al<llltd H. Hermt, IH ll Vie
S1t•no YorM l.I,_, Callf0111ia ....
Edfl9'0 H, LUllllnQ. W He_.,
Ro•d. C06la -· Callf0<nl1 tit» Hlal P L.,.1111\9, •1 Prlnc-4.,.
Ori••, C•te Maw, C.lltonll• t.at Jalftff H si..tP. Ill, ltol 0...-,
SlrHI. !>anla -.ke, Clllt«nla ...
Tiii• n.nln•n h concl.,<114 •Y •
0-,e1~1p. Willl•m ER IU<:llarcl• Tlllt •tllerMfll wet 111.0 wllll ,,.
county Clerk of Ounoe CovlllY on
•pr II ll, 1 .. 1 .., ....
Puou.-0.lftQI CO.SI Dally PllOI,
Apr I~. n. 2t, May•. I .. \ 1~1
P U BLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI IUllMIU
MAM& lfATIMaMT
COUNTRY CABIN WEST, 200 WORD PROCESSING SCHOOL, PuOllJIWG Orange COHI Dally PllOI, PAHY, 1201 Autlllld Road. H9WPor1
'rromoncory Drlvt EHi, l(ewporl UU S.E. BrlllOI, Sull• 205, S.nl• Ane, A~ll tt. MIY 6, U, 20. 1 .. 1 ltlUI B .. t ll, Clllfot'nle t·JWO
BHch. (,tllfornl• tl!WO. Celllornll '2101. J emes &ur9HI .. , ... no., Hlv.... l'ICTITIOUS •UllNIU Tl'•• loll-l"t pertonl lfl dOllll
b\11lne1111:
THE PERFl!CT ULAHCE, 411S C Hllerle Wey, H•wporl l•a<ll,
C1lltornll n.63 Corin,.. Ann C1llall•11, •IU C
Hlle rl1 Way, H•wport B•a <ll,
Celllornle tMa
T•r•M M1tl1 Amoro•o, 507"' Marl9old Str .. t, Coron• d•I Mer,
C.lllorni. m2S Tiii• llUslneu 11 <on4.,cled Dy • -·•I ~llllO.
C-1,,,,. "· C.11-Tllll Ill..,_ wet 111.0 wltll IM
Counly Cllrk of ~-C-ly on Apt II 17, 1"1. rt .... I
P"DlliNd 0.enot Co.it D•lf'f Pllol, Apr II tt, Mey 6, 13, 20, 1 .. 1 2027 .. 1,
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS I USIHESS NAMI STATaMIEMT
Tl\e followlno P••M>nl are dolno 1>ullnes11s. PACIFIC MA INTENAN CE
SERVICI:, 11tS Av11on Slrffl, COSll
Mew, C11ltomla t21.2'. CAROLYN A. WEAVER, 22tS
Avalon St,..1. Coal• Mew, C.1110<"'•
tU2'.
THOMAS 0 MUETZEi., 221S
Av1lon Slrwl. Colla Mesa, (lllfornl1
'1'2•. Tiii' Oulln•H 1, (01\duCl•G Dy • eenaral perlMttlllp. C.rOlyn A. WHvtr
Thoma\0 M ... IHI Tiii' stl .. .._1 was lllld with II•
Co.,111y Ci.r'-Of Orange C:-ty 6"
April 20, 1 .. 1. r l .. 07
PuDll"'9d Or-Coest Dally Piiot.
Aprll 12. 2', May•· U, 1 .. 1 116NI
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI IUll•aS.S
MAMa STAT•M•N1' Tll• foll-l"t _...,, •re dol111
-lntt1M! MAR WEST BUILDERS AHO
OIEVEl.OPllU, UIU l•a<ll l1ul1 va re1, ""nllnoton B••<ll,
Celllornll~.
J.J .H.T., INC., 1 Clllfoml1 cor·
-··""'· MIU 8M<I\ BoullverCI, Hun-""''"" BeKll, c..tlfoml• t»47. Tiiis ~ Is conduCWd bye COf· -·tlOft. J.J.t4 T., Inc.
HIClor llMl'MCll, ,.,.....,,,
Tiiis 111..,_. w• llled wltll ltw
County Cieri! OI Oran91 Covnty on Atwll0, 1"1. ,.,_,.
fluC>ll~ Or-Co.st Delly Plll4,
"-'1119, #Ny .. u . 20, , .. I toUtl
PUBLIC NOTICE
ARTHUR CRAAl.l!S BISCH, MARILYN SUE SAL4'S. 2657 O'f C U OI Rut ..... ROid, "-wPOr1 hl<ll, NAMI STATIMIEMT Promo11tory Drlv• I HI. N••potl 111 .. rsld• Orio. Cuh M•u, 1 P U BLIC N I E C•lllornletlMO I n• lollowlno per-.• are dolno
8 .. <11. C.l(loml1tJMO Cellfo-1111'2627. Tllll Nine» Is concl<>C .. d llY M In· Dulln•uas Tiiis DusUllU Is,_.., Dy'"" 11'1· Tiiis bullMM I~ con<IUC•d Dy an In-dhrldll•I WBP INVliSTMEHTS, 11911 En· dlWcsual dlvloual. STATIMIMTO,AIAN~MIHT J.,.,..B.A Niven lerprlst Dr ive. GarO•n Gron ,
Ar11\U< C:lllrlH B•scll Merilyn Sal•• Oil USIE Ofl Tiiis slal-1 w11 lllecl wlln 1119 C•llfornla t:i.43
Tiiis s111...,...1 wet 1119'1 wltn 1119 Tiiis sla-1 wat 111.0 wlln 1119 'ICTITIOUS •USINIESS MAMIE County Ci.<11ol0.1n99 COUlllY on Mey Je<k A WIWll•n, 11911 Enl•rprlM
Counly Cl•rl< ot Or•noe co .. n1r on c.un1y Clerk 01 Orange County on _!~.,!~~':'1c:':.::: .!:,~~=== 4, 1,.1 Orlv•, Gerdtn Grove. Clllfornl1tlM3 Aprll ~ 1991 Aprll 17 1 .. 1 ,._ ·-"' u-'1•1411 Roll9tl J B•rntteln. l)tl~ En· ' 1'1"'417 ' . r1 SOUlHCOAST DENTISTRY. l lOS Publlt1*1 Or-Coast Dally Piiot, ttrprlu Drlv•, Garden Gron.
Pub II~ Otanoe Coal! Dall y Piiot, Publlslled Or-Coell Dally Piiot. H1rbor 91....S., Coll• Mew, C•lllOrnlt Mey•· u . zo, 21. ,,., JOt0.:11 Callfor"'' ~ April 11, 2', ,.,.y 6, I), 1 .. 1 ltt7 .. I Aprll 2' ,,._y • tl 20 1 .. 1 102M Tll• FICllllou> Busl...U H•me ,._ Rollotr1 J Pear<•. IJtll En1trprl11 • ' ' ' lerrtO to eCIOW was lll.O In 0.-orive. G-n Grow. c.1110""• •~
coun1y on~'· 1"1 PUBLIC NOTICE ArftOld H. Fl•\Hf, It Cn.rry Hlllt Thlt Duslnffs h conGucloCI by a PUBLIC NOTICE P U BLIC NOTICE UM, H-1811<.ll. (llllornla 01n~ral J~""w~-1 ... -----1 fllCTITIOUS I UJINIESS Tiii• business I• c-leCI Dy WI In· l'ICTITIOUS •USIHIEH Tll11 .~.;;..,, ·;., lllld wllfl '""
l'ICTITIOUS IUSIHIEU HAMI STATIMIHT Cllvld.,elArnold H. Flenar NAME STATIMIHT Counly Cllrk ol Oran99 Counlj on NAME STATIMIHT T iit 1011....,.1111119,_, I• oolnQ llUll· I The follow1no perso<n ar• GolnQ Apd l 2o, l .. 1 Tn• 1011owlno oar sons .,, dolno neu ... Tllla ,,..,.,,_. was 111111 wl II ,,.. ou11no••' CA PRETI a. KASOAH
D .. slneu •s· I DOLPHIN TACKLE co .. 2100 CounlyC .. rllOI O._C_lyonMey EL lOC.Al.O. 451' C. ... pu. Drive, "'"'"'""LA• COAST HE.ARING AID CENTER, E . Ho well Stretl.Allall•lm. 4,1'tl • .... 11 1rvlnt,Cl4lforn1•t271S Mtl llllllMM~°'lv• JAOt E.ul Colll HIQllWIY, Co<ona del rb,. Exlt.-0 -...m.n1 Strvl<ff. Swll•"'
Mar, C•liforn41'111U orO, i.l41 Tortola P"Dll"'9cl Or-Co .. 1 O.lly PllOI. Inc , • Calllornla CO<POrallOn, 1"402 lrvllll, CelMentil H7U
EVELYN G. WHITE. i.su Elm Hatb0Ur,C1lllornlt M•y•.ll,20,17,IJel ~'1 S••rt•C.lmo,lrv1nt,C•lllorn1atJM.1 . .., .... ,
C1lllort1l1 t210i
Ml<"•' R F
Clrclt Fountain VelltY. CAltlorrua CE Tllb lluSlntU •• condut ltd o;. (0<· PuDlllMCI °'"'"Coe•• Delly PllOI,
t270I conclu<led Dy 111 In· P U BLIC NOTI porellon. Apt U .2'.May6, 13, l .. I 1MW1
Circle, Hunllnoton u ...
T"ls IMAIMU I> DONALD H. WH ITE ... Sil Elm E•ltndtd Manage ment dlvldual Clrclo, Foun1eln VelltY. C1lllorn11 R Ford fl1CTIT10U5 IUSI NIESS Strvlcu . .,~~i. ous1n•U " conoucted DY • .. .. 1119'1 wllll Ille NAME STATI MI HT ~~=n~ Pa-,,,
oeneral parll\lf\lllO Oranoe Co.,n1y on Tiie lollowlnt p1taoru are dollll Tiiis >1•1-1 was 11100 wllll IN
Mlcllael
Tiiis tlal.,.,...I Counly Clerk of
P U BLIC NOTICE
EvelynG Wllllt Fl-INsl;-:~~:TMEHT CORPORATION Co.,nly Clork ol Oran99 Counly on
p.,01111'•9'1 Ot-Coetl D•ll~1~o~ "9t CM•I Ot llY PllOI. OF AMERICA. •> Cor-•1• Ptu• ~:~~~~:1KIDDEll •SUCKLING
Aprll 17 1 .. 1 OR DIR TO SHOW CAUH flOlt
CHAMGI 0' NAMI CASC NUMalUI Al .... PuDll-Ora
Aorll 1l, 2t, May•. IJ. ltll 1.,..11 :ZO, 1 .. 1 mMI Ori .. , Sull• 100. Newport B••<ll, Atl•m•y• al Law
C1lllornl192660 ,...,,, .. ,.111 l'IOO<
APrll 2t, May•. ll, IRIS II GIHSllUAG eltl IRIS B.
ROWE ""' "'"' • 119l1Uon In 11'11• ceur1 lor an order all-Ing o.tllloner lo
cnentt lltr name from I RIS B.
GINSBURG eka IRIS B ROWI lo
IAIS B.STEIN
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS IUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
Tl>t loll-Int P9fMlll Is 4oln9 l>u>i
ftl'St •• H EB E NG I HEeRI NG I.
DEVELOPMENT, 1117 GltnUOIH
Tffract, ec.11 Mtw, C•lllornl• t»17 NEALE EOWARD BERGSTROM
1117 GlenelQIH Terr1<1, Coll• Maw
Celllornlt tt.27 Till• INMMSI it <on<IUc .. d Dy an In
Cllvldu1I Netll E B1ro11rom Tlll1 flallflWftl wa\ lllecl wllll Illa
Counly Cltt-of Or.,,oe (ovnty on
April 20, 1911. 111"'4! 2
PuDllsMd Or-Coafl Dally Pllol Apr II 22. 2t, May•. ll. 1 .. 1 116.s.t
P U BLIC NOTICE
fllCTlTIOUI 8USINISS
MAMIE STATIMeHT
i
T II• 1o11-1110 IM"°'" are e101n11 1>u1ln1u 11: FIVE POINT$ PET SHOP, IUtJ Mein Strnl, H11ntl1>1•011 ll•Cf• . Callloml• £. H. o.u.-. 111CIS Trojein Wey . Sllnlon, Cllltome• t06IO l.ucllle A.. 0.Ll•le, 11 IOS Troj.n
W1y, Slanllln. C.lltornle '°6eO Tiiis Duslneu II Conclueled bY In·
P U BLIC NOTICE INVESTMENT CORPORATION W•llt l'areo lulldlnt
OF """ERICA, IHC .• •n lclellOcorpOfl• ... Htwperl Cln .. r OtlYt ----lion, • > Cor-11• Pl1t1 Or Iv•, S..11• H•w,.r1 -<I•, CA 92..o S IUSIHES.S 100, H•-1-11, C.lllornl• "'60
-----
FICTITIOU
HAME ST ATIEMIEHT fllll -• ... u 11 cOl>du<tld oy • (Of·
persons •re oo•no -•""' lnwstnwnl Cor-•llon T "• followlno b<.ttlMUIS. l'T. 111n Wtltern olAmerlu
s1.,,1on, Calllornle Tlllt It_. w .. lllecl wllll 11\e
County Ci.<11 ol Or-COunlY 011 M,ay
B AW. CAA
Avtnu11 Unll M.
~.
BRVCE A. W EEKS, 1eo.o Tlllrd 4, 1911.
Valley, C•lllornl• SttH'I, Foufll•ln ,,,OI
DEBORAH
,,.,.,,
Publl-Or-Coast Delly Piiot.
D WEEKS, 110.0 Mey •. IJ, 10, 17, 1 .. 1 110_.I
Tlllrd Slr1tl, Foun1e1n V•lley, GelllOtll•a t770I Tiii• l>USI-It
Cllvldual (""sl>lnd
ConcluCl•d Dy an In a. wile)
P U BUC NOTI CE
o.COrell 0 .W .. kl fllCTITIOUI IUSIHIH
NAMI STATIMaNT Tllll 11at-1
Co11n1 y Cll•'-of Aprll 10, 1991
wes lllt<I wllll I""
or ... ve County on Th• fOll-lnQ peraona er• C101n11
l>ullMUH: r1.-u> ( I I P R 0 I' E SS I 0 H A L
,..,blllhedOr -c ... 1 D•lly flllOt, MANAGEMENT SERV ICl!S. tu P M
A&>rll 21, 2', Mey •• IJ, 1 .. 1 ••»t• s. (J) M E s. (4) I c T, 14761 Franklln
Ann.,., Sul!• A, Tvslln, C.llfornl•
t2MO PUBUC NOTICE Medl'91 Eltclronlca Sy1t•m1,
-----Inc., • Cl41fol'nl• corpora1lon, 14761
fllCTITI
NAM•S Tiie lollowlno 1Mnlnn1as·
MIKE~DH
t701 Olympic
l .. <11, CAlllomll
Mlcn.1 C
Drive. HuntlllQI
OUI IUSl•IS.S Franllll,. Av•nue, Sull• A, T .. 111n,
TATIMaNT C•lllornl• n.111 peraont .,. dolne Tiii• llullneu Is ~I.cl by • cor· por1llon.
AM POOi. SERVICE, ~ Ei.dronkl
Orio, H.,nt11101en S'(lt-. lnoc: ,_.. C.ol 1..-.rlM,
OIOl\am t71n Olympic S.Ct'l'IMY/TfH S .. fet'
on a..<n c..111ornl• Tiiis rtet_. ,.., lllecl '""" Ille ' Cou111y Cllr'k of Orat\99 C-IY on ,,_.y
flU ... 7 II IS ,..,..., o<derld tl\el ell .,..._ PuDllshed Orltlill Colsl Delly Pllol, lnler•sleel In .,. rn1tlor alOAMld ·~ Apr 21. ?t. ,,..Y •. 13, 1,.1 tm..tl pear 1191•• tills <-1 In Oeclartmenl
PUBUC NOTICE
Ho. J •I 100 Owic Centar Dtlw West. Sanl• ,.,,., Cllltoml•, on J..,,. 17, 1•1.
•• 10. JO O'<loc• ··"'·· encl IMn •nd IMr• ,,,_ CIUM, II an IMY ,...,., wny
fllCTtTIOUS IUSllfUJI said pttltlon tor cllen91 of neme
NAME STATIMaMT llloUIO nol 119Ql'ant9d
Tne to11owl1111 person• 1t• dolno It la f"'111itr orde...., lfwll • covr or
bull MU et 11111 order m -<-CM puOll.-DATAPRE$S, Itta w Clle>lnut, In 1111 O.lly Pilot, • newwa-o1
S.nte Ana. Clllloml• t270l ve,,.,., <ircllletlon. PllblllNcl In "''' Helton G. L.Ope1. 1190 l olM, Coale county al .. est once • -lor four
MeM, Callfoml• t»» tonMC .. 11 .. -. prior 10 tlW dey of
Polo Loptr, 112• Sa1v-. Slrff(, HICI Merino. Cnl• MKa, Cllllo-nla , D1tecl: l!My 4, 1 .. 1 J ... Lopt.t. UU W Clllndl1r, San· Ronakl H. ,.,_r
I• Ana, Cetlfomil '1104 JYdOI of I,_ Cerlot I.~. 1111 FIOr• Slt'MI, S.-lor Court S...11 Ana, C.lllornl• t1104 Publlllled Or-Co.Pl Delly Piiot.
Merlo L.Ope2, 1111 fl tor• Sir w t. M1y •. u, 20, 11, ,,., 21~1
S...t.I ""'· C•llfomle '1.104 Tiiis INSIMU Is conClu<lld by •
19Mfll pet'1Mnfllp. N-G.l.-1 Tllll 11.at-t wes lllecl with 1119 Co.,11ly Clerk ol Oran91 Co"nly on
PUBLIC NOTICE
fl1CT1nous l'usi .. •U
NAM• ITATllM8•T Aprll 27. 1•1. fll6"1J Tiie lollowtng 119,._ 11 dOWlt ltual·
.. llbtl-~ CO.SI Delly Pli.t, ""'-:~ST COMT TRADING COM· Apr. Jt. May•, IJ, 20, l•I ll7 ... I PAHY, 410D Blrcl\ Street. S..lte IOI,
P U BLIC NOTICE
Htwpor1 8-11, C.llfoml• tlWO
----dlvldu•I• (llUll>lnd 1nc1 •ll•I. ., ...
Judllh F. OI clllam, t70'1 Olymplc 4, 1 .. 1.
on Bt1<n, C.lll'0<nl1
R ""°' R c.onwnan", Inc., 4100 Birch Slr11I, Suite IOI. H•wporl
BNtll, Calllcwlll• •a..o
NOTICIE Qtf NOM-tlHflC>ftll llLITY E. H. 0.1.ltlt Luc Ille A. 0.Llai.
Holkl Is IWl'IOr OI,,... tllll '"" """ Tiiis l\tlanWnt wet flltO wllll thl •r•ltnecl wrn noc CM rH410Mlbl1 for c ... nly Cl•r•k of Orengo County on
e11y oeou or 11e111111i.. contrec.ted rt Aptll 27, 1 .. 1.
a11y-04Nf' ci-myMll, on°' •f"r P1'"'4
lllla dell. P"bll"*' Or-CO.ti Delly ""°' i D•lld::..;.~l":.Y.:'!,':~'!1 Apr. 2',,,..y•, U,20, , .. , tm ..
IMO E. Sycemof't st ... et o. ..... c;A., .. 7 PUBUC NOTICE
Publllhlll QrM\11 Coe1I O.lly Pllol, ----------Mey 6.1. ll, 1•1 ttJWI
PUBUC NOTICE
l'IC'TITIOUI IUllNISS
•AMa IT~TH .. NT
The follMlflO ,.._ It dOlnt bull· -·t: IAY AOVIRTISIHG, 1211 W
Ceul Hlpway, H1wporl 1••<11,
C.11 !offlla.,,..,
Allee Mcc.ll\llft, lttl W, G .. st
Hltll••'f, ,..._., lle<.11, C1lllornl1 ,,..,,
Tiiis llullnlaJ la <ondUCllHI by an 111·
dlvldUal,
Ailc.8 McC.ll""' Tiiis stM-f w•s flied wltl\ ,,. c-ty Cllr1I of Or.,.. c-ty on Mey
4, ltll.
fllCTITIOUS BUSINISS
NAM• STATIMIHT
0
n
T"e foll-Ing --ltl dol11
""-'""" H . THE OSAGE WAT ER CO .. 111..0 T11119r1 Awnu.. FOUl'llll
Velley, C.llfornl• tt70t •
•
COMMERCE FUND INC., Cellfornla c.orporetlon. 111.0 TallMrt Aonue. Fountain Vell•y, C.llfornl
'110I. Tllll INMMU Is Conclll<led by a <or
portllOn COMMERCE FVHD INC.
S-tn B HICktll. ............ ,
Tll~ slal-1 wH 111111 Wllll 1119
c ... n1y Cler• 01 Oran01t C.01111tv o n
April 20, 1 .. 1. ' ,. ... ,
Publl11*1 Oranee coert 0111y Pilo I,
Aprll 22, 2', Mey 6, ll, 1 .. 1 11151 .. 1
fl161t11
f'vt1111111d or .... eo.s• o.11y ,.111t.
llley 6, 11,lQ. i7, t•I tcltMI !------------PUBUC NOTICE
P U BUC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS IU51NISS
NAMIE STATIMI MT
Tll• followlno P•''°"' ert doln 0 11 .. 11 ...... ., EASTERN DIGITAi., 1790
Mllc"411, lrYlt11, C.llloml• tt71•. 2
Atlle S. Mt-. 12'32 Ametlln ; &lrHI, Gerdlft Gro .... CllllO<nl• tM
it 1(1\oa v. NOUY .... 13» East "'" Str••I, Apt. a,C·5, S1nt1 An1
C111fernle 92701. Thi• busln1u II <Of\dUCltCI llY
-rel --""""Ip
AQNS.IN-
'
•
... Tllls stet-I ••• fll.0 with I County Cl•t11 of Oran91 C:O..nty on
M1r<ll U, 1 .. 1. ,. ....
Publlslled Oran91 CN•I D•lly flllot ; Aprll 12, 2'1, May 6, ta, 1 .. 1 I .....
PVBLIC NOTICE
Of ..
RI
'
"' W• ..
" I
ell
Drive. Hlo9\llfllll ., ... ,,
Tiii' llUstllftl I s conduc:•d Dy In·
l\Ult>lnd ancs wl le I.
.Oldllem
dlwldu.11 c
Mlc-C Judl1n F. Olc!Mm
fll61414 fllCTITIOUS IUSINUS
P11bll""° Or-Coall D•llY PlloC. NAME STATIE,,..EHT
Mey•. t>. 20. 21.1,.1 2141 .. 1 Th• followln11 Otr\OM •r• dol110
b.,s1neu ..
P U BLIC NOTICE
Tiiis stei.m.nt
Co.,nly Clerk ol
wet flllO witll tM -
Orltlll9 Gou111y on
GABRIEi. WILLIAMS COM-
PANY. nm Ar belle Role!, L.19"111
Hlo.,.1, C•tlfomi• 911171
PICTITIOUI I USINllS Pacllk Coest Matlllnt•Y CorPO••·
NA.Ml STATaMa•T 11on, a C.llfornl• ccwpc>r111on, * w. Aptll 27, 1 .. 1.
Publlillld Or
Apr. 2',#Ny6, 12, "''"" .,,._Co.eat Deity Pl~1 20, , .. I 203141
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tll• followl"t P•rto11s ••• doing 4th Slrltll, $anl1 An1, C111tornl• '2701
11u11neu •: Tiiis oullnHJ I• tonduc•d by• cor CHURCHILL LIMITED, 177fl porellon
lllY••••• .............. porl B•.cll, Paclfk cou t Ctlllornle 9** #NClllNY Corporation Pe tric• II. Smit II db• Roe-Harrlllt• Se>rlnQ9r,
__ ----D•v•lopment Company, 121 Wive Slc;retery
SlrMI. LeguN &Hell, C.lltoml• n.s1 T "'' 1tat9""nt .... llltO wltfl 11\t
IM THE OISTlltl CTCOURTOflTHIE Merlckol D•ve lopme nl, I co .. nly Clttk ol o~an09 Co.,nty on
CIAI. DllTalCT 01' C•llfomle corporetlon, 17Wl Sky Perk April 20. 1911 llVaNTH JUDI THI Clr<l•, Sulllt F, lrvlne, G•lllornl1 9211' MIE L SflRIHOER
HO, IN foMD flOlt Tlllt Wllll•n It concluct•ct by • Alt•rMy •• Law ITATI Ofl fOA THI llmllld PM'\1Wt111\lp. 296 WHI flow1ll Slt911
Ofl flltl..0.T ,..,ICll II. Slnllll Swll• ... COUNTY
AAHDY TRO ST, Pl1l111lff. va. Tllk tUl-1 wes 111.0 Wltl\ 1119 San1eA111.C.llfe ..... 1tf701
TS TROST, 0.1.,. CountyCle,,,ofO.-CounlyonMey SHARON MOUN
Clenl. SUMMONS THIE STA
-flOAHllVICI
TaOI' IDAHO
ltllTINGITO HNDSG IHA.ltON MOUNTS TROST
UHTS GROST, Ille
ndent.
SHAllOH MO •bO•• Mf'llld o.f• You An H9rWy Ho41flld, Tllal e
complelftll\M
Ill• OUtrlcl Ce -lllecl -'~1 YOU In
"" of 11141 Sa••nlll of IM SI.ell of ldefto, _,, OI ,,.mOtll, by Judl<lal OIWICI
In eflCI fOf' CM C
Ill• ebov. nemecl plalnlltf, ena vou ere
o -end., .. .., to Wlll\ln IWtfllV Oen OI
1141,..by dlf'llCIM I
wlo complll11t
Ille MrYlc• of 1111 • -· and yow !H 11\el IHlllW you IO ••• f.,ruwr notlf •PP9" end ... wllllln ""'11-
.. \0 wlel c«nPtelnl
l\lr9in IPllClfltel. 1119
• ludQmelll -Inst WICI compl•llll plalntlfl wlll tak you es preyed In
R.J.H -· Al-y f0< Pl1lnllfl
o.wllM C.tonoe
c.llr1I of .,,.
Olstrkl c-t ._ ... Olrl•
'*""" II. J. HOOtl'aS ,,0 .••• ,..
·--~·--Tel:.._
Puatlllllld 0.
Apr. it, 1Ny6, t
Pu au· C NOTICE
fllCTlTt OUllUIUlllS
ITATIM••T •AMII Tiie follewln • "'"°"' er• 001"' Ml-•· li'AllAOON ,ANY,• a .
C.llfef'llle ftU'1 RINfel H, Wl~,c.ae
Luila~ 0rlY•,,...
L•ule I .
.. '"'· Clllt L~ H """
•.ltll.
Tllh buslneu Is <ondue•d tly e <Of·
POr•llon In Ille Stale of Cllltornl• .i.11,..y c. 11•.tllln
Tiiis 1111-1 wes 111«1 '""" t.M Caut1Cy Ci.r1< o( Or-County on May
•. ltll.
Alter•Y• ..... •"'"" 81ttAN II. CAllTIR *' Cllrlc C.-. Df1,,. We• ........... Cal ....... ,,,.,
Ttl: 0 141-..-l.el .._ 8r...cl\,
c:-.cy CllA ., o.OOI o .•• , ... , •.
Deputy
P161 ..
Publl""° Or-Ceell Delly .. llol,
M1y 6, II, 20, 17, 1 .. 1 '117-tl
PUBLIC NOTICE
I
.. , ______ . ·~·-.------·--... ................. "":""'" .. _•_~·,.. . ....., ............ _ ..... -·--·-· ... ·-· .. ·-·~ ... , ""'.,.. ..... _ ... ___ ..,, ................. i:oi•-·~· ...... ,.. •• -~ .............. 0111a .. •mic1111u•••t•z111s1111•1•••1• -~-... ... * Orange Coaat DAIL Y PILOT/Wednesday. May 8. 1981
~{U THE 1JRAN&E COAST A Value-Pack~ M~nlhly Feature ~ the
-~~ INFLATION FIGHTERS Dally Pilot 8:4~7~fe
Reserve Your
Space Early
For The Next
Coupon Caper
section which wll be
published on June 1 Oth
Pkasecall
Debbie Kosmin
fOf' lpOC• ,....., ......
642-5671, ext. JJO
ORANGE COUNTY
SUPPLY
PERIM-1-TRON ALARMS
lasic Units Starting
As Low As $169.00
1'~
HAii\ STYUNG
833·0304
MacArthur Square
Newport Beach
l,4df-to S-o-Ho•I
We ere •heed at the um.. on heir
llnowledge •.. but heY• turned beck the
ctocll on prtoee to gtye our cllent. • .,,...,
FIRST VISIT OFFER
llewtr Cit l Style plls
fldal l Makl"!I
Al flf s 35.00
15500 value
~TIU COUPON av APP'T
SPIRITUAL
READINGS
Reg. $25 per Session I
$1 S With This U>upon
492-7296
IALTI lltlGtao ..
SMITH & TUTHILL
WISTCLlff CHA'IL
DEATH NOTICES
DAVIS
•s.ooott
17141719·1216
1114112'-lllJ
Mother's Day is SUn. May 10th
COrchr Yow Ao..., Todaylt
1505 MHG Verde East
COSTA MESA
545-2027 or 548-7522
"Our Pnces Will Be
The Lowest In The Area"
Fine Selection 0( Hand Made Gifts
Candies That Mother Will Love '
Coupon Good For a IYd VaM $3. ti 1..,ss.t1
NOER THE EXPE~ DIRECTION Of
ICl<:IE: MARX V P As5oclatlon lot Humane Pet Training _ lorme< OlrectOf of Educotlonol
Sefvioes of Pet Education Center Humane Socle'V of N.Y.
OE: k'.IND TO YOUR DOG
THROUGH OUR GENTLE REWARD ANO PRAISE METHOO
The allemollve "No Choke Collar Pr~ram"
Complete Obedience· Training Off Le~nh and
On Leash Control
BEHAVIOR SPECIALIST!
Training in Your Home
For Free ET•atioft
C•Today
1 extra lesson at no
additional cost with
this coupon
7 14-531-9890
if SPIGTllll t
rlilTUS llC.
~ EXTERIOR• INTERIOR A ~ RESIOENTIAl • COMMCRClAl ~ .........
IS% OFF WITH 171 4 1 9&4·4828
COUPON OR 9&3-2098
•27 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
646-9371
BESSlEDAVlS.residentof Sabr u was born on July 19. American Cancer Society.
Huntington Beach , Ca. 1889 in Dauphin , Penn-Services under the direction
Passed away on May 3, 1981. sylvania The dauihter or o r Sad1dlebac k Chapel,
She was a member or the Dr and Mrs. William Pat· Tustin.Ca /
P1HCI UOTHllS
SMITHS" MOHUAIY
627 Main SI
HunhnQton Btiach
536-6539
PACIAC v•w
..OllAl.PAH
CetNtery Monuarv
ChapeJ-Oc-ematorv ~ Pa1C1f1c V.ew Drive
NewPort Boch
8'4·2700
WcCGaMICIC MOITUA.RllS
lecJuna Beien 494•9'15
Laciun1 Hills 7~ San Juan C.p1strano
495-1776
~U~MT.Of.IYI'
Mortuarv • C.rTWterv
CrerNtorv 1625 Gisler Ave .
Costa~
~564
Gordon Oolnick L Z.O.; t he ter:son Clark. She graduated OSTMAN
North West Home for the fr om Gouther College KENNETH P OSTMAN.
Aged in Chicago, Illinois; and Baltimore. Maryland In 1921 passed away on May 3, 1981
lheWeWlllAidSociely.Sheis Married to J ames Halla rd Survived by his dearest
survived by her son George Berge, physician and surgeon friend J oyce Nuckles, his son
and his wtre Frances Davis or on Qecember 3, 1921 and they Michael and daughter Lori,
Sun I a nd . C a . and her m o v e d to Se a t ll e . his father Clyde E. Ost man
daughter Bernice and her Washlpgton. Survived by and 2brothers Douglas L. and
husband Jack Stein or Hunt-sons James H. Ber1e. Jr. or Thom as C Ost m a n .
lngton Beach. Ca., also sur· Falls C hurch . Virgini a, MemoriaJ ser vices will be
vived by 8 grandchildren. William Clark Ber1e or held at the Pacific View
Slumber Room visitation will Snohomis h. Washington. Memorial Park on Wednes·
beheldonWednesday,May8, daughters Sabra Ber ge day.May8,1118lat2:00PM.ln
1981 from 3:00PM to 8:00PM Bushnell or PaJos Verdes lieu of flowers memorial con·
at the Harbor Lawn Estates, Ca., Melinda Berge lrlbutlons may be made to the
Memorial Chapel. Fin•I In· of As pen. ColoradQ, 12 City of Hope, Duarte, Ca.
terment services wut be held grandchildren and 3 arreal· Pacific View Mortuary direc·
on Friday, May 8, 1981 at 1randchlldren. Alter her first lors. '
Pisner Memooal Chapel In husband's death. In 11166 she
Chkaao. IUlnola Final toter-married Wllllam A Demlna Sentenced ment servtcea will be held In on July 18, IMB and moved to
the Family Plot Atereth· South Lafuna Cu. where she
llrul Cemetel")' I Chlca10. lived WIUl h.lsdeatb In April or
Illinois. Harbor Lawn· Mount 1979. She had been a resident
Ollve Mortual")' forwardlna of Lelt ure World since
direct.ors. 540·$S54, Janu ary 1980. SM was a
OElllllNG member ot Della Delta Delta
SABRA CLARK DEMINO, Sorority, and Put President
resident ot La1una HUit, Ca. of the Washln1ton State
PHHd IWI)' on May 4. llll. Medical Awdllal")'. She was
l.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:==:;ipaat membeT of the Sun et lub. Statue Golf Qd Seattle
1lnler Club and Ute D.A.R.
There wtll be no MrVlc• and
FRESNO CAP) -A
Modeato man bu been
sentenced to a federal.
f daon medical center
or fl v e year1 for
maklnc a bomb threat to
an air line. Harold LetUe
Coolt, .a, WU HD&eced
to parttetpate In R
alcohol relaablllt aUon
pro1ram.
cremation will be ffllowtcl by -:==:::::=;::;:;::;:~lnterm.m ln Arllntton Na·
tlonaJ Cemetery. In Ueu of
nowert tbe family req11ata ..,~ ____ ... _....,.. donallOM be mtde to the
IUIOPIAN FACIAL
WITH MASc;Mll
Eyebrow Arch & Make-Up
I hf' Ptutlr..1t1•.t •
With Instructions
Rag. $46 w /COMlpOllt $29
~UC At1hor ·~1uro.,.. ~,.,., M.irl""l"'" Wdv
N,. .. ,,. •t R1•11< h CA q26N ,,. ll1,11.l<l• --
NEWI IN COSTA MESA
~or;ental
food Mart
LAl Gl 5UKTIONS
• nUPINO • CHINESE • JAPANESE
--~ • SUSHI Mill .-L.-aAHCAJS
• ~ ~--• flSH • DllllD S&AWUO , • flUl'I
• ~TTUS •• l>C)On •~":....a • MA.cAP\.NO • lANC.«" • I.Ill !AM t • • • IAGOONC
• ""10-t!llLO MIX o • ~
• LAHC.l(f\ • '"""'" • ,Al<IT • Al.AMAH(. "411.~ • MOHGO. ~!Cl --.... OT..US • SUAML Oil
'"' lfC
-AMTA"loumNfAl fOC» MASl tU\MUAW..OI' 1.4.)f ., .. ..:':,":'1: •. .......... LAI ....... , I ClfllJrlfrw." . "
25o/0 0FF
DOG GROOMING
KLIP JOINT
759-1578
Gentle care. no tranquilizers .
Or.t.:r .:urlt -• Jir.:•l th:lh.:r -=d _.lft ltl.:•
llalloo11!'Ji fo1• Hl~bcr
AMERICAN
OAK SALE
Tabin, Chairs, Cupll D •ch, SI•
Boards & Much More.
M...tlon this Cid & cpt
15% DISCOONT
Freelands 864 W. 19th St .
642-7331 645-6434
DOG TRAINING
IN YOUR HOME
... where the prolilem1 ere.
Wny contend w11h problems such as
nousebreak1ng O•Oo•no 1umo1ng on your
guests barking ano many more -.flen 1nese
D<Oblems c1n be SOlveO by Our Cln1ne l>ehAVlO< soec111tsts
F0< 1 FREE ev1lu1Uon 11 HO oON911lon
J.C.'S
TREE
SERVICE
Press acce$s ruling a,sked
SAN FRANCISCO ( (AP) -The state Supreme
Court has been asked to decide the constilut.ionali·
ty or a 109-year-old state law that permits a defeo·
dant to bar the press from a preliminary hearing.
''The statute deprives the public of First
Amendment rights to access to a judicial procted·
ing," Ed Davis, representing the San Jose Mercuy
News, said Tuesday.
The preliminary hearing is an accusatory pro-
cess and "there is no right'' of the public to attend
ll, said Harry J . Delizonna. representing San Jose
City Councilman Alfred Garza. accused of bribery
and state income tax evasion ln a grand Jury in.,
dictment. ,
The Mercury News was barred from covering
Garza's preliminary bearing and filed a lawsuit
challenging a defendant's right to close a hearing.
The preliminary hearing Ls a process in which
a magistrate decides .whether the prosecution has
enough evidence to hold the defendant for trial. ·
The preUminary hearing in the Garza case,
which involves three. other defendants. already has
been completed and a trial date is beint asslcned
Thursday in Santa Clara County Sµperior Court.
The question before the hi1h court tribunal
mark.! the first tlme lo recent history that the bod)!
has been asked to conslder the validity of the 1872
act.
Davls, who said th.e newspaper was acting as
"surrogate to the public,'' was ll1htln1 for
somethln~ or "slgnUicant conalltu tlon•l
dimension.' ffe conceded to the court that the
news med.la hu to be more ri1ht than the public tn
the case In quesllon.
"The public ha~ a compelling right to eumlne,
how the government functions . . . \t la fallaelol.lt
that every time there ls publicity, the defendant 11
deprived or hls constitutional rights.·•
Davis went on, "The right to exclude preN
and public from a prellmln&Q' beartn1 should ~
determined by • magistrate'' •nd not the defen·
dant.
Delizonna s aid the public la not automatically
privlleied to alt.rid pr~llmtnery hHr1np because
It ls a process wt\e~ unproved accuaaUon1 are
aired.
••Dirty launftry " It drap«I out durlol a pre.
1111\tnary beplna and the pub.Uc may bf barnd by
tbt defenae, M aa.ld .
, .
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-Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 ' . 07
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642-5678
Orange Cocut residents bought 42% of
all new cars &old in the county UJ$t year
even though they comprise only 30% of
the county's population.
'''*''•Al.Ca•
642-5678 HIWPOllTHGHTS Spy,....HllH-. MMUSfHSAU Delu xe townhouse ThI1 Immaculate pro ~., um duplex, 3 bdrm amity, fesslonally decorated .._t.i.M 1a 2,,; bath each unit. b l d d Ith .,_,.._Ill• 1et1 Frplcs, all built·IDI , home &~abt: win c.~""' 11 ... h ''" c arm. .,""' nght • een.:a .. Wu I'll decka & patios. Park· terior features the flneat &::: = I: EQUAL HOUSING Ii k e I and• cap Ing . in carpets., wallcovering ~,;..,_,,., :: SELLER WILL HELP and window treatments.
...._ .. Affl ,... OPPOBTU N ITV FINANCE. $295,000! The custom p00I and spa ~~.~ ,... 1~141yProp. toge ther with IU1h ---;i;:.. :: , .... ._.,,Motkt: ...... land1cap1ng and
::::=v1e1o • :: All real utate ad-*675-7060• separate guest quarters!~~~~~~~~~~ New~~ 109 v e rt i s e d I n t h i a make this comfortable I t:J11:C9.'~111111<> [5 tnheewapeadpeerar llsFaauibrjecHoluts~I~~~~~~~~~~ home perfect for enter· MESA VSDI
s.1111A11a F4 OHIYIAllOLD taining.$4.W,500 ' $141,900 ~"~~ = ing Act of 1968 which OCR&..-.--D.M.ManW Hundred• or Clow~r• w.ti.:i"Mt.,. •• makes it Illegal to ad--""' 0 d ,..._"-"Sal• 1100 vertlae "any preference, T A K E O V E R 644-tfl everywhe re ao sun l£Al ESUTl Ii m it a h on, or d is . FABULOUS LOAN OF !~~~~~~~~~ fiJled rooms make this 3
A.,..,.IV&ai. :: crimination based on M26,000 INCLUDING THISOHl'S BR home a must to see. ~~s.ie '"° race. color, religion, 12~3 INTEREST, 29 Callnowfordetalla. =:,L%°~:111.. :: aex, or national origin, YEARS TO GO. TRY M& @
Co<llrner.,11 Procltny JllOO or an intention to make $ l 5 0 , 0 0 0 D 0 W N , Absolutely no cost lo = .. i!W~~s;.!~ := any such preference, ASKING 1649,000 view this 5 bdrm home
.................... 1100 limitation , or dis -JACoas•r11yy with RV parking,
,.._ ,,_,,,,, i:iooo1-crimination." RUY. sparkling pool /spa, SEA COVE ~~~._r1, m Italian tile entry, Ii
w.-Kw Tri. Prk• = This newspaper will not ____ 6_7_>6~6_7_0 ___ , plumbed for aotar heat. PROPERTIES e·~""lf"' = knowin~ly accept any Ex.clllinT..... Take over existing 7% 714-631-6990 °"' ... =~,';~°" -advertising for real l \.'.t year new, split level, loan. $225 PITI, OWC. :::~;.~·~.':;:' = estate which la in viola-3 Bdrm, 2"" ba end unit. WUI help finance. What llMlt:a~w .. t" -Uonofthelaw. Entertainers deUght ~irnc;b~~9'9~ub· IQCULS with formal dining rm. .-... ,.._"'" "°' and gourmet ktichen. ~ Wz'k--1 ln ==~ :_: HROIS: AdYetihen Recreation includes. • IUI
c-bnil\IJjm• ""'" 340! ' tennis & racquet ball. REAL ESTATE C......,111l11nu Ual = alMNlld diedl tlMir ach $160,00Q. 1----------1 =~!::;n = dally mid ,..,.. fl'-Touchstone Realty Inc. MO! YES!
~1--:.,0·1 = ron l••1 llahly. T1w ----~------1 HO! YES! A~ Uan.n. .. DAILY PLOT ••-H If you're undecided. see Apta ll\tt11N lnl llliOO h' • f 'I
LIDO ISLE
Super sharp 3 Bdrm with
apa. Completely re -
modeled & redecorated.
1525,000, 153" down.
O wne r wi ll carry
balance. ~--....
IAYCREST CUSTOM HOME I?e~igned for entertaining & family
living. 4·B~r~. huge living room, large
form a 1 dining & family rooms .
Gourme t kitche n Master suite
separate from other extra-lge bdrms.
Pleasing privacy in pool-sized back
yard. Great terms. $395,000.
WESLEY H. TAYLOR CO., REAL TORS
2111 s.J .. .-..... oact
MEWPORT CEHTllt, M.I. 644-49 I 0
RODI FOR 2 WCE YACHTS
Gf"ffl fin9lcilMJ a•......_ 4 ldrta +
... 1c1·. quarten, ............... .., ....
wite, fonnal ....... Price $I. I ..__
Te,....s. lob or Do•w Koop
R&'Mrtc 631-1266
RE/IL TORS
11-.. .ooo lebllty for .... first FAMl.YHOME t is spacious am1 y =~~~d :': h1corr•ct h1Hrtlo11 S pac io us Somerset h ome with s pa and C--...t-S~ialt-ts OWNER DESPERATE c-1Hom.. u:10 ....._ Mod 1 1 1 many upgrades . 3 __, ,---o
suv .. "'.~ R11«,•n1,•111•, ~ -1· e on extra arge ot bdrm s , l lV• bath . Call the experts at the Low down, take over ex-""" ~ in Harbor View Homes. d · f t · is· t ifto VA J N 1 Mt ntlll10Sllo••· uoo 5 bd r .1 fl replac e . ma1'ft'e'f' con o in ormo ion .... oan. oqua 1-c.,._iar R-~ rms., ami Y rm .. bedroom is a beauty 714 760 C)333 center. l ying. Just reduced ~':.!t:... :00 LI--fori:'....L. covered patio, toerrific Home warranty In-o~ TouchstoneRealty,Jnc. $.5000. Beautiful pool, 3
1,..,;a1R11>1•1 ~.-.-ff -location.$329.750 wner eluded. Sl2S.OOO Now'sl .,,,_ 963-0867 Bdrm . RV s torage. Stw-aa• -•••••••• ••••••••••••••• will help finance DR.,_ ... TE R...ub •a11tec1 ""° G ral 1 OOJ · the time to caU for view ....,. . _._ $124,950.
MIK llo1H I• _, .,.. 17141 673-4400 Ing a P p oi nt m e n t t U>rooa del Mar ptJplex. jWiainitiAidiHielipli"i· ii642ii·i56'7iilll•••••••-. BUSINESS, INVEST-•••u•••••••••••••••••• 12131 Ul-JHI 545.9491 Huge owners umt 4 car 1
MENT, FINANCE IT SIZZLES! HARBOR ~Walker B laa f::aa~:~.~~~~1it11 of· :::::::::,=· = WOW ! Price reduced
:=:=:::~.:i1 ~1~ $10,000. Large single ,._~"'"""" : story 4 Bdrm. Mesa
w-1 w11>1..i• ~ Ve rde Home w/3 Car @ REAL ESTATE
Mort1-1ttTn. 3(1:1$ G F I o· ANNOUNCEMENTS, arage, orma in .. A Dt \•is1on of
Hurbor Investment Co .
YOUR IEST VALUE
IM CAMEO SHORES
Lowest priced fee sim·
pie opportunity. Gte at
assumable lit TD. En·
joy arternoon sun and
Fam. Rm .. Spa, Central PERSONALS & Air & Air Purifier . In SEA COVE PROPERTIES LOST & FOUND Beautiful Cond. Now on· ~~~~~~~~I ly $232,900 and Owners 714-631-6990 t~••h
l.qalNatl<O u.t• F'o.iad ~· So<tal Chim• Tr•vel•
SERVICES
~tte °'"'1or)
EMPLOYMENT &
PIErUATION s.--. luir...1-.,..Want•d• HolpW-M" •.
MERCHANDISE
=r.:" """""" =MM~rl•b c.-. E<t ... ,.,,,. .. = f)M toYM
h Mltllrt O~•S.lt i=-..rc-. t::t _....,.
ltitttll-· ~"-•Yt1nlHI
MwlcaJ ·-.... -~,. Olliet """' • ~q111 p PWt = .. ~~~~. ~llC Oood• e.Rft.taureft\ Bu ~."lt!ii...Hi f'I Sl•r.O
IO~TS & MUINE
EQUIPMENT
0-&1 lloeU.MllM !Mr•tt• Bolltl.Marlno Equip Do"". Power !'l*a.Rel>I Charier ::::..s.u . si.,. Oo<h :=:=:Sit•
TIMSPOHATION
)100
lUO
S300 ~ ~ SAOO )45()
eooo
1UQS 70'1)
71()0
IOO& IOlO 801) ---lllJS -IO<.s -~ _,
IOU
ID'lO
"" 11111 -a 1 --llOI! -..,., ----
tolt -il030 llCMO -90llO 90'10 --
tllO tl20 91JO
9140 .tuo ,,..
tilt
91111 -
very anxious! CaU Clyde i---------•I Johnson, Rltr. 549-2644. MEAT AS A PIH
SO.OF HWY
CDM dptx, lowest price
in town. Perfect move-in
condition. Call today-it
will be gone tomorrow.
Tim Rhone. 631-1266
R~Mt«
H~Alfl>lt~
Describes tbis 3 Bdrm 2
bath co11do in Woodside
Village, overlooking
p o ol and park .
Beautifully upgraded
ca arpets and nooring.
TAKE O V E R
EXISTING FINAN·
CING AND OWNER
views from wood d~k. 31-------•-ml beautiful priv ate PRICEREDUCTiOH
beaches. Only S549.ooo. Owner anxious. Great
Calltoday,S7J.8SSO a ssumable loan. 3
THE REAL ESTATERS
Bdrm. in Huntington
Bea ch Only Sll0,500.
Hurry!
lYn 1n--g-a~i-m-. 1mm
WILL CONSIDER CAR-REAL PEOPLE
RYlNG A 2NO TO. Ask-will love this.beautiful 4 ~~~~~~~~~ ing $95,500. For an ap· Bdrm home Wttb family
962·4471 (;::')
pointmeot to see, call rm on comer k>t. Many ., .... m..... f STIOU. TO ~1151 extras. Only $133,000. mut -
NEWPORT 11.ACH Call now V79-S370 Mlll.a.'5 Day Charming 4 Bdrm. Cozy A u.t
living room features; , LLSTA TE Mtty IOtlt wood burning fireplace. _ Send a messaae to Mom
Owner will help finance. ---------I REAL TORS via the Dally Pilot's Only $209,900. Hurry, &f'~ Mother•• Day Page.
caU673-8S.50 RQUthl Your mesaage will ap-
THE REAL ESTATERS
YOU GET MORE ASSUME LARGoE pear in a pretty nower
FROMmESTORE LOAN box. For info rmation
J kH Lesh M oo this excel value. 4 and to place your ac . c • gr. Bd la g I g 675-1771 rma, r e poo • as message call 642·5678 !ireplt, new carpets. On· TODA y ! owe I st ~~·500. c ai1 97&.S37o --------
This 3 Bdrm condo bas
auper financing, pool, A LLST'A TE spa, and abowa like a _ I,.
model with all upgrades. ~~~~~~~~~I REALTlORS Won'llaat,callnow. Tim~ ,.
Rbone631·1266-3 IR CHAIMER HOISEl'IOPHTY
WAT!RFIOMT
Fantastic jetty view.
o ne of Maikai 's
loveliest 2 Bdrm. 2
bath condos. Large
lanai ror ex panded
I nd o or /o utd o or
entertaining . Superb
co ntemp o rar y
(urnJsb1ngs may be
purchased. Truly an
exceptional property.
$549,SOO. Call Don or
Mary Voo Geldern for
appointment.
R~Mt« $91 •000 Lots or wood, stained
Rf:o\ITllH'-
glas a and c ountry Sb1rp 3 Br, 2-sty home, charm describe the at-
-buge·family rm, formal mosphere of this Santa ------'--====1 dlnlng rm, ulll rm. Ana Hgts. 3 Bdrm 2 Ba
Loads of &t.orage! Love-home. The owner will
Jy neighborhood. Giant carry large 2nd and you
lot! Call Teri Marquez can ass\lme the Isl. Full
'15°/oDOWN
3 bedroom 1 bath ,
se parate io -law
quarters. Large comer
lot. RV parking. $81,900.
751-3191
C:::, '>E I t ( T
1 ...,..,, 1'4( JP! H 1 I{ ',
HORTHWoODS
Thia luxurious
Candleberry bu 3 Bdrm
and shows Hite a model.
Call today. You won't
beUeve the price. Tim
Rhone 631-12118
R~Mtte
It F ·\I 1 1111-.
CASA 111.110
759·1221 price $163.900
VACAMT-and. lonely. 2 bdrm. COD·
do cute as can be need• company . Super
WestcUff location. Very
con v e nleot. Pool.
fireplace, bar, nicely de-
corated. $129,500 move
right In !
17 I 41 673-4400
12131 Ul-2121
HARBOR
WISTCUlf Attrictl ve four bedroom
home. Cbarm~I roun· try kltchen wltb oalt
, cablnet1. Alt new ap·
pllaactt. Butcher bJock.
Newu~ULrouPout. Cu1tom drapu and
wal19ap•r. Double
flrepl1ce. Reduced to
P15.000.
'31·7JOO .....
Little Mla1 Muffett 11t on
a Tutret., abl,t came a
•Plder and reed tq the
Dally PUIM Clat1Wled
MCUotr alloul Mill Mui· fet •• Tulfel IDd bouOt It
foir •·•· You ean M1I ,., hlfftt ........ ol ... , ~ ......... , ....... ..
Dalb PtW uuamed
Ada. CaU IQ.Ml
directory. Your
servlOf is our
specialty.
Call 642-5678 ext. 322
Placing a Classified ad is
aa easy as dialing your
phone. Give us a call.
We 'll do the r est.
642-5678
• f'iAIRM{[.j~'
STARTING
A NEW BUSINESS?
Aceotclnt to C .. Momla lulineaa
and ProfeMIOn• Code (Sec. 17900 to
17130) alt p•reon• dolno bu1lnH1
undet • lldllou• neme mutt nte •
.......... ....,. the County et.fl! •nd
Kave. tt pubNeh•d fo•• time• In •
MW ... eamng the ..... In tlifttlCh
th• butlMta " located. The 9tatement fa'"'*" by law
and 11 necutary In ptotedng yout
bu1ln"' MfN, Moet Mnb requite
proof of Mnt to open oonunerclal
accoune..
TM OAlliY PILOT ~·· bottt nnae · and SM*k•tloft 1.ntcee. W• haH ... tM neoe11.-y ,.,_ 1nd
.......... dally..,,... ..... °'81111 co__, a. ....... ~-~.,.. =~---~= -.., ... ..=.. ..... ..-.
CE
, 110111 1L111s ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
LUXURY COHDO
C onvenient Loc ation . Two
Be droo.m s, Two Baths . Plush
Carpets . Pla ntation Shutters.
Skylights . Top Security. Lock Up &
Leave Whe n You Wish-. Large
Assum a ble 101h% Firs t Trus t
Deed. Only $255,000.
HEWPOIT HORSE COUMRY ·
Glamorous 2+ Acre Estate In
· BeautifuJ Setting With Your Own
Privacy. Formerly Home Of Movie
Star. Jus t Listed. Large Five
Bedroom Home With Double
Master Suite, Large Family Room
& Gourmet Kitchen, Surrounding
Sparkling Swimming Pool. Your
Own Stables. Priced At$2,SOO,OOO.
·--······~···
759-9100
#2 Corpo1ah Ptno ... .,... c....,.
WATERFRONT 30' ~K
l«Mlor pad, .,.ry prfvah, ......... Mlt9
w /•t.w & spa. l.nJ sit -. wet bcr, 9Ji
sun d.cks. Price $525,000. Excel...,__
lob & Do•I• Koop.
R&'M~
RfALTORS
1mc a,,,.
631-1266
"°""' .. , __
QC.-.. ._ Mo.rt .. , .. .,,., .. ""' ·-!OM-''°"'' """' ,,_
~= ,._,..
~~ .... :If:.. '"'-... ·-.. _ ·-•r-.,._,
•YM .-. ..,,_ ...,
{)Nmul
CUVllt
C 0 ~ N t M 0 A L A S C I R P H 8 R 8
S o.t t" E I. AT TL L I E R 0 I T 0
D C P A X M E P R R U 0 'A C T R ( H U
I M 0 V , 8 A A E R £ I. T N H C U T &
t R E H Y 0 M 8 S R 8 P A M I T E S M
A U T L Y S Q L M T 0 I X E N Z Q Y 0
" 0 T U E U A E P I L N M ( G K 5 I
)( J · J T t 0 R D A L E 0 I A l L A M
TM MC TR TS IT ttt IE N 0 l l K
t P K T R E £ R A X L R M 0 I A V C l
£ M t T l T I C l L I A R L 0 l E S l
1 H I ~ t R 0 E 6 l E I E U A L M t
I. S U E D E I T H K P R A H S H C t H
I. A Q I 0 D N T N A V Q M II 0 S R T
l f J A ~ I T W C 0 S 0 A II R I l S S
UHDAISU
Wide channel view from spectacular
architectural designed 4 bdrm pool
home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1 ,495,000 .
By appointment.
LIDO ISLIE HOMIS
Featured on Homes Tour this lovely
traditional spaoious, custom 3 bdrm, 3
bath home, newly decorated. Priced to
sell quickly at $475,000.
Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus
lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam
ceilings . Great for entertaining.
$420,000. Best price for the mohey.
PENINSULA POINT llACIROMT
Panoramic view at wedge, from prime
large lot, 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home.
3700 sq. rt. featuring marine room,
en~r}'.. li ving room, dining room,
bwlt-ms. etc . $1,385,000.
IAYFROMr
We have several fine homes with pier
& slip, starting at $1 ,500,000. '
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
1 ~ ! :·.' '. '" ' t) . 'J 1\ 11 /', 0 16 I
' ' . I
llHM»IN
PAYMBfTS
Owner aoxioua. this 3 Bd
pool home also llaa a
family 'room & lanai.
Call oow, it won't laat!
Tim Rbooe'31-1211l6.
WALITOWATR k
ff'Om this 45' wide dplx. J.
OWC 1st. Call for term•. ·
Tim Rhone. 831·121116
DWI.EX
3 bdrm, 2 bath each Unit.
Fireplace. built-ins. Ex-
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay. $285,000.
642·2253 eves.
associated
BRO~ FllS WE 111 TOllS
j11J< \ltl 9,Jlt,, J t' If)
SUPl!R STEAL
14 units, best E .slde
loc ation. Xlnt cond.
Prin. only. Call today.
Tim Rhone 631> 121111
R~M~
IH \I ' I ' ·~"
GREAT INVESTMENT
3 BR l Ba, S72.900. A•-
sum able financing &
seller w/alao carry
paper. Call for t~rms.
752..&l99
RHKedSI0,000
Highly upgraded & re-
modeled Santa Ana Hits
view home. Large 3
Bdrm 2 Ba. s kyllte greenhouse window,
pool. spa, and family
room are some of the
features. 1be owner will
finance with 30% down.
Full price $210,000.
Hurry on lhia ooe !
TRADI T 10\,.\ I
REArrY
HOMES f, INVEC,TWN"·,
631·7370
NEWPORT
llEACH
Jluge home w/RV -or
boat acceu. Under $200,000. Call today-1ee
tomorrow. Tim Rbone.
631·1211l6
Planlll~ty _O_C_EANAt __ OHT __
EAST SIDI RXa 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unfum.
What a mess! Bring New.$850yrly.
paint brushes. s1l9vels IA YFttOHT
and rakes and make $$S 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfurn.
on this barpin. Only Mintcond.tBSOyrly.
$139,000. Woo t last. Call CHA .... RtOHT
now. 3 Bdrm; 2 ba. unfum.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
114·631-6990
$7SOyrly.
associated
OP ( ,,. E .. ':, Q f I\\ l I._
J J' ~ [•-, ( •' I
---------1 When you call Classified
Lose something valua.
bte? Place an ad in our
Lost a nd Found col·
umns. That's where peo.
pie look when lhey've
found an item or value.
lo place an ad, you're as-
s ured or a f riendly
welcome and help in
wording your ad ror beat
response. Call Now!
642.5678
SEE AND BBJEVE
The very finest buy in the
Harbor area. New 16.50 sq. ft.
condos. 5 minutes to beaches.
One flalf bJock to major
shopp1na centers. Cement
drives, air conditioning,
micro1'{ave oven, trash
compactor, large walk-in
closets. Garage with opener.
Pool and 2 jacuzzis.
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
A LYRA
I' I r I
s u •rs
llOW.WHMa Coa•w. ... c1.
714/611·1055
"'-Stl6,000
L I I' r
REALTORS
'7~11 11
NIWPOllT SHORIS: Wtl located away
frOl9I trefflc. ahort wale to c~• &
:rtNMIS, pooJ etc. Citfft l '*"' home,
coay flreplace, wood dleil & patio, Hay ace~ to oc•• IMacll. Jlllt SI 35,000 IHIL
COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TOIS
25 I 5 I. Coast Hwy., Corona .. M•
675-511 I ....
EASTSIDE COSTA MISA-slX DUPLll
Twelve units, all w/2. BR, pvt patio,
C l a heat , laundry area, attached
..garages, !pie & extra parking. 8 units ·
>Y /1 !¥.. bath. All l·story, shake roof.
Owner may finance or assist. $7.65.,000
-\lJea ArQold 642·8235 CG81)
•ewpon .-.oh
901 Dover Drive Harbor VfdW Cent.er
t'\42-8235 644-62oo
Pf~IO! NllA1 I ~Al I !>lAIE SJ RVltfS
THE HST OF JASMMI CUB
A beautiful Plan Ill witb 3 BR. +
family Rm. One level living on a
magnificent freen belt with utmost
privacy. A gorgeously decorated
home. Central air. Auto sprinklers.
Cedar panelling + outstanding
owner financing. This won't last at
$390,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
CO.IUYEllS ~DllEAM
Nicely furnished 2 story, 4
Bdrm with '!separate master
s uites. Large asau mabl e
101A1% loan on this 2 year new
Ne wport Back Bay ho.me .
'315,000.
Pft41MSUL4 con 4G~225,000
Walk to bay or beach. Great
location. 2 Bdrm, 1 bath,
fireplace in the living room.
Flexible terms.
CDMOUP\.IX
'600D f!IMAMC,_
2 Bdrma + loft w/frplc,
wet bar in each unit. wltb 1reat ten.ant.I.
KONE+ RENTAL
lovely 3 Bdnn, front unit
with frplc and beamed
celline f>IUI u bdrm unit w/yearale ....
WH ._ CaU Barbara GIUI A' ~ UMl9'JI Century 21/SandpJper
AIOUT UM9U1 MCMMO SS1·9S41
BIG BEAUTIFUL-S pa n Is h 5 B d r m s , Cos .. Mesa I 024
charmlnf patio, pre· ••••••••••••••,••••••••
stige o Lido Isle, OW $650,000fee. MHAMAHCID
OUTSTANDING PAM LOCATIOHI
Lovely 38R, family rm and t~ bath
home on a large comer lot next to
park. Immaculate condition . Nice
landscaping w /easy maintenance
yard. Walking distance to school yet
so quiet. $139,950. Young Park 551 ·8700
<G82)
• lrv1na
Ca.mpua Valley Cent.er WOOdbr1c!«e VWage Center
752-1414 851·8700 I Large 4 Bdrm 2 bath
MONTEGO-Harbor home , beautiful
Vlew Homes, 4 Bdrm. 2 wallpapers lhnlout. Cul
ba, well cared for , desacat.reet.Ownerwlll
p r I v ate bac k y a rd . carry AITO for 7 yean Coata M... I 024 HIGH ASSUM.AILE
Lowest listed Monteao at 13/5~ inte"'9t. For an ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4Br home w/spa, xlnt.
at $241.llOO. appolatmenl to lee, call OCEAH & CITY YU cond. Slti,000. 552-6940.
R ET R EAT l N o Lo
54
0-tl.Sl ~ >'{' '!Z000· Ladore' 3
0styc, * * WOOllllnPf CdM-Master bdrm b.84 rp c. _,, wn. WC ua
wetbar, fplc, and bay Ut at 12~%. Call BUI. LANDING . 2 Bdrm b •at. 963-3847. vaew. , 2\'J a ,
adorable, French doors.~~~~~~~~~ SHAllPCONDO Fabuloua J .M. Peters
patios.$357,000. 3 bdrm, 2 bat.h, pool, ~~ng~t?1gcenPtlapna•4io.
IU .. -s1 near So. Coast Plaia. • A S S U M A B L E --$115,000. WiU consider w/private spa. Co1y
LOANS--3 Bdtms, 2 ~ INV'5TC>aSI lease option to purchase. fireplace in muter suite
ba, plantation shutters, Try I 00/o Down Broker, 644-0134. w/laviah adjoining bath.
lge corner lot and 1ome A roomy 3 bdrm 2 ba ----------1 Huge country kitchen
<><.Pan vlew. All U\is fur borne In great E'side WHAT A V4LUEJ w/every amenity. Of·
S3SS.OOO fee. area w Ith completed lf you've wailed for an fered al $315,000. Owner
plans for 1700 s /f 2nd un· exceptional buy. this is will belp with financing.
SPARKLING CLEAN-it s147 500 it! A charming, com-~ Citihome, 3 Bdrm, 2•., · .... 6· .. ..;7211 fortabte, 3 Bdrm home \\\lodbrldgc ba, fplc, 2 car garage, ...... located on a c 1 d u,. e-sac Realru end unit, some view! street. Priced at only ,
1240,000. $100,000 and 13""1% 551-3000
finapclog available. 024/Buranu Pkwy.lrvln.-
SELECT YOUR OWN-Best loan an.ngement --------Decor, fantaaUc financ· ---------i we've seen 9n a fine
ing 4 Bdrm, plUf farn i-------• home like.this. 556-2660 Turtlerodc ........ rm, 2 fplc's. quiet street. MESA VERDE 011 Fee L..d ·
1249,000 OWC 1 _. ot 13•50,0 2 story, 4 bdrm, dining
... 1• rm . added den w/wet THAT'S WHAT'S Sharp 3 bdrm on comer bar, steps to park ,
UNll'M1&.A10UT lot . Feat uri ng 2 ----------1 comm. pool&tennis. As· ~ rlreplaces, new roof. Fo.doilt V.-.Y 1034 aumable loan. Owner U!'lil()Ult li()Ml:S copper plumbing and I••••••••••••••••••••••• will asst.at in financing. Rea.ltors,67~ ~~~ U:~r:~~:~ ~I 3 Ml. To leach 1210,000 Fee Agt ,
wiU also aell VA and 3 .Br. 2""1 Ba condo + 64_0_·_5560_. ------1
.. --------•t FHA. Priced at $136,000. bonus room ,In Fountain CalJ540.11Sl Valley. New carpet, FIENCH DOOi
DECOR Ca.<>
20~ OWN 12'-"% ON BAL.
... s .. HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
GOLDEN TOUCH
ceramic tile and loads of
stained glass. $112,000.
Anne Mcca slan d 631-1266 .
MAKE AN OFFER
Priced lOOO's under
market a Bdrm + den.
lrg family k itchen ,
comm. Po01 few doors
away. Owner's motlvat
ed. Call now!
~!~::.~~ ....... .!~:.~.~....... ~.~.~ -··
Mtw,.rtlMdt I 06~wport.._. I 069 Mew,.,. le9di I 06' ······················~······················· ····•·····•···········•
This 5000 Sq. Ft ; Home sits on Linda
Isle. A private g uarded Community in tt~e heart of Newport Beach. Boat
slips for (3) 55'·70' Yachts. For Sale or
Trade.
We are developers so submit land or
other Real Estate to owner Jim
Thompson.
C714J 121·1210 IZIJJ 5tl-IJ6J
11001 l52-J7 I 0
.... N ... 1052 •••••••••••••••••••••
AW ARO WIMMIMG
Unique foicglove model
in Lake Park. 2Br, Den,
2Ba Vaulted ceilings,
french doors in den &
Kit. Upgraded carpet &
Ceramic tile in earth
lone colors. Prof. de·
signed landscape. Ac·
cess to 154acre park
w /tennis & 40 acre lake.
$74,000, assum al too/,%
$154 ,900. Open ho use
1·6pm Sat /Sun. PP 831-7634 or Ans Ad lf481
at 642·430024hrs.
PENTHOUSE
UNIQUE CONDO
with boat dock. pool.
secur ity + 180 deg
ocean. Catalina, bay view. Fee land. $450,000.
SJnith Meyer, Bkr.
640-5357 548-7113
OCEAN/BAY VIEW
2 Bdrm, 2 ba condo .
Magnificent ocean and
bay viewm Poo l ,
jacu zzi, clubhouse .
$275,000 Own /Agl.
548·8636
°" tbe water, ' bdrm, a ba One blk to beach.
Bonus rm "79,000.
642.2097 -•
llGCAMYOH ·
CUSTOM HOM8'
En1ll1h Tutor l5br, on
Goff Courae, P09l, m•tda quarters, eecutity f2.4
million. Ownerl wlJJ H ·
slat. P rlnclpl+s only. 759·1913 t
S.J ... (.
Caplatr.o 071
···············~1,,·r·· 3Mlletfr..,....,
WITH OCIAMN~
1-.c'-oS•ll&i
~ ....
Over 3,000 aq .lt. or
elegance. Exclusive new
homes, from .$11.S,OOO.
1~~% HnanclnpY9U.
Charter Rlty &dnvest.
496·8122 ) 831-8811
HAW All OR BUST Mu.st
s ell perfect fam ily
home, 3bdrm. 2ba .
prime comer lol.'Wktb 180
degree valley• view.
Totally refurbished in·
side & out. Owner
Sl78,600. Opeiljoqse May 9th. 10.2p . ~SU22
Galano Way. ( ~do &
Ortega). 493-5 '( etes
6·9pm. I
A11....-..$UA/MO 2 Br condo, 10;t% FHA
loan. $92.500. Print only. Ownr/Agt. CaU 497>-2509
s..ta AM 1 ,I 010 ........•.•....• _,., ...
BY Owner, OWC. . ..:J' br,
Crplc, dbl gar; ~.500. 751·8045 • .J I
By the beach 3 Br 2 Ba OPE .... HAI' •5"" Mhaioll Vi9fo I 067 Xtra wide lot, comm f"'lll UU :I:
•••••••• ••••••• •••••••• pools & tennis. 1235,000 Sat/Sun 1-4 AFFORDABLE Terms. Owner/Agent Gd, financing, aer. pool.
3 Bdrm Mission Viejo 642·3850._ ~:i 54;~~;· 97~ba
sinele family home with country kitchen and lov-,_ ________ , Sowth LCICJlmMI I 016
ely mountain view. Only BIG CANYON ••••••••••••••••••••••.,.
S29,8SO down to exhisting This hiehly upgraded 3 Spectacular ocean view.
loan. and no qualifying. bedroom 3 bath horne 4 Br Private a{e'f. ten·
$124,500. has it all 3450 sq rt In· n ls P r1cedJ below
Tow• & Co.rtry eluding custom pool, spa market. $54~, 000
llHI htale 552-1 tOO and sauna. View or the 499·l526. B.kr. golr course and all new ------
Owner built new house. carpel compliment the Other led &t.h
vacating 5br, pool, many r efinements . A •••••••••••••••••••••••
Spacious. quality Living
with charm and good
vibes. 3 Bdrm, 2 bath,
patio, pool, rec hall, Par·
quet floors, new carpets,
disposal , micro and
range. Newly painted.
·Must be seen to a p·
preciate. $145,00Q. As
soclation dues, ~O per
mo.
$320,000 this week. huge k't b ( II Mobu-H CONDOMINIUMS H.-.a.'-""'-•--L 1040 1 c en . am y _ ._. _.. .. ,,.._ ._.. Terms-let's make a de. room and formal dining For Sole 1 1100
Large private decks & ••••••••••••••••••••••• al! 830-1953 room complete the •••••••••••••••••••••••
--; IU~NC H A 1:1 l\l TY ~ 11111 :JOOU
OCIAN&OANA
HAUOltVIEW
Dll'LEX
Minut•s ~ bch, parks. &
view point.a. Prime ren·
lal area $165,000.
ROIBTS llLTY.
493-0202, 498-UMO
patios. Only t left. Xlnt11---------t N amenities. Couple the PALM SPRINGS•AREA. terma. 13% interest for 3 ~=======:._ ewport leech I 069 above with excellent BS· 2Br 2ba. 4 yrs old. Comp!
years. SEA WIND w /POOL W ATaNOHT ••••••••••••••••••••••• sum able rinancing and rurn. On 9 hole exec golf
2000 MEYERPLACE Designers 4Br. 2""1Ba, Woodbridge prime VIEW CONDO you can move In before course In adlt nark .
OPENWKNDS 10.5 pool hom e . N r l ~kefront location. $20,000 dwn and assume the summer staru: Ex· View San Jacrnto.
641·l991 ; 631·4361 , agt. Brookhurst & Atlanta. Views forever, 3 Bdrm. loans. $137 ,500. Rae elusive at $875,000. 638·9300 ask for Virginia.
SIDRM
POOL HOME
Terrific finan c ing
available. Large 2 story
family home with lovely
pool, encloled courtyard
and separate master
suite downstairs. All this for only $145,000. Call
540· 1151 for more in· formation.
.. , '~HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
Reduced to $165,900. 2."" ba: pvt spa. Flexible I Rod ers 631-1266 *Cote' Realty 2700S/FICHSIDE (11\ancrng. Spectacular! --I New Mobile ,Home ,
Custom 4Br, 3Ba w/pool Offered at 1354,000. Call • i~&· & Investment oceanview·EI Morro
& spa, 4 blks to the bch. 552 1800 and ask for :_ ·-640-5777 Beach Park, sp 70. 2Br.
1197 ,500. Lynn Noah. '-l IMll.•lljll -~~~~~~~~~I space rent $175 mo. 20 yr DUTCH HAVEN Tow11 & C-*Y 1_ Jae. $59 ,900. 499-3816
Sharp 3Br, 2Ba nr Beach lleefton 512 1100 OC ..... ...-~ "Warner.$112,900. • IACICIAY ~""' ARTISTS RETREAT
ASSUME VA UNIV ptDlf 3 Bdrm, 2 bath home $450,000 2Br, 2Ba, def, sunny Like new 4Br, 2Ba • Ml\ plus ideal mother-In-law Tbts first time offering porch. wlk to Beh &
w /$62,000 VA loan at Lrg 4 Bdnn 2~ Ba home quarters. Comp I is an estate sale One of stores. Agt. 49~24-0
91r'J3. Sll7,900. in prestlgaoua Univ. w/bath. $220,000. Newport Beach's ftnest T
R.E. Proh1tfoHh Park, steps from pool & lloy McCcrdle, RJtr. views. 3 bdrms home *MOVE IN OOA Y
''
• •377 greenbelt. Assumable 5..._7729 with guest apt or 2 units. 1978 Obie wide in family
-financing. Call for de-1~~~~~~~~~I Realonomica 675-6700 park. 2 bdrm. 2 ba. ~til· ~~~~~~~~~~I tails. I-ty rm. Din rm., siled. NEWPORT HGTS Picnic tble All appl. STOP HERE l Oo/o dwn, 3 Bd + fam VILLA BAI.BOA $46.500. Ownr. 964-S309 This super nice 2 Bdrm 2 FOUR.flt.EX Ba condo is just right for rm . great opportunity at Plan 6, 2 Bdrm 2 bath, COST A MES4~1E
BYOWNER a young couple starting $194,500. OWC 2nd. Guarded $1,500 :' '
WAUTOllACH XlntFlnancing! out. All the amenitiea area. Only $209,000. Call Single wide d~oltse
PALISAD.,.., DUPLEX 1310,000 are here. Large low in· -----'-----• V I E W , VI E W , 645-9161 w /lg added 1r "vt _, 675-0073, (714)34.S-4123 te t I an ii bl d ~ " With Wood 1iclln1. vault· res o ava a e an CMdo S,.clalhh VIEW pat.lo, walk to:: pping ed wood ceWn1s. In llllcel ________ llll4 seller will carry a 2nd. Call the experta at the 3 Bdr home w/cornerh-& bus. (DU926->' '
new conditioca. Mu.st ltte· $4 Priced rilhtat$l08,900. cod do lnformtation poaure. Super lnveat · DISCOUNT Al DLE
forthia price, $179,900. 0 ODO ON 1~67.~700Jlt1 center. ment. $26?~. ~~=.. ;
ROlll'TS IUrTY. Owner t m finance:" 3 •----------1 Toucbatone Realty, Inc . ' RAE ROMBS
' <714>d8-t040, •93-<>202 bousea on a lot. East.aide •ASSUME t •/a% 963-0ll67 631-11'6 HIGH t;MIALITY'
£oat a Meu. Only 4 Bdl~ ba $79,000 VA A REAL Sharp 3 Br, fa , beams, LOW PRICE •i79,000. Call645-9161 Ut, $1..20,000 w/10% dn. UJlt, seclud spa/decks. Dbl wide Cruaader, cen-
Princ only. Bkr751·6836 VALUE $1900000wnr 645-1,'96 tral air, dahwahr , lg
Jasmine Creek decorator ' · rms, $26,950. See to ap-bome, plan 1 on ireen· BY OWNER AT a lime when good OWNER DESPERATE prec. (Dff.162G.&4). ,
beltimmac. $305,500 3br, ll'~~$1!7,000 buy1 are few and far ---------i l Br & 2 Br condos. low DISOUNT MOJUL E
1022 •••••••••••••••••••••••
. OPEN HOUSE
r<lAL TY
Exceptional commission split
for listing oriented realtor
associates. Beautiful office in
choice location. Have 2
openings.
640-ll4S 961-2644or957·218'17 between. We are pro\Jd H.A'aaoa YllW HOME down + terms. John. HOM~ 1 fiii~=::~~~:-~;;;;;;;;~;;~~~~~=~~~~~~:~;~ to present this Im · "Montego"4br,2ba, Fee 540.4646 63S-Oll80 macuJate 4 bdrm, 2~ Land , loan assum. ---------SZOOt< at I 2'1J-!o W AMT A HOME? ba. Plan 4 In Tw:tle Rock 675--2139 LOW DOWN
/
.
759-1616
CHFRONT LANDMARK! DPOIT
0... II o~ •SAM wW It Hn
4 ...... d oppncl ...... -t '· .. C8'I
A•ttlft OeyH •r Jecla.. =1t1te for
..... 4 HW way to oww lhft tacelewt
................. wftll ..... 6000 141-ft.
IMtta•ng 2 .... J Md. ........ 2
IM4. retttal +peat ...... W1t wttll
2••11t..r & 4econted ltH•tlf•lly.
Jl-t400.
i OPORT CREST~ VIEW
M .... wl .. Oc._.... I I• •ltWL
Upp•il9d 21t4., 2 VJ INI. hcelle•f
fl••••l•t •••fl•ltle. l•••dlete ·~•cy. $110,000.
Fl.MAHCIMG IMDOOI SPA But don·t t.hinlt you can Hilla. Fabulous VIEW. BY OWNrD Repoued single ..;ide
Beaut. 2 sly 3 BR, CamUy afford It. Golden West Quiet and private loca· I br Versailles penthse LR FI e et wood . centr a I
CDM COTTAGE room and spa room on Realtors has designed a tfon, extra Iara• pool imported tile throughout LllS8/Pr.!'! Ora nge County, fleJlible PLUSIHCOMI cul de sac near all pro1ram that bas al-1l%edlot 1289500 $122,000. TSL Properties down & ter m s . or 3 Br 2 ba bome with schools. Agt. 846-4380; lowed many people to ., .. . • . 6'2·1803. !f arbor Ri~ he condo <GM4772-89).
is o I ate d master _642_·_4'4_7 ______ 1 enjoy home ownerahlp •55o.ooo wit s5o.ooo DISCOUNT MOBlLE
that never •""-·rcht they IA YFROMT HOME cash. 759-3903 HOMES bdrm/parent retreat or l .... VESTfta ... ~ Gl · • Bdr 'b in·1'w quarters +· 2 br " -could. Call now or more oriou. • m • a llG CANYON 636-0880
colt•fe. Any way you IH ftOUILI details. w /pvt dock for your "o-..m....•• -1ox•5', Costa ... ~a , deacnbe It . tt's charm· NO DOWN Golclelt W..t llllr yacht right at your front --·-• .. lnl, up lo date and Bach. Flat. Total Securi· (7l.4) 848-3588 door. Excel Peninsula By Owner. 3700' Golf adults. $6500 for ·ck
beautifully decorated. ty Condo. •1011,000. ~~~~~~~~~ Poin' locatloa. Sl,650,000 Course view, very lge lot sale. 673-911216
Priced at $280,000 wlth~97iii8-iii04iiiii23iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-I ; lee or $1 , 2 9 s , o O o on comer with Jae pool & very apecial financlni. 111 I Oo/o LOAM J ea 1 eh o Id . 0 w n e r spa1 $875.&.000. Owner will haflt .. 1 Prap1rty f 400
CAUFOltDITAll.S 37 ASSUM LOAM Assume '95.000 loan at 't.523C\MPU,Dl:fRVINE ~i~r Dan Blbb, ;::_1::iarrtnciples only •••••·~·i#;-;,;.-.;••r••
644-721 I No quatlfyh~g . s mall 10% on lge. 4 br. home ------------------1----------$ down payJn_en._, low ln· with fam. rm. & fprlc . LOCJ191G ltoell I 04 W aterfrORt .,..,... 9 0 ff Ice b u l1 d · g .
t.ereat rates, no roan No quallfyinfi. Only •••••••••••••••••••••• WlttalCNlfD9cll OVIAl/J ACll $425,000. Hj'3 . on't
polntal 2, 3 fc 'BDRM :.::.:.:0°:., ~~r,o;:~ THISHAICES Could be Newport'a IN NEWPORT BEACH. ~;5~{81 Bill ru dy'
Houses & Townhomff. for Jim. Ownr/Agt We at he rad ceda r Joweat priced •-aterfront wide open spaces, green --------+--
All in l:::: areu ot ---------• shakes, t.hat ls. Custom bome with income .\mit 1 awn s • n d 1 a r get•------•-1m!~~tme Or=!kt.~~lltr Al~·!·i~~~ 2 ~.•g:~.J.~E":'teri~~~ ~o~~er?~a~r Ipfo. l~~r!n~on:.~~ ~~op~ o:tc:O°':t11
City as ocean view (714)848-8588 use of wood 1lau & portunlty for you. Call Pride of own=r.Jone
$540,000· only 15% dwn.r-~~~~~~~~~ Ba-good reota, no ceramic tlle. Beam cell· •LOWDOWM• for details.
A • TD OWC vacancy factor. Price In f I .,, .... 0 ~_..1 _ 642 SZOO of a kind, preat Cloua laume Ut • IUSlt41SS.OPPn $185,000. Loan is ... g. rp c .• ~ss.ooo. ." -.irrlHG• • location in Newpo rt
balance al 12%. Ppnc. EatabU.bed well located 1 u m a b 1 e . A 0 n e Mllsioo Realty Ver.all a Luxury 2Br Beach. AU this pl1Dla so
Only· 96M758. beauty •aloe in prime McCuland. m.1218 (714)4M-0'131. Condo, below apfralaed foot boat 1Up. ~will -:-~:;;ijiiijiiiiii;;;::---:l tocatlon. Suttmlt on New wood-glass, spa, •tlue , part~ ocn· consider eaob1~1e .
terma. iolar. 6 decks, Bcb· ~·JJ:'~J'· ftplc, Prin. only. Call BW Mer·
DUPUX
Attraotlve property,
1ood Income, near
beub and a hopa. SHO,QOO. Shown by
ApPt • ..........
Touc:hliooe.Realty, Inc. v 11 1 age Iv I e w •. fl n aoc~. 1-V:o~'i:iQ rell,
......, ttt5.000PP'94-7631 dya4U eva. ~~!!~!!!!~~
Two J Jldrm bcMpea 08 '"IM HM•_ ....... .__ _____ _, ~;iiiiijiiiiiiiiiiii
one lot, W, Ooata Meta. • .. ••••••••• .. ••••••••• Li,_1 Mlplt ~~s=.·~,~n. owe . THI HOVIS •••••••••••••••••••••••
Spacloua 2 Br tnobUe ""V-........ Lee.._ home. Owner wlU help
Sbarp i Bdrm coado ln finance. BHt ln th•IJ~!ll!~~I! Meu Verde. Prt-to P•fk. Seller anxtou1. Hll .~ M ,908. Anae 1187,500. Rae R6d.1era
llcCaalancl. lll·l.39 &31-lJM. Act.
R6'M~
1°•11 r
HAllOl llD•l 8'A11S
Comm a n di n 1 v iew & value.
Und erstat ed eJeeance with
unsur passed upgrades. 4 bdr.
Devonshire. Fantaau c financlna.
Alkinl $850,000. Models wiU be over $1,000,000.
!.
• •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 -...
•'\.' C ~sh 1·n on· 7-or· 11 __ ~--Here'• • aure thing for Or•noe County •dvertlMr•-
There are two ways to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad
Run 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes D ·1 p·1 ~
Items totaling $500.00 or·less Call 642-5678 II J 111
Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please . Any classification. No cancellation Rebate.
3tt~~~~~~~~~~..\ .. 'OIM.-......... ......... e>ttterlffl...... .._...U•fw••d ....... ulltfwwilt1wc1 ......._U•fwMalwd CCNIClo••• 1 ,........,.,_..,d •h~ •• ,. •• ,............. •••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• • • •• • •••••••••••• • •••• •••• • • • •••••••• ••• •• •• • • • • • • • •••••• ••••• • u • ..,..11wc1 3421 • •• •• • • ••••••••••••• •• • •• •••• • • • • ••••••••••••• Yew .... 1-.n ......... ".,.,., 2000 Loh for s. zz COf'OH .. Mii' JJZ2 Coate M... 3224 .... ,.... .... UH ....................... s-c...... 3776 Coat• M... H24
II .. " t.r• 1780 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nwpt. Bch. 18r. wlk to ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIX & SAVEt-IAY AVIMUI 2 Br, 2 Ba, all newly de-3 Br l~ Ba. dahwshr, Hart.or View Bch, pool, jac, laundry lbr. lba, clean, new rum 2 Br. Adults only, no pets. '•· THILAIB 3 " ' un1ta rl~ t CORNER VACANT LOT co1 rated, lmmac., Prime frplc, dbl car 1ar. encl. Gracious family home 2 fac. SS2S/mo.642-4957 & drapes, utll pd. Wik lo SUS/mo. 7M W. ~h. St.
,... IRVJNE ' p o READY TO BUILD ocatlon. 1 blk from backyard, .nice area. • t o r Y 4 b d r m b c b / 1 b ppg 101 W. Call for appt.146-9507
" l BDIUl Townhome ten· move now. SeUen want lncluda apprvd plans. ocean. '850/mo. 7S0.1998 S7 5 O. Marguerite. Fumishtn1 avail at no 1 Br condo, $800 mo, No Mar1ulta 492-8120 --.. l ll s:uri quick eacrow. A buy at u 8o,ooo . 54().3616 extra Sl200/ 1te N qualllying·lease option. ~,... llfu Cbarm101. ZBr, 2Ba,
1 M i l:' io:-owc ·~ ~~ Hurry! SPYC'iLASS HILL pets. · 2015 ~~ Bristo~ ~;~st Plaza. John. u .. t. ~.h.d ~t~~ ·~-=· Carport.
"T.D. CaUS.S-9511 MEL FUCHS LEASE 3 Bdrm l~ Ba. frplc, dbl Cr. Call Elaine &U-5997 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• --. PAVILION REALTOR a Bdr, form•l din., ram car 1ar, lrg rec rm, nice or640.5357 G--......1 ~10 3Br 2B Tri 1 ""-ts
1 ,. THISPR.-s
'
1 IRVIN E • lBdrm CONDO on
• •1' water. Pool, tenna "
11 ap•~ $84,000. Aaaum
·• · loaa. owe 2nd T .D. can
lilf,1511 '
' .. ~/. 1100
• •••••••••••••••••••••••
M'IAI THI SA.MD ..... , .. .,...
, S.eoada to the water.
Extelleot 3 B.R owner's
I "home-like" unit Ir 2
BR, 2 ba, rent.al unit.
0 , Ideal for home Ir lo· ~. 1
• come. C&oee to Newport
,1 (HeYandahope. S289,950.
, W,W.yM. T.,....Co.
IHlton 644-49 '0
~:·· ,,..,.rty 2000 •••••••••••••••••••••
IAPPU VALLEY
, Near new 4-Plex, 2
bdrm, 2 bath each unit with fireplace, enclosed
..,,., r atio, double garag.e.
: 18~.ooo. Bill Grundy,
" Rlir, 675-6161.
Q!t'!lltlHVl !>£ 875-SU> ~ea $7!50. Marguerite. • ......... Rh F:.-i ... d ....... ..--ill • a P ex. """P ~ .,,,,_ rm, 2 firep laces, lrt un """"" ApG~I W41 •••••••••••••u•••••••• drps, patio, car-~rt
714164,1·0763 MobHe H.. bard $11100/mo. Bob, & __, • ......., llG CA.HYON ••••••••••••••••••••••• APTMTS FOi RIHT Children OK, no ts.
Co2787t BMr1stol SCtA. Pertl 210 ovle Koop. 831·1266· D..a PoW 3226 Exclusive, full security, ~~.~!~ ..... ??.~~ H.B., N.B .. Co6ta Mesa 2515 Or~nge A•t 8.
. s a esa. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Aat. ••••••••••••••••••••••• beautiful 3 Br. 3 Ba. Little Isla d 1 bd 1 Something for Everyone Owner on premisel'$un.
---------325' oo Lagoon, older Coate w... 3224 •Close to marina 3bdrm, ~riv ale yard, wet bar & ba. New nf~ & r~, 1 Bach. to 4 ~r. Unf!Jrn. ~!_ 10 '485. MS-9!11
U.._.ITS-C M trailer park '250K. ••••••••••••••••••••••• l~ba , frplc, y•rd, f1repl~C!, m.any ot~er $62.s mo incl utll. 1 a1it' Afts. Certam locauons 1 ... ST"'...,.1 .... ,
f"'llL • • Trade $1!50K equity forSechlded 2Br, 1Ba p•Uo $600/mo. Townhouse. amen1t1es 1nclud1ng 873-0786 · o. fer · Pool . s pa. " "'"' "•
14 units, E·tide, pool , ?? ? ~1014. home, pool. adlta, 00 495-44116. • Maids room. $1450 mo fireplace, laun. room, Beaut. 2 Br. 2 Ba. A/,l. 10~3 fmancing. o.tofC__... pets, $500 mo. 2453 Call Anthony wkdys CostaM... 37 24 beamed cei lings, Frplc,enclsdgar.,ln ry ,ro,.:,b'r' 2550 Oranae Ave, see Mar CLASSY COHDO 642-5757 eves & wknds. ••••••••••••••••••••••• garages, all built-ins. rm. patio Small pet OK .
8 units, near new ....., Apt B 751 2717 For Lease. Dana Point 3 644-8889. C •s ... DE ORO Garden & Townhouse S440 Mo. bousewn rentals ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · Bdrm. Ocean view, pool, "' "' design. NO FEE. TSL Mgmt. 642·1603
New Mobile Home 3Br, 3 br, 2~ ba, condo. 2 car serene living. $725 WESTCLIFF AREA I Br ALL UTILITIES PAID TSL MGMT. 642·1603 •y "'IL .... OWt
TSLlnvestment.s 2Ba. frplc, redwood 1ar .• deck, paUo, pool, Thompson Mgmt. Corp. condo. pool, carpl, new "' "' " 642-1603 deck, cedar shake aid· $400 54<M083 493-0141 appl, spacious. Very Compare before you lalboa Pe•alllla 3107 Roomy 2 Br. 2 Ba. Apt.
---------• ing, nr lake & skiing · private·Adltsonly.SSOO rent. Custom design ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4·Plex . lndry rm .. $41,900. Terms or trade DOLLHOUSE EIToro 3232 675-6646or833-3622. features: P~l. BBQ . $400Utilspd.2BrDuplex balcony. Adults only.
499-3816 1 Br. patio, attached ••••••••••••••••••••••• surround.ed with plush 410 Harding, Balboa. No $465 mo. 9 ocean view apts, 8 1arage, stove Ir Refrig. HOME FOR RENT THEILUFFS !andscapmg. Adult liv· pets. 547·11.SS TSL Mgmt_:_ _!42·1603
17 UNITS
comm 'l, underground 1.-htate 0 S D 1 3 Bdrm. $650. Fenced bd b mg at Its best. No pets. parking elevator. fron· W..tecl 2900 range t. near e yard & garage. Kids & 4 rms, 2 aths, super Bach furnished $310 CoroH def Mer 3122
taice on Coast Hwy Mar. $395. Adults, no clean. Yearly lease. $950 ...,R W. wa·•---. 642.1971 ri1 . . ••••••••••••••••••••••• pet.s. 673-m2. pet.a welcome. 964·2566 A t 673-5354 ...,., """' •••• ••••••••••••••••••• P me Laguna location. Investor's looking for or 973-29'71. Att .. no fee. mo. g ' · SUS CASITAS 2 Br, 2 Ba duple~ w /sun·
Duplex 2 Br 1\.-'a ba.
$415/mo. No pets. Dave,
Agt. 644·7211
D•aPolnt ·3126 WhelaS40-3666 home In Laauna/So. Beautiful new condos. t• t~•~e. 3240 BLUFFS. 3Br, 3Ba. fam deck 411 Poinselta. n Laguna for sale by $650. Dblp.rw/opeoer, ,,._..,.__, rm. pvt spa. Sl.050 Furn. 1 br. apt. S32S & S700 /mo . lyr lse . o~ner. Stephen Flan· 400sq.ft. astro turf deck, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644•2300 up. Encl gar. Adults, no 675·0124 Jackie. •••••••••••••••••-••••
Real Estate rug an 4M-8481 4bdrm. 2ba. nice location. --------pets. 2110 Newport Bl. --3 BLKS FROM PCH --'------·----1 close to ocean. 00·1991 ; frpl c' dishwasher. New 2 Bdrm. Condo, npc, 548-4968 btwn8&5PM Im mac. l Br. ocean vu. 1 1 br, J ba, au utils pd.
20 un i ts . Pride of R..tah 631·43&l,agt. I $700 /mo. 891 -1947 ; pool , jac. Nr. Hoag H t'-_._. __ _.. 3740 blk from bch. Shar~d $360.831-1873
2 BR F d yrd Co 839 4090 Hosp ttCI\ Mo .. .,., 1361 • .,,,,_. __ n garage, laund fac11. ownership. E.side Costa ••••••••••••••••••••••• · nc • aar. U· I · · · ,,,.,.,., _..,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $675/ Alt67J.1181 H..tiftgto.t leoch"3140 Mesa. 1.3 million. 30% Ho.In Fwwl Md P.le. child o~. smaU OUl· •21rToMl.'tolM $550 Dave, days, 557-7630 $375/up 1·2 bdrm. pool, ___ m_o_.--"------4 •
dwn. OWC. Overall in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• s1~e P!t· Drive by 555 A Gar pool park 963-5l9l eves. jac. adlt. 1.8992 Florida, Bachelor $275/mo incl
terest 103. Agt. 760-9333 L.aCJl-a 1eocJt 3141 V1ctor1a St. C.M. June ' · · Newport Shores JBr. ZBa. H.B. 842·2834 or842·3172 util Freshly painted . . :· ,· NEWPORT BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• lit. $42.s. 963-33'79 •Closeto Bch• tennis & pool. Nr Bch new drps 631-1094 Owner says sell/exch. 24 2 Br. 2 Ba. PaUo. ocean 3 Br+den. 2ba, fam rm. S750. 968-9110 H.B. 's FINEST 15~ down and assume indus. income units for view, now to 9/30. Adlts, lBr, 2Br "Junior. 2 Ten· dining rm. S795. 963-5191 Spanish Estate Llving! Enjoy summer living all
Joana . Three adjoining 1 r g er Ind us I c omm . no pets, bus to beach. nis crta, pool, jac, sauna. Family home. 2 Br 2ba , Beautiful park-like sur-year Wik to CdM beach.
TRIPLEXES tn CdM on $895 ,800. Agl, Bill. $850/mo.494-4475. sand Yolleyball, pool 3br. 2"'1ba, frplc, Cam rm. frplc, pool, lenni~. pvt roundings Terraced 2br. frplc, lgedeck. encl
• I & l 81! P~hO 4pl\
• 0 \• "'~"f" & 8801
• f & Rr Ro •r
oc.analdeof PCH. 831-1.2.57 ..._._ • __ ... tble. Adult sorry. no gardener. S'700/mo comm 2 blks to ocean. pool. Sunken gas bbq. parkmit S750 mo avail •·· PLUS ,...wport--... 3169 pets. 6~ Baker. CM 962-8375eves 7607199 sparkling fountains. 1mmed 675-8589 or
• -..tit· 11r l 4nO\C40•"4
• J~Q to llucn 4 Sl\QI!>
two duplexes and 1 -~.,'~,4 ....................... 557-0075. Spacious rooms . 6427544 •~< triplex in a row on 19th .. P 2100 LIDO ISLE charming 3 Springburst 3 Br 2 bacon WA TERFllONT Sep a rate dining area. C -M ... St, Balboa Peninsula.••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm,2bat.h,playroom. WAUCTOPOOL dow/patio,gar.Immac. W a lk in closets . oata Ka 3124
• Stt , I G1ttS
SEA ENVIRONM• NT
9631HAMtl TON t< B
962 4~00 , Only l lotfromsand and LA~UHAIEACH Just remodt;led. Sl6SO or sun oo the deck 3 Nr. Newland & Talbert. w/boatslipincluded homelike kitchen & •••••••••••••••••••••••
surf. Ablolutely prime Canyon Industrial bldg mo to mo. Btll Grundy, bdnns, 2 balhll. spacious 172.s, 891·6:1!6. 3 Bdr 2 Ba, dbl gar. rm cabinet.a. Walk to Hunt-2 Br l Ba. Maple St.
properties. near town Ir art festival 675-6161· ~~:.~atU:~b~~~0!t '""'• 3244 ~~u~~~Sl~~~o~P to ington Center. Adult, ref rig, no pets. SE ASP RAY. 2Br, 2ba.
grounds. Fully leased. ~4 LIDO ISLE BAY FRONT, Barrett Realty, 64.2·5200. ···~··••••••••••••••••• J £COBS 111:£LTY l Bedroom.furn, $440 Quiet. $37 5. Sierra frplc. Rec .. & security.
DUPLEX wlltl Dock
for 30' boat.
tenants. 9600 5,. ft. Sohd sm boats + 60• dock. R~ ... •s ~ ~ 2 Bedroom-furn, $510 Mgmt. Co. 641·1~
mon1 maker mhlgbde· Wkly, now/summer. MESA VERDE 4 Bdrm 2 IA"'•~ 675-6670 't~iJ~~}~~~· Spacious3BrDuplex ~;l.beach. 1645· 891•
6396
man area. Manage· 673-SURF 873-7677 bath. double garage. ~ =~.12't~~· = THE BLUFFS. A lovely 1 $425. Pool & laundry fac
.• fLOUIPLD/FfwValley mentavall. ' lmmed.occpy.S'750mo. 3Br.2"'1ba. $800moto LAQUINTAHERMOSA S48-9556 2 Brl"'i!Ba,gas p4.$350 IMS 000 A.n 642 5200 level 3 Br. 2 Ba. on green ------i + $350 deposit Crpts, .• , Realooomka 675-8700 Ho.tnUwfw-....d •·· . mo.3Br.2ba. Sl.250 belt near pool. Sll25 l6211ParksideLn.lblk
t ' MANY MANY MORE! ••••••••••••••••••••••• MEW 211 w /FllrLC I FURN leat.e Agent 759·1092 w. or Beach. 3 blks s. of meat:aJS.AU :-::es~ rblt~~s~ c~~F:~:
C /21M.wportc.tr forS. 2200Caplstr.oleodal211 Built-int. ACsults. no Edlnger847.5441 ADULTS
·! • 640.5157 ~·~·;1~·:;::·;;;;~~ ;;;:;;:.-~~;.~-;,.;,~~~~~~ peta.642--0lm. S675/Mo. 30:;~n 2 ~e!~·~~~~ L IMCJ. Bea!~tu~~ped 893-4894or&.6.~let s ·
{.•· DUPLIX. H.I. m area of million dollar redecorated. $85() mo. 4 Br. New paint, carpet & Ask for Roa. 752-5111. ;~~! ........... ??~~ garden apta. Patios or THE WHIFfU T.JlH
Luxury Adult unlt.t-at af·
fordable living. 42 & 3
Br. Well decorated.
Olympic size pool, light·
ed tennis court, Jat:uzzi,
park like landse9ping.
Most beautiful bilig. in
H.B.
" Nearbeach,two3Bruo-homes. Read~ to go. 34544 Calle Portola. drapes . Gar d e ning decks. Spa. Heat pd,
r
it.a, 2car1ar, nr park. S3lO,OOO. Gil Agl. Owner(714)549-2042 s~rvlce . $750 /mo . NEWPORTCREST BEAUT.2 br1oceanview, cove red parking . TSL lNVSTMT 642·1603 857-0211. 546.9950 Agent has 3 three units. Ill-fashion oecor. huge, Ad I 1.8
Y Have somethina to sell? · ~oaalble lease option torgeoua Lr. Sl,000 mo. 2 B~~·:~pe · $470
• •:1 ~Udle ltema 142-5678 Want Ada Call642·S678 Classified ads do it well. Classified Ada 642·567& 1775 to $850. 645-0295 Avl. 5·1to7·15·499·2221 2 BR, l ~Ba $470
·'•' '1 H I MewportlMdt 37'9 398W. Wilsoo,631-5583 ·'' lfS 3 CAMPll5l>a·IRVINE A IOR VW KNOLL ••••••••••••••••••••••• t,1 3br, view "CONDO'", MEWLYDECOR.
1 h Wi h L 1900" of super upgraded OCEANFRONT 1 Br. &as pd, encl gar To Mot er 1t O"-T.e Smoketreee 2 Br 2 Ba elegance & corner Wltly,d1Jt.2-4br d/waaher. pool. Adults
'V' • • • condo, 2 car garage, nr privacy. Pool & tennis 873-SURF,873-7877 642 5073
Lovt bas a way of retum1n1 toils aource On Uu~ 1pt"<"1al da• tennis /pool/school. A vi. pri vi ledges. S900 I mo ---------·--·--· ---
Ille lovt )IOU have clvtn IS rtlu.mtd wllh a •s>tt••I mt'"mllt' 5 /2. $625/mo. ( 213) 644·5598 Spacious 2 Br $365. Pool &
ol warmlh Taitt a look Stt how much you arf ln•td 474-7892 or (213) 474·0820 --------laundry fac.
From $395. 846-0619
Spacious 3br. 2baft four·
plex. frplc. disbwshr.
$450 mo847·7846 -----~ MOllLE HOME S48-9556
·---· ...... , L LOCJmO leecl9 3241 Super dbl wide, 2Br. Avail. now 2 Br. 2 Ba.
-L-rg-3B-R-. -2B-A-.-U-P_""'_r _u_n_.· Apts. Garages. l child Allli., r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2Ba, $550 mo. includes "'" OK . no pets . Oceanfront rental 1650 uUI ! 1st + $200 security
mo. furnished / un· movesyouin.642·699lor
furnished. Adlts only. 675·7104.
499-3818 Harbor Ridge Condo. 3
Two family home. 4 BR, 3 Br, 3 ba, sec. pool, s pa &
ba, 2 kitchens. 2 living tennis . S1750 . Ph :
rooms, 2 (pie's, vaulted 759-8903 ·
ceilings. Great ocean ---------
view. Much charm. Like NEWPOl\TCREST
new . Sl400 mo. agt 4 br. 2000 sq ft condo,
Hillie, 494-7551 split levl, immed. O<'C
S990/mo. 631-7270 Lagma M... 3252 -------
••••• •• ••••••••• ••• •• • • SAM TIA.GO DR.
4bdrm, 2ba. frplc. gar, in Beautiful house avail
lovely neighborhood. now In elegant area. 4
$735 lease incl gardener, Br. 3 Ba. Dininl Rm.
no pet. 499-4721 or Living Rm. & Family
838-4921 Rm. New wallpaper.
cozy kitchen & many 4br, 2ba, 2 car gar, refrlg, many xtras. Children &
lge lot, low maint. avail pets OK. 759-8974.
immed. $750/mo497-4.2'79 ---------
1 BR + den, Niguel 5-teA.M 121
Shores, guard gate. ••••••••••••••••••••••
Some ocean vie w Beaul.3br,2ba,frplc,all
Comm. pool, tennis: new decor. Drive by.
walk to beach S87S 2317 S. Lowell. '600/mo.
498-2501 or492-2958 ' lat, lest + Sl!50. 644-5069
YEAR·ROUNO FUN:
Social Acl1v1lles Or·
rec1nr •Free Sunday
Brunch • 880 s •Par
l•es •Plus much more
~EAT RECREATION:
Tennis • Free Lessons • Cpro & pro shop)• 2
Heallh Clubs • Sauna•
Hydromassage •Swim·
ming • 011v1ng Range
BEAUTIFUL APART·
MENTS: Singles 1 &
2 Bedrooms • Fur
noshed & Unlurn1shed
• Adull L•v•ng •No Pels
• Models Open daily
910 6
Oakwood
Garden Apartments
NewPQrt Beach/So.
1100 16th St
it. encl gar. Nicely dee. Water/trash paid, $475. Mesa del Mar. $475.
751·9905, Iv message. :4;~ or 973·297\· Ail ..
MESA VBDE EAST
2 Br . Apl .
w/dis hw811her , frplc.
vaulted ceiling, balcony.
pool, spa , bbq, gar
avail. Adults only. no
els. SSOO & up. 2651)
________ ...._ __
3 2bdrm apts, (•pie's,
microwave ovens, un·
derground sec. prking.
SSOO I mo. 963-6490.
LGCJmta IMCJ. 1141 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~=a_r_la_._54_9-_244_7_. ---1 New1 br, lgedecklocean
i1'1!UG E Bedrooms in view. close to Dea ch, S48S. 494. 7079 super location. Fully ----------
carpeted, built-ins, 1 br, ocean view, frplc,
ground floor. Adults. no lge deck, open learns.
pets. $3!50 mo. Apply Apt $600. 494-0066, 751-4293
B 568 W. Wilson. 646-4477. M•wport leoch 3169 ---------l •.••......•.....•.•....
Lg 2Br. carport, lndry, Oceanfront for ft'inter
S385 mo. 642-8843or (213) Rentals. Furnished &t
596·3703 unrum. Broker. 6'!5-4912.
Studio Apt, beamed ceil· NO FEE! Apt. Ir Condo
lna. paUo. $265/mo in· rentals. Villa ae.tals.
clds utils. 646-73"2. 675"'912 Brol(er
10o•e• ,j 1stn1 2 Br. No pets, Joann St. 1
(714) 142·5113 chUd. $375; Canyon St. 2
Cosy Town.home. 2 Br. 2 Bradford Place 3 Br 2 ba Newport Beach/No. children $390; Pacific
Ba. Fireplace, beamed condo w/patio, gar. Nr 880 Irvine Ave. 2 children, garage,
WESTCLLFF 2 Brf!~ ba
townhouae. Adulv. only.
no peta. $.W>/mO: 1728
Bedford Lane. ~533
cellioas. 2 ca.r garaae, Bradford It Carriage. w 161~1 ~i~~rra M1mt. Co. •OCIAMM~•
comm . pool & 1pa.1_$5'_5_.9_9_l_.6.'IJ6 __ A-'gt~.-·_~ (7t41 945-H04 Frplc, panelled, atlo,
$600 /mo . 495-4947 , SotltttL...-321 2 br, l ~ ba, no children, lbr. $575/mo. ·0045
141-5171. •••••••••••••••••••••• small do1 OK, SUS. 610 _e_v_es _____ ...._ __ SHORT TERM Rental.a S Mk.a..Vlefo J 2'7 OCEANFRONTHOME Weekly•moathly Joann t.642·7344 BIG CA N~O N
••••••••••••••••••••••• O'lookaJ!vt~ach.2 br. Agent,875-8170 L•k ea , streams Ir Townhouse2Br. Ba.
HOll!:S FOR RENT 2"' b•1 en. din. rm, lge ----"--'------waterfaU. in the back DI n In I Rm . en. • Bd ....,,. F ed deck, •l.200/mo. 499-2253• ~ d f b __ .. be utlf il ted .. rm. -· enc '99·S02l OCE.Alto..U!.BONT yar o a rll.IN new 1 or a u Y ap n · yards Ii aaragea. KJdt Is ~ 2 bdrm condo. Frplc, 975. 644-5494
pet.a welcome. 9&4-~ CHll1•llll• • Fum,. 3 ~~ .. 2o1Br•1· 2 bltl.na, 1ar. pool, Jae. or tnS-217LAgt.,oofee. Uwfwlllle.d 142 car ara1e W ILD ce, 5S'O&up.979-6 2br, lba, frplc, ••ve • washer Is dryer tncld. re f r l 1 inc I . new ... _w._.. •---l26t •••••••••••••••••••••• "' v a I I . N o w t ,_ ,....... • -2bdrm 2 U' I• red " Eaatalde smaller "1 Br. cpl /drapes S60 /mo.
••••••••••••••••••••••• paUo.' ~c~rtOc~~ch. Wltly/Mnt.bly. Natural wood ceWni 752-1111 day1, 7 -0591 II& CYN LIA.SI Access to pool ll court.a. TSL MGMT. Mi·l80S cablneta. Adulta only. evea/wknda ft
3 Br 3 Ba, formal din., .'75. H.B. (21.1)925-4798, FaotaaUcally fumlabed $MS. 551-1890 Quiet 2br, lba, 1aq pool,
lJ'I ma•ter IW.le, very (714)875-4902. toWD.boUM, wttb ocean adults, DO pellr$450
aharp, pool, view, bot ZBlki fromSo Cat Piasa vlew.Teanlscourt,pool. • 2br 2ba condo, n r l801Dl5tb8t.t42· tub. $2000/mo. Bob Is e 12 ... : .... _ • lfZ5/mo. m.tU7 S.C.Plua.S .A. '500.
Dovie Koop. w . .-or mo.-· -mo. Adult• only, no pets. 1 Br •-z Br -
Xllll cond. 551-4540 Whitewater view, 201te~ 549-1212. Adu.its -:iJ. no ~.ia SPY•LASS HILL Woodbr\d.ae c:aldo, 2 BR, to Hnd, cheerf'ul, nl~ 'I --H-~-W-,,-Ol-IT___ $\lperlor. ~ LIA51 claM to pool ta• brtck furn 2 Bdnn. Avall 5/11
I Bclr, formal d.ln., t•m patio, -mo. US-9111 to e/25 MOO. Matu re APAlnen'S WESTCLJPll' I B
rm n 2 flnplacun ir1 afU pm. •dwt.t.Al-Gl'74 2-1.Bdr. ulll. mo. mo. D.R., frplc, pool,
Jard Sltoo/mo. Bob a *SPACIOUS* :!':e:':t~rtn, Adulta.-. .-reu-
Do•l• Koop. IJl-lJM. FOR L&ASE. Back Bay Prof. decor 2b1', 2ba, t450 'Newport Blvd '
Al\. ne~utlvt condo. J BR I 19ln l 1taira, frplc , 1 Cotta.Meta ·
Ba, t:al.tmtve \lPlf'aclet 1k1Utea patio, 1pa, 1ar . ... CYHCONDO t hr u o u t . lnefud ea l block lobth. Utll lftel. nn: SCVlLLI: 2 Br. l~
Lo•tlJ JBd ZBl,avall. •uller/dtrer and 1l,OI01rlr . ...._after Ba. Aduhl onl)'. crptl,
lmmed. tll Stpt . 1. refrl •. llOO mo. Call lpm. drap•_!1 patio, far.,
U SO /mo. Ul·UH. Jlob.a1.-. Aull. now. 2914 w. water pa. 1411. llltSan·
Patrtell ,._..,Ast. Delut Jlw, a.I, Md.aln Oeffnrtoat 2 Br. 1 Ba, ~_:~~tv•. UMt.20.
I br, den, I bL Wal) te uaJt at ... C..JOD btd rtrepltee 1anf•·---------• k acl. TiUll • pool waiher/.,_, fr11e, •· U OO/wuk. Opu. t Bk, c,.., clrps. aloft. Uwtue, ill n ,
prW, "9tlie.i....a'71; lf der1r 0Hd pkt, ttc, 7 t • / 7I l ·11 • ~ or edl&a, no,.. '*mo. _,_., •
DOW. l·Taml pool. ll:u.la....... 111/111~1. .. ... • •• M ...... ...,.
..
:
: ,
-... 0tMge Coat DAILY PtLOT/Wectnetday, May 8, 1981 . e . ;>I: ~,I. ) ~ .... ~~ "!'(I ~·! J,~ I _ __: • . t, .,,.... . I ~: ) .,, .... :_ .... I ) I ; • l tj I t ( I ; • ) t -I : ( ;~ ~ •
i.--c-c----C.trw._ H••• HMIK..... , _ _.,_.,... , .... /P .. •"'9 P ...... f'apsolwf loofllt9 •• SMll
SP£CW.
................................................................................................................................................................ ····················•••'
All Around Carpenter, Carpentry,AddJUona• HOMEIMPROVEMENT WantaREAl.LVCU:-\N WEDOITALJ.! QUALITYtlAlNTERS OAVE'SPAINTlNG BALBOAROOP'IN(iCO.
Ftobh • Roulb. Free Smalljobl.J:5yruitp. R•mod•Jirtl-Oddjobs HOUSE? Call Glntiham We do It best! We do It BARGAIN RATES Serv. satl5fted cu.sl. 9 Take advantaie of $100
Eat.John7'1MIOIZ Llc.aotl51 548-a?lt alynexper. 9'79-n55 Glrl.J'reeHt.MS-~123 c h flapeatl Russell Freeeal. 848-5684 yrs Qual.-integr1ty. 181 or food give-away
C.,.. S..la , Re1ldentJaJ 6 Comm re-Carpentry, cablnet.a, root ROBIN'SCLEANING Lancbcaplnti. M4-T062 •STEVENS PAJNTING Reas. ans. lie. 700.7301 Realtors welcome.
••••••••••••••••••••••• modelln1. Rm add It. repaln, ph1mbln1. Free Service-. lhorouahly MetOOWy Int /ext. Free 1tembed Platter /Repair 8"73 6743 _ 673.0403 .•
Shampoo• 1team clean. Pati09, Ccncme wrkm eat. Call Anawer Ad clean house. ~0857 ....................... est Neat. quality work. • ...................... S•dblcu"-9 ,1
~ .. ~.1~!1y
fora
'°:~d
OAl..Y
N.01'
Color briehtenen, wbt Uc 12271'73 G.R. Ryan, 1461, 142-4300, 24 bn. Expert be HouKkeepina BR 1 CK WORK S,!'"os'tlal ~.:._32CJ8, S46-4561 Neat patcht.'tl & textures •• •••• •••••••••••••••• •
crpta 10 min. bleach. GenCootrctrfTS-8133 SuppUesfumlshed Jobs. Newport, .., TESSIAN frff Ht. 893-109 LOCALSANDBl..ASTER ,, ~:~1n!1$7~~~-=hm~ CONSTR.6.Rl!:MOD. CaU~~~J$-3014 Personallud 641-4970 ~:.~~is Irv ine, Reh CU~OM PAINTING ED'S PLASTERING ~:~i.~~,i;e:o.~:J0b loo ~J
saVICI
OlllCTOllY OOITNOWI
....... s-dr'9
Your Dall)' Pilot
Service Dtnct.ory
RepreMQ\aUve
chr $5. Guar. ellm. pet Plana. Llc'd. Oeor1e NEED YOUR HOME -lnt/ext Material-labor All Types Int/Ext -, odor. Crpt repair. U yrs J>Umer 6Sooa, 6S7-8932. Carpentry · Muonry , All Types Masonry guar Free est. 953-9810 64S 82511 FREE EST. S.wlnCJ/ A.ht atloM
exp. Do work myaeU. "--el Rooflna. Plumbing Evelcy~.~~·an 5 Very reu. Lie, bonded. -••••••••••••••••••••••• · Reta. 531-0101 .... .,... Drywall· Stucco · Tile Bob 548·2753, 538-9906 WALLPAPBIMG Plaster Patching, int·Ul, AlteraUorus & Ore!lsmitk·
••••••••••••••••••••••• & more. J .B. 648-9990 General Housecleaning Prof installed, lsl roll 30 yrs exp. Neal work. l n g. e xp• d, re a 5 We Care CarpetCleanen Dryw~U S lali&t FRPLCS built & refaced, h u n 11 t ree . o 0 n , 545 2977 1 Paul) 540.3593, 646.3393 Steam clean & \ij)holl. Qual. fr . New & re-IB'AllWIMOOB. Rellable·References brick/stone veneers. 30 1·639-1429forfree eal ---- ---- - -
Work 1uar. Truck mod.# .5S2.MC9 All type1. Carpentry, Own trans. 962·0SlO yraexp.893-3743 PLASTERING-Houses. ShaMCa.-IRg 1 mountunk.~3716 DRYWALL-Our ex -plumbln11 concrete, House c leaning done -••PAINTING-Don't additions. re·color, over •••••••••••••••••••••••· '42·5671, •at J 11 No Steam/No Shampoo pertlse. We can bandle ceramic, maaonry, elec. thoroughly. Call arter 5 PoBoRI l~K sApRaTIScoTpR1· Yng• Cal5136Un980less Y24o~~are ! block walls. Free est. Portable Steam Cleaning
St I i 11 t fast _ ...... -~ .... 1 ........_. One call does It all. Work "' 0 • · 1 < m 10) _ Low rates. 5864892 Engines, machinery-~~~-:'!'.'!':!............ d~~ F·,:~ ~1582 .:;:;::;--·"'"· ..... _..,. ~:.rJ;~ est 63H 323. pm. ~::~~-6786 ~~~~ ::.r.~1~~k & NEWPORT P AINTING , ..... bhtcj--~~crpls --~~
..... F •-•--Al'i:roach HOUSEKEEPING Comm 11nch1S. resad. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5-a..L1-n •ne em....,.., UPHOLf&DRAPES ••••••••••••••••••••••• H•Avwrdn.....-& r •••..-LEIGH ROB TS •-.._... Give your home U'lat spr-IRICK STOME F'ree e11t Low rat.es PLUMB ING new con ••••••••••••••••••••••• Accountant S48--1484 Cleanln1lnyourbome. ELECTRICIAN-priced ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ing cteanin& look all Tlle,Marble&Frplcs 67307:r7 struct1on, remodeling, CONSERVE WATER "
TIP-TOPCARPETf& rl1bt, rree estimate on HARDWOOD FLOORS year-round, with quality 8"73·6650 (213)634-0140 ---repair s , restaurant, Automate Your F/CBKKPGSERVICES FloorCare. 960-62156 lar1eoramalljobs. Cleaned&Waxed & dependable work. ---First Class int/ext puint· electronic leak detec· •Sprinkler System
All TaJC!S·Ceeta Mesa caa...., Acomtk Lie. 1398121 673-0359 Anyllme.832""881 S.A. Free eslima le. re . Cuatom Masonry & Con· ing, wallpaper, refinis h lion. Top Hat Plumbing 714/586 1591
Callt46-U86/MS-9:580 ••~•••••••••••••••• REMODELCNG ___ hrence furnis hed , crele lOO's Local Ref's cabinets,et.c.979·5294 636-2030 ----....... Lie/Ins /Bond 645·8512 --------TIS. • .,.... AcouatJcCellings+ Electrlcalworlt,resid.& 9 licensed & bonded. Jim.S40·l70SRod . RALPll'S PAINTrNG RealEdateSet-Ylc:es •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• custom hand texturing comm 'I. 831-2004 •H•••••••••••••••••••••• 952.3034 Lt<'. Int 1Jo:xt. Low rates •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Custom tile mstallation.
0 I • ..,_g lot Lie. _,,,..,.. 532·5S49 --•-!Tm.... aul, cleanup, concrete ax A SON RY & TILE Free eat 964 "'"'"'" N R I L' r1 k b .. _ d r v ways, par..... ~ .----e, ·-removal. Dump truck. Mature remale desires .. , . .....,., ewpor t ea ... stal e rs. tl, at...,, & relate repairs, sealcoatin1. C.••t/c-crtte ••••••••••••••••••••••• QuickservM27638 h ouseke"pina w Ourspecially We solve agentwill considertrad· remodeling, free est SA:~ AsRbalt. 646·487 1 ....................... Formica Countertops " .. your problems. 631·2004 F'ine paint.mg by Rachurd mg services. Wbal have Roger lrvin11979-6160
Lied. Foundatloiia. Retaining Custom built & installed, DUMP JOBS reaponsibUi~ for prof. Smar Ltc, ins 13 yrs or you got to trade? Bruce
R l lo d S JIM In J ... _ person. Lave ou t NATURAL happy N B customers. Blomgren. RE MAX TILEINSTALLED • .._.~ Walls, Hillside estora· atest co n & eslgns. ma ov I oue .._., ..... .., SI b pt' F ~·-Call MlKE "•"t391 S86-5919 MAllU&OHYX Thankyou.631-4410 R ealtors. 759 1221 . All kinds, guaranteed. ••••••••••••••••••••••• lion, a s, a 10s. reeest ........ ~,.1 '""" f J Bl It •-B · .. Li 'd ----H 0 US EC LE AN 1 NG Fireplaces, baU'lrooms. 760-0297 re s ohn, 893 1667 Nr So Cit Pla•• Full pt OC "' nca. c · 1.. • Jn-C 11 g St dent p'd · -· ' 642-8317eves/960-0S39 _ • ....,._, Haullng&DumpJobs. LOW RATES, Own counter tops & floors an ° e e u · ex · ----·
Ume a. swing shifts 0-4 ----------1••••••••••••••••••••••• Ask for Randy t ransportation ca ll slalled .641·1222 ant /ex, any Job for lesi.! R•flnlshlncJ Tree Service
yn "7·2140 CWld c... CLEAN·UPS/l.AWN 641·8427 Mar i II a f t er Sp M Alex 851·9:r71, 552·0231 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• Malntenance-Lodacp -646_7698 Milli llln• ---J 0 . llorn Refinishing NOW IS TIIE TIME to Lic'd day care now lhru
June ll. Costa Mesa
are!· 64~-----
........ s.n&ce •••••••••••••••••••••••
$3 I '~K Free est 64.2 9907 Tree/shrub trim. 1tarage -••••••••••••••••••••••• PAPER HANGING Antiques, kit. cabinets prune your t~es. Call
• · • & yard clean-ups. Free Hot1H11ttin9 Mini-blinds & woods wm 25 yrs exp. f''ree est Fine painting. 645-0664 ''Tile Experts". 20yrs
Hot lunch. .M. Chris· Gardenln&' landscaping est. "7·8Z71 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dow tinting , verdctes. F'ast. neat. reliable Rooft-g -loco I. George548·3239.
tian Preschool. 646-5423 tree lrl~mlng & re'. --Reputable college stu· Ph~_e est. ~..:.OS_~ --$8 /roll & up 645-6490 '"
I ' I HAULING St d h • • • • • • • • ••••••• ••••• ••• Ty-'-9 Servlu D a Y C a r .. , L i c . mova , m8.)0r c ean-up, -u enl as dents wlU houseslt any Mov'--WALLPAPERING '"" " f I k L T""Jr ; ~UAl.ITY ROOFING ••••••••••••••••••••••• Kias Minute Service Stop. BH C l8231, my c .M. reeest. 752·1349 ar11e true . owest or all summer. May ••••••••••••••••••••••• c fls t w k 11 f 9 .,_ t ( ra man· ype or A types, reeest. Expert typma, my home. Eng ravine. Pri~ling home. F/T. Ages 2·4. rate, prompt 7~ ·1976 30-.,..p · 1· re s .83J..J4l4 Moving? The Starving 673-0759 Vasa . MC S<&l-5930 12'~ yrs ex"p IBM Sel 1 . D a Y Ser v • c e . .. ... •036 Prof. Japanese Gardener Thank you, John UC I p d l d d --
W .. slma·nsler Mall ......... Lawn cutting, tree trim· __ re-me s u e nt CollegeStu ents Mo\lng llAR BORROOFlNG 111 960 4977 "' min&, weeding. ~S Home c ... Set-Tice w o r k i n g al ii o a g Co. has grown, Insured Wall Paper Hang an~ , ----
-89-1-·1-16-1-·------~~~•••••••••••• --0-A-R_D_EN __ M_A_I_NT-.---i••••••••••••••••••••••• Hospital this summer same good ser vic e Allworkguaranteed Leak Repair-res comm Weldbtg c.,.,..ttr Elderly&HandlcapCare wants t.o babysit house I T12 4·436 License Tern.~~268 lstqual mat'l&labor ...................... .
••••••••••••••••••••••• Conslruction-Alltypes YdClean·up.Treetrlm· Service, Christian i or boat. Doesn't smoke 641·8427 DOC S PAINTING has Beatany_~d.~1·9193 Indus Comm 1Res1d
DOORS It WINDOWS 20 yrs exp. Free est. mini 541W1709 4-8pm or drink 714·953·2100 Atlas Mobile Mel.al Lie. #334589. 645-m3 · · · owned & operated, pro-1 ABC MOVING, Ex per returned! Doeks, boat ROORMG 548-~ ~:~[~or~e~;120 ----------1Ci ... ,...s.r.&c.. viding in -the -hom e eves. _ pror. low rales, quick s laps , int ext hs e All t ypes. repairs. -
Corona del Mar Const Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pers?nal ~are: bathing, LmtdscapiftcJ careful service. 552·0410 Prompt. re I 1 ab I e decks Free estimates Window C~
All Types Remodeling & des!gn consultation by For housework, windows, cooking, lile housekeep· ••••••••••••••••••••••• -service. Duve 645·0389, Call Bob548-0769. •••••••••••••i>•••••••••
Repairs, top quality, 17 design dire.ctor, cot.or gardening, painting, re· ing. Call Richa rd or LANDSCAPING "MOVIN-MAN" 839 5851 "Let The Sunshine In"
yrs in area. Lic'd. Mr. sketchs, & aid i.n obtain-pairs, elderly care, rate Donna al 499-5693. Jesus Rototilling, clean-ups & is careful. courteous & Have something t.o sell? Cull Sunshine Window
Palombo; 962-8314 I inl fin. 644-4289 $3.50. CaU S48-9674. is Lord! ideas. Lie. 841H154l cheap. Pls call 642 1329 Want Ads Call 642 5678 tlass1f1ed ads do it well Cleaning, Ud 548·8853 ------...
Apa l••h.,.., ROCNU 4000 ._..to sa... 4300 Office l..W 4400 Office R...tal 4400 IRdustrid R...tal 4500 Money Wanted 5030 Lost & FOWtd 5300 P~noftats 5350 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Remenlller Hew,.nllMdl 386' •••••••••••••••••••••••
Two houses to beach. 2 Bd M1 ..... r's Day apt. $475/mo year round. UR;
8"73-2432 Mery I Otta ----------1 Send a message to Mom
PAii NEWPORT
COUMTIY CLUI
via the Daily Pilot's
Mother's Day Page.
KOLL CENTH Bayrront office space ror NEWPORT lease. l imo free rent
Elegant executive suites _646 __ ·4_4_19_. __
In prestige location . Executive space N. B.
With complete support 1675 sq . rt. fu.il service.
services. ground floor, ample
Oldest & largest agency ___ 7_14_1_8S_l:_068_!__ parking, $1.25 per fl.
in So. CalU. since 1971 •DELUXE OfftCES * Terms negotiable . Call
Credits: ABC,NBC,CJJS. 1 Room 41 2 Room. No (714)975-0403 Courtesy to
Cosmo. Phil Donahue lease required. 2172 Du· brokers
INDUSTRIAL
SPACE
FOR LEASE
COSTA MESA
Wall pay JO"',,+ on 19·25K
for I yr on well·sec DP
prop 83J.1257 _
MorfCJC!CJ"• Tnnt
DHds 5035 .........•.•......•....
Sattler MtCJ. Co.
All types of real estate
in vestments since 1949
Yo und Schnauzer. m
Shepherd mixed. Brtn
die male Shepherd.
white fem St Bernard
tri t'Olored m Shepherd
maxed. bk & brn fem
Also. Siam ese cat.
Newport Beach Animal
sheller 644·3656 ------
found Old Eng. Sheep
do!(. Fem, pup. Vic Bch
THE
Girlfriends . ·
•ESCORTS•
Ho1..-/Office /Ho~I • * 759-1216 * * 529-1883 * •
24Hrs Now Hinng
MC VISA
LIVING
Singles, 1"2 bedroom
apta & townhouses.
From SSlO 644-1900
1 Your mes.sage will ap-
pear in o pretty flower
box. For information and lo place your
message call 642-5678
TODAY!
•'-'lorf• Pont Dr. Adj. A1rporter.._ _________ I
lo all who need a place. Hotel. 833-3223. 9.12 I" Newport Beach,641·1899 ----------1 Ocean view and double
642-4463
•On e 2780 sq fl
warehouse avail for im
med. occupancy. •Two 1600 sq ft units, office &
warehouse space avail
J une 1 •32<·33' per sq
fl. •Leasing otnce hrs
Mon thru Fri 8-4, Sat
10·2.
s fMC:ialJUM) in
2ndTDs
642·2171 545-061 I blvd & Main, H_B_5~1138 --~~~~~~~
Lr• Blurfs ~do. 2bdrm, 1?;;!;;~1i;jp;;t·;;lru;o/;;;;l~~~~~~~~~~~I l Sq. offices in full service .. ......... I Peninsu a oml $140/mo. 1 5 Ft on I bl 2ba. 2 C.r gar W/openar, Pri .. suite now avw a e al "' v. entrance, no COOa· Rmmte wanted to s hr lge Th E uu· Off" " lreenbell. bay Vl·ew. · ·· e xec ve ice tog/smokmJl. 673-4419 condo nr S.C. Plaza. NrwMBT NEWPORT CENTER secluded patio . $750. ~nnnu Xlnl P vt ""-t •. Ba Nr Sauna, pool, jacuzzi. ~92 ,
Retdab WCll'lted 4600 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Found Pink Jumpsuit
W writ.mg on back, 1den
t 1 fy 640 6656 e ves
~59-0912dys. -----
AFTERNOON
•DELIGHTS•
Home/Office/Hot.I 830-0645 """ • p · a•a bath A ·1 bl HAMOR ~~~~~~~~~~IHome w/pool or jac ----·--.-----Hoag, No smkr-drinker. nv "'"' · vat a e MD r: Wa nted appr ox 6 1,
I "'YFRONT Male ..... c . "~1035. now. $250 + eicpenses. I f ., 9
Widow has money for
2NO T.D. ·s any size
above $10,000. No credit
I . no pnlty. For action
cal l AGT 673-7311
anytime __ --. Lost German Shep pup. F
blk. Reward 646-6791 or
548·5043. * 529-4631 * ·-A ......, ~ c II u '7 .,c.,., 759 0060 ? Cannery Village 450' of· X nt re . 67 ... l 33 S h 2 b 2 b a oN • ....,..., or -24 llrs Now Hiring
uper pos r, · a Hoteh MoNh 4100 d · • fice or shop space in Retired Lido Isle busi· penthouse. 2000 sq fl. ••••••;•••••••••••••••• Prof. Fem 30+ es1res 3035 S ft quaint character bldg. Sec. bldg boat slip 8 Ibo 1 f t same to shr CdM home. ~ • $475/mo. avaH May Slh ness man going 1nlo
Want investor for Npt
bayfronl home Give
well secured lst or 2nd
T 0 Agt, 675-6161.
MC VISA Lost Gold engagement _________ ...._
rrng, v1c Placentia & ----·: avail.St450imo.NopeCS. a a . M oceanro~ · Seperatebdrm,Uvarea, p1......1. 673.65229.5 Peace Corps . Sep t. 8"75·0105 Lowwinterrates.Dally bath. P vt entrance, -_________ ,_ Desires houseor boalto
Cannery Village lbdrm.
$400/mo avail May 21st.
or weekly. Kitchenette. patio & laundry Very lcry Ylewt OFFICES FOR RENT sit for summer or furn
S90&up.8"75-8740. secluded & quiet. Pn•ahPaHot Ground floor office. 21r.t bach apt. References
$5 00 I mo + ~ u l i I. Loh of Wlltdowt blocks from beach. 315 Enjoys pets & peac:e
Want 21-220/o Yield?
On your T .D.'s Notes
SSR a1s ers-lnvestorsSS
19th.<.: M 646-2171 -- -
LOST Fem C ut:k e r
Spaniel . tan . \I C
19th Acacia 960-6023
Remember
Mother's Day .
Call 673-6522 9.5
Across from beach .
Studio, encl gar. Adult
only. Pool. $350 yrly.
640-5078
SEA LARI 759·1487 eves. P..t&J.g fi911CJ1 3rd St. RB. Asking $225 640·9608 __
MOTEL For the business man per QJd. ~ 7533 ---M / F 2br, 1""1ba hse. Whowanlstomake a SCOTTREALTY HELP! 2 adult.s, I dog
W .. 1 La1una, tiar, resp, non· good impression. need 2 bdrm, encl. yd, :van~:~ ~t:p~ now :,~~~~~:8 Robert w., Last. ~!'::::.~~•••~~.~~ f:r· ~~~~~1 ·t:I~~:
•Color TV. •Phones in CCllToclay! For store & office space 800-772·3920 X296 1
Call Dennison Assoc
673-7314
Purchase of 2ND T.D 's
arranged. For details
call
960· 1957 Broker
3Br, 38a Condo w/frplc, rooms. Rmmte needed nice (7 I 41675 8662 at reasonable rates. (Jean). pool, sauna. $675/mo. 2274NewportBlvd.C.M. home in Lagwia Niguel • SOOtoZ?OO~Pt. ---------26 % yield , balance A..lk for Brent631~ ~7«5 M /F non-smltr. pro· . Newport Family nds 4 $44 ,000. You buy for
Lost IAlb1110 Cockatael &
grn Parakeet. Vic. Lan
bergh Sch REWARD
646·5229.
FOUND : German
Shorthalred Pointer, M.
Solid brown. Harbor &
Geisler. CM. 957·0381
May IOtta
Send a message t.o Mom
'1a the Dally P ilot 's
Mother's Day Page.
Your message will ap-. pear an a pretty flower
box. For information
a nd to place your
message call 642·5678
TODAY'
resslonal. CaU for appt Prime Newport Center MESA VERDE R • d b J. Is $39,000. Due 6 '1182 -------5350 Personah S-Cle•cale 317' LIVE IN NEWPORT 495.0909 Orrlce space w /s pec · Pl..AZA SB30rmO 't2"41 S~OO~O e. 1·793-8247
••••••••••••••••••••••• BEACH FOR $100 PER lacular ocn view for sub· 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M 0 Y s -------•••••••••••••••••••••••
Near new 1 br. apt., bu.ill· WEEK. 645-0640 Fem. Business student lease. 1078sq ft 760-9204 545-4123 975·0888· eves 675 04751---------·1·---------i WANTED
Adventurous woman
To shar<' en.using life.
Ina, carpeta, drapes, car nd1 rm mte to shr 2 Br 2 ----- -ask for Bob I ST TRUST DHOS * FOXY LADY *
port, lamodry raciUty, Yearly. Hotel Apt. room. ba apt NecotJable btwn Suite off Pacific Coast eo-rdal · 22% ltfT'EllEST OUTCALL ONLY
Orfshore cruJSing vessel
Be compatible. 25-40
W rile Jamey Reil 2005
W Balboa Blvd. #243
pu!;>Uc tennis courts, and kitchenette & baU'I. S280 lluntln.gton Harbour 41 Hwy, nr Chart House . R...tah 4475 .... ilteH/ln .. st/ 1500/o COLLATERAL VISA MC
golf coul'M riCht behind + SZIC> security d~lt. Seal Beach 8 1825.9952 NB. *40 sq.ft. $400 per ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ait..c:e * 972· 1 Ill *
propetty, adult1, no 2308 w. Oceanfront, or208/2Sl·IOul mo. Call JohnS49·2117 S,000 sq rt. or space avail ••••••••••••••••••••••• Thi~so~ !~T:l:h 1 pet1, avail May 1 Newport Bea c h -on Harbor Blvd near .... iaell Newport Beach, C A
921663 $375/mo. Owner642-0131 8"73-41M. r-·rm. wtd to ahr 2 br, 2 ba MIWPOltT llACH Wamer. This space ad· Opporfulllty 5005 own, & would llke to Im SHE
---lrvlne rondo '250 + ahr Convenient Penln1ul11 joins a well established ••••••••••••••••••••••• prove. Leave messagl! PSYCHIC 3 br, l~ ba, 2nd fir apt, S-.r ._.. 4200 utllt1. 552 ~ locaUon acro.1 from Cl· retail store. It la ex · APPLIANCE SERVICE with telephone sec'y fl: S c O R T s & Readings Jack 556-117_1!
closet.oahopplng,beach, ••••••••••••••••••••••• tyHall. Executlvcatyle celleol space for addl· & SALES ... Best & 646·8841 MODELING
no Pet 1 or •ma 11 Newport Beach lfouat. Share bHut Newport orr1r .. w/full 1ervlcea llonal retail, Uaht as· busiest service ogrncy ----·------•1 115-9199 PROBLEMS???
children, 9550. W-3252 Summer Weekly Rental ffet1ht1 t.om.. Overlook avail. rronl 215 1q.n . aembly, specialty shop, in the Harbor area. !!:at •--_......1 -------Our group or "think ._.._ ... ~iao •hSt ~blJdromHnd, Ina th• bay & open and up. No lease re or Inventory 1toraa.e. 8 yrs & still growtna. -, ~~/ tank " specialists may
-"' ~ com pl. furn off 1treet O<'Hn Vt11Jr own luio quired Cail 1171-3002 Could be excellent dis· Nets steady $7-8K per en-SWEETHEARTS resolve your problem op ••••••••••••••••••••••• parkln1. tak1n1 ,...,va Bdrm 6 full batt1 Non trlbutlon center. Call month Owner relocat· Lott & Fo.td a service fee or a "n~
E•tl'e 11 2Br 2ba «>ndo. tlon15401632tvn only i mlillin" .., II@ 806!! AllrOIT 5"·3700orM7·2223. ing out ohtate. Very re ••••••••••••••••••••••• •ESCott'fS• cur e-no pay" basis.
P •ti O~I ar · poo I , " IXICU'nYl IUrTI --uonable price. 731 53'75. Lo1t & FOWtd 5300 MIOURS Phone 714/897·71S510AM WHbr/ r, prof palnt Balboa Penlnaula Ji'urn 2 rett1 •hr' apt c M '-'rent Antral otfleea avail ln OJl'P'ICE-STORF. __ ---••••••••••••••••••••••• Vlsa1MC 529·1927 t 0 n 0 0 n 00 1 y . N 0 ed, new apea. Adult.I Br, quiet loc. 50 yrdJa l-0 tlH +-lllll tt.f rtQ ,\ft full NtYll'4t Hflr aultn 525 1q fl or 1050 Aq fl. EXTRA INCOMt; ~-~~~~~~~ weekend calls. •
CloH to Ml Sq Prk. beach $4.50wk.876314A I JCll'MM64740 louted near 0 C Carpet, paneHnlJ, park e hrs/wk. 10 fruit Juk e '-Sell ldleltems --775-0529,831-1088 ------AlrPOrt 7a:tOMll ln1. N•wport & Day machlnHw. IOxlnlloco _ 642-5678 Want Ads Call642-S67k
T &&.... 1190 Yee ........... 4210 •r, •Sit &11 1tl1m1 w/M Shop Center. 20:52 tlona. 751·0174 FOUND ADS •"" ••••••••••••••••••••••• I h' I 1•1 t Otflu to 1h1r11 C'o•t• N wport Blvd C M
••••••••••••••••••••••• •NWPT OCP!ANP'l\ONT ''I . '''" I vv MHa tUlltmo. ao: ... J8J orM4•m . . . .............. • ARE FREE Seoarlly apta, lbdrm • •Lido lilt b1)'ff'.rnt11m ~: .. 4.~~CJMl~ll ••I tll•Ull - ---ore•........, IO I 11
2bdrm, util pd, adult.t. boatt It dock. Waly • ...._.,........... 4100 •••• I••••••••••••••••• P.JI.
ao pet1. From $375. 673·SURF l'fft llrt prot pntl•tn1ta Jl:Ul'Ull¥e ofCl + Hrty/ ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• 1 t s2oo 000 Snrured 1Hnr. W.lsot. ---wlll •hr l ... e ... :mr '"lt1 rtl'tJrtltm .,..., nr Air $61&. A~~rox. 2000' In· nbvea T 0 i,, h. • 64 .. 5671 Oahu Haw.II beaut .. '" " •• l t llO I I d 111'I fflce, 1•101 'l•t ··••a re.urn•. ""' •-e. tll Pw I '1d ' • · home w/1m 111 Mt r r(lr m. o nc " fl o --~~!!!~~~~ ~IJ:iW~1a.·d"j;•oo 1tudlo condo, o lookln1 ov•r IO ~ utll ltwl hnltor, MC, rrpt II Rtdondo Cr. "Q" llunt ;eo."1,£{0 ta wnH ,-•••••••••••~•••••••• 1011. oce1n. 414-2111 780 OI02 1•antlln• US 1•1• l\rh '42 .at --Lo 1 t Me I e Golden
TR AO E H 0 M t: IN MeMl te Lo. 1025 Retriever. N1tme Slotin. s EA w I HD GRASS VALL~Y ror .. , .. •hr NH lbdtrn,N•wport. Ce nler MESA •••••••••••••••••••••• vlclnltyHJthJandNorth
VIL• JJ.. ~E n I c e h ome I n Zba. \.41 blllt'll to bt1t•h, Prnft11lonal bu•lntH INDUSTRI •L JltdTDL..ms View Tract. Laguna """. mo .. utll ffrure ,, OftlC' ... lCIOO lo IOOO IQ "' • 00000 ·-_,..000 18/'L. Nl0 uel Day or n1te La.una/Hewport ar... .....1 s-•. tl. Dulld to1uk . New In 1 • "" -i ,,, .. . ~3:.t •:;.. ~~.'':i~~ Clautc Spullh home In -...., ltrlore et no coit PARK + ~lnta. Cal : Bllr .. 495·3676or'9'7·1708
rro,n $440, 2 bdrm rrom footblll l'Ommty ot No. 2br, 2ba Condo N.JI U50 Atrium, covered parlt· tea-718 Lott: Ba1ofkey1 in Hank
S50S + pool1, tennl1, CA. adJac.nt to foreat • + utlUty. rem onl( lltll lna, orHn view. Call 7 I I w. 11tll St. LOAM PIMO•S of Newport baa. vie. 17th
waterfalls, JIC)O(k! Oaa Golf Coune. 1·2 weekt rra n a 64U·Ul •ft Tim 81oal. 8u1ln111 Cet .. MIM. e... Hllhelt fte1 paid In U'le S t , C 01 ta M es a
rot coollln1 • beatln1 from June·Stpt. C1ll l :IOPM .!ro~rtl•7!41'76HOll. 64M 4H bu1lne11. Call Mr. Reward! 646-5623. ~Y ~~e ~r1~·:~ .. Thom. (t1')2'1Mlll Roommate to 1hr I ·br arand new Medlcal/Dtn ~~~~rd 1 day• at Found remale bulldo1 vie
leach to Kc Fadden Patk City, U\ah. 2 Br. on condo nr Back Bay. Ten• ul Offlcee. Xlnt hl1h tllO •Cl· ft. Unit nail. Trask " Mag. Owner
UllloWestonllcP'addeft 1olf courtt. ta71/mo. nil , pool , lndry . trafflo, ht1h ¥laable May lll. Cuptll, CluitlledA.dl SG5178 ldeo,IU·2192
t.t ,Stawlnd Vllla1e. lhruNov.•a.ae DIS/mo. Avail. lmmecl location wlth water drapee wet bar. •aal·Mt ('lM~Slll M2·••1 vlew1. AUowaac. for Im 141· ft. •l.Aulnl otnce M........._ Trwt •41rf1111e. Trwt . . • Oeeantroat C.oedo. Potpu provtmtnta Call Tim hrl. Mon Uu'\I Fri l·t. hidi" IOJI hidi IOH a-4000 Be1cll, Kaul. 1 Br. MS a MD lfflll prol. M/r who 110 a l . au 1 I"• 11 Sat. 10.1. ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ••••••••••••-•••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• DliM.llr ..... lUI. hat hOUlt to 11\r, North Prope...U.TltnU·IOll. llOOSOPT -----":... -
IARD• a.a,c~!"n.GeorlDnt, l•••te..,. 4100 t.11., COi or N .B. Watebouat/Jlr1 Bld1. -~ R.-IG No. •~ c Co.. • .............. •••••••• 144..oatevwa~. orrtC&/WARGfOUSI!!. Cotta .... t omcte ' ~ • _i g:ar.:. · i:i,~ l::~ Movtn1T A*'I ctepoetta a ..... ,, ... nMct.ct to t~i~r:.~:::~ .. trooma, nou;, upt11, ow ,. ai•
... ~.ble. Low •inter • cut IM'al ,.,......, .... ,. ' Br. Apt. in try. Wlllaub-dMde\&pto 2 ovtrbHd tnack drt, 2nd Trust Deeds rala. -.... Proltulon1ll1 1lnce :;:rt a .. elt arH. 1JllO ft .,, ft 120/IOI a pba .. pwr. --------• ltn. ,. '• com!:t ,;.ie:.~1: Clou to the octao. Low cost equity loans avail. $20,000 to
Room whit kltohen HOUllMATll ___ " ...:..-....1 ... •••• Properll•• Tit.Co Relllr Inc. llr. $150,000. 18 yr. loan1 Assumable. friYlel• .Ad.at.t ooly. ..,.. ...... ' . ~ -T\amerMMltl Owner occupied. • ,.... i.••·-··-·--...... n•nu.J.
Prtwa .. ..,...__ !Wer ~=--"""* Uy OOI .,.._. ...._ AC, ~ Ofllee lpeN. ·~--:r:::-':-~: '• .. ... .. Ho llUOk· Mlect ,.... =ble .. S!t~ .. u .. I................ .,., ... Ol&tWt IN BANKERS NAn '8TUGE CO.
(714) 73l.sM4 • • ~•· 1145. rmmte to eutt.-1.our &. "1· ,~ W.laM.._Lilil"' :"."llHlll ·~ .......... ...,,. .., .. ., .......... un-1. -------• ..... .. ,..9'11\c.il.ef. ' '·· An•t.abU.ltifdOC.M ..... ··-Banklnl llll>OftrDl'Sul&ellJ'fB lllT "'-'· N ... ut Aw.U.llus&: ..... · lll1'e1 .... rtbhnt.to M.IJT --·
'nil! .... t::.,r,::. ta GMlfl ==:=..:=:: ••"'"""' ea..-rt Clwltlecb,.doatnll 1 --~ -~-........ ---
'
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Use /lnsW.r Ad service
when placing your ad ... '
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appear in your classified a~
... we take your message_~
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in at your convenienc~
during office hours and gei
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this service is only $7 .~ >
week. For more informa ..
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ca I I 642-5678 . --
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•
,.,.... 1110 tt.1pw..-. 11 .............................................
ATUMnS
M.ASSAMSPA Be pampered by 16
Beaut. Olrla. Open
10AM·4AM 7 daya.
Phone "5-34.13
ASSDIBL.ER
1·2 yra •lP.. Ute alertro-
rnecbaalcal uaembly.
M uat know aoldertn1,
speak • read Ena. S.·5
pr br. So. Santa Ana.
Sd-08U
,, · . 1.
•1.1 ~ W9111M 7tl0 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. May 6, 1981 .•• l"................... ~ ~"-~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.;;. •. ~-----1111!--• ... -~~ ..... ?!!! ~~~ ••••. ?! •••...• ~~ •.••• ?!~ ~~~ ..•• .!!~ Clerical
8"uty At9Wl~for NI.._. It CouaterHtlp,Ftr. ftl.lelmta Kotl•aa/ua.t, P tr, o•r.· MAIDSOP"I
Baa.kt.DI bua1 Bell h.alr uloa. 1C:lt\11 1 KuaW'aci.u.r. Guenl office work, HCHIUJ. Apply D Afpl.y to Antie 11t Su T!IMf ITMOU =•::-3a s.:!:i 1:; ,._. eometypiqreq.for~ personN • ~Bi8ar1 rtt.ld 1..4184 C emente Jnn . 125 I~ .__,, '° w motional oppoctuolU.. !f.·~ _•00w..-. 11 • "'· • EaplaadJu. Buutys.kla ::'ii~.~ ov::',. COUMY9.., No experimce req. Kiah _..,, . POSITillS ~~~or w.':: rout.e maU 6 Uo.t wtlb Pit, P it, 4&ya. apply ln achoo( 1rtduate. Costa ::H~ote:-:--;-l -::o.k=::-:::C::le-:::rk:-:.,.,::1::aht:::1•-------
.... ~& ,,..,. .... Muat have mi.al: ot f ... v __ wb or w P I D t ~l'IOft. '711 , i . '4"afboa Meu area. will be mov· d . M •CHl .... E mum foUowbll. We i..we U.. • r • 0 0 0 e e P · Blvd. llll to lntne aoon. Au ttor. Experienced A " Aaaemblen/Eleelronlu mo.. om~ cub handl· bullaeM eau-... workload.,.,,,. IOwpm Farmer luuranee NCR 4200. Apply to SHOP in1 or puuuc contact e:&• • min. Prevliom clerical Countv help 10pm4am Group 540-UOO David McNeil or Mn. ::a'r:!"er:C:!.0~1u!!~ per. BUU.s c-.rtc For eXl>Qd· ex"r. d•lred. • day Wlocbella Doout Houae · E.O E: Baltaaar, ll<Ml La1u.na. lmmed. openlna f0r ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ..--tn1 CM Julport Co. Gd work wk. We olfer &cl 253E.17UlSl.C.M. . 425 S . co .. t Hwy . eer 'd . Cenlerle11 JolK W..tect, 7071 E x p w i t b a I r LAeUMA ...U t~lol akllla ...... Some pay ft t.lefltl. Call for FOODSERVICE 4 9 4 -1151 between Grinder. CM plant. Ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1crewdrlver dnlnble. -1 -~... appt TelDnlc Bertlelev D•T• -y .. "el ,.0 benefits ~ Jl rrie d.l Co ~ p ne exp. a +. XlJ»il 14.4 '' "' "'~'"" Reataurutwor .. er,.over Uam·5pm. .. .. · Eurofcean lady offen ma ...... ~.! .. · ,nr •Acc .... Plllf ¢11 aaJarv be.:,~51rowth 7 -4t4·MOL E.O.E. Pff day1, n.x. hn . Will 18, will t.raln for meat ---------1 Deltronlc,5'5-06l3 .erv C•s to elderl" M or ocean. _.._ aa.. •01 • ' ln Hotel ~~~~~~~~~ ... .-..~ potaotlal. tra . 557.7314 aUcer &i portion control. _ F, comfanion hep, live _W_e•-·-------1 _. 7 h Fl ....,l'-HT •uo1T-C ft (lluatbeable 'I ,,..., Approx. ra. ex. "• "' V9' Malnt. per1ooa needed out. al a .5,5*0848. totype40wpm) I001Dl911 Clerical Dau Entry, Int "'uent 1tartin1 time. lOAM· lmmed. opeolna for for Steam cleanina Co.
Nun. students avail. ror ASS•--S ACCOUNTANT CLBICTYPtSTS f°· •!!"-.;_RT toper. for lPM, Mon·Thur., 8AM· nlaht audit« at the Surf Gd pay, euy lo learn.
Pvt. duty nura. Xlnt Loe. Milaioo Viejo co. W /Mlnlmwn 5 yrs u p fl Immediate Openioas mm..... I erm ... 1 PM ·Sun . Lor I 's •Sand Hotel, Laa. Bch., Foreman ...... avall. Call d bl h I h •ltncn 't. I h s H bo to work Thurs. tbru ..-1 r4'f's .$i/hr.759-l.882. nee a Auem en W/2 I accur acy lo lfyou cantype40wpm + Callnow.Remedy Ktc en. 3077 . ar r Mon. nltee. UPM·7AM. _C_h_ria_M_1._u_n1 ___ _
I .HetpW..W 7100 ~!at i~~e ~~~~~:!:~ r:v'lri!i~a:~~·c~'l! ~E~~0\.~r~:ortwo~ Temporary&ervicet Bl.,S.A.979-0747 Excell.H lary.Applylo:
••••••••••••••••••••••• dexterity, ad. eyealabt. or wela ~t reduction Iona term usipments. 11371 Beach Blvd. HB Front Office/Publishers Charla 497·1118 MAMA<•IMT
Accountlna Clerk ror in· neallnappearanceAde· •T•r aalosu. Excltlna oppty Toppay,holidayflvaca· Ml-1139 Aas't wanted for locall•--------1 terlor design firm. Ex· pendable. Work la ln life caU Nancy at 95.5-1491 tton pay, pd. weellJy. 17802 Skypark t lOO pub. Co. Typln& a must.
TIA.IN• for telephone anawerin& bureau Ir communlca·
lions services. We are lookin& tor lateUiaeot,
dependable fu~ure mamt. penonnel. E x per. pref'd. but not nee.
Will train. Pay scale
based on ability &i ewper.
Many co. benefrta & re-
gular merit increases. H
lntere1ted .• call Mike Smith. 543·4230 btwn
9 30AM &i 11 :30AM .
Mon·Fri. EOE
per req. Muat type support medical elec· •l-•P'lll llt ~ ~7-8522.
4Swpm. Gd ben. Relocat-tronlcs. Gd. benefits. .... 1 100119HS l\olrell' EOE Employer MF... ---------;
HOUSECLEANERS
To S5 /br, car. 14$-5123
inglrv.area.879-8880 On l y r eap o n aible •C~ Newport Beacb real FULLTlme,p/lime.Ana
persona aeekint perma· (pvtUme, estate development DILIY•YSALIS aerv. No exp. nee. Call: HOUSEKEEPER CHILD
ACCOUHTAMT nent emplymt. n~ ap-Sbr1.AMorPM) company wtth proJeell rs~ .-vtet• tMC PERSONS 648-IOOOEOE CAR.E.part·time.Mdys
Work close lo home! ply. CaU: ~Mn. Parelli, in So. Callfonlla and Full or part·Um• for or-CilMHAL OFFICE wk. Goodpi,)'641-9323 Property mana1ement, 58l·a30 W ff th Florida needa ~-full 2081 Buslneu Ctr. Dr. lice supply A equipment construction, land de-~~~~~~~~~ e 0 er 1row OP· chart• bookkeeper to #208 Irvine dealer.OpPtyforadvan· Immediateopenin11full· Housekeeper llve·in
velopment company oC· 1-portunitlea, excellent handle all pbua or pre>-752-Me6 EOE M/F cemenl. ApPly Coaat Of. lime. South Laguna area Lovely home, 'sch area.
rers exceptional o~y. ASSEMBLERS. We will worklna conditlo na, Jed accounllna. Salary ~~~~~~~~~ fl ee Equlpmen1 2121 propert.Y own~rs aa· Pvt bdrm, aome cook·
Cora quallfied, exp d ac-tr a In . APP I Y 1 AM . salary at beneflta. Call : open. Call 548-9al8 for in· r.._________ Harbor Blvd. C.M CA s o c 1 a t 1 o n. . ing. salary \le&. Call
countant. Send resumes MacGreaor Yachts, 1831 Carol Tbuyna, 132·2811. lerview apPt. ... _MB-__ 1_1e. ______ .... Shorlhand /~peedwrlt· Kathy Sf6-811U · 7~·Q17? to: Chris Pisarllt 17711 Placentia, Coata Mesa CL-nPIST Ing, good typing helpful. ·
'B' MltcheJJ North l rvlne ELDOIADOIA.t« l•likH .. r/S.C"y Ener1etic penon with DBJVaY MUil be outg~ing , Housekeeper, flexible
92114 Automotive E.O.E. For new ieaf ood aood typing needed for Person that knows personable Ir en1oy a hrs Ena . spklng MAlllNE
---------1 SllVtCEWllTIR I~~~~~~!!!~~ rHlaurant 00 PCH in busy manalina general Oranae County, must buay office deal~g with w/trans. Xlnt wrklna lllCTRICIAN ---------1 Growlna N.B. Co. needs Sunset Beach. Good of· ~ency . -l<o exp. have own car. 4M-5294 members & public._ Ex· cond. Nwpt Bch area. T h 1 1 t 67 . ACCOUNTING Individual w/minlmum BANKING fl ee akUls , F /T . necesaary,butabilitylo cell e nt benefits. Call eve 76()..6062 Mon· Y~ch~~-~~mlaTleDick ...t/or 5 yn. exp. in diagnosing (2l3)592·5534. learn a muai. Attractive DILIYaY DIUYH '900/mo .. Niguel ~bores Fri 9.5 auto mechanic condl· salary & all company Ldcal area, own s mall Commuruty A.ssoc1ataon. ___ . ------1 Luckey 8'5-6063 BOOKKEEPING lions to manage 200 car ~-.-.. IOOKllllPH benefits. Call Linda at ·c ar . Wee It d a Y s. (714)493-0122. Housekeeper/Companion MATEIUAL
To assist in developina n eet. Good written & .HYiiii Real Estate lnveatment~54~9~·8!1~6~1·~~~!!!~~ 4:30-8:30pm. Weekends Liveinorout. HAHDUMG ~rn1!:i~~ ':'u°.!.~v'i:1~~~ okrlalll com~!ficSatllon s.~. Co . with multlpler: 1r;~ornya~· l:!11:i~a1ry· PG/Tf;Hpe~al~~~nt•----833-__ 2009 __ . ---• lmmed. opening for ,... s s requ1r . a ary r-ft191 pa rtnership entities CL_"...,..ST b h Required lo use indepen· commensurate with ex· Ca..L.L.-..1 needs full charge book· -• • n earn over ts/hr, no tax· with general secretarial IMST AU.BS part.a clerk, ru ber ose
dent judgment. May H · perience. Xlnt benefits. ..-.-.uuu keeper to work ln all Work in beautiful sur· ea. Call 497·4188 wkdays &i bookkeeping skills. Need extra money ? producla, must pass co.
sign work lo lower level Send Job history to P.O. If y•'re IHW.. for aapecll or accounllna &i roundinp at the harbor. a fter 2pm. For rurther information Parttime employment. ~ysical including back clerks . Xlnt company Box 1560 c/o Daily Pilot tlle 11.W of appa tu quarterly financial re-32·40 hrs/week. Pay 1-De-11--'-----18-f --t ca I I M a r cie at N 0 e x P er 1 enc e ·ray. Taking appllca·
benefits. Call Millie NewapaperCM CA 92626 portina. Please send re· commensurate with exp. very men over or (714)973-0812. necessary. Car 8 muat. lions btwn 8 &i lOAM on-alter9AM : 64.5-5800. Ad US5 ty wllere yo• c•• sume lo PO BOX 3050 Requires good typinc L.A. Times lo homes in ---------1 Apply Teleprompter Ca· ly Stratortex, 11671 ~~~~!!!~!!!~~A __ U_T_O_M_OTI __ V_E ____ , •tllhe you ,ro· N.B.CA 92llllO skills, bool krkr~eping &ibo N.B. & .. ~;.M,,;.~!~~: PG/TEMaHAL.fternooOfftns,CnEon-ble TV, 901 w. U5th St, AErOmEstArona Adveis., lnlrdv.
U,-...-ID feHioHI tltlh. .-cl ---------gPeln era ol ~~ etxbp . nua._.._..,....,........... Newport Beach. . Ken av .. ,
ACCOUM'TlMG cuus
Plessey Semiconductors
in Irvine Ls looking for
two Accta. Clerk.a. Must
have typing of 40-45wpm
& 10-~ey adding mach.
by touch. The Ideal ap. plicant should have ac· ctg. exper. Excel. benefits. Please apply in
person :
PLESSEY
SEMICOHDUCTOIS
1641 Kaiser Ave., Irv.
~ __. ... _ L&.....1 of.....__ loeld111plll1Cltrtl ease appy •uea .ru smkr, mature lhjnking, --'--------1 Co.
AUTO CA.SHIH .,. .... - -., Full time. exper. helpful Sat. Dana PL Marana Dental Aaaiallnt. Crown w /pleasing J>(!rsonality INSURANCE ---------
Excellent working con-yotl bow ..... ... but not nee. Many com· Co., 24701 Dana Dr. • Brldae restorative & good typlng·must en· Excellent opp. for exper. MICHAHIC
dilions Ir fringe benefits _.. wortli. .... le•~ pany benefits. Apply at: I Dana Pt. practice. 4 day week. joy small co. all around competent Customer MOPll>
includina retirement ly H• Set' I .._ • 1610 Placentia Ave., CLO~TIME Sala r y dependent on s s 1 es work . EN · Service Rep. aasiating Full or Part·Time la •o ....... ·--rw66k _..._.. .i. '"-t r---taMeu •~ ability &i potential. VIROSCOPECORP.CM Aaency'slo~producers. NewportBeach ~ n. • ........ .... .. .. · ••c--I ,... """'· Now h irina •sslstant p ·bi I · t f """f " alary Commensurate -r-.. o s s 1 1 Y or M5-....,., orappt. Newport ea ch Loe. 114M2-8870 for yo& Busineaaman seeks p/t manaaer trainees. aupervl.sory duties in the Call Pat67S-6300 fil1:~a~xperience. Call aasoclale ln wholesale minimum 6/mo exp. futur e . Corporate GEHHALOfftCE MEDrCAL
We reQllluw •-I•'-• supply. 754-17'2 Cal1642·1231. benefits. Located In Must type, 9am·4pm, INSURANCE lmmed. opening for ex· NA~R~ of l --_.911-• N t C t C 11 Mon· Fri. Call Chuc k 5•• .. ~ bl R
CA LL. A 11tt1te'-~i: •CAIDalY•S• Fl~~-Dt!:....~M,~ad· ~~~{. eu er. a _<_1_1•_)67_U_u_o_. ____ 1 19a50N5 B~~isf:hl~yeN.B~~~
-l•d•tfry. So•• C~~~ab ln1comprebenaionlrat· 0 .._.._1 _,.1 GfNHAL.OfftCE O u tstanding op -thopedic prac tice. ••p•r•ltory becl1· ~ t.entJoo to details. WW _..,_~ portunities exp'd or 1n· Phones, appt & surgery
C •aw•SH lr ln ~c77.u Receptionist N.B . Exp. helpful, gd. typing exp'd. Salary +com· scheduling; greet pa: gromdh..a..-,. "' "' a . ._.a&• pleuantarouppractice. abilit y. proficiency misaiona. Phone Bob lients. Xlnt fringe
} (>()() I-{, HbOt Bl\ II
l ""·' 'lllt ..... '>40 '1100
Cash ie r s wanted , Commtaalon Sales, In· _640-__ 1_122 _______ 1 wlflaures, l O·key by Smith953-3l.53 benefits. 648·5995 for Babys l lter n eeded , We offer• y ~ Anaheim lc Oranae. Call __ .. touch. Xlnt Co. benefits.,_________ pt
A Cl '-t mature woman, 2-3 days 844·44GO aalt for Nancy or terior Desi~ firm noecua Dental Hy"''enilt for buay Informal ore C M Call ap · cetg er-.. compu er of co•t:••Y p• d -·n a-.a ........... '""call .. · · · lnteriordeai0 n flrmseek· k M ho 2 bo An ....... .... __,,,,....,...., om ce nea.r So. Coast Mlllle afl9AM 645 5800 ... Medical. full lime front input, typing, use wee . Y me. ys, __..._ Mfltl. __ n_. _______ upon potential clients. Pla UK..,.... • · · ing purchasing/order
calculator. Gd ben. NB 2/yra &i 6/mo. Eastbluff .......-..--CASH• Sales Ir design back-__ za_._.._._______ GEMllAL OfftCE desk clerk-. Must type, office position. Mission
area. Call Kathy675·7071 area. 76(HJ79. d 1 0 t 1 be ad /details & follow VI e Jo . Re q u Ir es ---------•For htfor••tlo• Prr, a pply The Earl's aroun a Pua. u go ng•--------•1 Looking for a very In· • w medical. secretarial ex-AER091C Babysitter wanted. P/t pie tll: Plumblna, U26Newport peraonalilY a must. DISHM4 teresting part time job up. P /T. Relocating Irv. per. lncludin&insurance
INSTRUCTOltS eves. NB home. Dr's re· ue c Ave, C.M. ('714)641·1289. 114-645-8300 EMGl'4-In pleasant office? _87_9-_8680 _______ billing. 495-lOSO
Expr'd onl y. Newport sldence. 646-70'78 NC::XT~ C ••u..a COMPANION for elderly Mfa. co. in Mlaaloo Viejo Clerical, fo~ mature Interior design firm, ---'--------
area. 759-14511 -d J 2 area needs exper. In penon. Locatt0n P.C.H .• aeekina aaaistant to MEDICAL Babysitter Tues . &i 71 31-77 Exp'd .,ad.workin&con· lay, Junes to une 1. electrical connectors. Npt . Bch. Exper. a VP/ pdoniat v ri frolltJa-&.Ofc. ... •DE Thurs. my home, NB. di. Muat be able to work Xlot. oond. Salary neg. tier m et 1 c sea 1 s , muat. Accurate typing. rece · a e· 1-d T "" Ref R 644-7777 ~.at sun. Other bn. to P<Miiible full-pa.rt time tra--.a .a~i-co no shorthand. 2o hr. ty of duties. must type Fashion lslan . ype Active retirement com· , __ ._eq-'-. -----• BEVEi, J be arranced. Apply in offered. 640-6337 ....,ucer ~ .. .,, m· week lnchadea Sat" Sun. 60wpm. Gd ben. relocat· well. Reliable, ecricient.
mun it Y · 11 : 30p m · Babysitter, lite hskeep. Jleraon : Kerm Rima ---------1 pmoe~~~J!. materials " Call: 646-7431 in1 Irv. area.17i-8680. exp. pref.MG-2J023. 7:30am. Pleuant, good In Wk d.a 7 30 lo lmJ.S d -H bo C O M P U T E R LDuwt be fi N B 63 ......... I · ya : am ar ware. -ar r Dullea include des Ian. I-'-.--...... c-MEDIC•• ne 1la. . . l·.......... 8 pm. Newport home. 81., CM OPERATOR-Exper on draruna rutertal.a teat· 1---------1 WTT r--.. __ .. OFC-
Al DE for parallzed Mr.Hood.644-t141 s1~ Burrou1h1 L9000 . in1 " RlrD ~ol:cts. "ENE··· omcE Growin1companynoecus IACK ~ ''~ Lumber eatimatin1, xlnt a RN. reliable pel"900 who ls Limited X·Ray permit young woman. Mon·Fri. BABYSl'M'ER needed. 6ttl•C•111l11 CASllEIS worklDI conda. lled.lcal Mec:haalcal I eer· Growlnt electronics willln1 to learn. Some req'd.646-3903. 7:30·5PM, must drive. vie or TeWlnkle School, .... fl dent.al Im. ~5. 5 dys. I nt de1ree pref'd . firms needs outgoio& knowlect.e of bortJcure Balboa lal. 875-565.2 CM 2 ""'•'-2 .... 5 30 Quall fled candidat es beln(uJ., 6 ut not n«. Call Medical Au't, H.B. Front · · au... :...,. : C 11• II H B 147-81511 d r aum to· Mn person to a ssume '(' "'IDlr!tr w /transp. 556·0838 art • 14 u TD TE M -·-·-------1 aeJ n e e 9 1· V 1 · secretarial duties 3 days for mterview. ~ &i back omce. Exper ~ rMY CA t200I COOIC a n • • 2 3 8 a pr wk , Mon· Wed. 8·5. No belpCul. 847~
If you care for the needs '-:;iii6
p;mmiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Equal Opportunit)' For retirement hotel, 1 ~t:.~a:::L .8c~~~13· ahortband nee. but ap-INVOICI Cl.BJ(
of others. call the Elder· ,. BANKING EmploJeril/F/H day. Mon. 2nd a hi ft. ~ ptitude w /figures a Wanted for lie Marine Medical
ly Ir Handicap Care ~~~~~~~~~ MARKETS NewportVW..M2·5l8l. muat.Conieruaiolficeln Hardware Store good Fashion Isla nd MO .
Service. Must have car. TELLO For2nd•3rdSblft.a DINING Rm. personnel. Huntinaton Beach. benefits, lmmed. open· backorrictl, Pff& vaca-
499 · 5693; ask for Baokin& We promote to mana1e· Coeli-se.rt~ for luxurlom apt. hotel. Please contact Joanie ing. Call64S-17ll lion coverage. Exp
Ri chardorOonna. PARTTIMI MIW ACCOUNTS mentlr aupervlaionfrom Nlthta. Apply: Mesa Perm .. rull/part time for appt. at 894·7257. _..;;._J_A_M_IT_Oll __ AL ___ 1 EKG. drawing blood &
,AIDE-work W/h a n. L"'GU ....... HILLS n-h"' .... Lh within. Lanes, 1703 Superior, onan•-da Gd wo ...... ln• Salarynegotiable. inject.844·0381. ~ ~ Newport P<"ac -' aa WANT A CAREER? Costa Mesa, see Sam or ,,.. u•• · · .... "·~~~~~~~~~I Couple Deeded for a f/t dicapped adults. Must 23601 open Ina for New Ac· COllta Mesa Betty. conds. Unilorma fum'd. 1-em p toyment. Mus t MGR. gifl store Lido Viii.
be strong, willing to as· M....._P.tlway counts Counselor. New lllDelMar Willln1 to tnln. In-GEMHALOFFtCE speak Engllah. Call Req : powerful, self-
• slst in tasks such as 714-llMOSO Accts .• IRA/Keoth, col· 631·9'21 COOK-am. retirement re· tervlew by appt. Call 8 lo 4 PM. Must be good 844·0510 or a pply In motivated in; selling, a
toileting , feeding, gen. leclion•, tr ~W Accta. aldence in Laa. Bcb. baa _H_o-'pe'--a_t_S1_1_.c_1_1S___ accurate typist, 10 key person a t Newport sell·starter, take chg ..
1 cleanup. Excell. vaca· Mr.~~H::.._ e•per. req' · Sa.lary Laauna Beach openlo1 for mature all· DISHw•~.-ap/T by touch, conscientious Dunes 1131 Bac.kbay Dr. fast working. Sal. open. \ion & i n s urance -...,... commensurate with ex· t!M-1233 aroundcook.40bn/flex. "'--a nd mature worke r. N.B.8·4:~PM 673·4655 benefits . Uni ted per. Full Insurance b ra worhrk . Mra. Neededforconvaleacent Salary$83.3permo.Ask Cerebral Palsy Assoc.. W i 11 accept s harp benefits • paid career Huntinaton Beach Collini 4M-M58 hosp. Perfect for stu· for Dawn 645-8830 10 to Jewelry store in So. Coast MMGMT POSITIOM
Santa Ana,546-5760 trainee with rretvlous apparel. PleuecaU1: M2-9116 ---------1 dAent1. GdBeworkin1 g cond. 4pm. ' Plaza neoffieds brla
1
ht Fabric chain, C.M ..
cust ome r con ac ex· lb. Denny Paris a ~~!!!!~!!!!~~!!!!~ COSMITICIAM pp f, ver y Manor, person ror ce dut es. Anaheim. Xlnt opp. ANIMAL perlence. Type 20·30 · 71~ i--------Needed for poeltlon 81 MOV ctoria,C.M. GEHllAl.OFFICE 540.9066 Geri,646-4040.
wpm. MEWl"OltTIALIOA C~ make·UP artist at a Donut shop. Early AM Auocialioo mgm~. div _L_A_N_D_S_C_A_P_E MOTEL HOSPITAL We oHer career op-SAVI ... $ & LOAM with major atock broker Newport Beach salon. shift, no exper nee. App-~~s s~~!:uk,T~ wt;~.:: CONSTRUCTION posl· DE~" CLEAi(
Ftr perm position Incl portunltles. competitive ~~!!!~E!!.O~.~E~.~~~ oc Al rt E Muat be lic'd. <213> ly · DlppltyDonull 1854 r -of ... ti M th II -
wknds, bather, brusher. salaries and wide ranger~ ~~-r prerd. ~. i to:: _654_-_ew __ . ------1 N~wport Blvd. C.M' ~:~ "J~ ,~·e'~risb tr:: ro°i!d ex~r. T!;~a~ le ~e:~ 1~P~:r!nectt. ei~h
cteangin\s & gen 'I as· of company benefits. IA1H AIOI Type SOwpm. cau: Judy COUMSILOI Pleasant working condl· benefits. Please call public. N~~~::~ age 18 yrs. LINCOLN Ptr. 7-Uam. Mon·Frl. ~E~e~ke~rt~,~~~~U~l~~~ Day camp. Juae29-Au1. Do•licMJ...ar tlons. Call: SCM834, ex~ (7J4) 788·4751 from AMBASSADOR INN
Newport VUla,fU..5861. r: 28. 10.m·l :IOpm wkty. ~ 205 9AM·3PM. C.M 645-4840 ANSWERING Serv. No. SAVINGS Looklnl for a nome ol Prewioua experience de· ln Newport Beach aeeb --------
exp. nee. Part & full & LOA.... Beauty your own? You'll find aired. $4.25·$4.75/hr. part time hei,t wffkday General . Corpot'•r_.. Lepe NANA needect for 2 sm.
time. Min. typing req'd. " HAii DISe.t• many homes advertised Nl1uel Sborea Com· mornlnp. Asi: for De&Jt. I IF or Seael•t children. S3.50 hr, 4 day
631-0140 EOE Equal Opportunity & MAHICuatST for ule In Clanified munlty Auoclatlon , 640-5313 VICKI HESTON with heavy corp. back-wk Ref's. 962-1915.
EmployerM/F Leue altua.Uoo. Studio every day. ~0122. DllY• Lround to manaae corp MuasBY
Apartment Manager, I~~~~~~~~~ Five. N .8 . Judy , I ·1 p·1at ... b i l ri &Aaloclatet pt. Small lawN orrc1ce11' y ............... .... Couple, 65 unit adult apt. 642-6443. • ••••• ~ . I r I .. ec an ca upe ence. Speclal.Wn1 ln airport area. B a --" Hunt. Bch. OCCice &i The fast.est draw In lbe ---------1 Wlllin& lo learn t.rade. TemporaryClerical Carolyn13341883 To do deliveries Ir help
maintenance skills re· Weat ... a Daily Pilot ant Ad Reaulta 6'2·5878 Radlatot"I. 631-9424 Personnel w /stocking. F /time .
quired. 213/592-1573. Classified Ad. 642·56'78. • • Driver, Claaa l , Nat .1 140.0400 LEGAL SECY• ;'uke~Y~h~*"-~ .l:"fo~
I• Classified Advstisll-e Client co. aeeka Ucenaed •UAl.DS SIEHIOI PTMR Jerry. Lloyds Nunery.
BANKING
Are you a well-groomed. career oriented
Individual and have had banking or
related experience? If so, we are looking
for you!
We offer an excellent salary, me~lcal
Insurances Including Dental, one week
vacation this year If hired before June 1,
pfua working In the beech area. Our
Immediate openings are:
• Flle Oerks • T ellefs
•NCR Proof Operator • Cr.ot Ch.de
•Customer Service Check
...........
17141761 ....
'• '-div w/-'-t drivln1 re Cballea1""• poaltlon for rt Bl CM e supe~vl1or for Claullled Deeartme.nt.z co"' rd 'ror~" term 11: Full & part time. All lop Hcy°";/Xlnt It.Ula. 2038 Newpo ., ·
• E _...,, ""1• areas. Uniforms fum'd. l ,,,1 oc 1 rt 64&·74"1 Experience necessary. x_...ent company siin. lmmed. Ured De MH v-CI a rpo ---------
•
beaeflt1. Salary commensurate withe a--y Ag8',l 21 orNover, re area. Gd beo. Sal. Oom· NURSESAIDE = F I t t • inte 1 -, welcbme. o exper. nee. a•-/e• Con h 1 • ence. or appo n men aor rv ew,. Tempo~Servic-1 u 1 1 menaur ... w ~· · For retirement ote , · -· A PP Y : n v er s a .. t Cind 7""7 l c l fi'2-4'2l, ext 2'17. · 163'71 Bea Blvd. flB Protection Service, 1228 .. c . y, _. I Fr i " Sat, mldni1ht.
e e ... _. w. sth St., Santa Ana. L ........ SIC'Y Prr" • Prr poeltk>n tor e Gen·-f a •• ......_. e 17902SkYIW'k#lOO Interview hrs: •12• 1·4. SANTAANA an aide, Spm:U pm.
• 1111 ~··•" • $40..M Moo ·Fri. Small firm (S lawyers> NewportVUla.~S861.
• Secretary t. • &O E MF6H require• 1ood akllla. W HAIRSTYLIST/ Cutter. Nuraln&
• Execltlve Offtce • n~fe~~ ii:'p.;~~ ~r!~d1d ~':~e. ~:i!'. ;:~~'i:n~~f~f.' 1:~~= t:~~~lme
e1mmedla.te ~ll'll fOf' veraatlle 1ndlv1dual. • Ian . Moulton Pina euy lolfte atmoephe~. LIPMUAIDS 3:30·7:30pm. Country e •uat be capable of haDClliu fait.·pac:.d.. Plaarmacy, La•· HUia. Work w/klda It adults. WAN1'9 Club Conval. Hosp .
• vu1ed and lnterestlDI dutiel tor newaPQer. llr. Dreyf\a, 'Nl-J7M Wiil traln ll ntt. KB. lluat becertll\ed. 1Jtyn 549·8061 .
...utiwe It penocmel admiailtntor. Call:. ... Aiu•hr/ _au __ .-0 _______ 1 or older. Ffl'·temporary MU.SING .MMiln. Ext.mforappt. WIN,..._ Healtll poMUon cmly. Apply~ RN , 1.a:JOpm. LVN.
• ca..••IA..I 011.:.&.. ~ala. : N.-Md by Laruna Kllll tv•YIODY ... IS peuoa. Oel We bb I llpm·7amt 3 da~ week. a ~1""11 • iiMi ~ ladutrlal control A WI•• New.porter lnn, uo7 P vt . 41 oed Conval. ~ r l Jamboree Rd, N .B. Hotp. Immac. with td •~tu1peuon to handle Re.al ltltate e mr-fl~m"e.•_t111u trrealrn .. Be part of tbe futett Penouelotftoe. atatflnt. Santa Ana Hll. ..... ve opment account• and aatolDOll~• ai u ,.. arowln1 GOnl)JeQ1 in tbe ---------• acco11nr1. llatt but at leut 2 7ean. B-tm. l\e.alt.b • nutriUon field. U9UOI ca.ma 8.A. 549·Pl .
•
·=~~c'Fe:...l$alaryl•.,• ... -?''*'.~_gt~'-~· --1 ·-.-.----~--11---1 Ua1'mlted income OP· !:xp d P /T at P /T ----............ .. _ ... -kt --........-:•.,_... porlunlty. Call Mr. Hlllara Liquor 2.90 f;. OflfltClm¥1CIS
beneftta. . or •lllOlDlment IGra.t.+iew, e WWI Annatrona, •1-0MB or ma.St.CM ... 1 ... ST .... ..,,
• .,.....,._ ext. rrr. • OoWwett 8aaller Real llM!!!;;·1!:!'7!:5S~. -----lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~ .,. _... l _; Health care co. la<lmne
• II-a :n.a... E~ • =:~~ :.::..· ~: 1---... ---1 MACHINE !\al an lmmecl. QMalna • r-• l 11-I htle9'"*'1 :r=c. ~I ' for an tndl.-idual to Join C • '.... ..._~ ... , ....... •-\Al•---· SHOP our Office Suvlces • ' •t -'9!1 ._ tra... ""'_.,._ Staff. DutlH iDolude
•Adalta with ouht•n=uln atlracu ••: Cal \Ilaire lolaaaoa, ,R.W,llHIUIBleDitatlft lmme4. opeoln1. 1orUn1 ,. dellvnto1 ,.,_aUti.. wtao ., ~JO.al .... ..,,.. >M.1tlt.el. Newport leach hu an maelllln• operator mall ,. ul'Oldnl• Muat
l ,.•r old 1out1W evee .... ....,.. I0-4lb lwm.'!.ed, °'*'. ~~ .. 'our-•. tr•I .... AD ldrl dtpt. be able to 1lft ts tbt. & .......... .._.. ___ -•• I _..a..;. I....... • "' C\str. ll'\111 -CM ,..... ~.1. co. ... .... HI Drl • -~ v.n .. _,,, -.m -pm, _ _.._,, pos., 1-11 ...... .a1ft.. be.l(._Ota. Dellronlo, oaYe a --. Yer•
I • Ana. can llolpt . ....,.. Nl!M1I Uc . For men lltdanna·
DC... r"'d. For late"r••· Uon 4 ~ .. , coo·
•
• I ... 1 •------~----1 coataet : PllJllh tad: Ter~~ o~u , WarutL 71'-Ml·l1t'J. n4·t"1·.._,SO :/F ~ ec>&•lr
• Equal ~ ~r J ~f. ~!!!!!~~!!!!~'. ~:::::~::=:::£:::::±::::=:::=t:~~~===~=:=.G~~·~·~·~·········· .....
I
r ..--· • • • --• .,....,. •..,.. ••--•-----~ ............ _,..._.._.. _____ ....... -. •. ~____..... ....... ------~---· ...... -............. --.......---.-.... .._ .... _,,. ....... ~-•• .. •,.•~-~-.;,.u ... i;s ..... u .. a .. u••1110 .. :11m11J•
DI Or1nge Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, Maye. 1981 ~!!~ ..... ?!~
tw.W..W 7tM W...W 7111 IWlllW...W 71 ~!!~ ..... ?!~ IALm UfAL W...W 7111 w...-. 7100 twpW_... 7t Dots 8040 •••••••••••••-•••••••• ••• •••••-•••••••••••• i.e.T••••••••••••••••••• Ma hare 1ale1petaon -•••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••J, .. Optomet:nc otnce, Ptr. RfftptioDllt. Ptr All, a 11$TAUl4MT &&lea wuted. lhtenlty,._ _______ llCUllTf4MIAIDS TYPIST FREEi Goodhome1matl
m•• t>. neat, outioin•· 4y1. Airport area. No WaltrHIH~walter1, $36 000 + atore. Full • pttlme. *A*cSICctP•~. =~'~·~* Openln11 for qualified Part time, alternoon1 wht part poodJe, ~ mo.t
willin1 to~m ... 7·5827. typina. Pbooe penoull· bullpenm.. btwn. B g VE aL y H ll.LS $61.SJM ..,,.., "'....., lndMduall, Good at.art-for reception• llaht typ-old. ~•.•ol"
ty • neat appearuce a tAll • Nooe, '• Ac:c:tAut/ SlS,eoo ins pay. Refu.ndable u.n· ina. lnte~ poellk>ft. -., •
rAMaS mmt.L.aurie. 753-SlU CMU, IOOl lledtdll, IUda. !!.~t: 6 Nullidca~ -----~--•! SlltlO/RE/ 4000 !form depoeiU. '78-7243 Call 714/'7~ On'lualitJed need •PP-n. ste. tm;c.11. o c s1 "'operalionl s.ae. WordP,.,.....ln&SlS,eoo "sas.1111 ,______ Poodhl lea, '11AKc ... ~:1c'!'!.: ly loimwns1nexplnn Receptlonllt-Newport · .Nffiuyoee>Dletor llMrAL Eapd.ComnMantOun w te 1 ver. •r. -
all haaea. Ref'• re-Center law nnn needa Sur.rvlaion 6'rralnln1. CONSULTANTS LhReiader1Aay,1ac. SEC'Y-DEC. Ty,W.C..,,.t only.'7f.5228
q_ul , permanent posl· aomeooe w/Ute typba1. 8-tauranl Fil I/Part lhn•. Wlll Breu n er' 1 tlent1 .m881rcb l'At 'MEOE Ca--r· opportunitv with A •MCa .. uen AK C Rea . \' e I low
lid Call a fter &PM CallSbeUa&tO-lMO train. Xtot. career or l'w'nllure S.OWroom in Newportflm.81.IO/rr. very·-,ood~rorowth ~·n· Lona • 1hor1 term Top Labrador Retrlevttr 967-~69c> COUNTER aupplament. Ca ll: We1tmlo1ter 1eelu t"""' P N F .IC.,,-.a•sT f.SPll Mr Zuclterbrod tial for lcated, prof. ay · o ee. Puppiea for tale: CH
""' · · career oricoi.d penon •--------• aecretar,Y who 11 not II ne1 . ha ve a boo. P A R T · T l M E Nlfhll. Between 2S & ~ at '73-8"S. for nt.ry level poa. lo Secretary afraid or hard work It ..... ,_..,,, ·
housewives, make those teen of a1e. ts hour. Hrl D Sales home furnl1h ln11 . wlllpertonnresponsibly _._,,.,
xtr hrs profitable. Call bet . 8pm "tpm, u,.r •lllDALSHOP• Br.uner '1iaCalifomla'1 bee.~ •efficiently. Contact FnetoY• I045 Sat reps needed. For Wed.·Sal. '75-e080 <Bon· larceattum. reoulco. At FOA. Mlltw-rn minded, Mr Green,6'4--9800. ••••••••••••••••••••1>••
Nw Snack Co. CaH to-nle) .,,._ l•dmpl Part Ume-eo.ta Mesa. neea. qualified sate. • b:trdw8:=. Wv~~;~: 3 Male killenl, 2 wbt, )
da J.'7320 --.-IC--.,,--OMl--S-T---1 ,Gotoud do~":7U:'t! !o! Pref. exper. ln retail m1mt. staff for expand· ta phone It correapon· SELL AVON FULLTIME Npt B .. h "'""·"c20 blk " wht. 8 wka adora-
homemakera to tear: clothin1 •ales. lnl mkt. Jtet.all eap. pre· dence. Typlnf. 80-65. Ac· EaCmalJ96~'?!!..hr. Equaiopp Empl-yr MtF ble. 681·5693 • AaTTIMI Full·tlme, Newpo rt d 1 546•1821 556-&3S3 f'd. WWtrain.$4.hr.,de· 'd •1 350 ...........,""' --------
Su mer dollan " fun. Beach •re-. lifwrt have an earn . App Y In pendln1 on exper. Full curacy pre · • • -:::::=:=::=::=::==:---·~~~~~~~~~~Sha11Y ·haired 22 lb
Pacific Caatln1 is In· goodphone~~~e•mut1 t person to: S~ or p /tlme. Mon·SJ1l., DOE. Call: Sberree. SEIYICISTATIOM WAJTR"'"""'/WAJTER Cockapoo, lovable, weU , te-~·•-i no•w for Hllh work weU w1u1 peop e. C t-5: ao • Sun. 12 Noon· 54()..8055, Coalul Person· .._ _ .._...,.. ~ l 1 d _... 87 ..... A .... Sc°b.:l'i1hlookin1people 752·0969. WIENERSCHNITZEL arur opportunity In 5Pll. Contact: Cindy nel Al)'., 2790 Harbor ... ...,"'"' W/carforwtckerbaskel rane ,spay ..... ~-.
for ~ajor motion pie· llCIPT~ST 45G1Jamboree, :::i.P~pf,.~ ~~~~ MUil, 191-23111. EOE ~~·E CM. Never a fee. ~;!k ~t:~r~s c!~: ~ u30n 1c ~"P~ e rMv i CF\ Small fem. Doberman. 11 '1
tur al10 clean-cul Newport Beach, CA S41·4l17 1~~~~7:~~~~~~;;;~~~~~~~ mi.ssion.N.B.&&4-71Sl : · :.w • 00• r ·•1 mos,allshots.to1dfalll mal emale 2l·30 with Newport each law I" Earn S125·S1SO wkly. w/yard,972-l190Saad.y
100 1mlle for com· firm. office. Salary com-equalopport~ty Sales SALIS SERVICE (In shop). Ex· Must be neat, persona·:--'------------
me lal auditio n . mensurat.e with ability. employerm/f/h ~-••I Seadol Computer Corp. SIC_.._.;llS cel.opply &benefitsfor bleacenergebc.979-07~47 Cute, c u.ddly fem 61e
d b 11 · •· 844-MOO •• UI. expa-..._g. We have -·-f OAM f C Ii Kitt Fi .... •-De t:e n a 1t y .. · TL.. 'I ,..._ R ldl dl mech-inclined indiv. a ti orappt •co ens. x.,,, ... ~-• 1 •-~ff vacanca·-for ~"'"lified ap Y e xpan n1 h Ith u 0 527° lra iwiUOn • must. llC--..IST Th R ... _ d De f .... -N rt ... b /I I Ith basa'c lect · I · ea y . .,... "· I _.. .. _... RESTAURANT e eauct · pl. o outside 1a1ea sales ewpo ucac rv ne w e raca Wanted: Boys, •Garis to --
SSS orappt. llH FIT, Sa.ks of Irvine. S406 Food service. worker, the Pennya~ver ls ac· mimt. candidates. CaU: invellment finn h.aa im-knowled1e. S40-6300 sell flowers Mother's ,_,..._.. 1050
PartTne
Co ... IMJYOllllt e.....-.
Ad•lts with outstandin1
att.ractlve personalities
to spend 15 hn per week co~nsellng youth a1es
10 ,15 . Evenlncs &
Weekend.a Available. S7S
per wk . Ca ll
2:3()-5:30pm. Mon lhru
Fri. 642·4321 ext. 343.
Ask for Lori. o;r:eoa.• D Piiot 330 W. ay Street
Costa Mesa, Ca.
Equal Opporl .
· " Epiployer
PAR Time Daya. Ans.
serv. No exp. nee. Call :
Stf·3333 EOE
WalnutAve,lrv. over 18, wUl tram for ceplinl applications for 714-642-4435 med. open.lop for the SEWINGMACHINE Day wkend. $3.50 /hrl•••••••••••••••••••••••
-___ SS&-_8353 __ . ___ , meat slicer• portion a part·Ume aalea poe. ---------• followin1poaitlona: OPERATOR +bonus.CaJ177~9945t!j **I BUV * ...._ Clear printing, ed. spell· SALES, SHOES, cbilds/· Executive Secretary " JI{
RICB'TIOHIST control. Approx 7 bn . inl • a friendly smile teen a . F· p /T , exp! d Junior Acoounlanl Sall loft exp. 631-1842 Warehouse person F /T Good used Furnitun: &:
R · d r · Flex. startln1 tim e, h basi Co ff I frln equare or growing, are l e c require· person, brly, incentives, . o era exce . ce Single needle operators. dys. Xlnt beo .. Call Bob Appliancea--OR l will ,ell lntemaUonaJ company. lOAM·lPM, Mon·Tbur .. ments.WewUJtrain.Ap-benefits. Children's benefila•advanc:ement experienced Lots of 77G·167S,LagH1lls. orSELLforYou Minimum 3 years ex· 8AM ·lPM Sun. Lori's ply: 168<1PlacenUaAve .. Bootery ..... 2 .... Mr. opportunities. Please · M ... ST-s ... UCTIO"" per., word processing. Kitchen. 3UrT S. Harbor CM Milter. ..... ..... call Penonnel,'752..()070 work, full ltme. In shop. Work early summer ~ ~ • ""
typing & good tele})l'lone Bl.,S.A.971M1747 E.O:E. For lnteTvlt<W call eves. & wkends P /T . 64W6M,IU·9~5
skills. Neat & organiied ---------Sales SEAMSTllSS 491-8520 Welcom. e ne. w residents I IUY -..t.. ••tUll
and not afraid of hard Restaurants ~l~et ~e~ai! s~': ;:sr ~ Sallmakin1. exp helpful ,_ ________ •!Skate t. Bicycle rentals Hospitality Hostess Les PVllP" 957·8133
work . Good growth but willin& to train. Secretary and sales. F/time iocld needs a few good people. potential. benefits, 1aleaperson. Oppor. Jmmed . openln1 . wknds. Must have good Car & typewriter Antique hand carved salary. Contact Mr. 4 4 w l id ben. Contact "'a.·7"""". S~ d d 547..,..... c h· ,..,.._ •• ,..., """ local refs. $4.00 to St.5G nee e · . ..,,_.,, meae '"''""'l .-95.
Green.644-9800. JOJOS Ket.arahat768'3383 __ S_IAMS ___ TUS __ S_· --$1.~~::irp pe;aon per hr depending on ex-Mercll•llM . 536-~evenlngs.
RICB'TIOHIST Sale• 1lrl needed , Boatcovers n eeded w I g d . per. Oceanfront Wheel ••••••••••••••••••••••• Collectable, lpc st"<G!nt T~eenleeprhaolneo,fflllgchet dlyuplin1·egs.' Newport87S~&Sport 5Gl29lbSt,N.B. secretarial skills, Tr.p-Works. Balboa,875-6510 ......._, 1005 desk. Oak Asking 'fsG.
WAITRESS .r7823 87~1823 in& 6G+. All co. benefits. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 847 ()()6Se es • ewport Beach Law Call: Judy, 540-6055, SKIPTHE WANTED TO IUY -. _v_. ___ _
Firm. Salary $800. Call Sales •SEAMSTRESS• Coastal Penonnel Agv., l~ME 1 bu Y 0 1 d guns , 5 piece Spanish Dinette Mlkkl 9~2411. WAITER HILPWANTED! 2790 Harbor Bl., CM. Careers an sales, sales diamond.a ivory jade & set, like new $125. Call
tU• •nME Telephone sales. No ex· Bridal shop-part time. Never a fee. EOE mana1ement, Salary +. collectibles Cail (714) after 8pm. 97~1473 .--per. nee. Excell. co. 546-1821 556-9333 Call Tom Finn 963-8531 972 4926 & ·k f 0 OPENIH(iS OM benefits. Commission · as or ane. 8' blue sofa, S2S. Cu.rw
ALL SHIFTS pro1ram • profit shar-SEC UT ARY Secretary ST A TIOHAIY F 0 r s a 1 e Ant i q u e cabinet, $75. 10' sta"eO
11en/SCTRY
Do you have a good front
office appearance,
pleasant personality and
PaDT TIME phone voice? So. Cal. MI Builder seeks sharp re-
G E .... ER.._ L OF· liable reception ist.
TOP PAY in1. Apply in person: For small office. Typinl SICllJAIY Store In CdM needs Partners Desk very console w. amtfm. $50.
Pennysaver , 168G 70 wpm, telephone. Our Property Mgmt. salespenon F/tlme, S good cond. 7141731-2535 s.49·0208
Placentia Ave .. Costa I general office skills. Financial Dept. seeks a days. Xlnt working con· eves. ----APPLY IM PBSOM Meaa S000..$1100/mo. 851·915(). responsible individual to ds. Especially fine clien· ------AirSprang twin bed w.
" A Varied office dutJes a in· FICE elude accurate tyring. G~owing electronics fiUn1 •n<! genera ad· firm needs outgoing mlnistrat1ve laalu. lo
person to assume exch~nge for abilities to
secre ariaJ duties 3 dys I function well in a busy
pr wk, Mon· Wed. 8·5. No office, company offers shorthand nee. but a p· frlendl.Y atmospher e,
pilud., w /figures a must competitive salary a!!d
Congenial offi ce in Hunt· good benefita. Call Lan·
inglon Beach. Please da Foster at The Pres!ey
contact Joanie for appt Com paniews for m -at 894-7257 l e r v I e w a p p l . 714 /540.0500.
IETWllH 2..fPM ---------perform Secretarial. tele. Phone 6'4·7.s2 for Antique Englah bedsprd & dust ruffle.
1507 S. Coast Drive Sales SECRET ARY general omce functions. appt. tea caddy ssoo. Like new $160 645-9442
Costa Mesa.Ca92627 IMSULATIOM Part time, 8-12 hrs per Job reapooslbllities in· ~8688 •E nglish It Spanish week. 873-6372 cludea auU.Ucal typin1. STOCKllOKB Natural Knotty Pine Ta·
1peakln1. 14).key by touch, phones TRA.IMH Appl..c" 10 IO ble Sl .. round w 2 22··
• • •$500totl,000perwk. SECRETARY-sharp & Ille fllin1. 1·2 yrs. CoUecegrads.Oppty.in •••••••••••••••••••••••leaves & 6 chrs $325
JOJOS •Paydayevery week. peraon w/xlnl phone Secreurial exper .. typ-Newport Beach area for HARBOR AREA 631·5009
•NocredlllW11doWD5 manners, tale charce ln4 of 60wpm, numbers hard working en · APPLIANCESERVICE -.-H-d-----~
•Dlrectsalesexper. poiltion , itron1 oriented .~ a finan· thusiaslic lndiv.Sendre-Webuyusedappliances 7 1 e·a -bed couch" estill'mts, •Wllltraln. secretarialexperldyp-cial /clerlcal bac k · sume to: P.O. Box 430. ··wesellrecond,guar matching arm chair.
531-4501. Bob inl akil.b a must. Buay ground an! all deairable. M arlton, New Jersey. appliances. 549-3077 $2 S G blue d esk &
I We offer compelllive 08053 bookc ase combo S~O llC. 5 .... & ~....... ~ :1 ~.B. Phone Gina salary & excel!. benefits I IUY APPUAMCES 64()._625_2 ____ _
an equal opportunity al John Wayne Airport • packaae. Submit BP· ~K Clerti part time Les 957-8133 RCA Combo 25 .. Blk/Wht
PAYIOUCLHK
2·3 days per week. Hrs.
9·5. Apply: l660 Placen·
tia Ave .• C.M.
employer m/f for 1 pel'ICG ofc. Need SECUT ... •Y plication to: for marine hardware r-il;c;:T;:;~ri~~~~~;~~~~1 take·char1epenon Exp. -Howard Derman store. Call : Balboa Small Freezer $100. T.v. record player, good llC.,,OHIST nec.6'f.2Z3 Out.standing opport. for Marine, S49-S67l. E.O.E. Washer•dryer,$125ea. cond . SIOO 75 1·1762
12:30toSPM R-elailclothingsales.FIT ---------caree r minded super 111'!1HEIRYINEa:MPNW M/F /H AllA·l cond.646-5848 545.3479
Reception & typing dys, exper pref. Xlnt SALISPIOPLI secretary. Excel skills W rlEMSIOHADMIM. duties for Executive ben. Call Larry771>-l877 ; PAln'TIMI and organizational MW796 STUDENTS 4' long LeGourmet solid Youth Desk Dre!lser &
Youn1. dynamic pension Suite, nr. O.C. Airport. Lag Hills. Eves. " wlmds. 1n our abilities will guarantee 1061 Camelback St., 18 yrs or older. Work in mapl~ cooking stand, B 0 0 k ca 1 e • Kl n g ·
co., looking for ex per. Call : 752·0234 for appt. wine & 1plritl dept. Must a succeaaful future with Newport Beach, 92660 movie t he a t re 8-12 w /spice & pan r ack . Waterbed xlnl cond
retirement plan ad· ~~~~~~~~~~r-::::'!~::'!:-' ____ I b 21 A 1 1 lhla dynamic, growing EqualOppEmplyr hrs/wk.S7~an.s. $45().673-3122eves. wrought iron dinette.· r: Re t nts e over · PP Y n pension f111D. Smokers r.~~~~~~~~~i ----------mexa·can glass lag"t. is··' miniatrator, with strong ,. _________ I 1 aura peraon : Peraonnel d I C II Rf · f r n t l l b k De nee not app y. a T•oc~Ccre erigerato~. rost ree, blk /wht Zenith . g~~~od~c~o:ifion 8 fm: Receptioniata Co~rt' !r/:,a~:. _B_a_r_b_a_r_a_85"1_·1204____ Before"&"':iJr school excellent, like new S2SG. wardrobe doors 4· x s·
m ediate I Y a v a 11 . . PULSE BOAIO • • Bch. S e c r e l a r Y . F I T Secretary hours. Fulltime during 548·8513, 548·'485 _4_97_._ss_1_1 _____ _
smokers need not apply JOJOS restaurant. Ucbl typ-~~~~:n?11 ~~:n~:! school Vacati.ons & Washer " gas dryer, Complete Furn. apt. Bed.
857-1204 PBX SALISP/T in1,applylnpenonM·F followlna career op· holldais. Chtld~e n clean,worb1ood.S75 & sofa, d sk, chrs. love PESTICIDE SPRAY We need31harppeople 3-Spm. TbeMa1k Pan, Center ermlt require-S8S.548-&513,S48..t485 seat, lmp&endtbl. All
CrutK'Y with faahloo backfround So CoaatPlua portunlly: mentll. St&-8849, call bet. ---------
OPERATOR-Ex per Utllll.A COOKS to work lnourmen·s ~ --·----·-----1 PURCHASING l&fipm. Tappandlxrnicrowave for$200 67H720 :u't.~:; li~~~~~o ~a; P~ Posltlooaavailable now. :~:~ni':.~~: ~;nryf:;. SICIETAIY SKRET ARY T•'--"~ touch control. Xtra lge. Sofa bed full siie Earthy
benefits. Please call long " abort term as· FULL TIME PIT Christ Church By Perform secretarial Sell to "'d;';ie";;",""!"I factory ?!1_Y27!1.,5ed 3 mos. S3S<l. tones SlOO/obo. 673-~ • 1l1nments. Call today OP....-SOM appt. The Sea. Mon-Fri. '"" ..., (714)768-4751 9AM-3PM. forappolnt.ment. THILOOIC 9.lPM. General office duties for Purchasing direct via phone, great eve_·-----~~
ALL SHIFTS 644-6500 duties 873-3805 Department. Good typ-product, repeal busi· Kelvinalor refria. $75 DUE TO ILLNESS * f'lc._..Ft 'uJ 551-0045 TOPPAY inl and sborlhand re-ness. SlB,000 to P>.000 Gibson eJec. dryer, S3S M t II NEW k &
Picture frame sfiop s ... .....,,., SECUTAIY iulred. Experience pre· ,1st year. Call for in· Ward• dishwasher. $75. q~!e~e sz matl~n~ox
nee d s perso n ex -r-n.L1n::._ ArrLYIMfllBSOM Kiah faatilon women's erTed. terview966-<*56 Gua r.546-8672 sprgs, S225 & $1 85 perieoced in all phases U \ f1 IETWBH 2..frM apparel at.ore 1n Fashion ADMIMSTRA TIVI 894.2729 of picture framing . TtMPOltM'Yl'ft!tOHHf.UUMCU S Cou D laland. Salary, comm., Expandln1 researc h Salary commensurate TOOLPUSHHS Refrig. Sl.50. Stove, dbl ________ .
SSl-1522. ~72 ~ • .__ .. ....___.. Co~~ Mesa, C~ ~ aood beneflta. Ex per. firm needs versallle, with experience plus ex· California based drilliag oven , $100. Dishwasher. ENTIRE HOUSEHOLD ., .,__...,...._., req.'44-7100 ca reer-minded In-cellent compa n y contractor seeks grow-$100.76().1096 offumiturefor sale:LR,, PLANTS Mew_...._.. divldual to provide benefit.a. Submit resume lnl foreman for Hu.nl·•---------bdrm . OR It p,tio. Wbil ln the wonderful l!.O.E. 4 4 $............ aecretarial support for or call : Eva Taylor, lngton Beach rigs. Xlnt Mlcroovea,Lk new. Ever ything near-"'w.
worftl of interior plants. ~~~~!!!~~~~!I JOJOS Btctro •rtrtfc.tlll & Adm l n i s tr at l v e Employee Relations aalary •benefits. Send Sl75 MustselJlmmed. Offer$
Lean to care for them llC--....ST ~ .... _ ·-··... Secretary. Excel. typ· Dept. (7\4)54().1111 reaume.:,1 PO BOX 2508 848-084C> Oel·a'very. r•"·90lO ( I & ....... _.... .., -ma. •h. " ability to or-DOu.LAS OIL Bakera ..... Jd CA 93303 or !---------...,,. ~~lfene'C.~er,:::. n&f1.111t Wltb or without typing .._ ff op1•1 for•,....... ganl.ze •maintain fileu COMP.AMY Of • call (805)327·5736 KdenmoreXbelnavy dduty1f:ss -0-0-u-b-le-bed--. _co_m_p_l-~-te-.
have &d drivina record, needed. Top pay. Tern· IS.aiW, ••IH ,orH•. So. mual. Call for appl. CAUFOINIA __ ..._ _____ _, ryer. t con . . good condition, $75.
company trucks /tro· rarary & full time. Call C•Of. Ar••· C•ll Newport Pba rm a . 316GAirway Ave. ,...... 552-1717 aft6. 631·5179.640-6683
vided. No wk nds. tart od Services at 9'1M900. Inc. I 7 I 4 1141·0 4 7 7 NceullB ~~!'7599711 ~ l~lh7 St.. Colla Meea, CA 92626 ::~~e~1 '.}':r e.,~~:::a~! •-E-1-ec_t_S_l_ov-e-.-Comin--g-to_p_, '-----e -........ ---8-0-5-5 St/hr 751·7756; stS-6253 ll'T /T"(PIST an equal opportunity t.etw ... 7:JO -to -·-· ------' ..,,._ •. _ .. _-t Affirmative Action picture frame mlg. App· hood $75. Bit-In elect w•taCJ• _.
l'•ODUCTIOM ~~.11-lpm, trvlne. employer m /f 4:30 Employer ly 8:30 to 5 at Pin.e Arc h stove ~. St. Andrews •••F•l••E•:••:;:•1••K••ET•••••
... .._. ..... _ 833-1.S54 Bobble Secretary I~~~~~~~~~ Framina 15632 Product Church. lSlh St. " St. A l'D'IA ·-~ SALISPIRSOH Inc. Seaet..,., Ln. RunUncton Beach. Andrews Rd. NB Thurs N w pt Crest Hom ~ Rubber bole products, .................. '-...... W t d f tl t· El i l a.SOIF7 & Fri 9:30-2 Owners mUlt fiass CO• ph~ilcal sn •-• ..,g"ll, Retail Salea an e or a rac ave e ct ron cs co. n SICllTAIY for Laftuna's leadln1 wom-'1 ,......__ dept in La1uR• Bea·'" .... an ----------• Ma,9lh9·S mclud ng back -ray. ... """' · ... "" ,... Excell. oppty. for 1barp Tr I lk-le 1020
T kl II ll R.E of ice. Full time. THIH'i>·D-s. Pubion llland. Full or immed. ~ availa· 1 ~1nr-... ~... ave ,-• Superior Ticonderoga a rag a pp ca ons Lie. req. 497·5411 aslc for _.., parl·tlme. Experience ~·If you are an exp'd. I• tow.,... .. •. pa~ EXCLUSIVE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Beach
btwn 8 & lGAM only. Ruth oeceasaey 84().7110 Exec:. secret.arywitb ex-Newport Be8dl comm'l Nwpt Bch travel ageney 2 Schwl~ Sc~~mblers, Stratoflex . 1767 1 An excitlna. fast grow· · .-eel. typin& a kllh real eat.ate ofc:. E1cell. Min imum 2yrs exp. boya. lS •20 .$40-$50. Rummage saJe. St. An·
ArmsltfChll Ave .. Irv. Rept.trypist. Fantastic ing retail co. is now hir· SALES p Ell SON, (?O+wpm) •able to d• typiof • d lclapbone w/travel aiency. Saber S49.as53; S57·1566 drews Church. lStbSt. &t
EOE. A Kendavla lnd., opportunity for en· ingfull·Umeltpart.time mat.&&re. P!tlme•aome al with people, handle a k il • r equ ire d . agta ONLY. Contact Men·a Schwinn l().spd" St. Andrews Rd. NB
Co. thusiasUc airl. Jmmed. help, male " female. wlusch.873-3534 correapondence, ital Challenstn1 poslUoo for Gaylene"5-TTT7 lad1·es Peu1-t J".spd Thurs, May 7. 9:30-5. F /T •. 1 for Ma n a gemenl op· ridbt 1al. Call: Lalla, w v F M 8 9 .... 2 0 pen n ~ortunlties available. S ... LIS,.orfto...I lypin&, phones " • sal.2900 $100 9513818 n . ay ' _. · Property Man.aement Recept. /Typlat in Beaut. 1 ;.M in " ~ variety ol admin. duties, TYPIST __ e_a_. __ , ____ •-try 1070 -NewportCenterotnce + uae a Y penoo, ll'orPlantston!PIT·FIT call ual Some account· General office work no 1...uc1111 "'W ...1.....t-10•5 -w• ' .An.LEASING 9AM·5P • 516 lhru 5/15 IMS 33821M "' ·' d -9> ,,... ., •••••••••••••••••••••••' ~, ...... TIMI xlnl incentive program. or call: (7lt)t'74-1250. --·--------In& or bookteepinl ea· SICURITY experience require . •••••••••••••••••••••••L l 1.t r t " •• -· 6'4·2507. ~r dealred au ... -s High School 1raduate. • nves menl qua I y ace . Enlry level '""""Ilion for a Located In the Sad-Salea penon needed lo · ffer e ' ..... 1 a a. .., -"·-ta M ..... a a-a. Will be llDWOOD 2161 S ed SAPPmRES over let 1 • ..--A dlebac " Sho~plng sell malnt. ,......_acts In e 0 x ...... · PY .. W _ .. 1 lb N """ _, .... Xlnt d '"R" •20 l Y h i ril "~pie person .. to han-R.E. S LESPE.RSON for • ... -.w ben n•-mcl• .... ,A .. our ant .... aor e ewport movlnl to Irvine soon ec_... er on1 ea. our c o ce. o Y dle real dent relaUons, salea, exchan.-. invest.-Center{ 2371G E Toro 1rowing Co. Wlll train, 4 De .._' .. y W,;::;6W-Beac:h ana. Full & part Good benefits. Fartnen lOK' on hand. SS• /(l. St5<> peratone ! ~8681. '
b Its •-_.. l •-Hl""" ,.._ Rd., E Toro, Ca. 92630, · 1d pay, •••y to Jeam. • -tlm all hU'· avail G M& 9185 an .. •1me rn:-:..~~nge~~"t;~te::~ :•iiT :k.co:~~°';~ (Next lo Edward I Call Chrl.'° Unlimited PJlelHeicalBl lo~ a9pt: Mt11~' be o:er i1, hav~ ~s~~an ce roup, . ,,.. Ori1. design, lavender .
ol our apt. complexes. p ... RE•""--'" Cinema 4,5•8>. Maintenance Service, eon c eraeley, car Ir phone. No exp. . .EOE NEW 10' wide 4 panel Jade1old rlng,w/l2fuU..
Mus t have flexible ac'"c . ·---· 141·1071 eraonnel Dept. nee. Unllorms •train· . . . bronz:c aluminum slid· cut dla. $2500 /0~0
sGti=ule It be available llSTAUIAMT 1~.-------··-------;.-7l4-4'4·..ol Inf 1upplied. $U.S hr. Get GREEN cash lng glass door. SWl in 8'4·2790 • ' •-· r .. ...__k-... -. We s d l h M .. bf R t •-...... II' ~~~~~~~~~l1tartlng Call for appt· r WHITE I h l box value $350 will sell ' ...... a .. _ "'"" an w c a.er 1 ea auran.. Have aom.,.,.mg to ae . r: · · or e ep an s for $15. 8• wide X 2• high, Mhc•I••-IOICW
wlH train. (No real 7A M-3PM Mon.·Frl. Classllledadsdoitwell. Sellidleitenu 842-5678 SSl-11.35 wlthaClassifledAd used aluminum aUdlng ••••••••••••••••••H•••• =~o~~~~~r:: ~8813• callanytlme 4 4 Want Ad Results 642'-5678 Call64.2·5678 window s10. conlrac· Oriental Rugs, muat~n .•
commiuion sales). Part Reataurant JOJOS PL A ,. A. --------.... .111-----------------'t tor's wbeelbarrel S25. 20 hand woven ru&a1 h'ee. · Urheposltlco. Denny's Restaurant 290 Aaft Transit level $75. illver dollar for erte-h•
llJoyceJerome S. Bristol, CM hlrinf 548-4039 purchase. 646-«122
1191 ho1t/ho1taa positions. ........... la+lce w~Wcru:w1"t' 7·2Pll. Mon·Frl. Top BUS HRP
lott CamelbactSt., pay, iood beoefib. cau nteY GO 8Y MANY NA••
Newport8each,1266C> S51-I07Uorappt. ML TN •form lett.,.. f!lual Opp Emptyr Reataurant OP ... I OM • autom11ttc a.ttera ~!!-!!~~~~~ lmmed. PIT openlnp ALL9id IS e•-a..•te~aa.
da hnd I anUformokllrbarten· ,_,.._, ~ .... ..,.._
P/tlJD.•i.7 >"· 2 • · den. Muat be 11 ai older _... " •word p1oc111tno ly,''"• delivery, L.A. ' bl to .. Thi.tN. '100 per week. a e wor.. evea. Arr&. T .. PllSOM La Belch.41M..._. Look.lnl for lndMdu.ll l~MPM
w I t b o u t 1 o t n f. lJOT S. Cout Drlve PIT a.1q....,. Clertl. Apply r:l'IOllaliUea. Apply da • eo.tLa ..... CetmT
Broadway Uq\IOt, m •1 R>.fore 6om. Alk lot 8 d•ay. Lacuna Jean or Bill lie• Ed'1
h. Pl11a, lTth ls Tutlln.1
C.M. • • J!l°i ...
Aft equal opport~ .. ...,..,,
WHA,..VU YOU CALL,,. ...
THIY -
MVI~ .... , ......... &,...
ptOOll:lf-·
GN'IYOU:
~ .,......,'°"'au1•0.,.,._ ~-..-...-~--.... , ~
1040 •••••••••••••••••••••••
\
'
, ,. ... -. ,,,
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. May 6. 1981 Dia
MINtl ,_ .. ......_u-/ Trwd&s tHO.._NI '701 1,11. e.d ,a.,1-W ~.U*9 ....._Uted ...................... '"' ,,..,,,........ 9070 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................ •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
a.. .. 1•1111 ····················--······················· *c .... .-.·10 lll•ll*°r D..._ 972 5"b 97'0Wck 9"oc...... ttu Send 10meane you love a LUY 'I,.._ S.. .. ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••I'•••••••••••••••••• ~":!~.m~ulU :~: wtth dual reanl Ideal Mlk'S n... ·eo zeozx. Xlnt cond. See LEASE 'IO Reial l.JmJted, 2 dr, '71 MllCIMY
•-1 'or ....... ..._., ay • for lancbcapen, etc. -1 to appreciate. 99500/obo. / •--•~...-COU.AAXl7 w • ~ ,._ ..._ 1• Wkd aft '" ••7 ""'•2 DIRECTI a c, •-·-...... , ps, pw, your own peraonal (.,.r.ION). --. ya "• °" ·v-. plka, tilt, tUtro roof, Automatlc. atett0 tape.
meauae. Perfect for OM&.Y Slttl Send a meuaae to Mom Sat/Sun all day. level alr ~.etc. 12,000 c•er ai.nna.1 pow1er ·-w .. HOW ... -~L.....-&.d via th• Dally Pilot.. l ,,_ -rakea ele"'tr c w D every occu-. • v.• ~--,..._.. Mother•• Day Pa1e. '7• Dat.aun pickun. Xlnt 1911 S ... .a.1 m 20mP1.-• " · liver l'lJ.64ll Do IJ n. •• 11 St.a " -d0w1 & Hata, air coodl· · leilt tl20 ve ~ · Your meeaaae will ap-cond. Rad., AM/FM. TUUOs '77 IUICIC Uonln1. vinyl top, tilt
Rerria. chair, aofa &i ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT BEACH pear in a pretty flower S2'700 . (213)598·8218. u••-1 wheel, iport wheela.
at amp coUeetlon. Call Non-profit or1. needa Cabover Camper , Iona ll).0111 box. For Information David. Wk. ni1ea aft 7. IE .a.CH 1 ...... 0RTS 2 door, a· .. ~aUc, ra.a•-. (814377 )
98211158 your boat. plane, car, bed mini t.ruck. 1125 or and to plac:e your "" ....-....,.,, uiu -HI · · etc. Liberal tax deduc· 't.lofr Extru Ms-13M '80 Rabbit P .U. truck. mesuae call 642-~78 Fhlt 9725 8'8DoveStreet power 1leerln1, It -
WANTED: Air condi· lion advantatet. . . SP e c . w Ind o w . TODAY! ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEWPORT BEACH brakes, cnile ooolrol,
Uoner for a auh win· 21S/'54·23tl FOR SALE: '73 Ch..fVY Blaupuoct ateNO. 18,000 '78 13lS 4 dr Sdn. Xlnl 75J..0900 lilt wheel. (50IRSD>
dow. Load leveler or New .Avon lnrlatable ~T Camper Spe~lal ml./wan.5.52-3473 SAVE NOW! Auto cond. Call before 1 pm. Sl691 tr~ller bJlch. IBM Elec· dlDIY C12T') I saso. $2000. 4N-&120 '79 Ford pickup, 1 ton, broker will find the car Ph !168·225.1 Bob '80 Saab99GLI,
tnc corrective Selectric 1·68'·12271.-..7082 '70 GMC t~ T factory bit lumber raclt "tool box· you want at Low Blue '70 Fiat Spyder convert.. ~Jocf0~::· cassette
typewrtler. 751·818'7 Camper Xlnt cond ea new tires & rims Boolt or lower. Dave. tape, stereo, $2195 . __ ..._· ------~ lotlh M•I 1111:e/ ~ . . ' ' Typewriter, JBM Exec, •-~•--ftOJ 44,000 mi. 8 Nu. Ure1. '8000. 754·7995 631·4621 837·0510 s.ban1 9762 ......-.. ~ *" 300/0BOMl-5438 ~~~~~~~~~~I ••••••••••••••••••••••• elec, proportional 1pac· ••••••••••••• .. ••••••• -. • 7 7 DATSUN p . U . r: H.-9727 '76 2Dr auto air tape in&, $300. 673-6472 Marine Electrician Motorlled.... 914 am /fm radials 59K mi Atta lom.o 9705 ....................... d cit s2 ooo ' '
REASON
BUICK
909 N Grand
Santa Ana S 4 7 9 I I S
REASON
BUICK
'109 N Grand
Santa Ana ') 4 7 'I I I '>
9940 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0e11antlnstalltrepa1r ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS200/0B061s-3a18 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• VISIT YOUR e . '57~ Men'1wi.n1Upahoea, Qual. wortr.549-ZUOeve. MOPED REPAIR LEASE n 1().1~. xlftt Your moped can run like '73 Chevy w/Camborac · ORANGE COAST Toyota 9765 Cadillac ft I
cond$25pr.848-MOO to.h,M...,. new. Fut service. Call shell, blt·lnJ, auto, a /c, DIRECT! HO ... DA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••
l
-Mid -W eek :
WANTED B b t II ... ,. • 903 Larry~ pb p1, reblt motor IJ""llll '79CorollaSR5liftbk,AC , COHTl:MPLATIMG
• • Y 1 ro er ••••••'•••••••••••••••• • · '29istOBO 673.7078 ' HIEADl"Y•ARTERS AM/FM stereo, radials, c ·-• •c7 and playpen, both In 12· Aluminum' foldln1 Moto!:CS/ · 1911 .a.LF.a. T-ood d .,._,, "-r -~ iood cond. only. 751·811e'7 boat, $250. Electric car, Sc 9150 '6& Ford Ecoooline P/U lo "" "" TOD •y111 i con · _,/.,..t 0 r. We epeclallie in le~e1
aft SPIDERS A ••• 6'6·8697 for the bualneu ex·
C-·•--r Red "•~t1btbar szso. 642·1.3S3 . 3pm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mi, ad cood, auto S1400. U .... IVERS~ . •-rof . I nwtc ~· _..,_ C IJ '"•8 1800 "" '' ' '79 Celica GT Liltback. ecutive • p es11ona Mathew1 ride9 well S70 : to.h, Power 9040 '81 Yamau• '50 Special. a ""' . . SALES&SERVICE L S.lactl Radio control equip. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2500 mile1, like new, v... 9570 IEACH IMPORTS BI k . Io ad ed , CI n ·Gn)e~ $1800 499-1.216 "' 848 Dove Street OLDSMOllLI S6495t OBO 831-7634 ; Of"-w 1911 Cirrus sport Ill, Dual re· "r1 17~' Tri-Hull llObp, . ....................... NEWPORT BEACH HOHDA 759·2465 C .. 1c1
ceiver 1yst.em 4 servo, Volvo ' cyl 280outdrive. Honda C8400T, 1980, xlnt '76 GMC Loaded. Custom
Nicad charier. 760-lB61 Walk tbru bow. Seat.a 10 cond, muat sell, $985 paint le inlr. PS/PB. AC. 752'"'°'00 ~MC TllUCICS VoltaWOCJI" 977 How Ill Stodi!
people. New upbo~try. Firm. 494·7033Tom Ster, Craeger whls, lo • pd M h 2850 Harbor Blvd. ••••••••••••••••••••••• NA~ Tiffany Club m em· Sln1le axle American mi.Regga.s,sharp,best 71 Ss 'convert. ec COSTAMESA benhip, sold card, no trlr$4400.IMO-M10 '71 HONDA 350 CB. elec ofr. 754-W3or49UJOO A·l. Nu paint, ruel injec. 540.9640 MARK HOWARD CA I LA
dues required. IM0-1028 start. header. xlnl cond, ~/OB0646-4594 VOLKSWAGEN
18' baycruiler, red le wbt $425 firm. Call M2·83l5, '72 FORD Window Van, AIMii 9707 '77 Hatchback , 5spd, Large selection or 2()()() H.\rbol Blvd
Cosr" ~ ~9100 Phone-Mate Telephone
Answerln1 Machine
with warranty S79. With
remote $149. 750-3791.
SCUM-1.ETS
ANSWERS
J un11e -Larva -
Guess -Canine -
SAVINGS
canopy top! Character 556.0701 lOAM·lPM lTon ••••••••••••••••••••••• a,m,trm8:v.,'.JJ587.ooo m1. Best Volkswagens with com·
boat parade wlnner! kd .. .. • p t 646-7076 .72 Aud'i lOO, •~pd •• 1000 o er. _.. l_ petitive prices. Slip avail. 673-7873, w ays.a ... or a · ..., •
673-7677 '80SuzukiGS450S AlltotW..ted 959• orbestorfer. '77 Blue Accord, Eng. (ff)~o.LKSW!fG~.l"'C
M In d f 'ri ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-1732. rec. overhauled. Nu • ... .......
21' LYMAN Lapatrake 3 f' xi t con.1500• ai ng, WE PAY TOP DOLLAR IMW 9712 Urea & brks. Am /Fm 8 m1:<!11J1 _.100 Bayboatl/BMNdawr ... caemrrors .• · r d t k {71•)494 4644 ~
'76 Convert, mint cond ,
23,000 mi, last yr of con·
vert production by
Cadillac. 754·1142 • 975 S877 673-6732 o r l o p us e c a rs · • • • • • •. •. •• • ••••• • •• • • • r . .. : IBOO. 679-2988 or Ans Ad · · r I d t · 494 3422 13731 Harbor
# .. 72at" .... ·~ .... _..._ H ~......_~ o,re !'n, tromes .1cs ~r ForThe Best --·---'"'-arden ,..ro"e Dir Demo, '80 Seville ... .,._......,., -.vr -., -c as11cs. your car is Bua'. Or Lease Deal v v • ed rf . • __.../S...._ 160 extr a clean see us '79 CVCC 5 s pd, red Load , mn , wtres, ~ ·-...,,.. • In rangeCounty .. f FM etc. Low mi (283ZFK) 20'~JACI ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIRST! ComeSeeUsToday! w/sunr oo . AM / 8 '60·'65 VW le.fl & right
radio. 8 bl"'S. only on rbll WE CAM SELL & 27.000 mi lmmac cond. each Western style whl .69 Cad, nu Urea. brakes.
188 H.P. Mere cruiser YOURR.V. k Wel l ma1nt $4 925, rims for Super Beetle Xlntrunningoond.$600.
SPECIAL !
WILLIE'S MOTHER'S
DAY
SPECIALS!
Hew ltll
FOllD LTD
'6999
I
199 down will 11nance!
0 .A.C. (1208)
1912 FOllD EXP
I st;999
199 down will finance!
O.~,C. (3982)
SUllSIT The speclal 1uest tours
to gamblinl towru give you the wort.; air rare,
room and board and
shows. All they ask is
that you lole your lire
SAVINGS.
W /Trlr. & so channel ~ lrk. reg or unlead gas. door, '73 left door. SSO $15,950. ~2963. 752-0687
ene. $'7500 &M-91117 aft S.W-13CM 545-2821 S20 ea. ~9744 557·1721 6PM ----------1
'78 Tri-Hull, xlnt cond. 8.!~; :si!!.6,1 '!:u.~~t #I i. 0...... ~ SADll.fBACI ~~~ ........... !?.~~ Blu/~"~'tr~ X'lnt ~-:'!'.~ .......... !!.1•7 ~
Large wood cotree table
with storage apace ~.
Ca II 842·5643.
Kirby Vacuum. Uke new
with ALL attacbmenta.
Will sac. for S2SO. See to
appreciate. H0-5844
eves.
Mhcalw-
Wcmhd 1011 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Low bn .Manyxtraa.4 1295/wk + 8, mt 292SHarborBlvd BMW '67Jaguar38MKllSall cond.M~sell.494-lSSS •78camaro
cyl, $5600 fll'tn. 49~5375. 6'0-858S. COSTA MESA orig. very well mam· Air. automatic, power 6-9pm eves. ---------1 979•2500 28402 M&rJl.lerite Pkwy. tained Must Sacrifice '78 VW convt $7500 35K steer inf. Z?,961 miles, Trden. T,..,al 9170 ---------Miss1onViejo 846·8570 m1 . a t e. am fm 8trk, (S82VE )
XOOIAC ••••••••••••••••••••••• W AMTED!! A!very5 FPreekwyw.aeyXJ).t Mada 97-18 _x_ln~~n_d_631-GOOl __ da_y_s_ .... 981 MK·2 <?.R. 20hp Mere. 13' self-cont. trailer, '77, -3200. Finn 548-0542 aft. almost nu. Sac rif~e. Ca.-1,..orts 13 I 40 495-4949 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 VW Rabbit diesel. L Barwick Imports
'· 640-1237 TopDoll. osedSundays '81 Maida 626. 5 spd, mdle SOmph. Sunroor. lll-lll I Pokt!! ------:-......... ---1 brown, mags, sunroof. air, xtra tank, Stereo
'72 24 ' Reinell cab. AlltoSerTlce rarta am/fm cass,lomi,$8500 tape:Xlnt.$6500. '79 Camaro, auto, P /S.
cruiser. 22S OMC out &Accna~I 9400 Call Jl111 HCH)Oft or OB0.495·S025 aft .5. 640-6216,966·1779 PIW,rad.,$4750
drive. Sips 6. VHF radio. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mike L• u-rce...__• •-9740 856-4865 Stove, sink, bead. Runs For.. Cre•lerMoton -_....... '72 VW Runs, needs
100 gal ruel lank. $6900. Datsm z ~ SAWTA AHA 897·3978 SELUNG YOUR
'HCA.MAIO
1 owner, clean, auto,
mags, 307 eng. 2 barrel
F ",RD
636·4010 IH.,..e rnes.-~ ,a..-or°"' ,_...,. .... ~
\nW•tffW'IW
'78 Rane hero GT w /every
xtra incl cruise control
a,m tr m , 8 tr k , C B .
Deluxe cmper s h ell
w/blt ins, all cpt'd inter.
motorcycle carrier etc
$5,200. Call 548-1484. Wanted : Gold " silver dollan, slot machines, &
jukeboxes. P.P. Gary.
714/981-8873. 1181~148
xlnt. Trim labs. 40knols. 83E 3171 & I ST ., llOADWAY ••••••••••••••••••••••• work. S700or best
846·4471846-4473 motor 835·3171 MERCEDES? '80 Rabbit "L" mdl. 4-dr,
,.,.._,.. W..t.d + ott.i'pmts THE ULTIMATE 0111V1HO"'&cH1HE WEPA.Y snrf. AM /FM, must sell. ca r bur ator, d 1fi t al '73 Ranchero
clock, am /fm. 1700 Sl600orbestofrer.
Malcol
1979 30 ft. TS Trojan, 5'37 *USED IMWs * TOP DOLL.AR $$ Dys 673_·3J7_0 ____ 1
f&lass, VHF. fishing 1----7_68-___ 37___ '76 2002 4Spd (0603) Call Jack Bacon '79 Convertible. 8000 mi,
... trua uab 1013 ....................... e q u I p ' d , < c I ea n MP'--,...,. ...... SE '793201 Sift <5894> JIM SU:M,......S mach ine). $2000 dn, w ..-..~ '79528iS/R <l076) "" am lfm stereo cass,met.
1256.33 per mo. Don, EPA teated, Waag lnj. •81 320iA (Oll5) IMPORTS paint, $8500. 1·346-0201,
CONN Director trombone 494.1095 Eves. only. system a. Money back 1970 Harbor Blvd. l·S64·4960
with case. Excellent 1------__;;---1 guarantee. 675-2530 CloMd ::!lllllldlllVI COSTA MESA condition, $100. 675-8052 ....:::;..________ 631 1""6 """9300
after8PM. OR SALE
1
_F_o_u_r_T-ru_-_'p_o_k_e_w_ir-e TM MosthcitltMJ · '"' .,_. wheell 15"11'.7", auperb Part Of Yatr
Ro land AHIOI Echo cond$3S0.9&W852. IMW PwdileM Or '78 Blue MBZ 450 SL.
DC-20$1SO. Dark blue leather , soft 67~5128 BAYLINER ManypartafocCbevy '111111~~~1 LeaMCCMllldh top, Uahtblueext. 39,000
V-3.1&41 up. ~ M~L--IMW!! miles, am/fm cassette, SOPRANO SAX, alra~t 846-MOO l"Y Orl.eaM alloy wheels. new Pirelli =-e~5~~ cood. Only 1973 27 Ft. WE IUY ly Ow....._ Pim! radial tlra. Complete
..,...... MtosforW. CLEA.HCA.RS (7141522533] service records avail Office Fw •• • & MC.-.. ....................... • One Owner. Loaded w /X·
· I• 11, ul IOIS :.::l• == 1MPORTANT A.MD TRUCKS OUHGE COUHTY'S tras. Car IS Like brand
••••••••••••••••••••••• NOTICETO OLDIST new. $26,975. Call Gary S m I th .Coro n a READERSAND Bisel 71'1642·4283 or C ONNELL
C HEVRO LET typewriter, Model 300. T• 130 ADVERTISERS & 7141754·7788 Good condition. S150. Yot.o • ..... The price of Items
Call Dalebout Bay & l'l(AJ flSHIYI' advertised by vehicle Beach. Aak for Janel • na dealers in the vehicle
'"" "1 •• , ii .. : ""-l\\1 1·'-\
Smitb,831-7300 . claulfled advertiaina ---------BOAJI columns doe• not In·
546-1200
Office furn. Mus t II· • elude any applicable
quldate immed. Prac· ~1r11 ocrlY taxes, license, lra.nafer
tically new, Ideal for • U U111 fees, finance cbar1e1, ·'-.. k 2 y fees for air pollution con· compuuir co. • oa AYD IA IOAJf trof device certifications layer shelving for com· R • or dealer documentary
putera, 2 wh.it.e formica "IEAT Oii "AS'. creparation charges Un· secretarial desks, l a a
oran1e chair, 2 brown "IEAJ PllC£1 ess otherwise specified leather exec. chairs. 2 a • by the advertiser.
brown tweed exec. $12,000 Aillff!lllH/ chairs, l oak work Ctossks 9SZO
center w /white formic a __ 6_7_S-_l_lll __ -_ll_• ___ 1••••••• ••••••••••••••••
cab. acroa top, 2 walnut lotlh ll ... /
deslta w /secretarial re-C ........ 9050 turn• w / w/attached
credenza, 1 encineering
table, 4X9'. 675-IS04.
••••••••••••••••••••••• *1MMAC28'·34' BOATS
6/12mo. plans prepaid
Cash Reclater. Sweda from $189/mo. including
Monroe. Newly Inspect· alip, leuona 714J9M..SMM
ed • serviced. $350, to.h. W 9060
673-6241 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Typewriter, 'Olympia, 8 F o o t S A B 0 T
full a.a ofc elect. Almost SAILBOAT SZ25. Days
new. Xlnt Cond. S3SO 8Sl·lf32, evenines
PlllTT11ST
•57 T.alllD
IHTOWHI
IESTOFFH!
{cm\1KZ)
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
10b0 HARBOR l\lVO
(Q\TAMl ~A 1>470010
760-87Z7 898-8840 ----------1' 4 6 Ford Woodie ,
Pah IOl7 · ISTA11 SAU restored, $13,SOO. ALSO
••••••••••••••••••••••• Catalina Z7, 1978, Good '29 Model A Town Sedan, Amason Red Parrot, 1 cond. Wkday1 please 4 dr, restored. Ideal for
HIGHIUYH
Top dollars for Sports
Cars, Bu~s, Campers, 914'1, Audi a
AskforU/C MOR
JIMMAllHO
VOLKSWAGEN
18711 Beach Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142-2000
TOP DOLLAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLliM
USED CARS!
........... 4
~Mele 645-5700
WANTED!
Late model Toyotas and
Volvos . Call u s
TODAY!!! l:o" oldilieZ caaea, etc. call 759-4175. s tudent. $1 o. 5 o o. _..,. 675·8181.
· 946-• 142·-· GO CIUIU. MOW! 1--------1 111161~ ... ~ ... llli "-9t&OI 1no LaFitte.Ccutter '48 Studebaker Land ......... ::.! .......... All trim• Bil aav I Cruiser. Xlnt cood. Sell
WU ILLITZ&R, apinelte 1 __ N_._B_. C.:...71_4..;.)_6'5-_0222 ___ 1...;o:.:.r..::tr:..:a:.:d:.:e.;_. 483-4~...:.7:.:8.:.1 ___ 1
model '410. two 4'·note Force 5 boat trlr. north '87 Imperial LeBaron.
keyboa r da, 13 pedal 1111, 9900/080 muat aell, Bllt w /blue It her Int. ::;.:..";.~aoC::~~'. aft 7PM C114)M0-6244. Beatoffer781M>l.SO
pie w /matcbina bencb. C21J)592·a1 ~. 1_..
$400 caab ot ~ de· Beaut. 11' flber1la11 ... 9140 ~ livered. 5ff.JM.5 1allboat, alpi I, all xtru, •••••••••••••••••••••••
'-.. BABYGRANDPIANO lrlr, OB, ttt., c:ompua. '11 "GAZELLE"p~!! ~toee6Aoolla, anchor, etc, etc. IM'7S. replica llereedel"' .. uu
tudMrtaa' m.8'40 871~ rc»e yellow w/but fen·
-----·----den, VW drive lralD eou capnc. delu ... N a er a 111 q mt~ $1500 ca ll alt IPM
po. IJI ..., 11mc111 t.eL Catamarm. a.t offer. 1_-..-i------..,...---1 ~-~..,... ~Ul54 or MMJ.90, ext 4W......_ tlH
'11.lo~w..i ....... t 1c SI II 1092 ...... , ............... .
ltU H.t.w ••4. c ..........
"'-'46-tJOJ er '40·f0 7
,,, Ollar
Paid For Your Car!
JOHMSOM & SOM
U.C•Uer~ 2126 Harbor BlV ~
Coeta Mesa 540-SUO w.,.,
OVER
,~~ood
VW. Poncbe or Audl
Sales-Service-Leasing
Roy C.-.er,lnc.
RoUs 'koyce BMW 1540 Jamboree
Newport Beach 640-6444
'75 BMW l2K ml, a lloys,
a /c, rm.
{213)355-0765 aft 5PM
CoM 9717 •••••••••••••••••••••••
AuTHORIZED
M ERC~DES BENZ
DEALER
831 1740 495 1700
'77 COLT
4speed. 497.2653 ·79 300D. black/black. sunroof, $18,900. Work
9720 960-4942; home8'7-Z736.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
599*
OYER
INVOICE
SALE ON ALL
TRUCKS::;_
21 Os & 31 Os
IN STOCK! ._.,. ........... ..._
Sale end1 Thursday.
'May 7, 1981 at close
of business. Copy of ad
mu1t be pr ... nted at
time of purch ... .
'76 Mer cedes 450SLC,
metallic blue. alloys,
full serv records.
S21,000 /bst orr 645·2375.
675·8638 eves -----
300 SD M BZ 1980 Black
on black. sunrf, AM/FM
cass. c hrome whls .
$31 ,000 ; Ask for Bob
496-5155 or 545.3973 aft
2pm.
Mercedes, 1979 300D, 25K
mi, sunroof. nu Michelin
tires, all extras. Xlnt
cond. $19,000. 64().9637
r...-ot 9741 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LEASE
DIRECT!
198 I PEUGEOT
TURIOs
IEACH IMPORTS
M8 Dove Streel NEWPORT BEACH
752-0900
9772 •••••••••••••••••••••••
#I VOLVO DEALER
lN ORANGE COUNTY!
SALl!S, SSYtCE
AHDLEASIMG
OVERSEAS DEL.IVERY
EXPERTS
LULllKE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
'46·9303 540.9467
ORAHCft COUHTY
VOLVO
Largest Volvo Dealer
in Orange County! BUYorLEASE DIRECT
10120 Garden Grove 8 1
Garden Grove 530·9190
'70 IHS. Good cond .
Needs paint. $1500. Call
557·6964
A.tot, UMd •••••••••••••••••••••••
CH.ral ttOI •••••••••••••••••••••••
firm. 995-8989 Call 543-3098 aft SPM.
Sharp '79 Camaro, xlnt U.colll 9945
cond. pw, pb, ps, $4650. •••••••••••••••••••••••
_855_·_4865 __ .e_v_es_. ---~ '79 Llnc. towncar, loaded.
'6f CAM.Atl0
l owner. clean. auto.
maea. 307 ene. 2 barrel carburator, digital
clock, am/fm Sl500.
99S-898t
xlnl cond., xlnt main·
taln ed , best offer.
831 ·80318·5 wkdys only.
'70CONTINENTAL
Loaded. asking $1000.
Jim Sutherland 64.2-1268
Cllaenolat 992 Mere 9950 •••••••••••••••••••••• • •••• :-:? •••••••••••••••
'71 CHIYY ORANGE COUNTY'S
MONTICilLO ...ST
Low m iles , loaded. LINCOLN-MERCURY
(085UCD> DEALERSHIP
$3995
I
~~ e.,.am 831.(8X)
'79Chevy
MALllU LANDAU
Automatic, stereo tape. power steerin g &
brakes. air conditioning,
tilt wheel, cruise con·
trol, door locks.
(999WRJ)
SUH
REA SOM
BUICK
90Y H Grand
Santa Ana 5 4 7-91 I S
SEE US FIRST! We have a 1ood aelecllon
o f NEW " USED Chevroleta l
~ ?&et/J.•
LINCOLN-MERCURY
16·18 Auto Cent.er Dr.
SD Fwy-Ut Forest exit
IRVINE
130.7000
'73 Capri Auto, A/C, anrf,
Gd cond. $1800 557·•941
dye; MS·96V7 eves.
Mltl'-9 9952
······················~ '75 Ghia, orig. owner, im·
mac. cond, $2500. Pvt
party. 760-1996
'66 Ford Mustang, fair
cond. Needs body work.
$1 ,000/0BO. 842-7083.
'67 289 auto, air. nu trans,
crpt , am/fm ca.aset Xlnt
cond. $3200. 552·1•70
'75 M ustane Ohia. SR.
Loaded Beauyt. S2830.
675-5255, IJ79..247•
'74 Mustana 11, p/s , p/b.
air cond. Xlnt mech.
cond. $1750 for quick
sale. 548·2512 , .... ttS7 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'85 Baracuda, need•
work, $400.
9112-6138 H.B.
Vallanl Sipet, '67, 8 cyl,
4dr, ts,000 mi, reg. •
snow tires, new batt.
675-MIO.
Fury Spt Sub. wen. '71, ·•a e111, pe, pb, a t e.
radio, trlr bitch, lood for bauUn1. _,, 5*-2219
P..etec 9961
l l
\
t I
I
i
Dl4
·'
-.. -:--· -· ~ ----~..,....,.,.~-~..........,....,,....~--~---~---..------------~~~
OranQ4!Cout DAILY PILOT/WednH day, May 8, 1981
~
-TAKE
NEW 1981 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON MIS'.ERS . .
Y0Ult$
PICK '
TC3 HATCHIACI<
Equipment Includes o4 cyl. engine. 4 speed
trans., bucket seats with fold down rear
aeat, max. cooling, wsw radial tires & morel
(22!M69l.
NEW 1981 PL YMOUT
4 cyl. engine. 4 speed trans.. max. cooling. REL I A ~ T body side moldings. left remote mirror, wsw
" gt ... ti.fled radial Urea and morel (145687).
$5995 NGHESTMPG
6PASSEHGER
CAR IM AMERICA!
41~~ EP •
BRAND NEW
. 1981 DODGE
21 MP~
These fl EST.
comp / '11Jre8 m//ea arson onty •re for
'18 may vary. 85 •ctua1
LAMJ!c~~~~ IIItiaiPm
$2,000
OFF MAHUFACT'lJRER'S RETAIL STICKER PRICE
Lo.decl with options lnchldlng air oond., tilt wheel, AM-FM casaette & 40
. C.B .. 4 ~luxe recliner swlYel bucket seats. moonroof. Ice box,
turbine wheels & radial tires. Vlat#Bay windows. convertlble
sofa bed, crulact control, roof rack with llldder & much
much morel (28783~ List prlc...-.16,885.00
··. 1115 WBK'S
IB CAR SPECIALS
1975 PLYM•111
Y Al.IANT SEDAN
1975 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA COOPE
4 cyl. engine, 4 speed trans .. bucket seats. radio. body side moldings, rear window
defroster, wsw steel belted radial tires & morel (201091)
')01 PLllT SALIS &
LI AS 1 : IMPOllMAnOM, CALL .•~RAMCo ~-
546-1934
NEED CASH??? ·w.,., ... t1111ir tw ..-. ._ ... _.. _ ... c.. ........... ,__...,. ..
............ ,.. ............. ...,m
1977 FORD LTD SEDAN
Automatic trans., air cond .. pwr. steering &
brakes, tilt wheel, AM·FM stereo, pwr.
windows & door locks, split seat, vinyl top,
SER-VICE HOURS:
. Uad., ilr. Prhllry 7:JO && to 5:30 ,_
Sala dlty 1:06 && to 5:00 ,.-.
Sii OUR SlltVICI
DEPARTMIMT AIOUT RIMTIMG
A '11 CHIY$LM 01 PLYMOUTH •
1979 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA COOPE
6 cyl. engine, automatic trans.. power
steering. radio & morel (%70LYJ).
$
Automatic trans .. air cond .. pwr. steering &
brakes, cruise control, pwr. windows & seat. waw tires & morel (641UJZ).
Automatic trans .. air cond., pwr. steering &
, brakes, radio, split seat, vinyl top, wsw tires
& morel (532WWC). r.r.~r~~52·1 .... ~ '°'"" 52695
.............. 1~u•o~n~YM~00~™~--... ----19-80·C-HR-YS-LE-RC_ORDOBA __ .....
53499
1977 MERCURY Xl7 CllPE
Auto . trans .. air co n d .• pwr .
at.·brakea·wlndowa. padded top. split
leather pwr. Mat. AM-FM With 8 tt8Ck. tilt
wh .. I. cruise control, waw ti,. & morel
(074VNS).
1980 PLYMOOTH
HORIZON TC3 HATCllACI
4 cyl., automatic trans., air cond., pwr.
steering & brakes, AM·FM stereo, custom
extet'IOr, wsw tires & morel (830ZEQ).
54995
YOLARE COUPE Lolldedl Automatic trans., air cond., pwr.
steering & brakn, tilt wheel, pwr. wlndOwa, · 6 cyl., automatic trana., air cond.. pwr. cruise control, split pwr. ...ta, AM·FM
steering & brakn, AM·FM stereo. bucket at9reo, vinyl top, waw tlr• & morel (1..aeo8).
.. ta. wsw tires & morel (173000).
54995
• • • • •
111111 1:1111 Ylll 11111111 llllY Ml
WEDNESDAY. MAY 6 . 1981 ORANGE COUNTY . C ALI FORN IA 25 CENTS
Federal aid for -chastity?
Alabamc;i seeking $30 million for operation of
'pro-family-emphasis' centers across United Sta.tes
WASHINGTON (AP) -A pro-
posal to spend federal money to
promote "self-d iscipline and
chastity" among teen-agers ls
speeding · toward a vote in a
Senate committee.
"When young people engage in
intimate physical relationships,
before they are ready or willing
to· take on the responsibilities of
marriage or child-rearing, they
jeopardize theiJI own emotional
or physical health," said Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R·Utah. chairman
of the Senate Committee on
Human Resources.
With Hatch's s upport, the
I
legislation dratted by Sett.
Jeremiah Denton, R·Ala., is
scheduled for a vote by the full
committee nut Wednesday.
Preliminary lndlcationa are it
wlll have widespread support.
At a time ..of federal budeet
austerity, the Denton bill would
provide $30 million tor continued
operation of 27 centers whose
functions would be redirected to
a "pro-family emphasis," in-
stead of helping pregnant
adolescents or young girls seek
information or birth control de-
vices.
$
I
Other centers could be added
later.
The Reagan administration is
proposing to cut specific federal
funds for the centers.
Specifically, Denton wants to
prohibit the centers from refer-
ring pregnant teen-agers to
abortion clinics.
Teen-age girls also would be
required to get parents'
permission before being pro-
vided birth control information
or devices.
Local sponsors of the centers
would be encouraged to find
ways to spend money to "pro·
'72 41 Rt. '75 41 Flt. '80 41 Flt. 9/80 41 Flt. 10/81 41 Rt~ ...... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'
• 41 takeorfs per day averaged annually
Graph lhowl how commercial airline flight• haw ~tn parcel.tel out over tM 11eon at John Wayne
Airport.
PSA threatens airport
Though granted access, airline balks at conditions
By FR6DERJCXSCHOEMEHL
Of-~"91 ..... Legal action on aeveral front.a ia
considered a certainty in the
wake ol approval by the Oranee
County Board of Supervisors of an
air carrier access plan for John
Wayne Airport.
Sneral airlines aren't happy.
Nor are the Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration and the Civil
Aeronautics Board, tbe two
federal agencies th1t oversee air
tranaportation.
Under the plan approved Tues-
day by a unanimous vote, Pacific
Southwest Airlines, of San Diego,
will be permitted to begin Oranee
CountyserviceOct. l.
PSA wu iruted two of the 41
jet departures now permitted dai·
ly from the airport. The two
flights will be created by reducing
flight allocations of AirCal and
Republic Airlines, two of four car-
rien now openUng in Orance
County.
Thouch it will be permitted to
enter the airport, PSA la not
aa ti a fled with t h e plan,
particularly ita provlalon to
guarantee that the carriers now
Reagan a bidder
on old W8yne boat?
A Costa Mesa yacht broker
claims President Reagan has
made inquiries into purchasing
John Wayne's old 136-foot con-
verted World War II
minesweeper, the Wild Goose.
The famous boat, now owned
by Santa Monica attorney Lynn
Rutehins, is going on the selling
block Thursday for S2 million.
Robert McGregor. who sold
the boat for w ayne in 1979 ror·
$750,000, says several Texas
oilmen also have expressed in-
terest in acquiring the Wild
Goose.
"Nolhing's firm yet, of courH,
but I did get a call from the
White House," McGregor
claims. "Wouldn't that be
something?"
Hutchins, who bought the boat
several days before Wayne died,
claims the president would be
the perfect owner.
"I've been tblnkin' of callln1
him myseU," b~ exp~. "I'm
going to be damned careful
whom I sell it to. That boat's
practically a national monu·
ment." The old minesweeper, says its
owner, bas been chartered to a
number or film stars during the
past year. He saya be chartered
It for a surprise birthday party
for Rich Llttle last week.
The boat also was used in the
filming of the movie "The Man
with Bogart's Face."
"The boat is a s hrine,"
Hutchins says. "It still bas all of
Wayne's awards on board. It
still bas his old poker table too."
He says he's selling It because
he lacks the time to look after
the craft.
''When John sold it to me,"
Hutchins says, "be r eaJly
checked me out to make sure the
boat wu getting a good home. I
plan to do the same thing. I
don't want it turned i.nto some
cattle boat.'·
operating at the airport -the so-
called incumbents -may keep
their existing rueht allocations
for a three-year period.
At tbe end ol that period, the
airport would be considered open
to all qualified carriers.
The "gundfatberlng" of
flights, as officiala ref eT to the
auarantee. "will not withstand
legal muster," Deo.nla O'DeU, a
PSA vice president told
supervisors during the two-hour
Ions bearing that preceded action
on the plan.
<See PSA, Pate AZ>
SUCCUMBS -Teamster
Union President Frank
Fitzsimmons died of cancer
today at the Scripps Clinic tn
La Jolla; the San Diego
Evening Tribune reported.
The 73-year-old labor leader
reportedly had undergone
three weeks of treatment at
the facility.
mote self-discipline and chastity
and other positive famlly-center
approaches" to reduce adoles·
cent pregnancies, a ccording to
the language of the le1islation.
The bill would apply to all
teen-agers but with priority
given to those 17 and younger.
The-only major similarity to
the centers as they exist would
be to provide information and
advice to preenant teen-aeers on
adoption agencies.
Denton, chairman of a sub-
committee on aging, family and
human services, held no hear-
(See TEENS, Page AZ>
Slaying
suspect
captured
The second of two men sought
for questioning in the April 13
Costa Mesa shooting death of
Placentia hair salon owner Carl
Lawson, 31, has been captured
in Texas.
Costa Mesa investigators said
Rami K. Darwiche, 23, was ar·
rested on their murder warrant
as he crossed into the United
States from Mexico Tuesday.
Being held in Orange County
Jail for suspicion or murder is
18-year-old Samue l Monsoor.
who turned himselr in at Costa
Mesa police headquarters April
25.
Monsoor is scheduled for ar-
raignme nt Friday in Harbor
Municipal court. He is held in
Orange County Jail without bail.
Investigators said they were
notified by U.S. Customs officers
Tuesday of Darwiche's arrest.
The teletype message, they said,
indicated he would be taken to
El Paso for arraignment.
Lawson's body was found in
his car parked in a Santa Ana in·
dustrial area park1na lot early
April H.
Two witnesses told Santa Ana
officers a few days lat•r that
they bad seen a scuffle and
heard sbot.s in the car late April
13 in Jojoe Restaurant's parking
lot on Harbor Boulevard in
Costa Mesa.
The witnesses came forward,
police sald, after reading of the
multiple-shot slaylna of Lawson.
Investigators said friends of
Lawson led them to beUeve
Monsoor and Darwiche may
have been involved in the shoot-
ing.
Armed with warrants, Costa
Mesa officers launched a nation-
wide search for the two men.
The two shared an apartment in
Costa Mesa.
They were tracked to
Sacramento, then Detroit and
New York City before Monsoor
telephoned his father in Palm
Springs that he planned to sur-
render.
Monsoor, a convenience
market clerk, told police be last
saw Darwiche, a meat company
driver, in New York City.
No staff change
ATLANTA (AP > -Mayor
Maynard Jackson acknowledges
the special task force investigat-
ing the deaths of 26 black youths
is not "a perfect organlzation,"
but be says he bas no intention
of removing it.s leaders to pro·
vide "sacrificial lambs."
·Economy? Simpk of course
Here's explanation of what's
happening in money market
87 llEl'nl TU8Ea ................. It'• ao complicated, It'• 1lmple. Like pla)'inl dominoel1
The Federal ReHrve rwport.ed a wbopplna 91.4 blllion ln·
crease ID tbe Ml·B mtaaure ol mone1 -cub, cbeeldna ae-
counta and lntereat·Hmlnl checklnt <NOW) accounta-ror the
week eadlni April 22.
Why did the natloft'• mone1 ·~~1 eoar?
"lt'I bard to HY for 'j;t' ,..Ued SMYt Ort~. ID
anaa,.t fer Bateman Eicbl•, Rlclaardl lDe. ill 1M = •'IM It showed the Fed tb.at butlwHI are not bat
down the batebd, or lakJq it.a polld• MrioullJ. lo It rue ,
and fut."
What the Fed dld wu ralM lta clilcount rat. -what tt
char•• benka to borrow from dlltrict Ptd«al It_.,.. beDkJ -
• full~· polftt to 14 perieml in..t meanl It'• aotq to CCllJt baUI more to borrow -..,,
C ... P&IDMH,Pa .. AI>
~NII .... ,_.
'SLEEPING BEAUTY' FACELIFT -Scaffolding covers the
face of steepine Beauty's Castle at Disneyland this week
while the structure undergoes its annual refurbishing, in-
cluding paint touch-up. replacing shingles and application
of 14-karat gold leafing to spires and turrets. Castle en-
trance remains open.
Brown names Kaus
to Supreme Court
SACRAMENTO <AP> -Ap-
peals Court Justice Otto Kaus, a
moderate who bas been on the
bench 20 years, was nominated
to the California Supreme Court
today by Gov. Edmund Brown
Jr.
Judge orders
King letters
kept private
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
judge has granted a request
from tennis star Billie Jean King
to temporarily bar her former
homosexual lover from sellin1
some 100 letters that Mrs. Kini
wants to keep "forever private
and confidential.'•
Documents filed by Mrs.
King's lawyer allege that
Marilyn Barnett had been
threatening for two to three
years to publish personal letters
Mri;. King wrpte to her during
their alfalr "ii Billie Jean Kine
did not 1ive Marilyn Barnett
what she wanted."
Tbe documents say Ms.
Barnett claimed she had been
offered $36,000 by the N&i.fonal
Enquirer for rights to some 100
letters which Mrs . King wrote to
her durin1 their love affair.
Neither Ma. Barnett nor her
lawyer could be reached, and
there was no immediate com· ·
ment Crom the newspaper.
In an affidavit filed with her
request for a court order Mn.
King 1aid, "I wrate the letten to
Barnett with the intent and un·
deratandinl that they were and
would remain forever private
and confidential."
Ma. Barnett, 33, who became a
paraplecic in a fall lut year, 11
pre11ln1 Mra. Kins. in a ao-
called pallmony aui~ for Uletlme
support and for a MaUbu home,
wbleb she said she was prom·
lied when ahe and Mn. JtlAf
wereloven.
Aft• the lawsuit WU nJed,
Mn. Klntt n. admitted lut w"k that 1ne.. bad a tfomOMxual affair wttb 111. Barnett, but aald
tb• attalr baa been over for
aom• Um• aM 1a1ct .aa.. bed
promlMd lb. BarDett D01htn1. •
Mn. Klq and IMr husband.
(lee TENNiil, Pa .. Al)
\
Brown did not name anyone to
a second vacancy on the seven-
mem ber court. Hi• office said it
did not know when he would
make that appointment.
Kaus, a 61-year-old native of
Vienna, Au.stria, la a presiding
justice in the 2nd District Court
of Appeal in Los Angeles.
He was app0inted to that court
in 1964 by Brown's father, then-
Gov . Edmund "Pat" Brown,
who also had named him ~ the
Los Angeles County Su~rior
Court three years earlier.
The nomination is being sub-
mitted to the State Bar ro.-re-
view and must be confirmed by
the three-member state .COm·
mission on Judicial Appoint-
m ents. The job pays $72,885 a
year.
The vacancies were created
by the death in January of
Justice Wiley Manuel and the
resignation in March of JimUce
William Clark to become Preti·
dent Reaaan's deputy aec:retary ot allte.
Ttltre was no Immediate word
on -..eb vacant.y Kaua filled.
The ablence or a second ap-
pointment appeared to confirm
reports that Samuel Wllllame, a
conservative black corporate
lawyer from Loa Ancelet, had
turned the job down.
111111 CUil 1111111
Fair tb.roUgh Thul'lday.
Lows t.oniaht lo tbe !IOI.
Highs Thund•f 70 alone
the coast, 75 lnl~.
111111 TlllY
T1t• YaMNI GN .. '°""' ogoht tat1tght to /act fM
Ang1ll. S. doNI, p#aotol,
Po,,_ DJ.
11111
I
\
' i
I
I 1t
IJ, r
I
• • • • • • • Orange Coast DAil. Y PILOT/Wednesday, May 8, 1981
., .......
A hooded youth lights hi& Molotov cocktail from the bunUrig /uae
of a second dunng sporadic riotif!g in Bel/cut after the death of
hunger striker Bobby Sand!.
Military transport
disaster kills 13
WALKERSVILLE. Md. (API
A C-13."i military Jet transport
crashed and burned on a farm
near this western Maryland
com munity today. killing at
least 13 people, authorities said.
··It apparently blew up in the
air," said A.E. Appleby, police
communications officer at the
Frederick state police barracks.
"I heard a roar and then when
it crashed the windows shook."
said Arabelle Boone, who lives
across the road from the crasb
site.
The rural area in central
Frederick Co unt v was sealed off
by state pohce. and military of·
ficials from near by Fort Detrick
were sent to the scene
The Pentagon said the aircraft
was baS~d at Wright Patterson
Air Force Base in Dayton. Ohio.
where 1t was assigned to the
4950th Test Wm~
From Page A1
The plane. with a ('rew of 21.
wa s car r.v in2 sophisticated
radar equipment and was on a
test night, a s pokesman at the
air force base said. It left the
base this morning.
The aircraft crashed shortly
before 8 a.m. PDT about a mile
from the center of this com-
m unity of 8,000, said William
Adams, a dispatcher at the fire
department.
Larry West, a spokesman for
the Walkers ville Community
Ambulance Service. said 13
bodies had been recover ed.
along with pieces of other
bodies.
Local radio stations were
asked to broadcast state police
requests that residents who find
documents from the aircraft
turn them in to local authorities.
according to Jane English of
WZYQ·FM 1n Frederick.
PRIME RATE IDTS 19%. • •
so what they did was pass on that cost to consumers.
On Monday, the Morgan Guaranty Trust Co .. the country's
fifth largest bank. raised its prime rate -the rate bank~ charge
their most creditworthy customers -a whole point to 19 per-
cent Within hours all of the top 15 banks and many regional and
s maller banks followed suit.
Locally. Citizens Bank of Costa Mesa. the Bank of Orange
Countv and Herita~e Bank in Irvine raised their primes to 19
percent. South Coast Bank in Costa Mesa jumped its prime lo
1914 , a spokeswoman said Tuesday.
The Fed's move was intended to reduce the amount of
money In circulation.
Too much money in circulation is considered inflationary.
The more money in the system, the less each unit is worth. So
by raising its costs, the Fed in effect lightens credit and limits
s pending and growth
The actions had a staggering, if predictable, reaction on
Wall Street. Money market rates compete with the stock
m a rket. and. as the interest rates go up, investors pull out of the
market to take advantage of a painless. sure return on invest·
ment,
The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped more than 16
points Monday to close at 979.11. its lowest level since March 11
On Tuesday, the market lost another 6.67.
The increase in interest rates strengthened the dollar
abroad against major European currencies. And while paper
money was strengthened. precious metal prices fell. Generall y,
investors seek refuge in gold and silver when the dollar is weak.
and sell when the buck is slrong.
What does all this mean to you?
.. For the average guy on the street. it means hard times
ahead because interest rates will remain high," said Karl
Graeber, assistant economist for Bank of America in Los
Angeles.
"Since the prime is the general indicator for other interest
rates. this means those oUier rate~ won't be going down for a
while like auto and mortgage rates.
"By slowing growth and inflation," Graeber continued.
"people suffer. and that's why there's such high unemployment.
Businessmen's costs will be 2 or 3 percent higher than the
prime, depending on their credit rating. That means they will
delay trying to borrow money, for expansion and other reasons.
That can have a large impact on unemployment."
It's a kind of Catch-22.
The bJgh cost of borrowing money limits buslneH growth,
which limits hiring. And because of the higher money costa,
firms Jre forced to raise their prices -negating the anti·
inflation program's goal.
"The government knows thJs will happen in the short run,"
said Marc Wanshel. assistant vice president and enconomist for
Crocker National Bank in San Francisco, "but they expect It to
moderate."
ORANGE OOl\ST Dilly Piiat
Thomae p_ Haley ~
Robert N Weed ........
f,A. ThOmH Keevll
~
Thom .. A Mu'l)hine ...........
CtwteeH Loos ......... ...._....._ ...,.,_d S!hulman c...w
Clr1 C..tenMn ,_,....,.~
K*"*" N. GOddard Jr ~~
CleaeHled edveftfelng 7141M2·M71
All otMr depertment• 142·'321
MAINO,,ICE
JJ0 Wnl .. V lt., Cotl• MU•, CA
M1ll edllre11. llo• 1560, C01l1 Meu, C:• . .,.,.
c • ., ...... ,., o..,,.. C-14 Pvlllllftlftt c;~, ...
11•w1 11or1e1. 11111str1tlons, 1cmot111 ,,. .. ,H ., ••
.. ttlH-flll llH91n 1'11'1' be r1pr041KM wllllOlll l!>l<ll l PHmluklfl of copyrl9ftl ow.,.r
Thousands· Illourn Sands
Rioting gives way to stone-throwing in Belfast
~
Rt;Ll"AST. Northern Ireland
<AP> Thousands of mourners
flied past Bobby Sands' open
<'Offln lOduy In his family's small
row house In Bclrasl. Jn the city's
11lreet11. anti-British rioting gave
wny to sporadic stone-throwing
by Roman Catholic youths.
By early afternoon, the city of
363,000 was the quietest it had
been since the 27-year-old IRA
m ember's 66-day hunger strike.
t•n(kd in death Tuesday at tbe
M nze Prison outside Belfast
In the Mazt>, three other fasting
I NMATE • LAYING
members or the Irish Rep.ublican
Army's Provisional win& grew
weaker, and all 440 Jailed IRA
men pledged to continue hunger
strikes untU Britain yielded to
Sands' dema nd for political
prisoner status, the Republican
Press Office said.
The office issued a statement it
said was smuggled out of the
Maze in which the prisoners said
that Britain would never "rob
us of our principles. There are
many Bobby Sands tn these
blocks and we will continue to
die on hunger strike If need be to
s afeguard those principles."
<Relaledphoto, PageA4)
It was not clear It the prisoners
intended to carry out a threat of a
mass hunger s trike announced
Tuesday by Sinn Fein. political
front for the IRA. The front sald
Tuesday that 70 Maze prisoners
were prepared to join a Hunger
strike, but no final decision had
yet been made.
On Tuesday, Prime Minister
Ma r garet Thatcher declar ed
again that Britain would never
grant the rasters' demand that
imprisoned IRA members be
classified as political prisoners.
Most leaders of the opposition
Labor Party supported her stand.
But today in London, 11 Labor
members of the 635-seat Houseo/
Com mous broke with their
party's s upport for Mrs.
thatcher 's refusal to yield to the
prisoners. They issued a stale·
ment. aJso signed by a Welsh rfa.
tionalist member, that said
Sands had died because of the
Conservative government's "in·
tra nsigence' ·over the demands.
5 face murder charges
There were renewed sporadic
disturbances in Belfast earlier to-
day following overnight rioting
which spread to Dublin.
Up to midnight, 22 people were
reported injured, three of them
critically, in the rioting that
erupted in Roman Catholic dis·
trictsof Belfas.tand Londonderry. Five Orange County Jail in
mates have been formally
charged with murder in the
death of another inmate who
was attacked in a n Orange
County Courthouse holding cell
late in April.
According lo murder aom·
plaints filed Tuesday by the dis·
trict attorney's office, the al
leged assailants were Gilbert
James Lovato. 23, of New Mex·
ico. Bill Leonard Frisbee, 30, of
Orange: Kirk William Smyth.
29. of Torrance. Phillip Senteno.
32. of Baldwin Park, and Arthur
Ruffo, 25. address unknown.
The five were charged in the
death of Michael Charles Bot·
toms. 22, of Long Beach, who
had been accused of murder in
the stabbing death of his 19·
year old wife in an Anaheim
parking lot last June
Ho tlo m s was found un ·
conscious on the floor of the
basement holding cell of the
Santa Ana courthouse on April
20. A bout 15 other inmates had
heen an the same cell with hjm
Bottoms was taken to UC
Ir vine Medical Center in
Orange, where he died about a
week later from head and neck
injuries.
From Page A1
During the initial invesliga.
lion, sheriff's officials said they
believed more than one inmate
had been involved in the fatal at·
tack on Bottoms
PSA NOT SATISFIED • • •
"There are many, many legal
fronts on which this will be
challenged .. successfully ."
O'Dell warned.
Also displeased with the plan,
and concurring with remarks of a
CA B representative, was Douglas
Holmes of Continental Airlines.
··Two years is two years We 'd
like to start operating (at the
airport) now," Holmes told the
board.
Ava Kleinman, a CAB attorney
who flew from Washington D.C. to
attend the hearing, claimed pro-
visions of the plan run counter to
the federal Airline Deregulation
Act of 1978. The intent of the act is
to increase competition among
air carriers by reducing the
federal government's control
over routes and rates
In addition to criticizing the
grandfathering of flights alloca·
t,ions. Ms. Kleinman·said federal
officials also are concerned about
th!? 0 -nighl·per-day lid on de·
partures, a rule preventing car·
n e rs from serving destinations
more than 500 miles from Orange
County (with the exception of Salt
Lake City ). and a regulation pre-
venting use of the airport runway
by aircraft weighing more than
95.000pounds
It wa8 the worst violence in two
weeks of daily disturbances,
since it became apparent that he
was determined to die and that
the British government would not
give in.
Security forces were prepared
for worse violence after Sands'
funeral Thursday and the end of
the three-day mourning period
proclaimed by the IRA. But the
riots had not spread to Protestant
districts, where militants vowed
to fight if attacked.
UCI medical,
lwnors set
The UC Irvine College of
Medicine will honor 32 faculty
members, 15 residents and 72
students during the 13th aMual
Honors Day ceremony Thursday
at the UCI Medkal Center.
'Alexander' TV
Dr Norton Greenberger, the
Peter T Bohan professor and
chairman of the Department of
Interna l Medici ne at the
University of Kansas, will de-
live r the keynote address on
"Specialization in Medicine:
Lessons from the Past and
Implications forthe Future." saga not mystery The awards ceremony will be
held in the UCI Medical Center
Auditorium immediately follow·
ing a 10 a.m. reception in the
doctors· lounge. By MICHAEL DOUGAN
Oflll1 Dellrl"llltS\lff
·'The Search for Alexander the
Great" is an ambitious, if slightly
off.track, four-part series begin·
ning tonight at 7: 30 on Channel 50.
And, no, this is not one of Leonard
Nimoy's schlocky "In Search of
. . "programs
In fact, the Litle is somewhat
misleading. It implies a m ystery
where there Is none. It also sug-
gests that the s how is a documen-
tary, which it isn't.
The producers have come up
with an appealing topic Any man
who can conquer the known world
and become, in the eyes of
millions. a god before his 32nd
birthd ay Che never had a 33rd> is
worth a story. And the telling of
this one isn't bad. The acting,
directing, photography and re·
sear ch are all up to public
television standards.
Still, the series is:ihackled with
one gimmick too many, and that
makes for a touch of tedium.
Producers Michael Peacock and
Haidee Granger of WETA in
Washington, D.C., hit upon the
idea of unveiling Alexander's tale
by us ing Greek choruses. Get it?
The main chorus comes in the
Corm of an unlikely gathering <un·
likely because some of the
characters are dead> of all those
who were involved in Alexander's
life his father, Philip JI of
Macedonia; his rftother. Queen
Olympias (who c laims she
became pregnant with Alexander
while messing a r ound with
From Page A1
TEENS • ••
ings on the legislation before
sending it directly lo the full
Human Resources Committee
for a vote.
But his views on morality and
sex have been developing since he
returned from a North-Viet-
namese prisoner of war camp in
1973.
During his election campaign
last fall, Denton said, ··No nation
can survive long unless it can
teach its young to withhold
indulgence in their sexual ap·
petities until marriage.''
Denton was elected with h~lp
Crom the fundamentallst Moral
Majority organ1iaUon, and an
aide who worked on &.he legisla·
lion, Karl Moor, la a former
staff member for Moral Ma· jority.
From Page A1
TENNIS • • •
Larry, sald thelr 19-year mar·
rla1e Estronier than evel' . Ma. t had been Hvlnt in
the alibu beach bouu
purchased by the Kln11 in 197•.
The Kinas ~nlend that Ma.
Barnett.'• Lawtwt wu prompted
by their request that 1be mo.e
out 10 the house could be sold.
--
... Zeus ); his teacher. Aristotle. ana
so on. In strained conversations,
they relate their own histories to
each other , providing the
springboard for flashbacks on
Al exander's life.
A second chorus is provided by
actor James Mason who, in
modern clothes, acts as a sort of
host. He is a chorus to the chorus
and it doesn't work.
Alexander is portrayed with ap·
propriate fervor by Nicholas
Clay, who American audiences
may recognize as Lancelot in the
current film hit "Excalibur."
Julian Glover is Phillip and Jane
Lapotaire plays Alexander's pro·
miscuous mamma.
Despite its pretentions, "The
Search for Alexander the Great"
should satisfy anyone with a taste
for the limes and the rich tale of
one of history's most fascinating
characters. It's good enough to
makeyouwishitwas better.
PLAYS ALEXANDER
Nicholas Clay
The awards are given aMual· ·
ly l.Q recognition of academic
achievement, co mmunity
s ervice and excellence in
teaching.
Sexual disorders
treat ed at clinic
A clinic for diagnosis and
treatment of sexual dysfunctions
and di s order s ha s been
established at UC I Medical
Center in Orange.
Treatment can include train·
ing in communication skills, the
use of behavorial techniques and
psychodynamics and human
sexuality education. For more
information about the clinic, the
director of which is Dr. Roy
Gravesen, call 634-6214.
Spring Upholstery Special
Continues
All of our fine lines reduced for this event
* SUPER SPECIAL *
Woodmark 's
fomou·s
crewel wing chair,
The Tree of Life
Q)lor choice: r
Spring Tones or .
Blue and White Tones
Velvet Outside
reg. 519.00
SALE39900
TORAANCI!
23649 Hawthorne Blvd,
(213) 37 .. 121t
COSTA Ml_IA 1S9S Newpor1 Blvd. (714) 642-2050 LAGUNA BEACH
345 North C:O.sthwy, (71~) 'M-655' jcLoseosvNoAvs I .
. ------~--··-....... -
-·
..
:·
..
:·,
•I
•• ----r
A,. •• ,......
Terri Welles, 24, a former airline stewardess
wi10 has been named Playboy magazine's
Playmate of the Year. smiles at her husband,
Los Angeles Kings hockey player Charlie Sim-
mer.
HB's 'M~rick'
BJ's 'guest'
Huntington Beach Coun-
cilman Jack Kelly better
known as the actor who co-
s tarred m the ··Maverick"
television series of the 1950s
still occasionally appears
on the tube
At a City Council meeting.
Councilwom14n Ruth Bailey
a s ked if
anyone had
watched
Saturday's
.. BJ and the
B e a r • ·
te l evision
show in which
Kelly made a
guest ap
pearance.
"I did ," Ul.LY
said Kell y. smiling, wav.ing
his hand in the air
"He was the bad guy,"
quipped Mrs. Bailey. ·'just
like he always is ..
.. rm innocent, chief." said
Kelly to police chief Earle
Robitaille, silting near by
The Archbishop of Can·
terbury . Robe rt Runcle,
celebrated a Cinco de Mayo
Mass in the East Los Angeles
barrio in honor of the an·
ni versary of Mexico's VIC·
tory over the occupyrng
French army in 1892.
As mariachjs played dur·
ing the Mass at the Church of
the Epiphany. Runcie urged
the congregation to pray for
Irish Republi can Army
member Bobby Sands, 27,
who rued Monday in a prison
in Belfast, Northern Ireland
after a 65-day hunger strike.
Former hostage Biiiy
Gallegos has been eating
more than the two meals a
day he got from his Iranian
captors -and it shows.
Marine Sgt. Gallegos has
added so pounds in the J'h
months since his release
from the Iranian embassy.
"I've put it all on in the
wrong places ," sai d
Gallegos. "I haven't had
much time to exercise."
Gallegos, 22, is one of the
52 Ameriqans held hostage
£or 444 days in Iran.
Je'8 Barris, in prison for
murder in the March 1980
killing of Dr. Hermaa
Tarnower, plans to watch the
NBC movie based on her
trial. a spokesman for the
New York Department of
Correction said.
The spokesman said Mrs.
Harris, serving a sentence of
15 years to life in the state
prison for women, would
watch "'The People vs. J ean
Harris," a three-hour made-
for-TV movie that begins
Thursday night.
The movie, taken from
transcripts of Mrs. Harris'
trial and sta rring E llen
Buratyn as t h e former
private school headmistress
convicted of shooting the qa·
llonally known diet doctor,
concludes Friday rught.
After Secretary of State
Alexander M . Haig Jr.
finished testifying before a
House subcommitee chaired
by Rep. Clarence D. Lons, D·
Md., Long said he wanted to
s ay a wor:d to Haig.
··Thank you, Mr. State-
ment, for your secretary."
Long said.
Television actress Loni An·
d e r son took the stand in
Orange County 's Old
Courthouse during filming of
a TV m ov ie, "Sizzle,"
scheduled for airing in the
ra il.
Miss Anderson stars with
John Forsythe in the two-
hour "Movie of the Week"
segment for ABC about a
country girl who gets en-
tangled in the Chicago un-
derworld of 1927.
The movie is being pro-
duced by Aaron Spelling
Productions.
F'I LMS IN COUNTY
Loni Anderson
Orange Coast OAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
_..., ... _
Will these little bird.a heed the state's beckoning and settle in Upper Newport Bay? Least tern at right
off er• a ~h a.a part of mating ritual. ·
Valley man named
to .airport board
Will terns
flock to
Back Bay?
BY O.C. HUSTINGS
Of lilt O•ty l'IMt S\tff
David Prebish of Fountain
Valley has been appointed to the
Orange County Airport Com·
mission by Supervisor Roger
Stanton.
Prebish is chair man of the
Fountain Valley Parks and
Recreation Commission. He also
has served on the city Housing
and Community Development
board and the city Committee on
the Handicapped.
The airport commission ad-
v is es the county Board of
Supervisors on aviation matters,
primarily those involving John
Wayne Airport.
* * *
Lt. Gov. Mike Curb will be in
Orange County May 12 to spend
an evening with his backers in
the Grand Ballroom of the Dis-
neyland Hotel.
Tickets to t.he fund-raiser are
going for $500 each.
The evening will get under
way with a reception at 6 : 30
p. m. followed by dinner at 7: 30
p.m.
* *
ORANGE COUNTY District
Attorney Cecil Hicks, who has
been getting out and about late·
ly. will make another speech
May 13.
This one will be at a luncheon
m eeting of the Balboa Bay
Republican Women, Federated.
The meeting will be at the Irvine
Coast Country Club.
*
O.lly ,., ... Stoff ,,_e
JOINS AJRPORT PANEL
Valley's David Prebish
Gerken. Gavin Herbert. Don
Koll , Peter Kremer, Bill
Langston, Don Livingston, John
Rau, Phil Reilly. Glen Stillwell.
John Virtue and Bill Voit.
*
Bv STEVE MARBLE
O(llle Dally l'llel SIMI
Attracting least terns lo Upper
Newport Bay has been singled
out as a chief objective or the
managers or the bay's ecological
reserve. the State Department
of Fish and Game said. ..
So far they've had little sue ~
cess at 1t
The terns and several other
endangered species rate in a List
of goals and objectives the Fish
and Game Department has com-
piled
Known as the draft manage-
ment plan. the document out-
lin es goals for restoring the bay
to its 1890 condition and for at·
lracting wildlife The plan also
sets goals for attracting .peo-
ple but to a lesser degree than
birds and other creatures.
Mure than a year ago. Fish
and Game officials constructed
a white sand breeding site on
Shellmaker Island in the bay in
hopes of attracting the least
tern
The breeding site is equipped
with models or least terns and
ha s a foot high electric wire run-
ning around it, to keep dogs and
other non -birdlovers away.
But the small bird. known as a
finicky creature. appears to pre-DR. CARLOTTA MELLON, fer selling down in places like
Governor Brown's appointments Bolsa Chica in Huntington
secretary, will speak on "The Beach or along the runway at
Gubernatorial Appointment Lindbergh Field in San Diego.
Process in California" May 15 in But Fish and Game offtcials
Santa Ana. say they're not about to give up
., Rain drenches Alabama :·
T he Orange County Women on the little bird or their man-
Lawyers group is co-sponsoring made breeding site in the bay .
Dr. Mellon's appeararu:e with In racl, they say, it may be de·
MEMBERS OF THE business the California Women Lawyers, s irable to establish other such
comm unity will greet As · the Women's Law Institute and sites to give the terns a selec-
semblywoman Marian Bergeson Women's Caucus of Western lion
.-. .
Thunderstorms rumble across U.S . to East Coast May 14 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Fluor S~ate Univer sity's College of .. The best you can do is offer,"
Corp. headquarters in Irvine. Law, and the Orange County s uggesL':l Ralph Young, a Fish
Coastal ~ather
F•lr lhrouoh Thursday. I.ow•
tonight In the*· Coealal high Thur'" d•Y 10, Int_ IS. Water M .
EIHwhere, •mall <r•ll advl-y
lhrou11h ThurMSay over outer wetera
with non-11 winos IS to JS knoll
•nd ' to 10 foot combined Hu
WHler1y 1-11 t to l leei
U.S. summary
H••"Y r•ln •nd thund1ntorm1
twou11111 fl•~ fl00dlrt11 to IOVl~lern Alabama, torclng Ille evac.wotlOft of
.. hundrech of pe091e· rrom 11\elr
llOmH, eu1110f1tln MIO. Heavy rein
•IM> ftll Oft -·· --1• of tM central G<ilt Goe•t -lno ,,,. -• ••• hov". AletNm.eut!IOtlllnvldnolnlwrltt were reported when 11141 ll-ln9
•truck _. .. -8 elOWln cowntlu
lete T-y -Nrly locley, More
lll•n eight Inc"" of rain Inundated IN -II• arM wllllln • sl•.flOvr period,
according 10 Ille N•tloftal WHINr
Service.
c;1v11 Delenw olllcl•IS H id no
dam~ntlmetehaclbeenmacleyel.
Munwt.11•. clrlule -OIHIM f09
covertcl part•of the nontwn1 tnd mlO.
Alltnll< CO.ti. ~l'I arid lllun-
derr.llo-s -e K •tlertcl •lontl ti•
Ao<kl•• Into acljOlnlno HCllOnl of II•
Pl•ln•. A•ln •1911 tell o .. r perts of Ofllo, In.
dltMond_.,......_Yorll.
Sllow.,.. .,.. -Ulufldltrtnowerl -r• ellpedtcl lo lie Kllltel'9CI today
ocrou the nort11er11 •net centrel
Rockies..., odjOlnlno MC11wa of II•
Pl•lns. wllll • dlollc• of .,... over 11191\tr •• .,,.,i-,
Sllowert ...i -mom" olM
were ••PKUd to rNCh from,,,. -r
Mlululppl """°"llf' the All .. tk Coe11
stein end lie widely w•ttertclowr l/M
IOUIN rn Plains. Temper.iuru eround tllt MllOft ••rly lodeY r onvect from lO 1n Mtr-
ciuello, Mk h., to1•1n "'-'•·Ariz.
Udifomia
Tiit CM1tloo11 Is for f•lr we•tlltr
lhro119h Friday, wllll w•rml119 In
COHl•I ..... TllurlChly. Moulll•ln
encl deMr1 t rees or• upecttcl to
hne 9u1ty -• to northwest wlnoh. Hl9h te..,perolurH Th11r•d•Y
allovlCI lie In the ...,_, IOS In Los
Ant•l•s •nd co••l•I o nd In· , ... ..,.oi.w 11oltey1, In OW 60s In tN
-l•IM, 7S to IS In Upt)er de-
ond H to ts Ill -de•r11.
Temperatures .,.., ... .,.....,,
.......... ~ AllMllly
HI La~
11 j6
12 47 .03 ~ Fl1dey If yo;i do nol '-Al.,.._
--..., & JO p "' Call belor'9 7 p.nt -l'O<lf copy wOl llCI .,...,,.,..,
'" I -..a •• \
Am•rlllo IS so
Alllevllle u ,,
Allan!• II .,
All•nlc Cly s. 50 8olllmOA 11 Sl
etrmtnQllm ., M
lllam•rck .. ,.
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The fund-raising reception will Ch apter o f l h e N a ti on a I and Game official.
f eatur e Dixon Arn et t , Women's Political Caucus. ~~ ~ ·
01 economist, Rose Institute, Clare-The meet,irrg_ will be al the It is estimated that 900 pairs of
.-st mont College. Guests will in· Saddleback lnn at 11:30 a .m. the tiny birds fl y north ellch-~ ~ ·
03 elude Assembly Minority Leader Lunch wiU be served at noon and year from South America to
•3 15 ·01 Carol Hallett, Stale Senate Or. Mellon will speak at 12:30 California. San Diego, Camp
M 11 M" · Le d B'll c bell Pendleton and Huntington
12 u ·01 monty a er 1 a mp p.m. Beach are listed as favorite "" .u and Ernest Dronen burg. • Lunch is $7. Your check must ~: !! chairman of the State Board of be received by Susan Katzen, least tern slopping spots.
1• '° Equalization. 695 Town Center Drive, Suite Fish and Came officials, as :! ~ J . Robert Fluor is chajrman of 1000, Costa Mesa, no later than stated in the management plan.
•1 " the host committee which in· May 12. Make the check payable say they hope to "optimize" ~: ~ .01 cludesJimCavanaugh, BobCLif· to Orange County Women clapper rail and Belding 's
st• ford, Tom E llick , Waller Lawyers. savannah sparrow populations.
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Gem
Talk
By J.C. HUMPHR/f . ."S
Certified Gemolo1111t. AGS
DIAMONDS
.. u boJ1'1 beat fnmd?
A recent nationwide survey
shows that single men are
becomjng more interested in
wearing diamond jewelry . . .
even to the point of asking peo.
pie to t uy them diamond gifts.
In fact, single men are acqulr·
ing diamond jewelry at twice
the rate of married men, and al
half the rate of all women. Most
of them buy the jewelry
themselves, but a trowing
number ar~ beint given
diamond lifts. U this surprises
you, consider some other
aspects of the same survey:
men are becomin1 more recep-
tive to special dealper clothing
and such thine• u distinctlve
furni1hin1a ln bachelor apart-
menll and men'• offices. ThoH
who are expert ln such mitten
tell ua that all of thla ta part of 1
1rowin-feellna amon1 men
Give mother a lifetime of ~autiful mo~nts with Omega.
Elegant Pr,c1se Truly the gill of a t1fe11me
An Omega for Mother's Dav For a l1fet1me of beautiful moments
141( Gold $1275 14K Gold S 1500 14KGold $1375
Sun, moon, tides · that they abould aaaert their ln·
dlvl dual peraonallUes and
mucu.linlty. Such 1 movement
ls said to be an offaboot of the
same kind of comclou1neaa ln
women. So, no wondt1r men
have dilcovend dlamonda ..•
the llldi• led tbe way there,
tool
f
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
1823 NEWPORT BLVD COSTA MESA
33 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION
BenkAmenoard-Mu .. , Charge PHONE IS48-3401
a a a a 2 1 a sm H/F Orange Coat OA.ILV PtLOT/WednHday, May 8, 1981
AP...__
BURNED UP -Irish demonstrators bold bW'JllnR British
Union Jack aloft outside British Consulate in N""ew York
City. They were among hundreds from various Irish na-
tionalist organizations protesting starvation death of IRA
guerrilla Bobby Sands.
[(Jill TI~ 00 [(]
Reagan attacker
'not a stalker'
WASHJNGTON CAP) -In·
vestigators have found little
evidence that John W. Hinckley,
charged with attempting to as-
sassinate President Reagan, was
stalking the president or other
political figures. it was reported
today.
The Washington Post, quoting
law enforcement sources, said
Hinckley's apparent infatuation
with actress Jodie Foster was
partly responsible for his
nomadic travels.
The newspaper also reported
that HinckJey's mother. Jo Ann
Hinckley, uses Jodie as a
nicknarne and is said in her youth
tohaveresembled Miss Foster.
Senme sl.ashes
social.p rograms
WASHINGToN (AP) -Mat-
ing even deeper cuts than Pres-
ident Reagan asked, the Senate
Finance Committee la Joppina
billions or dollars from popular
social programs for the sick,
poor and elderly.
The committee, rejecting every
effort to moderate the reductions,
agreed Tuesday to slash pro-
grams under lt.s jurisdiction by
$10.3 billion below the 1982 budget
recommended by the Carter ad-
ministration. The savings in 1983
would totaJ about$12 billion.
Reagan abolishes
&e/,ection pane&
WASHJNGTON (AP) -The
last element of a judicial selection
system that former President
Carter praised as helping him put
a record number of blacks and
women on the federal bench is gone.
On Tuesday, President Reagan
abolished four panels established
by bis predecessor to help find
nominees for vacancies on the u
federaJ circuit courts and severaJ special courts.
$1.5 billion aid
WASHJNGTON (AP> -The
House Foreign Affairs Commit-
tee voted 12 to 8 Tuesday to
specificaJJy earmark more than
Sl.S billion in U.S. economic aid
next fiscaJ year for Israel and
Egypt, as a gesture of encourage·
ment for the Camp Oavid peace
process.
Back on the job
BOSTON CAP) -Laid-off
police and firefighters have their
jobs back and Boston's schools
have enough money to operate for
anotherlO days, but Mayor Kevin
H .,White is warning that the city's
fiscal repriw may be only tem-porary. r
'Rippe~'~' final
killing detailed
LONDON <AP> -:-Peter
Sutcliffe, who hClS admitted 13
alayln8J of women blamed on
the "Yorkablre Ripper," killed
hls lut victim u she looked at
him "with an accu.atn1 eye," the
Old Bailey Central Criminal
Court WU told today.
Attomey-General Sir llicbael
Haven told t.beJ.ury of •Ix men
and six women tllat Sutcliffe, 34,
stabbed Leeds Unlvenlly atu-
dent Jacqueline Hlll ln the eye,
bashed in her skull, alu bed her
acro11 the bead with a knife and
stabbed ber ln the breaat.
Miu Hlll. 30, wu alaln u abe returned to her unlvenlty ,....
ldence Nov. 17. Sutcliffe waa
arrested Jan. 2, endlnl a ftve-
year manbwst for the man who
WH named after the notortout
· "Jack the Ripper" ktller of prot·
tltutes. Police UJ el1ht of
Sutcliffe'• victim• were prol·
Ututet.
Plea 'cautimu'
an'Wde~
PAR.IS (AP) -Much ol the
French .,..... declined to Jude•
-_........__,..
today whether incumbent
Valery Giscard d'Est aing or
Socialist challenger Francois
Mitterrand won the only
television debate before Sun·
day's presidential election.
Most comments on tbe 211,
hour debate Tuesday eventne
were alon1 the lines that "the
electorate will decide on Sun-
day."
U.S. COnJJWen
OU3ting enroya
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Rea1an admln.latrat1on may ex-
pel Libyan dip l omat a ln
W aahlncton becauae of concem
over tbat country'• support t«
international terrorism and tu
mmtary mo.ea In nortllern
Africa, lt wu repon.d toclaJ.
The WubinCtoa Poat said tbe
adminlatraUon allO f•ared that Libyan diplomata here mlSbt try
to ellml.Date Ubyam In tbe UDlt·
ed Statel wbo an foe. ot tbe
>Jrtcu ecMmtrl'• leader, lloem· marKb.adaty. •
Employee lsr.ael watches missiles
takeover · Syria claims weapons in Lebanon legal defense
• nearing
WASHINGTON (AP) -
"WeleometoOUR airline," pilots
at Continental Airlines are aa)'i.DJ
theae days as they 1reet
passenien. And the emphula la
definitely on "our" because the
employees may soon control the
company.
In lhe midat or a bitter cor-
porate takeover battle that la
threatenini their jobs and securi-ty, about 10,400 pilots, flight atteo-
d an ts, ticket agents and
mechanics are close to purchas·
ing 51 percent of the country'11lt.h
lareest airlloe.
A key test was awaited today in
Denver, where Continental's
manaeement, which supports the
employees, was expected to beat
back an attempt by Texas In-
ternational Airlines to thwart the
workers' move.
Some industry leaders say the
employee purchase, if successful,
could become a model for a rapid-
ly changi.Qg airline industry try-
ing to trim labor costs.
BEIRUT, Lebanon <AP) -
Israeli watplanes streaked
throu1h Lebanese skies today
and there was a report they had
buued Syrian surface-to-air
missile batteries in Lebanon's
Bekaa Valley. The United Stat~s
and Soviet Union prepared new
diplomatic efforts to defuse the
Israell·Syrian crisis, but Syria
insisted it would not remove the
missiles.
Israel's demand for their
withdrawal is ·'ridiculous and
not negotiable," said Syrian
Foreign Minister Abdul Halim
Kahddam . "The Syl'tan
peacekeeping force is the only
legitimate law-enforcing force in
Lebanon, and Its right to sell·
defense by whatever defensive
weapons is unquestionable and
undebatable."
But Khaddam said his govern·
ment is prepared to listen to
what special U.S. envoy Philip
C. Habib has to say.
The White House announced
Tuesday that Habib, a veteran
diplomatic troubleshooter,
would fly to the Middle East
soon in hopes of avertln1 an
armed Syrian-Israeli conflict
over the Soviet-made SAM-6
missiles Syria deployed in
Lebanon after Israeli fighters
shot down two Syrian helicop-
ters.
The Soviet Union was sending
Deputy Foreign Minister Georgy
M. Komiyenko to Damascus.
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin, in an interview published
today, said Israel had decided to
give the United States time to
r esolve the missile dispute
diplomatically, but "it is dif.
ficult to say what a reasonable
period is."
He told t.he Israeli newspaper
Maariv, "Our dilemma is that if
the Syrians bring in more mis-
siles, the effort to destroy them
may hurt our boys. We want to
preveht that."
However, Israel Radio quoted
Begin as saying it would take "a
miracle" to persuade Syria to
remove the missiles, "and the
State of Israel does not believe
in miracles.•·
For Mother 's Day •
Reaean adminl1tratlon s ources in Washington 1a10
Habib, a 61-year·old retired
career diplomat, probably would
go to Beirut, Tel Aviv and
Damascus in that order. But lt
was not known when he would
leave Washington.
Deputy White House press
secretary Larry Speakes said
Habib would "explore ways to
reduce tensions produced by re· ..
cent developments surrounding
the situation in Lebanon."
However, he refused to say
whether he would take specific
propos~s with him.
Israel claimed that the sta-
tioning of the missiles In
Lebanon aJtered an understood
but unwritten agreement allow·
ing Syria to control the ground
and Israel the air so it could
monitor the Palestinian guer-
rillas in southern Lebanon. Syria
denied any such agreement, say-
ing nobody but the Syrians and
the Lebanese could set limits on
Syrian activity in Lebanon.
"When they see us succeed,
when they see the productivity,
when they see the savings to the
company, this industry, the en-
trenched airlines are going to
have to go for it," beamed Paul
Eckel, a 16-year veteran at Con·
tinental, formerly its chief pilot
and leader of the employee
takeover move. tliat ""I Several other air carriers have
stock purchase plans, but at none
do the employees have a majority
holding or -as is expected lo be
the case at Continental -mem-
bershipon the board of directors.
The Continental effort bas the
full support of management,
especially the company's presi-
dent, Alfred L. Feldman, who
grabbed it as a last hope of keep-
ing Texas International from tak·
ing over Continental.
After Texas International
purchased 48.S percent oi Con-
tinentaJ's stock earlier this year,
the pilots selected Eckel, a
one ti me Brigham Young football
star. lo lead the employee coun-
terattack.
Continental workers bad been
sharply split in the aftermath of a
bitter strike by llight attendants
last December, and Feldman
asked whether. a broad range or
employees would want to
sacrifice half their pay increases
over the next three to rive yean in
return for stock.
He changed bis mind after see-
. ing an 8,982 to 359 •·yes'' vote from
employees ranging from ticket
agents, flight attendants and
ground mechanics to Boeing 7'l7
captains.
·'If you could just know how this
has brought this whole company
together," Cheeld says. "Family
doesn't give you the flavor ....
It's absolutely incredible."
Continental then would use the
money to pay off existing debts.
And most importantly. the
employee stockholders would
have controlling interest and
would be able to thwart the Texas .
International takeover.
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• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981 H/F Al
July coast permit change baCked
Mail plan ups
San Diego vote
Bill ~ould allow cities, counties preparing plans to issue documents
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Arter
months of bitter debate that
splintered political alliances and
lrieeered a record turnout,
ballots were belng counted today
in the nation's !Jirgest mail-in
referendum.
' ratings" in which motorists
from higb-ris.k areas pay higher
premiums than drivers from
other regions.
OU.Vet oond
interest raised
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The
Assembly resources committee
has approved a bill to let coastal
cities and counties tbal are
halfway finished with coastal
protection plans begin issulna
building permlta July 1.
At the same time Tuesday. the
·Ener1Y and Natural Resources
Commltt~e rejected two
measures to repeal the entire
1976 Coastal AcL
One, AB1'25 by As -
semb l y woman Marian
Bergeson, R·Newport Beach,
would have repealed the law Ju·
ly l{ 1983, unless the Legislature
dee ded to retdln it. It was de·
Ceated by a 4-3 vote.
The vote tor the permit bill,
A8385 by committee Chairman
Thomas Hannigan, D-Falrfield,
was 7-1. It goes to the Ways and
Means Committee.
A 8385 addresses the problem
ot who will issue bu11d1ng
permits on the state's 1,100-mile
coastal t.one alter July 1.
The Coastal Act, passed to
protect the coast from over·
development, set up a 12·
member state Coastal Com-
mission and six regional com·
missions. All 67 cities and
counties along the coast must
write local coastal plans and get
them approved by the sdite com·
mission by July 1. After final ap-
proval, they can begin issuing
their own building permits. The
regional commissions, which
. h ave been issuing building
permits, cease existing July l.
However. Peter Douglas of the
Coastal Commission said only 33
of 106 plans · some cities and
cd\mties split theirs have re·
ceived state approval for the
first part of the process, the land
use plan. Even fewer have
finished the zoning ordinances to
get (inal approval.
Hannigan's bill originally
would have had the state com·
mission issue building permits
after July t . adding a
streamlined procedure for small
building projects.
Two r ival bills, backed by
loc al governments and de-.
velopers, would have let the
locals take over the permit pro-
cess, even if they hadn't finished
their plans.
Hannigan's compromise bill
would let the local issue permits
after they get government ap-
proval of the land use plan -
before the final ordinances are
finished.
His bill also attempted to win
loca l government support by
making approval of land use
plans easier, but that was reject·
ed by committee members.
At stake was the proposed S224
million convention center that
backers say is necessary tor ex-
pansion of San Diego's $1 billion·
a -year tourist industry.
Sixty-two percent of Sao Diego
County's dci,211 voters returned
ballots, nearly doubling the
turnout of previous single-issue
special municipal elections.
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A
week after the state fajled to sell
Cal-Vet bonds at 9 percent in·
terest, " Senate committee vol·
ed to raise tbe interest limit to 11
percent.
I 0 autopsies due
The special election attracted
national interest because lhe
mail-in system costs half that o(
i re&ular ballot-box election.
Ballots were sent out two weeks ~go.
~insurance ~rejected
: SACR:\MENTO (AP> -A bid
to force automobile insurance
companies lo base their rates
solely on driving records -in·
stead of sex . age or
neighborhood ~-has been re-
jected by an Assembly commit·
lee.
The action Tuesday was the
sixth defeat for the idea in six
years. The proposal, hotly con·
tested by the insurance industry,
would eliminate ''territorial
The 'bill, A8176 .by As·
sem blyman Tom Hannigan D·
Fairfield, was supported' by
s tate Treasurer J-esse Unruh,
who said he didn't see any
chance of selHng general obliga-
tion bonds in the near future at 9
percent interest.
Rem control
phase-out voted
LOS ANGELES <AP I -Rent
control for about 97,000 apart-
ments and mobile homes in Los
Angeles County will be abolished
by 1983 under a measure the
Board of Supervisors has ap-
proved.
The panel passed a two-year
phase-out of the limits in a 3-1
vote Tuesday before a crowd of
about 100 tenants and landlords
a like
~Citizen aid asked
:in prostitute fight
HOLLYWOOD <APJ -It's a
:sign of summer -Hollywood's
.evening ambience filled with the
sight or prostitutes lining up
"their night's work on busy
'thoroughfares. Police s ay pros·
sitution presents frustrating ef·
C ouncilwoman Peggy
Stevenson, whose district in·
eludes the fiollywood a rea,
Tuesday called on citizens lo
volunteer their time at the police
station helping with the clerical
records on prostitutes and their
customers.
in hospital deaths
~
RIVERSIDE CAP) -In·
vestigators probing 26 suspicious
deaths in two small hospitals hope
to begin this week exhuming 10
bodies in Southern California in
an effort to unravel the mystery.
"My office has taken the posi·
lion we will be exhuming the
bodies in the very near future, ..
Coroner William Dykes said
Tuesday. pointing out that the
longer autopsies are delayed the
more difficult it will be for
medical examiners to find traces
of toxic substances.
He said work could begin this
week, but that toxocological and
microscopic tests could take at
least two weeks.
Autopsies already performed
on nine bodies that had not been
buried or cremated showed that
several had abnormally high con ·
centrations of a drug and that
hospital death certificates in six
cases listed the wrong cause of
death. officials said.
Meantime. Assistant District
Attorney Thomas Hollenhorst re·
fused again to confirm reports
that a nurse who had worked at
both hospitals had been s us-
pended and was under investiga·
tion in the deaths, but he did say
under repeated questioning that
·"there is no firm evidence at this
time of criminal activity.·'
of why we are exhuming bodies
now."
The s tring of deaths came un-
der investigation last month by
local, state and federal officials
after 24 elderly patients died at
Com J\},Wlity Hospital of the Valley
in Pefris during March and April.
Three other deaths at San
Gorgonio Pass Hospital in Ban-
ning, 30 miles away, were being
in vestigated. but officials said
Tuesday one of those has been
eliminated as unrelated.
A II of the deaths occurred in the
hospitals' intensive-care units.
By comparison , only · six
persons died in the Perris
hospital's intensive-care unit in
1980.
County Coron~r William Dykes
said 10 bodies will be exhumed at
cemeteries in Riverside and Los
An geles counties . Riverside
County officials may also seek to
exhume two bodies buried in
othe r states, one in New Mexico
and the other in Minnesota.
A 13th body. which had been
given to Loma Linda University
Medical Center for research, will
be retrieved.
Five other bodies of persons
who died at lhe Perris hospital
have been cremated, and a sixth
is buried but unobtainable for
autopsy. Dykes said.
~fort at enforcement all year
.long, but the warm evening ~climate makes s ummer the peak
,season.
1 This year. citizens are being
;asked to help out in the fight that
"We have done everything
else; the police have extended
themselves and will continue to
extend themselves." said Mrs.
Stevenson, explaining her plea
for lay help.
The Community Ho~al of the Valley• in Perril u undn
inveltigation for up to 24 m116terioul tkoth8 over a li:r-week
period.
"'Many people, many witnesses
are being talked to, .. Hollenhorst
said. "We are attempting to keep
an open mind as to what the in·
vesligation might reveal.··
Deputy Coroner Carl Smith
added, "The cause of death has
not been established. That's part
Hollenhorst said "'relatively
high quantities " of a common
drug were found in two bodies at
Perris and one at Banning, but he
would not confirm reports by a
Los Angeles television station,
KABC. that the substance was
Lidocaine, a local anesthetic ad·
ministered intravenously. has grown beyond police control.
i
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2850 SOUTH HARBOR BLVO.
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cial step to take next, you can simply be making money. Risk free.
Newport Balboa Savings offers a full range of financial
services, with each account federally insured to $100,000. . "~ '-'
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Discover what the bulls and i ..;,~
the bears are mwing. ; ;jl.!~ ~~· , \,
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Why pay for a checi.ing account
when your checking account can pay you?
Our new Profil Check service actually
pays you 5 l-4 3 interest on the balance
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Westcliff Plaza, 1100 Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach, CA 92665 (714) 645·6505
9-5.Monday thru Thunday, 9-6 Friday, 9-1 Saturday.
I
Orange Coast OAJLV PILOT/Wednesday, May 8, 1981
'Private' justice can
sidestep court delays
It doesn't require a great deal
of perception to realize it can take
years to settle a civil lawsuit in the
court system these days.
The backlogs of civiJ suits only
seem to grow thicker by the day as
a litigious citizenry wants its
grievances in court.
Jn an attempt to leapfrog this
backlog, former judges as well as
lawyers in California -in~luding
several in Orange County -have
been taking advantage of a cen·
tury·old statute. The almost-
f or gotten law permits opposing
parties in a legal dispute to submit
their case to arbitration, thereby
a voiding the otherwise congested
legal channels of the conventional
courtsystem.
This means d~eling partiei
merely sign a contract agl'eeing
to abide by the decision of the
arbitrator, or so-called private
judge.
As a means of allowing
litigauts· an avenue to speedy
judgment, the private judging
system has obvious merit. Coses
can be settled in a matter of
months instead of years.
But it also raises qucsUons.
One in particular concern s
secrecy from public scrutiny.
No record need be kept of such
cases and sensitive matters that
would normally be settled in public
court now can be adjudicated In
secret.
Another question is whether
private judging is merely a way
for the well-to-do to sidestep
normal court channels rather
than wait in line with everyone
else.
Supporters of legal arbitra-
tion. however, point out that
private judging is one way to
weed out cases for settlement.
th•t wouJd normally take up a
public court's costly time.
Perhaps with the new
popularit y or arbitration. the
Legislature can re-examine
statutes to ease concerns about
private justice.
Oil battle joined
Testifying before a con-
gressional committee, new In·
terior Secretary James Watt said
a state's role in offsho~e drilling
matters is "purely advisory" and
that stale objections can be over-
ruled by a simple finding that a
state's concerns do not reflect the
overriding national need.
Those views soon may be
tested in court.
· The state of California, led
by Gov. Brown and a coalition or
environmental groups, is going to
court in an attempt to block
Watt's proposal to open up to a
million a~res off the coast or
Northern California to oil drill-
ing.
Secretary Watt set off the
ruckus by deciding. shortly after
he took office, to overturn the de·
cision of former Secretary Cecil
Andrus to exclude five offshore
California tracts from oil leasing.
Andrus agreed that environ-
mental and commercial concerns
in the areas offset what appeared
to be a rather limited amount of
oil that could be produced.
The lawsuits will attempt to
delay drilling in the Santa Maria
basin, scheduled for leasing this
month, and to head off planned
lease sales in four other Northern
California basins -Point Arena,
Bodega. Santa Cruz and Eel
River.
The.suits contend that an en·
vironmental impact study pre-
pared for the lease sales is inade-
quate; that oil exploration in cer-
tain areas could gravely damage
the multi-million-dollar com·
mercial fis hing industry; that oil
installations could adversely af-
f ecl the tourism business upon
which many coastal communities
depend; and that drilling would
be inconsistent with the state's
Coastal Zone Management Plan
•
which already has been approved
by the federal government.
State Attorney General
George Deukmejian is working
with the governor's staff on the
s tate suit and the National
Resources Defense Council is
·leading the environmental coali-
tion.
Separate suits are expected
to be filed by several of the af-
fected counties, which include
Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo,
Santa Cruz, Sonoma, Marin,
Mendocino and Humboldt.
The oil exploration would
take place in federal waters
beyond the three-mile limit, but
the state contends the planned
lease sales have not given suffi-
cient consideration to the state's
needs as required under the
federal Outer ContinentaJ Shelf
Act.
In announcing the accelerat-
ed five-year offshore leasing
plan, the Interior Department
states that complete environ-
mental impact studies would be
prepared s hould the exploratory
drilling result in commercially
pro~g "finds."
The department further notes
that, "If limited oil is found, the
potential for environmental
damage from a s pill declines pro-
portionally.•·
This must be small comfort
for the north coast communities.
The need for development of
new energy sour~es cannot be
denied. But that need, as the
suits contend should be weighed
against potential permanent
damage to irreplaceable coastal
areas, a matter that apparently
does not interest Secretary Watt
nor the oil companies now suc-
cessfully pushing for extended oil
lease rights.
Opinions expressed in the space above art: those of the Daily Pilot. Other views ex-pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is Invit-ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (71-')
642-4321 .
L.M. Boyd/Shakespeare's ideal
Q Did William Shakespeare
describe his ideaJ woman?
A. Repeatedly. Al least, many of
the '"'Ulmen be wrote about had
s imilar characteristics. Black hair,
black eyes. blue veined breasts, a
breathless way of talking, and a
peculiar manner of hopping instead
of walking.
Q. Can you verify the claim that
the toughest boxer who ever lived
was a fighter named Lamar Clark?
A. No. sir, can only report Mr.
Clark set the all-time consecutive
knockout record by decking 44 oppo-
nents in a row. But Archie Moore did
a lot more damage than that with 136
non-consecutive knockouts during his
career.
Ten families weTe called a tithing.
And 10 tilbings elected a spokesman
called a reeve. These reeves met
perlodicallr to figure out what waa
best for al the tithings put together.
Their overall group was called a.
shire._ Am talking about the Anglo-
ORANGE COAST ~ailyPilat
Saxons in the A.O. 800s. And this ex-
planation is preliminary to our
Language man's report that "shire
reeve" gave us our word "sheriff."
Quick, name the only land animal
that gives birth in the water. The hip-
po. the hippo. The female hip-
popotamus delivers in an unusually
rapid manner, might mention. A live-
ly moment, And the lOO·pound baby
bobs lo the surface for its first
breath.
Tbece they sit, Sweden and
Finland, side by side. In Sweden,
most of the butchers are men. In
Finland, most are women. Why this
difference?
The contention that men tend to be
more boneheaded Is an insult offset
by the claim that women are more
likely to be tot'l·beaded. None too
compUment.ry, these plain facts, but
lbey are true, physically. Men'11kull
bones -seem to calcify more readily
than women, aay the medicos.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
ThOIMS K"Yll
Editor
BarlNr•Krefbklt
Edltortill Page Editor
Conflict doubts shadow Watt
W ASHlNGTON -During his con-
firmation hearings, a reluctant Interior
Secretary James Watt agreed to take no
part in department decisions on cases
brought by bis old public-interest law
firm. the Mountain States Legal Foun-
dation.
That promise, however. bas not
slopped Watt from taking actions worth
mlllions to big corporatio~ that con-
tributed money to the foundation. Since
the non-profit foundation depends ror its
existence on such contributions, Watt
appears to have violated the spirit if not
the letter of bis pledge.
What mak~s this important Is that the
Mountain States Legal Foundation bas
championed the view that more federal
lands should be opened up for develop-
ment. Up to the day of his swearing in,
Watt was an articulate spokesman for
this view.
Within two weeks after taking over
the Interior Department, Watt reversed
past policy and opened certain West
Coast offshore areas for oil exploration.
Not surprisingly, among those who have
expressed interest in drilling rights are
Chevron, Shell and Exxon.
IN THE PAST two years, Chevron
donated $10 ,000 to Watt's former
foundation ; Shell contributed $3,000 for
1980·81. and Exxon chipped in $5,000 last
year. <.;ritics might be forgiven if they
suspect the big oil companies cast their
"bread" upon the waters and are hop
ing to get it back offshore.
Another case that Watt is reportedly
acting favorably on involves the Utah
-__ Q,
~ JACI ANDIRSON
Power and Light Company. which 1s
also a contributor to the foundation
that Watt set up. The utility wants the
Interior Department to OK a lease·
exchange on coal·producing federal
lands. Approval could mean millions for
Utah Light and Power .
In a private letter to Watt on April 2,
the General Accounting Office cau-
tioned the secretary against approving
the lease-exchange before GAO has
time to submit a report on the deal. "An
unanswered question." the letter noted,
is whether the exchange "would result
in leasing non·competitively a prospec·
tively highly competitive tract. ..
A spokesman for Watt told my as-
sociate Tony Capaccio that no decision
has been reached yet on the Utah Light
Gunplay fills the • news in
TULSA , OKLA . -Like most
American newspapers the Tulsa World
gave Pagel play to President Reagan's
first interview since being shot. Speak-
ing with the authority of a victim,
Reagan said he still opposed gun control
laws, lhat he didn't think they could
"make a difference." The Reagan story
dominated the main news section, sec-tlon A.
Section D was "Family.'' The lead
headline was "Fighting Back -Women
Take Matters Into Their Own Hands."
The story began: "They refused to be
victims. Recently two Tulsa women
shot and killed alleged rapists who had
broken into their homes ...
"LAST YEAR WHEN a series of
rapes occurred . . . gun sales to women
increased dramatically and have con-
tinued to rise ... Women seem to be
fighting back . . . The following ex-
plores some of the methods."
"Sand Springs Woman Relies on Tae
Kwon-Do, Dogs, Guns" read the
headline over a story that began :
"Torchy Wolfe has packed a double-
barreled shotgun and a .38 pistol for
years ... "
"Experience in Past Is Reason for
Weapon" was the headline over the
story about Cyd Gordon, a ~year-old
bank teller, who said: "Some of my
friends are policemen and they've told
me if somebody breaks into my house I
should shoot to kill ... I know l could
and I will."
The Family section also pointed out
~ ----------------------~~~~ RICHAID RflVIS 1·;_-.
' the procedure for buying guns from
stores -"fill out a questionnaire ... Or,
if you are buying from an individual.
"the gun owner may register it with the
police but is not required by law."
In section E, the sports pages, The
Sportsman, with stores on E. 4lsl and in
the Woodland Hills Mall, advertised
eight handguns and "New Shipment Ar·
rived -Riot Shotguns."
A .Z2·CALIBE R "Tackle-Box Pistol"
-something like the cheapie used to
shoot the president -was $49.99. A
.25-caliber a utomatic -"Repeat of
Sellout" -was $59.99. A .22-caliber
automatic -"Excellent for Ladies" -
was $119 in blue steel, $149 in stainless
steel. Visa and Mastercbarge cards ac-
cepted.
In section F, the local news section,
there was a story on the trial in Tahle·
and Power proposal. He also assured us
that Watt "has a national job with a na-
ti<?,nal perspective." and insisted that
lhe secretary "has severed all ties with
Mountain States."
T HIS MAY WELL be true, but there's
a problem here: At his confirmation
hearings, Watt made the surprising
claim that he didn't even know who the
contributors lo his foundation were.
In the hope of enlightening Secretary
Watt. I'd like lo list a rew 1980' COO·
tributors to the Mountain States Legal
Foundation who have either litigation or
other actions pending with lhe Interior
Oepartmnment.
In addition to the aforementioned oil
companies. the list or donors includes
the Arizona Public Service Co ( $6,000),
Consolidated Coal < S2.DOO 1. Boise
Cascade <$7.500). Burhngton Northern
( $4.000>. Gulf Oil ($1 .000), the Adolf
Coors Co .·s foundation ($35,000 ),
Phillips Petroleum ($2 ,500). Amax
(a.bout $5,000), Amoco Foundation
( $10,000 ), the Rocky Mountain Oil and
Ga s Association and the Mountain
States Fuel Supply Co
Ir Watt really wants to avoid the ap·
pearance of a conflict or interest, these
are cases he s hould be keeping an eye
on I can assure him that I will.
Oklahoma
quah of Mrs. Sharon Clark, a teacher
charged with second-degree murder in
the shooting death of Mrs. Sandi Quin-
ton at a boys' baseball game.
"Two of the witnesses will be called,"
the news paper reported. "in an effort to
show Mrs. Clark was distraught over
s tatements by other mothers about the
playing ability of her 11-year-old son,
Robbie, al third base.''
"On July 15, witnesses said, Mrs.
Clark threw a cup of motor oil . . .
some of the oil hit Mrs. Quinton, who
s tarted scuffling with the larger Mrs.
Clark.
"WHEN THEY WERE on the ground,
Mrs . Clark s hot Mrs . Quinton once
through the heart from close range, wit-
nesses said. Mrs. Clark purchased a
.22-caliber pistol five days before the
shootinJ{ death.
So it goes. The point President
Reagan was trying lo make back on
Page 1 was that carrying a concealed
weapon is already against the law in the
District of Columbia. where he was shot:
It is in Oklahoma, too. So what difference
does the law make? The point that I-and
others -would like to make is that new
law is worth trying if it discourages a
John Hinckley or a Sharon Clark from
walking into a shop and buying a pistol to
solve their problems
New gante shows cri1ne can he exciting fun
Just as the Depression spawned
''Monopoly" and World War 11 gave us
"Risk." so have the present times
created yet another new fun game -
"CRIME!"
The rules of CRlME! are relatively
s imple: Each player begins the game
-----.;-i' AllHIPPI ~.
wttb $50,000 in cash, a house, a car, and
various llems of penonal property.
Unlike Monopoly, the object la not to In·
creue your weallb but rather to keep
u much as you ean of what you've got.
Elementt o( JUalt are also involved as
you advance al'O\D:Mt the board by pick· Ina a card from a plle labeled
''Cbuce,".~ typt(;al eumple of takllll
a Cbanee mJaht. be a canl readlnf,
.. Viall autom•ied teller alter 10 p.m."
Tb at will OMl ycie flOO.
Good tbrtulie, hoW"er, IDQ amile oe
)IOU u Well Let UI .. , )'OU dnw a card wblcb ,.. ..... ••f;aDd GD Free Partiaa aot: ............. Wltai lutk. there wtl
be a pOit8eltpt · addlq, 1' You taDr mqs.
.. rLDto~l.O.U.'' '
Naturally, you can Lake precau-
tions ln hopes of increasing your odds
for survival. Many players invest
SlS,000 in an elaborate home alarm
system. Thal automatically advances
them six spaces. Unfortunately, thia
maneuver doesn't always pay off.
ONE CAaD reads: "Gerbil escapes
from ca1e and sets off alarm system.
Police, searcttlng the house for burglar,
disco"8r ski mask, airplane glue. spray
paint and gram scale. Go directly to
J aii. Do not pass Go. Do not collect
Burglary lnaurance."
Or: "Alarm system malfunctions;
starts microwave oven· burns $16 lea of
lamb to crlap." Or, 1lmply, "8ur1lar
steals Sl:i,000 home a larm system."
Other precautions may similarly
backfire. For instance, one card aays:
"Your superbly trained pitbull s how•
contempt tor a loser , by sldina with
bul'glar; you require 18 stitches t.o ~loso
nasty wound lo calf."
Or: "Your attack cat attacks friendly
neighbor." Even worse: "You Mace
auapiclous character al door carrytnc
1uaplcloua·look.lna package; you ere
aued bJ FloriN T•arapb Delivery •trvloe." ConnrMb-:•'\You ne,Usebtly
1pproacb 1tnn1er rn dart alJeJ to Ilk
Ume: you tet M1eed.''
In some cases, if you are incred.
ibly fortunate. you may be able to
hold your own. Let us say you "Park in
front of bank in order to avoid long trek
to car while carrying large sum or
money." This brilliant tactic advances
you six spaces. The next card though,
may read: "Bank robbers steal your
car for getaway; go back six spaces."
Well, so il goes. The app&al of
CRIME! is that it embodies all the
thrills and excitement of real life with
the chance to emerge a winner.
The winner, of course. Is the last
player on his or her feet with bu,, rare in
his or her pocket
No wooder the.re's .. no booOt' all!MM11
tbifves. •· The criminal wbo "ftnk.1•• on
the other 1ets lbe llCbtatsem.c..
F.lt. . ._, -----.......... .., ......_ ..... . _._..t::° ............ ...,, , ....... ....
-.. 0.. OeilJ ~-
\
-.
•
:'!N':l. *' '" Alcoholism costs
. business plenty:
$60 billion
0
. HllTlllTll llll:l/flUITlll VllllY
#My 6, 1981
FEJ>&'T"URES
MOVIES
T ELEVISION
86
88
89 I I I
I I See Bll
~
D
HB m ulls
• annex ing
lowlands
The Huntington Beach City
Council is considerin1 negotiat-
ing with Orange County o(ficials to annex the 1,600-acre Bolaa
Pbica marshlands into city
jurisdiction before the area is
developed.
Bolsa Chica comprises two ~luffs and the controversial
1,200-acre lowland marsh south
of -Warner Avenue alone the
eut.em aid• of Pacifi~ Coast
Highway.
· Last month, the Orange Coun-
iy Board of Supervisors ap·
Of'oved a boat marina and hous-~g development concept for the
.,-ea.
Thal P,roposal , which calla for tp> acres of marsh. preserva·
t'°n, 57,700 homes and an l,i.>0-
1Up bo1tt marina, still must be
appro\<ed by the California
Coastal Commission.
•'Our staff reports indicate
that the earlier we annex the
Bolsa Chica the better position
tile city will be in to get future
tax dollars from any develop-
ment," said Mayor Ruth Finley.
Last Monday, the City Council
Wlanimously asked city officials tilt prepare a report on the "finan·
tlal and political feasibility" of
•nnexing the coastal land.
; Owned by Signal Development
Co .• the area currently has more
than 200 operating oil wells. It's
bordered on three sides by Hunt·
tngton Beach and on the fourth
atde by the Pacific Ocean.
: The marsh is the center of
~ontroversy and court battles
J>etween environmentalists who
:want it preserved as a wildlife
habitat and the landowner who
wants to develop the property.
Valley chief s
get pay hike
~ The Fountain Valley City
Council has unanimously ap·
proved pay raises for the city's
poll,ce and fire chiefs.
· Police Chief Marvin Fortin's
annual salary was increased to
$41,664. Fire Chief Tom
Feierabend's annual pay was
boosted to $.17,032. The council's
1ction waa taken Tuesday. The
raises amounted to a 7 .8 percent
tncrease for the police chief and
an 8.8 percent increase for the
fire chief.
Indian pen pals visit HB
........................
Indian children parade in costvme at Huntington Beach'• Hope Vw School during Nava;o8'
Wit to~ Cotut.
DRUMMING UP INTEREST
Gloria Denny per/ornu
Third-graders at Hope View School got a chance to
meet their Indian pen pals from Arizona Monday during
the Navajo youngsters' visit to Huntington Beach.
The Indian children perfor med Navajo d ances and
songs dressed in their native costumes. The Hope View
youngsters responded by presenting a square dance
demonstration for their new friends.
_. "I THINK IT was a very worthwhile event," said
Robin Rouse, the Hope View third graders' teacher. "Our
children learned a lot about another culture."
Correspondence between the Hope View students and
the ~avajo third graders from the Pinon Boarding School
in Arizona began last Christmas after Roy and Marge
Partridge of Huntington Beach visited the Indian school
as part of a McDonnell Douglas gift-giving program.
Mrs. Partridge is a former Hope View aide.
THE NA YAJO children were told that if they could
raise part of the money, the McDonnell Douglas Manage-
ment Club of Long Beach would pay the balance needed
to bring them to Southern California for a one-week visit.
The 37 Indian children raised their share and this
week are visiting attractions such as Disneyland, the Los
Angeles 7.oo and Marineland, in addition to the stop at
Hope View.
The touring youngsters are staying with McDonnell
Douglas! amllies.
Huntington hoy, 8,
believed 'runaway'
Signups s et
.for kids in
HB District
No trace has been found of an
8-year-old Huntington Beach boy
who disappeared last Wednes·
day after presumably fleeini his
fo s ter parents ' home in
Anaheim, police said.
Gabriel James Mahoney was
last seen when be left Palm
Lane Elementary School lo
Anaheim, wearing oran1e pants
and a blue and beige striped
pullover shirt.
Kindergarten pre-registration
for the 1981·82 term in the Hunt·
ington Beach City (elementary>
School District is beine conducted
today at each of the district's
elementary schools.
FV seeking people
for city hoards
••Nothing has panned out."
said Anaheim police detective
Roy Records. "He left on his
own, so presumably he's aroud
the beach area."
Police believe the third grader
may have run away In an at·
tempt to return t.o his mother's
home in Huntington Beach, after
being removed from the home
by the county social services
dept.
Children who will reach age 5
on or before Dec. 2 are eligible
ror entrance into kindergarten.
Proof of age is required at tho
time of registration This may be
a birth certificate, baptismal
record, passport or hospital
transcript.
California law also requires
proof of current immunization
against polio, two types of
mea.slesanddipbtberia.
The City of Fountain Valley is
now accepting applications from
residents interested in appoint·
menl t.o two commissions and two
committees that advise the City
Council.
Four appointments will be
made to the Planning Com·
mission, w)lich r eviews and
takes action on planning depart·
ment recommendations and
·bears appeals from property
owners regarding planning and
toning changes.
The Planning Commission
meeta at 7:30 p.m. on the second
and fourth Wednesdays of the
month at City Hall.
Three people will be appointed
to the Parks and Recreation
Com mission, which considers
proposals for the use of city
part s and for development of
-pro1rams.
The Parts and Recreation
Commiaslon meets at 7:30 p.m.
on the fourth Tuesday of each
month.
The city also ls acceptin& •ap-
pU cations from residents in·
terested in servln1 on th~ ftve-
member Traffic Committee.
Thia 1roup advises the City
Council on wayr: to improve traf-
ttc condiUoos alW hears requests
'Mulic Man' •et
·al llantinp>n 8iBh.
Tickets are avalla ble for a
1tudent production of ''Th• Mule Men," to be presented
T b.,141.ay tbrou•b Saturdar, '8 tile HUDtialtoD .-.acb H1Cb ·febool audltortum, 1105 Main St.
· Perf.,..anc-.will bepl Ill t
•. m. Mvaace t.lcrbU eoet ea. rill
1dalllllon at tbe door 94. A IO-ceot
dlaeount la available for senior
cJUunl, cblldre \IP to qe 12, and
.ttudeatl wbobaYe ao AtlB cant.
~ Advance tlcket1 may b•
pvcbaMCI la ... hl•b Rbool'a
I CU.ttlel oftlce, 7:'5 tot a.m. or
DOOD to a p.m. l'or Ucat ln· ....._,eallllWIH.
and complaints in connection
with signals and signs. Three ap-
pointments will be made.
Finally. the city is seeking ap-
plicants for the Housing and
Community Development Ad·
visory Committee, a 10-member
group that makes recommend•·
lions oo how lbe city should use
federal block grant funds.
Applications for the com·
missions and committees are
available in the city clerk's of-
fice al City Hall, 10200 Slater
Ave., and must be returned by
June 1. Appointments wUJ be
made by the City Council ln late
June or early July.
All appointments are two-year
terms.
Summe r day camp
signops announced
Re1istration ls under way for
the summer day camp pro-
grams planned by the West
Oran1e County YMCA.
.,.. Two day camp sites wUl be of-
fered -Mlle Square Park 1n
Fount ain Valley and Central
Par~ ""n Huntin1ton Beach.
Re&lstratlon must be made
throuah the Wat Oran1e County
YMCA, 1362 Gar field Ave., Hun-
Un1ton Bea~b. •
Camp will be In session from 71
a.m. to I p.m. weekdaya. One
major excunlon to sites 1uch aa
Macie Mountain, Dlaneyland
and the Loa Anaelea Zoo l•
planned eacb week. Two-'""*
camp aeulona will be ottered
June U UlrouCb Sept. 4.
Drag Abuae unit
11et in Se al Be8cb
A r .... pu~c meet.lna of the
Oran1• County chapter al the
Palmer Dru AbuH Pracram
will be held a£7:30 tclnlpt ID tbe
communlty room at Great
We1tern Savin••· H i t Wett~ Ave., Seal Beadl. . '
•
Gabriel is four feet, four
inches, 70 pounds. Anyone with
any information is urged to call
Anaheim police at 999-1958.
Emergency lnformation such
as parents' phone number, doc·
tor and neighbors who can be
notified when necessary also
will be requested.
CI NTD O' ATTUn'ION -, Arcbbll boJ> of CanterbVy
Robert A.K. Runcle ii tUrrouaded by membett of Viet·
nam .. Cblldnn'1 CbOlr·der tMY. ..,Ol'IDed n..tay dur·
~-------·-
Sex magazines
dumped on
Valley council
1
By PIUL SNEIDERMAN
°''"~ ...... , ...
Complaining about th e
widespread availability of sex·
oriented magazines in Fountain
Valley, a resident presented a
port of the three other coun·
cilmen, issued a written state-
m ent declaring that Fountain
Valley is a "clean community."
alack ol what he claimed to-be of-~1""1!"'~9''!"'1'9'!'!!1!!"1!"'11!"""1
rensive publications to the City
Council, along with a list of 19 Ii·
quor stores and markets that sell
them locally.
"I don't want to look at them,"
Mayor Ben Nielsen said or the
magazines. "Give them to the
police chief.··
Airing his concern about the
material Tuesday was Justin
Alfred of El Monterey A venue, a
member or the anti-pornography
group founded by Councilwoman
Barbara Brown.
Alfred praised the city for pro·
hibiting massage parlors and
adult movie theaters. but said the
council should take further steps
to assure that sex-oriented
magazines are kept out of view of
children and sealed in cellophane
wrappers.
He asserted that Fountain
Valley must not drop its guard,
despite its reputation as a city
free ofX-ratedentertainment
•'The price of freedom is eternal
vigilance." Allred said.·· And the·
price of cleanliness in a comm uni·
ty is also eternal vigilance."
Although the anti-pornography
campaign was initiated to keep
out so-called "hard-core porno·
graphy," Alfred mentioned more
general circulation adult
magazines such as "Playboy,"
"Penthouse," "Hustler" and
"Forum."
Mayor Nielsen repeated his
contention that the council op-
poses the open display of sex·
oriented magazines. He said most
local merchants have cooperated
in keeping the publications away
from children.
Nielsen also said he bas consult-
ed with city planning orrtcials
about the possibility of imposing
additional restrictions on stores
localed near church~ or schools.
Councilwoman Brown, who or·
ganized the local anti ·
pornography campaign, did not
speak on the issue during
Tuesday's council meeting.
Interviewed today. she· said she
is s tepping down from her
leadership post in the ~roup.
"The emphasis has been taken
away from the problem and shift·
ed to my involvement in the
group," she explained. "My first
concern is the issue. not my being
in the limelight.·'
Mrs. Brown pledged her con·
tinued support but said the group
may be more effective with new
leadership. No new chairman has
yet been named. .
Last week, cont:erned that the
anti -pornography ca mpaign
might be marring the city's Im·
age, Mayor Nielsen, with the sup-
SUCCUMBS AT 70
Ex-trustee Ada Clegg
School le ade r
Ada Cle gg
de ad at 70
Ada Clegg , who was a board
member of the Westminster
School District for 24 years and
had a school and park named
after her, died Tuesday at
Hylond Convalescent Hospital
in Westminster.
A funeral service has been
scheduled for 2 p.m . Friday at
Peek Memorial Chapel in
Westminster. Burial will folio~
at Westminster Memorial Park.
Mr s. Clegg , 70 , of
Westminster, had been in declln·
ing health since s uffering a strokeinJanuar~ 1980.
Born in Rocky Ford, Colo., she
moved to Tustin in 1922 and at-
tended Tustin Grammar School
and Tustin High School. She
later attended La Verne Colle1e
and studied vocal music.
In the early 1940s, she moved
to Westminster.
She is s urvived by two
daughters. Diane Beichley, of
Midway City, and Marilyn
Frevert, of We stminster. five
grandchildren and a sister, Fem
Boyd or Westminster .
Mrs . Clegg 's husband,
William, died in 1971.
Mrs. Clegg was elected to the
Westminster school board in a
1955 recall election.
1
BACK AT HOME BASE: One\thlng nice about 1c~lnl
around the countryside, willy-nilly, for a few days is ttiat you
can get away from a couple of things. Like the telephone and
bill collectors.
Alas, you must sooner or later return to productive labor.
Or at least make it look productive . Just look at this plle of
clippings on my desk that stacked up.
Here's IJ fascinatin1t one out of the Washington Post. It re·
counts how recently. former
Vice President Spiro T .
Agnew's one-time personal at-
ro.\ 'torney actually testified
-TO_M_M_U_R_P_H_l_N_l .~r, .,.:::::::::• ~:=~E
W. White, created somewhat of
a stir when he told the Annapolis court that Agnew admitted to
him that he took kickbacks while in public office.
White, in his testimony, quoted Agnew thus :
"It's been going on for a thousand years. What Jerry and
Bud told you is true. Matz is grossly exaggerating the amount
of money involved. He only gave me $2,500." .
You have to admit that sounds like good old Agnew. He
was always accusing somebody of exaggerating something.
Normally, attorney White would have never been able to
testify against his former ctt.,t, under the cloak of attomey-
client relationships, if Agnew hadn't first started blabbing
abQut his plight in a book.
THAT CAUSED THE JUDGE to rule that the sanctity of
the attorney and his client had been wiped away. He ordered
t he lawyer to tes tify.
The little fascination here was that White claimed in his
'
Agnew. with some admirers. 1n Nnvport during Nuon years
testimony that Agnew's confession came in a conversation
right her e on our very own Orange Coast.
White said the conversation took place in February of 1973
in Newport Beach.
This stret ches your me mory back a few years.
THUS FOR THE SAKE of pure research (which Agnew
used to allege no news hack ever did), the old files of this
sterling journal we r e pulled out. The big headlines of
February 1973 for our region involved a heavy series of
rainstorms. A lady from Huntington Beach named Wyn
Sergeant was drawing ink because she had assertedly mar·
ried an Indonesian cannibal. News of the returning Vietnam
POWs was heavy.
But then on Feb. 5, there was an announcement t hat
President Nixon was planning his first visit to San Clemente
since re-election. Press Secretary Ron Ziegler announced a
cancellation the next day. Then Nixon left for San Clemente on
Feb. 8.
SPIRO AGNEW ARRIVED in Newport Beach after an
eight·country Asian tour and set up lodgings Feb. 9 at the
Newporter Inn. He met and reported to Nixon the next day, on
Saturday.
Then the vice president departed for Palm Springs to play
a little golf with Frank Sinatra.
Did Agnew make his admission to attorney White during
his brief one-day stopover in Newport Beach?
IF SO, IT WOULDN'T be the first scandal to rock that ad·
ministration that had its seeds in Newport Beach.
Remember Martha Mitchell? She claimed the administra-
tion bullyboys held her prisoner in Newport.
There sure was a lot happening around here in the Nixon
years.
More millionaires now
-thanks to inflation
WASHINGTON <AP> -lnflation
may be pinching pocketbooks of
many Americans, but it's also in·
creaaing the number of people who
earn more than $1 million a year.
Figures released by the Internal
Revenue Service show the club lsn 't
all that exclusive anymore.
Those for 1978, the moat recent
available, show that 2,041 Americans med individual federal tax returns
with adjusted gross incomes of more
than Sl million.
The number Is undoubtedly hJcher
by now, with rising prices and in·
come from the last two years of
double-digit Inflation pU1hlng more
people into the millionaire bracket
deal1nating the wealthiest of the weflthy.
TM 1978 fipre was actually a bit
lesa tban the 2,092 estimated by the
IRS IMt June, but lt was 1Ull well
abovetbe t .771 reported for lt77.
While thole tupayen wen report·
ln1 IJIOOmet averagln1 Just over sz
mlWoa. 536,071 other Amerteans filed
form• 1bowln1 that they either
nrned ao 1Acome or their IOlaea ex·
ceeded wttat money they did make. ,. ·People at tbou extremes, bo"ev•, fUed fewer thaa 1 percent
al the •.n milllon returna which IJtS
•tlm....S Jt rectlYed for 1'71 taul.
Total MJ•ted C1'0ll iDeome for tbe nation'• ta ftlen wu SJ.a trilUoD, up
trom ll.15 trWlaD la lt'7'1. tbe JU
rtiurea lndleated. TboH ftsurH
break d9wn to an aver•1t lacome of
$14,IOe In me. ~ from ~ su,m of 1m.
About 35~ percent of Americana
reported eam1n11 bttw"" SU,000
and $50,000 that year, with the big·
gest groups being the 12.7 percent
between $15,000 and $19,999 and the
9.5 percent between $20,000 and
$24,999.
There were 15.9 percent between
$10,000 and $14,999, slightly less than
22 percent between $5,000 and $8,999
and 24.8 percent under $5,000. That
left about 2 percent al $50,000 or
abo'le.
Total taxes paid added up to $118.23
billion, an average of $2,740 each for
the 68.66 million Americana who had
taxable income. Tues bad averaged
$2,474 per return in 197'7, accordlnc to
the IRS.
M lllionariea' laxe1 averaged
almost a million, too, with tbe IRS
putUnc the fiture at S-.328 per re.
tum.
Judge affirm8
picket rights
MARTINEZ (AP) -School
employees may pleket tbe places
where school trulteel do balnta, a
Contra eo.ta Couat1 judt• bu ruled.
Judie DaYld Oolltn lifted • pre. Umlna1"7 bij~ UM ldlool ..., trtr obtutcl to b*k tbe ~ct.un,.
Plcketlnt b•••n when
ne1otJaUon1 broke down bttwetD t.be Pltuburt Unlfted Sebool Ollatet
and tM California SebOol EmploJ ..
Ataoelation.
.,,.
NEWS FEATURES"
We sell tlr11l quullty und tth1conUnued
merchaandl1c.1 from Stuarit Rtilull und Cataloa Dlalrlbutlon.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the
it ems were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
IHffhe l/1111
The Graduate
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
20 Inch Crefteman
ROTARY
-1~,--LAWN MOWER
was •219"
SEARS
45L8.
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
NOW s13sg
with correction
was'264"
NOW s19499
SAVE s7000
19pc.
ROUTER BIT SET
21292
s57es
Sold Separately
SAVE 47°/o
NOW
s2999
(6 onlyJ Craftsman
-·STANDARD ..• ~
· ~ ~TOOLSET ~~i~~ 133pc. ~·; &1¥YE •moo ~Q,~•~NOW ~~-om:r ~~~524999
#43396 --
Manual
PORT ABLE TYPEWRITER
was
S6']99
NOW SSQ99
EASY FIND
HOME SHOP
CENTER
Over 1300 pea.
WINNIE THE
POOH
MATTRESS
was
s4999
NOW
s2500
SAVE 50%
was '17"
NOW
sggg
SAVE44%
Huntington Reach
904 5 Adami.
Adams & Magnolia
<7 14 J 96J. 2666
STORE HOl:RS · -..Mlf•t·" hi. ;.ilMI UI
:-.;,.,.,, t•n•dit
11lan,. s ..... , •• , .... , .. _, .... ,.
Cuisinart
at an unbelievable price!
Three models
Three days only
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 7.9
ALL WITH REVOLUTIONARY
MEW EXPANDED FEED TUBE!
SALE
DLC 1 OE ...................... 99.99
DLCSE ...................... 14'.tt
DLC 7E ...................... 199.99
Hllitecl...,., _ ,.. ... 9-ryl
20%
off
Westcliff
(formetty Rion)
1024 Irvine Ave.
Newport Beach
MJ..llJI
LIST
130.00
185.00
260.00
Harbor View Center
(formefly ~)
1614 San Miguel Dr.
NewPort Beach
64Ml1
,,
·'-------~-..\
.,~ ··-
. ,
\
l t• -.
HOT PURSUIT -Jack Klugman (white
jacket), Robert Ito (left), Joseph Roman
and Peter Virgo are on the trail of a
murder suspect in "Quincy" tonight at
10 on Channel 4.
......... ~ --,.... 1
trom NII atudlo window
end dlea.
• OWREAIY
ClUMt Metle H900atd. IRI
iD MACHlll. I LEMMA
MP'ORT
Cl) T1C TAC OOUOH
9 .-.v CJNfAN
()""'a: Kai Rudman, The
Captain and Tennill•,
RoHnna CHI!, Kenny
Rankin. Boomtown Rat9.
The Wlllapere, Lauren
Wood.
1:JO .... 2 ON THIE TOWN
Hoetl: Sleva Edward•,
Metody Rogere. MMI
-'tlMabaJt grQYPlae wflO follow !he e1111et-. .,,
Interview wt th Glenn Y at.
b«ough.
I FA*.YFEUO
IHANANA
au.I: Delle~.
• NOUYWOOO
IOWMS D FA.Ca THIE MUllC
• KNXT 1CBS) LOS Angeles
• KNBC (NBC) LOS Angeles e KTLA tlnd I Los Angeles
D KABC· TV tABC) Los Angeles
(() KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ· TV (Ind) Los Angeles 0 KCST (ABCI San Diego
I KTTV (Ind t Los Angeles
KCOP TV (Ina I Los Angeles
fl) KCET· TV I PBS) Los Angeies C9 KOCE·TV tPBS) Huntington Beach
..... _._...
Hot Lipe Ollabfetal her
"'81..granted dlwtce.
• MAQB. I LIHllllA
NPORT
• THI llAIQ4 '°" AUX•IDD' THI GNAT
"The Young Lion" J-
M-tio.11 lhla re-«•
atlon of the axtraotd!nary
life of the men hletorlan•
haw c:alled the world'•
graataal IMCMr Nk:holM
Qay ...,._(Patt 1)
(()P.M.~
An automobile that can fly
lttle WI llirplMw, S..ltla
reeldenta wflO ~ I
mon.r·MYtno food co-OJI
l:CIO • Cl) INoi
Eno9 ~ a one-man
police loroe wtlm'I WI eof.-
demlc of "Blue Flu" etr••
Iha o.pertmant. (R)
D MAL PEOP\J!
FHtured: female prlH
tight ... ; • handlcllPPed
IOtMI rmngw: a man wflO
plaY8 tM ~ In a ,,,_.,
room; a M9tfval for a noto-
noua 11UM:an1ury medatn.
9 MOYIE **'At "Flat Of Fury II"
( 1980) Bruce u, Attar
many adwnturae In Japen,
a young men 1'9CUl'N hOlna
to China to Nttll down.
e a THIGNATUT
AMPICAH HIEN>
One of Ralph.. ltuoant•
~ the prime eu•
pac1 In • ..... of allPI·
cioua llree.
_(9.W
• MOYll
.... .. ~. (1"1)
Didi VM 0yM. ..,WI
Fa6don. Wiiiia lw MrVanta
00\llt tor ""'· a pH!Mthto-
plO Old lid)' tlOt ~ .... ..,. ,.,,.,,....
~to ll)rNd..,
w..ftll.
• AU. IN TMI 'NIM..Y A etllldy ~ lluet._
AtdMa Into llllf*1g tor
OOlllly llumllun ~ 10
Ot-' '-' loM.
• MOVI&
•••• "The ~brMll
Kiel" ( 1912) CllarlM ()to-
din, Cytlll ~d. Tha
llol~ ...... of. oou-
pla ot young Jaw1111
-'>Wede QO ..., wMn
the eroom dac:ldel he
WWlta a 1eplaoenlao1I l0t
1111-~
• TVAUCnON
A bld·by-phone ex1rave-
ganza .._.. anytlllng end
-vthlnO .. be auc-
~ to tn. hlgflMI !Md-
dar.
UO. l'.M. MMaAZINI
An autoinoblla that can fly
Ilk• an ...,._: S..ttll I
....idenw who organlDd a
molta) Mvliig food co-op;
Of. JulMw1 Whllakar etlar•
--.ye to gai prollen; Chef Tall praparM Chi,_
Yagalabtal.
• THE HALL Of ,Ma "c-y StanQal" Cliailae
Oun'llng atan In a on.man
parforiNMM U Iha lag-
andary euay StanQal, COi·
, orlul and unpredlc:l•ble
manager of both the "'-
Yori< Yank-end N9W
Yortl.,...._ l:OO. Cll uov.
"The Gentleman Bandit"
(Pramlara) Ralph Walla,
~ 8ovaaao. The trua
atory of '"her 8arnatd
Pagano, a IOClally con-
oamad and contr_....,
pr._I who wu arrwled
for • --of 111c:1cupa, ta drametlud
D Dff'MNT 9TIQCE8
Arnold .... Iha C>Nm-
mond panthOuM to hide a
ldlool chum who la laoed
with being _, to an
orpl\anlQlt
•Ill~ DMAM 0.-y I.pa tn 1oYa with a
woman ten year• Old«
thlln him.
• MSW CMWf'IN
CNwta: K.i Rudman, The
C•pleln •nd Tannllla,
RoH nn• CH I!, Kanny
Rankin, Boomtown Rate,
Tlla Whl1per1, Lauren
Wood.
• TVAUCTION
CCONT"Qt
t:10 II THI FACT8 Of UF'I!
Tooua fllll In low for Iha
Int I.Ima. (Al
• HIM TO loW<.E
~
A Dlognlpt1lc pot1tall of
$35!2" 3 3 co 0 $J JOJO 53 0 0 0 ea s u e u
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6. 1981 H /F
TUBE TOPPERS
KHJ 1J 8:00 -"Fitzwilly." Movie
starring Dick Van Dyke and Barbara
Feldon about an elderly dowager who
continues to live .i.n_ quiet luxury while
unawares be is penii'lless .
KCOP G) 8 :00 -"The Heartbreak
Kid ." Charles Grodin and Cybil Shepard
star in a movie about a newly married
man who falls lo love with another
woman on his honeymoon. •
CBS fJ 9: 00 -''The Gentleman
Bandit." Dramatization of a true story
about Father Bernard Pagano, a social-
ly concerned priest, who was arrested
for robbery.
ltztlak Par1man .. pr-•·
ad.CAI
10:00 .. QUM:Y
TWo brotherl organlu a
vlg6n1e commlltM In 11n
aftof1 to atop etlma In their
nalghbortlood. eGeNEWS e o V10At
Oen talc• Chatga of a
tiaarra Htortlon-murdet
~ for hie Franch d•lac·
live Irland, Nlcholu Rim·
-bllud.
to:ao·~ NEJWON( NEWS
G WON.D ll'ECIAL
"The Red Army" The
.irangthl and _._
of Iha Ruallan military are
examined
1t:CO .D8Cll0 HEWS ITARTMK
A huge maehtne le ram·
paging lhtough •P•c•
daalroylng alt In front of 11,
end Iha Enletprlae le eent
to daalroy II.
• Nl!Wl YW!D GAMI!
• M"A"l"H
C'*1w la eure he hid a
grMt llme In TOkyo, If ha
could only ramembet wl\at
he did.
• ll!NNY HIU.
&anny mak• • euparmat·
kat tM ''"" '°' • comic l*lal eequenca.
• TV.AUCTION
(CONrD)
11:i0 8 (() MOVIE * * * "Demon SHd"
( 1977) Julia Chrlalle, Fritz
WMYet A IClenllll'a wlta
la held prl-by 1 com-
puter ,whlcfl llu Miactad
her to bacorne lie mate
and the mother of Ill child.
(R)
~ D TONIGHT
Hoat: JOl)Mj' Caraon --0-~NEWI . -
NIOHTUHE G l.Erl MAKE A OfAL t8 KENNETH HAGIN
• llAAETTA
T °")''I parlnar bacomea
deec>ondent •ttar lllltlng a
bendlt In Mll-delarlM whO
turna out to ba hla brolhet.
~ CAPTIONED A8C
NEWS
12:00 8 MOVIE * * "The Hengad Man"
( 1985) Edmood O'Brten,
I/eta Mliea. The Mardi
Oru la the -of a gun-
man'• 1t1emp1 to avenge
Iha murdet of hta friend
8 111 LOVUOAT
"Third W,,_." Ethel Mar·
men, Bob Cumming•;
"Orendmothar'• Oey"
N-11• F11><•y. Barry Net·
eon; "Second Siting
Mom" Bath Howland, Kan
Barty. (R)
JOHN DARLING
• OUNllM>ttl
A 10\'fflck tOUllaA>ovt f-. ~mob wtlefl ha
ICddantall)' kllle • pooular
yo;.ing eowhand
• MIMION:
IMP() 11111.1
TM IMF .,..,_.. Eqyatorlel
AtrlOI to CliNllh an army of
marpenarlee.
• CAPnONB> A/IC
NEwa
1t:JO 8 TOMOMOW a-: Tina TU<nar
• ONf ITIP MYONO
"Emargancy Only" Arthur
OouglU atl9nde 1 Manll•I·
tWI coeklall party wtlara • woman ~I fortalla hi.
tvture.
• PHIL090"HY
1:CO. N YCHIC
,.~THIE
WON.DMVONO
~: Demian Sltnc>eon,
Stacy Hunt
Otraotad by Cllartae
Laugllllon A _, and • '* 1WO c:hltdTen .,.. *'°'" Incl by • ~ychapaltllo
killaf In ptMChar'I garb. 1:401 HIWI l:OO NIWI
3M W0V-.
• • "I O 9. Peolllo"
( tff.4) Rlcllard Attenbaf·
ough, Eva Bat1oll F lw air·
crut> llJN!vor• etranded
on an i.tanct being UNd tot
atomic l•llng grapcile wlft
Iha problem• of axlatet"tCI, u.1 NIW8
4:CO "'°"" • • "Friwletn" (185')
Dena Wyntet. Mat Ferr•.
lrt Iha ctoalng daya of
World war II, a young Cler·
man girl le raunlted wtU\
Iha Ametlean ottic.r wtlOM
INt had Ntliet helped 10
-=ape
• MOYie I Thur•day'• * • * "Ship Ot Foo11" I
(1985) Vivian Leigh. · Daylhta.• Mo.,if!•
Simone Slgnoret A motley
_,rnent of P~I. -MORNIG-
le '°'cad to lhar• cloM ----quan_.. whlla lrevellng to
Br-11•van.
• INOl!Pl!HOEHT
NETWON< Nl!W9
1; 10 • MOYll!
• •~ "Tha M•n Who
Haunted HlmMlf" (1 971)
Roger Moore. Olga
Oaorgea-Plcot A bual-
,_..,, dlecovera 111•1 hi•
exact double II ifvlng hie
111-IOt him and 19 doing •
ballet )Ob ltlan he eoutd
lllmMlf.
1:aoe MOVIE
• • • "Jul! For You'
( 1952) Bing Croaby. J-
Wyman A larnout lhaatrl·
Cal produclar llrugglff lo
llnd llma for hi• two teen·
ega c:fllldren t:"81 tewa 1:16 H1W1 2:00 D NEWI
• MOYll! * • 'h "Whlla Wlldl Doc-
tor" ( 1953) SlJtan Hey·
watd, Robar1 Mllc:hum A
mlulonaty tMW lrt Africa
wortca dlMgantly to gain Iha
rwpact of the natl¥al.
2;j~ I EDfTONAI.. 2:20 MOVIE * * • 'h "Tha Night Of The
Hun tar" ( 1955) Ro~r1
Mitchum, SMiiey Wlrtl.,.
1
11:00 e • ~ "'MMtll Arizona
Sic ..... ( 1934) John Wayna.
Shalla Tarry. A cowooy
tr ... to t MCUe • young
lndlan glf'I from kldnllpf*•
whO ara •ftar her lnharltad
I
waetth. •
11:ao D ••• "Harlow" (P...,
1) (11M15) CarrOll Ballet,
I , Matlin BalNm. A Hotly·
wood llllrllt btCOrnal ch;
lllualonad and turn• lo a
llta ol alcohol.
-AFTERNOON~.
12:00 ., ••• "()par•llon
Pacific" ( 1951) Joh"
Wayne, Petricla Neal A
aubmerlne commander
OOtllrOlt hla er-with Hm-
lllela de11otlon
1:00 m • • •·~ "lntarrneuo"
( 1938) lngrld S.rgmen.
Laalla Howatd. An Int.,_
10111 efl•lr develop.a
bet-• married concert
lllotlnl91 and hi• daughtet'•
rnutlcl~ a:ao D • • • "Call Me
Bwana" (1863) Botl Hope.
Anll• Ekt>arg. An author•
axplorar tindl romance
end danger wnen ha la
9Wlt to Africa on • Mcrat
government mlaa1on to
11ne1 • aoaca capau1a
by Armstrong & Batiuk
,.111·nJng portrays Stengel with wit, warmth
Casey stengel, 8f'eaker of "Stenge~s~."
ment lhat scriptwriters Sidney
and David Carroll have placed
their hero for the show. The set-
ting is a Glendale Chamber of
Commerce event in 1965 and
Stengel is lhe keynote speaker.
(After his retirement, Stengel
became vice-president of a bank
ln that foothills community).
Other than a brief introduction
by a stereotypical · Glendallan,
"Casey Stengel" is a one-man
Everyone here Is crazy •••
everyone else is cracking up ..•
I
..
show. He tells jokes and stories.
dons Yankee and Mets caps and
jackets, shows slldes of his
favorite players. But it isn't
necessary to know baseball to
like the ahow. As Stengel, Durn
ing never gets technical. His ex·
planation of a ba seba ll
manager's job, for example, i~
SHOWTIMES-
Weekday1 7:00 a 9:30 P.M. I
Sunday 2:00·4:20-e:40·9:00
to know ··when to do this and
when to do that, which is a very
important thing."
Stengel talks of his days with
the Yankees and pitchers who
could "throw a lamb chop past a
wolf.·· Under his management.
that team netted 10 American
League pennants and seven
world champ1onsh1ps.
He was fired in 1960 and went
to the New York Mets, the worst
team in the history of baseball.
"Our first game of the year
was April 10, 1962, ·· says Durn-
ing as Stengel, "and it was our
best game. We got rained out.
Up lo then we were undefeated~"
~<john8i]ver~
I Fish& ~
Chicken ~
TLANTIC
CITY
• • Dinner
$2.49
... prehistoric ·an1m11 HOUl8!"
_...., ......... 1'1 ..............
Our crispy fish fillet from the icy
North Atlantic and two boneless
whltemeat Chicken Plankse ...
with fresh cole sla\W and golden
---NOW PlAYING ----
-ClftAIOA IM ~ Oliff la (,_. C.1191111 Woollbtttlct uu.i•n • Ctll1•111t>t7' 41•1 (1U)SSI ~~
m n• -UA .... , Sld4ikt ~
111Mt0 402' 1110 Yl !lllO <11•! llt-tm
llU'lmm
Ht w., 3' Ottwt la <11•1n1 lm
llnmntt
UA Tw1~
1rn1n113M
fryes, that's a winning combination.
cJ:Ong'john~.·
SEAFOOD SHOPPES
JOtl...._...._c... ......
.klll South of 8lr'I Ot990 Fwy. Aol'Oll trom F9doo
...... nmt --=-··
•1
-·-.. ··-_,,.._ . ...-. -··-·---... -....... -
••• Orange Cout DAIL 'V PILOT/Wednesday, M~ 8, 1981 CONSUMES
DEAR PAT DUNN : My brother-in-law
sells life insurance and he's been trylnf to
talk me into buylne a family income policy
ever since my wife and I had our first baby. I
would like to find out what this type of p0llc)
offers, but don't want to have to listen to a
bif sales pitch from my brother-in-law. Can
you fill me in?
P.M .. Costa Mesa
Family Income llfe lnsu.raace, de1lgaed
for a• lDdlvldaal policyholder, ii a comblaa·
tlon of permanent and term lmuaace. b ad·
dltloa to the perm anent luaraace, Heh
polldes normally provide that If the
pollcybolder 11lould die wblle &M term a..
sannce ls atW In force, the beneftclary wW
receive a stated income each month for the
balance ol the term period.
For e:11:ample, a $25,0IO famUy lacome JlCllkl:. ml.Jht provide that U the policyholder
sllould-dle w1uun·ze years after tile poU~y ll"
l11aed, h1a famlly would receive SZS,Olt la a
lamp sum, plu a $%51 monthly Income for
the remainder of tile zt years. Becaaae tbe
family Income feature is comblaed with a
base of permaaent life lnsarance, tile coat ii
1maller than If these were lssoed as separate
policies.
Tax f onm revieiood
DEAR PAT DUNN : My father passed
away last month, and I heard I may have to
file a special form with the Internal Revenue
Service. Can you explain what this is? I'd
a lso like to find out about the federal govern·
ment's residential energy credit program.
When does it expire?
P. W .. Huntington Beach
Form 70I, "United States Estate Tax
Return," Is required to be filed If your
father's gross estate exceeds $175,0M.
The residential energy credit program ls
based on the cost of Items Installed after
April It, 1177, and before Jan. l , ltM (re·
gardless of when the Items are actually
p11rd11ued). See Publication 903, "Energy
Credits for IDd.IYldaala" for all tlae detalll.
Cl.assics get break
DEAR PAT DUNN : After reading your
Consumer Closeup article that included in-
formation about the price of car insurance for
antiqueandclassie cars, I've been wondering if
these older cars have lo be equipped to meet
current anti-pollution standards, and is a
s pecial license pl ale required?
T .J .. Huntington Beach
VehJcles of historic laterest are not re-
quired to have any motor vehJcle pollutlon·
coatrol device e:11:cept for devices that were re·
q•lred for such vell.lcles by the Pure Air Act of
lM8. The Department of Motor VehJcle1 llaaes
special ldeadllcatloa pla&e1 for m°'°r vehJclea
manufactured af&er 192% and those that are at
least ZS yean old.
• "Got a problem? Then write lo Pat · ""l Dunn. Pat will c\11 red ta~. gttting
• the a~rs and action 11ou need to
•
sol~ 1Mquities m go~ment and
bu.riMaa. Mail your qy.e1Uona to Pat
Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coait
Dally Pilot, P.O. Bo:z: 1560, Costa Meia, CA 92626. As
many letter• aa possible will be answered, but phoned
inquiries or letters not including the reodn's full
name, addreis and buliMu hours' phoM number
cannot be conlidered. This column a~ars daily e:i·
cept Sundays."
HONOR DUE -
Television talk show
host Mike Douglas
will receive the Na·
tional Brotherhood
Award for work for
c haritable and
humanitarian causes
on Thursday from
the National Co n ·
f erence of Christians
and Jews.
.
Casket
draws
crouxb
ALAMO, Tenn. (AP>
Cletus Pritchard's
casket is made of solid
cedar and is lined with a
quilt.
He says i,t 's "real
nice" but hopes he
doesn't have to use it
anytime soo n .
Meanwhile, Pritchard
and thousands of other
people are spending a
lot of time looking at it.
Si n ce the deluxe
casket built by Malcom
Thompson was placed
on disp l ay in
Thompson's woodwork;
ing and antique shop a
week ago, about 4 ,00()',
people have come in to I
admire the curio.
The project began
some months back when
Pritchard was watching
Thompson build an or·
nate clock cabinet from
cedar.
"If I could afford it,"
Pritch ard sa id to
Thompson, "I'd pay you
to build me a casket."
Thompson, 60, agreed
to donate his labor, and
neighbors passed the hat
to raise enough money
to pay for the materials.
The casket has
handles all around, a
pyramid double top and
walnut inlays on · the
sides.
Pritchard, a life·long
bachelor who celebrated
his 80th birthday April
11, spends many an hour
gazing at it.
"It's real, real nice,"
he said, "but I don't in·
tend to need it for at
least 10 years."
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
942-5878
NIPON BOUTIQUE
'SFAntastic Dresses
PIERRE CARDIN
COLLECTION
Sport Dresses
FRANCES HENACHAN
Meet representative Elaine Flom
Sport Dresses
SILK DRESS
COLLECTIONS
'SFAntastic Dresses &
Sport Dresses
Informal modeling
of summer dresses .
from 12 noon to 3 p.m.
Sooth C <M>t Pl.ti•. I I I I ff rt\ IOI ~flft'f. ( e»r. M~ ,
• l
WINE CELLAR -
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PRICIS EfflCTIVI TMlCIU(Mt SUMDAY MAY I 7tti
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S,.CW Gift Pee .... L ....... & T-...._ ·
BLUE NUN ROIERT [~ BOLLA ALMADEN
MONDAVI Olabiis, Rhine, Burg. ' LOUIS ....... s319 MARTINI SO.AVE&
750ml '77 CAIEIMET GAMAY BARDO LINO ··· ..,. s219 SAUVIGMOM ROSE reg s4 59 ea I 5 liter
Wlllll . 750 ml STANFORD reg $5.25 750 ml 2 for MATEUS CHAMPAGME s3&1 s32s •••13 ••$249 s599 !0~!$299 750ml
750ml
OPEN DAILY
8 A.M. TO
11 P.M.
495 E. 17th ST. • COSTA MESA
PHONE (714) 548-9314
z ~
Iii! ~
l '''"'St •
"' 1ittt£1
~
PAClflC COAS 1 HWY
With reasonable minimums and shorter terms
so you don't have to tie up your money for 21/2 years!
Commercial Credit now ofTel'1' Monev
Market rates v.ith just a $1,000 minimum and
a 3 month term for our "90 Day Wonder"
thrift certificates. And onlv $500 minimum for
a one year term. Or, if you \,·anl passbook flex-
ihility, we pay 8.5(1..t annual mlerest com-
pounded quarterly (8.77':f yield) on Super
Thrift accounts of $1,000 or morc ... 7', annual
rate (7.lsek yield) on $.m and up.
· These plans pay 2.5% lo 45% higher inter-
est rates than Federal law allows on compara-
ble plans at banks and savings & loan associa-
tions. Call for our current thrift certificate
rates.
And if you n~ to withdraw early, you11
earn 6% annual interest. By comparison,
banks and savings & loans require forfeit-ure of up to 6 months' interest, so you could
~ually 'get baek LF.SS than your original
investment!
Send thi s coupon to open an account or for
more information. Ava1lahlc to California
re!iidenL" only. ..------------., I '"'"'· I'd like lll(tr'' information. llc·re·~ my rht't'k or money onlt·r ror $
I I 'Ian :I month11 -I )'t'lll' -Su11('r Thri rt
T~ 1~· 0 I ndhidual 0 Jnlnt TrnllllC) I 11 l'ru.'!tec 0 C orpllrate
I
I
........ ,..,~
<'o·Own~rSIJ(llatu"'--------1 A""'rnl Addi\
I <'•h-----CA 7~ Phnn<' ---
1
I
I
M~ ~,al SmJri\.\ll'fl l.U•·--------
0
0 • l
A
• N
. ..
L
..
s cc a a a a;c:zsa . µsac suss ; ---at o as so a a a 0 a q a' 1
'·
H t F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. May 6, 1981 ,,-----------------~----~~~~------------------...:.--------BIS
NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS
OUOTAflOMS llt<l.UOI , llADI s OIO TMI IOIW vo••. MIO•IST ~'""" ~··· •ono ... 01 flt011 ANO CllOCINNAfl STOC• lll(MANOIS A .. 0 ltll'OllTID IV TNI NASO AN O INiTINIT ~~" ~,.~ .~ '1 Stockholders
have challged
A full 6.5 million Americans have bOught stocks
for the first lime in the past five years. reversing the
dramatically steep decline in shareownerahip that
began in the mid·l970s and sending total ownership of
istocks back lo 29.8 million, within whispering dis·
lance of the peak reached in 1970.
Who are you? You are from your predecessors.
A~ I would interpret your differences as (1) !avora·
ble to the Reagan administration's tax-savings
policies: <2> op-
timistic for the ~ stock· market 's
trend in general ·----------;;;-..« ( 3 > st rong
f;~d~~~!r~::.~ SYLVIA PORTIR ~ .... z
U .S worker --
still has a basic
belief in the future power and prosperity of the
American economy
Findings of the New York Stock Exchange 's re-
cent survey of sbareowne.rship discJose I.hat you, the
new buyers, are:
MOR E LIKEL \' to be women than ever
before. A thumping 55 percent of new sharehowners
are women , compared with 47 perce nt of
shar:eowners who entered the market before 1975.
YO UNG E R . The average age or new
shareowners in the recent survey period was only
35. 7 vears. In startling contrast. the average age of
those who became shareowners befe11'e the mid
'70s was 50.6.
-HOLDING SMALLER portfolios of stocks. The
newcomers owned stock worth $2,00S al the census
date vs. an average portfolio worth $4,915 held by
those who became shareowners earlier
IN LOWEK I NCOME groups. Newcomers re·
port household incomes of $25,880 in comparison to
$28,550 among earlier entrants
MOR E LIKELY TO be in white-collar Jobs t6~
percent vs . 56 percent) in comparison to blue-collar
jobs < 16 percent vs. 11 percent>.
LESS LIKEL \' to be housewives, retirees or
not employed for some reasQO (only 18 percent in
these categories against 33 percent in these groups
among the pre-1975 shareowners). or course. yo u could have guessed some o( the
findings without any census to confirm your opinions
With women so firmly entrenched in the U.S. job
marketplace today and in positions of higher and
higher author ity, il is logical for women to be not
only investing on the!T own but also daring to invest
in their own 11ames c that Is the new "ingredient" in
the mixJ .
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NIEW YORl((API FIMI Dow-J~ e¥9'-
NIEW YOllK (.AP)-Salel, T-y pric.e s":oc Tl(.-VS • Mey S
end nel < ..... ol tlle 1111 .. n most K11.. HI . C C N•• von. Stoel>. IEll<llMOO 1..-, tr.otno ilO lnO °1':;'07 ~Jf ~2 ,/;'!-,~
M llonelly•t,,_•t....,SI. '° Trn 414 • 411:11 409:11 "l:tt-S:u llM 1,171,IGO 57_. -.. S Utl 1o:a.• IOU4 !CD.It 101"-I.» O.n Motart •.• SI~ -114 ..S Sit f7• ts m .o 111.JO ,,._,_ >..1111
Sony Corp .O.,_, I~ -"" '"'"' s m POii .A,,..r Tl.T Hl,MO U. -"" re11 , ........ l TV Corp .,,,.., H~ -\II Ullll 'nt'ooo f ::°U'w m:= m~ .:_ ~ ~ Stk a.ou:.00
l:!~f~r>( ~.: m~ :.: WHAT STOCKS DID ~~'ti::T: ~:= m: = ~ NIEW YOAIC (~Pl Mey S Prev SldOlllllO JIS,IOD S.V. + '"-
Atllllc"'IO J2.S.ol00 4'\lo _• ~ Aoue••"" Zeoet• Cl> n1,i: 24 -• ·-~I,
Citicorp 11', 2~ ..., ~~~~ 1441 U9 1 .. 1
AMERICAN LEADERS
• NEW YORK CAPl -Slll!I, T-•Y prq
•llCI ntl cllMOO ol vw ten mo1t oc:llvt
Allllrlc;., Slodi IEX<Mnee 1-. lredl"t Mllollelly411moretMnSI.
Hudt90H 11 19f,700 1l .. ,..
Atsrtlnt WI 111,IQO SV. • \Ii lllllrvm SYl llJ,40D I Oorclll!C..• 101,JOO 22 • t Intl Bnll/IOI '7,DClll )Vo -"' HOllOllTr '41.00 22"' -14
GIBea ""' 7S)OO 12\4 -"' OomePetr 9 74,700 1.--IV.
Cllemp HO U .500 '"' -"' Pe r..iy... 61,JOD 41"--\II
UPS AND DOWNS
NIEW YOAIC. (AP) -The foll-1"9 1111 a/IOwt I,,. N9w York Stod EJO<"-tloc:kt -_r.,.IJ Ille\ ,...,. 10M .. Ille moat end Oown Ille motl NWCI on -unt ol <,,.,. rt911rdtou ot volume
tor Tuetder., ~ ~':'~ ~9:!,"1'.:~...:~r:r~~ Olllerence lle-n ,,.,. prevlovt clotl"t
price allO T~'J'~'
I Am•N·~ ..... ~\.... .c~
2 WlnnOIW .... + J ~·· Up t .7
UP '·'
Total IUMH New hlQM Ntw lows
Wl1Ar <Ul(IC 010
NIEW YOAIC (AP) #My S
AClvenc:ao
Oe<llnecl Ull< ... l\Olld Totel It_.
New lllOfa New 10..,,
METALS
Too:~
'31
205 a:J • 11
I ..
'-~cents •~. US. °"'1-llont .
L.tef a UfllJ a pound,
ZllK &.J\4 ceno • PCllll'ICI. cMll,,.rao.
Thi M.GIJ M.lAlt W .. k c-lte lb.
A1•""-"1'cenu a ~. N.Y
Me«_.., "4111 00 s-r I ies.,
Pltll-MS7 00 troy ot • N Y
SILVER
H4'f'OY I. H.,.,,_, SID.ti per troy ouno
J PennzoO OV. • J...,
4 HOlll Febfl< "' • .. ) Tl·Cero t It" + I'll t SavlnQ> II~ • Vo
Up l .t ~: ~~ GOLD QUOTATIONS UP •.7 , :r:JJi. 0o0 4:: : 'r: t HMW IM I'll + V.
ID NL.T Cor~ JI~ • I'll II NtvP 2. 11\11 + I II All~ IW. •I IJ llte<t Co tV. + YI t• BTMtt lilv 2\11 • ~ 1$ CoetllCP plB MYI + 1111.
•• Jawelcor oow'..i • It,
"-LAii C"11 I SMrwma pf 6' -7l\ 2 IUllll I.. 1114 -tV. J L.FIECP pt.A 6 -'II
4 AllGY:pfl 11•V. -It J Amer U~ -114 4 llitMJ v It -I 1 NevP 1.74'! II -t I GreyOr\111 1114 -~ t JoyMlo w1 ,.~ -J 'f OeytPL OfE .._ -J"
I .A~m jljllllla "' -" 'l IEIMemlil ,,. 714 -Yo I Steleylilfe --t If JOllllOI fpl '7\'l -2Y> l' UtdMwW 11 S'll --
·'' ~;,~=!' ·~,_ = ' ..
GOLD COINS
UP •.6 Up 6.S Up U
Up U Up S.7 UP S.4 UP S.4 Up U Up U
Up H
P(L
Off '°·· 011 10 •• ·
Oft '·" Off t.41
l.llMe!I'"'°""'"' ll1Cl119••J.7~,1111 M,SO. ~: ellltf-tlalno 9o*.OO. 11P U.7S. Perle:~ flal1111 .... S.U. \IP M." ,,_..,., r1.1,,. t.42.u . ""u.n .
hndl: l.tt• ·~ 11w1no M11.m, "" M.OO, .... oo ... ao. H••d• a MerMa•: only de lly quoit
t412.00, 119 "5.IJ.
• .......,, Oflly .... , qvote ....,.OI, uo
U.11. • ......,..., tnly o..11y cauot• fe1>r1cttect
uo1.21 • ...,.,.
~ ?~1\SYMBOLS
~ ft =i:===~.i:~~-Ofi .. , -......,_, .. -Oii "'-... .....,,, Off t,S ., -I -l•••llOn lpeclel °' todt• ~ tl =~.:....-,,.~ ......... ~ .,.,,, ~ -..... ,. "'"""""' , .. ,,. ... -· vr ~ ............... fi•l<MllO Ot! -~ OMi.tM t1 peld 1n t •t ced1110 1l -..tho ~., ........ ·-· .... -..... "" ....... M ,_, ... _ -"*'• -°'no -..... ·---"'O~ NEW YOAIC CAP) -~•l<H ltle TllHMy or P9k1 lllie ,-, ell aoc-ta11W -"'"'
Of t old COIM. COMl)er9CI •1111 _....,., ........ -... --..0.-or ,,.ct. • .............. ,._....,..,. __ ..... ... .. .... ,.._ .... ,, --. .._......., , ... , ................ ... ............ ,, . .., ... ~, ........ . •••lea tO ....... ,,.., .... ..., ..... -.....
............ ~ .... ,,..., "'· 1417.JS, offlUJ.
...... ...._. .. " __
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tlcH;el... w•Wllell dll lrl-Wltf .. _,. =:;::---·---.... _,...,.tu ... -· ........... "' c:.==::--.,_~-
• ~ • " • . • • r •
If
" ..
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...
............................. ._ ................................ __________________________ ~------. ----------·----.
..
I
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
Lower tar. New filter. Sa1ne great ~aste ..
---
-_f
1
I 2 ·-wl Oc1~n-..._ ~011:S ---------
VANTAGE
ULTRA LIGHTS r---lOOs ·
--
.
l __
lvANTAGE
ULTRA LIGHTS
.
l
lltro LowTar4mg
. .
New
ULTRA LIGHTS: 4 mg. "taf. 0.4 mg. nicotine, ULTRA LIGHTS 10011 6 mg.-"taf, 0.6 mg. nicotine. av. per cigaren1 by FTC method.
\:·
•
I
.
\
'
.. I
I
~
l
I
!-.
,_N ••w•• -•<•~·~~·,--. ~··~~---~·-·~·---·~·~·~·~·---·---H~-,~·-·~·--~-~4~•~·--~~·-·~-~P~¥~P~S-~U--~·~N-U ___ O~OO•O~O~Z~O~C~~-·-·~·~·~·~~0~4~~4--~S~P~0-4-C-~~ . . . ' (\ . . . .
UPPRESSOR I
mmune~fect
f~~~~ _l!~.:.g -and
even some healthy people -have sometbing ln ~eir blood lbat blunts the body's natural defense
a.Inst tumor cells, re.earcbera have said.
Sclentbta at the Univenity of MtchJsan have
scoverecl a "suppressor factor" that blndera two :ypes ot cells lo the bod)''s lmmune system from
attackinf and destroyin1 tu1nOr cells.
The Immune aystem ls the body's internal de·
enae asains.t Infection. 'l'here is arowtna evidence
t ls involv~ ln cancer defense as well.
Dr. Stanley A. Schwartz. a Pedlatrtclan al the
on Arbor, Mich., school, said the suppre1Jor fac·
tor was found in small quantities in the blood of
st people. But levels were two to thtee times
lgber in cancer patients and in a few bealtbf
olunteers. 1
SCHWARTZ DESCaJBED the research re
c,ently to the convention of the Federation of
American Societies for Experimental Biology
•ere.
~me 10,000 scien~ists attended the six-day
1 '"I Spoaaors aa)l-Jl. w.aa. U.. la.tguL...M:lentifk.
ting in the world.
Schwartz said the suppressor factor may betp
fxplaln the "vicious circle" suffered by som~
•ancer patients, in which the ability-of the immune
stem to resist the disease actually decreases as
e std of the tumor increases.
IN A SEau;s OF experiments, Dr. Madhavan
.N . Nair and Schwartz found the suppressor fac·
or in iiatients with cancers of the colon, rectum,
arge intestine, small intesline, bladder and lung.
The scientists added a purified extract of blood
an artificial culture in which cancer cells were
1rowing along with two immune system cells -
"natural killer" cells that attack tumors without
need of antibodies. and "anllbody·dependent"
killer cells whicb rely on antibodies to recognize
t.be tumor.
f Blood from healthy people inhibited tumor cell
tilling about 20 percent, the scientists found. But
tplood from cane~ patients cut it by 40 percent, on
•verage, and as inuch as 60 percent in some cases.
I THE GREATEST INHIBITION was from in·
~estinal and bladder cancer patients, the scientists
•aid. Lung cancer patients had the least.
E
' The two scientists theorize that the suppressor
ttor may be a natural means of putting the
rakes on the killer celts, Schwartz said. "Un-
ridled killing mechanisms, if they go astray.
ould become pathologic •n themselves," he said.
But the scientists do not know why cancer pa·
tients -and even some healthy people -have
tore of the factor, Schwartz said. It may be that
he tumor induces the factor somehow. Or it may
e that people with high levels of the factor are
Jn ore lilc:ely to get tumors.
The scientists may try to follow people with
igh levels o( the factor to see if they have an
ded risk of cancer, he said.
ankruptcies
• creasing
By The Asaoclated Press
t The bankruptcy business is booming and
creditors are complaining.
The recession is partly to blame ror the grow·
lng number of people who are going broke. But
Jenders say a revision in the bankruptcy law -
~md advertising by some lawyers -is equally
responsible. I The change took effect a little more than a
tear ago. In general, the ne~ law allows debtors to
eep more of their property when they file tor
ankruptcy. Ii also makes it easier to wipe out
your debts without actually going bankrupt or pay-
ing back all the money you owe.
I THE NATIONAL CONSUMER FINANCE As·
sociation, which represents finance companies,
has started a campaign against the revised coae.
The group is publicizing examples of people who
abuse the law. It is warning that lenders are going
to be much more careful with their money.
PlJBUC NOTIC B
ITAfaMcJfT OPA ..... ooMMaNT
Ol'UHO" P ICTmOUI IUllNtlS •AMa
........ ltlilflnl --Ila. aMllclenacl the u• ef ._ lktlllwt ltuJI-ne-: IHITI' lUHa •at, •tiu llcllllfer
A-, ~llllllfltllen IMCll. c;allfoml•
'"47 TM P'kllli-tluMNU Mame ,...
rerr'4 tt ""°""' w• flied In Or..,.. °"'"'' ... J-y Jt, ,.,.,. La WIS M. M4 TIA. SJOS 5'1Aer-1 •oao. AMN4m, CalllOfllla ta01. Tf\ls ~ .,.., c*"lllctt41 by .,.
lndlvldlloal
........ M. MaU.
lllli ... _... WM flied Wiii\ IM
CeunlY Cl•r• ol Oran91 County on
Aprll 10, 1 .. I ........
P11Dll""'4 Drlil'IOll C:-.. O.lly Piiot,
Aorll U, 2t, Mey6, IJ, 1"1 IUWI
PUBLIC NOTICE
MS114D
l'ICTITIW. IUllNIU
NAMa STATIMINT
TM ......... --Is Ooint lltlsj.. -··: O•AHOE 6 CAIRILLO, LTD., ti.
Lett 11th ltreet, $ulle 117, C·Otla .,. ... CelllOnll• flW.
CHARLES SPILLER, JR., JU lul 17111 SlrHI, Sull• 117, Cast•
,.,...., C61Jfoml• flW.
Tllla llullnou Is COllOuCl.O lly e 1111'111 .. ....,.,_.,,,p.
CMl'lel 11»11..,., Jr.
Tf\ls ""'-' was llled wltll U. ~ou11ly Clt r1t of Or.,.ge ~ty on ~llJl,ltlt
""''" PublllllM Or.,. Coast Delly Pllol.
PU8UC NOTICE
l'IC'TITIOUI IUSl•&SI
tiLAMa ST-TQMaNT
Tf\e ... lewlM '*''°" Is llolno 1111-'· M~ .. :
ANTIQUAAIUS, 71t W. ltlf\
Slrttt, CO.ll llMM, C.lllOlllla .,._
Oer11lc Carr A•etoom. 1UJ HIOlll•M btl ... , Hew~n le•Cf\,
Cllllfor"'41 t*O
Thi) 111111 ..... I• conclUCl.O by an Ill·
lllvlclll•I
0.1'11< C:. r Ave'-'>
1"1• ~t wM fltt• wllll 1M
Ct1111ty Cieri! 01 Ortl\99 C.OVlllY on
Aprll .. , 1 .. 1
l'ltnU
Publlthed Oran91 Cotti 0.llY Piiot,
Apr 22, 2t, -y 6, ll, '"' 1"1 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
Orang,e oast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Maye, 1981
PUBUC NOTICE PUlllJC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI IUllMHI •NIM JlAT4M4NT f'IC'TITIOU$ IUllNCU
TM tOI ...... ~It clOlnt llWI· NAMllTAtlMINT
,,.,, ti Tiit i.11owlno per'°1\s ar• ao1no
CORONA LEASING, uo\.\ lkl\ll)•U .. : MerlQola Awnue, cor-,.. Mar, ROIS PRODU CTS, IUU
Calllorl'lla ftUS. Ma<Artll.., llvd., 5111141 200. lnlee,
VllOTTA IC. LINOCtRO, .-~ C:•llfOrnleWIS
Marltold Avenw. COf-41e1 Mar, ROUO CORPORATION, •l•te of Calllornlam2) tncerporatlol'I, Ct lllor11la, l h62
Tiii• llUlllllM It (Oftclll(11d llY .. In· MacA""-........ $vita JOO, lrvlM,
•Mwal Celllornla'271S v-. K. LI-rt ROSSO CORPORATION
Thlt ~ -111141 wltt\ -R •· ~ty•, County Clerk ol 0.-1111 (Ak;nty Ofl Pfoilclefll ~1127, 1'11 Tlllt 114'1-1 wn lllod wit.II Ille
"' County Clara Of Oran91t "'""'" on Pullll.-Oratlt9 C.. Dally Piiot. April tO. 1 .. 1.
"""'" H. Mey•. u. 20. 1"1 mul Pl...., PuOllllled OranQe CNll Delly Piiot,
PUBLIC NOTICE Apr n. 2t, May•· u. '"' 1 .. ...,.,
PUBIJC NOTICE
P~ITIOUt I UUN411
SUMI STATllMa•T
TIM lolteooriftC ...,_ It Oolnt IMtsl
.,... .. 1
Ca l ..._,ltL.O'#lDI L.IASIHO, <21
TH a I UL.LIOH COMPANY, CM A9'T
•TC., Mt I . 17111 IC,_., llllle t, C..
,,.. .. , Callfor'N•-.D
J, "°""" CAwcl, JM II. 1n11 $1roel, 5'111• t. ~ MHa, CMlfornla flU1
Thia....._. la COft411tcllo4I lilY ......
41M-I.
J • ..-....eerd
Tlllt -w• llled Witt> tlW c-•Y Cle'1! Ill Or...., c.-t1 on May ..... 1.
f'l•l4H P11bll\Nd Orenge CO.II Dally PllOC,
May•· 1a, 20121, 1 .. 1 20t2 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
H/ F Da
PUBUC NOTICE
PICTITIOUt autO••lll
HAMa ITATIMmNT
The ltllMlftQ PtrMlll I• delno IMoAI
neM aa. TO~ 1UHE HO. 1•, ... J •4111\tOf
Avenw, .. Wllllntton IMotll, c.t ttHlll • .,..,
Lewlt M. MetH, SJO! Sun<rMI
11..-, Al\e/lelm, Callfontla
Thi\ -•neu It c~ by all If>.
c11v1oua1
L••l\M MIU.
Thll llallHNftl WM 111141 wflll \ht
Co11nty C .. '11 Of Or.,ge Qkll'lly M
Allfol 20, , .... ,.MIW
Pullll•IWO Or-(Mii Dally ~let.
APrll 22, 2t, Mey•· 12. l'ltl IU>ll
PUBUC NOTICE
P\JBUC NOTICD f'ICTITIOUS IUllN4ill
f'ICTITIOUS IUSINllS "'CTITIOUS IUSINUI ""' NA.Ml nATIMINT NAMl ITATIM4NT NAMI n&TIMSNT l'ICTITIOYI I USINIH The followlno partont ue llolllt
Th• toll-lno Plt<IOll ,, Oolnt !Mill• Th loll I OOln bl.I I NAMI STATIMINT bvllnus •• ..... •• • -•no penon • 0 s . PICTITIOUS CUllNIU Th• lollowlno ""'"'' •r• aolne GEMOLOGICAL T ECHHOLOGV.
fRt·COUHTV PORTABLE X· neu .. R s G NAMllTAT•MaNT b1ntneo•'· )200 lri•tol Str-. wit• 705, c-a-
RAY, Sl' s. Raymono, F111t•rlOll, SER~I~: ~.~o t.. .. ~Lp~.,_"." ~:.. Th• followlno "'"'"' ••• aotno BRANCHING OUT,.,. Capital MHa ,<:allfoml•t»»
Olller11lani.:ll MaW Califoml••2'2' . tkdlMUat Slr .. l.CGlteMaW,C:.lllomla t2'21 Wlfllam ER Richa rdt, ltSt
Rl<Mnl IMIC .. llt Coddlnt. 17... BARBARA MARIE DUNCAN J A C UNDERGROU ND ROBERT J A MARGARET J BalH rl<Orlw ,C•laMe ... C.llt-'•
M•rygolcl, etooml119ton, Calllornt• •UlO CefllOll Piece Cotle Md .. ENGIHEIRIHG CONTRACTORS, 201 .. ""'MOHO, ... C:.ptul Sir-. Coste .,.,. ttJ1' C Ill I __ • • S.VU. Anita 0..lw, S..lle 103, Ore11111t. Maw, CellfornlattU7 Rlcllercl H Ha rmt, ltt7t Via
Tf\ta ~It c-tta tlY.,. In· a orn • ·-C:.llle>rnlafMM. Th" b1 .. 1nau 11 conauc1e<1 11y a _.... alvio ... 1. Thi• bl.l\lnou I• conouciea Dy en In c . A. W..EELER, JOI So.ltrl M ita oeneral PMW""IP S..-.no v-Ll..O.. c ....... 111. _ a1v1clu•I 0 I LJ• 1-Or ~·tll I RObe-J uam-~ Eawara H. L'*'lno· w ..._ RlcN nl Malcolm Coddll\9 1 ve, -·• .... .-gt, ..-O<n • ·• ~ ,.__ Roao, C•UI MaM, C.llloml• ta» Thia Jla.......,t wa. llleel wltf\ Ille Barbara Ovncan .,.... Tllll •tat...,.nt wa• Ill.a "'II" tlle Counly C~K of 0.M .. Covnty on Tiii• llal.,_,I was lll.O wltll IN b A 0 EHOIHEERIHO CON· County Cler~ ol Or.,.Qe Counly on Nial P L.,.•lno, J07 PrlllCtlOfl AprllJI, 1'll. County C,." of Oren .. County TRACTORS, INC., • C:.lltornle cor· Aprll 20, '"' Drive, c-i. Ma.._ Calllornlata.. ,.,..,.. Merell 2•. IWI f'1$1.S6.1 porallon, 10'2 Tulare Drive, Co•t• ,......,_ Jam.a H. Slwlrp, Ill, llOI 0.-Y
Publl"'9cl Oral\Qlt CO.•I D•llY Piiot, PuDl!iheO Or""91 Co .. t Oally Piiot, Me ... Callfomta ~K. PuOlllheO Oranot Co .. 1 Dally Piiot, Str .. t, SMUI -lea. Callf9mla tMOj
2. ••· • 20 M t l•""t 3 a Thia b tin ' I c a 1-A b •prll ... -. ~-y ', 13, 1"1 1•11 •1 ThU t>ut1ne11 '' conaucled lly • Apt. • -Y •• 1., • 1 I I ..... April 2J, 2'1, MllY •• 1 . "" , .... 1 u • • • on UC -y • ~ .... -• , Q•n•r•l jMlrtn..-shlp. ----oenerat par\Mrshlp. Wiiiiam ER 9'1C ... rch G& G ENGINEERING PUBLIC NOTICE CONTRACTOR5, IMC. PUBLIC NOTICE Tllla •tate..-t w•• llltd wltf\ IN PUBLIC NOTICE J""'" B. Gallacher. County Cler• Of Of'an .. Counl' on
Prelllclenl l'ICTITIOYS IUllN•U April IJ, '"' ........
"'CTIT10UI IUSIHIU f'ICTITIOUS IUllMISI Tllll lUl.......,I WM 111.0 wltll tM NAMll STATIMINT Pubh.iwG 0r.,._ Coa•I Dally Pl19t,
~II H, !My•. 11, 20, 1911 --~ -·-------------
NAME STATI MEMT NA.Ml STATRMIMT CounlY Clark of Or.,.Qlt ~ly on TM loll-I"" perlOll It _...., bus!· •~ 1, .., .. ""• t ,..,, !119.ll ------Tll• fotio.tno ~"°" 1s oowio &us1 "'f h• 1o11ow1no ""°" tt -.. !MDI· Allftl ir,"" ,,. .. •• "Y -··y """'h ,.,_,.,~_,... __ i _ .. _...,..___ i:;r:-•
"'CTITIOUS IU$UlllS nan.. MU e• ........ HALLMARK BULLION COM·
P UBLIC NOTICE
MAaWITATIMlltT COUNTRY CAllN WEST, :JOO WOAD PROCESSING SCHOOL, Publl"'9<1 Or-CAest Dally Piiot, PANY, 1201 Rvtl-RoaO, H-P0'1
TM 1o11-1119 parao111 are Oolnll Promon1or1 Ori we EH i, Newport 2U2 s E BrlslOI, S..ll• 20S, S.nte AM, Aprll 2t, Mey•· IJ, 20, 1'11 1t7S-11 BM<,., C:.llfornl• t1'60
PUBLIC NOTICE
IMlllMUH. BHCh, c.lllornlatllMO Callfornlat2107. James """"" A .... ,_, HIV.. PICTITIOU· 1u•1NRlS T .. E PERFECT 9Aj..AHC£, '1U ARTHUR CHARLES BISCH, 100 MARILYN SUE SALAS, 2U7 1201 Rlll!Mld R-Ne rt e. .. • c .. ll•rl• W•v. Newport IHCll, Promontory Drive Eul. Hewporl Rlver1IOe Drive, c ut• Mu•. I PUBLIC NOTICE . WPO .Cl\, NAMISTATIMINT Call,.rnle~ Beach, C:.lllornla•llMO. C~lllornlaf».27 ____ ca;~';'~.,..., lne lollowlno ,,.,...,t are aolng
Corl11ne Ann C•ll•han, 41U c This bl.ISlneu It conooc1e<1 01 en In Tiiis butlrwu I• cono..ciea oy en In 1 ,_." c-tta by en In· bullneues
Hllarla way, Hewporl Beech, alvlauel 01v1aual. STATIMINTOf'AIANOOtOHNT dlvl~al. WBP INVESTMENTS, IM11 Ell· C.lllornle~ At1hUrO..rluBIKh IMrllynS.la• Of'USIOf' J.,.,.aB.A.Hlven lerpr l u Drive O•rden Grove
TerHa Mar ie Amoroso, S071'1 Thll u.i ..... nt was 111.0 with tlle Thi• 1Ult-t wa1 lllecl with lhe l'ICTITIOUS IUllNISI NAME Tlllt tla1-I wH Ill.a wllll Ille C•lllornl••~ • •
'iil•rloold Strfft, Corone ael Mu, County Cl•rk ol Oranoe County on Counly ClerK of Or.,.Qlt County Oii TIM lollowlno perton hal abendOned County Clerll Of Orenot County Oii May J•Ck A. Whelen, IMll Enterprise C..tllornl• m2S Aprll 20, 19'1 Apr II 11 '"' Ille usa Of Ille lletll'-buslneu name: 4• l'ltl Orlv•. Garoen Gro,,., C•lllornla tJMl Thia llullMH It condu<l.O Dy • Pl~ • ,., SOUTHCOAST DENTISTRY, 3105 P1'141J Robert J Ber11t1el11, ll'lll En· ~retpwtner&l\lp. Publl1heclOnnge CoallO.llyP1101, PublltneclOr-Coa~IO•llYPllot HarllorBlvO .. C-l•Ma ... Calllomla Putlll"*IOr-CoastOallyPllot, hrprlu Drive. Garaen Grove.
C«lnne A. Cell-n A Pr II 22, 2', Mlly •• 13, ... , .. ,, •• 1 Aprll 2'. IMY •• IJ, 20, ... , 20'2W Th• Fictitious BinlnHI H•m. r•-Mey •• 12, 20, 27. 1"1 209CMI C•lllornl• ':i..J
Tiii• ,,.._t w• lllect will\ Ille ----lerred to abOY• wat 111.0 In O..,ge Roben J Pearce, 11911 Entarprl ..
(ou111y Clerk of 0r .. oe County on PUBLIC NO·TICE PUBUC NOTICE County"" ~Y t, 1"1 PUBLIC NOTICE Drive, G•ro.n Grow , O lllorn•• ti.q A.,1121. 1 .. 1. ,.,_1 Arnolcl H Flan1er, 1t Charry Hllll Thi• t>uslneu It cona11c11a by •
· fu0t1 -0r.,... CO.st Delly Piiot, f'l-ITtou• IUSIN•ss 1--Pl-ITI"''• eu••N•ss i..ne, Newport a..ch. c:a111ornla o•nar•I partnenhlp ~II 2', !My •• IJ, 20, ... I 1021 .. 1. ... • .. .. • -· -.. T"l• butlnet• il tonoucwa by .. In· ... CTITIOUS IUSINISI J•O A. Whelen
-----------N&MI STATIMENT NAME $TATEM.NT a1vlclu•l,.rl>ol0 ... Flanur N&MI STATEMENT This •t•tenwnl .... ,,,.., wit" ,,,. PUBLIC NOTICE Th• followlnt partonl a re aolnQ TM fol~,..._ 11 Ooin9 busl· Thlt ,....,_.t ••• Ill.a .JU\ Ille Tne followlno o•raon1 are ao1no ~:;'~1:C, ~!::k 01
Or.,.9" County on
"'CTITIOUS CUSINES.S
NAMI STATEMENT
The 101tow1no per ton• •r• dolnQ
Dvline$1 H ;
PACIPIC MAINTENANCE
SERVICE, 221.S AV•IO!l Street, Co$1a
Mew, Calltornl• t2'2'.
CAAOLVH A WEAVER, UIS
Avalon Slf'ffl, Colle Maw. Ca•llornla ,,.,.,
bUMnH•as ....... c Or c Ma l>UMntss•• CAP•l
0
Tl&llASOAN COAST .. EAR I HO Al 0 CE.HT ER OOLPHI N TACK LE CO • 2100 ounty Cleftl OI ange ounty on y EL Zoe.ALO, 0 11 C.mou• Or1ve, AtteiilMp at Law
l40'I Eaat Coll•t Hlollway, Corona a.i E . Howe 11 SI r • e I , Ana he Im , 4• l .. I. f'IUQ1 Irvine, C..lllornlt tJ71S Zttl llUl-c:.Me<' Ofi•e
Mu Ct lllornlt t2'U C•tllornl• f2D 0 1 P E •t•ndtO MllnaOt,,_I Services, S..lt• JOI EVELYN G WHITE l•seJ Elm Mlcn .. 1 R. Fora, 1•1 .. Tortola Publl"'9cl Or.w.oe Coau • IY llot, Inc., a Celllornla corl)Oratlol\, 1~ lrvlM c.allf.....w• tJ71S
Clrclt, Founltln Vell11'. Calllornl• Clrcl•, HunllllQllon Harbour, Celllornla May•, IS, 20, 27, '"' 2i.o .. 1 Sl•rr• C•lmo, tr.1ne, C•llfornla•M4 . • f't*4J
'2709 '2Mt BLJC NOTICE Tiii• business 11 <-IMI by• cor· Publl•IWO OranQe Coail Delly Piiot,
OONA.LO H. WHITE, 1•5'3 Elm This ~lnau Is c-ucllta by en In· PU poutlon. Apr.12, 29, May•. 13.1 .. 1 '"HI
Clrele, Founttl11 valley, Calilornl• dlvlaual. ---Exlenaell M•n•Q•m•nt '2709 Michael R F.,.-a l'ICTITIOUS IU51MElS Strvlcn
ThlS Dutln"' 11 conau<1ea by a Tlllt SUltemer'OI was 111.0 wllll tne NA.Ml STATIMINT ThomaS F Pe-n,
oeneral partnerlfllp County Clerk of Orange County on Tl\e followlno pa"'"'' are doing PratlOenl __ _ E .. lynG White Aprll 27, l .. 1 buslneua Thlt st•1-I wa• lllecl with t1'CI --0 .. -0-.-,_-T-OSHOWCAUSI PO•
f'l*Jt Fl-INVESTMENT CORPORATION County Cl•rk of Orenoe County on CHAMOa Of' NA.Ml
PUBLIC NOTICE
PllbflttwO Or-Coall Delly Piiot, PublltMcl Orange Coast O•lly Piiot, OF AMERICA, U Cotporate Plaut April I, 1"1 CAM NUMll• Al ... Dy e Aprll 21, 1'1, May •• U, 1 .. 1 1196-11 Aprll 2',Me,., IJ, 20. 1 .. 1 20tt-t1 Ori Ye, S11lle 100, Newport BH<h, JACKSON, ICIOOER & SU CIC LING IRIS B GIHS8U•G eke IRIS B.
" PUBLIC NOT-IC_E __ Cell~~~:~ .. HT CORPORATION ~:;;.:~~'i!; ~~~~ "!'~~~:::!ons!~1~:":!
THOMAS 0 MUETZEL, UIS
Avalon Slr .. 1, CAllla Maw, C:.lllornl•
t2'2•.
Thia 11<.1llnH1 I• conoucltcl
oenerel partnt~lp CMOlyn A Wuver
fhOmalO.Muollef
Tllli si.te"'*"I was lllacl Wiii\ tlle
covntr Cler .. of Orange C....nty on
April 20, 1 .. 1 Ft*JJ
Pul>llsMO Oranot C:-11 O.llr Piiot,
Aprll 22, 2t, INiy •. ll, 1 .. 1 116WI
PUBLIC NOTICE
f'ICTl'tlOUI IUllMISI
NAMtl ITATIMINT
Tll• loll-Int peraons ar• clotno
1111111\ffi .. :
MAA WEST IUILOERS AHO OIVILOPEAS, 16162 Beacll
l owle¥a r•. Hvnllnotan l each, can,.,,,.."'°· J .J.H.T., INC., e Qlllfornl• <~·
..,..•tlon, ""' Ceec:ll ao..tevaro, Hun-u,..1on 1aec11, c:a11fot'lll• nM7.
Tlllt busl<leM 1 t cOrlducted by a COf •
oorauon.
J.J.H.T., ll'IC.
Heetor Martadl,
""'*"' Tlllt tlai-t WM lllod wlU. WM
~Iv C,.r• of Or8ft1111 County on -rll 27, 1"1.
l'l-
P..011"'90 Or-CO.It Oally Pllol,
~II H , Mey •. IJ, 20, 1 .. 1 2024-tl
• PUBLIC NOTICE
MOTICI OP NC>lt-RISll'OttllllLITY
Hotke It Nre4rf Given !Mt tM ..,..
MNIOMd wlll ""' bo r._.slble fOf any detoU or llaellltlfl corotractacl b•
any-olflef then ..,.,..ti, on or•''"
Uris oate.
Oal.O thlt 191 clay OI May'"' ~llR.Rutllorforil 1~ a. SY'C•mor• Street 0..,...,CA""1
Pullllaf\ed Oranoe co .. t Delly Piiot,
Mey•. 1. u. 1t11 21n..a1
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOYS IUSIHESS
NAMI STATJMENT
Th• 1o11-1no penon I• dolno t>uSI n"' ., NEB ENGINEER ING &
DEVELOPMENT, 1117 Glenuo•o
Terrece, eo.1a Maw. Celllornlt 921627
NEALE EDWARD BERGSTROM,
1117 Oteneagt" hrr11ee, CcKI• Maw, Calllornl•~21
This bu~nHS .. Condu<tea by •n In·
alvlaual N•ale E llero•lrom Tiiis ... ...._, w•• fol.a wlUI Illa
County Cltrk of Of'anoe County on
OFAMERICA,IHC .• •nlcunocO<llO'• W•ll•F•f'9'1uMdl... <lla no• her n•m• lrom IRI$ •. ----llon, •J Corl>orate Pl•te Drive, S..lte ... New,.,, Ceftter Of'lve GINSBURG •U IRIS B ROWE to
FICTITIOUS IUSIHESS 100, H-t BoKh, C.lllornla t2WO Newpe'1 laadl, CA""° PU-7 IRIS B STEIN
NAMI STATEMENT Thll -·-It conOuctad by a GOf'· PulllllMCI 0ranQt CO.st D•ll Pll 1 It It ha<Wy ordefed IMI all per-lh• 1011ow1no paraon1 ere aoano poratlon Apr 12 2t Mey• 1l 1911 ',":,i lnt•rest.O If\ U. mauer al0<-la •Po bu\oneu ., ,.....,..,,._t CorPO,..llon • • • • pear before thl• cout1 In ~t
B A w CAAF T. 1 llU WHttrn °'America -----No. l ., 100 Civic Cel'llar Ori ... WHI,
Aven .... Unit M, Stan1on, Callfornlt Thia ,._,._, was 111.0 wlU1 the PUBLIC NOTICE S.nl• Ana, c:.111.,.-!'lla, on June 17, '"'· 9oc.t0. , Cou111y Clerll of Or-County on May at 10.JO o'cloO a,m., and tllen encl
BRUCE A. WEEKS, ltoMI Third 4, lttl. there -causa, 11 •n !My llaW, wlly
Str .. t, Fount•ln Valley, Callfornl• P1'1t1J l'ICTITIOUS IUSINRH sala petition lor ch•noe of 11a ma
'1109 P111JlllNd Oranot CO.II! Dally Piiot, NAMll nAT4 MINT thould llO(beOll'MleO
DEBORAH 0 . WE EKS, 110.0 M•Y •.u ,20,27,1 .. 1 2142 .. 1 Tll• 1011-•no paraons .,. dolno 11 It furttwr ... a...., lllail. CoClf ol
Tlllra Strut, Fountain Va lley, . ------11<11lneu .. ; u.1, Of'cler to -c-lie pUl>lllllecl C•lllorn•amot 1 OT £ OATAPRES.S, ltlt W Cf\Htnlll, In IN Dally Piiot., • .,..._,_r of
Tiii• -lneu Is cono.Ktt a oy an In· PUBLIC N IC Santa Al\9, C.llfoml• t710l genar•I clrculeUon, ....,,-.CS 11'1 11\11
alvlavai Chu-no A wlftl ---Helton G. ~.1. lllO 1o1 ... Costa cou111y at i..st onca • WMt< tor '°"' 0.-an 0 WHks "'CTITIOUI a ustNllS llMM, ce11-. n.• tOftMCllll ... -u prior to ,,.. 0.T of
P1'0Ul Tna. •latemerlt we• 111.0 with Ille 1tA1oM! STATIMINT Polo i.....,.1, 112' Salv-S1.-, .. 1a Marino.
PvblllNO ()rtnge C:-11 O.llr Pilot. Co11nly Clerlo. of Or-Countr on The toll-Int eanon' a re aolno CMta Maw. cetlfomla Dated !My 4, '"'
Aprll 20, 1'11
Aprll 12, 2t, 1My '· IJ, 1 .. 1 IMWI Aprll 20, 1 .. 1 • bullMM M JOM ~. UU W Cl\anOl•r, S-.. RontlO H. "'-, ,_SJ ( I I p • 0 F E s s I 0 H A L la Ana. C:.llfoml• t2lOol JUOOit Of IN
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI I UllNIU
MAMll STATIMRNT
Tiie loll-Ing partons are OolnQ
bvllMU H ;
FIVE POINTS PET SHOP, ltsfJ
Main Street, Hul'llll'lglon Beacll.
C•lllornl•
I .... Delille, 1110S Tf'OJan Way,
Slanton, C:.llfomla t0610
PuDlllheO Oranot Co .. 1 Delly Piiot, MANAGEMENT SERVICES, (1) P M Carlos ~1. 1111 Flor• Str-, ~lorCourt APfll 22, 2t, INiy •, U, 1911 1~1 S, (J I MES, (41 I CT, 147•1 Fran•lln Saflta ANI, C•lllornl• t2704 Publl.-Or-OMJl Dally Pllol,
Aven.,., S..11• A, TWlll'I, C.llfornl• Marlo i.....,.1, 1•11 Flora Slr"t. Me, 6, u. 20, 27, '"' 21 ... 1 ntlO S.nl• A..._ c.flfO<nl• t2104 PUBLIC NOTICE Mealc•I lll.ctronlu Solem•. Thia 11<111,,.u It conducltd by • PUBLIC NOTICE Inc .. • Cellfomle corporation, 147'1 oontr•l pe'1llanfllp.
"'CTITIOUSIUllMISS Frenlllln Avenuo, S..lte A, Tutlln, Hel_,0, ~1 ---------~ NAMI STATIMINT Calllornla t2'IO Thia , .. ,_, wH 111.0 wllll t/W l'ICTITIOUI IUMNIU
NAMl ITATIMINT Th• lollowlno peraon' ••• aotn11 This_,,. .. I• c-..Cllecl bY • cor· Cou111y C .. r1t of Orange County on bUll,,.HH. llO'•llon. Aprll 27, 1"1. -'<el Elect f't6"a Tiie lollowtno perwon It Oolno lluSI· MIKEOU>tlAM POOi.. SERVICE, n>nles PublllNO Or ..... Coast Dally Piiot, nHI as t702 Olymplc Drive, .. untl1101on S.,.._, Inc. ~. 29 !My •• II 20 , .. 1 117._.1 WEST COAST TRADING COM·
9HCh, Ceflfornl• ,_ c:.ro1 L-IM, • • • PAHY. 4100 llrcll Strwl, S..lt• lOI,
Tf'Ojan Mlc'-1 C oior.tm, t702 Olymplc Secrotart/Treasurel' Nawpon llNcll, C:.llfornla t1'60
by In· O<lve, Hllflll119Con llHcl\, C:.111«'111• This steewnent wa lllecl wlltl IM PUBLIC NOTICE R -R Conwllenta, Inc., 4100
LIKllle A. Del.It .. , I llOS
Way, s1 .. 1on. C:.llfoml• _,.
Tiii• buslMtl It c-.Ctacl
a1v1a.,.11 t--.0 •nO wife I
E .. OeLl1le
LUCiiie A. 0.Llstt
Thlt lllet.tmtnl was llle<I With 11\e
Covnty Clerk o1 Of'anoe County on
Apr II t1, 1911. ' ........
Publl.-Or-Co .. 1 Dally Piiot. Apr. 2t, May6, I>, 20, 1•1 2012 .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
'7M6 Cou11tyOer11oAOr-County-Mlly _ __ _ -----Blr<ll SlrHt, Sult• IOI, Newoort
Juailh F oi-m, t7W Oly"'91< •. '"' 8••ch, CelllonW• t1WO Ori ... Hunt1no1on Baach, C:.lllornla 1'16141• "'CTITIOYS I USINISS Tlllt buslneu It tonoucttd by a cor· ~ Publl-Or.w.oe C:-11 Daily Piiot, Ht.Ml STATEMENT POrallofl lnllWStale OIC.lltomla.
Tlllt business It .-ucleel by tn· May 6. 12, 20, 27, '"1 2141 .. 1 Tiit following peraont are aolng J.itrey c. R•tllln
dlvlaualt (~ anO wllel. t>vslnH I at. lhlt 1i.t-i wa• filed otltll Ille M~I C.010!\am PUBLIC NOTICE G ABRIEL WILLIAMS COM· C-lyCtenOIOr-C.-IYOflMa'f Judllh F. Oldflal'll PAHV, 22711. Arbella Ro.a, LAouM 4, 1't1.
Tiii• 1tet.menl WH fllod with , ... -Hlouet. c.tllornl• '2'71 Attar•Y .......... """" CO..llly Clerk ol Oran .. counly on f'ICTITIOUI IUSINl.S Pacific Coall Machinery CorPOr• aatAN R. CART&a
Allfll 27, 1 .. 1. NA.Ml STATIMltn' Uon, • c.lllomll corporation, 2°' W. 4'1 Clvk CMW-Drlw Well
,.,...., Tll• 1011-1no paraon• •r• 0o1no 4th 5trMI, Santa An•, c:a111ornl• 9210' Moote AIM. c.tlfwlll• t17t1
Publlshe<I °'"""° Coast Oally Piiot, bvtlneu •: This buJJneu It conouc11ta by• cor· Ttl: 17141 ....-
ftlCTITIOUl IUSINESS Apr 2',May•, ll,20, l .. I 2011.a1 CHURCHILL LIMITED, 171F porttlon. L .. A.Branc:ll,
H"""I STATRMINT Rlvertlcle Avenw, Hewporl Beach, Pacific Coall c:-ty c .. r.
The loOowlnt per>«i• ••• dolno PUBLIC NOTICE C.lllOrnle,,.., MllClllney Corporation By-OeODI o ... ,,,.,.., "'CTITIOUI IUllNUS buSlnau °' T .. E OSAGE WATER Patrick R . Smith cltl• Rock Harrl•ll• S4>r11199r, OetMY
NAM81TATIMENT CO , 111.o Talbert ,...,..,., Fountain On•l•ptnenl Company, '21 wa.. Seueiary ,.,., ..
Tiie IOll-'no DerwOll •• dolno bu.JJ. Valley, Ceflloml• ,VOi, SVoel, ~ ...... C:.IHornl• t».Sl Thi• 11111-t WH Ill.a with Ille
M,UH COMMERCE FUND INC , a IN THI OtST•ICTCOU•TOPTHI Merlckol O•velopme nl, a County Cler1t of Oranp County on
aAY ADVERTISING, 1221 W. Callfornle corporation, lll40 T•llM'1 SIVINTH JUDICIAL OIST•ICT Of' Cellfornla corPorallon, 11'1S Slly Pa r• Aprll 20, 1 .. 1
Con I .. IOhW•Y. H.-w11orl 8HCh, Avenue, ,:.....,l•ln Valley, c allfomle TH• Cfrct., Suite F, lrvlna,C.11tomle tt714 MEL SP•IHOI• C.lllornla'*' n 10I ITATE Of' IOAHO, IN ANO f'O• Thia bvtlneu It cortOucl.O by • Atl-,atLAw
Alie• M<Callum, 1221 W. Coa•t Tl\ll oullneM 11 ,onauuea by • cor· THE llmllect pwtnenlllp ,.. WHt "-Ill sirw. u .... ,,,
HlgllW•Y • .........,, ... h. Calllorl\I• oorallon. COYNTV Of' .... MONT P.trkll R Smith S11l1• -NOTICE OP TRUSTll'S SALi
t2'&I COMMERCEFUNOIHC:. RANDY TROST, Pla lnllll, YI T"lt llat-1 was lllecl wll" Ille U11teA11a,C.llfarNa t1701 GTONe.llM
P\lbll-Or-Coast O.lly Piiot,
May 6, II, 20, 17, 1 .. 1 _ __!!!!:!1
'· PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiii• IMalneu ,, , __ by en In· Steven B. Ha<k•ll, SHA AON "'°UNTS TROST, Oel•ll· COUlllJ Clef1l ofO.-Counl'f on M•y • ,, Re: UT IAal "The current abuses of bankruptcy must be 4llvloue1. Pret1oon1 cl•nt. 4, ••1. PulJll•twO Orenge CO.ti O•llY P1101, su HwEST BANK, • c a111or11I• stopped," says E.C.A. Forsberg, the chairman of Thi• ~=f8~:"111ec1 wllh ,,,. Tn11 •l•t-1was111.0 with,,,. SUMMONl-f'O•HRVICI 1'1'l417 Apr U,2',Mlly•,U,1 .. 1 '"~ .. 'corporation, formerly SANTIAGO
h bo d I th
Counly Clerk of Or.ange County on THR ITATI OP IOAHO PublltNd Oranot Coa" Dally Piiot, -BANI( as outy -lnlad Trvatff un· t e ar o e association, in an article in caunty ctt"' "'°'.,.. COW1tyonM•Y Ap111 20, 1 .. 1. HNoto•11T1Nos TO May•· u .20. 21.1 .. 1 201M1 PUBLIC NOTICE cier tM tot•-•nt a .. u1M01 dMcl of ''Credit," the group's magazine. •. "''· ,.._SI IHAROtlMOUNTST•OST trust WILL SELL AT PUILIC
Forsberg Cl.tes t he ~ lllllcl...... ""1411 Publl111eO 0r-CCM111 0.11., Pilot, S .. ARON MOUNTS oRosT, 111e PUBLIC NOTICE AUCTION TO T .. e HIGHEST 110-1111 ..... CO.st Dally PllOI, Aprll 22. 2'. MllH, U. 1 .. 1 1151.al f llove namec1...-1. Tl.. DER FOR CASH (pooy-Ill tllM .. case of an unnamed COU· Mey6,ll,20,17,1'11 ~I '!'Oii Art Htf'eOT Hollflecl, TNI . ---------·----NOTICIOf'TRUSTll'SSALI .. ,. In lewfUI _, .. Ille UflhM
Ple with a aross annual tlWS AHALYgs PUBUC NOTICE complall'lt .... been lllecl ... 11\11 you In "'CTI TIOUI IUllNIU T .s. NO. IUIS Sl•IHI •II rlQM. tilt•..,., '""'""' (-• PUBUC NOTICE Ill• Ohlrlcl Covrt of llM S.nnth NAMI STATIMINT On Mey 22, '"'·at 10:00 • m. at Ille ¥eyea to --,,... w It llMIW '8141 ipcorge o( $78,()()() WhO, be Juolclal CHWkl ef Ille 51.ele ef lc&aM, 1'he follow!-pertont are doino norU. lnlftl en«rance to IM Orenoe Oeelll of Trffl 111 "ttre l'NP rly ~ays, elirninaled $22,000 Nl71tM f'ICTITIOU&aus1Nbs 1" •l'lcl '°'IN~' ef Fremone, by bustneuas ··• c-ty ceur1HGYM,100 Cl¥k Canllff 11ar.1na1tar°"'rl-: • d bt b f'}' f NOTICllOP I UUt T•ANIPI• NAMI STATUolENT Illa allo"9 NlfMd ol•lntlH, and VOii •,. OIAL·A WI FE Sl4a Dunbar·O Drive Well. In City of Santa M a, Real· TAUS1'0R Georl9 R. o.ntavaon
in e S Y I 1ng or 11,.0 , .,.,_.,.7 u .C.C.I Th• 1ouowlno P••ton• .,. aolno :!f:'70:::' :~..;,~ ::: !: Hunllnoton kach C.mornl• ·~ • tv Tiii• Company Lto .... clUIY ..,. and oar1,1 M. Ou11en1W1, f\u-bankruptcy "when alternatives were possible for 1"0 WHOM IT MAV CONCERN: t>uslneu a.. ,,. 0ot11e Hert, 5'1" ~.0, .. uni· polntea Trust" undel' •nd --nt •"" wll• ••JolM 1......U
th m It t. th t uldh ll edth Nttl<• I• ll•r•llY 9 lven lo Iha EASTERN DIGITAL, 17101 1 sarvlc•Oltf\lswmrnona,andyou lnglot18Hcfl,C:.llfornlat~ DffdofTrvllre<-Aprlltt,HCO, BENEFICIARY; Santlaoo ·~. e -a erna lVeS 8 WO ave a OW em CredllOn OI TERRILL 8EASLEV OflCI Mlle Mii, Irvine, C.llfornla t2714. are hlt1Nr ""!fled t"8t unleN you '° Ann Klno, 10J22 MllntMa, Hunt· as Inst. No. 21610, In bootl lalli, Patt Callfor11la ccwporallon tO meet their Credit responsibUlties~'' TERRY HAILE V, Trantferon, Agha S Me,,,_, 12U2 AmetlwsJ !~1~' i:'u~r':t:e,'!c:.l•tl: Ing Ion Bffeh, Callfornla ·-12tt of Offklal Recorcll In IN office of Racordad !My It, 1'40 as lnllr. No. He also Writes Of what he calls "a rash Of w-MlllneM lldWeu la'"° IS•rr-&tr"I, Oer'clln Grow, C:.llf«l'll• 926'° Cerol Allder ton, ttl1' WlnOJ-· the County Recoto.rs °' Orenot C:O....-tn4' In boot1IMOtpett1271 of Ottki.t Ca Parltway, lrVlne, '2114 Unit "It", Knoe V. Houyan, l"-1 EHt Fruol ptalnlllf Wiii .... IUOQment aQaln\I mer Lane HunllnOIOll 8ea<f\ IY, Stale of C:.llfortlla Utculed by Rtcoras In the office of "'9 RKotO.r ~wyer advertising offering bankr uptcy counsel." count' at 0r.,..., MM• of c eutot11I•. street , Apl. • C· s. Santa Ana, YOll H Pf'•'fed In .. ic1 compt•lflt c autornl• ,,..._ • Raymond L. Sher"'· ulnol• man. 01 Or•nea eounty; .. io doeO OI lnill orsberg adds: "Much of lhis advertising is mere· tll•t • ..,,. trantfer 11 1111o111 10 11e c a11forn1e n101. R.J ... '*'" ,.. • .,. F•lc-,,5 P•io• irv•n• WILL SELL AT PUI Ltc AUCTIOlif oescrtbtst11e1o11ow1nellf-r1Y• an offerina Of servi'ce. But t'S It ...,.rope"" for a m•de lo OME "°UR CLEANERS, Thia lklslness 11 (ondU<ted by t ~'°:::'~~nllfl Callfornlat271S ' ' ' TO .. IGHEST BtOOER FOR CASH Lot 10 o1 Tract 5MI at -n Oii a • r i INC,., a Calltarnl• cor por•t1•11, gener•lparlnerslllp. · T"I• lklalnan 1, condvc:tad by • (paya b,. •t time OI HI• In lawful map,._..., 111 bootl 144, P8l9t U awyer to advertise that going bankrupt 'will not TtOfl•,.,.. .,... lillltlMs• ..,.... '' Ao11a s. Mal\mOOO CJtf1I of ttw 118nare1 par1nen1119 mOMy °' IM United stata.> •t the and "°' ""'-"-~. l"Ker•
ed't'>' ll' h 1 •• OU••,.,_. P•,...•Y, lrvlN, ~ Thi• llal-1 •a fllecl with IM OltllletC-' Ann 1(11'19 not111 tront entranu to IM Oranoe ofOr•noeOM!tY, C:.lllOf'llla. &rm your Cr l . S &ppenng, 1Yof0r ..... ,StMeOIGalltornla"714. Counly Clerk ol Oranoe Courtly on Cllrlaa.ewUi Tl\lt atat .... nl was llled with lhe c-tyc-1-,lnlNCllyofSellla MAV I E ALSO KNOWN AS ....
I Tllh bulk lrantfer It aultJKt lo Marc II u, 1 .. 1. • Oftluly counly Cieri< of Oranga County on Ana, Ca llfomla, •II r1t lll. tll,. anO !ft. Trenton Way, C:-le ,.,.. .. , Celltomle
c;.fllornle u..,,_,.. ~, .. c.-. "1...a · '· HOOPU Aprll to 1"1 1are1t cenwY9'1 '° -110W llolcl lilY " "Ill • atrMt ..,_or-•
7 ----------=i============:i '-<llon •*-Pul>llPlad Orange CO.al o.ny Piiot, :·0· IK "-• PltMSa u-r .. io OMO of Trua1 l11 lM11'41P*r· •lt natlon la ttwwn, l'IO warrMty I' TI>t ...-tY Is clnulllled In ..-•I Apr II 22, 1'1, !My •. 1>, 1M1 1116-41 .,:.~ P\ll>llihea or-C:-ll Oelly Piiot ty tltualH 111 .. io c-IY and Stele olvan •• '° lb com!Mt-... or c:er·
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
ltOTICll W Al"PUCATI09t "°. CNAM&IMOWet• .... l .. OP
ALCOMOUC HY ...... uc•••• T .............. ~;
JOACHIM & OAOMA• ... llTA
.... • ... .,.,. .. .. 0...-tlNnl Ak-..k ......, ... c-t ......... ., ..
ON SAi.• O•M•ttAL f PUILI
llATINO f>UClll, ..... , elcal>of ~ ....... .,._, •ttO, Hllftt
I lleedt_ Ctlftwlll• ..... ..... °' .... c:... Oelly ... ..... "'1 JI
PUBLIC NOTICE
=~11~": .:,•r: .. ·:~..:;~ PW!hMd 0r-. COest Delly Piiot, A.,ll n , 2t, Mey •• n. 1'11 , ..... ,: cle~·=.-:i ,71 feet of --t ltl.71 .. ~~~·~..,., ..nOar telct Oee4I ef Pf'IY~ .,..i1et a1141 .,_ -P\JBUC NOTICE Apr. 2t, 1Mv6, IJ, to, '"1 IOU41 PUBUC NOTIC"' f"t at Lot 7• OI Tr«I No, UJ. In IN Tn.1•1. "' r-of•..,....,.,. 411'9ull .. Nt *" c....,,.,. 11u11-•-.. -------------ir. clly tf c.u ,.,...._ _,Y of Or.,..., In IM tlMl .. llon• s.curecl u • ......,, noi .. cRaalC Cl.EANEltl e114I 5U ... •ICMtCOU•TOPTit4 PUBUC NOTICE •tale tt c;.lltornl•, HI* _, ,... henlof-eucut .. and oell••l'M '°
IO<•IH tit 4UO ..,re.lea P•rkwa,, IT&T4 01' CAUPOtlMIA POR 1'1Cn'10Ut IUSINIM carda41 Ill "°" It ,... 41 " Ml "" uMet•toned . wrltWn Declar .. len Irv'"', Unll .. ,..., CN!ly of Or.nee, THl()OUNTYOPOAA1t•I ~ITATQMllMl' cella_. """"-rtconla el ~-nee of Otfwll IM~ tor Sale, -
llM9,tf catlt.nlle 92714. Ill tM MMIH of Ille A#flc•tlon 01 fllCT TI I a T I tOIHll' Clllfof!llL wrlli.tl fllUte Of llffld1 M4I of ele<llel'I
TM Wiii lfllltiler wlll 119 CAIMUft'I-l'IUllDA l'ltlEDI Hl•RO fof ,.... ruJ.ai::A.,::::::s ~.:...~~net..,._, a re clol119 Tiit t""4 ...,_end etMr Ceftl• to ee11te tM ~ '° wll MH
_ ... 911 ...... lflet1tf\lleyefl!Uy, t• Cf\•n•• her n•m• •• $HERi TM, ....... " • ...,_.,. 41411119 HARIOR AMO MAC AltTHU• m1111 ·~ ..... If MY ... .,.,.., ptOptrlY to sell•fV Nici .......... ltll, ClllMa -y be filed el WILL.$ f'IUID•NHltO. ...... •tlOCI •T•t 1·•-P'-rly ~r11*t ..... It PllrP911ed al'ld 11\ertefter-llMlflllflM <• .... l'AltOOIAMK,H.A.,ltc.-DeNrt-, CAMIMO,A;..... .._.r;:'R~~ON $0f'fWARE COM· irvlM c;.~ami4 H•I• AYlll ... , la lie: 1010 Wltat Wllten $t. Cotta Nlclnotltaefllf'MCf\llf14ltfele<llell ..
.. -.. ~·i...!!'..,_Or .... ,,·,~. ~ OltM•TOIMOWCAUH PAHY, -•• WI•-. c.111 .... ....,,p w~'""'" ... ,,.. .. ,catlfeml•. MRa<1t1tclMJ_., •• 1.u11Mtt. _.. • ....._ -~-· ""'•OA flR1toaM11Ro hevl"' c .i1tor111e,_,, A-1rv!M Celffentle"7M TM"'*"...,.._ Tl"lllWe •1tc1e>m .... '°*"' ._. '"",... , .. ..._ .. ..ac:ll, ClllMy ef Otellft, .._ of fl!M llef ~ If\ h a11ove M • ........ H. Mec..._rrle, tlO w. """' D ' Oar,. II IUtl Hele ,,.., t1•t11V .., _, ..,.,ectlleN tf MIO Oftlelal ltK«ft, c.t....._ """ """"' • Ml4I .-.kMll ,,..,. w111an,cm.-.a,CMlflnoll•_,, •-1~ ~mw u. •trett .-.. ..w ..._, -talcl Ml• w11111e -· -.,...,. All, ..... ,,... ............... Wt Inf' ....... ,....., ~._... " ..... \AUii a.tY•i UN ...... VelNy ... i., I • lllMen ,., .. H••• MtleMllell, If.,,,,,.._ henllft. ···-"'., w•NlllY. ~.,, .... M*W., h *'!It ... ef Me'f, I.,, UHta llor -f,..fft l'•t•DA Orfw , .......... Celifln!le 91m .A-lmM ~9'1714 S.141 .... wlll .............. •"'*It ...... ,...,.... "tie, il4Ail$fll
llflltM .. _... .,...,_ .... ~ f' R I ID I Ha IR G I e SH I RI LeW. a . aetyW, '1841 'hi.. Wll~ J° 11'1""'911 IN'ft M ... <-ti....,.,_.,, ......... fW IM-tfl(u--W PiT Ille .. -~-.... 1--,ln~ FRllOl!Nll"°' $tr"1.,~c:.itfenNtlJU .A-ltvllle·c.m.n.1·'27M !MIM,,......... Ulla,........ ~IHI""" el -.-..<tl
'99, ... ( ........................ IT IS Hl•UYOROEltlOtlloettll UfM H-M9(°"9frle ...... Oif•t r .. : Crary, 1Ut1 H•le ---~lnC~'--Cll« ..,..,eu.ee,ot 1,___,_..._
..Cllll_llUll..... .. ........ MllCll ... ~lk .... ,.,_.....,..._Ill M141 IMtl« • •ee11 ..... ---... '.., .. A-INN ~at2't4 8Ma ...... el1MT,,.... .... ltlla Ml4I ................ ....,_..,II f11¥,
T ~"'·~--.. tr&Mt••M"' .. 01u""'-t .. ,.., ....... ~~"'~... Je<ry "',,._, 11111 "·........ ,..-., ""'--· -" ... trWt•~'Y .... 0••0flrwt, ..,.,.-..... ~tfT .... Tiie .......... .---...... Ill -..,_ -Alc!IN!k 9ww ... CIMrot. ti tM C:-. C........ i.t .... et 1t1 A_,..,.. 'Valley, C9ilftntle,._. A-I,.,. Qtlfwlll;tT114 ,.y tfle ,_...,.. "'1ne:IMI -· ef IMt, <Mrtet 9"41 ......... el ttlit ...._IC! _..., te,.,. ........... .,.~....,_, .. , C1¥k c... °"" w..c,..,... Me. ,...,., ,._•CM•'·*' s.... cu~ c. A...,_ ,..., H•te the111teteewe4l..,ta1c1 DM41 .. Tn.t Trwt".._.,..._o ... unrua~ 111000C MIMll Wl' 11. LfO., IOVTMCQASTotlfTISHY, -=t=••_....,._.._..., c;.tt,_.,.,enJ-a1 IMt,fltfle,_, A-LR~c:.llferlff-.. A-IMM ~"714 .. wit! aM, ... tlwltf\lfltemt ....,_ Nie will .. Mtft .. Mey II,'""•• &:.. ..... ....., ._. ,.._....,, ".,._ ......_ ~-., Tf • IM .,.. .,..... , .. ef '9:• &.fft., • -llf14I ...,.. " w1l11.m P *9111 ., .... ,,.. weiw If• 0....... 111 Hiii ..... '""" ~ ''*' 1• 14 14 tefWtll ll:IO A.Iii., M IN INln ....._ • ..=:-... ~~ 1,.(, -.... Or. atv~a Wlln. tta ltftH ~ ~ ":;,:-..=• ::.1 ~~ e:.=-.-.":t:-.:z A-,~~~~ A.,.._i:r::-r:~~ =· ~=.: :.::.: .. ~ .. -: =1.:'A!.~O::.~ ,.., L ........ "*.!:..!. ...... ,. ·~~· ... ~wv ... Unit .. ,..,,,,.., .... CM ..... ..,,.; ltlafWllltf ........... .,.,efltllt ~It _,..., It<~•--..... · • ....!';. IMM c':.:·mt• H•te .. ,.... ""' .--i -.:;:.=..-... .. ....... _ ·---... ... "' -,,,... 4._... 111' UlltWl'llty OfM, or•r .. ,_. .. 1.-. Ill .. Ori,... •• • • ' I .. TM ~ ... , ....., .. 0..-.. .,.,_. .. .. ....... ., _ ........... _..~Dr........ .,., •••. C.llf•r9"• .. ,,,;a.rt• ~la.llY .................. ,_ ..-.i:.:~.. A~~I .. ~~~: .,. Trwtt ... ......_ H.CUIH.,.. *' .... """"" ............. .. ~-==--· .,... ......... -,... .. ~ -. -. ...... _ ,..~ ~ HCO .. l'lla Weftl, .... lllet H 141 TIWe .....,_. .... , .... ""'-.. T"-1 J, Atllle,, 16"1 Kall llftrff .. llW "'*""'*' I Wflhllll llllWelt, I• ....... .W ...... --.. -· .. -,.., ............. ...., ..... ~" ~ .. o.r-.. ,_, ..... _ .• ,....,~,... ~ ............. "'" ... ~"" c..o ................... .. ... .-w, ~ ~°"119fOJ .. c.te¥• '° .......... ,,,,,,_., C•ll,.,._, ...,....,_._,, i.rlf14•· .....-" .... ,. "· CMlt , t&Jta "•I• We,-•Wf'lall1Mllk•9f~ .,.,. .. __,, ..... .,.
ftil -.... ... .. " a.-.., m5 •· V..... OAflO: ... I~"" U1tf .-lltmS.. A.-""""'~...,,_. eM aleCUlll .. 11141. Tile w•11111a• Dint:-· 11, .... . ~::..~-~~os.I ........... ~~ •• =·~ IMIC8W .... 4• UIDY&CWll8" TMe,..._le~-..... C.utH.-NetlCatfOel..iteM '___. ....
a..i:--"'!"I,... .., ....... .,,,... ".., ....,..;.._...__ .. __ 1_ JUGOaa..nea .,, s ... -""" .. ...,...-. ••,!1!"~1!!..~"" .. , ·=-~Me ., ~ ,..· ~'----. -W..alOllC:OUaT ......... oi-.-...... Wllllll'll J . ll'IUMea c..-"., _,_..,. •-·-.......,.., ' ·~--..._ TU•AY,OW_.ft... ...... O-•f!W1Nr • _._. • __.. ........ , '9a.,9IO&~TOll u.s........... Tlllt ....,_ -fllM.,..... t t -''n,,"" _L__.;,.O.la•
YD,..,.....111111 ._,,, .....,.,.. ...._... ....... OlllW c:-tw Oen 9f °' .... c-., • llULT"f"1'\..ICDttP!Ut't.LTD. = ... ................. .....--.c.-....... ...,.... .. .... ,......... ~• .,.. .. 1.0S•--' PMIMI llWLV . ...._ "' ~*'Ve CMel o.l!t.!"'..._ ,....._.Or .... CINI 011*f...... ,,_......_ c..Dllll'f ....._ ._. .... 0.-. ..._ .. ., ~.... 11'11911.,. Or._ CIMI Ditty...._ ............. ill .... Mi,
""""_. __ _. _____ .._.._......;~ ••tMI •• U,U,.1',*tl."'1 tt1Mt ...... q,a.,n,*t~T tl,...t °""""·*"''" .. "" ... Mr'. tlf,11,lWI 1-... Mfttll, ....... 1 ~
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... H /F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
. .
r•iu THE ORANGE COAST. A ¥alue-Pac~d M.onthly Feature ~ the
~~ INFLATION FIGHTERS Dally ~If an:4~~7~1fe
171 4175 ... 1216
C714t I H-1113
Reserve Your
Space Earty
For The Next
Coupon Coper
section which wll be
published on June 10th
rt.aw c:oll
Debbie Kosmin
for spoc• ... ~atioft •s.oo oH
642-56 71, .... 330
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NOER THE EXPERT DIRECTION OF
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IALTl lltlCHtlON
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427 E 17th St
Costa Mesa
t)46-9371
N I CI ltlO'f'HHS
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627 Marn SI
HunlmQton Btiach
536-6539
,AC..C YllW ....... ", ...
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3500 Pac1t1c View Ortve
Newport Beach
~·2700
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4!M·!M15
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768-()933
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495-1776
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DEATH NOTICES
BOTKIN grandchildren, 10 gre11l made to St . Catherine's
JEAN BOTKJN, a resident grandchildren and 2 it.r~at Catholic Church, L~guna
or Cosla Mesa. Ca. since 194'7 g.reat-,randchlldren. V1s1ta Beach, ~a. or the C1!y or
when she moved here rrom lion will be held on Wednt!S· Hope. Directed by Sw1gard
Oregon. passed away on day May~· 1981 from 12:00 Funeral Hom e, C anal
May 4, 1981. She is s urvived noon to S.OOPM and Thurs· Fulton. Ohio.
by her husband Robert O day. May 7, 1981 all dll,Y
Botkin or Costa Mesa, ca: Re<'itallon or the Rosary wlll LANGZETTEL
Catholic Funeral Services be held on Thursday. May 7. ROSALIE J . LANGZET-
are scheduled ror Friday. 1981 at 7:00PM at the Baltz TEL. resident or Costa
May 8. 1981 al l :OOPM at the Bergeron Smith & Tuthill Mesa. Ca. Pass~ away on
Harbor Lawn Memor ial Chapel. Mass or the Resur· May 4, 1981. She 1s survived
Chapel with Rev. Father recllon will be held on Frt by 2 daughters, Darlene
Denis Lyons or St John the day, May 8, 1981 at1o·OOAM Oun and Rene Jo Eddy
Baptist Catholic Church of· at St._ John the Baptist both or Costa Mesa. Ca., 2
nclatlng. Interment will be Catholic Church .with Father brothers Sam Lauara of
at Harbor Lawn Memorial Denis Lyons om clnt1n1. In· Calabasas, Ca. and Eugene
Park. Services under the terment wiU follow at the Lauara of Nevada, 2 sisters
direction or Harbor Lawn· Good Shepherd Cemetery, Mrs . Mildred C. Ladoma
Mount Olive Mortuary of Huntington Beach. Ca and Ma J . Lauara both of
Costa Mesa 540-SSM Services under the direction W b 1 t t I e r , C a . a n d 3
ciNDEL . or Baltz Ber1eron-Smllh & arandchUdren. Rosary wllJ
KATt"''RINE T CINDEL Tuthill Westcllfl Chapel be recited on Wednesday,
u.:. • Mortuary of Co ta Mesa. May 6, 1981 at 7:30PM and possed away on Ma)' •. 198l 64&·93'71. Mass of Christian Burial will
In Santa Ana, Ca. She was 8 be celebrated on Thursday,
resident of Costa Mesa. She f'Yt: May 7, Ul8l at tO :OOAM, both
was born ln Hun1ary on BEATRICE J . FYE, resl· at St. John t he Baptist
November 25, 1118$. She Ir. dent of South LaaU11a, Ca. Catholic Church. Interment
s urvived by 3 chlldren, Paned away on Monday, wlll be at Good Shepherd
Katherine Piccolo of Costa M•y 4, 1981 at the aae or 80. Cemetery Huntll\$ton
Mesa, C• .. R.oae Heinineer She was the director of Beach, Ca. Frtend1 may call
of t.•auna Be.ach, Ca. and aervkes for Coast lnterna. at Pierce Brotbera BeJI
Johtt ClndeJ of Oreaon. • slss llonal. lnc. and • member of Broadway Mortuary on t•r In V111oslovla, St. Cathel'lne'a Catholtc Wedoeactay, r,tay e. 1181
ltii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;:;;=;;::=:;iChurch. La,auna Beath, C•. from l :OOPM to s:OOPM • N• ~·t Sht 11 i urvlved by htr Pierce Brotbara Bell -.ftlii• 1 CW::"' e_arent.t Mr and Mrs. Wllll• Broadwty Mortuar)' dll"OC· P'Y•. 3 ataten aod a brothera ton · ~7431 Mau of Chr11U1n 8url11--· -------
wu htld at St. PhlUp le Jam .. CaUlolic Church In Canel f'Qttao, Ohto. In u .. ________ ... of nOWft'I ckimitiom ma1 ~
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... where the pro .. lem1 •••
Why co11tertd w11n proDlems such 1s
noosebrea~1110 d1gg111g 1umpmg on vour
Oue61S bark1f'IO and m111y "10fe ""en lheM
P<Oblems can be so1vea by our c1n111e
l:M!l'lav1or 1pec111t11'
F0< a FAEE •••lueUon at NO obllfaUon
J .C.'S
1REE
SERVICE
Press access ruling a,sked
SAN FRANCISCO ((AP) -The state Supreme
Court has been asked to decide the constitutionali·
ty of a 109·year-old state law that permits a defen·
dant to bar the press from a preliminary hearing.
"The statute deprives the public of First
Amendment rights to access to a judicial proceed·
ing," Ed Davis, representing the San Jose Mercuy
News, said Tuesday .
The preliminary hearing is an accusatory pro-
cess and "there is no right" of the public to.attend
it, said Harry J. Oelizonna, representing San Jose
City Councilman Alfred Garza, accused of briber')'
and state income tax evasion in a grand jury in·
dictment. ·,
The Mercury News was barred from coveri~
Garza's preliminary hearing and filed a lawsuit
challenging a defendant's right to close a bearing~
The preliminary bearing Is a process in wblf#l
a magistrate decides whether the prosecution has
enough evidence to bold the defendant for trial.
The preliminary bearing In the Gana case,
which Involves three other defendant.I, already has
been completed and a lrial date ls beint assll.Ded
Thursday in Santa Clara County Super1o~ Court
The question before the hi1h eourt lri~~I
marks the first time in recent history that the body
has been asked to conalder the validity of the lBn
act. ~ •
Davis, who said the newspaper wu acUns ¥
"s urrogate lo the public," was fighting for
something of "signUlcant constitutlon•j
·dimension." He conceded to the court that t~'
news media bas to be more rlgbl Utan the public lji
the case ln q,uestton . .:i
"The public has a compe1Un1 ri&bt to examW.
how the govemmel\t functions . . . lt la fallacl0!,11
that every Ume there Is publlc.lty, the defendant ti
deprived of his constitutional rt'9'ta." !
· Davts went on, "The rlCbl to ex.elude 1raa
and public from a preUmlnary bearln• abobkt • determined by a ma1istrate'' and not t.bt defeo.
(!ant.
DeUionna said the public t1 not apr.om1Uc1lb
prlvlle1ed to attend prellmln&rJ heert.,. beeaute
it la 1 process where unproved acc .. Uou are
aired. •
··~ la"°d.ry" l.J draatd CRll durtlaj a pre-
Umtnll1 ....,tq and OM pubdc ma, be berred W
tM ct.lease, he said.
' \
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' '
r
. lllilll IEACH/llUTH CIAIT
.llllJ ...
. WEDNESDAY,
#MV6, 1981
FEATURES
MOVIES
TELEVISlON
86
88
89
., '
I \ I
Alcoholism costs
business plenty:
$60 billion
See Bll
Laguna supports S. L~una
~
annex
81 JOHN NEEDHAM
OtllleDMty .........
Laguna Beach City Council
tr}embers have 9lven verbal sup-port to a group of South Laguna
fesidents who would like their
pnincorporated area annexed to Uie city.
However, the council said
Tuesday it would not take direet
action or sponsor the annexa-
tfon, leaving it up to the people
ll•ing in the county-owned area
to work toward joining the city
through the petition proceaa.
The areas included In the an·
nexalion proposal are the
Treasure Island Trailer Park.
Hobo Canyon, Lagunlta and
Blue Lagoon, representlnc
almost all the land between
Laguna Beach's southern border
and Aliso Creek.
Annexation sponsors say
South Laguna residents are tired
of county decisions that have an
adverse affect on their com-
mun1ty.
'Dbe sponsors admit that tbe
impetus beblnd the annexatJoo
move la poulble construction ol
h•o blgb-riae, time-share con-
dominiums that would replace
266 mobile homes on the 27 -acre
Treasure Island Trailer Park.
Tbty also oppose a 700-unlt de·
velopment planned for Hobo
Canyon, above the Alpha Bet.a
shopplne plaza In South Laiuna.
Treasure Island resident
Roger Derryberry said that by
jotnlo1 La1una Beach, city
hel1bt ordinances which prohibit
new structures of mqre than 311
feet would quash the building
projects.·
But council members warned
tbe South Laguna residents at
Tuesday's meeting that the proc·
ess or joining a city ls a long
one, and annexation may not
come in time to stop develop·
ment.
Councilman Howard Dawson
said there are 14 steps to in-
corporating. "By the time yoo
finish with all the hearings, all
the projects will probably be
done and I'll be dead," Dawson
said.
He added that if the annexa-
tion move was an attempt to
control or stop development, it
wouldn't work.
A preliminary report prepared
by City Ma nager Ken Frank~
said annexation would have no
adverse affect on the city's abili-
t y to provide services to the
area.
The Local Agency Formation
Commission will be looking at
Laguna"s sphere of influence in
the South Laguna area as part ol
a May 13 routine review.
Council members adopted a
,resolution to be forwarded to
LAFCO statln1 that the cit)'
wants the unincorporated areas
proposed for annexation to be in-
cluded in Laguna's sphere of in·
Cluence.
~· Lagunft condos hacked, 3-2
CENTER OF ATTENTION -Archbishop of Canterbury
,Robert A.K. Runcie is surrounded by members of Viet·
. namese Children's Choir after they performed Tuesday dur-
ing his stop at St. Anselm's Episcopal Church and Refugee
Center in Garden Grove. 'lbe archbishop is on a three-week
tour of the United States .
Park nearing reality·· Sewer fee
increase OK' d
for Lagunans Architect's plans approved
Preliminary plans for a 10·
acre hilltop park in Arch Beach
R elghts received approval or
"*te Laguna Beach City Council
Tuesday night moving things a
uep closer for the community's
tlrst public park.
Council members unanimous-
~ endorsed preliminary plans
for the community's first public
park drawn by Fullerton
l;andscape architect Randy
)I eyer.
The park will front on Balboa
Avenue overlooking Aliso Viejo.
. The Aliso Viejo Co. is dedicat·
tng the 10-acre parcel to the
county in exc hang e for
permission to build homes in the
&,2t9·acre Aliso Viejo develop·
sne~t.
·~ With the exception or a small
ane-lot volleyball court, the
, Ugbtly·packed Arch Beach
Heights community has no open
recreation area.
-The Moulton Meadows park
proposal presented by Meyer
t.atures three ll1hted tennis
courts, a children's play ap-
paratus area, restrooms, a ball-
mile exercise trail, basketball
court and several picnic and vis-
ta areas.
The final design may include
the undergrounding or utilities
and installation of sidewalks
along Balboa Avenue.
City Manager Ken Frank said
he believes the park improve-
ments can be completed for
about $380,000.
George Fowler, the city's
r ecreation and social services
director, said funds for the park
will come from developer fees,
state park bond money that bu
been set asi~e . and other
sources.
The landscape architect will
now prepare final park plans
and bid specifications, teotaUve-
ly slated for the council in early
July.
The date is tentative because
the cowicil must await an en-
vironmental report beinl pre.
pa red by the county.
...,,.._
Propoted acttuU~ arecu at
Moulton MeadOwl Park.
Ridgeline access road OK'd
Six-month construction period seen in Arch Beach
Construction on the Iona·
:awalted emer1ency fire acceaa
1road Jolnln1 the Top of the
World and Arch Beach Het1hts
f()mmunWel lo Laau.na Beach
wlll bellD later tbU montb.
In a unantmoua vote T1Mlday,
Site coundl awarclld a '190.1'2
con1tructlon contract to the
Grttntb Co. of Irvine. TM 12·
.foot·wlde road will be built on
-· ~ betWeeD tbe two •mmmaiUet.
City Manqer Ken ll'rank said
UM roed lhouJd be complet.d by
•ld·A...-t, In time for the Sep-
t9mbli'-Ottober fin MUOD.
fte Ortftl4lt ~ IUbmiu.d UM
lowest ol 11.x bldl which raqed
·from a hilh of $847 ,013.
TotaJ coats for the project wW
be ta'M,8116. Jill)tt ot lt wW bt
llnaneed by ted••• revenue-1ba1'in1 tunds.
Wltb ~pletlon ol th ftn •·
ce11 toacl, a moratorblm OD
, bulldlna ln Arch Beach HtlOU
will be lifted. Tbe CltJ Coandl enacted the moratorium ...,...
years aao becauae of limited
*"!ert~ acceu tot.be .,...,
'l'op ot the World bu a ft.re
station. A rtdcellne ftn road wW
allow emersmcy equtpmtnt to •tt to~~ ..... Arell ......
Comp)«MG ot Ute !'Md will
mean an Htlmated as tO IO
pro~ onen wM an watt.
la1 to tH&Ud bom11 lD Arcti
Beacb HeUbU cu beatn Ill">
ceea ... tbl&.~.
BJ STEVE IUTCllELL °' .. ...., .......... Laguna Beac h prop e rty
owners will begin paying Sl0.50
per month for sewer service
beginnint July 1 as the city
scrambles to raise funds for cost
o.,,:errum at its coastal treat-
ment plant.
Laeuna Beach council mem-
bers approved the sewer fee in·
crease, a Sl ~rcent hike over
the former ,6.50 per month
char1e, . Tuesday. The increase
will tint show up on property
tax'bllls due Dec. 10.
The dty la one of seven public
partners In the Aliso WaJer
Manaaement Agency, a regional
•1ency that ls con1truclln1 a
$100 mUlloo sewer system for
eouth Ora.nee County.
A cout.i treatment plant in
All16 CaQyon baa suffered COil
overnm.a and dealp deflclen·
clea, accordln1 to A WMA of-
ficlala.
Tbe contractor butldlna the
maltl·mWioll dollar facility ••YI
deal... problems have caused
delays Md major chan1ea in the
project.
He la>" be can't do the Job few
tbe SU.I mil1loo bid price, and
bu IMed tor Slt.a mlllicD to com,.._ the plant. La,_. Beach mast, pick up
about St mWlon of that locr .. M,
alODI wttb nearly .-,tOO for ,....
patr of a plpellat that waa
damaced durlnlf •••t year'• ltorml.
A WllA wlll be bon'owlq tM money from • bank •Ul It HD ftoata.._...._,atyM....,.
Ka J'rals aaJd Tu_.•J.
Memwblle, be said, tbe dtJ
•lll be lavut11at1a1 ti••
poullllllQ ol taklq ..... acUCID •••llllt \'TN Coatolfd•t.d ot .,,.... ............. ftnD tlaat
.......... tJle coutal treatmmt
plul; .Web la onJ1 IS percent
complad. · ...... ... the ctt.r • 'lbould
1et bJ for two or t.bne yean
wlU.out uotber lncrtaH," ln
... ...... I
600-unit Treasure Island
project se-nt to supervisors
BJ GLENN SCOTT tried very diligently to find a
Of .. M1y,_,_ center point."
A proposal to r eplace the Syfan said occupants will be
Treasure Island Trailer Park in allowed to stay at the "lodge''
South Laguna with two multi-from 2 to~ wee.ks per year.
story, time-share condominium Commissioner W\lliam Mad-
structures was approved Tues-Dougall stronely supported the
day on a 3 to 2 vole of the rezoning under the new condi-
Orange County Planning Com-lions which be said were made
mission. possible through negoliatioDB~· The controversial project now Supervisor Thomas Riley's o .
goes to the county Board of fice. MacDoueaJI is Riley's
Supervisors for consideration. District appointee on the com-
No bearing date has been set. mission.
Applicant Bernard Syfan's; "I never could have gotteb
plan originally was to bwld a that 100-unit reduction on my
600-unit, 24·sfory terraced build-own," MacDougall said after
ing at the coastal site. After the meeting.
months or delays and a final Commissioners A.E. Woodeii
compromise worked out with and Charlotte Mousel also su~
Sou th Laguna r es Id e n t s, ported the rezoning from a CO~·
however, the proposal is for two binalion or four uses lo th~
terraced towers 10 to 11 stories tourist-recreational-commercial
high with a maximum 500 units. use.
Sixty of the units will be set Commissioners Al vin Coen
aside to relocate trailer park and Irv Pickler opposed the a~·
residents who lived in the park lion, however, claiming the two
before May 1977. when de-towers would be out of place ib
velopers announced construction the quiet setting. Pickler said
plans. possible traffic congestion aloQi
Other trailer owners will re-the Pacific Coast Highway was · to S8 not adequately addressed. ce1ve up ,000 each to aid in The commission included a relocation. condition that the two buildin'5 R esidents of t he 266-unit wlll be phased with a three-year
trailer park have not given up span between building permit is·
their seaside setting without a suances. The first buildings
fight, though. Ellen Winterbot-must be in operation for a year
tom, a lawyer hired by the before work can begin on the
tenants' association, told com-second stage.
missioners Tuesday the so· That condition was added d .
called tlme·share lodge would be ing Riley's negotiations with
"an edifice to what we believe South Laguna Civic Associati
would be bad planning." . as a means of gauging the pr
The tenants have maintained ject's impact oo traffic and
throughout the hearings that neighborhood.
their homes represent a bastion Syf a n 's architect, Alvi
or needed affordable housing Wie hJe of South Lagun ,
'along the deve loping South claimed that objections abo
County coast. the structure sizes are not meri .
But Syfan argued that his ed. He said the design, with
motel-like use provides just broad base below the higbw
what the state Coastal Com-growing gradually narrower at
mission wants: public access, the top, will reduce the feellnc
view corridors and• no perma-that the buildings are high rises.
nent private homes. Commissioners set the mu-
" It is not possible to satisfy all imum height of the buildinJs at
these desires," he said. "We've 97 feet.
Lawsuit dismissed
A lawsuit which alleged that
Rep. Robert E. Badham, R-
Newport Beach, distributed mil·
leading political advertisine in
his 1976 primary campaign has
been dismissed in Orange Cowtty
Superior Court.
Judge Luis Cardenas, acting on
a motion by lawyers for Badham,
ruled that the plalntitrs in the
case, including fellow GOP can-
didate Harry Jeffrey, had faUed
to bring the legal action to trial
within five years.
The suit was filed in April, 1976,
by Jeffrey and bis campaign co-
chairman, Helene Hollinpworth.
It claimed that a political
brochure put out. by Badham, •
California state assemblyman at
the time, sou1bt "psycholOlical
advantage" by lmplyin1 that t.lie
Newport Beach lawmaker
already was a House represer\-
tatlveseeking to stay lnofflce.
Jeffrey and Ms. Hollingsworth
claimed the brochure was a mll·
representation of Badbam"s
status and violated pro•isiom
the C alllornla Elections Code.
Council roundup .r
A
The following actions were taken by the Laiuna Beac
City"'t:ouncll Tuesday night:
nRE ROAD -Awarded a contract for $180,142 to GJ
fith Co. of Irvine to construct a mile·long emergency fire a -
cess ~d between Top of the World and Arch Beac
Heiahti.
SEWER FEES -Approved an increase in sewer fl
for L•IUD• property ownen from M.50 per month to $10.
-a '1 percent bike -that will appear annually on propert
taxes. I
ANNBUTION -Verbally 1upported, but woukt nqt
lU•*-una.aUon of a portton of &Nth Laaun• lnto the ett
Said 1ueh a move would be economically feulble f
La1una Beach. '
unGVAllD ll.BADQllOTSU -Encloned a
that would see llfepard ulOdattoa flnwe and
own beadquarten atop MWr pa-p station .t II*
Park.
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•W:P:UC 0% • • ••• 0 0 0 0 0 0 ••• ., •
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 6, 1981
. Coastal
confession?
BACK AT HOME BASE: One thing nice about scurrying
around the countryside, wiUy-niUy, for a few days is that you
can get away from a couple of things. Like the telephone and
bill collectors.
AJas, you must sooner or later return to productive labor.
Or at least make it look productive. Just look at this pile of
clippings on my desk that stacked up.
Here's a fascinating one out of the Washington Post. It re·
counts how recently, former
Vice President Spiro T .
Agnew's one-time personal at~
,,....'\ torn ey a ct u ally testified
-JO_M_M_U_R_P_ff_lil-f-~'1 against him in a civil lawsuit.
, II '~ THE LAWYER, GEORGE
W. White. created somewhat of
a stir when he told the Annapolis court that Agnew admitted to
him that he took kickbacks while in public office.
White, in his testimony, quoted Agnew thus:
"It's been going on for a thousand years. What Jerry and
Bud told you is true. Matz is grossly exaggerating the amount
of money involved. He only gave me $2,500."
You have to admit that sounds like eood old Agnew. He
w..as...alway.s accusing somebody of exaggerating something.
NormaJly, attorney White would have never been able to
testify against his former client, wider the cloak of attorney.
client relationships. if Agnew hadn't first started blabbing
about his plight in a book.
THAT CAUSED THE JUDGE to rule that the sanctity of
the attorney and his client had been wiped away. He ordered
the lawyer to testify.
The little fascination here was that White claimed in his
Agnew. with some admirers, in Nnuport during Nucm yeaTI
testimony that Agnew's confession came in a conversation
right here on our very own Orange Coast.
White said the conversation took place in F ebruary of 1973
in Newport Beach. ·
This stretches your memory back a few years.
THUS FOR THE SAKE of pure research (which Agnew
used to allege no news hack ever did), the old files of this
sterling journal were pulled out. The big headlines of
February 1973 for our region involved a heavy series of
rainstorms. A lady from Huntington Beach named Wyn
Sergeant was drawing ink because she had assertedly mar·
ried an Indonesian cannibal. News of the returning Vietnam
POWs was heavy.
But then on Feb. 5, there was ~n announcement that
President Nixon was planning his first.visit to San Clemente
s ince re-election. Press Secretary Ron Ziegler announced a
cancellation the next day. Then Nixon left for San Clemente on
Feb. 8.
SPIRO AGNEW ARRIVED in Newport Beach after an
eight-country Asian tour and set up lodgings Feb. 9 at the
Newporter Inn. He met and reported to Nixon the next day, on
Saturday.
Then the vice president departed for Palm Springs to play
a little golf with Frank Sinatra.
Did Agnew make his admission to attorney White during
his brief one-day stopover in Newport Beach?
IF SO, IT WOULDN'T be the first scandal lo rock that ad·
ministration that had its seeds in Newport Beach.
. Remember Martha Mitchell? She claimed the administra·
lion bullyboys held her pri.soner in Newport.
There sure was a lot happening around here in the Nixon
years.
More millionaires now
-thanks to inflation
WASlllNGTON (AP> -Inflation
may be pinching pocketbooks of
many Americans, but it's also ln·
creasing the number or people who
earn more than $1 million a year.
Figures released by the lntemal
Revenue Service show the club isn't
all that exclusive anymore.
Those for 1978, the most recent
available, show that 2,041 Americans
filed individual federal lax returns
with acljusted gross incomes of more
than $1 million.
The number is undoubtedly higher
by now, with rislna prices and in·
come from the last two years of
double-digit inflation pushing more
people into the millionaire bracket
deslrnaline the wealthiest of the
wealthy.
The 1978 fi1ure was actually a bit
less than the 2,092 estimated by the
IRS last June, but it WU still ....
above the 1,776 reported for 1977.
While t.bo&e taxpayen were report·
inl incomes averagin1 Just over $2
mllllon, 524,071 other Americans filed
forms 1howln1 that they either earned no income ot their loaes ex-
~ed "hat money they dld make.
People at thole extremes,
however. flied fewer than 1 percent
of the •.7'7 mUUon returu which IRS
•tlmated It f'9Nived for 1'11 ta••· Total acijuated ll'OI• income for the
aatlon'• tu fUen WH tl.3 trillion, ut>
from $1.15 trillion In im, tb• JBS
t11ures Indicated. Those fl1urH
break doWJ> to an averaa• income of
$14,508 In 19'11, up from the IU,S'72 ol
1171.
M>out 35~ perce~ ol AIDerleane report.s HJ'lllDJI "l•HD llS,000
and $50,000 that year, with the big·
gest groups being the 12.7 percent
between $15,000 and $19,999 and the
9.5 percent between $20,000 and
$24,999.
There were 15.9 percent between
$10,000 and $14,999, slightly less than
22 percent between $5,000 and $9,999
and 24.8 percent under $5,000. That
left about 2 percent at $50,000 or
above.
Total taxes paid added up to $188.23
billion, an average of $2,740 each for
the 68.66 million Americans who had
taxable income. Taxes had avera1ed
$2,474 per return ln 1977, accordin1 to
the IRS.
Mllllonarles' taxes avera1ed
almost a mlllJon, too.L.!..ith the IRS
putting the figure at ,1ARJ,326 per re-
turn.
Judge affirms
picket rights
MARTINEZ (AP> -School
emptoyMt may picket the placea
where school tnaate.t do bwllnnl, a
Contra Colt.a Comaty Judee hu ruled.
Juclp David Dotaln lilted a ,.....
llmlnary Injunction the school dif,
Lrkt obtained to block the ptcketlnc.
P i c Ir e t t ru b e I an w hen
ne1otl1Uon'I broke down between
the Ptttabura Untiled School Dillrict
and UM CallfOl!nla School Employees A1socl~oa.
Huntington Beach
PLUS STORE
We sell first quality and discontinued
merchandise Crom Se ars Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoted a re the regular prices at which the
items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
20 Inch Craftsmen
Eftedhle Slf.'11
The Graduate
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
with correction
NOW s19499
SAVE s7ooo
Manual
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER
was
S6]99
NOW SSQ99
:ROTARY -
LAWNMOWER
wass219"
19pc. -=--~~..-,,,=-_,~"--..-......-. EASY FIND
HOME-SHOP
CENTER
NOW
516499
SAVE55%
SEARS
45LB.
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
ROUTER BIT SET
2129'J
s57es
Sold Separately NOW
s299s SAVE 47°/o
llunlington H<·a«h
90-IS i\rla m'
Adam" & Magnolia
(7141 96:1 2fi66
Over 1300 pea.
WINNIE THE
POOH
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was
s4999
NOW
s2500
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was s1799
NOW
sggs
·SAVE44%
STORE HO URS · .... hi ...... ,,.
•l __ .. , ........ :.
''"about
"war' <'rt•dit
s. ... ,11:~·· '''"'"'·
Cuisinart
at an unbelievable price!
Three models
Three days only
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 7.9
ALL WITH REVOLUTIONARY
NEW EXPANDED FEED TUBE!
SALE
DLC 1 OE ...................... "·"
DLC 8E ...................... t 4t.tt
DLC 7E ...................... t 9'.9'
also
Cuisinart Cookware
and
Cuisinart
Accessories
20%
off
LIST
130.00
185.00
260.00
Westcliff
(formlrty Rion)
1024 Irvine Ave
Newport Beach
·641-1111
t&
corona del Mar
3107 e. Coast Hwy.
'1MM
Harbor#View Center
(fonn«ly lmprill)
1614 San Miguel Or.
Newport Beach , .... ,"
••
' "
...
' ~
a J P t ;; s s a ss e s s ; p a ;.; ; ; o ; ? .¢ • a a a 0424 QC f W
..., ....
WEDNESDAY, May 6, 1981
FEATURES 86
IRVlll MOVIES 88
TELEVISION 89
flistoric or just nostalgic? Irvine Country Store may fall victim to road-widening project.
Irvine store battle ·lines drawn
City road-widening plans threaten county's historic complex;
other structures prime candidates for preservation
By RICHARD GREEN
Of .. Oelty ..... IUff
Is the 72-year-old Irvine Coun·
try Store a historic structure
worthy of saving at the tax·
payers' expense, or it is merely
a piece of nostalgia not worth
the cost of preservation?
"I'd say the store is more
nostalgic than historic," said
Irvine Councilman David Sills.
" [( you go to Europe, 72 years is
modern history. I'm nol inclined
to pay taxpayer dollars to pre-
serve it."
City road-widening plans
threaten the existence of the
store. a blacksmith's shop, an
old hotel and a bean warehouse
along Sand Canyon Avenue just
south of the Santa Ana Freeway.
''These structures constitute
excellent candidates for pres· ..
ervation," said Irvine Coun-
cilman Larry Agran. "By virtue
of our desire to move cars along,
we're apparently contemplating
the destruction of a signific&:lt
part of our heritage."
BadhaDlfreedof suit
by political foes
While battle lines are being
drawn on the City Council in the
opening stages of discussion
over preservation of the build·
ings, the city staff ls preparing a
request for money for a study to
determine the historic value of
the atructures. That request will
be considered by tbe council
Ma~12. A lawsuit which alleged that
.Rep. Robert E. Badham, R·
Newport Beach, distributed mis·
leading political advertising in
, his 1976 primary campaign has
been dismissed in Orange County
Superior Court.
Judge Luis Cardenas, acting on
a motion by lawyers for Badham,
ruled that the plaintiffs in the
case, including fellow GOP can-
didate Harry Jeffrey, had failed
to biing the legal action to trial
within five years.
The sWt was filed in April, 1976,
by Jeffrey and his campaign co-.
chairman, Helene Hollingsworth.
It claimed that a political
brochure put out by Badham, a
California state assemblyman at
BRIEFS
the time, sought "peychololical
advantage" by lmplyln1 that the
Newport Beach lawmaker
already was a House represen-
tativeseelting tostay in office.
Jeffrey and Ms. Hollingsworth
claimed the brochure was a mis-
representation of Badham's
status and violated provisions of
the California Elections Code.
The brochure in question read:
··For your Representative in
Congress ... Your State
Representative."
According to the suit, Badham
had unsuccessfully sought ballot
designation as a "represen-
tative" in the state legislature.
UC Irvine junior
gets scholarship
Vivian Mendoza of South El
Monte. a UC Irvine junior major-
ing in biological sciences, has
been awarded the Jean and
Daniel Aldrich Scholarship.
The scholarship, which will
.-pay a full year of tuition for Miss
: Mendoza, was established in 1972
; in honor of Chancellor Aldrich
and his wife on the 10th an-
niversary of bis appointment as
chancellor.
Tbe scholarship was awarded
on the basis of academic ex·
cellence, leadership and con·
tribuUon to the campus.
~ Irvine graJuaM
to Weat Poinl
Davis F. Taylor, a 1980
1raduate of University Hlth
School In Irvine, bu been ap-
• pointed to tbe U.S. llllltary
Academy at West Point for the
academic year beginnin« in July.
University High
·gets new coach
University i:'J: IAH a new
.Jfootball ~cb 7 aa 11-J.: old Riek Oartl1 taet over
foUowtnc Ted Mullen'• raiena·
tlon to beefa coacbint at Foot.bill
RJ1b.
Curtlt. an aa1i1tant in the
Taylor, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Sutherland, 19501
Sierra Mia Road, Irvine, was a
member of the track and cross
country teams at the high school.
Debate slated
on evolution
A debate pitting the creation
theory against the evolution
theory will be held at 7 p.m. Fri·
day in the Social Science Hall of
UC Irvine.
The public is invited to the
free-of-charge debate between
Dr. Duane Glab, profeslOI' of
Natural Sciences at Herita•e
College In San Diego; and evolu·
lion-advocate Dr. Krlabna
Tewari, professor of molecular
biology and biochemistry at UCI.
Irvine offering
free teminar
A Clty ol Irvine Community
Services seminar entitled,
.. Resolving Conflict Tbrou1b
Comqumicat.ioll, '' wW be Wf..ed
fr" to tbe pUblic at 7:• p.m. • • ., 11 in tbe MU and D'eftl room ot Deerftelcl Comm_,
Park.
"We certainly think itl his-
torical value Is worth exploring,
and we're supporting that ef·
fort," said Jerry Collins,
spokesman for the Irvine Com·
pany. which owns the buildinp
in questioo. "No one of course,
is in a position right now to
make a commitment one way or
another. We all must wait until
the study is in hand."
Irvine Historical Society
Science U CI talk
Dr. Philip Handler, president
of the National Academy of
Sciences, will give a lecture on
May 13 al UC Irvine entiUed,
"Science and the American
Future.''
The biochemist will talk at 8
p. m. 'in th~nce Lecture
Hall. Ticke andJer's lec-
ture are $3 general ad·
mission and $1 for UCI students.
representative Barbara Wiener
said she's confident such a study
would show that the structures
are worth saving.
"It's one of the most historic
places in Irvine," Mrs. Wiener
said. "It's the birthplace of com·
mercial Irvine. It's where an old
stagecoach line stopped along
the El Camino Real -the major
trail between Los Angeles and
points south."
Tbe battle shaping up over the
Irvine Country Store, which is
still In operation, and the sur-
rounding buildings is reminis-
cent of a fight waged four years
ago over preservation of the
Frances Packing House, an
oran1e packing house built at
Yale Avenue and the rallroad tracks in 1916.
On Sept. 1, 1976, the City
Councll ·decided by a 3-2 vote
that the old structure should not
be preserved because of pro-
hibitive renovation costs. Voting
against preservation were Sills,
Bill Vardoulis and John Burton.
Mary Ann Gaido and Gabrielle
Pryor wanted it saved. Mrs.
Gaido, Vardoulis and Sills are
still on the council.
. At the time of that vote, Sills
said "I'm not going to vote to
preserve somethi ng that Is
seven years younger than my
mother." sma now says that "the coun·
try store is a unique and in·
teresting store but I've been in
lots of them and I'm not inclined
to spend the taxpayers' money to preserve it.'·
''As far as the blacksmith's
shop across the street," be said,
''that thing looks like an old junk
heap."
UaJvqty pl'Oll'am for lite put
·two yeara, already baa bl• .tan
picked. l!'or detaila, IM Sporta,
, •• , Dl. "
The aemiur, apouond bJ tlMt
South eo..t Medical Center Can
Unit, 11 to txplore pattenl ot
commanlcatlon, tbe m ... :r u
lt reflecta Oil behavior a the
double b&nd.
Franlr Rob&nlon, Ph.D., 11 to
leed the Mllliftar at SI Deerwood
Wnt.Jntne,
.CINTD Of' ATTWNTION -Arcbbl1boj, of Canterbury
Robert A.K. Runcle 19 surrounded by members of Vlet·
namete °"ldren'• Choir after they l)eJ'formlfl Tuelday dur-.
Alcoholism costs
business plenty:
$60 billion . , .
See Bll
UCI to hike
student fees
$86 next fall
ceiling," Parker said, noting ~'! that these fees go in part to elt·
penses created by the new St
UC Irvine Vice Chancellor
William H. Parker said today
that yearly student fees will in-
crease next fall from $714 · to
about~ at the Irvine campus.
This jnC1;ease is necessary to
keep pace with inflation and will
have no effect on the uni·
versity's enrollment. which is
expected to remain around the
10 ,000-student level, Parker
said.
He pointed out that inflation
forces the university to pay
more and more each year on
teacher salaries, utility costs
and supply expenses.
The University of California
campuses don't charge tuition.
Instead, students pay registra·
lion and educational fees.
These fees diffet slightly from
campus to campus, but on
average they will increase about
$100 throughout the system next
fall, according to a recent an-
nouncement by UC President
David Saxon.
In addition to inflation. tight
federal and state budgets place
pressure on the University of
California to increase student
fees, Saxon said.
UCI Chancellor Parker said,
however, that reduction in state
and federal financial aid to stu·
dents wilJ have a greater effect
on private universities than on
public institutions like UCI.
He added that many of these
reductions are still in the pro-
posal stage and U the cutbacks
are adopted, their effect prob-
ably won't be felt immediately.
The University Of California
Regents set the educational fee
and establish a ceiling on reg-
istration fees. Local campuses
can then set their registration
fees under this ceiling.
UC l's new registration fee will
be ··a couple of dollars under the
Quake rattks
Seal Beach
An earthquake measuring 3.2
on the Richter scale rippled
througti Seal Beach Tuesday
ni ght but apparently caused no
damages or injuries, authorities
Nported today.
The quake, centered four
miles east of Seal Beach, oc-
curred at 10:57 p.m .. according
to a s pokesman for th e
Ca lifornia Insti tute of
Technology at Pasadena.
Local police said no damages
or injuries were reported. Of.
ficials of the Seal Beach Naval
Weapons Station likewise report-
ed no disturbances on the base,
which stores weapons for the
Pacific Fleet.
dent Union on campus.
Sclllptor
attacked
in Mesa
By JERRY CLAUSEN
OftlMD ... ,,.._.1'9ff
Costa Mesa welder and met.U
sculptor Ali Roushan was~tacked late Tuesday in a parki
lot to the rear of his Superi
A venue shop by three men ca .
ing an assortment of weaponj,
police said. '
Roushan, who suffered folJI'
head cuts, managed to fend offUie
men and later received stitches
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital.
The fiery Iranian immigrant.
center of a controversy over three
tall metal sculptures be raised#
front of his shop without final ci
planning and building depa
ment approval , said his af.·
sail ants all spoke Spanish.
He told police he had just
turned to his living.quarters at
rear of his shop, 1550 Superi ..
Ave .. when two well dressed~
panics knocked at his back door.
He said he couldn't understaftd
what they wanted but stepped iMo
the lot when they motioned for
him tocomeout.
A third man, Roushan s&ta,
came up from his back and
slipped a string around his throat.
'·I knew 1 was being attacked,
then," Roushan said this morn-
ing. "I didn't panic, I just started
fighting."
Roushan said he was hit several
tim es in the head with a gun,
later identified by police as a
simulated .45·caliber pellet gun,
before he tore it from one U ·
sail ant.
Pohce were called at 11: 30 p.m .
by residents of a neighboring
trailer park who heard Roushan's
screams for help.
Witnesses said they saw three
men pile into a yellow station
wagon and driv e north Qn
Superior Avenue as Roushln
stumbled from behind his shOJI.
later 1 Officers said they later found
the discarded gun, a flash light,
screwdriver. straw hat and
·blood, most of It from Rousban•s
head cuts. in the parking lot.
Roushan, known for his ruMlng
battle with city authorities, had
nothing but praise for police, their
promptness and their concern.
r"P ______ .,...,,..~--•-.v.-..,_.....+-.wr:-w_.., ... w..._.,..,._ ... w•-•--... •-= .. u,..o_u_....._ • .,.,..._..,. • .,.._U,..0-"*0 ___ ,.,.U_U_U_u-.w..._.u.._wro-..---u~---~-......----.------- -
I\
\
..
Coastal •
confession?
BACK AT HOME BASE: One thing nice about scurrying
around the countryside, willy-nilly, for a few days is that you
can get away from a couple of things. Like the telephone and
bill collectors.
AJas, you must sooner or later return to productive labor.
Or at least make it look productive. Just look at this pile o(.
clippings on my desk that stacked up.
Here's a fascinating one out of the Washington Post. It re-
counts how recently, former
Vice President Spiro T .
Agnew's one-time personal at-
r.a\ 'torney actually testified
,-0-M_M_U_R_P_H_IN_I __ ~ aga::i~A:;:::1 ~a:::E
W. White, created somewhat of
a stir when he told the Annapolis court that Agnew admitted to
him that he took kickbacks while in public office.
White, in his testimony, quoted Agnew ~hus :
"It's been going on for a thousand years. What Jerry and
Bud told you is true. Matz is grossly exaggerating the amount
of money involved. He only gave me $2,500."
You have to admit that sounds like good old Agnew. He
was alw~y~.accusin& s.omebQQ.y of e"ag~eratin somethi)lg._ _
- -orm lY," at orney \Vhffe wowa nave never en a ore to -~
testify against his former client, under the cloak of attorney.
client relationships, if Agnew hadn't first started blabbing
about his plight in a book.
THAT CAUSED THE JUDGE to rule that the sanctity of
the attorney and his client had been wiped away. He ordered
the lawyer to testify.
The little fascination here was that White claimed in his
Agnew, with some admiTers. in Newport during Niron yeora
testimony that Agnew's confession came m a conversation
right here on our very own Orange Coast.
White said the conversation took place in February of 1973
in Newport Beach.
This stretches your memory back a few years.
THUS FOR THE SAKE of pure research (which Agnew
used to allege no news hack ever did), the old files of this
sterling journal were pulled out. The big headlines of
February 1973 for our region involved a heavy series of
rainstorms. A lady from Huntington Beach named Wyn
Sergeant was drawing ink because she had assertedly mar-
ried an Indonesian cannibal. News of the returning Vietnam
POWs was heavy.
But then on Feb. 5. there was an announcement that
President Nixon was planning his first visit to San Clemente
since re-election. Press Secretary Ron Ziegler announced a
cancellation the next day. Then Nixon left for San Clemente on
Feb. 8.
SPIRO AGNEW ARRIVED in Newport Beach after an
eight-country Asian tour and set up lodgings Feb. 9 at the
Newport.er lnn. He met and reported to Nixon the next day, on
Saturday.
Then the vice president departed for Palm Springs to play
a little golf with Frank Sinatra.
Did Agnew make his admission to attorney White during
his brief one-day stopover in Newport Beach'?
p .
IF SO, IT WOULDN'T be the first scandal to rock that ad-
ministration that had its seeds in Newport Beach.
Remember Martha Mitchell? She claimed the administra-
tion bullyboys held her prisoner in Newport.
There sure '.Has a lot happening around here in the Nixon
years.
More millionaires now
-thanks to inflation
WASHINGTON (AP) -Inflation
may be, pinching pocketbooks of
many Americans, but it's al:io in-
creasmg the number of people who
earn more than $1 million a year.
Figures released by the Internal
Revenue Service show the club isn't
all that exclusive anymore.
Tbose for 1878, the most recent
available, abow that 2,041 Americans
filed indMdu•l federal lax returns
. with adjusted gross incomes of more
Uran $1 million.
The number is undoubtedly higher
by now, with rising prices and in-
come from the last two years or
double-digit inflation pushing more
people into the millionaire bracket
desi1nat.ing the wealthiest of the
wealthy.
The 1978 figure waa actually a bit ~ leH lhan the 2,0V'l eaUmated by the
IRS lut June, but tt waa still well
above the 1,776 reported for 1977. WbUe those taxpayers were report-infp::o'°" averaging just over $2
m , ~.071 other Am ericana filed 'orm• 1howln1 that the)' either earned no income or thel.J' louet ex-ceeded what money they did make,
Peop le a t t hose extr e mu, taowewr , ftled fewer thall 1 percent
oof UM •. 7'1 DiiUkJD retumt whleb JU
etUm..., It neel•ecl for 1"8 taw.
ToUI .u.iect "°'* income tor u.. uUQD•a11la fUen waa Q~ trWioo up
from si . .11 trilUoa lll 1m, u.. iu
fl1urt1 indicated. TboH flfllrtl
break down lo an aver11• lneome.of
'14,D ln 11'71, up from the '13,372 ol im .
A)oul 35~ percent of Am~eam
reported ea.mJn11 belwten 11$,000
and $50,000 that year, with the big·
gest groups being the 12.7 percent
between $15,000 and $19,999 and the
9.5 percent between $20,000 and
$24,999.
There were 15.9 percent between
$10,000 and $14,999, slightly leas than
22 percent between $5,000 and $9,999
and 24.8 percent under $5.t.~· That
left about 2 percent at ~.ooo or
above.
Total taxes paid added up to $188.23
billion. an average ol $2,740 each for
the 68.66 million Americans who bad
taxable income. Taxes bad averaged
$2,474 per return in.1977, according to
the IRS.
Mlllionarles' taxes avera1ed
almost a million, too, with the IRS
putting the fi1ure at $888,326 per re·
turn.
MARTI NEZ 'AP) -Sebool employees m•Y plcllet the placa
where tebool ~do buatnen, a
Contra Coeta ODlmly J...tce bu ruled.
J qd1e DaVta Dollin ~ a pre.
llminary lAjunC!tion tb• ldloGl db-trlct obtained to blodt UM Dick._.
Plcketln1 b e1all wben
ae10Uati°"8 broil• •own betwHD lbe PttUbufll Unlfied 8cbool Dlltrtct
and tbe Calli~• Scbool Employees
AaaoclaUoa.
NEWS FEATURES
Huntington Beach
PLUS STORE
We sell flrst quality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail and
Catalog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the
items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
20 Inch Craftaman
E ff ectlve 5/f.181
The Graduate
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
wit h correction
was S26499
NO·W s19499
SAVE s7000
.,,RClf.AlrL ..... ~--~-..................... c _
19 pc..._ ........... _
LAWNMOWER
was s21 999
SEARS
45LB.
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
ROUTER BIT SET
21292
s57as
Sold Separately
SAVE 47°/o
(6 ooly)
NOW
s2999
Craftsman
. .--. ~STANDARD
· ~ · ~ TOOL SET ~~i~~~ 133pc ~1; 0= SAVE •13100
Now $1359 ~~e;o~,.r~N1 OW ~~__E~, ~~~$24999
#43396 --
Manual
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER
was
S6]99
NOW SSQ99
EASY FIND
Hn MESHOf> -:.e~~
Over 1300 pcs.
WINNIE THE
POOH
MATTRESS
was .
s4999
NOW
s2500
SAVE 50%
was s1799
NOW
s999
SAVE 44%
lluntinglon R•·ac·h
94~5 Adam!>
,\dam!> & Magnolia
( 711 ) 96.3·2666
STORE HOURS · A~k ahout
S•·a r' 1·n ·dit
11lan~.
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Daily Pilat
WEDNESDAY, MAY 6, 1911
COMICS 04
OCC captured its second
straight baseball
CLASSI Fl ED 06 title Tuesday . See D3.
Bell hopes to return to Kansas '
• By ROGER CARLSON taken a beating, along with his
shoulders and thighs, when he fulfilled
his promise by rushing for more yards
than any freshman in Bil Etlht history.
special football shoes not with the
managers.
32 times in games.
Of ... o.My ,.... ....
Kerwin Bell, the former Ediaon High
football star who tore the Bil Eight up
as a freshman running back is finding
out the facts of life these da)'1 -as a
collegian, you're living in a lllb bowl.
The scene exploded into a verbal ex-
cbanse and the result was the team's
No. 1 back was sent away.
Will it become a give and take situa-
tion?
Especially, when sometbinl ls hap-
pening outside of daahtn1 for a
touchdown or picking up sqme of the
1,114 yards culminated in your firat col-
lege campaign.
"When I read about the accounts of
this in the papers in LaWTeoce, I felt
dumb about it," Bell said ln a telephone
interview this week.
"I need to talk to Coach Hadl <John
Hadl, the offensive coordinator> and ex-
pect to sometime this week," says Bell.
''I'm just going lo finis h out school
and see how things go. I hope to come
back here th.is faJI . · ·
Bell doesn't think so. ''I haven't real·
ly thought about that," says Bell. ''I'd
like to return because of the things I've
done as a freshman.
Th :i-9. 90-powid sensation for
KaASu Univ~a.U.y Dl4Wie a ~Lir r~aUy
when he was dismissed from the team
after missing practice, created when be
got into an argument with an assistant
manager on the practice field.
·'Something that small -it seemed
very uncalled for -on his part, and
maybe mine. too."
. What happened, according to Bell.
waa. Lbat-be unvad... aL1he. ctreu.in&-
q uarters and requested his shoes. But
his request was put off and after sett.ins
hls ankles and toes taped, found the
buses bad left for the practice field.
In the event the J ayhawu feel they
can do without Bell, the University of
Tuu appga..to.JM:..»cJl'uRLMm. _ _
"My mom and dad told me to han1 in
there and it's for me to decide. Fratlk
lSeurer >. my roommate, has said about
the same thing, to stick in and see how
things come up." •
Reflecting on the blowup, Bell adds!
Bell took teammate Frank Seurer's
car to the practice field, wearing tennis
shoes, and when he arrived, found bis
Bell revealed be wears special flak
shoulder and thigh pads, in addition to
the shoes. The special equipment is
needed to help absorb some or the
bumps and bruises an l·back sustains
during the course of a year when he ls
called on for carrying the ball 38, 35 and
_::_we b'ML.iJl ~r~ment the :'jr~ous
Saturday and I know tfiey mew aano
other shoes to wear. it really ticked m~
off. It was bad enough that I was late
coming down .
Kerwin Bell
It stemmed rrom the unavailability of
Kerwin's special shoes, shoes designed
to protect sensitive big toes, which have
"This is nothing that can't be worked
out. But, yes. I suppose things could get
(See BELL, Page DZ>
Baylor finding groove
Angels' DH is leaving April miseries behind him
8y EDZJNTEL
Of .. o.lfy,.... SUit
April showers bring May flowers.
For Angels designated hitter Don Baylor. that
pretty much sums up how this spring has come
and gone.
"It's a oew month. April's out of the way."
Baylor sai~uesday night as he gladly accepted
his first cha e to appear on the Angels post-game
show.
A season-long slump that brought the former
American League MVP to an emotional low and a
batting average of .056 as recently as last Friday
bas apparently willed.
BEFORE 35,6%9 FANS at Anaheim Stadium
Tuesday night, Baylor went three-for-four, drove
tn three runs and smashed his third home run in as
many nights to give the Angels a come-from-
behind 6-2 win over the New York Yankees.
Baylor, now hitting .118, believes that the
sto'm may have finally ended. It's time to
blossom. And with others continuing to struggle at
the plate, the Angels can use his fertile bat. ·•u I aet bot, I can carry this club," Baylor, an
11-yeir veteran with a lifetime .267 average said.
"Then, others will start to contribute too, like they
did tonight. ..
For the Angels, losers of their last three and
five of their last six before Tuesday, the victory
was a much-needed lift under the circumstances.
Bill Travers, returning to the mound after 11
d ays with tendinitis. started and threw a no-hitter.
UNFORTUNATELY, TRAVERS faced only
one batter. He walked Willie Randolph on four
pitches, none of them coming near the strike zone.
Manager Jim Fregosi paid Travers a visit after
the walk and sent him into the clubhouse.
However. from the third through the seventh
inning, J efferson retired 12 straight batters before
Graig Nettles singled.
Don Aase finished up to post his first save of
the year with 211 innings of shut-0ut ball.
"I FIGURED HE CFregosi> would call on me
first," Jefferson, who picked up his first win
against four losses said. ''I'd never want to come
in cold like that again. But I love to pitch for a club
like this because you're never out of it."
J efferson. who was a starter when the season
began but was summoned to the bullpen after be-
ing shelled for five runs in 1 ~ innings against
Milwaukee in the opener of the home stand,
pitched for Toronto the last four seasons. His beat
record there was in 1977 when be was 9-17.
"it's been a tough adjustment going from
starting to relieving," he said. "I had the ball run-
ning pretty well tonight, but when you don't have
your best stuff, then you've really eot to pltcb and
try to hit spots."
Baylor singled with the bases loaded in the
fourth inning to tie the game. 2-2. then slnsted in
another in the fifth.
Bobby Grieb followed Baylor's first single
with a base hit to drive in the decisive run.
THE ANGELS SCORED a run in the sixth on
Rick Burleson's single and Brian Downing
homered in the seventh, his second of the year.
"Hitting an occasional home run is nice, but
sometimes there are situations when a slnsle i.a
what's needed," Baylor said. "I felt very com-
fortable at the plate. Jim C Fregosi> and I have
been working on my stance, opening it up."
The three RBI gave Baylor five in his last
three gam~ after he bad driven in only two runs
in his first lB·sames.
Jessee J efferson worked~ innings, giving up
• run in the first on a double by Dave Winfield and
another in the second on Barry Foote's home run tO left field.
His slump in April came to a bead when Angel
General Manager Buzzie Bavasi was quoted in a
story as saying that Baylor was not a bitter.
0.llJ ............ ., •kMN ll.-.r
Lou Piniella stares at second bcue umpire Bill Haller in di8belief as Haller oalled PinieUa out
<See ANGELS, Page DZ> on Rick Burleaon•s tag.
MuUen o ut, Curti,s in a t University High
Football coaching switch elevates ·assistant to Trojans' top position
By ROGER CAR~N
Of .. Olllly -...,, A year ago he was toiling as a
sophomore football coach at
University High, but today 25·
year-old Rick· Curtis finds
himself as the head varsity
coach foUowing the resignation
of Ted Muilen.
Mullen bas left University to
return to the Century League
where be established himself as
a fint line coach at Villa Park.
Only this Ume the fiery 48-year-
old Mullen takes the reins at foothill High.
Mullen's decision to leave
Un herslty breaks up the
Mullen·Bob Salemo combination
(or the Trojans, considered one
9f the ftneat coaching duos in
~tbern California.
''If' I GET the opportunity,"
·~· Mullen from his Foothill Hilb po1t today, "I 'll certainly
10 after him (5alerno>.
"But If Bob were still a
&eacher at Universit~ and had to
be a walk-on well, that wouldn't
be a good situation. Still, we'll iry to eat together again.''
• Mullen came to Univer1ity a
year a10 wlth lmpreuive
eredentiab and the Trojans bad
been In deep water, aeven·Ume
losers for three strat1ht yean.
. The 1980 team could do no bet-
ter ln tbe wln·loes column, re-eordlnc a 3-7 mm. "J was tore&y dlaappolnted,"
adm.Jll Mullen. "But we were
vef')' competiUve lD ftve of the Hl::Jam .. •• klH and J was E wtlb the way they COO·
-4 to coa1e ba~k. Tbe at. .. ,. up. But Ute fact
tbal .. did lo9e Hveo 1am• cu't a.. NYetHd."
-: •VU.SN SA YB hit dedlloa to leaft University 1temmed
die fact Ills~ ln
Ila Park la mun eloMr to
.......... It " .... OlllMll'tlml·
" to ........... bi ~the 0.. Sarr JAap,, wben •tabUllMd
rf•abi• .. IUCh adlooll liDd
coaches as El Modena and its
coach. Bob Lester, were pres·
ent.
to coach the linebackers.
CURTIS WAS a standout
linebacke r for Mission Viejo
High and later at Saddleback
College.
• College netted an All·Mission
Conference honorable mention.
but that was the end of his foot-
ball career. because of the knee. "I'm looking forward to get·
ting back into that element,"
says Mullen.
As for what is left at Universi-
ty, Mullen says Curtis will have a competJuveteam .
"University can be very com·
petltive, if the kids stay out for
football," says Mullen. ''Leam-
ing to win is a hurdle. I thought
we were on our way."
''I don't expect to change a lot
of things," says Curtis. "We'U
continue a alot-1 offense. l think
Ted and Bob laid a good founda·
lion and I'm really excited about
the upcoming season."
Curtis, who resides in Mission
Viejo with wife Jo Ann, was an ·
assistant to Ken Visser at
Servile High and Bob Gallo at
Laguna Hills before coming to
University, where he was an as·
sistant for Chuck McAninch for
a year, then Mullen in 1980.
When Mullen took the reins at
University and brought Salemo,
a former Anaheim High head
coach with him, be elevated
Curtis· from the sophomore staff
Curtis was an All-Crestview
League selection and second
team All-Orange County as a
junior at Mission Viejo, but bis
senior season was cut short by a
knee injury. He finished bis
education at Cal State Fullerton.
His staff will consist of Dick .
Roc he (defense). Steve Ruil
(defensive backs), Steve Calles
(offense) and Jim Grove (of-
Two years at Saddleback fensive line). Ted Mullen
Dodgers driving Lasorda to begin fast
Phillies'-stirring come-from-behind effort puts Los Angeles doum, 8-7
PHILADELPHIA CAP) -All lou ba~to do was look at the faces o tbe wo
man agers after Tuesday's nlab 'a
Dodgera·Pbiladelpbla Philllea same and
you knew instantly who won.
Phillies mana1er Dallas Green bad the
1mu1 look of a IUY whOM team had just
demonstrated tu cl.au. ,
Dodaers manacer Tommy La1orda
looked as if he needed a doctor.
The Pbillles rallied for a pair of alDU\·
innlns run.I to beat the Doqen, .. 7, for
their fourth 1tra1Cbt victory. It wu a
same of upt and downa for botb aldel. Tb•\
Dodcen led early 2.0. Tbe Pbllli• rallhd
to ., abead 5·2. +lie Doc11en came back
wltb "" ib the etpua to lead 7·5.
TBS PlllU.ID, llOWSVD, picked'-.~
•• nm ln tbe tilCbt.ll and tbole two 1111 . ODM 1n tbe DiD&h.
Laaonla aat beMDd bia delll oae aa.d Oii t.be aide of bll f.C. IDd mumbW _,,..,.
to reporta'I' =·--· lt'• anlJ .. ., ud be apPeand .ate ov• tM klea of a
came.
SonMOIM ftna1lJ uUd LlllGC'da ltoW be
felt, -be eruptad. ••What do you Wnk I look Wle thll for.
Mca ... l'llllJvMktedt
"We just blew a 1ame. We just lost it.
That'• how I fee-I," Laaorda declared. He
· wasn't even eatin1, a 11tual after 1 same
forLuorda.
The PhillJes' ninth •tarted with a walk to
pincb·bitter Del Unaer by Bobby Cutillo, on TV tonight
channel 11.at 4:30
i.he acrew'ball·tbrowllll Nlever who was
t.ryinC fot bl.I third save.
But Orea Grou forced UDHr fer the
fl.rat out. Pete ROH drew • walk to plan nannen at ftnt ud HtODd.
imE 8CBMIDT THEN LINED a dou·
ble elf tbe left fteld •all HOr1DI ~ to
make lt 7-7. Luorda broulbt ill Steve
Howe, wtao hadn't alao..d a nm In 10 ln·
nlu• o.w tilltt cam•. lfowe hltmdopaUJ wa.lhd Gary llat·
t.llew1 loadbla the baW . ..... Trtbo, whOM ...... inDlnl lead·
off homer bad redue.cl UM ~· lead to, ... Mt ..... dri•• to .... fMadet Ka Landreaus~ and RoH tcon4 oa tbe
uerlftce fl1 to end tlM 1ame.
11l• Dodlen acored one b> U.. ftnt on
Ludnaus'• •lnll• and Dully B•er'•
RBI double. They made it 2-0 in the third
on triple by Landreaux and a sacrifice fiy.
The Phillies finally reached Dod1era·
starter Bob Welch i.n the sixth, •corinl
four and knocldn.1 him out. Pitcher Larry
Christenson walked, Gre1 Groes sincJed,
and Rose was hlt by a pitch loading the
bases.
MIX.£ SCHMIDT WALKED forcln1 in a
run, and Matthews unloaded a base clear-
tn1 double for a 4·2 lead. The Pbllllea
added anotbu ln the seventh OD an RBI
dou~e by RoN.
Tbe Dodcen bad 1ont ahead la tilt
elJhth when tbey lll1oed PbWiee' 1tarter
Chriateuoo. Dave · Lo.J>e• sln1led, stole
aecond Md 1cored on LandrMU't alqle.
Tbat broqht ln reUtnr Roa Reed.
Duty Balter linaJed Land1eaux to th.lrd
from where be •cored on a puMd ball.
Att.r a... Garvey It.ruck M. AOll Cey
d~bled a.ome Balter with the tytn1 run.
Pedro Oaernro tbm un1oacW tu. third
llome NI ol t.be HUOft and Loe AnC9*
ltd 7·5.
Wben It wu all over and n1De pltcben
had ~. t.be PhlWft' &pany t.rle wbo
worked the nlnth1 emeried lhe winner
<2·1>, and Cutillo \0.3) th_.loHr.
Exploding
<:elts do it
to Houston
BOSTON (AP> -After rally-
ing from a 3·1 deficit for a
drama-packed .seven-game vic-
tory over the Philadelphia 76ers,
the Boston Celtics appeared ripe
for the taking.
And the surprising Houston
Rockets were on the verge of do-
ing just that -until the Celtics
exploded once again like horse
racing great Silky Sullivan down
the stretch. •
After looking over the~r
s houlders, for most of fO
minutes, the Celtics charged
from behind Tuesday night for a
98-95 victory over the Rocket.a ib
tbe opener of the best-of-aeven
series for the National Basket·
ball Association ChampionabJ~
"Houston came out ready to
play and I guess we were stlU
thinking about what we did l.i
week," Boston veteran Chdl
Ford said.
"J wasn't emotionally ltP fw
this game because of the PbWJ
series," forward Cedric Mu·
well said.
"We were very hesitant wlil\I
lot of thlnss we were do ••
backup center Rlck Rob
added.
However, Botton Coach
Fitch blamed early tumoY
and f.ailure to appl)' deal
preHUNI on t6e Rockets l0tt
Celtics' need to rall7 from
14·polnt deficit, and then
82-87 and 88-91 ln the f
period. ·
"Tbere wu a Uttle le'4owft
far as the adnntJ.ln 1oea,
don't t.b.lU lt wu aQ)' tq I
tor," Flteh aald. "We Just
over tbt ball too oft' Fortunately, .. ..,... ~
and1otaolal." •
Tbt CelUi lhrl~ 1 pre.1111n lD
dld t.be aame bl ll ·
tortes bl a to'# ovs Roiila.
tbe end, they kllled tM KOCI~
hopes wtt.b the fut bftu ·
---
D2 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, Ma)' 6. 1981
Wills isn't ready
• • to give up JUSl yet
f·rom AP dlspalches
SEA1"fl.E Seattle Mariners Ii
Manager Moury Wlll11 sold Tuesday
there is no rt>nson lo panic.', yet. even
thoul(h the Mariners have fallen into the cellar
in th~ American Lf'tta(ue West.
"I s lill likl' my team," Wiiis said at e meet·
ing of lh\• PUMl'l Sound ~rts Writers and
Broudcitstt>rs
"l won •t stand uv here ancl make excuses,"
he said "We didn't exrwct to win the thing. I
fiaurt.>d nn plnyrna 500 bn~l'ball Thert>'s still a
chonr,• to do thnt
"Wc··n· not tlt•prt•ssoo. Tht• sun's aoing to
sh.lna. w .. nw~. not ~ t h~ ht ~at-t It'. but tt 'II
be tht'f\' Nobody', deprt>sst'd If you '!Vere on a
llHlJOr lt'ague lN•m. and you we re S-and -17 und
in la:o.t pl&re. ~ou wouldn't fet>I loo chipper,
either ··
The tt•ani l1ctunll.>· w11s 6· t8 after 'l'ut>sdvy
nittht':. lcl..'5 in tht• t<1n1tdome to M1lw»ukce
\\ llb discounted su.:gest1ons thot h,• mnv
be undt'r pressure personally
"No, no pressure at all," he su1d "I 'm not
going to let that happen to me ThNt''!( no net>d
Thert>'s no pressure. Cont'ern. of \'ourst• IC
there was pressure. I probubl) wouldn't htH't'
!lhow11 up today ..
Wilts drew laughter when he comrnt•n\ed on
the possibUity of a baseball s trike latt'r this
month ··1 haven't even thought or lhis stnke."
he said "It might be a blessing in disguise for
me. Gosh, hurry up strike ..
Quote of the day
"My wife said, 'Wh ere havt> vou been.,.
a nd I said . 'At the ballpark.: She said,
'You're lying ... Pawtucket Red Sox
pitcher Luis Aponte. recalling what hap.
pened when he got home in the wake of the
2-2, 32-innmg marathon between the Red
Sox and the Rochester Red Wings. the
longest game in professional baseball his·
tory .
Hendrick plays long ball with Braves
George Ht>ndrlck and Darrell • Porter belted successive solo homers
with one out in the fourth inning,
powering ~t. Louis lo a 4-1 triumph over Atlanta
be hind Lary Sorenson's seven-hitter to highlight
National League action Tuesday ... Elsewhere,
Pinch-hitter Willie Montanez singled home War-
ren Cromartie from third base with two out in the
ninth inning lo lift Montreal to a 4.3 win over San
Diego . Alan Ashby's pinch two-run double
with two out in the lop of the ninth lifted Houston
past theChicagoCubs,4·3 . Tom Grirrln, a last-
minute replacement for Vida Blue. allowed four
hits in seven innings and knocked in two runs as
San f're1ncisco built a, 9-0 and withstood a seven·
run rally by New York to pos t a 9-7 triumph over
the Mets. Griffin. 2·2. was replaced in the eighth
by reliever Randy Moffitt. Moffitt and another re-
liever. Fred Breining, were chased in the midst of
New Yo rk's big ratty in the ninth before Greg Min·
ton came m to s hut the door
ROGER CARLSON
Gross perfect in Oakland's victory
Wa1n e GroH aod Dwayae •
Murphy hit solo home runs, and Gross
also ~ubled twice a nd singled In a 4· ·
ror-4 performance to lead Oakland and
Mike Norri• to a 6·2 win over Delrolt to highlight
American League action Tuesday .
Elsewhere. John Watha doubled leading off the
seventh iMing. went to lhird on Dave Ct.alk'•
s acrifice and scored on Jerry Grote'• Hcrifice fly
lo lift Kansas City to a 2·1 de·
dslon over Boston. Earlier.
Gary Alleoaon and Glen.a Hoff·
man riµped con secutive
doubles in the 12th inojn.c to
help power the Red Sox to an
7-7 victory In a game sus
pended al 5·5 after 10 Innings
Monday night because of a 1
n m Ame rican League
c urfew . . . Leon Roberts
smas hed a three· run homer as
1'exas whipped the Chicago Croaa
White Sox. 6·1 _ .. Rieb Dauer drove in two runs
before being forced from the game with a rib ln-
JUry as Baltimore edged Minnesota, 3-1 ...
Robin Yount drilled a three-run homer as
M llwaukec disposed of Seattle. 4·1 .. _
Cleveland Toronto was rained out and wilt be
played as part of a double-header JuJy 19 ..
Oakland's Matt Keough, a Corona del Mar High
product, was honored as the Pitcher of the
Month for AprU.
tsrand~rs sweep Rangers; gain -final
Mike Bossy scored two power ~
pla y goals in the first period to set a '
N 11 L record for most goals In a re·
gular season and playoff combined as the New
York Islande rs cruised past t he New York
Rangers. S 2. lo sweep their semifinal Stanley
Cup seri<'rs, 4-0 . . In other action, Dino Cle·
rarellJ scored three goals and set a NHL playofr
nicord for rookies. sparking Minnesota to a 7.4
vlr tory over Calgary in their semifinal series.
The North Stars now own a 3·1 lead in their
series
Wall resigns as Surf coach
Pet.er Wall, coach of the NASl Surf for the
pust two years. resigned Tuesday. Surf Presi-
dent BUI Dawsoa said he expected t.o make an
announcement today about a replacement for
Wall ... The Women's Tennis Association has
urged BlWe Jean King to remain its president
despite her admission to a lesbian affair with
her former secretary. In other moves involving
King, NBC-TV announced it would retain her as
its color commentator on Wimbledon and other
events, while E .R . Squibb & Sons Inc., disclosed
it was dropping King as a spokesperson for its
vitamins _ . _ The Toronto Blue Jays say they
are inte~sled in signing reliever Don Staaboase
if he can prove to them over the next few days
that he is able lo regain his Corm .
Television. radio
Following are the top SPOrts events on TV
tonight. Ratings are: / 1 1 1 excellent; 1 ' 1 worth watching; / 1 fair; / forget It. n 4:30 p.m .• Channel 11 ./ ./ ./
DODGERS BASEBALL: Dodgers at
Philadelphia.
Announcers: Vi n Scully, Ross Porter and
Jerry Doggett.
The Dodgers will sent Burt Hooton (3-0) to the
mound to oppose the Phillies' Nino Espinosa
(1·1). The Phillies, with a run In the eighth and
two more in the ninth, earned a come-from-behind
8·7 victory over the Dodgers Tuesday.
RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Philadelphia, 4:30
p.m ., KABC (790); New York Yankees at Angels,
7:30 p.m .. KMPC (710). .
THURSDAY TV·RADIO
Baseball -Dodgers at Philadelphia, 7:30
p.m ., Channel 11; KABC (790).
Weaving some gold
. ,
He 's a man walking a light rope. one that re·
aches to the 1984 Olympic Games in Los Angeles
and wruch will consume the next three years.
Huntington Beach reside nt Monte Nitzkowski.
United States Olympics water polo coach, the Sl-
year-old who has put half of his IHe into the
fortunes of Long Beach City College, knows it's
just that and expounds on the intricacies of putting
together a world power.
"We have to weave a cloth of gold and each
thread is important," says Nitzkowski , a coach
with a gift of communicating. which can't be
anything but a plus for American water polo.
The United Slates finished fourth at the recent
FINA cup tournament at Long Beach State. a
verdict reached by one-point tosses to the Soviet
Union. the champion. and Cuba. a long with ties to
runner.up Yugoslavia and Spain, and capped by a
rousing 12· 7 victory over Hungary.
ALSO SNUFFED BV the U.S. were the
Bulgarians and Australians, but that wasn't very
s igniClcant.
Many who witnessed the action felt that
maybe the U.S. team has more to worry about
then just the competition, scheduling conflicts, the
loss of five s tars from the 1980 juggernaut (includ-
ing our best hope, Gary Figueroa) and other poten·
tial pitfalls. •
Jntemationat officiating leaves a lot to be de·
sired . U Switzerland could produce aJI the referees
it would solve the dilemma, but the Swiss don't
mess with water polo.
So, you're saddled with referees with a lot at
stake and at limes, their calls appear blatant.ly
cTUde in trying to steer the verdict one way or the
other.
ltls,arterall,a European1ame.
NITZKOWSKI OFFERS no criticism -but be
oflera ~ solution to potential problems.
"There's only one answer -to 1et so damn
1ood. officl1tin1 won't or can't affect you," say•
NlUkowsld. ·•rt•11 a perilous road. We can do
everythln-1 right and still not wtn. But of coune,
we can't think In those terms.
"Tbe secret to lmprovtna la to 1core more
natural aoals, the alx·on·thc sltuatton.. In theory,
that's gotn1 to have to be don otlen. ll wu our
phUOllOc>hY In Munich (the '72 Games) and we d.td
lt.
''It bolls down to the ruor'1 ectse. We have to
become .a m~tally 1lron1 we can t.ake lbe same
out of U. referee•' band.I. Tbe Rwa1l°' dJd jmt
lbal iD W. toamamert '' 1'bc "Pd at Loni Bacb SU&e lall weell It vlrtaaD1,u.e teUn which wlD repn...t the U:.S. lD
tM 'II <J17mp6es, with a poalble cbana• or two.
JN 'l'B& WINGS II aootbll' foalJe ll lt becomes ~ .ad NltalcoWlkl says tbat optloil dOel
Mt CGICerD blm. •
"Jack Graham (now at USC, formerly at
University High in Irvine) is our next goalie and
he's a good one. When he comes up to the nationaJ
team it won't do anything but help us."
Other potential changes lie simply in whether
veterans return -most notably Figueroa and 6·7
John Siman.
Nitzkowski makes no predictions. but if you
listen between pauses, It's obvious this in an area
that would virtually double the United States·
chances for. gold in 1984.
What lies ahead boggles the imagination con·
sidering U!e problems for Americans in amateur
status.
For the balance of this year there are three
more weekend training sessions, a Yugoslavian
tournament in mid-August and a possible junket to
China.
Things warm up in '82 with the qualifying
tournament for the World Championships in
February. Cuba has a tock on one spot, Ecuador
also ts locked in as the host of the World Cham-
pionships, leaving one other spot for a western
hemisphere entry.
Training with the Yugoslavians, the Can-Am·
Mex tournament in Ha wail, more tralning ln Bel·
grade and Budapest before the T~sgran Cup and
tralnlng with the llatians precede the World
Championships, where hopefuJJy , the U.S. will
have qualified.
ln '83 it's the FINA Cup in Rome, the Can-Am·
Mex and Pan-Am Games, plus training with lbe
Italians.
Then the big year -the Tuns1ran Cup,
another tournament or some sort, traintnc and the
Olympics. .
"'!be tournaments are 'for the mentaJ H pect."
says Nltdcowskl. '"The training Is for the
mu11ctes."
FOlJJtTll PLACE at the Lon1 ~acb tourna-
ment doesn't really shake any raUlet, but the
potenUaJ la obviously present.
ln 19M the United Stat• flnWled 1Sth at the
Olymples. ln 1188 Nlllkowsk:i appeared and helped
1ulde a ftf\h place fi.nlsb at Mexico City. Tben the un6 turn, under NJUkowtlr.J'a cllrectJon, won the
broue medal at Munich.
The Amertcana were ranked No. 2 ln ~ world
ln im, but the boycott of the M011cow OlymplCI
lrllled ht&h hopes'
So, a fourtb plac. finllb with I br-HW
teain It alplftcaat. Mo,.. ao ta I.he fact tlae world
powen hardly Wew tbe U.S. 08t ot Ule water. 1"1•
Sovleta' maraln la an 1-1 dectakla caJDe •a U.S.
mll\ake. W SpalD ,ot ltl U. wWll a llaUar men·
utmwtUepro"dln•tbe~fttlenee.
N~'• '""' ........... -lt would be nry ~ ll llDOthv e~ .-. Mrw U.. YantL
From Page 01
ANGELS. • •
Bavasi said the reason a trade
that sent designated hitter Jason
Thompson to the Pittsburgh
Pirates was made was because
Bay tor couldn 'l play lhe outfield.
BAYLOR, FURIOUS over the
quote, walked into Bavasi's of·
lice on Apnl 16 and announced
he was retiring. However, hours
later, Baylor was back in un·
lform 1tnd has remained silent
on lhe s ubject ever since.
"I've been laking extra bat·
ting practice the las t few days
and it's helped," Baylor said. "I
made cerluin changes like mov-
ing my left foot more square to
the pitcher. When you're hitting,
you're not aware of things like
that. But I was wo{'rled about
everything
"I'm not hooking lhe ball foul
anymore and that's good.
"Lately. we haven't felt like
Wt> could come bark after being
down.
.. You know l made a st-ate· m ent earlier today tha t we did·
n 't have the killer instinct
needed to win. Tonight, the guys
proved me wrong."
ANO•L NOT•S Tonlglln ll!lrd ,...,. of lltlt
tovr11...,. -I" ,,.,. rooltl• rloflt ,,_ Mleott
Witt 12·1l , •• ,,. Yenk .. left-......., Ron GwlOr(
CJ·Jl .. 9111 Tre...n •es d .. to lie eu-by Dr. Lewi• YK-tl!lt momlnt. Fr-M Mid tl!M
"" ,, .. no lmet1llOl\1 01 movl"O ~ AA• (0.St
ERA> Into the 1terll"O rotetlon to replK•
Trevtrs If IW'• .....ol• IO pitcl! tor awl>lle. "M Je
Min t hed -OU H • UM'tH He'll Utt In the
pen w,,_e 1111 llr.....,,. ere," Fr..,..l Mid . Y•n• .. °"111-~ _,.., • ..._ ....
111111"0 strN• Tl.9t4tt to " oemes -. -RM Carew 11 In• mini Slump of Ills-"· He's Mor-tA
In 1111 letl •I ll<ltl . . The AftOtll ere nowS.tOet
An•llelm Sledlum 1111• teer . . Former v-..
<atc111no ll'Nt v.., -·· ...,, 111et J.at 11-. wrwn ,,. ••• playlno ourlno ltw l'MOa, SOI -io..
,,,. ,..,.,. OI tr. oeme I• tUll plld>lr>o -,,..
tenM "A lat OI -e -·t retllH tl\tl -n -•tr• wlnnlno all t,,.,... pennentt. --• doino II wltll pil<fllnv encl ctet ... w," the •Hall of ,,...,.
wld "AMI 1Mt'1 wl>tl It'll lake 11\11 club to dO
llll1ye.,"
Yrroll's hit
lifts U CI, 7 -4
Carson Carroll's two-out. two
run double in the eighth inning
broke a 4·4 tie and UC Irvine
h e Id on lo beat UC Santa
Barbara, 7 -4. in Southern
California Baseball Association
play Tuesday.
Carroll's double Lo left-center
scored catcher Ron Elliott and
shortstop Mike Nagle. who had
s ingled a nd walked . res pec·
lively.
Josh Randall, 7-5. who came
on in relief of starter Cas Soma
in Lhe top of the eighth, pitched
the final four outs to record the
victory.
Carroll finished his day's work
going 3-for-4 with a double, two
runs scort'd a nd five RBI
Nagle also had three hils while
te ammates Lee Granger, Mark
Stowell and Elliott has two each.
After Carroll's double. it was
Granger's single to score Carroll
that provided the final margin of
victory.
The win improved UCl's rec·
ord to 28-19 ove rall, 10-11 in
SCBA play. The toss dropped
UCSB's mark to 26·26·1 over,
5· 15· 1 in the SCBA.
GWC dealt loss
Fullerton scored two runs in
the top of the seventh and made
them stand up as the Hornets
beat Golden West, 2-0, in non·
conference women's community
college softball action Tuesday.
In high school play, Edison
l 17·1 > won a forfeited game
from Fountain Valley, 7-0, when
the Barons used an illegal
player in the fifth inning.
.....
I
SPORTS BREAK I BASEBALL.
Bucs, Gauchos ·
capture crowns
GWC knocks Harbor out of first
Orange Coast ColleJ:e wrapped
up its second straight South
Coast Conference title with a
narrow 9-8 decision at San Diego
Mesa to highlight community
college baseball acllon Tut>sday
1 n othe r area play, SaddJeback
clinched the Southern Division
of the Mission Conference with a
6·5 win at San Bernardino and
Golden West remained in a
second round tie with Rio Hondo
in the Soulhern Cal Conference
with a 10-9 verdict l)ver visit
lngLA Hsrbor.
Here's what happened ·
OCC 9, SD Mesa 8
Kevin Sliwins ki hit a solo
hom e r m I.he second inning and
a l\\'.p·run shut in the {ourth, and
Ed "Farrel£ blasted a two run
homer in the sixth as the Pirates
over came a 6-J deficit to PoSl
their 13th win in 17 outings in the
South Coast Conference.
Farrell 's shot. over the 402
sign an center , came after San
Di ego Mesa h a d walked
Sliwinski to open the inning.
Jack Reinholtz, in relief of
s tarter Don Smith. picked up the
victory Mesa used fi ve singles
and two walks to score five runs
in the fourth inning and chase
Smith
The Wln upped occ·s record
to 29 ·6'overall M1•sa ,
meanwhile , dropped to 22 11
overall. 9-8 an the sec
Saddleback 6, SBVC 5
Ben Amaya went the d1:...tant·e
for the Gaucho:... to improve his
record to 8-2 for the year
Amaya, in allowing only three
earned runs. lowNed his ERA tu
l.70 fie also struck out seven,
giving him 61 to lead the con
ference.
Rusty Evans provided the big
s tick for ~he Gauchos as his two·
out, two-run double staked Sad
dleback to a 3·1 advantage and a
l e ad they would n ever re
linquish. • Mike Breslin added a pair of
insurance tallies in the top of ttlc·
ninth with a two-run double
Bob Gray, the Gauchos· center
fielder, went 2-for 4 with two
runs scored and three s tolen
bases
The win improved Sad·
dleback's numbers to 14·8 in con
ferencC'. 19 13 ovc•ral l
GWC 10, LA Harbor 9
Third baseman Jack Settle
belted a two-out homer in the
lOtb inning as the Rus tle rs
knocked LA Harbor out of a
first-place lie in the Southern
Cal Conference
OCC, Rus tle r s
record v ictorie
Kris Kroyer and Michelle
Deyden combined for 42 points
as Oran ge Coa s t College
whipped Pasadena. 74-65. in the
first round of the women's state
community college basket ball
playoffs.
In other action. Golden West
got 30 points Crom Timi Pitzer as
the Rustlers edged Hancock,
87-83.
Second round action resumes
Thurs day with Orange Coast
play ing Fullerton a t Golden
West College (6 p.m I
Settle hit the first pitch thrown
to him by lefl -hander Roe)\
McCune and he sent it over the
390 sign in left-center.
The Rus tlers actually made it
ha rd on· themselves when they
couldn't hold leads of 6·0 and 9-11,
LA tta rbor finally partayea
three singles. a wa lk and a err9r
into three runs in the eighth ht·
nmg to tie the score at nine.
Larry MacArthur. who is OD a
tear, led GWC going 4·for-5, ip·
cludln~ a triple and three RBI.
The hits raised MacArthur'$
average to .413 in conference a"S
he':. collected 14 hits in his last
20 at bats.
Wes Collins also went 4·for·5
wiijl two doyblcs, while KeiiA
Hall went 2·f6r 5 with lhree RBI
Rob Meyers picked up the wm
lo improve his conference-rec·
ordlo5·1.
From Page 01
BELL ...
worse I guess I don't know.
Coach I OonJ Fambrough just
said he would leave it up to me ..
Fambrough, who was
calapultcd into Coach of the
Year honors in the Big Eight
following the exploits of Bell and
Seurer. the biggest one two
freshman pe1ckage or the 1980
rolleg1ate scene, has slated.
"The most important thing Is
our football program. There can
be no one individual above this
team or the program here.
K~rw1n Rell must prove lo me
t hat he· wanls an opportunity to
get an educe1taon and play foot·
ball for the Uni\'e r s ity of
Kan~<is "
Bell says he doesn't feel he
has been treated unfairly and he
is not unha ppy he chose Kansas
over such national powers ~
Oklahoma. Texas and USC
Nor does he see this situation
affecting the Edison Jligh con-
nection with Kansas.
Edison has sent five players to
Kansas in the past two years -
t he others bein~ Bill Malavasi
and lwo fo rthcoming freshman
Frank's brother . Troy, and
Kerwin's brother. Dino.
And, Bell is aware of what lies
ahead when he presum ably re-
turns to the fold for fall practiC'e.
"A II the sportswriters will be
bark and I'll get the same ques-
1 aons again ·what happened in
the s prang'." he says
Small starts,
then saves OV
Ocean View High moved into a
lie for third place in the Empire
League c hase and knocked
Loara out of first in process as
the Seahawks edged lhe Saxons,
7-5. in prep baseball action Tues-
day .
8111 Small , who threw a no-
hitle r an the first four innings for
Ocean View, had to come back
in in the seventh inning to save
it for Wayne Carla nde r.
Carlander , who entered the
game in the fifth inning s laked
to a 3·0 lead. actually had the
margin increased lo 4-0 before
{..oara touched him for two
walks. three single and a triple,
good for five runs in the bottom
of t he sixth.
Baseball standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
West Dh'11lon
Oakland
Chicago
Texas
Angels
Minnesota
Kansas City
Seattle
W L .Pct. GB
21 5 .808
12 9 .S71 61AJ
12 9 .S71 6~"2
12 14 .462 9
9 14 .391 10"11
6 12 .333 11
6 18 .250 14
East Division
Cleveland 10 S .667 -
Milwaukee 13 8 .619 -
New York 14 9 .609 -
Baltimore 11 9 .550 l 'h
Detroit 10 13 .435 4
Boston 8 13 .381 5
Toronto 8 14 .364 5"4l
T--.Y'tkw. ...,_..,, .... Ywtll
••111-.1.~1 Clew.-at,.,.., ..... ••>
... lilftt,~Oty1 11J1Mlftll,~
ef M9ftMy'a.,_..._...,._ I
·--City 2. IMtefl ,
Ttua6,<:Mu901
OMllMd •· o.t"'I t Mllllt..._4,ltM'"t T ........ ._
"-""'~l·fletAllelt!llWlnl·tl CltWlaM lll'f-)i.t) •I T-te (T .. l •tl
MlnNMIU (Af,..._ 2·tl •1 l•IU,,,_. , ... .._ 1-0)
ClllUttll tlwfttMI e1Tnet I Oerwl11t4l
.. SWl\ (~24) •I IC-a City(~
NI 0.INll (W\KoJIW) eto.llMIM l~ .. 11
MllW..._ ILttr(ll 1'11 et IMtlle ll'ltnwttWI
NATIONAL LEAGUE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 16 8 .667
Cincinnati 11 10 .S24 312
Atlanta 12 12 .soo 4
Houston ~11 13 -458 5
San Francisco 11 15 .423 6
San Diego 8 17 .320 81".I
East Division
St. Louis 13 4 . 765
Montreal 15 6 .714
Philadelphia 16 7 .696 -
Pittsburgh 8 8 .soo 41~
New York 6 13 .316 8
Chicago 3 17 .150 11'~
T..-Y'•k-Phll-lplllel,~7
HllUtl81'14,Clll~J
Mont!'Nl 4 Sell 0Mee I
S..11 ,.,.c(teo I, -Yor11 I St. l.wlt4. A.~ 1
Pllblluroh et Cl"'.,_tl 1 ..... relnl , ......... o-
D••••n (HOOl•ll J .O) •• Plllfeda lplll•
IE11111_.1-11,
HOVSMll (RV ... 1-t) •• CNceeo ((~1110.tl.•
Sell Ot.oo IEl<Mlller .. r 1-1) t i Mofttrffl
''""'''"'' PllttlM'O'I lk..,.,,, t•I et Cln<IMetl ,,._.,..
t-01 kn ,,,_IKO IWl\111411 0'31 81 Ntw Yor'll
ltecllf'Y HI
Atl8ft18 1,_,,.V Ml el St Lewlt II'-'> Ml
I
?
r
, I
I
l
.. _.-
CENTER OF ATTENTION -Archbishop of Canterbury
Robert A.K. Runcie is surrounded by members of Viet-
namese Children's Choir after they performed Tuesday dur·
•
lllJllJlil
WEDNESDAY, May 6, 1981
I
FEATURES
MOVIES
TE.LEVISION
86
88
89
Detty,... ..........
ing his stop at St. Anselm's Episcopal Church and Refugee
Center in Garden Grove. The archbishop is on a three-week
tour of the United States.
Pallel to study schools 'Closings
A committee to study long.
range policy for closing schools
in the Newport-Mesa Unified
School District has been named
.by tbe board of trustees foUow·
lne recommendations by a
board ad-hoc committee.
The new group is composed of
50 parents , school ad·
mtnlstraton, teachers, students
and other cltiieru of the two-city
school dlslricl. •
It is charged with formine a
plan for housing students -ln a
district whose enrollment COD·
tinues to decline -without up·
setting major educational aoala.
District offlciala have ordered
Rea Middle and Corona del llar
Elementary schools to clOH ln
June after sbutttnc down eipt
Costa Mesa elemesitary lcboola
over the past eipt years.
Student e11rollnient, ottlciall
Badhalll freed o f sUit
by polit ical foes
A lawsuit which alleged that
ltep. Robert E . Badham, R·
Newport Beach, distributed mis·
leading political advertising in
his 1976 primary campaign has
been dismissed in Orange County
Superior Court.
Judge Luis Cardenas, acting on
a motion by lawyers for Badham,
ruled that the plalntirrs in the
case, including fellow GOP can-
didate Harry Jeffrey, bad failed
to bring the legal action to trial
within five years.
'llhe suit was filed in April, 1976,
by 'effrey and his campaign co-
cbalrman. Helene Hollingsworth.
It claimed that a political
brochure put out by Badham. a
California state assemblyman at
the time, sought "psychological
advanta1e" by implying that the
Newport Beach lawmaker
already was a House represen-
tatl veaeekin1 to slay in office.
claimed the brochure was a mll-
representation of Badham's
status and violated provisions of
the C alifomia Elecltons Code.
The brochure in question read:
••For your Representative In
Con gress ... Your State
Representative."
According to the suit, Bad.ham
had unsuccessfuJly sought ballot
designation as a "represen·
tative" in the state legislature.
However, Secretary of State
March Fong Eu disallowed that ti·
tie.
Bad.ham went on to win the
June, 1976, GOP primary against
J e ffrey, incumbent Andrew
Hinshaw and several other can·
didates. He then beat Deinocrat
Vivian Hall in the November,
1976, election.
note, continues to drop at the
rate of about 1,000 annually.
Trustees met for months with
parents throutbout the sprawl·
Ing district re1ardln1 future
scbool·closlne plan.a btfore or·
derinc Rn and Corona del Mar
1cbooll to shut their cSoon.
Tb• cliatrtct expects to uve about '800,0GO In u~
by abutting diole two ladllties.
Lon1-ran1e plana for combin-
ln1 Intermediate schools wt~
hith school campuses met wtt&
a barraee of parental objections
and trustees are not enthuaiutic
about cloeinc hiib school plants
with elaborate educatloiial
facilities not available In lower•
grad~s schools.
One way or another, lbouih.
school officials say they will be
forced to cloee down up to alx
more schools over the next five
years as enrollment dwindles.
Representation on the new
closure committee, dubbed
Educational Reaources Adviaory
Committee, is divided amona
the four high school zones.
Those represenUnc the Costa
Mesa Hip School 1.one are Gall
E . Enger, Zona McKlbbon,
David Sboore, Ron Raya, Unda
Williama, Wallace Kleck and
Kenneth Mowery.
Estancia Hieb area represen-
tatives are Marcaret Mooney,
Ed De<:ker, Jene De La Torre,
Dr. Don Drake, Wayne Kraiu,
Gene Hoo, Jane Lee and Dr.
Michael Nesbitt.
Newport Harbor Hi1h area
representatives are Gary G.
Brown, Marlon Robboy, 1.J.nda
McGavran, Nancy Remley,
Stanley Cohen, Carol Martin.
Gloria Loudon and Dick Sweet.
Corona del Mar High
representatives are Sandra
McGowan, Candi Grant, Karen
Hochadel, Sue Morris, John
Briscoe, Nancy Jones, Leonard
Baltler ud Holley WUkinaon.
District Admlnl1trators Al·
•oclatioo representatives are
Principals Paul Twedt of Ensign
Middle School, Mike Hill of
College Park Elementary, Bob
Francy of Estancia Hieb and
Dennis Evans of Corona del Mar
Hitb. ·
Newport-Mesa Federation of
Teachers representatives are
Paul Jordan, Pat Candelaria,
Sonia Morales, John Hinrichs,
Katherine Pervetlch, Geraldine
R . Lumian and Jean M .
England.
Student representatives are
Darlene Dunning of Newport
Harbor High, Robert Hoo of
Estancia, Susan Hamada of
Costa Mesa High and Paul
Harney of Corona del Mar High.
Central office school ad-
mlniatraton will be represented
by Superintendent John Nicoll,
hiJ deputy, Norman Loats, and
Mary Kruse, director of instruc·
tional services.
Loats has been named
coordinator and convening
chairman.
The committee ls expected to
make its report and recommen-
dations to the board of trustees
within six months to a year, ac·
cordint to board president Ken
Wayman.
Alcoholism costs
business plenty :
$60 billion
See 811
D
0
Mesa truancy
crackdown
cuts thefts? •I
Costa Mesa police, whose drive many of those crimes were co~
on truancy last week resulted in milted by youths who skipped
208 "status offense" arrests, said school in search of money to play
todaytheireffortisbelievedpartly e lectronic games al corner
ftl)H>ftStbtt!ftH-a sr~r C'ellt~· ...... 1'ft11tlt~-ahdfa~ ...... -•• ,__ ..... ..,. --
lion in burglaries. Sgt. Bill Bechtel, leader of the
The two months effort was department's Schools and Com·
launched because of burgeoning munity Agaiust Truancy <SCAT>
daylight burglaries in the city, in· Team, said seven burglaries were
vestigatorssaid. counted in Costa Mesa last week.
Reports and arrests indicated Duringtbesameweeklaatyear,
Mesa 111a11
attack ed
by t rio
By J EBllY CLAUSEN
Of .. Delty ...... SWI
Costa Mesa welder and metal
sculptor Ali RollSban was at·
tacked late Tuesday in a parking
lot to the rear of his Superior
Avenue shop by three men carry·
lng an assortment of weapons,
police said.
Roushan, who suffered four
head cuts, managed to fend off the
men and later received stitches at
Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital.
The fiery Iranian immigrant,
center of a controversy over three
tall metal sculptures he raised in
front of his shop without final city
planning and building depart-
ment approval, said his as-
sailants all spoke Spanish.
He told police he had just re-
turned lo bis living quarters at the
rear of his shop, 1550 Superior
Ave., when two well dressed His-
panics knocked at bis back door.
He said he couldn't understand
what they wanted but stepped into
the lot when tbey motioned for
him to come out.
A third man, Roushan sald,
came up from bis back and
slipped a string around his throat.
"I knew I was being attacked,
then," Roush an said this mom·
ing. "I didn't panic, I just started
fighting."
Roushan said be was hit several
times in the head with a gun,
later identified by police as a
simulated .45-caliber pellet gun,
before he tore It from one as-
sailant.
Police were called at 11 :30p.m.
by residents of a neighboring
trailer park who heard Roushan's
screams for help.
Witnesses said they saw three
men pile into a yelJow station
wagon and dri ve north on
Superior Avenue as Roushan
stumbled from behind his shop.
later
Officers said they later found
the discarded gun, a flash light,
.screwdriver , straw bat and
blood, most of it from Rousban's
head cuts. in the parking lot.
Rous ban, known for his running
battle with city authorities, had
nothing but praise for police, their
promptness and their concern.
he said, 14 burglaries were re-
ported.
Bechtel said preliminary
figures indicate thefts for last
week willbedownabout40perceot
in a similar week-to-week com·
parison.
Of the 208 students caught,
Bechtel said, 131 were male and 77
female.
Most, 92. were Costa Mesa High
students. 1
Estancia students numbered
39; Back Bay High, 31; Rea Middle
School.3; Davis Middle, 3; Kaiser
Middle, 3; TeWinkle, 1; Whittier
Elementary, 2; and Pomon•
Elementary ,2.
The rest of those arrested, he
said, came mostly from Santa Ana
and Irvine, with one boy from
Lakewood. He had hitchhiked te
Costa Mesa to place a surfboard
order, investigators said. •
''He was happy,'' one detective
said. "that he had gotten his ord~ '
in before being brought into
Police Department."
With t he exception of rtp·
percussions from a lunchti~
sweepoftheOrangeCoastColleg.
campus that resulted In about 30 1
arrests a week ago today, Bechtel
said he is "very happy" with the
lruancyeffort.
Several outraged parents com·
plained to school and police
authorities following the noontime
arrests.
Although Newport-Mesa Dil-
trlclschoolsarecon.aideredclosed
campuses, Mesa Hifb Principal
Robert Packer said students ~
aUowed to cross Fairview Road to
the college where many purchase
lunch ala snack bar.
Police said school authorities
<Ud not make the unwritten policy
clear before last week's effort
began.
Quake rat{/,es
Seal B each
An earthquake measuring
on the Richter scale rippl
through Seal Beach Tuesd
night but apparently caused
damaees or injuries, authorities
reported today.
The quake, centered four
miles east of Seal Beach, OC·
curred at 10 :57 p.m .. according
to a spokesman for the
Cali f orni a Institute of
Technology at Pasadena.
Local poli~e said no damages
or injuries were reported. Of-
ficials or the Seal Beach Naval
Weapons Station likewise report·
ed no disturbances on the b~.
which stores weapons for U]e
Pacific Fleet.
'
\
Jeffrey and Ma. Hollingsworth
School aide
talks t o night
Mud-clpgged channel u:orries lwmeowners ·
Anthropology bulf and school
administrator William Sanborn
wUI be the I eatured speaker
tonight at the 13th annual
1eneral meeUn1 of the Friends ----o1 Newport Bay.
Tbe 7:30 meeUn1 wlll be held
at Corona del Mar Hith School
and II open to tbe public at no
cbar1e.
Dr. Sanborn, director of the
media lnltructlooal center for
tbe Newport-Mesa Unified
Sehool Dlatrict, will t•lk OD pre-
hlltorlc OranJ{e County.
\ Once popular boat parade spot, .swimming hole
reduced to nar'row ribbon of water dur ing low tide
By STEVE IWA&BLE 0( .. ...., .........
\
"The meandering ocHD·fed
cnannel behind Don Borthwlck'1
Newport Shores home isn't
mucb anymore.
The channel, known u Ox·
Bow Loop or Semlnec Sloulb,,
once wu 10.feet deep at hilb
tlde . It was. a popular
nei1bborbood 1wtmmlDa, flab1DC
and boaUna spot.
Mott of tbe homes that bllck
up to the ebaanel. Ilk•
Borthwtclt'I, aN equipped With
docks. On the 4th of July, retldentl la
west Newport commanltJ would
bold a boat parada. Bid tblre
ban't been a parade tn four
'-""· ·-al &Ila a.om ..... = ,. ..... BartJawtds ...,.
1Wl11111 Ol ftlbel .....
HJ...._. lie etalma eftD llllt
blrdl tbat fed alf the flab .....
mo•ed .... wben.
Tb• Ox-Bow Loop ll 11111Ol161&.
At bl ... Ude, the ctialiMI...,
la ODe to two-feet deep ...... tM
Ude 1oea out; the ctaanaet II r.-
duced to a aarrow ribbon GI
water.
"We used to enjoy tbe bell out county or a private landho1din1
of it," aay1 Borthwick, a Loa firm known u Beeco Ltd. could
An1ele1 fire chief and a nine-be the owner. r.~S:t .:,fr.:1 ~res resident. ·:TH bouadary alon1 that
area Ms}!VW really been ct. In a recent letter to Newpan fined,'' eq1atn1 Wynn. Beach clty council memben. resident.I aJaac tbe Loop collee· Bortltwlck, a put board
lively referred to the cbanael u member la the Newport Shoce1
"a fllth)', smelly, weed·l.Dfeated, bom::=:roup, HYI real·
mud-etmedey ..... " deatl the cbannd la
City officlala. ln Newport ~. ltC!Oll ,000.
achowtedle ~ cbawl la Just ~~rlc~ now would be
• tbat. • u cal, said llortbwtek, l cb~co::! =.a ·~S.:: ==~;:t=t"r;:
Ana River. The rtHr ud UM wouta man I\ dlftleult to ftnd an ~baaael tnteneet JUlt Dortll al area '° depoalt tbe dNQed ailt. P'f.:!c =n':~~· natar&l ''You'd t.blnk yoa could J..t
.......... ti Wit .... ~ =:L.~::r.·:.:-:.=: ~ wu • •....., •,..,. ..,..1.be tbe law doa't....., br~~-,.~,...., -~~ll'adswtn ••"·
m1t••1er. ,.,. •art of Uae 8'ittswta laid ... , Of 11111• reu.llalettvlaMD'tbMIUleto uq~laon ba•• r•elaed Ute
IMIP 11 &Ut-it71 .. .._ ...... 't'llitll .. palat'' Md .,. tired tMOx~ LoGp. if lillliltlbe -for ......
A\laWIUI& ftW '1 tW .-. Al-................. dlll pnblrrr
torD•J Oeaeral to aeUI•-tbe •loc:I .... wtta. tbe clltmtl lllll • ownmblp qtaliaaa iill'-W. la nen II dll md?" Iii ua. "U
, t.be ~ lllin Im. '071..S lt~l 'c .. lt1Dad lO' ~Homa a ·Uaf oa &be .......... &M dJ, ta.I -~I~ U..r'd tell•·" •
(
BACK AT HOME BASE: One thing nice about acurrylng
around the countryside, willy-nilly, for a few days ii that you
can get away from a couple of things. Like the telephone and
bill collectors.
Alas, you must sooner or later return to productive labor.
Or at least make it look productive. Just look at this pile of
clippings on my desk that stacked up.
Here's a fascinatin~ one out of the Washington-Post. It re·
counts how recently~ former
Vice President Spiro T .
Agnew's one-time personal at-
l"<a\ 't o rn ey a c t-u a lly tes tifie d
TOM MURPHINI -~It aga::hi:::;::~ ~a:::E
W. White, created somewhat of
a stir when he told the Annapolis court that Agnew admitted to
him that he took kickbacks while in public office .
White, in his testimony, quoted Agnew thus:
"It's been going on for a thousand years . What J erry and
Bud told you is true. Matz is grossly exaggerating the amount
of money involved . He only gave me $2,500." -You have-to admit thai sounds like good l)Jd Agpew. He
was always accusing some y or exaggerating something .
r
r
~
I
f.
Normally, a ttorney White would have never been able to
testify against his former client, under the cloak of attomey-
cli ent relationships, if Agnew hadn't first started blabbing
a bout his plight in a book.
THAT CAUSED THE JUDGE to rule that the sanctity of
the attorney and his client had been wiped away. He ordered
the lawyer to testify.
The little fascination here was that White claimed in his
Agnew , with some admiren. in Newport during Nuon year•
testimony that Agnew's confession came in a conversation
right here on our very own Orange Coast.
White said the conversation took pl ace in February of 1973
in Newport Beach.
This stretches your memory back a few years.
THUS FOR THE SAKE of pure research (which Agnew
used to aJJege no news hack ever did), the old files of this
sterling journal we r e pulled out. The big headlines of
February 1973 for our region involved a heavy series of
rainstorms. A lady from Huntington Beach named Wyn
Sergeant was drawing ink because she had assertedly mar·
ried an Indonesian cannibal. News of the returning Vietnam
POWs was heavy. .
But then on Feb. 5, there was an announcement that
President Nixon was planning his first visit to San Clemente
since re-election. Press Secretary Ron Ziegler announced a
cancellation the next day. Then Nixon left for San Clemente on
Feb. 8.
SPIRO AGNEW ARRIVED in Newport Beach after an
eight·country Asian tour and set up lodgings Feb. 9 at the
Newport.er Inn. He met and reported to Nixorr the next day, on
Saturday.
Then the vice president departed for Palm Springs to play
a little golf with Frank Sinatra.
Did Agnew make his admission to attorney White during
his brief one·day stopover in Newport Beach?
IF SO, IT WOULDN'T be the first scandal to rock that ad-
ministration that had its seeds in Newport Beach.
Re member Martha Mitchell? She claimed the administra·
tion bullyboys held her prisoner in Newport.
There sure was a lot happening around here in the Nixon
years.
More m i llionaires now
-thanb to inflation
WASIUNOTON <AP > -Inflation
may be pinching pocketbooks of
many Americans, but it's also ln·
creasing the number of people who
earn more than $1 million a year.
Figures released by the Internal
Revenue Service show the club isn't
all that exclusive anymore.
Those for 1978, the most recent
available, show that 2,041 Americans
liled Individual federal tax returns
with acijuated gross incomes of more
than $1 million.
The number is undoubtedly higher
by now, with rising prices and in·
come frorp the last two yean of
doulalMtlpt tnllatioo pushinc more
people into the mUlionaire bracket
dHlpat1n1 the wealthiest of the
wealthJ. ,
The 1'78 nrure was actually a bit'
leas than the 2,092 estimated by th•
IRS Jut June, but lt was still well abon the 1,719 reported for·tm.
Willie tlaoMi taspay•n were report· tng iDtomet avera1in1 just over *2
• Ike, SM,071 otber Americana nted
form• 1ho•l•1 tha\ they either Nfted no income or thelr lonea ex· ee.dld wba\ moa1J they clld make.
P•o•I• at tllou •xtremea, liowetlr, aled ,.. Uan 1 percea\
.., .... ,, ............. Wblebla _. ... tt ,._ ... for 11'11 ..... .
To&al ........... ~ ... tM adaia'• tu ftlirl ... tu &.r1111a.·'a tnm '1.J.S tn111aa • wn, .._, ...
ft1urH mdleated. 1°llOll fl•llNI
a.nail doW to 8lt HtTq• lMOine of SH.a lD 1171, up frOm ·OM llUTl fl
llTT. A..._•" ,etttnt of AIMdl•
· I ~ earillDP bet ... --
and $50,000 that year, with the big·
gest groups being the 12.7 percent
between $15,000 and $19,999 and the
9.5 percent between $20,000 and
$24,999.
There were 15.9 percent between
$10,000 and $14,999, slightly less than
22 percent between $5,000 and $9,999
and 24.8 percent under $5,000. That
left about 2 percent at $50,000 or
above.
Total taxes paid added up to $188.23
billion, an a veraae of $2,740 each for
the 68.66 mllllon Americana who hed
taxable income. Tues bad avera1ed
$2,474 per return in 1977, accordint to
the IRS.
Millionarles' taxes a vera1ed
almost a million, too, wtlh the IRS
putting the figure at $9111,328 per re-turn.
Judge affi.nns
picket rigJits
, --~--------· ~ l
•
We sell first quality and discontinued
merchandlae from Sears Ret ail a nd
Catlllbg Disnibution.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the
items were formerly offered by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores around the country.
20 lnc:h Craft.man
l!"edt'" 811111
The QradU11te
ELECTRIC TYPEWRITER
with correction
was'26419
NOW s19499
SAVE s7000
Manual
PORTABLE TYPEWRITER
was •
S6]99
NOW SSQ99
. --~RmMV ~ PAW•·· , ..... ta..pc. .,~ ..... ,.,,..." EASY FINO
t r.oME SHOP -·--
CENTER LAWN MOWER ROUTER BIT SET
was •219"
NOW
516499
SAVE 55%
SEARS
45L8.
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
NOW s13s9
21292
s57es
Sold Separately NOW
s2999 SAVE 47°/o
II untington Bttarh
9045 /\dams
/\dam~ & Magnolia
(714) 963·2666
Over 1300 pea.
was $17"
NOW
sggg
SAVE44%
WINNIE THE
POOH
MATIRESS
was
s4999
NOW
s2500
SAVE 50%
STORE HOURS · •--:rrt. .. , ... , .. ll•t-7 It:_: .. _,11, ... ,, ..
A'k :.ilHIUI
S••:.iri. nt•dit
plan ...
Cuisinart
at an unbelievable price!
Three models
Three days only
Thursday, Friday and Saturday, May 7 ·9
ALL WITM-R&-VOLUTIONARY.
NEW EXPANDED FEED TUBE!
SAL.I
DLC 1 OE ...................... tt.tt
DLC BE ...................... 14t .tt
DLC 7E ...................... l tt.tt
llllllhcl .,,tr _,..... llwryf
also
Cuisinart Cookware
and
Cuisinart
Accessories
20%
off
LIST
130.00
185.00
260.00
Harbor View Cehter
('°"'*1Y~)
1614 San Miguel Or.
Newport Beach
--_..,. _,.. __ ,..,_ _____ _
I --
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. May 8, 1981 N ••• ~~ ...... .,...~~~~~~~ ...... ~~~ ..... ~~~~---------------------Dow Jones Final
UP .90
CLOSING 973.34
~·~ ~,~ .~ " Stockholders
I
'I
have changed ·
A full 6.5 million Americans have bou1ht stocks
for the first time in lhe past fi ve years, revenini the
dramatically sleep decline ln shareownership that
began in the mid-1970s and sending total ownerahlp of
Sfo~tJaet 'f(f"ft.8 mntti>tf. wlthil'I Wht-spel1n1 cUs-~
lance of tile peak reached in 1970.
Who are you? You are from your predecessors.
And I would interpret your differences as ( 1 l f\vora-
ble to the Reagan administration's tax-savings
policies: <2> op-
timistic for the ~ stock market's
trend in general
(3 ) st ron1 ---------
e vidence that IHllA PllJll ~ ,,~ the "average" -, T
U .S . worker
still has a basic
belief in the future power and prosperity or the
American economy.
Findings of the New York Stock Exchange's re·
cent survey of shareownershlp disclose that you, the
new buyers are:
-MORE LIKELY to be women than ever
before. A thumping 55 percent of new sharehowners
a re women, com pa red with 47 p e rcent of
shareowners who entered the market before 1975.
YOUNG ER. The average age or new
shareowners in the recent survey period was only
35. 7 vears. In startling contrast, the avera1e age of
those who became sbareowners before the mid
'70s was 50.6.
-HOLDING SMALLER portfolios of stocks. The
newcomers owned stock worth S2.06S at the census
date vs. an average portfolio worth $4,915 ·held by
those who became shareowners earlier.
-IN LOWER INCOME groups. Newcomers re-
port household incomes of $25,SfM> in comparison to
$28.550 among earlier entrant&.
-MORE LIKELY TO be Ul white-collar jobs (65
percent vs. 56 percent) in comparison to blue-collar
jobs (16 percent vs 11 percent>.
-LESS LIKELY to be bousewiv1•. retirees qr no~ emptoM lbr scutie reUbn (only 18 perlent1 &t
these categories against 33 percent In these croups
among the pre-1975 shareowners).
or course, you could have guessed some of the
findings without any census to confirm your opinions.
With women so firmly entrenched in the U.S. job
marlretplace today and in posTClons of higher and
higher authority, it is loglcaJ for women to be not
only investing on their own but also daring to invest
in their own names <that is the new "'ingredient" in
the mix>
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS
HIW YOM W'I -...... nclOll ll<lOt -""' ~ .. flltion ----'""' lllOCll ;;---V-.0 ,. .. ~ ., ....... -
UPS AND DOWNS
••'-" •'" : ~ ... • II> . " "" . " • II. . '" " t114
HfW YON( W'I -The IO-ntl Ntl .,_ t1W
-Yew\ S-~ O\OCU -----...... the ___ .,._ -Ofl-al c...,,..r __ al_ . --......... -.... .,....,... ... ---.... C"''C..;'' ,,,. ....... _ _ .. ..,._., __ ..,..,
-pl\CI
METALS c..-~1 <"'b a POUfld. U.S. wstl-ll~s.
~ • <-etlts. ,oo; ......
llAc 4Jllt c.nts • _,.i, dell ... r..i,
T• M.Cla Nllll•IS' W ... COfftl!Ollte 1a. ... ....._ ,. <ents • IPOUftd, H Y
*"<W? t4Q.OO per fl-. ~..._ .. S7.00lreyN., N.Y.
SILVER
I -
\ . .
Lower tar. New filter. Sa1ne great taste.
(
r -~ -_, --.
! I
VANTAGE !
ULTRA LIGHTS· l ,___lOOs-. . I
!
l ' '
t I '
i i
I
I
VANTAGE
ULTRA LIGHTS
lltia Low Tar 4Jrng . .
New
., .