HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-13 - Orange Coast Pilot. . .
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111111111• llllY PIPll
WEDNES DAY MA Y 1 l 1'lH 1 OH A NG[ COUN l Y C ALIF OHNIA 25 CLN TS
~ULLETS REMOVED; CONDITION IMPROVES
U.S. seizure
hit by Russ
WASHINGTON· (AP> -U.S.
customs agents are trying to de·
termine whether three pieces of
equipment seized from a Moscow·
bound Soviet airliner detained at
Dulles Airport for about four
hours were properly licensed for
export, the State Department said
today.
The official Soviet news agency
blasted the Tuesday night incl·
dent as an example of "intema·
lion a lterrorism."
. State Department spokesman
:Joe Reap said the plane, Aeroflot
: Flight 318, was boarded by
:customs and FBI agents because
;officials had "reason to believe
:that cargo aboard the aircraft
: might not have been appropriate·
; ly licensed.•'
: •'They did find some equipment
; that they decided to detain over·
; night to see that it was properly
: licensed," he added.
Meanwhile , customs
spokeswoman Chris Ligoskesaid,
''The investigation Is continu·
ing ." But she said she did not ex·
peel any announcement of lt.s fin·
dings until later in the day.
Export licenses are required
for a variety or high-technology
goods, Including computers, elec·
· tronic equipment, chemicals,
metala and buildinc equipment.
Particular attention is paid, a
Commerce Department
spokesman said, to "dual-u.e
commodities," which have an
ostensibly civlU~.rol.e but which
could have a mihtary use.
Licenses are also required for
purely military goods.
Earlier, a State Department
source called the seized material
"defense non-exportable items,"
but later said he may have misin-
terpreted information given him
on why the equipment, which he
could not identify, had been
seized.
Tass, the official Soviet news
agency, charged today that
customs and FBI agents -acting
with sanction of higher-ups -
committed an arbitrary act of
''international terrorism''
a~ainstthe aircraft.
Crew members were forced
from the plane and "attacked,"
Tass alleged in a dispatch from
Washington. It said "three Items
of luggage were arbitrarily con-
fiscated" and "hand weapons
were seized from the crew mem·
bers, although in keeping with in-
ternational law they are allowed
to wear arms to ensure the securi ·
ty of the flight.·'
The State Department source
said he knew nothing about these
allegations and had few details of
the Incident, which occurred
between about 2 p.m. and 6 p.m.
PDT.
"That fight was detained by
customs," the source said initial-
ly. ·'It was searched for defense
non-exportable. items. All
pasaen1en and baggage were off·
loaded from the night. A1enta
round three such items. They
were removed. Then the ba11age
was reloaded by customs."
11# .......
Pope John Paul ll wowwUd in lhootfng a:ttaclt today a1 1w .mered
St. Peter'• Square in Vatican City.
NB developers win AirCal bid
L yon, Argyros victors in dramatic sale at ,,tice of h1 .5 million
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of .. OM!y .........
Two Newport Beach
developers have emerged
victorious in the high stakes
battle to purchase AlrCal.
Air California Investments
Inc., formed by real estate
entrepreneurs William Lyon and
George Argyros, will purchase
the Newport Beach-based alrllne
for S61.S million.
The question remaining today
was what changes, U any, Lyon
and Argyros will make at
AirCal.
Attorneys Richard Sherman
and Alvin Segal, of the law rlrm
or Irell .and Manella, of Newport
Beach, declined to comment on
those prospects following the
entry Tuesday afternoon of the
winning bid in U.S. District
Court in San Diego.
The team of Lyon and Argyros
wasn't present when Judge
Leland Nielsen approved the
sale of the airline to AirCal
Investments. So they didn't hear
the congratulatory comments
made by those in the courtroom,
including representatives of the
d efeated bidder, Air Florida
System, Inc .. operator or a
regional East Coast airline of
the same name.
Air F1orida's final bid wu $58
million for 90 percent or AlrCal,
with the remaining 10 percent of
the airline's stock to be
distributed to shareholders of
Westgate-California Corp.,
AlrCal's parent firm.
But Judge Nielsen, who baa
been supervising the financial
aCfairs of the once bankrupt
Westgate for eight years, ruled
that the investment eroup's
all-cash bid of $61.S million
exceeded that of Air Florida.
AirCal went on the auction
block Monday. with Air Florida
opening the action al $3S million.
By day's end the price had shot
up to $59 million.
Attorneys for Air Florida and
the Lyon-Argyros group stepped
to the courtroom podium ~:>
times in the often-dramatic
bidding war.
Edward Acker, Air Florida
board chairman. said after the
battle was over that he did not
think AirCal was worth the $81.S
million Lyon and Ar1yros
agreed to purchase it for.
He denied that Air Florida did
not possess the resources to
better the final bid. "We bave a
$90 million Une of credit," Acker
said.
Acker, however, c an take
some satisfaction in the sale to
Air California Investments.
Last year. Atr Florida
purchased 26 percent of
Westgate's common stock .
Because the bid price of AirCal
went so high, Air Florida stands
to make a profit or between $11
and $12 mUloion on Its Westgate
investment, Acker said.
"Your pockets have been
<See Alll CAL, Pa1e A2)
Armed young
man arrested
VATICAN CITY (A P)-PopeJohn Paul II wassbottwice
in the side as he rode into St. Peter's Square for a general au-
dience before an estimated 10,000 people and was rushed to a
Rome hospital, the Vatican said.
A young man with a pistol was reported arrested.
The Italian news agency ANSA said the pope had been hit
by two bullets at the level of his pancreas. He was standing on
his )eep near the Vatican post office between St. Peter's
Basilica 'U)d the famous Bernini collonade.
The pope underwent surgery in the Rome botpital and
the Vatican radio said to pray for his life as "his condition
was very grave." But after the 9 mm bullets were removed,
a spokesman said the pontiff's life was not in danger.
CJDEF VATICAN SPOKESMAN REV. Romeo Panciroli
confirmed the pope had been hit twice in his side.
Italian television reported two women were also injured,
but there was no confirmation of that. The television said it
was not certain whether the women were injured by pistol fire
or hurt in the ensuing panic.
Italian police sources said police in the square ap-
prehended a young man who reportedly shot at the pontiff with
a pistol. The sources said the man did not speak Italian, and
was identified as a Turkish student. Other reports said a
second suspect was taken into custody and a third was be-
ing sought.
Vatican radio said the pontiff had been driven through St.
Peter's Square in his jeep and was about to leave the jeep to
start a general audience when shots were heard at about 5: 25
p.m. -(8:25a.m. PDT>.
The pontiff collapsed into the arms or his aides as the Jeep
returned inside the Vatican at high speed, the radio said.
.Seconds later, an ambulance followed by a car with
Vatican di.gnitaries carried the pope to the Gemelli Policlinic,
Rome's most modern hospital.
A FEW MINUTES AFTER THE shooting, the
loudspeaker which broadcasts over St. Peter's Square an-
nouncedthat the pope had been wounded.
The voice on the loudspeaker asked the crowd to pray for
the pope by reciting the Our Father prayer and the Ave Maria.
John Paul, the former Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of Poland,
became pope in the fall of 1978 at age 58 -the first non-Italian
pope in 455 years.
The pontiff quickly became history's most widely traveled
pope. His ninth and longest trip, in February. look him to
Pakistan, Japan, Guam and the Philippines.
Shortly before the pope's arrival in Karachi, Pakistan, a
home made grenade exploded at a stadium wh.ere be was to
celebrate Mass. The man carryine the grenade was killed.
Extraordinary security was in effect in Manila, where
Pope Paul VI survived an assassination attempt in 1970 by a
knife-wielding Bolivian judged later to be deranged.
· Sime files
~uit in
Bay fouling
The state Attorney General's
office has filed a $2.1 million
lawsuit against a sewage treat·
ment fll'm accused of illegally
dumping millions of gallons of
waste water into a creek that
feeds Newport Bay.
Deputy Attorney General
Emil Stipanovlch alleges ln the
suit filed Tuesday in Orange
* *' * Reagan prays
fo r pon tiff
WASHJNGTON <AP> -Presi-
dent Reagan, told that Pope
John Paul 11 had been shot today
said, "I'll pray for him," a
spokesman said.
Reagan. himsel( a victim of a
would-be assassin only six
weeks ago, was totd or the shoot-
ing by presidential counselor
Edwin Meese Ill.
County Superior Court that Deputy press secretary Larry
Laguna Hills Sanitation Inc. Speakes told reporters that he
violated state and federal laws had relayed word or the shootlni
by dumping murky water Into to Meese as soon as the bulletin
San Diego Creek for 208 moved on one of the news
days Jut year and early this service machines ln the White
' I
Look __ wh.o's moving
~·~ J~QC$-.t~,iJ;.JtQw.".~ T"'.49"-r'~ · ; • ~~ \.~,_. -~ ~ ·y ~ r ,._#At• if'1tll'l.~\9' ~--..¥t.~f_. •' , .,._._ ~J·•k_.:'.'lt(•~~--,...._q.,f;"U-Qr'81&>olli(.~• r -"", __ M ,Jl. 'I' '
Mo~itoo-Part~ay:J..aguna Us, I
Last January, 43 -year-old Newport
Beach developer Geor1e L. Arl11'M carved
out a name for himself to the sports world
when be purchased the SeatUe Mariners
baaeball team for $1J million.
Now the Newport retldent, who graduat-
ed from Chapman Colleae in 1958, baa moved
into the aviation world wlth the joint
purchase of Newport·baaed AlrCal alrllnet.
Artyro1, married wltb three children,
formed Amel, a real eatate development
firm, in 1967. He was part of a .aroup that
bought President Nixon'• San Clemente
estate. He tervtt on \he board of directon of
the Finl NaUonal Bank ol Oran•• County
and ls a t.ru.tee on t.M World Affaln Council. GEORGE L. ARGYROS
A former chief of Ult Alt rorc• Rnerve,
67-year-old Wiiia• L199 lt a Newport Beacb
developer. The Udo lale ....tdat wu ap.
polnted to bl• Air Poree post ta 1m b1
former PHaktmt Gerald Ford.
A major 1eoeral ln the Alr Foree Rttervt,
Lyon enlJIW lD the Army A1r 0.,. la I.NI
and HrVed lD NOl'llller'D Atrtea dUliq JIOl'&d
War U. He ii a USC craduat..
Lyon ii married and bu ooe IOll Ud two
dau1hten . .\ mtmbtr of the advllory bo&l'd
of St. Jude flolpltal, Lyon allo la a member
of the Bll Canyon Coaatry Club and tlMt Udo
lalt Yadlt Club.
l
(near Irvine's Lion Country
Safari) has been lD compliance a111~1 "IAIT lflTHll with water codH since late • 11 11
January. At that time, the firm
be1an pumplng lta waste water
Into a plpe that carries it several
mUes offshore from Lasuna
Beach.
The waate wat.r 111 a liquid re·
1ldue from th• sewage treat·
ment process coatalninl wute
Cloudy nt1ht and morn-
ing hours with early morn-
lnC driule otherwbe fair
throu1h Thursday. Lows
toniaht 55 at beaches, 13
Inland. Hlth• Thursday m Id to upper 601 alon1
coast, low 70s inland.
material and or1antams.
Otrlcia11 of the company 1ald 111101 TlllY they have tried their belt to
meet st.rtncent water code re-
quirement. and that they spent
company money ln a 1ood faith
effort to coiTeCt problems that
led to the dumpint.
Deputy Attorney General
Stipanovtch uid companlet can
be fined ~:000 for every day that
it vlolat.11 me wat« eode. 11111 Tb• •ult alle1t1 that i..,una
Hilla Sanltatlon, by dumplnf lD·
lo the Creelc, violated a CHM
aad del1lt order of tbe Santa
Aaa Re1tonal Water QualltJ
Control Board
SUpanovlcb added that be ii
now neaottatlnc with the com-
pany wttb a view toward acble'f·
( ... l.AOS, Pa1tAI>
~
v
Al • • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednuday, May 13, 1981
Carter ~isinforined' on S"4h's illness?
NEW YORK CAP> -Preti·
dent Carter's decision to admJt
the shah of Iran to the United
st,"9s for medical treatm_..t -
a move that helped 1p1ri lbe
seizure of Americ1n bos.ta1es -
was a "calculated political 1•m·
ble" and was based on some
misinformation, The New York
Times said today~
The Times said an "extensive
uamlnalion of the Iranian
c rlsls" indicated Carter WH
misinformed about the nature
and urpncy of tho UlneH of the
cancer·stricken shah who died
last year in E1ypt.
Carter. now livilll ln Plains,
Ga. was quoted by the Tim6
_ as ~ayine he was told the shah
needed medical attention avaJla·
ble only In the United States. ----------------
However, the shah's cancer
could have been diagnosed and
treuted in Mexico rather than
New York, the r.aper quoted his
do'ctor, BenJam n Kean. as HY·
Ing. ll said the decision to admit
the shah to the United States
came after months of argument
within the administration and
··was influenced by an intensive
lobbying campaign ... by a n
STEAMBOAT FOUND -Bob Bennett <left )
and Ma rtin Ma yer work to uncover the
crosstail section of the steamship Tennessee
that wrecked 128 years ago after losing its
.. ,..,.......
way in heavy fog . The wreckage was found in
Tennessee Cove, four miles north of the
Golden Gate in San Francisco (see story,
P age Al2).
Airport funding backed
County OKs $100 million for improvement project
The first steps in what could
be a lwo.year project to gain
financing for improvements lo
John Wayne Airport have been
taken by the Orange County
Board of Super visors.
Board members a pproved the
use of revenue bond sales lo
generate about $100 million for
the improvements. Supervisors
also agreed lo seek proposals
from underwriters and bond ex·
perts on administering the com·
plicated bond transactions.
Although in itial estimates
we re that $75 million would be
needed for the improvements,
s upervisors decided Tuesday to
up the ante lo $100 milJion to ac·
count for inflation and con·
tingencies
From Page A1
SEWAGE • • •
mg an out-of ·Court settlement
that would gua rantee that if the
company's ocean-outfall pipe
broke it would have adequate
f acilities to avoid having to
dump into the creek.
Health authorities say that the
Upper Newport Bay area is so
polluted that it is difficult to
prove the waste water from
Laguna Hills Sanitation further
decreased the water quality of
that section of the bay. The Upper Newport Hay area
is generally closed lo s wimming
and shellfish gathering.
Hearing set
on tax cut
WASHINGTON (AP> -After
scoring budget victories in the
House and Senate, the Reagan
administration is focusing its ef ·
forts on its proposed t hree.year,
30 percent cut in personal in·
come taxes.
The supervisors decided to sell
t he same kind of non-profit gov-
ernment bonds used by the coun·
ty government lo raise money
fo r its belQw-market rate
mortgages for qualifying buyers
of low-cost housin~
In the case of the airport, rev-
enues collected at the site ~r~
expected to pay for the cost of
the bond.
The $1 00 million will go
toward s tre nghte ning the
runway and adding 737 feet to its
north end, construction of a new
general aviation terminal and
new taxiways and aprons.
Also, it is to finance a new
213,000·square·foot commerdal
terminal and a new 3.500-space
parking garage.
Former OC
principal
electrocuted
A former principal in the
Fullerton E lementary School
District was killed Tuesday at
his home when he touched a
chain link fence charged with
electricity from a severe~ power
line.
The Fullerton Fire De part·
me nt said Herbert Welsh, 68,
died instantly when he apparent·
ly leaned against the fence after
cutting down a eucalyptus tree
in his rear yard.
A department spokesman said
the falling tree cut a Southern
California Edison 12.000.volt
line, which came into contact
with the chain link fence .
Fire department crews were
called to the scene after a slu·
d e nt at nearby Fulle r ton
College, who h ad heard the
screams of Welsh's wile. alerted
authorities.
Welsh was principal of RoLUn g
Hills School from 1962 until 1973,
when he retired. He had been
witfl the district s ince 1946 as a
President Re agan's c hie f tea~her and administrator.
economic spokesman . Treasury •
Secr etary Donald Regan .. was Tax hike seen
being CalJed todar -lO fac_e ,a . • t;~A.Us.'!""'V' 1 ..... ~ u. . ?..~ptjcjt ~ F'itloft<.t ~.~. 4-'-~ l-....-.~
m1ttee to defend the admirustra· sem IY. Repu~llcan. lea ers are
tion's proposed tax cut. o.pposang highe r taxes on c agarettes and candy. and are
Regan, scheduled to be the catllng for a $205 miflion re(und
first witness in hearings on the in a business property tax.
tax reduction, planned to tell the The Republicans' ''alternative
committee that the president, budget," revealed Tuesday, also
savoring big budget victories on includes Med.i·Cal co·payments.
both sides of Congress, Is in no in which low·income people
mood now to talk compromise would pay $1 to $3 for services
on taxes, according to his they now get without paying
Tre asury aides. anything.
---------------------------------------------~ OAANOI! COAIT Dilly Pilat
Thomlil P. Hiley
NllWW
Robert N. WH<J ,...,,.
M. Thom11 KMVll l ....
Thomu A. Murphlne ..........
O....H.l,.001 ..... -...uw ~Schulman
~~"
Ktr!Nth N. Oodd1rd Jr. ~~
MAIN OflP1CE .ut Wttt .. , M., C..t. Me .. , CA
Mall....,_: ... IM, Geai. Mew, CA.~
t
I
A portion of the money also
will be used outside the airport
property to improve freeway
ramps, add another southbound
lane to MacArthur Boulevard
and improve nearby lntersec-
li o n s for grea t er traffic
capacities.
By starting now, county of·
fi cials say they hope to have the
financing ready when the first
improvements to the airport are
to be made probably in about
two years.
Before anv imorovements eo
in . h owever . th e county 's
master plan for the airport ex·
pansion requires that jet noise
from commercial carriers is re·
duced.
* * * From Page A1
AIR CAL • • •
e nri ched," Nielsen told Air Florida attorneys barry
Hoffman and Herbert Wolas.
Herbert Kunsel, a court-
appointed trustee for Westgate
said the sale o f AirCal will
permit cons ummation of the
Westt'ate reorganization within
60 days.
Kunzel said owne rs of com·
mon and preferred stock and
holders of debentures will re·
ceive no less than a return of 100
cents on the doll ar. He estimat·
ed there are about 8,000 to 10,000
shareholders who will get their
money back.
Westgate crumbled in 1973
after U. 8. National Bank, run
by financier C. Arnholdt Smith.
was declared insolvent.
Smith subsequently was con·
victed of grand theft and em·
bezzlement. The case is now un-
der appeal.
Ai rCal was Westgate's maJOr
asset. The firm still owns a fish
cannery in Puerto Rico. It is for
sale.
Hotel reopens
. 3'w~ ~ .....
STATELINE (AP> -Seven
and one-half months after being
shattered by an e xtortionist's
bomb, Harvey's Resort Hotel re·
Joined its glittering neighbors at
the south shore of Lake Tahoe
toda y.
In a celebration presided over
in a rare public appearance by
founder and board chairman
Harvey Gross, Harvey's opened
Its remodeled hotel to the public.
The resort bas spent nearly
$18 million rebuilding and ad·
ding s afety and security
features since the Aug. 27 bomb·
Ing. Glass curtain walls, Italian
Granite and wheal·colored
ceramic tile highlight the ex·
terior or the building while
auedeclot.h walls, dark aranite
plllars. brHs and marble lrlm·
mlna and lush carpetln1 are
featured wide.
Goerrilla8 hunted
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
CAP) -Government 1oldJert have launched a methodical
1weep f0t leftltt 1uen11la1 ln the
hlllt 12 milH north of thl•
capital df.7. T
~
1old·boy network' " that ln·
eluded David Rockefeller ,
forme r chairman of C hase
Manhattan Bank, and former
Secretary of State He nry Kiss·
inger.
While Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi was being treated for
cancer in New York, militants
demanding his return to Iran
seized the U S Embassy in
Tehran on Nov. 4, 1979, and cap-
tured the embassy's istaff. The
ho11tage seizure lasted «4 days.
The Times said Carter'is early
optimism that the crisis could be
resolved in the 11prlng of 1980, 10
months before It actually ended,
was based on u secret meciUnte
in Paris In 1''ebruary 1980
between his c·h lef of 11taff,
Hamilton Jordan, and thti Ira·
nl.n forclNn minister, Sade~h
<:hotbzadeh
Tht' newapaper ah10 said that
for 10 of thl' 14 months of use
crlal", the tlnltt'd States w•s
ne1<1ll1tlln14 with cuentia lty
powMlftH 11cc:ular leaders In
I ran """ aot nowhere until mall lnic 1·1111tw•t with the rellglol.Mt
rl14un•11 wt111 t11111 thto rt·ul clout
Envoy compromise told
Habib leaves for Damascus , Beirut after talks ;
Proposal aimed at defusing Syria-Israel powder keg
JERUSALEM <AP> -Presi·
dent Re agan's special Mideast
envoy, Philip C Habib, re·
portedly proposed a compromise
aimed at defusing the Syrian·
Is raeli powder keg that drew
c lose r to flas hpoint when
Syrians fired anti·aircraft mis·
s ites at Israeli jets .
Ha bib l eft h ere today for
Damascus and Beirut after two
da ys o f ta l ks with Prime
Minister Menachem Begin. He
Trial begins
forGanoood
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. <AP>
Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood
tr ied to sexuall y assault a 7 ·
year -old girl whose parents
befriended him after the Marine
returned from almost 14 years in
Vietnamese prison camps, a
prosecutor told a Superior Court
jury today.
District Attorney William H.
Andrews told a jury of eight men
and four women that he wouJd
prove Garwood, 35, molested the
girl Aug. 7 as he took her to gel
ice cream.
Ue said he would present
evidence that liarwood the on-
ly American serviceman con·
victed of collaborating with the
enemy in Vietnam, tried to force
the child to have or al sex with
him, tried to rape her, forced
her to fondle him and fondled
her genital area.
Lesbian tops
in cop class
PITTSBURG <AP > An ad·
milted lesbi an who won a court
battle to become a Contra Costa
County s heriff's deputy has
placed first in her class at the
police academy
Denise Kre ps is the first
woman in the h istory Q.f the
county's state police academy to
win the plaque designating her
a s the class's' 'No. 1 officer."
There were 39 students in the
14-week class, authorities said.
'
flew to DamascuK the>n drovt' to
Beirut, and there w1u1 no 1m
mediate word on wh ot. if
anything, he had uccom1>ll8hed
in the Syrian c:apital
As Ha bib arrived in Beirut, a
booby·trapped car explode d
near the offi ces of a leftist group
in mostly Moslem West Beirut,
killing five pedestrians and
wounding 15 in addition to set·
Ung afire 10 cars parked at the
scene, police said No other de·
tails were given
Is r aeli opposition l eader
S himon Peres, who met with
Habib before his departure,
said "Nothing 1s over, no one
has anything in his pocket."
I s rael Radio an d th e
J erusalem Post quoted Israeli
sources as saying Habib's pro-
posal included a limit on Israeli
flights a nd the r emoval of
Syrian missiles from Lebanon.
There was no official con·
firmation of the reports Begin's
office denied that the Habib pro·
posal would limit Israeli bomb·
ing attacks and reconnaisance
fli g hts, and P e res s aid the
media account was "not exact."
The lsraeli ·Syrian s howdown
over Syr ia's deployment of
s urface·lo·a1 r m i ssiles in
l.Phannn has raisecl f Pars of a
Middle East war But Israeli
Radio said Tuesday that Israel
ministers who attended a s pecial
Ca bi net meeting later indicated
they believe a solution is possi
ble
A Syrian military spokesman
in Damascus said one lsraeli re-
connaisance Jet was downed by
Syrian "air defenses in the
Bekaa Valley" shortly before 5
a . m . Tuesda y, but did not
specify whether m issiles .were
used. Syria today cla imed the
plane was a pilotl ess drone. used
for reconnaisance. and showed
the wreckage on televis ion.
The report was denied by the
Israeli military command.
Witnesses in the valley said
two SAM-6 missiles were fired
from halftrack vehi cles two
miles south of the Lebanese
Highway closed
BAKERSFIELD (AP >
Northbound lanes of Highway 99
were closed for about six hours
a fte r a p artia ll y overturned
tanker truck spilled liquid sulfur
south of here Tuesday
FUii
1.11rf1eld at a.-yak at about Ule
t1mt> da1mcd hy the Syrians. l)ut
no plancis wt re downed.
Jn a i>pcec h to P arliament
ufter meeting lfabib, Begin re
iter ated his insistence that Syria
rt•move the m1 s111les 1t brou&ht
mlo eai,tcm L-ebanon on ARnl
29 Syria has refused adamantly
to yield
Ht'gin said every diplom~1c
avenue will be purs ued but. ir all
fail lo persuade Syria lo take the
missiles from the Lebanori·s
Bekaa Valley. "military means
will be used ··
The missiles were fared Tues-
day at Israeli planes in what
was considered a maJor escaJa
lion of the crisis. although re
ports conflicted on the details.
Pope news
told Senate
WASHINGTON <AP1 St:n
Barry Goldwater interrupted a
Senate debate on a military
a uthorization bill today to advise
colleagues of the s hooting of
Pope John Paul II in Vatican
City
.. I have the sad feeling that I
should report to my colleagues
t hat an attempt has been mane
on the pope's life in Ro11'1e." Ille
Arizona Republican said ... We
have no further details."
There was little visible re{IC
t10n to Goldwater's announee
ment from word of the shooti'.ng
through news reports.
Goldwater then went on to
speak on the bill.
Bess sp end s
'quiet night'
KANSAS CITY, Mo <AP>
Former first lady Bess Truman
re mained in serious condition lo·
day at a Kansas City hospital .
where she is battling pneumonia
and other complic ations of
surgery last week to repair a
broken hip
"She spent a good, quiet nigt.t
Her blood pressure Is stable."
Tom Peck. a spokesman at
Research Medical Center, said
tod ay of the 96·year old widow of
President Harry S. Truman. She
re mained in lhe hospital's in·
tensive care unit
Ill THE SUll
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Elizabeth TayLor is the center of attention at a party
following her Broadway debut in "The Little Foxes.,,
Among the revelers are her husband, Sen. John
Warner (right J and actress Shirley Mac Laine r see re-
lated story, Page A 12).
.........
Gambler Kenneth Uston, shown at an Atlantic City
blackjack table, has won his suit against Resorts In-
ternational Hotel Casino. A New Jersey court ruled
that the casino could not bar U ston from playing
because of his skill at memorizing the cards dealt in
the game.
Neuport slur
bri.ng1 apology
A Sacramento housing con·
s ultant apologized for calllng
Ne wpo rt B each tht
··Polyester Harbor.''
"1 guess it was a poor
choice or fibers," explained
Ward Coanerly, on contract
to the harbor city.
The "polyester" reference
had caused a few stirs in
Newport's city hall, where
some officials thought Con-
nerly was making fun of the
city.
But Connerly said that isn't
so. He said leisure suits often
are made of polyester and
that he thought of Newport
as a leisure suit kind ol town.
Director Jobn Hu1ton wu
upst aged when stars of the
film version Of ''Annie" were
introduced , but it wasn't
l}ecause of his actors and ac-
tresses. A frisky dog stole the
show.
Bingo, the 6 -yea r -o ld
canine who plays Annie's
p et , Sandy, in the movie
version of the musical show.
kept journalists entertained
at a New J ersey news con-
ference with a series of
tricks under the direction of
trainer Moe DlSesso.
Shooting began at Mon·
m outh College. The film
stars Albert Finney as Dad·
d y Warbucks, Carol Burnett
as Miss Hannigan and Alleen
Quinn in the title role.
Whe n the Mexico City
Philharmonic arrives in San
Antonio next week . the
woman who helped found it
Carme Romano de Lopez
Portillo -will come along.
The wife of Mexico Presi-
de nt Jose Lopez P o r tillo
plans to arrive Sunday and
spend three days. She will at·
tend a con cert o f the
orchestra and open an ex-
hibit to sell Mexican books
and crafts
Mrs . Lopez Por ti Ito, a
patron o f t he arts. has
sponsored concerts by the
Philharmonic across the
United States .
Dame Cicely S aunders,
credited with cha nging the
way the medical profession
views death, received the
$200,000 Templeton Prize for
Progress in Religion at Buck·
ingham Palace.
The check for the world's
richest prize was presented
by Prince Philip, husband of
Queen Elizabeth II.
Dame Cic e l y, 62. a
specialist in the control of
pam for cancer patients. was
accompanied by the founder
o f the prize. John M .
Templeton, a Tennessee-born
invest ment counselor who
lives in the Bahamas .
Dame Cicely. ninth winner
or the prize. has been called
the woman who changed the
face or death by establishing
a n Anglican Protestan t
hospice in London to care for
the terminally ill.
Princess Maha Cbakri
Sirindhom of Tha iland ar-
rived in Peking for a 10-day
visit. the first by a member
of the Thai royal family
Thunderstorms spread
Minor flooding reported in East, Midwest, Texas
Temperat.ures
Llgllt variable w h•ds t11ro111111
lonltftl e•~ sou-I to -.tt I to
•••nots In afternoon. SovtllWfflerty
swell 2 lo l twt. CentJdffabla •-c 1011d lnus 111ro11gll lonlgllt •1111
-tlal a"-CIMriftg.
NATIOtt
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT,.Wedneaday. May 13, 1981 s
AP ..........
DAIRY PRODUCTS -Two-week-old But·
termilk s its atop its nannie goat mother.
Yogurt. Yogurt, owned by Joan Neufeld .£!..__
Madera, gave birth recently to four kids,
which farmers consider unusual.
Super-80 jet aniving
Air Cal plans premier departure of 'quiet' aircraft
from John Wayne Airport May 22 in practice flight
By GLENN SCOTT
Of .... o.11, ...... ,..,.
Fo lks who live under the
takeoff pattern at John Wayne
Airport may want to mark their
calendars for 3:30 p.m. on Fri·
day. May 22
That's when Air Cal's first
new and supposedly quieter
DC-9-80 passenger jet will make
its premier departure from the
airport.
The night will be one of 10
practice runs authorized from
May 19 to the end of the month
at the Orange County airport.
The county Board of Supervisors
approved the flights Tuesday.
AirCaJ officials s aid the Super·
80 jet will arrive on its m aiden
practice run in Orange County
at 2 p.m on May 22.
It won't be the first time one of
the so-called quieter jets has vis·
ited the airport. County officials
were given a demonstration of
one of the new models last year
The ar rival of the jet -the
first of four AirCal is scheduled
to buy this year will mark a
turning point tn airport ac-
tivities. however.
Use or quieter jets is the cor-
nerstone of an airport expansion
master plan approved by the
:.upervisors in February. The
plan increases the number of
daily commer cial Jet flights
from 41 to 55 while targeting a
reduction in total jet noise.
After the initial practice run,
the new jet is scheduled to ar-
rive again at 7 p.m . Sunday,
May 24. and take off at 9:30 a .m.
Monday, May 25. It returns the
same day at 6 p.m .. departs at 7
a m. Tuesday, May 26, and re-
turns at 5 p.m
The jet is planned to begin
carrying passengers on June 11
if the supervisors approve its
use, as expected .
Panel 0-i(s oil drilling curb
Bill gives California power to block offsh ore leases
SACRAMENTO <AP) -An ef-
fort to give California the power
to block federal oil lease sales
off its coast has been a pproved by
a Senate committee. despite op-
position fro m oil interests and
fears the attempt could lead to a
bitter court fight with the federal
government.
The bill would Impose a four·
year moratorium on offshore
d ri I ling unless oil companies
meet broad sta te controls.
To avoid the moratorium. oil
companies would have to con·
vince the state Coastal Com·
mission that "failing to allow
offshore development would
have a greater adverse impact
on coastal zone resources than
allowing development.•·
The measur e, approved 6-1 by
the Natural Resources and
Wildlife Committee, now goes to
the Senate Finance Committee.
The measure would give the
com mission the right to limit
dr il lin g a n y wh ere within
the 200-m ile offshor e coastal
limit.
Despite heavy s uppor t from
environmental groups includ·
ing the Alliance for Coastal
M anagemenl. the Sierra Club
a nd the Oceanic Socie ty -Sen.
Barry Keene said his measure
"was not an environmental
c rusade.''
Gem
Talk
Jly .JC /!UM />llH/f;,<;
Crrt1fwd f il•m11/111(11<1. A r.s
Keene. D-Mendocino, said his
plan would still permit new oil
drilling "in high-yield, low·risk
areas,.. but would enforce the
moratorium in "hi gh-ris k "
zones where pet roleum reserves
are in doubt.
In effect, he added, his pro-
posal seek.s to "serve as a policy
statement" and a "signal to the
fe deral government that
Californla intends to ride herd
over oiJ drilling off its coast. ..
But John Berwald of Chevron
said Keene's measure would sti·
fie oil exploration needed to off.
set "the arbitrary and
capricious actions of OPEC," as
domestic oil reserves decline
"a bout 5 percent per year "
Berwald was joined in his op-
position by Alfred J Shults, a
s pokesman for 10 major oil com·
panies. inc ludi n g C h evron.
Atlantic Richfield and Texaco.
A r e present ative of the
California Cha mber of Com·
merce. oppone nts of the bill,
said offshore drilling platforms
are "not aesthetically that un·
pleasing . . they a r e not
noticed by 99 percent or the
public ...
Federal officials have target·
ed five California basins for oil
exploration Bodega Bay,
Point Arena. Eel. Santa Cruz
and Santa Maria. Bidding has
a lready begun o n the Santa
Maria tract, while a final de·
cision on the other fo ur zones is
ex pec t ed to be made next
m onth.
Filtn SVC class topic
Film as an art form will be the
topic of a class at Saddleback
College in Mission Viejo begin·
ning May 26.
The three-unit class meets
from 6 to 10 p. m Tuesdays
a nd Thursdays and will be
taught by associate professor
Robert Cohen.
The class will evaluate films
such as "Bananas," "Annie
Hall ," "Alien ," "Young
Frlrnkenstein" and c lassics such
as "The Gold Rush." "Citizer.
K ane" and "Yankee Doodle
Dandy ..
R eg1strat1on begins to·
day. For more information call
831-4788.
Let America's top
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Soutltem Calif omia swf report ... -a a • •
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What do you ll.ke about the Dally Pilot? What don't you llke?
CalJ the nwnber below and your me11a1e will be ~rded, tran1crtbed and chllvered to the approprtate ed.ltor.
The 1ame >&·hour auwertn1 aenlc• may bt '-'Std to record
letten to the editor on •.Q)' toplc. Mailbox contrtbuton mU1t ln·
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When the future King of
England gets engaged, it Is cer·
tainly a s pecial occasion, so
when he gives his l ady an
engagement ring, you can bet
that it will not be an ordinary
ring. Prince Charles has given
Lady Diana Spencer a vtry
special ring. ll is an oval sap-
phire s urrounded b y 14
diamonds. All of this is set in
s h im mering white gold. If
British royal tradition has been
followed -and there's no re-
ason to believe it hasn't been -
the gold ls from a nu11et mined
in Wales. A discreet silence Is
always ma intained by the
Jeweler who furnishes royal
Jewela, but a London newspaper
lnsi.ats that Lady Diana 'a rtna
was purchased from a well·
known London abop for about
'43,000. That, ol COW'le, la a blt
more than moet lolkl pay I or an
enga1ement rln&, but royal
en1a1em enl1 don't bappe n
every day. The royal family hu
matntalned Its tradl\lon o
choo1tn1 beautiful, lHleful
Jhelry piece•.
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\
s Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Wtdnt1day. May 13. 1981
Paralyzed parachut~t
Pennsylvania paraplegic plans perilous project
MUSICIAN DEAD -Bob
Marley, a Jamaican reggae
musician, who smoked marl·
juana on stage, has died of
cancer in Mi ami. He suc-
cumbed Monday.
KING OF PRUSSIA, Pa. (AP)
-Jim McGowan, a 48-year-old
paraplegic, plans to jump 3,000
reel Crom an airplane, equipped
with a parachute, wet suit and
1 flotation collar, into the cool
waters of Lake Wallenpaupack
in the Pocono Mountains.
"I probably won't be in the
water more than a minute. I can
swim but only on my back,"
said McGowan, who will be
greeted by five scuba divers and
a motorboat when he hits the
waters of the IO·mile·long lake
Tuesday.
"He's an amazing guy. He's
got a lot of guts," said sky div·
ing instructor Doug Angel,
manager of the Sky Dive East
Parachute in Pittstown, N.J .
Angel said he was hesitant
when McGowan came to him
and said he wanted to learn sky
diving, but that McGowan was
adamant. Angel spent almost a
Mi:llion-dollar stamp
~1847 letter brings record su m
GENEVA, Switzerland (API
-A five-cent .. Blue Alex an·
dria" stamp on the cover of a
l ove letter m a ile d lo a n
American girl in 1847 has been
sold for $1 million, the highest
price ever paid for a philatelic
item , according lo auctioneer
David Feldman.
The cover . also affectionately
known as the "Blue Boy," was
bought by an unidenlHied .. very
well-known European collec·
tor " a t a c losed -bid sale
organized b y Feldman 's
Geneva-based auction house.
The previous owner. also a
private Continental collector,
had paid $200,000 for it six years
ago, according lo Feldman, who
said the soaring prices reflected
a growing d ema nd for
"Am ericana."
The previous world record
price for a stamp was $850,000
Ballo t s mailed
SACRAMENTO (AP l A
month of mail-in voting has begun
lo decide which unions will
represent 120,000 state employees
in bargaining with the state. The
state Public Employment Rela ·
tions board mailed punchcard
ballots Monday to all eligible
state workers.
paid for a ··r ed o ne -cent
Guyana" from 18.56 at a New
York auction almost exactly a
year ago.
The "Blue Alexandrias" were
a provisional issue made by the
then-postmaster. Daniel Bryan,
in 1846 or 1847. just before the
first general issue for the United
Stales. Only six have survived
but none matched the fame
gained by the "Blue Boy" on the
letter addressed to Miss Jannett
Brown in Richmond, Va., on
Nov . 25, 1847, and in which a
gentleman named Hough pro·
posed marriage.
It was discovered in 1907,
when the daughter of Mrs .
Hough looked through her
mother's belongings and found a
bundle of love letters.
The stamp is crude, in bluish
paper and in a black design con·
sis ting of the word "Alexandria
post office" with a "paid 5" in
the center and framed by a
rosette.
The stamped letter. or cover,
was sold soon after its discovery
fo r $3,000 to an Ohio collector
named George H. Worthington,
and since has changed hands
five times.
Feldman said he received
nearly 50 bids, mostly from
Am ericans trying to repatriate
the cover.
year training McGowan for the
jump.
"He weighs about 200 pounda
and because of his paralyzed
legs he might get hurt,'' Angel
said of McGowan. "That's why
we decided it would be safer to
land in water."
McGowan, a technician with
Upjobn Co., became paralyzed
m Brooklyn, N. Y., when he was
19. ·•A couple of teen-age gangs
were having a fight and I got ln
the way," he said. "I was
.stabbed in the abdomen. But the
paralysis was the result of a
spinal anesthetic I was given
while they were operating on the
sta b wound."
Much of his training was done
at a pool at Temple University
in Philadelphia.
"We put him in a wet suit with
a flotation coll ar around his
neck and showed him how to
jump in the water and stay
afloat," Angel said. "We took
the premise there wouldn't be
anybody there when he came
down. So we taught him how t-0
get out from under the chute in
the water."
,.
· · 1 think if I can do this, it may
inspire other disabled people to
do thlnga they think they can't
do," McGowan said. "It's better
than sitting around the re-
habilitation station, wondering
what to do with their lives.
"Strangely enough, I'm not
scared. I'm excited. I'm looking
forward to it. It's a good feel·
ing," he said.
Pilot crashes
dinner party
WARSAW, Poland CAP) -A
wedding party did the hospitable
thing when a hang-glider pilot
crashed their celebration. They
invited him to dinner.
u..._... McGowan will fall about 200
feet before his c hute opens,
Angel said. His legs will be
bound and he will wear just
socks instead of paratrooper
boots.
PAP, the offi cial news agency,
s a id Jacek Kibins ki of the
Krakow Air Club had just
broken the national record for
hang-gliding, covering 20 miles
in an hour and 20 minutes, when
he landed· near 1 the newlyweds
and their guests in Kojszowka, a
vi llage near the Czechoslovak
border.
He received an immediate in·
vitation to join the party.
James McGot.oon is confined to a wheelchair, but he'U be a free
spirit next Tuesday when he parachutes 3,000 feet into a
Pennsylvania lake.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Babies behind bars stir f11ror
LOWELL. Fla. <A P > -As the The boys were born April 24 at said from Tallahassee.
Legislature considers a bill that an Ocala hospital. Circuit Judge "They don't come in routine
would declare prison s unfit John Rudd of Tallahassee grant-contact with males. they don't
p l aces to raise c hildre n . ed their mothe r temporary go lo the grocery store with
newborn twins have joined their custody Friday, transferring the momma, they don't see and hear
inma te mother. push ing the case to Marion County circuit cats aud dogs, telephones ring -
baby popula tion to eight at court in Ocala for a full hearing. just the normal external stimuli
Florida'~rison for women. The boys arrived at the prison that doctors, psychiatrists,
Three 'ether inmates at the Friday. according to their pediatricians and common sense
the children on a path to prison
t hemsel ves, Ms. Raulerson
added.
"What you do is create a
whole new generation of people
who are going to be on the other
side of the law. so to speak," she
s aid.
prison are pregnant and already mother's lawyer, becoming the tell me are important aspects of
have won c ustody , prison first twins ever to live in a normaldevelopment ofa child." T e chnique
observers said. Florida prison. Prison Superin-At the prison, the inmate
A 1979 law gives judges case-tendent Bill Booth said Ms. mothers and their children live • J•f• d
by-case discretion on whether Wilson had two previous convic· in a cottage within the prison Sllllp I le
women may keep babies born lions for grand theft. compound.
during incarceration, but a bill The House bill to get the Clare Raulerson of the Florida BALTIMORE <APJ -About
pending in the state Senate b a bies out o f prison wa s Clearinghouse on Criminal on e -sixth of the estimated
would ban the practice. The authored by Rep. Chris Meffert, Justice said research has shown 300,000 Americans who die each
House passed the bill in April. who said he filed the measure the most important as pect of a year of heartbeat d isorders
The latest infants to arrive at after touring the North Florida child's development is being could be helped by a simplified
the state prison for women were fa cility and interviewing in· with its mother. technique for implanting re-
t he twin sons of 24 -year·old mates and offi cials. "It is absolutely essential for gulators, says a Johns Hopkins
Charlotte Wilson. She is serving "The reason for it is, first and mother and baby to be together University surger y professor.
a five-year term for grand theft foremost, I don 't believe the best at least for the first year, or the In the operation. two elec·
from Brevard County and e·n· interest of a child is served by baby will suffer psychological trodes connected to a generator
tered the Florida Correctional being confined in an environ· damage," she said. unit are implanted in the heart
Institution on April 15. ment such as prison," Meffert Separating them could start thro~ small incisions. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_.:,_~~-=-~~~~~~~~-
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Killing of burros
pref erred by Navy
CHINA LAKE IAP> -The
Naval Weapans Center says it
favors shooting wild burros on
its grounds to reduce the papula·
lion, which it says endangers the
lives of test pilots and those
traveling on base.
The Navy released its recom·
mendations Monday on reducing
the burro numbers at its China
Lake Weapons Center, saying it
fa vors shooting the animals.
"T h e recom m e n ded
a l ternative with t he m ost
f avorable phy s ica l and
economic effect on the environ·
ment and the Navy is direct re·
~ duction," or s hooting them. a
state ment by the Navy said.
"If complete removal by a
combination of live trapping and
d irect reduction is selected. live
trapping must be financed by
mended solutions include.
"Complete removal by direct re·
duction (shooting). com plete re·
moval by a combination of live
trapping and direct reduction,
partial removal of burros on
center lands and no action ...
Public hearings must be held
on the findings.
The Fund for Animals is one ot several conservationist
groups suing the Navy to stop
the eradication pronam
Rape law studied
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981 s
Burnett award slashed
Comedienne accepts reduction of libel damages
LOS ANGELES <AP >
Castigating the Nation al En·
qu1rer for .. a form of legalb.ed
pandering," a Judge still cul in
half a $1.6 million libel award
lo comedienne Carol Burnett.
who sa id s h e was "very -
s allsfied ··
Superior Court Judge Peter
Smith. awarding the entertainer
$800,000. said a jury's a ward of
the larger amount was .. clearly
excessive and not supported by
subslant;al evidence."
Miss Burnell. who could not be
in court because s he was re·
hearsing, late r affirmed her
lawyer·s acceptance of the re·
duction.
"I'm very satisfied with the
judge's de{'ision I hope the Na·
t1onal Enquirer has been taught
a lesson," s he said in I\ slate·
ment released by her puolicist,
Rick Ingersoll, who said she was
r e h (' a r s i n g · · E u n i c e a n d
Mama ," a CBS-TV comedy
drama that will appear in the
ra 11
absurdity," the judge said .
However. h e said it was
"more realistic" to give ber
SS0,000 in general damages for
emotional s uffering and $750.000
in punitive damages.
Smith said the latter amount
might be sufficient to deter the
Enquirer from printing similar
libelous m ate rial in the future
but would not put them out or
business.
"This court has the distinct
impression that the defendant
has absolutely no remorse for its
misdeeds," the judge said .
He noted that the tipster "who
started this travesty"' was pro-
moted to gossip columnist on the
Enquirer, a pasition he main·
tains today.
Mas te rson con ced ed th at
"there are certain people you
are not able to convince. but in a
First Amend m ent case, that
doesn't mean you quit. .. 'VERY SATISFIED'
Carol Burnett
: private organizatio ns ." the
. statement said. ..Costs of re-
SACRAMENTO lAPJ -The
time lo prosecute an accused
rapist would be extended from
thr ee to six years under a bill
a pproved by an Assembly com
mlttee.
RECALL MISSES A recall
drive against state Sen. Alan
Robbins. who is facing sex
charges, will fail to make
the ballot. said Jan Tucker.
a n organizer of the drive.
She said 8,000 lo 10,000 of the
required 27,415 voters had
been collected. with the
d eadline today.
With Mi ss Burnett's accep·
tance of the revised award,
.Judge Smith denied the En·
quirer's bid for a new trial, bot
Enquirer lawyer William
~asterson vowed to appeal.
He said or the reduced award.
..The original award was of·
fensive to the First Amendment
and the concept of a free press
This one isn·t quite as of.
fensive."
when the rules are broken,
particularly in such a flagrant
manner."
The Enquirer's misdeed, he
said, was compounded by its
failure to print an adequate
retraction of the item which
described Miss Burnell as beinf
boisterous in a Washington D.C.
restaurant. The judge said it
was clear to him that the item
portrayed her as drunk.
• m oval are estimated at $50 a
:·burro for direct reduction and
·: $500 a burro for live trapping ··
Air crash kiUs 4 Judge Smith said: ·'This de
fendant engages irr a form of
legalized pandering intended to
appeal to the readers' morbid
curiosity.
..
Navy officials said all of the REDDING <APJ With fire
burros must be removed from season fast approaching and in
the base. the wake of a plane crash that
Meanwhile. a federal court destroyed a service warehouse
hearing m Fresno on the issue and killed four, the U.S. Forest
Monday was delayed several Ser vice may be acutely short of
months to give the Navy time to fire-fighting equipment.
prepare and publish an environ-f'our Forest Service workers
m ental impact statement. died in Monday·s crash of a
_ Th_e_N_avy s aid its recom __ twin-engine Beechcraft
MEWPOIT
HARBOR CRUISE
&
SUMDA Y IRUMCH
ATTHECAMHBY
714 675-7522
trans
natlonal
funcllng
RJLLY ASSUMABLE
INTEREST OHL Y
Fire s till burns
BAKERSFJ ELD tAPI Kern
County rirer1ghteri. t•xpect to
spend another riay or :-.o putting
out the last embers or a rire that
has been burning in 11.000 toni.
or Collon seed s1n<:l' Saturday
night
Smith s aid a gossip item about
Miss Burnett publis hed in 1976
b y the Enquirer wa s
"reprehensible" and clearly im
plil'd Miss Burnett was intox·
.icatcd.
.. For the National Enquirer lo
contend it was not guilty of ac·
tual malice and that the article
was not libelous borders on
"This style of journalism has
been enormously profitable to
the defendant," Smith said .
··While the First Amendment of
the United States Constitution
permits such journalistic en·
deavor, it does not immunize t he
defendant from accountability
•
Miss Burne tt· s attorney .
Barry Langberg. said the judge
had made "a sensible decision."
but added he felt the jury's in·
ilial verdict was fair.
ISftOW
• 1ng.
2nd TRUST DEEDS You'd be surpri sed how ·easy it is to install most
gas-sav ing device s. J\nd now it 's a lot easier on
your budget, too.
Wea therstripping. Caulki ng materials .
And hot water-saver showerheads.
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HUNTINGTON BEACH
'Kennedy Center
Tonight' Pays
Tribute To
Jazz Great
Duke Ellington
Get a 40% State income tax credit.
A new State law lets yo u take 40% of the cos t
of many Gas Savers as a State in come tax credit.
Up to a maximum of $1500. (Less any Federal
tax credit.)
Many easy-t o-install Gas Savers qualify. Like solar
pool covers. Wat er heater blankets. Warm -a ir duct
insulati on.
You'll find all these Gas Savers can really help
keep your gas bills down .
And you'll probably find in stalling them a lot
less taxing than you think. Both physically and
)
financially.
Lets work together
to save energy.
Program airs Wed., 5-13
Celebrated jazz artists Sarah
Vaughn, M ax Roach, Billy Taylor
and Joe Williams make a rare con-
cert appearance together in an attec·
tionate tribute to the late orchestra
leader and composer Duke Ellington
on "A Salute to Duke." The "Ken-
nedy Center Tonight" performance
airs Wednesday, May 13 at 9 p.m. on
KOCE, Channel 50.
J
Duke Ellington died in 1974 at the age
-• Of•.]l-tt#~C · ""'~· ,i.ffft°".V-f~ ~ -~ -cftlrt~~;'1>CJt r~ti\f~<t'lfl~'"nrc'l<hame
"Duke" early in life for his innately
elegant style. Highlighted In the
special program are personal re-
miniscences about Duke by Ella
Fitzgerald and Ellington family
m embers. Also inc luded is a dance
performance by Harold Nicholas of
the famed Nicholas Brothers and a
selection of Ellington's gospel music
performed by singer M cHenry
Boatwright.
··"Kennedy Center Tonight" Is pro-
duced by WQED, Pi ttsburgh, WET A,
Washington, D.C. and the Kennedy
Center with a grant from the Shell
Companies Foundation. Executive
producer : Dale Bell.
. -' . ~-
I '
I I
I.
Orange COast DAILY PILOT /Wednesday, May 13, 1981
Mail balloting might
spur laggard voters
Last month in San Diego, a
record 60.8 percent of voters cast
ballots in a s pecial e lection, de-
f eating a proposal to build a $224
million downtown con vention
center. The previous record
turnout for a special election has
been 55.8 percent in 1971.
The difference this time was
that all voting was done by mail
More than 430,000 ballots were
mailed to San Diego voters a nd
261,433 w ere returned by the
deadline. San Diego officials
credit the mail ba lloting for the
turnout.
The question of conducting
elections by mail as an antidote
to steadily dedining voter
turnouts has been much in the
news lately. And s upporters also
believe it could s ubstantially re·
duce the cost of staffing and
servicing polling stations .
In a recent discussion among
Orange County political and gov
em ment leaders. the res ponse
was mixed. Some said they would
be ready to try matl balloting,
es pecially 1n s pecial election s
that traditionally attract fewer
votNs Othl'rS ·were concerned
ahout such probll•ms as possible
loss of IJallots in the mail and of
fraudulr nt voting by persons not
t•ntitled to n•ceivc ballots.
San Diego officials said a
comparison or signatures on
ballots with those on file with the,
Registrar or Voters was used to
prevent fraud in their election.
In recent testimony on elec-
ll on practices , California
Secretary of State March Fong
Eu said s he personally always
votes by mail with an absentee
ballot since s he's never certain
where she will have to be on e lec-
tion day. .
And voting by mail. she
pointed out. would be one way to
overcome the dilemma of the las t
pres idential e lectio n in whic h
thousands of voters. dismayed to
hear the election result before
the West Coast polls had closed.
s imply decided not to vole.
At the moment. Congress is
considering a handful of bills de-
signed to correct that problem by
staggering voling hours in dif ·
ferent time zones.
In r ecent presidential elec-
tions. the voter turnout has
d ee I med steadily. going from 64
percent in 1960 to only 53.9 per-
cent last year.
Trus is a far cr y from the re-
cent San Diego re:,ponse. If the
goal is to encourage citizens to
participate in the election pro·
cess. the idea of voting by mail
would s eem to warrant som e
serious study
Collecting damages
I n th ese times of
a ~tl'onomical damage judgments
in pnsonal inju r y and or
wrongful dt'ath cases. it is not at
all unus ual for plaintiffs to re-
rrive dollar awards well up in the
hundrl•ds of thousands .
C'ustomarily, the judgment is
paid out in one lump s um by an
in~urance company. State Sen
Ba 1 rv Keene has introduced a
bill that would permit courts to
s pread damage payments in ex-
{'l'Ss of $100,000 over a number of
year s inst t·a<l o f requiring a
single payment.
Clearly, this would be advan-
tageous for the ins urance com-
panies. But Keene believes it also
would provide greater security
for the injured by guaranteeing
steady payments througho ut a
lifetime. or al least for a substan-
tial period
At present. extended pay
menb are allowed only in
medical malpractice cases. But
that law r ecently was declared
uncons titutional because it
.singled out a s pecific type of
damage case. Keene says the
practice would be permitted if it
applied to all cuses.
That might be so. And there
is somethin g to be said for
guaranteeing an injury victim, or
the heirs of a wrongful death vic -
tim, a reliable, long-term in-
come. On the other hand, there
might well be many who believe
they should have the right to dis ·
pose of the proceed s of any
damage judgment as they see fit.
Certainly, medical and legal
bills resulting from an accident
can rarely be settled on the rn -
stallment plan
Any option given the courts
in assigning damage payments
should take into consideration
s u ch obligations as well as the
wis hes of the damaged party.
What's in the bottle?
After an endless series or
hearings, studies a nd reports, the
U .S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms has decided to
abandon the idea of requiring a
full listing of ingredients on wine
bottles.
Trus will be dandy news for
the wine producers who tend to
pride themselves on the elegance
of their labels . Imagine a fine
vintage wine with a label that
looks like something that beJongs
on a ketchup bottle.
Supporting t.he vintners in
protesting the idea of ingredient
labeling, California Sen. S .l.
Hayakawa said flatly, "Wine is
n~t made from a haphazard con·
•
coction or ingredients, it is the re-
s ult of a natural process ... every
material which goes into wine is
n aturaJ to the product."
That, of course is the way it
s hould be. But the next question
might be, what is wine? It's got
to be hard to believe that the con-
tents of some of the low-cost
·•pop" wines. are 100 percent
naturaJ.
Maybe the next step for the
BATF would be to determine
which drinkables are really en-
titled to exemption from ingre-
dient labeJing because they are
indeed true wines. As for the
res t , a list or ingredients might
be enlightening.
Opinions expressed in the space above ar~ those of the Dally Pilot. Other vi~ws ex-
pressed on this paQe 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 (714)
642-4321.
Recall that story of yesteryear about
two shoe salesmen sent to ..a small
African nation to open up markets.
One wired back. "It's hopeless.
Nobudy here wears shoes." The other
wired back, ''Opportunity unlimited.
Nobody he r e wears shoes yet."
Something similar may be happening
in China. The Communists banned
neckties years ago. Now thnt the coun-
try is accepting western notions, they
may be salable there. Okay, you take
tie~. I'll take hluc jeans, and meet you
In Shanghai.
In (Andon for a short time a!Ur
World War II, you could mall yourself
l)y postal service from one part of the
city to another. And lnupenslvely.
cost the equivalent of six centa a mile.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
' ..... ,_ -··
You could designate yourself a living
package, and pay a postman to accom-
pany you from your hotel, bus stop or
wherever to anyplace you wanted to
go. It was set up for people who didn't
know their way around town, 1 gather.
But too few used It, so It was stopped.
Q Who was lhe last U.S. President,
before President Jimmy Carter , who
failed to get the opportunity to appoint
a Supreme Court justice?
A. President Andrew Johnson more
thQn a century ago.
0 . ls there anyplace on earth whC're
the natives never used bows and ar·
rows?
A. AU1trallo. The aborigines stuck
with tb~lnpear8.
Thomas P. Haley
Publisher
Thomas Keevil
Editor
Barbar~ Krelbich
Editorial Page Editor
a
--=-=----
Haig thr~at sp11rs security
w ASlllNGTON I\ rew weeks ago.
five activists opposed to the administra-
taon 's policy in E l Salvador managed to
make thl'ir way onto the seventh floor of
the State Ot'partment, where the top
brass have thl'ir offices
Whtie two of the intruders d1verte&
thl' guurd on duty, the other three en·
tered Secrc•tary of State Alexander
llaig 's s uite. s houted s logans and
dum pcd bluod and as hes on the plus h
furnishings
Haig was in hb suite at the lime, bul
secunlv officers subdued the protesters
w1thoui much trouble The 1nc1dent,
however, has quit•kened the depart-
ment's moves to tighten security at
home and abroad in the wake of the at-
tacks on U.S e mbassies in recent years
and the assassination attempt on Presi·
dent Reagan in March.
HAI G'S lll G ll PROFILE and
hardl11ll' pohc1es make him a prime
target for terrorists. security officials
fear. Th<>y note that he narrowly
escaped an assassination attempt in
Belgium on June 25. 1979, four days
before he left his post as NATO com-
mander
Spedal measures are being taken to
make lla1g's home in nearby Bethesda.
Md , safe from unexpected visitors. Of-
f1 c1als did not want to set a dollar figure
on the cost of these security arrange·
ments for fear of tipping off Potential in-
lruders to lhe exact nature of the safety
devices Hut sources told my associate
Lucette Lagnado that only about $12,600
worth o( equipment will be permanently
attached to the house, the rest can be
removed and used again when Haig
leaves office
Possibly to reassure llaig's neighbors
in the PoSh suburb, officials did disclose
G. -JA-Cl-AN_D_IRS_D_N -~
that attack dogs are not part of the
security system . Instead, sophisticated
"motion detector " devices will spot
a nyone approaching the large house
and its tree·shaded yard
HAIG'S Ll~10USI NE ts also being
fitted out with security equipment, in·
eluding a special tracking device that
will enable authorities to locate the
vehicle in case it is stolen
Internal security measures are also
being tightened up at Foggy Bottom
part1cularly concerning access to lhe
seventh floor "It ·s a tricky business,"
one State Department official ex·
plained "There are all sorts of visitors
busloads of tourists, schoolkids. It
makes it very difficult."
Overseas, plans are proceeding both
to make our embassies more secure and
to prevent sensitive documents from
falling into the wrong hands in case an
embassy is overrun The Iranian mili·
lants were able to seize our Tehran em·
bassy before security officers could
destroy some highly sensitive papers.
Eventually, the Sta le Department
hopes lo solve this perennial problem by
s imply eliminating the presence of
sensitive documents in our ell)bassies
The plan would involve an electronic
s torage and retrieval system in
Was hington. Overseas personnel would
plug into the computer to !>tore sensitive
information and call 1t up later as
needed All trans missions would be in
code, just as messages sent by cable
are now
OFFICIALS ESTIMATE that the data
bank will lake about five years to install
1 n 250 U S missions worldwide
Meanwhile. lop priority is being given
to embassies in countries on the State
Department's secret I isl of "severe"
security problems These countries re
portedly include El Salvador. Lebanon,
Pakistan and Afghanistan
Meanwhile. on a personal level.
foreign service e mployees are being
given instruction on the best way lo
behave and survive 1n the event or
a terrorist attack on their overseas
post.
Names soon lose original meanings
Our newest nuclear submanoe was
Just launched in Groton, Conn , after be-
ing christened "Corpus Christi."
There were quite a fe w people who
complained about the name. They said
that "Corpus Christi," meaning "the
body of Christ," was not an appropnate
name for a warship designed to kill peo-
ple.
The people who decided to name the
s hip "Corpu5 Christi'' didn't have
Christ in mind. of course. They thought
they were naming the ship in honor of
the city in Texas, and Christ never en-
tered into their thinking. Not many peo-
ple think of Christ when they think of a
Texas city.
THAT'S THE WAY it 1s with names .
After a while they assume a character
of their own and where the name came,
from doesn't have any effect on how we
think of it. Hardly anyone thinks of the
apostle Saint James when they talk
about San Diego even though the city
was named after him. Nor are we re·
minded or angels when we talk of Los
Angeles.
Many religious names would be a
heavy burden lo carry if they were con-
s idered literally all the time, but stu-
dents at Catholic schools don't give a
second thought to names like "Im-
maculate Conception High School" or
"Sacred Heart Academy." After a
while. it's jus t a name like any other.
The school's character gives the name a
new meaning of its own. When Notre
Our popular President let his heart
get in the way of his politics and ended
up with his foot in his mouth. I know the
feeling, I have often had to consult an
ora l podiatrist myself.
It happened during an emotional
White House luncheon for the Presi-
dent's Commission on the Holocaust to
IHDRCI MAIR
honor survivors of lhe anli·Jewtsb NHI
horror of World War 11. Mr. Reqan'•
response to the memories or six mUUoo J ews murdered in Nazi coocentraUon
camps wns decent. human and humane.
It i~ n view we can all be proud of
when he closed his speech with:
"Ttl£000RF. Roosevelt said that tbe
Pre11ld ncy was a bully pu\pll. Wtil, 1
for one Intend that lhls bully pulp t 1b1Ji
be used on every occaston, where It Is
oppropriate, to point a rlnctr of shame
at ev.en lhe uelln ss of 1raftlt.I, and cer·
lainly wherever IL takH place ln lhe
world, tbe act of viol oce or ltrrorllm,
and thllt ~vcn at the neg0Ualln1 table,
'
Dame supPorters are exhorting their
team to kill, "Our Lady" is furthest
from their thoughts.
I have no objection to having the
nuclear sub named the "Cor pus
Christi " Naming anything is difficult.
,~,,
-AND-Y -RDD-Nl-Y _ .. -§1
and even when two people name their
baby. one of them often objects to the
name.
THERE AR E A lot of names I object
to. ll doesn't seem lo me lhat teams in
professional sports have been very in-
ventive There are too many Tigers,
Bears, Giants, Pirates and Cardinals. I
happen lo be a New York Giants foot-
ball fan cno one's perfect) and I dislike'
all the confusion on the SPorts page of
my paper about whether they're talking
about the baseball team from San Fran-
cisco or football team from New York.
College team nicknames are even less
original than professional teams. Most
of them, are named after some animal
they apparently like to associate wilh
the character of their team. There are
dozens of Bears, Wildcats, Tigers, Bob·
cats and Bruins. How a name like
"bruin" ever got PoPUlar, I don't know.
It's just another name for a brown bear
n~ver shall it be forgotten for a moment
that wherever it is taking place in the
world, lhe persecution of people, for
whatever reason -persecution of peo·
pie for lheir religious belief -that is a
matter to be on that negotiating table or
the United States does not belong at that
table."
That statement set off applause In his
audience and panic in his start who
rushed around trying to tone down the
President's views so It didn't sound aa II
the American government really cared
that much about human rights in the
world. God forbid, that we s hould be
perceived as ll pt.,-ople who believed In
our own Constitution or s uch com pone
08 human righ~
APPARENTLY, a closer readina of
the mood or Mr. Reagan's start Is re·
vealed by the peNJlstent attempt to •P·
point the former legal eagle for lhe
Liberty J..obby to a hl&h offlce In the
Department of Human and Health
Ser vices. Even alter the nomlnatlon
was withdrawn In the race oC tncredlble
flip.Oops by the nominee -who first
said be only dJd It for money <so do
prostitute&) or didn't know what wu 10-
ln1 on (neither does lbc plano playel' In
8 brothel) or did know Whal WU &olnl"
on, but didn't approve ol ll (lb.It's what
they saJd al.the Nurembura trill•> -
and no one ever uses it as anything but
the name of a team .
THE AUTOMOBILE makers were
very big on animals for years but they
seem lo be phasing out animal names
now that they 're making fewer
elephants. There's a trend toward just a
letter from the alphabet. Chrysler's "K-
ear " seems to have caught on as a
name if not as a car and General
Motors is banking some of its future on
the upcoming "J -Car." I prefer the let·
ters to the Cougars and the Pintos. I
suspect they've changed because
they've run out of appropriate animal
names for cars. You just wouldn't call a
car a "Bear," a "Razorback" or even a
"Leopard."
It seem s strange that "Corpus
Christi" is an acceptable name for a
submarine for most of us As meaning·
less as names and nicknames often are,
we seem lo have some clear lhougb un·
spoken idea about what names are ap·
propriate for what categories of things.
We name teams "Giants" but we
wo uldn't call a bank "The Giant
American Home Savings Bank." On the
other hand, the word "First" appears in
the names of hundreds of banks and
hundreds of churches. That's strange.
And while there is a vast difrerence
between breakfa st cereals a nd
automobUes. Kellogg's was successful
wilh a brand called "Special K" long
before Chrysler applied the letter to a
car.
Reagan staffers continued to derend the
choice.
The Liberty Lobby is, you may re·
call, one of those ultra-right wing
groups of nuts that claims the Nails
never killed six million or, for that riitt-
ter, any Jews. That the whole lhinc ia a
hoax and those were camps lnvented by
the Jewish-controlled Ameritan news
media. Whew!
President Reagan used to be a liberal
before he went wrong aQd every once In
a while a bubble of decency 11tilJ sur·
faces.
GllllY CUI
About Gov. Brown's .. Cuttma Co.rntrt
DepL" Now Supplemental Securicy In·
come reclplenLs are not allowed to ... t.he dOCtol' unless they are very Ul. What
about the cbeci·UP to prevent Hl10UI
mn.eu7
B.E.
'
' "
CongressmaJ'!, 's wife
becomes private eye
W ASllJNGTON i AP> Sam Spade
and Phillip Marlowe, move over.
There's a new private eye ln town -
and she's the wife of a coneressman.
Arlene Crane, wife or Rep. Philip
Crane, R·Ill .. insists she won't be an
armchair detective.
"I want to dig it out!" she says. "I
want a challenge. Solving puzzles is
m y bag."
But it is unlikely the busy Capitol
Hill socializer , who refuses to re-
veal her age, will
have many of the
nati on's
lawmakers sitting
at her desk. chain·
s moking and
nervously stam -
mering their tales
of woe.
Mrs. Crane sa9s
she won't take any
clients she knows MH. cHNE
socially. But she says she won't
hesitate to take a case j ust because a
congressman or senator is a target or
the investigation.
Mrs. Crane says she always want·
ed to be a pri vale ey<'
"I like solving puzzles." s he says
"I like helping people. I reel hke a
doctor."
So. at the urging or a neighbor. s he
enrolled in a detective course After
g raduation, she was hired by In-
ternational Investigations Inc of
McLean, Va., where neighbor Dick
Bast is chief sleuth
Mrs. Crane concedes her husband,
Brain death guides
termed obsolete
BOSTON (API Guidelines drawn
13 years ago for determining when
somone 1s brain dead are obsolete a nd
need to be revised, says a me mber of
the medical panel that hammered out
the Ha rvard Criteria
T he guidelin<'s. drawn after medical
ad vancement in transplant and re-
suscitation techniques, s aid brain
death is present whe n there 1s ir-
reversible coma and certain other
signs or unresponsiveness.
However. Dr William Sweet told a
conference here that the criteria failed
lo distinguish between irreversible
coma and brain death. Others said
spinal cord reflexes persist as long as
two weeks after the destruction of the
brain.
No Fun and Games!
a conservative con1ressmao who
made an unsuccessful run for the
1980 Republican presidential nomlna·
lion. al first bad mixed reactions to
her career. But ahe says he is happy
now that she is fulfilling her ambi·
ti on
Among other things, Mrs Crane
s ays her women's intuition will help
her crack cases.
··A woman can size up a man
without even talking to him," she
says. "Men are always looking for
the good not creeps, of course, but
mos t men. Most women are protect-
ing their bets by looking for the good
but seeing the bad
.. Women are not going to be
s uckered by a con,·' she continues.
"They have an innate capacity to see
through people."
Because she has eight children.
ranging in age from 8 to 20, she ex-
pects to do most of her sleuthing out
of he r home . S he doesn't want
divorce cases, and the prospect of
stakeouts doesn't appeal to her.
"That would probably mean a
divorce case," she says.
What would s he do if a cli ent com·
plained of harassing phone calls?
"Tap the phone." she says.
Sunken ship
poses problem
in Savannah
COLLEGE STATION, Texas <AP >
Unless the slate of Georgia or the
federal government is willing to raise
and preserve the ironclad fighting
ship Georgia, the vessel should stay
where it is in the mud of a Georgia
river, a researcher says.
The ship. one of the largest fighting
ships launched by the Conrederacy.
has lain m the Savannah River mud
since 1~.
Or Erv Garrison, a researcher
with Texas A&M Uni versity's en-
vironmental engineering division.
s aid the 1.000-ton, 250-foot ironclad
would be better preserved in the mud
unless major preservation work was
done.
The s hip was sunk by its crew after
firing on Gen. William Sher man's ap-
proaching Union troops, Garrision
said The Army Corps of Engineers
wants it moved away from improve-
ments to Savannah harbor .
r~.,11c;n<1I U<11VP•<,1ly is''"' ror most recen1
t11yt1 s<.tiool g1aduates
M,uure adulls anend Nal•Onal Uruvers•ly
10 g!'I a gofJd solid oouca11on Courses
are 1,i.1grit by dCadPn11c. arid business
prolP<,<,1c1ndll. ""'in di lf!ast 10 yPars f'•oerience
,,, 111c•ir t1elds most navi: ooctorate'>
• 5tuOv .1ne cciur<;e ec.c;h montr
• AttentJ t1en1nq cia.,~f''>
• Rec~'""~' any working day ot me 1 "a'
• ' nc111t•d a·tl ,., a•a11ao1e to inose wr1n <l i::111ly
• Ovt'• •O ihJMusS•Clfl ano Cid'> r(.)01'• t,f'f If'•!>
1nc..ilt'f1 1nrouQhou1 '>an 011>90
... ,
"d' w and L v!> A•19e1es Lounl ti!>
Next claases begin June 1
Call for further informallon
San Diego 563-7200
North County 941-6245
Orange County 957-6285
L.A. County (213) 431-3649
• ..,.,,.,,,, " ••• ,.. ,., .... " ......... ·~··· .. ,. ,.19(! ·~ ... ui..i• ... 'V'I
•t• ...,, ...... ,,""'....,, •""•"' .... ""'4-#lo~O'·~ .. ., •• .. .... ... , .. ., .. ~ ... -... .. .., ...... ""' ~ • ._ .,,,.,._' *i"V'~,,_.,, --./"
30% -40"% .
ALL OUR FINE
LEATHER FURNITURE
ALL LEA THEfl . •.wr_,..._...,.....S888
YOUR COST JUST
• All Leather • 8 Way Hand Ti9d Coil Springs
•Hardwood
Frames
AMBER LEA'IHEB COMPA.NY
------"""' •lHlH'T 1.Et11fEa Jta"n It,; •t'fNIG,\
2850 SOUTH HARBOR BLVD.
SANTA ANA
'" ............. .,.... <•> ,.,,
C"1Mr H.,t>or & Seo-rstrom IMWY••• ~ S.. arw ,...._ ltAM·JPM ClOMd Frldtyt end Sllurdlyt
•
..
Orange Coast DAILY l'ILOT/Wedneaday, May 13, 1981
Huntington Beach !ACH OF THHI! ITl!MI ARK AVAILABLE fO" I AU
A8 ADVl!RTlll!D PLUS STORE
We sell first q uality and discontinued
merchandise from Sears Retail a nd
Cat alog Distribution.
"Was" prices quoted are the regular prices at which the
items were formerly orrcred by Catalog or in many
Sears Retail stores a round the country.
CEILING
FANS ·~~~>~ ·-~
.dP./.
p':\ t .~ was 99.99
8 only <.4.. ... ·
40" FAN-4 BLADES
(hght not included)
NOW 59.99
HOME-N-SHOP
VAC
was 69.99
ettectlve 5114111
11903&
12only
was 69.99
38" FAN-3 BLADES
NOW 34.99
GIRLS FASHION Ai:~
CORDUROY /. ·~
PANTS
Size 7-14
was 12.99
STEREO
STAND
was 89.95
NOW
64.99
TERRY
SCUFFS
with heel
ladles sizes
were 10.99
·r--fr '
Ill In .• . I
·~'i i .
(, f 1 r_~~
7 only }
NOW
49.99 NOW 8.49 NOW
4.99
WALKING-JOGGING
EXERCISER
with Metal Rollers
was 189.99
NOW ..
124.99
..
TIMED RELFASE
C500
I
I I
I I
I I
SUPERC
500
INTRODUCTORY
OFFER
j()tablna
• our twst ~00 mg I
vitamin C fonnul2
with 1121ural ro8C h1~. I
n.nln. hcspcridin, and ~
the total hlollavonofd
8 l'Omplex
• tfme<I ff!/~ 10
as.'>Urc pmlongcd
prOIC:l'lu.>n -ask u' I
10 prove: lhat II woru I I
I
I I I I
llmJl 2 ~r cwtomer
I I
I
~ .... ,,,_{
SALAD BOWL SET
was 12.99
MAJOR LEAGUE
BASEBALL SHIRTS
Boy a am1ll -extra large
NOW
7.99
were7.49 NOW 3.99
NATIJRALE
OXYE
200
• our C:Xl lu'lvt'
envlronmcnu l
protn11on furmuu
comhlnci. the finc:-111
1U1t11rul vitamin E
.a.1th dc\'t·n anu
11x11Jan1~
• nt'" extrJ potent
formula11on fc:atUft'<i
I: in the dr)' tahln
form -no oil
STORt-; llOl'RS
Iha. Fri 11 Mt.M ~.1.n1o, ...... ..
8'o-> II ... , M
• I
,\.,k a~mt
S1·ar' t•rt•lfit
pl:rn ...
I I I I I I I
I
TIMEDREL~E
MULTIPLE
i
I I I I I
I
I I
SUPER
HY·YrTE
• rh" rt'j(lll.1r 'trt"llj(lh
formulJ l llntJlll' ..!K
'11.101111' Jn<l n11nc:rJI'
-hl'lf" "mphh
your hk'
• filllt'tl ""'"'«'"1th
our pJlt'ntl·<l ( .1n<l
{1f1'1t•'ll) l·Jrth'f).IO•
Jlf'Ul~''
• h1W1 potc:nq II
u•mpft'x 1t1 '>Uppurl
)llUr hold) Junn~
Jlt'rHlO' o( ~lfl"l'.'
INTRODUCTORY
OFFER
j()tablets
llmk 2 ~r cuttomcr 99ct I INTllODUCTORY
OFFl!Jl
30tableu
llmk 2 ~rCUM.omcr
I
·.--/' ·._. ,.., • -~ .. ~, .... ~ .... Al'!._.. ~ ..... 'i ~/I' r ---,....j.......,..• ~ -p; .,.. •
We want you to try our best vitamin formulas. Everywhere
you look, people are selling ascorbic acid and synthetic
Vitamin E at low prices. We can d o that too. But we can also
do better!
Just give us a try. We're convinced that once you\re
sampled these superior formulas, yuu'Jl never shop for
vitamins apywhere else.1bat's how gOQd they are - and this
week only, you can try all three for only 99¢ each! Can you
afford not to do something this simple for your health?
DISCOVER THE GREAT EARTII
VITAMIN STORE NEAR YOU.
100 Stores Nationwide.
OPEN70AYS
Mon. thnl Sal.1
IJ ~la m 106 oop m
undayt1
llOO~m w t,OOpm
COSTA MESA STORE
370 E. 17th ~trPet
(next to Ralph's Market)
(714) 646-0534
HUNTINGTON BEACH STORE
lOOM Adame Av..
ID ~. Albertaone Center
96S-5694
VITAMIN STORES
~· Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, May 13, 1981
TIMELINKS•
IN 1924,
(ijf:ORGe gus H
WAS BOK>N IN JUNE" ...
Japanese favor
'prickly' defense
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
&4 2 •5e78
PUBLIC NOTICE ------s u1>•••CM1COU•T0, THI
STATI 0, CALlflOaNIA l'Oa
THI COUNTY 0, OlllANOI
In llM Mitter of -Appllcatlon of
IRIS II. GINSBURG, alto known as
IRIS 8 . "OWE, For Change of Name
CASI NUMel • Al ...
o•o••TOSHOWCAUH l'O• CMANOI 01' NAMI
IRIS &. GINSllURG aka IRIS 8 .
ROWE 11.H fllad a pollUon In lhlt court for en order •11-ll'Q petitioner to
c henge "" na me ri4im IR 1 S 8 . GINSBURG ella IRIS 8. ROWE lo
IRIS 8 . STEIN.
II Is ller90y ordered that ell porsont
lnterHlld In the matter •for.said ap-
fM•r before !Nt cour1 In 0.pertment
No. 3 at 100 Civic CAtnltr Drive WHI,
Sent• AM, CAlll0<nla, on J.,,.. 17, lttl,
al 10:30 o'clock a.m., end then and
Iller• ,,..,. cause, II an they flaw, why
u ld petition for cllenge ol nemt
SMuld not be Of'Alllld
II 11 further ordll"ld I/lat • <OPY of
this ordlr to snow c-be publl"'9<1
In lhe Dally Piiot, • newSj)Apor ol
gen•,,•I circulation, publl.nld In 11111
county at i.ast once • week tor four
con.acullw -Its prior to the day of
u ldllearlng,
Dated: May 4, 1'11
RONld H. PrtMtr
Judgtoltlw
~lor Coun Published Or-Coast Dally Piiot,
May'· 13, '°· 21. f91l 21Jt.t1
PUBLIC NOTICE
,.CTITIOUS BUSINIUS
NAME STATEMINT
Tiit toll-Ing person Is doing busl·
M U at•
HALLMARK. BULLION COM·
PANY, 1201 Rull-Road, N-POrt e .. cll, Caflf0<nla •1660
J.,nes Bur99ss Aluander Niven
1201 Rutland Road. NewPOrt Baecll,
Callfornla nMO
Thi• bUSIMIS Is conducted by ... In·
dlvldual.
J-s B. A. Nlve<1
This 11.ai-1 was filed with the
County Clert< of Or-County on May
4,1ttl.
""'" Publlslled Or-Coast Dally Piiot,
May 6, 13, 20, 27. 1911 2090'41 t
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
Th• lollowlng ptrsor1s are doing Duslneuas:
J & C UNDERG R OU N D ENGINEERING CONTRACTORS, 201
Soul/I Anita 0r1 ... Suite 103, Orange.
California.,...,
C. A. WHEELER, 201 South Anita _
Drive, Suite 111J, Or-. C4111fornla '2Mll.
G &. G ENGINEERING CON·
TRAC TORS, INC., a Calflornla cor·
porallon, 1062 Tulare Drive, Costa
Mew, Calllomla 9262'.
Tiiis l>uslnou Is conducted by • general INll1Mf"Shlp.
G & G ENGINEERING CONTRACTORS, INC. '
J-8. a.uacrwr,
Pre"clent
This 11411 ..... nt WM llled with the
County Clerk of Oran99 County on
Aprll 27, 1'111. ,....,.
PuDll.nld Or-Coast Delly Piiot,
Aprll 2•, May 6, 13, 20, 1911 191W1
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAMI STATEMENT
Th• foll-lno ptrsons "' doing !KlslnHs as:
11) PROFE SSIO NAL
MANAGEMENT SERVICES, (2) P M
S, 131 ME $, W IC T, 14761 franklin
Avenue, Suite A, Tustin, Cafllo,.,,la
'16111
Medlcal Electronlcs Sy1tems,
Inc., • Collfornla corpof'allon, 14761 franklfn Avenue, Suite A, Tuslln,
Callfornla t2'IO
Tiiis buslftfts Is ~onduc:IH by. COf'· poutlon.
MedkAll EIKtronlcl
Svstef'M, IM.
C.ol Li.dOYIW,
S«retary(TrNsur ...
This It-I wn filed with IN
County Cler'll of Or1nge County on M41y
4, 1'11.
1'1610
Publlallld Oranoe Coast Dally Piiot, Ma''· 11, 20, v , 1"1 2141 .. 1
P UBLIC NOTICE
'ICTITIOUS BUSl .. ESS
1: ~p ... ~.~,J~~r~'\W'\~ JMt.'t
bu.lneuas:
BRANCHING OUT, 196 Capltal
s1r .. 1, COit.a M111a, c.llfomla t:i.21.
ROBERT J. & MARGARET J,
HAMMOND, ... C.pl1411 StrMI, Costa
AMMI, CAiifornia tim.
T 1114 bu1lno1 Is <Ol'lducted by •
11-r•I pertne""le>.
Roi.rt J. Hammond
Tlllt llM-' was llled with the
County Clerk of Ore<199 County on Aprll 20, 1911.
1'161444
PuDllllled OrA119t Coast Dally Piiot, ,Apr II 22, 2', MAy 6, U. 1911 1111 .. 1
P lJBUC NOTICE
l'l(TITIOUS 8USINHS
NA.Ma tTATUdNT
Tn• followlng o ... '°"' are dolno
IKIJtneu as:
EL ZOCALO, 4517 ~I Drive,
1rvln1, GallfonllatVU e •ltftdiM Mfna9e,,,.,.1 $ervk .. ,
Inc .. a C.llfomla <OfPH'•llon, 1'402
Sierra Col-, lrvlM, C.lllornl• t""4.
This llUlllN .. II conduCWcl b' • <«·
porallon. •111anO•d 11una11m1nl
$ervtc.t n-w. ...........
l"r•ldtftt
Tiiis ................ flied """" tN Covnt1 c .. rw Of Otllltlt ~nty on
AIWll f, 1W1.
JACICION, ICIDDI " a SU(aLllfO ... ...,...,. ..... . , ........ ....... ..... , .... ....... .......... a... ..... ,.._,... .... ,CA.... ,,,,,..,
PW!llllllf Or-CMM o.11¥ I'll«, .... It. f\• Mer•, II, IWI tltMI
WASHINGTON \APl The
prlrnt> mlnJ•tM of Jupon doesn't
w11n1 hl11 t'Ounlry lo bl' lhouaht of
tul u rourln6il lion on mlUtary hi·
• SU<'ll Uul ntill ht•r dot•s he want to
b6 tllkt!n fur u mou11t.>. He'd
rj1thor bt• u pon·upint•
A<·cordln.: to th<' Japanese
Embussy hurt-. Uw unlmal im-
8Rl'S l(Ol mixed up nnd came out
wrong beruuse of translation
problems wht•n Prime Minister
Zrnko Suzuk i uddressed the
House i''oreign ACfairs Commit-
tee last week
Th<' embassy said Suzuki.
speaking in Japanese. charac-
terized Jnpun's attitude on the
defense issue as .. Retter to be a
porcupine than a roaring lion ...
But the oCficial ioterpreter in·
correctly translatt.'d this as,
"Bettt'r to be a wise mouse than
a roaring lion," the embassy
said in a statement.
The embassy said Japanese
leaders have been using the
porcupine metaphor to describe
J apan's strictly defensive role
unde r a constitution which
May is nATIOIAL
HYPERTEns1on
monTH
forbids it to acquire the means
to wage aggressive war.
The incorrect translation ,
portraying Japan as a mouse in·
stead of a prickly porcupine,
ca used comm e nt in som e
American circles that criticize
Japan Cor not taking more
res ponsibility for the defense of
its region of the world.
·'The Embassy of Japan
regrets that a different implica·
lion was rendered by this mis·
taken interpretation," t he em·
bassy statement said.
The Wash..iogton Post picked
up the "wise mo\.ase'' phrase in
an editorial declaring that ''the
J apanese cannot simply explain
the ir special cond itions (on
military matters> and sit back
with folded arms .
.. Ame ricans do not expect
J apan lo become a lion that
roars," the Post editorial said.
"But a lion that squeaks?"
During his state visit to the
Un ited Stutes Suzuki said that
Japan will do more to bolster its defenses.
At SAV-ON we care about
your blood p ressure. So, during the
month of May we will be having ...
FREE BLOOD
PRESSURE CLINICS
SATURDAY, MAY 9th . & 16th .
1 :30 to 4:30 PM
• Blood pressure taken by trained person nel.
• Free literature concerning your blood pressure.·
·subject to supply o n hand
WIN
A FREE Pl PEER HOME
BLOOD PRESSURE MONITOR /KIT
SMIRNOFF BLACK VELVET OLD CROW
VODKA
1m 1.75LT. 9.69
CANADIAN
WHISKY 9 99
80PF. l.75 LT. •
BOURBON
WHISKEY 11· 79
80 PF. l.75 LT.
1 CANADIAN 'CLUB
IMPORTED WHISKY 5 79
86 PF. 750 ML •
TANQUERAY
IMPORTED GIN
94 PF. 750 ML
FOSTER CREEK
BOURBON WHISKEY
6Y r.Old aoPF.1.75lT.
\
IMPORTED -. /tt llrf/~1./ 'fl I/
8.99
WINES
CRIBARI
MOUNTAIN WINES
•CHABLIS ~~:SL:.1.9 9 u
GALLO
BERTOLLI
LAMBRUSCO
WINE
LANCERS
VIN ROSE
WINE
1.5 LT.
750 ML.
1.49
750 ML.
2.59
SAVE54.SO
Christian Bros.
CALIFORNIA
BRANDY
80 PROOF
1.75 LT.
SAVE 51.00
Mac Kinnon' s
BLENDED
SCOTCH
IO PROOf
COORS 'BEER ·1.75 LT.
12 oz. CANS 919
6 PAK 1.89 ~· _ __,
1 •
EYES RE-ELECTION
-U.S. flouse
Speaker Thomas P.
"Tip" O'Neill said he
will be a candidate
. for Congress and
speaker next year.
He said he doesn't
want his son, Lt.
Gov . Thoma s P .
O 'Neill III of _ Mas.sachusetts, to
take his p lace in
Congress ..
Baffling
ailntent
hits tots
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-A mysterious illness
called Kawasaki disease
rarely kills young vie-
,. tims outright. But
month s after the
feverish symptoms have
passed, a few children
are felled suddenly by
heart attacks -
although they're usually
less than 4 years old.
Dr . Ma sa to
Takahashi, a pediatric
cardiologist at
Children's Hospital of
Los Angeles, is trying to
save those youngsters
with an aggressive
screening program that
apparently identifies the
10 to 20 percent of
Kawasaki patients with
dangerously damaged
coronary arteries.
He said sudden death
claims 1 to 2 percent of
those who get the un-
common disease, which
is named for Dr .
Tomisaku Kawasaki,
the Tokyo doctor who
described it in 1967.
If the child is a risk
for sudden death, then
we can increase our
s urveillance ,"
Takahashi said in an in·
terview.
Initial results were be·
ing outlined today at a
symposium sponsored
by the American Heart
As sociation 's Los
Angeles affiliate.
Takahashi said
Children's Hospital has
had about 70 cases of
Kawasaki disease in two
years . Ea c h wa s
screened, six were
found to be at risk and
s pecial preca u'tions
were taken. In one ex-
treme case, he said, the
parents were taught
cardiopulmonary re-
suscitation and the
child's breathing was·
monitored while h e
1 • slept. There have been no
deaths and "there were
a couple of children we
were really sweating,"
Takahashi said. "They
were like time bombs."
Because fatalities are
mercifully infrequent
and the disease is not
common, the program
hasn't followed enough
cases long enough to
scientifically prove its
value but, Takahashi
said, "we believe we're
-=•s •• a P ¥WO. µ •• • 0 $ •• a c e o -ix . ... . . . ..
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Wednffday, May 13, 1981
Big salary no guarantee against worries of inflation
NEW YORK <AP) -Stru11lln1
to tel along on $30,000 a year? A
survey ol executives making up to
10 times that much shows that a
bl& salary ls no guarantee against
the worriu of inflation.
The survey shows "executives
are not only genuinely concerned
about inflation and the erosion of
their wealth, but also are uncer-
tain what Jteps to take to preserve
it," said Edward D. Ryan, a
partner in Eroat & Whlnney, the
accounlin1 flrm that com·
missiooed the survey.
The research organization
Audits & Surveys interviewed 200
executives in half a dozen cltles
with Incomes ranging from ~.000
lo $200,000 a year.
Just over half of the executives
-55 percent -said they did not
expect a higher standard of llvin1
ln the future. More than one-third
of this group said inflation was the
reason for their lowered expecta·
lions.
The median age of the ex·
ecutlves was 5". The median an·
nual income was $88,500 -almost
four times as much as the govern·
ment says it takes for a family of
four to maintain an intermediate
or moderate standard of Uvtn1.
Ninety-seven percent of the ex·
ecutives surveyed were male and
90 percent were married. The ma-
jOt"ity said they were president or
vice president of their firms.
The survey found that l" percent
of the executives -about one in
seven bad absolutely no
strategy for fighting inflation.
Twent ·three rcent -about one
SAVE eoe SAVE20e
........ ,. ........ ...... ,..
ln four -said they were battllnt
the rising cost or Uvina by cuttlna
spendlna.
Sixty-two percent said they need
investments like real estate,
stocks, etc.. to hed1e a1ain11t
higher prices. But 36 percent of
the executives had no confidence
that the return on their invest·
ment.s would equal or exceed the
rate or inflation.
Pak of sl.51 2AI ··~1.11 ~ -~~
............. ,., ...............
SPECIAL!
J RESH START
LAUNDRY DITIHINT
(COMCUITUTED)
(..-l•alntt.
r.111111 Size roww
Dot.rsuts
SAVE so ~
REACH TOOTllaRUIH
SOfT • MlDIUM
BUY 21 SAv't 1s~
REYNOLDS
WRAP
ALUMINUM FOIL
12" I 21'
2 =89C
AD PHICES PREVAIL :
WED •. MAV 13th THAU SAT .• MAV 16th
CORRUGATED "WOODGRAIN"
STORAGE AIDS ...
• SHOE FILE (2R" • ll'4" I l~")
•TWO DRAWER CHEST u~" 11r 1 tr>
• THREE DRAWER
CHEST (lW" I tr I U")
YOUR
CHOICE! 3.99 ~
• FOUR DRAWER CHEST (ZSW' a lJ" a Ir)
• TWO IY TWO CHEST (lft" I U~" I 22"')
YOUlt 5.95 CHOIC[I IA.
• REGULAR STORAGE CHEST (24" I U\4" ....... ,
• REGULAR UNOERBEO
CHEST
(W
1 ;;~~·nl 49
CHOICE! • IA.
~ MD'IA 90YI' ~UNDERWEAR For Fit. Comfort. & Long Wear
•n BllEFS 4 00 IOYS' T-SHIRTS
a.at.IL W U • rM
MO'S T-SHIRTS
' ~ 3.50 ~ ~ 5.00, ..
WE HONOR YOUR CREDIT!
Mo\ter Cord
HOYLE
PLAYING
CARDS
Fw I .... r/,....,.,
... 89C
EAGLE
PLAYBALL
Kids will en1oy bouncing
throwino & catching•
WHAMO
FRISBEE
·= ggc
--PLASTICWARE
•llCTMGUUI
.... Wastebaslet
...... DISH DRAllER
'
SPECIAL!
REVLON
MILK PLUS 6
CUAlllD 111.tT~
Face looks soap and water
fresh. feels soft,
smooth, never dry•
219 5.15
• H .
MOISTURE
LOTION
4& 3.49
SPECIAL!
DIETAC
from CONTAC
SAVE 46 ~
COIMITCO
HOT OIL TitUTMINT
Concentrated to help
restore beauty to
problem h1lr
BUY 3 & SAVE 17e
KAL KAN
DOOFOOD
' on th.e ri~hUrack." · _. . •\·~~~ : ~..!'~--.... t ~< ~··· > .1'(1>4;. .. • •' ' '>-~>
r(~):i';.~ '<!{£)'::;.:
.___,..,_ Boalt cle ar
BERKELEY (AP> -The federal Office of
Civil Rlahta bu cleared
t he University o f
California Boalt Hall
law school of char1es of
dlscrlminatlng asainst
student.a by falling to
hire more women and
minority faculty mem·
bera. .., ......... ,
''Purve)'Of't of
Otdtlme Nef9hbofllnett" .... ..,.....,. ............
1 ......
.J.1
SAVES0°
.~l.71
.,..1.09
SAVE20e
CHAPS TICK UP llAUI
Durable CHI Iron
construction
1'9Llll ............. 1WU.
&MM? F ·~Pn>-39c ....._.,PMoM&...._l1TUS
w.... .. :=."~~~ ~------------------· CAW!
SNAROL
SHOP 7 DAYS A WEEK I 'l llCI AM Tll •1 Ill P M M O ~ H~Fll' <.,!\I
• •1 on AM TCl T (1(1 ~M .. 111'.t flA)
3 e $1 --
1 ... ... ____ .,.L
.I.II ..
.1
tf4Jiir. llACH -Adenle & ......... _ .,..,,,,, .... & Mlnpf-leecfl & Oefftetd
~N VA&.LIY -.. ..,_... & W9f'Mf
~ -'°" lmne. Weeeotlff ,.._
llM .. -CulWf Df. & W•Ull
IL T°"°-MIT2 ftedlftetd "°" .. ..,.. VJaJO -IUTI ........... """·I MltTA AN.l -_, t 9euttl ..._..,.,...
,
; ¥ i -44# ;e ;we p • • po F µpp #-0 0 0 -'
~ .. Or.ngeCouc OAJLY PILOT/Wedn .. d1V. May 13. 1981
------------~ -------------r;::==============::;::::::::::::==============================..
BT1ANNUAL
C!LIFORlll STATE CBIMPIOISBIP
11
.!
··-----------
1 SHE'S OUT -Sharon
Clark, 19, of Salinas,
ponders her honora-
ble discharge from
I· the Army that pre·
I• vents her from re·
e nl isting f or two
11 years. She alleges
1 that the Army dis-
, charged her after she
refused to have sex
with h e r drill
sergeant.
Contest
to aid
disabled
LAUREL, Md. <AP>
A n1Uonwide contest
to come up with waya to
aid the handicapped haa
attracted more than
5,300 appUcantJs, accord·
ln1 to Its sponsor, Johna
Hopkins University.
The aearch for devices
to assist handicapped
people in their dally
lives Is being conducted
by the university's ap-
p Ii e d physics
laboratory, the National
Science Foundation and
Radio Shack stores.
Paul Hazan, project
director, said the search
is open to anyone with
ideas, devices. methods
and computer programs
to help the handicapped
overcome difficultiea In
learning. working and
living.
Finally,a way to end the recession.
We're tallcing hair .rec.wai on.
Mel II .,.,..,,. ~ -· -~1 ,.,... 1°" • ftnol Olli why .. Mii ..;i.u -t .,.._ .. dM W9fW -,... wttll ...., Tai·
OIO"S eod .... ,.., .......,. ..,.._.., • _,""""' 111 ,._....,, hal.r ..,,._ _,......, """""1,.,......,. _,,. ~..,
y-. ---1u.1yi.. c.u totlily -llNI -.... , "° -.... ht IN ...... _,.,... olftt yoa
A BETTER WAY TO R EPLACE HAIR. . Auto & Homeowntirs
,t,... Ouoles By Phone I ,_
FMMOS llUIWICE .,
541-HS4 er IJS.l07 ,,, ....... c .. t.Me••
(~< ~-'~)"ate 3 HAIR RESEARCH CENTERS
116U V.attua ll•d.,
Studio CJty
(2U) 995-7270
14120 •Kb 91Yd.
Wt9taiaetfl', Ca.
Cn4> Ml·Mll
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
J'ICTITIOUS •UllNE$$ J'ICTITIOUS •USINIH NAME STATEMENT
NAMll ITATIMENT Tiit IOll-1"11 ~ h doing bull·
Th• 1011ow1119 P•"°"' trt Oolnt llHi 0 O..Slntuas ANTIOUARIUS, , .. w . 19th
R 0 SS PR 0 0 UC TS. I I 4 I) StrHt, Costa Mt,,., C.lllor11la t1'1'
Mac.Arth11r 81•0 . S111te 100, lrvlM, Gernl< Corr Ave loom. IU J
Calltorn1a n11s Hlghlano Orin Newport leach ROSSO CORPORATION, state of Calllornlat2WO ' '
lrtcorporotlon, C•lllornla, 1 .. U Thi> D<nlnH> I• condu<tao 11y.,. l11·
Mac.Ar1t111r BlvCI • Sult• 100. lrvlM, Ol•IOual
Ct lllorn1a '171S Garnk Carr Avtt_,,
ROSSOCORPORATION Tiii> ~1•1-1 ••> llled with the
R. E Ho>llY~. County Cler~ of Oran11t County Oii
Pr .. lcMlll Aprll t• 1,.1
Thi• "•ltrnenl ... ~ tiled "'"" ,... . J'1Ml9>
Cou11ty Cltr~ ot OrMQll Co1111ly Oii Pullli>lwd 0<•"119 Con t Oally Piiot,
April 10, 1,.1 J'IM144l Apr )), 2'1, ~y •. ll. 1 .. 1 , .. , .. ,
P11bllshed Or-Cont Oally Piiot,
pr. n , tt, ~• •. tl, 1,.1 , .... ,, PUBLIC NOTICE
NATIONAL
FOOT HEALTH WEEK
May 9th thru 15th
The podiatrist is the only
doctor solely dedicated to
t he care of the foot. See your
podiatrist during Foot
hea lth Week.
For the name of a POdlalrlst
in your area call ...
J'ICTITIOUI •UllN•ll
NAM•ITAT•M .. tT 546 5782 The loll-1119 perllOfls are dol1t9 •
PUBLIC NOTICE
J'ICTITIOUI •UllNlll
c11L1 cooiow -
1 Orf&G~.wem ~l~iRl!ftfS J THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1981 ------·------~, _p __ 4_:00_PM_To_11_:00_~---
5 CH iLi c oofCER.S
L£BRiTY ""06£7 EWoAK~ ·5KY01V£R'
.. ~~ PE of 6:>N-r'ESTANTS S:30
I
~~ t<~c. wa..c<>Mes .,~~CALIFORNIA STATE--_,
·--CffJLr S£AUTYCoHTE5T~
° FRE"E C::H•Lf . ·-----.,.
~ouNm'( WEST£RH SHOW&1JAHfE·
-:;::::::. ffAl~6 J
AL. ,, D D06#' WEBER -
, ~ c\JSTO'S \MT BAM~_ ~OllSOY JN~A~e.o __
8adgea Avella~• At: ~~j
e TI1E RITZ RESTAU RANT ~/ ~
2106 W. Oc•nfront ', l Newport BNc.tt, CA.
I e JW't COWBOY
1721 S. Manchester
Anahelm, CA
ALSO LIMITED BADGE SALES
AVAILABLE AT THE GATE
ATTENDANCE LIMITED
[$10.00 Per Badge]
(Adult1 Onfy)
--
Come
Dressed
In Your
Western
Duds!
FOR ADDmONAL INFORMATION CALL (714) 645·5000 EXT. 181
llu$IMQM' t~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii N~ITATIMINT MAit WEn IUILOER$ ANO T~-:!~1"11 .. ,....,,are clol119 OEVELOll'Elt$, 1•1n •••c" ~~-I~===~~=====~==~=================================~=~
HAIUIOlt AHO MAC ARTHUlt ~~l~!.:.:~7~t1lllln9to11 Bu ch. -
$0CIATE5. 1.sn Hal• Ave11.,., J J HT 1,.,. ,._111 1 P UBLIC NOTICE IM c.lllonlla '1714 · · · ·• .__, • ...-om • cor· 1t.:-t P w.,.,,.1111ton 1un Hale -•lloft, t.itJ leach 8o<Mvard, H,,,.. -w,.... Irv~ Calll0tlllatvl4 ..... '°" llaa<ll, Callloml• nMJ. J'ICTITIOUI •u111 .. 11
1toiter o .' OarMll, 1un H•I• Tllll ~ IS C-.cteG llY. cor· .. ~ ITATIM .. IT
...,...., 1,....,.,CAlltomle tt114 -•II"-The follow1"9 _ _,, ••• clol119
Pe ter I. l11ma11, IUU Hale ~TM!~.. llusl-• ..._, lrvlM,CAlllorllla W14 • PARAGON 50FTW.AltE COM
Wllllam J Pll-. IU'1 Hale Prealclenl PANY, -E. Wll...,, C:.ta Ma .. ,
,,_ lrvlfte CA11torllla'1714 This -•• lllecl wltll -CallfOf'lllamV
on'ver 1i Cra ry 1Ut2 Hale Co..111., Clark of OrAft .. County on Ronald H M«O...rrle. 290 W
,..,,..., lrvlne; CAllfonlia 9V 14 .t.O<ll 2I, l"1 ,,1..,.. Wiison, Ce.ta-. Callfor'llla t»J7 :.,..,,..., --· ,_, ,..1. l aulO letyar, llSll Pon., v ane.,
11-lrvlne Calltomla' 91714 P11bll-Or ..... Coest Cally Piiot, Orlve, Northrlclgt, C:.llfornla 91Dl o.~. c. Alderman, ••m H•I• APlll 2', May •• ll, 10• "" 102UI LUllO •. letyar. 21>40 T11IH
Ye,...., lrvlfte, CaOtoml• .,,,. Sir"'· OW.I-II, Calllorlll• '111 I
Wallltf" H. c-»11, 111, 1un Hale PUBLIC NOTICE lAYM Havert Ma<O...rrle, U70 ,,.11.,., lrvlne, C..llfor11la 97714 Rosu~. 111-. Hev~ "JD:!
l . S....,_ Ai.-r, I~ Hale Jerry R. Mason, 1'41 H. Macllne
¥e1111e, lrvlfte, Callfor'llla '1714 J<ICTITIOUS •USINl:H Ave,...., Simi Valley, Callforllla 9l06J
Ro., J. MCICHll, IUU H•I• NAME 5TATIMCNT Mary ..... MCCartlly, .,, st-
.. _. lrvlM, Calllorllla 9271• Tiie follow Int per SOii> are 0011111 ,,..,.,..,.,LOI...._..._ C.lllOf'nl• ,_.
Tllomu J. Ashley, IU'1 Hale bu>lnenn Wllllam F. McGiii, 270. P.l11e
nn1M,lrvl11e,Callfor111•'1714 Gll8RIEL WILL.I.AMS COM· Av.11 .... -.tlal1af\ 9Mc"· C.lllornl•
Rol>erl H. Oclle, IUU Hale PANY 22712 .Arbella Road L.atuN fOtt• ... n ... , 1r ...... ,Callforrtla 9t114 Hlg ... 1' Callf0f'111at»77 • Tiii• IMKIMU •• COllclllClacl by •
T"'' lluslMH •• COlldllelacl lly • P•cllk. CO.M Ma<hl11ery Col'POf• ....... 1 ~. rel~ ROfWcl H. Me(Quarr'le w 1111 • J Pitt "°"· • Calllomla corp0ratloft, J06 w. This IU*-1 •• flied wltll -Mral Parttwr a m · m a n, 4111 Street, Swot. Ana, Calllor11la t2701 County Clerk of er ..... Co;inty Oii
This ... ...._. •• filed with lhe T::f.~' 1' Conclucled by. CO•· .Aprll 24, 1911.
-11ty Clerk of 0r..,.. c-ty o.. por PecllkC.,. t LAWOl'PICSIOJ<
pr1111.1"1 Fi.om MacNtwyC!,,PO"•tlon =~~.~:~c=,::1' ....
P11bllshecl Or ..... Coest 0 .. ly Piiot, Harriette 5'>flnger' 61t .. ..._. ~ on ....
11 2t,Mtay•,ll,10,1 .. I 102H1 Thi'~~ WM fllad with Ille:':...........,
Co..11ty Cieri! of Or.,, .. Cov11ly Oii .. _..,.."'-lat c..r
:re~ :O,;~:O.. .. ........ ~.~·-,., .... P UBUC NOTICE
Att-y ML.aw Pllllll.,_ Or ..... GM1t Cally Pllet,
AMll-»1 ~.~::,._.I.,_ Mar•. IJ, .. f1, 1 .. 1 Jta..tl
NOT I Ca 01' TltUSTIE'I SAL• s ... ia AM. c.llfeftola '27tt
P\JBUC NOTICE :!~u~= J<1.-
suNWEST •ANI(, a Ce llfor11la P11bll....., 0rAf191 Coast'Oally Pilot, -------
erporallo11, formerly $.ANT IAOO API JJ, 1'. Ma y •• U , 1"1 ttn .. t I TAT • .._NT OJ< AMNDONMINT
.ANIC. H clllly -"tlecl Tr-.,,._ OJ< UH OJ<
r Ille follow4"11 -.Crlllecl .... cl of PUBLIC NOTICE J'ICTITIOUl •UllNH U •-• rust Will SELL. AT PUIL.IC The fol~,..._,,.,..,._
UCTI°" TO THE HIGHEST •10. -llW .... ., .... fletlt'-11u11 ..... Mme:
ER FOlt CAM4 (peyellle il4 llm•.. T1.. SOUTHCOllST Ol!HTISTltY, aios
le 111 lawflll moMy of -UIMIM NOTIC9 OJ' TltUITll.'S I Al.IE Harllor •1vc1., C.la Mesa, Cetllorllla
etul ... ,..,,., tltl• •llCI lnteretl COfl• T.L NO. 1... TIM Flc1ltlclut ...._ Name ,.
yec1 to Wiii -Mid llY 11 -..io 011 May n. 1,.1, at 10:00 a.m. et tM terrect to .....,. w• flled 111 er.,..
••cl of Tr"" 111 the propert Y ~orlll 1..-erttranc• to ,,,. Oranoe c:..ity °" ,..._., '· '"'·
f'8l11attef clHCr111ec1 C-IY Court Houte, 100 Ch•IC CAtllt.er Arnotcl H. FIAfl1er, 19 C;Mrry Hiiia
T RUSTOR: Geor .. R. G11stavso11 Orl"9 w..t, 111 City of 5allla Alla, lte ... LAM, Hewpot19Nc:", Celllomla
cl Oarlel M. 011*0011, ""sbanct ty Tlll• Gompelly ltd., at clllt'f 1111-Thia 11u11,,..s 1s <OftducttO by., 111
wife•• jOl11t ......,1s >0lnt•cl Trwt .. llnCler alld --"' to clhrlcl11a1. •ENEFICIARY: Salltlaeo lellk, • :>MCI of Tr\111 rec:cw-.Aprll 22, .... .Arnolcl H. ,11111.ler
t110r11la <Ofl)Or•llOft H lnsl. No. v•10, ill book IUl2, ,.... Tiiis ,._,_, ••• fllecl with the
ltacord9cl W..y i., 1'90 •• l111tr. Ho. 12'1 of Offlclal RKorcll 111 the off lea of county Clel1i Of er.,.. Co<lflly °"May 174' In tloOk '*"" iaeee 1211 Of Offlclal Ille eo..111y Rec:orcltrs of 0r.,... COuft· 4, 19t1.
ords 111 the office of the R.corcler IY, State of ea111or11la uec11tecl by f'llM71
Or•nee Collllty; wkl Oeld Of tr111t Ra ymOllCI L. Sheriff,• slntle men. 11'111111....., 0r.,... CoHI Oelly PllOt,
scrlbet-lollowln9 pr-rly: WILi. $IEl.L AT PUILIC AUCTION l!My •• ta, 20, f1, t .. 1 1140-tl lot 10 Of Tract SJ41 at _,, Oii • TO HIGHl.ST llOOER FOR CASH
•P recorclld In tloOk IM, Peeet IS (paya t>te M llme of sale In l•wf111
1' of Ml-II-"'-. ,_.. m-y of IM u11l"6 Statft) at the P UBUC NOTICE
Orenoe C:-.CY. C..lllOml•. ,orlll ''°"' entranc.e to u.. Orat'199
Y l'I ALSO KNOWN Al: ,.. C0¥'1,IJ_ffll'll'9Mlte,.l!!ll!e~ltw.,of~1-.-_--:...;...t.""'~-!l.--'-0U.-._.--... -.. --~ CAlllll...._~,_. ... ,~L~----,....._,
"(II ettr.tadclrfttar ~ell· lerHI c.,,.,.l'tcl to..,,.._ ,,.ICI itY 11 • lSTATI ME .. T
1t1netl011 It -· M werre11ty 11 llnNr ..... o..ct of Trll&I 111 .,_ ~·· The foMOWlftt SMn011 IS clolllt DvSI
1 .. .,. n ID Its c.,,...ttneta o< cor· ty •II-111 Mid C:-y Mel s.... nusT~P T·~E..,... , ..... E~1 ...... MHl " • ,.krll!H 11 • "" ""' • • " . ..,...r TIM .... kiat'y llfldtr Hid OMcl ef TIM Nit ,jJ I feet of tM well lta.11 A ... nw. HYllllngtoll 9e«ll, Calllorllla
Nil, lrf ,_Of• __ ,, or cllfavll 1"1 of Lot 74 of Tr11tt NO. •». In U.. '™1
11 lM 991 .... ie.s 1«11re4 _,...,, cl!Y of Col .. Mtsa. c-ty .. Or...... L.ewls M. Metta, UO) S11ncf•"
........ •llKVl9d .... cllllYefed .. • .... ., Callforllle -..., -r• RoN, Anellelm, c.llfomle
wo-...-• WrllWll Oecler .. lell corclecl 111 lleOll tt ,.... 4l of Ml This ~""' 11 cOlldlKtecl -Y '" 111
Default 9'lcl ~tor Sale, ..W cell._ ...... reconlla .. 0reft99 d1"lcllltl.
1tte11Ntlc.eoflWNC"-°'eledlell countyCallfoml• L-l•M Mtlla
u-lN WMllWJltMcl lo MM .... The "'-' --....... _. Thlt .....,_t ... flled With lht
te N11tty Micl ....... ~ "'°" clls.19l••O•ll, If any, of.,_ rMt c-1y Clerk et 0.-C...11ty 9fl
, _ _. .. _.....,. U4dM pr-.eny -.c.-.. ....... It__..., fA~ll to, 1911. Pt*"7
14 M41ce Of~ IM ti t ttocll1flll .~e te H . 1010 W.tl Wll-$1. C.Sla 11'1*!1.,_, Or ..... C..tl OMty Pllet lte(Ofclld J-"I •• 1911 •• Mv, ...... Cellfonll• I ' • _... In 11iM11 11t11 .... 141', M T~ wo•r~ TIWM •1tcl•lm AIN'll 22, 2', INy •, IJ, 1•1 IU2-tl
Id Ofllelel It-di. Ally tlelllllty 10t el'IY IM-"'"9
s.111 Ml• wltf • ,....., Wt •11'*" t11t 11reet .---~ ....... Ill fl Wtlff/111'(, H "'9tl Of 1111• HtltMlilfl, 11 eny, tlwwll lltnfll.
'"· r ......... tllte, ,. ....... or a.111 .... wlll lie "*"· tM wit ··----------
.,,,..,_.,., ... ., .. r-elfll .. CtftMlll • wwrtflty, .. ,..... ., '"' l'ICTITIOUI IMlllNlll
IMINI IW'll el .. Mtlltl IKW ... itllN, ,...,..,. tllle, ,._.-, NAMl ITATIMINT
-• u... .. , ,_, •"" '""'"1 " '"'""""--. • ...,. ...._ ,... Tiie IOl10wl119 ...,_, .,. ctolne Mt1 .,,,..,.,...., ~. If My, allcl e.,...,... of 11'1t Tnittea -of ltlt blltlllftl .S.
the _ ...... 0....otT'i"I. lr1111tcr ..... llyMlclOMIJ .. Tnllt, WIP IHVHTMI NTI, lltll In•
'• ,,_.., _!;1~T-,!! .. ~ HY the ,_lnifte ff'IMl..i ~• er pt he Ori..,., Guclt11 Oro"'· rvttM aillf .. --., •-· _.., 1119 MM 9"vrM t101 u141 OMll .. True Celllor'ftl• hMl
le wlll °' IWlll M _., ~ 1•1• et to wit: .a.,M• wttll I~ tlltf-. JeO It. WMlen, lltll a11t.,.,I•
t1ot A.M., at IM~~ r-.1 ... e 1• trem "°"""*' Ut, ••et 14,.rc, Drlvt.~0-.C.llfWlll•f»&a !Ml T"'* Oe9d -.... n. • per .,._ • ,,..,, ... In Ml• ltollert J, hrMlel11, llttt lln
•lrAw .. ~ ... CA. .. tt11a t..C.•lftY...,_Of ,.I ter•rhe Drlo, Ger .. 11 Or•••· T"9 tw«•I ~I ti tllt llflte tetftt. C.llferlllet»U
tMC• ti N ... 1'9tlM ~..,... :: Tiie M!llfkW, ""*' Mid OMll llltWl't '· Ptttrce, 11"1 • ....,.,, .. Id~ le 119 ...._ -·-' w Tr11tt lltr~ ·~ IN * Otl.,.,~°"""9,C:..llfwfllet»Q "'• ._.. c:llfl9", .... HCI~ 11 ... , .. w ...... n1 ... a T"ll Wtl-t I• <--u<tacl lly a
,,,......, .. .,._..,M Dtclef9UMef ........... ~ 19Nfel....-.ltl4f.
... __. ....... ti. lele, ......... M«ke " .18'11 A. ......... 0.1 _.ti, Hit .,.. liec.. le Wt, Tiie '"la ....._. -,,.. wltll "'9
.._..,... uv ....... ~ "' o.t...,, e-ay ci.r1C .. or-.. c-, "' 11 .... T,,_., lleetlM • ltll • lie ,_.. Ill ~II• "91 OUAltDIAJI HUIT Ol.10 c ... ,.,, .... tllt ..... ~ I CA"9en a .......
NJtYtCDC04111i'OttATION ...... ~-W.
te91._,...,, ~ o ..... " a.. -..n,."" ........ Cllm9 ......
Or ... (A... •ULYY"~ CIOMl'A•Y, LT9. ..... •
fTM)l'7t4ttl ...... r....... '"··~""' 9r1 .rALOO "· MAUO .. 1.Y. ltlilllmr ,,..._ ......... Or ... 0..-o.t!Y """" ....... Or .... CIMl o.llr .._ .._ ..... Or" .... CMtll o.11• l"llllt,' ,.,...,,6. 11, "81 tttMI .....,11,,,~~t&."'1 ,-.., "'-'·":"•....,•• u .1•1 lttt~I
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC REQUEST
KNOWN AS "9th STREET BEACH", "10th STREET BEACH", OR
"PELICAN CO VE''?
THE AREA
WHY THIS AD
TO LAGUNA
BEACH
SOUTH
~LAGUNA
I
SOUTH COAST
9th STREET BEACH
"1000 STEPS"
THREE
ARCH
BAY
I COMMUNITY HOSPITAL
9th STREET
10th STPEET
>-w =1 ~
..... ~ .... ;->;_,£ t,1,' .. -. , ... ...,.,...,. ·"·"'~ ),•-
SALT . ~·~ ~TO D~~A
CREEK BEACH ~ POINT
In South Laguna there are concrete stairs leedlng from the Coast Highway near
9th Street, to the beach below the bluffs. Built In the 1920's, these stairs have been
used as access to the two coves below. Over the years the stairs became known as
"1000 Steps" (because It seems like 1000 5t9J!! when you climb them) and the
beach areas bec•me variously known as '9th Street Beach," "1oth Street Beach," or "Pelican Cove."
A lawsuit has been filed In Superior Court In Santa Ana which comes to trial June
1oth. This lawsuit will settle the question of whether the publk1'as any rights to
use either the steps or the beech. As pert of this lawsuit the County of Orange Is
trying to prove th•t the publlc hn, since 1920, used both the steps and the beach. If
the County'• case Is successful, then a new stairway rney be bullt to allow the
publlG to continue use of the beach.
WHATCANYOUDO If you used either the steps or the beech, at any time, plHM contact the County at
the telephOne number below. You wHI then be malled a questionnaire to complete
and retum In a posti:pald envetooe. S.Md an your questionnaire responses,
you may be asked to s an affidavit which the COUnty cen use In court or testtf y
In cowt to aid In est.bl lhlno the public's rloM to past Md future use of the stairs
•ndbNch .
CONTACT For QWStlonNlre •nd/Ol moR Information, p.._ cell County
of OrMOe, Open Spke/Recl"NtlOn Program Office at (714) .,....,,.
1
I
,~~\
,,,~
~ Fee back
if job lost?
DEAR PAT DUNN: I was juat laid ort a
job that I got thr ough an employment agen-
cy. Do I have any chance of getting back the
fee I paid to the agency.
T.L .. Costa Mesa
If, wtthl.D 90 days, yoa quit wltb ''jut
caase," or are fired or laJd off through no
fault of your own from a Job obtalDed through
an agency, you shouJd receive a partial re-
fud. nus scale ls l /toth of the permanent
fee, mu.IUpUed by the aamber of calendar
days remalnlllg. A refund, when dae, mast be
made within 10 working days after you re-
quest It lD writing.
If dlfficuJtlea arise,.. first dJscu s them
wltb the agency owner or manacer. If you
sllll need belp, contact the Department of
Conaum~r Affairs' Bure au of Employment
Agencies at 1333 Howe Ave., Suite ZOO,
Sacramento 958%5. T he bureau may be able to mediate your complaint. In cases I
which severe violations have been a1Je1ed,
the bureau wlll ~onduct an investigation
which may result lo an agency havlng Its
license suspended or revoked.
Conlact lenses di.ffer
DEAR PAT DUNN : What's the dif-
ference between intraocular contact lenses
and extended-wear soft contacts? Is it true
that cataract patients can use these lenses?
D.J ., Costa Mesa
lntraocuJar lenses are used by many pee>·
pie who undergo cataract surgery In which
their natural eye lenses are surgically re·
moved. These permanent plastic lenses are
substitutes. The complete operation may
cost $1,200 or more and often takes less than
one hour to perform.
Extended-wear soft contact lenses also
are designed specifically for cataract pa-
tients. The lens Is made of plastic and can be
worn for up to a month without removal. It
baslcaJJy serves the same purpose as the In·
traocuJar lens, with more convenience. Costs
vary from $300 to $400 a pair.
The FDA recently approved an extended-
wear lens for general use. These lenses can
be worn for as long as two weeks day and
night, without removal. The extended-wear ·
lenses may cost even more than dally wear
contact lenses.
Although a qualified doctor mus t make
the decision for each individual regarding
use of either of these lenses, you may want to
order a free copy of "The ABC's of Contact
Lenses," by dropping a postcard to the
Cons umer Information Ce•ter, Dept. 5'4-J,
Pueblo, Colo. 81009.
Refund entitleal
DEAR READERS: Between weddlngs
and graduations, gift buylng and receiving
reaches a peak during Jllne that'• topped on·
ly by Chris tmas. Many consumers ask
themselves and this column lf they are legal·
ly entitled to a refund or euhange on goods
purchased or received.
It's Important to remember that each
store can set Its own policy oo refanda and
exchanges, and generally a con.sumer ls not
legaUY. entitled to eltber. For good baamess,
moat stores will exchange noa-1ale Item•
wllether you buy with cash, claeck or credit -
but they don't have to. Most sale Items are
non-refundable and non·exthangeable. In ad-
dition, if you exchange one Item for a lower
priced Item, you can be requJred to spend the
remainder ln the same store.
Before purchasing mercbandlse, you
should ask. what a store's policy ls regardlog
exchanges and reloads. You also should save
all receipts showing the date of purchase and
purchase price, so that store personnel can-
not argue that the m erchandJse was not
purchased at the s tore.
Gllts fall within the same general rules
as a purchase you yourself have made. You
have to depend on the store's policy to accept
the gifts back for exchange or refund.
• "Got a problem? Then write to Pat .... 1 Dunn Pat will cul red tape. getting
• the anawers and action JIOU need lo
•
solve 1nequ1ties an government and
,.... bU3tness. Mail your queataons to Pat
! I Dunn, At Your Sttvict, Orange Cooat
Daily Pilot, P.0 Boz 1560. Costa Mua, CA 92626. Aa
many letters 03 posStble will be aMwered. but phoned
inquirita or Letters not including the reader's full
name. address and business hours' phoM number
cannot bt conS1dered This column appears daily tZ·
cept Sundays."
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~-r-------
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981 411
) Vintners boil over label
CHUCKLER -A
com ment by a
guest breaks up
Pres i de n t
Ronald Reagan
as be passes
among crowd at
White House re-
ception for con-
gressmen.
EDINBURG, Va <AP I A
war• of words is under way
between California and Vireima
wine makers over the use or the
nam e Shenandoah Valley on
wine labels and in advertising.
A spokesman for Shenandoah
Vineyards near Edinburg said
he would tile a counterrequest to
one made by Amador County,
Calif.. vintners that ,the
Treasury Department's Bureau
o f Alcohol , Toba cco and
Firearms designate their West
Coast growing area as the
'Shenandoah Valley vilicullural
area.
"If they are permitted to put
Shenandoah Valley on their wine
.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~__;_~~~~~-
lube ls Instead of us, It wltl def
initely be a point of confusion to
con1>umer1>," spokesman Alan
Kinne said
"Some of their wine already is
being marketed in Washington,
D C . which 1s the third or fourth
large1>t wine consumer area in
the US."
Kinne s aid lhe section or
Amador County called the
Shenandoah Valley is really not
a valley at all but a 10,000-acre
tract between several hills that
was name d for Vi rginia's
famous valley
"We're trying to protect the
Shenandoah Valley name not
only for now but also for the
future ," he sold. "Rl&ht now,
thert: are only three vintners in
the valley, but in 10 yean
there'll be between five and 10
It has potential for even more."
Kinne said there was .. a lot of
money involved" in whether the
California vintners succeed in
getting the rights to the name.
If they do, he said, their wines
will be classified as estate
wines. and they'll command
higher prices. The s ame would
be true if Virginia vintners re·
ceive the designation.
Federal offi cials have said all
those opposing the California
wine makers' request must file
their complaints by June 12.
TOT .. FIRST I 00 PERSONS
ENTERING OUR STORE THURS. MAY 14th
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Ala Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday, May 13, 1981 QUEENIE
Liz in running for TOny Award in 'debut' season -
NEW YORK <AP ) -Elizabeth
Taylor, who made her Broadway de·
but only last Thursday, and Eva Le
Galllenne, who tlrst appeared on
Broadway in 1915, are ln the runnin1·
for the Tony Awards citation for best
actress this season.
They'll be competing a1ainat two
other women nominated for bat ac·
tress in a play -Glenda Jaclc.aon and
Jane Lapotaire -when the Tony
Awards are announced June 7.
Miss Jackson was nominated for
"Rose," and Mias Lapotalre tor
"Piaf." Both played their title roles
in London before openln1 on
Broadway. Miss Taylor is ln a re·
vlval of Lillian Hellman's "The Little
Foxes.'' Miu Le Galllenne plays a
1raodmother besie1ed by selfish
1randcbUdren in "To GraJldmother'a
House We Go," which h11 cloeed.
None of those productions was
nominated as belt play of the seuon,
which officially opened May 12: 11180,
and closed Sunday. Two plays opened
Sunday, the lut day of Tony elitlblli·
ty, but weren't nominated either.
The nominated play1 are "A
Lesson from Aloes" by South African
playwritht Athol Fu1ard; "A IJfe" -
by Hulh Leonard, whose "Da" con·
tains some of the same lrllh charac-
ters and won a Tony two yean a10;
"Amadeus" by Peter Shaffer, whose
"Equus" won a Tony In 19"15, and
NOMINATED
Jane Lapotaire
COMPETING
Glenda Jacluon
'Loveboat' bug
bites San Diego
SAN DIEGO (AP> -The city that shapes its
image around boats -from dinghies to destroyers
-is fishing for a larger trophy to add to its waterfront showcase: cruise ships.
Bitten by the "Loveboat" bug, the San Diego
Unified Port District has announced plans to build
a $1.9 million cruise ship terminal to lure another
business to the waterfront.
"You can say a cruise ship is definitely in San
Diego's future.·· said Bill Dick. the port district's
director of community and government affairs.
Plans call for converting the l,OOO·foot long 8
Sb eel Pier into a facility that could cash in on the
growing cruise ship market.
With Los Angeles·to-Mexico cruise traffic a
record, port district officials envision San Diego as
a regular stop for several passenger lines, and
possibly a home port.
Inquiries have come from Cunard, Holland
America and Western Cruise Lines, according to
Port Director Don Nay.
Long dormant, the project has priority. even if
it means something of a gamble to the port dis·
trict, says Nay.
"I think we have to build the facility and then
attract the cruise ships rather than hoping for
some kind of commitment ... ahead of construe·
lion,·• he says. I The plan is part of a $66.3 million, five-year
waterfront improvement project.
1 A huge warehouse near the famous Star of In·
dia merchant ship would be tom down to make
room for the terminal, which would house shops
and restaurants.
As one of Califona·s top resort cities -17
million visitors in 1980 -a built-in market ex·
is ts.
Getting a cruise line based here would add to
San Diego's ability to attract more tourists, said
Dick.
"A cruise ship operation tends to draw a
greater number of tour groups, more conven·
lions," he said.
One of the nation's fastest-growing cities, the
San Diego metropolitan area ranks eighth in
population with 1.5 million residents.
"As we continue to grow, we expect to be the
object of cruise lines' attention," he said.
Five cruiselines operate out of Los Angeles. A
total of 101,336 passengers were booked on 146
ships out of Los Angeles, with Mexico the most
• popular destination, according to Julia Noeano, a
spokeswoman for the Port District of Los Angeles.
, "There's no question that the popularity of
1'Loveboat' has helped the industry," she said.
No warning not
grounds for suit
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A rape victim can't
collect damages rrom the 1ovemment because
police failed to warn her after the same rapist
tried to break into her apartment a month earlier,
a state appeals court has ruled · 1 A uaalllpM>"1t three-are.-DIMl oC ~ ,k{
DistrictCOtlrt of Appest' tumed"T ClOwn -a clalm
'against Sacramento County by an unidenUfied
27 -year-old woman who was raped in AUIWll 19"18.
According to the court, the woman was away
on vacation the previous month when someone
broke into her apartment. or tried to break in.
Sheriff's deputies recognised the b'reak·ln H
the work of a rapist who bad attacked other
·women in the apartment complex, but did n°' tell
the woman after she returned, the court 1ald.
A month later, the woman was raped by the
, same man, the coort said.
She sued the county, clamint that lt wu either
negligent ln fallinl to warn her, or bad intentional-
• ly left her without warnlna in order to provide
"bait" for the rapist.
But the appealt coort, in a decllk>n latt week,
11id the suit was dismi11ed because 1overnment
a1endet are le1ally Immune from dama1H for
falllft1 to provide police protection, a matter of
discretion.
IN1'£&4Cl'INQ SEXl/.4UY
A1R1rtun 1111 .. 11 ef ,..., •rt llr •
···'r:;~~~"'l'I:'•
MVP (114) ---Coel -
"Flfth of July," by Lanford Wilson,
whose "Talley's Folly" won a
Pullt1er Prize last year.
Nominees for beat actor in a play
are Tim Curry and Ian McKellan as
composers Moiart and Sallerl in
"Am a deus a; " Roy Dotrice ln "A
Life;" and Jack Weston In "The
Floating Lllht Bulb" by Woody Al-
len. Curry, McKellan and Dotrice are
British.
Gower Champion, who died Au1.
25, the day his show. "42nd Street,"
opened on Broadway, was nominated
• beat director and best choreo-
gr a pher for the production. The
show, based on a mQvle, also waa
nominated as best musical.
"Sophisticated Ladles," a revue ot
son11 by Duke Ellln1ton, wu
nominated as best muaical. It. dlrec·
tor, Michael Smuin of the San Fran·
cisco Ballet, wu nomlnated for best
director. Its leadin1 man, Gregory
Hines, was nqmlnated as best actor
ln a musical.
Neither of those scores wu eligible
in the best musical score category.
since they weren 't written for
Broadway.
"Woman of the Year," hued on a
1842 Katharine Hepburn-Spencer
Tracy movie, and "Tintypes," a
musical revue arranged as American
history, are the other nominees in the
best-musical category. "To temipoverty!"
TM
~ to try. Soon, you can learn
how easy it is to do your banking
with the new VERSATELLER™ auto-
mated teller machines in Orange
County and the San Fernando
Valley. To give you a personal dem-
onstration and answer questions,
helpful people will be on hand at the
machines now through June 5. In
minutes you 'll be an expert. At the
same time you can enter our "Try It
Now" Sweepstakes. The grand prize
is a Princess Cruise for two. And you could also walk
away with one of our over 20,000 instant cash prizes.
Easy on~ Soon you can bank with-
out going in the bank. Want to make '-
a deposit? Use the VERSATELLER
machine in the morning. Need
cash at noon? An automated tel 1-
er withdrawal saves time during
your lunch hour. Loan payment ?
Do it the easy way. Pay through
the VERSATELLER machine.
OPEN '
6 a.m. to midnight I
everyda~ 1
Easy to Jret to. VERSATELLER automated teller
machines w"111 be open from 6 a.m. to midnight. Saturdays
and Sundays, too. You'll find them at Bank of America
branches throughout Orange County, the San Fernando
Valley and in the San Francisco Bay Area. Before long,
they' II be al I around the state. Pushbutton Banking.
Another money convenience from Bank of America.
Want more information? Call toll-free
1-800-362-7152. m
BANKOFAMERICA .
... '
·-1
Daily Piiat
WEDNESOAY, MAY 13, 1911
MOVIES 89
TELEVISION 810
COMICS 811
•
Budget politics threatens
U.S. strategic oil reserve
-or does it? B3
D
0
Inmates practice hair styling at KCJnlal State Women'• COrTectional Irutitute of Lan.ting, as Instructor
Marjo AnderlOn, center, walche1. It'• one of the vocational training clalaes offered at the coed prison.
Gene Mefford helps tum out 1heet·metal products at Zephyr Product1, Inc., Leavenworth, Kan. But
when quitting time comes, he and mo1t of his fellow work.era go home-to prison. Nearly all the fac·
tory'1 employees are inmates at KanMJI State prisons.
Coed prisons seen aid to inmate rehabilitation
Kansas institutions join experiment in mixing sexes behind jail walls; lawmakers' reaction awaited
LANSING, Kan. (AP) -The
three men and one woman in the
flower·arranging class joked
easily with each other as they
(luffed silk roses and pushed
de co rativ e w ee d s into
styrofoam.
Smoking cigarettes and drink·
ing coffee, the students went
about their daily routine like
millions of other Americans on
that sunny wloter's day.
But there was an important
difference. The four modishly
dressed young people in the
wood·paneled room were con·
victed criminals.
Traditionally, prisoners in this
country have been segregated in
all·male and all·female penal in·
slltuUoas. But ln recent years a
few facilities, including federal
prisons at Lexington, Ky.. Ft.
Worth, Texas, and Plesanton, Calif .• as well as the (;addo
Parish (County > Jail in
Shreveport, La.. and a state
penitentiary at Framingham,
Mass .• have placed male and
female inmates behind the same
high fence.
In September, Kansas joined
the fledgling ranks of coed
prison s ites in the United States.
About 45 male mini mum·
security prisoners from the
Kansas State Prison have
moved a mile south of the over·
crowded "Big House" to join 59
women on the grounds of the
Kansas State Women's Correc·
tional Institute.
It is not a trend. certainly.
although Sally Halford, prison
director, would like to see it
become so.
The mix was initiated at the
beginning of a four-year re·
modeling job at KSP. Officially,
prison authorities say establish·
ment of a coed correctional
facility is only temporary. But
privately, many express hope
the move .will become perma·
nent when KSP's renovated
wing is completed.
Some penal experts believe
that putting men and women of·
fenders together creates a
beneficial environment for both
groups. They claim It reduces
tension and stress, stimulates
Improved personal hyaiene and
groomjng, and cuts the ab·
normal atmosphere of segregat·
ed prison life. They also believe
it enhances the rehabilitaliop...
process and eases. the parolees
· transition back into the real
world. ,
"The co-correctional ex-
perience has been very 1ood for
us," says Mn. Halford: "I think
l~'s an excellent pro1ram,
healthy and normal.
"We've tried to set up a situ•·
Uon where Inmates learn to n ·
late positively to Ute oppoelte
1ex, and so far I don't have any
ne1ative tblnp to say about the
effort,'' she adds. "I firmly
believe that If Inmates don't
work out their problem• bere,
they'U have to work them out on
U.e street. l believe thlJ new pro-
1ram helps a lot."
But Mn. Halford and other
correctiom olflclal1 worry aboal
bow tbe roed proaram wW be
perceived bJ tbe public and
1tat• lawmakers wbo control
prtlon f\lndtq. That cautl°'9 bal
ltee• tran1mllted lato •trtct ruin pernlni the behavior ot
botJa male and female IDmaa..
ADJ lafractlon by tbt men
mea111 ID automatic but ride
back to tbe all-male kSP. So far
only two men have taken that
trip, officials say.
At first glance, the grounds of
KSWCI resemble a pastoral
Midwest college campus. Local·
ed high on a bluff above the Mis·
souri River, the prison's rolling
lawns are neatly pruned and its
mellow red brick buildings
trimmed in white are in good re·
pair.
Tidy concrete walkways con·
nect two major living areas -
one for men, one for women, a
greenhouse, administration
building, gymnasium and small
outdoor swimming pool.
The prison has a 69·member
s taff and watchful unarmed
guards patrol constantly. un·
mistakable symbols of authority
in their brown uniforms. There
are high steel fences and a cen·
tralized security control building
with a 24 ·hour guard who
monitors the comings and go-
ings of everyone on the grounds.
A prison by any other name is
still a prison.
But Larry Griffin, a 30·year·
old transfer inmate from KSP,
says the s witch from the nearby
institution to the women's facili·
ty has been like a miracle for
him.
"The food is better, the
general atmosphere is great,
and the privacy has been won·
derful," says Griffin, who has a
private room after sharing a
four-man cellblock at KSP.
Griffin is one of the inmates
enrolled in the flower·arranging
course. The class spends seven
hours a day, five days a week
learning the florist business,
making arrangements for sale
in Leavenworth and Kansas City
flower shops. and preparing for
a possible profession once they
leave prison.
Gilbert Mason. a 29·year-old
prisoner convicted of kidnapping
New official
hopes to
curb attacks ,
VACAVILLE (AP> -The new
superintendent of tbe 1tate'1
~pital lor dlltw~1Allr ~ --~befter~, correctional officers will curb
inmate attacks on 1taff mem·
bers.
"When I was a 1er1eant, or·
ders were to communicate with
Inmates," said Jen Marquei. "l
don't think that's done much
anymore."
Marquez l1 the first perma-
nent superintendent ln the
hospital's 25-year hi1tory wbo LI
an administrator and not a
medical doctor.
The 55-year-old veteran ol the
correctional 1y1tem •as once a
guard at tM Vacaville prllon1 known u the California lleclic11
Fac1Uty, and later moved into
admlniltraUve poeta.
Marques aald at a Dewt COD·
ference that tbere ._.,.. It in·
mate ... aulta OD botPtta.I Ital·
fer• in 1llO and then"luiva beell
11 more so far UP year.
''I don't thlnk Ute numbai'I re·
ally tell the 1tory," ba 1ald. "I
think that ft\lnY tJmet it 1volve1
from somethln1 el11, such u an
inmate'• penoaal problem."
and robbery, also is in the class.
He says the transfer to KSWCI
"has made me optimistic about
life again. They treat you like
human beings here, even the
guards. They resp ect your
privacy."
Ahmad Abdul Hasan, 40, con·
vicled of robbery. says coming
to KSWCI "totally reshaped my
personality. I haven't a cted like
a fool since I've been here."
Prison psyc hologi s t Ian
Fluger is extremely pleased
with the res ults of the coed ex·
periment to date.
"We tried to anticipate a lot of
situations before the transfer
and briefed the staff on what to
expect. put everyone went into It
with a 'positive attitude," says
Flu1er, 31, a wiry, athletic
sch olar who hails from the
Bronx . "If you think
something's going to work, It
will work -but it takes a lot of
hard work.
"The men shave more fre·
quently and press their clothes
more carefully." says Fluger.
"and the women are using more
makeup, paying closer attention
to their hair.
"The public must realize that
what goes on on the other side or
the prison gates goes on here. A
person's sexuality and the power
structure in society goes on
here."
Penny Lonergan, the 37·year·
old director of the prison's
educational program. also views
the facility's new coed status as
having a beneficial effect on
enrollment in college classes in·
side the walls.
"Taking college classes and
high school equivalency tests is
strictly volunteer, but this
semester, with the men here,
I 've got 32 students in college
courses. each c arrying an
aver~ge of seven hours," says
Ms. Lonergan. "Last year, with
an all-woman population, I had
36 s tudents enrolled.
.. Because the classes are held
at night, the same time as
recreation period in the gym·
nasium, my students have had
to make a choice. which in·
dicates they're serious about
getting an education," says Ms.
Lonergan.
The state pays for all books
and supplies, and there is no lui·
lion. Instructors are borrowed
Crom a nearby college. Courses
this semester include beginning
algebra, introdu ction to
sociology. nutrition. and a
science class. The courses are
coed but, since there Is no prison
llbrary: inmates study alone Jn
their rooms.
Besides the horticulture
course, vocational training
classes include cosmetology.
Hair dressing students practice
on fellow inmates. who must
make appointments and pay for
their own supplies at the beauty
shop set up on the second floor of
a dormitory where inmates also
eat their meals in segregated·
seating shifts.
Kathy Wilson, a 21-year-old
mother of twins who's served
four years on a conviction of
armed robbery and kidnapping,
says she no longer resents hav·
ing male inmates at the prison.
''I didn't really want them to
come at first, because I felt their
presence would cut down on our
privileges, but I think all of us
women have shown a tolerance
since they've been here. We've
accepted them," says the in·
mate.
Garth Crow, a 46-year-old in·
mate convicted or second·degree
murder, has been a plumber
most or his adult life, but since
transferring to KSWCI he's been
l earning a n e w trade -
hairdressing. And he's enjoying
himself despite some friendly
razzing from the female stu·
dents.
"I hadn't associated with
a woman for five years until I
cam e here,'' says Crow, a soft·
spoken man with a snappy black
mustache. "I was sick and tired
of having men around. Here you
don't have to fight for privacy or
anything else. you can be
yourself. It's quieter. the tension
isn't nearly as bad as up at the
Big House. Right now I don't
have any problems. There'll be
time enough for problems when
I return to the free world.
Rhonda Knowles, a 2l·year-old
Oklahoman serving a flve:year
mandatory sentence for r ob·
be r y. says the men· s presence
"gives me something to look
forward to. having them here
makes the time go faster ..• s~
cites Halloween and Christmas
celebrations as s pecial oc·
casions where the men and
women could mingle socially
"in a normal kind of way."
Besides holiday get·togethers
the men and women prisoners
are allowed to attend movies
and church together, play
volleyball, and a few travel back
and forth to work outside the
prison in the same bus.
Prison director Halford,
although optimistic. is nonethe·
less realistic about potential
problems.
"It is inevitable that some of
the men and women will want to
pair off, so we've got to have
careful supervision," says the
veteran corrections official.
"We haven't had any problems
with sexual misconduct, and I
don't think we'll ever have
wholesale sexuality, but I have
no doubt they will outwit us once
in a while.
··on the whole. everyone
AP--
llOONLIQHT '1. ftRI -Sllhouetted a1atn1t a brllbt 1prtn1 moon, lesser 1andhlll cranes fly
over Nebraska's Platte River enroute to Ala1ka on tbelr annual ml1ration trom wlntertng
IJ"OUDdl in Weat Texu and New Mexico. Some 80,000to100,000 of the blrda pause each 1prini on a stretch of the North Platte.
seems so glad to be a ble to re-
late to each other as friends,"
says the warden. .. Most of the
guys don't have lo be in the
macho game. like al KSP. The
women started out very ter·
ritorial, but that's about disap·
pea red .
"All in all, it has improved
morale tremendously and we're
all glad the program is working.
We feel very good about its
future ."
Fraud cost
in U.S. near
$220 million
WASHINGTON IAPl -Thi
General Accounting .... Office h~t
estimated that fraudulent and ii.
legal activities cost the redera)
government at least $150 million
to $220 million over a 21h·year
period.
The agency, the investigative
arm or Congress. estimated the
actual.loss was far higher -but
gave no prediction. The report
covered known frauds com·
milted by federal employees and
by private individuals with Sc·
cess to government funds.
The report said 29 percent of
the 77,000 fraudulent or illegal
acts studied were committed by
federal employees -but that
the workers involved amounted
to only four.tenths or 1 percent
of the federal work force in the
21 federal agencies reviewed by
the GAO
The agency estimated that 40
percent or the illegal acts were
committed by individuals or or·
ganizations outside the federal
government. As for the re·
mainder of the cases. suspects
were never identified. ~
The GAO said the Justice
De partment declined to pros·
ecute 61 percent of the 12,900
cases referred to it by federal
agencies. And in the cases that\
were prosecuted, only about one·
third of those sentenced actually
served time in prison. 1
The agency said weak internal
controls often contributed to
cases of fraud and illegal ac·
tivities. And it said the govern-
ment r~ecover-t .:-.a~,,\ll'll.~ •\·-• ~: .. -.~Jtfrfe$(~. ~···~~. ~an 30 percent o( the funds lqst •
as a result of fraudulent pr.C-
Uces.
The agency. in a report ~
leased by Sen. William Roth, ft.
Del., said the four most prev-
alent areas of fraud were
financial assistance to In·
dlviduals, inventory control ahd
property mana1ement, mail
service and personal property
management.
The report was based on an
analysis of 77,000 cases of fraUd
between Oct. 1, 1976 and March
31, 1979. It did not cover cues
lnvolvtna federal funds where
state and local JurildlcUOD1 bad
primary invest11atory
responsibility -a cate1ory that
Included s ome 1ub1taotlal
losses, GAO said .
Neither did It lnclude aay
eaUmate of fraud that bu ,_.
undetected. I
Despite the findlq1, tba GM>
aaid Pl'Oll'ell II .,..._ made ID
combaunc fraud. ll clt.d t.M
eatabllabment of omcet ot la·
1pecton 1eneral in 15 federal
a1encles u a meau ot combat·
inf fraud.
-s Orange Cout CAIL. y PILOT /WednHday. May , 3, 1881
CBS
blasts
boycotts
L OS ANGELES <AP>
Thomas H. Wyman, president of
CBS Inc .• has said boycott•
against television advertisers
tbreatened by s uch groups u
the Moral Majority would ~ a
disservice to the nation.
· "In their actions, they dlsen·
franchise the real m•Jorily of
viewers from making their own
decisions about what to watch."
Wyman told the annual meeting
of the CBS Affiliates at the Cen·
tury Plaza Hotel.
He added. "We must make It
clear that what is at stake is not
the prosperity of the networks,
bu t th e freedom o f the
airwaves."
The Coalition for B etter
Television, with the backing of
the Moral Majority. is monitor·
ing prime-time TV programs
and has threatened a boycott
this summer against companies
that sponsor what they don't ap-
prove
Wyma n s aid h e had no
apologies for TV's emphasis on
e ntertai nment because "we
have helped the American peo-
ple get through som e difficult
limes . . when other forces
were threatening to fragment
our country ..
Wyman's words were rem-
forced in an earlier talk by B
Donald Grant. pres ident or CBS
Entertainment.
Grant told an estimated 765
broadcast executives represent·
rng more than 200 CBS affiliate
s tations that if t he network
listened to all the critics who
cond e mned programs before
they were broadcast, many of its
most prestigious shows would
never have been telecast
"It is true that if some of these
pre-judgers favor the subject
treated, we are doing great
public service with quality and
tas te, and aiding their cause
with a large audience," he said
··But if they disagree. we a re
pa!ldering, exploiting and seek·
ing a large audience in an ir-
responsible pursuit or a high r at
in~ and higher profits '·
He cited several CBS pro-
grams and the se nsitive s ubjects
t hey dealt with, s uch as an
e pisode or "WKRP in Cincin·
nati" i n w hich a m oral ity
crusader pressured the station
to change its program ming. The
programs "One Day at a Time,"
"Trapper J ohn. M. D .. " and
·•Lou Grant" looked at the
harassm ent of women on the
JOb.
Grant noted that many of the
projects attacked before broad·
cast often becam e the most
honored events of the season
··after millions of people have
watch e d the progra m a nd
passed the only judgment that
really counts ...
He said the network does not
deliberately set out to create
controversial programming, nor
does it s hrink from it or abandon
projects that come under attack.
ln his s peech, Wy man also
ca lled for the repeal of the Fair·
ness Doctrine a nd Equal Time
rule, as well as the reasonable
access provision of t he Com-
municalfons Act.
.............
METAL ROCK -Actor Sylvester Stallone pats statue of
himself being used as prop in bis new movie, "Rocky
Ill." Filming began at the statue erected for the film at
the top of steps of Pbiladelphia Art Museum, site of
scenes from the first two "Rocky" movies.
Retired legislators
keep election funds
WASHINGTON CAP l When
they retired in January, some
congressmen gave themselves a·
going-away gift. campaign con-
tributions they had collected for
r e e lection campaigns they
ne ver ran.
Much of the money that went
into their pockets came original-
ly from special interest groups
whose activities are regulated
by Congress.
But what these former con-
gressmen have done is not il-
legal. ln fact, these Little-known
retirement bonuses -which can
amount to tens or thousands of
dollars -have been a round for
years.
Most veteran congressmen
keep their fund-rais ing commit-
tees active between elections,
piling up cash for the next race.
Many aJso use the accounts as
political slus h funds to pay for
travel back to their districts, en-
tertainment. Christmas cards to
cons tituents and other incidental
expenses.
Those who lose their r e-
e lection fights us ually have
spent all they have and more
trying to keep their seats. But
many or those who retire volun-
tarily have substantial sums left
in their accounts.
Some return money to their
contributors. Some make con-
tributions to cha rity or other
political candidates. And some
just keep it.
Under federal election law,
the only constraint appears to be
paying personal income taxes.
Forme r congressm e n do not
have to say how they spend the
money.
For example, Fede ra l Elec-
tion Commission r ecords show
that former Rep. James Hanley.
0 -N. Y .. chairman of the House
Post Office and Civil Service
Committee, had alft1ost $40,000
in his campaign fun'ti when he
decided early last year not to
run for re-election.
Since his last campaign, he
had r eceived $36,100 from the
political action committees or
s pecial interest groups, many of
them representing the postal
e mployee unions, direct mail
users and others under his com-
mittee's jurisdiction.
After announcing he wouJd not
run, Hanley spent some $10,000,
about half or it on personal
travel. When he left office, he
still had $29,406.89.
Repeated attempts to reach
Hanley to learn his plans for the
money were unsuccessful.
Some lawmakers ask their
financial backers If they mind
lhe m oney being used for
personal expenses.
"I wouldn't want to be so pre-
s umptuous as to do it and not
have their expressed consent,"
said former Rep. Mende l Davis.
D-S .C.
--Women get rebates
Mothers collect $200 in test to cut maternity costs
BOSTON CAP> Women who
alve birth and leave the hospital
wlthlo 24 hours are collecting
$200 rebates from an insurance
program in an ex~riment to cul
maternil,1 costs al a suburban
Boston-hospital.
The plan is intended to give
doctors and women an incentive
to reduce costs while still de-
livering babies in the hospital.
"So far as we know. it's the
first in the nation." Or. l,ouis F
will go home too soon 11imply to
get the money. since doctors
must agrt'(' lo euly release
The fi rst woman to deliver a
baby under thl• program wo11
Sally Gallunt of SuuguR, who
stayed In the hospital overnight
when s hr tklivt•rf'd her Kon
Patrick on Murch 4 Shf' will col
lect 11 SlOO ch,•r k on Monduy.
and onoltll'r SlOO will b«' At•t
aside to 11ay for ht•r rollowui1
('Ore for the nexl yl'or
"Wh,•11 you'rt• huv1ng n buby,
you'rl' nul Mltk," lHlld Mrtc
Gnllunt. :Ja "I wuntt•d lo go
homi• 1111 itoon fJ11 I c·ould llomt'
Ill lhf• ~·111 pliH'fl to tw With a Of'W
huhy "
'l't11• 1111t1•nt111l 11uv lnl(11 are
111rrfl " •unl(I•· 1luy 1n thf' ~
lw1 h'"flll ul t•11111t1t $170, and the•
MVMlll(I' "l•Y ,,,, {I m1tl4:rt1lty pu
I ln1t '" 'i 111fov•
Alfan o, c h airmu n of
Massachusetts Blue Shield and
a n obstetrician al Mt'lr olle
Wakefield llosp1tal.
"We 're studying to !'ltH' whut
the real savings will be so we
can then make a judgment Bii to
whether we can offer thl11 kind of
Hamlet pay · dollar
for moth bounty
program in our rci:ulur bw1lnc1J11 Wf':Nf>Jt:LI., Mu11 I Af'> In
and uJtlmalely lower the pre un unll pc11U1•1d1: 1 um1>•l1n '''
mlum," !18ld Robert Murphy, o wipl" out v11r mlnt11 with 01'1
Rlue Cross plunncr. "I'm ob f:111hlorwd melho<t11. thl11 w1·11~11
vlousl y cxpertlni;i to KUY\' MuKuc·huMl'll" hill t'1wn hu IU-i
dollars Thal'11 wh y we're doing u SJ bounty ffir 1•1u•h tw11 J.lf~lt
it " <'IHI of gyp11y moth f'IU'" ulfl
The plun is un outgrowth of cutc•rs1llhm1 turrwd Into off11•1nl•
the hospital's mall'rnlty d uy Re1ldenu at a lt1wn m..un1
care program, which wu11 dt• appro\led t h e bounty and
veloped t() allow women to hav1• ClltYblishcd u s.r,o kitty 111 flnum·,.
their babies In a comfortable, ttw venture
hom e·like a tmosphere and go N lno Kelln, wh11 11roJJ011ed lhf'
home as soon as possible bounty, calli-d 1t a "11ymhol1c:
g c 11 t u r c · · t o JJ u IJ I I c· 1 7. 1• So far, two mothers have "alternallv1· way11 " tr1 right the participated in the program
t d b pt:sts open o women cove r e Y •. Every htidy '!-i su worried
master medical Blue Cross-Blue about lhc moths getting into
Shield. which is s ponsoring the their cell ars, back yards. and
one-year t rial. And if it works laundry, l started thinking why
here, a spokes man says, Blue not go b ack to an old time
Cross will expand it to othe r method, .. s he said "There used
hospitals. to be bounlle~ on raccooms and
Dr. Walter G Leonard, the s kunks whenever things got out
hospital's chief of obstetrics, or hand."
said there is no chance women The town or 700, whic h
~~~~~~~~-
1 t1l111,,,.,,..,, II• l111 ..-ut,.nnh1I fo"n
tlfl y tirllf1 1~~•• '1#1 fflt;tr rt"111dents
U1.1"' A1N1 11 wu 1rworr>oratt.'<i,
t1u r w 1 afoul 11t 11t11l.f· regul a
11111,. 111 lt>r JJM •I In trylnl( to han
lw•llt 1'11· .m1J twrl111•ldr 11µruy
'"" fn DM1t1.1Jt1 111 Uw l(Y""Y moth
l1ounty r~lllt-t1h ;,1110 adopted a
r .. v111•-d •1rd1ns1n<".-;,t the town
m,,~twg ;urn•·rl al rt"gulating
''"""' 1111r uy1111( •11 herlu<'ades by utlhtl~
Thi! l;,w wh1C't1 muM be ap·
prov1•d l1y th .. 1>tat,, c.ttorney
l(vnerul llt'.'for., 1t take1> effect, re
11u1rci. the· town hoard or hec.lth
to h<1ld ~ publ11: hec.ring and de
tnm1m• whether the proposed
~pra) ing conforms with state
regulat1<Jns before granting a
pcrmit. The attorney general
has ruled prev1ou~ly that the
town c annot e1d o pt tougher
pesticide and herbicide regula
lions than the state
Finns IRVINE MEAT CO. • • mnair
au:ards
FRES NO CAP )
Fir m s in Tu l are,
Merced and Fres no
co unti es have wo n
"c lean air " awa rds
fr o m t h e Ce ntral
California Lung As-
sociation.
R ecipi en t s were
Treehouse Farms of
Earlimart, Glen Wells
Asp h a lt pav ing o r
Woodlake, Northern
Merced Hulling Associa-
tion of Ballico and pro-
duce r s Cotton Oil of
Fresno.
An award was pre-
sented Monday to Norm
Covell, manager or the
Fres no County Air
Pollution Control Dis·
trict.
County s plit?
~i~ ?n"" ~lA.>lif"1 A~ ~w fo ~~n. ~f)l.f\f~ 49TCAI'-14p~ O&.\r" ~ptti.a( ~"·., '"· ~ic: "'~"' ut-.tr GA.f2.D ! 4U,.96eo)( '('o~s;JJ1e it .oo.fr,r~ l~j~ ~ f 10.00 ~?l'*·
Now wtr.,¥t FKrn ~ LQQl ~ua ..WLfOi.w u;n11ef\i&a !
We carry only Manning Prime Quality Beef
frffser le.t Prlc:n: c:ut. wr~ Clftd flash froHfl at "° extra c:harq•
Monniac)s lfff
Side of lfff 1 I 41 Hind Quart~r 't "
LOCATED AT JEFFREY AND
IRVINE CENTER DRIVE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK MON.-FRI. 10-7 SAT. 10-5
SUN. 11-5 552-7988
FRESNO <AP > -
Me mbers of the Moun-,
tain AJliance who want
lo carve a new county
out of easte rn Fresno
County presented peti-
tions for its formation
h e r e . Orga niz ers
estimated more than
28,000 s ignatures were
submitted to force an
election on the creation _:~~~~==~=====-===~============-=====::""::~
of Ponderosa County in
the foothills east of the ·
Friant-Kem Canal.
Jenrette near
bankruptcy?
11111 111 n., ,,, , ••• ,,. •
WASHINGTON !AP> -Despite assertions by
his estra nged wife. Rita, that he is worth milUons.
former Rep. John W. Jenrette "Is a step away
from ba nkruptcy court,'' the lawyer for the South
Carolina Democrat says .
Kenneth M. Robinson made the statement in
U .S District Court at the start of a hearing of
Jenrelte's appeal of his Abscam conviction Oct. 7
for taking a $50,000 bribe from an FBI agent pos-
ing as-an aide to two Arab sheiks.
Robinson said that not only is Jenrette, dereat-
ed in a re-election bid last year, near bankruptcy
but also he has "the tax people on his back In
South CAroJlna. ,., . . He was asking Judge John·Penn to order that
daily transcripts be m ade available to his client
without charge because "we can't afford it." Penn
said that was up to the fede ral prosecutor, John
Kotelly, who has ordered expensive transcripts to
be ready at the e nd of each day.
ae A&E
RV AWNINGS
Rita Jenrette told an audience at Nassau Com-
munity College in Garden City, N.Y., last week
that "John has a lot or money, millions of dollars
in property but little cash now."
She added that he has asked her for alimony
but said , "I have no intention of paying blm
anythin.e."
Call us and You'll see what we mean.
Free Installation at your home. All
sizes and prices avallable.
The former congressm an, who ia claimina hia
due p~ess rights were violated by aovemment
m isconduct and entrapment, was ln court but dld
not testify.
'Piggyback'plllllper
HILLINGOON. Eosland <AP> -Suraeoo•
b1ve performed Brttaln•a ftnt "ll!lwback .. beart
tr1n1pl1nt, lmplantlnc • MC!Oed Mart aloaplde
the patient'• own, hotpltal autlmtU. Mid.
The patient. a 51-year-okl printer, P.ter ScoU,.
... oven the heart of. J.J.7ear-old strl "*'acct·
dent victim ln a four-bour apwatloll Sund.Q altbt
at Harefteld HospttaJ.
A apohlman Hid ScoU WU "coud.oua and
makiDC a nonnal l'ftOVtlJ'."
• w •. ,.. ...... , ., ......... ,..... ....... • Al wOftl cr.••lcedl •Senwt ....... v ,.a .:a.ce 1971 • .... 1c.
Sff ua for woven WOOdl. ~
lt0f'IQ9 poda and tev•ll"il IYlten"e.
.. OMC•AMY•'MC.wrecr-
15998 Mariner Drive
Huntington Beach,
(21 ,, HJ-21 tJ
-. . . . Qg ~· ,_ -'2 i ¥44 441-;4 • e •• 4¥ ¢ 0 g $ ¢¢# ,_ 0 • u '
Orange Coa1t DAILY Pll.OT/Wednnday, May 13, 1981 ••
rnrn~~m~~~
Budgeting the reserve
Congress searches for way
WASHINGTON <AP> -Facln& a $3.9 bUJlon
tab it would rather not pay -at least directly -
Conaress ls searching desperately for a way to fill
the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve without
taking the money from the federal budget.
The petroleum reserve is the nation's in·
s urance against another oil embargo. It now holds
135 million barrels of oil, equivalent to some 20
days worth of imports, and the government wants
to build it to 750 million barrels by 1989.
But the money needed to buy the oil -$3.9
billion next year under President Reaaan's pro·
posed budget -is caught in the tangle of budget
politics.
UNDER PRESSURE TO cut federal spendine
and move toward a balanced budget, both the
House and Senate have voted to reduce appropria·
lions for the reserve by $3 billion next year on the
assumption that some private financing scheme
could be used to buy the oil instead.
Supporters of the spending cuts insist they
want the reserve filled and are confident
alternative ways can be found to do the job. The
sticking point has been finding that alternative
plan.
Plans have been proposed, and hearings have
been held in both the House and Senate. But the
schemes have been attacked by the oil industry,
public and private economists and irwltstment
firms. Some ideas simply won't work, me critics
say. Others just hide the cost of the oil.
HOUSE ENERGY COMMITl'EE Chairman
John Dingell of Michigan calls it a "budgetary
s hell game," and Senate Energy Committee
Chairman James A. McClure of Idaho concedes
to finance oil 'insurance' ..
that to some degree, "we're doing this with mir·
rors. •\
In effect, several of the schemes call for gov·
ernment purchases on separate ledaer books, so
the expenditures do not count on the federal def·
kit. But money for the oll purchases still would
come from government borrowing -or from new
taxes.
The simplest solution, proposed by Sen. Ben·
nett Johnston, D·La., would enact a new law
declaring that money for the reserve "shall not be
included in the totals of the U.S. budget" -mean·
ing it would not count against budget ceilings.
Budget Director David Stockman told a Senate
Energy subcommittee last wffk that the idea may
be the preferable solution to the dilemma.
although McClure calls the idea "a transparent
mirror" in the game of mirrors.
The Senate Energy subcommittee on energy
and natural resources says it will try to come up
with the solution this week. Aside from Johnston's
proposal, alternatives being considered include:
-MANDATORY CONTRIBUTIONS. This
proposal would require major oil importers to con·
tribute five days worth of im~rts each year to the
reserve. They would be paid 10 percent of the oil's
worth each year for 11 years.
-OIL BONDS. This scheme wQuld allow
private investors to buy oil for the reserve. ln·
vestors would purchase bonds denominated in bar·
rels of oil at current market prices. If the oil were
withdrawn during an embargo, they would be
compensated at the market rate then, minus
storage and handling charges.
-GOVERNMENT BORROWING. In various
AP..._...
David Stockman, director of the Of/ice of Manage·
ment and Budget.
forms, this proposal would borrow money through
the sale of bonds. Either a new government cor·
poration would issue its own bonds or the corpora·
lion could borrow through use of regular govern·
ment securities, such as Treasury bills.
-NEW TAXES. Some industry and financial
experts propose the reserve be financed by impos·
ing a new excise tax on motor fuels, with the taxes
going into a trust fund earmarked for reserve
purchases
Ex-accountant gets mileage out of roads ter
LAS VEGAS <AP> -Three years ago Jules beginning at $29,750, it's not the basic family car. He said the maximum production would be
Kaplan decided to take the big step. He sold his "The specific buyer could be a man or woman about 100 cars a year.
s hare of a successful accounting office to bis between the ages of 35 and 50 who bas made it and Kaplan likes to say the car -rated at 24 miles
partner and became an automaker. wants to show the world that they are an in· per gallon -gets "more looks per gallon." A drive
"I just got tired of my practice." he says. "I dividual and are different from everybody else,'' in the prototype, a rich burgundy red, bears out
decided to chuck it all." Kaplan said in an interview. "They are usually out bis claim. \
Kaplan will never pose a threat to the Big in the forefront, they usually want lo be seen." With high fenders, a classic Mercedes-style
• Three, but since the introduction of his Moselle The cars are built in the Los Angeles area, grille, huge chrome headlights and fl exible
Stoc kman:
'Gi mmick is
1W proble m '
• WASHJNGTON (AP) -Budget Director Davld
A. Stockman says he's willing to go along with a
little budget gimmickry if it will fill the nation's
stratefic petroleum reserve'.
Stockman, testifying recently before a Senate
Energy subcommittee, aald the administration
would prefer a straightforward, itemized ap·
propriation of $3.9 billion to buy oil for the reserve
next year.
But faced with votes in both the House and
Senate to delete $3 billion from the reserve
because of budget ceilings, Stockman said the ad·
ministration has no problem accepting a gimmick.
IN FACT, STOCKMAN said, the "simplest
way, probably the preferable way" is a one·
sentence law proposed by Sen. Bennett Johnston.
D·La., that would simply declare that appropria·
tions for the reser ve do not count against the
budget ceiling. '
Sen. James A. McClure, the Energy Commit·
tee chairman, called the proposal "a transparent
mirror," in reference to "those who say we're do·
ing this with mirrors ."
Sen. Wendell Ford, D·Ky ., noted that the ad·
ministration has been extremely successful in
moving its economic plan through Congress and
said a similar effort could have saved the direct
appropriation for the reserve.
''l'M NOT SURE you've put your heart into
it," Ford said.
Joined by Treasury Secretary Donald Regan
and Energy Secretary James Edwards, Stockman
largely dismissed a congressional dispute over
financing the reserve as "a quarrel among book·
keepers" that should affect neither the filling of
the reserve nor the impact on the economy.
"lf the Congress does not want to count the ex·
pense, we will find a way lo make this program go
forward,'' Stockman said . "It's a bookkeeping
problem. Let's create a set of books that will allow
us to go forward ."
The dispute involves votes taken in the con·
gressional fervor to cut spending.
The Reagan administration asked Congress
for $3.9 billion for 1982 to buy crude oil for the
strategic reserve, which is aimed at building a 750
million·barrel stockpile of oil as insurance against
another cutoff of supplies from the Middle East.
When full , the stockpile in Louisiana salt domes
could last about 90 days if it were used lo replace
the current level of imports .
roadster last November he's carved out a small with construction at a small, seven-employee shop chrome exhaust pipes leading Crom the side of the
' but comfortable niche for himself, selling cars to in Chatsworth and a s howroom in nearby hood, the car does attract attention. BUT BOTH HOUSES of Congress, while say.
people who don't want to buy Detroit products. Woodland Hills. Since the prototype was complel· The Mbselle's chassis and drive train come ing the reserve should be filled, voted to cut that
"It's an ego thing, true ego," Kaplan said of ed last November, Kaplan said, he has sold 45 of from a small pickup truck, the Ford Courier, that spending by $3 billion. Lawmakers said an
the Moselle. the cars with an average deUvery time of about 14 has been le ngthened to accommodate the alternative financing plan would be found .
Indeed. Long, very long, and sleek, the weeks. roadster's 137.inch wheelbase and overall 204-inch Congressional committees in both houses have
Moselle was inspired by the classic 1928 Mercedes· ''I have orders for 73,'' Kaplan said, "but I length. With the Courier's four.cylinder engine. the since been wrestling with the problem, but havt
_B_e_n_z_ss __ ro_a_d_s_t_e_r._W_i_th_t_w_o_s_e_ats __ an_d_a_p_n_· c_e_l_a_g __ c_a_n_'t_.p"'"r_od_u_c_e_th_a_t _m_a_n_y..__r..,,ig:;...h_t_n_o_w_._._' _______ M_os~!le tips the sca_le_s_a_t _3._,020_ ... eo_un_ds_. _______ b_e_e_n_un_able to come up with a plan.
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
lllCTITIOUI au11111•11 111.\Ma ITAT•M•lllT 1111 TH• OllT•ICT COU•T 011 TH•
Tiie IOl-1"9 _...,., are 6el"9 l•VUfTM JUDICIAL DIST•ICT 011
-IMues: THll
DATAPRESS, ltll W. Ole•-. STATll 011 IDAHO, 1111 AlllD 110•
, S.nta AN, Celllornta '2103 THll Neltml 0 . U.-&. lllO llotM. Costa COUNTY 011 P•llMOefT Mna,c.1-.... llANDY TROST, Plalnllll, Vt.
' P ... "-'· 112• Salv-Str ... , SHARON MOYNTS TROST, Oef-
Costa ~ c.llfornla dant.
J-"-1. u11 w. °"'""'~·SM-SUMMONS -l'O• s11•v1c• ta AM, c.lllonlla t2704 TH• 11'AT& 011 IDAMO
Cw• '--~ 1111 l'lo<e St...t, SaJtDS O•••TllllOa TO SMiie Ana, California 92104 1-llOM MOUlllTI T•OST
Marlo ~. 1111 Flo<a StrM t. SHA.ON MOUNTS GROST. Ille
Santa Ana, CellNrnla tmM atoov• ...,_.........,
Tllfl lluMneu It cOftdwcted tty e Yeu An ""'90y Notillecl. TM! a
........ 1 ~. <°"'plelrll,_llMnllled ...i...c you In ...._, G. ~I Ille Ohtrld C:O..rt of Ille S."9nlll
Tlllt ~ •es llled •1111 Illa JIMIClal Obtrlct of IN Slate OI 1-.
County Clerk of Or-C:O..nly °" In aftd 10< N County of ,.........,., by
Aprll 27, 1"1. Ille e-,_ plalnllff. -you ere "'..., lle'9llY dlre<ted lo _.r .,.., ,....., ..
Puttfltllecl Or-COH1 Dally Piiot, w ld < ............ •lttlln twenty cleys of
Apr. lt, May 6, 1J, JO, 1tll 117441 Ille .. rvke of .. ,, Mlmf'ftOM, Md you
are luru.. llOllllM tllet IHllfls you so
appear end plead lo Mid ~alnt
PUBLIC NOTICE •llllln Ille ume ...,...,. -lfled, IN
plelntlff •Ill lake judgment aplM1
you H praV9Cf In laid c11m9ial11t
"· J . KoclPe• l'ICTITIOUS a u11111•11 Al_, for Plafnlftl
MAM•STATaMllMT O«leMC.tonoe
Tiie hlllOWlnl PH1011 It Clelflt 11\KI· Clertc of tM
-11: Dlsltlcl c-t WOllD PROCESSING SCHOOL, Owlt 8adonn 2m s. E. ar1.1o1, 5'11te m. Seflt• AM. o.pucy
C.lllornla t2711. •· J . HOCWl:I MAlllLYN SUE SALAS, 2U7 P.O. •••N,
lll••r•ld• Drive, Costa Me11, •e....., I ....
Calllor"'9m17. Tel: u..aat
Tiii• ....,_I• c-.CltCI tty ... In· Pulllfl"'9d Or-CMSI o.lly Piiot,
dMWel. Apr.tt,May6, IJ,to, 1tl1 lO:l:Mt Molt1f yn SalM
Tlli. ~ •• llled •1111 Ille
c-ty Clffll or Or.,,.. Couftty °"
""'""·1"1. "' ..... Pvbtl9Wd Or ..... Cent Deify Pllo\,
~II 2'. May 6, IJ, 20, 1"1 102>41
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTtTIOUI au1111111u
lllAM• ITATaM•lllT
Tiie loll-1119 per-• e•e dolrtt ttualneuu:
MIKE OLDHAM POOL SERVICE, '702 Olymplc Drl v1, Huntington
eH<ll, c.llfornla ._..
l'ICTITIOUI eu11111•11 Mic-c. Oldlwtn. tl02 Olympie
lllAMI ITATUUlllT Drive, -lfl9\0n llN<ll, C.lllornla Tiie , .. ._.,,. ...._. Is Clelng Ml·'~
.... H : JU<lltfl I' OldNm 9702 Olympk
DOLPHIN TACKLE CO .. 2100 Drive, Hurltl-..«11. C.lltornle E . Hewell Street ,Anellelm, '2'46
CallfOrnle ,_. Tiiis ......_ 11 <ondu<'9d tty ln-
Mlc,_I R. F9"1, 161• Tof'tofa dlvldualt (......,..,Md •ti.J.
.Clrtle, HwWI.,..... Ha-. C.lllomta ~ C. 0-m
ftMt Judltfl F. OldNm Tllll ~ I• ,ondlK ... tty .,. In· Tftll ,..,_. WU lllect wllll Ille
dlv!Wal. County Clert< ol Or-Coumy °" MIC._. II. Ford Aprll 27, 1"1.
f Tllll .C.C-t •11 lllMI wltfl 01t P""'1
Cw11ty Clertl If Orlrltll Cevnty Oft Puttll....., Or""" Coast Dally Piiot, APfll t7, 1"1. Apr. 21 Mav 6 U 20 1'11 JOJl.~1 "''°"° . ' . . .
:· P''*lllllN 0r-. Coast Dally Pl ....
, Aprll H, Mly6, II, 20, 1"1 -..1 PUBUC NOTICE
Let's face it, the cost of energy is climbing and there's no end in sight.
But there are ways to conserve electricity in your home. Easy ways.
Ways that will conserve energy and, in the long run, save you some
money on your electric bill.
1. For instance, unplug second refrigerators when not in use. Check that
refrigerator in the garage. Are you spending money cooling a can of cola?
2. Weather strip doors and windows.
3. Insulate your attic.
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PUBUC NOTICE A 'T.' ,.,,.{f ~ :':::~ .. .;.,~:;: ..,(.. .-~"1..P.' ! '' "~":=:I!. -r ••.• :J;, ~ ... •· .~W:O--.=-z., ~uane( .. .4:=c·"°· _c.v_. ; , .tti,·~·, '!!.'.rJ "> PICTIT10us el>SIN•U Tiie IOl._."I ,__1 ere •l"I ., .. _ .-.. t'/11'-;iti,-. , • ,_ .-• "l ,, ... ....
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NAM• ITAHMlllllT llutl-•: I:!. I . th dry l th .d Tll• , .. _.1111 --·ere""'' Moooc M1111• IEA$T ... LTD., I :J. n nice wea er, your co es outs1 e. I
A "111-•11: ..,, a 1rc:11 ........ WW •• ~
• PACI l'I C MAI NT llNANC E a..tll, CMltwftla.... ' · ~::,~~.=.~ Stree1. o.1a H .. :!~~~~s~ .• ~~~·1,; 6. When you do use your washer and dryer, make sure you use full loads.
CA•OLYN A. weAv1111. uas sw .. t.,._,...,...,..1 I I
,. ~;.~ Stnet. c-i. Me ... c.0-· ,.,1:::..i.---11 ~_.,a aw· The same holds true when using your dishwasher.
i THOMAS 0 . MUllTZ•L, UIS MMllcMlne e-. 1..c.
Ave ... ltrwt. ()Illa ..... (.elllerftl• .111111 w. O'O.WWll Pr91-~ J . h
:· ~i. "'-IMH I• cOfldu<ted.., a-;:.. ........... -fti. ~ .. I ,. When you're cooking, bake several om t e · I ;: e-raler:: =:11.~ *' Ot-. ee:::.: I dishes at once. Conservation I Tiie. ,._.,.._. wes tli. wl111 ""' ,,._...a.•' It•
lltp Clerti et Dr.,,.. C-ty M ..._., .. "-8 { h ~tw11 •.1••· "'...., ..... ..._A_ • n summer, set your t ermostat at • ,.._.,.,....Or .... (Mat Delly Plitt. ...... llMdll.C. .... · f""~;~::; ~~;::;=.:-= : ;!i ~=ilewinter, 68°should keep Generatioh. :
,... ......... ..-"............. '=::=::,• I The higher energy costs climb, the more Southern CaliforniR Edison .... : ,.......................... As h I l "'I I
t •• :t:,:.~~~!~ 1
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1ec':: -.:i™ CXloUT Dtl .. ,1,nv. a• it pays to conserve. a e p, c ip out E ~... ~ .,., c:.e,...... CM#erlN d r 11 th 8 ..:~ .. MIU ..... ~..:~ ~ ... Dr. •r11ce Wll•ir~ IC .. • I an ro ow ese saving tips. I A.,....,C..MIM.Cell ..., • Tilllll~-~lff-.... .!::.... ....... ~"¥-... ·1 I ,..MlQllMll Dr • .,._..., nm__. .. ,... ...... ,........,... .. ,...._.. .. (Wt"°' ... ~"'.., e.... °"" "°' ... CiMltrtll.., ...... ..,.. ~ ~.. Ill ..:-::;.~c.-... .::i ~~~~~.= ••••••••••••••••••••••
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.. . ' . -·· ... Orange CoMt DAILY PILOT/WednHday, May 13, 1981
Definition a problem
SBA has trouble determining what small business is
By JOHN CUNNIFF
·~· ...... .....,. NEW YORK Because of a bur~aucraUc com-
pulsion to designate it not dedicate each week as
something or other, we now celebrate U.S. Small
Business Week, per order of the president of the
United States.
Oddly, the celebration of the small-business
free enterprisers is largely an a/fair ol govern·
ment. which many small-business people long
have contended has been and may remain the No.
1 enemy.
The enemy because of the way it taxes them,
and regulates them and writes contract regula-
tions that big companies can handle but which are
too costly for some small businesses to adjust to.
The enemy also forgets them and forgets the
country isn't made only of bif government, big
business and big unions, but o millions of small
companies providlng scores of millions of jobs in
many thousands of communities.
In a typically entrepreneurial way. small·
business groups have fought hard, and ver the
past couple of years have begun 0. winning their share or
legislative victories. They still
have a way to go, though, and '
still must contend with bigness; \
they just can't avoid big gov-~ -
ernment.
Tbe latest confrontation
came last week at Senate hear-
ings on proposed new standards
defining the size of s mall busi-
nesses eligible for federal pro-CUNN"'"
grams, mainly those of the Small Business Ad·
ministration.
One proposal seemed iMocuous. The SBA said
it would like to establish a single standard for de·
termlna what constltuted • small bualneaa. It
would be bued on the number of employeet
But ntlhlng is quite that simple in deallne w1lh
the bureaucracy.
THE SBA SAID THAT to be fair the standard
s hould vary from industry to industry. dependinc
on the level of competition. A four-dl1It code bued
on the Standard lnduatrial Classification system
would determine an industry's competitiveness,
and that would mean a small business mleht range
from ju.st l~ to as many as 2,500 employees.
Some small-business owners and organiutlons
were outraged at the proposal, which the SBA said
would be more rational as well as simpler than the
"mish-mash" of criteria developed since the 1950s.
An officer of one small business testified that
size standards should be based on average annual
sales . Another critic said the proposal was based
on bad data. And another contended that "the
superficial appeal or just one number" must be re-
sisted. The proposal was withdrawn.
Who is to blame? Is anyQne to blame? Or, in·
deed, is there really any problem at all? An at·
tempt to answer produces still another question:
''Who can say?"
ONE THING IS CERTAIN: Smail business is
exceedlngly dirricult to define, and some people
who huve spent year s dealing with what they say
are s mall-business matters have very flexible
definitions.
Dozens of definitions exist based on the
number of employees and sales, such as that of·
fered by the Walter E. Heller Institute, which
s tates that a small business is one with annual
sales between $1 million and $50 million and 50 to
500 employees
Yields on Treasury securities soar
WASHINGTON !AP> Average yields on
short-term Treasury securtties have hit their
second-highest levels ever, continuing a three·
week spurt in interest rates, the government has
re~rted. . Six-month bills sold at an average discount
rate of 15.531 percent. up from the 15.104 percent .of
a week earlier, the Treasury reported after its
weekly auction Monday. The new figure was the
SALES MGR
ltiCREASE SALES WITH
TOLL FREE 8 0 0 NUMBERS
Efftdin for Service Companies also
• Combine with adyert1sing for quick response
• Maximum ettect111eness nationwide
• Sales trained telephone secretanes
• Round the clock service
• Reasonable rates
CALL TODA YI ••. For detailed 1nlorma11on
1 14 / &ls.1111
800/'632·7257 lXT. 741 a
CONSTRUCilON
MONEY
AVAILABLE AT
HERITAGE BANK.
•Residential
• Commercial Buildinp: Takeout
Commitment required along with leases.
• Land Loans up to one year 50% appraisal.
CONTACT:
•Tom Wilcher-
Anaheim Offic.e (714) 851-41.26
• JeffJohnson-
lrvine Office (714) 851-4050
highest smce the record 15.7 pf'rcent reported on
March 24. 1980
The average yield on three-month bills rose to
16.433 percent from 15.963 pe~cent last week.
reaching the highest level srnce the record
16 661 percent or last Dec. 15.
Beginning Tuesday, banks and thrift . institu-
tions may pay as much as 15.781 percent interest
on their six·month savings certificates.
A Flctltlou1 u1lne11
N1m1 S111e,.,.n1 lll•d
wllh the County Cletlt 11
velld for ftve yeer1 '""
which time continuing
bu1ln1ue1 mutt re flle.
Publlc•tlon I• MCIHlry
only If there '" chengH. C.it the L.99•1
01p1r1men1 et the
DAILY PILOT for
l nformellon end
nece111ry l0<m1.
642-4321
EJ(I. 332
EXECUTIVE SUITES
JADE MANAGEMENT
881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14
NEWPORT BEACH
714 -631-3651
MILLIONS TO LOAN
MEW RA11SI
$10,000 to $1,000,000
2ND • 3RD TRUST DEED LOANS
PromQt Fundlno
• SWING~g~1;1svears 11~~
• 2ND-3RD T.D. LOANS
• Resldentlol Speclollsls
• Apartments
• Commercial
• WE IUY DISCOUNTED T.D.11
• We help structure notes
lor maximum soleoblllty
• ~(~1tr//t/ .!/>arf't<: /la1fh~1? ·1i1t·.
llClNSEO MOll'IGAGl lOAN ll!()l(lll
CALL 714/955·1055 , . 4000 MocAllTHUll tlOUUVAAO
t •• ; .,.11.oµ f~ 1~ .. ,~ll.1'41.0 .>~!.; ,,. _ .. _,_~~~Ji{'
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTlnous •UllNISI PICTlt'IOUS au11N•ll NAMa ST&TIMINT NAMll ITAT•MaNT
T ... '-~ ...,._ I• ..... _,. T ... loftewlne --· .... dolnt ""8M: ....._..:
WIESTCLIFflC REALTORS, 11» INVU"TMaNT CO"ll'OltATION
Wnlcllll Ori~•. Newport a11ch, 01' AMa"ICA. •I c:er.«ate ll'le ..
Clllltornl•tM.o Drive, Sult• 100, N••IMlrt •••<fl,
D•11lol "-WelltnllM, IJlft Cllli.t'nl• ....
Mer .... Clrc11, lrwlne, C•lllornl• INValT•aNT 'Oltll'OR&TION
fl'714 Ol'AMUU<:A,IN(. lftl .... -.et•
Tiiis ......_It <endue.., t.y on ~ tltll, •I CWller* ...._. ~""'· ~ .iw14111el. 1•. N.....,.. lleecll, c;ellfwllll ,_..
OllllolH. Wllleftll,. Thie .......... ~ 9'f I CM•
Tlllt ~ w• fllef wllll Ille 11«•tl0n. ._ c-iv Clltll ot o..,.. eeunty on Mey 1~ '9rl*9' ....
•• 1911. .. AIMtk• .. ,.,.., Miii i.. ~
PvtM"'-9 Or-Coetl Delly ~.... ..........
Mlyll,211.17,J-J,ltll tt»41 TM1.........,.. -flied wtttl Ille c-ty C.. el Of Malt C-Y lft Mil' .......
PUBLIC NOTICE
John Malone checks the editing piano at Play-Rite Mtaic Rolls Inc
Player pianos make comebllf:k
Firm producing music rolls realizes big profits
TURLOCK <APl A firm ts staking its future
on a home entertainment system that was out of
date 50 years"ago.
But John Malone said he believes player
pianos are worth the effort. He is general manager
of Play·Rite Music Rolls Inc which makes ('ylin-
der-like rolls used on player pianos.
A perforating machine capable of punching
out about 800 music rolls a day produces selections
ranging from the latest Kenny Rogers recordings
to old·time classics
"l would guess that our typical customer is 45,
female, can't find middle C on the piano and en·
joys Elvis Presley music." he said with a glance
at thous ands of piano rolls in the plant inventory
here.
AL THOUGH 40 COMPANIES manufactured
the rolls in their heyday during the mid 1920s.
Malone believes his 20-year-old firm is now one of
only three manufacturers in the world.
OVER THE COUNTER
NEW YOlllK IA~) ff•rltJL NASOAO ~I C~wCp .-1ne flltMtl ColrTle and 1-1 ~ by ColG'1\ol m•rttet ~ as of ComCIH TUH. Prlut do not CmlShr lncl-retalltnlrltuP CmwTel marltelo-or com;n. ConPap s lulon for TUffdly. Cordi• Sloe It Bid Ask Cros Tre 1 AEL Incl 14\lo I CullrFd • AFAProt t \I) 10 Cycltron AVM Cp w. 4114 OenlyM
Accuray ICW. 11 Ot•O.• 1 AdcllanW 12V. l:Rlo Oa'(IMal AOYltOH ~ 4Y, 0 11Mr ~:1:~. 1~ .)4 g:~~~·
Allcolnc; 42 Q YJ O.weyEI Ally11I 71' 1 OlaCry1 AllH 6\1) .__ OlanCru
Aman• 27Yt 2~ Oocutl 1 AFum ~ 5"' OollrGn AGrMI 11~ 12llr OoylOI l AlntGp nu. nv. OunttlnO
AMlcros ~ 20Vo Ourlrn • ANallns 14\lo I~ tl,Qrlef
AQuasr l 1' 2614 ftlftVnai AAa~ \Wt IM' E<onLAb AWeklfte '6'h ...... l!IPHEI AmtUllnc n.... 14 El~ ..
Anldll1 ICM I«* EleNucl :no~Gd = ~l4 EIModul
A!:tc 1~ ""' EnrO.v Apld~I 17\'t 21'111 =~•"::lhd
::ro1Gl J:! Jt EntwlsU
AllGsLI I"' IJh EqulSL
Alla,,lllt It ltY, Jt:IOll
eelrdCp I~ 12 F111<IU lallyPP 11\1» 11~ F•rmGp
9-HE IOYI IOYJ l"ldlcor &eslcAs o 1014 !O'h FtlkSys BHSIFr Ullo ~ FIBo.ln l1yl1Mk IOh 11\lo FtEmpS
a .. 11,.. P4 ' FtWnFln llentPtl Fl~lks
2 1>-i. 2 '~" Fllcllor lanllyL O Y, 41'1j, FloltPnt BetzUb SIYJ S2 FllNFla
llevM91 ISYJ I~ Flurocb s
81b0Co I°"' llV. ForeslO lllrdSon ,..., 1S Forml~I alrt<llr 1 ,.,.. Frenlt
lly,,_ 1~ ISl't FrenltE •~n.ta Slit ~ l''"SG llrwTOl'ft 1 40 '°.,.. l'remnt s lluctt-10 10.,. l"ullrHB luffels .a ~ G•IHY<>
llU'nuoS I~ l•'h ~Aulm ~NL l'ln J\4 J'Wt nl>tVCI c:.i~fv Y g"" AJE)t
C•n,.dH ,_ ~ G~:::,;
C9'1Ent 214 ~ GreyAdv
CepSwC 11\f• """ Glllnlll CplnAlr M ~ Gyroclyn Clf'~. ""' IJYI HemlPI ~:v'iJs' 1~ 1;:: HarchR• ChrmSll 16 1'\4 HrpA-Cl\lr1Ho ~ ~ HarpGp ChmLN nv. nV> HartlNI
CllHUtl 11 lt\lt ~=~CIRFKl ChlNwTr 71 7' Holobm g~~ ':"" 4~ Hoover
MUTUAL FUND
NASO LISTINGS
After 15 years in electronics, Malone made a
commercial venture out of player piano and
television repair work that began as a hobby in
high school
.. Most kids m y age were mowing lawns for ex
tra money m those days," he said .. But there was
no money in that "
His project With partners Elwood Hansen or
San Francisco and Robert Kolsters of Oakland
combmed the old magic of the pianos Wlth modern
day electronic wizardry
The manufacturing proces!> uses both an 1870
Wurlitzer machine and a computerized scanner.
ELECTRONIC SIGNALS transmitted through
keys of an old Ives & Pond piano are assisted in
th .. ir work by an empty peach can and auto parts
the only equipment Malone could find to keep
has machinery running
·'The pubhc is staying home more now and us
ing more home entertainment mstruments" to
contribute to the firm's thriving business. he said
-SI-Te< elot.ciNr CanhKE" M9dtom York Rall Per-0.. Omni Aw
Hlllnt • Tlmn t3w' Mlcrl WI Mlltros WI OOotAtt Pry me En VI rat.It eases wt Mier Z pt
0Uffl ..... Col Gui Id WordTrn SymbTec:
0Utt1Md ~~1' TSllnc Telmlrw
N.,.,.
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NestEn U" llldlnv ChatO.V ISSC CA Cit
UnAtnEn ASA CP GST un Gromen "",,... St~IVT suttwt TICS.Roy
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NiW YOlllK(AP) lull' .... Gp: P111TF 12" ll.3' 1;,;, lndk 1.n ..... HI Inc 7_44 7.15 PIOftfff Fund f:!o'' It~ 1::~
-l ... IOI--. 'f'IC> c apm 10.• NL TX Fr• unevell lnvQull '·" l .'2 HI 011 ..... t.IS eonc1 1.11 ··~ l•Uons ..-lied Dy c epll $ ll.'5 NL US Ovt unavall Inv aos 12.n 13.77 lnlTrm 9.~ t.1J Fund 10.4j 22.lS ln•esl 17.17 1',07 .... N•llONl Ano<I· Gotcn IS... NL l"ldelllr ~: '"llHlort Group· LIM•I 9,77 t.tl II Inc; 11.'0 14.10 Trull I.fl t,71
atlon of 5ecl'lllos t alvln auiiodt: · AIM IS.J2 L 105 9C1 Ut , 4 11 MunHY 122 I J6 Pl•n In. 17 U NL Vo"I IS.t7 17.4j Dealers, inc .. .,.. lull<ll l6.Jf ll ti Bond "°' NL 10s Ort ts.11 1•.» Mu,,lln ,,:.., • n P11on11 16a 1t o se Eq1, t6.J4 11.20
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t •
Orenge Coat t DAILY PILOT /WednH d1y. May 13, 1981 s •• ,,,..-----------------------------------------------------------------------~---------..---------~ (:()MPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
... ..... . .
' Polaroid
prof its dive
Yoa've seen those clever Polaroid commercials
Ceaturm.: James Gurner and Murielle llarlley? They
can be funny und they're dl rterent from the run of
mill commercials you see on television because Lhcy
show a little humility, they're not a ll claim-and·
boast. They also cost a lot of money Polaroid spen1
$101 million last year lo .u.lvt>1 t1se its w:octanl c·amera
and fil m packs
That's a sizable nutluy for u company Polaroid's
size . TotaJ sa lei. 1n 19fl0 w1•n· SI 4 billion. whi\'h
means Polaroid spent 7 CN1l!t of •'u<'h sale) dollar on
advertising. Polarou.l IO\'t>'>L'> ubout as much money
in advert1s1ng :.is 11 dm.·-. HI r c1>l'Urch Jnd develop-
ment
They don't '>pend I hat w<1) ;1t Pularo1d ·s
archraval, Easlmitn KodJk To be :-.ure. Kodak out ad
vertised Polaroid at:.. t.'xpendaturcs run about SO per -
cent higher ~ but 1l 's also u •
much bagger \·, Q>
company 1 ,
Kodak's 1980 ~· sales were S9 7 .. ..+,;;m...,..:t _______ _
~~1~1~~· t~~0l~~ MllTDN MDSIDWITZ
Po l aroid 's
Kodak's l980 µrofiti. afll'r Laxe1i wert• $1 I htlhon, 13
times what PularouJ dean•d 1 ~5 4 ma I hon 1
JN SHORT, KODAK dot•:.n·1 h:tn• lo work as hard
as Polaroid to bring in the salt''> tloll.ir Las t year
Polaroid's plus.$100 m1ll111n ud hudget resulted an
sales of 6 6 million instant l'umcras. t.lown :;harply
from the 7 3 million :-.olct 10 1979 l>unng the year
Polaroid sold 200 million film PJ<"k1i th~1t "as a lso
down from the 1979 :.ales
The decline appt•:Jr., tu Ill' l01111t1nu111g this year
For lhe first three month:. of 1!1111. l'olaro1d"s 1iales
dropped 10 percent and 1t-. profit!. s kidded 45 per
cent from a year ago The Wall Street Journal's
verdict was • Polaroid I!> r1nd1n~ that !.Uch luxury
items as instant camera1i and ftlrn don't sell \\ell dur
ing tough economic: times ·
It irritates obsl'rn•rll un Wall Strl'l't that l'olaro1d
has this obscs1>1on with an:-.tant photogr<iphv That
was all right during tht• 191',th ""hen lhQse same peo
pie on Wall Street touted Polaroid as '>uch a super-
growth company that orH· had to pay $145 to huy a
s ingle share of stoc•k If vou lx·u~ht a 1ihare at sur h a
price, you can·1 hl' tno h;appy lt>d<t\ when 1l s tn1dmg
at about S28
SO WALL STR F.F.T EN!o' t'<Hl1pla1n now that
Polaroid has to diveri.1fy, thank of something e lse
besides instant photogruµhy Th1·y aho find deplora·
ble Polaroid's reluctance to ~11 rlceµlv into debt
Bearing the brunt of thi~ cntll'lsm as f:d\\ an H
Land, the inventor uf instant photography and
Polaroid"s lcadl'r fur morl• than 40 Vt'ars until he
stepped down an 1980 :.is th1l'f cxl'tU.tivt.' officer In
favor of a Polaroid veteran. W11lium .I Mc\unC' J r
But Land continues as cha1rm<1t1 or thl· ('Om pany and
he is indisputably the largl•St ~han•holcle•r
Polaroid's annual r1•port for !!>KO opcnl·d. as
usual. with an es~a' IJ, t.anrl Th1;-rt· h<' had these
points to make · ·
DO NOT do anything that anyone else can do
readily ... In other words. don t enter markets already
served by others Do not undertake tht' program un-
less the goal 1s manife1itl) important and its achieve·
menl nearly impossible .. 11'hat narrows the field 1
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORICIAPI FINI Dow JC>fttt •¥9'
AMERICAN LEADERS
HEW YORI( CAPI S•tU. Tun prlC.
•llCI ,,., <'*'-"' the ,.., "'°" o<ll•t Amer le.., Stoo EA<IMnQt ouuu.
lr•dlng nMk>NllY •1 """' th<tn " HudsBOtl Q UT ,'GO 1S"-• lo Gullc.t\ o 106.100 11'• HouOllTt 111,000 2tY> \'t OorcMI~ t02,SOO 22" • " El&ln«e t00 . .00 tot. Rur11nt A M,JOO 1S"-• 1
W•Plll B U .JOO 00"• : :~ !Z!~:Oj~ U::: t!'..: Cl\amp Ho S1 000 ,.,, • ·~
UPS ANO DOWNS
HEW YORK IAP) Tlw lollowlnQ lit!
•llOW• ,,. New YOO Stoc~ E.Ch•r>Oe
\tock> -• .,,.., ... lh<tt ...... -uc> Ille most --lfl• moit .,. .. ., on !:''..,' of <"""9t ~rdlfn ol •olume
°'Ho !::."J .. tro<llnQ De,_ '7 •rt ln<I· -.i. Nel -pe<Ctnft9f cl\enges •re .,..
dilft ren<• beiw.tn IM prevtou\ C IOtlllQ
prk• alld Tuetdoy''UP~"
H-UUI ,Chia PCI I Toll lllCI O• " Up U • 1 Sunet.c 12'-• ,,.. Up tt.7 1 Gteynnd wt l"' • '-Up I U 4 WheelPll Sii l4 3'11 VP It S S Wometco lO\I• 1 Up 11.0 l 1\1\d Cup •I 4 Up 10.1 I P•t rlckPtr n:io ,Vi VP 10 I
I Horlronc.> ""' tYt Up 10.l t O•n River to~ t~ Up • •
10 CCI Corp 1414 • IV• VP t 6 11 Mod~h It'll • t VP t .S
11 Bur lrlCll l'lld lS • 1 VP t 7 tJ Suave!Mt , ... , ... uo 1.3 ~~rll l$'o + "VP 16 l ''-It ~(--, ... ., .... <'•.' f' ~r ' ' ~,..A.,, -.,.,
Hlmt LHI Clla Ptl.
I C-8'9 HY '"' -. \ro Off 10 1 MolMt ~ , v. Off 7 7 * KCPL •.l!IP'I m., I 0t1 1 s : t!;.L,:~OI 5!~ -~ i i:~ 6 NIM 6. -111; f S •
1 "~· ll>f ,,.... ... " S>, t Joy -' ,.... , Ott ,,
t Ar e.1 llY '"' -"-Ofl U 10 BTM~tw l'-Yo Oft H 11 HOA 1'-"-()II S.0
11 f'lll!'IW'( 0 11 " Off • ' U Hot'VIOCIM 714 '-Off 4 9 " 1'11-yt 7~ --Oft ••• IS L _ _... 1' ti. Off • S
I• HLT CerP J.S~ 1\11 Q!I U IZCt!•""'"' 1' -ll)Olf •1
GOLD COINS
MIW YOlllK 11'PI l"tle9• l•l• Molldey Of tol4 ~ol,., t.,...r.a wltll f'rl4ff'1 P<k•
ltt .......... I lroyo.r 'Ullf.IS, Oft V .1S
~ ..... I lroy Dt., UOf.JO, off ,1 ,.
~._., 11royot.,l* JO,ott v.u.
MHIC.M IO '"°-t.t troy ot., Mll.U , Off ......
A•""'8fl 100 CNWf\, ,"°2 ll'OY OI , ... U ,
Off $7.00.
Source. OMll·.,.ror•
~··" Not
•
tor T uudoty Mlly I) STOCKS
lO lnO 10 T r11 IS Ull
U Slk tndu• Tr•n
Ul1I• H Sll1
ep.n H19n Low Clow Cnu
.. , ,q •Tl 10 ·~ .. '10.,. 7.311 tO' JI •I• It .CO IJ •11 O• I U IOS _., IOI 11 tOS OI t0..17 • I 2• lit U JI& 40 )6q il6 JIS tJ t 7 •7
l. t7t,200 1,401,200 t.t"9.'°°
&,Sit.JOO
~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
WHAT STOCK S DID
NEW YORI( tAPJ ~· U Pr••· 100.y o:r, ACIY•n<tO Ill O.cllned ... 11 ..
Unch•~ .,, l60
Tolel l"uti t'l'11 , .. ,
New nlQM " ,,
New IOW'\ }A • W•tAl AM[>. •II
NEW YORlt IAPI M .. 11 Pr~v
IO<My o~ AdY•n<.O 74S 0.<llnt<I no .,,
Unt h •llQf'CI 221 t•7 Tot•I l\Ma\ IOI m Now hi~ •1 ..
Hf• IOW\ t• tO
METALS r"'°~n
c-as-.,e1 <""''•-.no u S o.111 ....
tionl
L•M •• tt<IU • POvnd
lift< .. \, Ct<lh • POvno 0.11¥tre<J
Tiii " -Mtl••s w .. ~ <OmPO"t• II> Alwml-. IUtftlS. pc>uncl N y Mercvry ._.20 00 per llHll
,. ........... Ml4 00 troy Ol • N v
SILVER
11•MIY A M•rm,.n. •tO I ) per lroy ounu
GOLD QUOTATIONS Tue~,
1..0IHklt: mor,..l11q ll•lnQ Mel.00. Olf ... 00. Lo"-: •lltrl'OOll 11•1"9 ...... 00, oll '9.00
l"orh : elternoon ll•lnO $Sl• SS, up
111,,
l"ronU~: ll•lnQ ...-.ot, Oii $t• Ot. lwr10· lelt •ll•r,_., ll•lng "4&4.00, on ... oo ..... , 00•"'""
........ #o ~"S."'('l; ,oi:,l\>tltll¥. _.-'~ ~a;, .. ,.-·-~ if'"· \ ~ • .-Altt,:1'~
1-..IMrW only dflly Quot• Me-4,00, off
1900
......... ~. otlly CS.lly OU04o l•b<tc.tecl lJOl >4. oft n 3t
SYMBOLS
t
I
. ---. ··--........------.. ----.·------·-·-·---,·---....------..... -------------------.... ----.... -................. .. .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednuday. May 13, 1981
'I
The sprlna sun ma)' have been 1ttlnin1,
but luncheon 1uests last Thurada)' at Trlth
O'Oo_onell'a Newport· Be.a.ch home were thlnkln&
about autumn leaves.
Thoughts of autmim Peter Kremer aaya Dennll Mantert, 11 master
of ceremonies, "will toa'it and 1U1htty roast"
A11emblywoman Marian Beranon.
The occasion 11 the center's annual awanb
banquet. Tickets are SW per person for re1u1ar
benefactors. But, lf you want to donate a tad
more, you can aet a Silver Circle table of 10 for
$1,250 or a Golden Circle table of 10 for $2,500.
Mrs. O'Donnell, toaether with Louise Ewin&
tand Valley Reilly. hosted a Patroness Luncheon
for South Coast Repertory Theater'• 1981 open·
ing gula. The gala, this year themed "Simply
Sterling," ls set for-Sept. 12.
SCR gala, 'Simply Sterling,' scheduled
Dot Clock. gala chairman. said the $300-a-
couple benefit will focus on a London theme.
The ball. which was a huge success last fall, is
SCR 's largest fund-raising event of the seasoa .
It'll be a white tie-and-tails affair beginning
with a cocktail reception In the lobby of the Im-
perial Bank Building next to the South Coast
Plaza Hotel. Participants then can stroll
through "Hyde Park" where they will be greet-
ed by a variety of street entertainers and flower
vendors.
Once through the park. between the bank
and hotel, guests will gather in the ballroom
where they will be served traditional English
faire topped with trifle. A cabaret-s tyle original
production, directed by SCR Director Lee
Shallat and performed by members of the real·
dent acting company, will be featured followina
dinner Completing the evening will be dancing
to the music of Joe Moshay.
Among those attending last week's luncheon
were Mrs. Don Adkinson. Mrs. Alex Bowie,
Mrs. John Coelho, Mrs. Andrew Johnson, Mrs .
David Maffei and Mrs. Stephen Farosi.
Also. Lucille Kuehn, Mrs. Paula Millman,
Mrs. Patrick Riley, Mrs . James Rodgers, Mrs .
Robert Searles. Mrs. Peter Shea, Mrs. Delane
Thyen and Mrs. J ohn Vi rtue.
Also, Kathryn Thompson, Mrs. William •
Wenke and, from SCR, Barbara Grady and Kay
Brown. Elaborate floral arrangements at the
luncheon were provided by Chris Lindsay
Designs. Corona del Mar.
The center hopes to raise $20,000 from the
affair at which music will be provided by a
str ing quartet aa well as bv the Society for
Preservation of Bia Banda.
DiMer committee members Include UC
Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich, Walter
Gerken, 5lh District Supervisor Thomas Riley,
developer Henry Segerstrom and Hancock Ban-
ning III.
Knott honor due
M arion Knott of Knott's Berry Farm
wlll be honored Thursday as a "Special Angel"
for her support of Children's Village, U.S.A., a
hom e for abused children near Beaumont. The
award will be presented at the 17th annual
Woman of the World Awards Luncheon at the
Century Plaza Hotel, Los Angeles.
Also receiving Woman of the World awards
will be actress Debbie Reynolds, J oanna (Mrs.
Johnny> Carson and Jill Kinmont Boothe.
A.ssisteem feted
G radualing members or the Assisteens,
an aux111ary of the Newport Beach Assistance
League, will be honored at a diMer dance
Thursday at the Santa Ana Country Club.
Hosting the event will be Leslie O'Donnell,
auxiliary chairman, and Mrs. W. Channing
Lefebvre, auxiliary coordinator, with her assis-
tant, Mrs. James Dobrott. Fashions displayed
w hen the Monday Morning Club of
Laguna met yesterday they were treated lo a
different ki.rid of fashion show
SCR luncheon hostesses (from leftJ Valley Reilly, Louise Ewing and'Trish O'Donnell
On the committee are Janet Sweet, Sheryl
Rados, Tracy Andrews, Mary Whittier and
Karen Howard.
Lee Childress. who narrated the show, held
in the El Adobe Restaurant in San Juan
Capis trano, called the fashions .. lovely clothes
for sale the second time around at lovely
prices.·· Items s hown were contributed by 2nds
Ltd. of Laguna Beach and Li'I Audrey's
Recycled Rags of Corona del Mar.
Among the models was club president
Violet Lansddl.
The music for the luncheon gathering also
was of a different than usual variety. The
sounds were provi ded by the Kitchen Klatter
Band, a group of senior citizens from San Juan
Capistrano who play on kitchen utensils .
Among highlights of the luncheon was in·
stallation of officers with Ms. LansdeJI installed
for her second term as president. Other mem·
bers of her executive board are Dorothy Goode,
Ger aldine Banarer. Doris Otto, Lorna Belcher ,
Helen Ri chman, Elinor Thomson and Anna
McCallum.
The group's fou nding president, Florine
Roper. was installation officer.
Benefit set
Mrs. Robert Lucas or the chapter will ac·
cept reservations .
Assisteens mothers helping with the party
are Mrs. John O'Donnell, Mrs. Victor Harris,
Mrs. Anthony Allen and Mrs. Dennis Pickens.
John O'Donnell is slated to present a pro·
gram at the party during which the graduates
will receive medallions for their service at the
Child Day Care Center and Assistance League
Thrift Shop. Graduates are Karen Lowaoce,
Virginia Freeman, Tracy Allen. Andrea Hilker,
I.:eslie O'Donnell and Megan Dobrott.
Auction sbued
The third annual Auction and Variety Show
for South Coast Repertory has been slated for
Saturday, July 11, according to the fund-raiser 's
Chairman, Mary Garibboti, A goal of $40,000 has
been set by the Friends of SCR Guilds. who
s ponsor the event.
"This year's goal is almost twice last year's
achievement of $24,000," said Mrs Garibotti,
"but we're confident we can meet our goal for
the benefit of South Coast Rtpertory. · ·
A benefit for the Mardan Center of
Educational Therapy is set for May 29 at South
Coast Plaza llotel, at which, dinner chairman SCR Development Director Barbara Grady SCR Gala Chairman Dot Clock
the theme for this year's Auction and
Variety Show is "Now -Everything Goes!"
which is a take-off on SCR's final production of
the Mainstage season, "Anything Goes!·· The
items on the auction block will range from
theater memorabilia of past SCR productions to
vacations to ski and beach resorts lo exotic ob·
jet d'art and modern furnishings donated by
local merchants.
Li/ elines to meet
WHEEL OF FRIENDSHIP of Orange
County will go bowling Saturday For
information. call Rose at 635·4161
UFEUNES, sponsored by Hospice
Orange County Inc., meets every
SINGLES CALENDAR
Tuesday from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. in
Laguna Hills. The group is for re·
cently widowed men and women. For
information, call r.1 arge al 494·2025.
WE CARE, for the newly single, wi ll
present a lecture on ··Physiology of
Stress" by Michael Lewis at 7 :30 p m
Friday in El Toro The group will have
a " Hard Times" party at 8 p.m. Satur·
day in Mission Vlejo. For informa·
tion. call 842·1127.
PEOPLE SAMPLER social will be
held at8p.m. Friday in Buena Park. A
get-acquainted dance party will be
held at 8 p.m. Saturday in Anaheim.
The events will be led by Emily
Coleman. For information, call (213 )
828-8949.
NEW AGE SINGLES will have a waUc
on the Aliso Creek Bike Trail at 10 a.m .
Saturday . For information, call
770-3296.
CORINTIUANS will have-a wine and
ch eese party and dis cussion o n
"Travel Opportunities for Singles" at
7: 30 p.m. Friday in Irvine. F'or in-
formation, call Betty at 551·4897.
'Bear Revue' ready
Final touches are being put on the
fast-paced .. Bear Revue .. this week by
members or the Punch & Judy Guild of
the Childrens llos pilal of Orange
County.
Acts will include vaudeville skits,
disco and lap dancers. and a hoedown
plus a finale with more than 100 cast
m embers singing and dancing.
The show will run Thursday and Fri·
day evenings at Orange Coast College,
and general admissions 18, or pre·
ferred seating is $15, and tlcketa are
available from Mesa Travel In Costa
Mesa or by calling 557· 1247.
The proceeds from the revue will 10
toward the specialized medical care
for children at CHOC.
Cheddy Brot ·
• SMOKED SAUSMI WITH MATUIAL CHIDDAI CHllSI
Available Now-While Supply la&tsl
WISTCUff PLA%A
642-0972
Plump and dellclou1 .
• . bursting wtth rtch.
natural Cheddar
cMele. Great COOked on the grill. Pick up
plenty now ... before It's all gone.
FASHION ISi AM>
640.6030
......................... , ... ·"'"···-· ...
"Some stains had been on our
carpet a long timee I didn't
think they'd come out but they
did ... and Stanley Stee1ner cr111 it!'
.· ~9~
"Our carpeting looked terrible. It was time
to make a decision to keep it or replace it.
We decided to try Stanley Steamer
because we heard they were the best.
Their crew came out. really studied the
carpeting and in about an hour Wb had a
beautifully. clean carpet. We were
amazed."
Here's why the Stanley Steemer
cleaning system Is best.
Stanley Steamer combines steam and
extra powerful, safe cleaning agents to
deep clean carpet fibers.
Immediately, this
exclusive cleaning
formula is powerfully
removed leaving no
residue and allowing
your carpet to dry
quicker.
Stanley Steamer
does not use your
,sJil°"v~~· ~~·~•r."' u·.-:y,~ ,:._A. '-"\Vanc:f. n"t>s~ 8naSJSec'fat1ilrilned crew
enters your home. You 'll be surprised at
how quickly your carpet Is cleaned and
sanitized, and ready for you to enjoy.
~---------------~ I CAIPll OEAJlll& SPECIAL I
I $29JIS Any alze llvlng I I room 1nd hall I
I or f1m117 room 1 I ind hal I
~----------------Irvine Call: 979-8448
Southern Calif. 1 800-432-7116
STAILEY STEE"iER~
The ·carpet cleanlng company women recommend.
18023 Sky Park Circle, Irvine
\
_,_
Eat.1947
~111.1'r ,,."°,....,. .... ..,... Z •
' ' ........ ~ -.
...
s I ¥ ; CJ 0 4 4
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wedntsdav. May 13, 1981 .,
!'Dead at Seventeen' l"ates . high among teens
I I ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: I clipped thla column
•from .the Williamsport Sun-Gaaette in 1977. The 1 J way kids in our town drive makes me think that ~
article should be printed again. Please, Ann, one Ill Ulllll -more time. -I LEARN FROM YOU :a.,
Dear Learn: The col 11ma you waat to see S.11 ... -------
' a1ala .. the leCODd moat oftH reqaeated by lee•·
a1er1. The first .. the Dna1 and SH Teat. <Next
• week l'IJ nm the 1981 version.> Here'• the oae yoa
want:
DEAD AT SEVENTEEN
Agony claws my mind. 1 am a statistic. When I
· first got here I felt very much alone. I was over·
whelmed with grief, and I expected to find sym-
' pathy.
I found no sympathy. I saw only thousands of
others whose bodies were a~adly mangled as
; mine. I was given a nu~r and placed in a
category. The categor y was called "Traffic
1 Fatalities."
The day I died was an ordinary school day.
How I wish I had taken the bus! But I was too cool
for the bus. I remember how I wheedled the car
out of mom. "Special favor," I pleaded. "All the
'kids drive." When the 2:50 bell rani. I threw my
books in the locker. I was free until 8:40 tomor-
row morning! I ran to the parking lot -excited at
Virgo: Focus
~on challenge
'
T hursday, May 14, 1981
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJES <March 21-April 19): Avoid direct con-
frontations. Examine various• alternatives. Be
familiar with legal rights, permissions. Popularity
increases and social activity accelerates. Focus aJso
the thought of driving a car and beln1 my own
boss. Free!
It doesn't matter how the accident happened. I
was goofing off -going too fast. Taking crazy
chances. But I was enjoying my freedom and hav-
ing fun. The last thing I remember was passing an
old lady who seemed to be goin1 awfully slow. I
heard a deafening crash and fell a terrific jolt.
Glass and steel flew everywhere.
Suddenly, I awakened. It was very quiet. A
on partnerships, contract and marriage. I TAURUS <April 2Q-May 2Q): Emphasis on de· .
tails, basic procedures. dependents, employment
and health res9lutions. Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo
persons figure prominently. You 'II be asked to revise
material. Do so, but don't veer too far from central
theme.
GEMI NI <May 21 -June 20): Emotional
responses lend to overwhelm logic. Know it and pro·
tect self in clinches. Focus on children, speculation
HOROSCOPE
and intensified relationship You could have luck
with number 5. Young person aids in making travel
arrangements.
CANCER (June21-July22): Emphasis on home,
security, domestic adjustment and ability to work
with material at hand. Aquarius, Scorpio, Taurus
persons figure prominently. You'll gain a more clear
understanding of money, budget and investment procedures.
LEO <July 23-Aug . 22). Avoid attempting to do
too much atone time. Be versatile, but avoid scatter·
ing your forces. Remember recent resolutions con·
cerning nutrition, proper exercise and sufficient
rest. Short trip is on agenda. Define meanings.
VI RGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Accent on challenge,
, promotion, added responsibility, special rela-
tionship and ways to increase income. Older in·
· dividuaJ lends benefit of experience and can become
valuable ally.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22>: Lunar cycle high;
take initiative, make new start, follow through on
hunch. You'll be rid of unnecessary burden. Tie loose
ends. One you admire will seek your counsel. Aries.
Leo, Sagittarius natives figure in provocative
scenario.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 >: Breakthrough in·
dicated: you gain access to story behind the story.
You might be on brink or "striking it rich." Highlight
independence. initiative and self-esteem. Leo, Aries,
Sagittarius persons play important roles.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21>: Finish rather
than initiate project. Focus on romance, fulfillment
or desires and dividends resulting from recent in·
vestment. Learn by.teaching. lntuition is on target.
Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius persons figure
prominently.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Expand
horizons ; potential will come into clear focus. Im·
portant contact made at social affair. By displaying
sense or humor you ingratiate yourself with .. a very
important" person. Communicate your feelings.
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Emphasis on
travel, publishing, education and ability to rectify
()ast erroifs. Another Aquarian and a Scorpio figure
prominently. Long-distance communication aids in
organizing material. Adhere to basic principles.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 2Q). Analyze legal pro·
cedures. Protect financial resources. Refuse to give
up something for nothing.
YMCA to show Sinbad film
The movie, "Sin bad and the Eye or the Tiger"
will be shown at 9:30 a .m. Saturday as a benefit
for the Orange Coast YMCA Youth Scholarship
Fund.
Tickets are $2.50 each for the showing to be
held at United Artists Theater 1, 1561 W.
Sunflower, Santa Ana.
Door prizes will be awarded and there'll be
"surprise prizes for everyone." a YMCA b~AV ~U .b.t t'~~..A tll(,, ., -" .. "'C!."."· ~· v.t~ ,.1_,, ~ •• .... ~.·:.f.v 'IW't:"I '-'•~ :t. ~ ".,....~ -,....-::. .. ,
SIHIOI ITI'llHS
SPICIAL
25°/o OFF ALL SUYIC
M-. T•a.. We4. Olillr
HAii
HAHOLllS
I
21 mg. "tat. 1.8 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTC method.
_,,_, __ _
police officer was standing over me. Then I saw a
doctor My body was maneled. I was saturated
wilb blood. Pieces of ja&1ed class were stickine
out all over Strange that I couldn't feel anything.
Hey, don't pull that sheet over my bead. I can't be
dead. I'm onlv 17. l'vejol a date tonight. I'm sup-
posed to grow up an have a wonderful llfe. I
haven't lived yet. I can't be dead.
Later I was placed in a drawer. My fol.ks had
to identify me. Why dtd they have to see me like
this? Why did I have to look at mom's eyes when
she faced the most terrible ordeal of her life? Dad
suddenly looked like an old man. He told Ute man
in charge, "Yes -he is our son."
The funeral was a weird experience. I saw all
my relatives and friends walk toward the casket.
They passed by, one by one, and looked at me with
the saddest eyes I've ever seen. Some of my bud·
dies were crying. A few of the girls touched my
hand and sobbed as they walked away.
Please somebody wa.ke me up! Get me.
out of here I can't bear to see mom and dad so
broken up. My grandparents are so wracked with
grief they can barely walk. My brother and sister
are Like zombies. They move like robots. In a daze.
Everybody. No one can believe this. And I can 't
believe it, either.
Please, don't bury me! I'm not dead! I have a
lot or living to do! I want to laugh and run again. I
want lo sing and dance. Pleas~don 't put me In the
ground. I promise if you give me just one more
chance. God, I'll be the most careful driver In the
whole world. All I want is one more chance.
Please, God, I'm only 11.
M ) I~'or that ex!ra ort · · · .r. ction rneasHYC oj sa tis1a .
'
! ! ;
Warning The Surgeon General Has Oelermined
That Cigarette Smokmg Is Dangerous to Your Health
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ABIDE
C T D H I £ 8 l A L H H E I· W N 0 E I
S L A I W W I Y 0 G R E 0 R R E 0 T U
A R C l G 0 M R J. D E W .0 C Y H 0 A A
U K R M W A E 0 K l E H G M R Y S C N
W S A A H M V R C 0 H T X T R I 0 E M
RE E PIA B I DEIR TT PL AH TT I
E W 8 I D E L H U I C S C A T E 8 P E
A I H S I X R 0 H L E E E I R I S l T
E S R H T E J H D E P R H R E T A 0 0
I M A P L 0 A E G G X U A I R G I W H
X C Y S S 8 P I H H E D H L N T E I A
T T L T I 0 P H T E G H T I 0 l E T E
P S C T 8 A H L U 0 G E U H L P S M 0
8 R 0 A W J L 0 T R U T W R H R H S G
E C E T A L R I 8 V E I L 0 D R E 0 C
Awelt
lltef
Bide
Continue
Dwell
Endul'I
Ellpect
lM
lodge
Rtmeln
lnlleallt
ReA
Sojourn
StoP Terry
Tomorrow: Papen
DEATH NOTICES
Women hail 8ettlemenl
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Women'1·rl1hll ad
vocal.ts are bailln1 a Sl.~ mUUon HtUement that
alma Lo atve women a better chance to advance In
the U.S. Forest Service.
''Tblt doesn't follow tht UJual pattern of
decrees, which 1lve1 each woman a couple of bun·
dred dollan but leaves the problems untouched,"
said Nancy Davla, who handled the law1uJt for
Equal Riahts Advoc.tes.
Federul Judge Samuel Conll approved the con·
sent decree, de11igned to open up all fields o f
service and set up tralnlna and promotion pro
grams for women It ia to be enforced over tht'
next nve years.
QUEENIE
''Your lawyer is here with a 'one-Lo-rive' look on hu
face."
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUIUC NOTI PUBLIC NOTICE
P'IC1tnout IUl•••U "1CTlnOlll 0UlfltlH WAMe .,, .. ,.MIUfT NAl!At lt.tT•MtNT
llltl..U.WV.--•,....... Tiie , .. , .. ,,.. "'-· ••• datna ...... ,,..... ..,,, .......
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Ne•Nl1 OeMll, Calltornla'11Wf I H 0.lltla, 1 llOt TrOlen Wey,
JD1'•0CO HO I IAIT. INC , Stallton, C•illonll•'OeilO
N•••d• <•r11tr•t1•11. I ••• , .. ,,., l utlll• A O.Llllt, lllOj Trojtll
\lr•I, ·-· H•vaM .. JOI W•y \l .. lefl, CellfOt\'lle .... T~ls ... .tlnetl I\ C-lecl tty a Thll ~U It <~led .. tn
11m1,.o _,lltrsll!J dlvtouall '""'°""" .,,. wllel
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Tlltl 11a1-1 ••• llled wllll tllt Coullly Cltr~ of Ot..,119 Counly on
Cout1ly ,,.,, .. OUf\(19 County .,, AP•ll )/, 1 .. ,
Aprll '7, 1 .. 1 .. , .....
l'r-11 k-• PuDll"-d Ortfl{jlt t anl D•lly Piiot.
AnHMY at UW Apr 2', -y l IJ, >O. 1911 202211
1• ca-i1 It. a.lie M
Ntw ..... -11, CA tt--PUBLI<' NOTIC'F:
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTITl~t IUllNllU
NAMI UATIMINT
f ft• fOlfOwlrtt oetten\ 41• delftQ "'''h•n ,., I AW CR"''·,,,., w ... .,n
AHnutl, Unit 1111, MM>lon, (•llllrnl• ~
8RUC A WE£1t$, llOtO fftlrd
Slrut, ,...,nleln Velln , ~•lllOrnl•
•110.
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Tr11r11 ~t•••I rciw~•••n V•ltt¥. t ell lorn•• UIOI
IHI\ 1>\1\1 ... 0 11 tOnclu~ed 01 eh Ill
OIVIO\l•I lllull>encl t. Wllel
Qebo<.n D Wtt't r "" ••••tmen• ... , ,,,.., .,,,. '"' Counr, tier~ or O•an91t County on
April XI •'41
,., ... ~J
Pubt111\td Or-(O.ll D•llV Pilot
llpr tin, 19. Mey•· ll. ttt1 llto-tt
P UBUC' NOTICE
l'ICT1h~' OU~NIH
MAMIUAUMINT
Tiie roi1ow1.,. ""'°" I• clolnQ ~' ""' ., Nf:I Elo(;INLElllN<. t.
DIVl!l.0,.MINT, llll GltnUQln
Terr •U . C..te M<IM, C•lllOrnle 001
NllA~ll EOWAND •ElllC.~TlllOM
1111 Ot•ne"'llle• feHete C0tl• ""-..
t alllotnl• nu1
T~" °"""ft• '' (oncNc led Dr a-1 1n CUYtOw•t
Ht•lt l DorOtHOm Tl\I\ , ... ,.....,,, wn lllttQ wlln Ille
t.ounr y t.rork ot O•.nue County Of\
Apfll 10 l'ltl .. .... ,,
Publl\"80 ()r..,vs CW>l Oally P1to1,
Ap"t ll l'f M4'1 •· U 1 .. 1 llU 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
P 1.attt '"ulbll~ o..,,_ Canl Dally Piiot. Aprllft -Y•. IJ.tO. 1911 ?~I
P'ICTITIOUS aUSINIU PUBLJ(' NOTIC•: NAME STAHMENT 0"'1C1Al PlllOCEEOIHOS OF Tl•• 1ooow1no i>e•-ll 00!1>9 IKlll
IHE ~u •l
•OA11100,SU'llllYltOllS Nt.711• CAl.l~OAHUI tNOUSTIUAL
Sa-11a Ane, C ettfornl• NAMI ST A Tl MINT Apl, ~P. ~I• M•, Cetttotnl• 07°'4
PUBLIC NOTICE o,. 0111AN01 COUNTY. cA1.1,.
1
"CTITIOU' ausrN•n I RESOURCES, >:ao• s e •• , str•t.
" reo\11., rn..Unv Of In. &o.td OI I~• lollOwlnO 1Mr\Onl ••• dolno JOlln -·~ Slam411il, :001 S Beer Sll"SSa.. Supervho•• OI Orenoe (Ounly, 1>\1\11\•H.. $1rffl, •DI ~p S.nl• Ane C•lll0tnle NOTICI 0,. TlllUIT••·i ll>Al.• Celltotl\le, ..... "'"~ ....... c; .... ,,, T H f 0 p T I M A II I( hlOC
..__.. .,. ...... , •no lo••O Of°"' Ol•t•l(I\ llOV•rMO Dy COllPOlltATIOH, *' Bu•trwn L•lll•r '"" ...,..,,.., .. <onclu<led Dr •n Ill
QI\ lrldliy, J..,.. ), '"'· •I I I 00 ,,,. Boerd of S-rvtM>r\ .... ,,.ICI May Ori•• S..t,. 190, lrvlrw, C•lllotnl• dtvldufl
AM .• frM>M-•lte Tiiie lnu•ureno S, '"'· 411 9 JO AM Tiie lollO•tno ttlU JONI NI, Sl..,,..•llt
Com1141ny, • C•lllornl• <O'llO••tlon, •• named ,...me. •• bell\Q 1>re...,1 11•1~ T lie Opllm•I Menaoement e nd I Tllll tt••-• w•• 111.0 "'"" Ille
duly •1>1>0lnl•d Tru•IH under and B Cl•rk, C~lfl1••n, ROQer R !>I""· Marke1lnv Cor-ellon. • C:.lllornle c .... ntr Ct••• ot 0ta1199 cciunty on May purau..,I to 0..0 OI Trull reco•deO Ion, Herrtell M Wlod•r. Bruce <Orpor•llon. tot• Bu•tneu Center 1. 19t1
Mey >. 1916, •• IMtr. Ho ... -NHl•nde T...,._, JC Riiey encl tllt Drive S..lto 190, lrvlrw, Cetttornle f'tlllU
.,,, •• ~ ltl.ol Offl<lal RKOtdl, ••. Clerk '21U Pyt>lt....., Or-c ...... Delly Pttot.
tCwltCI Dy Aot>erl L WeC..ter •nCI AHFP No 1011 AQr-nl wllll '"" Ttlll llu\l,,_.l 11 <ondu<-Df e CO< M•r U.10.11 JuneJ, '"' 1169 t1 $onye A WeC.ltr .............. In,,.,. Of· City Of SHI lie.ell I• •r>Pt0•9CI B.,,.., por•llon lie• 01 tlw County Aecoroer of Oranve Pr09rem Aor-..1 wtth ,,.,. City ot Tiit Oi>clm•I ~ment
County, Sl•l• or Calllornta, will Mii •t S•nl• Af\41 I• •~rO••d Oettnqutnl ~-·~•Uno C0<-•tton PUBLIC NOTICE
publlc •IKllon to lllgheU Dl-r lor Medic.I Center A<<ounlf ••• •nloMG -r11nJ MoYlllll•n,
cun IP.r•bl• at lime of w•• In lawlul lo Tren1<on11nenl•t Crodll Service PfftlOent NOTICE TO ClllEDITOlll$
money of IN Ullll"" Stain) el W>llth AppotnltnHlts ere mec1o lo llW Or•"9111 Tnil •tel-I we1 111.0 •1111 llw Of' auut TlllANSf'Ell
ftonl enlrOftte 10 llW Oranoe Cou11ty Counh Vtl•r•n• Ad•1>0ry Cwn<ll, CO<lnty ClertL ot Otetl9or C°""1Y on llil•Y IS.to . lltl-4lt7 u.c C.I
010 courtllDu .. , 100 block ot Wot Sant• Senior Clt11eno .....,..,_.,, Council •ncl I, '"' Noll(•" lwr•Dy 01 • .., 10 creclltOtlOI
Ana &ow••••rd, Clly or S.nta An•. Al<ollOl t•m AdVl-y Ila.rd ~enry s 1"1611tS IN wllllin ,,.-4 tr•niluwhl 1,,.1 •
S,.I• ol C.lllor11I•. all rig/II, 1111• •nCI P•ntan, Miidred M•lllew1, Senior I PuDllshtcl OrMIOt co." D•llr Pllol, bulk H•ntler 1, •Doul IO o. m-on
lntor••tcon••yeclto•n<lnowh•ICIOyll Cltlnn• ot S•nl• An•. !.anl• An• M•r tl,20.ll,Junel, t9t1 1H7.f1 P•rsonel properly her•rnalte• unci.r w ld 0..d ot Tr11sl In tllt proper Senior Cent•r. DJ a.nttey Family, O.Krlbecl
h lltuated In .. Id C-ty -Slel• Oen Bl-9Mlllp •nCI G.,y JOlln.on ,,,_ "-rnalU encl l>\l"neu •ddron
dtK•lbed,.. Lot :M of Trecl Ho •U.. •r• <om-s1 .. 1e, A Vouno •• PUBLI(.' NOTICE ol 1,,. rn•-1,.,,,.,..,0,10 •••
•• tllown on• mao rec-Cl In llool< cono•atul•l.0 C•r1••n cont1ruct1on I 81Ll. CORWIN FORD INC . • 100, P89H J2 -ll ol Mltc•ll•-s contr•cb ••• Mt ror Oto, ••••-•nd c M•P•. Reco•dl or Or•noe County, comptet..i C-.h dllltrento luncl '°' SUiit •lllor111• c0t-•llon. JO Ry• Gr•ncl Calllornla, tlle We.I Munlclpet Court ll tnc;re .. od l'ICTIT'IOU$ aU$1NEU Y•tte, Newport B .. <h, C•lllornl• •tMO
TM st .... 1 _, .... and 0111tr com· Payroll P•OcedurH lor Fire SPiii\ HAMa STATEMENT Tiie IOUllOtl In Calllornte ol ,,..
mon dt•l~llon, II any, oc trw •Ml Porlonne1 •rt •POro•td Anf\l•nt flle fott-•nv per-i• do•nv ou11 '111'1 uecuti•• office or prtnc;tpel l>Y•t
property -•ll»cl eboY• h llU•POr1ecl CAOIP••-1 Report 0,. "t901i•tion• neu o neu Olll<t O! ""' lnlOf-d lren>letor
lo be 1>122 0..uvlll•, Co.le -... wltll Fife -~menl Unit ll ep E M E R A l. D I S l. E " ?JO South _,,, StrMI, S.nt• Ar\41,
Callfornle. prOYed SB 100 ll '-'"" A4>1>tlu DISTRIBUTORS OF SAN OIEGO C•lllornt•
Th• ,,,_llgned frustw Oll<lelm• lion lo• l.l<eM• to Conducl •n Ado~ HIO Wl!ldlOr (I Co••• Mou' All ot,., °""""" n•rnal •ncl .O •ftY llabOlly tor ... y in<OHKIMU or llon Agency I• -•O•td ''F"I Fii" C•lllornle9Ul6 loreuu uUd Cly Ille 1nut10•0
1r.. '""'-""encl OCMr tommon PrOQram , .. ,..., •~ll<atlOn lor FY O••ld. Sltw•n W•Uon, JOO lran$1er0t wllhln '"'" YHrl lul i>ell dt1lgnatlon, II eny, &llown lltreln. 19tl·t2 l••""ro..O. 1'90.fl IRAP Chlld Wlnd•or Cl • Coot. Mew. C•lllornl• •o ••r •• ~nown 10 !ho tnltndeO
Sald YI• •Ill w m-. 1>\11 wlt"°'11 D•••lopment Progrem conlretl " •)U• tren•l•r• •r• "°""
cov•n•nl °" wa,,M>IY. uprtu or Im· •mend.cl HSA -nt•t HUllll p,0. fl'lls -1nen '' conoucttd by en tn I TM ...,.,,.1,1 ""° Du••neu •dcl•Hl plied, r_.ot119 tlUt, PolWUlon, °' gt em Obi.<:tlYft .,. epptovtd A•lff d!Ylduet of lhe Int-trenlltr .. (ll are
tncumbranc ... to 'Pay tM remalnlnv of tnl•rHI and R•tn O! ControDutlon• 0.YldS Wat•Oll GRANO FOAO, INC • C•ttlornl•
l!ICTITIOUS aUSINESS Ptlncipel """' of llW nott (ll M<u<9CI lo the Orenoe Cownty Employoes Tl\ll stalenwnl •H !Ilea will\ lllt <Ore>or•lron, IMS C.0<1110 p.,k Or1vt, NAME STATt:MllNT f'ICTITIOUS aUSINEU DY u lo 0..0 OI Trust, wltll 11\lerelt Rellremtlll S~slem ere •OJu•ttO C°"nly Cttrl< OI O<enQe Counly on M•Y I S•nte 1'na, C•lrl0tnl• 97101
The lollowlng per>0M •r• dolno NAME STAT•MENT tr.ereon, H proy1oao In wld not•C•l. N•VOll•ll-'°' • Mfnl•I H .. un inpe I. l'ltl I Tllat 1"-PtOC>trty P"rt1nen1 ,,.,.,o '' 1>u•1no• ••: Tiit lollowlno r>e•>0n1 .,. doing •d•ancu, II •ny, .,,..,., ,,,. term• ot 118111 F•<lllly ••• -o•td 1 ,,.. Com-,,•t•J oucrll:i..i '" vsn.,•I •• •ulomoll••
EASTERN DIGIT AL, 11102 lllltlntnel' Uld OffO ol Tru>t, IN•, CN•ll9• •nd munlty s.rYke Dlntdor ii autMrlt.cl PuDll1""" 0.-Coest Oetly PllO'I, duterl'1<P enG ll lo<•led •t ?:10 !.o<lth
Mllcllell, lrY!M, C.lllornla 971U. N E W C R £ A T I 0 H S openw.\ Of ,,_ Tfl"I" encl of '"° lo •Pl>IY fOf oio.r American ora-11' Al "l•v I), 70. 21 J..,.. l, '"' ?1"1 .. 1 Mtrn St-I SMtta Ana C•lol0tn•• ,51,.:P.."t~.::= . .,J~r..!.I!~~ MAIHTENAHCE, 12'1 I.a Lom• Cl•· trulls trNled Dy w ld 0..0 01 Truil. IO(etlon Of USOA ·-· 10 Volunt-Ir!::!,:';!~,· ':."":.~~~.l::. ~~o ~tl'RCKl:'l:SO:\ 1no Sernces under Lhe ...... -" <,.,A,..,.,..,..,Celllot'nl•,,_ '°'Ille tmounl rHsoneDly t1tlme1.o 8u•••110fHor1n0.8fl99 Coun1yh•11-PUBLIC NOTICE CORWIHFORO W " K"N v "IQwyen, llSl IU•l ~ru11 11.M I>. Lt nd.caplng. Inc , a lo lit~·"°·" pro•""· 1911-tl Au .. wnenl A-••• I J ;\ ~1 E S d 1 reC't ion of Harbor Lawn s,, ••I. API. • c -s. s en•• An•, C•lllorr>11 corporation, 1741 u Lorna Tiit DeneilCl••Y IH'der ••id o..o ot eo.rds •nd HMrlnv Ofllce" rulH •lld Tll•t wld Du!k ,,.,n.,.," 1n1eneled 10 ~ll' It C l II NSOI". J#:l' li7 of Mount Oil ve Mortu arv of C•lltornlamo1. Cir<!•, Anehtlm. c.111ornle t2t06 T •w•t rwrerorort ••acuieo •nd d•· •PPll<•llons .,.. -rOYecl. AnMullon ,.,CTITIOUS ausiMEs• bp• cot1•ummel•d •• ,,,. olflce 01
11unl1ngt0 n Beil ch . ca J Thi• llll•ln•n Is conducted Dy • Thi• lluMneu ,, conouc:t.o ll"f. (Of 11 .. red lo ,,,. ulW»f\IQned • wtllten No. llC).J lo Cowntv S.r•k• .. , .. No. • " ~ I rolo•tonel E\>CrOW S.rvk H , ,.,, H P d :'I Costa Mesa. 540·5S54. oen.,•I -tnannlp. PO••llon. Ot<l•r•llon ol 0.t•ull .,,., Oemend I• •PPro•..i Blttnoual VI-hi>e Ad· Tllo ,:.~~on~~~~".~. !,~~:n •-Sent• A11t, Cellfornla 3SS(' awa) on • l a) 9. 1981 LET1'S AQN s _,,,,_ RM D. U-•plne, Inc. lor S•••. •nd • written Nollce ol .1 ... menl of Rlonts I• 3PCl'O .. d Tr.ct ~T• dotno Th. on "',•tier J~ I '"'
Sur\'1Ved b) ht?> \\Ire Esther, G E~E L LETTS r '"'' .i.i-t •n "'"' •1111 ""' R_.,McOenlot Oeleull •nd EIKI-lo s.n TllO ..... m•ller• .,. -o..O JOlln W•yrw l>\l"~~'v~cHI Ll l.IMITEO 111F c 111" l>\I ~ 1,r•n• r " IUDI•<~ to son Gl'Orge :'II :'llurchinson . • Cl>! County Cltrk of O•-oe Count~ on Pf"tSlcllftl dtr•lon•d <•uleCI UICI Nollet or 4'1rporl ACCH• Plan .. appro••d s!c Orl\l~oc. n• orm omtn0rci•I """ daughter~ B"tl.• Crimi r:ail de.·~t of Costa Mesa. Ca Merell u. "" c111e1 FIMMl11 Officer O•l•ull .,,., EIKllon to s.11 10 be rt A•~•• of s.cuon 30, ot Powerpl•nt Rl .. rlldt Avenue. NtwPO• t Buch. lion•
Powell. l\athi Wt Illa ms and H s . e aW8:Y on ay · PuDlltht<I 0.M>9e co .. t Otlly Piiot, County C .. rk ot Or_.... Cownty on May property h locale(! ea. T .. met tors •r• •PP•O•td 0 P1etrl<k 1 RC Smllll d1~~ :0<• ProltUIONI E:Crow ~i•k• ,.,, ~· ' ' '' Pa ·s d M 8 1981 f'ISIUI Tnl1 mt......,I •••Ill.., wit~ 1118 corOtd '"Ille <°""IV wntre lilt !HI •lldlndustrlalFuelUMAc11,,upport· C•lllornle9U6l 1 w•~~·;=.~7'1:':'euof.;.ht,:;".;,'°"
:'11arIe11 l' n :'11u rch1 n son e 15 s urvived by his wife Aprll 12, 2'. -Y t , 1>, '"' , ... ,, ~ '':;1<99 Oat• M41Y s. '"' Purcha•lno melt••• •re •PProved St~;:, 0: a::;:•~;,110,n•• ,;~~ Tustin Avenut. Sent• An•. i 11uorn••
grandchildren :'.lic h,tcl and Verna ~Lis of Costa Mesa. l'lll~NK NICttO&..AI TRANSAMERICA TITl.E Flnencl•• St•ltmtnts tor O••no• Morie 01 Oe~e ro pmo nl, • ,1701 P 0 Bo• 11511• S•n•• "'"•
Kelll'(' \lurC'hlll~Ofl. J amt'~ Ca c hildren J~la Letts or PUBUC NOTICE t• O.we...... INSURANCE COMPANY County EmplOyen Rotlrtment System C•lllornt• <Ot-•llon ,,..s Sky Pe .. C•lllorn•• f'1J11 lm•llll>(I •dclr•n l.
and Jirl" Crimi ··nd Beau M mnesota. Cathie Letts of ,. .. u... ltlltll , C.llfornl• corPOr•t-"r.cel..O Fu.I lhe>rt-con1tnvsncy Clr<t•, s..11e F, 1,.,,..;,.1110rnte 0714 •no 1110 1n1 day tor ft11nv <1a1m1 oy
u u D C I d d J N"' •• wld Tru•~• Plan ConW!i.111 40•-nl wllll Ben· Tnl• Duslntu h conOutltd D • eny cr.011or l~ll o. May 1', t9t1 \\ ii h .i m!> Roi.an ~ill be en\ er. 0 ~ra 0 an Om P'ICT1TIOUI ous111a11 ~.._..,CA...., ·~ Ion 8!1«11 '' •r>Pt0•ed 1.a9411 •ctton ltmlted _,,.~lltp ' I•""" 1, lht Du'1neis d•r twlore Ille held on Tuesdtj , .. -... 3, 12. F'orrest of Minnesota. sister NAMO ITAT•M•NT '"'••11• JoYllO 8•y•n <10••ns1 Jeck G Raub co .. tn 111e u.. P•t•l<k R s tth
1
con•um,...iion dft• weclrt.a •bo••
l 9 8 1 '
·1 t 7 ,03' () ,·;·,.. a I Col I een Benson or MI n · Tllo foll-lnQ .,.,_ It dolno'tlutl· Publl"*I Or-CIN•I Dtlly Piiot. Aul•IA>nl S.<r••.,v of G. A Ma<OonalO ConJlructlon Co.. TM• Sltl_t. ::. Ill.., "'"" ,,,. O•led -y 11, ""
,.. MU •s. May u.10. 21, J...w 3, 1911 ?Us,-tl I• •ulllO•IHd L .... ••t1•w•I with Counly Clen. Of°' Count on Me Gr-FOfd, Inc We~lmm~ll·r Mt'monal P a rk nesota and 2 gr andchildren COlllOHA l.EAStHO, UO"'> T•-K•Tlll• Al<herd A Stonton tor ProD•tlon 4 1911 411\0t Y Y av c11ar1uAnt.1>11n.
:'llortu.in Chapt'I :'II a ss of S~n·1C'es _were held on Tues M••ltOld A.....,., cw-dtl #Mr, ~~=~;:,. Oei>e•tmen1 r.crttly '' •r>Pto•eo Ctr· • ,,,.,411 Pr"'""''
l'hn,11 •n Burl •I \\Ill b" held da) • Ma) 12, 1981 at J 30PM Calllonile.-U. PUBLIC NOTICE t•fn lr•""1 r-..m •r• epprov.a~ T,.. PubllllWd OrMIOf Cou1 o II Pll t tnt..-.i Tr•n1ferff
v u ' l I h II b L VEOTTA K. LINOOE1'0, '10"'> 8kenle<Wll•I St•lion fl•m ot lloy Jor~nMn A•s.o<l•IH, M•Y • IJ 10 11 ,,., • r?OM ~;• Publo•htcl °'-C041•1 D•llY P1to1. on Wednt•..,da\, ~IJ\ 13. 19111 a ~ a r 0 r 8 w n Merl901d A .. nue, cw-clef Mer, LotAnotlH . CA 9000I inc . 11 w1ect.o •• • <01>Wl1an1 ror trw · • • • llil•r n, ,,., n., .. , at Sil> S1nion and Jude :'Jemonal Chapel With Rev C.llfornlanw. f'ICTITIOU5aU'9N•H 12lll.SS-l000 M•lnltftenG•0"9r•llon~Plennlno •ncl BruC'e Kurrie pas tor of the This.,...,,_ Is c-..c1ee1 Dy.., tn. ,. ... E ST"Ta .. •NT Publl>lltcl °'-Coe\\ Dally P11o1, Sclledu1tno Syitem Contract to con· ''alhul1'r / 't1ur·"h. I lunt1nglc>n . • ..... A .... M y 13 -•1 1911 •1•• ., " ... ' p b Ch h r h dlvldu411. ,,.. followlnv pa.-, I• dolnv !lull • • -·. • • ~ •Ider H~A/l>\>bll< >1Ulll1 l.ebot•tory P UBLIC NOTICE P UBUC NOTICE
Beach. ('a lnternh:nl at All • r es ytenan urc . 0 l e v..n.e 111;.1.1,_ro ,.. .. •• conwuctoon is cont•.....O u9<11 .O·
sou 1., (' t' meter) L 0 n ~ Co,. en 3: n t o rr i c 1al1 n g T~I• ~ w-. 111.i with ,,,. l(AMCO, ?OHJ s. .. 11.11 c1rc1e, PUBLIC NOTICE .. ,,,,,no ccw11r«1 ror ru Colte<IOr" 1"1CT1T1ous BU$1NIUS
f\taC'h C a Tht' ram ii\' sug Pnval~ .'nurnmenl serv1C't!~ c-t• Cltrt. •• 0r.,... c-1, Huntington a.er.. c allfoml• nwt •pproYtd Em•rotn<r E .. rctlt NS 1.u2 NAME STATEMaNT
gestc d11nut1on< "" ma'cle tc 1.mmcd1ately rollowed Aptll27.19tl K•lllleen A Mamelll. 2020 Agrffmtnl wllll Soul!Wrn C.lllornl•l l'ICTITIOUSOUSINEU I T~· lollowlno per10 ...... doing ~ u ~ '"' f'I St••"•ll Circle, Hunllnolon a .. cll, C-#1 EdllOn Co., II -rov.cl Agrffment NAME IT,\TEMINT bullno1 a1
lilt' M u~cular Oy~t roph y A~ ~yrvH1ces undt•r .t he direct ion Publl&hecl Or-Cotti Oelly Piiot, C•lllornl•..,... LOI ANGILll JUDICIAL DISTllllCT wllll Ao«ltr1 &tin, Wllll•m Frost •nd Tll• '°''-•no ""'_, •• dolno bYll s Tu DIO FI v E, 702, Sull• 0 ,
SOC'liJll On Dirl•(•ted h\ arbor l.awn ·M Ount Apri129.Mey•,u .20,1911 11t2S.fl Tlll1-lneult<ondU<ledbyentn 1lt ..... ~-A-• AUO<lelnl0<lht8ol~ChlUCNnMI n..... Nc•porl Cenler Or•··· Newporl
·Olive Mortuary of Coi.t dlvldwel L .. ......._~•n 11tDC1rovec1 ScOC>t o•-rlr.•nclhind 0R.tNGE A CA8AILLO,LTO.,l~ 8H<h,Cer11orn1••~ • W estmin:.ll'r .'llemo nal Park ll l(eth ..... A ~II PLAINTIFF FAMIUAH PIPE A 11>9 for lht Ctol•tr ..... a.ec11 Specific EHi 11111 s1 ... 1. Sutic 117. Coll• JOff'Y 4nn l.tlly, .... River
Mo rtuan Me 5a ~·5SS4 PUBLIC NOTICE '"'' Jl•l.....,t wet flleod wllll IN SUPPl.Y CO . llK , • C•lll0tnle CO<· Pten 11 •PP'OYecl Tr.,1ler ot Fu~ to ,,..w, C•lrloml•nt21 Aunue, Nt•POr1 8t.c11. C•tlforntt BROZI(' County Clar-of Ort1109 Covllty on porellOn IN Tr•MP0r1•ttor1 Dl•lllon OperaUno CHARI.ES SPILLER, JR 2341 '17 .. 3
POPE Mar 11, '"'· OE FEHOANT O. 8 ROSE, In Pl•n " 41pproved. Campt,.0 '"' el I Eut 11111 Strtet, Suitt 117, Co•I• Judy Herrt.on, '"'Church, No A, THOMAS r nnoz1r. ii VIOL.A PEARL POPE. re ,.~~~~!:~!·:::' ...... dl•ldu•llY -dol119 IKl•lneu n D H FetllltrlY RtQlonal P•rk .,. welved llil•W, Celll0tnl1'21HI Co•I• "'-W, Calllornl• ,.,.71
res ident or Costa Mt'Sa C:i '>ldl!nt or Costa Mesa. Ca for Tll• lolfowlno perl()nl ... dolno Publlw.d Ortn11t Coast D•lly PllOC, BROSE 8Ull01HG SUPPL.'( •k• tor Ce ltlornle ConHrYallon Corp• '"'' l>\lllneu ,, conducted Dy I Jo•n c Br-.rv. IOll Dulcll<tr,
for 9 \ r ar-. Pa~sed av. a\' on 33 .vears Pus~~.. awa) on l>v•lrwu M May IJ, 20, 11, J ..... ,, 1911 11 .... , HOA IZOHS CONSTRUCT I~ COM· LHM '°' Alrcrefl •tor-lac I Illy -' llmlt.O -1ne••"'P ,, .. ,.., CAllllOfft•• '111'
• · • " ~ni PAHY Oa 0 H 8ROSE • AS· JOlln W•'fl\lt Airport will\ Soutll (04llt Chartn5plll•r, Jr Tllh l>v>lneu I\ tOndu<led Dy .a "1il) JO, 1981 lie IS ... uni\ed Ma\ 9. 1981 She IS SUnhed HEW OAW!f, IS7I Myrlltw-SOCIAfES DOES I l~rouoll XX. AYl6llon llle>IW-Aeporton-ra llll• Nieman! wH "'"" wllll 1"8 ~neral per1norvup h~ h1~ \\lfe :'llan BnlllC and b) her husband Dean W 51'~~;=--~~~1=.:~m '"''"''.,. j "on ot countv rkl! dam• 1n c1e .. 1enc1 County Ct•rk or or.,,99 Counry on Jerry" 1.111y
I th r l \1 (-2 ' •2• CASE HUMOElt ~ llnuao Oon•t•d •~ct aorumtnll 1'1-Joen C. Br..it>vrv
a rlJughl.er Syh1.i R~oz1r P o pe, daughter Shirle•· Mrrtt.-ood, Co&t• Maw, C•lltort1l• PUBUC NOTICE SUMMONS Nellon•• For"''' rec••••d and con 1Apr1111.1"' / JudrH•"''°"
)() II ():.ta 'l'~a . a • Mc A leer or Costa Mesa Ca NOTICll ................ -·, ... ,with l• llonlt• Communily Cenltr •ncl Publllohtcl Or-c ..... Oally Piiot. Tn11 •lflt-nt we• llled '""" ine ~l~ler .. <:ath1:nnt• Z~clak or ~I S(('I' Lillian Brubak~r of Ho.:' •• \:r:-.~f::..~:2:,:t"'· f'ICTITIOUS•U$1NISS ( .......... Y*< ........... y ..... o ...... Y W C A for Elder Ctr• Cllntu .,. Apr117'.May•.ll,l0,ttt• 1011•1 C0<1ntyClertLol0t .... oeCounlyon M•y
San Bl'rnardtno. (a and L o ng Beac h , Ca , Opal ,,,,. t>vslnen 1, conoucted by • MAMESTATaMaNT '""....,. _,. -v-,..9"M •1>1>roveo 1.1tt1
R OS I(' n ud a r 0 f p en n Moore or Michigan. Pauline ••l-1ntnlllp ne~~.f.ono.lng pa.--•• dolnQ 1111 ... ::!: ... ,L ........ !Mtmlatlea cs~:L~rdaelj~~~ ALEXANOER PUBLIC NOTICE Puhll\twd Or.--Coe•I 0•11~·::,-:
syh an1a a b ro ther .Jo hn Sha\\ or Washington. brother Thi• :..;,_~ .. flled with Illa TRl·COUNTV POltT ABLE )( II you ..... .,. to -... edYlce 01 •n C .. rtl of Illa 8oerdof S..perVIM>n Mty u. :io. 27. J-J. l9'1 ?m .. , ~rO.ZIC' or Pennsyh anr.i Vt!. Wesley King of Missouri. ounly Cl.,k ot0r-. Counly on M41y RAV, SM s. R•ymen<I, Fullerton, 1ttorno ,,, lhlS melter, you lllektld do 01',.ICIAL ,.lllOCt:EOINGSOf' THE
1lat1on will be held on Tues a I so s u 1" vi v e d by 4 ,,., Celllor11le'26at •o promptly l4 tll•t Yo11r wrlll•n OOAlllD 01' su,.1111v1so1ts
da y • May 12. 1981 from g ra ndch1' ldren. Services • . "1'11l4 Rlc11ard Mekotm COOdlng, 11,... '•IPOftM, lhnY. m•Y be m..ion llrM OF ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF PubtllMO Orenet Coe•I 0.lly Pll.C ~~1r,roold, Bloomloelen, Galllornla AVllOI u-.,. *'9 .._...._ Sellt• AM, C:.llf0tnla 12 00 noon until 7 OOPM al were held on Tuesday, May ' ... •• 111-... ,_. -....-c-• u•. " r•ov•., ,,_11ng of .,. eo.rci of
the II arbor La\\n M o rtuary 12, 1981 al lO:OOAM at the Y lS, 20• tl,Jw.a. "'1 21..,. Tiii• bull""' I• C41\dwCIH by..,,,.. 11• •""-'-•-... u•.111..,... SuperYhOfl of Or•no• county,
R ec1t:ll1on of the Hol~· Harbor Lawn M emor·1al el•hl.,.i. ._.._ ........... LAla'-ac ... c e1110tn1•,••.0111111111 •••11tGo .. ,n. " PUBUC NOTICE Rlcllllrd-otm C-lnO ,. ... .,._, lnO Boero of,,,. Ol•lrlell governed Dy
R osan· l'lll be held today. C hapel with Pas tor Bill Tlllt •ll*""1t was llled with,,,. scusteddltfflOlkllart1cor1MJ00a ,,,.BoardOl5-rvlsors•HMldMo
May 12, 1981 al 7 :00PM at Tolbert or El Toro Baptist County Cl•rll of Ort11oa County on un ·~ ... ••t• .... nro • .,..,.,, ••• ,.,, •• •:JO .t.M Tll• IOllOWll>(I
the llarbo.r Lawn Memo.rial ChurC'h off1c1' a t1'ng Inter NOT~~~.1!.,,CI0!'.!,1to"'1~0lti Aprtt 21. 1"1. ll•<•••o lnmedlatamente, de Ht• nam.., -~"being P••Mnt. Ra1p11
C I ............... ~ -· ,.,..,.. manera, .., ·-•141 •Krlla, •I ney B c1ar11. Chairman, A-• A SIM> hape (.;ravcs1de s ervices ment 11erv1c(•S Immediately Scllool District: <:eett Community P\11111\ftee 0r.,,.. Coest O.lly Piiot, •llllHll, ,,.__ reglstracMI e tiempo ton, Ha,,t•tl "" Wieder. Bru<1
are '>cheduled for \\'cdnes followed Sen·ices under the .,, ... Ollfrlcl Apr 1', Mev•. n. 20, 1911 1t1Ht 1 TO THE DEFENDANT A c1 v11 Nest..,.,., "'°""'' F All•• •ncl tho
d a} ~1 a ~ 13. 1981 al d1reC't1on of '!arbor Lawn-.!:d •• Deedl, .. 1 rne· 2 oo p.m . T-y. <omp1e1n1 ~ -rn..i by,,,. Pt•ln-C•••k r --• PUBLIC NOTICE tiff •0.tln'1 YOU ti 'YOU Wllll to Otlencl Ordinance nu " •doPI"" l.O<el 10 OOA M at the II arbor Lawn Mount Olivt> Mortuar} or Piece .. 9ld Receipt: Office of tllt lllls l•WMlll, YO<I mu•t. wlll•ill '° GeY• Cool•I Pro0•-J are •POrov•d •nCI
M emorial Park with Father Costa Mesa $40 SSM. Purcll•slne Aetftl. Ms. -•Ian Purlft, eftar 1111s ~• I• Mrvtd on you. cot1lln\lff, oaratci A. "Jorry" J-• I•
Joseph :\1C'Eneany offlC'iat Coe•t C°"""""'ty Col9-Dllt•kt. Ad-AM._... "'• wlln rnl• <our• e ..,,11ten r•spons.e comm•-Mff•lll9 on,,,. Appeal SCHWENK mlnl•tratlon Owlldl119, 1270 Adams T.S. M0.""71 lo Ille <omplalnl Unleu you do .o, ol tile i.-.... Hlgwt community "'"
-Neutune Society
CllUIAriiw •UlllALATMA
646-7431
A .. ,...., C.t.a Mna, CA. '16a. MOT I Ca Of' TltUSTalS' SAL• Y°"' dtfe..11 wlll be entv.., on •o--letlon 0.-..IOpert 11 cotll-d. Tne WILLIAM A SCHWENK. Project '*"'lllcallon Nema lld Oii J-4, 1"1 at 11:00 a.IT!. FIRST Plk•tlon ot Illa pltlnllH, encl 11111 tourt llrm ot OMNI Gr-. Inc . p1..,,.1nv
res ident of Newport Beach. Ho. "4,, Snee:' ... Mldlti-, Oeldeft AMEltlCAN TITLE llllSURAHCS mo Ofli.f • l..clQtlleM 89e1nJt yow'"' COftlUll•llll II HIHl•d .. Ill•
Ca Passed away o n May 9. wut Collage, Hw11111101on •••<h.1 COMPANY, or SU<~ Trust .. or ,,,. ,.., ... Otm.111C1H In ,,.. complaint, Arcnrtect/EnalnH• tor 111e Mu110
Calllornle. SUt>stlluted Tru•t .. , of 1r..t ca11a1n wnlcn -.rd rnull In o•ml•.11man1 ol Fetlllly _,.., Pl.,, Trecl Map No. 1981 Born May 3. 1894 in Plan• Anilabl• lrom; Wllllam DHd or T""' uecuted lly PETER II. w1~$. laking of money or properly o• 1121S luppr-.
"ICTITIOU$ aUSINIUS NAME STATEMENT P UBLIC NOTICE
T n• foll-tno par'°"' .,. dotno bu11neu H THE OSA<iE WA'fER l'ICTITIOUS OUSllllEH
CO., 11140 Te1Dtl1 A ........ Fountel11 NAME STATEMENT
Vfllt,, Caltlornl• •170I Tiit tollowlno per>0n1 e re Going
COMl\ll ERCE FUND INC •• ou11no .....
C•lllornl• COtPo•••lon, , I 1.0 T ••Dtr1 p c s c I N s u A AH c E A .. n.,., Founleln Vallo, C•tllornl• SE AV ICES. ?O• t 8ullnt>J Center
91/0I Ori••. Sull• llM, lrvlrw. C•lllornlt ~
T1111 DuSines• II conoucted Dy• co• '11lS potallon P•<lllC Contrecl S.rvrct1 C0t-•·
COMMERCE FUNO INC lion, • Celllornl• corPOr•hon. 10-lt Stov~ B H•<ken. 8ustnot Cenrer Ot1ve, Sult• 10<. Pre110~1 1 •rvCM, Calllornlo •110
Th" •l•tomenl ••• llled .,11,. the Tnl1 Dullneu I• conc1uc1.o h • <0<· Coun1y C:tork ol Or•n~ Counly on por•Oon
Ap•ll 70, '"' Pee Ille Conlrect l'HOUI S.rYlce Corpoullon
Pub'"""" Oren99 c ...... D•ll• PllOI ~~ ', ""t""'"
Allr tt 17, 1'1. -Y• tJ '"' llSI 11 non~•
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tnl• llel.,,_t w•s 111..i w11n ,,.,.
Countv Cieri! ol 0t""90 Counly on Mey ......
'"""" PuDll'""" Ora-1or Coe•• Delly Pllol • Yevt ••••• , ....... , ... 4 ••l•r•fl• ChiC'ago. Illinois Survived 81urock ~ ParlMfS, JJOO N•wpon o•Ew •• ,,,.,.,...,,,,.ft,Hlll•tol•anel 0111•• rellef reque.itd In , ... com· ,,,. 8-d eeljourned In memory Of ••• 1 .. 11tt1tleR ............. , .,.., • I I I I
-...... - -by his wire llelen. daughter ......... d. Newport ONcll, CA.~ ........ , •• Md re<cwded AllllV'1 u. ·-p . n . Merion Cor11ett l'ICTITIOUS •USINESS c:.ttw--J B I 714/'7'J.«IDO H lnltr ......... no.t"'5.(11boot<IJ10J, D•l9Cl:MerchU,1"° !SEAL.I JUNE AlEXAHOER NAMESTATEMEHT
M•y IJ, l0, 11. JllM J. 1911 lmtl
Hllft c;:e-.-une ale) t>f Newport NOTICE IS HE1'EBY GIVEN lMI ptge lfft, of Offlclal ltec;ordt of Cla<111( Sotto, Cler1<oftn.8CNrdof5upentM>n The lollowtno P•rton• •r• oolng ~;;;::;;::;;:::;::;::;;;;:=:;:;~18eaC'h. Ca. brother Robert ,,,. at>o-ScMol Ol•l•ICI of Ora110• Co11111y, C•lllorfllt , and Clerk Publl•htcl Or-CCN•t Oallv Piiot ous1nau as PUBLIC NOTICE
,,. Schwenk of Newport Be&C'h, OrMQt ~y. C.lllornla, <Ktlnv by pu,.uanl lo tllt l ur1al11 Nollu ol ~•yOe U CrUl, Mey U, 1911 ?1lW1 COAST HEARING AID CENTER, f'ICTITIOUS BUSIHt:U
"' Ca and grandchildren , and 111•°"911 II• Go•••nlnt loard, 01hult and Elt(tlon to Stir ....,.... -HO• Eur C:O.\I HtQllw•Y. Coron• oal HAME STATt:MENT
'AClffC VIEW
MbtOllAL 'ill
Cemetery Mo11ual\t
C hapel-Crematory
3500 Pac1l1c View 01111e
Newp0r1 Beacn
644 2700
W llarel11afler rah,,•d to u thtr•\llldtfr•.,_J......,,y70, 1"1 OEO•OESYKUUICI PUBLIC NOTICE Mu,Cellfornleti.u i 111 am Bai I e y, Br e L "DISTRICT", w111 recal,.. ,. 10• lilul ., lnitr""*'t ,,., 1"4t, lft llOOll t1'1tl, MM Wtltllln a1..-.. EVEl. YH G WHIT e ••5tl Elm Tllo 1011ow1119 per...., ts c1o1no Dusi
Bailey. Greg G SC'hwenk l>Ot later"-tflt ._....stlltd lltM, P.toe ..C, of Offl<ltl •ecardf of ••le hit•.... Circle, Fo.,n1t111 Velley, C•lllo•nl• n•n;;UNT~v C4'BIN WEH lot
and Christopher Schwenk. -ltf llltlt tor Ille .. .,.d of 1 c911trect c-ty, wlll U'1dtr and ....,._, to Ot"tflY Miik, CA "111 NOTICE TOCREDITOltS O)TOI Promonlory Ori .. EHi, Newport
t El K d f hit IN Mew projeCt, N ici OWd of Tf\lft Mii at puf»k t u<· T.C: IJIJ) ...... ,., Of' CUI.It TlllAlllS,.1111 OONAl.D H WHITE, ltSI> Elm &each. C.elllornr• ·-111 s e r s s 1 e u n c o •Id -I M r.ctl,... 111 ,,,. -'•• 11011 r0< c.atfl, tawflll meMY of tilt unit· P111111.-Or-C041" D•lly Piiot, <S.o •1t1-4t17 u .c.c.1 c1rc10, Foun1411n V•lley, C•ll!ornia
Newport Beath, Ca , and t,1 ldtfttlflN ......,., .,_. 111e1111e ~ t4 Sitt" If ~•k•, ,, 111e meln "'" Mn ra.20.u ,J-l, '"' Us.41 Nolk •l•lwr•bYol••n1ocrec111orsot tt7ot "ATHUR CHARI.ES Bl~CH, :ioo nc1 bUC: t~ wlt~6n Mmed t 1t•ror(i, tMt Promontory Driv• E•,t, Newport ly Zielke of C hicago, I llinois • !IV '" ,_ alOUd •t t,. ** trt nct 10 ,.,., Amarlcen Tiii• ••n e Thi• bulln•u 11 condut1td Dy • Buell, C.tilornr•t2t>6'0.
F I , st.al.cl llmt eM Place. lft•ure11ca Company louted al 114 PUBUC NOTICE bulk tr ens.fer Is •Dout 10 be m-on v•ntr•I pertne,.n1p unera servtC'eS will be held Tlltrt w111 w a SU.AIOO dtPMlt,.. I HI l'fflll 54,.... 1,. 1,_ c;ity of S.llt• per•onal propnry 11e,.1naller E••lyl\G White Tni. Du•lneu" conc1uct..i by.,,,,.
on Wednesday , May 13, 1981 .,,,... 111 Mell wt of bid dllK""'""t to AM, c.111w111a,.i1 IMlt rlfM, 111,..,... ----oe1<r1-,.,...,. dl•ldu•t
al 11 :OOAM al lhe PacH1c tva(lft-... ,...""'In good_".., llltt •••t <~ .. aM-,...., lty It N~79'0 T~ ,,.,.,..,,) -butlne11 •ddreu I PuDll•htcl °'""'" , ..... D•llY Pllol ArtlKlr SN"H 81.ch
4
McCO.MIC« MOITU4•1H
Leouna Beac h
View Mortuar" Chapel With wltMI\ flwe den efler IN ~ ._..,1111 .,,,.., ~ Qwd ot Tr"'4 In I,_~ MOTIC• TO calOITOllll of t!W 1n1..-,,.,,lerorl•I are Aptil U , 19, IMy '· u , '"' ia...i i C flll~ "c~'~"tf w0" llleoCIC wltll IM
, e.tta. ty sllu.._., 111 .. Id County en41 Sti tt 0,.0ULJCTaANIP'•lll 811.l CORWIN FORD, INC , •1 oun Y ••• 0 ranoo OUM• on Rev l.othar v Tornow or l!acll IHd mu" ~onlorm • ..._ --dtlCrllMClet:. (Ian .• ,., .. * U.C.C.l C•lllOr!ll• corporation, lO Rue Gr•lld Ap•ll 20. , .. , ..,..,, •
f iclating.. I nterment ~ rnpons1"'9to~c~trect1£?..., ~~~.!Ll~f ! ot ~~~I= v,:~~: ... ~ ... :for.:~\hJJ19t~~t.._,,. ... ".,lt.\'~ '~; ~~~fi.;ny-:~_$'' • l'1:~JS: UO~••o
768-0933
Jt .l ~c R • .a'tMtt ·~,::=_,~-.~"""'~ ar..:~~r.:::m ... ; 1f'rt'if.~n1 •• ;, , -I I . ,·1.~;·:;;-on tllfOIH9Cl/ll•eofftoorprlnclpell>\l•I· Aprtt tt.1'.-y•,ll.1991 •lf1••
• Park, .. ~wport Bearh, Ca c.tocu,,.,.. Md 1ty u. 1tt1 .. ~ mff• '" .. ""°et""' etft<•., .,. ,., ..... , pr•••rty "•'•'"•"•' Mu ou''• of the ~"t"'*'d tref'.-t•ror PtCTtTtOUI 1ui1N°IS.S
San Juan Capistrano
495-1776
HAllOtt L.AW~MT. OLIVI
Mortua"' • Cemetery
Crematory
1625 Gisler Ave
Costa Mesa
5'10.5554
f'fBCI llOTHHS
HU ll0ADW4Y
"'40lTU4RY
110 Bro1dwev
Costa MHa
S.2·9150 -lALnta••OM
SMITH & TUTHt&.L
WHTCUff CH.l,M. 427 E 1711'1 St
Costa M•N
646-9371
Pie He omit flowers Pacific ..,OCOfttflc\ett. -ty ~of Nld c-'\'. clettrlMd, 1, uo Soutn -In s1ree1. s.n•• An•. •AME STAT•MEMT
VI M d TN OIST•ICT ,_._ n. rltttl ta l!.c• ell ll!'MI..,.., lllOf'liwn IM TIM -1•1 eM bu•INU -·" Celltornl• 1 l'lt lotlowlno ~rtons •r• dol11g ew ortuary 1reclors ••I.ct ...-flif 111 ~ ... "'w•lw lft' all ''"" mattrl•ll 11t11rmlned of IN llltllfl6tdtr .. •11trorhl tr• All 011wr buttneu n•me• •1'111 .o. butiMu 11. TURfYER lrt'e9Vlwltlet Ot ll'lfOm\tlllltl In any p11t1uent to lectlOll S<Ol(O al tllt GUiii""'"'" IOFF1'10A and drauu uud by 111• lnrenou THE PERl'ECT BALANCE, 4lU
"SDdAledNIEL5TURNER, age
11~~~.~~':. -.i!IM lrMI ::r'':. :.111,::111~~ .. of~-:e~t'i:~~ :~l~~:·~l~d ~o:::~:::· ,4::,~. ~:enf~~·~.-!':!".~': ~~~·,~~~;:•J ~ •• ~~~~r!~y, Newport ha<ll.
• • on aturdoy May 9. tllt 01r«11r • .. OetNltt'-' of'"" •'•llvct1eo1 of flsll0111•t• 111at1r1a 1. c;1111.,nN1 tr•n•l•f••,... ,_ Corinne Anl'I C•U•11•11. •tu c 1981 in an automobile aecl· dltttrl•t.......,.. u...,_.11.,. ... 11. Ollll!Mt 111 ~ ~Mleft, Tiit -hi -llll1.,_n M*ns Tl>t _,,, -1K111neu •dclreu 1111.,la W••· Newport a .. c11 .
dent In F1a1starr Arizona 1119 rat• .. --.m ..... Ill ti• Ill.,,..,. lfl .... 111111, ~, Wlttl of tM Ill~ ,,.,,.,_Is l ... of .... lnt...-0 ,,.,,,,., .. 0 1 •r• C•llfornl• '*'
He was on his w~y to New :;~~ :4::'!,:f".,'~,: ~ ::: ~'ri'~.': :, '!~-;.~';'.: .. :~:/'~~ :·. •: .... ~b:~ .'i~~~ ,..,::1.~i:, f:!~g~~~.; :~!"~~~~ "".,r;;,~ .. s1~~'.ec:::~;0~:·, !:~~ p II r Is. 0 h I 0 where h I• -•m1111 _.., .. ·-· ,,,. ,_ l•tlvet, .. MY time to onlM """ , ... N•wPOrt OMcll. C.llloml• lent• Ana. C•llfomlH2tOI Calllorn .. n•li
Carenta Uv. e . He Is survived tr•~•. ltflll tflf ""9Ct fw. mlna •11111 ,... Tllet , .. ..._,.., llffllNnt lltr•lo '' Tllat '"" -"'Y partlnan111ara10 •• Tnl• ttualneu '' (Oflduc:lecl llY •
Y hi. •-M d M TIM 1.,.....111 ~ 81 ~ 4lem men Ille .. -. 1T1ellln1 J111t tefll· *tcrli.M ltl 119,.rll ea Tait•°"',_ dtt<rllltel In oane••I •• '*"' 1"811 .. ,..,., ,.,,_""-·
R .. _ paren... r . an ra ..... -Oft fMI .. tM O•ST••cr Of. ,._, .... .., .... .-... ., l'1Wf'Y 8<• ..,.. wllll 119tr .,.. •lfW. eftd It l.UI• bllJIMH. -It !Kelod •I "' Hortll c;.,w. A Call.,,.,, Oucrl Turner of New Par1s, lkt HIC.at..i at tut ---•-. ~ llWfwlloY, M , __ !fl u. M at1 • 1. o.tlloe 01"'11 ..... ,.,, Main $1,...t, S-t• Ant, c a11t°'11t• Thi• ,_. w• med wnn ri..
Ohio, 3 brothers Robert of c:.et• MeM, C"-C-.. _., w • .... ,,_ UiM• Stat" of 11.ftWrtu, lffUI. c.tHWlll• TM 1111•1-,..,.,,. 111" 11¥ ,,.. .. 1d COtlfttY , .. ,. or Oren .. County on
R ichmond Indiana David lalfled °" ,....._ A c., of .._ ff<.,.. ~ It, , ... 111 _. ""· Tiii•....,,... name ut.M 1ty 11w .. ,d traruterortu at u ld 111ull011 I• .tprll u , tttl "''""
d ' ' r.W-ltt................ ..... .. 7,9ffl<1-lr8<Wdt trenaftrOfCll 81 Hid le<.allOfl ll: COleWINFORD Publlt.fllf0re1'Qt COHIOally Piiot,
an D1trrln both O( New Tiit ~..,.,.... .. ,... ttlefll TM.,.... ---• otllff C-· Jotll'S ITALIAN MAllll(•T , ........ bul-trenJter ,, 1111 ..... to AIHll 2t, Mey" u . JO,.... 1937-41
Purls, Ohio. 1 sister Mr• .......... _.-...... , .. -....... lfilfl"' .... """'1Y II TNtt .... llilll-lf8111f0tl•lnt~to .. COll&WmlTltl•d •I , ... olflo Of Tb~reaa M1nnsfleld or ...... ,...,,...,,,.,....., .... ....,...,_.. .. Ml U1t Oeteatt, c;..u tl9 C911~ettlleoffkaof• H A ,.,..fff•ltflall1<rewSenlu•, "'IN
So 0 •ftf -1ffM _. 111111 .. et ..... MHe, ~.. Ala •SC-OW C:OU'OfllATIOH Hllf't• T11.i111 A-. '9nt• AM, C..lllor11I• mer aJe. New Jer1ty, hla tlftw•.,.....wt. a.If ...... 1 .. ,.....•l"*'l t...,.. .,..... IN<ll. c:a.lllOnlla, Oft w •ttltt ttJOt,auralttlr J-1. lttl
fflndparenta Mr. and Mn. It Wiil tt.""" t 1 11 ..-i .._ COft.. ll9llt w wwretltY •• ..,..., ., 1,,.itM, J-•. ,..,, Tiii• ..,,. ttlft•ftr " 1ut1Ja<t t•
Edward Caroy of Richmond TaACTOR •"""" .. Wl!lrea I• •tetltta,........,.wtJICllll'l9r-" TM_.,..._,.., .. ~ telllorN1\111llor"m COMmerd•I COdt
lndlana, Mre . Vfr1lnl~ =~~'::l =::.•.: ::.-:.-:,:_~~:C:,:80.: :::'i:"..::~~:~11':~1 !:t, S.:~':;,=_. .. _of tlleper ... Turner or Bt.ntonvlUe, In· .. .-""' ..... , ........ , ~ .. Tr• .. "'"' .,,,.,.., ~ ... WetMt A-. Hllftt11191M h.c: .. , •It~ •Mm Clelfllt ,,,., ... llltf It dlana. f\ln ral aervtc" wtll ....,.. • ._."' .. ._ ...... • ,......,"'-... _... ~ • .._.... c.tlfor!U, ..... ,_. .. , .., tt11t11 ,.,........,,.. a.c,_ Wvk•" "" " be held on w_. _... "" .. .c:...,., ..-...._ •• ,._ • ... 111111e1 e1a1ma-,.,. <,...,.., ... , • J-s, ni.1111 •-• ...,.. ..,., c;.11f9nll• -.n.,.,..ayt."'•Y lft.,...., _,.......,. •.., ~-w "''' Netlu ., .... , •••.__,,It .. ..._.. .. , i..w.. •n11, ~.o ... 1u11 • ..,,,, • ..,,.., 13. 1981 a\ 2 : OOP M al • ,.,.. ., ~ ..... (411 .... mftH ... .. Ill• <111•--llen ••t• a.-clfl•• C•ll..,... ... Ce!""""• ""' 1-111,,.
Marshall Fui\eral Home In .,....,. ..... ...,....,.._ DATIO: Mliy .. '"'· .-.... ..., •• ,,, .. "" 1 .. , "" • f1U119 Dublin lndl•~ Burial wUI ~~.,.. .. • ,.,._..,.... irtMT AMUllCAN Tm.1 .. ,., • •• ._ ...... .....,,... c,.1,.,,, .., '"" c'"'1or IMll • M8y
PUBLIC NOTICE
.__ I ri. t ' -"' w411 .. ,...,,_ llltler......... INIUAANC•t OMP'ANV, Tr111thr .. h l u l• 11110••• n, 1'11, Wiik" It t,_ _,,,... •Y -ca-..uaai ""' n ....,ntonvll Cemetuy, •ow~,,.,...,......._..., •~<-.Wllll8fl, .,.,_..,_111 ........ ,.......,....., ,.,.,. tit• 0 ,,.,,mm•ll•1i •••• ..--_....,...,.. Brntonvllle . ladion1 "'..,..,..,......, .......... ._..,,.. AITJlOSTla ttMet ....._ _ -..,_ _ .. ..,...,..
$MITI4l' MOl1'VAIT Friends may cl\1 from ... -.111 .. c..r.tD« '*''" .,_ ._....._,, w1t11111• ... -.181l1...,1-. DatMMtr "· '""
W M.inst ... oopu•AtOOPMtod H ca.ecesm......, ~omc. 0 .... ,..,14., °' ... ,..,..,,~ .
• : l"l..., •>'· ~ C:...Dlllrtn , ..... "'""....... ~-"...... ,, o.r•~•tt. Huntlnaton Buen bad been a ruldent of ...,...,,,,... ...,..,.,_,<A.,.. ... ...-. "'""*"" ~ La1u1\ll Beach, Ca. for tllo '' *"'-' • .._ m. .. uwt11 1,.... T,_,..._ ,,....,~ .... ___________ A,,,,. P••U years ........... Or .... ~°"''' Pt18C. l'Wt!I-.. Or8'l9I c... °"''' ,..... ... ..... Or ... Clitltt Dallr ~If\ ~.-..or.. c-0.11., ~ ....
• Ma'Yll. .. tet ...... , Maytl».1',1'91 dlHt ..... \1,1'11 l'MIMI ~rtJ.I• tMM)
P UBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOU$ OU'9HEU
N.u.11 STATEMENT
T llt loll-11\Q pet'\On h doino Du>I·
ntH •s~
BAllllARAS Cl.E AN IH G SERVICE, 2410 C.rrlon Pl«•. COil•
Mt M, C•IHomla tlitlli,
8AA8Af'A MARI E DUNCAN,
1410 C•rllon Place, Coil• MUI,
c e111or1111 '2tlirl.
Tiiis llutl-I• (~ltd tty a-I In
cll•ld11•• ••be•• Ollf\<•11 Tllil •tat-I we• lllfd •1111 Inc
County Cltrk 01 Orenoa Counly on
M•rtll 74, 1 .. 1 ,.,...,..,
,UlllltNO Or.not CocUI Delly ~1101,
A.prll U. 2t, May •• 13. '"' 1• II
PUBlJC NOTICE
~-----I
-------·--~ 0 2 0 a S~ a '" ij3 ¢ Ci!JW& 2
Orengo Coaet OAJLY PILOl/W dnesdoy, May 13, 1981 .,
CMU-the unsung show biz st;hool
PITTSBURGH t AP) -Carneate·Mellon
Univeralty likes to braa that ita drama school ia on-
ly SO minutes from Broadway.
it was a shOrt flight for the muaicaJa "Pippin"
and "GodspeU." Both ori1lnated on campus and
became s mash hits on Broadway.
"The record or people from Carnegie who work
in the profession -it's astoundin1," said Mel
Shapiro, an award-winning Broadway director who
now heads the natJon's oldest collegiate drama de·
partment.
The 1980 theater season in New York featured
the·worlts of three Carnegie playwrights.
Across the continent, in HoUywood, television
studios are brimming with actoMI actresses, pro-
ducers and directors who once attended the private
university, best known for its ens(ineers.
J ack Klugman of "Quincy," David Lander
and Michael McKean of "Laverne and Shirley"
Mariette Hartley of "The Incredible Hulk," Sada
Thompson of "Family" and Nancy Marchand, the
Mrs . Pynchon of "Lou Grant" all attended CMU.
formerly called t:arnegie Institute of Technology.
Movie actor George Peppard, actress PeUy
Rowles, and George Romero, director of "Night of
the Living Dead," all took courses atCMU.
And when movie credits roll across the screen,
look for the name of costumer Ann Roth or the class
of '53.
About 20 students currently are enrolled in the
drama department, majoring in acting, directing,
playwrighting, design or production.
The school's success stems from a commitment
to "strong training, very demandint discipline and a lot of performances,·· said Shapiro.
"The studenu here work from 9 in the morning
until midnight-seven days a week.''
The competition for admission is "ferocious."
he s aid. This year. 700 s tudents auditioned for the
acting class and 35 were selected.
Once admitted, the students can't coast. The
school weeds out those who Cail to continue to show
professional promise. More than half the acting stu·
dents won't graduate from the program.
Shapiro, a 1961 f raduate, returned to direct the
drama department ast fall.
"I want to make it as 'now' as possible. I'm
not interested in classical training. I'm interested
m new plays. I'm interested in new ways of look·
lng al theater. new staging, innovations and ex-
perimental things.
"I totally disregarcco what went on before me.
Like Frank Sinatra, ·r did it my way,"' he said,
laughing.
This spring, the department initiated a new
play festival. Eleven original plays written by
graduate students were performed by student ac-
tors and staged by student directors.
Hollywood producer -director Bud Yorkin,
an.other CMU aJumnus, put up $10,000 in cash
prizes.
·'If people don't get a crack at writing plays at a
university where will they gel a crack al it'!"
Yorkin asked. "H's a kind or thing that should be
done "
Yorkin, a
wants the festival lo be a n annual event. He said be
Will donate the prizes for five years and probably
longer.
The Washington, Pa .. naUve said he feels he
has "an obligation" to the university.
"It opened the doors for me. 1 got a job at NBC
In New York because l had a degree from Carnegie
Tech. I've never forgotten that..
Yorkin 1s now president of Tande m Produc
lions. He helped m odernize television situation
comedy ln the 1970s with productions of "All in the
Family,"" Maude ," "Sanford and Son," a nd "Good
Times."
Of course, fe w people or plays make one big
jump from CMU's dimly lit theater to Hollywood or
Broadway. Most young actors and actresses strug.
gle for years at odd jobs, while purs uing tbetr careers. "---'-----~~--"-.;..:....~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
.. Practically all become busboys and waiters."
Sha piro said, with a s mile.
Director signed
HOLLYWOOD (AP ) -Animator -director
John Canemaker has beetl signed to contribute
animated sequences to "The World According to
Garp," a live-action reature starring Robin
Williams. /
Canem aker is developing storyboards a net
characters for a three-minute experimental se-
quence that deals with how the child Garp vis-
ualizes the father he never knew
TEEN IDOL GROWS UP -David Cassidy.
former heart throb of ·"The Partridge Fami-
ly." has outgrown his days of bubble gum
stardom to star in the George M. Cohan com-
edy. "Little J ohnny Jones." At 31, Cassidy
quips, "Thjs is the show I've been waiting
for."
iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiii~~~
NOWPUYIHG
,lCIFIC'I IOUTM COAIT MANN SOUTM COAST ClllEOOM(
Laguna Beach 49·H ~14 Cosla Men S49 33~2 Ora"ge 634 2SSJ
ltO ,HIH lCCl,TlD FOR TIOI UHIAGIMDT
NOW Pl.AYING
NC.. ... •A£l ...
A.MC OUMt MAU tOW•llltl ' HtotlU'I; f'"'41"t• I "1' o
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--------!
PUBLIC NOTICE
N-72365
NOTICE OF DEATH OF
JOSE ROSAN , aka JOSE
ROSAN , SR . AND Of
PETITION TO AD · MINISTER ESTATE NO.
A·101630.
To al l h ei r s, beneficiaries, c reditors and contingent creditors of
Jose Ros an, aka Jose Rosan, Sr. and persons
who may be otherwise in· terested in the will and/or
,estate :
A petition has been filed by Charlotte Mae Rosan in
the Superior Court of Orange County requesting
that Charlotte Mae Rosan be appointed as personal
representative to ad -
minister the estate of Jose Ro s an , S an Juan
Capistrano, Ca lifornia
(under ttie Independent Admlnlst~t ion of Estates
Act). The petition Is set for
hearing in Dept. No. 3 at
700 Civic Center Drive W es t , S anta Ana , Ca lifornia 92701 on May
27, 1981 at9:30 a .m.
I F YOU OBJECT to the
granting of the petition,
you should either appear
at the hearing and stete
your objections or file
written objections with the court before the hearing.
Your appearance may be in person or by your attorney.
IF Y O U ARE A
CREDITOR or a cont-
ingent creditor of the de·
ceased, you must file your
Ringo Sterr CAVElllAlll (PG I
SHOWS AT 6: 158:15 10: 15
UONOFTHE DEIEllT !PG l In Dolby Stereo SHOWS AT 8:00
Neil 01emond
JAZZ SINGER IPGI
SHOWS AT
6:00 8:20 10:30
Burt Lencaster
ATl.AllfTIC CflY I RI SHOWS AT 6 :00 8:10 10:15
A•t0lutio~y C•ne f •
Sownd •• ().,.-.. ., .. k>w
Vo..., AM OH rldHJ tt vow.-.. ., lfno AM
., tedM> .,, ... '9f\t1 tOft
~~IO'\bt'tfllt 'tOVI own AM potlM ..
en 1c •I Vincent HARDCOUlfTRY IPGJ
And
HHven's Get• (RI
MichHI Ceine
THE HAND IR I
Plu1 Th• Sphinx (RI
I John Boormen's EXCAU9UR (RI fo~tApedl•,TheBronx (RI
l'i:j~.;'y Aw•r~ W111ner
OMMNARY PEa'\.E
IRJ
Tribute IPGJ
Gene Wilder mRCRAZY IRI
Plus
Uted Cars IAI
KIMQOFTHE MOUNTAltl IPGI
Plus
Ven Nuy1 Blvd. IRI
£XCWSM MANN n!EATP.£ SHOWING
SPECIAL
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT
Mann's South Coast Plaza
CoN (71•) 546-2711 fOf shoWftmes.
TLANTIC
CITY
3:30-7:45
THE
DECLINE
of Western
Clvillzatlon
12:00-2:00-4:00
e:~:oo.10:00
WIST COA~T PllfMlfRl £NGAC.CM£NT NO\N S HO\NING
• Ofonoe CINIDOME •Cotto Meto, HARIOI TWIN
6>•·21U UHIOI
OOlfv 100 PM
Sol S....100 ••JO I I OOPM
~PACIFic:s~·ooME . c=.~ ~,_ ... ,,....,y,,._ "°"' ........ JlJ/ ..... J40t
Daly 1230 • )~ • 100 • 1015 PM
11t1111, o .. ~u~~W:~i,::,:: :~.~:.~ -o.-,.-"-.-roa-.. -.-oc-u~I
• "'"' " · 001 OOUIT STtAEO r
claim with the court or 1------------.-----------------------present it to the personal
representative appointed PVBUC NOTICE There are 2·00 seru·o-at Mi by the court within four --------.• .,
months from the date of "' ,... And ..a_ 'til first Issuance of letters as PICTITIOUi.UllNHS Seven uayS lded 1 seer 700 NAMananMuT ~~-~, p!o~. ,.. n _ • ion .at ·"'°~~<t..Jtll!!-_ . ~~ ....... ="~ro: ......... ·--• --~.:r• ... __.._ ............ ~,.... ,, --... -"".. ·,,"I&/". #
California. ·The -time for aurr) c aNTER MACHIN&, •
filing claims will not ex-~~~;;1?i. ~~C:..c:-"C:~~27~~11t11nt
plre prior to four months Pe111 e .. udr•n, "" Eu1 from the date of the hear-••uett. ....,.11n, ee11tOm1etaos
Ing notl.Ced above. oanon aurkett, SJlO o~ Ori.,., Rlvenlcie, Cellfoml• t2S05 YOU MAY EXAMINE Tllla IMlllrMu 11 conclucled by•
the flle kept by the court ~:}-:.:z::io
If you are Interested In the T11l1 ... ..._, WM llled wllll Ille
estate, you may fll e a re-c;°""'" c1er11 01 or.,e-c.w111y °"
quest with the court to r•· ~u 17• '"' celve SPKlal notice of the
Inventory of estate assets
and of the petitions, ac· counts and reports
described In Section 1200
,, .... 1
PAlllC•ll & l'ltANKLIN
'4llt l•ll °'""*'Awe. 0r .... CA. .... PYMllNCI Ot.,. Qoul 0.lly PllotJ a,.11 H. 2'. IM~ 6, 13, 1•1 ,.,...,1
of the Callfomla Probate __ P_\J_BU_C_N_OTJ __ C_E __
Code.
MeMrve, Mumper and -H"thH, by: Ernest J . P1a1nousauS1NHt .. N4Ma ITATIM9MT
s........, CKJUSTOPKEll GE.ORCE_, PATCH MACK!Nm
ijm.1tc0PIS Ill, i..
Sc"at, Jr., Attorneys at ,,,. N4lewlllt ,..._ •••Ille -...1-
Law, 5190 C."'llUI Ortve, -.. i ,.,0 . aox 7'20, NewPOrt WIST COAST tuo1No co-. t--------' ---=::.;.ir,..:;;::zu.____, ---------.
I Heh, California 92660. :!:~ ~':.:=·.=• *·
(714) 752""'5. ll ... ll CMM'-'U, IM., •Me
Pubtlshed Orange COllst """ "'"'· 11111• , ...... ,.,,
Dally P1101, May 6, 7~ ...... .ji·F~•o, ... . M1 llV9>tJl ...... • C:.•lfltnll•. r ., . """"'(. ~ ..... ~----------t "" ....... -, .......... Call 142-H71. CiellMya.tietCW .... ~ye11Mt.,
Put • f.,., word• ~=:.;., .... • ..... to wottl tor you. ..,.,. a. CMTS• •a,,..a..r.,... ...
........ C:---.tlPtt
Tth f1wt ---.. , .. . DAILY PILOT'
Q.ASSIPllD ADS
........ Ct .. c.M °'911y ......... _-==~~~.J..------~======::t ___________ .. , ....... .,;..., 1111..-.14
""OAY THI 1attl ,.,, 2 (II) ·--·t:::••t&M• ............
.
REAL VALUES
._,..,_ .. .,
811\'l.OOlr' .. , .. .,._.. .. ,
'°"CAW' _.,.,Allll
"CAVIMAN" (l'Q)
l'UllfNI
"QOINQ Alill"
"<>f'DINA"Y NO~I" -"PfltVATl llNJAMIN" Ill)
"PCALllUR"
t•I ..,..,,..,... ........ -... ..... -"lowen
AND llAAl"t111 '"' ..
on items from applesauce to zippers the·lll"'IJ Pilaf are advertised every day in
_,,
Or•• Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednuoav. May 13, 1981
I TU BE TOPPERS QI-K-,, Aleo OWi-
-To r81011n lwn#y weellh. Iha prw-of I
lllld·l11toe>M11 ,orll ~
pleN to rn1111r; h« deuofl-,
-~ ~ .... .. .,... .,.. joined lly •
llrenc:M\afl Ind NI '*'Of\"
tar
·-EVBM-
e:00 ID. NEW8 WONOll' WOMAH
A peychlc: wtlO lnvtKMe
mlnda fOt lnt.,natl~I
MCra11 11 •"~ by
Wondet Woman whO PfO-
dUCM • man with uncel-
1~ ettecta.
D TIC TAC DOUGH
• u •1.•1•H
When Franll lhr-len1 to
la1ve. Hawkeye and
Tr~ find it_... dOU·
ble duty lor them and
lnvenl a w1y 10 make him
Illy.
• OOOOTlMU
The line Pflnl al Ille bot·
tom ol an ..... Y payment"
CXW1trect I« an enc:y.;lo-
pedla Ml bvyt the Ev-
• lot ol trouble
SING IT -Annette O'Toole and Cooper
Huckabee play country singer Tammy
Wynette and her first husband in "Stand
By Your Man" tonight at 9 on Channel 2.
•G ELECTNC COWAHY(JI)
(I) C88Nf.W8 9 A8CNEW8
t:30 G J()f(E.A'S WlL.D
• Ml.COME BACK.
KOTTP
Finding II lmpoaible IO Uva
on his IHCh9t'a Ula<y,
Gibe find• • p1rt-llme job
In 1 lael-food chain. llt llf.HHY Hill.
Benny hU a rlVal in Henr(
McGee IOf the hand of a
channlng widow
• KCET NEW88EAT
~ ITUOIOlff
"Orient-Ing" The n-
aport ot «lent..,lng In
Ro<:hrnond, 1/1 la demon·
strat.O 111 .. 1 Al Hlrtlg, kite
man. ttlofoughbred h<>f-
.,. trll"8d 1n Ocal•. Fla
(R) I
Cl) NEWS
@) BARNEY MILLEA
While lnvfftlgallng van-
dals' 11tack1 on • POfOO
bookSl«a. the detect1...a
.,. Nlon•ahed to di.co.....
the o-• are an elderly
couple
1:00 tJ C88 NEWI D NllCHEWI II HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
Fonz,. ul<• Rk:h,. to keep
an eye on his girlfriend
while he I• OUI Of town '°' •
week U MCNIWS
"IUU.M'Yt: fD M•A•S•H
The <1077th'• evecruatlon 10
• neerby cave poaee
anoth91 haz11d lor Hawk-
eye. whO hu • P<oblem
Cot Pott., II un1w11e of
Cit STMnaMSAH
FAANalCO
A prlat refuMI to tell
Stone where 1 longShOr•
man lnVOlv9d In the mur-
der of • poloceman oa llld·
l~OUI
SI OVER eAaY
"There'e Got To Be A
Place For U1" Hugh
Down1 and Frank Blelr
explore aome of the we~
older people If& llW\g In
America IOOly (R) 0 ~ MACHEL I ~REA
REPORT
Cl) TIC TAC DOUGH
@) MERV GA1""1N
"Seven1h Annual Ladies
Home Joum11 Awatdt"
Guest• Lenore Herll'lly.
Lon• Anderaon, Suzanne
~ •. Ann·M1tgret
1:30 8 2 OH THE TOWN
Host• Steve EOwardl and
Melody Rog1<1 visit Dub·
lln, Ireland. perl0tm 11 the
historic Abbey Theater. go
pub-crewllng eno v1111
some ol the Emetald Isles
CHANNEL LISTINGS
II KNXT 1CBS> LO'> Angeles 1J KNBC 1NBC1 LO!> Angeles
II KTLA (Ind I LO'i Angeles D KABC· rv 1ABCJ Los Angelpo;
(.)) "FMB 1CBS1 S.1n D iego G KHJ·TV (Ind 1 Los Angeles
~ KCST tABCt San Diego
G> KTIV lino 1 Los Anqele!>
II) KCOP TV (Intl t Los AngelP'> f£l KCE T· TV 1PBS1 Los AngPlt><, ~ KOCE· TV 1 PBS! Huntington Bc>.1c:n
I
I
,,,_, hlll«lcal and photo-
genic IPOll D FAMILY F£UO II IHANANA
GUMI' ROMY Grier 8 HOU.YWOOO
80UAAU G Flia THE MU8AC
g) AUINTHEFAMILY
The Bunk.,. leatn that lhe
"mad• In haeven"
r«nanc. of Edith's f1v0tll•
cousin lan't ao divine 1'1er
all
S) MACHEL I LEHRER
REPORT ~ THEMAACH~
ALEXAHOEA THE GREAT
"The Young Conquw0t"
The Greel< cl1y-11a111 are
stunned Into aubmlsalon
u Alexande< Pfepates for
war Nieholu Clay stars
(Part 2)
Cl) P.M. MAGAZJH£
A woman whO won her
own Island In • contell. •
look el the "I Love N-
York" ad umpelgn
1:00 • Cl) ENOe
Daisy Ovtl• comn to Loe
AnQllel fO< I cat r-and
unwittlngly becon>ff Iha
pawn of an lnternetlonal
~ll'llal(R) D AEAl PEOPLE
Featured· en attempt to
Jump 1 tank over ltva ura.
an artlat whO paints woth
her boll«n, the "humen
echO"; • belUty perlor tor
men (R) II MOVIE • *'"' "Horr« At 37,000
Feet" ( 11172) 8udOy Ebaen,
ChuCk Connor1 A 747 jet-
1.,_ 11 haunted by 9"11
1pi1111 wh!N urrying •
shl~I from England U 9 THE GREATEST
AMERICAN HEAO
Pam le promoted to junior
law partner end then die-
covers thal her ,_ bOsa 11
en11ng1eo in an
underworld bribery
9Cl>eme o uow • * • "The Swan" ( 11156)
1er to ~·· Crown ' I Prince Alb9'1, who It
t9QUlt9d 10 Mlee1 • Wife ......... ~
A -wtlO won her
own ~ In • ooni.et, 1
took el the "I Lo\19 ,....
YOl'k" ed caml)elgn: Judy
•nudd trek• dOwn w .. 1
.,n Avenue to dlecoutlt
ehop IOI' lurnUIH• and
n\llJOt ~--Or. Wiii·
teller lhM• • food t111or-
mula; Chef T .. whlpe up 1
li.n~ole
• MOW
• • '"' "Hunters Are F0t KllNng" ( 11170) Burt Rey-
noldl, Melvyn Oouglu
When an Innocent man
retuma lrom pneon. he
encounter• trouble wt1h hl1
lather end his gtflfrlencl' •
l•lher. ID KENNEDY CEfTER
TONIGHT
"A Stalute To Ovit•" S1tllh
Vaughan, Joe Wllllemt and
oth« )an grHll pay a
epecia1 tribute lo Ovtle EM·
Ing ton. t:aO . CAAOl. IURNETT • ANO FAIENOS
Sklte: "The Famtly," "The
Otd Gunllghler "
~ L08TTOTHE
AEVOU/T'IOH
The WO<k of mut., ~
and goldamlth Peter Carl
Feberge It chronicled
N1tr•ted by Vul Brynner
8:00 II Cl) MOVIE
"Stand By vour Man"
(Premiere) Annette
O'Toole, Tom Mcintire. The
raga-to-rlchft atory ol
country 1n<1slc st•r Tammy
Wynell& le drametlzed. D Olff'AENT 8TAOK£8
Willis, • etar pltch91, ii
wooed by oppo1lng
coechee from 1 IOslng IOCll
teem and• winning aquad
ecrot1 town O
D ltl MOVIE * • * 'h "Callf«nla Suite"
( 11178) Alln Akll, J-
Fond1 Sevar•I couple•
become Involved In a
-• of unuauel lltuehona
during their Illy at I pos/I
hOtet 0
• MERV GRIF'FlN
"Seventh Annuli Ladles
Home Joumel Awarda"
Gues11 Lenore Herll'lly,
Loni Al'IOeraon. Suzanne
Somera, Ann-M1rgre1
Riclt y Schroeder
&l) TME SU.Aai FOA
ALEXANDER THE OAEAT
"The Young Lion" James
Meson ho•t• thts re-er•
atoon of the extr10tdlnary
Ille of the men hl1torlan1
have called I he worid' a
greateat leader Nleholu
Ctey atars (Pert 1)
~ K~EDY CVITEA
TONIGHT
"A Salute To Duka" Sarah
Vaughan, Joe Williama and
oth« jan grMI• pay •
special tribute to Duke Ell·
1ng1on
• .)«) D THE FACTS Of' UF£
The glrll rMOtl 10 ahopllf1-
lng lo get Mrs Garrett a
ntce P<-1 IOI he< birth·
day (R)
II TWIUOHT ZOHE
Bob WlllOn 11 llylng home
alter • sla-monlh con-
vale9cenoa from • n9fllou1
brHkdown
Rivals • • review movies
By TOM JORY
A-Ni•,.,_•~
NEW YORK -Gene Siskel and
Roger Ebert are adversaries of the
most intense variety. As film critics
for competin g news pa pe r s in
Chicago, they toss their subjective
judgments at one another nearly
every day.
Siskel, movie c r itic fo r the
Tribune, and Ebert, who writes for
the Sun-Times. come together each
week for public TV 's "Sneak
Previews'' and the rivalry con·
linues.
"We've been in competition ever
since we started." Siskel says, "get-
ting reviews in the paper quickly,
Sunday articles. interviews, going to
see films.
"We were both in Dallas to see
'9·to·5' and interview the stars," he
recalls. "I got on a plane for New
York to see the first 'Heaven's Gate'
without him knowing about it."
"While he was on his way to New
York," Ebert interjects, "Mae West
died, and I wrote my piece on the
way back lo Chicago. I was two days
ahead of bim on that."
''I want to look better than he
does," Siskel says.
"Week after week." Ebert adds.
"he wants to."
The electric combination -Ebert
and Siske! don't always disagree on
the movies they see -has created
public TV. 's most-watched re~arty :•~1~:·~ :_ ... ~tnt 14tje1f'wUb
· an average ofi rbillion viewers each
week. Nearly 90 J)4!rcent of the 270
stations in the Public Broadculing
Service network carry the program.
"In lSO of those markets " Ebert
says. "we probably are the dominant
film crlUcs. Our idea Is to have for
each show movies that everyone can
see, and then maybe one that no
one's ever beard of.
"The other day, we bad 'Heaven's
Gate' and 'Night Hawks,' and also
did a piece on 'Napoleon,· which few
people have seen."
Ebert and Siskel are sensitive
about the relationship between what
they do on "Sneak Previews" and
what movie critics for TV staUona ol-
fer viewers.
''Most of them are televlalon peo.
pie talking about movlee,'' Sllkel
says. "We are movie crlllcs on
television."
"Whlle It Is true that turn criUcilln
Is very subjecUve," Ebert H)'1, "It la
possible to make errors of fact. I re-
member terun, one TV criUc, 'When
JOU said "The Valacbl Papen" wu
bitter th.ID "Tb• Godfather," tUl ••an error of fact.· " "A lot ot the TV critic•," SlakeJ
ad d1, "th• most tbtJ ever write
R oger Ebert (left) and Gene Sukel with Spot the Wonder Dog.
about a film is 12 lines or so, and
th_at 's just to introduce a couple of Tatum
chps.''
"Sneak Previews." produced by dr ·
WTTW, the PBS station in Chicago, 008 · ~tit::.=•tt:~~~!!~. !:&~~r . .....r0·.,1<il':e.~t. ... (. ·;...-., ·" ··
two critics themselves have to say."
When Francis Co ppola 's
.. Apocalypse Now" was released, for
ins tance, viewers of "Sneak
Previews" got a difference of opin-
ion.
The movle, Ebert said at the· time,
"consists of some of the most
beautiful, beart·breakln& tra&ic and
m emorable footage of war that 1
have ever seen." Sisk el responded:
"Let D)e tell you, Ro&, I don't tb.lnk
it's such a big achievement to make
a heart-rending film about Viet-
nam."
Both criUcs rank the 10 best mov-
ies of tbe year, and they 1eneraJly
come up with a half·doien or so com·
mon selections. "But there's nothln1
objective about it," Ebert says.
"Gene'• '10 best' Utt for lut year In·
eluded 'The Blua Brothers,' and he
WH about the only critic who lilted lt.
J know be enjoyed it."
Ebert and Sialtel won't te.U viewers
whether to see a film they have re·
viewed; or tsnore it. "The pbrumc lt very apec:tnc," Slake! aay1. "OUr •yea
or no' at the end of lhf abow lt, 'No, I
cannot recommend that you see Ulla
movie,' or, •vea, I can recommend
lt.' ..
HOLLYWOOD CAPl
-Tatum O'Neal bas
withdrawn from her
starring role In "Cap-
tured,•• now being
filmed in Dallu.
Recent script changes
Increased the number of
night scen es, and
because Ma. O'Neal is
not yet 18 the hours she
can work are legally
limited. The extra days
of s hooting necessary to
accommodate this
restrictJoo would result
lo a aubstantla.I Increase
In the film's budget and
would extend the pro-
duction very close to the
date of a threatened
direct.on' atrlke, aald a
spokesman fo r pro·
d u cer-dlrector Ted
Kotcbeff.
No replacement was
name-:t for Mlu O'Neal,
who won an Academy
Award for ''Paper
Moon."
KHJ IJ 8:00 -"The Swan." Grace
Kelly, Alec Guiness, Louis Jourdan and
Agnes Moore.head star in a movie about a
roy at marriage for money.
KCET 9 8:00 -"Kennedy Center
Tonight: A Salute to the Duke." Thirty
top jazz artists re minisce and honor
Duke Ellington.
ABC fl 9:00 -"California Suite."
Neal Simon comedy starring Alan Alda,
Bill Cosby. Michael Caine and ruchard
Pryor.
10:00 D QUINCY
An air dl ... ter Pfomptl
Quincy 10 1n,..ooa1• atan-
dard lllrline Ml•ty pr~
durM.(R)
••• NEW8 9THESU.ACHFOA Al..EXANOP THI! GMAT
"The Young Conqueror"
The GrMk dty-at11 .. we
atunned Into eubmlsslon
u Aleundet prepern '°'
war Nleholu Cl•y 11ar1
(Part 2)
«!) ANHL ADAMI:
PHOTOGAAPHl!I'
One of the grut .. t photo-
gr IP'*. of the 20th cer>-
tury talk• 1b0ut IU life,
WOfk Ind perspective on
photogrephy t0:t0 • NEW8 • tNOUEHOENT
NETWOAK Nl!W8
n:00.D8(J)9 Nl!W8 STAATAEJ<
A ec:ientlftc lewn whlCI\ hu
been 1n .... 11g111ng. dying
pl-la found deed fJ NEW\. YW£D BAME
Q) M•A•S•H
Klinger lallt vlc:11m to the
pecullat b9havl0t OI the
<I077th •• pereonnef
• eEHNYHILL
Benny tllt.. • IOolt .,
women'sllb fill DICK CAVETT
Guest: Stanley Elkln
~ THE CITY 18 OOA8
Seattle pelnt.,• Gertrude
PK1llc end Jecob Law-
renc:.e join ectOf JOhn GW·
bert f0t • dllClU•llon of the
city's elfect on their work,
philosophy and lllMtyles.
11:30 fJ CJ) MOVIE * • * "Murder By
OecrM" (111711) Chrleto-
pher Plummer, Jemea
MMOt'I. T'he trlll of a mur·
deru le1C11 legendary
detectl\19 Shetiock HOI,,_
to eome of the moat 1nnu-
enllal m9tnberl of Brlleln's
Parliament.
D TONIGHT
Hoel Johnny Ceraon
G.-11 Mflrtln MuM. Joe
Geteglola
8 111 UC NEWS
NIGHTUHE IJ Ln"I MAKI! A DEAL
• KENNETH HAGIH
• IAAETTA
Tony m1111 trecll down the
It Iller• ol a dOM friend and
P<Otacl hie widow
ID G CAPTIOHED ABC
NEW8
-MDIGHT ~
12:00 • MOVtE * * • "The Nanny·· (1965)
Bette Devit, Wlllllm Olx A
dlaturbed child end his
nanny r_,t each othar
tor their reeponalblllly ~
the oee1h of the boy's 111·
ter
D ®' LOVE IOAT
"The Brotherhood 01
Sea"; "Letter To B•by·
cakM" Demond Wllaon,
Jimmy Walker, "Daddy's
Pride" Heney McKeon.
Alex Cord (R)
D OUNIMOt<E
A pretty, bffnd glr1 lnlluenc·
•• Deputy Newley
O'Brien"s elforte IO arreat
lhOl'Mlhlef
JOHN DARLING
J'M REALL 'I' PL.&.SEO
TO 0E HE~E AT ~ANNEL ONE, JOHN !
i HE. MA~EMENT HE~E HAS 61VEN
ME AL.OT OF
FREEDOM .-.NO~ ALLO~S ME 10 BE
INNOVA'TIVE. AND
CREA'Tl'IE/
Jillll P'*lll llnd ow-i ... "*"-'-up .. , ••
084• fOf an underwol ICI
OtgMlinllOn k-f()( Ill
etrong..Mm tectlce
-~ 11'..IO D TOMOMOW
Ouee11 M-.n RM(lan
Revel. diminutive mlltlon-
!Wre r..i-..tate men Johtl
end Fredd Aloe: George
Steinbrenner. Ed
M<:Mlflon
• ONE STV .VOND
"The Deed Part Of The
HOUM" Ttww dole and •
v~t room which can't
be halted by g .. provide
the M1tlllg f0t I llllle glfl'I
llreng& •• ,,..lenoa
t:OO G NYCHIC
~THE
WOM.o 9EYOHO
"Paychlc Abffily And R4Mn-
cam1tlon" Holte Demien
Slmpaon and Slecy Hunt
011cu11 coun11lln11
through put Uvee wl1h
QUMI• 8111 Corredo and
P81jl H011ow1v
., MOV1E
* * 8 "Lilith" ( 111641 War·
ren Beatty, Jeen Sebero
An employee et 1 mental
lnllltullon felt• in IC>Ye with
one Of the Plllente
• INOEPEHDENT
NETWOAK HEWS
t;tO D MOVIE * * • "The Houee That
Wouldn't Die" ( 11170) Bar·
bare Stenwyck RIChlfd
Egan Three people
11temp1 lo rid an old hOUM
ol 1118Yll IQlrll•
1:30 II) MOVIE * * * "The ~•kid Edge"
( 11161) Gery Cooper,
Oeborltl Kerr A tong-
oetey.o letter cau-the
reopening ol a five-year-
old 1n<1rd., C1M 1:46 1 NEWS
I
1:M N1EW8
2:00 0 NEWS II MOVIE • * * "Oe8dllne U S A ..
( 1115') Humphrey Bogart.
Kim Hunter A big-city
-.paper edlt0< bent on
gel I Ing an exPoM locic1
h0tn1 with • powerlul
~ngtlnd chlel
2: 16 • EDfTOAIAl
no e MOVIE
•• '"' . Beecllhead" ( 11154)
Tony Curtis. Frank Love-
1oy While on • million
through e H1wlll1n )\Ingle
to dellVlf 111111 Information
to headqu1rter1. lwo
1:401 .... 1:00 ....
1:10 MOVll • * • ·~ "the See 0 1
OraH" (18"7) lperK8'
heoy, KAlthltlne ~
Fight• bet-f .. rnera
end rancflert to -the ~-tO'tt a temlfy 1!418 NIWI
aM 9 MOVIE
8 * * "Mut«Mt In The 8lu9
Room" j tllU I Grae•
Mc:Oonlld. Donald Cook
A defwmlned man trlee 10
I
unre"91 the myetery bef'llnd
the delth of hie wtle'a llrll
hlilband
•:aoe MOYIE * ~ ··Sectet Of The CM-
tlMI" ( 1113") Jedi La Aue.
Claire Dodd
T h11r•dat1'•
·Dat1li•e Mo 11le•
-!tORNIG-
11:00 llt • * "Wyoming Out·
law" ( 111311) John W1yne.
Ray Hutton The ThrM
Maaqulteere eapoae I
crooked pout~ whO hu
oeen Mltlng jobl to 1mpqv-
erllhed renchefs
11:30 0 * ••11 "Arena" (111531
Gig Young, J .. n Hegan
Sucx;eea almotl ruins the
mamege Of a •odeo COW·
DOV
-AFTERHOON-
1':00 CD • * * "Fite Is The
Hunter" ( 1116<1) Glenn
F«d, Nancy Kw11n Alter a
plane er..,_ Wllh 50 pae-
lerlOI'• aboatd an airMne
aaecullva 111emp11 to von-
do<:ate hi• lrlend. the pilot.
by almulellng lhe event to
determine the real cause
1:00 CD * * •,c, "Diary 01 A Mad
HOUMWlle" ( 11170) C11rr ..
Snodgrns. RK:h11rd Benja-
rn1n A New V«k hOU ...
wll• despondent over the
eupertlctahty of her tamlly
and eva<yday Ille llnelly
yields to having en alfelr
with • ..... u., wno turn• out
10 be. bor•
S:30 U • • • "love I• A Ball'
( 11163) Glenn F«O. Hope
Leng& An helr .. a Ind 1
duke respectlvety 1811 In
love with common..• loll·
Ing the pten1 ot an ardent
metChmaker
Watch the
California Surf
vs. the San Jose
Earthquakes
Friday, May 15, 8:00p.m.
s7so Ticke ts available at Ticketron and the Anaheim·Convention
Ce nter Box Office -icall 999-8900.
....., ........... ,,.._.
HOSTED
B'(
PAX
~ ...... ---
\
:·
: I
.. ..
llf w.
or
to
al
ti•
In
81
C(
th
fo
SI
S«
8 1
M
S\ n
ir
ti
fc
0 c
0
It
a
Si • b » a
0
TH£ BIG GEOllGE
f i\MIL ,,
ClllCt M
0 4
~
by V1rg1I Partch (VIP) PEA~l'TS
~ ..
™E 8ATIL£ OF
WATERLOO lUi\S WON
ON THE Pl.Al(IN6
FIELDS OF ETON!
J T t:MBLE"EEDS ~
r-n W SHOE
Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Wednttday. May 13, 1981
UJMAT'S TIV\T SOPP05EO
1?) MEAN ?
by Charles M Schult
i BOT W~EN 'lt>u STANO l AROUNO IN RI~ FIELD, . f ~OU ~VE lO SAV S0Mf Tltltl6 ·
~:-' =-i:-~ ,_,, ~ ... ..._ _____ _
FOR"TUNA"rel..Y
I HAVE::MY
MUSIC 10 CHE:f:R
M~LJP.
by Tom K Ryan
by Jeff MacNelly
"If they lived hoppil~ ever ofter, does that "Mfft my brother. I'm teaching him the business --p-~-~-~--';f-1'1_D_W__,,.~..,...---~-,
mean they're still olive?" from the bottom up." I.Ml£~ ~VE lO
~.\R'IADl'K E .. by Brad Anderson
~~B~
''OK. OK. take the chair!"
Jl'DGE PARKER
S" 11
MOON1 EMMA
~EARS A NOISE
DoWNSTAIRS.
DE,:\IS THE ~EN ACE Hank Ketchum
I I lll~llllllUltil
. >
~~\
-:)~ ~
'It's only RUBBER, Mr. Wiison! You don't think
I'd put a REAL spider in your soup, do ya?"
by Jim Davis
JGUE~I KNOW WHERE I FALL
IN i HE OfU7ER OF~INGS
by Ferd & Tom Johnson
LlNLll(f" You) MOON DoESN'T
KNoWiH6 M~,ANIN~ OF
, "THE W~D ~FE.AR'.
~IN M~WIU..?
GORDO
•'l'~K \' "l~KERBEA ~
ACIUAU...<..> I "THE BA~D PLANE
COULD 8E A 6000 ~RCE
OF RE.VENUE !
BRABBLE
60'1, 'iou'U C~lt'it~b
AltOVNO ~ L.Of O~ SOOl(S •~--. 'fe>VA-1, NoRMA>-1!
lil~u .. , 1'0WA1t0$1'HC ENO
~ fllE. 5~E~f&.ft, 1 AL.lllA'IS
MAl(E ~ ~1'£l1Al. EHOR.1"'
1'0 S1"UQ~ 1-\ARO ANO 8E. fJj UIW. MEVA .. O!
~\
~-11
11"'5 A F'OCKe!1""
Ve!RSION FO~
NUP l5"T" POC1"0FtS ••.
1-r' FA91"eNS
ON Wl1"H
A S UC-r'ION CU P
by Ernie B ushmtller
I I I I
by Gus Arriola
by Tom Bat1uk
by Kevin Fagan
iv*',,,. -· ~~~~ •• ,.~ ... --~-·:r~r".:-~ ••ii·•· • ~~:~ """' ~ ... ~ ~-·,. dNi-rm,,'ea1ori'~'"°""111--'-'
1 Chirp 50 Gembllng Tl*day'1 Pume $olv.d
6 Prank geme
10 T ablttl 51 Haw Ill en
14 Mltcue storm
15 USSR river 5:2 Kowtow
16 Boy'• nlctl· 55 - -
name missus
17 Vine 58 Wnl Point
11 Mary -; lroeh
Blbllcal eo Noted 11111an
women
:20 Inc., In
canad•
21 Otvff•
23 Took out
24 Brl111h -
2t 8ooarl
21 Ar9cl
30 l»ldl ll'llrnll
31Tnlllt
32 Concrtt•
epplictlOI"
2worcif ,. Aevllgl
31 °""" 380<1pe
3t Urwttl pNice
42 Stdlflet
44 Drenctl
41 TV pt09tltll •o.i--out of
name
61Awry
62 Bird
63 Mint naff
&4Wall
65 Magi
DOWN
1 OIWlge
2A.agal Pes* 25 Snow Item 43 P.I. YOlcano
3 Extltpeta :26 SuHry 45 Preeldlntlel
4 Eternity 27 USSR city nidlnamt
5 ,..ollowed 28 Want fat 4f P9ik•
6 Gett rid of 29 Wlngtllla 4 7 ant tit
7 C.O'a meld 30 SwtM rJkt 4t -IUegO: So ._...,_..,.._.,_..,.._
8 UN MIM 32 0..t long
I Ancient 33 •• Blb't 49 P.,egon to Loo. coat ~ t. I• laytr 51 Undntood
It Wiii .. tr" 36 Clr1oonllt 53 WoodWlnd
12 Ea1lng pllcl 37 Put>llca 54 Tumon
13 Ofllnt 40 A!Mnd 5e ~ ti~ 4 t COdt creetor 57 Slr'°9
22 Doc'• fdl, 42 Cftetuf)e 69 Or.-y .,..
------_,-------~-:------------
\
LISTEN~ -I SAID
'/OU COULD STA'{ 11'4
HERE IF YOO DION'f
iALKTO
ME~
BUTl,M~
lf\L.KING TO ~l)
r~ RSK1NG-
QLJEST10N51
Ves~el
wreckag
Iooated ·
r.tttl ~ALLEY (AP>
-The wreckage of the 13~-year-old steaQJboat
T.-. .... ,~e has been 10,,.tecr, mostly intact, in,s~e Marin Coun·
ty coVf. Jt·ran -.round
in March 1863.
Volunteers and park
s ervice people have
bten working since Oct.
1 to locate the hulk, said
Blll Whalen, superinten-
dent or the Golden Gate
National Recreation
Area.
.He said at a news con-
ference there were no
plans to .aalvage the
vessel, a4diag that some
400 ~41ts havf been taken-lo~study. '.
Whialen s.aicl ~cove
had lteen ~·!'amell" and
added tq the N!onal Recist.f.!-. of H oric
Places .. ~ said no
r eli.uilfug wowl be alto .
Th T~essee went agro~ a little beach
after ~the Golden
Gate in dense fog. The
cargo , i.ncluding 14
chests '-Id, w.s re· moved e beach'. His·
torlans port rescue
was prom t. Boats were
unable to ptlll the ship
off the b4!ach, and it
broke up.
The ship was launched
in 1848 on the Atlantic
C~ast for the New York a d Savannah Naviga-
ti n Co. The next year, it
brought gold-hunters to •
San Francisco for the
PTcific Mail Line .
Mail ruined
PEKING <AP > -A
CblneH tele1ram de-
livery man who felt bis
job wu degrading hid or
destroyed 3'8 tele1ram1 la December, lncludln1 a money orders worth
th• equivalent of tlf7 ,000, China's official
XJn bua news a1ency re··
,Orted. Xlnbua aald U Ll·hua,
aft 1 ... year-old employff
of tbe Sbaoranc Pott Pd TeJecrapb Office la'
Hunan pr ovince, baa
•••n turned over to ••tllorttlet, IJ)pattntlY f9Ddtnc protecutlon. 1
Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/WednHday. May 13, 1981
.
JHIRMACK MAKE-UP
p .. perfec•. pHl01lt, 'npH1ticlt a< pHoce pHolnl mo1coro.
llj>sh<k & moke·up. l"re¥ioualv sold in beouty .alon• only.
YOUI .'
CllOIQ ... .... ,
IWltlOl&l •W...M
3.65 ·4.50
PADS FOi
CAnAIN'S
CHAllS
NIYIA
M01S--m-ua111NG
CllAM
16-.lar ......... ,
311
ALMADEN
MOUNTAIN ...
A Jllt.ri..ttt..
snEL FRAME
CANVAS SEAT
DIREOOR CHAIR
DECORATED
,IRONSTONE
7-IN. BOWLS
BOUTIQUE
DRIP DRY
HANGERS
All DEPARTMENTS
JOIN IN FOR THIS
SAYINGS FESTIVAL
SPUNDOLA ACRYLIC
KNITIING YARN
SHCIAl IUY llG. ttt EACH RIG. 30t EACH 4-ply yarn. 3 'h ·oz. 101id1 and 3-or ombre1. Fully woah·
able yarn ia mothproof and 1hrlnkprool. Save now I -1-4 81 ! , ••. !lie
G laze finish hand pointed
bowl1. Many klt<hen u••
Chlor-:~,
I:&;
ALLERGY
fic petabs
IA!tll I\
111.••d SfldftJ
DUUCILL
AWLINE
um11ES
2 C or D Of 1·9 volt.
ISi
COLOIFUL
WOYIN
STUW MA1S
!I!
.
....... Al.UY
..... 1 .... .-1 ......-
•11'M ........ -, ........... .
I
MBn HOODED
LONG SLllVE
SWIAT SMllT
OIOlw of color.. ~XI.. .,;_.!
111
Smooth llni1hed rual-proof
hongert Choice of colcY1
ICY POINT
8000 TASl'lllO ... u ....
IS-112-. Whlleetodwta.t.
.. PllCI , ••
Sl.IUIS
fOI
DlCOUnD
llONSTONE
COFFIE MUGS
AHOfted potte rM.
PILLSIUIY
DUDNlll ......
'5· 112 •. wt.lie 1todl.1 ..... .. ...a .aac
SUPEI GLUE
INSTANT
ADHESIVE
SPALDI~
OYD-CAU
TUllSOI
A.P.F. I DIGIT
--~~ LCD POCllT
.Podl..-of • Mdtt . ..
Ull1'aLllll tH
CALCULATOI
fvll fUftCiM>n ........ 6= Spoldlnt 11 TM of OIHlltot COf'p.
Mn•--• ..,. a ............... . ..,....,
•
·: •.
When warm weather meals need a
lift, try these two unusual salads with
warm Olive Onion Bread.
Chinese Chicken Salad is a col·
orful, glamorous dish which is easy
to prepare.
The Moroccan Salad can stand
alone as a main dish or be an attrac·
live addition to a buffet or picnic.
Inclu.slon of ripe olives in these or
any salad adds unique texture and
color.
Use your creativity in presenting
the Chinese Chicken Salad whether
for your family or a speclaJ lunch.
Slivered green onions and toasted
sesame seeds sprinkled over the top
add crunch and colorful flavor .
Marinating the chicken In the spicy
sweet and sour dressing is a subtle
flavor booster.
The Moroccan Salad captures your
imagination with robust flavors from
the Middle East -from the zesty
fefa cheese to the mellow whole ripe
olives (even though they come from
California). Choose any size ripe
olives; they are available all year
long.
'J'he uuve u nion .Hread is so simple and savory with an herbed custard of
sour cream, onions and ripe olives
spooned over biscuit dough, then
baked. Especially good as a counter·
toint to salads, it can be a wonderfuJ
accompaniment to barbecued meats
or soups.
OUVE UNION BREAD
2 cups biscuit mix
2 tablespoons chopped parsley
~cup cold water
2 cups thinly sliced onions
2 tablespoons butter
Sall and pepper
"'2 cup sour cream
1 egg, beaten
1 teaspoon dill weed
~ cup pitted olives, sliced
WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1911
HOT OFF THE PRESS C2
USING HERBS C4
SLIM GOURMET C11
and wate.r; spread in greased 8 x 8
pan. Saute onions in butter until
golden; season . Co mbine sour
cream, egg, dill weed, onions and
olives. Spoon over bread.
Bake at 450 degrees, 20 minutes.
Cut into squares.
CHINESE CWCKEN SALA D
4 cups cooked chicken, cut in
strips
1 cup sliced celery
11-'J cups fresh or canned pineap·
pie chunks
l cup pitted ripe olives
1 small green or red pepper, thin·
ly sliced
Green onions, sliced for garnish
Sesame Seed Dressing:
1 cup each sugar and vinegar
2 tablespoons finely chopped
onion
i 1,.; teaspoon each dry mustard
and soy sauce
1 cup oil
1 tablespoon toas ted sesame
seeds
Mix together sugar, vinegar, onion,
dry mustard and soy sauce in
blender; add oil gradually. Stir in
sesame seeds ..
Marinate chicken strips In dressing
at least I hour. Arrange with celery,
pineapple, olives and pepper on let·
tuce lined plate. green onions ; serve
with dressing. Ma.kes 6 servings.
' . MOROCCAN SA.LAD
1 head Romaine lettuce, tom up
3 ounces sliced salami, cut in
strips
1 cup garbamo beans
l \l'z cup pitted ripe olives
1 avocado, sliced
1 small red onion. thinly sliced
1 cup feta or cream cheese, cut
in cubes
1 tomato, cut in wedges
•
Marinated Mushrooms over green beans
make (l slimming salad dressing. ClO
Mix together bi11cuit mix, parsley
Combine ingredients. Toss wllh
Italian dressing. Makes 4 to 6 serv·
ing~. JjLactc npe onves ennance two cotor/ut satacts amt an unusual bread.
87 JOEL C. DON °' .. ...., .......... We've all beard about. the baalc four food
1roups and their importance in our dally diet.
; Alt.boueh the federal 1overnmeot bu Mt up
·and widely publiclied nulrit.lonal guldeline1,
most Americans, according to a Harris poll. are
ettber not familiar with them or have mt.lb·
· terpreted the 1overnment'1 recommendatloo1
tor provldinl an adequate diet. ... The public baa every rt1bt to be confused or
mi1lnformed because government guidelines
• often are muddled by a 1eemin1 it.ream of
never-endlnt contradictlODJ from health care
apeclallltl, would-be nutrit.lonal expertl, 1llc;k
adverUllnt and newt media reportl, aceordJq
to a nutrlUonllt.
· "Tbe lDformatlon la not oa1J eoalllcUa1, lt ~ Oftn prNCbel to people about what DOt to eat,"
1a" SbarOD Lon1, a rest.st.red cn.tltJu aad
• IMaJtb ldencet protfam d.lrector for UM Dairy CouDd1 ot California. "Don't eat caady or your
. teetb wtU decay. Don't eat meat or your anen. will etot. Don't drink eon .. or JOW'
• c.111 will diricle abnormally. Don't eat potato
· elllPa or JOUt blood pr91ure wtll lnereue."
,
At a recent. Dalry Council preu conference
In Yosemite, Ma. Loni proposed a new system
to help people blend their current food pref·
erencea with nutritional concerm.
The system combines the U.S. Department
of AaricuJture <USDA) "Dally Food Gulde" and
the "Dietary Guidelines" ol the USDA and the
federal Department of Health and Social
Services. It allows you to Cet adequate nutrtentl
and control lntalte of fatl, 1u1an and nJt aa
well u supplement your diet ·wtth new nutri·
Uonai lnformaUon.
•'A penon works on the whole of hl1 fdod
choices, everything he eat.I, rather than on a
alntle food, a 1ln1I• l11u. or conffrD.'' 1be told
a 1roup ot California food editors and set.-e
and health wrtten. "That (the ayatem) tuea
people away from focualq only on fooda to
avoid.
"Thil lt Important beea ... foeullq oa a
1in1le food Jeopardises a bUaeed latUe ot
nutrlenta."
By eaUn1 tbroulh moderaUon, a penoa it
allowed to 1et an adequate diet, eal a HrtetJ ot
foocll and 1WI control IUbetanc• OD tbe eonetra
Utt 1uch foodt u hl1h In f.U, 1u1an and 1aJt,
she said.
'
Fint, a person aelectl from the four buic
food ~ps : mUk, meat, fruit.I and ve1etablu
and &rainl. Extru auch u fatl, aqan, alcohol
and navorin11 are excluded from the nutrient
base.
The food 1roup1 are outlined ln the USDA '•
"Dally Food Gulde" whicb deacrlbea the
Recommended Dietary Allowaneea for commoo
nutrient..-aucb 11 vitamlna and mlnerall.
Second, a penon loou at .ii the "extru" ln
hl1 diet and makea chan,. accord.Inc to b1I
'nurtltional concerns.
"The important thlnt to r.member here it
tb1t ll 1 decl1lon la made to deenue eouwnp-
Uon of one type ot four food .,....., fQpd, a
1ubatltute muat bt made from tbe ••m• 1roup.'' .. •. "'°"' aald.
Next you write down your deeillou aod
chan1e1 ln order to help carry out JOUJ' dietary
C!Ommltmentl.
"By Pl tbroulb tbeM .,_, illdiridull
,,tll iMNIH tbe VI~ ot dMllr food ebolca ud wU1 be abte to b U1 ...,,.doaal COB·
ceru tllat tbe1 bave," •be edded •
For example, ll a penoa tlUo1I potato
cblpe but it concerned about Nit aDd fat bl bi•
'
diet, he can Umit chip conaumptJon and lower
the amount.I of other fooda hip 1n fall and salt.
"Uae of this approach means that by COD·
c:entraUn1 on a person's total pattern of fQod
choices, all the kinds of food he normally eatl_,
instead of on 1in1le food, we 1et away from the
Idea ol 1ood food and bad food," ahe said. "We
back away from all the 'thould notl' of nutrition
and allow the lndlvldual to mue dec&.iOOI ac-
cording t.o the foodt be normally eat.I.
"No l.lnlle food 11 a vlUaln or a 1alnt.'' 1be
111erted. ·"It'• bow a peraon conaum• the food
that makea the difference."
Ma. Lona alto noted the 111tem, developed
for the Dairy Council, allows for cban1 .. du. to
conttnuln1 reeeareb and debate on n..vtUoeal
needJ. She emDttu1Hd the dietary PfOll'•m la
oot detllDed for ~nooa who require 1peclal
diets t.nder a phya&dan'• 1uperviaion.
The Dalry CouneU la 1'8pPOrltd by the
Calltornla dalr)t lnd\lltr'J IDd Mtl up a nrlety
of ed~at1ona1 procram1 to blip people make
decl1klnl on nutrition.
A cop7 _ot Lbe federal IOYel'IUlltDt't D.tri·
Uonal pldellnet m11 be obtaMd bJ wrttiq UM
Office ot Governmental and Publle Aftaln,
USDA, Wuhlqtoft, D.C. IDl90.
. ' .
' ;
.. =
ca OrtnQI Cout DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, May 13, 1981 FOOO
R e cipes for food processor
Cookbooks focus on ways to use the latest appliances
•'COMPLETE DES·
sert Coo kbook "
la 1 224-paae 1plr1J.
bound recipe book wtt.h
d o 1 e n s of m•o u t h •
watering recipea ran1-
ln1 from Manso Bread
Cookbook," with rt·
cipe1 by Joee Leopoldo
R omero, wa•
pu bll•hed by R1ndom
House, 201 E. SOth St ..
New York 10022 .
Romero, who 1rew up -------AIOUI
If one of your
Mother's Day fifta WH
a oew food proceasor,
you probably need a
good recipe book to 80
along wllh It.
"Cuisinart Clasaroom"
by Abby Mandel mi1ht
fill ~ bill. The spiral·
bound 277-pase book
publiebed by Cuisinart
Coo kina Club ,
Creenwtch, Conn., con·
talns bask a"'1e1Uona on ways to uae food pro·
cessors, menu augces·
lions and dozena of re-
cipes rantlnl from •P·
petizers to dessert.I and
breads.
HOT OFF THE PRESS
of Cant.on. China, now
llvln1 In MinneapoUa.
Ms . Chin la a highly re·
garded reatauranteur
and teacher of Can·
tonese, Siechwan and
Mandarin cooking. Uke
the book on Mexican
cooking, her book in·
eludes explanationa or
special seuoninas and
lnarediehts. The book
retails for $7.95.
1$199GREAT I e DINNER
Other new cookbook
and recipe booklet of·
ferings include:
"EVERYDAY AND
Gourmet Microwave
Cookbook" by home
economist Marlene Leis-
ing is in its second print·
Ing. The book is divided
Into 13 categories of food
including appetizers and
beverages: casseroles;
meat, ftsh and egg dis·
hes; vegetables and a
variety of sweets and
desserts. The book is
available by mail for
$7 . 95 postpaid from
Micro Magic Cooking
Co., Dept. N., 145 N. 46th
St., Lincoln, Neb. 68503.
"COOKING WITH
the Convection Oven,"
contains more than 280
recipes for everyday
and gourmet cooking. Jt
can be purchased for
$8.95 plus Sl.50 for
postage and handling
from M ou linex ,
Publication Arts, 5700
Green Circle Drive ,
Minnetonk a, Minn .
55343.
to Banana Cake lo
Plum Conserve. ll'a
available for $'7.95 from
Rutledge Books, The
Benjamin Co., 485
Madison Ave., Ne w
York 10022. Recipes ln
the book are from the C
and H Sugar Co.
EASY AND Thrtfty
Recipes for Two ls a
pamphlet prepared by
the Rice CouncU tb1t
comes in regular form.
large type or Braille.
For a free copy of the
regular edition, send a
stampe d , s elf ·
addressed, business-
size envelope to the
Rice Council. P.O. Box
22800, Houston, Texas
77027. An envelope isn't
required for the large
type or Braille editions.
QU.(KER B R AN
R ecipes is a free
booklet listing recipes
for breakfast dishes,
dinner entrees, bread·
ings, vegetables and
sa I ads for delicious
ways to add fiber lo the
diet. Jl is available
from Bran Recipes,
Dept. C, Box 853 ,
Young America, Minn.
55399.
'
"BETTY CROCK·
er 's M e xi c an
Chil cook-off
in CM May21
California's hottest of the hot will be put to
the ultimate l.4!st at the California State Chili
Championship May 21 al the Orange County
Fairgrounds in Costa Mesa.
Sponsored by the International Chili Socie-
ty. the cook·off will feature the-56 winners of
s tate regional competitions and 12 previous
slate chili champions. They'll for this year's ti·
lie and a spot in the World Championship Chili
Cook-orr.
Gates to the fairgrounds open at 4 p.m. with
the cook-off beginning at 5:30 p.m. Scheduled
entertainment includes a fireworks show, sky
diving exhibition and and a country-western
band.
Admission price is $10 per person, which in·
eludes an all·you-can-eal chili dinner.
Eggs ~ake a m e al
Sophisticated, but
simple, this asparagus-
. s piked lemony custard
soup tastes like it takes
all day lo prepare.
Thanks to The lncredi·
ble edlble e~g, it'e
nutritious, too.
LEMON CUSTARD
SOUP
1 quart ( 32 ounces)
chicken broth
1 pound fr esh
asparagus s pears, cut
into 1-lnch pieces or 1
package (10 ounces)
frozen cut asparagus
8 eggs
"4 cup lemon juice
Watercress, optional
In large saucepan
bring chicken broth and
asparagus to boil. Cov-
er. reduce heal and sim·
mer until asparagus Is
crisp-t ender, about 8
minutes. Beat together
eggs and lemon juice .
Blend small amount of
bot broth into egg-lemon
mixtutt.
Stir egg-lemon mix-
ture into remaining hot
broth. Cook over low
heat, stirring constant-
1 y , until mixtur e
thickens and just coals a
m etal spoon. Serve im·
mediately, if desired, or
cool quickly by setting
pan in bowl of ice or
cold water and stirring
for a few minutes.
Cover and refrigerate
several hours or over-
night. Serve thoroughly
chilled. Garnish with
watercress, if desired.
Makes l~ quarts or 4
main-dish or 8 first -
course servings.
In Mexico City and
Yucatan, was a pro·
fessor of Spanish al
Tufta University before
opening Casa Romero,
his Mexican restaurant,
in Boston. The book
costs $7 .95.
''BETTY
CROCKER'• Chinese
Cookbook," a lso was
published la.st month by
Random House. It in·
e ludes recipes by
Leeann Chin, a native
.........
1y,. ..... o-..
......... ,, '"
~, ..... ~ .. '""
QUALITY MEAT!
PERFEcr PIE Crust
is a seven-page booklet
by Barbara de Coater
in which she guides the
cook along the path to a
pie crust she says is
"yummy." The booklet,
at $2 per copy, ls
available in eourmel
cookware shops or can
be obtained from the
a uthor at 5732
Grandview Ave., Yorba
Linda 92686.
...... c .. ,. 8 I C i~
Good lor nine ptecH or 1u1cy, golden l>fown Kentucky
f'11ec1 Chicken. with lout 10111. 1 large cOle 111w, 1 large
mHhed pe>tatoea and 1 rTl4tdlum 01avy, Limit l*O olle11
per purc:hHe Coupon OOod only 101 combination while/
oark OfOell Cullomer p1y1 111 applicable UIH tax
Oller 8•PH8!1
May 24, 1961
C2C
Puces may vary at par
11crp111ng loca11on1 GOOd
only m Southern
C11tlorn1a wrie1e you see
Ameroca·s Flavo111e
Window Banner
fi•rn. fro•h 2· I la Cri>P Ho ... , y
~ ~ H <h
~.,._. $1 ' 9 •24-CI ~
•IJ.Q. 1~
i~ -·
Wllh ,..,..,.,.
Guaranteed
LOW PRICE
Protection
With Safeway
DOUBLE CASH
REBATE!
LIQUOR BUYS! FRESH PRODUCE!
Boneless Roast"::~ " 11aa t!--t·Gln or Vodka"'=.!..~ :,~164' Italian Squash °::::' • 45'
Boneless Steak .... s.;:~ • 12°• C-i Broccoli ~ 3~~ 1100 ~ScoresbyScotch .. ':,.,'.Z110" Fresh Cucumbers .::-.. -25'
Chuck Short Rlbs -:0.°""'"' • 1179 mi Lucerne Yogurts ~ 1109 C-i•Old Crow "'T-=:-:.z '9" Coachella Grapefruit ":l " 25' :
~~~! ;Jr ,,...O•~~-,.....,. . .--. ~ .~~~l1~J''t~n.C:m$ ...:;::... __ ,~ !_~~~~~=~~~~~ 7-BoneSteak "t.~ ~~211 -~hol;Whea~ •• ~,1:.:i9'·~ i£,Gallo.Rhl~e.:::t,~~~ii 'fr;i;.:n!t~es..; '~'5 .• l _,.
Mr. Fudge's home-baked
chocolate chip cook-keys.
Newport's finest. Great
v1rlety. Soooo de-llc-ious.
216\o\ Marine Ave.
Balboa laland. CA.
•
Center Cut Roast ~~ ,. '129 ~Spaghetti .. -'~ 49' ~olony .... -2.~. 1500 Red Radishes -;:~ 2_, 39' !
I
Fresh Sld11 Pork ,=-a=, • 1129 ~Glad Wrap ll"A79' Pothos Plant on Trellis 6;: 13° :
Turkey Drumsticks...,.:-• 69' ~Ralston Cereal T: ·~ 11°' •cream Corn ...:..... ·~ 39' Super Soll Potting Mix 't.: '1"
Fried Chicken ~':'.. 2:.'2" ms;. Oasis Drinking Water.l.:J121 •Green Beans ::=:;. ·~ 39' HEALTH & BEAUTY
Smoked Sausage I: • 12'' ~Ajax Detergent::::.:•1H ~ear Halves 't: 59' Right Guard ---'l:
Premium Ground Beef=. 11'' •star-Kist Tuna = •;i:-89' •romatoSaucer.:. 5\4! '100 VO 5 Hair Spray ,.,
""'
Safeway Corn Dogs .. 113' •Coffee (:::: 'I: '1" •cling Peaches'i:°'= 't: 49' Henna Shampoo ""
Skinless Franks
Sliced Salaml ._
Fresh Idaho Trout -
Breaded 9ea Allets .:t..
'J.:'15
' We've Gi ven LOW PRICES A New Name •••
:: •1n
.. '1"
• '2" __ ..,,_, ..... ..---...... ·--:-"-·---·--...
; IHI..;... Or;-.....,.,..._. • tH Mil. C.... ~. L,.,_.._. ................................ • ........ ........, .. Le, ...... ~ ............... ,.. .... • 144 17~0r .... W .... .,..,._
• '
,
f
~ ,.,. ,,..~ ............ ,
.green hel111
;IH•llf ,,...
leueamhen
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981 Ca
meal
I,... 111 s flrletltt '"'• ,..~ ,.,..n .. ,... ,,. .. ., "11'"' rlee ea leas "'· •t.os
I ""' ......... ., ftll, 11rthllf ..... ftf ''' ... ••n hllllfll ..... 11111
$2'8 ••· te111•11ra haHer
t6 II.
$2'' ••· hanana chi•• ,... •u9
...... ,. ... ,., .. ,. •1rktt ., ••••
$289,.. trail mix ! .. ,. •lllfl
.
: ,.,. ,,.. . ;
! spinach
....... 2s•..... chicken hreast 19 lllfH •IMfll 21 II .
$ 81•. mineral •ler ------$198 11114111 ~airy pre41efl ' • i : IH1llf ,,... ltalll•
t
I
1q11a1h .
: 1p11lal lllttNllfll1
J
~ ,., .. , ,,...
r orange juice
l
I I
j . ,
••. $129
$2t9
•'· & Y1
.. ., •••. $249
bakery
...... ,. ... ,.,.,,. •1rbt 1t9
7-graln hrea• !•Y• ••· '"" $
. lftl• ,. ... ,.,..,. .......... $169
i Meet rolls ... ,4
' . ' .
,
vitamins
. .. . . ........ • ...... $,14
. too 11•. ,... •6. ts
~ ....
........ ., ..... "I· •4.SI $409
, (
1•. fr11h 1r111M1 eofft1
$$00 tff .. , •so frffzer t•••
$1000 tff Hf ttoo frffzer t11k
fr11h 1~111114 1ra191 J1l11
11f1r1I hollf
•••pl111711114rlt4 ft1ffl & 11111
fish .. ,.. ,..
shrimp
frtlla •1•lfll red snapper
,,... 11••11•
eod
I l•• ..
scallops
fresh shark
flnt ., flat 111111 I
loe1I eorn
fro• the
Co11~1ll1 Valley
cleli ·
$598 Rtldtf ...... 1•· ha Iced ham '" · ·~·4' 1•·
$149 ,..,. 1111 i•. pepper heel "•· •4.t11•.
~1·98 .,..,. flllltf
if 1•. jlrllherg IWl11
$6 981•. _.., ehea• ,... •os ...... ..,..
$169 ... potato sala•
Hf -Int• .....
$2'····
$fl•, •.
$94'···
$3fS,.
Produce
fresh from
daily ·
................ 6IM404
t ................. ..
-....... 11111., ,... ....,.
,
I
i
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Wtdnt1day, May 13, 1981 FOOD
Sage· is th·e sausage herb 01 8)' MITZIE KELL ER
• Would you enjoy tome
delicious sausages? But ' are you afraid to eat any
because some contain
questionable add ill ves?
Why not prepa re your
own sausa ges witho ut
additives?
ll ls n ·~ r eal l y as
formidable a tas k as one
might suppose.
Sausages need not be
m aaber. T ie lightl y :
refrigerate.
When wa nted for use,
turn back bag; cut off
USING HERBS
meat in 1h inch slices.
Brown, simmer in but-
te r with cored, sliced ap-
ples
F RI CATE LLI F O R
TW0-1850
<SALTLESS PATTIES>
1/3 pound leanpork,
finely minced
• ~ cup bread crumbs
1 2 onion, minced
1 pound lean beef
1 pound fat salt pork
~ pound beef s uet
s tabl es p oo n s
powdered sage
1 tablespoon parsley
<dr y)
l ta blespoon savory
1 t a bl-espoon mar -
jor am
1 tabl.-spoon thyme
1 teaspoon cayenne
pepper
1 t easpoon black
pepper
1 2 teaspoon
nutmeg
12 teaspoon
cloves
gr ated
gr ated
~ encased in intestines or
· ani m a ls . as pack ing
~.:;hou ses ma y e ncase :r them. They c an b e
~.: enclosed in bags, made r e a sily or m u s lin , as
., housew ives p re pa r e d
;\ them during the 1800s.
'' Patties need not be en·
·• cased
· • Since sausages should
: not be prepared during
12 larg e
mm ced
Optional
1 2 teaspoon crushed
sage for mild OR 1 teas-
poon sage and 114 teas·
poon thyme for spicy r
onion.
I clove
• • s ummertime, now Is the
·-· lime to make some for
,. rreeilile. Here are four
old-fashioned recipes ~ All require sage, the
,..: sausage herb.
MILD SAUSAGE
• (ONE POUND) -1860 ~.. 1/3 pound fa t o f :-t sweet fresh pork ground
...: with
• ": 2/3 pound lean pork . ..1 1 tablespoon ( ba lan·
... : ced·m ine.al > sail
L:. 2 teaspoons sage,
i sifted ~· I.Ai t easpoon white
, , pepper
Use whole sage . dry,
r • pound, sift it Mi x ingre-
1'' dients thoroughly
Casing r_.. For 1 pound of meat
.. • m a ke coU.on bags of
"-4 w ashe d , un b l eac hed ~ ~ muslin, 1 yard long, 4 ID·
•: ch es wide t finis hed>
• Dip bags 10 strong s ail r;.. water : dr y well . fi ll
Cr owd meat into bag
with a wooden potato ~ ,. . ... . , . .,
l small egg
1
J uice or 12 la rge
lemon
Paper-thin s lices or
lemon
l tablespoon oil
1 pat butter
Ground black pep·
per
Moisten bread crumbs
with water ; stir through
to soft en bread. Mince
pork and onion in a pro-
cessor : blend with sage,
thyme, crumbs, egg .
Form into six 2-inch pat-
ties Over high fl ame,
heat oil; sear patties to
brown on both sides;
cover ; s im m e r 45
minutes to well-done .
Add butter: sprinkle
lemon juice over : grind
black pepper on top Cut
a s lit into each sli ce lemon. twist. serve one
s li ce atop each patty
WHITE HOUSE
BOWGNA -1887
1 pound lean pork I
ground with
l pound lean veal I
t1 Tenderloin is specia l :•:
:...· T h e Nation al Live Y: Stock and Mc<1t Board
~· points out that the pork
.L..: le nJ e rl o 1n is an
L, exre llent choice for a
~. special meal. ..
6 thin onion s lices
~~cup water
j'
S pr inkle sal t o n
tenderloin s lices ; dip in
egg a nd dre d ge in
cracker crumbs. Brown
s lowly in fat on both
SUNNY PORK s i d e s i n l a r g e
~~ T ENDERLOIN STACKS fryi n g · pan . Pare
~ 6 po rk tenderloin ora n ges ; cul e a c h
"-s lices, fl attened c r o s s w i s e i n to 3 r, ... •-,teaspoon salt inch-thick s lices. Place
l egg, beaten a n orange s lice a nd I
garlic, minced
Salt to taste
Blend weU. Stuff into
casings for 4 ~ pounds
m eat T ie secure l y
Prick in severa l places
t o a llow s t ea m to
escape. Put into hot, not
boiling. wa t e r . H e at
g r a dually to boiling.
Cook slowly for 1 hour.
Dry in the sun on clean
sweet straw or bay (or
towels>. Rub casing with
oil or melted butte r. To
keep more than 1 week.
rub ginger or pepper
ove r cas in g . R e -
frigerate.
This is eaten w ith
lemon j uice. without
further cooking. It may
be used in sandwiches.
WIDTE HOUSE 'kiad • •
COUNTRY SAUSAGE l""'•ons .
3 J>Oun::S~ean fresh s~,...:: at yOur .J.z•nner table. B pork ground with '"' ' ui 3 pounds Chine fat
11.\ tablespoons salt MEMORIAL DAY • Baked 30 hourel • Honey 'n spice Glaze
1 tablespoon black WEEKEND • Splral allced foreaay urvlng ~ • Whole or hall hams pepp2er heaping tables-la May 23-25 •Nationwide •hipping •~Ice 0 • Full service Delicatessen O poons pounded Sage. Great for company •OldWorfli ChffuShop &
sift ed ~ or parties. ·u··· •S.ndwlche•to go 1 ta blespoon sum -~Partffgy trays qs mer savory Order your ham
<Chine fat is t ha t ad· 0 now! 0
joining the backbone .) ~ 8 Mi x thoro u g hly with J700LCOASTHWl~C-.. M•'"°'*'7J-toto
your bands. P ack casing J4HI RAYMOND WAY .. IL TOIO ID .. a TOIO, P'~l IJ7·ll2J
for 6 pounds meat: d ip "°'' 11.ACH IUD ... G•IMl.D, HUHTINGTOW HACH, P'HONI 14Ml71 0
in melted lard. hang to Q Also Anaheim, Orange, Ranc ho Mirage, La Habra, San Diego, Lakewood D
dry in cool, dry, da rk n Westlake Village, North Hollywood, Woodland Hills, Santa Monica, Pasadena n
place. Freeze. -~c::>e:Jc::Jc:x:::JCJc::J OC>CJCJOc:x:x::x::x::Joc::>c:::>ClCJCJCJLJ
TRIM
0
3• cup fint• cr<1cker onion slice on each piece
It. crum bs or m eat. Add w a t e r , l'-3 t a b I (.' s p o .., n s cover tightly and cook r_ cooking fat s lowly 20 m i nutes or
2ora~n!gc~~:.., ________ ~u~n~t~il~d~o~n:e.~6~s~e~rv~in~e~s~·---------------------------------:--:---~~----~--==~--"
MOW ••• ~ Hu'4.ti~torv S&o.ckl ~o fOut\tO.\W\/ Vo.\\~ ...
#!1/t£/JIL ftODUCE!
OP\:N \ • b • C\..OSE6M~t>~l!\~';'r'~-~-----rw
--1~~the
l~
I
E~
~(Ji
"' 1 G .) 1!.. i.. ,00 New crop , !t, ~, . L.Ef1 UCE .... ~· -GAt«~LOUPE .. iJffl -.
~&et NAVEL 1~ e PrKtl< JAJ . ORANGES ...... v,b. ~PEFl2UIT.... Vea,.
JAl~ · ·· C ~r:. •·19 StPE of 11414 ~~i:; Mee~ ....... ..s ee.eF .... .a l:i.
..
Lemonade Flavor Drink Mix
or low Calorie Lemon Tree:
ClEAN-UP WITH
THESE SAV/NfJS
CHEER I
DETERGENT
OIMT 49-01 ................ ~1 84
ICIMO SIZE 14-0Z .......... ~ 3' 7
FMIL1171·01 .............. ~ 619
•MMU AT Ml STAHi llOS. MMlnt
PllelS Iffier. aw M -20, 1"1
-------
1FOOO Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Wednetday, May 13, 1981 Cl
Alsatian chef brings British custom to U.S.
By ,TOMHOGE "It was s imoler and hotels s erving buns, crum~wt!>, hi~<·ults
..... .,...,.....,...,.. there," he sa1d, "Just a is par a g us a nd and cake
1'he venerable Engl!sh tea and those pastries watercress sandwiches, Today lt!& in England
custom of afternoon tea ror which Strasbourg is pa te de Coie gras and is much simplt•r, usually
is being popularized in famous. Here we serve buttered toast. This was limited to a bi!H·u1l und a
this country by a young real English afternoon followed by trays of scone or two. But Henry
chef who is not British tea. with s ands iches. ec lairs. tart lets and prefers the old way.
but Alsatian. scones and pastry." other ~weeUi. .. We began ser ving af--.. I think th<.1 l if you're
t ernoon tea four months In some English coun· going to serve tea you
ago,'' said Jean-Pierre BEFORE World War try manor houses of that should do 1t right. the
Henry, 30-year-old ex-II, teatime in England day, tea was actually an way the English used
e c ut iv e c h e f 0 f w~s an ela~rate ritual early dinner complete t o,·' He n ry said · · 1
.C h i ca g 0 • s white ha II _w_1_th_e_xc_l_us_1_v_e_t_e_a_s_h_o..:..p_s _w_i_t_h_b_a_co_n_a_n_d_e_g:..;g:...s_. _m_a kc tiny s andwiches
r1tled with cucumber ,
cress, t•g gs, s moke d
salmon and tomato.
THIS IS followed by
scones served with thick
Devonshire-type cream
and s trawberry pre-
serves. And, finally, we
serve French pastry."
Henry makes his own
scones, a Scottish inven·
lion. Herc 's lhe recipe:
2 ounces butter. half
a slick
"'~cup s ugar
L teaspoon salt
3 cups s ifted flour
1·2 cake and ·~ bread
111', teaspoons bak-
ing powder
1rJ cup black raisins
2 whole eggs, beaten
112 cup milk
Mix together butter
and s ugar in mixing
bowl till s mooth. Add
s alt , flo ur , baking
po wder and raisins .
Keep mixing and slowly
add beaten eggs and
milk. Continue mixing
for two minutes .
Remove from bowl onto
table top. Let dough
rest for 30 minutes. Roll
out dough to half-inch
thickness and cut out
2 1'2 ·in c h -diameter
cir cles. Place dough
circles on a buttered and
floured baking pan.
Bake scones in preheat·
ed 375-degree oven for 20
minutes. Makes 12 ·16
scones.
For the best in gourmet
cooking, order your copy o/
"IOI Recipes" from Tom
Hoge's Gourmet Corner.
Send 12 to Gourmet Corner,
50 Rocke/ettn Plaza. New
York, N. Y. 10020 .
·Hotel. "It was actually I
,the idea of the hotel's
'-English-born manager ,
LUE CHIP STAMPS *LOW-LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP STAMPS* LOW·LOW PRICES PLUS BLUE CHIP ST AMPS *LOW -L O W PRICES PL US BLUE CHIP STAMP ~*
Michael Littler . We had
some doubts at Cirst, but
it i s proving ver y
'popular."
Henry learned to pre·
pare afternoon tea not in
England but in
,Strasbourg, where he
.studied lo become a chef.
Irvine • woman 1s
• a winner
: An Irvine r esident ,
;Prim Le wis, has won
;one of two grand prizes
in a county-wide recipe
icompelition sponsored I
!by Weight Watchers In·
!ternational.
: Ms. Lewis' winning re-I
:c ip.e was for Spring
1
Ch i c ken S alad . He r
:prize is a trip to the
•Weight Watchers Spa in 1
! Santa Rosa. a resort. I
· Here is her recipe.
·SP RING CH I C K EN
' SALAD
16 ounces cooked.
diced chicken
1 me d ium
c ucumber , diced
1 cup pinea pple
chunks
1 tablespoon freshly
chopped parsley ....
114 teaspoon white
pepper
·~ teas poon instant
herb seasoning
4 tablespoons re·
duced ca lorie m ayon·
naise
4 lettuce leaves
8ripeolives
Combine first 7 ingre·
~di en ts. Place mixture on I •
lettuce leaves. Garnish
with olives. Di vide even-I
"ly. Makes 4 servings for ~midda y or eve ning I
,meal.
~arbecue
!pork plain
~·or fancy
' Pork back ribs can be
broiled indoors as well
as out, and can be plain
·or fancy, depending up·
on ttow you glaze them,
points out the National
Live Stock and Meat
Board.
They are delicious
rou AlWAYS SAVE/
STAIER BROS SLICED
LUNCH
MEATS
25-0Z
39cEAtH
1urn-1 PRICES EFFEC
___ ,I ___ .,,
1-Rlll MYS I '"~' : : ' • .. : ..... • ' '• I
~,, &"•"tit t I • I I I MAY If.If), •Ii<! .. 1 Iii" ... ·'•! '(
tt\ .,, •• ,,,Ii,, '• j ,,,,
'.ft'-ALL VEGETABLE SHORTENING
w CRISCO ....... . .48·0Z •21•
I clili1iKWliiiANS .. 15·0Z 69c
HILLS BROS. BEVERAGE-ALMOND MOCHA,
... BAVARIAN MINT OR •1 •• "" CAFE MOCHA . .. . . a-oz. !· DISH LIQUID •2 3S PALMOLIVE ._ ......... 48-0Z
BEEF BLADE CUI
L8 97c CHUCK ROAST
BEEF CHUCM ROASI
s1•• ROUND BONI LB
BEEF CHUC~
l8 s1 59 7 .. 0.ROAST
BHF ROUNO BONELESS
s2•• TIP ROAST L8
BEH CHUC" 80 NElESS • 1 •• SHOULDIR •OAST ,a
SI AIER &ROS SLtCED t OZ
EA •• C LUNCHMIATS
ltll LE JUAN 10 A OZ
(A99c CORN DOGS
sw1ns BROWN&. SERVE e oz • 11 • SA USA GI ~~G~~:~ MAPg
t10RMEl COUNTRY 8AAN0
,9 s1•9 PORK LINKS
I A Bl E BRANO 16 Ol
E.A 99c SLICID 8ACON
PINEAPPLE DOLE CHUN><~ c RUSHfO (.,P
~l1• FO I
APPLE JUICE .~H~;:,.. ,,R t
GRAPE JUICE liElCHS I
PINEAPPLE JUICE D ll ~t
KRAFT SPREAD $AN0WIC, ..
I HI C
FRUIT DRINKS e VAR
OLIVE OIL POMPHN I
BAI• M
BUlo< $I 39lt SLICID
8ACON
tiAf4 ¥ $12•1 8ULK
WllNIRS
BEEF LAROE ENO
Rl8STIAK
8EEf BONELESS
ROUNDSTIAK
BEEF ROUND 80N°ElESS
TIPSTIAK
BEEF
CU81STIAK
FRESH NOT TO EXCEED 22» FAT
GROUND811f
X•Ol 69C
bHll $1.49
•OM $1.44
Ab Ul 99c
LB
$, ••
l 8 $179
l8 •2••
l 8 •2s•
l 8 •1•9
""'• ""•• lU "•-• 111t 1'1•"4 tvlfic..-~t •ICIC:• OI tO~flfj•.O MtltCf'l•"O••• If o..t• tv .. uno+t•~• bit)~ oo,11 t.O'\l•o•
•• •1itn 0.1 ol •n •11""''''.0 ~·•' • RAIN CM(C... ••II 0.. ,.._., ~-.. "" '°"" tv Ow, tf\t; 1••"" •' 1"'9 .0f9" l!...O Pllt-• •t ~ •• 11 "'-" .. "'• ., •••• b .. Of ••tf'I•" JO,, • .,,
we mm
Cflli
HIGO STAWS
AVAILABlf IN STORCS WIT" SERVICE OEL• 0Nl Y
ALO POJA!O
,,a 39c SALAD
ALEX CARROi RAISIN
.le 49c SALAD
OH TA VALL£Y AMERICAN
l899c CHllSI
BAR M SLICED 10 OROEll
•21• ROAST811f L8
FRESH CUT
L8$1 99 JACKCHllSI
FRESH WESTERN a.oz .,
EA• 1 39 OYSTl•S
FRESH PAClflC REO
•1•9 SNA.-PIR l 8
FRESH FROZEN
•1•9 TU•aOTPtLLn LB
FRESH FROZEN 12.oz CLE.ARSPRING
$179 T•OUT u
FRU H FROZEN CANADIAN
l B' 1
99 CODPILLIT
when simply brushed
(;with bottled barbecue ~sauce near the end of
• the broiling. Or for more
•adventuresome dining, j try Cumberland Back
f
Ribs .
The meaty ribs are
f flavored with a bright
1 sunny glaze made with
PILLSBURY ! WHEAT NUTS ....
18·0Z 65C.
.7·0Z $I 3 5
30·CT.•2•s
..30·CT $1 79
.. 30-CT •24 •
BEEF STEW ~~~~~N" t 1• oz sl.49
ARMOUR TREET W NCHEONMEAI. •201 Sl.35
CHOW MEIN NOODLES '"IN•eo• l eoz 55c
{ port wine. currant jelly
I and lemon and orange
juices. For ribs broiled
to perfection, careful at-
. tention should be given I to broiling time. lem-
t
perature and distance
from heat.
back ribs
l teaspoon salt
! MiNl-PADS ...
I MAXI-PADS
PILLSBURY
6NARIETIES FIGURINES 170H)Z• 159
LA PINA f FLOUR
IOLB• 1 ••
BOWL CLe~N£R OIVoi'IULES
I VANISH
-aoz* I 2 7 ! cu:~:R~~:dsB:~r:
LIME.ISCA~E 23 cup port wine REMOVER NEW fREEDOM
'h cup currant jelly .LIME AWAY MAXI PADS
f 11,. cup lemon juice ,-~z• 11 a ! • 11 a ~ !!UP orange juice """ t2cr A . ~~1 ':.;~Ji'!f""''J• [llllG!1.~,f-~·1f~·~l •$.'.~_. P!'":§:~~-7,~....;·'!~~~~~:.~~=.~~~~L~ -A'...::!~ .1...::<J ~~~~~~,,~~~..,,.(.;'.t'
4 teas poons cor-
\ ns tarch
2 teaspoons salt
I/" teas poon ginger v, teas poon dry
mustard
Place ribs on rack in
broiler pan so surface of
• meat is 5 or more inches
• from heal. Broil at a
· moderate temperature
45 minutes to l hour.
• turning occasionally.
Season ribs with 1 leas·
• poon sail. Combine
wine. jelly, lemon juice,
orange juice and hot
sauce.
Combine cornstarch. 2
teaspoons sail, ginger
and dry mustard In
saucepan. Gradually
add cornbined Uqulds.
Bring mixture to boll,
sUrrlnR constantly; re·
duce heat and cook slow;
ly 2 minutes.
Brush ribs with 1laie
and continue brolllng1 bl"Dlbina with 11a_H ana
tumlnJ ooCNlonaUy. 15
minutes or unUI done. 6
td81ervl~p.
BEER g WINE
SPECIALS I
AVAILABLE IN ALL STORES EXCEP'T LOMA LINDA
PllST e1Sm&T:sA ..................... ., ............. n •101 11.89
CARLO 1oss1 WINES ................................. ,,. •1.aa
CRlllRI Wtld9 ........................................... ,t h 11.99
CILIERT GIN .................. • ......................... , l ••.BB
IElllllMl 7 ~I~~~~ ' .................. •l 18.98
Pllll8 lllllRTI k.~~~ ....................... ,l ••~71
IEEFEITER Ill ..................................... ,, 19.18
~: SHEEPHERDERS
~ BREAD VAN OE ••MPS
RICE UNCLE BENS • COWERTED ii(
LA PINA FLOUR !
GRAPE SPREAD ~NCH~ I
LITE SPREAD m~cw~EPf'• •
DRIVE lAU•l[IRV DCTEl'lGE'lf ·I
PINE SOL g~i1~l~WH ,,
I : CANADA DRY • ClUB soo~ VOO•. MIXERS N«t,O"L~INS OR CilNOERALE
•&OZ $2.26
]~LB 54.65
1soz 51.14
tMOZ $1.39
•W Ol $1.60
•OOZ s2.55
TO~IC WATER ~~;t~;~~N()ll f ai,ooz Sl.97
ORANGE JUICE MINUTEMAIO t 6"0l $1.77
DRESSING Sl4lfR BROS BLUE CHfESE IOOl $1.29
1&0t $1.09
~·oi 51.28
1•01 '1.19
I nOt $1.19
1
oeot $4.79
PIZZI MIBIC cf.:~~~~=~~·0~'
IPIBHfTTI DIHEi ,,,.~ VlAl
FflOlEN FOODS
YAM OE KAMPS ENCHILADAS c~.!~Jl~Pc:;f ~~EA:~:~~" I
TDTlllOS PIID CL•SS•Cl0 ... 90 •
BE£F ENCHILADAS v•'IO! ••VP<i I
LENDERS BAGELS P1•1NO•UN10t<
BRIGKT & EARLY UkANUlCONC[Nl•A'L
OIAllGE JUICE MINUfl MAIO
WE RESERVE
THE lllGHT fO
Ll~lf OR REFUSf
SALUTO
COMMlflCIAI.
00\.UIOR
WHOl.£SALlRI
•
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Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, May 13, 1981 FOOD
By MARTIN SLOANE
C an fr iend s put
similar refund requests
in the same envelopes to
save postage?
This is one of the ques·
lions that I rece ntly
asked represent.atives of
several or the largest re·
fund-fulfillment houses.
They r eplied that the
co mpanie s who make
r e fund offer s are in·
cre a singly ins tructing
them lo reject requests
from groups.
What as a ··group" re·
quest»
··Two or more refund
requests In the same en
velope could be con·
sidered as coming rrotn
a grou p ," sa id a
fulfillme n t-house ex ·
ecutive. He ad vis~ed tha t
re funders play it s afe
and use sepa rat e en·
velopes.
Re funders often as k
about offers tha t do not
state any limitations on
duplicate requests
such as one per name,
family or address 1n
lhe fine pnnl of their re
fund forms Can refun
de rs send for t hese of
fers morr than once"
'"Y e s," s ay t ht•
fulf i l l m e nt -h o u s e
repr ese ntatives If no
limits are µra nted on the
refund form. you should
be able to send for the
offer several times.
Wh al if a request is re·
jected as a duplic ate
be c a use the re fund er
lives in thl' same house
with her mother-in-law.
who <1lready sent fo r the
offer ''
Sut•h problems have
become f~urly common
They can a ls o occur
when several refunders
live in one a pa rtment
building I
The fulfillment houses
have procedures to ha n
di e thes e p roble m s
Refunders should write
to them ex plaining the
situation.
Here is a letter with
some good advice on re
questing refunds .
0 E A R
SU PERM A RKET I
SHOPPER I work for
a r e fund -fulfillm e nt
company .f thought that
your readers might be
interested an some ad
vice from one of the peo-
ple who open the en·
velopes.
Don't put your na me
and address on a lar ge
s heet of paper
An autom atic s litting
machine opens all the
envelopes. When a large
s heet of folded paper
fills the envelope, the
machine often slits the
paper at exactly the s pot
where the name and ad·
dress a re written.
Use a 3-by 5·inch card,
instead. Be sure to print
your name or use an ad
dress label
Don·t tape or staple
your proofs to the refund
Sharing won't work
form. Th1s often causes
the form lo be tom when
we rE>move the proofs.
If you want to be sure
thul your proofs remain
together, tape or staple
them to a separate piece
of paper. Put your name
a nd add ress on that
paper, too
If you are sending for
different refunds from
the same company, send
the m in separate en-
velopes. each addressed
to the correct post-office
box.
Putting two requests
10 the same envelope
may add weeks to the
lime it take8 to process
them . And there Is
always the possibility
that the request could be
misplaced while being
transferred to the prop·
er post-office box. °"IC you have a com-
p la 1 n t , put it on a
separate piece of paper
We will forward it to the
company.
I hope that these tips
come In handy.
Laura from
Minneapolis
Next week 1 will tt>ll
you who decid ·11 when a
refund request Hhould bt'
rejected and answer 11
question frorn • reader
who wants to start h1·r
own coupo n c lt~ar
inghouse.
REFUND OF THE DAV
Write to the following
address to obtain the
form requJn:\1 IJy this of
fer · Gillette Good Nt•w)(
Half Price Refund, P.O
Bo x 4023, Monticello.
Minn. 55362 Send for
this form by Sept 1,
1981.
-------------------------------------·
Courtesy a Value •• .that's Ralphs
' I 'f
\ '
... ~
...
Double Coupon
p, .. 1 fu·H m., Cl)uCJon 111ong wilt" an, one M anul•Ch.1rtt•
~r ,.,, t• 1 1oon i)nd QPt dOubl@ 1ri~ iav1ngs wnen you
t.iY' r d\ta •t ,. •t m Not to •nc•uoe retailer lree or
il~ tl'> uu1c•,cn~ C.C11Joons 0' t!•Ceeo tne velue ot the '~"'' f ,ctvde:' 1guor tooaicco d'\d flu10 mi11t proaucl1
Limit One Item Per Manutaelurere' Coupon
and Limit 3 Double Coupon• Per Cuatomer
Coupon Ett.etlwe May 14 thru May 20, 1111
Limit One Item Per Menufeeturere' Coupon
and Limit 3 Double Coupon• Per Cuttomer
Coupon Ett.etlwe May 14 thru May 20, 1111
~-Double Coupon
Pttt\t•l•l If ' (.t)•.1PU'' d ., ~·It• tnv intt Manuf&(.lu'9f5
cf'!"'' 1,11 t ouoon J !J ~ttl :iouu e tnp ~d• "0~ ..,nt'n yQu l>•'"' • t'" •hp H!"' "'''' 1, inc•ude tpt11 P' hee 01 tl''llt"'V r"'cna5c ,,t, 1n> 0' t1'•C-l't'\J 1"1fl #i\lu,. OI t"f' If•,,., F ,t.ivoet •O•HJ' tnnd1 co and flv o ""''~ p10CJucts
Limit One Item Per Menufeeturera' Coupon
end Limit 3 Double Coupon• Per Cuetomer
Coupon Ett.ctlwe May 14 thru Mey 20, 1111
Foster Farms or Zacky Farms
Whole
Fo1ter Farms or Zacky Farm•
Consists of Breasts, Drums,
Thighs & Wings
Foster Farms or Zacky Farms
Whole Fryer Legs
Fresh
'
California
:fryers
1i
":.;;:·~ .-c-
Western
Iceberg
Lettuce
lteac~ •
Ralphs-Meat or
Beef
Wieners
•11b.
-pkg .•.
Fresh Best Thighs or
Drumsticks of Fryer
California Grown
per
lb. •
California Grown
per
lb. •
Foster Farms or Zacky Farms-California Grown 1 o 9
Consists of Breast•, Drum• & Thighs
Combo Pack ~:~
Fruit Punch, Grape, Orange, Strawberry gal.
btt. Ralphs Fruit Drinks
Bush's Beat
Baked Beans 16 oz.
can
PLAIN WRAP. -9 Inch pkg. Paper Plates of 100
.79
.48
.99 I
I
I Grape tips I
Ralpha-Sllced Food
America
Cheese
Ralpha-8 Pack Calamity Cupa or pkg. .99 Funny Fingers I
I I
'
Fresh imported t able
grapes come to North
Am e ric an m a rk e t s I
during winter months to
bridge the gap when our •
own domestic grapes
a r e not availab l e
They' re excellent ea ten
out·of·hand as a snack.
For dessert. lop chilled
a nd ha lvrd impor ted
seedless green gr apes
with vanilla ace cream
Dri zzle wi t h mel ba
s au c t" o r b o ttl e d
..,-.-.... NO~~~v.~,,. .. . ~>~1:111~~-~J~-·~-4'~ ~ ... .
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The seeds from but·
t e rnut s quash make
great afternoon snacks
when toasted and salted
Store thern in s mall
plastic bags for spur·of·
the·mornenth munching. \ •••
When mastilnc
potatoes use hot mllk in·
s tead of cold for the
creamiest texture.
••• When cooking a pot
roast, lay whole carrols
across the top of the
meat. They'll become
tender &nd permeated
with the flavor ol the
meat.
• • • 1' ... resh coconut makes
8 terrific snack or hors
d'oeuvre. Thinly slice
the meat and spread it
In a slngl layer on a
baklnl ah t. Sall highly
and toast In a 275°F oven
unUl browned. Cool,
lbtti store ln an elr-Ught
conl1tner.
•aoz.
., k .•
•
Ralphs
.charcoal
Briquats
.. 101b. W bag
Prlc" effective Mar 14 thru May 20, 1111
of 8
Ralpha-Aeg., Dip or BBQ-Twin Pack
8 oz. .77 Potato Chips pkg.
Ralphs the oftlclal
Su~nnarket of the
Los lngeles llcentannlal
•LA•
Adwertl .. d Item• In thlt ed •r• th• u mt prtc. 01 lower In all ttor••
where 1w•ll•ble. Price• otlMr thin ad¥ertleed p1loa1 mty wa1y
depending Upotl IOCal competition. COii facton Of f90V'llf)hle IOClflOft
lawtnoe rel1l1 to orewtoue week'• Aelphe price, or •••I date prlo1 to 1n1t11t pile• redYCllOfl •~chit••• of edweftlffd 01 promotional
ptlCH
• 17lll ST,. COSTA IW 291 lmE. ll1NIT ILLS PASOI • Yl.Dm. IJ&llA IW 1214 IWI. TIS1ll. OPllT & ME I.YI. cam a AT ·~-. -171111111 ST., TUSTIM
•1 W a•., W• lfACI
MAI• & ._ 411 ll ~ .... -1142 IAllll. llJf'llllT• IUCI
CISTA Mm • _.1111111. ..... ftll1
1sa1 s. -.m. m1m1u
ST-.~ .. 11 Illy, N s.117
'
· FQOO
Toast, garnish, drizzle, spread
Here an bandy Hilet&toaf ol well-drained crushed pineapple.
&bl•l•todowtth EDsJlab mattlu: Spri.nk.le chopped null over
Toast and serve with butler American cheese slices on tout·
or peanut butter or favorite jam ed mutrm halves. Oo the same
or jelly. with sesame seeds on another
-Toast. spread with cream day.
ch~ese. Try one or the flavored
cream cheese spreads, such as -SERVE to PP e d with
pepper and herb, or chive for a scrambled eggs, sprinkle on
change of flavor. grated Parmesan cheese, slip un·
-Garnis h toasted raisin derbroilertomeltcheese.
English muffin halves with s lic:es -Accompany plain toasted
of ripe avacado. Sprinkle with halves <unbuttered) with plain
bacon bits. yogurt then top with shredded
Make a Nutty Topping for
muffins by comblruna "' cup
butter or marearlne, "t cup
firmly packed Ugbt brown sug-
ar, ,,., teaspoon ground cin-
namon, 11 cup chopped nuts.
Spread mixture on muffin
hat ves, broil until bubbly. Serve
hot.
-Traditional English Style:
Toast muffin halves to golden
brown, butter liberally, spread
with English Orange
Marmalade. Eat while still hot.
serve with tea. granola or crunchy cereal for a
-DRIZZLE halves with change of pace breakfast. lunch
honey. or late night snack. SERVING NOTES: Never cut
-Cover halves with mashed Cul one apple into thin an English Muffin with a knife ..
banana or banana slices, dust on slices, place atop raisin English A torn-apart muffin bas a
chopped peanuts. muffin halves, pile with stuedded marvelous taste sensation that
-Spread toasted halves with Cheddar cheese. Brown under comes in the toasting of the
softened cream cheese, top with broiler. rough peaks and valleys.
Astronauts lii~iii~iiiiiiiifiiiiii
favorites in
cookbook
CAP> When they're
up in space the
astronauts are limited to
prepackaged roods , but
back on Earth they have
special likes when sit·
ting down to eat.
Many of these special
tastes are chronicled in
a new book put together
at the Smithson ian "
Ins titution. "Fa mo us
Persona lities of Flight
Cookbook "
The volume by Mary
Henderson Valdivia of
the Smithsonian's Na·
tional Air and Space
Museum. includes rec·
ipes that range from
Orville Wright 's pear
sa lad and Am e li a
Earhart's sour cream
waffJes to John Glenn's
ham loaf and the lamb
curry loved by Michael
Collins.
In addition the 136
page book contains bio·
graphical sketches and
anecdotes by and about
the contributors. The
cost is $4.95 plus $1. 75
for postage and handling
from the Program
Coordinator, Dept. CB.
National Air and Space
Museum, Was hington. o.c .. 20560.
Orange Coatt DAILY PH OTIWednnday, May 13. 1981
More Traditional American Lmh Recipes
)f.f.,·~
OLD MILL
Lamb Chops
The old American mill It stands for a time
when early Americans were establishing
their fine cooking reputations by setting
tables loaded with bread made from fresh
milled flour. homegrown fresh fruits and
vegetables-and lamb done to a "fare thee
Write for more free lamb recipes
american lamb council
Dept L-980. 200 Clayton Street
Denver. CO 80206
O ffer good on U SA only while 'upphes ta•I
PleHe allow 4 10 6 Whtlkl lor o .. hvery
well'.' Now you can set your table with a
touch of the early American by serving a
meal starring this traditional dish.
6 servings
6 lamb shoulder chops,
cut Y.·incn 1n1ck
1 medium onion f1nPly
cnopped
2 tablespoons butler
Sall
Pepper
•,, 1easpoon dried dill
weed
I cup water
1 stalk ceiwy. each rib
peeled and cut into
2·inch pieces
2 eggs
3 tablespoons lemon
JV I Ce
1, cup boiling chicken
broth or bouillon
In heavy skillet with cover cook lamb and onion
1n butter until browned Season with salt pepper
and dill weed Add water scraping pan well Cover
and cook over low heat for 1''> hours or until meat
is tender Add celery and cook t5 minutes Beat
eggs unttt ltght Add a dash of salt and beat 1n
lemon 1u1ce Slowly add hot broth or bouillon
stirring constantly Remove lamb from skillet to
warm platter Add egg mixture to pan dr1pp1ngs
and mix well Cook until thickened but do not boil
Serve sauce over lamb
Serve American lamb for farm fresh quality.
REAL VALUES
on items from applesauce to zippers the Dll.IJ Pl.IOI ..
are advertised every day in
-----------Tr--------lnvitation to richness.
~-Enjoy rich-tasting Brim ®
and save up to $100.
..... ····· \" ' ...... .. . . ""·
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The ~ ~e wants to make 1t easy tor you to cut corners IM'len
clipping coupons.
Mag1cutte:r cM make this Job more efficient With 11 blode that
extends only 004 of an inch, 1t cuts througt1 11 sheet ot paper
'Nlthout f:\le:T cutting you Nld it 'Niii go on cutting f~
<:Ne:T 6,000 feet 'Nlthout getting dutl
Its ~ble, precise Md can be used tor cutting out ortteles, rec1~ and
eYen 91ft vvrapptng
... ---------, I Mno '' ?!> '°' MO ( Ull«'\ '"" luOn I OOOl"'J"~""1cl""JllO I !he~~ "O Bo•?)()) I ""'"" ...,.., WI'' I
I -I NJO'tU I ---I CllV Sl.11t Zro L ~<llloN4 tO~Wttl<)l(]r~Wvy .J ---------~'--------~..-. ....... .:-:==-==-==-==-==-=:--=~-==--=--==-"=""-=-~
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MAIL·IN CERTIFICATE
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Orang9 Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedne1day, May 13, 1981
Grocer continues tradition
BOSTON t AP > -
Geor1e EUia would be
pleased to know
Boston'• "carrla1e
trade" bun't whispered
Its IHt burrah .
Al one o r New
England 's oldest
grocery stores. some
customers s till think
Belgian endive ls worth
SS a pound a nd ten·
derloin is u bargain al
$8.
&ool4'thlna t lse. lhW1 ~l
around a table ...
T hlnes not being what
th ey onco were is a
refraln at George Ellis
·'The prime beer we
have is .not whal it wns
rive yt>ar~ lllO "
Warwick i1nys. "It gets
worse and worse. less
and les11 tender They
arow cows ror profit. not
quality."
"In the old day!I, my WILUAM Wa llace got
father sent wriu en nolt'' d iscouraged and was go·
'inviting' new 'clients' lo in& to s hut the stor t-
lhe store." says William down unlil his son
Roger Warwick, 32. 'the moved In
current owner of George -
Tbe o l d t imu
cus tomeu In 8011ton,
und lhe neighborhoods
of tuburban Newton and
Brookline, ure 1Civin1
way to the trendy isc.-t
The pro spe r ous
11ewt'omer11 buy up posh
condominium:J ncur the
cramped EIUR store on
fashionable Newbury
Street.
To s erve th e
newcomers, the store
which once closed dally
ut 5 p 01 is now open
until 8 weeknights .
"WE STILL do some
selling on the phone ," he
1ay11. "Som of uur bo•l
culttonwr•. ror ao or 40
year!\, haive ntver bet-n
In hert' "
If U CUJltonwr WUl\t!\
s omHhlng special ,
Warwick &Ctl' It . Ofttm . 1
tor loyul clients. u d'•
l1veryrnun will lt•t
himself Into th apart
ment with a key lhti
custo.mer provided, ond
put perishable food11 In
the refrigerator
"They trust us St.1mt•
of these client11 go bark
·a couple of generations
with George Ellis." ........
FOOD
Willtom Warwack, 32.
stands in produce de-
partment of Boston
grocery store which is
one of the old.est of its
kind in America
Warunck is carrying on
Jamtly traditwn of pro-
v1dmg quality.
Ellis & Co groceries,
established In 1837
IN FACT, until two
years ago. when Wilham
Roge r bought out his
father . Willh1m Wallace
Warwick, the store still
had aging clerks who I
climbed ladders to '111
orders and an elderly
bookkeeper who made
change from a tr ay of
YOtlS L ERi YOUR ·
FOOD BILL-(i11ll1AN11~~,
cash in a tiny office. J
R oger Warwic k or
dered a big change: he
inst ailed cash registers
Edwin Harry Warwick,
Roger's great uncle,
bought out Geor~e Ellis
a century ago and insist 1
ed o n a personal re
ference from each new
"client."
··The basic idea was lo
give them abslolulely
the best of ever ything,·'
Roger says.
SAVE WITH
EVERYDAY
LOW PRICES
AT VONS
Edwin Warwick had
another store bearing
his own name nearby, so
he continued lo use the
1
Ellis desi.g~~tion for his
new acqu1s1t1on.
ROGER Warwick. a
s tockbr oker who got
"fed up" and went into
the grocery business.
continues the family
1 tradition. a lthough he
has made concessions to
modem times. .
He started a deli in the
front of the store to lure
lunch cus tomers. They
supply the cash that
helps ca r ry old ti m e
clients who charge their
accounts.
"We still have some
customers in Maine and
Nova Scotia we s hip J
meat to," he s a ys.
"Sometimes they s end
fheir chauffeurs to pick
it up. Some of these peo
pie are 85 or 90, you
know."
A "good" customer I
will register a monthly
tab of $1.500 or $2,000.
Warwick says. The I
m ore typical $50-a
m o nth c lient "is n 't
worth it. but I keep them
lo·lt&nice:'.' ..... ······.···I .. •·•·•
And what do these
people buy besides
crabmeat for $10 a can'>
"Everything," Warwick
says.
GEORGE Ellis & Co. I
still delivers to anyone
who calls in an order
for a fee of $2. Non
regulars pay cash on de-
li very. For all of them,
choice meat and pro-
duce are the main at
traction.
"Most people don't
want the quality they
used to:• Warwick says
"They don't want to eat ,
th ey 'd r at h e r d o
Party
tidbits
Perk up entertaining
with hot and spicy hors
d·oeu vres ... tamalitos
in jalapenosauce.
Tamalitos, a new
ca nn ed p r odu c t , is
unique in the
marketplace. Made of
meat filled cornmeal
rolls in chili g r avy,
GROCERIES
" h.. . .. ~ .-.. ,. ... ~" ~
SUm Pr1ce Cookies
u<_ ,,,,.., Heinz Sweet Rellsh
1,, ... , "'•"' .f\l't ... ., .. Viva Italian Dressing
-JUI tW)f1ll {Jl L~"' ~'\IA'J vrapefrult Juice
lltfJI nrJ""ll I Seneca Grape Juice
··~ (N't S ti W Baked Bun1
.99
.73
.57
}09
]1 5
}43
.69
they're quick and easy '""' ,..,,.,,.,... '"'"""' }99
"as i :· _o.r~d~seM•"~-All American Peanut Butter . -~ ... )" ' "'1'"-~--.'«1iilf"1:.j, "~.l.t~ ··~..,' ~ · ~.!· 1' ~ g ettr · gests. ~· • • -
2 cans ( 15 ounces ""' ""'f. ,..,_. '"''' "'"' "'"""°""' }69 each) tamalitos (meat Ragu paghettl Sauce
filled cornmeal rolls in T;~Pk~t"'Pr'~;';'rvu . • 99
gravy) ,0 "',"°" 99 1 cup diced green Sunahlnc Hl·Ho Crackers •
pepper ''"0'"-ff"" 65 'h c u p c a n n e d Rud • 4·Bean Salad •
jalapeno sauce •l'Oll'f.l~ 341 2 tablespoons sour Come ·n Get It Dog Food
!JCV C""M"IHt{WOll~r 11\.t, 49 cream "'I Kan Cat food • 12 pitte d blac k
olives, sliced in half ~'Ow"'\~room Cleerw }28
horizontally •JtT ~-}39 6 stuffed olives, otad Tr11hB1gs
sliced lenatbwbe '•Glol SI'\. 52 Real tamalltos for s. Purex Uquld Bleach •
minutes In gravy ; ""00• 129
I 7)1JTER
lll'IJT 2 l~M DWI llm•"'!I P'Q 1)691
PROD(JCE
l•""4.H81J\t o\~l(
Colden Ripe Bananas
W>D r A"°"1Tl l.NIOl CAl~~ Haas Avocadoes
ntlit•OI It Alfalfa Sprouts ... ..... "' White Rose Potatoes
AllCl ,., 10.....,...11 •X>rn
Fresh Limes
lD .29
IA .33
IA .39
10 .25
IA .15
DELICATESSEN
MEATS
JAf!U lll'tCC~OJJ Beef Chuck steak
f o\111..C Kl't(j llEf.f N)r'4(ll .,_\ t fo41Kll\
Famlb' Steaks
·~f •..C.l!EU ll()t<(l.(~' Slrloln Tip Steaks
1~rlP<ilEM Bee Cube Steaks
IAllU llK Pl(U llAM rrl'QU Boneless Chuck RoHt
1-llU'll(.l(U
Ul 268
Lii J69
lft 2 19
lO 259
Lii 2 59
1.8 )98
1101. 'Ml I t'AO/ ._ MIA. Vons Sliced Cooked Ham }49 Boneless Stewing Beef
UXJtfTtrV SVTI.L 11111 [1'0 P()jl!\
Ill 2 °9
49 -~~~P.~-~~ }69 ork Loin Chops UI
¥0r"t\ttt<~ "''\ II 119-f.\1"111'f ,~ ... --224 MontereyJ•ck Cheese •• J:H!;WC!IEHr.-,j[•I•lt)
1$01 "t'<I 1 "'~ P'l(.MG( }25 ~"'10.EOll__,•ST?MSl.8 4191 399 Precious Monarell• Cheese Nng Salmon ' LB
LIQUOR
II'"°' I (9L (,A .. \ P•bst 6ttl
,_~vrur Nmeden Mt. Ch1bll1
17)-lll'{a Oor.son·a Qin
l_Ul•t • Don Miguel Chabti.
~rr111~ ...... ~ Rhine c 11tte
s::Wodk•
329
299
999
279
299
999
f!IUlt•..cn: Red Snapper Fiiiets lJI }79
""°" Dover Sole Fiiiet UI 279
C ter Flah Fltlet lJI J79
HEALTH £, BEA(JTY
}37
R1.:\~g0d }19
~ttll:o'~~t 135
li;tet~ g~li•I•l •~11
I ) <:.Al. "" DC.ul)(l ASSTtl N'o'OIOS Jerseymald tee Cream }55
Mf~~ Maid Orange Juice 129
HOT BAKERY
1&.,Pkf••,ti~lfiv-I XJN(M:N }49 Clnn•mon Chunky Loar
1""1M'~''~''"'-Bear Claws 2~.89
VONS BAKERY
&•WCK~~tJNori.tOOIW'll U" Egg Hot Dog Buns
.. M:t<OIW'IC.f ()rt Cinnamon Rolls
Q~[~
Angel Food Loaf
.65
.93
}19
J98
VONS OWN LABEL
1rouroctv.ro Vons Sweet Pe.1
IOOl...C{ llOl'TU Vons P•ncake Syrup
FLATWARE
.39
.89
ELEGANT 8TADU.E98
AT BIG 8AVINGSI
ITEM OF THE WEEK
TEASPOON
A"~9 · .~,-/-~-· , lAJOU.A OR
PIUl'ICU8 •
COMPl..ETER PIECES ALSO
AVA.llMJLE AT VONS LOW . PRICES
rese r ve some c h l ll Purex Powdered retergent
Ir av y .. Arr a n g e ~~~~""'m~,r.i.·S::,.~~~=='::~=.."'=1'~"::~°""~':.~.~~=..,~nowmm THE SUPERMARKET THAT CKIARANTEES
tamallto$ IJJ small two '""'..,......_.,,..Ol""I • 11, 0wer~c-5o1em1..-........... 12' IW!locoLaN0--.-·-·-·-11• o.-,,..,....,.s..._.120IKI 2011
quart c bafln1 dl1h. lAo'•lloM.,_dT""'"r4«"'° 12' o...~s-w.u... .... -.... ,..1.. ,...._o.A\l'-ic:-, ...... -.... ~1 ,,. ~a.....iw.i10U'tCZ 1•9 Comblne ~ravy, ereen ,....~,1'!W .. _u__ I.. l.oultMdl~.,_.,. .• (IU!CCl • P'WIWW-.~ 2-'9 JontolMccwl.tlQ.ta 1'9
pepper. J a apeno sauce ,..,_so.. o-. _ .. •.a.,,, de "'°'* llkll ~ eo.o Seletnl.11« M> 1 .89 o.or ,._ 8lceft. mi °" n«11., u 1111 ~I.Ht lil\aloe. 1M>11G 2 19
and sour cream~ beat Qocer,,..,.Ytl ~8"11,,_.,..,,._,,, .. 20I ~-.... -~..,.,,.._, .. .,. .. _ 1111 0..,....leclol\Thktl.• .. ,•-•-I 00 Joroo9~1.JriM.li'Oll!Dl....uT?:IOl 1.29
Vote Yea
.,
for two minutes over
medlum heat. Pour over
Tamallto•; place tn
cbarln1 dlah. G•mlab
with oll•es. Makef 12 Htvini• (2 tamalllo•
Hunttr19ton a .. ctl
~122 l!dlnger & lprln9dale """""-'•n .. ach 21oa hMtt atvd.
Ir YI flt
41)0 81ttenca ,.d. 'ovnt.,n Valley 11~1 HertMK & l ..... r
, ........ v...,
1,,_M 5 tllaT~
Cot11Me1e
tH E. t7tll ltrHt and Oraftttt A1rt
•di). 'I
a1.1 J\tan Ca,tswono
32"1 Camtno Capfttf•• a o.tatHapo
. ,.
Cepleuano a .. c"
'40tt Oohet1J '•I'll Or. & Vlctcwte ""'"' ... .,...nt.lwd
f
•
--
It 1 llODIDtG
KRAFrOl:-FREE
WITH REAL BIJRCDIJY RAWJR
Here's a lighter, new style of
dressing-fashioned after our own
European recipe. New KRAFr
Oil-Free Vinaigrette with real
burgundy flavor. 100% oil-free, it's
r----------~--------
a tasteful alternative to traditional
dressings. There's full flavor, but I
only 6 calories a tablespoon. Subtle t
spices and natural burgundy flavor I
give it a clean, crisp taste. For I
salad lovers, it's a very good year. I
I
1SC STORE COUPON 1'
UDUM ttlOIOl'l.Y-Olft COU10N PU ITIM PUllOLUID
ML C.OCU 1 Kr•ll. Inc (ll•l•ll l'<K>d Croupl w111 retmb"1M yo~ 101 th• I•<• ••111• of th11 coupon pl ... 7f h•ndhng •llow•nce p1ovtd4'd you ••d••ine<I It on you1 ••lw•I ul•• of tho n•m•d product(•I •nd that upon 1eque11 you •vr•• to fum"h proof of pur· chH• ol a11Ul<lant prod11<t to cover oil red•lllpllona
Coupon " void wb"'' tued, probJbll4'd. or thtrlc'led by law, and moy no< be o.u.lgned 01 tran.ie11ed by you CHh
volue 1104 CullOffter nlu•t pay •nr •pphcabl• tu "'" rodemp11oa m•ll to DAl'T, INC. IPC, P.O. IOX ..... CUNTON. IOWA un ..
UJE15CONNEW
KRAFT·Ol.·FR£E VINAIGRETTE
DRESSING <23
21000 110730
PICK OF 'I'Hf: PODS.
I ·~ ,_,._~
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Stir,fry the qua)ity of C& W Chinese Pea Pods into all
your recipes. And save l~.
C & W C hinese Pea Pods are tender and delicious, with
that crisp snap of freshness you expect from C& W
vegetables.
For flavor that makes every dish special, try C& W
C hinese Pea Pods in succulent O riental dishes, savory
casseroles, and as an exciting surprise in salads.
Pick our pack and pick the ve ry best.
And save 1~ on any C& W vegetable.
Save 10' on any C& W ~getablc box or baa.
10¢
To rhr Rtulltrl c..:.s.. w Fn•l•ll h ... 1. ".11 .. 1n1lo111•c \Pl! IOll th• In·~\ •l11f "' tht• '"'''"''n rlu• 1' h;nJlrn11 II
\•"I ffCt't\lf •t ''0 Che Hfl"Uf thr 'r•uftr,J rh,llK t .tn,J It H~1n '~"lUft.t \••ti t.U~tnlf C'\ •JC'~~ thl"rntt Utl-l,1\.h.r\
"' C..:11& W fn•:rn h~..t• C""I'"" m"' "''' ._.. "''•"•J . rro1n•tr11cJ. '" rcrr•"'""'' C11.,11mt• mun r"' "'" •• , •• IH \\11J •h•rt r111h1lomtJ. •~uJ ... •••111\t .. J ... 1 .... n ... ...i t1nh '"us A l •·h ••• 1 ... l/l\)' c .... ,.."' ... ,11 nm~ "'""''tJ II ~n<rnrtJ rhnn111h .... , ...... ·~ ............. i1c,,. "' ••thtrt •h11 ~, ..... , ll'1t1I J,,
1tl"11111n Uf UO/f mttch1nJ1..-1of 'f'C<ilt<;lly All!h<tt1•0J ..... I" Ill l'fOtlll (1•1J1'•R• fut ttJenlf'fl<lll hot trJelnr•
t1<1n uf rrortrly rc<t1~rJ .nJ h•nJlcJ c1n1r"n nuil 111 C~ W ftvtcn Foiwh, P.O.~ R7112. El Puo Tttu. 7997',
Of'ot ollplut O.t . ll, l981. l1ni11r 0.W Cl>ll!"•n I'•• rurch.-,. Whrrt ••••l•"lt Thtt<t"lf"~' ,..,J 11nh '"' ru ........ ,;f rn .. h1cr 1nJl01orJ A~ ••thtr ..... <t•R\lltlll" trouJ
! 10¢ ~ got <pility down cdl. uii'
~------~----~-------------------~
. .. • •
Orange Coast DAILY PtLOT/Wednelday, May 13, 1981
1)~ .ffw.s CAKE MIX ·
S2~REFUND
l>l·.'l.l '.\'/-: JI
C ""' M" .J
Here's How:
1. Buy 3 boxes of
Duncan Hines Layer Cake Mix.
2. Send the 3 net
weigh.t statements plus the
cash register tape. along
with the attached certificate.
l!EJ
Pl1DDING !!"&t!!
Enclosecl are the net weiohl statements from any lhree packages of Duncan Hines Layer
Cake Mixes. ptus the cash resister tape with the purcnase prtce of the three Cake Mixes
circled Please sencl my $2 4 refund to
NAM[
ADDRESS
Cfl'I
S1Al£ ZIP CODI
AREA CODE IHEPHONl
U\of13< 1'·n&r•Cl~+·•t'I .. ,,~..t!CJ" ~
Place '" stampeO envelope ano mail to
DUNCAN HINES S2 40
REFUND OFFER PO IOX916'
CLINTON IOWA 62736
0-H HIMS '1 .. fief ....
Olttt Ctllllk ... .c,sn,.,,...,p1..,.at ... 1 20nl1«'
mASl NOT( THU[ AOOITIONAl Tl""'' I 011•• 0000 ""'' ... A/ ,. liV .... , ur } IHIS tERlll1CJol( MAY ~01 8( 1.4£CttANIC'llY R!PAOOUCEO Al'IO MUSI ACCOMPAl<Y YOUll ~IOUESI ) l r<•I """•tlun~ r• n1mt
o• JC7d'O J Yovr oHt· 1.q"''' m4y "Cl' Of ""'"' Ql'litO o• HJM\f,.Hft. i, Ottr t •O••h Junf' 26 l9el P.u st
• ou~ t b •tt•\ to at._.,,.,.
--------------------------9601EA I
~o5lz~!t ~~~ ! .........................
fQIH( ('~" C•vt~ ,,..,......,.,. •• ,""'°' .. _...,.....,..,,.,_ior..-...c~•.....,.,.,,..""O,.'-OW"'.O°""N .. fl ..... ll'f""41 ,,.. ~;i_4l~'~"'"~~ ·~;~~ ~;::::::.,:::1 .......... t.i·~ ·~· ·Jo(~ .... ~ ........... d ~ • ......,., I ~ ...... _.._. ............... "lilt".'"'' ·~""""•• ..... 0.."'tlO'?drooot.ci ....... IW"' •• ~.,,., • .o.,~ ..... ".,.,.,..""'" .. -,. .......... ~,,.. ................... ""',.,. ....... , .. ~ I ''''"' •·~t• ~ •. ._..,,..., ••• , -.,. .... ~"""'""' .....,"" 4-.... ...,...... ·--w""-•• .. '"""''IQllo" .,........._,.~..,.-..,..,.,..,_..,.......... • .,._.e"'°'-••~ ... .,.._..., ,,..,... . ...,. ....... ~-.,..••c-~.,.........., ..... _ ................... _ . .....,,. ...... ~., ·~ ....... __ ............. ,..... ............ I ~A.::~·~,~~~=::; .... -;::.:.~--::.:::~~.--:-:.·;_:.,.:~~~~
"!.' ~~,. ~~· ~;.;::. ~,,::.~:= .::.-:~.:. :::::--:::-:-:..=:-... :i ~~I ~"°'"h"'•.,._ , ....... -........ ,.,.. ... ..,._'-..,....•-c:--. ... "f' •vtr. ·~·~II\ Mtf"~'O --OC:Tt.a & c.--._1 I " _,,... • .,...,_...I)" •t tV ..... _at ... ~ ••11 1-.
PROCTER & GAMBlE-STOAE COUPON I 054980 I ~::;;~Ill» I -------------------------------9608PO
rO•Nf:t_M'V'tllf" t.•v••....._ n,, _.,,_ .,,,.,."".,..t;•*""""9""' .. " ·~-~-... ,. ....... ...,.,,,,.pwrt.,•v •-. .. .,.., '"--"'f _. .,. . .,.....,... -.o"t ............... ... • • ... ~ ........... ...
f'i ._.. .... .,,.,. ' ... , '""'" • ....... ............. , ...... """" ....... -..... , ... -·-·~·--··· .,,,-~ .......... _ ................. ~ .. , .................... ,,.. ~...... ... ..,, ••11!1•.0"'• •"-"• ,, .... ~·-... .. •""'•~ •-,....,.='-l-4•.,.•'-'A•• ....... ,,, ... , .................. ,.-4 ................... ,,,.., ..... , •••• _,.__ ........... ~
·~·--· ... ...._-'>_ ....... ·~ -~··' ... ~ ... _ ... -· """"._.,........ .... •
-·-....... .# ._,....... .. ....... ~ •IP\ '"""' • • ... ~-·-_...~-.... ,..., •••• ~ .... ,, .... ~.: .. ~l~;;: .. ,~~ .. ;,.--:: .. ...;-.::::." ... : "'~~~ ... ~=~.· . ..:of':·~=~=.:.~~~:~:;:.~~ s
~· . .:::.,i:.,:·~~~:~~:·._.;:~' ;~~f~: .. N~~~ •• :-: :--t :;-::,;;•, :--:~ ;:"':'! == .. ~ ~ t.,.-• .__...a • .,.. • .,,,.,.~,.1 ... t...i••-->•• .,.._ ., .... .,,,_ .. •1"'1.l'""l't r11 .._ •• ._,,, •Uflof I Yff)t'i.Jfil~ •,1• ._,1fla' U lltf ro
PftOCTl"•O•tl9f..l.1•W'~"AAr";e.6toi1v• r1..,,•1.M ... 1 ,,i-•• , .. ,,
PROCTER & GAMBLE STORE COUPON I 05-4980 -------------------------------• 9600SU I
:~ ~ave25c !
: :7::t~~~~lM.~~ SURE ~·•~ONtcouPOHm~v~Hm :
I I
I .... ".I'~''°"'~,., ..... ' ............. -.~· ..,._ta.o', ............... j'!o>. rt .. , ..... ...., .. ,,. ... ,,.,, ... ., ... ...., I -~ ... -~··· ,,, . ... ···~ ...... _... .............. ~~~1:mt:~~ . ...,...-.n .,.. .:,t~
--.. , .,.... ,.. .. •• .. Y'' ~ __,. ...,....,., -·~ ...... Qi{flll.111•• • ...... 6"Cl •• ........................ ,,.....,._.tp ......... ,..~ .......... ~ .............. lo#,-.... ~ ............... , 0... _...... .. ., ... " ......... wo'°'14'~ .. """""°'~·""°°',. ... ,."""""""f*"""·'· ........ ,.""'°'_._,,. ....... ,, .......... ,,"'. I °"""' 7• lifp (...,..,... ··~" M • ,_..It> 0-~tad ....... _.,,.,...,. l CJ.•~~.,.,.. .. 1,Wt l:i.atMfTI,,..,, ·~ f!lf ti) ~~~~~:_-.;;".,~-:.•~:-;':.':~~:..=~,~~"!'~~-=~I • ...,,...,-t-,....,,,,.,....,._..,~ .. ,.....,... , . .,~ ..... ,......,..... ... _,,_,,.,,..._...~-..... ~ ... ,." ... ~ ~
.............. 1tt .,,_,,,.. ,_,, ....... -....., ~' ... ,.°'" air.i......., •""""1Ai.• tltfO.-ftittOCOUll"Otfl \~OW ,, .. , 'O ""OCTP .......... ,,..., ........ .-nc> 01'l>Y( e:~· \lM"" J •"11' I
PROCTER& GAM8LE-STORECOUPON I 0.5-4980 I ~.':";'c ··~ I -------------------------------9eftPT • ~JaV,,!50C
one any size shampoo UMlt °"' cowow"" l'UfletlA ..
------~--. ---~----~---~ -·---r---~-~-~----------------._... _____ ...., .......... lmlll .................... ..
Orange Co•t DAIL y PILOT /Wednnday, May 13. 1981
u 0 a coos a ~
FOOD
nshrooms add jazz
Tbose ele1ant
mus brooms t.bat do 10
mucb to Jan up or-
dinary meals are as
mucb to be applauded
for what they don't con-
tain u ror what they do.
Their ne1ative virtues
include belna low ln
calories Conly 127 in a whole pound). low an
sodium (68 mg. in a
pound). low in fat ( 1.4
grams per pound ) and
low in carbohydrates (20
ams to the pound). All
those minus qualities
add up to a very positive
food.
Here, for example,
are two recipes, both
low in calories, that are
perfect for summer eat· ing.
Marinated
Mushrooms make a
rich-tasting salad dress-
ing which belies Its
small calorie count. The
dressing contains sliced
mushrooms. tomato
juice and r ed wine
vi n egar (no oil >
seasoned with onion and
garlic powders and
Italian seasoning. It's
simmered for just a few
minutes lo cook and
blend flavors, then
chilled for al least two
ho urs before using .
When covered tightly in
the refrigerator, il will
keep for a few weeks.
You 'll feel like you're
' eating a lot. too, with all
of tho se meaty
mushrooms in there
and at only 5 calories for
a tablespoon.
The Mushroom Potato
Salad with yogurt dress·
ing is not the no-no that
you might imagine: a
"'a-cup portion contains
just SS calories.
SL I MMING
MAR I NATED
MUSH R OOM
DRESSING
1 pound fr esh
mushrooms
114 cups tomato
juice
If.I cup white vinegar
1114 teaspoons Italian
seasening,crushed
1 teaspoon onion
powder
~ teaspoon salt
114 teaspoon garlic
powder
.,.. teaspoon ground
black pepper
Rinse, pat dry and
s lice mu s hroom s
(makes about 51h cups).
In a medium saucepan
place tomato juice ,
vinegar, Italian season -
ing, onion powder, s alt,
garlic powder , black
pepper and reserved
mushrooms; bring to a
Egg s alad
is quick
and easy
Taste-tempting en·
trees needn't take hours
to prepare. Mix the egg
salad ahead of time and
store it, covered, in the
refrigerator for quick·
and-easy good eating
any time of the day.
MINUTE· MINDED
EGG SALAD MELTS
14 cup mayonnaise
2 teaspoons pre·
pared mustard
l teaspoon
Worcestershire sauce
~ teaspoon salt
6 hard-cooked eggs,
chopped
~ cup ( 2 ounces)
s hredded Ched d ar
cheese
8 slices bread
2eggs
Y.t cup milk
2 to 3 tablespoons
butter ·
Cherry tomatoes, op·
.:fOA~"'-Jl;i~· ~
Blend together
mayonnaise, mustard,
Worcestershire sauce
and salt. Stir In bard·
cooked eggs and cheese.
Spread about ~ cup egg
salad mixture on each or
4 slices of bread.
Top with remaining
bread allcea. Beat
to1ether 2 e11s and milk
in shallow pan or dish
un.tll blended. Dlp
sandwiches in e11·mUk
mixture, tumin1 tO coat
evenly. In larfe omelet
pan or skll et over
medium heat, cook
sandwiches lo butter,
turnlnl u necessary un-
til IOlden brown OD both
aides. Garnllh wttb
cberr1 tomatot1 and
parale1. lf dulred.
Mak• ' lll'Vinp.
boll. Reduce beat and
simmer, covered, for 6
mlnutes. Pour into a
small bowl; cover and
r efriaerate at least 2
hours. Spoon over
cooked green beans,
mixed salad greens or
lettuce wedges. YIELD:
2~ cups ; 5 calories per
tablespoon.
MUSHROOM POTATO
SALAD
8 ounces fresh
mushrooms
1 cup chicken broth
or watu
l cup plain yo1urt
~ teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon onion
powder
~ teaspooJl tar·
ragoaleaves,cnfsbed
.,.. teaspoon 1arlic
powder
l cup cook e d ,
peeled, diced potatoes
l cup cooked peas
1 cup diced
tomatoes
Rlnse, pat dry and
slice mushrooms
<makes about 2~ cups).
In a medium saucepan
heat chicken broth uoUJ
hot. Add muahrooms; a team, covered until
tender, about 5 minutes.
Drain and set aside to
cool. In a large bowl
combine yo1urt, salt,
onion powder, tarra1on
and garlic powder. Add
'potatoes, peas and re·
served mushrooms; mix
well. Cover and chill.
Just before serving stir
in tomatoes. YIELD: 4
cups (8 portions>; 55
calories per portion.
Marinated Mwhroom1
over green beana make
o 1hmmmg lalad dre11·
jng,
·~ ... ·~GREATEi:tsAV{N?Js' .. w/'r"'R'~VERYDAY LOW PRICES INSTEAD OF A FEW LIMI TED SPECIALS. •
FRESH g ~gg~~~EEF" 11
LARCiE END "198 RIB ROAST
80nde08fff
CROSS "198 RIB ROAST
~s BonOed 8fff cnUCIE
!"IMPERIAL 65 ~ ~kAACARI~~ Ctn •
BLADECUT 98 ~~KSTEA~.
PORK SHOULDER98 ~2~~5!~ Lb .
COUNTRY STYLE 119
SPARERIBS
Rib End POf1t loin lb
Key Buys mean extra savings.
DUNCAN HINES
CAKE MIXES
1 o Varieties, 1811> oz eox
.79 ~~n
r !c;;L~,~ ~.89
BARBECUE
SAUCE
LadV Lee Regular or HICkOry noz. Btt.
.89 ~n
r ~!:J'?~;~ 611 r i~~~~~-97
.35 ..
}"COORS AND 179 ~ ~}'p~~EISE~oz cans I COCA
COLA SIX PACK ,,.,,~ 1 s9
FRYING 57 PORK LOIN "119 ~~t~~~~ sovrnern LD •
ROAST
s1r101n cut 3 LD Avo w t
FARMER JOHN 48 PORK LOIN
"168 ~~~~PE a 01 Pkg .
CHOPS
RID Cut
ROUND
STEAK
eo~s~Bfff
HASS
AVOCADOS
Large. ~tomla's Finest. Eacn .. 2~ ~ .. t •• ~ •r-
LAROE
MANCOS
Spley AaYOf. hen
.79
"188
QUARTER
"138 PORK LOIN
SllCect lnduMs LOln RID
8~ & Slr10ln Cuts
GOLDEN
BANANAS
ltl~. ReaCly to Ut, LD
-29;
ITALIAN
SOU ASH
Excellent O\lallfV, lb
.29
l ... ~·
LAROE
PAPAYAS
US NO 1, lb
.29
OW Me ... OttCtlarl "91cy _ ... !WI -pn(et to Ill tfft<tW9
W-llloyUtfll?rVT-. lllrflt ltf1
l'llfW O<IC" llOt .. lfC11W1 WI S-1 -·-J'"l ... OOt<c!OCCll"'-
Lower prices overall.
l
:
FOOD Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday. May 13, 1981 Cll
Crab • IS • convenience classy
B1BARBARAGIBBONS en t ertainer. Try Lhls
Crabmeat Is one ot spread at your next get·
those foods which dlts· together:
proves your contention CRAB CHEESE
that everything lovable SPREAD
is fattening. 6-ouoce package
Crabmeat is 2& Alaska Snow crab ,
calories an ounce. This flaked
count applies to all types 8-ounce package
of crabmeat: East Coast Neufchatel or low -cal·
blue crabs, West Coast orie cream cheese
SLIM GOURMET
minced parsley
I c love garlic .
minced (Or pinch Of
1arlic powder J Optional . pinch of
mustard, dash or hot
pepper sauce
fluffy. t-'old In remaining
ingredients. Stor~ 1n
refrigerator until serv·
ing time Makes two
c ups , 24 calorieis pt>r
t ab l espoon with
N eur cha tel; 18 c aJori es
per tablespoon with low ·
cal cream cheese.
FARMER C RAB
SPREAD
processor . us ing the
steel blade, process until
creamy. Remove trorr1
food processor with a
rubber scraper Fold in
crabme at: 15 calories
per tablespoon.
RAMSAY :
REXALL DRUGS :
ANY COSMETIC
WITH PURCHASE
OF 500 OR MORE
• Max FactOf • A•vlon
• Arden • Almay
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
!
RAMSAY
DRUGS
~ EVE~6wD~~~ovf
: DEVELOPING
! PRICES!! • : C 111).12 Exp ......... •ztt• ,
: C·l26·12 Exp ......... sr•· 1
• C 126 20 Exp ......... •411• '
: C 110.24 Exp.. .. .... 14H• 1 : c 135-24 up. ........ ''"' , • • • • •
Kodacolor II . .... ' ..
·p,.,. , ...
Dungeness crab and the s a It 0 r butter.
frozen AJaska King and flavored salt
Thaw crab in the
refrigerator, retaining
juice. Allow cheese to
c ome to room tern ·
p e rature. Add crab
juices and salt to taste
to cheese ; beat until
Substitute 8 ounces
fresh farmer cheese ror
the Neu!chatel or cream
cheese Combine ingre·
dients, except crab, in
the container of a food
Protean-packed. ca lonf'
shy. low-fat sea/ood u a
dieter's delight For re
c1pea and diet tips, send a
s tamped, self-addressed
envelopt> and SQ cents It>
SL IM G OU RMl-:'l'
SEAFOOD RECIPES. P ()
Boz 624, Sparta, NJ 07811
• COSMETIOUE 2246 NEWPORT BL VD. • PHOTO FINISHlNG
• HEAL TH & BEAUTY
AIDS Snow crabmeat avail&· l la b I es po o n
ble year round in your chopped chives or green
supermarket frozen food onions
case. 2 ta b I e s po on s Already cooked and ----
ready to eat, frozen six·
o un ce packages of
Alaska crab is my idea
of classy convenience
food.
What's the difference
between Snow and
King? King crabs are
larger, some as big as 25
pounds, and 6-feet tip to
Up although the average
is closer to eight or nine
pounds.
Snow crabs are three
pounds and approx·
imately 2 feetin width.
The meat of the King
crab is denser and more
richly flavored ; the
Snow crab has a subtler
sweet taste and a
moister texture.
Flavor preferences
aside , they 're in ·
terchangeabl e in re
cipes.
Because the meat is
ready to eat or heal
and eat -crabmeat
s hould be added to
cooked dishes at the last
minute and simply heal·
ed through. The liquid
that accumulates as it
thaws is very flavorful
and should be added lo
the dish as well
' 0 A ( ho1ct' 8ont'!lt'U 8e.,f lo•n
TRIANGLE TIP ROAST
1 "''• Coo~ed Watt'!• Added HAM SLICES
I S l> "-Choice wt',l•rn Groin
l8 2.89
l8 1.69 If you're cooking for
o n e or two , frozen
Alaska crabmeat is an
easy indulgence that
SMALL LOIN LAMB CHOPS 1e 3.99
makes s hort work of
special occasion main
courses. Here's one to
try:
LINGUINI WITH
C RAB , WINE AND
MUSHROOMS
6-oun c e package
frozen Alaskan King or
Snow crabmeat
3 ounces dry linguini
(2 cups. cooked )
I 1, c u p s s I 1 c e d
mushrooms
l cup sliced sweet
onion
Optional . s mall
clove garlic. minced
1 cup white wine,
divided
l o• Ion ..
• FINE FRAGRANCES
• GIFTS
( 1 BLOCK NORTH OF 22nd ST )
M-F f ·L S.t. 9-6, S-. I O.l
FOSTER FARMS CALIFORNIA
N11 .tPrn 8 Ol Jor
RESH FRYERS
WHOLE BODY CHICKENS
LIMIT 2
SS MINIMUM PURCHA.SE REQUIRED
!XCIUDING llOOOI IOIACCO ' Mill
PURCHA.SE OVER LIMIT
REG PRICE 79< l8 4_9!.
l8 1.59
•I l•I•• ~ • f\ ,I. ._, ...
FRESH OYSYIRI 1.49 ALASKA KING CRAB t& 3.89
BANANAS
e LOW IN SOOIUM •LOW IN CALORIES • HIGH IN VALUE
..
Roch Flo•or
llALIAN
IQUAIH.
ff)()CS fJf' Ttff f1~£m-
4~ ..
COSTA MESA
646-7744
" . THICK SLICED BACON
.... J.-.f. to,J'. ~ H r,t • 7 7 ~
FRYI NG CHICKEN LIVERS
K 1, 11·• tl")1n & Rn 111d • ~'
SLICED VEAL
l8 1.09
l8 .59
l8 5.99
Pinch of grated
nutmeg
Pinch o f red
cayenne pepper
VIDAL IAllOOll 1 89
IHAM•OO O• •11111............ • FRESH '" 001 """ HOC>ue• Of" 2 5 c NAPPA................................. LB.
Salt or butter·
flavored salt, pepper
4 tablespoons grated
Parmesan cheese
2 tablespoon s
minced fresh parsley
Allow crabmeat to
defrost retain juices.
Cook lingui ni unt i l
tender in salted boiling
water.
While Linguini cooks, .
spray a nonstick skillet
or electric frypan with
cooking spray or wipe
lightly with oil. Spread
the mushrooms, onion
and garlic, ii desired, in
a shallow layer. Add 4
tablespoons wine. Cook ,
stirring occasionally.
over moderate heat until
wine evaporates and
vegetables just begin to
brown. Add remaining
wine, nutmeg, cayenne,
salt and pepper. Cook.
stirring occasionally,
until wine is reduced to
just a few tablespoons.
'\ Wh e n linguini is
cooked, drain, but don't
rinse it. Stir the hot
pasta into the skillet and
.,..,...,,..,._, ..
PHn•PACK
""'"'"-" .... '•• "-""' ftMOISTUlllD•
" ..............
UOUID ••om•
~or~i~?S ~h(S<)i<1Es0"
I 6·01 Solod • Smoll Elbow
SPRINGFIELD MACARONI
1.09
.• 59
KRAn DINNER ., ~·:··:""j.9c
1.89 JfC T omo•h•'OQO So""•n 16.-01 w.,1 Por 11'1 fomoto !.Guo· I ) 01
NOODLES .65 MACKEREL .69
l.•9 Kr~~OMO't~l'\l'l'I• 10.-01 '" llo<I 'wi..., J a•
86 ,,oof Co,.od·O<\ w~ ... .,, 1.10,,, Pio,. lollM! 80 P100• 1 I)'"
SEAGRAM'S VO 6 .98 GIN OR VODKA 6 .99
SOUP BASE .95 SESAME SEEDS .57
2.19 °"""'"'. 01 .•9
Cotp-co )t 4 01
WATER CHESTNUTS SOFT DRINK 2.•s
We're 1rying to make sure, nobody's grocery prices ore lower lhon ours!
IANT TIDE
I •, ·llr Mor11nell1
APPLE JUICE
PAYING MORE
FOR IT
WON'T GET
YOUR CLOTHES
ANY
CLEANER!
s
16 or Slrowberiy
KNOTT'S PRESERVES
59
49-0Z.
INCL 15• OFF
LIMIT 2
8.rntte1n'• 16 or
1.35
1.39 Chtl Boy Ar Oee 15 or with Meot 8011•
1.45
.71 ITAllAN DRESSING SPAGHETTI
... 99 .85 32 oz
HEINZ KETCHUP
1601. Tub Margonne
SOFT IMPERIAL
ORANGE jUICE 4 PACK IVORY
Minute Mood Chilled Corton 6" 01 Per~nol Sire llorl ·I 169
Cko<k Fvll O' Nuh, 1 lb l1m111
GROUND COFFEE
Aur 8<'••HoQ~•
2 LITER SH AST A
1.99
1.09
UGHES BOLOGN
Sloeed 8 oz Plcv
c
' ~.
toss lightly (mtil well
coated. Spoon onto two
plates and sprinkle with
grated cheese and
parsley. Makes two
meal-size servings , 350
calories each.
·~ ·-• tJaree·•l••k·
--> main course:
I KING CRAB SCAMPI
~····~~~~!!~~··~!'!.••
• . DOl*N LARGI IGGS . I . ; ,. . •2~r-vi:·c~• P'CJ••····~~~~· .. •••!,•!'1 . ! Y-.f .:AR -,. ~1 t -:-._1..,_liG IJHuc; -' ~.· fdd~
• GOODTOWAROPURCHASE I 00 • I Good Moy 1 .. 2o w 11h1k11coupon 2 9c I 1 tablespoon butter
or diet margarine
l or 2 cloves garlic,
minced
2 tablespoons
minced scallions or
green onions
1 tablespoon minced
parsley v. cup dry white
wine
6-ounce package
Alaska King (or Snow>
crab, t.bawed
Paprika
Melt butter in a DOD·
stick 1killet. Cook and
atlr iarllc 1 minute. Stlr
ln rem1inln1 ln1re·
dlenta. Cook and stir 1 to
2 mloutee, or wstil crab·
m11t la heated throucb.
Makes two aenln11. HO
calories each wtth but·
ter. lU calorlea each
wltb dlet mar1arlne.
(Serve wttb coolted nee.
116 caloriet ~r YI cup,
It dealted. l
Crabmeat ll • 1rear
• Good May 14·20 With thlt coupon 2 9 c • • & Mlnimvm SS purchoM uctudinv •
• ~iquor, lobo<eo & fluid milk limit OM •
• Item per coupon ond on• coupon per •
• cutlomer •
········~~IW MARKflC~~·······
f!Al(p••~~!.~~~,~~~····!·70~1
I Fwt• 101• IAUIAGll • •
• GoodMoy 1 ... 20w.tt11111covpon 2 9 c • • I. Mimmur11 S$ pvrd\O .. •Hludl"9 •
• llqucH, IObocco & fluld milk. limit on• •
•
i1tm per coupon ond one coupon per •
• c:u•tomw. ········~~MYU~:B>ili••····'
• Of ANY T·fAl COOKWARE • • & M1n1mum SS purcho•e H clud1n9 •
• MAY 14·20, 1981 • • liquor, tobacco & fluid milk. l1m11 one •
• UMIT ONE ITEM O F • tltm per coupon ond one coupon per
P'!R COUPON F • CUt!Ol'I•• • •••••mmma~nur:~~m•••.I l•••••••~o~MA•Kn~ou~•••••••I
·-·····---------------~ I WIN • , 00.00 IN GROCIRllS : I No '""'"° .. '9qllt'.., Hv9"" ......,_. ..... oio914>1o I
I w ...... ,. ··" k ....ii,.., '"'"....,,. .. ~. I
Wed Moy 10. "'' I ~ I I I
I ~ I I I I ~ ,.._ I
·-----------------·····
fl4'1'••·················· JIUGIB"BiGUiiiMuffiit
• Good Moy u .20 With thh covpon 2 9 c • • I. Mtn1111ur11 U purchaM Hcludl"9
• ~quor, tobacco & fluid millt. Umlt one •.
•
item per tovpon ond one coupon per
<vttome• • '····••E:~»MARgUQY.B>!ll••····'
WI WILCOMI FOOD
ITAll•I ........
Open dolly t 0.111. te lO p.111.
We accept ALL coupons from other Super.Marketa
limit rlohtt r•Mr~. No ~i.. to deoltra.
Thl1 od only eff.W~ ol !4119~ El lo!ICM
olld Hu9he1 Udo.
I t•p;.M (~ ,.., t<t ...... ' ,..........,. ,--.. & tfWWI' ~--,... _""" J o.ly
M-te<tv ... '. r~"' •t 11 00 ~ lttt CM It.~ '· ............ .t ~ tll ~'t • ._. ''till-'IH liy lew > Ylfl.,. ti .. "-<.,.~~ .... ~ 11Y w. M ~ • tt we N ,... t1ee\ ....
t-~ ... •"-....,Me<\ ............ -.Ill ................. '-.. ~ ...... 1 , ...... l9Mtt•'
• .., ~ ·~ • ......, .. ~ ~ ....... -'Oft., .... Me, 14-20, ""
fltlCH ffffCTIVI, Oo\YS
I o."' Thvn . Mqy U thrv ~ 20, lftl
.. ~ ------·-.. --.---· ---·----~----------~-----------~-~~$ ......... ,
Cla Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/W•dnuday, May 13, 1981 FOOD .
Reduce heart attack risk through special diet
By JVNE ROTH
Two ot the three ma·
Jor factors associated
with heart attacks are
"lated to diet -bltb ~lood cholesterol and Wieh blood pressure. The
third f utor is cigarette
s,motlne. and this risk
will drop to normal in
one year after quitting.
High bloOd cholesterol
levels can be reduced by
a strict change of dJet.
Eat lean meat <trim
away all excess fat>.
m·ore fish and more
and chopped
2 tablnpoona grat~d
onion
2 tablespoons
chopped 111een pepper
Arrange tlllet'S on a
broiling pan. Season
with oregano and pep-
per. Combine t.omat.oes,
onion and green pepper;
spoon mixture in a thin
larer over the top of tbe
fi lets. Broll for 10
minutes or until fish
flakes easily. Makes 3
servings.
M E A T 8 A ~ L 8 ----------------8 AT A TO U ILLE
1 pound lean ground
beef
1 small on io n ,
grated
2 tablespoons
chopped parsley
2 slices whole wheat
bread
1 clove a arli c I
minced
1 large onion. thinJy
sliced
2 table spoon s
vegetable oil
SPECIAL DIETS
1 medium eHpJant,
peeled and diced into l ·
loch cubes
2 zucchini, sliced
1 green pepper ,
seeded and diced
4 tomatoes, chopped v. teaspoon pepper
14 teaspoon oregano ·
Combine ground beef,
grated onion and
chopped pasley. Soak
bread sUces in water
and shred over beef;
mix well. Form into
small meatballa. Saute
garlic and onion in hot
oil, add meatballs and
brown on all aides. Add
eggplant, zucchlnl,
green pepper, tomatoes,
pepper and oregano.
Cover and simmer for 30
minutes. Makes 4 serv-
ings.
CHICKEN PROVIN·
CALE
8 chlcken thighs
'I• cup unbleached
flour
2 tablespoons
veeetable oil
1 onion, sliced thin
l clove garltc ,
minced
4 tomatoes, chopped
1 green pepper.
seeded and chopped
Y1I teaspoon oregano
~teaspoon
rosemary
\4 teaspoon ground
thyme
~ cup chicken over cooked broad
boulllon noodles. Make• ' serv·
l package (8-ounce Inga.
broad noodJea. cooked
June fWth u LM m.1tlaor
Coat chicken parts of mor• then 20 popular
with nour. Heat oil in a cookbook•, includtng tM
large skillet; saute new "Aerobic N'dritton"
onion and aarlic. Brown authored with Dr. Don
chicken on all sides. Add ManMT~g. If JIOU have a
chopped tomafoes and apecial diet queation, write
green pepper, oregano, to June fWth clo tM DailJI
rosern.ary, thyme, and Pilot, P.O. Box 1580. Ca1ta
chicken bouillon. Cover Me.a; 92626. P~e encloae
and cook over low beat a aelf-addre,,ed. •tamped
for 35 minutes, or until envelope for a per1onal
chicken is tender. Serve replJI . 1oultry (remove skin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
before eating). Use skim
rpilk products lo cut
down on saturated
animal·based fats.
Most doct.ors advise
persona to limit egg in·
lake to several a week
because the yolk is hlgh
in cholesterol content
but also contains valua·
ble nutrients such as
selenium.
To further reduce the
intake of animal-based
fat which is thought to
contribute to increased
levels of cholesterol in
the blood, use only
vegetable oils in cooking
and baking.
Cholesterol is a
norm al component of
blood, it is only when it
gets in excess that pla ·
ques are store along the
artery walls
causing narrowing of
the interior of those life·
pulsating tubes.
lf your blood pressure
is high, besides pre·
s cribed medicine it's
wise to decrease the salt
in your diet. This means
to avoid all foods that
are prefabricated with
many kinds of sodium
on the label, to omit the
use of salt when cooking
or at the table and to eat
more fresh vegetables
and whole graJns.
Heart attack-s give
varying types of warn·
ings, so it helps to know
what some of them are.
Chest pain is the most
common symptom, and
is described by some as a heavy weight or vise-
like feeling. Most often
this paJn is in the mid·
chest, but sometimes it
.radiates to the neck or
left shoulder. or is a re·
!erred pain that goes
down the left arm.
Other symptoms are a
feeling of weakness and
shortness of breath. an
appeaqmce that is pale
and cold while sweating
profusely or sudden col-
lapse.
Any of these
SJ1mptoms should signal
tlile observer to get
m edical help quickly. It
can mean the difference
between life and death.
Here are some low
cholesterol/low sodium
recipes to get your Cami·
l:r eating a preventive
medicine way.
l!IROl.LED FLOUNDER
OREGANO
1 pound fillets or
flounder
~ teaspoon oregano
i,-it teaspoon pepper
2 tomatoes, skinned
f-'trawb erries
JWexican-s tyle
~Here 's a delicious
esaert to finish off your
exican meal.
1COMPOTA DE FRESAS
YPINA
(Strawberry aad
Pineapple Compote>
2 pounds fr esh
strawberries, washed
and hulled 12 large w boJ.e.
strawberries, washed'"".!#~
~, cup light brown
sugar
Blend 2 pounds fresh
strawberries with suiiar
and ~ cup Kinch (or 2
tablespoons ii counting
calories) · ~ cup Kahlua (or 1
tablespoon if counting
calories)
Strain the mixture
twice. Then combine
12 1Uces ripened
fresh pldeapple
12 tabl upoons
Kinch (4 table1poons ii
count.mi calones >
12 ta b lespoons
Kahlua (4 tablnpoona ii
countinl caloriet >
12 tablespoona n,ht
brown 1u1a.r <• table·
1 po one U coun tlnt
calorlel>
Strve tbe plneapple in
wlne iJ.UMI. Cover wttb
strained 1trawMrrlu,
aJid 1a.mllh ea.cb l lUI
wltb a but• strawberry·
Se.rvetU.
LOWER PRICES OVERALL BACKED BY MARKET. BASKET'S
T ·riple The Difference
& 0 ar a s II
Save With · Dollar Days And
Our Triple The Difference
Money Back Guarantee
8UL8 PKG.
VIN ROSE. BllllGUNOY. llHINE OR CHABLIS CARLO ROSSI
WINE
1.1
LTR.
$
COACHELLA VALLEY 2 g RUIY IED
GRAPEFRUIT u.•
11111111 ~Squash Ii .39
All OUANlllY RIGHIS
RUfflVEO NO SALE 10 DEAL US
OR roR llUALf OR
COMMERCIAL USf
ASSORTEO VARIETIES 4 s 1 TOP RIMEi
NOODLES =·
Altftlhftllf 1 ~Pecan Twirls
llttllltr Or l•t~I ~Dos Equ is Beer
...... tt .. tl A111111Ct~ H! Cheese Food Slices ':~:' • 2
CllllCO s211 SHORTENING 4::·
lit-Cl tit Bf Family Pride Aspirin
IA A"'·'"" ~ Chapstic k Li p balm
2!1
ft! ~~'ii lighters ..
!I! Mr . Coffee Filters· IJ9
__ ._,.
FNH CAIC( Mil MAll·IN orn• . 8 ouiCii~H•Es 0
CAKE MIX "~~.
1Ml '--g,•et .. 1 .............. ~Mars hmallows
I
Tripi• The-Difference '==':1
Guarantee!
tu• n ,,,.r.,.r n1•1-1• m .. -111•wn1A1u1 co11,.u ,.ou•
'"'' WUI .. !Mt &Mii iil .. ill illlt tlltll ~WUI-IUl't.1111111111 IOlllT
Ollf Ill 1-"" 111• MCMUU •H N U1U ... IOI C .. l'Mi ... I ol !MU•
lllill ti l-1 1111 .. ft\141 llfllllU ..__,., ll'IUI lfllllll , ... AIOI
l llt( fl•ll 11 .. I I NCfl IO llAAllll IAllll illlt Wf Will Pill 1114' IMfll
1111 lllffUlllCI .. CAM.
CAMPBELL'S TOMATO
SOUP
$
ASSORTED OR WHITE
NORTHERN BATHROOM
l'RICES fFHCTIYf
WED MAY 13 THllU
IUES MAY 19 1911
J(lllEYMAID LOW CAL 011
FAllMfll STYLE COTillE
CHEESE
~ i<ti'or:Ar~rd
H ~Cocktail Juice -,.. .
hlltfllflt • ~Hi-Ho Crackers
Pt.US DEPOSIT
llE•lAR
7·UP
)·314..0. ....... .. Ht Zes t
.•. ., • 1 •ti
1 .. 1/Nll CM .... ,, .. _ .. 8i Chicken Noodle Soup
~ at"Mi:;ltfM .. " ....
TISSUE
4$
ROLL PKG.
IEEF CHUC• SHOULDER CLOD
BOIEl ESS BEEF
ROAST S)98
l.I .
Rt Sp11;~~;; Steak
,.,,
~~~~Ider Stea
Wfttltlffy ~Stewing Chicken
FRESH FILLET OF
BUTIERFISH ll .
lb 3. 79
.. 1.59
,, .43
lb .99
SJ79
•'l.ower Prloea Ov•r•ll
Gu•r•nteedl
Daily Piiat
WEONESOAY,MAY 1~1Ml
CLASSIFI ED 05
Danny Ongais hit
200-mph but may not
qualify at Indy. D2.
He got the right pitch
OCC outfielder Vanderburg was a star prep pitcher
By CURT SE EDEN
Of ... o.11, Plt.i ...... •
One wonders how Mike Vanderburg ever found his
way into center field as a member of Coach Mike Mayne's
Orange Coast Coll ege baseball team.
While at Brea High, Vanderburg had the moves and
the ma.kings for a fine tailback. He certainly caught the at-
tention of OCC football coach Di ck Tucker.
But il didn't take Tucker long to realize that Van-
derburg's Corte was really baseball. and to be more exact,
pitching •
··He's the bes t pitcher who's not pitching in junior col-
lege baseball." notes Mayne.
WHY ISN'T HE throwing for the de-
fending state c·hamps, then?
"I haven't needed him," Mayne
responds.
The Pirates a lready have enough
pitching. The staff that hurled OCC to the
state championship last season is just
about intact this season. lt"s one of the
reasons the Pirates are favored to ad-
vance to the state playoffs May 28-31 at
Long Beach's Blair Field and Cerritos
College
The other reason for the Bucs' success
as Vanderburg. a player Mayne labels "the
bes t defensive center fielder I've ever
coach(•d .. !las hitting isn't loo s habby
either, wav£>ring around the .365 mark
this season
LAST VEAR, he raised his batting
average 21 points in the stale playoffs. He
was particularly impressive in the state
sem1f1n<JI game against LA Valley. Van-
derburg singled home two runs, including
the winning tally lie also pulled off a tri-
ple steal, including that of home to give Mike Vanderburg
the lfot·s their 11th and final run of the
game.
'Bulldog " Before this season , Vanderburg was 30th on the
all lime season hitting list at OCC with a .340 average He
s hould move up about 10 notches by the time this season
ends
AS FAR AS Vanderburg is concerned, the season is
just starting to get interesting.
"We're in the driver's seat right now. There s hould be
no problems for us now. The main thing is we can't get
down. Everything has to be positive now," Vanderburg
says
Mayne has often labeled his 1980 state championship
!>quad as the best he's ever coached. This year's squad
isn't far behind, but Vanderburg points out the diHerences
bet ween the teams
"There are a lot of young players on
the team this year . We had a lol more
great individuals last season. This year
we're molded more as a team and the
team doesn't make too many mistakes,"
he points out.
Unlike last season, when one in-
dividual say, a Kevin Romine or Mike
Sodders <both at Arizona State J could
make up for any mistakes with one mighty
swing. this year's team must do the little
things.
"THJS VEAR, WE HAVE to bunt
when we're asked to. steal more bases and
work just a little bit harder." Vanderburg
explains.
Fielding as Just as important, and Van
derburg covers his ground well.
··Yeah. I like center field I thank I've
bcl'n concentrating more on my fielding
this year It's a good position l"ve got
room on both sides.··
"lle's got great baseball instincts,"
adds Mayne. "lle's always al has best
in the big ~ames. He 's really not a power
hiller but has strong point is up the alleys. A home run hil-
ler. he's not
--
•
The all-time RBJ leader at OCC, Vander.burg is having
the time of his life, learning everything he needs to know
about baseball from Mayne. Next year, that knowledge
will be expanded under the leadership of Cal State
Fullerton's Augie Garrido.
··The thing I like the most about Mike is the way he
plays the game. He's just a fierce competitor. I guess I
could cirtl him one of my all-time favorites." Mayne adds. PUTTING IT AWAY -Doug Parson <3 ) goes up as Laguna
"These are the best two years I've had in baseball," ad-
mits Vanderburg, a 5-10, UIS-pounder aptly mcknamed
Vanderburg says he wants lo play professional
<See PIT<.:H , Page D2>
Beach High teammate Rudy DvorA <5 ) watches. The
Artists defeated Costa Mesa in three straight in the second
round of the Ci F volleyball playoffs. For the story, see 02.
PCAA, Anteaters 'given a car with no engine'
Greg Polton
-
Snyder, Slaught capture tennis titles, but get a snub from NCAA selection committee
By JOHNSEVANO
OI Ille o.lly ...... ,_
Rodney Dangerfield and the Pacific
Coast Athletic Associalion have a lot in
com moo -neither one gets much
respect.
Of course. Dangerfield jokes about his
lack or cons ideratio n for a living
There's nothing funny about the PCAA's
predicament, however .
A Division I entity of the NCAA , the
PCAA 's latest slap in the face occurred
this past week when the regional selec-
t ion committee convened for the
purpose of formulating nominations for
the upcoming NCAA tennis ch am-
pionships in Athens. Ga.
With 64 possible berths available. no
one from the PCAA was invited no
singles players. no doubles teams .
nada.
And, it just so happens that the un-
fortunate victims of this miscarriage of
JUSlice come from UC Irvine.
Jim Snyder. UCl 's No 1 man an
singles. and Snyder and has partner J..!.!n
Slaught. the No. 1 doubles duo. recently
displayed their talents in the PCAA
championships .
Snyder won the singles and late r
teamed with Slaught to win the doubles
UCI REPOKI \!'.
tille as the duo led the Anteaters to the
conference championship, edging Long
Beach State by a point.
The reward for their efforts? Well, as
their coach Greg Patton put it, "They
were given a car with no engine."
The regional selection board com-
prised of three coaches from the Pac 10,
the US F tennis coach and Patton opt
ed to give berths to the No. 3 and 4
players on Cal's third place Pac-10
team rather than give Snyde r and
Slaught any nod at all.
~e were Ji?iven a raw egg," said Pat
ton bitterly. ··Snyder, especially. I think
he deserved it It's the same old story of
the Pac 10 getting a ll the roses while
the PCAA ends up holding a pot of
dirt "
This isn't the first time in the past
year the PCAA has been snubbed by the
NCAA.
Last year, despite a 37-25·1 record and
a second place finish to Cal State
Fullerton, the UC I baseball team was
ignored for post -season consideration.
In football this season, no bids were
offered to confe rence champ Long
Beach State for a bowl appearance. In
basketball , it was the same story. San
Jose State, despite a glossy 21·9 overall
record and a second place finish to
Fresno St ate in the conference stand·
ings, was told by the NCAA it wasn't in-
terested in its services.
Of course. some legitimate ar g u-
ments could be made for the NCAA in
each case In baseball and basketball.
we ' re talking ahout s econd place
fin ishes not first place and it"s ap.
parent the PCAA doesn·t command the
same notoriety as the Pa-c-10. Big 10 or
some of the other conferences.
And. in football . although the caliber
of play 1s good the crowd count
isn't, which 1s the bottom li.ne concern-
ing bowl bids '
On the subject of Snyder and Slaugh,.
however. ex<.·uses run than. A second
place finish 1s not the issue here in-
di vi dual titles a nd a conference cl\ant-
pionship are.
Snyder. who recovered from a mid-
season broken thumb. fashioned a 31·11
record durm~ the year The team <Jf
Snyder a nd Slaught was 15·9. 1
"Last year Snyder beat at least SY'
guys who went to the nationals." Pattoh
recalled "lie is heart-sick and bitte1.
And how <.'an I expect to recruit for ~
pro~ram when kid-; who do well aren1t
rewarded"'
"I feel like we'Vl' been robbed. I feeJ
(See SNUBBED. Pa~e 02> l
Cey hot, Hooton not 'Best friend' aids Forsch (5-1)
Sluggish Dodger hurler posts win Five double plays give Angels a victory
LOS ANGELES (AP> The
Montreal Expos are the win-
ningeit team in the National
League over the past two years.
with 95 and 90 victories respec·
lively, but still they've yet to
win a djvision title.
One reason is the Los Angeles
Dodgers and Dodger Stadium.
The Expos wer~ winless in Los I ·-· ~M!a~w~ ._. __ -~ne o sl°" -'ta~!'t h~re the pr;.
vious two seasons.
TUESDAY NI GHT, in their
firsl appearance this year in Los
Angeles, the Expos lost again,
5·0, despite outhitting Los
Angeles 10·7. placing runners on
base in every Inning, a nd gettina
two more steals out of base-
runnlng whb Tim Raines.
T hey could not, however. find
an answer to Ron Cey.
The Dodgers' third baseman
1lu11ed hi1 fourth and fifth
homers of the season and also
singled home a run ln the eighth
as the Dodgers retained a four·
1ame lead In the NL Weal.
The Expos are on• same
beblnd St. Louis In ihe NL East.
"We've certainly had •+cceu
aaainst MontruJ," said Cty,
who bu driven In 18 runs t.h11
season, nlne or which have come
a1ain1t the Expot.
''Wt've been u toulb oa them
u anyone In t.M leape. ll'• not
a caae of u. overpowerilll them.
we 've Jult been rortunat•
enoutb to play •tll a,.Jnat &be .. ~·y LtJGG eo1 bl• rt rat
horo er of the game in the second
inning after Steve Garvey
reached base on an error by
Chris Speier, one of four by the
Montreal shortstop. Cey con·
nected again, to right-center, to
lead off the seventh.
"The first one was a tastball
in and I didn't think 1 hit it that · ~~Ai9 .. ~ey-. ''19:" Y"--'_-, one";'"°lfiat ohe I knew rot sute-
was gone. That's as well as I can
hit a breaking ball."
MILWAUKEE <AP> The
Angels' main weaknesses are
supposed to be pitching and de-
fense, but both were rirst class
Tuesday night.
Ken Forsch, aided by five dou-
ble plays, scattered seven
Milwaukee hits for his second
shutout or the season. Rick
Burleson j cored o e run and
K:JND-._ ll -:. ~.--~,;.
defeated the Brewers -0.
~ ....... , .... ,_
May 2. the veteran's only poor
outing of the season
·'The cold weather had a lot to
do with it tonight," he said.
"They weren't swinging their
bats freely. I think the pitcher
has an advantage in a game like
this ,"
"He was throwing for strike
02~ ~11 night long,·· Bre~er
-.,illl}~fltlbck R41ig .... -.., •• ,, 41
-Forsch. "0 u ~there < In
Anaheim> he was behind and he
had to com e in with his pitches.
But tonight he was strike one on
everybody ... Burt Hooton, 5-0. earned the
win with help from Bobby
Castillo and Steve Howe.
"Burt did a good job consider·
ing the stuff he had,'· Dodger
Manager Tom Lasorda said of
his veteran right-hander who
gave up nine hits in 6"11 innines.
FACES YANKEES -Corona
del Mar's Matt Keough puts
his 5-0 record on the line
tonight against the Yankees
and Tommy John in New
York.·
"DOUBLE PLA VS are my
best friend," said Forsch. 5-1.
"That's the kind of game I pitch.
I hardly s trike out anyone.
Tonight was my kind of game,
except I walked a couple of
guys."
The Brewers h ad raked
For'sch for six runs and eight
hits in 2"3 Innings In Anaheim
''I THROW A LOT of sliders
and my fast ball was sinking
pretty good ,·· Forsch said.
·'They were charting m y pitches
and a couple of times couldn't
tell m y slider from my sinker.
Celtics take challenge well, rip Rockets
BOSTON (AP) -The real Boston
Celtics, those men in green and white un-
iforms who run trequenlly and rebound
feroctou.sly, nnally carn.e to play.
After poelnt ror nearly thtee week• as a
mi.staJte.prone 1roup lhal 1tru1akd to un·
leaab lta runnlnJ 1ame aod dominate the
boards, lbe real Celtics resurf actd Tutt·
daJ nlpt.
In a pme they took ~trol ot In th•
first quarwrL t.he C.lUcs raced away from
the Kw.ton Kocktt.1109.ao to cbarse lnto •
3·2 lead In their best-ot·seven National
' "
Basketball Association championship
series.
The Celtics can wrap up their 14th NBA
title in Houston Thuraday nilhl. If the
Rocket.a bounce back from their 1econd de·
clalve defeat of the aeries and wln, the
seventh game would be here Sunday.
Boston led 34·19 al\er the first quarter,
when ftve of their 14 baaketa came on f11t
brtakl and the Celtic• outrebounded the
RotkeU 13·7.
"l Wnlt lt was just defenaive rebound•,"
ta.Id Bottoo forward Cedric Maxwell when
asked what ahiRed the runnlna 1ame Into
high 1ear. ··w e rebounded well. They
didn '\ get back on defense that quickly and
so they were al a disadvantage on our end or the court.··
The Celtics held a S4·41 reboundlnf ad·
vantage for the game and snared a aeries·
hl1h 35 defensive rebounds to prevent
second shots by Houston and kick off their
own tranalllon 1ame.
Boaton had not played a aoUd came wllh
runnln• and reboundinl spurt.a since April
22, when It deJeated PhHadelphla 118'99 ln
the second game of the Eutern Con·
ftrtnte finals.
That docsn·t say much for "»'
fast ball, but I was keepil)g n\y
pitches down for the most 'part.r
The Brewers failed to get a
runner in scoring position ~s
they were shut out for the fi(Ul
time this season . compared wilh
11 times all last year.
"We'r e a head of schedule,
a~ we?·· sa\~c .Moose ~ rrc.-we-~~.,.-.. ~-!5
runs in one game, and then
nothing. People look at a week
and suy, wow, we averaged six
runs a game. But they're not
looking at the other games."
llaas has grown accustomed
lo non-support. In seven of the lS
games he lost last year, th,.
Brewers scored a total or ju.at
rive runs.
"It's not just me," he sa)d.
"Mike Caldwell has been shut
out twice so far. Sooner or la~r
It will come. It'll have to.
There 's too much talent not to."
THE ANGELS scored the only
run Forsch needed In the fourth
Inning on a slnale by Burl"°", a
sacrirtce. a two·out w&Jk to
Brian Downtn1 and a alnfle lty
Ed Ott.
They scored two more runs an
the IUth. After a 1tn1le by J'*1
Benique1 a nd a hll·a nd·rln
sln1le by Larry Harlow,
Burleson and Rod Carew
followed with RBI 1ln1lea.
Harlow Mat out a bun,. ltGle
aecond and acorcd on a alnlle _,.
Bobby Clark In tbe niatb.
RodRera •hook his head.
0
0r8t'lge Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedne1d1y, May 13, 1981
F rom AP dlspatchu
I NDI AN APOL IS Oa nny •
Onguis or Costa Mesa has gone raste r
than anybody else at the lndianapolls
Mo tor S peedway this month, but
more bad weatht•r could keep him out or the
lineup ror the May 2.4 Indianapolis 500.
Oniuus. a sofl-spokt n native or Hawaii, Wl.l8
timed ., exactly 200 mph during practice Tues-
day, making him the rirst com petito r to reach
that speed since 1978, when
the Indy curs had fe wer
horsepower restrictions.
Mario Andrelli was close
bt.•h ind a t 199 600 mph, also
sur passing the m onth 's pr e-
v io u s top lap of 199 .510,
turned tn lust 1-'riday by Bob·
l by Unser
Onga is drew the second
position ror the opening
Ongau session of qualifyin g last
Saturday, !Jut a starter problem forced him to
s kip his turn during t he brief dry s pell that day.
Ile was nol among the ntne cars that qualified
for starting positions in the race. ·
By skipping his t urn, tie also forfeited his
g uara ntee or a chance to qualify for the pole
position as well as for the race. T here still are a
total of 32 cars with such guarant ees, so it is
possible Onga1s could be shut out if those cars
fill out the traditional 33-car field and rain
forces the lime trials beyond their scheduled
endin~t1meof3 p.m . S unday.
Quote of the day
"I made the first of what I hope will be
many choices 1n New Orleans, but I hope
we don't have any more No 1 's." Saints
Coach Bum Phillips , a rter pic k in g
lle1s man Troph) winner Geor ge Rogers or
South Carolina to start the NFL d raft.
Murcer homer paces Yankee victo ry
The New York Yankees made the II
most of their five hits, four of the m
for extra bases, induding a hom e run
hy Hobby Muroer, und t agged
Oak land with its firs t road loss of the season ,
4 1, T uesd<.1y night Loser Rick Langford, 4-3,
s urrendered two tuts in the fourth inning.
F:lsewhere 1n the American League, Willie
Wilson singled home pinch r unner Dan Garc ia
with two out in the ninth to
eup a two-run ra lly that gave
Kansas Cit y a 3-2 victor y ov·
t'r Texas American League
batting c hampion Geor ge
Bretl, off to a slow start th.is
season. was 4-fo r 4 with two
dou bles an<! two singles for
t he Hoya ls . Mic k ey
Hatcher and Roy S malley hit
ronsecuti ve hom e runs with
Murcer two out in the bottom of the
toth inning to li ft Minnesota to a 4-3 win over
Boston T o n y B e rnazard tripled and
sing led, driving 1n one run and scoring t wo
1)thers and Carlton Fisk drove in three runs to
lead the Ch1cagCt White Sox to a 7-4 win over
Cleveluml John Wockenfuss drove in three
runs lo back thl' fi ve-hit pitc hing of Milt Wiicox
as Dt•trml defeated Seattle, 6·2. It was the
second" successive complete game for Wilcox,
5 2. the top pitcher on the T iger s ' staff
Ruck Martine z, making his first start in a
Toronto uniform , keyed a fi ve-run firth inning
with a two run double. and Dave Stie b checked
Raitt more on four hits to lead the Blue J ays to a
5-2 victory
ROCER CARLSON
Niekro two-hitter beats Pirates
Pbll NlekJ'O tlred a two-hitter a nd II
r ecorded hla 23St.h career victory a1
Athrnta trimmed P ltls bursh . 2.0,
Tue&diy nJght ror the Braves' llth
consecutive win o ve r the Piratea. Nlekro never
allowed a ru nnCf' past second base In pltchln11
his 40lb carffr shutout . E lsewhere In the
Na tional Lca1ue, E no• Cabell a nd Larry
Herndon had run-scoring doubles In the first ln-
nir\j all San i''rnnclsco came
buc k from a no-hit loss to
bfnt Philadelphia, 4-0. Doyle
Alexandu, S-2. a nd Gres
Minton combined to sc11tter
nine hits . Tommy Herr'•
s uicide squt-eie bunt :scored G~nt' TC"nace rro m third base
with tht> winning run In t he
10th inn ing a nd St LouiK
etlaerl llouston. 3-2. Tcna ce N1~kro It'd ofr U\l' innine with a dou·
ble Right fieldt•r Leon Durham's wild relay
throw on Ron Oestf'r's base hit allowed Ray
Knig ht to iscore lhe win ning run from first base
in the bottom of the ninth inning as Cincinnati
beat the Chica go Cubs, 2·1 Knight had walked
wlth\one out a nd Oeste r, keeping his 14-game
hitting streak intact, grounded a s ing le to right
.. Juan Eichelberger scattered seven hits
anti Broderick Perkins, the major league's lead-
m g hitter , s m ashed a ho me run, d ouble and
single for three R 81 as S an Diego detested the
New York Me ts. 3·0. The s hutout was the firs t or
Eichelberger 's career and the firs t s hutout for
the Pad res Lh1s season
Baseball tod ay
On th is date in b aseba ll sn 1959:
Stan Musial, by now a St Louts Cardina l
legend. cr acked the 3,000th hit o r his
fabulous career , a pinch-hit double off
Ch icago's Moe Drabows ky
On this dale in 1955:
Ne w York Yankees s lugger Mickey
Mantle cr acked three home r uns , all over
the dist ant center -field fe nce, lo lead the
Yanks lo a 5·2 victory over Detroit at
Ya nkee St adium
Tod11y's Birthd ay .
Angels outfielder J uan Beniquez is 31.
Islanders stop North Stars. 6-3
UNIONDALE, N. Y The New ~
York Islande rs got shorthand ed goals '
from Bryan Trottier a nd Ande rs
Kallur. setting a Natio na l Hocke y League
playoff record for scoring al a m anpower disad-
vantage, and blitzed the Minnesot a North Sta rs
6·3 Tuesday night in game one of the Stanley
Cup finals .
Th e d efen din g c h a mp ion I s lan ders
thoroughly frustrated the young North Stars,
esp ecially whe n Minnesota held a manpowe r
ad vantage
CdM man heads Olympic pentathlon
Richard S. Stevens , a resid ent of •
Corona del Mar , has been named
Com mssione r "bf the Mode rn P en·
tathlon for the 1984 Oly mpic Games in Los
Angeles .. T he Cleveland Indians beat the
Chicago While Sox Monday night and then
stopped a street bea ting by overpowering three
males who were allegedly beating two othe r
m a les with a sawed-off bat. Several playe rs s aw
a possible mugging in progress and yelled for
the bus driver to stop. which he did . Sports
promoter Ross Fields, accused in a lawsuit or a
$21.5 million fraud from Wells Fargo Bank, was
found guilty of falsifying a passport application
John McEnroe and Jimmy Connors along
with Sandy a nd Gene Mayer, will carry the U.S.
Davis Cup hopes a gainst defending cham pion
Czechoslovakia whe n the two teams meet July
10·12 in New Yor k City.
Television. radio
TV: No events scheduled
RADIO: Babeba ll Angels a t Milwaukee.
5:Jb.:p.m . KM PC l710 1; Montr eal at Dodgers,
7:30 p.m., KABC 1790 1
T HURSOA \' RADIO
Baseball Angels al Milwauke e, 11·30
a .m ., KMPC 1710).
4-hour jobs for trainers?
Spring cleaning
Did you hear the joke about somebody sug·
gesting fou r hour Jobs for the athletic trainer s in
t he Huntington Beach district?
I didn't thank you did, beca us e it 's no joke
S h o u ld s uth a pr o posal b e r ammed home
sometime whe n no one's looking, Orange Co unty's
No 1 league in terms of safety. the Sunset League.
will be serwusly damaged.
KeC'ping lht:> t raine rs int act in the Sunset
Le ague was supposed to have been all take n car e
of with recent decisions lo eli minate a couple or
m ino r sport !> llnd lhe closur e of swim m ing
radlitie~ during part of the year
So wh a t 'i; so i mporta nt about at hle tic
trainers·>
SomelimPs they're be tter than a house doctor ,
especially since clahl'y ~appen to be ar ound when
you need them . ~ A
Edison lligh rootball coach Bi Workm an, for
one , will be huppy to speak for a couple of hours lf
you like •
Here's one or his stories:
"We were pla ytng against Ma rina when one of
the Marina pla yer!! was in trouble, going into con·
vu ls ions on the sideline," sa ys Wor km an.
"Our trainer, Randy William s, was on him Im·
mediately, and then assisted by others.'' They
may have saved his life.
Four-hour schedules mean Just one thlna:
Part-time help. • • •
FANS WILL GET lhclr moner.'• .,orlh at. lhe
rourth annua l Or ange County Al ·•tar volleyball
gam e IJCheduJed for Laguna HllJ1 Hilh June 5.
F irst. a airls 1ame will be added. Secondly,
the boya game wUJ be a best four-oul·Of·seven, ~1lnnln• at 8:30. • • •
LATEST aEPORT on Duval Lov~. Founl&lJI
Valley HJgh'I contribution to UCLA football : Ae
8·f~. 264 pounds and with arma now bullt to 18 In·
CtiH, be'a d unking With t wo hands olf the blacktop.
l .-oodtr bow many freshmen bave eve r 1t.an.d
fo r UCLA ? Love will ope rate as an offensive
gua rd • * • '
FOUNTAIN VALLEV fUGH football coach
Mike Milner says the Bar ons project 25 players in
the 200-pound r ange this fall, led by 240-pound
Steve Clowe r, a n offensive tackie with inside
knowled ge about the o ppos ition . C His d ad is
Lym an Clower , the athletic director at Edison
HighJ.
• • •
A F OOTBALL d eve lo p ment c amp is
scheduled for J une 21 25 at UC Irvi ne for boys 11 ·18
with instruction on all positions, weigtrt training,.
running mecha nics and diet evaluation . among
other items . Cost is $210 per athlete. Further in-
form a tion can be obtained by contacting Larry 0 .
Bryan at 645-8411.
• • •
FORMF.R CORONA DEL MAR High ten nis
s tar Danny Salli is doing a number on the opposi·
lion on the college scene . The UCLA sophomore Is
unbeaten In 16 dual matches and ls a key to the
Bruins' quest for the NCAA title.
SaJti was a me mber or four CIF 4-A cham·
plonship teams at Corona del Ma r • • •
SOME TJUNGS you should know: Estancia
High'• golt team finished the regular season with a
17-1 record and was unbeaten ln Sea View Lea1ue
play ... Edison completed Its second 1tral1ht 10--0
te nnis ca mpaign In tht Sunset Leaeue (whatever
h appened to the Ne wport Harbor tennl1 d yn11ty?)
. • . SpeakJ01 or d ynasties, there are $2 All·
American certlflcetes for water polo llnln1 the
wall• of the aquoltcs office at Newport Harbor,
datln1 since 196' . . . The much·traveled Tom
Baldwta 11 back in prep coachln1 clrclH, taklnl
over the football rortunea or Sut.a Ana Valle.y.
Didi Hill'• back , too, a11l1Un1 Tom Mella at Sant.a
Ana ... With Ted M•lle• DOW at Foothill, don
tbl1 make 25-year..old atek CWUa at University the
youn1 .. t head football coach ln Oranae County?
<Just wondmn1> ... Jay ,,_,_, lb• 1uper htch
Jumper from Lquna Beach haa aotten blJ wish
Stanlord Unive rsity h as seen the ll1ht and
beckOMd wilb a acholarahlp.
•
5 3 a
Eric Clark
Fro m Page 01
SNUBBED. • •
like we've tlone everything we
needed lo do. I get an(Crt l'r JUSt
thinking about it "
The PCAA 's lack or r ecogn1
tion as a Division I com modity
had a lot to do with ign orance of
Snyder and Slaught.
"Let's face it, in the NCAA
there are tiers an upper lier
a nd a lo we r lier,·· s aid a
spokesm an for the PCAA offit'e
"The top lier has conrere nces
like the Pac-10, the Big 10, the
Southeas tern a nd the A ti antic
Coa s t
"On the bottom tier a re con·
re re nces like the PCAA , Mis-
souri and Mid -Ame r ican. It's a
never-e nding s truggle. You can't
deny that ."
The solution·~
"Yo u just have to line up
against the good teams ·and beat
the m ," sa id the s pokes m a n
"That's the only way we 're go·
in g to get recognition."
UCI played the to p talent on
the west coast this year and,
quite frankly, didn't fare all that
well beating only Arizona State
a mong Pac-to opponents.
But, as Patton 1s q uic k to point
o ut , UCJ p l a yed a ll those
m atches on the road and against
No. l ranked Stanford, four of
their matches went into a third
set
What particula r ly upsets the
UCI coach , though . is out or 64
possible singles berths Snyder
couldn't obtain one of the m .
"If all the conferen ce cha m·
pio ns were given a u tomatic
berths," he expla ined. "it would
t ake up only 15 spots ·'
It d oesn't take a mathemati·
c ian to figure out that wou ld
leave 49 at-la rge be rths .fo r the
rest of the country
What's equally tro ubling 1s the
west coast's note d reputation for
pro duc ing qu a lity tenni s
p layers . One would imagine a
t ourname nt cha mpion . of a ny
conference on the west coast,
would have to be cons idered a1'
automatic .
"One or our goals was to win
t he conference and be No. 1 in
singles and doubles," said Pal·
ton. "We accomplished that and
it didn't get us a damn thing. We
came up em pty It JUSt m akes
me sick.''
It s ounds as if the NCAA
s h o u ld be investig a t ed ro r
negligence and pu t on probation
accordingly.
ass a 2 2 2 2 .
Artists, Eagles
• • post v1ctor1es
Mustangs , Tars , Vi kes Barons lose • By ROGER CARLSON
Of Ult Oelly ,.. ... ,,_ •
It wuis ti uftgested by more than
one volleyball ob. t•r ver that lht'
C:ostu Mesu Mu11tan gs were ont>
or lhl' very rew with a 1'hOt Ul un
beate n Luguna fl l'ach Hluh.
cis p eclally with the ir ('I F
p layoHR Kt-Cond round liu1ue on
tht>1 r home rloor
Thl· Mul'ltbng11, r unner up to
two llml' Cl f' rlnuhtit Estoncla
in t h~ St•u View Leo.cue ond
hoastmg u lfl 2 record , had size.
11ut{'k11css, u iitundout blue chip·
per 111 Puul Kn111P <ind a vO<'al
hacking to help their m uml'ntum
T ut.•11duy.
B UT IT TOOK the Art11:1ts or
I .aguna Bt'tl l'h Coach 8111 Ashen
only 75 mlnull':s to dispose of the
M ust1111101, thl' 27t h 11tra1ght vie
lim in th1·1r que11t for a cham
p111n'lhtp t>t:rl h May 22
T iii' Artists rolled 1n l hree
'ltr111ght, tak1n1( 15·11. 15 12, IS 10
dt'Cl'>HIO!I
Jo:l•wwh1•r1• 1n second round a c·
lion i-;:oit unriu dropped Ne wport
llC1rh<11 111 thret' sets 115 9, 15 12,
15 01, Ma rma dropped a fi ve set
m a ll'h to Loyola a nd F ountain
Vo ll1•y lost tn four gam es to San
ta M<in1<·;1, 15 4, 13-15. 15·7, 15-12. Tht-quarterfin11ls µit Laguna '
n eat'h agatn!>l Loyola a nd
Jo:11t anC'ia langll'S wit h Santa
11;1 r bar a
'"It was un average outing for
us," said l\shc•n "We haven't
pl<•yc·d a batl game since J>0QJ
play 1n the Inglewood Tourna
ment
"We lncd to run a Ii ttle loo
much offenM! early but a fter the
first six points of the m atch, we
found out some things and made
some adJustments ..
MESA COACH J cr ry Win ant
was obviously disa ppointed with
his club's perform ance in terms
o f mistakes. but despite citing
the mist ake!> was anxious to tell
of h 1s pride for a team which
fin ished 16 3 after a 2·12 cam -
paign a year ago
"Wt• were so inconsist ent,"
lamented Win an t "And that's
Laguna Beach's name con·
sistency."
A starting crew of j uniors
Ma rk Arnold and Pa ul Coenen,
seniors P J . Kiley and Knipp
a nd sophomores Dan Ma xner
a nd 6·5 Tom Ken nedy (the latter
m o ved lo middle blocke r for the
From Page 0 1
PITCH. • •
baseb all some d ay, a lthough m
high school. football was lhe No 1
1ssueonhis mind.
A tailback at Brea, Van derburg
rea lized he was JUSt too small to
play at a major college ,
Tucker found out a bout him
w h e n Vande r b urg 's m o the r
called him Vanderburg's mot her
wa s sn the first class Tut·ker ever
taught whilc at Brea
"Tucke r came to me a nd said
Mik c"s future r ea ll y was
baseball ," Mayne adds
His future at OCC no w boils
down to just a few more games.
Step one is to knock ofr two South
Coast Confe rence foes beginning
Thursday.
"It's lik e starting all over
aga i n ." Vand c r,bu r g says .
F.verything 's new It's something
to look forwci rd to "
tnJU r l'd Kl'n Hurd slev 1 had
l.a1&unn Beach down, 3-2 early m
t ht< first ga me
Hut then the Artists warml'd
u p und r a n orr u nine point
string, ignited by Erk Clark's
tip a nd finished with Clark's
spike to give the Artists a 14 4
b ulgt'
Again 11 wa~ rlos e for a wh1lt'
sn I he bel'ond gu rn e and the
Mus tangs pulled to 11 11 before
c·rrors and Nei l R1 ddell 's
s pikes put the Arltsls on lop
Mesa wa!> down by an 1 t to
m a rg in tn t he f1n ul gaml' only to
see m is ta kt·s a nd two Lane"
Stew11rt al'C~ h nish orr the thn·e
f(ame l'lel
D O UG P A R S ON S. Leif
H a n son, Rudy Dvor ak and
Larry Allen were other t horn!> in
the M ustangl'I · side
I
~
I
At Newport llarbor tht' big
news wa~ a n inJury to Estancia
!>ta r Oou~ ll 11rtung, w ho
'>pra1n ed hi s an k le H 1 ~
a vailabtltlv for fo'rtdav 1n tht'
quarterfinal!> is \'f.'ry q"uc!>l10na
ble , accord ing to his coach, Mike ·•
P1>m eroy
Bill Mallia~ and 1' en ton Cctrcv
led the Eagle~. who are now 15·2
'"We gave 11 lo them, we JUSl
blew 1t." wa'> Manna Coach Tim
Reed's !>umm11tion of the lc>S!> to
Loyola
"We had them reclmg and JUSI
went fla t Ill the fourth game
Loyola took advantage and we
weren t read) to come bJC'k Wt·
JUSt ktnd o( wa lkfod around ltkl'
zombi e~··
And> Klus~mann·s hilling a nd
blocking led Ma rina. 1n add1t1on
to sterling play b~ Kenn Fis
c her and Tom Plane· .
Fountain Valle\' ~ Barons ran
into trou ble against Ba} Leagut>
<:hamp1on Santa ~tonic a and
a fter t}tng the count with a v1c
tor y in the second game, fell
behind and couldn't catch up 1n
the final two to drop a 3-1 de
cision Bill Ni les paced the ,.,c
tors w'ith Kirk Jl art.) and Ken
II a r te r pl aying well for the•
Barons
UCI edged
in San Diego
SAN DI EGO UC I rvine
came from beh ind twice but 11
wasn't enoug h as the host
University of San Die go baseball
tt•am handed the Anteate rs an
8 7 defeat 1n SCBA play Tues·
day
San Diego scored the winnmg
run in the eighth inning without
benefit of a hiL A wa lk to Andre
J acobs a nd a steal of second set
up two infield ground outs to get
him home .
f or the Anteaters, Mike Nagle
ha d a bases-loaded doutrle in the
fifth inning to get two runs
home, t hen a fter Carson Carroll
walked, Troy Ybarra sent thret>
m or e across the plate with a tn
pie
In the seventh. the Anteaters
tied t he count at seven on a two
r un single by Carroll with the
bases loaded .
Da ve Glick of the Anteate rs
ha d t wo hits in the game to give
him 10 in his last 14 trips to the
plate
T he Anteaters are now 29·22
for the season a nd 11·14 in con-
fer ence play with regula r season
action ending this weekend wtth
UC Santa Barbara
Baseball standings
NATIONAL LEAG UE
West Division
W L Pct. GB
Dodgers 21 9 . 700
Atlanta 17 13 .567 4
Cincinnati 15 14 .517 51,'J
San Francisco 16 17 .485 6""'2
Houston 14 17 .452 71~
San Diego 11 20 .355 101":1
East Division
St. Louis 16 7 .696
P hila delphia 18 11 .621 1
Montreal 17 11 .607 11"2
Pittsburgh l l 13 .458 5\'J
New York 8 17 .320 9
Chicago 5 20 .200 L2 . ,_,.,k_
~ S, MontrM I 0
Alle11i. 2, Pllutlurvfl 0
_, C1nc1..,..t1 J, Cllkeeo 1 St. Loul1 J, MoullOll 2 110 lnnl"91)
S." 01 ... J, H-VOtll 0
1.en ,.,_IK0 4, Ptlll .. lc>llle O , ... .,.,.,_
MonlrMI IS.~ .. 11 el ~ IR-
).11," l'tllie.tptlle 18VSlroM H I el Se" l'r-IKo , ...... , 241
1'1111 ......... Cl llley H I ot All•11to 1-...fllKe
•·2),"
ClllcetD lltrul<-1·2) et Clf\Clnnotl 15"-
).I), n •
"
51. Leub C9'W..Y ... ) et Houll"" II~ 2 .. ), n
New 'I'-(Lynell 1.01 e1 ~ Ole90 (~1111 Ml,
AMERICAN L EAGUE
West Division
W I. P ct. GB
Oukla nd 24 8 .750 -
Texas 16 12 .571 6
Chicago 15 12 .556 61 2
Angels 16 16 .500 8
Minnesota 11 17 .393 11
Seattle 10 20 .333 13
Ka nsas City 7 16 .304 12112
East Divis ion
Cleveland 14 8 .636
New York 1.~ 12 .586 1'2
flalt1more 14 11 560 l'~
Milwaukee 14 13 519 2'h
Boston 13 14 .481 3"'1
Detroit 13 16 .448 4 'l:r
Tor onto 10 19 .345 7"'1
, ...... , •• k _
A,_.elt 4, Mllw..,k .. 0
Toronto '· ll•IUmore 2
New York 4, 0...19'\CI I
Oolrol ... SH IU•'
Clllceoc> 7, Clt._.1_ 4
K•nsos CllyJ, To .. 1
Ml11-. 4, 8-lan J, ( 10 lnnl"ttl , .. , .• o.-.
......... (R-o M l et Mllw..,({" IColdWorll
>·JI," llalll,.,.... IM(Or .... M l el Tet""lo (ton! aec._ J·Jl."
0.U•nd (1(-ofl ,.., •I Hew v-(JoM .. ,..
" S.•111• (Clerk 2.01 et 0.1,..1 ( Pelry O.tl,,.
, ........ (()tMy 2·11 •I CM c..,o tlorrto. I-JI,
n
l bt lOft (Torru M l •• Nll,_IOI• (Arr ..... M l. n
r .. .-tMeclkll M 1 ot Kon .. , City IScoltftorlf
O.JI,"
• --------
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~ . . . "
AMERICAN LEAGUE
AncMla4, BreweraO
(ALll'Ott.IA MILWAU•lll Mrlllll .. , .. .,.
H••l-,rl 4 2 2 0 G•nlllf ,2111 4 0 I 0 llifleM,'6 S I 2 I MOo11,< 4 0 t 0
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TolelS U 4 IO 4 T•i." 2' 0 1 0
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Mllw...U. 000 000 ~
OP c.lllornl• f: L08 c.111 ...... 1. 10,
Mllwovktl 4 ti -011. 58 Hlrlow. S -
C.rew, H.,1-.0tt
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To..onlO 000 500 00•-S • o
Pelrner, 5-en UJ. T M1r1lne1 Ill -
Grollem; Sileo -I . M1111ner. w-511e41. )..]. L-P11mer, 1.t, HA 81lt1mor1, M ..... ,
C1I .. 11."4.
Y.-....4,A'll
Oell>ond 000 000 01~1 t 0
New Yori! 000 JOO °'l S 0
L•no'°<d -...-11. Guldrv. Go&-111 And Ootn. W-Guldry, 4•J, L unofotd, 4-3.
S-Gos-"). HR N-Yor•. """rcor
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Oelroll OTO 140 0014 I) I
l•Mlllor, ClaY CSl aftd Her..on, Wlleoa
encl Perrllll. W-Wlleoa, S-2 L-8_,I_,
J.J HA-$Nll .. , Zllll 111 A-4,._
•• ., ... i,._.1
Tou• 010 000 000-2 • 0
1(111w• City 000 001 mrJ-J IT 0
Two --wlnlllno r..n Korld. Mello<k, c-r l •I. JOl\noon le) end 5'1-ro. L-rd en4 Grote, Quirk Ill w Leonerd, J s L Met11<11, l·l.
A 1t,US
WlllM IH 7, t IMlllM I
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Clll<eoo JJD 001 Ola-1 IT 1
Wiits, 5'>11lrwr Ill en4 Olaf, Tr°"t· Hoyt
It) '"" Fiiio. w Troul, J·I L Well .. ).J, 5 Hoyt 14) HA• Clewl-, Cllotr-
121, Rowllo Ill. A-13.~
Twlftt4, ltMl .. aJ
Botton 000 002 000 1 J • 1
Mln111MIC1 000 000 JOO J ' 0
Two ou1 -wlnnl"9 r..n KOrld. T11d0r, ~ley Ill, 811•omel1r tel -
Sc""'ldt; er10_,, coriwn end lwiero. w-
Corbtltt, 2·1, L 8urom•I••. 2·1 HR•
Ml nn•Hle, J1<k10n IJ). Hett111r (JI,
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NATIONAL LEAGUE
OodQera 5, E:apo1 0
MOMTlt&AL LOSAMOILaS ....... .. ......
RAIMI, 11 l 0 I 0 L-•· tb 4 I 1 0 H1itton, II I 0 0 O L•nclru,cl 4 O 0 0 Scott, 111 4 0 1 0 8ekor, II ) I 0 0 O.w-.,CI 40 10 Monctey,11 0000
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Mo111r .. 1 000 000 000 -0
Lot A"911ft 020 000 Ila -S
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A"991•\ 1 L08 -reel 11. LH A"lll ....
S, 28 -L-' HR Coy 1 S8 Roi"" J
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end 8onedlct. w -P Nlollro, 2·1 L-
Solornon, J.J. •-•,llT. ..... ~,
ClllcA90 000 100 000-1 s 4
Cincinnati 100 000 OOt-J S 0
llU!rtJ, Tldf'Ow m en4 81•0woll. SO(o
end Holan w Solo, J.S L-Tldr-. I~.
A~IJ,01'
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SI. LOlllt 000 100 010 1-J ) 0
HC>Vllon 000 200 000 l>-J 1 J
Foncl1, s.Alltf (I). K .. t 1101 ..... T-., Knepper, SA1"111to 110) Ind A•llY w-s .. tter, 1-1 L s.mll/10, "2. $--1( .. 1 121
HR--IOft, OW 11> A-J0,020 ,. __ ,,,...,
Now York 000 000 000-0 1 0
S... Oit90 JOO 100 OOa-.1 t 1
Z•cll•v. Felc-(t i, R..,don ltl llld
Trtvlno; Ekllelllef99r ll'd Kenne4v W-Elc,,.l.,.,_r. .,. L-l.acllry, ~ HR-SM
oi.oo. P.n<ln• 111. A-•,m
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Ptlll-lplll<t 000 000 000-0 • 0
Ion P'rlMlt<o JOO 000 1011-4 IT 0
E1plf>OM, PrOly m, LYie (7) end a-.,
Ale1111der, Minion Ill end M•Y· W-
•IHender, H . L-EIPlllOM, l..J. A-10,ao?
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C.I M-. "Ill..,_ At L~a Lone -..u. SW. .. ~,..,,,.
Cal $._ i..,.,,..... et U. flf S... 0 ....
Communtty~
IOUTM••• CAL CIOHl"•••11ca
.............. I.A ,
Oot .. n-• M M-lt • J
aHt LA .. -•t-1 IS t ~. °""'" m . ....,. c.1 .., '°""1;
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o..-..ee1-
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LA ~M 00..... W.ot
l!••tl.M""'91M1tltle-
s.ni. -.ie. •I LA M•rllOr
CYIWIM al U. Angeift CC
SOuth CoHt Conference l'OUltTH P\.ACI Pl.AYO•P
Sent• AN IJ, Ml. s.n Antonio >
TMUlttDAY'l lttAU ... QSIY PAt•tllMM
S.ntA AN 110r-. C.St "n oc..,.-... .i CMrltiot
MINion Conterance
TMUltlOAY'I P\..f.YO•P l'Al.lllf•S
s....-noet~k s.n oi..,cc et Cit""
STANLEY CUP FINALS
lllander1 e, North Stars 3
ll~-a«tn,1'41
MlnnetOlo& SC.WW..,~ 0 I I ~
NY ltlllldln , I 2-•
.. ..... t ........
1. N-Yor),, K•llur J (~In, Gorlntl.
l.S... 2. ,.._ York, Trottier 10 Cc.trelll, 14.a. ). Now York, l(ell"r • IT..ottlerJ, 1S·u. Po<\Attlff -e -·-"·Min,•·"· 8011rne, Hy, ..,.Jor, 11.11, M<ClrtllY. Min, i•.o. * .... --•. Haw York, Cerroll J I 0 . S11ttar,
Hystroml, •.JI. ,, MlnneMllo, ""*'-J
(Clcurallll. U:IM Pwnellle• -G. Smltll,
Min,.<»: T-111. NY, , •. IJ; Trottier, NY.
11 "· Tlttnl ........
•• New Yotk, MerrlO '· Sl.7. MlnN'°"· Payno 11 (~. a. Smlllll, ,.oe. • Haw Yor1l. Merrkk S ILAngavln, T-1111,
tJ u . t . Mlnnuol•. Cle<•""' IJ IM<C•r111~1. IS: 14 Penelllel -Lino. NY.
2.1', Trotllaf, NY, 11.lf. SN>U on.... MlnnelOCI ..-.10 ,.
H•w Yorll ICHo.J -Jl.
GCMlllt$ -Mi.-IOIA, Meloche. New Y-,
Smltll. A -15.QOI.
LOI Al•mltoa
TUlllOAY'i ltllSULTI (ltllef'1 _ _,_,_ .. -.,
F lrll .... -OH·Mlollty Poll<j
(Truwr.). 12.40. IUO. 10.JO, OH·IUlltlles
PoUle (Mylftl, '2.40, 2'.00, U.00, S.ntlal""
IH•rtl, l JO. OH-OMOlllAI tor w in U tlltc·
la 11·11 peld P6d IO, P 111ctA (J.IJ peld
Utl.IO.
S«ond •«• 8-.. F•va< IMltcllllll,
11 IO, 1.40, 4.40; Jlmmy-lfOllng 10.lombel,
4.JO, J.20, ClouO CMm>lf (Word), 4.20.
Third race -Reay Lid IMvlol, J.40,
J.00, 2.IO; RHI Hot 8r111e IP ... nne>, 4.IO,
3 • ..0, SPOf11no Oe<K CO.lomblll, 4.00,
FOl.lrtll r1K1 -Sltybo ICr1191r), D .JD,
IJ 40, •.20; Saint Court IH•11l,t 20, 4.tO, °°'
Hli Stt•r• CHe~), 4.JO. U IHCIA C3-1) IMlk:I
U41,IO. Fiith ,... St\erntWim /oMry IClerllWI, u.oo. uo. >.20. ~· HOCMI cc.,do11>. J.20, 1.40; Myns Flye< (W•rd), 2.IO.
Sixth rece -,._,.i•n 1Clerl1w >. 10.00,
S.00, l .IO, My R-Spring (C..doi.e), S.00.
J.40, Go '-' -y ICr-), 4 llO. p
UKt. IS.JI !Miki SJf.00
$evantll roe. -Ftoory Jel (Clrdoul.
•.40, J.IO, 1.10. St\ewc! Dice IH•r11, 4 tO,
J.40, T-rlghl rcr.-ri, t.JO 12 oucu
1+-111 pek:I Ul.IO.
E'9fttll rece -_..., C.Adllrl. 4.IO. UO,
J.40, Mf\6 10. Rey 10..wr>. 10 ....... a.,. en R•• IT.....-el. uo. U auctA (~ti paid i '1.00.
JJ Pkk Sia 11·).S.J.+el pek:I IT.1'1.00 -
" wlnnlne tklllU lflw "°''"' u PIU SIJI conaolatlon paid m .JO with ,... wlnnlne
ll<lloU llOllr --.1 P Piek Sia Kf"etcll
col'•ol1t1on peld S21.00 •1111 »I wlMtnw
tickets I-,,.,.._.,..,-.c:retclll.
Nlnlft rece -Mr IC-• (H•r11, 1.60, a.60,
• 00, Lw_.ley ITrNSUro). J0.00, II 40;
Peu Em Lion !Oomln-1l, S.00. U olUIC\A
14-ll Plk:l Sl ... <00
At1eno.nc1 -6,003
-(_ > .
NBA CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES
Celtlc1 1ot, Rocket• 80 , ...... _.._ ... ,WI
MOUITOM -P..,ltl 10, R•lcl t, llUI'-20,
T. H.ndanon 7, Ount11vy S, M"rplly 4,
Wlll0\19N)y 4, U.¥111 10, Garrett J, J_, 7,
Tornf-kllJ Totel1l010-»to. IOSTOM -__ .... ••ro "· Porltll
II. Ar<ll'-6, Fonl I, R-y 14, G H-.
dlraon J, C.r II, McH• .. •. '1rnlllft J,
0...,..od 4. Tot.1141 f1·U IOt. sc-Illy o.a.-n
Hovston " II Tl ll -IO lost.on Jo4 U 11 l2 -lot
Fo..lld «M -o..nt.evy. Tatel lolill -
HOllston ,., eo.ton u. TocMIC•I -""' .. TS.Jl'O
Men's tourn1ment '-'"-'-......._ ......... , .. .,... ..... ~
Sin• l(NleVIU ,,.,, Rlcllerd lAwls, ....
.. 2. J--~th dltf Schei-.... -
Morw• ... 2, 1•. Chris Jollftll-19ai. MIK• Hunter, M •.. 1 •.. ,; Ml<llHI M~bllre d91.
Leo Polln, .. l . 2•, W ; Nl .. 1 S.ort def. Dew
Scllneldlr,k ... 2 ... 1.
German lntem1tlonal c., ............ , ........... "-"
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'"91ALL
,......l.N9M AT LAHTA l1tAVE$ -Slgttld Cllrlt c ... mbll•, "~ -· to • 11¥•,.... <OftlrMI
PIT'TS8URGH PIRATES -Pi.•.-
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HetllMI ........ L...-SAN OllGO CHAltOEltS -SioMll Hit•
Wrloht, corner b•cll; Rob Pruton, q11erl••bec-; Ervin Cootls, Mloty; s.tn
ClepftAll, tackle; Rkllerd "'"' p;inler, IN K•'"' llak•. klCll r.tUf'n tPKMllltl, SEATTLE H AHAWKS -SIOftld Jeff Wett.,_. cou.ao1
1101$1 STATE -H•med Ii. MlcllMI Mullelly ..,.,..k director.
"OCltaY .A. ..................
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Htgh IChool volleyball
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NAIL
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' I
Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/w.dnesday, May 131 1981 DI
Fail-safe advantage?
It's a luxury OCC, Saddle back nines pref er not to use
By CURT SEEDEN
0{-0.., .........
It may be an added luxury, but lhe fail·aafe
advllntuge which both Orange Coast and Sad-
dleback colleges baaebaJl teams enjoy ls ont' lhe
two would prefer not to use.
Since Oran1e Coast captured the South Coast
Conference regular-season title wlth a 14-4 mark,
the Pirates can afford to lose their Sbau1hneasy
playoff opener Thursday agaiMl Santa Ana and
still win lhe playoffs and a berth in the Mey 28·31
state playoffs.
Likewise. Saddl eback. with lhe best record In
lhe Mission Conference·s Southern Division 05·9)
can also advance to the state playoffs even with a
loss Thursday to Northern Division runner-up San
Bernardino.
Bolh OCC and Saddleback host their opponents
Thursday <2 :30), and both Pirate Coach Mike
Mayne and Gaucho Coach Dick Stut>tz aeree, the
regular season doesn't mean a Uling now.
"THERE ARE THR EE PHASES to a season,"
notes Stuetz, who will step down as Saddleback's
head coach after seven years, once the Gauchos'
season ends. .
·'The first is the conference season, tbe second
is the playoffs and the third is lhe state tourna·
ment. We came through the first in fine fashion.
Hopefully, the second will be the same."
Adds Mayne, whose Pirates will be out to re·
peat as slate champions, ''It's a mental thing now.
It's been our mental toughness that's been our
strength. We can win it if we remotivate ourselves
for a second season."
WHEN OCC DOWNED LA Valley 3·~. for the
state championship last season, many observers
felt it would be difficult for Mayne's team to im·
prove, regardless of personnel.
Well, Mayne's 1981 squad finished the regular
season at 30-6, and, as the OCC coach predicted,
the Bucs repeated as the South Coast Conference
champs.
It was following an April 25, S-2 loss lo Cerritos
at home that an unhappy Mayne chose to predict
the title. Ironically, Mayne was mad as hell with his
team, lashing out at the players for their
lackadaisical performance.
Moffet leadi;
upstart Tars
EAST LOS ANGELES -Newport
Harbor High breaststroke and individual medley
specialist John Moffet led the upstart Sailors by
qualifying first in both events Tuesday at the CIF
4·A swim prelims, here al East Los Angeles
College.
Whether his and his teammate's errorts were
enough to make a solid run at the six-lime defend·
ing champion Mission Viejo Diablos. however. re-
mains to be seen
The Diablos, stocked with imported stars such
as Fili Colon and Rick Prado from the Mission Vie·
jo Nadadores, qualified first in both relays and
five of lhe eight individual events.
Moffet, the defending champion in the 100-yard
breaststroke, went 56.43, more than two seconds
Caster than his nearest rival and appears t.o be a
shoo-in for his second straight in that event.
He also qualified first in lhe individual medley
with a 1 :53.69, wilh his nearest rival being Prado,
who finished in 1:54 .52.
6-IDeter boats race
In between spits of cbewin1 tabacco. be noted
that the Pirates would have to clou out the season
with vengeance. And that, they d1d.
OCC lost just four conference sames all
season
THE LO~ TO CERRITOS MEANT the Pirates
had just a one-game lead on the Falcons. but
Mayne decided he wasn't going to wait for Cerritos
to lose. The Bucs swept their final fou.r games t.o
win the conference title by a comfortable four
games.
"I told you we'd win ll." Mayne reminds you.
OCC will start Mike Hogan (9-ll Thursday,
while Don Smith will be on lhe mound either Fri-
day or Saturday. If the Buc:s wtn Thursday, they'll
play the winner ot the Cenitos·San Diego Mesa
playoff (also Thursday) for the Shaughnessy
If the Bucs lose Thursday. they'll host the
championship game at noon Saturday.
Meanwhile, at Saddleback. Ben Amaya will
get the starting nod for the Gauchos against the In·
dians <15-9). The versatile performer from Santa
Ana High boasts a 9.3 record and a 2.08 ERA. He's
also batting a crisp .330 (when he's not pitching,
he's usually catching l, wilh eight doubles, two
triples and six homers.
"l'M HAPPY WHERE we are right now,"
says Stuetz. "The players have done a super job
this season and regardless of what happens from
here on out. I know they're all winners."
Saddleback 's playoff position is similar to occ·s.
If Saddleback loses to San Bernardino . they'll
sit out Friday's game between the Indians and the
winner of the San Diego CC·Citrus game.
They would then host the survivor on Tuesday
at 2:30 to determine the conference's entry in the
stale playoffs.
If Saddleback beats San Bernardino Thursday.
the Gauchos can wrap things up Friday (2:301 at
home against either Citrus or San Diego. • • •
GOLDEN WEST, MEANWHILE, is still fight·
ing LA Harbor and Rio Hondo for the second-half
championship of the Southern Cal Conference. The
Rustlers, 9·3, close out regular season play at
home Thursday against LA Southwest and Satur·
day at Rio Hondo.
Coach Fred Hoover's Rustlers should have few
problems with LA Southwest. In the first three
games, GWC has whipped the Cougars, 19-6. 18·2
and 22·4
Should the Rustlers win the second-haii
crown. they'd face LA Harbor (the first round win·
nerl in a best two·out-of·three series. The sec9nJ.
half winner would host the first game Friday. May
22. The next two games, if necessary, would be
played Saturday at Harbor
Rustlers slug
20 hits in win
EAST LOS ANGELES -Golden West College
took advantage of a 20·hit attack and 11 walks lo
post a 10-7 Southern California Conference
baseball victory over host East Los Angeles Tue&·
day afternoon.
The Rustlers put two runs on the scoreboard i.n
the first as Wes Collins belted a two·run homer, his
sixth of the year.
Then after Ken Patterson duplicated the feat
in the third for the Hus kies to put ELA ahead, 3-2,
Golden West scored four times in the fifth w!th
Chris Schulz belting a two·run double to go with
four singles and a pair of walks . .
By AL LOCKABEY
oaur l"I ... ......, "''""
After lhe Huskies tied it again in the sixth with Yacht Club three runs. the Rustlers put it away in the eighth
Jim Emmi, staff com· with four. Jack Settle opened with a double and.
modore of BCYC. has scored on Collins' single Two walks and run·
put together a special scoring singles by Randy Brower, Danny Larson
The "Sacced Sixes"
are in Newport Beach
this week preparing for
the national ch am ·
pionship regatta for the
famed 6-roeter class of
pre-World War II Olym-
pic fame.
Sponsored by Bahia
Corinthian Yacht Club,
six of development-type
sloops will be competing
in the ocean off Newport
Beach with practice rac-
ing scheduled today and
hard-core competition
starting Thursday and
continuing through Sun-
day.
They are the same
half-dozen 6·meters that
competed last week in
the California Cup
match racing series at
Marina del Rey.
Newport skippers who
wi ll be campaigning
their own boats are
Greg Thagard of BCYC
and Gayle Post, Balboa
Yacht Club. Sailin g
Thagard's boat will be
Hank Thayer of
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club. No skipper has
been designated for
Post's boat .
Other Newport skip-
pers will be involved
with boats from othei:
areas. Dennis Durgan of
NHYC will be at the
helm of the San Fran·
cisco entry, Ah, Si St ,
and Andy Rose, Balboa
Yacht Club. will be sail·
ing the boat from the
Fort Worth, Tex. Boat
Club.
Other entries are Sl
Francis Vll, skippered
by John Bertrand, St
Francis Yacht Club, and
an entry from Seattle
committee to handle the and Bob Grogan ended the GWC scoring. . .
championship event. Mark Stone posted his fourth consecubve wrn
Others on the committee for Golden West in a relief role to bring his season
are Al Cassel, Herb mark to 5-5. Golden West plays LA Southwest
Hope, Jack Larson, Thursday and Rio Hondo Saturday lo close out the
Fred Martin, Seth Mor· regular season. rell and Charline ~ei . .::.s:::s·:,__ ___________________ _
BR78x13
DR78x14
ER78x14
FR78x14
GR78x14
HR78x14
FR78x15
GR78x15
HR78x15
LA78x15
4100
47.00
49.95
Sl.95
5195
55.95
52.95
56.95
51.95
'1.9~
mn uus -n1tWtiS
Pl8S/U13 .. .. . .. .. . .. .. ~78x13) U
~nsRIS ............... l008xl5) U
P215fl5R15 ............... (008xl5l 5U5
Free agent
tryout set MERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO
SPECIALISTS AUTOMOTIVI USTOIATIOMS
AMD .. AIU
The OranJt £mplre Outlaw• profe11lonal
f oolball club b holdin1 free a1eol tryoul1
Tbund.ay 1l I p.m. at
Anaheim mth School.
Read Co1cb Brad
Ecklund and at111taot
eoacb Tom Fe.an say
they are l~ tor 1
1ood draw from the Oran1e County area.
~ flrH 011,...... w/$14.tl Oft C ......
CHICK OUl COWITTTIYI Pl.ICIS
RRST & GRAND ARCO 135-4049
1222 I. I It (off I fwyl 1·5 bc.,t SI&
c~~ ~=~ Daily Pilat m:huf w4' m tM
COMrLm AUTO~•
~-.. CADl~.!.~O:r'"' "-~ iFj>......,., ........ , .......
lllllJ • Tll.WS • B8'U m1ll ..... ,_ ... 11mu.
.._., 'llliltMec=r .... -.w .. 1 ""-~ ........ -~ 711 I . 111 ST,. CISTA D (1l4} 15t.tm
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D4 Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT /Wtdna1d1y, M1y 13, 1981
~~=-"·~===·~~-~~..---~---~·------~--~~?·~-..._..----..._------~· ..... ·---·~···--~· .... ~-
Sale Price 2 Jugs ... sp
Leu c..ai ,.._ ~,...., frffi
"PllSTONl9" .. twe "'9• -s400
YOUR COST FOR $tl38 TWO JUGS LIMIT
Ami MCTOIY lflATI c
HERE'S HOW: I HOULAI l'ldi"t..C:-.:-In -r '• '°>'> ''°'• ~llCI Moll wllll !I.It od 10 .. , ... _,. $
_,_..i.ctr~.oo ... 10o1 ,11r.._. (DNllt 1..Slwe.) .. ......__ ___ _
26 INCH MIN'S 111(1
W11M IAL.LOOH TIHS .
PREVENT THEFT
OF COSTLY GASI
llPLACI i!i1 r.i YOUI GAi CAP WITH A SEAL...TITE
&OC•ING 0
GAS CAP_
• 26"•2.12$'" aoloon wi.;,. wa• t .. ~ 995 • Tour''' cQfft•Ofc ~Saddle 7 ~ .. __ _
e Oeiol•• blffo ~bar, &ottl SidH. UOI . • a.flector• rOf'I REMANUFACTURED WATER
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SUPER HIGHV.Y (llodi TM Type)
7.oo. u I '·"• 1• I '·"• u I '·'°• 1• ~~ ~~.~ '-.!~ ~.!~
ftlnn HtUOO "'".' "'""
TWIN SINGLES <llodi T.W.Ss)
s"•" I 64" I"" 1 •i" I ii" O"wtO l f'\t•..Afta tl'\•t••ll f'UWtO '""itAlt'I HIU• ll l Uff HI M ,. llt M4' H t U S)
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WITH IAlllD WHm LITTIU
lt7MI I Iii. II " I II • II I II • " " I ". '"' '''M': !.~,'.:' ~!~ !.~~ ~.~:'
TRACTIONm M + 5 (kit T~ (-.ck,...._,
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12 MONTH UMITIO WAIU#Tr'
FOR TODAY THRU SUNDAY Se habla espanol
COSTA MESA FULLERTON GARDEN GROVE LA MIRADA SANTA ANA WESTMINSTER
2946 BRISTOL ST
SO 0,.-SAN DIEGO FWY
PHONE 549 1533
1S30 S HARBOR BLVD
PHONE 870 0700
10912 KAT ELLA AVE
KATElLA & EUCLID
PHONE ~38 0863
14707 ROSECRANS AVE
PHONE 944 6437
120 E FIRSTS f AT CVPRf SS
PHONE 54 7 74 71
I '.>121 er AC:H 81 Vf)
PHON( Hen HS44
OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 8 A.M.-9 P.M./SAT. 8 A.M.·6 P.M./SUN. 9 A.M.-5 P.M. --1' '
t
••
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981 DI
I= P\JiLic NOTIC~ -PUBLIC NOTIC~
....... c:a 111VlflllO 81DS ,.CTITIOUS au11111a NtllU It ,..r ... , e•••n ,,. ••• ,.. .,.... STATIMAllT ~ • .., V--Dlllrl<t ef Or-fl•• ... ._ .... _ .. " •• ,. ••lllt , ...... y wlll tKtlw ........ llUI flOl l•l•t
WMllHt.. IN111. l 00 ,. M , T~y. ,,_. Jt1
6
4
2
The marketplace on the Orange Coast ... 642 -5678
CLE .. 0.NIH ,.llOll'Ea'f11!S, UO Oey 01 ,,.., 1•1. _..., lllO• 10r I.ht ll'•ltltY l•t 1111t, c;oro11e Otl Met llltllltllltlt flf t trlM'! ..,,, 10 ... lned el Cellfonlle~ ••tlOV\ te-t 111 Ille Ohtrkl ~
l'r-a C..,.._, •• lrvtt• 01 lllO• \ft.ti i. rec••-111 ,,.. e .......... HCMllH For s• ....•...•..........••••..•..•.•...•.......•..........••.••...••••••••.••..•...••..••..•................................................... '"" l'r-a. ,........,. tf\41 l'tel\ttt OHkt 9' I,,. Dltb'l<I el tttCI 8 SV•I Ci.ncltMft l'Mftlly '""' 1••"'1111•-H1111ll11ft0tl 9MCll, Celllot11le ., ... ;
lly Declerel.., 9' Trvtt 00\111 OttOller eno "'•II i. --•llO pulMkly r•.O u . ttlOI, uo .......,., A-. ,.,.,.. ....... , .,,. -Jt•1ecl lllll• -
IOOJ ~ .. tOOJ ClaMr .. IOOJ G.-rol 1002 G.-ral IOOJ
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . •••••.•.•.••••....................•.••••..••.
0.1 Me•. Celltoml4 nus 0 1ac• Oe11111a Clendenen, UO Poppy All 1>lc1t ....it De m-Of' blO oormt Avenw. Cll'ON Clltt -(, C•lllorrue t11rn11,... ......... 01\ltl(I nw form
,,." •11•11 be k C-leO Cly • terlUleo A•l•ll Cltlldtnen, UO POPPY cullltr'acN<llorbldllondtor)'otllle A•tn.,., Cor-Otl Mar, Calltornle eme>11nl ol lhe bid, m-peyebl• IO llw
.,.U order 01 lllt OCHll View '><-1 o .. Tlllt INllMH I• <ond11<1ed by • Irle! 01 O<envt COU!llt, Celllotnle t•nerel~ntl'llllp. Ettl! bid mual contorm •nd b4I Fr-8. c;,.,...,,.,, rt'l>Ofltlw 10 lllt conir.cl OO<um.nh Tiii• ............ we• fllod Wiii\ Ille C~I•• ol lhe cerpet -lllutlotu •ncl c;ounly Clm Of O.envt Couuly on Mey tole I quantity of c erpet1no 10 b• ~·-~':~ C. a•AD""• tumlt,... ere now on Ill• In Ille Butt ,... ...., D neu Office, Ot..,, View '><-1 01• :...-::;:•i..w lrl<I, 1H40 8 StrHI, Hun1111111on Beech, Celllornle :::~~Nllee Tiie OlslriCI ,. .. ,v .. tlw r1911110 ••
•-..-• -Drlff JK I llny or ell llMh "'o D-1 rn•; "••"'1 -·CA.,.._ •lllldrew "" blO la< • p.,100 ol torly I '""" llv• 1451 oe~ •lte< orw ••t• >4'1 lo• ,.,. P11llll"*I Or-Cotll O•llY Pllol, (>t)elllno Of DIO• Mey IJ, 20, 71, Jyne J, 1 .. 1 JJl.4.al -A ... 11 ~k-
P UBLIC NOTICE
C .. rll Of 11\e Bcwtd 01 T '"''"' oc..,, VW.. !><,_I Ol>lrt< I Or-Countt C•lllOtnte P11Dll>lltcl 0r""9t Coe\I O•lly Piiot,
'ICTITIOU• aU$1NEH IM•t IJ, 10 '"' 1lll .. I NAMI ITATHHNT Tne tollowlno ""o"' .,. 001no ...,,,,,..... P UBLIC NOTl('E (el HEWPOAT HOME LOAN , INC .. Ho Ut, 1111 NEWPOAT HOME LOAN, INC .. HO. lJ'I, l<l NEWPOAT HOME LOAN , No HO, IOI HEWPOAT HOME I.OWN LOAN, Ho 141, (t i NEWPORT HOME LOAN, No 142, lf l<MEWPOAT HOME LOA"', Ho
ld. (O) NEWPOA'f HOME LOAN,
H o 1'4, (Il l NEWPORT HOME LOAN. HO. 745, ti corpo.eto 01 .... H.,•llOrl a..cl!, Catllornl• •3'o60 HEWPOAT HOME LOAN INC, e C•lltornl• uwpo•ellon NEWPORT HOME LOAN,
NOTICE 01' INTENT Tiie ~Ill Cewtlt Count, W•l•• 01\ lrlCI, Jim Wttt SlrMI. Soulh Levune, Celllornle, 11•• flied •n epe>licellon wltn int Soulll Coest A9910t\tl Com mlulOn for <Ot\5lrucl1on ol tKlelmeo ··••r tecllltitt ,,.. l)rOIKI con•l•I> of conslrucllon ot ed<lll1one1 lrHI ment letllltln encl modifoullon• 10 ,,.. u l•llnv pwnp•no ••••IOn •I 1rw o
l\linQ tr••lment pl•nt i1t• 1n At1i.o C•n
YOfl. Conslrll<llon Of • ""* oumolnO
t••UOn •t the northerly corn&r of INC. c;.,, ICIOl!t. General Telephone property eotacenl
~ftlelofll 10 All\O W•v. (On\lruCllOI\ ot • KAllllHn HAp, pjpellnt In P•clllc Cout Hlohwayl Aul VI<• Prn trom Al"o W•Y on the norlll lo Tnls >let-I w•• tiled wllll 1.,. Wll lleweler Ori•• on 1rw >oulll, encl "' Coun\y Cltrll Of Orenge Counh on M•y Slonehlll Orlve from lhe weslorly end1 ti, 1911 lo Dene Hiii> H19h X'-1, •ncl con
1 P'l6lllS ~trucllon of • rHt'rvoH and pumplno
Publl....0 Or-CoHI Delly Pllol >1ellon ., I"" u 1>t1no rowrvotr >11• Mey u , 20, 11, June 3, tttl n»-ei Wt>lerly of !>ea'""'°" P••k I Pu1>lls11tc1 OrMl9t Co.tsl O•"• P••o1.
Mey ll, U, Ii, 19tl 11~1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOU• auSIN US NAME ITATI!MENT Tll• lollowlnv ""'°" " O<Hno ...... l'ICTITIOUS auSINESS
MU et NAME STATEMENT
M< COHNEU ~ COMPAH V '"I Th• lollow1no l>e'"'"' •r• do•n9 Abbie Wey. Cati• MH• Celllorn1• IN>1neu es tUU CU STOM TOWIHC. !.ERVICE Cerl Cleren<e McCC>t\l\ell. •II AD 1111 B•kor Suri• 0 Cosl• Mu e
Ille Wey, C"6l• Mew. Celllornle .,.,. C•lllorno• t2'26
T"I' bus.lnnt 15 <ondU<ted by •n In f W•rr•n Wln\-10f'\ Corc>or•t1on, •
dlvldu•I C•llfornl• <Ore>0r•l1on 1111 8•i..er , Ori C McConnell Sulle 0, Ccate Mew Celllornl• tl!l26
Tiiis l\elemenl Wit lllod •Ill\ llw Tllh bu:>•~·,, <ondu<l..O by e CO< Counly Clef'll Of Ortn91 c-ty on Mey POrellon ti 1'1tl war._.. Winston C<><o
' F1•tllt WIMton Anotrson
Publl"'9CI Or-Co.tit 011ly Pll01, PrntOtnl Mey ll,20,21,Junel, 1tt1 ,,.,, .. 11 Tllll stel•menl ... , l1led wolh lno
PUBLIC NOTICE
NS1'1a "CITIOUS aUSINESS HAMI STATIMl!NT Tiie 1oi1-1no Pl""" Is oolno bu•I
ne1• ••
Counlt C,.,. of Or-County on M .. 11,tffl Fl•ttoOI Publl•rwo Oranc:io Coe•I Dally P1101. M•y IJ, 10, 11, JUM l, t911t 71)MI
PUBLIC NOTICE
PAINTED PRODUCT, 414 E 11111 P'ICTITIOUS austHEH !lrMI, Cea•• Mew, C•lllornl• •i.11 NAME: STATEME NT Ben T w ... , U.SI O.k Ciro•• Cir T "• 1011owl119 ""'''°" " 00tno bu>1·1 cle, Hunllnolofl e .. cll, Celllornle neu ••
'2M1 I lJL ~SOCIATES, 1511 Florocu,I Thi• DllM~J Is c-wd Dy •n In Sulle A, Huntonoton 8t'Mh C•lolorn•• dl•lduel 91•~ Ben T w... Loo J LAC<H<•• Jr 2Sl2 Florocu,I Tlll1 slel-l was llled wllh 1no !>111)• A HunltnotOfl Bo<Kll C111lorn1• Counlv C .. rli Of Orenvt Counlv on Mly tt..e
I, 1"1 Tf"I' °""''re'I\ 1\ CON:t\l(fftd Dy M' 1n
I' 1•1a1 dlv•duel Publl"'9CI 0r-. Cotti Oetly PllOI, l.eo J L•G•w•<i jf Mey ll, 20, 11, June J, 1'91 17so.tl Tni> Ila!_,.! ,.., ltled wolh 1ne
PUBLIC NOTICE
I
l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The loll-lno oerwn> e" 001no
........... ti MADAM J l HAIR PU.Cl, UH
Counoy Clon. Of O<.,oo CO<Jnly on M•v
II "II FUl-4 Pub41Jhed Or-CoHI O•llY Pllol, M•y ll, 20. 21 J.,,... l 1'91 71• I ti
PUBLI(' NOTICE
Mew v .. m O<lw EHi, Ho Ill, Co\le l'ICTITIDUS aUSINESS Mew, CellfMnletilol!l NAME STATEMENT' Phlllp 8 & J-llt 1/inctnl, HI T llt lollowln9 otr•ons •rt Ootng
A¥o<•do Strttl, Cott• M•'•· lbv\ln~n.s•' C•lllornle .,.,, (t i NEWPORT HOME LOA N. No Tllh llutlneu I> (OfldUCltd by 1131, (b) NEWPORT HOME LOA N,
llu•b•nd-wllt No 1J1 lei NEWPORT HOME LOAN I Pllltlp B Vlnc•nt LOAN, Ho lll. (0 ) NEWPORT! Thi> '"°tornenl wu lllod with Ille HOME LOAN, No 13-1, lt1 NEWPORT County Cieri! Of O•M>Ot Covnly on Me1 HOME LOAN, Ho 135 Ill NEWPOR '
ti, ltet HOME LO AN , No 1H !11 11 1'1•1'11 HEWPOAT HOME LOAN No lll l Publlllled Or-Cotti O•lly Pllol, (h) NEWPORT HOME LOAN, No ni. Mey U, 20, 11,June l, Itel 7111 .. 1 11 Cotportl• Pleu, H•wporo &et'"· Celllornla 91"60 • NEWPORT HOME LOAN, INC.,• PUBLIC NOTICE ce111ornlecoroore11on NEWPORT HOME LOAN.I IHC ,.CTITIOUS •USINU• Corl KIO-I NAME STATEMl!NT 1>t-.1deft1'· ... !~1tot1-1nv penon Is clolnv lkitl IC•tlllHn Heep I
INTERACTION COMPAHV •:JOI Aul Vocp Pr°' Peurnont O<I.. HunllnotOfl Bt1<h This >l•l.,,....nl ,.,., ••led wtth the C•llfornle.,.. · · C011nty Cieri! of Or-Coun1y on Mo
A099< V T Yell, ~1 Pa<HTICW1t ll, l'ltl
Orlvt, HunflnglOtl S.etll Celltornl• P bll·-Or C Fln-t1.... u p--oesi OeHv P1101, I This ...,.,,..... I> conou<ttd by.,. In f"•Y ll. 10 11. J-l. l"I 11'7 11
dlvlckl•I A-VT Yeh Tllol stet-I ••> flied w1ln Ille Co.inly Clt<1< °' O<-c-1y on M•r I •. t'91
'""" PuDlllhod Or-c .... ,t Delly Pllol, Mey 13, 20, 11, June>. 1•1 n..._.1
' I I ~ ~·\~ r-i 'l1 ·
).LI ·• 1\ X·•
Starting
a New
Bu1lne11
Acccordlng 10 Callfornta eu.ineH and ProlHtlont Code (Sec
11•00 10 111101 811
poreon• dol"iJ but1ne11 undar a flcthlout nam•
mll•I Illa a ttetom•nl with Illa County Clark and Ila,.. II publlahad tour tl mae In a nawepaper MrwtnQ Ille
aroa 111 whlcll Ill•
b11atna11 It tocetad
Tiie 1talamant 11 req11 lrad ll't law aMI It
necH .. ty 111 pHMectl11g
ro11r b11alnau namo Mott ba1111t roqul,.
proof Of tltlftQ 10 09911 commardal -11nta.
PUBLIC NOTICE
STATEME NT 01' AaANOONMENT Ol'USE 01' 'ICTITIOUS aVSINESSNAME The lollOwlno perwon lies ebendOneel llw uM Of tlw lktiliou• bv>1neu ,..,,,. VACHTIHG C()ljSVLTANTS el 1'14 VI• Oc>ot1o. l'to 1, Htwpon 8e1Kll, Celllor11le '2'4J Tll• llollllou> lki\lntu namt rt lerroo<I to abow ••> 111.0 "' County on Octo«Mr11. 19'0 Roberl O H•oln, ll7 Vlr9ln••i Piece. Coste Mew, Clllfornlt '1•71 Tltll bo .. inHS W" CondllCl..0 by lft lndlvld.,.I. A_,,O Hllvln Tllll •llte..-1 ,.._ 1119<1 with Ille Covnty Clerk Of O< anQtO County on Mey ....... 1'1411)0
Pwblltllod Or-Coesl Delly Pllol, M•y u,20,11,JUMJ, t9111 n •t-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUS aVSINEH HAMI STATEMENT Tiie 1oi1owtnv person• ere dolno
"""' ... ""' PREMIER PLUMB ING, 10311 Munder Line, Hunllnvton BeKll,
C•lllornle~
lhy_,.., JoMpll Ge11nt. ?OJOI Mee11der l.6M, H11nllnglon 8•ecll,
Celllornle ~ Troy l'ranCls oc 111 .. ,, U21
S11owlllrd, H11nll1191o n •••<II, C..lllornle.,._.. flll1 INJIMU Is <Ondu<ltd Dy e veneret.,.,,,,.,.,,...
R•ymond J G-Tta\' F ICIMty Tiiis 11111-1 wu flleo will\ I"' Ct11r1ly Cltrll flf Or-Counly on Mey n,nt1.
PU1"1 P\11111..,_ ()re119t c .... "'I 0.llY Pllof. Mey U, 20, 11, June 3, 1•1 ttt..fl
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PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITlOUI aUSIHEU 6 HAMl ITAT•MINT
EQUAL HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY
Publish•r's Notice:
All real estute ad
v l!rl1 1>e d 1n thi s
newspaper 1s subJect to
the Ft>deral f'air Hous
mg Act of 1968 which
make:. 1t illegal to ad
vertise "any preference.
llm1tat1on, o r di s
c11m1nat1on based on
rue·~. t'olor . religion . wx or natwnal origin.
o r an intention to make
anv ~uch prcrerence.
l1 m1tal1on. or d is n 11nm.it1on ..
Thi:. m•wspaper will not
knowinitl~ an·ept any
a<1vcrt1s1ng for real
estate which u. in \ 1ola·
l tvrl or the law
ERRORS: Adverffsen
should check th.Ir od1
daily and reporf er-
rors immedlatety. The
DAILY PILOT a11U1M1
liabUlty for tM fint I
incorr•ct insertion
only.
!Houses for Sole
l;;;;~~i ··········io.oi
········•··············
SECLUDED
RETREAT
1\i.sume $74,000 Ill loans ~16 per mo pay!> all
Wa lk to South Coast
Pla£a 3 li<inn, gourmet
k1l1·h • plw. formal Liv
ang Scduded patio a nd
n1mm pool T~nhse
<1s k1ni: $97.750 Call
963 7881
THE REAL ESTAT&:RS
580 38APOOL
E'\e>cut1>we home I blk
rrom golf l'OUrsC' Large
J!>:>UflH1hle Isl OWC
2nd Won't lai.t' Phone
t o n11e T im Rhont'
631 1266
RrfMrte
Rf-'.Al.TORS
DON'T SETTllE
FOR LESS!
T han e arning over
$&0,000 per year! Fmd
out how. Jolll us at 7PM. Thur~tla y. May 14 al The
Ko•al !::slaters. 2855 E.
Cnai.t H 1~hwa). Corona
dl'I Mar Ask for Julie,
li7J 11550 .
THE REAL ESTAT&:RS
GIANT
HACH IAlGAIN
Charmin& 4 Bdrm. Liv
Ing room features coiy
wood burning fireplace.
Huge lot. Owner will
help finan ce! Onl y
$209.900! 673-8550
THE REAL ESTATERS
owe
~ side C06ta Mesa con
do, pool, spa. 3 Bd super
steal. Talk w me. Tim
Rhone 631-1266
RrfM~
RF.Al.TORS
DECOR.ATOR
CONDO SI 19,900
Wmding greenbelts lead
lo bright single story
condo. Exquisitely de
corated with custom
wallpaper and cabinetry
thruoul. Formal dining
roo,rn too! Owner will
cooperate with financ
ing Won't last at this
prit'e, so call now.
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
7 J 4-631 -6990 ------
eDM owe IST
3 Bd 2 Br duplex. 3 short
blks t o the water
HAUT.uu.Y
HFUUISHID
4 bdrm home in good
location with a com-
p I e te ly remodeled
kitchen, new paint, new
cpta and drapes. Owner
rlnancin& available.
$132,500 Call n ow
979-5370
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
MESAVBDE
· UHRIAL
Hundreds of flowers
everywhere a nd sun
filled rooms make this 3
BR home a must w see
A real value al $141.900.
Call now fordetailll
@
SEA COVE
PROPERTIES
7 •4-631 -6990
LIDO ISLE
Super sharp 3 Bdrm with
spa . Comple tely re·
modeled & redecorated.
1525,000, 15'* down
Owner will carry
balance.
HDUCID
SI00,0001
OCEAHROMT
Choice comer duplex. 3
bdrm , 3 bath up , 2
Bdrm. 2 bath down. Can
convert lo a larger
home. SELLER WILL
HELP FINANCE al
13%. $795,000!
.. lboa lay Prop.
Reallon
•675-7060•
_/cf;:\_
" ... '''" ..
Horitor V!.w HOIM
Highly desirable large
corner lot. Newly de
corated famHy home on
fee land. Too many
amenities to mention 4
Br Palermo. $349,000
Ownr/Agt. 759-1698
WHA rs UNIQUE
AIOUT UNIQUE
Lowest prfre m town 714 Ca ll me today Tim , __________ _
PRIDE OF
OWNERSHIP
Palermo model, 4 Bdrrr.
country lotchen, super
master suite. lovely
yard. S325.oooree.
Rhone 631·1266 ••
RrfMtte
R t-:Al.TORS
15°/oDOWN
3 bedroom t bath,
se parate in law
UPPER BAY
~ht and ch eer y 4 Bd~ bath family
home Large covered
patio $220,000.
Roy McCcrcle, Rltr.
541-7729
quarters. Large comer!~~~~~~~~~~~ lot RV parking. ~1.900., ... ________
1
CLEAN DEAL -On a
clean home. tasteful. 3
Bdrm , 2 ba Monaco in
Harbor View Homes
S235, 000 fee
751-3191 1•
C::. C,El f C T
........ PHOPl:Hlt( ~
FIXER
In Npt Sch. RV access,
owner anxious. Won't
last 1 Call now. Tim
Rhone 631· 1266
WM~
R F.Al.TOkS
r l• : ."
1.J l, l't .. ) •
· .... ] '·,' ]'•.
WES TC LIFF
Ou t standing f ou r
bed room. three bath
home. Stunning country
kit c hen with oa k
cabin ets Oth e r oak
builtins in c lude
bookcases and desk. All
new carpets. AJI new ap-
pliances. Cuswm d rapes
and wallpaper. Owner
extremely motivated.
Submit offer. Price re·
duced to SJl!i.000 .
63 t-7300 H .I .
FINEST I N WOOD·
BRIDGE~ Bdrm 2 ba.
near Stonecreek Park.
mountain views. de·
lightful at $1.89,000.
BEST OF BOTH
WORLDS.-New quality
construction. and the
c harm of o ld world
craftsmanship. Stained
glass. French doors, 3
Bdrms and 4 fpl<''s You
must see this $477.000
ree
EXCIT I NG
CITIHOME-3 Bdrms.
den. 2\o'.t ba, looks out on
quiet greenbelt. $169.500
BIG CANYON -
Broadmoor. 4 Bdrm. 2'•
ba, with pool and spa.
SUPYDUPER newly redecorated.
Reduced $10,000
Highly upgraded & re·
modeled Santa Ana Hgts
view home Large 3
Bdrm 2 Ba. skyhte
greenhouse window.
pool. spa, and family
room are some of the
features. The owner will~~~~~~~~~~
finance with 30"k down.
Full price $210,000.
Hurry on this one!
TRADITIONAL
REAi.TY
HOMES&. INVESTMENTS
631-7370
$645,000 Beautiful, immaculate,
nicely landscaped 4 THAT'S WHAT'S bdrm home on cuJ-de
sac. Spacious rooms UNIQUEAIOUT
View of golf course from U,_.IVUf. t1()Mf.S property. Owner will
help on financing. Only 1~~R~e~a~l~w~rs~·~67~S~-6000~~~ $1 39,500. Call now 1~
979.5370
OPEN HOUSE 8 E H I M D I ~
332 P o1nsett111 , CdM PA YMEHTS
ALLSTATE
REALTORS
!'nme & set' thts brand Owner is motivated. Se<
nc•w home with its Old Um 3 Bd pool home to
World Oak cabinet ry day . C all me . Tim
THINKING
TOWHHOME7 ~at 1 5 or call to see Tim Rhone 631· 1266 Ca II the specialists at
the condominium in·
formation center Hhone 631 1.266
RrfMrte
RF.Al T ORS
RARE OPPORTUNITT
IH CA.MEO SHORIES
Lowest pnced ree sim
pie available! Great as·
i.umable lst TD En1oy
urtemoon sun and views
f1 om wood dec k . 3
be autiful pr ivate
heaches. Only $549,000!
Call today! 673-8550
THE REAL ESTATERS
owe 91/4°/o
Picture perfect 2 Bd
home. l Br apt m CdM
below the Hwy. See (o.
day. buy tomorrow. Tim
Rhone 6311266
Uil
SA.UOAT
WATCHIHtS
This Camoo HiabJands
beauty is priced w sell!
$339,000 Owner 10%
down with owners as-
s istance! One level 3
Bdrm plus huge yard.
Hurry! 673-8S:i0
THE REAL ESTATERS
Touchstone Realty
963-~ ----1
PA YM ENTS $750/mo
Lovely 3-4 br E/S1de hse.
OCEAHROMT s110,ooo, w/811.ao/c 1st 291
2 Bdrms. 2 ba, unfum. Monte Vista, CM .
New $85-0 yrly. 646·4289.
IAYRtOMT 3 Bdrm, 1 ba, unfum Get GREEN cash
Mint cond. $850 yrly. for WHITE elephants
CHANNa FttOHT with a Classified Ad
3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum.1 ___ c_a_ll_M2_·56'7_8 __ -i
WANT ACTION ?
Classifed Ads 642·5678
S750yrly .
associated
BROKER S Rf At Tul>S
101', 'W Boll·.,.H1 ,. •' !#..t_. I
t80DEGRHVU
or the blue Pacific.
W atcb~e aunset behind
Catalina. Lowest priced
view in CdM. Call today.
See me Sunday on Opn
Hse 1·5. Tim Rhone
631·1266
DWI.IX
3 bdrm. 2 bath each unit.
Fireplace, bu.llt·lM. E1t·
cellent rental area. Near
beach & bay. 1285,000.
642-=a eves.
associated
u fl')~ r w ·. ., 1 ri. ' 1 i..• •
J ' o/\ I ' ,
PIHIHSULA COTIMH
$225,000
Walk to bay, beach or center of
town from this 2 Bdrm 1 bath
c harming cottage, with
fireplace. Owner will carry
loans plus property is availa-
ble on a short term rental
basis.
C0°IUYHS DIEAM
Nicely furnished 2 story, 4
Bdrm with 2 separate master
suit.es. Large assumable 10'h%
loan o n this 2 year ne w
Newport Back Bay home .
$315,000.
Tht DA ILY PILOT
prOYfdH llotfl fltlflt and
,ubltcatloft -¥Ice•. We llaH all tM ftKHHty
torm1 11nd maintain •
dtll~ Hr'WCH 10 lllo O r 11n1t Coun., Cour01ouae. attMt tlop
•r on• ot our eonHnlant offlc .. or
pllont Ill• LIOAL
O"Aln'MINT 142..u21, 111. '12 for mor•
Into'"'•"°" 9ftd lenftt.
, ... IOllOWltlO jteflOft& .,. dolno 7 llu•IMUet
•AHO a. •• ..,.,. o~ ... co.i• LOWEST PRICE ,,,....,, e111t...,,.• n.2ll Little Mils Muff et Hl on a Except\onal commission split
for Hstlng oriented reaJt.or as·
social.es. Beautiful office in
cholca location. Have 2 open·
lnga.
M•nl!I llMtt strlftf, ,.., Su•ra In Northwood.a lhla 3 Bd Turret. •Ions came a c1rc1e.c..u-...c.1tfllmla..,. Cand leberry mdl 11 'd __ ...
Lerry G. sw111...,. J1i11 •· Nine 8 abowroom perf~l. Call •P• er """ rud ltt the or1w.W011NN1..,..,c:.11'-1•t2'11 today See to.mo. M'OW Dally Pilot Claulfled
1111• ....... •• <Olldll<.Wd • ., .,. ""' Tim Rbonee3l·l2116 aectlon about Mln Muf·
::::;::: -1a11oo1 ..,.r ...., • tet'a Tuff• and boulhl tt
Mw1111 a ..,_ for •.16. You can 1ell
Tllli ......,,_. Wet Iliad wltll ... v()Ut tulfet and loll of C-lyC...-.flOt .... c:-ty.,,~y ' 11.1•1 other U1 ln11 throu1h ,..,.,.., Dally Pilot Claulfled ,........ °'._ c:.att o.ir., ~... ... ... _ can---~----------~----~---~ .......... '_'-~~"'--v_._J ... ___ •·_'• __ ' ___ 2_1~__.' .J. __ -=-..;;;!;----...l------------------...l=nu.===·====....._.======'·=====L..:::=:::::==::=:=~~==::r
• " I
t
REALTORS
'75-554 I
HIEWPORT SHORES. bc.tl.nt FIHAM·
CIHG . A Y AIL.AILE. Gnat 3 ldrm 2 lo
home; open beam ultlnga; Hty accHI to
oceClfl beach and cl&bhauM with feftnls &
pool; just SI 35,000 lsh.
MOUHTA.IH RETREAT: Cl.ar, cool air
CMnOfMJ big p ines & ceders: w_.. buiff custom
hotM with 6 ldrm1 Oftd study, 2 fl,..,._H,
bit-Nia In kitchen. Two adiacfttt buiklabta
loh ond mony utras. OWNER WILL
FtNA.NCE A.T FANTASTIC TERMS.
$250,000, or will sell home Mpm ately for
$200,000.
CHARMING CDM DUPLEX. Wolk to
beaches, schools and shops from this lnt-
maculate duplex, l Bdr with F.P. and 2 ldr
retltalunlt. '
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 E. Coost Hwy., Col'Ofto cWf Mar
675-551 I
WESLEY N
~YLOR CO
REALTORS si 11cc 1H4
IA. YCREST CUSTOM HOME
I?e~igned fo r entertaining & family
hvmg. 4-Bdrm, huge li ving room, large
form al dinin g & fa mily room s.
Gourmet kitc he n Master s uite
separate from othe r extra·lge bdrms.
Pleasing privacy in pool-sized back
yard. Great terms. $395,000.
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., REAL TOR.S
21 I I San Jooquln Hll1 Rood
NEWPORT CENTER, H.8. 644-4910
GAHAGE S/\1,1'; <11b in
the Uall} Pelot IJrin)!
ha pp) rci.ult~ To JJIJl'l'
)Our draw1n~ l'Jrd
phone 642 5678 today '
Class1r1ed Ads are tb.e
a nswer to a successf~I
garage or yard sale' It's
a be tter way to tell more
people '
SEE AND BELIEVE
The very finest buy in the
Harbor area. New 16.50 sq. ft.
condos. 5 minutes to beaches.
One h alf blo<'k t o major
s hoppin g ce nte r s . Cement
dri ves. air conditioning ,
mi c r owave ove n . trash
compactor. larg e walk-in
closet l>. Garage with opener.
Pool and 2 jacuzz1s
WILSON PARK
CONDOMINIUMS
380 W. Wll10tt
Cotto Meso, CA
714/631-5055
From SI 36,000
UNECf>UALLED LOCATION OH
LINDA ISLE
Elegant home situated on 61 feet
of prime bayfront on main turn·
ing bas in . Panoramic views of
bay a ct ion from mos t every
room. Double dock with accom-
modations for four large boats or
three 65 foot boats . This spec·
tacular five b e droom, 5 112
bath home is beautifully decorat-
ed and includes u sparkling pool
and many more outstanding and
unique features. $2,600,000.00.
RF"ilO~N lll\1 fUAl I SIAll <;lf!VICES
OWH YOUlt OWN PAIUC
The setting Cor this 4 BR. Harbor
View Hills residence compliments
the tasteful inte rior. Privacy &
qui et location. M any custom
features. Very special at $3.S.S,000.
IN NEWPORT CENTER
644-9060
J
I 0(_ .,
••
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•
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(
1
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t
IA
I
II
• ' • II c
• • -
\, •
II
HHINSULA POINT IMCHFROKT
Panoramic bay & ocean view at
wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm,
3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft.
f ea tu ring marine room. entry, living
room, dining room, built-ins. etc.
$1,385,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
I l 1 H"Y'"l' 0• ·•· "'4 H bl'> olbl
n MACNAB·IRVIE REALTY u ............... __
llt.LIOlt. PEHIHSULA IA YFftOMT
$329.000
2 bdrm. i bath condo, assumable
loans, owner will help finance. Boat
slip. For appt. lo see, Mrs. Callahan
642-8235.
••wport .a..ch
001 Dover Drive Harbor View Cent.er
642 8235 644 ·6200
CIE
110111 ILlllfS ca.
OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE
LUXURY COHDO
Co n ve ni ent Location Two
Bed rooms. Two Baths . Plush
Ca rpets. Plantation Shutters.
Skylights. Top Security. Lock Up &
Leave When You Wish. Large As·
sumable 10 11~1/,. First Trust Deed .
Only $255,000.
HEWPORT HORSE COUMTRY
Glamorous 2+ Acre Estate In
Beautiful Setting With Your Own
Privacy. Formerly Home Of Movie
Star. Jus t Lis ted. Large Five
Bedroom Home With Double
Master Suite, Large Family Room
& Gourmet Kitchen, Surrounding
Sparkling Swimming Pool. Your
Own Stables. Priced At $2.500.000.
·--··•·· ...
759-9100
#2 C01potatePla.e .... .,...c .......
RVM~
JI~ ·\I TOI<"
: • HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
DEERFIB.D
TOWNHOME
l~~~~~~I SUPER FINAN • ... a PHk •• I 007 Lovely 3 Bd 2~ Ba plan
•••••••••••••••••••••• IUSIMISS OPPTY 3, over 1500 sq ft, has Establlahed weU located $91,700 assumable loan
SUMMB AIM beauty salon in prime at 12"/o int. PIWJ owner
AND THE BEACH ! location. Submit on will carry 2nd TD. No terms. qua llfylng. Offered at Located on desirable Touchttooe Really, Inc. $139,500. Fred Gibson Peninsula Point. Th11 968-_, SS9·9400
easy care home, only 7 ---------
years o ld, oversized l•--------g a rage and boat
storage. 3 Bdnna, faml·
ly room and formal din·
mg room much more.
Call for details.
642-5200
j PETE J BARRETT .. REALTY
MISlt.VaD!
OWC llf .t I 3.5o/o
Sharp 3 bdrm on comer
lot. Featur i ng 2
rlreplacea, new roof,
copper plumbing and
much more. Owner wiU
carry the fmancing and
will also sell VA and
FHA. Priced at Sl36,000.
Call 54CHJ51
· ·: · HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
EASTSIDE
10% ASSUMABLE
Owner will help finance.
Fabulous J.M. Peters
Landing Plan 4 .
Magnificent patio
w /private spa. Cozy
fireplace In master suite
w /lavish adjoining bath.
Huge country kitchen
w /every amenity. Of·
fered at $315,000. Owner
will help with ftnancing.
Woodbridge
Realty
551·3000
4ttt8arranca Pkwy,l rvln.-
STEPS TO PIMES,
OCIE.AM VIEW Plt.U
Walk to beach. 3br home
in beat Palindes loca·
lion. Many extras In·
eluded! Call for details.
Cr eat ive finan cing
avail. Just $175,000.
3 Bdrm 2 bath, spa. Only ---------
SlZ7 ,900. 64.S-9161 ....... HIGH lt.SSUMAIL!
4Br home w /spa. xlnt.
cond. $169,000. 552-6940.
DEllJltU COHDO
Enjoy the peaceful,
restful atmoaphere or
this charmin1 single
11tor_y borne. Features in·
elude: 2 Bdrm, den, din·
inl room and exquisite
lntertor desi1n. Our best
value at $128,500. Call us
now. sse..ao
c::. ..• ''. ; ~1·11111•1 11:,1 •,
WOOOlalDGE
COTTACH
Bodega Plan, 2Br. 2Ba,
family rm, comer lot,
auumable at 13%.
Sl.58,900. s.51·1183
A SMART
START
Owning your own home
still makes more sense
than renting. Start with
thil well kept 1 bdrm, 1
ba. Plan A1 The Lakes in
Northwooa. Assumable
loan. $103,900. ,.
lt.523 CAMPU' DI· IRVltf£
SPECTACUL.Aa
LAKROHT
Woodbridge luxury at Its
finest. Views forever
Flexible financing.
$354.000. Call Lynn
Noah.
Town Ir Co.try
Realtort 552-1100
UNl9UE
Fully detached Cam·
bridge mdl. back up lo
park on comer lot! Huge
living rm w/masaive
frplc ove rlks sunny
atrium. Frml dining, Jge
kitch, 3 Bdrm. 2 car gar.
Walk to pool, spa. tennis.
This 5000 Sq. Ft; Home sits on Linda
Isle. A private guarded C.Ommunity in
the heart of New,eort 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.
17141121-1210 l21JI 591-13'3
11001 J52-J710
n MACNAB-AYN: REALTY u . ..-..... --
CHARMH IM OLD aUffS!
Highly upgraded Franciscan model
situated in the most desirable section
of Old Bluffs on a beautiful expanse
green belt. Home features imported
porcelain fixtures throughout. Mex-
ican tile in entry and kitchen, quality
plus carpeting, custom shutters. de·
signer wall coverings & drapes, mar-
ble floor in bathroom;, also included
washer & dryer and refrigerator. The
ultimate condominium style living.
$239.500. Young Park 5.51-8700 (Hll >
·~Be6ch
901 Dover Drive Harbor View Cent.er
642-8238 644 6200
OPEN HOUSE FRI MAY 15th 10.2
1707 Eatt lay • ., .....
El Greco Mediterranean 4 story re·
sidence. 5 bdrms, 5 baths. Newer 2
story residence. 1 bdrm, 1112 bath, 2
car garage. 3 boat slips.
506 I Street, 3 car garage, 1 bdrm, 2
bath apt above. Additional 2 car
garage.
Suggested sales price $4,405,000
TITLE IMSUaAHCE Ii nusT co.
953-2020, Ext. 7371 (213) 614-7371
Dan Lewis
•• S:A.::11e1ERR'TllB:I
l=EAL •• ESIAIE UNIV PAii Hurry · priced at
• Sl38.000. Lag.a M~ I 052 H1t.a1oa VIEW HOME
Lrg 4 Bdrm 2"lt Ba home Town & eomtry ••••••••••••••••••••••• "Montego" 4br. 2ba. Fee
(714)498-1040,49~0202 ~ar~~:::::if~~ ~,~,:V& afflort 552-1100 AWlt.UwtofMIHG Land , loan a ssum
greenbelt. Aaaumable ASSUME AT l~'k 675·2l39
S..J-c.,a...... 1011 •••••••••••••••••••••••
••EXEC HOME
Over 3100aq ft. 3 Bdrm•.
den with w« bar, rormal
II v ln1 l"OOm Is dining room . Fireplace In huge
m1tr suite AND in fami·
ly room. Call for details.
551 3000
\\bod bridge
Re~uu
SSI·~
4t2t1Jarn11u l"lnn.lrvlnt'
Assumable financing
Best 4 Br value In beach
community. $127,000.
Lingo R.E Dennis
498-4950
51/JACal:S VIEW
The perfect site for your
estate. Overlooking San
Juan Capistrano -
private yet only minutes
from town. Horses
permitted. No financing
problems. 16.'i0,000.
' I 11\ "'"" 111 ll.111 .. 11 l llH•,1rn1·n11·11
WONDERFUL
FAMILY HOME
Located in the Mission
Creek area or San Juan
Capistrano, this 3
bedroom, 2 bath home is
perfect for the active
family. With expansion
possibilities. this home
should not be missed!
$164 ,500. 49~8812
Lingo
11 .. 1h .. n
Santa A• 1010 , ..................... .
E.lt.STSIOE DUPLEX
Both Ir& 3 Bdrm units, ~~~~~~~!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~~!~~~~~ ~~~~.~~ ••• !~.~~ ~t~~r ~~~tn~en~ ~i~~
... ---.;;::::::~--IJasmine Creek decorator only 15% down. orrered
fmancing. Call for de· .._.. I 041 Unique foxglove model VERSAILLES 2BR. wlk
tails. ••••••••••••••••••••••• in Lake Parlt. 2Br, Den, to bch, low dwn, no
athered cedar ahakea, 2Ba Vaulted ceilings, qualifying. S140K
that ii. Custom designed 3 trench doors. Prof. de· 730-2270 dys 642·2682
IU.DFoaD COHDO
Beautifully located on
park like grttnbelt just
a short waJJc to the pool.
$$5,000 assumable loan
of91.AJt ~ interest. Private
patio and 2 car garage
Only S99 ,.500
644-721 I
BEACHFRONT LANDMARK! NEWPOR
Owwer It offerlftcJ • SN4 wMt It lt17
A "thared eppreclotl• ........... c.11
AlllHn Dayne or Jackie WWt. fw ...._
It. new way to own thlt excellnt
beachfront home with O'IW 6000 Mf.ft. IKludlecJ 2 large ] bed. ............ 2
bed. Nftfal + guest .-... I.Mt wltlt
-.11allty & decor•ted bH11tlf•lly.
631-1400.
PENINSULA POINT COTTAGE
Oft ftte ,...... with tt.e priqcy of a,.._
yet w• ta lay or leach. J bed. 2 baths
for the Miider or decorator. Ifft priced
fol' quick sale. $295,000. Hl-1400.
NEW HARBOR RIOGE-STATRY .
110' VU of ley, Oce• & ..., ll4)Mt.
M119'1ificettt qHllty Ii d9tall tlrugl1111f
tNt 5700 tq. ft.,... ........... to
ttt.ct your own deccw for thlt _......
hoftw with .. bed, llbrwy ............
mL.. immettM fClfft. ""-..ct ------fftCltter s11lte with flrepklce, .-dtck
1C1U11C1 & 1pe. lfllP"HI•• cmtd custolll fw
the portfcYler hotMow....-, 1R the best
trocitlon of thlt Louis XIV M_. -...
Sl,991,000. n 1·1400.
WATERFRONT HOMES, INC
REAL ESTATE
s.i,, Rental• Prnpor1v ~,,,.ni
2436 w CO.Ott Hwv 31~ Mann« Aw
NtrWPC><t S.ec'1 &!boa Island
6J 1-1400 '7Ut00
w:::' ~\\JllA-4~~s·-= ------.,..,GAY L ~ ................. "'"-,_ IC,....,.... _. ~ ............ ,_.....,.._.
home, plan 1 on green· al $160,95.Q. Motivated
belt lmmac. ~.500 1eller. Call now. 540-3666
___ 640-_8_145 ___ 1 Whelan
CDM DUPLEXES
GOOD '*4AHCIMG
2 Bdrms + loft w /frplc,
wetbar in each unit. with
great tenants.
HOME+ RENTAL
lovely 3 Bdrm, front unit
with frplc and beamed
ceiling J>h• 2 bdrm unit
w /year s lease.
Call Barbara Glau
Century 21 /Sandpiper
640.4950 851·9541
Real Estate
OWMH wtl CADY
Cutlom blt-12 yn old 5
Br 4ba with large poten-
tial In-law apt. 3200 sq ft + 925 1/f garage .
$275,000
Oww/Jt.tl 541-0350
TWO-STORY CONDO:
Spacious 3 Bedroom.
Look• just like a model!
Atrium. Ck»e to South
Coa1t Plaza. Low ln·
tereat loan available. Jasmine Creek decorator $l34,750, TARBELL.
home, plan 1, greenbelt REALTORS.540.1720 loc. $305,.500. ~8145.
......... at I 3010 IMVESTC>a
Old CdM. Wlk to beach. MOT1Ylt.TIO
dn 0 NODOWN OWC w l1l1'lo · wner· Bach. Flat. Total Secur1-Br1tr 675·0704 962·2900 ty Condo. $108,000.
1---------1 978-0423.
SOUTH OF HWY
Cozy 2 Br. Home. 1 block
from Ocean Blvd .
$225 ,000. Bernita
Eilerhen, Broker,
675· 237 3 or 770.8598.
---------E. Side lovely 2bdrm
home on very lrg lot.
Beaut. cul-de-sac.
$145,000. Call agt :
Chrlatlna at 557·2'783 or
646·32SS.
Cameo Shores Camden 3 DR 2y, ba twnhse, fplc,
Dr., 3 BR, den., 3 Ba, 3 l1e patio. dbl 1ar ..
car 1ar. 600 e ntry ownerwillfinance.Only
w /retractable roof. Call Sll5 000 Ast ~390 Two Longs, 760· 1397 : • · ·
673-7761, a1DUCID $14.000
S,y,_. "'SS Beautiful 2 1ty, a BR, ~ lam rm, Inside Jacuui CITY & OCIAM VU on CdS. S156,000. Agt.
lmmac. 5 bdrm home. 6"-4380
1640,ooo. 15% down. Aa·D ---,---....... ---10-2-6 sume lat TD. OWC .. -
balance at 12%. By •••••••••••••••••••••••
owner, 963-4751.
-f'!,N< H A ; f ,'.t TY ~ '~'' 1 /()()0
b signed landsca pe. bdrm, lam rm, 2 atha . $154,900. Open house _e_v_ea_. ______ _
Extensive u.ae o_r w~ 1 .6 pm Sat/Sun. pp gla11 " ~eram1c tile. 831.7634 or759.2465 llG Clt.HYOH ___ ,.__;,,. _____ Beam ce1llng, frplc . 4Bdrms3ba,largepool.
$165,000. M•wportleach 106t Intimate jacuzzi off /Jn NIGEL
(}AILEY Ii.
ASSOCIATES
~~~~s:eho~~~~lur.
Ing 4 Bdrm, 2,,... Ba in
Irvine'• Colony Club.
Walk to comm. pool, ten·
nil courta, schoola, 1hop-
pin1. Priced to sell. Call
for delaila.
e--. ·•''J(ll
' f " I I 'r
',',1 .'flll()
Mlaaloo Realty ••••••••••••••••••••••• master suite and Iota of ---------
(714)494·073L WESTCLIFF bulltins included in this
New wood·1la11, apa,
10Jar, 6 decu , vlew1.
Beach /Village .
$495,000PP 494-7831
family home nestled on
Price reduced + seller a quiet cul·de·sac. Excel
wlU carry lrg 2nd. Total· financing. Owner 111
ly remodeled 3 Bd 3 2 Ba. motivated. S799,000. Call
Purchase price $279,900. 640. 7665 or 675-2311 Agt.
Aaaume i.t, $104,000 al
l0.2S"lo. owe 80K 2nd at
123 for 9 yrs. Ask for
Darrell Pub. 63l·U66
OPEN HOUSE
Sat/Sun 1-4
Gd. financing, 3Br, pool.
spa. 3221 S. Manitoba.
Agt 547·7066; 975·0«8
t l
Hlt.llOllllDGE
3 Br. 3 Ba. Aasume lease
option. $20K down .
Agent St.eve 752· 1920
By Owner. OWC al 13%. 3
Br. l~ Ba., frplc, dbl
gar. New paint & carpel.
751·8045
Secluded 3 Br. spa , 2 Bd n-. Ba condo nr So.
decks, beams. fam Xlnt Coast Plaza, lower.
con d OW C 1 2 ~ patio, 24 hr sec. bldg.
$190,000. 645-1496. $86,900. Assum. ~3.250
w /11.37% Consider sml Fo,..H)R ltt'IHfonl 2nd T .D. Own.r. 894-~92
Coshhyen!
Waterfront condo. ~uJ~i· Ofheraed&tah
Miiiion S View: 40 slip ••••••••••••••••••••••• avail $400.000 aasuma· Mobl!. H-..
ble Call now! 67~0248. Fot-Sale 1100
' 11 • I _.(_l ' I I· I ' •': 1 1 '-\)r) hi' t I\
I ,I II
t
. .. .. .. .... ·-
.I
..
a
•
• • •
. .,--____ _........,._ ___ , __ _
6rarige Coast DAIL V PILOT/Wednuday, May 13, 1981 D1
Cash in on 7 or 11 ...... · _ ... , .... tur• thl1t9 rot Ot•nt•Cou"'7 actY..a-.-
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
Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Daily Pilat
Private Parties only -no commercial businesses please. Any classification. No cancellation Rebate.
l . O...rRNI...... IO..rlNt.....,. Ho•••Fw.w.d "-"•U.._...a.ct tto.M1U•fwWu.d ICowdotn.._ ~Apelt•.tau.tw.. .,..._....u.tw.. .,..._. ... ..,....._ ]
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Utt~ l4JS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
C ..... nr Loh/ .__. Prop1;rty JOO Cof"OIHI del Mer 3222 Mewport .._.. 3269 Mewport INctt 326' .......... ......... ... oroH def Mer 3122 osto Meta 3U4 Newport leodt 3169
i C__... 1500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••' •••' •••• I"' ._ .... E • rr• DUPl.D M.I ••••••••• ••••••••••••I ... ~' ~.., • •• • •••• ••••••••••••• •• ••••••• •••••••••••• • ••• •• •••••••••••••••••••••
....................... N be h • 3B ShorecUrta 2br, 2ba. fam lrlHmrywooda En}oy aummer living all 2 IR COHDO
Harbor Lawn Coalu ear ac ·two r unk· rm. tie yard, klda/pela 3 Br 2 Ba Tri lev"'I "M•r. Wlk•oCdM beach, M ' ltAI, 2 car 1ar. nr par · OK month-month l900 a &•Ara.IAO llO\la~ IOICAI~ . "'· #~ • Designed for shored hv PARK NEWPORT eaa. 4 adj. lots . I TSL INVSTMT 6'2-l603 644.0164 · • ,,,.,.._.V"\,g.lf"'\Y•-..;;n~ frplc,m1cro-w11ve,pool, 2br,frpk,lgedeck,encl ing or ramll y with
Acacl1 Area . reu •~°""-~ lennla No pets. $745. p11rkin&. f150/mo avail children f'nvateamk in C OUMTltY CLUI
59'7·4188 Long Beach Peninsula 4 blltalobeach 3 Br.2 Ba. 01ys 646 4262, Eves immed . 675·8589 (>r each bdrm 1-'en ted
C•-•rdal Duplex. Steps lo sand. New crpt, fresh paint. 645 95"3. 642·7$44 palto & laundry hook up
LIVIHCi
Singles, 1&2 bedroom
a pts & townhouse• . ,_....... 1600 OWC 1225.000Agt Donna 11195 642·5290. t d 769 2 R
••• :.:'::::~•••••••••••• (213)439-6811 ; 43!Vi~ 2 STORY PEHTHOUSE Bachelor apt, w refr1g, H"!%e1 lto~cp~455 m 0 t 'rom SSlO 6'4·1900
0 units Pride of lmmac. 3br, 2ba, Jae, LUXURIOUS l.4YFftOHT! Panor11mlc ocean , place for micro. So or 9638182 Agt NEW CENTER fr plc, ear , $895/mo F b I . r •. . mountain & City llahta PCH. $275 and ut1ls . . Beaut 2 Bdrm. frplc, 90/4 CAP ownership. EsideCosta 673-5069or673-2869 au ous view rom Jvmg and dining view 2 Br 2 Ba. den, 76().1813aft 6pm. 2 Bdrm 1 bath duplex, balcony,qu1et11lreet.315
o • Meaa 1.3 m1l1.ton 30% ---rms over 40' deck on the bay. 2BRS, 2 frplc 'Never hved in large patio, pm•ate gar, E Bay ~. 962 8840
Major lenanu. Xlnt MIS dwn owe. Overall In· Coroea .. M.-baths r Lu s d 0 u b I e garage . New ! $1000 Spectacular ocean & ttlY small pet OK $450 per --a Ion Viejo locallon leresl 103. Agt. 760-9333 (I · T } M $2000 / I l L Dy Also 2 Br 2 Bn oee11n & hghb view from every mo Call Pam, Dll V" cir 2 Br 1 Ba Apt. Sundeck. Trades accepted Full rvme errace · ag mo. yr y. arry er 642-8235 city U 0h•~ view l"rom • .... 75 •-1 priceSB,000,000 ..... ~ hl80degMr~vlew.Custom (J-193 ) S&O ,. "" room . Large I Br 1.arry !>4658SO .. 111t ... a.st
A1enl 714/644·9315 Pro 2100 ome. in. 1 yr leaae 3 675·9113 & 675·9132 $600/mo Call Anlhony • 675 ~8
••••••••••••••••••••••• bdrm. 3 ~ ba. Liv rm , wkdys 642-5757 eves & 2 Br. t Bu., J.I0(1l S475 ---------•I L "'GU .... • 1 .. "'CH DR., den, maids rm. Bit Jlewport 8-ch wknds 6«·8889. Cu11t11 McH 2 Dr Townhllt'. $625
106, NewPorl Blvd.,
near 17th. Sl00,000
ltoy Mee_., llltr.
541-7729
• ~ -around atrium w/ pool. 901 Dover Drive H&rbOrV1ew CAfm.er Apartnt ..... Fwwltt..d --------• 641 C1743 Adults, no JX>-t.ll. View
Canyon mdustrial bldg By owner . $3,500 Mo 642 8235 644 6200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Corona Del Mar tharm MES• Pl .... ES 1409 Supenor. 645·8684
near town &an-s.tival Call Col lect (212) CoataMeta 3724 ing2br,w/frpl,nopets. •" grounds.9600s~fuJly 572 ·4230. or (203) ••••••••••••••••••••••• $600.644·23llor64G-7085. 14.J'TS Bayrronl lower duplex. 2 leased. Gross annual in· 837-4646. 2 Br. 2 Ba with t;11r Bd 2 Ba, gar, adults, no
come $54,000. HWttlngtOR leach 1240 BIG CYH CONDO CASA DI! ORO Clean, Sunny 2 Br 1 Bu Pool, spa. barbetiue, pets Yrly $700. 227 19th
Realonomlcs 675·6700Charmin& 2 br, 2 ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely 2 Bd 2 Ba,avall. ALLUTU.ITIF.SPAID w /bolcony. No vets . cathedralte1liniis. Fil'. St,6750236,673-7092
w /frp No ....... Lease 5blkatoocean F.legant2 1 d ·1 s ~50/mo.64G-4000 D/W, balt-ony Qu1t•t • Co•do"'hll.,.t/Towft· Loh for Saia. 2200 · """" · · ' mme · l• • ept. I Compare before you Adults over 25 Av"'il Pcnrnsula.modem3br,2
ho•Hfartalit 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _!700_mo.759-12A3. ~~[s''[;·rrf:~/i:h"c~:~· i850 /kmTo. 63~l2 66 rent. Custom design Charming lbr, beach 2 now S565 1rno 26~0 ba, din. rm, frplc, Indy
••••••••••••••••••••••• ll-IWhftewat.rV11 CostaMeso 1224 2~ ba, ~edar & gt11a11: __at~l~ __ e_nore:._l!.l. features : Pool, BBQ, blks , frplc , stove , Harla.!>4!12447 rm.S675.812W Balboa.
Harbor Rld10. leaae opt.. G real tenns, subord . ••••••••••••••••• •••••• Obi car pvt gar, fully surrounded with plush refrlge, storage rm. no Be 11 t be a<' h a re a
a11umable 10.750 3 BR 3 714/492-8320 Secluded 2nr, lBa patio malnt. yd. Adult~. no SPYGLASS HILL landscaping. Adult hv gar, shower only $425. 1 BR. S3SO per mu . pool. 673 9498
Ba, lort, pool, spa, ten· -----home, pool. i.dlts. no pets Inquire at 527 t8th 3 Bdr, formal dm .. Cam mg al its best No pels Ind util. xtra gas. Avail adlt!>. no pel~ <i23 W --
na. $550,000. Close Jan Buen11 Park, 14 Unit site pets, $500 mo. 2453 Sl 714 /96().6331 rm. 2 fireplaces, lrg Bach fumlihed $3'70 6/4 lyr lse No pets Bay 548 95 16 2 Bil, I Ra, S800 mo. yrly
1, 1882. 759-8900 with plans, permits Orange Ave, see Mgr yard $1600/mo. Rob & 365 W. Wllson.6421971 714/883-2723 7 lo 9PM 2bdrm. Iba, easl WI". 61s7e3 822N2o kids, no pets
engineering $268,000. Apt e. 751·2787 !Hr Condo, pool , clbhse, Dovie Koop 631 1266 I "' . hDlelt•
1
H / Submit ofrer Comer In· tennis $.1'15 mo tsl last Agl SUS CA.SIT AS on -1'.._ adult apt. S4001mo No -0.f fale 1100 diana and Whitaker. lBr, 2Br & Jwuor 2 Ten + S200dep. 768.7633 _ I ~-------Furn. 1 br. apt $325 & Costa Mt'ICI 3124 pets 543 5478 2 Rr 1 Ba ocean view
••••••••••••••••••••••• JohnW Saunders Real· mscrts,pool,jac,sauna. SAHTIAGODL up Encl.gar Adults.no ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1 bd rm , lndry fa c with p6ol SGOO /mo
HL\lt THI SAMO ty 848-4002 sand volleyball. pool llOM F.S FOR RF.NT I Beaut1ru1 house avail pets 2110 Newport Bl 2 Br 1 Ba 1981 Maple adults. no pcot~ 311 w 646 4529
lalboaP ... "-'-• ----tble. Adult sorry, no 4 Rdrms $600·$625. now 1n elegant area 4 548·4968btwn8&5PM Ave Adult, refrig, no Wilson 6312177
Second• to lh;Tater E·Costa Mesa. 2Br house pets. 635 Baker. CM Fen ce d yards & Br 3 Ba. Dmmg Rm. HWttln""'-hoch 3740 pets Quiet $375 Sierra
Excellent 3 BR owner's on large R4 lot Condos 557.0075 garages Kids & pets Living Rm. & Family •••••• :'::::•••••••••••• Mgmt Co 641-1324 llrTo~
Newly decor gas pd
encl gar , pool. tlswhr
Adults 642·5(173
Newl)Ort Shores 3 Br 2
Ii" Frplc S725 Adults.
no pets. Avu1I unmed.
Suvage Wilde & Co
675 6606
"home-like" unit & 2 OK Agt.645-7221 ------welcome 964·2566 or Rm New wallpaper.
BR. 2 ba, rental unil o.t WAU<TOPOOL 973·2971 Agt ,nofee cozy kitchen & many $375 /UP I 2 bdrm. pool.
Joe, adlt, 18182 Florida,
11.B. 642 2.834 or842·3172
Spacious 3 Br Duplex
$425 Pool & laundry fol'.
548-9656 • ld ... al for home *-in-of C~ or sun on the deck 3 many xtras Children & ~ • l'ro-...., 25501 lnlne 324.. OK """"" come. Cloae to Newport ,..... 'J bdrms. 2 batha. spacious .. pets . 7......,,,.,4. New Condo, pool. 2 br.
ear. washer dryer
S750 t mo 646 9618 ur
645 1732, Eves 661 f>l 16
•• ••• •••••••••••••••••• condo with &UMY decor ••• •• •• • ••••• ••••• • • •• • plerandahopa.S289.950 New Mobile Home 3Br. S82Smo.CallBarbaraat Smoketreee 2 Br 2 Ba SPYGLASS HILL H.B.'1FIHEST MEWLYDECOR.
WetlerM.ToylorCo. 2Ba , frplc. redwood BarrettRealty,642-5200 condo, 2cargaragc. nr 4 Bdr +maid's qtrs, SpanishEstateLivinl(! 1 Br. gas pd, encl gar
2 Ir. I la Apt
Newly decor C:u!> pd
encl gar . pool, di.hwr
Adults 642 5073 Realtors 64 ... 49 I 0 deck, cedar shake sid· tennis /pool/school Avl beaut decor Super vu Beautiful park·llke 11ur· d /washer, pool. Adults
ing. nr lake & skiing MEW21RW/Ftl.PLC 5 /2. $625/mo. 1213) Top of Spyglass r o undlngs. Terraced 642·5073.
FOURPLIX $41 ,900. Tenns or lrade Bui It-ins. Ac)ults, no 474·7892or 1213) 474·al20 s 2 o o o 1m 0 K 0 0 11 . pool. Sunken gas bbq. -Jo.:/S1de 2 BR. cpl:!. dr11s. Super Vers a i llc~ 1 br $40000oWll 499·3816 pets.642·<1135.'675/Mo. 6311266 Agt sparkling fountains Spaclous2Dr$365 Pool& enclgur ,lndry,no11Ns studiocondo.$450
MOHi _ lnl -------TURTLEROCK Sp a c i o u s room i. laundry fac $395. 549.z170 549 i.c~1
OWC Ja~00847 8935 2 Bdrm, I bath rental. Cute condo 2 Bdrm no J Bdrm 2 bath, utnum. WeslcliH 3 Br 2 B<i Separate dining area. 548-~ San C9-tnetth 3176
$4200 per year income. pets. SS25/mo. Oo~nu modern decor, across Familyhome,newcond, W alk -In closets , PJNEBLUFFAPTS •••••••••••••••••••••••
'-cCNlleProperty 2000 $15,000 down. Apple Richardson Realtors from park. Smull pet gardener, no pets. $795. homelike kitchen & Newer 2 Br. µalio & 2 ,Br . 'f Ba Adult11, n~ 3 br. p~ ba. 2.nd nr apt.
••••••••••••••••••••••• Va 11 e Y. Sa le price 768·5600. 837-5916. OK S850 mo 675·8170, Avail. now. 646-2389. cablnelJI. Walk to llunl· garage. Adults, no !)\?ls. pets. I alto, Vlt'W. frpl~. close to shopping bcath,
S52 .000 <)wnr/Agt -agcnl. ------inglonCenter. $435 /mo.84.55577. encl gar . gas stove. no pets or ~mall
APPLE VALLEY
Near ne w 4-Plex, 2
bdrm, 2 bath each unit
wllh fireplace, enclosed
patio, double garage
$165,000. Bill Grundy,
Rltr . 675-6161
Exec. Spyelus llome
For aale or lrade Owner
wl)l leaae back 1640.000
1 0 "1.o d o wn owe
balance 963-4759.
64t 2003 Sharp newly decorated 2 W0W111 I Bedroom-fum,$440 $.'525
ll ....
-h bedroom plus dining RlMTALS ••• 2 Bedroomfurn,SS IO 2 HUGE Bedroom.s 111 SPMC 63161\17 chtldren,$.'550 8353252
a room condo. Pool and 2br.l.,..ba $550 Won 't last Newport Adults.nopets super location. fully SClftJuon
••••••••••••••••••••••• spa. South Coast Ter 2br .2ba $775 Crest Townhouse 3Br, UtiUtiesFree' ca rpeted , built 1ni;, HWttlngtonleoch 3840 Capistrano 1178
race area. Walk to South 3 br 2 ba S800 21,;ba, wet.bar. walk lo ground floor. Adull.8, no ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••, Coast Plaza. $.'575 month 3 br. 2 ba $1250 Funt Bch, tennis. pool. spa LA QUINTA HERMOSA ~ta S350 mo Apply Apt 2 Kr. den, t Ua, dinmg
G .... ral l I 02 yearly lease Agent. 4br 2ba $725Lakc Forest Mint Ocean view Avail 16211 Parkside Ln, I blk B 5 6 8 W . W 1 Ison rm, livlnl( mt, ~25,mo
••••• ••• ••••••••••••••• 631 7300 L5. May. S850/mo lyr lse. W. of Beach, 3 blks S of 646·4477 acc.4•5c Children OK. 64G-1644 Edinger -----~ .. " Oc._ View! ------847·540 ' 2 br. 1"'1 ba. no children. l..tlmah! ROMmltk! Great lower E. Side loc 2 Bluffs 2 bdrm wtview 11 0 • 1& 1 flA P•hO -oh Santa AM 3810
Execuuve home up· br. 1 ba, gar., uul rm. Immaculate. $675 mo. Newport leodt 376t ~~nn ~~g642-~J!425· 610
: ~:,~~'~:· ,/·,,~fl(J •••••••••••••••••••••••
graded $2000 mo new crpt, tile " drapes Bkr. 644.0134. •••• •• ••••••••••••••••• Extra lg 2Br 2ba condo
87:J..O'l48 SS25. No dop. Wayne. Fanlaaticallv fumashed 1 Br Eaatside. Small but • t,.,°' 1' O\ '0',,i' P 8 l • 0 • i 8 r · P 0 0 I · 646-8816 Hort»o• vi...w tl~.llll... h # • JOO·~ l!u cn " ~l·OO\ washr /dryr, prof p11l11t MAKE AH Off£RI.
10
.__
01
_._.... 3106 022.8600 • ,.. ...-town ouse. with ocean cozy w tlots or neat • !>u , 1 Gm s ed. new dra--s. Adults
--o.;J;;J ' Up&raded 3 BR lwnhme. view Tennis court, pool wood $325/mo. 551 1660 ..-••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br. l Ba. House, new avail now Pool. jac.. 11125/mo 76().91)7 --------Close to M1 Sq Prk
5 Income Properties
Eaatalde Coata Mesa
20% down. Owner will
carry Pnced to sell!
7141641 0763
2925 Collct(l' A vc·
Costa Me~a . CA
UNITS..C.M.
14 unlls, E·s1de, pool,
10~3 financing
II unlla, near new
house w n rentals
Cute collage, 3 Br 2 Ba. P!iml inside & out, ocean tennis. Close to shops -----• 2br 2ba condo. n r 775·0529. 63\.1006
winter lease $650/mo view yard. Adults only 't523 CAMP'1,Dt·IRVll4E $97 5 mo. lse. 27 06 SHORT TERM Rentals S.C.Plaia.S.A. SSOO no 3 Br 1 "'• 8 8 c 0 n d 0 .
209 Gamet. 1·661·0693 $650 + utila. 64.5-3000 Hillalde Dr. 1·568-9343: Weekly & monthly pell. 549·3232. woods 1 de v 111 age
CoroRad.IMcr--3-l-2Z Easlside private studio, 1"346"2034 Agenl,675-8170 2 Br. No pt'tll, 57 1 w 2 Br l "'2 Ba, ga~ pd: S350 ~O lmo. Wtr & gas incl
••••••••••••••••••••••• knotly pine, $295 /mo 3 Br 2 Ba. Kids OK. 14865 • • CRF.STlg 2 Br z BR Joann St. 1 child. S365 + S350 deposit CrJils, s-15 7975 aft 3
TWOGllEAT Gas&waterpa1d NO Gyareredn,bgrareeatFeanrceead 3ba,3story,~urf~lew6 2248 Canyon St . 2 drapea,blt·tnl Mt•Fud T-tt-. 3190 PETS $48-6680 h"ld . de n nr Bea<·h Bl ••"' SUMMEltREtfTALS -·-----S795 /mo 546-0514Agent, molae838-7488 <' 1 ren S390. Sierra ADULTS. no peb •••••••••••••••••••••••
Each w i l h thre e 2 Br. I Ba., Large yard. Mgmt Co. 641:~ --893·4894 or646-9243 Sernrily apts, I bdrm &
bedrooms,lwobaths.On S475.Costa Mesu Woodbrldge,3 Br.l ~Ba BAYSIDE CONDOS : NEWPORT 2bd rm. util pd, adults.
the sand $1000 week for 641.0763 Condo near pool, tennis, znr 21/t ba. Optional THE WHIFR.ETREE no pets From $375
one, lhe other $1500 to school. '650. 714 /495-1695 slip: 1 condo on water. 1 Al'ARTMEHTS Luxury Adult units al af. 836·5506.
$1800 per month . CharmingDuplexes.ZBr, afl 6PM. w /vi~w. FromS2000. Yr· 2·1Ddr. avail. $270. mo. fordable living. 1,2 & 3
631-7300. aak for Roger. lBa. 2107 Oranae Ave. I W rl H VEAA·AOl.lNO FUN: Plus utlls. No children, Br. We II decorated Children & pets welcome Agent. ____ Avail lmmed 2107 ...., LOCJUft• leach 3241 y. ate ront ome!l Soc1111 Actrv111ea 01 nopets,nowaterbeds. Olympic size pool, Ught Large 2 Br. 1v, Ba. Con·
-••••••••••••••• ••• ••••• Realton, Inc. 631·1400 r•clOr • Freo Sunday Z..50 Newport Blvd. ed tennis court, Jacuiii, do., Real sharp. SS25.
Mewport leodt 3169 Orange Ave, CM Avail 2bdrm. 2bti, view, walk to B1unch • BBO a • Costa Mesa park like landscaping 754·0225 Wkdys. 556-3050
••••••••••••••••••••••• May 23. 1460/mo lit, beach, town. schools. Par11ea • Plua more --------Af\ 5 •-Wkn"-. I l ,..,IV\"-Will h Most beautiful bldR in "' "" LIDO ISLE charming 3 85 • _.,.,.,.,c. 11 ow. Laundry +gar. Yearly-GREAT AECAt!ATIOH: IHSTAHT IH! H B bdrm.2bath,playroom. May 17th. 1·5pm $2500 /mo /a umm e r , VILLAIALIOA Tenn1a•Fr1111LesaoN Beaul. 2 Br. 2 Ba Apl From$395 l:W60619 .Apartm ..... fw'IMlhed
Juat remodeled. $1650 966-6720 dys. 962·0088 S9 o o I m 0 I w 1 n t er Outstanding view, ocean lpro & pro shop)• 2 Frplc, enclsd gar . lndry or UnfwN"-d 3900
mo to mo. Bill Grundy, Eve. F u r n / u n r u r n & bay Comer lop floor HeeltnCJut>t•Seul\3 rm. pallo. Small pet OK. Avail now 2 Br. 2 Ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• unit w /skyUghts Adil, • Hydromaauoe • •.uo M 675·6161. 3 Br. 2 Ba. paUo home. ( 2 0 6 ) 8 5 8 6 7 7 3' security. $850 lse or Sw1mm1ng • Goll ~ o. Apti! Garages l thtld S E A W I N D 2MOBO..EHOM~ beaut. decoraled, with <714>548·0Ull______ month to month Agt. 011v1ng Range TSL Mgmt 642·1603 <> K · no Pe l "
JN LIDO PARK atrium. Near S.C.Plaia Large wood &r glasa 3 br 760-8617 or644·0322 BEAUTIFUL All'TI. Av "'L MOW' -Water /trash patd S475 VILLAGE
•---------s nglH I' 2 B d -. 964 2566or973-297l Al(l . 2 Bdrm. 2 bath rrom & Irvine lnduatnal area 2~ ba. family rm .. 2 car 1 · • Roomy 2 Br. 2 Ba Apt no ree New l&.2 bdrm luxury 1oom1 • Furn11htd d I I NEWPORT BEACH $650 . Nr water S750permo.731·4710or garace. ocean /canyon super sharp custom 3 &UnluffillhllO •Adull 4 Plex , lndry rm , a ut apt.s 111 14 pans
TSL Investments
642-1603
Prine Pro•rties
TRIPLEXEft n CdM.
Ocean aide or hwy.
Three to chooH rrom
DUPLEXES on Balboe
Peninsula . Two lo
choose from.
bUPLEX on lhe wuter
wllh boat dock.
FOURPLF;X In Foun ·
t.aln Valley.
Waterfront Homes , 731-499~. view. Nopet.t. S102S/mo. Bdrm + den, qulel re· L•v1ng •No Pel•. ~cony. Adults only 2br duplex, yard. gar, ~ ~O~~~e~~~
Realtors, Inc 631-1400 For leaae beaut 3 br. 2 SI err a Mg ml Co. aidentlal area. prof re-9Mo10d~'' Open Daily mo. kids/pets OK S3SO + S250 waterfalls, nnrids ! Gas aak for Dan 641-132,4 d ted T rrlf 1 " TSL Mg~!42·1603 set• 963·8286 ,,... .. ba. home. large Uv. rm • -----ecora · e 1c poo for cooking & healing on•• UtltYnllshed r r p 1 c , d In in g , LC191"a Hiit 3250 & spa. A great place lo O•kwood 1 Br. Adults, no pets. Deluxe poohude xtra paid. From San Diego
••••••••••••••••••••••• ramily /kllchen, utll •••••••••••••••••••••••entertain. $1500/mo GerdenApertment1 L ndry room , pool , large 2br, 2ba, bllns. Frwy drive North on
LEASIW/OPTIOH hook up +ice maker. HOMEFORR~N'r AfCl 673-6413 _ __ NewportBMchN. carports. ~/Mo. S265 dswhr. l'-ll mllea beach. Beach to 'McFadden
Horae property $800 lar1e patio It rncd yrd., 3 Bdrm. ~. Fenced ltufft.. 880 Irvine 1•11111111 Dep. 931 W 19th St. Adlts, no peta. $395 mo then Wet1l on McFadden
renl. Rm for 10 horses. Gardenerfum. 1 family yard & garage. Kids & rmmac. Zatory, 3 bdrm 2 (714) 64~11<>4 548-0492. 536·8362 lo Sea wind Village
make extra money. 2 only. lat & laal mo. + peta welcome. 964·2566 VJ ba, fpl. earth t.ones Newport Beech S. H (7 14)89_3·_5_198_. ___ _
Bdrm, 2 ba. clean1n1 & dama1e. No or 973·2971. Agt., no fee. Enc patio, children ok, t700(~e,1~)s~~~~si'1311&m1 :at,;t;' 3142 Rooms 4000
6 75-1771 pet.a. $695/mo. 549-0185. L-a ... '--I 3252 wlk to pools and tennis 7, ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.....-· ".,,....... ~ u•.Au ...................... .
E. Side, 2 br +den, frplc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $800. Wk da 997-6215. P · 2br, lba, w/encl gar & Laguna Beach Mot.or Inn,
S450, 1-l & laal mo. rent 2 br. 2 ba, adult comm. evea 644-1516/club Av a i I. now. 2914 w "'P"'RTMb-S~ patio, Znd noor 143.5/mo 985 No. Pacitfc Coast
642 8674 w/pool & apa $550 mo s..t • 3210 Oceanrronl 2 Br. I Ba ~ ~ .,...., 893.61030r 832.2153 Hwy, Laguna Beach.
· Call eves 4gg..~ .. uu · ••• Fireplace, garage. Beautiful la ndscaped ---Daily , Wee~y. Kitchen • '""'· ••••••••••••••••••••••• garden apt.a. Patios or Ir-Yin• 3144 available. Low winter ~~~~!~'~1~·~u:'n8eb:: s;:r~~~~t~~:i!:i:~~~~ MltaloftVlefo 3267 Beaut.d3br,2ba0,f1111lc.b1ll ~~~0/7w5e1e.~ 1 ?fe;; decka. Pool & Spa, cov· ••••••••••••••••••••••• rales.41M·52fM.
motlva._,,,. For d ... lalled ..... ~ •~nn ..... ...,5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• new ecor. r ve Y 213/33l·u17. ered perk.ins. Adults, no Adults Condo 1 br + loll
lnfo C.l
u.u
1
"" .--+ -•ec .._ • ...,, HOME FOR RENT 2317 S. LoweJI. '600/mo. '" pet• • • Private ·entrance. Prerer
.J •--L. 3 11 d i.t laal + '"'50 644 5069 2BR. l v.BA. ...70 poola, lennls, etc. Male over 40. No amok C / Z 1 M • w 0 t • .,.,.,_ ~" 2 3 Br l ~ Ba, dahw1hr, 3 B rm. $MS. Fenced • •~ · · 398 W. Wilson, 631.~ .7SO.l250. 542-7600_ 1 d.rl kln ,.__...__ P r •••••••••••••••••••. •••• frplc, dbl car gar, Ire rec yard It 1arage. Kids &: Co•y aparkllno clnan ~'!."' .. .!':!''-A . n1. no n g. l200. _. 3 B 2 B I ri •·lo I ba ~ rd n.•• welcom ..... _..., .. .. " · -'ITTlllll-Woodbrldge 3 br condo, Share utlla. 556-0637.
6
.. ,.,1117 76
...
767
r a. WtU 0111 • v-rm, enc . c...,a , nice ,,_.., e. _..,......., f hi lnled 2bd R .,., -ely no pet. f150 a rea. f100. Mariuerlte. or f73-2971. Ast. no fee. re• Y pa rm •••••••••••••••••••••• IB · ~100 lower comer unit l600 ~~!!~~~~~~!L:_·_~~· ~~·---1 ' house, nr Maln & F.d G ... rat 310 2BR.28A. W..,l leaae .S7S-83S9aftS. Fem wan~ bae nr S.C. -493-0t6'7 540-31186 Mewport.._. 1269 lnaer. Lrg back yrd, 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2250 Vanauard ay, Plaza, avall5/9. Teri c .... IH "•r+r 1400 ....... ruµ rty 14 Beaut. almo8t new 3 Br. ....................... ca r a Ir. S5 $0 I m 0 APTMTS FOa ltlHT 54().9626 .... 3141 551·9018 evea
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• houa ... 2 ba. Uv, din. llG CVa...tl ..... SE 617-7918· H 8 N 8 r-ta M ...................... . "' 1 " ~ • • • .. ~ eta 4 Plex 2Br, 2Ba, lrplc, lbdrm Offan view large Room for renl l200/mo r r P I c • d b I I a r • 3 Br a Ba, formal din.. So.th LOCJlllMI 3216 Somclblnl for Everyone alngle encl gar. ~ mo. deck , block lo bcoach utll Incl. StOO cS.epo.lt.
NEWPORT
OFFICE BUIUING
AIRPORT AREA
15,000 SQ FT $1,200,000
LIASIO LAND
-WESTERN TERRAIN, INC.
(714) 549-141J
frool /back yard ,w/1awn lrl maawr aulte, very ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bach. to 4 Br. Unfum. Ul &: taat, l200 aec. No ISSO '494 0088 494.2246' Call811-43118af\er8pm.
service. Ne.xt t.o park. 2 tbarpii&:t· view, hot -' vmaic Beach Houae. 1 Apta. Certain locatlona pets. 5411·0472 blwn 75l·G3 • • yearleaM.Man1ed cou· lub. /mo. Bob It Br. fireplace. fmmcd offe r : P ool , a pa , 8AM-7PM. · Very priv. detached am
pie. Non 1moken. No Dov~Koop.'3M2186 avail. 316'2 Fairview. rlreplace, laun. room . Mew,.rtleodl 3169 furn bacb room, pool,
pet1. '750/mo t.l. It S\85/ato.a.21186. b ea m ed cclll na •. Bach . w /lofl, refrlae. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1ara1e.Utecook.QuJet
laat . S200 HcwrUy. a••,,. .... ...--... 1ara191• all bullt-lna. atove, pool. PIO. 283 Ocunfront for Winter adult S3501nc utl845-311U
751·7328. tw ~'"'" G1S1cfen It Townhouse Avocado.~ Re ntal.I Fuml1hed It Excl111tve, full aecurtty, 1425 de1i1n. NO FEE. f 8
ltbdrm, 2 ba fenced yd, 2 be1utlful 3 Br. 3 Ba. ••••••••••••••••••••••• TSL MOMT. 842·1803 2 Br. l Ba. Frpcl, dlbwr, un urn. roker. 675'4912·
Cit ,.,, Nr Placentia. Prtvateyard,wetbar• 2bdrm,2car1ar.covered newcirpca•drapes or NO FEEi A"". Condo 54 fireplace, many other ~atio, ~ mlle t.o beach. ..... P Ji •• 1107 $MO.~. ' rentai.. vi&itentol1. tDOO. 7 •7425 . amealUe1 lncludln" pool•· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ------------.. cceH t.o • courtJ. 1 a J ..... -s 67$--4912 Broiler Sharp 3Br. aw mo. In• Mal.di room. $lac> tno. '515. K. e. (213)92&-4798, '400 Utlla pd, ZB.r Du pl.ex _.., __ .;..... _____ _
eludes wtr/cu. locked Call An\hony wkdys (714)875-aO'Z. 410Hardinf,Balb0a.No POOL,C•D,AOT Slepetothebch,lae4br, aata. Act. M5-2All "2·671' ev• 6 wknda. pet.I. 547-1.W 731·812tor5'8-0574 2~ba clled tn paUo. yr
Llk• new &MUWlie I Br
2~ ba, •vall June lit.
Dbl 1ar, ya.rd. '750/mo.
631-11114
........ 3br, 2ba, nr SC Piasa. c ........ ....,. 112z ly. '950/mo. f7a.25m
W ·~~ Beaut. trl level, pool, ..... •••••••••••••••••• Executlve townhome, So. 1-'----------"' VI"' I 1pa. car. '850, 1.ll , laat + Ctt Plau loc. J br, 2V. Ocean view, 1paclou1,
w Jb9aU p b\dudod 1ee. 6Sl·m>eve. lmmac. 1 Br. ocean vu, l ba. pool • Jacuril. '715 I u • , 2 b r , 2 b a
I Bdr I Ba. dbl 1ar, nn bllt from bch. Shared mo. CaJJ-.ocl8etv•. "Venalll•'' Condo au
Compl. fum. rooms, lood
nelchborhood, we.tC.M.
~.an aft. 8pm.
Matu~ adWt, employed,
pvt rm " ba, kllc h.
priv11. Sl50 mo-~ utll.
'79--M99.
Penlnaul.a Polnt $140/mo.
Private entrance, no
cooll ln1 11moltl n1 .
1'7M418
----------• fo~wer boat up lo Deluae 2br, 2ba. Mel.tin 1ara1e, laund facll. amen t'750. 567 198'1 The ratltat draw In tht ...... t.,..1 unit al 8'• Can"on Incl '850/mo.ActlJl..Ull 2bdrm, uUI Incl. Pool. -----·---Hou1e prlvllecet, non·
Wttt.. -u Piiot • -· .._.. mo. ... 1 .. f ll a uw ll)' JACOIS RIAL TY waaher/drytr, 1tt1e, un· Sell wtth EASEi quiet, mature couple W!.STCLI,.. 2 BR. 2 BA. 1m.r, over ao. u "I ~!~~Ad. Call To-671f. .._670 deraround pkr. eec. ll'aaBREUJ! pre r. No p e t• or D.R., frp&c, pool, palloe. emplo1d. UOO /mo -=~~=====:ii:::======::.t==:="-:::••:::===b==~;; ... ~;;;;~=d pool. •t.m1t....... Clual.nedAdl...,I chUdn.n. CallN-1•. Adult.I • 17Wl88 _16_7_-MIO _____ _
' ' ..... ,, .. ~ ..... • '!" ............. .... .., ..... • • I •• • ... . .. , .. ~ .... .. ... . #Jiit . ~ .
-__ .. _ . . . . . ..
---------c_,.... cwwc.. ••11111111 ....................... ....................... ...................... . SUMMER
SPECW.
}Ja·t'.7J?o~1Y
rora
30day11d
in the
DAILY
PILOT
SEAVICI
DIHCTOllY
DO IT NOW!
A1kForS.....
Your Daily Pllol
Service Directory
RepresentaU ve
642-5671, ext l 11
AJI TyJ)ft Rernoct.llna • Mom1 relax! l'U watch GARDEN MAINT
Repairs. top quaUty, 11 yo1.1r llld1 dally or Yd CIHn up TrH trim
yn In aru. Llc'd. Mr before/after lt'hool mini ·w8108.4.,pm Palombo; 982-1314 Univ Pk area. M2·3'51
•11 ArO""d Ca..,...nter. C ... recfer Yard t leanupa, trt>l' " .... • .. ~ work , lrriaatl11n ' rt1 Flniab • Routh. Free ••••••••••••••••••••••• pair. arefl\ bell lndat•v'll
Eat . J ohn 775-8082 Coo1trurtlora·All typo1 M l Ol29
20 yn HP Pree "t Corpcf S..ke Lie #3345119 MS 5973 EXP ERTL.AWN C'AIH;
••• •••••••••••••••••••• --Monthly aervlco Tret>1 Shampoo It steam clen. Carpentry, Addlll<>M • & c I 0 an u p 1 MI k f'
Color brighteners, wht Small }obs·~ yni exp ~l·20tll
crpta 10 min blea<'h Lie. 308W 548-17111
H1tll, Uv.·din. nna $15: 1lU!: LANDSCAP1':CO. ava rm S7.SO: \.'Ouch SlO; CONSTR. 41• REMOD Nothlna fi'lnl.'rin Malnt
OUMrJ OI~
Sm•ll Movln1 Jobe
Call MIKl':<Me 13111
l111.1Un11 & Uump Jobe
Aak fur Randy
IWl 1Wl7
llAULINU Ntudnnt h111
11 r11eo t ru1•k l.ow1•11t
r1tlll, prompt 7~9 ttnff
1'h•nk you. John
llAUl.ING ANU QUIC'K
l' I. fl: A N U I' Y r r to
l':allm•tt'I 831 005J chr ~. Guar. elim pet P lana. Llr d Geor1e i-20l5 1 odor. Crpt repair. 15 yn Pllmer &Sooa.s .. n 6932 ~ llllyt me llAULINl: t;U ;ANUPS
exp Do work myself Drywal ---Comm'l/RHld f"ertlhr (;u111to. yards, junk,
Refs . 531·0101 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lng, tr1mmln11. pl1tntm11. dirt. 1hruh1 ti lrl'l'•
We Care Carpet Cleaners • Oryw1tll Spcc1ali.8t clean up MS :WW trim /rem<>vc IM2 52H
MA ·ru RF. Ct>I lJel)t'nt.lu
bit-. nun •mkrs . no
children Would like to
houn11t rrum 6 to to
7 18 Sold homl• mu111
rn uv". nl.'w hom11 not 1 ••
ut.ly I ii 7 16 H33 17:t'7
L-.deca,Mg
···•··•····••··•······· Wt~ DO fT ALL'
We do It bt-111 ' Wt• do It
I.' h e a p r 11 t I It u 1111 t• I I
L11nitii1·11p1na Mot 10112
LANDSCAPING
t<ototllllng, ('11·11n uµ!I &
id('OI l,le 848 G.'W I
Steam clean & uphols. Qual &i prod. New &i ~ G ... rol s.n1c" HCHttHa...IRg
Accowttlng W o r k g u a r . Tr u 1· k mod. 11389944. 532.~9 •• ••• ••• ••• •• •• •• ••.... • •••• • ••• •••• ••••••••••
••••••••••••••••••••••• mount unit ~37 16 DR Y W·ALL-O ur ex SENIORCITIZ!o;NS Wont a llfo:Al.1.-¥C 'l.t:AN
NURS~RVMAN I~ yr11
C'XP In plant IU. di11ust•
& ptl&t c·ontrul. Wall <•on
llllh w /you on 1111 your
~urch•n nN.'<lll
llcfll The Fem mine Approach
LEIGH ROBERTS
Full services. 548-1484
F1C BKKPGSERVICES
All Taxei·Costa Mesa
Cull 6MH.596 /64>958o
Appliance Repair •••••••••••••••••••••••
G uar. Used re!Mg.
Good cond. Sales &
Service. 642·7754
NoSteam/NoShampoo pertise We can handle We provlt.le trnnapoi;tu llOUSF." l'11ll (iin.ihnm
St I · Ii t r t your problems 631 2004 lion & do odd Job8 <.:all C.1rl l''rt•t•t'lll 64~ 5123 an specaa s. as __ ---KimorJlm,d~
dry. Free est. 839· 1582 S.ctric.. -
---• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • H~ym• UPH.OL~DRAPES ELECTRICIAN priced ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cleaning in your home. · If OM ... IM PHOV EM ... N'I' TIP TOP CARPET & nght, free estlmatl' on c. , c.
Fl ·C large or small Jobe Rcmodelu111 Odd Jobs
oor are. 960-62166 Lac "396621 673 <mY 28 yrs uper tnD 2265
l':xpt-rt i11l• lluu11t'kl•epl11K
Sup"h1•11 fumlsht't.l
Pcrsotaollr.~'<I 1'41 41170
Nt:l-:U YOUll llOM ,.;
('LJ::AN .. :U?
Evelyn. 642 07211 uft ~
MaMHtry ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ulll('KWOHK S mall
Jnhs Nl•wpurt. C1111t11
M t'K a , I r v1ne, ltd11
61:1 :m~
t•fl PIXS built & n·f1t<'t'CI.
bnr k lltont• v1•n1·1·" JU
yn '-'"" 1:19.1 ~n4:1 ellftCJ, Aco.tk K.i!:MODELING Carventry, rabmets. roor
••••••••••••••••••••••• Electrical work. resld. & repairs, plumbing "'rel' General llouseclt•u11l116¢
ArousticCeilmgs + comm'I 631·2001 l'Sl Call Ans wer Ad fleliablt• lldl'1'em·e11 klH<'K AHTISTHY
customhandtexturing #461 ,S.:H300,24hn1 Owntruns 002·~10 l'onl & spa i·u"anw~. Asphalt Lie. 389944 532·5549 Formica/Tl• k · ••••••••••••••••••••••• --••••••••••••••••••••••• REPAIRS SUNSlllNt-; brat• pavmg!i. hlm·k & ~-.J/,_ __ _....... "' · C rt brn·k walls 960-7•121 Driveway~. parking lot __...,.. ~ .. ormaca owite OJ.Ill Call unyt1me, &'75 3()14 llOUSEKl::l-:l'ING
repairs sealroating. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Custombwlt &:anslalled. Glveyourhomethotspr IRICkiSTOHE
S&S Asphalt 646·4871 Foundations, Retainm g latest colors & desil(ns Carpentry Mnsonry log r leanmg look all Tile, Marhll•& i"rph''
Lic'd Walls, Hillside Restora· Free est. 646-4871 Roofing Plumbin11 year· round, with quality 1173·6650 (213)634 0140 ---l ion, Slabs, Patios, Drywall·Sturro -Tilr •-d d bl k ~ A..tomoti•• Block & Brick. L1c 'd F.rnltllN & more J B 646-99'JO .. epcn 11 e wor Custom M1111Ur1ry & <'cm
••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·8387evesl96().0539 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F'ree est imate, n • rrcte 100'1> l..ot:al llcr'ii
C Rer Sh ~ e ne• b rerenre rurnl8 hl't.l , Alan's Luxury Motor ar CONCRETE&BRICK ma •.on • ve ... r. Roofing , plum 1ng , licensed & bcJrldet.l t.1rllni. aont.l 64511512 Care WaXll\g, polishing. sandblast. Prom patio lo ea rpent ry pa an t an g Jim, IW0-17<lS Kod
mt. Home ore 536-4151 Dr1lvk e wa ys.85p5a0l9103s0, piano to cabinets A floors , re"~1rfremodcl. 952 3034
---wa wa ys • TourhofMagar,831·~17 F l !l6820>6 ·n 5 MASONRY&Ttl.fo:
lusineu Sert5u 962 0986 ---~e .!.!._ -a Do you want your home Our spet•ralty. We solvl• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --GardenincJ Hardwood Roon cleaned weekly"' t'ull
Personal Bill Paying & ero111lc Tiit ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .Jeri, 5:14·Z745 cirt 5 your problems. 631 2004
Tax Record Service. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CMLEAN-UPS1LLAdsWN HARDWOOD FLOORS R<>BIN'SCLEANIN(,' inl Blinds
Trust Deed collections. LAMIERT T1LE amtenanre· n rp Cleaned &i Waxed ••••• ••••••••••••••••••
675·9132_ Kitchens, bathrooms. ~e est 642 9907 Anytime, 832-4881 SA Scrvlee a thoroughly Mini bland! & wood~."' m
luilden entries. Lic'd. 978-0320 Gardening, landscaping, clean house ~0-~7 dow tint mg. v~rtu•lcs
••••••••••••••••••••••• tree tramming & re HCMllft9 'Houses""--Phone est 549 a>Jll
I . I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ···~~ D. & D. luilden
Designers C u stom
homes J7 yrs exp Fin
avail Charles (714 )
898·3141 Al !7141 963-8433
SEA LARK
MOTEL
•Weekly rentals now
avail. •Sfl8 and up
•Color TV •Phones in
rooms.
2274 Newport Blvd. C.M.
646-7445 ---
Swnmer Rentah
PU ERTA VALLARTA
Avail. May 28 to June 10
End unit on the water
Sleeps 2·4, maid service.
private beach, kitchen
New hotel with dining
room. swimming pool,
etc . 155.00 a day
548-6646. IJ.42·5200 ---
Moving? Avoid deposits
& rut Ii ving expenses!
Profeas1onally since
l971.
HOUSEMATES
8J2.4l34
• ShaNd LMitcJ*
Counselors to personally
select your compatible
rmmte to suit your
lifestyle. Shared-Living.
833 Dov tor Dr Suite 31 NB
631-1801
Bargain shoppers read
the ltltle ut.l s an
Classified regulcirly
And the} find what
they're look mg for
mova . ma.)Or r ean·up, H 1 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mo•'-g r t 752 1.,.9 au • c eanup. concrete m ree es . · .... 1 D t ~k Reputable college stu ••••••••••••••••••••••• -remova ump ru, . U ho . Pror Japanese Gardener Quick serv 642.7638 dents w1 usesat any BC MOVING. E>.J>cr
Lawn rutung,treetr1m -o r all summer, May pror. lo"' rates. quack
ming, weeding S48-8J75_ Want Ads Call642·5678 JO-.~~l.rers 83J.141~ careful service 552 0410
Young F 19·23 wants
same to shr your place
or look together Non c1~
smoker CM or NB area.
540-8451. 546-6444
KOLLCBfTY DR'a ofc. in Owntwn HB. ._.EUl9,_T 2,000 sq.ft. Sl.200 lse. Red " n..--Carpet,893-1351 Elegant executive suites 1----------1
1n prestige locat ion. . AIRPOIT AREA
With complete support F1.1rni1hed ,or un ·
services, . furnished Executive
714/851«)681 Suitea In Irvine, wal.klnft
MOMy toLom 51>25 •••••••••••••••••••••••
2.-d TD l.oafta
Sl00,000 to $250,000 18'1} + points. Call : Bkr ..
963·5788
•DELUXIOFffCES• dl.sta~ce to Ai~r\~'2 --------
1. Room "2 ROom. No serv ces ava · INDUSTRIAL WIDOW tw money ror lease required. 2172 Du· Mlchelaon, Suite 212, 2nd T.D.'s. $10,000 & up!
714-752·0234 a-••CE E-Z CREDIT. No pnlty. Pont Dr. Adj. Airport_.-~""
Hotel. 83J.3223. 9-12 -~ 17th SlUIT, C.M. FOR LEASE For 1aclion call 673-7311
2 room office s uit e . COSTAMESA _a_n...;;y_t_m_e _____ _ 1.25 ta fl.In Great parking. Great 64i.4461 • Mort~gn. Tnmt "'lo bid&. S220 mo. • o n e 2 7 8 o a q rt Deicls 5035
THE ADVERTISING
COHSULTA.MTS
Now you can reap the
benefits of high cost ad
vert1sing for your com
pany! Let The Advertis·
Ing Consultants set up
your own in-house ad·
vert1s1ng agency. Please
r ail for informallon
759-0652
•
.... .., , ........ ,......... . ...... .....
• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
MovinJI" Th~ Starving OOC'S rAINTING hae J 0 Hom Rennt.hlng
Colle11c-Studt'nt.a Muvin11 rt't urned! Duck a, boat An liq ues, Int rab1net11
Co hu l(ruwn, Insured 111 P 1 . 10 l / t' x l h 1 c Fme palnUna 64.S 0664 aa mt' guod aervlrt• • T 1 2 4 4 3 6 LI c ~ n IH' P r o m p t , r cd 1 11 b I c looflltg
IJ.41 8427 1crv1('e Uavt' 64S 0389. •••••••••••••••••••• •••
"MOVIN MAN"
Ill 1·urefol. 1:uurttoui1 &
l'hl'llJ) l'la ('1111 S.2 13211
HW'llnCJ s.nlcH •••••••••••••••••••••••
PRIV ATf': NURSt:
Any shift, 12 Yl'll t'Xfl,
1:nnsdent10W1 & relluhle
642 11494 anytime
rai..tln9/P .. "'9 ....••.......••••......
•ST t:Vf:NS PAINTIN(;
Int 1cxt 1''1ec ltcmi7.1·1l
(•st. Nl'al, c1u11hly work
llJ;! 32C~. $46 4561
w ALLrArBllMG
l'ror an stulled. bt mil
huul( frt•t• An:1wt•r l\tJ
11 41ill. 642 •l~IOO. 24 hr11 or
I O:W 142'J
N 1-:W l'OKT l'AINTIN(;
Comm 11Klu:s /l"t!tdd
i''ret: l'!>l I.ow rate'
673 ln37
839·5851 QUALITY HOOYING
DAVE'S PAlN'f lNG
Serv sat1sf1l'd c ust 9
>rs Qua I integrity
Heas, ms. lie 760-7301
All type!!. r~ l'ttl
v111a , MC s.i1 5no
HARBOR RO<.WING
BALBOA ROOFINli CU
Takr udvantawe of 1100
AGAPE FORCE KIIii or food 111ve away
rAINTING COMPANY Realtors welcome
3 Generations of 673 6743 673 O<S03
Pamtrng Excellence Sandbka~
~-5851 •••"j ••••••••••••••••••••••• rloster /Repair LOCAL SANDBLA.STl':R
••••••••••••••••••••••• Lac·, rns. reas. No JUb too
Neut p11tt•ht1i & texture11 bag/small. 840--7909
Free .. t. 193-1~39 Sewlng/.+.ltfl'Gtiofts
ED"S l'LASTl-:HING •••••••••••••••••••••••
All Types lntr F:xt Alterat1oru. & Dres!>mak-
645·8""8 fo'K"'"·. "'ST 1 n I(. exp' rt . re us ""' "'" "' 540 35!1J. &JG ~3
Plaster Patthmg. mt t>Xt.
JO yrs exp Neat work
545 2977 I Paul I
l'LAST~:H tNG Jlouse1>.
addtlloni.. re ~·olur, O\'er
block wall-! i''rt•t' t•st
Low rates 586 4892
Sprinklen .•.•...••••.....•......
C 0 NS I!: RV ~; WAT 1-:U
Aut omall' Your
Sprin k ler s~.,t1:111
114 586 1591
l-'1rs1 Class int/ext puint
IOI(, Wa llpaper, rCflnl!lh rlwnbfng
!-.PH INKLEHS & son
Tree remov:il l>l<i IT
Lcind~rapc.646 7CYIO «ab1nt·l~. etc 979-5~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl.lJM BING ne w 1·on
flALl'll'S PAINTING
Lil' Int F:xt I.ow ralei.
1"1 ec c~l 964 5566
Fmt· pullltlllll by HacharcJ
S1nur l.11:. llHI l:l vr~ ur
ha1)PY N U 1·u.~lo11lt'r~
Thunk you 631 <1410
1>l1 uct1on, remodelinie.
repa1ri.. restliurant,
electronic leak detec
t1on. To" Hat Plumbin1:
636·2030
llolleman Plumbing
Tiie ........•.••••••.......
Tit.I': INSTALl.fo:O
All kind~. guaranteed,
ids John,893)667
Tree Senlce ...•...................
Sales Serv1ee·Repa1r~ NOW IS THt: TIM i:; tu
Frt'e estimates 552·7183 prune your tree!> L'all College Student. exp'd "The Experti." 20yrs
int ex. llny JOb fur ll'sS' Property Marwlgeme11f l<wa l Georgl' 548 3239 Al~x 1151!l:r71,552 0231 •••••••••••••••••••••••
r APER HAMGIHG
25 yrs l'XP t'ree est
F'ai.t. neat . rt'hable
S8 roll & up 645·6490
Wull Paper llangml(
All work l(uaranleed
Tei 1·1, 545-6268
INT t-:XT PAINTING
1,0 ratl'i> Prompt. neat
F'ree est 848·5684
FOUND ADS
ARE FREE
Call:
642-5678
Prof Property Mgmt
Apts, houses. condos, of
fices PM Co 951 6666
Real Estat. Senius
Welding .••....•...............
lnl1ui. Comm Res1d
Atlas Mobil~ Meldl
S.Ul-9507 ..........•..•......... -
Newport Real Es tate Window CleoaninCJ
agent will ronsader tr ad • • • •• • • • ••• •• ••• ••• •• • •
rng serv1t·es. What have "Let TheSwi~hme In"
you got w trade'> Bruce <:a 11 Sunshine Wmdow
Blo mgren. RE /MAX Cleanmg.Ltt.l ~8~3
Realtors. 759·1221 76().0297 W<1nl Ad Resulu. 6-12 567fl
io'ound Mini Doxie. no rot
lar. older female May
4th Var Brookhurst
Adams 968 30(}l
COVER GIRL
• OUTCALL *
THE
GirHriends
•ESCORTS•
Home /Office jHotel
•759-1216•
BUSI BANKRUPTCY
Reor iean12auun & la
qu1dat1on by ex" Jt
torne) s C7141851 0611
Emoloylftftlf & ,,..paration
•••••••••••••••••••••••
Schook &
lndrvc:tion 7005 .•..••.•..••....••...•. 953-0778 MC/VISA Piano instruction offered l•---------1 to a ll levels Member MTA. Studio near Spr *FOXY LADY*
OUTCALLONLY
VISA MC * 972-1138.
mgdaleSc~l~ l271
Jobs Wanted, 7075 ...•.........•.•...•...
LOST· Sm blk & whl t•at, l•---------1 Lie. cosmetician. very personable desires posi vie Rancho San Joaqum, .+. TLANTIS lion in progressive skin
Ir vine 9~1897 MASSAGE Sr A rare salon Npt B1·h •
Be pampered by 16 area Xlnt salesperson
Beaut Girls Open 6420862aft6PM. LOST· Car Keys on I. V
key case C.M. area
REWARD 548·8498 10AM 4AM 7 da ys Gent-le-m-an~~hes posa· Phone 645-3433
FOUND Fem Small Dog ---------1 lion as companion.
driver and helper Must
lave 1n , light duties wht/lan vir Nr. N.B
675·8972
E S
SHE
C 0 R TS
MODELING
835-9199
&
If ave good references
Reply to Ad II 873, Daily
Pilot. Box 1516, Costa
Mesa.CA92S2S
What a Wonderful World
or Shopping, right a t
your fingertips every·
day ! Dail y Pi l ot
Classllied Ads. To place l•---------1 Sat /Sun relier work wanl·
your ad. call 642.5678 SWEETHEARTS ed Housework or nurses
and let a Classified Ad· •ESCOllTS• aide 673-1236an 7PM
Visor help you_ 24 HOURS
Visa/MC 529·1927
WANTED
Adventurous woman.
To s hare cruising life
Offshore cruising vessel
Be compatible, 25-40.
Write Jamey Reil 20<lS
W. Balboa Blvd. #243
Why not hire a woman
with energy, mtegrit y,
skilled as PH. Llason.
mediator, Cowiselor. or
Newsletter Ed Valid or
!__ers only ~7410
Legal secretary wants
PIT job in Irvine area.
Mag-card, dirtaphone
exper ience. 851·9131. Newport Beach , C A
9266.1 H.lp W-.ct 7100 -----· ...................... .
rSYCHIC
Readlngs J ack 556-1178 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
•ACCOUNTING• PROILEMSm Ac:ct;Asst.Rec.$15,600
0 1.tr group o r ''think· Payables Data $14,400
tank" 1peclali1ta m ay Payroll EDP Fun$U,600
resolve your problem on Liz Reinders _...ency
t---·---
Oldctl ac lar11eat agen<'Y
ln So. Calli. atnce 1971
Credlta: ABC.NBC.CBS.
Cosmo, Phil Donahue
NEWPOIT Re.lonomics 675-6700 b all t war~ OUM av or Im· ••••••• •••••••• ••••••••
Approx. 450 sq. fl. Zoned med. occupancy. •Two Satttcr Mtg. Co. HAii• C·2, crpt.a, drpe, $180 mo. 1600 aq ft unit•. office & All types or real estate
130 E. 17th St .. Suite 0, warehouse apace av1.1ll. Investment.a alnce UM9. 7 C.M. 548·ll88 JfuneLl. •1n32"·33'tfiperhsq. Spech11111MJ Ill • ri. • eaa ll o ice rs. ZadTDs
3035 ~Ft. og:::t~~SZ::O.So' ~o.°t thru Fl1 84' Sat '42·2171 545-0611
Use Answer At/ service
when pJ'aclng your ad ... a
Daily Pilot ad number will
appear in your classified ad
a service fff or a "no. 4020 Birch Eat'64EOE
cure-no pay" basis. Newport/833-8190/Frff
Phone 714/89'MlS5 lOAM 1---------t o noon onl y . No
weekend calla.
For a Therapeutic
M ass age by a lic'd
therapist. Call Earle
648·2817 10.,SPM
ACCOUMTS
PAYAILI
Al10 general •rcounllna
duties. Some experience
nHe11ary Ul-0991
Nancy.
·~orr•
to all who need a place.
Newport Beach, 64M8D9
~rvlo11 all the S. Coaat
Garden Grove, 1116-3'82
Share beaut. Newport
Rel•bt• h()cM. Onrlook·
In• the bay • opu
ocean. Your own Jere•
Bdrm. ' fulJ bath. Non
1mokln1. Sl50. ~.
'=va.w. Mt-:!OCXI 8,700 sq. rt. office + Want Investor for Npt
PrtnhP..... ..ant...... 4450 warebouae. Irvine ln bay front home. Give ••• ••• ••••••u••••••••• duatrtal near San Diego well secured ut or 2nd Loh of Wllldowa For 1to,. • office ap•ce Frwy oftJambo~. Call T. D. Ai\, 675-flln.
,.,......... atNuooablent.. 148·1044 o r Inquire W-"•i.•-.~? ForlhebUllMUman 100 .. 17MS.... Maro.I Co. 167$3 Noyu. -6 ... ,., •-Whowan&atomu.. MESAVBJU)EbR 95'7·92116 Brkr Coop in-On your T.D.'a Notes
ood •-loo 1•--" MRallon·lnv•tonSS • m.ipr9t PLAZA v --... • Cao Dennlloo A.Hoc W•,lmt. 1S2SllhHV.rde£,C.M ....... W ..... 1 4600 f13.'7l14 e•r-,r 141-4121 •••••••••••••••••••• , •• ----------11 1714)675-8662 8p1« for Re.t ln ictlve lbr neat clean home Owner·Brokor want• •---------1 bea1.1Uful bu\&Y 1alon iieedtd by mother, soo • ~·= i;:oc:noooO:c~
•• you rad tod.a1'1 Any related ...,.clalty well behaved doa. realdence. Principals
Claaait'-d Adi? lf not. ok. Fuhian laland, N.8 . Deeperat.e\y JuneClallt. o"'v &44-1817 aft $pm.
you'ra m..., tbe beat Pat: ('IH)l40-llm. UnderrtOOS.1272 . T'""om b1r11bu m 1on l Hl-" Sc boot dJatrtct
. we take your messages
24 hours a day ... you call
In at your convenience
during office hours and get
the responses to your ad ...
this service is only $7 .50
week. For more Informa-
tion and to place your ad
call 642·5678.
\_1i
IHTllYllWERS
Needed p1rt time In
Romantic Holidays In
troductlon Service In
Oranfe County. Sales/
, publ c 1peakln1 ox
perience preferred. Call
(213)-2123
8udd,y now Mrt from lb.e
Spa Hotel.
Stl-211 '1, 540407. l(). '1
ACC~
ASST/SIC'Y
ADAMMcY
Knowledge of A/R, A /P,
lO·key by touch, ac·
cu r ate typlna. Ex·
cellenl, tactful com·
munlcatlon 1 klll1.
Dulrable Newport
Beach loc: l.lberal
buetlta. Call. Jan Wood, 'I 1.._l65-0800
f
-. . -:-.
~~~ ....• ?!.~
ADMIN.ASST
Plirab offlff for Newp0rt
<Anltr lnvnlmt:nl firm Su~r opportunity for
ambltloua per.son Good
secret a rial akllb. Ex
ceUent salary a. bonus
p.ckace. Hout'8: 3 days
1·9pm, 2 days l 1·3()pm
CalJ 644·ZW7
C.rald Kottll
Koaall ""-c:lal
Senlus
AIDE-Work w /han·
dlcapped adults. Must
be strong, williua to 1ui
1i1t In tasks such as
toileting, feeding. gen.
cleanup. Excell. vul"a
l ion & in s ur unl'e
ben e f its United
Cerebral Palsy Assoe •
Santa Ana. 546-S760
ASSIMILEll
Mechanical assembly
elec. eq Wiii tram. Nr
Ocean in C M Gd
benefits. Ask for Wes
845-3632
ASSEMILEll
Plastic products . Im
medidale opening
Newp ort B eac h
548-9818
. .
~~'r.!~ ..... !!.~! Orange Coet1t DAILY PILOT/Wodnesday, May 13. 1981
... !~ ..... ?!.~ ~-~~ .... ~?! ........ !~ ..... ?!~ cs::d~~c~ r ~:;;,~.Pp';.; ~If.~~ ..... ?!!~ ~~~ ..... !!.~~~'f.~~ ...... !L~~
IOOIKWll Mon -Fri Call for appt PASTflOOOS ~IRL .. IOAY ., Jt'wt-h> 1tort ln So Co111t
BANKINO Real Estate Invettmc:nt Clerical 7S2S401,Gary'1Debe Cook~ Cuhler Eltper Needed fodut grow1n11 Pl1111.i ntit1d1 bt111ht c 0 w Ith multi p I e GENERAL OfflCl'. c__..._ ........... --nf'l' 50. P 11C1fl(' Coa1t 1m•ll Co HUNT nnr SX"non for Offl<'t' dutle1
REGIONAL
TEUEI
partnereblp enlltlu ~ --• ..,.. llwy H8~311-4445i:vea. ~rea S36 ~ ~0.0066
need• Cull ch.arse book ASSIS Monday Fr1dD)' Surwr ---------keeper Lo work ln ell TANT Sandwlcb54.S-4887
upecta ot accounllu & 6 m o . t em Po r a r Y 1--------FILE CLERIC
CiOLF ST ARTER
32 hr week. pu~reor re
tired peri.un
714 1499-1919 qllarterly flnancla .... re· l&Sli&nment ivalJ now tn CUSTOMB Lar(Ce in11urance •&ency
Portlna Please send re Santa Anll iu~11 Must hos immediate opening
sume to PO BOX 3060 typt-40wpm General or Rll.ATIOMS for fast, energetic file
NB CA92660 rice dutlH Call today CLIRICTltAIMEI! clerk Paid comp11ny GROUNDS KH.PE.R
Full &t PIT rX>silll)ll'
avull ul Public-Gui Ul'n
In Corona del Mar 0 ):1
& hrs flex. For a n uppt
Cull Terry M f' 8 30um
4pm 673-2268
look Paa ....
P trlmo Mon, l ·30PM to 6PM, Tuet. l0.30AM to
6PM . No exper
necessary. Apply Pen·
neySaver 1660 Placenh:i
Ave. C.M.
•CAI DRIYBS•
Checker Cob
77().0222
CAR WASH
Cas hi ers want e d ,
Anaheim & Orange Call
6«-4460 ask for Niinl"Y or
Ann
for Ao nnt bonef1ts Call· Llndo at r-n .• llr\~":. ExpoAgency 842-S447 S49·8161 U \ II \ 164838. Magnolia HB m.~•AIPV PfllSONNH srll'lllcu I~~~~~~~~~~ Fine retail 11tore needs 11
CLERK. 7 Eleven mkl,
P IT 24 hrs max,twk,
graveyard & wknds. 1920
Balboa. N B 673·6190
Delivery & W11rehouse
person for Party rental
store. Ftor Pff. Apply
2025 Newport Blvd. C.M.
DIMOHSTltA TORS
PART TIME 1-'ri & Sat
Work in your area Car
nee $4hr S41·1nl8
full time exp
salespersor\ Opptun1t 1e~
w / good bencf1t b 1----------1 768 8383 <.i uardi.
MOWHIRIHG
f'lor1st. ex~r. foll time Armed & Unarmed
DeMurl f''lurl!il. 2438 Openings in ~;.~jg o r t 13 1' C M Costa Mesa. lrvtne.
El Toro.
F' 0 0 D I' R E P &-•$4 OOPerhr&up
SERVER. now hinng. if •Uni forms-cleaning frt'l'
you're friendly, t•onr. •Mature pen.un'
l.ANU~t'APf;
l"ONS1"1Hl<."rlON pos1
lion M U!il havl' a ll
round t'XJ)t'r Tup Pll> &
lJe11cf1l1t f'll'Ul>t' l'llll
•7 11 1 76114751 r1om
9A M 3PM
Le9ol S.C,...ory
Minimum 2 yrs r1v1 l
ht1g11t111n Sular) open.
liood bcnl'fll, Xlnt
11 k 1 I I s r t• q u N o
shorthund
752·2$16
LEGAL SECY·
SEHIORPTHR
An exciting opportunity
1.1 available with a lead·
in& savings & loan
We're seeking an ex·
perienced Teller to
travel to branches in the
Oranae County area.
provldin& extra cov·
eraae when offices are
short-starred. II select·
ed. you will be based in
the office nearest you,
a n d you'll receive
mileage r eimburse·
ment, lop salary and
outst.andinf benefits in·
eluding paid career ap-
parel, profit sharing and
paid m edical/dental
coverage. Please apply
at our Newport Beach
office on TIIURSDA Y. ---C-"'-SH..._R
May 14, from 9·30AM to "' ""
Cle rk . mature Ory
cleaners. 3 dys pr wk
646-7621
DENTAL ASST
Newport Beach office
~icper nee Call
64().5680. c1enuou~ & dependable. welcome
we want you from SAM •Semi-retired OK
t•h..a lll'ng1ng pc11>,lion for
toµ :ict·y ~ Xl11t sk1 lli;
Dt'lu~e t1fcs OC airport
drcu <:d l>4•n S..il Com
mt•ni.urak w exp t'o11
ta<:t <:ind) 752 7~1
LEGAL SEC'Y
NEWPORT IEACH
f'ull t 1me !I to ~ :io l'all
Jm n• Cur appt 6'10 sn:>O
3 30PM Grocery exp. pref App-
ly 1n person . Wells
Supermarket, 3347 F.
Coast Hwy, CdM FIDBJTY
FB>BAL
Savings & Loan Assn
1515 Westclirr Dnve
Newport Beach
EOE
CASHIER W AHTfD
El Toro & NewpQrt Sch
a reas Call Lt!l1na
644-4460
CASHIEK
HOUSEWARESALES
CLERJ< TYPIST
Energetic person with
good typmg needed ror
busy managmg general
agency No exp
necessary. but ab1llt} to
learn a must Attractive
salary & all compan)
benefits. Call Lmda JI
S49·8161
Dental Asscslanl, i-·rr or
P T Pleasant
established Costa Mesa
office. X-ray Ile & exp
req 631 -1420
DENT AL ASSIST ANT
Cha1rside, RDA, X-Ray
he . F /T. Beach city
Salary open + benefits
No n -s moker pref
847-2569
4PM wkdy:. Appl) 10
person Stonem1ll Ter
race Res taurant , 2915
Redhill.CM
GENERAL OfffCE
Guod typing skills. work
vaned, electron1rs firm
Advanced Kmet1cs, 1231
V1ctorta St CM 646·716S E O.E
BEKINS
PROTECTION
SERVICES
2601 W Ball Rd
Anaheim.Ca
(7141 761 -483 1
E.O.f .•••.•..... M/F
GUARDS
LIFEGUARDS
WANTED
...
~!.!~ ..... !!.~!
HUIS....
LVN, 11 7pm, 3 dayt per w~ek Pvt 41 bed Con
val Hotp S.A Hta S.A
~9 3081 ---MU.SING
Personal need• 1uten
dant 8am .... 30pm S11t
Sun Gd worlting condi·
lions S3.7Shr Nuraea Aicl
ex pn belp(ul but not
nee Call Jennie Subnick
Ruyv1ew Manor 3SO W
Hay l'M, Ca 642·35<l>
Off.ICE
Personal needs atten
dant. 8am-4:30pm Sal
Sun Gd working condi
lion11 S3.75hr. Nurses
Aid ex per helpful but not
nel'. Call Jennie Subnick
Bayview Manor. 350 W
H11y CM, Ca. 642·35<l>
ORDElt·FIUEA
Must be accurate. no
exp necesary Apply in
person 511 E. GoetzS.A
PAIMTBl'S
APPRB4TICf
Nu exp nee $4.SO/tir
Call Jim at 631-0769.
P J rt f'ull time job at
home Send stamped
and self.addressed en-
velope to 0 N En
terpr1ses. Box S4~. Pme
Bluff, Arkansas, 71611
ASSEMILEllS
Loe. Mission Viejo co
needs Assemblers w 12
yrs. exp. Candidut es
must have gd. manual
dexter ity, gd. eyesight,
neat in appearance & de
pendable Work is in life
support medical ele c
tronics. Gd. benefit s
Only r es~o n si ble
persons seekmg perma
nent emplyml. need ap
ply. Call Mrs Parelll.
S81-3830
Apply in person Crown ,...._._ ........ ~_._,. ...
Hardware, 3H77 E Coust DENTAL/Pede> GEHERAL OFFfCE
Smull office needs girl
good on phone, lite typ
mg Call 546-l532
Full & pttrt lirt1l' All
areas Uruformi. rum 'd
A~eb 21 or over. rl:'lirl'd
wekome Nu cx1>1.:r lll'l"
Apply . Un1 vl•rsal
Must be l"t'rt1f1ed 111 yri.
or oldl•r F T ·temporar}
pos1t 1on only Appl) m
per!'oon J)cl Webb 's
Newµortl•r Inn. 1107
Jamlrn1i•1• Hd . i'> 13
11Prsonnl"I office
Pan lime al home. Nd fl
dynamic people. will
tralll Hichardbi5·51195
AUTOMOTIVE
Co111~ C>,perator
Rey. & Rey Vim II Ex
penenced PREFER
RED Will cons1de r
training the right apph
cant. Must be good
typist Contact Elsie
Tompkms or Sid Wig
gins at
E .. arle/ke
TOYOU-YOLYO
19U H-1Mw 11•4.
Cotto M•••
""60.9)0) .... S40·9•'7
AUTO MECHAHIC
Domestic & F'on•ign
Lg , c leun , w e ll
equipped s hop so•.
comm . Own tools Lot:.
of work Hunt Auto Ctr .
1825 Laguna Cyn Rd
494-3000or833 8966
AUTOMOrYE
blief CCHM.r I
Phone Operator
Some auto dealership
experience helpful. Full
time Tues thru Sat. Con
tact Elsie Tompkins or
Sid Wiggins at
Earle Ike
fOYOTA-YOLYO
19U H-1Mw 11•4. c .......... .
""'46·0 0) -S40·'4'7
Babysitter 'Nanny Com
petent woman to cure
Cor newborn. Approx
1G-15hrs/wk. Xlnt salary
673·8423
BABYS ITTER . Lile
hskpg, 5 yr old girl. 38
hrs week. Refs req. Npt
Bch. 644-tMnl eve aft 6 &
wknds .
Banking
LOAM SECRETARY
Local NewPort Beach
savings & loan has 1m
med. opening for a Loan
Secretary Will consider
trainee. Satar) com
mensurate with exper
Full msurance benefits
& paid career apparel
Please call.
Bookkeeper, Secretanal
F' C. smgle entry, P T
Permanent position, ex
per req Typwnter. 10
key by touch I f
qualified calJ 751-7042.
IOOKKEIPSl·F /C
Salary commensurate
with ability. Newport
Beach. Call 851-1502 for
app't.
Hwy,CdM
CLERICAL
Leading local pest con
trol company net•cb
fulllime general off11·e
personnel Entry level
position T) ping re
quired . o ffi ce ex
per1ence helpful Call
Tim, 642·5822
GEHERAL OfflCE
Leading local pest con
l r ol company needs
fulltime general orr1ce
personnel Enlry level
pos1l1on T y ping re
quired . offi~e ex
penence helpf(JI Call
Tim. 642·S922 looidluper for South Santa Ana ,_ _________ !
Mfg Co. Must be full
charge CalJ 547-7425 for
mterview App. ------
BOOKKEEPERS
Newport Beach real
estate development
company with projects
In So. California and
Florida needs exprd. full
charge bookkeeper tc
handle all phases or pro
ject accOWlting. Salaq
open. Call 546-9316 for in
ter view appl.
To place your mess age
before the
reading public.
phone
Daily Pilot
Classified, 642 S678
CLElltCAL
Our expanding busme:os
h as several 1mmed
openings. The following
Positions are avail:
MA I L CLER K
CLERICAL, typing 30.40
WPM, A'lailing, filing,
general office duties.
CLERK TYPIST. tyring
4().45 WPM. genera of
Cice duties.
CASH IER , typing
30·40WPM. 10 key by
touch, & detail minded
BILLING CLERK, typ
mg J-0..40 WPM. general
office duties Office ex
per helpful. Good com
pany benefits Hrs 8AM
4: lSPM Call for an in
terview appt 83J.84SO
COMERCIAL
BANKERS LIFE
1401 Dove St.. Ste SSO
NewPorl Beach, Ca
COOK
Fur retirement hotel, I
day. Mon. 2nd shirt
Newport Vtlla 642-5861
COOK
I mmediate o pening
Night s hift. Excellent
benefits Apply 1n
person Jolly Roger,
2300 llarbor Blvd. Costa
Mesa
Cook. hne & prep exp
Breakfast & lunch For
a ppt 493-1948 s J C:
Cook
Pizza, Short Order
Must be l8. Apply
311 Palm Balboa
Counter Help·mature. for
dry cleanmg plant Top
wages Eastblurr
Cleaners 25-17 East bluff
Dr N pt Bch. 644 09:t..!
Counter help
Sandwich shop PIT dys,
Anthony's DeU . 556--0670 ----
COUNTER HELP
F /t, P /t. days, apply in
person 711 E. Balboa
Blvd.
Counter person for Party
Rental store P ff Must
work Sal Apply 2025
NewpQrt~d. C ~
To Place your
.. Fas t Res ult"
Service Directory
ad Call Now
642-5678
ld. l22
Non s moker, back of
flee. Roving assist. now,
front ofc in 2 wks
644·0611 NB
Dental Receptionist
Exp. nee 4dy wk $1200
C M. 645-7580 --------
DENTAL FRONT
OFFICF.
Full time position Costa
Mesa, 2 years exp , m sl
be s killed in s trong
telephone commur11ca
lion, peg board & 1n
surance 631 1420
Desianer
HVAC Comm lndus t
projects Min 3 5 yrs ex
per Mech Consultants
Nr OC Airport
Da hi, Taylor & Assoc
S49·5234
DESIGH
ENGINEER
Mfg co In Mission VICJO
area needs exper 1n
t"lectric-al connectors,
herme t1 t· seals .
transducer design, cvm
1w nl"nts materials &
methods.
GENERAL OFFICE Protel'lwn St-t v1c·l', 1221'
Lttl' Mfg Full & f'11rt
t1nw "'ori.. available
tl42 5702
RecC"ptionist/general of-• W 5th Sl, Santa A11a
f1t·e Typing required Interview hrs 9-12 & l .i
Part or full·time. C M Mon -F'ri MACHINIST HELPER
F'ull lime Must read
vernu•rs rni<:rometers li
in1n l'X IM.'r l.aakm,rnn
~:l .. l tro Opt1t·~. 1111·
1-: O 1-. San Juu11 1·a1)(1
area Terry: 546 6444
GENERAL OfflCE
Sl,000
Lots of l"~lomer cont art
& variety with local
uff1n: nal"I firm
~Int benef1ti. & future
EXPO AGENCY
lliUl3S Magnolia 118
842 5447
Gene ral Factor) Worker:.
ncedl•cl for pla1>l1C"
fahrit·atmn plant Appl}
in person Fahnn1lecl
Plast1t•s Im· 815 W lllth
St , CM
GENERAL OFFICE
1o:xper1encecl o ffi cl'
person to work in small
plvasant sales office m
South Lagwia on Coast
llwy. G<x:Kl typist. non
smoker, p rr lo start 1m
mediately Sit 50/hr l'a 11
~99 45°'1
HAIR STYLIST
Lrg i;alon. follo"'m~ not
O('C 586·2216
HAIHSTYLIST ('11111·1 1714 t 193662.4
Needed 1mrra·1I l-'ull 1----------t1m e & part t1m1• lo 1111
ea!.y goini.: atm11!>11h1•1l I
Work w k1tls & .11lul1' MAIL CLERK
Will 11 am 11 Ill'• I I H ~urt & prt•pa1 ,. outi.:mni.:
~3 11860 111.111 Part llllll' huor'
llosµllal
W.ARDCLERK
\ •·r) fll•x11Jll· Cold" l'll
Jl;;nlo.•·r H1 ,11 1-.-.t.tl•·
Jo'a1>h11111 l.,land J'k for
l'larll' John:.on, fel I !Jtl60
Raleigh Hilb llU!>Jlll.JI Ill ----------Ne~ port Bt'al·h h.1 ... ·'"
1mmed OJX.•nin~ f111 J
Ward Clerk Full t1m1·l•---------
pos , 3 11 l'\l"lllllJ.: .,11111 REST.AURAMT
Ac·ut1· 1·.irt· ho;.pt 1·:1.111·1 MAMAGER
n •q ·u Fur 11111·1'11·" l<l'~JlOn"hh· per snn for
c• 11 n t " 1• t I' h \ I I 1 :. II 11 g 1 1• ~ I' I J 1· 1·
Warnl.'r . 71.t 1;1;; 5107 Hi"•t.1111,1nt in fo'ai.hw11
EOE M F hlanll N 11 Cull 1;.10 1;;r,111
HOST /HOSTESS
f'ull & part t1m1· •" .111.1
blc. A11pl} 1n JH'I ''111
3·5PM Jolh HoJ.:l'I ICHI
So <."oa!>l I h, ~ l..q.!Ut1.J
Bea('h
M.AMICURIST
11 r~ !I I Tues Sat
Nl'" pnrll•r Inn 11 1111 lks1gn,.,. l\ B f>l I 2580
llotel :'-1 \S'ft-:H Plui.: \takl'r
DESK CLERK ~ 32 llou1 \l u. .. t haH" 1
l'urt time
GENER.AL
Perm p 1t for installation
& mcrchand1s 1ng of
greeting cards depart·
ment m retail stores
<.:all (7 14 )495 6548
hetween 7PM·9PM
Part Time
CounMlinc) Yoe.th
Carriers
1\dul11> with outstanding
.1t1ra('l I\ e personalities
lo 'pend 15 hrs per week
1·oun:.chng youth ages
10 15 fo:\en1 ng s &
\h·ekentb A' ailable. S75
per "'k Call
:! :JU 5 :JOpm Mon lhru
Fn 642·4321 l''l 34:1
\'k for Lon o,...coost
Oaitv Pilot :1:1U W ~ay Street
l°Ollld Mesa. Ca
t .. qu al Oppurl
Employer
I' AH 1' Tune slllt'k cll•rk
fu1 marine hardwar•·
!>Ion• Call Balboa
Manne. 549-\,MJ71 , 1-:0 J-:
~ r II
Paste-up
Full 11ml' pos1lion Full
l'Ulfl J>J II) l11.•nd1ts .t-:x
l•l' r or w tram /\ pph
I' t-:"'' E YSA \'EH I li11!1
l'IJ•·enllJ /\\e C M
Duties include design,
drafting, materials test
ing & R&D projer l s
Met·han1cal Engineer
ing dl.'gree pref"d
Qualified candidates
send res ume to Mrs
Jan s . 2389 1 Via
Fabncante, Suite 603.
M1Ss1on Vie10. Ca 92691
GENERAL OFFICE
Looking for a \'ery 1n
terestmg part t1mt• JolJ
1n pleasant o ffi c-c ''
l'leri<:al , for mature
person Location P C II . Npt Rrh 1-;xper a
must Accurate typmi.:.
no s horthand 20 hr
week mcludes Sat & Sun
Call 646 7431
Lido Shores holt I ~ \I ~ µlu~ 111alo.1•1 L':\lll"t
manna. xlnt salan \\ H•;i•I hlut·1111111!> & 1·1111
benefits CJll B.11 h.11 .1 I ~11 ui.:l ~ooclt•n plug~ lur PA YROLl CLERK
673·8800.1.\M 3P~l hoal!'t clt•ll'rmml' tqw &. "l J UJ~' per week Hrs
d1m1•n:.111n ... 1~ lumht:r 11 s Apply 161)() Placl'n
Hotel u~i· hJndt0t1h plumh lla .\\v.CM General Office DOCK ATTEMDAHT
Newport Arches
Marina Call Judy or
Harvey: 642-4644 Mon
Fri 9.5
HELPn HIGHT AUDITOR rult· ll·\l·J rw1b holt-.. j
Exp NCR 4200. ti 1111cJ 11l .. 11k~ ttmtk·r. power PENSION .ADMIH.
night to 8am 1\ppl' , .• w, 1111wc1 drilb \'11ung ,dynam1cpens1on
Oavul McNeil 111 \1,.. ~uiw1 "'l" :1 1 "'11rk1·r~ ro lookrng for expe1 We are m need or a Baltazar betw•w•n 11an1 I d
Donut shop Early AM
s hift, no exper nee App-
ly I>ippity Donuts. 1854
Newport Blvd. C.M
f I k n Tt1kr.1dtont•;tfl•,tStall• n•t1rement pan a creative gen o l' c er Spm. Hot"I L.aj!.una 12..'i I t t th t r l l "' fo_m plu.\ rn1·nt !,(•f\ ll"C m1n1!. ra or w1 s ronl! or a ong term em S Coast llw' l.a"una t t t b k l "' ... ore m Orani:t· C'ounl\ I u l> a l"l" n g a c .. pora ry assign men Beach 494 1151 DC>T l"i("il 2.,1 010 i'<I ground Position im
Mus t be l'Omfortable, .. ----·------• o ., th ...,,. d h i· paid rur b• t>mpln.,cr m c d' a l cl} a\ at I w1 numuo:rs. R P one HOUSECLEANfo:HS l,.._ ____ ., ___ ~--•I i.mokers need nol appl~
DRIVER
needed, must have good
driving record. Room
for advancement. Hunt.
mannvr, pn>fess1onal al To $5 ihr, rar. 645 5123 1
1
1• 11.57 1204
titude 1mpt Call : MATERIAL
Bch. area. 536-2593. IVICKI HESTONI Houull~r/Hanny lmm~~~~P~I~~ .. ror Live-in. Pvl bd'rm. View " ___ __ __ & Associahs home, N.B. Childcar('. parts C'lcrk. rubber hose DRIV~ 54R0400 It. cleaning. 644 ll90 produt•ts, must pass co. ~ V" phvsital lnrluding bat•k
Meverhof's. primary Specializing tn HOUSEKEEPER X ru y Taking apphl"a
s upplier of good foods to T Cl 1 Live in. wanted by sr lions btwn I! & IOAM nn the lr\'ine corporate empQrary erica Iv .''tr"'tofl"x, 17671 P rso I citizen. Must dn''<' LJ ·"" 0 , community needs a e ~ne_ H a b r a 3 r l' a Arm~lron~ l\Vl'. Irv
responsible & flexible l•----llliillliiiii-lli 1 2 1 3 1 6 9 1 . 6 0 1 J . EOE /\ Kt•nci(lv1s Ind
person to do food prep & GENERAL !714)675_6760 Co
bark-up delivenes. Mon OFFICE
Fri. 8·3pm. Good driving Housekeeper. II' l .. In
record necessary Starts Eledronlc1 firm ht Lovely home, B<·h ar('a
at $3.45 Call Susie at Co1ta Meta H•lls Pvt bdrm. some rook ~7-6232 person with g.Mral ing. salary neg l"Jll
EXEC.SEC'YS office & llqht _K_at_h_y _~_~l.75901i7
Wanted for Hunt Sch bookn"'"9 •xper., ift.
area Open in g for cludln9 occoe1nts
qua lif~ed Connecticut payable & occo•h ladies Xlnl benefits, un
Housekeeper Comp.in111n
Live m or out
833-2000
MECHANIC
MOPEO
1-·u11 or Part T1mt-
Newport Beach
714&12-8870
MEDICAL
Pt-:RSONNEL
llecept1onist that has i11
itiallve, nexib1hly, gd.
handwriting & figure ap-
titude This is a career
pos m a one person ore.
llvy telephones & public
conl acl Personnel exp.
,·er~ helpful Saiary
DOE 54().6236 ask for
.Janice
PESTICIDE SPR AY
OPERATOR-Expe r
w pest control ap·
phc:llor Ile Top pay &
henefits Please call
(714) 76847519AM-3PM.
Ms Denny Parisia
714-04.5·6505
HEWPORT IA&.aoA
SAYINGS & LOAN
E .O.E.
E.0 .E. M/F H SELL idle 1Lems with a ~~~~~~~~~!'!' Daily Pilot Classified
limited oppQrtunit1es ~ceivobW. ft•rrnat1eM
Appl} in person llunt po1ltion ,....,... re-Housekeeper/Apt. '1 gr
Lido Isle. 5 days, 11\e
out. Eng. sp & clnvers
he pref . re f req
673-7873
Immediate Opening for
t•xpl•nenc·ed per..onable
Keccpt1on1st 1n bus.)
N t> w p o r l B c :1 l" h
Orthopedic pract1t•e
Hea' y phones. appomt
ment scheduling, greet
patients Xlnt frin ~e
benefit s 646 5995 fur
appt
Phone Representative
No selling Talk with
business executives dur·
1ng normal business
hours Make app"ts for
our professionals to
meet with prospects.
P rf PoSition with bonus
option. We are an old
hne Newport Co. with an
exrell. reputation.
Please call 752-2255,
ext. JOS. Anderson & An·
derson Ins. Bkrs .. Inc.
EOE M /F/H
·•••••• Daily Pilot I Classified Advertising :
Banking • Supe~vlsor for C lassified Deeartment • MIW ACCOUNTS • E 11 • NewPort Beach ""*·' has Experience necessary. xce ent company ~ .benefits. Salary commensur ate with .
open ing for New Ac· experience. For appQinlment for interview,
counts Counselor. New e call '-'2·4321, ext 277. • Accts., IRA/Keogh, col·
lectlons, & NOW Acct.s. ·• •
ex per. req'd . Salary • Ge.nera1·· Ass1•1J111Mnt •
tommensurate with ex· 6'"'""
per. Full Insurance •. Secretary to •. benefits & paid career app~~~~~;~i:• • Executive Office • 71~6505 e 1mmedlate opening for versaUle mdividual. • "41W,oaT IALIOA • Must be capable or bandUng fast-paced ••
SAVIHGS & LOAN I Yarled and interesting duties for newspaper. E.O.E. executive & personnel administrator Call. !!~~~~~!!~~I 142-4321, Ext. 277 for appt. e
Batiking ~ Classified o.utside Sies :
•Saleaperson to handle Real Estate .
Development accounts and automotive.
e accounu. Mus t ~ave at least 2 years
TIUlllfMaW
ACCOUMTS
• experience. Salary plus commission. Must.
Let 01 include you ea a have car, mileage paid. Excellent compony
part or our friendly ataff •benefits. For •PPointment for interview, cau e
at our beaulilul office. I M2 56'78, ext. 277. f
lrvhle Savtnp ls looking ~~ ·.~:l!~ re:~i::at ~! •. · Part rune Ev~!e. •. •Ork ae telJer /new ac· c .. y........,
co unt.I on a permanent ·-• I ~ e putUme bull. Pleue .Adulh w ith ouutandlni attractive . ~D :W.e561 ror an appt 11t1"'"'a UtJa who enjoy working With 10.15
••ltd lntu"lew. Exp.er f r old )''lll&Jl.1 evcnlnaa &-9Prn. Call su.m1 e
• :f'tltrnd. ~~'f" •m lo 5prn, .. k for lmt •
JRVlNESAVTNOS • 0 Coast • •
143'71 C\llver Dr e ~ PIW e JRV~:~?1' •• 330 w:-say Street •
·-,,,.--,-0 -&a-t -d-,..-.-1.n-1-h-t e Costa Mesa, CA e
Wat. • ·• Dall>' Piiot e F.qual Opportunity Employt!r e
Claul&dAd. ea.am ••••••••••• ••
~·
Ad Bch, California liable f"ncM\. Cal:
Clerks &
Secretaries:
Hughes In Irvine needs
your basic office skills
Can you type 45 words a rn1nute, an-
swer phones. and hie letters and
reports?
Hugtles has a position for you as gen-
eral clerk1
Can you take shoOhand at BOwpm. too?
We re looking for secretaries'
Pay and t>enellts are excellent 1com·
pany paid dental insurance. for In
stance, and an average of a paid
holiday every month) Ano there's
room to advance. because we·re a
small·but·growing division of etec
tronlca leader Hughes Aircraft. ll'a
all at Hughes. where we·re Involved
In 1,500 different projects and have a
backlog of over S6 billion. That
means both job stability and variety
tor you
Apply In person, or send a summary
of your training and work experience
to: Hughea Aircraft Company, Con·
nectlng Devices, General Employ
mont Dept 45-0C, 17150 Von -Karo
man A11e., Irvine, CA 112714
~-------~-----~----~ ' HUGHES :
I
~------------·--·· j totUOHC9 '"JtCllll•' t COM"""'"
CONNECTING DEVICES
IN IRVINE
Proof of U.S. Cftlze~lllp(
U S Reaid nl VIN Requlrto
Equal Opponunlty Employer
Valor S.Ctronlc1
540.9264
GENERALOFFICE
T yping, phones and
mailing. Purl time. 9 to
12 30, S days R. F. office.
NewPort Beach. Larry
Strong 644·9513
General
TIM loltoa loy Club
11 now hirt..g:
Snock lcr Cooks
Fast rood exper
Summer only.
Hoit /HcKtu1
P fflme, Thur . Frll Sat,
Sun Some hotel nost/
hosteaslng exp. pref'd.
CodctaR
Wolter jWoltre11
Exp'd 4·5 nlln per wk •
S 12PM
Oah,enoft
P rr Fri Is S8t 7om·3pm
Walter /W.,.,..,,.
P IT Lunch or dinner ex·
per req.
P leaee call for appt.
645 1358, Mon· P"r• ,
9:3C>-tPM5PM
HOUSEMANAGt-.:H
T o s upervise ll•e111-&
Hskpg duties for youth
s helter. 642·8380
HOUSEWARf~SAL1':S
CASHI ER
Apply in person. C.:rnwn
Hardware, 102it Irvine.
(Westcliff Plaza) NB
INSPECTOR
Exp. in blueprint read
mg, and measuring in·
slruments. Send resume
Lo . Aluminum Forge Co.
502 E. Alton St, (PO Rox
21~). Santa Ana 9Z707
E.0.E. M/F
INSUIAMCE
SAUS
PERSONS
Outatand1na o p
Portunlties exp'd or in·
exp'd . Salary +com·
min io ns . Phone Bob
Smith 953-3153
MEDICAL COURIER
M u s I h a v 1• o w n
t ransportat1on &. be
familiar with C alif
freeway system Mon
fn. 9·5pm 768 8500.
MER C ll ANOIS~ll
permanent part lime.
service greeting cards 1n
supermarkets. 8 open·
ml(s 1otal in bch c1t1es,
C M & Mtss1on Viejo.
10 20 hrs wkl> Call .John
1714) 533.8958
MESSENGER
6 morninas a week,
Mon: S:OOAM to MM.
Tue1. thru Sat. 6 .30AM
lo ~AM . Excell dnvlng
rec rcq 'd. Apply : Pen
nysaver. 1660 Placentia
Ave ,CM
MHGMT POSITION
Fabric e haln. C M IHVOICECLERK Anaheim Xlnl opp
Wanted for lsc Mnrlne Geri,6464040
Hardware Store aood ----bcnffits, immed opt>n· Models·female, tall, non·
lna.CalJ 645·1711 fashion. ma1tnilne.
-Sharp only. 842..e282 Bob
JAHltOllAL
Stock • delivery person.
.... 1hif\, Sunday
New!fpap~r deJl very
pt"rson, 11 or over.
Dr: vtr' ..... In·
IU , 1 CM', haraday Xlnt
e lt1 . Apply In
• When you ca.II Ch1sslfled pct'16t\, IU 'nme L quor. Npt Bl'h·l,.-Coata M a
area. "1 dys pr wt Mon
Fri . 2-SPM Sal /Sun
4·7 30A M Appro•
~oo mo CaU 140.3007
~I. llAM PM Aak for
------
PICTURE NAME
Manufacturer looking
for EXPER I ENCED
hard workers. Involves
frame assembly, mat
cutting, glass cutting~
etc. Pay according to
skills. Costa Mesa area.
646-4863 (!HI)
PRlSCHOOL
Teachers and Aides
needed, part & full time.
Ne wport Beach. 64C>-8820
P /llm:~e room
helper. Mon 3PM to ap-
prox 8PM, Tue, 2PM lo
approx 7PM. No exper
necessary. Apply Pen·
neySaver 1660 Placentia
Ave.C.M.
,,.. .... w ..
l.011ding cat.,et.te tapes.
bl !lhlrt. 549-0138
,ROOUCTIOH
TUMI
Rubber ~ products,
m•L ,_ to. physical
\11fl.._1 buk X-ray.
Takln/ a ppllc•tloo1
btwn • lOAM only.
Stratoflu, lHH
Arm•trona Ave .• Irv.
EOE. A Keodat"b lnd.,
Co
to place an ad. you ·r~ as C95 Jo:. 17th Sl. C M.
aured or a friendly 0u clon'l nHd a IWl to
welcome ind hf'lp In "drair fut" when you
wordln-1 your ad for best pl.aee an ad In the Daily
ruPon•f' Ca II Now! Piiot Want Ads ! CAl1 ~-now~-Lee or_B_ob _____ Want Ad Helpl
-~------!
•
i
r
.1
lo
'
£, •le Or!J? Cout DAILY PILOT/Wedne1d1y, May 13, 1981 twit W"'*'4 1 IM
-r ·---~-----~-------------~ ..................................... ~ ... lli!l' ......... ~ ........... a .. 911011111s•s9llt .... l9! .. d ....... 191 ......... 111111111 ............ ~ .... lllllllllllJI
~W_.... 11~W...... 7t ~W--4 11H~'r.?~ ••••• ?~.~ Swttcllbo•rd Opeuto~, •;-eT ..... -............ :/.!.=~ ............ ~;; ... ~ ......... ~!.~~ ..... • .. ~.! ............ . •••T ................... .._.. w-... 7100 • I 1011' Yt.. ~ I •• IOIO ee"9Te••••••••••••••••-.;i~;;.T••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••• --= •-H I I approx. 30/hra wee · Tl•I• Sm a It Prener SlOO b h Tw weddlna 1own1 SALES Clntt for reuU ... ,..ca, .. t ·• NllH • wlleod~ Will 7 h . navy lue couc o • l.n hard 1 ato Atthlte uraJP1nn looli· train CMJ.!IOll. ,.,.DWrtdU•111r Wa1her•dryer, Sl.25 •• Very comft Xlnt cond flower &l rl dreu . :•;.:net CwUi:e 8aJ~a Ina for 1barp peraon . Thlt bl.1\13 1ucceuful AU A·l cond. Me-5iMll IH5 Ml *7 evu. w /hat1. raa1. Pauline RECEPTIONIST Jl"dlSf x I ' . !...; EOF. wllh profHtlonel •t· TEACHER t'ull time local neww119per hu an --W -708& , /lln Mnne •• s.e.....,,l • tltude. Located near Teacher•Alde9nMded. openln&fOt'alraJnHln CASHFOI Beaut. lnd1a Collon -y;--Tennl.I Club
Nallonal mortgage banklnt firm M/F/H Oraoae Co Airport. Uberal beoenu. ralH• the clrcuLatJon d•p•rt· Relrtaeraton, wuhen, Sofa/Lovouet. "oo. John r ·~amil Mem-needs receptlon\st (or corporate b~ad· Salea.. eaaenenced, part Pleete call Elalne at Cell Marilyn 847·$284. ment. BuJc 1ldll.1 wlll dryen, ranau. Worklna Cotree Table set SlSO. :0 b~l· lncl: iJ
1
fees quarters located in l rvlne. Person time. L»dlct •sieclallty 751-3&~3. Hunt. Bcb .,... entail aupervtaloo of lO ~ot. S4%-1Bl.S __ Dea Sofa StOO Sacr1flct' S8l~~ A
5
pM h I t h h F• hi 1 1 d to 14 yean old boy and pr1ce1 847 ~ _~_;__a ____ _ must type & 11ve p easan P one • op, •• un • •0 SICltlTARY sLrl home delivery car· Refr11. frott f~. clun, --·--rvice for 1..2 dll·
personality. Call Marla, (714) 975--1080. fi:~~~ hna Call Mimi Accurate, reliable for a ftC.....CIAN r I et 1 . A re a a or worlta aood. 1150 Muat aell fumltul"t! un ~e~~-~e·~.lronatonefrom
COLDWELL BANKER RESIDENTIAL salr• ~::Ur.~:~re~ec~~~.~: f,~·~· n~:u A~~':::iu~r; :1~~;,ll!::1c~1l~~ adn~ ~·713~$487 ( 1 :!~!1:;~'ii1~1~1n~~~cn En& 195 8312111 __
GRIATHOUIS (714)CU5-2ll1Zak. Tecb with 2 yn exper ule1 ~lecled appll e v na or • • re r g, Dix mct11I detector MORTGlf'( t'rDMll'ES to •nemble 6 ln~1rate cant• wlll receive re· copper clr, work,a &ood Gorep S. 1055 w I h e II d "hon e s "° -""'"' SICllTARY •-uul arly acheduled 1125. Fria.audryerSSO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. Equal opportunity employer tAM-JPM
or
4PM-trM
rROOf UA.DEll
Part time poeition. 1r-
temoo111 for teeretarlal
1erv1ce 111 Irvine. Mu.st
have xlnt s pelling &
grammar :1kllls. Some
rece ption duties re-
~uired Call 714n52·0234
RI AG84T /LJc'd
t o wor k co mpan y
generate-d tiaUng leads.
Earnings to 14000/mo.
Call Jack Hill from 8 AM
to 12PM. 7141964-9093
RE C EPT IONI ST
PART·TIME for Doc-
tors Office Exper m T)'p·
mg & bkpg. Eves .Aft
6pm 831-9125
•ectPHoMt
AdACJlftCY Typma slullS reqwre<l
Call Robin
752-6211
RECEPTIONIST
Grow.ing S.A company
has opening ror recep
t io n ist /t y pi s t
w /p l easant phone
personality Typing
skills o f 55 wpm
Respanslbillt1es Include
typ1Dg or urders, ID·
voices. quotations. cor·
r espondence etc Ex·
cellent slartmg salary
w /periodic reviews For
personal interview con
tact Cy Simpso n at
558 2603
acn /SICUT AAY
Busy ot'r1ce with Cruindly atma.phe~ need.I sharp
rellable recoptloniat
Varied dutle• Include
answering phones ,
ereetlna vl1itora. ac
cur ale light l)'pinf, !11 •DJC and a«>nera ud
m1nlstratlve tasks I
you have a good rronl of
h ce appearanl'e with a
pleasant personality and
phone voice, we have a
good position with cum
petltlve salary and ex·
eel benetita Call Linda
Foster at 714 /540.~ for
inte~vlew appt __
Join tbt Lo& Antic les
Time• Circulation Team a. adapt your wo rk
11chcdule to yo ur
Ufealye. Work 5/hrt /dll)'
in a Times Circulation u lea office near yuur
hume & have more time
ror your family, studies
or leisurely period.a. We
pay hourly wages &
commtSsions
LOS ANGELES TIMES
1375 Sunflower Ave, C:M
~0301
Equal Opportunity
Employer ---
RESTAUIAMT Sales
Saoow1ch Maker hrs HELPWANRDI
7AM -3PM Mon. Fri Telephone sales No ex
646 8883, t•all anytime per. nee Excell co
benefits Comm1ss1on
program & profit shar-
ing Apply m person:
Restaurant
WAmtESSES
t;xp 'd waitresses
Ma le /Fem. busboys,
cooks, & cooks helpers
for new Continental
Restaurant in N B
673-3233
Rriluwanl
A11l1tClllf Mmoger
lmmed opening. "Good
pay & benefits Send re
sume to Mr. John
French, P .O. Box 391.
Huntington Beach. Ca
92648
P en n yaaver , 1660
Placentia Ave . Costa
Mesa -------
SALES-«ITCHEH
Good comm Run ,
631-7032.
Sales
$12,000 Month?
I am 25 yrs old & 111 the
mo of March I made
$12,000. In the mo. or
April it will double I
own a house on the ocean
& drive a $80,000 Clenet.
Full or part time pos
now llvail Only ag-
g r es s 1 v e & se lf-
Ne-wport BeachGener11I C.~l:·c~=•s-s;~::Om:~ ~a l1ea. bonua o r.· 546-8756 DON"TUA.DTHISI S250/0BO 645•1609•
Contractor hu ln1 -hed··'•ln••-"'ew portunlll• and many r· Unleas you want lo aave s.8·6390 ----mediate open1n1 for • •c '""' ~~..,, · Inge benefit• •uch aa Dryer. Avcx 9reen Ken· mone)' on fine Co.tume
con1truction secretary compiany paid dental more Elect. 4 yrs old, Jewelry. Brand new $1 & SCRAM-l.ETS Xlnt wortdna condition• TILIPHOMIPaOS ind health plan, .croup ~t. cond. $'7$473-1712 up Plus mi.ac. aara11e
& compan)' benefits . Set appg. for our Hie• life ln.urance. vacation Chut freezer, Seara, aale items. Sunday onl)' ANSWERS
Oood l)'plna skill.a ~-r,eop[e. ~·re looking and alck leave. Com-older model works 8·4. 20131 Crater Circle, Single Val~ quired. Send resume to : or M~p 'd M F good p • n y v eh I c I e Is • H B . A d a m s 1
Margaret Holmes PO workT;, cond: (you're furnllhed during work· &ood, SSO. 9'7&-0043 Brookburat Alias Garilh
BOX 2390 Ne wport place or ouni) Hourly in& houra. Applicanl11 Frigidaire Wuher & Gas . --. -Theres~~~ a lit
Beach CA 92660. M/F wage, bonuaes also ' mutt~ over 18, have a Dryer $300Fng1dalre19 Top quality furniture fo~ lie more oil tu gu uround
EOt: 545-41Nl ask for Steve or tiood driving record and cu fl. froet free Refrige. sale this week Incl 7 these days. Maybe gaa
Marshall be n e at a ppearina $300. Xlntcond. 700.2593. wall ·unit Sl.25 + sl11te stations will start ofCer SECRITARY -------Ho un are genera II)' ---topped buffet, oria p&ln-lrvine advertlalng aien Tt .. phoM Soldton Monday thru Friday l lcyclH 1020 linaa. mirror, decorator mg GLAS!ES again _
cy. good typing skill.a & Are you llred or working Some overtime evalla· ••••••••••••••••••••••• floral arrangements etc. 8 piece fine Chana set.
pleaunt phone voice. full lime fur part lime? ble. If you are qualified Schwinn <.:rul11er 5 apd 552 9547. dnt cond $50, code a
Salary commensur ate MOHEY7 and interested in learn-Spitfire, blue, aood cond. -L.-L.t '--~ 1065 phone 2000. no remote,
w I e" P . Ca 11 E 1 v a Why not try working in& the circulallon bust· $150. 675-9638 . •--records calls $50; sue-de 557·0&42 , full n e • s conta c t 0 on ------••••••••••••••••••••••• mpaortnety•.m:.,0·~kr ""24t1::1,! Williama or Ken God· BEACH·CRUISER Waterless Cookware, life kmgsl:r:e bedspread with
*•SEC UT ARIES * * Bkkpr /Shl /80$16,800
AcctAsst I AAdegSlS,600
Shl80/RE/F unll4,000
WordProce11si.ng$15.600
Expd. Consultant Oun1
Liz Reinders Agy, Inc
4020 Birch Eal '64 EOE
Newport/833-8190/Free
SECUTAJtY
Full time sec'y needed
for busy real estate of·
rice Good t yping &
phone skills essenllal.
No shorthand required.
Good benefits. Contact
Chris 644·7020
Secretary
PART TIME
Weekend sec'y needed
immediately for busy re
al estate offlce. Typing I
& good w /phones essen·
t ia I. Contact Ch r1s
644.7020
""' in 5 d bl k I t ti o t B d pillow s hroud $45 , per week ln plush new dard. Apply person. sp ' ac ' a mos me uaran ee. ran kitchen lable, seats 6,
oH1ce in the Santa ORANG>ECOAST new ' as king S1 70 new.Sac 979-9368 $20, s m all drop lear ta
Ana /Costa Mesa area DAILYPILOT 770.2376 _ ewelry 1070 ble $25 C ull T o m
for well estab company. 330 W. Bay Street MldilHJ Mtlhrioh 1025 ....................... 548 7140
Earning potential of $220 Costa Mesa, Ca. •••••••••••••••••••••••One design. lavender
J:r week Call 835-8883 Equal O pportunit y REDWOODlX•'S Jadegoldnng,wl12full
orappl __ ~mployer ___ Xlnt decking S.20' long. cut d ia. $2500/0BO WedclftaD,.aa
OK' h d 5 /( 644 2790 White wedJmg dress TaPHOHE TRAVaAG>ENT 1 on a,n · 5' l ---s11e 5: never been worn
SOUCITOllS N.B. Agcy needscomm'I 646·988Sanytime PLAT 3 dlamond wed $200 or best orrer <.:all
lmmed.openlngsnow&c agent w /2 y rs ex p Old Bamwood $1.00 per ding ring grade V~S2 548·5956atl4PM tor summer. Work 3-9. Apollo trained a + Call foot. Sl2.50 appraisal Sal'rifll:e
Mon·Fri.Nosellmg.Call ~rma644-S373. 54a.a234 $1150759·1643 968-0151 after lpm.
Telephone
LAY OM THE HACH
.AU.DAY
Tree trimmer, exper in Cab IOlS Diamond Pendant. whale
all phases or tree work. ••••••••••••••••••••••• gold setl1Dg, 16 8pl
Top pay & benefits. Pis Cf'A Himalayan Seal stones . True appra1s11sl
c all 714 1768-475 1 bet Points, 8 wits, 2 males, .!_1400 962-~aft5
9·3PM _ sm 751-5376 bcellaMcMB 8010
TYrlST P edigreed Pure Male •••••••••••••••••••••••
General Office, P rr Ac· Black Persian 9 mos GAME SHOW PRIZE
l 7""8111 ' S I L V E R G I FT ~:a~~~~us uv-super cute, 1150 644 5168 CERTIFlCATE worth
TYPIST DOCJ• 8040 $1000. Will sell at $750
546-9215 or673-0340 ....................... ----
Gen e ra I o rrice he lp KEES HOND Pups AKl. REDWOOD 2X6'S
M11:1:cal
1 ... tn. .... 11 8013 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CONN Director trombone
with case Excellent
condition, SlOO. 675 8052 aller6PM
Wurlitzer elec. piano,
S4 SO or best urrer
548 8878 atl 5
Office~& Eqtli,...,. 8015 ••••••••••••••••••••••• REC EP'TIONIST
GENERAL Of'FIC.: E
Good on phones: some
typing & lillhl bookkeep
mg f'ulllime, Mon Jo'n
~alary open. ~9505
REST AUit.AMT
Hogue Barmichael 's
Door person. cooks &
bus help C M 645-3678
(Jules or Harry> mot1vated people need ............................... ....
apply Mark_834-1810.
5 immediate openings.
Short applicat.Jon. Work
5·9pm. Mon·Fri, tallung
on our telephones. Deep
voices preferred
S3 35 1hr guaranteed
More money easily
possible. Come by 3 L
Ent 1180 N Coast Hwy,
N Lag Bch. Wkdays at
3pm First come, first
hired.
needed for busy Costa • I Mesa office. IBM Ex· Champ sire. M If'. Pet ex Xlnl decla.ng. 8-20' ong · s h o w P v l p l y . lOK ' on hand 55• /ft ecut lve experience pre-213/697-13'5 aft 6 pm 646 9885 anytJme
S m 1 t h •c o r o n a
typewriter. Model 300
Good cond1lton $150
Call Oalebout Bay &
Beach. Ask for J anet
Smith, 631-7300.
ferred Flexible hours.
RECEPTIONIST
position avail. with a
well establis hed bust·
ness firm ID Laguna
Hills . Must be well
dressed & groomed. Lite
lyptng req Beautiful or
ri ces & xlnl benefits
Hrs 8 :30·5pm. C'nll
Judy al 586-4400
RESTAURANT F1T . PT
sandwich man & cowlter
help Plaza de Cafe
Gary's Deli:_752·5401
RET .AIL CLERIC
Costa Mesa Stationers
270 E. 17th St. C M
F IT Apply in person
10.12onl)
SA.LES
People needed lo help
expand Nutritional
Sa lea Program. Only en-
thusiastic need apply
SECRETARY
Fashion Island. Fan
tustlc working Condi
tions & good future.
Irvine Personnel Agy
488 E . 17th. Costa Men
Telephone
rHOME PERSON
P /T phon e pe r son
needed to call & set
app'ts for busy Solar
Energy Co $4 SO/hr +
bonus. Ask for Al :
-~o.2:5_22 __ -----l AAA Home DogTrammg Pho ne-Male Telephone
Does )'Our dog have good Ans we rin g Mach 1 ne
manners? We specialize with warrunly $79. With
in happy owners 4i well remote S149 754}3791 T ypewrite r, Olympia,
full si ore elect. Almost
new Xlnt Cond S350
898 8940
RECEPTIONIST saso
Lite ofc exper needed lo
help ID per.IOMCI local
co xint benefits
EXPO.AGEHCY
16483 S Magnoh:i 1111
8(2.5447
RECEl"TIONIST
Part time afternoons.
P rofessional attitude.
Varied responsibilities.
Real Estate Co. Vicki
641·5928. --
RECEP.TIONIST I lrvtne
Distributor has 1mmed.
opening ror energetic &
cheerful receptionist
Heavy typing & 10 key
by touch req AIR exp a
+ Gd Co. bcn, salary
DOE Call 754-1931 ask
for Wayne.
HC"~IST Newport B each
Bayfront Law Ofhce.
Legal expr not req .
548·2283
RECEPTIONIST
With or without typmg
needed. Top pay Tem-
porary & Cull time Call
Tod Services at 979-8900
REC El"TIONIST
WBEHDS
Coldwell Banke r Real
Eatate Services ,
Newport Beach orrice.
Switchboard experience
helpful. but will train
Call Claire J ohnson,
644-9060 weekdays 9 to 5.
Receptionists
PULSE BOARD
PBX
CENTREX
Potilions available now.
long Is short term as
signmentJJ. Call today
(or a ppointment.
Retail
THEMAYCO.
So..tft Coost Pina
Hot opMliftcp for:
COSMEftC
SALESPBSON
lmmediale opening In
one or our prestigious
cosmetic lines. Only ex·
per1enced need appl)
Must be available eves &
w ee k ends Salary
+commission. Apply in
person , Mo n Thurs ,
10 12pm o r 2·4pm .
personnel ofh~e. 333~
Bnslol. Costa Mesa
EO.E
Retail
THE MAY CO.
So..tft Coast Plcrza
Has opMliftcp for.
ASSlST. DEPT.
MAN.AC.ER
Suite 224 642-1470 546·1791 ___ ...._.._. .......................
Salesperson ror Boutique.
Part-time Approx
30 hrs week 67~·3020
SALESP/f
We need 3 sharp people
with fashion background
to work 111 uur men's &
women's dept. Salary +
commission, call for
appt
THELOOk
644-6500
Sa3"penoft1
High rastuon women's
a pparel store 111 Fashion
Is land. Salary, comm .
benefits, Ex per
req 644-71~ __ _
SECURITY GUARDS
Openings for quahf1ed
U!d1vlduals Good start·
ing pay_ Refundable un
iform deposits. 971! 7243
& 638·8191
STAT10HERY
Store In CdM needs
salesperson F/ttme, 5
days. Xlnt borking con
ds. Especially fine chen
tele Phone 644·7482 for
~·t __ --
STOCKIROKER
TRAINEE
College grads Oppty in
Newport Beach area for
hard wo rki ng en-
thusiastic indlv. Send re·
s ume to · P 0 . Box 430,
Marlton, New Jersey,
~053
STOCK Clerk part lime
for marine hardwa re
s t o re Call Balboa
Marine. 549·9671, EOE
M If' /H
SALES PStSONHEL
Cor dynamic contem·
porary retatl 5tore Only
career-minded. mature
women need apply At
least 5 yrs. retail exper
r eq 'd Salary plu s
comm. Please apply an
person or call. Apropa.
644 2652 or 1129 Fashion
Island, Npt. Och. EOE
Immediate opening for ----------c a~g re ss1ve career
Student Jobs
$1000/MO TO
mt.nded individual with
previous r eta il ex·
perience. Some t!ollege
preferred. Good com-
pany benefits. Apply in
person . Mon -Thurs,
10·12pm or 2·4pm.
personnel orrice. 3333
Bristol. COtila Mesa
E.O E.
ROUTEMAM
Mature young man over
20yrs for Sort Water Co.
tn San Juan Cap area
Must have gd dnvmg re
cord. Pd Vac. Ins, elr
493-4535
SA IL CUTI'ERS-
Sales ST.ART RB4TAL SUMMERORCAREER
COMSULTAMTS Due to expansion
Breu n er · s R e nt s company needs many
Furniture Showroom in secret a rial, m arketin g
Wes tm inste r seek s & warehouse positions.
career oriented person Will be rilled Immediate·
for entry level pos m ly Must be 18 & have
h o m e f u rnish in~ s. transportation & be well
Breuner's is California's groomed.
largest rum. rental co & Call loam 3pm
needs qualified sales &c 17 141147-00 I I
mg mt. stafr for ex p11 nd · I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-..liu mg mkl. Retail exp pre·
f'd. Will tram $4 hr • de
pending on exper Full
or p /lime, Mon·Sat ..
9·5:30 & Sun. 12 Noon·
5PM. Contact · Cindy
Mill!, 891-2388 EOE
SUPERVISOR
MaWaw.ic•
ASSEMBLERS
Exper ience preferred.
but will tram 631-1842 Sales, Students 16 & up,
need summer jobs or
P /llme year round
work. Call Mr. Jones
541·4118
,enowl
Supervlau 19 M uln
tenancf' personnel In re
tlrement hoftpital.
Orlien 1upplle1 lnrlud
lnl chemical product11
Mixes Ir labeill cht'mlcnl
producll for V1trlou11
UAea. Kt'"Jll detailed rt>
cord1 18 75 per hour
SALIS
.ADVANCEMENT
POTENTIAL
Are you a motivated Sale•
1elf starter, l<>oking for TOP
high earnings? Secured
Financial Investment DOLLARS Inc .. Southern Oregon's
T • k c ll d t 0 s l II t 1•
l!:mployment Office in
Oran&e <.:ounty DOT
321.131 010.
Ad paid for by employer.
LJQUIDYNE
ENERGY SYSTEMS
~5·6793 754.0535
Tele~SGIH
Vacation Club t.n Santa
Ana promoting for re·
sort condot1 is wtder new
management We nee<!
people w /gd phone voice
to ca II Bus111ells People
an Orange Cnly. Gaur
against Comm. $4 lhr to
start. pyd wkly. Call
543 7957 for Interview
Npt Och 556 8520
Equal Opp Emplyr M /F
TYrlST
P a rt time. a fternoons
for reception & light lYP·
ing Interesting pos1t1on
Call 714 '752·0234
UPHOLSTERER TRAINEE Top qualtly upholsterer
wanted Must be For Dl1trict McmlDCJtr • familiar Wlth convert•·
This highly successful ble tops. tnatallat1on &
local newspaper has ~n fittmgs. !>56·82<17 openmg for a trainee m ----
the circulation depart-Waitresses, P time days
menl. Basic skills will Over 18 Will tram
entail supervision or 10 SHIRAZ 548·7948 to 14 year old boy and --- -
girl home delivery t'&r W A R E H 0 USE M AN
r 1 e r s A re as o r F lime. Exper. ner. F.x
supervision will be de· eel ro. benefits . Call
livery, colleclion5 and Balboa Manne, 549 967 1 u lea .Selected appli E O E M f' H cants will receive re-
gular I y scheduled Weekend Supe rvisor.
rai ses. bonus op· 4.AM·noon. Sat/Sun 16
portunities and many fr. total hrs Primary job is
Inge benefits s uch as ~mg cert.am adult auto
company p11d dental carrier picks up papers
and heaJth plan. group on time & monitor &c de-
llfe Insurance, vacation Uver complaints called
and sick leave Com -In b y cus tomers
p a n 'I v e h 1 c I e i s $l00/mo expense check.
furnished during work S3 50 hr lo start. M usl be
Ing hour11 Applicants 21 or over. Valid driver's
must ~over 18, have 8 h e & Insurance Call
good driving record and 540-3007 llAM·2PM Ask be neat appearing
1Jour11 ure generally for Bob or Lee. - -
Monday thru Friday Work early 11ummer
Some overtime av1ulo evt'a & wkcnds p /T
blto. If you DN? quallfil•c1 Welcome new residenls
and lnlt'rcett'd In learn lloll p ltaltty Jlostess Ina the cltculallon bwu n ~ • • r 0 n 1 11 <' t u 0 11 needs o few aood people
Wllliam11 or Kt'n God C ar & t y pewriter
du rd, 642 4321 needtid 547·3005
O~Coett D Piiot
3:10 W BA ST ft 1'; t<:T
COSTA MESA. <.:A
F.quol Opportunity
~mployttr
0 AltA0 1': SALi£ ad11 In
the Dally Pilot brin1t hap
py re11ulta To plarl' your
drawing card, phone
842 5e78 today I
557-0045
major mortgage invest Earn $30,000-t lst year
ment firm, needs exp'd. with leading HBA Com
sa les people. For In-pa n y . Loo k ing for
ttrvlew, call Robert K. management and Buchanan 1 800-452·7977 manaaement tralnet'I ~ ,.. _______ ..;..~-------,
(I n Ore.go n ) or Call Mr. F leetwood:
(503>779·2839 (outside ...:558:..:....:..·_...0288 __ . -----U\-Llr\:. lfMf'Oll~ l'f"90NNfl SllMCfS
Oregon>. SALESWOMAN, mature.
Sale1 apparel exp, for friendly
$361000 + C.M. helf-1lse ahop.
Steady P tr. 541-6500 BEVE R L Y HILLS
Health & N~rition Corp. SIAMSTRUS
1etllng up operation• In Boat cwhiona
O.C. Need key people for 50129thSt, N.B. Rece,....t Supervision & Tralnina. '7~1123 BUllr Coron.a del Mar Full/Pert tim e. Will Stc-•ay R E ..lfl 'I h train. Xlnt . career or -·~ ea •late"' ce . .., ll t •up p 1 e m en l . Ca 11 : Good office uklUt. Start
t y pln a . n lary com . t ·SPM. Mr. Zuck.erbrod Im med iately. Salary menaurate with ex· att7J.8443. com m ensu rat e with
peri•nce. Allt for Lorcl· ability. Newport Beach.
ta Van1t ,'7$-34U Sain Calll51-1502forapp'l
llC9'T10MIS°T laloyrn .. 11 ~
Good front oltlce •P· n. •-peorer7 Son:e booltbeptn1 ex-
peara nce. l )'p ln1 ~ TheReaderAd Dept.of llt • •-• 4 d
I en e ra I o UI o u • th• PennyHver lt at· ~~l .. ~g>;iUo a ptrltn ce requ ired , cepUni applleaUona ror1_;;~::...:.:..;;.:.:~.;..;;...;=..;,___,
p I e a 1 • n t p h o n e a part.Ume talea pos. SICllT AIY
peraona11ly. Newport C•ear P~l.Jd. t ptU· P/f Chritt Cburtf\ By
Beach. 54t-2881. ln1 6 a frt.141)' 1mlle Tbt S ••· Mon· 'rl. an the baalc req1alre-t ·lPll. Qene.ral office mtnla. Wt Wfll tnln. Ap-dutiel..,..,.. llCritoMff ply : lMO Pla.cientla Ave .. 1...::.=.::.::~;..;..;.;,.;..:.. ____ 11
I J:JO .. I CM Secretary Reccvtioaltt, Reception • typtn1 1----------1 1maUCPAotc.~pt lcb.
dutlH for Executive OttORSl:Ncub Pay eom111t11urate
Work after school and on
Saturday g ett i n g new
cuatomert fo r t h• area's
INdlng new1paper. Big S Ph•
prlz•. trips and bonu ... · c••c.._. 64Z-41Jt, nt 21 Ir
Equ•I Opponunlty Emplo,.,
Sultt, nr. O.C. Airport. ':.:~~ w/u per .....
C.U:T6Mr&M fouppt. Call ta.51'71 WantAd,_.. 142-MTllM~---!!""'--------------'
USITHI
DAILY PILOT .. ,.,,
llSULT"
SUYICI
DlllCTOIY For Result Service CaJI
642.-1671
Id.Ill
mannered ~gs. 638-92.65 K-1-rb-yV~~uu~-. L-1ke new
with ALL attachments
Wall sac for S2SO See to
appr ec111te 960 5844
Fantas t1t• Germ an
Shepherd puppies AKC
8 w ks Males 963-5592
Mixed Puppies male 1fem
Sl5 &cup!
77>1678
eves
1928 Antq Marin e
Gasoline Engme, l cyl, 8
hp, fly whl 111 hpnl. xlnt
cond. Craig. SJ .500
213 591 ·566.5
-------Local kitchen store will
Shih Tzu pups, 9 wks. Ing to sell kitchen cab &
AKC. c hamp lines. vanities. 30""~ below dlr
shots. Sl15 644-9571 _ pnC'e 631-7032_
CA IRN Terner F'em 8 Kmic·O-Lawn front throw
mos shots, AKC reg mo wer, $1 25. Mclane
Sl50492·8600 edger. $75 ~7·~
Novice Obed1ent'e DolC B tsl quality ST AR
Training Classes nuw RUBIES from India On
s t a rting Mesa West ly S20 perstooe! 64~8688 Veterinary Hosp 1870 ---
Pla ce ntia St C M ln1ne Coast Country
642 5UM Club Membership for
- - -sale S1200 + transfer Free to YOll 1045 f ee 6 46 ·4525 dys.
Black metal desks. $100,
Wood desks, $200, swivel
chairs. $35, legal rile
cu b1Dets, S60 to $100.
Map rack, S35. Conr tbl.
SlOO, chairs, $25, plastic
comer sofa, 170. 17802
Sky Park Cr. Ste 203
Irv Mo n Tu W e d
557·5003
OHtce SparkJettes com-
bo. hot & cold. w side
GE refr1g, perfec t .
$400/0BO 754-6789 ----"°"°' ' <>rg.s • 09 0 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WURLITZER, sp1nette
model 4410. two «·note
keyboards, 13 pedal
notes, auto tone control,
earphone jack, solid ma·
pie w /matching bench
$400 cash or 1450 de·
In ered. 547 L845 • ••• ••••••••••••••• • ••• 644 1•44 eves
21)'r Mini Schnause r. - --5'6" A.B. Chase Louis
w /redwood d h Lor d WA NTF.D Air rond1 XV Amp1ro reprodut'
Shama-ped Free lo gd t1oner for a sash win 1 n g grand p 1 an o
home 759-1003 eves dow Load leveler for Completely restored &
free to home with yard 6 tra1~er hitch. !_51·1!!7 -reblt. Piano originally
yr old Gennan Shorthair WANTED I BM Electrl<' bit in 1921 Like new-
very good wtchlldren. corrective SelHl r tt· good investment Collet' t oq ite m A s k in~ 551-5473 typewriter 751·8967 120,000 Ham m ond
Free dog or puppy for Lo•• l .. DOftl Organ & Plano Center
pet, well behaved and You have not really been CdM. 64Hl930
fnendly 891·3118 loved unltl you send so-1886 F.mmerson Square
•-p S' > me-one you love30mult1 uaby Grand, rosewood. Ping• ong ( .amese colore d huge Helium u .... · k nd. lovlng family Balloons Perfect for h11nd rarveu, ivory eys
64tr2279 -tvery occasion Wt! de S2,000 bst ofr 642 3122
'-"".._.. 1050 hver 673 4419
••••••••••••••••••••••• N 8 Alhlet1c C lub * * I BUY * * mbrahp Fuhlon Island
Good used •"umlturt> & S150. 6 pm to 9pm
AppUances-OR I w11l &t'll 213 433·4363
or SELL for You
MASTEllS AUCTION
'46·1,H. lll-'625
I IUY FUaHrTUltl
l.01 967·8133
Piano Mahogany up
r1aht, Benut open grain
f111 lsh Gd tone. nu keys
1950 IW6-40C 2
HA.MMONDORGAN 8000
Serles Leslie Animll
t1on S2495. 536-4912
Betsy Ross (L ester
spmel l 88 keys. Gd cond
SBOO bst ofr 642~289
S.wlftc) MochMea 1092 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sears Zig Zag Sewing
marh w /walnut cabinet,
175. 960·8160 ---
Sporti119 Gooch 1094 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WANTED Scuba gear m
good condition only.
751·8967 ---------
• I
---·----·----------------.-~------_. __
28402 Ma rguerite Pkwy.
Mission Viejo
Avery Pkwy. exit
(off 5 Freeway)
'73 Datsun 610, 39,000 mi,
runs xlnt, new tires,
$1400 /0BO. 631-1465
'73 Wgn 610, low ml, auto
great cond, new paint,
$1600. 646-1355
COMMELL
CHEVROLET
.'X.,. ll.111•11 Bl'd
' ' IST ·\ \1 I·::-. \
S46-1200
DI I
'70 Maverick Xlnl ('und
Several new p arh
$1500 545·9594 Cvt.'!I
'77 Grunada Gh111, ~lrit
l'Ond, full)' t'(!Ulpµt•\I 111
rm $2950 No pt!1-.u11,d
'71 N o v a . 2 D our c·hel'ks 552 9146 Blaupunkt stereo Uh l
o ff er 644 11 5 1 o r Lincoln 9945
640 7293 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'73 No' a Hall·hbatk,
good l.'Olld Sl<l75
675-1402
'70MARK111
.MUST S t-;1.1. MAK t: 0 1-'FEll ' 6'12HI111
Mercury 9950 C Oft'tlflental 9 9 3 0 ••••••••••••• • • • • • • • • • •
••••••••••••••••••••••• OHANGEl'OU:-OT'I' S
·73 Continental 43.000 m 1. FINEST
leath intr 4 s pkr i.tert.>o, l.IN('Ol.N -., f',f{l'l 11 '1
full pwr. Cit:, xlnt rnnJ IH.Al.ERSllll' thrU·OUt, $2200 bsl ofr
Bill 714 1646 0691 ~?IA~ EAIU.EllCE
VOLVO
1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MF.sA
646-UOl 540-9467
Cor•ette 9932 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LlNl'OLN YI l'.Hl'l H \
198 I PEUGEOT
TURBOs
BEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEW PORT B EACll
752--0900
Porsche 9750 ••..•..................
'7 5 Porsc:~ 9 14
S46 0248
ORANGE COUNTY
VOLVO Largest Volvo Dealer
in Orange County!
BUY or LEASE
DlRECT
1O120 Garoen Grove 8 1
Garden Grove 530-9190
1968 Mdle l22S Slll
AM FM. need s
$900 Firm
900-1381
wai;:
work
'67 18~. very clean. nu
tires. $3750.
646-4384
* II
HEW 1981
CORVETIES
THREE
4 SPEEDS
TO CHOOSE FROM
CORMIER-DeLILLO
CHEVROLET CO.
17' 41847-6087
* 78 CORVETTE
T T o p po l.ir1 ~ re d
leather. full} equipped
16,000 miles! Must St.>l''
(20010)
Saddleboc:k IMW
'77 911 SC~. Autos, UMd
Xl nt l.'Ond . Lo m1 , ••.,••••••••••••••••••••
M ISSIOO VteJO
821-2040 495-4949
Closed Sunday loaded Sl7,000 Ph Days General 9901
751-4344, e~64S-265..!__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·79 Co rvette. loacled ,
·n Porsche 911s Targa. J E E p s . C A R s . while, 6700 m1. a~MJITll'
Xlnl cond Low miles. PICK UPS from $3~. lease,$J25/mn75!1 1Hl!l
loaded 1 owner $18 000 Avail. al local Go vt CoUCJar 9933
Del M ~r. 1-481 5511 · Auctions For Directory •••• ••••••••••••••••••. _ __ call S urplus Oata Center . 11 n R 9756 (415)330-7800. 77 Cougar XR7, ru . pwr o 1 oyce _ am tfm tape, SJK m1. • • • • • • • • ••••• •• • • •• • • • • 99 05 ' S f $J J"S •t DEALER IN U.S.A. AMC ~51e2_a5~22 acn •l't' • .,,
ROY
CARVER
ROLLS-ROYC£
••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ J
'75 Hornet, 4dr. Auto. Jr you:;e never placed a P tS . am /fm C a s s . wrack perfect cond Classified ad, you're in
548-SJOS the min only! Try 1t ont·e
------and see how quH'kly you
Iii Iii A ulo t'cntrr I Jr
SI> F.,.. \ Lk For c~t' i.11
'IRVlNE
830-7000
Mustan9 9952 .....••..•......•.•.••.
·r.n Mu:-1 111,.:t:-. 1u11·
~~!"•! ~t IU5 1;1:1 11 11
l' \'l's, G-11 ~'>.5 <lys
'07 6 c·vl. :i ~µcl "'"k
, AM fM H t rk !.ll.'rl·11
su;oo oh 4!J3 llGS7
Oldsmobile 9 9 5 5 .•.•....•••....••.....
·au Cutlass Urou~h.,1
St•d S7500 nr I akl· "" lt~ast-S2 1 I mo 1.o.id1·tl
\ 6 8J2 5!17 ~ 552 11!00
. 7 H 0 I d !> l' U I I ,1 ~
Hroul(h.tm c;oo<l emu!
Moi.t all optaonJI l'llllll
mc>nl $46!j5 ~57 1:11
1977 Olds OmeJ'la, l ""' 111
6 c y I 36,UUU 1111 ~1:!111•
639 1136. 5.57 8911le>.U:!I •
'67 Tornado ~'iO f11 no
<.:lean Huns 1.H·ll l ';ill
A d S I l t l' r II 2 2 •I .1 I
642 •1300. Z.I hrs
Pinto 9957
··••·••••·············· ·7:1 Hunuboul. ~ootl 1·owl1
tum. $850
548 K.5419
'7 2 PIMTO WGM
Auto. gd tnnd_1;:11 'lWl-
Ptymouth 9960 .......•.•....•.••.••..
"I la Or ... C..ty
2925 Harbor Blvd
831-2040 495-4949 -~~;? Closed Sundays
IMO J•mboru
ltewpor1 llHc~
\'---.-J ~ luJck 9910 get res ults f'hon l' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642-5678.
'77 Volare. 6 '}I .111\u
a ir P B !2000 1 "It •
960 2346
Ex-fishi ng boat with
moormg for sale. Days
547-Mtil. Eves631-1096
WANTED: Old lS' or 17' COSTA MF.sA
travel trailer t.o be used 979-2500
for parts. Also utility 1-------
traller. ~Qr76 WANTED!!
13' Boston Whaler. 35HP.
Evinrude, trlr . great
s h a pe . $2250 OBO
.to Senic:e, Parts Ca.. lll!pOl'h
.. !!!:~~~~! .. ?~.~~ T'1~
714·840-5997 For ..
TRADEWIND YACHTS Dat z 31' Chris SF '80 S49.9K SUft
32' Luhrs '70, Dsl S23K motor
Coll JIM HOCJC1ft or
MlkeL•
Cre'llerMoton
835-3171 33' LaPattrwlr $49.SK + ofhert;!'
38' Bertram '80 $2(X)K 3 I--===
40' Pace SF. Dal's Sl60K 1 ___ 7_6_1-_5 __ 7 __ _
47'Chris glsdsl. SUOK Four 6~"xl4" VW rims
TERMSAVAJL. chrome Inserts 2/hub
675·9007, evs 960-1725 caps, new Best offer Jim
loah,Sall 90601...::...63~1_·~-~~38-----~ •••••••••••••••••••••••
'73 21' Schock. sleeps 4,
Berth A va1I. Acces 11101 for Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••
Call544-3Z78 IMPORTANT
----NOTICE TO
16' Sunfish Sail Boal READERS AND
Xlnt for summer Good ADVERTISERS
cond. S6SO 642·2641 The price of item s
advertised by vehicle CAL 34 Sloop. '69. highly dealers tn the venicle
sought racerl.'ruiser, classified advertising
S35K. Bkr,675-8711. columns does not in-
~ Sale. Finn Good cond elude any applicable " taxes. license, transfe r Price includes trailer, rees, finance charges,
rigging & sail $750/bst rees for air pollution con·
ofr. Eves SJS-6863 trol device certifications ---------or dealer documentary
AMF Alcort "Mtn1fish" preparation cnarges un-12'. white. com pl. equip, less otherwise sped ried
like new 898-5037 by the advertiser. ----1....:.;:....:.:.~----------SWAN 431 &cs design, ~-s/
maintained & equipped Ctasslcs
to the highest s tandards,
complete 8&G na v. In
slr. Deal dlrel.'t & save.
Call Answer Ad #469,
9520
642·4300, 24 hrs.
14' AMF SUNFISH
S3SO
fWl..4647
~s1,.1 Declu 9070 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Side Ties for rent.
18-$10/ft. Hurry !
••••••••••••••••••••••
PRETT1lST
'57T-llRD
IMTOWH!
IESTOFffR!
(005UKZl
THEODORE
ROBINS
FORD
101,0 11/IABOll Bl\10
(O~tA Ml\A C>'11 0010
____ fW6._44_1.9 ____ 'M Packard CUpper
NEW Slip avaU Ulna July Restored
We'll Buy
Or Sell
Your C lean
Import On
Con\iqnml!nt'''
Call Our
Used Car
Manaqer
TODAY111
831-2040 495-4949.
Saddlebaclt BMW
Mission Viejo
WEIUY
CLEAN CARS
AMDTRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
:X.)l ll.1rl••• 11 1"1
llJ!'.il\\<I~'-\
546-1200
~th . 35 ' Newport. 641-3124 .......
Us • 8190 I 532.'2305 o ~---._._-----1
547.7425 1957 Flyln1 Spur con·
Need Slip or side'tle for llnental S.1. Exceptional
lovely 28' Se,a Ray In NB 2 tone paint. R.labt band
or Dena Point. Call eves drive. Xtntcooc[ 131,000.
orwtnd P oss trade. (805)
497-442 e&M902 1---------
• Sallw/usfreeonalleaut. PUMA . 1918 exotic
Hana Cl\riaUa.o Ketch lf Brailllan Import, mtnt • LI fa c t o r y c on d . L o you hue a 50 ve-ml.~. (7l4)751-l13$ aboard alip f or a ~olVV
WANTED!
Late model TQ.Yotaa and
Vo l voe . Ca l l ua
DAYlll
CREVIER
&I Sl 6 llOADWAY
SAHTA AHA
835·3171
T Ht UlT1114A I l 0111\llHG MACHINE
•USEDIMW1•
'76 2002 usxl <<m3>
'79320i Si ft (5894)
'79 5281 S /R (1076)
'81 320iA (0115)
Closed SlllMla
TIN Molt bcltlRg
PoriOfYow
IMWPwchaMOr
Leaw COlllld h
McLaNft IMW!!
1-,0rL.eoM
lyOwPhoMP._!
1714) 522-5333
ORAM CH COUHTY'S
OLDEST
Sales-Service-Leasing
Roy C«V•r,lnc.
Rolls k oyce BMW
1S40Jambore~
Newport Beach 640.6444
79 7lllA
BBS wheels. low miles ,
purchase or take over
lease! (6431)
Sodcleb•c:k IMW
Mission Vlejo
121-2040 495-4949
Closed Sundays
reaponalble couple. Call ... ,....,. 11 Dr . 0 er Y Brew er YeMdtt '79 t201. Slerr• Bell•,
_<:.:2:.:1.;.3>;.;T;.;;•,.t;.;;5.;;133;;.;:...M.;;;...·F...;.l •_S_. _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1unroor, lmmac. Al•
Moortn.1 fOf' 1ale. Up to Two Rtapooalble Adulta 1ume le ... or pv.rch ....
••• Rl1ht on Bayaborea. Wlab To Leaae c .... ~ I PP' 'IM-8081 evea. 17~ 1. Sell cootalMd Tra•d ~ , • ._,,., • .... ,." TetUDa the ID09t peop ..
Tr;•tl•r DOl loclca than LoM 1omethha1 value· . pcmlllM II lmportaat to ~ R.v not Ion .... tban bMT Place 1n ad lD our th 1DCcu1 of ant n • · Loet and Found col· ..,.... ule. Make tun a. ircr u. ftnt l weeb ...... Tbat .. 1 wher. peo-1oura 11 U1ted ln
. ,..... .... ..., way for
JOU to ..a that btcyde ,. .......... Jutt
14YerllH IL ID tlll1e a.-.riedf Cell.,,..,.., Jwy,ataru.,JUb'eth. pie look wit• lhn'n Cla11Uled, pboo.t -..u. bmdaaltemolvalue, IOlnl.
Fiat 9725
LEASE
DIRECT!
9760
1981 Sill
TUUOs
'56 Buick.
Cail after 5
962-3006
odlllac 9915 •••••••••••••••••••••••
COMTEMPU TING
CADILLAC?
We specialize in leases
ror lhe busines s e x
ecullve & professional
••••••••••••••••••••••• IEACH IMPORTS
'78 Spider 124 Convert. 848 Dove Street
LarcJe s.tection
Of Hew 1981
Codillocs
Mow In Stock!
Red /btk t.op. Sisp. 32,000 NEWPORTBEAC H
mi Am /Fm stereo Cas s, 752--0900 xlnt cond. SS800 /0 BO __ _ __ _ ~~Jli~. 893·8276 Eves. •75 99L E. auto. am /fm,
Hot.do 9727 cass, Mlchelins. 45M.
••••••••••••••••••••••• $4 000. Call AnswerAd
VISIT YOUR
ORANGE COAST
HONDA
HEAD9UARTERS
TODAY!!!
UNIVERSITY
SALES&SERVJCE
OLDSMOllLE
HONDA
GMCTitUCKS
2850 Harbor Blvd
COSTA ME.5A
540-9640
'76 Honda Wagon.
$2995
646-0681
'77 Accord. nu eng, nu
tires & brks. Am/Fm 8
trk. Everything works.
$4 ,900. (714)494-3422;
494-4644 Patty.
'75 Honda Wagon, looks
like nu, $2900 /0BO.
Work 631·2242
#~7. 642·4343. 24 h!!:__ 2600 H.\rbot Bfvct
Co\!,, Me!..\ 540-CJIOO -~-~~~~ ........... !?~~ ~~~~~~~~~~
'75 Toyota Cellca GT 5spd , beaut cond
$3400 t OBO 846 8924.
840-4556
'77CBJCAGT
Liftback 26,000 m1, good
cond. $4695 7JG.~7
'74 Corolla lmmal.' thru
& thru S2000
Ph$57-3481
Vo .. WCICJl'I 9770 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MARK HOWARD
VOLKSWAGEN
Lar ge se l!!c t ion o r
Volkswagens w1th com
petitive prices
~MOWMd
VOlK.SWAGlN. INC
534-4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
'60-'SS VW left & right
77 CADILLAC
COUPE DEVILLE
Leather int., tilt, cruise,
AM /FM stereo. wire
wheel covers+ lo miles!
OB1F83ll
$5995
'79 Se Ville Diesel loaded'
20 K mi, assum lse .
$416.00/mo. 759-0481
'71 ELDO.every extra
M UST SELL-MAKE
OFFER
642-8110
ELDO '74 xlnt cond, new
bra kes, tires, ell'. reg
gas, getting new car best
offer 644·14216
door, '73 left door. SSO '76 ELDOCONVERT
each. Western style whl Choe bm/saddle int. &
rims for Super Beetle top. lo mi, $10,000
$20 ea . 548-9744 Consider pickup as part
trade. 760-8860 '79 VW Rabbit diesel. L ---------
mdle SOmpg. SWlroof, l 9 7 9 E L D 0 R A D 0
air, xtra tank, Stereo DIESEL
tape, Xlnt. 96500. We have sold our home
640.6215. 1166-1779 1n the desert and have
'75VWDaaber
MUST SELL
MAKE OFFER $42-8119
too many cars. This
beige beauty has brown
leather Interior, s hiny
wire wheels and brand
new Good·Year Arriva
radials. This petted and
pampered darlin is look·
In& for a home with ao-meone who apPreclatea
the care llS had. Sll,750.
PP956·CK98
DAVID J.
I
PHILLIPS
Proudly Pre sents . . .
11FAHT ASTIC
DEALS!"
1979 POMTIAC
LIMAMS SA,.uJ
~ W990f' I cyttndeif IUW>f'Ml+c PoiW' 1.._.,ng e~r C.~•tlO( .... ,_ ,,.,. 8ooll • OI& 11$711
D.J.,.'1 SAU l"tUCI 55395
1974 FORD
"MTO WA~OH
~tic .. , ~1tion•no '.ct"° '"99IOI car,,., oN¥ !' t>oit' ................ ,,.,, .,
D.J.,.'1 SAU f'l.ICI 52295
1974 CADILLAC SEDAM
DI llMAMCI
4 OOOf "'' CONt•iotong ~ 'M~ OVM c.omrOI OOW9' 000t
._... ~ PGW9' ..-1 .. ''" am4m 1weo •tr.a. orly '' 025 Ol'•O""• ,..._ lfU7·A)
D .J.P.' 1 SA.LI f'l.ICI i3295
1976 IUICK
SUUUCUSTOM
• doot, • cy11nditf, IUIOf'\AUC POW~ • ...,no IH poi-.. 'MndQr.I.~
--IOCIQ 1111, I°"',.,.._ leoe.A)
D.J.r.'1 SALi NJCI 53195
1979 PONTIAC
GUMO rancsJ
t~ .... 1..-11e.-1-1n9 _ .. _.B_Po_
~. pc)W'9t OOOf tocllt, ""''" ••to h" Oti#M T-too 8hJt &ooii-m46 lt07•")
D.J.P.'1 SALi l"tttCl
1971 OLDSMOllLE
CUTLASS SUPREME
-· --"'0 "" .... *""'" -• lo-<---~ 23 190 ,._ ,,,.. 9000 llllOO fl5tl)
O.J.l .'1 SALi P'llCa S 5 2 9 5
I t7t CHEVIOLIT
MM.ISU CLASSIC
·-· ~ -·~ -.. _elf < ... IO'll -MI• --ll;ieloell t4IOO 11641)
D.J.P.'t SALi f1ttCa '4295
ltl I IUICIC
SIYLAH UMfTID
• ..,.._, • ~ ....... ·--. --... ,h
-ctolll ~ li.oant, )'Ill ----mioo en~ '74 VW Wgn412, eng ehot,
ax.le bent S750 '79 Fleetwood Brougham O.JI.'• SALi PllCI ~1ded :'9250 11-----------=;....;;.....;;_,~-;----t
AUTHOJUZED
MERCEDa.BENZ
DEALER
'8ai.t'740 415-1700
960-43'2, 846-40(»
''4 BUG 1ood runnlhl
cond, StJ00/080 ens anytime
'et vw Bua. R~bullt, am Jfm tape1. $2800.
49'7·5717 al\ere.
'12 VW •U SQB, IMIK ml "°°·
Perry 549-88'1 l
...... ttl7 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
'78Camaro
AJr, •utomatlc power
1teerlnf· 71,Mi mllu. (1112VE )
S4tU
Barwkk Imoorta
IJl0lJll
-------
•
..
Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981
BRAND NEW
1980 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON TC3 HATCHBACK
SPECIAL s ~,,,
PRICE ' ie/t
4 cylinder engine. 4 speed transmission, custom 1ntenor, two-tone paint, AM -FM
radio. mag wheels and morel (222552).
BRAND NEW
1980 PLYMOUTH
VOLARE SEDAN
Equipment includes 6 cylinder engine. automatic
transm1ss1on. power steenng and wt11te sidewall tires'
(228399)
THIS WEEK'S
USED CAR SPECIALS
1973 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER CWPE Auto trans.. air cond.. pwr. st. & brakes.
crulae. tilt, pwr windows. AM·FM stereo,
vinyl top & much morel (984JEX). 51395
1977 DODGE
ASPEN WAGON
6 cyl.. automatlo tran•.. pwr. steering &
brakes. custom· moldings. radio, custom
wtteels & morel (360SPG).
52595
1975 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT SEDAN
6 cyl. engine, ·automatic trans.. power
steering, radio & morel (270L YJ).
51695
FOR FLEET SALIS & .
LI ASE' IMFORMA TIOM, CALL
4i&tlNAMKO
546-1934
NEED CASH???
Wt,.., ... .._ fw--" dN9 ....... an. ... c.. ........... ,__ ...,. w. .... .., ..... r-........... •tM¥11
Au to. trans .. a ir cond . pwr. split
seat·ateering·wlndows·brakes-dr. locks, tilt.
AM·FM stereo, vinyl top. & much more•
(876PRT). 51895.
1977 BUICK
Le SABRE CUSTOM COOPE
Loaded Inc. air cond .. auto. trans .. pwr. split
seat·windows·ateering·brakes·door locks,
r.'~ri~~r· iilf 5,.. "'°'·'
Auromat sr ic trans 9ering & b P011Ver sear ra1<es · ll1ny1 I · Sp/11 White s1oe op, r aa10
morel (14006~~,, tires a'
SERVICE HOURS:
MoBday thrv Friday 7:30 a.M. to 5:30 p.m.
Sahrday 1:00 a.a to 5:00 p.M.
SEE OUR SERVICE
DEPARTMENT AIOUT RENTING
A 'I I CHRYS&.H OR 'L YMOUTH.
1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA COUPE
Automatic trans .. air cond . pwr. steering &
brakes, cruise control. pwr windows & seat.
AM·FM stereo, vinyl top, wtre wtleel covers &muohmifi95
1979 CHRYSLER
CORDOBA COUPE
Automatic tra91 .. air cond , pwr steering &
brakes, radio, split seat, vinyl top. wsw tires
& morel (532WWC). · 53495
~-------------~----.----~~~...,._~"""'!"""~~_~ ...... _~----~_-_-_~_-_~_~~----~~~-~~~-~-~-.._~~·::::::·_-_._-:_·_·_·_·_·_·_·_·_·_·_~:·_·_ .. _._._._·~~--.~ .. ] ~------~-I
I
* * • • •
111111 CUil Ylll 111111111 UllY NPll
WEDNE S DAY . MAY 13 1981 OR ANGE COUNTY C A LIFOliNIA 25 CENTS
'CONSCIOUS AND SERENE'
PONTIFF SHOT
John Paul JI
Two men held;
third hunted
VATICAN CITY (AP> -Pope
John PauJ II was shot twice in
the intestines today as he rode
into St. Peter's ·Square ror a
general audience before an
estimated 10,000 people, but
Vatican radio said no vital organ
was struck. both bullets were re·
moved during a hair-hour opera·
lion and he was "conscious and
serene.··
Italian police said they seized
two men and were looking for a
third apparently involved in the
shooting. Police sources said one
of the men held for questioning
was a 23-year-old Turkish stu-
dent at the University for
Foreigners at Perugia, north of
Rome. He was identified as
Nehmet Ali Hagca.
Police said In addition to the
pope , two women were
wounded by the bullets in St.
Peter's Square. One was iden-
tified as Ann Odre of Buffalo,
N. Y. She was not in serious con-
dition, police said.
Witnesses who saw the pope
enter the Gemelli Policlinic,
Rome's most modern, said he
was awake when he arrived
there. Italian television said the
pope was taken into the operat-
ing room at the hospital at 5:55
p.m . -8:55 a.m. PDT.
The Vatican radio appealed to
the faithful to pray for the pope.
wo· e
:Newport men seal
· AirCal purchase
T he ·1talian news agency
ANSA said the pope had been hit
by two bullets at the level of his
pancreas. He was standing on
his jeep near the Vatican post of-
fice between St. Peter's Basilica
and the famous Bernini col-
lonade. The weapon was a 9
mm. semi-automatic pistol.
Italian television reported two
women were injured. but there
was no confirmation of that. The
television said it was not certain
whether the women were in-
jured by pistol fire or hurt in the
ensuing panic.
°""",... _..,..., ·--Two women praJI in St. Joachim'• Church in Co1ta Me1a for Pope John Poul 11, felled by an assailant's By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of .. Diiiy ,. ........
Newport Beach's Willian Lyon
and George Argyros were in San
Diego today lo put the finishing
touches on their $61.S mUJion
deal to purchase AirCal.
The developers, principals of
Air California Investments Inc ..
emerged victorious Tuesday ln
bidding In U.S. District Court for
the successful West Coast
pirllne, also based in Newport
Beach.
The question remaining today
was what chanaes. if any, Lyon and Argyros will make in AirCal
operations.
Attorneys Richard Sherman
and Alvin Segel, of the law firm
of Irell and Manella. of Newport
Beach. declined to comment on
those prospects following the en-
try of the winning bid before
Judge Leland Nielsen.
Neither Lyon nor Argyros
could be reached today for com-
ment.
The team of Lyon and Argyros
was n't present when Judee
Leland Nielsen approved the
sale of the airline to AirCal
Investments. So they didn't hear
the congratulatory comments
made by those in the courtroom.
including representatives of the
defeated bidder, Air Florida
System, Inc ., operator of a
regional East Coast airline of
t'•P. same name.
Air 1'1orida's final bid was $S8
million for 90 percent of AirCal,
with the remaining 10 percent of
the airline 's s tock to be
distributed to shareholders of
Westga(e-CalHornia Corp ..
AirCal's parent firm. bullet• today in Rome. But Judge Nielsen, who has
been supervising the financial
affairs of the once bankrupt
Westgate for eight years, ruled
that the investment group's
all-cash bid of S61.5 million
exceeded that of Air Florida.
Vatican radio said the pontiff
had been driven through St.
Peter's Square In his jeep and
waa about to leave the jeep to
start a general audience when
shots were beard. Shot felt around world
AirCal went on the auction
block Monday, with Air Florida
opening lh-e action at S3S million.
By day's end the price had shot
up to S59 million.
The pontiff collapsed into the
arms of aides as the jeep re-
turned inside the Vatican at high
speed. the radio said. Wounding of pontiff elicits Orange Coast prayers
Attorneys for Air Florida and
the Lyon·Argyros group stepped
to the courtroom podium 35
limes in the often-dramatic bld-
dlOR war. Edward Acker, Air Florida
board chairman, said after the
battle was over that he did no•.
think AirCal was worth the $61.5
mi Ilion Lyon and Ar gyros
agreed to purchase it for.
He denied that Air Florida did
not possess the resources to
better the final bid. "We have a
$90 million line of credit," Acker
said.
Acker, however, can take
some satisfaction in the sale to
Air California Investments.
Last year . Air Florida
pur c hased 26 perce nt of
Wes tgate's common stock.
Because the bid price of AirCal
went so high, Air Florida stands
to make a profit of between Sll
and $12 milloion on its Westgate
investment, Acker said.
"Your pockets have been
enriched," Nielsen told Air Florida attorneys Larry
Hoffman and Herbert Wolas.
Herbert Kunsel. a court-
<Stt AIR CAL, Page A%)
Seconds later, an ambulance
followed by a car with Vatican
dignitaries carried the .pope to
the Gemelli Poll clinic. He had
also sustained a fractured arm
and injured finger.
A few minutes after the shoot·
Ing, the loudspeaker which
broadcasts over St. Peter's
Square announced that the pope
had been wounded. The voice on the loudspeaker
asked the crowd to pray for the
pope by reciting the Our Father
prayer and the Ave Maria.
Thousands in the square knelt to
pray.
John Paul , the former
Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of
Poland. became pope in the fall
of 1978 at age 58 the first non·
Italian pope In 455 years. He will
be 61 on Monday.
The pontiff quickly became
history's most widely traveled
pope. His ninth and loqgest trip,
in February , t~im to
Pakistan, Japan. Guam and the
Philippines.
Shortly before the pope's ar·
rival in Karachi, Pakistan, a
homemade grenade exploded at
a stadium where he waa to
celebrate Mass. The man carry-
ing the grenade was killed.
By STEVE MABBLE O{ .. ._, ..... .--
Mornln1 'mass was being said
at St. Joachim in Coata Mesa
when Msgr. Thomas Nevin an·
nounced that Pope John PauJ II
had been shot.
"There was an audible
groan," the Msgr. Nevin report·
ed. "and then everyone knelt in
prayer. It was automatic."
Al St. Catherine in Laguna
Beach, school classes were halt·
ed for the announcement and
students were asked to pray.
In Huntington Beach, at St.
Bonaventure, candles were be·
iog lit and prayers offered. Peo·
pie worshipped in silence at
Catholic churches along the
Orange Coast.
Bishop William Johnson is·
s ued a statement from the
Catholic Diocese at Orange, ask-
ing that prayers be offered for
the wounded pope.
Bishop Johnson said he was
"deeply saddened," adding that
"an injury or hurt to him is an
Injury and hurt to all of us."
"He bas staunchly defended
human life and human dignity,
shown hims elf a friend to the
poor and to the oppressed all ov-
Look who's moving
AirCal's tail now
Last January, 0 -year-old Newport
Beach developer Georie L. ArlYl'M carved
out a name for himself ln the sporta world
when he purchased the SeatUe Mariners
baseball team for $13 million.
Now the Newport resident, who 1raduat-
ed from Chapman College ln 1959, bu moved
Into the aviation world with the Joint
purchase pf Newport-based AirCal airlines.
Argyroa, married with three children,
formed Amel, a real estate development
firm, in 1.967. He was part of a frOUP tbat
bought President Nixon's San Clemen.le
estate. He serves on the board ol d.lrecton of
tbe Flnt National Br.n.k ol Oranie County
and Is a truatee o~ the World Alfaln Council. GEORGE L . ARGYROS
A former chief of the All' Force Reserve,
57-year-olcl William LJ011 I• a Newport Beach
developer. The Udo lale realdent wH ap.
pointed to hll Air Jl'otff po1t ln 1971 by
former Praldent Gerlld Yard.
WILLIAM LYON
A meJ« ieneral ln ~All' Poree Relerve,
L7on tlllltted ln tile Army Air Cor'DI ln lMS
and HrVed In Northern Ah1ea durint World
War U. He II a USC 1raduaw.
Lyon la married and bu ODt aon and two
dau1bt.en. A member of the advilory board
of St. Jude Holpttal, LJOD mo ii a member
of the Bil Canyon CouatrJ Club and t.be Udo
1111 Yacht. Club.
er the world. It is our· prayerful
hope that God will hear our
prayers and allow him to con-
tinue to share the light or the
gospel with all men.''
Msgr. Nevin also reacted with
sadness.
•'This is a most shocking ex·
perience," he said. "For those
engaged in such violence. we
can only hope their hearts will
be softened."
Several Catholic leaders re·
pealed that Pope John Paul 11 is
a man of peace and a man who
prays for peace.
•'One has almost become used
•o this happening to political
figures but the pope is not a
political figure. This hurts,"
said one person at St. Anne's in
Santa Ana.
Sister Floren ce at St.
Catherine e xpressed shock.
"We're praying. We're praying
very hard that it all works out."
Noon mass in the Marywood
Center in Orange was scheduled
today. Officials said prayers
would be offered at all churches
<See PRA V, Page AZ)
Soviets rap U.S.
• • in cargo seizure
WASHINGTON <AP> U.S.
customs agents are trying to de·
termine whether three pieces of
equipment seized from a Moacow-
bound Soviet airliner detained at
Dulles Airport for about four
hours were properly licensed for
export. the State Department said
today.
The official Soviet news agency
blasted the Tuesday night Inci-
dent as an example of "interna-
tional terrorism."
State Department spokesman
Joe Reap said the plane, Aeroflot
Flight 318, was boarded by
customs and FBI agents because
officials had "reason to believe
that cargo aboard the aircraft
might not have been appropriate·
ly licensed."
•'They did find some equipment
that they decided to detain over·
night to see that it was properly
licensed,•' he added.
Meanwhile, customs
spokeswoman Chris Ligoslte said,
"The investl1atton is contlnu-
ina." But she saJd she dld not ex·
pect any announcement of Its fln-
dln1a unW later in the day.
Export licenses are required
for a variety or bJ1h·tecbnolo1Y
aood1, including computers, elec-
tronic equipment, chemicals,
metalJ and bulldlnJ equipment.
Particular attenUon 11 pald, a
.commerce Department
apokeaman aaJd, to • 'dual·UH
commoditlea," which have an
ostenalbly clvtllan role bul wblch
could have a mllltar)' UH.
Llce111e1 are a1'o required for
purely mW~ 1ood1.
Earlier, a State Department
IOUrCt caU.i the Hiled mat.rial ''def~ DCJll-exportable ltema."
but later Uld M may havt mialn·
terpreted lnformaUoo ,ivtn blm
on whY the eqwpment, which he
could not ld•Ufy. bad been
Hlled. ;
Tass, the official Soviet news
agency, charged today that
customs and FBI agents -acting
with sanction or higher-ups -
com milled an arbitrary act of
··international terrorism ''
against the aircraft.
-Crew members were forced
from the plane and "attacked,"
Tass alleged In a dispatch from
Washington. It said "three Items
of luggage were arbitrarily con-
fiscated" and "hand weapons
were seized from the crew mem-
bers, although in keeping with In-
ternational law they are allowed
to wear arms to ensure the
security or the maht ...
llUCf COAIT lflllfl
Cloudy ni&ht and morn·
Ina hours with early mom-
lnl drizzle otherwise fair
through Thursday. Lows
tonight 55 at beaches, 63
inland. Highs Thursday
mid to upper 60s alon1
coaat, low 70s Inland.
111111 TllAY
ThoM dM> mob no.ooo a
~ear and""' dnfnlMQ mQr fUtd a ,,., Of f"COM~nl
lftmfl'IQ tltai n:ecMtfvea eana-
fng JO ffnw• lhat much or«
olto toOrNd about thf rt.ring
flC~. PaQe Al.
"CO I C .. ...,.u... .,
~= == ... M.A~ .. ~l
~i ..
'• ,,,,
fl ' >.11
• t
• I
J
a e e o a e ; a e s c 4 0. a $05 -------------. ---.. -. .
u ..... Ora~ Coast OAfL y PILOT /Wednetday, May 13, 1981
Nation reacts with shQck and sadness
By The Anoele&ed Preu
Shork quickly waa succeeded
by fervent prayers today 11
. word spread of the shooUn, ol
Pope John Paul U. Cburch•otn
flocked lo special services
where they were asked to "pray
your hearts out for our pontiff."
"We're stunned ... The reac-
tion of our people is one of
stunned qujet. We're turning to
prayer and leaving it in the
hands of God." said Bishop John
S Cummins of the Arcbdlocese
of Oakland, who dined wlth the
pope in Guam in February.
"l 'U pray for him," w.s the
reported reaction of President
Reag~tall recovering from a
Shah inove
'political
gmnhle'
NEW YORK <AP > -Presi·
dent Carter's decision to admit
the shah of Iran to the Uruted
States for medical treatment -
a move that helped spark the
seizure of American hostages -
was a "calculated political gam -
ble" and was based on some
misinformation, The New York
Times said today.
The Times said an ''extensive
examination of the Iranian
crisis" indicated Carter was
misinformed about the nature
and urgency of the illness of the
cancer-stricken shah who died
last year in Egypt
Carter, now living in Plains.
Ga., was quoted by the Times
as s aying he was told the shah
needed medical attention availa·
ble only in the United States.
However, the shah's cancer
could have been diagnosed and
treated in Mexico rather than
New York, the paper quoted his
doctor. Benjamin Kean. as say-
ing. It said the decision to admit
the shah to the United States
came after months of argument
within the administration -and
"was influenced by an intensive
lobbying campaign .. ·.f>yan
'old-boy network· " that in-
c luded David Rocke feller,
former chairman of Chase
Manhattan Bank, and former
Secretary of State Henry Kiss-
inger.
While Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi was being treated for
cancer in New York, militants
demanding his return lo Iran
seized the U.S Embassy in
Tehran on Nov. 4, 1979. and cap-
tured the embassy's staff. The
hostage seizure lasted 444 days.
The Tim~ said Carter's early
optimis m that the crisis could be
resolved in the spring of 1980, 10
months before it actually ended.
was based on a secret meeting
in Paris in February 1980
between ha s chief of staff,
Hamilton Jordan, and the Ira·
naan foreign minister, Sadegh
Ghotbzadeh.
bullet fired by 1 would·be u -
sassln.
As televtalon networks broae
oft regular pro11rammln1 to 10
on the alr with news ot the at-
tack on lhe pope in St. Peter's
Square, people gathered 1rim·
faced around TV act.I -repeat·
Ing the pattern set only six
weeks ago when Reagan was
s hot. At New York City's St.
Patrick's Cathedral, c rowds
gather ed. A murmur of shock
a nd cries of "Ob God" arose
from worshipers at the noon
Mass when lhey were told the
pope had been shot.
"I have some dreadful. tragic
news to tell you," the Rev.
Charles Mahoney sald before
beginning Mass "Pope John
Paul II was shot just a few
minutes ago . . We want you
today to pruy your hearts out for
our pontiff."
Cardinal Humberto S .
Medeiros, archbishop of Boston,
said rus immediate reaction was
"a mixture of shock. sickness
and sadness.
"Then I asked, if this man. so
strong a force for goodness,
justice and peace. is attacked.
who then among us is safe?
What tragic example of the
dwindling regard and respect
for human life!" he said in a
statement, adding, ". . when
we remove God from the center
ot our Uve11• th~ vacuum is only
too t1asily flued wllh evil or mad
ness.··
And In Philadelphia, where
the coverning board of the Na·
tlonal Cotancll of Churches h1
meetina. the Rev Robert W
Moon said the shooting "rein
forces our concern that we con·
trot handguns all over the
world, .. a sentiment echoed by
others al the session
Jn ChJcbgo, the largest Roman
Catholic wocese in the United
States and home to more Poles
than any city except Warsaw.
Mayor Jane Byrne interrupted a
City Council meeting to report
that the Polish pope had been
shot.
·~1
:. ·· 1
, I ... ~ '
Ar•...,.._.
STEAMBOAT FOUND -Bob Bennett (left)
and Martin Mayer work to uncover the
crosstail section of the steamship Tennessee
that wrecked 128 years ago after losing its
way in heavy fog. The wreckage was found in
Tennessee Cove, four miles north of the
Golden Gate in San Francisco (see story.
Page At2 > -------------------
Feds grab weapons cache
Foreign-bound arms taken from jet in Houston
HOUSTON <A P) Customs
agents stormed an Austrian-
registered jetliner at Houston's
Intercontinental Airport and
confiscated a cache of more
than 2,200 automatic rifles.
grenade launchers a nd other
military weapons bound for
South Africa. authorities said.
Six foreign nationals two
from England and the four-
member Austrian crew -were
arrested, said U.S. Customs
s pokesman Charles Conroy, and
t he Boeing 7Z7 was siezed. ThP
men faced arraigmnet today on
c harges of violating the
Neutrality Act.
about two dozen agents rushed
the plane Tuesday, capping a
three-we ek i nves tigatio n ,
Conroy said.
Conroy s aid agents had
tracked th e trucklo ad of
Americari-made arms from
Hartford. Conn. ,
The cache in c luded 636
a utomallc M-16 military rines, magazine clips, ammunition,
38-caliber handguns and .357 -
caliber pistols, Conroy said.
The weapons. still in wooden
crates. we re manufactured by
Colt and purchased in Connec-
licut with a teller of credjt is-
sued by a European bank, s aid
Conroy.
He said the suspects carried a
false State Department license
permitting the export of muni·
lions of war.
not s porting weapons." he said
"I don't feel this is completely
over yet Some details haven't
surfaced "
The jetliner arrived from New
York on Tuesday morning, said
t erminal manager Darrell
Harris. He said the crew told
him the fuel bill, in excess of
$20,000 had been paid in New
York.
Last week in Houston, Federal
Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms
Bu re au agents confiscated 807
high-quality gun silencers at a
private Houston airport. Agents
said the s ilencers were for
"drug hats" an El Salvador and
along the U.S.-Mexico border
The Uruted Na lions Security
Council imposed a permanent
arms embargo against South
Africa in 1977 and the United
States is complyinl(.
Rabbi Moses MeschaloCf. who
was al the meeting to read the
Invocation. prayed for the pon.
liff'!J recovery. The council had
been honori ng Timothy J .
MeCurthy. the Chicago native
wounded in the attempt on
Reag,n's life.
Al Chicago's Five Holy
Martyrs Church, 500 c hildren
from the church school began a
prayer vigil for the pope, Emily
Strenk, parish secretary, said
tearfully
Similar prayers were begun by
about 460 children from the St.
Stanislaus Elementary School in
Chi copee, Mass.
Special m asses were
* *
scheduJed an cities across the na-
tion
Mi c higan Gov William
Milliken called the shooting ''a
tragic commentary on our
times."
In a statement, he said: "The
fart that it could happen here
<with Reagan's shooting> and
now in Rome is a disturbing sign
indeed. I only hope that bis
wounds will not be critical . , "
··we can just hope that Ute
luck of the Polish holds out ...
Its 's like when they s hot lhe
president, Let's hope that that's a
precedent and that the pope will,
too." said Edward Piszek, a
Philadelphia seafood buai-
nessman and friend of the pope.
* * *
Reagan says he 'II
pray for pontiff
W ASllJNGTON t J\ P I f'rf>SI
deni Reattan , told Pope J <ihn
Paul II had heen shot today
* * •
Pope news
told Senate
WASlllNGTON I API Sen
Barry Goldwater interrupted a
Senate debate on a military
authorization bill today to advise
coll e agues of the shooting of
Pope J ohn Paul TI in Vatican
City
"I have the sad feeling that I
s hould report to my colleagues
that an attempt has been made
on the pope's life in Rome," the
Ari2ona Republican said "We
have no further details ··
There was little visible reac
l 1on to Goldwater's announce·
ment from word of the shooting
lhrou~h news reports.
Goldwater then went on to
speak on the bill
Trial begi,ns
forGanvood
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. !APJ
Marine Pre. Robert Garwood
tried to sexually assault a 7.
year-old g irl whose parents
befriended ham after the Marine
r eturned from almost 14 years in
Vietnamese prison camps, a
pro!'ecutor told a Superior Court
jury today.
District Attorney William H.
Andrews told a jury of eight men
and four women that he would
prove Garwood, 35, m olested the
gi rl Aug 7 as he took her lo get
ice cream.
He said he would present
evidence that varwOOd the on·
ly American serviceman con·
victed of collaborating with the
enem y in Vietnam, tried to force
the child to have oral sex with
him, tried to rape her, forced
her to fondle him and fondled
her genital area.
.11 a1d I II pray for ham, .. a
"P'JkMlmt.n 11a111 , u .. o.l(an h1rn.,,·lf 11 victim ol a
w<>Uld h• "''a"''n <Jnly "ix
wt•1•k11 lll(<t w"' toM of the !!hoot
1nic t,y pr+-,11frnt1.tl (l>Unsek1r
Edwin Mn ... " II
Ut-puty pr .. !l"I \f'rretary Larry
Spcak1·11 told reporter!. he had
relayl'<i worrl ,,f the shootang to
M ee<ie as !>oon a<i the bulletin
m oved on ont-<J f the new'
ser v1c·e machine!> 1n the White
House press ofhce
Speakes i.a1d the president s
first reaction was s hock lie told
Meese. I'll pray for ham. and
as ked to be kept informed
Less than 10 minutes later
Reagan called Cardinal Ter·
rence Cooke tn New York and
"expre!>sed the sorrow of the
American people and expressed
has personal concern" for I.he
pope, Speakes said
The cardinal promised to re
lay the pre!>ldent 's message to
the Vatican
Speakes said the Whale House
1s being kept inforcned of de·
velopmcnts through "contacts at
several points." but dee lined to
indicate what sources were be
ing relied upon or whether they
were providing any information
not generally available through
the news media.
Reagan. who was felled by a
guns hot wound in the chest
March 30, is continuing to .re
cover well and has resumed
some presidential duties.
* * *
From Page Al
PRAY. • •
dunng evening mass
The San Juan Capistrano Mis
s1on was inundated today with
phone ealls. both from persons
seeking news on the pope's con-
d i lion a nd information on
special services.
Prayer ser vices are planned
Wednesday morning at the mas
s1on
The newspaper also said that
for 10 of the 14 months of the
crisis, the United States was
negotiating with · essentially
powerless secular leaders in
Iran and got nowhere until mak·
1ng contact with the religious
figures who had the real C'lout.
Conroy said the Tuesday raid
··represents the biggest seizure
of weapons ever made by the
eustoms service." He estimated
the value of the illegal con-
traband at $1.2 million. The intended use of the
weapons was not immediately
clear, but an investigation mav
turn up more details, said Conroy.
------------------~
The weapons were being
transferred from a truck to the
cargo hold of the jetliner when "These are mihtary weapons.
Airport funding backed
County OKs $100 million for improvement project
The first steps in what couJd
be a two-year project to gain
financing for improvements to
John Wayne Airport have been
taken by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
Board members approved the
use of revenue bond sales to
generate about $100 million for
the improvements. Supervisors
also agreed to seek proposals
from underwriters and bon<l ex-
perts on administering the com-
plicated bond transactions .
Although Initial estimates
were that fiS million would be
needed for the improvements,
supervisors decided Tue1day to
up the ante to SlOO mUlioq to ac-count for Inflation and con-
tingencies.
The supervisors decided to sell
the same kind of non-profit gov-
ernment bonds used by the coun-
ty government lo raise money
for its below -market rate
mor tgages for qualifying buyers
of low-cost housing.
In the case of the airport, rev·
enues collected at the llite 're
expected to pay tor the cost of
the bond.
The $100 million will lJO
toward strenghtenl n a th~
runway and addin1 737 feet to Ill
north end, construction of a new
general aviation termlnel and
new taxiways and aprons.
Also, it is to finance a new
213,000-square-fool commercial
terminal and a new 3,500-space
parking garage.
A portion of the money a lso
will be used outside the airport
pr o perty to Improve freeway
ramps, add a nother southbound
lane to MacArthur 8 oulevard
---------------------------------------------~ ORANGe COAIT Dilly Pilat
Thoma P. Haley ,,__..
Robef1 N. WMd ,._
M. Thom .. Kwtll ....
ThomM A. Murphlne ..........
CNr1e9 H. Loo. ~ ............... t:::" S°"ulman
c.t c.r.'9'\Mn ,.......oii-
~:.:.!oddant Jr
_,
CIHelhd ..,..elng 714/M2•N71
All otMr depettMenta M2..Q21
MAIN OfflCI PO w .. 1..., It., c .... IMM, CA. Mell..,_:._ IMI, C•le MMe, CA .,._
'
and improve nearby intersec-
tions for greater traffic
capacities
By starting now. county of-
ficia ls say they hope to have the
financing ready when the first
improvements to the airport are
to h<· made -probably in about
two yenr11
R(>forc anv lmorovements 20
in. however, the county 's
mu11ter plan for the air port ex-
pan11ion requires that jet noise
from commercial carriers Is re-
duced
From Page Al
AIR CAL • • •
appointed trustee for Westgale
said the sale of AlrCal will
permit cons ummation of the
Weat1ate reorganltation within
60 daya.
Kuniel sald owners of com-
mon and preferred stock and
holders or debentures will re-
ceive no less than a return of 100
cents on lhe doUar. He e8Umat-
ed there are about 8,000 to 10,000
shareholders who will 1et their
money b1ck.
Weat1ate crumbled In 1973
1fter U. S. N•tkmal Bank, run
by llnancler C. Amboldt Smith,
wae declared lntolvent.
Smith 1ut»eq_u,ntly was con·
vtctod of 1rand theft and em-
beulement. Tht case ls now un·
du aepeal.
AirCal wae W.t1t.aate'1 maJor
aaset. Th• f\rm •Lill owm a flab canJl~ry In Puerto Rico. It ta for
11le.
xr· ass a
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., ..
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,.,.,....
Elizabeth Taylor is the center of attention at a party
following her B roadway debut in "The Little Foxes."
Among the r evelers are her husband, Sen. John
Warner f rightJ and actress Shirley MacLai ne t see re-
lated story, Page A 12).
Neupon1lw
bruyJI apology
A Sacramento housLn1 con·
aultant apolo1lted tor callin&
Newport Bea c h t h e?
"Polyester Harbor."
"I f ueas it was a poor
choice o( fibers," explained
Ward CGmterly, on contract
to tht harbor city.
The "polyester" reference
had caused a tew stirs in
Newport's city hall, where
som e officials thought Con·
nerly was making run of the
city.
But Connerly said that isn't
so. He said leisure suits often
are made of polyester and
that he thought of Newport
as a leisure suit kind or town.
Director Jolan Haston w as
upstaged when stars or the
film version or "Annie" were
introduced, but it was n't
because of his actors and ac·
tresses. A fris ky dog stole the
show. ...
Bingo, t he 6-yea r ·old
canine who plays Annie's
pe t , Sandy, in the movie
version of lhe musical show,
kept journalists entertained
at a New Jersey news con-
fer ence with a series of
tricks under the direction of
tr ainer Moe DISesso.
Shooting began at Mon·
mouth Colleg e . The film
stars Albert Finney as Dad·
dy Warbucks, Carol Burnett
as Miss Hannigan and Alleen
Quinn in the title role.
When the Mexico City
Philharmonic arrives in San
Antonio next week , the
woman who helped found it
Carme Romano de Lopez
PortlUo will come along.
The wife of Mexico Presi-
dent J ose Lopez Po rt illo
plans to arrive Sunday and
spend three days. She will at·
t e nd a con cer t of the
orchestra and open an ex·
hibit to sell Mexican books
and crafts
Mrs. Lopez P ortillo, a
pa tron o f th e ar ts, has
sponsored concerts by the
Phil ha rmonic across the
United States.
Oa me Cicely Saunde rs,
credited with changing the
way the medical profession
views death, received the
$200,000 Templeton Prize for
Progress in Religion at Buck·
ingham Palace.
.... '
The check for the world's
richest prize was presented
by Prince PhUlp, husband of
Queen Elizabeth II. ,., .......
Gambler K enneth Uston, shown at an A tlantic City
blackjack table, has won his suit against Resorts In-
ternational Hotel Casino. A New Jersey court ruled
that the casino could not bar U ston from playing
because of his skill at memorizing the cards dealt in
the game.
Dame Ci ce ly , 62 . a
specialist in the control or
pain for cancer patients, was
accompanied by the founder
o f th e prize. J o hn M .
Te mpleton, a Tennessee-born
invest ment counselor who
lives in the Bahamas.
~·::Rocky mountains wet
i;~.Aline, Colo. yells fore as golf-ball size hail hits
V.S. swnnurry
Tll11nd•rllorm• r11,..lll•d acrou
Color-to IN central and _,,,,.,11
Plain• early LIM• rno<nlno, 119'\t t110W
tell In Wyomlno -Monl•na. -lleavy tltowers drenclltd New
E119land
Aller ~ C>IW-<!1Mr1er 111<11 of
rain 111 Oeflvff T.....S.y, tM 111..,..
der1torm1 moved lrtto nortl'te r,, Oti••-· 119ntno 1i. town Of AllM
with llall IM slJ• Of 9011 .,.11,
Ill the Hortl>fftl, -'IGM of Ille
Gr•en Mountain• In Vermont re· eel...:! i-IO lllf• ln<llet ol ral11.
nrelll119 •lrMl'M to cepaclly Later~-•uttered•-• and
tlt11nder.,_,., ar9 upectH to ci. velop o .. r Ille lower Mlululppl
Valley. Rain al.o Is predicted tor Ille
mld·Mlu lu ll>Pl Valley, the central
Plains and II• Not11teUI
To~et"'H around lht Miion et
J e .m EOT ren .. d from ll 111
u remle, Wyo., to 12 In llV111e, Cal II.
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We1re Listening ••• ~·
What do you Uke about the Dally PllotT Wbat don't you like?
Call the number below and your musage wUI be reeorded,
lt1n1cribed and d4Uvered to UM appropriate editor.
'The 1am• 3'·hour anawertn1 ""fee may be uttd to record
lelten to the editor on Hf topic. M1ilboJC coatrlbuton mu1t ln·
elude their name and telephoae number for verlftoaUon. No
clrculaUOn calla. pleue.
Tell ut what'• on J OUl' mlnd.
TODAY
Se<-llltft 7'.J2p.m. 4.t TMUaSOAY "'"'low t:.,e.m. t.O Fl"l 111"' 7:JSe .m. •~O
Se<andlow t:J:Jp.m. O.•
Se<onclltltll 1:Jlp.m. 5.1
Sun Ntl 7:• P.nt., rl-TilllrMay
s "•·"'· Moon N ll TllurMMy l :St e .m., rlMs 4:05 p.m.
Itch eyed
OAKLAND (AP> -A
report on health prob·
lems at lbe $9.2 million
High School found that an
unkno wn ''airborn e
pollutant" caused heallb
problem s. in c lud)ng
sneezing, i ncr eased
thirst , d luln ess and
itchlng~yes.
Orange CoHl DAILY PILOT/Wtdnetday. May 13, 1981
..............
DAIRY PRODUCTS -Two·week-0ld But·
ter m ilk s its atop its nannie goat m other,
Yogurt. Yogurt, owned by Joan Neufeld of
Madera, gave birth recently to four kids.
which farmer s consider unusua l.
Super-80 jet arriving
Air Cal plans premier departure of 'quiet' aircraft
from John Wayne Airport May 22 in practice flight
By GLENN SCO'IT
Of -Dally .......... Folks who live under the
takeoff pattern at J ohn Wayne
Airport may want to mark their
calendars for 3:30 p.m. on Fri·
day. May 22.
That's when Air Cal's first
new and supposedly quieter
DC-9-80 passenger jet will make
its premier departur~ from the
airport.
The flight will be one of 10
practice runs authorized from
May 19 to the end of the month
at the Orange County airport.
The county Board or Supervisors
approved the fli ghts Tuesday.
AirCal offi cials said the Super·
80 jet will arrive on its maiden
practice run in Orange County
at 2 p.m. on May 22.
It won't be the first time one of
the so-called quieter jets has vis
ited the airport. County offi cials
were given a demonst ration or
one of the new models last year.
The arrival of the jet -the
first of four AirCal is scheduled
to buy this year -will mark a
t urning point in a irpo rt ac-
tivities, however.
Use of quieter jets is the cor·
ners tone or an airport expansion
master plan approved by the
super visors in February. The
plan increases the number of
daily commer c ial jet flights
from 4J to 55 while targeting a
reduction in total jet noise .
After the ini tial practice run.
the new Jet is scheduled to ar-
rive again at 7 p.m . Sunday,
May 24. and take off at 9:30 a.m .
Monday, May 25. It returns the
same day at 6 p.m., departs at 7
a m Tuesday, May 26, and re·
turns at 5 p.m.
The jet is planned to begin
carrying passengers on June 11
if t he supervisors approve its
use. as expected.
Panel OKs oil drilling c urb
Bill gives California power to block offshore le ases
SACRAMENTO <AP > An ef·
fort to give California the power
to block federal oil lease sales
off its coast has been approved by
a Senate committee, despite op-
posit ion from oil interests and
fears the attempt could lead to a
bitter court fight with the federal
government.
The bill would Impose a four·
year moratorium on offshore
drilling unless oil companies
meet broad state controls .
To a void the moratorium. oil
companies would have to con-
vince the state Coastal Com·
mission that "failing to al low
offs hore development would
have a greater adverse impact
on coastal zone resources than
allowing development."
The measure, approved 6·1 by
the Natural Resour ces a nd
WildliCe Committee, now goes lo
the Senate Finance Committee.
T he meas ure would give the
commission the right to limit
dri lling a ny whe r e within
the 200·mile offs hore coastal
limit.
Despite heavy support from
environmental groups includ-
ing t he All iance fo r Coastal
Management, the Sierra Club
and the Oceanic Society Sen
Barry Keene said his measure
"was not an en vironme nta l
crusade."
G em
Ta l k
Hy./(' HUM /'lfHll:'S
("Nt1fwr/ (;,,m11lt1Nl~I A(;,<;
LADY DIANA
get• her ring
When the future King of
England gels engaged, it is cer·
tainly a special occasion, so
when he gives his lady an
engagement ring, you can bet
that it wiU not be an ordinary
ring. Prince Charles has given
Lady Diana Spencer a very
special ring. ll is an oval sap-
phi r e s urro unde d by 14
diamonds. All of this is set In
s himmering while gold. If
British royal tradition has been
followed -and there's no re·
ason to believe lt hasn't been -
the gold I~ from a nugget mined
In Wales. A discreet silence is
a lways m aintained b y the
j eweler who furnlabea royal
jewels, but a London newspaper
lnsiat.s that Lady Diana '1 nn1
was purchased from a well·
. known Lonclon shop for about
'63,000. That, of course, le a bit
more than most folk• pay for an
e n1a1e ment r ln8. but royal
e n1age ment1 don 't happen
every day. The royal family hu
m aintained Ile tradition o
cboo1ln1 beautiful, taateful
jewelry pltta.
• r ••
Keene, D-Mendocino, said his
plan would still permit new oil
d rilling "in high-yield. low-ris k
areas," but would enforce the
mo ra torium in "h igh-risk "
zones where petroleum reserves
are in doubt.
In effect, he added, his pro·
posal seeks to ··serve as a policy
statement" and a "signal to the
fe deral gover n m e n t that
California intends to ride herd
over oil drilling off its coast."
But John Berwald of Chevron
said Keene's measure would sli·
fie oil exploration needed to off.
set "t he arbitr a r y a nd
capricious actions of OPEC ... as
domestic oil reser ves decline
"a bout 5 percent per year ."
Berwald was joined in his OP·
position by Alfred J . Shults. a
spokesman for 10 major <>14 com·
panies. inc lud ing Chevron,
Atlantic Richfield and Texaco.
A re presentative o f t he
California Chambe r of Com·
m er ce, opponents of the bi ll ,
said offshore drilling platforms
are "not aesthetically that un-
pleasing they a r e not
noticed by 99 percent of the
public."
Federal offi cials have target·
ed five California basins for oil
exploration Bodega Bay,
Point Arena, Eel, Santa Cruz
and Santa Maria. Bidding has
a lready begun on t he Santa
Maria tract. while a final de·
cision on the other four zones 1s
e xpect ed to be m a de next
m onth.
Fil01 SVC class topic
Film as an art form will be the
topic of a class at Saddleback
Coll ege in Mission Viejo begin·
ning May 26.
s u c h as .. Bananas," "Ann(e
Ha l l ," "Al ie n." "You ng
Frankenstein" and classics such
as "The Gold Rush," "Citizer.
Ka ne" and "Yankee Doodle
Dandy "
T he t hree·unit class meets
from 6 to 10 p.m . Tuesdays
a nd Thurs days fnd will be
taught by -associa'te professor
Robert Cohen.
Registr ation begi ns to ·
day For more information call
831·4788 The class will evaluate films
e
Let America's top
jewelry designers show you
how to give your heart mvay.
1'
,, ,,
(~
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The American Gem SOC/ety
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Presented by De Beers
M ay 23rd to May 29th
J. C.JJ.ump~rie6 Jewefe rd
MfM!JfH AMEHI{ AN GEM SOCIETY
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-------
.A4 H/F Orange Co .. t DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981
27th victim added
to Atlanta murders
ATLANTA (AP> The case ol William Barrett, a 11-year-old
01ack youth whose bod y was
'found in a wooded area east or
Atlanta, will be added to the list
or 26 other s layings being In·
vestigated by a special Atlanta
police task force, a uthorities
said today.
DeKalb County Publlc Sarety
D1rector Dick Hand, in whose
jurisdiction the body was found
Tuesday, macle the announce·
menl at a morning news con·
ference.
Mayor says Reagan
'rouse of <kf em '
FAYETTE. Miss <APJ
Mayor Charles Evers, who gov
erned this predominantly black
town for 12 years, blames his r e
election defeat on his s upport of
Ronald Reagan during the 1980
presidential race
·'I believe m y support for
President Reagan was my big·
iest blow." Evers said Tuesday
wrnrnarn
after conceding the Democratic
m unicipal primary race to
Fayette lawyer Kennie Mid·
dleton.
Refi1wry bunu
LAKE CHARLES, La. t AP> -
A "major" explosion and fire
erupted in an oil refinery at
dawn today, shooting flames in-
to the sky before the bl ate was.
controlled two hours later, of·
ficials said. No injuries were re·
ported at the Cities Service
Corp refinery near the Gulf
Coas t 1n so uthwestern
Louisiana
Prof its upheld
WASHINGTON (AP> The
House Armed Services Commit·
tee has given final passaf'e to a
$1 35.6 billion military
authorization bill after turning
ai.ide by a lie vote an effort to
repeal a law that limits profits
by shipbuilders and aircraft
manufacturers
Ripper's defense:
'divine missio~'
The Social Security Reform Packag e
l ow Earner •R• ·f1111 111 A f f ,;J
SS80.70
198 4!• 198 7 1982 . 198 /
Maximum Earner ------------
S755.60
S469.60
1982•1987 1qa2 • 19e1
I '11 .. ,f •I " I 'I. 11 I 111 .. 111.111 111.111 -
•
-~·1,.....
LONDON (A P > The con
fessed kill•r of 13 women in the
Yorkshire Ripper case insists he
was sane and that his five·year
string of slayings was a "divme
mission."
Again and again. prosecutor
Sir Michael llavers tried Tues·
day and failed to shake defen·
dant Peter Sutcliffe from his
claim that "the voice or God"
ordered him to kill prostitutes
even though he had no taste for
murder o r hatred for street
walkers
Market rebow uls
PARlS IAPJ French stock
prices, which col I a osed a ft er
I
Socialist Francois M·1tterrand's
presidential election victory, re·
bounded in heavy trading today.
<Jp parently in reaction to
moderate comments by one of
his econom1<· advisers
Soviets toorned
BRUSSELS. Belgium <AP>
Defense Secretary Caspar W.
Weinberger, armed with re
n<.•wed European pledges to in·
crease defens e spe nding ,
warned the Soviet Union today
tha t .. those days are over,"
when the Kremlin could take
military action without any
rt•s ponses from the Wes t.
FOR SU
REFORM PROGRAM Graphs depict comparison of what
low, average and maximum wage earner would receive in
Social Security benefits if they retired at 62 or 65. President
Reagan is calling for a 10 percent cut in Social Security
benefits. estimated to save nearly $53 billion by 1986.
Attorne y murde r e d
LA JOLLA, !APJ An at·
torney was s hot to death at the
doorway of his $500,000 home,
apparently by someone with
whom he had business. police
say
Richard B. Crake, 56, died
Tuesday night of a s ingle bullet
wound in the head,
The assailant drove off in a
late-model s ports car with a
woman companion He had been
to Crake's front door saying
something about insurance
papers. the lawyer's 20·year-old
daughter told police
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--------------------
Reagan budget plan
gets Senate OK
WASHJNGTON (AP) -Presl·
dent Reagan, exulting in
"bipartisan cooperation and
representative democracy at its
best," has another victory for
his economic program and a
prediction that the Senate will
live up to its $700.8 billion budget
<!ell Ing in perhaps tougher
skirmishes to follow .
W ilh little s uspense, the
Senate swept aside virtually all
opposition and voted 78-20 Tues·
day night for a spen<ling plan
which embr aces multibillion
dollar cuts sought by Reagan
and makes room in the budget
for his proposals for a<!celerated
defense spending and a three·
year, 3 percent tax cul
The vole came less than a
week after the Democr at·
dominated House handed
Reagan an almost· identical
package of 1982 budget
guidelines.
Twenty ·cigh t Senate
Democrats and a ll but two
Republicans Lowell Weicker
of Connecticut and Gordon
Humphrey of New Hamprh1e -
voted with the president .
Reagan said he a1reed with
Sen Pete Domenlci, R·N.M ..
chairman of the Senate Budget
Committee, that "in the put, we
have been spending the bless·
rngs of America while forgettint
where the blessings came
from."
The Senate budget plan for fis.
cal 1982, starting Oct. 1, would
cost $12 billion more than the
House version, mostly technical
d1Herences to be resolved by
negotiators for the two cham·
bers. That work, beginning lo·
day. could be finished this week.
The next major battlefields
will be in individual con·
gressional committees whi<!h
must decide over the next month
where and how to cut federal
programs lo fill out the budge\
outlines. The Senate mandated
$36.9 billion in cuts. the House
$36 6 billion, and it is in making
those r eductions that som e
members of Congress may try to
undo parts of the Reagan plan.
Hundreds mourn
dead IRA striker
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
CAP > Hundreds of mourners
lined the street s of Roman
Catholic districts or west Belfast
today lo watch the body of a
second IRA hunger striker, Fran·
cis Hughes, begin a las t journey
home
Young Catholics had bar·
ricaded streets, set buildings on
fire and hurled gasoline bombs at
British soldiers in angry over·
night rioting sparked by his death
Tuesday.
Hughes, 25. once the most
wanted Irish Republican Army
gunman in Briti s h ruled
Northern Ireland. had gone 59
days without food in Maze Prison
in a campaign to force the British
government to reverse its policy
of treating convicted I RA guer·
rill as as common criminals.
He was expected to be buried
with full IRA military honors at
his home village of Bellaghy in
County Derry, 50 miles northwest
of Belfast.
His fellow hunger s triker. Bob·
by Sands, was given the same
'--
military style ceremony after his
death eight days ago
As they did when Sands died,
women in Catholic neighborhoods
blew whis tl es a n d banged
garbage can lids on the pavement
lo spread the news that Hughes
wa!> dead. Some Catholic women
took to the s treets with their
rosary beads to pray while
youths attacked security forces.
To the south in Dublin, capital
of the predominantly Catholic
Irish Republic, 2,000 angry dem-
ons trators marched on the
British Embassy. Police in riot
gear charged into the crowd with
batons, leaving some protesters
bleeding A heavy police guard
W<Jl> posted today around the em-
bassy
In Belfast , a Catholic man was
killed and two British soldiers
wounded in violent clashes.
A poh<'e s pokesman said
British troops returned izunfire m
the Catholic Divis Flats
neighborhood. killing Emmanual
Joseph McClarnon, a 20-year·old
Catholic
OK·
·'
I'. I
\,
I
a cc e e ea a ca a o o o o a a ¥ 6 6
Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981 H/F 41
~UillU~
Home raffle
halt ordered
SAN RAFAEL (AP) A cou·
pie has been told to return the
money for raffle tickets for a
$300,000 house because the plan
is illegal.
Marin County District Al·
torney Jerry Herman said he did
not plan legal action against
Michael and Arlene Coe if they
agreed to stop the raffle and re-
turn the money
The Coes agreed to halt the
raffle. noting that SlS0.000 1n
$100 raffle tickets had been sold
by Monda y m or ning , a
spokesman s aid The spokesman
said. however, they hoped sales
could resume
March backs I RA
SAN fo'RANCI SCO ! AP l
Some 300 c hantin g dem -
onstrators marc hed o uts ide
the home of the British consul in
San Francisco in s upport of Irish
Republica n Army hunge r
strikers Bobby Sands and Fran-
cis Hughes.
Republicans are calling for an
investigation of the stale
Department of Education, say-
ing there are "se rious ques-
tions" about the use of funds.
But state schools Superinten·
dent Wil son Riles. a Democrat
s eeking a fourth term in his non-
partisan office. says the group's
demand is based on a "loose col·
lection of old, outdated issues"
and is part of a campaign to un.
seat him
Mining company
tells gol.d find
SAN FRANCISCO <API The
price of Homestake Mining Co
s tock soared more than S4 a
s hare following reports the com-
pany had discovered one of the
nation's largest gold reserves
north of San Francisco.
Hospital due
license loss?
LOS ANGELES <AP> The
operating li cense of a Perris
hospital where 25 elderly pa-
tients mysteriously died in a s1x-
week period will be s uspended. a
state official says.
Deputy Attorney Genera l
James Lahana said a decision
was made late Tuesday to
suspend the license of lhe Com-
munity Hospital of the Valleys
because it failed to protect its
patients, the Los AnReles Times
reported in today's editions.
Lahana s aid the documents
s uspending the license for the
hospital would be deli vered lo·
day . He described the forced
closure as "very unusual," say
ing he knew of only two other
acute care hospitals that had
been closed by the state since
1977 .
Unless a court order is issued
to block the temporary license
suspension. the handful of pa-
tients remaining at the 36·bed
facility will be transferred im·
mediately. A hearing on whether
the facility should remain closed
must be held wi thin 30 days.
would be available for comment
until later today
One former staff member told
another newspaper Tuesday that
hos pital orficials Ignored her
pleas for a coro!ler 's investi.ga-
tion in early Apnl after the fi rst
eight deaths occurred in lhe in·
tensive care ward.
Burnett libel
award· cut
to $800,000
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Carol
Burnell. who said she would
have settled for .. a dollar plus
carfare .. 1n her libel suit against
the National Enquirer, cheerful-
ly agreed when a Judge cut her
Jury award in half to $800,000.
But a National Enquirer
lawyer. calling the award ··still
excessive:· vowed Tuesday to
appeal to higher courts a pro·
l'ess that could delay payment
fo r at least a year.
Stale sclwo/,s
probe soughl
Homestake President Harry
M. Conger told s hareholders
Tues day that the company
believes there are reserves of
more than 3.2 million ounces of
gold at t he co mpan y's
McLaughlin Project in a remote
section of Napa County. The lode
had previously been estimated
to contain l million oun ces.
·~·.,.,.....
The documents suspending the
license accuse the hospital's
board of directors of failing to
act when staff members began
ex pressing concern about the
numbe r of death s. t he
newspaper said.
M 1ss Burnett has said she will
give her award to charily.
SACRAMENTO <AP I A
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714 675-7522
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l714l 975-1128 :;E:~a:=~
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"' '. Sef'J'ce pubt\C
KDCE
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'Kennedy Center
Tonight' Pays
Tribute To
Jazz Great
Duke Ellington
Program airs Wed., 5-13
Ce l ebrated jazz artist s Sarah
Vaughn, M ax Roach, Biiiy Taylor
and Joe Williams make a rare con·
cert appearance together in an affec-
tionate tribute to the late orchestra
leader and composer Duke Ellington
on "A Salute to Duke." The "Ken-
nedy Center Tonight" performance
airs Wednesday, M ay 13 at 9 p.m. on
KOCE, Channel 50.
Duke Ellington died In 197-' at the age
of 75. He was born Robert Kennedy
E llington, but received the nickname
''Duke" early In life for his innately
elegant style. Highlighted in the
special program are personal re·
mlnlscences about Duke by Ella
Fitzgerald and Ellington family
members. Also included Is a dance
perform~nce by Harold Nicholas of
the famed Nicholas Brothers and a
selection of Ellington's gospel music
performed by singer M cHenry
Boatwright. .
"Kennedy Center Tonight" is pro-
duced by WQED.L Pittsburgh, WETA,
Washington, D.l.. and the Kennedy
Center w ith a grant from the Shell
Companies Foundation. Executive
producer: Dale Bell.
.-. . .
ROPE TRICK Muhammad Ali shows Assembly Speaker
Willie Brown a rope trick while Gov. Edmund G. Brown
Jr. and Assemblywoman Maxine Waters watch in fore-
ground. They were gathered al a breakfast in Sacramen-
to honoring Ms. Waters.
.. l 'm very satisfi ed with the
Judge's decision," the comedian
said in a statement issued by her
publicist "I hope the National
E nquirer has been taught a
lesson "
You'd be surpri sed how easy it is to ins ta I I most
gas·saving devices. And now it's a lot eas ier on
yo ur budget, too. ·
Get a 40°A State income tax credit.
A new State law lets you take 40ao of the cost
of man y Gas Savers as a State income tax credit.
Up to a maximum of $1500. (Less any Federal
tax credit.)
Many easy-to·in stall Gas Savers qualify. Like solar
pool covers. Water heater blankets. Warm ·air duct
insulation.
.. .
An official who was reached
by telephone at the hos pital said
no one from the administration
is now
• 1ng.
Weatherstripping. Caulking materials.
And hot water-saver showerhead s.
You'll find all these Gas Savers can reall y help
keep your gas bills down.
And you'll probably find installing them a lot
less taxing than you think. Both physica lly and
financially.
A Lets work together
'"'gs to save energy. g C~N• .. ___ _.. SOUTHERN (Allf~NIA GAS COMPANY
' (,
~
-----------. .,_._. .
OnnglCtollt DAILY PtLOT/W~~ay, May 13, 1981
Mail baUoting miglit
spur laggard voters
Last month in San Diego, a
record 60.8 percent of voters cast
ballots in a special election, de-
f eating a proposal to build a $224
million downtown convention
center. The previous record
turnout for a special election bas
been 55.8 percent in 1971.
The dilf erence th ls time was
that all voting was done by mail.
More than 430,000 ballots were
mailed to San Diego voters and
261,433 were returned by the
deadline. San Diego officials
credit the mail balloting for the
turnout.
The question of conducting
elections by mail as an antidote
to steadily declining voter
turnouts has been much in the
news lately. And supporters also
believe it could substantially re-
duce the cost of staffing and
servicing polling stations.
In a recent discussion among
Orange County political and gov-
ernment leaders, the response
was mixed. Some said they would
be ready to try mail balloting,
especially in special elections
that traditionally attract fewer
voters. Others were concerned
about such problems as possible
loss of ballots in the mail and of
fraudulent voting by persons not
entitled to receive ballots.
San Diego officials said a
comparison of sl1naturea on
ballota with those on file with the
Registrar of Voters waa used to
prevent fraud ln their election.
In recent testimony oa elec-
t lo n practices , California
Secretary of State March Fona
Eu said she personally always
votes by mail with an absentee
ballot since she's never certain
where she will have to be on elec-
tion ~y. And voting by mail, she
pointed out would be one way to
overcome the dilemma of the last
presidential election in which
thousands of voters, dismayed to
bear the election result before
the West Coast polls had closed,
simply decided not to vote.
Al the moment, Congress is
considering a handful of bills de-
signed to correct that problem by
staggering voting hours in dif.
f erent time zones.
In recent presidential elec-
tions, the voter turnout bas
declined steadily, IOinC from 64
percent in liieo to only 53.9 per-
cent last year. This is a far cry from the re-
cent San Diego response. U the
goal is to encourage citizens to
participate in the election pro-
cess, the idea of voling by mail
would seem to warrant some
serious study.
Collecting damages
In these times of
astronomical damage judgments
in personal injury and or
wrongful death cases, it is not at
all unusual for plaintiffs to re-
ceive dollar awards well up in the
hundreds of thousands.
Customarily, the judgment is
paid out in one Jump sum by an
insurance company. State Seo.
Barry Keene has introduced a
bill that would permit courts to
spread damage payments in ex-
cess of $100,000 over a number of
years instead of requiring a
single payment.
Clearly, this would be advan-
tageous for the insurance com-
panies. But Keene believes it also
wquld provide greater security
for the injured by guaranteeing
steady payments throughout a
lifetime, or at least for a substan-
tial period.
At present. extended pay-
ments ar e allowed only in
medical malpractice cases. But
that law recently was declared
unconstitutional because it
singled out a specific type of
damage case. Keene says the
practice would be permitted if it
applied to all cases.
Thal might be so. And there
is something to be said for
guaranteeing an injury victim, or
the heirs of a wrongful death vic-
tim, a reliable, long-term in-
come. On the other hand, there
might well be many who believe
they should have the right to dis-
pose of the proceeds of any
damage judgment as they see fit.
Certainly, medical and legal
bills resulting from an accident
can rarely be settled on the in-
stallment plan.
Any option given the courts
in assigning damage payments
should take into consideration
such obligations as well as the
wishes of the damaged party.
What's in the bottle?
After an endless series of
hearings, studies and reports, the
U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
and Firearms has decided to
abandon the idea of requiring a
full listing of ingredients on wine
bottles.
This will be dandy news for
the wine producers who tend to
pride themselves on the elegance
of their labels. Imagine a fine
vintage wine with a label that
looks like something that belongs
on a ketchup bottle.
Supporting the vintners in
protesting the idea of ingredient
labeling, California Sen. S.l.
Hayakawa said flatly, "Wine is
n~t made from a haphazard con-
•
coction of ingredients, it is the re-
sult of a natural process ... every
material which goes into wine is
natural to the product.''
Thal, of course is the way it
should be. But the next question
might be, what is wine? It's got
to be hard to believe that the con-
tents of some of the low-cost
''pop'' wines are 100 percent
natural.
Maybe the next step for the
BATF would be to determine
which drinkables are really en-
titled to exemption from ingre-
dient labeling because they are
indeed true wines. As for the
rest, a list of ingredients might
be enlightening.
Opinions expressed In the spece •bove are U'IOM of the Dally Piiot. Other views ex-
pressed on this~ are those of their authors and artists. Reeder comment Is Invit-
ed. Address The Dally Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa MeMI, CA 92626. PhOn• (714)
642-4321.
L.M. Boyd/Necktie market
Recall that story of yesteryear about
two shoe salesmen sent to a 1mall
African nation to open up marteta.
One wired back, "It's bo~le11 .
Nobody here wean aboea." Tbeotber
wired back, "Opportunity unlimited.
Nobody here wears aboea yet."
Something similar may be bappenlq
In China. The Communlltl bannecl
neckties years aao. Now tbattbeeoun-
try la acceptlna wettem notiool, tbey
ma' be salable there. Okay, iOAA take
ties, I'll take blue Jeana, and meet you
in Shan1hal.
In London for • abort Ume aft.er
World War U, you could mall youneJI
by postal .ervf ce from one part of the
city to another. And inupeaalvdy.
Cost the equivalent of 1lll ceta a milt.
ORANGE COAST
Daily Pilat
You could de1i1nate yourself a living
packa&e, and pay a postman.to accom-
pany you rrom your hotel, bua 1top or
wherever to anyplace you wanted to
10. It wu aet up for people who didn't
know their way around town, I 1atber.
But toofewuaed it, 101t was stopped.
Q. Who wu the la9t U.S. Prealdeot,
before Pntldent Jimmy Carter, who
failed to 1et UM opportunity to appoint
a Supreme Courtju.aUce?
A. President Andrew Jolu'llon more
than a untury •10.
0 . le tbere anyplace on earth where
t..bt natlYet never \&led bowl and ar-
rows?
A. Australia. Tbe aboristna 1tuck
with t.belr 1pean.
Thomas P. M•teY
Publllhef'
Thomas K•vll
Editor
B•rMl'a KreHtldt
Edltorl•I p_. Edltw
u co 0 a a SS
-====--
Haig threat spurs security
WASHINGTON -A few weeks ago,
five activists opposed to the adminlstra-
tion 's policy in El Salvador managed to
make their way onto the seventh noor of
the Stale Department, where the top
brass have their offices
While two of the Intruders diverted
the guard on duty, the other three en-
tered Secretary of Stale Alexander
Haig's s uite, s houte d s logans and
dumped blood and ashes on the plush
furnishings.
Haig was in his suite at the time. but
security officers subdued the protesters
without much trouble. The incident.
howe ver. has quickened the depart-
ment's moves to tighten security at
home and a broad in the wake of the at-
tacks on U.S. embassies in recent years
and the assassination attempt on Presi-
dent Reagan in March.
HAIG'S HIGH PROFILE and
hardline policies make him a prime
target for terrorists, security officials
fear . They note that he narrowly
escaped an assassination attempt in
Belgium on June 25, 1979, four days
before he left his post as NATO com·
mander .
Special measures are being taken to
m ake Haig's home in nearby Bethesda.
Md., s afe from unexpected visitors. Of-
ficials did not want to set a dollar figure
on the cost of these security arrange-
ments for fear of Upping off potential in-
truders to the exact nature or the safety
devices. But sources told my associate
Lucette Lagnado that only about $12.600
worth or equipment will be permanently
attached to the house: the rest can be
r emoved and used again when Haig
leaves office.
Possibly to reassure Haig's neighbors
in the pos h s uburb, officials did disclose
Q
-J1-c1-11-1-11-sa-1 -~
that attack dogs are not part or the
security system . Instead, sophisticated
"motion detector " devices will spot
anyone approaching the large house
and its tree-shaded yard.
HAIG'S LIMOUSINE is also being
fitted out with security equipment. in-
cluding a special tracking device that
will enable authorities to locate the
vehicle in case it is stolen.
Internal security measures are also
being tightened up at Foggy Bottom
particularly concerning access to the
seventh floor. "It's a tricky business,''
one State Department official ex·
plained. "There are all sorts of visitors
busloads of tourists, schoolkids. It
makes it very dirricult "
Overseas, plans cire proceedtng both
to rnake our embassies more secure and
to prevent sensitive documents from
falling into the wrong hands in case an
embassy is overrun The Iranian mill
tants were able to seize our Tehran em-
bassy before security ofhcers could
dei.troy some highly sensitive papers.
Eventually, the State Department
hopes to solve this perennial problem by
simply elim1nat1ng the presence or
sens1t1ve documt-nts in our embassies
The plan \lolould in volve an electronic
s torage and retrieval system 1n
Washington. Overseas perl>onnel would
plug into the computer to store sensitive
information and call ll up later as
needed All trans missions would be in
code, JUSt as messages sent by cable
are now
OFFICIALS ESTIMATE that the data
bank will take about five years to install
in 2~0 US. missions worldwide
Meanwhile, top priority is being given
to embassies in countries on the State
Department's secret list of "severe
security problems These countries re·
portedly include El Salvador. Lebanon.
Pakistan and Afghanistan
Meanwhile. on a personal level
foreign service employees are being
given instruction on the best way to
behave and survive in the event or
a terrorist attack on their overseas
post
Names soon \ose original meanings
Our newest nuclear submarine was
just launched in Groton, Conn., after be·
ing christened "Corpus Christi."
There were quite a few people who
complained about the name. They said
that "Corpus Christi,'' meaning "the
body of Christ." was not an appropriate
name for a warship designed to kilJ peo-
ple.
The people who decided to name the
s hip "Corpus Christi" didn't have
Christ in mind, of course. They thought
they were naming the ship in honor of
the city in Texas, and Christ never en-
tered lnto their thinking. Not many peo-
ple think of Christ when they think of a
Texa s city.
THAT'S THE WAY it Is with names.
After a while they assume a character
of their own and where the name came
from doesn't have any effect on bow we
think of it. Hardly anyone thinks of lbe
apostle Saint James when they talk
about San Diego even though the city
was named after him. Nor are we re-
minded of angels when we talk or Los
Angeles.
Many religious names would be a
heavy burden to carry if they were con-
sidered literally all the lime, but stu-
dents at Catholic schools don't 1lve a
second thought to names like "Im-
maculate Cooceptlon High School'' or
''Sac red Heart Academy." Arter a
while, It's just a name like any other.
The school's character gtves the name a
new meaning of its own. When Notre
Dame suppQrters are exhorting their
team to kill, "Our Lady" is furthest
from their thoughts.
I have no objection to having the
nuclear sub named the "Corpus
Christi." Naming anything is diffi cult.
,~,,
-AND-Y-RDD-Nf-Y -§t
and even when two people name their
baby. one of them often objects to the
name
THERE ARE A lot or names I object
to. It doesn't seem to me that teams in
professional spor ts have been very in·
ventive. There are too many Tigers,
Bears, Giants, Pirates and Cardinals . I
happen to be a New York Giants foot·
ball fan Cno one's perfect) and I dislike'·
all the confusion on the sports page of
my paper about whether they're talking
about the baseball team from San Fran·
cisco or football team from New York.
College team nicknames a re even less
original than professional teams. ¥ost
of them are named after some animal
they apparently like to associate with
the character of their team. There are
dozens of Bears, Wildcats. Tigers, Bob-
cats and Bruins. How a name like
"bruin" ever got popular, I don't know.
It's just another name for a brown bear
a nd no one ever uses it as anything but
the name or a team
THE AUTOMOBILE makers were
very big on animals for years but they
seem to be phasing out animal names
no w th at they 're making fewer
elephants. There's a trend toward just a
letter from the alphabet. Chrysler 's "K-
ear .. seems to have caught on as a
name -if not as a car -and General
Motors is banking some of its future on
the upcoming "J -Car ." I prefer the let·
ters to the Cougars and the Pintos. I
s uspect they've c hanged because
they've run out of appropriate animal
names for cars. You just wouldn't catl a
car a "Bear," a "Razorback" or even a
.. Leopard."
It seems stran ge that "Corpus
Christi" is an acceptable name for a
submarine for most of us. As meaning-
less as names and nicknames often are.
we seem to have some clear though un-
spoken idea about what names are ap-
propriate for what categories or things ,
We name teams "Giants" but we
wouldn't call a bank "The Giant
American Home Savings Bank." On the
other hand, the word "First" appears in
the names of hundreds of banks and
hundreds of churches. That's strange.
And while there is a vast difference
between b r ea kfas t ce r eals and
automobiles, Kellogg's was successful
with a brand called "Special K" long
before Chrysler applied the letter to a
car.
HUJnan rights words revealed an old Reagan
Our popular President let his heart
aet In the way of his poli\ics and ended
up wlth his fool in his mouth. I know the
feeUn1, 1 have often had to con1u1t an
oral podiatrist myself.
It happened during an emotional
White Houae luncheon for the Presi-
dent 'a Commission on the Holocaust to
1111111111
honor aurvlvon ol the anu.Jewfsb Nali
horror ot World War D. Mr. llea1an'1
responae to the "tnemortea of 11.1 mUUoo
Jews murdered ln Nasi conceatratlon
campt wu decent, human and human..
It l1 a view we can •II be proud of
wben be closed h111~b with:
''TREODOaB RQolevelt uld that the
Pl"eaidenc)' wu a bull1 pulpit. WeU, J,
for one lntend that lbil bu.Uy pulp.It ahall
be u1ed on ev.,., occ11ton, where It ll
approprtat., to paint a tinier ot 1bam•
at even tM ..,u.,.., ol sranw, and c.t'·
talnl)' wherever it takes pllc. la lbe
•oTld, the act ol violence or terrortam,
and that eYtn •l the nefotlatlnt \able,
never shall It be forgotten•for a moment
that wherever it is taking place in the
world, the persecution of people, for
whatever reason -persecution of peo-
ple fo~their religious belief -lhal is a
matter to be on that negotiating table or
the United States does not belong at that
table."
That statement set off applause in his
audience and panic in his staff who
rushed around trying to tone down the
President's views so It didn't sound as If
the American government really cared
that much about human ri1hts ln the
world. God forbid, that we should be
perceived as a people who believed in
our own ConalituUon or such com pone
as human rights.
APPARENTLY, a clos_er reading of
the mood of Mr. Reagan's staff la re-
vealed by the peralatent attempt to ap-
point the former legal eaalt for the
Liberty Lobby to a blah ottice in the
Department of Human and Health
Services. Even after the nomlnallon
was withdrawn ln the face of incredible
fUp-fiope by the nominee -who flnt
aald he only did It ror money <so do
proaUtut.ea) or didn'l know what was IC>'"
inl on (neither doe.a lbe piano player ln
a brothel> or dJd know what wu IOinf
on, but cUdn•t approve of It (that's what
they Hid at.Lhe Nuremb11r1 lrlala> -
t
Reagan staffers continued to defend the
choice.
The Liberty Lobby is, you may re-
call, one of those ultra-right win&
groups of nuts that claims the Nazis
never kllled six million or, for that mat·
ter, any Jews. Thal the whole thing is a
.hoax and those were. camps invented by
the Jewish-controlled American news
media. Whew!
President Reagan used to be a liberal
before he went wrong aod every once ln
a wbUe a bubble of decency still 1ur
faces.
CllllY Ill
About Gov. Brown'• "Cutttna Comen
Dept." Now Supplemental SeeurU,y ln·
come recipient.a are not allowed to set
the dOC!tor unless the7 are very Ill. What
about the tbeck-up to prevent aertoua
lllneu? 8.E.
·-,·~-.----•....-n••----:i.::c·-.................. ,, ........ ...
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--..... ... ~-··----· ......... ~...----------. -____ ....,..._, __ ,,. --------......-...-..._....---·-------------.....-..,--..-.------------•• i ,,,
HUITlllHI lllCI I f 1111111 lllllY
WEDNESDAY,
MAY 13, 1981
MOVIES
TELEVISION
COMICS
89
810
811
Budget politics threaten
U.S. strategic oil reserve
-or does it? 83
0
0
Bolsa Chic& Dlarsh developlllent due?'
State Sen. Paul Carpenter,
D-Cypress, has agreed to amend
one or his bills to allow
development in the Bolsa Ch!ca
lowlands near Huntington
Beach, a Carpenter spokesman
said Tuesday.
The proposed amendment,
which hasn't been oHicially
introduced, would ask the state
Legislature to endorse a 1973
land title agreement be~ween
stal e officia ls and Signal
Landmark Inc., according W>
Sianal attorney John Knox.
In 1973, Signal's ownership of
most or the 1,600-acre Bolsa
OC chase
ends • I D
arrest
A chase that began in
Huntington Beach when a police
officer spotted a stolen truck
ended about 15 minutes later al
2:46 p.m. Tuesday in Costa Mesa
with the arrest of a theft
suspect.
Huntington Beach police said
Michael Lee S m ith, 26, of
Huntington Beach is being held
in their jail in lieu of $25,000 bail
after a Costa Mesa officer
cornered him in the northern
part of his community.
Smith, they said, was wanted
on an Orange County Sheriff's
warrant charging theft when he
was spotted in Huntington Beach
at Magnolia Avenue and
Garfield Str eet in a stolen,
four-wheel-drive pickup truck.
The Huntington Beach officer
radioed for help as the chase
continued through city streets
and on to the southbound San
Diego Fr~eway.
An Anaheim Police
Department helicopter. being
flown to John Wayne Airport
near Costa Mesa, spotted the
fleeing truck and radioed
location information to orricers
pursulne on t.he ground.
Costa Meaa patrolman Bill
Redmond cornered Smith at
gunpoint behind a home at 3051
Trinity Drive after the suspect
leaped from his truck at a
deadend and took o(( on foot.
Huntington Beach officers
said Smith is being held for
suspicion of auto theft and on the
Orange County theft warrant.
GWC slat es
Commnnity
Festival '8 1
Free family entertainment
with a western flavor will be of-
fered during Community
Festival '81, scheduled Saturday
at Golden West College in Hunt-
ington Beach.
M<We than 80 West County
service organizations will taJce
part in the festival, to be held
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the col-
lege's main quad area.
Twenty performing groups
will provide entertainment
throughout the day . The
festivities also will include
games, contests, food booths, ex·
hibits, demonstrations and dis-
plays.
According to the event's steer-
ing committee, this year's
festival will be the largest in its
12-year history.
Additional activities for
younasters will be oCCered, in-
cluding pony rides and a story
hour. A children's theater
. ensemble from Marina High
School will perform in the Patio
Theater, and two performances
by Paul the Magician are slated.
Chica was recoinized bv state officials. In return, the state got
title to 300 acres of wetlands
along Pacific Coast Highway.
The state, according to the
agreement, gets another 230
acres of marsh if it builds a boat
marina and navigable ocean
channel by 1987.
However, that agreement has
been clouded by the California
Coastal Commission, which
traditionally h as prevented
development in the coastal
wetlands.
Signal representative Wayne
Clark said if the Luislature
endorses the 1973 agreement,
the marsh development issue
could be taken out of the hands
of the Coastal Commission.
"Then they wouldn't have a
vote on it," Clark said.
Coastal Commission stair
officials have recommended
against development in the
1,200-acre Bolsa Chica lowland
because it tentatively has been
identified by the California
Department of Fish and Game
as a "degraded wetlands."
The Orange County Board of
Supervisors approved a
conceptual development plan in ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'--~~~
Deify -"'99..,.., ....,_
Pierre Ortiz snips for a record and charity. Patron ia Judy Perkin&
of Bellflower. Her son is an MS victim.
Record a hair away
H B stylist snips for Guinness Book
By PHIL SNEIDERMAN
Of U. Delly ~-S'9ft
A Huntington Beach hair
stylist is continuing hi s effort to
snip his way into the record
books and raise money for the
N atlonal Multiple Sclerosis
Society.
Pierre Ortiz. 42, said today
he's had only five hours of sleep
since beginning a hair-cutting
marathon at 11 a.m. Sunday.
"I'm doing fine," he says.
'"There are some valleys but I'm
getting along well. I'm taking
lots or vitamins and minerals.''
Ortiz plans to cut hair for 350
hours to earn a place ln the
Guinness Book of Wor ld
Records. '
He is permittl!d five minutes
of rest per hour. time which may
be accumulated for an ex.tended
cat nap.
Ortiz said the public's
response has been aood. t.houch
be still has trouble fhJdlnC
customers m the wee hours or
the morning. During such times,
he keeps cliooinr on doll heads.
Ortiz works at the New York,
New York Salon at Peter's
Landing. He's been coaxing
some late night customers into
the shop as they leave the Red
Onion, a nearby Huntington
Harbour night spot.
The Manhattan native says he
fasted to get in condition for the
marathon, and is now alternat-
ing fast periods with a semi-
Uguid diet.
H atr of the proceeds from
Ortiz' marathon will go to the
M ulliple Sclerosis Society.
Ortiz exj>ects to clip through
May 25 in order to break the ex-
isting hair-cutting record -342
hours and 58 minutes -set in
Dover , England, In 1979.
"I'm bound and determined "
he said, and joked that ''l'il
probably have to wear a strait.
jacket" before the marathon is
concluded
April that calls for preservation
of 600 acres of marsh, a boat
marina, navigable ocean
channel, and housing in the
Bolsa Chica.
That proposal, part or the
state-mandated Local Coastal Plan (LCP) La being ironed out
by cowity stafr members and
eventually will be sent to the
CalifomJa Coastal Commission
for certification.
"We 'r e against any
amendment that calls for
development in the Bois a
Chica ," said Eric Metz ,
wetlands coordinator for the
California Co&11tal Commission.
He said the amendment has
been seen "Clying around
Sacramento," although It hasn't
been introduced.
Carpenter 's SB 493 would
allow creation of '"special area
management plans" along the
coast, but wouldn't conflict with
the responsibilities or the
Coastal Commission. Metz
said. .
Knox . a former
assemblyman , said th e
proposed a m endment would
give the '"1973 agreement force
and errect." He said It could bt
Introduced Into the Assembly
next week.
Peter Green, president or the
~.m1gos de Bolsa Chica
environmental group, said .he'•
"disturbed that Signal is tryinl
to bypass the Coastal Act." ,
Carpenter couldn't be reach4
for comment, but a spokesm8'
confirmed. h e 'd agreed in
concept to the proposed
amendment.
The Bolsa Chica is south of Warner Avenue along the Inland
side of Pacific Coast"Highway.
Fee hearings set
Huntin gton Beach to sound out public
on attitudes toward activity charge~
By PATRICK KENNEDY
Of .. Delly" ........
Trustees of the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dis-
trict will seek public comment
on possible $25 fees next year for
athletes and drill team and
marching band members.
By unanimous board consent,
a series of public hearings in the
six comprehensive high schools
will be scheduled next week. The
board will reconsider the fees on May 26.
lf approved, district officials
say up to $170.000 could be
generated by the participation
fee next year.
However. district superinten-
dent Frank "Jake" Abbott rec-
ommended Tuesday that rev·
enue from the fees shouldn't be
spent until the courts determine
if such a fee is legal.
The school board considered
the fee following a Santa
Barbara Superior Court ruling
in April that such a fee in the
Santa Barbara School Distric:A,
didn't violate constitutional
guarantees of a free education.
However, the ruling is being
appealed by the state Board of
Education and Santa Barbara
parents.
District off icials anticipate
that the fees may be appealed to
the state Supreme Court. The
appeals p rocess could take
between nine months and 2'h
years, according to district
estimates.
Although the trus tees un-
animously approved the public
hearings on the proposed fee.
trustees Helen Dille and Zita
Wessa expressed reservations.
Board President Dille sug·
gested that all fee activities
must take place after regular
school hours so the constitu-
tional guarantee of a free and
equal education isn't com-
promised.
· • 1 would never go along with a
fee unless the activity is com-pletely separated trom the
school day," Mrs. Ditte said.
"During the school day, every.
one must have an equal and
~Mesa hitchhike r
held in robbery
A Huntington Beach man lost
his car -and bis pants -when a
hitchhiker he picked up in Costa
Mesa allegedly threatened him
with a knife, police reoorted.
New c olle ge
headquart ers
d esign eyed
Coast Community College Dis·
trict trustees will consider the de·
sign of a new headquarters com·
plex proposed for Coastline
Com mwiity College at their meet-
ing tonight.
Earlier this year the district
leased an 8.S-acre site at Warner
Avenue and Newland Street in
Fountain Valley for construction
of a central office complex for the
college, which currently occupies
leased space.
Design and construction costs
for the project are estimated at
$5.8 million.
The complex will not be used for
classes. Coastline will continue to
offer Instruction at numerous
locations throughout the district.
The trustees meet at 8 p.m. In
the district offices, 1370 Adams
Ave.,Costa Mesa.
A suspect in the incident, James
Patrick Donnelly, 23, of 372
Magnolia St., Costa Mesa, was ar-
rested early Monday after Irvine
police stopped the missing car
near the San Diego Freeway and
El Toro Road, police said.
Donnelly was booked into Hunt·
inglon Beach Jail on i>uspicion of
armed robbery and auto theft.
According to police, Ronald
Paul Schmich, 36, of Huntington
Beach. was driving home from
the Newport Beach restaurant
where he worked at 1 a.m. Mon-
day when he picked up Donnelly
at 19th Street and Placentia
Avenue in Costa Mesa.
The driver told police Donnelly
a s ked him to pull over a!
Brookhurst Street amt. BaMing
A venue in Huntington Beach,
then drew a hunting knife from his
boot, forced the driver to remove
his pants and ordered him-out of
the car.
When the suspect drove away in
the car, Schmich said be ran to a
nearby residence and called
police.
Police said a description of the
auto was broadcast, leading
Irvine police to stop the car In
their area40 minutes later.
free opponunity for education ...
Mrs. Wessa said there's '"no
way 1 can go with a fee at this
time." But she later supported
the public hearings to ··get S01lle
creative ideas."
Trustee Stephen Smith said he
believes most parents will sup-
port fees as a means of prevent-
ing further budget cuts in
athletic programs.
T he district cut nearly $300,000
from various sports programs
this year as part of an overall
$3.8 million budget reduction fpr
next year.
According to the fee proposal.
a $25 charge would be levied for
each sport or activity with a
maximum charge of $50 in the
event a student participates ln
more than one activity.
A family fee ceiling would be
set at S75 for those with more
than one student active in school programs.
The fee would be wai ved for
s tudents from low-income
families. Those students would
be given opportunity to work on
school campuses for several
hours as an alternative to the
fee.
Superintendent Abbott said ~
school districts in the state with
5,000 or more students are
charging such fees, but that f$5
districts are planning fees neXt
year because of the Santa
Barbara court case.
In Orange County. both the
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict and the Laguna Beach
Unified School District charge
students activity fees.
District officials say the maj9f
argument against the fee con-
cept is that it gives unequal ad·
vantage to school districts in
more affluent areas where the
parents can afford to pay for
their children to participate in
extra-curricular programs.
* * * N-M weighs
athletic
fee plan
High school athletes who ~
out for football, baseball and
othe r sports in the
Newport-Mesa School District
may be forced to put up money
for the privilege.
District trustees ordered
Superintendent John NicJU Tuesday night to study n
extracurricular fee system r
the district and come back th
r ecommendations for s uch a program .
The 70-piece Golden West
College Symphonic Band will
present a one-hour concert at 2
p.m . in front of the ShowmobUe
sta1e.
"The Great American Wild
W11t.e Show," a vaudeville re-
vue focualnt on 1arba1e and
other enviroomental t.auea, will
be presented at 10:20 a.m. and
1:20 p.m.
New park camping? Not till '99
Like many other Orange CoMt
area sc hool dlstricta,
Newport-Mesa has launched the
study because of a recent Santa
Barbara County Superior Court
decision that schools may
charge for alter -sc bop l
participation in aporta.
The district has cut some
sport funding, including
tra nsportation and uniform
purchases, and ls eyeing the fee
system as a method for t\&rt.Mr
reducing expendltures becaUH
of waninJ district income. An arta and crafts sale and an
uhlblt of police, fire and Red
Cro11 vehicle. also la plaAned.
Gunman r obs
Irvine salon
A brown-haired man robbed
an Irvine hair 1aloa of .->Tuel·
day aft•noon and eluded a
poUc• manhunt bJ Oeelu !mo a ll.arby oranfe ll'OV•, polrce aald
toda1. nt mu walked up to tbt
cub fllilt.er at Sak• ot lntae, MDI w.i..t A••·· at a p.m. and told I la&oD tm]>loJM to Sivt bl• all tM money, 11ld police
L,,. Bob LenMrt.
By STEVE MITCHELL 0( .. ..., .........
It you envisioned the new
Cryetal Cove State Park as
another Leo CarrlUo or Polnt
!t(ufu park with Iott of campl.ni
areu, think again.
State para olftclalJ met ln
Newport Buch 1'Mtday allbt to
dlacuH prellmlnary plam for
tbe 2.400-acre 1tate park loeal«t
between Corona del Mar and
Lacuna Beach.
And while a campln1 area t.
propoted on tb• blufttop at El
Mono where mobile bom• are now locat.d, lhat •pol woo't be
available un11l lM, •hen lhe mobUe bomes are moYed out ol
tM park.
Other than that nat 1.lte above
Cout ffltbway, the only other
camplfti Pl'OPOled tor the pert
are tbree wllderneu camp-
, ........... "" ~ . -._ -... -...
1round.s inland of the highway
between Moro Ridge and No
Name Ridge.
That lnland park area, behind
El Morro Elementary School.
will lnclude a network of more
tban eight miles of hiking and
equestrian traJla. linked to the
primitive camp1round1, vista
1ltes and an equeatrta.n 1taatn1
area.
But the most Intensive park
uu. says state park• spokesman
Dave Allan. will be alon1 the
3.S·mlle coastal 1trip.
The coutaJ strip will be able
to aerve up to 7 ,000 vlJlton at
one Lime, Allan 1ay1, wltb a pro-
poaed l,a parkhtJ spaces at
various locatlon1 wltbin the
park.
Vlalton wlll be able to enter
tbe Can at thrM locallona. In·
clud ng tho proposed Sand Can-
yon Road, Crystal Cove, and a
terrace at Coast Highway near
Corona del Mar.
Parkina for 400 cars would be
provided Inland of tbe elemen-
tary school, with access to the
beach alonJ a trall and lhroulh
the Moro Crftk underpass.
Another 200 vehicle lot la pro-
posed adjacent to the underpass
where mobile homes are now
located.
A 600·car lot is proposed
further north, Inland of the
bl1hway and acrou from
Cry1lal Cove, with a tumarou.Pd
for yebJclet at Cry1tal CoH to
allow tor loadln• and unloadlnl of pUM1t1en. tc-e chest.a, a.ad
beacb parapbenalla.
Where the aqueatrian cent.er 11
locat.s would become an area
for day UM picnics, and four.
. --
60-vehicle parking lots on the
coastal strip.
A hiking trail, well Inland of
the bluffs to prevent eroelon,
wlll connect the north end of the
coastal strip to Scotchman'•
Cove.
Pedestrian overpa11e1 that
would provide access from ln·
land areu to the coastal 1lrlp
are propoaed near Cry1tal Cove
and Moro Beach.
Allan said the Irvine Company
ii propo1An1 tourist oriented
commercial areu at two IOC!a-
tlon1 lnland of the park, lnchld·
ln1 one just north of UM pro-
posed Sand Canyon Road and
another inland of Pelican Polnt.
The next step ln a.be plannlq
proceu la pubUc hearlnp on UM
park ~an which will be bald
next MarC?h by the State Patt
and Recreation Commiaalon.
'
The Newport·Meu 1tudy wu
ordered as truateea in O'•
adjacent Huntintlon Bea.th
Union Hiah School Dl1trtct
ordered a sertee or publle
bearln&a scheduled to dllcuu a
fee program in thelr dislrlcrt.
T h ey propo1e c b ar1la1
athletes and drill and marcb.lq
band members S25 to participate
In tbe activillea nnt year. 1
Newport-M .. a offlcl&la noted
Tueaday tbat U f eu ate
char1ed. no acbool credit can be
offer«l lor 1aac.b adlvlUa.
Ph11tcal ed"9cttlon crecltu
bave ~ offend lft prevto.
y1ar1 tor parllclpaUoa lJI
after·t.chool •Portt-.
':'
'
(
~--~~-..-•c ____ -• --~ ---~·~·------• • w •• µ •• us 0 a a cc s a ••••• 40 -H/F OrangeCout DAILY PILOT/Wednnday, May 13, 1981
CBS
blasts Pink Ladies widen joy
boycotts
Hospital volunteers to encompass nursing homes
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Thomas H Wyman, president or
CBS Inc , has said boycotts
against television advertiaen
threatened by such groups as
the Moral MaJority would be a
disservice to the nutlon.
•'In their a<'tions, they disen·
franchise the real majority of
viewers from making tht•ar own
decisions about what to wntch ...
Wyman told the annual meeting
of the CRS AfftUates at thl' Cen·
tury Plaza Hotel
~e added, "We must make at
clear that what is at stake as not
the prosperity of the network~.
but th e freedom o f the
airwaves ."
T he Coalition for Be lter
Television, with the bat'king of
the Moral Majority: is monitor-
ing prime-time TV programs
and has threatened a boycott
this summer against companies
that sponsor what they don't ap·
prove
W y man s aid he h ad no
apologies for TV's emphasis on
ente rtainment because "we
have helped the American peo·
pie get through some difficult
times . . when other forces
were threatening lo fragment
our country "
Wyman's words were rein·
fort'cd an an earlier talk by B
Donald Grant, pres ident of CBS
Entertaanml'nt
Grant told an estimated 765
broadcast executives represent·
ing more than 200 CBS affiliate
station~ that if the network
liste ned to all the critics who
t"ondemned programs before
they were broadcast . many of its
mos t prestigious s hows would
never ha\•e been telecast
"It as true that 1f some of these
pre 1udgers favor the sub1ect
treated, we are doing great
public service wi~h quality and
taste, and aiding their cause
with a large audience," he said.
"But 1f they dis agree, we are
pandering, exploiting and seek·
ing a large audience in an ir·
responsible pursuit of a high rat
anl{ a nd higher profits ..
He c ited several CBS pro
grams and the sensitive sub1ects
they dealt with. s uch as an
episode of "WKRP in Cincan·
nala " an which a morality
crus ader pressured the stallon
to change its programming. The
programs "One Day at a Time,"
"Trapper John. M.D.," and
•·Lou Grant" looked at the
ha rass me nt of women on the
job.
Grant noted that many of the
projects attacked before broad·
cas t often became the most
honored events of the season
.. after millions of people have
watched the program and
pass ed the only j udgment that
re ally counts:·
APW..._..
METAL ROCK -Actor Sylvester Stallone pats s tatu e of
himself being used as prop in his new movie, "Rocky
I I I.•' Filming began at the statue erected for the film at
the top of steps of Philadelphia Art Museum, site of
scenes from the first two "Rocky" movies.
Retired legislators
keep election funds
WASHINGTON <AP > When
they retired in January, some
congressmen gave themselves a
goin g-away gift: campaign con·
tributions they had collected for
re -election campaigns they
oever ran.
Much of the money that went
into their pockets came original·
ly from special interest groups
whose activities are regulated
by Congress.
But what these for mer con-
gressmen have done is not il-
legal. In fact. these little-known
retirement bonuses which can
amount to tens of thousands of
dollars have been around for
years.
Most veteran congressmen
keep their fund-raising commit-
tees active between elections,
piling up cash for the next race.
Many also use the accounts as
political slush funds to pay for
travel back lo their districts, en·
tertainment, Christmas cards to
constituents and other incidental
expenses.
Under federal election law,
the only constraint appears to be
paying personal income taxes
Former congressmen do not
have to say how they spend the
money.
For example , Federal Elec-
tion Commission records show
that former Rep. James Hanley,
D-N Y , chairman of the House
Post Office and Civil Service
Committee, had almost S40,000
in his campaign fund when he
decided ea rly last year not to
run for re-e lection.
Since his last campaign, he
had received $36, 100 from the
political action committees of
speciaJ intereat groups, many of
them representing the postal
employee unions . direct mail
users and others under his com·
mittee's jurisdiction
After announcing he would not
run, Hanley spent some $10,000,
about half of it on personal
travel. When he left office, be
still had $29,406.89.
Repeated attempts to reach
Hanley to learn his plans for the
money were unsuccessful.
By J E•··· PARKER
Of .. OMty~IWt
··Ladles an pink," those vokln
leers wbo eJve their lime to pee>·
9le in hospitals. will soon be
moving into another area
nursing homes
Under the direction of Hillary
Rountree and with a $22,000
grant from the California Com·
munity Foundation, Community
Volunteers for the Elderly will
soon be training and sendjng
volunteers to seven nursing
homes in the Newport Beach-
Cosla Mesa a rea
The f1r11t volunteers are ex
peeled t-0 visit the areu convales
cent homes by early June
"I have a very personal In·
teresl 1n this ,'' said Mrs
Rountree. a
th eologian
who gradual·
ed rrom
Episcopal
Divinity
Sc h oo l i n
Cambridge,
Ma ss "Mv
grandfather
went lo a
nurs ing home •ou•n•••
an Washington, D.j: and when
we 'd v1s1t un1rnnounced we'd
Marine base plans
open house Sunday
Marine Corps Air Station
(Helicopter > will have its a nnua l
Armed Forces Day open house
Sunday in Tustin.
A National Street Rod As
sociallon safety run will feature
specially constructed antique
Meeting set
on HB funds
Huntington Beach officials
will hold pubhc hearings tonight
and T hursday on how SI .5
million of federal revenue shar
ing funds wlll be spent in the
1981-82 fiscal year .
Tonight the sess ion will begin
al 7 p.m. at Murdy Communit y
Center, 7000 Norma Drive. The
Thursday meet ing is 7 p.m . at
the Edison Community Center,
21377 Magnolia Avenue.
s l r c l' t r o d ., , w h 1 1· h w 1 I I
participate in NSHA 111.1fl·t y 111
spccuons, spv•·dornctn 1· Jlll1r ,,
lions, a street rod <Jlym111t•11 11n1l
show ·n' shme.
Street rod act1vltl<•11 wlll '"'
from 9 a. m to 4 p m
Jn addition, 5 and 10 kllmnctn
runs will start at 8 a m. and H 45
a .m ., respectively Hegi11tralllm
is $7 and includei. " com
memorative shirt
Community olymp1cs also will
be held, featuring a football
throw, softball throw. basketball
throw and golf chipping
The MCAS< H > Tustin Model
Aircraft As sociation will present
rad io-controlled model aircraft
fli ght demonstrations
Also. aircraft will be on di~
play and tours of the historic
blimp hangars will be con
ducted.
Gates open at 7 a.m For in·
form ation , call Major Russ
Verbael at 551-7540
find ham lied up. uni;haven and
sitting in his own urine
· But we b e l ie ve nursing
homes serve a real need too
We're trying lo lighten the
burden of the s taff i n local
homes • we want to improve
the quality of life there," she
said.
Among the things volunteers
wall do ar<' organi ze c lubs
c nature, men's, reading, book,
plant. newcomers', and birthday
clubs>. conduct "life review"
s essions which encour age the
elderly to renect upon the happy
times in their laves, welcome
and orient new c•hents to their
s urroundings and s e r ve as
· wa lt>r ladies ..
"f'h1·n"s something about
11h11r10j{ woln that's very sym
1111111'.' i.,ut<I Mr!. Rountree
0111• 11( llw things volunteers
w1 II 1l11 ,., a rnak1· rounds to pa-
111•111 •. rrJ11mi., with fresh waler
:wtJ V,l:11i.,, • ., S11m(:l1mes patients
';ir1 1 1(1'1 up t•111 1•a'l1ly and the
·••r; .111 •1f t1t1 v1nJ( s omeone
l1r 1nv WJli•r .inti J lltll1• goodcheer
t >I ll 11·,tll'I' I.I'· HnJ1'1rt<int
\\ ,. 1 ... Jl'1•1 v..ry <·nth us ed
;il1•111I w•·I• hHl lfl~ llf'W pat it>nL'
Wtwn th•·y • •11111· t11 a nursing
t1111w·. lh1•y 1 •· uflt·ri 1·onfused.
111,fll lf'lllN'f f)lllJ 1J1i.,l!JllJ010ltd If
''1mN1n•• '" lt1•·1 •· t11 'l h11w them ;1r11ur11I 111t r11tJu1·1· th1·m to other
IH''111l•· ariil ~··n1·r;illy 'l mooth
th1·ir •·ntn 11 1·a11 lw a big
h1·lp 'hf· ,,111J
~ r~ H11un tn ·t believes tht-
O\'Crall qu<thl~ of earl' wall be
s ignificantly (:nhanced s ince
voluntl•crs an· ~chcduled to free
nursing st<1ffs for other work
Anyone w1 sh1ng to volunteer a
few hour~ a week to visit lhe
elderly an rest homes should con
tact Mrs Rountree or Mary
Cooper at 548 93:11 -
Ile said the network does not
deliberately set out to create
controver sial programming, nor
does it shrink from it or abandon
projects that come under attack.
In his speech, Wyman also
called for the repeal of the Fair·
ness Doctrine and Equal Time
rule, as well as the reasonable
access provision of the Com
munications Act.
Those who lose their re-
election fights usually have
s pent all they have and more
trying to keep their seats. But
many of those who retire volun-
tarily have substantial sums left
in their accounts.
Some return money to their
contributors. Som e make con·
t ributions to charity or other
politicaJ candidates. And some
just keep it.
Some lawmakers ask their
financial backers if they mind DRY DAYS _ This 25-yard pool in Irvine's the money being used for personal expenses. Heritage Park Aquatics Complex isn't much
good to s wimming enthusiasts these days.
"I wouldn't want to be so pre-That's because it has bee n drained s umptuous as to do it and not
o.11, ...... St.Mf ,.._..
to a llow for repainting before the hectic days
o f summer. There a re two other pools in the
complex a nd they'r e available for public
swimming. For information call 754-3813.
Jenrette near
bankruptcy?
WASlllNGTON (API Despite assertions by
his estranged wife, Rita. that he is worth millions,
former Rep John W. Jenrette "is a step away
from bankruptcy court," the lawyer for the South
Carolina Democrat says.
Kenneth M. Robinson made the statement in
U.S . District Court at the start of a hearing of
Jenrette's appeal of hJs Abscam conviction Oct. 7
for taking a $50,000 bribe from an FBI agent pos-
ing as an aide to two Arab sheiks.
Robinson said that not only is Jenrette, defeat-
ed in a re-election bid last year . near banJcruptcy
but also he bas "the tax people on his back in
South Carolina."
He was asking Judge John Penn to order that
daily transcripts be made available to his client
without charge because "we can't afford it." Penn
s aid that was up to the federal prosecutor. John
Kotelly, who has ordered expensive transcripts to
be ready at the end of each day.
Rita Jenrette told an audience at Nassau Com-
munity College in Garden City, N .Y., last week
that "John has a lot of money, millions of dollars
in property but little cash now."
She added that he has asked her for alimony
but sald, "I have no In tention of paying him
anything.''
The former congressman, who ls claiming bis
due process rights were violated by government
misconduct and entrapment, was in court but did
not tesUly.
'Piggyback'plllllper
RILLJNGDON, Entland (AP) -Sur1eona
have performed Britain'• ftnt "plH yback" heart
lrao1pjant, lmplantint a MeGad beart aloDp ..
the patient'• own, hotpltal aut.borltlea tald .
The patient. a 51-year~ prlater, Peter Scott,
waa stven the heart of a 13-year-old ,Ul road accl·
dent vtctJm ln a four-hour operaUon SaDda1 nlCbl
at Karelleld Koapttal.
A fPC*•man 1ald Scott waa "coudou.I ud
maktni a normal recovery."
••
have their expressed consent,'· [ DAILY PILDT
said former Rep. Mendel Davis, CLASSIFIED ADS
D-S.C 642-54578
~~~--~~~~~--~~~....;.;;;;_.o,.;;..;...""-~~--.
Jllll la Tl•1 ,,, , ••• ,,.
ae A&E
RV AWNINGS
Cell us end you·11 see what we mean
Free Installation at your home. All
sizes and prices available.
•
• We'reMOWlel •Al work .. ••••••ell • Ser¥ ... CGllfonlo IV • PWIOIMllbecl, profet ...... ,.... ... lt71. Mnlc•
See us for woven woodl. eocloeures,
ttoraoe PO<I• and leveling aylterr. .. ..°"' c .. ._. v.~eo""4'"
15998 Mariner Drive
Huntingt.on Beach,
121lt H2·2193 1714) 147-0424
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, Mey 13. 1981 ~I 1 F •• ,_------~--------~~~~~~~~~~~--------------------------------.., ~--------------~--~
c:()MPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
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BtlllSll 1601J 702 26'1> ~."'12·~;;1.m ~ HMW "·M·~ 1'1 14 ~~r, H·i 11: 1;~."'§1~:.1.:. ~"' .. ~-tll~~1111 1~~ .Ji 1~t:-·~~Wl~·s~ ,,'1, ·n 11 :--. 8 1gTll• l 60 I• IJO '"" • v. 0.lmP 1 SJ 1 n 101111 11•<-W '20 I 1 MTrMlll i ·11 ' 61 221'1 1 ,b 1.i,. to ~ 44,_ + \\ StonW tlAOe J 24 JTYt-\<o w nriQgo 111 1t I~ Blnn•t !!! IS ~ UV. "' 0.11•• 1'40 10 1m '~. )V. ~.·1oc,, ·a II I ••• ... MAPCO "j t UtS ~..... I , 210 21J SC* .... "~". .. 11 u ..... •Ell" 2 .. ' " llV.. .... Blal'S NI IJ 1~ '" OeltOlla IJ 2 17 n I llO 10 71 I•~ vt Mar011 10 ,,. ftl/4 '+' P 11114 40 ' 10t i!-. + ~ top hO U2 41 21~ YA Wltl ill l .tO .. l20 ta •I 81tek0r 1' t "41 181-\ 'I\ 0.l•Cn , s. 1> 71 -H•lbtn 1lO14 &II bl', 111 MerMld 1 0 s 14 1'14 ,. 1,, pf I , ; 1 + '-.C ; ;! I+ '6 W1tcll"L 2 • " j'..,_• "' Bl•HP <\7 16 1 ll 1 \4 O.nMfg t » 9 9 71~ V. HarnrP 1 .. I 2t )' • Yt Mer!Ol' ... ~ I.JO 74 ,;· Plll!Ptt 2.20 '14' lo'I orer l'2 "'I.' W)tcl"S t t2 J 26 5Vt., "
•••It Jn 1 7 2 19"" · .. 0.1111ya 'a 12 442 1"' + V• •l•11J!> 1 •7• u 1ov. • v. MlfkCl l6 l' '' u12v. + ~VH ~ • ~ 11 ~ rl4!'11 1.U • + .. witco 1.eo 1 au 211/H .. 811HL I.lei I 12 lOV,' '4 0.~l!IY • 13 J 1.'ilt ·~ HenJI I te. t l•''lt l! Mlr•C wl' , I Jl\la, ,,, I> 4 Vl .J1 J , lt.._+ "•$11 ;111b I 111 "'W11tr" 10 6 'l11 1' •214
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12 I~~.~ I~ rol! 1j 15;::2""~:r:,·.~ 11110 , ,~:,:· =~:f~·~~~ 'J 1:::· ~:ti: H 1iJ I \It e11lu1e'' = 1~·14 1.i Im ~:: .. : =~~=~· ,'t: i ! m:~ :! l:;;t r~210 ~ 11~· ~m~. ~ .~ ,~ ~m ~ ~u~,E ··~:: m 11~ , ~:. . 11 'I: • t: mroJ11 1~ • 3-.+·-. m: · t• ~ 1
1 ... :1~ ••'f: t ... s '" ti~• "' t11eY 1 14 ~ "' H•l'"'e ... 10 11 M\• • v, Matti ,..1 • w ut. Ta• , 'J a 2114-141 'fK•; A • u a. + 14 a • j 1 11o .... l wn 1 JJ • t n-\II vrtfll t 4 "4• rirH UO I ti U 1 Mall!£ 1 2 50 I U\4 • " q u~. , . -T-T -tvrnln,. 1,o.e 1 M .._ 'r\ •II II 1.10 I I ~ \<lo ..... 7• 10 61 12\j, H•lettC • JI tJ¥. "M.tyO 1'10 1 30 tt\4 141 r , ' HO ac\4 ... ,. JIC() 1 n $ M 111'1+ " Wll '' ... U 114 Jj ... • ~ 'M , J fl , YI Hlllfll!I 1 30 t 11 71\lo t 11'1 MIYJ 41 f f llo + Vt ft« ., J + " ,..,.,.. ·'° 12 ,.. !. YI.. • .. i9 ~. \4 "• mP .n It~,., !l • ~ AN~tg ,. 10 ttl r::· ... ~I II 1' I• I + -. rlllll 1112.C . lit ••""" • .,. 't t o, 'ill Htr<UI• 1.20 t If •• ,.. M< rm I to It 7Q1 ,,... I ~..,m , 8 ...
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udtllf . . t w ... , ... ~·
111
,._. ~ Hutn1111J 1 •• ·: ~ 0 '·°'gifi D 14 ,.rt' 11 lhth LlOl l T • I hi
""'" ,4011) • l0'141 +.. 1 JI ~ H•Ul>llJI t • II ! ... , • ~ 0 llO IS ~· "',.,.."" ''i'' +Vt n.star 088 t ""~'"it•.. " """ , . M • _. l'l•••tP • 21 m ,,.,.,.._ "' = H , .. • ,. "~ 1 i 11 UllllR I·* u 101 H • aw • , g u ,... " t!•1:01 eo 11 11 m,. ~ ' • • • S C 1 Ty p ':r.~ l:ft i 1.ol l!t~ :'1 1 · tt Ii! '"'-;' ~ ~J~':~r :~ 1S ~ :~ ... ' ~ =~~r 1t: • ~ 1\t: ~ l"rf1J!..~'.f ~ 4V.~·t Lo~k~~ E lor:. 'chairman < :o/ An· ·~is: :~ :~ 4'17 j::_ .; J:.\..:i::Z ;~ ull a·+ \4 a~.\~y 'f. :& m ::~ '°' =~I · 1·: : ,: !1......!_ "' I .r'pt ii., 1a t ~ ders.QO h8S toJd Shareholders 8t the
' t •.;; iO 1 ~ i.\ """r·1·r • '11 1t:·~ ~~~d' "'l~{g ' .!t 4~"" ·:;-. =:=:~ :~rn i~ ~..., t:1" jl,~ ' l.~·~ aeroepace company's annual meet· ~~ t:U ~ •;. ;If. ~ t· ~ "' wt: : .: $$1• ~ ~t ,ill !: : :~ =~~r: •j ,: ~1 tm· .. ii~ :~ :~ J ~il:! ~ ~~.t~:~ i:,~eac~:u~h:.n~1ot!,1 ~~!:~
"'1•1 i 1 LI t J :t ii ... HoevU t 1A t 'f1 JtW. "' ,_,..,Tll' 10 11 *'i'+ .. " G .~ S , ... ~ th •t ( di·"d .a--c-c -• .... "ol'' J 1 "' fi41••• " t,ta • l o • ,. .,.~11 f, ,. 124 1 ~'·'°. .. .. . e reaump .. on o v. enua. ,,,. ,, .. » ~ •• J(IC :I• .. l "" HOtlTOll ,. m "" \4o •r•llll ... t 1 .... il<ttjr 'l '· "" .. UO t . • ••·· ., n .. )4 • . i.o'4111C • ,.. " .,. m. • tta ~"'-• ., l 4u "" ftt flfJ, • l'.4 "
Polaroid
prof its dive
You've sct·u thost• dever f'olurotd <·om merctals
fea turing Jame!> C~rn1•1 and Mariette fl artley·1 They
can be funny und lht'y'n• <l1ffrrl'rtt from thl' run of
mill commerl'ials you SN· ur1 tf'lcvl:oon because they
s how a littll' humility, they n• not all rluim·and
bou11t They abu l'ost a lot of monl'Y J'olaro1d spent
$101 million lust v1·111' lo ,tdvt·rt1,t· ill> instant camera
and film pal'l~s ·
That's a s 11.ahk outlu ~ lor .1 1·m11pany Pol+tro1d '!>
size Totul s11lt•:1 1r1 H/80 \H•rt• :SI ti h11l111n, which
means Polarrnd sp1•11t 7 1•1·nts of <·.i<·h sales dollar on
ad v<•rtis 1ni.{ l'oluro1 d 111v1•sb. ,1hou! as mu<·h monl'y
in advcrt1s1ni,? .is 11 dot•-. 111 11•s1•.1r1'11 :11HI llt•vt•lop
ml·nt
They don ' l s p 1· 11 II I h 111 1r\ u v 11 l Po J a ro 1 d · s •
archnval. Ea:.1lman Kod.1k l'o lw 'un·. Kodak outad
verttsed Polaroid 1t i; c•xpend1tur1•s ru11 i1 houl 50 per
rent higher
but 1l 's also j
mu c h b1 ggt•r
compan y
Kod a k 's !!Hiil
sales wc•re $!J 7
b illion, .1bout
s e Y e n ! 1 m t• s
P o l aroid '!>
I~
MILTON MOSKOWITZ
Kodak's 1980 µrof1 t.-. aflt•r taxC's wen• $1 1 hllhoo. 13
llmt•s wh;.il l'olaro1d <'lt•arl'll 1$85 1mtll111n 1
IN SHORT, KODAK d111·s 11 t h<" ,. ln work a:-hard
as Polaroid lo hnn~ In th1· s:.ilt•s dull.11 l.ci st year
Polaroid's plus $100 m1ll1on .1d liudi:(t•I ref>ulll'd 111
sales of 6.6 mill1on instant t•<imt•rus. down !>harply
from the 7 3 m11l1t111 sold 111 l!l?!i 1>11n11g th<' yc·u r
l'olaro1d snltJ <!00 m1ll1on fll111 pat ks th<tl w11 s .tlso
down fr11m the· 197!1 s.tlt•'
Tht· dl·<'llrw a p111•ars 111 lw t•11n t111u1n~ th1' year
f'or the· first thr <'<' mo11t hs of 19Hl l'ol.11 0111 s s;lff's
dropped 10 lll'rt't'lll and its profit!> sk1<1d1•t1 45 JJt•r
cent from a y c·ar ago The Wall Str«et Journal's
verdict was • l'ola10111 ,... r111d111J..! that 'll<'h luxury
Items as instant '<'<trllt•r.1-. Jnd film d11r1 t '"II wt•ll cfur
Ing t<1llgh t•eonorr111· t 1rnt''
It irntat1:s ohst•r'\ 1·r~ 011 W;.111 Stri·et that l'olaro1d
tias this obsc•sswn w11h 111sl:1r1! photography That
was all r1ghl dunng tllf' J:HiO-. wtwn t host• same pt•u
pie on Wall Strt:t'I tout1·d Polar1J1d a-; suc·h a super
growth C'Om pany th:Jt on t• 11.td 111 p<1v $1 15 to huy .i
single shan• of stoC'k lf v•iu '1.1111-(h! ,, sh.in· .it ,11('!1 a
p nee. you can't be loo hUJJfl~ toda\ whl•ll 11 ., 11 .1d1ng
at about $28
SO W/\1.1, STRt:E'I •:KS 1·ur11pl.1111 now th;;t
Polaroid has to d1vt•ro.;1fv. think of sonwthm~ else
bcsldt's mslanl photogr;1ph' Th<·' alsn find tll'plor:i
ble l'olarmd'<; rPlueta111·1· lo g11 rlt•t•pl,v min deht
fkanng the brunt of th1-. 1·r1t1t·1sm 1~ E dwtr1 II
Land . tlw inv1•11tor o f 111sl,1111 photograph\ und
Polaroid's leader for n111r·1· 111.111 ·to Vl'ars until he
stepped d1>wn HI l!JISll .1-. d111•f t•Xt•1·ut1v1• 11H11·1•r 111
fa vor or a l'olaio1d vt•t,.rJn. W1ll1.rn1 .I Mc('unt.· .Ir
But Land continu1•s as di:11rm.111of 1h1· 1·11rnpan). and
he 1s tnd1sput<1hly tht• lurgt·st 'h:u .. 11111111•1
1'0Jaro1d's unnual 1 r·port fo1 1!180 opt•nt•d , .1~
usu.ti, w ith an l'"'"\ Ii \ L:md Th1•rt• ht' had thc:.e
points to~mak1•
00 NOT do anything tliat .rn~one else can do
readily "In other word!>, don't (•n tt-r markets already
ser ved by u! h1•rs "1>11 not undt•rt:ikt• I he pro~ra m un·
less the goal 1s m a nifestly important and its achieve·
menl nt.·arly 1mposs1hle 1That narrows thfo' fi eld 1
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES
NEW VORl'ttAr>J r •ll<ll Dow JO~• ••Dl
AMERICAN LEADERS
NEW YORK tAPI S•I•\, luu prltt
end net chenQll Of tf\.t ttn rno,1 A( llv•
Am•rl<•n StO<k E1th4lrtQ• tUVI\
l••dlt1Q Ntttonellv al mo•~ 111•11 •• Hud180ll Q HI.~ H.. • .. GullCt n Q 100,100 11' •
l'!ouOllTr 117,000 ''"• 11• OorcJntGu ten soo 11'9 • " E1tl11ort 100,.00 IOlfo RHrllnl A &.,300 l~... • I
Weng 8 •S,lOO 401 • • ''~ 1n1trum Sy1 \S,sOo ,,.._ • ''t
MCO 1-tolcllno S4,100 ""' Chemp HO ,,,.. 1'1• .. ·~
IOr T v•\OA>' ..... , 17 nocxs (~to HoQli LO• (.IOH C711Q JO Ind ~I IY t/110 t~ !II 91012, • 10 frn 40'J]/ 41' II <04 81 0143t I IS
I\ Utt IU\ •• 101 II •UI 08 IOo 81 • 1 ,,
U SI~ Jll 8~ 11~ 'IC> \A9 lo JIS tl • 1 47 tndu• J,911,200
lr•n t,401.200 Ulll~ I, 1911,900 ~s ~·-k~~~~~~~~~~-6_._s,_•~,JOC~
WHAT STOCKS DID
NEW Y'ORK IAPI MAY 11
Adv•n(Ht
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• .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wedneaday, May 13, 1981
T ~e sprint su~ay have been 1tlinlft1.
but IWlcheon 1ue1u lasl Thursday al Trilh
O'DoMell's Newport Beach home were lhlntio1
about autumn leaves.
Thoughts of autumn Peter Kremer says Oennla Man1ers. u maater
or ceremonies, "will toaat and allptly rout"
Aasemblywoman Marian Ber1eson.
The occasion is the center's annual awards
banquet. Ticket.I are SW per person for re1ular
benefactors. But, 1f you want to donate a tad
more, you can get a Silver Circle table of 10 for
$1 ,250 or a Golden Circle table of 10 for $2,500.
Mrs. O'Donnell, together with Louise Ewing
Jnd Valley Reilly. hosted a Patroness Luncheon
for South Coast Repertory Theater's 1981 open·
ing gala. The gala, this year themed "Simply
Sterling," Is set ror Sept. 12.
SCR gala, 'Simply Sterling,' scheduled
Dot Clock, gala chairman, said the S300·a·
couple benefit wilJ focus on, a London theme.
The ball, which was a huge success last fall, is
SCR's largest fund-raising event of the season.
It'll be a white tie-and·tails affair beginning
with a cocktail rec4tption in the lobby of the Im-
perial Bank Buildina next to the South Coast
Plaza Hotel. Participants then can stroll
through "fiyde Park" where they will be greet-
ed by a variet y of street entertainers and flower
vendors.
Once through the park. between the bank
and hotel, guests will gather in the ballroom
where they will be served traditional English
fa ire topped with trifle. A cabaret-style original
production. directed by SCR Director Lee
Shallat and performed by members of the resi· dent acting company, will f>e featured following
dinner Completing the evening will be dancing
to the music of J oe Moshay.
Among those attending last week's luncheon
were Mrs. Don Adkinson, Mrs. Alex Bowie,
Mrs. John Coelho, Mrs . Andrew J ohnson, Mrs.
Da vid Maffei and Mrs Stephen Farosi.
Also, Lucille Kuehn , Mrs. Paula Millman.
Mrs. Patrick Riley, Mrs. J ames Rodgers, Mrs.
Robert Searles , Mrs. Peter Shea, Mrs. Delane
Thyen and Mrs. John Virtue.
Also, Kathryn Thompson, Mrs. William
Wenke and, from SC R. Barbara Grady and Kay
Brown. Elaborate floral arrangements at the
luncheon wer e p rovided by Chris Lindsay
Designs, Corona de l Mur.
Fashions disp layed
The center hopes to raise $20,000 from fhe
affair at which music will be provided by a
string quartet as well as bv the Society for
Preservation of Big Bands.
Dinner committee members include UC
Irvine Chancellor Daniel Aldrich, Walter
Gerken, 5th District Supervisor Thomas Riley,
developer Henry Segerslrom and Hancock Ban·
ning III.
Knott honor due
M arion Knoll of Knoll's Berry Farm
will be honored Thursday as a "Special Angel"
for her suppQrt of Children's Village, U.S.A., a
home for abused children near Beaumont. The
award will be presented at the 17th annual
Woman of the World Awards Luncheon at the
Century Plaza Hotel, Los Angeles.
Also receiving Woman of the World awards
will be actress De bbie Reynolds, Joanna (Mrs.
Johnny) Carson and Jill Kinmonl Boothe.
Assis teens feted
G raduating members of the Assisteens,
an auxiliary of the Newport Beach Assistance
League, will be honored at a dinner dance
Thursday at the Santa Ana Country Club.
Hosting the event will be Leslie O'Donnell.
auxiliary chairman, and Mrs. W. Channing
Lefebvre, auxiliary coordinator. with her assis·
Lant, Mrs. James Dobrott.
W hen the Monday Morning Club of
Laguna met yesterday they were treated to a
diUerent kind of fa shion show.
SC R luncheon hostesses f from left J Valley Reilly, Louise Ewing and Trish 0 ' Donnell
On the committee are Janel Sweet , Sheryl
Rados, Tracy Andrews , Mary Whittier and
Karen Howard.
Lee Child ress , who narrated the show, held
in the El Adobe Restaurant in San Juan
Capistrano, call ed the fashions "lo,vely clothes
for sale the second ti me around al lovely
prices " Items shown were contributed by 2nds
Ltd of Laguna Bea c h and Li 'I Audrey 's
Recycled Rags of Corona del Mar.
Among the models was club president
Violet Lansdell
The music fo r the luncheon gathering also
was of a different than usual variety. The
sounds were provided by the Kitchen Klatter
Band, a group of seni or citizens from San Juan
Capistrano who play on kitchen utensils.
Among highlights of the luncheon was in·
stallation of officers with Ms. Lansdell installed
for her second term as president. Other mem·
bers of her executive board are Dorothy Goode,
Ge raldine Bana rer , Doris Otto, Lorna Belcher,
Helen Richman, Elinor Thomson and Anna
McCallum.
The group's founding president, Florine
Roper, was install ation officer
Benefit set
Mrs. Robert Lu cas of the chapter will ac-
cept reservations.
Assisteens mothers helping with the party
are Mrs. John O'Donnell, Mrs. Victor Harris,
Mrs. Anthony All en and Mrs. Dennis Pickens.
John O'Donnell is slated to present a pro·
gram at the party duri ng which the graduates
will receive medallions for their service at the
Child Day Care Center and Assistance League
Thrift Shop. Graduates are Karen Lowance,
Virginia Freeman, Tracy Allen. Andrea Hilker,
Les lie O'Donnell and Megan Dobroll
Auction s'laJed
The third annual Auction and Variety Show
for South Coast Repertory has been slated for
Saturday. July 11 , according to the fund-raiser's
Chairman, Mary Garlbboti, A goal of $40,000 has
been set by the Friends of SCR Guilds. who
sponsor the event.
"This year's goal is almost twice last year's
achievement of $24 ,0$)0," said Mrs Garibolti,
''but we're confident we can meet our goal for
the benefit of South Coast Repertory.··
A benefit for the Mardan Center of
Educational Therapy is set for May 29 at South
Coast Plaza Hotel, at which, dinner chairman SCR Development Director Barbara Grady SCR Gala Chairman Dot Clock
The theme for this year's Auction and
Variety Show is "Now -Everything Goes !"
which is a take-off on SCR's final production of
the Mainstage season, "Anything Goes!" The
items on the auction block will range from
theater memorabilia of past SCR productions to
vacations to ski and beach resorts to exotic ob·
jet d'art and modern furnishings donated by
local merchants.
Li/ elines to nieet
~HEEL OF FRIENDSHI P of Orange
County will go bowling Saturday. For
information, call Rose al 635·4161.
LIFELINES, s ponsored by Hospice
Orange County Inc.. meets every
SINGLES CALENDAR
Tuesday from 3.30 lo 5:30 p.m. in
Laguna Hills . The group is for re-
cently widowed men and women. For
information, call Marge at 494-2025.
WE CARE, for the newly single. will
present a lecture on .. Physiology of
Stress·· by Michael Lewis at 7:30 p.m
Friday in El Toro The group wi ll have
a "HardTimes" party at8p.m Satur·
day in Mission Viejo. For informa-
tion. call 842·1127.
PEOPLE SAMPLER social will be
held al8 p.m. Friday in Buena Park. A
get-acquajnted dance party will be
held at 8 p.m . Saturday In Anaheim.
The events will be led by Emily
Coleman. For information, call <2131
828-8949.
NEW AGE SINGLES will have a walk
on the Aliso Creek Bike Trail at 10 a.m.
Saturday. For informa tion. call
770-3296.
CORINTHIANS will have a wine and
c heese par ty and d iscussion on
"Travel Opportunities for Singles" at
7: 30 p.m. Friday in Irvine. For in·
formation. call Betty at 551 ·4897
'Bear R evue' ready
Final touches are being put on the
fast-paced " Bear Revue'' this week by
members of the Punch & Judy Guild of
the Childrens Hospital of Orange
County.
Acts will include vaudeville skits,
disco and tap dancers, and a hoedown
plus a finale with more than 100 cast
memberuin~lng and dancing.
The show will run Thursday and Fri·
day evenings at Orange Coast College,
and general admissions $8, or pre·
ferred seating is $15, and tickets are
available from Mesa Travel in Costa
Mes a or by calling 557-1247.
The proceeds from the revue wlll go
toward the specialized medical care
for children at CHOC.
Ch eddy Brot ·
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Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981 87
'Dead at Seventeen' rates high among teens
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I clipped this column
from the Williamsport Sun-Gazette In 1977. The
way kids in our town drive makes me Chink that
article should be printed again. Please, Ann, one
more time. I LEARN FROM YOU
Dear Leara: The column you waat to 1ee
a1aln u tbe second moat often reque1led by teen·
a1er1. The first 11 tbe Drag and Sell Test. <Nut
week I'll run the lt81 versloa.) Here's the one you
want:
DEAD AT SEVENTEEN
Agony claws my mind. I am a statistic. When I
first got here l fell very much alone. I was over·
whelmed with grief, and I expected to find sym
pa thy.
I found no sympathy. l saw only thousands or
others whose bodies were as badly mangled as
mine . I was given a number and placed in a
category. The category was called "'Trame
Fatalities.··
The day I died was an ordinary school day.
How I wish I had taken the bus! But l was too cool
for the bus. I remember how I wheedled the car
out of mom. "Special fa vor,'" l pleaded. "All the
kids drive." When the 2: 50 bell rani. I threw my
books in the locker. I was free until 8:40 tomor·
row morning! I ran to the parking lot excited at
Virgo: Focus
on challenge
Thursday, May 14, 1981
By SYDNEY OMA RR
ARIES (Marc h 21 -April 19): Avoid direct con-
frontations . Examine various alternatives. Be
familiar with legal rights, permissions. Popularity
increases and social activity accelerates Focus also
on partnerships, contract and marriage.
TAURUS (April 20-May 201 · Emphasis on de·
tails, basic procedures. dependents. employment
and health resolutions. Aquarius, Scorpio, Leo
persons figure prominently. You' II be asked to revise
maleriaJ. Do so, but don't veer loo far from central
theme.
GEMI NI 1May 21 -June 20>: Emotional
responses tend to overwhelm logic. Know it and pro·
tect self in clinches. Focus on children. speculation
HOROSCOPE
and intensified relationship You could have luck
with number 5. Young person aids in making travel
arrangements.
CANCER (June2l·July22): Emphasis on home,
security, domestic adjustment and ability lo work
with material at hand Aquarius, Scorpio, Taurus
persons figure prominently You'll gain a more clear
understanding of money. budget and investment
procedures.
LEO <July 23-Aug 221: Avoid attempting to do
too much at one time Be versatile. but avoid scatter
ing your forces. Remember recent resolutions con·
cerning nutrition. proper exercise and suCCicient
rest. Short trip is on agenda Define meanings.
VIRG-0 <Aug. 23-Sept 22J . Accent on challenge,
promotion, added responsibility, special rela·
tionship and ways to Increase income. Older In·
dividual lends benefit of experience and can become
valuable ally
LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22J. Lunar cycle high,
take initiative, make new start, follow through on
hunch. You'll be rid of unnecessary burden. Tie loose
ends. One you admire will seek your counsel. Aries.
Leo, Sagittarius natives figure in provocative
scenario.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): Breakthrough in·
dicated; you gain access to story behind the story.
You might be on brink of ''striking it rich ··Highlight
independence, initiative and self-esteem. Leo, Aries,
Sagittarius persons play important roles.
SAGITTARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Finish rather
than initiate project. Focus on romance. fulfillment
of desires and dividends res~ting9Tl'om recent in·
vestment. Learn by leaching. Intuition is on target.
Cancer, Capricorn. Aquarius persons figure
prominently.
CAPRICOR N (Dec . 22-Jan. 19 > · Expand
horizons; potential will come mto clear focus. lm·
portant contact made at social affair. By displaying
sense of humor you ingratiate yourself with ··a very
important" person. Communicate yourfeelings .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emphasis on
travel, publishing, education and ability to rectify
past errors. Another Aquarian and a Scorpio figure
prominently. Long-distance communication aids in
organizing material. Adhere to basic principles.
PISCES < Feb. 19·March 201 : Analyze legal pro-
cedures. Protect financial resources. Refuse to give
up something for nothing.
YMC4 to show Sinbad film
The movie, "Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger"
will be shown at 9:30 a .m. Saturday as a benefit
for the Orange Coast YMCA Youth Scholarship
Fund.
Tickets are $2.50 each for the showing to be
held at United Artists Theater l , 1561 W.
Sunflower, Santa Ana.
Door prizes will be awarded and there'll be
"surprise prizes for ever yone," a YMCA
spokesman said. The event will be chaperoned by
the YMCA staff and volunteer mothers.
584101 CITIZIHS
SPECIAL
25°/o Off ALL SU
M-. T ..... WM. CW,
HAIR
HAMOLHS .
111 lllllll
the thought or driving a car and being my own
boss. Free!
It doesn"t matter how the accident happened. J
was goofmc off going too faat. Takina crazy
chances. But I was enjoying my freedom and hav·
ing run. The last thing I remember was passing an
old lady who seemed to be going awfully slow. l
heard a deafening crash and felt a terrific jolt.
Glass and steel flew everywhere.
Suddenly, l awakened. It was very quiet. A
poltce omcer was standln1 over me Then I saw a
doctor My body was mangled. l was uturated
with blood. Pieces of jaued glass were sticking
out all over. Strange that I couldn't feel anything.
Hey. don't pull that sheet over my head. I can't be
dead. I'm onlv 17. I've got a date tonight. I'm sup·
posed to grow up and have a wonderful life. I
haven't Lived yet. l can't be dead.
Later I was placed In a drawer. My folks had
to identify me. Why did they have to see me like
this? Why did l have to look al mom's eyes when
she faced the tnost terrible ordeal of her life? Dad
suddenly looked like an old man. He told the man
in charge, "Yes he is our son."
The funeral was a weird experience. l saw all
my relatives and friends walk toward the casket.
They passed by, one by one, and looked at me with
the saddest eyes I've e ver sffn Some of my bud·
dies were crying. A few of the girls touched my
hand and soobed as they walked away
Please somebody wake me up! Get me
out of here I can't bear to see mom and dad so
broken up My grandparents are so wracked with
grief they can barely walk. My brother and sister
are like wmbies. They move like robots. In a daze.
Everybody. No one can belteve this. And I can't
believe 1t, either
Please. don"t bury me' I'm not dead! l have a
lot of living to do! I want lo laugh and run again. I
want to sing and dance. Please don't put me In the
ground. I promise 1f you give me just one more
chance, God, I'll be the most careful dnver In the
whole world. All I want is one more chance
Please. God. I'm only 17
More. For tl wl t•xtr11
f. , ·ft"\1tl< f 1u H. niea .. '.H r<' u. ~u ..
\ l s i
Warning The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health
....
0 0 0 o s a a so c s a a a ; -1 ..... .. H F Orange Cout OAIL.Y PILOT/WednHday, May 13, 1981
,_ 0.1, """''' G."-Accet••Af •• •t.• ''•"
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T T L T I 0 P H T E G N T I 0 l E T E
P S C T B A H L U 0 G E U H L P S H 0
8 R 0 A W J L 0 T R U T W R N R N S G
E C E T A L R I B V E l l 0 0 R E D C
Aweit Endu11 lnhtbit
8111 Exp Kt Rart
Bide Uvt Sojourn
Conti nut Lodge Stop
Dwell Remain Tarry
Tomorrow: Pa11t11
DEA TH NOTICES
.J
"' u
Q
Tl R'\'F:R
JI \\IH I I lt'\i':I! •lt:t
!~ •. ti''"' '111 .... ti lit tl;I\ \1.11 !I I 11R I 111 ,111 ,11111',11111hilt ,11·n
11'•111 111 Flotl(,1.tll. \111011.1
JI,. II•'' 1111 hi ... \\,I\ lo '\1•\\
1•.111 , 1111111 \\ht•tt• hi '
p.111'111' 1111• 111· " '•UI qq•tf
111 111, p.111•111'-:'111 .tntl "''
Hnl11•1 I l'llrtle'I col '\111 l'.1ri-.
Oh111. I IJ111lh1•" Ht1h1•rl or
1!11•1t111ontl. 1111111111.1 l>J 11d
ulltl IJ.11t111 liuth or '\!'IA
l'.111., I ''lt·r \lf, l'ht.'rt''••
\l.tn ltt'ltl nl :0.111111·r )'alt-
" t' II .J t' I ' t' \ h I '
i.:1 ,1111fp.1 n·11h \1 r .11111 \I 1'
\h•n1111·1al l'hJJ.ll'I c; 1 <H l''9dc
wn lt't'' \\l'rl' hl'ld on Wed
nl•,...ll.1\. Mui l:J 1981 at
111 l>UA.M .it th·e llarhor La1.1 n
\h•monJI Park \\1th Fallwr
Jo...,eµh :\1tEnt•am t1ffll'tJI
111~ St•n i re~ u11der the
1ltrel'l1on of l111rlmr l..1wn
\lnunt Oli11• \111rtuan of
!°11.,t.1 \lt·~a 5 It> SSS1
1-. ti It ,1 I ,( ( .t I 1· 1 11 I
DEATHS
ELSEWHERE
Women hail se ttle 11Wnl
SAN FKANCJSCO CAP> Women's-Mahi. ad
vocates a.re halUn-' a $1.S million settlemt nt t h a t
alms to alvc women a bette r chance to advance an
the U.S. F o rest Service .
"This doesn't follow the us ual p¥ltern of
decrees, whic h gives each wom1m a couple or hun
dred dollars but leaves the problems untouched ,"
said Nancy Davis, who handled lht: laws uit for
Equal R ights Advocates.
Federal Judge SM muel Conti approved the con
sent decree, d esigne d to o pen up all fields of
service and set up training and promotion pro
grams for women It is ltl be enforced over the
next rive years .
QUEENIE
"Your lawyer Is here with a 'one-to-rive ' look on his
race"
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PU8l.I(' NOTl("fo; PUBUC NOTICE PUBLJ(' NOTICE
fllCTITIOUI •U•t•IU •1c11flOUI1Utllt8U fllC'TlllOUS I Ul lN8U lllCTITIOUI IU"NIU
ltAMl ITATIMINT N-1 ITATIMINT NAMI nATI MI NT NAMI U AllMINT
l11t IOlltwtn01»•_,••••00ln9 Int tollowlnQ ll•'""'' ••• uo1n11 In• to110 .. 1n@ ""'"'"' ••• OOlnQ Int t041owlnQ P<t•'IQl'I 11 001n11 °""
"'"'"•'' •• n•n1n•" •~ IHJ••n•u ., n•\\ ., lllJOJIAO<.O NO 1000EA$T.L1U 11\l(l'()INt\µrT\t<OI> tilt) "AW 1.ICAtl lll•?Welletn N(ll l::NC.INlt.ICINC. £ 411 C.Al.,OANIA JOJOBA Wl'T llll•1n $tr .. 1 ><vn11nolon B .. <n Awen.,. Un11 M )lenlon, C•lltorftt• OEveLOPMENf tttl Gttr\t•lll"'
l r 0 . H•1 Dlr(n itrffl, Svll• '"· ,.,,, .. rnl• 'llH>IO '•"•tt. C..C..I• Mew. C•lllO•"'•''-"
.... po,, 8H<n C•llfOtn•••MtO l H °"' '''• 1110, ••01.-1 W•t. BMUCL. WEE""' •IOtO rn110 Nl•ll: COWARD BEAOJTAOM,
JOAAl>CO NO I t.AllT, IN( . !>t•nton. C•lllurnl• <!Otto j ~tr ut f'oun141n ll•lloy, C:elllornia 11'1 Glenugl9' r ''"'" CO\I• Mew No ude (Ofp;ltAllon, I £•11 ~ l"I l..utlllt "-0.L"l<t. I 110) tro)..-'11()1 C•llrOrn1• n•27
"'''"'· leono Nt•.0.f Ul)t lw ... \t<l\lbn C•llfwnl•tOMO Otl!OMAH 0 Wl:l:K) lt0.0 ln11 °"""ft'" •""411<lo\l llY •n 1n
fPU\ l>v'ff\e\\ I\ (01\.0uUeO by • ''"' °'1ll,_,, "(onGuC.tM b,i '" t hHC) ~''"'' Fount•1" \l•ll•Y 01v1Ch,•I ""'"•d _,.,,..,\ft•P d1•1\lw•I' ,,_.,,..,..,'° •nd wtt•> C ••nor nt• •uoe Nt••• l s.,v,ttom
I
lor-u No I E••I, tnl I: H O.l 11lt I I n1• Du"""'' 11 <onOu\1.0 oy •n 1n ln11 \l•IA>rn•tnt wo 111..i w1tn In• J-M O•lmm. Prt•I ~..C•ll• • 0.l•'lt 11 .. 1du•I (""~n<I &. wlltl Co11ntr Clerk ot Ortn~ County on
dent I nl• ""''"'""' WU 11111(1 •tin ,,,. Oeoo<all D WHk• •pril )(I '"'
Thi\ ''•' .. '*'' ••t hied with H• luunty (l~H ot 01~~ Covnt• on fn,, \l•l•tTWnl ••• f•l.c,J Nllh lht ft~J
tounly Clerk ut Oran~ Cuunty on Aptol JI tttt t.uunlt C•••• 01 Oran00o Covnty un Puo11,r.tQ 01<1ttl1" C.M\I 0•11• P11~1.
Aprll 11 lttt ll t-Aproo JO 1 ... 1 AP'll /1 rt Miit • I), 19e1 , .. ~ •t I l'•-•10 It $<1111Mellt er I l'ublll"'MJ Ounllf C:O.•l lle1ly Pilot.I 1'1.0.UJ
All••MY ol t.aw I Apr l~ MAr• tJ, 10 1911 10>1 •1 t'ubl1u-.o Qlor'lll" (.oe•I O•llr Pohil,
l-~1151.S..tleltt Al>'"li It M.oy• I~, .. , 11.IO et ,.,.,.,, ••.t<". CA n-Pl1lil.I(' NOTl('fo;
~ .. o•tt t•vlbll\IWCJ Ut•riot t <M>I Dally t'llQI, I PUUUC' NOTICE
t ><t I Ap•ll "· ~ ... 1J, 20, , .. , 101' •• Ol'FICltfoL PAOCE EOINGS or
1 0"-llO 0 11 SUPEllYIM>ltS NS70•
I PUBLIC NOTl('t: 0 1' OHNGI' COUNTY. CAI.Ill ,.CTITIOUS •USINl!SS
)"111• An•. (•lltornlo NAMI STATIMINT
A '•Qui•' ~uno of Ow Soard ot J h• follo'tllflnQ P•rM>n\ •'• dolnQ j SPSlt... J~up•rVHOI\ o t Ur•nO• (O\iln t y butfntu•'
NOTICI Of' TltUSTI E'S SALi' (tlllOrnlO al\O >1111"0 e\ ,,... (.ovt tl\ T H l 0 P I f M A N I( •--·He s.M1 1nv BottoUI '"* D"trt<h 90.,.,,,.g by COAPOAATtON :IOll Bu•tr•hJ Cente r
On F<tdey luon• ~. lttt ol tt 00 tn.Bo•rOOl),_rv1M>r\•t1,..ld M•Y Ort••. Suite tto. trwlne C•lllorn••
A M , ftllt\Wtt'-tlca Tiii• tt1u\ur11n<.• 1), l'ftt •I Ci )0 AM Tt'l• .. fOllOWhlQ +UU
Cornpany, • t •hfOHll• totp(HAth.m as n,untQ fHttmbflr\ Orll'Jt'IQ Ptt unt AalO" j Tnt Opllm•t M•n.•gem~nt •n<I
duly ·•OPc>lnt•O Ttv\tt• und., •"0 B Cla n (h.tHnY n 5'0Qlrt A St.,, Marll.euno C0tPGt•tlOI'\ • Callforrua
Out\U•n• too-a oi Trvsl ,.,oro.d HH'~"'"" ,,,. Wh~G•t Brue• <Orpor•tlon 20ll e u,ln•li Center
Mey l f '"'* ., 1ni,tr No •'-• 000' Nt~ r~., ~ Atl•Y •no 1"'9 Ort•• ~ult• 1IO lrvtM C.•HforrU• 11114, o-oe Ill, of Ollltl•I A41<ord•. t • Cl•• •1111
tluted by Robert L WtO•ter ondj tfoHf P No 1011 A~r ... ment .. 11n '"" lnl• bu"MH •• (onduci.d by• U><
S.On't• A WwtKt•' '' tru\tor\ tn IM ot City <ii \c•I 6e4Kh '' •Pt>to-..ed 8•,,•0 por•t1on
flu ut ,,., County Re<or0tr 01 O••nQ• Proor•m "-<!'"""'"' w11n tne City of T,,.OP41mal Ma.._mtnl
PUBLIC NOTICt-;
'ICTITIOUI IUSINl'U
NAME STATEMI H"I'
rne fOllOWl"O ,..,_, " OOlnQ bu••·
M\\ .,
CAI fFORNIA t N OVSTRIAl
RESOURCES, JJOI S Bu r Sir"'·
Apt 3.<P, S.ftlo A~•. C•llfutnl• U/Ot
Jonn Mera Sl•m•llJ. U01 S Bur
Slrfft, ADI >tP S.nl• An•. C•lllort1t•
~"°' Thi\ bu\IM\~ ., <OOOu< tea by •n tn
OIYIOw•I
JoM M St••nat11
TM\. \lale,.,.nt ••\ f•ltld With OW
County C:l<lr~ Of Or-County on M•v
t, 1 .. t
Pu1eu
PuOll\IWCI Or•nQt C:oau D•lly Piiot,
Mey IJ, 10. 71, Jun. l. 111111 1••911
PllBLIC NOTICE Co-u,,l'I SlAltf'of C•mornl• w111 \.ett •t S•n t• An.t ·~ •C>Pro'l•G Ot•tnauent & Marlletin.;,CorPQf'•UO'I I
P\ilbtlc ~tion to niQ"-e\I b1~r for M•O'"•' C•nt.,.. ActOVf'lt\ .. ,. •HiQn~ M.iarttnJ Mo'Yl'll~n
U"" IP•Y•l>lt •t time ol \•It tn l•wful lto lr•n\C.OOlln•nl•I Ctedll !>•rVlt' Prnl<>cmt NOTICE TOCREOITOltS
I mono of the Unu.o ~t•tol •• ~utn Aopc,.ntmon9' ••t ""'de 10 ·~ Or•n11t In,. 11A1.,,_1 wn 111"'1 .. un tne o, au Lit: TltAltSl'l'lt fro"t entr•n<t to lhe O•onll" C:ountt County \/etor•"• AcJv11ory Coun(ll (ounty Cit•~ Of 0.-(OU'\ly on May l$eu. •11H117 u c c I
oto Cour1houw. 200 block of Wttl Sent• S1n1ot C•ltJen\ Adwi~,, counc II •ncJ •. 14>91 NOf•t;.• I\ f'W'rtDY 9h;~ •o cr..OllOr\ ot
An• 8out•"•rO (11, ut S.nt• An•. Altoholl\m AOvnorr &o.10 Heory S trt•H•S IM wllP\ln rwmeo lr•n\fuor(~J "~•t •
St•t• ol C•lllorni• •II "O"'· htlf' •nd1 P•"••n, M1IOt e(J M•lfie•o , Seniot Publlsnecl Ot.nQ« (0.)1 O••IY P1101. lbulll. lran\f., •S •bOut to be mMM on 1nttrutconveyedtO •flC1now nelOO~ll C1t1,.n1 ot !o•nl• An•. S•nle An• Mo tJ,'I0.11.JuntrJ 1981 1Hll l pt,.011•1 proptrty neroon•ller
undtr Wld 0..0 of Trull In tn. proper Senior Center OJ &enllh Ftmlly, Ooturlb9CI
ly '"u•leel lft w 1d County .ono St•I• D•n Bl_e,.,,,10 •"" G.,y JOllnM>nl fne namot•I '"° °""""'" •OO••"
du<rlDtCI H Lot J• 01 Tr..:t No O~ ••• <om-.-s1an10 • Youroo '' Pl'BLJC NOTICE ot lftt ont9ftCltd lr•Ml~rorc11 .,.
••shown on• mep •KOfO.d 1n 800& convr•tul•teo C:er t•ln con1tructton BILI COPWIN FORO INC •
104, Pe.oe• J1 ond ll of Mt'Collenttou•jronl••ct• •rt "'' lor blO, •w••d"'1 •'IO lt •fllorn,, <O'PO••lt0n, JO Rut Gron<t
M•r•· Record• ot Oronvo County, compte1eo C..sn dlttoreno fund tor FtCTtno!J~5:ustNESS ll•llt. N•wuort eucn t.•htornie91"60 Cel lorftl• I trw We't Mol\i(ip.t! Court I\ in(fM\.O The IOC'•flon 1n C•Hfo,.,,. ot IM
Th• ,,,-.,., .odttt~ •nO othitr com P•,rou prCK•dUrf'\ fOf f ir• ~Mtt NAME STATEMENT <"••I l'tf'<utlvt t)flt(f' or pnnc:•~· O\at
mon dellOf\ltlOI" ti •ny or lhe rNt Personnel •rr •P9ro<1ed ._,,,,t•nl fh~ to1tow1no ()tr'°"" ckHno O\lt,i n•~' ort1ce Of th* inte"<>l'd tr•n\fttror
PfOC>erly ':tr-''bfr<J •bOvt I\ P\itOOftf'd CAO Ptr\IQnnff Rf'OOt1 on neoou•tlcwn ntu •' ,, 130 Sovth M.Ain StrMt S..nt• Aina
10 ~· 1u 1 Ouuv111e. Co>!• Mn•.[wt1n Fir• M•n•oem•nt Unll I• •P DISTA~e~T~R~ ~/s~N 10~E'c-,~ C•ltlornie · ' C•t torn• provt>d !>8 100 11 \uppOrt•O 4pptlc• A.If othrr bu\•'WH f\41'l'W'-•no •O
Tr\• UncMfilQt\'ed Tru,tff dlWl•ln'\\lt•Ot'I tor LitttnW' to Condi.Kl •n AOOa>->••O W 1f\d\Of' Ct (0\1• M•\• df'l,\t~ \f)CQ by 'n" 11'\lt:nded
•nv ll•blUty for •ny lncorrrclnt\\ of tfOft AQt'n<v I\ •PP,-o"t<I F~I Fn C•Htorn••9'1•l6 ,,.n,teror W'Hf''hn lnrtt ye.-ri t4,, O•~t
'"• \trtet eOOrt•H •net ott'M!r tomf'?\on PfOQr•m rf'\flMG •PC>ll(•Uon IOf FY D•v•O \t•w•tt W•hon 1•90 so '•' "' i..now.n lo •he inttnaeo dt"t notton, 11 •"Y. ,no,.n IW•••n 11 .. 1 91,. al)C>rov.o t980 81 IAAP Chilo Wlnchor Ct C0>t• Mt\•. C•ltlurnta tren•ltrt<> ••• ,,.,.,..
I S•td wit .. Ill be m acle, Dul wlll>oul Otv•lopmonl ProQr•m conir•ct " ~1'16 fh• ,,•mo•sl •nd bu\lne\\ •OOrt\\
tO\ftn•nt Of w•rr•nty, tapreu or im •m•nded M~A M•nl•I J.tt•Uh Pro ff'H\ ~-.1MU I\ tonou< ~d by .,, in ol lht inrff'OtdtrM)ft-rtftJ> •rr
Pll•d. r~rdl"V tltlo IXl>~•U>lon Of vr•m Ol>jodl~ ••t •PC>•ovtd Rotu dlvtOU•I Ci AANO FORO INC C I I f't\<.umbf~•' •o CM'f the rf'm•ln1no of lnltfttt M'td R•tei of Contr11>utton\ O.vtdS W•l\On . • •' o1n1a
FICTITIOUS IUSINESS prlnc•Pal wm ot U>t nollhl Mt<ured 10 In• Or•nv• Counly Employet\ lnls •l•lemctnl ••s 11100 with IM <Orpor•toon, l)AS C61>rtllo p.,,. Ori••
NAME STATEMENT I f'ICTITIOUS I USINESS bY ••id Off<I o( lru•l, W•I~ lnlerut ll~llrtmont s .... ,,, ... •dlU"•" I County (It••"' Or••oo County o~ M•y s·;~· ,Ar;;· C:•hlornit•110t
Tnt IOllOwtr19 pe,.On\ ... Oo1no N"-ME STATIMENT l1ntroon, •• prov•dOO 1n \Aid Nlltl\I, NtQOll•l•on• tor• M«nl•I HUllh lnPA 8, 1911 O • ~ O•ooerty pel'1"W!nt ;--"to 11
1>us1n•\\ a\ T"• followin9 pe r'°"' ~tr• dcHn9 •d~•'"''· 1r •ny u~r 1"'9 t•rm\ of tfef'\I F •<tllly •rt •pOl'ovf'd Th• Com FUtlOl O:~;~>nio •:net ':7'~:~;,\ .,,•u,~m~~~
t A s t EA N 0 I GI t AL. 1110 l l>U>tne~· ~ w c A E A f I 0 N s :::.~.:~ :: :...:u·~ r ~~:. '::~oeo: •,::? mu~•IY ~ .... O.r•ctor •• •uthortHO M~~~~·;::o1:>J..::: lee::;: Oe11v, ~.:;o~l M••n St'"''· Soot• AN C•lllo•ll••
M1t(nt11 lfvtM 1 C.•l1tornl•t211.t '"" •-...: to •Pt>IY fOfOfOOf 4mertC•t\Qr•t\U At fh• bU\lf'lif'\\ narrw u\*d by tM \•IO •gna S ~nmood, 121Jl Amtll>Y•l M•tNTENANCE. 1141 Lt Lomo Cir trust\ tr.al~ by ••IO Off<! ot lru•t. IO<ollon Of USDA lunch to \lotun1eer I tr•nsl••ortsl •I U•d lot•llon 1,
.S\rt ei, G••defl (;rove. Catlfornl• 92'AS tit, An.,...lm, C•lllornl• '11906 lor lht •mount rv<t10n•b•Y O\l•ffi•l•Cl Bure•u (11 Norlh Or•rtQO County "•P CORWIN FOAO
Kno• v HQuyttn, tm eol ~ru1t R. M D l onou.plnQ, In< •• to l>f' lH s~ 49 proved 1911., A>W">sment APOHI> PUBLIC NOTICE ln•I '410 butt.. ,,..,,,.,, .. ,,,tnMO to
Str t t t, Apt. • c ~ San•• An•. C1lltorn1a <OtPOf'•tk>n, '14t U Lom• The t)f,-,.t1c1ary "no.' S•td Oeeo of 8o•rd~ •nd H-t•r.ntg Otli<e" '"''""•no bt-con~ummattd •• ine Off I<~ ot
C•lltotni• 91101 Circle. A~m, C•IUOrn1• ~ Tr\il\t ntrttOfOr• ~••c ulf'd •nO d• •PPlltaHOft\ ••~ -oprovt-o AnN•4111or'I FtCTITtOU!t •UStNESS Prof•n1on•I E\C.row ~rY•te\. ,.,, N
fnt\ Ou>tneu " tond~<ttd tly • tnl~ bu\lr>tt> I• <onelu<teo tly •cot ri''~•d to IM u;:e•~tQMd • '"""'" Ho IO 1 to County S.rv10 Att• No 6 NAME STATEMENT t urnn Avtn~. S.nt• An•. t •lllorn1a
Qtntr•I partner.nip por•t onA M 0 L.t u r•llon ot l•utt bnd Oem<tnd I• •Porovl'd 81lln9u•I V1<Mo hpe Ad In• tottowlng Pt' SOn> are doing '1/01, on or •l~r Jun• t 1"61
AQtw S M•f'lmood And M<~•PlnQ, "'< ~r, •,'• ,..:n: • wn lt•n NoU<t ot vh1mtt'll of R•Qhh is aoorov•o fret.1 OU\lt\t"H•' fhf\ IH.tlk tr•nst•r " '"'bl•<• io coru~:. '~~~e;:":! ~~!n:;!.oco':~~. ~~, cp:.~F1nt 1
1•
0
1 a:,~~~":" c .\~~~'!n . .'!.~1~0r1~". ";; ~.~1;::~ ~':,:~r:;:~ .~°".~P~:::: CHU AC H •LL L 1 M t 1 E o, 11 tr ~:·.::~n~~°'un110tm Com~r<••• C.<Mk
M•rcnli, 1911 ntfi n.nc:I• tt•<•r Ott•ult .r'CJ Ele<.Uon •o St-u lo be re RtPfl•I of Sir<lton JOI or Po-erol•nl ~~;,~~:~:;~nu. Ntwpcrt 8e•ch. lhr n•f'T"lir'•nd •OOrtH ot u-.. pcnon ,.,Sl4.ll C '"'' ~·'~ci, ... IUe<I with IN coroeo in t"t rounh wrw-re ~"" re•I •'1d lndu\trl•IFvrttU\t1Acll\9'UPOOrl P•tr•<ll A S.mlth dba Rori: with ""'nom <l•lm\ m•t bf' fllfd I\ A;,~10~~~":, !~.oo;l~~\ D•iiy1:0~i ~ 1o.·u.1"..0tYtf1 ~=~ .noe Cown11 on M•y P•~~~~,,~IY~·:~, ~~rr~:;.11;·~~~;.',.":~~ ·:~~,00::~ ~1~::,'."~::::.: i::~·~;i,.~?~ .• ~;.;~ ~:::~:'~°::.!"s'..O:,. ~~:><~.,'.~n~• ~ ~ IAANSAMERICAflfl.E F1n•n<1t1 St•hmt nh lor Or•"CI< M;;-:;kel Otvtlopmenl, • 91101 PO Bo• tUll S•ntt Ant
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS autlNl'SS
NAME STATEMEllT
Tiie IOllowlr>U perJQft It 001"9 llu$1· MH•• CORONA LEASI NG, 610 .... I Marl9old Avenue, Corona Otf Mar,
Collfornl• '2tll
VEOTTA IC LINDBERG, •10.,,
M•ro901d Aven.,., Corona Clel Mor,
flltAIOt: NIClt()(J.J Covnty Emptoy..,, Rttorem•nl Ststom Ull Oew ltrwl INSURANCE t.01\1\PANY "rel •••.0 FUC!'I '"°,,_ <onflnQen< y C•l1fornl• (Orpcm1lt0n lltt! S..y P•rk
f'••lMMtil Wt.e • C.•l•torn1• < orpor•t1on Pl•n <onw•t•nt AQtf"e~nt wltn Ben C.•rCll'. S.U1tf F • Irvine, C.•llforn•~ ,,,,_.
H••,..rt llM<~. CA nwo •H••d rruu.... '°" B•1a<n" •w<ovod L•o•• •t"on rn1, l>U•lnu• '' conouct•d DY •
I' tttll• Jov1to B•Y•n •ot•Mt Jae~ C. R•ull Co in '"'° c •w llmlled ,,.,,,,.,.,,,P
PubllJl>ed Or-(Mii O•llY P1101 AUttlent Sett••··· ot (, • -.:Oon.tld Con\trv<llOfl Co P•lrl(k R Smlln MeylJ,10,)1,Junel,lttt l1U .. 1 h •utno,.ttO l .a\P rtnew•I wltll Inf\ SIAl•ment ,...., l•ltd witn Ill«
Trenwnwtt1C• t t1f• R 1ch•rd R $tftnton ror Probat10" Counly Ct~rk of OrtinQlr County on M •lf
PUBLIC NOTICE
fnMJr•n<• C.o I°''"' tment IA<llltr "•Poro••d C•• ' "8'
P 0 Box "'°' t•ln •rt11 vtl rl'QV4'\h er• dDC>f'O'l.-cl TM I',., • .,
Publl\"'°" Or-Cot" 0 •1ly PtlOt 8K•ntrnftt•• St•"°" '" m of Roy Jor~"~" A\'4< ••I~\
loti AnQete,. CA~ lt\l ,, ._,~ tf'O •\ • conwltant tor '"" M•y. 1l, 10. 11 1981 J08'1 •I
C•lllornl• eiw '9CTITIOUS I USINl!H Utlt 6..S)>-JOOO M••nl•Nn< e OPt->t•l•CWn Pl•nntnQ •nd
C•h torn1t1 '111\ tm•lltnQ •<k"~'"
and thr le\1 day tor flllnc;r tte 1m\ by
•n-v crtcUt°' \n•ll ~ Ma., 19 l'MI
whtch n tM ""-i\11"1if\\ CS•y twfor• I~
C.Ot'ISUn'Hl'WttOl'I dttf \oe< 1f1f'O •OO'lt'
O•ltO -y 11 t•ll
Gt•na ~OHi, Inc.
Bv Chartt-\ Ant~Oho,
P,-t\Ktenl
lnt•not<I r ,..,,.,,~,•"
Publt•ntel OranQt (Ot>I Oet1v Pilot
May I) l'ill 11•/ 81
Htt hm11nd ln1l1.111.1 \lf.,
\'111(1111,1 Tiil lll'I or lll'llltlll
1 ill•• lntl1,111.1 Fu111·r;1I
\t'r\ ll"l'' 1.1tll Ill' h•·lrl CJll \\'t•d
111•,tl,I\ \1." l '.I l!IHI .ti
.! 1~11'\I .11 \l.1r,hall rw1l·r,tl
110111" 111 lluhltn, l t1drnna
Hur 1.11 11111 lw 111 1!1•11111n11111·
l'l•rn1•lrn t11:n111n1 tilt· In
111.111.1 C'11nlnl111111111.., .11·1· r1•
qu1•,(1·1I 111 lh1• l>,IOll'I W
rut 111·r \11·111011:11 F1111cl 1· 11
H.u1k ot \11w11<.1. ~ Otean
111 \" l..tl(tlll;t llt•Jdl. C'J
!f:!li . .I l>.11111•1 11a' ,, t't''>lilt•nt
.. , 1 ... ~·11n.1 lh'ad1 rur I h•·
11.t•l !. \l•,1r·. ~1·11 IU'' untl1·r
11 ... t111 .. , t 11)11 nr 1111 \l.1t'hJll
I· un .. 1 al 11111111 rn l>11hl1n In
d1.111.1
H f,:1\l 'f'ORT, SC . j A I' I I dl!t~~.~ IJ ~-uc .. d by"" In NAME STATEMENT
Gt'n . :\tt-lv in Za1:., fH. veo11a K Llndbero ... ~~~•'°''-'llO oenon 11 ooino bull·
Pvbl"neel Or.,.Of' C0t1t DAiiy P"'lt, Scn•Oull"Q Sy\11 m Contr•<I to ton
M•Y 13, 10, 11, "'I 1114 81 \Ider ><SA PuO/I( ,. .. ltn L•l>Ortlory
Con\trucuon 1\ cont•t\'Uf'd Leo•• ad
vftfl1\1n9 t.ontr•• toir T•• C.Oll~tot ••
•PtHO\ftO Ernr1o~nt t E ~ere'"'
A9rrem~n1 w1rn Southun (•liforn14
E:O•M>n Co 1 t\ •POrOvtd A(lretment
wltn Aoc.n Bton WllfloN\ Fr0>l •nd "'\.OC 1••tt •~ trw Botw (f\1r• Cn•nnet
'' •P9ro11.o 4l<oc:W.' ot work •no tuna
•no lo• '"'" C•P"lrano Buen Spe<lltt Pl•n is aporo~d Tran•••• of Funds to
the Tr Ansoon•tion 01-..1\1on Ootr•llnQ
P141n I\ •PP"O•fd C•mPtn9 ft-es •t ~f'•t~rty Af'Ow>NI P•r~ •rt wa1v.o
for C •hfOf rt1• Con\•rv•tlon Corp\
L .. .,.. for Atr<•dll \lor-f•cllity •I
Jor"' W•yrw -.irport wllh !>Guth Co.es.t
Av••lk>n tt. ilPCWOVl'O fhoor-t on ooe,-•
tlOt\ or count• h\ll ct,am\ •n C ••v•l•nd
PUBLIC' NOTICE PUBLI(' NOTl('E
IHWZJ<
1110\1.\!-. 1'' lilWZI<.: ,,
11•.,11!1·111 111 ('0 ... 1•1 :\1•''"· Cu
1111 'J 1t•a1·., pu'l:.ed <1wa~ on
\1.11 IU l!Jlll lie '' .,ur\'11 ed
11) 111' 111ll• ~tar) Brunt and
u tla11.:ht1·1 .Svh·1;i Rroztt·
hoth or l'o ... 1a \k'>a . <.:11 . 2
.,,,11·r., C";.11h1•rm1• Zrl'lak or
"·•n He1n,1rd1no l'.1 and
llc"ll' Hutlar uf P en n
"11 .1n1 .1 anti " hrnlht•r
.John ll11111c· ur f'1•nn "I' Jllta lt1•nlat1nn or thl.'
11111\ Jlo,an "a:. hl•ld nn
l'u1•o;d11). \tay 12. 1981 a t
7 11111':\1 a1 lhl· llarbor l.a\\11
N~UDe Society CllUllA a11t11AL AT IU
646-7431
T•1111r ••<l•f ••c:wtttr .,_. •..t•r•A• .,,.., .... u ............. "1 ••• , .,,,, .... ,.. ... ~ """"'"· c.9,.._,.._
2' ~ .. c;:-.-
I
\\ h<t 'l'r\ ed :J<, commdncftn~ Tnl\ ,.._, ••• llltcl wlln '"' IC"-MCO 1010 S.•>n•ll Clt<I•,
).tl'nt'r JI o r thl' Thi rct \rm\ . Counly Clerk of O•anoe County Oft Hunlfnqlon Bff<n. C•fi lornl• ·~ p BLIC NOTICE NS 1Ml1
l'IC:TITIOUS auSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
I Aprll 11, .... l<•tlllH n • M•m •lll 10~'1 tltecJ t•urhl'r thl' \\l'l'k ,,_ StHh•ll Clr<lt . Huntington ' Bu ch, C·J71
Pul>llll\eO Oranoe CCMSI Ottly Piiot, C•flfornl• .,... I LOS •NGl'LES J UDICIAL OtH ltlCT
FtCTt TIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT T ... IOllOWl"O POr\Oll ,, dolno l>v••
'"l' IOllOWlnQ ptt\Of"S .,, 001no
IXl\ln•u •~
\Ir"'"' EA POI.IS • 111•,
(;eo r gt> II . B r adl t>},
Ion g t 1 mt• JOUrnJlts t and a
re11n'fl As~ot·1att•tl l'rl'ss
nc\\ !-man. h<t'> died 111 tht•
:'II 1nnt•apoh" \'t'H•ran'> .\11
1111111,lrottmn llu.,µ11al lit•
II .I' HI
S \ <; II .\ll llO It. "\ \
\I' "ebon Alg H·n . 72.
a \\ rikt knov. n for his nn1
l'b Jlld 'ho rt 'tone~ ahoul
hu.-,th·r~. lt1'>t'r'> and lol>os
Aprot ,,, May •• tl, 20, , .. , 202H t T~I• bu>tnen •• C-ltcl by..., In 1 tt -o·-A-... dlvldu•I L .. ._..., C•ttlenti• -11
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ICTITtOUS aUStNEU
HAM~ STATEMENT
I l n• fo110,.1nv Ptr\On• •• • dotne
b\ilsfnen •t
NEW OAWN, 1Slt Myrllt•OOCI
Slrtt l, CO$t• Mtw. C•lltornl• •:Z.2'
L•wrefte.e Herm.n Ao«>1nton# 1$11
Myr11•-. (0$1• M«a, C.t ltfornl• ,.,.
IC•lnl""A M•mefll PLAtNllFF FAMIL1"-N PIPf a.
TnlS ... ,,,.,.,,, .... llleel wlll\ Int SUPPL v co' INC: • C•lllorno• tor
Co1111ty Cler~ of Or11noe c;ovnty on PG••hon
Moy ti t'llll OEFENOANT D BROSE In
lll•t• OIVldU•ll• -Clot"O buti""H •> 0 H
PubllsntO()r-Coett Oolly Piiot, BROSE 8UILOING SUPPLY 0•
M•y tl, 20, 11, J-J, !ttt J19'-tl HORIZONS CONSTRUCTION C:OM
PUBLIC NOTICE
PAH Y •II• 0 H BROSE a. AS·
SOCIATES DOES 1 th•OuQn l<X
SUMMONS N•t1on•I Forf'\t it, tt'<t •v•O _,ncli COi\
CASI' llUMallt ~ t1nu•d Oon•ttd •o•« •oreemtnl\
llOTICl l y.., Ila•• --T~• wttn l • Bof>•I• C.ornmulltly C:•ntor and fllCTITIOUS aUSINl'SS '"''1 m•y tleci* ... lfttt ,.., wtllltUI Y W ( A ror Elder C•ro (1tn1c 1 •rt
HAME STATEMINT , ... , .,.,,.. -'11 ""leu yeu ,..,......, approno
Tl•• tollow•no _..,,, tt dolr>U but• .. 111t111 •MY'" lt•M Ille lrtf•Nftat• ln• 8CMrd"'1iOUrMO
n•\\ •s ORANGE a. CABAILLO, l lO 7>t
Eot 11th Slrt•I. Su••• Ill, Co•t•
M• "'· Collfornl• •·um C><•RLES SPILl EA. JA 1H
l•U t/tn Strut, Su•lt 111. Coit•
Mt ... C•t1forn1• 91-17
TP\t\ bu11n•1' h conducted by •
11m1ted Pt'1Mt>lllP
Ch.Irle\ Spiller, Jr rn1~ stA11ment ...,., Ult<I w Hn the
C:ounly (tor• ot Or..,oe County on
Apr1111 11191
l'HOMt
Putlll•~ Or•n11t CM\I 0•1t; Piiot,
"-Pr1I 19, M.o y 6 I), 10, 19'1 101111
!>TUOtO f'IVE 102, Sull• 0
Nt •OOrt Crn tt-r Ort'ff', Newpo't
Bt•ch, C•llforni• 'Jt)o()
Jeny Ann Ltlly 48'6 Al'lff
Av•nut, N'wpcrt 9t.ti<h C.•llforniM
9JW.J
Judy Harrison 19'J7 Church No A
CO>I• ~ .. C•lllorn•• •lf.11 Jo•n C Braclbury, SOJt Out(npr
1r .. 1ne C•l1lort'll• •uu
T hl\. Ou\tne-u " t.onour l•d by •
Ot'Mr•I Nrfntr\t'up
J ury A Lilly
JUO .. H•trl\,On
JCMn (. Br Mll>Ur y
Thi' \t•fernPlll ••t Ole<ll ,,.. .. lh the-
Counl; (.~r• QI 0.-COU<lry Oft M•v
• 1•11
w L H..,..., -4023 w t•7no Strfft,
No F•, Totr•nce, C•lllorn1• '<>SOS
Tn1s Ou>l"'H h <onelu<t•d by •
...... Ptl't~•"'lp
d1ed or a heart a11<1<.'k W L H.,.... llt H O . ...... tSEtfoL J JUNE "-ll::.llANOEA
TR tCOUNTY PORTABLE XI lt you wl5"10SHkthe.Ovlttof.on Cltr~OllhtBCMrdofSuoervoton l PUBLIC NOTICE
1'161110
P 11hli.,Nod Or4tn0t t o.tt D•llt' Piiot, M•y ll, '°· 71, Junl' l, J<ltl 77ll 11
Salurda\' "" Wllb best Thlt ll•l"f'Nl'I .... ltl.O wlln lh•
kno\\ n tor. two nov~li.. · A i:;:o;i.;1
1• Cton. °'or.,. Co\11\tv on M•Y RAY, S39 s . R•vmonCI, Fulttrton. JllOl"nt y In llli• m•tt••. you ihould 00 Ol'l'ICIAL .. ltOCEEOINOlOflTHE
Cofllornl•tUll co promptly so lh•l your '""""n aOAltOOI' SUPEltVllOltS f'ICTITIOUS BUSINESS PUBLIC NOTICE
Rkn.rd Mtll<Olm Cocl<l•no. 11•'4 ··~ ... II enY. ,.,,., ... llltdon lime OF ORANGE COUNTY, C•l•F NAME STATl'MENT
Mery90ld, Bloomlnoton, C•Hlornl• AYIM>I U-.,. W.. -rodtff. Sanl•An•,C•fllor111• •~• totlow1no .,.rsons •rt do1nol Walk un the Wiid Std<' ' and r ~u11u
Tht' ;\Ian w11h the (;olden Publltlltd DIOof\Oe c-it O.Hv PllOI{
Arm MoyU,10.11.June>,19'1 ,..._. tU1• tEI trlllllMt --dloclcllr <Ofttr• Utt A re9ul•r ..-tlnQ ot tnt 8oud of lbu\lnH\ u THE OSAGE W•TER P'ICTITIOUS9USINESS
Tnl• llUSIMU ,, tonductto Of .... In· Siil •UtlleoKIA • ..-.-... Ud .......... Super •"O" Of Or•no• County, I co. 11100 Tt1Dtr1 Av•nue, Fou,,t••n NAME STATEMENT
SA!\TA ~101'\IC'/\ 11\ r '
:\taurltt Klul(man, 6ii. as
'CH'liJll' JH'otluc•f'r o( the
<1u111c·1 1 \' 'l.'rtl''> and
hrntlwr of 11'\ 'ltdr. Jar k
l\lul(m.m 1l1e1l Thur ... d.i~
llO Ll.YWOOU I A l'I
~1argare1 l.lnrl"a y, 70 an
art re,., ""ho '>lurrl'd 1n AA
mo\ 11·~ l111 n1111 a :111 v1•111
('Ofl'l'r d11'<I Fmtuy or 1•m
ph1 .. e mu
PUBLIC NOTICE Olvtdu•f. Ila Mt1tre•JOt1i.L Le I• trtform•c .... C•lllornle, elM) rn11no ., IM Govorn· V•llty yhtornld 911Cle Tnt IOllO,.•l'V l)trsons •'" OolnQ Al<NrO ~l(Oll'l(OCICllno q......... lr\Q Bot.-OOftMDO\lrl(ISljOVtrMC!tly COMM ERCE FUNO 1"4( • °""""""
Tiii• S\.llttN<tl wa• llltd wltll ,.... St Utle<I <>HH M>ll<llu tlCOfl .. 10.,. Int Bo•l'CIOI s._ ....... , w.u held Mey C•••torn1• t O•Po••lton 11140 '"'°"'' p c s c I N s u A,. N c: E
County Cltrk of Or1t100 County on un ·~en Ult •>unto, d•beno • ''" el ~ 30 ,. M Th• tollowlnQ "'••nut Fout1l••n Vtll~y C•htorno• !>E RV IC ES. 1041 Bu\lntn Center
NOTICI lOC:ONTltACTOltS Aprll 21, 11191 n•cuto lnmedlata mt nlt, Ot ella ntm~o memt>ors be•nQ pres.nt A•lpn 0108 ' I Orlvt Suite 10•. lrvlnt. C•lltornl•
CAU.INO l<Olt •IDS Ft-m•ntr•, SU r-11• ocrit•. •I lloy B C:I••~ (l'l<llrman R09er A St•n rn,. ou""~'" conelu•l•d by a cor '211! School Olstrkt Cout Community Publl>M<I Or1119t Co .. t D•llv Piiot, •lgun•. -\et rtQ••lr..,. • llompo ton H•rr1ttt M W••d., Brute pora uon P•<lll< C.ontr..:l Strvlct\ Co•-•-
oll ... Oltfrlct Apr "· ~Y•. 13. 20. 1911 t•IUt I TO THE OEFENDANt A tlvll Ntsttnek' TllC>r"N• F Allty •nd IM COMMERCE FUNO IN( lion, • C•lllorn1t <O•Por•I•""· 1041
a id DHclllne 1 00 l>.m . Tue"'41y, compl•lftt ""' DMfl 11100 C>y '"" pltln-Ct•rk Sl•••n e ><•<VII, Bu\lno• Center Ori ... Suit• 104,
June t, lttt P UBLIC NOTICE I"" •oeln•I vou tt you wlsn to O.l•nd I Ordinano l'•1 " •clopt"'1 Loe•• p,.,,0ent lrvme, C•lllorn1••111S Pl•ct ol Bid Ret•lpt. Ofllce ot tne tnh l•w•ull, you mu.,, ..,unin JO dhsJcoutai !'Toor..,.., •rt •OP•O••d •nd fn" \IAltmont wai ,,1..., wttn tne Tnl, bu\IMu Is toncluct•d by•'"'
Purch .. lnO Aotnl, Mi. M<t•l•n Perrin, •llor thll """"'°"' '' \trv•CI on you, lcontlnutd c;.r•ld A •·JtrrY Jon•• 1, Countv (tor• ot Or•nQ9 County on por•tlon
Co.ti COfl'WnUl\lty C.ollegtt Dltlrkt. Ad-AM~ 111• wlln lhl• court •'""""' rooon .. commCIT\Otel Ht•""O on tne Apoe•I Apr1110 1<ie1 Pa<•ll< Contr.tcl
mlnlltr•llon 8ulld1nt. U IO Adoms T,$. N0.""7S t·o tne complelnt Unl•U you 00 so of lllt L-NIQVfl Community A• ,11.00 1 ~rvl« CorDOftllon
Aven.,., Cat. ...... , CA •U:z. NOTtCI' Ofl TltUSTllS' SALi your <lefeufl wltt be tnter.O on •P-•0<••llon O.w1ooers Is co11n ... o Tl\t Pubh•~ °'""II' C:oot 0•11y Pilot, MIChattT M•rlno.
Pro I•< I •-Ullcetlon Name: Bid On J une•. 1911 •I 11:00 •.m. F IRST pllcallon of tne pt•1n1111. •nd tnh courl tlrm of OMNI c;roup, inc .. PlttnnlnQ APttl H , 1'1, MAy •. 13. t!/81 1ss1 8t Prttldtnt No."'· Sfteck B., Addition, Golden AMER ICAN TITLE INSUR•NCE mor •nl•• • l~nl •O•lnst you lo• Con~ult•nh I\ Hll<ltd .. Int Tiii\ ,,.,.,,.,..,,,WU Ille<! wlln ,,...
Wttt Colle9t, Hunllngton 9eacn,1 COMP•NV, ot Trust" or Su<ces.tor ii.. rtllt l Cle~ In tl'W! <ompl••nl. Arcltllt<I E"tlinttr ror ,,.. Mu•l<k Countv C1tr• of Or-County onM•Y
C•lllornla. Tnill" or s.ibllllu1"'1 Trust ... of that wnfcll WOUICI rHUtl In a•ml\nment Of F•t•llly ~•I•• P1.., lr..:t M•P No PUBLIC' N'OTICE • '"'
fll •n• Av•ll•lll• lrom Wflll•ml <ttl•I" OHo ot Trutt •U<uted lly w•ve•, 1a111no Of mo,,.y or prootrtv or IUIS "•P<J<ovt>d ,..,.u
Puoll>nee! Or•n11t Coe" O•lly Piiot 81vroo ~ P•rtM rs, U OO Newport P ETER B DREW,• merrled man, H ollltr rellel reQut\ltO In In• com Th• eoard .Ojournt'd 1n m•moty ot
80UlfY ... d, N-t Beech, CA fU43, lllJ Mlle -MjNrMt, end rec:or-plolnt M•r Ion (O..-bltll
11•161).0300. Auoust U, IMO u lntt rumeftl no D•ted Marcnn ·-ISEALJ JUNE ALEXANDER
NOTICl IS HEREBY (.IVlN t ... t t'2•1, In -13103, -1"9, Of OI Clerk IC '-t•to. Ct.rt Ol t"'° Boero Of Suoervlson
Ille .-.....,.,.., Sc'-1 Ol•t•l<I or 11<1•1 lttcord• of Oronoe County, Clerk Puot1\l\ed O.M>QO co .. 1 O•llY Piiot
Ore,... c-.ty, C.t1tor11le, tctlnQ by Catlfortlla, -pun ue,,t to ll'Mll ertatn A M 0. l • C:ru1, M•Y tl, 1911 11l$<11
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NloME ST"-TEMI NT
fne toltowmo per\on\ arf' Oo1no
ou~1nes\ a \
May tl 10, 71, Junt' l, ~1 U7 .. l t
PUBLIC NOTICE
.r -.,
PA~ADE'\ 1A1'1
John 8 . ~llllkf'n. K7, an up
po1ntet• 11r Pre~1111•n1 t'ul\'tn
C.:oohd~e lo thl' 11at111n·, Tax
Court tn 1926. dwd at his
homl' ht're •nd tnr°"9fl It• <Hvernfftt 101r<1, Notice ot Oeleult -e1ec:t1on to Seit Ooovty
ht •t lllaller •tferred t o es ti..rtunder tecor<leCI Jonu.ry 10, t9'1 IOlOlt01 lYKUUICI
"DISTRICT", wltl rec.iv. .... to. but .. ln•t·-· no. 1~. In -.,. ... _. WllUW. llYtl .
r'IOI l•ltr -tr. allo-tlaltd ti,,,., P9ve ..cl, OI Offki.1 Re<orelt of Wld ISlllle ....
PUBLIC NOTICE
COASl HEARING "-10 CENI EA,
J40Y E•\I Coa11 Ho(lhw•y, C:orOfl• Clel
M., Calllornt4 ~llil\
'9CTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STAT EMENT ~ r.ACIFIC VllW ~· MEMO•l.AL rAJtK ~ Ct-rrele1Y Mo rtua"'
f Chapel·Cremalory
1500 Pac1l1c View Dr•ve t: NewPOrt Beach
644 2700 --
McCOIMIOC MOUU.AIUIS . LilQuna Beac h
\ 494·9415
~ Laauna Hills
768·0933
San Juan Cap1~trano
' 495 1776
~ . HAJll OI L.AW,.._MT. OUVl . Mortuarv • Cerreterv
CremalOIY
1625 Gisler A11e . Cos1a Mesa . 540-5554 . ; --
PIHCl H OTHIH . HU. 110.ADW.AY ;· MOITU.AIY • 110 Broadway ,
~ Cos•• MeH
~2·91SO
~--IAln ... GHOH
iMITH & TUTHILL . WUJCUff CH.Arll
427 E 171h St
Cosla Mes11
646-9371 --
. ~. rtuCI N QTHIH
': SMITHS' MOITV.All Y
• 627 Mam SI
HunllnQtOn O.ecn
63&-6539 .... ...
.,;~ • WPS 3 z s a
B l'Rfii\~K 1A P 1 t\
brain 1umor claimed the
life o f lo n,g11me n t t1v1st
l.uWanna Y o un g, a
hou!lew1re and m o ther or
... ,.., lllca ..... ,,. •••rd of 0 contract Coullly, will ~ •no pur .... nt to l •verly Hlllt, CA ttJlt NOTICE TO CAEOITOltS
lor Ill• -pt'Oj«I. Wld °""Of TrU>I ...... OUl>ll< •uc T•I: UIJ) U).tltl 0, •Ut..K TAANSl'E It
Sid JIWlll be rec•lveCI In tlW pl•o llon lor otll, l•wfut mO<Wy ol llW Unit· Publl•-Ou noe Coe>I O•i1y P1101, 1 ts.cs. 6101-4!07 U.C.C.I
lclenltlled MIOw, •nd "'4111 be ope...O ed Stat• of A,,,...l<a, •t Ille m•ln tn· M•y tl, 20, 21, June l, 19'1 1HI It Nntlu I• r.reby ol••n to croollors of
•llCI 1H1bll<l't' rNd •IOud •I the --lr•n<e to f'l,.1 Am•rlcan Tilt• Ille within,..,.,...., tr•n•luorhl tn.1 •
tlalf6'1,.._p1Ke. lnsu••nct Compeny lou ted •t IU PUBLIC NOTICE llu" transit • I\ aoou1 to 0t m-on nine \\ho est~1hlished lh<' rn. ... w111 be• w .oo del'oslt re-E•tl Flltft $t,...t In tne City o1 Sent• P••~on•I prop•••Y nor•ln•llt r
Los A n geles Con l1nu1ng q ulre<11neec1tM1ofbkl<1ocumenhto Ana,Cetllornl•,alltl\atrltftt,tlll••ncl lo•r.c•tl>OO
(; 0 n !i u m e I p II n t' I " I oua••nlM aw return In QOOcl COndfllOft lnttrtJI conwyeO to •ncl now lleld by II NS.7"47 I T ,... n•mel\I •nd OU•lneu •dd•tU
R h 95. wltnln ,,,... dtYt •lttr ltl9 111<1 Ol)efllnt undtr .. Id 09eCI of Tru\t In llW p,_r NOTICE TO CltlOITO•S ot tho Intended tr.nsltrorl\l .,.
esearc '" I • date. ly sltu•lll<I In MIC! Cour>ty -,.... o~ au1..1t TltANS~Elt BILL CORWIN FORO, INC . 0
R I VERSI DE <AP> A
stroke has taken (he lift-o r
charact e r act or Herb
Vol1nd, who appeared o n
11uch series as "~f-A·S·ll,"
"All In the Famil y ,"
"Be w itc h ed " a nd "LOVI.'
Ame rican St y le " Vola n d
tap ed en e p isode o ft he series
"Flo" ju st a w eek b efor t-h is
death April 26 a l Riverside
Com munlty Hospita l
SINGAPORE I AP I
Sinaa pore President Ben .
Jamin Henry heare11, 83,
wh o h<"l d t he t a rget}
crremoninl om ce for more
tha n a decade . died tod11y
iifler 11uClertn1 a cePebr11t
h emorrh age on Frida>•
YAKIMA, Wu h cAP>
Tom OolUc, • forme r f rf'sl dent of thf' Natlon1 As aocletlon of 8roadc111Jtf'rft
and 0 p11st chnlrman or the
CBS Atflliates aroup, died Sunduy
SAN 1.EANOKO t A Pl
Rabbi John J . Zatluor, 71,
w h o waa ra.b b l o l
Heldelbtra wbt-n ttie Nu l11
beaan lhelr cunp0l1n or
txtC)rmlnnlon there, died
Wednesday
7 7
E•<n bfcl mutt o lllorm •ftd be <Iese rt-•• lieu. 6"14117 U.C.C.) C•lllornle ,...._., ...... JO Rut Gr•nd
responslw to l"9 contrect documentt. Lot 6' of Tr..:t No ,.5&, .s tllown Notk • 1• lle..i>v QI...., to ptelllort of f Valle, NtwpOfl S.~h. Colltornlo •26601
Eacn blCI s/1111 Dt e<<omlltflled by on a map --In 1100• IOG, PIGe• ti.. wltltlfl NlmtCI ,,..,,,,,0..-(il tn•t o Th• loc•llon In Cllllornl• of ttw
"" .. <urlty rel'"" to In the c.ontrect tt to U lftcluJlv• ot mlact tl-s bu" traMter Is •OOUI to be mt<le on <nlri ••Kutl•toll><• or prlnclpel Dusi·
clocuments -by tlw Utt OI P'°"°'90 INIOt In u. Olfk• Of ttw oflk • of the o trso n•I proPttlY nt reln•ll•• n•u olfl<• ol tllt lntt.-0 trensteror
sub<Otllracton tovnty reconter Of w tCI <OUlllY. do<rllltcl. I> UO Soutn Mein St'"'· S.nt• Ant,
TM DfSTlltCT ,_....tr. •'9flt to EstaOC •U urenlum, thorium •M Tiie -<•> -buslneu .. oreu C•lllornl•
reJOKt .ny or Ill bkls or to ••lw Ofly all otner m•terl•I• detarmlntd of tlle lftltndteltr1t11lerort1) .,. All otlltr bl•Slntu n•mu •ncl ao
lrrt9uterlt1es or lnfot<m•llll•t II\.,.,¥ ourtuent 10 Section JIBH1l of tht GUISEPPtNA tOFf'R IOA •nd d•euu u'"d bf '"• 1nttndtd
bldtorlntlWlllOdlnQ. Atomk Elltrrf Act of , ... 1.0 Stat DOMINIC D tOf'l'AI OA, •Oe E tr•n•ltror ,..1tn1n tn•M Y•••\IU I p"t
Ti.. OfSTRICT hM oMlllM<I lfom ltll, to be PACllll•rl't HMrtltal to tilt l•lllO• llvd , Newport 8e•<ll, so far •• known 10 lht lnltnOtd
Ille Oltecllllr of IN o.p..tme<lt ot lft. orod11ct1on of lluton•l>I• l'fl•t••••I. CllllfOfllla t,.ntftr" are· none
Ouitrlol Rel .. lofl• tltt oeM•ll pre••ll (ontelnecl 111 -tevtr conontr•tlOfl, Tht -ISi •ncl bu•lneu -res• 1 n. n•melll ano ou1tntn •C!Oreu
•no rate ot lltf' diem w19ts In tlle In O.OOJllJ In teld 1-. to.,.ti..r wl\l\ 01 tn. lnttndeel trllft•l-1•) .,, · of If•• lntenclt<I t•llft'9.,eohl .,.
loctllly In wN<lt tltl• -· I• to tie ,,.. rtoflt OI ""' United Stal .. '"'"""' .. HILi p N. BENSON •nd ELDA GRANO FORD, INC •• Colllor11I•
per1or"l90 lor •Kii craft or 1,.,. OI "' eutllofli.41 •oen•• or ror• .. 11· 8 EHSON. •OI E 8•fbo• 8tv<1 , co.poutlon, uo Caorltto Pen Otlve,
wor'm.., -to •10K11tt the t on-111101, at .,.y lime to .,.,,., -t,.. Htwll0'1 llHCll, C•llf°'"'• San I• AM. Callloml• '7101
lract. f~ and ,,,_, tor, mlM •lld ,... Tn•t llw pr~y ,...., • .,..,. ht•tto h Tnot tht -r1y oer1'"'"' nereto ''
Tiie IOAOOlno ~ OI -dftm mon tM M-. ma, Ing lu11 corn-cttt<rl-In t:1tntrM •• TO• out taoO d•Hrfbed in -••I •• l)Ody •"°9
w-• trt °"Ille M tlW OISTltlCT Of· ptnutlorl lor .,, • .,.....Of or 1n111rv oc swre wltlt -and wine, •no I• toc..1° butln•u , -'' to<et"'1 at 111 Nor1n
lk• locat• •t ,,,., ,.._ """"'· <••'-" I,.,..., ••• , ... , ... .., In IN ... •t -E B•ll>oa .,.,., • NewOOtt M•ln Sll"Mt Sant• ....... CalllO<lll•
Co.le -. c:A. ~ !Ny lie ,._ deed from United St•ltt of ,.,_,lta, 1~11. c.tlforllla The bu•lntH n•-uvd by the "'"
tatneo on ,..,..., A ~ 9f ttlew .-.c•""4 .1-12, tt41 tn tJ0011 t.S2, TM•"""""' neme uMd by ,,... .. ,d tr•ntltrorltl at u ld tet•tlon ''
, .... "'•II lie"°"*' It ....... .,... ,... 2t1, 9ftlclel tKOnls. trantltrOt (•) •• U ld location ,,. CORWIN FORD
Tll• tor...,ino t<Ndul• " "' dltnl Tiit Ill,.. -·" or OIMt (Olf\> JOSI ••• ITALfAN MARK ET Th•t '"' l>vtk ,,..,.,., ,. tnttt*d to
·-• I• - -• -111111 ••Y Of "'°" dtt/tftMlor'I of utd p.-openy It Tllet Ml4 Wiil trat\\ltr It tnt"'4ed to be <On•umm•ttd ot Ille otll<e of,
l ltftl II) '*'" Tiie reta tor llelldty "'""°"'" .. tie U7t C0'9ate, C.lt M Cttl._...,..teel •I the Offk• o1 SEA Pt9feuklnlt £to(rvw ,..,,I( .. , ,.,, N Incl..,., .. _ WW1l ""911 Ill .. loe.M """9,c.tl-• AIR l!S(ltOW COltPORATl0"4, Hunt· Tu•lln A-. ~I• Aft•, C•lllornle
ttrne •IMI__,,..., 5114 tall wlll llt m..,. wltlttout ~tv• t1\910tl h«ll, C.tltornta, on °' alllt t210t, on or t ltet JVM t, t91t
11 tllell •-Y ~IN CO"• n•lll or •.rranty, upn111 or fmplltd, JUM t, '"'· Tlllt bulk lrAntftr It \Ubf•ct lo
TRACTOR le ""*"' "" clfltrect •• .. to"'"'·""''""°"., •M ..... llr-" Tiie NI-oncl edclrtu Of .,,. P"'"' C•lllornl• Untlorm Commt•clal c-•·a~. -""" ""' ..... ,, • .., t• NtlJfJ' tlll -Id 1>tta11<• -on wltfl ""'*" (laHM ,.,,..,. lie flt«! I• SEA Section ... uftdltr lllnl. .. ..., Nt ... "*' ... tMllOl••"""MC"""llrvNldO... Allt IKROW CORPOltATIOll, .. 1) l n•-...-IOcltKSoflllef)etWl'I
uild -lllM ,.... It .. , ~ tf Tt11-. • wtt· ••.no"'· pltn "" Warl\Ot •-. Ht111tt119ton ltt<ll, •1111 wltom <l•lmt m•y lilt llltcl t•
OlftillleY94f"" tlltlft In"" OW<tltl4fl.. ltllowllltl .... ,,,.1 .. <tttJ. ••Pfft ... Cplllerrll•. -'"' IHt NY !Of llllnQ illroftt'tonef EK row S.rv9"H . 1'21 N . tllt <Mlrtd, •ftf ... _II ttlt ti-f/f Ille lnJUll cl•lm•.,, MY C'9dttor _., ... J-s. lllttlll A-. $Mila Ant, C.llfornl•
No.,._,,,,.,. withdraw"'-....,.., i1111tl!Ullel\ of 1111• Nt tlu Of ••••· t•t, wl\kll It"' butlMU ..,.,. 111rw. 0 1ot, ,. 0 ... ttst7. Sant• A11•, • "''"fl ,..,.,.Ill.,. l•JI .. ,,_ .._, ••1.•. tllt <•t1•wmm•t1en t11tt nettfl•d C•tlrornta. Ct llltf'fllt tlllt lmaUlno tlle•tew4ftttlw..,.,.9f!Nft. OATaO Mey •, t•1. e"°" Nllretsl, -tlw IHI d•y tor llllf'll
A ,_'1flltl'lt _.IM •,.~. f'lltlT AMIRICAN fl Tl.I to I« n IS --to .. Id lntff'IMd <l•I"" "" Illy u 't<lllOr >"-II Ill M.ty
MM WIN .. NCIUll'M "''°' .. •tenlllt IHSUltANCl!COMPAHV. Tra1111., .... , Uld lnhnd•d ''· t••. wfllefl II t .... l>IJtlMH dty Of tfMI Cftr.ct. n. MYf!M!ll llefld.,.. • C.llfiDl'lllat Ot110r.Cl9n, TrlMlefW(t)....,"" 1011 ... tno ctddl· btfore tn• u 11tut'lllllotloft d•t•
'"'*llltftC.elll'!'llllllllllelflUlt'-ASTltU$Tl l! tloMt....,.... ~...., _.," ... tot<llteel .....
M4 fMll lfl .. c:-t,..t OK-a. an.u R 9"41ty, wltl'll11 IN llW'e. .,..,..1 .. t P.•t· -· Dated....., t I,, .. ,
C:... e--lty AlllMt1 ... Offk., OtlH ""'11 U, "" Or-...,_, Ill(. Cltilt9t Olllf'kt 11• le.C l'lttfl Sll'fft f'NI~ N • ..._ By. Cltarl .. A11IAl>ll11,
lMH"'TNllMt a-•Ant.CA'210t tldll9Mteft ~ ly...,_a,w~ crwt-.si11 ,.....,._Tr-~ ,,,......,,.,.,_
illlltllltlM 0r11111 c.... O.lly ,...... ....Mt .... Or .. CMtC o.ltr Pllee 11'114111.tNd Or .. C-t O•Oy Plleol, Pu .. ,.,..,~ C-~• O.llv Pilat,
Mn tt -1•t ,,.,.., ..... IJ, .. n, ~ U tM t """" '*· t•1 ,._, M•Y tl , 1"1 n ... t
SS 2 SS • fn 297 , es DC 9 ° ••• a o re o ····=····
EllElYN C. Wt<llE ••Sil Etm
t1rct1 Fount••n Valley, C••1torn1• 91108
DONtfoLO H WHll( 16SIJ Elm
Ctrtfr Fount•in V•llr-y CalUornt• 0108
This bui,1ne\\ ts tonovctl'd by •
oener•t PArtnt,.n1p
E ••lyn Ci Wl>lt~
F lto4J'I
PvbfllhOtCI Or.->Qt Cot\! Oally Piiot.
.llpttl 12, 1' M.oy. tJ 1 .. 1 .. ,. .. 1
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllCTITIOUS au St NISS
NAME ITATEMl NT
T ht ro11-1no pereona .,. doing
b1i11lneua.1•
THE PEAl'ECT ••LANCE, rns
C Hlltrl• W••· Newoort Bt•<h, Celltornt• IMJ
Cor inne Ann C•ll•ll•11. 41U C
Hll••I• Way, Newporl Bt•<ll,
C•llfornto '2MoJ
Tt •eH M•rlt Amoroto, S07V.
Marfootd Strfft, Coton• del M•r.
Cal llornl• nus
T nfa butlneH la tonOut le<I l>y a generef l)M1nertl\lp
Corinne A Collalt•n
rnis ........... t .... 111.0 wllll ,,,.
County Clftk of Oran0t covnty on
A~ll t1, 1911 ,.,_,
PublltlWCI O«anoe Coe•t Oolly Piiot,
Aprfl 2', May •• 13. 20, ltll 1021 .. t.
PUBLIC NOTICE
lltCTITIOUl.aUSUtall
Tnp toltowmo per'\on '' 001nQ bu\1
nts\ •\
C:OU NfAY C"-8tN WE~! IOI
Promontory Onvt1 E1a.-.1, Newport
Buen, C•llforn1a 92600
AR IHUA (HARLES 81SCH 100
Promontory Ott-..• EA\I Newport
Beacn C:allforn1a 92MO
fh1\ bV\IM\\ 1\ ton<)u\.ted Dy •n 1n
01vlduAl
Artnt1rC,.,,rln B•K n
fhf\ \l•t~nt W•\ f llf'd Wl'tf\ O°tfl'
County Cit•• ol Oronoo County ·on
Aprtl 10 1'1111
,,~,
Publ1'"'° Or•~ Cot'1 D•llv Piiot, A Of ti 21, 1'1, ~y •• 13, 1 .. 1 11'111
PUBLIC NOTICE
fllC'TI TtOUl IUSINUS
NAMI' STATl'MEltT
fht f041-lllQ "'...,,. " c1o1no bu•• "''' ., 8AR8AA1'S (t.E ANIN(.
SE RllltE. 1410 CA<llon Piao C.011•
M•W, C•lllornl• l)t2' 8AA8ARA MAAIE DUNCAN
.. 0 Cullon Pll<O C:O•l• M•U
C.•llfornlt 9~1'
Thi• l>vtlneu 11 conouc ttd Dy on 1n
OIVIClull
& ... ~r•Ounun I hi\ \tatt..-1 ,.., lltl'd w1tn ,,..
Cou11ty Ct~•~ 01 O•tn09 Couo\lf on
M•rtll 24, 1 .. 1. l'IM~I
Putlll"-0 Oranot Coast 0•11~ Piiot
"'"'" tl, 1t, #My •• u .... • ....
PUBLIC NOTICE
NAME STATIMa•T l'ICTtTIOUI IUSINUJ
Tito IOllOWlllt perso11t •re ttolllt NAMI ITATaMIN~ ~tllltH.. Tilt IOtl<IWlllt .-r-" d0'"9 btl•I TME ANAH!IM ANTIQUE SHOW ,,. .... ,
& 'ALI!, llDO W.tt 1(11otlle, A-Im, t•I WOltLOWIOli LEASIHO, 12)
Celllotlllt,_, THE l tJLLI°" COMflANV, Ul AltT Je~ 0.... Ori"'". &,._ CM,.,I I TC ,_. II t1tll St-. ~ulte I, C-t•
Wey, Rl-5*, C.llloNlla ft* Mew, CtllfWlll• t»t1 I
ltflY• Savoie Ot lMti, )Me Clwryl J. J--" Cord, aM E. 11tfl Strte1,
Wly, Af\lertldt, CAllllOl'llll ntOli lull• t, c.ta Mew, C.l~lt ••t7
Tltl' llutlMn 11 U ftdlf<ttcl lly • Tlllt litllllOIKf It <andlle.1141 by .. I,,_
leflfr•l 1Nt11Nf.,_ dlvldutl ,,... °""'Gt'"'" .I.,,..... Olrf Tltla JlettirNflt wn flltcl wlllt t Tlllt "'""'*" WM 111 ... wltl'I V>t
Gei.nly Cl•'" or ~Mtt ~ty a Ceu11tr °'"1L of 0r"'9t c-1~ 81\ M.ty
AIH'll ao, 1"1. 4, t•t. .. ,., ..,.,."
fl..e.tl ..... Or-CMA o.Jly"' ""41 ... Or .... ~ o.llY ......
Moy U, .. )I,,.,,. l. Itel tlU .. t #My 4; 1~,., ll, "'' lf'HI
.~-------~ -
i
• l l '
ca c s $$52243 s e o a ZOO! .• a a: a f
Orange Coaal OAILV PILOT/Wedneaday. May 13, 111 ~• ltl I
tl60 AMto W.-.4 tltO IMW '712 • l•p•rW A.t.t, l•p1rW , ....... UMd A..tot. U1td • ~~~ ._.. ..... o .. ·~I TrwcJu ' •••••••••••············ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. :i:r.···-.. 9070 .............................................. ,, BMW 1331. Tulle O\'U Mere...... t74 .... 9170 e...-o 9917 o• 9935 •• :!••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Special T ftaM. ' l•••• $210/mo Perf~cl ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••• :7!'!'•••••••••••• •••••••;••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
.... ,... 9010 ~•nted slip for 30' p-L--lf Ip U91Mf coodlt1on P1P 644 ~ ·74 4SOSIL ,4 Bu". on• t>eiae patnt. '69 CAMARO '68 Cu111net Wl(ll .~m.ill
••••••••••••••••••••••• Erickson ullbo•l. love ~ n.w Sunroof. ll'llthl'r in s:iiK ,,;"1, xlnt l 1 1 VK nt•w P<'lnt '4''~'
Non·proflt ora . need• ly cond ~ Low ...... I r-• Cepri 9715 terior, hH everythlna• 12950 642 8717 m:;~~ ~n~ani b~~r~i 645.7611J. (213>~ 9:i.'it
your boat, plane. car, t,S-..i& lfl04 ..... ~a!_.lfld. PorVourCarl ~TeC~~·rnr:;~~Ve~:·;~ 0 67PVJ l 0nJ> c arburator . dq11111 1 .71 UMt1' [)(•miHi 111 ,1 ~conu':d*~a~.d~u: Sid r--90IO D .... r--..-• JOHMSOM&SOM 45K ma. rm Cu.II, anrf. $9995 '61VWBus.am/fm ('8Sll clock , lllll frn 11500 l s ~
213 /'54·2341 ..................... Tre11•11c!w La.collltU1rcwy S3&00640.ll211 Sod•boclllMW linrf. tires & nms. runs D9$ 11989 uu o." 00·7S71i
mmer camp want.a to So ... !!! , 282e HarborBlvcr. •'74Capn,4spd,a c.re MLS11onV1eJo f~:s~yruce MU5t bell '7 6 Camam 4:.pc.l, rull> rd 9940 AVON RedseaJtnnatable buy newish 165 hp 1/0 M•dOww Cotta Mesa 54().~ liable & looks good 121-2040 495-4949 load f'd , rJlly i1 v1111, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~=~'t.~l~:OC::un~~ ~~t~~~ ~-~~r open -4 •a:ciWw ,.,....... W• ,., $1900. 6-46-5151 C los ed Sundays 74 Dasher Sta Wl(11 S420010806Ml 0067 •7s G ran 1'orrno. 1• ~ .
631-0479 OVER D..._ 9720 '69 280S L. a Auto, uir, 49M mi. 0 ' lg CIM•roa.t 9920 P R. stereo. lrlr 11111 h
--Claaalc SS Chrh1 Craft ••••••••••••••••••••••• white, $16.000 c · a uto, ownl'r 4fM.(>29l ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slf>l)O 5S&~
7'8" Dino with rblt runabout,xlnt (·ond l ... looll pp 998-6405 '11 8 VW Hug , xl nt
Seagull featherweight 751-l242 ForYourGood tra n s po rtation . j!ood
eng. $250. 752-os.58 ---- -VW, Porsche or Audi '80 2400. Ivory p11 lam lno cond 67s.4529
Vc
ran1portaffOlt int 4s p. loadt-d Must iwll ------loett, M•t•nanc• ...................... 893·8547 '69 VW . xlnt rulllling
S•"lc. 020 ln:roft 9110 •CHIV. MU 'I I cond Needs pamt & uv
•••••••••••••••••••••····••••••••••••••••••••• ITOHST.AKE VW·PORSCHE-AUDI '79 JOO S D . ll l l \l'r hol $1200 7S9-6076 Marine Electrician PARSONS' AlR 445 E. Coast HJway grey 1blk Swirl, like nu
SEE US FIRST! 'H T hundt.•r h1rd
We have u 1<110d i;elel·tmn lr.inb. Sli!W l'ull
o f N E W & US E L> 7SI 2770 M:u'l>
Chevroletb • '70 Mavcn l.'k Xlnt •·•in•I
S evl'ral new r•·•" ·
$1500 54S·U091 t'Vl''>
Deaign/instull/repalr Sales-Maint.-Rentals 12 n. model with Uft,ate, at Bayside Drive 6000 m 1 S26,7SO ""
Qual. work 549-_2520eve · duals, air cond.. 1· D. Newport Beach 673-0900 95S·2699 · lnslrucoon springs, pwr. st.eenng, loah, M.-Tie·downs avail. for 400 aux. tank & more! ~........ 9030 Sweries aircraft. J ohn Workhorse complete! Premium prices
paad for any used car
1 fo reign or domestic l
In &ood condition
See Us First!
'73 4SOS1":, louc.lt!d , lo 1111.
sunie boc.l) u:s '110 300
Tur bo Di.I SI0,900
496 41 62
'72 VW Rug xlnt cond.
S339St0 ll0 Ive message
964 1872
COHHRL
CHEVROLET
.'IUl ll.11 hur Ith 11
1·1~TA vtl'::-.\
54~1200
'77 1: runadJ (;ht<• 'Int
rond , full) t'QUI l'l"'d It
n11 $2950 Nu IH'''""·ll • 7 7 N o \ a . 2 ll o" 1 rhi:ck\ ~2 !II-In
••••••••••••••••••••••• ayne Airport, 557-1900 (3961).
6 hp Johnson sm °"'~"·Selle/ OMLY $12,491
Good cond1t1on Refit 9 120 HOW ARD Chnroa.t
646-1105 ••••• •• •••• •• •• •• • ••• Uove /Quall Sts.
NEWPORT BE~ll
833-0555
'68MRZ
$3800 OHO
673-6652
'72 VW Super Beetle, very
good cond1t1on c a ll
7Sl 11230
Vol•o 9772 ......•..........•.....
Bia upunkt stcr~> llt.·'>I
o rrc r 644 11!>1 or Lincoln 9945 640 7293 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'70 M/\ltl\ 111
MlJSTS1':LI •
MAKE Or H :H• 1..i211111 3.SKW Onan Ole gen air oleman Teqt Traile r
cooled, rblt . still in boat ~ 6 Good condition
May be 5eefl in opera --· 89-7-·8006------1 1978 El Camino, very
t io n . S 12 S 0 0 B 0 Motoriud IAIH 9 140 clean 29,000 mi. every
714·840.5997 ••••••••••••••••••••••• xtra. $5350.642·7404 Ron
'78 2400. loaded. hke ne"'
67,000 m1, $14.000 l'I'.
Inman. ~9-8867 wkd~:.
#I VOLVODE.ALH
IN ORANGE COUNTY'
SALES, SERVICE
.AHD LEASING
OVERSEAS DELIVERY
EXPERTS
'73 No\ J I IJtt.·hb.1.11k.
good eond Sl4i5
675 14(1l Mucury 9950 Contin~ntal 99 30 •••••• •• •••••• •• • • • • • • •
••••••••••••••••••••••• OHANGl-.l'Ol :"TY...,
Brand new Brookes &
Gatehouse Halcyon
compass w. extra re
peater. Reg price $4140
Our price $2SOO Call
Answer Ad #4 70.
642-4300. 24 hrs.
FOXI MOPED S200
Goodcond.Jtion. '79 Toyota Pa ck U p.
842·7235 Regular bed. s tandard
tran s 644·11 Sl or
..!8118 11.11 b"r Hh d
('11,I J \l c~.i 5.10 IJ:l:JO
MOPED REPAIR
Your moped can run like
new. Fast service Call
Larry. 645-~29.
640. 7293 .A..to1. lftlported ·-.... ---....... .W cat9 011DjKI IO -.... Sale
'S6 190SL. restored con
course 99',. both tops.
beautiful blue. SIS.000
I 760 8860 E.ARLEIKE
VOLVO
'73 <.:onlmenlal "3,000 nu. FIHEST
lea th mlr 4 spkr ~tcn·o I.IM '()I.. M 1-:Hl'l It 'i
full pwr, (.' <.', xlnt nrnd UE \I t-:fl~llll'
thrU·OUt. $2200 ~I ofr
Bill 714 646 OOtll ~ '?!.~
••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Datsun w/camper. nu .AHa Romeo 9705 fOOcl "'"' IN ....,,_,. following -~catlO<\. To -Wly IOI Mi.
COf1t of eel m'* be _.,.., II 11me ot pure,._
'63 220SE COMV. 1966 Harbor Blvd
COSTA MESA
646-9303 540-9467
Conette 9932 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.1:'1.l'lll."I :\1 ERC'UH'
tires & rhns. Best offer. •••• •••••••••••••••••••
631 2244 966 l~S Hi Ill /\ulol\•111t•1 U1
Marine FM /VHF. new '79 Honda Express. xlnt Aft s. 7S2·9001 LEASE
DIRECT!
SEE US HOW! MGI 9744 * Sil f\lo \ l.k l''on·:o.t • '\ll
IHVINE
830-7000
.....•..........•......
w I an l e n n a . S2 2 5 cond. szso. Call after
67S·9961 eves . Spm: 963-8758. Mark
Boats, Pow.r 9040 MotorcyclH/
•••••••• ••••••••••• •• •• Scooters 9 150
'SS Chev panel truck 327. 4
spd, am 1fm stereo. nu
tires. nu clutch 548·6506
hme 9S7-2071 wrk
31' Bertram SF. letter ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'SS FORD
1981 ALFA
SPIDERS than MW. ScrYe o•er Motorcycle trailer . 3 rail. $400
$40 ,000. Ownr. ~~.~:.9t~ks. custom. 645·8746 BEACH IMPORTS
675-6670.673-4585 ----------•·so DODGE 'Dso· PU 848DoveStreel
19' RANGER 360 C.1
Panther jet i1uper nice.
$10.SOO finn 631-4539
'79YAMAHASR500 auto, p/s. a tc. s tereo, N~WPORTBEACH
CLEAN. $1200/080. sharp, SSS00646 6149 75!·~900 ___ ----493-8797 a~. 6 & V 1 9570 Audi 9707 •'72240Z.newpaml up
Motor HOllle'5, s• / .~"•••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••! bol. anth gray. 1.a.000 28' Silverton. FB, OF. R...t/Storacp 9160 ,79 FORD LSO Van ('stm •72 Auda lOO. 4Spd. $1000 ~i. susp ktl. steering
VHF, CB, RDF, stereo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• mt paint many e xtras orbestorfer kat, custom stereo. $4SOO
low hn. dinghy w /mlr. WE C .a.a...1 SELL S9 S00631-4539 673-1732. PP. Christopher Ucn
xlras. Xlnl cond $19.500 """ ' -nett, 5S7 Z792
1977 MGll
New top. slerl'o.
(.;all ~I !138<! day
Peuqeot 9748 •.....••••.•...........
LEASE
DIRECT!
19 8 I PEUGEOT
TURBOs
BEACH IMPORTS
848 0.>\ e Street
NEWPOHT lll-:ACll
752-0900
OR.ANGE COUMn
VOLVO
Largest Volvo Dealer
in Orange County!
BUY or LEASE
DIRECT
I 0 120 Garden Grove Bl
CJrden Grove 530-9190
.... ag
work
I I
NEW 1981
CORVETTES
THREE
4 SPEEDS
TO CHOOSE FROM
CORMIER·D~LILLO
CHEVROLET CO.
17141 847-6087
*
Mustonq 9952 •......................
'lih 1\1 U,,l 1111 •!\:.. 11111.
;_:•:nil bl l\l,1 ti7;l 11°\"i.I
l'\I''> 1\<11 ;,;.')'.11 1\~
'ti i Ii t'' I :J "fHI -.t 11 lo.
/\M l''\il 11 ltk :.kn•>
lfiOO ofr l'l;l t;ii.';7
Oldsmobile 99SS
·•··•••·•······•······· IHI ('ut la'>~ llr11111di.111
~,·11 s;:;oo '" 1.1k1 11\ • .,
il':l~l' ~I I 11111 I .0.11!.•tl
\ •• 11:12 5!114 55<! \lltlO
i II () I 11 ~ ( 11 I I,,' Terms. 548-8242 YOUR R.V. 1974 C hev Van Ne w 1978 Audi SOOO s ilver
559-1304 · paint job Xlnl body mete Ille Lo m1 l"ull lux· 280Z 57K mi. goocl l'ond Pone~ 9750
'S6 18' Century Xlnt Ca ssette stereo S219S ury, pwr pac kage . 2 SS,9SO •••••••••••••••••••••••
l9G8 Mdle l.22S sla
AM f'M . need s
S900 F'1rm
960-1381
78 CORVETIE
T T op , 1rnlJrl'> rcd
lt>athe r . fulb .. qu111pt•d
16.000 m1ll'l>' Mui.I Set•'
1200101
UroughJOI. 1,11c11! 11111.i
Mosl all opllo11.d 1·111111
ment Sllti••fl h·l.1i1:i1 cond SSS 0 0 10 BO RENT 22' lux. mtr 673-0160.NewportRea ch w ay e lect s un rf 496 6556 '67 l800S, very clean. nu
ures $3750. 642·0671. By Ap~ home Sips 6. self.cont -------AM /FM stero cassette DATSUN OI FSEL J<:NG S29S /wk + 8< m 1 C MC 1977 Yandura $7900 .645-1804 33' OWENS BRIG S t F 640-8585. Camper. PS. PB AT, 6 cyl 1.0-28, fits Z. S3495
w /New port Slip, new ------1 sunroof, new tires New IMW 9712 w 1lrans 953-9316
crusaders. trans & pro Rent Dix Motorhome exhaust. Trlr II it eh, & •••••••••••••• •••••••••
'75 Porsche 914
:>46 0248
'77 911SC~.
646-4384 --------
Autos, Used
Sodda.back BMW
M is:.1on V1eJo
821-2040 495-4949
ClosedSwid;i"
1!1'77 Ohh. 1)1111•1:.• I••\\ 111
R ('\I ;1tt1Kl(I IHI ~I ··~l
6~ 11311 ~1~17 "!1111 l'XI '" l
ps. Radar, pilot . bail 22·. sips 6. a /c, S200 wk, Warmly 30K $41 00, ForThe Best '76 Mdle 280Z. air. stero Xlnt c ond l.o m1 .
loaded . $17,000. Ph Uu~:.
751 4344. eve:; 64S l!t>.'i9
•••••••••••••••••••••••
General 9901 '67 To1 n,1tl11 SC1U I 11 111
tank. Halon fire system, 10<' mi. 493-4168 Days 855 97311, F:vt•s Buy Or Lease Deal xlnl in & o ut SS475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·79 Corvette. lnudt•d,
J E E p S . C A R S . white. 6700 mi, a!>:.llml'
t"11•u11 llu11~ ""'I t .i
S37,S00640-7246 •--------.. 855·9796 In Orange County. 552·66S8
RESP . COUPLE wants 9590 Come See Us Today' '80 280ZX XIJ1t confl " .St'l' '77 Porsche 911S Tar~a. PICK U PS from $35. lease.SJ251mo75lHHlll
Avail al local Gov't Couqar 9933
J\ ll S 111 I' I II:!:!\ ·'I
642 4300 ',!,I 111 ...
25. GLEN·L lltT l::xp "'uto1 W-"'-.... to rent self-contained .... wnwv to appreciate. ~SOO obo Pinto 99S I
.. ~~~-~~:n~~·s van or J.s.20 ft. motor ·~·~·;~~;~;·~~-~~~·~· ~ Wkdys aft 6, 1157 0582
Xlnt cond. Low mile!>.
loaded I owner Sltl.000
Dl'I Mar 1481 5511 Auctions For Dir~ctory ••••. •••••• •••• •••• •••• •··••····•·•·•·········
NowSCBSO.AY.6469000 h o me, approx . July for lop used ca r s 'I • ~l tSunall ~ay
13-19. Call548-8192. foreign. domest ics or SADllEBACll '73 Datswi 610, 39.000 m1. 0111 Royce 9756
cull Surplus Data Cente r . • l4lSlJ30-7800. 77 Cougar XH7 f~ll P"'' ----------u.-.ifm tapr. 5.11\ 1111
•7;1 Hun about l(uot! • n1ut
t IO f\ , 5850
Bay or Shore Boal Nan classics. tr your car rs I\ runs xlnl. new tire!>. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .AMC .. 9905 clean' Sal·nf1Cl' ~J.:i!f~> ;,.11111~11~·
tucket 14. Uni versal 4 rali.n,TraYel 9170 e xtra clean , see us BMW s14ooi080.631·1~
cyl eng May be sce1111I ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIRST!
Lido Shipyard 900 I.ado Tra vel Camper Trailer ~ 28402 Marguenle Pkwy '73 Wgn 610, low ma . auto
•1 DEALER IN U.S.A.
ROY
IRR CARVER
•••••••• ............... 5-52 5522
'7S lfornet, 4dr. Auto. If you've never placed a P S , am /fm Cas!>,
'72 PIMTOWGH
1\ut11, )(II t•on1I li:ll ;,:!Ill<
Park 0_.!". NB (Tent). for sml car, S295. M 1Ssion Viejo great cond. new pa mt. ·n Wellcraft Scarab 30' Sharp 545-~ Avery Pkwy exit $1600. 646-1355
wrack, perfect cond Classified ad. you're '"
!'>48-5306 the manonty ' Try 1t OO•'l' r ROllS ·ROVCf. Plymouth 9960
······················· J (off S Freeway) w trlr very nice. ow 29• trailer used twice, fu ll 831-2040 495-4949
1"40 J•mlMlrtt *•-11k,Hll \'----~
-a nd see how qu1ckl~ }o\I
lulck 99 I 0 get r e:. u I l :. I' hon t' 7i Vol.II I' lo 1 \I
a 11 . P II ~WOii
~160 2'.146 hrs, ver) fast. m any Bath SS,700 xtras. twin mere 280':. 559--8421 '"'"Or-.. C~ ClosedSwidays
$22,000759 1913 --------1 2925 Harbor Blvd
ClOSlD SUNDAYS
••••••••••••••••••••••• 642·5678 ·ss Buick
Call afters
962·3006 ~~·. ~~~~-........... I ~~~·.~~~:'. .. Ex-fishing boat with
moonng for sale. Da}'S
547-6561. Eves 631-1096
WANTED: Old 15' or 17'
travel trailer to be used
for parts. Also utility
trailer Sl>or76
13' Boston Whaler. JSll P . Auto Servic:e~Pm-,..--, --i
Evinrude. trlr, g r eat & Accessort.s 9400
s hape $2250 OBO •••••••••••••••••••••••
714·840·S997 ---TRADEWIND YACllTS
31' Chris SF '80$49 9K
32' Luhrs '70, Dsl S23K
33' La Paz trwlr $49 SK
38' Bertram '80 S205K
40' Pace SF. Dsl's $160K
ForMlle
Datsun Z
motor
+ othet' ports
768-5.37
47'Chrlsgl8dsl. $110K Four 6"'2"xl4'' VW rims
TERMSAVAIL. chrome inserts 2/hub
67S·9007, ev~ 960-1725 caps, new Best offer Jim
loat1, SaH 9060 631-0338__ ---•••••••••••••••••••••••
'73 21' Schock. sleeps 4.
Berth Avail Acces.
Call 544·3Z78
16' Sunfish Sat I Boat
Xlnt for summer Good
cond. S650 642 2641
CAL 34 Sloop. '69. h1ghl>
sought racerc rutsl'r ,
$35K. Bkr. 67H7ll
4 Sale, Fmn Good cond
Price 111cludes trailer.
ngging & sail $750/bsl
ofr Eves 536 6863
AMF Akort "Min1f1sh"
12', white, compl equip.
like new. 898-5037 ....
SWAN 431 S&S design.
maintained & equipped
to the highest standards,
complete B&G nav. m
slr. Deal direct & save
Call Answer Ad 11469.
642·4300, 24 hrs.
14' AMFSUNFISH
$350
646--4647
uto1for5* •••••••••••••••••••••••
IMPORTANT
NOTICE TO READERS AND
ADVERTISERS
The price of Ite m s
adve rtised by vehicle
dealers 111 the vehicle
d ass1fied advertising
columns does not 1n·
e lude any applicable
laxes. license. transfer
fees. finance c harges,
(ees for air pollution COO•
trol device certifications
or dealer documentary
preparation charges un-
less otherwise s pecified
by theadvert_is_er_~-
l~11e1/
CIGulcs 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••
PRETI1EST
"57T-llRD
INTOWH!
BEST OFFER!
{005\JKZ)
THEODORE
loah, Sips/
Doc Its 9070 ROBINS
FORD •••••••••••••••••••••••
Side Ties for rent.
18· $10/f\. Hurry 1
1060 HARBOR BLVO
CO~IA ME~A o4'2 0010
~19 'SS Packard Clipper
NEW Slip avail thru July Restored
r'15th . 35' Newport M&-3124
845 ·8790. 532-2305 .
547-7425 1957 Fl~i:!"'lpur con·
Need Slip or slde'tie tor tinental S-1. Exceptional
lovely 28' Sea Ray in N 8 2 tone paint. Right hond
or Dana Point. Call eves drive. Xlnt cond. P .000.
orwltnd Po111 trade. (805)
497 4342 684· 1902
. COSTAMFSA
979-2500
WANTED!!
c-.~
T°1ald!!
Call Jim HOCJClft or
MlkeLalle
CNIYW Moton
835-3171
We'll Buy
Or Sell
Your Clean
Import On
Consiqnment' ! 1
Call Our
Used Car
Manaqer
TODAY!!'
83 I ·2040 49 S-4949.
Saddlebaclc BMW
Mission Vi~jo
WE BUY
CLEAN CARS
AND TRUCKS
COHMELL
CHEVROLET
.'~II.er hur Hh cl
1 1 IS'I \ \1 I-.!'-\
54~1200
HIGHIUYER
Top dollars for Sports
Cars . BuMs• Curnpers.
914 's, Audi s
Ask forU /C MGR
JIMM.ARIMO
VOLKSWAGE:M
18711 Beach Blvd .
HUNTINGTON BEACH
142-2000
TOPDOl.LAR
PAID FOR
GOOD&CLEAH
USED CARS!
miracle
ma zda
T, •
Collw ...... 641-5700
WANTED!
aab 9760
····•······•··•········ ---CREVIER LEASE
DIRECT!
CodlHac 9915 ...•.•.................
· *USED BMW1 * '76 2002 4spd (0603)
'79320i s 11\ ( 5894)
'79 S281 S IR < H176)
'81 320iA (0115)
C loMd 54lftda I
Rat 9725 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'78 Spider 124 Convert
Red /blk top. 5sp. 32.000
ml Am /Fm stereo Cuss.
xlnt cond. S.5800 /0BO
1981 SAAB
TURI Os
BEACH IMPORTS
848 Dove Street
NEWPORT BEA<.'11
752-0900
Th• Most Excitlncj
Part Of Yow
IMW PurchaM Or
' LeawCould le
McLaren IMW!!
luyOrl.HA
lyOwf'hoMPlan!
1714) 522-5333
89J..8Z76 Eves. .75 99LE. auto. am/fm.
Honda 9727 cass , Michelins. 45M.
••••••••••••••••••••••• $4000. Call Answe r/\c.l
oaAHGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
VISIT YOUR
ORANGE COAST
HONDA
HEADc;>UARTERS
TODAY!!!
UNIVERSITY
SALES&SERVICE
OLDSMOllLE
HOHD.A
GMCTRUCKS
Sales·Servace-Leasing 2850 Harbor Blvd
Roy CarYer.lnc. COSTA MFSA
Rolls 'koyce BMW , ___ 5_4 _0-_'64 0
1!'>40Jamboree
Newport Beach 640.~44
79 7331A
BBS wheels, low miles.
purchase or lake over
lease! (6431)
Saddllbock IMW
Mission Viejo
821·2040 495-4949
Closed Sundays
'77 32Qi.Spedal, $3000 car
'76 Honda Wa~on
S2995
646--0081
'77 Accord. nu eng . nu
tires & brks. Am /Fm H
trk. Everything works.
$4 ,900. ( 714 )494 3422.
494-4644 Patty.
'7S Honda Wagon, looks
like nu, $2900/080
Work 631·2'M2
phone In cl. Pioneer '77 Civic. htchbck. 38.000
11467, 642 4343. 24 hrs
oyota 9765 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'7S T oyota Ccl1 ca GT
Ss pd . bea ut cond
S3400 o no 8468924.
840-4SS6
'77 CRIC.AGT
L1flback 26,000 m1 , good
cond . $46~ 73().~7
'74 Corolla lmmac thru
Ai lhru. S2000
Ph557 3481
VollttwaCJlft 9770 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MARK HOWARD
VOLKSWAGEH
L a rge se lel'l 1on o f
Volkswuitens with 1·om
pclitive pm·es
. L m<Wt Mowaitd ~ VOlKSWAGEN INC ~ 534--4100
13731 Harbor
Garden Grove
am/rm ca.sa. a /c, snrf.
nu tires, dk blue/tan inl. mi, 5 spd, am/fm. xlnl '60 '6S VW lefi & riRhl
xlnt cond. Priced to sell cond. 968·3411 door, '73 left door SSO
S89S-0846-8559 JCICJllClr 9730 each Weslem style whl ....;... _________ ••••••••••• ••••• ••• • • • • nms for Super Beetle
USIDIMW's '67 Jaguar 3.8 MK llS all S20ea.548-9744
EXC&LEHT orig. very well main· SELECTION t11ined Must Sacr ifice
'7 6· .. 0 MOO&S 84&-8S70 --
UOl's. UOl't. --GNo 9134 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'79 VW Rabbit diesel. L
mdle. SOmpg. Sunroof,
air. xtra tank, Stereo
tape, Xlnt. 96500.
64().6215. 966-1779
C OMTEMPL.A TIMG
C.ADILUC?
We spe ciali:ie in leases
fo r the bus iness i.>x
ecu11 ve & professional
Lanie Se4Ktion
Of Mew 1981
Cadiloc1
Mow In Stock!
~~Jli~~
Z(J(.X) H.\rbor Blvc1
(Q!,(<\ /\l\e<..I. 540-9100
77 CADILLAC
COUPE DEVILLE
Leather int.. tilt, cruise .
AM /FM stereo, wire
wheel covers + lo miles•
(1BIF831)
$5995
l-"llltA ICI.'( ~
49)00; . &1i.(8))
'79 Se V 1 lie Diesel loaded !
20 K mi, ass um lse.
$416.00tmo. 759·0481 -------
'71 ELDO.every extra
MUS T SELL-M AKE
OFFER
642-8110
ELDO '74 xlnl cond. new
brakes. tires, etc. rcR .
gas. gelling new car best
offer 644-1426
'76 ELDOCONVERT
Choe. bm/saddle int. &
top, lo mi. Sl0,000
Consider pickup as part
trade. 760-8860
1 979 ELDORADO
DIESEL
1211's.6l0c9''• o Ghia, front eod
CAL&. US FOi • damage. Not running.
OUI S&IC110MI Sl200 080. 552-3746
Sd•abecli IMW 9731
M ll1k>n Viejo •••••• ••••••••••••• • •••
121-2040 4tMt4' '79Muda GLC Sport.
We have sold our home
in the desert and have
too many cars. This '74 VW Tlllng. Classic, belie beauty bas brown
xlnt cond. new top & side leather •lnlerior. shiny
curtains, eng. compl. wire wheel.a and brand
reblt. less than SO mi. new Good-Year Arrlv&
R&H. new seata, SJ300, radials. This petted and
540..6223 pampered darlln is look· CloeedSunday1 Xlnt cond. as to 42 ml
•76 2002 BMW; AM /FM MPG S4200or be8l offer. '75 vw Duher lng for a home with ao-
MUST SELL meone who appreciate•
DAVID J. .
PHILLIPS
Proudly Presents ...
13f ANT ASTIC
DEALS!"
1979 POMT!AC
LIMAMS SAFAJll
lkeuon w~ • C'flU''I09r •WtOf'nl UC 00"'4t ·--.nu •~' eotldtlll\ .. "'II ,...,.., 111 ... 8oo• • 096 (157•1
D.J.,.'1 SALi f'l.ICI '5395
1974 FOID
rtMTO WAGOH
....,..Of"llt6C eH (.OftdltoOn•"'O tedtO lUQOIOt CM,,., onty 11 .... I
ongt ..... ""'"' 1511• ....
D.J,,.'1 SALi f'l.ICI '2295
1974 CADILLAC SEDAN
DI ILMAHCI "'
4 door .. , cof\.dfhoruf"'g pow.,. ""'"dowl t'f""M ton''°' ~ ooor kX*a .,..,.,, po.., Metl tit' *'"""' tWIO I t.ridl oNy 1f(QS Ol•Q>f'I•
,..._ 191U AI
D.J.r.'1 SALi f'l.ICf '3295
1976 IUICK
SICYUH CUSTOM
4 doof 8 Cyllnde', l utO'f!em: Po#et ,..,,"0 atf ~ ¥1"~'
-cloOI IOC .... 1111 •ow mllH f19 (~Ai
D.J .,.'1 SAU f'tllCI s3195
1979 POMT!AC
GlAMD ,.IX SJ
t cyttftdef eutomauc.. powet 1....-1no ~ -~ I wey paWiH ..._ ~ door •octt1 .,,,,,.. 1ttw.o hH CrUIM T top Bh• Bo<>•
17)06 ft07 .. A)
D.J.,.'1 SAU f'tllCI '6995
1978 OLDSMOBILE
CUTlASS SUf'HMI
D.J.P.'1 SAL.I Ntca 55295
1979 CHIVROLIT
MALllU CLASSIC ·--·-·-"'0 -D--.. ,,...,..,..., .. , --l lue toe-....,(IMll
D.J.r.'1 SALi PltCI '4295
1911 IUIC*
HYLAllU...,_
•
Sall .,,1.,. rree on a Beaut. P U MA , 1978 exo ti c
Hana Christian Ketch It Brazilian Import, mint
you have a 50' l.lve· fa c t o r y cond . Lo
aboard slip fo r a mi.$9500. {"114>158-~
Late model Toyotu and
vo:vo •• C1 11 U I
TODAYtll
Ca11ette, sunroof. low 9'75-lS37, SS?-4545
mllea1e. Xlnt cond. .cSn'-'740 MAKE OFFER &42·8119 the care its had. $11,750. PP95"5·~ • cyt-• _.. -... --. .,_ "'-...... ~ '""" _,.. ,....,.,,"'" _........ 1111111 OoOfl $7$00
ffOOO. Call MCH813 Hk tor Hal. n.poo1lbM couple. can RKNethn ..
Or. Gary Brewer Yeltlcltt flJO .... ~~~~~ _<;.;.Z.;..13•)._7_43-~StJl __ M_·_P_S.-_S__ ••••• •••••••••• •••••••• .__..;.-~~-. ... .__..
'79 3201, Sierra Belie,
1unroot, lmm1c. A1·
1ume leate or purchaae. Moorift1 for 1ale. Up to Two Retf!:lble Adult• ~·. IUlhtolf S.y•hOrta. ~~.T~on=td Travel
C'7J.4ll4 Trailer not tonier than
TbeH'I U .. , wa7 for ro-to ..U &Mt b&eycle
JOG 90 ..... UM, JUlt
ld•etllll It In lh•
CluaUWI Call "2-5171.
18'.
2. R. V not loal•r than 21'. a. ror th. ftnt 2 neb
JW,. •tart.inc July ab. ••u.
PP, 168-eOl'1 ev•. ~ '4'"ntl er Uf.•4•7 Telllq U. moat people
e aometbl.n1 value· poulble '9 lm.~nt to
bleT Place an ad Ln our tbe occu• of anJ
Lott and Found col l•taff .ai.. ll""e 1un
wnns.That.'1"1terepeo· youu II llthd ln
pie loolt when they've ClauUled, P"one
found an item of value. ~
'74 VW Wgn 412, ena shot. ---------
----axle bent S'750 '79 Fleetwood Brougham
960-4342, 846-4009 loaded: t9°l5()
AuntORlZED
M ERCEO£S BENZ
Dl:ALER ,
131-1740 ·~1700
. ___ P_erry 549-851
'64 BUO &'ood runnln1 ·-cond, $l2001080 .,.oro H 17
IT5-cn'25a.nJtlme ••••••••••••••••••••••• '78Camaro
'H VW Bu1 Rebulll. Air, automatic power
1m /fm tape1 SHOO. 1tttrln1. 27,tsi mites,
497.527; aft.er&. (882VEJ) -S4tll '72 VW 411 SQB, 98X ml Buwtclt lmPofll "°°· 813-5018 I J 1 ·H II
' ,_
ct1•"1
D.J.l.'1 SM.I NICI
'
l
·\ '
I ,
• Orange Coat DAILY PILOT/Wedn11d1y, May 13, 1981
BRAND NEW
1980 PLYMOUTH
HORIZON TC3 HATCHBACK
SPECIAL s ~,,,
PRICE ' illiJll t
4 c.yltnder engine. 4 speed transmission. custom interior, two-tone paint. AM -FM
radio, mag wheels and morel (222552)
BRAND NEW
1980 PLYMOUTH
VOlARE SEDAN
Equipment includes 6 cylinder engine. automatic
transmission. power steenng and wti11e sidewall tires•
(228399).
1115 WEEK'S
USED CAR SPECIALS
1973 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER COOPE Auto. trans .. air cond., pwr. sl & brakes,
cruise, tilt, pwr. windows. AM·FM stereo,
vinyl top & much morel (984JEX).
51395
1977 DODC£
ASPEN WAGON
6 cyl.. automatic trana.. pwr. steering &
brakn. custom moldings. r11C110, custom
wheels & mo,.I (360SPG).
52595
1975 PLYMOUTH
Y ALI ANT SEDAN
6 cyl. engine, automatic trans .. power
steering. radio & morel (270L YJ}.
51695
FOi FLllT SALIS &
LI AS 1" INFORMA TIOH, CALL
~INIFIAt«O
546-1934
NEED CASH??? ........................... --... c:.. ...... ., .... ,__ ...... . .......... .,.. ............ ...,iti
1 BUICK
REGAL SEDAN
Auto. trans .. air cond., pwr. split
aeat-ateering·windows·brakes·dr. locks, tllt,
AM·FM stereo. vlnyl top. & much morel
(876PRT)." 5189 5
Automatrc t
Steering & ~ans Power
sear, v1ny1 ,rakes. sp11t
Wh ite Side op, radio
1Tlore1 ,14006~~11 tues &.
SERVICE HOURS:
......., ...... Friday 7:30 .... to 5:30,..,...
Sahrday 1:00 ..... to 5:00 ,....
SH OUR SERVICE
DEP .ARTMEHT AIOUT RENT I MG
A 'II CHaYSLll OR PLYMOUTH.
1975 CHRYSLER CORDOBA COUPE
Automatic trans., air cond . pwr. steertng &
brakes. cruise control, pwr windows & seat AM·FM stereo. vinyl top. wire wheel covers . much miffts .
1979 CHRYSL
CORDOBA COUPE
Automatic trana., air cond • pwr steenng &
brakes, radio, aptlt seat. vinyl top. wsw tires
& morel (532WWC).
53495
I·
. ---------------------
111111 ClllT
WED NE SD A Y. MAY 1 J "H:li
r-
1
c :s s sac a 3
* • * •
Ylll llllllWI UllY MR
\ H~ ANGE <'OUN TY CALIFOR NIA 25 CENTS
'CONSCIOUS AND SERENE'
PONTIFF SHOT
.John Paul II
Two men held;
third hunted
VATICAN CITY <AP> -Pope
John Paul 11 was shot twice in
the intestines today as he rode
into St. Peter's Square for a
general audience before an
es timated 10,000 people, but
Vatican radio said no vital organ
was struck, both bullets were re·
moved during a half-hour opera·
lion and he was "conscious and
serene."
Italian police said they seized
two men and were looking for a
third apparently involved in the
shooting. Police sources said one
of the men held for questioning
was a 23·year-old Turkish stu·
dent al the University for
Foreigners at Perugia, north of
Rome. He was identified as
Nehmet Ali Hagca.
Police said in addition to the
pope, two women were
wounded by the bullets in St.
Peter:s Square. One was iden-
tified as Ann Odre of Buffalo,
N. Y. She was not in serious con·
dition, police said.
Witnesses who saw the pope
enter the Gemelli Policlinic,
Rome's most modern, said be
was awake wbeo he arrived
there. Italian television said the
pope was taken into the operat·
ing room at the hospital at S:55
p.m. -8:55 a.m. PDT.
The Vatican radio appealed to
the faithful to pray for the pope.
WO e
'Newport men seal
: AirCal purchase
The Italian news agency
ANSA said the pope had been bit
by two bullets at the level of his
pancreas. He was standing on
his jeep near the Vatican post of·
fice between St. Peter's Basilica
and the famous Bernini col·
lonade. The weapon was a 9
mm. semi-automatic pistol.
llalian television reported two
women were injured, but there
was no coffiirmation of that. The
television said it was not certain
whether the women were in·
jured by pistol fire or hurt in the
ensuing panic.
I Deilly ,.._."'"-Illy OerT A-
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Ol .. o.I.., ...... ,_
Newport Beach's Willian Lyon
and George Argyros were in San
Diego today to put the finishing
touches on their $61.S million
deal to purchase AirCal.
The developers, principals of
Air California Investments Inc ..
emerged victorious Tuesday in
bidding in U.S. District Court for
the successful West Coast
airline, also based in Newport
Beach.
The question remainlne today
was what changes. if any, Lyon
and Argyros will make In AlrCal
operations.
Attorneys Richard Sherman
and Alvin Segel, of the law firm
of lrell and Manella, of Newport
Beach, declined to comment on
those prospects following the en·
try of the wionlng bid before
Judge Leland Nielsen.
Neither Lyon n or Arayros
could be reached today for com·
ment.
The team of Lyon and Argyros
wasn't present when Judge
Lerand Nielsen .approved the
~a le of the airline to AirCal
Investments. So they didn't hear
the congratulatory comments
made by those in the courtroom,
including representatives of lhe
defeated bidder, Air Florida
System, Inc ., operator of a
regional East Coast airline of
t'•P. same name.
Air Florida's final bid was~
million for 90 percent of AirCal,
with the remaining 10 percent of
t h e airline 's s tock to be
distributed to shareholders of
Westgate-California Corp ..
AirCal's parent firm.
But Judge Nielsen, who has
been supervising the financial
affairs of the once bankrupt
Westgate for eight years, ruled that the investment group's
all·cash bid of $61.S million
exceeded that of Air Florida.
TWO uomen pray in St. Joachim'• C1nn'ch in Corta Me1a for Pope John Paul II, felled by an assailant'i
buUm today in Rome.
AirCal went on the auction
block Monday, with Air Florida
opening the action al S3S million.
By day's end the price bad shot
up to S59 milUon.
Vatican radio said the pontiff
had been driven throusb St.
Peter's Square in hls jeep and
was about to leave the jeep to
start a general audience when
shots were heard.
The pontiff collapsed Into the
arms of aides as the jeep re·
turned Inside the Vatican at hilh
speed, the radio said.
Coast prays for pope
'Everyone knelt in prayer' as news of shooting received
Seconds later, an ambulance
followed by a car with Vatican
Attorneys for Air Florida and dignitaries carried the pope to
the Lyon·Argyros group stepped the Gemelli Policllnlc. He had
to the courtroom podium 3S also sust.alned a fractured arm
times in the often-dramatic bid· and injured finger.
dirut war. A few minutes after the shoot·
Edward Acker ... Air . F.lo[ida .. 1og, the loudspeaker. -which
board chairman, said after the broadcasts over St. Peter's
battle was over that he did no~ Square announced that the pope
think AlrCal was worth the 161.S had been wounded.
million Lyon and Argyros The voice on the loudspeaker
agreed lo purchase it for. asked the crowd to pray for the
He denied that Air Florida did pope by reciting the Our Father
not possess the resources to prayer and the Ave Maria.
better the final bid. "We have a Thousands in the square knelt to
$90 million line of credit," Acker pray.
s aid John Paul , the former
Acker, however. can take Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of
some satisfaction in the sale to Poland, became pope in the fall
Air California Investments. of 1978 at age 58 -the first non·
Last year, Air Florida Italianpopein45Syears.Hewill
purchased 26 percent of be6lonMonday.
Westgate's common stock. The pontiff quickly became
Because the bid price of AirCal history's most widely traveled
went so high. Air Florida stands pope. His ninth and longest trip,
to make a profit of between Sll in February, took him to
and $12 milloion on its Westgate Pakistan, Japan, Guam and the
investment, Acker s aid. Philippines.
"Your pockets have been Shortly before the pope's ar·
enriched." Nielsen told Air rival in Karachi, Pakistan, a
Florida attorneys Larry homemade grenade exploded at
Hoffman and Herbert Wolas. a stadium where he was to
Herbert Kunsel. a court· celebrate Mass. The man carry·
(See AIR CAL, Page A2) ing the grenade was killed.
By STEVE MARBLE Of .. .,..,,..._.
Morning mass was being said
at St. Joachim in Costa Mesa
when Msgr. Thomas Nevin an·
nounced that Pope John Paul II
had been.shot.
''There was an audible
groan," the Msgr. Nevin report-
ed, "and then everyone knelt in
prayer. It was automatic."
At St. Catherine in Laguna
Beach, school classes were halt·
ed for the announcement and
students were asked to pray.
In Huntington Beach. at St.
Bonaventure, candles were be·
ing lit and prayers offered. Peo-
ple worshipped in silence at
Catholic churches along the
Or ange Coast.
Bishop William Johnson is·
s ued a statement from the
Catholic Diocese at Orange, ask·
ing that prayers be offered for
the wounded pope.
Bishop Johnson said he was-
"deeply saddened.'' adding that
"an injury or hurt to him is an
injury and hurt to all of u5."
"He has staunchly defended
human life and human dignity,
shown himself a friend lo the
poor and to the oppressed all ov-
· Look who's moving
AirCal's tail now
Last January, 43-year-old Newport
Beach developer Geor1e ~. Ar1yro1 carved
out a name for himself ln the sports world
when he purchased the SeatUe Mariners
baseball team for $13 million.
Now the Newport resident, who 1raduat·
ed from Chapman Collete ln 1958, has moved
into the aviation world with the Joint
purchase of Newport· based AirCal airlines.
Argyros, married with three chlldren,
formed Arnet, a real estate development
firm, ln 1967. He was part of a 1roup that
bought President Nixon's San Clemeote
estate. He serves on tbe board of directors of
the First National Bank of Oranse County
and Is a truat.ee on the World Affairs Council. GEORGE L.. ARGYROS
A former chief of the Air Force Reserve,
57-year-old WUllam Lyoa la a N•Wl>Ort Beach
developer. The Lldo late realdent wu •P·
pointed to bit Air Force poat In 1975 by
WILLIAM LYON
-former President Gerald Ford.
A m~ 1eneraJ lo the Air Forc:e Rtserve,
Lyon enlisted ln the Army Air CofPI ln lM3
• and served in Northern Africa durln1 World
War II. He la a USC araduate.
Lyon Is married and haa one '°" end two
dauaht.en. A member of the advilorJ board
of St. Jude Rolpltal, Lyon alto ll a member
of tht Blt CanJOll Country Clab and tM Uclo
ltle Yacht Club.
er the world. It is our prayerful
hope that God will hear our
prayers and allow him to con·
tinue to share the light of the
gospel with all men."
Msgr. Nevin also reacted with
sadness.
"This is a most shocking ex·
perience," he said. "For those
engaged in such violence, we
can only hope their hearts will
be softened."
Several Catholic leaders re·
peated that Pope John Paul II is
a m an of peace a nd a man who
prays for peace.
"One has almost become used
to this happening to political
figures but the pope Is not a
political figure. This hurts,"
said one person at St. Anne's in
Santa Ana.
Si s ter Florence at St .
Catherine expressed shock.
"We're praying. We're praying
very hard that it all works out."
Noon mass in the M arywood
Center in Orange was scheduled
today. Officials said prayers
would be offered at all churches
<See PRAY, Page A2)
"' ' Soviets rap U.S.
in~o seizure
WASHJNGTON (AP) -U.S.
customs agents are trying to de·
termine whether three pieces of
equipment seized from a Moscow·
bound Soviet airliner detained at
Dulles Airport for about four
hours were properly licensed for
export, the State Department said
today.
The official Soviet news agency
blasted the Tuesday night inci·
dent as an example of "intema·
lional terrorism.'·
State Department spokesman
Joe Reap said the plane, Aeroflot
Flight 318, was boarded by
customs and FBI agents because
officials had "reason lo believe
that cargo aboard the aircraft
might not have been appropriate·
ly licensed."
•'They did find some equipment
that they decided to detain over·
night lo see that it was properly
licensed," he added.
M ea nwhile , customs
s pokeswoman Chris Llgoske said,
"The investigation ls conlinu·
ins." But she said she did not ex·
j>ect any apnouncement of its fin·
dings until later in the day.
Export licenses are required
for a variety or hiSh-technolotY
1oods, including computen, elec·
tronlc equipnent, cbemtcata.
metals and buildinl equipment.
Particular attention is paid, a
Commerce Department
1poke1man said, to "dual·ute
commodities,'' which have en
ostensibly civilian role but which
could bave a milltery use.
Licenses a~ allo requlnd for
purety military 1oodl.
Earlier, a Stat• Department
aource called the 1eJ1ed material
"detense non-ex~abl• ltema,"
but later l&ld be may have mllln·
terpr«td lnlormatlon 1tv• blm
on why the equipment, wblds bf
could not ldtntUy, had betn
Hlled.
Tass. the official Soviet news
agency, charged today that
customs and FBI agents -acting
with sanction of higher-ups -
com lltitted an arbitrary act of
''international terrorism"
against the aircraft.
-Crew members were forced
from the plane and "attacked,"
Tass alleged in a dispatch from
Washington. It said "three items
of luggage were arbitrarily con-
fiscated" and "hand weapons
were seized from the crew mem·
bers, although in keeping with in·
ternational law they are allowed
to wear arms to ensure the
security of the flight."
DRllCI COAST lllTHIR
Cloudy night and mom·
Ing hours with early morn·
ing drizzle otherwise fair
through Thursday. Lows
tonight SS al beaches, 63
Inland. Hishs Thursday
mJd to upper 60s alon1
coast, low 70s inland.
llSIDI TIDAY
Thoac tdto mokf ntJIJ()O a
11ear and or• ,,~ mar find a bU of ftlCOU~f'lll
learning thot e.reC1'tfw1 earn·
fng 10 H~• thot ma.th or•
alao worried about tM mmg
tCO~. Page A.9.
11111
.i
I
'·
---·~----~-----------------................. 1111m191 .................................... ~ .................................. .. •
I e>Atl Y PIL.OT/Wedn .. d1y. M1y 13,' 1911
Nation reacts with shOck
By The A.uodalM
Shock qmckly wa
by fervent pr11et'I f
word spread ol lM a
Pope John Paul It llN,rw11Mn
floc k ed to s pecl1I HNI 1
where they were oslt~ lft ''I"' 1
your hearts out for (lur p<>nUlf "
··w e're stunned Ttw rac
lion of our people It Mt of
stunned quiet Wt"rt tucnll\f to
prayer and leavll\I( It •• thf'
hands of God." said Bf~oho
S Cummin:. of the Ar.: •
of Oakland, who dint!if w the
POPe in Guam In FeW1iury.
''I'll pray for hlrft," wu tht
reported reactiotl of Pn,1itdent
Reagan. still recovering ltrom a
Shahnto~
'political ~\
gmnhle'
NEW YOHK (AP t fresl·
dent Carter·~ dec1s1on tu mlt
the shah of Iran to the JJ'lted
States for medical lrtiall1'~ -
a move that helped •v•k ~he
seizure of American hl>sh11ea
was a "calculated political s•m·
ble · · and was based on ~
misinformation, Tht.' New t~
Times said today.
The Times said an "eaterusive
examination of the lranta•
l'ris is" 1nd1cated Carte was
misinformed about tti ature
and urgency or th• uan of~
cancer stricken shah VI o died
last year in Egypt
Carter, now living In Pl.th.
Mht fti'fd b) • would·bt •·
le\ l..._ ntttwurb brokt ar Pl"Otr1mmln1 'o IO
• r wtlh newt of lhe at·
• aft tht' poP'f' In t Poter'!
Squ•rt>. peopl• IJ&lhC'red 1rim
feced .round TV ~t.'t" repeat
ln1 the ptUfrn u•t only six
w..ek" BMO -.•hen HC'o1ton WH ...
~\ Ntw \'urlt l 'it y '" St
P1ttrlrk'tt <'1tlht•dral, l'row<.l!i ·
Jl&herfll. A munnur uf :thook
u\t crtH of "l)h Ood" arose
tfoet worshtpllra ut the noon M•• when they W<'rt' lold the
~ had bffn shot.
"I hav.-somt' drc>adful. tnouc
news to h•ll you." lfll' Hrv
Ch1rln M1hon"y said before
be1lnnln1 Mase "Pope John
Paul It wu shol juat a few
mlnuk uao . . We want you
today to pray your heart.a out ror
our pontiff "
C urdlnul Humb e rto S
MedelrM, urchblshop of Boston,
said his lmmt..-dhate reaction was
· · u mlxturl' of !!hock, sickness
und sadness.
·'Then l u11kcd. if this man, so
e;l ronl( u Corel! for goodness,
Jus tl et· and peace. is attacked.
who then a m ong us is safe ?
What tragic example of the
dwindling regard and respect
for human life!" be said in a
~lu tement, adding, ". . when
we remove God from the center
of our lives tbe vacuum lJ only
loo easily filled wilh evil or mad· nHA."
And lo Philadelphia, where
the 1ov mine board of the Na·
Uonal Council of Churches Is
meeting, the Rev. Robert W.
Moon said the shooting "rem
forces our concern that we con·
trot handguns alt over the
world," a sentiment echoed by
others at the se1Jsion.
In Chicago, the largest Roman
Catholic diocese in the United
Stales &Jld home to more Poles
than any city except Warsaw.
Mayor J ane Byrne interrupted a
City Council meeting to r eport
that the Polish pope had been
s hot
Ga .. was quoted by the ·Ti01es
as saying ht' was told U" lbttb
needed medical attenUon a\..tla
ble only an the United Statf6.
However. th~ sha h '• tan~· r
could have been dia~s:ed
STEAMBOAT FOUND -Bob Bennett <left)
and Martin Mayer work to uncover the
crosstail section of the steamship Tennessee
that wrecked 128 years ago after losing its
AP W.....,._
way in heavy fog. The wreckage was fo und in
Tennessee Cove. four miles north of the
Golden Gate in San Francisco <see story,
Page Al2l.
treated in Mexico rattf~ J)
New York, the pape~ q\JcAed s "
doctor, Ren1amin J(e;m., ts fAY, 1
an g It said the de<.'bfdn m adhlit
I he shah to the Unite 4 States
came after months of a rgument
within the administ rQtfon and
"was influenced by 11r,tnt~y,
lobbying ca mpa ig,.. '. ~')' lln
Feds grab weapons cache
old boy ne twork' " lb l in·
e l ude d David Rocket He r ,
for mer c hairm a n of has e
Manha ttan Bank, a,., km••
Secretary of State ~ kils·
anger
Foreign-bound arms taken from jet in Houston
While Shah Moturmm~'t
P ahlavi was being tre• lot
cancer in New York, ilti ff.
demanding his ret to
seized the U.S fl
Tehrun on Nov 4 , I , Cfl,.
tared the embaS$y's st . Tii.
hostage seizure lasted .U. aya. •
The Times said Carte(f earl)'
optimii.m that the crttls ~d bit
resolved an the spriitg of 1 ... 1'9
months before it actuatry e~.
was based on a secret meetlnJ
1 n Paris in February 11.,
het ween his c hief of 1t4ff.
llamilton Jordan, and U\Q lrct
nian foreign minister, IMtlegll
Ghotbzadeh
The newspaper also said ~~t
for .10 of the 14 months of ftte
c risis, the United Stat~• was
negotiating ft'ith e-s ent1•t1y
powerless secular-·f.adars In
Iran and got now~d u~'1l maJt.1
ing contact with lhe r lgl<'-1
figures who had lM r eal t
WJOUSTON <APJ Customs ~nts s tormed an Austrian·
'Nistered jetline r at Houston's
llttercontinenta I Airport and
confiscated a cache of more
tbo 2,ioo automatic rifles,
1r~ade launchers a nd other
•ilitary weapons bound for
South Africa. authorities said
Six foc-eign nationals two tom England a nd the four
ember Austrian c rew were
rres ted. sa id U.S. Customs
spokes man Charles Conroy, and
the Boeing 727 was siezed. The
men faced arraigmnet today on
c h tirges of v iolating th e
Neutrality Act
Conroy said the Tuesday raid
"represents the biggest seizure
of weapons ever made by the
c ustoms ser vice." He estimated
the value of the illegal con
trabaod at $1.2 million.
t'he weapons we r e being
transferred from a truck to the
lar go hold of the jetliner when
about two dozen agents rushed
the plane Tuesday, capping a
t hree·week inves tigation ,
Conroy said
Co nroy s aid agents had
tracked the truckload or
A m e ra cao made a rms from
Hartford, Conn.
The cache inc luded 636
a utomatic M·l6 militar y rifles. m agazine clips, ammunition,
38·caliber handguns and .357·
caliber pistols, Conroy said.
T he weapons, still in wooden
crates. were manufactured by
Colt and purchased in Connec·
lieut with a letler of credit is·
sued by a European bank, said
Conroy.
He said Lhe suspects carried a
false State Department license
permitting the export of muni·
lions or war.
The intended use of the
weapons was not immediately
clear , but an investigation mav
turn upmoredetails,said Conroy
·'These are military weapons.
Airport( funding backed
County OKs $JOO mill ion for improvement proj~ct
The li.-st steps In i coul4 ' be a two-year pro~ galri
financing for impro rt, Lo '
J ohn Wayne Airport h Deen
taken by the Oran-• ounty
Board of Supervi!M>rs.
l_y gQvemment to raise money 'QJ ih belo w·market r ate ~rt.gages for qualifying buyers
Of lOW·COSt housing.
Ill the case.or the airport, rev·
enu~s collected at the site "r~
ext ected to pay for the cost of
the bond.
Board mem bers approved the
use of revenue bond l e11 w gene rate about SlOO Q'lJl OQ fot
the improvement.a. Jtu ~Y'66ort • The $100 million will go
also agreed to tflet/I. at, toward s trenghte nin g the
from underwrtte~alid 81'· runway IUld adding 737 feet to its
pe rts on adminis~ilit ~om· north end, construction or a new
plicated bond tranaac °"' geaeral avtaUon terminal and
Although Initial stlm.ies ftew taxiways and aprons.
were that $75 mOI~ ~ be Also. It ls to finance a new
needed for the ir_.n:6V°fll}~ ... " 213,~-square·foot commercial
supervisors decided" 'tu._.at to termlnaJ and a new 3,500-space
uo the ante to SlOO rftlllioft to ~· '" Pl\rking garage. count for Inflation ~nd c~· tingencies. • A portion of the money also
• wilt be used outside the airport
The supervisors dectdi~ f. proJertY to Improve freeway the same kind or non1)t t Y· r1ttnps, add another southbound
ernment bonds used by th ' lane to MacArthur Boulevard
ThomaP. Hele1 ~
RObett N. WMd ............
M, ThomH KMYll , ....
~Murpt\fne
~Jt~°L .
~ SehuMlen
Ca1 C.19tenMn ,..,... °""""' KeMtttl H. ~d., W a.-0.-II
and improve nearby intersec
lion s for greater traffic
capacities.
By starting now, county of·
fi clals say they hope to have the
financing ready when the first
improvem ents to the airport are
to be .made -probably in about
two years.
Before anv lmorovements izo
in . however, the county 's
master plan for the airport ex·
pansion requires that jet noise
from commercial carriers is re·
duced.
From Page A1
AIR C·AL • • •
appointed trustee for Westgate
said the sale or AlrCal will
permit consummation or the
Westgate reorganization within
60 days .
Kunzel said owners of com·
mon and preferred stock and
holde rs or debentures wUI re·
ceive no less than a return of 100
cents on the dollar. He esUmat·
ed there are about 8,000 to 10,000
shareholders who wlll set their
money back.
Westgate crumbled in 1973
after U. S. National Bank, run
by financier C. Arnholdt Smllh,
wae declared tnsolvent.
Smith aubeequ,nUy was con·
vlcted of arand theft and em·
beazlement. The case Is now un·
dtr 1ppe1J ..
AlrCal waa West1ate'1 major
uaet. The firm still owns a fllb
cannery In Puerto Rico. It la for
Hie.
)
not sporting weapons," he said.
"I don't feel this is completely
over yet. Some det ails haven't
surfaced."
The Jetline r arrived from New
York on Tuesday morning, said
terminal manager Darrell
Harris He said the crew told
him the fuel bill, in excess of
$20,000 had been paid an New
York
Last week in llouston, Federal
Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearms
Bureau agents confiscated 807
high.quality gun silencers at a
private Houston airport. Agents
said the s ilencer s were fo r
"drug hits" in El Salvador and
alone the U.S. Mexico border .
The United Nations Security
Council imposed a permanent
arm s embargo against South
Africa in 1977 a nd the United
States is complyin(o?.
and sadness
Rabbi Mose1 Meachalort, who
was at the meeti.01 to read the
Invocation, prayed for the pon·
tiff's recovery. The count'il had
~een hono r ing T i m othy J
flt cCarthy, the Chicago native
wounded in the attempt on
Reagan"s life.
At C hicago's Five Holy
Ma rtyrs Church , 500 children
from the church school began a
prayer vigil for the PQpe, Emily
Strenk, parish secretary, said
tearfully.
Similar prayers were begun by
about 460 children from the St.
Stanislaus Elementary School in
Chicopee, Mass.
Special m asses were
* * *
acheduJed in cities acroaa the na-
tion.
M ichigan Gov . Wllllem
Miiiiken called the shoolina "a
traelc comme nta r y on ~ur
limes."
In a statement, he aaid: "The
faC'l that it could happen here
<with Reagan's shooting) and
now in Rome is a disturbing slgn
indeed I only hope that Jlis
wounds will not be critical .. :. " 1
"We can Just hope that l he
luck of the Polish holds out.! ..
lts's like when they shot the
president, Let's hope that th~~Js a
precedent and that the pope ~tll• '
too," said Edward Piszekt a •
Phila d e lph ia sea food bwii· •
nessman and friend orthe pope, 1
* * * Reagan says he'll
pray for pontiff_
WASHINGTON IAPl Presi·
dent Reagan, told Pope John
Paul II had been shot today,
* * * Pope n e ws
told Se nate
WASHINGTON <AP> Sen
Barry Goldwater interrupted a
Senate de bate on a military
authorization bill today to advise
colleagues of the shooting of
Pope John Paul II in Vatican
City
"I have the sad feeling that I
should report to my colleagues
that an attempt has been made
on the pope's life in Rome." the
Arizona Republican said "We
have no further details."
There was little visible reac·
tion lo Goldwater's announce·
ment from word or the shooting throu~h news reports.
Goldwater then went on to
speak on the bill.
Trial be-gins
for Garwood
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. <AP)
Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood
tried lo sexuall y assault a 7.
year·old g irl whose parents
befriended him after the Marine
returned from almost 14 years in
Vietnamese prison camps, a
prosecutor told a Superior Court jury today.
Di strict Attorney William H
Andrews told a jury of eight men
and four women that he would
prove Garwood. 35. molested the
gi rl Aug. 7 as he took her lo get
ice cream.
lie said he would present
evidence that varwood the on·
ly American serviceman con·
victed of collaborating with the
ene my in Vietnam, tried to'force
the child to have oral sex with
him, tried to rape her, forced
her to Condie him and fondled
her genital area.
FUii
said . "I'll pray for him," a
spokesman said.
Reagan, himself a victim o( a
wo uld be assassin only six
weeks ago, was told or the shoot·
ing by presidential counselor
Edwin Meese II. '
D puty press secretary Larry
Sp kes told reporters he Jiad
relay word of the shooting to
Mee: as the bulletin
ved on n e of the news
er vice machines in the White
House press office
Speakes said the presideat 's
first reaction was shock. He told
Meese, ''I'll pray for him." and
as ked to be kept 1r1formed.
Less than 10 minutes later.
Reagan called Cardinal Ter·
rence Cooke in New York and
"expressed the sorrow of the
American people and expressed
his personal concern" for the
pope. Speakes said
The cardinal promised to re·
lay the president's message to
the Vatican.
Speakes said the White Hoµse
is being kept informed of de·
veiopments through "contacts at
several points." but declined to
ind icate what sources were 'be·
ing reli ed upon or whether they
were providing any information
not generally available through
the news media.
Reagan, who was felled ~ a
guns hot wound in the ches t
March 30, is continuing to re·
cover well and has resumed
some presidential dut ies.
* * *
From Page A1
PRAY. • •
during evening mass.
The San Juan Capistrano Mis
sion was inundated today wit
phone calls. both fro m person
s<:e~ing news ?n the pope's cor
d1t1 o n a nd infor m ation o
special ser vices .
Prayer services a re planne
Wednesday morning at the mii
sion.
Ill THE SUll
DRESSES
These a re only
two from a
wonderful selection
of summer sundresses ... most are priced under $401
New styles arriving weekly I
The ruffled sundress Is Just
rlQht for eny occasion ... easy cere poly-rayon blend. ~.00
The ~eeted skirt sundress In poly/cotton volte In a charming
navy mini-floral print.
A. QrNt ~nywhere dress. $36.00
••
3487 VI• Lldo.r.
,..wport ae•ch .
(pettdnt tot •ntteno.)
67M510
a ,
I
I \
llGUll l llCH /IDUIH CDlll
..
DallyPltat
WEDNESDAY,
MAY 13, 1981
MOVIES
TELEVISION
COMICS
89
810
811
c s s a
Budget politics threaten
U.S. strategic oil reserve
-or does it? B3
D
0
Few cainpsites scheduled in new park.
Crystal Cove eyed mostly for day use
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of ... IWfJ" ........
If you envisioned the new
Crystal Cove Slate Park as
another Leo Carrillo or Point
Mugu park with lots or camping
areas, trunk again.
State parks orricaals met in
Newport Beach Tuesday night to
discuss preliminary plans ror
the 2,400-acre stale park located
between Corona del Mar and
LaJ'una Beach.
And while a camping area is
proposed on the blurrtop at El
Morro where mobile homes are
now located, that spot won't be
available unlH 1999, when the
mobile homes are moved out or
the park.
Other than that flat site above
Coast Highway, the only other
camping proposed for the park
are three wilderness camp-
groundS inland of the highway
between Moro Ridge and No
Name Ridge.
That inland park area, behind
El Morro Eleme ntary School,
will include a network or more
than eight miles or hiking and
equestrian trails, linked to . the
primitive campgro~nds, v1~ta
sites and an equestraan staging
area. But the most intensive park
use, says state parks spokesman
Dave Allan, will be along the
3 5-mile coastaJ strip. ..
The coastal strip will be able
to serve up to 7 ,000 visitors at
one time, Allan says, with a pro-
posed 1,600 parking spaces at
various locations within the
park.
Visitors will be able to enter
the park at three locations. in-
cluding the proposed Sand Can·
yon Road, Crystal Cove, and a
terrace at Coast Highway near
Corona del Mar.
Parking for 400 cars would be
provided inland or the elemen-
tary school, with access lo the
beach along a trail and through
the Moro Creek underpass.
Another 200 vehicle lot is.pro-
posed adjacent to the underpass
where mobile homes are now
localed.
A 600-car lot is proposed
rurlher north, inland of the
highway and across from
Crystal Cove, with a turnaround
for vehicles al Crystal Cove to
allow for loading and unloading
of passengers, ice chests, and
beach paraphernalia.
Where the equestrian center is
located would become an area
for day use picnics, and four,
60-vehicle parking lots on the
coastal strip.
A hiking trail, weU ioland of
the bluffs to prevent erosion,
will connect the north end of the
coastal strip to Scotchman's
Cove.
Pedestrian overpasses that
would provide access from in-
land areas to the coastal strip
are proposed near Crystal Cove
and Moro Beach.
REEF POINT
SCOTCHMAN'S COVE
I WILDERNESS CAMPING
· 8 ML Of TRAILS ~~CRYSTAL COVE
( STATE PARK
I I
I
I ~ EOUESTRIAN i STAGING . AREA \
J
I
(-
I UNDE~j u~ r--Laguna Beach
')
ABALONE POINT
DelfJ ,... ...,
Preliminary plana for new Cryltal Cove Skate Park •how parking for 1,600 cara, aome camping areas,
day use oreaa, two ped4'1trian bridge• over Coan Highway and a marine re1er~ at Pelican Point.
Allan said the Irvine Company
is proposing tourist oriented
commercial areas at two loca-
tions inland of the park, includ-
ing one just north of the pro-
posed Sand Canyon Road and
another inland of Pelican Point.
The next step in the plannini.?
process 1s pubhc hearings on the
park plan which will be held
next' March by the Slate Park
and Recreation Commission.
Lavender lady has city • ID • tizzy
Boutique operator Dru&cillp Tyaen 14111 neighbor• aedng red
over her lavender la.die• shop.
Laguna
raps c olor
of s tore
An attorney for Laguna's
lavender lady says he's pretty
sure a demurrer he filed on
behalf of his client will be over-
ruled in court later this month.
But Long Beach attorney
William C. Price says he bas a
solid case if and when a lawsuit
filed In Orange County Supettor
Court by the City of Laguna
Beach comes to trial.
His client, Druscilla Tysen,
has been named in the suit that
seeks to force her to substitute
another color (or her strawberry
sho rtcake bouUque, which now
sports a soft s hade of lavender.
City officials, and at least 30
residents and merchants near
the shop at 1145 S . Coast
Highway, object to the lavender
trim that frames the windows
and doors of the woman's shop.
Her neighbors said as much in
a petition that prompted the city
action against the entrepreneur.
Attorney Price appeared in
court Monday and won a delay
in the hearing until May 27. He
says he needs the extra time to
check out city statutes and
ordinances in support of his de-
murrer.
Whal is a demurrer?
"In lavman's terms, it means,
'So what?,' PMceexplained. . Teache r firings
· /·-iip held b y hoard
In other words, he said, should
the city prove the building is
lavender and that Ms. Tysen
painted il that color, so what?
The city contends Ms. Tysen
painted her building without
municipal approval. City of-
ficials want her to appear before
the design review board and
gain that panel's approvaJ for a
color scheme -and it's doubUul
they would support lavender.
Delly~IUff .....
Strawberry Shortcalu boutique in Laguna Bea.ch IJ)OTt• lavnder trim, which nearby merchants and
reaidentJ want replaced with more aubdued tone•.
Laguna Beach Unified School
District trus tees ha ve un-
animously adopted the rlJlinjt of
an administrative law JUi:ige up-
holding the firing of eight dis-
trict teachers next year
The eight teachers received
layoff notices in March. To help
m ake up for an expected
$543,000 budget deficit next year,
district administrators say cuts
in teacher personnel are
necessary.
However , seven of the
teachers requested a hearing
. before a law judge, saying cuts
could be made in other areas.
They suggested laying off ad-
ministrators to save money.
Teachers who received layoff
notices were Dee Namba, Robin
Tench, Penny Siavells, Ursula
Wallace, Janel Rogers, Barbara
Harding and Richard Kelly.
An eighth teacher. Nancy
Morgan, a part-time instructor,
also received a layoff notice, but
was not involved in the bearing.
In April attorneys for the
teachers argued unsuccessfully
before Judge Robert A. Neher
that firing the instructors was
not necessary to balance the
school district budget.
District officials testified that
teacher salaries and fringe
benefits would amount to about
$27,000 in savings per teacher.
-District Business Manager
Clyde Lovelady said the district
must reduce spending by
$500.000 to balance its budget.
School District Superintendent
Bob Sanchis said laying off the
teachers was an especially dif.
ficult decision in Ugbt of their
average leneth of service being
five years.
...........
StarTtd drc~ f right) local~• nwage tnatm.nat plant on Moulton
Parlcwatl, Laguna HW..
But her attorney contends city
ordinances a llow minor
modifications to the exterior of
commercial buildings without
the ope rator having to go
through the deslgn review pro-
cess.
"And what," asks Price, ''is
more minor than some paint?"
"It's a minor alteration and if
they (the city) can come down
and control the color of a build-
i og, then it's a constitutional
restriction or freedom of ac-
tion," he said.
His client agrees.
She says she can 't see what
the fuss is about.
• She ·operates a Strawberry
Shortcake in Corona del Mar on
Coast Highway that features a lavender sign and a lady in a
swing, dressed in a lavender
Victorian gown.
And, s he says, she hasn't
heard a peep from officials in
that town objecting to her choice
or color.
She says she won a beautifica-
tion award earlier this year
from the Reno Chamber of Com-
merce for a third boutique.
located in that city.
She points proudly to a photo·
graph of a two-story Victorian
home which she converted into a
shop, painted rooftop to porch In
pale lavender.
"It's the trademark ((or her
boutiques). she says. "And it's
my fa vorite color. It's a very
feminine color, suitable for a
ladies store."
She argues that a lot ~r
women's shops are painted pint,
"and I don't see a lot of dif-
fere nce between pink and
lavender.
But color preference isn't th~
issue, says attorney Price.
··How does this harm tbe
public welfare, health and
economic health?·• he asked.
"What is the ill. the evil they're
trying to prevent?" . ·-.
"We're talking about less than
a quarter pint of paint."
State files $2.1 million suit
Laguna Hills seivage treatment fir m accused of.fouling Newport Bay
~ The stale Attorney General's
office has flled a $2.1 million
lawsuit against a sewage treat-
ment firm accused of illegally
dumping millions or gallons of
waste water into a creek that
feeds Newport Bay.
Deputy Attorney General
Emll SUpanovtch alleges in the
suit filed Tuesday in Oran1e
County Superior Court that
Laguna Hilla Saoltat.lon Inc.
violated state and federal laws
by dumping murky water into
San Dteao Creek for 208
d1y1 lut year and early this
year.
He aaid the firm at 23542
Moult.on Parkway, Laauna Hllll,
(near Irvlne'• Lion Country
Saf1rll hu 1'een 1D compllance
wltb w1ter codet 1lnce late
January. At that Uma, the firm
b41an pu.mplftl ltl wute water
Into a pipe that carries lt several
miles offshore from Lasuna
Beach.-
The waste water is a llquld re-
sidue rrom the sewa1e treat-
ment process conta.lnin& waate
material and organisms.
Officials or the company Hid
they have tried their beat lo
meet 1trtn1enl water code re·
qulrementl and that they spent
company money tn a 1ood laltb
etf ort to correct problem• thAt
led to tbe dumplnt.
Deputy Attorney General
Stlpanovtch said companlet can
be fined tt0,000 ror every day thAt
lt violates the water codt.
The aull all .. u lbal Lapna
Hilla SanltaUoo, by dumplq In·
to th• enek, violated a ceue
9'ld delllt Ofder of the Santa
Ana Jle&lonal Water Quality
Control Board
I
Slipanovich added that be is
now negotiating with the com-
pany with a view toward achiev-
ing an out-of-court settlement
that would guarimtee that lf the
company's ocean-outfall pipe
broke il would have adequate
facilities lo avoid having to
dumiMnto the creek.
Health authorities say that the
Upper Newport Bay area is so
polluted that It is difficult to
prove the waste water from
Laguna Hills Sanitation further
decreased the water quality of
that sedioo or the bay.
The Upper Newport Bay area
ls generally closed to swimmi111
and shellfish gathering.
Lug it aml I.eave it
You know that old rerrt1eutor
In the 1arage that haan't worked
in yean? How about tbe rusted
water healer that's been 1ltt.ln1 ln
the backyard?
Well, c..a,unans, next week you
can 1et rid of thOle heavy, bulky
item• that have been accumulat-
lnl since last year 's annual
cleanup.
Put them curbllde on your r•·
ular pickup d1y next week and,
when you set home from wodt.
tbey'llbegooe.
It's the cit.)''• 1nnual •PriDI
pickup. CUpplqs and otb•r ltema
lhat the truh crew normally la·
norea wUJ be c.rted off.
F'or lnlormaUon, call thedty at
497·S311.
,
~l • ----
BS L . Orange Cont CAIL V PILOT/WednHday, May 13, 1981
~\ ------.H-.o-:-j~-t~-l k-vo-lu-nJ-te-;~-s-t!_!_!-~-~-p-a-s~-~-,!-~-in-~-hil-om_e_sJ-.-O-Y--
County airport:
who wants it?
PIE IN THE St<Y DEPT. -Now that ·AirCal, our
homegrown jet air force, has been purchased by a couple
of Newport Beach developers, and the search for a new
airport continues. maybe the jet situation around here is
now in better focus . Maybe.
There must be a certain irony that it was two Newport
entrepreneurs, George Argyros and William Lyon, brought
AirCal home for their very own after a spirited bidding war
with Air Florida operatives.
THE WINNERS COME from Newport and so do the
most vocal opponents of commercial jet aircraft operations
out of Orange County's John Wayne Airport. So now it would
appear the proponents and opponents are confined to one
community. 1 '
Meanwhile, of course, the search by our county and re-
gional officials continues, as it has for a decade or so, in the
effort to find a suitable alternative site to John Wayne for
commercial jet operations. ~ ·
The latest brainchild
along these lines has come • ~
from a regional govern-~-r-'\ .
ment almagamation 1,
known a s the Southern -~
California Association of TOM MORPHINE Governments, or SCAG, l
for short. ---------
The SCAG notion is to build a super-jetport in Santiago
Canyon, up in the alleged boonies.
This asserted site combines with the other long-
standin~ "cure" for Orange County's airstrip woes, which
would be to locate the superport Just across the county lme
in San Diego County, on the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp
Pendleton property.
AU. OF TW S is just wonderful. of course, and you could
anticipate that people now living under the flight paths of
John Wayne Airport -in Newport. Costa Mesa and Irvine
They're testing 0110ther quiet model at Orange County'• airport
would greet either of the new locations with great
huzzahs.
But how about the folks near the other locales?
You can anticipate the reaction.
Maggie Ryan, a member of the Santiago Municipal Ad·
visory Council was quoted on the Santiago situation this
way: ''No way in the world do I want an airport here. This
area is rural and an airport would bring overwhelming
changes."
LONG-TIME COASTAL area residents, who can re-
member Orange County Airport when it was surrounded by
beanfields and a couple of bovines. will have a hard time
arguing with that statement.
Meanwhile downcoas(. San Clemente officials aren't
exactly enchanted with the notion of big jets roaring
skyward from Camp Pendleton.
J APANESE HONOR -
Robert Ingersoll, former
U.S. ambassador to Japan.
will receive the First Class
Order of the-Rising Sun for
his efforts to improve U.S.-
J a p anese relations , the
prime minister's office an-
nounced.
Clwrch nixes
gram to aid
Cuban gays
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
San Francisco church group has
turned down a $100,000 federal
grant to relocate 50 more Cuban
r e fugees -many of them
homosexuals -in the Bay Area.
The Metropolitan Community
Church 's Gay and Lesbi an
Refugee Program, which
already has settled some 173
refugees in San Francisco, says
the effort has reached its satura·
tion point.
T he Rev. Robert M. Falls, a
Metropolitan minister who
spearheaded the refugee reloca·
tion effort, s aid last month's
grant offer would have provided
food, housing and clothing for
the 508 Cubans for six months.
"It takes a much longer period
for the refugees to become ac-
climated to our society," Falls
s aid, adding that long before the
government grants became
available, "we had saturated the
Bay Area gay community with
the refugees we already have.•·
Falls said their program,
which operated when there was
no available government as-
sistance, marked the first time
·'a refugee program was mount-
ed to fit the needs or gays and
lesbians here."
Harassment
damages tol.d
LOS ANGELES <AP) -Two
women bookkeepers each won
$13,500 in a sexual harassment
case Cited against their former
boss.
By JEFF PARKER
Of .. Dliily .........
"Ladies in pink," those volun·
teers who ~ive their time to peo
ple in hospitals. will soon be
moving into another area
nursing homes.
Under the direction of Hillary
Rountree and with a $22,000
grant from the California Com·
munity Foundation, Community
Volunteers for the Elderly will
soon be training and sending
volunteers to seven nursing
homes in the Newport Beach·
Costa Mesa area.
The first volunteers are ex
pectecl to visit the area convale11
ct•nt homes t)y early June.
· · 1 havl' a very personal in·
ter est 111 this.·· said Mrs
Rountree, b
th e olog ian
who gradual·
e d fr o m
Ep isc op a l
Di v init y
S c ho o l i n
Cambridge,
Mass "My
grandfathe r
w e n t t o a
nursing home atOVNUaa
in Washington, D C and wh('ll
we'd visit un:rnnounced we 'd
Marine base plans
open hou.se Sunday
Marine Corps Air Station
(Helicopter) will have its annual
Armed Forces Day open house
Sunday in Tustin.
A National Street Rod As·
sociation safety run will feature
specially cons tructed antique
Meeting set
on HB funds
Huntington Beach officials
will hold putllic hearings tonight
a nd Thursday on how $1.5
million of federal revenue shar-
ing funds will be s pent in the
1981·82 fiscal year.
Tonight the session will begin
at 7 p.m. at Murdy Community
Center, 7000 Norma Drive. The
Thursday meeting is 7 p.m . at
the Edison Community Center ,
21377 Magnolia Avenue .
s tr eet r o d s. whi c h will
particfpatl' in NSRA safety in·
spections, speedom ete r calibra ·
lions, a s treet rod olympics and
show 'n' shjne.
Street rod activities will be
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m .
In addition . 5 and 10 kilometer
runs will start at 8 a.m. a nd 8 :45
a .m .. respectively. Registration
1s $7 a nd inc ludes a com
memorative shirt.
Community oly mpics also will
be he ld, fea t uring a footba ll
throw, softball throw, basketball
throw and golf chipping.
The MCASC HJ Tustin Model
Aircraft Association will present
radio-controlled mod el aircraft
flight demonstrations .
Also, aircraft will be on dis-
play and tours of the historic
blimp hang ars will be con-
ducted.
Gates open al 7 a .m . For in·
formation. call Major Russ
Verbael at 551·7540.
t intl him tied up, unshaven and
Kitting 1n his own urine .
'·But wt• be lieve nursina
honH·s l(t•rvc a real need loo.
W e· rt• t r y ang to lighten the
burden of the staff in local
homci; we want to improve
the qu<ty of life there." she
said.
Among the things volunteers
will do a rt o rga nize c lubs
<nature, men's, reading, book ,
pl<1nt, newcomers·. and birthday
clubs >. conduct "life re view"
sessions which encourage the
el~erly to renect upon the happy
tim es 1n their lives. welcome
and orient ne w cli ents to their
s urro und ings and ser ve a s
"wat('r ladies"
·'There's som e thing about
s har•ng wa ler that's very sym-
bolic," s<J id Mrs . Ro untree.
"One of the things volunteers •
will do as a make rounds to pa-
tients' ro<ims with fresh water
<1nd glasses Somet im es patients
can't get up too easily and the
ver y act or havi n g someone
bring waler and a little good cheer
can really be important.
"We're also very e nthused
a bo ut welcoming new patients.
Wh en they com e to a nursing
home. t hey're often confused,
disoriented and disappointed. If
som eone is there to show them
a round. introduce them to other
people and generally smoo th
their entry. 1t can be a ba g
help ... she said.
Mrs Rountree believes the
over all quality of care will be
significantly enha nced since
volunteers are scheduled to free
nursing staffs for other work.
An yone wis hing to volunteer a
few hours a week to visit the
elderly in rest homes should con·
tac t Mrs. Rountree o r Mary
Cooper at 548 ·9331.
San Clemente Councilwoman Karoline Koester was
quoted in the public prints only today as suggesting, "The
impact (of the Camp Pendleton site) would be adverse to
traffic on Interstate 5 and there is a probability t hat aircraft
would be coming a~ going right over San Clemente and San
Juan Capistrano.''
So clearly, th locations now being dusted off as possible
jet airport replacements for John Wayne aren't being greet-
ed with great huzzahs by the neighborhoods most closely in-
volved.
A jury awarded $3,500 general
damages and $10,000 punitive
damages to Laverne Faymon-
ville, 27, and Cathi Draper, 54.
The money is to be paid by their
former employer, Golden State
Glass Co., and its president,
Raymond Morris, 73.
Fields g uilty
DRY DAYS -This 25-yard pool in Irvine's
Heritage Park Aquatics Complex isn't much
good to swimming enthusiasts these days.
That's because it has been drained
o.llyf'lttltSWff....._
to allow for repainting before the hectic days
of summer. There are two other pools in the
complex and t hey're available for public
~~imming .. For information call 754 -~13.
Pavilion due
YET WHAT ARE the stakes? Well, AirCal went in the
bidding war for $61.5 million. Hughes Airwest went to
Republic Airlines for $38.5 million.
That's no penny-ante poker game they're playing out
there behind the hangers, folks.
LOS ANGELES CAP>
Sports promoter Ross Fields,
the target of a grand jury in-
v es ti gation of a $21.3 million
bank embezzlement, races a sen·
tence of up to five years in
prison and a $2,000 fine for lying
on a passport application after
being found guilty Tuesday.
Mtl;RCED CAP) -A
pavilion will be built at
the Merced County Fair-
grounds in the next fis-
cal year as part of a
four-year construction
program, directors an-
nounced.
Space teclmician
lecturer at UCI
A lecture titled "Space Shuttle: A Success" will
be given by Jack Hoagland, Rockwell Interna-
tional technical staff member, at UC Irvine at 7:30
p.m . Monday in Room F-110, Medical Sciences
Complex.
Hoagland is responsible for the communica-
tion-tracking-data transfer subsystem of the shut·
tie and is one of the pioneers in space propulsion
and scientific and communications satellites.
His lecture will focus on the solution to major
problems encountered in the development of the
space shuttle.
Tickets for Hoagland's lecture -are $3 for
general admission and $2 for students and UCI
staff, faculty and Alumni Association members.
Tickets are available in advance at the UCI Alumni
Association Office, 651 Administration Building.
linguist speaker
The blstorical-Unguistlc connections between ,
the Inca and Aztec cultures will be the s ubject of a
lecture by Dr. Mary Ritchie Key at UC Irvine.
Her taJk, "Intercontinental Linguistic Connec·
tions,'' will be at 7:30 p.m. May 21 In Room 220,
Social Sclence Tower.
Key. a UCI linguistics professor wbo haa done
extensive work on South American Indian
languages, argues that the Incas and Asteca had
considerable contact with each other at some p01nt
in history. This led to the almilarities ln their
l&J11U8gts. • Key's lecture Is part of tbe ffumanlllea
lnaucuraJ Lecture Series and Is op.a to the public
wlt.houtcl\arJC . For information call 833·$581. "
IRVID MEAT CO.
~~ vn"" ~~un., Alu ~ -+o ~an. tJew-''/fJPJJ<. 9fEAtc.. CAP for 0&4r' ~pt&iA l ~>'·"'"·~" "'~"°'-' ......... {,lit$l.D ! +at=.:' vo ... ~ 1, .... -~ ~~~u't~ f to.oo~pttif-.
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We carry only Manning Prime Quality Beef
Pneler lfff Pricec Cllll, wt lf••d _. .._. frou9 • • •Jdra A.rte r---------·---. M• nlnp a..t
Side of leet •1• HW9••lt1 'I"
LOCATED AT JEFFREY AND
IRVINE CENTER DRIVE
2blr.-,FPi~l~fs~f ~fo.s
SUN. 11-6 . &52-7988
. ' • "1 ..-....... --;. -• ...... • -:--
111111
llllyPlllt
WEDNESDAY, MAY 13, 1911
MOVIES
TELEVISION
COM ICS
89
810
611
...
c a ; 4 .. s. s a
Budget politics threaten
U .S. stzategic oil reserve
-or does it? 83
.•
0
0
JC a
State files $2.1 ·mi11ion suit
Laguna Hills seu;age treatment firm accused of f outing Newport Bay
1191fy .........
Starred circle f right ) locates sewage treatment plant on Moulton
Parkway, Laguna Hills.
~
The state Attorney General's
office hu filed a $2.1 million
lawsuit against a sewage treat·
ment firm accused of illegally
dumping millions or gallons of
waste water into a creek that
reeds Newport Bay.
Deputy Attorney General
Emil Stipanovich alleges in the
s uit filed Tuesday in Orange
County Superior Court that
Laguna Hills Sanitation Inc.
violated state and federal laws
by dumping murky water into
San Diego C r eek for 208
days last year and early this
year
He said the firm at 23542
Moulton Pa~kway, Laguna Hills,
(near uvine's Lion Country
Safari) has been in compliance
with water codes since late
January. Al that time, the firm began pumpmg its waste water
into a pipe that carries it several
... miles. offshore from Lasuna
Beach.
T he waste water is a liquid re· .
sidue from the sewage treat·
ment process containing waste
material and organisms.
Offi cials or the company said
they have tried their best to
meet stringent water code re·
quirements and that they spent
company money in a good faith
effort to correct problems that
led lo the dumpin".
Deputy Attorney General
Stipanovich said companies can
be fined $10,000 for every day that
it violates the water code.
The suit alleges that Laguna
Hills Sanitation, by dumping in·
to the creek. violated a cease
and desist order of the Santa
Ana Regional Water Quality
Control Board
Stipanovich added that he is
now negotiating with the com-
pany with a view toward achlev·
Ing an out-of.court settlement
that would guarantee tt)at lf the
company's ocean -outfall pi~
broke it would have adequate
facilities to avoid having ~ dump into the creek.
Health authorities say that the
Upper Newport Bay area is so
polluted that il is difficult to
prove the waste water from
Laguna Hills Sanitation further
· derreased the waler quality of
that section or the bay.
The Upper Newport Bay ar~a
is generaJly closed lo swimming
and shellfish gathering.
• e's Agran says Marines should go
o.My .......... ~
body or water . The operation, near the intersection ot
University and Campus drives, is being handled by a con·
tractor for the county.
SPRING CLEANING-Dirt-moving machinery cleans dirt out
of the San Diego Creek in Irvine in an effort to maintain a
good water passage in the creek and prevent the dirt from
flowing into Upper Newport Bay and further clogging tha~
~~~~~~~~~~~-.:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Old buildings mulled
Irvine Company, city to share in $10,000 study cost
The City or Irvine and the
Irvine Company each will put up
$5,000 for a study aimed at de·
Gunm a n robs
Irvine salon
A brown-haired man robbed
an Irvine hair salon of S200 Tues·
day afternoon
The man walked up to the
cash register at Saks or Irvine,
5406 Walnut Ave., at 3 p.m. and
told a salon employee to give
him all the money, said police
Lt. Bob Lennert.
termining the feasibility of sav-
ing the 72-year-old general store
and other old buildings in the
eastern area of the city.
Irvine City Council members
unanimously approved city
participation Tuesday in the
study of the buildings threatened
by city plans to widen Sand
Canyon.
The Irvine Company, which
f'(>wns the buildings along Sand
Canyon near the Santa Ana
Freeway, had previously agreed
to s hare costs of the study.
Assistant Irvine City Manager
Paul Brady said Tuesd ay nl1ht
that the study will determine
how much it would cost to ren·
ovate the buildings and whet.her
they would survive a move to new
locations.
The buildings include the Irvine
Country Store, a blacksmith's
shop, a grain warehouse and an
old hotel.
They are all clustered along a
2-lane stretch of Sand Canyon
A venue, whicb..the city plans to
widen into a 6-lane throu"hway to serve truck traffic going to a
large sanitary landfill proposed
for Bee Canyon north of Irvine.
Irvine OKs
$2.5 million
animal pound
The Irvine City Councll has
given conceptual approval to a
proposed S2.5 million animal
pound but stopped short of al·
locating any money to the prOJ·
ect.
Any allocation of money will
have to wail until May 26 al
which time Administr ative
Services Director Mik e
McNamara is to tell the council
about various funding options.
Other Tuesday night council
action included:
-Final approval to an Irvine
Cotnpany proposaft to build a
12-story hotel al Main Street and
Jamboree Road In Irvine.
Seeks
air base
deinise
By RICHARD GREEN
Of .... OeMy Pl•,...
Irvine City Councilman Larry
Agran is asking U.S. Rep. Robert
Badham, R-Newport Beach, to
back federal action to move El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station out
of Irvine's backyard and thereby
eliminate noise and safety
problems alJegedly caused by the
military facility.
"The kinds of intensive
military aircraft ope rations
emanating from El Toro...,-more
than 65,000 flights annually -
are no longer compatible with
t h e r apid ... growth in
southern Orange County ,''
Agran said in a letter to Badham
made public today.
"I respectfully urge that it be
based elsewhere, at Yuma or
some other appropriate locale."
A spokesman for Badham said
the congressman hadn't yet re·
cei ved the letter <which is dated
May ll) and can't comment on it
until he reads it.
Lt. Col. Bob Wemheuer.
spokesman for the air station,
said Agran 's plan has two
chances -"slim and none."
"H we leave, this (air facility)
becomes LAX <Los Angeles In·
ternational Airport ) Number
two," Wemheuer said.
Wemheuer explained that
there is tremendous pressure for
a regional airport in Orange
County and the air station's
runways and equipment could
easily be converted for com·
merciaJ use if the Marines left.
"Because there has been oc-
casional and irresponsible talk
about the possible conversion of
El Toro to a commercial airport,
any federal action regarding the
base should be accompanied by
an express declaration that the
Marine Corps Air Station at El
Toro be dismantled . . . but that
in no event should the facilities
be available for commercial
aircraft purposes," Agran says
in the letter.
Agran said in an interview
that the threat of "hundreds of
successfui lawsuits" would pre-
vent a commercial airport from
SEEKS BADllAM AID
Irvine's Larry Agron
operatmg al the El Toro air
facility.
He points out in his letter that
the land on which the air station
operates northeast of Irvine is
wor th "hundreds of millions of
dollars." That money could be
used to relocate the air station
at an ultimate p rofit to the
federal government.
Lt. Col. Wemheuer said,
however, that it would cost $1.5
billion lo relocate the air station,
not including land costs
elsewhere. He also contended
that the air station's present
location is strategically impor-
tant, given its proximity to other
military installations along the
California coast.
Irvine Councilman David SiUs
echoed Wemheuer's contention
that if the military left, there
would be tremendous pressure
to build a regional airport at El
Toro.
Agran said in the letter that if
the military left El Toro, lbe
land C'o uld be used for
agricultural operations, regional
open space and park uses, and ap-
propriately clustered residential,
commercial, and industrial de·
velopment.
"Those of us who have seen
the rapid development of tbe
southern Orange County area
r ecognize that it is just a matt'r
of time before the Marine Corjs
Air Station at E l Toro must
necessarily be relocated ," he
said In the letter.
-
Few caDlpsites scheduled in new par~
Cr yst al Cov e eyed mostly for day use
By STEVE MITCHELL or .. ~,.......,
If you envisioned tbe new
Crystal Cove State Park as
another Leo Carrillo or Point
Mugu park with lots of campln&
areas, think a1a,n.
State parka officials met ln
Newport Beach T uesday night to
discuss preliminary plans for
the 2,400-acre 1tate park localed
between Corona del Mar and
Luuna B4?ach.
And wblle a campln1 area is
proposed on the blurrtop at El
Morro where mobile homes are
now located, that 1pot won't be
·available unW 1999, when the
mobile bomea are moved out of
the park. .
Other than that flat •lt• above
Cout JDl)lwa.y. the only other
c1mplne propo1ed for the park
are three wlldernH• camp·
ll'OWICll lDJUMI of tbt bl.Jbway
betwteG lforo Rld1e and No
Name Ridfe.
That lnland park area, behind
JICI Morro Elementary School,
will include a network of more
tban eight miles of biklna and
equestrian trails, linked lo the primitive campgrounds, vl1ta
sites and an equestrian stac1nl
area.
But the moat intensive park
use, aaya state parka spokesman
Dave Allan, will be alone the
3.5-mile coastal llrlp.
The coastal aJrlp wUJ be able
to serve up lo '7 ,000 vl1iton at
one time, Allan 11y1, wlth a pro-
posed 1,800 park.Ina apace& at
v arlous locaUona wltbln tbt
park.
Visitors will be a ble lo enter °'• park at three loc:atJona. in· ludlq the propoeed Sa.Dd Can·
1on Road, Cryatal Cove, and a
terrace' at Cout H11tl••Y near
Corona de1 Mar.
Paltina for 400 car• would be
provided lnland ol t.be t lemen·
tary tchool, with accet1 lo the
btacb aloni a traU and throua,h
the Moro creek \&Dderpa ...
Another 200 vehicle lot la pro-
posed adjacent to the underpass
where mobile homes are now
located.
A 600-car lot is proposed
further north, inland of the
highway and across from
Crystal Cove, with a turnaround
for vehicles at Crystal Cove to
allow for loading and unloading
of pauengers, lee cheats, and
beach paraphernalia.
Where the equestrian center la
located would become an area
for day use picrucs, and four,
80·vth1cle parkln1 Iota on the
coaJtal at.r1p.
A hlJdrta trail, well lnland of
the bluffl lo prevent eroelon,
wlll connect the north end ot the
coastal strlp to Scotchman'•
Cove.
Pedestrian overp111e1 that
would provil1e acc.., from in·
land ~u lo the eoaatal strip
are propoMJd near Crystal Cove
and Moro Beach.
i WILOERNESS CAMPING
" 8 Ml Of TRAILS ~#'CRYSTAL COVE
l STATE PARK
ABALONE POINT
'"' IRVINE COVE
I i
.........
PrfUnmm¥,..., tor w 6,lfol Cow S1caU Porlc "'°'°pot,_, for lllJO cora, 101M comping a~, do~ w _..,, hoo ,.Jl#rba bridQlll owr Coad H.,,..,_ Clftd G mortM teNTW at Ptlkoft Point .
• All~a the lrvibe Company I 1 pro 01 tourl1t oriented
co. areu at two loca·
Uoo1 of the park. lnchMI·
ing one just north of the pro-
poaed Sand Canyon R.,ad and
another inland of Pelican Paint.
The next atep in I.be pla.nnin«
proceu aa public heartn,1 on uH1
parlt plan which will be belc.
nut March by the State Pan:
and RecruUon Conunl .. lon. .
'4
_ ... _ ~ -r -.~..:. --:-·:;;;;;;;;;:;:-::·;::::::-::::-'.:::;::;;::::::· :::·:::;:;· ==="•:;r:• ~"===~==-,.....·---...-.:r:;:~•!":""'•-·""':"':'"".''...--.... ::-__,~"·~~--__ ___...,.,..__...._ --· ------.... ---.. ~·--:"""'""'!"_.,, --.. ;~-.,.,., ... ~u .... uuuuso~tt,...• ... •• ... ~.-... ,,..1
81 L
·Pink LO:dies widen joy
Hospital volunteers to encompass. nursing homes
County airport:
who wants it?
PIE IN THE SKY DEPT. -Now that AirCal, our
homegrown jet air force, has been purchased by a couple
of Newport Beach developers, and the search for a new
airport continues, maybe the jet situation around here is
now in better focus. Maybe.
There must be a certain irony that it was two Newport
entrepreneurs, George Argyros and William Lyon, brought
AirCal home for their very own after a spirited bidding war
with Air Florida oper atives.
THE WINNERS COME from Newport and so do the
most vocal opponents of commercial jet airer aft operations
ou( of Orange County's John Wayne Airport, So now it would
appear the proponents and opponents are confined to one
community.
Meanwhile. of course, the search by our county and re-
giona l offi cials continues, as it has for a decade or so, in the
effort to find a suitable alternative site to John Wayne for
commercial jet operations. ~
The lates t brainchild
along these lines has come • ~
from a regional govern-~-/'<a\
ment almagamation \ <
known as the Southern ,,,
California Association of TOM MURPHINf Governments, or SCAG.
for short. ---------
The SCAG notion is to build a super-jetport in Santiago
Canyon, up in the a lleged boonies.
This asserted site combines with the other long-
standin~ "cure" for Orange County 's airstrip woes. which
would be to locate the superport 1ust across the county lrne
in San Diego County. on the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp
Pend)eton property.
ALLOFTIOS is just wonderful, of course, and you couJd
anticipate that people now living under the flight paths or
John Wayne Airport -in Newport, Costa Mesa and Irvine
They're testing another quiet model at Orange County's airport
would greet either of the new locations with great
huzzahs.
But how a bout the folks near the other locales?
You can anticipate the reaction.
Maggie Ryan, a member of the Santiago Municipal Ad -
visory Council was quoted on the Santiago situation this
way: "No way in the world do I want an airport here. This
area is rural and an airport would bring overwhelming
changes."
LONG-TIME COASTAL area residents, who can r e-
member Orange County Airport when it was surrounded by
beanfields and a couple of bovines. wilt have a hard time
arguing with that statement.
. . .1'!1~flnwJlil~ {jQ\VT)CQ~St.. San Clemente officials aren't
exactly enchanted with the notion of big jets roaring
s kyward from Camp Pendleton.
JAPANESE HONOR -
Robert Inger soll , former
U.S. ambassador to J apan.
will receive the First Class
Order of 'the Rising Sun for
his efforts to improve U.S.-
J apanese r e la tions, the
prime minister 's office an-
nounced.
Clwrch nixes
grant to aid
Cuban gays
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
San Francisco church group has
turned down a $100.000 federal
grant lo relocate 50 more Cuban
refugees many o f them
homosexuals in the Bay Area.
The Metropolitan Community
C hurc h 's Gay and Les bian
R efugee Prog ram , which
already has setUed some 173
refugees in San Francisco, says
the effort hm; reached its satura-
tion point
The Rev. Robert M . Falls. a
Metropolit an minis ter who
spearheaded the refugee reloca-
tion effort, said last month's
grant offer would have provided
food , housing and clothing for
the 508 Cubans for six months.
''It takes a much longer period
for the refugees to become ac-
climated to our society," Falls
said, adding that long before the
government g ran t s became
available, "we had saturated the
Bay Area gay community with
the refugees we already have."
Falls said their program,
which operated when there was
no available government as-
sista nce, marked the first time
··a refugee program was mount-
ed to fit the needs of gays and
les bians here."
Harassment
damages told
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Two
women bookkeepers each won
$13,500 in a sexual harassment
case riled agains t their former
boss.
By JEFF PARKER
Of .. Oelt,,.... .....
"Ladies in pink," those volun-
teers who give their time to peo-
ple ln hos pitals, will soon be
moving Into another area
nursing homes.
Under the direction of Hillary
Rountree and with a $22,000
grant from the California Com
munity Foundation. Community
Volunteers for the Elderly will
soon be training and sending
volunteers to seven nurs ing
homes in the Newport Beach·
Costa Mesa area.
T he first volunteers are ex-
peeled to visit the area convales-
cent homes by early June.
"I have a very personal in
terest in this," said Mrs.
Rountr ee, a
theologiaia
who graduat-
ed from
Episcopa l
Divinity
Schoo l in
C ambridge ,
Ma ss. "My
g r a ndfather
went to a
nursing home •ouNTHll
in Washington. D.C and when
we'd visit unannounced we'd
Marine base plans
open hou.se Sunday
Marine Corps Air Station
(Helicopter> will have its annual
Armed Forces Day open house
Sunday in Tustin.
A National St reet Rod As·
sociation safety run will feature
specially constructed antique
Meeting set
on HB funds
Huntington ,Beach officials
will hold public hearings tonight
and Thurs day on how Sl 5
mmion of federal revenue shar
ing funds will be spent ID the
1981-82 fiscal year.
Tonight the session will begin
at 7 p.m. a t Murdy Community
Center, 7000 Norma Drive. The
Thursday meeting Is 7 p.m. at
the Edison Community Center.
21377 Magnolia Avenue
s tr ee t r o d s. which w ill
participate in NSRA safety ID·
spections, speedometer calibra-
tions, a street rod olympics and
s how 'n' s hine.
Street rod activities will be
from 9 a .m. to 4 p.m.
In addition, 5 and 10 kilometer
runs will start at 8 a.m. and 8.45
a.m., respectively. Registration
is $7 a nd includes a com
memorative shirt.
Community olympics also wi ll
be held, featuring a football
throw. softball throw, bas ketball
throw and golf chipping.
The MCAS< 11 t Tustin Model
Aircraft Association will present
radio-controlled model aircraft
flight demonstrations
Also. aircraft will be on di s
play and tours of the historic
blimp hanga rs will be con-
ducted
Gates open at 7 a.m . For an·
formation, call Major Russ
Verbael at 551·7S40.
rtnd him tied up, unshaven and
sitting in his own urine.
··But we believe nursing
hom es serve a real need too.
We' re trying to lighten the
burden of the staff in local
homes we want to improve
the quali ty or life there," she
said
A m QJlg the things volunteers
will do ur e organ ize c lubs
<nature, men's, reading, book,
plant, newcomers', and birthday
clubs>, conduct "life review"
sessions which encourage the
elderly to reflect upon the happy
times ID their lives, welcome
and onent new clie nts to their
sur rounding s and s e r ve as
"water letd1es " •
· Therc·i. something about
sharing water that's very sym-
bolic," ~aid Mrs. Rountree
··One or the things volunteers·
will do 1s a make rounds to pa-
tients· rooms w1 th fresh water
and glasses Sometimes patients
can't get up too easil y and the
very act of having someone
bring water and a little good cheer
can rcally be1m1><>rtant.
.. We're also very enthused
about welcoming new patients.
Whe n they come to a nursing
home, they're often confused,
disoriented and disappointed. If
som cone is there to show them
around, introducE' the ~ lo other
people <:1nd g(•nerall y s mooth
t heir entry, 11 can be a big
help." she .. aid
Mrs nountrc1.' believes the
over all quality of care will be
s ignificantly enhanced since
voluntl•ers are scheduled to free
nursing staffs for other work
An yone wishing to volunteer a
few hours a week lo visit the
elderly ID rest homes should con
tact Mrs Rountree or Mary
Cooper at S48 9331
San Clemente Councilwoman Karoline Koester was
quoted in'the public prints only today as suggesting, "The
impact (of the Camp Pendleton site ) would be adverse to
traffic on Interstate 5 and there is a probability that aircraft
would be comihg and going right over San Clemente and San
Juan Capistrano.''
So clearly, the toe at ions now being dusted off as possible
jet airport replacements for John Wayne aren't being greet-
ed with great huzzahs by the neighborhoods most closely in·
volved.
A jury awarded $3,500 general
dam ages and $10,000 punitive
damages lo Laverne Faymon·
ville, 27. a nd Cathi Draper. S4 .
The money is to be paid by their
former employer, Golden State
Glass Co., and its president,
Raymond Morris. 73.
Fields guilty
DRY DAYS -This 25-yard pool in Irvine's
Heritage Park Aquatics Complex isn't much
good to swimming enthusiasts these days.
That's because it has been d.rained
DMly "llt l taiff -
to a ll ow for repainting before the hectic days
of summer . There are two other pools in the
complex and they're available for public:
swimming. For information call 754-3813.
Pavilion due
VET WHAT ARE the stakes? Well , AirCal went in the
bidding war for $61.5 million. Hughes Airwest went to
Republic Airlines for $38.5 million.
That's no penny-a nte poker game they're playing out
there behind the hangers. folks .
LOS ANGELES <AP >
Sports promoter Ross Fields.
the target or a grand jury in-
vestigation of a $21.3 million
bank embezzlement, faces a sen-
tence or up to five years in
prison and a $2,000 fine for lying
on a passport application after
being found guilty Tuesday.
MERCED CAP> -A
pavilion will be built at
the Mer ced County Fair-
grounds in the next fis-
cal year as part of a
four:year construction
program, directors an-
nounced.
Space technician
lecturer at UCI
A lecture titled "Space Shuttle: A Success" will
be given by Jack Hoagland, Rockwell Interna-
tional technical staff member, at UC Irvine at 7:30
p.m. Monday in Room F -110, Medical Sciences
Complex.
Hoagland is responsible for the communica-
tion-tracking-data transfer subsystem of the shut·
tie and Is one of the pioneers In space propulsion
and scientific and communications satellites.
His lecture will focus on the sol\JUon to major
problems encountered in the development or the
space shuttle.
Tickets for Hoagland's lecture are $3 for
general admission and $2 for students and UCI
staff. faculty and Alumni Association members.
Tickets are available in advance at the UCI Alumni
Association OHice, 651 Ad ministration BuUdlng.
linguist speaker
The historical-llngulatlc connections between ,
the Inca and Aztec cultures wUJ be the subject of a
ture by Dr. Mary Ritchie Key al UC Irvine.
Her talk1 "lntercontY'ental LlncuiaUc Connec-
Uons,'' will oe at 7:30 p.m. May 21 ln Room 2'20,
Socl•l Science Tower. ·
Key, a UCI llngulsUcs professor wbo bu done
uteJltive work on South American Indian
lan1ua1es1 1r1ue1 that the lncu and A1t.ec1 bad
considerable contact with each other at aom• po(nt
ln hlatory. Thia led to the 1lm1larltlet ln tbelr
lan•u.,es. Key'1 lecture 11 part of the Humanitlu
loaupal Lecture ~riu and 11 oPtD to I.be public
wtlbout charse. For lnformadoa caU •5511.
IRVINE KEAT CO.
Mimi Pril# Q'-'>\U..J "!'''W' ""' Atu ~ 1o ~~n. t'1~'/ll(lJt{ 9T'EAtc--'-'f7-6'r Ol4r' ~eia l ~·" '"· t:\?iC ~t4iGo &At-Ir CPSlD ! •1t:.!': Yoi1.%We 11 .a..(.,.-~ l~..Y.U'{ ~ f I0.00 '-f'lt*·
~Wt~e ~ ~~ ~.a-""'fOCW ""'~U\itid !
We carry only Manning Prime Quality Beef
.............. Prices: at, ................................. c ......
Mamtl••lfff sa. of ..... ,. .... ~ .,,.
LOCATED AT JEFFREY ANO
IRVINE CENTER DRIVE
OPEN 70AYSAWEEK MON.-FRI. 10-7 SAT. 10-5
SUN. 11-6 662-7988
-----------ir--·-·---l -,,--
a z • • •• 5 a . ....
' I
• •
IUlll l:IUT -11101111 UllY Ml
r
WEDNESDA Y. M AY 13 1Q81 O RANGE C O UN TY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
. .
SURGEONS SEEK THIRD BULLET
PONTIFF SHOT
;.fohn Paul II
Police hold
T11rk fugitive
VATI CAN CITY (AP> -Pope
John Paul II was shot three times
in St. Peter's Square today by a
m an believed to be a Turkish
fugitive who had vowed to kill
him. The pontitr was stUI in
surgery more than two hours
after being hit as he stood waving
from his white jeep at some 15,000
people massed in the s unny
square for a general audience.
A Vatican spokesman, Sean
Lovell, said of the 60-year-old
pontiff: "He's stilJ in the operat·
ing theater, the operation is still
continuing. They are trying to ex-
tract a bullet from his abdomen.
The latest word Is that his situa-
tion is not critical. ..
··Appare ntly t he pancreas
was not punctured. His intestine
was punctured. No vital organs
were touched.
·'The operation bas been goiq on for over two bours now. I th.ink
it's going on in two parts. They
certainly already removed two
bullets. He was shot In the ab-
dom en and the shoulder.
··Being of a very strong COD·
stltution, as he is, he should pull
through without too much dif·
ficulty.''
Police said the shots were fll'ed
from a 9mm pistol by a 23-year-
old man who identified bi mself as
a Turkish national and kept re-
peating, "I couldn't care less
a bout life." Police said he gave
his name as Nehmet Ali Hagca.
a WO e
jNewport men seal
; AirCal purchase
In Ankara, the suspect was
believed to be Mehmet Ali A.gca,
the convicted assassin of the
editor-in-chief of the respected
Turkish newspaper Miliyet, Abdi
I pekci. lpekci was gunned down
on an Istanbul street Feb. l, 1979.
Agca was reported by the
Turkish press to have vowed to
kill the pope in a Jetter he left
behind when he escaped from
Istanbul's Sagmalcilar military
prison shortly before the pope vis-
ited Turkey ln the fall of 1979.
Dlllfy ...... """"~Ort.
Two women pra11 in St. Joachim'• Church in Colta Me.a /or Pope John Paul 11, /elted by an assailant's
bullet• todatl in Rome. By F REDERICK SCHOEMEHL Ot .. .,..., ...........
Newport Beach's William Lyon
and George Argyros were in San
Dlego today to put the finishing touches on their $61.5 million
deal to purchase AirCal.
The developers, principals of
Air CalifornJa Investments Inc.,
emerged victorious Tuesday in
bidding in U.S. District Court for
the s uccessful West Coast
airline, also based in Newport
Beach.
The question remaining today
was what changes, if any, Lyon
and Argyros will make in AlrCal
operations.
Attorneys Richard Sherman
and Alvin Segel. of the law firm
of lrell and Manella, of Newport
Beacb, declined to comment on
• ... ose prospects following the en·
try of the winning bid before
Judge Leland Nielsen.
Neither Lyon nor Argyros
could be reached today for com-
m ent.
The team of Lyon and Argyros
wasn't present when Judge
Leland Nielsen approved the
sale of the airline to AirCal
lnvestments. So they djdn't hear
the congratulatory comments
made by those in the courtroom,
including representatives of the
defeated bidder, Air Florida
System, Inc., operator of a
regional East Coast airline of
ft\e same name.
Air F1orida's final bid was $58
million for 90 percent of AirCal,
with the remaining 10 percent of
the airline 's stock to be
~istributed to shareholders of
·Westgate-California Corp., .
AirCal's parent firm.
But Judge Nielsen, who has
been supervising the financial
aflairs of the once bankrupt
Westgate for eight yeara, ruled
t hat the investment group's
all-cash bid of $61.5 milJion
exceeded that of Air Florida.
First reports from Italian
police sources sl\id two men were
seized and a third waa beinc
sought in the shooting, but of.
ficials later made no mentioo of
any suspect except the 23-year-
old who identified himseU as
Hag ca.
Coast prays for pope
AlrCal went on the auction
block Monday, with Air F1orida
opening the action at $35 million.
By day's end the price bad shot
up to $59 million.
'Everyone knelt in prayer' as news of shooting received
Attorneys for Air Florida and
~he Lyon-Argyros group stepped
to the courtroom podium 35
times.in the often-dramatic bid-ding war.
Edward Acker, Air Florida
board chairman, said after the
battle was over that he did not
think AirCal was worth the $61.S
mi Ilion Lyon and A rgy ros
agreed to purchase it ror.
He denied that Air Florida did
not possess the resources to
better the final bid. "We have a
$90 million line or credit," Acker
said.
Acker , however . can take
some satisfaction in the sale to
Air California Investments.
Last ye ar , Air Florida
purchased 26 percent o f
Westgate's common stock.
Because the bid price of AirCal
went so high, Air Florida stands
to make a profit or between $11
and $12 million on its Westgate
investment, Acker said.
"Your pockets have been
enr iched,"' Nielsen told Air Florida attorneys Larry
Hoffman and Herbert Wolas.
H erbert Kunsel, a court·
(See AIR CAL, Page A2)
Police said in addition to the
60-year-oJd pope, t•o women were wounded by the four or five
buUet.s ~in St. Pettr'a Square.
One waa ldenti!led as Ann Odre ol
Buffalo, N.Y. She was not In
serious condition, police said.
"We beard two shot.a. A terrible
quiet fell over tbe crowd. Then all
of a sudden screams and yelling
began. People were pushing and
shoving. The pope slumped over.
Gua rds were running after peo-
ple," said Betty Holsten of Min·
neapolis, Minn. who was in the
square.
The Vatican Radio appealed to
the faithful to pray for the pope,
whose61.9t birthday is Monday.
Witnesses who saw the pope
enter the Gemelli Policlinlc,
Rome's most modern, said be
was awake when he arrived
there·. Italian television said the
pope was taken into the operat-
ing room at the hospital at 5:55
p.m. -8:55 a .m. PDT.
Vatican radio said the pontiff
had been driven through St.
Peter's Square in bis jeep and
was about lo leave the jeep to
start a general audience when
shots were heard.
The pontiff collapsed into the
arms of aldes as the jeep re-
turned inside the Vatican at high
speed, the radio said.
By STEVE MARBLE Of_...,""' ....
Moming mua waa beinl said
at Sl. Joachim in Costa Mesa
when M.ser. Thomas Nevin an-
nounced that Pope John Paul 11
had been shot.
''There was an audible
groan,'' the Msgr. Nevin report-
ed, "and then everyone knelt in
prayer. It was automatic."
At St. Catherine in Laguna
Beach, school classes were hall·
ed for the announcement and
students were asked to pray.
In Huntington Beach, at St.
Bonaventure, candles were be·
ing lit and prayers offered. Peo-
ple worshipped in silence at
Catholic churches along the
Orange Coast.
aiishop William Johnson is·
s ued a statement from the
Catholic Diocese at Orange, ask·
Ing that prayers be olfered for
the WOWlded pope.
Bishop Johnson said he was
''deeply saddened,'' adding that
"an injury or hurt to him i..s an
injury and hurt to all of us."
·'He has staunchly defended
human life and human dignity,
s hown himself a friend to the
poor and to the oppressed all ov-
Look who's moving
AirCal's tail now •
Last January, 43-year·old Newport
Beach developer George L. MIJl'09 carved
out a name for himself in the apolU world
wben he purchased the SeatUe Mariners
baseball team for $13 million.
Now the Newport resident, who 1raduat·
ed from Chapman Colle1e in 1958, bu moved
into the aviation world with the Joint
purchase of Newport· baaed AirCal airlines.
Arfyroe, married wltb three children,
formed Arnel, a real estate development
firm, in 1987. He waa part of a 1roup that
bought President Nixon's San Clemente
estate.
GEORGE L. ARGYIWS
A former cblef of tbe Air Force BeMrve,
57-yea.r-old WUUam 1.7• la a Newport Beach
developtr. Th• Lido Jale Nlldent wu •P·
polnted to bl.I Air Force pott ln ms by
former President Gerald Ford. Am~ 1eneral In the Air FOl'Ce Reeerve,
Lyon ..u.ted ln tbe Army Air Corpe In 1MI
and Hl'Vtd ln Nort.bena Alrlca durln1 World
War JI. He St a USC P'aduate.
Lyon la married and hae OM IOD and two
daupten. A member of the edrilory board
of St. Jude ff01p6tal, Lyon lllO la a member
of U.• Bil Cad,JOa Country Club and UM Udo
l1le Yacht Club. ,
er the world. It is our prayerful
hope that God will hear our
prayers and allow hlm to con-
tinue to ahare the light of the
gospel with all men."
Msgr. Nevin also reacted with
sadness.
"This is a most shocking ex·
perience,'' he said. "For those
engaged in such violence, we
can onl y hope their hearts will
be softened."
Several Catholic leaders re-
peated that Pope John Paul II is
a man of peace and a man who
prays for peace.
"One has almost become used
to this happening to political
figures but the pope is not a
political figure. This hurts,··
said one person at St. Anne's in
Santa Ana.
Sist e r Florence at St.
Catherine expressed shoc k.
"We 're praying. We're praying
very hard that il all works out."
Noon mass in the Ma rywood
Center in Orange was scheduled
today. Offi cials said prayers
would be offered at all churches
<See PRAY, Page A%)
Soviets rap U.S. •.
• • in cargo seizure
WASHJNGTON <AP> -U.S.
customs agents are trying to de·
termine whether three pieces of
equipment seized from a Moscow-
bound Soviet airliner detained at
Dulles Airport for about four
hours were properly licensed for
export, the State Department said
today.
The official Soviet news agency
blasted the Tuesday night inci-
dent as an example of "intema·
tional terrorism."
State Department spokesman
Joe Reap said the plane, Aeroflot
Flight 318, was boarded by
customs and FB~ agent.a because
officials bad "reason to believe
that car1<> aboard the aircraft
01ight not have ~en appropriate·
ly licensed."
"They did find '°me equipment
that they decided to detain over-
night to see that 't was properly
licensed,'' he added.
n MeanwhJle , c ustoms
spokeswoman Chris Ll1oske said,
''The lnvest.l~atlon is continu·
illg." But she aald she did not ex-
pect any an.nOuncement of It.a fin.
dines until later in the day.
Export licenaes are required
for a variety br hl1h·technol01Y
1ood1, Including computers, elee·
tronlc equipment, chemicals,
metai. and buUdln1 equipment.
Particular at.ienUon la paid, a
Commerce Department
apokeaman aald, lo "dual-uae
commodlUee,.. which have an
oaten1lbly clvtllan role but which
could bave a mlUtary uH.
LlcenHI are alto required for
purely mllitar)' cood•.
Earll• a State Department
source c&iied the "lied materl~
"defeDM non-exp0rtable ltema, '
but later •aid be may have m.laio·
terpreted tnfonnaUon atv• him
on why tbe equipment which ht
could not identify, had bffn
ael1ed.
Tass, the official Soviet news
agency, cha r ged today that
customs and FBI agents -acting
with sanction of higher-ups -
committed an arbitrary act of
"inte rn ational terrorism"
against the aircraft.
-Crew members were forced
from the plane and "attacked,"
Tass alleged in a dispatch from
Washington. It said "three lterru
of luggage were arbitrarily con·
Ciscated" and "hand weapons
were seized from the crew mem·
bers, alt.hough in keeping with in-
ternational law they are allowed
to wear arms to ensure the
security of the night."
011111 CUil lllTIHI
Cloudy night and morn·
ing hours with early morn-
ing driule otherwise fair
thro~gb Thursday. Lowa
tonight SS al beaches, 83
inland. Hi1bs Thursday
mid to upper 60s alon1
coast, low 70s Inland. .
lllllf 11111
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Wff" and art If~ mG¥ /fnd o bit o/ mcoMnlQfmAI
lHntmQ thot •zecutivca .Or'll•
ing 10 tfrrwa that much arw
allo worried obolit tht rilf"f
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u .... Orange Coast DAILY PIL.OT/WednHday. May 13. 1981
1
Ntition reacts with shock and sadness I
By The As~lated Pre ..
S hock quickly wa.s aucceeded
by fervent prayer loday as
word spread of the shootlne of
Pope John Paul 11. Churcnaoers
flo cked lo s pecial services
where they were t1sked lo "pray
your hearts out for our ponllff "
"We're stunned The n.i111:·
lion of our people is one of
stunned quiet We're tu1 mng to
prayer und leaving it in the
hands of God.·· s aid Bishop John
S. Cummins of the Archdiocese
of Oakland, who dined with the
pope in Guam in f'ebru.Hy
"I'll pray for him,' wa~ the
reported reaction of President
Reagan, still ret'O\ cnng from a
Shah 01ove
'political
gamble'
NEW YORK tAP I Prei.i-
dent Carter's dt!c1 sion to admit
the shah of lrun to lhl' United
States for medi<'al lreutment -
a move that helped spark t.he
seizure of American hostages
was a "call'Ulated political gam-
ble" and was based on some
misinformation, The New York
Times said today.
The Times said an "extensive
e xamination of lht Iranian
crisis" indicat ed Carter was
misinformed about the nature
and urgency or the illness or the
cancer-stricken shah who died
las t year an Egypt
bullet fired by u would-be U •
11ussln
A$ televudon networks broke
off r~euJur proarammln1 to 10
on thti alr with oews of the at·
tack on the pope ln St. Peter'•
Square, people aathered arlm
raced around TV sets repeat·
ing the pattern set only six
weeks ago when Reagan was
shot
At New York City 's St.
Patrick's Cathedral, crowds
gathered. A murmur or shock
and cries of "Oh God'" arose
from worshipers at the noon
Mass when they were told the
pope had been s hot.
'"I have some dreadful, tragic
ne \\s to tell you." the Rev
Charles Mahoney said before
be1IMing Mass. "Pope John
Paul II was shot just a few
minute aao . . . We want you
today to pray your hearts out for
our pontJrr "
C11 rdlnal Humbert0>·S
MedelrOll, archbishop of Boston.
said his immediate reaction was
"11 mixture or shock , sickness
and sadness.
·'Then I asked. Ir thiis man, so
strong a force for goodness,
justice and peace. is attacked.
who then among us Is safe?
What tragic example of the
dwindling regard ahd respect
for human life!" he said in a
statement, adding, " ... when
we remove God from the cttnter
ot our llves, lbe vacuum 11 only
too easily nlled wlth evil or mad·
ne1s."
And In Philudelphlo, where
the aovemlna board of the Na
tlonal Council of Churches Is
meeting, the Rev. Robert W
Moon said the shooting "reln
rorces our concern that we con·
trol handguns all over the
world," a sentiment echoed by
others at the session.
In Chicago, the largest Roman
CathoUc diocese in the United
States and home to more Poles
than any city except Warsaw,
Mayor Jane Byrne interrupted a
City Council meeting to report
that the Polish pope had been
shot
Carter. now living in Plams,
Ga . wa'> quoted by the Times
as saymg he was told the shah
needed med1t·al attention availa-
ble only Ill the United States
However. the s hah s cancer
could have been diagnosed and
treated in Mexico rather than
STEAMBOAT FOUND -Bob Bennett (left)
and Martin Mayer work lo uncover the
crosstail section of the steamship Tennessee
that wrecked 128 years ago after losing its
Al'WI .......
way in heavy fog. The wreckage was found in
Tennessee Cove. four miles north of the
Golden Gate in San Francisco Csee story,
Page Al2).
New York. the paper quoted his
doctor, Ren1amin Kean, as say
ing It said the dl'cision to admit
th<' s hah to lhl' United States
came after months or argument
within the administration and
"was influenced by an' intensive
lobbying campafgn by an
'old-boy network' " that in
el ud e d Duvid Rockefe llH,
form e r c hairman of Ch ase
Manhattan Rctnk . a nd former
Secretary of State Henr}' Kiss
1nger
~eds grab weapons cache
Foreign-bound arms taken from jet in Houston
While Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi was bemg treated for
cance r 1n New York. militants
demandmg his return to Iran
seized the L' S Embassy in
Tehran on Nov 4, 1979, and cap-
HOUSTON <AP) Customs
agents stormed an Austrian-
registere<l jetliner at Houston's
Intercontinental Airport and
confiscated a ca che of more
than 2.200 automatic rifles,
grenade launchers and other
military weapons bound for
South Africa, authorities said
tured the embass~ s staff The Six foreign nationals two
hostage seizure l<Jsted 444 days from England and the four-
The Time:. said Carter's early member Austrian crew were
optimis m that the crisis could be arrei.ted. said U.S . Customs
about two dozen agents rushed
the plane Tuesday, capping a
three-w.ee k investigation ,
Conroy said.
Conroy s aid agents h ad
tracked the truckload or
America n ·made arms fro m
llartford, Conn.
The cac he included 636
a utomatic M-16 military rifles.
ma gazine clips, ammunition.
38-caliber handguns and .357-
caliber pistols. Conroy said
resolved in the spring of 1980, IO spokes man Charles Conroy, and
months before it a ctually ended. the Boeing 7Z7 was siezed The The weapons. still in wooden
was based on a secret meeting men faced arraigmnet today on crates. were manufactured by
l·n Par1·s 1·n Februarv 1980 r · I · h Colt a nd purchased in Connec-
J c harges 0 VIO at1ng t e I 'h I f d" . b e twee n hi s c hief o r staff. t cut wit a etter o ere 1t 1s-Neulrality Act d b E b k 'd Hamilton Jordan. <Jnd the Ira· sue Y a uropean an . sa1
nian foreign minist er. Sadegh Conroy said the Tuesday raid Conroy.
Ghotbzadeh "represents the biggest seizure He said the suspects carried a
The newspaper also said that of weapons ever made by the false State Department license
for 10 of th(• 14 months or the customs service ... He estimated permitting the export of muni-
crisis, the United States was the value of the illegal con-lions of war.
n egotiating with essentially traband at Sl 2 million. The intended use of the
powerless secular leadt'rs in weapons was not immediately
Iran and got nowhere until mak· The weapons were being clear, but an investigation mav
1n g contact with the religious transferred from a truck to the turn up more details, said Conroy·
Ai;;,~;t j;~di~; b~~k~d·1
·-
County OKs $100 million for improvement project
The first steps in what could
be a two year proJect to gain
financing for improvements to
John Wayne Airport have been
taken by the Orange County
Board of Supervisors
Board members approved the
use or revenue bond sales to
ge nerate about $100 million for
the improvements Supervisors
also agreed to seek proposals
from underwriters and bond ex·
perts on administering the· com-
plicated bond transactions .
Although initial estimates
were t.hat $75 million would be
needed for lhe improvements.
s upervisors decided Tuesday to
uo the ante to $100 million to ac-count for inflation and con-
tingencies.
The supervisors decided to sell
the same kind or non-profit aov-
ernment bonds used by the coun-
ty government to raise money
for its below -market rate
mortgages for quali£ying buyers
of low-cost housing
In t.he case of the airport, rev-
enues collected al the site tlre
expected to pay tor the cost or
the bond.
The $100 million will go
toward strenghtening the
runway and adding 737 feet to its
north end, construction of a new
general aviation terminal and
new taxiways and aprons.
Also, it is to finance a new
213,000-square-foot commercial
terminal and a new 3,500-space
parking garage.
A portion of the money also
will be used outalde the airport
property to Improve freeway
ramps, add another southbound
lane to MacArthur Boulevard
.---------~------~-------------------------~
ORANGE COAIT Dally Pilat
TtlomU P. Haley
NolllW
Robert N. Wff<I ,......,.
~Thoma• l<eevll
~Murphtne '
CtwllilH.Looa ~-....... ..... =:ct Sct111lman
c.i ~tene.n ........ ~
1<ennett1 " Goddard Jr. Ol'lllllllt oi.-VOL. 1•, NO. 1U
•
and imp rove nearby intersec·
lion s for greater traffic
capacities.
By starting now, county or·
ficials say they hope to have the
financing ready when the first
improvements to the airport are
to be made -probably in about
two years.
Before anv improvements eo
in . however, the county's
master elan for the airport ex·
pansion 'requires that jet noise
from commercial carriers is re·
duced.
From Page A1
AIR CAL • • •
appointed trustee for Westgate
said the sale of AirCal will
permit consummation of the
Westgat.e reorganization within
60 days.
Kunzel said owners of com-
mon end preferred stock and
holders of debentures will re·
eel ve no less than a return of 100
cents on the dollar. He estimat-
ed there are about 8,000 t.o 10,000
shareholders who wlll 1et their
money back.
Weataate crumbled ln 1973
after .U. S. National Bank, run
by financier C. Arnhold\ Smllh,
was declared In olvent.
Smith aubtequ~nUf was con·
vlcted of rrand thelt and em·
beulement. The case la now UD•
der eppeal.
A.lrC°al wu Weat1a~1t m_,or
anet. 1be Orm atW 0"'1l• a flab
cannery ln Puerto Rko. ll ll for
Hie.
'
not sporting weapons," he said
"I don't feel this is completely
over yet. Some details haven't
surfaced."
The jetliner arrived from New
York on Tuesday morning. said
terminal manager Darrell
Harris. He said the crew told
him the fuel bill, m excess or
S20,000 had been paid i.p New
York.
Last week in Houston, Federal
Alcohol, Tobacco and Fire arms
Bureau agents confiscated 807
high-quality gun s ile ncers at a
pri vale Houston airport. Agents
s aid the silencers were for
"drug hits" in El Salvador a nd
along the U.S.-Mexico border.
The United Nations Security
Council imposed a permanent
arms embargo against South
Africa in 1977 and the United
States is complying.
' t
Rabbi Moses Meschaloft, who
was at the meeting to read the
lnvocaUon, prayed for the pon-
tiff's recovery. The council had
been honoring Tl m othy J
McCarthy, the Chicago nellve
wounded in the attempt on
'Reagan's life_
At C hi cago's 1"1ve H.,._.
M ar~yrs Church, 500 chlld'Jl(:n
-from the church school began a
prayer vigil: for the pope, Emily
Strenk, parish secretary, s aid
tearfully '
Similar prayers were begun by
about 460 children from the St
Stanislaus Elementary School in
Chicopee, Mass.
Specia l ma sses were
* * *
schedult-d 1n ('lltes across the na-
th>n
M1 c h1ian Gov W1lli@m
M1lllkf'n c·ulled the shooting ?'a
tragic rummentary on dur
tlmt11 " ;
In a 11tot tc.-ment, he said: "'(he
fo l't th<it il could happen hfre
I wtlh ReuRan 'H !'\hooting> ~d
now In llome is u disturbing s gn
inde ed I only hope that is
woundb will nol bi: critical .. •."
"We can JUKt hope that lhe
luck or th(' Pohsh holds out.! ..
Jts 's like when they shot the
presidttnt. Let's hope that that~ a
precedent and that the pope will,
too." said Edward Piszek~ a
Philadelphia sect Cood b~i·
nessman and friend of the pope1
* * * Reagan says he'll
pray for pontiff
WASlllNGTON cAP> Presi
dent Reagan. told Pope John
Paul II had been shot today,
* * * Pope news
told Senate
WASHINGTON <AP I Sen
Barry Goldwater interrupted a
Senate debate on a military
authorization bill today to advise
colleagues of the s hooting of
Pope John Paul II in Vatican
City .
· · 1 have the sad feeling that I
should report lo m y colleagues
that an attempt has been made
on the pope's life m Rome." the
Arizona Republican said. "We
have no further details "
There was little visible reac-
tion to Goldwater's announce
ment from word of the shooting
throui?h news reports
Goldwater then went on t o
s pectk on the bill
Trial be~ns
/orGanoood
JACKSONVILLE. N.C. <AP>
Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood
tried to sexually assault a 7
yea r -old girl whose parents
befriended him after the Marine
returned from almost 14 years in
Vietnamese prison c amps, a
pros ecutor told a Super ior Court
jury today.
District Attorney William H
Andrews told a'jur y or eight men
a nd four women that he would
prove Garwood, 35. molested the
girl Aug. 7 as he took her to get
ice cream
He s aid he would present
evidence that varwood the on·
Iv American serviceman con-
victed or collaborating with the
enemy in Vietnam. tried to force
the child to have oral sex with
him. tried to rape her, forced
her to fondle him and fondled
her genital area.
FUii
said. "I'll pra} Cor him,": a
spokesman said :
Reagan, himself a victim of a
would-be a ssa ssin only J11x
weeks ago, was told of the shoot·
ing by presidentia l counselor
Edwin Meese IJ. i
Deputy press secretary Lcttry
Speakes told reporters he had
r('layc<l word of the shooting! to
Meese as soon as the bulletin
m oved on one or the ne~s
service machines in the White
House press office ·
Spc>akes s aid the president ·s
first reaction was shock He told
Mt'ese. "I'll pray for him," and
a s ked to be kept mformed
Less than 10 minutes lat~r.
Reagan called Cardinal Ter·
rence Cooke in New York fnd
"expressed the sorrow of lhe
American people and expressed
his personal concern" for the
pope, Speakes said. •
The cardinal promised to ire·
lay the president's message to
the Vatican
Speakes said the White Hollse
IS being kept mformed Of tte-
velopment S through "contacts al
several pomts," but declined to
indicate what sources weret·
ing relied upon or whether t ey
wer e providing any informa on
not generally availa ble thro9gh
the news media. i
Reagan, who was felled bit a
guns hot wound in the c~s
March 30, is continuing to jre
cover well and has resu19ed
som e presidential duties •
* * *
From Page A1
PRAY. • •
during evening mass.
The San Juan Capistrano Mis-
sion was inundated today wi
phone calls. both from peuoris s«;e~ing news ~>n the pope'S:con-
d 1t1on a nd informatiop o n
s pecial services :
Prayer services are planned
Wednesday morning at the mis·
s ion.
Ill THE SUll
DRESSES
•
These are only
two from a
wonderful selection
of summer sundresses ...
most are priced under $401
New styles arriving weekly!
The ruffled sundress is just
rloht for any occasion ... easy
care poly-rayon blend. $34.00
3487 Via Lido,
Newport Beach
CP•fttfftt lot efttranoe)
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"
111111 ClllT
WEDNESDAY,
MAY 13, 1911
MOVIES
TELEVISION
COMICS
89
810
811
¥'P!¥4•7f 44\4-4$" • 44 p s : a s ; ;
Budget politics threaten
U .S. strategic oil reserve
-or does it? 83
D
a
State files $2.1 million suit
Laguna Hills sewage treatment firm accused of fouling Newport Bay
~
The state Attorney General'11
office has filed a $2 .1 . million
lawsuit against a sewage treat·
menl firm accused of illegally
dumping millions of gallons of
waste water into a creek that
feeds Newport Bay.
He said the firm at 23542
Moulton Parkway, Laauna Hills,
(near Irvine's Lion Country
Safari) bu been in compliance
with water codes s ince late
January. At that time, the firm
began pumpmg 1ts waste water
into a pipe that carries It several
miles. offshor e rrom Lasuna
Beach.
The waste water Is a liquid re·
sidue from the sewage treat·
menl process containing waste
m a terial and or:.ganisms.
meet stringent water code re·
qulrements and that they spent
company money in a aood faith
effort to correct problems that
led to the dumping.
De puty Attorney General
Stipanovich said companies can
be fined $10,000 for every day that
It violates the water code.
• n
pany with a view toward acbiey·
ing an out-of-court seltlemeiit
tha t would guarantee that if Ole
com pany 'a ocean-outfall pi~
broke It would have adequatt
facilities to avoid having to
dump into the creek . '
Health authorities aay tbal tbe
Upper Newport Bay area is so
polluted that it is difficult to
prove the waste water from
Laguna Hills Sanitation furthtr
decr eased the water quality Of
a.lty--
Starred circle (Tight ) locates sewage treatment plant on Moulton
Parkway, Laguna Hilu.
De puty Atto rney Ge neral
Emil Stipanovich alleges in the
suit filed Tuesday in Orange
County Superior Court that
Lag una Hills Sanitation Inc.
violated state and fede ral laws
by dumping murky water into
S an Die go C r ee k for 208
d ays last year and early this
year.
Officials of the company said
they have tried their best to
The suit alleges that Laguna
Hills Sanitation. by dumpin& In·
to the creek, violated a cease
and desist order of the Santa
Ana Regional Wate r Quality
Control Board
Stipanovich added that he is
now negotiating with the com·
that section of the bay. ~
The Upper Newport Bay ar a
is generalJy closed to swimm~
and shellfish gathering. '
t
Few ca1npsites scheduled in new park
Crystal Cov.e eyed mostly for day use
By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. .,..., ri ........
If you envisioned the new
Cryst al Cove State Park as
another Leo Carrillo or Point
Mugu park with lots of camping
areas, think again.
State parks om caals met in
Newport Beach Tuesday night to
discuss pre liminary plans for
the 2,-400-acre state park located
between Corona del Mar and
La1'una Beach.
And while a camping area is
proposed on the blufftop at El
Morro where mobile homes are
now located, that spot won't be
available until 1999, when the
mobile homes are moved out of
the park.
Other than that fl at site above
Coast Highway. the only other
camping proposed for the park
are three wilde rness c amp·
grounds mland of the highway
between Moro Ridge and No
Name Ridge
That inland park a rea, behind
El Morro Elem entar y School,
will include a network of more
than eight miles of hiking and
eq ues trlan trails, linked to . the
primitive campgro~nda, va~ta
sites and an equestr1an staging
area.
But the most intensive parJt
use. says state parks spokesman
Dave Allan. will be along the
3.S·mile coastal strip.
The coastal strip will be able
to serve up to 7,000 visitors at
one time, Allan says, with a pro·
posed 1,600 parkfog spaces at
various locations within the
park. .
Visitors will be a ble to enter
the park at three locations. in·
eluding the proposed Sand Can-
yon Road, Crystal Cove , and a
terrace at Coast Highway near
Corona del Mar.
Parking for 400 cars would be
provided inland of the elemen· '
tary school. with access to the
beach along a trail and through
the Moro Creek underpass.
Another 200 vehicle lot ls pro-
posed adjacent to the underpass
where mobile homes are now
located.
A 600-car lot is proposed
further north. inla nd of the
h ighway and a c r oss from
Cr ystal Cove, with a turnaround
for vehicles at Crystal Cove to
a llow for loading and unloading
of passenge rs , ice chests, and
beach paraphernalia.
Where the equestrian center is
located would become an area
ror day use picnics, and four.
60-vehicle parking lots on the
coastal strip.
A hiking tra il , well inland of
the bluffs to prevent e rosion,
will connect the north end of the
coastal strip to Scotchman's
Cove.
P edestrian overpasses that
would provide access from in·
la nd areas to the coastal strip
are proposed near Crystal Cove
and Moro Beach.
PELICAN PT
Marine Reserve
CRYSTAL cove/
\ WILDERNESS CAMPING
~~ff C~~~~~~~~~VE
l STATE PARK
ABALONE POINT
J
I
.,...., ..........
Preliminary plaral for new Cryatal Cove SkaU Park show parking for J ,600 can. 1ome camping areas.
day uae atta1, two ped.e1trian l1ridge1 ooer Co<ut Highwoy and a marine re•~ at Pelican Point.
Allan said the Irvine Company
is propos ing to urist oriented
commercial areas at two loca·
lions inland or the park. includ·
ing one just north of the pro·
posed Sand Canyon Road and
another inland of Pelican Point.
The next step in the plannin"
process as public hearings on the
park plan which will be held
next March by the St ate Park
and Recreation Commission
Irvine councilman
mps El Toro base
Busing fees· to • increase
·Proof of financial need required for free ride
By RICHARD GREEN
Of llle o.tty Ptl .. 1-
1 r vine City Councilman Larry
Agran is asking U.S. Rep. Robert
Badha m, R-Newport Beach. to
back federal action to move El
Toro Marine Corps Air Station out
of Irvine's backyard and thereby
eliminate noise aod s afety
problems allegedly caused by the
military facility.
"The kind·s o f i ntens ive
military a ir craft operations
emanating from El Toro -more
than 65,000 flights annually -
are no longer compatible with
th e rapid ... g r o wth in
s outhern O range County,"
Agran said in a letter to Badham
made pubUc t.oday.
"I respectfully urge that it be
based elsewhere. at Yuma or
som e other appropriate locale."
A spokesman for Badham said
· the congressm an hadn't yet re·
, ceived the letter (which is dated
May 11) and can't com ment on it
until he reads it.
Lt.. Col. Bob We mheue r .
spokesman for the air station.
s a id Agran 's plan has two
chances -"slim and none."
• •• "I( we leave, this (air facility)
becomes LAX <Los Angeles In·
ternatlonal Airport ) Number
two," Wemheuer aald.
Wembeuer explained that
there ia tremendous pressure for
a regional airport in Orange
County and the air station's
runways and equipment could
easily be converted for com·
merclal use Lf the Marines left.
··Because there has been OC·
County road
< meeting due
in Newport
A communJty meet1n1 on road
and freeway condltlons ln
Oran1• Count)' ii to be held
Thurlday evenlnt tn NeWJ)Ort
Beach.
Tbe 1:., ae11loo, sponsored by
the slow arowth ~roup SPON
(Stop PoUutJnt Our Ntwport>, la
open to the pubUt.
Speabn Hl>ftted to attend Jn.
elude Tom Jeaklnl, dlreetorolU.
Oran1• County TrampcJri8timl Coma:aiuioa, and Court Burnt,
Cal\r'-pl...., ln ctiart• o1 t.be
Cott.a .... ftweway proJfft.
Tbe m.tlq wSU be held tl
UM Patt Newport a partment.
lpa, 4000 Park Newport.
casional and irresponsible tat
about the possible conversion of
El Toro to a commercial airport.
any fede ral action regarding the
base should be accompanied by
an express declaration that the
Marine Corps Arr Station at El
Toro be dis mantled . . . but that
in no event s hould the facilities
be available for commercial
aircraft purposes," Agran says
in the letter.
Agran said in an interview
that the threat or "hundreds of
successfui laws uits" would pre·
vent a commercial airport from
operating at the El Toro air
facility.
He points out in bis letter that
the land on which the air station
operates northeast of Irvine ia
worth "hundreds of mllHoos or
dollars." That money could be
used to relocate the air 1tation
at an ultimate profit to the
federal government.
Lt. Col. We mheuer aald,
however, that it would coil $1.S
billion to relocate the air station,
n o t Including land coats
elsewhere. He alao contended
that the air station's ·present
location ls atraleglcall)" Impor-
tant, given Jts proximity to other
military in.stallatlons alona the
California coast.
Irvine Councilman David SlUa
echoed Wembeuer'1 contention
that if the mW•.ory left, there
wou Id be tremendous preaau.re
to build a regional airport at El
Toro.
SEEKS BADHAM AID
I rvine's Larry Agron --"...--=:.-----
Oops; we're sorry ..
Sometimes, the eyes of Daily
Pilot copy editors play tricks on
them. Thal happened Tuesday
when a cutline writer overlooked
one of the characters in a pie·
ture about a production of "The
Wizard pf Oz" at Woodland
School in Costa Mesa.
There we re five costumed
characters in the photo, but only
four were Identified. The fifth
was Shannon Anderson, who
plays the heroine's dog, Toto:
Rabies clinic set
An anti-rabies vaccination
clink for dogs will be held May 19,
from 7 to 8:30 p.m . al the Oran1e
County Fairgrounds, In Costa
Mesa.
School busing fees for low·
income families will more than
triple next September in the
Newport-Mesa School District
and proof of financial plight will
be required before passes are Is·
sued to needy famiUes.
The new policy keeps the full·
fare rider rate at $15 a month.
The low-income tee will be
$7 .50 per child, up from the S2
c harged this school year, the
first year of parent·pald buaing.
The new fee structures were
discussed late last month when
trustees learned the district will
come out about $75,000 short of
the $250,000 expected !rom fees
this school year.
School trans portation officials
s aid the shortaae resulted from
more free and r educed-price
riders than anticipated when the
program was initiated.
Based on figures in other
school districts which charge for
busing, tru.st.ees had anticipated
that about 10 percent of the dis·
trlct'a riders would qualify.
But Carolyn Stocke r , d istrict
transportation director, said
about 28 percent of the students
Mesan wins grant
for college essay
Gary Fakhoury of Costa Mesa
has received the $1,000 Armlniton
ScbolarsbipAwardfor1981.
Fakhoury ls a sophomore
journallsmstudentatPeppercUne
University's Seaver· College lo
Mall bu.
are riding free or at reduced
rates.
Next year, families will file
signed affidavits noting their
depressed incomes and eUgibiU-
ty for the $7.50 "reduced" fares.
Familfes with childreu who
ride free must prove the y re·
ceive help through the Aid for
Families with Dependent
Ch ildren program and are
covered by MediCal. •
In related act ion, trustees dis·
continued some bus routes that
h ave been lightly used and
a dd ed others to trans port
children who attend schools to
be closed at the end of this year
to their new ca mpuses in Sep·
tember.
Arts festival set
2 days in Newport
Hundreds of pe rforme rs .
artists and craftsmen wilJ dis ·
pla y their talents before a n ex·
pee l ed cr owd of more than
35,000 at the Newport Beach City
Arts Festival at the Fashion
Island Mail this weekend.
The 17th annual event, this
year called "Follow the Rain·
bow Road," will kick off with a
concert by the Orahge Coast
College Jazz Band following
opening cere monies at noon
Saturday .
Entertainment will continue
throughout the afternoon and
begin again at noon Sunday.
Dance, Celtic music, barbershop
songs and classical guitar and
lute performances will be
featured.
In addition, strolling clowns,
mimes, jugglers and puppeteers
w ill a ppear t hroughout the
festival grounds.
The arts on exhibit will in·
e lude the perfor m ing art.a,
juried a.rt and childre n's art.
Demonstrating artists include
calligraphers, potters . s tained
g lass-makers. quilters, a k~
m a ker and a Chinese brush
painter.
In addition. the festival lli prese nt a "Communi y
Showcase" with booths by e
Or a nge County Philharmonic
Society, See's Candies, the ~
s istance League of New~rt
H a rbor, Bowe r s Museu$,
Friends of the !"lewport Beath
Arts Commission, Friends of tile
Theater Art Center, the Oranre
County Arts Alliances •. South
Coast Re pertory Theater and
and the Oasis Center for Older
Adults.
Aaran 1aJd In the letter t,bat lf
the military left El Tord, t.he
land could be uaed for
acrtculturaJ operaliom, reaionaJ open apace and park UH•, aiid ap-
propriately clustered realdeatlal,
commercial, and lndu1trtal de-
velopmen\.
'Wet Paint' in Mesa
Estancia stages student-written satirical comedy
You've never aeen "Wet evolution of Lbe Meat.ally GtA.d
"Those or ua who have -" Paint" produced like Estancia Mlnora prosram and lJ fcmded
the rlpld developmlD.t of ~· Hieb School's drama depart· throufh the State Gltt.d and
southern Oran1• County anra ment does lt. Talented !'.ducaUon procram.
recoplie that it la Just• mailer You've never seen tt. -.... "Wet Paint" wu conceived
ol time before the Marine Coi'PI The aaUrical comedy, whlcb more than two YH.rt •to by
Air ~itatlon at El Toro m~ a. 1>remlerea Thursday at a p.m. In Etta.Dd.a ...Uor Mltcb Hunnta.
nece111rlly b4: reloc•ted/' the Cotta 'Mesa achool's Fonun The p_ay lnY)>il"4 four wrtten
said in the letter. "lt'.itoula be wu written, produced and who. labored under "tllht"
the benefit of all "bo resld9 lb dlrectAMI entirely by studenta. deai:blaiee to create a l ·fiour·
this area to be1ln, now,, tO "'Wet PaJnt' oot only appeala Iona plen that wil\ eom• to Ufe
seriously diaeuaa fdd II.Ml dul to me penonally,'' nys drama In more than 50 uitthet •adrtl·
are conalltent wl"' IOUDd Pftn· lnatructor Barbara Van Holt. lnl film. t.levislOft and eont•m·
clples ol reat.onaJ and env\ron "but it llvet my many excep. porary culture.
m.at.al plannlq." llonally &ban• atudnll the op. Hunfltl, wbo a1lo cllrec:ta the
POrtunlty for creaUq freedom pleet ana plans to attend
Asra.n al.lo aent coplea ol LIM ·wJthout wreaklni bavoc upon Georl•town Unhentty in
letter to Calllonila S.iaa~rt \he world 1t lir1e. '' WUhl.nlton. O.C ., SIMfully aft·
Alen Cranston and S .J . The pl~. she advtaea. It an noun"9btpl&n1tobe "thena·
Hayakawa.
' ....
Uon•s fii.at stand-up attorney.
comic.
Sltetchel In Hurwitz' concoc-
Uon teltify to the bllarre MD.lea
expreaaed by Ms. Van Koltz.
lnchaded art "Escalator '81"
ln wbJch terrtnect shoppen are
&.rapped oa a 1taJled escalator:
"GUll1an't Hot Tub," an IOI
\'er1lon of the llland series, and
lampoons of alrcraft u ftty,
Japan .. mon1ter movt•. com·
mercials and televlalon 1ame
shows.
Costa Meta.DI attendlnt the
producUon will be utea for sa.:;o at the doQr al l p.IQ.. oa
openlns day ud at I p.m.. oa
Friday, S.twdaJ. Monday and
Tuesday.
4
PIE IN THE SKY DEPT. -Now that AlrCal, our
homegrown jet air force, has been purchased by o couple
of Newport Beach developers, and the search for a new
airport continues, maybe the jet situation around her e is
now in better focus. Maybe.
There raust be o certath irony that it was two Newport
entrepreneurs, lieorge Argyros and Willia in Lyon , brought
AirCal home for their very own aft er a spirited bidding war
with Air Florida operatives.
THE WINNERS COME from Newport and so do the
most vocal opponents of commercial jet aircraft operations
out of Orange County's John Wayne Airport. So now it would
appear the proponents and opponents are confined to one
community. ·
Meanwhile. of course. the search by our county and re-
gional officials continues. as it has for a decade or so, in the
effort to find a suitable alternative site to John Wayne for
commercialJetoperations. ~
The latest brainchild
along these lines has come ,.. ~
from a regional govern· ~r.'\
m e nt almagamation -I,
known as the Southern ~
California Association of TOM MURPff INf Governments. or .SCAG,
for short. .--------
The SCAG notion is to build a super-jetport in Santiago
Canyon, up in the alleged boonies.
This asserted site combines with the other long-
standing "cure'' for Orange County's airstrip woes, which
would be to locate the s uperport Just across t he county line
in San Diego County, on the U.S. Marine Corps' Camp
Pendleton property
ALL OFTHJS is Just wonderful, of course, and youcuuld
anticipate that people now Living under the flig ht paths of
John Wayne Airport in Newport. Costa Mesa and Irvine
They're testing another quiet model at Orange County's airport
would greet either of the new locations with great
huzzahs.
But how about the folks near the other locales?
You can anticipate the reaction.
Maggie Ryan , a member of the Santiago Municipal Ad-
visory Council was quoted on the Santiago situation this
way · "No way in the world do I want an airport here. This
area is rural and an airport would bring overwhelming
changes."
LONG-TIME COASTAL area residents. who can re·
member Orange County Airport when it was surrounded by
beanfields and a couple of bovines, will have a hard time
arguing with that statement.
Meanwhile downcoast. San Clemente officials aren't
exactly enchanted with the notion of big jets roaring
skyward from Camp Pendleton.
San Clemente Councilwoman Karoline Koester was
quoted in the public prints only today as suggesting, ''The
impact (of the Camp Pendleton site) would be adverse to
traffic on Inters tate 5 and there is a probability that aircraft
would be coming and going right over San Clemente and San
J uan Capistrano."
So clearly, the locations now being dusted off as possible
jet airport replacem epts for John Wayne aren't being greet-
ed with great huzzahsoy the neighborhoods most closely in-
volved.
YET WHAT ARE the stakes? Well, AirCal went in the
bidding war for $61 .5 million. Hughes Airwest went to
Republic Airlines for $38.5 million.
That's no penny-ant e poker game they're playing out
there behind the hangers. folks.
JAPANESE HONOR -
Robert I ngerso ll. former
U.S. ambassador to Japan,
will receive the First Class
Order of the Rising Sun for
his efforts to improve U.S.·
Japanese relations, the
prime minister's office an-
nounced.
Church nixes
granl to aid
Cuban gays
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
San Francisco church group has
turned down a $100,000 federal
grant lo relocate 50 more Cuban
refugees man y of them
homosexuals in the Bay Area.
The Metropolitan Commuruty
Church's Gay and Lesbian
Refugee Program , whic h
already has settled some 173
rerugees in San Francisco, says
the effort has reached its satura·
t1on point
The Rev. Robert M. Falls, a
Met ropolitan mi nister who
spearheaded the refugee reloca·
lion effort, said last month's
grant offer would have provided
food, housing and clothing for
the 508 Cubans for six months.
"I l takes a much longer period
for the refugees to become ac·
climated to our society," Falls
said, addjng that long before the
government gr ants became
available, "we had saturated the
Bay Area gay community with
the rerugees we already have ...
Falls said their program,
which operated when there was
no available government as-
sistance, marked the first time
·'a refugee program was mount·
ed to fit the needs of gays and
lesbians here " ·
Harassmem
damages told
LOS ANGELES IAPI -Two
women bookkeepers each won
$13.500 in a sexual harassment
case filed against their former
boss.
A jury awarded $3,500 general
damages and Sl0,000 punitive
damages to Laverne Faymon-
ville, 27, and Cathi Draper, 54 .
The money is to be paid by their
former employer. Golden State
Glass Co., and its pres ident,
Raymond Morris, 73.
Fields guilty
LOS ANGELES <AP>
Sports promoter Ross Fields,
the target of a gr and jury in-
vestigation of a $21.3 million
bank embezzlement, faces a sen·
tence of up to five years in
prison and a $2,000 fine for lying
on a passport application after
being found guilty Tuesday.
The debugging champs
Engine pulled from VW , replaced in record time
Don Schenk and Rand Foster
will tell you it takes the better
part of a half-hour to take the
engine out of a Volkswagen.
But with $500 and a plaque on
the line, the two Costa Mesa
mechanics did that and more ln
two minutes, 40 seconds flat.
They set a world record doing
it, too.
The pair competed against six
other t~man teams at the 28th
semi-a.nma.al Bug ln at OranRe
County IDtem ational Raceway.
They could wie only band tools
and Jacka to hoist the car, take
its enet ne o ut, d r ag the
powerhouse 10 feet to a coot.est ·
llne, dra1 it back again, hoist It .
back l.nto the bug, start the car
and back it over the line.
F ost e r , 22 , o wns fo ur
Volkawa1ens and Sch enk, 39,
drivea a Yolks bua, but they
dldn't uae any of them.
For the conteat, tbe mecban!ca
bad to use a atock·model vinta1e
llM throulh t• Bu1.
The Colla Men na borrowed
one from Foster 's friend. He pro-
mlaed her a tune·UP In return,
Schenk kld~-
Tbt duo work It Oat.ea Toyota,
1731 &lperiot Ave., where they
speela!Ue In repaittns foreip-
macle cars.
Takt!W tM easlne from • But
normalfy Jln't all that euy.
Schenk coalkttd.
..
................
Rond Foan f i..ftJ, Don ScMnk made ~le '°°'" of mnoomg nom. from v~ and Mt Q umld ~to boot.
Most of the m b1ve d lrty
t nt ina, the boJta are aummed
1nd ru1.t.ed co and t.hinp can let
pretty dWJcv.lt
"And we sure don'l want to t>reak ~." aaJd Fo1ter.
T hey made 1ure the entioe on
the ca r they u1ed to H t lbt
wor1d'1 r uord wh steam
cleanec;L the bolts were nJcel,y
lubricated and evetyt.hina waa work(ftl Just riaht •
B)' RICHARD GR EEN
Of_O....,,.... .....
Gilbert ChaUet, the man cm·
powered by Orange County to
keep a full-time lookout for ln
sect problems, says that even he
has a few of the little critters in
his Irvine home.
"My wife Ilk es lo tell the story
or how we have insects in our
home, just like the plumber's
pipes leak and the cobbler's
child ren go without s hoes,"
Challet said in an interview in
hi s office at Orange County Vec-
tor Control headquurters in
Garden Grove.
A vector. explained Challet. is
any or a variety or disease-
trans mitlang organisms
And it's Challet's job to make
sure these little pests are kept in
line
O•lly 1'119' S\.etf -
areas are periodically treated
with granular pesllcidus
While mosquitoes have the
potential of transmitting d1sease
through their sk in piercing
mouth part~. flle!> transmit dis-
ease by landing on a germ·laden
substum·e and then landing on a
food product that's eaten by a
human, Challct said
ThE> pers<in who eats sut'h food
runs the rii.k or getting gastroin·
t esti nal dis euse, he said.
Cockroaches trunsmit diseases
in I he i.ame way, Chall et added.
"Our flv problemi; have gone
wa.) down s ince all the dairies
arHi all but three or four of the
ch1chn ranchl'i. le rt Orange
County." hl' said "Our biggest
fl) producers now are trash
t'tllls" "Rats are my biggest
headache." Challet said, point
ang to a map that indicates that
more and more rat inrestations
are reported each year in the
county
··After about 10 years, the
vegetation grows large enough
and overgrown enough in a
neighborhood to harbor rats.
Then they move throughout the
neighborhood by walking along
the tops of fences.
PEST PURSUJ.;u
Gilbert Challet
With tht• time Chall et spends
on tht• JOb worrying about bugs,
one would presume that his
leisure tlml' would bl' occupied
b.> other pursuits But that's not
I he l'a1>e
"l 'm gl•tling read) to go down
to Mt•x1co on ;i beetle-hunting
trip," he said "It'!-> JUSt my hob-
hy some peoplt: Ith to fish.
hut I likl' t" t'Olll'ct water
bcelll's Aftt•r a day of trying to
net tht•m we just Ml around the
campfire, have a couple of beers
and talk <iboul the beetle that
got away ...
carrying fleas, the potential for
a plague outbreak wou ld grow
Second on Challet's "hit list" are mosquitoes
"Our biggest problem is we
don't get the cooperation or peo-
ple in trimming their vegetation.
They'd be helping themselves if
they did it."
Rats worry Challet because
they have the potential of carry
ing fleas that transmit bubonic
plague. For some reason. the
rats in Orange County don't
seem to carry these fleas
"The biggest health peril with
mosquitoes is encephalitis lin
flammation of the brain)," he
said "But we haven't had a
case or mosquito-borne en·
cephalitis in this area since
1952 ..
C:ha llct says that while he en-
JOys v.ork1ng with bugs, he
know1> that they really aren't too
smart desp1k some science
f1 ct1on films thut would indicate
oth<•rv. ISl'
Challet says he doesn't know
why He adds that 1f they start
People living near the Bolsa
Chica Marsh near Huntington
Beach and the San J oaqui n
Marsh in Irvine are sometime~
bothered by mosquitoes, he said ,
adding that that's why those
And media report1> of deadly
fire ants and killer bees are ex
US($l<'r:llt•ll he !\U1tl
Realignment advances
Harbor Boulevard improve m ent eyed
Long discussed and delayed plans for realign-
ing Harbor Boulevard in downtown Costa Mesa
where it meets Newport Boulevard have ad·
vanced.
The city's Redevelopment Agency has voted to
suggest to the City Council-that a full study of the
proposal be launched
The agency board actuall y consists or the City
Council members themselves who undoubtedly
will approve the study.
Proposed is curving Harbor Boulevard a bit to
the north to meet Broadway, which dead-ends on
the east side of Newport Boule'vard.
The realignment, said a~encv chairman Donn
Hall, would improve traffic circulation downtown
and offer "greater v1s1b1 lity" to the shopping
center proposed for con!>lruction on city-acquired
property known as the Fidelity Block
llt.11l said early estimates indicate reconstruc-
tion or Harbor Boulev&rd will cost about $500,000.
Acquiring property required for the northward
s wing would cost about $2 million more, he
estimated
Wiped out by the new alignment would be
Marvac Electronics, 1870 llarbor Blvd .. and a cor-
ner of the Crocker National Bank's parking lot at
1845 Newport Bl vd . llall ~aid
Noise buffe r s get boost
afte r home o wn e r s' meetings
Owners or homes along Costa Mesa's busy
arterial streets may get some relief soon from
trarfic noise at a reduced cost
The City Council has ordered a resolution that
will allow construction of 8-foot -high walls
along such property lines without a variance. Such
a variance costs about $100.
City law, which requires only a building
permit for a standa rd 6-foot-hlgh wall, will
reflect the same status for an 8-footer if the
new proposal is approved by the Planning Com-
mission and council in June. I
Est ancia
stude nt
honored
An Estancia High
School sophomore, Dan-
ny Shapiro, has won a
second-place medal at
the state speech tourna-
ment held at USC and
s ponsore d by the
California High School
Speech Association.
Sha piro was one of
eight Estancia speech
students qualifying for
the tournament.
S h apiro, the on ly
Newport-Mesa District
student to make it to the
fi n als, faced 48 other
st u dents f ro m
throughout California In
the expository speaking
category.
Other Estancia High
students participating
inc luded Rebel Ely,
A my Sch oles , Ti na
Alcar az, Randy Tift.
E Ilse Me hr e n , J oy
Yur ada and Annette
Fineberg.
School sets
tale n t show
Lindberg h E lemen·
tary School PTA wlll
present Its annua l talent
show, bre akfast and
pa p'er drive Saturda y
from 9 a.m . to noon .
T h e M ay F low er
Talen t Show, at t he
school 1rounda, 220 E.
23rd St., will feature
parent and 1tudent pre·
1tntatJona for the cost of
a wa ffle brea kfast.
Breakfast 11 U for
aduli., Sl for children.
Councilman Donn llall suggested the change
recently after working nearly nine months with a
groups or homeowners along sections of Adams
A venue plagued by traffic no1~e
Also expected to benefit from the proposal are
residents along Victoria, Wilson and 19th streets in
west Cos ta Mesa , and Orange, Santa Ana and
Irvine avenues on the east side.
Also benefilling wi ll be those whose homes
rest along Baker ~treet and Fairview Road in the
north Mesa area.
cm
•
111111 CUii Ylll 11111111 llllY PIPll
Wf ONE S DA Y MA V 1 J ttrn 1 ORANGECOUNTY . CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS
'HOPES FOR RECOVERY' CITED
PONTIFF SHOT
·John Paul II ,
Police hold
·T11rk fugitive
VATICAN CITY (AP > -Pope
John Paul II was shot at close
range and wounded in rive
places today by a man believed
to be an escaped Turkish as-
sassin who vowed to kill him.
The pontiff was still in surgery
more than three hours after be-
ing hit as he stood waving from
his white jeep at some· 15,000
people massed in sunny St.
Peter's Square for his weekly
general audience.
"Although the condition of the
pope is cause for concern there
are well-founded hopes for re·
covery," the Vatican said in a
press release.
The 60-year-old pope was
rushed in an ambulance to the
Gemelli Policlinico, Rome's
most modern hospital.
The hospital d irector,
Professor Luigi Candia, said one
bullet passed throuih the pape'a
body. causing a wound as it went
in and another as It left. He said
a section of the pope's intesUne
was removed. The pope also re-
ceived two minor wounds on ht.
right arm and one on his left
hand, Candia said, plus blood
transfusions .
The Vatican Radio said earlier
that two bullets had been ex-
tracted. but Candia said there
were no bullets In the pope's
body. It still was not clear how
many shots had been fired.
WO e
:Newport m e n seal
1 AirC~l purchase ,
Police said the shots were fired
from a 9mm pistol by a 23-year-
old man who Identified himself as
a Turkish national and kept re-
peating, "I couldn't care less
about life." Police said he gave
his name as Nehmet AH Hag ca.
In Ankara. the suspect was
believed to be Mehmet Ali Agca,
the convicted assassin of the
editor-in-chief of the respected
Turkish newspaper Millyet, Abdi
lpekcl. lpekcl was gunned down
on an Istanbul street Feb. 1, 1979.
Mty ...... -111\'0er'I~
Two women pray in St. Joachim'• Church in Costa Meaa for Pope John Paul 11, felled bu an °"'ailant's
bullet• today in Rome. By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of -Delly ...... , ....
Newport Beach's William Lyon
and George Argyros were in San
Diego today to put the finishing
touches on their $61.5 milllon
deal to purchase AirCal.
The developers. principals of
Air California Investments Inc ..
emerged victorious Tuesday in
bidding in U.S. District Court for
the successful West Coast
airline, also based in Newport
Beach.
The question remaining today
was what changes, if any. Lyon
and Argyros will make in AirCal
operations.
Attorneys Richard Sherman
and Alvin Segel, of the law firm
of lrell and Manella. of Newport
Beach, declined to comment on
those prospects following the en·
try of the winning bid before
Judge Leland Nielsen.
Neither Lyon nor Argyros
could be reached today for com-
ment.
The team or Lyon and Argyros
wasn't present when Judge
Leland Nielsen approved the
sale of the air line to AirCal
Invest ments. So they didn't hear
the congratulatory comments
made by those in the courtroom,
including representatives or the
defeated bidder, Air Florida
System, Inc .. operator of a
regional East Coast airline of
tl\e same name.
Air f1orida's final bid was $SS
million for 90 percent of AirCal,
with the remaining 10 percent of
the airline's stock to be
distributed to shareholders of
·Westgat e -California Corp .,
AirCal's parent firm.
But Judge Nielsen, who has
been supervising the financial
aHalrs of the once bankrupt
Westgate for eight years. ruled
that the investment group's
all-cash bid of $61.5 million
exceeded that or Air Florida.
Agca was reported by the
Turkish press to have vowed to
klll the pope in a letter he left
behind when he escaped from
Iftanbul'• SagmaJcUar mlUtary
prison shortly before the pope vis-
ited Turkey In the fall of 1979.
Coast prays for pope
AirCal went on the a uction
block Monday, with Air Florida
openina the action at $35 million.
By day's end the price had shot
up to $59 million.
First r eports from Italian
police sources said two men were
1eiied and a third was beinc
1ou1ht in the 1bootin1, but of·
flcial1 later made no mentloo ol
any suspect except the 23-year-
old who identified hlmaeU as
Hat ca.
'Everyone knelt in fJTayer' as news of shooting received
Attomeys for Air Florida and
the Lyon-Argyros group stei>i>ed
to the courtroom podium 35
times in the often-dramatic bid· ding war. Edward Acker, Air Florida
board chairman. said after the
battle was over that he did nol
think AJrCal was worth the $61.5
mi I lion Lyon and Argyros
agreed to purchase it for .
He denied that Air Florida did
nol possess the r esources to
better the final bid. "We have a
S90 mlllion line of credit.~· Acker
said.
Acker, however. can take
some satisfaction in tbe sale to
Air California lnvestments.
Last year , Air Florida
purchased 26 percent of
Westgate's common s tock.
Because the bid price of AlrCaJ
went so high, Air Florida stands
to make a profit or between $11
and $12 million on its Westgate
investment, Acker said.
''Your pockets have been
enriched." Nielsen told Air F lorida attor n eys Larr)'
Hoffman and Herbert Wolas.
Herbert Kunsel, a court-
<See AIR CAL, Pa&e A%)
Police said In addition to the
60-year-old pope, two women
were wounded by the four or five
bullets fired In St. Peter's Square.
One was Identified as Ann Odre of
Buffalo. N. Y. She was not in
serious condition, police said.
"We heard two shots. A terrible
quiet fell over tbe crowd. Theo all
of a sudden screams and yelllni
began. People were puahlne and
shoving. The pope slumped over.
Guards were runnlne after peo-
ple," said Betty Holsten of Min·
neapolls. MIM. who was in the
square.
The Vatican Radio appealed to
the faithful to pray for the pope,
whose615t birthday is Monday.
The pontUf collapsed Into the
arms of aides as the jeep re-
turned lnalde the Vatican at hlgh
speed, the radio said.
Witnesses who saw the pope
enter the Gemelli Policllnic,
Rome's most modern, said be
was awake when he arrived
there. ltallan television said the
pope was taken into the operal·
ing room at the hospital at 5:55
p.m. -8:55 a.m. PDT.
BY 8TBVE MARBLE °' .. ~ .......
Morning mass wu being said
at St. Joachlm in Costa Mesa
when Msgr. Thomas Nevin an-
nounced that Pope John Pau'l II
had been shot.
·'T h e re w as an audible
groan," the Msgr. Nevin report-
ed, ··and then everyone knelt In
prayer. It was a utomatic."
At St. Cath erine ln La1una
Beach, school classes were halt·
ed for the announcement and
students were asked to pray.
In Huntington Beach, at St.
Bonaventure. candles were be·
ine lit and prayers offered. Peo-
ple worshipped in silence at
Catholic churches along the
Orange Coast .
Bishop William Johnson Is-
sued a statement from the
Catholic Diocese at Oranee. ask·
ine that prayers be offered for
the wounded pope.
Bishop J ohnson said he was
"deeply saddened," adding that
"an injury or hurt t-0 him ls an
injury and hurt to all of us."
"He has staunchly defended
human life and human di,nlty,
shown hlmself a friend to the
poor and to the oppressed all ov-
Look who's moving
AirCal's tail now
Last January, 43-year-old Newport
Beach developer Geor1e L. Ara.... carved
out a name for himself in the 1porta world
when he purchased the Seattle Mariners
baseball team for tl.3 million.
Now the Newport rea(dent, who traduat-
ed from Chapman Collete 1n 1958, baa moved
Into the aviation world wltb the Joint
purchue of Newport-bued AirCal alrUn ...
Ar1yroe, married with three children,
formed Arnel, a real eatate development
firm, in 1987. He waa part of a lro\IP that
boutbt President Nixon's San Clemente
estate.
0£0RGE L. ARGYROS
A former chlef of the Air Forcea...rve,
1'7·YHt-old WUBa• L J• la a Nnport hacb
devtlopet. Tb• Udo Ille realdtnt WU •P· pointed to h1I Alr Foret .-t ln lt'71 by
former .Pre.ldeat Ger"'1d ront.
A major teneral iD th Air Poree 1teMrve,
L)'OD mliltAld 1n t.IM Army Air Corpe la 1MI
and Hl'\'tld ln Northern Afrtca duriDC World
War 11. Hell a USC sraduate. , Lyon ll married and hu one IOA aad two
dau1b .... A member of tbe adftlor>' board
of St . .J• Holpltal, LJOD a1IO ll a member
of tht Bll CU)'Oa Country Club ud tbe Udo
Ille Yacbl Club.
)
er the world. It ls our prayerful
hope that God wlll hear our
prayers and allow him to con-
tinue to 1hare the light of the
gospel with all men."
Msgr. Nevin also reacted with
sadness.
"This Is a most shocking ex-
perience," he said. "For those
engaged in such violence. we
can only hope their hearts will
be softened."
Several Catholic leaders re:
pealed that Pope John Paul JI Is
a man of peace and a man who
prays for peace.
"One has almost become used
to this happening to political
fig ures but the pope is not a
political figure. This hurts ...
said one person al St Anne's in
Santa Ana
Si s ter Florence at St.
Catherine expressed shock.
"We're praying. We're praying
very hard that it all works out."
Noon mass In the M arywood
Center in Orange was scheduled
today. Officials s aid prayers
would be offered at all churches
<See PRA V, Pa1e A2>
Soviets rap U.S .
• • in cargo sei z ure
WASlUNGTON <A P > -U.S.
customs agents are trying to de-
termine whether three pieces of
equipment seized from a Moscow·
bound Soviet airliner detained at
Dulles Airport tor about four
hours were properly licensed for
export, the State Department said
today.
The orticlal Soviet news agency
blasted the Tuesday night inci-
dent u an example or · 'interna-
tional terrorism."
State Department spokesman
Joe Reap said the plane. Aeronot
Fli1hi 3111, was boarded by
customs and FBI aeents because
officials ttad ''reason to believe
that car10 aboard the aircraft
ml1ht not have been appropriate·
ly licensed."
•'They did find some equipment
tbat they decided to detain over-
night to aee that ll was properly
licensed," he added.
Me a nwhile , custo m s
spokeswoman Chris Ll1oske said,
''The lnvest11aUon la cootlou-
lng." But she aald she did not ex-
pect any announcement of Ila fin·
dln11 unW later in the day.
Export llcen1e1 are required
for a variety or hilh·technoloay
1ood1, lnclud.ln1 computerf, elec·
tronic equipment, chemicals,
metall and buUdlnc equipment.
Particular atttnt.lon la paid, 1
Commerce Department
1poke1man aaid, to "du~·uae
commodities," which havt an
01ten1lbly clvWan rolt but which
could havt a mllltary ult.
Llcel\M9 are alto reqWred for
purely mllltary 1ooda.
Earuer. a State Department
t0urct called the aetMd material
''def ... non·exportablt ltema,"
but law 1ald be may have mlaln·
terprettd lnformaUoa sJven blm
on wbJ U. equipment wb.ldl he
could not ld••Ufy, bad bttn
1ei1ed.
Tass, the official Soviet news
agency. charged today that
customs and FBI agents acting
with sanction of higher-ups -
committed art arbitrary act of
··internatio nal terrorism"
against the aircraft.
-Crew members were forced
from the plane and "attacked."
Tass aJJeged in a dispatch from
Washington. It said "three items
of luggage were arbitrarily con·
flscated" and "hand weapons
were seized from the crew mem-
bers, although In keepine with In-
ternational law they are allowed
to wear arms to ensure the
security of the flight."
DRlllil CDllT WEATHER
Cloudy nleht and morn·
Lng hours wtth early morn-
ing driule otherwise fair
throu1h Thursday. Lowa
tonight 55 at beaches, 63
inland. Hlehs Thursday
mid to upper 601 along
coast, low 70s Inland.
llBIDI TDUY
Tho•~ mob '20.000 a
11•ar and or..1 at~ mar ftnd o bfJ o/ mcouroo-m.,.,
ltamn.g that t~cuthic• fd"'·
• 1119 10 Ur?Wa Chol much or•
alao worrW about th. rimlg
•COM"'JI. Paoe At.
I
u ..... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/WednHday, May 13, 1981
Nation reacts with shock alid sadness ;
By The AllOClated PreH
Shock q1dckly was succeed.cl
by fervent prayers today as
word spread of the sbootlna ol
Pope John Paul U. Churchioera
flocked to special services
where they were asked to "pray
your hearts out for our pontiff."
"We're stunned ... The reac-
tion of our people Is one of
stunned quiet. We're turning to
prayer and leaving it in the
hands or God," said Bishop John
S. Cummins of the Archdiocese
of Oakland, who dined with the
pope in Guam in February.
"I'll pray for him," was the
reported reaction or President
Reagan, still recovering from a
Shah move
'political
gamble'
NEW YORK CAP> Presi-
dent Carter's decision to admit
the shah or Iran to the United
States for medical treatment -
a move that helped spark the
seizure of American hostages -
was a "calculated political gam-
ble" and was based on some
misinformation, The New York
Times said today.
The Times said an "extensive
examination of the Iranian
crisis" indicated Carter was
misinformed about the nature
and urgency of the illness of the
cancer-stricken shah who died
last year an Egypt.
Carter, now living in Plains,
Ga., was quoted by the Times
as saying he was told the shah
needed medical attention availa-
ble only an the United States.
However, the shah's cancer
could have been diagnosed and
treated in Mexico rather than
New York. the paper quoted bis
doctor, Benjamin Kean. as say-
ing It said the decision to admit
the shah to the United States
came after months of argument
within the administration and
··was influenced by an intensive
lobbying campaign. by an
'old-boy network ' " that in-
cluded David Rockefeller.
form e r chairman or Chase
Manhattan Bank, and former
Secretary of State Henry Kiss-
inger.
While Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi was being treated for
cancer in New York, militants
demanding his return to Iran
s eized the U.S. Embassy in
Tehran on Nov . 4, 1979, and cap-
tured the embassy's staff. The
hostage seizure lasted 444 days.
The Times said Carter's early
optimism that the crisis could be
resolved in the spring of 1980, 10
months before it actually ended.
was based on a secret meeting
in Paras in February 1980
between his chief or stare,
Hamilton Jordan, and the Ira-
nian foreign minister. Sadegb
Ghotbzadeh.
The news paper also said that
for 10 or the 14 months or the
crisis, the United States was
negotiating with essentially
powerless secular leaders in
Iran and got nowhere until mak-
ing contact with the religious
figures who had the real rlout.
bullet nred by a would-be U •
HHln.
As television networks broke
off recuJar pf"Otr&mming to ao
on the aJr wttb news of the at·
• ~ck on the pope in St. Peter's
Square, people gathered grim-
raced around TV sets -repeat-
ing the pattern set only six
weeks ago when ·Reagan was
shot. Al New York City'g St.
Patrick's Cathedral, crowds
gathered. A murmur or shock
and cries or "Oh God " arose
from worshipers al the noon
Mass when they were told the
pope had been shot.
"l have some dreadful, tragic
news lo tell you." the Rev.
Charles Mahoney said before
beginning Mass. "Pope John
Paul II was shot just a few
minutes ago ... We want you
today to pray your hearts out for
our pontiff."
Cardinal Humberto $.
Medeiros. archbishop of Boston,
said his immediate reaction was
"a mixture of shock, sickness
and sadness.
·'Then l asked, If this man, so
strong a force for goodness,
justice and peace, is attacked,
who then among us is safe ?
What tragic example of the
dwindling regard and respect
for human life!" he s aid in a
statement, adding, ". . . when
we remove God from the center
of our lives, the vacuum is only
too easlly filled with evil or mad-
ness."
And In Philadelphia, where
the governing board of the Na·
tional Council of Churches is
meeting, the Rev. Robert W.
Moon said the shooting "rein-
forces our concern that we con-
trol handguns all over the
world," a sentiment echoed by
others at the session
In Chicago, the largest Roman
Catholic diocese in the United
States and home to more Poles
than any city except Warsaw,
Mayor Jane Byrne interrupted a
City Council meeting to report
that the Polish pope had been
shot.
STEAMBOAT FOUND -Bob Bennett <left)
and Martin Mayer work to uncover the
crosstail section of the steamship Tennessee
that wrecked 128 years ago after losing its
Al'WI .......
way in heavy fog. The wreckage was found in
Tennessee Cove, four miles north of the
Golden Gate in San Francisco (see story.
Page A12 ).
Feds grab weapons c'lche
Foreign-bound arms taken from jet in Houston
HOUSTON <AP) -Customs
agents stormed an Austrian-
registered jetliner at Houston's
Intercontinental Airport and
confiscated a cache of more
than 2 ,200 automatic rifles,
grenade launchers and other
military weapons bound for
South Africa, authorities said.
Six foreign nationals two
from England and the four-
member Austrian crew -were
arrested, said U.S. Customs
spokesman Charles Conroy, and
the Boeing 727 was siezed. The
men faced arraigmnet today on
c harges o f violating the
Neutrality Act.
Conroy said the Tuesday raid
·'represents the biggest seizure
or weapons ever made by the
customs service." He estimated
the value of the illegal con-
traband at $1.2 million.
The weapons were being
transferred from a truck lo the
cargo bold or the jetliner when
about two dozen agents rushed
the plane Tuesday. capping a
three -week inves tigation,
Conroy said.
Conroy said age nts had
tracked the tru c kload or
American-made arms from
Hartford, CoM.
The cach e inc lu ded 636
automatic M-16 military rifles,
magazine clips, ammunition.
.38-caliber handguns and .357-
caliber pistols, Conroy said.
The weapons, s till in wooden
crates, were manufactured by
Colt and pfilchased. in-Connec-
ticut with a letter of credit is-
sued by a European bank, said
Conroy.
He said the suspects carried a
false State Department license
permitting the export of muni·
lions or war.
The intended use of the
weapons was not immediately
clear, but an investigation mav
turn up more details, said Conroy
"These are military weapans.
not sporting weapons," he said.
"I don't feel this is completely
over yet. Some details haven't
surfaced ...
Th~jelliner arrived from New
YoHl(on Tuesday morning, said
terminal manager Darrell
Harris. He said the crew told
him the fu el bill. in excess of
$20.000 had been paid in New
York.
Last week in Houston, Federal
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
Bureau agents confiscated 807
high-quality gun silencers at a
private Houston airport. Agents
s aid the silencers were for
"drug hits" in El Salvador and
along the U.S.-Mexico border.
The United Nations Security
Council imposed a permanent
arms embargo against South
Africa in 1977 and the United
Stales is complying.
Airport funding backed
County OKs $100 million for improvement project
The first steps in what could
be a two-year project to gain
financing for improvements to
John Wayne Airport have been
taken by the Orange County
Board or Supervisors.
Board members approved the
use of revenue bond sales to
generate about $100 million for
the Improvements. Supervisors
also aereed to seek proposals
from underwriters and bond ex-
pert.s on administering the com·
plicated bond transactions. ·
Although initial estimates
were that $75 million would be
needed for the improvements,
supervisors decided Tuesday to
uD the ante to $100 million lo ac-
count for inflation and con-
~ingencies.
The supervisors decided lo sell
the same kind o( non-profit gov-
ernment bonds used by the coun-
ty government to raise money
for its below-market rate
mortgages for qualifying buyers
of low-cost housing.
Jn the case of the airport. rev-
enues collected at the si~ are
expected to pay for tbe cost of
the bond.
The $100 million will go
toward strenghtening the
runway and adding 737 feel to its
north end, construction of a new
general aviation terminal and
new taxiways and aprons.
Also, it is to finance a new
213,000-square-foot commercial
terminal and a new 3,500-space ,
parking garage.
A portion of the money also
will be used fut.side the airport
property to Improve freeway
ramps. add another southbound
lane to MacArthur Boulevard
--------------------------------------------~ ORANQI COAST Dally Pilat
ThomM '· Haley .......
Aob9rt "· Weed ,,,......
M. Thomu KH¥11 ._
~Mutphlne
a.tee H. L.ooe .......... .-
~SchuJmen
r=!arz..-:-"
~~oddatd "'·
C..fllllll 1'11 Or ... C-lt l'Wllalllftt C.-y. Ht II.wt ""1tt, hl\1•r•tltft•, H llOtlal m.ittr tr ff
"•11fttmtfttt Mttlll may .. repraclV<ff wlt~I ~let llJ9f"lllt'*' 9f C9PYl"f9'll O•M<.
and improve nearby intersec·
lions for greater trarric
capacities.
By starting now, county of·
fi cials say they hope to have the
financing ready when the first
improvements lo the airport are
to be made -probably in about
two years.
Before any improvements llo
in. however, the county 's
master plan for the airport ex-
pansion requires that jet noise
from commercial carriers is re-
duced.
From Page A1
AIR CAL • • •
appointed trustee (Qt Westgate
s aid the sale of AlrCal will
permit consummation of the
Westgate reorganization within
60 days.
Kwuel said owners or com· mon and preferred stock and
holdert of debentures will re-
ceive no less than a return of 100
cents on the dollar. He estimat-
ed there are about 8,000 to 10,000
s hareholders who wlU get their
money back.
W eat11te crumbled in 1973 after U. S. National Bank, run
by financier C. Amholdt Smith,
was declared in.solvent.
Smith 1ublequ,atly was con·
vlcted of trand theft and em-
bHzlement.. Tbe cate ls now un·
d•r al)OU).
Alr<Al .wu Wetllate'I major
aaaet. The ftrm 1tilJ owns a ft.lb
cunt!')' lll Puerto IUco. ll I.a for ••••• " (
'
'
Robbi Moses Meschalorf, who
wu ~t the meeting to read t.he
invocation. prayed for the pon
tiff's recovery. The council had
boen honoring Timothy J .
McCarthy, the Chicago native
wounded in the attempt on
Reagan's lite
At Chicago's Five Holy
Martyrs Church, 500 children
from the church school began a
prayer vigil for the pope, Emily
Strenk, parish secretary, said
tearfully.
Similar prayers were begun by
about 460 children from the St.
Stanislaus Elementary School in
Chicopee. Mass.
Spec ial ma sses were
scheduled in cities across the na·
lion
M i chi g a n G o v W 111 la m
Mllliken called the shootina r a
tragic commentary on ~r
times" •
ln a statement. be said: "*1e.
fact that il could happen b•re
(with Reagan's shootine> llitd
now in Rome is a disturbln1 sign
indeed I only hope that his
wounds will not be critical . . ! "
"We can just hope that the
luck or the Polish holds out.=·
Jts 's like when they shot the
president, Let's hope that that}> a
precedent and that the pope wpl,
too,·· said Edward Piszek.-a
Philadelphia seafood busi-
nessman and friend of the pope; . .
* * * * * ~
Reagan says he'll
pray for pontiff
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Presi·
dent Reagan, told Pope John
Paul II had been shot ~oday,
* * *
Pope news
told Senate
WASHINGTON (AP> -Sen
Barry Goldwater interrupted a
Senate debate on a military
authorization bill today to advise
colleagues or the shooting or
Pope John Paul II in Vatican
City
"l have the sad feeling that I
s hould report to my colleagues
that an attempt has been made
on the pope's life in Rome." the
Arizona Republi can said. "We
have no further details.··
There was little visible reac-
tion to Goldwater's announce-
ment from word of the shooting
throu~h news reports
Goldwater then went on to
s peak on the bill
Trial begins
for GaruxJod
JACKSONVILLE, N.C. <AP I
Marine Pfc. Robert Garwood
tried to sexually assault a 7·
year -old girl whose parents
befriended him after the Marine
returned from almost 14 years in
Vietnamese prison camps. a
prosecutor told a Superior Court
jury today.
District AttorJley William H
Andrews told a jury or eight men
and four women that he would
prove Garwood. 35, molested the
girl Aug. 7 as he took her lo gel
ice cream.
Ile said he would present
evidence that liarwood the on-
ly American serviceman con·
victed of collaborating with the
enemy in Vietnam, tried to force
the child to nave oral sex with
him. tried to rape her. forced
her to fondle blm and fondled
her genital area.
FUii
s aid, "I 'll pray for him, .. ~ a
spokesman said. i
Reagan, himself a victim ot a
wo uld-be assass in o nly $ix
weeks ago, was told of the shoot-
ing by presidential counsetor
Edwin Meese ll. f
Deputy press saretary L~ry
Speakes told rep"Wrters he tfld
relayed word of the shooting to
Meese as soon as the bullelin
moved on one of the news
service machines in the While
House press office.
Speakes said the president's
first reactaon was shock. He told
Meese. "I'll pray for him," and
asked to be kept informed.
Less than 10 minutes later,
Reagan called Cardinal Ter-
rence Cooke in New York and
.. expressed the sorrow of lhe
American people and expres&ed
his personal concern" for the
pope, Speakes said.
The cardinal promised lo re-
1 ay the president's message. lo
the Vatican. .
Speakes said the White Ho~se
is being kept informed of de-
velopments through "contacts at
several points," but declined to
indicate what sources were be·
ing relied upon or whether lbey
were providing any informatjon
not generally available throogh
the news media. •
Reagan, who was felled by a
gunshot wound in the chest
March 30. is continuing to ire·
cover well and has resumed
some presidential duties
* * *
From Page A1
PRAY. • •
during evening mass. •
The San Juan Capistrano Mis-
sion was inundated today with
phone calls. both from persons
seeking news on the pope'a•con-
d i ti on and informatio6 on
special services. ·
Prayer services are planned
Wednesday morning at the mis· sion
Ill THE SUN
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two from a
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of summer sundresses ...
most are priced under $40!
New styles arriving weekly!
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\
Orange Cout DAIL. Y PILOT/Wednesday, May 13, 1981 N •1
N YSE (~OMPO S ITE TRANSACTION
OUOTATION\ IN(l..UOI •••Olt.ON '"' NIW YO••. MIDWI" l'A(•-•c,111• I OUON O•TIOIY ANO (IN(INNATI uocir l lCC"ANCifa ANO a I l'O•l( 0 UY T"I IOA\0 AHO INnllOI l
J f
Dow Jones Final
OFF 3.07
CLOSING 967 .75
Polaroid
prof its dive
You've sc•cn those rl1:vcr Polaroid C'o mmcrc1als
featuring JamC!s Garner and \taractte Hartle)., They
can be runny and lhl'Y rl' d1rforcnt from the run-of
mill commerrials you see on television because they
show a little humility . they're not all claim-and
boast. They also cost a lilt of money Polaroid i.pent
$101 million la~t year lo .tdvt'rt1se its instant camera
and film pucks.
That's a sizable outlay for a rompan) Polaroid's
size Total s <.1lcs in 1980 wen· SI 1 b1llwn, wh1 ('h
means Polaroid spent 7 rent~ of t.'ach ~ales dollar on
advertising Polaroid '"' ests atx1ut as muc:h monev
in ad ver11sing as 11 docs in rcsi.'arrh and de' elop
me nt
They don 't s pend that way at Polaru1d's •
atchrival, Ea!>tman Kodak To ht' !>Ure. Kodak outad
verlised Polaroid its cxpendJtures run about 50 per
cent h1 ght>r
but it's also a
much b1~gl•r
company
Kodak '.., 19!!0
sales wi.'r(' $9. 7
billion, ahoul
s e v e n l 1 m 1• ..,
Polaroid 's
MILTON MOSIDWITZ
Koda k !> 19R(I vrof1ts jftl•r tai.1.:s wt·n· $1 I b1llmn
times what f>ol;.iro1d cleart.-d 1 $85 I m1ll1on 1
13
IN SllORT, KODAK d1w-.n t ha\£• lo \\Ork as hard
as Polaro1cl lrJ bring 111 lht• <,a lt·s dollar Last year
Polaroid':-. plus ·SlllO m11lt0n ud hudget res ulted in
sales of 6.6 million ins lunl cameras , down sharply
from the 7 3 million !>old m 1979_ During the vear
Polaroid sol<t 200 million ftlni purks th<it \.\as also
down from the 1979 sales
Th& detline appears to Ix• cont1nu1n~ this ) ear
For the first three months of 1981. Polaroid s :-.ales
dropped 10 µen·ent and its profits skidded 45 per
cent from a year ago The Wall Street J(lurnal's
verdict w•1s .. Pfllarn1d 1s find mg that such luxury
items as instant t·:imcru> and film don't sell w~ll dur
ing tough <•ronom1<· time.,
It 1rritatc.•s obserH•rs on Wall Street that l'1)ICJro1d
has th1!> nhsC'ss1on with 111!>tCJnt photography That
was all right during llw 19tills "hen those sa me peo
pie on Wall Street touted Polaroid as such a super·
growth rnmpCJny that <JOl' had to pa:-Sl45 tn buy a
single share of s tu(•k If you bou~ht :i share at c;u('h a
price, you can't be too happy t1l<lay whC'n 1t ., trading
at a bout S2fl
SO WALL STR EETF.RS complain now that
Polaroid has to divers1ry, think of something else
besides mst ant photography They also fmd deplora
ble Polaroid's reluctan<•e to go deeply mlo debt
Dearin~ the brunt of this C'rtl1c1sm is Edwin JI
Land, the inventor (1f in:-;tant photography and
Polaroid's leudcr for more than 40 years until he
stepped dc1wn m 1980 as chief executive officer in
favor of d Polaroid veteran. Wilham J McCune Jr
But Land C<mtmues a s chairman of the C'om µany, and
he is md1spulably thl' lar~l·'>t <,_hareholder
Polaroid's annual report for 1980 opened . as
usual, with an essay b\ Land There ht> had these
points to make -
STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT
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UPS ANO DOWNS
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llilo•ka9 '° -· 1.1 tray Of., .. 1$00, .. $US. A"""911 100 c-. _, troy or .. ...,,H,
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AMERICAN' LEADERS
Nl:W YORK (Al'I Sii .. llOO" ""'-_.., ,..0 ~ al , ... '~ ""°'' .,...,,y. ",,....'<.M"t ~ ~ ~ l•ed~ ,..,~ •• , •• 1'V'9 "*"
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ln\trum Sy•
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METAlS
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51 100 0.100
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A tu ml"""' 16 C.rlll • PoUncl, N Y Mercury "410 00 potr fl•~ '"'•ti-'4.S. 00 troy 01 , N Y
SILVER
GOLD QUOTATIONS
L-· rnomU>Q ll•ll'IO ~ to, 1111 U.to
L~; atwrnoon fl•tno '* H . 1111 to U .
Perla: •I-llatnv Ull 10, Oft .. U l'r•-· ll•lno ~I u , olf tO ,.
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SYMBOLS
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•
.. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Wedneadey, Mey 13, 1981
T he spring sun may have been shinin1,
but luncheon guests last Thursday at Trish
O'Donnell's Newport Beach home were thJnking
about autumn leaves.
Thoughts of· ~utumn Peter Kremer says Dennla Man1era, aa master
of ceremonies, "will toast and 1U1ht1y roast"
Assemblywoman Marian Bereeaon.
The occasion is the center's annual awards
banquet. Tickets are $125 per peraon for reeular
benefactors. But , if you want to donate a tad
more, you can get a Silver Circle table of 10 for
$1,250 or a Golden Circle table of 10 for $2,500.
Mrs . O'Donnell, together with Louise Ewing
~nd Valley Reilly. hosted a Patroness Luncheon
for South Coas t Repertor y Theater's 1981 open·
Ing gala . The gala, this year themed "Simpl:v.
Sterling," is set for Se pt 12 •
SC R gala, 'Si mply Sterling,' scheduled
Dot Clock. gala chairman, said the $300-a·
couple benefit will focus on a London theme .
The ball . which was a huge success last fa ll , is
SC R's largest fund-raising event of the season.
It'll be a white tie-and-tails affair beginning
with a cocktail reception in the lobby of the Im-
peria l Bank Building next to the South Coast
Plaza llotel. Participants then can stroll
through "Hyde Park" where they will be gr eet·
ed by a variet y of street entertainers and flower
vendors.
Once through the park, between the bank
and hotel, guests wi ll gather 1n the ballroom
whe re they will be served trad1t1onal Englis h
fa ire lopped with trifle. A caba ret-style original
product1qn. directed· by SCR Di rector Lee
Sha llat and performed by members o( the r esi·
dent acting company, will be featurea following
dinner Completing the evenmg will be dancing
lo t he music of J oe Moshay.
Among those attending last week's luncheon
were Mrs . Don Adkinson, Mrs. Alex Bowie,
Mrs . John Coelho, Mrs. Andrew Johnson. Mrs.
David Maffei and Mrs. St ephen Farosi.
Also, Lucille Kuehn, Mrs Paula Millma n.
Mrs Patrick Riley, Mrs James Rodgers. Mrs.
Robert Searles, Mrs Peter Shea. Mrs Delane
Thyen and Mrs John Virtue
Also, Kathryn Thompson, Mrs William
Wenke and, from SCR, Barbar a Grady and Kay
Brown Elaborate floral arrangements at the
luncheon we re provided by Chris Lindsay
Designs. Corona del Mar
The center hopes to raise $20,000 from the
affair at which music will be provided by a
string quartet as well a s bv the Society for
Preservation of Big Bands.
Dinner committee members include UC
Ir vin e Cha ncellor Dan iel Aldrich , Walter
Gerken, 5th District Supe rvisor Thomas Riley,
developer Henry Segerstrom and Hancock Ban·
ning Ill.
Knott honor due
M arion Knott of Knoll's Berry F arm
will be honored Thursday as a "Special Angel"
for her support of Children's Village, U.S.A .. a
home for abused children near Beaumont. The
award will be presented a t the 17th a nnual
Woman of t he World Awards Luncheon at the
Century Plaza Hotel , Los Angeles.
Also receiving Woman of the World awards
will be actress De bbie Reynolds , Joanna <Mrs.
Johnny) Carson a nd Jill Kinmont Boothe.
Assi.stee ns f e t.ed
G raduating mem bers of the Assisteens,
an aux111ary of the Newport Beach Assistance
League, will be honored at a dinner dance
Thursday at the Santa Ana Country Club.
Hosting the event will be Leslie O'Donnell ,
auxiliary chairman, and Mrs. W Channing
Lefe bvre, auxiliary coordinator, with her assis-
tant, Mrs. James Dobroll. F asliions <fuplayed
W hen the Monday Morning Club oC
Laguna met yesterday they were treated to a
differl'nt ktnd of fashion show
SC R luncheon host esses t / rom left J Valley Reilly, Louise Ewing and Trish O'Donnell
On the committee are Janet Sweet, Sheryl
Rados. Tracy Andrews. Mary Whittier a nd
Ka ren Howard
Lee Childress. who narrated the show, held
in the El Ad obe Resta urant 1n Sa n J uan
Capistrano. called the fashions "lovely clothes
for sale the second time a round at lovely
price~ " Items shown were contnbuted by 2nds
Lt d . of Laguna Hea c h and LL'I Audrey's
Recycled Hags of Corona del Mar.
Among t he m od(•h. was c lub president
Violet Lani>dd l.
The music fo r the lunchron gathering also
was of a different tha n usual variety The
sounds were provided b)' the Kitchen Klau er
Band . a group of senior c1t1Lens from San J uan
Cap1~trano .... ho pla~ on kitchen utensils
Among h1ghltght~ of the luncheon was in-
s tall ation of offi cers with Ms. Lansdell installed
for he r second term as pre~1dent. Other mem-
bers of her exN•uti ve board are Dorothy Goode,
Geraldine Ha narrr. Doris Otto. Lorna Belcher.
Helen Richman. Elinor Tho mson and Anna
McCallum. •
The group's fo unding prt-s1dent, Florine
Ropc.•r. wa~ in~tallation offi cer
Benefit set
Mrs. Robert Lucas of the chapter will ac·
cept reservations.
Assisteens mothers helping with the party
ar e Mrs. John O'Donnell, Mrs Victor Harris.
Mrs. Anthony Allen and Mrs. Dennis Pickens
J ohn o· Donnell is slated lo present a pro·
gram al the party during which the grad~tes
will receive m edallions for their ser vice al the
Child Day Care Center and Assistance League
Thr ift Shop. Graduates are Karen Lowance.
Virginia Freeman , Tracy Allen, Andrea Hilker,
Leslie O'Donnell a nd Megan Oobrotl.
Auction slated
The third annual Auction and Vanely Show
for South Coast Repertory has been slated for
Saturday, J uly 11. according to the fund-raiser's
Chairman, Mary Garibboti, A goal of $40,000 has
been set by the Friends of SCR Guilds, who
s ponsor the event.
"Thls year's goal is a lmost twice last year's
achievement of $24,000," said Mrs Garibotti,
"but we're confident we can meet our goal for
the benefit of South Coast Repertory.··
A bcnl'flt for lhe Mardan Center or
Educational Therap~ 1s set for May 29 at South
Coast Plarn llotel. at which. di nner chairman SCR Development Director Barbara Grady SCR Gala Chairman Dot Clock
T he theme for t his year's Auction and
Var iety Show is ··Now -Everything Goes!"
which is a take-off on SCR's final production of
the Mainstage season. "Anything Goes'" T he
items on the auction block will range from
theater memorabilia of past SCR productions to
vacations to ski and beach resorts to e xotic ob·
jet d'art a nd mode rn furnishings donated by
local merchants.
Li/ elines to meet
WH EEL OF FRI F.NDSHIP of Orange
County will go bowling Saturday For
informat1on.call Rosea t 63~·4161
LU'E LINES, s ponsored by Hospice
Orange Couuty Inc.. meets every
SINGLES CALENDAR
Tuesday fro m 3 30 to 5 30 p m in
Laguna Hills The group 1s for re·
cenlly widowed men and women fo'or
infor mation. call Ma rge at 494·2025
WE CARE, for the newly single. \\ill
present a lecture on "Physiology of
Stress" by Mi chael Lewi s at 7:30 pm
Fr iday in El Toro The g roup will have
a "llard Times" party at 8 p m Satur
day in Mission V1e10 For informa-
tion. call 842-1127
PEOPLE SAMPLER social will be
held al8p.m. Friday in Buena Park. A
get-acquai nted dance party will be
held at 8 p.m . Saturday in Anaheim.
The e vents will be led by Emily
Coleman. For information, call <213>
828·8949.
NEW AGE SINGLF.S wi ll ha ve a walk
on the AJi so Creek Bike Trail al 10 a.m.
S a t urda) For informa t ion. ca ll
770 3296.
CORINTHIANS wi ll have a wine and
c heese pa rty and dis cussion on
"T ravel Opportunities for Singles" at
7 · 30 p.m Friday in J rvine. For in·
for m a lum, call Retty at 551 4897
'Bear Revue' ready
Final touches are being put on th"
fast -paced " Bear Revue" th 1~ Wt'<'k hy
members of th<' Punch & .Judy Guild or
t he Childrens Hospital or Ora nge
County.
Acts will Include vaudeville skits,
disco and tap dancers. and a hoedown
plus a fi nale with more than 100 cas t
members singing and dancing.
The show will run Thursday and Fri-
day e venings al Orange Coast College,
and general ad m issions $8, or pre·
fer red seating 1s $15, and tickets are
available from Mesa Travel in Costa
Mesa or by calling 557. 1247.
The proceeds from t he revue will go
toward the specialized medical care
for children atCllOC.
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Est. 1~7 z• 18023 Sky Park Circle, Irvine
,.
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