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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1981-05-15 - Orange Coast Pilot. . --~ ~-·~:-"".,._..,..---·-r-~""""---llllJ!!ll~-·""""---• .... c""u ... a._.ue1110~------• ... o ... a ....... ._ .. , ... •••11119••--•·---1, ..... • ' • Ii. I I • ,. . . .,. DUNGI CUil FRIDAY. MAY 15. 1981 / ) \ • • •••• Ylll 1110111 llllY PAPll ORANGE COUNTY . C A LIFOR NIA 25 CENTS ............ shot the bird and nearby residents have been unable to cap· lure it. LA Dodgers' Fernando: Is 8 enough? LOS ANGELES CAP> -There he sat, this 20-year-old youth in a foreign land, surrounded by dozens of reporters firing ques· tions in a foreign language. His valuable left· elbow and shoulder were packed in ice, and he looked tired. But, through an interpreter, Fernando Valenzuela said all the right things. Oh, his answers were replete with cliches, and while he had every right to be exhausted, he just sat there, pa- tiently, answering the m any queries. "It's not affecting me at all, in any way." Indeed. He had just completed another day at the office, so to speak. Actually, Valenzuela worked at night. firing a three· hitter as Los Angeles Dodgers downed the Montreal Expos 3-2 before a sellout crowd of 53,906 at Dodger Stadium. The Expos managed to put on· ly four runners on base against Valenzuela, but the Dodgers needed a leadorr homer by Pedro Guerrero in the bottom of the ninth inning to give their in· credible rookie his eighth vic- tory in as many decisions this season. A DUCK THAT DIDN'T -This mallard hen, with an arrow piercing its breast, has found a home at the Sahara Nevada Country Club golf course in Las Vegas. No one knows w_h_o __________________________ _ .. I'm glad to see all these peo. pie here ~d I'm happy to keep winning," said the 20-year-old left-hander from Sonora, Mexico on Thursday night when asked about the mounting pressure. Valenzuela, who has a 10·0 lifetime big league record <See FERNANDO, Page Al> Volcano erupts oil Marianas isle Florida: that sinking feeling· ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, Fla. Mclellan moved belongings CAP> -Dominick Cipollone from their homes Thursday, the knew first thing in the morning elderly Cipollone bemoaned the that something was wrong when loss or his tomatoes, "ready·to· he went out to water hi:: garden pick" peppers. corn and grapes, and couldn't find it. Where He makes wine from the grapes. vegetables and wine grapes once "That's what 1 do. I pass my flourished, a crater gaped. ''What a shock," Cipollone, 7S, time in my yard," he said. "I said Thursday as four drought· don't have a hobby except caused sinkholes opened in the gardening. If I don't get back in · Orlando area, one just five miles there and water. my fruit trees from a huge sinkbole that has and other vegetables are going swallowed a house and cars in to die." Winter Park. "Most of my The crater -estimated at 50 . g~~~e~ was go~e -~ ~?d .. a .. ~~r .. .fdeet. in .. ddi~_ipe1~~-~dandd . -~Og .rCeli~~-tree and a 50-foot oaa. eep -eve ope urm e The sink hole opened up pre_-daW!1 hours Thursday .in a between Cipollone's house and residential area .n«;>rth of_ Winter that 9f h is neighbor, John Park, _where. off1c1als still were McLeUan, swallowing a chain· watching a su~khole that opened link fence. As Cipollone and last week, estimated at 400 feet wide and almost 100 feet deep. Great Wall thief found guilty in oc By DAVID KUTZMANN Of .. o.tly ...... ._ Perhaps it will go down in Orange County crime annals as the Great Wall caper. It was certainly that. And much more. The wall, in this case, is ac- tually a chunk of Chinese anti· quity -a piece of the Great Wall of China that former Presi- dent Richard Nixon was given on bis historic trip to mainland China nearly 10 years ago. The chunk of stone wall, however, was not in the care of some museum curator or even in the possession o f Nixon himself. It was just one of several mis· sing pieces of Nixon-era <see CAPBB. Pa•e AZ) 111111 CDAIT llATHIR •'T his is exactly the same geological event except that it's a lot smaller," said Seminole County Engineer Bill Bush after surveying the cave·in. A third central F lorida sinkhole opened Thursday in an orange grove area in Auburndale, about 45 miles southwest of Orlando. It was re· ported as 60 feet wide, but only about 5 feet deep and nibbling at a roadway. T~affic was blocked, but no houses were threatened. Meanwhile, a bole about 20 feet wide and 15 feet deep was growing larger in a barren field north of Lakeland, and soil engineers planned a trip to Win- dermere to assess a sinkhole that began growing in the sandy soil on the edge of Lake Bessie and spread into the backyard of a home. The 75-foot wide crater had expanded to within 10 feet of a sundeck. No one has been injured in any of the incidents, natural phenomena common to central Florida in times of drought. Sinkholes occur when the water table drops and cavities in the underground limestone formations can 't s upport the above-ground pressure. The earth collapses, pulling every- thing down until the cavity fills (See SINK, Pace AZ) ........... A hand holding a gun at left (circled) aim1 from the croud in Vatican City in thil photo taken at the moment of the attempted a.sJO.Slination of Pope John Paul II. Pope shooting a plot? ' Italians probe evidence suspect part of conspiracy ROME CAP) -Italian anti- terrorist experts probed today evidence that would·be assassin Mehmet AJi Agca of Turkey shot Pope John PauJ U as part of a conspiracy, and a Turkish Em· bassy official said he was sure the 23·year-old terrorist bad not acted alone. .. In Turkey. terrorist or · ganizations · independently from their ideologies -have always helped each other. But clearly this criminal < Agca> has also found support outside Turkey, pe rhaps i n F rance, West Germany and in Italy," said the Turkish diplomat, who asked not to be named. "Without any doubt somebody has helped him but we do not know who." Major Italian newspapers re· ported there was evidence some kind of international subversive organization backed Agca in Wednesday's attack in St. Peter's Square in which the'pope was wounded by three bullets. * *· * ·'It can be prov ed and documented that Agca did not act alone. He is a killer who was engaged by an international group with a revolutionary aim," prosecutor Luciano ln- f elisi was quoted as saying by the moderate daily La Stampa of Turin. The report did not elaborate and repeated efforts to reach the prosecutor by telephone were unsuccessful. The suspect was quoted in the press by interrogators as saying he acted alone and knew nobody in Italy. Police said they were seeking information from other Euro- pean countries where Agca has traveled since he escaped from a Turkish jail in November 1979. Italian newspapers suggested that somebody must have given him money to travel to West Germany, Spain, Swltzerland, Yogosl~via, Hungary' and Bulgaria since his escape. Rome's chief prosecutor, * * * Achille Gal luci, formally charged Agca with attempted murder of a head of state -the Vatican -and attempted murder of the two American women wounded in the attack - Ann Odre, 58, of Buffalo, N. Y., and Rose Hall, 21, wife of a Protestant minister serving U.S. Forces In Wuerzburg, West Germany. If convicted, he could be sen· <See SUSPECT, Page A2) U.S .S .R. Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Gusty west to nortbwe.t winds 15 to 25 m pb at times . Lows tonlsht 52 at beaches, 60 inland. Highs Saturday 66 along cout, 72 inland. 111111 TIDAY Pontiff begins therapy ' . \ Com1dtan Joe11 Bt1hop r19lace1 MicMt/ R.ooM11 fn "Suoar Bobk•'' for /our·wt•lc tOtlr cm BroodWCJJI ... Dl John Paul !I's recovery changes 'distinctly better' ROME CAP) -0Pope John Paul 11 began a limited form of physlcaJ therapy today, movln1 hla arms and le11 and recelvtna ma11ages, hospital sources said. They said hla conditlon ., .. serious bUt atable, and his doc- tors said the pope'• chances of recovertns from t•rro.rl1t bullet wounds were "di1tlnctly bet- ter." The Italian news a1ency ANSA quoted • hoepital report HYiDI the poJle woke up re· peatedly dorlnt the nt1ht. But the latest hospital bulletin said the pontiff "rested peacefully." Asked to comment, Dr. .Luis! Candia, director ot the hoepltal, aald "'nle holy father is bavtn1 pains but they are not abllOl'D\al pains." ' "In the aecond nliht, the holy father has rested peacefully. There is penistence of 1U1bt temperature, Principal c:Unlcal slsn• and lab reaulta are wUbln the normal Umlfl ln relatlca to the second dar after the •UJ'llcal lnternntlon. The outlook ta dil- tinctly better. The pope con· tlnued prudent and fa.rable evoluUon of the pe>at-o~raUve proc:eu," the medical bulletin said. Dr. Canc:Ua aald the pope'• tem· perature wu tbe equivalent of 99.1' detreea Fahrenheit -lea than a Ml depee above normal . He oonftrmed that the doctort are watchlne the pope'• l\mlhot wounds for alp of lafedloft, whleh tbey .,,, t1 the 1reate1t dan1er he facet. \ ~ l] Ooean .~ ~ .. ,•. :: • 54 said trapped • mcave HONOLULU CAP> -A volcano erupted on the remote Northern Marianas island of Pagan, blasting ash 40,000 feet into the air and oozing lava toward the only village, where the island's 54 residents were thought to have ducked into caves, United States authorities said. Rescue vessels were speeding today to the Pacific1 island, a U .S'. territory, to rescue the in· habitants. The island's only shortwave radio oper ator said Mount Pagan, one of two volcanoes on the island, erupted shortly after 4:15 p.m. PDT 'l:hursday. The oper ator then aF>andoned his radio and has not been beard from since. .. The crew of an Air Force B·52 born ber diverted to Pagan re- ported seeing a red lava Oow oozing toward the village and an ash cloud climbing to 40,000 feet. Crew members reported tem· peratures of more than 100 degrees inside their plane when they flew near the cloud. The crew reported seeing no sign of life. but Nor t hern Marianas Lt. Gov. Fraclsco Ada said on Saipan he believed the island residents, almost all farmers and fi shermen, were hiding in caves as they do during typhoons. Lt. Sandy Stairs, a Navy public affairs officer in Guam who was aboard a PC·3 Orion re· connaissance plane that flew over the island today, said the plane's crew spotted no boats in the water to indicate that the in· (See VOLCANO, Pa•e A%) •MARIANA olSLANDS' • 0 Pagani • • • • • Saipan1 # • (/Guam , r ... • • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Prlday, May 15, 1081 These hoo women al.8o were hU by shots aimed at the popg. They are Ann Odre f ~ft) of Buffalo and Rose Hall, /ormnl11 of MauachU$etts and now living in Welt Germany. From Page A1 SUSPECT QUIZZED • • • lenced lo prison ror lJCe. Italy does nol have the death penalty. Agca. arrested moments af. ter the shooting Wednesday, was convicted in absentia by a Turkish court last year for murdering a Turkish newspaper editor . Detectives reported he earned a letter saying he planned to kHI ·the pope to protest U.S. and Sov- iet 1mpcrtalism Agca escaped from a max- imum security prison in Turkey shortly before John Paul JI's vis- i( there in November 1979, and in a hand-written note lo an Istan- bul news paper, swore that his desire to assassinate the pope "was my sole reason for my escape from jail." Alfredo Lazzarini, tiead or Rome's anti-terrorist police, described Agca as a "a terrorist with a caipital T. cold, lucid. certainly well trained to shoot. in perf ect physical and psychological s hape , very agile." Rome's socialist daily II Messaggero reported. Dmnp weekend seen Early morning patchy drizzle forecast The National Weather Service ls predict1ni more low cloudi- ne11 and early-morning drizde for the weekend with gusting winds from 15 to 20 mph coming from the northwest Driule dampened morning newspapers and welled sidewalks and streets in cities throughout Orange County to- day, but many areas were left dry J . Sherman Denny. a Hunt· in1ton Beach weather expert, said the patchy drizzle is being caused by un unstable air mass pr~sently over the area. com- bined with low clouds Oenny suid the minute amount of rainfall today in some areas was not enough to measure. He added that another inch and a , hair of ram is needed to bnng the year's total up to normal. Military due student li,sts? SACRAMENTO A<AP) -The stat e Senate would require schools and colleges to give military recruiters lists of stu- dents and their addresses, un· less the students or their parents objected. A 23·8 vote Thursday sent SB246 by Sen. John Schmitz. R· Corona Del Mar, to the As· sembly . At present, it's up to the school whether to give recruiters stu- dent lists. Schmitz' bill says that school districts must give military recruiters, for a reasonable fee, the names and addresses of 12th grade students or those who quit school before graduating, un- less the student's parent objects. Jn the case of colleges, student lists wouJd have to be given to recruiters for a fee unless the s tudent or former s tudent notified the institution in writing that he wanted off "If recruiting doesn't work we're going to get the draft," said Schmitz The bill was opposed by most stud e nt, faculty and school board groups and the American Civil Liberties Union l\nd whjle Laguna lieach and Newport Beach residents saJd the dnzzle was only enouah to s m ear their car windshields, northern Costa Mesu reportedly received steady sprinkles at 1tbout 6 a.m today Temperatures are expected lo be In the low 70s along the coast this weekend and near 80 inland. Night1me temperatures should be tn the low 50s, a weather service spokesman said 'RECRUIT OR DRAFT' State Senator Schmitz From Page A1 FER NANDO beca~e of two victories in relief last season. equaled an ac comphshment by Oave "Boo" Ferris of the Boston Red Sox, who in 1945 won his first eight major league decisions as a starter The feat or eight victories tn as many starts beginnlna a big league career is believed to be a record. No such achievement ts listed i11 the record books and baseball historians have been researching to find out if any other rookie had such a start Even though they lost, the Ex pos accomplished a number of things against Valenzuela that hadn't been done before. Nobody had ever scored more than one earned run against the southpaw, who has allowed four earned runs in 72 innings Uus season ror an earned run average of O 50 In the Montreal third, after Valenzuela retired the first seven Expos. light-hilting Chns Speier drilled a 1-2 pitch JUSl in side the left field fou l pole, about five rows deep into the stands T h e home run . whi ch Vale nzuela said came off "a curve ball that didn't break,' was the first allowed by the rookie after 83 big league tn nings. and it was the first homer for Speier in more than a year. The Expos had only two other baserunners Rodney Scott hunted for a hit leading off the seventh and Speier drew a two out walk in the eighth before Andre Dawson blasted his eighth homer of the year with two outs tn lhe Montreal ninth. tytng the score Mof.e than just legs Several sena tors said they ob Jected to the st ate telltng school boards what to do. Sen. Ralph Dills, D·Gardena, said the bill was unnecessary because 75 per· cent of the schools arc already doing it. Sf'n Nicholas Petris, 0 Oakland. said that as a liberal he wrestled with his conscience over the matter, but decided to vote for it. From Page A1 SINK ' ... 1n with earth and debris Dawson's shot. his eighth of the year, came on the first pitch from Valenzuela and sailed deep into the left field bullpen. "It d idn 't bother me at all because he hit m y bes t pitch." said Valenzuela, who had seven !>tnkeouts Thursday ntght. "II was an excellent screwball." Countians ready for Jumping Frog Jubilee Ile quoted Andre Malgaux as having said t h at Spa n ish Republicans lost their civil war because the liberals let the right wing monopolize the military. Geology en gineer Bryant Ma rs hall, a pri vale consultant. s aid the Alta m ont e Springs crater was more "typical" of the size seen in this area than the huge one in Winter Park. which caused about $2 m1llton damage to a house, s ix vehicles. two businesses, a municipal pool and other property So. the Valenzuela beat goe:-. on When w1ll 1t end? ANGELS CA MP -Jelly- bean's here. although his ow n e r I trainer. President Reagan, has sent his regrets and has hired a local jockey. Columbia. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s entry, also is in training in this celebrated min- ing camp And like the Presi- dent. the Governor, being much too busy a man, has employed the services of a jumper. And, Duke is here. But unlike the above named political ex- ecutives. Duke's jockey and his team of talented trainers are present. Duke, by lhe way, is a frog - a beautirul, fat-legged frog. Duke will be among thousands of e ntrants in this weekend's Jumping Frog Jubilee, held in conjunction with the Calaveras County Fair. Duke is the entry of John Wayne Airport Manager Murry Cable. The backup staff includes Denis Horn. airport chief of <lperatlons; Doug Wilson, an airport analyst, and George Walker, owner of the airport's Mission Beechcrafl sales office. specify what he intended to win. "We've been in training for more than two months. We 're using a special combination of foods and eli xirs," Cable said. He declined to be specific. For the first time, the Daily Pilot will be represented in the competition. The newspaper's Orange County Bureau Chief. Frederick Schoemehl, is enter· ing a leggy dish, American Dream. Jellybean, Columbia, Duke and American Dream will be out to break the workd frog jumping record. held by E . Davey Croakett. Croakett set the rec- ord in 1976 with a jump o( 20 feet, three inches. Last year's competition was won by Oh No, a frog plucked from the cooling ponds of the Rancho Seco Nuclear General· Ing Station by jockey Brent Bloom of Salinas Oh No failed to break the world record. however. OP.er\ competitions -in which From Page A1 anyone may enter will be held throughout the day Saturday. The media jump, for the press hacks, will be held at 12: 30 p.m. Finals are scheduled for Sunday afternoon The frog jumping contest was first held in 1928'to celebrate the paving of s treets in Angels Camp. As for the invasion of privacy, Petris said "l don't see what 1s wrong with letting the armed forces make their pitch to the s tudents, and letting the~ make up their own minds." The camp once was the home of Mark Twain, who wrote, "The Fonda due exrun Celebrated Jumping Frog of LOS ANGELES CAP> _ Actor Calaveras County." Over the years, the contest Henry Fonda may spend his 76th has grown a nd s o have the birthday Saturday in the crowds that annually come lo hospital, where he's getting a re- h · view of his heart medicine and wale 1t. h . h' With the zeal of those hooked avmg is pacemaker checked In Winter Park. meanwhile, city offi cials and businessmen were angry about reports from the state capital that their sinkhole was not a big enough disaster to qualify for federal <.id . And there appeared little possibility of obtaining state as- s i s tance for the public •roadways, !>wimming pool and land devoured by the crater . · In baseball, yoy wtn some you lo se some ." said Valenzuela "( am winning. I hope I can keep winning, but l am prepared to take a defeat I don't have any idea how far l will go but every time I go out there l go out to win. "This was a very difficult game, very tough. The matn thing is that the team won Tha t 's the most important thing ·· Valenzuela leads the big leagues in victories. earned run average, inntngs pitched (72). complete games (7). s trikeouts <68), and shutouts (5) He has allowed 43 hits and 17 walks. on the chlli c~k-off comp~i-,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ lions, frog jumpers often form teams, bring cheering sections and generally yuk it up. The John Wayhe Airport team, however, wants to keep things relatively low key. Duke will be identified by only one thing: a doll-sittd cowboy hat. DEN'S "We're gonna win," Cable puffed on the eve of the start or the competition. He did not CAPER AF''IERMATH • • • From Page A1 VOLC ANO • • habitants were fleeing. "We couldn't see much of a nything," she said. The southern end of the island was relatively haze-free , Lt. Stairs said, but ther e was no vis- ible sign or human activity. Officials were to dispatch a C-130 rescue aircraft from An· derson Air Force base on Guam to scout the island at dawn Saturday and attempt a landing if possible. The Office of Civil Defense on Saipan, capital of the northern Marianas island group, was pre- paring rescue efforts as well. The island residents live In 11 tin homes. There is one jeep. The 1.879-foot Mount Pagan had not erupted since 1955, but was considered a live volcano. The island's other volcano is dormant. Pagan is the northernmost island In the Marianas chain, about 350 miles north of Guam and 3,500 miles west of Hawaii. "The island doesn't have a harbor," Lt. Ed Marmol of the Joint Res cue Coordination Center, said. "If they can even approach the island, they'll have to use smaller boats to ferry the people over the reef." ORANGE COAST memorabilia that turned up In the rented San Juan Capistrano home of 28-year-old Susan Mendez. An Orange County Superior Court jury convicted her late Wednesday of possession of stolen property for having the missing Nixon collection items lJl the home she shared with boyfriend. But the story doesn't end there . The jury also found Miss Mendez guilty of grand theft and burglary in connection with a $47,000 jewel heist in 1979 of a Dana Harbor _gift shop. Deputy District Attorne~ Chris Kralich3. ~who prosecuted the brunette aefendant, said It wasn't until after the arrest of Miss Mendez and her boyfriend for the jewel heist that in- vestigators came upon the Nixon Items reported stolen from the San Clemente Inn several years earlier . The presidential memorabilia was found in the San Juan Capistrano home. Durin1 her trial before Superior Court Judge Kennety E . Lae, Kralich alleged that Miss Mendez participated in the August, 1979, jewel theft at Loren's In Dana Harbor by dis- tracting a store clerk so her boyfriend, Terrence Nlkrasch, could open a display case and take diamond and opal rines valued at $47.000. They were apprehended Dally Pilat MAIN OfflCI Thoma P Haley ~ Robert N. Wffd ............ M ThOmaa l<MYll .... Thomu A. Murphtne ......... (..., Char~,.t~oe A-.... 8emerd Schulman ~ ~~n ~:..!Odd•rd Jr. U0 Wttt..., 54., C•e. ~ ... CA IMll ..,_:ha 11 ... G•s. llMM, CA .... • a board their boat at Dana Harbor when an Orange County Sheriff's Department clerk re- cognized them as matching the descriptions of the jewel heist suspects. Both Nikrasch and Mi ss Mendez were released on bail. Nikrasch was arrested on un· related charges in Texas. He faces a possible life term there, if convicted. authorities re- ported. But the story doesn't even end there. Along with the Nixon memorabilia recovered at the rented house, other stolen items also were recovered, including a valuable watch reported stolen in Hawali in 1979. Also recovered were burglars' tools as well as devices that police claim could be used with the tampering of s lot machines. Kralich, discussing the case T hursday, said Miss Mendez and various relatives hit seven jackpots in Las Veeas in recent years playing the slot machines. In May 1976, s he won a Lin- coln Continental at the Stardust Hotel while two other family members also won new automobiles at the Stardust, it was claimed. A year later, a relative won a Mercedes automobile at the 20th Century Club in Las Vegas and in 1978 a dilferent relative won $29,000 at the Flamingo Hotel, it was alleged. Also, in 1978 a relative hit the jackpot ror $34 ,000 and the de- fendant won another $64,000, It was claimed. Though the money from these winnings was not seized, Miss Mendei waA presented with an unpaid tax blll of $19,000 by Krallch for her wlnnln11. Followlne her conviction, Judie Lie scheduled aente~cln1 for the Orange County woman for June 19. She faces a possible four-year state prison term. Durina her trial, the defendant denied the knew Nlkrucb ln· tended to rob the Dana Harbor 11ft a.hop or that. the ml11ln1 Nix· on memorablJla waa in the home. She ii pr-esenUy free on $25,000 ball. Antron Ill Myton 100% Myton Spluth Myton cut Carpet Carpet and loop Tracery s21so 51450 s11•s s12•s .... ... .... .... INt caa'°'I' -COpel .. pMoct JodO 0 ~ lll'\#I dCOIQl IOvt>; 1-I""'°' lffl carpet II olt .-.o...I Or'#t-GVll-l"CIO IOCW - lllr>0.10..0tll0tnl'yooom ,..,..,on• ---""'--d -~-""'"'W'O .. Wlln-carpet IO Ill OflCIO IO W lut ...,... ... ..,_ Pof!Von• -~'--..A• COID9' ~ 1\11> --.00 lnO~~-d-,,,.., or-. """O ""9 IO --~• Mllotllllal,.,.__...,IO,...., --.-.-IOuQI\ -IO-""'°"Oned~•-row "'*"' °"" IUdOA ----.. ----~~IQr -c"'°"""°"--"ltlr _,,,, __ ,....,_°"" -IC)_Or\ .... ,_ ~-.oo· 11 wllll r DEN 'S • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·iflstallation ·custom draperies linoleum • parquet wood flnr • ceramic tile 1663 'lACENTIA AVENUt • q>,ST~ MESA, CALIF 92677 • 'HONe 646-038 -6~6-23$.5 ... . ' ' . . .. ,. .......... Sorrell Booke, playing Boss Hogg in the "Dukes of Hazzard," tries to get out of a sticky situation during taping of a TV segment. At right is actor James Best. Boss Hogg won the role of sheriff in a poker game . Doggone nice of president The postman brought a nice letter from the Wrute House for Tessa Jo Collins, a 9-year-old red Irish Setter. and Flub SUva, 7, who hap· pens to be a mixed cocker spaniel. Six weeks ago, Francesca Collins sent photos of her dogs to P resident Reagan along with a letler express- ing sorrow over the attempt- ed assassination. · "What you need are two dogs like us to protect you," said the letter. There was this P .S. over their names signed by Ms. Collins: "We are Republican dogs." The response from the White House ende d with these words : "From the bot- tom of my heart, thank you fo r car i ng, your friend . Ronald Reagan." Singer Diana Ross signed what may be the biggest money contract in recording industry history with RCA Records, and the announce- ment of her signing also calls for "filmed entertainment." the singer and RCA Records announced. RCA Records previously has not made movies. No money rigure was given in an- nouncing the •'long -term exclusive re· cording ag r eement for the United States a nd Canada." But •011 Neil Bogard, head of Boardwalk Records, has been quoted in print as saying Miss Ross turned down hi~ offer of $18 million. No recording artist pre· viously has signed with a record company for a fi gure that high, according to Billboard magazine . Gov. Hu&b Carey'• bride, 44 ·year -o1d Evaa1ellne Goulelu·Carey, say a she is "absolutely" interested In having more children. But ls her new husband also yearn- ing for the patler of little feet in the executive mansion? During a news conference, the 62·year-old Carey was asked ii he might ··welcome the opportunity to become a father again." "My record speaks for itself," quipped Carey. The governor and his first wife, Helen, had 14 children before she died of cancer in 1974. Actor James Caan suffered a back and knee injury in a motorcycle accident in the Bahamas and will m iss the Cannes Film Festival wbere his latest picture, "Thief." is ente r ed,' Cann 's publicist said. "He is in tremendous pain and sleeping only two hours a night," publicist Paul Block said. Caan , who also starred in "Hide in Pla in Sight ," ·'Chapter Two," "The God- fath er," "Comes a H orse m a n " and "The Gambier." s u stai ned a s prain to the back, a torn muscle in the buttocks and a wre nched right knee in the accident. David S t ockma n , Reagan's budget cutter who exhorts other agen- cies to trim spending, is having trouble convincing Congressmen to give him more money for his office. He told House panel mem- bers he needs more money because of added responsibilities. f' Rain widely s~attered ~ Showers due over East Coast , Midwest , Rockies, Northwest .-.. .. . . . .. ~ -: .. i: .. ~ •1 :-c: ;, .-.. ~ -. :-·. :: .. .! :: -· El Centro Cnastal ~alher --.......... -........ :~:::: '° S7 ., From Point Concep(lon -.tllw.,.d oar outer weter• to S.n HlcotH l&lend, ...ilWftt winch 10 to ts kMb wlltl 4 to 7 r..t -· 11....,...., ttpt verlllt>M wlfllh lfw'ou9ll t0fl'9M e•-cept w9tt.,. ~ 10 to 20 kllOU In •fl•,_, I to 2 IHI -·· to IOUtllWeA -Ill. Mostly C-Y llllft with °""' ,...., .. 1 ctMrlftt aftor-•nd IVOftlno, U.S. summary s-n---•oc· , __ bJ ltrOfl9 wtndl crouecl the mlddltt MIMi.ippi - -Ofllo velleyl Thurldey -_. •" relll acro11 T..w.u.., llW _, Ofllo V•ll•'I' -11111-r GrNI Lekn. Tt>ere were wlde ly 1cettarad 1t>ower1 ..,., Hort,,.,,, Cefllotnl•, ...rtlllrn Hevede, -tarn •-and Ille Poclflc _,,_.., 1.oi.i.1u-n1111 over FtorlM end Ml"'-1"1. tn 11ortlllrn Tuu, •11tllorlll"' .. ,..., off IN .,....1 -of Em- ..,_ on ~-Y lo prev...t loot· Int etter I torNdO wtllcll ltrllCk lete Illa nleM bllott, ll•nitnlftt ,,..,.,Y •-donn bulldlnva -tnJllf'l"ll IO people. Te_lil..,.. M'OUnd IN nellon at m idday ~Yr'""" frOfl'I • IOw of d at~; Columtbla, Mo., -Toledo, Ofllo, to e 1119'1 of t3 11 """'· Cellf., Ind "'-la. 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Call t.be number below and your meu.,e wUl be recorded, transcribed and cleUve:rtd to the appropriate editor. Tbe same M·hour wwerlbt lttYlce may be \&Md to record lettera to tbe editor on any topic. Mailbox contrlbuton mutt In· chide their ume ud te.lepbooe num~ for vertftcauon. No clrculMlon calll, pleue. Tell • what'• on 10ur mind. $wn .... l :U t•'"·• ti-P'r14M, S:Slo.m. ._ lfb•·tt om fl~. rl- 4:ffe "'- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Frld•y. May 15, 1981 s Al County heavily white Slight integration reported in 1980 census results 8y GLENN SCOTT o(-Detty~._ Although 1980 censu.s figures show that Orange County bas become more racially integral· ed in the last decade, the county still has one of the highest percentages of Caucasian resi- dents in the state . or the county's estimated 1.9 million residents, 86.4 percent are white, according to the latest census findings released this month. In 1970, 97.3 percent said they were white. The current racial mixture - or lack or it is even more def· lnite along the Orange Coast. In Newport Beach , for example, 97 .1 percent of al I resident.a re· ported that they are white. In Laguna Beach, whites account for 96.5 percent of the popula· lion, the federal Cens us Bureau reports. Latest census figures show t hat 76.2 percent of state resi- dents are white compared to 89 per cent in 1970 census Cigures . Residents of Spanish origin in· cr eased by 7.3 percent during the decade and blacks increased by 0.8 percent. Percentage changes for resi- dents or Asian races were not available. Of the 17 largest metropolitan Tu'o from Coast on seniors panel Two Orange Coast men are a mong seven senior citizens elected from Orange County to the Ca lif o rnia Se n io r Legislature. Neel Buell of Costa Mesa was elected to one of two senate seat s and Nick Warner of Hunt- ington Beach was chosen as one of five assemblymen during May 8 elections Results were announced Wed- nesday. Other winners are Shirley Cohen of Santa Ana as the other senator, and assembly m embers Kathleen Benson of Fullerton. Aileen Johnson and Nick Ogden, both of Santa Ana and Rub.y May of Tustin. T h e sen i ors ' grou p is organized to m irror the state Legislature. Members are elect- ed for two-year-old terms to lob· by state political leaders on behalf of senior citizens. The seven Orange County del· eJtates are scheduled to visit Sacramento to take part in the legislative process from July 29 to 3L Also announced Wednesd ay were , appointme nts o f nine seniors as the county delegation to the White House Conference on Aging in November. They are Buell . Robert Covey a nd Isadore Schneider, Irvine ; Muriel Oberleder. Laguna Hills ; Ka y S haw , Sa n Juan Capistrano ; Maria Estrada and Sem a Levinson, Tustin; Jim Jarrell. Buena Park, and Cruz Sandoval, Anaheim districts in the state, Orange County has the fourth highest proportion or whites. according to the cens us bureau. Santa Rosa has the highest, at 92.8 per- cent. Modesto ranks second at 87 .8 percent and Santa Cruz is third at 87.5. The statistics may be mislead- ing, however , because many people who listed themselves as of Spanish origin also said they are white, said ce n s u s coordinator J ohn Herna ndez. .~panish origin is an ethnic rather than a racial category, he said. Orange Coun(y had 1.7 million whites, 286,000 residents of Spanish origin, 86,900 Asians, 25,280 blacks and 12.940 American Indians and Eskimos , according to the 1980 census. The 1980 populations and percentage breakdowns or racial categories and Spanish origin in cities along the Orange Coast are: -Costa Mesa (82,291 >. white 89.9 percent; Spanish origin 10.3; Asian 4.6; black 0 7, and Indian 0.7. -Fountain Valley (55,800), white 88.7 percent; Spanish origin 6.8; Asian 7.2; black 0.7, and Indian 0.6. -Huntington Beach ( 170,505), while 90.4 per cent; Spanish origin 7.9 ~ Asian 5.0; black 0.7, and Indian 0.7. Irvine (62,134), white 87.8 percent; Spanish origin 6.0; Asian 7 8, black 1.5, and Indian 0 3. Laguna Beach (17,860), white 96 .5 percent; Spanish origin 4 3: Asian 1.2; black 0.5. and Indian 0.4. -Newport Beach (63,475), white 97 1 percent; Spanish origin 2.8; Asian 1.4 ; black 0.2, and Indian 0.3. WINATRIPTO HAWAII FOR TWO REGISTER ATANY ONE Of THESE DEALER$ C1morillo Appflance D1scoun1 Center 878 Laa Posts Rd C•noge Partt Biker & Wells 21'29 Sl'l1rman Wey C1nyon Country Ho..vard & Phtts lll034 Soledad Canyon Co111 M11a 8ulldera Emporium 289 E 17th Street Oown1y Tabbert 1 Home Ent1rl1lnm1nt Ctr 8130 Flre•tone 81Yd Fullettoll Mervtns TV & Appl 1\l12W OommonwHllh Oel'Hfl Otovt G•rcten Grovt Appl 13191 Ht11X>r 81\'d Heci.Mt Htlghtl Sow11t1 1231 8 H11el1nda Blvd Hunlfnglon Beach Home Sates & Serv 17242 Beacl'l Blvd LI H1bni B & H TV & Appl. 1351JS.8each 81vd Don Page Home Service 5!>11 W Whlllter Blvd Howaros TV & Appl 901 E Imperial Hwy Long 811Ch Brannen Contr Sply 18~ Hert>or Avenue LOI Angol11 Builders Empoftum '8~ W Pico 81vd Speros 4&81 W PICO BlvO M1nht1tan 811ch S a.y A.ppllanct 321 M1nh1111n B11ch Blvd Ncwth Hollywood Snydtr D11mond 011coun1 Plbg & Appllenct 12825 Ven Owen SI Or1ngt 8u11oers Emporium 1343 E Ka1e111 Panor1m1 City ATA Stores 8330 van Nuys Blvd PHadena Donognuea Home Appliance 32 S Pasldene Ave Perry & Tl'lompaon 641 N Lake Ave Snyder Dl1mond Discount Plbg & Appllenc1 36eO E Cotore<10 Blvd Rtdondo 811ch Rtdol'ldo Tr1C11ng 611 N Pac1hc Co.st Highway Sen 8ern1rdlno Bulldera Emporium 1700 E Hlghfend Avenue Cullens TV & Appl S7S S.Hllnt Sin OllQO Kitchen -o.11gn Ct• 2545 El Cefon Blvd Sin 01brl1t Howards TV & Appl 300 E. V1lley Blvd Senta F1 Springs Perigon Sa tes 11823 E Slllluson Avenue 148 Sant• Monie. Bay Ollltt Appl. 1302 S1nl1 Monica • Blvd Snydl! Ol1mond Discount Plbg & Apptt1nc1 1399 Olymptc Blvd Simi V1lley Appl Showroom '"88 lt1dus1r1a1 St, s11ncon Penn Pipe & Supply 11121 0.lt Str"t Ton1nct Ptclllc l1ltt 2080 Wuhlngton Avenue V1n Nuya Bulldtrs Empottum 5960 S1pulvlda 8tvo Waedt Appliance 16919 Sherman Wav W11llak1 VIiiage Weretiouse Discount Center 31368 Via co11nu "108 Yorbo Linda Yorba Linde Appl 4885 Mam Street D1stt11>ulor Cat Western Dist Co t 110() Downey Avfl Downey. Cafll0<nl1 1 • . . . . • . . \ ' -t s Orango Co at OAIL y PILOT/Friday. May 15, 1981 HOUSE SPEAKER BATTERED Has Tip lost ability to lead Democrats? W J\SlllN<:TON 11\ I'> llull'h' Spt•ak1•r Th1111111' I' 0 Nt•1ll Jr , baltt•n·d rn his first l'lll'llllr\h'I' with 1'1r'>idl'lll lkui.:a11. ts lryint: tu 1 ully lus troops .1111.''\\ Hut hts ubilJI} to l1•;1 cl llw D t'1111w1 alil' di;11 IW 1., ht•111~ qt1t•.,t 1tir1t•d from w1t h111 tht' l'drl\I ltt-h11~ lit'l \l'cl fut th I l:l' dt'('.l(h--; I I '\1·111 hr usht•s istdl' ~111·h l'f II ll'ISl!I \Cl\\ lllJ.: lo l11t'l1S his 1·11 .. r~y on c1111nlt•r1ni.: llw rh'XI '"'' t 111 lt•·agari':> rcor1111111l' plan llw pr1·suh•111 s thrt•1• \t'JI $~.i hi llwn tux cut. l'hut'~ tht' nt.•xt major Reagan 1111t111t1\'t' bt>fore Congress, slnce llw Sl'natt• pusscd Tuesday night the st11n e bns i c R c agan - t•niior~l'tl budget cuts the House aµpro'ed last week ... Are we go- 1n~ to ~1v~ him challenges along tht• line" Do we have a game pl;1n·1 The ans wer is yes," 0"\11•111 su>S. Dt•mocra t1 c ~upport - t''-l>f'l'1ally among conservatives rnr the Reagon tax package seems to be running far be· hind that for his budget, which drew 63 Democratic HoW'le de· rectors. In fa ct, an i nformal head count just made for O'Neill eshows that 60 or those 63 bolting Democrats are unlikely to sup. port the president's tax plan, Democratic congressional aides confirmed Wednesday. Thus, while some Democrats in the House are critical or · 0 ' N e1ll 's leadership, there's ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ been no open movement amon1 them to challenge it. Many Democrats say t hey are watching to see how O'Neill performs on the tax. measure. ·'Sure, Tip's out of touch with America in the 1980s and, sure, he 's not that effective but there's a reeling that, hey, be's there and It doesn't make sense to publicly kick hlm," said one leading Ho use Democrallc liberal, who asked not to be identified. He and severa l other Democrats depicted O'Neill aa a relic or the political past, affable but ineffective. One Democrat who didn't re· quest anonymity, Rep. Les Aspin, D-Wisc., told his conati· tuents ln a recent newsletter that O'Neill was "a lovable old bear" who simply had gotten out of touch with House Democrata. "Tip doesn't understand the explosions that have been going off since November," Aspln said. O'Neill's comeback: anyone who l.b1nks last week's 253-176 pro-Reagan vote ln the Democratic-controlled House could have gone any differently, well, just doeso 'l understand politics. t "This was just a battle. The war is in 1982. And we'll be in good shape by then," O'Neill said. ''I walked my district the other day and there was nothing REJECTS CRITICISM Thoma.t P. O'Neill but a warm hand and a concern about the change in America. And the president's programs aren't even out there yet. Just wait until 1982." Anderson creating base for '84 race WASHINGTON (AP) -John B. Anderson is starting a fund· raising drive that his supporters hope will lead to creation of a third political party and another presidential campaign in 1984. Although the effort is a pre· liminary one, Anderson said be will use the money to find out lf there is enough interest in a serious challenge to the two ma· jor parties in both 1982 local, state and congressional elec· lions and the 1984 presidential campaign. • · 1 want to outline steps which would have to be taken if together we decide to form an entirely new party," Andenoo s aid in an appeal mailed to 50,000 supporters from his 1980 presidential campaign. 6. 7 percent of the vote na- tionally. Last week, officials managing the remnanta or Anderson's 1980 campaign organlzat10n reg. istered the National Unily Committee with the Federal Election Committee. As a poUticaJ committee, it is permitted to raise and spend money, although it is not yet a political party. Jane Fowler, who heads the committee, said that after the first mailing May 18, a second one is planned to an additional 250,000 potential contributors. The money will be spent to send Anderson, who gave up his congressional seat from Illinois to make the presidential run, to meet wilh supporters around the ·country, to publish a newsletter RAISING FUNDS John 8. Anderson GAME OF WAR -Young boy plays army while Austrian soldiers march in Bregenz in ceremony marking end of their basic training. Eight months of military service is t'Ompulsory for yo ung men. The letter said And.erson's in-· dependent candidacy last year raised issues ignor~ by the two major parties. '·Election night 1980 did not, and in lrulh could not, signal an end to such an auspicious begin- ning," said Anderson, who drew and to pay the salaries of a Washington staff, including speech writers and schedulers. Ir the fund-raising effort is successful, then Anderson will campaign for candidates who plan to run as independents or third·party members in at least six states. Anderson received $4 .2 million in federal funds following the 1980 campaign. If he runs in 1984, he would most likely be eligible for the same amount, plus a percentage for inflation. F'zr st Baptist Church of Costa Mesa I nv1tes you t o join us As we welcom e our New Pastor .I oe B uonCLssiss1 S UNDAY ](}. :w '\[ MAY 24 -1981 The Sanc tuary Choir with 17-Piece Brass Choir and Band, Featuring the music of Andrea Crouch, Dan Burgess, Dan Whittemore (): ()() p w JOHN LAIRD, GU EST SOLOIST RECcPTION FOLLOWING f'Cl'>lor H1'rmnss1ss1 Speakmg At Hnt 11 "lernc:es 30 1 Magnolia, Costa Mesa <Corner 5<1nta Ana St. one block north ot 18th St I 631-3010 C€l€BUate Newport 's 4th Anniversary Tuesday, Ma y 19, with 1977 Dinner Prices, an extended ''Cas k Hour'' with ,;;, Two-for-One Cocktails from '(A~ 11:15 A.M. all closing. ~Lt·' Complirnentary Desserts ~ \it!~ ·~ and other festivities. · . '• ' • Exce ent Opportunity for POLICE OFFICERS In Northern California' 1 "All American City" VALLEJO, CALIF. Entry Level or Lateral Entry Available Sal~ry A!J!J.~1~ !!!!1 :ay$~!l~ ~!9~t;.!~!!'he Ant 1alary step. Uberal beneflh which Include HlS, CH' "an, hlth"t year. Min. Req: 60 Sem. Units of Coll .... At• 21 te 35. lqual Opp. lmpleyet, Minorities and women encoura9ed to apply. Excellent Climate ... Ample Recreation Good Family Community aecrultlng representative• wlll be at Anaheim -May 20, 1981 -HoUday INt l 850 S. Ha~r ltYd. letw•ett tt. "-n of t:OO..., ...t 4:00 ,..._ To answer any questions you may hove. No Appointment Necessary. M9y "" J]©)t:!Jll!Hm]l \ lllo\\11 \lo\t•A/1-.;1 ll)R I o\Ll~l'R'I.\ -.;r\l:"l'"l'lRs COMING THIS SUNDAY • ••• • The M ay Journey Magazine, an excit ing travel supplement exclusive to readers who subscribe to the Daily Pilot. Every m onth you can discover some place new. Journey will take you to the near and faraway. And show you how to get there. With tips on package tours. Plus the latest rundown on cruise news. Including option trips and special rates. Journey Magazine ••• One way to see the world before you sall off to see It. Overseas destination: Manlla Domestic destination: Mazatlan California destination: Major Amusement Parks IN THE llily Piil 642-4321 \ UNCLAIMED GOODS PUIUC AUCTION OF AUnamc HANDMADE ORIEHTAL RUGS LICi)UIDATING ENTIRE INVENTORY of accumulated unclaimed goods, plus others from I OUR STORAGE WAREHOUSE an Los Angeles various rugs and carpets of fine QUallty lrom Iran. Pakistan. India. Afghanistan. Turkey. Romania. Russia and China. Wide Variety of sizes and colors. A Certificate of Authenticity wtll be issued for each purchase. FOi YOUR CONVM..CE. THE AUCTION WILL T AXE PLACE SATURDAY. MAY 16 at 2 PM HOUDAYINN 25205 lA PAZ RD. LAGUNA HILLS (1·5 & La Paz Road) Information: (213) 709-0026 Terms. Cash/Check A. A & A ORIENTAL IUGS, INC. N-M's new menu in The Zodiac: Just one more reason to come Sunday-shopping with us. Each Sunday between 12 and 4, indulge in a buffet of famou s N-M desserts: all you can eat. 4.95 . And N-M's Wine Bar and medley of hors d'oeuvres: all you can eat, 6.95 . Before you go browsing, stop in for lunch! The Zodiac, Middle Level, Newport Beach. N9WpOftBNdl, 10to6Mon .. 'T\aa , Wed .. Tl\lan.. • t0to9Fri.:Sunday lltu!;Mdnow~nifttAsVea-.• . ~ .. -.... -............. ., -,.,. • 6 Ill" I ., . . . -~. .. • . . . •• t 0 coo us 000 so 0 , , . . ., .. I • • • • Orange CoHt DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 s Al Airport ·noise assailed Apes gaining State poll backs Darwin Homeoumers battle Burbank plan to expand traffic SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A California PoU ahows that Callfomlana fovored the teaching of the Darwinian theory or evolution over lhe biblJcal version ot creation when presented with the choice for public schools. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Six homeowner groups have aaked the City Council t.o prevent the Burbank Airport from implementing a proposal to increase aircraft U-atflc at the faclUty, a group spokesman has announced. "We think that any attempt to increase flights is totally unac~eptable and the airport has declared environmental war on the San Fernando Valley," said Richard Close, president of the Sherman Oaks Homeowners Association. The airport's Draft Master Plan Update. re· leased May 4, proposed conatrucUon of a new larger airport terminal and said paasenger capaci· ty could more than triple ii demand continues and no other airports are built within the next 20 years. The plan projected three growth scenarios with the maximum possibility of 7. 7 million passengers being served in 2000 by the facility compared to 2.3 million people in 1979, said airport spokesman Sam Jones. - However , the plan also stated that increases in passenger capacity would take place only if airport noise levels are cut by one half or more by methods which would include the use of new, quieter jets such as the Boeing 757 which is not yet available for commercial use. he added. T he updated plan is subject to public scrutiny and comment until July 6, Jones said. The homeowne r g ro ups also hope t he master plan because studies indicate that noise levels in s urrounding neighborhoods already ex· ceed a 55 decibel level, Close said after a news conference attended by repres_eotatives of the North Hollywood , Van Nuys, Sun Valley and Sherman Oaks homeowners associations, the Burbank Anti·Noise Group and the Studio City Residents Association. "AJI the s tudies indicate a very serious prob- lem. Unfortunately the airport doesn't care because Burbank residents don't get the noise," Close said. "We are asking the City Council to take action to prevent implementation of the Burbank Airport's Master Plan since 80 percent of the noise falls on Los Angeles residents." he added, saying his organization has been speaking to councilmen Drug to mom saves inf ant SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -An unborn baby was successfully treated for a deadly inherited dis· ease by giving medicine to the mother, University of California doctors report. The "important new concept," tried only twice before, "could be applicable and very benefi cial for a fair number of inherited metabolic dis· eases," said Dr Seymour Packman of UC·San Francisco. The child, Nicole Whitmore of Santa Rosa , was born last Dec. 21 with a disorder that prevents her body from utilizing a crucial vitamin called biotin. Packman and Dr. Morton Cowan described the novel treatment that protected Nicole from the dis· order, which is fatal if untreated, at a news con· fe rence Thursday and in telephone interviews earlier. The biotin dependency was Orst described 10 years ago and has since been reported in fewer than a dozen families around the world. He and Cowan diagnosed Nicole's problem 16 weeks into Debra Whitmore's pregnancy -a ruagnosis never before made on an unborn child, the university said. They looked for the disorder because Nicole's older brother also inherited it. About eight weeks later, Mrs. Whitmore began receiving huge doses of biotin. Because of the uni· que physical bonds between a mother and child, much of the vitamin traveled with other nutrients to the fetus. The idea, Cowan said, was to get so much biotin into the fetus that some of it would have to reach the right places and be utilized. . It worked . T he child was born with no symptoms and remains normal and healthy after five months, he said. Packman said Nicole and other children with the disorder "will probably have lo take biotin all their lives and they will probably Jive normal lives . That's based on what we know now, but the oldest li ving patient is only something like 10 years old." Nicole's 2·year-old brother, Justin, faced life· • threatening problems within 36 hours of birth. He was sent to UCSF's Moffit Hospital with acid ac· cumulating in his body. his blood sugar falling and, because the disorder somehow disables the immune system, widespread infections. Given massive doses of biotin. he recovered, Packman said. Toads 'clean' Betting on derby nixed COALINGA (AP> -For the first time in memory, fans won't be able to bet on their favorites in the 42nd running of the Horned Toad Derby here this weekend. Gone will be the five betting windows where peor le once placed s mall wagers on their favorite df:sert dwellers. said George Lacey, Chamber of Commerce manarer. "Fifty of the b est darned toads io t he country" wi ll have to hop and wriggle without their traditional financial backing today and Saturday, be said. Dale Blickenstaff, Fresno County district at· torney, outlawed belting alter the practice bad been overlooked for several years. Proceeds were the chamber's prime source of revenue for at least 15 years. "Nobody ever bet over 10 bucks or so and nobody ever got hurt," said Lacey. "It's Juat a damed shame somebody had to blow the wbis· tle." Ernani Bernardi and Bob Ronka about the pro· blem. A recent atudy of 57 acboola concluded that lbe 55 decibel level wu unpasted at each of tbe schools and cauaed lnterruptJona to communlca· tlons, thought processes and attention spans. The Los An1eles Board of Education was ex· peeled to vot.e next week to propose a plan to al· levlat.e airport noise at those schools. "Our position la that the Burbank Airport can not be expanded because the homes are too close plus there are safety problems," Close said. Four people died Sund~ when their sin1le engine aircraft crashed after takoff from the airport. The airplane narrowly missed a han1ar full of fueled aircraft. That was the first crash since 1971 involY\ng non·commercial aircraft at the airport 10 miles north of Los Angeles. The facility serves com· mercial airlines and houses about 300 privately owned aircraft. Close said the homeowner groups would like to see the airport consolidate passenger rtigbts be· cause the master plan indicated 47 percent of the seats were empty on outgoing planes. He added a consolidation plan would reduce noise levels. The homeonwe r groups also hope the Palmdale Airport would be completed soon and handle some of the Burbank airport's traffic, he said. ............. WHOLE HOG -These youths are doing their best to squire a greased pig in a contest sponsored by a home for mentally 'retarded adults in Tucson. From left are Greg Lunn. Tracy Burris (with pig) and Keith McGue. The poll said the evolution theory was favored by 6·1 among those surveyed, although about one· half fell that it would be all right to teach both views. The s urvey an April followed a trial in Sacramento in which a judge ruled that the teaching of evolution does not violate the right of creationists. The judge ruled, however , that evolu· lion should be taught as theory, not dogma. Of those surveyed , 40 percent said creationism should not be taught, six percent said creation should be t.aught iruitead of evolution. so percent said both could be taught and four percent had no opinion. The telephone survey involved 1,015 people in· eluding 471 Protestants, 258 Catholics, 46 J ews, 72 of other religions and 153 with no religious pref. erence. The total included 249 born again Chris- t.ians and 766 others . 11111 COSTA MESA STORE MAY 16-17 .. SOME QUANTITIES LIMITED SORRY! NO RAINCHECKS Saturday and Sunday Par g Lot S E! 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' Now Char1e It 3 way1 I ) Or1nge Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May HI, 1981 Health agency needs .a qualified director There can be no argument with the belief of the Orange County Grand Jury that radical improvements are needed in the delivery of mental health services in the county. The d e livery of such services, the jury said , has been hamper e d by numerous I bureaucratic obstacles. It recom- J mended the best way to improve I the situation would be to remove I ~ the mental health program from the auspices of the county Human Services Agency, an um-1: brella organization that oversees the county's social service pro· grams. We fail to see, however. how removal of the program from the HSA would make service de· livery any better. In fact, re- moval of the mental health pro- gram from the HSA could lead to : even more disruption to a pro- gram that has suffered too many disturbances already. Many of the problems that . face the mental health program -can be attributed to a flurry of departures by top mental health officials and a decision last year by the c-0unty Board of Supervisors to give Margaret Grier, former HSA director, a dual position as the county's mental health director. Miss Grier has since retired; an interim HSA director has been named. That man , Larry Leaman, says improvements in the mental health program will be forthcoming. Leaman agreed with the jury on many points - but not the one in which the jury recommended the HSA be stripped of the mental health pro- gram. What Leaman and the supervisors should do is keep the program within the HSA and quickly hire a permanent mental health director -keeping the program out from under the direct control of the HSA direc- tor, as was the case in the Grier situation. The hiring of a qualified, mental health professional as program director would go a long way toward solving the problems id en tif ied by the jury. ;-·School fwuling plans I ~ . I One of the keystones of the Reagan effort to "get govern- ment off our backs" would be a n ew method of dis tributing federal funds. Instead of target- ing money for specific programs, the administration proposes issu- ing block grants to the states to cover needs in general areas, but largely at each state's discretion. A similar approach is pro- posed for school district funding in several measures now in the hop- per in the state Legislature. For e~amp.le, a plan devised by the-Stale Senate Republican Caucus would combine som@ 27 different school programs now financed individually into five blanket grants. Each school district would determine which programs under each block grant are needed locally, and distribute the money accordingly. The decisions would be mad e by sc hool ad -i, ministrators. teachers, parents • and locally elected school boards, on the basis of local priorities in- stead of orders from Sacramento. • Proponents claim the plan could eliminate the need for up to one-third of the employees at the state Department of Education who now oversee the operations of s pecific pro~ram s in 1.020 California school districts. It could save up to $28 million in administrative costs. For example, one block grant covering needs for exceptional children would include funding for nine separate programs, such as sp~ reading, Indian educa- tion, migrant education, instruc- tional television and gifted and talented education. The local district would de- cide which of the programs are pertinent to local needs and al- locate the grant money. Other proposed block grants would cover adult and vocational education ; special child needs s uch as preschool programs and c hild nutrition; program im- provement, including resource centers and career guidance; and basic education needs such as transportation and capital out- lay. Supporters of the block grants say they would enable more money to flow directly into the classroom where it is needed, instead of being diverted by burdensome administrative pro- cedures to comply with mandates set up in Sacramento without re- gard to local needs. Most local school officials couldn't agree more. ~ A better primary date In addition to being thwarted by the premature announcement of the result of last year's pres- i den ti al election, California. voters earlier were deprived of any significant role in choosing the eventual nominees. That's because the state once more was last among the 36 that make their selections in primary elections. tial amount of money since many local elections are held on the April date. It is patently abs urd for a state the size of California to be virtually shut out of a chance to vote on all the would-be can- didates s imply because its primary election is held on such a late date. There a r e proposals in Congress that could result in the establis hme nt of regional primaries, covering several states ata time. , , . By the lime Californians vot- ed in June, many of the early contenders had dropped out on the basis of results of early primaries in other states . A bill now pending in the state Legislature would set the primary election here on the second Tuesday in April, moving California up to eleventh place in the primary sequence. That makes more sense. That might be even better, but given the probability that Congress won't get around to act- ing before the next presidential election, the Legislature would be well advised to move now to shift California's primary into a more decisive position. I I I I It also could save a substan- • Opinions expressed In the space above ar~ those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex- pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit- ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1S60, Costa Mesa CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·<4321. , \ L.M. Boyd I Names still popular ' Most popular names for 32-year-old men in New York City, in order, are Robert, John, James, Michael, William, Richard, Joseph, Thomas, · Stephen and David. Seven of these remained the most popular Into the next generation. Among 8-year-old boys there. the preferred names, likewise tn order, are Michael, David, Christopher, John. James, ' ,...i..-~..; ...... , ...... .. !ti , CMI• MitW ._,_ ~ono--• It .. ,, ,,.. , ... -~.,.~ . . Joseph, Robert, Anthony, Richard and Brian . Researchers now say Lhat lbe most common!>"' spoke n word In the Enallsh language is "1." "You" comes in second. That la oot bow It s hould be. "You" should be first. Anyhow, thlrd ls "lb " and fourth I.a .. a••. ThonYS P. Haley Publisher Thomas KM Vll Editor 8 1rNr1 Kr•lbich Editorial Page Editor - Risky drug evades control W ASHJNGTON Responding to the Reagan administration's "go slow " ap· proach to more government regulation, the Food and Drug Administration 1s planning to delay indefinitely a rule that controversial prescription drugs contain package inserts to warn patients about their dangers. This mild corrective action -far less dr astic than taking a suspect drug off the market while its safety 1s proved -would at least give doctors and patients a chance to weigh the risks against the benefits of the medication Yet even this pa rli aJ damper on sales 1s opposed by the drug industry. Let me cite one particularly shocking exam pie of the development and market ing of a widely used but controversial drug : Bendectin. It has been prescribed routinely to millions of pregnant women since 1956 for reli ef of nausea and vomit· ing BENDECTIN'S MANUFACTURER, Richardson Merrell , now Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, ls facing severa l lawsuits Crom women who blame the drug for severe malforma tions in their babies. The birth defects missing or badly de- formed limbs -a re reminisceot of those ca u sed by th e sedati ve dru g Thalidomide, which Merrell distributed in the United States. My reporters Indy Badhwar and Judy Grande have examined court documents and confidential company memos that s ketch an appalling record of inadequate testing, irresponsibility and outright de· • ce1t Here are what the documents show: Bendectm was concocted literally by Merrell's research director, Or Raymond Pogge. who had only three months of obstetrical training in his back- g~ound He simply mixed three existing drugs together ltke a cocktail Development was to be given top priority so that . a1> a Merrell memo ex Q -JA-Cl-AN_D_IR-SD-N -~ plained . Bendecltn would be ready for promotion at an upcoming meeting of the American Academy of Obstetncs and r. y n ecology -THt: FDA APPROVED Bendectin in 1957 even though Merrell offered no reproductive or fertility tests to vouch for its safety Despite the Amencan Medical Assoc1at1on's view that combination drugs have a greater risk of toxicity, the FDA OK'd Bendectin on the grounds that 1t was not a new drug, but a mixture of drugs already on the market To promote Bendectin, Pogge wrote an article on it for the Ohio State Medical Journal It appeared under the name or Dr. R. Nulsen. an obstetrician. In a s worn deposition , obtained by public interest lawyers Alan Eaton, Tom Tate and Jim Butler. Pogge later sa id he had ghost written 20 or 30 articles for other doctors over the years In 1963, a Merrell expert on birth de· feels, R. E Staples. tested Bendectin on rabbits and noted malformations in the offspring similar to those caused by Thalidomide He recommended further testing But the disturbing findings were deleted when the Staples report was sum- mar izl·d for the FDA and for Merrell's salei. force The company rece1 vcd numerous tel- lers from physicians with questions about malformations that had s hown up in their patients· babies Merrell did not prompt!} report all this information to the FDA, as it is required by law to do -SIX YEARS AFTER Bendectin's in- troduction, an article m the American J ournal of Obstetrics and Gynecology linked the drug to deformities in newborns Last September. an FDA advisory committee reviewed published studies and C'Oncluded there was no increased risk of birth defects from the use of Ben- dect1n But the panel did come across two studies that left "residual uncertainties" about I he drug. Instead of ordering Bendectin off the market wh ile the uncertainties are cleared up. the FDA decided to make use or a ne" regulation that would require package inserts warning that the drug should be used only as a last resort. This is the proposed regulation that the FDA has put on ··hold" in response lo the ad- m in1stralion 's anti-regulatory policies. Meanwhile. Bendectin 1s still on the market. Loudest voices get lawmakers' ears Earl Waters 1s on oocatton Thu column 18 by State Controller Ken Cory The rapid depletion of the state's once large general fund s urplus will, at some point in the very near future. require a much-needed reordering of the state's s pending priorities. The huge surplus that bad been built up at the time of the passage of Proposi· tion 13 in 1978 has been used up in partially making up the reductions in the local property tax Those so-called "bail·out" funds will be reduced this year as the Legislature and governor focus on the coming budget IT SEEMS TO M E a healthy process for government to question its prionties Crom time to time with an eye toward cutting back on certain programs -or completely eliminating those the public holds in least regard. As the Legislature begins to cope with the reality of cutbacks, and I must add tha t it has been quite slow to face the is- s ue, there is going to be a great deal of static Crom the Capitol Building in Sacramento. The Legislature is a col· lectlve political animal that responds to the loudest voices, the apparent biggest num bers of groups of constituents and perceived pohucal pressure From July of 1980 through March of 1981 the state's general fund has been depleted by an average of nearly $200 million each month. With a lukewarm economy at best, the state's biggest rev· enue source, the retail sales tax. has grown only s)ightly from the prior fiscal year. AT THE SAME time, more than 20 sepa rate state programs centered in the IARl WATIRS fields of health. education and welfare are tied to varying cost-of-li ving in- cre ases. Inflation rises. costs go up vi rtually automatically. Meanwhile, rev- enues increase only moder ately. The result: an impending budget crisis Unlike the federal government, California state government cannot go into deficit financing. When the surplus 1s gone. cuts will haH' to be made or taxe~ increased And I see no sentiment "hatsoe' e r by either party to increase laxes at this time with the exception of an added tax on gasoline to build and repair roads and streets As the legislative committees work on the budget between now and July tough decisions wi ll have to be made. There is no postponement for a day of reckoning later The problem will be compounded by the fact that mail and personal ap· pearances. petitions and telephone calls will be imploring the lawmakers to pre· serve this or that progr am agency. VIRTUALLY NO ONE lakes the time to come to Sacramento and ask the Legislature to cut something out Each program 1s somebody's ox waiting to be gored. When the threat of abolishing a favored state service or payment is p er ceived then the rush is on lo Sacramento. That is the process that is going to create the noise and friction. But it is a necessary process if the state is going to regain a proper per s pective on its spending and, like the families of this state. try to live within realistic means in a lime of severe inflation. A touching exaillple of the 'truly needy' And, now, boys and girls, a heart warming story about the Truly Needy whom Ronnie Reagan and his budget axman, David Stockman, have prom- ised lo protect. Both Ron and Dave have promised to lilORlil MAIR get all the Truly Un-needy away from the public trough, but promise that the Truly Needy wtll still be cared for and r\urtured. APPAR ENTLY one of the Truly Needy who quallfles for JtUblic as· slatance lJ another lovable Ronald - Ronald McDonald. of 1olden, arcbes fame He, bit Soldeo arches and many other bll businesses are the beneficiaries of taa~exempt lndualrlal development rev- enue bond• (IDRBs> autbori~ed by Con1...aa and, 1pparenUy, condoned by the current administration (As they were, 1n all talmea1, by the Carter and Ford 1dmlnlstr1Uons). cutes and atates can lssue lheae --~ bonds and use the money t o build facilities for fast food restaurants such as McOonalds and other big business firms (the l ittle mom and pop m erchants don't qualify in the minds ol most who administer lb is scam). So far. these IDRBs have been used to build 107 McDonald's. SO, WHY DO you care as long as you can get a Big Mac and an order of fries? The short answer is Lhat you pay more income taxes because of this and comparable such soak-the-poor-save- the-rich schemes foisted on you by your federal government. Here's how they get you. Because the income from them is tax-free, people who invest ln them pay less income tax- es to lhe federal treasury than they would otherwise. This also means the interest rate on them Is lower than il would be If McoOnaJd's had to go to the bank like the re.st of us poor slobs and borrow money at the going rate. So, Mc.Donald's JCll cheap money and Mch lnveston don't have to pay Uncle Sam 1H tbe taxes Lhey might. WHEN ONE SEGMENT or economy doesn't pay Ill share of taxH, ruess who has to meke up lhe s horta1e? Ob, you aJready lliured it out -you do. This y 1r lt Is estimated tha t we average taxpaying peons will have to ante up about 350 mlllion extra. And, how is the Truly Needy Ronald Mc Donald doing? Well. a few days ago his Chicago headquarters announced that he had a 21.1 percent jump in net profits in the first three months of this year. I don't know how many million Big Macs he gave you last year, but you gave him 1.6 billion Big Bucks last year. Just thought you'd sleep better know- ing that another Truly Needy case ts do- ing okay lillllY 511 While our lestslaton are busy dr.amln1 up new law. J wish they'd make lt u. tc1at for any kind of vendor to enter our homes via the telephone -especially at dinner time! c.v. -A " .. 01--.. --· ., .... ·-., • ..t.i..1 -· .... .... "' '"'"' '°"' ....... i. -· I SOPCER I I I I' I ' • ' I 1 Sug" m1kH you llypenen· elve 1ncs cellelne ruin• your ne rve•. 10 let'• keep r1erybody IWI)' from COllH F H EAR S 1-· I I I I I' o ~~:: ~""'~:.~ '=" -0.-.loll ,,_ ..... No 3 below ~ PllNT NUM8U(0 l(TTUS IN _ !HES( S9W•RfS 6 UNSCIAMllf A80Vf lfTTUS 10 Cf! A.NSWO ~·~\ rrrrr1 I I I I I I ~~"~ ~~ Compass off base DEAR PAT DUNN : Js it true that .. news" is an acronym for north, east. west and south the four points of the compass from which all news comes? A friend told me that's why journalists call their papers ·'newspapers.'· P.W . Costa Mesa That's quite a theory, but It doesn't have any basls ln fact. The derivation of "news" I~ fairly easy to trace. The old Old English word was niwes, from nlew, meaning "new." The spelling looks strange, but the proouncta· tlon was almost the same as that of "news" today. Habits born early DEAR PAT DUNN: Have any studies been done that establish the average age when youngsters are most hkely to begin smoking, drinking and taking drugs? As the parent of a pre·teen I would like to check into this. K.C., Irvine It's a lot sooner than most parents think. According to a nationwide survey by the Na· • &tonal Institute on Drug Abue of nearly 17,000 high school seniors, most wbo bad tried marijuana, alcohol and clsarettes bad done so before they were ln the 10th •rade. With most other Illicit drugs such as cocaine, heroin, stimulants and the Uke, first ex· perlences usually took place durlng tbe last three years of high school. A spokesman for the federal agency said that teen.age drug use Is dropping and "we are hopeful this recent downward shUt marks the beginning of a change." Bankruptcy liJJt,ed DEAR PAT DUNN: How long does bankruptcy take and will it be listed on my credit record? -J .S .. Costa Mesa Bankruptcy usually takes oa.ly a couple of months from the day you rue to Use day you appear tn court to be told that you have received your formal dl1cbar1e fJ'Om debt. But the most important date I• die day you fUe. The court will notify you credJton so that collection efforts, repolleSlloa aad wa1e garnishments will cease within a couple of days. Credit agencies are allowed to keep a notation of your bankruptcy OD rue for 10 years. They list the total amount of di•· chargeable debts and specUy whld1 debts have been discharged lo bankruptcy. It b up to credJtors to decide what to do with tbat LD- form aUon. 'Bal/,oon' defined DEAR PAT DUNN: Al what Point does a loa n's larger las t payment become a "balloon payment?" I have a loan with a hef· ty amount due on the final payment, but the lender claims this is not a balloon payment. Can I insist on refinancing when the large final payment comes due. or must lbe full amount be paid? S.T .. CostaMesa Any payment In a contract which ls more than twice that of the regular Installment pay- ment ls a "balloon payment." U, for example, you were to pay 23 lnstallmenta of $51 monthly and a flnal paymentof $Zto, thatlast payment la a balloon payment. If the buyer doe• not want to make the $ZOO payment, the state attorney general's omce says, he or she bas aa abtolate right to obtain a new schedule of payments lo which no Installment can be substantially greaterthan$50. Need mikage guide? DEAR PAT DUNN : Where can I get a copy of the gas mileage guide I've seen on display al car dealers' showrooms? I'd like to do a thorough comparison before I get anywhere near a dealer. L.J ., Huntington Beach Tbe 1981 "Gaa Mllea1e Gu.Ide" U1t1 tlile fuel economies of the varlou model nlllcle1 certified H ol .laa. Zl for Hie ID tM Ual&ed States. You cu cet a copy by wrtU., to ,._I Ecoaomy Dt.trtbaUon, Teclmical laform•· tlon Center, Department ol Eaergy, P.O. Bo1 IZ, Oak Rldge, Tenn. 27131. Reqaest the California version. • "Cot o problnn' TMn write to Pol "-l Dunn. Pot wfll c1.lf red t•, gdlfng • tlw oruwer1 ond octlon UOM rwtd to • 1ohie frvqultie1 m gowmmtnt and n bulitw11. Mou JIOl.lr qNttioft.I to Pot Dunn, At Your Sfmct, Onmgt Coo.t DaU11 PUot, P.O. Boz 1560, Colto Mita , CA 921824. At mon11 lftttrt 41 poalibk will bf ClnlWettd, but phqMd fnquff'N• or lift.,• not tncludlllg tlw mJdn't /uJl Mme. addrt11 ond ~ .. houn' phoM ftumber ccmnot bf ~. ThU colurma QPPHn dallfl U · cqt S~•." ,, • .. 0 0 , a o o so a sccsaus ... It •• " . . .. . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 The Best Keeps Getting Better ] ust opened: Abercrombie & Pitch (Houston} Le SportSac (Westwood} Coming soon: Bailey Banks & Biddle (Philadelphia) ~yid Orgell (Rodeo Drive} Haagen-Dazs ]. Jessops & Sons (La Jolla} Miller's Outpost Rizzoli {New York} SOUTrI COAST PLAZA For more store 1nlorma11on call 546·6682 0 ltS Aaron Brothers 1~ Fra1ne Sale! Your wall can be a gallery too. Here's how our frames can work for you . Buy One Frame at the Regular Price. Get a Second Frame That Ca.ts tt.e Same or Less for One Cenit Choose a frame , and we've got plenty, The second one will cost a penny. Just be sure the second. frame Is priced below or costs the same. So make your good cents work for you. Buy a frame and take home two . The second's just a penny more A painting of ria the Mona Lisa . Or the Leaning Tower of Pilla . A n ostrich or riaa peacock feather, Your baby in the altogether. ~~-~,!).~ !')~ ~ ~ !\ "~ ( At any '7our nursery And painting of T he time you came Certificates of Aaron Brothers store! • schooler's alphabet, the family pet. in number one , deeds well done. Custom framing and labor not included. (Items shown in frames are fictitious creations and ex1St only in the artist's imagination.) JO% OFF STUDIO '~ "ARTIJT'S 8Rl.J .. "illlllilllllnlr;;A3'1r STYLES ',,ze.s IN Fwi-S. OF 4-,0R 5 -~~-- ANAHEIM 222 N. leac:h ltvd. • COSTA MESA 171' Newport ltvd. • ORANGE 1112 E. Katella Ave. LA~NA IEACH 190 S. Coost Highway • SANTA ANA 1126 E. 17th. St. El TottO 2'350 Swort1 Dr. • HUNTINGTON IEACH 7•70 Edinger Ave. .. l NO--~~ ............ "-..... ...,. .. _ ... ,,. ........... ............. 0 0 -Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1 81 .REAGAN COUNTRY '-Surfers approach Refugio Beach near Santa Barbara , just below President Reagan's ranch in Santa Barbara Coun- ty and one of his favorite retreats. "Our 24th ' 1·ur ' ~ Auto & Homeownt:rs ~s:~· Quotes By Phone FAIMEIS llCSUUNCE CIOU, 54a.SSS4 w ll5·l4l7 If 14 ~ · Colla Muo . BLOCK P't.U=HG j HlATIHG t USU~T ...... O I ~;:,; IUCI' 848-3636 trans national funding FULLY ASSUMABLE IMTEREST OHL Y 2nd TRUST DEEDS 0 WMER /MOMOWNER OCCUPIED Call Wilham B Mitchell Call 1ooay for quo1e • No 01>1tqa11on Iron~ nollOOOI lund1ng (714) 975-1128 ;;~~:~==~ NATIONAL FOOT HEALTH WEEK May 9th thru 15th The podiatrist is the only doctor so lely dedicated to the care of the foot. See your podiatrist during Foot health Week. For the name of a POd1atrist tn your area call by Romulu• Linney The 1tormy c.,••r of lord Byron, Englend't ftamboyent, flrebrend poet, le reveeled through • aeries of dremetlc fleehl>eck• couched In Byronic verae •• Byron ettempta to Juetffy hi• lffe for th• d•ughter he n•v•r im.w. -NOW PLAYING- Through May 17 Main.stage Curtain Times· TuHd•y·8und•y •t I p.m. S•t. 1nd Sun. M•Un•H at 2:30 p.m. Limited Seating Still AvailalM! Social Security target Reagan proposes lower benefits, later retirements WASHING TON (AP> -Presi- dent Rea1an'11 proposed over· haul of Social Security, while aimed principally at stavlne orr bankruptcy or the system I seeks to reverse more than three decades of earlier and earlier re- tirement for millions of American workers. Rea1an wants to cul Social Security benefits for ev~ryone retiring in the ruture by 10 per- cent. But benefits for those who retire before age 65 would be slashed about 40 percent. Jn ad- dition. he would give those who work past age 65 a new. taxfree Social Security check. Taken together, these pro· posals are a huge financial in- centive for workers to continue on the job. The Reagan changes, if adopt- ed by Congress, come on top of two other factors that have been enrouraging workers to stay oo the job -inflation and the re- c en tty enacted law banning mandatory r etirement before age 70. The constantly rising prices of the past decade have made re· tirement, particularly one on a fixed income, far less attractive. And the federal law forbidding mandatory retirement before .-c.--------'---..:...a~ge.;__;,7..:..0..:..fo:..:r_m..:..;..:....;ost workers has al· NEWS ANALYSIS lowed those who don 't want to retire to stay on the job. When Social Security was set up in 1935, retirement benefit. were paid to only those reaching age65. That changed in the late 19508 and early 1960s, when American workers began to have the op· lion of retiring earlier. Social Security began paying retirement benefits reduced benefits to be sure to working women reaching age 62 in Nov· ember 1956 and to men reaching age 62 in August 1961. And in the early 1960s, the United Auto Workers and the United Steelworkers won path-breaking agreements in those industries that made it financial · ly attractive for workers to re· tire after 30 years of work whatever their age These developments changed the American workforce. mak· ing it financially feasible for workers to retire before age SS. In 195'7, only 16 percent of those eligible for Social Security were drawing benefits by age 64. By 1976, that figure had jumped to 61.2 perc:_ent. In 1940, the avera1e retire· ment age for federal civil ser· vants was 64.1 years. In 1980, it was 58.6. Reagan's ps:oposals-deslgned to solve Social Security's finan- cial problems -would tum that trend on its head. To begin with, Reagan would change the complex benefit formulas to cut almost all future retiree's benefits by about 10 percent. Then, Reagan would also cut benefits for those who retire at age 62 from the current level of 80 percent or full benefits to 5~ percent of full benefits payable at age 65. Com· bined with the overall reduction, the administration says the Social Security check for the average 62-year-old worker re- tmng next year would be cut about 34 percent or $126 a month. On the other side, Reagan would eliminate the current earnings test on Social Security, a change that would cost the system money. Currently. rel ire es bet ween age 65 and 71 can earn only $5,500 a year from employment before their Social Security benefits are reduced. Reagan would raise that limit by about S5,000 a year until 1985. after which there would be no limit. Diesel Oldsn1obiles. did car buyers make them AmeriCa's one selling diesel? Until 1977. the only way you could get a diesel was to buy an expensive foreign import. Out of reach for most buyers. Then Oldsmobile introduced the first American passen· ger cars available with a VB diesel engine. • It brought diesel econ- omy in a size and style to fit almost every need. Result? American car bu11°rs made Oldsmobile nu111uer one in diesel sales (with over 350,000 on the road right now). Here are some of the reasons why. Sigajflcandy better ;_:L..,.,_ less ~d:!afuel A diesel is basi· cally more ef- ficient than a gas-pow- ered engine. It delivers significantly more miles per gallon, and does it on traditionally less expensive fuel. So you save two ways. Arrother advantage is that diesel Oldsmobiles go a long way between fuel stops. For example, the Delta 88 diesel offers an estimated driv- ing range of 594 miles. The esti- mated highway range of 891 miles is more than the distance from Los Angeles ro San Francisco and back. What kind of mileage estimates does the Oldsmobile model you select offer? Here are the official EPA figures for California. in about 8 seconds at 0° E Other features include roller hydraulic lifters. an in-line fuel filter system to help keep out solid impurities and a water- in-fuel detecti on system with warning light. Service is simpler. Diesel Oldsmobiles don't have spark plugs, a carburetor or distributor -so service is not required on these items. Just California mi~ and rangr estimates change the oil and oi l filter every 5,000 miles and check crankcase ventilation every 15,000 miles under most driving conditions. Aside from that, the recommended service schedules are similar to other Oldsmobiles. And since it's Feel flt. Ell. EPA Est. MOOE LS , .. Hwy. Hwy. Est. """' ea,. """' MPG Cutlass 19.8 33 6Y3 ~ 14351 Cutlass 18.2 33 600 ~ 14001 Cruiser Delta 88 27.0 33 891 ~ 15941 Ninety· 27.0 32 864 ~ 15671 Eight Custom 22.0 32 704 ~ ~ Cruiser Toronaoo 22.8 30 684 ~ @Ifil use es11m1teo mPO IOI compa11son Your m1teaoe alld range may differ depending on speed distance weatner Actual ~ay mtteaoe and IM1Q8 towei Rqe esumates are O!Kaoecl br ~ EPA "1WNCes by Ille 51.ind¥d fuel lank c.lllo1C•IY r al~ OIOsmOOlfeS are QIQleCJ wll/I GM'4Ju!tt enoines iJOCllCl!d 11y v1110Us ow1SK111s ~ your dealer roi oe1a11s Fast-Start Glow~ and other engineering flitures. The patented Fast-Start Glow Plug System preheats the area around the fuel injec- tion nozzle. Result? A 1981 diesel Olds starts an Olds, you can have your diesel serviced at nearly 3,300 Oldsmobile dealers across the country. Great resale reputation. Over the past few years, diesel Olds- mobiles have earned a gre.at reputation for resale value. While it may vary by geographic location. many used car buyer guides indicate that current resale prices, averaged out, show a substantiaJ recovery of the cost of the diesel option. That means buyers enjoyed the economy of a diesel while they drove it, then got back a substantiaJ part of their investment at trade-in time. With the cost of fuel today, a diesel Oldsmobile makes more sense than ever. See and drive one at I lld I your Oldsmobile dealer soon. __ .. _ ... ' 1 .. • • • .. :w . . . Daily Pilat F RIDAY, MAY 15, 1981 ST OC KS TELEVISION COMICS . . ' . ' as 86 87 0 co o 0 ..... ,., ... M A o o a a a o 0 . . Jarxin leads world in importation of U.S. farm commodities ... 83 o· ) a i Are Anierican products losing quality? More questioning workmanship of cars, clothes, appliances 6 y The As80Clated Press Modern technology has broken d own Newer doesn't always mean better To many people, it means worse Half the people questioned by the American Society ror Quali- ty Control in a survey of 7 ,000 households last year s aid the quality or American products had declined the past rive years The society, made up of people who work in the field of quality control, said one-fourth of the public thought qua lity had im- proved and one-rourth thought it s tayed the same. A li ttle mor e lt1un 27 per cent of the people q uestioned said foreign-made products are bet· l er than domestic ones. just un· ,. der 24 percent said U.S. prod- ucts are better The rest said imports and domestic goods are equal. There 1s no s ing le, objective s tandard by which to judge the thousands of consumer products on the market Quality frequent· ly is in the eye of the customer People in between. in govern· menl and m the consumer move ment generally agree that the baste quality or big-ticket items cars. major household ap pltances and television sets, for example 1s better than ever. whether the pubhc beheves it or not • · There as less of a consensus about things like s mall ap· p l i a nces, clothing and the gadgets or everyday life in the 1980s. •"It 's mixed." said Ralph Nader, when asked about quali ly "Some pr oducts are not made the way they used to be," s a i d the long-time industry critic. Small appliances seem t o break more quickly "Clothes." Nader said, "are falling apart " Does the public care'' Monte Florman. director or the technical de partment for Consumers Union. the non-profit testing or ganization, s aid he belleves that many of today's * * products break more quickly. The small appliance industry, Florman said, "has gone the direction of proliferation and throwaway . . But people don't seem to mind It ·· StalLst1cal measurements of quality can be tricky The average age of the automobile on the road today, for exam ple. 1s increasing. It was 5.5 years in 1969 and 6.4 years in 1979, ac· cording to the Motor Ve hicle Manufactu rers Association Does that mean cars are lasting longer" Or does 1t mean t hat people are dr iving them longer because they cannot afford new ones? products in an ertort lo get peo· pie to buy new models Today, that policy won't work, Leek i.a1d "Planned obsolescence is ob· solete 1n the 1980s " It 1s hard to assess quality There are several reasons : Modern technology is com- phcatoo. Repairing a television set is much more involved than replacing a tube or two. You can't s imply take a screwdriver. tinker under the hood and fix your car yourself Power steer- ing and air conditioning didn't used lo break down because there was no power steering or a ir conditioning. Automobiles, 'Except for automobiles, I 'd have to say things are better than they used to be Major ap- pliances are probably better than_ they've ever been . The number of complainti. to the Better Bus iness Bureau 1s rising The bureau handled JUSt over one million complaints a record in 1979. the latest year for which complete figures are available But most or those com plaints dealt with services rather than with produc:ts And no one knows whetht:r the an crease refl ects an actual decline in quality .. People are much more hkely lo complai n today,·· noted Nader Jay W Leek. president of the 37 ,OOO·member Society for Quali· ty Control, said things are not as bad as lhey seem "Personally, I do not believe products are any worse today," he s aid "In fact. I believe they're better " Leek said, however. that there was a trend in the 1960s and 1970s toward "planned failure " Manufacturer s kept c hanging * * * ~aid Nader, are s<irer "The problem 1s they're more complex " Thal mean~ more things can go wrong There IS a s hortage or skilled repairmen, partic ularly in the auto industry. What starts as a minor problem becomes a major hcad<iche when it isn't fixed the first lime. We know more than we used lo Older p roducts may have had jus t as many poten tial hazards , but we weren't aware o f th e m Ther e wa s no m echanism ror recalling unsafe items. for example. "The general quality of prod· ucts has improved over the years." said J o hn Bell. spokesman for the Consumer Product Safel.> Commission But he said that publicity about problems has made lhe public more aware of them. There is no fixed definition o( quality Is durability the test? * * Cost'> Is a new, lightweight , three-speed hairdryer that costs $15.95 and lasts two years better or worse than an older, heavier , two speed model that cost $29.95 and lasted five years? How im· portant are energy efficiency and safety? Nader said, for example. that people don't think about auto safe ty until they have an acci- dent "It's the rallies and the bugs that people complain about." he s aid. , At Consuml'rS Union. F lorm<¥1 said: .. Except for automobile§. I'd have to say things are better than they us(•d to be Major appliances are probably better than they've ever been . . TV sets are terrific . . " The automakers take excep- tion to Florman's exception "By any ObJect1ve measure. they <cars ) are made better," said Thomas H Hanna, semor vice prei.tdent of the Motor Vcht· clc Manuracturers Association II<' s<11d lod<iy's autos need less regular maintenance and fewer repairs than older models ·we feel that our people are committed lo building the best pro duct we ean." sa id Don DeVoto, quality control director al the General Motors assembly plant <it Tarrytown, N Y • which produces X cars , the compacts GM introduced in 1979 to com- pete with the imports. GM is sl aking its quality rep- utation on its J -cars, s ubcom· pacts which go on sale May 14 . The company says it has im· proved "rits and finis hes" things lik<.• body work and Joints. The s ide fram e of the four-door mo del will be stamped in one piece to eliminate joints and weld marks Robots will be used for some of the welding and to check the ac<.·uracy of things like w1ndsh1eld size The number of automobiles re- call ed every year already has declined Just under four million domestic \ehacles we re recalled last year. compared to about seven million in 1979. eight million in 1978 and a record 10 7 * * * Changing work ethics reflected By The Associated Press American workmanship and the Amer ican worker are under attack. Imports are taking a bigger c hunk of the U.S. cons umer 's doll ar Justifiab ly or not. foreign-made products have the repu tation of being better. When the Ford Motor Co. an- nounced a year ago that it was c losing its largest assem bly plant , the one at Mahwah. N.J • it s aid the reason was the quali· ty of the cars coming off the line Harold A Poli ng, executive v ice pres ident for North American a utomotive opera- tions, said the failu res were caused by a "combination of m anagem ent and em ployee s hortromings " Management and union of· ficials in t he autom o bile and other industries admit there a re inst ances of sloppiness a nd even outright sabotage. But they in· sist that these are r are . They say the problem with quality is a problem with management and they are trying new techniques, som e bor ro w ed fro m t h e Jap an ese , l o improve workmanship. "Workers mlike m istakes because management didn't do a very good job or planning," said Jay W. Leek, president or the Society for Qua lity Control, an organization of professionals In lhe field of quality Leek said blue -colla r workers "sh are" Lhe responsibility, but a dded : "There's j ust been too muc h blam ed on the m ... Nobody goes to work to make a mistake ." Leek said concern with quality must start a t the top. "Attitudes a r e causht, not taught,1' he s aid. "It'• become pa rt of our culture to settle for something Jess th an perfection." American ma nagers frequent· l y look . with e nvy, at the Japanese. T hey see a picture of employees who a re totally com- mitted to their Jobt and their companJes. Thelr Uvee are cen· l t re d on their work. J ohn Novtn, chairman of the Flrettone Tire & Rubber Co., Hid people mlatakenly UIUmt the comm itment or J1p1neH workers lJ due to the Japanese ethnic baclc1round. "Nonsense," heuld. T b •·Made ln .J1 01n" label AP_,..... General Motors hcu made quaUtu a watchword at Ua Ta1'1'Jltown, N.J .. o.ssembly plant. Refort1'l8 wtre made tn the factory's operatimu to combal problema auch as high ob.sentedim arid sloppy workmamhip. was not auto matic ally asaoclal· ed with high quality In the days before World War JI , Ne vln s aJd, and the Japa nese ethnic back· IJro und has not cha n1ed alnce the n . "What c h a naed was the m 1na1ertaJ q uality," he Hid. T he Public A1e nda Found•· lion, a non.profit or1anJsaUon founde d by p olluer Daniel Y an ke16vlch a nd form tr Secre tary of State Cyn11 Vance. I • Is tryln1 to find out what makes people work a nd , m or e Im- porta ntly, what makes the m work harder and better. The first part of the study, Just completed, Involved Inte rviews w ith blue a nd white-colla r workers, 18 to 70, tn Seattle. "We found that people cared enormously 'lbout their Jobe,'' aald Carol Greenwald, one of the researchers ln cha r1e ot tbe 1ludy. "But th 1 want more personal re wards, more sense or involvement. They want to be appreciated They feel that their car ing_ about their jobs is not re- warde<i." Ms. Greenwald said attitudes toward work have changed. Money alone is not enough There Is more to hfe than a job Surve ys co n ducted by Yankelovich during the 1970s s upport these concl u s ions Between 1970 and 1976, for ex· ample. the proportion of people who agreed with the statement "Hard work always pays off," dropped fro m 58 percent lo 43 percent. The number agreeing that "work 1s at the center of my life." dropped from about 35 per· cent to about 15 percent Part or the change in at- titudes, Ms. Greenwald said, is d ue lo "the whole economic safety net" of public and private benefits . "If you are out of work, you don't suddenly starve.·· T he ch ange also re flects "the values t hat came up In the '60s and '70s self-fulCillme n t," Ms. Greenwald said. And it reflects the increase in the number or wom en working outside the home. In the days following World Wa r II, m en were the primary wage earners. The man "got his dignity from being the breadwinne r ," Ms. G r eenwa ld sai d . "T h e workplace was just a thing." Tod ay's workers -men and wom en -do not get the ir sense of worth fro m the mer e ract that they are earning money. They wa n t more . And, in m any families, they know th at with two in com es t h e r e Is l ess necessity lo work overtime, to m ake the extra e ffort . Ms . Greenwold H id the foun· datlon's Interviews have s hown that people want "a sense of fairne11, a sense of r espect, cloar lines of communication b e tween m o n aeem e nt a nd w ork ers ... a se n se o f autonomy and responsibility In controllif\I their own work . . . 'Treat me like a grown-up,' they say." Ms . G r een wald uld poor workmanship, particula rly the d eliberat e m ist a k e, com es "from e mployee• w ho are turned off and an gry.'' R a)' C&Jore, prealde nt of Unit- ed Auto Work er• Local 614, .. ,,.._ .... There ts a growing feeling among many Amencans that domestically produced automobiles. appliances, furniture and the other necessary items of modem life are made carelessly and don 't last as long as products of the past million m 1977 At the same time. however , 62 pe rcent of the more than 2.500 people questioned in January by the marketing researc h firm of J-1 .R. Bruskin said the quality of new automobiles was not as good today as it was 5 or 10 year s ago. Other products fared nearly a s poorly F1 rty-one percent of those surveyed said fu rniture isn't as good as it used lo be, more than 45 percent said the quality of appliances and clothing was down In each case, less than 2<> percent of the pubhc said quality had improved J o hn Nevin. c hairman of Firestone Tire & Rubber Co . disagrees . ··American quality tends to be ver y good ... he said. "The * * * perception of !>hoddy American quality 1s a uniquely American perception," Nevin added, citing airplane!>, computer technology and weapons systems as ex- am pies of U.S. products t hat are in demand around the world. Leek also said the perception of poor quality is important. '·Whether it's true or not becomes so mew h at im · material," he said. Leck !>aid that foreign manufacturers have "don e a wonderful JOb tn the past 15 yea rs" of making their products last longer "They have mad e quality part of the management woodwork ·' U S . compan ies have not. "American man age- m ent, .. Leek said. "became too obsessed with the profit and loss statement " * * * in quality • which represents the more than 4,000 hourly employees al the General Motors assembly plant in Tarrytown. N.Y .. agreed. "lf you like what you're doing, then you perform better," said Calore. "There are frustrations built into any job." "You can 'l take out those frustrations by hitting your supervisor , he said. so you strike hack al the product "Retaliation 1s human nature," added Calore Calore said m ost of those problems have been eliminated at the Tarrytown plant, thanks to the "Quality of Work Life" pro gram started there by General Motors in the ear ly 1970s The Calorc, who has been presi· dent of the local since 1955, said both managem ent and union ideas have changed. "l n the old days, we main - ta ined an antagonistic attitude toward management," he said , adding that antagonism was the only way to gel a point across. Today, he said. "if there's a problem, we resolve it." An employee knows that "if he does good work. he gets recognition." There 1s some resemblance between lhe General Motors pro- gram and Japanese stress on quality Japanese workers often are or ganized into "q u ality circles ," teams of men and women who are given direct 'Attitudes a r e caught , not taught. It's become par t of our cu ltur e to settle for something less than per/ ection.' program has s ince been ex· panded to other General Motors plants and similar efforts are under way in a variety of in· duslries. The program is designed to give workers the sense of fair· ness and responsibility which Ms . Greenwa ld said today's employees w a nt . When p ro · cedures are Introduced, workers are asked th eir o pinJons. They are not told how long ll will lake to perform a p art icular job ; they are asked. "The oper ator is the pro," said Tom Pilkington , personnel director at the plant. "Ninety- nine-polnt-eight percent or the people wan t to do the job and do ll right ... Wo rker s at th e T a rrytown plant spend three days ln train· ing session s r e lated to lhe · •Quallty of Work Life" p ro· 1r am. "The)''re subjected to the un· ion and management o rganlza· lions, to the process of d eclslona. to exercises on h ow to 1et In· volved," Pilkington said. Pllkinaton and Calore aald the prog ram la wo rkln 1 . The number of outata.odlnC .orller 1rlevances ba d dropped from sever aJ thousand to about 50. Casual absenteeism I• down responsibility for what they pro- duce. But Calore said there is a dif. ference. "J apanese industry is into qua lity control. They're " not in- to qu ality of work life." He admitted that J apan ese workers have a total sense of commitment that is lacking in m any American workers. "But that doesn 'l say they can build a better auto mobile," Calo re said. "The American worker is better . He's allowed to think for himself." IRS 'drags feet' on probing cheats . WASJONGTON (AP>-ThelG· te rnal Revenue Service Is wut· Ing time and money b y not brinC· lng lawyers Into lnvestigaUons of tax cheats soon enough , the General Accounting Office his lold the Joint House-Senate Com · m lttceonTaxation. A GAO atudy concluded thlt m a ny tax ca.sea whlch JBS Or Juatlcc De partment lawyet• decline to prosecute "contaln le1a1 d ficleocles which could have been detected durtn1 u,. in· v U1atJv proceu." I J f I I I 1 • • t ~ • J i t , ---~--_... ....... .._...,_. ........... ..,.. ...... ~ .......................................................................................................... .. .. . . . ' . .. I 82 s Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, M y Hi, 1981 I. I I ' RO-\ST 1 HE COAST: Loguna Beach city orfil·1·1ls took <'Onsaderabl(• gas this week when th1•y ap1>t'iHt•d befort' an Orange County govern- m ent :1rnt on quf'sllons of annexation and in· flut>nc<.• Tht• t'Ount.v body. known as the Local Agen· cy Format10n Com m ass ion, or LAFCO for short. didn't st'l'lll tuo happy with Laguna city in· Clu1:nce tn l.agun<1 Canyon, or UPon a Laguna annf'xat1on uf South Laguna, or 011 Laguna influ('nct' m l\hso Can von In fact I.<\ FCO r 0 l' moved a future develop· ment art•a 111 l.a~una Canyon from the city's <1rea of mfllwm·E' l"J Tll \T ors< USSION, county Supervisor Bruu· 't•sla11d1 "'ho sits as a commissioner, ask<'d L.1~:ut1J uffi<'ii.lls. "'When was the last rn.1d atu'"" you folk~ s upported to get people fr111t1 inland Orange .. County down to the twar h·1·· "'""' ttwr,.·s an interesting question. It could t•\ 1•11 pa om pt an op(•n letter from coastal people 111 ~1 r '\11·..,t.111d1· th.Jt would go something like • lh1' l>l',11 lln1n· \\•• 1•'.td Ht llw papers how you think , n.c •.ti ''""""' d1111 I do rnu<'h to h!.'lp your inland d1 .1r1ll f11lk , 110111 Orangt• <1nd Santa Ana to get t1• th1• lw•:11 h You ,,:11tta Jolla nt:rve, fella. .. "\'Ol I\ 'lO\\. Wt: COULD just take that ,11111 .. 11·1r1.1rl.. .. r \ours and turn it around, ask· 1111• ho" ,:rrnll'h \<HJ -.u pervasorc, support those h1•:11·ta~111 rs' 1111" man} roads have YOU \\ 1d1•111 d "' l1111lt tu thl' hcal•h"' \nd th< n ,1l!<.11n how m uch support does 0 1.1111!1· <'1111n1~ J!'""rnrnent offer to the ('ct"' 11111• .1111 r H1u v1· deluged the shoreline \\ 11 !1 .tit !1111,1 \1~1t111 ~. 111...n, 111 s t,Jl-.t l.J..:una Heach for exam- pit· \lti·1 .Ill 1lw 1nl.1nd \ t~itors have impacted th1· lo\\'1 1111 o1 hut ..,ummer 's day, packing the :\1 ;11n II ·.11 h l':irl.: that Laguna taxpayers built r111 llll'm lilt' 111~ 1t11•n spl'nds $211,123 per year 1111 l1f1·111,11 ct :0-1 r'1n·s lo keep thrm all from d r 111' 1111111 \rut """ 1111wh dot'" Orange County gov- ,.1111•11·111 I rd 111 111 ·.u ppurt that lifeguard u1icovers ~ \:'\ .111--.1·· \I' \\an:• C'arlt·r didn 't know 1 hi· rtt:i11 v It•> :111! h1· h.id tour ton\ 1ct1ons for dr1111~ tl11 \1111! ,w111,1!h \\,1~ ;1 "\anta Clara Countv 111<f~· tl11111i: •• n •1111h•r' ''' 1·r 111' f'">L1r,:..at1on of fraud an all11h,.l 11•1•11'.1•n prr11•r,1111-. So ,, 111•11 :->1um" ·iii \I unic1pal rourt Judge ,J.11111 •!. . ,,.,\,11 I 1'• c·:ir 11• 111 \Jr.., Carter with a c·111art 111d•·11111111111~111111 to ll\l' m" an alcohol re co' 1·1 h1111w 1111 :-.1' 111n11th" -.ht• told him he could prl'lt rul 111 ll\r' thr·r · 11 ti!' ri.11<1 the monthly room and h 1 11 d '"'' ol S mo . ..,t '""art said \lth1111~11 \las ( olllt•r originally dented that .,111· h 1<1 l11·d .tl><11Jt l1•ll111g Stev.art he could cheat on t h1· 11rd1·r. '-Ill' l.111 r .uim1tlt'd the d1shonestv I d1dri 1 111· 111 ~t·t his money." said -Mrs Ca11 1•1, \\Ito run" th1· :ilc·ohol n•co,·cry center New U t1t'l"l1C111!'> lwz t• I ft•lt \ l'n' sorrv for ham, more thu11 fut all\hody l'lsc. l promise you ·· No l'l1;trgt•s hti vt· been fil ed. An account of the 1urlg .. ·s 11111IJ(' "us publ1 -;hed in the Peninsula Timi·., Trthum· Sit•\\ .111 ~;11!1 ht• arranged lo go undercover ;1rtPr Ill' tw;arrl rurnnrs questioning the reliability of t lw .1k11hol rt c·o' 1•rv programs used instead of Jillltnl! lo.\ "lllTII' JUdJ!f'~ St<·w.irl. "ho <'i.lllNJ his discovery "a major (1 aud 111 ttw court:-. of th1~ county." said he wants 11w r111mt\ lo Ii.lunch an investigation into the kinds of :ll1·oli11I r1·c·oH•n programs Judges are us ing If I "''re \\h;1t I told Mrs Carter I was a fourth 1 rft·111l<:r drunk drl\l'r I would be out dravuw <md kalltng m~ st·lf or -.omebody else on the road · ht• -.aid It ~ rl'ally ugly ·· Stev.<1rt made Jn appointment with New D1 recl11ms aftl'r ohlammg an order from Judge M1r1il m Wolff that John Stewart" must live in an alcohol n .•c'OH·ry prngram for s ix months. Stewart sJ1d \\-hen he arnved at New Direc- tions anrl f1·1µncd symptoms of alcohol withdrawal Friday na gltt. Mrs Carll'r told him he could go homC' if ht· paicl llw S.100 per month for room and board ShC' also !'oat<! shf' would tell Judge Wolff he actually \\'i.11' li ving thl·r1• 1f the Judge inquired, Stewart s<1i<I Sht• ~ .. Jl(j sht• "cwld eall him if Judge Wolff in- d1 cuted ... tw \\o:l!-. rom rn~ lo visit. "You t•an gt•t down here faster than she (the 1udi::t.'1 rnn ·· St1:warl saad she told him. Mrs rarll•r told a reporter that the Stewart in- cadl'nl was thl' firs t lame s he had agreed to such a scheme. althouflh the Judge said she told him dif- ferently When asked if she had committed a fraud. she n•plied, "With this man (Stewart) l di<I .. Stl'warl smcl Mrs Carter also told him about ano1 her man \\ho laved with has family in San Franci"ro and would drive to New Directions on weekends to pay hi' $75 per week Mrs Carh•r st11d she reported to the court CA>lwnbia water ·· .: .. for. MX opposed ..... "' SALEM, Ore. <AP> Oregon Gov. Vic Atiyeh '• hu said he would oppose any effort.a to divert ·~:~ •• Colum bia River water to Nevada for the proposed ::: MX mlKiille project. ~ "I don 'l wnnt to be dramatic about thla," he vs',, •. said. "I'm absolutely adamant that nobody's 1oin1 1 • ;to get Columbia River watn." '1 • Th Nevada Senate haa introduced a rnolu· "· tlon uritng the fc:-dcrcll covemment to tap Pacltic Northwest waler ll the proJttt is approved. Pentaaon offlcuals estimate that 23,000 acre· loct of water per year would be needed to con· 1truct 4,600 missile ahellera across Utab and •• 1. Nevada. Another 13.000 acre-reet a year would be needed to support nt'w commwuUa aud support p«>rsonncl for lht ay tem. ' Nevada Teen gets jail term bars drug in terror vandalism devices MARTINEZ {AP> -A Hercules an coMecUon with the vandallam In service? Why, a great bag $35,000 ··Oh, county government might have flipped a couple of more coins Laguna's way had your board agreed to have the city guard the coun- ty's southern beaches. ·•out no. When it came to that, you went out a nd hired a gu~gle of Rent A-Guards. Swell. ·'Elsewhere on the coast. the impact of in- landers from your district even gets worse. Newport Beach spends $1.l million a year to try to keep them a ll alive. Your great county benevolence kicks in $123,000 (maybe) this year. "HUNTINGTON BEACH cit> lifeguard services cost S403.683 for the local taxpayer:s The county gives $61.190- "0h yeah, sure, Huntington city also gets another $61,000 m county crush because it guards 00 Inland vsSttors $Ure Leave a lot on the beach. Zeke " thf' rounly's Sunset Beach You ever see that lOO on a sunny Sunday, Bruce? ··And after all the inland voters of your dis tnct depart the coas tal beaches late Sunday as tht.• sun s mks s lowly an the West. we have all ~hose re minders of their happy visit · Stn.•el.!, and beaches are littered with beer cans, hotdog wrapµer'>. e mpty wane bottles and sandw1t'h leftovers AND THE COASTAL. taxpayers get to pay and pay and pay for those cleanup chores. "Just reml!mher, Bruce, you're operating from a pretty shaky Harl of Disintegr ation up there m the County Seat You shouldn't be the guy tr.van~ to ::.hake anybody else's cage. .. AJI Our Love · • drunk 'fraud' three tame-; that tht· man was h vmg at New Direc- l11>ns but s;111I h1• w<1s not li\'mg there after he failed to pa~ Stl•wart said 'Tm sorn Jbout lh&!-o, Mrs Cart('r said of the '>tc" art tnl'adc nt ""It "-tll OC\'C'r happen again It \'<I" a had lc-..,on NOW In IAVINE CARSON CITY, Nev <AP > A controversial measure barrln& "'head s h ops" from selling roach clips, bongs, co calne spoon s , water pipes a nd other drug paraphernalia has been sig n e d Into law by Nevada Gov. Bob List. The Republican gov· ernor maintained Thurs- day that th e law , modeled after legislation proposed by federal drug enforcement authorities, would s tand up to a con· stitutionuJ test As ke d what might happen to "head s hops " which sell dope pipes a nd othe r drug paraphernalia , La s t added that "m aybe th ey 'll get anl o som e thing more con structive .. The governor also s aid he didn't think other I bus inesses, s u c h as tobacco pipe m anufac I turers, would be hurt. I "The bill is drafted I hopefuJly in s uch a way that an individual who is I inclined lo sm oke re~­ ular tobacco will s till be abl e l o procur e ne cessary paraphernalia ... La s t quipped The prime sponsor of the bill was Las Vegas A ss e mbl y man J a n Stewart. a Democrat. who introduced the plan at the request of the C l ark Co unt y M etr opolita n P olice Department Am o n~ it ems spec1f1cally o utlawe d are s uc h drug c ulture esot eri ca · a s water , ··carburetor," c ha mber, elec tric, air-driven . I b o n g and ace pipes: s moking masks: roach I clips, cocaine s poons. 1 and '"chillers .. But the law also in· el udes m or e general descriptions o f drug-1 related items aimed al including all types of products in the ban. The law takes effect am mediately. m e aning merchants offering such items for sale must im mediately dispose of the products HERITAGE HOME CENTER • Televlalon • Vecuunr Cleanera • Sewing Machin•• WE NOW HAVE A Maior Appliance _Repair Service •WASHERS• DRYERS •REFRIGERATORS• ETC. "IRVINE T.V. CllM SHCIAUSTS SERVICE SPECIAL· (THll Ofn" QOOD TH"U MAY J1, 1M1) T.V. SERVICE CALL INCLUDES: TRIP TO HOME-INSPECTION OF SET ESTIMATE OF REPAIRS R99uler ;:: t-750 •22.50 AO ...,. , I ONN1 DAYIA WIU I • teen-ager was fined and sentenced lo the west county area. The cues of jail after he pleaded guilty in connec-three juveniles arrested ln the lnci· lion with t e rrori s t acts that dents were turned over lo JuvenJle frightened blacks in western Contra Court Costa County last year. The victims and other area resi- Scott J Hadsell was sentenced t.o dents contended the acts were six months in the county Jail without motivated by the Ku Klux KJan, but parole, fined Sl,000 and ordered not Contra Costa s heriff's omciaJs con- to use or possess any alcoholic tend youth gangs were behind the beverages during a three-year proba-acts. lion period. Hadsell pleaded guilty to felony Sherm Richard Rainey said the vandalis m dunng a pretrial hearing vandalism in cidents resulted from a in Contra Costa Superior Court to the Nov. 8 fight between white and black charge that he drove his car through gangs in Tara Hills in which a 15. the li ving room wall of the home of year-old white youth was hit in' the Olis and Geraldine Ireland. race Wlth a tire iron. The lrelands live in Tara Hills, the Rainey said the beaten youth's scene of a series of terrorist acts friends, who vowed to seek revenge, ranging from egg throwing to arson mist akenly thought a black youth last November a nd Dece mber. charged in the beating lived in the Hadsell was the only aduJt arrested Tara Hills area. ,.,, '" n., ,,, , ••• ,,. • • ae A&E RV AWNINGS Call us and you II see what we mean Free tnstallatron at your home All srzes and prices available • All work guorcmfffd! • SuvlnCJ Cali fornia RV parils since 1975. See us for woven woods. enclosures. storage pods and leveling svstems "One Call And You're Covered" 15998 Mariner Drive Huntington Beach , ----12 I lJ 592-2193 (71 41 847-0424 .ROTHE The curtain rises and the show begins. Come. Meet the foremost exponent of the almost forgotten art of mezzottnt. G.fl. Rothe. in a rare personal appearance. When you meet Rothe. y.ou U have the opportunity to acquire her masterful commemorative edition poster ... a brllllant find indeed. And Rothe's five extraordinary new mezzotlnts. as well as a large selection of her most recent creations. will also be available for your acqulsttlon. Rothe. The master. In person ... exclusively at the Upstairs Gallery. Meet Rothe BEVERLY HILLS f'rtday. May 15th, 710 9 p.m. LONG BEACH Saturday, Mii.)' 16th, l to 4 p.m. ORANOF. COUNTY Sundoy, May 17th, 2 to 4 p.m. aaVSa.&.T 111&.l.I 2'1'5 So I.a l'lrntl(• Ol~d I I bl(l('k So o(Wll1htrf'I 121316!19 6226 &.O"O a SACll 38llO Cherry Avr 12131 429 101() OaAJllOSCOVJITT South C'O .. I PIU• 1Nu1 10 011ll()(k .. I 17141$49·911H Ruy lht' llmf'lruon llMf' .. wllh our ron~f'nltnl lnw lnlf'fttl 1um~ Lon11 Ot'ach loforlhrtdltf' 81111 Rf'Vftly Hiit• OfWfl 'lo'rttnr~ay thru Sund•)' 10 to & Ano Pina. Tut day thru •tu• •Y 9''° lo 0 :\<> Ota1111t Counl) Monday 1hru rr1d41,y 10 to 9. S11urday 10 to O. Sunday 12 to :I • ' ... ---.... 0 • 0 ••• so ass 0 cue a a '. . .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 •• Agricultural 'club' becoming less exclusive 11 countries now import $24 billion JAPAN worth of U.S. farm commodities yearly WASHJNGTON (AP) The Agric ulture Department says "inflation and rising d emand continue lo broaden mem· bershlp in the once·exclusive" list of countries that import more than $1 billion worth or U .S. farm commodities each year. "A decade ago the sole do- main of Japan, the billion dollar markets for US. farm products now inc l ude 11 nations . representing a cross·section of the world marketplace." accord· ing to a new report by the de· partment's Foreign Agricultural Service. Together. the 11 accounted for $24 billion of the $41.3 billion worth or U.S . agricultural ex· ports in calendar 1980." The a nalysis was included in ·'F o r e ig n Agr i culture," a monthly publication of the agency. Some of the most dramatic gains in exports went to relative newcomers in the rankings, the report said THE FIGURES W ERE not adju sted for transshipments or U.S commodities, meaning that some countries might have im· po rted some product s for resale or deliver y to others. a nd grain sorghum were the leading items . THE NETHERLANDS Sales totaled $3.4 billion . a 30 percent increase from 1979 But an estimated $1.1 billion of that was transshipped to other coun· tries. Soybeans. feed grains, soy· bean cake and meal, corn, other oilseeds, wheat and flour were top commodities. MEXICO Exports to Mexico, a t $2.5 billion, were up 143 percent as the country continued to suffer from a two .year drought. The top commodities were corn, grain sor gh um and soy· beans, but also included signifi· cant amounts of beans, sugar. wheal and other oilseeds. CHJNA The agricultural ''trade door" opened wider, with exports total· ing $2.2 billion, up 123 pe rcent from 1979. Bad weather reduced harvests last year, contributing to demands. rn most demand we re wheat, cotton, corn. s oybeans and soy· bean oil CANADA llistorically, a steady U S. trading partner , farm exports to Canada last year totaled Sl.85 billion, up 12 p ercent. $1.05 Billion ··Mexico shot from ninth .. in 1979 to No 3 las t year as s h.ip m ents there soared 143 percent tfl $2.5 billion," t he report said .. Exports lo China rose 123 per· cent to $2.2 billion, giving fourth place to a country that as late as 1977 received virtually no U.S. fa rm products." Among the 11, only the Soviet Union took less than in 1979 reflecting the partial embargo of U .S grain shipments which was imposed Jan. 4, 1980, and was removed last month. The leading commodities were vegetables. sugar. fres h fruit, soybeans, fruit Juices and cot· ton WEST GERMANY Shipments to West Germany rose 30 percent to $1 .83 billion an 1980, following slight d eclines the previous two years. Counting commod i ti es that were transs h ipped from The Neth erlands and othe r coun tries, the U.S. total was about S2. 7 billion. Ko r ean econom y a nd p oor ha rvests which forced large r food purchases. The items of highest value in· eluded cotton , wheat and flour, corn, n ee and soybeans. 2 percent in calendar 1980 to nearly $1.1 billion. The m ost valuable com modities were corn. soybeans. cotton, wheat and flour ments for virtually a ll of 1980, the Soviet Union's imports of Am e rican farm commodities dropped to $1.05 billio n, a decline or 63 percent Crom $2.8 bi Ilion in 1979. See ley Lodwi c k and th e Hungarian deputy minister of agriculture, lmre Kovacs Lodwick said the ag reement , signed Wednesd ay, calls for the lwo countries to consult regular· ly on lheir agricultural outlook and on ways lo expand trade. The billion dollar markets for U.S. farm commodities in 1980 we re : SPAIN Despite a bumper harvest of its o wn. Spuin imported Sl.13 billion worth of U .S . com · modities. a n increase of 21 per· cent from calendar 1979. ITALY D esp i te a n econo m ic s lowd own and generally good crops of its own, Italy took Sl.09 billi on worth o f US. com· modities, an incr ease or 9 per· cent from 1979. Even so. t he leadin g com · modit ies last year were com, wheat and soybean s T h e agreement also calls for increased joint resea rch and ex- c h anges by r esearc hers , spec ialis t s an d sc i e ntific trainees. • • • JAPAN St ill the largest single·country market by far, Japan imported $6.1 billion worth of products last year. up 16 percent Crom 1979. partly because of the "worst growin g season in 26 years" for Japanese farmers. Soybeans, soybean cake and meal, tobacco. corn. nuts and reed were the leaders. SOUTH KOREA Exports jumped 25 percent lo $1 .8 billion last year , mainly because o f a laggi n g South Among the leading purchases were soybean s. corn, g r ain sorghum, tobacco, cotto n and wheat Leading items were corn. soy. beans, soybean cake and meal, wheat and flour. tobacco and cotton . SOVIET UNION The Agriculture Department r evealed an agreement has been s igned be twee n the U nite d States a nd Hungary calling for expanded agricultura l trade and cooperation in science a nd technology Officials s aid t he agreement ·expands ear lier coope rative ar- rangement s establis h e d in Budapest in 1979 and a n ex chan ge program s igned in Washington. 0 .C .. also m 1979." Corn. soybeans. wheat, cotton TAJWAN Saddled with a pa rtial U.S Farm exports to Taiwan rose ~_!largo of wheat and corn s hJP· I t wa s sig n e d by U n d e r secrelary of Agriculture P UBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE N·72372 ---NSl-NOTICE OF DEATH OF NOTICEOHRUSTU'SSALE "~C::,.~~!:~!.':::S -----1 P UBLIC NOTICE _ NSl-l'ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT fllCTITIOUS IUSINESS NS.11$65 FICTITIOUS IUSINE U FICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMINT STATEMENT OF AaANOONMENT NAMl STATEMENT HAMe STATEMENT JOHN C. ROSS ANO OF A"i~~~ The ro11ow1n9 persons ••• e101n9 Tn• followlno P•''°"' •t• dolnQ tH.alner.s •-' Tne fotl-1"9 "*"°" I> d01n9 """ OF USE OF f nt lo1tow1n9 pot\on• are do>n9 The fotl-tne person\ ere dOln9 nan t• "ICTI TIOUS aUSINESS NAME bu .. nen M bullnou aJ P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 . On J...,. t , ltll al 11'00 A M , TUia ou11rwn .. MINISTER ESTATE NO. IMuranu-Tnn.I C..,,.,_.y,•\duly !>OUTH COAST OEU, lOJl !.GUiii -•nl..:I TrvstM ""°"' •nd purwanl Brl .. ol. eo. .. Mew, C..lllornte •»V SOU TH COAST ST Al l()NERS COM PAHY, :U'IO C.odillac Avtn"41, Co•I• Mow. C•lllornta •»» THE l(LIP JOI NT, .. lO Harbor Tllo lotlowl119 per-havt aban· FOTOPROOF, lOS Irvine Avo 'C", AMBURGEY ENTERPRISES, Blvd , Cost.I Mew, CA Cloned ltw YW of llW flclltio"' bu~lntts Coile Mow CA "UI JOJ9 CaroD H•wPo•I B .. <h. CA A· 108690 to Dffd Of Trusl recorcled Fobrwry 1, B•y<o, Inc . • C•llforn•• corPOt• Karon EllUl»lh SI-. t7X> Por• "•mt THE ESC.APAOE LOUNGE el Jal\o Scoll H•rvollo, 14SS l•••ne Ave 92'21 NtwP0'1 •21M, NewPon lloa<ll, o 111 Eau 1mperfe1 Hl911wey, l.a Habra, "C ·, '""1• MOW, CA '2•7I I Samuel Ambu•f"Y JOl• Carot, T 0 a I I h e I r s • ""· .. IMI. Ho. IOS7. In -uon. lton .•• Ea91e Point. Irvine, CA 9211• benefi ciar ies, c red itors pa" m of Ottk1a1 Recore!•'" 111o of. T111. bullrwn •• conduc~d o, • c0t S A C Olfott Pr odU< h . In< , • Calllornta <OtPOr•Uon, JWO C~llla< Av•nu•, C.O.l• Mc"M, C••Horn1a •162' flus butln••" I\ conduc led by • cor por11•on 91660 CallfornlaQJI A:.·"~.•.• c':.i:=r~·~:~~ 1'"111 NewPOrl Buell, CA 92'2' Tnls DU~f'ie\\ Is conOU<:ted by .n '" Thf fl<t1tlous. b-..sln•1s n_.m c rt rnis D~\tM\\ 1, conou<1f'<I ., • Sn1rlty E•U•bllP'I Amburgey, lOl4 and contingent creditors of g~,fi~~=~ Reccwc1er °'or-Po••ttonB•y<o, ir.c dlVIClu•I ltrred lo abovo ..... lllld 1n County 01\ I Qene••I parlno .. h•p y cu ob. NewPQrl Bea<n, CA '12Ufo l(aren E SIOM June 8, 1979 Jane Scoll H•rlrllle Thi\ bullneu" conclu(lld Dy an In~ John c. Ross and persons WILL 5ELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION Ziad Bayu. Prttldtnl who may be otherwise In· TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, Thi• •l•tomenl .... '""' wllll ,,,. te rested in the w ill a nd/or ~~~~'iR;5 CH.!CK o~ CERTIFIED ~~~~:,V31~11~~ of oran99 Counly on estate : •••"" ~!. ~..:'u~;:: ~1.~~ ~~ ~m•» s A COfllc• Produ<:h, Inc Peter 0 . Sloan, S<Kretary Tlll1 11111""*'1 we• lllod wllll Ille MTS K. Ir><, JS21 S.9o1mort, Hun· I rno• "•lt,.,..nl w•> ltltO wllh lhe dlvldu•I CouftlV Cler k or Or AnQe C.Oun1v on lln91on Bff<;h, CA 926"1 Samutl Ambu•QeY Thi! Sl•temenl ..,., lilld with 1111 County Clor-or OrAnoe County on Aprll IT. l"I April•, 1 .. 1 Peul J. Rl•llle, SU Norlll Toti& Hill, Cou~•r, C~r' ol O•en9t1 County OI\ Thi\ \1411emenl w•\ lllld wlln Ille "IS-Sen Dimes, CA '11173 Apr · 1 1 "U.otll C,o..n1, Clerk ol Oran90 Counly on A petition has been flied 1 ... Sou111 1ran1 enirance 10 111o 010 Publl•flod Or-Cont Da11, Pllo1, l'l .. UJ Publlsflod Oran9t c::oa•• Deily Pllol, Pj1D;~":,! o;~.~~: Dt11Y1~;i ~Is :;:rinns was concru<wd by • Publlsrwo 0ren99 CoHI Dally P1101, April?•,'"' ,.,.1141 Apr ' Y • ' ' pa nor l(::;,,.ln J Gunn Apttl 24, Me1..2.: I. ~I 1190•• Pubrl>,..d Or•n9• Cou l Dellv b 111 0 • I d Oren90 co...nty COUrtllo<AM located '" Aprll 71. Mev s •7, 19, 1'111 , .. , .. , Y e n e an' e s an 111e 100 11oc11 o1 wnt s.n1a An• B1vc1. Colonel Sel im Herr ing uormerty we.1 •111 su, Sant• An•. Franklin in the Superior C•lllornle. •II rl9'1\, 1111• and ll'tlernl Court of Orange County conveyed to -now held by II unctor Aprll 21, M<oy S, 12 19, l"I 1"3-81 PUBLIC NOTICE Thi\ ste1emon1 wn llltO wllll 111& PUBLIC NOTICE Piiot, MAY t, t. IS. t2. 1"91 ~ .. , Co..nl y Clerk Of Or.,.,cie Counly ""May P UBLIC NOTICE MICI l>..cr Of Tnill In UM pr-My reques t ing that I Ilene 111uetec1 In said county ancr SI••• FICT1T1ous au11Ness Daniels, a ka Colonel Selim CleKr•-n NAME STATEMENT Herring Franklin be ap· LOI M, Tract Ho. 102. tn ,,,. Clly of Tllo tollowlno P•rsorn .,. dOln9 HowC>Orl &ee<h, County of 0r .. cie. Duslnns •• P 0 i n t e d a S Per S 0 n a I Slaw of C.llfornlo, as per mep re· l(HAPP COLOUR, 111H Slly Par-r e pre Sent a ti Ve t 0 a d · coroed In 8-m P99H 46 10 '° In· Cir< lo, lrvono. Catlfornla t17U minister the estate Of John <lwlve of mlteoUaneo<n lnePS. Int ... of Plllllip Edward l(n-. UOJ Bl.,. C . Ross, Cost a M esa. llu or u.. Counlv RK0tcler ot/s/ld s,, Ottw, CMCllft, G•lll0tnl• tt001 c:..in1, Wllllam AnlllOny TruJltlo, ~· P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICE Ofl S.ALE AT .-uauc AUCTION ~ICTITIOUS aUSIHESS NAME STATEMENT T II• 1o11-1119 person I• doln9 bu>• nesi•s THE SOURCE. •2' So Hart>or ~n la An•. CA '2704 Jerry A Wood, 14" ~w Or •C·J. ~nta Ana CA 91101 Tiii\ """,...' ll conducted by •n In dlYldU•f Jtrry A Wood S, , .. , I F·llUJI PYbll'11td O•-c ..... Dally Pllol, ,,.., 1 •s. n tt. 1"91 11es .. 1 P UBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS aUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The foll-•"9 person I• ctoln9 butl· "•" ., California (under the In· E•<•PI ... oil, oil r!Qllls. mlnoralS, Loma. Temple City, C..llfornl• '"'° dependent Administration m1,,.ra1 r1gr,11, na1ura1 9n r1911u Md T1111 r>u11nou ts conC1u<1oe1 11, • of Estates Act). The peti· 01111r hydre><erbOtls by .. r.etsorver o•nera1 part/IOr\lltp name k-\NI may lie wllllln or un-l>Nlllp E l(n-t ion iS set for hearing in Clor H id laftd, l09olllor will! 1110 Th11 It.II-I ••• fllecl wllll 1 ... Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic perpelwl r'9'>1 of do-1111"9. mlnl"9. ••· Co..n1, c .. ,.. of Or-oe County Oii Moy Center Drive West, Santa p1or1"9 --r•ll"9 111ort>1or ancr '· '"1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11\el al t 00 AM. on Jl#W I, 1 .. 1, ORANGE COAST PLASTIC MOLDING, INC wlll <ondU<I a putilk eutUOft to satisfy 1,..lr llan In trw var-molds uMCI lo proclv<• pl•tl< ,..ru f0t llM <-rue:· lion of a l!wnlelltlor -.er by DAYCO, INC TM .... wlll be u nd1Kttcl •I ISO Was t 11111 Street, Costa M•••, Calllornla. Otltd May 12, 1te1 T1111 \lalemenl wH hied wllll Ille Counly Clerk of Or An" County on Aprll 21, "" BEST PROPERTIES & BEST BUS INESS INVESTMENTS. JUI fll6061t No••d• AYtl\U~ Co•ta Mu a ORANGE COAST PLASTIC MOl.OING, IHC P11bll1flod 0.-COll\1 O•lly P1101, Calllorn1e .,.,. Aprll 24,/o1Wtyl,l,IS,l"I IMlll Ml<llU I Youn9 Chung, l361 . s1orln9 ln -removlll91twsemefrom "UIJtl Ana. California 92701 on Mid l•nO or AnY other land, lnclvcllft9 Pullll•hed 0rAn(IO Coa•I Dally Pllol, June J, 1981at9:30 a .m. Ille rl9ht lowl>l111tocll or CllrKtioMlly M•y S, 12, lt,1', 1'111 aitl .. I IF YOU OBJECT to the e1r111 encr ml,,. trom •-ot,..r then ti f th t•t• tllO .. lloritlnellow descrl-. oil or OH gr an ng 0 e pe I IOn, wells, 1..,,,.11 -.,._Its Into, tllr0V9" PUBLIC NOTICE P11bll\lled Or-Coe.sl 0.lly PllOt, Mn U. '"' m.s.11 PUBLIC NOTICE YOU ShOUld either appear Or atrOM lht lllbl<w1eco of Ille l- at the hearing and sta te ,..relnabove clftcr•-•ncl 10 t>ottom ~•CTmousauSINEH F~c~~~!:~~·:::s your objec t lons or f II e ~~~r.c1·:.::::~=•s0;n0°~119.'.:!0:.:!!~ NAME STATEMENT Tllo ro11owt119 pe"°" 11 doln9 ""•' written objections with the •nd be,,..,,. cw bey-t,.. .,.10r1or Tiie 1011-11111 person Is C10ln9 111111 nen es· COUrt before the hearing. limits llWroof, -lo redrtll, rat11n,,.1, nus as HEW DAY ENTERPRISES, 2110 A Your appea rance may be :!~':~1.m:~;·•;~,~~!~·,,":11e~1n••"" M•r::;.~1~.H A~~!~~~~~·M~ ~~~·,..A .... H11nun01on BM<:ll, CA In person or by your a t· wlltlOUI "-tvor '"" rl9'1t to drll~· Callfornlamu. Eerie P ... 1 ~. 2110.A Oel•w••• torney. mine, sloro, .~plore •ncl OIHtral~ P R 1 s c 1 L L A A L o E N Ave., H...ntlflQ1on lloa<ll, CA '12..e. I F y 0 U A R E A 1nroug11 tr.. surface Ot UM u-r 500 M<MUATRY, JOI> M<l r9,.rlle Avenue, Tiii• buslnfts Is c-uc•CI by.,, In· fMI or II• SUOIUrleco or Ille C0tone del Mor, Calllornl• t:lt2.S. dlvlC111al c RE D lTOR or a cont-IHI of,,,. wl>Surfa<• of Hid°': 500 Tiiis bullneu Is <Onduct ed by . EartePeul~ ingent creditor of the de· reMrvld In 111o...., recor-April~' 11m111c1 ~"':,?"'P· Tii is slotrnem.nt wet "'"" w1t11 ,,.. Ceased, YOU must file your ~ll In IOOI< IOW P-'"· Ottlclai Thi> >lllt:..:.~'!ur:r.:ci Willi Ille ~:~~·: •• ~!:~ ol Oranoe Coullly Oft claim wl~h the court or ~:;:.:., ... record ownar: CHRIST co ... n1y Cl•r-or Or anoo Counly"" "llalff. ~u1'" present 1t to personal 0 PEYKOFF AHO FLORENCE c. Aprll24,l"I P1111tl.-OrW>Q9 C011~t oa11vP11ot, P UBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS IUSINUS NAME STATEMENT Tllo foll-1119 per_, I• CIOtno tw•I "•'• ., DISCOVERY SUMMER SCHOOL, 412 Hardlno SI., N•wPofl Bea<h, CA 97461 Terry Sl\Onnon Covlllo, 417 HarCll119, Newport lee<ll, CA,, .. ,, This twllneu Is condu<lod by en In· dlVICIYal. Terry $/\Annon Covlllt Thh tlelemenl WH lllecl wllll tllt Co11nly Cieri< on April 21, 1"91 .. l .. 10J Publl""9CI 0rAn99 Coail Delly Pilol, Apr II 1'. May 1, 1. IS, ,,.1 1m e1 PUBLIC NOTICE representative appointed l'IYKOl'I'. 11u.oonc1 end wife. u Publls11tc1 Or~ eoa11 oau:'..~~~ M•v 1• IS, 22• 29• 1"1 21""11 by the court within four Jo~r!.1:=s-eddreu ancr ot!M• <om· Aprll H. Moy s.12." '"' ttJ1 ... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE "~~~!:~:,.•:::s months from the date of mon 0011grw110n. 11 .,,.,. o1 t11e , .. , ____ rne 1o11-1n9 '""_,' .,, c1o1ng first Issuance of letters a s. ,,_,..Ya.er•-e11ow 11 "'"llO"eCI 1>u.s1nen•s provided 1n Sect ion 700 of 10 be: 11 "°""Loma,~ eoac11, PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTIT1ouseuS1NESS OCEAN CHARTERS, 1 Corporal• th e Probate Cod e ~f C•i::~ Trustae ctlKl••m• s 1 Tr.• fot~.=.!1.!!!!,~~:!1119 ttu.s1· P•~:;,::'=.~.~·~ 1,1 •. California. The l ime for eny llN&ellty lor ..... lncON'OCllWH of ~:.c:,:.~~!~ ... ': .. :s ftU.SOS Hewp0M leadl,CA'1tt0 flllng claims w ill not ex· lM Sl.-t ....... -0--'°"'"'°" Tiie fotlOwlno petlOftS •r• CIOlnci SANORA LYONS -ARTIST, JUI'> Al•l't \., Adams, 10• Lind• ISie, Pi re prior to four months detltnetl41ft. If env. "-'tiwr.tn, OU•lnosaes Alva redo Pl•<•. HewpoM Bta<ll, HewpeM e..u.. CA t1tt0 f f S.IO MIO wlll be-· -wltllOut HEWP<>f'l MAIN 2JI E JOtll SI Celltornla.,,..I. Tii i• llullnou Is <ondu< .. d Dy an In· rom the date o the hear· '°-"' • werrenl'(, rlPfffl.,. Im C•I• MeM, CA mri ·• Saner re c.• Lyon1,. 3UI'> Alv•r-e11 .. 1d11a1. Ing noticed above. pl!M, ~ Utlo, --QJCHI, or Rober1 ""· O.wton, llU2 Matti!• Pla<e,Howporle..d\,CA 9*1 _ .. H.ACl.tmt YOU MAY EXAMINE •nc11m1>rences, to pay I,,. 1111peld Arcll,S.....AN,CA'2l'OS. Tllls!IUslnau lsc~byAn ln· Tiii• , .......... 1 was tllocr wllh 11,. th fl' k t b th Nl•n<• of ... notes MCurH by Mid Robert A ii-2Je E -SI dlvlCIYel. COVIii'( c .. rk of O•en9' ~nt'( '"' e e ep Y e court. Deed o1 Trust, ....... i1os,sa1 .... 1 ... C..t• ,,__· "'"',; " s-ec. Lyo,.. Aprll 22, 1"1 If you are interested In the (, ... ,,.. --ldeel "'selO "°'" .... Tllh .,., .......... <Oftelu<ted bV • Tiii• 11.e-I WU llled wlln llW • '1M711 estaJe, you may flle a re· ,,.nCf\1, 11 MY. under ow teNN tf Mid OOMret ...,,,_11111, co11ntv Clerk 01 or .... ga eo..nty "" P11bll11Wd ~ ... eo.11 Oelly PllOI, quest with the court to re· =•°'ot ';..~~ =~~u!~~ Tiii• ~· !,~,.., wlill 1119 Aprll u . 1"" ,,...,, 1_A_,.._11_24_._Me_,_1•_1_· 1_5• "" 1"'" celve special notice of the cree1.a1>yM1dOoodotTr..,.t. c-1y clof'kot ~enoe~r ot1M•Y P111111.-0r .. eo.stoe11,P11ot, Inventory of estate assets TM ll9Mf1<1My "'*' teld o.ed of • 1tt1 Aprll ''· Mav 1, 1, u. 1,., , .. 1 ... , PUBLIC NOTICE Htnda, C°"I• ,.,..w, California 9161• Thi\ b<nlntH .. <-U<IOCI by An In· dlvldual Ml<llMI YOU1>9 Cllunv Thi• , .. 1._.,1 was lllod with I,.. Co..nly Clerk of Or-County on Mey '· '"' ~"'"' Publl•lled Or-Coasl Dally Pllol, May S, 17, 1', 2•, 19tl 21 IMl PUBLIC NOTICE MUNICI rAL COURT OF CALIFORNIA COVHTY 0~ ORANG• HARM>RORANGECOUNTY JUOICIM. DISTRICT tUI IJUtSt,_I,. Wn-.Whr, C.llleniia tJMJ PLAINTIFF SKYWAY LEASING. I NC .. e C.lllcwl'le <«J10retl0n DEFE NDANT EMI LY ST ARK MAH. DOES l·X, INCLUSIVE SUMMONS CAIENO ...... HOTICEI You hew _,, -ci. T ... CouM ,.,,.y OKlde ac>eln•I Y0<1 without yovr belnv hMrCI vnlHJ you ,_.,., within JO Cl.tyl RHd II• lnlormallon .,.,_ II you .,,y. ID -• II• ..,,,lo of an attorney In 11111 mollor, you llW>Uld Go •o promplly to 111•1 yo11r written rt-M. II et'ly, ,.,,.., be llleel °" 11-. AVISO, U1ted IWI sldo Cl~o. El lrlllunel --O.Cldlr <Oftlr• Ud. tlft evctl-le a-. quo Ud. rftOnda <Mnlro de JO dl•J. IA• le lnofrmaclon QllO llfllO $1 Usl.l<I -· •Oll<llM 01 cenwJo oo "" •ll099do en est• .,.,,.to, '"'""• lleurlo lmmeCll•lemtftlo, d• u1a menora, w r-1te fl<tlla, SI llay a1oune, pw00 wr r99!11reoe • 11o..-. I TO THI Ol!FI NOAIH' A <1vll and of the natltlons aC· Tr11at lleretoftrt executed efld 114· ' • , ... ,.., ,.,.,.,. ..,.. • llvtl'9ll to h ~•writ!.,. p .. 11 ....... ~ C •• ... " c o u n t s a n d r e p o r t s o.c1eret1M flf 0tt11111 _.. OemllM "" .. -1119' ..... ..,.,u., itot, PUBLIC NOTICE '90TIC• o~ INTaNT <omPlelnl ,,., Mtn flled by Ille 1110111- desc rlbed In Section 1200 l•r l•I•, efl4 • wr1tta11 Hello •• Mey 1• 15• n , 29• 1"1 t1J:Mi of the Callfornla Probate :::1:.,.~!:!~'Tc!"'~ :;.:; - Code. ..,_ •t«t1e11"1e111a 11e rocer._ 111 P\JBUC NOTICE Ille <911111Y ....... llle ,.., """9'1'( Is ------------Thomas M. Wft.allng, At· 1oco9"; t .......... Hr1Y ~'"" trtCTmou1 au11HHa tornev at I ·w, -10 L•k• ..... TITLS INSU"AN C• AHO NAMllTATI MaNT r -.._ TllUIT OOMl'ANY. -Nor1t1 Melfi f ,,. fOllowlng ,_,..,. 11 tM!ng l>Ull· Forest Drive, Suite D, 11r..t. s..te AN. c.tllof'!ll• nm. nouu. LaguM Hl~!i C1tlfornla ~•: Allll: .,..,_w1111MN LAoo •NVUTMIHT c:.oMl'ANY. tJHJ, (714) S»-1211, Do .. ! Mly6, lttl u C•nptft ttl.,.lf Orlvt, H••Hrl ey JO"Kt Wl"I-.. Kii, CA t*O Published Orange Coast ..,.,. .... .._._ TllOrnt"' ~. 44 CMIY"' 1a1M11 Dally Pilot, MAy •• 9, '~ ~ ..... °" .... °'"'Delly ~Mt. Oflyt,fte-19ff(ll,CA"'60 1981 '2b1-ll MO,tl,U,tt,lttt ttlMI TilltMl-lt~IM .. y_.lft. .-~--------------------------4 .iv~. ,.,,....u. Piiot Logbook -I ·1 p·1at Candid comm1ntam• ~zclu.riwl11 in t~ II J I "'I• ........... w• "'" lltllll "" (;Ouftly C:lofll ~ Or .... ~y Oii ...,ltJl.1"1 .. , .... "'*'' ...... °'""" c:-t o.11, """· '---------------------------' Allf'll ,., Nwy I, I, IS,"'' 1 ..... 1 TM So.ltll C.11 c-cy Weter Olt-Ult ~1 .. 1 .,...., II '(0\1 ""'" IO ....... 1rtct, 11"2 Welt M,..t. Soutll 1...-. 11111 1ewsYit, 'l'Oll mut1. wltflln IO den l'ICTITIOUI eu111111r.s C•llfor11le !lee llleel .... eciplkotlOll •lier lllh -,, ·-Cll\ YOOI. HAMl.STATIMINT wltll IN t.,:.w; c.tt "9tMMI C-II .. with llllt cqurt a wrltteft r""°"N tl'lo lollowll'tO PMMll• ere 001119 mlulofl '9r ~I.Kl*' flt roclel,.,,.. to lllo COMOl•lnt. UftlOH Voll 00 to, l>ullllftt ... woler 119CH!11-.. TIIO ,rOlo<t consl•h your def.ul t will be enc~ °" ai>-MAST lltCltA" JEWELltY ANO ef1 ~ Of MllllMMI tr .. t• pllUllOft of IN p4ell'tllll -tlllt <-t OISIOH, mOt Maf't-"1 ... r Clr<lo, -• fodlltl• Mii ll*Nfl<etltM • may ffller • l~t ..-11111 'fO\I !Of l'ou,,talftVeltoy,CAft1'0L tMo•IJIUfll_.....fWt'911ett .. o•· tM rellet~ 1111,_ ~•lllt •oo s...,_ OWlttlllll .i.w.1ry ·~ .. lt&lftel_,_ .... lflAll .. C-wtllCll ttl!N '"4111 '" _..it11tNllC of • Colltornl• corpor•tlOft, 1160t ,....; clllllrlldMflflf o -~ wo .. •.t•l"9of_y.,.pr.,.r1y6' Marl•"* ltlvtr Cltelo, l't11nlol11 1tet1011 •I tM Nrt!Wrly c°""r of olM r rollt>f rtqlOOlllM 111 Ille cem YellfY,CA.'71a 0.-et T ....... ,....,.,.., 81111M.,.I plolftt. Tiii• .._.,.., 11 ~"41 bye CM· t• All to Wly; <Oflllt11cU011 ti I Otlecl Aprll J, 1• -•11011, ..... llllO Ill •eii:lflc CM9' Hlel\Wly 11.IC._.J,WKll IMISlefNll ClwlstlM frelll AllM Wey tfl the Mr111 I C- ,,....,.,, INC. ........... Ort\'O "' ... ...-,Mil IA ay .... Lfklt .... """*" "'-1411tM .......... Ortw ,_ .. ...,IY "" °"'°"' T~lt ~I •• fli.. tritll U. .. DIM Hllll Httifl l<Net, eN <Mo JOHN I' M•ILLO C-lt O.tll tf <WMte Ctwl\ty till ttntd .... ti I ,_,..,.., ..-,......... ltl'1 90ICft 911111. i. 1lf Alltll It. 19tl tWtlolll ............ ~, ti• H!lllllft91M tMcll. CA "'41 .. I ... --1yellN~hltl. (7H) ......... •w.U-OfMtl CM91 Oolly I'll«. ...... ..._.GI' .. C.-Olllly l'llM l'\llMltllM Or.,,.. C.at 0.llY PllOI. Alltll 14, ""'1'( I, I, IS, l•I 1 .... 1 IMf It, 14 IJ, ltlt ~ Mey I, I, IS, tt, 1•1 ,_,~I STATEMENT OF ACANOONMEN' OF USE 0" P UBLIC NOTICE FI CTITIOUS auSINESS NAME NOTICE OF NON·AESl'ONSl•ILIT y The loll-1"9 1>41'"""' "•"• •ban Nollet ll rwrooy 9lvtn 11\el Ille un OMd Ille u• or lh• lo<llllo..• buslneu dersl9...., wlll not .,. ,._,,.,bl• lor n~mt any Cltbt> cw llebllltlei tonlra<IA!d b' S T E U R E R . B R 0 W N , le,,yone olhef lhen mywll on 0t alter RUTHERFORD. BUILDERS, 11111 llll•Clale ' Tullp•ood '" Hun11n91on BHCll, O•t•CI llll\ lOlll Clay of Apr II, 1"1 C.111 .,... Mr• T E FIUQeralCI The FlcUllOU\ Bu>lnen N•mo ro 1100 N Tempi• HO .. fen.er to tllove WH fllld In 0rAnQe AN"Pim CA .itot Co..nly on II 29-IO Publls-Or~ COA\I Deily Pllol Randall E .. r.n Rul1Wr1ord, IS. N M.., •• IS '"" 2167 .. , Cambttdfe, Or-Calll 92"1 · Glr•rCI S Brown. ••n Abrarwtm St . Cyprtu, Carll ~JO P UBLIC NOTICE Cll•rlu All tn Slo11rer, 11111 T11llpwoocl Clr<I• H11nUn91on S.e<h, Celll. ftM6. NOTICEO" RECOROATION 01" This IMnlnen Wei <onduclad by • ASSES.WENT ANO DIAGRAM 09nere1 parlnenlllp STaTEM«NT 0' .ASSESSMENT Rana.II E RulllorforCI NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo Oii Tiiis stalemenl ,. .. lllld wllll ,,.. ownorl al,..., prGPff1y liable to be ... County Cirri< o1 Or.,.,oo Counly on M•v M>Md to pay tlle coS1• -.,._,of •· '"" Ille lmprovem•"" dncrlbed In ,.,,.., RootutlOnof lmenllon Ho. 11.14 adopt· Publllhed Oren90 cw .. Dally PllOI, •d bv lho Cltv Coullcll of UM CITY OF M•Y I, IS, 22, 2', , .. , 2°'1 .. 1 CO$T A MESA, $1eto Of C..lllornla, on PUBLIC NOTICE I ... 1'111 NY of MARCH, 1'11, lor lllo works Of lmprowmenl '" • SflO<l•I os MUITlenl cllltrkl •nown and clesl9ft0t· eel H ASSESSMENT DISTRICT NO. •ws ICM . NOTICE TOC•IDITORS You.,.,,.,...,,. notified !NI on UM OF •ULK TltANSf'E• Siii clay Of MAY, 1,.1, the A•sos.smenl IS.CL •111•1'7 u.c.c.1 •"" 01.,...,,. 10 saav 111e cos11 and••· Holl<• 11 lloreby given lo Ill• panM1 al ..+cl acqulsllloftS ancr Im croelllors or Ill• wltlll11 nemeo prov•mWlts _.. r~ In my ol· lrerutercw111 Illa\ • ""'" lrenster .... , •. elloul to tie mom on pertonel prOflerly S.IO __ , are -ancr paye ,..relneft•r clH<rl-bl• lmmodlately .i Ille Otll<• of tfle Tho _,,, -l>usl ... aJ ecldrHI City T,_,.... of Mid City, •I City of t1W ln1..-1r-reror111 are Hell, enO mull Do paid wlllll11 tllo JEFF MILLER, U:Q Felrvlew period oplrl119 on Ille 4111 dey of Roecl. C..te MeM, Calltorllla JUNIE, 1"1. S.IO-ts mey w Tllo IOUtlOft In Celllcwnl• of Ille p.tld In -or In ... ,, -I .. Uld chief uKutlw offk • or prlft<lpel llUll '9•10d. nou office of lht lntonold trena .. r.,. OR '' semoas-'" Ille.-of t,.. 1e11ure 10 ,., All Olhtt bonl,,.11 nemot eftll .0 belere U.. ol!Plrelloft of 1610 period, Clrtssu 11 ud by Ille Intended Mrlel ..,. to r-1 Ille -•ct lrensleror wllflln lllrM ,..,. lul PHI por11oftt Of --ts end beerlng 10 tar H known 10 Ill• lnlonelod Interest " • r ... Mt to uuod TEN tr ... sl--_,. .. EltCEHT 110%1 Pt•........,, will Do TM -C•I -.,.,.,,,.H -... lawed ,.,,.....,c .. IM "lmpro-• of Ille lnt.-1raM1er .. (ll ere . eonc1 Act Of ttlS," bel119 Olvl.._, 10 of JOHN U41 MAM UltA, t0•1MSlrwts_H..,....o,sOodeoflM Ol/lkol/I, ~m. C.llforfti• t-. Slelt Of ClllfarNe, ...0 tlW last ln9tell· Tllel Ille prGPffly perllllenl llere• la monl ef well ..... 1rw11 mMIWe "°' 10 deKrllltd In -rel et lllt'llilllt'e, II• u tMO l"OUltTIEIN (1'1 yeen lf'9"\ 111ru , •1111l111mtftl, lro.te11 tme, .,,. 211c111ayof Jiiiy twMt wct9"1ng len eeolf•lll, IMM, 1 .. wllel4I lmpre-(Ill montM ,,..,,, lfltlr -·· "'*nle, -.. ._ ..... M : l2JI l'alrv-NOTICI: Alltr llefldt llhe -It llMd,C..UMKA,c.lllerllle. l•llOd, e.....-.0 moy lie Ptkl enO TM l>utlneu --.... Ille seld propartlft ,....,.... Of Ille ..... of I ... tr•11•toror(l) •I Mid ~llan ,,, lllY totlO•lflO-: l•I MY IMlllllMftt Of OULAMOOS. prll'ICl ... 1 eftd !Ille,_ Wlll<ll lift Mell Tll•I ...., blllk lren"er Is 1111~ t• poslecl • t._ i.• roll tor lfle c........,. lie <Ofttumm•l•d et Ille office ol: 11ec11 .-; (bl tr• .,,..Id INll-of MAlt\.INIE STEIHIElt llCltOW prl11cl111•• 111111 ,,, lllereof: (<) tho SI RVICIE, ., WI Lat.Ire a1..cr., L• omounl of eny •11...-io., lnc1y0. Anoeltt, Clllfonll• -.010, ... ., .,.., •ne Pofllllln, !Ill_. end CO.II; Id) J-•• IWI. '"' tttllNlt .. ( ... Of t•lllfle ....,, •net Tiii• ttui. tr•narer It •ublKI to (ti ln..,_t to h Mt. ol (ljlll. ""'"'' Cellf6rlllt Uftlfel'l'll ~~l•I C-lftel.,...111(01 ....... Secllon•!Ot NO ACTION 011 ,AYMl.NT a v TM.W...1111111~-otttw_....,. TH• l'ltOl'E"TY OWN IEllS IS wllll Wlltft\ Cl.trn. f'llAY lie flied I\ N•C:llli'ltY AT THll TIM•. 1' MAltLIHI STIEINlll l.SCltOW 01111110 ntAT TH• ASHUMIHT SlltVIC• •• , WlllNr• ......... lM •e l'AIO 011111 'THI u VIAtl ......... '""' ......... •10. Mii"" ... , •111100. n. flnl IMlallfNlll"' .. MY fw flllfle cloit'M "" °"' cr'MIN; ._...,..... wlN -on tN 1.,42 VIOll .. J-41•1,WllKlltt tfto-l.atet .......... MU M~ .....,.. tlW C-IMI .... DATIO. IMyt. 1•1 .... ..-<lflM....... .._.....,... OetWMorcfltt, 1"1 ._..,., ....... lt .. llY..U ~ ....._.. OIV .. C:... MtM 1-...-T,........ MMttlC. ...... PMll .... ~ .... CMt4 Delly ~... l"*hMll °"""' CNlll Dally ....... llile'f IS. 1"1 tt..WI Mey t, U,, "'1 U..-i 1 Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15. 1981 Even experts don't know E conomic fore casting difficult -but profitable By JORN CllNNJJ'F Ar ..._ ...... NEW YORK -You may not bear il d11cua1ed often, but its aubUml.oal public impact must brln8 lowered coofidence, uncertainty, lnaeeurity and varioua other necatlve economic qualtUea. It ta the realluUoo that DOt many people have a very tood notion where the ecooomy la beaded. No, not even t.bose whom we t.b1n.lt are ln a pocJJtion to know. No. they do not really know. Tbat much we know. Otherwlte, you are entitled to uk, why are ao many bit·bank officers on record u aayl.na lnterest rates would be comine down? And so many small-bank officers saying mortgage rates would follow? And bow can some of the new adminiatration's plans, ju.st made, be so quickly upset because interest rates rose? How can the auto companies ac· count for the fact that sales are lagging behind forecasts? (UNNI"". 80 MANY WHO should know have been wrone 110 consistently, it seems, that no forecast, no mat· ter how extreme. can be dismissed these days. lf the conventional basis for forecasts -the data bases, for example -have proved misleadJn1, then who bas any basis for claiming that seemlnl· ly extreme opinions and bizan'e forec•sls are absurd? The bookstores demonstrate the point. In any well.stocked business section you can learn lo survive the coming inflation or the impending deflation, read ot tbe collapse ot capitallam or Ila renewal, learn ol the necnaity ot ownin1 1old ot the at.urdltf of boarclll'll lnert metal. Almo.t any theory can be peddled, and at leut one of the reasona is that the forecaata ol thole ·•wbo should know" have been far, rar ot1 the mark for maoy, many yean. Included are forecuta of ionrnmenl officials, academic•. business people and union leaders. JIMMY CARTER &EGVIARLY changed bil economic plan. Richard Nixon sa.Jd be wou.ldn't need price restrainta, then suddenly froze prices. Lyndon Johnson promiaed to avoid inflatJon, then set a course that, aa wu rea.liud later, could lead only in that direction. What must be particularly unaettlln1 to the public is more than a decade of reaa1urin1 forecasts from Waablniton on inflaUoo. How many times have you been told that the wont of lnflatJon was behind you? The private sector and academic record la not better. You may recaU hearln1 that numerical modela, made possible by electronic computers, would make economic forecaatlna a aclence. Real· ly? Why than have the econometric model• been far off the mark? Because. ll seema, lbe lnforma· lion they process remains aubjoct to human error and judgment. Nevertheless. the economic future la clearly a multi·bUlion dollar industry th11t Include•. amona others. consultants, publlshen, academics, stock forecasters, research Institutes and aemlnar organizers who often avoid the subject by brinelne their clients lo luxurious resorts Plant-newsprint tests start FRESNO CAP) -The newsprint on which this article is printed was made from a tree, but some· day newspapers may be printed on a plant now used to make ropes and gunnysacks. It's called kenaf, which is commonly grown for fiber in other parts of the world and ii now un· dergoing research on its possibilities for producing newsprint. Fresno State University agriculture re· searchers have grown and studied one crop of kenaf al the campus and feel it is suitable to grow in California's ~an Joaquin Valley. ··we found out that it can be grown with the least amount of problems in lbe valley," said Dr. Mahendra Bhangoo, who headed the study. "It did EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEM ENT 881 Dover Dr .. Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 71 4 -631-3651 produce good yield in lS·incb spacing and about 80,000 plants per acre. We got as much as 10 to 12 tons or dry staJks per acre." A ton of stalks would produce about half a ton or newsprint, Bhangoo said. "Some of the big paper people are kind of re· sisting the idea. but I think It's coming because it's not oniy good for paper, but it mates a good rota· tion crop in the valley." Kenai needs less fertilizer and water than cot· ton, and insects are not a problem, the study here showed. Soil nematodes, which eat the roots of plants. are a problem but might be overcome by planting in heavy instead or sandy soU, Bbangoo said. Kenaf plants grown In the valley will need 26-28 inches of water per acre, the study estimated. Previous researchers ·•ctaim kenaf can be grown on marginal, salty soils;· Bhangoo said. "The onJy condition is that this crop needs well drained soil, because if it's not, it causes fusarium ame as in cotton." The study here, financed with a gr~nt from The Fresno Bee. will continue this year. Farmers on the valley's west side wiU be asked to plant some kenal "to see whether the crop can stand ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~U-~sa~linity problems." Bbangoo said. c.Alewpo~t a g°asluo11s CUSTOM TAILORS AND EXPERT ALTERATIONS 2 Pcs usu-.u HOW ORDER NOW English Wool Worsted S3ll $215 AND SAVE $$$ 2 Pea Atl Wool French Gebard'"e Ul<W.LY S358 -S2S5 2 PC1 Ltghl USOM.•Y HOW Weight Summer Suits U4I S251 BRISTOL TOWN • COUNTAV CENTER • WI ftT AHY Silt • ...,., Sf'tU coPIEO , ,,,,H .... r U\A r tON$ • • NO fJCllUo C><~"Gf 10" D•C. a , .. , MttS • DBJYHY 'TO ' wms JProfit s foreca st Wes Baumgardner, president of Standard Logic In c ., told s hareholders the nrm would show a profit (or the s~nd half of the year ending Oct. 31 , after losses in the first two quarters. He an· ticipales saJes of about $7 .5 million for the year. Speaking at the firm 's annual meeting at the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach earlier this week, Baumgardner said that for the first r;;=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:;:;:;:=:=:=:=:=::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:=:=:=:=:=::;;i two qua rte rs ended April ~. 1981, Standard Prestigious Newport- Santa Ana Area Office Space ' 0 'f>tJ\ \oo-t • l • Rent a luxury atrium otooe 1n Orangewood BusinMS Center. one of the most suooeeetuJ new complexes 1n the booming Newport-Irvine-Santa Ana a.res., .)UBt um minut.ee t.o Orange County alrportl The cost? A fant.astic 76• per foot. Customize your needs trorn 1,64.0 t.o 33,000 equ&re reet wtth abund.ant park· 1.ng, aJ.r oond1t10rung, rught 1Jghttng, stgnage and a ohotoe or either beaut1!Ul atrlwn dealgn ... or ·'big door'' Bt.orage. OeJ.l toc1'Y at (TM) m a u or (ft') .. ,, .... !pr detaSl.I about the SPl!lOIAL BONUS MOVING PLAN, or vs.it the Oran'8WOOd tu.rniabec1 model. t Logic bad sales of about $2 .9 million and a net loss of about $640,000 which, he added, was ·•ahead of plan," or less than anticipated. For the previous year ended Oct. 31 , 1980. Standard Logic reported net sa.Jes of $4.6 milllon and a net loss of $32,324 . Losses for the first six months of 1981 were at· tributed to expenaes ln· curred 1n the continuous expansion of the firm's management team and marketing force, includ· ing the ~pening of new direct sales offices in other cities. Forecasts for Increased sales and profits were based on continued high order rates and anticipated aales or the firm's DART polnt·of·sale systems u sed to automate operaUona of fast food. flne dininC and hotel restaurants. Baum1ardner said the firm expects to open 20 addltlonal new sale• ot· flees by year's end and that tbe company b&1 pro1pect1 for clo1ln1 contracts tor DART ayat.ems with two major natlonal restaurant cbalna which are now completlna OD·llte teatl or tile computerhed 1ystema. . ,. "" --,,,. . , .. Me sa f irm appoints officer ERNEST GALLA&OO hu joined Tamutier· HamUt.on Development Co. Inc. in Costa Mesa u vice president/finance. Gallardo's responsiblliUes Include the coordlnatloo and placement of loan tinanctna. He lives 1n Irvine. * • • ED FOX has been promoted to project mana 1er or computer S)'stems conversion for Fluor Dia· trlbuUon Companies, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Fluor Corp. * * • RICHARD W. ADAMSON bas been named chlef financial officer of lrvtne·based American Educational Television Network Inc. Adamson, a certified public accountant. Is past president of the Orange Coast Chapter of the N ationa1 Association of Accountants. * * * CLEMENT ARTHUR (CLAY> PHOENIX has joined EstyHoover Advertising and Public Relations of Newport Beach as vice president/in· ternational marketing and director or client development. • * • ADAMION FRED J . DERIENZO has joined Pacific Na· tional Bank of Newport Beach as executive vice president and senior loan officer. He lives in Mi s· sion Viejo. •• * DAVID L. PALAGYI has been named senior vice president al Heritage Bank's Airport office. At Heritage Bank's main office in Anaheim. Lor· raine Attig, Tom Gotor, Faith Ryan, Flip Clifton. Marilyn Korn and Helen Wilson all received pro· motions. • * * SCO'IT R. CALDWELL has been appointed business development officer in the ~ Angeles OVER THE COUNTER NASO LISTINGS NEW 'l'~AP) ClerllJL )tl.4 JI" 1-.U lnl JI 1114 ,...,,:lp NASOAO lofll C-Cp ,.. • lnl••lllCI IV. 1~ P•YI ' -· ... ~llldl ColrTle 11 11\fo 1ni.1 1 » ,. ... p .. ,,... M>4 '-II ..... by ColGM>oi 1111rce...-"'-~ PeneEnl ,...r•el rn.i.n •• of .. ,. 11·1' l11tm1G1 ·~ 10 Pe111a1r Tll11n. Pl'IClK dlD not .:cMftCIH ,. .... _ lnB•Wr.11 '"' 11lllo Petri! l 111<1\lde r..c.11 menwp CmlSllr '~ """ lw•SoUI "'" ttYt Pelllboo\ m•rkdoMI or uwnm. CmwTel ,. 17 JMntby ""' lSV. P"ll•H•l IMlon for Tllunmy. ConP•P 1 J)w. ,.. Jerico 1 1•'11 14'1. Piere.SS Stoo lid Mk Cordl1 """ It J:::r:..~ S-1• ~ Plnkt111 AEL Ind I~ IS CrCNTre 1 )l\fo ,...,., 1'14 ~ PlonHIB AFAProt l\'>10 ClltlrFd 1 No JV> ~•lsSI pf """ II Plu llrw AVMCp 414 ~ Cycltron U\41~ ICeln r Poslll !~r.:Jt I~ II O.W.lyM l2V. ,...,., , .... , , ... PruGM 11'4 1'14 Dtal>ff. I"' '"-Kem•n -" PrtSl•Y" Aev•ou 414 ...... Oeyt#MI IW. 20Vt ICmpAm IS'll l~ Pt09rp 411tllll m...• o ... , I\..~ ~=r.~':. ~ , ... PbSvNC ......... DYi ~ OOIMO J:I JJVO ., ............. P11r18•" "llcoln< .1 ..... Q l4 O..ICenT " ""' ICeullel 24\lo u ~~~fc!t: Ally118 ~ 1~ O.weyEI , JV. KlmNll IM/o It AlleJI ...... .,. 01.Crn JI 22 ..... ICl1191n1 1'4 J ReoenPr ...... , .. 17 11'4 Ol•flCN JAl ...... 1Cloo4G ,,_ J3 Raycl\m AF11r11 ~ ~ Oocllll • ~,.. ..... ~~!r!v I~,."' ReymllCI AGr .. 1 IN 12~ OoUrGn .... I~ 11\li 1711> RttnCm AlnlGp ...... 14 O.ylOI 1 """ """ ICwllcU I~ 1114 R-E• AMICnK .... ~ ~lnO 11 ... ~ U n<eln n"" n Rol>OMy ANet1111 141/e .... °"''"' • 17 17'4 UndRH •ve .-.. Rowlon AO...t' t ~2' f•Orlef ""'~ ~· • ..... R-AReUAo 11 1714 etllVllCe 11V.,, LflllYI 21V. l2 Ru~lov AWelclftt .. 111 .. E<OllLM 12'4 12'-LlclStor UV. W h S.Oller A1'1ll1!811< EIPa&l!I 9" "" Llnllut ».,,,. S.fe<O 2Jll'o 2~ ElclerBe • .,, 7 ~?19i'" 10 10\t. StHelGO Allacllle 10\lo 1011> EleNtKI ,.._ ..... n 221,.. SI Pew I ""9SA 1~ 1'f't EIModul 1714 1tl'> MGF 0 1 14" 1411> SunO ~~ ll7YI • En• 0.¥ 1.-.. 17 M.OIGE 12" 12"" ~IPOH lt\fo IW. Enr..Wlhd sv. ~ .,._,,, ICM 10 .... ..... r A91d II n av. E11Rsv 14"' , .... Maf:mP ..... Sv<M•r ArdMGt> ~ >411 E11lwl111 I ,...., ¥e rRI 4 S-1' ~ Svcm1I AldCole Jf\j, -EqlltSL '°" 11111 M4I llU'I il)\j, Wh SllMecl At1G1L1 :r l:!~W" I~, • .,., -•-rl .. JJlllo )I Sllwml A ti.., Rt ,_ 2" ""'''°" I ICW. 1~ SCelWlr :::~~i 111'-11'-F•~ITll •V. 011 M•ulLP J1 lA SwEISv 11'-11~ F.,mGp 1214 » ..... _.,Pl • » lJ\lo Sw11Enr :-HE 1Cl'lll 10" Fldlcor 1~ 111'1 ::E~.!: :~ := Sl•lldyn nlcRs 11 10 1~ FllllSYI (j\j, o .... ••utFr ,. 141/e l'tlollll ""' ~ McF•rl '"" I~ leylUAll 1:: ·~\lo ~:~'!''~" 14\lo ""' :!°":I 15-"" •• 11 .. une 5 Siii J1 J7"' .... IPtl lll* 20Y> .,.,'J:.w ·~ 111'> district of Barclays ·American Business Credit. He wiU be stationed in the company's Orange County office m Irvine. • • • FRANK C. COSENTINO has been named director of national distributor sales for ITT Can· n on El ec tri c . He ha s responsibility for ITT Cannon's 11 distributor companies. 24 authorized CA PS locations. 35 authorized branch locations and 31 other distributor sales offices in the Uni ted States. He lives in San Clemente. * • • PIUUP J . ANDREWS has been promoted to vice presi- d ent, a ssistant manager or E ldorado Bank's Tustin office. coHNTIMO * * • FLET ON HAS been named associate manager or the Newport Center Agency of Pacific Mutual LlJe Ins urance . Co He lives in Irvine. • • • MICHAEL J . MILLE R has been promoted to manager of Soils Engineering Services at Irvine Soils Engineering, a subsidiary of the Irvine Consulting G roup, a leading geotechnical engineering company • • * HAROLD GOLD ha~ been elected chief finan· cial offi cer, in addition to his current position as corporate senior vice president of Swedlow lnc . Garden Grove. CLARE SMITH has Joined Appletree Advert1S· ang Associates an Costa Mesa as senior account ex· ecutive copywriter. MARDENA J . FEHLING is assistant to the vice president <ind general manager of the Hunt· ington Beach Co 14V. !Hit jSllSMlcrO I~ tOV. :~~ ::~ ~:!~~' Jl'J.t JA NASDAQ SUMMARY J3 ,.. .... a: :~ 1i~~;~~. µ. • 11'h 1t\o'i C> 40\lt S..bolru J7lllo ZI ""'' 17lllo ~r:eEbc ;~ :~ HEW 'l'ORIC t4PI -The lotl-1119 11'1 30""' 11 1~11 ..... i:::r.: JO',.. 30v. "'°w' ,,.,. °"'"' u.. c-t ... SS ~\It -91 llOCU -w•<rMll' 11\411 IWlve .,.,... 11C1 ...... »\fo TK\H'l\P .. 70 IM m<KI -down tlle motl bolMCI Oii \fo I IT•lcmA 11 ... 19.,.. I'!""'' of <,..,,. r-dleu or .,.,, ... ,,.. 7 ... 11/e TltftMI • 11 11\'J or T--~ "1'11 O Tlpr•r~ ~ 1' NO -urll tr.SI~-SJ .,e lnc;I JI JI\'> TomlO I .-.... -Net -_,.., CIWI-•r• 11't I'll. 1 l rlcoPd lD'Yt J3 dOfer•nc• be-nw pr•v"""• <lo>lllQ 11 11'-' TroyGld O ~ 4"-bid prlet -Tttut..S.y'• IH I bid prke 1414 24'4 TyM>ftFd UV> 16 Ullo U UnM<Gll 17'11. 11'1< IS u .... US Enr """ 11 U"5 9~ 10 ..... 'JS Sur 1 Jl\4 l2 Hllme LHI . ~~. 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YOall MIOWln C•(NANO U ANO llll'OllTIO IY THI NUO ANO IN\TINIT <~OMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS ftAClftl( l'IW I QiTON, 01 TaOlf ANO (ll•(lfllNATI \fOCI' _.,_, ___ ...... _ .............. _..._ ·------ JC you s~ or hear an advertisement or com· merclal that you believe stretches the truth, what can you do about tt? Well, you can, of course, refrain from buylnJ the product being advertised. But that won't put a halt to tbtt advertil!ling. You can also write direcUy to the company that makes the product, telline the presi· dent what you think of hi5 advertising. That may or may not work. The chances are excellent that you will at le~t receive a reply. However, there's still another way you can reg- ister a complaint about advertil!ling, and that's by sending your beer to NAO, 845 Third Ave., New York, N.Y. 10022. NAO stands for the National Advertisine Division of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, and it's ready to investigate complaint.s abou~ na· tional advertising that people find ''misleading, 1nac· curate or offensive." (tr it's a local ad that dbturba you, take it up with the nearest Better Business Bureau.) NA.D IS A PART of a self-regulatory mechanism stt up 10 years ago by the advertising industry it.self. The ad people reasoned it was better to regulate themselve s ~ rather than f. having some -\; ~ .on e e I s e 1 ..., • say the gover:n· 4 '1/t ~ ment -do 1t. ~ ; 0 wh~~~e:~sr~~ MllTDI lllllWITZ in place to deal with objections to ads. It's not just the public who can tap into it. A company incensed at what a competitor is saying can file an objection: . . . After you send in your complaint, the NAO, 1f 1t feels it has merit. will lake it up directly with the ad· vertiser, asking ror substantiation of the claims made in the ad. H the NAO feels the s ubstantiation is adequate, it will then drop the case. If it feels otherwise, it will ask the advertiser to discontinue or change the ad- vcrUsing. And if the issue cannot be settled by negotiation, then a complaint will be referred to a five-person review board whose members include representatives from the ad industry and the public sector tr this panel recommends changes in the ad· vertising and the advertiser then refuses to make them. the matter is referred lo a government en- forcement agency This has never happened SINCE ITS START in mid-1971 the NAO has pursued 1,283 challenges to national advertising. In 649 of these cases, advertisers substantiated their claims to NAD's satisfaction ; in 620 other instances, ads were either modified or discontinued ; only 14 cases had lo be referred to the review board for ad· judication. What ltind of complaints does the NAO field? Here are some recent examples: -Chrysler aired a commercial in which it com· pared the road-handling of its Dodge Anes K with that of a BMW 320i. When the cars were driven around a slalom-type course . the BMW driver seemed to lose control. Chortled the commercial: "BMW says it's the ul ti mate driving machine. but-in 14 out of 16 tries, it s pins out . . . Aries oulhandJes BMW every lime." BMW screamed about the commercial. The NAO in· vestigated. collecting evidence from both parties - and then, before it had completed its review. Chrysler said it had killed the commercial "for reasons unrelated to this challenge." -BEECHAM PRODUCTS advertised its CaJgonite detergent on TV by showing a woman in· side an automatic dishwasher. A mother complained that her 3-year-old child climbed into a dishwasher after seeing lhls commerciaJ. Beecham discontinued the commercial. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES AMERICAN LEADERS WHAT STOCKS DID NEW VOAIC 1AP1 MaV " HEW YORK tAPI May U METALS Tllu,.._y ~ ~1 ~9114•• ,.._, U.i . dhll-tlMa. "" ..... ~ .. ....-. hoc .... '*">•""""· .... __ Tllll St.UM-.,, We.it t11m .. Mlle t•. A......_1'0ftt••,_.,.., N.V. MeftwJ ICU.00~ flatlr. "-"-MS•t....,os.,N.Y. • • .. '• .. .. .. '• . -. ' ' " . ... " ;• I ~ ' .I : . ... ~9U8 NFNS • WOHOEA WOMAN wono.r Woman brNkt up • phony ManC41 end ,. .. GUM lhrN m.mti.tl OI 8 WOfld Pe-Conferenc;e II TIO TAC DOUOH m w•A•s·H .. -p • • ... ~ her Ind •llll her Mductot • rt M. MAGAIJHI C1n01c:1 c-a er"'°' Allen '11nt • vt"t to Lon· dOn • famout wax muM um, Madame Tuaaaud'• MM on the Sit-lnser- .._ ... 0. WNteli .. "'8t• the ptlnctc>IM ol welgl\t ION, Cept Catrol tu .. • look 11 111.,cl•• end ft!Ohl IOU • MOVW • * '\ "Saequascll" I t978) Ooc;u....,.llry S.veo men enc;ountet • etrange. heJI· nur~•n GrHtUf• In • primi- tive b.ckwood• erH fC LOI ANGEU!.8 WEEK INRIV1!W Hott Cllte Roti.t11 Qi!) WALL STRUT WEEK "Mun1c1p11 Oood• For Fun And Profit?" Gueat· Jemn J Lowrey, prt1lder1t, Jamft J lOwJey & Com· piny, Inc 1:30 D 9 MOVIE While Mttllng down to 11•- ten to th• Army-Nevy ~. th41 4077th 11 bom· batded 11\d left with en unuploded bomb lo defu" Cl) 0000 TIMES r11e1m1·1 hence turn• ous to be old enoogh to be net OOPS -Dick Clark will host "TV's Cens o r ed Bloope r s'' with funn y television tape and film outtakes tonight at 10 on Channel 4. • • * * '"Tiie Long .. 1 Yard" I 1974) Burt Reynold•. Eddie Alber't A former pro quatterback doing time In • Southetn pflaon ts glven '™' lob of coaching • group of conviett tor a no· holds-barred tootbalt game againat th41 guards '""" ti) U!) ELECTRIC COMf>ANY(R) (I) C88NEWS OJ ABCNEWS l :IO G JOKER'S WILD • WELCOME BACIC, KOTT!R Much to Julie ' d1Sm1y he< alster vlSlllng lrom NebrHkl 11ar11 dating Ep11e1n II) BE.NNY HILL Benny does a comedic teke-oll on "Bonnie &nd Clyde •· fJn KCET NEWSBEA T Qi!) STUDIO SEE 'Be4uga" Beltnda, • g11n1 Be4UQ• whale. trains It San ()leoo'• Se• World, two Chicego kids run • $11ete· board tll<>Q apple p1Ck1ng In New England (RI (I) NEWS QJ) BAANEY MILLER A cr11ed man threatens to leap off a l>\Jildlng 1n10 lhe 0Htc:1al m1yora1 peradt 1:55 I) EOfTORIAL 7:00 fJ C88 NEWS 0 N8CNEWS 0 HAPPV DAYS AGAIN Riehle hghll h•' tears ovlf attending• HaJIOween par ty at • haunted hOUse where he believes he saw a headlHI QhOSt CHANNEL LISTINGS 0 A8CNEWS 0 BUWIEYE Q» M·A·s·H The lllnllllf Col Flaog •h<>w• up at lhe 4077tll again. convinced lhat Hawkeya ts e communist !tmpalht.rt r W STREETS OF SAN FRAHCISOO Stone becomes a member of a fraternity of drun~s to find ou~ why lhree of them w.,e beaten lo death EE! OVEREASV Guesss· comedlon Dack Shawn, Or John F.-1qu11ar, Chef Naraat. (RI '1!) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT Cl) TIC TAC OOUOH @) MERV GRIFFIN Guests Tanya Tuckllr Roger Miiie< Bob Sages 7:30 I) 2 OH THE TOWN Hosts Steve Edwards Melody Rogers V1sH the Laundromat Theater in Los Angeles trav .. to the Rock11s to lollow some local entran11 on the Spe- cial Olymp1es 0 FAMILY FEUD U SHANANA Guest Bobby Vee 0 TELETONE 0 FACE THE MUSIC iJ l\NXT 1CU!:il L,,.., A114"1'" Q KNB1.. 1NBCJ Lu., Anqt'I .. ., 0 l(TLA dncJ I Lo., A114"'''" 0 IV\Bt TV 1ABC..1 lo., Anq•"••., 1f "rMB 1CB':i1 S,m l>•eqo 0 l(~tJ TV (lnll l Lo'> Anql'lt•' ll~1 KCS I 1AOC1 <;an D11•40 CD I\ l T.V 1 Ind I LU'> A1141'it' Q) ><.COP TV 1111.i 1 Lo" An'J"lt•'> fD !\CE T TV' PBS1 l t>'> An·~·''"' '1!) 1<.0CE TV 1PB51 Hun s riq101 Be,1tt1 Hot stuff on 'Dallns' By PETER J. BOYER • . ,, ........ ~ LOS ANGELES .. Dallas" has another whodunnit going I don't care. What's wrong here? Not only do I not care whodunnit, I'm not en· tirely certain what wal'I dun. I was stirring peppers into a pot of blackeyed peas at the critical mo~e~t of last week 's episode, and by the time my wife s urgent call wrenched ·me from the stov47, I . had missed everything but Cliff Barnes standing m a pool shouting up to J .R. Ewing, "You bastard!" And, you know? My first thought was, "I wonder if I put in enough peppers . . . " I like my peas hot . "It's Kristin," said my wife, joining me ~t the stove. "J.R. killed Kristin. You didn't put m too many peppers. did you?" She likes her peas mild. It occurred to me that just a year ago. matters "Dallas" we re central to more than one Friday night conversation at our house. J .R. (Larry Hagman) had been shot, you'll remember, and the hype surrounding the season·ending mystery as- sumed gross proportions when the actors' strike delayed its resolution. We even watched reruns. It turned out that Kristin (Mary Crosby), J .R.'s sister-in-law-lover , had plugged the boy. We'd been took. After that disappointing noo- development, I couldn't watch "Dallas" without thinking of that fairy tale, "The Emperor's New Clothes." Naked, "Dallas" didn't look so good. Trash- with-class suddenly seemed simply trash. I started going out Friday nights again, and growing in- tolerant of my wife's lingering passion for the show, which, happily, began to wane when baseball began. And so now, "Dallas" has another cliffhanger~ It's safe to look down, the drop isn't as steep as they'd have you believe. So, what's the setup this time? Barnes, that goony ineffectual, rinds a stiff 1n the Ewing pool. She's dead, he mutters. He looks up, to see J .R. standing betlind a broken raU, smiling that once· so-effective smile. Now, what we're supposed to think is that J.R. didn't do it. That's too obvious. The poor child jumped or fell into lhe pool. Or maybe somebody else did lt, and J .R. Just happened on to tbe scene. We're also supposed to thlnk tbat the corpse ls not Kristin, because that's too obvious, too. She'd s hown up to squeeze some more money from J .R., using their lllegltimate baby as the pump. Too ob· vious. No, we're suppo!\ed to wonder whether the vic- tim was Sue Ellen (Linda Gray), J.R. 's often· threatened wife. Or Pam EWing (Victoria Prin- cipal) the spectacularly endowed nitwit who helped sue Ellen make off with J.R...'1 cbUd. Or Leslie Stewart (Susan Flannery>. the polsonou.s PR lady who tried to put tbe screws to J .R . at a Senate hearln1. The real mystery la why the Tex.as state senate would be conducUn• hear· ln11 on matters of International revolution. Or Alton Cooper, J.R.'1 new mlstre11, or Louella Lee. J.R.'1 secretary, wbo somehow 1ot J.R. mad. .1 "Dall " la Well once burned, twice cauwowi. u lncapabl~ of a worthy payoff, to lt'a aafe to Hy: 11-e victim It Kristin. J .R. aboYed ber lo. He'll beat the rap. The pea.a weren't hot enouatt. CD ALL IN THE FAMILY Archie become• deprta..O alter taking a magazine'• hit ••PICllncy 1 lest lhlt lndtcal" he will d11 when he reaches 57 fll) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT '1!) BUSIME88 EXCHANGE "Employee S.net11 1n1te- 1ton" E•am1ne the bt1nt1llt packages lhal many co•· porallon1 reel don't 11or enthusiasm from employ- ees. but rasher apathy at an ••l•aord1nary prlee (]) P.M. MAGAZINE "Candid Camera" creelor Allen F'unt, • vltlt 10 Lon don's t1mou1 w•• mus.- um, Madame Tuuaud a 8:00 I) (I) THE INCREDIBLE HULi< Banner falls 1n wllh a gong of 111-•1 and she Hulk has to ge1 him ous Q MOVIE 'The Harlem Gtobetrotlera On G1ll1gan s Island (Premiere) Bob Oenvtr Alan Hale Jr TM! HarMlm Gto1>etro1ters plane er ash lands on 111e hny Pac1t1e island where G1111gan and hos fttenda ere marooned 0 MOVIE * * ' 'Somelh1ng Ev11 ( 1971) Sandy Donnie Ralph Betlamy A tamoly of tour uriknow1ngly b-Oeome er1dangered by 1111 evil within their n-home 0 (YO) BENSON An earthquake lrapa Bon son end Clayton In 1 small room or the execu1111a mansion 0 MOVIE * * ·~ 'Deadly Hero 119761 Don Murray Olahn W1ll11ms A trigger happy policeman s career end a kidnap vtc:tom s hie are 1eopard1zed when he rM· m CAROL aUAHETT ANOFAIEN08 Guetta Otck Vao Dyke Tony Randall &;) '1'i) WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW t:OO I) CJ) THE DUKES Of' HAZZARO An old flame ot Uncle Je11t1 s resurns to Hauerd County 10 collect a legacy tell to her by her 101e hus- band and a debl trom Boas Hogo. (R) CD MERV GRIFFIN Gutatt Tanya Tutker. Roger Miiier, Bob Saget, Georgl Irene. Belly Buck· ley EE! WALL STREET WEEK Munlcjpal Bonds For Fun And Prot117" Guest· Jamoa J Low1ey president James J Lowrey & Com· pany. Inc '1!) VOTER'S PIPELINE Hoit Jim Cooper meets w11h Howard Sleon. dtrec- tor of a drug 1et1ab1l1ta1ton 11ouse. and some 01 Ille pass and presens reSJdents to d1scuu wlly this house hes been such • wccess 9:30 0 TWILIGHT ZOHE Annabelle buys her daugh- Utt Cflrostie an expensive 1111o.1ng doll, and her hus- band Erich resents 1t fL) '1'i) SACRAMENTO WEEK IN REVIEW Host Murray Fromson 10:00 fl CJ) DALLAS Oesp11e being paralyzed and in lhe hosp11a1, J R conllnues to thwart Bob· bys ertorts 10 run Ewing 011 (RI Q rv·s CENSORED BLOOPERS Some of the llubs made by ma1or 1elev1s1on slars which were o"g1nally edit· ed out are seen. Dick Clark hOSll oom Mews Mary Crosby, Kristino :.if:...'....:'Dal=-=.:.:las~·-· ------ No loss seen LOS ANGELES (AP) -Frederick S. Pierce, president of ABC Television, has pred!cted that the networks will continue to be the dominant force in television despite the loss of part of their audience to cable and pay systems. "ABC believes that netwoTk television will re- main the primary means of delivering ne~s. in· formation, sports and enlertalnm~nl to a diverse American public -and will rema.in the mass ad· vertlsing medium," Pie rce saJd. He conceded that the three major net~orks are losing viewers to increas~~ compebtlo~: particularly t o the so-called, supers tations whose signals are sent by satellite across the coun- try. But Pierce said the network is al.so entering the cable business. He saJd ABC Video Enterprises launched. its first advertiser -supported cable programmme service 1n A rU. .....,,. .. , .•. .,... ---....... It ~IC ,,.,.41 ..,_,,,...,_ ... _0- !Cotl...,. ....... .,,,.,, .... 1 COIT11_,.l41•12n ................ --...4180401 ._.._..,..._ .... .... ~ • ....,....,.I tfYOU have a MJ'Vic. to otter OT 100d1 toeell, place an ad in the Dally PI lot Clu1llled ~tlon .• Phone~ • - 0 •••••• ·-··-·· • w • TUBE TOPPERS KHJ 8 8:00 "Deadly Hero." Film starring Don Murray, J ames Earl Jones and Ulla Skala about a psychotic New York policeman ABC fl 8:30 "The Longest Yard." Burt Reynolds and Eddie Albert star in a movie about a free-for-all prison foot- ball game pilling the guards against the convicts. KOCE 9 9:00 -"Voter's Pipeline." Host Jim Cooper visits the Phoenix House in Santa Ana where drug addicts seek counseling and shelter. Im MAIT£APIECI THEATRE FESTIVAL Of' FAVORIT'E.8 '"The Golden Bowl' 8ued on a novel by Henry Jam .. Amerigo aet1ds • telegram with a conualed warning to Cflattotte when Ml hNt' OI Verve<'• .mat· <lage rropoul to her (Par I 2)(R) Qi!) lllLL MOYERS" JOUANAL 'Of Ute And Law l 1141 Ill· est developmentt 1n she aborllon battle •• the atternpl by ~t>er• or Congreu opposed 10 abortion to pa11 • humaro Ille etetutt •• I• chron~led 10:30 U) NEWS Q) INOEP£N0£NT NETWORK NEWS 11:00 e o o rn 9 NEWS 8 STARTREK Mr Spock blowi hi• cool and almoat ge11 Capt Kiri\ ~llled whtn an overwhelm Ing mating urgt llkM poe sesalonolhlm G NEWLYWEOOAME CD M'A•S•H 8 J and Charles c;t11h when IM!y are both h<>n ored lor a 101nl medical ope<atlon Q) BENNY HILL Benny i>l•Y• a court )8118' and aoon IOMt rws head 8ll 01CtC CAVETT OiCtl Cavett Vt11ts The Sydney Jan11 Gallery (Part 2 Of 2) '1!) SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger Et>ert and Gene S1ske4 rftY-Lion 01 Tllo O...rt; "Friday Tiie 13th Pat1 II" and others 11:30 fJ ()) MOVIE. a a "Hlgh-BalUn"' ( 1978) Peser Fonda. Jerry Reed A protesslonal motorcycllat. hi• ooddy end a female lruol. driver take on a vlCiout gang or h•Jaokers (Al 0 TONIOHT Holl Johnny Caraon Gu•IS Roberl Klein. 79· yeer-Old twins Amos and William CaullMtld D ®l ABCNEWS MIGHTUNE 0 LETS MME A DEAL CD MOVIE * * * "Blrdman Ot Alca- lre..t" ( 1962) Burt Lancas- 111r, Karl Maldao Ourtng his 53 years of 1mproson- m en t, Robers Stroud beeomes o world authority on birds m DANCE FEVER Cetebrlly judges Dick. Jimmy. Nets. Vince and Pat Van Patten Guests Taal• 0 1 Honey EE! '1!) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS 12:00 0 MOV1E • • ··11 Conquered The Wortd• ( t956) Peter G•aves. Beverly Garland An ugly cave creature aid- ed by a sc.en1111 •S bani on t1k1~ control ol the world O ®J FRIDAYS 0 GUNaMOt<E A conlempllble rasher pre· tends to have a change of helHI When lhree nuns -•• 0 conlfont llltn #ltn tne cM• 411\0 OU&IOdy Of hll t- Cflllelf..., e IAMTTA fony't penonel f..ilng1 Oii In Ille Wey wMn he .... PICll 1111 ,.larded fflend °' pe11y CtlMM • JtNK.CJe()JtWV 12-JO 0 ICTV NITWON( IO (Premiere! ....... bert OI the lamed Second Cl1y lmpro \llNtlOflal troupe dttpl.ey their .. 11,. llld wit Ill thlt M<iee which lak• pl.C. at t tlCtlonll l...,,ttlon Ill· lion 1:00 G PSYCHIC PHEHOMENA,THE WORLD aEYOHO "Litt Alter O.atll" Hoatt Damien SlmpM>n and Sii· cy Hunl dllCUH phllOIO· phlff on dHth and dying wnh guells K1y Cro1111n1 and Kethy OM• 4J) INOEP£NOEHT NETWOAK NEWS 1:300 MOVIE * * •;, "TM! Oeuohter • 01 Joshua Cabe" ( tg121 Sud· dy EbMn. K1ren Valenllne To keep hll tend under a new 11omeattad1ng law a w11y fur trapper recru111 a thief. a p1Ckpocket end a prottltute to portray hos deughtera II) MOVIE * *"~ Shoek Treatment C 19641 Stuart Whllman. Cerot lyntey A peychoa tr1s1 subiecta a pr1v11e investigator to uten11ve shock 11eatmen11 In an a11empt 10 gain po11e111on ot an inmates llolen tor· tune 1:466 NEWS 2:00 II COMEDY ~OP U MOVIE * • "Tomb 01 L1geoa' ( 1965) Vlncenl Prtca. Ellza· beth Snepperd A dead woman altempll to tu1n her hutband't second marroage by terrorlllng h11 n-wlle 2:15 iJ EDITORIAL 2:20 8 MOVIE * • 'h "'The 01ack Roae p9501 lyrone Power Oraon We1181 A 13111-<:en· tury Englllh Sa•On sravels Oriental araven roules _..Ing trade se<rets 2:300 HEWS CD MOV1E * *. "'The MOUN Thal Roared 11959) Paler Sellers Jtan Sebero 3:00 0 NEWS CE MOV1E • • Tomb Of The l1v1ng Oeao' ( 1970) Joton A~ley Angelique P111111ohn 4 a "'I NIW8 ... WOYll • *'" '1(1ng Of The l(hyHr lilllflH'" p064) Tytone P-~k:haet Aennle 4:to• MCM1 •• "' "Jennttw' 11•»1 H0w8'd Oun, kla Lupine) 4:30. NIW8 ..,\I I HIHY -MORte«J - 11:208 NlW8 11:308 MOVll * *"~ 'Time W1tho<.11 Pity' ( 19581 MlehMI Atdgrave, Ann TOc:ld 1:00 0 SEREHOIPff'Y 0 COMMUNITY FE£08ACK Holl Fernendo Del Alo (I) SUMMER 8EMES~R (R) ~11141) FlLMSfHATTEACH 8:30 I) SUMMER 8EME8Tl:R (R) 0 THArSCAT 0 (!I) IT'S YOUR 8USINESS 0 DAVEY AHO GOLIA TH U) SPEAKOVT Cl) ..oMPER ROOM El) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS VOICEOF AGRICUl TURE 7:00 I) DUSTY'S TREEHOUSE U GOOZJUA I HONG KOHOPHOOEY 0 PACESETTERS Holl Larry Mccormic~ 0 @) SUPERFRIENOS 0 HOTFVOOE CD TURNABOUT fD LANGUAGE CJ) TV4 LOOKS AT LEARNING 7:30 I) MARLO ANO THE MAGIC MOVIE MACHINE II BIO BLUE MARBLE 0 GIGGLE8NORT HOTEL m ELEMENTARY NEWS Q) GETTIM' OVER fll) VEGETABLE SOOP (I) l(f08WORLO 1:00 iJ Cl) TOM AHO JERRY D THE FUN'TSTOHES 8 THE RIF\.EMAM 0 THUHOARR THE BARBARIAN 0 UFO CD MOVIE • • ·~ Boniour Trastesse ( 19~91 David Niven Oel>Orah Kerr m SPECV.L PEOPLE fLl E'£8<)P(R) ~ PLASTlCMAH I BABY Pl.AS JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk ,....... __ .,..-__,,._Fi_OR __ MOR __ E._ON __ "T._1-f_A_T_S_TOR-:-:::-~-L-E-r.--=s:-GO=--=--=T.=-=o=--'---:cor--, 1'HERE WA5 A LARGE. MUSH FtRf ON IHE EAST 'OIOE. 'TOOAY.1 MINNIE. CAM£~0N ON THE SCENE.' ~ Coffee not her cup -of tea NEW YORK <AP> She's poured more cups of coffee and listened to more troubles than Mrs. Olsen and Ann Landers combined, but after 25 years of playing Nancy Hughes on the CBS soap opera, "As The World Tums," Helen Wagner is out of a job . "I am not re tiring," declared Miss Wagner, who, a CBS s pokesman said, left the show because she and the network "could not come to a contrac- tual agreement. "I had nothing whatsoever to do anymore," the actress said recently In describing the gradual elimination of Nancy from the show -she had one line in three months and her decision to leave. "There j ust has n't been anything to Nancy's character," Miss Wagner said. "Anybody could read the lines I've been given. 1 haven't been in the kitchen for a year and a half." Soap opera buffs know that Nancy's kitchen , located in that mythical Midwest community of Oakdale, has been an imp of the s how since its de- but April 2, 1956. rt's where problems involvi ng the Hughes and Lowell clans were discussed, rediscussed and then discussed some more. "World Turns" has always been the most traditional of soap operas, celebrating the family, of which Nancy, and her husband Chris, played by Don Maclaughlin, were the anchors . It was the show which celebrated the Fourth of J uly, Memorial Day and Christmas. And for near- ly 20 years, it was No. 1. With the death In 1974 of its creator and head writer, Ima Phillips , and gradual success of youth.- oriented soaps on ABC, ''World Tums" slipped in the ratings. MEDLEY'S PRESENTS Gr.at Entertahwnlnt ..cl Food SH MDapoWtell Sunday, May 24; Monday, May 25; former Righteous Brother Bobby Hatfield In Concert Two Shows Nltely 9 p m & 11 p.m. Ticket• $10.00. Friday, May 15; Sa1urd1y, May 1e 8111 M9dley'1 Own Show Band "Vol<*" - ~--featuring Lee Ferrell I C.therlne Cnlg. Ttie lnoredlble Greg Topper Mey 18, 9 p.m. The Chenteyl -known for their hit ''Plpellne." • .. • ··'* ' . ·- It's still among l he five top-rated soaps. CBS said. but a turnover of writers and characters changed the tone of the show. The "World" of today is m uch sexier and turns at a faster pace, blurring character s, especially the newer ones who are in and out of the show within six months. "Writing an hour show, five days a week, 52 weeks a year is very, very difficult," Miss Wagner said. "To make all the tittle details fit is very de· manding. ''But if you're going to write 'World Turns,' you're going lo have lo do that. It's about the de· tails of people 's lives and their interaction rather than the thrust of the story. ''I am very much aware that as the years have gon e by, the char acter must change, ... Miss Wagner said. "I don't expect to be used m the sam e way as I was in the begiMing of the s how. "But I see no reason not to involve Chris and Nancy in the kinds of s ituations that their present age (early 60s) would be," .she said. "Don and I have never objected to being aged as we went along " Her husband and manager, Robert Willey, said "Helen and Don MacLaughJin were the only happily married people on the air . As far as t~e writer's job is concerned. writing a happy mar· riage is incredibly hard to do.'' The character of Nancy Hughes has not been written out of the show, Miss Wagner said. "I have never really criticized what the authors have wanted to do,·· she said. "What I have criticized is what they wanted to lose or not bother with. They should use what background material they have inherited." TM(' MO"ftON PICTUAC Ill MAf 011 SHOWrME9 l•fl.,._11 .. MIOSN s.mc.,...u2.mo .... ----· .. ,, . ·-,_., .. ...--. .. ... .. I I I I I i . .. " THE t'.\JllLl' CIRct·s by Bil Keane "Borfy's tasting P J!" by Brad Anderson "This is getting ridiculous! Let's go!'' - ... BIG GEORGE by V1rg11 Partch (VI P) I "It's a tomato. We're out of olives.". Mom says 1f ya don t ask us to stay for dinner we re gonna buy hamburgers So don I ASK us' Okay? bv Harold Le Doux Jl DG•: P .\RKt:R ~-~ 1"111,llll. H ~1 t'ol•llHlo."l'•f\IN:•I l\~•I\ Ml\(~ •I Wt\'.> V/\l1l II ' : >Ill '1/\IP l\[X)l!T 11 .• ••Ill tX"l'A'.•lllNl\11) 11\1\f " G.\R•'H:l .U by Jim Davis ~RFIELO, YOO HAN& AROONO T._.E HOU5E 100 M OCH WMAT CAN 1 DO TO IN'TER.£51 YOU IN THE GREAT OUTPOORS? YOU CAN SCREEN IT IN AND PUT A ROOF O\IEP. IT, FOR STARTERS 5-15 ACROSS H tf1 5LP 9 Door p1r1 14 Coins of Europe 15 Inner: Prtl. 180...... 17 The Orient 18 Waw: Sleng 19 Contendl 20 l(lnd of well 22 DMdllell • 23 Mr. Gfant • 24 COUCll 25Chtteeu 21 Exciting • movie 32 Ooleout 33-ecld· i AnlleeptlC ! " Mr Wllltnty , 35 Tra\'91 31 Rune ' 137 Edda 3a Chemlc.i Mii• ·~ 4080wl • 1 ntlutntflt)I . ~ , ..... .,..,.... 44 Assert 45 Girl'snemt 46 Of m1M 49 Shy 53 "For want of 5'4 Vessel 55 Ripener 56 lnllexlblllty 57 HOUMPll1 51 AIMkl city 59 Vttryh#d to Of the USA 81 Ilium DOWN 11tlMCI 2Suepec1one HEY! WHAT BROUGHT ON ,ALL 1HAT AMBITION, UNCLE WILLIE? UNITED Ftature Syndicate Thursdly'I Puzzle Solved 3 At one time Dey 42 AllotrMrlt 4 Rldlo dtYlce 24 T tnnaglnt 43 Golf club 5 W1tt1 25 Mlnllter to 45 Liberty 8T ooth fllllllg 211 On one's own 46 Gohc«• 7 Mr. MU8'11 27 Twltttd 47 "Sltp - I Demure \ 28 Oritlller -I": Hurry • An OQMl'I 2t Rent 48 Pudding 10 A~ lnw'l'I 30 Scott City bMe the mouth 31 Mtrttlful 4t ... nomld 11 ~ S3 FIUX pM 50 Oplfltlc ~ M Equebtt Pf1rlCt 12 Olyl before 371mPf9911111t 51 Veme 13 Mt.,.. • Oppolltlon ceptllfl 21 T• 40 lftd0n•l1n 52 -frter 22 ~ lllend ~.,.... Ullle © 1ge1 Uni*' fHlurt Sync!ICAllt tnc: by Ferd & Tom Johnson ~etH~EH·· SIMPL~, MOON·· MAMIE LET IT SLIP SHE THOIJ<:JHT 1 LOOKED MORE ~ANDSoMe WHEN I W,AS TIRE:() ... 11 12 ,, Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. May 15, 1981 PE\~lTS THIS IS MV REfttf ON M~.JO~N DEE~E '\~('\ IN 1837, MK~RE INVENTED THE SELF ·POLl5MIN6 STEEL PlOW WMICM !All\SA ~EAT ~ELP TO FARMERS ... YOU D ID N'T G~~ ~ ONV I t 'l ,K\. "l~K•:RBt:.\1'1 HAVIN6 OUR OWt-1 AIRPLANE WOOLO~''f ~<.>BE A BIG B00.5T R:>R -rnE BA~D ! DR.\BBl .. t: OM, A 80Y. Dr tC( CREAM SANOtiltCl4t~! \.low NICE.! • PLOW? NO, MA'AM, I 'VE NEVE~ SEEN A PLOW ... by Charles M. Schulz by Tom K. Ryan HE NEVER S"t>PS HOPIN& tl'S A SOPRE:ME COOITT iA~E?NI scbUT. by Ernie Bushm1ller r by Gus Arriola by Tom B at1uk PICTURE -rnE 1AX~5 FORMIN6 A LC(N(H MOS f by Kevin Fagan I "<>l'E 'iOIJ oo~"T 1'11\NK illAi'~ ALL \JJE 6oo&t.\i 'iOV~ __ , I ! . , f I -----------~~ • ..----...... -WW WWW V 4 9 ¥ ¥ 4 W -~'1"'-.._ .. -·-... :q: ...... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15. 1981 Presenting the new Audi "Coupe." A high pcrfurm.1m c mal hmc Jes1gned u'>mg the te<)rnology lkH·I, 'l'l'J (11r d1c AuJ1 4000 anJ 5ooll 'l'rte'\ aur11nwhill'" r.1h·n IHH: 'tcr (urthcr Thl· <.r\l1ng '"an ;il·r.11..h 11.11111l t••ur lk f11r1..c Ir ... nJe 1, 1n\ 1g11r;11mg, wuh ll\Jl'tilr1J111~ .11~il11v .1nJ trnlkmg. E\cn 'l:inJing .. ull 11 Im·~-f,1,t 1\nJ. \\llh II 'i l\l1nJl·r l'l1~tne u 1urleJ tll ;J 'i 'Jll'l'd 1r.111,1111"111n, 11 ''·Yet, w1rh all th" n.hil.1ra11n~ perform.tnl t' l Offil'' Cl\l diem (ul·I cumnm\. AuJ1 ( '1>Upl'. ( 'ornc hy and cxrcricm.t• It This Y<eekend only, we're having our sensational once-a-year demo sale! This is a great opportunity to own an exciting sports car just in time for summer. All cars are in top condition, each being maintained by Mc*I Triumphs '80 TR7 Conv. '80 TR8 Conv. '80 TR7 Conv. '80 TR8 Conv. MGs '79 Midget Conv. '79 MGB Conv. 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Newport .Seach 1642-9405 • 540-1764 \ .. ~~\ 599 14•,., OYER INVOICE SALE ON ALL 1981 210s AND 310s IN STOCK Ask To See Factory Invoice -If you don't buy your Datsun from Newport Datsun, you are paying too much. .. ···---· .... , -... > . .. . . . ....................... ,,, ....... ..._ ... . -~ ........ ~~---..--------. . ' . --·-~-----._.....,..._~~""'::"'~--:"....,""ll!" ..................................... ~ ........ ~ ............. 911101111Co~s1111Cs ... ~011119 ... u ........................... 1 , II ••• • , .... \ Daily Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1981 FOR THE RECORD C6 Valenzuela • IS writing his own • sen pt Dodger phenom is quickly becoming Eighth Wonder of the World Phenomenal Fernando By JOHN SEVANO OfllleDllltr,.... ..... LOS ANGELES -It's incredible ... aimply in· credible. As a spectator, you observe and analyze -and nlne innings later you're still shaking your bead in disbelief. Fernando Valenzuela, who is quickly establishing himself as the Eighth Wonder of the World, continued bis mystique over the National League Thursday with a 3·2 victory over Montreal before 53,906 -the largest cr,awd at Dodger Stadium since 1974. Pedro Guerrero provided the heroics as bis home run to left fi eld in the bottom of the ninth in· ning supplied the Dodgers with their margin of victory. And Valenzuela offered the dramatics as he tied a major league record for the most con· secutlve wins at the start of a career. Valenzuela, the superhuman, ran his major league-leading numbers to 8--0 in victories, 72 in in· nings pitched, 7 in complete games, 68 in strike outs and 0.50 in ERA (He also leads the majors with 5 shutouts). ·' Valenzuela, the human, allowed two home runs -the first two of his career -and two earned runs -the first time this season the opposition has scored that many against him. "l thought he pitched a super game," com- plimented his batterymate Mike Sciascia. "They (Montreal) only hit a couple of balls hard besides the home run. I thought he was as good tonight as any other night." Valenzuela's only two mistakes were a hanging curvebaJl lo Chris Speier with one out in the third inning and a low screwball to Andre Dawson with two out in the ninth. ' "It was a very difficult game but I'm happy because the team won." said the Dodgers' phenom through an interpreter. "In baseball, you win some and you lose some," he continued. "I'm ready to accept defeat when it happens. I'm fortunate that God is with me and my teammates are behind me right now ." The win marked the second time in two meet- ings that the DodJers had to rally against the Ex· pos to pull out a win for their young left·h~nder. In Montreal e/rlier this month, after Speier had singled to ruin Valenzuela's shutout and tie the score in the eighth, the Dod1era put together five runs in the top or the 10th for a 6-1 outcome. And, Thursday night, the Dodgers had to come back from a l·O deficit and a 2·2 tie rouowmg Dawson's homer. As a matter of fact, if a gamble by Expos Manager Dick Williams hadn 't backfired, Valenzuela might have been for his first loss. In the sixth inning with Dodgers at second and third and one out, Williams opted to bring his in· field in to protect his team's narrow 1--0 advantage. No sooner had he made the move, however, when Steve Garvey fisted a little fly ball over the head or the drawn in Rodney Scott at second base to score both runners. The ball landed on the dirt part of the infield, just inside the outfield grass. "It was my decision and I take full responsibility for it," said Williams or the maneuver . "Garvey had two strikes on him at the time and I wanted to play for the win on the road I Opponent W·L IP H !A A SO !AA Houston 1-0 • 5 0 0 5 0.00 Sen Frencleco 2-0 • 4 1 1 10 0.50 • Sen Diego 3-0 • 5 0 0 10 0.33 Houston 4-0 • 7 0 0 11 0.25 Sen Francisco 5-() t 7 0 0 7 0.20 Montreal 6-0 t 5 1 1 7 0.33 NY Meta 7-0 • 7 0 0 11 0.2t Montreal M t 3 2 2 7 0.50 Totals l-0 72 43 4 4 SI 0.50 "It was my decision and I'd cto it thP same way the next time." Williams was asked if Valenzuela's presence on the mound had any bearing on his defensive align· ment, and he admitted it did. "Valenzuela could have some effect on a de· cision like that," he said. "Up until that point we had only one hit off him and 1 didn't think we were <See VALENZUELA, Page C2> Angels stay hot Zahn, Hobson lead rout of Brewers, 9-1 MILWAUKEE CAP> -The Angels, who had struggled most of the season, blazed out of town I on a hot streak Thursday, and 1 tried to convince the struggling / Milwaukee Brewers that they could do the same. their guys have hit for haU a dozen years, so you know they're going to come out of it." BA VWR DOUBLED home a run off loser Jim Slaton, 2-2, in the first inning, and the Angels made it 5·0 in the second. grass in front of him it reaJly took off .. ·' l made an attempt, but I didn't think it had the spin on it that it did," Oglivie said. "The ball just dropped in front of me all of a sudden." Fernando Valenzuela hasn't a care in the world as he relaxes on bench with Pepe Frias. Malone's criticism spurred on Celtics Boston captures 14th NBA crown HOUSTON (AP> -The proud Boston Celtics, sick and tired of Moses Malone's bad-mouthing, silenced him and the Houston lft>ckets on their h omecourt. 102·91, Thursday night to eam their record 14th National Basketball Association title the bard way, and, the sweetest. "We were supposed to win, but making them lose in The Sum- m It made it all that much sweeter," said Larry Bird, who devastated the Rocket.a with his bi1•est offensive explosion of tbe slx-1ame aeries. Wrlnain1 champa1ne out or hla 1reen Celtic shirt, Bird noded toward the Houston dress- i n 1 room and said: Moses Malone knows we are the cham- plom now . . . all be did was just 1et us fired up." Several hundred feet down the ball Malone t admitted: "They are the world champions ... you have to 1lve them respect." Bl&D SAID, "It Malone h•d been quiet from the start, maybe the Rocketa could have llVtft UI I better tame." • What Malone bad utd was tbat be could 1et four other IUY• from bl1 hometown of Pet.rabur1, Va., and beat the. • Celtics. Bird ICOl'ed 2'1 polnta, collect· td 11 ...-ndl and doled out ftve ualtta u the Celtic• w•t to blm ln tb9 clutcb. HJa three· Pol1'ter from tbe corner witb • l :N to play 1ave Bolton a .... lead ud buried HoUltoa'• mme· bulrbopes. ''Tbe coach CBW ntcb) kept calJIDI mr play ud I kMw I coukt ..mak• lt," Wd ..... , wbo laad .......... ...,.,. ......... . ""her came to me n-., tlme ..,.,.. tbe atr«ch .•• ··1 didn't hesitate on the three- point shot. I knew it was there. Everytime I shot I felt like it was going in." BOSTON BUILT a 17-point lead before Houston scored 13 straight points early in the fourth quarter. Then Bird set· tied the issue, giving the Celtics the title and approximately $25,000 per player in four games to two. It waa Boston's first world ti· tie since 1976. Red Auerbach, president and general manager, puffed on his familiar cigar and said, "This team ranks right up there with any we've had in re- gard to character. They never bitched and moaned. They never yelled at each other." With champagne ~Pini off his nose, Auerbach grinned, "We finally got off that 13, didn't we?" Auerbach was coach for nine of Bost.oil's world tiUes and has served ln an executive capacity during the other five cham- pionship years. BIRD PLAYFULLY stole Auerbach's cigar durln1 the post-game ceremonies in which NBA Commissioner Larry O'Brien presented the trophy to owner Harry Man•urian Jr., who boqht out Jobn Y. Brown a year •r.· •'Tb a la what you drHm about," 1atd llan1urlan, lau,.._, at Bird wbo waa trJtq to tet lsnoU out of Auerbach'• damp 4'4.•ar. "Swtet la the .ont for tbla!" f'ltclt utd Ua• Celtlct bad worked bard for two ,..,. to make &bii Dllbl DGMlble. "Now we cu &ave our tint off nl1ht ln two ,,..n... •aid ntct. .• • ............ Geoff Zahn, 5-3, who had a 9.45 career earned run average against the Brewers, stopped them on five hits. Butch Hobson lined a mjsplayed, bases-loaded triple in a four-run second inning and Don Baylor added a bases- e m pty homer as the Angels whipped the Brewers, 9·1. THE ANGELS, who nearly cost Manager Jim Fregosi his job by losing three of four games to the Brewe rs in Anaheim earlier this month, now have won five games in a row and six of their last seven. The Brewers have lost seven of their last eight games. "You need a couple of emo· tional victories to get you out of it," the Angels' Brian Downing said. "We had a good series against the Yankees. We came out flat the next night against Detroit, but the night after that we just exploded, and we've been hot ever since. ·'The Brewers and us are very similar, good hitting clubs," Downing said. "We weren't gel· ting the leadoff man on base when we were strug1llng, and they have to miss Paul Molitor and Robin Yount. But most of A single by Ed Ott and a walk started the big inning, and the runners advanced on a wild pickoff attempt b y catcher Charlie Moore. After a walk filled the bases with none out, Hobson hit a sink· ing line drive to left field. Ben Oglivie missed a t r y for an ankle-high catch, and the ball bounced past him to the wall for a three-run triple. The fourth run of the inning scored .on a wild pitch by Jerry Augustine. "I DIDN'T HIT it that well," Hobson said. "That's the reason Benjie charged like he did and the ball just dropped on him. Then when the ball hit the wet Singles by Ott. Bobby Grich and Bobby Clark made it 6--0 in the third. Baylor hit his fifth homer leading off the fifth, and an RBI single by Downing in the sixth stretched the Angels' le.ad to 8-0. The Brewers averted wh.at would have been their sixth shutout of the season and second in three days when Don Money hit his second homer of the year in the sixth. Fred Patek hit an RB I triple in the Angel ninth. ··A touchdown and a field goal I 'll take it," Zahn said. "l ha- ven 't done that well against them in the past, but it helps when you have that many runs. All I had to do was try lo k~p the ball down, keep it in the ball park and make them hit it on the ground ·· Surf has new look, and it's quite classy By CURT SEEDEN Ofu.e DeNf ...... IUff It was no secret that Cnlos Alberto did not get along with management during his stay with the New York Cosmos. And it didn't take long for the Brazilian "world class" de· fender to disagree with Tom Lilledal, director of operations for the Surf, 30 minutes after the two had worked out a contract that brought him to the team. Lilledal, who was recently hired to make winners out of the Surf, regardless of cost, says the team will be in the Soccer Bowl next season. ALBERTO SA VS he, along with fellow Brazilian Paulo Cesar, wilJ put the Surf into the North ·American Soccer League ch ampionship game this year. It is a very pleasant disagree- ment. Alberto, a 36-year·old wizard when it comes to defense and ball handling, and Cesar, a newcomer to the NASL but a seasoned pro in BraaJI, add a touch of class to the Surf, and both were officially welcomed Thursday with a champagne toast at a luncheon at the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Cesar, in fact , will be in the lineup toni1bt when tbe Surf host.a the San Jose Earthquakes at Anaheim Stadium (8 ). Jt'a a bll nllht for the Surf. They're putting their four·1ame NASL win streak on the Hoe, and they're hoping the first bll pro- motion of the seuon -a Beach Boys concert which immediately f ollowa the game -wUI be a bil hit. ''This transition baa taken rour months to complete," notes Surf President Bill Dawson. "Our ownership ls dedicated to fleldin1 a world class team which can Implement a soccer playln1 system to develop Americana into outatandln1 playera." ALBE&TO, IN Bii 1omewbat broken EftCUah, aay1 he aUU bu three 1ooa. years left -tb• number of 7eara on b11 codtract -and be f eelt he can help the Joun1 Americana develop. ''I'm 1ure everythlni wUI bl > Alberto Cuar OK on this team," the always jovial veteran said. "I believe soccer in this area will someday be just like it is in New York. Soccer is the most popular sport in the world, so why not in tle •-. U.S .?" Alberto's confidence and ap- parent will to work within tbe system created by Lilledal brought plenty of smiles to thoee in attendance, particularly the hard·nosed Lllledal and Surf own ers Henry Segerstrom, Jay Carden, Kae Ewing and Richard Hausman . "Next year, Tom CLllledal) and Bill (Dawson) say we're go- ing to make the Soccer Bowl. No, I'm here to be a champion now,'' Alberto confidently pro- claimed. "DURING MY career, I have played with some of the greatest players ln the hi.story of the sport -Pele, Franz Beckenbauer, Giorgio ChlncaJa and others. We learned from each other and It ls my hope to PIH t.thla knowled1e on to my Surf teammates", Alberto added. "There's an old Cb.lneae say. tns," noted UUedal, "that the lon1est Joul'ney 1tarta with a flrat step. I don't know how IClftl the Journer wlll be. Carlos thlnka it wtl be abort. I know tt will end wt th the Soccer Bowl. .. Luted.al aaya the key to I.be Surf aucceu wtU be tbe way tbe team bullda around b.la world claH 1dd1Uou. He added tbat an announcement on yet aDOtber flrat·rate player'• 1lpiq will come 1bortly. Conaplcuoualy quiet durtn1 · 'tburaday'1 lavlab prece4.lu <S.. suar, Pap a> • • • • I t " .. . . • Q Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday. May 16. 1981 __ .... ________________________ ,... . Eagle fans scrinunage, judge calls final play From AP dispa&cbea ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . -Wben [i] two Philadelphia Eagles roo~ball fa~s 4. • . scrimmaged over season ticket.a. it took a Superior Court judge to call. the final play. Following a rull-scale civil court trial, Judge L. Anthony Gibson has ruled real estate man Richard E. Barrish must tum over four of his eight 1981 season tickets to hardware store owner Matthew C. Karpinski. The Mays Landing men, former rootball bu'ddies. went lo court following a bitter battle over eight season tickets to Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium they had shared since 1971. The Judge, annoyed the dispute reached his courtroom Wednesday. called the situation "a case with no winners." "I'm really troubled by this lawsuit that seems to be simply a n outgrowth of a quarrel between two friends who can't get along with one another any more," Gibson said. According to trial testimony: Karpinski and Barrish had been sharing eight season tickets since 1971. It was Uarrish who had traveled to Veterans Stadium lo make the initial purchase 1n 1971 and he had put all the tickets in his name But Karpinski said he always believed four of the tickets were in his name because his checks for Barrish were made out to the Philadelphia Eagles Football Club. The two friends recently had a falling out and Karpinski found himself without tickets. Wh en 1981 Super Bowl tickets were sent out last winter, Barrish refused to turn any over to Karpinski. Karpinski tried to have four season tickets transferred to his name, but was told this could not be don1· without Barrish's approval. That wasn't forthcoming either. Quote of the day Rick Monday, Dodger outfielder. talking about Hous ton s lugger Mike hie, critit'ized for attitude problems when he played for San Francisco. "He's a $40 million airport with a $30 control tower." Schmidt hit• flrat major league homer Dawe ~mld&, a rormf'r Ml111lon Ill Vtojo IU1.h 1landoul. bit hit flMlt ma· Jor le .. u home run, • leadotf Rhol In the 1 lth lnnln1. to help Bo.ton beut Minnesota, 8 f aRf'r blowlna an early e o lud Thursday in American Leagut' ur tlon Schmidt'• homer, a 375-fbot shot Into tho left rteld seats, w11 the fo urth In l403ton 'R 1& hit •t tack . . In other game11. Ont Winfield drovtt In tht• tie hn•uklnl( run with u san1f1 cf' fly nnd Rt'lll• Jad111on wDllopt•d an In surancc three run hom4' run u11 the New York Yunkee11 de fN1led Onklund, 9 ~ . Pat Putnam h111ht'd u t it• breukinR solo homt' run 1n the t•lt(hlh mnlol( to glvt' Tt•x u1-u 3 2 victory over K 11mm11 City hl•h1nd the six h it Schmidt pitching of Doc Medich and t wo relievers Halt1more'I Mlb t'lana1an hurled a five hlttt•r in ~hutting out Toronto tor the second lime in two weeks und Wayne Krenchkkl It'd ~• 17·h1l attack by driving in three runs as the Orioles trounced the Blue Jays, 10 0 . . No charges will be filed against m embers of the Cleveland Indians who In terceded in a street fi ght near Comiskey Park in Chicago, police said All-star third baseman George Brett, la!.t season's American League Most Valuable Player , was removed from Ka nsas City's game against Texas with an ankle injury There was no 1nd1cation how long Bretl would be s1delinl•d .· Sanchez, Hendrick ltft Cardinals Orlando anchez's RBI ground Ii ba II capped a four· run ninth-inning rally that lifted St. Louis to a 7·6 triumph over Houston in National League action Thursday night. St Louis used three walks, one llouston error and two hits, one of them 11 two-run double by George Hendrick, to lake the wm In other games. a dropped fl y ball l>y San Francisco center fielder Bill -North with two out in the eig hth inning e n abled Philadelphia to score the lY· mg a nd lead rul')s and beat the Giants. 3·1 . . Dave Concep cion supplie d the timely hilting a nd Bruce Berenyl a llowed six hits in 72.a innin~s as Cincinnate de feated Ch icago. 6· l . Broderick Pe rkins continued l/endnck his major league-leading bat· ting pace with a pair or hits. inclu~ing a tie breaking double that drove m the first of five eighth inning runs a s San Diego beat the New York Mets 10 6 for their fourth consecutive victory Right field er Jack Clark, who hit 73 home runs over the past three seasons, signed a thrt:e·year contract with San Fra ncisco Thurs day Clark. 25. 1l> currently under a one-year Giants' contract rl.'portedly $400,000. No money details were disclosed for the newly signed con· tract . Saltz back on top .~ of his tennis game I Ex-CdM star doing well at UCLA !· By ED ZINTEL ort ... o.11, P11e1 si.." There was little doubt that after wmning the C IF individual title at Corona de l Mar High in 1979 and leading his team lo its fifth straight CJ F team title, Danny Saltz was a past. present ctnd future star Saltz had all the tools required to become an exceptional col· lege tennis player a powerful and smooth ground stroke. an adequate serve and volley and the best coaching that could have been acquired. S till, there w e re doubts Critics wondered if his frail 6·2 frame could withstand the punishment or a long 4 5 month schedule of 25 or more matches . THOUGH R E HAD ex · perienced fe w injuries as a prep player, Saltz's weight had not kept up with his height. Al 150 pounds , he was do wnright skinny. The critics began sounding like prophets last year whe n, as \·a freshman at UCLA. Saltz ran : into one inJury after another. · First it was the ankle, then the shoulder. Most of the injuries were minor but were the nag- ging kind that keep you from playing 100 percent. But Saltz still played well - when he could -and proved he wasn 't going to fade away like so many past prodigies by win· ' ning the 21-year-old and under National Indoor aingles cham: pionsbip. With that to work on, Saltz was determi ned to make his sophomore season at UCLA one to remember. AFTER PIA YING solely in doubles In 1980, Saltz worked his way up lhe team singles ladder lo the No. 4 spot. He continued to play No. 2 doubles wllh partner Robbie Venter -a two-time AlJ. American Crom South Africa. The injuries did not disappear, however. He developed ten· dlnitts In his left anklt!. But he continued lo play -with paln. Apparently. a hurt Danny Salli was better than most healthy Pac-10 players. Saltz won 18 straight dual matche1 In sln1les before finally losing to Stanford freshman M ike Fallbert laat week, 8-4. 2·6. 3-6. Fallber,, an old rival ol Sall&'• at Santa Barbara Kip, took advanta1e of Salt&'• tender ankle to wear him down. But Salts 1ot bJJ reven1e later ln the day. Wilb the conference title on the line <Stanlord en- tered the laat m atch with an M recor~ after handJnJ UCLA I~ . unly conference defeat of the year earlier, 6-3> Saltz came back to team with Venter and beat J eff Arons a nd Fallberg, 7 ·6, 2·6. 6-3 uCLA won the match and the crown. fl 4 UCLA COACH Glenn Bassett. a former UCLA All-America in the early 1950s. who has had a part in 11 of the Bruins ' 13 na· lional championships, says this about Saltz: "He's the most im· proved player on the team. Dan- ny's No. 4 now but he could easi- ly move up the ladder at any lime. The only problem is that he's grown so fast <Saltz is now 6·3, 16.5) that his strength and footwork are a little behind his game . He's improved his serve and volley to catch up with his tremendous ground strokes." This Saturday, Saltz will begm play with his teammates in the NCAA learn a nd individual championships at the University of Georgia UCLA , with a 21 ·2 season re· co rd , is the c urre nt No. 1 ranked collegiate team in the nation, followed by Pepperdine. S t a nford , Arkansas and Houston. USC is No. 7 and Cal ls No. 14. Sixteen teams will com · pete for the team title. Saltz, as another feather in his cap, has been invited to compete in both the singles and doubles portions of the individual cham· pionships. "Danny has unlimite d poten- ti a I," says Bassett, Yes, patrticularly when he's healthy. • • • The 7th Annual Kodel Mixed Doubles Championships will be he ld Saturda)l· and Sunday at the Btllle ·Jean King Tennis Center in Long Beach. In January, clubs were invited to hold mixed doubles tourna· ments within their own facility and to send winners to compete in this event. The winners of lhls weekend's tournament in each aae lfOUp wlll advance to t.be Clnala of t.be natlbnal Kodel Cup In Flu•htna McadOW5, N.Y .• July 30·31. • • • M o r e t h an three dc>tto celebrities w1ll play Sunday ln the .third annual Cystic Flbrosl1 Celebrity tournament at the Anahelm Milla Racquet Club. Jn addiUon to the celebriUea, some 38 Oranae County amateur ,iayen will play doublet with th I lana. Tlcketa are avatlable al t.be a•te SUnda,. Danny Saltz From Page C1 SURF. • • was interim Coach Laurie Calloway who has been in charge of the team on the field following t he res ignation of Peter Wall. CALLOWAY GUIDED the Surr to a 2·1 victory over San Diego In bis first outing as the head man and he appears to have the Inside track as the Surf's new next coach. A veteran of both the EngHab League and the NASL (he 1pent five seasons as a member of the Earthquakes>. Calloway ts a f ormer head coac h of the Southern California Laaert of the Amertc1n Soccer League. Although he worked cloeely with Wall for two 1JeHOftl, he said he fMlll he can work with LHledal's same plan. addln1 that he feelt both will be wllUn1 lo atvejual a lltUe. WA.LL PELT HE w11 the only one 1lvtn1 and tlnally r•~ed two weekl aco. Toniaht'a came may be Lb• ftnal t.est tor Calloway ~ore man11ement choo1t1 a bead coach, and with an txpecled 30-40,000 tans anticipated at Anaheim Stadium, he can prove htmtell betore the lar1e1l Surf • crowd eYtr Baseball today On thl1 dale In b11ebull ln UNI : ·rhe New York Yankeet dropped 1 U-1 dt1t•l•l<Ml lo the Chlc1110 While SOx, but Joe l>l M iaau,1u'11 single: otf Eddie Smith alarU Th•· Vankc.•ci Clipper on his record ~-iame hilt Ina 1trcuk Today's blrthduy11 Sun fl'runclll<.'O outfielder 0111 North Is 33 Uahlmorc pitcher Ucnnia Martinez la 31 t.:hweland pltcht>r Rick Wuit.a IR 29 Kansas City third bm1cman George Bretl, the 1980 Amttrlcun League MVP, Is 28 Montreal still wants Walker Thf' C1tndlan t-'ootball League ~ Munogeme nt Council's resolution ••• which orohiblts owners from slanlna non gruduule Americans 1s not retroact ve and duu not apply lo University of Georgia running buck Heracbel Walker, Montreal Alouettes ownt'r Nelson SkaJbanla said . . Denver Bronco quart<•rback Craig Morton, who became a free ugent aft~r the 1980 s eason, has signed a con tract with the club for the 1981 NFL season . Wide receiver John Jefferson tried to quiet rumors or a contract feud with the San Diego Chargers . saying fl atly, "I'm not renegotiating" . The San Fruncisco 49ers. who chose four de· fe ns1ve backs in the recent NFL draft. an- nounced the signing of two: Eric Wright or Mis· souri a nd Lynn Thomas of Pitt . . University of M 1chigan quarterback J ohn Wangler, who led the Wolverines to a Rose Bowl victory over the University of Washington on New Year's Day, has signed a contract with the Dallus Cowboys of the NFL . College football powers USC and Oklahoma have agreed to meet in 1987 and 1988. Scott among strong mile field Former UC Irvine standout St~ve • Scott, along with Jobn Walker of New Zealand and Ireland's R ay Flynn will s hoot for a sub-3: 50 mile Saturday to highlight the California Relays track and field meet at Modesto Junior College .. His basket· ball playing days apparenUy over because or a persistent foot injury. Bill Walton has decided to be a lawyer. The 6·11 center has been hired by a San Diego law firm and will begin work May 26. In the fall, he hopes to enter Stanford law school .. CBS.TV will broadcast games involving na- tional champion Indiana, Notre Dame and UCLA in 1981·82 a s part of a 14-date, college bas ketball package leading up to the NCAA Bas ketball Championships ... Tom Watt, coach of the Canadian entry al the 1980 Winter Olym- pic Games, was named as the new head coach of Winnipeg Jets of the NHL Television, radio TV: No events scheduled RADIO: Baseball Angels at Detroit. 5 p m . KMPC <710 1. New York Mets at Dodgers. 7·30 pm .. KABC <790 1. Pirate women win state title SARATOGA The Orange Coast College wome n's tennis team capped an undefeated 21-0 season with a narrow 5·4 win over Chabot Thurs· day to win the community college stale cham· pionship at West Valley Collette. Sophomores Cari Garfield, from Fountain Valley High and Lisa Sawaya from Estancia High and freshman Janet Khorey from Costa Mesa High won s ingles matches. In doubles, Sawaya teamed with Khorey to win and tie the score. 4·4, before Lori Schoettler and Garfield won a 7-6. 7·6 tie-breaker match over Chabot's Marilyn Morrell and Jill Goularti to clinch the title. In the double tie-breaker sets. the scores were 7-1, 7·2. "T his was a team effort," Schoettler, a sophomore from Newport Harbor High said. "Our match was just the last one that was played. "We thought we could win slate becaus e we have so much depth," Schoettler added. "They (Cha bot) had a lot of people cheering for them. But J think our coaching is what helped us most." Coach of the OCC women is Janice Maran.· "She told us before we played the match today that we didn't have to put pressure on ourselves because just getting here was our goal all year," Schoettler said. Islanders now in command UNJONJ')ALE, NY <AP> The Mtnneaota North Stars looked more like their usual selves Thursduy night but, unfortunately for them, the New Vork Islanders looked a lot like their old selves and cranked out a 6·3 victory in game two of the Stanley (.;up finals . The North Stars had scrambled back from a l wo·goal deficit to lie the game 3·3, but the defend· 1ng Nationa l Hockey League c hampion Islanders then exploded for three straight goals in an eight· minute s pan lo go ahead 2·0 in the best·of-seven series "We looked more like ourselves tonight, but ohv1uusly it wusn'l enough," said Minnesota Coach Glen Sonmor "We were a lot more 10 this game than we we re the other night. At 3-3, : fell very good about our chances to win.·· After spotting Minnesota a l·O lead on a power play goal by rookie Dino Ciccarelli, his 13th of the playoffs. lht• Isla nders forged a 3· l advantage on goals by Mike Bossy, Bob Nystrom and Denis Pot· vin Minnesota bounced back. however , on Brad Palmer's lone second-period goal and Steve Payne·s 14th goal of the playoffs j ust 30 seconds in- to the third period. .. You bet I was worried when they made 1t 3 3," admitted Butch Goring "We stopped skating m the second period · · Potvin took the worry out of being close. however, with his second goal of the game and eighth of the playoffs on a power play at the eight minute mark uf the finul period "Thal goal ignited the club and we took" said Potvin ... We started to reel high on the bench when we got that power pl ay " Potvin now has 23 playoff points, Just one Rhy of the National Hockey League record for de· fcnsemen set by Bobby Orr back in 1972 His eighth goal also leaves him just one short of the record held by Orr and Boston's Brad Park Bryan Troltier·s assist on New York ·s final goal gave him al least one point in 15 consecutive games. snapping Orr 's 1972 mark "It's nice to have Orr's record ," said Trottier "I feel I'm being rewarded because the team is winning You really appreciate it whe n all the guys congr atulate each other " From Page Cl VALENZUELA. • • going to score many more "He was super last time we saw him and he was super this time. He 's some kind of a poised young ma n." Speier agreed. "He's got the pitch ( scrc•wball 1 that keeps every- body off ba lance He's been pitching for a m onth and a half now and he ·s dominated. "Whenever a pitcher can do what he's done against a ball club of this caliber you have to give him credit. I just pray people will realize he's a human being and not a piece or meal. I'm glad he doesn't speak English or the kid would be in a world or trouble .. Despite Valenzuela's phenomenal s uccess. some players were still reserving judgment. "He m ade some mis takes he's getting away with now ... analyzed Montreal right fielder Tim Wallach, the former Saddleback Coll ege product who went !I-for 3 Thursday night "There's no question his stuff is good. but nobody has really seen him. "Everybody on the team couldn·t wait lo play to day. He's talked about so much you can't wait to go up there and hit him He's got the stuff and good poise but let's wait until h<''s been around for awhile .. ll 's going to chan,l!e lle 's not going to win every game "He can't.·· Don't tell that to Valenzuela. the Dodgers or those who have seen him pitch. Gompert upset at MV Beth Herr of Dayton, Ohio pulled off a stun· ning tennis upset Thursday in the Seventeen Tournament of Champions at Mission Viejo, toppl· ing top seeded Kate Gompert of Menlo Park in the 18-and·under di vision. 6· 1, 6·3. In another upset. No 1 seed Eileen Tell of Aberdeen . N .J fell to Mi chelle Torres or Northfield, Ill., 3·6, 6·2, 6·1. in the 14-and-under division Play continues through Saturday Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 25 9 .735 Texas 17 12 .586 5~7 Chicago 15 13 .536 7 Angels 18 16 .529 7 Minnesota 11 19 .367 12 Seattle 10 21 .323 13"'1 Kansas City 7 17 .292 13 East Division Cleveland 15 8 .652 Baltimore 16 11 .593 1 New York 18 l~ .581 I Boston 15 14 .517 3 Milwaukee 14 15 .483 4 Detroit 14 16 .467 41v<t Tor onto 10 21 323 9 ,._..., •• 1c_ • ....... MHweullee I lettOft t, Ml""9NU 1 I I 1 IMI,,.) 1•111-.10. T.,.._O H-Y-t,OMll-..J 1 .. ttl• et Detroit.•·· rekl ,. ... ,,_K_ckrf T .. .,. • ._ ...... !Witt H> •t o.tr.lt CllMrrlt NI, 11 1C•11-CltY co.,. ,..,, et .... cer.....-. N l,11 • f04'0fM(LHl2..J)ltCllWIW (l~2·0,fl 1 .. 111. CA!letd._0 •t N_ Y.,. (Net_ I .. ), fl O•lll•fl• (McCetty '·U •I Mll•H••H ( YYCll..,,1(112-21, fl hUt C,,_..Hlt Ml et Cll!Qee 1~4-tl, 11 hltl-•10 Mtl'tlMl~l) etMl_C._.. 1 .. 113-1!.11 NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Dodgers 23 9 .719 Atlanta 17 14 .548 517 Cincinnati 17 14 .548 5i,., San Francisco 17 18 .486 7112 Houston 15 18 .455 8"'a San Diego 13 20 .394 JOlh East Division St. Louis 17 8 .680 Philade lphia 19 12 .613 Montreal 17 13 .567 21~ Pittsburgh 12 13 480 5 New York 8 19 296 10 Chicago 5 22 .185 13 n.inNy·a~ D~ J, MonlrHI l Sen Ole90 10, H-Y-6 Pflllldelllfll• I. Mii Frenclaco I Clflcl~tll. CNc ... I St LWlt 1, Houtlon • , ... , .• o- HtW y-1.i-tO-SI eto-..nl~tlell. 2-0,n (IMINWll 1Pef1.,e 1-1) at f>ltU_.9'1 ($cW''l' M). II 51, LWlt llOteflMft 4"11 el Alltflta (Welk 1•21, n Ciiio• CC.Wiii .._,, •I HOtitlOfl IJ HI .. ,. J.11, II fllllltdtlpfMa ICM'llOfl M l at * 01900 !Mura 1-4), n M•fllre•I ,,.._.u 2·11 •I Saft flranclt<O IWllltMft0-41,11 ~ . ,, ., I> "' •• •• ... ,. " n• "' y "· .. ll I&) .... ,. . ~ • . ~ Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15. 1981 ca IAGUNA,E4C~ IUD FOR SEMIS Soulh Coast Lea1ue champion Laguna Beach Hl1h and Sea View Leaeue klncpln Estancia r esume volleyball action in the C I F quarterfinal playoffs tonight. Low-key Pirates sh~ll Dons,11-1 Wertheimer ~ scores first OCC, Gauchos win playoff openers; Rustlers still alive with victory • • 10 six-meters Estancia, the No. 3 seed and l wo-time finalist , hosts the Santa lh1rbara Dons at 1 o'clock with the winner gaining a semifinal berth against the s urvivor ot the Su n C lem ente ~San Marcos match. Laguna Beach, the No. 1 seed with a 27-0 record, is al Loyola, the Central League champion, ~lso al 7. Pirates, Rustlers advance in softball Orange Coast and Golden West College's women's softball teams both advanced to the sem ifinals of t he Southern California Community College Championships with victories in lhe opening round of play Thurs- day al Golden West. Th e Pirates, be hind the pitching of Jan Culp, defeated Cypress, 2-1 and Pi~rce, 3·1. The Rus tlers, beat Ventura, 5 O in the first round on Kim N uller's two-hit piching performance a nd d efeated Pasadena. 1·0, on the one-hit pitching of Tammy Delp. "There was somethina low-key about this baseball game," Mike Mayne noted, shaking bis head after bis Orance Coast College baseball team breezed to an 11·1 Shaughnessy Playoff victory over Santa Ana a.t OCC Thursday. If 11·1 is low-key, Santa Ana would hate to see the defending state champions when they're charged up. OCC's victory, behind the durable four- hit pitching of Mike Hogan (10.1) sent the Pirates into today's championship battle w1tb t:erritos. If OCC defeats the visiting Falcons, the Bucs will be on their way to those familiar battles known as the state playoffs May 28-31. ff the Pirates lose to Cerritos today, the two teams wilJ get together again Satur- day at noon to decide the South Coast Con- ference's representative in the state bat- tles. That's exactly what happened to the ~ons who feU behind S·O after three in- nings and 7-1 after four. Perhaps the con· test ,became a matter-of.fact outing because of the way Hogan was sending the Santa Ana players back into the dugout. After the Dons collected their only run of the game in the fourth inning on a double by Doug Newark, a fielder's choice and a ground out, Hogan retired 11 straight bat- ter s before giving up a walk In the eighth. He retired the next six batters with little difficulty. ·'The key was definitely Hogan, without a doubt," Mayne summed It up. "He's im· proved so much since he came here." -ySul .. Tiie M:ul• Pam"-"""' •Clwonoc _... ..... pain·~• •Acutea<clvonicrow'** _,.~ .. •l'*"""ia•Te<>donil•·-0- Qjmnloty Y ff I Wlllll P..,, Aollel ~R-T-100 k-Sii-lot '2e0'"• Enc:loMo .. "'Y -"" • "'-"*4myR·T-tOOCOO IJUPOlllOt r.lor9 .....,,.,__ ht-11'9 -IO~ - R-TENS -a...c.,D& ......... -CS UOO le• A-217 aiy . CetM ...._ CA. t2U7 ELECTRO NERVE STtMUUITOR ... .ZIP 156-0719 w TWO DAYS ONLY May I 5 & I 6· Friday and Salwclar I 0 • .--6 p.111. ******************************** Memorial Weekend Su111111er Sale •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• TIHHIS AND SUMMER SPORTSWEAR 50% to 70%0FF FREE • Hyloll StriRg wltll Tetlllls Roc•et PtlrchaH • Selected TENNIS SHOES 50% OFF Spec I al Cadillac Beach Cheirs ,..,. H.tl 33.95 2700 W. Coast Hwy. Newport leach 642-8335 T HE BEST All Ski Merchanclse On Sale Special Boogie Board Sale In reading enjoyment comes to your home 7 dey1 a week In the D••IJ pjl .. 181 '42·4321 \ OCC scored twice in the flnt iMln1. although they got just one hit, an RBI single by Kevin Sliwinski. OCC beneflled from Spear's wildness which resulted with leadoff walks to Rich Amaral and Larry Lee, bOth of whom came arowid to score before the inning was over. It may have been a mistake puttina Amaral on base. He apparently liked It out there. The freshman third bueman fror.i Es tancia High cracked four straillht B4SEH4LL singles after that, scoring twice and knocking in a run. "He's an ideal leadoff hitter," Mayne understated. Amaral ended the regular season as the No. 5 hitter in the conference with a .418 average. The victory upped OCC's overall record to 31·6, yet despite the lopsided record, Mayne was concerned about the fi rst playoff game. "I Wt4S a Little leary about it. We had won a fol or big games this year, but we had already accomplished a goal (the con· ference title>. Now we had another big game and I didn't know if we would have a carry-over from the regular season," Mayne said. Saddleback 4, SBVC 3 Rusty Evans ripped a double which hit the left-field chalk line and scored Mark ~wancoat in the bottom of the eighth inn- Prkes e&cd\<e thru Wednesd.ly, M.ty 20, 1981 ing , as the Gau chos a d vanced to Saturday's Mission Conference title game against San Diego CC. T he Gauchos, 21-14 overall, are tryin& to send retiring coach Dick Stueu out as a winne r , a nd Thursday's pitcher Ben Amaya gave his contribution. T he sophomore right-bander scattered 'ive hits In going the distance to pick up his 10th win. nearly half the team's vic- tories. Meanwhile, Rick Irwin went 2-for-3 and Evans delivered bis clutch hit to snap a 3.3 lie as the Gauchos are now just one step away from the state tournament. The Gauchos will host San Diego CC Saturday at 1 p.m . Brian Wertheimer of Seattle Yacht Club scored the first win in the five-race National Cham- pionship regatta for the six- meter class under dreary skies and light winds off Newport Beach Thursday. The regatta, s ponsor ed by Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. continues through Sunday with the title hinging on the best fou r of fi ve races. Second in Thursday's race was Ah Si Si, skippered by Den ms Durgan of Newport Hafbor Yacht Club Third was Ranger sailed by Andy Rose of Balbo~ GWC 12, Southweat 1 Yacht Club for the Fort Worth Wes Collins and Keith Hall belted home Boat Club runs and the Rustlers swept the four Fourth was St. Francis Vil games with LA Southwest to remain tied with John Bertrand of St. Fran· for first place in the Southern Cal Con· cis Yacht Club at the helm, and ference with LA Harbor. fifth was Discovery s ajled by If both GWC and Harbor win Saturday Hank Thayer, Newpo rt Harbor and fi nish the second-ha lf with identical Yacht Club. for owner Greg 10·3 marks, they'd meet in a playoff game Thagard of Bahia Corinthian Tuesday. If GWC wins that game. the Ya c ht Club Gayle Post·s Rustlers and Seahawks would then meet in Perspicious the sixth entrv from the conference's best two·oul-of-three Balboa Yacht Club did not start playoff battle to earn a berth in the slate The six-meters are one of the playoffs. oldest development class sailing Freshman right-hander Rob Meyer fired yachts in the world. During the a three-hitter at LA Southwest, striking 1930s they were one of the Olym out seven and walking four for his first pie Yachting Classes but were complete game of the year. replaced after World War II by -By Curt Seeden the less expensive 5.5-meters. ~~~~~~~~~~..::......~~~--~~~ ,-------~ .-.'.. :::: 4't.I ........ l -.. ----~' Stereo CASSEITE PIA YER ALTUS-Top qua11ry con )Cr'UCU(.)n ll ~It \t~ff"'O ou1pv1 s~,u.,,,, noc 1n<lvd~ 1'3730 1199lA~ WE'RE HELPING YOU DO IT RI SPARK PLUG ~lar.72(;\. ' Resistor GG type 900EA. HAND CLfANE GO JO wllh pumKC' #1151 99• IC>Ot lA 1ua · HAND HELD SPORIGHT STA.Run Comp.l<I design lh~ m0<;1 s•~ comp.\nmen~ l'lug\ Into any clgarene llgh1e1 IKl'j)!Kle. n 1061 Dowgard Summer •OOIANT Buylwo - Get One Freel \ei.' \!Oft' IOI Clt'lo\llS LIMIT 89 ~:,:~ 3 CAL INTUDYNAMICS Al R CONDITIONING RECHARGE KIT SHALER RISLONE ~9'119 jf_ QT. · 100Ql JS97 KASCO REBUILT CARBURETOR Fo1 f)c\~'>t'nger CMS only (~.,,., C"""""H (t""-•'lt' I'"*-, l•l ()\~18fttl ... ,h (f'Wlovt(ltfo1 \ ~ .. """""""lw ,,,.,~ f t u,, /ftl\4 ,,,,, f0t1• f .. (lt\ f,.1fl.AtW" (t.)nW'I i\\otvt"•ic,4. ~a&1~:"~~'ll~11.;t~~;.>~ ,_l~'lll I/ 14> J'JJfnA !:;;~ ,~~~ ~~'~;l\t< ;-;;~' ~:':";:~. ,,~ 22 ~~. 26f!~ 5BAND GRAPH EQUALIZER Al.nJS-Cu~1om m1xl'<I 4 9 9 5 ~ncl plu~ ex11,\ ~· 101 your 1.1creo 1.y-.1em n 3 7 l 7 EA. DU.UXE INDUC11Vf. _____ _...., TIMING LIGHT SUN REBUILT CLUTCH &. PRESSURE PlATES ror -Am~rtu.n l'AH.U~. FRONT WHEEL BEARINGS • (. f'loto-.i'IJW' {"~II < hn'f'ISr ( .-m111n ~\WI' I~ I'> Ct< v1 lftM ( it•V fC)fCt fflc(V\ fMf'W'w' (,l)mf'I ~\jjtl~. l<>af! IY'Rl .. llMl•C••• 30~~ 33~~11n~~~-~-~ for most Amerkt'ln C.irs 1962 1979 (E .. ~epr Corve11e Toron<1do dnd CC1p1I) loner 29 orout~r 3 ngh1 or l~fl lACH s~. Open O.lly 9-9s Sat. 9~, Sun. 9-5 AMhehn luena Park •fountain Valley 1280 N. Eudki 5256 Beach Blvd. 9880 Warner Ave. (S. ot !'"*~~ 91 ) (at Malvem -'Cross (714)964-6427 772-9940 from K·Mart) • f•lerton • AM1M1m (114)9M·U10 141 t. Im Ml 2)40 W. Uncoln Ave.Col&a MeN (714)7l'M97 I 999· 1611 1739 s~ A\le.. • fulerton 6U·Hl4 2978 Yo.O. Undt •Next to Gemco (714)996-4780 m'Al CLUa ... fo1~t ArnritttAn ttu-. 13~· (2)()()16 t. 8 Cy4 1Mre~1 • La Mirada Oranse • Setnta AM 15081 Imperial 1100 N. Tuslln 2604 S Bristol St. (213)947-5641 (Ac.ro~s from (one blOC.k s of • Mtae1on ~ f'osc Offke Warner Ave.) 24510 Alicia l'atttway 771-)000 754· 14)1 9S I -9 I 75 • ltMt'lkte • Sant.A AnA 10403 Magj1oll-' Ave. • (714)JS9:J041 .. , 4 a c • #4 $ 0 0 5 ease sec o e .S ; as • Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT/Frtday, May 15. 1981 JOHN EYANO Rams: Battleground becomes a cemetery NOTES & QUOTES ..• For members of the media, Rams Park. circa 1980, was both a writer's deliaht und a writer's headache. There were stories aplenty good stories - and s omething was always happe n ing . Everywhere you turned, everywhere you looked there was some displeasure by a player in one form or another. And, as annoying as It was to Rams manage- ment, the controversy and unrest made for good copy. Everythln& is peaceful, quiet and serene once again. The players are laughing and Joking, owner Georgia Frontlere has come out of hibernation and never is heard a discouraging word. The imaginary sign hanging across Rams Park Is crystal clear. "If you have nothing nice to say. don't say It. Because if you do .. Management has demonatrated what w111 hap- pen to violators. Simply put, they'll bury them So don't look for any grumblings about con· tracts, any raps against the owner or any back· stabbings. The Rams are dedicated to playing Coot ball this year. Youngblood Fronhtre The headaches came from the continuing prob- lems manifested by the malcontents. Sure. It made for good read ing• ... but there was never a break in the action, either. Pretty boring, huh'' • • • Coach Ray Malavasi • on the departures of "I half' to los~ a guy like Jack Reynolds. But lh61l 's why we've been bringing other players a Ion ft." Vi n ce Ferragamo. Bob Reynolds: Br udzinski und Jack Was Rams management underpricing these players-> The reason for the background is the new philosophy that has apparenlly been adopted at Rams Park this season. Al the Rams' mini-camp this week all indications are that the battleground has been transformed into a cemetery. '·I'm surprised you (press) don 'l understand The players we lost are good (ootball players. but tames chan~e. things happen "That was n 't the r eason at all,'' said M uh1vas1. "ll was a questlon of players outpricing them~elves al certain limes in their careers." It's a very good weekend f Or viewing sports Preakness race , Indy 500 time trials, two Angel games highlight television schedule By HOWARD L. HANDY Oft.,. !Hilf ~ S!Mt Angel baseball. the Preakness and Indianapolis 500 time trials will be the feature television sports events this weekend. The Angels will be on Channel S Saturday al 11 and Sunday at 10:30 after gelling turned around thjs week with five straight victories. The Preakness, with Pleasant Colony seeking the second leg of the Triple Crown in Baltimore, will be aired on Channel 7 Saturday starting al 2 o'clock. {The race begins at 2 :38). The Indy time trials will take place Saturday on Wide World of Sports (Channel 7 at l>. then the final bump· Ing session Sunday will be televised on the same channel at s o'clock Sun. day <Channel 2 a t 10 a.m. >. Saturday's TV. radio TELEVISION 9 a.m. <SJ TENNIS -VIJay Amrilraj vs. Peter Fleming in a se mifin al m a t c h in the WCT Challenge Cup, taped in Montreal. 10 ·30 a .m Clll BASEBALL BUNCH. 11 am <51 ANGEL S BASEBALL The Angels meet lhe Tigers in Detroit 11 : 15 a .m . (4J BASEBALL The Cincinnati Reds meet the Pirates in Piltsbur~h. 1 p.m. (7) WIDE WORLD OF S PORTS -A national championship dirt car even t, taped at Eldora Speedway in Rossburg, Ohio Also: A live report on the rain-delayed Indy qualifications and a behind-the· scenes look at the Preakness. 2 p.m . (4 ) -WESTERN OUT· DOORSMAN A trip to Arizona for a chili-making contest . (7) -HORSE RACING The 106th running of the Preakness Stakes, telecast from Baltimore (Ill OUTDOOR LJFE Segments include fishing for a lOO·poUl\d sailfish off the coast of CenlraJ America. 3 p.m. (2) GOLF -Tbird-round play in the Colonial National Invita lion, taped at Fort Worth, Texas. (7) WIDE WORLD OF SPORTS - RescheduJed from an eartier date · The National Air Races, taped al Reno Also A lave post-race report on the Preakness horse race 3 .30 pm. (71 -GR EATEST SPORTS LEGENDS -Host George Plimpton talks to Pirate slugger Willie Stargell ilboul his former teammate Roberto Clemente. (34) - FUTBOL Cosmos vs. Pa raguay. 4 p.m. 121 SPORTS SATURDAY Jorge Morales ( 27 ·5· l l defends his North American Boxing Federation lag ht weight title against Ray "Boom Boom" Mancina ( 18-0) in a scheduled 12-round bout, taped at Kiamesha Lake, N.Y. 4:30p.m (281 SOCCER. P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS aUSINl'.H NAME STATEMENT Th• lollowlrw;i per..,... h 001"9 bust '1tUO. AMERICAN INDUSTRIAL SUP Pl..Y, 1.-Z Mor., SI. WtSlmtn\ltr, CA '1 .. l Wllllam A Hamlllon Jr , •111 "°"" Dr , Hunllnglon S.ecll, C.11 .,_ Tiii\ buslntU IS C-UC1td OY _, In dlVIOu•I Wiiiiam A Hemllton Jr T fH' tt.tement w•' t11.o wit" tr. Countf Cltr1< of Or-County or Aprll 2', 1911 '1'1114 Publlllltd Orano• COHI Deity Piiot, Maf I, I, U. U, '"' 1009·11 PUBLIC NOTICE 6:30 pm. (50 1 T ENNIS FOR THE FUTURE Co ach Vac Braden shows how lo change the overhead shot from a humiliating handicap to a poml·scoring weapon 8 pm 15) TOP RANK FIGHTS OF T HE '70s In only has eighth pro fight. Olympic gold medahsl Leon Spinks s horked the boxing world with a 15-round s plit decision over heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali. (50 ) SOCCER MADE IN GERMANY. 9 p.m. (50) SPORTS AME RICA Highlights of the Rochester In- ternataonal bonspiel curling cham- pionships an Rochester, N Y where tea ms from the U.S. and Canada compete. RADIO Baseball Angels at Detroit, 11.10 am , KMPC <710); New York Mets at Dodgers. 7 pm . KABC 1790) Horse Haring P reakness Preview. 8 40 a .m .. 9 40 a m , 11 40 am. 12·110 pm .. t ·'10 pm . KNX ( 1070) 106th Preakness. 2·25 p.m ., KNX I 10701 Sunday's TV. radio TELEVISION 10 am 121 PORTS SUNDAY - The finals o f the 31st ann ual American Rowling Congre1>i, masters champion.-,hip, telecast from Mem- phis. Also: The world aerobatics champions hips and the Mr . Universe body building champions hips. (SO ) S PORTS AMERICA Hi ghlights of the Rochester International bonspicl curling c hampionship in H.ochester. N Y 10 .30 am . (51 ANGELS BASEBALL The Angels meet the Tigers an Detroit Noon ( 11 I THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL. 1 p.m (2J GOLF Final round play in the Colonial National lnvlta· lion al Fort Worth. Texas. 1. 30 p.m 17 > 1981 VIRGINIA 500 -Highlights of the 1981 Virginia 500. taped al Martinsville, Val. 4 p.m. 14J SPORTSWORLD - Eddie Mustafa Muhammad 138-4·1) vs Renaldo S nipes 120·0 ) in a scheduled 10 -round heavyweight bout. taped at Atl antic City. Also: The women's world. bodybuilding championshi ps. taped at Atlantic, City 5 pm 171 AUTO RA CING - Drivers make their fina l attempts lo bre:ik into the 33-car fi eld for next Sunday's Indy 500 in taped coverage of "humping day" al Indianapolis. 7 p.m. (28) -TENNIS FOR THE FUTURE Coach Vic Braden dis· cusses the offensive potential of a well timed lob s hot. RADIO Baseball Angels at Detroit. 10: 30 a .m ., KMPC (710); New York Mets at Dodgers. 1 p.m ., KABC (790). (The Dally Piiot l.s not reseoulbl& for late changes.) LARRY BROOKS WHO, along with J u<•k Youngblood, signed extensions to their contrnct• through the 1984 season, said the Rams' handllnl' of the three malcontents and subsequent exiles ha11 him thinking a little bit. ··or course it affected my decision (about sign Ing)." admitted Brooks. "I was wonde ring wh1P was going to happen, loo. In football you only ha .. three options, you can be traded, cut or you can n tire " Dad the summer walkout help their cause'' "That's hard to say. We felt we had to exprl'" ourselves In a certain way " • • ADD MALAYA~ on last year's hassles "It was tough and it was fruslratrng It definitely hurt us early ." How about during the season? "ll was a pain in the ass." Malavasi went so far as lo tell has team foli o" ing the Dallas playoff loss he wouldn't cndur another year like 1980. "I'm not goin~ to do thjs again," he told th• players on their final Monday meeting "I'm nor going lo go through this again. We can't havt• winning team with unrest " • • • ADD YOUNGBLOOD on last year's holdout "Holding out doesn't do any good fo r the fool ball team. It was a busi ness decision I harl 1 make. It was an opportunity to express myself an enjoy myself <remember , Youngblood and Brook spent their holdout fishing in Florida) ... • • • The players do pay fines: Youngblood estimated that last year·s v:H-.1 tion cost him roughly $7,000, "and that doesn even include all the plane trips back and forth · h said. • • • Youngblood on the t hree exiles· . "The teait1 concept comes on Sunday rootti.tl' is a big business now and each individual h.,., 11 handle that in his own way.'' Does the fact Youngblood and Brooks caml:' t1 terms mean anything. "It shows agreements can be reached hl•re. added Youngblood. "It just depends on what l'<wl individual wants ." Footnote Youngblood said he got every1 hi ng he originally asked for from Rams managN~t·nt 11• the end • • • Georgia was an a good mood Wednesda} J\ 11 veterans joined the rookies First she addressed the squad of more than HO players by welcoming them to camp. and then ~ht• sat among the players durin~ lunch , Spl'n<hng most of her time with Bob Lee (I wonder 1f f';1 t lf aden noticed that"). Finally, after lunch, she got a lt>sson 111 cat ching passes from offensive coach Liont•I Taylor "Her hands are pretty good but she hasn't rut• any pass pattern!> yet ... said one member tJf th• media. "We'll see that when lhe trial opens.· :iuipped another ''CTITIOUS auSINllH NAME STATU"l!NT Th• looow1no per'°" Is doln9 oust P UBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE "9:.:~;IVATIOHAL MAIHC:ETING. no ,ICTITIOUS •USINllSi -T11le"t AO , C°'la ~ .. CA '7•U "CTITIOUS aUSINEU NAME STATEMllNT Derwin M. 801,lnger, UO Tulent NAMI STATllMENT Tl\t lol-lnQ perfOn ts OOlnQ Dusi· Ao • C°'t.e MeM, CA t>•i. T "• 1011ow1no perton It c1o1no 1>u11 I nt1' H Thi' buMntn la conckK .. O by an fn . ntu H ICAT'S LAWN AND GARDEN CIMOual(,,._nO&wlltl. STUART , JEFFRIES & AS CARE, '1S Dtl Mar Ave. CoUe D«wln M eo1,1noer SOCIATES. 1711 Gltnlltyrt, 1.eo""a Moa,C.llfUV. Tl\ls ~i.n-t wH lllecl with 1he Bta<ll,C.11'2.SI ICall\lten E Enelrts, 2U 0.1 Mtr AC FIRE R/Nli SPARK /IWliS SArlE BAS ... SArE MONEY. C°"nty Cltn Of Or~ C_..y O" May Gary S MonrM. JIS OsOOOC1 Cl . AYt., C06ta -·CA mn •·1"1 La11una9H<l\,CAtt.s1 Tlll•-•l•<,,,,_-.iby..,ln· 'ltlW Th•• bvllnau h colMluctltd DY • Olvldua1 ll"ubll._ OrMQe Co.st Dally Pilot. llmttad p.,.,,,.r\lltp ICatll-E EnOr" Mar•. u, 12, n. "" 11~1 Gary s Monroe T111t 11ott•-nt .... 111ec1 w1t11 111t I --I Tiii' Slel•mt•ll wH lllecl wltll. the Coun lf Cltf1l Of 0r.,... Countv 111 PUBLIC NOTICE Coun ty , .. ,... of Onnoe C.untf Oii May .llprll Jt, '"'· ""'" _ __.__ 6. 1tt1 l'ubll•lltO Orange Coot Dtlly 'mu. Piiot, May 1, a, u. n. 1tt1 1ooe-e1 NS fMU Publl~tlecl 0ref'flt Cont Dtlly Piiot. "ICTITIOUS auStNEU j May 1 I\ 11 2t ltll 21JH1 NAMll STATIMllHT ' ' ' ' " Tllo lollowl"lJ PtrMlfl• are ooino 1 PUBLIC NOTICE ,.,~,,,.,... I P UBLIC NOTICE . PACIFic IN OUST RIAL PEA SON· "'CTI TI OU$ aUilNIH NEI.. SERVICE, '10 NtwPort C.llltr NAME STATllMllNT Drive. Sullt 211, Newport Bu ell, "CTITIOUS aUSINISS Tiit 1011.,.1119 per'°"' era 0•1110 Celllornta fM) NAMI STA TIME NT OU1lnt11 n AME A IC AH 8 U $I N ES S The lollowlno PtrlOn\ art doing OVA GLASS. 1' Clowr. lf•IM, SERVICE CO RPORATION , e l>uslntHU Calilornlet27U Calllornla cori:io.-.tlo'I, .. o Htwpor1 SEOVOl.11 HOMES, 2012 s.a JULIE M.llA IE 80DMIR, .. Ct'lttr Drive, Suitt 21S, Newport 8rl\tol, Suitt~. S...La .llna, CA '2107. Clover, Irvine, Calllotf'la t2114. 8tt<ll. CalllomlatMl,' Stquole .. ..,,. .. t Calllor11le tor· JEFFREY 1..Y""'N &ODMIA i. 1 Tl\ls llUllneH I• conduc-.i by • '°' ooratlon, 2092 S.E Brlttol. Satlla .llna, Clover, lrvlM, C.lllornla t1114 ' -•tlon Calllorr1lat21'0I. Tiii• ~AM• I• ,_..O l>y.., In j AINrk., a.._1neu This bull,.... la <onCIU<ltO by a tor. olvldual Ser"'<• Corporation Po••llon Jutte M. --..r Wllllam J. Wilton. SeQuola H-Tl\h •la...,_1 waJ 111111 wllll Int PrHI-TOM Wiiiiama, ~-I County Cltrlt of Or.., .. C.&unlf .., Tiiis •lat-I wn lllecl will\ tl\t Tllla slal-t wH llltd "'"" lllOl April tt. 1t•1. CO\lfllf Clor• ol Orange Covnlf °" County Cltrl! ol Ot., .. County O'I ,1611,. Aprll D , 1Wl. April I, ltll l'ubll.-0rAn9t Coaal Dallf l'lloi, ,,... , ....... f'11tHt Mo 1, •• U, n , 1 .. 1 JOIH1 Publll-Or ..... COHI Dally l'llol, PwblllMO Otanoe C.oHt Dally Pilot. Maf 1, I, IS, 22, 1'11 20M-tl Maf I, U, 2:7, 2'. lttl 21 .... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE "C'TITl°"S aUSINllU llAMll $ ... HMelfT fl\t ,., ...... ..,_ .,. 0011111 WllMU M: HllLPIHO HANDS A£1'EAltAI.$, • a1 ... .11w .• .._PO,, .. k.,, c.11 ...... 1411th /IMry ....... •llOll Avt .. • Ntw...., 9MCI\, CA '1..o .l.,l'itl .. tnerd "••, ao6 alMn Ave.r NfWPllih .. adl, CA t2MO. Tlllt .....,.,._ It 'ff'Mlff ~ a 19Mra1..,wr1111-. IMtt!M. .... Tlllt ............. -111.-#ltll u. """"' °"" fll Or .... C.V..ty ... .., .. !t, '"'· '""" ll'ublltllell Ortn .. co .. 1 Otllf PUBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS aUSINllU NAMll STAT8MllNT T"' f•i.wlnt 1*"*1 I• dt~ ...,_,. ""'" TWO GUYS l'ltOM ITAl..Y, 1•\U Hart>or &Ivel .. '°""'•"' Valley, C... t27ot. Grttorlo 91111011. 2104 w. "''''"· Orange, CA., ... ,. Tllla blllll!eSS Is C°"°"'lff by 1111 Ill· dlvl<Nal. o,..,,1o •1111"" fllll ..._, ,.._ Ill• WIUI Ille e-1, O.rtl., 0r.,.. c:...nt,.,, Mef .. , .. , ,,, ...... ,1.1611 ,_....,.Or ... CMtll Deity ,,... ,,,.., •• u. it. "· "" ,..., ~II ... ,,_.., t,a, IS, n , , .. , .. , .. , 1----------- PUBUC NOTICE -------PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "CTI Tl OU$ aUllNIU NAMa aTAT•MINT I TM fOllOWlnt Wtona •rt dtlflt liullneu et. NI Wl'OltT HAltSOlt IHl'Y"ltO, tn 111\, ..._,, ...... Cl< ft.U lfowero c~u """" 111, 1141 •on•lrt W.y, HtwJort 11te<11, c" m.o. Ml(llMI D, 8elfl, ~ 011rllnotl'lle, los Antt._, GA toOft. Tll ll but.I-• I\ U1'4UUtd by a l•Mrel HfVltnlllp, How411'41 C. atwp 111 Tiii• ............. WM llltd wllll tllt CtvnlY C..,._ Of 0..411191 c.vnty ell .. ,, .. ,., ... , . .. ,." .. llllblh"'o Orer1tt Cotti Otllr ll'lltl, Mey I, t, U, 22, 1 .. 1 IOOWI fUBUC NOTICE If your spark plugs are mis- firing , a tune-up and a new set of ACs can help improve your mileage. ACs heat fast. Fire hot. And help deliver smooth, mile-stretching performance. Come on in for a new set of AC Fire Ring Spark Plugs. And give your ride some ''new fire". REGULAR TYPE RESISTOR TYPE •flntu ~hown above 111 on iWOtilQfl ae111ng price based up0n 11ec.en1 1n<1upundt1111 .u1vey of ltn AC O~lco outlals 1ll 1h1s are• selecled at 11ndon' [ach AC·Oolco outlet hsled below 1s an independent business 1mct th11100~ 111111111ovo1pr1ee111 chooses for tis DrOducta '!!ICQS will vary nncl w11 inv110 you tn 'hop around lor lhe best p11ce1. Quality and service vo11 e11n lino Price• ood thru M1y 17. 1981 . .-.-----------------. (llJ 6 .. 1"6"'1tt,YI ~ ............. f' "·'-'•--...... Kool T"ANIMllllON OIL COOLER •Stop heat damage to your transmission •Double Its life. .~i~~i!~ •Easy Kit ' .. HMM& ci. .. , c"" '''"'· J4 .,. ,,..... Fot 11MllH ., ,,.,.,, Installation . U.i. s51s kit '1 49 .. ,,,~2495 I COSTA MESA • Solitll Coast Auto Supply • 688 W. Baker at Bristol • 556-2500 NEWPORT BEACH • untted Auto Parts • 2902 W. Coast llOwaY • 646·93 ~ ...... ,... I . -. ... , ... -,.,. ........ -' .... \ \ • ,, , ., • " Area women . . • • • s@il s 0 0 OCC shell favored • Ill 0 <: ssoaoc a cs a 0 .... Or nge Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 ('~ Western Sprints dominate South team 19 collegiate crews (minus the Pac-10 ) compete in annual event Saturday, Sunday Cara i'Tancy, Shannon Meyer and Chris Wycinowski head the South team selected for the Orange County women's high school b~ketball all-star game at Fountain Valley High June 13. Francy, a 5-10 forward from Estancia. averaged 16. 7 points and 10.2 rebounds a ~ame last season. Meyer, a 5-9 guard from Edison High, scored 19.0 points a game and averaged 12.7 re- bounds. Fountain Valley's Wycmowsk1 averaged 19.3 points a game. Other members of the team in· e lude : Colleen Berry <5·8, Marina); Marianne Belgen (5·6, Fountain Valley); Teri Donohue C6·0. Mater Dei); Sue Randall C5·9 , Edison); Vicki Simpson (5 ·7, E s tancia ). Melinda Bauman <Mater Dei>, Melarue Whitenack (Capistrano Valley); Lisa Grandmaison (Foothill ); and Tanya Mothe rshed (San- tiago> By q.JRT SEED EN Of t .. Delly ......... " At one time, the Western Sprints at- tracted some of tbe top collegiate crews in the Western United States for two days or exciting races. Crews from UCLA, California. Washington State, San Diego State and Santa Clara gathered as the season was winding down and the oarsmen knew what to expect from the other shells from earUer regattas. The Pac-10 was especially aware of the talented Orange Coast College crew, which last year swept all four races it entered at the Western Sprints. SATURDAY MORNING, 19 collegiate crews will gather in the Mare Island Ship Channel in Vallejo for the Western Sprints. and conspicuously missing from the prestigious event are all Pac-10 schools fielding crews. "They (the Pac-10) thought they would have a more prestigious event if they limited a regatta to themselves," explains OCC Coach Dave Grant. "But what they've done 1s create two smaller regattas instead of one high-caJlber re· gatta." So, while the Western Sprints are be· ing held Saturday and Sunday. the Pac-10 will be holding its finals at Redwood Shores in Palo Alto. ·'It's just criminal to keep the oarsmen apart," Grant says. "If you left it up to the oarsmen thfy'd say, 'of course, we want to race the best com- petition,' .. he adds. That best competition is unmistaken- ly OCC in the Junior varsity dlvision. ·'The only competition California and Washington has is with Orange Coast in the JVs,'' Grant continues. "And in the freshman events Coast has already beaten them. So, they're missing out on the best part of the competition. We're hopeful things will turn around." GRANT SAYS UCLA. Stanford and Cal are all in favor of joining the Western Sprints. but one more vote is needed from the remaining three schools which held a crew. •'The US<.: Coach (Bob Hillen> told rne last week that he wanted to put the re gatta back together again, but we'd like to see them vote that way,'' Grant says. "Tallc's cheap " Grant is quick to point out that each year OCC is invited to the Eastern Sprints, but "we can't even get invited by our own local institutions. "It's been a real struggle and a fight This is the third year the Pac-10 has scheduled it this way,'' Grant adds. Plain and simple. the Pac-10 schools are tired of losing to a community col· lege crew. "THE OARSMEN deserve the best competition, and I'm hopeful we can turn this thing around," Grant says. In the meantime. OCC will face the challenge of crews from the University of British Columbia. UC Davis. UC Irvine. Humboldt State. UC San Diego, UC Santa Barbara, California Maritime Academy, University of San Diego, San Diego State, Santa Clara, Seattle Pacific, Western Washington. Pacific • Lutheran, Loyola. Lon~ U('.1rh "' .11•· Puget Sound, St M J n'!> and, 111 1111l event, Oregon Slate Last year. OCC won l'Vcry CVl'lll 11 p~rl1c1pated an Thrt>ati:nang a rept•at uf a Pirate sweep are Santii Clara and tht• oarsmen from British Columbia "This 1s an important regatl.i 1111 U'-. Grant says. "Right now, wt.•1t· lo11ktnf at whether or not we want to :.t•nd 11111 fres hmen to the Nationals .ind 011 sophomores to the llenley Hoy;al Ht)( 11 ta <in England> ··Tht.'ar pt•rf111111.1111 • this weekend wrll giv1• u'" prt'lt\ 1•1,.d indication." THE LENGTHY ro\.\ang !>l•asun 1·. start mg lo ~ md do~ n. and thl' 1'11 ;1f\'' are th mg to continue lhe p uce "'1111'11 has seen the Junior varsit)' go •Jndt (1".1t ed this season "For a s port that bc~an'> 111 s, 11 tember, it's not alwa y~ an t'a~~ tl1111g 111 still b<c• up for a race in May l 111 , .. ,.,II ed about it and I think tht' 1-:UY'-~"' genuinely, loo," Grant ~iiys Scarlett heads javelin field ---------~1-'l'his Weeks Special l 4ERCEDES-JAGUAR-VOLVO OCEANSIDE -A trio of Orange Coast area javelin throwers will go head-to-head Saturday al noon when MiraCosta College hosts the Southern California community college track prelims. Golden West College's Mike Scarlett. whose 224-10 toss is the best in the state and second in the nation. gets his toughest challenge from neighbor· ing Orange Coast and Saddleback. The Pirates counter with Jeff Hailey, the South Coast Conference champion with a 205-7 personal best. Likewise. Saddleback's Tim Mills won the Mission Conference javelin with a 209-9. Hailey and Saddleback's Jim Doehring wiil be among the top shot put entrants. with Doehring owning the best community college mark in the nation at 59·9. Others to watch at the competition, which pits the top five qualifiers from conference meets along with participants who have bettered the qua lifications marks. include OCC's Mike Lansdon and Saddleback's Mitch Clark. Clark's 30:08.38 in the 10,000 meters at the Mis - sion Conference finals makes him a favorite. while Lansdon. the sophomore from Edison High, has a personal best of 30. 20.06, which makes him into a position to challenge . Other area distancemen expected to make their presence known are OCC's John Gerhardt (14 19 in the 5,000), GWC's Gregg Ramsey (3:55 60 in the J.500> and the Pirates' Mike Serna (3.57 .3 in the 1,500). In the field events . Mills of Saddleback. is cur re ntly No. 2 in the nation in the discus with a 173·1 effort The best in the country, Long Beacg CC's Mark Robinson c 183· 7), is out with a broken leg. Doehnng is fourth 10 the country in the discus ( 169·4) GWC's Ramsey boasts a I 56 34 in the 800. but he'll be hard-pressed to better Mt. San Antooio's Glen Cunnin~ham whose 1: 51 .64 1s fourth in the na- tion In the women's competition. OCC, which won the dual meet and conference championships , sent l3 part1c1pants to today's prehms. A OLE ·s .SPECIALISTS Fru 011 FUt~r w/Sl4.95 Oii ChoncJe CHECK OUR COMPETITIVE PRICES ARST & GRAND ARCO 835-4049 1222 E. ht loff 5 Fwyl 8-5 Except Sun. 1978 CADILLAC SEVILLE ~UTOMOTIVE RESTORATIONS l.calhl•r rm 1:rt·d ~•·a Lin)( .1n•J l .ultll.11 "'ir • "Ii• • rnH·r~ & ftrt· mt~I pJ1nt o:l~K\"OY sg995 AND REPAIRS COMPLETE AUTO MAIMTEHAMCE W -'77. 78. ·79 & 80 Sev1lles at mn1lo1r ~a111111' CADILLAC & CORVETTE i'UCa.,S•bt«ITof'no• 5Bi' ,.,.,,.11 ... raH ,.,..,., SPECIALISTS!! BRAKES • TUNE~~:~=C~ '7;~;Towai lB'1.@.df!! .. ;. J u~i:'G1t:;~i:i ::: :!:~sNG I WORK • MAJOR r. MINOfl REPAIR OF ALL TYPES. I NAB s , ... ___ H_o"_Ci_Y'':"'_,l_~_:_~_! :!-~-~-:_-up_~_M_:oa_M,:_!.w_~ __ W_CM'il_' _! ___ I ~I .. ~ai.~f:,::nc-tfll~7-~!!! ~ /'./.(( u / ( / 770 W. 17th ST., COSTA MESA f714) 851-0232 ,._ ~----. ....... _. ~" f,,( '/ ( ~ '~ PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE I PUBl.IC' !'IOTI( ..: FICTITIOUS 8U51Ht5~ AMl•JJI Ht U H IC I PA l C 0 U 11 T 0 F I hAME STATE Mt HT NOTICE OP TllU$Tll'S SALi CALIFORNIA I h• IOI low""' P~• ,on• " o AP NO. tSI·~· COUNTY OF OllANCiE 4" DUS.neu ., T.S. N0.1M1 WIUT OllANCiE c;OUNTY CROW RtO~tll 1 ~111,L ~"' On J une I, ,.,# •t 11 00. m .• TIU• JUDICIAL OtSTRtC.T U9H f1h.h AV'l't'IVf" It.,,,,,. lftlU 1 ln•U'•"'• ellO TrvSI c;o.......,v, a• dUIJ 114111111 SI .,,,. •PPOtnltld r,..,,, ... under encl purtiu•n1 W•••mlN'-"'". CA tttial (.row Rt-OhH d fr ... I • i1r Ito D•edot TrU$t, rec.orded OeGemo.r PLAl,..TtFF SKYWAY L EA.SING, P•rtnf rVHP ltf1111 J t1t 11 Av•n•,• H. 1'7t, •• ln>t. no 37'7'. In book • r NC .• • Celllornl•<ore>ore11on 11rvone. C..l•lo•n•• quu 119IO, -111(> of Olll<lel R9Cord> In OE F EN 0 ANT SE BR EH Shoem .. •r ''""" •rllo \ It lhot offtce Of lhe CJNinty Aec.ordot of H 0 NA AV AR . 0 0 ES I X (•ltforru• ltfn•tf'O ii.•tt1'tt\•1•tJ t4 ' Oren9e CounlJ, Calllornle INCLUSIVE W•snovrn Uo.o o.,,. ., t • 1 WILL SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION SUMMONS ~vHl TO HIGHEST BIDDER FOR CASH, C... NttmlMr: Mo!M I nl\ Du\tnt ~ "" •I CASHIER'S CHECI( OR CERTIFtED\ NOTICE I v ... i..ve -wed. The Q•nero1 partnrr\n1p CHECK, Cp1Jebte al lime ol ... 1. In <Ottr1 meJ de<lde ... ln•I Y•U will>Otll Cr ON '<t'Jh"I lewlul money ol the United Stelnl et JOIW "'"' -·-ttnlns , ... """'""' Vln•'IJ S111tn l•ht South frcrtt tnlranct of the Old •""'"JO d.lyL R•Ad tM IMorm•t1oe c;ww. .. ,. '·• ''"'' Or•nv• County CourOlCNM •oc.•I~ In ........ Tn1\ Sldlf'rnt'fll Wd\ I r(I A " ,, ... I the 100 81oc.k of West »nt. An• 81wo u vou w1W\ to \irffk t~ .OY•Ct ot Coun1y C••r~ '' Utdt•Qt c ' ClorrnerlJ Wol •lh Slr .. 11, Sent• Ane, enJ altOtl'9J 1n lhlS miller. you "pnl ll. 1981 Cellfornl•. ell rlvhl, 1111• end lnlerHI sllOuld dO io prOMplly \0 111•1 Jour I Rhodu, K•nd•ll & H•rr•nvcon, • convity~ to end now held by It vnder .written r~. tt #'Y m•y be ftltG Protes,1ont1t L .. • Corpor•t10,., tft W•d 0..0 of Trvsl In tnt propier1y on Ume M•cArttuH Bouleviiirct Sv1lt" ~'-'> \llu•led In H IO County and Slelt AVISOI U1..-l\a 1.-.. ..._~ Ntwpor1 Buch C•hlonu• ,,..., deS<rlb9dH El trl-1 _.. dKldlr tonlro u-""•I• I Loi 2•. Tr1<l 4692, •1 Shown on • tin •wdlencl• 1 meno1 ttu• ue1 Puoo.,hftr<J O'd" r '-""' .r ., mep rMorded In 8ooll IM. Pega> 12·15, , • ._.., -tro de )0 CllH Le• I• In· April 1• Milly• • '' I / I t ••• 1"'lu•lve. MlK•llaneou\ ...U!K In the lorm•<left -al-. 01110 of I"" Oran90 CounlJ Recorder, SI l.hlf'G dtt<'• soh<fl•• fl co~1o PUBLIC' 'IOTl<"t. t09et11er wllh .., UlldMded l/"1h In de un •b09ot00 tn Hit Hunto dt l•rPtl tn LOI" of Tr.ct,...., Derl• n.-...-10 1m~d••l•mtn1e. dt Truslor Mlcl\MI l Glbelllno end tsle me,,.ra. i.u rttpuote escrll•." SUPEAIOll COUllT OF rHf INTRODUCING THE COROLLA SPORTS HARDTOP. I Nen(f Jo Cltwlllr>O. hUWMlnd and ••I• hey •IQuN. _.,. '"' rt19l\lrada • STATE OF CALIFORNIA •• 1olnl l0Nnh loempo IN ANO FOR THE The ··'"' eOdrtt• end otMr com I TO THE DEFENO•NT A ,.... COUNTY OFOllANCE mon destQNhon. If eny. ol lhe real complelnl NS betn h ied h Ille Pl••n BONNI!: bH ,1;1v •"l • • pr-rty -rot.cl •bove" jJ<ltPo'led 1111 •v••nst you II YOU W I\" lo dritnd PA I R•C•• BR• IH to O• •JOO HU1rt• W•y. Newport 1nl1 l•wiu1I, you must. w'lh1n )() O•'t''° Pl•1nt "\ BH<ll. Cell!O<'nle. •fl•r tltl\ summo<ts '' ser,,td on you, • Ht• uncl•nlgned Trusr .. dlKl•im• lllt•llhlhl1courl•wrilltn .. spon~ V IRGINIA ANAVA ••4 \Ilk,,,.. •nJ ll•blllly tor any ln<orrectneu olj 10 Ille <ompl••nl. UnltU Jou do so. R E El. O.lend3nt TI1ere s n new sport 1n town And one took w1ll tcll you how 11 plays Fac;t Sure-footed As oar 1ng as its rdkic;t1 norcl1tl<tck roof line A whole new feeling. Wr1e aper TI1n' s the lceling 1nc;1cic> 1t1<> Coroll<J Spans Hardtop thnnk!-i to ir1c pillar less Hardlop design Ready to rnovr Thats tile feeling the sporty standard lea tures on the Corolla SR5 Hard- 1op 91ve you 5 speed overdnve transmission ar d radial tires put you 1n touch w1rh the road Full 1nstrumentat1on tells lhe score Ancl the swiveling AM FM MPX stereo radio does a "pivot" to- ward 1inver or passenger ~EPA Est. Hwy. MPG, ~EPA Est.MPG. w.1h a gas sav1nq 1 8 t11• 1 4 cyhncJer engine spark depending on how last you dnve. weatt1er cond111ons and tnp lengltl Actual t ughway rr 1le ,lge will probably l>e less lhan tile EPA H1gt1way Es11mate Tt1L' npwToyota Corolla Sports HCJrrltop II n 1ay 1001< like 1t1e sport ol k1nqs But with so 1 nurh Toyota economy ;:mcl ~=~~=::d:::::::::::rl<me1 clribihlV l>u1ll 1n you •llll=S~~~ car1 affurc.110 get 1n on tt1e ric11on 100' lhe act ion Remember Com- pare this est1ma1e to the EPA "Estimated MPG of other cars with manual transmission You may gel d1tferent mileage. W~AT FEE~G TOYOTA lht sir"' --•nd other common your defeull wlll be enlered on •P No JMH11 desl9net1on, If eny, shown herein pllcatlon ol tM ple1n1111, end 111,. APPL I CA Tl 0 N F 0 A 0 II Or .. Said WI• Wiii be...-. but wllllOul court mey cnlor. lud9-nl ~··"" OIAECTIHG PAYMENT OU T ~ covenenl or warr..,ly ... PtH> or 1m., You lot the rtl1tl dtmeno.o •n Ille THE REAL ESTATE EDUCATIO plled, r-rdln9 1111•, PolM!Hlon. or complelnl. .... 1(1\ could tHUll on RESEARC~ ANO AECOVEAY FUND tncumbr•nce,, to P•V tnt t.1np•ld varnishment ot w•Qt\, 1•"1•no of (Section 10471 ot tnt Bu,1n1" .. na belenco ol 1111! not•C•I ..cured by H id monty or P'Ol'"rtv. or oll>er relltl •• Proleu1on• COdtl o.eo of Trvst, t~wu U1,040 "· In qu•sttd In the c.ompl••nt Pt• n11t1 ~rttt•y m..t"'"' .. ,,t '' ClucS1no •s provided tn u1d nole '1), •d 0 •1ed Apr-11 1, 1990 for 01oe1 O•'" l•ftO p.-ym• "' 1 1 v•nce1.1t .,,.,, under OM t•rmsot s.10 Rtt hiardJ Wack. Clerk At.ti E\tau U• .,..,,.,, J ,, J 1 Oeed of Tru•t. 1 .. s. ch•rges end ... By~ Lynell, DeP<>IY ltQf> lhat J)9nSfl ot thl lf"USlM •nd ot t~ trust\ Jofln P. R•IMll•, U1'2 ... <" BIYd., I) On N1Jv,•mt1t•r ~ l'll'~ 11 JV 1, r, cre•t•dbysald0eedo4 Trut1 it•.101, H.-tt"910fl .. .a<h, C.A 91"47 w•s e-nttrf'd by ttu' •ivrt ,11 ,~.,1 The IWMfklary under wld 0..0 of 11141 --AllWMY for Sl(YWAY pla•nt1ll\d<µ•n\tO~•~nt1~n• \Ill> ••• Trust ~retofore tatcuted and dt LIEASING,tHC ANAYA """ vtkG N "'-•'·, 11••••0 to Ille uncle"'--'• wrllltn Publ,.hed Or•nQt Coh t Oa.ty "EEL tor \11 oll !> Oec.laraUon of Otf•uU fW\d Otmand Piiot, Mly l, I , 1S, 12, 1"81 108011 d'mttQP\ tDQf'lt l'r w 1tr , , .. ,. for S•••. •nd • written Nottc1 of lhf'rton at ttw h>Q~I ,,111 '' , 1t Def•ult •net .. e<tiof'I to Sell Th• un •m~r 8 '~/'l tmtll p1'11cJ ''u111' it J cJ•rsh~n•d cau\td s•ld Notice of PUBLIC NOTICE mtt)l 1\ now t1nJtl Default ano EIKllon lo Sell to be re 11 T~ 1UCJ0...,..r•I """"o or ~ coro•o tn lf"9 county whir• th• rt•I ot action wnu ~ tt'O~ ht t•• ,.," .. _,...,,, proper! I• loulo<I. TrU\I" or p1rtJ NS 71519 ~ 1~1~ •""Or lt>bt'• J •?I\ I tonoTug~": ~~~UAANCE AND TRUST F~C:~~'fr!:~~1:::s ''~~o1~.~'::';~;~,·;,~~·~~:~~·,.;~ .. • COMPANY~ IOO N M.lln S1reM. Senta Tht followtn9 Pf'''°"' •rt do•no dfft>ndant ~hilt·''\..'""' ti .. ""'' .. ~, .. An•. Callfornla •1101 T t t 0 10 t>u\tntn a' s•lt-~~t!IOO ttr;d M bf Gk"' ""0 ""'' Ul-1070 SOUTH COAST PROPERTIES o.rtorm•M•<hlor whu~ ·••ft Oele Apm 19, "" INVESTMENT GROUP, USO CeOlllK wn rtouir•d ~••O Or"'' 1100• t l•ll• IM..,.entt fna "•en u e. Su I It C , Co•I• Ht•••· I "<e"'" nvml>t'r 0-0••181> 7 Trust Comp.any Calitorn•• 92626 •) Thf Amount ot tf'lf" o\1 IU.• • • •t-t..a•OT""''" GERALO J SOUZA,l.SSO C•OlllK d1reict to\\ Hi"_.,.,.o oy ,, ,,,, 1 JoyceWllfi•m' Avef'v•. Suitt c Colla Mes• tnr0uQn I~ rr4Vd m•o• "'''\ .. f't!dl1 PubU,,..., Or.tn0t '~·· D•lty PHo·t, C•hfornl• ma OfCflt or c.orwt>r \IOTI of ,, U'' lii,1 ""' Mayl, l),U.19e1 20t7 et Cl IF 1'0 R 0 MANUEL, JSSO dtlendant '' \IJ Ill~ 00 I CedlllK A .. nue. Su•lt C, Colle Mtw, )) P••lntoll •\ no1 lr>t \Q<lu-.. o• d•' PUBLIC NOTICE MU .. ICIPAL COUllT 01' CALIPOll,.IA COU,.TY 01' OltANGI HAAaolt OllANOI COU,.TY JUDICIAL DISTltlCT t1411MStnel, WHtmlMW, c.11"'111• tMJ PLAINTIFF Sl(YWAY lEASIHC, INC .• • OllllO<'nle corPOratron DEFENDANT. JUNE E. MABSON, DOES I X, INCLUSIVE SUMMONS CASflHO.t64t1 NOTICE! You he .. Mon wed The Cour1 '"41Y Ot<lde 991ln•I you wllllOut your belnQ ltMrO lH\len you r_...i within lO days. R•ad IN lnfON'Nllon bel- 11 you witll to -the ad"lce Of en ettornev In this melter, you SMllfd do 10 promptly so 111•1 your wrlll•n retPOflM, 11 eroy, may be lllad on II-. AVISO· Ult.cl lie tklo ~. El trlbuNt ~ O«ldlr cOl\Ue Ud tin •udltnda • ,,,._ -Ud. r-a oentro de lO dies. LN .. lnf<H'fl'le<lon que•l9ue. SI U&lecl ->oll<llM el cortujo de lH\ ·~ tfl Ht• asuntci. dlMrl• It.Cerio l"""tdl•l•rn•nle, dt ula menera, w r-1.a eterlt•. al fley 11ouna, ~ -r-olttr.-• tlefnpo. I. TO THE OEFENOANT. A <!vii complelnt lw1 bllen lllecl ll't the Pl•I,.. tiff •9'111M1 you. II vou Wbll to #lftd 11\h lewtult, till l'llWt, wllltln JO .. YI •lltr tN• -It ,..,,.. 111 Ylll. Ille wlltt 11>11 -I e Wfltlell t-.etlM lo lllt <OMllltlM. UftMll yw do llO, your dtfeult wlll lie tnttnd Oft •1>- 11111catloll.,, lht plal"'lft ... tlla. c-t l'lley enl-' e l~i ... Intl vou Mr Ille rollef dtfNl!dltd Ill lllt c-l•lnl, wltl<I\ t-'""'" In ..,.....,,..,...... el ....... ,. ...... 0 •1" April i. 1'111 lllc: .. ,.l.W.cl Ci.rt! llY..._L.,_11 °""'' JOHH ,. ltA,.ILLO j···~ IM<ll lh<e. ko. -Wut111"'*-' e..c:JI. Ce.,,.., 0 141 ....... ,.lllMI.,.. Or.,.. c--1 Delly "'ltt. llMY I,•, IS, tt. ftl1 ., .. ,, C•llforn•• n•lt. dent or th~ ptrwna1 r~P' t-~nlft""''' This Du\lneu I\ tonducted by • •uth •POu-.t limittd per1M"hlp •• A\ OI '~ dAtl' of ,,,,, •l-101 ·-'""' C..r•Jd J Soui•, 01a1ntOf\ rwve tf'Crtvf"CI 'O t wlM General P•rtn-er '•t11tact1on 01 thie'r 1uOQtnttn1 I TM\ 1tat..-nent •• , flled with the I> Platnllff'\ ~~ pur\iiJll'O r•t"t1.J1• County Cl•'" at Or-"oe county on ano ma<M tM tollow1n9 ''""'l' ~' .1n April 10. '"' lnqulrlt\. to •Kert•1n wh~ttwir tt\41 '" .,, ..... f•nd•n:tlj~nt cktbtor h•1t1n '' i> Publlsl'lecl Or-Co""I OelfJ Pllt t, u u.O OI rHI or .,.r>Of\<ll O•Of•'"'' fWley 1. 1, U. 12. 1'91 lot) 11 Olher HW1' l•.Olt to I>* \Old or "Pl»• •n 'H1fis.f•c.t1on of I~ tudQmrnt PUBLIC NOTICE 4•1 An eO\tr.ct ot JUOQment ~ • 1 rtcorded 1n thit Ott+ct-of th• (0Ut1'' A et order of ••th of thf' ro11ow1nq co,;i Utt "OTICfl INVITING llOS Or-County o ... •• •9 Hollo II het•bJ QlYtn !net Ille Boo~ 13'.tO. P-lA•, LO> ""~'t\ ( Boerd of Tn.slftS ol tlle Cout Com.,Jen.11. 1'90 llool< IO Pe~~·'° munlty Colleve Dl•lrl<I ot Or•noe CDI Pl••nlolh hlYt Ceuud County. C..llfornle, wlll rectlvt saettdi name SHrth 10 l><I condu<l•d 01 Ill••~ bkh up to II 00 • m . Mond•J. June I, rolls of ell M co.mlt•• o! C•t1tornOJ t. nt1 el Ille Pvrcl\eSlnv Deperlment of delermu~ -rwr\Np of any •H I pr., wld coll-dl•1rlct loulo<I •I UIO I party •n ""Y ol wMI counl•e1 Adam• Av•nut, Co,le Met•. C•us.ect • l>Ubh<•ltort M•rtP'I ' Cellfornl•, 11wfll<h11,,,. Mid bids wlll I l•l•phona numDe•• and/or .oar•''" be publicly opan•d eno ruo tor In •II~• <ounlle\ of C•llfornl• P U II C H A S E 0 F V I 0 E O CeuWICI •n ll""I \HO! 11 tn "4 EQUIPMENT conOu<tecl t>y Searchers ln••\llQ•l1• All bids ... e to be In 9<Corde"'e wl1!1 Co wht(I\ tn<lllOtd <IMOlnQ •OI•• rr llW Sid Form lnJtructlons encl C-1 g•Ur•tton In ell M tounl•n CH11<1· • llon& end 5"<.fllcello•u •"f<h er• now menl of Motor Vthotlo •••rtn •or rr on fll• and INIY be Mcu....i In Ille offlu 91>1ered •en1c••s. • u.q11 r•port,11, of tit• Purt'haslnv Agent of Wld coll-e9enc1 encl followed up w•tn &>erM><>• district conlatl ol ~nown P8r'•on•l •,-·•In Eeclt 111-r mutt sWn\lt with Ill& ti By ••Id saertlt end '"""'"" llfd I cflN«'t <,_0, .. rtlfled Che<ll, pletnlllf\ ...... Ol\conr.O no rtel 11' « llkldel"'& bond m-.. ,M>lt to the 1Mr1y or po1roonal PtOPtrlJ "°' oO••• o'*r of ,._ Co1111 communlt' Co11eoe .. ,.o Ol•lrl<t eoerd of Tnnlffl In e n •1 P1•1n111h 1t1vt d1llo-n11v pun•••• •mo .. nt nM Ins IN<\""' -c•nl U~l e ll r•medlt• •Ins! ell ludvm•nl d•h ftf ,._ wm bid H • -•"'• llwlt the I«\ eno ell ot!Wr ~· llet>lt to 111r llllelcler wlll em ... Into Ille OfopoM<I 1n llte lr•M«llon for •ltlfrt ,,_ _..., Contrect II IN -It •••'4o<I to rtcoveryb,lh"c .. om 1111'11. Ill IN twllt Oii fell11'9 IO •nt ... In· WHEREFORE pl•lnllll\ 0•6\1 lhfl It welt CGfttr11et. the proc: .. ch Of IM 01t cour1 INlk• lh oroer dl•l'<l!n9 th•I lNO Wiii lie tof1.iJ ... or Ill Ille UM lite ..... hltlt Ce>mmlUionf'• P.'J t• of • lloftcl, lite fvll 1111'11 !Mr.., wlll lie Pl•lntllt\ lrom the Atel E •t.e•• Ed11<, IOll"ff4'" .... '°<04MleOl'trkl llon Re-\...-ch -Re<qvery 'ulld 11\e "•bl ..... ll'ltY Wllltdraw .... bid'°' Wl'll Of Sll.•U 00109tl,.., with •nl•"'" • perlM .,, '9r1y•ll,.. CUI Cltyl eltu tn.r.on el lhlt 1-1 r•I• lro"' Now ti. d91t Mt NI ti. OCltfllllO lllerwf, tl'llller 8. 1'1' lo IN po...,, TN ._. Of TrllilMI rfl.rYfl 1"9 O•ltcl No,..mi.r 14 1't0 llftwl ...... f"tl«llftt .,.,, ..... a ll ... ..llJ ··~y te 8¥1 lflY l,.,tflllorll!f' Of 111-PllHll!ll fWmelli ... 11' Illy lllld or Ill U. llllcNl119 LIW Oltk• .. ..._ •l\d ICtlly S"'""11: HOllMAH I WATSON 1Mtl a.nt ·-· .._, Otfke ... s.<.nu.r,, ....,.of Trw•• 111'. •""-·Cetlfonll• "*· 111 u CNll ~IV COii-OlsttlU ........ 1"1111111....., OrMet C.•I ~ly ,.llOI ,.11911.i.ct Or...-C.0'1 Ot ll't "llot, Mey•~ ll. 1•1 llaMI Afl'll t•, ~VI • 1$, 1'11 lM.U I I 1 -------- Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 18, 1981 ~ . . .. .. AMOICAN LEAOUE Anoela I. •r•w•r• 1 CAUl"OlnNA MILWAU•ll .. , .. _. .. ,._. H•r-, rf I I I 0 ~•. c 4 0 0 0 .......... ,' 2 0 MeMy.• ''' I c ... -. ,.. ' 0 • • ..,.... ,. 0 • 0 0 " ... ,... .. 1 0 0 • Otllwl•, " ' ••• •Hlef. dfl 4 I I 2 TMM•t, <f 2 t 0 t Dew;\iflt." 6 I 2 I l!fwe .... ,cf 1 t t t Ott. c S J 2 0 Hlale,'"' 4 t t t 0#1<11, a 2 1 ' o Sim-. 11» o 1 o Pe .. 11, ft I 0 I I 8~. r1 J 0 t I CleA.cf 4 1 JI GM-.Jtl J 0 J 0 -·a S I I J ft-re, U J 0 I 0 Tei.la Jt ' IS t TetAIS JI I S I ._...., ....... c.ll ""111• '" "' ..,_. Mllw..,.._ D •1 --1 I! -IMoA, ~. DP -Celltof!N J. Mllwe11llH J. LOI -Cellleralo t, Mllw.._ S.. 1• -..,,...., Sim-.•- H.._.., ....... H• -.. ylof Ul • ._., 12). Ce...... I .. H • lft aelO LIM IW,W t S 1 I 1 1 ........... , ...... 11..J.21 I s s • ' :::'.:!.,,. ~ 2 : ! : ~ 1'1..-ra I I 1 1 t I Sleklft llltCllM to 4 ....... Ill tlle 2M. w .. -........ ~. P9 -0ft.T- 2tl7. A -11,M. .............. 1 Colonlal lnvltatlonal' Al'-'..,.. ~--------'T'"-· -----·-· -· -----· ----~,-, Mlle t • ..._ tlilt ... l , •11t.t 1 T ...... lle!M ..,_ti, 4.11.J; I O..W l~l. • IUI .......... CC.-. ... ...,.,, •1UJ; LY .... Ill ....... I,, 4. U.t, o. ....... lftc'.Um " ...... ., • ..., •• 411 .. ... T..-1e -t, ._, l.._l, l 1aJ; L ....... IC.-•1 Me#I, t i• a1 a. A"51n-!Min CillUI, t .11.t; 4 r......_ ...... ••r••••l. , • ., J; ...... ., IU•ll'tt'.IYI. t:tt.t ; Otllen1 lrtd- IP_....V .... l,t l".I. 110HH -I. 4aNwd (Wffe C:..lnel, 11.4, wlM. 2. Tew IMYlr), 111; J Grl- l"lverel* ,...,.,, IU, •• II ..... ,,_ .... Y...,), MAJ $. Mele llCetellel, IU. MtLH -1.,..,,,.,.. , ... C..IMI. au, I Kl ...... c•t•lrl, ,. .•• J c; ......... l lllvera .. .._y), M.t , •· ICef'lle (M ...... VleJ•l.11.I; s. Hele (ICetelle). 11.t. • ,.,.,. -1. Mui',"·'; 2. c-1on. ••.1; J. L• P91y, 41.t ; •. Ctllt-1•1, 41.J, S. P• ......... 42.J. UGO reloy -I. Muir, J :IJ.7; 2. Cefl4en. nlel, J:IS.1; l , ~. J :U.t ; 4. L8 ll'oly, l :U .t ; l. P...-...,J~1'.1. -.~ HJ -1. c.tre IPlua XI, 1-0; 2 • ._.., ll11glea0041). 6•11; I. Tiier .. • I~ 9-11), ~11; 4. Alllln-(1.8 Poly), ... IM; l. Allell 191elfl, ._10. PV -1. lteM (Lot Am ... I, 14-HA; t , P•l•rt (VIII• Pertl), 1•·114; J. ll•Mlllnl (Simi Veltey), 1 ... V.; 4. J-...i C,._.. Velley), 1 ... ; S. ....... IMMtael, IWYt. LJ -I. Tew (Mwlrl, 24-S, WI ... ; 2 .• ,_. (Serre), ~llMlt; a. Al).lna IW•l""'I· 2M\o't; 4. -~la-Ing), 2:1-4, S. "-M Cll ... -1. ZS.O, ...... TJ -I. WIH'-ITroyl, »ll'l; 2. Tew IMulr), *1"6, wlftd; J. "-11 CEdte-1, •1·1\o't, 4 1.-1 (Sertel. 41 I; S Fii/ii CCAIC ...... Velleyl, '1-0. SP -1. Fraaler CAnte'-Vellerl, 6+2'h; 2. Ill < ...... I ~2; J. 9MU (Ar<edle) St·U14; 4. Jettwtn I.._. Me,._l, ••11: s. Ky1e ca-P-1. ~. OT -I. C>mlllM llwr-.M), lt>-7; &. JefftrlH (~ Her-I, 1 .. ·ttl • WHter1 .... <C: ..... .tr-Velley), llMI; 4. l.1111•11 CMofw'cWlel, 11 .. 11; s. 111 1~1. '""'°· WOMIN 100 -1. -cc ... 1 ..... 1.11. 11.e; L M<Grew l~I. 11 7, wllld; J. J- <Oerey), 11.1, wllld; •· ary.,.t CMulrl, IU, S. Pe .. Torr-.el, 11.t. 100-1. '*°'-la-.NI, 24.0, wind, J. Jo""'°" CG•••r>. 24.J; J. WlntlOft , .... Jordtfll, 24.t ; 4. ,....,...., (Weft Torrancel, U .t ; S. Wlll5-IVelley Cl\rlall.,,I, JU, ...... •00-1. Kellon (Welll\lt), SS.6; J. Mc~­ IGenHllel, S6.S; 3. Jorden CCemerlllo), 56.S; 4. Olurcrtmen llllo Mete), S6.4; S. Aeneom IEI Torol. sr.2. o.i.n: It. f'rtc• IC.leMeMl,S7.I. D -I. C4rtlt (Cul,,., City), 2:1U; &. Lo•Al•mftn ntUalOo\Y't ftltuLTt ,, .................... .......... ~•••t race ,.. • ...,.. 11er•1. 111a, 26 JO, 11 ••• P'letlllll CMll I Clertuel. 4 •· J •• Ml•l..-CAnerl"ler"l, t •.P• .. ecte IMI Hld•o•.•· Se<.,.. ·--l!alr••-.eM IT•_.>. S 20. a.JO. IAI, Trllll't c;herm I,.,.....,.), 4 ... , UO; Eaty l>w (Her11. I, •. Tlllrd rllCe -~(~I. t.•, 4.40, 1.•; Joe c. Qul(k ,,...,,,, •.•• >At; 1.. ... 19olllPeullMl,UO. l'ourtll race ...... , ~Miu IMYlell, s .... i.oo. 2.ao; TM -II TOUCll (loN), 1.20, 2.20; Eety Fetlllon CCler-luel. UO. W He<le Ca.-J) pel<Ult.00. Flltll race -JM'• Jet ccr .... r>. lAO. J.60, 4,40, StlMdY lell CPe11llrwl, 4.JO, 4.40; l'lcllle Ebony ll"lor•l, 4.JO, 4.40. 511111 ••<• -ll•m.ilne "'•"'•' IMllcllelll, 24.10, UO, UO; l'oo ... r Ml .. 1Tree1urel, S.00, 2 • .0; A"*• Do CHerU, 1.40. SJ eoecu 14-tl peld 114.60. S.v.,.1" r«e -Joanie "'° IPllll-), II 40, uo, uo, Ml11 l'erm IH•r11, tM. 4.to; 0.. l•lthl Clllc:k (Went), J.00. 12 tUC· ... .... ,, pelcltft.40 Elt11111 ,_. -ao -1c ...... 11. 11<to, 1 60, J.00, -...,_ IMllClletll, J.to, 2.40; Eatr• E .. , IHenl, 2.40. 12 eucte <._.I peld ....... 12 Pl<IL SI• IU -,.....J peld ......... WIUI ...,.., """"'"" tlc:ll.U ., ..... .__.,, u P1<t; 51• c.,.....llon peld VJ,.60 wllll '54 wlftlllno lkUO Clew ""'Wll Nlnlll rec.e -Sino l.ouder IHerdl, JS.AO, 7.40, •·•· l'er11•1 Jet 10.rluel. J.10, 2.•. Ce1cll Lll<ll (H•l'KI. l.00 12 uecte 11-41 paid 161.00 Alle..-.C. -~.1S. Hollvwood Park TMU•tl>AY't ••IULT$ c, ........... Y-a«n .. ........, l'IAC rtce -PallWl'I IM<Her .. I, 1A . •.OO, J.•; c-tlTY Welll 1-Corr .. I, L•, 5.20; Hlti.r ..... Tlllllltr IHe-y),UO. Second,_. -11-•lll (Plnc:eyl, 4.40, J.20, 2.60; Pfllr1 Prine• 1c.m1.-1, •M, 4.00, Tn.e 1-IHewltyl, 4.60. U delly dollt>le IS-11 peld tlt.10. 12 contoi•tlon dtllly -·• IWI peld l t.00. Third rece -O.relOO CM••leyl , J.IO, UIO, 2.•o: Cle vlu1 IV•ldl,,luol, 12.60, S.00; Letlerec CLlpflem), J.00. lS•UCl.e 11·21 INMI 1111.so . ••loll 000 411 010 OJ...... u 0 MlllMNle llGI -100 ot-1 tt""t 111~ llO l'IOYd MllleSulllv.., llod C11r1 ~-­U-Sl-46 ~ ~1 S..u-.7 U.u-41 ,..,,..__.. Boston celebrates after winning NBA cham~onship. Dvr ... I~ a.ec11), J:n.a; I. Cell! IAleMeay), 2:11.J; 4. llllH ( .. ate .. ,..,.,, 2:1u: s. .._ cu•..,....,, 1:11.1. Otllera: 7. ICelly ICotle Me .. >. J: 14.4; t . St0U9Mo11 tCorOftt del Merl, 2:1S.71 10. McOllncllrf 1"-t.eln Velley), I: 1'.l. \ Fourlll ••<• -Prop Tlllrleen IVelenJ"9iel, IAO, •.20, J.00, He.,. A a.. Time 1.,.111uyl, >.to, 2 . .0;•Lolly Eeolt llMemeMrl,UO. Te-. I . $Wiiey m, ~II l'IO) .. kllmlcll; Wllllem&, v...,,,....-Ul, CertMt m. c_. 110> ""'a.re. w -c-... lf'-01. L -~ 1•11. H•1 -lleMell, Peru Ill, Sl•Pl•IOfl Cl), Scllmlft c "· Len1fonl ltl. A -4,IM, OrteMltt.-.U"• lettl,,.... 1• IM llJ-IO 11 0 T....... -· --0 SI l'IMetM aflCI ~; Clell<y, ~ 14), ...... (71 en4 .. MerllMI .• -,.._.., t._,I, I. --cwic, 11-l). Hlb -•••ti-, ~y (21, ¥1Jney Ill. A - 11.-. Y ....... t,A'•• OellleM OIO 100 JOO-S ID 2 New Yt"11 att 001 ....... U I M, Norrlt, ~ll\llO (71, J-1 111 end HffVI; •. #My, II. Dl¥b 171, Gosaa9I (7) ellit I' .... , 0.IM "" W -Gos ..... 1-0, L -J-t. )>t. HAa -New Yotll, Murcer IJl, lie. JIK.._ ISi. A -is·"'· NATIONAL L£AOUE Dodger• 3, l.llpos 2 MONTll~ LOIANOaLal Wl\lle, 11 Scott, cl DawlOf'l,Cf C.rter, c Cromrl, lb Wellecll, rl Petrllll,• ., ..... ftelnes,., '111111pe,u Gullclltn. p Smltll, .... ll•ll••. p Totelt •rlllll 4 0 0 0 '0 '0 4 I I I • 0 0 0 J OOO JOOO J OOO 2 I I I 0000 0000 2000 I 0 0 0 0000 JO J) J •rlllll l.-•.2b 4 I I 0 l.endrH.CI 4 0 0 0 l•Ur, 11 • I ' 0 Gervey, 111 • O I 1 Cey, lb 4 o o 0 G ... rrer, r1 4 I I I S<IOKle, c J 0 I 0 ...... 11." J 0 ' 0 TllomH, .. 0 0 • 0 Veleftale,p JOJO Tolell I) J t J larwllyl ..... Monlreel 001 000 001-2 LOI A noeift 000 002 001-J Noovt--1"9f\lftK-E -White. Perrish. L08 -MonlrMI 2, 1.M Anoelel • 29 -S<loKle, •uuell HA -,._.., c 11. °""""' (ti, G .. rrero ,., sa - 11.1 ..... .......... Gullkll ... lleUet IL. 1-1) .......... IP H • 1 1 2 I I I Ill II to 2 0 • I 0 I Velen1le (W,MI ' J 2 J I ll•tt•r plk:MCI lo I Nll•• 111 tlll. WP -Gwlkll~. T -2:n . A -SJ,906. ....... , .. _, N.,. Yorll JOO 001 IOI-6 t J San 0.... 0.. 100 Ob-IO 14 2 Scoll, Felc-01, Haut.men ltl •ncl Tre•lno; CWtll, UrtM C.1, I.UC .. 171 -KetlMCly. W -I.MUI ().)). I. -Feic.. 11·11. A -11,147. .......... J,0'--1 '1111........... 000 000 1121-J 1 0 San F•enci9co 000 000 100-1 S 2 llulll••n. M<G••• ltl end MoreleM. 1-(t). ai ... Ml111oft ,,, -Mey w - 1111t11v ... 1s-11 L a 1 .. cw1 A -11,1., ·-6.C-.1 Cllk... 000 100 000-1 • Cln<l-1 100 001 Ool•_. II I ll•UK ... I, TldtOW 111. Ceplll• ,., - Devit; ~. Price ltl, H-Ol aflCI Ntl.,.,O IMrryltl W ~enyl(4-ll L - llNKMlll-41 A II'"" ~1,t.a-• It. 1. ... 11 100 000 OU 1 I 0 H ... 1t.,. 400 002 OOD-6 t > Sy\cft, Menln Cll, Edelen 161, ICeet 161. Ol'Vft Ill, WllM It) end T...au, Senc ... r Ct>. Sprowl, O. Smllfl. Ill, Semblto Ctl, L.eG..-le (t) -.... )olt. W -Otten (1-01. L -Samii!• C l·ll. S -S..lter 161. A -20,0q Top 10 , ............. , HATIOHAL LIAOUI 0 Al • M ""1. ... ,.Ins, s... Oie9Ct u n u ao .417 Her ....... Sell Fren<IKO J2 '" IS ., .a1 Y-..i-, ,._ Yont n rs • 21 .MO Hewe,"°""""' ~ 110 IJ <&J .-Celllna, Cln<IMetl JI 121 n ., .JSS MMlled1, Pit....,,. 20 .. I 24 .IS3 II-, Piii._....... JI 12' 21 41 .M 11•1-, MoMrMI tt 101 U a .IS.S l!UdlKll, PlltMWV" JI 121 JI 41 .)46 MeHMws, PfllledeltlMe 2t 102 II M .m PIY"fl, H .. Yon JI tS U 11 .116 -·-kllmktl, "'41-lllN•. 10; o. ...... Mllf>. •reel, I ; , .. ,.,, Clft<lnMll, 1, J, CN1. H ... t.loft, 7; C.,, .,.....,._ '- •-9-I• Ctflce11<len, ClfKl1111ell, Jt; Scllml•t, Plllle .. ljllflle, U , 9-y, .....,n, U I ........ C.w..ti, t•. J Cr\ll, --· u. '"*•c•o.ceu..> 'l•l•••Hle, OMt•"· •·•1 Cerlle11, Pllll•••tNe ............. ~ .... •11•••11. '"'"'""r111. •·•; .... ., •• 11. 1"111~, ~I • ...,_,_, MeMrwl, .. ,, Wrtey, ... LAIMe, 4-1; 5etwft-........... . 4-t; 1-.1, Clnc"-11, •·1; Se-, ClfKlrl· Mll,M . AMa•ICAMt.U~I • Al .. .. """ ~ .... llfnete t1 .. IJ M .al ··-·...... 2t 110 ,. .. ... Utll,...._ DtD 14 a ... Wlllfleld, New Yon It tit It a .JU ~llMMll. OK°" 17 It t • ... i..Mfw....... 2t t" It • .• DIN, CltWllllit 2t 6' 1 ti .m (_.... Dlllnlt .. • • • ... A.._Oflt, "-City IA n It U JIU htMJoN. ~ • .:.111 " • ... T..-.... Ml...,._, t; A,_, 0.19111, •: lltl, ........ •: .. ~ ........... 1: • ., ......... ,; ............. ._..., ,. c. ,....._.~, . ......... lill'lftl'-Ock..._ tS; Wiii'-TeUI,, D ; QlllVlt, Mii' -I , !ti W. Hw Y"'-lt; Dll, ....... 11. Plllllillle C•....._I ...... OlllJelll8. ... : """" Ocll .... •·•: "'"''· .... , •. ,.,L .. ,, ••••. CttVtlo1141, .. 1, o.t-..., C IC ... , '°11 •ort11tH. l•lll""'•· l·t: M<•retet • ............. ,1 .................. . Tom Kite l'..uy Zoellitt terry J-MI Kelllll' ...... George ..... ,.,,,-...., TwnmyVeleftClftt ,..,, •• s .... Marti Lye ...,_entT ... tly O.Y, Ekttl411tro-r SC.tlS"'- ...... lrwtll Miiier~ Ed~ GeryHtl-.,. Crelt St.dler JoM-y I rvce 1.l«ille ArtleM<Nk• """·-.., loll Ml""" FrellkC- Tom WeltMIPf OonJ~ Jim Col..., "••Mela.le Oen Pohl Jell Mltclllll MerllO'Mt- lr11<e 0.¥1111 Jollft F~ Tom Purtler Ft'MC°"'*' Oen Helldaneln Bred ary.,t Eon Stl'Klt Clll Clll Aodr'-J ludAlll11 Je<llN- JeyHeos MerllMc~r HubenG.- Vence...- OevldEdW- Oeve St0<k- 8ol*y C-.,..1 J-~ 111111..-n Morr11 H-1.-y CO-gee.die lobE•- JlmSlrnons Jecllll..,,_ Jerry P.,.. Gery ICOC:ll LAnny WedlllM Denny EdWerdl CMrlesC-., l .. Tr9Yll'lo JOft11C-Tom J-iM Lon Mlllllle Mlh lleld Ed Flori Celvl11 PMte lerMy T,,,,,,_ 51111 Hoell PtlerJec- Georee An:,,., Jerry H..,d Glbl>y OllWft •-lley .... , A I Gel btf'9t<' Terry Olelll 0-l.lttler lobrf Welzel l.•rrYZMeler Boo Glider i..-rdT........,_, JOflnllyMlll« 11111 Me-.ele llu Celdoioell •Hel~ Ll ... yMll~ lenCre.- TemW•-Oon p-,. Merk H•'f'l't O-.T-1 Merlll't.I Pllll H...cock OevldGr-.0 LerryN.ilor\ aobl»'f W .. IM Victor ll999l- O.A. Welllt'\fto LouGr- Mlk•o-ld ,..,....,. :12· ..... ,..~ J1..J2 .... ,..~ )1·22 .... ~ ~ »-~ ,..~ ~ ~ ~ ,..,,,__.. ~ ,._,._10 a>.Jl-10 ~ U-U-10 ,..._10 17-»-10 IWS-10 Jj.JS-10 )6.J7-11 .,.._" ........,, ~' ~-" ~,._,, ~I )WS.-71 -.U-11 1744-'1 ~71 Jl.J4-11 Js..Jt-71 Jt.n.-n 17·u-1J >s.Jt-n J7·U-'2 ,._._n '7·JS-'2 21-ll-'2 ~ ,,,,._n ,.....__,, »-Sl-1J -.u-n »ou-n •u-n »-J?-n Jt.,._,, -.U-11 JS. __ ,, )7 . ._,, J7---1l .. .._,, •U-PJ »->1-n lt-U-TJ •»-74 Jl-J7-14 •M-74 31-31-14 U-41-14 Jt.U-14 J7.J7-14 J.S.Jt-7• »-J7-7S ,, . ._u ,..,,_,, ~7S ~s J7·1t-7S .,_,._,, Jl.Jl-1S U-40-IS ,.._,. »-40--1• ,...,_,. ..... ,. ...... ,. ...... ,. ,.....1. 41·U-7' .._,, ..._,, 17-lit-16 •n-n .. ,._n .. ,,_n .,..,,_,. ..,_,, ••1-" ...,. " Hlah echool Cl~T•AMCHAMPIOHIHIPI ....-.. ........ (-y •• ··"'" <et...-Vleje Ce1111trY Clttlll Or ..... (Mii ArM l•trtt• E 1le11<la -Greg L.Ot'*ll, Cllrlt Werd, Mllcll Fr-.. Bob C-. AUOI• Miiie" Cl\rl1McK" l!•lton -Don Smllll, JoM LUdl-, S<ot1 Hemllred'll, Merllel Teylor, Jolln Kerrtoen. lleUOrQUI O<e.,. View -Loni Key, Merli Mel,,._, Oevld Herrlnolon, lerry Medoty, Gery l..euclllen, Kim Seiki CoroM clltl Mer -Jim LIQM, Clllp WrlQM, Oery ~.Teel ..-y, Jett Wrlfllt, ICen , .. lrvlM -Pet Cr0<11etl, D.n P..,1, ~ KrllOll. Miil• .,...,... Dew HHdrl<U, ..... PrHtler Hwnll....,. 1oec.11 -Miu l•y, IClrti Me,._ Miu $<.....,, Jee C.IJI, s-lo.tell, 1111 Sfllnbr N•WPD'1 Herller -JOll w ........... . Merli ~. 1(1'11 s-. """ lAldef, J tit II Kil, ,._' Mocllett M9n'a tournament CetT-1 ~· .... ~ Ol<k S1«,k-Otl Eddie OI-. ._,, W ; lloKM T-• oef P•I OuPr•. "°· "°· Tom G11llikMlfl oef 11 .. NHUM, M , 1-4. 7·S; Sc.ti Smltll oec TomGorrnen, 7,, M . • M9n't tournament IM..__,S..M,E ....... l Crelo win ... Otl Mer• Co• .... 2. 4'4, S..J; !.toe KrulevlU cMI Nl09i S..ra, ... 2. M , Jen Gu"""''°" Otl. Mlct>MI Myburo, .. I, • J, J_t,_ Smllll Otl Andr-Jerrell, , ...... Junior men'• tournament tel Mii .... 11.elyl Ollel1trtlMll .... lel M•o1111• T10tmen Otl. Eric Korlte, ..... ~. •·>; l.uu Boll.eul Otl Mlroelev Meclr, ._., ''°· 511-.n Zl¥ojlno•lc del. Frenc:HCo c encelloW. M , ""· Henrick SUnchttom oef. Welly Meaur, 1·5, ._., ,.,.... Minter oef El..,. Wllove, Ml,•·>: Cetr...rlM Llndqultl ckl Rett•ll• 11-1 ...... W , A.r>Clr .. I.A- del Menuete Mellleve . •». 6·1. •·I, Elltabetll S.yeracHI Ce<<N Mo,,.,., "4, "4 German International (•IM--., Wftl o.n..-yl ~-11-Sl .. 1" Jimmy C.O.-• Otl Kl..,, Ebemerd, W , "-0 Tome• Smid Otl lloll o.tlrlno. , .. , 6-1. Tony GLemmel .. Otl Ello! Telb<,,.r, M , .. I, ..... , Ml:Nemere def .¥ab Wll-. 1 6, ..,). Cerrello krenv111 Olll Victor PIK· ti,••. SI, 6-o Women's tournament (elK-,J-1 Flnt 11 ...... Siflllff Anorta JM'Ot' def •v•~ Madrvo-, M , • I o..teaFIMll Pam SNI,,., Wendy Turnbull Otl Biiiie J .. n KtftO·AndrH J-r. •·7, ... 1, ._,._ Women'• Swlu Open , •• ~., ... ~.,._I 11-'llMllllll ..... Cllrl• E...n Llol'd ci.1 Jo Durie, ~.o. H ; Sylvl• H•nllle Otl 1111\etyn FelrbenU, .. 2. ... >. Vlrglnl• Aullcl dtl. N•Mll• Sc....U., .. 2, 7.s, 01-Fromlloltt def. Peul• Smllll, •». ).6, .. 2; Hene Strec:-•• def. """" Smllll, 1_., .... 1·S; SlrKllonO,,. def. ,.,,,.. HODD" J.•. •·2, •·2. Lloyd IHdl Kellly Horvelll ... 2. H (rein oe1eyecll. Seventeen T of C let Ml ..... Vie .. ) 0-rwnlMISlootilH , ......... ,0 ...... P•ll•11• ScllrobMIOttl CS.n Fre11ellcol def So<ll• -ccarrolllon, Ge .). ._,, H ; Elhebetll COit• !Let V-•I def. CollllM 1••1•1 (Lodi, Olllol, M . S.2. Ginni Pvr'dY C lnOlenePOllt) del Lynde Tele ( lrvl11g, TU '· ... 2. "'· Mlcr...llt Torret 1Hor111fleld, 111 I oel 1!11...., Tell <Atierdeen,N J .I, 'k. ... ,_ .. , ........... 0....... t Beverly -. IL.-k, T .. I 0.1 J- L•oeue IMellblll. • l ... , : Amy Hollllft CSereaote, l"le l del J iii Heu1ler l ~11<11t1e.., Pe.1 .... 2 .... 1. Joni Ur...,. 1-. dlelon, Otllol def Klrilin Leu• (~. Nob.I, •·O, •·I. Molly Ve n No•trend I 8 rlQ111••1.,t, H Y.I Olll Key Tiiie llN· i110.h•.l,M .H Ua .. .,. •u Dt•h• letn Herr 10.'(lon, Otllol 0.1. IC•l• ~ perl (Menlo Perlll, ._I, .. l , Ketlly RIMldl IJ1nu11 llHCll, Fl•, d•I L•lollA.nn Tllom_, lllklltllOnd. \le.I. '°'· 6-2; LI .. 80ftdtr (S.llN , Ml<ll.I del. LIU S.•MllO (leuc:ler Hiii, Fie I, ... ,, ... 2; ZIM GerrtlOft IHoullonl def. GrelcMrl Autll IPlllll>utVlll. •. ,, •·l College women it) WAIAW 11 ...... 1 Cllefft ...... ,., ... J-Mate) • "'"'"_., ...... sc1111111111 (Sen Oleoo Stel•I def. Merl• My•rt cue 1rv1 ... 1. l_., ... ,. 6-t; M<C.11• (Cell clef. K .. llftO cue INIM), 2 ..... , .... ,. l'lmll-Dwtl!M lledoNSo-Perll C5en Ol•OO Sl•l•I def. Myell·M,,...t IUC INIMI, ... 2, ... 1. COMMUNtTY COLLEGE WOMEN State cihamplonahlp• IMWMl'l.....,C:-...1 ~ .... C:-111,C-4 ...... Goulertl CCI def OMtb<ll, H , .. ._ .... Merrell CCI tlM. """· .. ,, ... ; Nerrlt IC) oel. ki-ttler, H . M , •4, Oertle .. IOCCl def •ocw, 1_., w , S.••Y• COCCI tlef. Geit-te1men, .... , ....... 1(...,..., COCCI def. C.,.y, S-1, 1 I. 1 .. ....... S<,,_mer.Ofrlt11e COCCI •t. ~t. Morrell,, ... 1-4, H«tl1~ CCI _,, lltt•·OMllKll, .. t, H ; lew•y .. l(Mfty IOCCI def Certy.Mc(M'tlly, U , '"2, M . • >'-· -(_ > . NBA CHAMPIONSHIP SERIES Celtlca 102, Rocket• 91 l..._wlM ~."II 805TO--Bird 17, MeJ1-ll It, Pe1lll\ 11, Arclllbeld IJ, Ford II, II-¥ •. M<IUI• 2, Cur •. G He,..•r1on O. 011erod o. Fern•lenO Total• <&J IS.II 111'2 JIOUSTOH -P ... llt U, lltld 21, Me- J'f, 011nle•vr •. T H-non I, WlllOUGllll>Y S. Gerr.n I, lAevell O. J_, 0 Tolelt J6 , .. J)" s.c .... r,o...nen 8ot\Oft 2S 2t 2' JG-1112 HOUllOft 24 n 20 J•-'1 Tllr••POllll goal Bird. Fouled out None. Total foul• Boalllft 21, HoutlOft 21. Te<llnlul HoutlOft 1coec11 H•rrhl A - ••.u1. High ec:hool women OllANOI OOUNTY ALL-STAii •0$Tlftt CJ-u . .....,.... VeNey Hltll. s:• •·""' .... C••• Fren<y, Ettencle, S.10 lorwe<d, 16.1 Pb .. 10.2 ....... 511-. Meyer. EdlMlfl. M ouerd, lt.o. 12.1; Ovit Wycleo,.,alll, F- 1•111 Volley, S-1 ,_.,...,.rd, lt.2, 4.0; CellMn l«ry, #MrlM , S-7\o't Ht. 14 1, 6 O; Merlenne 9e4Qen. F-lelft Velley, W I. 10.J, • 0 euitb, Sue 11.,,...11, EdlMlll, s..f I, 14.0, '0, VklLle ~mt>lllft. l!tten<le, S-7 0. 11 /, •• eultU. Mellllde 1 .......... -·· Oel, S·I 9, 12 0, 6.0, I 0 ualtll, Teri Oonollu•, Mal• Del, "O c. 10.0, 12.0. Melenlt ~-. c..,ittr-Velley, M 1. 24 t . t 0, LO tMbla; u .. GtendmtltM, FOOU\111, ..0 <, 12-", .... Tenye Mollltnlleol. !>anti ........ <. 24.l, 16.0. HH4 <MCll -Sflelle ,..._,,, F-111. "-ROC>ln Ferrlngl.Oft, C'(IH'9U. W Q. lt.t; Joell H•,...Y. Le Het>r•. S-0, o·I, 12.J, 1.0 reb .. Slleryt Hey-ea. El Dor-, S.tt I<, 11.t, 10.S, Cindy Kouc:lll, Cyprft\, ~ O. 1 •. 6.1 Haith, Clw'ISle Le ...... o. E_r.,,ze, S-1 o·f, ........ Llr uni ...... VIII• P•'1L. S-10 c.f, 20.4. 12.t, Ketlly Lo<ll•, LN••. S-10 I, I S.0, 11 I; Kelly My-ere, Sonore, S.7 0. U 4, s o, •.O eultls, T eml Perll.,, Gerden Grow, S·ll <·I, lt.7, U 0 , Kelly Slurgeon. E..,.rerwi, S-1 o. •.1, 4 J; Jennifer Simm, Le Het>re, s.• I, 10,7, t J, t.6 Hlilh; A""" WHley. C.-.li.. S-11c·I,17.l, 16 J. HHd <oect't -si. ... K•••IOllll, Gerdltn Grove . •nlatenl Merle Upton. Cypret.L STANLEY CUP FINALS l1lande,. t , North Stare 3 .............. _... ... Ml"llffllle NYl•I~ Sun.., PwriMI l"lrM_..,. I 112 0 - 1. Ml...-.. Ckc.erelll II (He.-._ Cllrl1totll. J a J New Yorlt, lony 14 CM<E-, D. PotYlnl, t ·l:J. I. -Y~ Ny11rom S (llMNk ll T-111), 14:Jit. 4. - Yorll, O. P•hlll 1 CMe,,1<111, 11.••· Pen•llltt -IC.elkW, NY, I II; Trllttler. NY, 2. U, ........ Miii., 4 •• 1..e....,,111, NY, 4·s.J; MKAOem, Min , '04; MortOW, NY. S:04, ~ NY, ILOI; lerretl. Min. lt;U ; 1-.NY, lt:U. tee.-,... s. MlnM .. I•, Petmer I 18roten, G Smlllll, t :IS. Penally -T-111, NY, IO:M nir.-... 6. Ml......,..., PeyM U (Y-, 11....W, ;JO./. N-Yerll, 0. Pot¥1n. COorlnol. t:OO. 1. N •• York, ,,.,.,_ I C Me•r k ll, 0. "9C· ¥1111, 11;J7 .•. N-Yorll, BOltY IS ITrOltlof, a ... mel. ll:Z2. Penelll" D. Potvl11, NY, J:lt; a,_, M111., 6:12; lerrMI, Min., 7:01 ; Trottier, NY. 7:01; Trottier, NY, 12:'9; 0. Pot¥1n, NY, ll:JI; Cku••lll, Min., mlnor- mlecoftdMCI, 16:41; I . Me•"""· Min., major, 16:41; .__, NY, mlMr-mll<Oftduc:I. 16:44; a ... rne, NY, rnejor, 16:44. SllCIU Oft QOel -Ml,.,,.Ml.e t-11..,_29, .._ Yorll IMl·lt-11. OoellH -Mln,..aote, le1upre. New Ytrll,Sml ... A -IS .. Playoff echedule ~ ........ NY ltl..-n6,~I ,__.,.,I<_ NYl1~6.M._...I ......,.,._ NV la._,.etMl-Ml.e T ........ t._ NY lt ...... elMlllM ..... ,,......,,Me?n Miii-el NY lllllMier• 111 nece11MYI ...... .... .. NY l.,..,.el._ .... llf nec_.,I T-.......MIY• Ml ........ et NY l..,,..,t Cit llK_.,) Mlle -1. C-(Alemeny), 4:41.1, a. P(•M•• cua1 .. en1ty>, •:M.1; i. s..o11s I •e•ollWI. •:St.J; 4. MUOll (911e11el. 4:S1.t ; l. H&llett (Seuoull, 4;5',,L o..rt: 7. •c•...., ,,,_. v.....,1, 1:tt.7; •. aen'IH tu.twnltyl, S:W J . Tw.-ftllle -I. 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D6 INTERMISSION ........ 03 RESTAURANTS ........ 04 i Joey Bishop became a song-and-dance man for' Sugar Babies ' Bishop and co-star Ann Miller in scene from Broadway hit ~He subbed for Mickey on Broadway ~ By MICHAEL DOUGAN •• 9( .. ~~ ..... quired he develop a couple of new ones -sjnging and dancing. · ~ u Joey . 8istiop. ·;,;e·re ' t.o write a resume. it ·'They tamed down nine other people." he ex- plained "Mickey had seen me in a play in Chicago with my son and he said that Joey would be thf' guy. which I found rather strange, because I'm not a song and dance man ... <But) if l didn't do it for him then he couldn't do the movie." ~ ,; j ~ t j I 1 i would read like a history of show business in the 20th century. From beginning in burlesque, Bishop became a stand-up comedian, movie star, television talk show host, serious stage actor. The capper came this year. when Bishop logged a brief stint as lead in a Broadway musical revue. And that, he said as he polished off a cup of coffee in the breakfast nook of his Lido Isle home, was "the thrill of all time." In February, Bishop spent four weeks subbing for his pal Mickey Rooney in the Broadway hit "Sugar Babies"' while Rooney made a television movie. The job not only drew on Bishop's well · established taJents fo r acting and comedy. but re· Bishop was given only two weeks rehearsal time. complicated by the illness of co-star Ann Miller's mother. "I really went about it very, very strenuous- ly." said Bishop. "l rehearsed 14 hours a day. I diagrammed the dancing. You see, you can re- hearse the lyrics. you can rehearse the sketches. but you can't rehearse the dancing without the music and the person to dance with. . I Big 'doings' are due '1 Some 35,000 to 4-0,000 people Also potter Norville Mook, are expected to "Follow the The 'roads ' will be made OrientaJ flower arrangers Ves Rainbow Road" through the 17th and Noriko Sne lson , mixed annuaJ Newport Beach City Arts of colored balloons , lead-media artist Mimi Sharon Stein Festival beginning tomorrow al ing f estivaL-goers to a and floral arranger Lily Briggs . 11 :30 a .m in Fashion Island variety of arts and crafts Mall. The "roads" will be made of exhibits and continuous colored balloons, leading music and d an c € resllval·goers to a variety or arts performances. and crafts exhibits and con- tinuous music and dance performances. The event will begin with a community songfest at 11 :30 a .m . tomorrow. Following open- lng ceremonies at noon, the en- tertainment will include the Orange Coast College Jazz Band, a "Best of Broadway" re- vue, a tap dance show, the American Music Jazz Band, another dance exhibit, a performance by the Sweet Adellnes, a concert by classical auitar and lutist John Schneiderman and -befinninl at 3:45 p.m. -two hours of en- potter David Kiddle, stained glass maker John Russell. Chinese brush painter Nlng Yeh, clothing-maker Helen Richards, stained glass-maker Jay Alex- ander. kite-maker Anthony Sirianni, printmakers and ' sculptors, the Back Bay Quilters and the C.L. Artists Association with oils, watercolor and acrylics. A number of local organiza- tions will host booths and ex- hibits, including the Orange County Philharmonic Society (with a music mobile, dem- on strating musical ins tru- m ents), See's.Candies, the As· sistance League of Newport Harbor; Bowers Museum , Friends of Newport Beach Arts Commissions, Friends of the Theatre Art Center, the Orange County Theatre Association, the Newport Harbor Art Museum, the Orange County Arts Alli- ance, South Coast Repertory Theatre and the Oasis Center for Older Adults. tertainment by the Celtic Socle· ty and Poetry Society of Cal Slate Fullerton. Best bets for the weekend The final show will feature "child prodigy viollnilt" Corinne Cabapelle, lrlsh Jll dan· cera; a tradiUonal Irish band of barp, two baaplpes and a fld· dler, and INb poetry. Another community son1 fest opeu Sunday'• abow at noon, alon1 with dancers, more "Beat of Broadway," a youth orchestra performance and a re- turn of the Celu. Strolllns entertainment throQbout the pounds will be proricJed by a clown, a Juai.r, mlm• and puppeteers. Anl1t1 wbo will be dem-outraUna tbelr 1klll1 lnclud• eaJllJ}'aplier Sam Scbwelt1er, 1 .. CBE,VALIEaE," • lwo- actor, three-character play by David Trainer, will bealD a 20·day run Wednesday on the Second Staie of the South Cout Repertory Theater. The play 1 eo-stars Ron Bouaaom and Georce McDaniel. ••A FESTIVAL OW Beethoven," featurJn1 the Saddl1b1ck Colle1e Chamber Singers and Concert Choir, ia set for 8 p.m. Saturday in the Malo Campus Floe Arts Theatre. Tickets are $4 general admlaslon, $3.50 for 1tudenta and senior clUzens. THE NEW YOa& STaJNG quartet will perform the tut of five c:oncerta at UC Irvine at t tonl1ht ln tbe Fine Arla Vllla1e Theater. For lnforma- tfon , call 833.e817. "There's one part (in the revue) that runs about 10 minutes where I'm dancing with Ann Miller and in the daAce I 'm .singing one song and she's singing another song at twice the tempo while we're dancing to her tempo As luck would have it, her mother was in a coma so she couldn't rehearse with me. lain lines that Mickey can do as an actor that I, as a comedian, cannot do. I' would be like if Charlton Heston I.old a joke, and it w~s a fajr jpke1 that would be all right. But if I told a joke, and tt was only a rair joke, it wouldn 'l be aJI right. Then a lot of the jokes pertained to <Rooney's) size. At the end of one sketch, be is head-on to a girl's bosom and hJs closing line is 'Who wanta to be tall"?"''" When it came my time, I said, 'Right now, I'd eive a thousand dollars to be as short as Mickey Rooney.' " "I rehearsed with the male choreographer, who danced it at half the tempo that she did it in. So opening night when she did it at her tempo, try- ing to catch up with her l knocked my knee out." Bishop took the role, in part, out of loyalty to Rooney, his friend of some 30 years. He expressed delight over the part "Sugar Babies" has played in reviving Rooney's career. For the rest of the month, Bishop's knee bad to be "frozen" with a therapeutic spray before each performance. Bishop said the show was altered to accom· modate him "It saved his life : it just gave him a complete "Before I accepted it, I said there were cer-<See LIFE, Page D8) Beach Boys still alive By JOEL C. DON O( .. Delty" ........ They were in their prime dur- ing the "Beach Blanket" ·eos. Despite personal conflicta and in-fighting between two sets of brothers, they pulled through the ho-hum '70s. When the news media pro· claimed "Brian's back" in 1976, they, or course, meant the prime creative force and leader of the Beach Boys, Brian Wilson. His problems began with a nervous bre akdown in liM, followed by a frenetic dabbling with psychoactive drugs. At the Beach Boys' Anaheim Stadium concert in '76, Wilson had to be nursed onto the stage by bis psychiatrist. NA8tMLLE ARTI8T8 - Jacky Ward (above), Donna Fargo, Sylvia, Steve Wariner, Eddy Raven, Mackenzie Colt, Lee Dresser and The · Bllly Thundercloud Show wlll perform • tbroua,hout the park at Dianeyland t.b1a week. t . . . the group has managed to live th r ough two decades of dramatic upheaval in rock 'n' roll; from surf music to acid rock, folk to heavy metal, dinosaur rock to disco, punk to ska to new wave. people are going to school. gel· ting jobs, getting ma rried ... they do normal things," be said, in a telephone interview from 'his Santa Barbara home. The Anaheim Stadium con- cert, following the California Surf soccer game, also marks a new direction for the group: It's their first performance in com- bination with a major aporta event. "California Surf and the You won't find Wilson huddled Beach Boys seem to Co to1ether behind a piano when the Beach band in hand -the words a b dl anyway," Love mused. "I'm .,oys return to t e sta um 'tonight. He bas survived th.rough looking foward to seeln1 bow it his years as a recluse. comes off. But more important, the group "Hopefully the team and the has managed to live throueh two Beach Boys will' create an event decades of dramatic upheaval ln .which will~o somethin1 for both Of us." rock 'n' roll; from surf must~ to acid rock, folk to heavy metal; Love said the Idea of playtnc a dinosaur rock to disco, punk to concert followin1 an athletic ska to new wave. event wu kicked around by the "We've had our areumenta," group in the late 'eOa. said vocallsl-lyrlcllt Mike Love. A few yean a10, be formed "It so happens our family 1quab-tbe Love Foundation to do Just bles have been reported in RoU-that. The non-profit orsanlutioa ln1 Stone but they don't have auppona the al'U and environ· any relevance anymore. mental groupe. "Belna eouaina, brotben and Heavlly Influenced by b11 friends helps a lot in term.a of many years of devotion to understandln.1 the peraQnality Transcendental MeditaUon and chances over the years." a personal commllment to Perhaps the Beach Boys have I ""' al •--Lo bell persisted -..auae of lhelr ··-•. eco o .. c ... ue1, ve evee ~ wu tbe muatc of the 'IOI wW be que choral renditions or "potitlve and life aupportlq and harmonies and for tbe sheer will not promote drup. •· simplicity of their l1ric• and "Since our mualc la already mt•!~. uld the aun-and-:t:~~·~ .a:/1~~~~ ':ft aurf-lntplred IJ'OUP bu luted dictate the tbea:aes ud people'• becauae he believes m0tt people tute will be more r.ftned. - aren't dyin1 their hair "Mualclau ibould p~o•lde pbo1pboreseent sreen, Jabblq music that upl&ftl ud btneftta a safety piDI 1nto their eb..U an4 l)el"ICID m·""--bll nu&A•u ~ alammlftc. lnto each otber oo ' • -• .. .., nlShtcluh dance noon. Clee BEACH BOYi, Pa .. DI) f ' f ' -. 1 " . . : ~ ;-, . :: 1 ~ . i . ~ ' '! i ~ i· ~ . J " r J DI Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 -PLAYS------ "SHENANDOAH" opens ll8 West Coast premiere tonight at the Laguna Moult.on Playhouse, 808 Laguna Canyon Rd., Laguna Beach. The musical drama set against the Civil War plays Tuesdays through Saturday& at 8 p.m. wltb Uckets available by culUng 494--0743. "CAROUSEL" Rodsers and Hammerat.eln'a well· known musical, opens for three weekend• too11ht at Fullerton's Plummer Auditorium, Lemon and Chapman Streets. Performed by the Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company, the show wW be pre· sented Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m . and Sundays at 2: 30 p. m. throuab May 31. "LONE STAR" and "Laundry ·and Bourbon,'' two companion plays about life in Texas, play tonight and tomorrow at 8 p .m. in the Orange Coast College Drama Lab Theater. For ticket informa· tion, call 556-5527 . "HISTORY OF AMERICAN FILM," a musical comedy featuring characterizations of famous movie stars, will be presented tonight and tomor- row al 8 p.m. in Chapman College's Waltmar Theater, 333 N. Glassell, Orange. Far.information and reservations, call 997-6856. "THE CENCI," an abbreviated version of the Percy Bysshe Shelley play, will be performed Thursday, May 21, through Saturday, May 23, at UC Irvine's Fine Arts Studio Theater. Shows at 8 p.m. Call 833-6617. "THE BELLE OF AMHERST," a play based on the life of Emily Dickinson, will be presented in a Sunday Workshop at UC Irvine's Fine Arts LitUe Theaterat8p.m. Sunday, Mayl7. Call833-6617. "DAMES AT SEA," a send-up of Hollywood musicals. opens tonight at the Gem Theater, 12852 Main St., Garden Grove. Performances on Wed- nesday through Sunday evenings at 8:30 p.m. Closes June 13. For reservations, call 636-7213 Tuesday through Saturday, noon to ·6 p.m . A special performa.i;ice for the hearing impaired, with two signers located near the stage, is set for Thursday, May 21. Call 636-7213, VOICE or 892-7070 TTY. "THEATER OF THE DEAF," an annual show for and by the hearing impaired, continues tonight and Saturday at Golden West College's Playbox Theater. Curtain at 8 p.m . Call 894-9885. "GODSPELL" wraps up at Newport Harbor High School tonight and tomorrow at 8 p.m. For in· formation, call 760-3249. ''THE WIZ" is on the boards all summer at the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana. Performances of the black musical version of ·"The Wizard of Oz" are nightly except Mondays at varying curtain times. Call 979-5511. Char•• o Brown 1 01\ ~~5 ~ ~,,,,.·,..---~ .. · -.. Snoopy $40 round triq . With free parking in Buena Park and Fullerton. Then straight through to ''THE MAX FACTOR.'' a comedy starrin11 Cesar Romero, continues at Sebastian's Weat Dinner Playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente. Performances nightly except Mondays through June 13. "A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM" runs throudl May 30 at the Westminster Community Theater, 7272 Maple St .. Westminster (99$-4113). The Shakespearean comedy plays Frid4Y'I and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. .. THE PAISLEY CONVERTIBLE" continues ac. the Huntington Beach Playhouse in the Seacllfr Village center on Main Street at Yorktown Avenue in Huntington Beach. Curtain times are 8 p.m . Fridays and Satulldays. Tickets at 847-4465. .. CBILDE BYRON,'' revealing the life of poet Lord Byron in a series of flashbacks by his dying daughter, is on stage at South Coast Repertory through Sunday, May 17 . For ticket information, call 957~4033. -CLASSICAL MUSIC--- THE NEW YORK STRING QUARTET will perform the last of rive con~erts at UC Irvine at 8 p.m. tonight in the Fine Arts Village Theater. For Information. call 833·6617. AN HONORS RECITAL by students of the Irvine Conservatory of Music is set for Saturday al 8 p.m . in the Forum Theater on the North Campus or Sad· dleback Community College, 5500 Irvine Center Dr., Irvine. Call 557-8243. ORANGE COAST COLLEGE'S SYMPHONY Orchestra closes out its 20th season Sunday, May 17, with a 4 p.m. concert featuring works by Mozart, Schumann and Rose. The orchestra will be joined by OCC's Coast Master Chorus. Call 556-5527. WOODWIND QUINTET from UC Irvine will present a benefit concert al Christ College lrvine. Founders Hall, at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, May 17. For information. call 833-3733. SUZUKI-TRAINED VIOLIN STUDENTS from the Irvine Conservatory or Music will play Sunday, May 17, at 4:30 p.m . in the Turtle Rock Communi· ly Center. I Sunnyhill Dr .. Irvlne. Free to public. THE UCI WIND ENSEMBLE will perform its first concert Tuesday. May 19, at UC Irvine's Fine Arts Village Theatre at 8 p.m . Call 833-6617. ' -DANCE------ THE CIVIC BALLET of Southern California will present "A Gala Performance" featuring fi ve separate ballets at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, May 17, at Huntington Beach High School Auditorium. 1905 Las Vegas, non-stop in 4112 ·5 hours. And, please. Sally Find the whole Peanuts 9an9 everv.dav in the ' lllllJ NII 842-4321 forget past "bus rides." Fun-are the Barbary Coast on the Bus promises to pamper you strip, and the Four Queens with on·boarg_!uxury never downtown. (We can book rooms before found on the ground. Our here, too, if you like). Come First Class Groundliners'"' give back when you're ready. We run you the ultimate in airliner com-daily schedules, seven days of fort. With first-run Ef'il.n'ii'-'R the week. We're motion pictures. ~~~~ ICC licensed and Reclining seats. &-. Re • insured. And ex· Reading lights. Call 1or senrat1om elusively yours, Earphone stereo [714)635•1390 Orange County! COMMUNITY FISTIV4L '11 Country Western Roundup Saturday, May 1 6 at Golden West College 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. • Food & Game Booths • Arts & Crafts • Contests • Entertainment on 2 Stages • Live Theater Supported by 1ervlce orgenlzatlona and Coordinating Counclla from Garden Grove • Fountain Valley • Huntington Beach • Seal Beach • We1tm1ri1ter Free Admission l • ..,.,---~---.......... -- .. . Peter Odegard directs the OCC Symphony Or chestra. closing its concert season Sunday. South Main St.. Huntington Beach. Reserved seat· ing $4. For tickets or information call 891-5105. THE SAIDE DANCERS will perform classical dances from the Mideast at 2 p .m. Sunday , May 17, in the Turtle Rock Community Center , 1 Sunnyhi ll Dr.. Irvi ne. Tickets $3 general ad- mission. $2 students and seniors. -GAL LERIES----- A STUDENT /\RT exhibition is on display this month at Golden West College's fine arts gallery. About 100 pieces representing all artistic dis· c iplines are included . For information, call 892-7711. THE SAN CLEMENTE ARTS and Crafts Club opens its summe r exhibition at 12 :30 p.m. Sunday, Ma y 17, in the San Clemente Community Center. 100 N. Sevillti. Show runs daily from t pm. to 4 p m , throu.rhJuly 10. ART AND MUSIC will be combined at 4:30 p.m Sunday, May 171 when the Zephyr Woodwind Quintet a ppears m conjunction with the Laguna Legacy exhibit in lhe Laguna Beach Museum of Art, 307 CUfr Drive. Laguna Beach. For details, call 494-6531. -ETC.------ HANDCRA FTED AUTOMOBILES will be on display at Knoll's Berry Farm, northwest of In· dependence Hall in the Lagoon Picnic area, from 10 a.m. to dusk Saturday and 10 a.m . to 4 p.m. Sun- day VICTORIAN ARTS AND CRAFTS will b~ demonstrated by hobbyists at the Victorian Fair Saturday in the Fullerton Aborelum on the campus of Cal State Fullerton. Included will be china painting, tatting, stained glass, canning, weaving, tussy-mussy assembling, egg batik, silhouette art, wheal weaving, wood graining and flowe r arrang. ing. Admission $1. HOAG\' CARMICHAEL'S MUSIC will be '>laved by Guy Halferty and The Society Combo at ·s p.m. Saturday in the Orange Coast College Auditorium. Tickets, at $.1 for general admission, will be sold at the door. For information, call556·5527. . THE KJNGSTON TRIO will appear al 8 p.m. Wed- nesday, May 20, at Irvine Bowl in Laguna Beach under the sponsorship of SaddJeback College Com- munity Services. Tickets are $5 and $6. For re- servations. call 331-4656 or 495-2790. THE LONG BEACH ROLLER SKATI NG M aralhon, with some 900 skaters e xpected to participate in three r aces ranging from six to 26 miles, takes place Sunday, May 17. beginning al 8 a .m . Starts on Shoreline Drive next to the Conven· lion Center. Entry fee $12. Call 597-6655 or register on the day of the race. ~PUT~~-O~N~Y~O-RI~~~~~~~-.•••••••••••••••••••••••••• • w ' . . ' • • e re g1vmg away our secret. • DANCIN' SHOES /'. • • ·-- u • • • • • • • • • • • • • • : CONTOUR FACIAL U~l : : Look Years Younger : • ~ur 1111·1 l<•n Y<'Jh l.no1wl<•dK<'Jhl1· wnmt'n h.iv• '""'j • • L .. ~crel JI h11mf' 11°J(uldrly 111 1,.,,,.,,, th .. 1 '"bit• ''""' ••I • • JK"'K A f111t' rl'hydrattnK fd• 1JI r rov1·11 lo "4•·nllv t1..:hh'n • • '"Kl<'"" ~l<.m dnd ><lht•n w1111kk" "11111 ti 1nol'ltu111· • • u Secrel '' .1va1l,hl<' by m~ll <1nly1 h11 V••lll 1nl1t1d111 lory • -.~----.:..i • '>dmplr wnd $2 50 lur f'O'>l•)o(<' & h.ondltrtl( t.o '"" /\1m •111J n • Great ftt11ng western wtiar for men and women • JJdrt,.,, Le S.-cret • 1n Oakbrook Village. Laguna Hilla 951-5760 • "\.Ill Santa M onita Blvd Suitt• 101 &•v1•rly I t.II' CA "ll! ltl • Mon·Sat 10~ Sun 12-5 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' . . • • . ., . ' -... -,... -----... __ .. , ... ~ . ---__ .._-....-~ .. ~,....---·-"':~~."""""'""mli!"!!!ll!l .... ~119111~~~ ........................................ -.. -... _·¢1 ..... °' .............................. , Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 DI PBS spotlights Faberge 'Chevaliere' world premiere on innovative Second Stage The PBS special '·Lost to the Revolution·' could have been tilled "The Egg and the Czar." Nlcholaa, that is. Nick was the final heir to the 300-year-old· Romanov clan, Russia's last imperial dynaaty. · The egg was the ravored rorm for "rantaJies" created for the ruling family and other aristo- 1. cralic R ussians by ~ .. .. ·- : !. ~ ~ .. :: .. : .... ~ ,. <( ";' ,. !· ,. rj r j ~ -: ~ ,,. ,: < ~ ., :c ~ Ir--: " ~ ;; . . ' : !• .. l ! . r: . i: •• • ~ ( " ~ t . .s . , . m a s t e r jeweler and goldsmith -J-El_E_V-IE_W_S Peter Carl Faberge each Easter. Faberge's Im-------p e ri a 1 eggs were masterworks, handcrart- ed from gold and brightly colored enamels, de· corated with jewels and miniature oil paintings and containing remarkable surprises inside. Today, many of those pnceless eggs are con- tained in a collection owned by f'orbes Maga zine. "Lost to the Revolution" was a half-hour look at these incredible creations. But there's more. The program was also an insightful, albeit brief, exploration of the Russia that was. Using old Wm footage, the narration traced the events that led up to the Bolshevik Revolution of 1905. Most intriguing were the czar's home movies, picling the royal family at play -romping in a fie ld , rollerskating, dancing and boating. Like all home movies, they are flawed in execution, affec- tionate in intent. In fact, we get the feeling that the people who produced this show really liked the czar. Nicholas is portrayed as a kind, well-meaning man who sort of accidentally let four million of his people die du ring some unfortunate little world war and didn't really notice that the rest were teetering on the verge of starvation. He is seen as a h apless victim of circumstance. Then again, Forbes Magazine has never been b£nj;a) t~r ·~~~~~~~ INDIAN REST<AURANT ·~-_.; f!:J.~ HIAIFAST •LUNCH• DIHHlll • 7 DAYS ;,~ ~ lelly Dancing MICJhHy ~ MAY 2for I SPECIAL 1wtt11 tws ec11 Order 2 Indian Curry Dinners and pay only for highest pnced dinner. Vahd Mon thru Thur. 5930 West Coast Highway Newport Beach • 646-4202 cw 646-1 302 COMPLETE EARLY BIRD DINNERS EVERY DAY 4 to 7 p.m.-'5" Including Prime Ribs & Lobster Au Gratin. Bar-B-0 Pork Ribs. Dover Sole and Red Snapper. WE CATER ANY KIMD OF pt ARTY REASOMAIL Y IC11tquet ROOM ··~ IUp to 2001 I 6 70 Newpcri Blvd. COSTA MESA 642-8293 With This Coupon 2 Hickory Smoked BAR-B-Q Dinners For SS95 Your Choice Brisket -Beef or Pork Ribs Includes Cole Slaw, BBQ Beans, Pickle, Toast. Sauce &I In or Take Out All our tn4111ts are H1clfory Smoked & slowly cOOked to perlect1on in our Hickory Pit using genwne H1elcory wood . sk About Our Catering Service - &. 21162ndStreet • Newport Beach ~A ""~L~Be~~~::~~~ge ~"~ 846-7370 Open from 11 :00 a.m. to 9 p.m. iii "' TtlE CANNERY FIRST OF THE SEASON FRESH LOCAL SWORDFISH LUNCH: MONAlAT. 11:30-3:00 DINNER NIGHT\. Y 5:00-10:00 SUNDAY BRUNCH 1:00-2:30 • GALA B~EFIT CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY SAT. MAY 18 12:0CM:OO FISH 880 • FLEA MARKET BOAT HOPPING • ART l!XHIBITI ' ENTERTAINMENT IY JAION CHASE RESERVATIONS 714 -'7M177 By TOM TITUS Of ltlt Oeilf " ... S&a" In the three seasons and soon lo be JO produc lions since South Coast Repertory opened its F'ourth Step Theater 1n Costa Mesa's South Coast Town Center, the company has done an admirable JOb of testing new theatrical waters. The list of county, West Coast and world pre- mieres mounted by SCR on its mainstage and smaller Second Stage is staggering more than two·thirds of the re pertory's three-year output Plays like "The Glass Menagerie." with which most theatergoers are familiar , stand out like the pro- verbial sore thumb on the SCR schedule. The Second Stage, in particular, has been a re· pository for new and innovative material. Testing their wings there were "Points in Time," "Time W!Js" a nd "Screwball" and now another world premiere, "Chevaliere," opens next Wednesday. F'aberge's imperial Easter eqq Like the current inhabitant of the main.stage, "Ch i Ide Byron" <which closes this weekend>, ··chevaliere" is the dramatization of an encounter between two real people from the pages of his tory Set in London in 1775, the two-character play de- picts the diplomat and playwr ight Caron de Beaumarchais and Chevalier d 'Eon, a notorious French dragoon officer. heavily into peasantry. Still1 :·Lost to the Revolution" 1s not revisionarv and the nistor y was presented as a mere backdrop against which to view Faberge's fabulous works. It's the kind of s how your mother would have loved. TH E. STORY GOES that Beaumarchais, author of the classic comedies "The Marriage of Figaro" and "The Barber of Seville," 1s charged with negotiating d'Eon's controversial return to France. He disC'overs that the rugged. debonair <Jragoon is reputed to be a woman in disguise and connives to uncover his adversary's true gender "Lost" aired Wednesday, al 8:30 p.m. and re- peated the following day at 4:30 p.m. on Channel 50. -MichaelDougan Make your weekends special' ~1th a magnificent champagne brunch overlooking Newport Bay. Smorgasbord buffet. only $8.95 ~4 50 under 12, Satwdoy 11 :00 a.m. • 3:00 P""- S..day I 0:00 a.m. • 3:00 p..m. ~~~lllEllf"~E 1tHfMiNT On the Waterfront In Lido Marina VIiiage Newport Beach 673·4700 · Real Cantonese Food eat hara or take home STAG CHINESE CASINO I I I 21stftl.. Mewport hod9 OIJole l·tHO H-to M ldlli9ftt D91ify-WfflltfMh u..tff I :OD o.M. Oftl M '1IA.IS .. -- "The play is a fencing match of wits, created by a tremendously talented playwright, David Trainer," says David Emmes. founder and artistic director of SCR, who is staging the comedy. Playmg the questionable d'Eon will be Ron Boussom, one of SCR 's most accomplished actors, whose much-heralded work at the Costa Mesa theater has included leading roles in "The Elephant Man," "Equus." "The Comedians" and "The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel " Guest artist George McDaniel, a veteran of Los Angeles theater . will portray Beaumarchais A week after the opening of ··chevalie re," SCR draws the curtain on its 1980-81 season with the revival on the mainstage of an old-time musical that may raise a few eyebrows among those familiar with the repertory company's taste. It's Cole Porter's "Anything Goes." a lightweight comedy which would seem more suited to the din· ner theaters J OHN-DAVID KELLER, SCR's specialist in the m~sical genre, as staging "Anything Goes." which 1s only the second musical at the Fourth Step It's being billed as the most entertaining SC R show of the season, and should provC' a favorite with general audiences. For those who dabble in stat1 s t1 cs ··chevaliere" and ··Anything Goes" will be th~ 145th and 146th p-roductions mounted on South Coast Repertory's stages since the company took up rC's1dence on the Orange Coast in early 1965 That adds up to more than nine shows a year from the industrious organization, which has long since eclipsed other local s tages and car ved out a national name for itself in regional theater. teak& A Family Shopping/Dining & Entertainment Center Shri Charbroiled and topped with 8 delicious tenyaki glaze. this skewered oombinatlon of thick. tmdu steak and plump shrimp Is serwd "with your choice or our SteamlniJ Clam Chowder, Soup of the Day or Chilled Mixed ·Green Salad. plus Rice Pilaf. Fresh Pinupple and a halfloefo(Warm Bread and Butter a.a." lllud · 203 M1111nc Awn~ Lalll hNlt • O!r I ·5 111 l..akt f()rtst Drtw 22873 Like furol 01tYc Co• lkaa · Hetbof Shopptoa Ce mu 2300 Htt.bof tflicl ........ Ncwl>ort r~v at f.lisi ~'Rd 1721EAu~Ad Albertson's • Bank of America • Bilbo Bagglns • Coco's/Reuben's • Command Performance Dolph In Hair Fashions • Edwards Cinema • Fash'n Splash • Hamburger Hamlet • Ice Capades Mesa Verde Florist • Mesa Verde Travel • Mione's • Music Market • Photography by Jeffrey Southern California Optical • Spa Lady • Swensen's •Vicki's Sunshine Fac tory (.\~ 0 0000000 IA\. ~~0000000 0,000 (.f!).J 00 00 00 ~ 0 0 0 2701 H1rt>or BJYd. • (Harbor & Adame) Cotta Mna. CA 1 Ornng Co111 DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 1e, 1981 'Secret' Le Biarritz moves into ·the limelight Jolnin1 .fs,roperty ror the addlUon of a park1n1 French eacargot a la BouriU11Jlone, $4.7S, one Bv NORMAN STAN&.F:\' Of u.. 0~1., l'ilec i\lllt It uppcar~ Ulll or Newport's best little set·ret rt·staurant~ hJt turned virtually over· r11ghl 111to one• of Orange County's hottest dining SJ>Ol)) Llmch at Le Uiurrih the other day somewhat rt-.St>illhlt•cl Oodgt>r S tadium w1lh Fernando \ alt•nwdu elm• to take tht: pitcher's mound But the farl' Wt-Ill apprcc1abl)-be)'Ond hot dogs and Pt'anul., Not. uf coUr,!,l', th<1t thl· offrring.!. ut Le ------- Hicirr1t1 hav1• ever lJt'en OUT 'N ABOUT oll1l 1 tl1:111 plt•nl1ful ;lllU fll '>I I .Ill' i\nd lh<• -------- rt·' la u 1 .111 l 1 t' 1 ta 1 n I} ha.,n't g1Jtw unnoticed ltl'n·.1houb 'illH'I' l!l'l l or unappreciated l'h.it':-. th1• 'vt'ar lht• prt' .... ent owners -Yves 111111'lu1 .... •111c· Hi ll'l .tnd Yvan Humbert look ov , 1 \\ h.11 h,ul h1·1·11 thl' <.;"' 1si. Ch:ih:I. an estubhsh La Fayette French Restaurant THE FINEST FREH¢H CUISINE IH THE COUNTY FOR RESERVATIONS CALL: 537-5011 12532 Garden Grove Blvd. Garden Grove, Calif. ~ ..,,_.. ~ L ~ Id u __....;~~ .-.,o E' ,, ~_:_.. -" ·. ~ ~,~~,?) ~f U(JOfl ~. ' ~t GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES SpPC1oh1irig Ir nu('IP...f' A l<J Corte Dishes t I , , ' ,~, ' t ... r r1 .. 1 l •lite Ovt 471 !> C llGpnQ1 • 011>.NC>E 750-7171 • 750-5098 la11cpiet Facillh•• 202 l H~ ll•d. COSTA MISA 642-:162 . 631-9911 r--------------. 1 · Ii / Chinese Cuisine I I \ J,~ 111(11·\I \I (I)( 1-.1 \11.1.1)1 -...:1:1·: I • , I, ,, 1111i ''"'"' .11 l>nrtk' ,, 1trBAMsoo MAY 1 I )J f ,TERRACE SPECIAL I I li JI ¥... '-"-S 5 2 5 P'er Pen°" I ir ''-If 11 °" ,_...., I . AN••''''" t ::i,,."'~~~, Wt•-1 I I q I f ·1 { "" U I• • i...... • I """' !>wH I ~ S....1 I ' f I ..... • " A'"""'"Vv\ 11 ... 1. Mu•IYoom Cllltk°". ~ • t t 1 ~•tr· '••A. t-"rluntC~1e I 1 t I • • I'>' roort """ Pork Cnow Mein I t , ot '"'>tr•"" II". 1tO P1>• Cn1cken I ~ .~} '; ~ 011.., f •P""' M •v 31 1~91 I I • ' Nol Ciooa On Ut' Quv :'.lull I F•·1 r \s r 1.-i1 r 1 ·o-.:r ' :\I 1-s' 61s s~:;r· ti.ii _____________ .. BROILED SWORDFISH STEAK & Josef Friederich "V" PIESPORTER GOl.DTROPFCHEN ~ SJ?.~1~r I }1,1111llt\\.' Wacntm11t I )inm~ t h 'tl'I lt1r • l111..kt.11ls n q \\ I' 11 1ttt l n,ht I li~h\.\.1\ NI\• 642 2291) r--------------. GRAND OPENING I EYE OPENER SPECIAL I Includes $19 9 I • 2 Strips Bacon I • I ECJCJ I • I Pancalce ,' I ' • I Cup Coffee I Ser«ed from 6 A.M.· I 0 A.M. Daily I I Co11po11 P'•r C111i-r -E.,i.-.1 J""• I 2, 1911 THE COOKERY RESTAURANT I 500 W. Coast HICJftway, Newport Beach I OCrOH ~°"' lcAoo loy Ci.. 646-6909 I ment where six ownera had failed to make a eo of it over a lZ-year period Dauntless souls, obviously, the trio cut an in- novative and immediate path to the success that had eluded earlier proprietors. By creating a uni· que atmosphere with food to match (French pro· vinclal), they even manaced to turn an out-of-the· way location (on Old Newport Boulevard, nol far from Hoag Hospital) into an asset. structure and lrtlUy enlarled kitchen faeWUea. dozen, $'7.:IO; Imported French pate, $3.25; alu.f(ed Now, tollowln& a S2 mWion renovaUoa, the mushrooms, $2.9S; soup du jour, cup, Sl.:IO, bowl, -.r_estaurant hu achieved the 1lae and 1t1tua aa one $1. 7S (some Items are priced sllghUy hilher on the or-the area'• m~or dlnln• attracUON. At the 11me dinner menu>. tlme, happUy, It haan't Iott the orlalrual amall BEYOND A LARGE variety of luncheon en-restaurant feellna; each ot today'• four dlnlna areas (lncludin1 the apectacwar U\lrd·OOOr room> trees -falline under the category of omeletua. have diltinctly different atmoepberet and maln· chopped steak (each featuring difrerent in1re· taln a cosy Intimacy. dlenta topping a half pound of lean ground beef When It comea to acann.tna the menu, re· served open face on a slice of French bread) and WITH UNERRING EYES for detail Yves, his wire Christine, und Yvan changed the one-room restaurant into an intimate hide-a-way. All lhe while lhey also labored with love to prove that French food is neither too rancy, too rich nor too expensive. member Le 8tarrltz avoid.I the lofty reaion of authentic French crepes -the biU of fare offers a haute cuisine; oflered lnattad u. the tare favored variety of hot entrees and daily specials. by the averaie French famiJy, uuarytnc and The first or our two selections are the superb flavorful dlahea that are key to everyday French ratatouille ca savory Mediterranean vecetable tables. dish) and sausages <served en casserole with Ir you have a robuet appet.lt.e you'll be wtee t.o potatoes) for $4.95. Ingredients in the ratatouille By 1978, Le Biarrilz had expanded Into the en· tire ground floor of the quaint three·story building, using the second floor for otrlces and storage. Finally, last year, Yves and Yvan negotiated ac- quisition of the entire building toaether with ad· atart your lunch (or dinner) with one of the Include eggplant, zucchini, green pepper. restaurant'• aavory appeUzera. The poealbilltiea, tomatoes, onion, garlic and other seasonings. · all worthy of your conaldtraUon, include French Ratatouille can also be ordered as an onion toup aratlnee, '2.75; a half-dozen imported <See LE BIARRITZ, Page D5> FOR THE HOTTEST ENTERTAINMENT, IN ORANGE COUNTY Go to the arlettuin Dl111t1r Playltou1 111111ri1111 Elizabeth Howard's fil fil [iJ Ill I CURTAIN CALL I DINNER THEATER I Califcrnia'a Fmest Dinner Theatre ~SS~M/i May 15-16 May 17 Afternoon • LIVE JIVE Tliunz* MUSIC ANO LYRICS BY II t'RA~K Wts!JER [I) FULL DINNER SERVED IJ May 18-19 AT YOUR TABLE 1J • CHICAGO BLUE DEVILS • May 20-21·22·23-24 . • .,, Mwloo/ . . . WW.-qf 1 Tony A WOlfb" Performances Tl.lea. lhru Sun .. & Sun. Brunch TUESOA Y SPECIAL llJ y AJllKl!.8 P01' ROA.81' 111 ~ " Ii) OINN!:JI 6 SHOW II] RESERVATIONS ( 7 14) 838 • l 54-0 llJ llJ ..,. 690 P.I. CAMINO KEAi., TUSTIN 9:t680 • (j] fi] "'"' ' SanUI Ana J"wy .. Newporl Ave. hfrramp IJ • LIVE JIVE 2406 NEWPORT BLVD . NEWPORT BEACH 675-2244 ONE NIGHT PAY ONE Nl(iHT NO PAY Check In 1-riday or utunby nlaht :u our iTi;cu!Jar Miit'. Gt'.t thl" Ol"XI nigh! rn't'' 'lnitJe $68. Oout>I(' $78. It' :.11rca1 mlnt·\·.&cumn wuh all o( Oranl(l' (•II.Int)·\ a11r-.&l'llrnl' ju\I numut"' ;t\\J\ DNlt"\ land lll mtnutt"' Kn1111\ llc:m Farm 2"i m1nu1c' An.&ht'tm 'Callium I 'i minult"' '"u II"'' a lu'lllntJU\ Rt1tJ'll')' mom. 'jlar\.hnl( 11l)1np1l"·"'l-<l po•il. lrt't' U'< 111 our mjl.)11 llichted 1enni~ t·oun' plu~ the 'll" -urf and 'h• ~of ht-.Au11ful 'lt"\\1lf1n lk'Jlh Jntn u' "" >n 1n 11ur l'nt..;itk aJ(;lt1~'' 1 ntl;111110' rOf hrcllhure l"all 800 -122 ·HI"' THE R EGISfRY HOTEL IAAllll M:ll:Ar1hur Rini .tntnc, <.A 1)2"'1"i (-11>-c;21r-., \.t•-ffHfl1 )t11tff\~.OTII' f,,.-MlJ« t fJUN\ \lrp"'1 Enjoy all the flavor of Mexico. · Right here. · Come to.Casa Maria and discover all the wonderful accents of Mexico. From the way we look to the things we cook. You'll delight all your senses with the fiesta-like atmos· phere and taste-tempting food. There's everything from the incredible Fiesta Tostada to Maria's delicious Combinations. It's all prepared to perfection and brought to you at a most reasonable price ... whether lunch or dinner . 1Casa Maria. MEXICAN RESTAURANT All the flavor of Mexico:· ~·······~--~······~ NOW SHOWING CfSflR <ROl1fRO starrfng In the World Premiere of . Tti~ MAX r:ACT()~ A Comedy ~.Marcy Vosburgh & Sandy Sprung Opens May 12th! "Hi11hlr rnlC'rtalninir ·it'll ma11C' you yearn for lh.,... 11ooct or dayo" -Tom Titus Ot\ll Y PILOT "l IC'ft 1~ lhHtC'r ftthnl uplih..d, I'm scill ""ll'"ll!" -laura Bun SUN POST .. thrw 'hl>n' can ""II ind dJlnC'<' w1\ll !h.. Bn"I of 0wm·· ""jiiii---------------J0·1'nn MotlJan NEWSPOST ''BABES IN ARMS'' -, Be11 DanMd Hickory Smoked Rib. You'oe ENrEa~n/ Y'all Come Down MONDAY TALENT NIGHTS Stan Orlow MC & LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE EVENING Remember 1he songs? "114y f'unnr V1lrntirw"' ··Th., Lady la A Tramp·· "W~()T wi-.- "Poor Johnn~ 0-'lloc~·· "I ~iJlll Wf'tTlnl..<HrAp1n •nd mott! Now Appearlllf wmTEUNE FEVER Tues.-8al. ' Hol.lrs OPEN 7 DAYS 6 AM ·2 P MJ • --------------4llrllllllllliii~ 16060 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842·2541 Call lo_r sign-ups now! Tueaday -Saturday Longhorn Saloon A VERY SPECIAL JAPANESE RESTAURANT !\\, .trd wi1\11111~ tradillon,,I f,1p.1nl'W lUi.,lnl' ,i nd superb Wl''ll'rn·'il\'le .... ~wcialties. Your l,l\ 11r11t• ,e,1fond, ch1cl..l·n. cll\d ~tc.11... Dl!hcate 'llllP' .rnd dt.>llght(ul -.i'll.~d" lmpl•rcablt• '!l'rvilt> In ,1 mo't ~.iuhtul Wtl1"~ 01-;ccwt.'r YnnMh> .1 Vl~rv ... pc•t'i.'I dintn~ c pl•ticnC'I?. uamato 60 f4 hion lslJnd Nl'wport Beach / 644-4811 Century Plau Hotel 2n-184o Reservations accepted. Major credit ca rds welcome. Follow your team in the Daily Pilat Featurea: Live Country Muaic &: Dancing 11111 MarcHrlte ftwy • ll111lon Viejo• 495-1900 ~'81:1"8 FOR YOUR DINING & ENTERTAINMENT PLEASURE . . IHB.LY GORDON ·DUO Tue. thru Sat. DANCING 3"l'OMITAYI. LA°"* KACH .... ,,.. .. _,_ Amp,. ''" P•rlllllfl 494-Mt1 752•8551 FIRE WATER T\leS., thru Sat. TWICE AS NICE DUO Sun., and Mon. DANCING NlGln'L Y . I OUlf'looldltf hoWC/tll tolcf F'Oft"· ,,........ ...... ., ...,. . --:· .. _. , .•. ~ ... m11 llUMLANOI AT,_. lllOVT'I I&. TORO 77'0-mf, • TWa.MMf- 4 ..• ',"ff'! .... 12802 COMT tffl'I. LAOUM MOUi&. ,., c_ • ...,,_,J .. 4ft-2'2' 416-5773 . • , .. .... . ··. :: '• . •:-.. ;:S ,, .. : .... ... .. . \• .. . .. . .. ~· ~-.. i= .. :· . ' i •• ---· ¥ .. a a a o s s a o 0 ' . .. . . . Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 •• .· •• Beach Boys sail on • • • Le Biarritz <Pro• Pa1e De) omelette, ... 50, or with cbeeM lD crepe1, ... 50. J ordered the latter, a aelecUoo I'd welcome OD any succeed.lq visit save for the poeaibility of faillDC to try 101De other unknown avenue of French pro- Saddleback Collep Collmltty Services Presents <From Pase 01) llf e better for a moment or an hour." Love owes much ol the suc· cesa and lutina brilliance of the :Beach Boys to Brian ·wllaon. He believes Wilson's dru1 ex· perimentatlon followin1 bis nervous breakdown was the moat dluatroua period lo b1a life, even though the aroup'a beat-known bit, "Good Vibra· lions," was inspired by LSD. "He ls very sensitive to drugs,," Love said or Wilson. "He is so sensitive he can translate that sensitivity into songs that are beautiful but the adverse thing is the drugs affect him much more than the average person. "Had he not taken the drugs and kept himself together he would have been much further off than he ls today.·' Though Love is now 40 and said he may have dropped an OC· t..ve in 20 years, he's sure the Beach Boys will be around for sometime. The group is working with ma- jor philharmonic orchestras for special concerts and plans to make movies about "beaches, cars and etrla" .:..... the atulf moet cberiabed 1n their aon11. "These son1s are played today as much u they were 15 yean a10," be 1ald, addlna ln a bulliab tone, "I think 150 yean from oow they'll be playln1 our songs in universities. They'll be claaalc1 like Beethoven, 'Brahma, Bach . . . " "And there'• no problem wltb aettlna older because what we do seems to be liked by mUHo"" of people. Bina Crolby WU OD tour unW be wu 70 yean old." vincial cookin1. And don't bypau the opportunity to partake of any one ol the restaurant'• tantallstq deuerta. In add1Uon to the putry cart, they include mouue au chocolate, cheesecake, peach Melba, chocolate. rum cake, creme caramel and apple crepe. Fair to 1· •• 6'w-19pf lvn.1'11 NO LOVE• of Frendi food would, ol coune, ~~ ...., .., J • __.... want to alt down wit.bout 'recourse to a Sood wine Artists and ~writers have cont.est. Any Orange County resi· Usl. Le Biarrltz hu one naturally. for judgina in the Oran1e County expressing what he or s kes with a special menu at1rved for Sunday brunch beeolnvitedtosubmlttheirworka dent maysubmitaJlngleefv Open dally for lunch and dloner from 11 a.m .. F~ir. which runs from July 10 to best about the fair. Entr es mus from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Le Biarritz la located at 414 July 19, according to aapokeaman be 25 words or less. Entran y N. Newport Blvd. <Old Newport) at the corner of The KINGSTl'\llr..I TRIO for the Orange County Fair and suggest a tune or a popular SOil& to Hospital Road, north of Cout Hip way ln Newport VI"' ExpositionCenter. gowiththewords. Beach. Telephone: 645·6700. Professional, novice and youth Allji.ngleswiUbeJud&edlniUal· '-------------------• IM C ONCERT May 29. All work will be jud•ed Semi-finalists will be selected to 1111•••-••••• Tom Dooley • Mariai" • Scotch and Soda • artif>tsmustmaketheirentriesby ly on content and orlainallty. PUT A ' . prlortothefair. · sing their lyrics in a "siq.ofr Sloop John B • Aspen Gold • Amazing Grace Professionals and novices can June6. LITTLE MMIC enter in the three·dlmeoaiooal sculpture, oil, watercolor and The top three winners will slog acry lic paintings, graphic draw· thelrjlnglesoothefair's "touchof ltl YOUR LIFE jng s and prints and two-couolry"radiocommercials.The dimensional ml xed. media topwlnnerwillreceive$50. categories. Youths under 18 can Entry forms are due at the fair· enter their three-dimensional grounds by May 22. Professional sculpture and two-dimensional songwriters and musician.a are framed work. not eligible. Songwriters are ell1ible for the For forms or information, call fair's flrst annual lyric wrltJ.na 751-FAIR. See the wi zardry of Gus Searcy, a member of the prestigious Hollywood Magic Castle at South Coast Plaza Hotel's Blue Parrot Lounge. No Cover • Performances Tue.-Sat. from 9 p.m. WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, I PM IAVINE BOWL 650 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD, LAGUNA BEACH RESERVED SEATS S5 $6 ($1 more at door) CALL SADDLE BACK COLLEGE BOX OFFICE Mon ·Fri 1().2 831-4656 INTEllAC'l'ING S E XVAUV A...tcM IMtttute of FemAJ A•tlone WOMaHOI' -(3 Mondays) May ~I June 1, Junt 8. 7 to 9 p.m. Ltd by cwttftld S'ex Therapist Penny Stewart MOVIE RATINGS FOR PAREJfl'S AND YOUNG PEOPLE RSVP (714) 112-04'0 Coat $35 ~-Tr.inlng fOf Men.and W~ I CCM9CG: .... Wide/top -I a..•~------·--AaN)o'~....-. 0....,.0...,.. ...... .., _....,,..... 0-.C ..... ~ •.. the Nlationrhi contin.,U ( Now edwards LIDO CINEMA "'1 P LAYING I HfWl'Oll llVD. AT VIA LIDO I MlWPORT I UCH 673-8350~ There are 200 seniors at Mi And seven days 'ti] graduation. S\&ITiftf CHRISTOPHER GEORGE°"' PATCH MACK.ENZl:E ~ , ........... .,,, .. , ® HO OHE UflOEll 11 AO .. ~O IAG9"""' .,.,.,.,, i.--------------------tf'l~am aNMI All a m """ IJll 'IUCS 11ec Erv£ ntCIEM. OI ntt lolOTIOH l'ICTUll£ COOE OF SELF AEGUlA TIOH To Place your "Fast Result" Service Directory ad .... Call Now· 642-5678 ht. JU The comedy tor everyone who's had it up to here ... ... and Robert Hays hasn't had this much fun since "11 ; """'l "I .c&UJJ ane . ----· 4 ACADEMY AWARDS BEST PICTURE DlST Dl"ECTOP. ~r f\edfOfd DlST SUPPOIU'IMG ACTOA T1morhy Hurron DlST SC"UNPLAY ADAPTATIOH Alvin Sargent ,R,~ ... "'.,,. t ....... uu OtlllOI '37~ ............ ,Ol SlntJ Ana $4("74'4 """'"' QWAMl'WIUOTWW UWU91' ... , .. ,. MlsliOn v..,. l30-M90 HunllllQIOlt llNch '48·0331 lDWAMI' WOOINtMI IT._ ...... 1n11ne SS1 06SS Ot11191 639·8770 ERMN' C .... Wlll • l'UIU ICCIPTD Wtstt11111tie• 891 3935 NI hll •'" I edwards HA BOR TWIN ~11:5... 631-3501 ..TAKE THIS JOB AND SHOVE IT" Aleo Showing at Edwarda Viejo Twin, Mlealon Yl•Jo; l!dward• 18ddlebaok, · !I Toro; and Edward• Fountain V•H•r Twin *"" the C• Hit, °CAYEMAN." UWAU'I .. POU UA CllOIAI l DWAIUt'I WOOOllllDGl ITADIU• D.I. Mtwport Buell S.4·0760 Wtstmlnsllf 893-0~ ll'llne !>51·0655 Orange 639·8770 'ACW.C IOWTW COAIT ........ WIUO Ull ...... 'LUA Wlil "'"' D.I. ll!IUN llac~ 4!14·1514 MISSIOl'I VtljO 495-6220 8rN 529-5339 8ue111 Park 821 4070 ~ 0r111111 634-2!153 •,..... ACC8'T9 ,. Tm =a mn "STUNNING" -Fred Yager, A.P. ... sw .. plng atory of coun1ge ••• 1 am roaring mr approval for 'Lion of the Deaert'." -Jeth, LJOftl, W"X·TVIWCll RADIO wtST COAST .PREMIERE ENGAGEMl!NT 1 N0\'1 SHO\\'ING •Orange CINIDOMI 6M-HH •Cotto Mela HAllOI TWIN 611·1101 ~t.oollM sat.U 1;00 • •>0 • l:OO PM 1 •I I . I ! I_ ------~~~""':""""·~·--~·~·,....~·~~·-· ... ·~· .. =~· ... ·~· ... ·~-.-~·~• .. •~•llllllJlll•~• ... u~s~o .. a~s ... u•s ... u•c ... u~c .. a~s•sS1111•s11S&•s1110~0~&112 .... 1211 ... 3 .. 111111111111111111111 .!. .. Oran~ Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 Belly laughs from the Bard? At West minster Theater , Shakespeare's a 'Dream' Shakespeare could be a pretty depretaiDI 1uy, but he bad a fun ·streak to him, too. Ooe of hll sillier (that'• silly as in merriment, not u to stupid) plays b "A Midsummer Nllbt'a Dream,'' runnin& lbtouib May 30 at the Wntmimter Com· munity Theater. Sbateapeare badly done ls sll&hUy more en· joyable than appendicitis or the death of a pet. And that's the way you usually find It In non· PLAY REVIEW profes sio nal performances. On the other hand , good Shakespeare Is a treat. So get ready to be treated. The WestmiMter rendition of'· Dream'' is delightful. Not that it's easy to understand or to follow. There are 24 characters In this play carting monickers like Hippolyta, Snout, Peaseblossom, Bottom and Babies Breath. A diagram of their re-lationships would drive any sociologist into the insurance business. Somehow. none of that matters. The work Is aptly titled, because it possesses a playful dreamlike quality that enables viewers to simply sat back and appreciate events as they un- fold , even if their import Is obscured by Elizabethan lingo and a convoluted story line. As always, Shakespeare tells a tale of royal- ty -in this case. Theseus. Duke of Athens, who plans to marry H1ppolyta, Queen of the Amazons (yes. Amazons>. This time, though, he throws in a band of fairies from India, yet -and a motley group of craftsmen who are a cross between the Dirty Dozen and the Keystone Cops. Low-key mayhem results. Director-producer Art Winslow should be pelt· ed with wildflowers for his inspired sense of rythym and rus awareness that "Dream" is a largely physical comedy. He keeps things flowing like the creek in the woods where much of the ac· lion takes place. Liz Dawson has done a commendable job of choreographing the fairy dance sequences and set designer Bronson (just Bronson) gets a kudo for her functional, multi-level re-creation of an English forest glen. As lor the players ... well , it's almost unfair to pick a few for praise out of two dozen clearly talented people. But we 'll risk it, because Charles Taylor as Bottom and Laurie Sondag as Puck can't be ig- .. .,,_... CMllMll O~MJl llUD llOMllTMAU Ill "LION OF THE DESERT" (PG) "TAKE THIS JOB AND SHOVE IT ' (PO) The bo:dY count continues ... """'w 11" ,.,.2 00 " .... ~. l'ICl~t ,,,.. 1:'46, 1;11,19:11 ""'-· 1:Jl, l:11, ..... " .... ,., *" llOMltTMAYI "TAKE THIS JOB AND SHOVE 1r•.._ .... ,_" IATllUll, , ... .,..,... .. ,_ FOtPd by a pf. Found by a Ku.. £XCAUBVR 0 111 -IOll----"QRADUAflON DAV" Oil """'*' "'1• Mflll*, .. , ...... 1'1M .... ...... ,, ...... .. ,_,,. "'· , ...... I "''""-WKI"" I "'.-. ,,., -. - Ill Kent Elofson as Demetrius and Maureen Shrubsole as Hermia in •A Midsummer Night's Dream' nored. The scene between Bottom, an oaf en· trapped in the head of an ass, and Puck, the fairy jester, is a classic bit-of comedy, an obvious in· spiration to the later likes of Laurel and Hardy. A final note: if you still find yourself intimidat- ed by Shakespeare, ret me mention the darling lit· tie girJ -perhaps 5 or 8 years old -who sat across from .me at last Friday's performance. She was !augh10g as hard as a kid at a circus. If she can get 1t, so can you. "A Midsummer Night's Dream" will play Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. until the end of the month. For tickets, call 995-4113. C*lllT-11 otOllOI "GRADUATION DAY" Clll ~ue "FIRECRACKER" Clll -Mic~l Dougan "TAKE THIS JOB ~ND SHOVE IT" "-~ue .... -~-·-··-- lteltCo.cePt J .. 14 HoMe s ....... J-10.14 , __ _ NOW PLAYI N G "'""~ .... 1.1 '"'' '' !':°:u~:'"' AMC ORANGE MUI lDwuos· SADDllBACR OllAllOI DlllWHll 'I' .jll•~f" ,,~u IH·M • '"' •, 11jft I .J!l It ,•,a (),. UA CITY CINEMA EDWARDS CINlMA CEllllll llllCOlll Olllfl-111 I tr.,, t-; 11 ;~· l I 'l· .. I J k ~ I l't • d. ~ .! f IDWAllDS' fOUllTAlll Ulllf • -·-nu '" "''',. ... ,, , ' ,., .. ~ MAJOR STUDIO SNEAK PREVIEW Tonight at 8:00 pm Mann I VA sourn COAST PIAZA CINEMA COSTA MP.SA • (714 ) 54&2711 CERRITOS • 924·7726 REGULAR FEATURE WILL BE SHOWN BEFORE AND AFTER PREVIEW REAL VALUES on item s from applesa uce to zipper s are advertised every da y in the D1ilyPillt _...... ... . ... .. • • •• -•• @Ii ' -...... --...... . • . I . --,,--------. ... -----.. ----.. ... ------• •. • • • a e a ; . . .. . . . I \ Orange Coast DAIL'( PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 87 MATURE AUDIENCES RECOMMENDED THIS SUSPENSE THRILLER SHOWS YOU :HOW THEY CREATE THE MOST BEAUTIFUL GIRLS ~tN i;HE WORLD THEY'RE NOT USING LIVE MODELS FOR COMMERCIALS ANYMORE . COO't'l!Ohl C 19tl ,,.,. lOOO COtT'C>CW'V M lllgnl• ~ CINEDOME THE·ATRE . 3001 W. CHAPMAN AVE., ORANGE TELEPHONE:· 634-2553 "NIGHTHAWK" WILL BE. SHOWN BEFORE & AFTER THE PREVIEW AT 6:00 & 10:00 P.M. I ~ .. . 1 I c " ,. . -. -~--·--------------...... ...--.................. ,..... ............ .__ __________ _ Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, Ma 1&, 1981 ife Lido • is lei!Jurely, but Bishop stilf busy on <•re• Pa,. OU because you go out and do the same act every flu and serve the employees at the annual and 1randchlldren, memento. ot h.la Ufe tn the ruu.rreeOoo," said Bi1hop. "He's doing a series time." Cbrlstmu party. "I remember once I was In the Umeliaht and countless antiques. "My wife hu a now, he 1ot lhe movie and he's do1n1 a movie for Nor does the man who appeared In rums ltke Balboa Bay Club and he caUed to me," Bishop said black beJt in shopplni ... he explained. lelev1•' hlch I' ' l to t E "The Deep Six.'' "Ocean's 11," "The Naked and with a ""'n. "'"nd I aaJd, 'John. ii I told YO" one• I ·~00• w m sure 18 &o nt &e an mmy .. 1 • '" " B'-bop boudht lb• ho .. •e while it wu 1tlJJ ..... -il'• aboul a SO.year-old retarded guy. He's so hol the Dead," "Texa• Across the River" and ''Who's told you a hundred Umea. lf I bad the money J'd UI • "' .... _. now it's unbelievable; he's even dolng the Dr. Pep· Mindlng the Mint" have any desire to return to a loan It to you.") der construction after spendjng 11 hours steerine per commetclal. That's bow bot he is, honest to soundsta1e. Wby are talk shows teas excltin1 today lban bis boat from San Dieco to Newport Beach. God. 811 t.alenl -he's a big talent." "Enjoy rum acting! I enjoy the end result.'' he when Bishop, Jack Parr and Steve Allen ruled the enroute to Marlna del Rey. He docked the boat on Bi1hop ls no small talent himseU, as reflected said, "but I don't enjoy sitUn1 around. late·n11ht airwaves! Bishop said it's ~cause the the other side of Newport Bay and lived aboard by the New York reviews that followed his opening ' "Uke the first movie t dJd was "The Deep novelty has worn off. · while he watched his home being built. night on the world's most famous street. • Six" with Alan Ladd. We were out on a destroyer "We had not .een celebrities as themselves," Bh1hop no longer sails, except with friends. "l "They were great, just great," he said. "Earl for 10 weeks and I may have done 20 lines in those be said, "and that was kind of excitin1 ... to see sold my boat to my dentist,'' he said. "I know no Wilson wrote, 'Whether it's Mickey. or Joey. it's 10 weeks. It is dull." a Lee Marvin taJking, for example. better way to get even with him." the funniest show I've ever seen."' And Rex Reed At one time, Bishop's television talk show was Bishon. recalled the lime he kicked Mr. -who's really a rough guy, you know -J·usl went one of the most popular programs in the country. .... The mellow entertainer said he will continue B lackwell, the catty clothes designer who to ak fo ' · t th t t n the ape. But he doesn't want to do that again, either. publishes an annual list of the world's "10 Worst· m e rays m o e coun ry o appear o ''Naturally, business will fall off when the "I don't think I have anything to contribute boards. He hopes "Seven Year Itch" goes on the Dressed Women," off his show. His offense: in-d rt D ti headliner leaves the show, you know, but as soon that would be different," he said. "As a matter of roa a er a as eluding Lurleen Wallace on his hit list while she as these reviews came out. 1t just zoomed right fact, when I was originally going to do the talk lay on her deathbed. Blackwell said the former .. I don't think there's anything like a live au· back up to the top.·· show, I recommended that we do it '°"' stars; I Fi L dience. es""'ca·ally on Broadway," he sai·d . "Gee•, h . k h · I · h b rst ady of Alabama "looked like Monday's ... ~ .. His Broadway stint behind him. Bishop is re· t in t ere s more enterta nment w1l t e average wash hung out on Tuesday... the curtain opens and they're applauding you, you h.earsing to play "The Seven Year Itch" with person. Now, all of a sudden, they've got things ''And 1 thought, with aJl the women in the know? Barbie Benton in pallas. opening July 21. "I'm like 'Real People' and 'That's Incredible." also going to change a few things there." he said. Bis hop said with the standard talk show world that he could have put on his worst-dressed .. I would say lhe magic to it is, it 's the one f b d -"' b th · lb list . . " said Bishop. "l said . 'I don't thi'n'-you med1·um where all the connecu·ons i·n the Id including updating references to current sports ormat "you are ur enoeu y e questions at • wor heroes. a re submitted to you by the talent's manager. So should do that' and he said 'That's how I feel.' aren't going lo help you You 're either right for it •·And I· m goin~ to play 1t a little older, whatever show you watch. you're going to hear the "So 1 said, ·Let me tell you how 1 feel; I feel or you aren't right for it l · 1 h t b ... you s hould apologize or get off the show.· And he naturally,'' Bishop added "He <Tom Ewel > was same questions. overcame t a y taAmg my wouldn't apologize so he got off the show... "You can take a non· actress and put her in a 37 in the (original 1 play " stars down to the audience and letting the au-k 1 movie, and ir you do enough takes and enough d. k th · A wee ater, Blackwell returned to Biabop's Theater appearances are all that interests 1ence as e questions. program with a mouthful of crow. Two weeks after editing you can make her look good. But with a Bis hop these days Nightclubs, movies and "I remember when I took John Wayne down. that, Mrs . Wallace died. play or a revue. that's a different ball game. television have lost their appeal for the Bronx·born they asked him how old he is. He said. 'I'm 62, I've entertainer, who says he only works when he got seven grandchildren and I drink like a son-of-But those days are gone, tucked away in "(On Broadway) yo u've got 1,600 people and wants to. a -bitch." Bishop's mental vaudeville trunk. you're the most important thJng in t heir life for 21r.i "It's been some lime since l have really en· (Bishop and Wayne were Balboa Bay Club Bishop leads a quiet existence on Lido, in an hours. Especially when you come back for your joyed work in L n i gh le I u bs." he said " I guess it' s_jiibiiuiidiidiii eiisii. iiOinicieiiia iyieiaiiri, ithieiyiiiwiiiioiuJiiiidiiidioiniwiiiiiaii· tieiir 'iisiioiiuiitj· lj;a;lt;r;a;c;ti;v;e;;h;o;u;se;;f;il;l;ediiiiiwiiiiiitiiih~piiiic•tiiiuiiiriiiesiiiiiioiiifiiiiiiciiibiiiliidiireiinil_bow. for the curtain ca II that's exciting ! " NOW PLAYING EDWARDS VIEJO MALL MANN SOUTH COAST MIU'°" Viejo 4'Wll0 Cotl• ltMY ,,...JlSJ ., P'HIU ACCEP'TlO '°" nus UtGAGEMUU JAMES GARNER THE FAN (RI 1:30 1 :20 10·15 GL&NN ,.ORO HAPPY BIRTHDAY TOME IRI 1 :00 l :U 10 20 Sly•••t•r Sl•llone RINGO STARR CAVEllA• (PGI 6 IS 1·1S 10·1S Dolby Stereo uo• OF THE DESERT (PGI 1 :00 Ru;turd Pryor THE JAll Sl•GER (PGI '00. zo 10.30 !Utell& Nev STADIUM Revolution1ry CINE Fl SOUND at Drive·in Below YoUI AM C•r Radt0 11 your spNlcer 1: no AM car r•d10 with 1 n1t1on 11t1on, b11n our o wn AM port•ble. JAMES GARNER w.nn.tOf4AocllmyA- THE FAN OROl•ARY (Al PEOPLE CRI TMK CffANOIEUNC(R) TIU8~ (PG) It'• Ha•CI Stay. It'• To lA•u HARD COUNTRY (PO) HSAVUIS QAft (RI JOHN BOORMAN'$ EXCALIBUR (R) THS QAUffTLl[T (A ) GENE WILDER mRCRAZY 1111 ) USED CARS (RI DENNIS HOPPER KING OF THE MOUNTAIN cPGl nAMCHE, THIE 8RoetX(R) Drive ln'1 Open Al 7 :30 Nlthtly Cllllelren Unel11 12 r:ru Unleu Noted an ,,. "'•,.a 1o c..e ...... n... ..-~·~ * lllDNIGHT MOVIES * ... t,, .. , ,.,, u10 M•n ... IWlmtll" 4-Tra Ster•! TDt·SQJft·ert1AlttS·Tl·SAHt Jlml Hen~• In "Ji mi Plays Berkeley" THE DECLINE IJ~~~..;d~~tt-Of Western Clvlllz•tlon 11:00-2:CICM!OO t:OCM:00.10:00 "A prehistoric 'Animal House:" -Joet ~. AIC-TY 8ood ........ a.nee ----NOW PlAYING ---- 11u U TM 11Ym llSSIOll YUi UA Movo~s Saddleback Woodbnd&e Mission V1eio Mall 990 4022 58 l ·5880 SS 1 ·06S5 495·6220 COSlA MtSA rOUMTAI• YAU£Y lJ .WA llAllll Ctnedome The COffiedy f Or everyone Edwards Cinema Fountain Valley LI Mirada Dr ·In 634·2553 who' S had it Up tO here ... Center979-4141 !7141839-1500 921·1706 WlSTMlllSTtl YflSTMlllSTH H1·Way 39 Or·ln 891·3693 UA Cinema 893·054 and Robert ~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..I ... ..::: Hays hasn't had this much tun since "/'>. l'"""'} "I """.,, ane . ... ucalll.L-1m.,.. •• _rr ___ _,_111111 t11n11••--1•111---~ amam ..,._........... ·-" __ .. ___ .. -M.lMCll -· __ _.,_ ..., .. .Bflll-.. MY--·-ALU. ... -.UMTTa -...... IUllWB1. ·--WIUM~-.. ~--. -.. -~ ••CHW~"--~--• • --:::==·1P01...,.--•1 • .:'.!!!::-. ................ __ . openlnt taMonow I .,... ...... --llCT·-..... ~~~.<:J,._ 1'1110...., .................... . "TAKE ntlS JOe AND SHOW rr· l~I tk'•·,.•·•>9 · .. ·-=-·---·~---.I :~_,, ·-=-~·:~;::.";:"!'.~--,,.,,._ ,,..,~ ....... 21)/!ill .. MO • ..,,. •• ..,....---,. .... , •1:11 · ............................ , .... IOU.Y•L&.Y • ..... "NI:!!£. ~:.1rol .. , ... t:t•·~·.,.•11:11 r>AC...c n.Al"MI-.. ,,_,... l1'IST'CM -9UCU ---ntl MY AT --·&--• I Ml TO > N .... ,,_, • _, --.-n&•-n- ~ 1:11 .... ""'· ~ ......... l :AI IMP'OIHANT llOTICl' CMllOIUll UNOUI 12 fllH! CWIWWW .OW: ... 'ATCM ~ \_t1.•1·~i~~;R,;li;IJ,~1r°!~~' r'!;'!M~.,,f:~'.:": 1lcHEr11 o~::~:~:::: ;~ 11 HO AMC. 11-Wllll loNll"" At<•-Y. llr1"9 Y-Owft ANt _.IHI ... "1;'' :.•::-..::. ~ "HA~Y llllT~Y TO ... (II) 2 J!~ .. ~~ 879-99SO "WHlN A ITllANQP CN..LI" (II) I No AMC. II-Wtlll lenlll., At<R-Y llrl119 YOUI Own AM ---LAI CAaAMTUIAS CON DOIH~SAllN MICAMA ·---·--·---·---"'""' ------...J ··nte KIDI Alll AUUGHT'' INI ------1,-......... =--·---LOYPI AHO UA"I Cf'I -IU MAC ... Nl l"I • .• .. ----~------. ~---.. f Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 16, 198i E l GARDIN ING Time for summer planting Club will install officers The last meeting or the current club year or the Spyglass Hill Garden Club is set for Wednes- day at 9:30 a.m. lo the home or Mrs. David Kagnoff of Corona del Mar Rather than the regular monthly program, this meeting will be set aside for the installation of officers for the 1981-82 year. The new president will be Mrs . James Frisbie, Mrs . Frantis TRIMMINGS faciliUes Interested members are asked to call Mrs. Thomas Norton at 644-5933. THE FRIENDS OF THE Hortense Miller Carden in Laguna Beach wiU meet Tuesday for the informative program, "Mysteries of Iran and Afghanistan" at 7.30 p.m . in Laguna Federal Sav- ings and Loan in Laguna Beach. For more in- formation call the Human Affairs Dept. at City Hall, 497-3311. May 1s the time fo r Southern California gardeners to plant heat-loving plants including melons, vinca rosea, and zinnias, and to plant or transplant lender tropicals and subtropicals such as avocados, citrus, and palms. The weather during May can be better for plants than in the actual summer season. Check nurseries for a wide choice of bedding plants and vegetables. Annual flowers and vegetables should be rert1lited with a low-nitrogen product formulated to promote blossoms or fruit Lettuce and other leaf crops, however. should be fed with high- nitrogen plant food Subtropicals such as avocados, bougainvillea, Citrus, gardenia, hibiscus, £antana, macadamia and Natal plum should be fed with a complete fertilizer when new ~rowlh appears. If gardeners wish to start subtropicals, now la the tame to plant. Heat-loving ornamentals such aa banana, palms, hibiscus, and bougainvillea will adapt well al this time To prevent sunburn, pro· tect exposed trunks with whitewash, white latex paint, or tree wrap. Gardeners recommend planting summer flowers in May Choices are abundant and include: ageratum, sweet alyssum, fibrous begonia, cama- tlon , coleus, dwarf dahlia, gloriosa daisy, lmpa- ti ens, lobelia, marigolds, petunias, phlox, portulaca, Shasta daisy, sweet William , verbena, and zinnias. Additionally, vegetables can be started at thjs time, either from seed or as seedlings. Beans, beets, carrots, corn, cucumbers, eggplant, melons, okra, peppers, pumpkins, radishes, squash and tomatoes shouJd be considered Beauchamp will be vice president and the new re- cording secretary will be Mrs . Dan Perlmutter. Other new offi cers include Mrs. Marc Metzler, Mrs . Joe Carne, Mrs. Robert Cimini, Mrs. A.E . Thompson, Mrs. J ames Hodge, Mrs. Richard Tester, Mrs. Dennis Wilson, Mrs. Jeff Pence and Mrs. Malcolm Green. THE FASCINATING varieties of Tillandsias will be explored Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. by the J Horticultural Society of Orange County. The meet- ing will be held at the California Cooperative Ex- tension, 1000 S Harbor Blvd., Anaheim. For more information call 526-6713 SHERMAN GARDENS specialist Sandy Fox will discuss the construction, composition and care of moss lined flower baskets on Wednesday at 1 p .m. in Sherman Library and Gardens, 2647 E . Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. All materials will be provided for students, and the registration fee IS $28. LLOl'D•!i I • A LUAU POTLUCK Dinner is planned for tonight by the Newport Hills Garden Club in Clubhouse I of Newport Hills. Each member will brmg a Hawaiian recipe, and reservations may be made at $5 per person by calling Mrs . John Reilly at 759·9326. On Thurs day, the Newport Hills Garden Club will travel to Lawry's Cali fornia Center to tour the Yard i,s 'sheep-shape' Students completing the class will make their own baskets. For more information call 673-2261. THE NEWPORT Harbor Orchid Society wiil meet Thursday in First United Methodist Church al 19th St. and Harbor Blvd., in Costa Mesa. The guest speaker al the 8 p.m.1mceting will be Charlie Bowman For more information call 646-0132. gard~nsho IMPATIENS 4" Pot ldeaf for shode gordHtl BEAUTIFUL HANGING FUCHSIA BASKETS In bloom or bud. Ideal for 1hody location. Reg. $19.'5 I CORNWALL VILLE, N. Y. (AP I -A man who was tired of mowing his lawn has come up with an easier way and wants to share his method with others who want lo keep their yards sheep-shape and have a part-time pet to boot. End of lawn mowe r? Now' I ~ Louis R Valente will rent a homeowner a sheep for the summer for $35. Valente. 36, a former New York Ci ty transit policeman, raises 128 s heep on his farm in this Greene County community 20 miles east of ratskill "Last year. my wife told me to mow the lawn," he said. "I put a sheep out there and it did a great job . COLUMBUS, Ohio <A PI -If this one works, Dad can trade in the lawn mower on a new set of golf clubs for Saturdays. The Chem Lawn Research Center near Marysville is trying a new product that it hopes will retard the growth of grass without destroying t he plants' ability to grow back after their normal ltfe spans .. Everybody wants a thick. lush, green lawn," said Mark Thielen , who heads the grass g r owth retardant p roject for the lawn-care company ''The trouble is, they don't want to cut it every week." LIGUSTRUMJ "WAX-LEAF PRIVET' Excellent plont for hfllge,tcneft or for shaping I CJol. 1ile R~-$ 3.50 Now 5 I '5 "I rigured why shouldn 'l I find people out I here who want pets for the s ummer that can cut the grass also. There are a lot of people out there who are like me who hate cutting the grass." A IO·week, back-lawn testing period has been set up tn 30 Columbus homes FREE ALL ITEMSSU8JECT TOST()(XON Hl<NO S..egooo 11\IOUQ~ "'•v '0 1931 ~~~~ OPEN MON THAU SAT 7-6 00 SUN 9-5 30 Gardener's clwcklist • There ar e lots of vegetables available at the nursery right now for transplanting into your garden. • Prune spring flower- ing shrubs weigelia, spirea, lil ac, etc. to encourage more new growth which will bear I flowers next year. Prun- ing them while in bloom will give you the added I advantage of using the sprays or cut branches I for arrangemen t in- doors. J • Garden fresh herbs a n d a Ca l i fornia barbecue what a com-I bination. Pot them up in clay pots to decorate the barbecue area and as you need them, just snip som e oH. • If mildew is appear- ing on your plants, con- s u It you r lo ca l nurseryman for lhe best spray to use. ACUS OF PU.MTS AT WHOl ISALI QUA&n'Y.-CAUSI WIHOWTHIM ..,..__ CLOSID ,.,.... ~'· ........ s.,.. o. -TUISOA Y , tous Property lein«J Sold NURSERY Liquidation Sale All Specials Subiect to Supply on Hand SAVE UP TO 70°/o /\'u rs~ry .';pt>c ia l FUCHSIA PLANTS Gem·llke blooms for the shade: lGAL. ~ REG.2.98 ~ Each plant tagged with name and variety. UPRIGHT & BASKET VARIETIES I ALSO 4" POT .98 J ROSE BUSH CLEARAN fj s~~-5 GAL REG.9.98 Beautlf ul Rose bushes In pressed pulp containers ... You con plant pot and 0111 OAT HO KLEEN UP re adv-to-use Weed & Grass Kiiier Gets fhe spray wflere you want It. In convenient trlggef ·SQUHZI applicator. tlJ 111: I 24 oz. oppllcotor Sine• 19'46 ·, Ha)li~a-s · Nursery · Florist 2840 Harbor Blvd., Coato M110 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 642·5678 m11rnd1ua LLOYD'S NURSERY AND LANDSCAPE co .. INC. 2028 Newport Blvd (at Bay St.) Costa Mesa. CA 92627 I (714) 646-7441 ALL TRASH CANS 20%0FF Rubbermaid. Galvanized Steel, Loma, Lustro (5 yr. guarantee) and more ALL GARDEN HOSE including Flexogen! 20 % OFF ALL MALIBU LIGHT SETS 20%0FF our r9CJM1cr low price ALL MALIBU PARTS AND ACCESSORIES 20%0FF GARDEN SALE ALL OSCILLATING SPINKLERS all sizes. including Nelson & Rain- bird 20%0FF ALL KORDITE AND HEFTY TRASHBAGS 20% OFF Hook 111ail1 & .... with THAT'S IT! all sizes Prices good thru Wed. 5/20/81 limited to stock on hand OPEN 7DAYS 20% OFF CROWM HARDWARE . Westcliff (fonnerly Riot\} 1024 Irvine Ave. Newport Beach '4Z·1Ul fVHYTHtHG YOU WAHT .. A HAlOWAU STC>al tZ Corona del Mar 3107 E. Coast Hwy. 67).JIH Harbor View Center (formerly I~) 161 4 San Miguel Dr. Newport Beach 644-8110 0 1. 1 I . •• f • ·······-= ·a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Frld1y, M1y 18, 1881 Teens be lieve parent~ are • in dark . , UEAR ANN LANDERS,. I om wrttln1 tbJ1 lettfr to turn on tt liatht In the heacb of parent.a who ttre living 111 Uw d;ark J'v~ diacuaaed lhla with my friends and t·:u1 tell you there are plen- ty of lhN'll out there I am u 17 yl'ar old tugh school senior an honor i.tudent :tnd <U.•tivc in $ludent government and :.ports I comt' from an upper-maddle-clasa family, am the youngest child and the only eirl. It bugs mt-that my pc1rcnts think I am an iM O· cenl child :111cl the> trt'at me like one The truth is. Mai.s Landl'rS, parents today don't have any idt'a whut their teen agers are really like und how n11H'h st rcss they are forced to deal with ln lhear rl:uly live~ In m\ own (.'1rc:lc of fnends (these kids are all l'ons1d<.'l l·d dt•t't•nt, not trash) two gir ls have h~ul ,1hortmns, one has had a baby and married th1 l't' 1110111 h' lakr. unolhcr has a ste pfather who uhllst•:-. twr 'l'xually, two have attempted s111t•1dP anti anolhl'r ;,1tJmittcd to me that s he is g.ly 1h for nll' I h.1ve had un affair with a mar- rtl't.I ffiJO \\-1· .1 II drink liquor occas1ooally (but not to t'Xt't '!oo 1 t1nd we.· hHVl' all smoked pot Every person I h<iv<' na met.I •~ in lhe top 10 percent of our ~ruduutmi.: dai.s <over l,000 students). They url' l111• l,Jst one' vou would expect to be In· vulv.-d 111 the· lwhav111r I have described llll llllfll JI purents knt-w w hat their 1on1 and d"uahter8 ao through d uring adolestmce, they would be ublc to comm unicate and deal with them better P lc11sc sign me -YOUR TEEN- AGER O.ar Teen-ager: Your let&er I.I lrrefatable evidence that aduJt1 aren't &be oaJy ODet wbo o n put Oft a good front. Teen-ace facade1 call be equaJly deceptive. Thi• I• not ne w• t.o me. • Hooest and open commualcaUoa be&ween children and parenls must 1&artearly. lf&be eban· nel1 ann'l open by the time &be cblld I.I ln bll t~ens, It ls usually too la te, without &be belp of a counselor-a nd even that doe~n't alwaya work. I urge all parenls to ta ke time &o become ln· volved with your very young child. U aten to him. Respond to bis needs. Let blm know euct- ly what you expect from him and wbat wlll NOT be tolerated. Be consistent. When be fall• &o respect tbe guidelines, be firm bu& not cruel. If the punishment is too severe , be wUI be afraid to come w you and admit what he bu done and uk for he lp-or when you discove r It, be may Ile aad tompoundlheproblem. lteartoa <"lllldrea today l• a tremeadoa1 cballeaae. More Uaaa ever befettt eouple1 are opll•I aot c.o bave chlldrea. AM Ulere 11 .ot'1111 wroac wttb &lal1. It a. better ecK &.o have a famlly lf you are not prepared t.o make a aertoa1 com- mltmt!at ln &erm1of&lme, eaer1y and lo-ve. DEAR ANN LANDE RS: I read with in· terett the letter from Df'lorea whoae husband in· slated on addr.,Hlna he r aa "Hey, you." J wonder wh at t h at Cal ifornia paychoanaly1l who llAld Delores was probably an "over ly controllln1 type" would u y about M Y H ·hullbund He has a ha bit of addre11Slng rnl' with my nAmt> In revtor11e. Ins tead of Mary It Willi "Ynam .. flf' took orren.e If J called him Charll-S It hud to be "S<'lruhc." Thia went on for sevf>n yeurK Have you «ver heard of another couple a1 nuUy IUI that7 UN-HIP IN BA K F.RSFl EU > Oear Bake : Just Ont'. llM namf' was Anna and bl• wu Bob. Do you /l't>I awkward, iel/·ccnuC10W -lonely? Welcome to th#> club TMre'1 help /or you in .4nn Lander!' boolclet , "The Key to Popularity •· Send so cents wtth your requeat and n long, stamped, 1elj- addrened tnvelf1Pt' to Ann L.a~ri. P 0 . Box 11995, Chicago, Ill 6001 J Pisces: Make plans for traveling Saturda), ~.1\ 16, l~IU Hy SVllNE\ 0\11\RR AH.n;s 1\t.111'11 ~I l\pnl 19> Involvement in flnJnl'IJI ,1ffJ1r .... of othl'r!-> dominates scenario. l'r otcl I ,df 111 1·mot11111Jl dtn('hes And count your cha11g1•1 < ·11.-1•1. <·rc•tl1t r;11ings, investment returns HOROSCOPE .inti i:u<1 rd \11111 (l\Hl S t'l'Urtly Gemini, Virgo µt•r'>un :-. ftJ.!111 t• 111·omint-ntly TAllfH :-, 1 Apnl 20 May 20! · Go s low, lie low ;1nrl don t rt''' t 111t•v1t.1hlt· domestic adjustment. I.mph."'" 1111 It J.!;.il J ff.11r,, special acquis1t1ons and :.1 111111:-. d1 :-.1•us 111n' ni.:.1rding home improvements 111 1111 .... t11lo· r han#!l' of rl'~ldt:nce Study Aries nll'')'.;1 1.:t' GEMlSI 1 M:n ~l .June 20! Answers he lw h1nct ~ l'•'llt"i knm-. 11. cll'I ve beneath surface in· tl1('.1t111n' !kfint· tt·rm .... wmd self-deception. Em· ph.1"'" 1111 h;'"'' t,i..k,, improved services and a n1•\\ unt11•1,1.1111l1111. of d1·p1·n1knts Pisces 1s m pie· lllrl' T he rattlers are cratvling 6 y JOHN I>. ROSE~.'! f) \ n1·i~ht>or or m IOt' ht' re in Corona del Mar U\' 'he· ,;1w ;i rattlt""nake iD her garden. CoaJd It hav.-IH•t•n a r;iUlt•\nake and what sboclld I do If onl· of "' 1' blttc·n by one? C. W., CORONA DE L M\H \ '\~Wl .. I< \'t·'· 1111•11· <irl' rattlesnakes in this ;Ht• 1 \t111 h of 11111 111111'1 11~ 1s built on their habitat, pu,hin ~ th1·111 h.11·k hut 'till rlose to u.~ \lthou~l1 lltt•\ t1•ntl \Cl shy away from peoplf', ·- "•J?htmi;:s in b ·tt•k\ ards and gardens are not un· com mon Thi' ol1h-r tri·.1tnwnl!-., i.urh as cutting open the b11t• and 'ut•km~ blood Jrc pretty much outmoded. Our local hm.p1tals an· ·stocked with antivenom, which,., \t>ry effecttv1 lnc1dl•nt<1ll v, many bites are harm less in· asrn\trh u:o. no venom is injected. U a bite occurs, even if you ;irt• not sure it was a rattlesnake, call lhr parunwdt<·:o. Our p.1r;11n1•tlt1·, an• the best. and arrive on • lhc> scerw mmult•s :irtt•r a <·all The victim will be rushed 111 th1• rlf'arri.t hospital where antivenom w1111w acltt11111slt'rt'd A 11111 c• t 11 111 kl' rs. particularly on the Irvine Handt lancls 1w:1r lh1• t·onsl Watch where you are ?'w:dk 1111~' l'h1• 1 altll'r:. :Jr1• I here lJr Jo/111 / 1 li11,1•n, u prart1tumer in Nru'IJ)Ort BeaC'h, 11•t•fro1111' ''""' 111w\t11m1 1\1011 reque11t& lo A11lc lhf' Doc· Cnr. I' u /1111 l:IW ('11sl1i Mr110 9'/626 'Bri<lal show set 01 Garden Grove :: 1\ lwo cla~ hrulal show. themt>d Bridal Reflec t11111s " pl.111111•11 Jurw :1 and " in the nrb<>retum or ~. tht• ('1 p l:1I < .1ttwl11.1l, CJ1th•11 <irove .. >. Dooa ~. 111 llw evt•nt "111 OJ)t'n ut 2 p.m each duy ... "1th fr1•<' .1d1111,s11m ui1t1l ti p m to view exhlbll8 by ~ phnto1tr<1ph1•1!oo, J''" (•lt•rs, florists, cat erers, <'hap<•ls, v11lt•o l'l'l'orct<•rs. entertainers, formal wc>at sho11s ;11111 bruful shop!I. t\ f.i..hmn ~how will be presented at 7 each t'v1•11111v at .... h1rh bridal itowns and men's formal WC'ar "-111 he· "ho .... 11 by 1-\•rndale's of Sant a Ana Actm1:;.,io11 1i. $.1 A wN1tl111~· <'onsu ltant11 and mlnJsters sym- 1:; po11lum wtll lw ronduC'h·d from 4 :30 to 6 p.m . June -!-• 3 b) "lann l'h11mpson, W<'ddlng consultant for the 2 Crystal C:1lh<'dral Ac1mis~lon ls SS.SO. ;~ A bridE> .ind J(room t1eminor will be held from ~ 4 .• 10 to 6 P m Jun~ 4 nt which s~dallau In all phasf'~ of brutal planning wlll ~n wer questions and J(IVe ach•1ce. Admission Is free with • raahlon show tkket or $2 without one. 0mars C Ul'TOM RlAMINQ Open 6 Days A WMtt Mon.·Frl. u Set. t~ ,8()3 Newport 81Yd, CMM[ 11 _.RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTIRY ..... ...._ .......... 1'21 MAJIOI IUD. ~ C05TA MllA -141-11 16 CANCER I June 21 July 22) Emphasis on c reativity, challenge, responsibility and greater c hance for rewards. Member of opposite sex con· fesses feelings and some complications could arise Capncorn. Taurus, Virgo natives figure prominently LEO (July 23 -Aug. 22> Long.standing transac lion can now be completed. Know it, don't hang on to past. Reach beyond current expectations. Bring potential into focus. Older family member re· leased you from obligation Former obstacle is lransformed mto exciting challenge. VIRGO (Aug 23·Sept 22!: Highlight indepen- dence. originality, versatility and willingness to imprint your own style. Emphasis on relatives, short t rips and special reports. Leo. Aries, Sagit- tarius persons figure prominently Illustrate beliefs LIBRA I Sept 23·0ct 22) Hunch regarding money pays d1v1dends Focus on direction, family security and obtaining needed material Cancer , Capricorn, Aquanus persons figur e prominently One in authonty flashes green light for your pro- g ress SCORPIO !Oct. 23·Nov 21 > Emollonal burden 1s removed Popularity increases, social life ac· celerates and long-distance message could in· stigate travel plans. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius persons play key roles. Diversify, but avoid scat· tering your forces. SAGl1TARIUS <Nov. 22-Dec. 21): You obtain "secret" mform ation. Be willing to tear down for ultimate purpose of rebuilding on a mor e solid structure. Aquarius, Leo. Scorpio persons fi gure m scenario. Focus on rom a n ce. g l amour and mystery . CAPRICOR N <Dec. 22-J an. 19): Roadblocks to progress are removed. Emphasis on freedom of thought, action Romantic involvement lends spice to life. A wish will be fulfilled. Gain indicated through written material. Gemini, 'Virgo persons play key roles. AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Individua l you aided in past expresses gratitude and returns favor. Emphasis on career, p romotion a nd s urprise source of additional funds Family member lends moral support. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio natives play important roles. PISCES (Feb. 19-M ar ch 20): Em phasis on communic:ation, outline of travel plans, publishing project and a definition or abs tract legal prin- ciples. Cancer, Scorpio and a nother Pisces figure prominently . You a r e on ver ge of "spiritual revelation.·' • All fans 25% off reg. Pier I has a fantastic coll ection o f O riental fans. handmade of paper. bamboo and si lk. Recent issues of hom e magazines show some imagina- tive display ideas. Use yo ur own imaginat ion and take it fr o m there. Always a bargain. o ur fans are irresistible at sale prices. Re~ .. 49 19 .99 ....... . .... 25% off Special o fter good o ne week only. Piel' 1 llDllOl'IS : colledlons AHAHOM DOU I Kel•lla • f1t'141t COSTA MfSA 2110 HerbOr Blvd • 6"0-'7337 QAIDOI CIOYE 13081HarbOr8tvd. • 63&-2411 MISSION VIEJO 308M!u~Mall ... -..... ---~ . .-.. .. --... • .I•.. """ •. - ,,. ··~'"" ...... •""- P UBLIC NOTIC E l'ICTlllOUI eUllNeH NAM• n ATUlleNT P UBLIC NOTICE ruau c NOTICE PUBLIC NOTIC E ... ,.. l'ICTITlOUI aUatNeU ~ITAT•M8NT T"• loll-1"9 --• en .. ,,., t>vtlMn a\ FAR WEST CO A S't NOT1c• TOco•n•ACTo•s IPR o PER Tl ES 1 NV EST ME NT Proi.<1 Ho IO/M/CH2 GROUP, lS50 c.lllleit A-.u.. SUllt s .. 1..i propawlt wlll be rec•lved •l C, Cotl• -· c.tlfonwa ..,._ ll\e ofll<e of~ ()peralloM _ C""4 GERALD J . SOUZA, U iO CMlllK of Pl•nl ~.UO..Slll , .. n.lew S«ato ••• n .... S11ll• c. Coll • M•u. HotPll•I, UOl H•rtaOr e1vd., Cos141 Calllri'.':e,,':'c,»RO MANVEL )HO Mew. CA mM, ""'" 2 JO l'.M. on I ' S 1111, el wt>i<ll Ume llley wllf be C•d llK A--. Suite C. C-te Mew, l>Vbll<ly ---·-tor -1Mm· Calllornl• m•. lnt1 wor-u lncl11det all lab or Tiii• b<ltonttt It conet11c1..i by a materlatt, loolt •"d equlpmeni llmlledpert,.rMIP n e c e t t • r r Io ••A E LOCATE Ger elcl J Sou••· EMPLOYEE HEAL TH CLINIC" Gena#•I ~r1Mr Rt,,,_ VMlow$ ,_ of -"It& T" '"" stet-I ..,. llled wit" Ille lklt1 Into 0acion· ,....,..,,,,. offkff, County Clerk ol O<.,,oe co.inly on "'"''"ti offl<.e, Fl.,. cwMcal eumlnlne April JO. 1'11 ,_.,,, ·~··•one ..... modHy ,.,. .. 11 uhllnq IGll.U lor llM>llk 9" VM, pro-Puoll~ Or""Vt Coe•I O•lly POOi, vlcH .,. __ "II tlnllt •t fWCHMry M1ty I, t. U. n, lttl lOti-11 In u amlnl1>11 .,.., al Falrv .. w Slltte Hoooll•I. In .. u>rdanc. with ,..,., •nd •-lll<ottons ,,_,.tot Preftren<e wlll IM erented lo bld- 1 d•rt pr-rly •PP<o•.O .. "Sm•ll l>nln•u" In •<.ordat><e •II" S.C tlOft 1 .... II MQ , Tit .. 2. CAlllornla M-ml11htrat1n C:-. Ape>ll<allOflt tor prefer...,_• m.at be wtimllted lo Ille Smoll lusln.s• Ofll<e, 1m -14111 SlrMI, Sar-. CA •.914, rol 1"4 tMn five n> <•-ci.o In Mlvan<• ol bid -1"9 Cl<lto Thlt prefManc:• •1>1>tlu to -J<Klt .,_. Ille estlmot- •d prof.cc <.,.t uc-lU.000 lld ,,_, rnu•I ... WC>Mltt..i tot 11\1 entire -'" lkstrlbe<I IMrel". o .. 1e11c>M '""" ,..,., --111u- 11on• wlll not be con•l-.cl anet wlll IM <•UH for rej.ct101" of bldt. T"• P UBLIC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINIU NA.llUSTATEM•NT I IMr lollowtng ~''°"' ••• ck>lnq OUtilne\.••t WET SEAL, llll PIKentla Ave , C0tla -... CA '2•21 Slll>f\tn ScOCI LlntOln, JOt W•lnul SI . H1wport Beach, CA "2t4> Aoberl (;e«ga 1(1,.,.I•, 11• I 1111 St . See• B•e<.11. CA nn1 '"" butl,.u ll conduel..i by • tllM rel perlnff thlp 5cOCI Llnc;oln T"I• ,,.,......,.1 ••• llled with Illa Co.inly CIMI! OC Oranga c.o..<lly on April tt, 1'11 0.PClrlrneftl ""'Ille rl9"1 to ..,•I•• •ny 1'1'114t lrre9ularlly in • bid or co rejocl any Pubtl•,,.O Or•nQe Co•tt Dally ""'•II Dlch. Pllol, M•y 1, t , 15, n, 1'11 lOOJ.tl Ho bid wlll be <onJidered ..,,,HS It It P UBLIC NOTICE m•O. on • ,......,d lo<m lurnl tNd l)y Ille 0.-1 anet It ...._ In e<· cordanc:• wtt" Ille "lnstr..c:llon• lo lld- d•rt" Prolt)Kllv• bi-rt m•y u amlM "~c;;_~~!:~~·:::s and C>Ot.ln plan•, -lll<allOM and TIM foll-Ing ~''°"' ••• ck>lnq bid lorrm D'f <•111"9 •I or molllne • ••· bu•ln•n .. quatt to -Offk• of llM Clllllf of Plenl Operation• at Ille •bO .. addrHS, NORTH COUNTY DOMES, 21' E. JOt" s1 . em"'-... CA mv lel•~ ........,., (714) fl7·llt1. JoM "-ten., 11• E 20lll $1 Cosi. A PCIYrnanl -..i, $..,_nl Fonn I07 ,.,. .. , CA 9UZ7. In 11\e amount of lilly ~r<..,t of U. G•ry Yo<,. ... 1t71 Aoumar y, conlrect Prl<• must e<.c_, • ..,, C~I• Mtta, CA '2'11 conlrecl lnvolvlno on ••s>endlture In Thlt bu•llWU 11 ,_,.., by • uou of 'u.oao. QeM•"' partn.rU.lp Tiie W<;<Hsful bidder wlll be ••· John L p,,1.,_. quired to eucule a conlru tur•l 1 '"" s1a1emen1 w•• Ill.cl wrl" Ille a11ru ,,,..,1 In Ille twm of a "St.an-d•rd A-1 Form 2" wl\l<h lollall Co.inly C~I< of O<ttr>oe County on i.. bl,.dlno In -·si.c. of C.lltwrti. on -'P•ll 1'· "" ly u-_....,.,by -Stale 1'1•11D Publlsl\ed Or•rtll• Coate Oally In accor-.c.e with Ille provltlont of Pll'l1, May 1, I, u, u. ,.., 200J-lll Se< I Jon I 110 of Che ~boo' Code, the 0.p•rl"-1 Piel aKer\alMCI lhet tfle O•Mr•I pnvalllno ••I•• of •eves ~ pllcebl• In Illa <...,,, '" wl\lcll the P UBLIC NOTICE work Is to be -.,. llW>M ram r:1CTITIOUS IUSINISS Ulebll1bed and publlthed by '"• NAME STATEMINT Olr•Clor ol lrtdu•lrlal R•latlort•. r,,. tollowtnt1 pertoftt •r• doing COPIH of .... wave ••IH .,. on Iii. •• b•.nlnHS •• Illa Office of -Chief of Plant <>Per• NEWPORT HEIGHTS BICYCLE llOfll, F'•ln.lew "°"'Itel, -at the SHOP. J71 Old H1wpor1 llvCI , Oeparlm•nl of Developmenlal Newpartlleeitll,CA'214J. S.rvlcet lleadq<.ar1ertolllu Robert L Sevtrton 1'11 Court Sii• ln~Uon wlll ...... Ml T"urt-Avenue. HHl)Orl B••<".'cA 92MO day, May 11, 19'1•I10 00 A M Caroll,,. M Se••rsan 1921 Court 8 E G I H H I H G A T P L A H T Avenue N~ B .. ch CA 92MO OPERATIOHSOFFICE This 'llu\ln.ss I• Conduc .. d by ·,,.. Fal"'lew State HOIOilal dl•ldu•lt IH-& Wllel VI< lor B )el•I ac C.rot NI. Se Clllel of Plant ()peralloM 11 I A_;,~ s. .... ~'°" Pubn.-Or-c .. ., D•llY PllOI, Tiits si.1.,,_1 was Ill.cl with Ille May U, n. "" J:IQ0.4t C011nty Cterlt of O<.,,oe County on M•y P UBLIC NOTICE ~.1911 Nerrlt & Aa-letn, llK,. Ult CAll't· l*t .Drhe, Me. t, Ne._.t IM<"• CA ·-......... NOTICE TOC:o•n•ACTO•I '1t1UI CAU.ING ~· llDS PubllslleO Or-c .. tl Oelly Piiot SCHOOL OISTRICf HU H M•rl,IS,?2.1'.l"I 1147 .. 1 TI HGTOH BEACH UNION HIGH SC HOOL DISTRICT , BI D DEADLINE: BIO Ho. OJ -1 00 P.M., Mon<l•Y. J .... '· '"'· BIO Ho. 4'J - PUBLIC NOTICE i'~!c~Mci;. ~r;,o·:ec'~;';T1' ~~~'. NOTICE OF DEATH OF Tl HG TOH BEACH UNION HIGH REX RICHARD GI ESE SCHOOL OIST RICT EDUCATION AND OF P ETITION TO CE NTER, 102S1 Vor11.1own A_,.,., ADMINISTER E STATE ao.rd R-.., H""llngton leach. CA NO '"'1<11769 92~. P•OJECT IOENTIP:ICATION · "' ' NAM E: lld Ho. HJ A•P"•lt T o a I I h e I r s , Rn1ora11on ...., ora1,..ge -Hu"t· bene ficiaries creditors •"ltton 11Mc11 Hl9" ScllOOI. aid Ho. 4'J and contingent' creditors of -Floor c-r"lflO -WfttmlflU., H'9fl Sc11001; PLACE PLAHS ARE OH REX RI CHARD GI ES E FILE DISTRICT MAINTENANCE, and persons who mav be ns Yortitow" AnrtW, H11,.11ne1o" otherwise Inte rested In the ~~~: ... CA u ue P"0"•· 17141 wlll and/or esta1e : NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN l:NI A petition has been filed ,.,. abo-rned Sci-1 Dlstrkt ot b y D R E W LAT H R 0 P ~~="~,=ivj,~~::'!i,,.ec:~':,':l. G I ES E in the Supe rior h•••ln•tte r r•l•rr•d 10 u Court of Orange County .. D1ST111CT:' w111 r..i .. uP ID,""' requesting that DREW :!.!:':a"':::.:=;,'-.1-;ton~;';i LATHROP GIESE be ap- 1or tM --11<1. p o I n t e d a s p e rs on a I lllb sMtt be,....,_, 1n -piece repr esentative to ad· •-11•1ec1-.-Sl\<l11 i...-....,m lnlste r t he estate of ancl pub11<iy.-al0ucl •t t11a-•• REX RICHARD GIESE ,,., ... 1 ..... -,. ..... h<I> llld """' conform .,.., IHI (under the Independent re-t1wto t11econtrac1 00<u1Mntt Administration of Estates Eecll Did ..,.11 be ace-led "" A t) The till I t f tlle ..c..niv referred to 1" 1M contrec1 C · pe on S se or docu......ts _."".,,. "".,. ,., __ hearing In Dep1. No. 3 at wlK°"''~ 700 Civic Center Dr ive, ,.J:. ~!T!';r ~0":.~!:"!.!~ West, In the City of Santa lrr•tlUIMllltt or lnformallllff '" ... ., Ana, California on June 10, 1>1dsorrnti.-1no. 1981 at9:30A.M. T ... DIST RICT ,_ ..... m,_, .... IF YOU oe.J ECT to the -··1 -"'"" r•t• ol ... , .. ...,, granting of the petition ·~ Ill .,.. i..nty In ftldl 1111• / ~'''°be,.......,._. for eac11 cratt you should either appear or type • wartJnen,..... to uacvt.t at the hearing and state tlle contract.n..rn.araontli.at yo ur Objections or file the DISTRICT Office toutad •l IOU! Yor'-town A-. H..mt"Cllon a..ch, written objections with the CA ,2..., c...-.... Y be -.ined on court before the hearing. reciu•tt. • <Ofl'/ ol -'°'" -11 .,. Your anna.arance may be POSled .t h i-site. TIM fon9oi"I .--- tc-le o1 -diem ween ~ M...i In person or by your at- UPofl • -111 lfttl ci., of •ltflt m /lovn. tor n ey . ~ .. ':!u~ ::'1:!:s'; ~,:'. -:.::'!: I F Y 0 U ARE A Mii. C REDI TOR or a cont-1t •"•"be~ -the CON· lngent creditor of the de· TRACTOlll to -... .,.. centract 1' ceased you must file {°"r ewercMcl, etMI -eny lllbcont..cllOf / .....,., "''"· 1o pay not ,... tt>en.,. claim with the cour or ,.,, ~111ec1 '" .... 10 an wortrme• present It to the personal tmploywd by hm '" IN encvtlWI o4 re presentative l~lnled IM contrect. H• 11'-tr ,,..Y ··--"" '"" for by the court with n four • ,..,1911 "' ..,.,...,.,. cd> .. ,. tfte< m onths from the date of tMN1 .. .c twu._....ttbkll. first Issuance of letters as .:,r.,:.w-: == .:.=:: provided In Section 700 of u ..... ,.._,.,_.,TI!e,.y-tllllfMI th e Probate Cod e of "'4111 • "' .. twft'I ... ,.,.., "'tt1e California. The time for CMtract~ fili ng claims will not ex-11y ~c .... ...,, ot,.. plre prl~ lo four mont hs ---.ic ... o.w.ei-from the date of the hee r-Put11t;:~:=., Dally Plt.4 Ing noticed above. Mey u,n, '"' tt1Mi YOU MAY EXAMINE PUBLIC NOTICE the file kept by the cour t. If you are Interested In the estate, you may fll• a ,. PVeuc..ona quest With the court to,. MOnC11 °" AVAfLAatu n eel ve spec I al notice of the ....,rM!:t~~=> _. .. Inventory of estate assets 1 .. t.,,.., .. ,_ c .... Mtlu 1• 111d of the petitions , ac-.,..., .,_ .... __.,....., cou n ts end re ports· o.i~rn'vl1: :'.,.~ described In Section 1200.5 ......... .-... .... -. ,11..,. •• of the Clllfornla Probltt ,,w...., C1111k1t"' ~..,.. CocM. ,...._...._.._....,._,..,"'-•• Wlll'-n M. C.._., At· ...;111"".-:r:-= ::-.:•;-.,! torney et uw, A 'uw ,....kM!IR. corporation, Ost V•R TIM rw • ,...,., """'..., ~ ,. Karmef'_, Newpert leeclt, :::.:..:: ........ c. .. ...._, C•llfornla HHt; tel. TIM..-.·,.,...._ fll • .._ 7D-'1't. •'-' i.-.y o.w. Pu~lshed Orange Coest ,.......~ c.-o.11r pt-. Dally Piiot. fiMy 14, 15, 21, May ... ""· ~ 1911 2211 .. 1 I • It • I• :>. II r l, I 4 tr r tad I n t ly hat 1 ' ..----. . Corvair cult flourishes Illinois fan of 'unsafe car' owns se ven FRANKFORT, ll1 t AP) -It was a funny· looking compact car with the engine in the rear , condemned by Ralph Nuder as "unsafe at any speed ." Genera1 Motor s q uit makln1 them a dozen years ago. The Cor vair, like Ford's Edsel. fell victim to a throwaway society. But thousands of the little Chevrolets have s urvived, pampered and polished by members of a Corvair cult who say it's really the only way to go. One of them is Larry Claypool, who was only 5 whe n the first Corvair rolled off the assembly line ln 1960 and too young lo get a driver' a License when they went out of p roduction in 1969. At Claypool's auto r e pair s hop in this Will County comm u nity n ear Chicago, t here are Corvairs in various states of disrepair scattered all over the lot and two ramshackle sheds stuffed with rare Corvair parts. In his home are Corvair movie reels. Corvalr photo albums, Corvair postcards and two s helves lined with trophies he won in Corvalr cult races. Claypool owns seven Cor vairs. Is Claypool's brain running on empty? Nader. the consumer advocate. denounced the Corvair as "unsafe at any speed" in his 1965 book o f the same name. Chevrolet reacted by gradually phasing out production. Claypool says Cor vair enthusiasts were un · daunted and business at his repair s hop, The Vair Shop, known by Corvair drivers all over the Midwest has improved every year sin ce he st art · ed in )972 Larry Claypool sits in hi1 auto repair lot in Frankfort. Ill., surrounded by hiJ favorite cars, Chevrolet Corvairs. He is a leading fan of the car once called "unsafe at any speed.'' "In the beginning. people tried to tell me. 'Oh they don't make them any more, what are you gonna do in two years?"' he said . "Well, the number of Corvairs on the road falls with every passing year, but at the same Ume fewer and fe wer places are fixing them, so I keep a good business . I'm backed up two months in orders." Corva1r he owned from 1965 to 1975 was the best Chevrolet ever made "1 drove it to Arizona and back three tim es," said Bell, 59. "No kind of weather stopped it It w as the sorriest move I ever made to sell it. 1· can tell Nader that to his face." Nader said the Corvair oversteered in sharp turns and its rear wheels tucked inward when the car slid side ways, increasing the danger of a roll at high speeds. Claypool says he helped his older brother buy a new 1969 Corvafr for a pittance a few weeks after they went out of production. But in 1971, two years after the car 's te rmina - tion, a federal study found the Corvair no more dangerous than other contemporary cars when driven at reasonable speeds. Consume r Guide magazine subseque ntly judged the last model year to be a good used car buy. A couple of years la_ter , Claypool found a n abandoned, 1961 Cor vair station wagon. He located the owner and bought the car for $10. Two dank, gloomy sheds are treasure troves of rare Corvair parts Claypool has collected. There are turbochargers. tinted windshields, aQJustaote telescopic steering columns, chrome trims, wire wheel rims. original upholstery and accessories s uch as tissue dispensers, mounted clocks and trailer hitches. Claypool belongs to the Corvair Society of America, a group of 7,800 Corvair owners with 100 chapters around the nation and in Canada. Sweden a nd Iceland. with names such as Association of Corvair Nuts <Rochester , N.Y ) and Choo Choo Corvairs (Chattanooga, Tenn.) The national organization puts out a monthly magazine, Corsa Communique, and stages yearly conventions featuring car raJties and parts swaps . Claypool now runs a mail order business in parts. He says Chevrolet s t ill stocks many parts but many dealers are unwilling to provide service for a long-defunct vehicle. However , he says, in recent years small independent firms, with nam es like Corvair Underground , have formed to s pecialize solely in reproduced Cor vair parts. The Ch icagoland Corvair Enthusiasts is part of lee Challenge Events, a group of five Chicago car clubs that makes an a nnual winter pilgrimage to Twin Lakes, Wis .• for ice races. ''The Corvairs do r e al well because with their rear-mounted engines. their traction on ice is great," Claypool said. Many of the reproduced parts are Detter than the originals because now more care goes into making them," Claypool said. Charles R. Bell, a Chicago taxi driver, says a Bridge • Jumps nixed TALLAHASSEE. Fla. <AP) -After fondJy r e· calling the days or their youth, members of the state Senate Transporta· tlon Committee have ap· proved a bill making it illegal to jump or dive from public bridges ·'This goes against the g r ain of m y idea of freedom," said Sen Dan Jenkins, D·Jacksonville. · · 1 used to like jumping off bridges." So did Sen. Pat Neal, 0 -Brandenlon. "It wasn't but two years ago that I jumped off a railroad trestle," he s aid But bill sponsor Sen. Bill Stevens, R-Cor al Springs, said the ban was necessary. He said the s tate had s pent PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS eUSINCU ~ICTIT::;~llNCU P UBLIC NOTICE ~ICTITIOUS eUstNCU NAM8 ITATC-NT "-AMC STATUHNT T~-folio.I--I• dol ~.... NAMa STATllMllNT Tiii 1011-1,.. _ ... n .... dolno ... ..,. ~· -· no ...... Tiii 1o11ow1no penon 11 clOfno 11u11-1><111,..., 11. MH ai. MH II H P LOAN SERVICING U.Stl Et KNOT BAO CHARTER SERVICE. MANILOW MVSIC 11S1 Dove T Rd EITOf'o CAmJD.• 1221 W P«lll< Coa1t Hwy., H9Wpon Slr .. I Slit .. lAO New_:..I S..Cll CA oTroD .;:~k t'..: I ~1 l eech CA ,,..., • . _.. I r-... • ""''· IK ., ......... ,. JIJ 'wal*• Goutd. 1221 w. Pe<lllC t2MO corporeUon. U1'1 El Toro Ad., El COlll Hwy., He-1 8"<1\. CA~ Berry --... Odyuey Court, To;~i.~~ 11 <ondu<IH by. , .... Tllll ....,,_, 11 <-.Clad by lft I,._ Nl•llOrt e..cll, CA n..1 POf'l tlon. dlvlduat Tl\lt _..,... It cClftdli<:ted by an 1... TO PubO<atlan1 Inc Jey W Gould dlvlduel. Ralpll J Tt<ell•' · Tiii) Ila'-! ... "'"' wllll 11\e earryMaNto. Tiii• Itel.....;.. Wit """' wllll Iha '°""'' C'-'11 ol Oranot Cowily Oft Mey Tiii• Sia-WI\ "'"' .. 1111 II• co1inty Cllf1l of Or-County on May 11, 1•1. C°""tY Clerlt ol Or-County on n 1•1 "t.1114 APf'll I), ltll ' • P1H1., P11bll-Or-Coa•t Dally Piiot, '""" P1ibll1MC1 °'""' Coa•I Delly Pll01, Mey U . Z2, 1', J-S, ltll ttff..11 P11blllhld Orenoe Coa1I Dally Piiot, May 1), 11. H. J-S, 1'9t ?U1 .. 1 ---May u. 22, 1', J-s. 1•1 1H1-e1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI aUll"llU ----l'ICTITIOUI eUSINllU •AMC ITATUIUIMT ~ICTITIOUI aUSINlll$ N.AMl ITATIMINT Tiii 1011-lno "non1 .,. dolno NAMll ITATI MIMT Tl\I fOl-lno penm• •• dolno 111111· .... 1 ..... at: T ... fol!owl .. perlllft I• dolnt IMl•l· ..... 11: CVSTOMCAll COVER$, 1• H..,._ ..... 11: THE BUY AMllt lCAN AGENCY, Aw., C.U. Mn-. CA,,.,_, G A SOU NO, f01'2 Ku«111 LAM, H.,... Ult Pe .. wt SI , Sa"I• Aftl. CA .,,.,. w. C.sln!IMm, 111 "-llnoton 8Mcl>. CA n.-. n101. Avt., C•ta Mne, CA.,.._ G,....,., II. llllWI, 101'2 K ....... Le.... Ptllllp Weyne ltotll, IS21 Ptoesu• SI., Mll11 Ran .. I, 7M H11dMlft Ave .. H1ifttlf\910ft BMcl\, CA,,_, Santa Ana, CA n101. CMI• "'"'·CA..,.,.. Tiii• ~-"cOf\dllclad by all In Tllll ~-I• C-.Cllcl by ... 1 ... Rendy l'ocllt, 7M Hlidton Avt , dlvlduel. dlvldvel. Cosl• MHI, CA nu.. Grt90<y R, Relln Pl\lllp W. ROlll Tlll1 butlMU 11 cond11ci1d Dy a Tllll __ , was lllld •1111 t T1111 •t•l-1 "'" Ill.cl wllll '"' 0t ... r11 P«lMnlllp. COllnly C,.,,. o1 Oranot Goumy °"Ma C°"11ly ci.r• ol Oranoe Covnty on 911en ~ IJ, ltll. Mey 13, 1"1 Tllll ..-•• lllld wltll 11\e ~'•" ~1'1111 Covnty Clar1l of Oranot c:-.ty on May Publl-Or-C:0.11 Dally Pilot Publl.-0r.,. Conl Diiiy Piiot, 1i. 1t11 May 1 s, n . H.J ... s. "'' utt•t May "· n. it, J ... s. 1•1 uu.et "U11J P111>11.-Or-Coa1t Delly Piiot, P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ~n u, 22, "· J ... s. n11 tto•1 about $200,000 the last ~ICTITIOUUUll"US five years in lawsuits re· '~~~:!:::::~• NAMUTATllMINT s uiting from peopl e DEATH NOTICES Tll• 1011-1"0 ""OM.,. dotno 11u!."~~0!-1"' perM>nl .,. dolno j u m ping ( r 0 m the _,._. os· SIERRA COASTAL PROPERTIES. b "d d h . CHRISTINA'!> CAFE, -~II 17111 1 Nao rre.l"'t,..,CAtt)IS. fl ges an urt1ng McGINNIS SlrMt,C.la Mha.Calllornlanu7. ltlcllerd "· -· ... 1 Nuarrt, themselves. A11C1r•1 EllMn ~·or. •no Sovtll 1rv1,,., CA mu. The bl.II went t o MARGARET c; McGIN Eu t arlllol. #SO. San1• An•. Char1H&.C.--all,•1'P•Mrarne. N IS. age 91. resident ol C•lltornl•ll%707. Lao""• IH<ll, CA nu1 another Senate commit· Costa Mesa. Ca Passed Slllrl..,Marl•Grler, lDOSoulll fllll Tiii• bullMU II cor>ducll4 by • tee. away on May 13, 1981 In :;/:,'•1· 0 '· Sant• AM. CalllOf'nta o-,.•~r::..., -::,_.._iiiiii .... =iiiiii--.iiiiii;;;;;;;iii~""" Costa Mesa, Ca She was T1111 --· h c-ltHI .., 1~ Tiii• •&at...m w11 111..i w1111 ,,,. ' born in Augusta. Illinois on •tvl4"1t1. c ... n1yOe+11olOr_C_Y..,MIY 'AClftC VllW MIEMOllAL 'AlllC Cerretery Monual'( Chapel-Crematory 3500 Pac1f1c View Oflve Newport Beach ~<'700 McCOIMta MOITUAlllS Laquna Beach 494-9415 Laauna Hills 768.·0933 San Juan Cap1str ano •95·1776 HAJllOI UW.,.._MT. OLIVI Monuarv • Ceme terv Crametorv 1625 Gisler Ave Cosaa Mesa 5-40-5554 PtHCI U OTHUS 1&&.UOADWAY MOATUAIY 110 Brolldwav Cotta Mesa 642-9150 IMn••llON SMfTH & TUTMIU. Wlt2Tf&JNI CHArt\ 4 , l 17tPI St Co111 M 1• e•e-9371 '9.c:IMOTMlll IMn'HI' MOITUAIT 827 M11n St Hunllnpcon Buen 636-6539 : ............ _________ .. ~ ,,j September 21. 1889. Survived Thi• ~1': ~'!';111 .,,. u, 1•1· ,,•nn by a daughter Catherinecoun1y Ctartot 0r.,,..eountyonMay Pubt1_0r..,..eoa11 01t1yfllll01, Prosler. 3 grandchildren and u. 1•1. ~i.nv Mar"· n.n. J-s. ,.., 21•1•1 2 gr ea l ·grand chi Id r en ""bu"*" 0r.,,.. Go.ti oa11y Piiot, Graveside service will b4" M1yU,Z2,1',J-s.n11 im..1 PUBLIC NOTICE held on Thursday, May 14, -------- 1981 al 1 OOPM at the Rose PUBLIC NOTICE "",..... ~ M I I P k I h NOTICI Of' IWTSNDID Ht Is emor a ar w l ------TUMSP••oP•llTAIL D . Alister Sinclair official PuBLrc HCAlttNGS "'".,.,,......, A~c ••n•AOI iq g. Services under the IN Costa-.. P1_,1n9 c-1ul0fl u ca"M UMDI• direction o( Baltz Bergeron· •t the City ~t. 17 l'•tr Drtw, C..ta llK. ,..,....,4, Smith & T uthill Westcllrf :::·,:---..:=:·:.!.a:.:·:; r 1 CA';!===~=:•o Chapel Mortuary of Costa •• .,,May»,'"'· ri..--. -Wtl -.. 1.., ~ Mesa. 646-9371. 11!:~t11t,. ,,,. ,.,,_.,.. .,.."'' ~~,5~1:.,::1~;:::•:: • .:i':s: SCHWENK t . REIOl.UTION ~..,. • •-4111 l . ••tllN 81¥d., a1111N, Ce. WILLIAM A SCHWENK, llOfloftfw,._ .... GomMIMloft.t U U tl DOMINIC o. IOl'l'lllOA, City of COii• M9M rec0Mf'!Mft4 U l ·IJ·U .. 4111 I!. B•lllO• etwe., resident of Newport Beach, adoption of ,...,._,,.._ •tMMt• 811.,.., c.. ,..1. Ca. Passed away on May 9. •llow c-n.ctklft etNl••twrwetlMI Tiie .._, _1 .. uc:wltv-*'" 1981 Bo I ~ II ••ll•~c.n.MclK-~ u1t1 etltlroun 01 Ill• 1111111••• . rn n c:ago, . 2. lONl l!XCl!fllTI°" , •• MIT lra ..... rw.-! '"ILi, N .•• "'°'4· I I n 0 I s . 0 n a y 3 • u .. M .. "" HSU/,... Al'ClllW<.. ss.-1...., 11711 ...... ~. """'' 1894. Survived by his wife .-1 ........ fer YI-* ........ • ...... 9Mtl\. Co.; CLOA HNICHI, Helen. dauahter Jane Btlley 1• ~ trt• . ..,.... AM. .......,,.., ma ..._ '--· ""'"' N C c9MltllMI -tllM'IW1 .. elqllMtl • 11\9*1 tMc:h, Ce of ewport Beach, • .• ton --.1 ..., ...,.. • ,_ .. ..... TM 111N1 .. 11cen. ~ •• .. Roger Schwenk of Newport , .. ,_ ••lllty '""'a ..,.,.._, ,.._ tr_,.,,.. 11 Tl/'9 .....,.., c.. •u B e 8 c h , c • . 8 n d f1nt11<~ w1uc11 r""'"",."''· . •-.,.. Wlftt °" ..... • a-.. drandchlldren , Wiiiiam leee1M at t• .,.._. tcr-, In 1 Ct a1otll0• atYC., N~ 8-11, Ca. • •-· ,,..,.,.._...,.. *"""'"*''-" J~'I Uelle11 MtrUt. Bailey, Bret Beiley, Gre•a ,....u ... -i. .. -. N..,.,.,....,_,ue<,_..,..._ G. Schwenk and Christopher a. ZONI! 1xc1,'f1°" flllllMt ., 0111r•11ter: h • Air ••u•• Schwenk. 1l1ter1 t:l1le ltl·lt·t .. ftr '"'"1 ••tthre. ~allel\ eetr ..,_A .... H-. ~ ...... -Thrifty 011 c-. ~ hlc:tl, Ce. flM1. Kunde of Newport Beech1 ,.""· ,_ Lntw ... hvln•rtl, ttt .. cw•••....,. .... ,_..fw.._ Ca. and Lii)' Zielke or OewMJ.•~-~t• w.1-.,..•~= Chlca10. Illinois. Funeral ,..,.... .,.. ..... .,. Mnlk • 1ttt1e11 e. ........................ s•t.M.• I h Id Wod ,,....,,, ................. "'. ,,. ,_,_,,..... .... •.... ..... eerv ce:s were e on • ""'" , .. , mr111.''"'"'' e11t1 • TOTALAMlllUWT tt.-.. n.,day, Ma.y L3, lllfl 1t the w.n-•9-..._...,N rt•a,.. Tlu,.,.....,..httlltCIWllW• Pac ific View Mortuary •"'"l'Nflt" •K•i.411 •t m ... ., , ....... .,...,.. .............. _. Chapel wlth Rev ' --bar V """" 111 ' a -· Sl••llaw:u '"" ltN lk-"• .. .,... ""'""" .. """" ~"'....._., ~tllKllW._. ~--ef Al<Mle4k .. -..r ... Tornow offlclat1n1. Inter· ...,IWWW., ....... ..,, ..... ...._ C:tfitre1..,.. ~ '"' ...-. nfent followed at Pacific: -...~...,.._,..,...,.,.(all tr~. n. ..,. ... .._..,.. ... Vlew Memorial Park . .c 1118 OMce "' • ,._.,.. .,...,,_ .. ,...,.,...._ ..... _...tte"'9 IMM. ._ -. n ""' Oflw, beta l#Nl9f • ,.,... ~ ., ... ,..._ Newport·Be.ch, Ca. f'leue Mete,QlltwNe ,..,,., ... ,,_....,.._..., .. omit flowers. Pacmc View COST"MD4 l'l.ANN1MO ,_,,,,. tt MN ,,_,., .-* M rt d1 _.... COMMttl!OH 1"'-• .,,...,.... Ill ....... "' 1, O uary r""'.ort. ~~ "" c11f1er11t• 111aln11• 111t1 a.ir-.. ,......... .2!:. DAILY PUDT C='e:--....... .:- aASSl"ID ADS ,__=:..:. "c::&.,.., ~ ,.. .... =:. O!iMy ,..., 142 ·1878 ..., ... "" ....., .... , .. ,.. lt1t.tt 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 ·8 . .. ... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 16, 1981 HOMHI For s• HouHS For S• Hous•• for 54* , ... .....,.Hottu: All r eal estate ad •·••·············•···•· ...•••.................••.•..•................ v e rt Is e d in th I a Ci_....rol I OO:Z &.-r al newspaper is aubjt!cl lo ••••••••••• ••••• ••••. •• •••••••••••• •• •••••• ••. •• ••••• ••• •• ••••••••••. 1002 IOO:Z ~al the Federal Faar lloua· i----------1-------------------ing Act ot 1968 which makes 1t illegal to ad· vertln "any p~ference, llmilat 1on, or dis· crimlnation based on r ace, cqlor. religlon, sex, or national origin, ur an int.enUon to make any such pre fe rence, l1m1tation , or das e r1 m 111 a lion. " This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is 111 viola· lion of the law ERRORS: AclY•rtfsen Jhotlld clwck tt.tr ads dally Giid =:. ~ ron '"""' ty. The DAILY PILOT GIMllMI llabtlty for .... fl"t Incorre ct lnHrtlon only. Hot11e1torS• ...••.•................ 1002 ...•................... 2 UNITS $94,900 Super investment' Two 2 Bdrm wiits, one w1lh fireplace! Current in l"Orne $740 mo Financ· mg' One year home pro- le c t 1on plan 1nl'ld Hurry. this won "l last' 646-7171 flft\D DECORATOR OCliHAONT 2 Bdrms, 2 ba, unfum New $850 yrly IAYRlONT 3 Bdrm, l ba, w1fum Mint <'ond S850yrly. CHAMMa FAOHT 3 Bdrm, 2 ba, unfum $750 yrly associated BROKER') RE Al TORS lU}1, VY Oolhr)fl ~'I 1tibl E-Z DUPLEX CONVERSION Cos ta Mesa R ·2' Remodeled 4 Bdrm 2 bu home with fireplat·e. copper plumbing Could be ronverted to duplex Only Sl L2,0001 Call lo see! 646 7171 THE REAL ESTATE RS OCEAMFAOMT Take over fabulous luan of $426.000 lndudln11 123••, interest 2!:I yrs le go Tr)" $150,000 down Asking $649,000 Onll I YI uld JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 DOVER SHORES PRESTIGE We drc proud lo present one of the finest pro pert res of Dover Shores This prestigious estate sized hume offers thf' fine s t of amen1t1c:. f•ealure:. w1thm thu. 480<. sq ft residence include 4 Bdrm~. 3 Bath:.. b1ll1Jrd room. formal d1n1n.:. marblP entry. swim ming pool. spa and a panoramic view or the HACH HOME. rOPUL.U MOOa OPEM SAT /SUN I 2:3M:JO Walk to beach. Assume FNMA loan at 1134% 1st TD. $84,800. Monthly pmts $856. No qualifying. Gorgeous country kitchen , 4 BR, or 3+den. Dining area overlooking patio. Plush upgraded carpet thruout and much, muc h more. As king $137 ,500. BKR. Ask for Mary Anne Holsey. 963-7881. 963·8793, res. Pill/IE llUFFI llM VIEW OPEN SAT./SUN. 12·4 PM 1973 Vista Caudal, Newport Beach End unit. 3 bdrm + family room, 2 1.~ baths. lofted ceiling. Prestigious area Great remodel possibilities. Good financ ing Own~r/09t $425,000 17 I 4t 7 6 0-8507 OCEAN UMTS $162,0UO U nbelievable ! Seller is motivated. Assume loans with $20,000 down . Great investment opportunit y~ lsn 't it? Call SANDY ROIBn'SOM THE REAL ESTATERS 963-6767 CONDO SI 19,900 Winding greenbelts lead to bright single story condo ExGuJS1tely de· coraled with custom wallpaper and cubmelry thruout Formal dining room too! Owner will cooperate with (111anc· ing Won't last at lhts priee. so call now e 1 l y I 1 gh ts and l he ~~~-91'!~~~~~'!!1!.'!~~~lll!!!!~~~~ bal•kbay VdlUl'd al - @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 71 4-6 31 -6990 WALK TO BEACH! $699,000 Balboa Island Realty. 673-8700 A SSUME URGE 9%LOAN on this excellent value 4 Bdrms, large pool. ga:. hrep1t. new carpets On ly $95.500 Call 97~ 5370 ~oday ALLSTATE REALTORS Security gated adult ---------condo. Elegant 2 Bdrm 2 bath, 1500 sq.fl.. home. Enjoy pool, sauna and exercise room Owner will help with finaneing Asking $175,000. Call now , 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS ]# ·t ,• . . , . . . .. . ~ .. . ' ' .. l ~ • ' !'I ' "1Al IS1MI l.JCUtfl'fCf '1NCI t• ' IAYVIEW CONDOS Good frnancin~. Sl4"ps lo bay boats -business HoaJ! Hospital Propert) one and a hall years old. 15010 DOWN Individual buyer or In· MESA VBlDE UNHAL Hundreds of flowers everywhere and sun rilled rooms make this 3 BR home a must to see A real value al Si41.900 Call now for details @ SEA COVE PROP ERTIES 7 14-63 1-6990 SAILIOAT WATCHERS This Cameo Highlands beauty 1s priced to sell' $339 ,000 Owner 10'1 down with owners as sistance! One level 3 Bdrm plwi huge yard. Hurry ! 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATE RS UPPER BAY Light and chee r y 4 Bdrm, 3 bath family home Large covered pallo. S220.000 Roy McC.., Rttr. 548-7729 GOLF COURSE VIEW d1n1ng room, famil) room, br4'k fireplace, large country kitchen Four stately bdrms. 2 baths. 3 car garage. A FANTASTIC VIEW 0 .. GOLF COURSE Privacy' Many, man) extras. Only $262.500 546·2313 THE REAL ESTATE RS 1• vestment gn:lup. Prfre 3 bedroom I bath , Sl69,900. •---------1 s e p a rate in I aw 6 3 1 7300 M.I . Ga~s D"""' Sharp 3 Bdrm on lrg lot with lots of trees & plants. greenhouse. cov ered patio $185.000 $22,000 dwn. quarters. Large corner ~~~· ~~~~~~~ Jot. RV parking. $.91,900. = 751·3191 --------· C::. ~Elf C I ......., PHOPf IHI{ •., SUMMER POOL HOME Lovely family fun home with l6X32" pool 4 Bdrm . family room. stone fireplace. many extras. One of a kind ' Sl26,900. Call ror more details. 546-2313 THE REAL ESTATERS TRIM-TIDY TERRIRC Home w /out homework! One or the lowest priced homes in entire area. Assume the exist VA loan, 8%, $460 PITI. Ow n e r m otivated Bought new h ome Please hurry . Submit! 545-9491 ~Walker I laa REAL ESTATE SELLER HAS ANOTHER Home and miat sell this OPEM Sat/S• 1-5 275 E. 16th St, C.M. 3 bdrm . Camlly room, re modeled on large R 2 lot Owner may help ftn ance Sl6.5,000 317 JasmiM, CdM I 4 bdrm, family rm, 2 fireplaces plus 3 bdrm rear unit with fireplace & beam ceiling Close to beach Good financing potential. $495,000. MAURY ST AUFFH SEA LION REALTY 673-5354 MEWrottT HGHTS De lux e townhouse duplex, 3 bdrm. family, 2~ bath each unit. Frplcs. all built-ins. decks & patios. Park like landsraping. SELLER WILL HELP FINANCE S295,000! lal»oa lay Prop. Realtors •'75-7060• beautiful home located ~~~~~~~~~ In excellent area of .;. Tustin. Step down Uvtnc room , family room. apace ~e kitchen, 3 big bdrma, uat recently re· model . One year fru home protection plan. can today. 75.2-1700 THE ~EAL ESTATE RS DWI.IX a bdrm. 21*1' each 11nlt Firepla~1 bullt·lllt. Ell· ctllent rental area. Near l>Uch Ir bey. $28:1,000. IU·ZZUewa.. associated Pt• 'I. • f (\ "' I • ~ t' ' RAii OPPOCltTUNITY IM CAMEO SHOllS Lowett prtcod fee aim· pie evallable! Oreat 81· 1um1ble lat TD Enjoy altemoon sun and vlewa fro m wood d eck. 3 beautiful private beaches. Only $549,000! CalJ today! l7J.8S50 THE REAL ESTATERS TH...._ TOWMHOMl1 Call th.• apedalku at lbe condomlnlum In· lonMUoo~r TouchltGne Realty lla-0987 R.E. IMVESTOI Always wanted to invest in Real F8tale-but don't think you can? L~t Golden West Realtors show you how to invest with little cash & no ··Te nant Problems". Ca II now for more details Goldeft West Rltr. ( 714 )848-8588 GIANT HACH IARGAIM Charming 4 Bdrm L1\• mg room features cozy wood burning fireplace Huge lot . Owner w1ll h e lp finance ! Only S209,900! 673-8550 THE REAL ESTATERS surERDUPER Beaulltul, Immaculate, nicel y landscaped 4 bdrm home on cul-de· sac. Spacious rooms View of golf course from properly. Owner will help on financing. Only il39,500. Cal l oow 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS OWHER WILL TRADE 20 acres near Rancho California Owner wants condo m Nwpt, Irvine, Costa Mesa Can be divided Into 4 to 5 acre parcels for s mall equity or Sl40.000 takes all Barguin shoppers read -----t h e littl e ads in Ha ve some thing you want to sell? Classified ad1 do it weU. 642-5678. Classified regular!)' And t h ey h nd what they're lookl!li for. RCTaylorCo 6 40-9900 srY•LASS POlMH MOOIL Fantastic Vl E W home. Ideal for large family with maid 's quarters or suest suite. Pool & j ac uz il. Owner wi 11 help finance. ONLY S795,000. ) \ • .... I, --...... ~---------------------...----· _._......,...................... ......-----------..... -----1119--.... -.................. .. E4 Orange Coast DAIL V PILOT/Prtday, May 18, 198t ....... Pw S. ..._... llef Wt H.we '°"Wt HeetN1 '°'Wt ......._,....Wt ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..._..,._.. •wr.. 1002 c.r. ......... IOJZC" .. M... I0240 .. PoW IOU'""'• ~o.M ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;;;;; .......... ,ooi ;;;;; ............ i ;;;.;;; .......... ;.... ....... 100! OWH••c•UY JASMNC... ASSUMAal ltt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. ••••!!'! •• .. •••••••••• .. ••••••• Cull.Om btt·U 1,. old 1 !1tec home. ll 8r2~ ba, OWH• PIN.AMCID NUl»IOUS at 111.~. llbr, 2 ba home UMDAISU Wide channel vlew from spectacular vchitectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats. $1,495,000. By appointment. LIDO ISLI HOMIS Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional i;pacious, cu.5tom 3 bdrm. 3 bath home. newly decorated. Priced to sell quickly at $475,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Great for e ntertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money. PENINSULA POINT llACHNOMT Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm, 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft . featuring marine room, entry, Living room, dining room. built-ins, etc. $1.385,000. BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR I l 1 H,,Y'"t' D1 ''" "' H t>l'l t.1 6 1 FAMT .ASTIC VIEWS This lovely 2 bedroom Versailles penthouse has new carpet and drapes, a wet bar. mirrored fireplace, and the best view in Newport. $275,000. REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 Eaet CoHI Highway. Corona d~I Mar WE HNE ~OFntE BEST AGENTS IN T<M'N HI ..,IUI NflA1 Hf Al I <.!All '>OWIC E'> PICTURESQUE IA YSHORIS Charming living w/raised brick hearth, wood paneling & shutters. Delightful 3 BR. 2 BA. Space for outdoor living w /2 patios. Room for remodeling. Outstanding value at $.135,000 LH .. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 C!IE 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE I LUFFS Very Desirable Three Bedroom, Two Bath. Tastefully Decorated. A Highly Upgr~ded Airy End Unit With Sun Deck On A Cul-de-Sac. Owner Will Carry Large Second. Call To See & Submit All Offers 759-9100. STAITIR UNIT In World Famous Newport Beach. Real Sharp Two Bedroom End Unit With Deck Overlooking Greenbelt. Walk To Shopping, Park & Pool. Submit Offers. $145,000. ® 75S.9100 ·--,, ..... " .... #Z CCNpCWllll• Pino MewpcWt C...tw JASMINE CIHtc~ I For the buyer who wants a lovely new 2 Bdrm and den home in guarded community, on a beautiful quiet street, close to pool and tennis. Large assumable loan at 12V•% ln· terest. $315,000. MOllLI HOMIS We have 8 lovely new listings in a 5 Star Park, priced from $38,000 to $52,500. Exceptional commission apllt for listing oriented realtor associates. Beautiful office In choic e location . Have 2 apenina1. -- \1• l · I I ·. '. TAYLOR CO. HI \I 1111;·, ··'"' l'tl h 11.MAHT •'Y•SAIUIS .. -IXCWSIVI OH 11• C.AMYOM ~ COUISI S p ectac ul ar Deane Homes "Versailles" located on largest lot of all Deane Homes. Beautiful golf course view! Professionally landscaped yard w /mature trees ln a private park-like setting including a lovely large pool &: huge spa + an attractive gazebo. Gated fro nt courtyard entry with fountain. Marble floor i n foye r with glittering chandelier. 4 Bdrms. den, formal dining room &: 4 lh baths. Priced right at $895,000. Call for appointment. WISUY M. T.AYLOI co~ UALTOIS 2111 S-J~ ........ HIWPOIT CENTll, M.I. '44-4t I 0 REALTORS 67$.5511 LOVELY "E" f'LAH. Most ~ nt0del e••r built In the ltuffs. Situated on spectacular 9re ... belt wtth mountain view. 3 ldr, F.R. lest buy In th• area at $252,900. COLE OF NEWPORT REAL TORS 2515 E. Coad Hwy., Col"OM def M• 675-5511 MOVE IMTO IRVIME • FOR OML Y $89 ,500 Super triple ~ide mobile home in beautiful adult park. 3 Bdrms 1314 Ba with assumable 1st. no qualifying·. $50,000 dwn will get you $850 payments. Also other terms. Call Co lleen at Katella Realty. 552·1714 REALTORS DOMT MISS THIS! A Sale You can make even in these times. The largest "1650 sq. ft." Condo for sale in area . Cement drives . air conditioning . micro-wave ovens. t rash compactors, pools, parkside & all shopping locations. Owner will consider local exchanges. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 310W.WlhoR Cotto Meta. CA 714/631-5055 BEAUTIFUL CONDO-OCEAN YU Profeulowolly decorahd by Roger T'IMMMs. HASID. LogmNi l9aciL ,._ 5 ... Newport c,...t w/Jbcl lltd. _ .... Mlh, 1.-ge f....,ty ""' & p • 111 acelc VU. Quality & •lecJmtc• .... llUIJl-t. OwMl- wll carry .AITD. $270,000. 631 ·1400. OCEANFRONT EXllJISITE F•llllo.t wchlhc._.. -••piece • COl"Mt'. Hew wood & CJMu. a.to. CNll& cClblMts & 1Mttc..eo.s .... & decor IR thlt 2-story ............ ID••l ldtcMta Ir .,._.d Matter Mite. Twrfflc VU of ... & lllrf frotCI ..... 2 bed. .... ""' -.. phn 2 bed. ,._..... ..... Y• cGlllld 111oke tlllt o tlfttl• fo•lly Ito•• St7s,ooo. GRANDEUR ON UtlJA ISLE ......... of ....... ,...,,,.... .. ,... ....... U.. ltle .......... ... ..,... ••• brick Wiii wwy & dip ,...,.,. to ........... c: .. T .. ....., ..... wffll .................. ., • ......, .......... ,., •• r u.... ,...... w1tt. ...... f...aly ,.... ...... ..... ........ ,. ~ ........... ,... + I bJMlldtc ..... Lawt-...... ..... + 4 ............ ~ .... ., ........... Mtlt docla & .., fer J M9h. 11.H\.000. 611-1400. WATERFRONT HOMES. ll'IC. REAL UTATt s.lr•, 1'.N._ '"'"'IY M.ne,irmmt 2436 W CoMI ~ 3 IS MM111e Aw ........., e..11 Belbw Wand ,, .. ,.. ,, ...... ' • I Br•bawttblar1epoteit• tplan Vuterr a.50,000 Larae' Bdrm 2 bath COMOOS Cntry kit . l1e yd Ual lo·law ape.. 3200 aq ft 644-lltS h 0 me • beaut 1 f u I &mt-with Ot"1rn View~ Crea' 1 Y~ tin On I Y + us i/f iaraa• /7 /')/ ~ wallpapen tbnaout Cul Minull"tl to llurbor & $143,500 Ry ownH 1275,000 .._., YIHifl.-~.-· dtouc llll"fft Own~r wit'l Bh~li 7 Avualahlt-ibr ~ S483 0 I 5 ... 0350 carry AITD tor 7 years 2b r s .,. ..,.. REAL UTAH 644 ·6397 at 13/S~ lnlt'rl:t'l For an 1t rom lM.000 PAYMENTSS750/mo UONewportCtrOr, NB a_,polntmenl LO :>t't', cull ~ ~.~~~w~~~~~~.h:;i 1im--------i )40- 1151 ··~Bl:::l•l4:1~BR::ntis9 ·'·· HERITAGE Monte Vista. C M POTIHTIA&.PLUS •• ES IAI E 846·'289. 3br, l ... ba home ne~a •. --.• LEASE W /OPTION Horse property $800 rent. Rm for 10 hones, make extra money. 2 Bdnn,2ba. 675-1771 "TLC". So. Of Hl3hway Room for 2nd unit $210,000. Call Stephen Meyen. 7~8.520 tftCHARTEA TPAOPERTIES Co1toM ... 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OWMrw/Carry lit TD MES.A VERDE POOL HOME Just 10 lime for ~um mer! This channmg 4 Bdrm home features REALTORS f714 )49ti l<W0,493 0202 IUSIHESS OPPTY Established well locuted 2600 sq rt UJ>&radt.'d beauty salon an 1,>rimt-thruout, up tu 5 Hdr. 2' ~ location. Submit on Bu fully landst·aiH~d terms. . w/pool & f1rcp1t . ltCp. Tout·hstone Realty. lnr ~ldl' y:Hd w 'play arl'a _ 968-~ $103.000 ai.sumabll' loan Fronts Golf Course Santa Ana Country Club lit low ant St85.000 P P Prm onl) '193 21»7 Beautiful 3br by ov. ner HuntlngtOft leach I 040 540.5010 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S5000DOWH 3br CONDO 9:14 mo moves you u1 ~ No qua h Cyan1e' AGT 545 Hl61 MARINER'S COVE huge family room wtlh 4br, I 'iba . hardwoocl bar, s kyli g hts and floors, new paint. 2 Bd 11, Ba. 2 sty condo w attached garagl' Ma fr om beach 111 guarded <'om m Assum(' 10'. loan Ov.nl'r ha :. purthasl'd Jnolh('r S110.soo Wcndy Sitler 759 1221 Hort»or View HCMfte stained glass windows rarpet. drapes. plumb Highly desirable large overlooking beautiful ang. Sll5.<XX> Owner "'II corner lot. Newly de· solar heated pool and he lp with fman r:ng corated family home on spa. And, for the avid Open hou:.e Sat 1Sun fee land. Too man)' photographer, 11 com 10.GPM 683 Senate St amenities to mention. 4 plete dark room with BY OWNER 548 1731 or Br Palenno. $349.000 custom cabmels. sank . 831 91178 R&'M~ R !':Al.TORS Ownr/Agt. 759·1698 separate waler healer, light sealed and ventilat Mesa Verde Jbdrm. 2ba, i---------1 PACESETTER HOME· ed. Beautiful wallpapers sohd financmg $139.500 WANT A HOME? VIEW and levelors t.hruout A By Owner556·7174 But dun'l thank you l'Un $169, 500 in Lagun a unique kitchen wt th afford at Golden West Niguel! 4 Br .• l~ Ba .. 2 cedar skyUght and re REA.LLIVIHG Realtors has d<'~•i.tned u story family home. Rear ceased ltghtrng. Thl'I G111e us a call to se«.> this program that has al living room overlooks customized home u; a "more for your money " lowed many people· to beautiful hills, used must lo see. OHered al home Give your family enJoy homt• ownt'rshap brick floor lo ceiling $199,900. For an appoint enjoyment or their own that never thought tht>y fireplace, huge master menllosee,cul1 S40.ll51 private pool & s pa. l'OUld Cullnowformun• suite with 2 large closets perfectly setup for re details + walk in. built in gas !axing or entertainmJ? Golden West R"r kitchen. family room. with redwood deckmR & <7 14 ) 848 8588 family bdrms complete· ~~~~~~~~~1 gas BBQ Add to this thl' 1 _________ 1 d I 1 _ solid eomforl or a 3 ly seperate on 2n eve · Bdrm 2 Ba home. All for 2 car attached garage, ---------c lots of storage. A must to ASSUME only Sl29,SOO. 556-2660 DUTCHHAVEH Very ioharp 3 llflrm 2 bu home near Hear h and Warner Only $100.900 Call Ron Ort .tt see! Drive by 24500 Los FIMANCIHG Serranos at Niguel Road Te r r 1 r 1 c Io c at 1 o n . &LaHennosa.OpenSat minutes to shopping, 16th, Sun 17th. from 1·5 schools and reereataon or by appt. Over 2200sq fl Separate ORANGE COAS T master bdrm, lovely FIN AN C I ~ L pool En closed REAL TORS <' o u r l ya rd Ask 1 n g Marilyn Dunger $142,SOO. Owners anx 957-<1701 ious, submit all offers ------- Capistrc.o leach I 0 11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEPS TO PIMES, OCEAH VIEW PARK Walk to beach, 3br home ln best Palisades loca· lion. Many extras in· eluded! Call for details. C r eative fin ancing avail JustS17S.OOO. ~ •• ~AllCCJl8:Jll9R::f'Ti SS FE.AL ••mtAIE --" (714)498-100>. 493-0202 Beaut. 180 degree sweep- ing ocean vu add 2nd level & enjoy rare 360 deg. vu. 3 Br 2 Ba, privacy. walk to beach. $209 .000 . Ownr 1·677-6533 Corowa cMI Mor 1022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jasmine Creek decorator home. plan t on green- belt immac. $305.SOO ~814.5 CDMDUPUXES GOOD ANAHCIHG 2 Bdrms + loft w/frplc, welbar in each unit. with great tenants. HOME+ RENTAL lovely 3 Bdrm. front unit with frplc and beamed ceiling plus 2 bdrm unit w/year s lease. CaJl Barbara Glass Century 21/Sandpiper 64()..4950 851-9541 540-1151 , .. s:. HERITAGE . • REALTORS RVMtX Rt.Al.TORS FREE Hot air balloon at Mariner's Park, May 16th 7A M ·3P M Weather permitting CompUments of Robert M1Jliken E Sade lovely 2bdrm home on vcr> Ir~ lot I Beaut c ul de 1>at S14 5.000 Call agl Chnstma al 557 2783 or 646·325S REDUCED $14,000 Beautiful 2 sty. 3 llR. fam rm. lllSlde JCH'UlZI on CdS Sl56.000 Ai.tt 646 4380 PAYMENTS$750 mo Lovely 3 4 br E/S1de hse $110,000. w/81 i r;, Lst 291 Monte Vista. 646·4289 37 ASSUM LO.AH No qualifying, s mall down payments, low in teresl rates. no loan points' 2. 3 & 4BDRM Houses & Townhomes. All m goo<> areas or Orange County GokleftWntRltr ( 714 )848-8588 Two 2 Bdrm houses on one lot W. Costa Mesa C:::. SHE:C T ......, PROPERT IE~ _lcfu\_ •O• ·t NEWPORT HGTS Ranrh style 3 Bdrm + family rm on quiet tree lined st F ahulous financing Call Ball ur Linda 631 ·0884 or 646·5096. MESA VERDE 4Ur. den, beautifully de. corated. $190.000. OPEN SAT SUN I 5 Z7120GANNET DH A gt. 979 5099 3 Bdrm 2•, Ba Townhouse. pvt yard. 2 car auto garage. 3 decks orr bdrms. Crplc in II\ rm & mslr bdrm. :.ep din· 1ng rm & mod kitchen 2 yrs old Comm. pool spa lral·k Close to bus & s c Plaza. sno.ooo. Low down. terms Paul Hll'key 751·8485 Hlkrett B y o wner Thrt•e bedroom 13• ba. Beau ya rd. concrete drive. new floors C:losl· lo everything. Fm. Ava 11. w t 20 per cent dn S129,000. Open Sat-Sun 11·4 1261 Conway. 557-3881 ---- Spacioe & Ll9ht Impressive Uving room highlighted by vaulted eeilmg ! Cook gourmet meals in handy kllchen Master suite w1skyhle for that "open 'n airy .. reeling. Two more bdrms for kids & guests This twnhm is pnced to sell fast! Call now64&-7434 Century 21 Gold Star R.E Profe.ssionak 963-8377 Owner wall h<-lp ranan<t' S pJr klan g t l:Jdrm Sl36.900 l.5<172 Kingstnn Lane Brokt•r K-12 141!1 or 962 6365 OPEN SUH. 1-5 l br Sea llarbor condo w o('t'an vu Prof dN·or Assum loan $124.995 17172 Bluewater Lane HEAi.TY BYWALKEH I 5211 6757 1044 ........•..........••.• DEERFIB.D TOWHHOME SUPER FIHAH. Lo,·ely 3 Bd 2'7 Ba plan J. over 1500 sq rt h.ii. S9i .700 a1>1>umablt-loan at 12', mt Plu1t ov. ner wall rarr) 2nd TD !\o quahf)ang Offert'd al S 139 .500 Fred (; 1 b-,on 559·9400 R&'MtlC RF.Al.TORS Uninnity Parii Heaut1ful 3 Bdrm + bonus room. Julliard model. J?reenbi?lt lo l·a lion Walk lo sc·hool. park & shopping c:ood Hnanrang and term:. FJJll price $159.000 Ask for Mary Donnell. TRADITIONAL REALTY HOMES 6. INVESTMENTS 631·7370 THIHKIHG TOW .... OME? Call the specaah'>ls al the condoman1um an formation <'enter Jasmine Creek decorator Assumable loan OWC ---------I home, plan l , greenbelt lrg 2nd 64().7464 Touchstone Realt~ 963-~ loc. $305.500. 640-814.5. TRIPLEX· Th ree un its with Clreplaces. on a 4S ' Corona del Mar lot. for the price of a duplex. Favorable assumable lBl loan, seller w/carry 2nd. Priced at 1322,000, down payment $80,000. By owner -will cooperate. 675-3141 SOUTHOFHWY Cozy 2 Br. Home. 1 block from Ocean Blvd. $225,000. Bernita Ellertsen, Broker, 675· 237 3 or 77().8598. Cameo Shores Camden Dr .. 3 BR, deo, 3 Ba. 3 car gar. 600' entry w/retractable roof. Call Two Long1, 760· 1397; 8'73-7761 SPYGLASS CITY •OCUHVU lmmac. 5 bdrm home. $640,000. lSCV. down. Al· a ume 11l TD. OWC balance at 12%. By owner, 96:M7li8. PIX• Sbr, l~b• bome neech "TLC". South o f Hiabway. Room ror 2nd unll'. uo.ooo. Call SUphen Meyen. tACHARTEA TPAoPEATIES EA.STSIDE Pnde of ownenih1 p. 3 BR 2 Ba. fpl c. bl 1n 's Woodland school dbl gar. w /opener. Sl49.SOO Agt. 642-4447 Nice 3br Home by Owner. Assume S70K at 9~'7, lsl T.D. Pnce Sl<l>,000. Call 646-8082 COLLEGEP.ARK AREA Super nu:e home on cul· de-sac st. 3Br+fam rm FRESHLY PAINTED m & out. Two beautiful fireplaces. paneling Motivated seller Priced right. Open Sat 12·4. at 2512 Duke Place . Cheshire Realty 759·1877 * *WOODBRIDGE LANDING Fabulous J M Peters Landan~ Plan '1 Magn1fi<'e nt patio w/privalc spa Co7.y fireplace l.n master s uite w Ila vish adjoining bath Huge country kitc·hrn ana Point 1026 w/every amenity. Of • •••• •• •••••••••••••••• re red at S315.000. Owner EASTSIDE OCEAN VIEW LOT will help with finuncinR AbonDanaHarbor [Ul)ui... d ... Id , 100/ ASSUMABLE v. ~ere, plans, pennit 3. ~i n'''' "' 9C /0 . minutes to Dana Realcu Owner will help rinance. Harbor. 3000 SQ fl home 3Bdrm2balh.spa.Only Will surbordinate 551 ·3000 SlZ7 ,900. ~9161 Sl35,000 7141898-76<17 lt?t 81rr1nr» Pk14 \. lr11lnt' . OPEN HOUSE RE Al TY / IASTSIDI DUrLIX Both lr1 a B<lnn units, never vacant. Great 1t.arter investment with onl1 15~ down. Offered at Sle0,950. Motivated teller. Call now. ~0.3666 Whelan Real Estate' Beaut l1e ranch nyle •br. 2ba, 2000' VA tetma, aa· 1um 5.lf. tGK owe at 12~. Sl.37,500. MS. 'TC»l IMVISTOI MOTIVATID NO DOWN Bach. Fla Total Seeuri· tr Condo. Stoa. ooo. t71·0U3. '""'• I 044 Classified ~ds. your one ••••••••••••••••••••••• stop sbopptng center FORMY Mopa HOMI WITH VflW 4 BR, l ·s t ory Turtle Rock Pr~ident Home situated on choice lot. Assumable loan -creative financ ing possible. $294,500. Lorraine Reid 551-8700 (1·11 > !ft&L mtlJ& 'IOU.L UflllMJ!m arnn o.msiw VllllCJ' CllmG' ~ VU1* 0.0.... ~~INIDrM 4'79t ~~ 1toMe.CA~ llT\l'lll e&91m4 ------· ' ~ """"' •.... ......... --,......,...,. ~· ........ ,. ··""' •• -.....-• • ,. "'t .,, -·······~ .. UNIV. PAii Lrg 4 Bdnn v-, Ba home an presl1g1ou1 Umv Park, st~ps from pool &c greenbelt Auumiable hn1tnrmg Call for de t111l11 --'"; HANC ll ~ IHl\l l Y \iii ~.~ 1 20 00 WOOOIRIDGE con AGE Uodega Plan, 2Hr. 2l:Ja . fam ily rm. tomer lol, ass umable al l3 '. SlS8.900 5Sl I Ul3 L~r~~~~~o£~~~!r ang t Bdrm. 21 2 Ba in Irvine's Colon) Club W Jlk to tomm pool. ten n1:. courts. school:.. shop pang Priced to sl'll Call ror det<11ls e RANCH RE.A LT Y 551 2000 SPECTACULAR LAKEFROHT Woodbridge luxury at its rane:.l Views rorevcr Flexible r1n C1nl'1ng $354 ,000 Call Lynn Noah Town & CCM1ntry Realtors 552-1800 UHICf>UE Full} detal'h<'d C.:<1m bndl!e mdl. h<1ek up tv park on coml.'r lot' llug1· II\ ani: rm w ma1>s1ve frplc· O\ erlk-. sunn} atnum Fnnl dananJ(. IRe kllt h. 3 Bdrm. 2 car l(ii r Walk to pool. !>pa tennL-. llurr } pra t ed a t Sl38.000 Town & Cowttry Realtors 552-1800 LOOK WHAT WE FOUND lnnedable rand. ~ood ICJ('at10n ne<1r park A large .i bdrm. 212 ba Plan 4 m Northwood Pl<1 c:e l mmal'ulale throuJ?hout Ct-ram11: tile entry, beige carpeting and nll·e wallpapers Exten!.111e bnl'k ;,and re me nl patios Luw 111 lere:.l assumablt loan S25R.900 ' ' '+513 CAMPOS Dl· IRVIHE TURTlEROCK Garden Hume Hy Hren. 3Br . library. family rm. rorm;.al dining rm. 2 Crplcs. over 2500 i.q rt ,\ssumablt-loan al 'J 7 Ii', or new loan at 12', 115 Salvcrfem !151 90'J!l Open House Sat 'Sun 10·6 Lrg 2 Br 2 Ba, dbl gar. Univ Prk "Bradley" Sl26.900. owe Agt 870 7870 Res. 970.2241 Orange Tree Condo. Plan S, 2 br I ba Sl03.500 Call 552 75S2 after 7pm La9una Bead9 I 048 .•..................... THESHAICES W ea thered cedar shakes, that IS. Custom designed 3 bdrm. fam rm. 2 baths. Extensl\'<' use o r wood glass &o ceramic tile Beam cetl mg. frplc $165.000. M issaon Really t7 14)494·<T73l. New wood glass. s pa. solar. 6 decks. views Dea c h 1 V1llage S495.000PP 494 7631 STEAL! WHITEWATER VIEW 3 Bd 2 Ba, room ror pool Low down. Lease option $270,000. 540-3666 Whelan Real Estate UMOISTRUCTED-. . ocea n views. A fabulous building site In a quiet area. The pnce of this double sized wooded lot Includes plans & permits for a 3SOO sq. ft. home . $205,000. MYSTIC HILLS A beaullfull1 main tained custom home on a large lot. Superb ooean views & Catalina sun· sell. 3 bdrms, 2 baths. Seller may help finance. YOUCA.HHAVE lovely ocean & 1'11llstde views from this 3 bdrm, 2 bath home on a large lot. Sellera ma1 help with tlnanclna. $3115,000. ~1trtter ~'-.... ~----HfMf("tMI\ C714t 4'4·1117 1 • J ., I ll ·• ~ Ii ------------........ -.. Orange Cout OAIL Y PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 Bl ...........••.......•...••.•••••.....•... , •.......•.•....................................... ~~.~~.~~ ..... !~!~ ... ':~~ .... !.'.~ ~~~~ ... !!~! ~!'r.!~~ ... !!.~! ••••••••••••••••••••••• s.ttl A• I OIO L. ....................... ott.er l..tW. fw I e.4 _IHwt u.t...._4 U.fw m•1• L • 1 un a cb armer ILUFFS CONDO ............................................. ~······················· ...................... . OPE~~<?}'SE ~!.'!r.!!? .. ! .... ~~~~!'!:~.?!~. ~~~~~ ....... ?~!~ ~~! ............ ?~~ fll0,000 2 blka lo beach Beautiful Blwra condo l Br 41n-4128.A1enl. w /1paclou1 wrup n 11round patao. 1-;nd unit Gd, fldanctn1. 3Br, pool, A,flU VAUIY Br •Den Condo Purn. Charmina Duple11et, 2Br •IMTALS OCIAH VIEW n I Dclortlfl plan w/3 bdrm, DU"-DFIX!ltl ewnar/ V.::Jt1ach 211ba Open Sat /Sun, 1pa. 3221 S. Manitoba. NHr new •·Plex, 2 I 1 2 O O Per mo . lDa. 21171 Or1m1e Ave: 2br IV. ba. $.$5-0 Agt547·706a;975·0.48 bdrm, 2 bath each unit 7l41338·26U. Avail lmmed. 2107~ 2br 2bit 1775 Bnng your p1tlnlbrush & r -l2 5pm . .00 V\.Sta Quin· l»-oom to save $$Son lbls ta •Creative financing By Ownt'r. OWC att:t% 3 ;!\~/i~~~~ ~nac.!!:1 L•1•• 1eecJ1 J 141 ~ran1;3 A~7M A~a:I 3 br 2 ba t800 Br, 1~ Ba., rrptc, dbl s165000 Bill Grund ••••••••••••••••••••••• ay mo 1 . 3br 2ba l l.250Furn dirty dawg! ! Prime L• uv1.1lhtble. $249,500. By q una Beach duplex 0 ~ Owner 76(>,6028. aar •New Pl&int & t•upet Rltr : 675:~1181 y ' Walk t.o buch. 2 Bdrnu, l laal, $300 Sec. Will s how, 4br. 2ba $725l.a.ke fo'orut 751·8065 · ba , leaae 1650 /m o . M ay 17lh. 1 5pm w /attached 1ua1e. Sub n/ mil offer! 759 1501 0 1 Ctlan l'O Fresh pa111t, nu carpel/· 752·7373 drapca, makes lhlll ~e. OtherRHUst.h DUrLU-N.I . Aaent.~7 966 6720 dys, 962 0088 Near beach, two 38r un .... _ Eve Its 2 car gar nr purk ..-wport leocll l 169 -- . -TSL J.NVSTMT 842•1603 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba pat10 home, --=-Walker I laa REAL ESTATE YOU CAN AFFORD this ocean view cwtlum an a n executive area. Large vaew d ecks beautirul home. 3 Br 2h ba, den OnJy 315,00 LCICJUM Vllage R.E 497°1761 DIAMOND INTHEROUGH Two story charm home on large H2 lot Otrers pnvacy. close lo beach with expuns1on pote n tial Gues t quarte rs Beamed ceilmgs, frplc. Ass umable Js t F' P S210.000. MOVE IN COHOmOH EnJoy thtS ocean view 3 Bdrm, 2 ba home Finish the bonus room as a fa m 1 ly project Enter laanme nt patio Lush landscap1ng. $245,000 497-5494 udy to move 111 Weatchff ••••••••••••••••••••••• home a mu.st &ee 4 ~r 3 Moba. H..t UDO ISLE charming 3 beaut. decorated, walh U ..... IT~C bdrm. 2 bath, playroom. atrlurn Near s.c Phau '""' ~ .M. Juat remodeled. $1650 & Irvine lndustnal area 14 units, E·aide, pool, mo to mo. BIU Grundy, $750 per mo. 731·4710 or Bu , pool ~ Sot/Sun For Saa. I I 00 This 5000 Sq. Ft; I lome sits on Linda Isle. A private guarded Community in the heart of Newport Beach. Boat slips for (3) 55' -70' Yachts. For Sale or Trade. l 5 1612 Lincoln Ln. ••••••••••••••••••••••• U niv e r se Realty . Real Doll Ho use lrlr 752·0207_ _ __ w cabana. aldl park. 101/t '?c linancing 675-6161 731·4991 Satt Clt1Mlde 1076 Pnn cipalsonly ~3070 •••••••••••··~··••• 48 'x 10' expando , at 8 units, near new ho~ew/7 rentals We are developers so submit land or other Real £state to owner Jim Thompson. beach. 2 Br Good cond. 118,000. 8an.k loan or 18000. 673-0365. 645-8474 Greg. TSL lnvestmenta 642·1603 M.l .TRIPUX Bag Canyoo Condo 3br. decor a tor rum, view' pool , tennis. l s e 11800/mo. 64().6999 2 MOB1LEHOMES IN LIDO PARK ---2 Bdrm, 2 bath from C7141128-1280 l21ll 591-1363 CAREFREE LlVING Localed close to schools & shopping and within walking distance t.o the public tenru.s courts, this Cllblom 4 bedroom 2"t bath home is perfect ror carefree family living. SJ79,000 498-4950 28' Layton with Cabana in Newport Beach. Across the Marina. $6,500 cash. 714/653·500J 150 fl from sand Reduced to S279K l175K on 30 yr auumable loan ut 131/.%. No costs. o w e 114/898-7607 S650 Nr waler Waterfront Homes , Realtors, Inc. 631-1400 ask for Dan tlOOI 352-3710 Sec luded 3 Br, s pa . decks. beams, fam Xlnl l" o n d 0 W C I 2 •·; $190,000. 645·1496. Forek)n ln•ntonl Cash luyen! W11terfront condo. Multi Mllhon S View 40' s hp avail. $400,000 a:.s uma ble Call now• 673-0048. BIG CANYON Custom I Sift Fairway Newly listed 6 bedroom11 M m m aan house I. l'--i baths, family room biliiard room, large breakfast room and a ve r y pri vat e p ool Comple tely sepa r a t e OCEAMHOHT $450,000 This first time ofrcrang is an estate sale One of Newport Beach's rinest views 3 bdl-ms home with guest apt or 2 units. Healonom1t•s 675 6700 e bi£1.00 -------- ART ISTS RETREAT 2Br , 2Ba, den, sunny porch, wlk to Bch & stores. Agt. 493-8240 Acreag. for Sale 1200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• San Diego Rancho Santa Fe. bordenng excl~1ve Fairbanks Ranch Dev. 172 acres, lentalive map DOCK YOUR IOA T ready to present to Cly. VERSAILLES 2BH, oen AT DANA MARINA 80 potential estate sates MAKE AH OFFER! 5 Income Properties Easts1de Costa Mesa 20'H. down Owner will carry Priced to sell ' WESTCUFF 3 Bdrms, available July 1 1900 sq fl., neutral tones. seasonal or year· ly Sl150 a month. Call Ll2, 642-5200 Park Lido 3 Br 212 Ba. Condo. Frplc, patio , pool. Non smoke rs . Owner to occupy I Br. 1450 673·2181. ---view. low dwn, no quull Be home in minutes w /lake. 140,000 pr ac. ryinl( S140K . 7:10 2270 beautiful custom w/aU Terms avail. 7141755 115 714 641 0763 Ho111es Ullfwnilhed dys 642 2682 eve:. the amemtaes Pror de· 51 Gunther Rlty. Box 2925 l'ollege Avt• ••••••••••••••••••••••• BIG CA MY OH cor 180 deg views . 3 Br 3 l62 Solana Beach l'o!>l a Mtis:i C'A Gueral 3202 b ba + $525,000. A-rfment5 •• • • • • • • •• •• •• •• • • • • •• • 4 Bdrms 3 a, large pool LOCJunaYlllocJe R.E r.-----Garden Grove. $885. 3 Br. Intimate j a c uzzi off 497-1761 forSale 1300 17 U..._.ITS 2 Ba. Fireplace, new master Sult d lots f ••••••••••••••••••••••• " e an ° 9 ocean view apts. 8 paint , stove, rerrige, huiltms 111cluded 1n this S J Rent covers paymnt, ts d 2 an MOR ·d h gh 8 · comm'I, underground carpe . rapes, car ram1ly home nestled un C ist-I 078 avo1 a mt. units parking eleval"r, rron· garage. 213/464-SOJJ a quiet 1·ul de-sac Exc·el ap ·--CM 1310,000. lo<7r down "' r1nanc1ng o~nl'r IS ••••••••••••••••••••••• o w e 14 "1 Owner 'r.3rf~e0Lag~:s1~c~t7o~· ,;lboal11and 3206 -------- For lease beaut. 3 br 2 ba. home, large llv rm .. frpl e , dining , ram al y /ktlcben, util ho()lt. up +tee maker , large patlO & rncd yrd., Gardener furn. I family only 1st & last mo + cleaning & damage No pets. S695/mo. 549·0185. E. Side, 2 br + den, frplc 1450, l sl & last mo rent. 642·8674 3 Br l \'2 Ba. dshwshr, frplc, dbl cur gar, lrg rec rm, encl backyard, nice urea. $700. Marguerite 540-3666 Condo for lease. $625/mo. 2 Br 2 ba. dbl gar IHO Woodpine Dr Facing Woodpme Park Open Sal 1·4 pm. 2131433·5433 EnJOy lovely view from tlus custom decorated 2 Bd + den 2 Ba home. Spacious llv rm w/frplc. formal d1111ng area. Eat· Ill lt.1tchen, dbl selr clean oven + dshwshr. Patio, comm pool, Jae, tennis Onl y $650/mo. Ca II 559·0378 an 5:30 PM or wknds WOODBRIDGE Beaut almost new 3 Br 3 Br 1,.., Ba condo, house. 2 ba. liv, drn, S645 1mo incl all dub f r P I c· · d b I g a r • membership privileges front/back yard w 1lawn & maant 545 5438, service. Next lo park 2 731·2680 year lease Marned cou------ pie. Non smokers No LagtMa leach 3241 pets S750/mo 1s t & ••••••••••••••••••••••• las t $200 securit y 2bdrm.2ba,v1ew.walk lo 751·7328. bea ch, town , schools . ------Laundry + gar. Yearly· 3 bdrm , 2 ba, fen ced yd. 2 $2500 'mo /sum mer. car gar Nr Placentia $ 9 O O m o wint e r $500. 754·7425 F u r n u n r u r n 3 Bdrm , 21/2 bath townho~e. pvt yard, 2 (2 06 1858 ·6773 , 1714)548 Ollll ___ _ Laguna Hiiis 1 OSO guest /teen or in la w quarters with 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• bedroom!>. full bath and motivated S799.000 Call **EXEC HOME (2131431·4432 540-3666 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 640 7665or675-2311 Agt. Over 3lOOsqfl.3 Bdrms. CH,eteryloh/ Whelan Charmin g 3Br. 2Ba, H ... RI-RIDGE den with wet bar, formal I Cry.,,. 1500 frplc. palto, lndry, gar, car auto garage. 3 decks Large wood & glass 3 br off bdrms, frplc in hv rm 21, ba, ram1ly rm , 2 car & mstr bdrm, sep. din-garage, ocean/cunyon mg rm & mod kitchen 2 view No pets. $1025/mo. yrs o l d . C omm . Sierr a Mgmt C o . pool ts pa /track. Close to 641 1324 SPECTACULAR VIEW it's own hvmg room , ln P rivate,securcd com <plumbed for a full A ""' ,.... NO PETS. S950mo. yrly. 3 Br J Ba Assume least' h\'lng room & dining I••••••••••••••••••••••• Real Estate 675·0349 o ptio n $20K do wn room Fireplace an huge Harbor Lawn, Costa __ _ ---- AgentStevc752-1920 mstr suit~ANDmfami· Mesa. 4 adj. lots l C.M.Tri·Plex.near park. lalboaPlftinwla 3207 mun 1 l y . La ti u n a kitchen ) Ext'lusive with Meadows . Professional <:o te Re alty at SI 7 ly decorated, 3hr, 2bu. l Million l•--------- s p a • d f' c k • r u I I y '* ,, JASMINE CREEK furni s h ed , o r un Cote Realty Ncw orrerm~!Oncofthc rua ni s hed . b r o k ~r & ln\'t>Slmt•nt must tastl•fully dccoral- owned , 851 3851 640•5777 ed home11 m the area 2 B drm , 2 b.ith . 2 r1rcplaces, den. formal dining Add to lha t . 11k y ll g hh a nd nC'wly landscupcd rear }ard with s pa! Owner wall l"arry Sl50,000 Price. $275.000 C al l K e n Kna.iht fo r details La91Ma NNJ-1 I 0521-------•I ••••••••••••••••••••••• AW ARD WIHMING ASSUME AT JO~ ... , Unique foxglovt> model in Lake Park 2Br, Den. 2Ba Vaulted ceilings, frPnch doors Pror de s igned land!>l·a p e $1 54,900 Open houst' 1 6pm Sat 1S un PP 831· 7634 or759·2465 N~wport leach I 069 ........••............. WESTCLIFF Price reduced + seller wall carry lrg 2nd. Total· I} remodeled 3 Bd 3 2 Ba Purchase pnce $279,900 Assume lst, $104,000 at 10.2..S'it . OWC SOK 2nd al 12<: for 9 yrs Ask for Darrell Pash 631-1266 R&'MtlC REALTORS HARIOR VIEW HOME "Montego" 4br. 2ba, f'ee Land , loa n assum 675·2139 LIDO IA YFROMT Custom country French 6 bdrm, 6 bath home wilh pier & slip Spec· ta c ular view from buyside brick terrace. Features prov1dt' elegant charm. Call to· day. Redhill~Rcalty Iii:~ 1:wo Waterfront D .... x With loaf Dodt ('ould be Newpo rt's lowest priced waterfront home wilh income unit l oo! Call for info Broker , 963-8182 IR VINE TERRACE POOL&VIEW A cozy 3 bd rm home with formal dining rm and pool Highly expan· dable vi<'w of harbor and ocean. A great listing al only $335,000. Owner will c arry 2nd TD ror 1100,000. 644-7211 /JD.NIGEL GAILEY & J\5SUCIAfES "Versailles" Condo 2br, 2ba, ocn view, 1185,000 lease option possible. 642·S465 OCEAN VIEW IN HAUOIYllW 'l'his lovel.Y 3 bedroom home In original Harbor View 1111111 has been com,Plctely remodeled for your moll dls- crimlnat111a tastes With ocean view, pool, and profo tslo nal l y landscaped yard• tbll will be a Joy ror your summer entertain ing plan1. Well priced at $345,000 D.M.McnW '""'"' YaSAll'S Beaut. 2 BR 2 Ba condo. Luxurlowbi appotntod, can •fmt ror details. MMJT· SUPERB! 5 Bdrm. entertainer s delight. Seller will hsten to a II creative financ-mg pro posals Somm£'rsel model on fee land r!!R~~4~~ H.ITRIPLEX I 5 0 ft f x om s and Reduced to S279K $175~ on 30 yr. ai.sumable loan al l3' •.No l"OSts. OWC 71418!18-7607 WHITEWATER VIEW oo· lo beach. 10"1, assum loan. May take note on your prop as down 4 BR 2 Ba. recently upgraded, w /possible in·law citrs. Under $290,000 melds land Move fast! 752 6499 Plan Ill Realty ----- 642-5200 MEWPORTHGTS 1 Bdr. pool, j11c·. lri; family rm. wet bar, l'Or · ne r loc at1on $250.000. 540 3666 Whelan Real E~ate I Br Vctsa11les pe n thouse Im ported tale thru out $122.000 TSL Properties 642·1603 IJ'!IMACNAB ~~- r ALA TIAL ELEGANCE IN DOVER SHORES! Magnifice n tly designed 5BR French Regency and G r eek classic s tyle residence. 5600 sq.ft. of living space. Rare marble. hand carved doors and formal gardens overlooking the bay and formal entr y courtyard w /pool $1.900,000 incL land. Barbar a Aune 642·8235 0 -12) LINDA ISLE LAGOON! Well designed 4BR traditional on corne r location w /bay on two sides! Circular staircase , marble (pie, fam ily rm and upstairs play room. Slip for two 55' boats. Appt. only. $1,850,000 le asehold. Cathy Schweickert 642·8235 (1·13> LARGE FAMILY HOME! Spaciously built custom home m Baycre~t. 5BRS, family rm and terrifi c poo l a nd o utdoo r entertainment area. Owner will assist w /financing. $439,500. Tom or Terry 642·8235 (1-14 > UlVINE TlltRACE Terrific 3BR pool home close to beaches & Newport Center. Corner focation. $329,500 leasehold. Tom Allinson 642·8235 (I-LS) NISTH~IOUS lltVlte l&ltAClt 3BR home on large lot in super locati o n . Terrific financing. $259,0QO. Coby Ward 642-8235 (1-16) ,RIME PIMINSULM>UPLDI SB R, 2 bath duplex l"" blocks from the ocean . Fantastic investment for winter or summer rental. $259,000 lncl. land. Low down an.d owner will carry on AITD. Sharon Smith 644~6200 0 -17) TOUL IDfafO!il U!llllODa ••WiWii' UACll oat °""" °"'" ~ .... o.r-~ "-11. OA llleel) llMON "'"'* ~ ll"tlWPOI\ ~CA 9'eGO I ly room CalJ for details. Ac a c ia Area , reas. s189.000. OWC w/25'7. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 551 3000 597·4188 ___ __ down. Bkr 9'79-4383 Steps to bay/ocean 4br, bus & S.C. Plaza. $775 La91A'ta Hllh--3250 ""'\)db ridge Realty 551 ·3000 1920 l\arranra l'k,.}. In In,. ConuMrcial --------den, 2i..:.ba. 2decks p rty 160 Industrial/ Sl250/lse 675 3268 .... ":.'!!............... Property 2100 Ca-..lstrano leach 32ta •••............••••...• .... HEW CENTER LAGUNA IEACH 9°/o CAP. Canyon industrial bldg ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Br 2 Ba. luxunous & lov ely, no pets. 1750 M ajortenants. Xlnt M i5· near town & art festival As s umable financ ing . s 1on Viejo location. grounds. 9600 sq. rt fulJy Best 4 Br value m beach Trades accepted Full leased. Gross annual m· community $127.000. pr ice$6,000,000 comeS54,000. 493-0467 Corona def Mer 3222 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lin go R E Dennis Agent714/644·93l5 Realonom1cs 675-6700 4blks tobeach.3Br.2Ba. 498·4950 ·--------•Loh for Sale---2200 New crpt, fresh pamt. ----$895. 642·52SO. 51/2ACRES VIEW The perfect sate for your estate Overlooking San C-2LOT 50X 105, Newport Blvd., near 17th 1100,000. Roy McC... Rlr. 548-7729 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW LOCJ19M1 leock m o Paul H ac k ey ••••••••••••••••••••••• 7518485 HOME FOR RENT Eastside 2 Br. 1 Ba. 3 Bdrm S600. Fenced enclsd yard, garage. yard & garage. Kids & Avail. 1mmed. $535 + pets welcome. 964 2566 $350 secunty de posit. or97J..2971 Agt 'no fee. 673·6607 _ LaglA'ta N&g.1 3252 2 bdrm w/gar. $500/mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2052 Pomona Av Days Three bedroom. 2 ~a. . Fenced yurd F1pc Kids 544 6450, eves837-5009 & pets welcome. S700 Mesa Verde/beau. 2000 mo 495·3147 ___ _ sq rt 4 br, 2 ba. atnum. Misslc>n V'-io 3267 new paint, new c pt , ••••••••••••••••••••••• landscapmg Close to HOME F'OR RENT schls & freeway $850 J Bdrm $575 Fenced m o Avail July l yard & garage Kads & Jua n C apis trano -~~~~~~~~~~ private yet only minutes · fro m town Ho rses permitted. No financmg problems S650.000 $170,000 wilh S90.000 s ub· ordin allon. 90' rrntge . gentle slope. Allan Heller. Bkr. 714/851 8<l>O JASMINE CREEK Bea ulirully upgraded Plan 5. 3 bdrm. 2"'2 bath, ramily, air cond .. plan· talion shutters, some o c ean view . very private . Vacant & re ady. OnlyllJOO mu. 546-0480 pets welcome. 964 2566 MESA VERDE 4 BR 2 or 97J..2971.Agt.'..'nofee. bath, double garage. NewportlHch 3269 171 41 673-4400 121 ll 621-2121 ' IJI\ 1'1'111 Ill ll.11 ltnr hl\t•,11111·111 f 11 Condomhth•1/T own- ho11H1 for.. 1700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R·I WhitewaterVu Harbor Ridge, lease opt., Great terms, subord assumable 10.750. 3 BR J 7141492·8320 Ba. loft, pool, spa, leo· 8 p ..._ U . . nis. $550,000. Close Jan u~na a .... 14 nit s.1te 1, 1982. 759-8903 with plans. permits f(::<n.f111a def .Alall .~tf«,.) 67.J-l.///.9~ ----engineermg. $268 ,000. 2 Bdr m . 2 ba. 2 car Submit offer Corner In· .. 243s E. CoHt Hwy., CdM garage. Low interest d1ana and Whitaker rates Assumable loan. John W. Saunders Real· princ only. Days (714) ty 848·4002 523·1391 Eves (7 14 ) M bia...H 760·3675. 0 --- lmmac. 3br, 2ba, jac. frplc. gar , $895 /mo. 673·5-069 or 673-2869 ---~ Part& 2300 Corona del Mar Santa Ana I 080 Du&::'::SJ'. 180 ••••••••••••••••••••••• <lrvine Terrace) Mag •• ••• •••. ••• •••• •••• ••• •••. • ••• ••••••••••••••• Mmt Sel 180 degree vaew. Custom IRADFORD CONDO Beautirully located on park like greenbelt j~l a short walk to the pool. $55,000 assumable loan of 9V..o/c mleresl. Private patio and 2 car gara~e. Only $99,500 644-721 I lnmmac '78 Holiday 32 home. Min 1 yr lease. 3 FOuttPUX H. Adlt Pk Costa Mesa. bdrm. 3 ~ ba. Liv. rm., $4000 DoWWI 113,500 w/ shed. $90 rent. DR., den, maids rm. Bil Mo•Hyoalid P/P Licl!MW9964. (714 ) around atrium wt pool. OWC Jason 847.8935 646--9546 or831·7585 By owner. 13,500 Mo Ca ll Collect <2 12) OCEANf'RONT dlx TJ,n.Sho~al 572 ·4230 o r (203) duplex l'.'lB , Xlnt loc., •• ~~~••••~•••••~~.~~ 637·4846. ___ __ hn., price. Pvt ply.Wanllo huntdeer&elk . Charming 2 br, 2 ba 673·7873, 673-7677 vacation '" Montana? w lfrp. No pets. Lease Would like to sell S700mo.7591243. lmmed. occpy. 1750 mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Agl. 642·5200; 673·4396 SPYGLAS.SLEASE evs 4 Bdr + maid's qtrs. Mesa Verde 3 Br 2 Ba. Gardener. $7001mo Lease option a v ail. 556·7174. MESA VERDE. 3 Br. 2 ba. elec. kitch, dbl gar Encl fronl Married cpl $675 mo. 1st last + $150 sec Days &olS-2284 , e ves 556-8643 • E Side 2 br, renced yd, gar, crpts, drapes. Kids OK , no pets. 1435/mo. 675-0169 I Br. with st.ove, covered allacbed parking S400 mo. 536·2456or536-7979. beaut. decor. super vu. balcony off mstr s uite $2000/mo. Bob & Dovie Koop. A~l. 631-1266 __ SPYGLASS LEASE 3 Bd, formal dining, ram rm, lrg yard, 2 frplcs. $1600/mo. Bob & Dovie Koop Agt 631-1266 __ BIGCAHYOH Exclus ive. fulJ security. beautiful 3 Br 3 Ba Pnvate yard, wet bar & firepla ce. many other amenities includin g Maids room. $1450 mo. Call Antteony wkdys 642·5757 eves & wknds. 644·8889. DMa Point 3226 3 Br. 21, Ba. Condo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ocean view $800/mo •Close lo marina 3bdrm . Ask for Ron. 752-5111. Income Prope-rty 2000 ~ ..................... .. s • Exec. Spyglass Home I For sale or trade. Owner will lease back $640,000. ownership in vacation condominium al Fair· mont Hot SprinJs. Anaconda, MT. This lS 1 week (44lh l which is Nov. 6·Nov 13 Just right to make this a base for hunting big game nearby. <Reasonable) JASMINE CREEK 3Br, 2ba home $1600/mo l hba . frplc . ya r d . $600/mo Townhouse. Exec 495-4486. • Vu. COZY CAPE COL> 3Br 2ba . ram rm . 5 19 M arguerlte. 644· 1395 or HuntinCjtoft leach 3240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPYGLASS HILL 3 Bdr, formal dm , fam rm, 2 fireplaces, lrg yard $1600/mo. Bob & Dovie Koop. 631 1266. i\gt. 2 Bd 1 ~ Ba condo nr So. 10 % down . ()W C balance. 963-4759. Co ast Plu a, lower. 1 _________ _ SANTIAGO OR. patio, 24 hr sec. bldg. $86,900. Assum. $53.250 w/tl.37%. Consider sml 2nd T D Ownr 894·2592 NEWPORT BEACH Call 1·406-745-4431 or w r i t e to : Gale n L a-<//'etd/ ~ REA L ESTATE J.44 ·6397 110 Newport Cntr Dr, NB 5 blks lo ocean Elegant 2 bdrm , ram rm & den. ($750 mo.) Plush crpts, 2""2 ba. cedar & glass. Dbl car pvt gar, folly maint. yd. Adults. no pets. lnqwre at 527 18th. Sl. 7 l 4 /960-6331 Beautiful house avail now in elegant area. 4 Br 3 Ba Dinmg Rm, Living Rm & Family Rm. New wallpaper. cozy kitchen & many many xtras. Children & For sale, condo 3 BR, Woodside Village Open House, Sun. May 17 2521 W Sunfl-Ower Untl G·l , Dys , 213 785-7236; evs, wknds. 213-999·1622 L>UPLEX Prid e of Owne rship. Low, low down. with xlnt financ- ing. Call Owner/Agent Ron 752-5lll. NEARLY NEW CONDO: 2 bedroom in MacArthur Village. Loads or rec re a · taonal f aci l ities . C,,mplele sec urity. Close to South Coast Plaza. All oHers beard. $99,500. TARBELL. REALTORS. 540-1120 Prime Proaerties TRIPLExE!in CdM. Ocean side or hwy. Three lo choose from DUPLEXES on Balboa Peninsula Two to choo$e from. DUPLEX on lhe waler wllb boat dock. FOURPLEX In Foun· lain Valley. All large assumable l oa n s . All owners motivated. For detalJed info call C /21 Newport c....... 640.5357 760-67'7 Simonson, Rte 1, Box 73A . Sl. Ignatius, MT 59865. Large 2 bdrm, ramily rm J on large lot. Some ocean ~roo~~ 255 view. 11100 mo. Agent, ,.. r-• •r • 673-5354. .. . .. .. .............. .. ---------- lBr Condo, pool. clbhse, tennis. $375 mo. 1st last + 1200 dep. 768-7633 2 Bdrm, 1 bath rental. 14200 per year incom e. $15,000 down. Apple Va l ley. Sale price 152,000. Ownr/A gt 641·2003. Costa Mesa 3224 3br, 2ba. DR, frplc. dbl ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar.Walktobeach.$675. Secluded 2Br. lBa patio 642·3743, 962-nss . ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l102 ••••••••••••••••••••••• home, pool, adlts, no pets, $500 mo. 2453 Orange Ave, see Mgr Apl B. 751·2787 I Br, 2Br & Jtm.ior. 2 Ten- nis crts. pool, jac, sauna, sand volleyba II, pool tble . AduJt sorry. no peta. 635 Baker, CM 557·0075. oc .. viliwl fftt"'"*lla••tk! WALICTOPOOl Executive home • up. or sun on the deck. 3 graded. $2000mo. bdrms, 2 baths, spacious 4 Br. 3 Ba no smokers. Covered spa , clean. Near E d ison H .S . Sl OOO/mo 714/895 3300 Avail. immed pets OK 7_59_-8_!17_4_. __ _ SPYGLASS HILL 4 Bdr + maid's qtrs, beaut. decor. Super vu. Top or S pyg l ass .• · $2000 /mo . K oop . 631-1266. Agt. ·. ... WestcllH 3 Br. 2 Ba. ,. Family home. new cond, ~~ gar:Jener, no pets. $795. ':j. Avail. now. 646-2389. ;) ..... t OH ~OLFCOURSE View 3 Br. 3 Ba.+ Oen & Bar. $1100. 645-7605 or ~ ,, 646· 1713. ? 673-0248 condo with 1unny decor. 3 Blks to beach. Elegant new 3 bdnn, 2 tons. 2~ bath r amily room w tr pie. ProressionalJy decorated & landscaped. Obie gar with opener. $950 mo. Adlts only. (7 14 )892 ·8302 , ( 114 ) 96(). 2501. l•llteH Property I 400 ...... , fltopertf 1400 $825 mo. Call Barbara at ••• •••• •••••••••••••••• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• I~ l.a.d l 106 Battetl Realty, 6'2·5200. 3 Br town home HARBOR RIDGE Ocean ~ View. Lux. 3 Br. 3 Ba. ~ Lge Mast.er suite, den, "L" wet bars, t p., tennis, ~ pool, jac., 11900/mo. NEWPORT OFFICE BUILllNG AIRPORT AREA 15,000 SQ FT $1,200,000 LEASED LAND WESTERN TERRAIN, INC. . (114) 54S.1480 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $550 675·4078, 549.9(1119. ~ Yearly cute cottaae. 3 Br. MIW Jla W ~rLC 963-7177, SSH889 2 Ba. Sept.1875.Mo. 209 Bullt·lna. A ults, no Downtown 2 Brbeach col· BIG CANYON LEASE ~ Carnet. 14MB93. pet.a. M2·cm5. t875/Mo. taae, lllra Ira yrd , 3 Bdr 3 Ba, formal din· lng, pool. hot tub. vu. t very abarp. $2000/mo. • Bob & Dovie Koop. Aat ; 631 L266 Coreee .. M.r Jl22 Cute condo 2 Bdrm, no $545/mo. Mr. Smith ••••••••••••••••••••••• pet1. $525/mo. Donna. 536·l453 TWoa.•• •T Rich• rdaon Rea ltora.H --1-k-nt _____ _ -7 ... 5e00, 837-5818. -...... SUMM•UMTALS H....._ 1242 THE BLUFFS l level 3 Ea c I! w l t h t ti r e e S Br. 1 Ba. House, new •••••••• ••••••••••••••• 8 hi hl d d bedrooms, two balhl. On palnt tn1lde Ir out, ocean 3 Bd 2 ba, fam rm .. dlnlnt ll~'ootrn! ~;fJ{~e a the '*nd. '1000 w Ir for view yard. Ad.ult.a only. nn. r75/mo. Ca.U Linda, Br D ' tennis pool one, the otber 11500 to M50 + utlls. &65-IOOO. A1t.1Me·1r11 ;.u· rlten,. ,_ .,,..;...1 • u aoo per mon th. se.. y ...... •'"""' mo. 831-1300, uk for Berta 2 Br. 1 Ba., la.r1e yard. Gorgeoua 2 Ir 3 Br Con· A1ent 759-Ul92. Farr, A1ent. ~o~. M75. Coata Meea dot. Some w/ boat aUpe. New paUo Condo. ~l'H· lion area w/pool, Jae, BBQ. Bib &o beach. 1 bdrm ph• ,_.t aleep. 1111. Fireplace, adllt . Summer '1,000, Wbiter noo mo. (lH ) 484-4172 aft&. Ml..o7S3 11100 to Sl400 mo. l•t Ir laat req. C2l:t) 44$-1584 2 BR . l " bath • w /fireplace, new ttove. rerr11erator, carpet•. cat moved lido tolrn't l"IM 3244 Raa patio • a car park· T hen 1•t acqualnted ••••••••••••••••••••••• ln1. Yrly lease on River wttb th au.tiled Ada. Woodbrtdae, 3 Br ll;t Be. Ave. ~mo. Davldaoa Tbey'n the ... , ••1 Condo near pool, tonntt, Rutty,142·7450 &oRndJUlltbeit.ma&ad tchool M50. 7U/495-H8$ lla\11 aometbltll &o Nb? aenl.c.J011DMdl al'UPll. Clwitlech•do l&..U: I I ' 9 a I • ' .. ~ •~r-r v•~•+•••••• ••••••• $$$ •••••• -' soc •• 0 . . 0 .. Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/f'rtday. May 15, 1981 • Cash in on 7 or 11 .... _Htr•'taturelhlng lor Ore no•County advertlN r•- There are two ways to win with a Dally Piiot High Roller Ad I 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 commer cial busi nesses please. A ny c lassification. No cancellation Rebat e . ....__~-. u-.a.-.a_..____. ... _..___.._ ..__1.L.....~ Apartwt ... t. u..1unt. ••••••• ~.-:9.t~.~ •••. ' ~~t~.~ ..•• ~!'.~.~ •..• ~::'!~.~!~.~ .. !!.~~ ~~:.~~ ..... !~.~~ ~!':i~!.~ .. !~~~ ~ ............ ~ •panwn.....-. f"W"ftll....-V •••••••••• •• •••• , •••••••••• ••••••••••••• •••••• ••••••••••••••••• C del M4w llZZ Coda M"41 3124 Hmtingto. IMch 3140 T•tln l 890 • Shal'9d Living• Ml!WPORT BEACH S57S. Approx 2000 In Mewporthoctll l269H..tlilt-'-1Mch 3740 •• ~~:, ••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• t:ounae lorsloperson~lly convenient l'cnlosula dus 'l t Off1 c.~ .. 18101 ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• •••••• :':::: •••••••••••• Corona Del Mar rhurm 2bdr m. util Incl Pool. 2 Br 111 Ba. gas pd, 13...J Security a~. lbdnn &< •~lect your cor:npallble location across from C1-:~~o~4d2~~ Q Hunt Blurts 2 bdrm w /view $375/up 1-2 bdrm, pool, lng2br.wlfrpl.nopets , quiet, mature couple + S350 deposit. Crpta. 2bdr m ,t utalfpd. a~~~t~, ~~m\e ~~~I L Y.our ty llull Exe~r1vestyle Immaculate $675 mo jac.edlt.1899'lFlorida. S600.644231lor640-7~. prer No pet s or drapes,bll·lllS McFad no .pei rom estye. a -ivmg offices wru !>erv1ces H B M2-2B34or 842·3172 chiJdren.CallS48-7689 den nr Bea c h Bl 8365506. 833DoverDrSwte31NB avail f'rom 215 sq ft Bkr.S44-0l 34 · Bachelor. WM'!> bdrm. ADULTS no pets Ch1ldren lc petswelcomc 6Jl·l.80l and up No lease re Harttor VlewKnoffa H.1.'sFINEST sngl empld adlt No 2 1RCONDO 893-4894or64s.9243 Large2Br.1YJ8a.Con XLnt Pvt Ent & Ba, nr quired Call 673-~ Uperaded 3 BR twnhme, SpanlSh Estate Livma1 dogs $325/mo Ulll pd Designed for hared llv - ----do Real sharp S5t5 lloag, no smkr-<1r 1J)kt!r, Bayfront <>rflce space for ava\I now Pool. jac .. Beautiful parklikesur 700-9657 ing or family with THEWHIFflETREE 754·0225 Wkdys .~3050 Male$265.646·1005. leasl', I/mo Cree rent tennis Close to shops. roundlngs. Terraced children Pnvate sinkrn LuxuryAdultunitsat af ACt 5 &Wknds _ _____ 6464419 $975 mo. lse 2706 pool. Sunken gas bbq, 2Br F'rplc,crpts&stove each bdrm f'e n ced fordable living. 1.2 & 3 ----S hare 3 br condo Hillside Or. 1·568·9343; spa rk ling fountains . Balconyv1cw,Adults,no pallo&laundryhook up. Br Well decorated Rooms 4000 Bushard/Adam SlOO, ~'3 1·346·2034 S p a c i o us rooms . pets . S 6 0 O 3 2 2 Im med occpy 76!! 2 1l Olympic size pool, light ••••••••••••••••••••••• utilit y Close beach Separale dining a rea. 1lel1otrope Ave. Hamilton. $455 mo. edtennlscourt,Jat·uu1, LagunaBeachMotor lnn, 9646<Y7l,4-l()pm. BAYSIDE CONDOS . 2Br 2\AJ ba. Optional slip· I condo on water. l w/view From S2000. Yr· ly. W aterfronl Home~ Realtors, Inc 631-1400 W a I k I n c Io sets. 675·6024. Open 12~ 963-8182, Agl park like landscap111g 985 No. Pacific Co11&t homelike kitchen & Most beautiful bldg. tn Hwy, Laguna Beach cabinets. Walk t.o Hunt-Spac !Br wt pat10 grdn. 2 Bdrm 1. bat.h duplex, H.B. Daily, Weekly. Kitchen mgton Center W ID walk to bch ~00 large patio. pnvatc Kar, From $395 846 0619 available. Low winter I Bedroom furn, $440 + lsti lasttdep 640 8358 small pet OK S450 ~r rates. 494.5294 2 Bedroom furn. $510 - -mo Call Pam, Duve or Avail. now 2 Rr 2 Ba Adults. no pell! Costa Mesa 382 4 Larry, 540-5880 Apts Garages I child Ulll.illes Free' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 K • n o p e t s MESA VERDE home at· 2 Br 1 Ba • pool 1475 Watert trash paid $475 LA QUINTA HERMOSA VILLA BALBOA 16211 Parkside Ln. 1 blk mosphere. 2&3dlx apts. Costa Mesa 964-2561\or973-29'71 Agt., No pets. 546-1034. 641·<1763 no ree. Private entrance Prefer Male over 40. No smok mg, no drink~~_7S200 Share ullls ~97. Outstanding view. ocean w of Beach. 3 blks S. of & bay Com er top floor Edinger Spacious 3 Br Duplex unit w /skylights. Adil, 847·5441 S425. Pool & laundry Cac MESA PINES APTS F 25 35 to shr w/same 2 BR 2 BA, CdM dplx S300 mcl util. 675·2988 Rmmate t.o shr irg 3 Br house CM. S225 Resp l''em Plenty of pnvacy 700-0991, 675-6693 Kelly Roommate wanted Large 2 Br 2 ba HB apt S 2 2 0 I m o + 1"' u I i I 960-9664 Prest1g1ous Off1re Spart' 3 w 111dow offices a vaila- ule m Cull service LeRal Suite 1n Newport Center Avail May 15 640-~0 Cannery Village 450' of fH•e or shop space m t1uamt character bldg $475 mo avail J um: Sth 673 65229·5 Approx 450 sq fl Zoned C 2, crpls, drps, St80 mo. 130 1.-: 17th St .. Su1h• 0 , C M 548 1168 INDUSTRIAL SPACE FOR LEASE COSTA MESA 642-4463 •One 2780 sq f t warehouse avail for Im · med occupancy. •Two 1600 sq ft units. office & warehouse space avail. June I •32" :rt-per sq fl • Leas111g offi ce hrs Mon thru Fri 8·4. Sat l(}.2 Renta l• Wanted 4600 ...•..••............... ltouse wanted 3 or 4 bedroom, 2 baths. will rent for rour months. Call547 31.82 secur ity. S850 lse or 548-9556 month to month Agt. Newpori leoch 3 769 ---- 760-8617 or644-0322 •••••••••••••••••••••• NEWLY DECOR. 2 Br. 2 Ba with Gar -Pool, spa. barbeque, cathedral cetlmgs, 1"1 P. O/W , balcony Quiet Adults over 25 Avail now $565 mo 2650 Harl a. 549-2447 2br duplex, yard, gar. kids /pets OK $350 t S250 SCl'. 963-8286 Dt>luxe pools 1dt! xlra large 2br. 2ba, l>llns. dswhr 11,. miles L>carh i\dlts, no ~Ls S.195 mo 536·8362 Very priv. detached sm furn bach room, pool, garage, lite cook. Quiel adult $3.50inc utl645 2663 Com pl furn. rooms. good neighborhood, west C M 548 6892 af\_ 6pm Office to share near So Ft!m 2br. 2ba c·ondu, nr Coast Plaia S235 mo. Exec desires t.o lease lg home in Spyglass. Big Canyon, Harbor Ridge Xlnl ref 968 ()195 ---------•!Fantastically furnished I Br. gas pd, enrl gar beach, $230 Answer Ad 641 2000 Sup er sharp rustom 3 Bdrm + den. quiet re s1dential area, prof re decorated Ternhc pool & spa A great place to entertain St500 mo Agt. 673-0413 4bdrrn, 2ba, ram rm w/frplc, cul·de·sar, $900 incl gardener & water. Avuil 6/20. 642-1830 THE BLUFFS Exec. home Spacious (2000 sq ft.l 3 bdrm, 3 bath . ram kit townhome End unit, near pool, deluxe In tenor, avail now at SIOOO per mo Agent.640 5560 THE BLUFFS 3 Bdrm condo w , view Remodeled. like new with gourmet kitchen, !year lease SIOOO mo. 760·93678 Agt So.ttl LCICJlftl 3286 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Vlllage Beach House l Br . fireplace lmmed avail 31642 Fa1rv1e w SS95 /mo 499-2986. CadoMIRMM U1tfw-Mshed 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2bdrm, 2 car gar, covered patio. 114 mile to beach. Access t.o pool & courts. $575 H.B. 1213)925-4796, (714 )675_·4_9<Yl ___ _ 3br, 2ba, nr SC Plaza Beaut trdevel. pool, spa. gar $650, Isl. last + sec 551·2960eve. ~'ff Deluxe 2br. 2ba. McLain unit at Big Canyon mcl washer/dryer. frige. un· der ground pkr, sec. pool, & tennis. 64-4·9584 EASTSIDE 11 iH•ywoods 3 Br. 2 Ba. Tri-level. frplc. micre>-wave, pool. tennis. No pets. $745. Days 646·4262, Eves MS-9643 2 STORY PEHTHOUSE P a n oramic ocean, mountain & city lights view 2 Br. 2 Ba. den, frplc. Never lived in. New! StOOO. Also 2 Br. 2 Ba. ocean I< city light$ view. F'rom SBSO. 675·9113 & 675-9132 Recreational Condo. Lg lBr , w/prest1f(e Nwpt loc Party rm, pool11, apaa, nr bch .. 1650 mo Todd (213) 240.9077 Nr. S.C. Plata 2br, dbl gar. refrig, lndry. pool, $575 /mo . 645 6201 , 751-1162 PlerpoW Condo By owner . new I hdrm, 1 ba. end unit. Nr ocean. 1ara ue. fl pc., patio, pool, jac .. tennis, etc. Auumable loan. S92.500. M.2-2701. 962-7824 townhouse. with ocean dtwasher, pool Adults view Tennis court. pool. 642·5<173 $925 mo 76().9117 -- --- -Spacious 2 Br S3G5 Pool & SHORT TERM Rentals laundry rac Weekly & monthly S48-9556 1 BR, $350 pt!r mo . l)OOI, adlls, no pets 423 W Bay 548-9516 Aeent.675-8170 Newer 2 Br µa110 & THE "GOOD LIFE" YEAR·ROUNO FUN: Social Achv11le$ 01 rrc1or •Free Sunday Brunch • BBQ s • Parties • Plui; more GREAT RECREATION. Tennis• rref' Lessons (pro & pro shop)• 2 11eallh Clubs• Sauna • Hydromassage • Swimming • Goll Orrv1ng Range BEAUTIFUL APTS: garage Adults, no pets. $435/mo 645-5577. 2 HUG 1.-: Bedrooms 1n super location f"ully carpeted, built-ins, ground noor /\dults. no pets $3.50 mo Appl} /\pt B 568 W W1l sun &46·4477 2 br, ti 2 ba, no children. smaU dog OK, S425 610 Joann St 642 7344 3 Br Townhouw Newly decor gai> pd , encl gar., pool, dswhr Adults 642-5<173 2 Br. I la Apt Newly decor C:as µd encl gar . pool, cbh"' r Adults 642-5<173 ----- PINE BLUfJ-' A PTS 2 Br 2 Ba Adults. nu pets Patio, vie"'. frplc. end gar . gas stove• • 2br 2ba l'undo, SC.Plaza SA SSOO pets 549.3232 $525 nr SPMC llCI 631 61<17 2 Hr <.:11rpets. rtrupcs, w patio, w /J hook up. No 2 Br No !Jt!~, 571 · pets . S395 6'16 ·5!176. Joann St I child S3C5. 544 _5939 2248 Canyon S t 2 _ Huntinqton HarbOw 3842 , .......•............... 12br, Iba, wtend gar & patio, 2nd floor S435 1mo 893·6103 ur832·2153 I nine 3844 ..............•..•..•.. Woodbridge 3 br condo, lower comer Uilll $600 lease 675-8369 aft 6 La9una Beach 3848 ...••.....•••.•...•.••. thdrm. ocean view, larRe dct k. block to beach, $550 494·0066. ·194 2246, 751 4293 lBdrm. beamed ce1hni.;, bnck patio. $425/mo ut1l incl Nu pets 499-4225/5 7PM Hewpori leoch 3869 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Peninsula Point St40 mo Private entrance. no cooking sm o kin g 673 4419 House pr ivileges. non smkr, over 30, fully employed, S200t mo 557·5(}!0 S240i mo inclds utils Nor th Mesa Verde Avail 5·16 546-4781 Pri enter. & k1tl0 h privgs. Lge room, share bath. Nwpt Hghts $200 mo incl util 1''cmale only. 642-7450. Hohlt, Mot.k 4 100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SEA LARK MOTEL 11541, 6<12·4300, 24 hrs Prof lo i.hr JBr Park Newport Townhouse Approx S250 mo m cl !>pa, jac, tennis. racket ball & Sec Call An!> Ad 11473, 642-4300, 24hrs per day Female to s hart> <I bedroom apt. Steps to beach NP. $250 by mo I I Util. 979-IX'J45 F wants toshryourhouse or apt, have furniture. C:M NB 548 8672 M F roommate to shr rozy E Side C M hse 28 + No kids, pets S325 mo 631 03UI eves Sha run M room mate wanted lo shr lg Condo nr S C Plaza, sauna, pool /Jae. pvt bath. Avail now $250 mo + exp 556-5847. 751 7287 Singles 1 & 2 Bod rooms • Furno~hed & Unturn15hed • Mun L1vrng • No Pe1s • Models Qppn Oa•ly 9 to 6 children S390, Sierra Studio apt, (IUJt!l p('r!.on. Mgmt Co 641·1324 $150 Nr OCC i\\(111 now 645·"820 aft '1 PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS •Weekly rentals now avail. •$98 and up. •Color TV •Phones m rooms Male needs apt tfl s hare Oakwood Garden Apartment• Newport Beach N. 880 Irvine 111 161111 (71 4) 645·1104 Newport Beach s. 1700 16th St tDo•e• at t61n1 (714) 642-5113 Avail now. 2914 W Oceanfront 2 Br I Ba Fireplace, garage S 200 week Open 71 4 751 6147 or 213 331-5417 Bachelor s uite avail. June 15, compl furn, Balboa Bay Club <must be member). month·lo- month lease, $1000 mo. 552-9646 an.. 5: 30. Park Newport·2Br. 2Bs. sublease ~ay 15-J uly l S900 mo 1714) 323-8022or 768·4747 AV AIL JUL Y(AUG 2br/2ba conde>-g wtrbd St300/2mo831 <X564 evs OCEANFRONT tllx 2 48 R /\nd Lido 111111 bayrront hme W Ism boa ta & 00' dock Wkly . 673·SU R ,.., 673-7677 ·~rtm--u .. ...,..a.ct ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeHrol 3102 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ArTMTS FOR HHT II 8 . NO ,Cotta Mesa NEWPORT APARTMENTS 2·1Bdr avail S270 mo Plus utils No t·h1ldren, no pets, no walerbeds 2450 Newpon Blvd Costa Mesa IHSTAHTIH! Beaut. 2 Br 2 Ba /\pt Frplc, enclsd gar , lndry rm. patio Small pel OK $440Mo Bache lor Apt. E Side, S300 mo. mcludeit ut1l 646·9081. Lrg bachelor apt, good locale, pvt patio. adults, 8S9 W. 19th St S285 Lrg 2 Hr 1 Ha. great E.s1tJe lol·atwn. 5<175 mo I yrly lse No pets Call Lloyd. 675-6670 TSL Mgmt li42 1603 ----FAM ILi ES Sparkling, AV AIL NOW! clean 2 Br. S450 F'ncd. Roomy 2 Br 2 Da At>l ullls pd Rernl(, 2 ~mall 4 Plex. lndry rm. children OK No pets balcony Adults only 1960Wallacc,54~!1626 S465mo TSL Mgmt 642·1603 Vacant lbdrm duplex Stove. refr1g , washer /dryer t\dults, no pets. $330/mo Isl, last + sec. 631 50!11, 536-4333. APARTMEMTS Beautiful landscaped garden apl.S Patios or Newer 2Br1Ba.3007 Jef decks. Pool & Spa. cov frey Dr Adults. no pets ered parkmg Adults, no Refs. req'd S4251mo COUNTRY CLUI LIVING IN NEWPORT BEACH An adult community on the Back Bay Spec tac ular Spa, 7 swim mini( pools, 8 Lighted ten· ms courts. btke trail:.. putting g reen f\a c hf'lors , 1 and ·2 bedroo-ns apartments, and townhouses Crom $510 00 per month On Jamboree Al San Joaquin Hills Road ( 714)644-1900 2274 Newport Blvd C M or look together. N B 646-7~'> area 645· 171 l days Chris Summer Rentals 4 2 00 Empl Fem Share my ••••••••••••••••••••••• home Ref's Near Hoag 3 B d 2 b a ho m e $190 mcl ut1ls. 548·0027 Furnished. Newport Island Weekly S500, Pnv 2nd n Liv rm, br, ba. Agt 833-26.50 pool. sauna. Jac, tennis. ---C M N r 4 0 5 Summer in Santa F:verything furnis hed Barbara. Large 2 Br $295 751 5525 Apt. near beach June 15th thru Sept 15th S385 mo 805·68.S-1547 Elega nt 4 Br. 3 ba Furnished. Mile Crom beach S8501mo. 963-7148 Wanted. Beachfront ren· tal 2 summer wks. by in land Npt home owner. Check us out. no bkrs Fem rmmle lo shr 2br + twnhse $2501 Mo + shr ut1l Patncia 631·7364 /\l·t1ve fem . prefer same. nonsmoker. lo find & shr <ipt . Nwpl/CdM area. S300 S350 ea. 545-4436 Oceanfront for Winter ...:54~8·...:0;:.39:...7;...._ ____ _ Rentals . Furnished & V otlo Refttah 4250 unfum . Broker. 67~49~ .!'.4: ••• ."••••••••••••••• NO FEE! Apt. & Condo •NWPT OCEANFRONT M /F' to shr 2 br, 2 ba hom e, 300 yd from beach , jac, pool , SSOO/mo. incl. ulil. H .B 536·5184 rentals. Villa Rentals. & Lido Isle bayfront. sm 675·4912Broker boats & dock. Wkly 673-SURF pets 559·6221 Altl 2BR l''•BA $470 --Oc:ean view. spacious. J98W Wil'\On,G3I 5583 Dana Point 38 26 I u x . 2 b r. 2 b a Luxury oceanfront F to shr w/same. 3 br home in Turtler ock, pool . s pa . tennis. S350 mo + 12 ut1I 8Sl 1351 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. Versailles" Condo all Kaanapali Bch. condom Garoq•• S410 3 Bdrm condo, d<>n. amen $750 557-1997 Maui, sips 5, avail 7/22 forllftd 4350 i:~· I BA $475 ~a ra::,· ':c~I~ n tcvni~·~· Beaut. 2 Bdrm. frplc, ~~ 8 /5 Days 832-4204, ext 1 ;;~·;~~;;;;·~~;;·~·;~ 225ov~;::~way, ~;~o. dt4J493 7530 or balcony quiet street 315 --17th Place Aft llAM , 1213)885-~. E. Bay $ses, 962-81140 Rental1 to Share 4300 646 5137 Bach wtloft, refrige, -••••••••••••••••••••••• 11tove. p00I $380 283 Huntlngtoft leach 3840 2 Br. Townhse, $~25. Moving? Avoid depos its Avocado MS 6404 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Adulls, no pets View & cut living expenses! 1409Supenor 645-8684 Professionally s ince 2 Rr t Uu f'rpcl. dshwr. -1971 new crpts &drapes, 11ar. 2 BR. l Ba. $600 mo. yrly HOUSEMATIS ,r o AOUL T 1460. S45-&404 lse. No kids. no pets 832-4l34 673·8222 ...l~. LIVIN G I Ir 2 IR.AP'TS roo1 .. <.: & o. /\GT 7316829or~0574 o I & 1 811 P.11>0 AOI\ • D·~~""'''" & 8!!0 • • P\lol & R, Aou • • C..1•dtn 1.1nO\C •P•nQ ---- WANTF.O , Garage space, vie. Nµl llgls Ca II 642-1008 $50 per month. storage only N C M after 6PM ca 11546 7214 Office Rental 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SomelhlnJC tor Everyone Executive t~wnhome. So. Bech. to 4 Dr. Unrum . I 3 b 21~ • Joo 10 But~ & Snoo• S r I G•lt~ Newport Shores 3 Br. 2 Ba Frplc. $725 Adults. no pets. Avail 1mmed Savage Wilde & Co 675·6600. NB strt prof gentleman will shr beaut 3Br 2Ba home w/em plo. M IF. over 30. S350 ulil incl 760-0802 1617 Westcliff. N.B Want financ ia l inst. 7000s.f. Isl. rloor . /\genl541·503~ Afta. Certoin locallona Cat Pina oc r. o fer . P ool , apa , ba. pool & jacuz:u, $775 fi replace, loun. room, ~o.:..Call965·0006eve11. beam e ti c e 111 n P . H..tliltgtoft leoch 3840 SEA ENV IRONM ENT 9bl7 HAMll ION H R 962 4~00 garages, nll built-ms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden & Town house ·r.=========~==========ifl ~t1~t~,fEE 64z.1so3 1 Kennebunkport? Super Versailles lbr studio condo. $450 549-~. I Bdrm. avail June 1st Yrly lse. S450/mo lst tlasl & sec Stove. Female roommate wanl ed to share 2 bdrms, 2 ba Woodbridge ha bse. $250 Mo. Backyd , pool , sauna. jac 552-9794, 851-1494. Ben. KOLL CENTER NEWPORT Elegant executive suites In prestige location With complete support services. 71418.51-0081 ---------'°"""' ,....... 3107 Isn't that the horse that won The Triple Crown in '727 refrig. cpts, drps, encl Shr e legant Twnhse ear 2 blks lo ocean Beaut. view. 3Br, 21h8a 213/277-464-0, 714 /673-0834 $325 + last & sec NR •DELUXE OfffCES • l Room & 2 Room No leue required. 2172 Du Pont Dr Adj. Air por1er Hotel. 833-3223. 9-12 .,. t ... ,.,..lhtcl ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... !.~ ............... 1400 Ullll pd. 28 r Duplex lt6oo hlmd 1706 410 Hardfng, Balboa. No ••••••••••••••••••••••• pelA.547·11.55 1850/m o. Ch a rmin g , CoroftadelMs 1122 private 2 Br. w/aundeck. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Over 1aragsi. 306 Coral lmmac. 1 Br, oceun vu, 1 Ave. Do not distur b te· blk from bch. S hared nanta. Shown by a ppt. garage, la u nd tacit only . 213/$57-~. SGSO/mo. Ag\873-1181 C.• M... 3724 Enjoy summer living all ••• •••••••••••••••••••• year. Will w CdM beach. CASA DI OltO 2br, f'tplc, IJe deck. encl ALL UTTUTtES PAIO park Ina . 17SO/mo avaU lm mtd 675·150 or 642-7544' ~ro~ If you· re not sure who (or what) KennybunkpOrt was. don't feel bad -you're not alone. Kennybunkport Is one of 14 distlnctlvely different apartment noorplans at Seawtnd Village In Huntington Beach. Seawlnd Village Is a result of tot.ally personallied professional planning. The kind of attention you deServe. ---------646·9804 ; 631 -1153 I Br. l Ba. Apt. No pets, . no childre n. Close lo Happy outgoing Prof fem beach. Bit -Ins, frplc1 30-40 to sh my Npt Hta pkng. $450/mo. 67!H651 2br 2ba pool hm. No smk or752-2841. S350 inc utl. 645-2663 CdM Deluxe Suites, AC, ampl f kg, util pd. 2855 "E. Cat i wy. 67>6900 Rutland Road, Westcllrf Dana Pt. Large apt, pvt area. $500/m o. lBdrm. ba , $250 mo. UUI Incl. lsl DR's ore. in Owntwn HB. Comm 'ty pool Walk to & last. 49~ 761H234 2.000 sq.ft. $1200 lse. Red shopping center . Call M/F , nonsmoker. E. Side Carpet, ~1351 675·6646or833-3622 c.M .. nr UCI & OCC. 17th Snll'T, C.M. S• J.. pref. student, 1175 + .,... 2 room otrice suite Caph.,...._ 1171 utils. A_Uen, 7~~. Great parking. Great ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 t bldg. s22orno. NEWPORT CNTR Prei>L1g1ow. full service ocean view office 500 8699 SQ ft 644 7180 orr.ce Spate for i>ublease Tastefull} decorated ore !>U1te c·ontammg 4 or rwcs. c·onfert'nce rm & kitchen area 1300 s If Location Corner M es11 lusineu /lnvnt/ Finance .........•...•..•...... l minH I Opportw.ity 5005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Partner Active/Inactive $6500 mv M IF Plumb- ing & /\ppbance repair Good s teady income (714 )952 00529/\M-5PM Verd<> Dr & Ad11ms, 1 _________ _ CM 714 !47!H35.5 Office 1300 s q rt Carpets, drapes. a c 20 !>q rt omce rum avail 540 7063. 963 Sffi9 WESTMINSTER 14308 Beach Blvd 1200 sq ft Choice location for store or om ce Between 2 freeways !179·888!1 nr 645 1260 Prime SJC 2,200";q It oHlce sparl' avail. Flexible terms Frost Spcm•1• Tr111c11 714 641 1111 Business Rftttal 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For store & omce s pace at reasonable rates 500 to 2700 Sq Ft. MESA VERDE DR PLAZA 1525 Mesa Verde E. C M 545-4121 --- Space for Rent in active beautiful beauty salon Any related specially ok Fas hion Island. N B. Pal C714 l 640-6023 PRIME RETAIL LOCATION 1750 Sq. Ft. C Of'Mt' Location Outstanding St...et -side kltftffty. MecJOtiable Terms. Call 6 75-8662 RETAIL STORE COAST HWY CDM Front & rear entr y. private FREE parking! 1050' Sl.10 /sq . It OWNER (714)497·23.51 -------- Approx 1400' retail New bid!( 6 pkg spaces. XJnt loc CdM Coast Hwy Agent 700-1410 ------Commercial RHtoh 4475 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OFFICE-STORE 525 sq Ct or HX>O sq ft Carpel, paneling, park- ing. Newport & Bay S h op Cen t er. 2052 Newport Bl vd. C. M. 556·4181or644-2228. Waterfront omces & d is· play space. Coast Hwy Newport Beach. Xlnt for boat sales. 646-9361. lndntriol ..... 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Warehousing space avail , 5000 sq. Cl Complele service. Ship. pin g I receiving /book - keeping, etc. 540-7003. 963-5059. MESA INDUSTRIAL PARK 711 W .17te.St. Coate Mtso, Ccilf. 642-4463 PAMPERED PETS have loved this cozy grooming parlor for some 19 years Central Costa Mesa location Great parkmg $17,500. subm 1t your terms ( (,(, /(J Jlfl d"/ f l f<llt -J!>;.r:r . fJuf 1·' I"'-> ~ 6'('J-.V1!i1 ' 243!> E Cou1 Hwy., CdM ln•Htm~ Opporftlnity 5 0 I 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• f'ORECLOSURE PROPERTY AVAIL.ABLE In ves t o r 's seeking prime properties will be alerted by contacting: Foreclown Moticu Box 1696 Costa Meta, CA 92626 Investors Will sell 1"2 int m equity Newport Hts. home Call 642-6848 Partner, Act1'e Inactive $6500 mv M F Plumb· mg & /\pphanre repair Good s teady income <714J952·00529AM·5PM Money to Loan 5025 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WIDOW has money for 2nd T .D. 's. $10,000 & up! E·Z CR EDrT. No pnlty For action call 673-7311 anytime Mort~CJ"· Tnat De.ds 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• S crttt.r MtCJ. Co. All types of real estate in vestments since 1949 s,-clalUncj in 2ndTDs 642-2 171 545-061 I Want investor for Npl bayfront home. Give well secured 1st or 2nd TD Agt,67~161 Want 21·22% Yield? On your T. D. 's Notes SSRa1sers-lnvestorsSS Call Dennison Assoc. 67J. 7314 Owner -Broker wants $20,000 to $50,000 secured by 2nd TD on own N.B. residence. Princi pa ls only 644·1817 aft 5pm , Tom WE PAY THE MOST For you r T .D. 's & Notes al Dennison Assoc 673-7311 _____ _ /4.trtto•c ........ / ,.~; Lost&,.._. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PAIN RELIE King Family Medical Ctnter underlhe direction ol Com pa re before you rent . Cualom doai1 n fe aturea: Pool, BBQ, Spectacular ocean Ir city surrounded wllh pluab lt&bla view from every landscaptn1. Adult llv· r oo m . Lara e l Br . lnt_at tla btlt. No pet.I. S600/m o. Call Anthony A perfect blend of nature and nvtno- nestle<J In a forest with babbllno brook.Sand QUltt ponds. cooled by natural ocean bl'eeUs. Add to that ttnnls courts. swtmmtno poots. ajacuul and a convenient location near ShOpplno and employment and you've got a place anyone would proudly call home. (Even Kennybunkportl) One and two bedroom. one and two bath adult apartments from 9440 .00 2 Br, d~n. 1 81, dining ~~':n~': ,,;: :ourwp~~c! ~onomleft 875-6700 ~'.4~m1 rm, "~./mo or look loitether. Non cla SPECTA~ULAR smoker. CM or NB area. ·~ ?~.~~ ........ !!.~~ 540-~1.5'6-6444 HAR OR l980 1q. f\. Unil avail. May l a t . Carpets, draJ)H wet bar. •336·34• aq. n. •Leaslng offlct bra. Mon thru Fri 8-4. Norman K Beata. Jr . M O now oflera fantaallc pain relief with cold laser beam thtrapy Gre a t aucce11 In treating aathm•. arthritis , collllt & migraine hea d ach•• For Information come In or call King F•mlly Medical C•nter, 2800 W Warner. In th• F11rvle w /W1tner Plaza. Senta Ana lfach fumiabed $370 wkdya 642-S75l evea Ir -.SW. Willon,642-llrTl wknds....-. SUS CASITAS Cbarmlnf lbr, beach 2 J\ll"G, 1 br. apt. t:.m " bllu r p1 c, 1\on. up. !net.,.,, Adults,~ ttfr1a ... .iorap rm. no peta. :mo Newport • c•r •bower on.11. sas. 'I &41-'811btwnUrSPM loci uUl. irtn au. AvaU I ••n Mo. 1 Br. ~pt . t/4. tyr 1M. No pcla. .lhture edulta, no pell. '1'1183-ZTD 7 to 9PM Quiet, aeaant. MU'73. Ot'lly . ' ~-~~ t SS.SS HvnungtOD ~ Utll H\lntJngtgn e.acn. CA (714) 893-51Sl8 from Ult S.n CifOO Frtlft/4Y dnw nonn on BMctl to MctlOdtn. uien wut on McflOOtn to S..Wlnd '1111.tQt Fvm!Shings avllllble • Opell dl1ty I 0 AM tll cMk ·--_..,,.., Extra IJ 281' 2ba condo. EJderly Independent lady VIEWS Pa tl o I a r • p oo I , seek11lm1Uar to ahr her 440 to 4000 c..... A wubr/dm , prof paint· modesl 2br. N.B. •pt. ~ • ed, new-cliapet. Adulta. 751·928& ,,... .... ,, ti-• Cloae to Ml Sq Prlc. Fem 'l, 1 cbUd ahni apt Loclltlaa. TfJ..(1521,Gl·lml bome. SSl-991 1, Call ...... ••• aB r l ~Ba Condo . .fpm. VflYPla ..... T--. Woodside Vlll•I •· ly Ap,akt ·CW,. ::.O/::a.~ •,.. mcJ c~f:!t~~. (7141675-166 .... ,. , •• 9'• .......... ··-··-·· ~·--.. Sat . 1~.:..:;;.2. _____ _ 8 ,700 aq . fl. offi ce + warehouae. lrvlnt l n· duatrtal near San Oieao Frwy otr Jamboree. CaU Ul·l OU o r Inqu ire Marotl Co. 16753 Noyea. IS7·tal. Brier. Coop ln· vtted . CALL 7 I 4 /141-t40l ' f , I. 'Ii .. •I . •' '· .. I•, I .. r j --~~---~ ...................... _..r-~~ .............. 11!!111 ....................................................................................... . • • • i I Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Friday. May 15, 1981 ----------,~~~!~!:: ............. ~~~~ ............ !:~~.~ ............. ~~~~~~ ...... ~~!~ ......... ~:!'!! ................ ~~~'~!'-~'.~ ..... ~! ............. .. All Around Carpenter. Conatructlon·Alltypes Pror Japanet1e Cardtoner HAROWOOO YLOORS Japane1eHousecleanln11 Movma • The Starvin1 INT/EXT PAJNTlNG BALBOA. ROOFl.NO CO. Flnlah Ir Rou&h. Free 201:·ra exp. Fr~ est. Lawn culling, ll'ff trim· Cleaned 411 Waxed experienced. Weekly. College Shldenl'I Moving Lo r1tte11. Prompt, neat. Take advant.aae of $100 Eat. John '175'8082 Uc. 334589. 645-5973 ming, weeding. 548-8375 Anytime, 832-41181 S.A. Own trans 642·51116 Co. bas grown, lnaured fo'ree est. 848-5684 1as or food iilve·away ----------1H same good u~rvlce Realtorswelcome. 1~t'•J~o~7Y Master Crartaman Ca~ntry,Addltions& GARDENMAINT. _., HOtllH..._.,, #T 124·436 Lln•n:s1• AGAPl!:FORCE 673.6743 67a.0403 speclalllinl in rinishinl Small jobs-25 yrs exp. Yd Clean-up. Tree trim-••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~ 641 8427 ,-PAINTING COMPANY rora &remodellng.'99·31~ Llc.309152 548-2719 mina.54s.8700,4·8pm Haul,ch:unup,concrete •R•••••••••••••••••••••• 3Generation.sof S-61o•"'--• removal. '"'·mp truck. eputable college stu· ABC MOVIN'' Exper ·~ uu d t Ill ho It '" Painting Ext.-ellenct•. ••••• •• •••••••••••••••• 30~~ad CorpetSena PC10NSTR1:~dREM00D. Y ard cleanups, tree Qulckserv.642-7638 0~n:itsum~~~ M~YY pror, low rates. quick 83J..5Ml LOCALSANDBLASTER ••••••••••••••••••••••• ans. ,1c . corgc: work, irrigation & re· 30-S pt 1 ers 833-141-4 carcful service. 552·0410 Lie, ins, reas. No job too DAILY Mor S•YICI DIUCTOltY DO IT NOW ! Sharripoo&steamcleaan. Pllmer&Sorui,557·6932. pair,greenbeltlndscp'g DUMPJOBS _e · ,r · "MOVlNMAN" Plant1.lnt.ricw big/srnall.84().7908 Color brigbtenera, wbt C 1111) ... 1 0129 Small Moving Jobs •-~sea~ . · . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Crpts 10 min. bleach. CMllM "" . . C II MOCE ......., ,_..., . ruJ ..4 & r_ In /..,..., L..-a 646-1391 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• i.s care · cou .. eous lnlerior plant des111n & ~• t AHef'd-Hall, Uv.-din. rms 11.S ; •••••••••••••••••••~••• EXPERTLAWNCARE WEDOITALL! cheap. PlscaJl642·1329 maintenance for home ••••••••••••••••••••••• avg rm $7.50; couch $10; Pr Iv 8 t e Educ at to 11 Monthly service. Trees Hauling & Dump Jobs We do it best! We do it MuninCJ Senlces or off ice. Plant It! }Jteriatlons &; Dressmak chr $5. Guar. elim. pet Con11uHont; former & clean upa Mike l\skforRandy. h l' R II 5512894 "'Ing ~"Pd reas odor. Cr"'" repalr. 15 yrs owner-admi".llatrator "-•a.2tu9 64J·8427 c e 8 pes · usse ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · · • AlkFors-dr-a Your Daily Pilot Service Directory Representative up. D~ work myself. Montessori & K. !I .... .,.. _Landscaping. 644-7062 PRIVATE NURSE Pla1hr /R.,..tr 540.~93, 846-3393 Refs. 531·0101 teacher. 631·5529 TIIE LANDSCAPE CO. HAULING-Student has LANDSCAPING Any ~hif~. 12 yrs exp, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sprlllklen 642-5671. ext 31 I W C C Cl Drywal Nothing Flnerln Maint. large truck Lowest Rototilling clean·ups & consc1enl10W! & reliable. Neut putchets&lexlures ••••••••••••••••••••••• S~a~e cl=~~ ~:~~r:. •••••••••••••··~·~··••• 549·2015anytime ~ht,:~k %~~!~fui:5!J-1976 ideas. Lie. ~l 642·8494 anytime Ftte Ht. 19].. 1439 CONSE RVE WATER Work guar .. Truck Drywall~1altst Comm'l/Resid. Fertiliz· hffttin9/PapetirHJ SA u ~ okml a tse Vt 0 u r A 9a.... Q 1 & N & HAULING·CLEANUPS NURSERYMAN-l5yrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• !':D'S PLASTERING pr1n er ys em ccom "'ii mount unit. 645-3716 ua · · ew re· ing, trimming, planting, G d k exp. in plant ID, disease •ST".VENS PAINTING All Types lnt/Ext 7141586·1591 ••••••••••••••••••••••• mod. 1389944. 532.5549 <'lean-up. 645·5400 a rages, yar s. jun , , .., 645 8258 L'REE EST ·rheFeminineApproacb NoSleam/NoShampoo dirt ; s hrubs & t rees & pest control. Will con· Jntlext. Free itemized · ,. · SPRINKLERS&SOD LEIGH ROBERTS Stain s pecialist, rast DR Y_W ALL·Our ex· MOW & El>GE-10"/. dis· lrlm/remove.842-5274 suit w/you on all your est. Neat.quality work. Plaster Patching, mt-ext, Tree removal. DIG IT Full services. !>48-1484 dry. F'ree est. 839-1582 pert1Se. We can handle cuunt, l,\i price winter ~~~~~n needs. 832·320!, ~-4561 30 yrs exp. Neat work. Landscape, 646..W70 F /C BKKPG SER VIC F.S UPHOL & DRAPES your problems. 6ll·2<><M rates. 955·lJ28 GA~~GU::~.~;~NUP .54&.lS86 W ALLPAPSUMG 545·2977 <Paull Tl .. All Taxes•Costa Mesa Cleaning in your home. Sectrfcal CALIF. GARDEN Free est. 631 0953 Renovating·Rototilling Prof. installed, lst roll PLASTERING llouses, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call 646-1596/645-9580 TIP-TOP CARPET & •E•L••E•C•T••R•l•C••IA••N••_•••.•••d• Tree trim, clean·U"", ce· Ho•-acleanlncj Sprinklen;-lawns-clnups hung free. Answer Ad dd·t· I T ILE INSTALL~D P ('A ,.., .... Dave642 4~3 .. 4a ... 642.4300, 24 hrs or a 1 ions, re-co or. over Floor Care. 960.6266 . . ri " ment work. 'i!A" •"n ••• •• ••. ••••••••••••••• · " "" blo k lls .,. t •All kinds, guaranteed, .a.--.11 R I r1ghl free est m· le o U"IU"......., Bud 646-8481 1·639·1429 c wa · ,. ree es _,.,...a11ce epo r • 1 a n Low rates. 586_4892 refs. John, 893-1667 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cellng. Acoustic l8:rgeorsmalljobs. LAWN MAJNTENANCE ROBIN'SCLEANING G uar. Used refrig. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lie. #396621 673-0359 CleanU""·Landscape Service a thoroughly Masonry F:irst Class int/ext Pf.a in. l· pa.·-LfnCJ TrH SerYke ,.... 1 b "'0.""'7 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... g wallP""" re 1 sh ...,_ Good~· Sales & Acoustic Ceilings + R EMODEUNG Free est. 642 1337 c ean ouse . .,.. ~ "' · ...,..r, ni ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Service.642-7754 custom handtexturing El , I k .d •. W REA BJRblCKNWORK : SCma ll cab~nets,etc.979-5294 PLUMBING-new con· NOW IS TiiE TIME to Lie 389944 532 5549 ectnca wor , res1 , "' General Senlces ant a LL Y CLEAN o s . ewport, osta t . od 1. prune your trees Call Asphalt · · comm'l.631·2004 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOUSE? CaJI Gingham Mesa, Irvine, Refs . RALPH'S PAINTING s ruction, rem e mg. ''The Experts". 2oyrs ••••••••••••••••••••••• C---t/,.--_..._ SENIOR CITIZENS Girl. Freeesl. 645-5123 675-3175 Lie. Int/Ext. Low rates repairs· restaurant, I I G c: .. 8 3239 ........... ~ Fo f /Tia... "'ree e~t 964.5.,,~ electronic leak delec· ot·a · eorge'" • · Driveways, parking lot ••••••••••••••••••••••• ""ca 111111' We provide transporta· r J .rou repairs, sealcoating. Foundations, Retaining •••••··~··••••••••••••• lion & do odd jobs. Call Expertise Housekeeping FRPLCS built & refaced, tion Top Hat Plumbing WeldfnCJ S&S Asphalt. 646-4871 Walls, Hillside Restora· Formica ~ountertops Kim or Jim, 839.2544. Supplies furnished brick/stone veneers. 30 Fine painting by Richard 636·2030 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lic'd . lion' Slabs I Patios, Custom built & UlSlaUed, Personalized. 641·4970 yrs!~P· 893-3743 Sinor Lie, ins. 13 yrs or Holleman Plumbing lndus ./Comm./Resid. ........ ti Block & Brick. Lic'd. latest colors & designs. Handyman BRICK ARTISTRY happy N.B. customers Sales.service-Repairs Atlas Mobile Metal ... omo 'le 642·8387 eves/96()..0539 Free est. 646-4871 ••••••••••••••••• •••••• NE ED YOUR HOM E Thank you. 631·4410 548-9507 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Floon HOME IMPROVEMENT CLEANED? Pool & spa copings, f'r~eeslimates 552-7183 -------- Alan's Luxury Motor Car CONCRETE&BRICK Remodeling Oddjobs Evelyn.642·0728aft 5 brick pavings, blot•k & Colleue Student, exp'd, RealEit.-a....r--ices WlndowC~ Care Waxing polishing D · t · ••••••••••••••••••••••• -brick walls. 960.7421 .. WR"~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• . , , r1veways , pa ios, CRPT-UNO.WOOD _28yrsexpe __ r_. 979-226_5 G IH I ----int/ex, any 1·ob for less • ••••••••••••••••••••••• int. Home/ok.536-4151 walkways. 855·0930, enera ousec eanmg 962.0986 Installed/repaired. Lie. Carpentry, l'abanets, roof Reliable-References BRICK & STONE ~~~ 85_!.:9~1~2·0~3~ N~egwenpto~~JI Rcoensalide~sttr~~~ lusine11 Senke #369260 Greg 499·2652 repairs, plumbing Free Ow11 ttans. 962-0510 Tile. Marble & Frplcs PAPER H.AMGIMG v "Let TbeSwishine In" Cull Sunshine Window E eaning, Ltd. 548-8853 •••••••••••.••••··~··•••Ceramic Tile Fu u... est. Call Answer Ad -------673·6650 (213)634·0140 mg services. What have Personal B11J Paymg & ••••••••••••••••••••••• rntn1re #461 642.4300 24 hrs SHIPTOSHORE -----25 yrs exp Free est. you got to trade? Bruce Have something to sell? Tax Record Service. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ---·-· t3oat&JlouseCleamng Custom Masonry & Con· Fast, neat, reliable. Blomgren. HE /MAX Tr ust Deed collections. LAMIERTTILE Refinish. cane. veneer, Roofing , plumbing, Hellable-Exp.·Bonded crete lOO's Local Ref's $8/roll&up 64.5-6490 Realtors . 759·1221 . Classified ads do it well. 875·9132. Kitchens, bathrooms. sandblasl. From patio lo carpentry, painlin", Lict l ns/Bond 645·8512 W 11 P JI . 760-0297 piano to cabinets. A "' I s s Jim, 840-1705 Rod . a a~r angmg a.ilden entries. Llc'd. 978·0020 Touch or Magic. 831.0517 floors, repair/remodel 1 UN HINE All work guaranteed ReflnlshlncJ USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT .. SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call ....................... e~~~~~~~~~I Freeest.968-2006aft.5. HOUSEKEEPING MASONRY&TILE Tern,5456268 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GardenincJ -----G1veyourhomelhalspr· 0 · 1 w 1 J O.HomRefinishing D~ & D. l..aden ChHd Care ••••••••••••••••••••••• REPAIRS ing cleaning look all ur specia ty. e so ve DOC'S PAINTING has Antiques. kit. cabinets. D e 8 1 g n ers · C us to.m ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLEAN·UPS/LAWN Call anytime, 675 3014 year-round, with quality ~our problems 631·2004 returned ' Uocks, boat F' e pa 'nting 645 0664 homes. 37 yrs exp Fm. Moms relax' I'll watch . & d d bl k 1~~-_:___-:___ avail. Charles (714 ) o ur kids. dai l y or Mamtenance·Lndscp epen a e wor Brick-Block-Stone s lips , int 1 ext hse Y Freeest 6429907 Carpentry · Masonry Free estimate. re Veryreas.Lic,bonded Prompt , reliable Roofi119 898·3l41Al (714)963-8433 before/a rter school. · · Rooring -Plumbmg ference furni s hed , Bob548-2753/536·9906 service Dave 645·0389, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Carpeehr Univ. Pk area. 552-3951 Gardening, landscaping, Drywall · Stucco. Tile Ii c e ns ed & bonded 839·5851 QUALITY ROOF'lNG ••••••••••••••••••••••• tree trimming & r e &more.J.B.646-9990 952·30.14 MillllHnds Alltypes.freeest. . The fastest draw in the moval, major clean· up. ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAV E'S PAINTING Visa. MC. 541-5930 All Ty.pes Remode!mg & West. . a Daily Pilot free est. 752-1349 II ave sometb10g you "Tile Doer". Houseclean· Mini blinds & woods, win Serv satis fied cw.t 9 llAR BOR ROOFING Rep~irs, top q':la,lity, 17 Classified Ad Call To· - ---want lo sell? Classified ing done. Call eves. only dow tinting, vert1rles. yrs Qua I mte graty 642-5678 bt.Ul yrsalo1mn boar:e, 962a. _L83ic14d. Mr. day 642-5678. Want Ads ''all 642·5678 ads do it well. 642·5678. f 6 ~ ... 7599 Ph "-•!) ""36 Reas, ins, lir 76(). 7301 p .., ,-----------a ter ym.~ _;_ oneest. ..... ·\A] St>ll 1dll' items 642 ·5678 Allno ... cttMnh 5 J 00 Lo1t & Found 5300 Personals 5350 Penonah 5350 H•lp Wanted 7100 H•lp Wanted 7100 Helf> Wanted 7 J 00 H•lp Wanted 7 I 00 Help Wa:wted 7 I 00 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• THE ADVERTISING COMSULTAHTS Now you can reap the benefits of high cost ad- vertising for your com· pany ! Let The Advertis· mg Consultants set up your own in-house ad· vertising agency. Please call for information. 759-0652 5300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND ADS ARE FREE ca1~ 642-5671 SHE PROFESSIONAL Male Escort Dinner & Dane-Found Black Lab. Male Puppy. May 14. Vic. 19th & Irvine. Costa Mesa. 642·7149. E S C 0 RT S MODELING 835-9199 & ing. 645·1426ev_es_. __ _ F ound : Terrier mix. ----------1 black & white. female. •---------1 Retriever, black male. Shepherd mix puppies , tan & whHe, male. Great Dane puppie , tri · SWEETHEARTS •ESCORTS• 24HOURS Vi.sa /MC 529·1927 Preventative & Stress Redwcing Massage by Dons. "Intro" Special! 548-0407 Yours For The Asking! Salvation And Love Through Jesus Christ colored, male. Newport ~~~~~~~~~~I Beach Animal Shelter. f--------- 644·3656. PSYCHIC PenOftal SerTlces 5360 The Lord! Penonals 5350 Readings Jack 556-1178 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1----------Local artist now giving ••••••••••••••••••••••• PROBLEMS??? adult beginners classes FIRST LADY • Our group of "think· in oil painting. Call tank" specialists may 645 0920. Escort. Models resolve your problem on a service ree or a "no-Party Danc:ers. cure-no pay" basis. * 972· 1345 * Phone 714/897-7155 IOAM EmoloyfMll! Ir Preparation ..•.•...•........•..... Jobi wanted. 7075 MC &VlSAAccepted lo noon only . No .. --------.. --~------'--~1 weekend calls. ••••••••••••••••••••••• COVER GIRL Sat/Sun relief work want· LOST:Smblk&wbtcal. Relaxing massage by ed.Houseworkornurses vie Rancho San Joaquin, * OUTCALL * Newport's finest aide. 673-1236 aft 7PM. lrvine. 955-1897 953-0778 MC/VISA masseur . Call Steve, 5"8·2817. l().8PM Legat secretary wants LOST: 4/28/81 Male Wht1 .. --------•1-.:.::.:::....:..:::.::..:..::...:.::....:.:...:..::... ___ I P/T job in Irvine area Samoyed 6 mos old. Vic * FOXYLADY * Buddy nowhere from the Mag-card. d1ctapbone C • M . R E W A R D ' OUTCALL ONLY Spa Hotel. experience. ~1-9131. 635·6207 VISA MC 548·2817,548-0407 10.7 • 972-1138 • Companion Housekeeper LOST: Man's Diamond j ... ..;;..;.;;.:;;.:.:;.:;;.;~-1r'9--~~~~---av ai I 5 dys wk Nursing Ring vie. Hoag Hospital, THE background. 891-7123 • REWARD ! $1000.l _________ I 557.4231 Al\.AHTIS Girlfriends Mature lady wishes live· MASSAGESPA in nurse/companion Fo und : 6 m o . Fem. Be pampered by 16 *ESCORTS* position. Good driver, Collie, College Pk area Beaut. Girls. Open HollN/Offlc:e/Hohl non·smoker /drinker. 549-2554 10AM ·4AM 7 days . * 759·1216 * CallAdll474Daily Pilot Found : Male Collie , Phone645-3433 2-0irs. Now Hiring _64_2_·_4300 ______ _ brwn/wht. no ID, Beach I~~~~~~~~~~ Male/Female Escort SEC'Y /COMPANION Heil, HB. area. 839·5215 MC VISA LIVE IN Very attractive in ··--------.. w ·11 d k. g & d · Found: Golden Rlvr. Vic telligent 40 yr old lady • o coo an rive College Park.CM. 5 eek I ng pr 0 f . BUSI. BANKRUPTCY (owncar).548·8672 54()...4267 gentleman,age40.60for Reorganization & ll· Woman seeking position marriage Please only quldation by exp. at· to care for ill or elderly. J,.osl April 17, Sareway, · R 1 lorneys. (714>851·0611 549 0373 ft 7 30p CdM . White leather bag sincere replies. ep y 1__________ . a . : m. containing Jewelry. Box #745, Daily Pilot, Driving to Tulsa May HelpWanted 7100 Generous reward. No PO Box l 560, Costa 22nd. Share gas. 493-0250 ••••••••••••••••••••••• questions asked . Mesa, Ca. evenings.. ---------· 644·9523. Lost: Male yellow lab, 'Beach Blvd. & Adams. Reward. 960-8082 or . 538·7622 Lost: small cat, Just spayed, black & ortmge, white paws & stomach, CliU & Pirate, N.B. 5"8·6519 scRAM-tas ANSWERS CorJ>te-Souae - Peony -Af~h - SHOPS Sugar makes -you hypertensive and caffeine rulna )'our nerve.' 10 let'• keep evtrbody •way from oorree SHOPS. FOUND : Lbaaa Apao, Coc.lter mix, Cockapoo, Sbel~e! Terrier mix, Red uoole,. Bea1le m\x, Shepberd/IAb mJx, Cata It k-lUeot. lrvtoe Animal C.re Center'75f..3734 ,Found Female black ltb. • 2 wht feet.. vtc Hamilton CM.14•9'1 M011CI bow O•U:r PUot Claaa· lfted •• .., their m-..1• di lqll)llit1 ... lml*'tT our -.. " • "' lll"O'lll lo la)'' ,... . =r~ Nltlb. PboM ···- Use Anitret Ad service when pl'acing your ad ... a Daily Pilot ad number w lll appear in your classified ad . we take your messages 24 hours a day ... you cal I Jn at your convenience during office hours and get the responses to your ad ... th Is service Is only $7 .so week. For more informa· tfon and to place your ad ca 11 642·5678. ACCOUNTING ASST/SEC"f ADAG&fCY Knowledge of A/R. A/P, 10-key by touch, ac· curate typing. Ex· cellent, tactful com· munication s k ills. Desirable Newport Beach toe . Liberal beneCits. Call: Jan Wood, 714-95.5-0000 ACCOUMTIHG/Cleril Perm.PartHnt. Busy otrlce with friendly atmosphere needs permanent p /time employee. General ac· cnta. payable and light typing skills. Job re· quires 20·24 hrs per week. We ofter n exible schedule, competitive 11alary fc aood benefits. Please call Unda Fo.~er at 714/54~<MO ror an in· tervlew a~. or send re· sum• Attn: Personnel, Prealey of Southern Cal. P.O. Box 2200. Nowport Beach.921883 ACCTaCUB Excellent company benents, peneiOn • pro. rtt sbarlna plant, medical • dental cov· erage. Prefer 10 koy by touch Ir knowled&e of how to poal • balance acaount1. 1 yr In ac· countlnf· AIR or A/P. Contac An , ~0·8671. EOE. ACCOUNTS PAY AILE Also general accounting duties Some experience necessary 851 0991 Nancy ASSEMBLER Plast ic products . Im· med1date ope ning Newport Bea c h ~8-9818. ACCTS PAYABLE ASSEMBLERS Laminatmg firm seeks Loe . Mission Viejo co s h a r p ind 1 v 1 d u a 1 needs Assemblers w /2 w /s trong A/P back· yrs. exp. Candidates ground. Xerox computer must have gd manual appltcal1on knowledge a dexterity, gd. eyesight. + but not a must. neatinappearance&de Congenial work at· pendable. Work 1s in life mospbere, excel!. com support medical elec pany benefits, salary tronics. Gd. benefits. DOE. Apply Personnel Only responsible o e pt. Lamina ti 0 n persons seeking perm a· Technology Inc. 2720 S. nent emPlyml. need ap-Main. S.A. 556-l460JOIN ply. Call: Mrs. Parelli. A H A P PY W 0 R K 1~5S~l~·J83~0~~~~~ TEAl't\ & GROW WITHI~ TIIECOMPANY ADMIN.ASST Plush office for Newport Center investment firm. Super opportunity for ambitious person. Good secretarial skills. Ex· cellenl salary & bonus package. Hours. 3 days t 9pm, 2 days t 7 .30pm. Call 644-2507 . Gerald Kozak koic• Financial 5.rTlces ADMINISTRATIVE Assistant needed for busy hair salon. Must be licensed . Aura , Newport. 631·1390. AUTOMOTIVE Com,_.tor <>Dffotor Rey. &i Rey. Vim II. Ex· perienced PREFER- RED Will consider training the right appli- cant. Must be good typist. Contact Elsie Tompkins or Sid Wig gins at Earle/he TOYOTA·'IOLYO I '66 H.nor 11•4 c ......... . "'H•·UOl • uo.to1 AUTOMOTIVE Relief Cashier I PhOM~or Some auto. dealership experience helpful. Full time Tues thru Sat. Con· tact Elsie Tompkins or Sid Wiggins at Earle/he TOYOT.&.-VOLVO lfU H.nor lhll c ......... . "'•U·HOl., uo.to1 BA B Y S I TT E R . Lite hskpg, 5 yr old girl 38 hrs week, Rers req Npt Bch. 644·80'n eve aft 6 & wknds BAKER Exper·d. Assembly & baking of breads & pastry. Call Dick Bogard 673·2040 bfr 3PM. Banking LOAM SECRET ARY Local Newport Beach savings & loan has im· med. opening for a Loan Secretary. Will consider trainee Salary com· mensurate with exper Full insurance benefits & paid career apparel Please call: Ms Denny Parisia 714-645-6505 MEWPORT BAUOA SA VIHGS & LOAM E.0 .E. DEi FIELD OFFICE ASSISTANT AUTO MECHANIC Domestic & Foreign. ~~~~~~~~~·I Lg .. clean, well equipped shop. 50% comm. Own tools. Lots or work. Hunt Auto Ctr., 1825 Laguna Cyn. Rd .. 494.3000 or 833-8966 lmmed. opening in field sales omci; localed in the airport area. Must be a good organizer & ad m inlstrator. Strong typing skills with good telephone manner. Will l•--------.. 1 handle office in absence Automotive of salespeople. Please PEP BOYS call or mail resume. DATA ELECTRONICS IHC. 2192 DUPONT DR .. STF. 201 IRVINE, CA. 92715 (714)~2·7840 E .O.E. M/F/H Aide, Uve·in non-amkr as· slst w /care of elderly ambulatory gentlemen. 645-0002 AIDE-Work w/ban· dicap~d adults. Muat be strong, willing to a.s· sist In tasks such as toileting, feeding, gen. cleanup. F.xcell. vaca· lion & Insurance benefllt . Unitt'd Cerebral Palsy Assoc .• Santa Ana, 546-5760 Monny. Moe Giid Jack •INSTALLERS• It AIComn Together at PEft BOYS! Full Time We are looking for a bright, self motivated people to install tires, batteries and other ac- c es or i es on uur customers' cars. We or- rer good pay and a benefits package thal in· e ludes discounts, bonuses1 paid vacations, medlcai and Ure l.ns .• pen1lon and moral. Apply In person at: Banking TELLER /MEW ACCOUNTS Let us include you as u part of our friendly staCC at our beautiful office. Irvine Savings is looking for a mature resident ol the area who wishes to work as teUer/new ac· counts on a permanent parttime basis. Please call 552-6551 ror an appt and interview. Exper preferred. IRVINESAVfNGS 14376Culver Or. lRVINE, CA 92714 EOE. M/F IARMAID l'artllme'. Need en · thuaiaatlc person. Dart Bar, Costa Mesn. ~-9935 B ea ullci11n 11 & Manlcurill.IJ with cUen· tele, be seU employed. pick your own hours . First c l ass salon . $57·2234. PEP BOYS 15221 .... lf'ld. Wnhu•dw,Ca Equal Opportunity •ITIST l~~~Em~p~~~ye~r~M~/~F~~1·-;:::;::::--------•1 Sea & Pacific Skipper. a I~ BeauUcJan lead to a monthly boating ..... I c• magazine located In Selling an)'llllna with •· li-H~~· Newport Beach baa an DaUy Plloc. Cluslflcd Ad _ .. HIJrfllt Entry Level open1n1 Cor ii a slmple matter . . . H• lhtht an arttst to aaalst ln lay· Just cal16'2·!678. Preferably w?rollowtn1. outlspaate-up.Thepo1i· Xlot workln1 cond. tlon rtqulrea -.n •P· Pleaae call Tuea-Sat. proprlate• dearee "1./or To Place your gu..0092 Mk for Joyce. an equivalent comblna· "Fast Result" tlon of education 6: ex· Se 1 Ol SHtrltnco. Pl ue send rv1ce rectory resume with Alary re• ad .... Call Now quirementoot P.O. Box 642·1671 lftl, Newport Beach, Ca.QMI. .... Jll Be1'4)' Salon Mako Up Artist, (11Jl Umt. Rive Gauche. 2300 Brhtol St.New11ort Beat'b.s.o.117'7, Beauty Salon Needed models for hair cutting classes. Free. Newport Beach. Aura. 631·1390 Bookkeeper, Secretarial F tC , single entry, P /T Permanent position. ex per req. Typwriter, 10 key by touch . Ir qualiCied call 751-7042. IOOl<KHPBl-F/C Salary commensurate with ability. Newport Beach. Call 851-15-02 for app·t. Bookkeeper, Sportswear mgr bas opening in Nwpl Bch Xlnt opp for right ind Please send Resume Box 213.5 Nwpt Bch 92663 BOOkl<HPER Full exper. thru fin stmts, AIR, A/P, P/R, jmls, some cost. Com· puter input exper .. systems dvlpt, bvy de· tail. nn-smkr. Sal. com· mens. w/ability-exper Loe. C.M. wstrn area. Pleasant working condi· lions, benefits. Call Mr. P erron 833 ·2299 eves /wlmds 760-01!1>. IOOIOCHPER Real Estate Jnvestment Co. with multiple partnership entities needs ruu charge book keeper to work in all aspects or accounting & quarterly financial re porting. Please send re· sume to PO BOX 3050 N.B. CA 92660 IOOICKHPER IOOIOCEErER F/C PIT, payroU thru trial Growing So. Org. County balance. Salary com· Co. seeks bkkpr. Exp'd , mensurate with ex· in journals, ledgers, perience. Ca ll Lois P & L state m en ts , Smith at 675-4930. supervision or A/P & A I R p e r sonne l . Life /health ins. Profit sharing, ESOP. Send re- sume to: PO Box 2711, Capistrano Beach, CA 92624. looldcH~r FuJI charge. ull time position. Xlnt beneCits $1400 mo. Niguel Shores Community Assn. (714) 493-0122 ·•••••• Daily Pilai • • : Accounts Receivable Clerk : •· Prepares classified advertising data for. computer input. Handles inquiries from boll\ • customers and sales staff. Heavy detail work.• • 10 key adding machine & light typing. Com·• • petitive salary and employee benefits includ·· lng dental insurance. Call: 642-4321, Ext 277 •for appt • : Classified Advertising : •Supervisor for Classirled Department.. • Experience necessary. ExcelJent company • •benefits. Salary co mmensurate with. le experience. For appointment ror interview. le call 642·4321, eJCt 277. . • •. General Assi~nt : • Secretary to • 1: Executive Office : • Immediate opening for vensaWe individuaJ .• Must be capable of bandUn& fasl·paced, • varied and interesting duties for newspaper• • executive & personnel administrator. Call: I • 6'2·4.321, Ext. 277 for appt. : Classified Outside Sales : e Salesperson lo handle Real Estate. • Development accounts and automotive. accounts. Must have at least 2 yeara. e experience. Salary plus commisaion. !ifuat • have car, mlteafe pald. Excellent company: · benefit.a. For appointment rot Interview. caU e 6'2·5678, ext. 277. • • • Pasteup,.._ • e Wlth new•P•Ptr experience. Part Ume. e • houra U•m·llpm. Monday t.bru FTlday. : l!:xcellen' comp~oy beoef\la. For appt. for • intervlew. call 642-4521, ext, m . • • • 0 C...t • . ~,.... . e 330 W~Bay Street • e Costa Maa, CA e e F.qual Opportunity Emp .. yer • ··••••••• ....... ~ , ., I I Ill r Ill :1 . '. ~='' ,_ ··\! i 4 SL? & ! 5 2 •• f , ;. •• ,., $ pc Or ngo Coot DAILY PILOT/Ftld1y, May 16. 1081 il...i.. 7 ~W..eM 7tOOHtlaW...tM 7tOOtw.W...tM 1t00 HOIT,140STISS MIDfCALCOU.fllt 'AITTIMI llCrr'IOMIST Hetall ~.,.~~ ..... !!.~ ~~.,.~~ ..... ?!.~! .... ~~ ..... !!.~~~.,.~~ ..... !!.~ ~.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ...... !.~ .. ~T ................... •••T•••••••••u•••••••• ~~~T•••••••••••• .. ••••• Full 6 P•rt um .. •"•II• M u 1 t h a v • 0 w n To deOvrr D11lly l'llot po1lt1on avail with a THE MA y C 0 ILIY•Y DllV• •IMH.AL °"'Cl bl• A p_ply In pttr111n t r.rn1 rorl at Ion ' b• auto route ln Nt1wpun well ••tabU11\t'd bual • 111 ... 11,-:r Cl..1':RK, 7 lt'V<'D mkl. D S.&PM Jlllly Hof(rr 400 ramll ar with Cullf lffaeh neu firm In Lacuna • ,.. ___ _ for South S a nta Ana P T 24 h.ra me" wk, ror 1ulo par1a •tort' Rt't-eptlonblt/ac>ntr•I or So.. Co.ut llwv. WIMun• frt't1Wa). ua.ltm.. Mun HOU RS ~on thru f rl 111111 M111t bl! w.:)J ., .... _ ,.._ 11111 • .Q> MIMIC be full ll'OVtyaro&>wtmd• lllZO Mu.t haw v11lkl <•IU fiH TypmJ ftoqul!t'-0 til'iH'h t-•n .D~"m 7M8500 a~roa; 3 30pm lu drt'Hl'd .,acruomrd l.1lt' Hnoo•p•A•91•for. da.a.r1e CaU ~7 74~ (or Helt>Oa N H 873 61!W drlvera hr '&ood drlv Pan ur full Umt• ( M ~ m typtnii ~ Beauurut o r lot.rvlew A•W> · 1111 reconi Apol>• at Hub 11rea Tl'rl')' ~ 04''4 llott1l MIDIC "-L II O RS Sat & ~un rlcct ' xlnl 1Mn1<flta ... SSIST -.. ,. Clrrk Ury rlt•1&ncn.Jtly11 Auto Su"~ly . 2120 GINHA&..OfflCI ~ 5am7am li ra 8 30~pm ('1111 "' ._.-•• IOOICICEEPERS Ne wpo r t Beach rul estate d~vclo p 1nent compMny with proJc<'l3 In So California lilnd l'lorida need.• c"prd full charge bookktcprr to hand le a ll phases of pm 1ect account01g Salary open. Call ~9316 for in pr wk Harbor', C 646 i'64. .,}p41~~ ~.'r:i°!id TRAMSCRllER t;11rn1nl(ll 1tpprox SJ~O J udy at •4400 MAH.AG& t~762l a1kforChlud IFVOU Work at home. top pay Pt"rmonlh CLERK·TY,.ST ~ 12 19 pt.'r hr 20 3() hn. pt•r Wt'(•k ---l,lket>tol>lto ni&ht to 8urn Apply Jhqulrt•• mlnfmum c1111 6'.24321 ror Bry.in R~C1':PTIONlST/ trvltlt! lmmed1ul(' oJ)('ll.ln& for DELIVERY Knuworfl('('l'ro(•(•durt"I t>av1d Ml'Nt'll or Mn• ~ yra 1t<'Ul<' holp1l11l l'X llolland or Sht•ltlon Ul.alnbuwr hu 1mm~ •gareu1ve curter 1>'1T llntt' rur local de /\rt' money motlvuted Rultnnr bc>twt'<·n 1111m l>t'l lenrt' ln 11ll vhu1t'1 ur ll 1.1rte l!.:qu111 Oµpur openma tor energetic & mllldt!d 1nc11v1dual with h\t>rlt'I' Xlntdnvlnl(rt' Cal714/7Sl -t700 ~pm. Hotf'l l.ul(unu. 42~ m1·du·lill dlrtliltlon <'ull f:mployer l·het'rful rerept1onist pr rv1oua retail .-x Ht•M•rvaltu1111 .it fronl t·ounh· r of CommUJlll y curd req Phont· for ~lt·u~t.u1~1 :~~· l.1tl(Ullll 768 KSOO for illlt•r Vlt'W Heavy lypmg & 10 key Pt'rlt'llCt' Some t'Ollege Appl ~7 9212 AJ.k ror c:.,nerol 1''al'lo1> Workt•l'll PART-TIME by tout•h rl'q /\ R exp u preferrec1 Go<><! com St'1 v1n.•1. l>l.•pl R1'<1u1rt-d l ypml' ut 45 wl)lll Apply Mr Emmons Newptlrt needed ror plust lc __________ , MEDICAL lntt'm:illonul cxc·hunl(t' ~ Gd Co. ~II. 11ulary pany l>endilfl Apply In Stationers Inc f11brlcat1on plunt /\pply llOUSL'('I L'ANf."S lnim"dlll'" 0 .... ntnu ex k "oL· l' 11 7 .... 3 k person. Mon Thur s , ~~ew appt lo t'1ty of lrv11w. 17200 Jumb-Ort't' Hd . 7~'4 3639, Delivery d • ,., ,,.. ,,,. , " ,,.. ,. programl!ee srt'ftpun"1 v "' u ""'"I a11 IO 12pm or 2 4pm. In person Fabricate To ~/hr. cur 64)·5123 11'd medkul 1<t:t·c11ds & ble ind1vldu11l lo locate & tor W a y11e personnel office. 3333 Pl11st1cs lnr 815 W l8t h1•---------t•h1trt hundllnl( 1>C1111tlon inh •rvlt'w host families Orn.tot, Costa MesK. loollPcnhup t>t-fon· May:n, 1!181 TV IMST/DllV )>/Time Mon. I 3()PM to Mun 1''rl 12·7pm Appro" St. CM r I) r h u " y N n for h111 h sdlCJOI students RECEl'TIOHIST Hous.k...-r/Nanfty Orthopcdlc·orflcl' Some r rorn l':u rope , So Front orflt·l' Modt'rn E.O.E 6PM. Tut!!>. 10:30AM to Cll•rk typist, SO wµm . cor· 30hn/wk. S:ilury corn 6 P M No ,. " v c r rt·i.1u111dt•111·e :uHl light m~nsuratc w/t•xper Ap necessary Appl)' Pen fil111~. ~ome urf1t•1.• <'X· plr 1n 'person Kerm neySaver 1660 Plat•entla j)Cl'll'IH'C $1t 50 rwr hour n Im ll 11 t• rd w u r I'. Ave.CM Offll·t>lll.>111i.Ht11 S M1111 MU1':<.' 266fl lf arhor CAR WASH day thru Frid.IV Blvd CM &15 2937 C a ll h 1 t' rs w a 11 t l' 11 , Anaheim & Ortinl(e C'.111 i---------~ 644·4460 ll!ik ro1 N UUl'Y UI Ann CURI< TYPIST 1-.nt'rjletrc person with DEMONSTRA TotlS l'ART TIMt-: Fn ~Sul Work in your nn•a t'ur ner S4hr 541 U7111 CASHIER good typing needed for DENTAL ASST Mature womun . .:rol'l'I) busy man.1gmg general N<'wport lk111•h ofrit1.· exp pref Apph 1n agenC)' No exp 1':xµer nt'l. <.'.ill ~ e rs 0 n , w l. 1 I , nec·es:.ar) but ub11lt) to 640.S&W k 3'"7 lo l1:arn a must Allracltve upermar l'l, .... • •· 11 D0 nt ··I A--r~. tjnl. L' 'I' ut Co H (.'dM salary D< ti l'Ompany ' u ~ ·' r ~~ benefits Call 1.IJlda at P T P I e 11 :. J n t CASHla WANTED $49 8161 e:.tabllshed Cot.ta Me:.a El Toro & N<>wpor1 llt•h 1---------... olfu.-e X·ray l1t• & exp areas. Call l.t'l1l·1,1 COCKTAIL req 6311420 644-4460 W AJTRESS DENT AL ASSIST AMT, CASHIER CAMINO Cha1rsidt'. RDA, X Huy Wa nted P 1T. prefer c' M•xlc:an Rest. ht· I" T Heat·h dly perlence, but wall tr;11n Appl} an person Salary open + llenefiti. Apply in per..<>n. Mv11 201 11 Brookhur:.l Nt•n smok t·r pref Fri. 9am 11.im St.in at Adams IW7 2.56!1 d ard Shoeh, 3077 S Bristol.C M C A.'>111 E II HOUSEWARESAL~:s Apply m person C'ro'A 11 Hardwurt'. 31(77 ~: t'ua:.l Hwy, CdM CASHIERS UTDTEM Mi\HKETS for 2nd & 3rd Shift' 1 We promott· tu m.in.1 ~•· ment & upen 1s1011 from w1th1n WANT Al'AHEEH " Costu Mcs<t 111 Del M;i1 631 9421 COUECTOR Costa Mesa collection u .: t' n 1· ) 1 s ;. e e k 1 n !( tde11hone l'ullel'lOr Ex 1x·nt•111•e prefern•<l, but will tn11n Satan & l'om m1ss1011 llt>alth 111 ... uranl'e & p:ud \';.11·11 tum Conlat·l Mr G1h1Js ;1t 957 I (}17 VOi.LEG E STL'L>I': 'r Tr.i1nee Le.Jrn a11 of' flc'<OJ(raph1<· pnnlmg part l 1mt• :-.lo ex · µencor e required Jom Jlro'A 111.: l'Ompan) near 0 (' l' <:all 751 2790 \1r ll u 1.111111 ~ COMM 1-: HC'IALS. films. 11101.lels. l'llll JS SCAS II I' l' (I s 11 l' .... r d l' e s %7 021!2 DENT AL/P~do Nun srnokt·r, u;a•k uf fll'l' Roving U!.Sl!'it now, fnrnl ofl· In 2 wks 1;.s4 061 I NII Dental Expent•m·t-d Orthodon tic, chair side ,1s s1!ll 546 5170, l'H'S 557 7C177 DHital HycJiettist P T for bus) office nt·ar S (.' Pla101 Thur:.da.>s & Frida~ s 545-4553 DENT AL ASS 'T p T r h ll I r :. I 11 l' (! '( pencn<"ed. t-·n & s ome· Sat SlO pr hr '1ll Ctr 760 9357 DENT AL FHONT OFl-'ICF. full lime J10!>1Un11 <:11s la GENERAL OfflCE ~;JC p tt r I c n c e d o fr Ice i>t•rllon tu work in 1m111ll 1>l1•u1111nt sul(•s office In South l.ulo(wrn 011 Cou!ll tlwy C:uod typist, non ~mokt•r. P1T tosturt Ill) nwcJ111tt'ly S<I SO hr l 'all 4!r.l 4»t GENERAL OFFtCE L1·admg local pest 1·00 tr ol l·ompany needs fullt1me reneral off1t•e ptri.onne Entry ll•vt:I pu'.'>1l1on Typ111J( re ll U I r t• d , II ( (I (' C (• 'o: peru.•nt'l' helpful Call Tun. 6~2 5t!i'.!2 GENERAL OFFICE Looking for d \cry an terestmg pan tmll' Job 1 n p I e iu a n t u f f 1 c· e ? Clerical. for m.itur1.• 1>cr:o.on U.x:at11111 P <.' II . Npt 81'11 Expt-r a mui.t /\ct•uralt· t~ pm.:. 1w hh<>rlhand :w hr w1•ek 1ndudl':$ Sat &. S1111 t' u 11 tiilti 7ota1 c; t· m· 1 ,.i orf 1 re HELP!! \It l' u re 111 lll'l'd ''' :.1 t•n•al1\t' J:t•n ofc l'IPrk fm a tun~ tttm tPm p u r ::i r y a .,~ 1 i: n 111t• 11 t M ull t bl• t•omfortahl~·1 'Alth numben ... Kd µhorll'I manner. profl'5stunal al lllude 1mpt Cull lv1cK1 HESTON I & Associates 540.0480 Spt•t•mh11nJ( 1n Tc:mix1n1ryClc11t·:il l't'r..onm•I t.1vc an Pvt bdrm View 1n11urura't' uhw 5 duy Amcricu & Japun In le min11llon c·o. In So REWARDING home. N R. C:hll<frnrt'. wt•t·k . "l nl Cringe terestlng position fur a San ta Ana h as 1m It dt•uninti 644 1100 h1•1t11flt11 tl4tl 511115 fur J*rllcm who enjoys work medrnte n1.'\.'d for !!O '-'"'' POSme>H nppl mg with people & 111 m receptionist Greet vis I'' 1' ll ousl!k ecprr llou~u·kt't'pt•r, hv1· 1n 1 1 d 1 1· & d b Waitress for small re M I': It t' 11 ANI>1S .. :11 eres e n promo mg m 1tors hen le usy Lovt'ly homt'. llc'h 11re11 ternationul under:.tand phone ... lite typinK, t1remcnt facility Hours l'vl bdrm !lomc· 1·011k 1wrm1111l•nt vurt l1ml', ing Wnle p l 1-:. 13!1fi 50 6owpm Must huve 7 3PM Weekdoys. l'On- 11114, !lulury nt'I( l'ull rlt'r v1l't'l(n.•l•llrl1t t·u1di.111 Sunset Cliff Bl~tl Sun pleaiiant voi t e & ta C'l Mrs Collins Kathy 5468ftll. 7!\9 0177 11uµcriourkl•l11 8 OJ>l!ll D1ego!:l2lC17 personaltty & shurp up 4!M !1458 tn111 tolul 111 bl'l1 1.·1lle11. pearanee We offer u llousckl•epcr <.'olllpKlllOll l ' M & M111i.11111 Vttj(). Part T111" e O'tendly work environ R OUTEMAM Live 111or11ut 10.4:0 hn wkly l ·.111 Juhn ment. ext.~11 bener1ts. & M alure young man over 833 20W <714 > !1:1:1 H!l511 Co11nsellMJ Yo..ttl salary based on cxpcr Wyri. for Soft Water Co llousekcl·~r l\pl M l(r Lido blc, 5 dny-.. hq• out, t-:nJ: 'fl & drtvl'r'I It (' J> f ('( . I l'f I t• 'l G7:1 7117:.I II Ol 'S t-:w A It 1-: S/\ u:~ (' A.'\l lllo:H ApµI} 111 JJCnlOll C'row11 llurdwuf'c, 102-1 I 1 Vint'. (Weslc-llrf Pl111JJJ NB INSl'~(,~l'OH Exp 1n blueprint re11d an~. and measunn~ 111 str uments Send rel.unw lo. Alummum Forge• C11 5()l E /\ lton St, <I '0 1111" 2125), Santa Ana !ll7tn t-: 0 E M 1F INSURANCE SALES PERSONS <.Jut1>lund111.: 11µ portun1t1es exp'cl or 1n t'xp 'cl Satar) +t om m1i.:.111n:. PhOlll' Ht1b Sm1lh !153 3153 JAHrTORIAL Stor k & deliver} person. 7am 4pm shift, Sunda) thru ThursdJ) Xlnl b c n t'f 1 t s 1\ p p I > 1 n perl>on. lh Time Liquor. 495 E 17th Sl <: M MESSENGER o morn1nl(1J .1 week . Mon 5 :lllAM to 8AM. T11t•i.. thru !-.ut Ii 30AM lo llAM 1-;xcell <lnvmg n•l' n•q 'II Apply l't•n nybll\lf't . 164;(> Placi·nti.1 "''l' . ('M MHGMT POSITION Va hr I(' t·h1.1111. (' M 1\nuhl!nn Xlnl opp <:,. rr, Ci4ti 4(>t0 Models femall'. tall. 111111 lash1u11. ma1tuzlnc Shat ponly &12 6282 B•rb MONEY FOR COLLEGE In JU!>I two yt•urs you rnuld hLI H ' up tu Sfl.000 tu lwlp pay for your <'Olll•ge l'osl:. And a !tk11l that )ou'll le::irn plus e x Pt'rl('nn· 'A(1rk1nj! wllh other!> m tht• US Army If vou ha\ ca h11(h st·hool d 1· 1110 ma y 11 u may quahf) for lra1nm~ and i.crv1t \' to }our <·ountry 'Ahlle )O U Sl'r\e yourself ('all your Arm) Rcl·ru1tcr for more 1nformation C~ Come JOU1 u happy work in San Juan Cap area Adults with out.standing tcurn & Krow with the Musi have gd dnvmg re attractive personalities company Apply Person tord PcJ Vut·, Ins. ell to S""nd L5 hr.i nor week nel Dl'pl Lam1nat1on 493 4535 r ...-Tet·hnology 2720 S counseling youth ages Mam. s A S56 l460 10 15 Evenings & Weekends Available S75 per w k Call 2 :~0-5 :30pm. Mon thru Fri 642 4321 exl 343 Ask for Lori. OrmtepCoast Dailv Pilot 330 W. IJay St reel Costa Mesa. <.;a 1':q ual Oppor t E mployer PART Time stock clerk for manne hardware s t ore Call . Balboa Manne. 549·9671. EOto: M 1F1H Pas"-> Full ume posn1on Full eompany benefits Ex· per or wltrl!m. Apply PENNEYSAVER 1660 Placentia Ave. C. M PA YROU CLERK 2 3 days per week. Hr!> 9 5 Apply. 1660 Placen t1a Ave .C M PESTICIDE SPRAY RECPT/TYPIST Newport Beal·h Bayfront Law Ofrire Legal expr not rcq 548 2283 SAL.ES ADV AMCEMEHT POTEHTIAL /\re you a motivated i.elf starter. look ing for high eammgs? Secured Financial Investment RECEPTIOHIST lnl'. Southern Oregon's for f' IT pos1t 1on in major mortgage mvesl· Ch1rop ractor'i. office ment firm. need!> exp'd Must be dependable . ef· sa les people. For in· f1c1enl & have good of tervicw, call Robert K. ficc skills Non smoker liurhanan 1 800-452·7977 preferred l'llll 631 5690 < 1 n 0 re g o n ) o r 15031779 2!139 (outside RECEPT/SEC'Y Orc:Koni P T , Wed Sun Yat·ht • • . • Club. 1601 Buys ide. SAL ES Clerk for retail ('dM 644 9530 marine hl!rdwart' stOrt' RECf;PT I ONIST PART TIM I': fur Dot tors OHire 1':xl)t'r an Typ mg & bkpg San Clem drca 1-;\es aft fipm 831 9125 E"per nee Call. Balboa Marine. 549·9671 EOE M F II SALES CLE:RK-Retail Office Supply Company has full hme pos1t1ons available Will lra1n Ne .... l'Orl Stat1Unerl> Int· 557 !1212 Mr Emmons Slllt>:; En joy readin<J Ttt. Pet1nyscrnr? Laguna ~:ad1 494 923.1 Cump:in1on S1.0l'0 ) L1H• 111 'tlmr rookmR Own :\leSd, 2 YN•r:. exp ' m i.l ----------1 be :.killed 1n 1>lrung I.AREi. PRESS OPF:RATOH Mm1mu111 I yl·:ir c xperu:nce with flt'xo~raph1c p1 mtm.: (;wwang Cost;i Ml'sa <.'u offl'r~ grE'at opportunlt} r ail 75l ·l7~1 Mr han Costa Mesa 540 1026 II 11nl1nl!lon lkh !Hi2 HR21 l.ugunu llilb 7611·52.51 Santa Ana 542 47ft3 ARMY. BE All YOU CAN BE. OPi'.:RATOR Exper w pest control ap phrator lie Top pay & benefits Pleai.e rail nt4 > 768-47519AM 3PM RCPT /SECRETARY Bus)' office with friendly atmosphere need:> sharp reliable rel·ept1on1i.t Vaned duties in dude an s werinl( pho ncs . greeting v1s 1lors, ac t·urate hghl typing, fal in~ and gener11l ad m11111tt rall\'t' tasks If you huve a good front or hce appearunrc with ll pleasunl pc:rsonal1ty und phone voice, we huve a good poi.ition with rnm l)l!l1l1ve salary and ex rd benefit:. Cull Lmda Fosler at 714/540 0500 for interview appt The Header Ad Dept of the Pennysaver is ae ceptmg applications for a part lime sales pos Clear pnntmg, gd spell- ing & a fnendly smile a re the basic require men ts. We will tram. Ap ply 1660 Plac-enlta Ave . Hunlmgton BN1 th 962 91 Hi CHAUFFEUR HANDYMAN Responsible. auto b1•ul maint, odd hr.. ('all wk dys 494· 1112 CLERICAL Leading local pest con t rot compan} nl'eds fullhme genernl offl<'c personnel lo;nlr} lt-vd pos1t1on T) p1ni: r" q U I r C d . II ff I (• l' I \ periencc helpful l 'all Tim. 642 5U22 CLBUCAL Our ex pandmJ( hU'•lnl'c;~ has se\,c•ral 1mnh·•I openm~s Tht• foll o'A 111J: pos1t 1ons Jrt' J\ ail M AIL C l.EHi\ CLERlCAl.. l)p1n1: JO IO WPM. m111hn,::, f1lin1:. general office dulle~ CLERK TYPl~I'. ty11m1: •0.45 WPM. ~c·ncra or flee duties OHlce cxpcr hi!lpful Good company benef1ti. Hn 8AM 4. ISPM Cull for an mten 1ew apsll 833·8450 COM l::ltCli\I. BA:"llKERS un: 1401 Dove St St•· !>50 Newport Rt•ad1. t'a EOE \1 F CLERICAL l'ar N1.·.,...rH11l <Ht·a 54118672 COMPOUNDER M1x1ng l'ht·mieal puwdt>rs Mus t know basil' math A\·ailable for overtime & fnn~es Must speak En~hsh . L1nwiltu Lubs. 2832 r>ow . Tustm. 832 9700 Const ruct11>n telephone l'ummunH·a t11111 . pl'g boa11I & 111 surance 631 1420 Desianer H v /\C Com m/lndus t proJeels Mm J.5 yrs ex l*f Mech Consultants Nr OC A•11X>rt Uahl. Taylor& Asso<· ~5234 300-600WK E~~~~ HO EXP. NEC. M lg l'U an Mi:.swn \'l\'Jll <;ct uul of the hot sun & area ne('ds e-<pcr m into our air tond1t1<>ne1l e lellncal cunn1:dor'i ufrit·es W1ll loeale •111 of h c r m e t 1 t• s e a I s f11 c dost'sl lo yuu 1 transducer dei>1gn. cnm IUIYl:! lrn(Jl.•n.11 W;i )' punenls material!. & ~:~1 !IJz; mt"thod~ Dulles inl·lude des1.:n. Cook hnr & prc·11 l'"<P drafttni:. materials ll'sl llrf"'akfasl & huwh 1-'or ing & R&D proJc<·h .iµpt 493 1!148. SJ t ' ~le c ha n1cal Engmt•l'r 1nJ( d e gr<'l' pref d Cook Qualified c ;rnd1dale& r 111,,1 , Short Ordc•r send resume to Mrs M uict be L8 Ap1ll~ J a n s . 2 3 8 9 I V 1 a Jl I Palm BallJou Fabric·ante, Suill· 603, Cook-Short Order Miss1onV1e10.Ca !12691 N1ght11 1\pply Mesa I.ant's, 1703 Superior, Donu t s hop fo~arl> AM Costa MC!l<t. see Sam or shirt. no e-xper net• APP· Hetty IY . Olpp1ty Donuts, 1854 <.;ounter H el p or Sandwich Person. P IT Mon Fri Call ror appt 752 5401 . t;ary·.-.. l>clie CounttrHetp Munday Fnd:iy Su11t·r Sandw 1ch :'>45 4867 ® Newport l:Jlvd C M DRIVE:R n1•1•dc·d . musl h11vl' 1tood cl rt\ 1n1t rl'l'ortl Ho11111 for Mlv .1111·1·m1•nt II uni lkh Jrt•:.t ft.II, 25tl3 DRIVE:R MC'y1·rt111r·,. pnm.irv I I \UJlllll1•1 11f j.!•11.od roo•I" l•1 the• l 1 vin1• c 11 1 porul•• 1·11ni m Ullll )' lll"t'd'°' II ll"\llOO!llhlt• & fl\•l(lhh• l"'f"'" l111111 r111,.I pn·p & )Jl'k uv lll'lllll'tlt'~ 1\1011 1-'n , K :111m Ci1~11l 1lnvml( r•·1·111 •I ,,... ,.,.,..11 y Stu rt11 at 13 4:1 ( 1ill '-.w111• at :.:.1112:)'1 •DRIVE:RS• t'ull & l'IH1 lhrii· M UKI Ill' Ill )'('UOI ur ltl(I' & hll\11' a 1(1.1od ch I vh11< '"''""' ht11rlll ul S.1 in/hr <'ult TYPISTS R1·~1Sll•r today for l11<'al km porary as!l1~nml•11ti. 557-0045 a\-Llr\:. JIMPOl!AllY PUISONNll SIPVICfS 3 7 2 3 Birch Strttt Mewpc>fi IHch EOE LANDSCAPE CONSTRUCTJON pos1 lion Must ha\•e all round l'Xper Top pay & benl'f1ts Plrase call t711 > 768 '1751 from !11\ \1 JPM Le9al Sec~ary :'11m1mum 2 yrs Cl\tl hllgat1on. Salao ol)l'n G 11011 benl'f1t s XI nl c;i-:~EH \l.(Wfl< ... s k 111 !-r e q d N II T\ p1n~. phonl~ and s ho1 thand ma1lln.: Part tmH· •1 to I 752·~11; 12 :tu. 5 days R I': 1lftlre. I Legal Senl'lar). t•xper ~l''A port Acut·h Larry I Up to SI 100 mu Send re Sllon.:lM9513 _ 1 sume p o Box 6114 . Lag Nig uel 92677 G<'nl•ral LEGAL SECY· The Balboa Bay Club I is nowhlrin9: SENIOR PTHR Challenging pos1t1on for lop secy w/Xlnl skills De luxe ores ()(' :i1rport area Gd hen. Sal. Com mensurate w exp Con tact Cmdy. 752·7~~ _ Snock Bar Cooks Fast food e xix•1 Summer only Rest Host/Hostess I' T Thu1. F'n. Sal. Son, Ex1.1 rl'tl C°'ktail Wolter /W altress F:xr n .. 1 I-T GotePenon I' T Fri &Sul 7um 3pm Wolter/Waitress I' T 1.u11d1 111 1J11uw1 I"< ,,.., fl''I S•c11rity Guord I• T1·xp n •q I' T StoreCa.rk I u~tl H1.·~· t-.'q"·1 l 'rpf Ci at. Pft"IOn I' T nll'qu1•1 duh l'lr111u· t ult f11r ap11t Il l ~> 1 :1~11 . Mon F11 . !I :W 4PM 51'M LEGAL SEC'Y NEWPORT BEACH Full time 9 to 5:30. Call Joyce for appt. 640-5650 LEGAL SEC'Y Probalt' experient'l'. permanrnt PT N e w p " r t n e u t· h 673 7120 l.1te Mfi,: Full & l'a1l time work ava1labll' 642 S7a! LO.AH PROCESSOR Mu:-.t be experienced with 2nd trust deed~ Koll Fmanrial Cenll'r Ooocl cnv1ronment & !iala1 y 714 955 l<X>S The COlllpUling Company Murk KAM ~1l'M Mon ---------• MACHINIST HELPER Full llmt• Must read vcrn1rrs /mic•romelers 6 m111 l'Xper l.aukmann Eleetro·Opt1es, lnr I': O.E San J uan Capo Nt>w:.puper delivery person . 18 1)r ovl'r Driver's ll l'en:.l'. 111 surantc, et·onumy t·ar Npl Brh lrv·Co!>ta Me:.a urea 7 dys pr wk Mon rr1 2 5PM Sal 'Sun 4 7 301\ M I\ ppm-< $500 mn Call 510 3007 bet I li\M 5rM Ai.k fm Lt•e o r lloh NURSERY SALES Lookm~ for ix.•ri.onable. n1:.1t . energetic per)un able: to grow with a 'Aell eslabhs hed compan) Minimum I }l'ar rcta1l nurs t>rv ... etlrng ex penence" rl>quin:d Full lime starting salary SIOOO Sl400 pe1 mo Paid hohdayi.. & \aeallo ns ll o!tr1tal1zat1on Ins a va 1 . Part t1 me pos1 lion!> also avuil In t1:rv1ewi. by appt only ('a II 646 744 I Mon f'n I.LOY DS NU RS EH Y NUHS~AID E l"or r etirement hotel, fo'ri & Sat. midnight • P IT position for un aide. Spm l l p m Newport Villa. 642 5861 NURSING RN or l,VN. 11 7pm, :1 mtcs per wc••k Pvt 41 lx>d Con\'al llrn.p S A lits S I\ 549 3061 HURSIMG Pen11ma I needs alien danl 8am-4 JOpm Sat Sun Gd workmJ( cond1 twns SJ 75hr Nurses Atd exper helpful but not net· Call J<>nnt<' Subnick Bayv1t•w Manor 350 W Hay CM, <.'a G42 3!10S PICTURE Rt.AME Manuract urer looking for EXPE R IENCED hard workers. Involves frume assembly, m at <'Ulting, glass culling . etc Pay according to skills Cosla Mesa area 646 41163 (9-6) PIZZA Delivery dnvers & <'OOks necded Men & women 21 yrs of age. good dnv ing record. valid Calif dnvmg lleense. W11Jmg lo work eves & wknds. full Me-N Ed's Pizza 847·1214 PRESCHOOL Teachers a nd Aides needed, part & full time Newport Beach 640--11820 P l1m :.~e room helper. Mon 3PM to ap prox 8PM. Tue. 2PM tu approx 7PM No exper necessary. Apply Pen· neySaver 1660 Placentia Ave C.M. Production Wort& Loading cassetle tapes. Isl s hift. 549-0138 PRODUCTION ASSIST AMT Needed ruJI or part·ttme No exp necessary but an eye for detail & ab11i· Hestauranl CM • Sales, cxpcnenced, part lime. Ladies spec1alil > shop, fashion Island Flexible hrs. Call M1m1 759 9951 WAITRESSES Exp 'd waitresses Male F em. busboys, l•---------rooks. & rooks helpers Sales for new Continental Jo' T sales pos1llons m Restaurant 1n N B lhe following depl 673 3233 Sh<WS Garden shop 1\utomot1ve major ap· RESTAURANT pl1a11ces s porting Hogue l:Jarm1chael'' goods Door person. cooks & bus help <.: M 645 3678 l J ulei. or Harry) Restaurant E"per Waitress. all sh1IL:. open. Apply lrvme P rime. 2 4 Shirley REST AURAHT HELP Del Taro m NC'Wport Beach 1s now hmng full & partlime help. both do y & night shifts availa ble. Sta rting woge $3.35·$4 hr Apply 2112 SE Bristol <near John Wayne Airport) REST AURANT F IT , P IT sandwich man & counter help Plaza de Cafe Gary's Dell, 752 5401 P T sales pos1t1ons Credit Gartlen shop sports wear Xlnl Co ben mcl dis· ('QUiil PM\', IJIS plans . paid vac & profit sha r mg & pension program Apply m per.>on JC PENNEY 24 F'ashion Island. NB E.0 .E . M F Sales HELP WANTED! ty to work al a fast pare 1----------1s req uired. Start ing Telephone sales. No ex· per nee Excell co bl'nef1ts Commission pro~ra m & profit shar· mg Apply m person. Pennysaver. 1660 Placentia Ave .. Costa Mesa SJ 35 hr Books on Tape, Inc. 711·C W 17th St C M. 548 5525. Real Estate CAREER OPP'T'Y Join the team that year after year consistently ltst.s & sells more re.sale pro perties rn Laguna Niguel Take advantage of the many benefits we offer CaU Ken Strang for a confident ial in tervicw. (714)496-4040. LAGUNA MIGUEL REALTY Restaurant SGT.PEPPEROHl'S fJlllASTORE Now h1rmg for full & rart lime opening& al ocat1ons at 0 C Airport Vary111g days & hours, ideal supplemen tat income for homemakers & stu dents. Our progressive. growing company offers opportunities for advan cement based on your job performanl'e Pleasant working rondi lions. M usl be 18 le over. Apply in person blwn I & SALESM&4-IOAT Srhol'k Boals. Scott at 673 2~0 SAWP(T We need 3 sharp people with fashion background to work in our men's & women's dept Salary + r omm1ss1on. call for appl THE LOOK 644.65()() Automatic l>ata l'ro1•1•,.,,.m1ot 111 th•· worl!l'll largest 111dt>pe11llt•nt 1·ompulrn1< icc•rv1f1•s company W l' u~•· mo1'l' r o111put1•rs 111 mur1• way& for more pcoplt· 1n moi e r1l1u·1111 thun any other rompuny of our kind t714) 493·6624 tluy th111 J<'rl•J.1y iJl (;t•nl!rul l•---------1 751 i1uw Hetp Want.dP/T OFFICE Personal needs attcn <lunl 8am 4 J()pm Sat Sun Gd working l•Ondi t1ons $3.75hr Nurscs /\1d e"per he lpful but not nee Cull J ennie Suhnick Bayview Monor 350 W Bay CM. Cu 642 35<lt 6PM RECEPTIONIST 2300S E. Bristol SALESPERSON fulltime, T ues.·Sal .. 9 .30·6. Must have a t le ast 2 years ex~rience in 11 card & gift shop. Hunt Bch. 962-8910. CLERICAL SUPPORT Our rap1cJly growing Pens1011 Service. Divu11on administers rct1rcmcnt program!! for the self employed. and for '!mall to medium siied bu111ness and profe1monaJ ror porallons The clencal staff ploy<1 an Integral pnrt in lbe a dmm1slra1111n of the retirement plans. Our continuing expun11lon meam 11 constant need ror t nthualast1c and service orlen~ people Opportunities exist ror people with clerical or bu•lness backgrounds. For lh~e poeiUons we r~uire light typing. malb a p· tltudt and organizational 1killa . B11nklna or broke rag e ex pf r i f'n t'c 11 a plu1 . Opportu nities •Ito exist ro r I Omf lnexperlen ced people who ere willln1 to learn. ' ADP belle-n1 In cn couraglfl& the develop· ment or s kill• and llupervisory exper1l1e from wit hin the or1anlaaUon. We al.lo have lb kind or benefi t packace you would txped of a company o~our ata ture. For conalde r allon. vl•lt our P noon I Office betwfl!n 8 am and 4 pm or call 7•9300 e.x 218 tor more d etail• FASTFOOOS M11il room, Mon T1w~ tuc1k It C11.~hlc1 •:"l>Cf llll(hls 51)m 2um Apply lll!l' ~<>i l'u<'lfk Co1111t 11160 l'luc1•nllu, C M llwy Jin !1.-.J 444~fo:vl!ll <:enl'rul i--------1 ,,.. .. Rm Het,.r FILE CLERK Mon 3 30pm· lom Tues J.arlo(c 1n11urunre agency 2 J()pm 12·30am Apply ha'I Im moo1ate open ma 1660 Placentia C M ro1 fast. ener1tetlc rite <-'lt•rk Paid compuny GIRLFfUDAY benefits Call Linda ut Ne<>d<>d for fast growmii 549 8161 ~mull Co llUNT BCll Flor1st, ~Xllf'r. full time DcMurl 1-'lurnll 2438 Nl"'wpo r t Ill, CM &46 4479 t-'OOU PREP & SERVER, now h mna. 1f you're fr1rn dly . cons cientiou.11 le c1cpendablt', we want )'OU from 8AM· 4PM wkdya . Apply In person ; StoncmUJ Ter- race Reataurant, 21H$ Redhill. C.M. GIMll.AL OfllltCI Good typing llilll, work va.ned, eltttrmlc1 Urm. Adunced KIMllct, 1231 Victoria St CM IM&-71SS E.O.E . ....... Oflltel Sm1D omce ~ clrt &ood on pbooe, Ult lYP. In.a. Ca.LIM tm. area 536-2593 Girt Friday Part lime. Orange Coun ty Airport Arco Setr starter with strong or· llHniutlonol a nd ac- <' O U n l In (I !!kills M inimum lite t ypin g Top dollar 11nd nexlble boura for r1ic ht person. 7$2·690S GOLFSTARTEA 32 hr week. prefe r re· t l r e d p e r so n . 114 /499·1919. GUAlDS Full fr pert lime . All Ut'U . Unlfonn• rum'd. Aaea 21 or over. retlrtd ~elcome. No txPf'r Off. Apply · U n lveraal Protection Service. 12:28 W 5tJl St I S._n\a Ana, lntervlew hn: 9-lUr H. Mon·l'rl. ------ . MAILCLERK Sort & prepare outgoing mnil Part lime. hours very flexible. Coldwell Banker Real 1':state , Fushlon Island. ask ror Clane Johnson. 644·9060 Manager for ladies J r specialty shop located ln Fashion Is land Exp. & rer11 r eq'd Call Th e r I a ee 6-44-8982 MANICUIUST llrs 9-4. Tues.·Sat. Newpor ter Inn Ha Ir Designs. N.B. 644-2580. MEDICAL ORDE:R-FfLLER M usl he arruratc. no exp neccsnry Apply in person 5 ll F.. Goetz S A PACKAGERS F EMALE $3.40/hr lo start Merit rolses 1.537 Monrovia Ave. N B PAIMTBl'S A'PREHTICE No exp nee $4 50/hr Call Jim at631 C1769 Partt Full ti me job at home Send sta m ped ond self addressed en· velop t to 0 N . En· terprlses. Box 5439. P ine BlufC, Arka~. 7 11Ht. Pa rt lime at home. Nd 6 dy namic people. will train. Ric hard 675·~ Immed iate Openlng for experienced persona ble Rcceptlonlsl In buay Ne wp o rt B eac h Orthopedic practice. Heavy phones. appoint· PART TJME TRAINEE menl achedullnl(. 1reet Label Preu Operator. pa U enta . Xlnt ffln1e Growlna company ck>le ben e flt1. 846·S99$ for to O.C.C. Grtlt for col· appt. lea• atudent. C all 151-2'790. Mr. Oudd.lnl Your frleoda and If you wa.nt your ad· nel&bbora ..-. Clua.tned ven.lalnl t"neMA&e to re- w b • n t b • Y b a .,• acb more people at 1 o nut hi n 1 to u l I. k>war cOlt. Cla.ullled la Tbty'll tell )'OU bow we lJ the wayto'°l Clll Now I it worted fur t.bem I ~ Growing S A. com pany Santa Ano Heighls has opening for recep.-(NeJCl lo McDonald's) t 1 o n j s t I t y P i s l E.O_E w /p leasan t pho n ei .. --------.. 1 person a lity. Typin g s k i ll s o r 55w pm Respons1bibties include t yping or or~ers. in· voices. q uotations. cor· respondence e lc Ex cellent starting salary w/period1c reviews. For personal interview con· lact Cy Simpson at 558-2603 RECEl'Tl~IST WEBB4DS Coldwell Banke r Rea.I Es t ate Services. Newport Beat h om ce. Switchboard experience helpful. but will train. Call Claire J ohnson . 844·9060 weekdays 9 to 5. Rtc.,tt•t Bus y Corona del Mar Real E at.ate office. Light lyptn1. salary com· men1 urate with ex· r:rlence. AP for Loret· Van1t , 875-3'11 RIC.nOMIST Good front office ap pearance. typlnJ 6: &eneral o frl ce CX· perlence required. pl e a1ant phone puunallty. Newport 8«a(b ~-- RETAIL CLERK Costa Mesa Stationers 270 E. 17th St. C.M F IT Apply In person 1 ~120nl)'. Retail THE MAY CO. Sovth Coast Pina Has opcu•+ for: COSMETIC SAL!SPaSOH Sa~• ll1gh fashion wom en 's apparel store in Fash.ion Island Salary, comm .• good benerits, Exper req ~~-1_100 __ _ Sales PEP BOYS MGMy, Moe Clltd Jade IF YOU UICI SALIS YOUULOVE fJEPIOYSI F ull Time Take advantage of this Immed iate opening In o p portunity to join one or our prestigious Southern California's co.mellc tines. Only ex· leading auto parts re· perlenced need apply. taile ra /service centers. Mutt be available evea & You'll enjoy our friendly w e ek e nda . S a I a r )' atmo,sphere, top wages +commlsslon. Apply in iand progressive think· ferao n . Mon·Thura. I n g . Our b e n e fi t s O· Upm o r 2·4pm . package Includes dis· personnel o frlce. 3333 counts, bonuna, paid 8ri1tol. Coeta M H vacations. medical and E.O.E. tHe lna .. pension. and moral. RetallS alet Apply In penon at: Hieb Faahlon at o rc PEP BOYS need1 belp. Salary + comml11M>n. FIT. Ell· Wal I , .. ,,Ce. perlence dellrtd Mal• Equa I Opportunity or female Reapooalblo. Employer 117F 7to-OIT2 ~~~~~~~ j ' l , I • ' ~ ··~ " . ' •' -,· '· ... . . .. . 'I .... ,, • .. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 We're dealing like never before •.. Discount pri ces clearly marked . No hassles .•• Unheard of prices ••• So don't miss ou . This may be your last chanc e because of · mport cutbacks. So hulTJ to Ike! Fully recOnditioned used cars. ROCK-BOTTOM PRICES! 1978 PLYMOUTH SAPPORO 4 cyl., eutomatlc Irena .. arl cond AM·FM vinyl roof, steel radial tires iinted I radio,. morel Sporty & styli1hl (619UPW). g ass 197 4 VW SUPER BEmE Eco nomical 4 c yt en ine ttlranamRiaslon, radio, vl~yt ln~lor. & & V.:1fe~eadll All. uns .. LIKE NEW" (017LPF). · · ECONOMY PLUS! 1978 AUDI 51DJ 5 cyt., autom1ttc trane., •Ir cond. lng-braku·wlndows tinted I , pwr. l lffr· trOI. AM·FM stereo c'usotte f ~1(~~~~· 1971 VOLVO 145 WAGON ~:X11~;.n~~.:~r4 :r'::~ tr~nsmiasion, air condi· room for the family! (2:310e~~ rack & Iota of 197 4 MAZDA RX4 WAGON Equipment Includes " speed transmission radio, pinstripes. wheel well moldings buckei ~~Lt, tow miles. Excellent co~dit1on l 2499 1976 BMW 2002 •,cyt • 4 ·~ trans .. faCIOf'f sunroof AM·FM s ereo caasette tinted gtus & • tor"s item! ("96Nvs~ morel Colleo- 1976 TOYOTA COROLLA 4 cyl., 4 speed transml1 t ~~~;,~11ewa11 urea & m~~;· E:~·m~~~r'f~~j 19_71 VOLVO 145 WAGON Economical 4 cylind I transmission tinted glesr eng ne, automatic (7500CJ). • a s and AM·FM radio. 1974 VOLVO 145 WAGON 4 cyl., autom1tlc trena fact al •,teerlng, atereo. lugg1ge rlCkOf'f...;.. ~d,, .. , ptlwr. morel (592MMO~ • .... res 1976 MG "B" CONVERTIBLE ~yFl.~.•,s,peed trans., power·front diac brakes • m ereo cassette · oondlttonl (40689G) • new top & In excellent $359 9 1975 TOYOTA CWCA GT 4 cyl., 5 speed tran1ml11lon vinyl roof AM FM ;:;:0~}."tte, steel radl~ tires and ~rel 1974 VOLKSWAGEN BUG Economical 4 cyt. engine 4 lpeed . vinyl Interior & whltewell iira. ~).·· radio, SAL!& DEPARTMENT HOURS ._... ........... ... ......,... -11 ..... 1,... SERVICE I PARTS DEPAATM NT HOURI _, .. ....,... ··~ •OOYIHOP OIPAATM!NT HOU"I -.f'll. ........ c.1-. ..... 1 I 'i I ,, ., ·~ '•It ( . . J ( . . s .. ---~---.. ~-~----..... -....... 4r•---....... ---~ ........ -............ ~ ................. ~ ..... -~ ........ ~ ......... ~ ......... ,.,,..~ ........... ~ ............... ~ .... ~ .... C11111•,. ............. 2 .. s1C1 .... a111211!11 .. llll .... llS .. 1111112"ss1c1111"31111~ n Or1nge Co11t DAILY PILOT/Friday. May 15, 1981 Allctte. tOU ,_....... 80J O .. ,.... ~ IOll Mlacd•n• IOIO r.thu l c ••• IOIO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s .... a~~ al John Wayne A rt for l pef'llGll offle.. etd t all!! cbar1• peraoD E11p nee S0.220l ----- .... ~~ ..... ?!~ ~~~ ..... ?!.~ ~·.~~ ..... ?!~ 1··P·u·s·i.·1·c·rtlllN--·rru-·R·E-ENf T, IR I!: HOUSEHOLD o umllW'9foraale LR, SICltlTAAY Stl.ldftltJot. TRAINEE Label Presa * llll'JION• bdrm. DR Is patio Newpo" S..ch c .... ,.1 s I 0 0 0 I M 0 T 0 Operator EH-Ht op· """ EYet )'thinf near new Contrutor bu Im· Sl'AIT JIC)rtunltyto ltamart ol T .... 7:J OPM Muattelllmmtd.Offe,.. mtldlate opeoln1 for • SUMM ERORCAREER rtexoarapblc prlnllna Larae 1t.oraa• k>t from Oellvery.~9010 ron1lJ'uetloo aecre.tary D u • to tllpan alon· w1 t b tcrow 1na Co1ta Oon "tt artln Stora, ... Xlnt '¥orttlna condll.aont compa ny needs many Mt .. Co. Call 7$t 2788 boxea1 re fri1erator. 8' c-ouch, 1ood cond SALI S PBSOM ... & ~ company benefits. 1tcretulaJ. martceUna Mr Lloyd. w1.br. aryr, 1\0Ye, lovitly Warm colon. blk walnut for dyn a m ic contem Good typ1il1 •lcllla te· 6 wart'bol..t!Ml poellluna. bdrm Ht&, umolrt!ti, b1H·k 4s 11dea UOO porary tttall 1tor. Only qulN'd Send ~11um1t lo· Wiii be rilled immediate· TRAIN& tbla 4s chra, ch1naa, llv 875 llQ51 MoYlnl S.1-: •v•t')'thln1 IH•. 1190 W J&tb St Newport ee..ch ( l&th 4s Monrovia) Seacllft Mobilt' Home Park, Sp. li SAT /SUN 9 AM Washer/dryer, refra1. misc 1S892 Bogart ~· t"tn. Valley. WE'VE ADDED SOr.ITllNG NEW! A -COPY C..,.. OffSIT 9UAU TY COfillS 1 v2~~ 1~~~o~'L catter ma.nded . m11tur1t Ma'.Jarttt Holmt'I PO ly. Must be 18 4s h11ve Show Horse atable, lJve· ln11 rm tbl1. lump1 women nt'<.'d 11~µly At BO 2390 Newyrt tran1portalion&bewell In (714)2442218 PLVSLOTS MORJo: leaat ~ yns. rt'ta1I rxper ~u~h CA Ht'IGO IF aroomed. ---SAYE $AVE SAYE 1 ft. n11vy blue couch SAT Sam to Spm. 717...., Very comll. Xlnt conct Fernlear. CdM o._hes. Also Sl2et. 8 11-~ x 14" and 11 " x 17 " Slo(·ks Ava1lablc Vanous Colors <slight xtra charge> req 'd Salary plus Jo.OE ---CaU 10.m·3\>m TRAYB. AGBfT We honor BofA, MC. Sl7& 5~1·500'7 evea clothes, ant.lque11 . MATTE l<'INISH CIRCA 83 t'Omm Pll!QC' appl)' In SICllTARY C7 14»147·001 I N 8 Aaeyneed.Homm'I Caah lC'r'u cheekl & Reaut. India Cotton pt'nlon or roll Apropo. Jo 1 · ........... 1q"ent w/2 yrs exp Cuah. NO PERSONAL 6'4·2652 or •29 to'aeihhin 'ul time' •t-c y n"""~1---------Apollo trauied 1t +.Call CH ECKS PLEASE ! Sofu /Loveaeat 15oo. bland , Npt Orh F.Of. (or buar real est11te of· SUPERVISOR Norma 644-6373 Food uv111lable. ltem1 <.:oHee Table set 1150 flrt-. t.ood t yping 4' aubject toJ)lUale. Uen Sofa 1100. Sacrifice SA Lt~ H 1-:1•s phont' 11kill11 1111St•n Ual Tree trim mer, ex per. an MAST-• •ucn,_, s:"~<'ua. U1_:929S Need Salt'11 Manll.il'a No shorthand rnqulrod. M•llttanance all phase11 or trt1e work. ~"' "" preft1rablt> 3 )'t'aflj ell. (;~ bt111dihl Contact Top pay & benefits. Pis 20751,11,, Newport Blvd CM Ulnnlna Room Set . 5 P<inence to a.ell 111'tht' l'hrlll tJ.«7020 Super ~~~:'Main ~·.Ill 714/761J4751 bet il39·962~ 646-8686 Plece -SolldOuk Ball& •port1wear bu fll'l'd "··~-•·rv 1 · "3'-'M Claw. plus leaf Xlnt ~ .. .., .... , teoa nce pel'$0nne m re " r d $595 e Salt'S ReP11tos.lll\1~111k PARTTIME tlrement h oapllal llcyclet 1020 con · rass Lumv him with pnwt•6sln11 Orders 1uppl1es uwlud-TYPESETTER ••••••••••••••••••••••• 145· Call 7~IJ55 h Wl'ekend aec'y n~t1d BE c M u • t 11 ' l' • o tl d immedlatelY for busy l'e• lna chemical produc.-ts Com pugraphlc equip. ACH-RUlSER So. Amer hand tooled transportation, neoRt 1111 al est.Lt' olrk~. Typing Mixes & labels che1111c11I Positions or:en 1n Dana 5 spd. blackJ almout leat her bur & stools, l>t!ar•n<"C' St-nd br1t<f re & 1&ood w/phones ea•en· pr od ucU for vnrious Point & Costa Mesa new; askingSno value llOOO. :;ell 1595 11unu• to 3001 Krllh1ll t111l Contac-l Chris uaea Keeps detJ1led re· Goodp.iy,97_9-_J.5.1 __ 1 ___ 1 170-2:r76 5866181 OHO Recliner. S40 Sultr 104. Kldll 5 l'Olit:a '44·1020 cords. 16.75 ~r hour TYPIST Custom Columbia Clap 548-7871 Meo 113626 .\ttn Mr per26'',Uke new,$225or - UeRobblo l•---------1 Ta k e ad tu State General office help besto(r ttugh,S45-3091 Sofa & loveseat, beaut Set'retary Employment Office in needed for busy Costa fabric & pattern, near Sail's. Studenb hi 61 up. TOP lllC. Orange County DOT Mel.a omce IBM Ex luildiluJ Mat.rioh 802 5 new $450 till·~ need aummrr Jobs or SECRETARY 321 l:r'l 010 ecutl\e experience pre ••••••••••••••••••••••• -P time )e11r round M ferred l"lex1blc hours REDW000 11X6'S Sofa ,4uphol s1dechairs work Cllll Mr J one:. Jr. t'lectronles co. IS Ad paid for by employer 540 2522 Xlnt decking. /·20, long Usable c~~.d.0671t108n 541 41111 i;eekm& a career person 1~~~~~~~~~~I ... ...... who Ukee a busy desk,1 · 1----------1 lOK ' on hand 55</ft Sales has skills of typing Switchboard Operator, Typllh.Secty 646·9885anytime 3execwooddesks. lsec'y THE BUCK 8 0 w pm & sh rt h d . approx. 30/brs week Geft Cleril Old Bamwood SI 00 per desk, 4 swivel chrs. 2 90wpm We are in need Natea & wkend11 Will foot wood cabtnets. I wood STARTS HERE of an organized. self-train. S.2 3013. Long & short term Top credenza. 5 arm chrs The Los Ani;celes Tlmes starter who enjoys detail -------Pay. No Fee 548-123 4 Beat offer over s850 Circ ulalion Dept 1s look & diversification. Non-Teacher 751 6930 or 67a-6347 mg ror well groomed. en· smoker Location rlose PRf.SCHOOL. 30'' wood patio or back 1husiut1<· pt>0plt1 lo l'am to a ll your pers~n~I T e it e he r s a n d door with double up/ Captain's armo1re, solul up toS40.SWperdayfor needs Mission VieJO Substitutes neededstart down gla!ls panes and wood. walnut f1n1 s h , a few hours work as area. ing now thru summer screen.used S20 , t wo SWQIOBO 1>'58017 ~Ali~ISALI AT WAREHOUSE 9 to 5 SAT/SUN Items In· elude furn, 1portlnic goods, toys, clothing & decorator & misc Too numerous to mention it ema. bl k north of Segel'l!trom. oct Garnsey at 431 W. Roland in San· ta Ana. CaU 557-1307 Sofabeds, din. table & chairs. refrig, lamps + more. Sat /Swi. 10-4. 701 Goldenrod, CdM. ----- LINNEN~ FOX RIVER \ V.l.P. PHINTING & COPY CENTER Visit us w<: 'rt.• on the corner or 18th & Newport Blvd .the coffee pot is always on. 1795 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa 642·5280 ANOTHER GR EAT Hones 1 060 SALE ••••••••••••••••••••••• DI~ metal detector w headphone!! $250 0110 645 1609 ~86~0 FRI-SAT.SUN 9am For sale Pmto Arab t'1lly Furniture. knick-with some tack Cc1ll knacks, one of a kmd afler6pm S43-2347 ate ms. also Kodak film 1J l)lel'e Cine <.:tuna set. 30' a roll JM Rochester, Houiehold Goods 80 6 5 xlnt cont.I S.SO. rode a C M. S.8·9288 for d1rec-••••••••••••••••••••••• phone 2000. no rl'mole, rions 60 yds good used h1 lo re<·ord:. calls $SO , suede --------bm/be1ge crptg, S98 all kings1ie bedspread with G 1ant moving sale Patao or $3 yd 675 2172 p 111 ow s hroud S4 5 furniture, picture&. kitchen t· ble s ·~ 6 J ewelry 8070 a • ea.... • ~~:r~~ht;gn~~t tg~r :S: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~21oc i.~~11 d~~~ i'e~0t~) to S300. Sat. May lGth Ong. design, lavender 548 7140_ 10·4. 2150 Port Durness, Jade gold nng, w/12 full cut d1a $2500/0110 ---------~ ~i_._ ------644-2790 pa r t t 1 m c s a I es Ex c e 11 . be n e r its Also in fall. 968--8833 used pair louvered glass representative:. llours package. Salary com m . -----wanduws, s1xe J0x4l, are Crom 4pm 91)m, and with ex per. Only those TELEPHONE PROS Npt Bch 556-IJS20 2234. $20 and S30 pair, Sat May 16 only 9-5 1801 ii' blu/brn 8' 4'' sof& Port Ti£f111, NB Lots or w I Io v e seat S 3 0 0 good stuff. PLAT 3 d111mond wed ding rmg grade VVS2 11250 appraisal Sacr1IH'l' $850759-1643 W •dclna Drest White wedcTing dres:s l>iU.' 5. never been worn $200 or best offer. Call 548 5956 aft 4PM training will be pro-seek ing permanent Set appts. for our sales EqualOppEmplyrM /F expensive 12'' a {'- Ylded Your e<1rnan gs as employment need apply. people We're looking cousl1cal tile, fancy rest. 968-5088 af\ 6PM -------- a Times Salet; Represen· Send resume or letter of for exp'd M F good UPHOLSTE&fR qua lily with bronze Dry bar, curved. 3 stools tat1vew1llbebasedona application to· Mrs. working t'Ond, <you're ,...., alum 0 l t •to by chro modem Very K I 2 V · Top quality upholsterer ver Pa mg ...., l(u;iranleed hourly wage Y e , 3 8 9 l 1 a place or ours) Hourly want .. ,, M .. 5 1 be per 100. S375 per 500 sturdy S900. 979 <1734 orS3SO+generouscom Fabr1cante, Suite 603. wage, bonuses also' ~u " 6467909 missions Call now for Mission Viejo, 92691 545.4941 ask for Slt'Vt' or familiar with t•onvert1· __ :._ __ Jewelry from SI . re more mformat1on about ~~~~~~~~~~I Marshall bie topi.. uu.tJllation & C ats 103 5 cords. 8 tracks, books. this great opportunity fittin.:s 5$ llW •••••••• ••••••••••••••• m ll g a z 1 n e s , (7141957 2361,ext 1204 Sec'y Bright person Tel.phon.Solclton Wailrt'sses, p timedays ! Pedigreed ~ure Male kitchenware. golf irons. Furn .. baby things, toys. books, etc. Sat. 9·4pm. 240 Amherst, C .M 979-0368. Finished table 3x6. w/6 IJke nu naug. game chrs SSOO 968-~ aft 6PM Dtamond Pendant, white gold setting, 16 6pt stones True appra1s1al Sl400 962·l539af\5 No Wax Lmolcum, 30 col ors. a' g k11l·hen $99 labor and material 522 8601 , Are you llred o ( work1ng Ch er 18 Will lrain 1 Black Persian 9 mos, lots of mens and womens SECRET ARY w gd phone voice & R.E full time for part time? Sil IRAZ S48-w411 super cute. S~ 644 5168 shoes and clothes. new ·~· G1moodmeodrr1a'.cleeslyk1llsSaSl~•arrth ~cr;or t~!ag7ee: ~~~~8 MOMEY? -D 8040 sandal clogs at half ~ Why not try working W •REHOUs r. ..... E... OCJS price. still packaged. com meni.urale w it I Laguna Shores Realty "" ..,.. "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• C part time for full time neederl Duties range new packaged candle Ladies soltla1re 2 04 Trundle bed c-ouch 16' Ca rat diamond SGL fan ,IO"radialarm'saw Giant garage sale good laboralory ;ippra1!>ed fir 2x4·~ + many misc· mdse, Sat Sun 9.4 1015 Sl2.775 Takt.' S8 ,000 itms 968 ()162 Tiller Way, CdM 080 642 2287 GIANT \'At' 7 hp var HUGH GARAGE SALE MiscellOMOUS 8080 c·um. Briggs & Stratton Stereo. T. V. electronic •••••••••••••••• ••••••• S250 54' -~ ability Newport Beach o money Work 20-24 hrs Crom IJJC'kmg ln\enturv SHIHTZU-AKC type hlebulbs, ,.., price. Call8SI 150'.!forapp't per week tn plush new control to~hippml{ rec Champion Yummer's VWPlex1frontendcowl· devices Sewing GAME SHOW PRIZI-~ ~ SEC"f--EXEC. office 1n the Santa Small business w potcn Bummers. Male. 7 week mg for JU.lit S90 . xlnl St<rwtary Admtn Asst. Excellent Ana /Costa Mesa area L1al for ad\';incement old puppy for sale Rare girls 20" Schwinn J. Some I bookkeeping ~d·x typang & SH skills re· for well estab company S<tlar) ncgot w ex per gold and while .all an speed bake only $40. machine 1588Coriander SI L V ER G I 1-· T Girls ll'<'i.katcss1ze3S I' DrC.M.S/S9-4 CERTIFICATf: worth Ten Pro blades Xlnt SlOOO Will seU at S750 c·ond $50 SIOO (2pr 1 per.k ilektypmg, 4 a quir ed. Salary com· Earnang potentaul ofS220 Cull forJppt 536·4664 ternat_1onal champion mans 10-speed. great _w_or_w_ee 673-2180 mensurate with ex per week. Call tl3S-t18113 bloodhnes. $300 firm b Ike at S35 , two 2351 Fordham Dr Costa Mesa Sat/Sun 9.5 546-9215or673 0340 552 9<174 REDWOOD 2X6'S ------Xlnt decking 8 20' long John Wayne Tennis Club Family Membership $650 I I ) 496· 13.52 Sec"tary/Rec eptionist perience. Contact Erie for appt. WA H f: HO USE MAN Call 7GO-l!n3 Uktdeles. good al S20 and Architectural Firm look Hill or Cy Simpson. Telephone F illme f:xper nee 1:-;x KEESllONO Pups AKC S35 . Globe meat 1 MOVING SALE. Good !OK ' on hand 55' rt 1ng for sharp person 558·2603 PHONEPERSOH crl <·o benefits C<ill Champ sire. Mil:-'. Pet & produce scales worth with professional at Balboa Mannl'. 549 9671. show pv t pt y lots more than my S90 rum & antiques. tools & 646-9885 anytime misc 1118 Nottmgham Rd., Newport Beach 9·4 Phonc·Mate Telephonl' Answer ang Machine with warranty $79. With remote $149. 750-3791 Gold drapes w shears 3 120x96 & I for 6' slidmg door & I 70x96 All for $100. !168 1564 tltudc Located near Sec'y /&eculti•e P /T phon e peri.o n f:UI:: M F l! 213/697·1345aft6pm prlce;Anawfullotmore 0 C to maintain & run well needed to call & set t h ht . F range o . Airport app'ts for busy Solar Weekend S uper visor, a l e rag pnces. n / Sat.&Sun Pl II El t established manufac-AAA HomeOogTrainang Sat/Sun May 15 16 17 ease ca a inc 8 Energy Co. $1 50, hr + 4AM OiJOll, Sat Sun 16 · · ' 751 ·3853. ~~~~~;:~e 91:~~~~~-bonus Ask for Al tota I hr:. Pnmary JOb is Does your dog have good 9M·5. 325 2Esbthl erkSt, Costar Girls 10 speed, Metal Cabinet, Games, Books. Baby items, Maternity c lothes, Junior Girls c lothes. TV & Misc 20261 Meander Lane. H unt. Bch ( Ac·ross street from Adams & Magnolia> Sat1Sun. 9-3 S R F II · or Ll,,.•IDY ... E I ..... d It t manners? We specialize esa, . oc s 50 0 ecretary ecept1on1st u tame. rice in your TV "" >eang <'"• ..utn a u au 0 m happy owners & well 20th j t t r s t 1-'or testing Lab. front home. CdM. NB or CM ENERGY SYSTEMS <'arricr p1l·k~ up papers Ana.Stu!..,, e7~ 0 an a Kirby Vacuum Like new with ALL allachmcntl> Will sac. ror S250 See to appreC"late 960 5844 eves Magna,•ox color TV, works S75 Redwood p1cn1c table & 4 benches, cost S325. sell for SlOO After 5pm 631 7383 11 & & d m_anne_red dogs 638 926S .,..... .,.,.,, ofe. Typing & pleasant A o CC Ice equip, 545.5793 751 0535 nn I 1me monitor e personality a must Gd fumLShed PO Box 146 lin·r l'11mpla1nls l'alled Poodles. AKC. mm1 toy NEVBl USED on phone. f1hng & acctg %Daily P11ot. PO Box 1 n b ~ t· u s t o me rs white sil\'er M&F Cai.h Glai.i; top dmette, S300. exp._>r desirable l'all 1560, Cost;i Mesa, Ca TRAINEE SIOO mo l'Xpt•nse check only 979-5228 Her culon sofa/loveseat Walnut veneer oHace desk & chair 36" rnd ta ble & 2 rhrs, 22 gal fish t:ink . .,..ooden h1-cha1r IJ33 ().187 891 0206 92626__ _ For District Manoc)er S3 50 hr to start :\1 lbt be $315. clean bdrm 1540. This highly sun·essful 21 nr nH·r Vahd driver's Fant as l l c · German mattresses box springs Best qualit y STAK RUBIES from India On ly S20 per stone' 640-861:111 SECRETARY-LEGAL SEC'Y-RECn. local newspaper has <1n ht & insurance Call Shepherd puppies AKC twm S75. full SSS. qn $125, 2 career oriented pos1 G0rCowing C.M. Co near opening for a traml'l' m 540 :I007 llAM 2P~1 Ask 8 wks Ma_l_es_96J. __ 5592 bunks. more'• 770-0901 8 Am to 1 PM Sat only Dir tinder. assorted photo dark rm items. old bikes , 6 fl glass showcase. green de- corators lamp .. men's shoes 11112 D. Assorted luggage ~ King's Rd N13 lions open m lrvme 2-5 Airport has opening the carculauon dep.art for Hoh ur l.ee yrs legal expenen{'e for receptionist typist ment Basic skills wall Mixed Puppies male fem MOVING SAl.F. Hide bed Sofa, llammond Lou loloont You have not reall\' been f ur sale :isozx cheap loved until you se0nd i.o vurlJbll' color T\', meone you love 30 multa Moped, baby stuH (.';ill colored huge llel1um %2 0886 Xlnt benefit!. & workang with pleasant p hone entail supervision of 10 Work early s ummer c.-ondataons Call Fran P e r s o n a I 1 t Y to 14 year old boy and ('\es & wkends P T 833 3622 Responsibilities incl. girl home delivery car Welroml' new re:.1dents typing orders, quota· raers Areas of Jl osp1l .. il1ty Hostess lions, invoices, & cor supervision will be de· nt>ed s <1 few good people. responden ce Xlnt livery, collecuons and Car & ty11ewriter SIS & up' ns.1618 Shah Tzu pups, 9 wkll. _ Organ Drexel dm set. 6 Louis XV cllairs, 2 antq chairs, perfect l'ond Tools. etc 1118 Not· lingbam Rd Newport Reach 9·4 Sat. & Sun Ba !loons Perfect for SECRETARY lrvane advertising agen cy. good typing skills & pleasant phone voice Salary commensurate w /exp C a ll Elva '557 0642 AKC. champ lanes. shots. Sl75. 644-9571 benefits, good starting sales. Selected apph need('d M7 :1005 CAIRN Terner Fem 8 Ladies clothing sz 6-8, salary. Pleasant air cants will receive re mos. shots, AKC reg men's suits 40-42. men's conditioned office Xlnt gularly scheduled Birch Dropleaf Umin" sport shirts sz Med. oppty for sharp an 1 b Sl50492·8600 " TV . h & dl\'ldual. 979_8912 for ra ses , onus op MerchondiH Set 45" round·2 ex .. sewmgmac me portun1t1esandmanyfr •••••••••••••••••••••••Novice Obedience Dog ten s ions. 4 ch rs . other misc. 9.5 Sat/Sun every occasion We de Solid pecan kmg he;id- hver 673-4419 board like new $175 NB Athlet1t• C luh Raleigh motocross b1kt• mbrshp Fashion Island 545 559 1336 Sl50 G pm to !lpm 213 433-4263 All year Bubble Pool Enclosure. 30 x 55 Xlnt $750 /offer 642-96.56. Front throw mower & -----appt mge benefits such as Afttiquu 8005 T r aining. Classes now malchang hutch $750 2164 Ralleigh Ave. SECRETARY Ser vice Station a tten· company paid dental ••••••••••••••••••••••• starting. Mesa West 549.0903 Fo r a growing fa~t dant, f/tame, exper pre· and health plan. group ---------• Veterinary Hosp. 1870 Giant Yard Sale: Ap· edger. S225 Elect cart Bedside convalescent $250. 642-1353 aft 3 potty chair brand new pace~consulttngfirll'!tn fd.ChevronStation.3000 life insurance. vacation WESTMINST ER P l acent ia St. CM . Haitian Cotton Corner pllances, aqu a r ium Fashion Island. Typmg Fairview Costa Mesa and sick leave. Com 642.5104 Sectional $350, Rattan guitars, amps, wind s ur· --·W-•B.-D•l•..,.•6--• $75 631 1398 75wpm ·ACCURATE. • · pany vehi cle 1s ABBEY ---------bdrmgroup$90,klngsz (er, s urfboards, R.C. "" M m a computer & lite s H E ET M ET A L furnished dunng work 0A~TI IQ1,,U61':FMA1L().L9 AKC DOBERMAN Pups. pecan lattice hdbrd $45, equip, Cum , more. 970 W. SUPPLIES Picnic Table all 2 X 6 Redwood 6' long, new S135 646·9885 bookkeeping exp Xlnt TRAINEE ing hours. Applicants 31 Y "' • rt Bred to be mild man· freezer Sl00~7474 19th St CM fri/sat/sun. STOCK REDUCTION beneCils 760 .. 8111 Ms Must know math mustb~over18.havea ClosedTuesday nered. Black & red ----- Marina Permanent position good drivmg record and 11751 Westminster Ave $200iup 5J6.4014 Elegant din. rm set, 6 off. Sat /Sun. Furn, misc SALE SI • be neat appearing GardenGrove 5.54-6103 whl uphol. chairs, lge hseh ld items, sports Completeweldioo&c ut Camper refrig , S50 Weber BBQ gnll. $30 01 best offers 675-6764 SECRETARY Sea & Pacific Skipper, a leading monthly boating magazine located in Newport Beach. has an 1mmed opentng for a secretary Position req minimum or 2/yrs ex peraence +typ1ng skills or 45wpm, shorthand de s1rable but not man datory Xlnt benefits in elude group health/den tal /profit sharing Please call for interview app't (7 14)645-1611. ••SECRETARIES•* Bkkpr/Sht/80Sl6,800 AcctAsst/ AAdegSl5,600 Sht80/RE/Fwil l4,000 WordP roccsslngS15.600 Ex pd. Consultant Ours Liz Reinders Agy, Inc 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE Newrort/833-8190/ Free Use the Dally Pilot "Fast Result" service directory Your service Is our spedalty Call 6G &678 ext 322 8 ary commensurate Hours are generally -----•_•_•_• --~~~ AKC black M Lab. 8 wks, walnut table, 2 lvs, lake eq uap, toys , tools, tino units. as low 7is S2'75 with1 expe922riencPel Please Monday thru friday A t E 1• h dew claws off, shots & new 552·8530 hardware. 131 Yorktown Ar~ welders. complete CapMp Y • 1 acentia. Some O\'ert1me ava1la tn iquedd nf!'!, wormed. good line. Sl75 Lane CM (Monticello w 1access. 1159 Huge ble If you are qualified ea ca Y ~ 534·0565 M a t c h ' n g b r o w n T h ) and 1nterestro an learn 6-t0-8688 ---------naugahyde sofa & love wn ses ______ , discounts Big savings POOL TAILE STATIOHBlY Store 1n CdM needs salesperson F /time, S days. Xlnl borlting con- ds. Espee1aUy ftne clien· tele Phone 644-1482 for app't ------- STOC KIROKER TRAINEE College grads. Oppty in Newport Beach area for h ard work in g en· thusiaslic lndiv. Send re-sume to: P.O. Box 430, Marlton, New Jersey, 08053 STOCK Clerk part time for marine hard ware store Call · Bal boa Marine, 549-11671, EOE M/F /H To Place your "Fast ~esult" Service Directory ad . Call Now 642-5678 &t. 322 lh It b 6 Red Dobie Pup seat,xlnt.S300 6756764 ColorTVS30,F.P endtbl Complelelmeofweldmg mg e circu a ion usi Old Oriental Ru~ Want-mos _ _ supplies Sale ends ness contact Don M• d AKCFemaleSlSO S30. bldg mat 329 5129181. Wl·111ams or Ken God ...... any s1u or con itaon ... "9741 Boys' room furn . desk & R h CM C II 1 BOO <-<"8("'" ....v oc ester, II A. ~ 0~~ er:--• ... Co. dard Appl) 1n per~on, a ( · > o,N~ """ hutch , $125 5-drawer 645 .,co" ~·- A K C R L b . .....,., 2 2 lacenlla. C M 8:30 to 10 30AM or 2 oo Onental ruit, 9xl4 rust ( 2 ) eg a chest S125 Chest bed to5 OOPM Retreiver Pups, CH com pl w /lwn mall Garage Sale, Sal. 9-1 OO-a870 ~~air~ee~~~~scup~~~ lines , ha ve shots SlOO.Orcompl setS325. 2716 Vista Umbrosa. OpenMonday-Fr1day 94 932 ~llis, Eastblurr. $200 /ea OBOS36-0006 963 5108 N. B. Bikes. maple bed. toys, animal carriers, WOOD WOVEN BLINDS N B 644 1065 FREE! Loveable Dog to ~ • ._. cr:...t... 1 055 d h ' Sh h d • ·-"31 -etc. Xlnl cond, beige colors "LIQUIDATING Entire goo ome. ep er ••••••••••••••••••••••• Used 6 mo. MUST SELL Stock .. Prices below Golden MIX 548-3281 ooo.a ... R·"'D THIS! Game t able w/4 chairs, SlOO OBO 960-8362. Call ro • ~ w icker chai r s -sofa, O~Coott Dal Pilot Coin op S.SOO 646-9935 Sears electric wheelchair. barely used ~00. antique J • EnglJsh piano S900. 751-6016. MltcellaNOUS Wanted 8011 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Box s pring and mattress. Any size, good condition 559· l 143, evenings. ------ 330W. BA STREET COSTA MF.SA. CA Equal Opportunity Employer TRAINEE wholesale Antiques. old Ml N . SCH NAUZE R Unless you want to save misc. 390 Santa Isabel. days before3:30pm. Mutlcal & older Hundreds of PUP. money on fine Costume c M lnd..........ts 8013 Items Two Dealers. Salt & pepper m ale. Jewelry. Brand new S1 & · · 1979 washer & matching For Dl1trtc t MCIMCJer This highly successful local newspaper has an opening for a lramec In the circulation depart- ment . Basic sk1ll5 will entail supervision of 10 to 14 years old boy and girl home delivery car- rier a . Area s o r supervision will be de· Ii very. collections and sa Jes Selected appli . Newport Unlimited & S how quality. Shots, up. P lus miac. garage Sat. only 9-5. Bikes, oddi. gas dryer in white. RCA ••••••••.••••••••••••••• Tuttlcs Antiqul!s 130 E. papers •· 11·c. •200. sale items. Sundat only d 26 Whirlpool perf cond. CO_NN Directortromlbol ne "' • C 1 ·n en s. reas. 6 s195 ea 552_47<ll with. _case. Exce ent 17th St . <.:.M, units S & 496·03:\9 8·4. 20131 rater ire e, Brentwood c M · cond1llon, $100. 615-8052. T , b e h I n d M 1 k e s H . B . A d a m s I ' . . (t 6PM C&rpets. Mon·Sat 10-6. Free to YOM 1045 Brookhurst ---------John Wayne Tennis Club a er --·----- Sell wlll cont until stock ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------Treasures, trinkets & fami ly membership, Wurlitzer elec. piano. lagune. Persian Cat to gd home, Movin g Sale : Everything tr ash! Sal. 9AM-3PM. best oHer. For info, call S45!> or best o rrer papers, declawed. goes, crystal , china, 2140 Mendoza Dr. Costa Kathleen,642·1463. s.8.8878 aft.5. 1905· l920 WlCker chairs. tables, sofa & chaise. etc Sat & Sun. 390 Santa babel,C.M neulered, 559~. s liver, sofa, loveseat. Mesa <Mesa del Mar.> antique oak dining, ap· Alum . canoe w /oars. Office Fwllliture & Free kittens,2caUco,3 pUance1,toola,etc.Sat· Garage sale, Mesa C l ara con Stereo lqMl,.....t 1085 white w/gray Siamese Sun. 2522Seavlew.CdM Verde, Sat 4 ft x 18 ft w /spkrs. l.S h.p 0 B. ••••••••••••••••••••••• can ts will receive re· S TYPE markings. 642.7225 swim pool, gas rirelogs, motor. Custom recliner 1 01 . Movina Sale Garage chair 8'()..6353 Typewr ter, ympia, g ul arly ached u led ROLLTOPDESK 6 Wk old Shepherd/Lab Yard Full 1911 Swan, books, ska t eboards , . . full n ofc elect Almost mix puppies c M Sam S /S See ga m es & misc. 4141 John Wayne Tennis Club new Xlnl Cond. S350 raises , bonus op· Turn of the centur )' portunltlesandmanyfr Solid Oak Compl mge benefits sueh as r es t ored $2200 /ofr. company paid dental 41M·S<k'l1 Samoa Pl. 546--2331 ,.°"'O F 11 M 898 8940 548-1200 Dimes-a-Line ...., reg a m y em --·-------- Fwltttw. 8050 An nual Aux. Gar age Mhc t .. Mom 8080 :{.~~~.~~~Mall fees Mhc .. •Mom IOIO and health plan. group ---------- life insurance, vacation ApplHCft 8010 and 1lcll leave Com· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sale. Fum., bikes, ant· • .. ·-•_•_•_•_••_•_•_•_•_••_•_•_•_••_•_•_•_•..._-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-:_-:.-:.-:.:.:.:.:.=-----·_•_•_•_•_•_••_•_•_•_•_••_•_•_•_•_••_•_• .... • * * I BUY * * QI, clotllm. Sat M . 119' m s, I p an y v eh i c I e I 1 HARBOR AREA Good used Furnit ure I Solle. CM. 546-0293 • Applla ncea-OR I will tell Garage Sale. Sat. & Sun. a'I 1neCl.a rumiahed durin1 work-APPL1ANCES!!:RVICE ina h ours. Appllcanu We buy UIK'd appUancea Ol'SELL for You 9·&. Furniture It mile. r MASTIRSAUCTIOM Items. 2200 Waterfront NVELOPES AND LETTERHEAD mutt be over,11, have a ··We sell recond, guar. 646-1616. 133-9621 Drive, CdM. aood d.rM n1 record a nd 1tpplla nce1. M9-30'11 be n eat appear ing. ·-.... .....,..8 I IUY FUIMITUU Traah le treu ures. Alley Houra are 1enerally ,l~UY IW"T"-=; .. 1... Lea 1167..a.iu S.Je. 504 Fullerton. N.8 . Monday thru Frld•J · .....,, -.... -.,_, a.sun .. 5 Some overtlme avail•· --rt--,--,--le--DVETOIU.NESS ""'' • · · ble. If yo. aN ql*&Ulltd Ref ~ n11t T• $ :0 • Muet aell. NEW klnl 61 Senaallonal 1•ra1e u le. aod int.erelted ID a.am-wo r • •00 • 1 o. q ll•tn as mall/box antique Jewelry etc. Int the dttulatlen bu.I· 541-t5Jl,54M48$ apr11, S22S " $HS. Sat/Sun .. SPll. 248 E. aeu eouact. Don Cb11t frHur . Seara, IJN..2'72I 20UISt.G.,.,.A,CM Willlam.t or Ktn Ood older mode l works dent Apply lnpencin. poet l50 m.CJO.a Quee n waterbed, lriple ¥ard Sale: P'rl1tda lr • 01uee1cOAST ----·--·-----• dretaer • bUkb 1 n1te •lee o"• •rant• top, • "'• 'Y .... -Olllloe aprlJht deep trar, atand, aew .. -. 's..u for f7S, ft re Wood, aml load, mW•'/,;;:. Hu new $00. 561..UOl o r '750. M1-9":ft.rs. '20. e .. e lawn m-.r. tss. ,, c-. .... ca ...,.. •Ink, wbl*-MMil w/rtm, £qoal Oppor tunhy w., .. -, ... ft..r·r. tood 2t xu . Ut. other '!m..a-.--• ""'I"' Trade your old llulf for Joodlla, s.t/lm MPM. -1 -· coadltJon.•each . new 1oodle1 with a 1101 Yel-.tone 01'., OaulfledAda la_,.,. Dl·tl.JJ Clu1Uledad.t05'18 CM. ' ... -.... ,, ....... 1000 Envelop .. -10-24 Whltie ~ 00 1000 LetterhHd• -20Lb. Bond Whit• $19:eo 500 Bu.In ... Card• -Black lnk·lndeJI Piii M AO-+ Tax Black Ink -Copy ANdy-(No Half TOMI} Otter Good Thru Mey 30th. 1981 t 1 8took Avalllbteat Slightly Addition .. eo.ta I I I I · 1 11 .. '· ' I l •I .. .. .. •• v. •• '6 I ! .. ~· .. --------- MUST SELL ;i sl·wing machines and Ill 1neres of material and 111any other tailoring ac· 1·,.~M>nes. 5S7·8393. Sporting Goods 8094 ..........•..•••.....•. <.ulf l'lubs Men's :\111 thwestcm Pro-Line. I '.:! J 4 woods hke new I 1 uns 2 thru wedge. Put· ll'r $JOO. 646-0191 Eves. \nt1que Gun Cabmel. $500/0BO 646-8723 eves Swaps 1096 ...................•... ~10\J worth of Star Rubies frum India ! Will trade lor anliq~es. 640.8688 TV. Radio, HiFI, Ster.o 8098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lkaut1ru1 Color TV. 2 yr "inly. Free delivery I 18 646 1786. 1;r· t'olor TV, remote con- 11 ol. digital t uning, Smo. 11lc1 $300 96& 1363 Wanted : slip for 30' Erickson saUboat, love- ly cond. 552-0664 loata, S,-d Ir Ski ••••••••••••••••••••••• FIELD BID SALE 25· BERTRAM FB/SF Summer ~amp wants to with radar, radio, deck buy new1Sh 165 hp 1/0 bait tank, 2 rathos & Fanla~y or other open mor e to be sold to bow. Jim492·8954 highest bidder over SZ7 .soo. Inspect at slip Tnlftaportaffon D-8 . S unset Aquati c ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marina bet. 10AM·2PM. Aircraft 9110 Sat, May 16th. Mail bids ••••••••••••••••••••••• w / 1 0 % d eposit lo PARSONS' AIR Bertram 28 1SS6 2 Sales-Mainl.-Rentals Chemical Ln . •iB 92649. lnstru~on Bids will be opened at 12 Tie-downs_ avail. for 400 noon, 21st or May. Sur-Serles aircraft. John cessful bidder will have Wayne Airport, 557-1900. 14 days to present b a I a n c e and ·take Ca.~n, 5*/ possession of vessel. AU Reftt 9120 other deposits will be re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• turned. 73 VW CAMPEtl 16' Fiberglass 4 bucket. li g ht s. 2 m o tors Evinrude 35 h.p. & 4 h.p, top, trlr. everythin g goes S1300. Call 548-0850. •26' CHRISCRAFT• Recently hauled/ready to go. Cheap!!! 552·9250, 544·7122. Good cond. Dynamite Westralia pop-top camper. Only S4 ,000 miles with 4 s peed, ster eo, im · macula te. (Cl>4887) ' $4995 JIMMAJUMO VOLKSWAGIH 18711 Beach Blvd. 142·2000 18' Bay Cocktail cruiser, 101,oiJ Camper Four Star red & white canopy. with refrigerator and boats & Marine Character boat parade stove and port-a-potty. EqulpnMftt winner. 67 3-S UR F . all butane, queen size ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-7677 bed, sleeps 6. It is well GeMral 90 I 0 , , laid out for sleeping and ••••••••••••••••••••••• 31 J ERSEV S .F. 73, cooking. My price SlSOO ;'loon profit org. needs ~~CGL:5i5. Slfs~:'K 631 7657. rnur boat, plane. car, · a · 0 · --------1 l'lr Liberal tax deduc· 67S-9007 or eve 960-1725 69 VW CAMPEtl t1on a dvantages. Bkr. Fully c arpeted & 213/654-_234_1 ____ loata, Sal 9060 panelled. Must see. (QKK6S7) Avon · 9 rt .. w /floor . :1•3•;;~·;;;.:;~·;1:;,;·:~ $2495 pump, mtr. mount. $425. Berth A van. Acces. JIM MAlllMO ti45 9020 Cal1544-3278 VOLKSWAGEH Seagull 4 hp. long shaft $200 645-9020 18711 Beach Blvd. CAL 34 Sloop, "61!1, highly 14"' "'000 sought racer cruise r , ------6----1 S3SK. Bkr,675-8711. 8' Fibe rgls shell for I I fl British Dory. 20 h/p Chevy or GMC truc k . . Johnson . $700. Ca ll 4 Sale, ~Inn. Good C?nd. Xlnt cond. SSOO /bst 1151 9709 ~ric.e tnclud~ trailer, 968_8283 .~ nggmg & sail. $750/bst --------1 Boats, Muk1ttnC111c.e / ofr. Eves 53&-6863 torfzed la.. 9140 Senlu f020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMF Alcort ••Minifish •. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marine Electrician 12', while, compl. equip, MOPED REPAIR . Dcs1gn/install/repair like new. 898-5037 Your m oped c~ runcliklel 1 k 0 new. Fast service. a Qua wor · 549-252 eve. SWAN 431-s&S design, Larry, 645-8529. Boots, Marine maintained & equipped . Equipmet'lt 9030 lo the highest standards. 79 Honda Express, xlnl ••••••••••••••••••••••• complete B&G nav. In· cond. $250. Call after '1arine F M/VHF. new slr. Deal dlreci...At hve. 5pm: 963-8758. Mark w I a n le n n a • . S 2 2 5 . Call Antwer Ad #469. Motorc=-/ r,75 9961 eves. 642·4300, 24 hn. Scoo 9 I 50 17' riberglass canoe. $250 979-9619 14· AMFSUNFISli ~ 646-4647 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 VA MAHA SRSOO CLEAN. $1200/080. 493-8797 all. 6. A.utos, H•w 9100 Allto1, Mew 9100 '74 Honda 750, 29,000 ml, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••p•••••••••••••• run a 1ood , clea n , Inexpensive and built to stay that way. $1100/ofr. 631-~ eves '79 CX-500 Custom Hon· da, fairing It cargo box. $2000. 984-6289. '81 XLS~ Sl72S; '77 PE2SO f6.W ; RM50, $350, all excellent.. 49S·4932 '75 Yamaha 650 newly reblt, bucket seal, ex· lru $1300. 891·5225. '80 Kawuakl 750 LTD. 8000 ml. Like new. o&98-5173Aft5 '78 Yamaha vzao like n,w, S500. 380 Enduro "7", dirt only, SSOO. Hon· da SO minl·bike, SU>O. MS-7178 rH-.S./ .... ,s ...... fl60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WI CAN SILL YOURl.Y. •1* RENT: 22 ' lux. mtr bome. Staie I, MW-cont. SUS /wk . + a• ml. &4NSl5. RltSP COOPLE wan&. lo rent Hlf-contaiaecl van en Jl.IO ft. motor home, approx. July 11-11.C.UMMlll. Our company presently has 2.6M 1n advance European 'Ftv·drtve contracts and will peak at 4.7M Y eClf'oROWtd lusiMu IMot Jud Summer) LeoNolocU.. w.·,.. Th• Experts We encourage you to compare us witn others -Come 1n and check over our RESERVATION CHARTS We Heed More 1979-81 Mtn1·Motorhomes & Bubble-Top Van Conversions Please Call or Write for lnlo On Leaseback or Your Ovm RV or rll RV JWntoll, Inc. 11111 15092 Harvard Ave Irvine. Ca. 92714 (714) 559-4446 STOCK SlllAL NUMllR NUMllR MODEL STICKER YOUI PRICE PRICE Orange Coast DAILY PiLOT/Frlday, May 15, 1981 Fl DISCOUNT MODEL ~=~rt. tl20 ~=~u. 9520 • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PRITTIIST -...V •57 T-llRD 19~1 Fly\nl Spur con Unental S·l ~xcepuonal IM T~I 2 tone palnt ftlllht hand IEST ()ffEI! drive. Xlnt 1.'0nd. 126,000 . ....., • ...,~ P o111 t ntd<' <11051 ~ii!"""'~V~l'V•••. 684· 1902 People who need People That's what the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY is au about! Packard. 1956 400 201 hard top, pwr steertng windows & sea~ Radio. heater, auto trans Frr:.h restoration S4 ,500 (213>286·9689 an 6pm '29 Model A Town Sedan. 4 dr. reston.>d ld~al for student Sl0,500 ALSO '46 Ford W oodtl'. restored . 113.500 STOCK SlllAL STICKll YOUI DISCOUNT NUMall NUMlll 'llCI 'llCI ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's RABBIT 6708 052259 RABBIT 6631 023153 RABBIT 6988 100847 BBIT 6716 056305 RABBIT 6834 073409 RABBIT DIESEL 1001 113430 RABBIT DIESEL 6687 048175 RABBIT DIESEL 7082 118693 RABBIT DIESEL 6886 079259 RABBIT DIESEL 6888 080048 JmA2DR 7341 287534 JmA2DR 7342 293660 JmA4DR 7338 287636 JmA2DR 7378 383997 JmA4DR 7131 322481 CONVERTIBLE 7412 011765 CONVERTIBLE 7 420 010336 CONVERTIBLE 7428 013880 '78 HONDA ACCORD a..te.,......, A llll"'frMt W.. l._e wN4 ,_ ........... 11-.lw ...... j!HUUJ '74 V.W . THING 4 .,..., ....... ~ ••c.tt.M ,.....,.....__ ..... .. n"" 191 >llWl '77 MERCURY BOBCAT J 0.., 4 ,,..... 41M ltfo9h t "941~, ...... , ... " ...... , ••••• 1 • •• , , .. , • '74 HONDA CIVIC -· ... ·-. ..._.... -_.,. ... -MllM.(-004) '76 Pl YMOUTH ARROW 41 ....... , llliM ..,. ..... .-~ ........ , ""''I '"' ... ''-' ... ,..a •• (Hl••'l '7 5 VW RAIBIT :.....-:.. f:.= .... ...,...... ........ •Htyl '64VWIUG ...... -. ........... _,. ___ _ _....,_II~ I '6896 '784 PICKUP 6977 107224 $6730 15998 '732 PICKUP 7384 010213 '6750 15999 '751 PICKUP 6892 077131 '7645 '6649 '996 PICKUP 7069 126621 s7400 '765 PICl<UP DIESEL 7397 098981 '7775 '6888 '887 PICKUP DIESEL 7 435 128026 17735 '6998 SCIROCCO 7166 020111 '695 '6977 '718 SCIROCCO 7194 020835 18250 '7583 '667 SCIROCCO 7309 020478 '7686 •674 SCIROCCO 7195 023115 18480 '7589 '891 DASHER DIESEL 6918 902172 s8545 '7589 •947 DASHER DIESEL 7154 910912 18700 '7698 •1002 DASHERDIESEL 6910 901448 18995 '7997 '998 VANAGON 7040 033238 18960 '7881 '1079 VANAGON"L" 7140 077136 sl0,395 19419 '976 VANAGON 7375 085774 •10,290 •9131 VANAGON 7138 077379 •10,290 19286 '1004 CAMPER 6928 029983 sl 4,555 s12,995 '1560 '73 FORD PINTO --· -· -..... -·-·· ..... 1...w. a-· 1..in11 '79 MG "8" CONVT . ........ __ ,._,_.__ . _, ..... °"'1 1",-MllM. (IU1Tf) '7545 '6595 '950 '7395 '6695 •700 '7870 '6810 •1060 '7715 '6695 $1020 '7860 '7595 '265 18035 '7695 '340 19225 '7995 •1230 19265 18095 19885 18771 19265 18095 •1170 '10,505 9265 •1240 110,715 19395 $1320 110,610 •9459 '1151 •11,655 •10,195 '1460 •11,550 •9995 '1555 111, 140 •9795 '1345 •11 ,700 sl0,195 '1505 114,535 sl 2,888 113,905 $6450 :?.~.~~~~.!'.?..!~~!,.'!. $5475 .. ·-......... -. •lh ....... -· -·. Wf49 ,,,., 6 ~. • • .._ .. ...._.. ............ "' ... Mf , ,, '75 PORSCHE 914 4 .,.. .... ••· A .,_. ........ ...,, A ,,_, 4tf .. rt ---CJ••inoo1 79 DODGI OMNI ._,.,., .... 1111 •• , .Mtt .......... AM-f• ....... °"' _._ ... .,. .... ,, .... -.(ltlHflll '71 VW KARMEN GHIA 41 ,,.... ..... ,... ............ , .. , ... , 80 CHEVY MONZA -~ •• <yl.,. ~ .... -...... ... ........ Yw ................... ....,..( ...... , '78 DATSUN 510 ....... ............. .,,~ ............. .... Ht.-..... CIJJ'WMI) '78 CHIV LUY .... c....., ....... ..,...._ .... ,. •.• ,... -···---'"·''" $4499 79 VW IAlllT DllSIL $ 5 9 2 5 • fl'I .. ttk~ •-· ""' -· A -1 4'-· .,.,.. .. """ • ., . .., ,.,_, "1' '""ti '79 JEEP CJ7 ·-·-l+k•oM ... _. ,., ...... , '79 CAMARO Z-28 ,.,iwy ... -........ _-.... - """ "-· lilt -i. -·-Z-H • .,,.._ .. .--... -111-1 'IOVWJmA ,.,..... ___ , ___ ,., ·--.......... lllll'911&141) I :~~.~!'..!!.~ ... -.. -... $3499 -...-. -·· •"'1111-lot.(~ '77 PONT TUNS-AM ,......,. ... _, , .. -~ ----.,.--.. ......... 18~...., ......... i-tMIQ '77 IMW 3201 ................ -............... _"*_...,... ___ _ --·1•"'911 / . All.-.C ... •.!'-a .... '""' , ., I I ' ., I I ·I .-~ '1 ., ,, r• I j -... • f' .-.-.-.. . .. f ' Iii • ..... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 1 &. 1981 Poree he, 1983 3116B coupe. 4 we..1 ~-tH Freeh prof. restoration. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Blk/lan Int. Ca. Car, no '79 Toyota 4X4, xlnt cond, ruat. Many xtraa $12,500. many xtru. (213>28H 689an 8pm. 847·!r718 BARWICK OAT~UN '..-1n J1i1o n C .lp1,tTart0 831-3311 •CHIV. HU 'II I TON STAM! 12 It. model wlth llf\gat1.1, duttla, air cond .. H D 1prln11, pwr. ateerin&. a u x . lanlt & m o re l Wurkhorse complete! (39$1) OHl:Y Sl.2.498 . HOW ARD Che•rolet Oove1Quall Sta N F,W PORT 81'.:ACJ I lll-0555 1978 E l Camino, very clean 29,000 mi, every xtra ~MO 642·7404 Ron '79 T uyutu P ic k Up Re1ular ~. 1tandard trana . 8U ·1Ul o r 540-7293 i l Dats un w/t umper , nu tires & rims Best orrer Aft 5, 752·0001 'M Chev panel truck 327, 4 spd. am/fm stereo. nu tires, nu clutch 548·M08 hme ~7-2(711 wrk. 'M FORD $400 845-8746 '80 DODGE '0 50' PU auto, pis, ale. stereo, sharp, $5500646~149 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WE PAVTOP OOLl.AR for t o p used l'ars-rorelgn. domestics o r cluselcs. H your cu Is extra c le un, see us ·~ "''"~c_., 2925 llat bo1 Hlvd COSTA MESA 979-2500 WANTED!! ca...::c's T°1a1ct11 Call Jl1n HOCJGn or Mike Lab Cre•ler Moton 835-317 I HIGHIUYER Top dollan. for Spo1 ts Curs, Buffs. <.:11mpNs, 914's, Audi s As k for U/C M<.; H JIMMARIMO VOLKSW AGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. llUNTlNG'f ON BEAl'll 842-2000 The fastest dr aw ui the Wst. a Daily Pilot Classified Ad 642-5678 ~~·.~::: ....... !!.~~,~~~·-~ ... ~ ....... !!.~~ ~~·.~:.--: ....... !!~~ ~~·.~:.-: ....... !!~~ NEW 1981 LYNX 29 EST EPA 79 DATSUN 310 Only 14,000 m iles. AM JFM e e autte. velour Inte rio r . beautltul metall ic blue (&48XIB) 44 HWY EST '80 PINTO WAGON llll!l...,1111!1!1111!191!111ml!IJllll ! NEW 1982 LN-7 29 EST EPA 46 HWY EST '80 MERCURY COLONY PARK lt'e like a new one & h aa Ju1 1 about everything. Leathe r Interior, atereo, Ult wheel, aPMd control, e lr , I pa11e nger ''FOid E11ecutlve Car." '80 ZEPHYR 2 Door. economical • eyt. engine, air cond • 'AM/FM atereo rape Only 11 ,000 miles. must Mii. (601ZEE). :;ca; .•, ... -... as s a o a 0 a . . WEBU CLEAN ARS AHDTR CKS --------'72 914, xlnt cond. Xlros '64 XKE Coupe. Xlnt, lst $5,400 or beat oHer $5000 lakes 1L. 499-2883, 848·0701, 538-1130. work 896·1992 2480 Harbor Bl al ... m Coeta M t'i.11 80 VWDIESEL Dyna m ite L Motlt'I door 4 speed with ru. tory air. Ve ry sh" (719ZSM> COHNELL CHEVROLET .'~ ll.11 liur 111. d t 111'-tl \ \H ..... \ 541>-1200 CREVIER Beau silver grey, recond eng, comp. overha ul in April. 4 new Michelin Tares. 69,000mi. $9,000. 675·53<»1, 675-1723. Ka""ann Ghia 9734 '84 356C Jo'lrst S3750 lakes' Runs great 970 W 19th St CM 646--8527 Rare 1976 912E Por lo n11, xlnt cond . 552·6999 $6995 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAH USED CARS! $1 SI .. lllOAOWAY SAMIA ArlA 835·3171 THI U~TIMAlt OlllYINO MACHINl • • • • • • • •••••••••• • •• • •• Rois Royce 9756 '69 Ghaa. xlnt cond. Offer ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt Party. Ed . Call •t DEALER IN U.S.A. JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 187 11 Beach Blv•I 842-2000 •USEDBMWs• '76 2002 4spd t0603> '793201 s fl (5894) '79 5281 SIR C H176 > '81 320IA (0115J CloHds-days_ 76 IMW 2002 530-5551. ---- Masda 9711 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79M aid a GLC S po rt Xlnt cond 3S lo 42 m1 MPG $4200 or best offer 975· 1637. 857-4545 ClOSfO SUNDAYS --- MARK HOWARD VOLKSWAGEtol L arge s elccl 1u n • Volkswageru. "'1th " pet1t1ve pnc<.'S Kf<Wt M ou.'U' VOllCSWAG lN ·~ miracle mazda 2150 H..._, ll•d. 4 speed Very clean local car (123RKL> $5895 Mercednlem 9740 ~:.~•••••••••••••!?.~~ 534-4100 13731 Harbor Garden Grov Costa MHO 645-5700 WANTED! Lule model Toyotas and Volvos C u l l u s 1'U Hort.-11•4. Cotto Mete rt.. H •·U Ol • u o.to1 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beuch Blvd 842-2000 The Most bcitln9 Part Of Your 8MW Parc:hase Or Leas.Could le McLaren BMW!! luyOrlAas• ly OurPhoM Plan! l7 I 4J 522-5333 ••••••••••••••••••••••• *MEW '81 MIZ * 2400-3000 + SD HUGE DISCOUNTS Earle Ike's TRANSPORTATION CONSULTANTS 645-4288 Ga LEASE DIRECT! 1981 SAAB TURBOs BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEW PORT BEAC:ll 752-0900 79SMI Dynamite sunroof Gl.E sedan Loaded with dll 80 VW SCIROCC O Auto matic. u1 r "' 1!000 m 1 les t 03Q!f:(1 > S7995 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEM 18711 Beal·h HI\•' 842-2000 80VWRAB81T t:uslom 2 door 4 ..,, , • Factor~1r. unh • actua l 1les (Jn~'"•' !tharp I ADL698t Top Dollar Paid Capri 9715 xtras Low miles. shurµ. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Al 'TllORIZED original c997YSM l 15695 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEp..i 187 ll Beach llh ti 8 4 2-2000 For Your Car' '76 Capri II. auto, V6, a c, ~1 F:HCEDES·RE~Z $6995 JOHNSON & SOH 45K ma, rm l'llb!>, snrr. DEALER JIM MARINO Llncollt-Men:ury $3600640.1128 831 mo -195 1100 VOLKSWAGEN 2626 Harbor Blvcf ,.74 Capra, 4 spd, 3 /c . re· __ _ _ _ 18711 Beach Blvd Costa !'tfesa 540.5630 liable & looks good '79 300 S D . ~,i l ve r 842-2000 '60 65 VW left [I, I 1 door. '73 l('ft d1101 ~· We Pay S1900 646 5151 g reytblk Sunrf. like nu Toyota 9765 OVER DahUll 9720 6000 mt S26,750 pp ••••••••••••••••••••••• each Western !>I\ Ii ' nm5 for Su).lt"r g , S20 .., a 548-97 44 la.. look • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 955 2699 ForYourGood 78 DATSUN280% '73 45~E. loaded. lo mi. '77 CEUCAGT D l 4 ~..t L1rtback 26,000 ma . good 73 VWIUS Oynam 1te 4 !IJX.'•'rt \I • whee ls Top Hu11 1018282) VW. Porsche or Aud a ynam1 e Ii~ coupe s ame body as '80 300 Gold beauty, verycleun . T u r b o Dsl $10,900 ,._c.on•d•'•S4•37-5.•7•3().•<l>4-•7-• ~,mg§ t839uoou, 995 496-4162 ,. VW ·PORSCHE -AUDI 445 E. Coast Hi wa y ---75 Celie a GT, S !Spd, beaut JIM MARINO '782400 , loaded, like new, cond. Must see $3400 $2995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGE'H 18711 Beach Bh d 842-2000 at Bayside Drive Newport Beach 673-0900 VOLKSWAGEN G7.000 mi. Sl4.ooo. PP, 0 80 84&.8924; 84~4556 187 11 Beuch Blvd . lnmun, 54~~ wkdy~ bef llAM, at\ 4PM P remium price:; pa id for any used c·ar I foreign or domestic) m good cond1t1on See Us First• Autos, Imported ....................... 9705 ...................•..• LEASE DIRECT! 1981 ALFA SPIDERS BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street . NEWPORT BEACll 752-0900 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 78 AUDI FOX Drnamite 2 door s unroof with automatic & air. Very clean. CS3SXDF> $4995 JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 '72 Audi 100. 4spd, $1000 or best offer. 673-1732 77AUDI Dynamite Fox 2 door sun roof. 4 speed. air. Very clean. (779SPZl $3895 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. 842-2000 842-2000 SEE OUR 'I• PAGE AD OM THE FOUR DEALER IMPORT PACiEIM TODAY'S PAPER NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street N 1:-:w PORT 8 EACll 833-0555 • '72 240Z. new pumt & up '56 190SL, restored con- course 99q . both tops . bc1.1ut1ful blue. $15,000 76().8860 '63 220SE COHV • 631·2244 966-10.'>5 1970 Mercedes 28~ Silver Cull pwr • air. am rm s tereo xlnt rond $4975 497 2978. 496-8011 '68 M B. 25«5L Rdslr. rblt eng, new clutch, clean. orig. m t a te. 4spd. Sl4K ( 213) 427 .1590 821M B JO<SD Turbo DSL. loaded, snrl. under 350 m1 . sacnfice sale more than 10'4 off list price PP (714)559-C652 ·---- hot. anlh. gray, 74,000 MG 9742 mi, susp. kit, steering ••••••••••••••••••••••• kit, custor:n stereo, S4soo. MUST SELL! Pp· Christopher Ben· 1969 classic 6 cyl. MGC nett, 557-2792. < .. c EE .. ) GT 2 + 2 DATSUN DIESEL ENG. <;oupe. c;>nlY built for a 6 cyl LD·28, fita z. $3495 limited Ume! Best orre r ! w ttrans. 953-9316 Call 857·0001 or495.0507 . '7S Mdte 280Z air stero MGI 9744 t t ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt in & out S5475 1977 MGB. 552·6658 New top, stereo. '73 Datsun 610. 39.000 m1 . Ca ll 8.'il-93J2day runs xlnl , new t ires. 675-4869wk ends __ $1400 OB~.631~465 _ '76 MG B. o rig adult '73 W1tn 610, low m1, auto owner. 39.000 mi Whl. great cond. new pamt, al"".ays garaged. See to $1600. 6461355 belteve. S4oo0. 552-8087 '78 280Z, a uto , air , '79 MGB l2K mi, am/Cm AM /FM stereo cassette. cass, lugg r ack . wht Xlnt cond 80,000 ma. w/bllc ml. xlnt cond. S.W00/0 8 0 499·3836 $6400. 851-5073 '73 240Z : '5700, many ex· tr as 67~9981 --------Flat 972 1978 Audi 5000 silver •••••••••••••••••••••• melellic. Lo mi. Full lux-'78 Spider 124 Convert. ury. pwr. package, 2 Red /blk top. Sclp. 32,000 way e lect s un rf mlAm/Fm at.ereo Cass, 1981 PEUGEOT TURBOs AM /FM stero l'assellc xlnt cond. $5800/080 $7900 . 645-1804 893·8278 Eves. ----1 '74 Audi 1001.S, a uto, sun H0ttdo , t727 roof, air. new e ng •••••••••••••••••••••• $1950/0 80. 494-4816 IMW 9712 VISIT YOUR ORANGE COAST ·;,-~;~~~·~·~;;,:;~· H OMDA OLDEST HEAD9UARTERS TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 74PIUGEOT 504 DIESEL! Sunroof sedan . P a pers o n e ngin e . xtra c lean . (QS9LFF> $3995 JIMMARJHO VOUCSWAGEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 842-2000 SALES 4r SERVICE p M S ales·Service-Leasing OLDSMOllLI! one t750 Roy Caner.Inc. H<>tieA ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rolla 'Royce BMW GMC TIUCI$ '75 P= 914 t~O J amboree 285-0 Harbor Blvd. Newport Beach 640.6444 COSTA M~A '77 Poracbc tUS Targa. '78 2002 BMW: AM/FM 54 t'40 Xlnl cond. Low mile•, Cassette, aunroof, low W loaded. 1 owner. $18,000, }!n11ea1e. Xlnt cond. '76Honda •aon. Del Mar.1~1-5511 S'TOOO. Call 840-1813 u k .. !'!!. '77 Tar1a. white w/tan for Kai. -----------, In t , 40,000 m l; air , '79 3201. Sierra O.l•e, rt Accord1 ml ..,,, nu AM /FM cau, PW , new sunroof, lmmac A•· Urea • wu. Am/Fm 8 tires 7" whll,640-9429 ;.".,"'~.'::;, ~v:'rehHe. ~~e·o~~·~ 7:::; '67 912 While new aeat., ' ' 4N·4&44 Patty. am/Cm CUI, rblt enc, !71 BMW Tl:ll. Take o ver 'Tl H d CVCO W x l n t c ond l n I o u t. leaM "210/mo. Pwfect t0.00:':J X1al C*ad 'i!· IS700/0 80f7$.Ml4 CGDdltion Pl~ ...-S. 11de out. am/Im 1le~ '77 IUS, wht, air, pwr '7t BMW. aom, A /C, t un· CHHtt•. Mee whtelt Ir window•, crulle, 1nrf, roor. AM/J'M l leteo, t l ru . ••.IOO 0 8 0 AM/FM CUI., fl.1,175. pert. concl. &M..-U1·13U ll\5, Ua.5274, Jlm lllMCMO l I. '71 Corolla. Rblt e ng. Cln , $800, f irm . C lean tra nsportation 957 0886 '79 VW Habb1l dlt'~•·I mdle 50mpl( Sur>1 • • t air. xtru lunk. S•• tape. Xlnl !.6500 '77 Coro lla S RS, air, AM /f'M stereo $3100 640 6215. !166 177'1 !)52.950'7 '69 VW Bug Rebuilt, ·74 VW Wgn412. enl! ,.,, ' am rm tapes $2600 axle bentS7SO 497 ·5Z77 at\ er 6 960 4342. 846 <101" Autos, Used Autos, Used •......•..•...•.•...... ·····················~ DAVID J. PHILLIPS Proudly Presents . "FANTASTIC 'DEA~S!11 1979 PONTIAC LIMAHS SAfAl.I ...._ '111090" • .., • ....,.. •• -, .. --"'O ..., ton<!·• ' lfl9, ·-e1 ... eooto • 0'6 Ct&lll D.J.P.'1 SAU NICI S 5 3 9 5 1974 FORD D.J.l'.'1 SALi NICI 52295 1974 CADILLAC SEDAN DIM.MAMCI 4_,..,_._,,,.._.,.-.cr _ _,,, _.,..,.,. .... op111,......, -1111 ""''"' ·-· -"""' .. 02ft ""0"'°' tN'-jt111·A) D.J.l'.'t SALi NJCI '3295 1976 IUICK SICYL.AH CUSTOM 4 -. I cyli,,.,, 1v1ome11e pow .. ·~"" -""".,.,... --ioc111.1111.•rt1•--~ D.J.,.'1 SALi f'ttlCI 5 3195 1979 PONTIAC ••A .. ,•IXSJ ·~·-'"·-·-.... _ .. _ . ...,_ ---lOcl<l,A"'l"'-IHf.~,T lop lll\I0 -17141 (91)1•Al D.J.l'.'a SALi f'ttlCI 56995 1978 OLDSMOBILE cun .. us SUPHMI ---. --~ .... llft..,,.,,,._ • .._ -__ .,.,,so_.,.,..,_...,,,,.,, D.Jl.'t IALI f'ttlCI $ 5 2 9 5 1979 CHIVIOUT MAUIU CLASSIC ... _ __... _ _,.,_......, __ ....,_ _,..., ~ ..... t..oo jtl4ll D.JI .'1 SALi f'ttlCI '4295 1911 IUICI llYLAHUMnm • ..,..._, 4 --· ........ ·-..._..,._,.,. -•flh ................... ,.. llOIWll .... -· ........ 17500 .1 ...... ) D.J#.'1 IALI NICI 1 ' .. cf . I 1: " ~ ' ·~ ,, .. , ,, I . I u I I ' • -' I . ------------~-----·~---:-·---::~ ............... ~~ir-~~~----:i""'~ ................ ~ ... •~e .... -s~:~ ........... 2"'!'0-0 ................ , .......................... ~ ....... l•p1ried AwtM. l•fNl'ttd ..,.._.., UMd AMtoi UHd A.dot. UHd Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday. May 15. 1981 . t '5 ................................................... ······················· ..... : ....................................... . !~w.... 9170 voa.. f77J c...... "17 Co"ett. 9'3J Ford ff40 ....... UHd ...... Uted , .. w I w 0 ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •• •••••••••••••••• ••••• •••• •••••••••••• •• •••• •• ••• •• •••••• •• •••• •••••. ••••••••••••••••• • ••• • • ••• •• •••••••••••• ·•••• •• •• • • •• •• •• •• •• •• 1. Me tlOO 4wto•. M• 910 ~ VW 411 SQB, MK mi 01.AM .. COUNTY 71 CAMAIO '10 Torino. auto, air, 4 dr, MtlltmNJ HU ri..to Hl7 ••••••••••m••••••••·a·••• ••••• .0 ................ • . 173-$018 VOLVO Air cond., tllt, p<>W\'r * S950. ..... ....... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 0 n Lar&eal Volvo Dealer wlndowa Ir door lock.a --19 65 FOID '7 2 'IMTO WGH ·~~~u'::·t~~'!'."~ ln OranaeCoun~! ?~L<:7 •77 0 mllea. 11 '73 RANCHERO perfect MUSTAMGGT Auto.ad~nd 6315208 gd.Body nice.Mu:naell euirR~~AS > NEW 1981 cond. shell, new brakes I n aood condition ! '76 Pinto wgn, immac, 73'·8587. $4995 ~/OB0~5149 Automatic trans le disc m111t see. PS, PB. '2200 C ORVETIES F G brakes . Make offer. Call 891-3118 '74 DaaherSta. Win ~,·w~·· THREE '76 ord ranada. 6 cyl 4 64.2-9924, lf no answer, --::~·r~~~::. mi, orig. j~ie:J i!i•~ 4 SPEEDS ~t~i:d~~rxtn7~o~f. PL~ASEkeeptry~ ~!?~~•••••••••••••• '72 VW Bua lllnt cond. 10120Garden Gr'ove 81 ~/OBO lve message Garden Grove 530-9190 964·1872 _ _ ___ _ _ _ _ _ Lo Mi 848 9632 '67 6 cyl, 3 spd slick ·77 Volare 6 ryl auto TOCHOOSIFtlOM U..coln -9945 AM FM 8 trk stereo a i r. Pe.' 12000' C'<11i CORMIEJt .. DellLLO ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1600/ofr 493·6657 96Q.2346 - - 1 CHEVROLET CO. '70 MARK.Ill '66 Must, 6 r.>I, auto. xlnt '76 Ply Volare Premier '72 VW Super Beetle,very ~cw 1714tl47-6017 MUSTSF,LL cond,reblteng.&tran!I, Wagon All pwr a ft: good condition . t'all •••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 8Jj{'ID) MAKEOFFER '642·81~ S2000 536-5000 xlnt cond Best orr' 751·8230. ell 991 o -----* ·10 c r t 1 Ith · I ---.. 673·2490 --•••••••••••••••••••••• '78C on tnen a . r mt, 410ldsmob• 9955 ----'79 diesel Rabbit, deluxe '56 Buick. Air, auto~~f~ power , , ----spkr btereo, AC. tilt PW · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Potttlac . 9965 11000 mi. Per r cond CaUaller 5 79Corvelte,loaded,7.000 P B. Asking $1 300. ,80 C ti 8 h ••••••••••••••••••••••• S/R $5999 ru-m. 64S 7521 962-300! ~~;~iEfi 27.961 miles. m1 Assume lease $325 642 1268 --Sed. S7.~s or ~:kf o~::;. TRAN~AMS! or 640-7000 Mlke ___ •72 Buick Electra Ltd. $4988 Mo 759·04.sl __ Merc11ry 9950 ~ase $214/mo. Loaded. Large selectt~n· Take '70 VW bug, rblt eng, nu Xlnt Cond All luxury Barwick Imports Cougar 9933' ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6. 832 5!!4, 552-1800..:._ y~u r. cho1cT • roll'! '77 t II $2000 I t ' N . 831-3311 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGECOUNTY'S '78 Ol d s C utia.LL to81s <484 fo,L) Some po , runs we , . e ec op Ions. ew paint., '77 Cougar XR7. Cull pwr, FIHEST ., ~ hard to f~d models al 640-7376or642-4870 new steel belt tires. -•69 CAMARO <1m Cm tape, 53K mi, LINCOLN MERCURY Brougham: Good cond bargain pri<'es Quality '71 VW Squareback, 11800 iLs0:,~~~i171 owner. t owner. clean, auto. clean' Sacrif1C'e 13.395 DEALERSHIP ~~~~ ~l:~~~;~uap. a magnoo or best offer. Must sell mags. 3'11 eng. 2 barrel 552-5522 ____ ~---,, 1 642-5422. Cadillac 9915 c arburalor. digital Dod~ • 9935 ~ ,'!At/JH 19770lds 0mega,lownr, ••••••••••••••••••••••• c lock, am tfm $1500 ~-6 ~yl ""000 m1 $3200 ·16 RAearT oLx 995 -8989 ••••••••••••••••••••••• L1Ncoi.N-MERCURY L ...,, pont·iac 549 •300 AM/FM cass., A/C, xtra COHTf:Ml'LATIHG -----'68 Coronet Wgn, small 16·18 Auto Center Or 6311-1 136· 557·S9lOext2215 M9 nice $2495/ofr. 640-5234 CAOUJ.AC? V8 , new paint, S495 . SD Fwy-Lk Forest exit '67 Tornado $3.50 fi rm We specialize. m leases Ctt.vrold 9920 645·7619. (2131696-93.51 IRVINE Clean RW\S well Call 24110HarborBI -at Fair '79 VW Convert stored 2 fo r t he business ex·••••••••••••••••••••••• - - - --830.7000 Ad Si tter 11224 .;t Costa Mesa years . Only 2600 mi ecutLiav:!.pS:f.:::1 SEE US FIRST.•. Ford 9940 -- ----642-4300, 24 hrs. Beautiful S9950528·4719 . ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 77 MERCURY - Of New 1981 We have a good selecuon '73 Ranchero IOIC •r '77 Omega Good cond1 '6 7 RMlrcl, Xlnt Cond 498-2782 '69 Bug. Perfect paint & intr. New eng w/rcpts. S2150, 1-661-3982 '66 VW, compl. restored, Porsche eng & paint. Everything new. Mmt cond . See to apprec. 1·941-1291. '68 V W Bug , x lnt transportation. good cond. 675-4.529 Volvo 9771 o f N E W & USE 0 $1600or be!>t offer ~ Cadmaca Chevrolets! c a11 548JOOeun 5PM Auto matic tr<1n s lion Automalit·, air SUNllRDS! Now In Stock! - -AM FM wh1tewall t1re!>' t•ond S2500 559-6277 Looking for a bargain? NABE~ '75 Gran Torino, 1'1S. ( T Z Z 2 16 ) Look b -Real value" Comt-m P B. stereo, Lrlr hitch, g r c a t r u n s Little Miss Muffet sat on and set' the buys W<' CADILLJ\ $1500. 556-8658 fm e. priced right' a Turret. along camt> a have! We're offering lhe :.p1der and read m the lowest prices ever on our Dally Piiot Cla~!llfted entire inventory' CONNELL CHEVROLET :!IOI II <ff hu r 11 h <I ( ·ns I"\ .,, E . .., \ 2 (l()Q H.\1 OOc Blvd C~t.I ~. 540 <>100 546-1200 '70 Maverick Xlnt cond --------Sever al new p a rts . •~~~~~~!! '7 7 Nov a . 2-Door . $1500 545 9594 eves Bl<1upunkl stereo Best -- - '71 ELDO.everyextra offer . 644 11 51 or '68 LTD, beige w blk MUST SELL-MAKE 640.7293 vinlyl top Nrm•w tires OFFER ----$850 646 6801 sect ion about Mis:. Muf a, magnoo fl't 's Turret and bought it for S9 95. You <'an sell your turret and lots of pont1ac 549-4300 othe r thing, through a. magnon pontiac 549.4300 Dully Pilot Cla~:.1f1ed 24110Harbor Bl. at l-'<1ir Ads Call642 5678 Costa Mesa 642-8110 '77 Monte Carlo. yellow , --2480 llarbor lil-al Fair w white inter, top w sun Want Ad Results 642 5678 Costa Mesa ....................... -- roof , 8 cy l $4 ,4 00 -- efficiency and s tylis h elegance 2480 Harbor Blvd., at Fair, Costa Mesa 5494300 lhlsuol Cars, Classics, Antiques, Roc.e, & One of a lcind! # I VOLVO DE •LER ELOO '74 ~t cond, new '""' brakes, tires. etc reg. IN ORANGE COUNTY! gas, getttng new car best 968 0462 9800 Autos, Hew 9800 Auto1, Hew 9100 Autoa, Hew 9100 Auto1, Mew 980fl SALES, SERVICE AMDLEASIHG OVE RSEASDELIVERY EXPERTS oCCer644-14.26 '73 Monte Carlo. all power $300. Pvt P<1rty '76 ELDO CONVERT Call 675 2140 Choe. bm/saddle mt & top, lo mi , 110,000 '80 Malibu Cluss1c, mint Consider pickup as part cond. loaded, 6 C} hnder, EARLEIKE trade. 76()..8860 2 d r , only 5, 700 mi 752 1010 VOLVO ·79 Fleetwood Brougham 1966 Harbor Blvd. loaded : $9250 '78 Malibu Classic, 6 cyl. COSTAMESA Perry$49-8871 4dr. drk blue, fully 646_·9_3_0_3_5_4_0._9_4_6_7_ ,70 Cad, cherry condition. ::2s~~~8Xlnt t'ond. 5.1000 . 75 VOLVO loaded, SOK mi, 11250 Dynamite 245 4 door 548-3602 Continfftal wagon. ~ speed. air, . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64,000 miles. Sharpest 6 4 C 0 n v er t 1 b 1 e '74 Mark rv good cond oneantown.(012201) Na~y/Wlute t~p, red in S1lver1red. new tires $4995 ten or_. S2.500. 72 Coupe $2000. 1118 Nottingham JIM ........ 1 .... 0 de Valle: Brown/Beige Rd , Newport Beach ~ " $1500. Both cars xlnt VOLKSWAGEN cond. Consider oHer '65 4-dr convertible, 18711 Beach Bl vd 673-2181 beaut. drk red. only 72K · 842-2000 ,75 Cad Cd_V_Lo-ad-ed-. li-.k-e ~:9~ust sell $5500 new Only 36,000 m1 - - -1968 Mdle 1225 sta wag $2500, 645-7300 Autos, UHd AM FM . needs work -----$900. Firm '79 Seville, DI ESEL.••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-1381 loaded, 21,000 ml. As· -sume lease $416 mo. '72 Volvo Good cond 759-0481 S2800 Call848·2320days ------- 536-4781 eves. Camaro 99 17 -----······················· '62 Volvo 2 dr sedan. bod) '76 Camaro 4spd, Cully good, needs work, makt loaded, rally s port , offer. 646-4348 14200/0BO 646-0667 Autoa, Used True ks, Vans & 4X4s We're your Ram-Tough Truck Center' '79 DODGE '78 FORD """"'-,.. "SURFER" V • ... 0...,1200mlietl(l5$S4) "'" eon-1'°" (938UVOJ '8597 '6997 '79 ,LY. TRAILDUSTH WAG OH Q)4ea) '71 DODGE RAMCHARCiER 4X4 1)111'1 '76 CHEVY ¥•TOH 'IU (1°'4751) '3997 78TOYOTA ,JU 11lA1148) '4997 NABERS CADI l .1L1\l: • 1980 CADILLAC COUPE DE VILLE C604ZBJ J s12,595 1980 CADILLAC FLEETWOOD IROUGHAM 1325ZBW > S13,995 1979 CADILLAC SEDAM DE VILLE !453WWZ > s9595 1979 CADILLAC COU,E DE VILLE 1380166 ) sa995 1978 CADILLAC SEVILLE C358VOY I sa995 1977 CADILLAC SEVILLE <8S5SPKI sa995 1978 CADILLAC COU,E DE VILLE 1793VAZl s7995 I 979 CADILLAC SE VILLI (7t1 YBOI s11,995 I '79 CADIUAC ILDOIADO COU'I (633.408) s12,995 lf1t UMCOLN CONTIMIHT AL MAIKV (824VPX) 3 ONLY 3 NIW 1910 MUST ANO CONVHTllLI TAKI YOUI PICK •2000°'' WINDOW ITICIUI NOWI DOZENS OF COUllHS IN STOCKI IUM'LI IAVINOS NEW AS LOW AS "~~~~s $645 5 6 ONLY 6 NIW 1910 PllSTAS TAKI YOUI PICK ~~~I •5125 HUGI TRUCK INVENTORIES IXAMPLI SAVINGS FlOO SUGG. RETAIL $81 76.39 snus101 ou• SAu ,.,c• PICKUP $6581 '75 vw '78 MERC. IUG ZIPHYI WAGON 4 cyl, air cond, V8, auto trans., V8, auto trans., radio. (#036176) p.s., p.b., stereo. air cond, ps, pb, (#F53568) radio, pwr side windows. (#175181) •3395 •3595 •3795 '76 PINTO '75 CHEV. '75 CHEV. WAGON IMPALA MONTI CAILO 4 cyl, auto trans., VS, auto trans., V8, auto trans .• air, stereo, roof ps, pb, air, tlft ps, pb, stereo 8 rack. (#171109) wheel, vinyl roof. track, tflt wheel, (#Un23) vinyl roof. '80 FORD '80 PINTO '75 OLDS PAllMONT 2DI IUNAIOUT DELTA 18 6 cyl. auto trans., 4 cyl, auto trans., V8, auto trans., pwr steering. ps, pb, custom In-stereo, vinyl top. (#151662) terlor, LIKE Loaded. NEW Runabout. ( #141588) (1119033) •4195 '3"5 •1995 '78 FORD '77 CHEV '77 PLYM. LTD 4DI MALllU WAGON HIMlll WAGON V8, auto trans., vs, auto trans., VS, auto trans., air, auto temp, air, p.steering. stereo, split seat, ps, p.seats·wln· (#400960) til t, cruise, wire dows & door wheel covers. locks, cruise, tilt (#254180) etc:. C #118889) '279 1 I ... I } ~ . . . - . t ! " a a 2 26 2 3 ~ -------------------..... -..--;--------""""'i:~--------.... ....... ---------,.. ----....---~ ... ··~ ......--4 Orange Coaat DAil Y PILOT/Friday. May 15, 1981 BRAND NEW 1980 PLYMOUTH HORIZON TC3 HATCHBACK SPECIAL s ~,,, PRICE t ielt 4 cylinder 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 transm1aalon, power steer:ng and wt11te si dewall tires! (228399). THIS WEEK'S USED CAR SPECIALS 1973 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER COOPE Auto. trans., air cond., pwr. st. & brakes, cruise. till, pwr. windows, AM-FM stereo. vinyl top & much morel (984.JEX). 5 f395 ~~n~~•'-"'--"~"--·~~~ ..... ~~ _.,_..,~,~ - 1975 PLYMOUTH VALIANT SEDAN 6 cyl. engine. automatic trans .. power steering, radio & morel (270l YJ). 51695 1977 FORD GRANADA GHIA COOPE Automatic trans .. air cond .. r:tWI'· steering & brlk89, radio, vinyl top, custom moldings. WSW tlr89 & morel (346SLN). FOi FLllT SALIS & . i. I AS I IMFOIMA TIOM, CALL •IMINAt«O 546-1934 NEED CASH??? w.,., ....... ._~._ ... _.. cerL S.. C.. ...... w M ,__ ..... We ... .., ...... .,.. ................ " Auto. trana .. ai r cond .. pwr, split aeat-ateerlng-wlndows·brakes-dr. locks, tilt, (~.~~,;.••'°$ 1"895"'" mo<el 1977 BUICK Le SABRE CUSTOM COOPE Loaded Inc. air cond:, auto. trans .. pwr. aplll aeat-wlndowa-1teerlng·brak99>-do0f locks. m·J~r-· s3395-.... , ~uromaric 1 •leering a ~•ns . Power sear, "•nyt 1r•l<es. spt/t Wh/re sloe op, '•dlo mo,., ,,.006w6.,, tires a' ). SERVICE HOURS: ~tin,,..., 7:30 ....... 5:30,..... Salm cley 1:00 ....... 5:00 ,... SH OUR SIAVICI DEPARTMENT AIOUT RIHTIHG A 'II CHIYSLB Ol 'LYMOUTH. 1977 DODGE ASPEN WAGON 6 cyl., automatic trans.. r:tWI'· steering & brakes, custom moldings, radio, custom wheels & morel (360SPG). 52595 1979 CHRYSLER CORDOBA COUPE Automatic trans .. air cond .. pwr. sleef'lng & brakes. redlo, split seat, vinyl top, wsw tires & morel (532WWC). 53495 r / I I I .. , .. r: 111 ;Jf .. •'I ',J ·~ I t ,, ,•: .. .. 'I '· .. ·: -·~· · ··-·---~·~·-·~·~r•~-~~~~~·~-~~~~~~.,~~~~~~~~~~•D~P~~~~~s~~~~~•t~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I• I,. • • • • • IUllil CUil YIUI HllllDll DlllY PAPll FRIDAY . MAY 15. 1981 OH ANGE COUNTY. CA LIFORNIA 25 CENTS Entrants jumpy as big jubilee nears Orange County crew in Angels Camp frogf est ANGELS CAMP -Jelly· bean 's he re , although his o wn er /trainer. President Reagan, has sent his regrets and has hired a local jockey. Columbia, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr 's entry, also is in training in this celebrated mm- ing camp. And like the Presi- dent, the Governor. being much too busy a man. has employed the services or a jumper. And, Duke is here. But unlike the above named political ex· ecutives, Duke's jockey and his team of talented trainers are present. Duke, by the way, is a frog - a beautiful , fat-legged frog. Duke will be among thousands of entrants in this weekend's Jumping Frog Jubilee, held in conjunction with the Calaveras County Fair . Duke is the entry of John Wayne Airport Manager Murry Cabl e. The backup staff includes Denis Horn, airport chief of operations; Doug Wilson, an airport analyst. and George Walker. owner or the airport's Mission Beechcraft sales office. "We're gonna win," Cable puffed on the eve of the start of the competition. He did not Jellybean. Columbia, Duke and American Dream will be out to break the workd frog jumping record. held by E. Davey Croaketl. Croakett set the rec· ord in 1976 with a jump of 20 feet, three inches. Last year's competition was 'We're using a special combination of foods and elixirs specify what he mtended to win. "We've been in training for more than two months. We're using a special combination or foods and elixirs," Cable said. He declined lo be specific. For the first time, the Daily Pilot will be represented in the competition. The newspaper's Orange County Bureau Chief, Frederick Schoemehl, is enter· ing a leggy dish . American Dream. , won by Oh No, a frog plucked from the cooling ponds of the Rancho Seco Nuclear Generat- ing Station by jockey Brent Bloom of Salinas. Oh No failed to break the world record, however Open competitions -in which anyone may enter -will be held throughout the day Saturday. The media jump, for the press hacks. will be held al 12:30 p.m. Finals are scheduled for Sunday afternoon. The frog Jumping contest was first held in 1928 to celebrate the paving of streets in Angels Camp. The camp once was the home of Mark Twain, who wrote. "The Celebrated Jumping Frog or Calaveras County.·• Over the years. the contest has grown and so ha ve the crowds that annually come lo watch it With the zeal of those hooked on the chili cook -off compeli· lions, frog jumpers often form teams. bring cheering sections and generally yuk it up. The John Wayne Ai r port team. however, wants to keep things relati vcly low key. Duke will be identiHed by only one thlng: a doll-sized cowboy hat Volcano erupts on Marianas isle China's Wall caper closed By DAVID KUTZMANN Of .. Mfr ...... ._ Perhaps it will go down in Orange County crime annals as the Great Wall caper. It was certainly that. And much more. The wall. in this case, is ac· tually a chunk of Chinese anti· quity -a piece of the Great Wall of China that former Presi· dent Richard Nixon was given on his histot'ic trip to mainland China nearly 10 years ago. The chunk o r stone wall, however, was not in the care or Crater sinks Fl.oridia,.,'s garden, trees ALTAMONTE SPRINGS, Fla. CAP > -Dominick Cipollone knew first thing in the morning that something was wrong when he went out to water his garden and couldn 't rind it. Where vegetables and wine grapes once flourished, a crater gaped. "What a shock," Cipollone, 76, said Thursday as four drought- caused sinkholes opened in the Orlando area, one just five miles from a huge sinkhole that has swallowed a house and cars in Winter Park. "Most or my garden was gone -and a pear tree and a SO-foot oak.·· The sinkhole open ed up between Cipollone's house and that of his neighbor, John McLellan, swallowing a chain· link fence. As Ci pollone and Mc Lellan moved belongings from their homes Thursday. the elderly Cipollone bemoaned the loss of his tomatoes, "ready-to· pick" peppers. corn and grapes. He makes wine from the grapes. "That's what I do, I pass my time In my yard." he said. "I ·don't have a hobby except ~(See SINK, Page AZ) IUlll CDAIT WIATHIR some museum curator or even in the possession of Nixon himself. It was just one of several mis· s ing pieces o f Nixon -e ra memorabilia that turned up in the rented San Juan Capistrano home of28-year-oldSusan Mendez. But the s tory doesn 't end there. The jury also found Miss Mendez guilty of grand theft and burglary in connection with a $47 ,000 jewel heist in 1979 of a Dana Harbor gift shop. An Orange County Superior Court jury convicted her late Wednesday or possession of stolen property for having the missing Nixon collection items m tne home she shared with boyfriend. Deputy District Attorne}' Chris Kralich who prosecuted the brunette defendant. said it wasn't until alter the arrest of Miss Mendez and her boyfriend for the jewel heist tllat in· vestigalors came upon the Nixon items reported stolen from the San Clemente Inn several years earlier. The presidential memorabilia was round in the San Juan Capistrano home. During her trial before Superior Court Judge Kenneth E. Lae, Kralich alleged that Miss Mendez participated In lhe August, 1979, jewel theft at Loren's in Dana Harbor by dis· tracting a store clerk so her boyfriend, Terrence Nikrasch, could open a display case and take diamond and opal rings valued at $47,000. They were apprehended aboard their boal at Dana Harbor when an Orange County Sheriff's Department clerk re· cognized them as matching the 1escriptions of the jewel heist suspects. Both Nikrasch and Miss Mendez were released on bail. Nlkrascb was arrested on un- related charges in Texas. He faces a possible life term there. if convicted, authorities re- ported But the story doesn't even end there. Along with the Nixon memorabilia recovered at the rented house, other stolen items <See CAPER, Page A2) AP..,..._ A hand holding a gun at left (circled) aims from the croud in Vatican City in thil photo taken at the moment of the attempted aaaauination of Pope John Paul II. Pope shooting a plot? Italians probe evidence suspect part of conspiracy ROME CAP> -Italian anti· te rrorist experts probed today evidence that would-be assassin M ehmet Ali Agca of Turkey shot Pope John Paul II as part of a conspiracy. and a Turkish Em- bassy official said he was sure the 23-year-old terrorist had not acted alone. ··In Turkey, terrorist or· ganizations · Independently from, their Ideologies -have always helped each other. But clearly this criminal (Agca ) has also found support outside Turkey, perhaps in France, West Germany and in Italy," said the Turkish diplomat, who asked not to be named. ••Without any doubt somebody has helped him but we do not know who." Major Italian newspapers re· ported there was evidence some kind or international subversive organization backed Agca in Wednesday 's attack in St. Peter's Square in which the pope was wounded by three bullets. * * * "It can be proved and documented that Agca did not act alone. He is a killer who was engaged by an international group with a revolutionary aim." prosecutor Luciano In· felisi was quoted as saying by the moderate daily La Stampa of Turin. The report did not elaborate and repealed efforts to reach the prosecutor by telephone were unsuccessful. The suspect was quoted in the press by interrogators as saying he acted alone and knew nobody in Italy. Police said they were seeking information from other Euro- pean countries where Agca has traveled since he escaped from a Turkish jail In November 1979. Italian newspapers suggested that somebody must have given him money to travel to West Germany, SpaJn , Switzerland. Yt>gos l avla , Hungary and * * * Bulgaria since his escape. Rome's ch ief prosecutor. Ac h ille Galluc i. formally charged Ag ca with attempted murder of a head of state -the Vati can -and attempted murder of the two American women wounded in the attack - Ann Odre, 58, of Buffalo. N. Y .. and Rose Hall, 21, wife of a Protestant minister serving U.S. Forces in Wuerzburg, We st Germany. U.S.S.R . 54 said trapped • 1n cave HONOLULU (AP ) -A volcano erupted on the remote Northern Marianas island of Pagan, blasting ash 40,000 feet into the air and oozing lava toward the only village, where the island's 54 residents were thought to have ducked into caves. United States authorities said. Rescue vessels were speeding today lo the Pacific Island, a U.S. territory. to rescue the in- habitants The island's only shortwave radio operator s aid Mount Pagan, one of two volcanoes on the island, erupted s hortly after 4 : 15 p.m . PDT Thursday. The operator then abandoned>.. his radio and has not been heard from since. The crew of an Air Force B-52 bomber diverted to Pagan re· ported seeing a red Java flow oozing toward the village and an ash cloud climbing to 40,000 feet. Crew members regorted tem- peratures of more than 100 degrees inside their plane when they fl ew near the cloud. The crew reported seeing no s ign or life, but Northern Marianas Lt. Gov. Fracisco Ada said on Saipan he believed the is land residents. almost all farmers and fishermen, were hiding in caves as they do during typhoons. Lt Sandy Stairs. a Navy public affairs officer in Guam who was aboard a PC-3 Orion re· connaissance plane that flew over the island today. said the plane's crew spotted no boats in the water lo indicate that the in· <See VOLCANO, Pa1e AZ) •MARIANA olSLANDS • 0 Pagani Partly cloudy tonight and Saturday. Gusty west to northwest winds 15 to 25 mph at limes. Lows tonJgbt S2 at beaches, 60 inland. Higbs Saturday 66 &Jona cout. 72 Inland. 111111 TllAY Pontiff begins therapy ' . • • • •' Comtd•on Joe11 Bbhop reploc•• Mtc~ RooMJI fn ''Sugar BabNt'' for /our-~~k tmir on BroodlDOJI ... DI ·11111 John Paul II's recovery chances 'distinctly better' ROME (AP) -Pope John Paul II began a limited form of physical therapy today, movln1 hia arms and leas and recelvln1 ma11a1es, hotpltal sources said. They said bis condllion was aerloua but stable, and h11 doc- tors said U1e pope'• chance. of recoverinl from t.errort1t bullet wounds were "dJ1llnctly bet· ter." T he Italian news a1ency ANSA q~ a hospital report HflAI lbe pope woke up re-peatedly dUrinl tht nl1bt. But f the latest hospital bulletin said the pontiff "rested peacefully." Asked to comment, Dr. Lulli Candl•. director of the hospital, aald ''The holy father Is havtn1 pains but they are not abnormal pains." "In the 1econd n11hL. th• holy father bu rested peacefUUy. There 11 peral1tence of 11J1bt temperat\P'e. Principal clinical alms and lab ruult.a are wi\b.l.n the normal limit.I ln relation to the.~ day alter tbe 1urllca1 lnt1rnnUoo. 1'be CNlJook la dlJ.. tlnctly better. The pope con- tinued prudent and favorable evolution of the poat-operaUve proceu," the medical bulletin Hid. Dr. Candia said the eo~·1 tem- perature wu the eq\livaJent of 99.14 dfi1reea Fahrenhtlt -1 ... than • fuU de1ree above normal. He conltrmed that the doctors are watcbin1 tbe pope's lunNiol wounds for •lJN of lnlletioa, whleb they aay la lbe 1rute1t d.aqer he f 1cea. - • ' Pacific [] ()Qean. I ... • • ,• .. . : • 0 (/Guam I r ... . \. ·. ICI -t :·1 ;, , I: •' . =· .. ''I •I ' • • • • • Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1911 Man gets 5 years f r aud • ID A 5S.year·old Coronu del Mar man, who assertedly supported a namboyanl lifestyle by using in· vestors' money. has been sen· tenced lo five years in prison for his role in a $2 m111lon gold and platinum fraud. Edward J Shaida, ~so fined $43 ,000 by U.S. Distri~t Judge Lawrence Lydick in Los Angeles. was one of four men sentenced in the fraud case this week. According to testimony, the team of men defrauded investors by obtaining "loans" for extract· Ing gold and platinum ore from a Wyoming mjne. The men alleged to have a "secret process" But U.S. Assistant Attorney Charles Pereyra·Suarez s aid the ore was worthless and most of the $2 m illion collected from in· veslors bet ween 19'74 and 1980 was spent on pt•rsonal uses Ile also said the "secret proc- ess" was little more than com· mun mining techniques. A DUCK THAT DIDN'T This mallard hen, with an arrow piercing its breast, has found a home at the Sahara Nevada Country Club golf course in Las Ve~as . No one knows who I APW.,..._ shot the bird and nearby residents have been unable to cap-ture it. Damp weekend fore cast Thi• National Wt>ather Serv1Cl' 1s prt'dtcting more low cloud1 ness and early·morning dnizle for the weekend with gusting winds from 15 to 20 mph coming from the northwest. Drizzle dampened morning newspapers and wetted sidewalks and streets in cille~ throughout Orange County to day, but many areas were left dry J . Sherman Denny. a Hunt ington Beach weather expert. '.>aid the patchy drizzle 1s being ea u~ed by an unstable air mas:. presently over the area. com bined with low clouds. Oenny said the minute amount of rainfall today in some areas was not enough to measure. He added that another mch and a half of rain is needPrl to bnng the year 's total up to normal. Shaida. Pereyra.Suarez said , collected nearly $1 .2 million himself, mostly from the Southern California area. He said Shaida used the money to lease a $1,350·a -month Corona del Mar tiouse and lo lease a $720 a month Mercedes· Benz. Military to get student lists? And while LagunCI lieach and Newport Beach residents said the drizzle was only e nough to smear their car windshield:.. northern Costa Mesa reportedly received steady sprinkles ut about t> a m . today Sha1da. Pereyra.Suarez said. also gave "extravagant" al· lowances to his former wife. his girlfriend and his six daughters. The U S attorney s aid the Corona del Mar man was ac· customed to a high lifestyle after making $140.000 a year as a busi ne:.sman 1n the Detroit area in the earlv ·10s. SACRAMENTO (AP > The s late Senate would require schools and colleges to give military recruiters lists of stu· dents and the ir addresses. un· less the students or their parents objected. From Page A1 A 23-8 vote Thursday sent SB246 bv Sen. John Schmitz. R· Corona Del M.H. lo the As· sembly Al present. it's up to the school whether to giv<.· recruiters stu- dent lists. Schmitz' bill says that school 01slricls must give military recruiters, for a reasonable fee, the names and addresses or 12th grade students or those who quit school bt'fore J!raduatinl!. un· less the student's parent objects. In the caM.' of colleges. student Its ts would have to be g1 ven to recruiters for a fee unless the tudenl or former student notified the 1nstttution in writing that he wanted off "If recruiting doesn't work we're going lo gel the draft." :.aid Schmitz Temperatures are expected to be in the low 70s along the coa~t this weekend and near 80 inland N1ght1me temperatures should be in the low 50s , a weather service spokesman said In all. Pereyra-Suarez said, 65 people put up money for the min· ing operation. /\ "dummy" re· finery, he said. was set up .in Temecula that was s hown to cur10us investors. VOLCANO ERUPTS IN PACIFIC ••• The bill was opposed by most student, faculty and school board groups and the Amencan Civil Liberties Union . Several senators said they ob· 1ccted to the :.tale telling school boards what to do Sen Ralph Dills. D-Gardena. said the bill was unnecessary because 75 per· <.·cnt of the schools are already doing it. County man shot, kille d n ear his home Other~ sentenced 1n the case were Claude Birlle of La Verne: William Goodwin of Redlands and Walter Bennett of Wyoming. A firth defendant. Edmund Rams of Tehachapi. 1s to be sen· tenced next Tuesday Conv iction appe ale d in murde r c a .se habitants were fleeing "We couldn't see much of anything," she said. The southern end of the island was relatively haze.free, Lt. Stairs said. but there was no vis- ible sign of human activity. Officials were to dispatch a C·l30 rescue aircraft from An· derson Air Force base on Guam to scout the island at dawn Saturday and attempt a landing if possible. The Office of Civil Defense on Saipan, capital of the northern Marianas island group, was pre· From Page A1 paring rescue efforts as well. The island residents live in 11 tin homes There is one jeep The 1,879 foot Mount Pagan had not eruµted s ince 1955, but was considered a live volcano. The island's other volcano is dormant. Pagan is the northernmost island in the Marianas chain. about 350 miles north of Guam and 3.500 miles west of Hawaii. "The island doesn't have a harbor," Lt Ed Marmol of the Joint Rescue Coordination Center. said. "If they can even approach the Island. they'll have A state appeal court is being asked lo overturn the second· degree murder conviction of former Orange County news re· porter Thomas Andrew Barley, found guilty in March of 1~ in the stabbing death of his wife. CAPER SOLVED ... In papers sent late Thursday to the Fourth Distnct Court of Appeal 1n San Bernardino, Barley's appeals attorney Keith Munroe argued that the former reporter should have been found guilty o f involuntary manslaughter Munroe argued that evidence in trial was not sufficient to s how that Barley, 51, a former court reporter for the Daily Pilot, possessed the requisite in· tent under the law to kill his 45·year-old wife. Mrs. Barley was repeatedly stabbed while walking with a friend toward a Santa Ana restaurant on May 26, 1979. Barley was arrested al the crime scene. also were recovered, including a valuable watch reported stolen in Hawaii in 1979. Also recovered were burglars' tools as well as devices that police claim could be used with the tampering of slot machines. Kralich, discussing the case Thursday, said Miss Mendez and va rio us relatives hi t seven 1acltpots in Las Vegas in recent years playing the slot machines. In May 1976, she won a Lin- coln Continental at the Stardust Hotel while two other family members also won new automobiles at the Stardust, it was claimed. A year later, a relative won a Mercedes automobile at the 20th Century Club in Las Vegas and in 1978 a different relative won $.29,000 at the Flamingo Hotel. it From Page A1 was alleged. Also. in 1978 a relative hit the jackpot for $34,000 a nd the de- fendant won another $64,000. al was claimed. Though the m oney from these winnings was not seized. Miss Mendez was presented with an unpaid tax bill of $19,000 by Kralich for her winnings. Following her conviction, Judge Lae scheduled sentencing for the Orange County woman for June 19. She faces a possible four· year state prison term. During her trial, the defendant denied she knew Nlkrasch in· tended to rob the Dana Harbor gift s hop or that the missing Nix· on memorabilia was in the home. She 1s presently free on $25,000 bail E vi den ce presented in Barley ·s Orange Count y Superior court trial indicated that Barley was extrem ely In· toxicated at the time of the as· sault on his wife, from whom he had been temporarily separated. SINK HOLE IN FLORIDA. • • Several months prior to the slaying, Barley had been con· victed of assaulting his wife with a knife. Al that time, he was placed on probation. In his argument to the appeals court, Munroe said that jurors received improper instructions from former Judge Mason Fen· ton before retiring to deliberate the case. Should the appeals court agree with Munroe. Barley could be released from the California Men's Colony at San Luis Obispo as early as next year. Monroe indicated Bess progresses KANSAS CITY, Mo. CAP> Former first Jady Bess Truman, who s pent a quiet night. is mak· ing progress in h er battle against pneumonia. gardening. If I don't get back in there and waler, my fruit trees and other vegetables are going to die .·· The crater estimated at 50 feet in diameter and 40 feet deep -developed during the pr e-dawn hours Thursday in a residential area north of Winter Park, where officials still were watching a sinkhole that opened last week. estimated at 400 reel wide and a lmost 100 feet deep. "This is exactly the same geological event except that it's a lot smaller," said Seminole County Engineer Bill Bush a rter s urveying the cave·in. A third central Florida sinkhole opened Thursday In an ora nge grove area in Auburndale, about 45 miles southwest or Orlando. It was re· ported as 60 feet wide. but only ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIHl m.d edvertlalng 7141142·H71 All ot!Mr department• 142·4321 Thom .. P Hal~ ,.....,.. Robert N WM<I ........,.,. M Thom•• Keevll """' Thoma A Murphlnt ........... ,_ Chsltlt H. Loo. ·-~1-~d Schulman C.rl CersttnMn --. l)ll'Oeler Kenneth H OOddard Jr ~~ C._.,rltM 1'11 °'afllt CMll ~15'11"' ~y No fto•n •-•· llluMr•t'-. 9dltorlll mtltlet or Od ••rtlH,.,,.,.lt h .. 11n moy bo rtproouced without IHC lol Pl""lstlon of COPY'ltf>I owMr. i.<Oftd clot• POtle91 pold ol Cotto Mow, Colllorftlo IUP$ lu.eGOI. SUl!terllltloll lly t•tfl•f MOO "*'""Y· lly moll IS.IO '"°"4111Y. mllll•ry dUllMtlotts $4 00 -"''" t- about 5 feet deep and nibbling al a roadway. Traffic was blocked, but no houses were threatened. Meanwhile, a hole about 20 feel wide and 15 feet deep was growing larger m a barren field north of Lakeland . and soil engineers planned a trip to Win· dermere to assess a sinkhole that began.growing in the sandy soil on the edge of Lake Bessie and spread into the backyard of a home. No one has bee n injured in any o f the incid e n ts, natura l phenomena common to central Florida in times of drought. Sinkholes occur when the water table drops and cavities In the underground limestone formations can 't support thf' above.ground press ure. The earth collapse!I, pulling every- thin~ down until the cavity fills In with earth and debris. Geology e ngineer Bryant Marshall, a private consultant, said the Altamonte Springs crater was more "typical" of the size seen in this area than the huge one in Winter Park, which caused about $2 million damage to a house, six vehicles, two businesses, a municipal pool and other property. In Wlnter Park, meanwhile, city officials and businessmen were angey about reporu Crom the state capital that the'r 1lnkhote wu not a big enough dlaasler to qualify for federal aid. And lhel'e appeared UtUe posalb lit.)' of obtalnlnc state u - 1I1 tan c e for the pu.bllc roadway•, 1wimmln1 pool and land devoured by the crater. 1 to use smalll•r boat~ Lo ferry the people over the reef .. If an evacuation was possible. the residents probably would be taken to J\lamagan. the nearest inhabited island in the chain The island's only dirt airstrip was reported clouded in ash, making an attempted landing earlier by a s mall commercial plane impossible. Recent visitors to the island reported that the ground near Mount Pagan was hot all the time. and temperatures in a mineral lake al the foot or the volcano averaged between 80 and 90 degrees. The island is part of the Com· monwealth of the Northern Marianas DEN'S S ,. n N i c h o I a s P e l r 1 s . D. Oakland. sc.ud that as a liberal he wrestled with his conscience over the malh.•r, but decided to vote for it. fie quoted Andre Malgaux as having said lhal Spa nis h Republicans Jost their civil war because the liberals let the right wing monopolize the military As for the invasion of privacy, Petris said: "I don't see what is wrong with letting the armed forces make their pitch to the s tudents. and letting them make up their own minds." AntTon 111 Nylon 100% Nylon Splu1h Nylon Cut A Santa Ana man was shot and killed Thursday evening while standing in front of hts house. police said Mark Martin, 21. was hit with several bullets from a small ca liber gun and died an hour after the 9:40 p.m. shooting, a police spokesman said. M artm died m the emergency room at Weste rn Medi cal Cent er. formerly Sant a Ana Tustin Community Hospital Investigators said they have no s uspects or motive for the shooting at Martin's home at 1235 S Sycamor e St The in vest1gat1on is cont1numR. Tnwlra Polyester Carpet Carpet and loop Tracety Saxony Plush s21so ... !Na~ c;l!.-c -"_., b'tO.llo.IO ~ooom "'°"on• parl'f on" ono-.•-ClCOA • -• ._,...._~to no-. ,_ '°" ono ~-tar .,_.. loCOTW Onoole""""' s14so s11•s s12•s .... ... ... ...,..o~.,....,, det:JotoVOVt '-·-"*-" .. ....,.,. <>"1--~"°"IO--~ ...... -.,,. '*"'I' -d ~~-~ cgope4 II "'P"Ce IO -.... \IOV • "'O COl»f GU-VII...., -\00 lnO~~plled ,.,_, '"' -"""°,_to mow_.."' "-=* °"" <-. --'°"°' -I<). ""'°" °'1o d ~I llnMf """' INClt °"" """"" '-"~ IOClll -.. dllon"""°" ... PflCe tt b -all --'°""°"DJ; ---1..,..ongtl h llE R rumwr. DE·N'S : iiistaJlatioii: ·custom drapsriss Unoleum • pa11uet wood floor • cermnic die 1663 P'LACENTI~ AVENU~ • C~ST~ MESA, CAU,, 9261) • 'HONE 646-A938 -646·235.5 l a • I j ! I .. :·.· . •• I, '. ... t,:._. ... ... ,., " . ..: 'JS '· -: -~-....... Sorrell Booke , playing Boss Hogg in the "Dukes of Ha~zard," tries to get out of a sticky situation during taping of a TV segment. At right is actor James Best . Boss Hogg won the role of sheriff in a poker game. Doggo'IW nice of president The postman brought a nice letter from the White House for Tessa Jo Collins, a 9-year-old red Irish Setler, and Flash Silva, 7, who hap· pens lo be a mixed cocker spaniel. Six weeks ago, Francesu Collins sent photos of her dogs to President Reagan along with a letter express- ing sorrow over the attempt- ed assassination. "What you need are two dogs like us to protect you," said the letter. There was this P.S. over their names signed by Ms . Coll ins: "We are Republican dogs." The response from the White ·House e nded wit h these words: '·From the bot- tom of my heart, thank you for caring, your friend . Ronald Reagan." Singer Diana Ross signed what may be the biggest money contract in r ecording industry his tory with RCA Records, and the announce· ment of her signing also call s for "filmed entertainment." the singer and RCA Records announced. RCA Records previously has not made movies. No money figure wa s given 10 an- nouncing the ·'long-t e rm exclusive re- cording agreeme nt for the Uni ted S t ates and' Canada." But 1tou Neil Bogard, head of Boardwalk Records, has been quoted in print as saying Miss Ross turned down his offer of $18 million. No recording artist pre- viously has signed with a record company for a figure that high , according lo Billboard magazine. • • 0 Oov. ff•_. Carer'• brlcle, •4-year-old Eva•a•ll•• Ooul9' ... Care1, uya ahe la "abaolulely" int.ere1ted In havins more cbllclreo. But Is her new husband also yearn· ins for the patter of UttJe feet in the executive m ansion? Durini a news conference, t he &2-year-old Carey was asked ll he might "welcome t he oppe>rtunlly t.o become a father again." ·'My record s peaks for Itself," quipped Carey. The governor and his Orat wife, HeJen, had 14 children before she died of cancer in 1974. Actor James Cau suffered a back and knee injury in a motorcycle accident in the Bahamas and will miss the Cannes Film Festival whe re his latest picture, "Thief." is e ntered, Cann's publicist said "He is in tremendous pain and sleeping only two hours a night," publicist Paul Block said. Caan, who also starred in "Hide in Plain Sight ," "Cha pter Two," "The God· f ather ," "Co m es a H o r se man " a nd "T h e Gambler," s u stained a s prain to the back, a torn muscle in the buttocks a nd a wrenched right knee in the accident. Da vid Reagan's budget cutter who exhorts other agen- cies to trim spending , is having trouble convincing Congressmen to give him more money for his office. He told House panel mem- bers· he needs more money because of added res ponsitnlities. ( . ...,,Rain widely scattered Showers due over East Coast , Midwest, Rockies, Northwest 'El C•nlro Wastal iooalher _...,.....,..._"'-._.. ... 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Call the number below a.od )'OW' meaaaae wlll be recorded, transcribed and delivered to the approprtate editor. The aame M-bour wwertng 1trvlce may be used to record letters to tbt edi\01' on 07 topic. MailboJt cont.rtbutora mu1t In· elude tbelr name and telephone ru:amber ror veriflcaUon. No clrculatioa calla, pleaH . Tell ua wlUlt'a on your mind. S:S2 o.m. ~..., 4:21 ...... ,,1....,, rl-''"'·"'· • p o a 4 • p 0 q Orange Coaat DAIL y PILOT/Friday, May 16, 1981 s Al County heavily white Slight integration reported in 1980 census results By GLENN SCOTT O( .. DMty .......... Although 1980 census figures s how that Orange County has become more racially integrat- ed in the last decade, the county still has one of the highest percentages of Caucasian resi· dents in the state. Of the county's estimated 1.9 million residents, 86.4 percent are white, according to the latest census findings released this month. In 1970, 97 .3 percent said they were white. The current racial mixture - or lack of it -is even more def· inite along the Orange Coast. ln Newport Beach, for example, 97 .1 percent of an residents re· ported that they are white. In Laguna Beach, whites account for 96.5 percent of the popula- tion, the federal Census Bureau reports. Latest census figures show that 76.2 percent of state resi· dents are white compared to 89 percent in 1970 census figures. Residents of Spanish origin in- creased by 7.3 percent during the decade and blacks increased by 0.8 percent. Percentage changes for resi- dents of Asian races were not available. Of the 17 largest metropolitan Tu'o from Coast on s e niors panel Two Orange Coast men are among seven senior citizens elected from Ora nge County to the Ca l i f or ni a Se n ior Legislature. Neel Buell of Costa Mesa was elected to one of two senate seats and Nick Warner of Hunt- ington Beach was chosen as one of five assembly m en during May 8 elections. Results were announced Wed- nesday. Other winners are Shirley Cohen of Santa Ana as the other senator, a nd assembly mem bers Kathleen Benson of l''ullerton. Aileen Johnson and Nick Ogden, both of Santa Ana and Ruby May of Tustin. The se niors' group ·is organized to mirror the state Legislature. Members are elect- ed for two.year -old terms to lob- by state political leaders on behalf of senior citizens. The seven Orange County del· e~ates are scheduled to visit Sacramento to take part in the legislative process from J uJy 29 to 31 Also announced Wednesday were appointments of nine seniors as the county delegation to the White House Conference on Aging in November. They are Buell ; Robert Covey and Isadore Schneider. Irvine, Munet Oberleder, Laguna Hills; Ka y Shaw, San Juan Capistrano; Maria Estrada and Serna Levinson, Tustin ; Jim Jarrell. Buena Park, and Cruz Sandoval, Anaheim. districts in the s~ate, Orange County has the fourth highest proportion of whites, according to the census bureau. Santa Rosa has the highest, at 92.8 per- cent. Modesto ranks second at 87.8 percent and Santa Cruz is third at 87.5. The statistics m ay be mislead· ing, however, because many people who listed themselves as of Spanish origin also said they are white , sai d ce n s u s coordinator J ohn Hernandez. S panish origin is an ethnic rather than a racial category, he said. Orange County had 1. 7 million whites, 286,000 residents of Spanish origin, 86,900 Asians, 25,280 b l acks and 12,940 American Indians and Eskimos. accord.mg to the 1980 census. The 1980 populations a nd percentage breakdowns of racial categories and Spanish origin in cities along the Orange Coast are Costa Mesu (82.291 ), white 89 9 per cent, Spanish origin 10.3; Asian 4 6, black 0.7. and lndiun 0.7. Fountain Valley l55,800>. white 88.7 percent; Spanish origin 6.8; Asian 7 .2. black 0. 7, and Indian 0.6. Huntington Beach ( 170,505), white 90.4 percent ; Spanish or igin 7.9; Asian 5.0; black 0.7. and Indian 0.7. Irvine C62.134), white 87.8 percent ; Spanis h origin 6.0; Asian 7.8; black 1 5, and Indian 0.3 Laguna Beach (17,860), white 96 5 percent: Spanish origin 4.3, Asian l 2: black 0.5. and Indian 0 4 Newport Beach l63,475), white 97 1 pe rcent. Spanish origin 2 8. Asian 1 4 , black 0.2. and Indian 0 3. WINATRIPTO HAWAII FOR TWO REGISTER ATANY ONE Of THESE DEALERS Com1rillo Appll1nce 01acounl Cen1er 678 LllS Posas Rd Conoge Perlt Baker & Wells 21•29 Sherman Woy Cenyon Country Howard & Phlls 190~ Soledad C;1nyon Coate MIH BUiiders Emporium 289 E 17lh Slreel oowMr Tabber 's Home En1erta1nmtnt Cir 8130 Firestone Blvd. Fullerton M1rv1ns TV g Apol 1912W Commonw111th Gerden Grove Olfden Qrove Appl 13191 H•l'l>Or llv<f HIC .. nda Helolltt Sowt ll'I 1231 8 Hecltnd• BIY<f Hunllntton Boach Home Sales g Serv 172•2 Beach Blvd L1 Hebrt 8 & H TV & Appl 1351 JS Beecl! Blvd Don Page Home Servtct 559 W Whittler Blvd Howard~ TV & Appl 901 E lmpe.,al Hwy Lor19 lt1ch Brannen Contt $ply 1650 Harbor Avenue LOI AngelH BUiiders EmpPflum 41650 W Pico Blvd Spero 1 4661 W Pico Blvd M1nhelt1n BHCh S Bay Appll1nce 321 M1nhat11n Beach Blvd NDfth Hollywood Snyder 011mond Dtsc:ounl PlbO & Appliance 12825 V1n Ow1n SI 0111190 Builders Emp0<1um 13•3 E.. Katella Penoreme City ATA Stores 8JJO Van Nuys Blvd Peuden• Oonoghues Hom~ Apphonce 32 S Pa9aden1 Ave Perry & Triompson 6'11 N La~e Ave Snyder Ooamol'ld Discount Plbg & Appliance 3660 E Colorado Blvd R1dondo B11ch Redondo Trading 611 N Pac:1t1c Coast Hlgttwey San l1mordlno 9ullder1 Empo11um 1700 E H1ghl1nd Avenue Cullen• TV & Appl. 675 B1Mlln1 Son 019110 Kllcnen Design C1r 2~5 El Ca1on Blvd Sen Oebrlel Howards TV & Appl 300 E Valley Blvd Sent• Fe Sprln91 Pengon Sain 11823 E Slauson Avenue UB S•nl• Montee Bay CltiH Appl 1302 Senta Monie• Blvd. Snyder Diamond Dlscpynt Plbg g Apptlal'ICI 1399 Olymptc Blvd Simi Velley Appl Showroom '468 lndustroal St St•nlon Penn Pipe & Supply '1121 Dale StrHI Tooence Paotflc Salts IOCIO Wasnlnglon Avenue Yen Nuys Builders Emporium 5960 Sepulvtde B••o waa<11 Apph.ance t1;919 Sllerman Wav WHlllkO Ylllego Warehouse D11count C1n111 31368 Via Cohnas • t08 Y or1>I Linde Vorbe Linda Appl •885 Main S11eet D11111tlbutor Cal Wes1ern Dist Co t •1100 Downey Ave Downey. Callfornle t 1 I •• r: !• ll I l ' ~ ~ I I i ' i .I l ,. as o a cc 4 3 .. l Or1nge eo .. t DAILY PILOT/Friday, Mey 15, 1981 mill u~ rn rn ·U.S. envoy, Begin talks crucial Social Security increase assured TEL AVIV, l11rael (AP> After • crucial meetin8 today with U S Envoy P hlllp C. Habib, Israeli Prime Minister M_,nachem Beglo promised to continue diplomatic "efforta to find a peaceful solution" to the Syrian missile crlaia, but gave no indication a solution mi1ht be in sleht. of force as the tension mounted alona the ltsrael ·Leban ue border There was oo conllrma· lio n from MoRcow or W aahlnt(ton. "Adm1ttedly, Ume I• runnina out," Secretary of State Alex ander Hai& Jr. told reporter• In Washington Thursday tremely delicate ... with tbe most dangerous overtones," and said the possibillUH or the Unlt· ed States being able to brine about a state of normalcy in Lebanon were "a Iona shot." However, Hals said he re- mained hopeful, adding, "We're iOing to continue to try so long as our efforts will make a con- atructive contribution." Habib dashed from Beirut to Damucus on 'fhuraday for hur ried talks with President Haft-1 Assad after Syrian mlsslln m eastern Lebanon brought down J pilotless Israeli drone. Tben hl' went back to Tel Aviv for a 90-mmute meeting with Begin at the Israeli Defense Ministry. W ASHJNGTON (AP) -The nation's 36 mHlion Social Securi- ty recipients will get their cosl- of-living raise this summer after all. Health and Human Services Secretary Richard S. Schweiker promises the issue "wtll not rear its ugly head again." (Related s tory. Page A8.) Schweiker announced Thurs· day that the administration has ruled out delay of the 11.2 per- cent July 1 increase. White House budget cutters had con- s idered delaying it until Oct. 1 lo whittle $5 billion from a ballooning, $60 billion-plus def- icit in fiscal 1981, which ends Sept . 30. wrnrnarn S. Fwrida tokl to comeroe wcder MlAMI (AP> -Waler district officials ordered south Florida residents lo slash their water use by 25 percent a nd warned of cuts of up to SO percent as the re- gion's worst drought in 10 years tightened its grip. Just hours after the severe water order was Issued, rain began lo fall In parts of Miami, but officials say t he ground ls so parched, that it wlll take much rain lo replenish the ground water reserves. 10,000 mourners at Hughe~' rites Soviet and a Romanian cos- monaut aboard, Moscow Radio reported. It was the ninth flight involving a Soviet cosmonaut and one from another country. In Beirut, meanwhile, Syrian Foreign Minister Abdul-Halim "K.haddam was quoted as aayln1 his country was ''ready to do battle if Begin translates his threats to deeds." "The mjssiles will not be re· moved under Is raeli or any other press," Khaddam waa quoted as saying in Syrian newspapet'I. "We reject the con· cept that rsrael has any right to dictate security reg11lations In Lebanon or to control its skies." Israel has demanded Syrian remove the batteries of Soviet- m ade a nti -a ircraft missiles Syria sent into Lebanon last month, and has threatened to wipe them out if Syria refuses. Begin. speaking to reporters after his second meeting with Habib In 12 hours, conceded that Syria still rejected Israel's de- mand, but said, "The United Stales and Israel a r e or the same opinion that the status quo ante must be restored." Habib decli ned to speak to re- porters and it was not known what his next move would be. In Khaddam's interview he disclosed that the oil-rich Arab nations have cut off the $15 million a month they pay to Syria to fund its peacekeeping operations in Lebanon. But it was not clear whether that cut He called the sltuutlon """ ............... Villagers from Howh-Hamiech,Lebanon,po•e with pil.otleaa Israeli reconna1aaance drone shot down by Syrian miuile. The village ta seven mile• from the Syrian border. Student kept • ID closet BELLAGHY , Northern Ireland <AP > -Police and troops ringed this village today while the IRA gave a military funeral to hunger striker Fran- c is Hughes. An estimated 10,000 mourners packing country lanes and fi elds in a steady drizzle and a n army helicopter hovered above the funeral procession. The last international flight under the Soviet bloc's l n- tercosmos program, which car- ried a Soviet m ission com - mander and a Mongolian "cos- monaut-researcher,'· ended in March. off was aimed al pressuring the ANNAPOLIS, Md. (AP > A rat poison for four school days filed by the fourth g rader's Syrians out of Lebanon. 9-year-old girl was kept in a win-because she talked too much in mother Leban e 8 e PO lice said· dowless storage room containing her class, according to a lawsuit The $2 4 m 1 ll1on s uit hied mea n while, that fi g hti n g Thursday by Shelly Davis on between Syrians and Christians behalf of her daughter, Michyle. in Beirut overnight injured 24 s f charged only black students In Belfast. thousands of other mourners turned o ut for the funerals of two men, a Protes- tant milkman and an Irish na· l1 onalist guerrilla. killed in riot- ing since the deaths of Hughes last Tuesday and fellow hunger s triker Bobby Sands a week earlier people . The rightist Christian oap ans angry were disciplined by being placed Voice of Lebanon radio said four in the storage closet -'--..:~ans rie~iect. people were killed and 22 School S uperintendent /I.Tiie• .,._,. '.I wounded by Syrian shelling in Edward J Anderi:.on, Principal Soviet protest the Christian city of Zable, 30 KANSAS CITY, Mo. <AP) answer the calls Wednesday that Ralph McCann Jr and Assistant miles east of Beirut, but the re-H undreds of Kansas City s wamped the switchboard his Principal Wayne Miller w~re MOSCOW (AP) The U.S. port could not be independently viewers called to complain and, station shares with KCMO-TV named as def<'ndants in the Embassy in Moscow today ac-confirmed. in some cases, threaten violence "After 25 years in the busi-lawsuit cused the Soviet U n ion of Israeli news reports said the wh en television s tations pre-n ess, I am amazed and Deputy School Superintendent Soviets launch "grossly distorted allegations" Soviet Union was moving empted afternoon soap operas s hocked." h e said "They C. Berry Carter denied the al a Sh . · t th t for co erage f the shoot'ng of h a r assed the s tation Some over the U.S. seizure of cargo in w r 1P8 an ° e eas ern v 0 1 legation that white students nnir in ~,..._ 40 a search of an Aeroflol airliner Medlt.etranean, and the UnUed Pope John Paul II. ca 11 e d r e Pe ate d I Y . 0 n e were disciplined differently un ~ o.JV J""' States was es d. g b mo Steve Shannon executl ve vice threatened to come down and do this week in Washington. and r pon an Y V· • der the county's "in-school sus MOSCOW <AP> -The Soviet said it sent a diplomat to the ing part of its 6th Fleet in the president and•general manager bodily harm to the people at the pension prooram" under · So sam d' t ' T h t C KCMO di sa·d he helped station." " Union launched yuz 40 into Foreign Ministry lo reject a So-e tree ion. e repor s 0 ra o, 1 which students are assigned to ~s-p-ac_e __ T_h•u~r-sd•a•~ .... n•img•ht_.w_i.th;;;;;;;a;;;;;;;i.._v_ie•t•p5ro•t•es•t•osv;;;-er1 the.in1c1i1de1n1t1.1111c1a·l·le'dltlhlelmlolvlelslaiimiultulalllsihloiwiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiii'i::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;s~it~i~nspec1alrooms Fir st Bapti st Church Exce ent Opp' ortunity of Costa Mesa Invites you to Join us As we welcome our New Pastor Joe Buonassissi SUNDAY -MAY 24 -1981 10 30 Al\11 The Sanctuary Choir with 17-Piece Brass Choir and Band, Featuring the music of Andrea Crouch, Dan Burgess, Dan Whittemore 6:00 PM JOHN LAIRD, GUEST SOLOIST RECEPTION FOLLOWING Pastor Buonassissi Speaking At Both Services 301 Magnolia, Costa Mesa (Corner Santa Ana St. one block north of 18th St.) 631 -3010 C€l€BRate Newport's 4th Anniversary Tuesday, May 19, with 1977 Dinner Prices, an extended "Cask Hourl' with Two-for-One Cocktails from 11:15 A.M. till dosing, Complimentary Desserts and other festivities . for POLICE OFFICERS In Northern California' 1 "All American City" VALLEJO, CALIF. Entry Level or Lateral Entry Available Sol.ary .!l!J.t; !!.'n :.y·~~def~ ·~!!!;.~~~!'~ flnt ..t.ry 1tep. U...,_l beneflt1 whkh lnducle PIH, CHP fltan, hlth.at Y"'· Min. leq: 60 S.m. Unltt .t Col ..... A,. 21 te 35. lquol Opp. lmpleyer. Mlnoritlet and w~en en'*ltated teapply. Excellent Cllmate ... Ample Recreation Good Family Community lecrvltlng representatives wll l»e at Anaheim -Moy 20, 1981 -Holldoy Inn 1150 S. Harbor llvd. ................... ef 9:00 ......... 4:00,.,... To answer any questions you may hove. No Appointment Nece11ary. \ T R -\ \ I I \I " l, \ I I \, I I l \ R l \ I I I l IR '\ I \ '\ I \\ ' I' \ I t ll " COMING THIS SUNDAY • • • The May Journey Magazine, an exciting travel supplement exclusive to readers who subscribe to the Daily Pilot. Every month you can discover some place new. Journey will take you to the near and faraway. And show you how to get there. With tips on package tours. Plus the latest rundown on cruise news. I ncludlng option trips and special rates . Journey Magazine ..• One way to see the world before you sail off to see it. Overseas destination: Manila Domestic destination: Mazatlan California destination: Major Amusement Parks IN THE llily Pilat .. 2-4321 UNCLAIMED GOODS PUIUC AUCTIOH OF AUTten'IC HANDMADE ORIENT AL RUGS Ll9UIDATING ENTIRE INVENTORY o l accumulated unclaimed goods. plus others from OUR STORAGE WAREHOUSE 1n Los Angeles Various rugs and carpets of line quality from Iran. Pakistan. India. Afghanistan. Turkey. Romania. Russia and China Wtde Variety of sizes and colors A Cert1f1cate of Authenticity will be issued for eacn purchase FOR YOUR COMVMEHCE. THE AUCTION WILL TAKE PLACE SATURDAY, MAY 16 ot 2 PM HOUDAYIMH 25205 LA P il RD. LAGUNA HILLS (1·5 & La Paz Road) Information (2 13) 709-0026 Terms Cash/Check A, A & A ORIENTAL RUGS, IMC. N-M's new menu in The Zodiac: Just one mote reason to come Sunday-shopping with us. Each Sunday between 12 and 4. indulge in a buffet of famou s N-M des~ert~: all you can eat. 4.95. And N-M ·!\ Wine Bar and medley of ho~ d·oeuvre~: all you can eat. 6.95. Before you go browsing, stop in for lunch! The Zodiac. Middle Level, Newport Beach . lewponlk1th, 10ro6Mon., T~'·· WtJ .. Thun.,S11 .. l0109fn.:Su~ ll10~.aOilnow~n1nwVe:a-., I ' --~ --..-• • • o u a ¢ a as s a a 33663 3 3 Orange Co11t DAILY PILOT/Friday. M•Y 15, 1981 H/F Reagan's son will quit job 2 driving bills OK'd by solons SACRAMENTO <AP> -The slate Senate has voted to make . it illegaJ to drive with more I.ban 0.1 percent alcohol in the blood, and lo require the suspension of Fur or over soliciting letter brings r esignation from equipment firm WASHINGTON (AP> - Michael Reagan, saying he is "tired or having to explain" his actions, plans to resign from a company for which he wrote a letter sollcitlng contracts Crom U.S. military bases and men- tioning his rather. the president. · White House offlcials, insist· ing there was nothing improper in the letter. said President Reagan has asked the White House counsel to advise Michael and other members of the first family on avoiding •·even the ap- pearance of Impropriet y " in future business dealings. The March 24 letter in which Michael Reagan refe rred to his father was written on behalf of Dana Ingalls ProCile, a private military equipment supplier in Burbank, and sent to orricials at Tinker Air Force Base in Oklahoma. "I know that, with my father's leadership at the White Houae, this country's Armed Services are going to be rebuilt and s trengthened." the letter said. "We at Dana lngaUs l>rome want to be involved in that pro- cess." Jn an interview Thursday with NBC News at bis home in the San Fernando Valley, Michael Reagan said be would resign to- day as a vice president for marketing sales. a job he bad held since Feb. 27. "Now, wherever I go, people are going to be afraid to do busi- ness with me because they don't know if the press is going lo come in," he said. "I'm going to resign today." He said he would begin ;earchlng immediately for another job. "I 'm afraid to go help somebody do business or , try and make a living.'' Michael said he was "tired of having lo explain" his job of talking lo buyers and requesting permission to give quotes on business. ·•All we want to do is get on the approved suppliers list like hundreds or other com- panies." he said. Officials of the U.S. Justice • Department, Office of Federal Procurement Policy, Defense Department and Office of Gov- e rnment Ethics have said the letter apparently did not violate federal conflict-of-interest laws. Deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said in a brief statement Thursday that President Reagan had asked his counsel, Fred Fielding, to OC· casionally provide legal advice lo Michael and other first-family members. "Earlier today." the state· ment said, "in response lo a re- quest from his son Michael, the president asked bis counsel lo provide informal guidance lo Michael and his other children from llmetolime. , "In the president's view, this precautionary step is the beat way to ensure that his children can continue to exercise their full rights as private citizens while also observing their special responsibilities as mem· be rs or the first family' thus avoiding even the appearance of any impropriety," the statement said. 'TIRED OF EXPLAJNJNC' Michael Reagan Ho us ing woe eyed SAN FRANCISCO MPl -A group of Northern California builders have asked the state's six largest banks to help them find a way to ease what the builders say is the state's worst housing shortage since World War IL a driver's license for at least five days. The blood alcohol bill, S8745 by Sen. Alan Sieroty, D-Los Angeles, passed 22· 1 Thursday. The mandator y licen se suspension measure. SB373 by Se n . Newton Ru ssell , R- G lendaJe. got a 25·4 vote. Present law says a person is presumed to be under the in· fluence if his blood-alcohol level is O 1 percent or higher, but the presumption can be contested in court Under Sieroty's bill. a 0.1 blood alcohol level would make a person 9uilty without argu- ment. although the validity or the lest could s till be challenged. A per~on's blood-alcohol can vary depending on his size or blood consun;ied. but 0 1 percent usually follows three drinks nn COSTA MESA STORE MAY 16-1 7 SOME QUANTI TIES UMITl::D SORRY! NO RAINCHF.t:KS ... ~ TREATED IN WOMB Debra Whitmore of Santa Rosa gives he r five-month-old daughter Nicole a dose of Biotin to help com- bat a deadly inherited disease involving :: vitamin deficiency. Before Nicole was born, ; doctors gave Mrs. Whitmore huge doses or 1 Biotin that was then delivered to the womb. . t i Closed hospital i may be sold i . RIVERS IDE IAPl Two medical manage- ment fi rms have s hown interest in buying the 36· bed hospital shut down this week after 25 people died in the intensive care unit, a hos pital official said. ~ Meanwhile, a s tate investigation into ques- :; lionable deaths spread to four more hospitals, in· t eluding one in nearby Chino where a 28th possible victim died. No bail fo r Buono LOS ANGELES <APl Angelo Buono, ac- cused in the Hillside Strangler case, has lost aoother bid lo be freed on bail after a SuJ>:Crior Court judge ruled that there is sufficient evidence to sustain a possible conviction. I Saturday and Sunday Par • g Lot S E! Plus Many More Unadvertised Specials Sll9.99 MOTOCROSS MX BlKE 899 7 heavy duty frame, maa style wheels S37.99 4-LB. SLEEPING BAG 1897 hi-loft polyester fill ................. . S89.99. 7x7-FOOT PACK TENT 4497 durable rip-slop nylon ............ . S89.i9. THERMOS*K-QT. COOLER 4497 rustproof polyethylene shell ......... . $34.99. DISNEY ROLLER SKATES 2597 fits Kids' size J2 to adults size 7 ..... . $28.88 POLAROID8 ONE STEP 199 7 no focusing, fully motorized ......... . ~!i~8ri~~~~~e?!~1~:.~~~~.~ ... 2197 GARDEN -T OYS ~**********COUPON*********-~ Hot Dog and P e psi : • • : 50e : • • ,0.3 p.m. May 16th & 17th : It* * * * * * * * * * COUPON * * * * * * * * * * YOU R CHOICE Viva® Paper Towels or Napkins 3/$ 2 limit 16 Table Top Barbeque Grill $} 99 Special Buy 100 Only Beach Chairs APPLIANCES -TELEVI SION 18-C.F. REFRIGERATOR TOP MOUNT WIT H ICEMAKER reg. 669.99 SALE s53991 S5t9.H . 16-C.F. REFRIGERATOR t op mount, 1 only . . . . . . S76t.99. 20-C.F. REFRIGERATOR s ide by side. 1cemake r .. 449 87 63997 S379.H .18·LB. AUTO. WASHER 29987 water saver, 2 only . . $4H.tt.ZO-LB. AUTO. WASHE R 32987 9 cylces, heavy duly, 2 only . . ..... S699.99. l.S·C.F. MICROWAVE recycle recorder, J only .... $449.H . 19 INCR COLOR T.V. automatic color control. 2 only 4 9997 .33988 $479.91. 19 INCH COLOR T.V. 35988 with electronic tuning , 2 only .... $399.99. 17-INCH COLOR T.V. 43988 with remote control, 1 only S399.99. STRACK STEREO 32488 with turntable, 1 only . . . . . .. S399.99. STER EO W/CASSETI'E 32488 with turntable. l onl y . . . .. Stressing he was not ruling on Buono's guilt, I Judge Ronald George said Thursday that if a jury were to convict Buono in the murder of 15-year-old . ! Judy Miller. an appeals court would affirm such a 1 :• conviction. SING LE BURNER GAS GRILLE reg. 129.99SALE 89997 Special B uy 36 o.iiy CLEARANCE! Selected Misses, Women's and Junior Fashions Up To ... . · ~ Acrobats injured MERCED <AP ) Two women circus l~ acrobats were Injured i 1 n a fall aht the end ohr t~rerir performance atop a 20· oot pole ere, the s en s office reported today. Gabriel Gomez had fractures of both ankles, and Isabel Gomez had a possible compression spinal fracture that did not involve her spinal cord, a nurse at Merced Community Medical Center said. Nuke p act d e layed LOS ANGELES <AP> -A University of ·• California regents committee has partly honored requests by a student regent, student government representative and a faculty member that it delay its contract renewal with the federal government for operation of two nu~lear weapons labs. From hoss's mouth: . no cause for ala DEL MAR <AP ) - Jo n athan, a bay thorou&hbred s how horse competina in a na- tJooal contest this week, hae been putt~I on bls own aldeahow and kff P· In• fi.n(llhtA!rs hoppln1. Tbe playful equine half discovered a way to pull fire alarms at lb 1t ablea, brln1ln1 fire en1lnet -1lrena blarlna rearln• Into the boraes• quart.era on the Del Mar P'alr1round1 wt..re the Del Ma r Na· Uooal Hone Show la in pro.,.. mUJ Sunday. ' •)n Tuesday. puuled firefight.era were about to leave lbe stable• without finding a fire or the culprit who set off the false alarm. M a llroflahter reset the alarm, Jonathan nipped at hlm. But lt wun't until the firemen itetan cllmbinl onto their truck and Jonathan ambled over and pulled the alarm 1saln that they found lbelr Joker. Tbey put boar a arou nd the alarm to keep the horse away. $1.59. 3-LEG TOMATO CAGE 88 C promotes good growth . . . . . . . . . . ..... SZ.99. I-GALLON OUTDOOR PLANTS } 9 7 includes daisies. geraniums ............ . $21.99. SO·FT. RUBBER HOSE 1397 5/8" diameter, brass couplings ..... $259.99. 31,4,.ff,P ROTARY MOWE R 21997 rear throw with bag .............. . $199.993-HPGRASS EDGER 16997 easy set depth control ........... . ~:~ct~,~~:r~~~~~~~. ~~ ... 3 49 I AUTOMOTIVE -HARDWARE I $549.M . SPORTY MOP ED 29900 easy and fun to ride .............. . Sl3t.M. REFLECflVE SUNllOOF 9900 permanent bond. solar t ins ....... . $31.M. PORT. Ma COMPBESSOa 24 97 use In auto or garage ............... . $8.zt. SUP ER THEa ll INSULATION 600 blownin lnsulaUon, IO lb. ba1 ......... . •21.M. l ·FI'. WOOD STEP LADDER } 994. ideal for household tasks •........... 2t'1o OPF 11IE REGULAR PRICE, EVAPOa~TIVE COOLEa 8 I N STOCK SP ECIAL! P e psi-Diet Peps i $} 5 9 6 -pack Lim it 4 Wilson® Tennis Balls Specia l s 211 Can of 3 Umit4 BOATLOAD SALE! Imported Wicker 60% Off Regular Price 69c ea. MESH PANTYHOSE 2 /} O O great fashion tones .............. . SP ECIAL! GIRLS 1-Pc. SWIMSUITS 4 97 sizes 7-14, assorted colors . . . . . . . ..... . $6.99. BOYS HAWAIIAN SIURTS 400 sizes 7-18. asserted colors . . . . . . . . . . ... $4.99. MEN'S MESH TANK TOPS 2/700 assorted colors to choose ......... . SPECIAL. MEN'S CASUAL J EANS 1197 machine washable; 32-42 ........... . $13.99·15.00. SKIPS~ J OGGING SHOES 9 97 men. boys, women's sizes .......... . .. I WRANGLER WESTERN BOOTS ZS% OFF THE REGULAR PRICE HOUSEWARES -DOMESTICS ::~':rt:f:O~!~.~.~~.. . . . . . ... ' ..... 29 7 :·:~~; ~;!!tc!~~~.~ .~~~ ............. 9 9 1 $11.M. METAL FOLDING CHAIRS 89 7 sturdy conatruction. a.ssorted colors .... $11.M POPCORN MAKER 1997 makes delicious batch In munutes .... COSTA MESA STORE ONLY SAN DIEGO FWY. AT BRISTOL l 1 SHOP MON-FRI. 10 AM·t PM ••• SAT. 9:30 AM·9 PM ... SUN. 11 AM.e PM Now charge it 3 waya 1 '1 I 1 I I • • ". Orange Oout DAIL. Y PIL.OT/Prlday, May 1&, 1911 ~Health agency, needs j a qualified director There can be no argument with the belief of. the Oranee County Grand Jury that radical improvements are needed l~ the delivery of mental health services in the county. The delivery or s uch services, the jury said, has been hamp ered by numerous bureaucratic obstacles. It recom- mended the best way lo improve the situation would be to remove the mental health program from the auspices of the county Human Services Agency. an um- brella organization that oversees the county's social service pro- grams. We fail to see, however, how removal of the program from the HSA would make service de- . Ii very any better. In fact, re- 11: movaJ of the mental health pro- gram from the HSA could lead to I even more disruption to a pro- : gram that has suffered too many • disturbances already. Many of the problems that face the mental health program .. can be attributed to a flurry of departures b.v top mentaJ health otliciaJs and a decision lilSt year by t h e county Board o f Supervisors to give Margaret Grier. former HSA director. a dual position as the county's mental health director. Miss Grier has since retired; an interim HSA director has been named . That man , Larry Lea.man, says improvements in the mental health program will be forthcoming. Leaman agreed with the jury on many p<>ints - but not the one in which the jury recommende d the HSA be stripped or the mental heaJth pro- gram. Whal Leaman and the supervisors should do is keep the program within the HSA and quickly hire a permanent mental health director -keeping the program out from under the direct control of the HSA direc- tor, as was the case in the Grier situation. The hiring of a qualified, mental health professional as program director would go a long way toward solving the problems identified by the jury. School ftuuling plans One or the keystones of the Reagan effort to ··get govern- ment o!f our backs" wouJd be a new m ethod of distributing federal funds. Instead of target- ing money for specific programs. the administration proposes issu- ing block grants to the states to cover needs in general areas, but largely al each state's discretion. A similar approach is pro- posed for school district funding in several measures now in the hop- per in the state Legislature. For e~ampJe, a plan devised by the '"State Senate Republican Caucus would combine som~ 27 diff erenl school programs now financed individually into fiv e blanket grants. Each school district would determine which programs under each block grant are needed locally, and distribute the money accordingly. The decisions wouJd be made by sc hool ad - ministrators. teachers, parents and locally elected school boards, on the basis of local priorities in· stead of orders from Sacramento. Proponents claim the plan could eliminate the need for up to one-third of the employees at the s tale Department of Education who now oversee the operations of specific pro~rams in 1.020 California school districts. It could save up to $28 million in administrative costs. For example, one block grant covering needs for exceptional children wouJd include funding for nine separate programs, s uch as special reading, Indian educa- tion, migrant education, instruc- tional television and gifted and talented education. The local district wouJd de- cide which of the programs are pertinent to local needs and al- locate the grant money. Other proposed block grants would cover adult and vocational education; special child needs such as preschool programs and child nutrition ; program im- provement, including resource centers and career guidance; and basic education needs such as transportation and capital out- lay. Supporters of the block grants say they would enable more money to now directly into the classroom where it is needed, instead of being diverted by burdensome administrative pro- cedures to comply with mandates set up in Sacramento without re- gard to local needs. Most local school officials couldn't agree more. A better primary date In addition to being thwarted by the premature announcement or the resuJt or last year's pres- i den ti al election . California. voters earlier were deprived of any significant role in choosing the eventual nominees. That's because the state once more was last among the 36 that make their selections in primary elections. By the time Californians vot- ed in June, many of the early contenders had dropped out on the basis of results of early primaries in other states. A bill now pending in the state Legislature would set the primary e lection here on the second Tuesday in April, moving California up to eleventh place in the primary sequence. That makes more sense. It also could save a substan- • tial amount of money since many local elections are held on the April date. It is patently absurd for a state the size of California to be virtually shut out of a chance to vote on all the would-be can- didates simply because its primary election is held on such a late date. There are proposals in Congress that could resuJt in the establishment of regional primaries, covering several states at a time. . That might be even better, but given the probabiUty that Congress won't get around to act- ing before the next presidential election, the Legislature wouJd be well advised to move now to shift California's primary into a more decisive p<>sition. / Opinions expressed In the space above art: those of the Dally Pilot. Other views ex· I pressed on thi s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is Invit- ed. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. If l L.M. Boyd / Names still popular -- Mosl popular names for 32-year-old rnen ln New York City. in order, are Robert. J ohn . James, Michael, Wllltam, Richard, Joseph, Thomas, Stephen and Oavid. Seven of these remained the most popular into the next generation. Among 8-year-old boys there, the preferred names, likewise In order, are Michael. David. Christopher, John. James. • ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat Joseph. Robert. Anthony, Richard and Brian. Researchers now say that the most commonly spoken word ln the Engllsh laoeuage ls "I ." "You" comes in second. That la not how ii should be. "You'' should be first. Anyhow, third ls "the" and fourth is '*a••. Thomas P. Haley Publlsher Thomas KNVll Editor 8~rbara Kreiblch Edltorlal Page Editor ...... -· ...... .. ........... ~·---· - Risky drug evades control WASHING TON Responding to the Reagan administration's "go slow" ap- proach lo more government regulation, the Food and Drug Administration is planning to delay indefinitely a rule that controversial prescription drugs contain package inserts lo warn patients about their dangers. This mild corrective action -rar less drastic than taking a suspect drug off the market whil~its safety is proved would at least give doctors and patients a chance to weigh lhe risks against the benefits of the medication. Yet even this partial damper on sales is opposed by the drug industry Let me cite one particularly shocking example of the development and market ing of a widely used but controversial drug: Bendectin. It has been prescribed routinely to millions of pregnant women since 1956 for relief of nausea and vomit ing. BENDECTIN'S MANUFACTURER, Richardson Merrell, now Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals, is facing sever al lawsuits from women who blame the drug for severe malformations in their babies The birth defects --missing or badly de- formed limbs -are reminiscent of those caused by the sedati ve drug Thalidomide. which Merrell distributed in the United States. My reporters Indy Badhwar and Judy Grande have examined court documents and confidential company memos that sketch an appalling record of inadequate testing, irresponsibility and outright de· • ce1t I !ere are what the documents show Bendeclin was concocted literally by Merrcll's research director, Dr Raymond Pogge, who had only three months of obstetrical training in his back· g~ound He simply mixed three existing drugs together like a cocktail Development was to be given top priority so that. as a Merrell memo ex· G. -JA-CK-A-ND-IR-SD-N -~ plained. Bendectin would be ready for promotion at an upcoming meeting of the American Academy of Obstetrics and Gynecology -T HE f'DA APPROVED Bendectin in 1957 even though Merrell offered no reproductive or fertility tests to vouch for its safety Despite the American Medical Asso<'iation 's view that combination drugs have a greater risk or toxicity, the FDA OK 'd Bendectin on the grounds that it was not a new drug. but a mixture of drugs already on the market. To promote Bendectin, Pogge wrote an article on it for the Ohio State Medical Journal. It appeared under the name or Dr R Nulsen, an obstetrician. In a sworn deposition, obtained by public interest lawyers Alan Eaton. Tom Tate and Jim Butler, Pogge later said he had ghost- written 20 or 30 articles for other doctors over the year~ In 1963, a Merrell txpert on birth de- fects. R. E Staples, tested Bendectin on rabbits and noted malformations in the offspring similar to those caused by Thalidomide . He recommended further testing But the disturbing findings were deleted when the Staples report was sum- marized for the FDA and for Merrell's sales force The company rece1 ved numerous let· ters from physicians with questions about malformations that had s hown up in their patients' babies. Merrell did not promptly report all this information to lhe FDA, as 1t 1s required by law to do. -SIX YEARS AFTER Bendectin's in· lrnduct1on, an arucle m the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology linked th<' drug to deformities in m·wborns Last September, an FDA advisory cum mattcc reviewed published studies and concluded there was no increased risk of birth defects from the use of Ben- dectin But the panel did come across two studies that left "residual uncertainties" about the drug Instead of ()rdcring Bendeclin off the market while the uncertainties are cleared up, the FOA decided to make use of a nt>w regulation that would require· 1n1ckage inserts warning that the drug s hould be used only as a last resort. This is the proposed regulation that the FDA has put on "hold" in response to the ad· m 1n1strat1on 's anti regulatory policies. M eanwhalc, Bendectm 1s still on the market Loudest voices get lawmakers' ears E:arl Waters is on vacation This column 1s by State Controller Ken Cory The rapid depletion of the state's once large general fund surplus will, at some point in the very near future, require a much-needed reordering or the state's spending priorities. The huge surplus that had been built up at the time of the passage of Proposi· lion 13 in 1978 has been used up in partially making up the reductions in the local property tax. Those so-called "bail·out" funds w111 be reduced this year as the Legislature and governor focus on the coming hudget. IT SEEMS TO ME a healthy process for government to question its priorities from lime to time with an eye toward cutting back on certain programs or completely eliminating those the public holds in least regard. As the Legislature begins to cope with the reality of cutbacks, and l must add that it has been quite slow to face the is- sue. there is going to be a great deal of static from the Capitol Building in Sacramento. The Legislature 1s a col- lective political animal that r esponds to the loudest voices, the apparent biggest numbers of groups of constituents and perceived political pressure. From July of 1980 through March of 1981 the state's general fund has been depicted by an average of nearly $200 million each month. With a lukewarm economy at best. the state's biggest rev· enue source, the retail sales tax. has grown only s)ightly from the prior fiscal year AT THE SAME time. more than 20 separate stale programs centered in the IARl WATIRS fields of health, education and welfare are tied to varying cost-of-li ving in· creases Inflation rises. costs go up virtually automatically. Meanwhile. rev· enues increase only moderately The result: an impending budget crisis Unlike the federal government, California state government cannot go into deficit financing. When the surplus 1s gone. cuts will have to be made or taxes increast·d And I see no sentiment whatsoever by either party to increase taxes al this time with the exception .lf an added tax on gasoline to build and repair roads and streets. As the legislative committees work on the budget l>clwccn now and July tough decisions will have to be m ade. There is no postponement for a day of reckoning later The problem will be compounded by the fact that mail and personal ap· pearances, petitions and telephone calls will be imploring the lawmakers to pre· serve this or that program agency. VIRTUALLY NO ONE lakes the time to come to Sacramento and ask the Legislature to cut something out. Each program 1s somebody's ox waiting to be gored When the threat of abolishing a favored state service or payment is perceived then the rush is on lo Sacramento That is the process that is going to create lhc noise and friction. But it is a necessary process if the state is going to regain a proper perspective on its spending and, like the families of this slate, try to live within realistic means 1n a lime of severe inflation A touching example of the 'truly needy' And, now, boys and girls, a heart warming story about the Truly Needy whom Ronnie Reagan and his budget axman, David Stockman, have prom· ised to protect. Both Ron and Dave have promised to GIORGI MAIR get all the Truly Un-needy away from the public trough, but promise that the Truly Needy will s till be cared for and nurtured. APPARENTl.Y, one of the Truly Needy who qualifies for 1ublic as - alstance is another lovable 'Ronald - Ronald McDonald. of golden arches feme. He, bis golden arches and many other big bualnesses are the beneflcJarlea of tax·exempt lnduatrtal development rtv· ,nue bonds (IDRB1) autborhed by Conarea and, apparently, condoned by the cun-ent admlntstratlon <As they wue, ln all fairness, by the Carter and Ford adminiltraUon•). Clues and ~tales can luue these bonds and use the money to build facilities for fast food restaurants such as McDonalds and other big business firm s (th e little mom and pop merchants don't qualify in the minds of most who administer this scam). So far, these IDRBs have been used to build 107 McDonald's. SO, WHY 00 you care as long as you can get a Big Mac and an order of fries? The short answer is lhat you pay more income taxes because of this and comparable such soak-the-poor-save- the-rich schemes foisted on you by your federal government. Here's how lhey get you. Because lhe income from them Is tax-free. people who invest in lhem pay less income tax- es to the federal treasury than they would otherwise. This also means the Interest rate on them is lower than it would be if McOOn&!d's had to go to the bank like lhe rest of us poor slobs and borrow money at the JOlng rate. So. McJ)onald's get& cheap money and rich lnveatora don't have to pay Uncle Sam all the tues t.h•Y mliJtt. WKEN ONE SEGMENT of economy doesn't pay it.s share of tue:.. l'\ICSll who has to make up the shortage? Oh, you already fl1ured it out -you do. This year It Is estimated that we average taxpaying peons will have to ante up about 350 million extra. And, how is the Truly Nudy Ronald McDonald doing? Well, a few days ago his Chicago headquarters announced that he had a 21 1 percent jump in net profits in the first three months of this year I don't know how many million Big Macs he gave you last year, but you gave him 1 6 billion Big Bucks last year Just thought you· d sleep better know- ing that another Truly Needy case ls do- ing okay GllllY Gii While our h~glslatora are busy dreamln1 up new laws I wish they'd make It ii· legal for any kind of vendor to enter our homes via the telephone -especially at dinner lime! c.v. ..... "' ..... ,. .. -....... --..... -. -··--· ~" -....... -·. ·-. .. --..... -....... ... , ... _... .... , ~ I .__ --·-----·--__ .,._ • • 0 • 0 •• ' 0 ••••• u ca as a a Dally PUat FRIDAY, MAY 1S, 1981 , ..... SIA ST OCK S 8 5 HUITllGTll BllCH I f IUITAll Villi Y TELEVISION 86 COMICS 87 Japan leads world in importati on of U.S. farm commodities ... B3 Coastline College gets cable channel By PHIL SNEIDERMAN OllMDMl•"'l.tlUff Cable television customers in west Orange County soon will be able to fi nd additional college courses on their programming schedule. The Public Cable Television Authority. which is overseeing construction of a cable system in Huntin gton Beach. Fou ntain Valley and Westminster, has awarded a channel to Coastline Community College, based in OC honie buyers better off By FREDERICK SCHOEM EHL Of Ille D•ll' l"lleU!Aff In a s ix-county Southern California region , home buyers in Orange County are the least in flue nced by high mortgage in terest rates when it comes to purchasing a new home. This 1s among findings con t ained in a consumer attitude s tudy of 1,600 home s hoppers con dueled by the Building Industry A ssoc iation of South ern California. The study. conducted at more than 130 new home sites in Orange. Los Angeles, Ventura. Riverside. San Bernardino and San Du~go counties found "the most s1gmf1cant charactenstic dirrerentiating Orange County fro m the rest of Southern l'aliforma IS the VOiume Of af fluenlhomeshoppers " T he median income of the average Orange County home s hopper was $48,000, com pared to $39,000 m the six-county region, according to the study. Coupled with a median equity in an existing home of $79.000. the Orange County shopper is "well 11uahf1ed" lo purchase a home with a median price of $152.000. the study said This compares to a figure of $118.000 in the six-county region. "Given the income . Orange Cou nty is indicated lo be a ble to s upport a higher percentage or sales in the $150,000-plus market than any other area in Southern California." It was noted in the study that in the "price range of interest" category fully 10 percent of shop· pers in the south Orange County area indi c ated interest in purchasing homes v a lued at S300,000 or more. Forty two percent of those sur· veyed in Orange County were de· fined as belonging to t he "luxury ram ily group." In the entire sur- vey area only 27 percent were so rated Following are other findings containedinlhes urvey Orange County had the highest percentage of shoppers who own their own home. 82 per cent . compared to 74 percent for the six county region. Orange county shoppers the sur vey said " ... are the most de· pendent on a healthy resale ma rket to permit buyers to utilize their equity transfer (for the> purchase of a new home." "With an a ve r age household of 2.9 persons and a median age for the head or a househole. a quality house. or sophisticated design, will be needed to attrack this affluent discretionary buyer ... This is the fifth the year t he as sociation has conducted such an a tti t udc study. Information contained in the s urvey. according to association officials, ca n be used by builders to answer questions relative to consume r perceptions of aspects of the housing industry a nd housing markets. The study is available to as- sociation members for $275 per copy, and to non-members for $350. Swim classes set at YMCA R e gist ration fo r s umme r swimming classes is being con· dueled by the West O range County YMCA in Huntington Beach. The cla.•ses wtll meet Mopday. Wednesday and Friday, orTues- day and Thursday. Each three· we ek session will cost Sl8 for a member . S23 ror • non ·member. Le11on1 will be offere d al nelahborhood pools. The ftnt class begins June u. More lntonnauon ls avaUable by cal1Jn1 the YMCA at 8'1·9622. ' Fountain Valley Coastline spokesman · Jack Chappell said the college cur· rently offers many televised courses on KOCE. Channel SO, and other stations. but added that most courses are broadcast during day time hours when many stude nts cannot view them He said the new cable channe l will allow the college lo televise courses at more convenient hours, including evenings, when most stations offer more conven- tional prime time programs. A fall schedule of about 19 television courses 1s pla nned. Of these, 14 will be replays of courses televised on open-circuit stations, while fi ve wtll be of· fe r ed e xclus1 vely for cable customeri. To provide tht! cable services, equipment will be ins talled at the current Coastline offices at 10231 Slater /\ve. Jn 1983. pro- gra~ming will begin originating from Coastline's ne w head quarters, proposed for the cor n t'r or Warner Avenue and Newhope Strel.'t D i (' k I n s 0 n p a c I r i (' Cablesystems. \\ ht"h is prov1d ing the local cable service. an nounced that as of May 1 the company had service available to 18,813 homes in the three c·1lles The company said it had 5,6f.8 subscnbt•rs on that date or about 30 1wrcent of the home's the cable could -;cr ve l>d ve Edward :., general manager or the <.·able company, said 375 miles of cable construe· lion have been completed in the thrc•e cities or 55 percent or the total proJcct The cable system now offers 35 channels and will introduce a 58 c·hannel converter in August lo provide additional program min~ lluntington Beach public in formation officer Bill Recd said com plaints ;1 bout c<1b lt• con st ruction which C'rcated an up· roar in the three cities last year have dropped dramatically He said the cable company has im· proved its i.ystem of notifying residents about upcoming con- struction The cable telev1s1on authority re<'cntly added the city of Stan· ton as its fourth member Mayor E lden Gillespie of Westminster has been elech•d chairman of lhe authoritv Court rebuked SCHEMATIC MASTER PLAN I ' Sheriff says de puties ·confused ' ~TIN6TON BEACH CENTRAL PAAK ... -~ .. -,,,, __ .. ' ~ . .,. .. ' ~ 1 § covw•, PropowJ.3 /OT Huntington Beach Central Pork ore pinpointed in mop. Pouible development includes a golf course, o sports complex, recreational vehicle camping areas oroond a fishing lake and a lwtel complex. Park development eyed Hunt ington council commissions study citin g profits By PATRICK KENNEDV Of Ille DMty 1"119' St.tft A golf co u r se, hote l , restaurant. recreational vehicle campground, sport s fac ilities. electronic game arcade and con· cession stands should be de· veloped in Huntington Beach Central Park. according to a study commissioned by the City Council. City officials have been con· s1dering deve lopment in the 297-acre park for two years I ne goal is to generate revenue in the large park to s upport the city's entire park system which has run into financial difficulties since passage of Proposition 13 Local res idents. however. have criticized commercial de· velopment in the park The economic rorecast for park development prepared by Ultra Systems Inc., of Irvine. is based on the city spending $15.9 million to expand the park an additional 75 acres. The study said ma1or develop- ment in the park would pay off 80 percent on $12.8 m illion. or the exp a nsion a nd development costs within 10 years. The Irvine fi rm analyzed pro· posals developed by the city's Com munity Services Depa rt· ment. · It basically ruled out proposed racq uetbaJI and tennis faclU tles, a n amphitheater , a s kating park. the police department's he l iport , and a "kidd ie playland'' a musem ent center with water slides and baseball pitch. T he study recommends a mix HB Jaycee e levated of a 111 -acre 18-hole golf course wit h driving range. a 200-room hotel with convention facilities and restaurant, a 480-s pace recreation vehicle campground adjacent to a flsh1n~ lake. a six field baseball and s ports com- plex, a YMCA gymnasium. and an amusement ar('ade and pizza parlor. The study ulso recommends retention al the exis ting snack concessions. adventur<' play - ground and the police shooting range . The s hoot ing range should be improv<'d and ex panded to include a gun shop. the study s ays The proposed facilities would be operated by privat e organiza· lions and leased from the city, according lo the re port Mayor Ruth Finley said today that d{'srntt· the study's rosy financial p1l'ture tor develop mt•nt. tht• · impacts on the sur rounding community must be con:-1dt•rl.'d It mus t fit com fort:.ablv into the area," she said Vine{• Moc1rhouse, head of the p:.arks system. ~aid he is "en ('ouragt•d" by the report lit' suicl tht• plan 1s a ''pionccr ing" concept of "financing gov- ernm ental services." "There's bound to be some cont rovers\ ... Moorhouse said "I don·t krio\\ ii 1t will be accep tahle to lht• community or the council .. Publi" heari ngs will be scheduled to discuss the study Ry GLENN $('0'IT Of IM Dell' 1"11.C Si.ff Ora nge Count y Sheriff Corone r Brad Gates has l'r1licized the s tate Supreme Court and claimed the best rem c·d \ for 1t would bt> th<.' add• twn of Superior Court Judge .John Trolll•r Trotter 1s an Orange County 1udg•· \\hu Gates said he un dt•rs tands 1s one of threl' PffiPle hcing tons1dercd bv Gov Ed mund G Rrnwn Jr to fill a \ tl(':JO<.:y. Brown nominated Los Angeles lawy1.'r Sam Willi ams. but Will1:1rn::. turnl·d down lhl' offe r lh1 !» week Another Lo:. Angeles Jur1i.I. Otto Kaus. an appeals C'Ourt Judge, was appomtt•d last \\eek Two vaC'anc1l'S on the s<•ven JU<.lge t•ourt were crt>aled when W1l11am Cl<.1rk accepted an asi.1s tanl sc·cretary of statt' post with lhl• Rl'agan administration and Wil<•y Manuel died 1n January Speaking :.at a lunche{ln in El Toro sponsored by the Youth Service Program In<.' Thursday, Ga ll•i. said Trotter is a "prac· t1cal thinker," a trait he said 1s la(·kmg among five or the six current JUSt1ces. including Kaus Ill• -.aid the onlv other com mon M'nse JUSt1ce· is Frank K HH·hardson. ~ho Gates adm1lled might be a little too con servalive Rut H1chardson's problems llon 't bother G at<.•s the way the olht•r iust1 C'es· do lie s aid the Supreme Court and appellate court judges have forsaken their primary functiuni. "Thev are in search for error rather than in search for truth." he claimed T he Supreme Court. he said. has been more interested 1n ways of excluding ev1dc·nce from rourl rooms than in stewarding u sys tem intende d t o put l·r1m1nals in jai l. He c laim ed cons tant revisions and restnc lions passed down by upper courts have hurt the morale of law enforcem ent officers and handcuffed their effect iveness "They're confusing the hell out of my deputies." he said ·They're changing the law so filsl. we can't keep up with 11 ·· Cates cited several examples of what he called abs urd upper t'ourt decisions One was a case in the Central Valley \\here an offic<'r stopped a clriv<.·r for going the wrong way on a one way stn•et The offi cer. he said , felt somethrng was wrong ~1th the dn ver and ran a ch<•ck on the license plate The check revealed the man was wanted on three robbery warranLs m an adjacent county, Gates said. so the officer a rrest cd the driver But the distn <'t court of appeal Ste ve Carey of Hunlln1ton Beach has been elected preal· dent of the Metropolitan Al· socialion Ch a pte rs o r the California Jaycees. TALENT ON DISPLAY -More than 200 entries by Marina Hlah School students were on dis· play this week at the school's annual Mayfest o.My .............. ...,......_ celebration . Works on exhibit included paint- ings, drawlngsl stalne d glass, woodwork. short stories ana other Items. • • --~"·· 4'io" . -... -~ PUSHED BY SJ/ERIF'F' Judge John Trotter threw out the case, Gates said, because judges said the officer didn't have e noug h cause to check the driver's record Gates said he doesn·t think Trotter would do such things. He told an audience or about 75 peo- ple to write Brown's offi ce, talk to friends a nd lobby for JUdges who will take mon.' practical ap· proaches lo the law Many in the crowd were employed by the Youth Seryice Program, a non-profit umbrella organization that conducts pro- grams a imed at h e lping 1uventles avoid the justice system Also on ha nd was Orange County Municipal Judge John Griffin pres1d1ng Judge at the Oran~e County South Municipal Court Griffin sa id after the '\pee<'h that most trial judges agree with G ates a nd feel restricted by upper court ruJ· 1ngs. But he disagreed with Gates· assessme nt that Kaus. the newly appointed justice. will be unreceptive to law enforce- ment. Said Griffin "I think Otto is going to surprise a lot or peo- 111<.· • Oil pioneer Hilde b rand d e ad a t 7 7 Richard r lhldebrand. a long time Huntington Beach resident who worked for some of the city's oil industry pioneers, died Sunday at an Anaheim hospital. He was 77. A nat1 ve of Los Angeles, Hildebrand moved to Huntington Beach in the m id-1930s. He worked as an office manager for the McCallen-McVicor -Rood oil company. He also was active in t he Hun· tington Beach Masonic Lodge. Mr. Hildebrand is survived by his wife, Eileen. of Long Beach; his son Richard F. Hildebrand Jr. of Huntington Beach; his daughters J eanne Cheves of Huntington Beach and Nancy Jo Setters of Oregon ; his sister Ma r gar e t J acobson o f Va n Nuys; and six grandchlld ren. Arrangements wer e ha ndled by the Neptune Society A memorial service is being p1anned by the fa mily. A day and time hove not yet been set. New bloo d sought a t college festival A Red Cross mobile unit will be stationed on the central quad of Golden West College in ltunt· lngton Beach during Community Festival '81, lo be held from t a .m . to 5 p.m. Saturday. Those wantJn1 to donate blood can make reservation• by call· lna the West County Servlce Cente r o f lht Red C r ou, 898.3547 I , I ... • • •• -- --• :;os,:;"l'c;s;.""!l ....... ".~'""'""'·~-......... l!!llll!l!'---------... -... 11111._$"""*'-·-· ... ·-·"-• ... ,,_ . .__ ..... _.,.µ_; __ ..... ___ ~ ............. ___ .,,_., .... -... ------... -----, HJ P' Orange Cout OAJLY PILOT/Friday. M•y 115, 1881 : . ROAST THE COAST: IAIUJla Beach clty officlals took considerable au th1a week when they appeared before an Oranae County govern· ment arm on questions of &Mexation and in· fluence. The county body, known u the Local Aten- cy FormaUon Commission, or LAFCO for short, didn't seem too happy with Laguna city in· fluence ln Laguna Canyon. or upon a Laguna ~ I'-\ TOM MURPHHH -~~1 annexation or South Laguna, or on Laguna influence in Aliso Canyon. In fact. LAFCO removed a future develop- •m ent area ln Laguna Canyon from the city's area of influence. I N THAT DISCUSSION, county Supervisor Bruce Nestande, who sits as a commlssioner, asked Laguna officials, "When was the last road access you folks supported to get people from inla nd Orange County down to the beach?" Now there's an interestlog question. It could even prompt an open letter from coastal people to Mr. Nestande, that would go something like this: '·Dear Bruce: "We read in the papers how you think coastal people don't do much to help your inland district folks from Orange and Santa Ana to get to the beach. You gotta lotta nerve, fella. "YOU KNOW, WE COULD just take that snide remark of yours and turn it around, ask- ing bow much you supervisors support those beachgoers? How many roads have YOU widened or built to the beach? .. And then again, how much support does Orange County government offer to the coas tline after you've deluged the shoreline with all those visitors? "Okay, let's take Laguna Beach for exam- ple. After a ll the inland visitors have impacted the town on a hot summer's day, packlng the Main Beach Park that Laguna taxpayers built for them , the city then spends $211,123 per year for lifeguard services to keep them all from drowning. "And how much does Orange County gov- ernment kick in to support that lifeguard service? Why, a treat bi• sas.ooo. ·'Oh, county 1overnment mlabt bave flipped a couple of more colo.8 LalUJla '• way bad your board agreed to have the city suard the coun· ty's southern beaches. "But no. When lt came to that, you went out and hired a ga11le of Rent-A-Guarda. Swell . "Elsewhere on the coast, the impact of ln· landers from your district even gels worse. Newport Beach spends $1 .1 million a year to try to keep them all alive. Your 1reat county benevolence kicks ln $123,000 (maybe) thls year . "HUNTINGTON BEACH city lifeguard services cost $403,683 for the local ta.xpayers. The county gives $61,190. "Oh yeah, sure, Huntineton city alao gets another $61,000 in county cash because it guards ''Inland vtllton aurt leave a tor on tM beach, Ztlu! " the county's Sunset Beach. You ever see tbat zoo on a sunny Sunday. Bruce? ''And after all the inland voters ol your dis- trict depart the coastal beaches late Sunday as the s un sinks slowly in the West, we have all those reminders of their happy visit. "Streets and beaches are littered with beer cans, hotdog wrappers. empty wine bottles and sandwich leftovers. AND THE COASTAL taxpayers get to pay and pay and pay for those cleanup chores. "Just remember, Bruce, you're operating from a pretty shaky Hall of Disintegration up there in the County Seat. You shouldn't be the guy trying to shake anybody else's cage. "All Our Love . . " Transit gets facelift PR experts hope to boost image of county Communications experu from two dozen major employ era ln Orante County have Joto~ a new commlttee to help the Orao1e County Transit Dlatrict wln public approval for lta servlces. The advisory committee of publtc re11'tlons officials wUI meet four times a year and la expected to give the district both the exposure and political punch it may need to institute new mass transit proerama. Ralph Clark, chairman of the district's board of directors and also a county supervisor , claims the volunteer group will be "an invaluable asset In helping get out Uw mnaate of the transit problem.1 Oran1e County tac and propoted solutlona." The committee formation also represent. the Increasing em- phaai1t major bu.alness is placln1 on transportation Improvements aa • nece11ary part of their OPffatlom. The committee met once on Aprll 30, and OCTD Communica- tions Director Michael Barnes said the members discussed dlf· rtcultles ln attracting workerB to areas ln which they can neither afford to live nor easily com- mute. The committee's a ppear ance Is well-timed lo help OCTD of· hcaals win public llnd 1ov- ernmentaJ s upport for their pro- posed mats trans it line to run between Irvine and Anaheim with an extension to Garden Grove. Among t he employer s in· volved are the Fluor Corp., Smith Tool and UC Irvine, all from Irvine ; AirCal. AVCO Financial Services, the Irvine Company, and Pacific Mutual Life Ins urance Co., each in Newport Beach; ITT Cannon Electric of Fountain Valley; C.J . Segerstrom & Sons of Costa Mesa: Beckman Instruments Inc. of Fullerton, and Rockwell International of Anaheim. Mideast tellsion cools? Ex-ambassador doesn't see Israel-Syria war By JODI CADENHEAD Of .. o.lty '"" ..... Tensions between Israel and Syria are subsiding, after seem- ingly being on the brink of war earlier this week, accordlng to f ormer U .S . Amb assador William Brewer. "I do not see it precipitating into war. It will become another one of those millions of incidents that have cha racterized the situation in that part or the world," the Middl e East diplomat said in a speech in Irvine this week. I sraeli Prime Minis ter Menachem Begin has warned that Israel would use military force unless Syria agreed to re- move its SAM 6 missiles an Lebanon. The former ambassador to the Sudan and Mauritius, speaking before the World Affairs Council at the Airporter Inn, said a shift of power in the Middle East has left the U.S. with declining in· fluence. While the position of the U.S. and other Western nations is declining in the Middle East, their dependence is increasing due to oil, said Brewer. He said several factors con- tributing to the weakened in· Cluence include the withdrawal of the British from the Persian Gulf In 1970, the U. S. severing of ties with Iraq following the Arab-Israeli war in 1967 and the Trustees approve early retirement Newport-Mesa School District trustees have unanimously ap- proved a policy that encourages school administrators to retire before age 65. Following a presentation by the Newport-Mesa Federation of Teachers. trustees ordered ad- ministrators to begin studying the feasibility of offering early retirement to teachers. fall of the shah of Iran. The Carter administration had the "right idea" in standing up to the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. but lacked the military fort:e to support the position. said Brewer As a result. other nations are more wary of where they will turn for economic aid and will go with whatever super-power is offering the most support, he said. ''The likelihood of the Soviet Army emerging in the < MiddJe East> in the next couple or years is slight," said Brewer. "But the possibility of it happening some- day is quite substantial." In granting military and economic aid, the U.S. should take a lesson from the "Groucho Marx Syndrome. that says I wouldn't want to join any club that would ha ve me." said Brewer. The former ambassador con- tended that the U S. failed to note growing unrest in Iran while continuing to send more and more arms. The same problem he said, could occur in Saudi Arabia, where the Reagan administra- tion has recently approved the sale of several controversial an- ti-missile crafts. Beacon Bay feels inflation When given a second approval later this month, administrators will be able to retire at age SS and remain eligible for up to fi ve years of "consultant" con· tract work at an annual $5,000 fee. Bill Cue, chief negotiator for the teachers union, noted that early retirement for teachers is one of several issues scheduled for currently stalled contract negotiations this year. "The risk is minimal in selling arms to Saudi Arabia unless we do what we did in Iran and let them purc hase as mu ch hardware as they want." The cost of living in exclusive Beacon Bay was sent soaring this week as Newport Beach City Council members agreed to increase annual lease fees by 3,000 percent and higher. The whopping lease increase in tbe 73-lot com · munity is to be effective July 1. The move will boost annual city revenues from $11,600 to more than $425,000. And Beacon Bay residents haven't protested. At least not yet. The increase was expected. A new lease schedule has been In the works for five years. As an example of what the action means, an interior lot in Beacon Bay now leases for $250 a year. Starting July. the yearly charge would be $8,000. A bayfront lot leasing for $794 annually. will go up to more than $10,000. Although residen~ ln Beacon Bay currently have a lease that takes them through 1987, the city has developed a plan that likely will force most residents to give up that lease. Steps in time Beach users sought in suit By STEVE MITCHELL Of_o.11, ...... .- The County of Orange is running large ad- vertisements in e ight coastal newspapers this week. seeking old-timers who remember uslng Thousand Steps Beach in South Laguna. · The county counsel's office isn't planning a re- union. It is gathering testimony for a class action lawsuit over public access to the scheduled beaches at the base or the rickety, half-century-old stairway. The battle over Thousand Steps Beach bas been waged for more than a decade, with the coun- ty claiming the public has the right to use the steps, and the 540 or so South Laguna homeowners near the steps claiming that such a provision will lower property values and all ow riff-raff on the beaches below. The lawsuit, filed on behalf of the South Laguna Cove Association, comes to trial June 10 in Orange County Superior Court. County attorneys will try to prove that the public has been using the stairway slnce the 19209, . . when it was built. The advertisement running in coast newspapers says that "If the county's case is suc- cessful, then a new stairway may be built to allow the public to continue use of the beach." ·• Bob Young, a spokesman for the county's Open Space/Recreation program office, says the county coun.8el ls especially lnterested ln people who recall uaing the stairway and beaches "way back when the steps were bullt. • • Hls office ls asaistlne the county counsel ln fielding calls from former beacb visitors, and sending off a 3()-part questJonnalre to be filled out .• by callers. ' So far, response to the advertlaement hu been '·" treat. "We're tettin1 a call Just about every 10 mlnutes." Young aatd, addlna about 70 callers " .,. • have been sent queationnalre.a alnce ada be1an ap- peartn1 earlier this week. ~ . , : ~ Old tomb rmrovered .. . .. ' • A THENS. ONtce (AP> -A tomb almost 3-,000 years old cont.alnln1 valuable 1old object.I and a fine piece ol ancient fabrtc wu dllcovered on the laland ol fMa, Lhe Greek Cultun Mln11try Hid. The 1eneral lnlpector of ant.lqultla, Nlkoa Vlaloull, aald it appean to be a woman'• tomb. Tbe Wleton wu covered wiLb told leaves. a 1old muk, copper brooch•• and vufl'4 If a resident fails to renegotiate bis lease by J uly 1, the cost of renegotiation will go up sharply each year. In other words, a person paying $793 a year can re.negotiate by July 1 and pay an annual lease fee of $10,158. But if he waits until 1987, when the current lease expires, the annual fee would be $41,968. Early retirement. district of- ficials noted this week, will mean reduction in the retire- ment pay granted by the state on the basis of leaving work at age 65. Trustees were told that the s alary savings to the district generated by early retirement ol admi n istrators would be multiplied if the program is broadened. Peace in the Middle East will only come with recognition of Israel by the Arab world and the creation of a Palestinian state on the West Bank of the Jordan River, said Brewer The lease issue on Beacon Bay. a quiet residential community on a finger of land that faces Balboa Island. has a complicated history. The 19-acre area origlnally was leased by Newport pioneer Joe Beek ln 1927 and renewed in Woman guilty in tax case 1950. Under the lease, the Beek family subleases to LOS ANGELES 1 AP ) homeowners. -A woman involved in Homeowners, under the lease, collectively pay what has been called the Beek family $34,991 each year. The Beek fami· one o f t he nation's ly, in turn, gives the city one third and returns 1 a r g est income t ax another third to the Beacon Bay Community As· e v as ion c as es wa s sociation. placed on probation for That arrangement, though, was complicated five years and ordered by the fact that the homes are located on state to perform 500 hours of tidelands and uplands. community ser vice . State law prohibits residential use of tidelands. Josephin e Ar a u j o Because the homes were already on the p l ea ded guilty to a tidelands, legislation known as the Beacon Bay charge that she and her Bill was approved. The bill cleared the way for tbe husband o wed more homes to remain. It also cleared the way for the th an S3.8 m il lion in I city to renegotiate leases. taxes. ~~~~~~~~~~__;_~~~~~~~~~ • E A&E RV AWNINGS Cell u1 and vou'lt '" what we mean. FrM ln1tall1t1on at vour home. All II~ •nd prlcn avallable. • We'N ..... t . ,.,, ..... ,,. ......... ....... • • ' 8" 111 for woven woodl. ~ ltortGe POd• and 1...,.11no l)'lten .. "o. C .. AM Y•W C.t• .,- 15998 Mariner Drive Huntington Beach, I~ tJI lf2·219J 17141147~4J4 ,- ROTHE The curtain rises and the show begins. Come. Meet the foremost exponent of the almost forgotten art of mezzottnt. G.H. Rothe. in a rare personal appearance. When you meet Rothe. you1J have the opportunity to acquire her masterf uJ commemorative edition poster ... a brilliant find Indeed. And Rothe's five extraordinary new mezzotlnts. as well as a large selection of her mos t recent creations. wtll also be available for your acqu tst tlon. Rothe. The master. In person ... exclusively a t the Upstairs Gallery. Meet Rothe BEVERLY HILLS Frld•y. May l~rh, 7 to 9 p.m LONOBEACH Saturday. May 16th. 2 to 4 p.m . ORANGE COUNTY Sunday. Mii)' l 7rh. 2 to 4 p. m. aavau.Y aaa.a.a LONG aa.u:a OllANOS COUICTT ~ulh CoHI 1'111• INtxl 10 Bullock ti (714164~·\llOI 27& So. t.• Cttn(a• Blvd. 311~ Cherry A~ II blO('k&o.olWITahtrrJ 12131426 7070 1213) 6$9-0228 Ouylhf tlmrlt ton llmr. wllh ouri-un~ntfnl tow·tntr.,.•• Ir• 111• I.on A Rnc:h. No11hrtd&I' 11\d ikvtrtv 111111 opcon Wt<Jnraday 1hr11!lun!llly 1010 !I Al't'O Plua. Tttoday thru Sa1urday 11·30 II> &::Sa. Or•~ County; Monda)' thru Fr•d•y 10 to II Sa1utd•y 10 1118 Elund1~ 12 lo fl 1 ••••• . . -' EE . ... -...... -·------ Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 ----------------------------------------------------------..., H/F •• NYSE CC)MPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 0U01&tl0H\ IN(lUO& TllAO&\ ON fl•& N&W YO•t(. MIOWIU "A(ltrl(. PIW ~TON 011•01t ANO (IN(INNAtl UO(ll f lt(H4NOa$ ANO ••PO•no • ., , ... NA\0 ANO INUINI' \eln ,.., ~ ••• , ..... 'Nit'\ Ntl ~1.. Htl S.tn H•I pl "<!> (IO .. (llQ P [ "'h tto .. C"O P ( "CJ\ CIOM C"O PC "Cl\ (IOM C... P' ~ (IOM C"O l!l~n 1601 1' tJ • .. 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Pl f; •• H )lMll It. wtO 91 "'• HIMG jlfl.lt.: 1• Uu '-MerJ* .. f ..... ltlc 1\t t ••• ,, -r• lltf • .. ;. ._ )t :..:·~ Alrf ... : ' 1.-... \ ~u• ,., •. m F.''-~l ... H I .te .. ~:::·: ':l)"' ,. WWlfl IM J ~ti 1 t + JAlr Ut tt7 .._., ~ WlJ .J I =!Sf'; H!" t 1t~ 1 -t= ,f +: WWNAlf •• '1tw ...... + .. ,J· 1 ~ g:. · t=e l ,Jiz "' ~:::. n=' "~ .. " ::=~ .. 1· ;! · w. ·:1~ ·• ... _. ;: " :..."QI,'·-~! ,.J'1t~ ... ... •• lsl(M .. ,. ,,,. 14 • Htnl 11 t.a • 11 . . lilk. II ; .. -! I '" .. -.. WW9ell ... • ... wll• r l• ~ f'"' ...... I n 1S tl7 ~' 'I a~ ~· .,ll '"' = • 1'9 ~ ~ ; t \t ~ " ....., e 1U 1m; •• • "' '-~11" n• ., "~ , '"', 1~ i1 """" l:.u I .... ",..... . • '""····· -1 +·~...... ....! ... ..!1. t • 0 j t··a· ...... "rer::~ 111': Cl! ~-: ~!!~ t, ' • t: •p... • ~"' .. '= ... I .... ,.. ~ Ir."':': o 14 ·~"""' -.i 't!. SN+ ·~ l ~ ~ ' ~ " If::° ... I '°' ;,.--I ... dJ ' ,. = . . . ' + ! '· • ··i tft .. \Ii IA ·U , =· .... .;.~ ,,~ ·• '•• I~.~ 1!8-:ri:fl '.'. j =:.~&:ii. t ! ., ~-~ 'i 't ... '\tt 5 i ~ ~~ ,: :t::_.~ ,~] ; I ':: • rl' :..;· .. 'I : .!! '"'·" , ... ~ ... 1f ..... ~ .. _.. tO ,, ~~ "~ 12 ' -~ 1 llf4! .. ,. IE· t . 'IJ! • = . ·! ! "' ~· ~~ LM e ., '=!. \If ~· '1 ~ .Z •J~l'°t ti~== . I': 1 iLi: l6 =-t' ~ :: I ~ ... \: ~: 4:.t w ~ .._.! -fUt.O tn .T .-IM,.,,. I~ 1:~ 'l I:! IC* •• 7• I I' 1-... ., t "" If you see or hear an advertisement or M m merciaJ that you believe stretches the truth, what can you do about it? Well, you can, of course. refrain from buyinl the product being advertised . But lhal won't put a halt to the advertising. You can also write direcUy to the company that makes the product, telling the presl· dent what you think of his advertising. Thal may iw may not work. The chances are excellent that you will al least receive a reply. However, there's still another way you can re1· ister a complaint about advertising, and that's by sending your beef to NAO, 845 Third Ave., New York, N. Y. 10022. NAO stands for the National Advertising Division of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, and it's ready to investigate complaints about na- tional advertising that people find "misleading, inac- curate or offensive ... (If it's a local ad that disturbs you , take it up with the nearest Better Business Bureau.) NAD IS A PART or a self-reguJatory mechanism s~t up 10 years ago by the advertising industry itself. The ad people reasoned it was better to regulate th e m sel ves ~ r a th e r than . h aving som e ~; ~ o n e e l se s ay the govern- ment do ii. So there's now a whole system in place to deal I ~· &A MllTDI llSlllllZ with objections to ads. It's not just the public who can tap into it. A company incensed at what a competitor is saying can file an ob1ection. After you send in your complaint, the NAO. if it reels it has merit, will take it up directly with the ad vertiser. asking for s ubstantiation of the claims made in the ad. If the NAO feels the substantiation is adequate. it will then drop the case. If it feels otherwise, it will ask the advertiser to discontinue or change the ad vertising . And if the issue cannot be settled by negotiation, then a complaint will be referred to a fi ve-person review board whose members include representatives from the ad industry and the public sector. U this panel recommends changes in the ad· vertising and the advertiser then refuses to make them. the matter is referred to a government en· forcement agency This has never happened. SINCE ITS START tn mid-1971 the NAO has pursued 1,283 challenges to national advertising. In 649 of these cases. advertisers substantiated their cla ims to NAD's satisfaction; in 620 other instances. ads were either modified or discontinued; only 14 cases had to be referred to the review board for ad· judicat ion. What kind of complaints does the NAO fi eld ? Here are some recent examples: -Chrysler aired a commercial in which It com pared the road-handling of its Dodge Aries K with that of a BMW 320i. When the cars were driven a r ound a slalom-type course. the BMW driver seemed to lose control. Chortled the commercial· "BMW says it 's the ul- tim ate driving machfoe , but In 14 out of 16 tries. it spins out . . . Aries outbandles BMW every time." BMW screamed about the commer cial. The NAO in- vestigated, collecting evidence from both parties - and then, be fore it had completed its r e view. Chrysler said it had killed the commer cial "for reasons unrelated to this challenge.·' -BEECHAM PRODUCTS adve rtised its Calgonite detergent on T V by showing a wom an in· side an automatic dishwasher A mother complained that her 3-year-old child climbed into a dishwasher after seeing th.is commercial. Beecham discontinued the commercial. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES NEW YORK tAP) -S.111, T ........ prk e ~ "'' chanoe Of 11lt 1111•11 most •cllve N "'~ VOR(A.PI Fin.I Oow..Jone1 UOL Woellr141•Y. May u Ont Hlah I.ow CIOM CllO Votk "'" Eac11anoe 1s.uo. ~In~ na11on.fll/y •I mort than $1 y O<P 151 ,100 23 • 11'11 O vu 11>(),a 41 t IV. edNal MIO ... , 9 -+ 14 C~•t•ICp '76, '2~ • 4'"" 18M 5'9,.00 S61'1 v. w"'*''' un ••s.1 10\9 + , AIN.r fl, T ·m· SI • '""' Int T .. T , l2~ !Jr ~m~rlln , , 17•19 • ~ •• as ••o J v. • '"' ars oeb 40t,l00 20,... • "' "'cii~ «)t:~ U"' .t:: ~•aon C: . .ao M ' • • '4 Amax Inc i•• 100 S7~ • 2~ AMERICAN LEADERS NIWV'Oltl( CAl"l -f'NM .... ~ "' --alM, ...... Wllll ....... ,.. ..... Ind t 9Tf02'lt<l ot t 01• SJl ,, ., A23,., 411 .• , 4 10• l 12 ~ u\T' 10 ,il IOt.17 101 M l~.10+ O.M Stk 111.!: 381 n 31' 81 J~ n • 21 du• •.910. r~n 'In· VI ' ' 6S I~ 6, , WHAT STOCKS DID HEW YORK IAPI May 14 Prew Aclv•nc•cl TOCle~ o;r1 0.CllM O 55" .... ncllan~d )19 ,:J otal Ir. UH 1•1 0 ,.. ~== eii~· 2J ,. W"AT AMEX 1llO NEW YORK Ill.Pl MlJy ,. Prev ~ft:=' Tin cl•r m ncllen OlOl I~• ~ 14 t: rots' 10 • METALS T1111f"Mley c...., .,.....7 c:afll&. pound, u.s -11- llilftt La ..... ~··---· llllC 4t\li (-. ,.,...,, dell ....... Tl•.._._. Met.on w..11 <.,....., .. ,._ • ....... ,.Uftl••-"'·"·y M«<WY .as ... ,... lltill. P'-"-MJ.C)lrt'fOI , N,Y I .. .. , .. . ! I . , .. t:00.88 NIWI ~WOMAN Wonctet Women bfnlct up I phOny tNnC:e and '" ~ lhrM meml:letl Of • WOfld PMU Cont .. enee I TIC TAtJ OOUOH M"A'l"H -,... encl klll• .... llbelue1or ...... ~ Cll'ldkl Cltmlf• CfHto< AIMW1 Funt a vuwl IU I Ufl dOf> I fatnOut waa MIJM um MllO.,,.,. Tu~ 1 llAen on the St•Ml Inter II-. 0t Whlttlli .. lltllfM tM 11'11\cltplM OI ~flt loll, Cept Ca1101 IDM a ll>Ok It 1a•"l6e 111d "40111 '°" Cl) MOVll *I'• "8H4U•ICh ('91$) Oowmer•laty ~ men eocounter • •l•ll'Q9. hllff· hum.n cr11tur1 In 1 ll'lml uve becllwooda ''" fl' LOI AHO!LEI WEl!I< IH R2Vt.w HOii Clltl Aobefta ml WALL ITAIEl!T Wl!EI< "l\Aunoc1p11 Bonda Fo< Fun And Proltl?' Gunl Jamea J Lowrey pr111den1. J1mes J Lowrey & Com pany Inc 1:30 D 0 MOVIE I• I ·'Thi I OrlQ••I Ya1d White Miiiing down to 11.- ten to the Atmy•NIVY geme. t~ 4077th 11 bom. b11ded and tell wttt• 1n unexploded bomb to deluM Cl) OOODTIME8 Thelma'• tlpnce turnt out to be Old enough to be ,.... l1thet OOPS Dick Clark will host "TV's Censored Bloopers" with funny television tape and film outtakes tonight at 10 on Channel 4. ( 19741 Burl Reynolds Eddie Albert A l0tmer pro quarterbecii doing Um" In a Southern p111on la given lhl )Ob ol COIKhlng • group 01 convic11 tor • no holds-b•rr•d football gem• agaonal lhu ou•rd• ID ~ EL.ECTNC OOMPAHY(A) ()) CUNEWS Q'.IJ AICNEW8 tcao IJ JOKER'S WILD CD WELCOME BACK l<OTfER l\AuQI to Jut,. s d•-•Y h., ... ter .... 11ng from NebtHk • atarta dattr1g Eplletn ti) SEHHY HILL Benny doe• a come<llc t1ke-ott on 'Bonnie ;ind Clyde" fJD KCET NEWSBEA T ml 8TVOIOSEE BetUQ•" Be11nd1 • u••nt BetuQ• wflalfl tr11n1 II San Diego a Sea Wo<l<l two Ch•c-oo ko<ll run • lk•te board lh<>e> apple PIC k tng tn N-Engt11nd (R) Cl) NEWS (f§J BARNEY MILLER A crazed man thre11en1 to ie.p ott a 1>UKd1ng into the ott1e1e1 m1yo111 parade 1(86 IJ EDfTORtAL 1-00 8 CUNEW8 D N8CHEWS D HAPPY OAVS AGAIN RIChle llQhll h" t11r1 OVtil 41ttendtng 11 Hallo-n P••· ty at a haunted l\outMI Where he behevflt twl uw • hHdteatQl\Olt CHANNEL LISTINGS fJ AICNEWI 0 8Uu.8EYE OJ M'A'l'H The ••n19t91 Cot Flagg shows up ot the 40771h again conv1nc1d 11\al HaWltlyl It 1 commun111 ~mpath111• gJ STAU'Tt Of tAH FRANCISCO Stone blc:omes a membet Of 1 t1111m11y of drunt.1 10 ttnd out why thrM of them -• bHten to death . EJ!l OVEREA8V Guea11 comed11n Dick Sh•wn Or John F &rQuhnr Chef Neraao (Rt 8i) MACNEIL / LEHRER REPORT fJ TIC TAC OOUOH (10, MERV GRIFFIN Guett• T1nya Tucker Ro0er l\A1il1t Bob Sagel 7;30 0 2 0"1 THE TOWN Ho111 Steve Edward• Melody Roger• v1si1 tru1 Laundromat Th&•ter '" lo1 AnQ('le• lravl'I lo lhtt Roci.te1 lo tallow aom• loc;1tl entranll on lhe Spot c1•t 01ympic1 0 FAMIL V FEUO D SHANA NA Guell Bobby Vee 0 Tl:LETONE 0 FACE THE MUSIC IJ Kl>.p 1 l fh1 I , J\11 t•• lo• 0 !1.Mlt 1qUl t l ,,. A11 I'••· D KHA ilr1111'I 1. A11q .. , •• 0 l(AI;;( rv oAHC 1 I I• Aw11•1 .. J • FME-! ( h'>1 •, "' (J,"'I" 0 KHJ fV t lnt1 t I ,., An w••· tO KC..'1 l 1AH<.1 .,,,,, (J .. •11 CD KTl Vtlro1l1l(J~A11111 h• Cl) KC()P rv t lu 1 l " A .,,.,, ED KC f ' l' Pfj~1 l , .. "" J• ' " ~ KCX ( IV 1PB(,1 l!>111t" 11 '' f:;, ' h Hot stuff on 'Dal"las' By PETER J. BOYER ~ ... h....._.,_ LOS ANGELES "Dallas " has another whodunnil going (don't care. What's wrong here? Nol only do I not care whodunnit, I'm not en· lirely certain what wa!' dun. l was stirring peppers into a pot of blackeyed peas at the critical mo~e~t of last week's episode, and by the lime my wife s uraenl call wrenched me from the stove, I had missed everything but Cliff Barnes standing In a pool •houting up to JR. Ewing, "You bastard!" And. you know? My first thought was, "I wonder if I put in enough peppers " I like my peas hot "It's Kristin," said my wife, joining me at the stove. "J . R. killed Kristin. You didQ'l put in loo many peppers, did you?" She likes her peas mild It occurred to me that just a year 11go, matters "Dallas" were central to more than one Friday night conversation al our house J R CLarry Hagman} had ~en shot, you'll remember, and the hype s urrounding the season-ending mystery as· sumed gross proportions when lht: actors' strike delayed its resolution. We even watched reruns. It turned out that Kristin (Mary Crosby), J .R.'s slster·1n·law·lover, had pluued the boy. We 'd been took. Aft.er that dlsappolnlln1 non development I couldn 'l watch "Dallas" without thinking of that ralry tale, "Thf' Emperor's New Clothes," Naked, "Dallas" didn't look so good. Trash· wlth·cla1111 suddenly seemed simply trash. I s tarted going out Friday nights again, and growing In tolerant of my wUe'a llngerin1 pa11lon ror the show, which , happily, began to wane when baseball began. And so now. "Dallas" has another cllffhan1er. It's safe to look down, the drop lan'l as 1teep aa they'd have you believe. So, what's the setup this time? Barnea, that 1oony ineffectual, finds a stiff In the Ewing pool. She's dead, he mutters. He looks up, to see J .R. standing behind a broken rail, smllln1 that once- so-eltective smile. Now, what we're auppo1ed to think 11 that J.R. didn't do It. That'I too obvious. The poor child jumped or rell Into the pool. Or maybe 1omebody else dJd It, and J.R. Just happened on to t~e scene We're al110 supposed to think that the corpse la not Kristin, becauae that's too obvious, too. She'd 1bown up to squeeie tome more money from J .R , u1ln1 their llle1ltlmate baby u th1t pump. Too ob· vlou1. · th ... l No M!'re auppoted to wonder whe er w1e v C· Um was Suo Ellen <Linda Gray), J.R.'1 often· threatened wile. Or Pam Ewtn1 <Victoria Prin- cipal) tbe 1pectacut•rly endowed nitwit who helped Sue Ellen make off wt th J. R. '• child. Or Lettie Stewart (Sunn Flannery), the p0taonouJ PR lady who tried to put the screws to JR at a Senate hearln1 . The real myattry l• why tt\• '-iexa• at.ate 1tn1tt would be conductln1 hear· inc• on matten of lntemaUonal revolullon. Or Aft.On Cooper, J .R.'1 new ml1trN1, or Louella LH. J.R.'s aecretan. who 10mebow 1ot J.B. mad. ... I ti "0·11 " •· well once bum.u, tw ce cau out. a.uu .. lneapable of a worthy payoff, so It'• aate to Hy: The vtctim l1 Krl1tln. J.R. 1hovtd her In. He'll beat lbe rap. The pea.I wer n't bot •noush. OJ ALL IN THE FAMIL V Archte b1 come1 daptHMd attor t•klng 'l magazine 1 1111 ••l>OCl•ncf 1111 that lndlcatea he wllt die when hi fHChH !>7 f.lj) MACNEIL I ~HRER AEPORT 8i) 8U81HU8 EXCHANGE EmplOyM Benefit lnlla 11on • Examine the b<lnollt PllCkAQe• lhal many COi pora1oon1 IHI don'1 111r anthutiaam lrom employ· etrs, but 1atr1M 11palhy et an e•l••o<dtnary pr1ce ct P M. MAGAZINE Cand•d Camera Groato• Allen Funt a v1111 10 l on don 1 tamoua wu muse um llAadame Tuuaud a 8·00 0 IJJ THE INCREDIBLE HULK Banner tall• on with a go11g or "'""'es and th11 Hui~ hos 10 001 him out 0 MOVIE lhtt Harlem Gtol>4ttrolle,. On G1i11gan • l•l•nd 1Prem1ere1 Boo O.-nve1 Alan Hale Jr rhe H&rlem (•klb4'1rOllero plane CrOAll lunda ori the 1111y P1W:1hc 11l11nd where GofltgAn nn(1 1111 troonda are merooned 0 MOVIE • .. • SomOlllHtl,I r ••I t 1117 1 t Sandy Denno• l11tph Bolta"'y A tam•I 1 ol lt>ur unkno .. •ngty bf>c.•""9 endangered by lhl 11••1 w1thm lhttu new home 0 IOJ BENSON An tt11tlhquake lr•ps Bttn •on and Clayton on a ""Jll room ol th•l 011X •JIM• m•nMon 0 MOVIE • • '• Deadly Hero t 1976) Don l\Aurrly 0.ahn W1tMam1 A trigger hippy pOlteeman • car-and I\ ko<lnllO Vtel•m I Iii• are ff!008rdozed Wflfln he rt!' OJ CAROL 8URH£TT ANOFAIEH08 Gueats O•ck Va11 Dyke. Tony Anndall mm WASHINGTON WEEK IN REVIEW 9:00 0 Il l THE DUKES OF' HAZZAAD An Old llem11 ot Uncle Jene t returns lo Ha.tzard County to COllKI • tegecy tell 10 t,.r Dy h!'r 1e1e hut· band and u d8bl from Bou Hogg (Rt OJ MERV GRIFFIN Guelll Tanya rucker ROQIH Moll9r Bob Sagel Gt10<91 11 en• S.11 y Buck· let fil WALL ITREET WEEK l\Aunicopal Bonrh For f un And Prolit? Gueit Jarn<ll J lowr8y prff••derol .1am11• J lo"''"Y & Com· pony, !roe ~ VOTER'S PIPELINE HOii Jom Ceroper mMI M with Hr,,wMO St~n d"ec: IOI ot II drug r!'hilb•lol&llOll hOIJH arod '°me ot the pnt anll pres•.,11 re~o<lenll 10 doac.uaa why tr11s h<>ut.11 hill Deflfl tVCh •• lut.Cf'SS 9:30 0 TWILIGHT ZONE Annabfllhl buys ht1r daugh 1er Chr1stt1 .1n O•PBn~'"" 1atk1ng doll ""d h"' hut bond frlt11fM&rll•11 mm SACRAMENTO WEEK IN REVIEW H,,,, Mutroy ( rom1rJo0 10 00 IJ I DALLAS Of'\P•lf• b4tmu peraly1•><J uno '" 1r10 h01p•lal J R cor1t1n11fl1 10 lhw1lrt Bob by a ettnrt~ to run fwmg 011 (RI 0 TV'S CENSORED BLOOPERS So~ nl 1tw11 llub~ maot1 by maJO' 1 ... 1 .. vtaton ~tar• wr11ch Wfl'I "'1Qlna1ty "'111 ltd out •t• .,_. O.ck Clark noa11 00&1) HEWS Mary Crosby, K ri.•tm of "Dal.I.cu " No loss seen LOS ANGELES (APl -Frederick S. Pierce, president of A BC Television. has predicted that the networks will continue lo be the dominant force in television despite the loss of part or their audience to cable and pay ayst.ems. "ABC believes that network television will re· main the primary means of delivering news, in· formallon, sporta and entertainment to a diverse American public and will remain the maaa ad- vertising medium," Pierce 111id. He conceded that the three major networks are losing viewers to increased competlllon, particularly lo the so-called, "1uperataUons" whose signals are sent by utellit.e acroa1 the coun- try But Pierce said the network la also ent.ertna the cable business. He said ABC Video Enterprises launched lta first advertiser-supported cable programmln1· aervlce In April. ' "-~ .... ,... ------.. ~I( ,,,.., • ..... ,_ ...... ,,_°"' l(;e!l ..... -"''-" ... I C"'HIMl41•12H 1 ........... ---0401 -~~ ........ ,..,._,~. '''°" h.ave a Mrvlce to off tr or lood• to MU. otac• an ad In th Dally Pltot Cla.11ln«I Secllon • Pbont t42-M'T8. TUBE TOPPERS KHJ I) 8.00 "Deadly Hero." Film starring Don Murray, James .Eurl Jones and l.JUa Skala aboul a psychotic New York Policeman. ABC D 8:30 "The Longest Yard." Burl Reynolds and Eddje Albert star in a movie about a free for all prison fool· ball game pitting the guards against the convicts. KOCE 9 9:00 "Voter's Pipeline." Host Jim Cooper visits the Phoenix House in Santa Ana where drug addicts seek counseling and shelter fJD MASTIERJ>IECIE THEATRE FUTtVAL OF FAVORITE& ··r1141 GOiden Bowl" B1118<l on 1 novel by Henry J11m1t Amor1go Nnd• a 11tegrem with a co~•led w11n1ng 10 Charlo111 when he hl•t1 ol Verver 1 mar roage rroPOIAI I 0 hel (P Ill 21(R) '1i) BILL MOYERS' JOORNAL "01 Lota And law" The Ill HI d1vetopm9n11 1n lhl abottlon ballle . the a1111mp1 by memb6fa ol Congreu OPPOlld 10 11b0t1ton 10 pau a hum111 hie 1latut1 •• 11 chronteled 10-300J NEWS ti) INOEPENOEH1 NETWORK NEWS 11:000 D O CIJ®J NEWS 0 STAR TREK l\Ar Speck blow• hol coot and almo11 gets Capt Klr~ k1lled when an overwllftlm ong m1t1no urge '"kea Po' 11eu1on ot hom 0 HEWL VWEO GAME OJ M 'A'S•H B J and Ch3rl81 cloth whttn they are t>olh n1.n ored tor a 101nt medoCMI OPlfll•on Q) BENNY HILL Btor•ny plays a coutt JHll'• Ind 100t1 IOSf>5 Piii h81CI tll) OICK CAVETT 01ck C•v .. 11 V11111 rhe Sydney Jen•' Gallery tpa11 2 ol 2J m SNEAK PREVIEWS ROQer E~rl end 01r1e Soakel rev•-'Loon 01 The 0.-1 Friday Thtl t'llh Pert 11" and other• 11•30. CIJ MOVIE • I "H11,1h.B1llln " I lg781 Peter Fond• J&rty RIHld A proteu1on111 molCHcyclltl Na l>Uddy end a f •m.U. truc.k dr1~ Ilk• on • vlCIO\.ll gang 01 h•t1¢k"'' !Rt D TONIGHT Hoat Joh1111y Coraon Guella Rot>erl Ki1111 79 year-01<1 twins Amoa and W1lll1m Caullilld 0 [IJ A8C MEWS HIOHTLINE 0 la'S M.AKE A DEAL OJ MOVIE • • • Bordman 01 Alca- traz ( 1962) Burl Lanen ler Kati l\Aalden Dumag ho~ ">3 yt1ar1 of 1rnpr11on- menl, Robert Stroud bec:ornos a world author11y on bird& Q) OANCE FEVER Cetebroly 1udgH O•t~ Jimmy Neta Voncf-itnd Pat Ven Pa111n Ciuesfs I ute or Honey m m CAPTIONED ABC MEWS 12·00 0 MOVIE • * 'It Conauctrod I h" World 119'>61 Po11e1 Graves Bl•••ly Garland An ugly cave crt>alure did· eel by • ac.u.nt1•I 11 bent on lako~ contrOI ol the wo•lrt 0 nO) FRIOAVS 0 QUHSMOKE A conlemphbll IAlhOr po e tonds In htl•tJ ll ChlHIQU Of haort when """" '""'" c;.ont10<1t him Wilt\ '"* c.t• end culllOOy or "" lwf) c.n11d1en • IAMTTA fMy 1 t>erlOl\11 INllngt ~ "' '"' ... y _,,.,., lie 1uepec11 h•t retartted fttend OI p.ity cr-fll ll'HILC>eOPtfV IUO G ICTV NnWORK IO (Pr«r'lllt•l llA•mbefa of lhl tamed S.eond Cny tmprn VlllllOOl l troupe dl!JPley th411f 11t1r1 •nd wit in th11 Mrlll whlGh ,.., .. place II • llCllOnat 1etev1s10n 11e 11(>11 t-OO G PSYCHIC Ptil!HOMENA.~ WORLD BEYOHO "Lil• Aher D11111·· Hott• Oam..,., Simpson and St•· Cy Hunt <lltlCUH philoso ph111 on death and dying wnh guMll Kay CroaHrll end Klthy o.e. Cl) IHOUEHOf:NT H!'TWOAt< HEWS 1:300 MOVIE • * •, Th• OIUQhleta 0 1 Jo1hue L1be I 19721 Bud dy Ebeen Koren Vaten11fle to ~OIP h11 land undto • now hOmestead•ng l•w " wily tu1 trapper <1•Crt•ll~ " 1h11t • p1ckpocke1 arid 11 proslllul• to POftrly h11 dMUQhl8rl Cl) MOVIE • • '• Shock Treatment 119641 Stuart Whitman Carf)l l ynloy A paychoa 1r111 auD)ll(.la a pr1v111t or1vHl1ga1or 10 exlonaove ~hock lrellmentt 1n illn ~llempl IO Qaon poaMO,On ol lln inmate 1 1I01en tor tune 1•60 NEWS 2-00 0 COMEDY SHOP 0 MOVIE * * Tomb Ot l•g8•a I 196St Vincent Price Ellta b"th Sh"pperd A dead women ouempta 10 rum ner husband 1 aecond mamOQ• by lorro1111n9 1111 otrw wife 2 l!I 0 EOITORIAL 2200 MOVIE • * . .., l he Black Ro"' ( 19!>01 Tyrone Power Oraoro Wolle• A 131h-cen lury £ngllsh Saxon trav11I• Onontttl caravan roulll& M!Oking llOde $8(;rnl• 2:30 0 MEWS OJ MOVIE * * * lh• MOUMI Tloot Roared I tGS9J fluter S1llo11 Joou Slll>ti• o 31>0 0 NEWS Q) MOVIE • • lomb 01 thfl 'IVUIQ Doan p970t John Aahl"Y A11uu1o~utj Pe111tohn Ut l NIWI aM MOVll • *'-' 'IC1r11,1 l(hyber AlllH Tyrone Pow11 Renn .. 4 10 • MOYll Or Ina llttl41 Ml\.h•ef •• ', Jenni!• ( tf'IJ) Mowllltd Dutt IOI lwpino •·30CI) NIEWI "t:\ l t f<U:\ \' -MORNl«i- 1:200 HCWI &:30 8 MOVIE • • '• lime W11hou1 P11y I lfl!>ll) MochMI Ae<IQ•••• A1111 rodd 1.00 D Sl!ReHOIPITY fJ COMMU..ITY FEIE08ACI< Ho•t Fernando Del Rio lJ) SUMMER Sf.MUTER (R) llS G) RLMSTHATT£ACH 1;30 IJ SUMMER SEMUTElll (A) D THAT'SCAT 0 ®J IT'S VOUR BUStNE88 0 OAVEV ANO GOLIATH OJ SPEAKOIJT Cl) ROMPER ROOtaot &;) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS ll J VOICEOF AORICUL TUA! 7 00 IJ DUSTY'S TREEHOUSE 0 GODZILLA I HONG KONG PHOOEY 0 PACESETTERS Holl l arry llAcCOtm•G• 0 ff~ SUPERFRIEHOS 0 HOTFUOOE OJ TURNA80VT al LANGUAGE !f 1 TV.a LOOKS-' T LEARNING 7·30 0 MARLO ANO THE MAGIC MOVIE MACHINE 0 BIG BLUE MARBLE 0 GIGGLESMORT HOTEL OJ ELEMENT ARY NEWS Q} GETTJN' OVER EJ;) VEGETABLE SOUP ((, K108WORLO 8·00 IJ (}J TOM ANO JERRY 0 THE FLINTSTONES 0 THE RIFLEMAN 0 THUNOARR THE BARSARIAM 0 UFO OJ MOVIE • • > 8 <>nt<JUr I r11les5 .. ( 19~'1) Oo••d N1v111 0..b(J(Bh Kerr Q) SPECIAL PEOPLE Eli) REBOP(R) ~I PLASTICMAN I BABY PLAS JOHN DARLING by Armstrong & Batiuk r---.r-----: .... Fi-OR--MOR--:-E-0-N-Tk-~-T--:-S-TOR-:::-Y-:--L-E_i_S:-:GO:-=-Ti=o=-'---cor---, ~ I e Tl-IERE WAS A LARGE ~SH F'1RE ON "THE EAST SIDE TODAY/ MINNIE CAMERON ON YH£ SCENE.' ' ' t I ) t I I l t I , r B Coffee not her cup of tea : NEW YORK (APJ She's poured more cups of cofft.'<' and listened to more troubles than Mrs. Olsen and Ann Landers combined, but after 25 years or playing Nancy Hughes on the CBS soap opera, "A.$ The World Tums."' Helen Wagner is oul of a JOb "I am not retmng," declared Miss Wagner, who. a CBS spokesman said, left the show because she and the network "could not come to a contrac tual agreement. "I had nothing whatsoever to do anymore,'' the actress said recently In describing the gradual elimination of Nancy from the show she had one line in three months and her decision to leave. "There just hasn't been anything to Nanoy's character," Miss Wagner said. "Anybody could read the lines I've been given. I haven't been in lhe kitchen ror a year and a half." Soap opera buffs know that Nancy's kitchen, located in that m ythical Midwest community of Oakdale, has been an imp of the show since Its de t)ut Apnl 2, 1956 It's where problems involving the Hughes and Lowell clans were discussed, rediscussed and then discussed some more "World Turns" has always been the most traditional of soap operas, celebrating the family, of which Nancy, and her husband Chris, played by Don MacLaughlin, were the anchors. It was the show which celebrated the Fourth of July, Memorial Day and Christmas And for near· ly 20 years. it was No. 1. With the death in 1974 of Its creator and head writer, Ima Phillips, and gradual success or youth· oriented soaps on ABC. "World Tums" slipped In the ratings. MEDLEY1S PRESENTS Greot hhrlole11•Rf 9MI Food s ..... o.,..w ... Sunday, May 24. Mond1y, May 26, former Righteous Brother Bobby Hatfield In Concert Two Showe Nltely 9 p.m. & 11 pm. Tickets 110 00 Fnd1y, M1y 15; Saturday, May UI 8111 Medley'• Own Show 81nd "Vololt" -~--IMturlhg L" Ferrell a C.therlne O'alo. Tl'le Incredible Or•o Topper Ma.y 18, 9 pm. TIM Ch1nt~ -known for l,,.fr hit 'Pipeline " ............ _.. ......... .1164 """.,, .... NJU ILL MIDLIY'S llSTAUUHT 111741rn.,_at Paut•Y It's sllll among thl' fi ve top.rated soaps, CBS s aid, but a turnover of writers and characters changt•d the tone of the show The "World" of today 1s much sexier and turn~ at a faster pace. blurring c haracters. especially the newer ones who are in and out of the s how within six months "Writing an hour s how, five days a week, 52 week:. a year is very, ve ry difficult," Mass Wagner snid. "To make all the little details nt is very cit'· manding . : "But If you're going to write ·world Turns,' you're going to have to do that. It's about the de· tails of people's lives and their interaction rather th an the thrust of the story. "I Km very much aware that as the years have gone by, the ch aracter must change,". Mills Wagner said. "I don't expect to be used an the same way as I was In the beginning of the show. "Hut I sec no reason not to involve Chris aod Nancy in the kinds of situations that their pre&esit age <early 60s > would be," s he said. "Don and I have never objected to being aged as we weJit along ·· lier husband and manager, Robert Willey, said, "Helen and Don MacLaughlin were the only l happily married people on the air. As far as the ~ writer's job is concerned, writing a happy mar· t riage is incredibly hard to do." The character of Nancy Hughes has not been t written out of the show, Miss Wagner said. h • "I have never reall y cr1tac1zed what t e authors have wanted to do," she said. "What I • have rrttirized is what they wanted to lose or not e bother with. They should use what backgrouhd J material they have inherited."' MOTrON ""CTUP Ill MAr 011 SHOWlNE9 •• ,.. .... ' ... Ul-05" ...... , ... '°..,. I .:.J I! b ( r j .. ... •I I " .. 3 . ------------------------------------~~ Dilly Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 1S, 1981 H / F FOR THE RECORD C6 Valenzuela is writing his own script Dodger phenom is quickly becoming Eighth Wonder of the World Phenomenal Fernando By JOHN SEVANO °' .. ....., ......... LOS ANGELES -It's incredible ... simply in· credible. Valenzuela, the human, aJlowed two home runs -the first two of his career -and two earned runs -the first lime this season the opposition bas scored that many a1ainst him. As a spectator, you observe and analyze -and nine lnnin&• later you' re still shaking your head in disbelief. "I thought he pitched a super game," com- plimented his batterymate Mike Scloscia. "They (Montreal) only hit a co\lple of balls bard besides the home run. I thought he was as good tonight as any other night." Fernando Valenzuela , who is quick'ly establishing himself as the Ei1hth Wonder of the World, continued his mystique over the National Lea1ue Thursday with a 3·2 victory over Montreal before 53,906 -the lar1est crowd at Dodger Stadium since 1974. Valenzuela's only two mistakes were -a hanJ4ng curveball to Chris Speier with one out in the third inning and a low screwball to Andre Dawson with two out in the ninth. Pedro Guerrero provided the heroics as his home run to left field in the bottom of the ninth in· ning supplied the Dodgers with their margin of victory. And Valenzuela offered the dramatics as he tied a major lea1ue record for the most con- secutive wins at the start or a career. "It wa.s a very difticult game but I'm happy because the team won," said the Dodgers' phenom through an interpreter. "In baseball, you win some and you lose some," he continued. "I'm ready to accept defeat when it happens . I'm fortunate that God is with me and my teammates are behind me right now." Valenzuela, the superhuman, ran his major league-leading numbers lo 8-0 in victories, 72 in in· nings pitched, 7 in complete games, 68 in strike outs and 0.50 in ERA (He also leads the majors with 5 shutouts). The win marked the second time in two meet- ings that the Dodgers had to rally against the Ex- pos to pull out a win for their young left-hander. Fernando Valenzuela ham't a care in the world as he relaxes on bench with Pepe Frias. Malone's criticism spurred on Celtics Boston captures 14th NBA crown HOUSI'ON (AP) -The proud Boston Celtics, sick and tired or Moses Malone's bad-mouthing, silenced him and the Houston Rockets on tbelr bomecourt, 102·91, Thursday night to earn their record 14th National Basketball Association title the hard way, and, the sweetest. "We were supposed to win, but making them lose in The Sum- m i l made it all that much sweeter," said Larry Bird, who devastated the Rockets with his bi11eat offensive explosion of the slx-1ame series. Wrinlfn1 cbampa1ne out of hla 1reen Celtic shirt, Bird noded toward the Houston dress- l n 1 room and said : Moaes Malone knows we are the cham- pion• now . . . all he did waa jUJt &et UI fired Up." Several hundred feet down the ball Malone admitted: "They are the world champions . . . you have to Jive them respect.'' BlaD SAID, "If Malone had been qulet from the atart, maybe tbe Rocket.a could have &lvtn m a better 1amt." Wbat Malone bad aald waa that be could 1et four other 1uya from bh hometown of Petenbur1, Va., and beat tbe Ctltlct. Bird scored 27 Point.a, collect· eel U rebound.I and doled out flve uaiatl u the Celtic• went to him tn t.be clutch. Hla tbree- polnter from the corner witb • 1: 14 to pla7 1ave Bolton a ... lead and bw14td Houlton'• come- back hoptl. "TIMt coaeb <BW l'tteb) kept calliq llU' pl17 ud J lmew I cOuW maa It,' Wei llrdfa:.': u.s .,.. m a •bootina • . ~ eame to mt nery Uml ...,., tbt ltntcb .•• ··I didn't hesitate on the three- point shot. I knew it was there. Everytime I shot I felt like It was going in." BOSTON BUILT a 17-point lead before Houston scored 13 straight points early in the fourth quarter. Then Bird set-" tied the issue, giving the Celtics the title and approximately $25,000 per player in four games to two. ll was Boston's first world ti· tie since 1976. Red Auerbach, president and general manager. puffed on his familiar cigar and said, "This team ranks right up there with any we've had ln re- gard to character. They never bitched and moaned. They never yelled at each other." With champagne dripploe off his nose, Auerbach grinned, "We finally got off that 13, didn't we?" Auerbach was coach for nine of Bo.ton's world titles and has served in an executive capacity during the other five cham- pionship years. BIRD PLAYFULLY stole Auerbach's clear durln1 tht post-1ame ceremonies In which NBA Commluloner Larry O'Brien presented the tropbY to owner Harry Manaurlan Jr., wbo bouitlt out John V. Bto1VD 1 year •r.· •'Th • l• whit you drt1m about," 1ald Man1urlan, lau1b1Qa at Bird who wu trytq to 1et smote out of Autrbllcb'• cl1Qlp clfar. "Sweet lt t.be word fOT tbil.' Flteb aald lb• Celtic.a bad worked bard ror two ,.,.,. to mite tbll ldlbt poutble. "Now" cu ... " our ftrit oil ll11bt In two yean, •• 1ald n~h . In Montreal earlier this month, after Speier bad singled to ruin Valenzuela's shutout and tie the score in the eighth, the Dodgers put to1ether five runs in the top or the loth for a 6·1 outcome. And, Thursday nicht, the Dodgers had to come back from a l ·O det1c1t and a 2·2 tie following Dawson's homer. As a matter of fact, if 11 eamble by Expos Manager Dick Williams hadn't backfired, Valenzuela might have been for his first loss. Opponent Houaton Sen Francisco San 01990 Hou a ton Sen Frencteco Montre.i NY Meta Mont reel Total• W·L IP 1-0 9 2-0 • 3-0 9 4-0 • S-0 9 6.() • 7-0 • l-0 t 6.() 72 : H EA "so ERA 5 0 0 5 0.00 4 1 1 10 O.llO 5 0 0 10 0.33 7 0 0 11 0.25 7 0 0 7 0.20 5 1 1 7 0.33 7 0 0 11 0.2t 3 2 2 7 O.llO 43 4 4 51 0.50 In the sixth inning with Dodgers at second and third and one out, Williams opted to bring his in· field in to protect his team's narrow 1-0 advantage. No sooner had he made the move, however, when Steve Garvey fi sted a little fly ball over the head of the drawn in Rodney Scott at second base to score both runners. The ball landed on the dirt part of the infield, just inside the outfield grass. "It was my decision and I'd do It the same way the next time." Williams was asked if Valenzuela's presence oo the mound had any bearing on his defensive align- ment, and he admitted it did. "It was my decision and I take full responsibility for/it," said Williams or the maneuver. "Garvey had two strikes on him at the time and I wanted to play for the win on the road "Valenzuela could have some effect on a de- cision like that," he said. "Up until that point we had only one hit off him and I didn't think we were <See VALENZUELA, P1ge C2> Angels stay hot Zahn, Hobson lead rout of Brewers , 9-1 MILWAUKEE CAP) -The Angels, who had struggled most of the season, blazed out or town on a hot streak Thursday, and tried to convince the struggling Milwaukee Brewers that they could do the same. Geoff Zahn, 5-3, who had a 9.45 career earned run average against the Brewers, stopped them on five hits. Butch Hobson lined a misplayed, bases-loaded triple in a four-run second inning and Don Baylor added a bases- em pty homer as the Angels whipped the Brewers, 9·1. THE ANGELS, who nearly cost Manager Jim Fregosi his job by losing three or four games to the Brewers in Anaheim earlier this month, now have won five games in a row and six of their last seven. The Brewers have lost seven of their last eight games. "You need a couple of emo- tional victories to get you out of it," the Angels' Brian Downing said. "We had a good series against the Yankees. We came out nat the next night against Detroit, but the night after that we just exploded, and we've been hot ever since. ·'The Brewers and us are very similar. good hitting clubs," Downing said. "We weren't get- ting the leadoff man on base when we were struggling, and they have to miss Paul Molitor and Robin Yount. But most of their guys have hit for half a doze n years, so you know they're going to come out of it." BA.VWR DOUBLED home a run off loser Jim Slaton, 2-2, in the first inning, and the Angels made it 5-0 in the second. A single by Ed Ott and a walk started the bi g inning, and the runners advanced on a wild pickoff attempt by catcher Charlie Moore . After a walk filled the bases with none out, Hobson hit a sink· ing line drive to left field. Ben Oglivie missed a try for an ankle-high catch, and the ball bounced past him to the wall for a three·run triple. The fourth run of the inning scored on a wild pitch by Jerry Augustine. "I DIDN'T HIT it that well," Hobson said. "That's the reason Benjie charged like he did and the ball just dropped on him. Then when the ball hit the wet grass in front of him it really took orr. ·· "l made an attempt, but I didn't think it had the spin on it that it did." Oglivie said. "The ball just dropped in front or me all of a sudden." Singles by Ott, Bobby Grich and Bobby Clark made it S-0 in the third. Baylor hit his filth homer leading off the fifth. and an RBI single by Downing in the sixth stretched the Angels' lead lo 8-0. The Brewers averted what would have been their sixth shutout of the season and second in three days when Don Money hit his second homer of the year in the sixth. Fred Patek hit an RB I triple in the Angel ninth. ··A touchdown and a field goal I'll take it," Zahn said. "I ha- ven't done that well against them in the past. but it helps when you have that many runs . All I had to do was try to keep the ball down, keep it in the ball park and make them hit it on the ground." Surf has new look, and it's quite classy By CURT SEEDEN OfU.De1'11"111Clutt It was no secret that Carlos AJberto did not get along with management during hi s stay with the New York Cosmos. And it didn't take long for the Brazilian "world class" de· fender to disagree with Tom Lilledal, director of operations for the Surf, 30 minutes after the two bad worked out a contract that brought him to the team. Lilledal, who was recently hired to make winners out of the Surf, regardless or cost, says the team will be in the Soccer Bowl next season. ALBERTO SA VS he, along with fellow Brazilian Paulo Cesar, will put the Surf into the North ·American Soccer League championship game this year. It is a very pleasant disagree· ment. Alberto, a 36-year-old wizard when it comes to defense and ball handling, and Cesar, a newcomer to the N ASL but a seasoned pro in Brazil, add a toubb of class to the Surf, and both were officially welcomed Thursday with a champa1ne toast al a luncheon at the South Coast Plaza Hotel. Cesar, in fact, will be in the lineup tonight when the Surf hosts the San Jose Earthquakes at Anaheim Stadium (8). It's a bil nleht for the Surf. They're putting their four-game NASL win streak on the line, and they're bopin1 the fint ble pro- motion ol the season -a Beach Boys concert which immediately follows the game -will be a bil bit. • 'Tbls transition baa taken four months to complete,'' notes Surf President Blll Dawson. ·'Our ownenbip ls dedicated to · rteldln1 a world clau team which can implement a soccer pl1yln1 system to develop Americana Into ouutandln1 playen." ALBE&TO, IN RlS .omewbat broken F..n&lltb, saya be •t>U bu three tood yean left -tbt number al yean on hJ1 contnet -and be fHll he can help tbe youn1 Americans dtnloP. "I'm 1ure everytbln1 will bt Al~rto Cesar OK on this team," the aJways jovial veteran said. "I believe soccer in this area will someday be just like it is in New York. Soccer is the most popular sport In the world, so why not in ~ • U.S.?" ' Alberto's confidence and ap- parent will to work within the system created by Lilledal brought plenty or smiles to those In attendance, particularly the hard-nosed Lilledal and Surf owners Henry Segerstrom, Jay Carden, Kae E~ing and Richard Hausman . "Next year, Tom <Lilledal) and Bill (Dawson) say we're CO· ing to make the Soccer Bowl. No, I'm here to be a champion now." Alberto confidently pro- claimed. "DURING MY career, I have played with some of tbe greatest players in the bbtory of the sport -Pele', Fran1 Beckenbauer, Giorgio Chlnaala and olhen. We learned from each other and it la my hope to paaa this knowted1e on to my Surf teammates'', Alber(o added. • "There'• an old Chinese au· Ins." noted Lilledal, "that U. lon1eat Journey 1larta with a first step. I don't know bo'w tone the journey will bt. Carioa thlnkl lt wlU be abort. J know h wlll end wltb tbe Soccer Bowl.'' Lllledal •1¥1 lbe key to tlte Surf IUCCMS Wlll be tbe way .. team buUdl around bl.I world cllll addlt.lOM. R. added that an •~ment on yet uotber nnt-ra.. player'• 1lplnc will come lbort.ly. Conaplcuou1ly quiet durln1 'ttluraday'• lavl1h prectdlll• <SM 8l1aP, Pa .. Cl> , J-·.:"' , . .. .. ·:~ :· :· -· .. ,• .·. .. Schmidt hit• first major league homer Dave Sdamldt, a former Mission II VleJo Hilb standout, hJt his first ma- JOr 1-=aaue home nm. a leadoff ehot in the t tth innin1. lo help Bos\OD beat M lnnesota, 9-7 arter blowing an early 6-0 lead Thurisday in American League action Schmidt's homer, a 375-foot s hot Into the left field seats, was the fourth in Boiiton'a 15-hll at- tack In other games, One Wlntleld drove Eagle fans scrimmage, judge calls final play From AP dJspatcbes ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . -When [i] two Philadelphia Eagles football fans •. • sc!rimmaged over season tickets, 1t In the tie-breakins run with a :4licrHlt'e fly and Reule J ackllon walloped a n in · surnnce three run hom" run as the New York Yankees de- feated Oakland, 9 5 . . P at Putnam lashed a lie- brcaklng solo home run in the e ighth inning to give Tex- as a 3-2 victory over Kansas C'1ty behind the six-hit took a Superior Court judge lo call SchmuJl pitching of Doc Medich and the final play two relievers Baltimore's Mike Flanagan Following a full-scale civil court trial, Judge L. Anthony Gibson has ruled real estate man Richard E. Barrish must tum over four of his eight 1981 season tickets to hardware store owner Matthew C Karpinski. The Mays Landing men, former football buddies. went to court following a bitter battle over eight season tickets to Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium they bad shared since 1971. The judge, annoyed the dispute reached his courtroom Wednesday. called the situation "a case with no winners." "I'm really troubled by this laws uit that seems lo be simply an outgrowth of a quarrel between two friends who can 't get along with one another any more." Gibson said hurled a five-hiller in shutHng out Toronto for the second lime in two weeks and Wayne Krenchicki led tA 17-hit allack by driving in three runs as the Orioles trounced the Blue Jays, 10-0 No charges will be filed against members of the Cleveland Indians who in· te rceded in a street f1ghl near Comiskey Park in Chicago, police said All-star third baseman George Brett, last season's American League Most Valuable Player. was removed from Kansa s City's game against Texas with an ankle injury. There was no indication how long Brett would be s1dl•lined Sanchez, Hendrick lift Cardinals According to trial testimony· Karpinski and Barrish had been sharing eight season tickets since 1971. Orlando Sanch1>1's RBI ground Ii ba II capped a four run ninth-inning rally that liflt'd St Louis to a 7-6 triumph over Houston in National It was Harrish who had traveled to Veterans Stadium to make the initial purchase in 1971 and he had put all the tickets 1n his name. But Karpinski said he always believed four of the tickets were in his name because his checks for Barrish were made out to the Philadelphia Eagles Football Club. League action Thursday night. St Louis used three walks. one llouston error and two hits. one of them a two-run double by George Hendrick, lo take the wrn In other games, a dropped fly ball by San f'rancisco center fielder BUI North with two out in the e ighth inning e nabled Philadelphia 'to score the ty- ing and lead runs and beat the Giants. 3 1 . . Dave Concepcion s upplied the timely hitting and Bruce Berenvi allowed six hits in 1~a innings as Cincinnati rle- r ea ted Chicago, 6·1 Broderick Perkins continued The two friends recently had a falling out and Karpinski found hjmself without tickets. When 1981 Super Bowl tickets were sent out last winter, Barrish refused to tum any over lo Karpinski Karpinski trie d to have four season tickets transferred to his name. but was told this could not be dont• without Barrish's approval. Thal wasn't forthcoming either. llendnck his major league leading bat- Quote of the day Rick Monday, Dodger outfielder, talking about Houston slugger Mike Ivie, criticized for attitude problems when he played for San Francisco: "He's a S40 million airport with a $30 control tower." ting pace with a pair of hits. including a tie-breaking double that drove in the first of five l'ighth inning runs as San Diego beat the New York Mets 10 6 for their fourth consecutive victory Right fielder Jark Clark. who hit 73 home rum. over the past three seasons. signed a three-vear contract with San Francisco Thurs day Clark, 25. as currently under a one-year Giants' contract rcµortedly $400,000 No money details were disclosed for the newly signed con- tract. ~,' Saltz back on top of his tennis game Ex-CdM star doing well at UCLA By E DZINTEL 0(1 ... Dall~~ ... 5u" There was lillle doubt that after winning the CIF individual title at Corona del Mar High in 1979 and leading his team lo its firth s traight Cl F team title. Danny Saltz was a past. present and ruture star Saltz had all the tools required to become an exceptional col- lege tennis player a powerful and smooth ground stroke, an adequate serve and volley and the best coaching that could have been acquired Still. there were doubts Critics wondered if his frail 6-2 frame could withstand the . punishment of a long 4·5 month •. schedule of 25 or more m atches. THOUGH H E HAD ex : perienced few injuries as a prep : player, Saltz's weight had not . kept up with his height. At 150 pounds , he was downright skinny. . The c ritics began sounding : like prophets last year when. as • a freshman at UCLA, Saltz r an ~ into one injury after another : First it was the ankle. then the • shoulder. Most of the injuries were minor but were the nag ging kind that keep you from playing 100 percent. But Saltz still played well when he could and proved he wasn't going to fade away like so many past prodigies by win· ning the 21-year-old and under , National Indoor singles cham- pionsrup. With that to work on, Saltz was de termined to make his sophomore season at UCLA one to remember. AFTER PLAYING solely in doubles in 191K>, Saltz worked his way up the team singles ladder to the No. 4 spot. He continued to play No. 2 doubleA with partner Robbie Venter -a two-time All· American from South Africa. The ittjurles did not disappear, however. He developed ten- dinitis in rus lert ankle. But he tootlnued to play -with pain. Apparently, a hurt Danny Seltz was better than most healthy Pac-10 players. Saltz won 18 straight dual matches in stn~les before rtnally losing lo Stanf o rd freshman M ike Fallbe(I last week. 6-<t, 2·6, 3-6. Fallber1, an old rival of Salli'• at Santa Barbara H11h. took advan~e of Salu's tender ankle to wear Mm down. But Saltz got hJs revenge later In the day. With the conference UUe on the line (St•n.lord en· tered t.be lut match with an 8--0 record aft.el' bandln1 UCLA lta only conference defeat of the yl'ar earlier. 6·3l Saltz came back to team with Venter and beat Jeff Arons and Fallberg. 7 6, 2-6, 6·3 UCLA won the match and the crown, 5.4 UCLA COACH Glenn Bassett. a former UCLA All America in the early 1950s. who has had a part in 11 of the Bruins· 13 na- tional championships, says this about Saltz: "He's the most im- proved player on the learn. Dan- ny's No. 4 now but he could easi ly m ove up the ladder at any time. The only problem is that he's grown so fast <Saltz is now 6 3. 165 ) that his strength a nd footwork are a little behind his gam e. He's improved his serve and volley ln catch up with his tremendous ground s trokes " This Saturday, Saltz wiU begin play with his teammates in the NCAA team and individual championships at the University of Georgia. UC LA, with a 21 ·2 season re· cord, is the current No. I ranked collegiate team in the nation. followed by Pepperdine, Slanrord, Arkans as and Houston. USC 1s No. 7 and Cal is No. 14 . Sixteen learns will com· pete for the team litle. Saltz, as another feather in his cap, has been invited to compete in both the singles and doubles portions of the individual cham- pionships. "Danny has unlimited poten- llat, ··says na11sett Yes, patrticularly when he'!! healthy. • * * The 7th Annual Kodel Mixed Doubles Championships will be held Saturday a nd Suoday at the Billie Jean King Tennis Center in Long Beach. Jo January, clubs were invited to hold mixed doubles tourna- menu within their own facility and to send winners to compete In this event. 1 The wiM ers or th•• weekend's tournament In each aae group will advance to the finals of the national Kodel Cup in Flushing Meadows. N.Y., July 30·31. • • • More than three dosen celebriUa w1U play Sunday in lhe ,th1rd annual Cy1ue Fibrosla Celebrity tournament at the Anaheim Hilla R~utt Club. In additfon to the ctlfbri~es. some 36 Oran1e County amateur p)ayers wtll play doublt1 wUb the 1tan. Tick.eta are avaUabl• at the •ate Sunday. Danny Saltz From Page C1 SURF. • • was interim Coac h Laurie Calloway who has been in charge or the team on the field following the resignation of Peter Wall CALLOWAY GUIDED the Surf to a 2-1 victory over San Diego In hl11 rirst outing as the head man and he appears to have the Inside track as the Surf's new next coach A veteran of both the English League and the NASI. (he spent five seasons as a member of the Earthqunkes), Calloway ls a former head coach of the Southern Cullfornl&a t..aaert of the American Soccer League. Although he worked close!~ with Wall for two aeoaon s, he uJd he feels he can work with Lilledal'a aame plan , addln1 that he reels both will be wlllln1 to alve just a llUle. WAU FELT HE"" the only Oflt &lvinl and flnaljy realaned t.wo weelUI aao. Tonl&hl'I 1ame may be UM flnal teat foT Calloway before manaf meot choo1e1 • bead coach, and with an expected 30·•0,000 fans antklpated at Anaheim St.adJum. be can prove blmaeU -Mio~ lbe lar1est Surf crowd v r . Baseball today On this dole In baseball In 1941 · The New York Yankees dropped a 13-1 decision to the Ch1c11go White Sox, but Joe OiMag&io's stngle off Eddie Smith starU The Yankee Clipper on his rtt0rd 56-aame hittinJ( streak Today's birthdays: San Francisco outfielder Bill North is 33. Baltimore pitcher Denniis Martinez 1s 31 Cleveland pitcher Rick Walts is 29. Kansas City lb.ird baseman George Brett, the 1980 American League MVP. is 2fl Montreal still wants Walker The Candian Football Leaeue ~ Management Council's resolution •• • which orohibils owners from shmlni non graduale Americans is not retroact ve and does not apply to University of Georgia running hack Herschel Walker, Montreal Alouettes owner Nelson Skalbanla said . . Denver Bronco quarterback Craig Morton, who became a free agent after the 1980 season. has signed a con- tract with the club for the 1981 NFL season . . Wide receiver John J efferson tried to quiet rumors of a contract feud with the San Diego Chargers. saying flatly. "I'm not renegotiating" The San Francisco 49ers. wtfo chose four de- fensive backs in the recent NFL draft. an- nounced the signing of two: Eric Wright of Mis· souri and Lynn Thomas of Pill ... University of M 1chigan quarterback J ohn Wangler, who led the Wolverines to a Rose Bowl victory over the University of Washington on New Year's {)ay, has s igned a contract with lbe Dallas Cowboys of the NFL . . College football powers USC and Oklahoma have agreed to meet in 1987 and 1988. Scott among strong mile field Former UC Irvine standout Steve • Scott, along with J ohn Walker of New Zealand and Ireland's Ray Flynn will shoot for a sub-3:50 mile Saturday to highlight the California Relays track and field meet at Modesto Junior College . His basket- ball playing days apparently over because of a persistent foot injury. 8111 Walton has decided lo be a lawyer. The 6-11 cente r has been hired by a San Diego law firm and will begin work May 26. In the fall, he hopes to enter Stanford law school .. CBS-TV will broadcast games involving na· tional champion Indiana. Notre Dame and UCLA in 1981-82 as part of a 14-date, college basketball package leading up to the NCAA Basketball Championships ... Tom Watt, coach of the Canadian entry at the 1~ Winter Olym- pic Games, was named as the new head coach of Winnipeg Jets of the NHL Television, radio TV: No events scheduled RADIO: Ba~eball Angels al Detroit. 5 p m .. KMPC (710l, New York Mets at Dodgers. 7 30 p.m . KABC (790 t Pirate women win state title SARATOGA The Orange Coast College women's tennis team capped an undefeated 21·0 sea son with a narrow 5-4 win over Chabot Thurs- day lo win the community college state cham- pionship at West Valley College . Sophomores Cari Garfield, from Fountain Valley High a nd Lisa Sawaya from Estancia High and freshman Ja4net Khorey from Costa Mesa High won singles matches In doubles, Sawaya teamed with Khorey to win and tie the score. 4-4. before Lon Schoettler and Garfield won a 7 6, 7-6 tie-breaker match over Chabot's Marilyn Morrell and Jill Goularti lo clinch the title. In the double tie-breaker sets, the scores were 7 1. 7·2. "This was a team effort." Schoettler. a sophomore from Newport Harbor High said. "Our match was just the last one that was played. "We thought we could win state because we have so much depth," Schoettler added. "They (Chabot> had a lot of people cheering for them. But I think our coaching is what helped us most." Coach of the OCC women is Janice Maran . ''She told us before we played the match today that we didn't have to put pressure on ourselves because just getting here was our goal all year," Schoettler said. Islanders now in command UNIONDALE, N. Y. IAP> The Minnesota North Stars looked more like their usual selves Thursday night but. unfortunately for them. the Nf>w York Islanders looked a lot like their old selves and cranked out a 6 3 victory an game two of the Stanley Cup finals The North Stars had ~erambled back from a two goal deficit to lie the game 3·3. but the defend mg National Hockey League champion Islanders then exploded for three straight goals in an eight minute span to go ahead 2-0 in the best of-seven 1>er1es "We looked more hke ourselves tonight. but obviously it wasn'L enough," said Minnesota Coach Glen Sonmor. ··we were a lot more in this game tha n we were the other night At 3-3, I felt very good about our chances to win." After spotting Minnesota a 1 ~lead on a power play goal by rookie Dino Ciccarelli. his 13th of the playoffs. the Islanders forged a 3·1 advantage on goals by Mike Bossy. Bob Nystrom and Denis Pot- vin M 1nnesota bounced back. however. on Brad Palmer'1> lone second-period goal and Steve Payne's 14th goal of the playoffs JUSt 30 seconds in to the lh1rd period. "You bet I was worried when they made it 3 3," admitted Hutch Goring "We stopped skating 11\ I he se<•ond period " Potvin look tlw worry out of being close. however. with has second goal of the game and eighth or the µlayoffs on a power play at the eight minutt> mark of the final period "Thal goal 1gn1ted the club and we took .. said Potvin ··we started to feel high on the bench when we got that power play ·· Potvin now has 23 playoff points, just one shy of lhl· National Hockey League record for de- fenH·men set by Bobby Orr back in 1972. His eighth goal also leaves him JUSt one s hort of the record held by Orr and Boston's Brad Park Hr}an Trottier s assist on New York's final goal ga\•e him at least one point m 15 consecutive gamrs, snapping Orr's 1972 mark. "It's nice to have Orr's record." said Trottier "I fl·el I'm being rewarded because the team 1s winning You really appreciate 1t when all the gu\ s tungratulate each other " From Page C1 VALENZUELA . • • i::oang lo score many m ore. "Ill• was super last time we saw ham and he was suprr this time He 's c;ome kind of a poised young man " Spell'r agreed 'lle's got lhe pitch 1 screo,\ ball 1 that keeps every· body o(( balance He s been pitching for a month and a half now and he's dominated. '"Whenever a pitcher ran do what he's done against a ball club of this caliber you have to give him credit I JUSI pray people will realize he's a human being and not a piece of meat I'm glad he cloesn·t speak English or the kid would be in a world of trouble ·· Despite Valenzuela 's phenomenal success. some players were s till n•serving Judgment 'lie made some mistakes he's getting away with now.· analyzed Montre al right rielder Tim Wallach. the former Saddleback College product who went 0-for 3 Thursday night "There's no question his stuff 1s good. but nobody has really seen ham "Everybody on the team couldn't wait to play to· day He 's talked about so much you can 't wait to go up there and hit him He's got the stuff and good poist• but let's wait until he's been around for awhile '"It's going to changl' tie's not going lo win C'Vl'ry j:?affil' 'llec-an't Don l tell that to \ alenzuela. the Dodgers or those v. ho have ~een him pitch Gompert upset at MV Beth Herr of Dayton. Ohio pulled off a stun· ning tennis upset Thursday in the Seventeen Tournament of Champions at Mission Viejo, toppl- ing top seeded Kate Gompert of Menlo Park an the IR-and under division. 6 1. 6-3 . In another upset. No I seed Eileen Tell of Aberdeen. NJ fell lo Michelle Torres nf Northfield. Ill.. 3-6, 6·2. 6-l. in the 14-and-under d1vis1on Play continues throu~h Saturday Baseball standings AMERICAN LEAGUE West Oivlslon W L Pct. GB Oakland 25 9 735 Texas 17 12 586 5'-'a Chicago 15 13 536 7 Angels 18 16 .529 7 M inncsotu 11 19 .367 12 Seatlle 10 21 .323 13112 Kansas City 7 17 .292 13 East Division Cleveland 15 8 652 Baltimore 16 11 593 1 New York 18 13 .581 1 Boston 15 14 .517 3 Milwauket' 14 15 483 4 Detroit tt 16 467 411\i Toronto 10 21 .323 9 .,_..,.,"_ A-II t, Mllw-• I 90tt0ft t, MJ-..W 1 ( 11 IMlllO' I lttllmoro 10. T-'00 How York t, 0..0.~ s S.otti. at Delre!\,.-, roll\ hut J, 1(-1 City J , .. .,. . ._ A....it IWlll Ml el C>9lro41 1-rll WI. n KenNt City cc;.i. 1..)1 11 ....... ICr- N >, 11 Toronto Ii.HI NI., Clewtl-, ... bf Ml." 1H t11e (Alltf'\t0.11 al Hew York IHel.., 1-41, II Oa kland IM<C ottv 4•tl el Mllwewk .. IYIKkevkll 221.11 Ttu1 l""'*lft• Ml et CM< ... I 0e4..., ~II." ••Ill-• 10. Menlne1a.11 e1 .,.,,,..__. ,,..._ fKll '41." NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Dodgers 23 9 719 Atlanta 17 14 548 5111 Cincinnati 17 14 .548 51·:1 San Francisco 17 18 486 71'2 llouslon 15 18 .455 81"1 San Diego 13 20 394 to•., East Division St Louis 17 8 680 Philadelphia 19 12 613 1 Montreal 17 13 567 21~ Pittsburgh 12 13 480 5 New York 8 19 .296 10 Chicago 5 22 .185 13 ~,.,,,.,." O.....-n), MonlrHI J Sal\ Olt90 10, Nsw York • P~ll•delplll• J, San Frenc I.CO I Clft<lllNll •• Clff<-I St l.oul~ 7. Kow1lon • T-y'1G-•1 HowYortl!-0.SJet~tWtl<ll,) 1).n C111cl11nell !Past-1· 11 •I PllhburQll CS<urry ' ti," St Louis CSor-.rtMf\M) •1 All ... 1• , ........ Ml," Chl<090 1~111 0-JI el "°"'"'" IJ Hl•ro Wl,11 ~hll•*411N• ICMllon ...01 al S.1'1 Olt00 (Mura l-41,n Montru l IRooers l JI et Sa n Fte11<IJ<o IWhltaonMl.n • -~ ........... ,.. ............... , ••!"'\,. . . . . -... .... ,.~ .. ,, • 1 •' ... ~ '·' '· •:· ., ... "OJ flO \I ,rt tot ,, !,) ,ff. Corvair cult flourishes Illinois fan of 'unsafe car' owns seven FRANKfo'ORT, JU (API It was a tunny· looking compact car w1tb the engine In the r ear. conde mned by Ralph Nader as "unsafe at any speed ." Gene ral Mo tors q uit making them a dozen years ago. The Corva1r, like f''ord's Edsel, fell victim to a throwaway societ y. But thousands of the little Chevrolets have survived, pampered and pollshed by m embers of 1& Cor valr cult who say it's re ally lhe only way to go. One of them is Larry Claypool, who was only 5 when the first Corvair rolled off lhe as sem bly line in 1960 and too young to get a driver 's license when t hey went out of production in 1969. At Claypool's a uto repair shop in this Will County com mun ity ne ar Chicago, the r e are Cor vairs an various slates of disrepair scattered a ll over the lot a nd two ramshackle sheds stuffed with rare Corva1r parts In his hom e are Cor vair movie reels, Corvair photo albums, Corva1r postcards and two shelves lined with t rophies he won in Corvair cult races. Claypool owns seven Corvairs Is Claypool's brain running on empty? Nad er, the consumer advocate, denounced the Corvair as "unsafe at any speed" in his 1965 book o f the sa me na me Chevrolet reacted by gradu ally phasm g out production Claypool says Cor vair enthus iasts were un- d aunted and business a t his re pair shop, The Vair Shop. kno wn by Cor vair drivers all over the Midwest , has improved every year since he s tart- ed in 1972. "In the beginning, people t ried to·te ll m e, 'Oh t hey don't make them any more, what are you gonna do in two years?'" he said. "Well. the number of Corvairs on the road falls with ever y passing year, but at the same time fewer and few er places arc fixing them, so I keep a good business. I'm backed up two months in order s ." Nader said the Corvair overst eer ed in s h arp turns and its rear wheels tuc ked in ward when the car slid sideways. increasing the danger or a roll at high speeds Rut in 1971. two )'ears a fter the car's termina tion, a federal stud y found the Cor vair no m ore dangerous than other contemporary cars when driven al reason able speeds Consumer Guide ,magazine subsequently Judged the last model year to be a good us l•d car buy Claypool belongs lo the Corvair Society of America, a group of 7,800 Corvair owners with 100 c hapters around the nation and in Canada, Sweden a nd Iceland, with names such as Association of Corvair Nuts I Rochester, N Y 1 and Choo Choo Cor vairs 1ChC1ltanooga. Tenn l The national or ganization puts out a m onthly magazine, Cors a Communique. a nd stages yearly con vcnt1ons fc-aturing car rallies and parts s waps . The Chicagoland Corvair Enthusiasts is pa rt o f Ice Cha llcngt> Events, a group of five Chicago car clubs that makes a n annual winter pilg rim age to Twin Lakes, Wis .. fo r ice races. "T he Corv<1irs do real well because with their rear·mounted engines. their traction on ice is great." Claypool said. Charles R Bell , a Chicago taxi driver, says a Guns not mandatory SACRAMENTO t AP 1 An appeals court says the state 1s not required to provide guns to its parole officers. bul a state official said that of ficers who want guns can continue to get them . The state's 3rd District Court of Appeal, in a un<1mmous ruhn~. found there was no evidence t hat all 410 parole agents had to be ar med for their s afN> But the s tate Corrections Department, which iss ued guns to parole officers in Jun e 1979 under a Superior Court ordt'r. s aid Director Ruth Rushen will tonllnut' that practice voluntarily DEATH NOTICES JOHNSON FHANK 0 JOll '\'SON. 11• ~.cknl of <'o-.tu M1•:-.11, t'n Pa~serl awav 1111 Ma\ 1:1. 1981 Ill• IS .,UI \ IHd I)\ tll"' \\ 1f1· MUI \ I' J11hn-.11n .inti I ~on Fr•ink 1': .John:-011 hot h of ('o,ta :\h"•a I duu.:hll'I I' ti I r I l I ,1 S IA ,1 I l II ll l tt f W J'h1n~tnn I hroth1·r l.1•1• c .lohn!.1111 or (;Jldl'll c:rmt• l'J JIHI I j.!I a111kh1hl1 l•n Funt•r,il '•'I' 1!'1·" '' tll 111· hrld on S;itunl;I\ '"'\ 111. l!i>ll .11 t 0 11111\ M .11 t ht• I' 11• 111• B rot hl'r" llt•ll Ut n,1d IA•" ('h,qwl \\tlh 1nl1•rnwnl .11 Good Shl•ph1•1 ti ( 1•1111•11•1 \ ll11n11n.:11111 lk.•dl C'J Fr11•nd~ m:n 1·.111 .11 lhc• mort11a1 \ on Fncl.1\ ~I.I\ I s. I !181 r ro Ill 1 1111 I' :\1 11 9 llll P:\'1 l'll'l 1'l' lh 11lhl'r' Bell nroudw.I\ :1111rtu.1n d1r«'<'lor:1 Field trip set Sunday The Sea and Sage Audubon Society is con· ducting a fie ld tri p lo Santiago Oaks on Sun · day at 8 a m Santiago Oaks Park is located at t he e nd of Windes Drive in Villa Park. Information may be obtained by calli n g 546·5440 Lecture s~t a t OC C A 2 hour lecture on how lo respond positive· r ,ACIFIC VIEW MEMOllAL 'AllC Crrretery Mor1uc1ry Ctiapel·Crematory 3500 Pac111c View 011111' Newoorl Beach fi.44 ·2700 "'I I ly under hostile condi· t ions is scheduled May 28, from 7:30·9:30 p.m . in room 207 of Orange Coast Co ll ege's Chemistr y Building. McCOllMIC.C MORTUAllES LaQuna Beoch •94 9415 LclQuna Holl<, 768·0933 San Juan Cap1s1rano •95 1776 HAUO. L.AW~MT. OLIVE Mor1uarv • Cerre1e rv Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 5'40-555'4 "MCI llOTHIU NU MOADWAY MORTUAU 110 Broadwt1v Cos•• Mesa 6'42·9150 1.unl iii 110M SMITH & TUTHILL WUTCUH CHArlJ. 427E 17t"St Coale MtH 648-9371 ,_ClllOTHMI MiMTMI' MOITUAI Y &i1 Main St ~nt1nqcon ach 538-6539 .. .. L: "' Information about the free lecture can be ob· ta i n c d b y ca ll i n g 556-5880 PUBLIC NOTICE Larry Claypool sits in his auto repair lot in Frankfort. Ill .. surrounded by his favorite cars. Chevrolet Corvairs. lie is a leading fan of the car once called "un safe at any speed." Cor vair he owned fro m 1965 to 1975 was the best Chevrolet ever made. "I drove 1t to Arizona a nd back three times,'' s aid Bell. 59. "No kind of weather stopped it. It was lhe sorriest move I ever made to sell it. I can tell Nader that to his face " Claypool s ays he helped his old er brother buy a new 1969 Cor vair for a pittance a few weeks after they went out or production A couple of years later, Claypool found an a bandoned, 1961 Corva1r s tation wagon He located the owner and bought t he car for $10 Two dank, gloomy s heds are t reasure troves of rare Cor va1r p<1rts Claypool has collected There are turbochargers, tinted windshields, aOJUStao1e tclescop1t· s teering columns, chrome trims , wire w heel rims. original upholstery and accessories such as tissue dis pensers, mounted clocks and trailer hitches Claypool now runs a mail order business in par ts He s ays Chevrolet still stocks m an y parts but many dealers ar c unwilling to provide service for a long-de funct vehicle . However, he says, in recent years small inde pendent firms, with names like Cor vair Undergr ound , h ave formed to s pecialize solely in re produced Corvair parts . Many of the reproduced parts are Detter t ha n the origina ls because now more care goes into m aking the m ," Claypool said P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE N~111J1 l'ICllTlOUS IUSINIUS "ICflTIOUS I USINIU NAMI IT4 TIMUtT NAME ST4 TIMI NT The lollowln9 p"'»n~ e re doing The loll-lft9 ""'_, " "°4"9 bu•I bU>IR•H., ,.. .. H H P LOAN SERVICING, 23"1 El M4NIL0W MUSIC, llSI Dove ToroRd.,EIToro,CAn6JO SlrH I, ~le 100 NtwPOrl lke<ll, CA T D P\Alll<oollCW\ .. Ir><., e 0.lewe,. n ..ci cor1>ore1lon, 1lffl fl Toro Rd., El Toro,C4 n.JO Berry MjltljlOw, " OdY>S.Y C°"" Th i> builM" "conclu<lod by a <or· Nt•po11 e..cr.. CA,,.., IPO•••lon T"I• ~IMu I• <anclu<lod by en 1n TD Puollutlon>. IR< dlvldual Ralph J . Tt1'1111e Berry Mjln<low T M1 •1•1-1 w .. lllod •llh IM T"I' , .. ._, ••> fllod Wiiii Ille Counly Clerll of Or-C°""IY on Mey lcounly Cler-ol Oranoo Coynly on u, "" Aprll U. 1''1 "1'21 .. .. , .. ,,., Publl•""" Or-C.0.•I Oally Piiot, Pul>ll"*' Or-C<H11I Delly Pllol, May u, 11, 1'1, Junes. '"' n•••• Mo u . n. 1'1, June), '"' 11'1111 PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS eUSINHS l'ICTtTIOUS aUSINIH NAME ST4 TEMENT NAMI ST4TIM•NT The loll-1119 11tr_, It doll\9 !11.ttl· The 1o11-1no Ptrson I& dolnO bu&I• neo"' neu as THE BUY AMERICAN AGENCY. G R SOUND, IOltl Kullul l aM, Hun IUI Pe9e&u1 SI., Sante An a, CA llnglon S.e<h, CA .,.,.., •1101. Gre9ory R Rahn, 101'1 l(u-ul U Rt, Phlllp WayM Rolh, UJI Pe9uut SI., Hunlln9lon BH<h, C4 .,.... S•nla Ane, CA 91707 Tiii• but 1neu It <ondu<lod by en In This butlnnJ I• <onducl..:I by •n IA· dlYlduel dlvldual Greoory R R•hft I PllHIP w ROlll Tiii• >1a1 ....... 1 ,.., llleo wlln tlle Thi• •lawment wu 111..s wUh Ille C0<inly C••rti of o.-County on Mey County Cl••-or Oren99 County on 1 IJ, l .. I May 13, '"' "IU1 "1'2111 Publl....., Orenge Co.ti O•llY Piiot Publll""" Or-C<Hlll D•lly Piiot. Me y u . n, "'· J-s. , .. I ,,.,, II May u . n. "· J\MW s. , .. , 11.UI P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS IUSINHS l'~~~~!:~~·:::s NAM!! ST4 TIM•NT Tiie IOll-1"9 peroons are doing Tiie lollow1n9 peroon• are dOlflO l>V>l,..uas bu"n•u•• SIEltRA COASTAL PROPERTIES, CHRISTINA'S c;,t.FE, .. E .. 1 17111 I Nav•rre,ln.IM.CA9'17U SlrMI, c .. i. INM, C<lhlornl••>t17 Rlclla rd H. Whu ltt, I N•varre, Audr&y Eileen ~rrov, l:l30 Soul/I 1r•lne. CA "77U Ea 1t Brl>lol, • ~O. Se n I• Ane , CllarlH E Cr-..11, 419 PaNr•m•, Calllornl1 '2707 Leoun• Beech, CA '2Ul Slllrley Mjlrl• Grier, 1.130 Soulll EH i Thll bU1lneu I• condueled by • Br htol. S39, Senta Ana, Calilornla gener•I penner'llllp. '2101 R H -It< Tiii• -I""• I\ (ondUCl•d Dy If! Tllll llaltmenl .... 11190 w llh Ille dlvldua l> County Clertt of O<-County on M•y Audrw Ellffn Ouc>errov u , "" Thh 1tal...,.nl wa1 llllld wllll IM 1'1'2112 C0<inly Clerk of Or-County on Mey Publl•""' Orenoo eoa11 Di lly Pl101 1>. , .. , ,.,.,111 May u , n, 1'1, J..,.. '· '"' u o .. i Publl•twd Or-CO.>I Oally Pltol, M•v IS, 22, :It, June i, , .. , U'3-41 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 1&. 1981 H I r * ,. .. 1"-r'1 Motlce: All r t!1&1 esta te ud · Hous.s For s• HOMIH For s• HotlsH For S• .•••............•........................••.......................... 1002 1002 Chtleral v e r t I s e d 1 n t h 1 Ii GtoMr ol I 002 Getteral n~w1paper lb subject tu ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• thl' Federal Fair lloui, ,_ _________ , __________________ _ '"" Act of 1!168 whk h make11 1t 1llegul to ,ad Vl'rt lse "llfly prl'h~ rencl'. l 1mltulion. or dis cr1m1n ulion basetl on ra re. color, rehl(1on , sex, or n11t1ona l ·or111m. or an tntentwn lo make any sueh prererenee, l 1m1t alion. or dlb cr1mmallon " This newspaper will nol knowingly Ul'l't'JH any adverlisan (( for r eal es tale wluch is Ill v to la lion or the luw ERRORS: AdnrtiHn should ct.di their ads dally mid NpOrl e~ ron Immediately. Ttw DAILY P'ILOT assumes Nabilty for Ht. first Incorrect Insertion only. ..........•............ General 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 UNITS $94,900 Su pc r m vest mcnt' Two 2 Bdrm umb, unt• with fireplace' C.:11 rrent in l'Ome $740 mo Fmanl ml(' Onl' year home µro ll"l'l1011 plan 111 .. ltl llurry, ttu~ v.1111 l la~t' 646 7171 fi4Zs\iWI DECORATOR COMDOSI 19,900 Wmdm~ flr~ntx:lt:-lt.'<HI to hril(hl sm.:ll' "'lory n •ndo Kxquti.llt.'I) cit• turated w1lh t·usto m wallpap1•r and <'ul>t111•11 y thruoul Formul dmml{ ruum loo! Ownl'r will eoopt•r<Jll' '¢'\lhl finan1• 1ni: Won 't la~l at t111s pri<·r. S•l <•all 1111w @ SEA COVE PROPERTIES 7 14-631-6990 WALK TO BEACH! OC EAHFIOH'T 2 Bdrms, :.! ba. unrurn New $850 yrly IAYFROHT 3 Hdrm. I ba, Wlrurn Mllll <'Ond. S850yrly. ._,.AMMB. FROHT 3 Bdrm. 2 ba, unrurn S750 yrly associated BROKERS REAL TORS lllH W lolbuu 671 '•61 E-Z DUPLEX CONVERSION Costa Mesa R 2 ' Remodeled 4 Bdrm 2 ha home with fireplace. copper plumbu1f{. Could be rnnvertt'd to dupll'X Only Sll2,000' Call to see! 646·7171 THE REAL ESTAT&:RS OCEANFRONT Take over fabulous loan of $426.000 ml'ludin1o1 J2'1•', mterl'Sl. <!!I yr~ t< ~11 Try $150,000 ~Juv. n A~kmg StH!J.000 l)nly I vr old JACOBS REALTY 675-6670 DOVER SHORES PREST1GE We ..ire proud to pr e~l'nt onl' of lhl' rm cst pro pert IC'" or 0\1\l'r Shurl·~ This Jfft•sl1).(1ow. 1•!.lJll' ... 11ed home urrt•r' lht flnt'~l of i.lffil'Ollll'l> Fc<1turt•i. w1thm llrn .. -1!1()( sq fl rcs1rlenee mC'ludl' I Hdrm ... 3 Bath.-.. b1lhard room . formal d1n1n~. m<irbll' entry . ~'"m mmj.( pool ~pa ancl .1 pa no ram ll' ' 11'" ol the 1·1 l' I 1 l!h l .. :.ind l ht but·khay \'alul•d al $6!!!1,00() Balboa Island Reatty. 673-8700 ASSUME LARGE 9%LOAM or1 this exccllt•nl \'alul' I Bdrms, lar~l' pool. l!a~ f1rt•p1l. new cariwt:.. On ly S!IS,500 Call !17!1 5:170 ~mla) ALLSTATE REALTORS Sel'Urtlv i.:atcd .idull ----------condo ~lci.:ant :.! Hdrm :.! b<tlh , ISOO l><I rt hvmt• EnJOY pool. ~aun.i Jnd exen·1!.e room Ownt•r will help With fman<'tnl( As kcng $175.000 C<tll now 546·2313 THEREAL ESTATERS I )( 11~ ... L~ 1t_..i . ;... ] .. r"' ... ~ .. , '· r .,· J t S ! J' • · llff 'L f S r.trf f.ICfU.fNCf SiNCf •~ 1 BAYVIEW CONDOS Good rmancmg Stl'pi. lo bay boats bu~rne~s H11<J!! llOsp1tal Propcrl~ one and a hair years old IEACH HOMI. POf'ULAI MODIL OPIN SAT /SUM 12:30-4:30 Wa lk to beach . Assume F'NMA loan a t l l314'i'r 1st TO, $84,800. Monthly pmls $856. No qualifying. Gorgeous country kitche n. 4 BR , or J+den. Dining a rea overlook ing patio. Plush upgraded carpet thruout a nd much, much more. Asking $137 ,500 BKR. Ask for Mary Anne l lotsey. 963-7881, 96J·8793, res. Pll/ME llUFFI Mr w• OPEN SA T./SUM. 12·4 PM 1973 Vista Caudal, Newport Beach End unil. a bdrm + fa mily room . 21 :l baths, loftt•d tcilmg. Prestigious area . GrcCJt rem ode l possibilities. Good fi na nc- ing . Owner /CIC}t $425,000 (7141 760-8507 OCEAN UMITS SI 62 ,000 Un b el 1evable ! Selle r is motivated J\s~u me loans with $20.000 down . G r eat invcslment opportunity! lsn'l1t'' . Call SAMDY ROIERTSON THEREAL ESTATERS MESAVYDE UNREAL lluntlrt:ds or rlOWl'rb l'' cry where and s un filled rooms mukl' lh1s 3 BR homl' a must lo Sl'l' A rea I value <It Sl4 l .!JOO t'all now fordcla1li. (I) SEA COVE PROPERTIES 714-631 -6990 SAILIOAT WATCHERS This C:tmeo Jhghl<tnds beauty 1~ pm·ed to i.ell ' $339 ,000 Ownl'r 10' • tlown wtlh owneN> ai. s1slance' Onl' ll•vel 3 Bdrm plu.-. hul{l' ) .ird Hurry ' 673-l!.550 THEREAL ESTATE RS 963-6767 UPPER BAY L1g hl and c ht"ery 4 Bdrm , 3 hath family home Large l'O\t:rl'ti p;itm S220.000 Roy McCarcle, Rltr. 548-7729 GOLF COURSE VIEW J1n1ng room. famil) room. bnek r1replace. large cowllr) kitchen Jo'our stately bdrms. 2 baths. 3 ear garage, ,\ FANTASTIC VIEW OF GOLF' COURSE Privacy! Many, man} extras Only S262.500 546·2313 ~HEREAL ESTATERS Dow... lnd1v1dual buyt'r or 111 15°/o " vestment group. Pri(·e1 ·--------il•~-~-~~--3 be d room I h:ith, S169,!l00. 1• Garctet.r'sD,..am ~~a~t~:S a L~ri.tlc11 l'~r~1c~ •6-3•1.·7-3•0•0---·H-.B•. Alw~~~ ::l~~T~~vcst Sharp 3 Bdrm on lrg lot lot RV parking. $91 ,900. -------10 Real Eslale·bUl don't Wl lh lots or trees & 751·3191 think you l'an'' Ll•l plants,gret'nhouse,l'Cl\' SUMMER POOL HOME l,OVl'ly fom1ly fun homt• with l6X32' 1>00 1 4 Bdrm . ram1ly room stone rireplare. man) extras One of a kmd ' $126.900 Call for more details ~-2313 THEREAL ESTAT&:RS TRIM-TIDY TYRIFIC Home w lout homework' One of the lowest pric'ed homf's in entire an•a OPEH Sat/Sun 1-5 275 E. 16tti St, C.M. 3 bdrm. ram1I) room. re modeled on lar~e R-2 lol Owner ma) h el p rinanc·c SJ6.5,00l 3 17 Jasmine, CdM •1 hdrm, fam1I} rm. 2 fireplaces plus 3 bdrm rear unit with r1replacc & beam ceiling. Close to be11 ch. Good financing potential. 5495,000. MAURY STAUFFER SEA LION REALTY 673-5354 Assume the exist VA ---------• loun, 8'1, $460 PITI Owner mottvutc d Bo ughl new home Please hurry Submit! 545 9491 ~Walker B lae REALESTATI-: SELLER HAS ANOTHER Home and must sell this MEWP'ORT HGHTS De l uxe l ownh oui.e duplex, 3 bdrm. ramily. 2'i bath each unit Frples, all built in~. der ks & patios Park hke landseapmg SEl.LEH Wit.I. llELP FINANCF. $295.000! Balboa lay P'rop. llHltors •'75-7060• beautarul home located -~~~~~~~~ 1n excellent areu or Tustin. Step down b\ling room . rom1ly room, spoce oJe kitchen. 3 big bdrms. usl ~ccnlly re modele . One year rree home protection plan Call today. 752-1700 THE 'REAL ESTATERS DUfUX 3 bdrm, 2 balh ach unit. Fireplace, bullt·ln•. Ex· cellenl rem.I area. Near beach • bl)I. 1285,000. MZ-2251 eve1. assoc iated fl L o. 1 l. I I ,'\ • ' .... RARE OPPORTUNITY IN CAMEO SHORES Lowest priced ree 11lm pie available! Greal as· sumable lllt TO. Enjoy artem,)()ft sun and views rro m wood dec k . 3 beau t ltul pri v ate beaches. Only ~9.000 ! C.11 tod~!6'7~0 THE REAL ESTATERS ,......... TOW*OMl7 Call t be 1pecl.aJlatt at the condomlnlum in forma Uoo ctntcr. Toucbltone Realty ~ Golden Wc!.l Rcaltorl> ered patio S185,0UU show you how to invest S22.000dwn. with little <'ash & no "T1· n;int Problem~" Call now ror more detail~ Golct.ft West Rttr. ( 714 >848 8S8ll GIANT BEACH IARGAIM Charming 4 Odrm Liv mg room features l'OZ) wood bummg f1rcplat·c Huge lot Ownrr \\Ill help r1naner ' Onh $209.900! 673-8550 THEREAL ESTATERS SUPER DUPER Beaut1ru1. immaculate. n1<·ely landscaped 4 bdrm home on r ul de s11c Spacious rooms. View of golr <'Ollrse from properly Owner will help on financing. Only $139.500 Call no w 979.5370 ALLSTATE REALTORS Havf' something you want lo sell? Class1ried ads do it well. M2·5678. OWMER WILL TRADE Baricacn shoppers reud the little ads 111 ClauH1ed regul11rl) And they find what they're looking ror RCTaylorCo 640 -9 9 00 SPYGLASS ' PORMU MOO& F antastic VTE W home. ldeal for large f a m ily with maid 's qua rters or guest suite. Pool & j a cu z i i . 0 w n er wtl l h elp finance. ONL V $795,000. 1 £4 Orange Cout DAILY PILaT/Frld•y, M•y 1&, 1~1 HMtff '9r S.. Houtu ,.,. ,. Hoe.Mt,.,. S• HMMt 'er I• He.Mt P•r S• .•.••.••..•............ ···-··················· •••••·················· ••·••········•······••• ....•...............•.. ~:.~.~ ....... ~.~.~ ....... ~.~~ ........ ~:~.~ ........ ~~ .......... ~!!~ ~~.~~ ... !~.~~ ~~~~~ ....... !~!.~ ~.~!:~~ ........ !~.~~ ~':~ ............ !~.~~ G1Mr.. 1002 o ... ,... 1002 ........ 100-1 .... ,.. IOOJ OWNBwtlCA•IY JASMMCa• ASSUMAILI ht ••••••••••• •••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••• ••n•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cu1tom blt u >'" old & Exet" homo ll Hr 21.'t ba, OWMM ~NCID ,atSMfOUS 1t 1 •', 3 br, 2 b11 home ------------------• Br4bawllhlariepottn 8plan Vu tcrr S4~.ooo Larae • Bdrm 2 b1th CONOOS entr y kit , tie yd UHDAISU Wlde channel view (rom spectacular 11rchltectural designed 4 bdrm, 5 bath. pool home Slip for 2 large boats. Sl.495.000. By appointment. LIDOISLl~S Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3 bath home. newly decorated. Priced to sell quickly at $4.75,000. Must see. Newly remodeled 3 bdrm, 2 bath plus lge recreation room & 2 patios. Beam ceilings. Great for entertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money. PENINSULA POINT IEACHFRONT P a noramic bay & oceao view at wedge, from prime large lot. 4 bdrm. 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room. entry. Jiving room, dining room, built-ins, etc. $1,385,000. BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR J ·l I ~" y, "l, Dr , ., N B b 7 ~ b I b I FANTASTIC VIEWS This lovely 2 bedroom Versailles penthouse has new carpet and drapes, a wet bar. mirrored fireplace, and the best view in Newport. $275,000. U~l()U~ ti()M~' REALTORS. 675-6000 2443 Eaal CoHt Highway. Corona del Mar WE HNE 47 OF lliE BEST AGENTS rN TOWN Hf<.,tUFNllAo HIAI l<,IAll <.,fHlltr l'> l'ICTURESQUE IA YSHORES Charming living w/raised brick hearth , wood paneling & shutters. Delightrul 3 BR. 2 BA. Space for outdoor living w J2 patios. Room for remodeling. Outstanding value at $335 ,000 LH IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 mE 110111 ILllltS CD. OVER 57 YEAR S OF SERVICE ILUFfS Very Desir able T hree Bedroom. Two Bath. Tastefully Decorated. A Highly Upgraded Airy End Unit With Sun Deck On A Cul-de-Sac. Owner Will Carry Large Second. Call To See & Submit All Offers 759-9100. ST ARTER UHIT In World Famous Newport Beach. Real Sharp Two Bedroom End Unit With Dec k Overlooking Greenbelt. Walk To Shopping, Park & Pool. Submit Offers. $145,000. 759-9100 # 2 c °"°' .. e Pina Newport C"'"' JASMIHE CREEK-ft.AH I For the buyer who wants a lovely new 2 Bdrm and den borne in guarded community, on a beautiful quiet street, close to pool and tennis. Large assumable loan at 12W'/o ln· terest. $315,000. MOllLI HOMES We have 3 lovely new Ji.stings ln a 5 Stor Park. priced from $38,000 to $52,500. Exceptiona l commission split for llstlna oriented realtor associates. Beautiful office in cholce location. Have 2 openin11. ~ I Ual1nl1lwiar 320011qft 644139~ h o mt', be•Ullful Som~wltht>eeanV1l•w11 Crtatlve rtn Only + 112~ 1 ~IHBl(I! /7 t1/ .-:z::;> w•llplPf!IW lhruoul Cul Minuln lo ll•rl>Qr & 1143 .~00 Ry o wn.ir. 127$.000 ~a-Y l!JltiZ/ ~ dt' sac •tl'M Owner will Bt>uch 7 Avuilublt' 2hr M9 S4113 ~/ 14 S4a.03SO RUL ESTATE 644· 6397 ~r;;y ~~·~t'~~t 7 /o~a.r-:. 2b• from SlM.0011 ~. PAYMEN'TSS7~/mo llONewportClrVr. NU appointmf'nt to llt't', rail ~ UNIV. PARI L<>vely 3-4 br £/Side Ilse $40.USl •• RI • I RI a Lr11 4 Bdml 21, 811 home B.IGAHT .. VBSAIUIS''-IXCLUSIVI OM llG CAHYOH Q.OLf cou•s• Spectacular Deant! H o m es "Versailles" located on largest lot of all Deane Ho mes. Beautiful golf course view! Professionally landscaped yard w /mature trees in a private park-like setting including a lovely large pool & huge spa + an attractive gazebo. Gated fr ont courtyard entry with fountain. Ma rble floor in foyer with glittering ch andelier. 4 Bdrms, den, formal dining room & 4 'h baths. Priced right at $895,000. Call for appointment. WISLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 21 I I S• Jo ... Hlh load NIWPOIT CEHTEI, M.I. 644-49 I 0 REALTORS 675-SS 11 LOVELY "E" PLAH. Mott populor mod•I ner built In the llufh. Sltuat•d on s.,_ctacular 9reenbeH with mountain view. 3 ldr. F.R. I.st buy in the ana at $2,52,900. COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS 25 I 5 E. Coast Hwy., Corona dtol Mar 675-5511 MOVE INTO IRVINE . FOR OHL Y S89.500 Super triple ~1de mobile home in beautiful adult park. 3 Bdrms t=J4 Ba with a ssumable 1st. no qualifying. $50 .000 dwn will gel you $850 payments . Al so other terms. Cal l Colleen al Kate lla Realty. 552·1714 llALTORS DONT MISS THIS! A Sale You can make even m these times. The largest "1650 sq. ft." Condo for sale in area. Cement drives. air conditio n ing , m icro wave ovens . trash compactors , pools. parks ide & all shoppmg locations. Owner wtll conside r local exchanges. , WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 380 w. wu .. Co1ta Mesa, CA 714/U 1-5055 BEAUTIFUL CONDO-OCEAN VU l'rofeulonally decorahd by •e>eJer Thofnos, NASID, LCKJlllMI IHch. rl• 5 ift Newport Crest w /lbd.. Md. MOSier Mh, I~ fo,.tlly ""-& ,_... •c VU. q.ality & et.gance ... Olll)hoMt. OWMr wt• carry AITD. $270,000. 631-1400. OCEANFRONT EXWISITE Fe.loul arcllltKturd IRGlfetopMce Oft corMt". New wood & glcal, cusfofft oak cablMh & meHcutoua .W & decor ift this 2 ... tory home wfth punnet kitchen & spletlclld ma1ter suite. Terrific VU of MG & surf from fflls 2 bed. fCMLnn. hotM plus 2 bed. rental Wt. You could make this a s ingle famlly home $975.000. LIDO ISLE CORtlR-VU OfferhHJ .... Hcih......t & CORttnhMnt of Lido lffestyle -........ cWl'howN, bkycllftg & frietMly people. who -toy f°""'9 the 1•. 2-story, 3 ~. 4ba., f-. r•., for•ol dhl. ""' wf tll all w..tti.a. •ect.c•d to $665.000. GRANDEUR ON UtllA ISLE A ml~• of gr.ct jW apo; tlae Oft ,,... ........ Undo ltle . ..._. thru W ....... o .. r brick wtill -., & dip ,,..-; .. to tot.I ~ce. Two •tory ...,.... wffh wlftd ... 0 ifuls W"f, ...ery fou•toh•. f•r•or tl•lltt root11 with ...... fa.Nfy f"OMI .............. ••kH bar. Fot1HI •••t """ + 1a ..... t kffcML Lux..__...._... + 4 ....,, bedraa•. lAr9t Olltdaor ,.... ... ti.oet dodl Ir .., for 3 boats. s1,Jti.ooo. u1-1400. WATERFRONT HOMES, tNC. REAt. t 1'ATl ..._ R~"M.i.. "°"''IV M-'" 24J6 W COMI Hwy 31 ~ Mlirww A119 ,._,,.)ti & ... h &~ lt~ncl Hl·t4M '7Mfte Sll0.000. w/8""'1 lit 291 l=E.AL.. IO erut1a1001 Univ Monte V11t a . c M POTBmALrLUS •• EBIAIE ~p::e~b~~r~~~u~~I~ 6411·4289 3br, l~ba home need& -··---~·· 1 d "TLC" So Of Hlrchwuy 111anl'1ng Cal for e· LEASE W /OPT10H Ho rse property. 1800 n•nt. Rm for 10 hon1c11. make extra money. 21 Bdrm, 2b11 Roum fur 2nd un1l.1---~~~~~~~ (71414981040,493·0202 tails 12110.000 l'11 ll Stephen IUSINESS OPPTY -------- Mf'yen l':stablished wt!ll loculed '75-1771 760-85AM> beuuty 111lon 1n prime (ftCHAATEA T'PROPEATIES CostaM"41 1024 ••••••••••••••••••••••• lo c at Ion. S ubmit on terms. Toot•ht1Lone Realty. In(' 968-<XIOI Fronts Golf Course Santa Ana Country Club Owiwrw/C...,-y Beaut1rul 3brbyo~ner I at TD 54().5010 MESA VERDE $5000 DOWH POOLHOME 3b1 CONDO 934 mu Just In Ume for i.um moves you 111• No qoall mer• Tb111 charming 4 f) ing' AGT 545·1001 Bdrm home reatures -----huge rumll)' room Wllh 4br, l 1'2ba. hardwood bar. 11 k yliaht11 a nd rtoors . n e w pa 1 nl. Hart>orV'-wH~ stained glass windows car pel, drapes, plumb· Highly desirable large overlooking beautiful mg $115,000. Owner will corner lol Newly de sol;.ir healed pool and help with finanC'1n g. coraled family home on spa And, for the avid Open house Sal Sun fee land T oo many photol(raphl!r, a t•o m I0-6PM 683 Senate St amcn1l1e:. lo mention 4 plele dark room with BY OWNER 548-1731 or Br Palermo $l49,000 ('Ustom cabinets, !11nk, 831.9g78 Ownr •Agt 759·14''98 i.eµu rale walt·r heater. 2600 ~<I ft up~rudr d thruout, up lo 5 Bllr·. 21, Oa . l"ully lu11dxc-11 1>t>u w t pool & flrep1t. 111.'p side ya rd w/µlu y art'a. $103.000 assurn..ible loan ut lo w 111t $185,000 P I' Prin only 493 2(}t7 H111ttington hac:h I 040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MARINER'S COVE 2 Bd 1 •, Ha. 2 sly condo w attac hed garage M 1 from bl!ach m ~uarded comm Assoml.' 1or; l oan Ow n er ha:. purc hJsed anothe r $110.500 Wendy Sitler 759-1221 . WMtte REAi.TORS light t\t•a led und ventllat Mesa Verde 3bdrm. 2ba, i---------p ACF.SETT ER llOM 1-: ed llcaut1ful wallpapers solid Cinancuig. Sl39.500 W AHT A HOME? Vll'.."W und lcvekm. Lhruoul A By0wnerf>56·7174 But don't ttunk you <'Un $169.500 tn La~unu un1l1oe kllt'hl!n w ith afford it. Golden West N1gut-l1 4 Br ,1"10u,2 cedar skylil(hl and re REALLIVIMG Realtoti.haJ>des1grll'da i;lory family homl' Rt>ar t'cued l1ghtin1t This l:ive us a call to see this program that hu!. ;ii living room overlooks custo1111:u.'<l homt' ii. a "more for your money" lowed many 1x.•ople lo beautiful hills. used musl lo SCI.' Offered al home Give your fa mily enJOY home ownership brick floor to 1·e1llng $199,900. fo'or an UJ.IJX>Hlt enjoyment of their own that never thoug ht they fireplacl'. hol(e mast1•r menttosee.call!>I0-1151 priv ate pool & s pu. could Callnowformorr suite with 2 large closets perfectly setup for re deta1b + walk m. built in l(as laxinl( or entertaining Goldeft WHt Rttr kllchcn. family room. w1lh redwood decking & (7l<tl 848 858R family l>drms Mmplctc ·---------~· gas BBQ Add to this the i---------•I I} i.cperale on 2nd lt•H·I 1• solid comfort of a 3 2 rar attat•ht'<I l(aragt'. Bdrm 2 Ba home 1\ll for DUTCH HAVEN loll> or storage A must lo ASSUME only Sl29.500 556 2660 Very sharµ 3 Bdrm 2 IJa homl' near Beaeh Jnd Warner Onl.> SlW,!+00 Call Ron Ort e1t S€.'e' Drive bv 24502 I.Os FIHAHCIHG Serrunosat N1J!uelHoad Terr1 f1r l oca t ion &La llcrm06a O~nS..it m1nole1> to s hopping, 16th. Sun 17th rrurn I 5 school!. and recreation or by appt Over 2200sq ft Separate 0 HAN c; Jo: (' O 1\ S 1 mast lo'r bdrm. loHly F I N A N C I A I p o o 1 Jo: n t• I o s e d REALTOHS court) ard A~k1ng ~I Jnlyn Dun~er $142.500 O~nt•r!> a nx 957.0701 1ow.. s ubrnll all offers 540.1151 Capistrano leoch I 0 18 ••••••••••••••••••••••• STEPS TO l'IHES, OCEAMVIEWPARK Walk lo beach. 3br home in best Palisades loca l ion. Many extras in eluded! Call for details C r ea l ivl' f1nan r1n i; avail. Just $175.000. ~ •• ~RICCl:.•:ll•SR~l 'SS FEAL •• ESIAIE 1714)498-1040. 493 0202 -~~ HERITAGE . • REALTORS R&'Mtte R .. :ALTORS FREE Ho l a i r balloo n al Manner's Plolrk , May 16th 7AM JPM Wl!alher pt'rm1lt1n ~ Comphml!nL" of Robert M1lhken 1---------•I Jo: Sidi! ln\l'ly 2hdrm Beaut 180 degree :-01,1.eep mg ocean \'U add 2nd level & enJO) rare 360 deg vu 3 Br 2 Ba. privacy. walk lo ln•al'h s 209,000 o~n• 1·677-6533 Corona del Mar I 022 •.•.................... Jasmine Creek decorulor home, plan l on green belt immac. ~.soo 640-814.5 CDM DUPLEXES GOOD FINAHCIHG 2 Bdrms + loft w /frplc, wetbar in each unit. with great tenants HOM E+ RENTAL lovely 3 B<lnn, front unit with frplc a nd beamed ceiling plus 2 bdrm unit w/year's lease. Call Barbara Glass Century 21 1Sandp1per homt• on H'r} lrt.: lot I Beaut c·ul de ~J c $145.000 l'd ll a~t Christina Jl .""57 27113 or 646 3255 REDUCED S 14.000 Beautiful 2 sty, 3 UH. fnm rm. 111s1dc Jac•uu1 on Cd S $156.UOO Mll 646 4380 I' AV M ENTS $750/mo Lovely 3 4 l>r F,1S1de hse Sll0,000, w/812 1·1 Isl 291 Monte Vista 646-4289 37 ASSUMLOAN No qualifying. !!mall down payments, low In· ter esl r otes. no loan poinls' 2. 3 & 4BL>RM Housel> & Townhomcs All m goo1j areas of Orange County Gofdeft Wnt Rltr l714 )848-3588 640.4950 85 l ·95-41 I•--------Two 2 Bdrm hcm.~es on one lot W <.'osla Mesa C:::. SELECT -1""' PROPE AT IE~ HEWPORTHGTS Hun<'h Myle 3 lldrm + family rm on <iwel trl.'e lined s l Fabulous financ-m~ Call Bill or Linda 631 0884 or 646·5096. MESA VF.ROE 113r. den. beautifully de c-orated . $190,000 OPENSATISUN 1 5 27 120GANNETDR Agt 9'79·5099 3 Bdrm 2 '• H u Townhouse. pvt yar<l. 2 c-ar auto garage, 3 dt"tk:. oH hdrms. rrpk m II\ rm & mslr bdrm, st•p dm mg rm & mod kitchen 2 .> r!> old Comm pool sp11 lral'k C'lose to bus & SC Plaza SJi0,000. I.ow down. tenns Paul llH'ke} 751 S.185 HilkrHt By o wn er Thrcl.' bedroom I'• ba Beau yar d, c·onrrele drive. new floor s . Close lo t•ver ylhtng. l''m Avail w 120 per et-nl dn . $129,000. Open Sat·Sun 11·4 1261 Conwa~~57·31181 Spacious & Light Impressive Li ving room highlighted by vaulted ce1lmg' Cook gourmet meals m handy kitchen Masters wte w/sky hte forthat "open 'n airy" ree I 1 ng Two m ore bdrms ror kids & guests Th IS twnhm is pnre<l to sell rast • Call now 646 7434 Century 21 Gold Star R.E Prof.-.sionols 963-8377 Ownt.'r will help fm ..tlll'l' S pa rk lln i; 1 Bdrm St36,900 15072 h.mg~ton L.i.ne Urokt•r 842 14111 or 962 6365 OPEN SUN. 1-5 l br Sea I ht rlJor t•onclo w 10C'ean vu. l'n>f. del'OJ Assum loan Sl2-1.!l'J5 17172 Bluewaler LJIW HF.ALTY BY W/\LKEI< I 524 (1757 1044 •••.................... DEERFIB.D TOWNHOME SUPER FINAN. Lo\'ely 3 8<I 2' 2 Bo plan 3. over 1500 ~ rt. hus S91 700 assumable loan al 12'« uil l'lus owner will carry 2nd TO No qualify ing Offered al $139.500 Freel (;1hson 559-9400 R&'Mtte R F:Al.TORS University Port& Beautiful 3 Bdrm + bonus room. Jull1u r d m odel. greenbelt loc·a t1on Walk lo schoo l, park & shopping. (;ood financing and terms. Full price SJ.Se,000. Ask for Mary Donnell. TRADITIONAL REALTY HOMES ' INVESTMENTS 631 -7370 THIMKING TOWNHOME7 Call the s pecialists al the condominium 1n formation center Jasm111e Creek decorator Assumable loan OWC ---------1 home, plan 1, greenbelt lrg 2nd ~7464 Touchstone Realty 963-0867 loc. '305,500 640 8145 EASTSIDE TRIPLEX Pnde of ownen1h1 p. 3 B H Thr ee unit s w it h 2 Ba . fplc , bl 1n 's fireplaces. on a 45' Woodland school dbl Corona del Mar lot. for gar. w /opener $1'19.500 the price of a duplex Agt 642·4447 Favorable assumable lsl loan. seller w /carry Nice Jbr Home hy Owner' 2nd. Priced at $322,000. Assumt' S70K al !P2', tst down payment $80,000 T D Price Sl00.1100 Call COLLEGE PARK AREA Super m ce home on c ul de·sac st. 3Br+ fam rm FRESHLY PAINTED m & o ut. Two beautiful fireplaces. panelin~. Motivated seller Priced right. Open Sal l2·4 Ill 2512 Duk e Pla ce. Cheshire Really 759· 1877 * *WOODBRIDGE LANllNG B y o w n e r w 1 I I 646·8082 ~~~~~~~~~ coope rate. 675·3141 .-: Fabulo1" J M Peters Landin g Pla n 4 Magnir!cent p11tio w /privalc s pa . Cozy h r€.'p lace in m11ster s uite w /lav1sh adjoining bath. Huge country kllt•hen w /every amenity. Of· fered at S:ns.ooo. Owner will help with fmanclng SOUTH OF HWY Cozy 2 Br. Home. l block from Ocean Bl v d . $225 ,000. B e rn i ta Ellertsen, Brok er, 675-2373 or 770-8598. Cameo Shores Camden Dr . 3 BR. den, 3 Ba. 3 ca r gar 600' entr y w/r etractable roof. Call Two Longs, 760-1397: 613-7761 SPYGLASS CITY & OCEAN VU lmmac. s bdrm home. $640,000. ~~ down. As· s um e lat TO. OWC balance at 12%. By owner, 963-4759. FIXM 3br, 1"4ba home needs "TLC". South o f Hl&hwal. Room for 2nd unlt. 245,000. Call Stopllen Meyers. ~CHARTER P ROPERTIES 1-------• 1uana Point 1026 EASTSIDE 10% ASSUMABLE Owner wUI help rinance 3 Bdrm 2 bath. spa. Only $127,900 64.5-9161 : OPEN HOUSE REAL TY / IASTSIDE DUPLEX Both lrg 3 Bdrm units • never vocnnt. Great starter investment with onl)' l5% down. Offered at $160.~0. Motivated seller. Call now. 540.3868 Whelan Real Estate Beaul l1e ranch style 4br, 2ba, 2000' VA terms. H · sum 5.8% $42.K owe al 123. 1117,500 54$-'1001 IHVISTOll MQmATID NOOOWN Bach Fial. Tot•I ~curl· ty Condo . 1101.000 t7&-0U3 ------ ••••••••••••••••••••••• OCEAN VIEW LOT , ~~,:~ :='!~~ 3 [Ill] \\\>odhrldge m In u l e s t 0 D 8 n a Rcalru llarbor. 3000sq ft. home. 551·3000 Wiii su rbord1nate ' $135,000 714/B98-7fi"7 _ '920 Rar~C'I Pk"~· 1'"1"'' l"IH 1044 Classifi ed Ads. your one • ••. ••. •••••••••••••••• stop s hopping cente r_ FOi.MER MODEL HO.e WITH VllW 4 BR, l ·s tory Turtle Roe k President Home situated on c hoice lot. Assum able loan -creative financing possible. $294,500. Lorraine Reid 551-8700 U·ll) fOtAL Ul'tm&.TOUL u.nananaa nrnwa OMap\ll~Cei.r ~vm-..o.r.w 4040 Oa#IN ~ 47'14 IMTuMa PwlrWQ tmna. CA 9"1'1.8 lm.oe. CA •'14 e HANCH Hf ALTY ~!.>1 ;woo WOODIRIDGE COTTAGE Bodega Plan. 2Ur. 2Ba. fum1ly rm, romer lot. assumab le al 13 •, $158,900 5.51 1183 ~~~~~t£~l~~!r. m~ 4 Bdrm. 21 , Ba 1n In lnl.'0S Colon\' Club Walk to romm Pool. tt-n Ol!t courts, S<'hoolll , :.hop ping Pr1e1.-d to ~ell <'all for details e RANCH REAL TY 551 2000 SPECTACULAR LAKEFRONT Wooubr1dgt.' luxury al 1li. fin~st Vll'WS forever F I 1· x 1 h I 1· r 1 n a n 1· 1 n g $354 .000 Ca ll l.v nn Noah · Town & Country Rea"o" 552-1800 UNIQUE Full\ 11l'tat'hf'd l';11n br1d~t· null bark up lo p,1 rk 1111 t•omC'r h>l' II uge lt\ing rm wmas~J\t' frpll o\ crlk:. sunn) atrium Frml dmm~. lge k1tlh,JBdrm 2t•ar~ar .... ,Ilk LO por1l. ~11~1 . lennl!> tl urr} IJlll'ed at ~1311,000 Town & Country Rea"ors 552-1800 LOOK WHAT WEFOUMD Inned 1 ble find . i.:ood lc1cat111n near park A large ·I bdrm, 211 ha Plan 4 tn Northwood Pla t'l' Immac ulate throughout Ceramic lilt· e11 try. bc·1~c t-:.1q .>ellng and n1t·e wallpapers Exte n:.1vc bnc·k and re ment pat1oi. Low in teresl a~:.umablt· loan $2511.900 , . '+523 CAMPUS Dt· IR~ll~E TURnEROCK Garden llome By Bren. 3Rr .. library. family rm. formal dining r m . 2 frplcs. over 2500 !lq. fl Assumable loan al 9 7181 ; or new loan at 12''. !JS S1lverlcm. 851 9099. Open Jl ouse Sat 1Sun l0-6. Lrg 2 Or 2 Ba. dbl gar. Unt\'. Prk "Bradley" Sl26.9oo. ow e Agt 870 7870 Res 970-2241 Orange Tr<'C Condo. Plan 5, 2 br l bll $"103,500 Cull 552 7~52 af\er7pm La9111ta leach I 048 ......................• THESHA.KES W eathered ceda r shakes. that is Custom designed 3 bdrm. fam rm. 2 baths Exlensi\ e use of wood glass & ceramic tile Beam ce1l· mg. frplc. Sl6.'i,OOO Mission Realt) (714)494-<1731. --- New wood glass. s pa. solar. 6 decks. views Be ac h Village $495,000PP 494-7631 STEAL! WHITEWATER VIEW 3 Bd 2 Ba, room for pool. Low down. Lease option. $270,000. 540-3666 Whelan Re I Estate UNOISTRUCTED_. Ot'ean vie ws A fabulou., buikhng site m a quiet area. The price of this double slze u woode d lol inclu des plans & permits for a. 3500 sq. rt home $205,000 MYSTIC HILlS A he autlfully m :un lained custom home on a la rge lot. Superb cxean views & Catalina s un· seta. 3 bdmu. 2 baths. Seller may help finance. YOU CAN HAVE lovely ocean & hillside views from this 3 bdrm. 2 bath home on a tarae lot. S · 11cn may help with tlnanctne. ~.ooo. 0 a a a c I ' t f • # Offl;J;;,:••A ~M.... IMh. hi tNI T,.._., ,,.... 9170 T ......... ~ tl70 Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15, 1981 I . IHI I s1 ul 90JO ... •••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••u••••••••••• •••••• •••••••••u•u•• •••• •'•••••• .. •••••••• CHEOYLEI Ofr1bon 11' WANTED· Old 15' 0t n· "7114' MttooTnUer, a le . ..._ Se,.tc.. ,... Allto1 forS. ~1/ ~1/ Fl :; rn 1 t h c u r 0 0 a lUKW Onan t>lie. 1en. air Del cNIM ktch. k4.900. travel traHtr to be Wied awn .. rear bib hatch. A Acc......... 9400 •••••••••••••••••••••• Clet11Ct 9120 Cle111Ct 9120 typowrller, Model 300. cooled,rblt,1UUlnboal . Nwpt m our avail. for paru Also utility S40.7083,883-5Cllt. ••••••••••••••••••••••• IMPORTANT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Guud c:ondlllon Sl&O. May be aeen In o~ra· 8'15·90tT trailer 5Z <97e • , ....... NOTICE TO PllTTllST ltftltn l'nll Oalebout Bay & lloo . SU50 OBO . 75·18 Centennial, xlnt READERSANO •571,.IRD 1957 Flyln11 Spur con He ·u•h AAk for Jantit 714-840..6997 Old arey Hob» Cal 14, SELL Idle ltem1 with • cond, sell cont., no hot Dats"' Z ADVERTISERS .. tmental S·l Exceptional Sm.ith ·631.7300 ain't whal 1be Uled lo Dally Pilot Clauitled wtr, otherwise loaded, The price of Item a IM TOWMI 2 lone p11lnl ltll(hl h11ntt · · --Brand new Brookes & be. 2 ulll + lrlr. '600. Ad 12$00/080. 548-9521 motor 11dverl11ed by vehicle llST OFflltl drlv~ Xlnl cund. 126,000 Urtlce Sparkletl~s com Gatehouae Halcyon Aft&PM .~6134 MotorH S-.~ MotorH S.~ +~,.,+a dealera l.n the vehicle OCll5UKZ P ou tr11d1• <llO~l lie•. hol & cold, w. aide compa11 w. extra re-I _., I 0 / -._ 761-5,37 claaalfled »dVHtlslng 684 1902 GE refrl& perfe c t peater. Re1.pnce l'14G. IMP -SportBoatSpeciala ... /S....... 6 .... ,S..... 160 column• does not in· $400 080 1s4 &789 . Our price 1~00. Call al. dei le r dlicount ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• VW Plexlgla.ss front end elude any applicable f.»ckard, 1~ .ioo ZDr An awe r Ad # 4 7 0 , pr1cea. View at our cowling, t90. Maac tor tue1, license, transfer hard top. pwr Sleenng, WANTED Good quality 842·4300, 24 hn. docka, Newport Bee.ch. DO YOU HAVE ONE Toyota. Datsun and vw, fees. finance charces, WUldows & seats Hadio r l' mo t e t e I e Pho n e Lease purchue avatla· OF THESE? SlO ea VW wheel & fees for air poUutlon con-heater. auto trans Fresh answering machine. Wanted. Mere or Suzukj ble: Buynow&SAVEtor s pare l~re. ~ vw rear lroldev1cecertificallona restoration S4 .SOO Cull 646-3670or 646·4121 0 u lb 0 8 rd m 0 t 0 r . holiday & summer fun. window SB. 646-7900 or dealer documentary <213)286·9689 art 6pm Pl-o• & ~ a-o ,loo., ,l50bp Long shaft tor Sea Properties, Ltd. preparation charges un· People wboneed People .29 Model A Town Sedan. ..... • ...... ..,.... v-r 21 T r ansom Marc 673-2810 GetGREENcash leas otherwise speclfled That'swhatthe ••••••••••••••••••••••• Woods~2289 . CorW HITEelephants by the advertiser. DAlLY PILCYr 4 dr, restored. ldl'al fur WU ll LITZER, spinetle K-38 Hull #1, clusic. I "' with a Classified Ad SERVICE DIRECTORY student Sl0,500. ALSO model 4410, two «·note 24' Trlr. fo r SEARAY StD,sloop.alourdocka. Call642·5678 Want Ad Results 642·5678 isaUaboul! "4 6 f ord W oodie . kl'yboards . 13 pedal Boat. Askingll6SO. Sea Properties, Lld. .. restored SIJ.500 ~~~~stio~~%~~~~~~~t~o~'. 642·34~ 642-7796 673-2810 ,, Alltos, Hew 9100 Awto1, Hew tlOO Allto1, Hew 9100 Autos, Hew 9100 pit' w/matctung bench. loots, Powwr 904 23' Albatrou, by owner. ~ ~· ;tf ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• $'100 cash or 1450 de· ....................... $750. Side tie avail -., ,.. C livered 547 1845 33· OWENS BRIG S/F 551·6130eves. ~~~· ~&WJU& g w/Newport Slip, new a ·i. · A B Chase Louis "rusade-. tr•n• & pro-KITE 1017·2 sails, cover , • .. ...... •We w1 II pay $500 advanoe XV Ampiro reproduc ps. Radar, pilot, bait &dolly. S60() •Stability -8 yrs. in the business int: g r and piano . tank,Halonfiresystem. 673-7032 ___ 1 •Netupto$250perweek Completely restored & SJ7 50064~7246 -= r,~:·1~n ~~~.0 Ll~1:1~~~ Bay. or Shore Boat. Na~-•0r:~:.·,.1 9070 Our company presently has 2.6M In __/fl ~ -MOST MODELS PRICED · I ..... •• advance European ''Flv·dnve' • f~:~1n1vte!~.en~~~~l~c~ ~~~kee,:g.1lia~r:;;~~~ a~ Si~e ;~;;;;;;.;~t•••• contractsandwillpeakat4.7M. ~? ~--=l-\.~BELOW FACTORY STICKER! s 2 u, o o o H ammond Lido Shipyard. 900 Lido S8·$l0/ft. Hurry! year-Round lusMesl (Hot .,.. --·-- Oruan & Piano Center Park Dr. NB. 64&-4419 " Just SumlMrl LNM lac.b- l clM 644 8930 '77 Wellcraft Scarab 30' NEW Slip avail thru July We',-. The &perh - IAA6 Emmerson Square Bally Grand, rosewood, h.rnd carved, ivory keys S:.!,IHJO bstofr 642·3122 P1Jnu Mahogany up· 11~ht Beaut. open-grain lmu.h Gd tone. nu keys S950 646·4<>12 llAMMOND ORGAN 8000 SP1 lt'S Leslie . Anima· tum. $2495, 536-4912 lh•tc;y Ross IL es ter ~pinet l 88 keys. Gd cond Sl:!OO b~l ofr 642-6289 SewlfteJ MachinM 8092 ...................•.•. t'f'8rs Zig Zag Sewing rn,1eh w walnut cabinet. $75 !160 IU60 MUST SELL :1 ~e" mg machines and 1il pit'l'l:'S or materia I and many other tailoring ac· t't•ssories. 5S7 8393 _ _ _ I S portinq Gooch 8094 ..••...•.....•..•.••••• c;ulf Clubs Me n 's 'l:orth" estem Pro·Lmc I 2 :l I \\ioods hke new I nmi. 2 thru \\'edge Put l••r $100 646 0191 Eves \nllque Cun Cabinet $.500/0BU fH6 8723 eves Swaps 8096 ...•..•............•... ~.oo worth of Star Rubies lrnm India' Will trade fui .rnt1qucs 1;.i0.8688 TV, Radio, HiFi, Sfere.o 8098 ......••.•...........•. lkJutiful Color TV. 2 yr \\ml) Free delivery :SJ.II! 6'16 1786 l:r' Color TV, remote con· trol. d1{!1tal tuning. Smo w/trlr. very nice, low lSth 3S' Newport hrs. very rast, many 645·8 790, S32·2 305. xtras. twm mere 280's. 547-7425 S22.000759-1_9_13 ____ 1Need SUp or s1de'lie ror Ex r1sh1ng boat with lovely26'SeaRayiJ'INB mooring for sale. Days or Dana Po111t. Call eves 547-6561. Eves 631-1096 or wk nd -497.4342 13' Boston Whaler. 35HP. . Evin rude trlr great Sail w/us free on a Beaut. s hap e . $2250' 080. Hans Christian ~etch If 714·840·5997 you have a SO Live· -aboard slip f or a TRADEWINOYACHTS responsible couple . Call 31'ChnsSF'80S49.9K Or. Gary Brewer 32' Luhrs '70, Dsl. S23K (213)743·Sl33 M·F 8·5 33' La Paz trwlr $49.SK 38' Bertram '80S2<l>K Wanted : slip for 30' 40' Pace SF Dsl 's l l60K Erickson sailboat, love- 47 ·Chris gls dsl. SllOK ly cond. 552-0664 TERMSAVAIL. loots Speed& 67S·9007, evs 960-1725 Ski' FIELDBIOSALE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 28' BERTRAM FB/SF Summer ~amp wants to with radar. radio, deck buy newish 165 hp 110 bail tank, 2 fathos & Fanta~y or other open more t o be so ld to bow. Jtm492·8954 ___ 1 hi g hest bidder over $Z7 .500 Inspect at slip Transporiatioft D 8. S unset Aquatic ••••••••••••••••••••••• Manna bet. 10AM·2PM. Aircraft 9110 Sat, May 16th Matl bids ••••••••••••••••••••••• w 10", deposit to PARSONS'AIR Bertram 28, 15562 Sales·Maml Rentals Chemical Ln. HB 92649. . lnstrucllon Bids will be opened al 12 Tie·~owns avail for 400 noon, 21st of May. Sue-Series ~1rcraft John cessrul bidder will have Wayne Airport, 557 1900. 14 days to present b a I a n c e a n d ·ta k e Carn~n. S•/ possession or vessel. All Rent 9120 other deposits will be re-••••••••••••••••••••••• turned 7l VW CAM'ER Dynamite Wes Ualia pop-top camper Only 54.000 miles with 4 speed , stereo, im - maculate (llS4887) 16' Fiberglass 4 bucket, li g hts , 2 motors ~vmrude JS hp. & 4 h.p, top. trlr. everything goes $1300 Call 548·0850. •26' CHRLSCRAF"T• Recently hauled/ready to go. Cheap!!! 552-9250, 544-7122. Good cond. $4995 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEH 18711 Beach Bl vd. 842-2000 old S300 966-1363 -18' Bay Cocktail cruiser, lOYJ Camper Four Star red & white canopy. with refrigerator and Boats & Marine Character boat parade stove and port·a·polly, Equipmettt winne r 6 7 3 ·SU R F . a II butane. queen sue ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673 7677 bed. sleeps 6 It 1s well General 90 IO . -. laid out for sleeping and ••••••••••••••••••••••• 31 JERSEY S F 73. cook mg. My price 11500. Non pror1 t org needs ALL GLASS. $l3K dwn. 631-7657. \OUI boat. plane. car. owe bal or SISK. l'lr Liberal tax deduc· 675 9007 or eve 96~1725 69 VW CAMPER t1on advantages Bkr. ____ ,Fully carpeted & 21:1 654 2341 loots, Sail 9060 panelled. Must see. (QKK657) 1\vo11 9 ft., w/floor, pump. mtr. mount, $425. r..ts 9020 ------ Seagull4 hp. long shaft S200 645-9020 11 ft Br1t1sh Dory 20 h p Johnson $700 C all 851 9709 Boats, Maintenance I ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2495 '73 21' Schock, sleeps 4. JIM u •11 ... 0 Berth Avail. Acces. ~ " Call544-3278 VOLKSWAGEN 18111 Beach Blvd. CAL 34 Sloop, '69, highly 14~2000 sought racercruiser. ----"'"-----1 $35K Bkr.675-8711. 8' Fibergls shell for 4 Sale, Fmn Good cond. Chevy or GMC truck. Price includes trailer, X In l cond · SSOO / bst ngging & sail. $750/bst 968·8283 ofr Eves536-S863 Motoriudlllits 9140 Service c/020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AMF Alcort "Miflifish" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Marine Electrician l2'. while, com pl. equip, MOPED REPAIR Desinn/mstall /repair like new 893-5037 Your moped ca~ runchk1e1 .. new. Fast service. a ~ual work. 549-2520eve. SWAN 431-s&S design, Larry, 645-&S29. Boots MariM maintained & equipped ~---- Eqtdpmt'llt 9030 to the highest standards. 79 Honda Express. xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• complete B&G nav. in· cond. 1250 Call :Cler \1 arine FM 'VHF, new str. Deal direcL& save. Spm: 963-8158 Mar w an le n n a . S 2 2 5 Call Answer Ad 11469, Motorc~/ 675 9961 eves 64.2·4300, 24 hrs. Scoo 9 I SO I-::::::? ' FS SH ••••••••••••••••••••••• J7'fiber~canoe, /'V 14 AM ~Fl '79 YAMAHASRSOO 64&-"647 CLEAN. 11200/0BO. 979-9689 493-8797 aft. 6. 9800 Auto1, Hew 9800 '74 Honda 750, 29.000 mi, ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••• •••••••••••••• r uns good. c1ean. UBAR lne>lpens1ve and built to stay that way. 2480 Hnr Blwt. at F•, Cata Mm 54l1457 $1100/ofr. 631·2m9 eves '79 CX-500 Custom Hon- da, Calrlng & cargo box. $2000. 964..Q89. '81 XL500S 11725: '77 PE250 S650; RM50, $350, all excellent. 495·4932 '75 Yamaha 650 newly reblt, bucket seat, ex- tras $1300. 891-522:5. '80 Kawasak.I 750 LTD. 6000 ml. Like new. 498-5173 Aft 5 '78 Yamaha YZ80 Uke n,w. SSOO. 380 Enduro '74. dlrt only, $600. Hon· da 50 mlnl-blke, 1100. 645-7176 rH--.s.t./ .... ,s ...... fl60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WECAHSB.L YOURR.V. 558-lJCM RENT : 22' lu1t. mtr home. Slpa 6, Mll-conl. 1295/wk. + a• ml. M0--8515. 1'ESP. COUPLE wama t.o rent MU·con\alned v•n or 11-to ft. motor ho me, approx. July u.11. can~m. We encourage you to compare us witn others -Come 1n and check over our RESERVATION CHARTS We Meed Mon 1979-81 M1ni-Motorhomes c\ Bubble-Top Van Conversions Please Call or Write for Info On leaseback of Your Own AV or • RV Rctntol1, Inc. 11111 15092 Harvard Ave lrvme, Ca. 92714 (71 4) 559-4446 MODEL STOCK SERIAL NUMBER ~MIER STICKll PRICE YOUR PRICE DISCOUNT MODEL STOCK SERIAL NUMalR NUMall STICKEi YOUR PllCI ltllCI DISCOUNT ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's ALL BRAND NEW 1981 's RABBIT 6708 052259 RABBIT 6631 023153 RABBIT 6988 100847 RABBIT 6716 056305 RABBIT 6834 073409 RABBIT DIESEL 7001 113430 RABBIT DIESEL 6687 048175 RABBIT DIESEL 7082 118693 RABBIT DIESEL 6886 079259 RABBIT DIESEL 6888 080048 JmA2DR 7341 287534 JmA2DR 7342 293660 JmA4DR 7338 287636 JmA2DR 7378 383997 JmA4DR 7131 322481 CONVERTIBLE 7412 011 765 CONVERTIBLE 7 420 010336 CONVERTIBLE 7428 013880 CAMPER '78 HONDA ACCORD ..... ....M. •• ....,....... ... ~----~ -· .. ""'" 11 ... 11,.. ~ fllfr91JI '74 V.W. THING • .,....,... ... .....,... •••• c: .................... ....... le fl .... (9UJl.wl '77 MERCURY BOBCAT .) 0..f 4 '"~' 4111'4 .......... ~~-I hMit•t .. , ...... , ..... ,.. , .. ., .... , '7 4 HONDA CIVIC ..._, .. , ................... Qftliflt ..... ..._., <4.-""'"· IHJl!catcl '76 PLYMOUTH ARROW 4 ....... 4J&M .......... ,....... ...,...,. •l•rl i~ -.......... ,,.,,." '7 5 VW RABBIT ' ..... ·~ ........ .., ...... ,..., .. ..,.. lfllt.....,, t•••MfiVl '77 VW RABBIT ' ~ 4 ....... ,, ..... -.0 ... 1~ '"" ~·"· ....... ,..,..,, ,,..,.,.._ t•••ret• '76 CAPll 11 •• ,.L ........... ....,, ...... _..,..,......,,. ..,.,.,_, -•Ntyl l--.(~ I '7680 '6896 PICKUP 6977 107224 '7545 '6595 $6730 t5998 s732 PICKUP 7384 070213 '7395 '6695 s700 '6750 15999 PICKUP 6892 077131 '7870 '6810 $1060 '7645 '6649 $996 PICKUP 7069 126621 177 15 '6695 s1020 '7400 '6635 PIClCUP DIESEL 7397 098981 '7860 '7595 '7775 '6888 $887 PICKUP DIESEL 7 435 128026 18035 '7695 17735 '6998 5 737 SCIROCCO 7166 020771 19225 '7995 5 1230 1695 "6977 SCIROCCO 7194 020835 59265 s8095 18250 '7583 SCIROCCO 7309 020478 59885 s8771 $1 114 58360 '7686 SCIROCCO 7195 023115 19265 18095 $1170 18480 '7589 $891 DASHER DIESEL 6918 902172 110,505 9265 $1240 18545 '7589 DASHERDIESEL 7154 910912 sl0,715 19395 18700 '7698 s1002 DASHER DIESEL 691 o 901448 110,610 19459 5 1151 18995 '7997 s999 VANAGON 7040 033238 111 1655 110,195 5 1460 18960 '7881 '1079 VANAGON "L" 7140 077136 111,550 •9995 s 1 5 5 5 1101395 19419 $976 VANAGON 7375 085774 sl l,140 19795 '1345 110,290 19131 s11 59 VANAGON 7138 077379 111 ,700 110,195 '1505 110,290 s9286 $1004 CAMPER 6928 029983 114,535 sl2,888 5 1 64 7 114,555 112,995 s 1 560 113,905 '12,495 s 141 0 Mlw.Mc ... '73 FORD PINTO -... -.-..,, .... .._..-...... ........ -.~~JU) '79 MG "I" CONVT ·~ .. ·-·-·-""'-· ._,. ..... °""' "·--(N-1""1 '75 PORSCHE 914 ............ ·--·-·•-111ri .... _ _..l,...(llUVQI 74VWBUS · •• ,...._. ilhol ~ ..... ""'·· ...... , ..... u .... ....... tkt1tl , .... ,, •• 79 DODGE OMNI ...... ......... '"'" ... tr. .. ...., ......... °""' ......... .....,.........," ........... , ... '71 VW KARMEN GHIA .......... ,... .................... '"'"'' 80 CHEVY MONZA IWHh-..._lt, fl cfi., • ,,..-, tflM ...... , ......... hrMf•f', '---............ H.ft•111• llitllly,(1•tt••) '78 DATSUN 510 ......................................... ~, Uf'\.-f CU1WMJ) '78 CHEV LUV ..... c....-..... " .................. ,.... ,.... ........ 1...,.....cv•,n1 '77 PONT TRANS-AM ,......, ........... ,....., ......... --""_,. ..... _, ..... ~._,.-... -~ ....._. .... $64 5 0 :?!.~~~.2/J..!-c;?.!t.~ .. ~-$ 5 47 5 • .............. _. "" ...... 1. -· ••• ~ •• wt• tlret & .._.,, • ••tfl .. ,.t c.Nllt~ • .... ~ .... U140 :~~!.I!!~---~ $7350 ·--·lo'"''-f1J1DOl 1»41') '77 IMW 3201 . .... ~ ... -................. ----..-----....... f!Moll.11"""" •a2so "'"'' d I . c n a e :J t s F4 H/F Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, Mey 15, 1981 nteb tHO Tnteb tHO flJO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PUMA . 1.078 4!xot lc '211 r;•ord Phaeton $4200. 8rulllan 1mpc>rt, mint '28 Sport Coupe moo. ta c t o r y con d . L d 675-3175 ml.S9500. C714'7M-11M -------1 S,-cW '79 Chny, ~•T <'lift, dlll , L-.... 11 tO PIS, PH, A/C, 2tM W'C_,. ml, xlnt cond '6300/ofr. Low ~I 644 isss. 844 un lt104tp&...ll.JPd. v.... t570 Po ra c he J 9 s 9 "iiiA' S~rts. ltoce, c . loch 954 Coupe. Fresh prof••••••••••••••••••••••• around up restontlon. '7S Bradly GT 23K mt. Red/tan Int. Ca Car. no clean, many extras. ru1t $11,SOO C:U3 l $4000/firm.S4Saa8 286·9689 aft 6pm D..._ Plcla "' • • •••••••••••••••••••••• TN ..... dous '69 S uperVan . pnld, \ 4 E 0 ( ( r l 1 s ..... m stove, rerr, side/back M•-'aww u,1727:1ps 4, SJ 39S M•D ... ~... w ~1 ~ tStO Porsche, 1983 3568 coupe. 4 Wheel Drivn tHO BARWICK DAT~UN ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fresh pror. restoration. •••••••• ••••••••••••••• Silt/tan mt. Ca. Car, no '79 Toyota 4X4, xlnt cond. rual. Many xtnu $12,SOO many xtras. \an Jva~ ( ap"'' ~ 8 31 -33 11 WE PAYTOPOOLLAR ror top used cars · fore ign, domestics or c lassics. rt your car Ill extra rlean, see us (213)286-9689aft 6pm 847·3716 •CHEV.MU .. I I TOHSTAl<E 12 fl model with llft&ate, duals. air cond , H.D springs, pwr steering, aux. tank & more ! Workhorse complete! (3961 l. OHL Y $12.491 HOW ARD Ct.no._. Dove/Quall St.s NEW PORT BEACH 833-0555 ---1978 El Camino, very' clean 29.000 mi. every xtra. $53SO. 642-7404 Ron '79 Toyot a P ick Up. Regular tied. standard trans . 644 llSl or 640 7293 '71 Dats un w tamper. nu tires & nms. Best offer. Art 5. 752-9001 '65 Chev panel truck 3Z1, 4 spd, amtrm stereo, nu llrea, nu clutch 548·6508 bme957-2071 wrk. '6SFORD $400 645-8746 F~. #I lftOr-..C-'Y I 2925 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 979-2500 WANTED!! CIHn:- T1akl!! Call Jim HoCJGn or Mike Lake C re•ier Moton 835-3171 HIGHIUYER Top dollars for Sporti. Car~. Buj?s. Campers, 914 's. Audi s Ask for U C MGR JIM'MARIHO VOLKSWAGEM 18'7 ll Beach Blvd HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-2000 '80 DODGE 'DSO ' PU The fastest draw in the auto, p/s, ale. stereo, Wst. .a Daily Pilot sharp, S55006"6"6149 Classified Ad 642·5678 ~.°.~·.~.-.": ....... !~.~~1~-:t.°.~·.~ ... ~.! ..... !~~~ ~~ .. ~ ... ~ ..... ~.!~.~~ ~.°.~ .• ~ ... ~ ••.... ~!~~~ n;;g:::;:;;;;:::;;:;::;;;;:;:;:;;;;;;:;;;:;::;;iiiiii~I NEW 1981 LYNX 79 DATSUN 310 Only U ,000 mlles, AM /FM c assette , velour In terior , beautiful metallic blue. (&48X18). HWY EST '80 PINTO ' WAGON 29 '80 MERCURY COLONY PARK NEW 1982 LN-7 EST EPA 46 HWY EST '80 ZEPHYR 2 DOOR Economi cal 4 cyl.. It's like a new one & Economical • cyl. engine. air cond , AM/FM stereo taP9. Only 11 .000 mlle1. mUJt .. 11. (SOtZEE)! AM /FM c111ette . hit 1ust about r1d10, ai r cond .. everything. Leatf\er power steering & 1t'1 Interior, stereo, tilt like new. Only 16,000 wheel, •PMd control, mites . ''Ford air, 9 pauenger. Exec u t I ve Car,·· "Ford Executive Car." $4695 i49so i78ss , $4aoo ~':'!~~-~ .... !~~~~·.':'!~ ....... I~·.'.~ ....... ~ ... ~":!~.~ ....... ~~·.'.~ ....... """'"II DUY Or \<"II Your C it-on Import On Con\lqnmrnt'" Coll Our U\rd Car Monaq .. r TODAY'" 811 -2040 4 9S-4949 Soddleob oclc BMW Minion Viejo WEIUY CLEAN CARS AMDTRUCICS CONNELL CHEVROLET .'X')< lt.1rl1"r llh d I I " I \ ,, ~ :. \ 546-1200 TOP DOLLAR PAIDfOR GOOD&CLEAM USED CARS! miracle mazda 21 SO Hwbor ll•d. Cotta MeH 645-5700 WANTED! Late model Toyota~ and V ol vos Ca ll u :; OAV'" • , ........ lf•d. c ......... . "•4'·'10) -S40-901 Top Dollar Paid t7 I 2 HoMe t727 Ponce.. '750 V._wOCJI" t770 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• For The Best Buy Or Lease Deul In Oranee County Come See U1 Today' 2840"l Muq1uerite Pkwy Mission \'icjo Avery Pkwy. exit (off S Freeway l 111-2040 49S.494t Closed Sundays CREVIER $1 SI 6 H OAOWA'I' SANTA AHA 835·3171 THI! UlT,_.AU Oi.IVING IUCHINt •USEDIMWs• '7620024apd (06031 '79320! S IR (5894 l '79 S28i SIR (1(1761 ·111 320IA <01151 CloHdSWMla 76 IMW2002 4 speed. Very clean local car. (123RKLl $5895 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEM t8711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 Th• Most Excitlnc) Port Of Your IMW Purchow Or LHHCoulcll• McLaren BMW!! hyOrl..eoM By Ow PhoM Pion! (7141 522-5333 Capri 9715 ••..................••. '77 Civic, htchbck. :ll,000 '70 Tati• 911 F. Clt'un mL s 11pd, amttm. JClnt .:na Beatoffer cond. 968-3411 49' 1300 i9 Prelude AJr, sunrf, Porache '73, 9 11T. stereo cau. loaded Xlnt slvr /blk, 11lr. H111u. An cond 17200,494-1300 dial Serv1rr, 1mrnuc l'O n d 760 13311vrn . JOC)'Nlr t7l 7~ 1S36 d11y)j ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 914 New ~nl( & '67 Ja&ullr 3 8 MK llS all clutch, AC, cl~an Xlnt orig. very well m11ln mpg Must stdl liiJOO talaed Must Sucr1ricc 498 ~J62 846·M70 '72 914, Kint cond Xtra., '64 XKE Coupe. Xlnt. Isl SS,400 or best uHcr ~ taka 1l. 499 2883. 646 070l,S38·ll.JO work 896 1992 Beau sliver grey, rl'cond eng. comp overhaul ID April 4 new M1l·hehn Tires 69,000 m1 $9,000 675 SD ,67$-1723 Ko""°"" Ghio 9714 '64 3S6C fo'1rsl $37SO tu kc'>' Run!l grellt 970 W 19th St CM 64&8SZ1 Rare l!i769l2E Por In m1 . xlnt cond. 552·1W99 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rofts Roye. 9756 '69 Ghia. xlnt cond Offer ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt Part y Ed Cull #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. 5JO.S551 Moada 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79M aid a GLC Sport Xlnl cond. 3S to 42 m1 MPG $4200 or best offer 97S· 1637, 857-4545 IRR ~~~VER ROLLS·RDYCC I MO J.tmt>oree New-1k•<h \'-----'~ CLOSED SUND.a.VS Mere.ct" lem 9740 ?!'.~ ............. !?.~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •HEW '81 MIZ• 2400-lOOD + SO HUGE DISCOUNTS Earle Ike's TRANSPORTATION CONSULTANTS 645-4288 Gary An HORIZED LEASE DIRECT! 1981 SAAB TURBOs BEACH IMPORTS ~18 Dove Strt•t't NEWPORTBEACll 752-0900 79SAAI Dynamite sunroof (ii.I': l>edan Loaded with .ill xtras Low mile~. 'harp original <997YS!\t 1 71 VWOASHElt Thia 11 .ia l(rr11t htth l't'onomy 1purt c;.i1 <984UJX1 ll!I hilr11"'m prart'd a. magn~ pontiac 549.4300 2MO II arbor lll ..it l'a1r t'o:.ta Mt-~J 80VWDlfSR Dynamite L Modt'I i! door 4 ~peed with rac tory J tr Vt'r) '>h.irp 1719ZSM l $6'95 JIMMARIMO VOLKSWAGEN llJ7 I l Beach Hlvd 842-2000 MARK HOWARD VOLKSWAGEN L;.irge s cl t·< t 11111 ul \'olk'>v. a.icn.'> "1th < ''"' pt'tll I\~ prll'C'> @ ... HfwJt Uou.ia,d VOLKSWAG(N INC 534-4100 13731 Ha rbor Garden Grove 80 VW SCIROCCO /lutomattl', ,11r <lnl) KOO() m lies I WIJ4iilll $7995 JIM MARINO VOLKSW.AGEH 11171 l Beal'h Ill\ u 842-2000 80VWR.ABBIT Cu!>tom 2 door I '>1>1 •·d 1-'Jl'lor) atr. 0111) i(KMJ U<'(UH I rTlllt'l> 0111.(111.ol & ~hat fl c IAOI~> $5695 ForYourCar ! ·16Capn II, auto, VS, al e, JOHMSOH Ir SOH 45K m1, fm rass, snrf. .\I EHl'El>ES Ht-:'Z IH:ALE(( $6995 JIM MARINO VOLKSW.AGEH IR7 I I Bea<'h Bl\!I 842-2000 Linco~M.rcwy S3600 64_0.1128 2626 Harbor Blvd" •·74 Capri. 4 spd, a r. re Costa Mesa 540.5630 liable & looks good 11:11 17111 1!15 17110 ·79 300 SD. s 1hcr JIM MARINO VOU<SWAGEN 18711 Beach Bini 842-2000 We Poy Sl900 646 515 1 OVER Datsun 972() ••••••••••••••••••••••• greytblk Sunr-f. hkl' nu Toyota 9765 6000 m I $26.750. µp. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 955·2699 '(iO t.5 \'W left & n~hl rlovr. i3 ldt dom ~'" l'Olt h \\ l~tcm 'l \It• "hi rim~ for SUIJl.'f l\1•1·tl< S20 l' ;.i :'>-Ill !17 44 Btu.look r or Your Good VW, Porsche or Audi 78 DATSUN280Z Dynam1te4 speed coupe Gold beauty. very rlean t83!1HDDl '77 CBJC.AGT ·73 45~E. loaded, lo m1. Llrtback 26,000 ma, jloorl same body as '80 300 T urbo Os l Sl0,900 cond, $4375 73CH~47 73 VW BUS D)n.1m1tt· ~ i.ix1·<1 .\\ \( "h1·t·b Tuµ ltunnt·1 IOJl!~li:! I ~IJB§ VW ~PORSCH E-AUDI 445 E Coast H1way a t Bayside Drive N<'wport Beach 673-0!!00 Premium pr1res pa 1d for any used ra r trore1Kn or domestic l ID good cond1tton See Us f'lrsl! ~~·.·::~ ...... . 9705 •••....•............... LEASE DIRECT! 1981 ALFA SPIDERS BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEWPORT BEACH 752-0900 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 78 AUDI FOX Dynamite 2 door sunroor with automatic & air Very clean CS3SXDFl $4995 JIMMARIHO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 '72 Audi 100, 4spd, SlOOO or best offer . 673-1732. ---- 77AUDI Dynamite Fox 2 door s unroor. 4 speed , air. Very clean. C779SP Zl $3895 JIMMARJHO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd 842-2000 1978 Audi SOOO silver melellk. Lo mi. Full lux ury, pwr package, 2 wa y e l ect s un rf. AM /FM stero cassette. $7900 . 645-1804 ---'74 Audi lOOLS , auto. SUD· r oor,. air . new eng $1950/080 494-4816 ------IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST Sales-Service-Leaslng Roy Caner.Inc. Rolla Ro)'ce BMW 1540Jambotee Newport Beach &4().6444 $6995 JIMMARJHO VOU<SWAGEM 18711 Bearh Blvd 842-2000 SEE OUR 11.,PAGEAO ON THE FOUR DEALER IMPORT PAGE IN TODAY'S PAPER NEWPORT DATSUN 888 Dove Street NEW PORT B EACll 83J.-OSS5 • '72 240Z, new paint & up 496·4162 '78 2400, loaded, hkc new, 67.000 m1. $14.000 PP. Inman, 549-8867 wkd~:. '56 190SL, restored ron cours~ 99'~. both tops. beautiful blue. $15,000 760·8860 '63 220SE COHV. 631-2244 966 1055 MB '78, 300 CD. Ma vle yello " Orig owner, sharp. sun Snrf Loaded $17,000 968-4254.894 41133 1970 Mercedes 28~ S1her full pwr .. air, am fm stereo xlnt cond $4975 497 2978. 496-8011 '68 M B 25<6L Rds tr. rbll eng. new rlutch, elcun. or ig tnt a1c, otspd. S14K (213)427 1590 821M 8 JoaiD Turbo DSL. I loaded. snrf. under 350 mi. sal'n fice sale more than 10', oU List price pp (714 l559-ffi52 hol. anth gray. 74.000 MG 9742 m1. susp kit, s teering ••••••••••••••••••••••• kit. custom stereo, $4500 MUST SELL! PP. Christopher Ben· 1969 classic 6 cyl MGC netl. 5S7·2'792. ( • • C E E · · ) GT 2 + 2 DATSUN DIF.SEL ENG Coupe. Only built for a 6 cyl LD·28, fits z. S3495 cllm111toecd7~~e1 ! °::~.~~( w /trans 953-9316 a °" """' or · '76 Mdl 280Z-.-r -t r MGI 9744 .e , a1 • s e o. ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt in & out. $5475 1977 MGB ~.!._ ---New top, stereo '73 Datsun 610, 39.000 ma. Call8SJ·9:E2day run s xlnt, new t ires. 675-4869wkends $14001080. 6.11-1465 '76 MGB. or ig ad ult ·73 Wgn 610, low m 1, aut owner. 39.000 m1 Wht. great cond. new paint. a lways garaged Sec lo $1600. 646 1355 believe $4000. 552-~7 '78 2llOZ. a uto. air. '79 MGB 12K mi, am/Cm AM IF M stereo cassette, cass, l ugg rack. wht Xlnt cond 80,000 m1 w t b lk 1nt. xlnl cond $5900/080499-3836 $6400 851 _507_3 __ '74 Datsun Wagon great P•~t 9748 car ! Great MPG ! $1500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 840-4853 _ LEASE '73 240Z · $5700, m any ex· tr as 675-9981 Flat 972 •••••••••••••••••••••• '78 Spider l24 Convert. Red/blk top. 56p. 32,000 mi Am /Fm stereo Cass. xlnt cond. $5800/080 893·8Z16 Eves. HOftda 9727 •••••••••••••••••••••• YISfTYOUR ORANGE COAST HONDA HEAD9l.1ARTERS TODAY!!! UNIVERSITY SALES &SERVICE OLDSMOltLE HOHDA GMCTIUCKS 2850 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 540.9640 DIRECT! 19 8 I PEUGEOT TURIOs BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove Street NEW PORT BEACH 752-0900 ----74P~EOT 504 DIESEL! Sunroof sedan . Pa pers o n e n gine. x tra clean. (059LFF) $3995 JIMMAllNO VOLKSWAGIEH 18711 Beach Blvd. 142-2000 Pone he 9750 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '75 Ponca. 914 546-0248 '77 Porsche 911S Targa. '78 2002 BMW. l\M /FM Cauette, s unroof, low mlleau. Xlnt cond . '78HondaWacon. S'TOOO. Call 64CH813 aak 12995 Xlnt cond. Low mlle1, loaded. 1 owner. $18.000. Del Mar.1·481-5511 ror Kai. 648-0881 '77 Tar1a, white w/tan , Int. 40,000 ml. air, '79 3201, Sierra Bela•. 11 Accordt nu en1. ou AM /FM cus. PW. new 1unroot, hnmac, A•· lltts • bru. Am/Fm 8 tlrea 7" whit 6'0<9429 pu,m;~~:=, ~v:~chaae. ~~9o~~·=IM:':::;; ·n 012 Wbke 0 new 1ea\I, • · t4t4·4&f4 Patty. am/fm cua, rbll en1. 1'f BMW '7S3l: 'hb over • l n t con d In I o u t lease SilO/rdO Perfect ..,. Honda CVCC Waa. ~'100/0808'15-34.24 ~dltlon PrP.&M-41M. 40,000 ml. X1lll ~d ln· --------• llde out, amlfm alero '71 lllS, whl. air. pwr ca11ttl0. -Nice wheela & wlndowa. crulae, anrf, Uree S•,HO 080 AM/FM c.as., $16,975. aMJU aft 5. uz.ar., Jim~ 75 Cehc:a GT, 5 spd. beaut cond Must see $3400 080 846-8924, 840.4556 bef llA M, aft 4PM '71 Corolla. Rblt l'ng C.:111, $ 8 0 0 • r I rm <: I t• .. n trans portation !157 M86 '77 Corolla S R5 air. AM FM stereo $3100 552-9507 9770 ...•.•................. '69 V W Bug fh•hutll. am .rm tapes S2fiOO 497 5Z17 after 6 Autos, Used $2995 JIM MARINO VOLKSW.AGEH ltl711 lkdt'h Uh ti 842-2000 '7!1 \'W R;,ihh11 till'"' I mill<· 5UmJJJ.! Sunrii<tf air xtr:t ta11k '>IC'I •'" 1:11n" X Int Sb.<im 610 6215, ~166 177!1 '75 VW [)cl .. hl'I ~UST SEl.I \1 /\KJo;cwn.H 1;.121111!• H VW Wgn 412. 1·ng !.h.11 ax ll' lll·nl S751l !IGO -1342. IWi rnm .Autos, Uwd ...••.••........................•............. DAVID J. PHILLIPS Proudly Presents ... "FANTASTIC DEALS!" 1979 PONTIAC UMAHS SAF.UI ~ WlliQOf' f C"ffH\Cllltf I Wk>m.9hC 00.... .... iif"tG ... (OfW;Ml(trt wio .-e1 ... 11ooto•01$t•$111 D.J,,.'1 SAU NICI 55395 1974 FORD "HTO WAGOM ~uc eu COt"'CMIOlt•no 'aa'° '"'OOIOI c.ar,,.-°""' >• s.u .......,..,. ... ll$121AI D.JJ'.'1 SAU NICI 1974 CADILLAC SEDAM DlllMAMCI • 400" .... CONStttOf"•nQ. 00--#lf\CIOWI ~ t(lnlrOI ~ OOOf' -"""' --~ lltt .,..,,., ........ .,_ -"11:!$ Ot·Q"'• .,.. ... (1161.,t,I D.J.,.'1 SALi NICI '3295 1976 IUICIC HYL..4H CUSTOM • OOOt I cyHndef 1utomeuc PoW9" •teer""O ••t ~ .... noow-. --IOCloa lilt -"''!MOO (tlll&-Aj D.J.,.'1 SALi r.ICI 53195 1979 PONTIAC •R.U4D 'llXSJ • ~. •lllOmellC, -•-"9· -.. .-6 ... , -· -. power -loella, *°"'"' --llh c:tulM T·too Blue -PM' llO'Tf.AJ D.JJ'.'1 SALi r.K:f 1978 OLDSMOBILE CUTU SS ~llMI -_._.... ... bltwrtl,,,_,_ .... tom -. -IOI> D 160 ,,,_ 91.,. 8-_,., 115111 D.JJ'.'1 SALi NICI 55295 1979 CHEYIOLIT M.Al.llU CL..4SllC ·-·-_ _....._ .......... c..oiom-· 1C1W -..... 9oc* t4IOO 116411 D.JJt.'1 SALi PllCI 54295 1911 IUICK HYL.AH~ . .....-......... --· c-....... .,._... -•II\ -c--. ._.., l'tl --.... .,,.., l7too Gtl»AI D.J.l.'t I.All P1UCI ' -----~-----~~-:--........... 1111111111 .................... .. llliUll lllCH /SDUTH CDllT Dally Pilat FRIDAY, MAY 1S, 1981 STOCKS BS TELEVISION B6 COM ICS B7 , ..... SIA Japan leads world in importation of U.S. farm commodities ... B3 0 ~ 0 County hom.e shoppers said 'affluent' By FREDERJCKSCHOEMEHL Of tlle.,...., 11'1• ''"' In a s1x ·Co unty Southern California region, home buyers in Or ange County are the least in· rtuenced by high mortgage in· terest rates when it comes to pure basing a new home. This is among findings con· tarned m a consumer attitude study or 1,600 home shoppers con· du.cted by the Building Industry Assoc i a ti o n o r So u t h e rn California The study, conducted at more than 130 ne w home s ites in Or ange, Los Angeles, Ventura, Ri vers ide, San Bernardino and San Diego counties round "the most significant characteristic dirrerentiating Orange County fro m the rest o f Southern Califor nia is the volume of af· fluent home shoppers." The median income or the average Orange County home shopper was $48,000, compared to $39.000 in the six-county region. according to the study. Coupled with a median equity in an existing home of $79,000, the Orange County shopper ls "well qualified" to purchas e a borne with a median price or $152,000, the study said. This compares to a fi gure or t \ 18,000 in the six·county region. "Given the income . . Orange County is indicated to be able to support a higher percentage of sales in the $150,000-plus market than any other area m Southern Caliromia." ll was noted in the study that in the "price range or Interest" category fully 10 percent of shop· pers In the south Orange County area indicate d inte r est in purc hasing hom es valued at $300,000 or more Forty-two percent oC those sur· veyed in Orange County were de· Cine<! as belonRinJt to the "luxurv family group. ' In the entire sur· Terraces are cut at Lzon Country Sa /a n m I rvine in preparation for 10 .000-person amphitheater Amphitheater set for August opening? Seeking lo open in time for the !>um me r concert season. de velopers of a I0.000-spectator amphitheater in Irvine are plan n1ng to have the facility ready for use with et tempornry shell b:v Aug I Irvine Meadows Amphitheater Partner Tim Stradt'r says that it wi ll take about one year for lhe pl·rmanent shel l to be con· structed A total or 5,000 !Wals 11re now hl'ln g installed In t he am Village Laguna set s legal war on Alis o Viejo Village Laguna, a c1v1c or ganazat ion m Laguna Beach, has st·l up a legal defense fun d com m1tlc(' lo ra1Sl' money for a tourt appeal over the Aliso VieJo dt•Hlopmenl. The or ganization hopes lo r.i1se a $28,000 war chest to fund 1b laws uit against the Aliso Vie· JO Co. and the county Board of Supervisors through the Fourth District Court of Appeals in San Bernardino. phitheate r a l Lion Country S af ari off the San Diego Freeway at Irvine Center Drive. T here will be room for another 5,000 people to sit on terraces be· ing cul out of the hillside at the site The amphitheater is in the fli ght path of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. An agreement has been worked out between Manne 0Hac1als and the am· phitheater developers, aimed at insuring jeL'> won't disturb con· cert performances. The a~reement features a pro· vision that concerts will be can· celle d on s hort notice if the Marines decide they will have to fl y over the a mphitheater during a scheduled performance. However, the partnership de· velo pi ng the amphithe ater <which includes investors from the Newport Beach·based Koll Co and Li on Country Safari) has contended that the record shows rew jets fly over the am· ph1theater sites on weekend nights when most concer ts will be held Amphitheater spokesmen are billing the facility as having "t op flight " entertai nment s imilar to that offered by the Universal Amphitheater or lhe Greek Theater. T icket prices a nd concert schedules were unavailable FIXED SEATING PICNIC AND CONCESSION AREA SERVICE YARD VI P PARKING SERVICE ROAD TICKET OFFICE AHO ENTRY GATE------> Irvine Meadows Amphitheater grounds are to include picnic area. 4.000·vehicle parking Lot and caricession stands. vey a rea only 'l7 pe rcent were so r ated. Following art-other findings containedinthe~urvey Orange County had the highest percentage or shoppers who own their own home. 82 per· cent, compared to 74 pe rcent Cor the six·county region Orange county shoppers the survey said " are the most de pe ndent on a healthy resale market to perm1l buyers to utilize their equity transfer <for the> purchaseofa ncwhome " ··Wi th a n <Jver age household of 2 9 persons and a median age for the head of a househole, a qua lity house, of sophisticated design, will be needed to attrack this arfluent discretionary buyer " T he study 1s available lo as· sociat1on members for $275 per copy. and to non members for $350 Court rebuked Sheriff says deputies 'confused' By GLENN SCOTT Of Ille Delly f'IMC S ... tt O r a nge County Sheriff Co r oner Br a d Gales ha s criticized the slate Supreme Court and claimed the best rem cdy for it would be the add1 t ion of Super ior Court J udg(' John Trotter Trotter 1s an Orange County Judge who Gates said he un derstands 1s one of three people being considered bv Gov. Ed mund G Brown Jr to fill a vacancy Brown nominated Los Angeles law yer Sam Wi llia ms. but Williams turned down the offer this week Another Loo., Angeles JUri!>t, Otto Kaus. an appeals court judge, was appointed last. week Two va(·a nc1cl> on the seven judge court Wl'rl' created when Wilham Clark accepted an ass1s tant secretary of state post with the Reagan administration and Wiley Manuel di('d in Janua ry Speaking at a luncheon in El Toro !>ponsored by the Youth Ser vice Program Inc. Thursday, Gates said Trotte r is a "prac tic a l thinker," a t rait he said is lacking among fi ve of the six r urrent j ustices, including Ka us He said the only other com mon sense JUS tlce is Frank K Richardson. who Gates admitted mig ht be a lat tic t oo con 11cr vative But Richardson's problems don't bother Cates the way the other justices' do. lie said the Supreme Court and a ppellate court Judges have fors~ken their primary functions. "They are in search for error rather than in search for t ruth ." he cla1m('d T he Supremt• Court. he said, has been more interested 10 ways of excluding evidence from court rooms than in stewarding a syste m i n tend e d t o pu t criminals in jail. He claimed constant revisions and restric· tions passed down by upper courts have hurl the morale of la w enforcement officers and handcuffed their effecti veness "They're confusing the hell out of my deputies, .. he said "They're changing the law so rast. we can't keep up wi th it " Gates cited several examples of what he call ed absurd upper court d<:cisions One was a caM' in the Central Valley where an officer stopped a driver for goi ng the wrong way on a one· way street. The officer. he said, felt som ething was wrong with the drive r and ran a check on lhe license plate The check revealed the man was wanted on three robbery warrant!> in an adjacent county, PUSHED BY SHERIFF Judge John Trotter Gall'!> said, so the offi cer arrest· ed the driver But the district court of appeal threw out the case. Gates said. becetuse Judges said the officer d idn't havl' enough cause to check the driver 's record. Gates said hP doesn't think Trotter would do such things. He told an audience of about 75 peo· pll' to write Brown 's orrice, talk to friends and lobby for Judges who will take more practical ap· pro[tC'hes tu the law Ma ny 1n the crowd we r e emvloyed b.> the Youth Sery1ce Program, a non·prof1t umbrella oq~anization that conducts pro· g r ams a imed a t h e lping j u venllei. a void t he JUSt1ce sy~tem I\ l ~o on hand was Orange County Mun1c1pal Judge J ohn Griffin. pre!>1ding Judge at the Orange County South Municipal Court Griffin s aid arte r the speech that most trial judges agr l'l' with Gate s a nd feel restricted by upper court rul· ings But hc disagreed with Gat s' assessment that Ka us, th<' ewly appointed Justice, will be nrcceptiv<' to law enfo rce· men I Said Gnrfin "I thmk Otto is going to sur prise a lot or peo pll' .. Ar t displ ay~d T he Coastline Community Coll ege Artists Association is dis· playing wate rcolors by Ellen Prince of Newport Beach at the Coast Community College Dis· trict headquarters. 1370 Adams Avt•. Costa Mesa, until June 15. /\liso Viejo has received coun ty a pproval to construct 20,000 dwelling units on undevt<loped Mo ulton Ra nch land behind Laguna !leach. Vi llage Laguna sued the coun· ty and Aliso V1e10 nearly two vears ago. c laiming environ· m<'nlal documents were inade· quate on the project and that the county failed to make legal find· 1ngs required for pro1ect ap· prov al. 393-acre Crystal f.ove Park addition hacked Norman Grossman. a digital logic designer, and Robert F. Ge ntr y, a UC Irvin e ad· ministrator . are co-chairmen South Coast coeds win cash awards Four South Coast coeds won cash awards from the Laguna Beach chapter or the National League of American Pen Women following competitions in art and creative writing. Laguna Beach HI sh School wtn· nera Included Cynthia Smedley, whowonS200~flr•tpnieart entry; GenaKr~lOO for 11econd prize; and Tlna ~. who won $JOO tn the creative writ· ln1 cateaory. Karen Schreiner of Dana Hlll• Hlih Scttool won a lhlrd place prise of~ for her art entry. By STEVE MITCHELL Of tMDMly l'lleCli.tf An Assembly subcommittee has approved a $10.3 million package that will see another 393 acres added to Crystal Cove State Park. The budget items approved by an Assembly Ways and Means subcommittee also include funds for relocation of the equestrian c e nter, construction or a restroom and shower facility at Moro Cove. and the stationing of park rangers at Crystal Cove beginning in July. Thursday's approval, which still needs the endorsement of Burg la r s break Laguna window Bur1Jar1 broke a storefront window In La1un a Beach aomeUme early Thur1day, taklnl a coat and aweater Vllued aU450. Police aaJd operatora of Peru· vlan Glft1. 1180 South Coast Hlahway, reported the break·ln after d.lJcovertnt the abattered window and mlsslna ltem1 Thun· day. \ ... both houses In budget hearings late r this year. would see nearly 400 acres in the upper reaches of Moro Ridge purchased as part of the park. That would expand the park, located between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. to nearly 2,400 acres. In a compromise worked out between Assembl y woman Marian Bergeson, R·Newl)<>rt Beach and Terry Goggin, D-San Bernardino, the committee ac· tlon would see part-time resl· dents of Crystal Cove moved out of the cottages ln 24 months. A. decision on full·tlme real· denta of the cottage community ls still to be worked out, Mrs. Bergeaon sald today. While fundlnt waa approved tor pubUc f aclU~• to lbe new park, Auembtyman Oo11tn tit· pressed an1er at a 1tato General Services Department a1reement with mobile home owners at El Morro Mobile Home Park. Aucmbtywoman Ber1e100 utd the state department a1reed to allow moblle home ownen to resell or leaH their mobile homes over the next 20 # years. She said the agreement, which is Irrevocable, came as a s ur· prise She said the original plan was for the mobile home park to become slowly vacated over the next two decades through allri· ti on. Regarding relocation of the e qu estrian s tables Mrs . Bergeson said it is diflicuJt to know whether there Is an area within the state park where the horse center can be located. She places hilh priority on providing park ranger service Fall applicatiom at Saddleback Appllcauons for tall semester are being accepted now at Sad· dleback Community Colle1e. even lhou&h claa1ea don't begin until lat~ August. Forma ar'e available at the Mi•· alon V1ejo campu1 In the ad· mlaslons and recol'dl otflce. For more tntormatlon, call the colle1e at831-4!S70. by this s ummer to oversee operallon of the new park . Jn addition, she s aid she will push Cor the rapid creation or parking a reas. including a 600· vehicle lot at El Morro, where visitors would use an existing underpass to get to the beach. Offslwre 'rescue ' nnt appreciated The visitor from Mexico was ready to wait out the tide after he became stranded on an orf· shore rock at Moss Point In Laguna Beach Thursday night. Lifeguards saJd the 24·year· old man wandered out to the flat rock al low Ude, and wns unable to return lo terra rtrma when water11 rose at about 8:30 p.m . A resident at Mou Point 1'potted t.he rock 1ltter •nd called out to him. aakln1 If he was okay. "The 1uy saJd he waan't ohy, but 11Jd he'd Ju1t wall around unUI low tide," uld Laauna Beach ltte1uard Mark Klosterman. Kloster man was called to the scene a UtUe before 9 p. m. and waded out to the rock, brou1bt the man back to shore, then waded back out Cor a Oiiht bag left behind by the visitor. · The lifeguard Hid the man wasn't real anxlout for hlm to retrieve the ba1. and he found out why later. Police. who were walUni on 1hore, e1Je1edly found 1 1maJl quantity of marijuana ln the fllthl bag. The rock rescue ended with the vic tim beln l clt•d tor possession of marlJuana. - L Orange Oout DAtLY PtLar/,rlday. M•Y 18, 1Mt ROAST THE COAST: Lal\&Da Beach clty offlclala took conalderable au W1 week wben they appeared before an Orut• County aovern· ment arm on questioos of anneuUoo and la· nuence. service? Why, a areat bll 93$,000. •'Ob, county eovemment mleht bave nlpped a couple ol more co1n1 Lacuna'• way bad your boJrd agreed to bave the city pard tbt coun· ty'a southern beaches. The county body. known u the Local A1en· cy Formation Commt.aion, or LAFCO for abort, didn't seem too happy with Laiuna clty ln· nuence in Laguna Canyon, or up0n a Laauna "But no. When It came to that, you went out and hired a gaggle of Rent-A-Guards. Swell. ~ .. Elsewhere on the coast, the impact of in· landers Crom your di1trict even 1eta worse. Newport Beach spends $1.1 miWoo a year to try to keep them au alive. Your 1reat county benevolence kicks in $123,000 (maybe) tb11 year. r.\ TOM MURPHllll _~~ "HUNTINGTON BEACH city Ufeeuard services cost $403,683 for the local taxpayers. The county gives $61 ,190. "Oh yeah, sure, HunUnetoo city also 1eta another $61,000 in county cub because it guards annexation of South Laguna, or OD Laeuoa Influence in Aliso Canyon. In fact, LAFCO removed a future develop· ment area in Laguna Canyon from the city's area of influence. IN 111AT DISCUSSION, county Supervisor Bruce Nestande, who sita as a commiasiooer, asked Laguna officials, "When was the last road access you folks supported to gel people from inland Oranee County down to the beach?" Now there's an interesting question. It could even prompt an open letter from coastal people to Mr. Nestande, that would go something like this: '·Dear Bruce: "We read in the papers bow you think coastal people don't do much to help your inland district folks from Orange and Santa Ana to get to the beach. You gotta lotta nerve, feUa. "YOU KNOW, WE COULD just take that snide remark of yours and turn it around, ask· ing how much you supervisors support those beachgoers? How many roads have YOU widened or built to the beach? "Inland IMiton aure leave a lot on tM beach, Zeb." "And then again, how much support does Orange County government offer to the coastline after you've deluged the shoreline with aH those visitors? "Okay, let's take La1una Beach for exam· pie. After all the inJand visitors have impacted the town on a hot summer's day, packinl the Main Beach Park that Laguna taxpayers built for them, the city then spends $211,123 per year for lifeguard services to keep them all from drowning. .. And how much does Orange County gov· ernment kick in to support that lifeguard the county's Sunset Beach. You ever see that zoo on a sunny Sunday, Bruce? "And after all the inland voters of your dis· trict depart the coastal beaches late Sunday as the sun sinks slowly in the West, we have all those reminders of their happy visit. "Streets and beaches are Uttered with beer cans, hot.dog wrappers, empty wine bottles and sandwich leftovers. AND THE COASTAL taxpayers get to pay and pay and pay for those cleanup chores. "Just remember, Bruce, you're operating from a pretty shaky Hall of Disintegration up there in the County Seat. You shouldn't be the "uy trying to shake anybody else's cage . "All Our Love . . . " Mideast tension cools? Ex-am bassador doesn't see Israel-Syria war By JODI CADENHEAD Of .... DelfJ .......... Tensions between Israel and Syria are subsiding, after seem· ingly being on the brink of war earlier th.is week, according to former U .S . Ambas sador William Brewer. "I do not see it precipitating into war. It will become another one of those millions of incidents that have characterized the situation in that part of the world ," the Middl e Eas t diplomat said in a speech in Irvine this week. Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin bas warned that Israel would use military force unless Syria agreed to re· move its SAM ·6 missiles In Lebanon. The former ambassador to the Sudan and Mauritius, speaking before the World Affairs Council at the Airporter Inn, said a shift of power in the Middle East has left the U.S. with declining in· fluence. While the position of the U.S. and other Western nations is declining in the Middle East, their ~pendence is increasing due to oil, said Brewer. He said several factors con· tributing to the weakened in· Ouence include the withdrawal of the British from the Persian Gulf in 1970, the U. S. severing of ties with Iraq following the Arab-Israeli war in 1967 and the fall of the shah of lran. The Carter administration had the "right idea" in standing up to the Russian invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, but lacked the military force to support the position. said Brewer. As a result, other nations are more wary of where they will turn for economic aid and will go with whatever super-power is offering the most support, be said. ''The hkelihood of the Soviet Army emerging in the (Middle East) in the next couple of years is slight," said Brewer. ·'But the possibility of it happening some· day is quite substantial." In granting military and economic aid, the U.S. should take a lesson from the "Groucho Marx Syndrome, that says I wouldn't want to join any club that would have me ," said Brewer. The former ambassador con· tended that the U.S. failed to note growing unrest in Iran while continuing to send more and more arms. The same problem he said, could occur In Saudi Arabia, where the Reagan administra· lion has recently approved the sale of several controversial an· ti-missile crafts. "The riak is minimal in selling arms to Saudi Arabia unless we do what we did in Iran and let them purchase a s much hardware as they want." Technology lead waning UCI speaker says Reagan coul d spark t urnaround Two ~iiltures are developing in this country, one that un· derstands science and one that doesn't, and the latter group Is growing dramatically. Meanwhile, the scientific know-bow of the rest of the world is increasing swiftly, while the United States is losing Ila technological lead. Dr. Philip Handler. president of the National Academy of Sciences, made these observa· lions in a speech at UC Irvine Wednesday in which he pointed out the political, economic and mllitary implications of America's ''loss of determina· tlon" in the sclenUflc arena. While moat Russian high acbool ll'aduatea have taken two yean of calculus, a relative· ly small percenta1e of their American counterparts have bad 11'\Y expe>1ure to that aub-J ect, be aald ln the 1peecb apomored by the Student AffU,.. Lectures oruntsation. "Ve1terday every kJd ln the United Statea could repair a 11mple automobile .nd build a cryatal radlo Ht; today few u n," Handler t.oJd an audlenee of 100. •'Row can we hope to comp«e In the world market.a of blab tecbnoloo?" Auweii:r.:1llll own qu.Uoo, Hu411r ted out that ln a Hrl.ty lnduatries Oncludtnc the automobile) America ll ln· creasingly surrendering its lead to other nations who have made commitments to industrial high technology. He added that he has an "un· easy feeling" about the prob- lems that can be caused by the increasing gap between Americans who have an un· derstanding about science and those who don't. A lack of underatandln1 about science is one of the causes of the opposition to nuclear power. He backed nuclear power strongly in his speech while downplaying the Im mediate feasibility of solar power. Turning to the subject of American industry, he said that President Reagan should be try. ing to spur technological im· provements instead of merely trying lo protect them from foreign Intrusion. "That protectionism won't suf· fice in a world of competition." be said. But It hasn't all been bad news for American industry and tecbnolon. Handler said. He pointed to the apace shutUe as a ··suoerlalive achievement" but added that U.S. unmanned space probes and satellites are perhaps our greatest success. Ship funm donated "Seed" money totali.n1 '10,000 baa been donated by mercbanll in Dana Point Hara.or toward the purchue ol the bricanllne "PU· •dm," namesake of tbe ahln that broucht author Rlchard-ffenry Dana to the Callfornla cout 150 yearaaio. A purcbaH aareement between the 1blp'1 O'WI*'. Marioo Barich of L ons Beach, and i d· min.latnton ol t.h.e Oran1• Coun.- ty Marine Jaatltute lD Dana Harborwaa reacMd lut montb. The veuel ll expected to be moted from a San Pedro boat yerd to Dana Harbor on May 25 forthelnat1tute'11rudopenlnc. P Jana call for the ahlp to be uaed ror educational pro1ram1 and al10 u a lure to attract tourilta to the harbor. Tbe lnlUtute hu been 1ranted a seven-month iraee period to U · sets the worth of the Portu1U-9M- buUl v....i u a tourtat attl'actJon, and a.lto to ralH the $$00,000 uk· in1prtce. The Dana Polnt Harbor ,.., 1oelatJoa bu uked t.be Oraqe Count)' Board of Supemoon to matob tbe $10,000 donated by the meTcbanta wltb county tldelanda tru1t hinds. Transit gets facelift PR experts hope to boost image of county CommunleaUons expertl from two dozen major employers ln Oran1e County have joined a new committee to help the Oran1e County Transit Dlatrlct win public approval for ila servlcea. The advi1ory committee of public relation1 officials will meet four times a year and la expected to give the district both the expoaure and political punch It may need to Institute new mats ll'anait programs. Ralph Clark, chairman of the district's board of directors and also a county supervisor, claims Appeal set on forDler Nixon land A Laguna Beach physician says he will appeal a South Coast Re1ional Coastal Com· mission ruling granting public access to the former Nixon estate in San Clemente because the decision doesn't go far enough. Dr. Gene Atherton said be would seek an additional ease· ment along the bluff behfod the seaside estate to provide better viewing for the public. The regional commission earlier this week granted pedestrian access to 1,800 feet along the Orange County -San Diego County line at the southern end of the 20.9-acre property. Along with the ruling, Cotton Point Associates, the new owners of the property. were given permission to subdivide the parcel into 16 lots. Beachgoers currently have ac· cess to the sands below Casa Pacifica through a state ease· ment south or the estate in San Diego County that is good until the year 2020. San Clemente officials feared if that easement were closed, no access lo the beach would be provided. The dedication offer through the former NiJCon pro- perty will expire in 2024--four years after the state easement runs out-if the city does not ex· erciae its right of way. But Alberton says the view of Casa Pacifica is limited from the sand below the bluff, claim· ing that additional access behi nd the estate would better serve the public. Gas , oil deposits found MEXICALI, Mexico CAP) -The oil monopo- ly Petroleos Mexicanos has said it has found natural gas and com· mercial oil deposits 40 miles south of the U.S. border in Baja California. Technicians said the well was in a sand· protected area 14 miles east of the Gulf of California. There was no indica· tion how rich it is. In 1975, a natural gas strike was reported by PEMEX near the town of Guerrero Negro on the Pacific Coast. It is not in commercial pro- duction. 2 Lagunans to grad u a te Two Laguna ueach college seniors will be graduated from Whitworth College in Spokane, Wash., during ceremonies Sunday. the volunteer 1roup will be ·•an Invaluable asset in helping get out the message of the transit problems Ora11ee County faces and proposed solutions •· The committee formation also represents the increasing em· phasis major business is placing on transportation improvements as a necessary pa rt or their operations. The committee met once on April:.>, and OCTD Co mmunica· lions Director Michael Barnes said the members discussed d1f- riculties 1n uttractmg workers to a reas 111 whlC'h they can neither afford lo live nor easily com mute. Among lhe employer s in- ~ol ved ar e the F luor Corp , Smith Tool and UC Irvine. all fro m Irvine , A1rCal, AVCO Financial Services, the Irvine Company, and Pacific Mutual Life I nsurance Co., each in Ne wport Beach; ITT Cannon Electric of Fountain Valley , C.J . Segerstrom & Sons of Costa Mesa; Beckma n Instruments Inc. of Fullert<ln , and Rockwell International of Anaheim o.11, ~ .... -.._. DOLPHIN DAYS -Jaime Kingsrud. 4. of Mission Viejo. hugs concrete dolphin in Ma in Beach Park tot lot in Lagun a Beach, as friend J ason Ewing. 2, of Newport Beach and her brother Jack Kingsrud, 2, look on. Recent warm te m- peratures and sunny skies made for an excellent outing at the beach. .ROTHE The curtain rises and the show begins. Timothy Pines, son or Mr. and Mrs. Mark Pines of 1550 Temple Hills Drive, and Renee Gumb, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Gumb of 339 Emerald Bay. will be among 300 students to be eradualed. Come. Meet the foremost exponent of the almost forgotten art of mezzotlnt. G.fl. Rothe. 1P a rare personal appearance. new mezzottnls. as well as a large selection of her most recent creations. will a lso be ava II able for your acqulsltlon. Donors sought The Red Cross blood· mobUe wlll be at St. Nicbolu Catbo1'c Churcll Thursday from 2:45 to 7:30 p.m. l'he church ll at 24252 El Toro Road In Lasun• Hllh. and person a wl•bine to donate blood abould caU 83"MOIO or 518-1183 for an appoint· meat. Oonon thou.Id be ln iood beaJlb, wel1h at ltHt 1JD PoW'dl. and be between 17and15 yean old. \ When you meet Rothe. youll have the opportunity to acquire her masterful commemorative edl tlon poster ... a brllliant flnd indeed. And Rothe's five extraordinary Rothe. The master. In person ... exclusively a t t he Upstairs Gallery. Meet Rothe BEVEIU.Y 1 llLl.S Friday. Mav 15ch. 7 IU 9 v m I.ONO BEACll Sa1urdny. May 181h. 2 to 4 p.m ORANGE COUN1 Y Sunday. Mav I 7th. 2 to 4 pm aanauau.La 275 So. L• Cltntf• Blvd 11 blOC'k ~or WI ~hlff'I 12131 fl&9-tl22G LOJIJ08SAC• :lfl!IO C hf"I t) Avt 1213142(; 7070 OllANO& COUNTY !oo111h COll•I f'la111 tNt'•l lo R11lluf k •I 171 4 1!1411 lll'H Uuy thr 11mrlr1"' on 1111,.. -..1111 nu1 • u11vr111rn1 lov. 1n1r n .. 1 lri '"" Loni( Bud\. Northrldi(C' 11nd l}f°\'f'rlv 11111• 011r11 Wn.lllf'~d•\ 1h1" ""'""'" 10 1n, Arto Plan. 1 un<lo1v thru ~e11ml." fl :\0 10 !I lO Or•n11r County, Monday 1hru f'rldav 101<>'1 !'lo1urtlnv 10111 II f.1111111>1~ 12111 !I 1 ____ .. _._ ..... , .. -------~· . . I ------------------·--· .... -................................. a1111a .. a••••BS11£•CS11S•BS11•£••············••••2•••••- Or•nge CoHt DAILY PILOT/Frld•y. M•y 15, 1981 D! PBS spotlights Faberge 'Chevaliere' world premiere on innovative Second Stage The PBS speci1J ''Lost to the RevoJuUon" could have been tiUed ''The Ell and the Cur.'' Nicholaa, lhat ls. Nick was the rtnal belr to the JOO.year-old'. Romanov clan, Russia's last Imperial dynasty. The egg was the favored form ror ''fantasies" created for the ruJing ramlly and other aristo· crali c Russ ians by m a s t e r Jeweler and goldsmith -J-EL_E_V_l_EW_S Peter Carl Faberge euch Easter Faberge's Im·------ ~1 e r1 n l eggs were masterworks. handcraft· ed from gold and brightly colored enamels, de· corated with jewels and miniature oil paintings and containing remarkable surprises inside. Today, many of those pnceless eggs are con· tained in a collection owned by Forbes Magazine. "Lost to the Revolution" was a half.hour look at these incredible creations. But there's more. The program was also an insightful, albeit brief, exploration of the Russia that was. Using old ftlm footage, the narration traced the events that led up to the Bolshevik Revolution of 1905. Most intriguing were the czar's borne movies, picting the royal family al play -romping in a field, rollerskating, dancing and boating. Like all home movies, they are rlawed in execution, affec· tionate in intent. In fact. we get the reeling that the people who produced this show really IWd the czar. Nicholas is portrayed as a kind, well-meaning man who sort or accidentally let four million of his people die during some unfortunate little world war and didn't realJy notice that the rest were teetering on the verge of starvation. He is seen as a hapless victim or circumstance. Then again, Forbes Magazine has never been F'aberge's imperial Easter egg heavily into peasantry Sti111 :·Lost to the Revolution" is not revisionary and the nistory was presented as a mere backdrop against which to view Faberge's fabulous works. It's the kind of s how your mother would have loved. "Lost" aired Wednesday, al 8:30 p.m. and re- pealed the following day at 4:30 p.m. on Channel 50. -Michael Dougan By TOM TITUS Oll ... o.tly ........... Jn the three seasons and soon to be 30 produc· lions since South Coast Repertory opened Its fourth Step Theater in Costa Mesa's South Coast Town Center, the company has done an admirable job of sting ne w theatrical waters. he list of county, West Coaat and world pre- mieres mounted by SCR on Its mainslage and smaller Second Stage is staggering -more than two-thirds or the repertory's three-year output. Plays like "The Glass Menagerie," with which most theatergoers are familiar, stand out Uke the pro· verbial sorethumbon the SCR schedule. The Second Stage, in particular, has been a re· pository for new and innovative material. Testing their wings there were "Points in Time," "Time Was" and "Screwball" and now another world premiere, "Chevaliere," opens next Wednesday. Like the current inhabitant or the mainst.age, "Childe Byron" (which closes this weekend), "Chevaliere" is the dramatization of an encounter bet ween two real people from the pages of history . Set in London in 1775, the two·character play de- picts the diplomat and playwright Caron de Beaumarchais and Chevalier d' Eon, a notorious French dragoon officer THE STO RY GOES that Beaumarchais, author or the classic comedies ''The Marriage of Figaro" and "The Barber of Seville," is charged with negotiating d'Eon's controversial return to France. He discover s that the rugged, debonair dragoon is reputed to be a woman in disguise and connives to uncover his adversary's true gender. "The play is a fencing match of wits, created by a tremendously talented playwright, David . Trainer," says David Em mes. founder and artistic director of SCR, who is staging the comedy Playing the questionable d' Eon wiU be Ron Boussom, one of SCR 's most accomplished actors. whose much-heralded work at the Costa Mesa theater has included leading roles In ·'The Elephant Man," •· Equus," "The Comedians" and "The Basic Training of Pavlo Hummel." Guest artist George McDaniel, a veteran or Los Angeles theater, will portray Beaumarchais. A week afte r the opening of "ChevaUere." SCR draws the curtain on its 1980·81 season with l he revival on the mainstage or an old-time musical that may raise a few eyebrows among those familiar with the repertory company's taste. H's Cole Porter's "Anything Goes, .. a lightweight comedy which would seem more suited to the din· ner theaters. JOHN-DAVID KELLER, SCR's s pecialist in the. m~ical genre, is staging "Anything Goes," which Ls only the second musical at the Fourth Step It's being billed as the most entertaining SC R show of the season, and should prove a favorite with general audiences. For those wh o dabble in s tatistics "Chevaliere" and .. Anything Goes" will be th~ 145th and 146th productions mounted on South Coast .Repertory's stages since the company took up residence on the Orange Coast in early 1965. That adds up to more than nine shows a year f~om the industrious organization, which has long since eclipsed other local stages and carved out a national name for itself in regional theater. -----~----------~~--~----~~~----~------------------------------------------------------~------~------- b€:nj6a1 tlg£r ~~:~' INDIAN RESTAURANT ._,,.t!!Ji~ CILUFAST • LUMCH • Dtte8 • 7 OA YS ;., ~ lelty DCMdng MiCJNty _ MAY 2for I SPECIAL twfffl ... ..,, Order 2 Indian Curry Dinners and pay only lor highest priced dinner. Valid Mon. thru Thur. 5930 West Coast Hi9hway Newport Beach • 646-4202 or 646-1302 COMPLETE EARLY BIRD DINNERS EVERY DAY 4 to 7 p.m. -15" Including Prime Ribs & Lobster Au Gratin, Bar-B-0 Pork Ribs, Dover Sole and Red Snapper. WE CA TY ANY KIND OF PARTY REASOMAILY Banquet Roo"' AYClilcll* IUp to 200) I 6 7 0 Newport Blvd. COSTA MESA 642·8293 With This Coupon 2 Hickory Smoked · BAR-B-Q Dinners For SS95 Your Choice Brisket -Beef or Pork Ribs Includes Cole Slaw. BBQ Beans, Pickle, Toast. Sauce &I In or T•lc• Out All our meats ere H1cllory Smoll«I & slowly cool!~ to perf9Ct1on fn our Hicllory Pft using genuine Hicllory wood. sk About Our Catering Service N nl &, 211 62nd Street ~ • Newport Beach -nELBehind Travel Lodge on Coast Hwy 648-7370 Open from 11 :00 a.m. to 9 p.m. ~ t ... TtlE CANNERY FIRST OF THE SEASON FRESH LOCAL SWORDFISH LUNCH: MON.-SAT. 11:30-3:00 DINNER NIOHT\.Y 5:00-10:00 SUNDAY BRUNCH 1:00-2:30 • GALA BENEFIT CHILDREN'S HOME SOCIETY SAT. MAY 11 12:oo-4:00 FISH 880 • FLEA MARKET BOAT HOPPING• ART EXHIBfTS ENTERTAINMENT BY JASON CHASE RESERVATIONS 714 -t75-5777 .. Make your weekends ·special'' with a magnificent champagne brunch overlooking Newport Bay. Smorgasbord buffet. only $8.95 1 ,4 50 under 12) Sahrday I I :00 a.m. • 3!00 p.a. Sunclay I 0:00 o.nt. • 3:00 p.-. ~~lfilllElllYNR ·.1;rm.im On th• W•terfront In Lido M•rin• Vlll•g• , Newpor1 Be•ch 673-4700 .. Real Cantonese Food eat here or teke home STAG CHINESE CASINO A Family Shopping/Dining & Entertainment Center Albertson's • Bank of America • Biibo Bagglns • Coco's/Reuben's !' Command Performance Dolphin Hair Fashions • Edwards Cinema • Fash'n Splash • Hamburger Hamlet • Ice Capades Mesa Verde Florist • Mesa Verde Travel • Mlone's • Music Marl<et • Photography by Jeffrey Southern California Optical •Spa Lady • Swensen's •Vicki's Sunshine Factory Chaibrotled and topped with a deUaous teriyald glaie, this skeo..wred combination of thick. tender steak and plump shrimp Is served with your dlerice of our Steaming Oam ChO\Nder, Soup of the Day or Chilled Moced Green Salad. plus Rlce Pilaf. Fresh Plnupple and a hnlfloaf of Warm Bread and Butter ~tlg :fl«9.£ ---lan.o. blud . 203 M11nM A"'nut tde hnel • Ofl.S et Lakt f'oorut Dnw 22873 L8kt'. ~st DIM C.. likM · Herbof Shopplfli Ci>nt•r 2300 H111bor Bl.<! ........ Newport r,c~y 61 Ebt °'r"'r A.j 1721 Easi OVl't Rd 2701 HMbOr Blvd. • (Harbor a Adema) Coeta Mesi, CA ' r ~------------------~------· .. Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 18.1981 'Secret' Le Biarritz moves into the limelight " 8 y NOaMAN STANLEY 0( U. INlll'I .......... It appears one of Newport'• beat little "secret" restauranu has turned -virtualJy over· o • ni1ht -Into one of Oran1e Cou.nty'a hottest dlnin1 u spots. I · Lunch al Le Biarrita the other day somewhat !> resembled Dodger Stadium with Fernando Valenzuela due to take the pitcher'• mound. But the fare went appreciably beyond bot do1s and peanuts. Not, of course. that the offerings at Le ------- Biarrilz have ever been OlJT 'N ABOUT -... other than plentiful - " and first-rate. And the -------- ~ restaurant cert ainly hasn't gone unnoticed -or unappreciated - hereabouts since 1974. I That's the year the present owners -Yves J and Christine Briee and Yvan Humbert -look ov- •' er what had been the Swiss Chalet. an establish· ., ---n ~ I I La Fayette '•.· ·~· .. ~- .. •, French Reat•urant THE FINEST FRENCH CUISINE IN THE COUNTY FOR RESERVATIONS CALL: 537-5011 12532 Garden Grove Blvd. G•rden Grove, C•IH. /1olden ~~~-~~ ...., ~-,~ ~ ~ t ,, fJililairagon ·--- GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DtSHES Specializing In Chinec-~ A la C.Orte Dishes Lunch Dinner Oatlv • Food To Take Our 4715 C...,._. • ORA.MGI . :ZOU H..t-ll•d. 750-7171 • 750.5098 COSTA MIU , ..... FecllHet 642·7 I '2 • 631 ·9' II r.--------------. I. 'tA· Chinese Cuisine I f~ ORIENTAL COCKTAIL LOL':W;E I 1,7\' Featunnl! Troptt·al Dnnks I I BAMBOO MAY I I I TERRACE SPECIAL I I 'l ?f. '-it s 5 zs rr :-=.. I I ~ I lltecj. o;6.501 I I I I~) ~~~~::~;,a!:1~t;==~~~ I ·~ ,. Fried Aiu. r .. ~ Fonune COOlll• I I 1 l tor l cw more •Cid Port. Cl>ow Main •1 • 1 .I, , •.Jt-forSormcwe_l(..,f>a.Cllicken 1 ' . • I.~ ;,. c. . . . . , . . " , I ~ I • • , . ?' lL ~/'l' Olfl'f E&l>lr•• MAy JI ''" I ... I (Nol~OtlLAlllOi,,.,~ll I J. 53 EAST I ITH. COST A M ESA 645-SSSI' ... _____________ .. BROILED SWORDFISH mAK & Josef Friederich "V" PIESPOlllR GOIDIROPKllEll 4 SrHI:• c:l.ri1te f.?.!l1" r Distinctive Waterfront Dining Oyster Bar · Cocktails 3.3..'\..~ W Pac1ftc Coast Highway, N.B • 642-2295 ?~r-------------~ ~ I GRAND OPEMIMG I I EYE OPENER SPECIAL : I Includes: $19 9 I I • 2 Strips Bacon I I •IEcJcJ I · I • I Pancake I I • I C• Coffee I ~ e I Sen.ct fT'Offt 6 A.M.· I 0 A.M . Doily I .. I I c..,_., ... c...._..-........ ,,..t:z. IHI ! : I THE COOKERY RESTAURANT I :'l ; I 500 W. Coast HlcJhway, H.wport hach I ! ; I •cro•• ;;u~;r cWt I j l 'Hours: OPEN 7 DAYS 6 A.M .·2 P.M . • ~: --------------· j ·- • l A VE RY SPECIAL JAPANESE RESTAURA NT Award winnin~ traditional Japanese cuisine and superb western-style specialties. Your favorite s<.'afood. chicken, and steak. Delicate soups and delightful salads. Impeccable service in a most beautiful setting. Discover Yamato , .. a very special dining experience. 11B.111Bto 60 Fuhfon b land Newport 8ea(h / 644-4811 Century Plan Hotel 277-1840 ment where 1lx ownen had failed to makf' a go or it over a 1.2-ycar period. Dauntless souJa, obvlou.ly, the trio cut an In novaUve and immediate path to the 1u~e11 that had eluded earlier proprietors. By creatlna a uni- que atmosphere with food t.o match (French pro- vincial), lhey even managed to tum an out-of·lhe way location (on Old Newport Boulevard, not far from Hoag Hospital) into an asset Jolnlng property for the addJUon of a parkinti structure and art1ally enlarged kitchen tacllltles. French catcurgot a la Bourguignone, $4 75, one dozen, S7 50. Imported French pale, S3 25, stuffed mushroom. , $2.95 , soup du jour, cup, $1.50, bowl, $1 75 (aoome items are priced slightly higher on the dinner menu> Now, followlng a $2 million renovation, the resl•urant has achieved the slie and statua as one of the area'a major dining attractJons. At the same time, happily, It hasn't lost the original small reistuurant feeling; each of today's four dining areas (lncludmg the spectacular thtrd·floor room> have distinctly different atmospheres and main- tain a cozy intimacy. BEYOND A LARGE vanety or luncheon en trees falling under the category of omelettes, chopped s teak (each featuring dtfferent angre· dients topping a half pound of lean ground beef served open face on a slice or French bread > and authentic Frl'nch crepes -the bill of fare offers a variety of hot enlrees and daily specials. WITH UNERRING EYES for detail Yves, his wife Christine, and Yvan changed the one-room restaurant into an intimate hide·a·way. All the while they also labored with love to prove that French food is neither too fancy, too rich nor too expensive. When it comes to scanning the menu, re- member Le Biarrilz avoids the loCty region or haute cuisine, offered instead is the fare favored by the average French family, satisfying and flavorru.J dishes that are key to everyday French tables. The first or our two selections are the superb ratatouille (a savory Mediterranean vegetable dish > and sausages (served en casserole with potatoes> for $4 95 Ingredients an the ratatouille in c lude eggplant. zucchini, green pepper. tomatoes. onion, garlic and other seasonings By 1978, Le Biarritz had expanded into the en- tire ground noor or the quaint three-story building. using the second floor for offices and storage. Finally, last year, Yves and Yvan negotiated ac- quisition or the entire building together with ad- If you have a robust appetite you'll be wise lo start your lunch (or dinner) with one of the restaurant's savory appetizers. The possibiUlies, all worthy of your consideration, include French onion soup gratinee. $2.75: a half-dozen imported Ratatouille can also be ordered as an <See LE BIARRITZ, Page 05) FOR THE HOTTEST ENTERTAINMENT IN ORANGE COUNTY Go to the May 15-16 May 17 Afternoon • LIVE JIVE May 18-19 BcdBy Wilham F. Brown Music & Lyrics By Charlie Smalls !il li1 !il !il Elizabeth Howard's !il !il !il !il I CL.~T~.I (11 .. ~ I I DINNER THEATER I l ~~SS~~I !il MU:.IC AND LYRICS RY [lj ~ tKA'K l.Ot..."l"llK [I) iJ ..-1 LL 01'\~ER ~ER\ EU !iJ iJ AT YOl R TAUi.i'. [I] • CHICAGO BLUE DEVILS May 20-21-22-23-24 "Bat Musical ... W111Nr of 7 Tony Awardr" Performances Tues. thru Sun .. & Sun. Brunch fi) Ttt:SUA Y SPECIAL (j] lll i~~~J.if Ifil'tC~AST 1 I t •s !il [I] HPiEHVATIO:\"i (71-1-) x:rn -l :>·M> [I] • LIVE JIVE 3503 S. Harbor Blvd .• Santa Ana 92704 [I] ~ h~14t El. l'AM 1-..u HEAi.. Tl S'l 11\ 'l.!f1>-1t • llJ !iJ ""' · !"ltllHU Allot Fw\ '-1•w11url A\o• "ltr.111q1 [I] 2406 NEWPORT BLVD. Yi Mtle Nollh ol Sen 01990 Fwy. S.tWffn Su,.itow•• 4 MecAf1hur NEWPORT BEACH 675-2244 C ht·ck in Frida)'"' ,,uun.l:t) 11iich1 ;u our n-icular rate. <•t'l tht• ttt• '' nlicht fn-e! '>inick j(\14. 1>011hlt• S-14. It' .1 Wl'lt m1111 '·" .1111111 \\t1h .tll ul 0f'Al1j.(l' ( otUlll\ ' ,Ill r .ll 111 •11' 111'1 n1111111t.., .l\\J\ I >Nll'\ I.inti !t11111111tlt' "nou ' llnl" I.inn .! ~ 1111n111t' /\11.tht·1m 'l.11!111m I~ 11111111tt'' \ou J.(t"I J lu,ur1o111' l{t'W''" rt• 1111 '!»•rl..ltnl( 11lnnp1t ,,,,·u ll• • 11 lrl't "" of uur 01¢11 hl(.htnl lt'l111t' '"""' pht' lht• \llll 'lll1 Jlld \h<1l' o!l l>t'.Hllthtl Nt:\\pun lk"Jl h Jotn '" ""'° on ••tr' rn,.hfl .tl(.ttthl 1nll • .r111n' I or hroc:hure tall HOO t .! .? 11 1- I HE REGISTRY HOTH IHXCKI \lo1tAr1hur llh<l '"'flt ( \ •>rl~ ,-, , , -..,.? 14--- Enjoy all the flavor of Mexico. Right here. Come to Casa Maria and discover all the wonderful accents of Mexico. From the way we look to the things we cook. You'll delight all your senses with the fiesta -like atmos· phere and taste-tempting food. There's everything from the incredible Fiesta Tostada to Maria's delicious Combinations. It's all prepared to perfection and brought to you at a most reasonable price ... whether lunch or dinner. Casa Maria. MEXICAN RESTAURANT All the flavor of Mexico'.v 16060 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842·2541 Reservations accepted. Ma,or credit cards welcome. Follow your team in the Daily Pilaf [l]~~(j](j]~~[l](j]~liJ~~~liJliJ(j]~~ NOW SHOWING CfSflR <ROMfRO starring in the World Premiere of -Tt1~ M~X t=ACT{) A Comedy By Marcy Vosburgh & Sandy Sprung Opens May 12th! "llott:hh rntrru11n1n11t or'tl ma"" 1ou ~ .. am for 1h1~ .:uod ol" dap -Torn l11us DAIL v PILOT "I J,.ft lh<" lh<"Ol.r f..,..ltn~ upltftrd. I'm •ltll •tnJtrntt:'" -l tlu•a Bo1ari SUN PO<; r ••thf',(" 'Rabc-11i c •n ''"( Jind dant r ~ 11h thf" R .. ,, of th .. m ·• "jiiiiiiti:.o--------------Jo Ann Mu•q~n NF W'iPOC, 1 n, Rodl{tn & llnrt <:la.mr ! ''BABES IN ARMS'' -, Bt>al Danwd Hickory Snwkf'd Riha y,,u'Vf> E1•er Eotn1! Y'all Come Down MONDAY TALENT NIGHTS Stan Orlow MC & LOUNGE ENTERTAINMENT FOR THE EVENING Call fo.r sign-ups now! Tuesday -Saturday Longhorn Saloon Features: Live Country Music & Dallcittg Rem~mr "' lf'W ')(l'lt]S '\1 \ I-unn' \ •IC"ne1nr ll>r l ... d• h \ Tnmp' ·~ h~,. llr ~ hrn" Po1tr j .. hnn\ ( )nf" , .. ,,. .. "I~ "h I~ .. ,., 111 Io•<' \ft•'" .anci nturf!• Now AppearJng WHlTEUNF. FEVER Tues.·Sat. %8'82 Marguerite Pkwy• Mission Viejo• 495-1900 FOR YOUR DINING & ENTERTAINMENT PLEASURE .. SHELLY GORDON .ouo Tue. thru Sat. DANCING )14 ,OMST AV£. LA°'1HA H ACH 11• Tioe L.-Y"111 Amp14' f trt' Pdrlttrl() 494;Mt1 752-8558 ~~~NT FIRE WATER Tues .. thru Sat. TWICE AS NICE DUO Sun., and Mon. DANCING NlGHTL Y OIN'rlooktrag 1Uot.111ful Lokt f'ortst Twtllght DtMen 1 0.t• a Weff 4 IO I p.m. -= A . W11 MUtM.ANDt AT 9'IOOI fllOUTI n ~o no.an · .. l'Wltc....-r ..... , ..... .... ~ .. --- 3:Zto2 COAST HWV lAGUHA NtOUIL ""' (-w-., ....... ,, 499·2826 49e-Sn3 . IRVINI D1llyPllat FRIDAY, MAY 1S, 1981 STOCKS TELEVISION COM.ICS .. BS 86 87 ,., ... llA Japan leads world in importation of U.S. farm commodities ... 83 County hom.e shoppers said 'affluent' By FREDERICKSCllOEMEHL Ot-.0 ... , ........... In a six-count y Southern California region, home buyers in Or ange County are the least in· fluenced by high mortgage in· lerest rates when it comes to pur chasing a new home. This ls among findings con· tained in a consumer attitude study of 1,600 home shoppers con- ducted by lhe Building Industry Association of Southe rn California. The study. conducted at more than 130 new home sites in Orange, Los Angeles, Ventura, Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties found "the most significant characteristic differentiating Orange County from the rest of Southe rn California is the volume of af- nuenthomeshoppers ... The median income of the average Orange County home shopper was $48,000, compared to $39,000 in the six·county region. ~-------- uc cording to the study. Coupled with a median equity in an existing home of $79,000, the Orange County shopper is "well qualified" to purchase a home with a median price of $152,000, the study said . This compares to a figure of '118,000 in the six ·county region. "Given the income . Orange County is indicated to be able to s upport a higher percentage of sales in the $150,000·plus market than aoy other area in Southern California." It was noted in the study that in the "price range of interest" category folly 10 percent or shop- pers in the south Orange County area ind i cated inte r est in purchasing homes valued at $300,000 or more. Forty-two percent of those sur· veyed in Orange County were de- f med as belonging lo the "luxurv family group." In the entire sur- Terraces are cut at Lion Country Safari in Irvine in preparation for 10.000-person amphitheater Amphitheater set for August opening? Seeking lo open 1n time fo r the s um mer con cert season, de- velopers of a 10,000 -spectator amphitheater in lrvme are plan- ning to have the facility ready for use with a temporary shell by Aug. 1. Irvine Meadows Amphitheater Partner Tim Strader says that it will take about ont' year for the permanent shell to be con· strucled A total of 5,000 seats are now being installed in the am- Irvine police seize $20,000 • • m narcot1cs lrvioe police seized $20.000 worth of narcotics and $2,500 in cash after stopping a car in which two people allegedly were sharing a manJuana cigarette. police Sgt. Leo Jones said today. Arrested after the contraband was allegedly found were Brian C. Cistulli, 20. and Laurie M. Knoll. 20, both of 14651 Coun- trywood Lane. Irvine. Sergeant Jones said each was booked in Orange County jail on s usoicion of possession of narcotics with intent to sell after the arrests Wednesday. phitheater at Lion Country Saran ore the San Diego Freeway at lrvme Center Drive. There will be room for another 5.000 people to sit on terraces be· ing cut out of the hillside at the site. The amphitheater 1s in the flight path of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station An agreement has been worked out between Marine officials and the am· ph1theater developers, aimed at insuring jets won't disturb con· c't!rt performances. The a~reement features a pro· vision that concerts will be can- cell ed on short notice if the Marines decide they will have to fly over the amphitheater during a scheduled perfor mance However, the partnership de· veloping the amphitheater (which includes investors from the Newport Beach-based Koll Co and Lion Country Safari> has contended that the record -;hows few Jets Oy over the am- ph 1 theater sites o n weekend nights when most concerts will be held. Amphitheater ·spokesmen are billing the facility as having ·'top flight" entertainment similar to that offered by the Universal Amphitheater or the Greek Theater. Ticket prices a nd concert schedules were unavailable SERVICE YARD SERVICE ROAD ·~ TICKET OFFICE AND ENTRY GATE _____ _. Irvine Meadows Amphitheater grounds are to include picnic area, 4 ,000 -vehicle parking lot and concession stands. vey area only 27 percent were so rated. Following are other findings contained in the survey Orange County had the highest percentage of shoppers who own their own home. 82 per. cent. compared to 74 percent for the six·county region Orange county shoppers the survey said ·· .. are the most de- pendent on a healthy resale mark et to permit buyers to utilize their equity transfer (for the) purchaseofanewhome " "With an ave rage household of 2.9 persons and a median age for the head of a househole, a quality house, of sophisticated design, will be needed to altrack this affluent discretionary buyer." The study is available to as- soc1al1on members for S275 per copy, and to non·members for $350 Court rebuked Sheriff says deputies 'confused' Orange Coun ty S h e riff- Coroner Brad Cates h as crilil'ized the slate Supreme Court and claimed the best rem· edy for it would be the addi· tt0n of Superior Cour t Judge John Trotter Troller is an Orange County Judge who Gates said he un· derstands is one of three people being considered by Gov. Ed· mund G Brown Jr to fill a vacancy Brown nominated Los Angeles lawyer Sam Williams, but Williams turned down the offer this week Another Los Angeles Jurist, Otto Kaus. an appeals court Judge. was appointed last week. Two vacancies on the seven- 1udge court were created when Wilham Clark accepted an assis tant secretary of state post with the Reagan admm1 strat1on and Wiley Manuel died in January. Speaking at a luncheon in El Toro sponsored by the Youth Service Program Inc Thursday, Gates said Trotter 1s a "prac· tic al thinker ... a trait he said is lacking among five of the six current Justices. including Kaus. He said the only other com- mon sense justice 1s Frank K. Richardson. who Gates admitted might be a little t oo con · servative. But Ri chardson's problems don't bother Gates the way the other Justices' do. He said the Supreme Court and appellate court judges ha ve forsaken their primary functions. ·'They are in search for error rather than in search for truth," he claimed. The Supreme Court. he said. has been more interested in ways of excluding evidence from court rooms than in stewarding a sys tem intended to put criminals in jail. He claimed constant revisions and restric- tions passed down by upper courts have hurt the morale of law enforcement offi cers and handcuffed their effectiveness. "They're confusing the hell out of my deputies." he said "They're changing the law so fast, we can't keep up with it. .. Gates cited several examples of what he called absurd upper court decisions One was a case in the Central Valley where an officer stopped a driver for going the wrong way on a onc·way street. The officer . he said, felt som ething was wrong with the driver and ran a check on the li cense plate. The check revealed the man was wanted on three robbery warrants in an adjacent county, Gates said, so the officer arrest· ed the driver. But the district court of appeal PUSJIED BY SHERIFF Judge John Trotter threw out the case. Gates said, be('aU!-iC Judges said the offi cer d1dn t have enough cause to chel'k the driver's record Gates said he doesn't think Troller would do such things. He told an audience of about 75 peo· pie to write Brown's office, talk lo friends and lobby for judges who will take more prc.1ctical ap- proaches to the law Many in the crowd were employed by the Youth Seryice Program, a non.profit umbrella organization that conducts pro- gra m s aimed al h e l pin g juveniles avoid the j ustice system Al so on hand was Orange County Municipal Judge John Griffin. presiding Judge at the Orange County South Municipal Court Griffin said after the speech that most trial judges agree with Ga t es a nd feel restricted by upper court rul- ings. But he disagreed with Gates' assessment that Kaus, the newly appointed justice, wiU be unreceptive to law enforce- ment Said Griffin "I think Otto is going to surprise a lot of peo. pie." Disabled events shued Saturday The Third An nual develop- mentally disabled tr ack meet is scheduled Saturday in Irvine. More than 400 disabled athletes from local schools and agencies wi ll participate in events starting at 9 p.m. at Irvine High School. The public is invited to attend. He said police found 411, pounds of hi gh-grade seedless marijuana. one pound of hashish and 30 grams of halucinogenic mushrooms. Irvine woman to keep state roads post? They were stopped near the in· tersect ion of C am pus and University drives in Irvine. J ones said the two Irvi ne resi· dents were spotted "by chance" by l\\O undercover police Of· ricers. who called in a marked police car to assist with the traf- fic stop. Orange County officials were waiting today to see if Gov. Edmund G. Brown J r., despite their objections, still plans to replace an Irvi ne woman on the s l ate Transportation Com mi ssio n with an out-of-county appointment. The state commission , which has 11 members. is a powenUJ group that chooses which major highway construction projects gel state funding each year. Frances Mossman, appointed lo a one-year term in 1979, is considered by local offl ciaJs to be Orange County's voice on the commission. On T hursday , Brown sent word to Senate President Pro Tern Da vid Roberti , D-Los Angeles, that he was considering replacing Ms . Mossman with Judith Hopkinson of Van Nuys. Roberti, in turn, que ried Orange County's three state senators on their opinions of the University Drive proposal· rapped By RICHAJlD GREEN of .. Deity""' ..... A proposal to extend Universi- ty Drive across Upper Newport Bay lo link Irvine and Costa Mesa doesn't thrill people who live between the two cities and in the path of the proposed ex· tenslon. Santa Ana Helahta residents expressed their unhappiness with the pl\. • ln a raucous meet· ina held by Orange County aov- ernment officials preparina a plannlnt document for the unin- corporated county area. A atraw vote of the 75 people altendla.a the meellna earlier tbh w ell s howed near - unanimous disfavor with the long-planned and much-debated University Drive extension, which would provide one of the few eaat-west links between <::oata Mesa and Irvine. The resldents t<>ld county plan- ners the road would destroy tbe residential character of the Heichts and disturb the aensitlve '!COIOIY of Upper Newport Bay. County planner Rich Adler 1aid a second publlc meet.Ina will be held in early July. In the meantime, he aald, planners will study the retldenu' ex· pre11ed cone rna and be1ln work on a transportation analyst. on the need or lack of it for the Oniverslty Driveextfnsion. Santa Ana Hei&bta resldenta aren't the only onea oppoalng the roadway. Despite contentions by some that the roadway would aUevlale some of the bumper-to-bumper tramc be\wHn Cost. Neta and lrvlne, resldentt of lrvlM bad said traffic would lncreaae ln the city if the roadwa y went throu.1h. And Newport Beach r sidents have objected t.o the roadway on environmental 1round1. Early this year, Irvine Ml)'Ol' Art Anthony embarked on a modest camp1lrn to fet lrvtne. Costa Meu, Newport Beach and the county to develop an en- vlronmentaJ impact r•port on the proposed roadway extension. 8ut the campaign produced 1'\0 hpmedJate resultt and thus far no work hu atarted on an en· vlronmental document that would add.rear the ro1dway's Impact on the Upper Bay area. The roadway extension falls under the planning Juri1dlctfon of tho South Coast Re1lon1l Coastal Commlss That commlaslon la now 1tudy- l n1 Newport Buch'• local Co11tal Plan. wt\J ch locludea plane for the controveralal roadway exteryJon. mbve. All objected, according to for the busin ess -oriented Sen John Briggs, R-Fullerton. Orange County Transportation Briggs said the issue was Coalition. said today the group handled according to protocol so has joined with political leaders Brown could "put his pinkie in calling for a local representative the water" lo test its political on the commission. temperature. The big questio~ He sajd Hinderaker has been now, he said, is whether Roberti sensitive to the county's needs, wants to take on the county but histor ically, his seat delegation in seek ing Ms . represents Riverside County. Hopklnson's appointment. Santley said the coalition "He has enouah battles or his endorsed three county residents own without taking on projects to replace Mil. Mossman. They like that," Briggs said, hintinr are Newport Beach lawyers that Roberti might advise J ose ph Walker a nd Terry B r o w n to s e e k a n e w Moshenlro and former Newport appointment. Beach Mayor D<>reen ManbaU. That appointment. county who la an aJde to Orange County officials believe, should be Supervi.lor TbomuJllley. someone from Oranae County. SanUey said Ms. Manhall was One of the tranaportatlon Interviewed a second time by comn1tsaionera , Ivan 8rown's aJdea about tbr•e Hinderaker, lives ln Corona del months 8'o. Mar. But be lived ln Rlverlide AIJO und'1' couldtraUoa frctn County when he was appointed Brown'• omce an Santa Aria and sUIJ ls conaidered the lawyer WaJlae. Davia and~ repreaentaUve ttier•, ofnclala A n a bu 1 in es• man Z I I! a aald. Djokov1ch, who recenUy ~a Ms. Moss man, a former tour•year lfrm. county planner, could not be d to Robertl Hid today reached today, but Br111s and An • e , o thtr a ourcea aald they be doean t know when a-.y understand tb1t 1he did not want announcements wlll be ma•e to be re.appointed. concemini the a0t>0intm11nkz. • Tho,nu Sanlley, a spokesman -OLENH ,, . --. -. -,.,. -----------------------... -------...... ---------....................... . c Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Friday, May 15. 1M1 AOAST THE COAST: LalWJa Beach city official• took con.slderable 1u thia week when they appeared before an Oranie County 1overn· ment arm on question. of annexaUon and ln· fluence. The county body. known as the Local Aaen· cy Formation CommlHion, or LAFCO for abort, dldn 't seem too happy wlth Lacuna city In· fluence in La1una Canyon, or upon a Laauna ~ /.'-\ TOM MURPHllf -~~ annexaUon of South Laguna, or on Laauna influence in AJiso Canyon. In fact, LAFCO removed a future develop· ment area in Laguna Canyon from the city's area of influence. IN THAT DISCUSSION, county Supervisor Bruce Nestande, who sits as a commissioner, asked Laguna officials, "When was the lut road access you folks supported to get people from inland Orange County down to the beach?" Now there's an interestina queaUon. It could even prompt an open letter from coastal people to Mr . Nestande, that would go something like this: "Dear Bruce: ··We read in the papers how you think coastal people don't do much to help your inland district folks from Orange and Santa Ana to aet to the beach. You gotta lotta nerve. fella. "VOV KNOW, WE COULD ju.st take that snide remark of yours and turn it around, ask· ing how much you supervisors support those beachgoers? How many roads have YOU widened or built to the beach? "And then again, bow much support does O range County government offer to the coastline after you've deluged the shoreline with all those visitors? "Okay, let's take Laguna Beach for exam- ple. After all the Inland visit.ors have impacted the town on a hot summer's day, packing the Main Beach Park that Laguna taxpayers built for them, the city then spends $211,123 per year for lifeguard services to keep them all from drowning. "And how much does Orange County gov- ernment kick in to s upport that lifeguard service? Why. a 1reat bl1 13$,000. "Ob, county 1overnment mltht have ntpped a couple of more colna Laauna'a way had your board •&reed to have the clty tuard the coun- ty's sou.them beacbea. "But no. When It came t.o that, you went out and hired a l•Hle of Rent·A·Guarda. Swell. "Elsewhere on the cout, the impact ot ln· landers from your dlatrtct even 1eta worse. Newport Beach spends $1.1 million a year to try to keep them all allve. Your 1reat county benevolence kicks In $123,000 C maybe) thta year. "HUNTINGTON BEACH city llle1uard services c04t $403,683 for the local taxpayers. The county gives $61,190. "Oh yeah, sure, Huntlnston city also aeu a nother $61 ,000 in county cash because It 1uard1 ·'Inland vintor• l\lre ~ow o lot on Uw beach, Zt:M." ' the cowity's Sunset Beach. You ever see that zoo on a sunny Sunday, Bruce? ··And after all the Inland voters of your dia· trict depart the coastal beaches late Sunday as the sun sinks slowly in the West, we have all those reminders of their happy visit. "Streets and beaches are Uttered with beer cans, hotdog wrappers, empty wine bottles and sandwich leftovers. AND THE COASTAL taxpayers get to pay and pay and pay for those cleanup chores. ''Just remember, Bruce, you're operating from a pcetty shaky Hall of Dlsliltegration up there in the County Seat. You shouldn't be the ~uy trying to shake anybody elite's cage. "All Our Love . . . " ·Dry waste site fought County Sanitation District orders study of proposal By RICHARD GREEN Of .. Dettf .......... Direct.ors of the Orange Coun· ty Sanitation District have ordered an in-depth study of alternatives to a controversial plan to dry waste material north of Irvine. The action came this week in the wake of mounting opposition · to a sanitation district plan to dry ,11ludge -waste material re· moved from sewage -at a site in the foothills near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. The material must be dried . .before it can be buried in a sanitary landfill. The sanitation district's lease on its present ·sludge drying site in Coyote Can· yon near Irvine's T urtle Rock area is to run out in three years. Sanitation district directors told staff members Wednesday to s tudy ocean disposal , in· cineration and composting of the material as an alternative to drying it near Irvine. Ray Lewis, engineer for the district, said that he was looking . at those options already but lhe board action serves to increase , the emphasis on the study of · those alternatives. But perhaps t he s trongest criticism h as come fro m homeowners in the northern part of Irvine who fear that they could be affected by odors, truck traffi c and other problems as· sociated with the proposed facilit~. District engineer Lewis said that a proposal for a method to deal with the sludge situation s h ould be air ed before the sanitation district directors in August or September. OCC speech team wins sweepstakes The Orange Coast College Speech team ended its 1980·81 season by winning the first place s weepstakes at the Rio Hondo "Cool-Off" Tourna ment, May 8-9. Novice and varsity speakers combined forces to compete against both four-year and two· year schools. Learung the way for Orange Coast was Erik Ulriksen of Cost a Mesa. who took first in In· formative a nd Mike Roth of Newport Beach, who took first in s plit readers theater. Richard Ril ey of Costa Mesa took second in spilt readers theater. thlrd in extemporaneous oral interpret&· lion. and fourth in draw im· promptu. Doug Be nson of Tustin took second in sales speaking and reached finals of draw impromptu . Marie Ga uthier of Costa Mesa won second in extemporaneous oral interpretation and was in finals of draw impromptu. Roth took fourth in extemporaneous oral interpretation. The team concludes its ac· tivities Saturday when it hosts the 22nd Annual High School Speech Tournament at Orange Coast College. Goat cle aring delayed .. ,,.., .... • > • • Q. 0 ~ • • c N~ CoaltliM CommwUtJI Collegt headquartera toUl be located m center of B.5-0cre parcel m Fountain ValleJI. Di.strict planl to develop other lealable ofjicea and burinesse1 in darkened areas College's plans OK'd Details of Coastline headquarters building told By PHILSNEIDEBMAN proved Wednesday. Ot .. DMfY,...SU.. The new building will house Preliminary plans for a $5.1 Coastline's admissions, counsel· million four-story building that ing and public information wiJI give Coastline Community services and will include offices College a permanent a d · for administ r ators and the ministralive headquarters in Academic Senate. An attached Fountain Valley have been ap-one-story wing wi ll house a small proved unanimously by Coast televisionstudioforthecollege Community College District Aside from an independent trustees. study area, the building will not The Coastline headquarters house classroom space. will be built in the center of an Coastline officials said they 8.5-acre vacant parcel on the plan to continue operating as a southwest corner of Warner college without a formal campus Avenue and Newbope Street. The college, with a current enroll · The Coastline offices wiU be ment of 34,000, offers classes at surrounded by a mixture of leasa· about 150 sites from Seal Beach to ble office space and commercial Newport Beach and inland to development that will help offset Westminster and Garden Grove. the cost of the project, district of· The district trustees' one con· ficials said. The plans w_e_re_a_p_· __ c_er_n regarding the initial design Massage parlor trouble d The beleaguered Atlantis Massage Parlor in Costa Mesa has new problems with the city. Grant Bjorn, who re· cenUy renovated the ex· terior of the parlor al 2112 Harbor Blvd., al· legedly ran afoul of the city's sign ordinance when he painted three signs on the builrung. was that 1l does not include a new home for the college's bookstore. The Coastline bookstore cur- rently is located in a Brookhurst Street shopping center several miles from the new Coastline headquarters . District Chancellor Norman E Watson said offi ce space m the 48.000 square.foot s tructure would ha\ e Lo be eltminated to in- clude the bookstore4 Board President Ceorge Rodda s aid after the meeting that re· visions may be made in the cur· The Coastline headquarters was designed by the Blurock Partnership of Newport Beach Architect Robert Hench said bid- ding on the proJecl is expected in the fall. with occupancy in J anuarv 1983 A s ign i ns pector warned Bjorn that the large signs must be ap- proved by the Planning Commission, but be comple ted •h em anyway, planners say. Bjorn went before the commission thls week to bave them approved. .ROTHE They were denied, and Atlantis has 60 days In which to remove them before city ofnciats take Irvine Company Senior Vice President Tom Nielsen joined the opposition to the plan at the Tuesday night City Council meeting, saying oeean disposal or incineration would be pref· erable. DESCANSO, Calif. CAP> -they could not deliver the ftnl legal action. The U.S. Forest Service bas de· 800 goats for the summer project Parlor owners already The Irvine City Council mem· bera have expre11ed concern about the proposal to dry the waste near Irvine and represen· tatives from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station have said birds that could be attracted t.o the site mi1ht binder flight operatiooa. layed plans to send 1,500 tame for flnanclal reason.a . face action in Orange goats t.o eat a clearln1 at a fire Bergstrom says tbe service County Superior Court. break In Cleveland National will seet new propoaala for The city bas flied suit Forest after two ranchers failed animals that can chomp their ch a r I i n I m • s sage to deliver the animaJa. way through the 490 acres of operaUons without valid Kim Berastr om , of the brush-covered fire break near permlta of proper park· Desc.DJO ranger distn'ct's of Pine Valley In northeast San Ing space. · Several masseuses fice, aald that ranchen Frank Diego County. Sbe says ualne Mllcbell and Robert Simpson of animals inatead of macblnea la have been arrested by Blythe notified the servl_c_e _th_at __ c_h_e_a..:.pe_r. __________ v_i_c_e_o_m_c_e_rs_. ____ --i .................. ..- ChnlJan motorcyclul pcwea police eye~• porlcftl for·vt~lda1J meeting in Corona del Mor . • The curtain rises and the show begins. Come. Meet the foremost exponent of the almost forgotten art of mezzottnt. G.fl. Rothe. in a rare personal appearance. , When you meet Rothe. you11 have the opportunity to acquire her masterful commcmorattve edttton poster ... a brtlllant find indeed. And Rothe's five extraordinary new mezzotlnts . as well as a large selection of her most recent creations. wtll also be available for your acqulsttton. . Rothe. The master. In person ... exclu~tvely at the Upstairs Gallery. Meet Rothe BEVERLY HILL..~ Friday. May 15th. 7 10 9 p.m LONO BEACH Saturd11y, M11y 18th. l to 4 p.m. OR.ANOE COUNTY Sunday. May 17th. 2 to 4 p_ m. .... ..,.an.a.a a.011tO •aAC• OaAJIOS COUNTI' l\n1.11h (tM'' Plan INf~I to Oull<X'k',I 17141&48 8101 27S 5o Le Cltlll'ga Olvd 3A50 Cburv Aw II block So orw111hlrtl 12131428·7070 121 :II tl&e e22s l!luy tht ltmtlt•a 11n ttmt .. With OUt<'On vrnltlll IOW·lnU·,,~l ltl 1111 Lon• Buch, Northrtdllt and Otvt'rly Hiil• o~n Wt--11~,.d•Y thru ~11nfl1y 10 toll Atto Pfue. Tuuday thr11811urttay II 30 lo&. 30 Ofttl# Count)l Mond1y lhru rrtd•y 10 to 0 l\111urd•110 to 9. Sund~ 1210 & DRllll t:lllT 0 • Daily Pilat FRIDAY. MAY 1S, 1981 STOCKS TELEVISION COMICS BS 86 87 0 3 so a s ' a t a Japan leads world in importation of U.S. farm commodities ... 83 County hollle shoppers said 'affluent' By FREDERICKSCHOEMEHL Ot-.O.ityNMl- Jo a six-county Southe rn California region, home buyers in Orange County are the least in- fluenced by high mortgage in- terest rates when it comes to purchasing a new home. This is among findings con· tained in a consumer attitude study of 1,600 home shoppers con- ducted by the Building Industry Associ ation of Sout h e rn California The study, conducted at more t ha n 130 new home s ites in Orange, Los Angeles. Ventura. Riverside, San Bernardino and San Diego counties found "the most significant characteristic d i rferentiating Orange County fro m lhe r est of So uthe rn California is the volume of af- fluent home shoppers ." T he median Income of the average Orange County home shopper was $48,000, compared to $39,000 in the six-county region. o.fly ...... _..,Jetty c ..... TOP HONORS -Costa Mesa's "Woman of the Year," Mildred Mathews. arrives on school bus for Chamber of Commerce activities honorinrz he r and .. Man of the Year" He nry P a n ian Thursd ay, Mrs. Mathews is former supervisor of transportation for Newport-Mesa School Dis- trict. Citizen's sighting aids Mesa arrests A Costa Mesa resident's sight· 1n g of a n old pickup truck believed used as an escape vehi- cle after a convenience market holdup is being credited by police today as aiding the arrest of two suspects. Theodore W Knight, 26, 584 Ha milton St .. a nd Miles J Jensen. 27, 1989 Charle St .. Costa Mesa. were held in city Jail this morning in lieu of $25,000 bail The duo were ar rested 15 mi nutes arter the Thursday holdup of U Totem, 517 W. Wilson St . police said. A m a n fillin g Kn igh t's d escr iption reporte dly took ite ms to the store counter and told the female clerk he wanted the money in the cash drawer. The clerk told offi cers the man had his hand in a pocket s he be l ieved a lso cont ained a weapon. She said she put $40 in a paper bag and ha nded it to the m a n. Ile t hen ran f rom the store. T he unidentified resident notified police of a pickup truck leaving lhe store. A patrol car officer stopped the vehicle near l9th Street a nd Pomona Avenue. C loth in g m a t c hing th at descr ibed by the market clerk as worn by the robbery suspect was found under t he seat of the truck being driven by Knight, police said. Knight was arrested but Jen sen fled from the truck. police said. However . other officers con- v e r ~i ng on t h e scen e a p· prehended Jensen in tbe parking lot of a fast-food restaurant at 635 W 19th St following a foot pursuit Police said that while booking Knight lhey found S40 in one or his pockets. according to the study . Coupled with a median equity in an existing home of $79,000, the Orange County s hopper is "weU qualified" to purchase a home with a median price of $152,000, the study said This compares to a figure of t1 18,000 in the six-county region. "Given the income ... Orange County is indicated to be able to support a higher percentage of sales in the $150,000-plus market than any other a rea in Southern California." ll was noted in the s tudy that m the "price range or interest" category fully 10 percent or shop- pers in the south Ora nge Coutily area indicat ed interest in p urc hasing homes valued at $300,000 or more. Forty-two percent of those sur veyed in Orange County were de· fined as belon~ing to the "luxurv family group ' In the entire s ur- vey area only 27 percent were so rated. Following are other findings containedinthesur vey: Or ange County had the highest percentage of shoppers who own their own home, 82 per- cent, compared to 74 percent for the six-county region Or ange county s hoppers the survey said " ... are the most de· pende nt on a heallhy resale market lo permit buyers lo utilize their equ1ty transfer <for lhe) purchaseora newhome " "W it h an a ve rage household of 2.9 persons and a median age for the head of a househole, a quality house, of sophisticated design, will be needed to attrack this affluent discretionary buyer .. The study is available to as - sociation mem bers for $275 per copy, and to non-members for $350. DC-9 'noise' <Jueried Subpoena of Super 80 test information rejected by judge, Manufacturer argues facts are trade secrets' By STEVE MARBLE Of ti. Dallf rlleC SuH Moves by a Santa Monica at· torney to subpoena test informa · lion on the supposedly "quiet" DC-9 Super 80 Jet were rejected tod ay by an administrative law judge in Costa Mesa. Attorney Jerrod Fadem, ap- pearing at a hearing on a state noise variance fo r John Wayne Airport, said he was seeking the subpoena becasue he had reason lo believe the jet is not as quiet as advertised. F adem argued that the new master plan for John Wayne representing a group of Newport Beach residents, is based on the premise t at the Mc Do nna l Douglas jet wi ll reduce noise. He said he wanted to scr utinize the fi rm'sown test data. "I have information t hat in- dicates lhe Super 80 isn't even capable of a chieving this noise reduction," slated Fadem D e nn is Mc Ateer. a Los Ange les attorney representing McDonnell Douglas. described the sought-after lest information as "trade secrets" and d ata "we wouldn't like to get out to our competitors." "Mr. Fadem doesn 't even have any idea what these docu- ments will show," McAteer told Jud~e Robert Neher. Mc Ateer leaped to his feet and pounded the table in front of him several limes with his fist when Fadem claimed during the hear- i ng tod ay tha t M c Donnell Douglas had assertedly been In· volved "in widespread bribery in the early 70s. ·· ·'All I'm saying," Fadem said as McAteer pounded and pro· tested, "is that if we have to rely on McDonnell Douglas's claims we must look al a little history." Judge Neher, appearing upset with the outburst, asked Fadem to "get on another subject." Fadem. continuing. said that two acoustical engineers. one ha red by him and the second by the City of Newport Beach. had measured noise gener a ted by Super 80 jets taking off from B u r ban}t Airport an d Long Beach Airport The Super 80 Jets being flown at this point are oper ated by Pacific Southwest Ai rlines and do not yet rly out of John Wayne Airport. F a de m sai d th a t bo th engineers brought back lnforma· tion that contradicts statements by McDonnell Douglas on how q uiet the aircraft is. At one point. Fadem held up an ad from the Wall Street Journal wh ich he said made the claim that lhf' Super 80 is 50 per· cent quieter than other jets com· monly used at airports. Attorney Ml'Ateer responded by stating that the test info rma t1o n Fadem was seeking "won't prove the point he's attempting to make." Judge Neher ruled against Fadem. saying the subpeona was too broad and too late in the noise hearings. The hearings, to continue May 22. are bei ng held to determine if the county will be permitted lo continue deviating from state noise control standards at the airport. More for Crystal Cove? Assembly panel approves $10 million package By STEVE MITCHELL Of Ule DMIJ l'IMIC $Uff An Assembly subcom mittee has a pproved a $10.3 million package that will see another 393 acres added to Crystal Cove State Park. The budget items approved by an Assembly Ways and Means subcommittee also include fu nds fo r relocation of the equestrian ce nt e r , cons tru c ti o n o f a restroom and shower facility at Moro Cove. and the stationing of park rangers at Crystal Cove beginning in July. Thursday's a pproval, which still needs the endorsement or both houses in budget hearings late r this year . would see nearly 400 acres in the upper reaches of Moro Ridge purchased as part of the park. That would expand the park, localed between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach. to nearly 2,400 acres In a compromise worked out b e t w c e n A s s e m b·l y w om a n Ma rian Bergeson, R·Newport Beach and Terry Goggin, D·San Berna rdino. the committee ac- tion would see part-time resi- dents of Crystal Cove moved out of the cottages in 24 months. A decision on full-time resi- dents of the cottage community is still to be worked out, Mrs. Bergeson said today Whale fundi ng was approved for public facilities to the new. park. Assemblyman Goggin ex- pressed anger at a stalo General Services Department agreement with mobile home owners at El Morro Mobile Home Park. Assem blywoman Bergeson said the s late de p artment agreed to allow mobile home owners to resell or lease their mobile home~ over the next 20 ) ears She said tht agreement. which 1s ir revocable. came as a sur- prise. She said the original plan was for the mobile home park to become slowly vacated over the next two decades through attrl· lion. Regarding relocation or the equ estrian s t a bles Mrs. Bergeson said it is difficult to know whether there is an area within the stale park where lhe horse center can be located. She places high priority on providing park ranger service by t his s umm er to oversee operation of the new park. In addition. she sa id s he will push for lhe rapid creation of parking areas, including a 600- vehicle lot al El Morro, where visitors would use an exis ting underpass to get to the beach. Sheriff scores court Claims rulings . , confusing, pushes Trotter for tribunal Orange Co un ty S h e riff Cor on e r Brad Ga tes h as criticized the sta le Supreme Court and claimed the best re m edy for it would be the addi- tion of Superior Court J udge John Trotter. T rotter is an Orange County judge who Gales said he un- derst ands is one of three people being considered by Gov. Ed- m und G. Brown Jr. to fill a vacancy. Brown nominated Los Angeles la w yer Sam Wi llia m s. but Williams turned down the offer this week. Another Los Angeles jurist. Otto Kaus, an appeals court judge, was appointed last week. Two vacancies on the seven judge court were created when William Clark accepted an assis· tant secretary or s late post with the Reagan administration and Wiley Manuel died in January. PUSHED BY SHER/PF Judge John Trotter warr ants in an adjacent county, Gates said. so the officer arrest- ed the driver . But the district court of appea\ threw out the case, Gales said. because judges said the officer didn't have e nough cause to check the driver's record. Gates said he doesn't think Trotter would do such things. He told an audience of about 75 peo- ple to write Brown's office. talk to friends and lo bby for judges who will take more practical ap- proaches to the Ja w. Many in the cr o wd we re employed by the Youth Seryice Program. a non-profit umbrella organization that conducts pro- g r a ms a i me d al h e lping juveniles avoid the ju s tice system. Will . kids pay to piny? Speaking at a luncheon in El Toro s ponsored by the Youth Service Progra m Inc. Thursday, Gates said Trotter is a "prac- tical thinker." a trail he said is lacking among fi ve of the six current justices, including Kaus. He said the only other com- mon sense justice is Frank K. Richardson, who Gates admitted m lg ht be a little too con· servative. court judges have forsaken their primary functions. ·'They are in search for error r ather than in search ror truth." he claimed. Al so on hand was Orange County Mun icipal Judge John Griffin, presiding judge at the Orange County South Municipal Co urt. Griffin said after the s peech that most trial judges agree with Gates and feel restricted by upper court rul· in gs. But he disagreed with Gates' assessment that KaU!, the newly appointed justice. wiU be unreceptive to law enforce- m ent. N-M trustees weigh fee system for school sports High school athletes who go out for footba ll, baseba ll and othe r sports in the Newport· Mesa School District may be forced to put up money for the privilege. District trustees ordered Superinte ndent J ohn Nicholl earlier this week to study an ex- tracurricular fee system ror the district and come back with r e- commend&Uons ror such a pro- 1ram. Like many other Orange Coaat area school districts, Newport- M esa has launched tbe study because of a recent Santa Barbara County Superior Court d ecision t hat s cho ols may c h a r&c f or a ft e r -s choo l participation In sports. The district has cut tome s port funding , includin1 lren1portatlon and uniform purchases_. and ls eyeing the ree system aa a method lor further reducing expenditures because of wanin.r district lncome. NB youth named to scholars unit Joseph W. Mader of Newport Beach Ml bffo named a fioallst lll th«. 1181 Presidential Scholars Proeram. Of tbt 1,000 flnallJ". 141 wln· ner1 wlll be choten and nown to Wasblncton. D.C., wbett they wlll receive the PruldenUal Scholars medal1lon. £acb rloall•t Will receive •·certlftea~ of recop!Uon. ,. The Newport-Mesa study was ordered as trustees in the adja- ' cent Huntlngtoh Beach Union High School District ordered a series of public heJrlngs scheduled to discuss a fee pro- gram in ~elr dJstrict. They propose char1lnc athletes and drill and marching band members $25 to participate in the activities n•xt year. In La1una Beach, athletes are charaed M5 to partlclpato in a sport. A aecood aport Cotti the student $40 more and a third sport, S3S. Newport-Mesa ofllclal• noted that ll fHa are char1ed. no school credit can be offered for such acUvltJes. Physical education credlU have ~ olfe,_ In previous years for part.lclpaUon In att.r- achool 1pona. But Richardson's problems don't bother Gates the way the other justices· do. He said the Supreme Court and appellate The Supreme Court, he said, has been more Interested In ways of excluding evidence from court rooms than lo stewarding a 'syst e m intended to put cri m lnals in jail. He claimed· constant revisions and realric· tions passed down by upper courts have hurt the morale ot M b • J law enforcement offlcers and esa 1cyc e ... handcuffed their effectiveness. , ~ "They're confusin• the hell COmpetl·11· on set oul of my deputies... he said. "They're chan1in1 the law ao fast, we can't keep up with lt." Students from 12 Costa Mesa elementary s c hool• are scheduled to compete in tbe city police department's annual Cbampion1blp Bicycl e Safety CompetJ.Uon Saturday. Flrat throu1h third place prise• will be offered In the event .,. to the thlrd, fou..rtb and 111\b erader• t>e•lnnlnt at 10 a .m . ~u Balearic' Communltr Center, J975 8.alearlc Drive \ Oat.et cited eeveral eurnpl .. ol what be called absurd UPPtr court declafom. One was a cue bl the C.tral Valley where an olflcer ttoppH a driver for toiDI the •tor\& way on a one-way 1tteet. Tb• oftlcer, be uld. felt some&blnt waa wroo' wtlh the drtver and ran a checlt on the UcenH plate. The check r.vnJed the man wu wan~ on three robbery Said Grlflln: "I think Otto is going to surprise a lot or peo- ple. · · Burglars leave muddyp~ts Burglars have left a trail of muddy footprinta ln a Newport Beach house after ran.aackinC It and escaploc with $16,633 .ort.b of loot. Police Hid lnlnldera en~ .Jack Harvey'• Irmo Terrace heme 'nlunday altenloon ~r r.ullln1 off rubber moldlq bold· n1 a window pane in place. The croob, who dumped out drawere and cracked off the back ~a locktd drUMr, roach off with jewelry' • a .qoo watcb, a television 1.t and '80 "* cub, police sald. I I c Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Friday. May t5. 1911 ROAST THE COAST: Laiuna Beach city offtclab took conaiderable iu um week wben they appeared before an Orance County covem· ment arm oo queatlona of annexation and ln· flue nee. The county body. known u the Lou I A1en· cy Formation Commlaaion, or LAFCO for abort. didn't seem too happy with Laeuna city in· nuence In Laguna Canyon, or uPon a Laeuna ~ ,....., TOM IURPHlll ,~11 annexation of South Laguna, or on Laauna Influence In AJiso Canyon. Jn fact, LAFCO removed a future develop· ment area in Laguna Canyon from the city's area of ln!luence. IN THAT DISCUSSION, county Supervisor Bruce Nestande, who sits as a commissioner. asked Laguna officials, "When was the last road access you folks supported to get people from inland Orange County down to tbe beach?" Now there's an interesting question. It could even prompt an open letter from coastal people to Mr. Nestande, that would go something like, this : ··Dear Bruce: "We read in tbe papers how you tblnk coastal people don't do much to help your inland district folks from Orange and Santa Ana to get to the beach. You gotta lotta nerve. fella. "YOU KNOW, WE COULD just take that snide remark of yours and tum it around, ask- ing how much you supervisors support those beachgoers? How many roads have YOU widened or built to the beach? ''And then again. how much support does Orange County government offer to the coastline after you've deluged the shoreline with all those visitors? "Okay, let's take Laguna Beach for exam· pie. After all the inland visitors have impacted the town on a hpt summer's day, packing the Main Beach Park that Laguna taxpayers built for them, the city then spends $211,123 per year for lifeguard services to keep them all from drowning. '·And how much does Orange County gov· ernment kick in to support that lifeguard service! Why, a 1reat big W .000. "Ob, county government might have nipped a couple of more coins Laauna'• way had your board a,reed to have the city guard the coun· ty's southern beaches. "But no. When it came to that, you went out and hired a gaggle of Rent·A·Guards. Swell. "Elsewhere on the coast, the impact of In· landers Crom your district even gets worse. Newport Beach spends Sl.l million a year lo try to keep them all alive. Your great county benevolence kicks in $123.000 (maybe> thla year. "HUNTINGTON BEACH city lifeguard services cost $403,683 for the local taxpayers. The county gives $61,190. "Ob yeah, sure, Huntington city also get.'I another $61,000 in county cash because It guards "Inland visitors sure leave a lot on IM beach, Zelu " the county's Sunset Beach. You ever see that zoo on a sunny Sunday, Bruce'> "And arter all the inland voters of your dis· trict depart the coastal beaches late Sunday as the sun sinks slowly in the West. we have all those reminders or their happy visit. "Streets and beaches are littered with beer cans, holdog wrappers, empty wane bottles and sandwich leftovers. AND THE COASTAL taxpayers get to pay and pay and pay for those cleanup chores. "Just remember, Bruce, you're operating from a pretty shaky Hall of Disintegration up there in the County Seat. You shouldn't be the ~uy trying lo shake anybody else's cage. ·'All Our Love . . . " Dry waste site fought County Sanitation District orders study of proposal By RICHARD GREEN Of .. Oelty,.... ..... Direct.ors or the Orange Coun· ty Sanitation District have ordered an in·depth study of alternatives to a controversial plan to dry waste material north of Irvine. The action came tbJs week in the wake of mounting opposition to a sanitation district plan to dry sludge -waste material re· moved from sewage -at a aite in the foothills near El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. The material must be dried before it can be buried In a sanitary landfill. The sanitation district's lease on its present sludge drying site in Coyote Can· yon near Irvine's Turtle Rock area is to run out In three years. Sanitation district directors told staff members Wednesday to study ocean disposal, in· cineralion and composting of the material as an alternative to drying It near Irvine. Ray Lewis, engineer for the district, said that he was looking at those options already but the board action serves to increase the emphasis on the study of those alternatives. But perhaps the strongest c riticism has come from homeowners in the northern part of Irvine who fear that they could be affeeted by odors, truck traffic and other problems U · sociated with the proposed facility. District engineer Lewis said that a proposal for a method to deal with the sludge situation sho uld be aired before the sanitation district directors in August or September OCC speech team wins sweepstakes Tbe Orange Coast College Speech team ended its 1980-81 season by winning the first place sweepstakes at the Rio Hondo "Cool·Off" Tournament, Ma y 8·9. Novice and varsity speakers combined forces to compete against both four.year and two- year schools. Leading the way for Orange Coast was Erik Ulrlksen of Costa Mesa. who took first tn In· formative and Mike Roth of Newport Beach, who took first in split readers theater. Richard Riley of Costa Mesa took second in spUt readers theater. third In extemporaneous oral interpreta· lion. and fourth in draw im· promptu Doug Benson of Tustin took second an sales speaking and reached finals of draw impromptu . Mark Gauthier of Costa Mesa woD second in extemporaneous oral interpretation and was in finals of draw i mpromptu. Roth took fourth in extemporaneous oral interpretation. The team concludes its ac· tivilies Saturday when it hosts the 22nd Annual High School Speech Tournament at Orange Coast College Goat clearing delayed -----__. _____ ,..,.,__•• .. •-+""o_c,..;: ..... ..,_4_ .. "llllOll'"OO"lllb-llllllOlll'OU ..... -... 1 ••rner •••· (~~:.~~~ -i ~::~IU~JIP j .. ~ • > • • ~ 0 ~ J • c New Coastline Community C-OUege Modquarln• will be located in center of 8.5-0ere parcel m f'ountam Valley. District plans to develop other~~ offices and ~asea in darkened areas College's plans OK'd Details of Coastline headquarters building told By PHILSNEIDERMAN OfllleOellyl't•StMt Preliminary plans for a $5.l million four-story building that will give Coastline Community Colleg e a permanent ad · mfnistrallve h eadquarters in Fountain Valley have been ap. proved unanimously by Coast Community College District trustees. The Coastline headquarters will be built in the center of an 8.5·acre vacant parcel on the southwest corner of Warne r A venue and Newhope Street. The Coastline offices will be surrounded by a mixture of leasa· ble omce space and commercial development that will help offset the cost or the project, district of· ficials said. The plans w!re ap- Massage parlo r troubled The beleaguered Atlantis Massage Parlor in Costa Mesa has new problems with the city. Grant Bjorn. who re· cently renovated the ex- terior of the parlor at 2112 Harbor Blvd., al· legedly ran afoul of the city's sign ordinance when he painted three signs on the building. A sign in s pector warned Bjorn that the large signs must be ap· proved by the Planning Com miss ion, but be completed •hem anyway, planners say, Bjorn went before me com mission this week to have them approved. They were denied, and Atlantis has 60 days in which t.o remove them before city ofri cials take proved Wednesday. The new building will house Coastline's admissions. counsel· ing and public info rmation services and will include offices for administrators and the Academic Senate. An attached one·story wing will house a small television studio for the college. Aside from an independent study area, the building will not house classroom space. Coastline officials said they plan to continue operating as a college without a formal campus. The college, with a current enroll- ment of 34,000, offers classes at a bout 150 sites from Seal Beach to Newport Beach and inland to Westminster and Garden Grove. The district trustees' one con· cern regard.in~ the initial design was that it does not include a new home rorthe college's bookstore. The Coastline bookstore cur- rently is located in a Brookhurst Street shopping center several miles from the new Coastline headquarters. District Chancellor Norman E. Watson said office space in the 48 ,000-square-foot structure would have t.o be eliminated to in elude the bookstore. Board President George Rodda said after the meeting that re· visions may be made in the cur· The Coastline headquarters was designed by the Blurock Partnership of Newpart Beach Architect Robert Hench said bid· ding on the project is expected in the fall, with occupancy in January 1983. ROTHE Irvine Company Senior Vice President Tom Nielsen joined the opposition to the plan at the Tuesday night City Council meeting, saylng ocean disposal or incineration would be pref· erable. DESCANSO, Calif. (AP> -they could not deliver the first legal action. The U.S. Forest Service baa de· 800 goats for the summer project Parlor owners already The Irvine City Council mem· bera have expressed concern about the proposal to dry the waste near Irvine and represen· tatlvea from El Toro Marine Corps Air Station have said birds that could be attracted to the site might binder nt1bt operaUona. . layed plans to send 1,500 tame for financial reasons. face action in Orange 1oat.a to eat a clearing at a fire Bergstrom says the service County Superior Court. break In Cleveland National will seek ne w proposals for The city has filed suit Forest after two ranchers failed animals that can chomp their ch a r gin g massage to deliver the animals. way through the 490 acres of operations without valid Kim Ber11trom , of the brush·covered fire break near permits of proper park- Deac•"'•" ran•er dlatrtct'a of Pine Valley in northeast San ing space. ....__, • · Several masseuses flee, aald that ranchers Frank Diego County. She says using have been arrested by Mitchell and Robert Simpson of animals instead of machines is Blythe notlfied the aervl.:.ce.:......:lh=•:..t:__~c::b::e:.:a:.:::pe.:.r:..:· __________ v_i_c_e_o_ff_lc_e_rs_. ____ --1 'lbe curtain rises and the show begins • Come. Meet the foremost exj>onent of the almost forgotten art of mezzotlnt. G.R. Rothe. ln a rare personal appearance. When you meet Rothe, you11 have the opportunity to acquire her masterful commemorauve edition poster ... a brllllant find Indeed. And Rothe's five extraordinary new mezzotlnts. as well as a Jarge selection of her most recent creations, wtll also be avallabJe for your acqulsttion. · Rothe. The master. In person ... exclusively at the Upstairs Gallery. Meet Rothe BEVERLY lilLt.S Friday. M~ llSth. 7 lO g p.rn. U>NO BEACH Saturday. MQy 18th. 2 10 4 p.m. ORANGE COUNTY Sund~ May 17th. 2 to 4 p. m. OILAJIOS C.OUJfft South cn .. t l'l•te INol tn llulloclc •I 11141 lk!Mll9 1 Buy thf' llmtl«:H on 11mt .. wllh ourconvtnltnl low 1n1uHt ltrm1 lonJ 8'at h. NorthrldJ' and fkYtrly Hiii• "Pf" Wtdnf'lldlt)' chru S\1nd•)' 10to15 Arco P\na, fuHd•y thru •lurd•Y O·)O 10 5:.30 Oran "C:ounc}I. Monday lhru1rlday \Oto O. 11urdJl1 !Otoe. Sunday 13 lo~ ..., .................. ._, ChnliOn motoreyclut "°"" ~ CJ1Cle• porbd for 'Wtdrwtda11 meeting in COfOM "'Mar. . " ' • .. • • ·-• w 0 0 0 ' • # 0 4 p 0 z 0 0 4 4 0 Orange Cout DAIL V PILOT/Friday, May 16, 1981 ,,_ ________________________________________________________ ., N •• NY E COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS OllOUY.0..1 IN(~UDI! UAOUON TMI NIW YOllK, MIDWltT. •aCl~I(, •tW, IO$TOlilt, OlfllOlf Alll O (lllCINllATI UOClf •ICCMUOU AllD ••"'O•no '"' '"' NA$0ANO ... ., .... f Dow Jones Final UP 12.87 CLOSING FIGURE 985.94 1f you see or hear an advertisement or com- mercial that you believe stretches the truth, what can you do about it? Well , you can. of course, refrain from buying the product being advertised. But that won't put a halt to the advertising. You can also write directly to lbe company that makes the product, telling the presi· dent what you think of his advertising. That may or may not work. The chances are excellent that you will at least receive a reply. However. there's still another way you can reg- is ter a complaint about advertising, and that's by sending your beef to NAO, 845 Third Ave., New York, N . Y . 10022. NAO stands for the National Advertising Division of the Council of Better Business Bureaus, and it's ready to investigate complaints about na- tional advertising that people find "misleading, inac· curate or offensive." (If it's a looal ad that disturbs you, take it up with the nearest Better Business Bureau.) NAD IS A PART of a self-regulatory mechanism st:t up 10 years ago by the advertising industry itself. The ad people reasoned it was better to regulate themselves ~ ra ther than , ha ving som e-\~ ~ one e lse · ).-,• s ay the govern· 4 • ~ ment -do it. ~ ;o w~~~~e~~s~~~ 111181 1a11a1u in place lo deal with objections to ads. It's not just the public who can tap into it. A company incensed at what a compet.itor is saying can file an objection. After you send in -yoor complaint, the NAO, if it feels it has merit, will lake it up directly with the ad- vertiser. asking for s ubstantiation of the claims made in the ad. lf the NAD feels the substantiation is adequate, it will then drop the case. If it feels otherwise, it will ask the advertiser to discontinue or change the ad· vertising. And if the issue cannot be settled by negotiation, then a complaint will be referred to a five-person review board whose members include representatives from the ad industry and the public sector. STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS ...= ~~ -;..:.~.:"...:.':..-..:: ~-·''*'"'II n•tlOf\olff!l •f,,...,.. _, A'uo.BOll 9 JI01.00 JO + Ill GvlfC•n 9 a:J,000 2A • 14 DorcltrtGH 207,100 1•~ + V. ~nQ9r011 144, 100 1a+oo • ~ ~ft!fr" m:i~ ~~ ·--~ o. ... prod 121..JOO 31 • 114 FPA Corf) ' 111,700 11~ + l FreqElct s 91,JOO «»<. n KlrbyExp s 13,.tGO JO"' -1 \4 METALS :z C9"W U-1 Cefth e pciund, U.S. de\11-llons. LAIN,.._. <MltS a _.o. ZIM .. ,. c.ftO a _.o, dell,..red. Tl11 '6."12 Metals W .... <omf)fflM lb. Al_._., 1U .... ts • jlOUrld, N. Y. Mercwy tcU.00 per H•sk. "l•tl-tA6.$.00troy 01., N.Y. SILVER NEW YORK (API -Htlndy & H•rm .. sliver '10.'MO, Off to.at E119•ll1trd •llve r $10.'10, up $0.U , l•brl<•led sllwr $11.•tl, up to. Ut. i.e.e.: morning fixing .-.1.s, oft P-fO. ~: .,..._ flxlno "47•.fO. off $7.7S. ,.., .. : ......_fixing uoi.,., off sn . .a. ,.,...,.,., flxlng$oll1.4', off U.7•. Z-•rtctll: let• eft-llxl1>9 S.76.00, Off '7.00; S.7'.00-ed, H•11•y & MUlftlll: Ollly d•llY quot• "47UO, off 17.7S . • .......,.., only doelly quotlf ,..,.,,., fllf $1.7S • ........ : only NllY QUOle IMtl~•tW SoltS.56, off $1,0.. ¥ • Orange Coast OAJLY PILOT/Friday, May 16, 1981 uoeue Nl'WI e WONDIR WOMAN Wondet Wom11n brulcl up • pnony -nc:e and , ... cu.9 thr .. m9'11WI ol • World Peece Conr..-D TIC TAC DOUGH • w•A•t•H CUM llef 8l'CI •lllil IMlf •bclvc10t • ,,M. MAGAZINI .. C9ndld C-•" ctNtOt A.llen Funt, • \lltll 10 Lon• don'a I~ WU,_ um, Maeltlfte f~e, .. w.tl on u ... l lreet Inlet· view"; 0. Whl1111cer Nial• the prlnc:IP* of -'Ohl ION. c.p1 Cetro1 lakM a took al •HtCIH •nO welgt\I IOaa .MOVIE • I 'A .. Suquetch .. ( 19711) Documentary s.ven men ancouotet a slrangt. hell h(lm.,.. cr .. ture In • prim!· ttve backwood• atH fll) LOI ANOl!LE8 WUI< IHMVllW Hoel Cleta RoOerta G WALL fTMEf WE.EK • Munlctpal Bondi For Fun And Profit? .. Gua11 Jame• J Lowrey. prHldant, JamM J Low1ey & Com· pany, Inc a:30 G OJ MOVIE White Mtttlng dOWn to Ill· 1911 to the Army·N•vy game. the ~0771h 19 bom- t>atded 9nd i.11 with .,, unexploded bomb to defuM. • OOOOTIME.8 Thekn•'I fianc:e lurna out 10 be Old enough 10 be her l•ther .• OOPS -Dick Clark will host "TV's Ce n sored Bloopers" with funny television tape and film outtakes tonight at 10 on Channel 4. • • I .. The loog"I Yard .. t 1074) Burt Raynorda, Eddie Albert A rormer pro QU8'lerback dOlng time In a Southern prtaon 11 given Iha job of coaching • group ol conv1<:ta lor a no· holdl·b•rted football game aga1na1 the guard• ., (!!) ELECTAIC OOMPANY(R) Cl) C88HEWS «I A8CNEW8 UC) D J0t<9'1 WILD .., WELCOME BACK, l<OTTEA Muell lo Julie's d111m•y. her s/119' Vtllllng flOfn Nebraaka starts d•hng Epstein • IU!NNY HILL Benny doe• • comedl<: tu.off on .. Bonnie and Clyde •• fli) l<CET NEW88EA T ~ 8TUDI08EE ··ee1uga .. Belinda, a giant Belug• wf\ai., trains •• San Diego's S.• World, two Ch!Cllgo kids run a sl<al• board shop, apple plekfng In New England (R) Cl) NEWS (!]) BAAHEY MILLEA A crazed man threaten• 10 i.ap off a bulldlng into the ofllc:lal mayorei parade 8'116 fJ EOfTO*'IAL 7.00 fJ C88 NEWS D NBCNEWS D HAPPY DAYS AGAIN Richie llghls h1~ rears ove< auendlng • Halloween P••· ty at a haunteo house whete r.e believes he uw • headial QhOSI CHANNEL LISTINGS a A8CNEW8 Q BULLSEYE Q) M'A'8'H n... tllnl1te1 COi Flagg ahOwS up II the ~17th ag•1n. convinced thll H•wkeye la a communtlt ~P•thller mJ STREETS M SAN FRAHa8CO StOM beCC>tnea • member of • lr•ternlly or drunk• 10 tlnd out why th•" or them we•• beaten to death fll) OVEA EASY Guests come<ll•n Dick Shawn, Or John F•1ouha1. Chai Na1ul (R~ (!!) MACNEIL I LEHRER RE POAT TICTAC~H 9 MERV OAtFAN Guests Tanya Tucke• Ro09' Millar. Bob Sagel 7:30 0 2 OH THE TOWN Hosts Stave Edwaroa M91ody R<>ge<s Vtlll lhe Laundromat Thaa1111 1n Loa Angeles, travel 10 the Rock-to IOllow some local ent1an11 1n the Spe- cial Olymp1C11 D FAMILY FEUD 8 SHAHANA Guest Bobby v .. fJ TUETOHE Q FACE THE MUSIC I) KNXT 1CBSJ LO'> Anyt:k'"> 0 KNBC1NBC1 Lo!> Anqe1p<; 0 KTLA tlnll 1 Los Angt>lt''> 0 KABC· TV 1ABC1 Los AnqetPS T >\FMB <CBSt S.in Diego Q KHJ· TV (lno I Los Anqt>lt> .. ®) KCST tABCi San Dwqo Q) KTTV lino I Los Anqel>''> Cl) KCOP TV tlno I Los Anqf'tr'> fll> KCET-TV PBS1 Lo., Ariq•·••., m KOCE TV 1PBS1 Hunl.,•qton Be.ten :Hot stuff on 'Dallas' . By PETER J . BOYER APTe..,,.._W,..._ LOS ANGELES "Dallas .. has another whodunnit going. I don't care. What's wrong here? Not only do I not care whodunnit, I'm not en· tirely certain what wai; dun. I was stirring peppers into a pot of blackeyed peas at the critical moment of last week's episode, and by the time my wile's urgent call wrenched me from the stove, I had missed everything but Cliff Barnes standing in a pool shouting up to J .R. Ewing, "You bastard!" And, you know? My first thought was. "I wonder if I put in enough peppers . . . " I like my peas hot. "It's Kristin." said my wife, joining me at the stove . "J .R. killed Kristin. You didn't put in too m a ny peppers. did you?'' She likes her peas mild. It occurred to me that just a year ago, matters "Dallas" were central to more than one Friday night conversation at our house. J .R. (Larry Hagman) had been shot, you'll remember, and the hype surrounding the season-ending mystery as· sumed gross proportions when the actors' strike delayed its resolution. We even watched reruns. It turned out that Kristin (Mary Crosby), J .R.'s sister-In-law-lover , had plugged the boy. We'd been took. After that disappointing non- development, I couldn't .watch "Dallas" without thinking of that fairy tale, "The Emperor's New ' Clothes.·• · Naked, "Dallas" didn't look so good. Trash· with-class suddenly seemed simply trash. I started going out Friday nights again, and growing ln· tolerant of my wife's lingering passion for the s how, which, happily, began to wane when baseball began. And so now, "Dallas" has another cUffhanger. It's sate to look down, the drop isn't as steep as they'd have you believe. So, what's the setup thi5 time? Barnes, that aoony lneffectua1', finds a sUff in the Ewing pool. She's dead, he mutters. He loob up, to see J.R. standing behind a broken rail, smllin1 that once· so-effective smile. Now, what we're supposed to think is that J .R. d1dn't do it. That's too obvious. The poor child jumped or fell into the pool. Or maybe somebody else did it, and J .R. just happened oo to the scene. We're also supPoted to think that the corpse la not K.rt.st.ln, because that's too obvloua. too. She'd shown up to squeeze some more moaey from J.R., ualq their illegitimate baby aa thf! pump. Too ob- vloua . . No. we're suppo8ed to wonder whether the vlc· tim was Sue Ellen (Linda Gray), J .R.'a ofleu· threatened wile. Or Pam Ewin1 <Victoria Prln· clpal), the spectacularly endowtd n.ltwtt who betped Sue Ellen makt olf with J.R. '• chJld. Or LeaUe Stewart (Susan Flannery), tb• poJaooous PR lady who tried to put the 1crew1 to J .R. at. a Senate hearin1.1be real myatery t. why the Tel.II atale aenate would be conducUnc bear· ID11 e.:t matten ol lntemallooal revolution. ' • Or Afton Cooper, J .Jl.'s new mlatnu, or t.ouelll LM, J .R. 's 1ecrttarJ, wbo tomebow sot .l;Rotmad. W.U, ooc. burned, twice c•utlout. "Dallu" t. .IDH~"'. worlby P•JO«.:.. IO lt'• .. ,. to .. ,: • .tc:tlm ll Krt.lln. J .11. abo¥9d her m. He'U ... t r•p. r ..... TM P*al weren't hOl eoouab • \ Q) ALL IN THI! FAMILY Archie become• deprassed aller taking • magazine'• ltle .. pec1anc:y t .. I that lrldbl• he Wiii die wtwn he reac.,.. 57 fl:) MACHEIL I LEHRER REPORT m BU81NE88 EXCt4ANGE .. EmplOy" Benell! Intl• tt0n•· Eumln• the benefit packaget that mMy co1· porauons leef don't s111 enthullasm l1om employ. MS, but ralhe< apethy at en ex11aord1nary prlea Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE "Candid Cemei1" creator Allen Funt a vlsn 10 Lon· don'a famous wax mUM um. Madame Tuuaud s 8.-00 0 Cl) THE INCREDIBLE HULK Bann., falls •n wnh a gang ol tn-.. and the Hulk has to get htmOUI 0 MOVIE .. The Harlem Globetrotters On G11itgan's laland tP1am1e1e) Bob Oenve1 Alan Hale Jr The Harlem Globetro1t111a plane crash- landa on me ttny Pactltc ••land whe1e G1mgan and htt ltHlllds 81• marooned D MOVIE I I·~ .. Some1h1f19 fvol (1971) Sandy Dannta, Rllph Bellamy A ramlly or lour unknowmgty become l!"dangereo by the av11 wnh1n their new hOme u (!]) 8EN80H An eartl\quake !laps Ben· aon and Clayton In a amalf room or the uecut1ve manllOn 0 MOVIE * * •;, "Deadly Hero ' ( 19711) Oon Murrey, Otahn Williama A trtgget-happy polrc.tnan • c••-end • kidnap victim's fife 61t ieopardlZed when ne res· Q) CAAOL BURNETT ANOFRIEN08 GuMta. Otek van Oyka. Tony Randall SI '11J WASHINOTOH WEEK IN REVIEW t:OO 0 Cl) THE OUKE8 Of HAZZARD An old !tame of unci. JMM s retu1ns lo Hauatd County lo cotfect • legacy .. It 10 hlll by her late hu .. banel and & debt lrom Bon Hogg (R) Q) ME.AV GAIFflN Gue11s Tanya Tucker Rogat Miiiet. Bob Sagel. Georgl Irene. Belly Bucil· lay 6ll WALL STREET WE.Et< Munapal Bonda For Fun And Prol117 .. Guest James J Low1ey. president, James J Lowrey & Com· pany. tnc (!!) VOTER'S PIPELINE Holl Jim Coope1 mMll w1tl'o Howard Stein, dlrec- 1or 01 a drug rehab1illahon houM and so~ or tha past and p1esent rea1denll 10 d111CY5S why lhll house has been such a auccess 11:30 D TWIUOHT ZONE Annabelle buys hat daugh 1111 Christie an e•penS1ve talking dOll, and hef hus· band Eru;n 1eaen1s 11 fll) (!!) SACRAMENTO WEIEt< IN REVIEW Host Murray F1omson 10:00 0 (J) OAL.LA8 Oe1plle be1no pararyzeo and 1n tne hospital. J R conllnues to thwart Bob· by'• allorts 10 run EWtng Ott (R) 0 TV'S CEHSOAEO BLOOPERS Some of the flubl made by mafo1 lelav111on stars wtitch -re originally 8011· ea out are seen. Doc:~ Clark hOSIS oom NEWS Mary Crosby, Kristin of "Dallas.'.' No loss seen LOS ANGELES CAP) -Frederick S. Pierce. president or ABC Television, has predicted that the networks will continue to be the dominant force in television despite the loss of part or their audience to cable and pay systems. "ABC believes that network television will re· main the primary means of deUvering news, ln· formation, sports and entertainment to a diverse American public -and will remain the mass ad· v~rtising medium," Pierce said. He conceded that the three major network.I are losing viewers to Increased competition, particular ly to the so-called, "superatatlons" whose signals are sent by aatellite across the coun· try. But Pierce said the network la alao entertn1 the cable business. He said ABC Video Enterprises launched lta first advertlaer-supported cable proar1.mmin1 service ln A ril. TUBE TOPPERS K.HJ I) 8:00 -"Deadly Hero." Film starring Don Murray, James Earl Jones and Ulla Skala about a psychotic New York policeman. ABC D 8: 30 -"The Longest Yard." Burt Reynolds and Eddie Albert star in a movie about a free-for-all prison foot· ball ~ame pitting the guards against the convicts. KOCE 9 9:00 -"Voter's Pipeline." Host Jim Cooper visits the Phoenix House in Santa Ana where drug addicts seek counseling and shelter. 8B MMTt.APIECE THIATM FUTIVAL OF FAVONTU 'The Golden Bowl .• Buect on 1 novel by Henry JamH Ametlgo Minda a 1areg1am with • concealed warning to Ch8'1olla When he heara of VaNfil a mat· rtage f"op<>UI to het (Pall 2)(R) (!!) BILL MOYERS' JOURNAL .. 0 1 Lile And Law The lat ast devetopmenla 1n the abo1t1on balll• · -Iha allempt by member• or Congrau oppo11d to abortion 10 pa .. a human Ille statute •• 11 Chtonicled 10--*I Q) NEWS II) INOEPEHOE.NT HETWOAI< NlW8 11:00 0 D G (J) (!]) NEWS D ITARTAEK Mt Spock blOwa n11 coot and almost gall Capt Ktrk klllad when an overwhelm· 1ng mallng urge taket l>OI· MSllOnOfhtm Q NEWLYWED GAME Q) M"A'S'H B J and Chari.a clash when tney a1e both hon· ored 10< a )Olnt .....Oicat Opetatlor> (I) IENNYHILL Benny pl1ys a court lester and M>On IONS his head 6ll oia< CAVETT Dock Cavell V1111s Tne Sydnay Janis Gallery .. (Parl 2 ol 2) (!!) SNEAK PREVIEWS Roger Ebert •nd G- Slll<el •-Lion Of The Desert, .... f'rlday The 13th Part ti" and oth9'1 11:30 I) MOVIE * * Htgh·Ba!Hn t 10781 Petet Fonda, Jarry RM<I A proleaSlonal motorcycflal. hla bUddy and a lamale trucl< drivet take on a VICIOut gang of h1)eck111a tRJ 0 TOHIOHT Host Jonnny Carson Gueata Robert Kla1n 79- year-OIO IWW>S Amos and Wtlllam C1utheld G 9 A8CNEW8 NIOHTLINE 0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL Q) MOVIE * * • .. Btrdman Ot Alca- traz .. ( 1962) Burt Lancas- 1111, Kart Malden During his 53 yeat' or 1mp11aon- mant Roball Stroud becomes a world aulh0t11y on birds (I) DANCE FEVER Celebrity fudgea Dick Jimmy Nels Yonce and Pal Van Penen Guests Taste 01 Honey ED (!!) CAPTIONED ABC NEWS 12:00 0 MOVIE * * II Conql>8fed Tha Wo1td' t 19561 Pete• Graves Beverly Garland An ugly cave creature aid· ed by a ICtenltlt 11 benl on lak•'!i_ conllol ol tne world fJ (!]) FRIDAYS Q GUNSMOKE A contempllble lathe< pre- tends 10 have • <:hang@ or heart when lhu1e nuns JOHN DARLING ' tonftont""" whh the~ and wtlOOy Of hit ·-'1\ltdtetl • l.AMTTA Tony's 1)9'~ IMllnga gel In Ille way wlWln r.e aua~ll hfl ratardad lrlend ol pa11y crltnM • PHll.OIOPHY ll:IO D acTV ~to tPraft'IHw•) ~bet'a of the l•ll\80 Second Coy impro- V!Mllonal troupe dlaplay the!• Mii<• andll'ri1 In tnla _,.. whk:h tak .. place at • llCllonal lelavltllon 11•- uon 1!00 Q PSYCHIC PHENOMENA. THE WOAlDNYONO .. Lil• Alter Death Hoata Oamlef> Slmpaon ano SI•· cy Hunt dlllCYM pnotoao- phiee on ONth and dying with gue.ta Kay Crouant and Katny O- Ii) IHOEP£NOEHT NnWOAI< NEWS 1:30G MOVIE • a•-. 'The Daughl••• or Joanua Cabe" (1972) Bud· dy Eb1«1 Karan Valanllne To kM<> hlS land Under a IWW ~leadrf19 law 8 wlly fur trappet 18CIUlll 8 tnlel, 1 pk:kpockel and a proalllule 10 por11ay n1s daughters Cl) MOVIE * * '" .. Shoe!< TrHtment .. t 19641 Sluart Whitman. CatOI L yntay A psych••· Iris! 1Ubj8CIS • Prt••l• investigator 10 u1ens1ve ahock 11ea1ments tn an allompt 10 gain poaH111on or an Inmate's stolen 101- tune 1.46 0 NEWS 2:00 0 COMEDY SHOP 0 MOVIE * * "Tomb 01 L1091a' ( 19115) VfnGenl Prtee Ehli· bath Shepperd A dead woman auempta to ruin her nusband·s second mamage by terror1Z1ng hts neww1ra 2:15 0 EOOOAIAL 2:20 0 MOVIE * * ... ·rhe Black ROM 119501 Tyrone Power. 01son W8'1es A 13th cen- tury EnghSh Sa•on travels 011anlal caravan routes see1t1ng 1rade sec1e1s 2:300 NEWS Q) MOVIE *. * The MOUN Thal Roared t 1959) Peter Sellers Jean Stberg 3:00 0 NEWS ..... Nlwt HO MOYll *a '-' 'King 01 Tha l(hyl>ar RlllH' ( 1H4) Tvsr P-. Mk:hMI ~ 4:10• MOVll * * '4 .. Jenntlw " ( 111&3) Howard Dutt. Ida t.uplno •:aoe NEWt S:\ 11 Kl>:\ Y -MORtK- 6:.10 8 HEWS &.~-MOVIE **''> 'Tlm11 Without Pity" (1956) Michael Radgr1ve, Ann Todd 1:00 D 8E.ADK>1PfTY C1J OOMMOHfTY FUO&ACI< Ho.I F1tnando Del Rio Cl) 8UMM9 SEMUTEA (R) 1:15CI) ALM8THATTEACt4 8:30 I) SUMMER 8EME8TVI (A) D THATSCAT D ®l IT'SYOUR 8U8IN£S8 Q DAV£Y ANO OOUA TH Q) SPIAKOUT Cl) ROMPER AOOM fl) CAPTIOHED ABC HEWS (I) VOICEOF AOAICUL TURE 7:00 0 008TY'S TAEEHOUSE D GOOZJUA I HONG l(()NG~ D PACESETTERS Host Larty Mc:Co1moc:1< fJ @) 8UPEAFRIEN08 fJ HOTFUOOE Q) T\JANABOUT ED LANOUAOE (I) TV .. L00t<8 AT LEA RHINO 7:30 0 MAAl.0 ANO THE MAGIC MOVIE MACHINE D BIG BLUE MAR8LE fJ GIGGLE8NORT HOTa Q) ELEMEHT AAY NEWS Cl) GETTIN' OVER ED VEOETA8LE SOUP (I) 1<106WORLO 1.-00 0 Cl) TOM ANO JEAAY 0 THE FUNT8TONE8 0 THE RIFLEMAN 0 THUNOARR THE 8AR8ARIAN fJ UFO Q) MOVIE • • • ·Boo1ou• TristesM t 1959) Oav1d Novao Debo• an Kerr Cl) MOVIE Cl) SPECIAL PEOPLE * * Tomb Of The Loving fD REBOP (R) Dead ( 19701 Jonn As/\ley @) PLA8TICMAN I BABY Angelique Pet111ohn PLA8 by Armstrong & Batiuk -. T HERE WAS A LARGE. ~SH FIRE ON IRE EAST S lc::>e 'TOOAY ! FOR. MORE ON IHlff S70Q~ LEI'S GO TO M INNIE. CAMERON ON THE. SCENE/ ; • ! ! . Coffee not her cup of tea·: NEW YORK <AP> She's poured more cups of coffee and listened to more troubles than Mrs. Olsen and Ann Landers combined, but after 25 years of playing Nancy Hughes on the CBS soap opera. "As The World Turns," Helen Wagner is out of a job. "I am not retiring," declared Miss Wagner. who, a CBS spokesman said, left the show because s he and the network "could not come to a contrac- tual agreement. • · 1 had nothing whatsoever to do anymore." the actress said recently in describing the gradual elimination of Nancy from the show -she had one line in three months -and her decision to leave. "There just hasn't been anything to Nancy's character," Miss Wagner said. ''Anybody could read the lines I've been given. I haven't been in the kitchen for a year and a half." Soap opera buffs know that Nancy's kitchen, located in that mythical Midwest community of Oakdale, has been an imp of the show since its de· but April 2, 1956. It's where problems Involving the Hughes and Lowell clans were discussed, rediscussed and then discussed some more. "World Turns" has always been the most traditional of soap operas, celebrating the family, of which Nancy, and her husband Chris, played by Don MacLaugblin, were the anchors. It was the show which celebrated the Fourth of July, Memorial Day and Christmas. And for near- ly 20 years, it was No. 1. With the death in 1974 of lts creator and bead writer, Ima Phillips , and gradual success of youth· oriented soaps on ABC, "World Turns" slipped in the ratings . MEDLEY'S PRESENTS C9rfft •terta s:uA md Fooct s ..... o.,..w.- Sunday, May 24; Monday, May 25; former Righteous Brother Bobby Hatfield In Concert. Two Show. Nitely 9 p.m. & 11 p.m. Tickets S10.00. \ ., ' Tuesday, May 19, Biii Medley's Special Guest Julie Dees, for an evening o f fun and frolic. WiJneta one of the greateat lmpreuloni\te of our time! Ticket.I '500. 9 p.m. & 1 t p.m ==--= ~· Fndty, May 15; Saturday, May 18 BW Medley'• Own Show Sand ''\t>lce" - ----fMturlnci Lff Fttr•ll & c.athertM CniQ, The tncredlble Greg Topper MIV 11. I p.m The Chanm. -known '°' their ntt"Ptl)tlln• ... ll 's still among the five top-rated soaps, CBS said. but a turnover of wnters and characters changed the tone of the show. ,.. The "World" of today is much sexier and turns al a faster pace, blurring characters. especially the newer ones who are in and out of the show within six months. "Writing an hour show, five days a week, s2- weeks a year is very, very difficult," Miss Wagner · said. "To make all the little details fit is very de- manding. "But if you're going to write 'World Turns,' you're going to have to do that. It's about the de- tails of people's li ves and their interaction rather than the thrust of the story. "I am very much aware that as the years have gone by. the character must change," Miss Wagner said . "I don't expect to be used in the same way as I was in the beginning of the show. "But I see no reason not to involve Chris and Nancy in the kinds of situations that their present age (early 60s) would be," she said. "Don and l have never obJected to being aged as we wenl along." Her husband and manager, Robert WiUey, said, "Helen and Don MacLaughlin were the only happily married people on the air. As far as the writer's job is concerned, writing a happy mar· riage is incredibly hard to do." The character of Nancy Hughes has not been written out of the show, Miss Wagner said. "l have never really criticized what the authors have wanted to do,'' she said. "What r have criticized is what they wanted to lose or not bother with. They should use what background material they have inherited." i'ELE ....... , ... , ... ........... .., ..... -+