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1981-05-28 - Orange Coast Pilot
.. 111111 CUii THURSDAY . MAY 28 1981 2nd prisOner- freed By GLENN SCO'IT Of .. ....., .......... A Huntington Beach man con· victed or burglary turned himself in to Oranae County authorities Wednesday aft.er be was released mistakenly 17 days ago from the county jail. David Benjamin Hadley. 19, ii the second Jail inmat.e releued prematurely in the last two • m error months ~ause or clerical er· rors by Orange County aberilra deputies. He waa released on May 11 after serving a 9Cklay sentence in jail for probation vlolaUoo. He was supposed to be transferred to a California Youth Authority facility where he could serve up to another three years. But when time came to transfer him, deputies at the jail failed on two occasiOlls to note the orders and instead released him. sald a sheriff's spokesman. Convicted rapist Darryl Watts 17. was mfatakenly released from Los Anteles County Jall about two months ago after serving time for a relatively minor offense. Walts bad been sentenced in Orange County to a 23-year prison term. Valley Scuffle • ID Newport woman charged in police car theft By PATRICK KENNEDY OfU..OellyP*'Slllft A Newport' Beach woman, handcuffed for suspicion or drunken driving in l'"ountain Valley, allegedly commandeered the arresting officer's police car, rammed another police car and drove away on the wrong side or Magnolia Street as the arresting officer fired his revolver at his vanishing vehicle. Police said the woman. Denise Noel Vourt.sis, 25, of 635 Baywood Drive, took the police car when her boyfriend began scuffiin1 with Sgt. David Brokaw durin1 the 3:30 p.m. incident Thursday. She was arrested a few minutes later on T'albert Street when the car stalled after she crashed over a raised street divider narrowly missing a traffic signal, police said. No one was injured, authorities said. Both police cars are out of commission, but no damage estimate has been made. police s aid. Ms. Vourtsis was arrested and charged with assault with a dead· ly weapon (the police car) on a police officer, auto theft. anddriv· ing under the influence. She wa. booked at Orange County Jail with $25,000 bail, police said. Her friend, Kenneth James Beals, 25, of 18331 Linden St., Fountain Valley. also was booked at Orange County Jail on charges of interfering with a police officer Nimitz steams home Fiery crash believed caused by pilot landing error JACKSONVILLE, Fla. CAP> -The USS Nimitz steamed toward its home port of Norfolk, Va., today with 20 dama1ed plane11 on its deck and a &rim cargo below -the corpses of 14 servi~men who died when a jet crashed ln names on the aircraft. carrier. The accident also injured 48 people. Despite the damase to the aircraft, estimated at more than $60 million, damaae to tbe nuclear-powered ship ltaell wu "not extraordinarily heavy," ac· cording lo Capt. Larry Hammon. chief public affairs omcer for the AflanUc Fleet. • 'Tbe carrier lbost likely will be able to do a quick tum around," be said. .. • • • • • • -llllTlll llllY PUii OH ANGE COUN TY CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS lllllty .......... ..., ,..,_ PACKED FOR SHIPPING -Women at Irvine have been graded by conveyors. Packers are Valencia Growers Packing Plant, which bas paid by the number of boxes they pack so been in operation since 1928, box oranges that speed means more money. Angry fa th er-raps in jury settleIDent By DA V1D KVTZMANN Of .. Deity Nie ..... Leslie Dawes· could hardly conceal his bitterness Wednes· day. ''I feel that justice is not being served," Dawes said of the $2.9 million settlement to which he was only reluctantly giving his approval as compensation lo bia teen-age son Michael. The boy was pennanenUy in· jured four years earlier when struck by Dana Point restaurateur Robert Charles Mardian's out-of-control Fernri sports car near Doheny Stale Park. "Mr. Mardian will walll: away without paying to Michael one cent for punitive damages, and that's a travesty upon justice," the angry father told Oran1e County Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein. Money for the settlement, which includes $350,000 already paid out, will be paid through in· surance. Dawes added: "I'm asking the court lo approve this settlement, and I'll spend the rest or my We working for the next little boy to be able to handle this situation in a much different manner." Mardian, aon of former ll1Hxon Whit.e House aide Robert Mar· dian, was convicted or recll:leu driving and spent four months in Oranae County Jail for the in· juries he caused Michael, 17. But Dawes, both in bis re· marks to the court and to re· porters later in a· hallway press conference, said he was ••ashamed of the_ legal communi·,,. ::c ty" ~ause Mardian was not being held fully accountable for his actions in the matter. Drunk ..driving char1es originally had been filed against the south county businessman, but were dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence. Dawes claimed Mardian was never given a sobriety test at the seen~ ol the accident because be told California Highway Patrol olficenr that another man was actually driving the car. Mardian later admitted be was the driver of the vehicle, but not ln time to permit accurate testing of bis blood alcohol level. He also claimed during testimony in the Orange County Superior Court civil action against him that he lost control of the car on eastbound Del WASIUNGTON (AP) -The 1overnment's index or le~dln· indicators, an import.ant .-uae or future national economic stren&th, rose slightly in April, the Commerce Department re- ported today. The department sald the index rose 0.4 percent in April after a March gain or 1.8 percent that was mostly due to risln& crude oil prices. The index ii considered a good barometer or future economic activity, but ill lndlvldual com· ponents can aometimes be read in several ways. For example, the two bi.uest contributors to the April-in· crease were bl&ber prices for raw materlala aucb aa r:troleu.m and a aubetantial rlM tbe nauon:a money aupply. Both tboae indlcatora can abow vtpoua ecoaomie activity ahead, but tbey also can be bad news for lnflation and lnterelt rates. In addition, the rlae la 1enalt1ve raw material• pricee probabb' ltll.l nf1eeta Praideat ReaCt J.J.IUal ot motl remala- iq Uc cnlCle oil price can· troll earlier tbll year. DOt MY bl1 demand bf lnduatry for ,.-.tro1eum to be und economic •zPUaf.OG, Obispo Street when be believed another vehicle was about lo turn left in front of him. His sports car spun into a curb and struck Michael, then 13, who had been walking on the sidewalk toward Doheny state park carryina a fishing pole. ent in court Wednesday for an- nouncement or the settlement, which ended eight weeks of testimony that had been going on before a jury and Judge Golds· tein. Michael also was absent because or continuing health problems. which Include seizures. the father said. The family moved from Capistrano Beach to Cruz after the accident. Before leaving the Orange, County Courthouse, Dawes said he would help promote passage of legislation that would require a drunken driver who injures another person to pay monthly payments like alimony to his· or her victim. "Let the drunk live dally wit.Ii the victim's hardship," be said. The youth suffered disabline injuries that left him ln a ooma for six weeks. He still baa speech impairment, poor memory, movement problems and psycbofogical damage, ac· cording to lawyers. The bby's father said in court that ~ause there was no leaat proof Mardian was drunk, the famlly bas bad to wage a ''ter- rific uphill battle to secure justice against Mr. Mardian." Crea tionism suit filed The Dana Point and Hawaii restaurant owner was not pres· In all, the report said, seven or 10 leadlng indicators improved in April: average work week, new factory orders, vendor performance, buildlna permits and stock prices as well as LITTLE ROCK. Ark. CAP) - Sayine they want to prevent classrooms from becominc bat· tleerounds for religious zealots, a Coalition of church 1roups and educators has filed suit sensitive raw materials prices and the money supply. Declines were abown for total liquid assets and for contracts and infiation-adjusted ord~ for plant and equipment. U.S. eyes strained peac~ in Mideast Habib back to the Mldeaat after a few d_,a of consultatlonl. Habib baa aald be expectl to be there nest week. Even tbouO the aU·etreraft mluil• tbal 1parked tbe im· mediate lmpuae remal.aed lD Lebuoe after three .... ot abutU. dlplomacy b1 Habib, R••I• Md otber aclmlnl8trldioD offtcl ... reJ«ted •Ull..U.. t.be apeelal eaYoy'a m111loo bad challenging a new law requiring the biblical version or creation to be taught slde-by·side with evolution. Critics or the state law. which takes effect in the fall or 1112, claim lt violates the conatitu· tional separation of church and s tate as well a s academic freedom and ls constitutionally vague. Two-thirds of the plainUtta are members or Protestant, Cat.boUt and Jewish aroups. Other plail(. tiffs include the Arkana8' cbapt.er or the American CivU Liberties Union, teachen and parents. 4 11011 CIAll lfUTlll Low clouds niebt and 'I morning, otherwise fair throuab Friday. Lowa toni1bt 58 at the beacbet, 64 inland. Hiiha Friday '5 to 70. 1t JllllTlllY St1oto·coo•red Jf•••• lrlclC.., '*"'-' ,. dlfftbo .,., bid u "°' tlw ""'11 o/.o ,_. dof ICroll. P.a(lf 81. ' : .. ~ ., . •. • • • • • • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT{fhursday, May 28. 1981 Alaia claimed . aware of act The saruty retrial or convicted double murderer Dr. Louis Alaia opened Wednesday with a proe- ecutor once again insistin& that the Huntington Harbour aureeon "killed out or anger and hate" when he rataJly stabbed his ex- wife and a Long Be ach lawyer last June. .............. e!!e Grossruck pilots his glider inside Seattle's Kingdome, the first suph /Hght indoOrs by fixed-wing aircraft. De puty Dis trict Attorney Richard Farnell told a jury in Super ior Court Judge Donald McCartin's courtroom that Alaia, SO, was fully conscious of what he was doing when he killed Margy Lou Alaia. 37, and Ma r vin Tinc her, 60, in the wo m an's barborside home. efined tax cut plan scanned Alaia was convicted of two counts of second-degree murder b y a differ e nt j u ry in late J anuary. However. that panel deadlocked on the question of sanity, resulting in a mistrial for that portion of the proceedings. WAS tnNGTON (A P ) The airmen or t he con gressional x-committees discussed tax ts with Treasury Secretary Donald T Regun today and in- • die ated agreement may be near ~ a substitute for the presi ll'lent 's proposed three year. 30 ,i ercent reduction ·in pe rsonal \tiiX rates. "We had a good give-and-take .~ssion," Regan told reporters after his breakfust meet ing at the Treasury Department with Sen . B ob Dole , R K a n , chairman of the Senate Finance Co mmittee. and Re p . Dan Ros tenkowski, D Ill . who heads the House Ways a nd Means Com mittee "We think the ball was advanced." The three officials refused to d iscuss a ny agreem ents that might have been reached , but thl'Y indicated there still is dis- pute over the liming of the tax reduction. Asked if the Re a g an a d - m inistration is prepared to back away fro m its insistence on a three-year t a x c ut. Regan replied. ·Tm not in a position lo s ay. I haven't talked to the pres· 1dent that's for him to say." · · 1 prefer to think we are in agreement much more than in d i sagree m e n t ." sa id Rostenkows ki. who planned to meet lat er in the day with Democratic members or bis lax· writing committee . Dole, too, said he mus t discuss the negotiations with members of his committee. "I reel we are quite close but again we could be a long way orr." he s~d. Hostenkowskl and Dole met priva tely on Wednesday and Dole said at tha t Ume, "We felt WP were close enough that we ought to discuss it with the ad- minis tration " Eve n so. D o l e a nd Rostenkowski said, they have not agreed on two major points in President Reagan's program: .. ffheir seal of approval ufiy STEVE MITCHELL Ol llM O.Oy ...... S- OI Scott Bluestem jammed a nee· . ildle into his patient as Karin biWyman held the convulsing sea lion tightly in a blanket. •' ··<:;! .l enactment this year or lax cuts for three straight years and glv· ing the &ame pe rcentage rate re· duction to rich and poor a like. I Dole's endo rsement earlie r Wednesday of a 25 per cent rate cul over three years ns a sub- s titute for Reagan's plan ap- p are nt I y d i d n o t s wa y Rost enkows ki. who does not want a cut that is locked in that long. ·'That is an area of some dif. ference of opinion," Dole said. "There 1s no sentiment <m the House) for a 36-month tax cut," Rost enkowsk1 said But in a s tatement that could signal he is softening has position aga inst anything beyond a one- ye a r tax c ut, Rostenkowski adde d. "That d oesn't mean there isn't sentiment for a 30- month tax cut." As for his de m and that lower · and middle-incom e families r e· ceive a greater share of the tax benefits than Reagan proposed. Rostenkowski said, "Those are a reas we are discussing." In their first a ppear a nce befor e the new jury Wednesday, defense lawyers contended that their client "nipped out" under the burden of a va riety of emo- tiona l, physical and fin ancial pressures. Edward Geor ge, one of two la wyers representing the de· fendant, s aid in opening state- ments that Alaia was in a state of temporary legal insanity when he grabbed a kitchen knife and at· lacked his ex-wife and Tincher. The orthopedic s urgeon had gone to the Hun tington Harbour home to d isc u ss wee k end custody rights of his two young child ren. However, an argument ensued in which Alaia was or- dered to leave the home. Testimony during the guilt phase of the triaJ indicated that the defendant grabbed a knife from a kitchen wall rack and stabbed Mrs. Alaia once in the a bdomen and the n a ttacked Tincher. who had been sealed in another room. George contended that Al aia suffered from a menta l disease and defect at the lime of the kill- Dallf .. 11941-...... 'KILLEDOUTOF ANGER' Dr . Louis Alma ings rendering him unable to ap· preciate the criminality of his conduct The defense lawyer claimed that his client was mentally ill before. during and after the kill· in gs But Farnell told jurors that Ala1a knew exactly wh at he was doing when he attacked the pair. Also present in the home were the two ch ildren . n either of whom was attacked , he noted. If Alaia is judged to be sane. he faces possible life imprison· m ent an state prison. If he is judged to be insane, he could be sent to a state mental institution for tr eatment -DAVIDKUTZMANN 91~ "You have to work fast when llithey go intP, convulsions or you'll lose them,\· Bluestein said as the two volunteers hooked up a sug· ar -based I V t o t h e un · dernourished sea lion. I 2 plead innocent in NB murder T he inject ion of Valium calmed the mamma l. and Miss Wyman injected a syringe full or Vitatnin B into the 25-pound sea lion ·we save morl' than we lose," 11she said , shaking her head. "But ff'we lose a lot .. tfl' The Friends of the Sea Llon tft organizalion has its hands full at ,'.t1he barn-11.k e s truc ture out Laguna Canyon Road where 33 !bs ea lions and two har bor seals are tenants. ~ "That's just about a record," 0.s ays J ohn Cu nni n g ha m . a 'ttiLaguna Beach Hig h School ""1•·scicncc teacher who heads the all vol unteer Marine Mam mal 70center, adjacent to t he city's !4.Fanimal shelter at 20612 Laguna ,.,~anyon Road. I!!' He says the larg~ numbe r of 'A•s1ck and injured a nimals are ., mostly inexperienced sea lion lh'~pups s uffering the pitfalls of in- 'TO:dependence. ~. Cunningham says the year-old pups have been on their own for about five months. "and it's been tough going.·' There 's competition fo r ~.dwindling supplies of food fo r .. m 1one thing, a nd many of the pa- !Ul1. i en ts s uffer fro m l ack of ~::-nourishment Other factors that force many J& sea lions to beach themselves in· Ui".clude parasites. lung worms. ns:hy poglycemia , pa ncreatitis, Ill! liver flukes, u lcers, and de 1191tyNll .......... hydration. Some have been hit b y f>oat prope ll e r s , a nd a number have been snagged by fish hooks. "Last year we bla m ed the [~.! numbe r of sick or injured anim als on winter storms, but we have just as many now, if not more. Laguna volunteers Scott Blu.eltein. and. Karin Wyman feed herring to healthier of the 35 sea Uom.and harbor aeal.3 recupe,-ating.at the Mammal Marine Center out l..aguna Canyon Road. ·'The last couple or three weeks have been devastating," he said. "It's t axi ng tbe , backbone and fiber of our or- ganization." T he 25 to 30 volunteers are mostly area h.igh school students who arrive each afternoon to feed and treat the animaJs and clean the swimming area and the barn. . Most of the sea animals are 20 to 25 pounds underweig_ht, Cun- ningham said, and one of t.he I 'duties of the young volunteers is to fore~ feed the weakest a nimals. And that can mean a painful bile. "You learn to be pretty quick a round here," Miss Wyman laughed. She and Bluestein sport several puncture wounds and bruises from past encounters with the brown California sea lions. Wh ile there is no sborta1e of volunteers willing to work (Scott and Karin put in six or seven days a week at the center> there is a s hortage of funds. Miss Wyman says it costs a bout $10,000 a year to m aintaln the center adding the 10-year· old orga~zation is habitually failing short of that mark. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat CIH11fted lldvett11lng 114/M2·MTI All oth•r «Mpattmant1 142-4321 Thomas P Haley P\iell-1111 Cllwt l •ecUll¥• Oii- Robert ·N. Weed "'- M Thomas Kee11n holor Mlct\ael P Harvey ..._,..~ ~!-J 8etiullz Of °""91- ~Mth N Goddard Jr r.......o-.or lllcina9 A Murphlnt .....,.,_ MAIN OfFtOE U0 WHI 8•v SI , Cotti flMN, CA ,tqil •dclrtu loll IMO, C•la Meta, CA. mJt CopyrltM 1tll Otel!P ~tl P-*11111"9 C-\' N• ~•wt t !O<l<lt, lllufl••lleftt, H 1,•fll l miMl•r ti 10 Y••HH-~lt llet ellt °"•Y be ••tOv<eO wllll-.il 'H< 111 lle•m•o-of t ol"ftltlll _, E x penses range from food (the organization trucks in frozen herring from San Pedro) to a ntibiotics, tranquilize rs, vitamins and other medications . If you want to help, s end a check to the Friends of the Sea Li on, 20612 Lag una Canyon Road. Coal s trike ne ar e nd? WASHINGTON CAP) -Union and industry negotiators, rresh from their longes t non-stop bar1atnlng sesaion in recent weeks, are makinl optimistic sounds about reacbln1 an &il'ee· ment. that could settle the two- month coal strike. Nearly sh hours after representatives of the United Mine Workers and tbe Bitumtnoua Coal Operaton Al- 1oclaUon went beblnd closed door• tn a hott!I suite Wednea. da11.!Jotb tldel emeried ufbeat . U • W President Sam Pf'U:J"Ch 1atd an accord coUJd be rHcbed toda1. "We made a lot ol prOIJ'tll,'' Cllarda Hid. "We've 1Ull 1ot .... ajinftjOIWicL prob••mt ('m optimlltlc. 1 f"l IDUCll bet- ter than I have in quite IOIDe Ume." • Two Rancho Mirage m en have pleaded innocent tn Riverside County Superior Court in Indio to murder cha rges ste mming from the Aug. 1 death of former Newport Beach r eside nt Ki m Le Valley. A Superior Court jury trial in lndio was scheduled Tuesday for the pair on J uly 17 , said Richard Loan rate drops NEW YORK <AP> Chase Manhatta n Bank, the nation's third-largest today dropped its prime rate one-half percentage point to 20 percent, the fi rst drop in the closely watched economic indicator since March. Last Friday, Chase Manhattan led the nation's banks to a 20.S percent prime r ate, the highest of the year and bordering on the highest ever, 21.5 p ercent, set last December. The pr ime, a funda m ental r ate on which banks base their loan rates lo different classes of ROl.8J[ customers, began reced in~ from 21.S percent in late December. reaching 17 per cent in late Ma rch. But the rate began heading up- wa rd again in April, as other in- terest rates rose, increasing the costs banks must pay to acquire funds to make loans. Leading economists have re- peatedly said they expect the prime rate to head downward this s ummer. although the over- all downward trend could have some ups and downs along the way . Erwood, deputy district attorney •n Riverside County. The suspects. Gle n Godwin, 23, and Frank Soto Jr., 31, each are being held in River s ide County Jail in lieu or $250,000 bail. Erwood said. The defend· ants are expected to ask the ~ourt next week for release on their own recognizance. h e added. A third suspect, Roy Dickey. 35, of Camp Verde, Ariz., has not been arraigned . Dickey has agreed to testify against Godwin and Soto in exchange for con· sideralion of a lighter charge, Crwood said The three men were arrested in March in connection with the stabbing death of LeValley, 26, whose bod y was found near his t ruck that was blown up at a re· m ote, desert military bombing r ange. Investigators said at the time of the arrest that robbery appeared to be the motive for the killing. It's a special kind of watch a man can take sea diving. parachuting, snow skiing ... then co a formal recepclon. Rolex makes that kind of watch. Their sports watches all feature a stainless steel case. 30:Jewel chronometer movernent and stainless steel band. A. Explorer II. S875. B. G.M.t Master Oyster. S985. C. Submariner Oyster. S950. §LA.VICK'S FIM Jewtlitn Sina ltl? F••hion l1land, Newport C.nwr. Newport had\, 714/644·1310 Wtttl'l\lnti.r I L.pn.t Hlllt / ~ Vwto I Noni\ Or~se I TM Ctty Loa Ce"*t • 9'" Mtlla Alto CIHMf Loa A11.,r. I San Oltfo I LK VepJ 0..-•llntd'•-ttw.,. ,._....,_. .. a...-. VISA. ...,o.p, ------....... -..-.tmltr FIM Jtwtltrt G11iW ll I, " " ¥ .. y _ ,. • 0 l· I, • • • I. t· .. II .. . • I t . • t l i • t t z t l ':""' .J .·· • . ,,,..,... Old friends meet at the West Point commencement as President Reagan and his wife Nancy chat with another former actor, James Cagney, w ho starred with Reagan in the 1938 movie "Boy Meets Girl." Cagney oums an 800·acre farm north of West Point. Hinck ley treat.ed for overdose John .W. Hinckley Jr., the man accused or trying to as· sassinate President Reagan, has taken an overdose of Tylenol in an apparent "at· tempt to harm himself," but was treated at a prison in· firmary at Butner. N .C .. where he is confined and has recovered, a federal official said. Tom DeCair, a spokesman for U.S. Justice Department in Wa s hin gto n , sa id Hinckley, 25, took an un- determined amount of the aspirin substitute Wednes· day, which be had requested and had been saving up in his quarters at the Butner Cor- rectional Facility. Hinc kle y ha s "been depressed lately and ap- pare ntly tried to harm himself," DeCair said. He said Hinckley was given an antidote and was later returned to his quarters after tests were run to check the degree of toxicity in his system. "He is not in a life· threatening situati on ," DeCair said. DeCair said that Wednes· day afternoon Hinckley told a defense psychiatrist that he had taken the Tylenol. Ac· cording to DeCair, the .,isychiatrisl immediately in- formed medical personnel at Butner, who administered the antidote. ODs ON TYLENOL John W. Hinckley Jr. Billy Carter, the brother of former President Jimmy Carter, bas accepted a public relations job with a Haleyville mobile-home man uI acturer. "I think it's a good job and I 'm glad I 'm going over there," Carter said from bis Buena Vista, Ga., home this week. "But we won't be mov- ing over there right away. of course, because we've got to sell the house and every- thing." Carter wall represent Tidwell Industries al private and public trade shows and conventions across the coun· try. He had been working for Woodgrain Molding of Americus. Ga., a firm that sells wood trim to Tidwell and other manufacturers. The 1981 graduating class of Memphis, Tenn. Central High School included 217 stu- de n ts and one multimillionaire. Hol iday Inns founder K e mmoas Wilson, who dropped out of Central High in 1930 to find a job to help s upport his family. was awarded an honorary high school degree this week. Wilson, 68, started his busi- ness career at age 14 as a de- li very boy for a Memphis drug store. In 1934, he started a home· building firm that led him in· to the hotel-motel industry a year later. Upon his retire- ment as Holiday Inns' board chairman in 1979, the lodging chain included 1,700 hotels and motels in SO countries and territories. Singer Jimmy Baffett has built a national reputation with songs of Florida, mari- juana and cocaine. Gov. Bob Graham takes a very hard line against illegal drugs. Now. however , the two men have glossed over their d.if. ferences long enough to start organizing a campaign to protect the approximately 1,000 ·manatees left in Florida's waters. 'Floods hit Indiana Swollen rivers force evacuation of 13 families in Vincennes NaJ,. rowlllup A cold front sorMCS lhowws utt ot Ille Miss!"""" Al .. r "> Ille AllMlk C..st., _,....,, _ ,.. • ., _ dorsllowers developed o••r Ill• soutlloestern corMr of IN Miion w11t1 ,,_,,. sconerec1 acrou re ... MHff lnlo Ille ,_.. Groot I.Akes re· ..... In southwestern lndlene, flesh fl-s -,_...., rivers lorcecl 1J lomllln 10 .,, ....... t"91r -· In VlnconnH as,..,.,., • lnc,.. ot rain foll within • H ·l\our period, eutllorllles Mid, No Injuries w.re ,.. portecl. luemont walls ca ved In and Mverel "*8 _,..II-or walMd away, polklo Mid, but lllero was no dam090 Ol'llrn.le avellabM. S.•oral •••a• ot .,,. ..... ,.,,,.,noel - flash fl-wernlnts Weelf'lesday ni911t, Tl\unctersllowor1 meanwllllo ck· .. 1~ _, ttw llltfl Pl•ln1 Wfollo a cold front --.,._,., Kl'OU Ille MM1111orn Sierra .... ..so Mowltalna Into Ille GrNt 8Mln. n.. P.c:llk N~ llad _,,., •!es anf mlld i.mporatwft, wtlllo a few .,_..n loll over u. -111Wn ltocll..._ TIM 1-.11 for _, c.al!W for tullSlllM for most of llM nation, but 111uncter--r1 _,. ••..-clatl lo IP•••d .,,., '"° middle AtlMllC 11.etos Into -E..-. A few Ill_. •rstonna -. ...,.. .... ,. over Vie Oroal ealn. IN conlrol Aocl1los and the u,..... lillallillppl Valley. loot ...,.._...,,.., ·-1. eon..-.. Ille •-c~-,.........,. lonlllfll •1111 partial c!Mrl,. In ltflor._.. California temps 70 SI IS 61 11 .. " " ., 41 n SJ 71 .. 74 SI " ... 7S .. Ontaroo Palm Sorlnol Pa~ ltl••rtlde ltlHI """ A-Sa<rarnenco $an lernerclno San Gabtlet Santa Ana ,.., ... lerb«• Sanl•Marla Sant•Monk• Tllormal Torrance Yum• ,. .. 90 65 74 .. ,. •I '1 .. 11 42 " SJ ,. .. I• .. , ... 7' S1 61 50 " .. HM IS SI .. 11 S1 SI .... u 42 72 SJ 77 •I 11 ,. 'PanAm temps 11 SI ..... a" •• •2 Acepulco 8ar!Ndol &¥-...... ,.,.....,. Guadal•I•• o..-. ..... • 7S .. 7' 74 ., .., 52 12 7S '° ff • 7' ... --· .... .... -• ... .... .............. .... ..... .., Zwne 2 s.it.~ 2 ........, J SM! «>-.. c-.cy 1 Outtellll tw ,, ... .,, 11....-... ,_. ·- • • • II ,. u II I 2 W ' l w 1 1 SW I l W We're Listening ••• ~ ... Whal do you like about the Dally Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your message will be recorded, tranacribed .00 delivered to lhe appropriate editor. Tbe aame 24-hour answertn1 service may be uaed to record letten to the editor on a n1 topic. Mailbox coatrlbuton mun ln· elude thelr name and t~lepbone number for verification. No clrculaUon ulla, please. Tellua wbal'a.ou)'our mind. H•v•n• Kines ton Mcwltt908ey Meut..., Mer~ Me•k •Clly Mcwlt•r,..., to 1S to ,. .. 1S ... 12 " 17 11 S4 .. 1S Nalional temps ..... ,,., IS ~ . ........_ • .. Amarillo " .. AncllOf' ... $S (1 ........ u .. .. •1 AU.nt.o 11 ... AtlMlkOty n ... lalU,,.._ ... " llrml,,.,_,, 11 " 81.,..arcll ... n ..... ,. ., ....... " " lrowMvlllo tt " lllff•lo 70 • Cl\Ml1tn SC • 10 CN tlstnWV 1• u CM.,._ •• n Clllueo •1 57 Clncl-74 u c ....... ..,,. .. " GolllmMla IJ ., Olll·'I WV1 " " Oen.,... 11 " °"..._ • .. 0.lreff ., ,. °"""" . , .. hwtleftb .. .. Hartford .. .. = 7J SI .. 1 .. .. 67 ....,. .... • 74 ........ ,. 61 JacllMvlle ft ,. J-" • K-Clty " ., u.v ... ,. .. LlttM ltOdl IS " 1.wlt•llte '71 " ...,.... .. IS " Ml-I " " MllW'"*-" • .... It ... n .. ........ 11 .. " .. ..... ~ .. 71 .......... " n '""9111 u .. 0-laClty " .. ~ " p OrlaMI ti " 1'111 .......... .. • .......... • n r"'*""' 7J • .......... " " ,....,.,Ore n .. ...... °"' 7t .. .._ n • .. ~ • .. "911&.-. 11 .. SMette " .. MUlllll 11 " ..... T ..... .. .. ......... .. .. ---" .. TttlM " .. ......... .. JI Sun, moon, t · ,In, ... ._. -~ .. ~-,.. -_. .. _,,,.,.,,...,.,,,.... - -------··- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT {Thursday, M.ay 28, 1981 s .· •••• I • t . . .......... EXULTANT -This isn't the \ar Fort l Academy, and even if it were, C<Hll't. \\<oul<I learn to fl y in airplane~. ~1i ke <;.i11 •t. •>t Stockton jumps for joy after r'er·l·1 \ ITIL' h1 diploma at the Naval-·Academy's Gra8uatioe .md Commissioning Cer ell\onies in Annepolil, Md J>a1.:helor's degrees were awarlled to MT rr t-mlwr~ of the class of 1981. Huge d e fie. t f o recast .t County to. analyze pro 1ec t eel $1 5 billion shortfall · A sen es of "issue papers" h:is been ordered by the Orange County Board of Supervisors to analyze a Sl.5 billion dC'ficit pro jected during the nexl 20 year~ The projection was included in the first areawide fiscal impact report prepared by the County Administrative Office. It is in tended to show costs for provtd ing existing services to present and future residents in most un incorporated parts of the county. especially in the ras t·growing sou them sections 1'111 ! •'Jll I 1n1•l11dt d J.>rOjeC t11111., 111.11 tt.1' 1 111111' gt•neral fun11 •>I to l111t~•1)(111ilhon by t I .. · , ,, . l<K. '.1·httol districts ~il l 11• 1 d ~1 .. 1 rnil11o111. f1re ·d1s- 1rw1~ \\Ill r•·quir•· 1n 1•\tra $132 m1lli1111 111<1 111 r:1 11t ~ :s:u million, ,\l'I ttl cl111,: Ill 1f11• fl p111 I 1\11,11\:..t I 1111\ t 'a r~t l•n s said Tu1·-.11.;, t h1• · 1·111111 ... hould be C'on 1111·1 I'd .1 fl,11 ;i h.t l for pro Jf'C'l1<1n I • 11• p:.ipl'r prepared cfur1111,! •11• fl\' -i ' •• .,, "111 include po..,s1lilt· -111111 i .. 11.., f•ir rn.i king up I h1· 111'f.<'1I tw ... 11d Analysts have found that new . developll)ent in the south count¥ can either add or subtrac\ re-. venue for financing county . se(vices-. Carstens said. ·•sometimes development COD· tributes to solving the problems 'and ·other times it addl to them," he said. . Issues to be reviewed will ln· elude funding alternatives,' potential serviCe reductions and new ways of mixing land UHi. ~alph Clark, chairman ol the board of supervisors, said "t.bil situation is verv serious." .. ... Def enders slw rtc ha nged~ . . New public defense chi ef asks 4fair share~ of funds By FREDERICK SCHOEMEm. Of .. o.tty "-,_ . Orange County's new public defender says elements or the criminal justice system other than public defense seem to garner top dollar when govern ment funds are doled out Such items as construction or expansion or jails and prisons or increased staff for police and prosecution agencies get the available money first, while what's left over goes to the public defense of criminals, said Ronald Butler, appointed to the • position Wednesday by the coun- ty Board of Supervisors. Buller, 46, of Anaheim, said government leaders should bear in mind that defendants have a mandated right to an attorney If they cannot afford counsel. 1t must be provided -at govern ment expense. Butler said some l~islat1vc mechanism should exist so that public defense gets its fair share of available funds for criminal justice . One of Butler's first tasks will be to seek approval from supervisors of a $4.9 million budget to fund the public defen· der's office in the upcoming fts. cal year beginning July l. NEW Pl'BI IC f)Jt n :NDER Ronnld lJulZ.. said, <;alls for no sfflff lncreue1. Prior to receiving the appoint. ment as public defender, Butl• was fSSistant public-defender tD charge of special operaticinl, ID· eluding the defense of bomtd• cases, He most recently i:epreMJ1ted Ronald Spring, a 33-year-old Long Beach man convicted ol second-degt"ee murder in tbe slaying of a Seal Beach Catbolle priest, t'~lix Doherty. . Butler bas serv,ed W.ith the ol· fice for ~ yearll. Prior to~ the office, he was in prhak practice in U>ng Beach. e.tJer is a graduate of the UnlveniV of Oregon School of Law. Butler succeeds FraQ Williams as public defender Williams, who lived in NewPart Beach. died last March. · Harbor tal,es T h • n fr 1 t.· < t' m p I o y s l 2 6 person:::. inclucling !lfi attorneys. The· n•m<1111d1·r of tht s.taH is mcJd t 11p of 1·l11•nt int1•rvil•wers. rn vt•..,llgalor., .u,111 st t·11•laries. Doris Walker, author • of u;. . book "Qana Point Harbor·Hoq91e .. Port for Romance," will be .tile guest speaker at 8 p .m, ·.nme·2 for the South Coast Jaycea. T he public · meea,tg will be at Casa Colina restaurant,. 2311 South El Camino Real, San Clemente. For informaUoo c.il 498-3817 or 493-1537. '• Thi· 11r->1x1~1·d bud~l·l. Butler ·~ RO LEX THE CONCEPT O~ ENDURANCE, .. THE FACES OF INTEGRITY l Rolex D:it~ust. self-winding chro-I nometer. stainless steel and 14'kt. I gold Oyst&r case. Jubilee bracelet. Rolex Lady-Date. seff-windlOQ._ with 1 stainless f.teel and 1'4k t. gold Oyster case. Jubilee bracelet. . Both models guaranteed pre8sure- • proof down to 165 feet. . •• 4 a Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /T'hursday, May 28, 1981 atin advi8ers 'vets' Central America team has war experience WASHINGTON <AP>-Preli· deal a..aan ..... mblille a team to budfe U.S. policy lo lbe •olaUle 1tatH of Central America, la drawtn1 heavily on men wbo played active rol• ln tbe VletDam War and otber put bat.ernatlonal bot lpoU. From aecretary of state Alu· ander Hail Jr. to military ad- vlaera on tbe around In El Salvador, Rea1an'1 Latin American policy team bu con- 1ld erable experience ln Viet· aam, LllOI and CambodJa. Ot her Stale Department of· flclals were oo the scene lo Chile during U .S . efforts to "destabilise" lb• Marxist gov· emment ol Salvador Allende in ~e early 197011 and several 1fere ln the Dominican Republic ben 1•,000 U.S. troops occupied • llland lo 1965. ·. Admlnislratioo officiala say it a. only natural for Rea1an to learn to people with such back· ,rounds in a situation that bu ''gone beyond talltlng." Critics, bow ever, contend Reagan selected offlciab who are likely ro seek mllltary answers to largely political problems. "They're emphasazrng the mlUtary upecll,'' said Enrique Baloyra, a Unlvenlty ol North Carolina profeuor on Lallo American affairs. "They aee ,I only one aide." Rea1an dispatched 58 non· combat military advlaera to El Salvador to help the ruling miUtary-clvUian Junta defeat left.lat perrlllu, who the State Department contends are sup- plied and directed by Cuba and the Soviet Union. ••A frlendJy country in our hemisphere ls trying to ball the infiltratioo into the Americu by terrorists, by outside ln· terference and those who aren't just aiming at El Salvador but, I think, are aiming at lbe whole of Central and poulbly later South America and, I'm sure, even· tually North America," Rea1an said March 6. Among officiab involved with U.S. Latin American policy: -Haig commanded troops lo Vietnam from 196' to 1967 and later, as deputy to National Security Adviser Henry Kiss- inger, played a prominent role in U.S. efforts to block Allende from t.aklng office. -Thomas Enders, •9, Exclamation point I r ate reader confronts reporter MONROE, N.C. CAP) -Newspaper reporter Jill Blon- din says being hit in the 'face with a pie for accusing state employees of goofing off has convinced her that county workers are not only lazy, they also lack class. Miss Blondin, 27, filed an assault warrant against Robert MacLeod, a social worker for the Union County Health Department, after he shoved a strawberry cream ,, pie in her face this week at the office of the Monroe En· quirer-Joumal. The pie was financed by "nickels and dimes" from ''about 150 of the county's 350 employees, who were protest· · ing a newspaper column criticizing them for not working hard enough,.MacLeod said later. "This not only reinlorces my opinion that county employees are lazy," Miss Blondin said. "It proves to me that they are also lacking in class and intelligence." Miss Blondin wrote of her experiences as a county employee in Michigan. She said some employees there padded expense records and took extended breaks and .lunches to fill boring schedules. Commenting on a proposal by county commissioners to extend Union County employees' hours from 35 hours and 37'1'.z hours to 40 hours a week, she suggested employees should not only work longer hours but also should work , harder. MacLeod said be took her comments "very personally," adding, "I do not like beiDg called lazy and a thief." Rea1an'1 cbolce lo be ualatant secretary of state for biter· American affalra, waa dep· uty chief ~ mlaloa lo Cambodia from 19'10 to m•. AccordJns to a 1973 Senate Foreisn Relation• Committee report, "U.S. Air OperaUona lo Cambodia,'' Enders chaired an "embassy bombtna panel" which met dally to decide bomb- lnt taraeta. Enders bas refused to talk with reporters prior to bh ccm· rlrmatlon hearings, expected next moath. -John Bushnell, 47, actine aui1tant secretary for inter· American affairs apd a spokesman for U.S. policy lo El Salvador, was asslped to won on Indochina u a staff member of the National Security Council from 1971 to 197,, accordln1 to a former 1overnment official familiar with Bushnell's career. Bushnell wu attached to...,t:be U.S. Embassy lo the Dominican Republic in 1965, when President Johnson dispatched 1',000 troops to occupy the island and prevent what Johnson claimed was a possible communist takeover. Bushnell also was unavailable to be interviewed, the State Department press orrtce said. -Col. Eldon Cummings, 50, who as former bead of the military assistance group lo El Salvador, wanted 7SU .S. military advisers sent there, was a military attacbe to the U.S. em· bassy in Laos from 1989 to 1972 and was involved with training and supplying pro-American Laotians. Cummings is stationed at the Pentagon as an adviser on Cen· tr al American security. -Col. Woody E. ·Hayes, 48, who succeeded Cummings in April as bead or the Salvadoran assistance group, commanded troops in Vietnam in 1970 and 1971, winning the Vietnam Service Medal and the Vietnam Campaign Medal. -Roy Prosterman, a University of Washington COD· sultant to the Salvadoran land reform program, designed a similar "land-to-the-tiller" pro- gram for Vietnam. -Deane Hinton, SB, new am· bassador to El Salvador, was direct.or or the Agency for In· ternational Development in Chile from 1969 to 1971, a period when the United States blocked out.side support to Chile. AID as· sistance was cut from $35.• million in 1969 to $1.S million lo 1971. ANTIQUES OF THE WORLD STEVEN-THOMAS ANTIQUES OVERSTOCKED SALE ·oN ALL MERCHANDISE . OVER $1,000,000 IN STOCK SLASHED 20% 40% WE MUST MAKE ROOM FOR INCOMING MERCHANDISE 3 DAYS •LY FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY MAY 29, 30, 31 I 0 A.M. • 6 P.M. PllCfS BB.OW WHOLESALE AND AUCTION HflS AND DESIGNERS WRCOME ' - Antiques Of The World -Steven-Damas AntQm 533 W. 19' (At Hnr Blvd.) Clsta 1111 541 m DOUBLE WHAMMY -He's not old enough to be a medicine man, but Keveon Kingbird of Redbul, Minn., appears to be applying double tickle to Mack Kingbird (left) of Redbul and .., ...... Scott General (right) of Six Nations Reserve, N. Y. They were attending recent annual pow- wow of Odawa Tribe in Ottawa, Canada. World violence rapped Human rights group $ays half of U.N. guilty LONDON <AP> -Amnesty lnlematiooal bas marked it.s 20th anniversary with a sweeping con· demnatioo of "torture, murder, abduction and im· prisonment" or political prlsooen by scores of United Nations member countries. The London-based human rights organization said "nearly half'' of the 15& U.N. countries are "believed to be holding prisoners or conscience." It said that in the past five years, allegations of torture have been leveled at 60 U.N. countries. In 50 nations, people can be detained without charge or trial, it said. The organization called for a two-fold attack on human rights abuses, "at the level of interna- tional law and at the level or human solidarity with the victims." "Human rights race a crucial test in the 1980s," it said, "with the right to dissent under at· tack lo country after country. "Torture and murder, abduction and im- prisonment -often sanctioned at the highest level of government -are systematic practices in na- tions of widely differing ideologies.'' Amnesty International waa founded 20 years ago after the London weekly newspaper, The Observer, publilhed an article by Brltilh lawyer Peter Bellen.son announcing a human right.a" cam· paign called "Appeal for Amnesty 1961." Today, Amnesty International claimi 2:50,000 members and active support.en. It was awarded lbe Nobel Peace Prize in 197'1. The organization, which relies on private donatioos, seeks the release or men and women de· tained anywhere in the world because of their "beliefs, color, ethnic orilln, sex, religion or language, provided they have neither used nor ad· vocated violence." In its anniversary review Wednesday of human rights violations worldwide, Amnesty said "the death toll is mounting" among political prisoners. ''Thousands have been liquidated in Guatemala. In Argentina and the Philippines, the victims have been abducted by security forces and never seen again. "In countries ranging from the Soviet Union to South Korea, from China to Haiti, criticlam of gov· ernment policy can carry severe penalties." Amnesty called for "universal ratification or international human rights covenants," nolblng that fewer than half the governments or tbe world have ratified the agreements. The group also called on the United Nations to give "priority" to adopting an international agreement against torture. VON HEMERT'S INTERIORS IS WAREHOUSE " CLEANING! ! ! 6th ANNUAL WAREHOUSE SALE YES , VON HEMERT'S IS HAVING ITS 6th ANNUAL WAREHOUSE SALE. RUTHLESSLY CLEARING OUT AND SLASHING PRICES ON FURNIS HINGS FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME. OR•AT BUYSl ll ONE-OF-A-KIND ITEMS , DISCONTINUED STYLES. AND SLIGHTLY SOILED OR DAMAGED GOODS, IN ALL OF THE QUALITY NAMES VON HEMERT IS FAMOUS FOR. CASH & CARRY -ALL SALES FINAL 2DAYSONLY MAY 30 & 31 SAT & SUN ONLY 9:00 to 5:00 Z• l (formet1J W•tttouM U ) IN COSTA MESA .. ~-. ... .. - ~ I I ... d ii .. I· 0 n e 3 1· e I .. J ~ITffiITa President recuperates But when Reagap's idle, reporters work harder WASHINGTON (AP) - Ronald Reacan'1 staff may be tbe tlnt in tbe White Houae in a 1eneraUon -at lea1t at.~• Dwt•bt D. Elaenbower wu Pl'tll· dent -to bave no fear in 1ayiq that tbeir boa ls takln1 a few days R'lat. So, try u they miaht to <&- cover that under a aulse of wood~. tbe pre1ldent ol the Uillted States waa reall)' workln& at mor~ conventional ta1u, reporters who nocked to Santa Barbara last weekend were forced to report, for tbe mott part, on aucb monumental duties u horseback riding three days In a row. Deputy White Houae prea secretary Larry Speakes toot the bull by the horns on a fogo, cool Memorial Day and told the world that the president's schedule that afternoon, "as you might guess, Is clearing brush and cboppin1 wood." And with that -and a few words pried out of him about such diverse subjects aa the Mid· die East and Nancy Reagan's fear of field mice at the fll'St couple's ranch -be announced that his next briefing would be at 6 p.m. The time was set because it would allow sun worshippers on the White House staff and in the press corps to pursue their solar llct.lvities. As it turned out, the sun never peeked out that day, the beach remained deserted and en· tbusiasts of the outdoors bad to content themselves with roller skating -Speakes tried his feet at it -jogging and tennis. While the president loped around his 688 acres, trying out three bones, there was a ra.scina· lion with motion 30 miles ea.st- southeast down the coast where the White House staff set up tem- porary headquarters in Santa Barbara. From poolside, a parade of Californians could be observed: in cars driving the coast road, on motorcy c les , bicycles , skateboards and roller skates. Feet, it seemed, were best used wben suidlni aomethtn1 bavtnc to do with wheels. In the •toady t.ralftc, several luxU17 Mdanl could be spied, driven from tbe mllitary'a Wbitf Rotate motor pool behind tbf wbeels, as some middle-level White House 1talf members wert chauffered about town rather than driving themselves in rent- ed can. Alooe U.S. 101, which bup the coast just north of Santa and Secret Service aeent stand· inl in front of a locked 1ate were tbe only evidence that Ronald Rea1an wu in tbe vicinity. The only written alp lndicat· in1 that tbe presidential res· ldence was nearby was much farther away. In band lettertni, it said, "Rea1an BU1bt Coun· try." Unlike Plains, Ga .. home of one president, Santa Barbara, While Reagan rides the range, Nan- cy runs squealing from field mice. Barbara, a steady stream of recreational vehicles filed past oil rigs given no day off on tbe holiday weekend. Tum off the freeway, onto 'the one-lane Refugio Pass Road and the tourist traffic continued: a two-door coupe with six passengers, an electrician's van from Wyoming, a family from Washington, D.C. The road was bathed in a translucent light filtered by a aoft mist. Lemon groves -where a Santa Barbara County sheriff's deputy suddenly materialized to politely ask a tourist to return tbe two lemons she picked up from the ground -gave way to more rugged terrain and a mountain stream that flowed across the road. At a turnoff affording a magnificent view of fog rolling into the valley. four blond youngsters in an old red station wagon topped off with a surfboard stared out at the scenery, combl.ng their hair and giggling a.s though caught in the midst of some mildly illicit ac- tivity. Nearly eight miles up the road, just below a summit where the blacktop gave way to dusty red-brown dirt, a police officer now the preferred home of another, shows no inclination to capitalize on ita celebrity. It wa.s known for many things -ita mild climate, palm trees, beaches and a brutal off-shore oil blowout -long before Ronald Reagan became president. But a telephone operator helping a reporter place a long- distance call one day asked whether the president was still riding his horse. The sales clerk in a shop offering Belgian fudge on the edge ·of a Spanish-style plaza also inquired about the president's activities . Although the best part or the day was given to the activities that helped him achieve a ruddy, sunburned look -riding and woodcbopping -the president devoted some time to bis busi· ness. This, according to Speakes, included reviewing written re- ports on Philip C. Habib's mis- sion to the Middle East. Telephone contact with the special presidential envoy was. d eemed unnecessary. Also deemed unnecessary was any photograph of the president at bis ranch. News pbotoeraphen and the official White House photographer were told to stay away. '" DESIGN A BEAUTIFUL SUMMER I I ROSES AT ROGERS TREES Roger's complete nursery has a beautiful selection of bush and _ climbing roses ... over 500 plants in 30 varieties. You will find many of your favorites among these outstanding varieties. 2 gal. reg. 16.96 NOW • 4.98 PETUNIAS Available In several colors to t>nghten your home this spring. 4· PQt reg. 11.09 NOW 1• 79 BOSTON FERN A real Indoor charmer. This hearty and popular plant adds a speclal decorator touch al- most anywhere. Feed It regul- arly with Oxygen-Plus for full and lush beauty year round. 6'pot reg.110.96 NOW'8.95 THE NURSERY WI1HIN TIIEGARDEN Choose from an outstanding selection of trees. Plant a tree to begin a family tradition that will provide years of beauty and service. 5gal. reg.112.00 NOW 18.99 PATIO & GALLERY Roger's Gallery dlsplays an excellent selection of patio furniture and accesSOf'ies de- signed to add extra pleasure to your summer relaxing and entertaining, and all avallat>Je for Immediate deilvery. SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY BOl:JQUET A colorful array of fresh cut spring fk>wera, artlatically arr. anged with Roger's flalr. reg. '10.96 NOW '7.95 ----- Orange Coast DAILY PtLOf/Thursday. May 28, 1981 s •• Maureen • mum on cuts SACRAMENTO (AP) -Presi- dent Reaean 'a dau1hter Maureen said abe ls not pre- pared to support her father's Social Security program, but that she wouldn't oppose it either. She repeatedly sidestepped questions from reporters u to whether she supported her· father's proposal -defeated lut week on a 96--0 Senate vote -to cut Social Security beneflta for thOt'le who retire at 62 from the current 80 percent to SS per- cent of the benefita available at age 65. "I think that's a sbort·term answer, and I think it's a long. range problem," Ms. Reagan said. "It's not really whether or not I 'm for it. It isn 't going anyplace," she added. Ms . Reagan, who says she still hasn't decided whether to seek the Republican nomination for the U.S. Senate next year, spoke with reporters before a speech on intert)ational trade to the Sacramento Metropolitan Chamber of Commerce. She was fourth in a Mervin Field poll last month of GOP Senate contenders with support or 15 percent or the RepubUcans polled, trailing Rep. Barry Goldwater Jr. at 35 percent, Rep. Pete McCloskey at 20 per· ce nt and incumbent S .I. Hayakawa at 16 percent. But Ms. Reagan, who is ex- ecutive director or a foreign t rade association for U.S. manufacturers and edits a foreign trade magazine, said that-poU didn't discourgage ber. "For someone who's not a candidate, who's not raising money and has not hired a cam· paign manager, to come up 7 points in the poll in less than two months (she drew 8 pereceot for fourth spot in Field's January poll) is not my idea or not doing very weU," she said. On the Social Security issue, Ms. Reagan disputed sugges- tions by reporters that the over- whelming Senate vote against it marked the end of her father's politic al honey moon with Congress. - .. ~ ........ Oil derrick viewed from under pier at Butterfly Beach, Santq, Barbaro. Judge blocks sale of oil lease sites LOS ANGELES CAP) -A federal judge has blocked the sale of 32 oil leases off the Cen· tral California coast after Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and 19 local governments objected to the sales on environmental grounds. •'There can be no doubt that a brief delay in the sale of these leases is in the public interest,·' U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer said Wednesday in issu- ing a temporary injunction. "The delay wilJ cause insignifi- cant monetary injury to the U.S. government or to the potential leasebolders. • · But she said she will issue her final ruling "before the end of the summer, preferably before July 31" and ordered that all disputed issues be resolved in court by then. · · 1 am fully aware or the energy needs of the country and I have no desire to impede oil exploration and developmeoi." she said. At issue are 32 tracts of un- dersea land covering 600,000 acres in the Santa Maria Ba,sin north or Santa Barbara. the auction includes a total of 113 tracts, but the suit did not c~n tesl 81 of them. Originally there were 34 tracts, but two small o n es were combined wtth neighboring sites to create .32 larger tracts. "Sports ••• " Keeps you on top Of the local scene . , ~ everyday , in the Daily Pilat WESTCLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE BANK Of.AMERICA CHARLES BAAR ~aERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VERNQll SPOHSWEAA DR. LOO aOER optometrist HAIRHANOLERS SALQll . HALUDA Y'S M8'1'S QOTHING HICKORY FARMS specialty food item1 HUMPTY DUMPTY children·, clothing JEAN DAfi.. designer ond benllf spo.-tsweor LA GALLERIA elegance in f~ MARKET BASKET MES AMIES TEENS NANCY DU~ ANTIOJES NEWPORT BAL.BOA SAVINGS P~UNUMITEO q;fts ond stationer\ SAV-o-l DRUGS STOREKEEPER trodtior IOI sponsweor VET A'S INTIMATE APPAAa. WESTCUFf CLEANERS WESTCLIFf CORNERS qovmet ware ond ~ ~ESTCUFF g..fCES XAVIER'S R.ORIST s Orange Coat DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May 28. 1981 Sales tax revenues boost Mesa's income While most Oranae County cities are watching dollars and keeping budget increases for next fiscal year around the 5 percent mark, Costa Mesa is adding staff and hiking expenditures by about lSpercent. The city is in the enviable post· lion of relying little on property taxes, once the mainstay of locaJ government operations throughout California. That was before Proposition 13 all but dried up that fountain of wealth in 1!178. City Manager Fred SorsabaJ and Finance Director Bob Oman predict city income will be up near- ly 22 percent next year despite cuts in allocations from the state. Most of the funds will come from 1 percent of all sales taxes collected in Costa Mesa. City Council members and Chamber of Commerce leaders have done more than go out of their way to entice industry and com- merce to eo.ta Mesa since its in· corporation aa a city in 1953. The city's portion of sales tax revenue la expected to climb to s12.i:imio next flacal year. That's $2.6 on more than this fiscal period. Sorsabal predicts the state will allocate only $2.84 mllllon to Costa Mesa next year -down from the $3.36 million of thia year. The ainale laraest geoiraphic · area generating sales taxes for the city andita residents la South Coast Plaza, city officials note. The second lar~eat con· tributor is "Auto Row, ' the car dealerships lining Harbor Boulevard. It's easy to curse the traffic and congestion that bring shop- pers and employees from other communitiesintoCosta Mesa. Considering the clty services they' re helping pay tor we ought to be offering them friendly smiles. Planning and politics The Newport Center ex· pansion battle has produced the expected fireworks. It also has underscored some basic planning issues in Newport Beach. Planning commissioners rec· ommended sweeping changes in the Irvine Co mpany's plan for' the center before shipping the proposal to the City Council for final approval. Two major changes the com- missioners recommended are: -Turning one of the two planned high-rise office towers mto a condominium structure. -Deleting a planned 400., room hotel and replacing it with residential units, probably con- dominiums. While the Irvine Company contends there is a need for office space in Newport Center, there also is a need for housing in Newport Beach. Condominiums at the center doubtless would be expensive, but it also seems like· ly that some of the new jobs to be created there will be top paying. Pl81Ulers cite the advantage of "reverse flow " traffic, with condominium residents and of- fice workers leaving and return- ing in opposite directions during commuting hours. · The Planning Commission argument against the hotel is less persuasive. In fact, t be com- mission's opposition could be based on political pressures rather than measurable prob- lems. Hotels have developed into a real political issue in Newport Beach. To mitigate the inevitable increase in traffic that would re- sult from expansion, the Irvine Company had planned to pay for some $8 million in road improve- ments around the center. But commissioners also recommend an additional $15 million road project before any new buildings can be occupied, a condition that does not sit well with the com- pany. The City Council, which will have the final say, is doubtless jn for some more fireworks. Recycling grams help With state funds for almost all pUl"J)05es in short supply, it was a pleasant surprise to learn that four Orange Coast com- munities had been awarded sub- st an ti al grants from a $2. 7 million fund to increase recycling efforts. Officials of the state Solid Waste Management Board said the agency had rejected eight ap- plications for every one it funded, but it was sufficiently impressed by local effort s to allocate $328,905 to be divided among Huntington Beach, Irvine, Costa Mesa and South Laguna. The largest grant, $143,500, went to Rainbow Disposal ol Hun- tington Beach where recycling capacity at the Nichols Street plant will be stepped up from 100 to 1,000tons of materials a month. The firm operates both d.rop- of f services. where donors leave au c h items as bundled • newspapers, and a buy-back service which pays donors for ~ cyclables such as aluriUnum cans. Solag Disposal of South Laguna received $88,870 to fund a buy-back center in San Juan Capistrano and curb pickup services in south coast com- munities. Student recycling efforts won the grants in both Irvine and Costa Mesa. UC Irvine Associat- ed Students Inc. were given $52,060 for equipment and im- provements at their drop-off site on Jamboree Road. And the O~ange Coast College 24-hour drop-off cent.er at the school was granted $44,475 for improve- ments. Since the recyclln1 can help both the environment and the economy, these gr an ta would ap- pear to be money well spent. Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Otner views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invit-ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone C7U) 6"2-4321. I I L.M. Boyd/Socb started ii The players on Princeton's first foot· ball team wore orange and black •trlped socks. Maybe you don't think that's significant. But It Is. Quite ~lgnificant. Because orthose socks, the players were nicknamed Tl1en, the flrat school team with an)' sort or nickname such as tho\. The idea hught on. More teams now are called · i'fi1ers than are called anythln1 elJe. ou may even be acquainted with a te•m known as the Ticers. All becaaae t0ftbosuocb. Not everythl ng done by the old Czars "or Russia waa bad. Th•Y IMde it a ,tradition alter a holiday dinner t.o call In the cook ror special recorntUoa with .. , toast and• round of applaUH. Here's .tothecook -cllnk! Clap;clap. ORANGE COAST Daily Pilat ,.,,..,.,... _, :::.: ... .,.., •• a. ......... S1.~Mtte l <W~tW .. ll U ... ~ta MtM. CA flt» ' A tavern o perato r named Boulanger In 18th Century France came up with the bright idea to serve hot soup any time of day. Inn keepers earlier had dished up simple meals at fixed times only. The hot soup was called a restorative, or in French, a "restaurant." And Boulanger' a place soon became known as such. the world's first so designated. I Sir. do you d•test your nelehbon? The surveytaken claim one out ol 50 Americanmendoao. Atle&1toneoutof 50. Pity. Certainly your old history ttacb•r would be proud or you, if you cou..ld name the only two U.S. presldeoll who were bald. Quick., HY John Quincy Adams and Owl1ht Eisenhower. Thomas fl!. Haley Publisher Tfloma1 K•vll Editor BarMr• Kr91blch Editorial P~ Editor . . Cruise missile deep in red WASHINGTON -The Pentagon's cruise missile program is a classic ii· lustration of the cavalier attitude toward the taxpayers' money that characterizes so much of the nation's defense spending. Here, as part of a continuing series on Defense Depart· ment extravagance, are the details or the fouled-up project: Already the cruise program is al least $13 million in the red this year. and the missiles are beset by engine malfunc- tions, according to a classified Pen· tagon document. What makes this so troubling is that the deficiencies arise from the defense contract system itself. which rarely re· quires contractors to operate on a com· petitive basis. Poor performance and outlandish profits a re built into the system . IN JUST THE past 12 months, de· fense contractors made "excessive prof· its" totaling $80 million, according to the now defunct Renegotiations Board. In that same period, the Pentagon laid out $70 biUion for procurement of weapons and ser vices. or that astronomical sum. almost $46 biLLion, or 65 percent, went to contractors who were tbe only bidders for the job. Only 8 percent or all defense contracts were awarded as the result or advertising for bids . The cruise missile is intended to become the mainstay of the U.S. nuclear arsenal. Capable of being launched from land, sea or air. the mis· site is small enough to be deployed in hard-to-spot locations, yet it can evade e nemy radar and deliver a nuclear warhead 1,500 miles away Of the nearly 30 companies involved in the cruise program, only one Q -J1-c1-1-1a-11-sa-1 -~ General Dynamics has given the Pentagon its main progress report for 1980. And General Dynamics, with a $2 billion chunk of the program, has charged the government $325,000 for status reports it has never delivered. Yet a Pentagon spokesman insisted lo my reporter Sharon Geitner he was "not aware of any contract ir- regularities." DUPLICATION ABOUNDS. Vitro Labs and McDonnell Douglas, operating under broadly worded contract terms, have wound up doing essentially the same computer work. Overcharges are unconscionable. One cruise contract.or, for example, charged the taxpayers almost SI million for a special data list that should have cost about $40,000. When confronted with t his discrepancy . the company blandly blamed it on a "typographical error." A relatively minor. but widespread, boondoggle results 10 the government paying twice for the same contract. This happens when an employee quits a defense contractor and forms his own one-man software company. He then charges his old employer or another company for the "right" to his contract -at the going rate of $40,000 per con· tract. Tardiness is epidemic. Navy testing of launch·control centers was stalled because the software was delivered six mo nths I ale. In 1979, McDonnell Douglas admitted to other contractors in a private memo that it would have lo "slip" <delay J the schedule three months because it couldn't have the launch hardware ready THE BASIC TROUBLE with the cruise program, as with most defense projects. is that cost-plus and sole- source contracts vague on the gov- ernment's requirements and wide open on budgeting -give contractors no in· centive to do the job right and on time. In fact. the system encourages ir· respons ibility by stretching out the length of a contract and increasing the profits as the cost goes up. Busing funds better spent on schools To the Edit.or: It was announced May 4, that Presi· dent Reagan was proposing to pay stu· dents who volunteer to be bused from either white to black areas and vice· versa, at least one-half year's tuition, or the number of years they were bused, in tuition at a Missouri state institution. The price for this project, one which President Reagan most asauredJy in- tends to be used across the nation, ia $6 million. A bill taxpayers will obviously pick up. RATHER THAN throwing away this money on buses , gasoline . and "scholarships," why not use this large sum to significanUy improve the quality of education in the areas in question'! Buses and gasoline are commodities that do little to improve a child's mind; MAILBOX and the "scholarships" are somet.bine I completely oppose. Because they are to be used at state institutions, I am sure that there are financial aid programs for the "truly needy," one of Presi· dent's key catch phrases. Rather, lhe $6 million could be used to better our falling educational systems. Despite the famous 1954 Supreme Court decision in the Brown vs Topek• Board of Education case, separate can be equal if sufficient money is spent to create a proper leamine environment 1 and to encourage qualllled people to become teachers. Teachers now are at the lower level of the pay scale in our society, while they hold one ot the moat crucial jobs in our country, the tra.in.lng of future American voters and office holders. I can only hope that Prealdent Reagan will reaUae tha\ t6 mllllaa can be spent much more wisely than be bu propoeed. Taxpayer money IDUft be spent to better aovernment services not bribe individual 'students to equal racial quotas. CHRISTOPHER K. LYNCH Tot.be Edit.or: Thank )'OU VII')' much for tb.t CO•· era•• you 've been 1ivla1 to AU Rou.ahao. It's about Ume we wen llY'tD a little art in Coat.a Ila.a. The ICQ.lpbartl have area\ly lmprovtd \bat area ol town. him the coverage they need to fight for their expressions of' art. Thank you for helping in putting a little art back into our city. C.S. OPP Boondoggle To the Editor: I am totally shocked that Lhe Reagan defense budget containing s uch incredi- ble boondoggles as the MX missile system was passed with only Mark Hatfield voting against. I just don't understand such a total commitment toward a stance or war. This waa a black day for the country and the culmination of a cumulative lack of Intelligence, courage and intee· rity, as well as a sign of the worst kind or depravity existent in our government and the elected representatives. ANDY WING Unfair to judges To the Editor: Responding to your May 11 editorial : How can a Superior Court judge pro- ceed through trial and (when the de· fendant has been found guilty) sentenc- ing when the defendant never appears before that court for trial? The statistics regarding only the Orange County Superior Court released by the Judges' Committee for Public In· formation and Judicial Education could only apply to those defendants who pro- ceed as far as trial before this Superior Court bench. Perhaps the editor should enquire of the police departments as to reasons for arrests and of the pros· ecutor's offices as to charges actuaJl)' filed for further statistics dealing with the number of those arrested and the disposition of each alleged perpetrator's case. \ The statement that the judges "chose to focus on one limited set of statistics . . . that made their position appear more favorable'' infers a bias in their interpretation of the statistics. It 1eem1 to m e lb.It the Supertor Court commit· tee could uae ooly the 1tati1tlcs wb.lch refer to defeodll'lll appearina before them. Moat persona arreated never pro- ceed as t~r as the Superior Court bench; ol those that do, the prosecutor presenta a plea·bar&ain to the court u a "fall accompll" lo a l1r1e percentaie ot lhOH cues. highly regarded throughout the United States) are foerced to defend themselves against what has become a continuous attack by the media. Paired with the constitutionally guaranteed right of freedom or the press should be the responsibility of the media to accurately report to the public. MARYDF.sROCHERS Voting record To the Editor : A letter to the editor <May 14> by Mr. Sterling E. Colthurst regarding my "no" vote on Assembly Bill 65, the so· called "item pricing" bill, should be answered. My personal preference is lo see clearly the price on each item. Present law provides that local ordinances may be passed requiring such item pricing, as is currently done in the city of Seal Beaoh. The most vocal advocates ror having the state require item pricing seem to have no faith in the erfect of competition between markets. THEY ARGUE for the state to man· date the Jaw in spite or present local controls. T hey adm it that stale · mandated item pricing most likely will mean that consumers may be required to pay a cent or two extr a on each Item. Mr. Colthurst wonders whose In- terests I represent : he claims I showed contempt for the consumer. I am sorry he feels that way. In truth. my vote was for those very people who cannot afford to pay that extra cent or two per Item. I encourage all constituents in the 73rd District to follow Mr. Colthurst'a advice and keep a "close eye" on my voting preferences and the record. You will find lhat the votes represent lhe productive element ln our society and also those who, because ol their physical Inconveniences or handicaps, cannot be as productive as lbey would choose. NOLAN FRJZZELLE lllllYlll ll is unfortunate that the Superior Perhaps one of tbe reasom foe Ult Court judaes of thls state (a bench. so • escal.tlq dlvorc~ rat• 11 that fewer 1poUM1 telJ Utetr matea they're "W'Cll'Ul thelr n-In told" anymore. D.JI. ......._, .. ~ ............. .,, ......... ... \! ~ . ""' h -- I've Uved lo Colt.a Ma.a all m,y Ule and our family hefpecl settle "Goat Hill" way back wben. We've a1lo clonal· 9d many reUc. ol Coeta 11 ... to Bowen MUHW!l. So aa a rtA!eat ol Colt.a ll•a 1 do putlJ tbMk All for Ida contribu· tloa to our dtJ'• •vt.roilaet. ·~;...._,...iiliilli~~-~-~~-----~-:-:-~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil:~ 1 -I ..... ,_ ttn AH 8Dlt otMl'I like -..... .1:.::·· ., ...................... ... -· ... o.11, ... ..... ~ i i I Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28. 1981 Social Security reform the firsi big blunder WASHINGTON -Premature ID· nouncement of Social Security reform la soberly acltnowledged at the White House as Ronald Rea1an'1 first un- adorned blunder as prea.ldent. but it goes unrecognized as a di.splay of trad.i· tional Republican masochism. Although something close to the Rea1an reforms will be necessary t.o save Social Security I the White House did almost nothing right in exposing lhem lo public view. The too tew who aaw the program In advance failed lo perceive how Democratl would help build a polltlcal firestorm. dread prOlpecl or lower Social Security beoellts t.o the Reaaan tax cut. Even ar- dent Reaga.n.ite members or Coniress were wondering whether they could wholeheartedly support the Reatan pro- gram any lon1er. The reasons for such poor political f1r:' f-,.-•• -/-.-11-11-~ the aeoood reason moved bud&et direc- tor David Stockman. who st.ronJly aup· ported It. What soon would be known u Schwei.ker's folly arrived at the White House on Saturday May 9, two days alter Reaean's budget vict.oey in the House had s tirred pretensions of omnipotence and infallibllity. publicly at arm's length from hls new program. As promised, Democratic Ways and Means members who bad solicited the president's ideas did not attack them. But lo believe that their example would be followed by Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill and House Majority Leader Jim Wright revealed unsuspected political naivete within Reagan's inner circle. Eager lo retaliate after their beatine on the budget, the Democratic leaders as· saulted the Reagan plan without mercy. viser: Professor Arthur Laffer of the University of Southern Ca lifornia. Near · ly a decade ago, Laffer devised a Social Security plan that would penaliie early retirements without the politicaJ self· da m age of the Rea gan progra m Nobody over the age or SS when the Laf fer program was announced would be affected. Long-term gain would be achieved without short-term suffering. All &hi.a Ls understood belatedly by Reagan's senior advisers. What they do not fully comprehend is bow the Social Security fiasco follows a historical syn- drome: Republicans seeking to al· leviate national problems through pain and suffering, only to end up wounding themselves lo the benefit or Democrats. CHIEF OF STAFF James Baker was not present. Presidential counselor Edwin Meese was busy, gave the Social Security scheme a cursory glance and scheduled it for a Cabinet Council session on Monday, May 11. The White timing in unvelllng a long-range reform House staffers whose alarm bells might pr ogram were twofold : Firs t , have rung, congressional lobbyist Max Democratic me mbers or the House Friedersdorr and political aide Lyn Ways and Means Committee prodded Nofziger, were not alerted. Nor were the White House for a Social Security senior Republicans in Congress . P OOR COORDINATION, bad judg- m e nt and e ven hubris ar e acknowledged at the White House. Less well understood is the more serious er· ror of seeking lo appease bond traders by inffictlng pain and suffering on the nation. Dr . Alan Greenspan, a Reagan outside economic adviser with powerful acolytes at the White House, helped build market skepticism by forecasting failure for the Reagan program. To override that skepticism , he urged drastic reform of Social Security. FUNDAMENTALLY, however , Laf· fer believes the Social Security system can be restored to health only through econom1c growth encou"6ged by the Reagan tax rate cuts. Laffer, a pioneer in promoting such a program. is never cons ulted by th e White House: Greenspan, who is consulted regularly, never has accepted the president's tax program. plan, promising they would nol take political advantage of the new proposal; When Baker returned on Monday for second, the admm1strauon·s economic the Cabinet Council meetine. his alarm policymakers wanted to impress sickly bell did go off -but not s ufficiently to THOSE WOUNDS WE&E deeply felt financial markets with their deficit· slop the programs. At the Cabinet Coun- There is one further lesson that may be missed at the White House. While everybody there mourns the political' fallout, it m ay not be noticed that the la t est e xhibition of Re publican masochism had no effect whatever on the bond traders it was intended to im· press so profoundly. by Republican lawmakers leaving slashing courage. cil session, Preside nt Reagan en· Washington to spend the Memorial Day The first reason impelled Richard thusiasticaJly endorsed a reform he recess in their home districts. The Schweiker, secretary of Health and long had felt necessary. The only pre- White House bad managed lo tie the Human Services, who drafted the plan: caution was lo keep Reagan himself p;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;..=;;;;;;;;;===============;;;;;;;;;;::=;;;;;;;;;::=;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--------~;;;;::;;:;::;:;;;;.. Neither Schwe iker nor Stockma n thought to consult another outside ad-·n GOURMET MARKET DELANEY'S BROS. SEAFOOD ·- REPEAT OF A SELLOUT Fresh Northern MORNING FRESH PRODUCE Picked Fresh Dally Local Grown Halibut Steaks .................... 3.98 lb. Fllet of Fresh Sweet Corn ...................... 5 for 1.00 Northern Seabass .................. %.98 lb. So. American Bananas .......... 3 lbs. 1.00 Ranch Fresh Broccoli .............. f9c lb. Large Sized Iceberg Lettuce ...... 3 for 1.00 MEAT DEPARTMENT P nml' and top c hoice heef aged at least J() days lo lht> peak or i;,erfeclion DELANEY'S WINE CELLAR Delani-)"s Private Label Champagne 1750m1l1 Delaney's oven ready meat loaf ......... : . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . l.69 lb. Z. 75 t'a. or 33.00 pu ca~ Half Stuffed Cornish Game Hen Oven Ready, Stuffed with Delaney's Famous Bel Arbes Vlneyuds ClteniJI Blue (75' mU> 3.5' ea. Canalllan Club <one liter> 9.99 u . coresby Scotch (750 mill 5.55 ea. (One liter) .. 6.85 ea. I Apple Dressing .................... 98c ea. Delaney's bas Lytton Springs Zlnfandel ID Stock All liquor and wine plus tax. TIRED OF TRAFFIC JAMS? C ALL DELANEY 'S FOR FREE HOM E DE LIVE RY SERVICE. YOUR ORDER IS UNDER COMPLETE REFRIGERATION F ROM OUR Sl'ORE TO YOUR DOOR. (5'.M MINIMUM PLEASE>. Com plete catering service. from a sit-down dinner party to party trays delivered to your home Call Delaney's Catering Department. ask for Tom Martin T his ad effective Wed . S/27 lhrough Tues , 612 DELANEY'S . Store Hours 9·6, Oosed Sunday 2920 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach 673-5520 II Your furnace pilot light 1s costmg you money And wastmg valuable energy. So turn your pilot light off this summer. Here's how easy it is: Open the access panel to the main gas control and look for the simple instructions. The y will tell you how to safely turn your pilot off and how to relight 1t again wheneve r you like. Please read the instructions and fo llow' them carefully. If you can't find the instructions or if you't e not sure how to safely turn your pilot off, call the Gas Company fo r help. Glve your furnace pilot a vacation this summer. It's one sure- fire way to save energy and money. • FEDCO'S FATHERS DESERVE THE BEST The Perfect Balance ROYAL LCB841 DELUXE ELECTRONIC CHECKBOOK Royal brings the age of electronics to your daily personal finances with the Royal LCB841. Where ever you go keep the status of your checking, savings and charge accounts, household budget or special bills. This electronic checkbook has 3 permanent memories to store figures continuously. The checkbook calculator comes with a rich grain leather-like case. retractable metal pen and credit card holder. BRING THE ELECTRONI C AGE TO YOU R PER- SONAL FINANCES. 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San ~roardlno 92410 STORE HOURS WEEK DAYS 11:00 AM lo l"OO PM• LA CIENEGA • SAN IEANARDINO ANO SAN DIEGO STOAU 12 00 NOON to t :OO PM• CERRITOS • COSTA MHA • PASADENA AND YAM NUYS SlORES SATURDAYS• ALL STORES 10-00 AM to t :OO PM SUNDAYS• All STOl'IH 1t:• AM lo 5·H ,._ ALL STORES CLOSED wtDNESOAYS ~LWAYS BRING YOUR MEM8lRSHIP CARO WITH YOU WH€N YOU SHOP AT A:OCO -- 8 Orange Coaat DAILY ~ILOT /Th uraday, May 28, 1981 TIMELINKS IN 1924 IHE DY AMIC LOUD5PEAl<ER WAS INV~NTED &Y RICE AND KEL LOGG .. '~"' 'S't1A,p '".\C"-.F f'aP ,s I A~ D STEVE ALL EN l./A5 3 YE,ARS OLD. Space weapons opposed Astronauts Crippen, Young urge U.S. space station SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Spac• abutUe utronaut Robert Crippen 1ay1 that altboqb apac. ls Infinite, there ts no room In It for napom. Crippen said here that the United stat.I ll not plannlnl to carry weapou Into apace OD it• abut· Ues. "We conUnue to tb.lnk that •pace ... ou1bt to be used for the benefit ol all mankind In a posltJve way." he said. "I'd Juat as 8000 not aee any weapona up there myself." said Crippen, wbo aiont with Columbia pilot John Youn1 addreued 1,000 people at the Commonwealth Club earlier thll week. Youna and Crippen, currently on a national tour. pushed for early establlabment of a U.S. space station. "I'm certainly hopeful that with the 1ucces1 of the sbuWe, the United States will see fit to.put up a permanently inhabited space station," aald Youn1. ·•I believe we could do it very economically and rapidly, and it's important to do it became the National Aeronautic and Space AdminlltraUon ll charged with advancin1 science and tecbnolof)' . . . and providinc for common defeoae in ac· cordance with the Defense Department." .... carry people into apac• rilbt oow, u IOCID u U.. aovenunent and NASA will decide \0 do ao," b• aald, addlna that people will 10 into space "routinely" within 10 yeara. The utronauts took turm fl vln1 a llfbt· hearted narration of a fllm on Columbia'• b.lttortc maiden rupt, a two-day orbital mllak>D that ended with a pictur•·1>9rfect landlnl at Edwarda Alr Force Bue ln Southern Callforn.la April H . One ~ the few thln11 to break down dwin1 the filtbt, laid Crippen, "WU the pott,. That's pretty slpillcant. It aoJ'l of 1ave up the post, but luckily lt dldn't completely five it up unW aborUy before we rot ready to re-enter." Describlnl the aeparatloo from the shuttle of two reusable solid rockets, Yount pointed out that the rocket cues "10 up to 275,000 feet and come back down at Mach 4.4 . . . or 4.4 times the speed of sound. "We refill them and reuse them on 1ome other fil&ht, one wblcb I haven't volunteered for, I'll tell you that," he joked. --... .,. .. Sovie t s su s p e nd flight s MOSCOW (AP) -The Sovtet Union bu impended maDJMd sbots wblle ita experts dedde on tbe next ·~ ln explorioJ space, scientists saJd. "In comin1 months, there will be no 1ucb nt1hu. After we analyse everytblnc, we will adopt a deeillon," said Alexei Yeliaeyev, head of apace ml.I· 1ion cootrol. "We must now analyze ail work done in the precedlnc five years, then determine what 1bould be done," Yeliaeyev added at a press conference th1a week oo the last of nine miuiooa in the lntercosmos series. Young said the United States could put civiHans into space today l! the aovernment would approve it. ''We've got a vehicle that will allow ua to Asked what hla tint reaction wu when be aaw that some of the beat-reslltant Wea bad fallen off Columbia's tall, You.n1 1ald, "Bob said be knew there was no problem. When we tint opened the payload bay dobr and I looked at the tiles mi11in1. I thought, 'Ob my 1oodne11. "' KEEP SPACE PEACEFUL Robert Crippen C o s monauts Vladimir K o valyonok and Viktor Savinykh, returned to earth earlier t.hUI week after boardlng Salyut-6 space station March 12. RAMSAY DRUGS 22Ae NeWPORT BLYD. (1 ........ of 22ftd It.) 'l1le John Wayne Airport problem ... COSTAMEIA .... 7744 .U:N,let.N,lun.1N ~ Ahle19 On Duly ~~------------------, I 51.00 OFF I A PUBLIC FORUM · I ANY COSMETIC PURCHASE I ON PREVENTING I O F $5.00 OR MORE WITH I ·I THIS.£9J;JfON. _ I ~-------------------~ •Max Fact0< •Revlon • COSMETIOUE Kod.icolor II Low, Low Fiim Deweloptng Prtcea • Arden • Almay • FINE FRAGRANCES EXPANSION HE MALE MAN--... AN UNUSUAL DISCOUNT STORE THE REAL MEMORIAL DAY SALE! Join us to find out about the Master Plan, Access Plan, arid Noise Variance Proposal. Learn more on the City's commitment to preserve and protect the rights of the c.itizens of Newport Beach. IT CAN'T UNWIND, OR FLOOD, OR BREAK UP, OR SHORT OUT, OR WEAR DOWN. ROLEX ••• WHEN YOU REALLY NEED THE RIGHT TIME. 'r>• .1ourrn:iutc; probe dangerous depths, they 11 "' <11irv1v.1I depends upon equipment. It must I ,. ' 1qt1 trur,ty impregnable. Down there. tlm- 'u~ 1 11 r hat"s why the best wear the Rolex ti 'r,r o .• te In 18kt gold, or surgical stain- ' ., '•· • 111 11 renowned Oyster case. this self· .,, n ,,, 1 ~ 1»wPI chronometer is pressure-proof SAVE UPTO 50 3 ON NAME BRAND MEN'S FASHIONS SPORT SHIRTS 9" Val. To 125. Monday, June 1, 1981 7:30 P.M. Newport Harbor High School Auditorium 600 Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach ' ' ! '" I ittioms ~ B.l). HOWES and SON THIS WEEKEND OHL Y! You are encouraged to become more educated and involved in the critical issues of preventing Airport expansion. ~ I l'\I 11 \\~I I H., HIM HRMC.t.,HlATIO'~ 'FWl'ORI BfACH HI.'\ •·il 11111 tr7J.27J I ·' t llfO·•o\ r'4\.•\ff"''" .. ,~.t.11 \-'"1ofl4,f'f\f0 In The HarbOr Shopping Center 2300 Harbor Blvd . Costa Mesa. CA (71 4) 5-40-8818 Mon.-Thurs. 1~7 Friday Tit 9 Saturday 1~ Sunday 11·5 The Newport hb Ci~ r.~1 TIRE BARGAINS? HERE HUNTINGTON If you don't see the prices in print are you really saving money? You hear a lot of radio and television talk about fife 'bargains .. these days. W1cn you want pnces you can cotint on. check the lire ads m the Daily Pilot. St1op the Daily Pilot before you buy ... get the tacts compare . . then you know you are getting the most for your money. Along the Orange Coast the best values are roost often advertised m the Dlllyl'llll 642-4321 Reg. $864.50 . ~ ATHENIA Reg. $636.50 . SALE1 5 49950 G3 BROILMASTER on 48" post List $464.SO SALE 5 3951~ :•••e••••••••••••••••coupon••••••••••••••••·•~t • • : Bring In this coupon and we'll give you : . ' . : an addlt lonal dlscoµnt Of : • • • • i $~.~ ON ANY ! ! PATIO. FURNITUA.E SET i • • • •••e•e••······························ .. •••••••• \ ·~~ Fl~EPLACe & PATIO Town & COuntry Center• South Coast Plaza 777 So. Main St., Suite 102 3333 Brlstol St. ?{,~~i~j .. 92661 ff,~tr 7~~CA 92626 Open 10 ·I 1 ·, . r . .. I i. . . l i ~ . . . i j i r I I l I O n May 5, 1981, the Federal Trade Commission released its "new" 1981 report on cigarette tar levels. Urifortunately, the new FTC report ts really quite old. . Old because it ts based on 1979 cigarette brands. Old because much has happened in cigarette develop- ment during the year and a haifthat it took to complete the study. Old because it doesn't tell tar-conscious smokers what they want to know today. Even the FTC concedes that its report is out qf date. And thefact is consumers do not have the latest statistics on comparative tar levels in ultra low tar cigarettes . if you're a smoker, what Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 , • does all this mean to you? Now cigarettes are t he Ultra Lowest TarTM cigarettes available. No matter w hat the style, there is no cigarette lower in tar than todays Now. These are thejacts. The 1981 FTC renor t is based on measurements of 1979 products. Here are the actual 1981.fl.gures on low est tar cigarette levels. NUMBERS DON'T LIE. NO CIGARETTE, IN ANY SIZE, IS LOWER IN TAR THAN NOW. 80, 85' soft 100' 100' soft S bOK S paclc S box S pack CAMBRIDGE O.lmg l mg 4mg BARCLAY lmg l mg 3mg All tar numbers are av. per cigarette ~Y FTC method. except the one asterisked 1•1 which is av. per cigarette by FTC Report May '81. tAvailable soon at your favorite retail store . BOX. llOX l00'1i Less ihin 0.01 mg. '"ter". 0.001 mg. nfcotine. SOFT PACK 85's FILTER. MENTHOL 1 mg. "ta(, 0.1 mg. nicotine, SOfT ftACK 10()'s fflTER. MENTHOL 2 mg. "t•". 0 2 mg. nicotina. ev. per cigara1t1 by FTC method. I I . . . "'' Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May 28, 1981 - THE l 'A'91L l' CIRCl'8 by 811 Keane "Borfy's being o naughty doggy, Mommy! He's settin' foot in the street!" )l.\R,_ADl Kt: by Brad Anderson ''When do we stop playing 'baby'? This Is his 16th bottle!" Jl'DGE PARKER BotJNCE:, r=r<oM !EDDY'S ... BOUNCE, MEET MIKE. ACROSS 62 Fancy marble 1 M<We qulekly 11-4 Vatued 5 Ship post 65 Anothef time 9 Entertain 67 Calumet 14 Poliltl r!Y9r 2 words 15 Key meaning 70 Originate 16 Pan1m1 port 71 Plu'a riv¥ 17 F1rm an1ma11 72 Flush 19 G1rmtnt 73 Midshipman 20 Gwnt 7 4 Sllip 21 Bl<d 75 Notioet 23 Not one 24 Orthodontat DOWN 27 Tallow N Doom9d 1 DHtt out "'* 2 T•t - -: ~~P541~~ 31 Of weddings Thtow a fight ~1 ~~ l A I! I H 35 Catd 3 Unlorg!Ylng 37 Nol fraafl 4 City of Halla 39 Ae¥tt'• 5 Ekklle pert 40 Goff club I Wadding i..tur• t0da 42 Electric 7 Otorglt - unit tS.U.. 44 Verily 9 Feign 45 Rma heavily 10 Cftlt PM11 47 Mlkt tatdy 2 wordt '9 Adtleftnt 11 Elbow bone 50•hum« t2E~:Fr. 52 lrwtftt 13 Info IOtnt S4 Al fie PMll 11 Limit M F.-22 Smll IUrne> It KN °"MO 25 9'1¥1 26Atttn19t 28 Pfflod 30 F1nt llddlt 32 Otllfmlnlng 33 Ztut'IOn 34 Pra.&ttlt time 35 Mounttlnl 3t Jell 31 Coneutned 41 Dllcour1t 43 Mr.Arnez 410roup 41...,. A 51 Negatlw 53Malegu 56Ai*to11C 5 7 Plain• tndlan hol'llt 58 PlfadiNI 59 9titlth Setv women eoc.,,.. 81 llwMIOn '3 EdMed MWtb .. Collctlon •CMdl BIG GEORGE by Virgil Partch (VIP) "What are you trying to do ·· look busy?" DE:\~IS THE 1'9ENJ\('E I ~~ 'This is the way we do 1t at the doctor's!" NICE M~ETIN' YA, MIK~ ~OPE to SEE YA A<iAlt-1... by Harold Le Ooux WOULfl IT BE ALL RIC:IHT IF I ~ONEP HER AT THE HOSPITAL? by Ferd & Tom Johnson NoN-PROFESSIONALLY, OF COLJRS'& ... , PEANIJT8 Tt: MBLEW £EON :\.\~C\' NANCY···WASH YOUR HANDS--- THEY'RE V ERY DIRTY GOROO DRABBLE ~l.U>i ~11. (M «Al.P~ ~-.. ~'60AV. ~ A~KfP ~ 1b~~ lt¥J lSK lf0'11D~Vf ~llt1. i DR.SMOCK 00,rT~ SO N\Cf. lb GEfll-\E t(IOS t"ro lsGHT ~=! THAT DOESN'T iAl<E TALENT ... ANVOHE CAH DOllW! WASH THEM CLEAN SO YOU WON1T SOIL THE TOWEL DON'T WORRY--- .51NCE THE LAST TIME I GOT SPANKED·-- Al.'fllC'Jl.M, ~R-SOtolALt:i, I OOtl' i11MIC. 'i0\1'~£ ~~ Of A 6A~AtM 'iOU~Lr, lf4Q If 'OJ QoN'1' fMtNK ~ B0-4'~ l4JO EKOO~ f~ 'iOU ... by Charles M. SchuJz IS LXXXVJI '(EUOW·6REEH ~ 8LUE-~EEN? by Tom K. Ryan by Gus Arriola by Tom Bat1uk 1fil5 15N'T WORKtt>.l(, OUT ! by Kevin Fagan by George Lemont .1 t • • • • ... ... ,.. ·\If,·.··::::. .~;.,...::-_l l I ~·· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 --------------------------------------!!'--------------------------------------------------- u ........ TV Lone Ranger upset . . Actor Moore decries new movie's violence ~ LOS ANGEL~ <AP) -Clayton Moore, who wu televiaioo'a Lone Ranier in episodes filmed from 19'9·1~. and who baa aince ridden Silver through many a rerun, bu aaid be won't be seeing the new Lone Ranier movie and be'a upeet that lt wears the PG brand. "No, I haven't seen it, 'TbeLe1end of the Lone Ranger,' and J bave no inttµitlon ot aee it," Mooreaid. "The letters from my rans -wblcb mean a 1reat deal to me -say they're not going to see it and they don't want me to see it either. I won't let my rans down." Moore aald he bas read several re- views ol the movie and is upeet by the violence described. "There's a PG (parental guidaoce suggested) rating on the picture," Moore said. "That's shocking to me. A Lone Ranger picture is supposed to have a G rating so mom and dad can take their 5-year-old to see someone fighting for what is right.'' As portrayed by Moore, the Lone Ranger usually neutralized a bad 1uy by decking him with a well-placed right or shooting the gun out or bis hand. ironic that the voice or youn1 Klinton Spllabury, who bu the title role in the new picture, wu completely erased after the movie wu abot, with another actor's voice dubbed in. Moore's own distinctive voice is lit- Ue chaqed from the days when he yelled "Hi-yo Silver!" Moore is under a court lnjunctioo not to portray the Lone Ranier • anywhere, after a bitter court battle with the Wrather Corp., which owna all rights to the character. Moore~ jected a suggestion that his voice mi1bt be appropriate for any future dubbini of the Lone Ranger's voice. "There's only one thine that I would do and that's be the Lone Ranger," Moore, 66, said. He .said be was offered a bit part in the current movie, and a fee of $150,000, if be would give the mm bis blessing and do some promotion for it. The offer was rejected. ·'They also said they would give me the mask back," Moore said, ·'but the court took it from me and the court should be the one to return it to me, not just throw it back to me like a bone to a dog." Clayton Moore, right, who portrayed the original Lone Ranger in the tetevmon sema, poses with hit faithful Indian companion, Jay SilverheeLa, in 1951 photo . Moore also said the American Humane Society bas critlcbed the movie because or the treatment or horses during the filming. In addition, Moore said be found it Moore currenUy is appearing in a television commercial wearing bia familiar powder -blue weste.m garb and white bat. Instead of the famous black mask, however, be wears sun- glasses. ••••••••••••••••••• : Are YCM.1 Payin9 : • Too Much For : Health lnsuranu? : $1 .000.000 • GROUP OR INDIVIDUAL • :c ... f0f'9 ..... 640-6075 •••••••••••••••••• ~•rw-.ce ,.,. Stllrtt If V()\,fr OocM- tCatf St0t• "9#ttt YOVf t.ru COSTA Mf.SA641-1289 •ut.._ .... ., MIHIOH v-..,0495-0401 ,_, c.-c.,.. ....... (l oo 00... ,_, ot A•HY ,. • .., I • e Daily Pilot e classifieds • workfor • you. Call 642-5678 e forquick e cash sales . • BASTANCHURY WATERS NATURAL DEEP WELL WATER PURE & DELICIOUS BOTTLED WATER FOR YOUR HOME OR OFFICE CALL TODAY & RECEIVE 2 FREE BOTTLES • The $1,000 3-Month Certificate That Yields 15.50% Annually on 16.42% Interest. • lf you really wanl your eyes opened, read thla ad, then tiompare with other ads by banks and savings & loan our Thrift Certificate, after penalty, is 6"-st1U ~% higher. a&'!Ociations. You11 see why we believe '"nle 90 Day Won-So, if you'd like to see your money begin earning der" just may be the finest thrift package in America what it's really wortA. without having it hopelellly t.ied today. up ... send this coupon with your check or money order, or The key is an unbeatable combination of benefits. bring it into a Commercial Credit office. Available to Cali- Short 3 month term. I.Aw $1,000 minimum. High 15.50% fomia re8ident.8 only. interest with an effective annual yield of 16.42% when r------------., compounded quarterly.• Even on early withdrawals, you I Here's my check or money Ot'der for a 8 rronth Thrift I earn 6% annual interest rate, no matter whal Certificate in the amount of$ ($1.,<XX> minimum) Look at what banks an~ savings & loans offer and I Type of ICCIOWlt: 0 Jndlvidoal 0Jolnt Tenancy I you11 see bow they compare. Wftb their 80 month oe~ OTrultee OCorporatioo tificate8, your money la tied up Ill toda11'• iJIUrut ratu I I /qr~ )/eart! And if you withdraw early you forfeit six 111 the 118llll(a) ~ mont.ha' interest. I ~priml.) I Their six month certificalel require $10,000 miKi-'l1Sipmn m1'm....with forfeiture of 8 months' interest for early I ~~ I withdrawal. I Acaount llddlw I So for the ti.nit time you can get certificate aim ratee 111itA ~ Ulqt giw p fr.itJmn t.o "* pr I <lit1 SUM--·ZIP--I money wit.ere it can do~ U.. matt gqod. To take advan· ,., Sodll ~ll'alt 1.D .• tage of a high rate. To invest in opportunity 1'ben it I • .. I lcnocb. Even in an emergency, you ~81)\tereat ~ rate for early withdrawal. I COMMERCIAL CR.EDIT I Wbileconventloul puabook aocounta otter a max· I I imum cit 6Wi>inier.t, the Joweat ixmible interest from ~ai.orr PW-I. ~TtD •a-s cm -U Ill the-rat& RU ,,_,,ctianp,_..,, . ____________ .. Anaheim. 6005. BrwkhuntSt. 928>4. (714) 774-6740 Co.ta Keu. 310 FM 17th St. '»Im. (114) 64&8700 • .._....._ .... 1«>15 <;olde:n Weat St. 92647, (714) 847-7nl Ml..aoa Viejo, 24395 Alicia Parkway. 92615, (714) 77'().•t • lluta Ana. 1224 East 17th Street 9'l701. (114) 5'7-5871 Only $11 O one-way to Seattle 1 But seating is lim ited , so pl an early. Just call your travel. c1CJCnt c111cl say you want to fl y RcpuhlK Or call us any time at ( 714) S4U /060 ARMED SECURITY ON DUTY GOLi SILVER fs,ooo CLASS RINGS NEEDED WE PAY CoeMS, ll ... S. IAHDS DIM1'AL M>LD ALLJIWKJlY WATCHES ALL GOLD WATCHES Ate POCQT WATCHIS Coilts 1964 -4 ..._. s~ SMYer s.+t .,. • .., '-iis. r,...,.. ltc. ALSO CASH FOR OLD BASEBALL CARDS I CISYA MW . ... ,. lttll31 1131 llSTOl Aft. 4 DAYS ONLY THURSDAY. & FRIDAY 12 NOON TO 8 P.M. SATURDAY & SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. llGIOMAL. HOMI OFFICE 11431 ~ ,l.1111 A. Vt. IN ANAHEIM lllUDAY INN .OOM 213 1150 S. HAllOI I.VI. NO NHI CllS Pl.WE HA. WTMOINI. CALIF. ·MA.TIONAL .OLD & SILVll EXCHANGE I • .f f• I \ I , ·1 J Ofange eo .. t DAILY PILOT/Thul'9day, May 24, 1981 QUEENIE I I I f \ FCC decisiOm hitting honre WAllllNOTON (AP) -SeYeral Federal Com· munlcatlom Comml11lon dtclllona permlWnc telepbone rat. lncnuea have bit bome for the acenc)'.. leaviq lll bud.set otftcera factq an une:&· peetecu.y lar&e phone bill. R. Donald Llcbtwardt, tbe FCC._ executive director, dlsclond dwiD& a pubUc mMUq lut week tbe General Servtc• Mmlnlttrauoa bu notified the eoqun.lsslon ill bill for loo&-distance phone Hl'Vice 'fill Jump *2'11,000 duriq the next ftlcal year. GSA'• telephone blJI, ln turn, ls cUmbln1 becauae American Telepboae • Telell'aph Co. rates are rbiq than.ts to FCC decllloos. "We did 10 over to the GSA~rotest theff inc re... and they haven't lauibln&," 11id 1bomu P . Campbell, t.be '• usoctate ex· ecutlve director. "They told us we're the problem." '"l'lle 19t ol the ltalf wutl to k:now bow It la tblt you're 1«tUit tM a.D pme on your comaiut..T" c.:ampt>eu said tbe new pbOae bW 1tem1 rrom an FCC declalon allowln1 ATH to dlaeontlnue ill -----------------so-called Telpak discount, u well u tbb month'• Warnings due ·of sun flares STANFORD (AP> -A method that may Ermit utrooomers to give three days' warninl fore aolar nares disrupt Earth'• atmoe ere baa en discovered by scientists at the st:ford Solar Observatory. , Sqcb nares interfere With communications and have considerable effects oo Earth, said the scien· tuts, who diacuaaed their ft.ndial thla 'week at a lllfftinl of the Amer\can Geophysical Union in Baltimore. TM researchers are Henrik Lundatedt of the Unlvenlty ol Lund in Sweden, who bu been work· lnl at Stanford, and John M. Wilcox and Philip H. Scherrer, both ol the ot>.etvatory. The scientists have found a correlation between the masnetlc field at the aite of the nare and the ability of the nare to accelerate the solar wind. By noting this, they say, dlaruptive nares may be caught immediately, thus allowing ad- vance notice. They explained in an interview before the meeim, that some solar nares, liant exploeion.s on_ the surface of the sun, cause sudden accelerations ln the continuous stream of particles nowtng from the sun called solar wind .. About three days later, the disturbance reaches Earth, interrupttn1 radio and long- distance telephone com'municationa, cauain1 1ur- 1ea in power lines and alterin1 the masnetic field of Earth. . The researchers discovered lr the magnetic. field at the site of the flare ls southward, flares within that field tend l<> be dlaruptive. But if the field is-northward, the nares lead to have no ef· tect. In solar nares, magnetic forces.now out of the sun's interior, break the surface, then 10 back down again. The researchers analyud 80 laree flares dur- inl a <14-month period. Wilcox aaid they have found few clues to explain the phenomenon. declsl<,>n allowing AT&T to raiae ill private line rates. Also included ln the GSA calculation la the e:&· 5"'cled approval by the commiulon later tbb year for another private line lncreue and a boost in WA TS rat.es. • It wu the demise of Telpak, however, that atarted GSA budget officials ~ their pen- cils. Afte}" years of llti1atioo, the rec·, 1tT7 de· ciaion to allow Telpak's dlacontlnuance waa abrupUy upheld May 4 by the Supreme Court. Three daya later, AT•T's bluest Telpak customer -the federal government -loet ill bulk dlscount. The GSA, which provides 1001-dfatance phone senice to civilian government a1eoclea throu&b its Federal Telecommunications Service, waa forced to begin computln1 new bills for its cuatomen. The bad newa got wane u the FCC ap- proved the private line rate bike May 7 and moved . closer to approvint"the other rate increases. Handicap rul~ questioned . . W ASUINGTON (AP) -Already under review by the Reagan administration, federal re,Wations requlring public transit systems to make bu.lea and subways more acceaaible to the handicapped have ~questioned by a federal appeals court. While not invalidating the rel\llatiom pro- posed durinl the Carter administration, the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals fQr the Diatrict of Colum- bia said Tuesday it does not tbi.Dk they are sup- ported by laws banning dlacrlmination a1aimt the handicapped .. The court said, in a suit brou&ht by the Am"rican Public Transit Aasoclatlon and 12 transit systems, that the 19'73 law banninl di.a· crimlnatioo against tbe handicapped does not re· quire systems to late extraordinary stepe to make vehicles accessible to wbeelc~. The court added, .however, that a ayatem could . be considered discriminatory if it refused to take "modest" steps to make ill vefilclea more acceui· ble. (t] ~®~[Mi ~® IRAllD OPElll• • , .., ... f ~ I 1 We've just opened our doors at 01~ World Village and can offer you tremendous savings on o.ur exciting new simulated wicker lawn sets. Come to the Sidewalk Sale this weekend for spectacular buys. • Grand Opening Special: ' . 5 piece Sllllll•tl Wicker Set .... ~-" ...... SALE 5 489°0 6 Piece ,._..,d Wicker Set .... ..,,.," ...... SALE 5849°0 All pfecee guw1meed 1 o v•11• tor both oomrnercl .. I retidenttal UNI Name Your Price Selle! Stock Reduction! Prices •eitic.-, NMecl ow •·Decor.tor C1•4 Pm-frOM $11 0ii •I Mw v ... Price! S.•• 1tylH to cllooH frOtll Prtoea~ through 6/14'1'1 ontvt' · ©)}l'l~~· 7561 .W. C1ail1r Ay...e llllt~···· (Old Wortd olf 406 & Beach) • (..r to leMfY) .. 17141191·6161 starts Friday; 9:30 a.m. many limited quantities ... not all sizes may be available· in each groupi~g ... colors and styles lim;ted to stock· ~n hand-, so shop early for be.st s~lection! • 1n our Huntington Beach store · · · - women's sportswear buys for boys tt llSSES T\JRTLENECK TOPS 21JUNIOR 8KJRTS ., . . •. "1 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS. . 1111880 SHORT SLEEVE TOPS 1MJUNIOA TURTLENECK TOPS 31 LARGE saE TOPS 121 JUNIOR TEE SHIRTS 41JUNIOR PANTS . . . . . . . •WllES SLEEVELESS TOPS 31 llSSES TOPS . . . . . . . . . , 17SJUNIOA PANT TOPS .... 311188E8 SLEEVELESS TOPS II JUNIOR SHORTS .... 122 JUNIOR SHIATS . . . . .. : . 54 JUNIOR SKIRTS . . . . . 11 JUNIOR PANTS . . . . . . . . . 31 JUNIOR TOPS . . . . . . . . . 31118SE8PAHTS .. 34 JUNIOR JEANS .. 71JUNIOR FAMOUS MAKER PANTS ' .. women's dresses NOW 98c 29 BASEBALL CAPS 98c 34 TUBE SOCKS . .. 1.98 15 WALLETS 1.98 37S.SLV. PLAJDSHIRTS 1.98 41 UTILEBOYSS.SLV.SHIRTS 3.98' 24 SKI PAJAMAS (SMALL OHL Y} 3.91 71PAtNTSWEATSHIRTS 3.98 11FAMOUSMAKERTEESHIATS. 3.98 . 21 "1TTLE BOYS SNOOPY,.,.. SWEATSHIRTS 4.98 7181G BOYS SNOOPY'"" SWEATSHIRTS 4.98 17LSLV. F~SMAKERSHIRTS 4.98 51 S.SLV. KNIT SHIRTS . 4.91 23 LITTLE BOYS 3·PC. SUITS 4.98 19 FAMOUS MAKER JEANS S-98 119WARM·UPSUrTS 9.98 9·91 buys for ryten &.91 6.98 . 6.98 NOW 29 FAMOUS MA~ER TEE SHIRTS 25 FASHION BRIEFS 115 S. SLY. TEE SHIRTS . 21 JUNIOR ANO MISSES DRESSES 9.98 51 CASUAL PANTS . . . ·. 23 S. SLY. SHIRTS 51JUNIOAAHDMt8SESDRESSES 14.98 23,JUNIOR AND MISSES DRESSES 19.9i lingerie, loungewear NOW 51 FAMOUS MAKER BRIEFS . 98c 13 8HORT SLEEPWEAR . . .Mc 13 8"0RT OOWMS . . 1.98 21 LOHO GOWNS ....... : . . . . • . . . . . . . . 2.98 . 2380FTCUPIAAS . . . . . .. ....... , 2.98 11 LOHO ROBES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... 4.91 women's accessories 51 PEOS SOCKS 210KHE!HIOHSOCKS . ·, •SOAPS .......... . 771ELTI .......... . 71 SCUFFS (HOSIERY DEPT.) 31 RAINCOATS . . . . . . ..... , f7CAHYASHAMJ8AOS .... . • P\IME ACCESSORIES ...... . .NOW 28c 68c 9lc 9lc 1.48 1.98 1.98 f71ELTI ........................... . 1.91 1.98 1.98 4t VINYL SHOES (HOSIERY DE,T.) 17 NYLON HAHOllAOS . . . . . . . f031CUFFS(HOSIERY DEPT.) 71 ctMA DOLL SHOES(HOSIERY OEPT.) 11tlTRAW HANDBAGS . • 114COVEA-uPS .......• 13 TW!EDHANDBAOS . . • 1tLEAntEAHANDeAGS . .2.48 2.48 2.48 3.48 3.48 3.98 · 1.98 21 NOVEL TY TEE SHIRTS 31 S.SlV. Y·NECKSHIRTS 1tS.SLV. SHIRTS 13 HOODED SWEATSHIRTS 45LSLV.SHIRTS . f7 LSL Y. SHIRTS 478.SLV.SHRTS . 13 SWIMSUITS. . . . . . 17 S. SLY. COLLARED SHIRTS 21 S.SLV.SHIRTS ......... . 298.SlV. YOUHGMEN'SSHIATS 45 S. SLY. YoUHo MEN'S SHIRTS 71 FAMOUS MAKER SHIRTS . . 23LSLV.SHIRTS . ., .. 25S.SLV.PULLOV£RSHIRTS 9 BACKGAWllON GAMES . . 17YOUNO MEN'S SPORTCOA TS 21 S. SLY. SHIRTS .. shoes for the family 45 INFANTS OXFORDS , 2S GIRLS SLIPPERS . . 21 WOll~'S THONGS . 14 WOMEN'S CLOGS 11GIALSLEATHERSANDALS •GIRLS CASUAL SHOES . .29MEH'SCASUAL SHOES 21 IOYS LEATHER OXFORDS •GIRLS CASUAL SHOES ..... 24 WOMEN'S SUEDE OXFORDS . infants and toddlers IOBOYSSUEOEJOGGERS .... NOW 11 WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES . 14M08US .............•............ 2.98 31WOMEN'SDAESSBOOTS .. 17WAHTDRE'8ES ...........• , ....... 2.98 31MEN'SDAESSSHOES ..... . 11WANTGIRLS'OIAPEASETS . -\· .•.. 2.98 17WOMEN'SCASUALSHOES 1tTOODLPDRESSES .. :. . . . . . . . . 4.98 17MEH'SCA8UALSHOES .......•.. 22TOOOLPIOYPANTSETS .•......... 4.98 d d t" NOW 9lc 1.11 1.98 2.98 2.98 2.98 3.98 . 3.98 4.98 4.98 4.98 4.91 4.98 7.98• 10.98 NOW 1.91 1.'98 1.98 2.9JI ~~ 2.98 .< 3.91 ' 4.98 4.98 . 5.91 5.91 .6.91 6.98 :i . 6.98 •. 8.91 . ,: . . ti·•·.: ., .. ..,: .. ·~=· .~ .. 9.91 9.9& 9.98 9.91 19.98 9.9f NOW 1.98 3:99 5.98 5.11 5.98 1.98 9.98 9.9& 9.98 . . 11.98 . 11.98 . 15.• . .. 11.98 . 11.98 11.98 .. 24.98 '11TOOOLD01ALOVERALLS ......... 4.98 yar age an . no ions ~. NOW buys for girls 214cAAOs1UTTONS · · · · · • · · · · · · · ..... ·. ·. !~ NOW 231 YOl INTlftfACINO . . . . . . . . . . . . - ' lie 44 YOICMNOHAM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .' . , ........ lie 1,,..~-~-·ISl-7 : :.•.••····:~ f ~~~:•• '.'.::::::-> ···•: i:S alMIQIU,_,.S~:~:::::::.: .... ~:: 31YDIDOU9U,ACICMLT ....... : ............. I .• 41 •.._...,. ..................... •·•· ·tor your home •unu...aJIAMI .............. .' ... 4.. .. NOW t1•G1R&.1D111111a .................. t.• 71 PLACEMAT11 : .................. , , ......... , ... lie ·-QINA~llTI ................ tM 102WAIHCLOTHI ................................ lie l •YOUNG """°"JIANI ................ t.• 1•HANDTOWU1 ............... ·~ ........ , : ... 2.11. • . t1 lWIN 8"IETs ................................ 3.98 toys, toys, toys 11oeLLAMP1 •................................. 3• 711AntTOWIL9 ............... : .............. 4.98 1toFULLIHlaTI ............................... 4.98 21 NYLOMIATIN .. HTI ..................... 4.• 1tNYLONIAT1NMLOWCAIES '" ..... ~ 4.98 27111LLOWIHAMI ., ....... : .................... 4• 21IOOVCOMPCIR1 lAI. · .•..................... 4.M NOW 11 f'UYDQptl"flUZZY ~ ........ : 1.• 10.UVDOM_,..DIHOP ........... a.• 11 &ICTM>llCIOCCUU ........ 10.-. 17-..CTM>llCPOOTULLOAMa .... 10M . Huntington Beac·h ~ 9811 Adams Ave. at Brookhursf St. • 963-9731 ..------~--- ............. ,..~ -··~·' ..--·-..... ···-···-·--. ..... ..., ........ Daily Pilat THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1981 OBITUARIES LEGALS 84 84 . .. ~ Alaska's Mount MclUnley is 'most dangerous walk in the world' . . . BB Prep 'school accepts only 'tough ' boy~, girls STOCKBRIDGE, Mua. (AP) -Neal, a bed.raegled 17.year· old with long·laabed brown eyes and a shock of unruly dark hair acroaa his troubled forehead, bas been kicked out of bla dormitory. . The boya voted him out, Neal explains, beca\lae be stole money from seyer&l of them. "They don't trust me anyone," he saya softly, with a shrug. So every night Neal shops around his school -an ex· elusive prep school that charges $8,SOO a year in tuition -looking for a place to sleep. "It's not as bad as it sounds," Michael DeSisto says later. "We all know Neal's out of his dorm and we ask him at night if he's found a place to stay. If be hasn't, the staff lakes him in.•' There's nothing preppy about The DeSisto School. Yes, it looks like any private school -brick buildings clustered on 300 rollin& acres of Berltshire foothills - but then you look more closely. Consider a prep school whose director is pleased -nay, elated -because a 16-year·old boy has run away. "He was too passive," DeSisto says. "When he ran away, I knew we wer e getting somewhere." Consider a prep school that claims it will never -not for any violation of rules, not for any offense, no matter how of· fensive -expel a student. Consider a prep school where every one or the 150 students and every one of the 40 staff .has psychotherapy once a week. It's required. The DeSisto School ~s most as· suredly exclusive, but'with a dif· ference: Michael DeSlsto ac· cepts only kids who are, in his words, "hopeless cases" - tough, troubled, troubling boys and girls. . 0 0 Some were expelled from as many as four prep schools. Some were evicted from private psyc hiatric hospitals. Some came here dire<:Uy from jail. Students surround M ichael DeSisto in f ront of school he founded to help YCJ!lngsters expelled elsewhere.· Al' ........ They don't look it. As they move through the clatter of the cafeteria line, these shaggy. haired, blue·Jeaned boys and girls seem clear-eyed and antsy wltb adolescent energy. DeSisto watches them, wear· ing 8 s mall, satisfied smile. Then he Jeans forward, press· es h is bearded fac e close ahd cries: •. Look around you. These are kids everybody gave up on. They were lost cauaea. Can you believe that? Isn't that incredible?" Despite their disturbing his· tories, his kids are "healthier" than most, he says. "My kids knew they needed help and they got it. A lot of them got in trouble smokinl dope. There's a girl here whose father smokes a lot of dope, so she started boozjng. It panicked him. He told me be was afraid she was an alcoholic. She knew how to get help." By training, DeSisto is a teacher, not a therapist. Yet the school he founded has been called a ·'therapeutic boot camp." He dislikes the description -it sounds loo callous to suit him -but it comes close to the mark. At the DeSisto School, every• one knows where they should be and what they should -and shouldn't -be doing al any mo- ment. There are housekeeping chores, class~s. athletics and lwice·daily dorm meetings to discuss who did what to whom or why so-and·so is feelln1 sad. And there are weekly Gestalt therapy sessions when each stu· dent i.s urged to realize that be'• responsible for his situation and for his feelings. And that be can change both. Since DeSiato believes actions gel through bet· ler to kids than words, the staff has therapy loo. The aim of all this is to create what DeSisto calls a "safe place," where h:ids feel secure enough to risk behaving in new ways and, if au goes well, to drop the self·destruclive habits -drug abuse, say, or sexual promiscuity -that landed them here. A kid who brew rules is coo· sidered to be coming along - trying on new behavior or suf· fering psychic pain or something, but moving. And movement is everything. There's no rush. If one student moves more slowly than othen, that's fine. Everyone ls laid back. F.apecially the director. DeSisto is a 41·year·old, curly· haired bachelor with intense, glowing brown eyes. He cannot be ruffled, bas never been shocked. DeSisto founded this school in )978, when be was fired after 11 years as director of Lake Grove School In Long Island, N.Y. Lake Grove's trustees accused DeSisto of f lotling to start his own achoo . When tbey fired him, that's. what he did. A number of Lake Grove students and teachers came with him. Advance tuition paid the bills. There are two DeSisto schools because most parents come to him in panic, hoping only that he can "keep their kid alive." Consider Alice Moir. Two years ago, when Mrs. Moir'• 14·year·old son, Roger, ran away from boarding school and tbeatened suicide, she went to an educational consultant in Boston, who recommended 'If you're not resisting , you're not feeling anything. I worry about the parents who don't seem to be touched at all.' ·now -the other is at Howey, Fla. -and the director divides his time between them. DeSisto bas said he'd like to found a national chain of schools. DeSisto boasts that 90 percent of his graduates go on to college, but says that's not the point. "The goal," he comments, "la to provide a place that will give them as much as they're willing lo take." For the most part, DeSisto parents seem pleased with what their children are willing lo lake. DeSiato says this is DeSisto. She brought the boy here. "It was desperation. I was ter· rified." Today Mrs. Moir is so thrilled about the school that her friends tell her she sounds like she's joined a refigious cull. "I've never fell so alive," she says, "and it gives me tremendous joy to see Roeer happy and to see him in control of bis life and not feeling impo- tent.'' DeSisto says that 20 percent of bis students were sent here not by their parents, but by their home school districts. Federal law requires public schools to pay to meet the special needs of students they aren't equipped to serve. DeSlsto is certified .to take troubled students by the states of Connecticut, Masaacbuaetta, Rhode laland, Calllonlia, llllnoia and New Jersey. Other cliltrlcta learn about DeSlsto through pro· fesslonal oreani&ations or special coosultants. Phyllis Steinbrecher, an in· dependent' educational consul· tant In Weston, Conn., has rec· om mended' DeSisto several Umea to public school IUidanee counselors who wanted help placlni emotionally diaturbed younisten. But lln. Steinbrecher ~Y hires out to advlae pa.rents and 1be ••YI when sbe recommendl tbe DeSUto School to t.bem, •'I wam them -when JOU 10 there, It'• loi.nC to be wild." DeStato expects a lot of parenta. He believes kids can't cban1e unless their famlllea live diem "permluJoa..'' So be uka ,.,_.,. to come to tetlodie week·klq and weeke.nd family u..ran wlklnl ben; IM •· peeta tbem to au.id ...u.17 ........ tau plac.1 uoand tbe naU.. Wk'*' O.SUCO (Main)°'*"* "hope'-" COM" ..... Tonw TOCGlllMo (Wf') CJftC:t ltiWw JIU~ ......... ,,.,, tcltool for tlfllt:Wt IHU. Tlaat•a tine with Doa ....... a Soutbftekt, ..,...., cbeadeal aecutiYe . ......._ 11 MW cm DlflU$>. He ..,a It belped bla eon, Srle. Aad blma.ar. Ke Uk• to mab small .. ; ·, speeches like this one : "Unless the parents change, the child can't. Now, I'm ter· ribly proud of what Eric has ac· complished hei'e, but I'm also proud of what I have done. I have changed a great deal." At first Shoemaker thought DeSisto's approach was pop· pycock, but now does all that is asked and more. He and his wife started a therapy group of parents; be has private sessions twice weekly. All parents are not as en· thusiastic about the school·. Some consider that DeSisto asks too much -indeed, demands it. Rogar Kahn, author of "The Boys of Summer," had a telephone caJl last year from his 16·year·old son's dormitory parent at DeSisto: "He can't take in affection," she said. "U you love him al all, you ' II come to parenl·child week. It costs $750 in advance and you're lucky we have space." Kahn went. ·•Recently , I skipped a parents' meeting and a parent called me and said, 'We want to help you.' It's so chlld·centered tbat it's frigbteninll." 'At DeSisto, Kahn's criticisms would be considered good news. They mean that Kahn is "resiat· ing." · "Resistance is pay·dirt," says Allan Whiteman, supervisor of 16 therapists from the Gestalt Association of New York who com mute here to serve the school. "U you're not resisliiig, you're not feeling anything. I worry about the parents who don't seem to be touched at aJI." When kids resist -break rules, run away -they face con· sequences. That's DeSisto talk: "There are no crimes here. There is no punishment." Instead there are "hours." When a s kinny 17·year·old named Bill returned from two weeks as a runaway, be was as,. signed to hours. There are no janitors here -the kids do that work and they did Bill's duties in his absence. With hours --a regimen or chores -be "pa,. the community back." There are other consequenc.._ If a student fails to make Bit bed, ror instance, his $10 weelO.r allowance is docked 50 centa; The money pays a student to make his bed for him. Though rules at DeSisto are broken -and often -it doesn~t trouble the director. He ex~ it: "We tell them they'll ne* be expelled. We say they cali:t do anything horrible enour to make us abandon them. course they're going to lest us,. l .. •. Sanguine thou1h be ls, ~ concedes that there are tiJn1tt when he doesn't know bow jp help a troubled student. ~ then? ~· .. "I ask the •'They u.suaJly need." ... kid ," be s~Jl know what ;J ~: . .. PT A u nit s press in~ for more school ai4f SACRAMENTO (AP> -The 1981·82 budget contains leas tbiin president·elect of the slate PTA a .s percent school funding .~ is complaining that Individual crease. parents have to pay for pencils, She said school fund paper and bus service that the shortages have led to a schools once provided. range of local cutbacks, fl "Whatever happened to the shorter school days to free public school system In terioraling equipment California?" Chris Adams of scarcities of pencils and pa Lafayette, said at a news coo-Many schools have also s ference? ed charging fees for on "Howard Jarvis decided to do away with it, and the public went alon1 with him," Ms. Adams added. She said Parent-Teacher M · sociation membere were "maJ'ddns" on their lelblaton' offlc• on ~of AB777 by M · aemb~ Lero1 GrHM. D· Sac:ramento, to lncreue slate acbool akl by 10 peruat. Ma. Adams Ud OtMr P.'l'A leaden allo pr•11ted a &one IC:l'Oll ftlled wttb .... ,. OD behalf of ABm to Gov. J:dmUDd. Brown Jr .• whoH propoeed \-----~ subsidized bwl service and school activities, Ma. Ada said. Without namina the sc she said one has no clOc:ks work and no money t«> fix bell system; one hllh 1 class has no textbooks for den ta to take bome: and elementary ac:hools are lonfer 'fun1Mhln1 • rel\llar plJ ot pBdlli Md paper. "PTAI are •ked more more to •'l'PlY the basic pll• that are auppoeed to paid I« bJ tu moa.la." Adams said . ~··~ ... ' ' . ' .. .... . . . ........ -.. . . . . . . . ' .. . . . . .,,. . .. . . . . .. .. -. . . . ---............... Lock up . the lane clo'sers DETOURS .It DEADHEADS DEPT. -Tboee lawmakers up in Sacramento who have been griplne and turniq livid over the state highway department could do all our hapless motorists one little favor by passln,-a simple law. So far, our august solons have made a lot of speeches about how they ought to chop off the hi&hway chief, Adriana Gianturco, at her pursestrings by reducing her salary to zero. Other teeth-gnasbings have happened. But blamed litUe ac- tion. Throug}l all this, our ~ l~wmakers have been making • ~ the usual mistake. They want r-'\ ~~p~tart taking action at the TOM MURPHINI '~I;. FOR THE SAKE of our harried commuters who have to use these highways, however. the Legislature would be a lot better off starting at the bot- tom -then working up. The prime example of this is when highway crews, known as Caltrans employees, all of a sudden decide, willy-nilly. to shut down some traffic lanes. When they do this, they leave the clear impression they couldn't give a tinker's damn what road conditions happen to be at the time. • An acquaintance of mine, for example, was motoring up Pacific Coast Highway just awhile back when traffic came to a screeching halt and backed up parked cars from Santa Ana River Bridge at Huntington Beach to The Arches Overpass in Newport. WHEN THE MOTORISTS finally crept along and got to the river bridge, what did they find? Two lonesome Caltrans workers had shut down an entire lane so they could shovel a couple of small piles of gravel around. Then only yesterday, Caltrans notified the Newport Beach cops that they'd have to shut a downcoast lane on Coast Caltram foreman being hauled off to the slammer Highway at the Newport Bay Bridge for a bit of cable- stretching along about 9 a.m. That might not have been too bad because the worst of the rush would be over by that hour and traffic cops would be on the scene to help smooth out the traffic flow. TROUBLE WAS, the Caltrans crews decided to shut down the bridge lane earlier, at 8:30 a .m . and they didn't bother to notify Newport traffic officers of the change to an earlier time. The result? Traffic backed upcoast from the bridge all the way down Mariners Mile. It may have backed up all the way to Huntington Beach, for all we can tell. So that's why our legislators who want to lower the boom on Caltrans should actually start at the bottom. They should get these arbitrary and capricious detours and lane-closings under control. ONE WAY MIGHT BE to pass a new state statute that would decree, simply, that any time a Caltrans crew creates a major disruption in local traffic flow, the local cops are em- powered to arrest the work crews and throw them all in the local jail. Cool thinkers among us, particularly those lucky citizens who don't have to commute, might suggest, "My , my! That would be terrible! Why that's hot-beaded and reactionary ... " MAYBE SO. But it might cause a few of those highway people to think twice before they throw out all those orange closure cones and pop up their detour signs. They might get just a little more thoughtful before they start shutting down major traffic arteries during peak commuter rush hours. And tossing them all in the slammer wouldn't be any more reactionary than reducing poor Adriana's salary to a goose egg. 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Our primary concern is to make you comfortable at a price that's affordable. TO FIND OUT MORE, send for your FREE copy of "Concerned Dentistry For Your Family," or call Connie to arrange for your personal appointment REAL VALUES (714) 846-0654 Max Burgess, D.D.S. "Concerned Dentistry For Your Family" 16141 Bolsa Chica Road Huntington Beach, CA 92649 on items fr:om applesauce to zippers Dll.IJ Pilaf are advertised every day in the 1~ ., .. ' • :l ' . ..,..._.. Folk ringer Joan Baez reflects.at Miami's In- ternational Mrport on South American tcvr that hcu forced her to perform underground in several atop•. Baez tour proves point MIAMI <AP > -Singer Joan Baez said that her month-long concert tour so far has included under- ground performances in Cbile, "total censorship" in Brazil and a less than warm welcome in Argen- tina. In an interview at Miami International Airport earlier this week on a stopover between Rio de Janeiro and Nicaragua, the 40-year-old singer said she had embarked on the tour knowing that her concert dates were unsettled, but she "wanted to go anyway." Despite cancellation of scheduled concerts in several cities in Argentina and Brazil earlier this month, Miss Baez sang anyway -in coffeehouses . and churches, on the beaches and at colleges. "I would sing in room aft.er room of people, but I couldn't sing officially," said Mias Baez, a veteran protest singer who vigorously opposed the Vietnam war and whose hits include "The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." Miss Baei last year toured the Far East and · spoke out against the commwmt-backed regimes · in Vietnam and Cambodia. This tour began in Mexico, then moved on to South America, where it was ,interrupted repeated- ly by government police who canceled concerts at the last minute, saying she didn't have the proper work papers. In Chile, she "went undersround -in colle1es and coffeehouses. They didn't atop me." In Argentina, 1981 Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Perez Esquivel lined up cafes and little chapels where she was allowed to sing. The Brazilian government's Division of Censorship and Public Entertainment claims the concerts were canceled because her promoters would not agree to '•a jet to fly her around the country, a first-class ticket to the exterior, $12,000 per presentation and the condition that tickets cost no more than $1.15." The government also claimed that when Miss Baez was informed she couldn't make political statements, she said she "preferred not to sing." Johnny Econonty still on the job VISTA CAP> -Back when reporters couldn't bear over the noise of the presses, publisher M.Z. Remsburg asked a reader to call up the Vista Press when he h~ard a oolice or fire siren. Well, publisher Remsburg is long dead now. But Johnny Economy, now 117, is still on lbe job. After 15 years, hardly a day passes without this cryptic telephone call from the one-time Greek immigrant:. "The sirens are out! " Today the newspaper occupies a new plant next to the fire station. Its modern printing depart- ment is so quiet everybody in the building can bear the siren go by on the way to an accident or a fire. But right afterward will come Johnny Economy's call. It's one citizen's contribution to the news. By GIGI'S ~ ~~ IED DEVIL SUPEI GLUE 39:GRAMS Bond. rubber, plastic, m etal, and most non· porou.. material.. ( B.Qinning to think my brain fall.a into that catagory.) DURO PERFECT MATCH VINn REPAIR KIT 3~ Fu tean in vinyl or leather. Complete kit com .. with colon to match almost all houaehold vinyl.a. If I hear someone say for the millionth time, YOUR CHOICE "you'll qet a cha~• out C of th ... " I'm gonna 99 reverM ha polarity. (Whoo, aren't we testy?) PAK ~,~,. ._, .;0 EMERSON ' -:-: ---CASABLANCA . .-: ;" .• ~ CEILING FAN ·--~.,,,,,, Simulated wood grain blades in Ch-terfield Brown or Antique White. 36" 88.88 52" 117.77 Five )'9&r warranty on the motor (if you don't fly it too cloae to mount&ina.) DIGITAL I COMBllATIOI ' LOCI Bl , CJ 1244 -=;'l~ Replac.a the keyswitch on garage door openen so you can open and clo.4t your door from the outaide. Neat mounting. DURALITE STRAP FURNITURE I want to ... you spending more time in o n e of th .... You work too h&rdl In aand color with brown and tangerine accenta. CHAIR s POSITION CHAISE MURRAY BICYCLES 20'' BOYS' TIX 69!! A new BMX ( whateftr that m eana) type bike, 20zl.7S" blue knobbt.., BMX type fork, Moto-Cro.. type bar, coaster type brake, chrome (type?) finiah. --... 26" MEI'S I 0 SPEED TOUllll IAJA 114!! • Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 s •• G.E. INSIDE FROSTED LIGHT BULBS CHOICE OF 60, 75, OR 100 WATT 27 · 4BULB PAK IOIELCO COOL WHITE FLUORESCENT 73 c TUBES 4 FT. 8FT. I 9 7 This ahould be a nice aarinp. (Hey, a guy tolcl m. if ~ make 8UN no oil or acid from your f1ngien geta OI\ the bulb they la.st much long9r. So rn ,.,..,. glO'N9 and d.l'OP the ba)l)?) Choice of 60. 75, or 100 watt in the incandMcent. n \IOIMC.tt. they ... rn to la.t forever. QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL 30 WT. 77~. 20/50 WT. 83~. Speaking of oil, my old girlfriend once oiled the tires on my jeep becau.u they squeaked on c urves. PRESTONE II SUMMER COOLANT/ANTI-FREEZE 3!!. ,..... ...... """'""'" Replenish t he level, or clean IM~~llM'*'-i out your system and replac., get ready for hotter weather. Limi t two to a customer, no dealer aales. ~lul MEGUIAR'5wCfxR CLEANER This stuff is really good becau.u I ' am looking at my car waxed with I it. (An unaoUcited testimonial?). ~ 2 ~~z. MEGUIAR'S LIFETIME POLY SEALANT SYSTEM YOUR CHOICE 14 OZ. PASTE 597 16 OZ. LIQUID ALLISON AIR COOL CUSHION 1 ~~102 Used to have one in my '56 Ford Wagon aa we climbed th• Indio grade. No air conditioning, had one of them water cooler things. (Ah, what a memory). NICHOLSON 7 114 II SAW BLADES YOUR CHOICE • ALL PURPOSE COMBINATION OR •PLYWOOD BLADE Almost co.tau much 2•• to haft an old blade ah&rpen.d. (Oh, not EA. that much, aorry. ) 4x8 PARTICLE ' IOAID ~.. 3.97 ~.. 4.97 M:r brother· ln -law came to .Wt lut w.ek. DOM he .. t? The kid ia a clo-lt- ~ famin9. ( M, .u. a..-,.....,. ~--.) ~ ~ ~Ji*ff _!!(~ . .i:/111 CLOSE-OUT! RANDI-Biii Sim' 3• TERRA COTI'A RED 5!! Thia i.a real brick, only it '• ~ inch thick, easy to handle. It's fireproof, weatherproof, and loolu smart. CoYen a.bout 5 itq. feet. 1'BE BUTLEl'S TABLE 37•• OLD TOWN USED ANTIQUE WHITE TAWNY BROWN YOUR 677 CHOICE BOX Hey, lookit thia. Got a nice lift-out •rring tray and aheli. Walnut finish, ...,. to .... mble. 27zl9.20 inchff high. SYKES Oil PARQUET FLOOR TILE I ~~IT. Natural oak, light finiah, til .. are 6Ysz6Ys inch ... Limited auppU .. here, ao come in early. -1HD·il~ -- DEXOL CONTACT WEED KILLER I~ 5~ I like thia idea. It knoc:lu off the w..da without learing a poi.eonoua rem.due which could hurt or kill your peta. • ~ . . • .! .. ' i J ... Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May 28, 1981 QUEENIE --------------- 01111~-s-..... --- PtJBLIC NOTICE •Kill_._ .. ..... nATUllllWT ,..........,.,__ ................ -A, IUMIMM"l"H INVHTMaNTI. 11•~-*C:..H.....,,,H .... illP llMCJI,~ ... IUMeaOWTH P .. OPa .. TY MANAOCIWNT, tt• ..__ C.... H"""'9Y,tt • .. , ... tl,CltlltorlM PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE NOT1C8 INVITI .. atDI Notice It llerolly tl•H llMll u.. ... nl el T,__ of ... Goett C-•tCTlftOUI MlltNaM m1H1lty c.11 ... Oltlrkt of 0¥._ llAMa ITATa .. •T C-\y, c.llfenlla. •Ill ...ulw-*' TM ... ie.iae ,__ ore .. 1119 M4ll .,_ .. II:• a.my Frl<ley, J-11, ....,_..., 1•1 ot IN ~cNalfl8 ~Of COU .. TYA"O ...,.._ 1"1S _, told col .... _.,let IOUlod ot 1110 ·-· T ....... CA..... •••1111 A••llUO, Cot lo Mo so. MA .. TIN A. CHIAVA .. 10, •m c.i••rllo. .. *"IO time uld lll<h •Ill Folr-.~CA"11l. lllO,....kty_.. ........ for: PUBUC NOTICE P l HI PM:TtTMUa WM.... teOTIU .... tTAT&Ma•T tot.._• Tllo,......,.._ -llMflt..... lol A llolo• ---· ...... IHa .. oY PIMANCIAI., .... ... ,,. ... Woaterlf ~IMO, Now,.n aoocll, *-ti It" r ~--Clt1V8LLO • 0-. TN¥ ....... 11111 Vie~ .... Hitt le~UI c.Mo Do C:... ~; P,O, ... e-11, (A 116. tr.-C. CM~ c.lltW"IM '"' -Ttlft ...... It~ llf Me. .. IM trM1H• ........ .., Hlol A•• QIOflel T. Moya a.Kii, CA~ .. Tlllt....,..._f .... wllll"'° All...,. C-''( °"".Or .... Crlilfl&y ....... .,.._ -~ M,IWI ' lllf' .. ~l I .. ...., .. If_,.,, Pl*l .... Or .... (Met Doll' •li.t, Cc I Th• < • llMY a . J-•· II, ti, t"1 na:MI, tottrl11t1on ~ PUBUC NOTICE lrllMfOfrod or IWH,9C!Ufll"• lol" f .. 1•11•• MASSINI() I• •M:Tlftout auM••U 111" strw1 ( , NAMa ITAT811MNT Id) ,..,., " Tllo ........ ,.,_ It ...... bull· ofter Wlll(ll I ,....._,: con•wmm ' M·C·MACHINa, , ... 8okocll AMIEltlc;.A • ,......, c.u ....... c.tlftrlll• ftU7 Ml w. 1 .. 1'1 MlcMol IL Gn;tl, '"' aoketll ti.l1 °" <>< • Mnet, c:.u -· CMHorlllo .. 27 Oolod Mo, Tllll llMlifwM It<~ illY Oft IA-y, .. .wi..1. .... • Mk-'l!.cn.tl ,.,.. tlllS -· -fl .. Wltll -Publl\hr I C-'f Ctetll el Or .... °"""' Oii MOY Moy H 1 26, '"' Fi... ------------------------; ANNlll L88 CHIAVA .. 10, ant OHa YU.It LaAIE Of TEM· l'ol.--~.CA"111. •OltAltY l'ACH.ITIE$ FOlt PuMltflM Or .... (Msl O.lly Pl.,_., Pl H Tlllt .....,... It ~ 11¥ lft> CHILOlt8N'S CENTER; OltANGE 11iv1W011CHlllMM &Wff9I. COAST COLLaOa WITH UP TO ...... A.Oii-io fOUlt 141 OPTIONAL l·YEAlt May• • .>ww4, 11, II, 1"1 ,,., .. ,. Yen donated to poor f ltt .. ,.,. l PUBUC NOTICE TOKYO (AP> -An anonymous donor left a bag containing $28,000 worth or Japanese yen in a telephone booth at Tokyo Railway Station wi~h. in· structions the money be given to the poor, off1c1als said. "Thls is not dirty money," said the note, found along with the money by a cleaning _employee. "Please give it to the P,OOr. Do not pass 1t on to the politicians or the rich. ' ---U.~lo ltUIEWALS. Tlllt ......... -,..., wltll U. Au ...._ OA to be 111 oc~•f'llonc• CWMY ~ .. Or .... C-y M llMY wlttl Ille ... Form •llttructlolt• ... ». "''· c .......... -lpKllkotl-•llk ll .....,.. & .,......., ,.. oro llO• on 11 .. ONI moy lie to<UIM lft wt c:....-DrM. ..... ' Ille ofllu ..... Pur~ •nt of ._..,......_CA_.. told Coll ... DIWkt. et•tlA Eocll lllclllM' """' .......,., wAA his Tiie IOIW •ICTITIOUI 9UMNIU "°" •• IUMll ITATIMaNT Pl.Ah TM foll-I"' ...... M ore feint PlutMr An 111n1-os: 110 81 SU04UK DEVELOPMl!NT CO.. Plumer A.,.. 1 .. 1 H-Ploco, ... ....,, .. Kii. Tlllt IN< CA ftMt. dlvldval PUBLIC NOTICE •ICTITIOUI aUMN•U MAMll ITATIMaNT T ... IOl-lftl ti«-• ore Mint bull-•: THE MESA PINES, IMO Guell Stroot. Suite IOf, Nowport 9oocll, CA ..... JAY MAHONIEY, .,, HorillOr lslONll,.......,, .. edl. CA.,..._ WALLY KNUIE, U77 N.opoll Woy, C.loMe9'CAfMa. Tllll llullllOSI Is cllftCN<tod lly • ..... r.1...,..,... WOily~ Joy_., Tiiis ......... WM fllod wltll tM C-IY CIMtl el Or .... c:-MY Oft llMV 2', '"'· f!Ulll PUOll ...... Or .... C:-SI Dolly Pl19C, Moy Jt,.Jvw4,_!I, 11, '"' 241HI PUBUC NOTICE USE THE DAILY PILOT .. FAST RESULT" SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5678 ht. JU PUBLIC NOTICE ...... bid 0 ~t C!IKll, eorlllled cf>ocll, P\llllltMd Or .... CMd Dolly Pllet °' bldder't '-"I in.-INIYolM• IO Ille May 21. _,... •. 11, "· ,., ,....., ordlr ol ,,. CMst CMNftuftlty Coll- PUBLIC NOTICE Dl1trle1 aoord ol Tr11slHs lft oft OllWIUl\I ftOI '"' '"°" nw -colll IS porcOl\11 of IN sum llld OS o ..-MIM lllOI Ille lllddot' Wiii enter llllO Ille pro- PICTITIOUl aUMNlla -d Controct II tlle -Is owordod llAMlllTAT8MaNT lo lllm. lft l,_ .-of folluro IO eftltr CHA .. UI H. TUltNllt, I.of Hor· Rot• t r-Place,......,_. a.Kii, CA.,..._ Tlllt Jlalf SUZAHHI l\lltHIElt, ltf1 Horr9W C.Unl, Ci.ro ~loco, ......... a.odl, CA tMM. 20, 1 .. 1 Tlllt llUllllOla Is cOfldU<tod • ., o .. llOrol ,,.,wntllp, Publl~ 0-1• H. T-r Moy ti, Ji,# This •'°'°"*'' •• lllOO wlttl lhe Cou11ty C .. rll of 0reft99 Count' on AJH'll tt, 1•1. PU ti Tllo ... ....,. ~ .,. dllll9 butl• lftlO MK.II controct. the procoodl Of Ille -H! Chock Wiii lie forloltod, or In the COM Pl•l111 G L 0 a A L I Y I T IE M S of o llOftd, the flMI WM lfloroof Wiii be PutMlllWd Or .... C.OOR D.ily Piiot, f lC J I INTUINATIOHAL. 4Mlt c;.I .. J-. forf•llltd IONlicl<oll-dlltrlcl. Moy 21. J-4, II, II, IWI 2417 .. 1 NIU • SMCIOf"lllM9,Cellfwnlo .. 72 Ho bidder moy wlllldrow 1111 bid ---------The fOllO • Dovlct L. ,_..,, 4lOI c.ti. J-. fw o porlod of forty.five (45) do.,. PUBLIC NOTICE bualnHs • SMC ......... ,c.t ........ on.11 ofl•r lllO dOI• SOI for lllo ... lllnt CENTER ' ~oul ,_ ........ y. DDI w.-INroof. I-·------CA n to. l.i.M ~ aoocll, c.tlfwlllo Tllo aoord of TrultMI rotorws •ICTtTICIUI aUSINaM Gr..n R1"" ..... • lllo prM .... " roloctl"' OflY -oll MAMll ITATIM8NT CA tl/10 Tiiis ~ Is c..-Cled b' • ltlcls °' to ..iw °"' 1,,....1or11'" or Tllo fellOWIJtt .-ao111 ore fOI"' 4'0I c;, .. ...,.rot___.. lnt0<malltles lft ..,., llkl or In tht bid-~-· CorONI. (" ~,,,_1 ...... y dlft9. ltALaioH HILL$ HOSPITAL, duct.cl Dy Tiiis .........,,_ -tiled wlttl .,,. HORMAN E. WATSON Ul1 IE. ,_ St.-. ~ 9oocll, Wllol J·- Cou111, Clo"' ef Or .... C-y Oft Moy 5ocrotory. lloorCI of CA f266a. -·· i.. Hll. T~, COost CornmUftlt' AOVAHGIEO HEALTH SYSTaMS, Tiii pi.: p~ p··~·1·~'-0r-Olltr~-~ ~-•1v Piiot, INC., 111'1 Cor1wrttiM "°911, 1,.IM, "--t~v ~ ... ~ Publl ...... Or .... CMlt Dolly Pllet ..... --....-M ..,., • CA '2114. ---· • Mayn,J-4,11,11,tt11 1..,.1. Ma,it_J-4,1"1 24*-11 n1t....._11COflduCWdb,•cor· "·'"' PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE pontlen Norris & &> . ADVANCED HEALTH tlnC.. .... ~ SYSTEMS, INC = ,.,_L~. AMI. $oc'try Tiii• .....,,...,. -flied with UW Publl.,..., C-'Y CleR Of Or .... c-ty on Moy Moy 11, J1r PICTITIOUI 8USIN8U flCTITIOUI auMNllll NOTICE OF INTENT TO DEED REAL PROPERTY TO THE ST A TE V,IWI. PL R MAM1 STAT .. dNT NAMS ITAT8MaNT Plutlt PubllllWd Or-CooR Delly Piiot, Tiie ... _.... --Is ..... bull· TIM fol-'• --Is ...... bull· Mt!' 21, .,... •• ''· "· 1"1 2 .... 1 -ff: llO•OI. PURSUANT tO UCTIOHI lMI TMltOUOM UIS, aaVaNUI AND TAXATION COOE, TH a HOTICI Of INTINT TO DllD alAL Pa~1aTY TO THIE $TAT8 IN AND FOlt TMa COUNTY Of OltANOI, STATa Of' CALIFOltNIA. HAS ••EH OIVID•D AND OllTl!U•UT•D TO VA•IOU$ NEWSPAPaits OP OINaltAL ClltCULATION PU8LllH•D IH $AID COUNTY, FOii PUaLICATION OP A POtlTION TM.l .. aOf' IN IACH Of f'ICT ""' The toll·• ltMH IELIECTltlC. IU UN Mroet DOOltS PLUS, Jl IEastmoftt, No. 2, c..u Motto, Col!Nmlo tlU'.1 trvlllO, Collfarnlo tl1M 11_,. Mleit.I He91INI, IU UN !ton 0 ....... Wol'9r, J> EoJiin-t, StrMI, No. 2, C.C.. MotA, Coll ..... la trVlllO, (allfarnlo '2714 PUBLIC NOTICE ,.. ... , tlU'.1 This "'*-I 11 ~ by on lft. Tllls -II cenduclod by on lft. dlvkllool. PIC'TITIOUI 8UllMlll SU N'H CIMduol. PUBLIC NOTICE llOU OS; UNIVIEltllTY PltE SCWOOL, M U11l•ors11, Ori••, COlto Moso, Colltwlllo *27 Corot C.., Tuell.or, 70t Cflff ~lw. L_.o 9Mdl, c.tltor"lllo .SI Tiiis .......... II aindue-by M l"- dlv'-1. PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI MIMN•U UMalTATIMaNT TIM followl"' _.... It dolftl bull· PUBLIC NOTICE SAID NaWIPA~lltl. 1n this 11,1 llM foll-11111 abOr••I•· Ilona ore UMd. AP -AMellM'l Porcol No.-N......-Por Port!.,,, PAltCEL NUM8EltlNG SYSTEM aXPLANATION The Aues-·s Met> Parcel Humber wllen uaed lo dMCrlbo P<OIMctY In this llsl. reltrs 10 Ille AS ... sor's mop -· Ille map P09' or block number In uw -anCI ui. lnellwl-1 porcel number on th• ,,,.., P09' °' within lllO block. It p•rcel number •t for eaemo1e. .. 044·»-0S'", would mu" Book 44 ol lllO As-·s Mal>', 8IOCk 363 lmot: po90 :it. 0100 )), -Parcel S wltlllrt tllol blOCll Tiie "'°"' referred to art •••liable lor lnWJO(lion In uw offk• 01 tho Al- NAM1 ITAT8MIMT Lomt>er • Tiie fol-'1111 ...,_, 11 dOlftl b<lsl· Calllorn•• • •Mtso$: OA\11 OPP$ CARPET, 1'°56 W.ststolo Ml Lorrtb-0 Str .. I, WoltmlMIM, CA "'8:1. C•lllorn10' JAMES CE. lt08EltTS. 114 S. Tllh bu" VotdlieO Rood, OIOlldoolo, CA tl:IOS. dlvldual This ........ Is condu<l.cl by Oft In· UA dlvlduol. Thi• ''" ' JAMES IE. lt08ERTS Coun1, l This .....,,_,. wos filed with I Moy n '"' c-ty Cle'1l Of Dr.,.. c-.ty on Mo 2'. 1•1. PuOll\I• N«rit & _ ..... ,I•. Moy h )I U1tC....-DrM,lllltet _....,.a.di, CA,_.. IMlltA ,,,..,.1 Pl II All pr-1Y 1' In llMI Town.nip Soutt ond R....,. Weil of ~ S.rNrdlno PubllllWd Or-C.OOsl Dellr Pll04. I'll I Bew and Me<lcllon. Moy 21, J-•· 11, 11. 1•1 2441-41 r n• 1 H#. " NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE IHJ'ln•U $0UlHf BROICE U 1npursuonceot1•w,f'Ub4lcnot1colshoreo,.tlW111Nt .... 111e11tdOyolJu1y, NOTICE OF DEATH OF Anw•.H1,.~,'''' , .. ,, ot Ille !lour of 10 o'<loO o m., ol tllOI doy, ,,. ...,..,..,.,.. Tox Colloclot· TreHurer Of Ir. Counly of Orenoe, at his offko In IN Oty of SOftlo AN>, Si.to D 0 R 0 T H Y A N N E $eel 81. otCalllornlo,wlll-IOtlleStal•,uftlau.....,,...._,MM IM!allment BRADY, AKA DOROTHY Thi\ I pion of redompllon ll lnltlotod os provlcllld by 1-prlo< to s p.m. °" fM lost A • B R A D y , A K A 1no1•1ou~ b<lslMSs city of June., .. ,,,,., .. , prOCIW'IY herolftOfW dMUI-u-wlll<ll DOROTHY BRADY ... ND Th•• .. dot• five or more.,..,. wlll hon elOCIMCI fnwn Ille dot• of lllo .... Of tolCI -"' ~ fttain por1y lo,,. si.10. TM omount tor Whkh tt1odMdwlll be 1.-.:1w11111e "'° totol OF PETITION TO AD· coun1, c Puot..,..,0r.,..eoosto.i1,Pllo(, amountdl'9 f1Kwtllehltw01soldlolheStole,to1C1omo .... 1belneMtl-ln MINISTER ESTATE NO."·'"' Mo,H,J-4, 11, ll.1"1 244441 dollars -unts -Ito tr. ducrlptlon of tho pr_,-ty. II the prOfllrty Is PUBLIC NOTICE -to,,. State, lllO rltllt of r-mptlOll W'lll tormlMte .,_ ony -.eqUOAI A 10l934. Puo11~~· tol•orotllerconwyan<obylhoSIAll•. T 0 a I I h e I r s • M•Y "· •• 110U H : ~ICTITICIUI .UllNaM As provlcllld by low, 111.i Slol• thOll -N SOie oulhorlty to roailwe oll beneficiaries, Creditors ~~j~:.~ onct profits orlslnt In ony -from tM p~rly so deocled lo and contingent creditors Of All lnlormollon concernlnQ roOompllon °' , .. lnltlollon of on Installment Dorothy Anne Brady. aka Pt f 1 McCRAY IHTIEltNATIONAL.. M4I MAMll ITATaMllNT Kl• c-t, C.IAI Mffo, Cel ......... o TIM followllll _.... It dolftl bull· Pl•n 01 remmpllon wlll, -roquoll, ... fumlslwCI by II-rt L. Citron, T .. Dorothy A . Brady I aka Flt.I t2'26 _ .. , CollKIM·Troo1urer and Re<Mmplloft Offlc.,. 110 FlftOllCO 81d9 .. uo N. D 0 r 0th y Br ad y and HA lloborl Meer.,, "" Pllcolrll TAKE IT Ofl' PRODUCTS, ., 8roodwov. IP.O. 8o• 14lt), Sonlo AftO, Colltornla'2702. Tho 1011~ 0oi.01111s1>111doyofMoy,1"1 persons who may be neuu . Orlvo.~Moto.Collfwftlotaa. tlrcll $1rHt, Newport •••ch, This ....... Is coNloCIM by ... lfto.. Coll .... lllol'JMO -ROeERT L. c1T1tON otherwise Interested In the LE 1 dlwlduol. JOllft J. L-. 22' Fll.twltllom TuColloc:lor·Troowrer Wiii and/or estate: MacAr1' "'*°" McCtoy LOM, ..__ ,.._yf•onlo 1•t0 :!!;~=r. A petition has been flled c011~~::: This .. __... -fllod wtUI .,,. tlll• ......,_,. -fllod wllh Ille C-ly CIMtl Of Or-County M llMY C-ly Clortl of Or .... ~ Oft llMY .~, ., ... ..,... Pl.-C Th• -11H 10 ... cModed ond wbfoc:t of ws AOC lo .,. ~tuotod In 111o by Margaret Anne Brady w 111 h I•, County of°'-· Slota of Calltomlo, ond pe<tlculorly dMCrl-OS ... -.. lo and Martha Ann Donovan Callforn1~ PvbllllWd Or .... c.oost 0.11, Pllet PUOll-0r .... (.ooSI Dolly Piiot, May 2', _,... 4, It, 11. ,_, 2411 .. ,1. Mt!' 21, _,... 4, 11, II, 1"1 Ja.tl. wl~:ROPERTY SOLD TO THIE STATE lfY In the Superior Court of di!.~~.':""' 1N THE YEAR tta F01t THE SADOlfBAOC VM. Orange County requesting ~ TAX es, ASSESSMENTS AND UtlRB> SQl)()l that Margaret Anne Brady Th•••••• OTHER CHARGES OF THIE FISCAL DI~ and Martha Ann Donovan COUfltr ''" YEA1t l'1s-7•. ~'"""' be appointed as personal s. , .. , LAGUNA BEAOt OTY "0 •1 -S••• No. s273u . AP representative to ad· Puo11"""" No. >s -s.10 No. 10t0 ... AP u.4t•,•t0.7t minister the estate of Mey '· 14 / DEATH NOTICES M4-4S.2111wmer1you-J02-441.te... FOUNTAIN VALLEY Dorothy Anf'e Brady, aka Ho. ,. -S•I• No 20•40J, AP Dorothy A Brady aka .,... .. 1-2, ,..,....1yoss->u-211. ..... OTY · • DUMPER HEFTY P U C HARLES W ESLEY ORVlLLE HARRY HEF· No. n -S.•• No. zot•04, AP No. 0 _ So•• No. •ouu. Dorothy Brady (under the A DUMPER. M.D. Worked at TY o f Newport Beach South Coast Hos pital. passed away May 26. H e is Passed away May 2Slh at s urvived by wife, J anese San C lem>?nte General. He fty : son Ken Hefty and Services p e nding, Ray daughter Heidi Poulter o f family Mortuary , Laguna Costa M esa: daughter Beac h . 494·1:>3S. Janille Gibbons of Santa ...._..1.201~1voss->1~u1,r... , .. -on-i•.mo.44 Al\ Independent Admlnlstra· '~~·,· No. >• -S•I• Ho zo.4 • AP No 10 -sol• No •01210 AP tlon of Estates Act). The Th• '" Mot-411-u 1..,....ri.,~11s-211.•111·92 , ... 2i2-n u ,0102 · · f>:tltlon Is set for hearing 1tu••nm No. ,. -Sol• Ho. 207011, AP • ...... 2.161forrn9rlyou.uH01. ..... SAN .lJAN n Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic THE v• Ho. •O -Sale No. 20701t, AP c•a1nnaun OTY Center Drive, West. In the A~~~p~':'1 ' M4-«Ms11ormor1yoswzH11,u..10 ~ ~'""'"" Cltlc of Santa Ana , A•t .Ce>< No. o -Sol• Ho. 201010. AP No " sa•• No uou AP Call ornla on June 2,, 1981 Thi• ""' MA-.44l·l4Cfottftorlyoss.n2'41l,..... · -· ' An a : S grandchildren: l ----------. . broth er John Hefty and sis· McCotlMta MOITUAlllS te r Bernice Webber of Costa Ho. 42 -Solo No. 101104, AP 121-14).05, ... M AP at 9:30 A .M. lnCllwldu~; '44-4~22 c1ormor1voss-m-u1. •u2.u 12~~~ ;..,~1• Ho. nou. IF YOU OBJECT to the Hill si .• Ho. o -Sol• "0• 207251• AP No. 11 -hi• No. u1oso. AP granting of the petition, county C•••• M0-424-1' (formorlyOSS-MS-11), U.IJAP "4~1.07 (tormorfY IU-"2-0ll. '".51 you s---·1d either a---r "· ••• ,. Laquna Beac h Mesa and sister Opal Hoover 494 9415 or Laguna Hills . Cremation No. u -Sol• HO. to7117, "'"" ---Mot·411-04 lfomll(ly osw51oo021. ..... IRVINE OTY at the hearing and state Pub11,,. Ho. o -So•• No. 20""· AP your objections or file M•v21 1e MA-414-24, AP ...._., .. u, AP ..._.1...,1 Ho. 74 -Solo Ho. •oo ... AP ltten objections with the Laguna H111s and private ser v ices. 768·0933 San JJan Capis trano 495 1776 HAalOI LAWM-MT. OUYE Mortuary• Ceme1ery Crematory 1625 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-55~ ..... ClllOTHUS 111..LllOADWAY ...otlTUAH 110 Broadway Coeta Mesa 642·9150 . IALn ... ••oM SMITM & TUTHILL WUTCLW CHAP'k '~7 E 17th St CO.ta Mesa e•e.9311 NaCl•OTMml SWTMI' NOITUAll Y 627 M11n S t .._,nttngton 9each 538-6539 aftd AP U4·4U·U Ctormerly 449-042·7•, .. .C Wr LAIN m .ua-tll, MCl-04 court before the hearing. B URTON THOMAS LAIN. No. •• -So•• No. mw, AP CAPlmw«> UNIFIED Your appearance may be Mot-414-01 ctormer1y os.s"~>. a.04 In person or by your at-1 u P • • 1 age 40, resident of Irvine No. 47 -Sol• No. 2oeon. AP SCtl)(l. OlsntlCT ed M 23 H · .... ,.144 crom-1y oss-.s.m. "21.2' torney. < pass away . ay . e is No. " -Solt N•. 212•"· AP No " -Sal• No. 70tOt4, AP I F y 0 U A R E A s urvived by his wife Palsy, u -04 •JO.OS1.u ...... cou a son Ken and a daughter ~~>_1•4;•..:-5010 No, 2u 444, All No. ,. -S•I• No. 7141u, AP CR EDITOR or a cont-1n me ,,,. Gaylene, his mother Mrs. m....-...... 14 • .,.m.01,w.tt lngent creditor of the de· ~~.!~', Mamie Lain of Texas. A N~ _.,.....cm ceased, you mu.st file your Po,...,l,tOf b &;"""'' uu.w1 SAVANNA lllAB> cl•lm with the court or cr-memorlal ser vice will e present It to the personal o•o ... held Thursday, May 28lh at No. so -Sot• No. zussa. AP SOl>Ol DISTRICT I I t-f<>tt 7:30prn at lhe North Side ~·~•,.1. No. utt••. AP No 77 _Se•• No. 7,.441, represent•t ve appo n..... ONtAMC Church of Christ. 2130 N. ost-ttt.outt• AP by the court within four _. SARA ,.., N n Solt ,.. uuu, A~ 07,_,.,..,,,..• months from the ct.te of pot111011 1r1 1 Grand ~ve. in Santa Ana,. ....~;, ... .;;_.. · first lssu.nce of letters H i.wi,.. "''1'1<> Mr. Lain was a native o Ho. u -Sol• Ne. H7$7J, AP SADllFIACX YAU.Ft 1 ...... 1 r~11 100 of f,_ SAR>• Amarillo, Texu. He was • 111Mt2.C.tt.ll 1...-:ft ~ rrov...., n ~ on CAMMER r c 1 Sl t ~ ~ h• Prob•t• Code of 111. """' i~u:~eH: was ~mplo;ed SAN C1fNSflt QTY DtSTllCT C•llfornl•. The time for :;-:=. ,f; by the California Delart· No. t4 -so .. No. •uKt. A~ "•· 71 _ hi• "'· 1nH1, AP fifing Cllims Wiii not ex-.... , 01 70 \ U b d ~-... '"'-''~1 • ...u ..,.1 .. " 1u1 plr• prior to tour months IMltoA,..,c•• ment ol ~ oos an a N•. ss -to•• No. HJtU, AP "•· 7; _ Se•• Nt. nun. AP trom the a .. ol the heer· 01 ,.,. a"'. been actlve l n Youth ttt-2tMS1t1rtMr1y••"'"-~·•"·" .,,.._.._.... · ~.1i.n"" Baseball ln Oran1e CounlY ' Ht. s. -Sol• No. uw1, AP .... " -l•I• Ne. ,, • ..,. "~ Ing 'noticed Move. tlMI f., ~ f F l1 ..... HHl.tUAO '2M7M•,... YOU MAY EXAMINE trOA•oe or maQ)' years. am Y re No. SJ -t•I• No. NHU, "'~ No. 11 -l•I• Ne. ,,., .. , A~ the flle k~ -the court. 111o ,..,,..,, que1t1 tboae who with l ~.,.,,. .a1-111 .. m.Jt f ...:..!-..-I t-1111 ~,. make ccntributiooa to con No. ,. -'°10 M• ... ,.,., AP "•· 111 -Sal• "•· 1nu1, "" I you.,. .. ..., •• _ n , .... ;,. 0•1t v ta ct Hlllvlew Acre ...,,,........,... .,,.. ....... ,.. estete, you mrf flle• r• ...-•1 c1m1 CbUdrtn'• home tn Chin COSJA MESA QTY .,:;.,:,;,:••• No. m 47•. AP quest with U. court tor• '-'" •• i.. California. DlncUMI by M•~ ••· ., -•••• No. •1out. ,.,. H•· •• -~10 "•· , ... u . Af' <1 elve~speclofat ~~ !!~ ~=,: D • I I , a m t t m-m• -.. .....,.,..,a.a nven --·• .._,s .,._lod .. """ 0 u a ...... -.... N•. 41*'.t, AP · end of petitions, ac· ,. .... ~~i' • Mortuary.~. -.1"·1•c111nNr1Y•...,.~~_.. 11.0.--.a.Uf\lllfEI) count• end reports., .. ~~ Mt. It -.... Ne 4T-, AP '""9"'t•t-• ~loft -J aal.1. ot 11 lllSL'ION l)t.1""........ SQl)CJl llS11ICT ct.scribed In.._,, ' • wit: THE • ''LES" LESLIE H. Mt. ti -s.10 NII • ..,.,. •• "~ "•· •• -.. ,•Ii•,,., ... ,,,.of the C.llfomle ProlNtte 0o41..,,, Al ... 07·~ flW, C~ llMeMf), .... I .... I# •i••P 1,__.., , ........ 10 SH<ONp-'...~.._. ol Mo .. _ ..,. Mo -· "" m ...... -.. JeH A. o.ca .. , At· ... ._..-ltim ...... -••• , II , ............. ..._,., 117..... M• .. -........ """· ,,, ,, •• , ., La• ''' °"'"=' lloWMd b1 faadl.7 -.. ...11Ntt..-.Vtl14INlt,..-Ne _ Cl•I•""" 6r•v• NV> Irle•••· Prlvale f9mll~ ••· .. -.... 11t • ...,.,; ,.,. 11•· " -.... ••· "'"' AP •-·' I Pl fll triW._ .., M .... ••· .. _ ..,. ••· ....._ ~P =·= :.:...•,_.., c--.., ·-• .._..,~ ,.. ....... c:ta.ttJ."-" 11 .... llllr, __., ltJ. .... N• "'-........ tJ$111, AP ............ OJ ... Caul ....... .... Mrilfft WW9 Mid. Coe· ra'"'':9 lllw, • ...._,, m .__,, ":;~~~ .... Nt. tU ... , AP ··::. ~r-=-.r.~;J •~en .. U Broed•aJ ,._ .. ,.,. .... ,. ft-II pt-a.a .... 29 .. ..... ~~-----:~:'.'l"'!"J-'t.••rtaarJ J)lr1dor1 ...... _ .... ••· ...... ,,,. ......... ~Clll&Dlll.f......_-Y --. _, ~t...·.:.t .......,.°' .~ ........ =-.... ...._.. ,........ ... ......... .... •,""' ~ .., ... , . ol ........... __ _ I • \ • --. ' llC!E folUS "' .. llO!ftO """'' ,. s"-" ... 11 . "J Otl• A Calll ....... e 1 oy on II'· .,. ,...., allV Pilot, u1••• lt't: .ru "'' tu1t\Q l>u•I rcoonoti• • •2'7t l Sl07 l:•l•lornl• 01 I/II In .. uh lllO ' <1t1 M•Y .. ,.,,..1 11h POot AN'I' al ut• lhe ,,1 WILl •• ro rHE C•~M l•.WfUI I rtQf\l, •OQ f\()W Tnat In IMtl >MAN I f tutt\d A d\ II\ •Qr' Ill' • v•t~ h\,t .,..,., .. rtQ l>f'O- • ,., .... tt ' 1• ot tru' o• • t 1' "' tvrn•• Utt•Uh \J(> ..... '""'"'" or co~ ~Oo< 'Ot'lt!Yll tP\~tcbY •trl"O to .uAt•nn y1• •nd I.,,.., hV" " •• tJ ._,.11c.n\ 1 •v\IPO ""' "to o• n'$1f " t \ ot .,,.,,,O\I, Or •m •l' Ot n n1nq ,ftYred 1h•(Cf\l d\ ' if •"Y. ,, tnnc tf \hf> • ~t .. J by I lllfllt DI! .. , 1 t 00 '' orn "11 ., °"' .,, uf rf\it Q•t•on ~ df'trdOt tt•V't't\~\ no you ' E ·TH OF L E N I I) 0 F J AD - IE NO. I t '>, l1tlors 1lor!> o l ~ ...... and 1cl y be ! 11 the r n filed Ho p e ••f>l r1or County Jrgaret •1JPo1nt prtsen tu the EI le'1 thP In -.1rat1on he peti iring in oO C 1111c. t, 1n t he , An a, 17, 198 1 f to the ... 11t1on , appear icJ !>late l')r f lie .vith the 1ca ring. •l"lay be four at· R E A n c.on l · • the d e- 111e your ourt o r personal i"\p ointed 1h1n four date of tters as o n 700 of ode o f 11 me for not ex· .months the hear- AMINE "e court. l1•d in the •lie a re· QUrt to ro· J.r of the • ,,~ nnd ol unts and a In Sec· 0 f th. ,,. Codt. N G TOM , At· ""· 19762 oulevaq:S , nld 92715. ng Coast t 1, n , 28, 2361·81 _,...._...,..._,--~- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 •• ·!I Home video systems: the ne~ word in entertainment C.olor TV wi II become Cartridges make video home video terminal games more versatile Today's color television set is tomorrow's home video terminal. The 1981 models, being premiered at area stores, embody this philosophy, and they're being made to accomomodate not only broadcast TV but the more stringent requirements of such relatively new program sources aa cable TV, video cassette recorders, videodisc players, video games and home computers. Sharper pictures and betler color registration are needed for some or the new inputs to the fami· ly TV set. This "design for video" also provides better pictures for standard off-the-air telPvi!\ion Remote-control tuning has become the most wanted feature in color television. and is includ in about 25 percent of all color sets sold. Most manufacturers this year offer electronic keypad tuning, using a lO·button panel similar to that of a touch-tab telephone. One of the advantages of this type of tuning is that channels may be changed instantly without running through all channels between the one on· screen and the one desired. In the past, remote control usually couldn't be used with sets hooked to cable TV systems carry· ing more than 12 channels. New remote systems tune directly to the special cable channels, eliminating this problem and usually making it unecessary to rent a con- verter box from the cable operator. With the improvement in network-originated ' TV audio, all TV set manufacturers are paying more attention to sound this year. Some have included high fidelity sound systems in special models, and a few TV brands even feature dual amplifiers and signal-processing systems which prduce stereo-like sound . Many makes have audio output jacks on the . back or selected sets to permit the viewer to chan• nel the sound through a home hi·fi system. A few of the new sets are designed lo ser ve as "monitors" with jacks for direct connection of video cassette recorders or videodisc players, to eliminate the necessity of attaching these devices to the antenna terminals. Giant-screen projection color TV sets are pro· liferating and this year there is a trend toward rear·screen projection of a translucent viewing surface. making for more compact receivers and more convenient viewing arrangements. While projection screens have grown as large as ~even feet diagonally, at the other end of the scale are tiny new color portables with screens of four inches or less. capable or power-cord or bat· tery operation Among specialized sets being offered this year are some designed to display two or more pictures simultaneously, some which can be programmed to turn on and off, and change channels at pre· scheduled times, and some which display special captions broadcast for hearing-impaired viewers by three networks. Monochrome TV is still a major product in the industry with more than six million sets sold in each of the past three years. These black and white picture units are \ virtuall y all portables, ideal for people on-the-go. Video Cassette Recorders: Want more control over programming? Record your own broadcast television programs and movies. Cameras: Understand what's going on in the world of computerize~ cameras. Variable Speed Control: Speed listening -listen to recorded material at the same speed you read. Stereo Systems: Your questions about stereo systems answered. DON'T MISS IT Saturday June 6th 9 a.m. - 4 p.m. Cal's Cameras Semi-~A:n:n:ua=I~: ----~---- SIDEWALK SALE REPS Will BE ~RE FROM 17 MAJOR CORPORATIONS -"SUPER SAVINGS" THROU'iHOUT THE STORE -THIS EVENT IS FOR OME-DAY..OMLY -DON'T MISS IT- MINOLTA XG-M. IT FITS YOUR HAND AND YOUR MIND. Few cameras hove been as well-thought-out ond engineered os lhe XG-M. tt gives vou veBOtll· lty and ease ot operation as no other camera In ifs class can: • Special con· toured hand grip. • Apert\Jf e-priority automation. • Full metered manual exposure. • Accepts 3.5 fps mota drive and 2 fps auto wlndef. . MINeLtTA 80-200f4.5 WHt.MAcao -o ... TCMldt-Trw Z.O... ONLY s1999s WITHCASI ... _f4.l-H OTHElt T6k1MA SPECIALS 35-70 fl.I 1HUO •••••••••••••• '239" 35-105 f3.5 fMUO ............ '299" I 00-300 f5.6 .................. •329• 500 fl. COMpaet •.,, ••• •• •• , • .'J4f" l ~Tckina 1770 ~ avo., COSTA MESA • (l14)M6-'31S tbuRS: ~.THAU SAT. 9-0:30 Ever want to step up to the plate and belt a homer over the right field fence in Ancel Stadium' Or Clash through the sky in a Superman outfit searching out bad guys? Or beat the Vegas slots for thousands of dollars' Well, now you can do all those things and more right in your living room with one of the new 1ame cartridges being produced by video gamea manufacturers for easy hook-up to your television set through the antenna terminaJs. Hundreds of different cartridges are available for these versatile games ranging from space wars to western shootouts to challenging games of skill and logic And. 1f you want to take your games outside the home, suppliers or. electronic games are also offering a wide variety of hand-held models. In contrast to .the variety now on the market, the first video games for attatchment to your TV set seem little more than electronic model A's. Today's programmable games mean that once you buy the console and connect it to the TV set, new games can be added simply by purchasing ad· dtalional cartridges. And, those cartridges pack more playing power than ever before. One company, for example, is selling a ·•maze game" cartridge which challenges two players to race through a maze, all the while attempting lo avoid or to chase each other, and to stay away from enemies generated al random by the game itself. And, to add extra spice to the game, the range of complexity can be increased in any of 256 dif· ferent ways. But. it's not all fun and games in the video field . There are also educational and instruclionat cartridges, such a basic math instruction pro- grams offered by several video game companies, and even cartridges offering lhe fundamentals of computer programming. In hand-held and desk-top non-video electronic models, a number of non-game models are now be· ing offered, such as the desk-top console designed to help children learn a variety of skills, including spelling, math and music. The emphasis is still on fun, however, and most non-video units concentrate on challenging the user or users to test their skills. And, like many other new consumer electronics products of today. some of them talk back Lo their owners. Through the technology of "voice synthesis," games can orally instruct players on what to do next, announce who won and who lost, and even get sassy. One electronic game "heckles" the player orally in an effort to break his concentration dur· ing a complex game of memory and logic. How far can those ingenious designers or new electronics game circuits take all this? No one knows for sure. but a newly introduced chess game prototype has an electronically · controlled hand which moves pieces around the board. .... - '\ 1 ~J ., I ·i , • I ... . .·$ 1 ) i ·i I \ . \ l > ' ·l .. 1 •: •' . ) ! • I • I I ! I • t f j • I ~ I I • I I .1 . I I --_,,._.. * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT !Thursday. May 28, 1981 ~nsult experts Wien buy ing stereo systems Variable Speed Control ups listening speed If you're ln the market ror a stereo system, you probably have a lot of quesUons. You may be wondering, for example, bow much power you need, or whether the siie or yo11r room and the kind or music yo11 like are Important in determlnlng the kind of system you should buy. Bll)'ing a bl&h q11allty stereo system that fits in with your personal lifestyle can be easy and fun if )'OU 10 to the rigbt experts. "Tbe store and person you buy from will be very lnlluentlal in the choices you make." says Stewart Greenberg, vice president of the audio division of Yamaha International Corp., manllfacturers or stereo components. "You want to make s ure that you buy from a bonafide audio expert , a specially .dealer who t:an answer all your questions and give you advice based oo years of experience," he said. Sit ~own and talk to your audio dealer. Mr. Greenberg advises. Tell him what your musical preferences are - what kind of room you plan lo put your new system in (does it, for example. have carpets or a hllh ceiling?>. Tell him how loud you like your music, what part of the system you plan to uS'emost often and How much you want to spend . All of these factors will make a dHf~rence ln ·the kind of system he will recommend. Stereo systems can be tailored to your personal : tntes if you consult the right experts. ·$ perFormance Tl!L I! VIS IO N • 100% Solid State Chassis • GE llH.lne Picture Tube System • AFC (Automatic Freciuency Contr~I) • ACC (Automatic Color Control) • DC Restoration • VHF "Pre-Set" Fine Tuning • 70 Position "Click·ln" UHF :Tuning • Molded-In Carrying Handle Also ch~ck lnto the special services your audio store offers. Want to cut your who values bis time, In fact , research commercials and slow· h d t shows that raster speeds moving parts of pro· Does It, for example, bave pre-selected stereo systems set up for simplified evaluaUon? Does it bave access lo a service center whJch stocks replacement parta for the models you buy? listening time ln half? s u c as o c ors . II I or ams wh1'le ata'll un· 1 b sl essmen actua y ncrease con· • Then aolve lbla riddle. a~~~~~~nts~ n centralion and Improve de r s tan d Ing the If the -averaae a peaking comprehension. soundtrack. rate is only 150 words VSC also is appreciat· Literature on VSC· Does it otret reasonable warranties for the merchandise you purchase? All of these factors should influence your decision to buy in that store. per minute, and the Speed listening pro· e d b Y 0 w n er s 0 f equipped products is averace reading rate ls vldes them with the videocassette players. available by writing to 300 words per minute, capability t-0 absorb re· Variable Speed Control how can you listen to re· corded speech at about Activated by remote Company, 185 Berry St.1 Before you go into your audio store. you may want to famWarlze yourself with basic stereo terminology. corded material at the the same speed they control, it enables them San Francisco, CA1 samespeedyouread? ~r~e=a=d~·~~~~~~~~~to:......:s~k~i~m.:.._q~u-i_c_k~ly;.__o_v_e_r__.:9~41~0~1~·~~~~~~-:- For example, a stereo system Is generally composed or three parts, the source of the sound, the amplification and the audible reduction. Answer -speed ~ listening. 1 It's not as simple as it sounds. A voice record· ing that is speeded up sounds like a threatened chipmunk. The d is· tortlon bas always dis· couraged speed listen· The source may be the tuner, record player, tape deck or, in a sophisticated unit, your choice of all three. The amplification section consists of a pre· amplifier and a power amplifier, often combined with a tuner Into one unJt caJJed a receiver. The audible reproduction of the system con· sists of the loudspeaker or stereo headphones. ing. 9' HOWEVER, THE .I\..~ VARI ABIE Speed l"'f Control ( VSC > feature Whether or not a particular system is capable of delivering true hJgh fidelity sound (that is, whether It can faithfully reproduce lhe full range of sound in the original performance) really de· pends on the quality of these components. Ir there's a weak or inferior link anywhere in system, the penalty can be distortion. Yamaha offers a booklet called .. An Introduction to Stereo.·· available free by sending a stamped self-addressed envelope to: Yamaha Audio, P.O. Box 6600, Buena Park, CA 90620. can be used on audio a nd videocassette players, auto cassette decks and telephone answering machines. Who wants s peed listeding? The answer is, anyone Television costs haven't changed. • • Con 'tfromlM It's no longer true that the cost of living has more than doubled dur· ing the past 14 years. A wage earner mak· ing $25,000 in 1967 would have to make approx· im ately $54 ,000 today j ust to break e\len . But, there is a ray of light in this gloomy picture. Government 's Consumer Price In· dex. Television -both col· 1 or and black-and-white -is one or tllose rarities. Statistics compiled by RCA show that t h e average retaiJ price of a color television set has actually declined from $568 in 1967 to $S6S in 1919. price ot a colo r television set had kept pace with the Consumer Price Index, the set would cost something like $1 ,250 instead of $565," according to Jack K . Sauter, vice presi· denl and general manager of RCA Consumer Electronics. He emphasiied that television, unlike many products, is neither over-priced, nor has it been downsized or re· duced in quality in order BROAlt~T INDUSTRIAL MEDICAL EDUCATIOtW. & PERSONAL FORMATS FROM PRE-VIDEO THROUGH ANAL EDITING • CONSULTATION • SCRIPT PREPARATION • EDITING • MINI-CAMS • MULTI.CAMERA PRODUCTIONS • LATEST TECHNICM. CAPABILITIES • MOBILE SYSTEMS CALL US FOR A DEMONSTRATION 731-3027 10251 SUNRISE LANE . Believe it or not, there are product s on the market today that cost about the same, or less than they did in 1967. the base year for the U ~ This compares with increases of 358 percent for fuel oil, 330 percent for coffee, 192 percent for hospital room, 188 percent for gasoline, 120 percent for auto repair,' 107 percent for college tuition, and 26 percent for whiskey. SANTA ANA, CALIF. to maintain the illusion ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ of holding the price line. -; ''Television has to rank as the number one consumer value on the marke t today ," h e a dded. It's less expensive to drown your sorrows than to buy bread and milk, which rose 93 and 84 percent, respectively. "If the average retail Since 1967. he noted, RCA and other tele· vision manufacturers have had to contend with sharply higher costs of SeeT.V.oapageB7 Hints offered for use of home video equipment A new day is dawining in home entertainment. geared to the new glamour word -video. Consumer electronics products for 1981 reflect the growing excitement that video is adding to the field of home entertainment as high fidelity in vision joins high fidelity insouf. The video cassette recorder (VCR> has become established as a major home product. ' With nearly 1.5 million in use, Americans are expected to have gought more than 650,000 of these tgriple threat machines in 1980, and a greater numberinl981. The VCR can be used as a handy time shift machine to record and store television programs for viewing at any time, as an electronic home theater to show pre-recorded cassettes which may be purchased or rented or, with a color video camera, make and show color/sound recordings of family and friends. The new 1981 VCR models add more versatili· ty to an already versatile instrument. Many of them now have forward and reverse "visuaJ scan" ....:.. which means that the picture can be speeded up for quick location or any program segment. They aJso ,include stop-motion or "freeze· frame" as well as slow motion. Battery operated portable VCRs are becom· ing more portable, some weighing just slightly more than ll pounds and the new, more compact color cameras make on-location shooting more con vertlent. The VCR is being joined by a new home video product -the video-disc player. VIDEO RECORDER VR9000W LIMITED TO STOCK haturiftcJ: • 5 Hr. RKord;Ptaybodr • ttC)h Speed Search •Stop Acti0tt • ProcJrammoble TllMr •ff'ffT .. 578900 COMPLm SERVICE DEPARTMENT SALES • SERVICE • TV • VIDEO EQUIPMENT A-OK MOH • .flll. 8-6 SAT. 9.4 SERVICE CENTER 2251 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 548-9351 ,---------1COUPOM ·-------.. Just as the VCR is a descendant of the audio tape recorder, which can make recordings and play them back, the videodisc player ls the see· and-hear equivalent of the phonograph. wr X PX P;< PX PX PX PX PX PX PX PX PX I RCA W< 250 I I s 12\y I I Limit of 6 Per Customer I I Add 3% If Using Charge Card I I . · lbpftt 6-10-11 I ~---------~---------~ Video Tape Rentals -A• ...... ,. 2 days 1st Tape 5 7 so NEW HIT MOVIES! It is de.signed as a reasonably-priced means of playing back visual and auraJ recordings in high fidelity sound and color. Videodisc players and program discs -In· eluding recent and classic movies as well as con· certs and instructional programs -are available in some areas of the United States and are scheduled to be available nationwide early next year. Both the VCR and the videodisc player are de· signed to be attached to the home TV set. Because both systems can provide sharp and clear pictures (and the videodisc c~n rival the audio disc in sound quality), they are bringing new high fidelity to the home television set. At the same time. the 1981 TVs have been up· graded for clearer, sharper pictures and better sound, and Improved home TV projection systems permit the viewing of recorded marterial as well as standard television. . Tbe coming t-0gether or si1ht and sound into a new bigb fidelity medium ls refiecttd tn new vitalltyforaudloproducts. Any home VCR or vldeodlJc player may be pluned into a home audio system for vastly Im· proved sound. Even r elatively low-priced compact audio systems have been up1raded this year, many of them rivaling the quality ol lower-priced compo· nenta. With the public becomtnc increa11naly audio-· conacioul, the entlre ar ea of autOIOUDd ii boomln1. and component 1ystem1, inchadinC tape players, stereo-FM and AM tunera, boo1ttre. power ampWlen, dynamic equa.11Jera and blp qu.llty t peake:rt, are lncreaalnf ly bein1 inst alled ln automobllea. SolM ol tJMM inatallatlou rival bett.r home ttereo ayateint lD &Miity. Rome a&.eNo ftdeUty ai.o 11 .,._, rivaled ln 10-aft)'Wbere lound "wpment -Ute atttt bttn1 the pocket stereo tape player, wboM feat.berw.t1bt earphoael provide amastn1 llOllDd quality. Cameras, Appliances & Sound Center YOUR COMPLETE DISCOUNT HOUSE 20~·6ft . DISCOUNTS MAJOR Ir SMALL APPLIANCES • Fiim & Film Processing • C1meru & Photo EqulptT*'t • TV & Rldlos • Video Equipment• T1pe1 & T1pe Recorderi • Stereo Equipment & Compo- nents • HoUMW1res • Vacuum Clean•• • Washers & D~rs • Refrigerators •Mattresses• Luggage • Typewrltert • W11ehe1 • Jewelry• VldeO Gamea . ... ANY NAME BRANO ITEM CAN BE OISCOJNT PURCHASED FROM US. C-. 't;! .. Ml I NII ..., ..... ........ ...._ • 1714) t64-11t7 PX PX PX Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Th'Urtday, May 28. 1981 .. . Video cassettes bring theater to the home CDmputerized cameras make picture taking easier than ever -~ Thll l1 what'• called "deplh of field" af It-(. a funcUon of lent openlnf, dlatance to the aubJect and thtfocaflinltboflhelena. Takinl photoe la one of the country'• moat popular leI1ur1 tlm• actlvttlu. Rtcordlnt broadc:11t ltltviaion pro1ram1 rt· maln1 the moet popular r1a1on for buylnt a vldeo cuaette recorder. mlnf they and tbtlr f amt 'I watch. 1uch a1 "10" to a cla11lc homH by th• end of IUCh u "ClUHn Kant'' 1880. Thi ea percent of U.S. famtUu lhat own one or more cam1r11 l1 currently 1hoottn1 more than 10 bUUon plcturea a year, accordln1 to authorttatlve trade 1ource1. But for many people, that Isn't enough. For thttt people, buy· lnt prt·rtcordtd vldto cu11tt11 offer• an alternative. -or opt tor a 1port1 Th• major movl• com· apectal, Dlaney oartoon pan.l11 reaU11 that tho11 feature, disco lesson or VCR owners r1pre1ent a ballet performance. large potentJal market T wo m illion vid eo for their firms. A major r eason why soapplng pictures has become so popular is that it's become so easy. thanks to the advent of computerized 3Smm single lens reflex cameras that do everything but tell the user when to take the picture. Thia mode al10 leta you uae many older afid 1peciallled lenses as Iona as they have mount.a which flt your camera body " ,, -Programmed mode: this is a real mlrac;~ of electronics. All you do ls focus and shoot. They want more con- trol over the proaram·. They can choose their fa vorlte feature movie -rrom a recent release ~assette recorders were expected to be. in U.S. Magna\/ox instant family album~ laugh and talk and hang from trees. COME IN AND CHECK OUR PRICES! ....., U70 -"Escort 6" recording deck • AC power block • Remote control with frame-by-frame advance CSLP) and still/pause (SLP) • Transl-. tional editing • Feather·touch controls • 11 lbs. • 11 3/8 "L 4 1/4"H, 9 7/8"0. Modlt U40 -Special effects video cassette recorder • 14 day /8 Channel Programmer • Picture Search In SP/LP/SLP • Weekly event feature • Automatic rewind • Transitional edit· mg • Full-featured remote control • One hour power loss protection • 19"l , 5 3/8"H, 13 7/8 "0 . Modlt IZ45 -Deluxe Olromavu~ color video sound camera with elec- tronic viewfinder • f1 .4 lens with 6X ~wer zoom (12mm-72mm( • 5 lbs. • 270 lines horizontal resolution * 6.5 W-OC pawer consumption. KERM RIMA ·MAGNAVOX 2666 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa • 546-1 69 I Hows: Weekdays 9 to 9 • Saturday and Sunday 9 to 6 VIDEO CASSETTE MOVIES LATEST RELEASES• ALL RATINGS• SALES• RENTALS• EXCHANGES ALL RENTALS (G-XXX) -$5.00 • VIDEO RECORDERS • CAMERAS • VIDEO GAMES BLANK TAPE• ACCESSORIES• TV's The Picture Show I 5881 Gothard St. (corner of dinger l Gothard behind Bob's Big Boy next to Nurseryland) .u.tingtonleach 894-0595 FREE Video Cassettet Movie Rental , Rent any movie - 2nd rental le-freet With thlt coupcn Limit • tapes per family FREE Heid Cleaning on any Y.HS or Beta· Video Recorder. 'A •5()00 Value) No Purchue Necesury With this coupon Some companies, In fact, have indicated they wi ll issue movies o n video cassettes a lmost simultane ous ly with the ir rele a se to the theaters, or while they are still in their fi rst run. · Programming also as b e in g pr oduced s pecifi cally for the video cassette mar ket, some of it geared to take a d vantage o r t h e special -e ff ects possibilities of m a n y video recorders. But, if the Idea or watching the same video program, no matter how much you like it, over an d over again holds limited appeal, vid eo cassette suppliers offer another option. Many companies will rent you the cassettes as well as selling them. In addition to the cost saving <most r ecent feature films sell for around $50 and up on video cassettes; renting a similar movie on a cassette would cost about SLS for a week's rental), renting video cassettes o ffers a chance to see a broad variety of progra m - ming at you r conve· nience. Later, you may decide to purchase your favorites. Several national video tape rental clubs have sprung up around the country. usually dis- tributing the cassettes through the mail. Like everything else these days, the com· puterized camera craze has spawned its own set of buzz words which are absolute Greek to the un-· initiated. Here are some translations to help you undertstand what's going on. -Oper ational modes: the way today's 3Smm SLRs work. Six modes cover everything that's available, given today's slate-or-the-art. Most cameras have more than one. The Canon A-1 has au six, m aking it exceptionally versatile. It can also be used with a mind-boggling range of accessories which will enable you to photograph anything from a fl y's eye to the craters of the moon Aperture prior ity: this is one of the six modes of operation possible with today's 3Smm SL Rs. With this one. the photographer selects the de· sired lens opening <f-stop > and the camera's com- puter automatically picks the right shutter speed. It is good for portraits, group shots. landscapes and close-ups. The Canon AV·l is an example Shutter priority: you set the shutter speed and the computer pi cks the proper corresponding lens opening. It's ideal for sports and other action photos. The best·selling Canon A E-1 is an example. Manual mode: you can override the com- puter and select both shutter and lens setting manually. It's useful under difficult lighting con- ditions and allows you to create special effects. Stopped-down mode: with this feature. you can push a lever on the ca mera and see how much of the scene will be acceptably shar p. The camera selects both the shutter speed and the lens opening It 's ideal ror quick candidJ « once-in-a-UfeU me shots -the kind even a pro· fessional can miss if he has to decide on shuttw speed or lens opening. t : Automatic fl ash mode: cameras with thfs feature will automatically set themselves to tH~ right shutter speed, l /60th second generally. for flash photography when a "dedicated " fl ash gun '15' mounted on the camera. " Many will also set the lens opening to the f. s top selected on the dedicated flash gun's di al. 1 Television . • • 11 coa'tfrom8' raw materials and labor as well as handle the ex- pense of adding such in- novations as solid state circuitry, s up erior picture tubes. electroni c tuning and controls, new fireretardant materials and other features. ''The ability to hold the line on prices in the face of soaring costs reflects greater pro- ductivity largely result- ing from improved pro- duction techniques. new materials , new techno logies. bigger marke t s and sever e competition." Sauter said. He added that soaring costs and fuel shortages are combining lo alter American living habits, and a growing number of consumers will rely mor e heavily on the " television set as the focal point of home en- tertainment. ·: "In a rem a r k able way, we are he ade d back to where we were mor e than a h a lf a century ago -home. "So. it 's obvious that mor~ and more of our lim e must center a bout the house, and the very center of the house must be the television set," be said. "Co mbi n e t h e television set with pay and cable TV. satellite transmission, v ideo games, video cassette reco r ders and t~e newest video accessot')', videodisc, that plays a wide variety of enter- tainment, and you hg\'e the makings of a video revolution in the horn•," he predicted. RCA VIDEO RECORDER SALE Most people buy video cassette recorders to re· cord broadcast television Pf'09rams. Video adds exciterrent in home entertainrrent Home vi deo recording -the new kid in hom e entertainment -has grown up a little. ' . Wi th the development of better, lighter weight video cameras and more sophisticated video tape, the video recorder is being used in much the same way movie cameras were used in the '50s a nd '60s But, the big advantage of tape over films is that you get to see what you s hot almost instantly. And, if you don't like a particular s hot. you can erase the tape and res hoot the scene. Sounds simple? It is. According to 3M . in· ventor of video tape almost 25 years ago, there are a few easy-to-follow tips that will help you produce a better show. Tip One. Don't let network TV shows st!t the standard for your home taping. There's no way your equipment or your experience will match the technical standards of the TV professionals. However . you have a few advantages the networks don't have. For example, you can work cheaply. How can CBS justify th e expense of cov- ering Uncle Dick's gar age sale? You can bring personal insights to the shoot· ing. Will NBC know when Cousin Charlie is going to pull off that old hidden ball trick at the annual family softball game? Probalbly not, but you'll know because he does it every year. If you want to follow the network's example. use basically the same video tape they use. All three networks use a lot of Scot ch video tape. Naturally, the format is different -they're using one·inch reels while hQme vi deo recorders use half-inch Beta and VHS format tapes In their cassettes. Tip Two. Enlist the aid of your subjects. As· suming you are doing a documentary. tell the peo- ple lnvQlved beforehand . More than likely they'll cooperate and you'll get better footage. They mlght even have some suggestions for special close-ups. At the very least, everyone will have their hair combed. Tip Three. Be prepared. Are there wall p_lugs where you intend to shoot? Are you going to need extension cords to distribute the power drain from lighls more evenly? Do you have enough tape? Too much is a!Ways better than too little. And, take a little extra time, • too, if you can Clnd some. Tip Four. Pretape. This simple little step is go- l ln& to save you some umpleuant aucprtaes. When au the equipment is In place and before the action belinl1 •boot some tape and play lt back. Check the focus , the lilbtinl, the' lnJUl{ com· pout.ion. I Make adJdstulentl u necessary. U you do your own Jf aphia, now ls 1 1ood Ume to ahoot them, Tip Five. Jteep yov .-a• of humor . .E>oil't set up1tt ii everrtlaln1 doesll't CC> aact11 •• ,aanned. Your movie mi&bt not be u 1ood • "Star Wart" or "The SUn1.'' but then you dJdn't bave a SlO million bud.let. Keep tn4n• to lmprov• your video i..,.a and you'll fl.nd that clever. ln1eniou1 idea (or vldeot1ptn1 an everyday ntnt brlna out tb• cbmn. humor ucl penooall\)' ol rour fritock aad fa.milt. 6 1899 RCA VET 250 .... 7 4899 RCA VF P 170 ... I 06899 .. 84899 RCA VET CC010 . ..86899 1---With th;-ab;; pwchase-~-;;;.he-nwmb;;;l;-1 I In the ludcpt Video Club I ·---------------------------' VIDEOCASSETTES For RENT or SALE O•tt 2500 VS.-eu.tte Mo•let le stocli • Video Club-Join Now and Save Big on Movie Rentals and Sales • VHS Blank Tapes - 2, 4, 6 hour • BETA Blank Tapes L-500 • L·750 • L4'130 • 8 and 16 mm Movies and 35 mm Shdes Transferred to Video Tape • ATARI Video Game Cartridges in stock • Video cassette Recorder Rentals NEWEST ARRIVALS FOR REMT OR FOR SALE • The Fot 11• • CIMllMJe of S.C..w • Or6..,. People • •pt-' Mm • Popeye • Serial • Yeu19 Ft-_.ettateiR • My lloody V•11Hne • South Poclfic • Cdffanlla Wh • Gwts of Ho•m"OllM • lridge °" the Rlnr K wal • .. The Video Statton o,_ Moa.-W. t:JO .-., ,... 955-1070 2201 MAATIM #103, UtVIME Behind Registry Hotel next to Hof's Hut Restaurant Across from.Orange County ArrPort .VIDEO CASSETTES FOR SALE. OR RENT • Clddyahack • Pe>peye 11 Honey Suckle Roee • M~num Force •Serial •One Trick Pony •Airplane • Friday the 13th • Being There • T~ Hunte r •The Shootist • Coast to Coast • Urban Cowboy • Eleph1nt Min • My Bloody Valentlne • M1rathon Man • Nuhll)lle • Ordln1ry People •Brubaker • RaiM the Tltantlc •Fool Play • Midnight EJ!prea1 • P1P8r Moon • Heaven can Wilt PLUS 100s OF OTHER TITLES -All RATINGS HOME MOVIES & SLIDES CONVERTED TO VIDEO TAPES t I . . • • • . • I t a I t I ! i . ' j . : • I I I I I . I j Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/Tftureday. May 28, 1981 ount McKinley: 'world's most dangerous walk' DENALI NATIONAL PARK, Al.aka (AP) - ueent ol llouat llcJtinley a loomln\tlDOW· ver'ed 4!ant that ii North America'• ab•t ak, ii •bulcally a walk," depeod.ln• oo the · ute to tbe aummlt. "Of course it may be one of tb• moat n•erou1 walb ln the world," addl Bob Gerhard1 lei mountalneertD• ran,.. for 0-a.ll Natioeaa rk, JUlt IOUtb of tbe a,m.foot mouataln. 'that clan,er wu bi1bll-.t.ed lut week wttb report of tbe death ol a Columbia Unlverak)' eluate student tn a •laclal cre't.... and lb• cue ol a fellow cllmbet at tbe 1,400-foot 1"el. Another climber ii mlulq oo tbe mountaln, and there have been two otber ~-al.nee tbe climblq aeuon be1an ln April with nearly two I AIU. Y ASSUMAILE I IMTHH T OML y .W lllmT DEEDS i OWHH/MOHOw.8 OCCUPIED I Call Wilham B. Mitchell C•ll today tor quote • No obligation Irons notional funding (-714) 975-1128 :E:~I Eucutlve OfflcH: 7812 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, CA 92647 South.,,, C•liforn/1 R.,,1on•I Olllc.,: !Win E. La P•lma A¥9., Anaheim, CA 92807 8866 Vellty View St., BueM Pant CA 90620 1650 ArMlll Rd., Camarillo, CA 93010 2071& S. ~valon Blvd., Careon CA 90746 1 23021 Lake Center Or., (Lake Foreal), Et Toro, CA 92630 1001 E. Imperial Hwy., La Habra, CA 90831 ti? 4140 Long a.ach Blvd., Long Beech. CA 90807 • 229311 HewtllorM Blvd .. Torranc., CA 90505 11*1 trvlne Blvd., Tuatln, CA 92880 lOUAl 236 N. Cltru1 Ave., Weal Covina, CA 91793 m~.c "Mercury Room" •v•ll•bl• on 1 ,.,~ N s/a MAY 28, 29 and 30 YOUR COSTA.MESA STORE for HAGGAR SLACKS THE MALE MAN In The Hatt>or . Sf'lopplng c.nt8' ho6 Hart>or Blvd .• Co1ta Mesa. CA ('114') M0-8818 Mon.· Tht.n. HH FrideyTll 9 Saturday 1 <Ml Sunday 1HS doMD people cbal'tenalni UM peak. Joi.>, elabt people died OD Mount llcK.lnley. At leut • tried lot tbe summit, &Del Gerhard aald "lt loob like there'll be at leut ~t many" before tbla aeuoo end.a ln Au1ust. There bave been a few 1ucceuful wlAter U · centa, but moet climben try for UM top ln summer -lf one can use the word 1ummer ln coaneeUon with temperatures hovert.ac around &e1'0 at the l&lmsnlt, anow and winda that often VII')' between to and 100 mpb. •"Jt'• always winter up there. I wu oo the l&lmmlt on the Fourth of July one year and lt wu below uro," aald Paul Denkewalter, who runs a moutaloeeriq equipment ltore ~LAncbora••· To ~ la Ancbon1e. 135 mllea eoum of the moun· Tlnw for a MW one? Energy-aavtng gas •ater heater with gta11-llned tank, and temperature ahut-off. 30 gel. taln, llcKIAley appean u a loll pyramid on the borban. Dmkewalter, wbo uceoded llcK1nleJ lo 1'71, aaid the 15-mile Weat Buttreu route -wbicb re· quirea no rock or rope akilla -ii comidered lb' "tourbt" climb, addlnC, "It'• a lot of work, too." About two-third• of tbe cllmben are Americana, but others come from nearly every European country, Japan, Taiwan, Korea and many commun.iJt-bloc oa~ Gerhard aald. Over tbe yeara, requlnmeob impo1ed on cllmben have varied -expedltlam once needed certlflcation by park offlciafa and mountalneerin1 cluba. Thia year cllmben merely muat reciJlter, wblcb helps the National Park Service keep track of them. "l ftlW'e the averaee smart climber wW coa· Unue to carry a radio," Gerhard aald of tbe de· claion to drop a rule that cllmben CUT)' radl09. "Those who climb without a radio are bulcall)' cboosinc the option that if they 1et ln trouble they may be there forever." lo any case, Mount McKinl~)' iJI not the stuff ol a Sunday stroll. Climbers neect 1ear wbicb .roald be uaed only ln winter ln otJ\er part.I of UM UJtited States, and the altitude and weather are formtd•· ble foes. The mountain la alwaya covered wttb 1aow and ice, temperatures can drop to 30 below even lD aummet, and bigb wind.a -and accompan)'inl wind chill -pose a aignlflcant threat. Lut year, 27 climbers were hospitalized for frostbite. kick back in comfort Multl·posltlon banana chaise made of strong, comfortable vinyl strapping over steel frame. Reg. 14.95. 11495 clean It upl With the Hoover power vacuum with caat aluminum chessls, ell steel agitator, and quick & counter saver to the rescue! sockets In your pockets 4t ... len ...... 124.95 so .. 11 ......... 184.95 spred the sltln Famoo• latex llat wall paint lrom Glidden. Beautllut flat llnleh. Scrub1clean,1taya color· a•• fut. Easy water clean-up. Reg. 11.49. ........ ".., "uooect garden hOM la 25' tong, .. di ..... tor 321 e¥ef'I flow. Br... coupl- 1n9t. ITMMG. c1e1n bag changer. 7915 tncludee attachments. #U433t-9. Reg. 94.25. 1pred H on HNI house Glidden goea on euy. dries quickly. Durable fllt flntah. R11tat1 bllstera, Pffllng. mlldew.1 o•• Euy watec clean up. Reg. 16.59. double hlblchl Cat iron double hibachi Wl6' ldJuatlng gwln grllla. 5· II 10"x17". #135-6. Reg. 8.99 Corning 10"x14" counter saver protects your counter• lrom scorching hot pots. pens 11 •• and plates. Your counters can't do without it. Reg. 15.99. 1pred some ltldden Gloss Exterior telex gtoaa House and Trim paint from Glidden goes on with ease. Quick dry· 11 •• Ing, chalk resistant linlah. Reg. 16.59. 1awort your local tomato Galvanized Wire tomato 1upport to lneure h .. lthy, 99"' t1rge lrulta. • Continental 21 p i ec e socket H I With 'h .. & 'I.'' SAE. Comes In a handy toot kit. Reg. 16.95 911 up against the wall-paper Assorted colors and patt9ma of wallpaper tor decorating any room In the hOuse. 3 o 'it Improve your Interiors O now. Ff a screm for 111 IUIOftl Screen• for your doorw and tcreene tor your Wlndo.s. We butld new .creena, r•bultd old ecreena or help you bultd your own acreene with the lllfgeet ael6ctlon of pane In Oreno-County tot ttie do-lt·yourtelf ecreen builder. COSTA MfSA • ·--• • •• .., ......... ft • ..-• ,... ---.. ,_ ............ -·-. , .. -. . • Daily Pilat • ... .. THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1981 STOCKS C7 FEATURES ca ENTERTAINMENT C10 .8,000! The Shoe, who else? SeeC2 I . J ________________________________________________________________________ ._. Most Of the Angels hitter Players would like to see strike situation settled ByEDZINTEL ............... Overheard in the Ansell clubbouae prtor to Tuesday ni1ht'1 1ame at Anaheim Stadium: "Well, there goes my fiahing trip." That waa Steve Renko taJ.klnC to fellow pitcher Andy Hauler and thoucb Renko can probably eat fish whenever be wants, the message was. clear -tb.i.a baseball atrtke business is for those with tblck sk.i.na and tough stomachs. With the understandina -ol aorta -that tbey and the other 82S players in major league baseball would walk tbe line at mid· night tonight, Angel play en were prepartn1 themselves for an extended vacatioo. For bow long was uncertain, though there were plenty of projections. Most ran&ed from sevend.aystotwoweeks. Then, Tuesday niebt, word trickled out that a federal agency wu working oo an in· junction that could stall the atrtke date 30 days. "What? I can't believe this!" Rick Burle8Cllabouted in aneer u be was handed a revbed itinerary for tb.i.a weekend. That itinerary U.ated departure times in the event that an lltb-bour setUement wu reached. Tbe Aqeb, due to play the Cbic.,o White Sox in Cbicaio Friday Diehl, were off today, awaitiq word from New York on the meet· log between the players' unioo·and league owners. If an qreement ia reached, or if the atrtke is put off, the Angeb will depart for Chicago Friday morning. And, of course, Renko can forget about pan·frted trout. "I was eom1 to take off for four or five days but what can I do now?" Burleson asked in frustration. Dan Ford echoed his thoughts. "I'm ju.st taking one day at a time oo this tblng. Whatever happens, happens. I planondoln& as little as possible if and when a strike comes along. I guess there's a few things around the house l can get to. "A few of the euys have talked about wor&· ing out during the strike but notbinc b Ht. It's the first time I will have bad a summer vacatioo which wouldn't be bad." For tbe most part, the players feel there' a little they can do about a altwatioo they bave no control over. Still, most oflbe Ancela ap- pear somewhat bitter. "I want this aetUed and settled quickly," $aid pitcher Geoff Zahn. •'What it does la put a bad mark oo baseball. With no con.atruc· tive headway made in a year's time' the owners have forced us to strtlte." Zahn, a players' representative when be was with the Minnesota Twins lut year, said he voted to strike then (when it wu averted <See PIA YER8, Page CZ> * * * Angels freeze up Base ball strike postponed? Toronto ices rubber ga me with 3-1 win Now it can be told. The threat of a player strike bas been oo the minds of certain Angels. "For the last nine or 10 days, there has been no enthusiasm OD this club,·· Angels player representative Don Baylor said Wednesday night. "There hasn't been any spark. So we haven't played well and the fans have gotten on us whic h just snowballed the effect." THE SNOWBALL has turned into an avalanche as the Angeb so obviously dem.,trated Wed· nesday by dropping their second straight game to the otherwise hapless Toronto Blue Jays, 3-1, before 21,167 unhappy fans. to rookie pitcher Mike Witt's two- hit, eight-inning stint. But Fregosi 's plans were spoiled Tuesday as the Blue Jays got orrensive in an 8-4 victory. WEDNESDAY, Ken Forsch was able to cool off the Blue Jays' offense but the guys behind him fell cold. The Angels collected just five bits oo another rainy, dreary night. Toronto right-bander Dave Stieb (4-S) who has a losing re· cord despite a ~.oo ERA, found his slider pitch just in time. WASHINGTON (AP) -A federal judge in New York was to be asked today by the Na· tional Labor Relations Board to keep major league baseball players from following through on their threat to strike over the free agent compensat.lon dispute after tonight's games. I, ....,Niii ................ ._. By midnight tonight, the Angels may be off the hook, at least temporarily, of this frustrating 1981 season. Or, they may have U> look themselves in the mirror for another 30 days in the case of a'strike delay. "I've been looking for the slider all season but I think it came baclt today," Stieb, a 23· year-old native of Santa Ana said. "I really didn't feel I had my best stuff the entire game, but I got a few NOS and good defense and tonight it was enough." Al the same time, a court· ordered postponement could give the players a legal way around the deadline imposed by the basic agreement reached last year when it was established that if the players did not strilte by June 1 over the issue, they could not do so for the remainder of the life or the agreemeot. Edilon High's Jon Butler seeks atate berth tonight a.t Cenito1. Well, that's one way of looking at it. "Thirty days may just prolong the agony," Baylor, who less than two hours later was due to hop a flight to New York for an early morning meeting today with fellow player reps. "I ju.st can't figure it out. When you're not doJDg things you should. everything adds uP.. I know for a fact that the stnke thing has bothered us. It's been on my mind." FOR 'TIIE ANGELS, the Blue John Moybnry Jays were supposed to be their saving grace. After dropping three lopsided games lo the Chicago White Sox over the weekend, Manager Jim Fre1osl was looking for a sweep over Toronto that would settle the natives of Anaheim and owner Gene Autry as well. It started out that way as the Angels won, 2·1 Monday thanks IT WAS PLENTY enough for the Angels, who dropped to three games under .500 and remained 7'r!a 1ames behind Oakland. Forsch (6·3) absorbed his second straight defeat although he pitched bis fifth straight com· plete game of the year, one less than he totaled in 1980 at Houston. Now, barrtng a strike, the Angels are off to Chicago for a four-game set with the White Sox beginning Friday night. The NlRB, acting on the re· quest of its general counsel William A. Lubbers, said Wednesday night it would seek a temporary restraining order in U.S. District Court in New York to postpone the walkout for 48 hours to allow time for filing and study of an injunction request aimed at further delaying the strike. The Board saJd in a statement Wednesday night that il wanted to give further study to an unfair labor practice charge lodged against the club owners by the players association. Area track stars seek state berths By aOGEa CARLSON °' .. ...., .......... NORWALK -The quest for a state championship begins tonight at Cerritos College as the cream ot CIF Southern Section track and field athletes con- verge for the Masters meet, which qualifies the top five in each category for the state pre· lims. Coast area, while four from the women's ranks claim such dis· tinctioo. Distance star Polly Plumer d University High's 3-A chai:& pions, along with hurdler deluxe Laura Mills and freshman Teresa Barrios and Laguna Beach starlet Rennie Durand, enter with championship creden· tials. Belly -button high . isn't the Dodgerway And they'll go there Rau-lesa after placing veteran left-hander Doug Rau on the 20-day disabled list to make room for the acqulsi· lions of Dave Frost and Fred Martinez. AS A MANAGEMENT ploy, Rau, by being on the disabled list, can pitch in Salt Lake City and can be recalled after 20 days. He's joining John D' Acquisto. sent down earlier this week. The player group's complaint, charging the owners with not bargaining in good faith, is aimed at obtaining financial data from lhe club owners. The players group maintains 'Such data is essential in their current negotiations on the degree or compensation teams should re· ceive for losing free agents in the re-entry draft. The flJ"lt running event gets under way at 7 following the start of the field events at 6:30. Amone the entries from the Orange Coast area are such standouts as Edison High dis· lance runner Jon Butler, Ocean View sprinter Rex Brown ·and Newport Harbor IIlgh shot put. ter Kevin Jefferies. Plumer. the defending state champion in the 1,800 met.en. won the CIF 3·A tiUe with a 4:48.60 and is expected to qual:ift for the state meet handily, aa 9 Milla in the 100-meter burdlel. Mills ia the state leader with 14.13 UOO·wind aided time. - ATLANTA (AP> "It helps for the owner to call you, but the home run helps more," said Manager Bobby Cox of the Atlanta Braves. After dropping seven of their previous eight games, the Braves overcame a 2-0 deficit Wednesday night and trimmed the Dod1ers 3·2 when rookie Terry Harper led off the ninth inning with a tie-breaking home run, bis second of the season. Cox bad barely reached his of. flee after the game when owner Ted Turner telephoned his con· gratulatioos. "All victories are big . when you're in a slump," Cox said. "I thought their left fielder bad a chance to catch it." So did Harper. "I waa just hoping Duaty Baker wouldn't jump up and catch it," Harper said. "Lut year be caueht one on me in Loi Angeles Just like that." The homer came on a 2-0 pttcb from Dodier reliever Steve Howe, 4-2. It was only the ~ major I.ape homer yielded by Howe, ud bis first in 75% in· nlnt• since Joe Morcan of Houston bit one lait June. "I WU just kind of 1tWq on a faat ball," said Harper, a bometawn product trom the sub- urb of J;>uu&laavm.. "J c..-•t beU••• tbat," aald Howe. ~ were tbe wont pltcb• I've thrown tb1a year ID that aitutlon. l cot bebbMI J.O and wanted to 10 awa1 wilb • f 11tbaU. But I 1ot lt tulde, belly·bulton hip. "I Jut didn't 1et UM ball wt.ere I wana.d it, aad IHI 11111 k out," 1-5d Howe. "I'm not a power 1a1bn. I'm a ...... ND p6t.c ............ 1 ... ... ..... ........ ... ,,_ ... Tit• .. .-; nt w at8 C••p, ~1; •lo reUr.. t•• .,... ......... u.. ....... • The Dodgers too~ a 2-0 lead ln the third, scoring once when pitcher Tommy Boggs knocked down a smash to the mound and then overthrew first Into the dugout. The other run crossed OD Steve Garvey's bloop single to center. Blff Pocoroba's RBI single in the sixth cul the lead to 2· l and the Braves tied it in the eighth when Bruce Benedict singled off Ron Cey's glove and reached second when Cey threw wildly past first. Claudell W ashingt.on later delivered a pinch-hit, ground--rule double to score Benedict. Dodger starter Jerry Reuu · bad a no-bitter eoing into the fifth when Cbrja Chambliss ended it with a one-out sinele to left. In additioq, the Angels were able to keep Wilt, who was figured to be tabbed for the minors after shaky outings re· cently. But his performance Monday apparenUY. saved him. The Blue Jays scored runs on Alfredo Griffin's single in the third, John Mayberry's t.owerin& homer to right in the fourth and on a double play ball in the fifth. '·Forsch did a fine job for us again," Fregosi said. "The pro- blem was hitting. Stieb threw some good pitches and bad pitches -none of wblch we could hit." . FKEGOSI, WHO opted not to employ a batting instructor this season, said that the problem with <See ANGELS, Paae Cl) -·Lubbers d-eclined to say whether the NIRB will ask the judge to order the owners to re- lease their financial files. · The board bas scheduled hear· inga on the players' char1e for June lS in New York before an administrative law judee. The board's decision to. seek a temporary restraining order was immediately cballenged by the Player Relations Commit· tee, the owners bargalnln" unit. ·'There is no ha.sis for an in· junction in this matter. The de· cision to seek such relief is an intrusion in the proceas of collec· live bargalnin1 where the parties mu.st ultimately resolve thelr differences," said a state· ment Issued by Ray Grebey, direct.or of the committee and chlef negotiator for the owners. The 3,a>o features the favorite, Butler and his 9: 10.21 lo the 4-A finals (he bu done 8:~ and ls seeking to break into the 8:409), Univeralty Higb's Brad Meyer (9 :13.55), Corona del Mar's Shawn Gallagher Ct: 13.55) and Fountain Valley's Bob Erickson (9 :17.50). Brown enters with times of 10.63 and 21.40 in the 100 and 200 metera. Butler, who set a Southern Section record in the 1,800 with a 4:06.75, is also expected to com· pete in the fOUf·lap ev_ent since Ilia blc event -the ·3,200 - comeallnt. BuUer and Meyer are the only CIF champions entered lo the men's division from the Oranae M Ills is abo entered in t.bf high jump where she faces a · tougher row to hoe, while Ba> rios ( 1,600 3·A winner ii 10:48.58) is considered a aboe>-bf. Durand is the 2·A record· bolder in the ll)() with a 2: 11.•. While that Quartet tops tbe U1t , several others are beaa' fide threat.a to qualify for tbe ltatf prelims which are at tbla aamf site June 5. Among the standout.a: F°""'" lain Valley's Bonnie McGliDclae1 in the 1,800 (5:01.73) and ADj nabelle Villanueva in the a.• (10:38.50); Costa Mesa's VI. Kelley In the 800 (2:11.28); University fresbmaa Aanette Rocen in tbe aprinta (12.01 md 24.84) and Irvlne'a L111nda Kelley In the h11b and loq jumpa. : -. Pirates battle Harbor tonight in winner's bracket • Smith's five-h~tter, Bucs' dozen hits put Saddleback.away, 6-1 i n f irst r ound of state tourney By cun 8El!DBN °' .. ..., ...... LONG BEACH -Oraa1e Coast Colle1e better set used to playtq nlcbt baMbell IAIMI· Coach Mike lfaJDt'I Pirat.el, tbe No. 1 Mtd ln tllle ltMe tom· munlt1 co1Je1e bueball tourDHMat, could wlad up pl.,U., all 7 p.m. ,.., .. ii they keep OD W11miq. TbeJ took t11e ftnt atep WedDelclay DlPt .. Dlllll lmltla IMllted • ft...a.ttt.tr ... u...ooc .... r.--9out1J ..... b.lta • .-. to a '" 9iCtorJ cmr Bed· ........... ftnt round of toume1 play at 8116 ...... . It'• ...... Bl.air ... toaltlat fttn the ~ fat9 LA Harbor ad tbe leaUm'Ke...Wllal't °"'•trn~ .. .,...to'doei"elfw. ..It'• ... .-.•" Iii .. wl 1rs ..,...., ..... :f.•nrld"llane llllW tlle .. htTD9 ........ ,..,. to .... -....... ftnil ..... .,.. n- ' peatina u the 1tate cha1npao.. Despite the fact Saddle .. ck could must.er Just five bit.a oil Smith (104), the Gaucbol ll~tbinCI hltenltlq for ••• Lnninp, ti' l ·l . OCC wuted U e tJ•• la ...,. • run OD the board •• Rleb Amaral opened the 1ame wttb a waa, moted to Heolld whH Gaucbo 91.,.ter Bea Amaya bit Larry lAe, ..... ....s oe Reale Koataomer1'1 ..,_ ...... to enter. . TU Plratte made It J.O la tM MCIClll4 OD th =ol a doable bJ 09 Dis ud a ilqle lAe. But sAdctl ct came t.a ID dM third wltb a run wit.bout ...... al a Ml. . Ja fact a OCC mlltaM -11 ,..... 11 u.., .., ... -broqM .... ,.. .... tM..... ,,~ ... Piii ....... opened .. tMrd Wtdl a wallt, ....., lllCCIDd alMI ...... eo dl6rd wbea OU'• throw wmt in to etot« ' . .. field. That wasn't the real mistake, t.boup. Smith, in prepartnc to ~&ell &o Pete Harrell, wu t.lclleted with a balk aad LaJo&e trotted ac.rou the plate. But tbe Gaucbol were not beard from the remalDder ol the even.lq. ''Domde pitched a real IOOd came tonl .... Nld .. .,... "But i.. .... 8'•lDlt a toqll l'IJ in Amara. lie'• ... ot tM .... p6Uben aroud .•• ... ,... Nici ... told IUs ~l~ .., al\er AmQa •arlr and nat let me M rllht ..... pt aMacl of tM -. SWJ, ·Amal• ...... to ..... --blta~ tM ftnt • • >., ... .. could ..... ---°' .... ..., .. .. llin1. bat ................. .., ... tbrM ,_ Wllldl'IMt LIM laiir • 1119 Oaacble. =c.18117 wttai IM ••i ...... ~ . ,.... ~Ml •• ~ ..... two--,.. tit "1 leett Groat. PrtGr t. Groot's t, '14 l'arTfU bad Cl'aUed an •' • I • Orange Coaat Df'IL Y PILOT /Thuraday, May 28, 1981 &;:...~=--------------~~ Just a for ra other day ing's No. I , From AP dlspatct.H INGLEWOOD Champ on jockey ~ Bill Shoemaker hit the 8,000-winner plateau in the first race at Hollywood Pitrk Wednesday and went oo for - tbr.ee more wlnnera, a second and • t.hird ln the nin e-race program. "Well, some day5 they come lo bunches llllt this. what can J say?" Shoem"ker said. He had just won the $5.1,500 Happy Issue Stakes for fillies and mares, the mile feature of the after· noon program. He won the first with War Allied, the favorite, and also brought home. Eagle Toast in the fifth and Sbamgo in the seventh. The 49-year-old Shoemaker is the winningest jockey In history. On Oct. 7, 1970, he ShuerooJc,er-won his 6,033rd race lo sur- pass Johnny Longdon's mark which still is second best. . Following the historic victory, he was welcomed into the jockey's room with a bucket or ice water thrown by fellow jockey Chris Mccarron. Quote of the day Veteran baseball player Riehle Hebner, on today's stadiums : "I stand al the pitcher's mound an Philadelphia and I do11 't know if I'm in Pittsburgh, Cmcan- nat 1. St or Philly .. they all look alike." Rozelle admits NFL a monopoly LOS ANG ELES -National Foot-[i] ba ll League Commissioner Pete ••• Rozelle conceded Wednesday that his' organization is "a natural monopoly" and so are all sports leagues. "I believe all ,professional sports leagues are a natural monopoly," Rozelle said after he was confronted with a magazine interview in which he had made a similar statement. ·'The nature of team s po rts. I feel. eventually fo rces one or the leagues lo fold or its members lo fold except those who become part or the larger league, .. he s aid, giving as an example the merger of the American Football League into the N FL in 1966. '-Att o rn ey Ma x w e ll Rozelle Blecher . representing the Los Angeles Coliseum, pointed up the slate· menu .. concerning monopoly in an effort to pro- \'e that the ._.FL is guilty of violating antitrust la\\ s. "What you mean is that jf you want pro· fcc;s1onal football , the NFL is the only game in town." Blecher said. ··As of 1980. we were the only professional foot ha ll league in America. yes." Rozelle said of the year the Oakland Raiders tried to move their franchise to Los Angeles and were blocked by the.NFL Baseball today On th.is dale in baseball in 1973 : Montreal 's Clyde Mashore lied a major league record with his second straight pinch-h.it home run. On this date in 1956 : Pittsburgh's Dale Long cracked a home run off Brooklyn's Carl Erskine, giving the Pirates a 3·2 victory and completing his record streak or at least one homer in eight c00$ecutive games. Today's birthdays: Houston infielder Rafael Laodestoy is 28. Detroit outfielder Kirk Gibson is 24. LeFlore uses bat, glove over Sox Chica10'1 a. Lef'lere drove in • one run and took away hwo with a ~reat catch WM.Detday u the Whitt Sox clalmed a s.o AtQencan Leacu• victory at Oakland . . . A bua-loaftd alqle by Teny Crowle7 ln the nJntb lrmlnt 1ave BalUmore a .. , victory over the Ntw York Yankees and a aweep of their three-same series . . •• 01Uvle hit a two-run atnal• and CbarUe Moo,. had three hlta and scored twice lo lead Milwaukee to a 5·1 victory over Detroit . . . Mlelley Hatea.er'a run-acorln• alnllt In the nlnth lnnlnti iave Mln· nesota a 2·1 win over Texas, sn•pplng a four-1ame losln1 streok . . Jim Klee belted two homers and Rlcll MllJer and Dwi1ht Evan1 one each L•Fl.ort as Boston rode a six-run fourth innlna lo a 10-5 triumph over Cleveland, snapping Bert Blyleve.'1 •Ix-game winning streak . . . Former Costa Mesa High and. Orange Coast College star Dan QulteDberry pitched to one batter and 1ot his filth save as Kansaa City topped Seattle, 8·5, behind WUUe Aikens' three run homer .. Oakland relief pitcher Bo McLau1hlln, hit In the face by a line drive Tuesday, was m gOOd conaauon with no apparent damage to his vision today . Yankee owner George Steinbrenner says the Bill Kunkel umpiring crew, expecting Kunkel. is partly responsible for the Yankee's most re cent slide. Knepper fires fourth shutout Bdb KDepper recorded his fourth Ii shutout in five decisions and catcher Lula ~ drove home the winning run Wednesday night as Houston slopped San Diego, 1--0, to sweep its three-game series. Knepper scattered six hits and retired 15 of the first 17 batters he faced . . . In other National League games Tony Pena's two-out sin1le in the ninth scored Matt Ale:a:ander to give Pittsburgh a 3·2 win oV'tr the Chicago Cubs ... Dave Kingman slugged a tie- , breaking homer, hi s ninth of the season, and Pat Zachry tossed a six hiller lo pace the New York Mets lo a 3·1 vic- tory over Philadelphia . . . Chris Speier smashed a run· sco ring s ingle and Tom \ Raines delivered a sacrifice KneppeT fly in a two-run seventh that carried Montreal to a 4·1 decision over St. Louis. Former University lligb and SaddJebaclt College star Tim Wallach ignited the rally with a s ingle on t he firs t pitch from John Martin . . . Dave Collins scored a run and doubled home another as Cincinnati edged San Francisco, 3·2 . . . The Cubs have hired former major league short.stop and manager Alvin Dark to perform special assign· ments . . . Dan Driessen says be wanla to be traded from Cincinnati and confirmed he was fined $100 by the Reds for missing a team night to Pittsburgh last week Ongais' condition remains stable Costa Mesa's Danny Ongals' con· • dition remained serious but stable Wednesday, four days after has race car crashed at the Indianapolis 500 . . Jim· my Connors defeated Christoph e Roi er· Vasselin, 6·1, 7 5, 3-6, 6-3 in the first round of the French Open . . . Former Ohio State football coach Woody· Hayes was in satisfactory condi· tion al the school's hospital after undergoing manor surgery to drain and treat an infection s temming from an earlier operation ... Julius Erving of the Philadelphia 76ers won the NBA ·s MVP a ward The Pick Six at Hollywood Park paid a single bettor $163,382.40 to one winning ticket . . . Michael J erry West, 19, son of former Lakers coach Jerry West, is scheduled for a hearing in West Los Angeles Ju· ly 31 on a burglary charge . . Jack McKln· ney or Indiana's Pacers bas been named the NBA 's Coach of the Year . A federal judge is urging the Big Ten Conference and University of Illinois quarterback Dave Wilson to settle their differences out of court Wilson, a former Fullerton College player. is being prevented from playing his senior season at Illinois by the Big Ten Television, radio TV: Dodgers at Allanta,3p.m., Channel 11. RADIO: Dodgers at Atlanta, 3 p.m . KMPC 1710) ~aseball standings )' NAnONAL LEAGUE .. Weit DlvlatOD • W L Pct. GB · Dot'"' 31 13 . 705 -Ci ncinnati 25 18 .581 5th Houston 23 22 .511 8th , San francisco 23 23 .500 9 f Atlanta 20 21 .488 9th San Diego 17 28 .378 14th > East Division t St. Louis 22 15 .595 - ' Philadelphia 25 18 .581 - ( MQOtreai 24 18 .571 \'2 l Pittsburgh 18 18 .500 3th New York 13 26 .333 1- 1 ChiC"a&o 9 30 .231 14 AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 30 18 .625 Chi cago 24 16 .600 2 Texas 24 17 .585 2"'1 Angels 22 25 .468 7"'1 Kans as City 13 24 .351 11 \'2 Seattle 15 29 .341 13 Minnesota 13 29 .310 14 East Dl vision Baltimore 27 14 .659 Cleveland 22 15 .595 3 Milwauk~e 24 18 .571 3'h Boston 24 19 .558 4 New York 23 19 .548 4\'2 Detroit 21 22 .488 7 Toronto 14 31 .311 15 ........ .,,.I<_ Tor onto I,"'-" 1 Cttk -1,0elii.MO Belt I....._~' N-York S &Olton 10, c1a ... 1-s Mllw--S, Detroit 1 M lrlftetCIU t, T H •t I lten ... City I, s..tlle S ,. ... ,..o_ O.tn1ll ll'Wtrv 241 at Mllw..,ll• ICA!dw911 ~ MlnMNta (lirlcU.. ,_., et TaHt I~ ).I), n Oftty ,_IC~. .. -·,.. .• --~ ,,. .,..~...-·=· .. ' From Page C1 From Page C1 ' I, ANGELS. • • PLAYERS' REACTIONS. • • his hitters does not stem from PoOr coaching. "l played on teams that didn't have batUna lnatructora and we did •lri&ht. ''he aaid. The loas w11 the fifth In 1lx games on the homestand ind the Anaelt · seventh loss ln the put nine game• Brian Downin, was beaned by 11 Stieb fa.stbaJJ n the fourth In· nine . however . was released from the hospital after X-raya. And the aaony ioes on. Maybe a strike Is ju5t what the doctor or· dered for the AnJtels. -By EdZlntel * ANOIL MOTii O....tel MeMeff ..... l••HI Oii llw't demOllOfl "H•'ll <Ollll,,.. to ll'I mt f•r .. _ (redll (WIWerd "'' .,.n1i...1. W.'N dOlne II tot Oeloe. not tOf' Ut II Mey tie • ....... In d( .. ulM '9r him We're wllllf>t I• leU • ~ ble "8'11 tome M<k , /I.NI on D'~: "Wl\•n I wH In le'! 06-, -Mfll lllm ._.tor IMM wMk• .... -n ... Umt ....... Ula P141ru l l\a Clld • •-loO I '-l\e '~' 11\al -UWI de 11\a -·· • TIM pl\<111 ... ,_ tltll t•r llllt -• Mrlet: .._.. I.-on l'rl-dey. Ml.,. wttl on s.iurdtr an4 Ito" 11 .... ...., D•n ,.,..... '" Suflcley't doll-f'll-r . ,.,,... Oii wMt ire llke lo 11a i»<k In tlM ..._., .. , wHn I """"'-•• get llW <•II. I • .,. .... <em• lleck. ll .. ry time I've...,. 0..11· .. le" 1191· I••· Mr curw 1111•1 real OOod Wt tl\an 1r1 ....,,., Ileen ru t good t oon·11t11nk Wt lmPO<'\efll lor ma lo 90 tllne llWM ... I ... ,., lltne et II It ID get a quellly Ii• Of' WV9fl lt1 •· l'r•t i>ll<IMd ti•_,."" nln91 In hit l•tl tl.ert 41 w•k 8(1111 et41ln1t H-ell, •llowlnt l1At1 • pair of IMln'I tine .. , alld _,., IMw 1111 TM Anoelt ••• Ntllnt 215 It! ,,,,... JOO In 11\e Poll 11....... it• CMN <.ell« ... "'' Ono cerMr '°"'·"II eeme Tuetdey n'9fll Dallas signs Adams Gordon Adams. the slartini quarterback at USC last 5eason and a product of Newport Harbor High, has signed as a free agent with the Dallas Cowboys. MONRO- MATIC ® •Amerlca'S Best semng Shock Absorber: In the lf&l boutt before deadilM) and fetllnodilferently Ullt year. · 'ln actullly, a 1trlke la no more than walkln1 off a Job wben workln1 condlUon1 are not utlafactory. From the time that Andy Metunmith won hlt de· cl1lon over free a1ency a few years aio. the owneu have made It a_polnttonolflveln11aln. Tbey f el a need to 1et a victory out of this. That's a poor way of re· achin1 equity. Now, the playera and owners are sepa rated as never before.'' Zahn, lllte many other An1el 9l11yers, said they have made few If any plan. for their free time In the event of a1lrlke. ''I stay In shape all year,·· Zahn said. "There's not much you can do. I suppose the hitters mlpt have an advantage over the pitchers ln a lon1 term layoff but really, no one benefillfrom Ws- not the players, not the owners, notthefans." Ah yes. The poor fans. They're the ones who stand to lose the most, perhaps, by havlne the form of entertainment they pay hard-earned money to see swept right from under them. "I feel for the fan," HusJer said. "It's their good money that we're fighting over. But it's hard for them to understand the whole situation. No one wanll to st.rtlte, but it hu to be reaolved and the only way is to strike and get It over with." Ford concurred. ·'The fans will just have to try and understand. No ballplayer can perform if coo- ~MONROE.Y RADIAL- MATIC ® •A Great RJde at a Great Price~ ~MONROE.I" rnese WKl<ll Pf'ICes are so IOw ttiev are notvald 1n conjUncnon w1tn inv otner couoon or otscount of~ MONRO- MACNUM&O® • bigger bore • bigger on capacity • bigger piston ~MONROE.Y n,... splcill prices are so IOW tfllV •• "°' VllO In conJu~ With anv otn-r couoon or Olteount ~fer dJtJona aren't rtpt. Tbll l1 a butt· neas. We're st.rildDa for a food re· Hoo. Somelimet, I'm DOt even 1urt what t.hat reuon t1 but there ha1 to be a rulebook.'' Zahn feels that the fam have been misled in their thinking. ·'The fans have been led to ri.eueve that the more you pay a player, the better be should play. Fan.a are expect.ln1 performanca. A lot hu been aald about the hip salaries that we·re greedy. But I don't believe that's true. We're just ultina for something that we've always had." "Some wall s uJfe r ." said Hassler "We're not striking lo hurl anyone. But we have to think about the future of the up and coming players Just like they stood up for us in 1967, we huve to stand up for the players of 1990 " There are those wbo feel that there won't be any kind of player strike. Llke Angels Executive Vice President Buzzie Bavaai. He believet that If hiat.ory repeats Itself, a &etUemeot will be re· ached aomeume before midnight tonight. But the players all see it com· ing. ··Absolutely nothing bas been accomplished In a year's time so I doo 't see anything suddenly cbangingthat,"saidZahn. Asked what be bad planned for Uus weekend, Zahn just shrugged his shoulders, "I doo't know. Read a good book, J guess.'· llD•Ol llPLAClllHT WMIAllTY If 1n eo dlYS you dOn't agree ttlat four Monro·Mattc,Monroe Riclal-~ Cl' MaQnUm 80 snock absOrbers give you the beSt ride you r.w had, Monroe wtll rep&ace tt1em Wlttl any comparallfV prleed Shoeks at no charge. lllPOmT MITI AVAILAIU llf llOIT ITOllS. 0000~~ CARQUIST Auto~ Storts, ~-iJ CAROUE5T thf> Rl<]ht Pl.1Cfl to tJ1Jy Juto pJrts ... ~ ~ ' I. I • • j • • • • • ~ .4 T /".. • I I t' ~ • _.... ..... .._ _____ . ' . ... ...-. ............... -.. .. , ;a . ... Nil , .. di ,., I.I• I ~ . .. ·~ I Sea Kings filled all gaps . Pries. and Co. set for CIF 2-A baseball finals Friday When your No. 1 pitcher is 20.o over a three.year career. it's dif. ficull to consider much else when discussing the merit.a of a baseball team. And although Corona del Mar High baseball coach Tom Trager bas plenty to say about Jerr Pries, who baa signed a na· tional letter of intent to play at UCLA next year. he's also well aware or just what has turned his team into a CIF 2·A finalist. THE SEA KINGS, three-time Sea View League kingpins, meet top-seeded and defending 2-A champion Santa Fe Friday al· ternoon at Anaheim Stadium with the opening pitch slated for 2 o'clock. Al the I.Other end of that pitch will be one Rob Murar, who de· veloped journeyman status in his first year with the varsity, filling a hole Trager feared might be the undoing or his team 's 1981 chances. ··My biggest rear at the start of the year was catching," says Trager. "I knew we had some high school talent, but I didn't know if a walk was going to be the equivalent of a triple. ••He has been doing a great job for us, much more than I could have possibly expected. We had no experience at this spot. but Murar is a smart kid and bas really plugged a hole. "I didn't have that kind of feeling about any of the other spots because I knew we could protect ourselves." MURAR WAS NOT accorded all-league honors. Nor was de- signated hitter Gordon Moss, a sophomore. or sophomore Dan Hess at short.stop when Pries is on the mound, or junior first baseman Brent Melbon, or third baseman Dave Rohde. Each, however , has played a key role in a 21 -3-1 record. The Sea Kings haven't over- whelme d the opposition in reaching the finals, as Trager points out in noting CdM 's vic- tories have been by 2-l and 1-0 scores. In addition to a 1·1 situa- tion entering the seventh inning at_ Mission Viejo and a 2-2 game with Glenn High in the rifth in- Tom Trager ning or the opening game or the playoffs. But the Sea Kings have found a way, scratching, making the most of five hits in the last 14 in· nings, getting lhe clutch de- fensive plays and taking advan- tage or a mistake or two by the opposition. "Nobody is playing any better on defense on any club we've seen than our' third baseman," sa~s Trager. "He's made at least one exceptional play a game and getting aJI the routine stuff, too. "MARIO YBARRA and Clay Tucker have played excellent defense in the outfield and come up with key hits. "Bobby Shollin has hit the ball exceptionally· well in the playoffs and stolen some key bases. ··But maybe the real key for us this year is pitching. In the past we've had teams that hit better and field as good, but we haven't had the depth in pitching we've had this year." In addition lo Pries, who seem s to tum every baseball he touches into gold, is Ken Santoro (8·3). Saotoro'a one-bitter over Mountain View (1·0 ) wu really the eem of tbe playoffs for Corona del Mar pilcbin1. "Pries wasn't real sharp Tues- day.'' says Tra1er. ··But we came up with some crucial dou· ble plays, including Jefra de- fensive play with bis diving catch and and doubling up. the runner. "ANOTHER TIME Palm Springs had two runners on and they got a clink hit over fi rst, but the rUMer bad to wait on it and couldn't score. Theo a double play got us out of it. "We've had some breaks, we haven't flexed. We're a pretty good team and take advantage of some mistakes, but we cer· tainly haven't manhandled anyone.'' Trager has been the head coach at Corona del Mar since 1969 and it's the first appearance in the finals for the Sea Kings. He doesn't see the appearance as the ultimate experience. "I knew it was Santa Fe which won the 2-A championship a year ago at Anaheim Stadium," says Trager. "But I qad a hard time remembering who was the other team in the finals ( Leuz- inger). . "This is something they're go- 1~g to remember for a long, long hme. I'm sure someone is going to go 1-for·4, but by the time they are my age it's going to be 4-for-4. · "I'll tell you, the adrenalin is pumping." A waiting the Sea Kings is vir..tually the same team which Corona del Mar eliminated in 1979 -when Santa Fe was an almost totally sophomore team. THE CHIEFS boast three AJl- C IF s tar.s from the 1980 c~ampionship team, including right-handed pitchers Ray Razo and Todd Burns. Razo was 8-3 with an 0.56 ERA and Burns 8·4 with a 1.20 ERA as juniors and this year's st~ts are similar as Santa Fe has raced to its 21·4 record. Also boasting AJl-CIF ·honors from 1980 is outfielder Mario Retana, who hit at a .415 clip. -By Roger Car.Ison Seven Rustle rs e arn honors Springer, Settle, Collins, Schulz gain first team Golden West College has placed four players on the All-Southern Cal Conference first team baseball squad and three more on the second team. GWC shortstop Steve Springer (.331 batting average) and third baseman Jack Settle (.349) were selected to the first team along with de· signated hitter Wes Collins (.377) and freshman catcher Chris Schulz (.373). LA Harbor freshman sensation Eric Bullock was named player of the year. Bullock led the league in homers (10), runs scored (31 ). hits (45), stolen bases (31). RBI (35) and batting average ( .425). GWC's second-team selections are infielder Larry MacArthur, outfielder Bob Grogan and freshman pitcher Mark Stone. First Team Pos. Player, school P Mark DeLaTorre, LA Harbor P-Forest Cope, LA Harbor P J ohn Sessom, Rio Hondo P-Marciano Moreno, East LA C-Chris Schulz, Golden West C-DeForest Young, LA Southwest IF-Marvin McWhorter. LACC Yr. So. So. So. So. Fr. So. Fr. Mark 9·1 4·2 6-4 6-4 .373 .337 .376 IF-Danny Koody, Rio Hondo IF-Jeff Payetta, LA Harbor IF-Jack Settle. Golden West OF-Ralph Sheffield, Santa Monica OF-Daryl Pitts, LACC I OF-Elton Hooker, LACC OF-Chuck Spiegel, Cypress 0 F-Milce Rindone, East LA OH Wes Collins, Golden West UT~ Bruce Proctor. LA Southwest Second Team P-Leonard Valencia, LACC P-Reggie Wyatt, Santa Monica P -Grant Walling, Cy press P Mark Stone, Golden West IF-Dave Untrauer, Santa Monica IF-Dave Combs, LA Harbor IF-Larry MacArthur, Golden West IF-Byron Smith, Rio Hondo IF-Brian Johnson, East LA OF-Rich Arzola, East LA OF-Bob Grogan, Golden West DH-Don Payan, Cypress DH-Chris Dettle, LA Harbor UT-John Fisher, Rio Hondo Fr. So. So. So. So. So. Fr. Fr. So. So. So. So. So. Fr. So. So. So. Fr. Fr. -So. So. Fr. Fr. So. COME SEE OUR FINE SELECTION OF. BUICKS, PONTIACS, and MAZDAS .and don't forget ... .307 .319 .349 .329 .360 .351 .355 .328 .377 .380 4-6 6-2 5-7 5.3 .327 .309 .388 .311 .334 .360 .362 .371 .317 .309 .... ~ ...... ~l111 ------. --...... 4 ·-..,..,, • Orange Coast DAil Y PILOT fl h11r,c;o11y, May 28, 1981 C l · JIM NIEMIE C. Albacore Most of the tallt along our·Southern l'41hfnrr Id coastline among sail water anglerk p1·rtJ1t1 :. to tht• upcoming albacore season, which ho11l•full\ "ilt begin the latter part of th.ls month Already there has been word flashed b) ,·oni mercial long liners that albies a re being takl'n some 250 to 300 miles due west of Los Angeles, ;m.I some wiconfirmed reports said there wert' JUrtl pers spotted just off San Clemt>nh.• lsl<mct lu.,"1 week. Another story had six small altuc:. we1~ht"d in last week at a Santa Monica bait ~hop The fi~h were reportedly caught between the outu ,.,f.ind:. ·eason near? • ·. i11il 'entlltl~ out a scouting ·~mmerclal t.if bo..t ht·~111n1n.: J une 10. Accordinl to Fl1bermu '1 I J11tlin~ -.pokesman Al Rlch bl the Searc.,... tlall U<i.il \Hll be ~laying on top of the albacore acbc';Oii ;1,.·ttil·~ move from Mexican waten and make d&I· I) 11 ports back to port. 1 lopdull y the inlormatioo pWed back to WMC. 111~., \\l ~I help in localing the northerly misradoe 11f th1· lon~fins. · • • Meanwhile, there is some pretty tood local llOo f'l ."fl ING .11 THE EXCITEMENT WHJ CH rnrnc., al111H: with the first catch made out of e1\her· l\j•·""''or1 or a border city landing is serond to nont· .i1 .. 1~ 11u 1 coastline. t 1 .. 11 1,1k ing pluce· for those an1lers fiahio_c the Ill(-• f.1l l Intl out of Newport Harbor and Dana wharf. When the word is Oashed that tht'M' \ .1.:JJ1t1111I of the deep are within range, suit ~ Jt1•1 .. 111;:ln:-. head to their nearest angling shop l•> 1 t'f1ll 11. I replace rusted hooks and lost s inkers, uno al><",. all stay close to the counter to try and m 1 rhl .n t lw latest in fishing reports. Since the last two longfin se:1!>on., .h..t\ 1· i.,., n disasters, there is a lot of optim1!>m ('11111111~ ( 1 m landing operators, veteran skippers and 1 h11->1· 'ho have fished albacore for years \.\-alt r ~nd 1, 111 conditions are ideal for a good early !'-t:.1" 111 1111 hopefully. one that will last into ()('tobt-1 : , ra1 t11 111 with it some of the exotics from Mex1c·o as 'A•·lt SAN DIEGO LANDINGS are ~etlm,g tn~ 1 t • • w~ntto trAde·in on .a newer ~I? Use a Daily Pilot Penny Pincher Ad to sell items under $100. 3 ti nes for 2 days only $1.50 a day. Sorry, no com- mercial ads allowed. Charge your Penny Pincher I ht•1 l' arl' good catches of Q)ackerel, 10dle I . r 11 ud.1 a nd bonito with an occuiooaJ yeUowtaU 111111 "lull' :-.l'::t bass brougb( to galf. When \be IW· l.t• • Intl· :-.tops, sport boats are mov)na out to deep : n·t>f... and l<mding up on the lut of the "uoa'a I (II'~ fl:-oh . . . o~ TH E .. RESH WATE• SCENE, action .. .111 111 cuod <it most lakes in the SouUaland. Bua. ,. 1tfl:-.h .md bluegill a re headln1 the ijat of molt I ,ct I h.1 hh', While SOffie crappie and stocked raiD• 111° .\ t1 1ut :.irl' also being put en strincen. 1 lw i!rnnd opening of the Santa Ana Rive!' I ' 11\,.. ha'>s and catfish ponds will .beCfn Monday, t.n t111g .1t 7 a m · .. , BALLY • f ,,..,rJ SUPPl...E ANO !11 < Ji' W!-ilT( SIQI 00 ----- .. Ad or use your Visa or Master Card. •I •\HIO ... l\l ... t<!J N(W,ORT lfACH 17141 •'4·421) II ...... \TPHT /<lHAMHA 121 )I 212·5'71 Call Classified Advertising at 642 -5678 to place your ad. S IEEL=R Rated#). in treadwear! Versu<; Gourly• '\ steel Firestrp11: ,.,:1 r 111 t 1 11, 1 xww tio:isPc! 011 1 ,. .. • 1 , pro1et 11on'> lrt'm 'T1.tn ,, ,, •111· , treadwear r;illn1l~ 1111<1t1t ·1 , r ( "' :.ioveroment Ur11form lorv (),, 111, Grading System / Ballt toagb at a price at '• toa b to beat. •• ----------------------------------............... -............... ""' ... ~--~.,l!!W~ ..,,.~ .... ...-..... . . ~ .. .. . . . .. 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LAtlYN ..... 2·4--c.teMM• et Schurr; Le .._,, et kllllrr 1·4 -Tlletcll•r •I Leyole; 'Cre••I et Car'plntene CIF etete quelffylng IMV .... Me"1i)ll> IOYI' DllCUI ••IUL n 1. Oo4llllllll (...,,..,...,.,., Ri41KrftU, tt•1t CC IF record, old merk Ito.to by %Im. mermen, Wel11111, IUO>; 2. Jefferi.1 (Newpert H•rl!orl, 17 .. 1; I. We1terflel4 CC.po Vel....,I, 11 .. 1; •· Pllllllpa C"-'ly Hiiia), 112.J; S S-y CC.,. 'llelleyl, , ... It. OtltLS' DllCUI •aMILTI I Nor1on CMIH lon Viejo), 147 ... ; 2 l(Hlewellle Cl'ullertonl, 1'0•t ; J. 1Crl"'8 caurb-l, t:ii..IO; 4. Miiis CUnlwrsltyl, US-I; S. C..,,_, IS... C..._..l, t~. AUTOMOTIVE USTORATIOMS AND R•AllS COMPLnl AUTO MAIMTINAHCI ~ ._. CADILUC & COl¥1111 -~ Wi'~~~~.t.. U IS • Tm.lfS • BmlCa SlSlOI ..... MAii & .. .,. • l l TYPES. Me •'-'dial Me c-t ,_,..., W..til ft~ftl YOH.L--ll.6cMtiolA ... 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McClellMI CScotUdele, Arlt.). U 7 -Merit Wlelle Cl!acendldol, Jeff Tllemsen IE ..... ldello), Onld VlllQftt (41~--1. Lowis ........ IL.ea Vetnl. Jeb Shoert CT-), 1• -0..rlel U.. (Te lwen), OWi• Koucllln CFreMOl, l(en ltlley Cllleltel. LI• hid Ille !Oii rwncl of tlle MY I.SI. (Sec.end""""' ~y wet,.,.__ W..,..._Y i.c.UM of rein wltll 27 Pl•-' ttlllontlle~I. ('Tiie •» jll•.,.n-11ty tot Ille net""81 POA ..-i11y1,. """rnement J-l~U In Lelle •-vis ... Fie.I NCAA chelNMonahlpa , .. .....,.., Joelt•uett.Or.Clt....,• ~ lllelt Oelt*. ~ :M-aS-19 Je' Don llMa, Ulell SL U-S7-10 Mike ,..,_, New Meslco IS-.-71 OonH-.-Mealco IS-»-11 ll•Y ''"" HoiMon is---.n OoMle a....-1, Howloll J4.l7-11 Ron c-. use -.u-11 MecNen ...,_, Geortl• ,..,.._n llllell Feflr, IYU JS-J1-n Tom "-mke,UCLA a.»-n Tom Letwnen, Ml,__. u.v -n Gordon l(r ... use ,..._,,, Tommy-.. Oii•-SI. 17·»-n Jofln S.--. Ho. CerollN ,.. ..... n JoM s.w.-. L$U ·~ llryM Hertllf\ Orel R-1 J7.U-n .. ,ry ~Sen~ St. 174S-72 Tll!Y on-. ArlL. St. •:a-n Oen F-, Ar1J.k ~ T"""'Y"'"-.-Meako U47-n T• .... ~-0re1111-•; .... Me•ke •: HolllW .. ; T .. •I UM -4rl.-. ~. 2'1; o--wie, I YU, Te .. -SM Oleee SU.., 2'4; H«1t1 Cetollne, •; CotoredoenclOll~St.ete. m ; Sell J-s.-, 1'1; Flerlde stete, Jtt; use -........... Misc. Wedrlellde-'~!:rHCdon• ..___ ....... MILWAUK•IE l ttEWE•I -s.....- CNrtle ....... eek'*,•• ,,.....lyoler ~ lrect. ............... CHICMM> cues -...,... A1¥1ft o.r. .. _ ........ --. NEW YOtllC IMH -........ "--wtMI:~ ........_,, ... Gery INrtw. UltdW, .......... -... " 1ClfWW1., ..... WMm ........ . POOfMU. ............... Le11191 CLEY•LAHO llltOWNI -Mell" ,._. ~-tiecale. KANSAS CJTY Q41E" -........ Ln ..... ....~-l'r-*C..,......, ......... NEW ENGLAND l'AT.-IOll -I .... JeM """" ... ,...._; ............. . ,_.... .... ; ... Mlfll , ...... , .......... ......... HEW YC>tllt OIMfTS -OIMMM4I "'- Dew, ......... ---. cn ,..._. --SM OMill CJww9n; _. T-~ _.. ~ ... ....,. lllleNul, r_...... llecll,f.-...... on-...... coua .. ••nto ATLANTIC COff"E••NC• -.._, ,,_ McDenNtt ~l•lmw •H JIM Pr-1Allll111t le Ille cem- ll'll~. "'°'°:::I NATOUa NT c•........,0...1 /ltltt# ........ Are a motorc yclists dominate fie ld of 16 World qualifying meet set Saturday 81 HOWA&D L. HANDY ............. LOS ANGELES -The Oran1e Coast area wlJI be well represented lo Saturday's U.S. World champtonahip speedway motorcycle quallfler at the Coliseum when four rtden wtU be aelected from the fteld ot 18 tA> participate ln the world cbam· plonsbipe later ln the summer. The world finals will be staaed tn Europe at London'• Wembley Olympic Stadium Sept. s. Five of the 16 competitors who qualified for the Saturday com· petition live in Huntington Be ach, including Shawn and Ke lly Moran, Scott Autrey, Steve Columbo and Alan Chris· tian. Bruce Penhall and Bobby Schwarh: call Balboa home while Brad Oxley ia from San Clemente, putting half of the field from the coast area . ''This is the most important speedway race ever in the U.S.," says race organizer Harry Oxley who promotes weekly races at Costa ¥esa's Orange County Fairgrounds every Friday night during the summer months. "Everything happens in one night. There is no preliminary event or a series of races. The champion is crowned Saturday night , " says Oxley. Oxley is predicting a, crowd close to35,000. Riders returning from Europe to compete in the qualifier in· elude Penhall , Schwartz, Autrey, Dennis Sigalos, Ron Preston, Moran, Steve Gresham and Shawn Moran. The riders wno compete OD a weekly basis in Costa Mesa in· elude Christian, Lance King, Dubb Ferrell, Mike Faria, Den· nis Pyeatt, Dave DeTemple and Columbo. Oxley is listed as rid· ing in this country where be gualified but be is also c:!ompet· ing on the British League circuit this year. King, whose 18th birthday isn't until August, had to gain special dispensation to compete in the qualifier. Fortunately, his birthday is before the world championship ln September. "U he wun't 18 by that tJme, we couldn't do anythinc for him," Oxley says. King iol into 1peedway radq throuih Mlke But wbote retire· ment last year kept him from q ualifyln1 for Saturday'• compeUtioo. "Mike worked for my d&d about five yean ago and I went to the races with them. I started last year Cat 18) and bad a •ood year. But I rode junior speedway for about five yean before that and was in motocross for 1 ~·years," aa.ya King. Christian had an unusual en· try into speedway racln&. "l lived in Reno and wu slid· Ing around on my bike in the s now on the street• after a storm," be says in recalling the incident. .. An older racer saw me and asked if I would be in· terested in speedway racing. "I didn't think be was for real but a couple of weeks later be came to me with an offer and I've been at it ever since. "l really don't have a strong desire to go over to the British League," he says. "I'm happy here and I'm making some money and enjoy what I'm do- ing," says Christian. The Moran brothers are 19 and 20 but both have been racing since they were 10. Shawn quit at age 16 but came back in less than a year. "I guess I burned out," he says. After attending a school run by former world champion Barry Briggs, he came back and has been doing quite well since. The empbasls will be OD get· ting into the top four positions in • Saturday's competition to qualify for the world cbam· pionships. After that, the British League riders will return to Europe and the re~ulars will compete at Ventura, Costa Mesa and San Bernardino on the southland short track circuit. Tickets for the event are on s ale at all Ticketron outlets and at the Sports Arena box office. Gates open Saturday night at 6:30. Racingstart.sat8 . Final PORC race set for Saturday By ALMON LOCKABEY 0.lty ................. Fifteen of the top rated lntema· tional Offshore Rule CIOR) rated yachts in Southern California will set sail off the Newport Pier Saturday in the fifth and final race of the Yacht Racing Union of Southern California's Pacific Ocean Racing Conference. Class A yachts will get the start· ing signal at noon with classes B BOATING and C to follow at five.minute in· tervals. Lido Isle Yacht Club is the host club . Three alternate courses are of· fered the racers, the choice of the race committee binging on weather conditions. Course dis· lances range from.22to28 miles. This year's PORC bas come down to a tight finish with only 1 v. points separating the top three boats on corrected time. Dennis Choat.e's Brisa is leading the fleet on corrected time, followed by Milt and Marty Vogel's Kindred Spirit and John Arens ' Tomahawk. The Yacht Racing Union is a group of property-ownlne, clubs within the Southern Calllomia Yachting Association. The PORC was inaugurated about five years ago as the YRU's answer to the Southern Ocean Racing Con· ference in F1orida. It is limited to yachts with IOR handicap rat· ings. In other yachting action along the Orange Coast, Bahia Corin· tbian Yacht Club is holding a Lido·14 open invitational regatta Saturday; Balboa Yacht Club is hosting a One· Design regatta for outside classes, and Dana Point Yacht CJub will sponsor a double feature-the 1981 inaugural of the Dana BeJles Series for women sailors in Performance Handicap Racinll F1eet vachts Saturday, and the third race of the Dana Point Series for PHRF ratings- Sunday. In etller •-of 11'9 Seoltllenl CelltornM Ye<M-1nt4~eocletlmo· IM ' J I L.-9MU w..-.. Hllll °"""' AMl<letllft -Oil I""'* rec:e • SetllN!ly. L.Htle ._. l'IMC -..,_., H-Ser-. S.tllrtley. ........ .., Cellforni• y .... a.. -c...ut c-..... Nertfl Irr __,__ reces IPHltF, MCllKl '8t11r'9y. Kllll HerWr Ye<M Clull -1-nM _. rec.e Cs.lllNW5e'* .... Jl Setw9y. l>el ltey YICM 0.. -$wlMf ... ._... rece cT-.swlftNe.J>SwlMf. a.ot..,. C ......... Ceya Yecllt Clull-• .,.... ........ Setlmley,.......,. lllll•lellleVYec:MC,._-l'emll1S..~ ble, Setwrlley, s....My. ~ Yadot Cll* -....,_ 5w'lel le.tell-VI S-.y,S-y; V .. te ....... CllM-fk_,I.......,. ............. 4~ Yedlt C ... -IC,.,_. -~ Sirin,,...,., Selunley; ~I ..... ~ 1et11n11er • s-w...,.•lllt1ntc11111-s.n...SiW• .... a. ~, .... ,.. w .. .._Yec:MCll*-~ 081 ........ Sw!My. GROUP .111 s•w g ~IF, LESSONS •••;. •11• nwe .,._ SAT., MAY JO-SUH., MAY JI BUY -SELL -TRAPe 260 TRADE TABLES Felilunng Guna -Antique & Mclc*n Ammo -Ww Aetlol & &.lrpfue lndlln Mifacta -Auge & Jewelry -Co6na . . ST ARTS JU..: 16fft 8 WEBCS-s25oo ONE HO• WESLY . IMCLIW GOLF BALLS & INSTRUCTIONS USSON HOUIS .r ..... w-.n.n. 9 A.Me or 6 P.M. Sat. At I P.M. Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thuradey, May 28, 1981 Investment clubs popular Officials claim am:ateurs can make big gains Stock market genie? By .IOllN CUNNIFF Al ............ NEW YORK -Durtnc lt.a •1-year history, members of Detroit'• Mutual Investment Club have boutbt $137,039 worth ol 1tock1, wltbdrawn ~7 ,6'.1 for other uses and now have a mUUon dollar portloUo. aalns. M la the cuatom, members allowed thel wives to plck a stock at the annual meet1n1. 1 1974 they chose Amcord. The purchase price, aai O'Hara, a member. was $2.875 Forecaster Granville tells how his stats feed Wall Street bulls, bears The belt ia to come, aald Georae A. Nkbollon Jr., mu.ally credited wlt.b beln1 t.be father of t.be investment club movement. Nlcbohon , a member, estima* that by 1988 the club may be worth $2.3 million. In 1979 Amcord shares were repurchased from shareholders at $34. Suddenly finding themselves with about SSC,000, the biggest lump of cash they ever bad the opportunity to invest, they bought among other thinas 1,200 abares of Kennecott By JODI CADENHEAD 0( .. .,...., .......... Provins that when Joseph Granville talks people Usteo, more tban 400 packed a UC ll'\line lecture ball Wednesday night to hear the pln·strtped soothsayer of Wall Street. The Florida-based stock forecaster made history January 7 when he was credited with causin1 the Dow Jones ln- d us trl al Avera1e to drop lM points after be advised the 3,000 subscribers to bis newsletter to sell their stocks. Also, the volume of shares traded that day reached a record high of 93 million. Since Nov. 6, 1974, Granville has predicted 10 drops or to· creases of 100 points in the market and has come within 2.5 percent of the projected swings, he said. How does he do it? That's what a panel of economists beaded by Irvine mathematics profeaaor Edward Thorp wanted to know. "I don't bave mirrors. I have no secrets,'' said the former Merrill Lynch tecbnician, who's been accused of I using every- lhin1 fro.Jll cards to astrology ln making his stock preClictiona. Granville told the audience he bases his predictions on market swings on the volume complex or the number of shares traded; on the advanced decllne line technique, or the amount stocks advance or decline in a given period, and what advice invest· ment counselors are offering stockholders . Since Jan 6 Granville has been strongly advising b1J 1ub- scrlbers to sell all 1tocka. "Sell to most people ia a dirty word," sald Granville. "You'll never bear the word from a broker." Gran ville malntalna that smart stock investors know when to get into the market and when to pull out. Many investors refuse to sell for sentimental reasons or because they're afraid to make a decision, said Granville. His most surprising remarks came when he said the state of the economy and world af. fairs have no effect on the stock market. In support of that theory he said the market shot up when: American hostages were taken in Iran, car sales fell and when the Iran·lraq war started. Dr. Jerome Baesel, assistant professor of finance at UCI, challenged that theory, saying the market was a leading ln· dicator of economic activity. Asked to clarlfy his theory Granville said: "When there's a buy signal adopt a 100 percent bullish attitude. When there's a sell signal regardless of any zig zags, stay bearish 100 percent.'' Where most investors fail, ac· cording to Granville. is when they start looking at economic and social factors instead of the movement in the market. "Learn the language of the market," he stressed. "Un · derstanding the s tock market takes a technical analysis." The last two calls or predic· lions by Granville were carried by the Dow Jones 'News Service, MARKET ANALYST JoaephG~ Pf'Ompting some observers to note that Granville causes changes as much as predicts them. "Now I find that I am one of the indicators," admitted Gran· vllle. "Instead of watching the market I find that I am one ol the pigments in the economic picture." Productivity up WASHINGTON CAP) -U.S. business productivity during the first quarter staged its largest gain in 3~ years, rising at a 4.3 percent annual rate, the govern· ment said in a revised report. The Increase In the measure of economic efficiency was greater than estimated in a preliminary report issued by the Labor Department a month ago. Tbe biggest paper profit in its preeeot portfolio of 42 1tockl la Moor Inc .. up more than Dine times. Trinity lndu1trles baa risen seven times, Core lo· duatries five time1 , Air Products, Avco and Mobil OU four times. Two stockl have tripled, six have doubled. per at $24 a share. Recently a.o offer from Sta dard Oil of Ohio was approved by both boards $62 a share. O'Hara revealed the club's· fi1ures, whic showed a fortfolio value of Sl,039,000 on the mor · Ing of March 31 (helped along by Moog reaching new high) in an effort to encourage people to sp the movement. He contends there's money to be made small investors, and be observes that, somewh under.publicized, "individuals have been maki money in the market for the past five years." Crities sometimes ariue the Detroit 1roup isn't typical of clubs in the 3,900-member National Alaoclatioo of Investment Clubs because 1ome of Its members are profesaiooah. They concede this, but inalst nonetbelesa amateurs can be properly prepared to make big 1alna. During these years, he said, there has been gradual rebuilding or confidence in the marke . "People view stocks as I do -that stocks are o of the few things that have not risen sharply, a~ that if there are bargains anywhere they're to ~ found in stocks." O'Hara detects a growing enthusiasm that feels will lift the number of clubs steadily ov · comin months. Tom O'Hara, chairman of the NAIC boar.cf of trustees, tella the sto of one of the club's biggest Pilo('s H(ll1)ey assumes new responsibilities Mic hael P . Harvey, marketing director for the Daily Pilot, assumes direct responsibility for the ad· vertising functions of the newspaper effective im· mediately, it was announced today by Publisher Thomas P . Haley. Harve y will baY'le .. responsibility for all ad· vertlsing departments, in ad- dition to previous areas of responsibility including: re· search, promotion, art and advertising services. He also provides support to the circulation department in a staff marketing capacity. Reporting directly to Harvey will be the sales managers for classified ad- vertising, retail advertising and the national account ex· ecutive, as well as the marketing services mana~er. "The overall challenge to help make the Pilot one of the nation's best daily com· munity newspapers is an ex· citing one," said Harvey. ''I believe advertising and marketing figure prominent· ly in making the Pilot the kind of paper the community wants." AD FUNCTIONS Michael P. Harvey PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE fllCTITICIUI IUMMaU fllCTITIOUI IUllM•ll fllCTITIOUS IUllNall fllCTITIOUI IUIUllll In the c.~':: ::!,~of IN Slete of fl~~!~!':::' NOT I Ca Ofl PUILIC HEAalNG NS 71114 MAMa ITATllMaNT NAMa ITATIMaMT MAMI STATIMUfT tlAMa STATaMaMT .......... T PwrMWll "" or-Of lfW C:.lllornl• fllCTITIOUS IUSINEU • Tiie tel_.,. --19 delftl bu»-Tiie tel.__ -It ........... bu»-TM tollowlne --la dOl"I ~ti· T ... tell I Celltornl•,lftendlortlwc:-tyofS.n II• loll-lftt P9tWlll er• dol ... Coutel Commlu lon. Sovlll CoHI MMIUSTATEMENT f _., _ ... -.... ~·-· -... neMM. -flt--· ere Ml,.. Frenclaco NOTICE OF SALE OF -l""tM: ..... _I COmmlMloft,"' IE. OcHn Tllf totlowtnQ 119r-.s ere 00 9 MlltAGE INTIElllOltS, UH COASTAL EQUITY, LTD., UJ HUNTINGTON VALLEY Ml~~D/AEltO JOINT VEN· ::LAI~ PROPEltTV AT PltlVATE IHV~;;c::·:.!~'f.:O~ =~T~.~~ llvo., S..ll9Jl07, P.O. Boa 100, Long 1>111Jne11ea: Felrvl•• --· Swll9 L·zt'J, Col!A L•f1111MW A-. eor-Doi Mer, G"OOMIHG. t.S4'C Wer_. A"'"'we, T1u .. 11E,r!_!~l!~t,...t, N-port In the Mell•r of 11,. Ettelt ot Svlh l'5. ~ .. .ell. Callforftle hecll. C:.lllornla, notice ot pvbllc YACHTING COHSULfAN rt llMM,<:alHemia""'. (.ell ..... n.2$ FOllfllelnV•ll..,,Callfornl•t27GI. .. • ....-~-·-· AltTHUll w PMIU.tPS ....... _ ""°· Marl"O ........... 01 ..... S.lo publk )At• VI• ~o. Swll• 1, New DAVID ,.ETE OOWLEY, UM St911 & ~' -"°'--Nano Ann L••••· 1221 Win· THIE STAFl'OltD COMPANY •••• Attllur PNll .... A.W Pllllllpl, -HA"IC>a·PACIFIC MOltTGAGIE "9ar1119 It ""9duled on .... J-I , BHCh,CAntt.l. Felrvi.w ,._, S..lte L·2t2. CMIA Orlv•, 1tollln1 Hill1 Ettel .. , -.~c..l~e.... CAii-• 0-el PMtMr ... 11, SI• A. Plllllltoall>M·o-I. INVESTOM (INCi. l.Ol Oow Strffll, "" Aoonoetorappllotlontor permit, ROBERT 0 . HAGI N, I , MHe c.I............ CalllorM m7' Tlll1-....-s 1a C..-UC"" by .. In-llr<ll Slr••I, N•w11ort leech, NOii<• It llerebw nlvon thet Ille Sult• 1'5, ~ S..cll, C:.lltornle nwmb•r P·11·7"1 H lllbMIU•d by Vlrglnlo Pl.C•,Cosle Mew,CA'1U Tlllt ._...._. ,, ~""by., In-Tlllt ...,al_ It cOIMklct9d by 0 dlvlduol. C:.llNnlloftMO. .__. I ' • ""° So<oth CO.ti C-.y Wator OltlrlO llOIERT GORDON IL.ER, I div-I. llml..-~. -.Cr.Mn~lt AIEllO COU"T A CAUflOltHIA _,...,.._•II Mii et prtvete .... Tll• 111bJ•<I requul It to p.,mll Ennl"QSlMl.e,..,N..,POrtBte<h, A ~,..wo..to-, ._.._.. Thia~•• llletl •1111 Ille OllNEltAL PAltTwa"SHI,. ~·1 111bfect to conllrmellon ot ••Id lt-J. S.-r.1.01 Clow Strffll, Conalrwcllon ot • rKl•lmed waler n..:i Tiii __ _. 11~ ...--..._, _,, .. • ·-"-ti«'-" on or ottor the"" Doy Solllto IU, "-' 19.cll, C:.llloml• Tiii --• I ~~1~ b • _..._.. ·--_,,,, .... Tiii• --... 11 .... •ltll -c-trC .... olOr .... c-tyOl\Moy CAMYON CltlE$T, SAN JUAN otJ-"'' ottlleofflc.of ltOBIUIT ""° treotmflll plent,, pwmplno atetlont, .............. , __ ~ • c-t'l'Clettl af Or.,.. c-ty..,Mey c_,1.,c1ort1o10r.,.. c-tyenMey s, t"1. CAPISTllAHO, CALll'OftNIAt2'7S.. A. a£LLUOMtNI, Swll• )OOO, JOO TM• buMneu 11 b91ng conouc:lod by 21,JOO , ... "'lllPOll,.. end• 1 s m111..,,, -r•l~p '2. 1•1. ,.,..,, n. ,..,, ~._ 0r .... Gout 0•11~1:~~ ~r::..~00':':E';:,,.~v. Monteomorr su..i, s... '••MIKo, a 11m1t9dr>er1Mn111i> ~:!:" c~:.:!"'~.,:.·a:~:'.' = =:.i~~01"· "*Ii-Or-. C-o.lly "llM, -.... ._Or-,._ O:ty"=-· ,...., 1 14. 21 .. 1•1 Jlt04l. ,.UTNE!ttf41P C•lllornle t•I04, Ceunty ot Sell .._,_·P.clll< Mort .... Leg11ne end L.aoune Nlgvel Sela Tlllt 11.a10,,,_1 WH llled with ~-y 1• •1 a, J-• 1"1 191-41 r._ -..... ,._.. -' ' . · FreMllCD, SI• of C:.ll'°"'le, •II Ille ln .. al,. lt!IOott Cownl• Cl9rll ofOr .. -c --1 o -•·• • • IMyU,tl.a.J-4,1"1 mt~I. IY:STRVESTAf'~D. right, tltl• e nd lnt•r•tl 01 J ,5tN1rr,l'Twldlnt Ao•nO• publlc 11u r1ng1 wlll com· • ,.. ·-·Y n PUBLIC NOTICE OIENlltAL ""'"TMlllt u ld(dec .. IOdl, In end lo ell th• TlllJ -w• nted with IN m.nce 81 ll:OO e.m °" J-•. 1"1 •I I. ltll PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE THIS STATEMENT WAS Fl Lao cert•ln !'Ml ..,_ny •h-t• In t11e c-ty Oe<ll o1 Or-.ge eo..nt'f """'°Y :.",":;":' :=:"s~~f,"':~1~':.:'~ Pvblllt...i Or•noe Coall o a ... ·-··--·•To• WITH THE COYNTY CLElttC Ofl C-ty of Or ..... Slot• of C•lllornl•, It.,,,,, B .. <11, c:.tltornl• Ovrl-•111<11 tlm. Piiot, May t•, 21,H ,J-4, 1911 , f'IC11TIOUllUllM!lsa -r• _.,. r OllANGtECIOUNTYONMAY1,1"1. perllculerly dH<rli...t •t tollo••: ,.,._ ·~ ....... ITATaMllMT CAU.,.,.MIA, CIOUMTY OP MUMTa• 6 VOii, t••lt: Publt"'*' Or .... CO.st Dolly Piiot, •II "''°"' •IU..r favoring or ~Ing TM lellNlno ""°"'er• ffl"t "~'!..'..~4!1!STllUMIMMMITU ~• AnOllMaYSATUW AnundM49dON~lllnt.....tln Moy 14,Jl,21,J-•. Hll 22,,...1. 111• •PPllcetlon •111 be l\u ro PUBLIC NOTICE -··A oao•a---.-··-• .... ,_,,AllM:Mf\.ODtUVa, T~ •-~-1 -·&A•r CSE")..,~ THiimony-lie r•l•teo lo II-• ~noM•: Tll• lollowl119 por10n la dolnt , .. _ -......... ~ -,._., -.. -dd Mel by 1"9 C:.11 c 1 PISTOL 111, W N. T,...ln, ~. '"'•lneu •: r•~•°"a•~ ~~'C:ma ••"'" Sou-~•lt IS~l ~, !,sEF::.', ofl•l-ln .~ PUBLIC NOTICE :c1 ·:~ m•. My wr1tt':'~•om:;.:~ fllCTITIOUSIUSINESS (.ellfonlleftWll A.J. INTUPltlSES, JIS1 llrcl\, In u:--...;;7 ... 'A.1CM11on .. ••VIMl,CAUl'O•tHA .,,, ,. o'i Tree'": i'.6.'":'.C~I lowl•v';;:i ----•nc• rogenling 1"9 appllutlon .,.., .. Id NAME STATEMENT PIM~~~·l=~-:i-""nJ! •SJ, "-1 .. ICll, C:.lllornle JOSH ELLIOTT IELL ,_ C:-.. of ,,UILISHIEO O .. A .. Oll COAST Fermi", In IM Cownty of 0,.,. .. , NOTICEOf'T'llUSTll'SSAL.• 119 directed ID 11\11 office prior to the fN lollolng 11«-.• are oolng -Nonw DAILY "tLOT, MAY 14, ti. a , JUNE S!At. of C.alltwnle es 119, m.., -eot LOAN M0.111t11"7 ll•er Int d•I• All lnter .. t•d t n ,..H •• .. tty J . Anllilr'loft, JMO.< ....... Amy Jwlle POlll•mva. 21112 JOSH IU..IOTT alLL _ 11._ e 4 1"1 ~I recor-lnloolllO etPegeslSenclM T.l.Ne.MUt-1 dlwlduelt-wltn_.U_llntorme MONACO JEWE L.RY, 7 • two ~l.c•. S.C. ...,,., Caltforftle t21W WIMclllld Utne, Hwntin.ton heel\, wtlU.. Ill !Ills ~ ,_ .,. WW ... ' of MltceO--recorch ot .. td TRANS.COAST SERVICES, INC. ea lion mo contoct tlllt of lie•. N•wport Boultvaro, Co•la Me a, Tlll1.....,_lt~by.,.lft. C:.llfOrnl•n.. lewl"9.......,WC ...... llltNnw 0 neee-.t · dwly eppotnt9d Truttff vnd•r Ill• P11bllU!edOre19 CMSIO.llyPllOI. C:.ltlornlet:lt77 div~. r-1e.·~~ Tlll•IM ..... ll<-.ciecll>Yll'l ln· ,,_JC>SH•U.IOTTIELL .. Jos.t PUBLIC NOTICE r:u.pu-y•n4 , ... , tng to .... toH-lngdes<rlbodlMOllOftruttWILL Moy21,21,1',1'11 107~1 011.,,,.., 1$1\ek ~22 L• Mir • ---· dlwl"'•'· RLLton--·~~~-. .... v SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO THE -A••nu•, • 1 Los •-1H , c:.111or •• Thi•~ WM 11 .... •Ill\ IM .JulloPDl"9mus ...... .....,~-ell --UnltedSIMetof~lco.ollllf'llll""'· HIGHEST BIOOER FOR CASH tOOJI c-tya.t1lofOr.,..c-.,.,.Mey Thia ---•• 111• •1111 ti. 1 ...... ,.. ... "' ... -~ ..__1411 _ MOTIUOl'TaUITll'SSALI ~~_:luml_!~ !}_I otll1•1' ,m•l~l•l•lll 1 ... uble •I llm. ot .. 1. In l•wlul PUBLIC NOTICE Krlkor l(echtchlen, 5460 SI• re 12• "'' COi.iniy c ...... Or .... CAlllnly ""Moy ;:;, ....._ Ulh ;;:;"'in -... .::;. Ts ,.. 19'91 --•m ·---P9CU ... , y ~·-· moMy ol ,,,. Unllod Sl•lHI •II rltfll. Viti.. •301, Lo. ... _ .... Calllor a ,,,.., ' 1,.1 -·-• ..._ • • • to the production of lu on•••• tttl• •nd lnlerflt conwyed to ond now fllCTITIOUSIUSIMISS tOO• "'*41 ... Orlfttlt Coett Dolly f'ti.t, • . ..... ~ .... J •• ,. Chic ~ Drlw ..... NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, 11\el m•l••lol, conte ln•d In WhHH•r ... Id by II ..... wld Oeecl ol Trusl In MAMa ITATEMaNT Thi• butlnew h ,_,..,by.., _, 14, Jl ••• J-4, ,,,, m2~1. SMI• ""'c:.llNnll•, en J-24, '"'· Ofl W•-Y. J-11. ,,., •• t :OO conc•nt...ilctft In ltepoalls In aeld lend the -1 I f lbod lncorpOratlcl I 'p·~·1·-Or-r-11 "-'1w Pl~, •t It:» &.11'1., Md.,_, Miii hro .,._ o'clock e.lft of takl 0.., In ti-loi*'f ot er• rel0""9CI tor 1119 wlO of lhe Unltod Pf y "9re ne l#r d91<r . Tiie lot-Ing _ _.. ••• dolno I aU« •tlon C1her tho # 7"'-::' -,. ......... ,",:;; c-·"...,.., ..... ,....,Wlld119tl· Ill• olllc~. of 1t•AL ESTATE Sl9tH rwlll\INr tot Ille TRUSTOR:HARRYN.81tOOMAL.L blltlnfltes: partMr"'p PUBLIC NOTICE May • ••. •1·•· 1 · tloft tw ctlen9t ot -.-.ci not.,. SECURITIES SERVICI!, loceted •t Unit.ii =:9 ""°""' lb 'o::111or1r9d •lld IDA"'-BROOMAL.L, lluJobend-BARELY LEGAL FUN ANO Olle,...at ero111•. 2020 North lrooctwer Sulto 206 In Ille ..-nu or _IMI ....• : eny tllM wit•. SUNWEA ... JOO! Redl\111, Bid!! •.Sult• This llelom9nt ••J llllcl wllll It Is lllr1ls _,. ._. o4 City of s.nte Ane ~y 414 c),...,. I I kl I IE NE F IC I A II Y. ALLSTATE 109 Cotle Mowi CA fl~ CO..nly C._ of Or-.ge C:O-ty on fllCTanous 1us1Mau PUBLIC NOTICE .,.., .,._"...., _ • -~ se..w Of c.1i1wn1~ GEORGETOWN 1• •n ~ ""°" ': ano:t ~11 ...-« SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION. • PAM£ L. A EL 1zA1 ETH '· ""· T1Mto1=':!!~: .... ~... lllTHEOAILY,,ILOT,aM-•perof lllECO .. VEYANCE COMPANY, e ~~ic1::'gi~a~o~=~lon•to~•i;:; •C.lltomlocorporetlon. l'ELTMAN, 1130 G•luy Orio, Pu fill CIUS IUllN•U 98Mr•I <Ire--., PlllllllllM 111 tllls Cellfornle corporetlon .. duly d m990 or lnj occulon94 _...., Recorded J..,. U, 197' •• ln1tr. No N••lllOf11Mch,CA'1"°. Me bllolled 0r8'>99 Coesl Oally Pl MM ~~:YMPIC PAINTING, 7U ... "'~ STATIMllMT ,_tJ et ..... -• --.., ,_ ...... n .. Tt'VSloo -• ...d pU<Wan1 ..:.. tudl ~ 118 led, .nci 21•17 In boall m• PG9A ~of Offkl•I l(AfWV OUPONT,eUOTuteeny, ., 1, ••• 21, 21, .... HI Mawltoln v-. SMI• Ma, C:.lll«ftle The f:ll-lng P••ton 11 doing ,_,,.... _.. ..,,... •-wy Of to Ille -of wle conforred In Ill« eny ,~~ atlttrwtlO":'Q<ll,:C, by 11111 RKords In IN of'.'ce of the Reurdw •110,P&.v•Del"•y,CA. ----- .,10) MN~ urt•ln Doocl ot Trw1t uec11t9d by dlllCIOtlllon nwy.,. H9'CIMd es It no of Or•nee County. lelo dMcl of '""' Thia -. It conduOtd by • PUBLIC NOTICE HAE SAHO LYU, 711 N. llMolntolll wcf;:.~M~EltVICES, tJl So. Har~r. DotiNMlly It, 1•1 ERVIN G. JUSTIN. •n wnm•rrl•d r ... rvetlonoftuqflmot•rlelahectbeen detcrlbftl"91oll-l"OPfGPOrlJ: .. norel,.,,.,.,...,lp vi-. s-. ...,,., C:.lltornl• t1'11. Seftl• Ano, CA 92704. ..... M ...,_ man, end rtotordtld May 12. 1t•o. In m-.. r~by IN Unllod stelH ThoM "'1lon1 of L..ot lot Trect IOn, P....io E. F•I~ ---- Thia l>o*MM It C.onclucliHI by .. In· AU CWOy Munding. m So. Herper, .-.·.... '°'* 1*4 of Ottklol ltec-1 of Ul<I ot Am•rlco In d .. d r•cord•tl In llW City ol ~ ke<ll, C-ty Thi. • .....,_, Wff llled wltfl the AMl-.>U tlf¥1<9uAI. SarltoAM,CAt2104. ......C:-. Cewnly, et ...-1194, ltKorffr'• s.,,t....W:M, 'tM, In llooll lt06, p ... of Or•-· S!At• of C:.lllornle, ea 119' C:-1'( CIOl1laf Or .... C-yonMe'( T.S, NO. I .. H• S-. L'rll Tiiis -'~ It t-.CIOCI by .., OOUGUISC. UECHTY, ln1tru-No. 121144, by reeton of • JU, of Olllclel R.cordt; mor• mep lllH In '-II JJ.1, .,_.., I -t IJ, "'' NOTICE Ofl T•USTEES' SALt: Thia ttei-t •M tll9d •1111 t"9 lncllv1411el. Ailtorney.C '--br•l<h or deleult In P•Ym•nt or commonly known H . Unlmprovod lnclvalw of Mlteello-~PS, In "1U'llS On J-S. 1'111 al II 00 a m Fl T c-tyCl9'tlol0r .... c.ountyonMoy Aot8C.Mvndlng SION""'°"c:..MerOr.,Ste.'20 P9rtorm•n<• of th• obllgellona ,.. ...... -'YotcomarOfG,.....Sll"Ml 1119 ofllca of the County Recorder Of Pwbllthed 0r .... co .. 1 Delly AMERICAN TITLE INSURA E 6,1'11 Tiii• ~ •• tllect wllll tlle Newpot11Md1,C..fJIMO wcurt<llllereOy,lncludlngttwlurlalft and Lo1Potot11 ... n.,. Huntl""on .. ldCIMl!lty,delerlbodeatol~: Pllot.MoyU,21.n ,J-•,1•12'2U41 COMPANY •• Trutlff, or Succ l' .. 1.U Cownty C*" ol Or-C-TY eft llMY (JM)...... b< .. cll or *IOlllt, Hotlca of Wlllch wet IM<ll Olllfornla p,_;..., f& tokl "et PARCEL. I Unit Ho . .at es shown Trust .. flf S..C.lltut9d Tru""· ot I PwbU-Oreneo CO.ii Dolly Piiot, It, '"' P\ltlll.,.. Or-. CMet O.lly f'llOt, r•cord9d Jenwary n 1911 In 8ooll 11 .. • • end 0.1<rl-In llW CondOmlnlum PUBLIC NOTICE c•rt•ln o..d of Trull ••Kul9d t>y Mo 1 ,. JI 21, "" "*'' Pt61174 Mey t•, 11 ... J-•. ,., 1211-41. uno of Ottlclal Rec.ordl Of H id 't.rma of .... Cesll In I-I_., Plen rocormd AUQlltl 12, 197S, In book FRANI( J MARSHALL, " Y ' ' ' PubllllledOr.,...CoeatDellyPllot, Cownty, •IP ... ISU, Rocortler•t OftheUnllod~anconfl~lonof 11411• P•oe• IJtJ.U1'. lnclwll\•• ----------Unmerri.G Men, and SUSA.N o PUBLIC NOTICE M•YJl.2t,J-•.t1,1,.1 1l1MI PUBLIC NOTICE lll•trv-No )4016,WILLSELLAT u l• or P•rt <Hll e nd belenu Otfklellt~oftoidCounty. fllCT1T10USIUSIMaM n.-ATHCARN An u nemer eo PUILICAUCTIOH TO THE HIGHEST evld.•nud by noh ucwreo b't' PA.-CEL. J: An undlwld•d on• MAMa ITA'l'IMaMT wom•n. •J JOINT Tt:N"N ''· noJ llDDElt FOlt CASH, lowt\11 l'll«WY of Morlt•t• or Truat Dud on tit• llfty•lghlh <1t•1t1> lnlerott at l9n•nl TIM loflowlno --It,...,,. buol ruorclff 0Kemb9r n . lt7t H l'ICTITIOUllUllMall PUBLIC NOTICE 0""'caO,,TM• -Unlt9dSU181,•llPGYOlll••llhatlnw prop.,ty to told. Ten poro111 ot lncom,,_lnthelHlnt•r•allnendto NUH' lnslt11m«11 no 141SI, In -I 51. MAMa ITATaMIMT Mta•l,,l"-COtlC*I• Of tal•, all rltM. lllle end Int•,...! now -· bid to bO *llOlltecl wltll 1114. ll\9 c-Aree of .. Id Lot f"'d tCOSH INTE .. NATIONAL, 151 poo-110), of Offlclel R.conh of The toti.wl -tlO COUflfTY OP OttAllOa holtl by It. et Tnn•. In encl lo tflet Soller ,...,... rltM to rofO(t eny or Trect es tueh twm It ctotlnad In IN MeM V-Orlw Eost, !wit• J11l, Or•nee County, Celltornle, nd llullneM a : nt .... -.s er e lftt fllCTITIOUS IUSIMaU llOTIQ CH' SAL.a UMM• rH I -rty llffwto '" Mid ~y ell bid' Artkl• 9"1lll0d "Dotlftllloftt" ot Ille C0tto Mew, C:.llleml• t»». purtw•nt to that certe1n Mollo Of THIE P\ASTElt FACT'OltY, t171t MAMa STATaMllMT oac•acwP'CNlaCL.OaUltl end S..W, dftcr1bed H fol-.: Lota Ilda;,.. o11Wt to 119 In wrltlno end O.clerallon of Co"°"enll, COftCllllOn$ T.C. ICOCHUl(~Y. tW M9 0.faull -Electlon 10 11 ai Toro "-· •i Toro. C.lllornl• Th• rollowln• P•rHn la do Int PLAINTIFF: OOVl!lt SHOltES t50 end HI of Trild No. t07, In tha CllY wlll lie r«el...O Ill lh9etol"eMld otfk• end RtttrktloM recontod .,, AUOll•I V9t'd9 Ortw Eoet. Sulw JJE. tharew-roe...-Ffllruery •. 1 ..,.. IMlllMNU: COMMUNITY ASSOCIATION, •I<., Ot N••PD" 9Mdl. c-ty of or...-••• any tlrrw Of'8f ... 1"1t Pllblkotlon 14• ""· '" booll ll4'4. P09• *· .... Olllfomlet»». •• IM"""-l no 1214. In --I Ll ... JMnGll'Nrd, t41t ~•tr-D'S Kl°', CA cata MoM St, COllA Vl. OEl"ENDAH~: ltOIEltT FltAHIC ll ... of Clllllomle, u -.ion e Map IWroot ---.41eto0f ,... Otll<l•I --of tald County llM Thia.....,,._ 11 conduclOCI by., 1,,. pave Ml. of Otllclel Rocorot Of Clrcl•, Hwotl .... 9Mch. c:.llfw •• Mota. CA~. NOVAK, NI. Ho.~ rK••-In --........ u to ,. Oelod thlt ltlfl deY of Me1."1t11. "0.Cl•r.Clon"). dlvldvel. Gownty, Wiii ..... -purtUOft n.-Ole,.. L. Fortlle't', 424 CO.IA Mete I, the unf9ralll\H, lr9d OelH, tnclutlve ot Mlaullentowa Me111, it08E"T A. BELLUOMINI, PA .. CEL l : Non·•xclwtlv• T.C.tC.c_..,,., Mid a.a of Trvst Hll al It "· Jlfln Ollhlnl, t411 ~atrw Cir· st .. Cotta Mowi, CA nt17. Sl\orlff·Cer-r, C-ty ot Ot..,.., recordl Ill Orflltlt '-'IY, C:.lltofftl•. AttorMy • Lew , aoo -lleotnOfY .... mflltl '°' ecc•u, '""-· .., ... , Tiii• a:W-' •• meet •1., euctlon to< cHll, lewtul rno,..y of ,.,. ''°• H-l·eft leeCfl, C.1Uer11le Thi• llwllMM It <-.Clod by en Sl9te of Olllfonllo, d9 ......., <.ntf'r l ... -•ttll "'9 ~y 11 IMt Strut, 5'1ll• 1000, Sen flr•n<llU, encroe<lw'rwlt. -1 -tor of Mr c ... nty CIHlll o1 Or-c-lly ti! AM Unlled StollH of Atnerlc•, et lh9 Wlel~ _.. llldlvldwol, 1191 ll'y .,...,...,. O.Crwet Fwec._,,. of INI ~of Vie 0-Mjolnlft9 Colltornle .. 104 141Sl tH·Olt1 for --·•II """" ••-b or• If, l•I. •ntrano lo Fl"t Anwr1cen 'rlllf I Tiiie M!Mtt la conoN<t• 11y e Dl-L. ~ elld kl• 111 IM S.-tw c:-1 of.,_ told lend Oft IN ~Io~ VIOLA ~1LLll'$ E•oc<ltrla of Ille ,,_,,,..,tor "'8 bOnlllll of or Ol'.,lect "16911 ln1ur•nt9 Comf)eny, louted f "• ,__ .. ll*lll9rtlllp, Thlt .._..,,_. wei fltod wltll ti. Ceunty et Or .... , MM• tll Calltwflle, bT lto ... utloftot l"9 City C-.Cll ot Ille Hleto of Al'l""' w. Pftllllllf, ellet, to Owners In Ill• Artie I• ot Ille Pwbll-Or ..... Coosl Delly Pl EHi FlfWI St'"t. In tlw City of nta UMe .-Olftvd c-tY Ciotti"' Or .... C-'Y Oft Me't' .,..., ... ell ,.._,, "· ,.,, -,.. c • ., .. ...._.,.. INCll, • c•'11fled Clo<Htod. 0.C.l•r•tlon entlllod "E•--••" Mey u 21 a. J-. ,.., 2217-41 Ano, CelltornMI, •II '""' r'911t, ti ""° \ Tllh ... .-it -ftl .. WIUI -It. ,..,, ,..,... ..__..., "· ,., "' Ille ...... C ... Y of Wllkll lte.tutloft w• ,_..., Pv911.,,. Or ... CO.II o.lly Piiot. s1 .... 1 .-....: '" .. Y•* Cow • • • lntlfftt ,., .... '"to --"9lcl Cly It c-t't' ci.n"' 0r.,.. C-y"' Mey ,,,... efttlu.1 edlllft, .....,..,. 00-IMt9t J-10, ltSa, In 8-""· .,... Ml of Moy Jt n, a. 1•1 ll11~1. W.lt • 4 Newport hecll, Call!Onllo, under wld Doocl of Truat In lfW s, 1•1. Pwbll.,_ Or.,. C-Dolly Pli.t, C-tnvftltt AMci.tten, a Co1'""'4e Offlcl•l ltacerw, · ' TM bOnoflcl«y undo• H ltl 'Dood of PUBLIC NOTICE pr-nv sltwated In u ld c:-ty•end flt'1M4 Mey JI,». J.,... •.II. 1"1 JJJO.et non.pr•lll CffllOr•llOfl, 1.,. •MY• Tiie lllr-4 ....,_ 04' oti.r eotnmo11 PUBLIC NOTICE TrVll, lt'I' ,_Of• brwecll ff tHfoull Sleto -rtem et: · PIHMI.,.. Cir .... C:-t Dolly ~lot. MlftM ,._nUff(tl, ~ • 1-.. dol1n•t1on, II anr, el Ill• tUI In Ille Mll .. tlon1 M<urH ttwr .. y. Lot • Of Trild He t'91,., J.o- ... _ 1 14 t1 •L 1"1 2 M --'" -._,_. ff/ ""9C:IMllA -11r9"ttY ... ,. ........ d91<rCIM4 It twrot.,.,._ •xe<-.llftd dell,,,., .. ID llOTICa °"~TO tft e me11 rocoNect In Book N , ...... -:-•' ' ' 1 41' PUBUC NOTICE .... ....,.......,.,.,....,....,Mlonlll pwr"11e4 t• llo: t» VI• OOftoo, llO'hCatltVITl ... llM .... ..,.,.......,...1...,,0.CleNlloll MletfllTllOOa• lhlMl14ofMl_ll_M..,.lnti. J-M. ....,.. ......,..(•), t.; Ult If-port Medi, C:.lllonlle, Notlu la Mrelty 9lven tll•I 1"9 of O.IHll -Domelld ,., Salo, encl Notice It..,...., ti_. lllOt bldl wlll cou11ty Recorde<'t Offk• of uld PUBUC NOTICE "'"' ot OM ......... -1111Mr9d Tiie .. ..., ,.., tlltclelma ..,., ..,. hard ot Tr11tt .. 1 ot lh• Ctnt wrlltan llCICk• °' llf~ of •le<11on lie reol"'9d for .... ".,. flltlll9d 0r.,... c-ity, Co!llornlo. • ,,,rnTIOUI IWSlllHI .... ., ..... ,.,,,. ~ '-flt( •II "*""' .... .,,. lll<er1'9C'"8IO " C....,mulllty c;.lleft Olllrltt of 0r-.. to CAlllM "" ..... "'-"" ...... Mid ••<•> ., ....,.. VOlll(ilOa Oii<-IO.... bcOllllno lllOrefram •II Oii, ell !IAM4r STATl.MllMT _,, ef H U.... ....... Md 11r taltl ,,,_ ........ °" ~ ,_ C-ty, c:.llfWIH, wtll reQ!w ...... ,,.,....,, le _.,., Mid •O .. tlOM. -ot .. Hul!t~ IHcll Union '1flttl, mtft9'el rlthts, ...twrtl oaa, Pta"inout 9""••• ,.,. , .. .._lfla ,..._ on .. ,,.. w1rt .. el• .it et...,.._,. lfl Mid .. tltMtloft. llMlt .._" 111• •·"'·· IMl>Uy, J-•· olld t~ 1111-rMtnotl ~ Hltflk-Olatrkt. neturol -''"'" end ~tlle• ~ fTATa...,.T ...,,.... a : KtlOft 1-.. "' ,...,_., fl. "''· I S1ld ael• •Ill bo m-•lfhe11t t•I M ,,. Pwc"-lne ~"'*" of ultl notk• ti br-11 end ot •~(loft to 114 term NO. ...S wltlt ..-:1t1Got""' llydf'oce,_. 11'1' ..twot-r neme , ............. --It •l1141 .... 11. MaltllA ""Clf'IC llLtCKltl•M. •m c--• ............ ""'"'1Y COV•lleftl ., ••m111ty, UIH'fft ., to1411 col .... dlterkt IOcMM .. IJ10 IM "Cl(Of'd9oll ....... .,y "· Itel ...... lftdl< .... Oll.OCI tow!IOft"' 1 ...... llnown tNt may 118 within or ..,.., ...... : IJMI ~WM, •A, Hlllltl ...... Ill the C-ty .. Ot ...... ,,.. ... ·~led, .......... tlt~l ~ ... ,,. ... ,,.. Aull .... Cute ..... IMU ..... 1..a41n ...... ,,... ....... , l'll•Y ........... ,,_ tllo Dlstrkl Mid 1-. wttllout. --· ... ~ .... SOUTH SHOlta D•SION, *toe IMcll.~19.... Col...,._~ ........ , -llflltlt-WMt1MTU.IWIM'"4 Coll~ .. wNdltllM.altlMdt ... 111 efta14110ffki.tltKOt8. P11rc1Ualn9 Doert,,.ot, IUSI wdrllleruwtlloM1KoOrlllo'"'9r Tttf\ c..e. .... Clll""11M...... J-K. ,..,....,, ~ .._., l.et "' .. TNdrGM .. ,., "'-"'°"'° ............ ..., ....... loft IM 1t111Hlcly _..... Md rt9d ,., : 5eld .... wlll --· """ wl1M;il v .... .._ ,,._, Hllfttl ....... hKll, JOO '"' "' told ............. ,.. In LIESLll MA"ILYN l'ltlOOlt, Wll ...... Clllltwlll•tCU 1'9CW .. lll ... 1J1, ...... 1 .. 14,fll. -urtf 11y t.tld OtH ff/ Trwt. •ltll PUllCHASa Ofl LOW PltlUU"I tonna"t or ••rre11ty, uiwe11 Of' CA--.MylMl'llrMy•I-........... 1,...,, 1-'0I Hofftot.. a llltllted :IWTaftW9y,Ola ........ Clll......... lrl .. Crowtw•. 1m 0.,, .... <hnlwe, •I MltCtll•"""· •• , •• llllMffl. ~ lfl ............. SOOtUMfllXTUltlSAND~ lrnptlttl,,....,.....1111•,pot-..MI\. .. , ... 1 ......... II,. --.. pert,.,.,.,._..., o.c...._ u, .... A-.............. BMell. Cellfonllo l'tCWWofOl'wllltCilolM•,Ctll........_ o!Mr .-i....-; phtt ..... _ .. ,it All ........... llloe<~•ltlt -.. --•• 18 poy IN,_........ llOf'IMtllldk.MlldoOW.._tL lf71Mleellt"'1,P099 t..,ot~1<lel Tttla ....,_Is~""• llt> ,...., ,,, ... rt, 11 rMro eom~!ll't' My, 1111111r ._..,.,,.et..., o...., tll• lltl l'erM 1111trwct1"11 •114 pr111<i_. 111(11 ffl h --"'" .-, l ltla tlloll M <IHrly 111erllo• "t<6nh. .,,,.._., ~. L. U•una, 1'111 Cel'lllwle •-•1 * M9rlllnt SQr ~. Trwtt •M fnteuu .,. '"" tuell c.i.tt'-Md 9-KNIC«'-wflkll M1411 OM et T,,,._ wlttl ~•" M "OMol• .,,.Ill Velll<tea lid No. Tiie ,.,._ ..,_ Of' ·•IJIH l.ftllo ~ Cltt .. , 0.... eel~.... ..._,.,. 9-dl, c.I.......... ..,,_, ... 1118 ,_., t ........... we -9'1fileMdnwy .. --·111 Mid llW pr~, ..i-c ... H ......... , ....._. 16 All'fll a . __ ...,, t otnmOf\ ....... loft of .. Id tw-rtv Tlllt .._,..,. -flled wtltli tM ,.,_.l(,,.,_W T ... tllOr wltll •II 11,.nltr tl\o ·~ .... T~ aM If tM ttll ... la ff/ .. ~ ...... ff/ llMW ... lillmlltl wilf 0.etTrwt, Pwrelletlllt MltN .. ~vtlllttetOfl l•~toM: 1 PrlllC.Clll, l"'lno, ~a.ti .. Or .... Clwlty • ...., Tiiis ----,.... ... .. t _ _.., .. , ... ,_,...,.. Mii .,. ""* CltllATaD IY $410 Hao~ ..... cetlelltdllltttet. ·-· ,..,. ... 9'"' ·~ .. tM lo.ell """"' Hllll Olltrltt, Coll'6tftlo I s. ""· c-t• c.11 ti OrMta CINlly ot1 Mrf ~-....................... lfl T•UIT. TH• TOTAL AMOUNT cw .... ~ -,__.. ..... Illa T"'""9 .... ., .. .,,,... ~ ., 111UI v ........ A-. H_,.... Dlrocti-to ,,,. ........... rt., ,,,., .. t. net. ~ ......... ~~.. IAID O~ATION INCLUDING W o t__.t ~cwtlftM U.11. Mltl 0... Clf Tn.M. lolcl Mio wMI llo lloKll, CA .... Md ,_IWll et .. m•y lie..,...,,... 11y rtqllfftlftt~ ~I--o-... c..t Dllll'f ,_..., '*.. Ul&.IC NOTlCI ,, H•"••v IP••NCI ACIC"uio INT•itltT ... ....,........ """ ........ llOltl "' ,.,.,....,, J-n , ,., •I _,_ J:•p.111., ,,,..,,,J_ IJ, ,.,. Ill ••"'"''"""' ... ""'91ktoty ......... _,,, ,.,11.a ,., ,.,..... "'91,_, °""la ee. o.1.., "'leC. 1111'1111• ''*'· ,_ 11. '"'· OTH•" NTSTMaM CM.II ANO..,..., If IMCllMt C..-.nltv ~ n:••·"" .... 9"1U .. T.o. ~ 11 wMctt.., • ,._ ... wtll • "...,. ._ .. f1'lt _..l<•Uen .. MltT 1, M,.11, .. "'1 nMt. et .. ; ...... •·"" ..... .., .. lllAIWIM Y' atTfMATllD ilea~ Olllrltl ....,_ ot Ttt1tl .. I la 011 ~ ...... ~· T....,, ,_kll'_.., .... ,.... W• eet.ICI. --~ ~ NOTJC• *"' "*"· C-'W ... ,.. CMt C ... ltO .. ANO Ell~llllUM '"• ._.Ml ...... nw '8f'Ufl llW.1 W• Hit, OM City ......_.. ..... All ...... .,~ ... _..... .................... -"-.. "'~ ... _,.UC NOTICE c.iwDl'M...,CltYdf'.._AMI. TfltUITll, AT' TH• T•M• Of' oftM-•••11*..,....,.. ... Ot'.,...,Cllt...,,.... , ._,......,tty.,._~~•_....,.., .. ..,.... .. .-vD f wltt wll .. .._ --~ ....,_ l•ITIAL. l"UILICATION Oft THll ...._, wlll ......, llM tlllt .......... Al h""" If IN lllltllll MtkMllll fJl. ""'41M, a te ""'· .......... et ""'"........... ty.~-M1t-..,_, ... NOTICl.IS-...,,1. c..MrKl If .. -.. .-.... .. eftllf•..-C., ..... .,,.... .. ~ ~rMlllttafllll ... 111...-wc-.. ,.,_ • .....,,. ........ ... ......... ,......., lltenW .... I 18 llillCtl..,., • IMf .. .._.., • 0ATIOMA.Yl41111t 1111'11. 111 .. ..,_ M _..,.. te...., 11tlltltltl Mf•Me .. 1118 •111 ... t-__ _,. ................. ...._ .. • -,_. • ._.. .,,_ ......... ..,_ .. ._....._ llMISITAW ....,. _, ..,,..._. Wllll ......._ 0 I 0 • 0 a T 0 WM ""'Mllc.Mrect .. ~--.cwM11r .. -.W-.rtMtf9M6' ... ,,..,.... ..... ,_..., __...,_..o.t4"f~ -... "'-............................. c-... ........... ~.,... •tcet1vaYAHC.ICOMl'MY. ~--............ lfttllllU. ,,,. ............... (..... ........ ld9'Wllttr•---•"19•.-Y. • ., ............. .......... TMa -C _..., lt1tA ~· -•: <• lit '-'Ill _., .... ~ A (A&,lllOf'NIAC:OtU•OttATICMlt, at•......,, .. 11111 ........ wlH lie •11d •-n~•• It '"~1~U.H . Te u.l't. o..-..a........ 11t .... .., 14-4, HlllOtl_."' e.Mll, ~ "CHOllPfTALMIWt~ l4MR. .AITa"'"' 11re•ao1 ........ liliL. JittWM,_ .. .,... _, ""'Mrf TIIO ..... ~ .. rilli!w 1'-fll .. 1111t19111•c-.. !If tNa Cli .... W& Im a •M ........... ttt, ...... 0....•._.Mt.. ~..., a Y I a a AL. a IT AT I ................ 1111 IN,_ ~I IPl41..... .... ..... er• -1•.• i.. Netlaef .... 1...,.._ "'°"" ... "'lat ftlMa. trttA ... ~.... a,t"1. H(U"ITIU ......... ~ -...... , O.:=:" "' •• ,a I .............. DAfSO ..,,'111. Nu p ........ lk!S 11 1..... ,...,. ,_UWY,........... ~~ IHVICl.ACAL!l'O•NIA ;c"!_. Tl 0 2,4-.... TitA ._1 _,.8£Y~l1K. t• ....... I" IT-.... ~ ..... ,. • ..,._ ,~~~ TIT\.a ~... .....am-.~-· ·-~CA ~=TIOM.ITIMallfT ...... ........ ..... • •II· _,., .... 11... ,..__ ...... Nin'. ,.... __ .. _.,_,._. TMl ....... ll~llr•• .., 'DI" O.J..... -~_. .. .._ ~T.~...... --·--~-----·~-Ml •a:.' ....... ...._.., r ... ...... (IUU 0..1 ...... ITS et la ..... ... •r --. • • fl_, ---" I ..... tMy.. Al T1tlllTll ) _,_,......... ,,_ _ __, ~ "RDDINT ,....,_..,..111 •Y et 111 tM ~..... ••"'*-"-_If,......... .._ ......... . TJl6t __... .. " ...... 1M T'llll ...._. -................. t.elDI AW "'-TH aWOWAY, IUllW ....... _.... .._.......,.. Mfac ,,.,_ • p SJ ... ...... C11111tY01rt11t0r .... Q!lllly .. Mil'Y c-e., awe• Or..., a.tr•_ .. .._._, A. ..... -•·•nott o.aiw....,..., 0-..111•'"·"" , .. ._,....._ ..... , ,_llU,"'1 ..... IAWTAMl&A.CA... ~ ...... n....._ ..._.CA... ..,_L..._, .... MCA_,.. .....,.. · w ._ .... CA... Tl&.:11MJ_... c;..iccs ·--·~-1tt ""'....._ ,_.,, 14~ cne-..n1 .......... ~ C.-Diiiy ....._ .,......... ...,... 0... o.,.... ,...._.0.-C'llllll ~...... ,,_ ... Or.., C.... 01i11Y...... ........... ...... Clllli ~..... ..... ..... O_ C.-De41Y !PU«. ....... Or .. Qllll ~...... ........ Or-. 0.... ~ l'ltet ..,,,,.,n,a,.• ntwt ...,, .. tt, .... 4,1W'I DINt lleyU.tJ.•fl'9f ftlH• ...,.,, .. ,_.._,., mM1 ...,.,,...... -.., ..., .. , .. .._4,,t• m.MI. ~4,191 ~ ..,'4,lt,..... -..i . --------~ -~~---~----·---------------------------------------... --.......... ._ \ Orange Coatt DAILY PILOT {T'hurajay, May 28, 1981 Computers open field Conference to feature variety of job opportunities. By llA&Y .JANE 8CUCEILO .... ..., ....... Hip salaries and job opportunities have en· coura1ed women to move into the computer in· dustry bit by bit and byte by byte. "The field bu 1row11 aloq with tbe women's movement," says Marilyn Thoma, who 1ooa will step down after a year as president of the Oranie County Chapter of the Intematlooal Aaaoclatloo for Personnel Women. She ls a personnel consultant and currenUy works at Pacific Mutual ln Newport Beach. She talked about women'• job opportunities alon1 with Cathy Null, a mana1ement recruiter with the company and president-elect of the Personnel Women ,roup. "Women are findln1 hip aalariea iD fields not traditionally 'femiDlne' aucb u enitneerinl and accounting, plus the larte area lnvolvinl com· puters," Mrs. Null said. Mrs. Thoma a1reed, addJ.ns, "Computers In· creaainaly are the buis for aeeminllY unrelated jobs. Even clerks in a department store uae a computer to nng up sales. "And word procesaln1, really a 1rowin1 field, requires some knowledge ot computers. Trained word processors can earn up to $400 a month more than ID06t secretaries.'' -EXECUTIVE SUITES JADE MANAGEMENT 881 Dover Dr., Suite 14 NEWPORT BEACH 714 -631-3651 ARST TIME tllME BUYERS SPONSORSHIP PROGRAM First Time Home Buyers Sponsors e An opportunity to get 1 start at the security of home ownership HOWi e The satisfaction of helpmg others to help themse"'9s. • HALf the down 1..-:S HALf the mthly pymts • Lucrative financial and tax benefits. Call Marti Jones at 631-0778 for Alff IROCHURE 1670 S.... A• An~ S .... I , C.• Mete. CA. '2627 ·$50,000 to $500,000 0 INCOME PROPERTY SECONDS • Inter••• ofttv PAV-nl ··--• Coaaerc&.I • Reet4ent&al • w-Uy co_.._,. •Nontt.lv ....... • •,_ ... to 3 yean • 9oetlaent Caltf--V l •1ntttl t ••ur loan lnfo~tlon ••rvke f1tt vuur f1ndnc1n~ nt'.'t'd~ (714) 759-1515 AlftlUCAN HOME llllOATQAQE I :130 Newpor1 Centar Or1ve , Oes•gn Ptau1 Newpart Beach I Cahforn1a 92660 COURTEOUS, PROFESSIONAL, TRAINED ••• Dncrtba TAB Opaetonand Sftvlcc. CONFIDENCE Dncrtbn O ur Cuatomen' Fttltnge About TAB. TAB OPERATORS Will . Take Messages • Tak• Orders • Quot• Pncn • Ret.y Calls • Make Ap.pointment1 • T•le~· · and Facsimile Service • Beepers for all Southem California • Wake·up J-rvlc•. Rota and Savlce to At Y~ur·Ntt:da 114-s~1-1m ~ IXT.711 -..ab TELEPHONE ANSWERING BUREAU ReJedinl the ld.. that everyooe COIUMCted with a computer mu.t be a math wbb, Mn . Tbom.t 1ald, "Lollc and problem-aolviDI are more Important. J>roc:ram• have been deveJC)ped iD all areu and the.re'• abo a need for tomeone wbo can me computer data. We have a computer in the department here, and learnlnc to uae it ls like learn1q to u.e a typewriter." Mn. Thoma, not a computer expert, bu been inveauiattng the subject more tbOf'outhly becau.e she will moderate a panel dlacuuloo OD ''The Computer Revolution -a World of Opportunities'' Saturday at the Women'• Employment Options Conference at the Anaheim Ccnvenlion Center. The conference Is open to all women and ad· mission ls $12 In advance or $15 at tbe door, with more information available by callin1 (213) 273-6633 or (213) 938-3781. More than 30 seminars will be elven and 100 companies represented, acCOl'dl.ne to Career Plan· nlog Center in Los Anteles, Of'lanisert of tbe con· ference, and they advise women to brint 50 copies of their resume for d.lalributioo. "It's a tTeat opportunity for one-to-one con· versatioo with hiring officlala from all types of companies," Mn. Thoms oblerved. Mrs. Null agl'eed, addine that Paclfic Mutual attends job fain, hires from them and la only one WANTED DIAMONDS • GOLD Jewels by Joaeph purchaHa dl1mond1, gemetone9. gold and allver from private Indivi- duals and estates. careful examination and evaluation by our expens. Highest prtcea paid. 1~ daitv. Sal 10-6 Cloeed Sunday. Phone today. Aak for Betty Grace 0t Eric Zalalakus. A ~Of TIIU)T JOA~ 00 ~ JEWELS by JOSEPH Soull COMt Pl-.a. Co.ta MeN • 54CMOH Are the Group Medical costs you'r e paying to cover your employees running out of line? If so, we may be able to offer you an affordable choice ol plans wlrh \ guaranleed rates If you have 2 10 24 employees, yoJ'll llnd New Eng· land Liie has these attracllve lea· lures - -Low Rates · Guaranteed 12 to 18 months -Unlimited Lifetime Medical Bene- fits -Reasonable and Customary al· lowances • No Schedules -No Enrollment or Monthly Fees -Choice of Deductible -Low Cost Group Term Life Insur· ance -$ 100 deductible • Waived for Accidents 80120 10 $2000 covered expense then 100%. Male age 29 only $33.83 per mo. for life and med· ical Guaranteed Rates will change July 1. so call us today at 558-2671 for a . frM mar1<et survey and quots,tion. ... ten ... ltns Cll • 1111 s..., 888 N. Main, Suite 501. Santa Ana. Ca. 92701 ~0::11 Grant • • , ~ R.Ph. , ' .. It is a fact that we do have many thousands of products to restore or Im· prove our health. There are more than 4,000 dir- f erent medicines in our prescription laboratory. Each one is classlried so that It can be located within seconds. They are stored properly to pre· serve their potency and many ol them are dated to control rreshness. We carry so many dif-ferent bealth·aids and sickroom needs, that the odds are you can always 1et exactly what you ask for here. Always re· member that, when you need any product or drug prescribed by a physi- cian, or made by a rella· ble 1upplier, ask us. YOUit l>OCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a medicine. Pick up your preecriptlon Ir abopplne nearby, or we will deliver promptly without extra char1e. A 1reat many people entrust us with their prescriptions. May we com])OUDd your• 7 PAUUDO~CY ,.~.,~-:· .. ... ::::~ .. DAILY PILDr CLASSIFllD ADS . Ml•MTI COLLECTORS CORNER Rare Coln• & Sl•mpa GOLO •SILVER S-27-t1 .... C...MUI ..._CLI-.. .., ... === ........... ........ , ... llPl..N t11.ft ,,_........,__ ... Cell ... ._ ...... (714) 551 •50 South Coe .. Plau VIiiage ......... --,_ ... __ C.._I , HOLLOWAY A pes1imist Is ooe who feels bad when he feels 1ood for fear he'll feel worse when he feels better. ••• The biggest problem with a fixed income ls that it con1tanUy needs faxing. ••• Consider how hard it is to chance yourself, and you'll understand what the chances are of cbanflnl others. ••• Then there was the fellow who aent the rovemment 25 cents with a note aaytn1 be undentood be could pay tu. lues by the quarter. ••• There'•= harder than a di . , except mum, the paymenta Oft tl. I *** The urvlce really 1parkl• at Tire City, lHO Newport Blvd., Cotta ..... See ua 'or a "1em" of a deal on ltunt ·bl• Uree. ...., ........ .-..... Cath11 Null U. a manag~ recruiter of many companies actively seeking women for placement. "More women attend general fain, anyhow, and women are leas hesitant than men about tak- ing a risk for personal and professional enrich- ment,'' she said. Both women rejected the idea of women work· ing simply for personal fuUillment, thou1b. "Women make a work choice based on economics,'' Mrs. Null said. Mrs. Thoms, who is expecting her first child in August, said, "Many of my friends have put off starting a family for economic reasons, and most young couples can't make house payments on one salary. Women have lo work and like it. "I've always worked and plan to return to my job around the first of the year. but babysitting is going to be a problem. "U any company in Orange County offered child care, I'd go to work for them." Mrs. Null noted that her employers make life easier for parents with "flex-time," so employees in a department can begin work between 7 and 8:30 a.m. and work only 37"" hours a week, with any extra time put into a ''time bank'' to take off on a regular basis "And the health care industry needs night shift workers, so they 're considering child care u an enticement for nurses to return to the profession," .. Mrs. Thoms added. Marilyn Tho17u wiU step dotm from her pod. MUTUAL FUND a.n t .11 II.ti IJ.9' -Pry-EA .......... h Mat.;M1 Ok Mlle ~ ... ..._...., ~:::::t. ·-Ok'-' ~· R•Ullltll S!Settt I 1"9111 e_. .. ,t_ ~ ·~ lwle ... L.oG ... .__Ow thp!Svy l'cL Up J1.J Up JU Up 27.J Up .. 1 tl: IH Up 2:U Up as Up ".J Up "" Up It.I Up 11.J Up 11.1 Up 16..7 Up IU Up 16..1 Up ls.A Up 1S.• Up IU Up IU Up U.I Up 14.J Up 1'.J Up 14.J Up IU ~ Pel 1,_ -~ Off n.J, t\lt -J .. g:: Jli IS\lt -4 _a. 411t -I g:: IU J .. -\It 15.4 •11t -1~ Off U.J J -\ltOffM.J ~ -.. Off 'tt llllt -,,_ Off 1 Jiit -\It g:: 1 1J -"' ll.7 Slit -_, Off 11.J ,.. -\It Off llj 1Yt -I OH 11 J~ --. Oft 1U 1-. -,_ °" .... J~ -\6 OH M.J Jiit -\It Off .... 17\lt -J Oft ... ,.... -Oft t.1 S Yt OH t.1 2\lt \It Off '1 2\lt \6 OH t.1 ''°' _, Off t.I ""' _,OH l.t GUARANTEED MONTHLY PAY MEN.TS -·I Aable Home Loans 832-6311 I I I . ; • I ; ; . , , ' I I l , Orange Coaet DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28. 1981 s NYSE COMPOSITE TRAN ACTIONS OllOfAllO•n IN(LUOI TllAOI• 0 111 TMI NIW YO••. AiUDWIU ra(t,IC ...... IM>UON 08lll01l AND (IN(INNAll ,,0( .. I CCNANOI• ANO ·•~n•o a Y '"' NAID ANO INUINlf ~ ~Airlines hit turbulence Robert L. Crandall, prealdenl of Amttrlcen Alrlinet. criucroued lhe COWllry thla aprln,, ~ to employees of the alrlloe lo coofereocea held at nine location.a: New York, Cbica10, Loe AQ&elea. San Franclaco, Hartford, ClncinnaU, Tulia, Dallu-Fort Worth (the airline'• headquarters) and Botton. Hla menage, dellvered In a ooe-bou.r presentation, was aim pie: "We're in trouble. We need your belp lo aet out of lt ... Alter hla preaentaUoo,' Crandall, a claarette· smoking, n<>-D<>Men.se executive who doesn't atand on a lot ol airs, agreed to answer any and all queaUona from the troops. The entire American wort force was invited to attend tbeae meetinp. More than t,000 did. American now employ• 38,300 people, down 5,000 from the peak reached in the middle of lul year. It's no big secret airlines are lo.ln1 a lot of money. Fuel costs are one reason, resuJtin1 in hi1.ber fares, which in tum result in people dectdine to stay home. Airline passeneer traf· fie declined 5 percent last year, the worst downdraft in---------- the industry's lllJll history. High wage costs are another reason. American claims that "airline wages over the put 25 years have escalated more rapidly than lhose of virtually any other in· dustry and the average airline employee is now among the best paid in the United States.'• The only airline to make money conaiatently in recent years has been Delta. And people at t.be other airlines are quick to tell you why : Delta is primarily non-union. About 60 percent ot American's employees are represented by unions -and later this year contracts are expiring with unions representing American's pilota, flight engineers and ntght attendants. So Bob Crandall's "President's Conferences" were especial- ly opportune. His main point to the employees was that they must become more productive if American is to survive in the deregulated industry we now have. He hammered away bard on t.be need to do away with inflexible, pointless work rules. He told me, for example. that it makes no sense to have an employee help load baggage on a plane but then be prohibited by work rules from pushing the plane away from the gate. Crandall is not looking for an angry confronta· tion. He bas asked American employees to "walk the extra mile" and cooperate with management. He re· ports that the reaction of employees and unions has been positive. "We're engaged in civili1ed dialogue." he said, "and we're gradually going to persuade pe<>· ple." American's president is sensitive to the issue of employee loyalty. Employees are, after all, the cor- nerstone of lhe airline's advertising message that "American is No. 1" because passengers, when polled, say lhey prefer American's service to that of other carriers. Crandall said that in the future be doesn't expect any airline merger to occur unless ''employees have approved of it." STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT DOW JONES AVERAGES ' NEW YOltK(AP) FIMI Oow·Jontt 09• N~W Y(Mtl( (AP) -S..., Ww. ,,to '°' Wed., /My 17 • .,,. ,.., <"-9 Of lfw lift.., ,,,_ ac11.. ITOCICS 0.-..._ "-C-C"9 Haw YOtk S&ock Exc:ha-11-, po Ind '85.lS 9".10 t1t,7• 99:1.1'· •It '&~1:~·-•Y •• ~:.•,..n,r , I ~ ~r.-~ :rn ~ ~:~: ~::I Am Alrll" 1'0,lGO 20\lo +!flt W St.k .,_.. _,,,. 311.AS 317.43+ 313 IBM .n.'00 SH\ +I~ lnclv1 •,131,.00 Polaroid Ml,SOD ~ --. Tran • .. .. .. • J,070,MIO c;... Molon •1'.200 ~ + 1-. Ulll1 74,300 StorttTacll 607,0llD lS\4 • I U Siii l ,6SO,JOO Amar T&T 602..00 S7Vt • ft ~~°?aow :;:= ~v. = :Z WHAT STOCKS DID • ~~L.amb m:= t~~ • ~ NEW YORI( IAPl May 21 Pen Am 507,JOO S'At ' \Cr ~ fn~P ~1: = • 1~ AAlltanoct T~s~ Texaco lt1< A07.100 31'1' = '"' 0.CllMCI n AMERICAN LEADERS Ut1el\anttcl J'7 Toc.1 1w ... 1 1ns .... 1119111 17' New IOWI 19 WHAT AMU OIO SILVER Prev clay :WJ • 14 I 215 • 806. r A.S • \ 7 •• Sll .. VElt -11f..M per ""'' -·· Hanel'( & Ha,_ .... ,*"''.-. GOLD QUOTATIONS ~, ........ : _.,...lllllfta .. 7.7', .. SI.JS.. ~: ...,_,..,,...._1s, ,.,us . ...,.,, ......... ...,. . ......... , flJtlfle tQO,ts, ...... . a.tea: ---fl•lnt ........ .. .a.•; .......... MeMy & ~: leftly e.tir.-l ...... 1s,,.11.:is. ........ , t.w, .... , .-...... 7J, .. ... u. • ......,.., c_, ...,1, .,..., ,~.,. ..a$A .... .-. SYMBOLS I Cll Orange Coast DAILY PILOT n'hursday, May 2.8, 1981 Honesty is the best policy • • • Ask any woman I t·m1w uut of a store the other day to 1ee rn >' husband poised in front of our rental car "1th the hood UJ>. s taring at the motor. T h.it 't't'nc '-\ ouldn 't have choked me up ell· 1'1'111 wh•·n vou know that a mechanic once sald I•> him "\'ou'n• losing a piston," and HE said, "I 111111 1 follow basketball that closely, but who I!; ,, ., So I ,aid to hun. "What's the matter with ltw 1·11r'1 " Nuthin,::'!> the matter," he said, slam mini d11v. n th1• hood · So what ur1• vou doing staring in at the 111111 ur • "I t.bou1bt I waa releulnt the brake and the hood went up inatead. J bad to 1et out and pretend I released it on p~." Aren't men 'silly! Why can't tbey be honest like women? Ever 1ee a t.enn1a player mlu a shot who didn't immediately 1top the 1ame and tu1 at tbe atrlnn of the racket to make aure Y <•or wedding picture Hr iruJ 'Hr~ folbt•rt l'o/lu>11-1 )a11zi~er I •'a 1\,1\' IJa11l1ger of Costa Mesa, and Ran· ill '.'..eo1ll l11lhc•rt of El Toro. were married May 9 1' II• (;:1111,.1111 Lu~una Beach. 1 lw 11111!1" d<nrghter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles \1 11 1r11r ··r .r Costa ~esa. was graduated from J '' .111• 1.1 I l1i..h sc·hool She 1s employed at the i ,, ,,,,, ,. r 111.1 DJll) f'rlot l lw lir llh'J.!room , son of the Rev. and Mrs. Bill I lht r l .. r Fl Torn, 1:, a graduate of Mission Vie- • 11.1.I• S1 '""''' Jlld Cahfom1a Baptist College, 111 \I r I It I lu/ nU'.'\-11UHllpSOll l .. 1u1 .1 I hompson of Costa Mesa and James tlulin1· of LonJ! Ueach recently exchanged wed- d1111! \11\\', 111 Long Hcach. I ho• hr Ilk daughter or Mrs. Norman P. I It "lf•'W' of Costa Mesa, graduated from Costa \l1 • ll11!h S1 hool and Cal State Fullerton. I Ill' IJrnJq~room. 5on of Mr. and Mrs. Norval I l11J "" • 11f 1>1•<;f'rt llot Springs, graduated from ( l11•11t'' ll1J.!li School and Washington State 1111··,11, Mrs. Sadler Sadl.er-Weisenburg Carolen M. Weisenburg of San Rafael and James R. Sadler of Corona del Mar have said their wedding vows in St. Michael & All Angela Church, Corona del Mar. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L.E . Weisenburg Jr. of San Rafael, ia a iraduate of San Rafael High School and the Univenity of California, Berkeley. The brideiroom, son of Mr. and Mn. Everett D. Sadler of Corona del Mar, wu graduated from San Marino High School and the University of California, Irvine. Williams-Lorton Tamara Williams of Chino and Geor1e L. Lorton Ill of Chino recently exchanged wedding vows in Fleur de Lis Chapel, Hacienda Hei1bts. The bride, daughter of Gall Morford and James Williams of Chino, graduated from Bonita High School. The bridegroom, son of George and Judith Lorton of Costa Mesa, graduated from Estancia High School, Costa Mesa. ' Keep passport in order \HU'.., 1\1.111·h 21April 19) Aggressiveness 1,' 1• r " 111' 1d1'nds Emphasis on new starts, ft•'" 11•n .. 1•p1 . 1•x1·1ting romantic interlude. You'll I 1 k• d t11 m..1k1· prrsonal appearances . Initiate 111111 I rnp1111I "t) I<', highlight your own judg- 111 111 111111111011 T \l Kl..,• \prrl 20 May ~>. What had been an '"'"" 1·111 '""" °" 111 now be transformed into signifi. HOROSCO PE 1 .1111 1:;1111 P1•rsons behind scenes are paving way fur , our p4 rsonal progress Leo. Aquarius natives f1g 11n· prnrnin<'ntl} Change of scenery tops agen· 1!.1 •••.~11"1 t Ma v 21 .June 20): Family member 1 \l•r .. , •. , rrgret for recent error. Be 111.11 11 11111111111-. Emphasis on friends, hopes, fulfill· i11•·111 of 1!1.·,ires Money comes from surprise '>111111·1· You ll>arn ll'sson of love. Aquarian figures 111 .. m1r11•nt I) ('A\Cfo:R 1June 21 -July 22): Foothold is .1111\'d on career advancement. Acquiesce to re- qut•1-1 for revision of material. Discard outmoded m l'lhods. concepts. Welcome challenge, construe· '" 1· 1•rtt11'1sm Authority figure lends valuable sup· p11r I l.EO r.July 23-Aug 22): Be sure passport and 1th• r nc·c·c•<.,s:iry travel documents are in order. 1':m ph:t'\l''t' communication, correspondence and for <'1g11 l'Onlacts. Broaden horizons. Aspirations 11, fulflllf'd 1f you realize "sky ls the limit." VIRfrO <Aug 23 Sept. 22); Imprint style. Lead Come up to tt-le Top! ·rather than follow. You get money's worth by be- ing persistent. Dig beneath surface indicationa. Piece together subUe clues and you'll come up with "complete story." Gemini, Sagitiarlua and another Virgo play key roles. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Diplomacy h.igbligbts personal scenario. Meam avoid at· tempting to force issues. If calm, patient you 1et what you want -and it ia banded you on pro- verbial silver platte r . Family member lenda moral and fmanciaJ support. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Don't ruab! Main· tain high state of ·readiness, alertness. Define terms, be aware of hidden meanings. Someone la trying to tell you something. U percepUve, you open door to money and love. Pi.aces ii in picture. SAGrrTARIVS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Focua OD exciting chan1~1. rare opportunities and success in speculative ventures. Cancer, Capricorn and tbe number 8 figure prominently. Children, creativity and sensuality dominate provocative acenario. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11): Lonptandin& transaction nears completion. Empbaala OD real property, buic need.a. security and establishment of home base. Aries, Libra nativea fi1ure prominently. One who appeared indl.fferent will now become an entbuaiaaUc supporter. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Empbaaue variet)', testing, aatlafying ol curioeity. Stop mak· in& excuses for neglect of diet, proper nutrition. ReaUess relative may be sincere but millnformed. Know it and heed your own counael. Surprise villt la on aienda. PISCF.S (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Con.aoUdate U · sets. Focus on penonal poueaaiooa, protection of valuables and way to increase income potential. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius person fi1ure prominenUy. You learn by teachiq. One wbo aided you in.put will make reappearance. tYHJ«UI! ON YOUR FM RADIO DIAL r.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~. 88 90 92 94 96 98 100 102 104 106 108 ~mu~~m~~~m~mm~~~~~mmmm~~~~ K wv E 20 YEARS OF THE NATION'S MOST POPULAR MUSIC ... ... ARRANGED FOR THE SELECTIVE LISTENER they were=tbere? Ob, doo't for1et tbe Academy Award performaa ol the 1olter wbo po1Wom b1a feet, cbeeu b1a wn.ta, nex.. bis ee. and 1win11 and tbs wbm be milaea tbe ball pretends be was only dotni a practice at.rake. Tb1t ii not the rtnt time I have seen blm 10 to elaborat. mean.a to cover up a mistake. I've seen blm tum an enthualaaUc wave (to someone be tbouCht be knew) lnto a balr pat, a neck maaa.,e, a fty swatter, a collar smoother, a label ft&er, and once be tried to tell me be wu wlndtq bl.a watch. Another time be was ta1kiDC to me and . when I wandered away from him be uked a stran1e woman what we were bavi.ni f« clin· ner. Instead of levelinc wltb her, be wll1tpered, "U you don't want me to come over, juat aay ao and I'll understand." The other night I walked into a dinlDI room and came face to face with a woman wearlnl a dress exactly like mine. We looked Uh , bookend.a. I wanted to throw a tablecloth over her and arranae four cbalra around btr. I looked at her sweetly and smiled, "So. you bou1bt the other one." My husband growled, "Now. THAT'S honest!" Nudity not necessarily art DEAR ANN LANDERS: We Uve lD Eau Claire, Wis. Our city .baa a very active and suc- ceaaful men's f.byalcal fitneu center at the YMCA . In this al -male atmosphere of steam baths, aaunu, sun lampe, whirlpool.a, and abowen after strenuous exercise, it follows that a creat deal of nudity and sometimes coarse lan1Ua1e la com· monplace. Frequently we see rathera brin1in1 thelr youn1 daupten into thla place. They walk rreely llllDllll throughout the entire racllity. I would aay the little girls are between two and three yean of a1e. As a penon who goes there often I resent the invasion of my privacy. I also wonder if children that young milbt be affected by what they tee and bear. I've complained to the Y, but they say "'ere iB nothln1 wron1 with it. What do you say? -S. IN EAU CLAIRE Dear S.: I aay tkre'a plellty Wl"Oll~ wWa It. Little 11.rts doll't belomg la &M .a.wer ,...._, of die YMCA, aad I a.ope aometlda1 la doll~ atto.t tM altaadea sooa. Wlllea I Uved la EH Oalre, Z'7 years a10, &M Y maugeme•t wu esHllalt. Wflaat llap- pemedf I Hllefl tlaey cMck wt&la Peoria, W. Tile YMCA tlaere ii OM of U.e besl. DEAR ANN LANDERS: 11da letter is for "Obsessed at 41 in Macon" and the woman who said you were wrong and backed him up. She signed bersel!, "Bolstered in 1'urlincton." What did I know! Ta.kine provocative pictures of me in the nude wu bis favorite aport. He bad thousands -in variou. po1es and po1itlom. One day the rat walked out on me and our kida and toot the pictures with him. The court ordered him to pay child support, which be didn't want to do, so be threatened t-0 circulate the pictures and swear they were taken before we were married. I had to go tbrou1b the county attorney to 1et those pictures back. It wu extremely embarrua- ing. So stick to your 1uns, Annie. No woman should pose for pictures she would not llke to see on Page 1 of her local newspaper. -TOO TRUSTING Dear T.T.: Tllaab for &M ba~·8P· I Mpe tlaose camera baffa <pardoll tlMl ,..) wW take beed. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A whUe back you told a woman whose husband waa interested in wlfe- swapping that you could unCieratand bow the tell life of some couples who bad been married for 18 years could go flat, but then you added, "It's no excuse for behaving like animals." On behalf of animals such u lk>nl, Canadian geese, otters, cardinals and almost any variety of bitd except cowbirds, I object. They. are purely monogamous and wouldn't dream of swapping mates. I believe you owe them an apolo1y. - NATURE LOVER IN ARIZONA. DEAit LOVER: OK, I apolo&he. Feel better now? Tbanb for willal me ap. Do J10U feel owlcword, aelf-corudoul -lonel11? Welcome to tM club. Thne'• Mlp for I/OU in A"" Lan- den' boolcld, "TM Key to PopularltJI." Send .SO Cefttl with JIOUr requelf and a Long, lfamped, ulf~reaud envelope to Ann Lande.,,, P.O. Boz u•s. Chkago, IU. 60611. The brouhaha was about the man who enjoyed taltlng pictures of bis wife in the nude. He claimed be wanted them for when they are both older, 10 Co t • they would have a record of bow beautiful abe WU. fTeC WR "Macon" insisted It was a wonderful bobby -Sorry, we gave a wrong number. something they could do together. You didn't think The telephone number wbicb was included it was such a bot idea. with the "Wheel-A-Thon" announcement in the My husband and 1 were married for 10 years. Daily Pilot tut Friday was incorrect. Anyone He, too, wu into nude and atrip-teaae pbotog· wishing information on the event, which takes rapby. At ftrat I thought it wu weird, but be coo-place Sunday at Orange Coast College, should vinced me it was "art." I wu a small-town hick. telephone 996-~. 1-=~~~==:::;.:.;.;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=-. , ... .,. ...... _, I INSOMNIA I I MEDICAL RESEARCH I 1 TEAM NEEDS 1 I VOLUNTEERS I I -If you require more than 30 minutes I I to fall asleep, OR total less than 6 hrs. I I sleep per night, OR have three or more I I awakenings during the night with diffi-1 culty getting back to sleep, and are between 18-60 yrs. of age, you may I qualify for a sleep medication study. I I Volunteers will receive a FREE brief JOHN MULFLUR M.O. Diplomat of the Almrican Board • of Family Practice is pleased To Annouce the Relocation of His Office to the Marguerite Medcal Plaza 2871 Puerta Real #160 Mission Viejo, CA 92691 Day or Night (714) 495-9353 Practice Includes Newborn Care, Pediatrics, lnt&mal Medicile, Office Gynecology Geriatrics. I physical examination, lab tests, EKG, 11 computerized EEG, chest x-ray, ~==============~ I medicine and visits with a professional. I I c.AU (71•) 752-7356 llETWHN 9 AM-5 PM •• I llONDAY THRU FRl>AY ••••••••••••• 1 Al..fRBIC5 ~~ W• do If all •.• FOR MEN AND WOMEN FOR WOMEN ONLY C.ut. . Scx>t Reducir'Q Diet Pfogroms Wo~ .... Eyeloah Tinllng .. Moke-uP . -····-. AC.-uAi1tm;-o;;1·1~··-······ 1 ~off Olfrf '°'°" ~ -~ -... ., .... . -___ ...,._ ------·---·-·.. ··-·--·-····· (M)Mlll" t6t0 ~ OoGlf *""'°" <-----~. FOR DAD ... CUSTOM MONOGRAMMING A subtle statement of good taste. Your choice of styles on any shirt ln our wide selection of 100% oxford or blended cotton shirt.a. Any Dad will love the personalized touch. Come in early. Father's Day ii June 2ta~. ,~m~~~~s~~~~~~~E~~~~~~~;~~~~?~-~-~~7·~~~~-~----~-~~~·~: · 2 .. .. •. ... . ... • . • .. • . .. . ·-. .. . .. " ..... .. . \ .. Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 .. !Plastic surgeons blast unqualified colleagues By .IOBL C. DON ................... Represeotatlvea from tbe Ca1Uonala Sodety of tPlutlc Smlf':ms have lubed out at unqualified medleal eollea~• •bo tbeJ uy take advutqe ·of the public and poHlbly ean came permanent in· jury and dlsftcuremeat. "We're 1ettln1aiekandtiredol1alva11D1 peo- :•le when we can really do very little for them," said Dr. Robert T. Miner, a Santa Ana pJuUc 1ur- 11eon , speatinJ ol malpractice cUel. I "Le1ally any phyaiclu in Ca1Uomla who bu 1 a Uceme ia llcenaecJ u a physician and 1ur1eon, be ,explalned at a~ conference in Newport Beacb IThunday. "Lqally, be can do anythlnJ from oeuroeur1ery to toe 1ur1ery." T he docton warned the public to be wary of plastic sur1eona wbo advertise and tboH who haven't received advanced tralnlnl and board certification in th1a particular medical apeclalty. "We have no quarrels wttb tbe people who are • properly trained in the univenlty," aald Dr. 'Frederick M. Grazer, president of the society ·whose private practice ia in Newport Beach. "Any 1ur1eoo who does an operation could have a com· l~llcaUon but we think proper tralnlnc ls the . ball mark of takinc care of these complications." The surceona' concerns partly come in the wake ol the case of former pluUc surgeon Ralph J ,W. Small of Laguna Beach. In J anuary, Small was ordered to pay $640,000 to the family of a female patient who died while undergoin1 breast Implant surgery. ." Small currently ta on probation and is not al- r A Flctltlou1 ualn111 "'"'' ..... -"' flied wtttl 1111 eo-ty Clefll •• "911411 lot' "" ,. ....... ., wlllcll u-contlnulnt IMl1ln11-mYlt reflle. Publlc•lloft 19 -ll•l"f · onlr II tll•r• 1 r1 cll1n .. 1. Cell IM L1911 D1 p1tl m1 nl 11 lftl DAILY '1LOT f o r t nfor11t1 llon end -•lllY*-- ~2-4321 Ext.m . RUFFELL1S UPHOLSTHY s. ................ lt2J HAl lOl I LVD. COSTA MISA-141-1116 lowed to practice plutlc surgery. The state Board of Medical Quality A11urance, however, retained bJa medical Uceme ao that be could continue in his ear, DOM and throat apeclalcy. Gr&Zet' advised lndlvtduala to check a physi- cian'• credentials before under1oln1 plastic aur· 1ery. Slnce plutic 1ur1ery can be done u an outpa- Uent procedure, a patient should uk doctors if they are 'prepared to take care ol any compllca- Uona. The patient should also determine lf a doctor la on the staff of a local hospital and lf the sureery can be dooe in that hospital. Hoepital affiUaUon helps screen pbyaiclans by a peer-review procesa, be said. "You can open up any kind of a cloaet and do your surgery in It lf somebody is crazy enough to come in '1)d do it,·' be asserted. Board certification is essential, and the doc- tors warned that a group advertised aa the Board of Cosmetic Surgeons has not been recocnlzed by any established medical group. The American Medical Association recoi nizes the American Board of P lastic Surgery. The surgeons also criticized the Federal Trade Commission for permlttine the medical profession lo advertise as a means of boo6Un1 competition and lowering coaUI. "Advertising pluUc surgery ia euentially the wrong thing," said Gruer, who noted that heart surgeons ap d neurosur geons don 't a dvertise because their work must be done in a hospital and under peer review. Grazer said plastic surgeons who advertise must make up for the costs in advertising with an increased volume of patients. "The one thing that happens ia the quality of care goes down because they can't spend as much lime with you," be said . Disputing the federal government's claim that ad vertising would cause costs to drop, Grazer pre- sented data from an unpublished study that shows fees of board-certified plastic surgeoM who don't advertise and non-certified surgeons who do. t:osts were similar for identical s urgical procedures . And the doctors challenged a question that the Host families being sought by YES Youth Exchange Ser vice needs families to host internatiooal studenui from Europe, South and Central America and Mexico who will be arriving in August for nine months of high school in America. Students are ages 15 to 18, speak English, bring their own spending money and are covered by m edicai insurance. • For more information, call 492-7907 or write Youth Exchange Ser vice, P.O. Box 4020, San Clemente, 92672. press conference was a reaction to the threat of physicians who advertise on the business of non-advertisers. "That ls not our motive for this," said Miner. "We have seen so many people that have been matimed or mutilated improperly because of lack or training " Fullerton plastic surgeon Richard Jones con- cluded that "If you let someone with a private pilot's license fl y a 747, you're going to have dis· aster." Saddleback set s 3-man art show Paintings that explore perception and "illusion by depicting vibr a nt a nd vis ually a mbiguous geometric shapes will be showing at the Sad- dleback College Art Gallery from June 19 to Au gust 17. The works of 8111 Paskewitz, Victor Herstein, and Bill Jehle are to be displayed. The three artists employ acrylic paints and masking tape to create their visual p uzzles, which "continually shift and change in the space of mo- tion and memory," according to Paskewitz. The opening night reception will take place June 19 from 7 to 9 p. m at the Saddleback College Art Gallery. at 28000 Marguerite Parkway in Mis- sion Viejo The gallery 1s open from 10 a .m. to 3 p.m on weekdays Call 831-4747 or 831-4761 for in- form ation . Con-GRAD-ulations! I I I ' 20°/o OFF CASE CUTLERY Sale May 28 T111r Jwte 12 on selected items ·~ CAP 273 , AIER ••••••••••• 6.50 CAP 282·5UTILITY •••••••••• 1.75 CAP 201-slOMER •••••••••• 12.75 CAP 283-8 CARVER •••••••• 13.00 M242·9~ SUCH ••••••••• 13.90 CAP 254 STEAi .••••..•••••• so Sale 5.20 7.00 I 0.20 . I 0.40 11.12 6.80 LIMihcl To Stock Oii H-4 South Coast Pbzo • Costa Mela. Cctf. 'lU:fl6 • (7\4) 549--3932 lower level • wilQ with IUod<s • bV the fOU"lton EUROPE HIGfl.DfTS (J C[lfTM. Ell<PE 15 GREAT DAYS from HAWAII MKll tOBY S.OAYS s334 CRUISES CMllllM M/i.A 10 FUN DAYS from s1520 Choose Crom a 10, 1J or a 14 day Sltmar Cruise vlsllln1 exotic Caribbean ports. Includes airfare from L,A. Graduation Suit Sale! He feels like a million and he'll look just as gocxH II/Ill~ 'fl!HJOHS '' 203 OFF YOUNG MEN'S CORD SEPARATES Hand5ome blazer and bell«! slack from RPM. In Ian ~ 28·38. blazers 36·42 ~slacks S28.50. blRer S70. Lev rs • BUTTON-DOWN SHIRTS A dl9lc. "pnj)p/ shirt. Easy-are poVeo11on In "'°"ite. 1an. blue. pink. maize. 5-M-L·Xl.. ~ S1S. IF~RAH I 203 OFF STUDENTS' CORD SEPARATES From •Cr• Momen!s" by Flflh. dlow-patch blazer lf1d bahd lllcb In llln. \lAikls 26-~. ~ 14·20 .... """ **' $23. blRtr $47.90. S.W pries fJOOd lhru 5131...Jille supplies IW. MIA 1040 lmperill Hwy, woss from BfN Miii. 7141529-9974 CfffRITOll AllTEllA 18600 Gridley, opposite Los Cerritos Miit. 2131924-8883 fOfMrM# VMUY 9380 Wimer A~. Wimer It the 405 Fwy. n419&4·3001 ,.,,.TO# IEAOl 10111 Adams A .. , Broolfhurst & Adams. n 419U-3323 ... VIEJO 25252 MCintyre, 405 Fwy, LI Pll exit. 71415118-f100 ._, 789 S Tustin A ... Tustin It the Gtrdtln 6nM Frty. 1U/63f.1791 f'f&1t l#UI 17851 ECO/Ima, eut of Puente Hills Mfl. 1131984-6721 Maw 3502 Tyler. ntxt door to the Treaury. n 41681·1322 IMITA MIA !430 Bristol A ... 114 mile north of South Coast PU. n4/951-f100 .. , .. ,.. 15412 Goldtflwest St, next to Goklfn West College. 7141898·5541 STOREHC>lm Mon-Fri 10-9;30 Set 10-7, Sun 10-6 • 1 I I -• v .. . . . . . . Cle Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 Connery's 'Outland' pleasing western 81 MICHAEL DOUGAN °" ...... ,...._.. Back ln the cowboy coWlt.ry where I crew u_p, there wu an old dude named Pistol Pete who wore his waist·lensth hair ln braid.a and always packed a pair ol six·iuns. Pele was a Je1endary marshal ln his time and he was still called upon lo lecture IUliverslty his- tory classes on the reality of the old west. In· variably, someone would ask him what he thought of coolemporary western movies and be would reply, "They're pretty good, except for the shoot· outs when those guys just stand there blasting away at each other. In my days, you'd shoot once and 11 you missed you'd throw down your gun and run Uke bell." Which brings us to lo, one of Jupiter's moons and locale of the latest Hollywood western - "Outland," starring Sean Connery. It is to writer-director Peter Hyam's credit that be chose lo give his adversaries notblng more futuristic than rifles and shotguns for their duel under the stars In this gritty sci·fi ruck. And, like Pele, Federal Marshal William T. O'Niel <Con- nery) 1how1 no tute for a rac•·1--face confront&· lion on Main Str t. Of coune, there la no Main Street oo lo. Tbere Is only Con·Amal1amate No. :rr, a bu1e, 1rtmy mining operation franchised by the Lea1ue of In· dustrtaU&ed Nationa. Con-Am Is a ruued, dirty, de·bumani&ing place where some 2,000 roul)l·bewn men Uve and work under deplorable, dan1erou1 condttlona. Privacy is unheard of and pleasure -drink, drugs and pro.stltutea in the mlne'a "leisure club" -Is fieellng and unsatlafactory. It's the klnd of place where mlnda snap. . . And that's what's happenln1 aa Connery ar· rives with his family for a year's tour of duty u bead of Io's police force. Men are crackln1 up and kilUng themselves at a rate that makes him sus· piclous. With the help of Dr. Marian Lazarus, played by Frances St.ernhagen, Connery determlnes that the chief of the mining operation (Peter Boyle) is 'News' latest in 01usical epidemic. By TOM TITUS Of .. Deltr Nie Sf9ff There's definitely an epidemic of musical nostalgia rampant on the Orange Coast. First "Babes in Arms'' comes back to life at Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse (it's now at the Grand in Anaheim), then "Girl Crazy" turns up in the same city at the San Clemente Community Theater. Even South Coast Repertory isn't im- mune -they opened "Anything Goes" this week. Yet another musical comedy that can be classified as a certifiable antique is "Good News," a show about college capers in 1928. That one has been resorrected at Golden West College where it'll be on the boards for the next .two weekends. INTERMISSION Unlike the other s, which laid some musical cornerstones in their scor es, "Good News" can only offer the plucky "Varsity Drag" as its claim to fame. Even the title song isn't one you'll leave the theater humming -so director Robin Huber has, quite correctly, placed the emphasis on comedy, or at least what passed for comedy in the Roaring Twenties. For those who imagine such movies as "About Face" as examples of how far we've come in the college musical vein, "Good News" will be a bit of an eye opener . Its transparent plot revolves around the "big game" and whether or not the football hero will pass his astronomy exam so he can suit up. But studying the stars leaves most of them in his eyes for his pretty tutor, which forms a shaky little triangle. William Pomeroy and KalhJeen Casey play up all the stereotypes of campus romance (he doesn't make passes till she takes off her glasses) with a fine satiric flavor. But the comedy leads (Bret Bourman as Pomeroy's wimpy roommate and Lin· da Cathey as the school sexpot) fare better, as they do in about 90 percent of these types of musicals. For· straight comedy without complication. Steven Schwartz' superstitious football trainer and Chris Williams' Mack truck-type lineman fill the bill, as does Steve Williams as the milquetoast of wm COAsr PIUMIUU fNCAClME NT NOW SHOWING •Orange CINIDOME Cosio ~·•so CINIMA CINTH H4-211J 919"'1" oa..,. I 00 PM Oo11v 7 00 6 10 00 PM Sol 5.11 l<ol I 00 • •JO ' 8 00 ..... S01·$un.l<ol I 00 :._• 00 • 1 OQ..!..!9~ ""! ~PACI Fie:~ mifiifilooME• ~~ 'V'°IM tfll•••VHW HatlJW°" • 21J/46 .. M01 Ooilv 12.)()•l'5 • 100• •0l~""4 ..!!E!L!Ji• ....••• ..:..:.~:~~:1:: ;:,.~~~ -.. -.. -"-•. -00-•• -""-,~1 ... If •••• [XJI DOl.9¥ tlTllWC I"' the town, the as tronomy professor. Frima Ruff re· quires some adrenalin as the spumed fiancee, and Greg Nicholas, who gobbles the scenery as the downtrodden freshman. could lend her some of his. ··0000 ....... A m<dkal directed b'f Roe.In H~. ,._...,.lilll'Y by .._, Olcll-1.Awls. mutl<.411 dlr..:tcw L.uti.r .....,.., tecllftlul 411twetor S..~11 T"""-BabO, 1<-Y cle119Mr Arped E. 1'9treu, ~ by Jocelyn C. KOf-"I, 119"11ne by own.. '" O.vla, ..,_.., l'rlcN'f' ~ Set-yt •I l :JO '"'°""' J._ • et ~ W.• Coll .... oH GotllMd Str"I 111 H111011,.._ 9Mcll. lleMrt•lleftt .... ~. TMa CAST Tom M•r-• .......... .. .............. Wiii..,, ,........, C..w1le I.AN • • • • .. • • • . . • . . . • .. • . ............ ~INMft c..y loeby R-1 . .. ,. ...... , ................ atet ...,_ B•i.0'0.y ........................................ L..IM9C....y P•trlcle • ....,..,., . . • .............................. rime Hwff Poocll IC-My . . . ........................... S-.. ~ Prof. CNrlft 1(..,.,.... .. ..... , ................. ~ _,....._ Ca.ell 1111-••••• , , ................. Devld Sci91'- 84oef S.unditn . .. ......................... OWll Wltl'-s SylYHIM • • • • • .. ••• ............ , •..•••.•• GAf Nlcllola It's all "cute" entertainment, with a score as thin as the story, but musical director Luther Hughes gets his licks in with instrumental em· phasis on some of the punch lines. Performances continue Fridays and Saturdays al 8:30 through June 6 at the Huntington Beach college, orr Gothard Street north of Edinger Avenue. CALLBOARD -Sebastian's West Dinner Playhouse has scheduled non-Equity auditions for the musical ''Flower Drum Song" on Saturday from 10 a.m. at the playhouse, 140 Ave. Pico, San Clemente ... singers and dancers who look Asian or Oriental are needed for the show, which will · open June 17 ... The Saddleback Valley Community Theater will hold auditions for a summer melodrama, "Pure as the Driven Snow," Monday and Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the theater, 2S74l·C Obrero, MiNion Viejo ... a large cast is being souibt by director Vince Cordio, including eight individual skit.s or song and dance routines. BREAKER MORANT 1,..,...1 .... ATLANTIC cm .• ,, .. THE DECLINE MWUTDN~-1~1t C&C'I NEXT MOVIE ll1M-11:tt THE BLUES BAOTH!AI ll1 .. ,, .. DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS 842•5878 '¢ John Boorman'• EXCAUBUR IRI Showt •t 7:00 9:45 Si #t£.# Ca~ol BurMtt Alan Alda THE FOUR ~(PGI thow• at 8:00 8:15 10:20 I Anthony Quinn UOlll OF TME OBERT (PG) Shows H 8:00 I HAPPY •R'IMOAY TO•IRI SHOWS AT 8:00I:15 10:20 N•il Di•mond .MZZ-RIPG) SHOWS AT 8:00 8:20 10:30 Ltur•n Bee.II THEFMIRI Plus KIM of the Mouni.ln(POI "'d!Mrn 1U1T111' (RI And Which W•v •• Uo (RI I John Boorf'lllln' 1 ECAl.9'9'1 (R. ""' TIM Gaunt'-' (A) ........__[ .....VSIPGI ... AND Fl''INI ~(POI CITY OF 'NO\A.EN STAlttlNO M.Uauo MASTROIANNI WltM ETTOtt! MANNI ANNA P-UCNAl IUNtCE STEGER$ oa..ATEUA OAMIANt _ .. WtS IN:.AJOI . ~ ...... --.... ._,..""" ..,~'-*'''~o ...... -...,....,. ... _ ...... importine a ltlnd of apace·••• amphetamine for hla men. It boostl productJoo and, ln Ume, 1t make• them crazy. lo la no Clnderella ualpment and we uawne that Connery's career on the force bu been leu than dislln&ulabed. Boyle believes the same thln1. and he ii dumbfounded when Connery refuaea to simply accept a bribe and look the other way while the drug is dlalribuled. But, ln food Gary Cooper tradlUon, Connery ii driven by a moral lmperatlve. He refuses to com. promise and Boyle calla ln a couple ot hJl men from a space staUon located 70 hours away. It's lbe running battle between Connery and the bad guys that gives tbia film a stron1 element of suspense and excitement. Watchine "Outland" makes you feel like a kld at the Saturday matinee -you want lo cheer each time a •tllain gets bJasted. There are some predictable plot twists. Miss Sternbagen plays Lazarua ln the cynical-old-broad mode and you know from the beginning that she - and only she -wUJ stand with Connery when the moment or truth arrives. Likewise, you are not surprised when Connery's chief deputy turns on him in the end. The sets, created by production designer Philip Harrison, add tremendously to the film 's sense of peril and psychological darkness. Unlike most movies of the outer space genre, the special effects and hardware in "Outland" complement, but do not get in the way of, a very human story. Hl!rMe ] "CHHCH AND CHONO'S ~ ft+i'400' N~~.•:; l"I ~-• ----. "THE BLUll B"onte11a•· (II) . --__ , __ _.. _"_'°_ "TAKI THll JOB ANO IHOW IT'" lll'OI , ............... , ... "'TAKI THll JOB ANO IHOV. IT'' (ll'O) .. , ........ a;, •• .._ •• t;At ... ~,_,, • ..,, ___ .,..__,. .. , __ .,.._,.,. ____ .,...., __ ---"THI LIOIND Of' THI LONI! llANOllt" !POI .. ,, ....... ,. ..•. .,,. .... ·····---·- ........ !,.,Ill, .. ~·-........ ,... IM,OltTANT NOTICE! CMllOltlN UNOllt 12 FllU! "TH« LIOl!NO Of' THI I ~,_..,., l LONE llA~ll" (l'O) --·1r,.; ... ~=·=:,a~~~· (ll'O ,, ... AM c.r ...... Wiii\ lfllllltn Accea-y "'"' y-Own AM "°"' ........ ., ~·= t·~. ~: .. ~~~) ( 2]L_ __ ~ 8~ "WHIN A STIIANOP CAU.S" l"I I Mo AM(« R .... Wltll 1,,..11 .. Ac__,. 8rlftl Y-oWft AM --· "BUSTIN" LOU" (It) -"THa ~ltl<" (ft) Sean Connery Som e technical contradiction s are troublesome. We are told that no articifial gravity is created in Io's jail, so prisoners noat at random ln their cells. Yet, when Connery dons a space suit and ventures outside to outwit his pursuers, we see that lo has some gravity of it's own and he adheres nicely to the surface. And the gunmen seem to be remarkably poor shots, even though their rifles boast computerized sights. But why quibble? As an adventure film and a morality play (and, )'es, as a western), "Outland" is entirely enjoyable. "LION OF THE OESERr'1N1 .,.. + n4Ual ,,..., , .... "LOVERS AND LIARS" -..-. rrta, tl'MCN "SAVAGE HARVEST" ··POPEYE"" .., •. -''*'"' "AIRPL.ANE" -·-· , ........ "OADINARV PEOPLE"" llD•·-· l.4tf'll "'THS" -- ed wards CINE MA VIEJO ... ' '" ' ......... ' .... , 830-6990 v·•• n.,. ..,.,, 10 "TAKE THIS JOB AND SHOVE IT" _.,.., "SAVAGE HARVEST' "THIE"' ..... n.M., ... ,, .. "MOMAN AOMANCf" -.. -. .. ,. "THE JAZZ. 81HOER" "-Utl"OI "COAL MINER'S DAUQHTE"" "HAPPV B'DAY TO ME'" l"Ull l"l "THE ,AN" "TAKE THIS JOB ANO SHOVE IT" ,,. 11:11 _,. .. 04' "BUSTIN' LOOSE" 1111 __ ,.., .... " . Pdw,ud<. C IN EMA W f5T .... ",',,.," 891 -39 .....,.. .. _ "BUSTIN' LOOH"1t11 -..-.ft'll.1111 'HA~Y BIRTHDAY TO ME" 11\.W"W.CN A 1111 ITUNGEA CALLI" ) , l I ( . . Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28. 198 1 Cl I gr9'1M PllOOle In the -tume of thllr fllntMIM: a looll et IM gruell/IO Nau- tllua Trtall\aion race. Ohtf l TUBE TOPPERS odd• 10 lin~ llWI r ••I ..... 1 Wnt vta rall•o<ld D O CHARUE'I AHOEUI rw•t•all bKI. at work Wflet'I hol new foreman la IACCute>d Of mut<let ,_.M IJ NEW8 2·30 0 MOVIE 111 1 K.,1 1 \ \ -EVMG-e.-001•• NEwe WON')8I WOMAN T .. .riopa for lamb, Juell M-U flu jamlrcleM fOt -gy; Joyce Kultlawlk ltl hall the .. , .. , In --weethtt oemerM. euow * * ·~ ""'1tl Of A legen<I" ( 1t73) ~rMntary A ooyote pup which hM o-i Of1lhllned ¥entUf .. out Into the wide, wondroua world. • IN8DESTOft't' Hodding Cl(tat, for,,. pr-~ for the State Department, IOOk• at hOW welt tM ,,_, con- tu!Mf la t«Vlclld by Pf"' c;-·· ID MAGIC MnHOO OF OIL PAINTlHO . • MOOl\8Ca4>9' • (I) FOR~? FOA WOMl'.t: ™I AMIAICAN FAMILY Wond•f Woman r- ~I llme to ~tur• en entmy ~t lnl9Cllld with ,,,. bubonic plague and armed with a MCret fOfmu- le ttwt could deelroy tM United Stat .. I TlC TAC OOUOH to1•A'8'H Hewie~ writ•• • letter 10 hil father. telling him tome of IM wecky golno--on In IM4077th. PROM NIGHT -Petronia Paley and Thomas Carter play high school sweethearts with career arguments in "Almost Summer," tonight at 9 o'clock on Channel 4. Hoat Robert MacNall ••wnlnM the Ir~ lmpect ot r_,t aoc:ial upheavals on American lamiliea. 1:30 8 !IDl BOSOM IUOOIU Kip and H~ry compete with a connMng rival al Ille ad agency for a luctal W. account. (RI e OOOOTIMU The Evant lamlty rolka ...ic11on to °'*' a flk·lt •hOC> tn th.if 111>11tmen1 • TOMOMOW/ TOOAY A atudy ol llow computers are teaching d\lt<Sren: • IOOlt at alternatlvn to lhOll and ptlta. a report on wtiat tome citizens are doing to corwwt ~ making faoilltlee 10 ~ fut -; a gllmpM Into one man'• vtalona of the futUfe. ID El.ECTAIC COMPANY <"> CJ) CUHEW& <II MCMEWS .... • JOt<IR'8 \t¥lU) ~LCOME BACK. KOTTER Tiie S-alhogl try to c1-pregnant Jutta \IP when Gabe go.a out of town fOf • teacl'laf•' con- ventton Cl) IEHNYHILL At ~t of a quti ahow, &.nny tr-to pr-1 • beaolllul bloncf• With • llOI· lday fOf two. S) KCET NEW88EA T GD 8T\JOIO SEE "RI.,., Boats" (R) i ~MILLER A ct.panment atora e>wn« la kidnapped and his cap. tors demand thll 1'111 ,,_. chandlM be given away to IM publlc. (Part 1) CHANNEL LISTINGS 9:66 8 IEOfTONAL 7:00 8 C88 NEWS I NllCNEWS HAPf'Y OA YS AGAIH Alc:ttle dtac-. lhal I he •trand.o "beatnllc" he hu brought ~Is also preo· nant D AllCNEW8 0 8UU.AYE m w ·A·a·H As soon u Flank is 1n char~. Hawkey• sk1p1 camp. runt a blOCllade to find Trapper and wel· ~. -llHg.c>n. (Part 2) II) STMETS OF 8AH F'IWC8CO When Stooe and Kell« are called In to SOive IM mys- llfY of • bugged factory, , IMV learn that IM _,_ hU a long record of crlm1. nal Involvement 9 OVEAEASY Guesll vlollnlat ltzhak P8flman. l1Jwyer Harriet Pitpet (R)O '1i) MACHE.IL I LEHAEA REPORT CJ) TlC TAC DOUGH ®J M£AV ORIFFIH Gu .. 11· Dick Ven Pallan, The Rovers. Chrlatlne Et>eraoltl. Peter B«gman. DMl\Conn 7:30 8 FPNANOO A lool< at the phenomenal auccea& of LOS Angeln Ooclget pitcher Fernando Valenzuela IJ KNXT tCBSJ Los Ang.,1,..., D KNBC tNB CI Lo<, Anqe1es 0 Kl LA tlna I LO'> Angt>ies G MBC TV 1ABC1 Los Angele'> Cl) ~FMB 1CBSJ San Diego 0 KHJ TV (Ind J Lo'> Angeles QI KCST 1ABC1 San D1t•go GI KTTV 11ne1 t Los Angele' ., KCOP TV llno.l I LOS Angeles ff> KCE T TV t PBSt Los Anqele~ '1i' KOCE TV t PBS! Huntington Be.icn Businessmen as bad guys By JAY ARNOLD A_..._,,,_.,._ .... LOS ANGELE.5 -You may think J .R. Ewin&. the villain of CBS' runaway hil, "Dallas," is mere· ly an outrageous concoction dreamed up by Hollywood writers. The Media Institute believes otherwise. In a new study called "Crooks, Conmen and Clowns: Businessmen in TV Entertainment" the Washington-based, business-supported research concern says that dastardly business executives beholden to neither God nor Constitution are the norm on prime time television. Among lhe study's conclusions: -More than hair or all corporate chiefs portrayed on television commit illegal acts rang- ing from fraud lo murder. -45"' percent of all business activities on television are portrayed as illegal. -Only 3 percent of television businessmen engage In socially or economically productive behavior. -Hard work usually is ridiculed on television as "workahollsm" that inevitably leads to strained personal relationships. "We were surprised by such heavy emphasis on businessmen as crooks," says Leonard J . Theberge, president of the lnstilule and editor or lhe study. The study grew oul of lhe Media loAtitute's primary function -monitoring TV news coverage of business and economics. Unlike the entertain· ment survey, Theberge says his group has foun4 little anti-business bias ln network news broad· casts. Among the Media Institute's 300 individual and corporate members ar;.e Mobil Oil, West- inghouse, General Electric and 20th Century-Fox. Theberge says the study reviewed 200 epiJodes from !50 programs between December 1979 and April 1980 on all three m.Jor network.a. "The small-business men are portrayed as social climben, buffoons, foolish; the bl1·bUJ1ne11 man only seems to have time for criminal ac- tivities," Theberge says. ''The murderous. duplicitous, cynical bull· nessman is about the only lc1nd of bualnesaman t,bere la on TV 9dventure abowa, Jmt u the cUD· Dini, trickster buainesaman •hares the 1ta1e wlth lhe pompou.a buffoon bullneslmao in aituatJon comedies." I FAMfL Y FEUD SHANA NA GUMI' Bobby Rydell. D EYEONLA. Hoats Inez Plld•oz•. Paul MoytW The ahow's "Eye On l11ael" conc:tvclM with • final Sholom to a proud and Independent land. visit Noftl'lafn California and • 11111e known cull of gold ""'-•· a lool< II aome -wave punk haltatytft II FACE THE MUSIC • ALL IH THE FAMILY Glori• IOHS her fob becauM lhe Is pregnant. SI MACHEL I LEHRER AEPORT Ill!) NEWS Cl) P.M. MAGAZINE A woman Wllo photo· graph• people In tM co.- tume of t"81r fantulee, a lool< at the gruellng Nao· tllut Triathelon r- 9:00 8 THE WAL TONS A vangeful mountain man wtloM plans to marry a Child bride -• fooled by Maty Ellen kidnaps EMza. beth for revenge D N8C MAGAZINE WfTH OA VIO 8AIHKLEY IJ MOVIE • * "Run For Cover" I 1955) James Cagney. JOhn Oerek A former OUI· law Changes the 11 ..... of a woman and • young boy 0 9 MORl<ANO WNOV Mork Olacovera the l'lumen emotlOn ot fear and -'S hlmMlf In a glua cube In Mindy'• living room to pro- tect hlmMll from ...,«Yon•. (RI 0 MOVIE **'It "The Spy Wllh TM Perfect Cover" ( 1114171 Robert Lansing. Dana Wynter An A,,_lcan CIA aoent does • pert«t job of dlegui91ng hlmMlf as a murdered. lool<..ilka for· llipn lndus1rlalbt. GI P.M. MAGAZINE A women who photo· CD FOA IETTEI'? FOR WOME?: THE AMUllCAN FMM..Y Hoat Robert MacNell ·~ tM tremendoua imp.ct ol recent social up~vala on American lamlllell. e SNEAK PNVlrNS Roger Ebert and ~ Slakel 1oo1< at IM beat fea- ture filml produced by the -bl'Md of American lnd419endent lllmmakers (R) '1i) INSIOE STORY Hoddlng Cal1er. form« ~ spokMman '°' tM State Department, look• at hOw well the ,_. con- sumer la tervic.d by preaa coverage. t:OO 8 CJ) MAGNUM, P.L Magnum ia ul<ed 10 guatd a Br1tiah general but IS not told wtiat °' wl>Om to ~ard him agelntl. (R) U MOVIE • • "Almott Summ«" ( 19781 LM Purcell, &uno Kirby A atuoent govern· ment election t>ecomea the aource ol ••ell-I and controversy at a Callfornla h_igfl tchOol II 9 8AAH!Y Miu.Ell Dietrich hand• In hie rfllg- natlon ratMr lhan Shoot at l\Mlng IUtpeCll (RIO fl:) SOUNOITAOE "Amanda." "Tulaa l ime" and "I Believe In You" are I few ol the rolling tunes perlormed In oonc:ert by Don Wlfflama O ~ SNEAK Pf'EVIEWS Roger Ebert and Gena Siakel lool< at IM l>MI 1 .. lure frtma produced by the ,_ breed ol Amerlean Independent llimmallera (RI 9:30 G ®) TAXI Ale•'• long·IOll daughter ~II mMrled to an ambas- sador'• ton In IM social .....,,, oltheyear.(R) GI MERV ORIFFlN Gunia: Olea Van Pauan, Larry Hagmon 08 the evil J .R. Ewing 'No coinpetition' seen for Big 3 LOS ANGELES (AP) -The president of the CBS Broadcast Group assured the network's af. filiate s tations that none of the emer1in1·· technologies bas the cap•cily to cballente com- mercial television on its own ground. Gene F. Jankowski said be believed the com- munications business would divide into "two tiers," of mass communications In the one and the supplement.ar)' aemces ot cable, pay teJevbloa and video cassettes and d11c1 ln the other. "The major compeUtioo ii Jolnl to be within eacb tier -not between them," be said. J ankowsti said the supplementary aervice1 simply do not have the economic resource1 to take on commercial broadcaatiq . •••• KCET .@ 7:00 -"Over Easy." Hugh Downs hosts violinist Itzhak Perlman in a discussion or handicapped children and lawyer Harriet Pilpel explaining financial rights of older women facing divorce. KTTV e 8:30 -"For Better? For Worse? The American Family." The ef· feels of social uphe aval on families are examined. CBS II 10 :00 -"Nurse, Where Are You?" Ufe-or-death crisis in hospitals or a nurse shortage is explored by Marlene Sanders. The Rovera. t.;hrialln• El>efaole. Paler B«gman. DMI\ Conn, Ctyd-Jaclt.. ton m TOMORROW / TODAY A look at llf1111clal lntelll· gene». a visit to the Ei1pto. ratorlum In Sen Franclac:o, an lnveattgatton Into Nrlh· qu1ka Pfac>at•llon. a com- mentary on ,,,. future of the human raQe u delat· ml"41d by ac;lenQe Ind technology 10:00 e Cll cea AEPORT8 "NurM, Where Ara You?" Marlene Sande,.. aum· Ines IM critical llhor1age of nur-In thia country and took• ., -of ,,,. rH · aona IOf and lmpllcatlona or 11111 a/lortage Beem NEWa Q]) 20 / 20 SI THIS OlO HOUSE Plant ere made for Iha new garege. Norm diacluaMa the stal,...ay In the barn, and a down-draft stove la lnllatled In tM mainhouM o 10:30 ., INOEPENOEHT NETWORK NEWS ff) AMERICAH P£R8PECTtvE:ANOTHEA VIEW "The YM Family" The slO· ry of an Ame<lcan-Ch1MM family •• their roots In Chi· na and their sik gener•· llont or Ille In the United Stataa •• eneapa...lataa the Immigrant Hperience or all athnoc groups '1i) CMA FANFARE 11:00BDGGICl>®J NEW8 IJ ST AA TAEI< An a11an myateroously bOaros tAe Enterprlae and aurg1cally removu Spock's brain 0 NEWL VWEO GAME Cl) BENHYHIU Benny dllCldel IO 11'"" h11 Sldak1ek .. hOllday 1n the sun fE) DICK CAVETT Guest Mickey Spillane 11:30 8 CJ) THE JEFFERSONS Mother Jtiltltfaon tnvllel one of Gaor~ 1 Old g111. friends over lor dinner IR) D TONIGHT Holl Johnny Carson Gunll Stave Lawrence MaurMn Murphy G O ABCNEW8 NIOHTLlNE 0 LET'S MAKE A DEAL GI M•A 0 S'H Happily mamed 8 J falls lor a beautiful ww cone- 1 pond en t (Sun n St Jam*') al DANCE FEVER Celabrlly ludgH Carol Lindley. Ronn1t1 Schall. Avery Sht1vltf GuN IS Two Tonao· Fun m m CAPTIONED ABC NEWS -Ml>NIGHT- 12:00 II CJ) MCMILLAN A televttlon newsman 1s poleoned and all ol the suspects are trtenda or Mac' a IJ MOVIE * * * "Unton Pac1f1c" ( 19391 Serb••• Stanwyck. Joel McCrea Men struggle agalnsl onaurmountable JOHN DARLING CHARLIE LORD HERE Wl'TH M Y COMMENTARY O N I HE. NEV<IS.' !HERE'S N O QUES'TI°" IHAI I H£ cu~~ENT ~GESIRIKE IS HLJallNG Cl.JR CrTY! iHE GAASA6£ MEN FEEL IHE.Y DESERVE A 1--1 tGHER 5AL/4R'{ ! Wltile vaca11on1nv ;I • mountatn f•IOfl S•(lt n I bec:O«Wtl 11 ... 10ly ... 11, .. f1mou1 •oeu11 critic 111rti1t\1 • has~ ta•geteo l(!f mu• <Ser (RI 0 OUN8MOt(E A young cowhand U•• Mall lrom an ambuall "''<I ti lsn I IOl'tl b411ore Moil! haa an oppor1un11v 10 return the lavo• GI MISSION IMP088111LE 1he IMF mull hee a pohll• cal pr11on•1 lrom dn MCll)e·l)fOOI g1aaa C"ll Cl) BARETTA "The Otppe<1' 12·30 0 TOM<>fll'IOW G.-1s Joe Cocker .ir101 CherlH Grodin au1toor Richard Schlk111 111 10111 Tab Hunt., and 01v11ta or the movie Potyesl"r t.00 0 PSYCHIC PHENOMENA. nlE WORLD BEYOND "East Meet& West . H(l<I Dami-On Simpson anti <.1 ' cy Hunt dotw:u~• "'" I " Eastern 11pp10•< 'l le. hee •no with nue11 0110 w..,,. , JO 0) MOVIE * • ' . .., "fhtt New lnt~rr1~ ( 19641 M1eha;il Callan &.11 bara Eden ,. lou1SomP .,1 n-1ntem1o ao1us1• " working al • Jarge "'""" polltan hosp11a1 ll) INOEP£NDENT NETWORK NEWS 1·100 MOVIE • • The Hatl1eld• ,., , The McCoy~ t tfl1S J.o ~ Patane•. Slav& Forrest The sparks 01 a mountaH lamoly laud ore rellmcJletl when two memb«• 01 oppos1ng ramtltaa beC<>mt' romantically onvotved @) CAROL BURNETT ANO ""IEHOS Skits "Enl&r Mrs T al ball," · Tht1 F ru11ceke 1·30ll) MOVIE • • A Bell From ~h I 19701 Vtvaca L1ndlo1) Renaud VP• IAy A df!<•r 1 r sensitive voun9 rnan VO.NI\ rt1venge dQ!llnst his liu"I and lhre<> C:OU5on5 bltflf they comm•• him 10 3 m f'll tal lnatotut1on 1:458 NEWS 2:00 8 NEWS 2:15 fJ EDITORIAL 2:208 MOVIE • * •;, Broci. s l ast Ch" I 19721 R•c:h&rd Widmar~ Henry Darrow A ,,.1,11 <l New York poht.oman hud • tt '-> Stop Trein 3'9" 11<l4!4) JON Ferrer S.an F ly11ri An East German ll<'wt owly on an Amerl- c"' train heading,...., NOQ NEWS 300ll) MOVIE * • Night 0 1 Th<t SOIC*· r.,~ ( 11110) Jack Taytor. Simon Andrue Evll anCI ll•~ftl CMtlall the memb«a ol "1l ••~Ilion when lhe't •cuoentatly Slumble on to • 5ac1111eia1 but18l ground deep 1n the tungletl of Aln· co 3 16tl) MOVIE " • • Lile Al The Top I 1111>61 l •u•~ Hatv•y J11 1n Sommons Unaware ltiul 1111 w1rt1 Is doing lh• ~ame • man deci<let to nave .i11 allalf 4 1~0 NEWS 4 20 0 MOVIE • • Mail Bag RoblMlry t 1%7) Lee Patterson Kev Gallard • 30ll) NE'W8 Friday's Daytime Movie -MORNING- 1 t 00 (I) • Desert Tr11I I 19351 1.,, -Nayn6. M••Y Korn· mJn A rode o s1ar M IS out '" lrnfJ " gang ol hank robbor~ t 1 30 0 • • 'The Grt1al lOV· 1·)••.11 Bob Hope 111 ""-• 1emmg A Boy ,..cour lall(le• tall1 ror a tu< hl!~S while on n lrans- Allurtl•< CllJll6 -AFTERNOON- t2 00 W • • Oragoor• Wells M<1~• "'e ( 1957) Barry 'ull•vltn Der1111s O Keele Aro 111 IO>~f)rted group Of ,.,1"'1 1 trCtppe<J 1,, a Slack· •<It' Nh1le an Apacht1 ma, k • gamerong on the ,.,,,,1), I 00 ti) * • • Talk 0 1 TM fr1wrt I 194:1) CAty Grant, Jc,Jt Artnvr A Supreme C:ow1 1ud9e <>no a lf'aC:hltf 1.1 i.> .s rnan c1ear nimti.ell ot ,,, .Jf '"" c.fldrge 3·30 0 • • • Roque Cop· t •~~~' Rober! Teylo1 ,,1.,t l mgn A pohceman r "'~ 10 .J•Pnge thf' death r I h brotner Oespolf! the r 0·#~1b1hh that n~ ~ttt be in '•"Hndtft<J tor Jcceplmg hr•h1•._ by Armstrong & Batiuk ON THE OTHER HANO. IHE PEOPLE: HAVE A RIGHT TO HAVE. !HEIR G~B.AGE ~KEO UP ' WELL..t. I HAl'S MY O YlNtO N ! \'I/HATS YOURS? 'Soap' star Diana Canova . now on Broadway stage ~la'.!.~HABBU'M' We were al how she happens to be 10 "Song," NEW YORK _ Wh en "They're Playing Our playing a kooky lyricist who fa lls in Jove with a Song" bowed on Broadway in 1979, Lu ci Arnaz, famous po p composer pl ayed by anothe r daughter or Lucille Ball and Desi Arnaz. was the Hollywood import. T<'d Wass. female lead. Now another show-bi z daughter has Well, she bt•J?an shf' saw the Neil Simon the job. musical when 1t opened, "main!\ lo see if I wanted She's Diana Canova, daughter of Judy Canova . to do it sometime •~long lhl' · hne. in stock or Diana once was a man-chaser on ABC's "Soap," somewhere. I bad no idea I d do tl here " which is no more, and this season co-starred on But one day the phont> ran~ whtle she was tak-. "I'm a Big Girl Now," which ABC also just axed . ing a showt•r. When the> phont> rings in Hollywood "Song" is her Broadway debut, her second while you are tak1nJ? a showt•r . it usually is paying stage job. The first, she says, was two someone st'lhng a · pre nl'cd runeral plot or an years ago ln Michigan with Steve Landesberg, a agent. "Barney Miller" cop wilh whom, the ''Song" In this case it was an agent , hers. He asked if playbill discloses, s he "currently cohabilates." s he'd like lo do "Song" on Broadway. She said Whe.n interviewed, the actress, a lall, pretty s ure. She's wanted to be on stage. ever since the woman, was habitating al a mid·town hotel here. musicals she did while at Los Angeles City The phone rang in mid-interview. It was lhe hotel College m anager calling lo castigate her and even gripe. Wh) TV first? ·Because.'· s he explained, Seems an NBC crew wilh a field producer , a "That's where my first opportunities came. There supporting cast of five and enough camera gear to were agents from television who used to watch me tape "War and Peace, Part Two," had tied up lhe in college elevaton while ascending lo her suite. "They'd say" -she did a little Groucho Matx So, as Miss Canova listened lo lhe man on the bit ... You wann a agnel"' I auditioned for lhe phone, the fi eld producer adjusted her designer ~tag<: in Los Angel.es, but then I started gelling jeans, her crew unpacked, the visiting scribe Jobs tn TV. Next thing I knew. I was doing 'Soap,' sipped apple juice and lhe press aJenl fretted. then my own show "Oh geez," Miss Canova sighed when the "I figured, though, that it'd be a great way to innkeeper ended his lecture on why his elevators get to Broadway if T did telev1s1on first, but only should't be tied up. "Not really a good day. Now, from a financial standpoint. I wanted to make where were we?" ______ e_n_o_u_g.;_h_money i~ TV to com~ to Broadway." Chic -------MOUT 1$199GREAT I -DINNER ('> ..... g Good lor three P•eCH JJt1cy go1011n C•Clwn KPntucky 1J FritCI Ch1c~en p1u1 ;'.~~le &erv1nos 01 cole slaw 0 mashed POletoes and oravy and a rull L1m1t lwo 0 11111, Z pe• purchiise CouPOn good only 101 com1><n1111on wnotl' I Cllfk oroers Cuatomer P•Y~ ;,II pph anit ~11IH 1.u Ol•tr ••PllH Junt 1 196 Pr1te' mey •<lly 81 1>art1c10111"Q l~a 1tOl'IJ 0000 Ollly 1n Sournern C•hlorn11 wn1r11 yo.i MM Amerie. a ll1nom1 W onoow 81nrit 1 coo"ns. -------ABOUT $5 ftft SUPERI e7~DINNERI GOO<I tor 111no 1>111cas ol l\l•CV QOIMI\ r11own Mnluc111 Fried Cf\tcllen. with louf .~11. 11 1110• OOI• lllaw • 11rg1 mashed potatoes trtll ~ mfldourn grevy ~1mll lwo 01ft11 per purcnase Couoon gooo only kit tOITlb•lllllon M Oarlt 0toers Cu11om11r par 111 apphetl>lt Hies lax z 0 ~ :> 0 u I I I ' l ! Oranoe Coat DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May 28, 1981 DEAR PAT DUNN: I recently ftled fol' bankruptcy and want to find out if Ulla will affect my lneome tax check. T.S., eo.ta Men 'ne ......,..., Ad ol 1'11 ftMl9(na &M la&erul ae ..... Seniff &o Irene aa1 ner· p•1•• of federal &as uW &lie)' are _...... .., ... ~1 c:.ut. llee•-&Me.rt .. c.....-., backlel1e4l, •181 lupQ'en' re- ,._., wW be delaye41. U a &aqleyer '""'"• a.la II &M cue, eem&ad &Ille lecal IU .mce. After ~ &M CHM of &M delay Is 8 buknp&ey, &lile &allpayer .W be ae9& Por• 4ftt, ~ lafor•aU. ..,..... u &Ille baaltnp&ey b9 doled, tile &upa1er .._.. reeelte a nt.H wtWa ti weeb ol receipt of lite Hmpiete4 ferm. Pllou <•> W.U. fw morelaf-aU.. Holiday origin untB1ain DEAR PAT DUNN: Can you tell me when Memorial Day was first observed? Thia came up at a family picnic laat Monday, and even though we were enjoying the holiday, nobody knew much about its bacltaround. N.E., Irvine \ fta&'1 becaue &lilere'1 • 4leflldte ... formaUioa • ..._ &lile ertpaaU. ti •e1Hrt&1 Day, ......_. called ~ Day. h'1 belJeyfJll fe bYe Mea ONenM fin& bJ ptey. lal 8uit•n• .... ftrtq ... Qril Wu. 'fteJ .._ May • &o dec•ate &lile II'&•• ti WI! Vllllm aad c.t•ra&e 111•1~ &CceN• 1•1 lo Ute Wort• BHk Sacjc .,. •••• Aaertcw..., oMene &Ida •a&lilaal Mlllla1 .. .._.....," ................... aaw. 4*111"1'• later wan, lacl ....... , .... Aaertcu War, lltl·ll"; Worl• ar I, ltl7·1tll; World War II, lMl·lMI; lite Koreu War, 1-.11SS, ... &Ille Vletlta• Wu. e ··Got a prob~m? Thn write to Pat .... 1 Dunn. Pat wiU cut red ta~. getting ~ tM a~• a nd action JIOU Med to • solve iM quUiea in government and n ~u. Mail JIOUT qw1tionl to Pat Dunn, At Y~r Senrice, Orange Coaat Daily Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560, Coata Meta, CA 92Ge. A1 man11 letters aa poalible will be anawered but phoned inquiries or letters not including tM r~r'• /uU name, addreu and bulineu houri' phoM number can1JPt be considered. This column appeari daily ez. cept Sundays." * JEWELllY SHOW * PRESENTED BY CAL WEST JEWELRY OPEii to the PUBLIC DAY 0 LY FRI.. Y 29 STARTING 10 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. ,.. % - UP 10 OFF -Now you can buy at wholesple prices. This may be your . last chcmce to buy gold iewelry at these prices: All Jewelry imported fro"9 Italy. CIAmS..C:HAl•S..CIAl•S We have them In all designs and lengths. Display of ecrrfngs and mountings. ALL JEWELRY SOLD IY •11111 LARGE D1$PLA Y OF CHARMS st Mr.MG AT sp AND UP · 516• CHARM HOLDas •••••• 5-IRACELOS •••••••••• ~ • - KODAK COLOR PROCESSING I I QUALITY WORTH ASKING FOR KODAK ... J Mailers for home delivery. For bright, clear color ... just the way you like if. •Just place your roll of exposed Kodak film in a KODAK Mailer. add postage and drop in mailbox. •Mailers are available for Kodak Slide Films and Kodak Kodacolor II Film. •Mail your Kodak fllm direct to Kodak in a prepaid processing envelope. · •Receive quality color processing by Kodak. •Finished prints delivered by mail. •For 110 -. 126-or 135-size color prints. •SI< f()OI COLOR PROCESSING BY Kodak Trust allJQUP IDllDOPlas Think of all the happy times you've had. tioKODAK Fiim The parties. The Proms. Graduations. The wedding. The firsts ... apartment, car, home ... Trips. Vacations. The baby. Birthdays. Anniversaries. The family times ... the 4th of July ... the holiday weekends. Remember? Trust all your memories to Kodak film and give your memory a rest. And.remember to always keep a spare cartridge on hand. That way, you won't miss the memories. FED CO, MEMBERSHIP DEPARTMENT STORES STORE HOURS WEEK DAYS -- . . • ·: ..,. ---.......... ·,, ... , . .,.. __ .._ ........... l'om ........... ~ ........... .,...~!"':"!""!l~~'P."'!"l~~ .. ---'::'""'r""'* ~~~ ~-: -;;:-;; -;--; -; -; r; -.. ~;,-:;. .. ~ ... -. . , .. .. . ...,,. . Dally Pllll ' .... ...... . ........ Fors-. Ho.Mt For s. \ ....... for s. ....... For s. ........ For'* ••••••••.............•• #•~····~··············· .............................................. ·············~········· .....•................. ·····•······•·•·•······ HHanforS. ........................ 100~ G....... 1002 G...,.el 1002 ..._.... 1002 GeMt".. 1002 . -IOOi ........................................................................................... •·••········•·········· ........•............•. G.MNI 1"2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DINISSIDAGIMT · ~~ IOOI 1• IOll'I 1011 ,. ... ·-um ICQo llMO 1064 DISTa.AUGHT WIN DISPEllATI OWHlt Make an orter-owner transferred. Great nelabborbood to raise children. New Int /ext Int. lge rear yrd for ntertaining. Exist VA t 7%, 12'5 PITI. Sub· ::: , ••• ...,,. Motlce: It! 5'5-9491 WALKER II LEE R.E :~ All real e state ad· 1• ve rta s ed i n this :::= newspaper is aubject to :: the Federal Fair Hous· .... Ing Act of 1968 which :: makes it illegal to ad- vertise "any preference, l i mitation, or d is· c rimination based on race , color, religion, sex, or national origin, or an intention to make any s uch preference. limitation. or dis · crlminaUon." 2 UNITS $94,900 Super investment! Two 2 Bdrm lnits. one with fire place! Current in- come-$740 mo. Financ- ing! One year home pro· tec lion pla n incld . Hurry, this won 't last! 646-7171 This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which Is in viola· tionofthelaw. THE REAL ESTATERS RARE OPPOltTUNITY IH CAMEO SHOUS __ ,,., ........ '-UftllmlWled lloo&Mtl'\ir,.orUlll C.....181....,. Pllr• c.diom11Mua 1 U•I T.,........_,...,. 1---------1 Lowest priced ree &im· ;: pie available! Great aa- DJO ERRORS: sumable 1st TD. Enjoy = · Adnrffsen aflemooo swi and views := lhotlldchedltMlrads fr o m wood d eck . 3 uio dolly and report.,... b e autiful pri vat e : ron 1,...dllhfr. n. beaches. Only $.'W9,000! = DAILY PILOT as.._.1 Call today! 673-8550 T--.-u.r °"Plot•• l'\irn Die*,... Uni . ~''"" Al!J U•lwa Allb I'\"" .. Uftl ._. .. _. . ...,., =~~ = W.llty fw .... fint ::: h•correct h•Hrtlo• THE REAL ESTATERS Swn,...r lltnt1I• VM•bon Renl•l1-R~.t lO Shar9• c ...... , .. lltnl Oll\tot Renea! --.11 ... .i 1-..01 Rt6taJ ::: Oftly. 4.JDO :: 1---------1 ~~Wanted M1.K. Renul1 IUSHfESS, INVEST· MOO,ANANCE 44lC 4.$00 UlO -- ==-:.: lnfflllmont ()oow1'y lOI) lnveatnwnc Wa111ed SCDO M-1t0Loan :!025 M-p Wanted• $030 won,11 ... Tn , 511)$ ANNOUNCEMENTS. l'OSOMALS & LOST & FOUND ~ ... lloaU.lollunt ~,., .. llolU,ManM £""'' -.Po .. or Boau. lltlll Cll1rter Boata.Sa.11 . lloau.Sli .. Doc:lu lloet.o..!!Md 6 Siu llollll.Siarqe TlANSPOIT A TION "'"''"" C.m,..,..llalo R061 D~o C.n MololM JfotnH . , .... C)t. ... ~ ..... • .._ Hm1.S.lt •Rfftl ~Allen.Travel ~.::.~~i.,,. AUTOMOBILE lil•oeral • ... Anllqun1Cl1U1<1 ~al-Vtb1<ln l\ar• Rods. 4 -•Onvn Trwu v .... A"'°WUUIC AUIG9 Wani.d UTOS, IMPOHED -10'!) 1100 IOIO ----lllO WlO -- tllO tl:llO tllll 9140 I la> 11111 1119 tlll) - .•10 9620 ----l610 -- 0-ral • • WIOI Alla R-o • . , flUI AtodJ f'IO'I -·Htalep 1'1111 BMW t'IU Cun WIU Oii.-... " . . .. .. ... 1'111 Colt . . . t'lll O.Uue fl'JO , .. ,.r1 . .. . flZI ''"' ...... ..... .. • ms .....,. rm JacMr rnD '-• risz ~uo111a WI» II ' ...... "'" "•• fTa Muda ent llleftotdn llHI , , Wl40 :gi. . . ...... ... . ::: 0.-1 t'l41 r-... t'lfl ::::::: . = "-'ill . .. . . '7lil llolll Roytt ' .. . . . t'lll ;;;: ........... ,. ' .::: ~················"··= =... ·::: ....... ·:: v.-. .. _ '"' va1.. nn ~·· urn, o AITIS, ISO a-al •1 AMC -................... ·-c..llK ................. .... C.MM9 ................. '•T ~,...·~· .....• ,,, ...... .. <.Jaitr ..................... ··-~ , .............. ·*' c. r1 •..........•. -~ .. , ..... s:' . ."':::::::.":::: = :k :/:.~:~·.::·.:~~'::-::"i , ............ .. =-· ............. = ~::::::::::::: . ..., $ ............. .. ........... , .. , -,,, ................ "" •v... ·············••••••• •• Oft-.~ -s.,. ....,.... ni4 t.be ,c11a1med.., eHr1 •• ,. If , •• ll•vt ................ ,.. ....... fllll ........ '9V.c.UIO-M1L I RCTaylorCo 6 40-9900 LOCATION UNSUIPASSID LINDA ISLI Exquisite home located on one of the most sought after bayfroot lots. Captivating view of main turning bas in from most every room. This home has 61 feet of bay frontage with space for 4 large yachts. Unusual features include pool & spa in private courtyard and elegant decor throughout. 5 be droom.5 & S'h baths. Shown b y appointment only. $2,600,000. PENINSULA POINT-SUPER w• to 1.., & oc .. ,,... IMI •••tl•d be.ty. Co .. llhly MW ill & ...t ... loada of roo. for ... fmlly. Sp•cioe Z..tory with l*Jt•d & groowd floon. .... & 1..-.d ...... "-9t JbcL .... lg. fmRily room & dill. ""' bcelat ff..cilMj $444,500. 631-1400. ON-WATER CORNER-SUP-VU Woock, w__.. & Mtectlft -.... Ill CJOOc1 tette. Mon Ill ..., ...t ...., us•wr Oft ... lay wftt. 'fOltlr M.t • yo.' door 2-story 4 ....... Wc-r & pri•acy: lea«Md 9l•t1, ~ & •1 -Mtles. s1.200,ooo. tw. 67U900. NEWPORT CHARMER-IOOL ..,f.,.NyarH•aqiliet*"'· L,_... pool Oftd dKJt Gr'ff ill a MChd1d back yard HrrowcMcl by '"'"'Y· 0,.. ••lllt room wf .. ..wty 1 ••••led ldtdlea. Two ~ + deR .., C..W be lrd bedrooM. $115,000 fee. a..oa1111 ,... eo •• .,.. .,_, 2•12 latll1. w,t l•r. l•terco& Lenty .,,......... n""'....... c. lty Pool. hst Vat. la Are& u.e.c1 U...- $200,000. A "Joy Of ..._..,....U. ..... WATERFRONT HOMES. INC REAL ESTATI s,,i..,, R•n••I•. Pr"P<rt~ M•r'-""'"' 2436 W Coast Hwy Newport Beach 631-1400 C 0 C R 0 P N E Y R E T R T A S H £ C SA Llk A [ P S]Y CDT EN W 0 A.PM C R U L H L E R E A 0 N X E R R A N A N T C GT E 0 N 0 t U N E R T•T E P H K I D A H V Y N T N I I V I l C R 0 T 0 R E I R A T A C I 0 M C E T H A J I A E l U S T H l E D I U N J R A L R 8 U V I £ A C A D E A L U N I H S C O I T C Y A H T 0 C L A IC X R C W T E 8 [ N I E C E C L U T E L P H IC f T D C I S L R L 0 A C E R X A A N R L E W N E C E D N I E I A L S T R U £ l R E A D Y E Y M D U W IC L T E E S T M T 0 D O S S E I P X I T E L L W M T I 0 M 8 y A D E C L A I R I I L I T. U 0 A V N l Dalebout Bay&Beach Real Estate • REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COME WITH us ••• TO coae>HA DB. MAR HIGH QUALITY, CUSTOM, ONE YEAR NEW DUPLEX .. THREE AND TWO BEDROOMS, PLUS IDEAL G UEST OR MOTHER-IN ·LAW QUARTERS .. NUMEROUS SPEC IA L FEAT U RES INCLUDING SKYLIGHTS . .FJVE PATIOS .. Sl99.000. I 617 WISTCUFf&, H.I. 631·7300 Cadillacs to Go.Carts Whatever the Fad Roll 'em off the market With a Chwlfied Ad Call Now! 642-5678 Classified Ads are the answer to a successful garage or yard sale! It's a better way to telJ more people! IEST iUY-OCEAtROMT l bechofft 2 both "°.:.!= roo.. projetalOHly MW kltclie., ..... dec:ll ... foc-ui. rigM Oft ft.. .......... lated fw $575.000. NEWPORT HEICiHrS 31 ... 21/J la,..._~ lot. Hardwood floors _. ...... ....... potewtl& $27' .ooo. MUST SB.L HiCJWy .. IJroded 4 ... 2 .. Co"9e ,_... e.o-loc•ad Ill lnlH. C111toM brick patio w /JocMnl mid ...... 119-.... ... to ~··· Jwt IWld .. $155,000. o,.. HM w 1-5. 3531 AluwMd St. JASMINE CIE8l Lo ... , 3 I .. 21/J ... co.dD located la prhat• .... of Coro•• del Mu. 24 .. o•r CJllSdecl CJClfe, ' ........... 3 pooh ..... ,... .,.... ... .... .-oc._ •&ew. Two ,.._, lo•ely '-chcaplllg _.. ..._.. priHcy. Offer.ct at $395,000. IA YCIEST IEAUJY $100,000 dowa a.cl oww a bea11tlf11I hOllH h• Newport IHct.. AIWIM the I 1t .t 91/flo, owe ... rHt at I 20/o for 5 yn.. Offered at SlZS,000. LEASE, LEASE on10N OI IUY 119 Caayo•. 2 Ir 2 la calUla•lll'-. • HM CJOlf ~. Secwfty w:s•ah ..... costl -...... pool. Cdl fw flft.cilMJ h . For IRfonuMlffott °" ....._ _. othet-ftae pt opartle1 ~ ow ........._.Dapalaw .. 644-7020 ,.. 110f .. ~ ... •""" ·-•11111 ._, ·-·-.. ~ .... ·-. ...._ .,_ .. ..._ ·-'" .,_ .... :::-==-·-~= ·~=-~~µ 11-OIDo ll'fW !Ito .,,_ ,,,,_ ,.....,_ .. a..-•• ,.,. .. ,. ... ,.""' .. ,_ ... ,. .. ,,_ •7n.. ,,_ .. ..., ..... ,._ .. _ ·-...... r.= ::= ~~ ..... ·-...... DA ... ·---.. -.... ·-·~ er.. .... !!:2:~ ::-.. == :::. ·-·-·-·-. .., ·-.,_ .. ,.., . ..,. -~Good ®.w-C)J!.i IAV£Y r r 1 1 Al TT I r 1 r 1 SOTMlO I r r I I l<S IYY N 1\YLOR CO. HJ-:A !:rtll\S ~.1111 1 · l ~H H SOUTHHH COLOMAL MAMSIOH OM THE GOLF COUISI llG CAHYOM COUMTIY cu• A masterpiece or elegance & dignity overlooking the lush green fairways . Created by Newport's finest builder. Top quality c raftsmansh ip & mate rials, abundant importe d marble , air c onditioning plus numerous other fine appointments. Stately marble floored foyer with impressive circular stairway. Elegant crystal chandelier. Queenly master suite plus 4 additional bedrooms, each with its own private bath. Banquet size dining room, richly paneled family room w /marble" fireplace & wet bar, fully paneled billiard room w /bar. Refrige rated wi ne room. Realistically priced at $2,150,000. Call for appt. WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .. REALTORS 2111 S• J~ ... Rood MEWPORT C&fTla, M.& 644-4910 Classified Ads. your one· 1 stop shopping center. WANT ACTION? Classifed Ads 642-5678 -.. ~ WATERFRONT 30' Da B~chelor pad, very private, master 1 suite w /view & spa. Lrg sit din., wet 1 bar, grt sun decks. Price $525,000. I t Excell. terms. Bob & Dovie Koop. 1 I R&'Mtile .. .6J1-12'' REALTORS RESIOENllAI RE Al ES fAf[ SERVICES EXCLUSIVB. Y USllD A popular PALERMO model with a pool in Harbor View Homes. Prime corner lot across from the park. Four BR. 2 lh baths + Family Room. Amenities include built·in bookcases. A super value. $284.900. IN NEWPORT CENTER 644-9060 CIE llDlll ILlllS CD. OVER 57 YEARS OF SERVICE HA.AIOI VIEW teU.S Just Listed In Much Sought After Harbor View Hills. Three Bedrooms Plus Family Room On A Corner Lot. Beautifully Maintained. Owners Are Being Transferred. Good Financing. Price $325,000. SAH CLIMIHTE DWI.IX Super Buy. Upstairs Unit With 3 Bedrooms. Peek·A·Boo Ocean V~ew. Wet Bar. Living Room With F1repalce. Cathedral Ceilings. Wrap-Around Patio. Spacious Downstairs Unit With Two Bedrooms & Living Room Wit h Fireplace. Laundry Facilities. Good Incom~..._Qwner.s Will Help Finance Priced At $195,000. . OUTSTAMOIHfi IA YPllOMf HOMI Lovely Custom-Built Home On Promontorr Bay. Living Room, Formal Dining Room, Den/Library. Spacious Master Bedroom Overlooking Bay Has Fireplace & Luxuriously Appointed Bat6. Three Other Bedrooms & Maid's Room & Bath. Pier & Slip For Large Yacht. $1,850,000. UPAMD• 'T Pl.AM Lovely Turf Courtyard Enttance. End Unit. Three Bedrooml Plus Larae Family Room. ~tin& Area In Kitchen. Master Suite With Extra Closets. Three Patios For Indoor-Outdoor Livina. Storaae Galore. Great Financina. Lar1e Auumable Loan. New Price, '2•9,500. A .. Joy ~ Newport' Usting. UHDA ISU Wide channel view from spectacular ttrchitectural des igned 4 bdrm, 5 bath, pool home. Slip for 2 large boats"° $1,495,000. By appointment. LIDO 15&.E HOMIS Featured on Homes Tour this lovely traditional spacious, custom 3 bdrm, 3 b~th hQme. newlv.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 entertaining. $420,000. Best price for the money. 1 PENINSULA POINT IEACHROMT \ Panoramic bay & ocean view at wedge, from prime large lot, 4 bdrm/ 3 bath custom home. 3700 sq. ft. featuring marine room, entry, Uvin( room, dining room, built-ins, etc._ $1 ,385,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR i·l 1 fl, v · ·<I· 01 v• "4 !l fl/) fllbl llALTOIS DONT MISS TNS! A Sale You can make even in these times. The largest "1650 sq. ft." Condo for sale in area. Cem ent drives air conditioning, micro-~ave ovens, trash compactors pools_. parkside & all shopping locations. Owner will consider local exchanges. WILSON PARK CONDOMINIUMS 310W.W..._ Cotta Me--. CA 714/'31·5015 . ., Ruffles and Moref ~ · .. • # ... ·:.r ... . ' :-;- .. ... ·. .- .. • •• • 4lrW ... -• • t •• .. ... .. .. ..~ . . ~ D2 * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May 28. 1981 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• HMtHFwS. ............ w. ......... w. ~ ............ s. ............ s. TRY THESE CLASSIFIED INFLATION FIGHTERS I Wow Thu Can Sell More ... with Daily Pilot PENNY PINCHER ADS Only $3 3 lines for 2 days only $1 .50 a day Advertise one or more items valued up to $100. Each actpitional line is only 66c for the two days. Sorry, no commercial ads allowed. Charge Your Penny Pincher Ad or use your BankAmericard or Master Card §VoW...§VeW... More value for your DIMES in the fa mo us Daily Pilot DIMES-A-LINE ADS Advertise items up to SSO In value In Olmes-A·Llne ads every Seturday In the Dally Piiot. Bring your ad with cash to any of our three convenient offices or mall your copy with • checil or money order for the corree1 amount. 20c per line, St .00 minimum. Sorry. no livestock. produce or plants and no commercial ad1 are allowed. Each item muat be priced with no Item over 150. Olme ... A·Llna ada may be placed al the Costa Mesa office until 3 p.m. Friday. until noon Friday at the Laguna Beach or Huntington Beach offices. THE BIGGEST GARAGE SALE ON THE ORANGE COAST IS IN THE DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS .·. ........... s. ..._...Fors. G ••NI I 002 •••r.. I 002 G...,... I 002 ., .. ,_. I 002 Clownil I 002 ................................................................................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• G1Mr.. I OOJ C'iwnil l 002 ~·······~~············· ..•..••••.......•••... , Wt ~~I I '1 !'\I I 1t t• twer or INYISTOIS I O'Y.DP. Noo .. ,,-. Cute 2 llR bouac & 1 Bdrm unit on 1-rte lot In Or1n1«'. Seller will finance at l3'A for 3"' yUtl. 6'1·1991, Ml 4361 Ail_. ___ ---- WE'LL TAKE IT! On lease or lae opt. Nwpt Bch or No. Tustin, 1 story "4 bdrm, la m rm w /frplc, Jae • yard. View. aunktn baths. maid'• qrtrs optional. Specific pro~rtles only. 759·1600 STEAL IT $85,500 2 Rdrm, 111 buth , Clrt1place Close to beach aand shopplnti Hurry• 64~ 9161 . OPEN HOUSt RlAI TY / '\ t~Jt Starting e New Bualne11 Ac:cc:o r d lng t o Calllornla Bullnen and ProlHalona Code (Sec. t 7900 to 17UOI all ,,.raon• doing ~alnen under a flctltlov• ... ,,,. mu•t Ille a •tatemenl with th• County Clerk 1nd have II publl•h•d lour time• In • new•p•pet -wine Ille a r ea In whlc:h the l>u•lnen la ioc.1..s. The atatef'!lent la r1qulr1d by law and I• n1c••••ry In protecUne your bualn••• name. Moat 1>1nka requite prool ol lllttg to open commerd al eccount1. The DAILY PILOT provldH both llllng and pu1>1tc1tlon .... "4cea. We have eH the nec:ea .. ry form• and maintain • d ally aervlca lo the Or ange County CourthouM. Either atop b y one o l our convenient olflc•• or phone the LEGAL DEPARTMEHT 142'-4321. E1t. 332 lor more lnlorm1tlon and lorm1. cars*bikes· *skateboards* trucks* baby carriages •tea carts*trikes rol lerskates • walkers*toys ·wagons•••• scooters• hot rods• coupes• traiters*hard tops*convert - ibles*motor homes*lawn mowers* limos ·corporate headquarters •garden carts Model A's•••• •typingtables wheelbarrows· recreational vehicles* golf carts*model trains*bikes *pianos*cars refrigerators "skates•••••• If it's got wheels, you'll move It faster in a Daily Pilot classified ad.Call 6"2·5678 and a friendly ad- viser will help you turn your wheels Into cash. Use lhe Dally Pilot "Fut Result'' aervlce dlf'Jdory V ovr Mnkelaour tped.rty. Call Ml-"11 ut. m HO DOWN PAYMENT Pay clo1ln11 coeta onl)' ! Buy your own home I Spaclou.a 4 Bdrm, quiet. prime locaUoo I lf you can afford Sl.215 mon thly payment, but don't have the dow,n pay ment dlll cove r T l.C .K.E.T . HOME PURCHASl!; PLAN. Call today for more ln!ormu tion. Offered at Sll.2.900. 9e3-87&1 THE REAL ESTATERS I THINICIMG TOWNHOMl7 Call the spc:clallsts 111 th.-condominium In formation cenlt'r Touchstone Rc11ll)' 003-0867 LOWDOWN r1r-fKt Storhr Unhclicvublc, 11paciou11 3 Bdrm horn<·. hugt• yurd Only $10,MO down, tak\• over $79,2.'IO loan al 14' ~ No quallfylni OHcrt•ll at $89,900 Owner wlll help flnnnc·c. 003·6767 THE REAL ESTATERS REOUCEO $100,000! OCEAMFflOHT Choice com er duplex 3 bdrm . 3 both up, 2 Bdrm. 2 buth down. Can convert to a larger home SELLER WILL HELP F INANCE all 13%. $795,000! I lalboa lay Prop. Realtors •675-7060• 9UAIHT, 9UllT, COUNTIY Used brickti, French doors, beams, cul de sue. two patios, pool esize yard. great neighborhood. terrific fi.nancing, 9 lovely bedrooms plus huie f amlly room. A doll house at $2'i.~.ooo. U~l()U REALTORS. 675·6000 2443 lHt,CoHI ltlyh1uy. Corona d•I Mar WE HNI:'. lf1 OF ntt. l:tl,!,'T AOl:NTS IN TOWN Dalebout Bay &Beach Real Estate REAL ESTATE EXCELLENCE SINCE 1949 COMI WITH US •.. TO MONTICllLO, C.M. FOUll ll~UH OCJ M Jo:NO UNl'I CONDO SllC>WS LIKL A MOlH;J, NY.W SINK , DISPOSAi .. r ouNTJo:n TOPS . fLOOlllN<; /\NI> WAl.l.f'Al'Jo;H .LOCATP.0 N 1-; A It C: L l1 B II <> U S J<; W I T ti T W 0 1'001.S TWO ('All c:AllA(a :. ONLY $.105.000 1617 WESTCLIFF, H.I. 6l l -7JOO TAYLOR CO. 1n:,\1.r <>1\:----.111"· t'Ht; A VllY SPICIM. HOMI with features t hat are hard to find today. Large , oversized lot . Immaculate landscaping front & rear, cozy works hop off 2-car garage. wood-burning fireplace & a warm, friendly feeling throughout. See this 2-bedroom & den home. Now. $183,000. Call for appointment. WISUY M. TAYLOR CO ... HALTOIS 2111 S• J ...... ttls load MIWPOIT CINTll, M.1. 644-49 I 0 REALTORS '75-5511 LOVELY "E" 'LAM. Molt paphr "'°*' e"9r bullt IR the ltuffs. Situated o. .,ectecutw grffftbett with mount.la •lew. 3 ldr, F.R. IHt buy In the oreo ot $252.900. COLE OF NEWPORT IEALTORS 2515 E. Coaat Hwy., Ce...a det Mw 675-5511 LUXURY CONDO 1---------MOVE INNOW! 2story2 Bdrm t.ownhome s tt:ps OCEANFRONT Take over fabulous loan or $426.000 including 123•': interest, 29 years lo go Try $15-0,000 down. Asking $649,000 Ta s tefu II y decorated 3 l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Bdrm 21 ~ Ba plus den ~ One year old located tn n No. Costa Mesa close to . ..,. .. ~-shopping. Features in - elude air cond .. lurge 75 .. 1111 wood decked pat lo •-------• rrom assoc pool. New cpla , drapes. freshly painted, central air & more. Won't last. Only Rl5,900. Town & COWlfry balton 552-1800 JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 ~gas BBQ, m1ero·wave ARIORLAKE ven and much more. WOOOIRIDGE ---------i Assume Isl loan and Perfection and prwacy OWC 2nd. Full pru:e in this 2 Bdrm plus den. FAMTASTtC ASSUM.UU LOAN Assume 1)5,000 loan at 10~ int. Large 4 bdrm home with fam rm & fireplace No qualifying $154 ,900 Call today 979·5370 DECORATOR CONDO SI 19,900 Winding greenbelts lead to bright single story condo. Exquisite ly de- cor a led with r us tom wallpaper and cabinetry thruout. Formal dining room too! Owner will cooperate with rmanc- ang Won't last al thts UPPER BAY $177,500. , mountain like hide away with security gate Pool und tennis Light and cheery 4 Bdr m, 3 bath family ho me. Large covered patio. $213,000. Roy McCardle, Rltr. 548-7729 SECLUDED EASTSIDIE Reduced! Huge 4 Bdrm plus pool Waterfall and bonus room here too! 4 kmg sized lxinns, huge countr y kitchen. Financ- ing is great. Large as· s umable 1st TD and owner will help with rest. Don't wait. Call 631 -6990 CI) SEA COVE PROPERTIES 114-63 r -6990 HORSE PROPBTY Lots of wood. stained glass and country charm describe the at· 'mosphere of this Santa Ana Hgls 3 Bdnn 2 Ba home. The owner will carry large 2nd and you can assume the lst. Full price $163,900 ABNORMAL Can you find a property four doors from the So Bayfront with a 45x85' lot on Balboa Island where the owner will consider anything or value.stocks, cash, lend, units, you name it. And TRADITIONAL REAi.TY HOMES f. INVESTMENTS 631-7370 SAILBOAT WATCHERS This Cameo Highlands beauty ts pnced to sell! $339,000 Owner 10'7. down with owners as sistance! One level 3 Bdrm plus huge yard. Hurry! 67J..8550 THE REAL ESTATERS OC IEAHFROHT 2 Bdrms, 2 ba. unrurn New. $850 yrly. IAYFROHT 3 Bdrm . I ba, unfum Mint cond. $850 yrly CHAMMEL FROMT 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. unfurn. $750 yrly. associated BROl<fRS IHALTOllS l lJll, 'W ~olb( o b ~ l lbb I NEWPORT BARGAIN Picturesque back bay 3 Bdrm 2 bath, pride of ownership home with a country feeling! Large kitchen, very private yard. Bargain priced at $168 ,500. Call to see ' 646-7171 THE REAL ESTATERS $180.000 759-1616 EASTSIDE ALLSTATE REALTORS One story condo, 2 nice bdrms. lovely big patio and yard. Owner anx 1ous to sell has bought IM THE IWFFS '""'@•. another Pnced below •Lovely. large .. E .. plan SEA COVE PROPERTIES market CaU Losee w1lh country kitchen 642-5200 Re.renlly remodeled Privacy plus a quiet cul· d · . Early Bluffs 714-631-6990 ~ PETE ' BARRETT ··· REALTY available. $300.000 D.M. Marshal 644-9990 Placing your Classified ad 1s so simple just give us a call on the phone and we'll help you word your ad for fast re· OHE YEAR OLD Want Ad Help? 642·5678 _s_u_ll_s._642_·5678 __ . __ _ Best lol'ataon, step!t for pool & volleyball UNDER $100,000 Pe rfec t starter home wath great assumable loan Call now. 751-3191 C:::. C.,fl EC T -t"" PHOµE H l il '> IEACH HOUSE s' 57,500 Newport Beach 3 Bdrm A·frame with a S74.000 assumable low , low interest. Super buy. l!E BEDBIE ELllRS CD. OVER 5 7 YEARS OF SERVICE SUPS EASTILUFF CONDO Former Model With View Of Big Ca - nyon. Three Bedrooms Plus Con· vertible Den. 21 2 Baths . Wet Bar. In- inte r-com. Lovely Appontments Throughout. Community Pool. Best Va lue In Area . Listed Under $200,000. A "Joy Of Newport" List· ing . ' MIEWPORT HARIOR VIEW HOME Desirable Corner Location In Phase II Harbor View Homes. Popular Montego On Fee Land. Secluded Yard With Spa. View Of Fashion Island & Big Canyon. One Block From Community Pool, Park & Bike Trails. Owner Very Motivated. $295,000. 759-9100 the owner will trade. --------• --~~~~~--Includes plans for a new D.._EX · (5) ·--·······-·· #2 Co.porrote Pino Hewporl Cftlhr duplex. Asking $595,000. 3 bdrm, 2 bath each unit. lolboa lslcmd Rlty Fireplace, built-ins. Ex· 673-8700 cellent rental area. Near beach & bay. $285,000. IAYCIEST Spacious custom built family home with pool, large paneled game rm .. formal dl.ni.ng rm .. and 4 bdrms. Priced below replacement. A super value al $449,500. Submit on terms. A Division of Harbor Investment Co. DOV•SHOUS 114' of bay fron.tace ~ sq ft "' quaHty COO· struclion. 'Ibis S )>drm Medlt style resldence In the best ol locations la offered w /the b eat flnan t lnc avail. $1.250,000' at 9~ lntereat. Price St,'150.ooo Incl the llod. Owner will carry 642·2253 eves. associated e11r.-fW'> llf Iii T(lllS .. I 1 I/If S J4h' <1 f-l I ll;f, I BACK ON MARKET O ldJ_e but Goodie . Lagwa beach cottage, fixer upper. Walk to the beach. $110.000. Call 752·1700 THE REAL ESTATERS HD.P ! The seller bu to tell this 4 bdrm air conditioned home that needs aome TLC. FNMA fin.nclng available. ~.000 • RED CARPET 754-1202 . Sl.000,000. C.U Dan Blbb 1~~~~~~~~ forappt. THI ....,5 IOG•-SllALTT Flne1t ort1lnal area. '-----•-7_W_l _ll ___ , Superb trMnbelt attun~ oflerlnt "Meulve S.Uin1 ...,..... wiUI a view, s.,.cio.. 3 bdrm Daily Pilat a.ulfled Ad encl unit. totally r e· Iii a allDplll IUltA!r ... decorated townhQme 11 jllel caU ....... -.S,000. Al\i 940-5580. WANT ACTION? Classifed Ads 642·5678 darre~ b~~~ .-.. 1a .. l"IH -The Ranch. Totally remodeled, Upgrades beyond belief. Bought another. must sell! 4 bedrooms 2 baths. Asking $1 72.000. ' '"IM· Turtle ltock Gt.. Owners say sell. 2 bedroom plus den. Make an offer. you may be surprised. $235.000. nlM -Woodbridge Geles. Bridgeport Model. AC. solar. premium location. Assume $11-4.000 1st at 10.;38% fixed 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. family room. den. 2 fireplaces. Asking $219,500. . eor..a .. Mw -3 units. $281 .000 In assumable loans. Asking $469,000. Owner will look at any o ffer. C..... .. M• -3 units. Assume $280,000 in loans. Seller will carry more. Asking $479.000. C..... def Mw -2 units. South of highway. Assume S340.000 In loans. Asking $525.000. Colt• M•H -3 unite. Newer building. Assume $128,000 1st T. 0 . at 9.25%. Asking $280.000. ~SK FOR darrell pash 611-1266 .... 76N74111llll1111 Ao•nt tor Pe~ R4tltort JASMIMIC ... 0tU1bttul Plan 5 ln ex· cellenl conditlon. 3 Udrm • .+ family, terrific ''"e n b elt locallon, auarded community with poola and tennis. $.179,500 with &ood as aumable k>an. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl':ARL AVENUE 1 sty home & 2 BR apt over dhl gur Ownr may u rry part. Bill Hardes · ty, Rltr. 675-2866 WILL BUILD TO SU IT. lge apt w /permanent bay view. Pill'> 75-0 sq.fl commercial Bill Jla1 desty, Rltr 675-2866 CoroRa def Mar I 022 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $2001( at 121/2% FIMANCIMG CDMCO'nAGE PLUS INCOME or 3 Br 2 ba home with 111olaled ma s ter bdrm /parent retreat or in law quartel"ll + 2 br collage Any way you describe 1t it's charm· 1ng, up to date and beautifully decorated Pnct<d al $280,000 with very special rlnancang. CALL FOR DETAILS 644-721 t "1n NIGrL [lAll.EY & ASSUCIAT ES DESIRE EXCHANGE Top of Spyglass - magnificenl view. Nan- tucket mdl, 5 Br, 3 Ba Prerer trade for smaller on Spyglass Ownr AGl 644 5922 •JASMINE CREEK• An extremely pleasant & hard to rind Plan 4 Featuring 3 brs & an ex· panded fmly rm . gourmet kitchen & ever} imaginable upgrade in eluding AIC & rustom f1rep1l. $419,000 759 1501 or752-7373 ~Walkarlln REAL ESTATE Sale, oplionorlrade. Best buy in Spyg lass Outstanding 3 Br 2 Ba + sep an-law qlrs Pool. spa, mln vu Assumable loan. r reative financing by Owner. 759·0969 --- SPYGLASSCAPE COD 5 Bdrms, 412 ba. fam rm. bonus rm, 2 frpks, 3 car gar, cul de-sac $1975 /mo. M O\'E RJGllT IN 3 Br. 212 ba. Jasmine Creek condo. Plan 6 Sl600tmo. 644 6397 La Vera Bums JASMINE CREEK J Bdrm, 212 ba. PLAN 6 Vaew property. $450,000. ~r~~ REAL ESTATE 644· 6397 Spertacular Lake Ar rowhead No. Shore. 88' lakefront. Posh 4Br 3ba. ram rm. $975,000 with $225,000 dn. L~<rwu~ REAL ESTATE 644·6397 SPYGLASS Be a ut i ful night h ghls and ocean view. 5 Bdrm home. $75,000 down and OWC $574,000 AlTD at l2"•"'o inl 964·7522 or 760-8158 HEW LISTING 12'•% loan. ocean vu. 4 Br, ram nn, pool! Open Friday 10·2. Ma r cia Redick. 631-1266 . R&'M~ 10-·\I T11H..., Costa Mna I 02'4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MESAVaDE EMTYTAIHIRS' DBJGHT Lovely 4 Bdnn 3 bath home. Beautiful fark- Uke yard with PoO and spa tor your summer en· tertaining. Larae ramily room, Mexican tile en· try. very light and air)'. As king $273,500. For m ore details, ca ll 5-40-1151 • HERITAGE . . REALTOHS 11"9 VA ASSUM.AILI LOAN Sharp 3 Bdrm starter h o me . Nicel y landscaped, new patio cover , no quallfyln1. Priced at -5,000. For an appointrMO\ to aee, call 540.1151 · HERITAGE IH /\l f •In.._ ' I Orange Coast OAIL Y PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 •• Cash in on 7or11 .... _H•r•'•••urethlngforOr•nt11•County 9dwertt .. ,.~ • There are two ways to win with a Dally Pilot High Roller Ad Run 7 days for $7.77 11 days for $11.11-3 llnes Items totaling $500.00 or less Call 642-5678 Daily Pilat Private Parties only -no commercial businesses plea se, Any classification. No cancellation Rebate. ~.~~ ....... ~~:.~.~ ............................... =.~~~ ....... ~:~:.~~.~~ ....... ~!!!.~~-~ ....... ~~~~~~!~~ ...... ~~~4!'.!!!~~ ...... ~:.~~~ .. .. Cotte M... I 024 Coata Mna I 024 1,..,lltt I 044 Newport leach I 069 1'4ewport leoch I 069 Mtwport leocta I 069 Mobile Hws CHM Properly 2000 C.tMral 3202 • ••• • ••••••••••• •••• • •• ••• •• •• • ••••••• • •••• ••• •• • •• •• •. •• •• •• •• • •• •• • ••••••• ••••••••• •• •••••••••• •• • •••••••. • •• • •• • • • • •• • • • ••• • • •• •• • • • • • • For Sal. I I 00 • •• • • •• ••••••••• ••••••• • •• • • •• •••••••• • •• • ••• • MESA VERDE Switch to tbla spacious 2800' ho me nesUed 111 an exclusive reside ntial area. All the amentlties you've always wanted in a execut i ve ramily home. Fea tures countr y kitc h . w /breakrast room, formal dining, and Jge ramlly room w ith bit-In BBQ. Full price is only $224,000 w /good terms available SSS-2660 MESAVBDE Lg 4Br + den tri-level home. Agt. 979-5099 EXQUISITE MESAVIADE EXECllTIVE HOME Lots or oak Large master & kitchen Solar healing. Pool & jac. As- sumable loan 4 Bdrm with a ll t he extras Broker957·1568 -------- MESA VERDE TURTUROCIC ' Detached 4 Br 2h Ba 2000 sq ft Formal Om mg area, den. fireplace, much more S140,000 m assumable Cinan<"tng Open House Sun. 5·31·81 l·SPM. $289,990. Call 752·1282. IS LOCATION IMPORTANT? You bet it is! So settle your family l.llto Cam pus View. 3 bdrm, 211 Waterfront Duple• Witt. loot Dock Could be Newport ':. lowest priced Waterfront home with mcome wut too l Call for 1rlfo. Broker, 963-8182 DUPLU Oft WATER Dock for 30' Boat 3 & 2 Bdrms, 2 frplcs, decks and patio. C /2 I Newport Cntr 640..5357 Oc~an ~ronf ••••••••••••••••••••••• •EXCITING• ltat Buy In Town Golden West 24x60, 281·. 2Ba w 1ramily rm, in Lag lhlls nicest 5 star pk 21 yrs + to quah(y $39,000 NEWPORT BEACH Prime Prooerties TR lPLEXE~-in CdM Ocean side or hwy Three to choo8e from DU PL EXES on Balboa Peninsula Two to choose from. OU PLEX on the water with boat dock RENTALS BY TH E WEEK OR BYnlEYEAR CALL TOM SMITH HE'S ALWAYS HERE 675-1771 Cor"Ofta .. Mar 3222 c:. •,f (1 ( l "'"f"" I 'I~( II 'l I~ l ll ', HST VALUE Sharp 2 Stor y, 4 Br. 2 Ba. new carpel, redwood s pa, easy care yar d $1 65,000 D Bourke Realtor~9950 ba . formal din. rm. ---------Close to shopping, and recreation. Very attrar live terms S175,000 IRVIHE TERRACE POOl&VIEW This 5000 Sq. Ft. Home 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. Newport ltaeh 20x52 2Br, lBa front kit, lge liv rm, nat wood in· tenors To have new ex- terior s upplied by seller $27,500. CLASSIC MOBILE HOME SALES FOURPLEX in fovn· ••••••••••••••••••••••• lain Valley. 4 Bdrm , bonus rm w /pool lble, lg bkyanl w /pool $1400 per mo 631-4888. Ask for Greg IUSIHESS orPTY Established well located beauty salon in prime location. Submit on te rms --- E /Side CM duplex 2 c ute 1 BR , $1 09 .5 00 Ownr l agt 640-7814 , 963-7600 A cozy 3 bdrm home with formal dtnin~ rm and pool H1ghly expan dable view or harbor and ocean. A great listinl( at only $335,000. O~er will <'arry 2nd TD for We are developers so submit land or other Real Estate to owner J im Thompson. 2706 Harbor, Ste 206·A 540..5937 All large assum11blt' loa n s All owners motivated For detailed mfo call C /2 I Newport Center 640·5357 760..6767 Lge upper dplx. 2 br. 2 ba, frplc. stove. refrig, pvt patio. no pets. $650 962 1835 Touchstone Realty, Inc. 968-0867 LEASEOPTIOH Beaulirul new condo Ital ian tile, double garage. 641 1991 , 631 4361 agt Sl00,000. 64 ... 7211 Mo•eollt Mobile home 12 x 55 fl l!JG2 Skyline, Xlnt l'Ond 17141121-1280 l2131598-IJ6l MAKEAMOFFER! S-5.000 64~0436 "--~~~~~~~2 br, a\a1lable now r ll-00 mo 1st & last 4 blks OwMrw/Corry I st TD MESA VERDE POOL HOME J ust in time for sum- mer! Tltis charming 4 Bdrm home features lf523 C~MPU5Da_·fRVl"E I 5 , •. (8001 352-3710 l'osta Mesa I Br trlr _ • home w,t·abuna. 15x30. 5 Income Properties Adult:., xlnl S6900. Eas ts1de Costa Mesa JBr 21 'l Ba Twnhsc. Frplc, lg e patio, dbl gar, Owner will finance SI 15,000. Ruth Laurie, Bkr 646·43!0 A GOLDEN SPOT 673 382ti 20"( down. Owner will Spacious 4 Bdrm home ------------------·~---------1 2 BR 2 BA. Mobile al the carry Priced to sell' in prime Northwood OCEANFRONT LIDO BAYFROHT area. Lovely yard with VIEW . FIXER beat•h with 18 year lease. ... 50 000 I I 'u:.tom coun11·, l"1 l·n1·h L' decking, custom spa and -, vxpans1ve ocean view ~ 'huge family room with bar. s k ylights a nd stained glass windows overlooking beautiful solar heated pool and spa. And, for the avid photographer, a com- plete dark room with custom cabinets. sink, separate water heater, light sealed and ventilat ed Beautiful wallpapers and levelors thruout A un ique kitchen with cedar s kylight and re- cessed lighting . This customized home is a must to see Offered at $199,900. For an appoint· ment to see, call 540-1151 waterfall Beaut1fully This first lime offering I Large lot on Kings Hoatl ti bdrm, ti IJath 1'11·1 J1ul from large wood deck. decorated with plush is an estate sale One or with duplex Rc:dui•NI to ;.hp Bin:k lerr<Hl' '1''"" S68.000 714 -990 JOOS WOODLAND SCHOOL Beautiful JBr 2Ba 1- FR . lg liv rm w tfrplc Dbl gar w1elect opener New paint quiet St $149,500. Broker 646-4380 or642-4447 carpet and c ustom Newport Beach"s rmcst Jlmo:.t lot value SulJ 1-:lc•g;,int t·harm 1:;110 "'I days, 714·998-4saicves draperies. Great financ views . 3 bdrms home· mit. $399.500 ft l'all nowfor appt C1JH'f1JU1,') 11'{. ing available. $215,000. with guest apt or 2 units -WATERFRONT Rea lonom1<':. 675 6700 HOM[~ VERSAILLF.S 2BR. ot•n REALESTATE ~1ew, low dwn. no quah 631 -1400 don osen n•a ltor.., Redhill¢~ Realty fi1:~-1:wo Mob11t• home w /cabana. nr s hopping cenler, ad ult~. r~ 645 5489 7M f>41 0763 i!l2!i College /\v<' <"•>:.t:i Mesa C'A fy1ng . $134K. 730 2270 ---------1---------•I ASSUMEPYMHTS ilea ut1ful reposesed 0 C EA HF R 0 HT · '-.. HERITAGE . . REALTORS Open H ouse College Park Jbdrm. t:l.ba, double-sided frplc As· su mable l0"'•'·1 Open Sat /Sun, 1·4pm Prine'. Only 336 P rinceton. C M <213)373-4787 --- CLOSE TO PLAZA . Spacious two-story con· do 3 bedrooms. 2 1 ~ baths. Formal d ining room Alrium Picture perfect! $134,750 All of· fers heard TARBELL. REALTORS. 54~1720 17TH AT PH~PECT TUSTIN, 731 3111 ~ *WOODBRIDGE Beautiful Carmel plan cottage home 3 Br. 21• Ba Good assumable loan . Lo wes t priced Carmel on the market Must sell. Co II for de- ta1 ls .. NOW ! soooo will buy large ra111•- 1s the time to grap this ly home in great area. \\\lodbrtdge RealllJ 551·3000 1920 81rran('I Pl111•v. l r\'lnr gem. In foreclosure . we Assume $113,0000WCdif· * * llJM DOWN! need an offer. 3 Bdrm + ference 4 Br. 1~. Ba, ad -on. $118,000. fam rm, frplc, shake Great one year o ld 2·sty, RED CARPET' Devon &Co 642·6368 Woodbr idge Low in· • roof. Prin only. $103,000. 3 Br attached home in 754 1202 ----terest assumable loans • Huntlnt)fon leoch I 040 Try lea.se option unlll ~~~~~~~~~ Assum able loan , up-u 1 ,.,. ....................... (ij] -gr aded Jbdr m. l ~ba , ~i TIOuubrldgt HO 9UAUFYING lrg lot. earthtones, RealllJ New 2 BR condo, seller S119 900 848 9378 will fmance at 13~ for 3 • _· _ _:_ --551-3000 years 641-1991, 631-4361 0 C E A N V I E W 4920 8arranu Pk .. ),lrvtn.- agt. SACRIFICE Laguna leach I 041 Iii b lks to bch. glorious • • • • •• •••••• •• •• ••••••• 2 Br condo <Mont1cello> S91,500. Webb Rily 493-<1761 $SOOODOWM 3 Bdrm condo. S934 /mo. moves you in. No qual. Prine only. Agt/545·1061 By Owner. Two 2 Bdrm houses on 1 lot. $130,000. Assumable 11% 1st T.O. owe 2nd. 641>7464 view. new 2100 sq rt THESHAICES home. all bltns. Jacuzzi w e a there d c e d a r A s teal at S250.000 As s hakes. that IS Custom sumable loan. Must sell designed J bdrm. ram by 6-1-81. 960·3211 or rm, 2 baths. Extensive (213 > 592-2845 use or wood glass & PRIME AREA Jbdrm ,2 ba . fprlc, 12 13'1 fin BELOW VA L UE $1 16 ,000 Collect . 213-530-5159 ceramic tile Beam ce1I mg, frplc $165,000. Mission Realty ( 714 )494·<1731. ore. 642-2682homc. WHITEW A Tat VIEW 90' to beach. 10·,~ assum loan. May take note on your prop us down 4 BR 2 Ba. recently upgraded. w possible m·law qtrs Under $290,000 1nclds IJnd Move fast' 752-6499 PlanWRealty SPYGLASS RIDGE Superb 4 Bdrm family home Pnme cond1t1on and location Partial ocean & city llghts view. Computerized security system throughout Some hnancmg abvaila ble. $549,000 C /2 I Newport Cntr. 640·5357 760..6767 GREAT BUY Sharp 2 Br + den. frplc, patio & spa T ry 10-2or1, dwn. Assume low in terest rales Patrick Tenore. 631·1266 R5'M~ Rt:i\LTORS 100/o DOWN NEWPORT IACK BAY Over 2000 sq fl on lg cor NEWPORT ISLAND Slas.ooo -owe $190,000 at I 0% Fee simple, 3 bclr. clrn 2 ha. patiu dcc-k , :IO ~ !15 lut Smglec,tory B) ~1ppt 71 t 675 3!17 1 • OC EA1' FltO:'liT * Triplex & dplx, :.Int k PP, 673-7677 . fi7:l 7H7:1 REDUCED SlS.000 Must sell 3br. Cam 1111 $180,000 PP,&15 11% 2 Br 2 Ba condo. 2 car s:.ir. low interest rate. a:-. sumable loan Pnn on ly 714 523-1391 ('V('' 714 760 3675 2 Cotta gt's. n1 l.1tlu Villal(e 2.'i' ~ down OW(' balance U1ll llarde!'ot\ Rltr 675 2866 CU5tom Pool Home With J<H: on lrg Cul de sac lot Featurt·~ gourmet Kit <overlook mg pool area & ~rd 1 + ram rm +den ofl t 48r, J•~ua IBr su1tabli· fo r Molhc1 111 la"" retreat Many l"uslnm feat urei. incl :i car fm1shed gar & extra rki.: for boat ett An exc('p t1onal home '. Huth La ur1e rltr 646·43KO. ner lot. nrCherry Lakes. b42-H47 assumable Isl, OWC w 1payments of Sl498 Owner fmancml( R<>aul mo Below appraised Harbor view horn(' va lue at $179,000. Carmel model Jbr. 2tw 494-0395or 951·8973 loads Of hru:k, planlN~ WA. TER A.HD SAND l.uxuriou-. Pe111n:-.ul.; home du~l' tu hctH·h .ind ha~ 1,.ir1w :J tJ.lrr11 :i ba 2 rr11k~ and mu1:h mm t- ( lnh 4 \ r, llt'W i\!-."llflll' largt-l~t al IU', mtl'l l''l Ou.nl·r "'II 1·a11' :!nrl ful I pm 1• Sl.">0,IK~I I a II Inda} !Ji!! . .:1111 ALLSTATE REALTORS San Ciemente I 076 .•..................•.. lllO<h-~ 11(·4•Jn pt1 ru11.1m11 vu $1!10,000 OJ.11.•ll ~IJ) 28 Jll. I 7 21!1 S La Espt·ru111.1 I 1!111 51311 t 'o<JIJ Santa Ana 1080 •••..........•...•••••• H\' O" nl'I l)\\( .tl l:J • .I Ht , 111 B.1 . lq1k tlbl gar Nt•" Jll•tnl & rarpt'I 751 1101:-i u.stin 1090 ....................... IN FORECLOSURE PRICE REDUCED With SI0,000 l'a:-.h t,11.t.• mer 'd(•,mt home and encumhranl-CS SH1.l,500 Approx market valul' S209.000 ror Tustin !II ('ti pool home Call l.1'"· Ownr1 J\r.,'1 5.59 !1400 ur 559-0769 Prine onl} R51M~ Rl-:ALTORS mobile home Double DUPLEX 1~78 Washington Beautiful 4 Br 2 Ba 1SC33401. Low down, Upstairs · J Br 2 Ba. low llll d t · F I DISCOUNT owns airs 1rep aces. MORILEHOMFS gar age, laundr~ room ' Xlntloc. 636-~ TSL INV~IMT 642 1603 VAIUYStS Call us today for Cast and easy rm. on VA loans. DISCOUNT MOBILE HOMES 636-~ FA.Mil Y PET PIC Low s pace rent, local area. single wide " large expando tF.X4656 > DISCOUNT MOBILE HOMES 636-~ ESTATE SALE 1966 M aJestic located in Laf!una Beach Park near ocean. Week days 75!1 .it75 IHVESTOlt'S DELIGHT/ I 00/o DP Two ne w condo~ on lot, live in one, rent or sell the other. Seller will fmance for 3 years at 13 '1 1 0~ DOWN 641 1991, 631-4361 agt FOUR~LEX BY OWNER Xlnt Financing! $310,000 675 0073, (714)345·4123 17 UNITS !I O('ean view apts. 8 <'Om m 'I, underground parkmg elevator, fron- t age on Coast Hwy Prime Laguna location. -----------1 54~3666 AFFORDABLE IH NEWPORT IEACH 2 bdrm. dbl wide New ap11hanl·es New carpet· ing Private patio Wood burning fireplace Full price S37 .soo. Whelan Real Estate FIRST TIME INVESTORS 3 Bdrm O.R . s ingle ram1ly, onJy $12.SOOdwn. OWC. Offered at SSS,900. 540-3666 ~~~~1 Whelan Cemet•ry Lots/ Real Estate Redhill~Realty f i i:~ -I :wo Crypts 1500 1..;:....;~=---:._;;_;...;;.......;__:::..... • ••••••••• ••. •• •• • •• •. • lndwtrlal / beac h R33 7812 pr 640-6358 Cotta MHG 1 3224 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NEW 28R W /NPLC: Built ins Adu lts . no ·pets 642-<IUS S650/Mo .. 3bd 2ba frpl ram rm. din rm, In rm. gar dner furn Fen1:ed yd nr schools & boy:. club $725 556 1737 art 4pm o r wk ends Be:iut1ful EXCl' home nr So Cs t Plaza, pool w !Jacuzzi, pool service, gardener 5bd Jba 3 car garg $2000 mo 556-1737 art 4pm or wkends 3 Bdnft 2 la F p. D /w, Yd. Bit-ins. Adlts. No Pets 642-~'l $700permo East Side Duplex 2Br I Ba frplc. I~ yrd, gar $5 7 51 mo 673-2<177 Quiel Easts1de 3 br, I ba, wood burning frplc gar age. refng S62S mo Wayne, Agt. 646-8816. MESA VERDE lmmac Xtra lge lh rm for enter 1a1n1ng, ramtly rm, large fenced yard. play house. gardner incl Quiet cul-de-sat• Lease S790 979-8727 4 Br New p-.11nt, t•a rpel & drapes Gardening s er\'lce $750 /mo 546 9950 3 Br Col lege Park Kids Dogs OK .,75 /mo 1st last "t deposi t 556-6516 .- NPT Hgts. 2 br, Iba, new cpts. drps 370 LaPerle Ln $575. 76().<1759 EASTSIDE 2 BR I Ba, yard & patio· $525. 1st & last 631-5661 New 2 bdrm condo, dbl gar gar .. elec opener. S600 2000 Meyer Place 631 4361 ; 641·1991. agt. MARINERS COVE 2 BR. 2 Ba. Pool. Jac. sec. Sl.24.900 644-1094 YOU CAN AFFORD this ocean view custom in an executive area Large view decks· beautiful home. 3 Br 2~ ba, den. Only 315,oot $25,000 DOWN fo:xclusive Eas tbluff Townhouse. 4 Br 3 Ba $275,000 Owner anxious. Ma k e offer . Owner Prin ci pal s o nl y 978-0423 & patios Low marnl )&rd , l'lost' lo e\l~r ything Onl) S35,000 down Open for tnS!)t!I" 111in Sal Sun 12·5 Ca II Owner Rltr 752·11"!:!0 , 640-5987 SELL tdle items with a Daily f>1lol Cl<1ss1f1erl Ad 2 c e m e t e r y I o t s , Pro,.rty 2 I 00 Westminster Memorial ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Br Garage, fenced Park Good section · LAGUNA IEACH yard No kids Pet OK worth $760 each, asking Canyon industrial bldg $450 546-7506 NEWPOltT HEIGHTS 3 bdrm, family room, re- modeled on large R-2 lot. Assumable loans. Owner w i ll h elp fin ance. $165,000. MAUIY ST AUFFH SU LIOH REAL TY 673-5354 SHARrCOHDO 3 bdrm, 2 bath, pool, nea r So. Coast Plaia. 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THINKING TOWHHOME? Call the specialists at the condominium in- form at ion center. Touchstone Realty 963-0867 Oran ge Tree Condo. Plan 5, 2 br 1 ba $103,500. Call 552-7552 after7pm. 200/oDOWN Owner will help finance. beautiful 4Br h om e w /spa. Racquet club. A&t. $166,000. SS2·6i40. ~~0~3.~0 0. Bro k e r , UNIV. PAIK LogUIMI Vilacp R.E 497·1761 New wood-glass. spa, sola r , 6 dks, unobstruct i- b I e views, Beac h /Village $-495 ,000PP 494-7631 ILUHIRD CANYOH Hav e good income - small reserve · try this c u sto m 3 Bdrm w /spacious decks. Close In . only JO % down $279,000 Logma VI .. R.E 497·1761 LOCJmMINigml 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A WAID WIHHIHG Beautiful new condo, 3 Lrg 4 Bdrm 21,.'1 Ba home ASSUME AT 10~% Bd 1500 rt 2,.... In prestigious Univ. rm, &q. .. Tll r I •-Unique Fox.glove model bat h a . Double c a r Park, steps rom poo .,. in Lake Park 2Br, Den, 1ara1e w/elec opener. greenbelt. Assumable 2Ba Vaulted ceilings, Draped, never been financing. Call ror de-french doors. Pro(. de- I Br Versailles Pen thouse. Assume $70,000 1s t. $35,000 down . S122.000. TSL Properties 642-1603 BEACH COTTAGE Two bdrm Spanish style , Frplc, gar, pvt patio & ya rd. Good location. Steps to beach. Only $174.500. Owner financ· in g OK ! Call now • 645-7221 Ag\. •IAYFROHT• LINDA ISLE. NWPT BCH Nothing down and as· sum o ur position on this prestigious 5Br, 5Ba 3 slip home In Newport Beach. Most desireable area. We are looking for Newport leach 1069 •••••••••••••••••••••• IJ!IMACNAB til~!v- PICTURE PERFECT Lovely lite. bright home with private corner location. 4 bedrooms & family room. master suite with Fireplace. Cathedral Ce ilings. exce11ent financin g. $459,000. R. Seitz, 644-6200. tO!AL Wtlii. '!OT.AL l&!W'.&O'l'I& JnnnC>ta'~· eo1 0owwr orwe KIM'tlOr v-OmtAr IJ~ 8-cb. CA 9aCI0.1 IM& 8611 MJCl,wl DI'. lllwpor\ lWcll. CA 1111«1" 642 ... 135 644-6200 S1200 for both 714 / neartown &artrestival 642·9136 eves. grounds. 9600 sq rt. fully leased Gross annual i.n· come $54,000. Realonorrucs 675-6700 Commercial Pro,.rty 1600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------•!Nearly new 10 Unit In- VACANT 6212X29212 zoned for of- flc-e building. $200,000 Roy McCanle, Rltr. 54S.7729 dustr ial Bldg in Costa Mesa 15,000 sq fl. 25% down Owner will carry 1st TD at 13'# interest for 3 years. Phil Sullivan •~~~~~~~~~I Realtor 548-2103. -- IDEAL RETAIL SPACE Lots for Sale 2200 Plaza Newport, 1000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bristol St. N .. Ste. 20. at R· I Whitewater V11 Jamboree. 1078 s q ft Grcatterms,subord. $1.20 sq ft. Beautifully 7141492-8320, 64S-Z781 decorated , W t o W carpet. Im m ed . oc· Caplstra~o Beach R-2 c up an c y . 851 5188 . Ocee~ view lot, plans, 833-3998 permits approved. Some --------cons truction started. DUDleata/ s100.ooo. 661-2871 Onita S'ale 1100 -- ••• • • • • • ••••• •••• •• •• •• Reallatate l year old, dbl lot. lrg lxct..cJt 2100 Santa Ana Heights 3 Br dbl garage. large yard Clean RiOO. Isl & last + $200 cleanmg deposit 548·4497. Eastside 2 Br 1 Ba. Yard & gar age Nice S485 Eves 642 5261. Days 752·2282. Meso Verde 4 Br. & Family Lovely big I story California Ranch Rustic About 2400 sq Ct Avail about June 16th. $750. Agent 549-1366. --- Nice E/Side 2 br, 2 ba, gar . frplc. Avail June l $650. 548-3561 Nice E /Side 3 br, 2 ba, d bl gar. A vail. June 1. $725/mo. 548-3561 House · 3 Br. frplc, dbl gar . S82S/m0. Avail now I a high Income owner ~-~=mmzm~=======~--wbo n eeds a tax write orr ror the best deal on the • 11 v e d i n . Se ll e r talla. sig n ed landscape. w /finance at 13% for 3 $154,900. Open house Sat· 7ean. 641·1991 ; 631-4361 S un 1·6pm S1r1day PP owners unit, Two 2bdrm. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2bn unita. Prine. Only. Our 4br near Newport 760-0734, 631-4402. Ba c It bay for you r $200,000 +So. County lftCotH h'operty 2000 home or Condo. 831·0611 House · 2 Br l t,A, ba, dbl l anr . AvailnowS525/mo. ast. 831· 7634 or75&-246S USTSIDIC.M. Fox glove model in Lake bay. We are owners, not brokers. Call Darlene (714 )828·1280 direct or collect . Office open 9·5 Mon-Fri. Owne r wlll h e lp to 1---------Park. 2 br, den, 2 ba, tldant'e. RVr'a dellabt. a WooclNiilll ...... vaulted celling. French Bd. 2 Ba. L ll, F R, 2 Waahlnitoo Mdl, Br 2% doon . A.uu.me at 1~ ~~!!~!!!!~~~I rrplc. wort •bop 14 Jl 24, ba, 2200 &q ft. Mau.me $154,900. Owner. fruit trea. Compl. re· nu.ooo lit. 8y owner __ 83_1_·7_634_, 7_st-_2'65 __ mod. llllt'ben 6 bath. Nu l189,000. Ph: SS&-5T'18 58 IB 1 1,._· d t'arpeta fc dnpes, auto•--'-------r. a ,vew. v m own sprinklers. Auto gar. WOOOllJDGI 12~' 1248,000. OWC opener. ~U End Urut Condo 3 Br. zy, 6TJ.2493 'OK' buva , .... •-•atttt ln .. Ba. llOt &q. ft. Danbury .. I ~ un.. .. Model. Auumable k>w Br. alngle family home. interest k>&n, AttachC!d Good location . CM aaraae, nicely dfforat· w/25K equity. Owner ad It landlt'aped. pa,. au bll•. wm •pUt SlN,850. • tas "rite-off end pfOflt Condo I Br. 2~ Ba. 1'41 arter azsoo. M7·H4S, aq. n. Aircoad. AMwna· Mf.tlf7 ble loan. Many com-•".---------1 murlty prlvllefet. Sell Uabap fMt wkh DallJ SUl,500 PUotWaatAdl. Call7U.la2 NEWPllT CREST Tflttfk ,._ I. -2 bidroom. 2 bath wilh 111umablt S79K ttt TD. Priced for quick aale. S\85,000. *Cote Realty & ln\l~tment 640-5"7 LIDO ISLE LIVING! Great PoSslbllitles await you in the floor plan or this 2 story Lido Isle home with 3 bdrms, den & family room . $445.000. Tom Alllnson or Te rry Hanes. 642-8235. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or496-8682 APPUVAWY Near n ew 4·Plex. 2 R....,. bdrm, 2 bath each unit ••••••••••••••••••••••• with flrepla~. ent'lo8ed Ho.ea,...._. patio, double 1•ra1e. ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1115.000. BUI Grundy, MewponlMdt 31'9 Rltr, 675-6181. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_ ____ _.._ .... LIDO ISLE cbarminc 3 USI THI bdrm, 2 baUt.~yroom. DAILY PILOT !:\0 ":,~ o~~ "FAST m.tl&I. RISULr• _ * lertt•c..ID * SllVICI Forever vfew, Jbdnn, DIRICTOIY 2ba, a<1u1ta, sec. bld•. For Result 8 0 a t • 11 P • v a 11 Service Call SIOOO/ma, C IDGI or 1rty '7Me3'7. 642-16 71 Clualtltd Ada, YoOr oe• ... JU atop •hopslin1 eent.er. Agent S48-1188 ..... v.., 3234 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • br. 3 ba exec. tri·level, fa.m, rm. 2 ftplea. ent'l patio. Gardener lncl. 1 y r l ease. No peu $925/m o. 963 33'4 aft 6 ;30; 962·7501dya. ............. 1240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HOME ro~ RENT • Bdrm. 1125. r eoced yard • prep. Kida • pet.a welcome. 9M·2"e or '7•29'71. Att .. no rec: D4 Orange Cout'OAJL Y PILOT (l'huraday, May 28, 1981 .,_.. ..... &Www.. • Vocatlotl...... 4250 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• !!:·11~ ............ d "'""u. ........ d ............ ,... I t d ...... h...... ~1!'~~ ••• ll!! LKu,xury uo!_ehanr1du11 t ••• ••••••• .. ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• • ,. • aoapa °" con o 111 .............. 3240 .... JJ6f w,.,t.... J7H CethlM... JIJ4 NO FEE! Apt. 11 Condo Ma'ul, l lpt 5, 11Vall 7 ,., ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••.•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• rentala Villa Rentals to 8/S. Day1 ll32-'2Gt, t"'' SHARP· 3Br 28a, crp\I, THI IWFFS 2 Br. 1 Ba . PoOI 9'U t76·d12 Brolter lO drp1, blto, frplc, lr1 a Bdrm tJOOdc> w/vlew. Ce>1ta M... Pvt cnt, pV\ ba. p1&t111 fenced yrd, walk to Bch. Remodeled, like new 841-afG PAii NEWPORT refriq, alps 2, 30 yd11 •· 1640/mo 914-d84 with 1ounnet kltcbto. 1 Quiet 1 Br. 1 811 New COUMT'IY CLUI aand. $17S wkly. alOO m• B yr. feaae. $1000/mo. ...rpta ... drpi. Good Nwpt Pen 67S S710 • • • 4 r. 2 Ba. frplc, 780-9118. .. • UV_.. bllt fence. aaraae. No Eaataldt loc. lihture Sina lea. 1~ bedroom KAUAI Lwt 2/2 on 1•1111 1 pets. 1•11 H'--1\ard St. IA YSHOalS Adult.a only ms. 147 E. apll • town.houaea, Bch Sips 6 Pvt pool 11·11 f125/mo + '725 S.O. Cbannlns_ 2 Bdrm 1 ba 18th. St. 14, C.M. From 1510 6'4·1000 n 1 11 S s 9 5 ~ ~ M2·77U. ~~: S:lt~l~o~: ~·o~ ~=;~i.~'. 2bdrm. 2ba., bit-Ina, encl OCEANFRONt (714 )tl731M79 Adult Condom in i um . 1800 75&-1550 r..,.•A·•"'rM""-"•y aar. l•undry fac Frplc. 3 8 2 e 0 I 2 ,. •ntalatoShare 4300 ..... ..,. r ......... ••901 1•0 073• r •. upex <'llr Mariner'• Clove. Thia 2 Brunch • 880'• • •• m 0 " • • g a r a I e w Ith a u to ••••• •• ••••••••••• ••• • Br l~ ba beaUly securi· Udo Sanda yearly lease l P1rtlH •Plue more 831 4402. opener. Yearly Must Movlnii' Avoid d vo&u ty syatern, eauna, pool Ir blk from Bch $1000 mo. OMAT MCMATION: Townhome apt, 2Br. 2Ba. aee lo •ppreciatc! 4' cut living Cl(Jl''llM" tennl1. Avail Im med . 2Dr + Den 2Ba Fam rm TtMll•FrM~ TSL MGMT 6'.2·l603 Profesalon nlly slnn S72S/mo. No pet.a. Alt DR covered p atio (pro&<pro1hop)•2 close to 1hoppln1 . urri. Ml-1168 w I J a cu 1 z I .Man y ~:~,~~~!:~~ hospital 1525 mo. Aat. 2 br, l ba, frl)lc , refrl11. HOUSIMATES . features, near park. Call Swimming • 0011 645·98SO new crpt 4' drp11, 2100 832-4134 H.tlatl• forappnl&f.2..3~ OrlvlngR1nge IAYTIMIBS Haven, Nwpt Hals H•~ 3242 HAUTIFUl APTI: 1575 /mo. 752·~1 eves. • Shored UvlR9 • Co un1elor1 to l)4!n.01111ll select your romp0l1hl• rmmle to s uit yu111 lifestyle Shur~ 1.1v1111 833 Dover Dr Suitt' 31"'11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• THEILUFfS SinglH. 1 a. 2 Bed· SPACIOUS l BR. Huntln•ton Urbr 2 atory 4 bdrm1, 2 baths, s uper room• • Furnlelled Large patio, walk in Townbouae. Exclusive clean. Yearly leaae. &.Unful'llllMd•Adult closet, dswhr, frplc, locatioo nr water. 38r 8950. mo, Ait.673-5~. Living • No Pel•• garaee Pool & lndry 2~ pa, 2 frplcs. Unique Npl Terrace 2 Bdr 2 Ba eMot de811 Open 01ily fac • modern de slen ° 399W.BaySt w 11reenboU1e windows. condo, pool/jac, encl,. Oekwood 646-9883 Adjct to tennis crt s. ear. 162S/mo. as of 6/1, GenMn Apertl'Mf\t1 ---• pool, spa, sauna & gym. assoc fee incl. 646-3942 Newport BMch N. 1295 Close to beach Lge ...,Simo + •• .,,.,. dues studio Stove/refr1g. -· · ~-· Why buy when you can 880 Irvine 1a11111111 AvailJunel.5.Call EUot rent a S2SO,OOOhome in (71'4)6•S·1104 gas , wtr . elec pd ~4 /962-7788 or David Newport Beech for Newport 8Mctt s. 642·4014 &-8559 $1200/mo. 3br, 2ba frplc. 1700 181" St. 100••• •• Ulthl Spacious 1 & 2 Br. Garden 3br , 2ba, fam ily r m. patios brick work etc. 171•)6-42-51 13 Apt. Pool&rec Allutils W75 /mo. Call Unda, Some furn avatl if nee. paid. Adult, no pets. AGT. 846-1371 Near Schools Newport El Puerta Mesa Center Shopping. Quick Decor ator furnished 1959MapleAve.Apt5 l"M 3244 occupancy, call owner Townho~ . .SS • • ••• •• ••••••••••••• •• • 752· 1830 or 640.5987 1ro9t 17 RENTALS 3 br. 2 ba. $1250 Furn. Super Condo 2 . Br . 2'h OC EAHFR ONT 4 br . 2~ ba. S900 Ba .. frplc, paho, pool. Furnished 3 Br. 2 Ba. 4 br. 3 ba. $950 Adults. $750. 673-2181. with office. 2 cur garage 4 BR plus fam rm. 2 Ba, with a uto opener. beuch house. R/O, D/W. Washer & Dryer incld. Avail. now. Weekly. 2 car gara.ge. Jacobs TSL MGMT. 642·1603 2br lba. Utlls pd. cpts. drps, refrige, stove, pool. Quiel adults. no pets, next lo K·Mart. $425 /mo. 543·7689 2 Br. Drapes & carpets. dshwsr. $:11()/mo. 548-5393. Realty, Sylvia, 675-6670 ------1A~rfntetlh Lite-bright airy & brand S-JUClft Unfwnlshed new 2br. 2ba, micro. dbl Capistrano 3278 ••••••••••••••••••••••• g a r • po o I . j a c . ••••••••••••••••••••••• G.-ral 3102 • waterfalls, $700979-3376 3 ldrm 11/J la • •• • • • • • ••••••• • • • •• • • • Exclusive Bach. P~n thouae. total security, vacant. $400. 978·0423. IAYFRONT 631 1801 Super posh 2 Br. 2 Ba Penthouse. 2000 sq ft Shr elegant Twnh~• Sec. bldg, boat slip Beaut view 6Br, 2•,11 avail $1450/mo No pets $325 + IW'lt & t'(' '\I 675·0105 646·9804. 631 1153 VILUIALIOA Brand new 2 Br. 2 Ba. + Den Condo. Ocean view. sky lights, xt-ra lrg paho, washer /dryer hook·up. Wont last long! $950/mo. TSL MG MT 642-1603 OC EANFtlOHT 3 Bdrm 2 Ba, dbl gar, n e w carpet, yearly $1250/mo. JACOISREALTY 675-6670 Beach Apt. 33rd St. Stove, refrig. 1 Br. Adlls only $395. 646--7662 Spectacular V11~'4 s. 1 gale. nr pool, J•1 $195 mo + lilt· h~lq. 760-9307 Fem. rmmlc to :<hr lu furn 3 Br home nr ltt'.I• in DP. ~5 +'~ ul 1 496· 7333. 770.IW75 M /F to s hr 2br, 2bJ ,q 1 C.M 30+ Pool. isott111 • fr pl 1· , d w . (.'I a' H, • 6'12· 7 319. 731 9<Yl() M/F to shart' 4 bt-111 01>11 apt. Steps to bea1'11 'I $250 by mo 1 1 ul1' 631 2270 1 BR. pets. $295. 1 Adult, no Share plush 3 br. 2 11 ~ oceanfront apt. llJlh .. , Pen. $367 tmo. I 5G!I G:l~11 -.S23 CAM.PU5Dl~IRVttCE New pain~ carpets. 1 mi APTMTS FOR RENT University Park. For lse Dana Poin Harbor. $575 H.B .. N.B., Costa Mesa Mo 496·6S<IJ, 492·0610 Som et hang for Everyone Wc:al:fteld FAMILY Al'TS Versailles Luxury 2 · I bdrm. 2 ba Country Brand new be~utaru.1 lrgi c I u b 11 vi n g $8 oo . apt. fo_r famali~s with 1 (213 )479-8091 12 13) M F 25·40 LO shr furn br. ram nn. pvl h1111 .. nr So Coast PIJ/J 1• & J a c 54 0.8225 S900 /mo. Cul-de-sac, Bach to 4 Br. Unfum G r een belt, frpl c, 3 br, 2 ba, a /c. no pets. Apts Certain locations skylight, air cond 4Br, pool priv. liOO June 1. 0 rr er : Po 0 J, s pa . all appliances incl No S86-7216all S fireplace, laun. room, pets, 1 teenager OK. Im· C ndo ....... ----beamed cei 11 n gs , or 2 children. Near park 453 2158 • Heat paid No pets · eves 2 BR l ' • BA $480 Walle to beach Newport 2 BR 2 BA $500 . R • Fem rmmte to shr :1 I\ condo nr So t'u,1 Plaza $175 mo 516 '.17 11 pecc~ble house 759-0600 CU ft "'dc•htd 3425 garages. all built ins mornings. "~-Garden & T~nhouse 398 W Walson 631.SSSJ Shores, lge ~ B 2 Ba, __ ·--_ S675 mo. Chns. 956·5871 Woodbridge Cond_o_3_b-r. ;·;;·~;~·,:;;;;;~;~· ~~f'~t~E 642·1603 2Vaba. $775 /mo. 1st/last, Panoramic ocean . frplc, a Jc. 644·4646 eves mountain & city lights Corona det Mar 3122 W view. 2 Br. 2 Ba. den, ••••••••••••••••••••••• " oodbrldge" 3br + frplc. Never lived in. lmmac. 1 Br, ocean vu, 1 den. 3ba, atrium, must New! $1000. blk from bch. Shared see: Rec fac. no pets Also2Br.2 Ba.ocean& garage, laund fa<:il. $825. 642·4164, 966-0696 city lights view. From $650/mo. Agt 673-1181 WILLOWS 4 Br. 2 Ba. $850. 675-9113 & 675-9132. Spectacular ocean & cit y lights view from every Sharp Eastside 1 BR apt pvt entry, all bllns, gar , $415, mo Call 546-5880. ask for Pam or Larry lbdrm, lba, encl gar , w /refrig, $335. Also 2br, Iba, w /ref rig, encl gar, $400 631 ·2374, 846·0096 Patio Rm., fenced yard, dbl gar age $650 /mo. 644-1480 & 83(). SOSO ext 81. lachelorCOftdo room . Large L Br For lease. Irvine. $395 $600/mo. Call Anthony L.oguaa leach 3241 per mo. pool & Tennis wkdys 64.2-5757 eves & 2Br . crpts. drps. bltns, gar. udults only, no pets. Victoria/Canyon area $430/mo. 631 ·6812 aft 5pm • •• •. • • • ••••• ••. •••• • •• _6_7_5·_7_73_7_______ _w_k_n_d_s_644-__ 8889_. ___ _ 2 IR. 2 IA. Large wood _& glass 3 br 3 br. 114 ba, sec. condo . 2 2~ ba, family rm, 2 car blks to So. Coast Plaza garage, ocean /canyon $575 mo. + sec. dep. vl.ew. No pets. $1025 /mo. Pace R E B94-0682 S ierra Mgmt Co. -·-·----- 641-1324, eves & wknds Beaut tri-level 3br. 2ba, 494-0417. pool. spa. dbl gar, xlnt 3br, 2ba. 2 car gar . fenced, ocean view. June 15, $750. 497·1051 2bdrm, deck. frplc, cen- tral k>c. No pet.s. Lease $700. 494·3651 S.A. loc nr. SC Plaza $650 1st/last + sec. 5S1·2960eves WOODBRIDGE avail im· med. Uty, 2br, l \.!iba, fr pie. a /c. mir rored wardrobes, $625 /mo. W ALI( TO IEACH Pool. cr pts. drps. Ideal Luxury tri -level for couple + Adult panoramic ocean & bay Roommate or Mother· views. U100 sq ft. 2Br. ln·Law No pet.Jl. Agent 2\.-J Ba. din area, decks. 731·6829, 548-0574 frplc, gar, laundry area. ----- crpt & nu drapes DC11tOPoW 3826 Sl .000 1mo yr l y ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494-2935; 557·6600 One Bdrm, one Ba. All --utal pd $360. Old CdM, 2 blks to bch. 2 831 1873 br. 2 ba. din. rm . -------- fireplace. garage. Great Lge studio. prkg & lndry, ovcean view. Avail 6/24. SJOO/mo Ors 768-6261 , 5900 /m o. 675-8370 • evs 498-0318 Loci-a...... '3252 857·015S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------STEPS TO BEACH. 2Br 2 Bdrm, 2 ba. dishwasher Lge 4br home in new de· Lge2br, lbanrS.C. Plaza 2ba + den. Front unit & stove $475 & $500 I velopment. Modern $525/mo&elec. w/pvt patio. $795/mo. Bdrm ., s t ove. dis · kitchen inc luding SS6·02:llall5PM Ask fo r Darrell Pash hwasher,$395 661-1192 mic rowave & bar-b· 631·1266 q u e / r a ng e . Rec 2br, 2ba N.B. Penthouse facilities avail. No pets. Condo. Adults onJy-sec $900/mo. Avail July 1st. guard, pool. sauna. 540-8300 days, 836-9784 gym. $750/mo. 645-0230 eves/wknds. SAMTIAGODR. CASA DE ORO ALL UTILITIES PAID CostaMno 3124 ••••••••••••••••••••••• H•tlRCJfoft leoch 3140 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,~a ADULT .J"ff. LI VING • I 4 1 811 P•llO Apes • 01\hWUlltl> & 880 \ • Poo1 & Arc Room • G11oto L•nO\C•o•n9 • Jog 10 Be~h & Shoos • St t G I s SE A f NVIRONMENT '""I.' HAM ii l(lN H ft '*'' ~',00 THE WHtFFU TRH Luxury Adult units at af- fordable living. 1,2 & 3 Br Well decorated . Olympic size pool, light· ed tennis court. Jacuizi. park like landscaping. Most beautiful bldg. In H.B. From PIS. 646-0619 Avail now 2 Br. 2 Ba. Aportm...ts Fwftished or Unfwwished 3900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apartment to !>hi 11•' smkr. C..: .M 5 mm I 1" Bch X cleun s20011. 548·8533 S E.A W I N D Resp t'hnstlan Ft•m .• VILLAGE to shr apt with sanw New 1&2 bdrm luxury Dana Pl Call 4!.ki •1,•1 adult apt$ in 14 plans 497 1556 from $440, 2 bdrm from 1-~em. 21 + shr 2 hr, I I SSOO + pools, tennis. waterfalls, ponds! Gas dpix m C M Sl90 t ill 1 I for cooking & heating Shari. 645 7861 paid. From San Diego Fem shr 2br, 2ba. ·'" Frwy drive North on loc • non smkr S220 m11 Beach to McFadden 963 ti2IG then West on McFadden to Seawind Village Goroqes _(_7_14_>_89_3-_5_1:_98_.____ for lleftt 4350 Oceanfront Penthouse. Laguna Beach. Security Bldg. Pvt beach Lease $2000. Nichols R E 494·7220 ~------~-- ..••.•.....•......•.•.. Single closed storage onl> 645 7836 Office Rental 440 ..........•....•...... Rooms 4000 1617 Westchff N B W ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• financial inst 700<~ Laguna Beach Motor Inn. lst. floor A~ent 541 :.n. 985 No. Pacific Coast Hwy , Laguna Beach. Daily, Weekly. Kitchen available. Low winter rates. 494-5294. LAKE FOREST All privileges incl club & util $260 1st & last 586-4038 F u rn . rooms. good neighborhood West C. M. Call 548·6892 aft 6PM ------- Christian home, beach . M. slraiqht. free long dist. phone, kit priv $250 & util. 499-2286 2 lovely connecting rooms w/balcony. Pvt bath. kitch privil. UUI pd. $300/mo. 1st last + S75 clean dep 645-6499. 615-5533 Mesa Verde sleeping rm Pvt entrance & bath Refrig, no cooking or smokin g . $175 /mo 549-36L2 lmmed. occupancy l Br fo r r e n t . $180 mo. 968·8139 Stan. •DELUXE OFFICES • I Room & 2 Room '\ lease reqwred 2172 IJ • Pont Dr Adj A1rpor1 • Hotel. 833--3223 9 12 Cd M Deluxe Suitci.. 1\t ampl pkg, util pd. 2X. E. Cst Hwy 675-6900 NEWPORT BEACH Convenient Pt•nrni.111 location across rrom < ty Hall Execul1v<• ~l 1 I· offices w /full !-Cl'\ ll'• avail. From 215 :o.<1 1 and up No least• 1 • quired Call 673-3002 Bayfronl Offl<.'C i.pat·c· lo. lease. I Imo free ri 111 646-4419 Prestigious Office Spa1 3 window offices il\ .11 I. ble 10 full service Lei.: .. Suite in Newport Centt 1 Avail May 15 640 5640 PECTACULAR HARBOR VIEWS Bach. w /loft. refrlge, stove, pool . $380. 283 Avocado. 645-6404. Apts. Garages. 1 child Room , priv entrance. OK, no pets. Wa t er / Cooking, quiet working trash paid. $460. 964-2566 man. Lag B. 494.4459 or 973-2971. Act .• no fee. 1----"'-----~ 440 to 4000 Sq. Ft. Pre1HCJI P•IR•uta Location. Pbg.G~ Very Flexible Terms. ly Appolnhnent Only S...,..er ._.. 4200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• p Beautiful house avail now in elegant area. 4 Br. 3 Ba. Dining Rm, Living Rm. & Family Rm. New wallpaper, cozy kitchen & many many xlras. Children & pets OK. 759-8974. BIG CANYON LEASE 3 Bdr 3 Ba, formal din· log, pool, hot tub, VU, very sharp. $2000/m o. Bob • Dovie Koop. Act. 631·12166 Compare before you rent. Custom design features: Pool. BBQ, cov'rd garage, sur· rounded with p l us h landscaping. Adult liv- ing al Its best. No pets. Bach fwnished $370 2Br furnished $500/ 365 W. Wilson. 642· L97 l 3 lrToWfthollM Newly decor. gas pd., encl gar .. pool, dswhr. Adults. 64.2-5a73. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Carpels, dsh w r , encl garage. $C50. 842-8032 •NWPT OCEANFRONT & Lido Isle bayfront. sm boats & dock. Wkly . 673-SU RF (714)675-8662 . BLUFFS 3 Bdrm. 3 ba. fam rm, formal dln rm, $1050. mo. 644-2300. EASTBLUfF 3 br 2 ba. Back bay $1400/mo yearly. BAYSIDE CONDO: 2 Br 2 ba condo on wat~r with optional 1llp. Sl950. Yearly. Waterfront Hornu Reallon. tnc. 83M400. Nwpt Sbon 4 br, 3 ba, canallroot, nwly decor. pe>Ol, tennis. 2 blll.I OC!tlaO $1,100 . ..-S. O..THIWAllR Great view ~ boat.I " bt._y. enc~ t&>lc, famlly room. Av.itable lmmed. for emOllbl. Only • mo. _ .. ., THE R £AL ISTA ..-~~ ,,,.. 2 Ir. 1 laA.t SUS CASIT AS Newly decor. C::as pd. Furn l br apt ..._ •-encJ gar., pool, dshwr. 2 Br 1 Ba. dahwshr. nr beach. upper. $475. S3"3L2 . . . _.., • Adults. 642-5073. up. Encl. 1ar. Adults, no •---------- WATBftlOHT Three bedrooms. Two peta. 2110 Newport Bl. 548·4968 btwn 8 & SPM COHDO a nd one ha lf bathe. Lrg 2 Br l Ba, great 3 Br, 1\-\ ba, S5SO plus Prime time still avail•· E.side locaUoo, SC75/mo utll 19933 Derbyshire. ble. $1000 per week. Call $335/mo. Deluxe Mobile )'rly lse. No pell. Call 960-5994 Be rt a Far r , Ag t .. Home . Mature adults, no Lloyd, 675-6670 -2-b-r-. -2-,-ty-,-1-'Al-b_a_con __ do-. _7_60-_0_l89_0_,,._11.1_1_-1_aoo_. __ peta. Quiet, secure. 1991 BeautHuJ Townhouse. clean, nrHwit. Harbour. NewportBlvd.&te-831J. SS2S. 2 Br. 1\-\ Ba. $S?S.642·5408 N:~~~~~Mh H•l.,.tl•'-' 3740 Fireplace. Sava1e WUd e DIL _. w • •t Pl .... IS 2bdrm. 2balh. paUo Ful· ••••••••••••••••••••••• at Co.6'7s-eoo5. ""' ""' " ly furnishe d : poo l H.l.'1 FINEST ....... Oc~ Spacious~~ Br Apt tsso/montbS31·0564 Spaol.ab Elt.ate Livi.nil! 2 Br. 1 Ba. Apt. Beam Frplc, pool • lndey fae: Npt Beb p6er area, 2 Br Beautltul pe"'·Uke 1ur. cellin1, lndry rm, pool. From "50. Adlllla onJ.y, t 'AI Ba. 1lpt 8. 'Al blk to roundln11. rerraeed 1Adulta onJ.y, no pet.a. No no pets. 19221 Delaware beach. Avail. S/7M /11. pool. Sunken ,.. bbq, Ht Mo. rent. ....... St Huot Bch SQ.111()7 aparlt ltn1 fountain•. TSL MGMT ed·ll03 • · · · P50 pr wk. 8f29.9/tU400 Spa c lou1 roo m s . Unfurn . 2·8r. Apts. pr wk. Femmes only. Separate dlnlnl area. 1 Br, $350, utll pd, Adultaonly.Nopet.s. J)y1 957-0~34, eves w a I k • l n c lo 1 et1 carport, quiet adulll. no 98C).28'7S 1_6'7_$>-_4_94_7 _____ _ ho mellkt kitchen ii pe la. HS W. Bat. • cabinet.I. Walk t.o Hunt· 5'1·9511 l"IM J144 OCEANFRONT home 2 lnitoo Center ••••••. ••••••••• ••••••• bdrm + den, aleepe 6. 1 Bedroom·fum, S.tO 2 bdrm 1 be attached encl Beautlful 1 Br iarden Avail. Aue Ii Sepl. Alt. l hdl'OOO)J'\sn.. eio 1ara1e. nu pat, c.,,w. bomt comm. pool, ~n· _n_s-_a1_1_0. _____ _ Adulta no p.u drpe, adJta Ollb' •no pet.I. n1a Call BUI Wedman Utllit~l'reel. 211 w. Wtl1on S4H . unaoRE...,_7., ·July 15tb lbru 30th, MS-lilt. • • B •a ult fully furn . LA QUINTA HEBMOSA ... .,,.,. IMdi 3169 Newport 2+ bdrroa wlth tall Parblde lA l blk 2 BR, end 1ar. paUo, ••••••••••••••••••••••• pool A Jaami. Peaceful w ot Beacla s bibs. ot D /W, llldry rm, 8dlta, no Ouaafroet for Wiater view ot hW.. lllOO per wk Ed·'8aer. ' peta, ••all July•· 9'C)O Rentala h.rnllhed • orll00for2'1Wb.f4C)-8Sal MT·M4l mo. 5'8--.wa.o.544t untarn. Brabr.m-.tu. ev ... I ~·---- DR 's ofc. in Dwntwn II H 2,000sq.ft. $1200 lsc H< Carpel, 893-1351 PLAZA EXECUTIVE SUITES ''There is a dlfferenrc 714-752-0234 2082 Michelson 1'212 Al•PORTAHA Fur n is h ed o r u11 furnished Executi1 .. Suite. ln lmne. walk1111• dutance to Airport J\ II acrvlcea avail. 20tP Mic he lson. Suite 212 'TlA-752-0234 ••"'"-•· Profnt-loHll Sp~ce avail 111 cooperaUve real eaitah• exec u -1to. P rlm1• ( Airport location. Mam amenities. fSZ..5111 OFFICE us 1q ft. Carpet, p11nl'I tn1. pal"kln.1. Newpor\ & Bay Shop Center 2001 r Ne1!fport Blvd C:M 556-4\ll ore44•222111 Want Ad Reaulla M2~711 ~ . 5300 ···•··••• 'I ~ i1ol1 , l1 1rd. 11 I II n II ;1 ti (~133 1 l.,h1n· II 1 1h1~·k •1l 1Jllhll1 •.: 211•1 \I ult' 1 ;n Kl r,•1 'N!t; ,JlouM Bncli.:t' I I\ hJk 11 ('M 'ti 111,,,:4•f J1 11111\ ·1 '"'in ltd & I ,1 I ~ '" .... 111.111• II•' I tllllt• ~l.1t1·1 •ll l fHJJt•, \t.1111, t~.!111 '" .1 11 ... \ .. 1.i f f '\ IH' I• II t "" ... , .. ol 11 5350 DY .)de ls n 15 .. . " :1l RL l ~ \ 1:-. \ OY * , I ' \II IS SPA Ill 11111 II ' I I .. ARTS S• •• p;x ,ds TS* Hotel 6 * 11111111-: I \'ftfl \ IS\ ''11 "'·!'- • Ii\ • 11.11' oony , 1111'11 k'lo /Visa 111"'"' It .11 ltnj! I ,, \ \ • him k~ t11n1I h I• 10,llTI ... in ) ARD• R• I •' J"1Sl. \r1\ l!ll' II hUt,1 111, S2.'l 1, 5332. •1 iOOI • t \ \ ('. \th 1sor ,\ Future Uralth. flu!llnc~i. <'ard & 11lll'lll If -I'\ ,. L 1 le 11ur own, lnfor & up \ a;l88 \SSACt:: tina mc•n 1171 ' - Orange Coasl DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 •• • G : · ·a·. 1 .i~~ ... : ... ~ 1 • 1, ~ r; j 1 : " e ..;"" 1 1 ~ • > ...... "': · > : . ~ ·~ .. -(11 ; , • ) .. u e: : . ~· .:.===~=~~~c~...,... ~Tit ._,...o.cwo,..n H~ HHMc.._.. Mo•a.. Powa9 ,.,.,.... S•Ah• .. s•1111.1r11 .................................................................................................................... ••••··••••••••••••••••• ..••••.••••••••.•••..••.•••.••••••••••.••••••• UlllllllUl All Around Carpenter. SPRINGS/HARDWARE Rooting, plumblnit. SUNSHINt: Movina ' Tbt! Stuv1011 AGAPE I-'ORCF. LOCALSANDBLASTEll SPECIAL I-'inllb " Rou,h. Free LAMm'TTILI Auto Opene~ new doors carpentry, p11hlling, HOUSEKEt;PING Collcae Studt-111.11 Movina PAlNTJNGCOMPANV Uc, ln11, ~u. No job too Est. John 77s.8082 Kitcbena, bathrooma, Lie. Bob 8 5'8·3687 floors, repair /remodel. Give yo1tr home that 11pr Co. hu1 arown, l~urtd 3 Generations of blg/11naU.1M().7909 1Ja·~.7Ar!o~1y Cora 30day ad tn ~ DAILY Pft.or S•VICI DIRICTORY DOITNOWI Atkfors-dro Your Daily Pilot Suvlce Directory Representative 642·5671, ... 311 No Steam/NoShampoo c.......as.r.a enlriet.Uc'd.978-0320 ~RI== Frete1t.968-2awiafl.5. In& clcanlna look all same good aervice Pamtm&Excellence S.crwt.WSenlcn •• ::ir;;•••••••••••••••• ••••••••~••••••••••••• Rl!:PAlR/REMODEL year-round, with qu1.1hty •Tt24 436 Llct!n:St 839-58Sl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shampoo ~-a'•am clean. Co.trectw CLEAN-UPS/LAWN & dependable work 641 8t27 RENTAi~~ PAINTi O Skilled Start Cot all Sec· .,. ~" AlltypeaoCrepaira,Ctte Fre e estlmute, re d Color brighteners, wht ••••••••••••••••••••••• F~=~~nance·Ln~~ est,workguar 63l·Jl:rT re renci: Curni as hed .NunlnCJ~lcfl In t /ext Pro mpt tr 'l/WPjobe.The Hu • crpts 10 min. bleoch . Construction AU t ypes aft5. li censed & bondi:cl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Seaside Palntlng. Greg, quarters Companie• Hall. UvAlin. rma $15; 20yru~p Free est. Gardenlna. landscaping, ooda.......-952 3034 Tired Oflh1h Prices 536·4806 ~~-1 _____ _ &vg rmS1.50;couchSlO: Lk lf3M.589. 645-ms Hordw ~ __ __ For Nun.t!l>Aidet1., ••-h 1_._-1 __ -ir-w'--/"'"=cd'en• chr s;. Guar. eUm. pet tree trimming & re· ••••••••••••••••••••••• T M ... F ,.._. • "~ --., _..,,_. odor. Cr])( repair. u yra Carpentry, Additions & moval, major dean-up, HARDWOOD FLOORS Reliable, pr0Cess1on11I ry e , . •••0 ? ri ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• exp. Do work myself. SmaU jobs-2' yrs exp. Cree est. 752-1349 Cleuned & Waxed houseeleoning Jesse Xlnt Rd ~ 642-4222 Interior J)l&nl design & Alttirutions & Dressmlik· Refs. 531·0101 Lie. 309152 548-2719 Anytime, S32·'88lS.A. 495-6976 Commerdul Pointing JawrL--mainu•nunce for home in g. ~ x P 'd. re aa · ----------t----------1 Pror. Japanese Gardener Resldentill.l ••••••••~:;r.~·.:~••••• or o ff It·~ Plant It 1 540.3593, 646·3393 We Care Carpet Cleaners Drywal Lawn cutting, tree trim-Ho•CJ --W "'L• .... •Eal .... G 551·2894 _ ~ .. ----- Steam clean & uphols. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ming, weeding. 548-8375 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HousesitttncJ "' ...-"""'~ " -..,... - " w 0 r k 1 u a r . Truck Drywall Specialist Haul, cleanup, concrete ••••••••••••••• ••• ••• •• Prof Installed. Lst roll ftlatte,. /Repoir-•••••••• ••••••••••••••• mountunlt .......... 16 Qua l.&prod.New&re-GARDENMAINT. I D k Newport Busrness exec hung rree. Answer Ad •••••••••••••••••••••••CONSE RVE WAT E R .......... mod. #389944. 532-5.549 Yd Clean-up. Tree trim· remova · ump true will housesit in Nwpt, lt468, 642-4300. 24 hris 01 Neat putche& & texturcis A u t o m a t e Y o u r ming.548-8700.Hlpm. Quickserv.642-7638' Laguna a rea Xlnt ref& 1 639·1429 F"eest 893-1439 'Sprink ler System Stain Specialist. Fast DRYWALL.our ex. Acco..tiitg dry. Freeest. 839-!582 pertlae. We can handle •••••• • •••••••••••••••• ----------1 your problems. 631·2004 DUMP JOBS Call Paul700-70'24 --. --714 586 1591 EXPERTLAWNCARE S llM . J bs -----!o'me pamtmg by Richard f;o·s Pl..ASTERING ------ Monthly service. Trees ma ovlllg o DON'T BE EMPTY, Sinor L1c. ln1>. 13 yrs of AllTypcs Int/Ext SPRINK.LERS&SOD l"IC BKKPGSERVICES J's STEAM CLEAN All Taxes·Costa Mesa 2rms Sl2.50/5rms $29.95 T a P i n g ·Te x t u re - & c I e a nu ps . Mike Call MIKE S46·lJ9l TlllRSTY OR LONELY happy N 8 custom ers. 645·8258 FREE EST Trtie removal. DIG IT 548·2049 Hauling & Dump Jobs. We sit your house. plants Thank you. 631·4410 --Landscape. 64&7070 Ca IJ 646-"96/64S-9580 Carpet dying. 974-6228 Accousllc Ceilings. Free •-..a... ir--lc est. Kevin 675·9088, MOW & EDGE-10'% dis· count, 112 price winter rates 955-1328 • d •-c-~ PLASTl-:It PATClllNG Ask aor Ran Y "' pets . .-x<'unty Plus COLLEGE STUD ENT. Inllext 30 yrs exp Stock lroken -swe. ""'!f ~ e CeililMJ, Ac.cMatic 673-1503 __ 641-84Z7 63l 7587 exp, tnl/<'x. any job for Neat work Paul 545-2977 ••••••••••••••••••••••• HAULING~tudent has Ma10ftr-y less' All'X 851 1137 1, ---Stocks . money market, ..... ••.• ...................................... ----------1 Professional Staff. Com· A t ' C llin S.ctrical P' uter Assisted System cous IC e gs + · custom hand texturing ••••••••••••••••••••••• CALIF. GARDEN Tree trim, clean·ups, ce- ment work. 64f>.4655 lar ge truck . Lowest ••••••••••••••••••••••• 552·0231 Phlmblng t a x s helters. Steve rate, prompt. 759-1976 lJRlt'KWORK Small ••••••••••••••••••••••• J ohnston, PAPER HANGING PLUM 81 NG new con 644 2442. Thank you.John. Jobs Newport, Costa struclion, remodehno, -----Mes I R f 25yrsexp Freeest "' a. r v1n e, e s rep a irs . r est a urant, Tile The. Headquarters Com· Lie. 389944 532.5549 ELECTRICIAN-priced pames . 851-0681. right, Cree estimate on •-II R--: C•"'ent/~ large or small jobs. "....-anc• .......,r ••••••• •••••••••••••••• Lie 11396821 673-0359 LANDSCAPE MAINT. CleatHtp Your Act ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Bus i·a pt-condo-church We clean out garages. 1 Guar Used refrig Foundations, Retaanlng ----------• Good. cond. Sales & Walls, Hillside Restora· R t:MODELING & homes. Call 548-24SS. ton truck. S25. 548-4769 Service. 642· 7754 t ion. S labs, Pa llos , Electrical work, resld . & ---Block&Brick.Uc'd. comm 'l.631-~ TREE/SHRUB TRIM Clean-Ups, Hauling, Garage & yard clean· Asphalt 642-8387 eves ~39 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Driveways, parking lot Pool Decks and Patios, repairs. sealcoalin g. Masonry, Sport Courts, S&S Asphalt. 631·4199 Tennis Courts. Lie. Lic'd. 374067. 851-1966, 847-7078 Automotin ••••••••••••••••••••••• Alan's Luxury Motor Car Care. Waxing. polishing, int. Home/ok.536-4151 luilden ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORcrefe Ratwortl Driveways, patios, pool decks, service walks, foundations installed. Lie. If 1800334. Free est. KC Paclfic Corp. Trimming, Mowing, bca•atioft Edging. Swee Ping ups. Free est. 5.57 8Z71 ••••• ••••••••••• ••• ••• • Chuck 548-6530 __ Houuc~ DUMP truck , s kip ••••••••••••••••••••••• loade r . bac k · h oe TREES Want a REALLY CLEAN services. Aft 5 PM. Topped/removed, clean HOUSE? Call G111gham 642·0239 ups, lawn renov. 751·3476 Girl. Free est 645-5123 --Fo .... ica/Tile General Sertlcff •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Formica Countertops H OM E RE p A I RS . Custom built & installed, Remodels, Building, Ex· latest colors & des igns p 'd, Reliable 494·3781 Free est. 646-4871 RICH ROBIN 'S CLEANING Service-a thoroughly <"lean house. 540.~7 ( 714 )634-4741 D. & D. lllilden ~~~~~~~~ Floor Co•erinc) Handyman SHIPTOSHORE Boat & House Cleaning Reliable-Exp. Bonded t:st. 646·2J.i2, 545·978S ---- 675-3175 Fast, neat, reliable <'lectron1<' leak dete l' ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----$8,roll&up.545·~90 1100. Top Hat Plumbinl(. BRICK ARTISTRY Ir'" 2030 Pool & spa copin ~s. Wall Paper llangm~ .,,, TILE INSTALLED All kinds. guar anteed, refs.John, 893-1667 brick pavings, block & All wurk guarantet>tl brt<'k walls 960-7421 Tern, 545 6268 Custom Masonr) & Con r rete lOO's Local Ref'::.. Lie tins I Bond 645 8512 Jim, 840-1705 R1xl MASONRY &TILE Our specialty We soh e your problems 631·2004 ----- Brick ·Block·Stone Very reas Lie. bonded Bob 548-Z753 536-9906 Mo Ying ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOC'S PAINTING hJs n•lurned ~ Docks, boal s lips, 101 ext h sc P ro mpt . r t•l 1ub ll· ... en ·1l'e Da'l' &t5 038'1. 839-5851 DAVE 'S PAINTING Serv satisfil•d r ust. !I vrs Qu;i l mtegr it y 'Reas. ins, he 760-73(11 INT EXT PAINTING IA1 rates. Pmmpt, neut Free est. 818·561! I Holleman Plumbing -- Salt!S Serv1ct' Repairs Typing $«Tiu Free estimates 5.52·7183 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Property Manacjement ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pror Property Mgmt PROF. TYPING On IBM Selectric. dic- laphone, statistical, re· pons. etc 97!MlS5 Apts. hol.l.'>l's, c:ondos, of fices PM Co 95_1_6666_ Pro fessional t yping Refinishlncj ser vice for those xtra •••• •••• •••••••• ••• ••.. work loads. Fast & de· J D I lom Refirushinl( pendable Lynn 545-0100 ~ntique~. kit. cabinets Window Ctec.illg F me pa1.11Ung 645-0664 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roofing "Let The Sunshine In .. •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Call Sunshine Window Designers . Cus tom I-••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••I homes. 37 yrs exp Fm. Make your s hopping CRPT-UNQ.WOOD HOME IMPROVEMENT I a v a i I Charles (714) easier by using the Daily Installed/repaired. Lie. Remodel.mg --Odd jobs ABC MOVING. Exµer HOUSECLEANING prof, low rates, qu1c:k Exper, refs, trans. careful servi ce 552·0410 RAINBOW PAIMTIMG Ext~ I n~. c:ustom Free Est &12-9614 QUALITY ROOFING Cleaning, Ltd. 548·8853 AU l) pes . free esL -- Vlloa. MC 541·5930 Find what you want in --HARBOR ROOFING Daily Pilot Classifieds. 898·314 l Al (714 1 963-8433 Pilot Classlfied Ads. #369260 Greg 499-5142 211 yrs ex per. 979-2265 979-9756 .. ' • •1 ·: ,. i• . Pusonah 535( Help W-'ed 7100 Help WCllftd 7100 Help W..t.d 7100 Help Wmftd 7100 H•lp Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Heap Wanted 7100 Help W.t.d 7100 . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Lonely but secure. a t traetive single male. 39, seeks s ingle woman of hnaneiul independence in her 306 who is atlra<'· t1ve . short tunder 5 feel -51 with ni ce fal(ure, 1ntelllgcnt . libe ral minded yel s in<'e re, sportsmmded <likes ten n is. golf) & without childre n Prefe r so meone in Laguna Beach, south coast area who has pl enty or time to s hare in late afternoon. early evening te nms. beach wa lks. etc. No pros or phonies. Please write to P.O. Box 836. CtO Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. 92626 ACCOUMTING ASSEMILUS CLERKS Loe. Mission Viejo co. Laguna Beach e lec· needs Assemblers w/2 tronics mfgr. has two yrs. exp. Candidates immed. openings: must have gd. manual Accollllh P...-1J.: dexterity, gd. eyesight, BankingS&L TB.Let Fullerton's S & L has openings for F tr Tellers in Newport Beach and Dana Pt Must ty pe 30wpm . C all (7141871-4244 for app't. E.O.E. •1-neat in appearance & de· Req ·s. 2 or more yrs. pendable. Work is in hfe solid acctg. exper. with support medical elec· gd. background i n payables. Will be resp. Ironies. Gd. benefits. Banking forentireA/Pfunct1on. O n ly respons i ble Formerly new Hunt· ,__.. persons seeking perma· ington Savings IS now •1•-· nent empl.ymt. need ap-accepting applications B O O KK E EPIN G P /tim e . Appl y at Crown Haniware, 1024 Irvine ( WestcUff Plaza I. NB BOOKKEEPER F /C Fashion Is land invest· ment firm Excell. op· portunity Exper . & maturity requ1red Call. 714·640.0123 Req's min. l yr. ac· ply. Call: Mrs. Parelli, counting exper. includ· 581.3830 for Teller positions. Call look Pasteup ing 6 mos. of payroll ex-,~~~~~~~~~~ _84_2_·8_600_·______ p trime Mon, l :JOPM to per. J ob a lso entails , __________ , 6PM . Tues 10:30AM to some cost acctg. duties. I•---------Beautician 6 p M _ N 0 e x p e r EDP ex per. for either ASSEUILERS lal>oa l~IMb necessary. Apply Pen-pos1tion will be a plus. 3 ope nings avail. for neySaver 1660 Placentia Mech a nical & Elec-11 now c M We offer excell. pay & fronic Assemblers !or Haintylst _A_v_e_._. -· ----- CASHIER Part lime Apply. T he Earl 's Plumbing, 1526 Newport Ave . Costa Mesa . 714 641 1289 Cashier OFFICE CASHIER EnJ OY wo rki ng in Sia vi ck '11 J e we lers Duties include \Jtm fying s ales balan<'es. doing daily bankmg transac t1ons. disbursing funds & other related duties. Ex cell Co b e n 1:f1l s paekage C-Onta<'l Mr M c Der mo tt 714·644-1380. ' SLAVICK'S Fashion Island CLERK TYPIST /CRT Ex p er 1en e c d C RT Operator Hequ1res good typing . H~key adder. & knowlcd)(c of office pro cedures Excellent com pany b t.>nC'r1t s CJ ll Millie afte r 9am a l 645·5800 CLERK TYPIST T)pmg 40.45wpm. Gen ofc duties. i-;xµe nen<'P helpful. Gd en h1 .. •1w ftts. Hrs 8AM 4 lSPM Call for in terv1c-w appl RJJ IJ.!50 cOMM EHl'lAL l:JANKEllS LIFE 1401 Dove St., Ste S!'iO Newport Heach 1':0 .E. M ,,.. benefits plus a lasers mfgr. Duties in-Preferabl.y w/Collowing. CAllMET SHOP ---------•( 4DAYWOIUCWIH elude P C Boar d as-Xlnl working cond. Trainees for mill work l~~~~~~~~~- AFTER..._.00..._. Company is 2 mi. from semblies, cable & har· Please call Tues-Sat. and assembly 54G-S5lS ·COCKTAIL WAITRESS ...,. ...,. Coast Hwy. & 8 mi. from ness assemblies. circuit 642-0092. Ask for Joyce -------Chauffeur Part lime Cull Newport *DELIGHTS* 405&5F'rwys. into chassis assemblies. CARPENTER &otherduties Male col Bc aeh Hc-s ta u ra nt Must be able to work 631·2004 le g e s ludenl N o n 675-2461 Horne /Offic~ /Hotel Please call Cor appt. with prot.o-type /sample. Beauty ---smoke r . dark suit req * 529-4631 * TelonicBerkeley Accuracy a must. Salon Assistants. also C arpe t He lpe r ex 25.35 hrs perweek. Day COM~1 ERCIA LS, fll mi. 24 Hrs Now Hiring Personnel Dept. Laakmann Elec tro· full lime makeupartisl. perie nced as soon as o r e vening driv ing m odels . l'Xtra~ ~CAS MC VISA 714-494·9401 E .O.E. Optics, Inc. E.O.E. San Lic'd only. Training pro· poss ible. 631-7518. 640.5335 n ee cl s n l' w r il <' t• ~ •~~-~~~~~~11~~~~~~~~~~ Juan Capo. 714·493-6624 gram. Robert & Taylor --!157 0282 Carriers -----646"7197 R . N h COO" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jobs Wanted. 7075 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mature housekeeper. separate quarters. xlnt ref's. (213)332-3038 European Lady w /gd re· comendatlons wants to Live in & care for one older single person Accounting Af'CLERK Rapidly growin g ih· ternalional co. seeks responsible individual for our Accounts Paya. ble Dept General knowledge of bookkeep· ing & some A/P exper. req 'd Salar y com - mens urate with ability. Outstanding benefits in a pleasant working en· Two experienced Cobol vironment. Contact: Pat Programmers interest· Mills. ed in part-time work. AMF P r o g r a m m i n g , Sc&.ttfffic ~ teaching. tutoring. Con· lfthnaHOINll tact 833 9593 or 975-2445. 18011 Mitchell South Irvi ne. S57·9«il, EOE ~~!.~~ ..... !!.~~!~~~~~~~~~~ ACCOUHTIHG Rapidly expanding stock brokerage /in vest- ment firm has an open- 1 n g for a Bo ok keeper/Accounting Clk 10-key by touch, lite typ- ing <CRT exp. a plus ). knowledge of A/P, bank deposits & reconciHa· Uons & payroll exper. nee. Salary comm with ex per. Call: Personnel, 752-0070. E .O.E. ANS. SERY. Pleas. ofc. NB. Exper. pr e f, but will train, J.llPM shift. 631·5511 ASSEMILY Expanding manufactur· ing Cirm has immediate opening. No experience necessary. Full-lime . Good wages & beneC!ts. Localed In San Juan Capistrano. CaU Judy: (714 )831-9640. E.O.E. Have something lo. sell? Classified Ads 642-5678 ClasslCled ads do it well. .•••••• Daily Pil'! I Advertising Sales •· • Expertenced newspaper dllplay salesperson. • to handle key accounts in major department. stor~ or food and drug categories. Sa1ar)' +. • commission and excellent benefit.a. ~cellent 1 ---eg1ster ewspaper as CLSUCA.L " ASS'TCONT~OLLER D y n a m I c New po rt llLLIMG CLERK Beach real estate invest-For expanding C.M. im· 1mmed. opemngs for af. Irv 1ne distributor h<1:-. European Rt·staut iint tem oon auto curricrs m 1m med . opening for Ex per only Full time Laguna Beach & Laguna Clerk Typis t to answt•r nights, Cont;ict Hi ck or Niguel. Must be over 18 telephone & do general Karl ·1!17 4441 port Co. Good typing ment & loan brokerage skills req. Some phone company has opening exp. a +. Xlnt salary for a s s 't controller benefits &growthpolen· w I a u di t & tax ex· tia I. 540.6955. yea rs old & have an ofc work. 10 key by COOK economical car. Work touch&someAIRexp a 3 0 30p kd Plus. Gd. co benefits Expt'nenn'<l See l'h(•f ·3 ·5 m wee ays, J ack a t Irvine l'oa:.t perience in public or --------5 7a m eek ds E salary lo $800 mo. Call : · w en · am Counlry Cluh, li44 9S!'i0 private industry-real estate emphasis pre- ferred . Sa l a r y $16.000-$20,000. Call Katie Cor appt. 640-9350 Babysitter needed for 2 adorable children in COM. 2 days wee k. 700-1390 Babysitter wanted Ill my home. Cost.a Mesa area 645-6681 BABYSITTER For 2 yr old girl, f ' tr. 631-1137 aft. 5 Banking ••• SECRET ARY II If you would enjoy work· Ing in plush surround· ings it's al our Newport Center omce and can meet our requirements, why not give us a call? We are currently in· terviewing candidates with a minimum or 6 mos . previous secretarial experience. excellent typln1 skills (.0 to 65 wpm) and the ability to communicate e ffectively. Knowledge o r IBM M e mor y Typewriter required. loblums Restaurant $500-$600 monthly. Call 754· 1931 Now -hiring dependable d ay hostess. Interview Tues thru Thurs 2 to to 4 pm. 37 Fashion Is~ Bookkeeper, ru11 charge Mr. Ensley 951-7113 Cas h1er thostess. P tT eves. Apply in person Two Guys From Ila ly. 2267 Fairview ltd, CM. 20hrs per wk. Child ca.re CASHIER WAMTED avail.CaUCarol642-9990 F IT call Barbara for -- IOOKKEEPB/ ASSISTANT P tr, hours n exlble. Ac- counts payable. com- puter input, bank rec Laguna Beach location Ca l l for interview (714 )499-4571. appt 54().3280 CASHIERS UTDTEM IOOICKHPING MARKETS CLERK For 2nd & 3rd Shifts Posting clerk for ac-We promote to manage. counts receivable, pre· ment & supervis ion from Cer knowledge of posting within. & balancing accounts. WANT A CAREER? 10-ke y & t y pin g at CostaMesa 40wpm rt!Q. Xlnt com-111 Del Mar pany benefits. Contact 631-9421 Donna 645-31132. BOOKKEEPER. Small Laguna Beach growing Irv . office ~9233 needs self-starter ex· per'd . In properly HuntingtonBeach m a mt. and l o r re•• r---·962--•9•H•6 __ _ Cleri<"al Office C~rtl & PIX Operato,. Our office is seeking a n individual who is ac curate with figures & has bte typing skills. Ex cell. co. benefits include p d v a c ;1 t 1 o n s & holidays. company dis- count privileges. m sura nce program, profit sha ring & pension plan Apply in person. J.C .PEMMEY 24 Fashion lslanct, NH E.O.E. . M/F' CLERK Plesse y Semiconductors is looking for an Ac- counting Clerk to handle c ommissions. s a lel> JOurna I, cash receipts postings & some A<"cls. Rec. Applicants should have some occounling C* 1'1zza . Short Order Must be 18 Apply 311 Palm Balboa Cook wanted 6arn-tl pm, 4 days per week 847 8015.. COSMf:TICIAN Ex per 1n s kin c <1rc un;ilysis, facials & wax ing W 111 also cover front desk The lla1r Handler!> 642·8484 COUMTER HELP Wanted p /t for rood deh call between SA M-HAM 752·5401 COUNTER HELP Flexible hours, day or night. P JT , betwee n 30-40Jhrs. per week Ap pl y at D e r W1enerschnit:r.el, 250 S Bristol, C.M. Ask for Rick. bkgrnd., not necessarily CUSTOMER in these areas. Mus t operate IO.key adding SERVICE .estate syndication bkpg. Salary open . Call : 54().2346 mach. by touch & type Huntin gton Beach 35·40wpm. Excell. start· swimwear distributor ----------1 ing salary & benefits seeks motivated im --------•I package. Apply 1n bl f Cashier person: pressiona e person or CA.SHiia PLES.5EY phone sales & customer SEMICONDUCTORS re l ation s . Sal ary FuH Time 1641 Kaiser Ave .. Irv. 115,000+. Good benefits. DEMTAL ASS'T Need sharp RDA w tX· ray he for Npt Ctr G P 4 d.vs wk, pleasant at· mosphe re Exp. esscn t1al, s a lary o pe n Ma rgart-I 76().6024 Mon- Thurs Dt-n lal A:.s 1s ta nt Challenging exdu~1ve reconsl rurllve ofr. seek mg Dental Assist w / ex pandt.>d duties abi lity 644 6611 Dental I' ront Office Sec ad under General office F11 s h1 on bla nd area f~.j 0011 Dl':NTA I. As sis ta nt. p time P rogress 1v('. nt-w o(r 1n Laguna Niguel. X·ray lie. req'd . M1chrllt', 714-495-6322 J>ome!>ll<' llelp needl'd Can make $6 hr ldt'al for hou::.ewirc or college student !J66-1300 fo r appt •DRIVERS• Full & Part time Mus t be 18 years of age & have a good dr1vmg record. Starts a t S3 35 'hr Call Mark 8AM 5PM Mon- da~· thru 1-'riday a t 751 2680 DRIVER Meyerhof's , primary suppher of good foods to the Irvine corpora te co m m unit y n eeds a responsible & flexible person to do food prep & back-up deliveries. Mon Fri. 8-Jpm Good drh •mg record necessaf) Sta rts al SJ.45 Call Susie at 557-6232. DRIVERS WANTED Part time delivery. Ear ly morning, I. A Times Irvine /Newport Beach area. Must be reliable & have dependable trans. $42 5 + Call Jess : !;.16 0235 DRIVER Must have gd. driving record. Local pick-ups & deliveriell some heavy lifting required-will ulso b e train e d In mechanical assembly work. Onl y those seeking permanent employment need apply. •Vacations & holidays paid •Co. paid prorlt sharing •Medlca l·Life Ins. Mission Viejo area Call: Mrs. Pa.relli 58l·3830 • growth opportunille.. Call for appointment •• , Take advantage of this ~~~~~~~~~ Call Gail (213)373-7787 OPPortllft&lytojoinoneor r: for Interview. Arena ~~~~~~~~~~ GENERAL OFRCE With some bookkeeping skills. 631-~. GENERAL OFRCE J ewels by Joseph look- in g for reliable person to handle various office duties. 540.9066. GEMERAL OFflCE 5 d ay s week , hrs 10-5pm. Call al 546-.8166. GEMERAL OFflCE Interior landscaping co. needs person to do typ- in g & ans wer busy phones f /l, mon-fri with co. benefits. 545-6429 Genera I Office persona- ble & outgoing, youthful person for Dental front office. Exper. pref. but will tram right person. R e q goo d com - municative skills. Non. Smoker. N B. 644-0611 . GEMERAL OFRCE Expe rience helpful, good typing ability, pro- ficiency with Ciguree, lO·key by touch. Op- portunity Cor advanc• ment Excellent com- pany benefits. Informal oHice. C.M. Call Millie after Sam at 645-5800 . General Office FILE ROOM COORDINATOR • Res po nsible , mature person lo take charge of po licy file room for growing llCe insuranee company No typing re· quired. Must enjoy de- tail and have a helpful attitude Duties include back.up for mail rooqs. Experience preferred b ut w Ill train e n· t husiastic. willing to learn person. 37~ how- week Call Laura : 833·6450. ------- GENERAL OFFICE. We need 3 e nthusiastic peo. pie with gd. pho ne personalities to explain our services & set appt.a. for our sales staff. Work out of our Costa Meta ofc. Salary $800 mo + c omm Ca ll : Linde 641-8815 GENERAL OFC Diversified offic~ skills required. Heavy phon~, Sea Coast Security. 642-3490 CiEHHAL OfffCI Looking for a very in-.. terestlng part time job in pleasant ofCi cet Cler lc•l. Cor mature person. Location P.C.H., Npt. Bcb. Exper. * must. Accurate t7ptnf, no s horthand. 20 h • week Includes Sat 6: S\&6. Call: 646-7431 . I -· ·' ,1 • • Call 642·4321. ext. 271 for •PPolntment for . Interview. • : Secretary tD • Excellent startin g salary and beoeClts. For rnore Information. plea1ecall; IOODllPll F ull charge, areal opp- ty. with busy Laguna Beach contractor. Must have construc:tion ex per. 494-6525 the oat.Iona leading auto,._ ________ USA lnc. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.-; ,. Enjoy needlecraft ?,.. part& retailen1. IC you CLllKTYPIST Dellcate11an help, P rr. Creative Circle needs ln· C.IHHAL OffllCI:: :1 enjoy meeting tbe public Eneraetlc penon wilh Includes Sat & Sun. Will atructora, will train. Call I rvlne firm baa 11111: • Executive Office : •. lmmedlate openin& for vt-net.11-lndlvtdual.e Mut be upable or hHdllna fut-paced. e varied ind l.ntt-re1dn1 duUea ror newspaper. • ~UUvt It pcraonne.l ad.mlnlltrator: 1oode spelUn( ai typtn1 ~e.oUal. Call: 642-43n,. e Ext. 271 for a.ppt. • O~C...t •• • D PW • 330 w. 8)' Street •• • Costa Mesa. CA ' ~ual Opportunity ·Employer : ••••••••••••••••• ... .. . Ke.tnT..-ry 714-640.9321 fillf~(+11JJ WELLS FARGO BANK USITHI DAILY PILOT .. FAST llSUL'r l&YICI DlllCTOIY For Result · Service Call -~~=~:bDr. 642-1671 " Jtqul Oe_p EmplJ 1 ,. tiL.~U lllPM 1 ---.----.. 1SSLL Wle ..... wU a WANTAC'nOfn' D1ll1 PUot Oualr&ed ClUalledMMMNe'll M.ea.-. .... • Ind serving UM!lr needs. lood typlnl( needed for train . See T~rry or (~l3)435·14Sl. mediate o penlnt lcsr thl$ ls Cor you! We offer busy man1ain& general Peggy, HJ Time Liquor.•---------brlaht. aeU·1tart•1' lood pa)' and• beienta a I ency No exp ~no: E 7lhSt c M f "'ST~s "el'son to Jnrform • Pa ckare Uut Include• · · """ · 1 • · • "' ~ ,. necessary, but ability to Cook & Cashier. EX"per variety ol nee dul~ discounts, paid vaca· learn a mU$t. AllracUve Delivery men over UI for nee. 504 Pacific Coast lncludlot aro1lnc. a.. Uooa. bonusa, med1eal ialar}' " all comp any L.A. Times to home• 1n Hwy.lf8536-4445Evts. ter·offlce ~Uvvy. fit' and life lns .• pension and benefits. Call Uoda at C . M . 3 a m • 6 a m • tn1. e tc. CooUct: hvei' mor1:11 LET'S GET 549-8181. economy car required. female RU In exchan_ie ty. Ml·ISIO. 1.~ AQVAINTEDI no co 11 e ct I n C . for .. hr day deanina • St00.$450/mO. + bonue. cooktnl e da)' wk. Non Applylnper1oru.t: MOW ISntlTIMI 6'&·063'7or648-SM<t. 1moldn1 non dtinklna. for Job seekers lo chtck art .tpm o r wkenda PEP BOYS 120 .... latSt. S-...AM.Ce. £q111l ()ppoctuo.ltJ tmplofer II IF the Delly Pilot Help DIUY .. Y 5'$6·1137 Wented cla.Minc.tioo. u ~ 1 --------u.. Job yoo wan.t la not rrr time Cor local de· FULL T ime. P /Um e . lllere you mlt.bt con· Uverlts Xtnt drlvlna ~· An.I ltl'Y No Hp nee elder oU erln1 your cord req. Phone for Cau·· au.a EOE. • Mf'VICCll with a.n ad lft Appt. 557·Dl2 Ask for •---· ------- t b • J ob w a a t 1td Mr Emmona. Newport Ftad what '°" want in· catfll01'7· "°9MMf71 'Stalioeen IDC. DaU1 l'Uot CJ.aMll'ledl. ...... ~---·-------... . ~ - I I I I l .. 111 ..... 111191~ .... 111 ... 11111111111m ................... ~ .................. ~ ...................... !" ............. ll'.9 .............. "91!"~~ ....... ~ ....... ~ .......... r'OI~~~~ ..... ~~~~~~~·-~----~ ---,.._ ... --.. ._,, '"' .... .. -.~........, ...... ..,.. "". • • ·. .... .. " .. ... --OG Orange Coast OAJL y PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 , ~~\':.~~ ..... ?!.~ ~,,.~~ ..... ?!.~~ -~~-:-.!'.~ ... ~ ..... !!.~ ~'r.!.~ ..... ?!.~ ~~~ ..... !!~ ....aw-... 71 w..w-... 71to Help w-... 7IOI W..WllllltW JIM UC.,.l".'f'llT SA.LES matu.reparttJme SICut ~•y Teacher TYPISTIUC.,. ~~T••••••••••••••••••• ;.;.•T••••••••••••••••-• ••••••••• .. •••••••••••• ee9T .... ~•••••••••••••• Peraon frlday must Sun, 'Mon +, Sal + -Pl .. ICHOOI. AdverUa(n.ir a ency o..ril lftvatinenl flnn build· I NURSE S AIDE. I&. t)'pe ta/br "2·03'7'7, comm WICKER RAT P-.Cleklla• T b d seeklo T ~ttlece . ~ W-.dP/T 1111 Real Ellale Sale1 II AST ER Cab I net bakpl, UV9 ln or out, no Barbara Wllaoc\. TAN DECOR.t.ae 1238 ~at·p~ed, 1rowln1 Subt~lt~t.Cll~!t!rt. Uoolat,'soJ~. tilt=· a&ah room, afon·'r'1H Yor.e. Ucensees lnvlted llak~r. '18,000 I*" yr. amok• N 8 IG-1411 rl..:,n1e .~ Airport ~~h lnl oow lhru eummor ll e e pl n 1 . vu n a i . nl&llta. $pm.bro Appl)' tocall 84M11U Muu have 10 yrs N ,_ llecept. Im ad al•nc)' SALISMAH •xcell~~t .!'"~al 6 AllolntaU ._11133 rnoipbere Dao a lee&Place.olla, C.M. fu.rnltu~ makl.n1 exper. unw1 AccuratAI t'Jl)ill, 80wpm llUU. otl p tr 549·1757 JANlTOR·wanted, &ood WUl deslp cabtfteta for RN or LVN 1-ll:IOPM. Sh.arp w/pJeuanl phone M t preferred ~nHque oraanlullonal 1kll11 T E A C II £ R s • ---·------· Genen.l hard worldnir person to elect.ronJc • •lKtrleal 41 bed Coov. Ho1p. per1on1llt)'. Orowtb •l~re• No'uperlence ~~:vbt tb~kkee~~~· l!:OUCATORS wanted --------- ,,.... .. ~ keep restrooma 1~rkl· alldlo Is video compo. NewportBackBayarea. potential. Ho 1molcln1. naceuary Nut 1 p For 1irr!me~ta"f: con Ptr.tomaruagumbua1 Typi.t.a Moo S:30pm·1am 'tue• ln1 clean.CallAd·slller nenll utllilillt draftlnl Sa.ntaAoaAve &4t-30e1. pleaH ~a:wo. pea ranee Laauna tlderatlon call Jae oua . Mr Murray Ty,ists 50WPM .J.:~m l2:30am. Appl)' U2:S.M2""300,24bra. table & drafting loolt, Nu-lnl ---Beach 8tartlrt1 salary quellne Schi .. r A• 846·8SS1i ,...,,. •-.... ••-C M d I t t ... Receptlunlet for dental ...... --_____ .. _~_ ..... ua __ . _. --4: v e 0 p pro 0 y P• NUTMI Aid• a.u:30PM. ortlr1. Muat be nHl ll00-'800 .... -· M>tlatn, 502969· o· Sec' General . J.AMITOIUAL cablnol model u1ln1 Part time S:»7:JOPM. T IACHH ICta JS Stock & delivery person. hand tools. Take ad to 4W.'54:S. Saleaperaon needed for Ex~rlence for paid p rr 7am-4pm ahlft. Sunday nearest &ate Employ· Country Club Conv. 1rowln1 med equip. co. SECRETARY l'hurch school position (X8C ~-'ys n.1 .... a.yc .. ..... ~ LoclHSpa A"11 ju :I M llll be flexible "°"' hlk CM Ex per. preferred. Fri, Sat, 11PM·9AM HottMott.s1 RES1'AURANT EXP. PREF'O Thurs, Fn, Sal, Sun 8-lOPM Please call for Mppl. 114S·73S8, Mon.Fri .. 9:30-SPM (ilrt~ Part lime. Orange Coun· ty Airport Area. Selr stArter with strong or· aanizational and ac counting s k i lls . Minimum Ute typing Top dollar and nex1bl\! hours for right person. 752·6905 -GIRI,. FRIDAY In com· fortable Laguna Beach atmosphere, flexible hrs, pay commensurate • with exper Call Chet . 4911·4604. lhru Thursday. Xlnt tnent Service Office In Hosp. Mt.30Sl Recepttonl•l . with ac O.C arOI 714 /&14 6IJOO * * Sundaya only. Call ~ benefits. Apply In Ora. Co·-'"· oor 660. -curate lyplnl tkllla It Kathie 499·3088moma. Cll•tilMJC....,.7 lu Tl • 1A • ..... .., HUISIHG aood with rltruru. Nwpt --Qualltlcd candld1He --1 ~...L.1....-pen1on, · me ...,..uor, -0.010. "'.d paid for by ed R VN t h Id h .._._.-a 405 E l7thSt c M -,. Ne 0 or L or pm Bch nfc, vrr Sl•rtln• liMIA!A • OU MVC proven Teac:her·Laguna Beach c · · · · employer. 1hltt In conval. hosp. ulary '900 + Ben C11 ll I 0 POSfTIOMS 1ecretarlal skill.a lnclud summer 11chool Ru11ic h•• ....... Kennel helpne~ed.F(f, Xlnt Ul&I')' • beneflta. Amvforap·pt67Ha&a Onanformotlvat•"'''""" Ina 1tt'curatc typing, math , l(rlldea 9 12. Opportmity Mon· Fri, June lit-June Dltrerenllal ~Id for ' - -.. ~ ...... .--¥ pltou1ant communlcu 6/l&/lU 71241 .. 1 SIO/hr 14th . Part or F rr dunno MATURI PERSON weekendt. App Bfver· * RECe...lftllJIST Vlv•e'reyll~~rl !!,•.,•le• or de· lion 1kllll and the ability 0 U11t• temporary jobs as • U m mer ' SC) m .. e lntervlewina. phones & ~Manor. 43340 lctoria. ...,... ' ~ U · .,, ....... to handl~ all dutle11 con Requires v1tlid Calif your shopping tool. We II . Smalldlv1.tlonorleadln11 --credentials EOE weekends. Nu ex p . te typina. 9-S, Sun. thru . M. A r c h ll e ct u r 1 I fl rm SALf:..'i P F.RSC>N ncf'tled •latent with ltw po11llmn 494·8546 have long & short term necestory Apply in Thurs. Npt lkh loc. Wiii needs mature, do--nd• lmmed 1..airun11 Nll(uel of• aecretary jobs available in the person 125 Mesa Dr. train. 642-995.5 PAITT1MI ble G•I f'rld11y"'w1th ret•ll ouUct for fine In TECHHICAN--1.AI 0 C Airport art"a. Week· C M. 631-1000. M~IC ••c• •tMS To deliver Dally Pilot •harp front office •P· terlor fumh1hlni•· llr11 We offt-r un t'xccllent Should be farnlUar with ly paychecks, quarterly KEYPUHCH Experienced key punch /tab equipment operat or Excellent company benefits, in· formal office. C.M Call Millie after 9am al 645·5800 LKAL SECRET ARY Santa Ana Law firm SOwpm, Mag ll, phone Jean 641·1681 Llf-a:':di Newport unes try outs May 30, Sam. 644-5921 LIFEGUARDS Newport Dunes Life guard tryouts May 30th Sam. Newport Beach 18 & over only. Call644·5921 5V ,_, -auto route ln Newport pe»rance It pit aunt flex Ible Sal•ry nra 1 a I a r y and com . rubber lestinll, com bonus trips. Never a fee. PROCISSC>tt Beach phone penonaltlty tor Muat be bondabki Call prehenalve bend1t1 pounding, moldin1. tole Callforappt.today . Must be experienced. HOURS: Mon. thru F'ri. vaned duties F111t, •c Marcia, 8310623. eves packaae Inc luding Med ical benefits. vaca 557 MJI: F /T. ask for Beth : ~ .. P~P rmox 3 · 30pm to cur»te typilll. Excelleni ... 1•9457 Medlc1tl, Dental. paid lion, profit ahannu """"'1 (71•)"'~"1711 ,, .. _ fl N ln "" vacat ion. rellremenl • Cf\ · ... ,,,., · HO RS Sat & Sun .,.,oe ta 01mok & and more Stanmg salary $300/wk •Ll'n:_ MEDICAL FRONT OF, sam.1am. W M LP.,...,._ Contact Don Davis, I \ FI CE, F /T N . B Earnings approx 1350 A1aoca.t.t Sales For lmmed11.1te con· L'Gurde, Inc 64~4880 It~ P'UISONNfl S(VlllQS Im med. openinc. Ell per month. MacArthur Blvd & to'ord PEP BOYS aldeullon please call Telephone 3723 lird: Street perienced. 844..8722. Call 642·'321 for Bryan Newport Beach Personnel Dept (714 I <iREAT SUMMER .... •wDOf't •---h Holland or Sheldon (714)644-0620EOE 76().6000 " t .o . __, MESSIMGllt Ha rte . Equal Oppor REc~-...isT Manny, Moe BA .... K Joas -~~~.o~.E~. ~~ 6 mornings a week. Employer ..,... .. _.... f"lll 5 1mmed1ate openings Mon: 5:30AM lO SAM. For F /T posit ion in and Jack OF dtalkmg on our telephone, Tues. thru Sat: 6:30AM P A R T T I M E Chiropractor'• office eep voices preferred. to 9AM. Excell. driving Demonstrators, Fri & Must be dependable. ef· WE'RE LOOKING NEWPORT Mon·Fri. 5·9pm. Come rec. req'd. Apply: Pen· Sat. Work in your area. Cicient & have good of· by 1180 North Coast nysaver, 1660 Placentia Car nee . $4 . hr . rice skills. Non·smoker FORTHEIEST! Equal Oppty Emplyr Hwy, Laguna Beach Ave .. CM 7 1 4 . 5 4 1 . o 7 1 B o r preferred. Call 631·5690. Part TM M IF weekdays after 2pm lst 213-877-1135 Ful tllM come. 1st hired RECE" /TYPIST IC you are bright, 11m SECURITY P •RT TIME R I E tat in estme t Telephone Sales office ,.. ea s e v n bilious and sell motivat· PERSONNEL VETERINARY HOSPITAL MNGMMT PosmOH Fabric chain, C.M & Anaheim. Xlnt oppt'y. Geri 646-4040. C ny attractive Of needs expen enced sules FllX. HOURS om pa ' . ed, PEP BOYS i~ your F rr or p If. nite shirt CID· P(f employees needed fice nr Redhill/Bristol. klndofplace.We'repro· ly . Call or apply in help. Easily earn up to -- for general pest control Somedf~alci~.' b~~\ udofourgrowth,stabil.i· person . Hotel San $9!_hr Call497·4198 1•-------- Has positions in Irvine & N B. r It includmg wknds must like bathing. brushing & cleaning Minimum age 18 yrs. Apply Mon-Thurs 11·3. 1333 Avocado NB. <Npt Cntr behind theatre) MRKTG STAFF ASSIST. L i k e pa r l y p I a n ? Personable detail orient· Creative Ci~le needs in· ed person to band le structors, will train. Call mrktg functions for busy work ln South L.A. & groun es rba e r 1 t" ly and professional en· Ma art en. Laguna TELEPHONE Restaurant Orange Co. Will train. company ene 5 · vironme nt If joining S I C e ate Beach, 494·9436 OP~ "'TORS WAITRESS Mu s l b ave ow o a ary omm nsur this winning team ~ t rt t, Ph with experience sounds Interesting to SEC'Y-SUMMER Answering Service. Ideal schedule. Excell raospo a ion. one c:•"llOS ed h f f II •-co benefits include pd. (213)973-8269 .,...,. · you, lets get acquaint . Ftr. June 1"Sept 11. various s ' ts. u "' .,,. Prr 362 3rd St. ll"C", vacations & holidays,' (illJHDB-Manan (213)435-1451. V. P . or growing So. CEMTBtLESS Llauor Cleric P/T Ca hf. food dist. Salary p "-Receptionist(fyp1Sl front Apply in person at: Fast. accurate typing. Laguna Beach c ompany d 1 s count Full um:' po6i\ioo. Full ore Sun-Thur. Pvt coun PEP BOYS transcribing. gen. offce. -privileges. insurance Top wages. benefits, 15~ Mesa Verde Or. based on exp. Call Lori: overtime for exper'd. (714)771-4750 from 9-5pm be ,,, E I try club 644·54<M 120 1e.-t l i t St. Will consider qualihed TELEPHONE Surveyor program, profit shanng company nents. X· I · -college student. One & Girl Fnday Earn up & pension plan Apply in per or w /train. Apply Restaurant Selftta A-. Co. person office. Busy work to f7 .50 per hr Call person operator. Must be able •--------_d_a_il_y_f_o_r _a_PP_'_t __ _ to set up for close MACHINISTHELPER tolerance work CM Full lime Must read Oeltronic,S4.5-GU3 verniers 'micrometers. 6 min exper Laakmann "-UARDS Electr o-Optics. Inc w E O E San Juan Capo Full & part time All (714) 493-6624 areas. Uniforms rum'd. ~~~~~~~~~ J;ges 21 or over. retired 1: welcome. No exper nee Apply : Universal Protection Service, 1226 W. Sth St .. Santa Ana. Interview hrs: 9 12 & 1·4, Mon.Fri. Hardware Sales. F /time pos. in retail hardware store. See Mike Johnson. H.W. Wright Co .. 126 Rochester, C.M. HARDWARE SALES Management potential Apply in person: Crown Hardware, 31<17 E. Coast Hwy.,CdM HOSmALADMIM. N'eeded for 96 bed SN F facility. Must be de· dlcated to good patient care. Strong leadership qualities. Xlnt benefiu Apply 1445 Superior, N.B. Housekeepers wanted SeaclifC Motel 1661 S Coast Rwy, Laguna Bch 494·9717 Housekeeper wanted for working Hunt Harbour couple. l :J0..6:30, Mon· Yrl. Cook eve meal, Ute housekeeping, $12.5 /wk. Call Rita: 846-1476, Mon· Fri, 9am-2pm. Housekeeper /Com pan ion Live in or out. 833-2000. Mamtenance MAINTENANCE MECHANIC WESTERN OlG ITAL CORPORATION IS a leading semiconductor manufacturer located in Orange County. We are currently involved in many exCJling projects and we invite you to come grow with us. We need an experienced maintenance mechanic to install eqwpment and perform preventive maintenance and re· pairs on mactunes. air conditioning and other faCJhly eqwpment. Must have knowlegedge of electricity, air condi- tioning and plumbing. Skill in the use of a lathe. mill and welder helpful WESTERN DIGITAL of· fers excellent salaries and fringe benefits in· eluding Company-paid medical. dent.al and life insurance, educational reim bursemeot, credit union, 1 week vacation after 6 months and an outstanding Employee Stock Ownersh.ip Plan. To apply. please stop by the Personnel Depart· ment. WESTERN DIGITAL 3128 Red H.UI A vc <Corner Baker & Red Hill) Cost.a Mesa. CA 92626 "Design10g Technology For The Future." NATIONAL CASH CARD PENNEYSAVER 1660 Bartenders. barten 23111 BToro Rd. sched. Interesting pro-675-6344 J.C. PENNEY PlacenllaAve.C.M deress 's , cooks . EIToro,Ca. jects. Send short letter ---24Fashionll.land.NB Advertising Sa les Representative. Career sales opportunity with a multi-divisional national company. We will train you to control 1 on 1 In· terviews with bus1· nessmen & pro · fessionals. We work by app't. only, offering a unique & valuable service that benefits both businesses & con· sumers. PAYROl1 CLBlK 2·3 days per week. Hrs. 9·5. Apply: 1660 Placen· tia Ave., C.M waitresses. waiters EcpNllOppcM'tmlty (n o phone c all s I TelephofteS.1 EO.E M/F 675-1094between1·6pm Employer M/F w /quahricalions & ex SUMMER We offer complete In· s urance package, ex· pense bonuses, & rapid advancement. We work on a commission basis with the average ac count executive earning $35,000.$40,000 annually. We need 4 people to train for management in our newly opened west coast office. We offer the most recognized complete lraining program in the industry. with extensive personal attention spark ed by friendly group competition. Call Chns Campbell for interview at 646-9906 9.9 Sunday thru Wednes· day. Newspaper delivery person, lS or over. Driver 's license. in· surance, economy car. Npt Bch-lrv-Costa Mesa area. 7 dys pr wk. Mon· Fri. 2·5PM . Sat/Sui:i 4-7 .30AM . Approx. $500/mo. Call 540.3007 be\. 11AM-5PM. Ask for Lee or Bob PEST CONTROL Person salary open. 641·6930 PICTURE FRAMER Gallery sales. F rr posi· lion for energetic. creative person. Some exper. pref. Art/design bkgd helpful. Lag. N1g. 831 ·5983 ; 770.2897 eves. PRESSMAN Exp'd for AB Dick 360, 770.6355 or 898·5249 P/tim:~e room helper. Moo 3PM to ap· prox SPM, Tue, 2PM lo approx 7PM. No exper necessary. Apply Pen· neySaver 1660 Placentia Ave.C M Pnnting Offt•tP~ Exper'd . 2nd Pressperson. Goss Com· munlty 4 unit. Apply: 1660 Placentia Ave .. CM Restaurant. Catering firm has opening for respon. adult to operate Hobart auto. slicer & learn portion control. Exp. pref. but will train. $4 /$4.50 per hr. 9:30am to 6pm Mon. thru Thur. 6am to lpm Swi. 979-<1747 for appt. Lori's Kitchen RETAIL Clerk, Costa Mesa Stationers, 270 E . 17th St., CM. F /lime. ap- ply in person l~ 12 only! REWARDING POSITION F /T Housekeeper Waitress for small re· tiremenl facility. Hours 7-3PM Weekdays, con- tact Mrs. Collins . 494-9458 RN , relief charge nurse, Upm-7am. Fti & Sat . NOCS, 80 bed ECF, gd. salary & Cringe benefits. Mesa Verde Conv Hosp .. 661 Center St., C.M. 548·5585. Sai Im aker·Seamstress. <Male or Female). Ftr. Exp. pref. 631·5950. Sales A11llt..t~r For Nautical Gift Store Full Time. Experience Preferred. Call Charlies Locker 67s-6230 Sales RECEPTIONIST AllditkMI for Av0tt. Top wages to matu.re Partlime career. Meet NIGHT AUDITOR/ person Apply 2-4PM, new people. Earn $6 or FRONT DESK CLERK Mon. lbru Sat.. 2406 more per hour. 966-0522. Newport Blvd .. N.B. For small Laguna~~~~~~~~~ SALES Beach hotel. Full or -CHILDREN'S AC· P IT Experience with RECEl'T /SEC'Y CESSORIES Mature. NCR 250. prererred. Im mediate position responsible salesperson Hotel San Maarten. available in legal/acctg Full or part Ume. Hours 494·9436. ofrlce for responsible flexible Evenings & setr-1tarter. Front office wlteods App't o nly NURSBY SALES appearance. Pleasant S49_3399 Looking for personable. phone manner; or· neat, energetic person i a n i zed & b a s i c SalH Dev R-.. able to grow with a well secretarial skills req. Part time. Sales exper establi shed company. Salary commensurate dealing with businesses. Minimum 1 year retail w i l h ex Per 1 e n c e Sal & comm. Position is Sandwich Salesperson Mon·Fri 7am lpm . Must have own trans. RAC, C.M. 642-1900 per. to Herb Mitchell, Exp'd. phone salespeo- 234 E . 17th, #206, Costa pie needed for mjr 0 C Mesa,CA92627. summer campaign SC TRY /LEGAL Mid site Newport Beach law firm rs looking for a sctry with 1to2 yrs legal expr. Mag II expr also helpful. Be11ut1ru1 at· mosphere and opport. for adavancement. Call 714 /833-<1730 Service station manager, ex per. Dys or nites Xlnt oppt'y. 673,3320. Service Station Attendant wanted full-time. 6am· 2:3-0pm shift. Part-time eves & wkends. Xlnt workmg conds. Exper req , Mac's Texaco Service, Beach & Ellis. 968·6505. SECRET ARY SHl,.,,HG / LEGAL RECBVING Probate experience Male , experien ce Permanent part-lime helpful. Some lifting. Newport Beach area. (50-SOlbs>. Excellent 673-7120. company benefits. In· formal office. C.M. Call Earn salary + comm Work m air cond . com· fortable ofc. Mon l-'n eves. 15 hr wk Begm 6 II Call: 957-2602 TIRE MAN No experie n ce necessary. Newport Tire Center, 3000 Coast llwy, Cd M. 644-8022 TRAINEE Leading local pest con· trol company needs Route Technician for steady job. Level entry position We tram no experience necessary Call Tim, Mon 9 12pm 979-6021 P /T .s~~~!RYYacht Millie at M.5-5800. TRANSCRIBER / Club, 1601 Bayside,,________ TYPIST CdM 644·9530. SHIPPINGDEPT. For Technical Law TRAINEE Firm. Newport Beach. SECRETARY Excell. co benefits. 35 /hr week Salary com For Newport Securities, Steady work. She must mensurate with ability F /T lo help manage be good with numbers & experience. 8.Sl-8081. mktg. program. Must be CM. Deltronic.54S.GU3 wellorganized,reasona·I~~~~~~~~~ TRAVEL AGENT for ble typing. SS.25 /hr 1: busy Irvine agency 957-1081 Jo. STATIONBlY Minimum 2 yrs recent Store In CdM needs exper Computer exper. SECRETARY salesperson F/time, 5 pref. Qualified only A front omce secretary days Xl.nt working con 957-2700. for small· Newport ds. Especiallyfineclien· Beach manufacturing tele. Phone 644·7482 for TRUCK DRJVER firm. One person with app'l. Load, deli ver & unload typing & secretarial --'-'--------cabinets. Heavy lifting. skills to also perform STUDENTS CM 540·5515 bookkeeping, posting. Job opportunity in CallS4S·9818forapp'l. s ports promotion & ••SECRET ARIES•• Shl100/ToVP$1S,OOO Sh80/Fashlsl$15,600 T55 /0urOfc$10,800 PR /CRT /Anah$14,400 ActgClk tropJobSll.400 Expd. Consultant Ours Liz Reinders Agy, Inc. 4020 Birch Est '64 EOE New port 1833-8190 /Free sales. p rr. swnmer & year-round work Call Mr Adams: 541-4117. Student Jobs $1000 /M O TO TYPIST fRECPT F rr position avail with land developer firm m Irvine. Pleasant phone manner & good typing/ grammar skills a mu.st Salary comm with exp Call Liz Hartzog 549-2691 T y pist / Reception1,s t (50-55wpm) wage S5 hr ly, prof. appearance. 1·5 daily ; parking pro· vided ; law firm 1n Fashion Island, NB 644·7600 WAREHOUSE PERSON Ex penence preferred Slarting pay S4·S5/hr. Days only, Mon-Fri Xlnt benefits. Laguna Hills. Call Bob: 77~1675. WAREHOUSEMAN P /time Exper. net Ex· cel co. benefits. Call Balboa Marine. 549·9671 E 0 E MIF/H Weekend Superv isor. 4AM -noon. Sat/Sun. 16 total hrs Pnmary job is being certa10 adult auto carrier picks up papers· on time & monitor & de· bver complaints called 1n by custome r s SlOO/mo expense check. ~.50 hr to start. Must be 21 or over Valid driver's lie & msurance. Call 540·3007 11AM·2PM Ask for Bob or Lee WOODWORKER Experienced. Call Tom at 642·6183. ------Work early su mmer eves & wkends P /T Welcome new residents Hospitality Hostess needs a few good people. Ca r & typewriter needed. 547·3095. WRJTERS Exper m composing sales seminars, com-. merc1als or related fields. Pay on shares ex- pected 60M. Call for appt 10.12 & 2-4 on Mon & Tues 675·0012 XRA Y-PERSON Person exp'd in xray techniques with some lab know how or willing· ness to learn needed for busy medical practice Ca II 997 ·3830 ask for Suzanne M•rchmulw *** SECRET ARY II START SUMMER ORCAREER Due to expansion· company needs many secretarial. marketing & warehouse positions. Will be fiUed immediate· ly. Must be 18 & have transportation & be well groomed. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ••••••••••••••••••••••• AftffqlMI 8005 Call 108m·3pm TYPIST ••••••••••••••••••••••• INSPICTOA RECEIVlNG Elect.ronics co. in Laguna Beach needs an electro·mecbanical in· spector for our Receiv· inc Dept. Inspection of ·variety ot components, assemblies, machined part.a, plating, etc. Must be able to work indepen· denlly. have at least 3 yn. exper. & Cull work· tnc knowledge of various measuring/test eq_uip· ment including O'acopes, micrometers, calipers, component teaters, e(c. Will a lso have other Rereiving Dept. duties. Equal Opportunity Employer 11 . N e w P o r l .B e a c h . w i· th Ca Ii r. la r g es t qursery 1e Ing ex· 64()."""0 If you would e~1oy work· · eq 'red Full ""° · Management consult. •v penence r w · i n g I n p I u s h (714'847-2422 Accurate typing & gd reception skills for WANTED TO IUY SUPVR.HIGHT pleasant Executive t bu y o Id guns, We offer excell. pay & benefits plus a 4 DAY WOU WEEtc Oompany ls 2 mi. from Coast Hwy. &S ml. Crom 405&5 Fwys. Pleaae caU for appt; Telonic Berkeley Personnel Dept. '1;4..-..9401 E.0.E IMSPICTotl lbcGreaor Yacht.a. 1631 t»tacenlla, ~ Meaa lime starting salary. RECErTIONIST firm. Send resume to s urroundings it's at our $10()()..$1400 per mo. Paid 23771 Mariner Or. l2·2<Y1, Newport Center oCflce Mon-Trainff holidays & vacations. Needed. New po rt Laguna Niguel92677 and can meet our re· -~· H 'tal1'•at1'on In" Beach. Boat·lype busl· & S-'-· P~ ospa • ... ed rt qulrementa. why not _.. avail. Part time posl-ness. 4/daya week, Sun· Sales, experienc , pa II? FULL&PART IME lions also avail. In· Wed, 8 :30-S :30pm . time. Ladies speciality giveusa ca Looking for an exciting · b t I ••.SO/hr. Heavy phones shop, Fashion Island. Ca reer l·n the r·eta1·1 lerviews Y app · on y. ~ We are currently In· Call "'•"1••1 Mnn Fri & typing experience. F lexible hrs. Call Mimi clothing field ? This .,....,.. .. ...... · ca11645.7100. tervlewlng candidates rapidly expanding retail LLOYDS NURSERY 759·9951. with a minimum or 6 clothing chain is looking . Sain•-. r m o s . p r e v I o u a for bright motivated re· You don t need a gun to People who need People Must have!xC:nce ln secretarial experience, liable, people to fill the "draw fast" When you That's wbal the selling up aeminan, and excellent lypi.ng skills position or Manager place an ad lo the Dally DAILY PILOT training personnel lo (60 to 6S wpm) and the trainee & Sales. Full or Pilot Want Ads! Call , SERVICE DJRECTORY semi.oar presentation. ablUly to communicate Part Tim e . Xlnt now -642-5678. I i.allabout! Pay 00 shares. comm. effectively. Knowledge employee ben incl expected SOM. Call for or IBM Mem ory ~f~~~~;:;· ••••••~Daily Pilat :~s:0 :~9:2~~·12 • :y;::~~:;e:~:·l ng So. Coast Plau • • Sale• salary and be_oeflts. For 33338r1tl01 CM A••a.THOURS more Inform at Ion. ----------To supervise teens in Suites. Hrs. S:30AM to diamonds, ivory, jade k youth s helter lOpm· 5P M, 4 or 5 days collectibles. Call (714 ) 6am. Call 548-0681 dys. 714-752·0234 972·4926 & ask for Dane. Make your advertising l~N~o-n~eed~~to~tr~av~e~l~a=ll~o~v~e~rl Early 1950 Coca Cola dollar go farther! List town to look for garage machine. upright, ~ your business every day sales ... you'll find them or best offer. 549-2478 in the Classified section right here in Classified. Or lh l·s newspaper T 1 Estey Pump Organ, o p ace your garage d .,50 1..~ f 6U·567S. sale ad. callM2·S678 restore • •• /or ...,.,to . fer. Also Oak Ice Box, flt ted for TV $300. 646-6935. Hand carved Mahogany Fireplace Mantle 5' XS' $1000 IMSUl.AMCI E.O. E. · e e •-please caU: Oalt Roll lop desk, S Curve. $1800 080. Good cond. PP. 957-0907; 962.()()(9 ladlvldu.al poUcy pro· ,.,.._. • Pastell ,.. • t._..JPM lev .. TMTJ ~ c•itlna for life iftl. M~, s•• •• • WlUt Dt "9pa SMtr •5':rl...:e. Patt Ume.. or 714-640.9321 ~~ ANnnur~ bhkeraae. Typln a , r{TS~ bou .a ........ _. ~4 4f'M.9'M ·+> ~ 11UW alutlMl t\IUre 1pt.ltude Career OPPortl.llJtles tor • n llam·lpm, on....., Ul.nl rn •1·. Smt " m.i h....,.- llaturtiy ••xi.adest~: mana,er tralneea with e Z..c.IMt:t company benefttl. P'clr appt.. fore Join the Loi An~elea ~ Of TH£ WORLD Co ... -e--m SI one o the fl.It.est ff'OW· bttff'Vttw, c:all t42411l , ext. m. Ttm-c•-··'·lt-"'am ~ft. ~ ·.,... ...... · mi, Ins clotbtn 1 retail • • .... u"....., .... "' "WELLS ~ .c.L.U.Mf.tom .... as adapt your work ~..., .......,~"'-,;,.I All c: 1 c:bl.IM. Xlnt oppty. Cor e l'aa •C h t d ule t o you r FIA nGQ ~ \. ~' lb• highly motivated.,.. '14Rlfl!!! • IUttlyle. Work 5/hrl/· ..n....o. ~ s1rvru 'THOMAS 1 ...... AHCI fot l·O~ individual, Ty 1 .... * .. d dav tn 1 'nl!Wll Clreula· BANK ~:1 ~II.ft" Undanrftl.w wkh COm· Retail or "'an .. ement • ol1p DI 5.0 wpm, abor~ nu/ lc:taphone,. " m'I. aU\O uperlence. Hl> helpful p/\mombat • P uunt phone YOlce. Work for t.wo. ~~:, :!:!! ·~~~ ::~ Work after school and on ANTIQUES pm~ l•hy. tome aal~a poiltlon• a lao newapeper eucutlvea. Ex.cellent bnetita " r 11 MONe•portCenterDr. Sat u rday g e tting new ~ . n dna. S.&ary open. g.. • v a' I• b 1 e . X l n t e and environm ent . !'or appoll'tmeat ende ~t':~t!~r ::''feta8utr;..7; N•WJIOrt ... ch customer s for the area's 1~ WOf'tdqcoodit\ona, tmp1o1• beMll&., •PP. e 111l«vi••,call t42.Qll,ut..m. e period•. we pay boW'l)' Equa l Ofl Em p lJ leading newspaper. Blg $Plus 20-40% Off l ew otc., movle 1 to b a t llUler·a Out~~ e ~,.____.. e •• , ......... m ... -.. 11 /H prizes. trips and bonuses. •l'L *•II•• rv l•• t a Au •u91 . 11euC..,.2UE.1,"" • -e ~'T • Clll .. C.._. 10:,,.;---·-~' : ~f:~•,:.•;:,.:J~ e &IM\WD ~.......... I ~ LOSAffOELl:8TUIES llore ram.ui.an1et1.lnl 642·4Ht,ed211 . f'JU&T.suN II -+. ~ . J ~ U11 SaAflO•tr AH . Ute cam~ ••but'' Ulla E Op t I E p6o,iw .. ., .. 3lat U ,..•,. • rti6ij U.. •• i \ Co.ta Mesa. CA -C.M. ... qual Pot un ty m 10 •• ,· 9tl ... la o-lfted1 11.Ue 1 .. r-4 COUJ'a r -••-1 ~rt•• .. r..-~er ..... 1•ar. l 10U a &Ve A • e.-w~':o..pmC II ,-.'Te ......., 1 lat• eta.aaa&d ~? If,.., ...-...-.. "l'l'V -u'I ---.-VJ' • ca mper u.t•a not.-~ _ _ &;.m."'-;Ma.oiti -=-~.=:-,,:.":.;. c:; ... -:::.-:-belt ....... 1·--·---·-·---·-·--·-•=-1• .... •~l·r;.-.:;··--·-·;;..o·...._ __ . .l:=&q=u;;;a.;'::;;;~~~===aall=J ==l:::l~r.:=·=~=td=,.:..=~= .. =l =!.=. DOW=1·"/-!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~-~~~JU.i:.W=aa=t:;;A=dlli=-~'~..,..,;;:;;;;;»1'I;.;; I (j 23 a s a .Appil•H• 1010,......... 105 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Ho111eho6d ~ I06S Muslcal IMh. ,...,. t040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• fn1tra ••• 1083 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28. 1981 * !Z WASHER •DRYER Xlot eond, ""°ea. M4·Cll.'IBJ HARBOR AREA APPUANCESERVICE We buy med applianc:a ·We Hll recoed. IUAI' **I BUY** Good u.aed Furniture A AppUaoce.-OR J wlll aell or SEU. for You 2 P.i..-uin Ru&s <Herez> ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17' aluminum canoe l·U ll 9 $1800. l 11 x CONN Dlrertortrombone l2000 wm trade or tw•t with cue. Eitcellut wltb aC«lllOCiea urr .. r. 7l4MMl9e1V cond1tlon, 1100 87S.~ S350116G-BJT81·90.10 Se"a, ,_.. 4-to1 W..a.d 95'0,.btoa, t•,_w A.llto1, I•,....... I Accft1arle• 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••··~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wt:PAY'l'OPDOLLAR Alfelo.eo t705Ho«Mle .,,, ,_... for lop uaed car11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••11 MAS TBS AUCTlOH 64MH6, IJJ.t6J5 -atterePM J.welry 1070 ----. ---260 SEARAV SW1dancer ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fender accousuc, 19'19, w /alip, '79 lo hrs. auto PLAT. 3 diamond wed aood cond. ~or be.oat pilot, alcohol elec atove, D.-&...-Z for"l•o. dom~•llu or '78 Alla Spidt:r 20K ml, '79 Accord. 4 dr, am«>, u1..-. cluale-If your en U1 mint cond, oria1 own.-r amtrm. extra mo1dtnea. appbances 549.3011 ding rm11 ttradt \IVSZ offtr. ~18 refri1. dock aide pwr & motor eitlra cle11n , 1u•e us 1'7500 ~46 2aS2 hlce new. 7f0.00S8 PP 1 • FIRST• I IUY FUMTUU swo apprwal S11crtrlcl' VIOUN i"·) charier, ralhometer fish I IUY .... -1 • ... CIS Les 957~133 ...,..,,. •· ... r· d I di ~'"'""""" ......,7S9·1""3 Like new rood, =<>or 10 er. ape co ra o + ott.t-,.,+a 7 ... 5'37 Lea 957·8133 8 l n u t d r e s s e r ~Lephone. radio dlrec EHGAGEMINT Off! beat orr.-r. 5'9-1040 uon finder, full c.nvas. 3 2 6 Pont 1 a c en i Refri1 fro1t free, ct.an, w /bookahell. matching Complete & &ood cond worlta. $140 Day~" desk & chr Gd cond. f'or u h:. cniiaeement Offke , ........ & 641·825lor964-SS18 1100. 645-2967. 646389S rma. Huac0n setting, ...,,.... 1015 18' Glaupar Seafar ----_e;:v::e:;IM:8;·-9907;:-;:;:::;:;--~; ~;;; •. ;;-;-;;;-;;;-;;;-;-;;;-;;;-;;;-;;;-;;;-;_~ ''• c •rat, written a P· • • •••• •. ••• •• ••........ ed 110 ood d ·se c HE vv PU less bed. Waaber & Dryer, xlnt pralsalvaluedatSl200 Soyal S60 office siie s an. ·& con· $300 d A d 9 ft sofa tor sale. net'd11 $800 or Best Orr er Ty•.,.wn'ter. Xlnt cond. 892·3620 960. ,..,,.7 827-6170 con . voca o areen. h 1 t 1 C:all ASAP '714-64()..5527 r-...,.. $350pr. some up o s er ng, or2JJ.J80-9680 1200. Remington office 260SearaySundancer --------- 641.0763 Mi.9183 hardwood frame, aold manual Typewriter $25. With slip. 079, lo hrs, VW Bus Weatpballa. In ---------1 suede cloth MS. 6 metal l 44 ct. RUBY Ap 551·5S38. auto pilot, alcohol /elec. terlorpleces.all orsome Dryer, gas, clean, works brld0 e chairs. need re· pratsed "l......,.,. ·11 II f d .... 1d priced to sell. 64S 1465 good , S75 's48·8513 , painting, $15. May be .. .-.uv,wt se ADLER Electrlc21CTa· stv.rer, OC!loii epower atter6pm. S48·448S seen nlght:i till 7 PM or for S700. G4().868H ble model. E:x<.-eU. cond. & charger, P'athometer ----- weekends. Cull 551·4435 Machinery 8078 Recent overhaul. 1200. fish finder, Apelco radio DATSUN PU & SlO Washer. clean, works llrvine). ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pis. call : 645-2842 tele, radio dlr. finder, Parting out 1969·73 good, SSS. 548 8513, ~~~~~~~~~AIR COM PR t::SSUH, • C ' full canvas.641·82.51 5461587 548-4485 Portlible 220 & 4 hp, Lwn 1 8 M M 0 d e 1 loots, Soll 9060 Autos for 5a11t " Walnut pedestal tbl!I cyl, l2SPSI. hke new Typerwrller $2.50 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Freezer, upright, clean works good , $100 548-8513,548-4485 w/4 uphol chrs, xlnl $395,645-9182 956-18Z7 •79 Montgomery 10• IMPORTANT cond SJS0.645-S9l6 MlscelloMous 1080 'ets 1017 w /sails, motor, xlnt NOTICE TO REFRIGERATOR 16.9 c u ft Frlaidaire w /ice maker. S4SO 644 0381 herrywood Bdrm set ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond Must sell. Asking READERSAND $350 Pecan Om rm sel Phone-Male Telephone Ge""ShepPllpS S1250,calleves832·~ ADVERTISERS SlSO LmpS, $2S. Lawn Answering Machine AK<.: shots $250 up The price of items mowers $10ea $48-1931 with warranty S79. With 544 1G97 2S' O'Day, w/lrlr & shp, advertised by vehicle remote $149 750-3791 fully equipped, hke new dea lera in the vehicle sk w/exec cllr $1500, 2 ------Tame PearlCockallel (213 )592·5801 classified advertising GE rerng, side-by-side. gsl chrs S200ea. file cub All year Bubble Pool w cuge & all, $150 or 4 Sail Lar.er, yello with columns does not In· 21\.'J cu f\, avocado. 3 $400 Enclosure.30xS5 Xlnt best.S48-8417a~ many accessories elude any applicable yrs, $400. 4944881 645-S923 S75010 rter 642·9666. ~ 1829 laxes. license, transrer GE waaher & dryer, 9 4S" round walnut table, I mos old, whlte. warran lear 24", 4 chairs. $125. ty. $450 both. 4S.·4881 646·5482 Kenmore Duo power up- right · heav1 duty, like new $75, HooveT' com· pact with attachments $10. 96()..1963 14 cu ft. upright coldspot freez.er very gd cond. $9S. 646-6714 wn 81.tl' trundle bted. makes into2fullsdwns, xlnl cond, matlr ind $75 548-7986 W11 s her. Dryer, queen size bdrm set & twin bed. Call 842·4754 evl's only. REFRIG, 19' Whirlpool Sofa 7' Pillowback wht side-by-side, froslfree, w iblue & apricot flowers $275. 640-0649eves new $650, (2J mint blinds llcycles 8020 45" wide X 70" long. off ••••• ••• •••••••••••• ••• wht $3S l ea 831-1076 For sale. 5 spd tandem Schwinn bicycle. looks like new Was meant for two. And now only one and she is gone $250. 548.4039 Schwmn Tandem ~ spd S27S, Punch Moped, nds rpr $7S. call 759-1195 aft Spm. r NEW 23'' Sentmel C11mel tan Vinyl Divan Bed + bedding. incl elec blnkl like new S95. 646 6714 Elegant mudem din set Wal tbl. 2 Ives 6 off wht uphl chrs w c hroml' legs Lk new 552-8530 7' camel sora & lo,·est.>al. like new, $525 1\ll'X 552·0231 , 8519371 lOspeed $100 -- 675·4174 67S 7346 Gora9e Sale 8055 ESTATE SALE ••••••••••••••••••••••• lwWllHJt4ahriohl025111m._._._._._ __ 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MAY 27 /28 /29 Lo•elaloofts Helium Bouquets de livered. Pedecl for every occasion 673-4419 MOTORCYCLE $300 WATERBED $175 546-1141 NEW Mother needs baby items. Small dresser, car seat and stroller 646-7263 Redwood 2x6's, xlnl Jeck ing 8 to 20' long. New load just amved S11'e al SS< pe1" fl 646 9885 anytime 6 rt redwood picnic table Brand new $75 646-9885 anytime Everything Goes! Merger forces boat manuracturer t o 11 qu1dale Huge sav1ni;t!. on pneuma t ic hand tools. l.Jghl machinery, ribergla~s. shop & office equipml'nl, rurnllurc. boat hardware, un "onos & OrcJ-s 1090 <714>7 · 1 fees, finance charges. • ••• •• •• ••••••••••••• •• L Gd d fees for air pollution con· WURLITZER. spinetle ~::;,·cover= • new trol device certiricat1on11 model 4410, two 44-note 673-3074 or dealer documentary keyboards. 13 pedal preparation charges un· notes. auto tone control, .79 525 Santa.na. race re· less otherwise specified earphone jack. solid ma· ady, w 16 bags of sails. by the advertiser pie w /matchmg bench. must sell. 497.4271 '520 $400 cash or $450 de --------Antl~uesJ hvered. 547-1845 Hobie Cat -trailer, 14', Clouica like new. $2700 cost. Sell ••••••••••••••••••••••• IYERS Ir POMO Studio Spinet. Xlnl cond.. $1200 In Costa Mesa. will Deliver (714 )338-3751 $1495. Eves640-6681. PRETTIEST Walnut Burl grand, 26' Sailboat & Moormg $20,000/0BO 824-1498 before 3PM G Icon C 1880, Germany '75 CATALINA Sailboat, S3900 OBO PP 957.0907 . w tboal slip on Balboa 962·1»19 Island. Fully equippe<j, Store, Restaurant, I inboard gas eng. $31 ,000 lar 809 I 675_·_«_56 __ _ ••• •••• • ••••••••••• ••• Laser w hand tra tier, '57T·llRD INTOWHI BEST OFFER! (OO'JUKZ) THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR Bl VO COSTA M E'>A 641 0010 Store Rxtures $1200 or bst orr. ·29 Model A Town Sedan. Mirrors, sc,......, show 673-2068 4 dr. restored Ideal for cases, h«99n. racks, loatt, Si-/ student SlO,SOO. ALSO sh~l•es, chairs, Docks r-9070 '46 Ford Woodie. restored $13.500 •acuurn, etc. Lost day, •• • • • • • ••••••••• •• ••• •• Moy 30. 675-1030. Side Ties for rent. '64 Cadillac C:onverttble 3641 E. Coast Hwy. S8·Sl01ft Hurry' Xlnl cond Navy New COM 6464419 while top. Beautiful rln1shed bay cruiser. TY R di misc items Sal. May 30 • 0 0 • 8 09 SUPS A •all. month to mo losl1. Max 30' o•eral $I 0 per dcry. 675-7100 673-2181 & Sun. May 31. Dumeld HIFi, St.no Yachts. 660 W 17th. •••••••••••••••••••••• c; M Beautiful Color TV, 2 yr ----wrnly. Free delivery New mini blinds 40 in x 4S $148. 646-1786. HUDSOH '53CLA5.51C BESTOFFEH 645· 1006 ANYTIME '"-.tj #1 lllC>r-..C-"f 2925 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 979 .. zsoo WANTED!! ca.-lmporb TopDoalal- ,oidll Coll Jim H0tan or MlkeL.U Cre•6erMoton 835-3171 w .. ·11 Buy O r S~ll Your Cl~an Import On Con\iqnme nt''' Coll Our u~ed C or Monaqe r TODAY"' 831 ·2040 49S-4'1 49 Soddlebac~ BMW Mission Vi~jo WEIUY CLEAN CARS AND TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET !.>.;,.11.trl••I Hl•d 111:'.IA \H !-o\ 546-1200 HIGHIUYER Top dollars for Sports Cars, Bugs, Campers, 914 's. Audi's Ask rorU1C MGR JIM MARINO VOLKSWAGEN 18711 Beach Blvd. HUNTINGTON BEACH 842-2000 TOP DOLLAR PAID FOR GOOD&CLEAH USED CARS! miracle mazda Redwood 2 by 6's, xlnl decking. 8 to 20' long. New load just arrived. Save at SS< per rt . 646·9885 anytime. Place . 201 Larkspur & Ocean Blvd Corona del Mar Time 8:30 am lo 3pm. Large 2 story home w /antq rumiture. low boy ch s t yle. grandmother clock. anlq dressers. spinet. chests. beds. pattern glass. chuia. TV's, primitives, trunks. brkfrt w desk. new W D. refng,. This is a REAL GOODIE! Come early for parking Visa & M C accepted. in S25: Marble corree ta· ble S2S ; Kirby varuum $50, Woven wood shade 48 in x 84 in SZO; Hanging lamp $25. 646-7603 60'MOORIHG 25" HCA Console Color 18. boat, Sl9,900 firm 4 WIMel DriYH 9550 2150 H..tMw ll•cl TV, almost nt-w, perfect cash631-4286. ••••••••••••••••••••••• COllta M ... 645-5700 Wrought Iron Fencing, 4' bl, gate, 60 ft length SW. 542·0435 8035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Burmese Stud Service CFA registered 964·80111 aft.2PM Siamese Kittens Female (2) Sealpoinl $5D1ea 586-0054 HELEMNOUHD ------- Girls clothes size 12·4, some new. under SS. Breyer Hon1es Collec tion S2 + $3 646-7603 Co u ch $75, Ho nd o Acoustic siwlar ~.Mat t box spnngs $15 Call 848·3915 cond1t1on $325. 557-9978 ---------1 197' SUIARU 45. wall Panasonic stereo H•w~! 4)(4 WAGON receiver & amphrier. <71 > 4 speed trans. & roof m a l c h i n g 2 6 ' ' Covered Newport slip for rack. (660WYM). Phaselloear speakers! pwr bt to 35'. ts.00 per n ONLY SlttS Almost new BIG quality 548·SSS6 MIRACLI MAZDA sound $450 Alex . ---------21SOHarborBlvd 552·0231, 851-9371 T rtatioft COSTA MESA 19" COLOR TV---.~:!:! ............... ___ ,_4_5-_5_7_o_o __ _ Philco, S200. Alex, COMptn, Sale/ Trucks 95'0 5S2·0231. 851·9371 Rent 9120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WENH:D .YOUR EXOTIC &IRmSHCARS Doga 1040 r---~~~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• BEARCAT Pollce Scan ner good cond. best orter 631·5800 ---••••••••••••••••••••••• s~iat S' PanasorucTV, I yr old, 1969 RV 10''l Ct camper r-- remote control. $1600 for P .U truck Fully Purchase!! 3100 W Coast Hwy Newport Beach 642-94«> KEESHOND Pups. AKC. Champ sire M/F Pet & show Pvt ply 213 1697-1345 aft 6 pm. MIN SCHNAUZER PUP Salt & pepper male Show quality Shots. papers & lie S200 496-0339 Pure Bred Blk Labs. Shots, 12 wks old. $50 ea. call 631-5349 AAA HOME DOG TRAINING In your home-obedience & problem solving 638-9265 Old English Sheep Dog. 16 wks. all shots. AKC regis. rem. Blue/grey & whte. Cath.t. 497·3818 SAT /SUN. 9·4, rum I toys. holL'iehold wares. bike. elc 10132 Cynthia Dr (Nr. Bookhursl & In dianap<>hs >. HR Garage Sale May 29 & 30 953 Senate Sl C.M. Collectablt-s or ~lass. chin a, books gadgets & misc HUGE Sale. Baby furn. Toys, clothes. 8-5 S&Sun 2375 Notre Dame Rd C.M TREES & Bushes tn Wtnebarrels·· must sell, moss hanging baskets buy I or entire pallo. 644.0583 Herculon curved green couch set, S80 T1rfanys memberslup, S200 Iii r1 stand. $20. 646·3388 Garrer & Satlll·r Gas stove, 4 yrs old, xlnt cond $150. 631 7~ cash 645 24.56 e I e c & s e If con l Low Mlleogel SlOOO /bsl 848 4815 aft 1910 4 spcl .ct 5 spd. loat1 Ir Morine 4pm t -L Equipment · Dottt111 P .... Up's •••••••••••••••••••••••(;om pie l e Cab Over Tretnendous Generol 90 I 0 Sleeps 4 including jacks. Sav~!!! • •• •• • • •• •••••••••••• •• $.500. 673-2593. Non-profit org nds your ---; --:----Mdce Wft boat, plane. car, etc. Moton1edl1bs 9140 GftdmontNypoywllfs Liberal tax deduction ••••••••••••••••••••••• advantage 213/654-2341 '79 PUCH MAXJLUXE Xlnt cond, just LW\ed. loats, Morine $400. 545·7884 art. 5. EqulpfMftt 9030 ---- •• ••••••• •••. •• •• •••••• Motorcyctts / Mere 75 Outboard Scoohn 9150 BARWIC DATSUN '>o" Ju on C opl\h ano 831 -3311 ESL.&... t-•-100 yds clean used shag engine. 60 hp, xlnl cond ••••••••••••••••••••••• •CHEV. HU '11 nml' -cpl green $2 yd Twin $450 9S7·!Yl30 '75 Honda CBJ6(11', xlnt 29036 Ridgev1ew Dr cond, new helmet $700 I TOH STAKE Laguna Niguel Sat May velour swivel rockers ---------1 Call (213)842-6005 eves. 12 ft. model with hngale. 30, 9·Spm Antiques. ap-rust $75 ea. 675-2!72 2 . 7 ' DIHGHY's duals, air cond., H.O. pliances. book.\. crafts. Mc Lane 20 .. front thrf>w Good condition Fantastic buy! '77 750 springs. pwr steering. WANTED! Late mod~I Toyotas and Vo l vos . Call us TODAY!!! Earle Ike TOYOTA-VOLVO 1 U6 H--. ll•d. C•1te M .. e ..... U6-UOJ or S40-t 0 7 Top Dollar P-aid For Your Car' JOHNSON Ir SOH Lincoh-Mffcury 2626 Harbor Blvcf Costa Mesa 540-5630 ~~n__ l awnmower with SlSOea 673-7724 Honda,lesstlum6Kml aux . lank & more' ~~~~~~~~~I lmmac .. exlras. ONLY Workhorse complete! WePay Goodies galore. Cash & catcher SlOOcall 752 2248 -$1495. Must see. 673-4068 (3961) OVER Carry. All Week long BRICKS 168 cement ONLY $12 491 221 E. 19th St <.:osta bricks lOceachorall for 7.5 HPG.,.fisher '69 Honda 750. Runs, HOW .... RDC.:._ a...t lluelook Mesa 642 1353 115 646 7603 Good runner. $1SO. needs minor repair, Do;e/Qua:iS~ro.,.. For Your Good 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72 Audi 100 l6SO 673-1732 '77 Civic, Auto Now palnt, 1nrl, 1teroo Gd cond 13200, 641·0777 Laura -Japar t710 IMW 971 Z ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••• • • • •• •••••••••••••• '67 J aauar 3.8 MK llS eM For The Best oric. very well ma.in· Buy Or Lease Deal tained Mu.t Sacrlllt• tn Orange CoWll Y 846-8570 CorneSeeUsTodliy!. ------~ ~~!'!' .....••.•.•. !?.~~ 'iJ/11 '77 Mazda/OLC, 1 owner, SADDLEBACK BMW 28402 Mar&uerile Pkwy MtSslon Viejo Avery Pkwy extl IOCf S f're~way ) 131-2040 495-4949 Closed Sundays ---- CREVIER &I Sf 6 HOADWAY SAHfA AHA 835·3171 IHl U~llMA If DlllVl"O MACHl"l •USEDBMWs• '76 2002 4!ipd 10603) '793201 S /R <58941 '79 S28i SIR 0076> '81 320iA 10115) Clos~ Swtdoy1 Th• Most hcitinc) Part Of Your IMW~hoaeOr LtaM Cot.lid I• McLaren BMW!! luy OrLeose ly Our fthoM Pion! (7141522-5333 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST $ Sales Service Leasml( Roy Carver.Inc. Rolls Royce BMW 1S40Jumhoree Newp<>rt Beach 640 64 14 '71 2002. good rnnd AM FM cass . sn rf. M 1c he lins. $3400 P P 645·6214, 772·6869 '74 2002, lo m1. air, slereo, new paint, New !rans 759·8928 & 759·8929 '78 3201. silver, snrf. 4spd. air. alloys Well mamt. S9500. Days 759 7905. 22.000 mt, S spd, xlnt cond 492·8536 1980 RX7. annlvenary edit • mint cond. 5 apd. sunrf. AC. stereo w /tape, new Mi chelina. 831·3231 or495-6673 '79 RX-7. limited edition. Loaded SWlroof. 673--4743. MercedesleM ·····················~· 04EW ... Ml'Z•'. 2400-3000 + s HUGE DISCOUNTS Earle Ike 's TRANSPORTATION'' CONSULTANTS 64 5-4281 Gory Al:THORIZED I ,\1 ERCEDF.S·BENZ DEAL1'~R 831 1740 • 49S·l700 '72250C .2 dr sport cqupe Im· maculale. $8200 Tom 675 9797. 673-6210 78 3000. Icon gold. tm· mac. sunrf. PP $17,000 496--4344 1:4 '72 2SOC. 68K mi, xlnt cond. $7800 559.5542 '76 450 SLC. dark metallic blue. Alloys. full service records. $20,500 645·2315 675·8638 '73 280C beaut cond, loaded. must sell $7500/0BO 752.24()'1 ---'S9 Mercedes 300 $.L Rdstr. wht, rd ml. x1nt cond. $35,000 548-6611 --'62 190. new radials, Capri 9715 brakes. etc. Xlnt cood. eves: 552-0957 ••••••••••••••••••••••• $1800 1974 MYCURY MG '7•2 CAPRI ••••••••••••••••••••!.• Aulu trans . air cond . MUST SELLl custom wheels, mterior • i. _ & exLertor. AM FM 1969 classic 6 cyl. MG<.: stereo & more' CT26117 l ("CE E ") G T 2 ;t 2 ONLY $2495 Coupe. Only built for a Th ...t.....-Robt... limited time! ONLY ~OllKWT ins $2995 ! Call 857-0901 or Ford 495.0507 2060 Harbor Bl • C ~1 ------~ 642·00 IO 1979 MG MIDGET 73 Capn. runs ~ood. Must sell ~50 675 5342 Dats11n 9720 • •••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Dat s un 8210 hatchback. 5 spd, ·45.000 m1, $2900 or o rrer 544·1911dy;49J.9710ev. •73 Oats. 240% Air. am 1Cm cass. mag whls. duel exh .. nu tares, mech per Orig owner $3950 OBO, SJ6.7187 4 speed trans .. AM /FM stereo cassette & ONL T 16,000 miles! ( 106ZBCT. ONLY $4395 MIRACLE MAZDA 2150 Harbor Blvd. • COSTA MESA 645--5700 -----.- P•UCJ•Ot 97.~8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LEASE DIRECT! .. ~ · 198 I PEUGEOT TURBOs &.... BEACH IMPORTS 848 Dove St reel NEW POHT BEACH'. 752-0900 97-SO ••••••••••••••••••••••• AKC Golden Retrvr pup- py. Male, 10 wks old. $125. 844.4077 673-772'4 some spare parts $900 NEWPORTBEACll VW. PorscheorAudi HOUSE SALE. Antiques. King Sized Pool Shde $25. ~~~~~~~~~I firm. 673-8133 days, only 83~0555 Datsun ·72z Auro. air. oak desk & 4 chrs. -be{ 5 ~ Bronze Mirror 8' high 12 ore pm mags, good cond1t1on. • * '73 914. Xlnt bod)'. m e .: h M a ny x l r a:s . SS.09S. 497·1597 dresser, wicker. pine. '-'l'wide SlOO 6420239 1979FORD while $3800 or best. '19'159142liter,mustseJI, lots or collectibles · 3 HPSeagul '74 350 Yamaha dirt, '74 VW-PORSCHE-AUOJ 846_9263 good condition. PM. s11. HUSKY ,urs Beaut puppies, mixed w /Malamute, 3 wks. looking ror great homes. Mother fully papered. C heck prices at pet stores. $75. 831-8307 Hurry! Fri /Sat. 9·6 18 Rustling H.O. Train layout 5'x8' Long s haf\. xlnt cond. 2SO Honda Enduro & 3 COURIEtt "CKU' 445 E. Coast Hiway __ ---eves 499.4359 Wind, Irv complete and ready to $200. 673-7724 bike trlr. all xlnl end. 4 cyl .. 4 speed, AM /F'M al Baysid~ Drive '78 8210 Hatchback, Sspd, ---- demon sl rate Incl. SelJ separate or all ror stereo cass .. mags & Newport Beach 673-0900 am/fm stereo cass. lo '7S 914. Blk, app. K(OUp, 6 F1.1m1lyGarageSale e n g 1 n es. t w 1 n SllSO. 5484888,673-4~ wide oval tires, cust . ood MPG 497 aegs alloys, air. S8700. D~niae Amer. oak antiques, transrormer, bldgs. 1~~~00Johnson '76, $575 ext. & int., roll bar& low Premium prices mt, g • · 835·4333. J:30lo7 PM. Engl. antiques ; also landscape. etc, must '79 HONDA 7SOK. Uke miles. (A74209). paidforanyusedcar '76 PU w/camper shell 8045 beds, dressers, e od see. weekdays new , low mile s OMLY$4599 (foreignordomestic) . $2600 tables. detik : Schwinn 54g.14R4 ,79 Brltlsh ~agulJ ldeal Sl900JOB0968-5210 TIModon Robins ln good con<litlon. 492·3859 an 6PM girl's hike. 865 Sandcas· for Avon Sl7S hurry: '79 Honda 110 ATC 3 Ford See Us First! • oz · pd I k lie CdM Fri-Sal Sun '75 Layton 21 " SJC xlnt 28 78 2+2 511 st c • '76 911 s 5 spd. A/C. stereo, al· toys, Cllrford a larom. Perfect cond. 645·6508• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' · 673·2810 aft 7, 7S l·6789 wheeler, perfect Xtra 's 2060 Harbor Bl C M II blk int lnt d • mos mixed collie/lab 10-4. cond. Roll up uwnin& 642-0010 . . s ver, , x con , Ro• Royce 97~6 f h $3300 846·3593 loot., Po...-9040 S880 ODO Dan 675-9731 t699S 64().6244 ---••••••••••••••••••••••• em puppy. as 1st Garage Sale. lou of do-il· , 1ho\1, nds ed home. yoursetr odds 'n ends, Mhc•lbleCM9 ....................... Yamaha 400 Enduro also '74 Datsun P.U .• p /B, '73240Z. $4000 •1 DEALER·IN U.S. 549-1880 tow bar. mlsc. items. W•ted 1011 31' lertr.rSF. lt79. Jawa Moped. Both radio, auto. xlnt cond. Auto.a/c,newshocks& O Fri .. Sat.·SW\. 460 Abbie ••••••••••••••••••••••• lethr "'-'MW. So•• clean. 645·4717 eve. 12200/080. 552-2976 tires. 557.9359 ~ ~A~VIR ~~~;or: 1~ r K01~ _w_a_y_._c _.M_._____ WANTED o•et $40,000. Ownr. Makeoffer. '50 DODGE P.U. good :!888 llarbor Rlvd Rot '725 ROllS ·ROYCE _R_e_1_1a_t_e_red_._842-_!l424 __ . __ Saturday, May 30th. 15302 BI ue short sleeved 675-6670, 67).4515 Motor H--, Sallt/ body cond, 318 eng. SlSO C'm•tu )h•!-u 540 0330 ••••••••••••••••••••••• tS.>•"'~ andlS322TouralneWay. security guard s hirts. 33. OWENS BRIG S/F l...t/Stonlgl fl60 latrtng.495-9728 1975FIATXl/t ,..__ _ __.:=::1 .. .c c::.~~~·~.5(1:,~~~~ The R anch . I rvlne. Sir.e lsto 1.51,; medlum. w /Newport Slip, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• '79 FORD F350. 400 cu In. We buy 4 speed tral\ll . AM /FM by fem, apayed 492.~ 1_8a_m_·2-'p_m_._____ 646-9100 crusaders. trans & pro-WE CAN SELL auto, 2SK ml. p/a, tilt. CARS & TRUCKS stereo tape, maes & like ClOSIO MJHOAYS aft6PM • p11. Radar, pilot, ball YOUR R.V. cruise. am/rm stereo. TOP $$$$$$ NEW' ll86NLYl. Saab t1)0 Clasalfied Ada. your one· People who need People tank, Halon fire system, 5:.1304 CB 4 x 4.1'7800. 545-2250 OMLY SlttS ••••••••••••••••••••'•• Free to 1ood home 7mo ttopahopptnscenter. That's what the S37 500~7246 ' SH S7t0 MllACUMAZDA LEASE . old t'/Golden Retriver DAILY PILOT • RENT: 22' lux. mlr V9M t570 • 2150 HarborBlvd. need• love It apace, 1rt MIK•"H 14• ERVICE DIRECTORY 1£6' 1L• Pd•lalrk!,·1 3S -1!! home. Sls-6, seU-c:ont. ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ......._ .. 11_.0--... COSTA MF.SA DIRECT! ~ w/klda,l.eavinaarea. W..t.41 IOll lullabout! vnru e, .. er.__,..,. $295/wk. + 8• mt. i1Dod1eTraese.man200 --.n.evwwa 645-5700 LI 151·9'11N •••••••••-••••••••••••1----------1 847-5038. Aft6PM. 6CG-8S8S camper van. new paint, ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------- --------· bucket 1eat1. relri&, wHI 4Ha I01MO t70S Hettdo t727 FREE Kl1TENS 13' losfoft W..... FOR RENT 23' Mldaa. 1acrlflce, make offer ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oranu. 2 male, l Trailer, motor shot. Sleeps4·S.A1r&Cruile. mutt aell. Wknd LEASE VISITYOUR fema.Je,'fw..U.847$18 $1100.&7&-709',844-5433 $250 per week + It• 2U·U2·7HO. wkdy •v•. 24, ocean fl.ahJna boat, 'mile. 84MOtO nS-831·02$9 DIRECT! ORA.NCH COAST ...... IOIO S P E C I A L · C AS H wJ(lybrd1. Mutt sell. 25' Pace Arrow "78. Must '71 DODGE Tradesman HONDA 1911 SA.Al • • TUUO. ~ J llACH IMPOITS 848 Dove St'"* -NEWPORT BEACH 7S2MOO ; •H••••••••-•••••••••• PREMIUM 1As1 than L50 hn. Call aell. Od cond. 864·$907, 200 camper special I 1911 ALI-,. HEAD'ftUAITIRS SOPAt 84&·67.S or aee at 3692 638-3052 many utru, Pl•. p/b, SPID&S TOD •Y.l!I. 1 ,--_....-----, .... 16-1 ' ft. cHeeat abape anc.J· 4 Days Only 11'ur-S.. Mo11'4e&o Dr, HB. Trellen. ,,.... ti 10 a/c, $2$00f llrm. 646-5908 IM' .~.~";~': ••••••••••••••• • que 1old velvet. Ex· YOUI Cl.ASS... ;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;11 •••••••.tu••••••••••••• evea llACH IMPORTS UMIV•SITT 1'19\t Supra l:uc. c r. ulleat codltlon 1 To Place YO'tr '7t Golden Falcon 13' '71 GMC Vu ""T ae., ... Do\'eSltffl SALr.B•SERVICE 18K orll ml Load4id. R•.eo. Aleo. ""° dark Alto I-••• c.11 fw ti "Fast Result'' frav. lrlr. xlnt con.d, fuJ. m1/\ran.1, carnpertop.e NEWPORT BEACH OLDSMOllLI "500ortakeoverlselor ::=. U':i'ftnitn~ •.W & Sku•1 ..,......._ ~rvke Directory tr SC, a te.. awntaa, new cyl. $1900 f73·Hl7 or 11J..o900 HCte• UOO. 547•HU d ... eaclll.Cal(7M)IT1·'1151. HOUDAY INN. la. JJI d C UN t.lnt. t lpt t. w. or w.o. M2·WO •MCTllUCKS M4....,e¥t • l J 1 ....., • • • • • • ow '71 Che\'y Suburban People who need people ZSSOltarbor lUvd. I A"4.C.... 642·1671 ~a.llerac Special, a/c, i4 Dod&• Van VllJ.I. Lo abouldalw_,.t.Mtkt.be COSTA MESA ........ .W~AMWW' ....... ..._. ...,., IU new Uriil. 56).1.251 a.ft ml, A/C, PS/Pll, SUiOO. ServlceDhdor)'tntbt -tpm. ' Xlfttcood.MS-2Ml DAILYPILOI' 14M640 .- '71 • C.Uca GT LIJlbe Blk , eleH, load tsdS.W·'llM. 0 .... : ... 0~:::. ,,.. -. u...i :-'°"MJ ...... ~tt:Z.~·;;;;· ;~ ...... ;;2.; ~~ ...... ;;·;;!~~~ ...... ;;~; ~;~ ...... f;ii ...................... ....................... ....................... ~ m ....................... ·······················~···················· ...................... . '761 ,.... 977 Y.e.e 9772 CtMlllec tf II 1971 ~HIYIOUT '7Ul av, air, 1teroo. auto, 79 Diesel C\a1all Calail, .... •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i~•• • * 68,000 ml, xlnl cond, 18,000 ml, Ute new. Mott Uca, 5 apd, am-fm reo, 22.000 mi. xlnt • l5SOG. &G-5409 t7'7 _4) -~ ...... -ms Harbor Blvd . COSTA M~A 979-2500 R7 Conv. 6500 mi, all 11. Spec paint, fun , f77SO, 759-1336 9770 ·79VWltAllrr DtlS& peed, AC, AM /FM r eo caas .. s t eel lals, whitewalls, tinl- 1lus. low miles cir w )black velour. XJR) Olllr $6695 ~,u~ 'IJ. \IOlKSWAGfN. IHC ~100 11731 Harbor Garden Grove •••••••••••••••··-• -...... CAA-COMT9AATIM6 • tJ_.~ S.2100. 968-8411 exlrH. Auwne ... for '61 VW van, bed, crpt, VOLVO CADILLAC? 1tffrin1 It brate., air I I Mere-9950 u~ .,. .. 6 ......... SJDO v•u•~n _.,.,. e nutoma c ........ pwr S1000 or buy for lllOO. curtains. 1terao. tv, We tpedallae i.n leaset cond .• vinyl roof pk1.. .._.EW 1981 ••••• ;;:••••••••••••••• · _._.. ' -< oven, heaur. Ice box. L~!1~ .. ~oleo"'°~":' ro)o tbe bualneu ex· tilt wheel " more I " ORA.NGECOUNTV'S 17• Old• Starfl,.., p /1, • -·-d U1 or_,.. ...,.y. ... ... •ve .a. -'..Jooal (1 .. -•) v Mech. new, •unt con · BUYorLEASE "'"-i •..--....... · CORVETTES FMST p /b, Ult wbl. amvfm $1800. 4'11-9'725 DlRECT LarteS.llctt. ltlO CADILLAC OMLY SZltl LJNCOLN·MERC\JRY cus, new clutch, 5ilpd. '7& Scirocco, s Edit .. ml bc.......,Vol¥o OfMtw 1911 COUPE DI VIW Tl•••,.. ..... , THREE DEALERSHIP ve.644-4*.539-71.84 cond., $6100 /080. C 1= 11 <eotZS.J> '-d 4 SPEEDS Pt.to 9957 .;.~;;:~:. ~~~: ~-~ N Me·~-1 Sll,995 ., ::~=~:~· ~~.:.~~ ~y~i~f ···:.~~=:··· Everythln1 new. Mlnt ~~ 1910 CADILLAC w b ood I · Automatic trans .. air d S 10120GardenGroveBt e aveaa aeectaon 1714Jl47·60l7 IRVINE' cond., AM /FM stereo, con . ee to • pprec · G G 530-9 90 z•JV"> u •~ ... ··1 FL.__OD o f N E W •-US E D o arden rove 1 """"'''""'""" -· "'" • 13~700 roof rack & more I fM_l·_l29_1_ __ __ lo'>'" Ml...,, S40 C)tOQ IROU~HfAM Chevrolelll * (l71l09). '79 SCIROCCO am tfrn (325ZBW > 1971 MIACURY OMLY $1"5 'atereo,a/c,mintcond. '':i r~~\:c':: ~~:: . 7 ~-:r:-:-t5:': o d $ 12,995 '73 Corvette T·top, a te. ZEPHYRWAGOH T'-odof~reloW.s 831·5800 atereo w/cass, auto,""". Automatic trans., pwr. metallc blue, blk lthr Brougham, loaded! ....,., steering & brakes . '68 VW BUG dependable, runs good, SlSOOcaU 963-7810att 4P M int. $11,900. 631·2825 aft 19.250 .. '78 Eldorado, xlnt cond must sell AM /FM stereo & more! 2060Harbor Bl., C.M. &pm s harp. $7995. Chuck 1'79 CADILLAC 96800/0BO 842·9188 aft (F53S68~ 642.0010 68VOLVO Perry SEDAN DI VILU 1977 CHIYROUT ePM OMLY Sl3'5 • 549·8871 '76 Pinto Runabout Craig stereo, map, lo mi ,$1800firtn.675·1020 '74 Convt Xlnl Cond, lo NEEDSW~ mi. new radials. askrna $.WO. 676-~ 73 Cocll.c s.4-$4500 963-4090 , Deville, A-1 condition, Cully equip. S1900. '75 VW BUS Blue/White, ~~·.~~••••••••••• 648-11629 lo mllea, qua.I tires, rwis Wdl t9 Io ·79 FLEETWOOD perfect! $3800494-9572 -'---------••••••••••••••••••••••• Lo mi, loaded, Sl0,000 '76 vw BUG Only 41,000 ·so Buick 47,000 orlalnal 675·7ll9, 675-6778 m1 , xlnt cond, orig miles, runa sreat, new C 9917 t $3800 Palnt. Call631-7066eves. CllllOro owner. mus see. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 556·7974 '76 Estate Waeon. full 1971 CHEVROLET '78 Conven, xlnl cond , power, air, S27SO. ~21 CAMARO Mich. rad, dyno sound 648-063?. Automatic tran1., air sys. Red·blk. Must sell, 77 lllidr RecJCll cond., pwr. windows, tilt Sac. $7700 firm Judy 3B,OOO mi, 1 owner, xlnt wheel. cruise control & 497·5224 af\5:30 under 20,000 miles! '61YWhg Xlnt t'ond. 675·4529 '75 Bug , sky blue, very lo m1, xlnt cond, sacrifice $2995. 675-9123 -----Black '79 VW con v Absolutley beautiful ACC. xtras. none finer 642·1620 Volvo 9772 ••••••••••••••••••••••• #I VOLVODEALSl IN ORANGECOUNTY ' EA.1LE llCE VOLVO 1966 Harbor Blvd. COSTA ME.SA 646-9303 54~9467 condition. 13.500, !60122). (714 > 495.2547 OML y SS" S Cadilec 99 15 MIRA CU MAD>A •••••••••••••••••••• ••• 2150 Harbor Blvd. '77 CllCll1c COSTA ME.SA c...-~v• 645-5700 ThJs beautiful car has leather Interior, tilt, cruise, Am/Fm stereo, wire wheel covers, and low miles! (UUF831) $5995 · ·73 Eldo conv., blue in· t/white top. S6,0000BO. 631-2744 '78Camaro Air, automatic, power steering, 27,961 miles, .(882VEJ) $4981 Barwick lmpons 131-3311 '72Camaro New eng. $2,500 64.2-5670 '75 Camaro, bronze, auto, AM /FM, A/C, ~IS. P/B, P /W, P Ilks . $3200. 631-7070 9920 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (4S3WWZ> MALllUWAGOH '77 Corvette T-Top classy Theodore Roblfta s9795 Automatic trans., air chauey, if you're look· ~ eond., pwr. steering, tilt lng for the best, this car 2060 Harbor Bl., C.M. wbeellrmore! (400060). looks, runs & smells 642-0010 '73 Squire wgn, auto, air I t7' CADIUAC COUPE DI VILLI (380Ul6) s9995 1971 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE (793VAZ> s5995 1979 CADILLAC SEVILLE 1711VBDJ s 11,995 NABERS CADfLLAC )Ii()() H.Hl°IOI 6/vt1 ( ll->1.1 ~· C,40 l)t()() OMLY SZtts new! Color dark blue, --------cond . very good cond, Tt..odore lobiaa yellow stripes on top. M•ta.4) 9952 11500. S4S-~ ~ Only 20K mi, has ever· ••••••••••••••••••••••• PlyMO.th 9960 2060 Harbor Bl., C.M. )'thing, beeSen in storage 1965 FORD ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642.0010 past 3 yns. Us newt<>-MUST•HG GT day 118,SOO.can be yours A 1977 PLYMOUTH '77 Monte Carlo, loaded. for \-" price. SD2SO call In good cond 1t1on ! PREMIM WAGOH air, cruise, xlnl stereo, for info. (714)772-2811 Automatic trans. & disc Auto. trans., speed con· $2900. 831·8522 eves: days ext 1474 ask for brakes. Make offer. Call trot. AM /FM stereo. lilt H I E 213) 642-9924 : 11 no answer, wheel, custom ext. & 978·3~days. a · ves ( 592-3191 _P_LE_A_S_E_ket!ptrymg! more! (254180) '70EICamlno3SOene.300 '68 T-Top 427-390 hp, 4 .67 Mustang, x.lnt paint, ONLY $3195 h/p, nds little work, apd,lowner.~ gd mtenor, runs great Theoclonloblu make offer. 960-7353 67J.~ Call644·6779 ~ '79 Chevy Caprice Classic CoMgGr 9933 2 door split pwr seals • •• • • • •' ••••••••••• • • • • sunroof, Am /Fm tape,' '77 COUCAR XR·7· $2900 wire wheel, tilt & cruise, all xlras. P /P. pwr locks & windows, re· 549-1414 ar window.defogger, AC. Dodge 9935 Factory installed CB ••••••••••••••••••••••• radi~!llarm system '72 Dart. New tires. bat 16,000m1. 752·~ Lery & more, gd cood. Lo '7 1 Chev El Camino. ml. $1125, 964-32161 Petro Laine Tank 11750 Ford 9940 963-8454 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72MACH1 Beautifully Restored $3000/080 96.2·6824 Oldslftoblt 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1975 OLDS DB.TA88 2060 Harbor Bl.. C.M. 642-0010 '79 Scworo 5 spd, cusl wheels, 'l:1 mg, xlnt cond 968-64:1J 9970 Automatic trans.,••••••••••••••••••••••• AM /FM stereo, vinyl lop 1971 FORD & more! 041588). THUNDERllRD ONLY $1795 Auto. trans., pwr steer '79 Fairmont 4-dr. sedan. Theodore Robins ang, windows & brakes, '78 Caprice Classic. 4 dr, 8000 actual miles, AC, Ford air cond., radio & more! loaded, lo mi, pvt ply A M I F M r a d i o • 2060 Harbor Bl . C M ( 175181 ) . 1_S39_50_, 644_·_2242 _____ 1 ahowr~m perfect ~2SO 642-00 IO OHL Y $3795 li7 EL Camino, fixer up· 557-9978 -------Thffdon Robina per. $425 /offer. 642·7222, '56 Ford Pick-up very '76CutlassSupreme, Xlnt Ford Telling the most people 8·5, ask for Wall clean, small V-8 $2500 cond Landau top, P /S, 2060 Harbor 'Bl , <: M possible ia important to _....u_ _ _._. 9930 BestofferGerry631·3'721 P/B. air Am /Fm stereo 642-0010 the s uccess or any _.,.._,_ $3,000.497-4774 --:---garage sale. Make sure ~·••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Torino:. Runs great , -----'63 T-b1rd Rbll erig. full yours is l is t ed i n 65. 4·dr convertible, 11000. Pnvale Party. GetGREENcash pwr $1300 C l assified, phone beaul.drkred,only72K 497-1905. forWHITEelephants 548-6611 ., • .,_5678 m I, m usl sell $5500. with a Classified Ad ...... . 998·9564. Call&U-5678 \ MATCH THE NUMBERS ON THE MAP WITH THE NUMBERS IN THE BOXES • • ATLAS CHRYSL&ft. YMOUTH NEWPORT DATSUM IOI LOMGPU POHTIAC COSTA MESADATSUM 2929 Harbor Blvd., Cosla Mesa. Tel. 5"4&·1934. 3 blocks eouth of San Diego Freeway off Harbor Blvd. Complete bodyahop. Sales. Service Parts . • ~ HACH l~S 148 0oYe StrMt, Newport Beach. Tel. 752-0900. Call UI, we·re the apeciallsta for Alfa Romeo. Pebgeot & Saab. 888 Dove Street, Newport Beach. Tel. 833-1300. At the triangle of Jamboree. MacArthur & Bristol. SalH, Service. Leasing, Parts. Fleet Discounts to the Public. • HOWARD CHEVIOUT Dove/Quail Streets, Newport Beach. 833·0555. We specialize en Corveueat And our body shop is one of the beat! See the atl·new '82 Cavalier now on display I 0 DAVID J. PHILLIPS IUtc:IC.fOMTIAC-MAZDA Sales• Service • Leulng 24888 Allele Part(way Laguna Hilla 837·2400 • Mill HOWARD YOUCSWMIM. IMC. 13731 H•rbor Blvd., G.,den CltO¥e. Tel. 534-4100. Large ttecka of new Volkawagena at~ prlCM. I.AILI Ill TO'YOl'A-YOl.YO ,. Hirbot Blvd • COila Mele (114J 141 .. 303 01' ~7. t 1 Volvo deai., In Or-. County and wh.-. you Mk for 1 Toyota at Eari. ll~•·a. you Q9t ltl 13600 Beach Blvd .. Westminster. Tel. 892-6651. Orange County·s oldest and largest Pontiac dealership. Safes. Service, Parts • UNIVERSITY HOHDA 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Meaa. Tel. ~9640. 1 Mlle South 405 Freeway. Sales. 58f'l•ce. parts & leasing • SANT A AMA DATSUM 2001 E. 17th StrMt, Santa Ana. Tel. 558-7811 Your Orlglnal Dl<llcated Oat1un Dealtf. • MllACU MAZDA 2150 Hatbor Blvd., Costa Mea9. Tel. &46-5700. 11 dealer In So. Calif. See the an tiew 11181 GLC. • ALLIM-OLDSM<*,l.CAIMU.AC IUUIU..MC TIUCICS Sen DMoo Fwy. at A~ Cemlno Caplltrano In L.ogune ~lgu ... Tet.131 0800. 2&45 Harbor Blvd , Costa Mesa Tel 54(}-6410 Serving Orange County for 16 years. 1 Mile So 405 • SUNSET FORD, IMC. (Home of Wittie the Whale). 5440 Garden Grove Blvd., Weatm1nster Tel 636-4010 • FltAMK PROTO LINCOLN-MERCURY Service and Parts Depanment always open 7 daya a week 7.30 A.M. to 6 30 P.M. 848-7739 • co"*" CHlftOUT 2828 Harbor Blvd .. Cotta Mau. Over 20 years serving Ofaf\99 County! Sain, leaalng, ..vice. Call 648·1200: .,.c:lat parts line; ~;body ahop line: 75-4-0400 . CHICK IVHSON POISCHl-AUDl-VW 41& E. Co11t Hwy., Newpon Beach. 873-0900. The only · daaler9tlip In Orange County Vt4th thne thrM great m.kM under one rooll e ea a a a osaau ' THURSDAY. MAY 28. 1981 E1-i-or 'corrected' Burglar back after 2nd jail slip-up - A Huntiqton Beach man COD· vlc ted of bur1lary turned himself In to Oran1e County authorities Wednesday after be waa released miataltenly 17 days ago ftom the county jall. David Benjamin Hadley, 1.9, is the second Jail inmate rele&Hd prematurely in the last two months because of clerical er· rora by Orange County sherlfrs depuJjes. He was released on May 11 after serving a 90-day sentence \, in jall for probation violaUoo. He was auDPOffd to be tramferred to a Catltomia Youth Authority faclllty where be could aerve up to another three years. But when time came to tranafer him, deputies at the Jail failed oo two occuiOOI to note the orders and inltead releued him, said a aherlff'a spokesman. Convicted rapist Darryl Watts 17, was mistakenly released from Los Angeles County jail about two months ago after serving time for a relatively minor offense. W atta had been aenlenced ln Oranae County to a 23-year prison term, but was freed in Los Anaceles when paperwork from Orange County Deputies wasn't sent to the jail, aald Orange County Sheriff Lt. Wyatt Hart. W atta was arrested 17 days later in Detroit, Mfcbtgan and returned for hia prison sentence. Hart said today there ls "no correlation" between the two re· leases, because procedures in· volved in each were different. <See ERROR, Pa•e AZ) Russ hit Reagan speech Soviets say West Point talk. aimed to hike tension MOSCO W (AP ) -The Kremlin aald today that Presi· dent Reagan's West Point s peech was alarming and warlike and aimed at increaslng world tension and malnt.aining the atmosphere of "military psychosis" in the United States. During the speech Wednesday, Reagan said, "The argument, if there is any, will be over which weapons, not whether we shouJd forsake weaponry for treaties and agreementa. "Now this is not to say we ' shouldn't seek treaties and UD· deratandlngs and even mutual reduction of strategic weapons," but the search for peace is easier "if we maintain our stre ngth while we 're searching." The Soviet news agency Tass, In a dispatch carried in the Com· munist Party newspaper Pravda and the Soviet army hewspaper Red Star, said : ''Such a point of view on in· ternational law and on the com· mitment of the United States on treaties signed by them, of course, cannot but cause alarm. "Reagan's speech contained gross and unfounded attacks on the Soviet Union, its internal and foreign policy. All signs are that the American leaders aim to maintain the atmosphere of military psychosis ln the coun· try and increase tension in the world." A separate article in the So· viet government newspaper Izvestia and carried by Tass charged that Soviet citizens liv· iog in the United States were be- ing subjected to "constant psychological pressure" and "shadowed" at the instigation of U.S. authorities. "Lately, there has been an in- crease in the number of pro- vocative proposals made to them (Soviets) not to return to their country and Impudent of. fera lo turn traitors. \ Dad says 'justice n o t sero e d ' Disabled youth's award in Mardian case assailed 87 DAVID KUTZMANN Of .. ..., ........ Leslie Dawes could hardly conceal bis bitterness Wednea· day. "I feel that justice is not being served," Dawes said of the $2.9. million setUement to which be was only reluctantly living bla approval as compensation lo bla teen·a1e son Michael. The boy was permanenUy in- jured four years earlier when struck by Dana Point restaurateur Robert Charles Mardian's out-of-control Ferrari sports car near Doheny SUte Park. "Mr. Mardian will 1falk away without paying to Mlcbael one cent ror punitive damages. and that's a travesty upon justice," the angry father told Orange County Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein. Money for the settlement, which includes $350,000 already paid out, will be paid tbrouab ln· surance. Dawes added: "I'm askiq the court to approve this settlement, and I'll spend the rest of my life working for the next little boy to be able to handle tbi.a situation in a much different manner." Mardlan, son of former Nlxoo White House aide Robert Mar· dian, was convicted of reckleu driving and spent four months tn Orange County Jail for the ln· juries he caused Michael. 17. But Dawes, both in bis re· marts to the court and to re- porters later in a hallway press conferenc-:1 said be was "ashamed of i.ne legal communl· ty" because Mardian wu not being beld fully accountable for bis actions in the matter. Drunk drlvine charges 'Let the drunk live daily with victim's hardship' originally bad been filed against the south county businessman, but were dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence. Dawes claimed Mardian was never oven a sobriety test al the scene of the accident because he told Californla Highway Patrol officers that another man wu actually driving the car. Mardlan later admitted be was the driver of the vehicle, but not in time to permit accurate testing ol bis blood alcohol level. He also claimed during testimony to the Orange County Superior Court civil action again1t him that be lost control of the car on eastbound Del Obispo Street when be believed another vehicle was about to turn left in front of him. Hia sportl ~.,. spun into a curb and at.nick MleMel, then 13, who bad been walkln1 on the sidewalk toward Doheny state park carrying a fishing pole. The youth suffered dlaabllna injuries that left him in a coma for aix weeks. He still bas speech Impairment, poor memory, movement problems and psycboloJical damage, ac· cording to lawyers. The boy's father said In court that because there was no legal proof Mardian was drunk, the family bas bad to wage a "ter· rifle uphill battle lo secure justice against Mr. Mardian." The Dana Point and Hawaii restaurant owner was not pres- ent in court Wednesday for an· nouncemenl of t.be settlement. Mi chael also was absent because of continuing health problems, which include seizures. the father said. The family moved from Capiltrano Beach tOCruz after the acctdent. Before leaving the Orange County Courthouse, Dawes said be would help promote passage of legislation that would require a drunken driver who injures another person to pay monthly payments like alimony to his or her victim. "Let the drunk live daily with lbe victim's hardship." he said. au • • • • • -11111111 llllY Ml . . • ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA 25 CENTS PACKED FOR SHIPPING -Women at Irvine Valencia Growers Packing Plant, which has been in operation since 1928, box oranges that .., ......... ...,...., ...... have been grad~ by conveyors. Packers ue paid by the number of boxes they pack so speed means more money. Judge r ejects Alcala retrial Rules evidence of perjured testimony at trial insufficient Orange County Superior Court Judge Philip E. Schwab ruled today there was insufficient evidence of perjury during con· vlcled child killer Rodney J . Alcala's trial a year ago to order new proceedings. Judge Schwab said in a writ· ten opinion that Alcala'a lawyers "failed to show by a preponderance of evidence'that material perjured prosecution evidence was introduced al trial or that false evidence that is substantialty matert~ or prob- ative on the issue of guilt or punishment was introduced against the defendant at trial." Santa Ana lawyer Keith C. Monroe, who is repreaeotJng Alcala on appeal of bis first· degree murder conviction, aald this morning be wouJd lake the matter lo the California Supreme Court. Deputy District Attorney Richard Farnell, who persuaded an Orange County Superior Court jury to convict Alcala and sentence him lo death last year, said ~r heariM of the judge's ruling that it confirms his opin· ion that jailbouse informant Robert Dove was lying when be recanted bis trial testimony dur· ing special hearings before Judge Schwab over the past seven weeks. The California Supreme Court had ordered the bearings before Schwab aft.er Monroe filed a writ which contended that One body unreco vered by Nimitz Alcala was convicted on per· j ured testimony during bis highly publicized trial. The Monterey Park man, who presently Ls on San Quentin's death row, was found guilty oft.be 1979 kidnap murder of 12-year-old Robin Samsoe of Hunlln1ton Beach. · Reacting to the judge's rulin& this morning, Farnell said "it means wh11t we said at the beginning, that this is a tempest in a teapot." The prosecutor contended, as he had during the hearing, that Dove lied during the special hearing to remove his "snitch jacket" when be knew he would be goinl to s\.ate prison for viola· lion of probation. .. He's o n Cloud 9 The wiry 25-ytar-01.d infotm· ant bad testifleCl al Alcala'• trial a year ago that the convict· ed slayer admitted. slappln1 Miaa Samsoe unconsetous and taking her body to ~ moun· tainous area where i\ would never be found. The youngster'• body ~u dis· covered in the foothills of Sterr~ Madre several weeks after ·~ waa abducted ln June of1979. ·. Huntington man wins top jackpot ~ J act Leighton of Huntington Beach says he's still lryinl to come back down to earth after winninl a record $380,000 alot machine jackpot in Las Vegu Wednesday. "Thia LI fantasy island," said Leithton, a retired drug at.ore mana1er ... Everyone dreama of sometblq lite tbi.I. We've jual been noating in the clouds and I'm Juat tryinJ to come down to earth today." Lei1hton, 87, and bia wife Alverta, 81, were celebratln1 their mh weddln1 annivenary when bel'bit the so-called Pot-of· Gold Jackpot at noon at tbe Flamiqo Hiltoo. Tbey married in Lu Ve1u in 1N4, and Leilhtoo aald they lrJ to make lt back there every year to "play a few slots and catch tom• abowa. "I'm not a tambler, really," be aald. "MI couldn't 10 home' without tr,m, tbat bit Jackpot." He ..W he'd ctroPDed about• tn tbe m8*M -whleb NQW.... pla1in1 tbr.-Ill"" dollan 8l a Ume -~ ftve 11 llDed ap ud stared blm lia tbe face. •'All bell broke looae1 ·' IAitbtGn aald tn a tel.,.._. ..,. tervlew from UM ca1tno tod.Q. "I never shook so many hands before. ••People were rubbing my arm and patting me on the bead for luck. Everybody wanted some of that luck," be aald. Leight.on aald his two aooa, one in oortbem California and the other in Washlncton. D.C., were pleasanUy aurprlaed when be Monroe, who said be wUt notify ·Alcala of the jud,e'a na1; ing sometime today, continue4 to maintain that Dove wu be1na truthful when be disavowed bil trial testimony. \ 111111 ClllT IUTlfls Low clO\ub ol1bt and mo.rnln1. otberw1ae I alr tbtouab Friday. Lowa tonl1bt 51 at the be•obel, 8' inland. IDthl rrtday G to70. 11111 I I . ' A2 • • • * * Orange Cout DAILY PILOT/ll1uflday, May 28, 1981 Israelis assault Lebanon bases TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> Is raeli warplanes attacked Palestinian and Libyan bases in Lebanon today after a nti- aircraft missiles "operated by Libyan forces" were fired at Israeli jets on reconnaissance patrol, the military command announced. command said Libya had aui>- phed Soviet·made SAM-9 anti- aircraft miss iles to radical Palestinian guerrillas of Ahmed JabriJ's Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-General Command. Steve Grossruck pilots his glider inside Seattle's Kingdome, the first such flight indoors by fixed-wing aircraft ."~ • .,.,,... The 01illtary spokesman said all the Israeli planes returned safely to base and Syrian forces -although embroiled in a dangerous crisis with Israel over missiles in Lebanon did not intervene . The m ilitary command 's statement on today's raid said SAM -9 missiles "operated by Libyan forces .. fired at Israeli jets on a reconnaissance mission. * * * By PATRICK '<ENNE DY 01111eoa11,,.....1..., A Newport Beach woman. •handcuffed for suspicion of drunken driving m Fountain Valley, allegedly commandeered • the arresting officer's police car, rammed another police car and "drove away on the wrong side of M ugnolia Street as the arresting officer fired his revolver at his vanishing vehicle. • ID Police said t.he woman, Denise Noel Vourtsls, 25. of 635 Baywood Drive. took the police car when her boyfriend began scuffling with Sgt. David Brokaw during the 3:30 p.m. incident Thursday. She was arrested a few minutes later on Talbert Street when the car stalled alter s he crashed over a raised street divider narrowly missing a traffic signal, police said. cop car No one was i:ljured, authorities said. Both police cars are out of commission, but no damaRe estimate has been made, police said. Ms. Vourtsis was arrested and charged with assault with a dead- ly weapon <the police car) on a police offi cer, a uto theft, anddriv· Ing under the influene!e. She was booked at Orange County Jail with $25,000bail.polices_aid. Econo~y on upswing Index of leading indicators shows slight boost in April WASHINGTON (A P > -The government's index or leading indicators, an important gauge of future national economic strength, rose slightly in April, the Commerce Department re- ported today. The department said the index rose 0.4 percent in April after a March gain of 1.8 percent that was mostly due Lo rising crude oil prices. The mdex is considered a good barometer of future economic activity, but its individual com- ponents can sometimes be read in several ways. For example, the two biggest contr ibutors to the April in- crease were higher prices for raw materials suc h as petroleum and a substantial rise in the nation's money supply. Both those indicators can Woman 'threatened' Reagan's brother RANCHO SANTA FE CAP) - A woman has been arrested at the home of Neil Reagan, Presi- dent Reagan's brother, for in- vestigatioo of threatening letters and telephone calls The 71 -year ·old Reagan said he doesn't plan to press any ., charges against her. however, saying he never fell threatened l' an6 understands she was jailed t "for her own good." Sheriff's deputies said they arrested Rais a Borisoba. 62, described as "east European," in the Reagans' garage tuesday afternoon. ,• After she was booked in San ., Diego County jail at nearby Vis- Mark e t cle rk slain in robbe r y try A clerk at a Garden Grove convenience market was slain early this morning during an ap· parent robbery allempt now un- der investigation by Garden Grove police. Ll. Pan Corona said the name •. or the male victim is being withheld until he is positively identified by relatives. According to Corona . a customer entered the store about 9:30 a.m. and found the clerk's body lying in a pool of blood near the cash register. Coron~ said the Wine Cellar, 12032 Gilbert Ave., normally opens at 8 a.m. fie said the ap- parent robbery and slaying oc- curred sometime between 8 a.m. and 9a.m. It was not immediately known whether money or merchandise had been taken. Nor bad it been immediately determined the type or weapon used in the slaying. Corona said, however, that the clerk's body was riddled with numerous wounds. The Wine Cellar is located on Gilbert just south of busy Chap- man Avenue , a maj o r thoroughfare in Garden Grove. ORANGE COAtT ta for investigation or burg Jry and making threats, her oail was set al $10,200. A Sheriff's spokesman, Lt. Doug Clemens, said the woman apparently hitchhiked from her home in Los Angeles and was arrested in the Reagan garage. There was no indication of the nature of any threats. In a telephone interview today, Reagan said the woman banded his wife Bess the last of several .. unintelligible" letters earlier this week. "The garage door was open and s he just walked in and knocked on t he door to the house," he said. "My wife opened the door and was handed another letter." Reagan said his life was n ever threatened . But he declined to discuss the contents of the letters or what the sherifrs offi ce call ed threaten- ing telephone calls. Beg in-S adat m eeting m e t TEL AVIV, Israel CAP) Egyptian President Anwar Sadat has agreed lo an invita· lion by Prime Min ister Menachem Begin to meet next Thursday in the Sinai town of Ofire, the prime minister's of· fice announced today. A spokesman for Begin said the two leaders would discuss further peace steps and the Syrian-Israeli missile crisis in Lebanon. Sadat said that the stalled Egyptian-Israeli negotiations' on ·autonomy for the 1.2 million Palestinians living in tsraeli- occupied territory would resume only after the Israeli elections June 30. Nuke waste leaks WASTA. S .D . CAP) -A semitrailer loaded with radioac- tive waste was oordoned off un- der guard at a rest stop near here Wednesday after the driver of the truck ditcovered a small leak. Daily Pilat Thomas P. Haley MAIN OFflCE J)O Wtll ... "" COl'41 MeM, CA. PIAll ..... encl CNef (_ ... , .. Olnc.t Robert N Weed ~ M. Thomaa Keevll follOr Michael P. Harvey ~Hiii 0..edor L Kay Schultz O....olOH<ll- K•nn•lh N Goddard Jr en...i.e .... °""'°' r_~:~ Murpf'llne B.fnlld SChulmen 0.0... Chari .. H Loot ..._.,~(- Mall eelcl,.N: lot IMO,C!!l•IM .. ,CA,~ show vigorous economic activity ahead, but they also can be bad news for inflation and interest rates. In addition , the rise in sensitive raw materials prices probably still reflects President Reagan's lifting or most remain· ing domestic crude oil price con- trols earlier this year, not any big demand by industry for petroleum lo be used in economic expansion. In all, the report said, seven of 10 leading indicators improved in April: average work week. n ew factory orders, vendor performance, building permits and stock prices as welt as sensitive raw materials prices and the money supply. · Declines were shown for total liquid assets and for contracts and ir)flation-adjusted orders for plant and equipment. Coal s trike n e ar e nd? WASHINGTON <APJ -Union and industry negotiators, fresh from their longest non-stop bargaining session in recent weeks, are making optimjstic sounds about reaching an agree- ment that could settle the two. month coal strike. Nearly six hours after representatives of the United Mine Workers and the Bituminous Coal Operators As- sociation went behind closed doors in a hotel suite Wednes- day, both sides emerged upbeat. UMW President Sam Church said an accord could be reached today. "We made a lot of progress," Church said. "We've still got some unresolved problems but I'm optimistic. I feel much 0et- ter than I have in quite some lime." More clouds onlwrizon More cloudy weather is ex- pected through Friday along the Orange Coast, but lhe National Weather Service says there is only a slight chance of rain. A weather service spokesman said temperatures will be in the high 60s tonight and in the low 80s at midday Friday. A spokes man at the Orange County Flood Control District s~id l!ght sprinkles Wednesday night in scattered areas did not accumulate and could not be re- corded on rain gauges. Sprinkles fell in Anaheim Stadium but didn't bait the baseball game between the An1els and Toronto. Japan won't bar return of Midway TOKYO (AP) -The Japanese 1ovemment rejected a request today from city officials of Yokoauka, home port of the U.S. atrcraft carrier Mldway, to bar the 1h!p's return to port unUl the controversy over repol'U that it and other American ahll>a CUT)' nuclear weapoo1 lnto Japanese waten dies down. \ Japan's K.yodo ~ S«vice report.9d that Primt .. ...._, Zenllo Suaulll m· Porelp lli•l•ttt SUllao may mH:::_-::g;,r..-·· ll~ICaMY tlMlllt .... .. ml'liat••· UOn" ill.... .... ..... nllOD. theft Her friend, Kenneth James Beals .. 25. of 18331 Linden St., Fountain Valley, also was booked at Orange County Jail on charges of interfering with a police officer and battery on a police officer. His bail was set at $1 ,000, police said. Authorities said Brokaw pulled over the Newport Beach woman's car on Magnolia Street near Talbert Avenue because of al- leged erratic driving. The woman allegedly resisted arrest and Brokaw forcibly handcufred her hands in front or her and pushed her into the front seatorthe policecar, police said Beal then allegedly began scuf· fling with Brokaw and the woman drove oU in the officer's car as another police unit was arriving to assist Brokaw. police said Brokaw fired three shots at his escaping car after she rammed the other police unit. police said Ms. Vourts1s allegedly drove against traffic northbound on Magnolia, turned west on Talbert A venue and crashed the police car, authorities said . Long lease con sidered WASHINGTON <A P > In- terior Secretary James G. Watt says an extension of the initial fi ve -yea r offshor e oil lease period may be in order for some Outer Continental Shelf explora lion and development. Wall expressed that sentiment in a letter to Rep. William Hughes. D-N.J . who had ex - pressed his reservations abQut a planned offshore oil lease sa'l e in the Mid·Atlanlic region later this year . The secretary told Hughes he was considering using "an in· itial lease term of up to 10 years when necessary to encourage exploration and development i11 areas because of unusually deep water or other unusua ll y ad- verse conditions.·· In Beirut earlier the Palestine Liberation Organization said Israeli warplanes bombed and rocketed Palestinian guerrilla strongholds in the coastal areas of Damour and Naameh south of Beirut A communique issued by the Palestinian news agency WAFA said the two towns 12 to 15 miles south or the Lebanese capital on the country's main coastal hi ghway were hit at 3: 15 p.m . <6: 15 a.m. PDTJ. The PLO communique said Is raeli jets als o fl ew over Palestinian refugee camps in Tripoli, Lebanon 's secon d· largest city 55 miles north of Beirut, but were not bombing. "These are first re ports," said a PLO spokesman. "We do not have anything more at the mo- ment and there is still no report of casualties. We may have something later." Libya and Syria merged their distant nations last September. and Libyan leader Moammar Khadafy has offered full backing to Syria in the crisis over Israel's demand to pull Syrian anti-aircraft missiles out of Lebanon. The Israeli command has ~·om plained of increasing Libyan rnvolvement in the brewing Lebanese crisis, and the chief of staff. Lt. Gen. Raphael Eytan. warned in a television inter view Wednesday night that Israel would treat the Libyans "just as we treat the terrorists.'· Last Saturday the military From Page A1 ERROR. • • He noted that Hadley was re- manded to the CY A facility in Chino after he already was in jail. Hart said deputies serving a s jail clerks and property agents failed to notice in Hadley's files that he was to be held for transfer to the facility. "You can't excuse the mis· takes." Hart said adding that such releases are still uncom· mon considering the number of inmates booked, transferred and transported each month at the jail. · Sheriff's deputies learned of the mistaken release Tuesday, Harl said. Hadley surrendered to Superior Court Judge Leonard McBride Wednesday and was to be taken to Chino by hi s parents. U.S. lwpes tenuo us peace lwlds WA SHINGTON !AP> -U.S. of- ficials are emphasizing they ex· pect a tenuous peace between Israel and Syria to ~old while P~esident Reaga n 's special Mide ast envoy is in Washington plotting the next move in U.S. ef· forts to defuse tension bet ween the two countries. Part of the strategy in tem· porarily recalling Philip Habib appears lo be designed to give Saudi Arabia at least;. temporary free hand to negotiate a solution. llubib spent Wednesday night in P aris and was due in Washington this evening. He was expected to report to the presi dent soon after his arrival. or on Friday. Reagan said he will dispatch llab1b back lo the Mideast after a few days of consultations. Habib has said he expects to be there next week. Even though the anti-aircraft missiles that sparked the im- mediate impasse remained m Lebanon after three weeks of ~huttle diplom acy by Habib, Reagan and other administration officials rejected suggestions the s pecial envoy's mission had failed. Reagan said Habib did "a re· markable job" in averting an out· break of fighting between Syria and Israel that had appeared im- minent after Syria installed So- viet-made SA M-6 missiles in Lebanon on April 28. Atlanta's police say not 'stumped' ATLANTA CAP) -Authorities have not determined how or why the 28 young blacks ki11ed in Atlanta were selected. but police are not stumped, Public Safety Commissioner Lee Brown says. Although members o f a s pecial police task force have devoted 86. 739 hour s i n 10 months to the case without solv-~?g it. Brown said Wednesday, I would not agree with the charact~rization that we are stumped." It's a speQal kind of watch a man can take sea diving. parachuting. snow sk11ng ... then to a formal reception. Rolex makes that krnd of watch Therr sport5 watches all feature a stainless sreel case. 30jewel chronometer movement and stainless steel band. A. Explorer II. S875. 8. G.M.T. Master Oyscer . S985. C. Submariner Oyster. S950. SLAVl'CK'S f(M ··-'"' Slftt!t 191'1 FHhlon llland. ~Pott c.tlttt, Newpon h1ch, 11'"'6·1!80 W"llftlnettr / ....... M ...,, , Mlleion V1'fO /Notth'Or.,... fllle t:1t)' 1M Ctrrit!M • I,_ Miis AltO CIMttf l..o. A..,./ t. Dlifto I lat v.-.,_ _ .,..._..,_........~ ........ ~.,.,.... YlSA, w...a.p. Ml!llWr F-~ C111W .. r&Lfat&Z!ZSS)SUSSU$ ;;:: .• . ! I I : AP ....... Old friends meet at the West Point commencement as President Reagan and his wife Nancy chat with another former actor, James Cagney, who starred with Reagan in the 1938 movie "Boy Meets Girl." Cagney oums an.800 -acre farm north of West Point. Hinckley treated for overdose John W. Hinckley Jr., the man accused of trying to as· sassinale President Reagan, bas taken an overdose or Tylenol in an apparent "at· tempt to harm himself," but was treated at a prison in- firmary at Butner, N.C., where he is confined and has recovered, a federal official said. Tom DeCair, a spokesman for U.S. Justice Department in Wa s hington , s aid Hinckley, 25, took an un· dete rmined amount or lbe aspirin s ubstitute Wednes- day, which he had requested and had been saving up in his quarters at the Butner Cor- rectional Facility. Hin c kl ey h as "been depressed lately and ap- parently tried lo harm himself," DeCair said. H e said Hinckley was given an antidote and was later returned to his quarters after tests were run to check the degree or toxicity in his system. "He is not in a life· threatening si tuation ." DeCair said. DeCair said that Wednes- day afternoon Hinckley told a defense psychiatrist that he had taken the Tylenol. Ac- cording to DeCair, the t>SYChiatrist immediately in· formed medical personnel at Butner, who administered the antidote. ODs ON TYLENOL John W. Hinckley Jr. Billy Caner, the brother of former President Jimmy Carter, has accepted a public relations job with a Haleyville mobile-home manufacturer. "I think it's a good job and I'm glad I'm going over there," Carter said from his Buena Vista. Ga., home this week ... But we won't be mov· ing over there right away, or course. because we've got to sell the house and every· thing." Carter will represent Tidwell Industries at private and public trade shows and conventions across the coun- t ry. He had been working for Woo dgrain Molding of Americus, Ga .. a firm that sells wood trim to Tidwell and other manufacturers. The 1981 graduating class of Memphis, Tenn. Central High School included 217 stu- dents and one multimillionaire. Holiday Inns founder Kemmons Wilson, who dropped out of Central High in 1930 to find a job to help s upport his family, was awarded an honorary high school degree this week. Wilson. 68, started his busi- ness career at age 14 as a de- li very boy for a Memphis drug store. In 1934, he started a home- building firm that led him in· to the hotel-motel industry a year later. Upon his retire- ment as Holiday Inns' board chairman in 1979, the lodging chain included 1,700 hotels and motels in SO countries and territories. Singer J immy Buffett has built a national reputation with songs of Florida, mari· juana and cocaine. Gov. Bob Gra.bam takes a very bard line against lllegal drugs. Now, however, the two men have glossed over their dif- ferences long enough to start organiting a campaign to protect the approximately 1 ,000 manatees lert in Florida's waters. Storms hammer Plains Rain, uJind, hail lash many. areas; flooding in East Coastal forecast Low clOuCll,.u nlgflt encl IYIOf'nlnQ !lours, with Frlcley mostly lair. co .. t•I •-SI tonlgM, U hl9'1 Fri· dey. W•ler M I nl•nc:I to. .. ton19ht, 70 hlQI\ F rl- O.y. EIMw,,..., llOftl, veri.11te winds i..comlne -.1h-s1 to I to IS -r ... u . On• to 2 toot soulhWfllerty swell. Low c loudlneu lhrOUQil tonlQflt Nmional S.nO~ S.fl Fren SHiii• StP·T- TulM Weshlfl9ln 11 •1 .CM •> SJ M IO ., .. 1.26 u ... .. 71 Udifomia temps Appl• \lelley llekerslleld lier stow 11 ............. 1119 II••• 111•"°9 Illy tr.. Cetellne Culv•r City El C.l'ltro 70 S7 IS 61 " " 7S S6 Huvy •-morms cr .. hecl to- O•Y •er-U. Western Greet Plaln1 with locelly he••Y reins, stron9 winds -hell A.\!_. llOOdlnv wes r9porled In Hortll CMollne _,..up to• lnchH04 relf'llell. NOAA U $ Oe .... <•••e~u furetla •2 41 72 SI 71 .. 74 • •7 .. 7S .. 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Soulhem Cali/omi.a surf report We're .... .... J J J J .... ..... 11 ,. IJ IJ ............ A99 Mu DW 1 • w ' J w ' l ,. 1 I W Listening ••• ~ What do you Uke about the Daily Pilot? What don't you like? Call the number below and your mesaa1e wlll be recorded, transcribed and delivered lo the appropriate editor. Tbe 11me JA·bour an•werinc service may be used to record letters to the editor on any topic. Mailbox contributors must in· elude theJr name and telephone number for veritlcation. No clrculaUon calls, pleue. Tell m wbal't OtJ your mlnd. fJ4a•608fJ . .. LOtlll llffclt Moflrovle -·-·lo Mt. Wlleon Hffdln Newport a..cn on .. rto PetmScwl,. P•Mehfle Rlvertklle Reel lllvtl Reno S.C:re-.. Sen hrnerclno S...Gnrlef S.flt•Afte Sent• • .,,.,. .. ntoMeri. S.fll•~ Thermal Torr~ YYINI ' 77 St 71 • .... au .. 62 71 " .. 6S 74 .. 7' .. t7 " 77 42 ta SI 1• .. 74 .. 76 eo 70 SI 67 • '7 .. 11 .. 1S • " n 7S " " SJ 1.14 7S ,. " 7J " 7S " n w 7S .... ,, 71 .. n "' · ~ rmon, tide lOOA't Sec ... flltll I t# jll.M. ........ l'lrtl... ltlte.l'f', "rtl!IWI 6l'1 Ull. ~-tt:•111o111. .., .__,: .. ~ .............. .. I.I'll fir...,, ~------------..... --------------------------!""!""-.--~-- Mwll "-' t:M •"" ,.,...,, *"' . .• ,... ... Orange·coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday. May 28, 1981 EXULTANT -This isn't the Air Force Academy. and even if it were, cadets would learn to fly in airplanes. Mike Gallet of Stockton jumps for joy after receiving hi s APW.,._ diploma at the Naval Academy's Graduation and Commbs1oning Ceremonies in Annapolis, Md. eachelor's degr1:es were awarded to 947 memtx>rs of lhc class of 1981 Huge deficit forecast County to. analyze projected $1 .5 billion shortfall A series of "issue papers" has been ordered by the Orange County Board of Supervisors to analyze a $1.5 billion deficit pro- jected during the next 20 years. The projection was included in the first areawide fiscal impact report prepared by the County Administrative Office. It is in- tended to show costs for provid· ing existing services to present and future residents in most un· incorporat.ed parts of the county, especially in the fast-growing southern sections. The report included proJel' lions that the count) general fund will be short $898 million b\' the year 2000. School distr-it•(., will need $461 million, firl' dis tricts will require an l'xtra $132 million and hbrane!> $33 million. according to the report Analyst Tony Car-..kns said Tuesday the report should bl' cons idered a data ba~c for pro jeclions. Issue paper:-. prl'parl•d during the next year v. 111 tnclud<• possible !)Olut10ns for making up the defi cit. he said Analysts have found that new deH•lopment in the south county can either add or subtract re- vc n ue for financing count.¥ ::.erv1c(•s, Carstens said. "Sometime::. development con- tnl)ules to solving the problems and othe r t ames il adds to them," he said Issues to be reviewed will in- c I u de funding alte rnatives, poll•nllal service reductions and new ways of mixing land uses. H:.ilph Clark. chairman of the bo<.trd of supervisors. s aid "this s 1tuJt10n is verv serious .. Def enders shortchanged? New public defense chief asks 'fair share' of funds By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of .. Dllltr ""' ,.., Orange County's new public defender says elements of the criminal justice system other than public defense seem to garner top dollar when govern· menl funds are doled out. Such items as construction or expansion of jails and prisons or increased staff for police and prosecution agencies get the available money first, while what's left over goes to the public defense or criminals, said Ronald Butler. appointed to the position Wednesday by the coun- ty Board of Supervisors. Butler, 46, of Anaheim. said government leaders should bear in mind that defendants have a mandated right to an attor;ney. If they cannot afford counsel, it must be provided -at govern· ment expense. Butler soid some legislative mechanism should exist so that public defense gets its fair s hare of available funds for criminal justice. One of Butler's first tasks will be to seek approval from s upervisors or a $4.9 million budget tO fund the public defen- der's office in the upcoming fis- cal year beginning July 1. NEW PUBLIC DEFENDER Ronald Butter The office e mplo ys 126 persons, including 68 attorney~ The remainder of the staff 1s made up of client interviewers. investigators and serretaries The proposed bud1:et. Butler said. l'alls for no staff increases. Prior to receiving the appoint- ment as public defender, Butler was assistant public defender ii> charge of s pecial operatlbns, in- cluding the defense of homicide r ast•s Ill' most recently represented Ro nald Spring. a 33-year-old Long Beach man convicted of second degree murder in the s laying of a Seal Beach Catholic priest, Felix Doherty. Buller has served with the of. fice for l3 years. Prior to joinin1 the office, he was in private pra<:llce in Long Beach. Butler as a graduate of the University of Or<'gon School of Law. Butler s ucceeds Frank Williams as public defender W1ll1ams who lived in Newport Beac:-h . died last March. · Harl1or tales Ooris Walker, author of the book "Dana Point Ha rbor-Home Port for Romance," will be the gut·~t ~peakcr at 8 p.m . June J for the South Coast Jaycees. The publlt· meeting will be at Casa Colina restaurant, 2371 South El Camano Real, San Clemente For information call 498 :nm or 493 1537. ·------------------ / ·~ RO LEX THE CONCEPT OF ENDURANCE, THE FACES OF INTEGRITY Rolex Oatejust self-winding chro- nometer. stainless steel and 14kt. gold Oyster case. Jubilee bracelet. Rolex Lady-Date. self-winding with stainless steel and 14k t gold Oyster case. Jubilee bracelet Both models guaranteed pressure- proof down to 165 feet RAFF jewelry 32 Fashion Island Newport BMch ~-2CMO .. :; .. , 0 ···= 44 . H /F Orange Co•t DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May 28, 1981 7 die , 5 injure d ,in tenement blaze r JERSEY CITY, M.J. (AP) -A flamin1 mattress bein1 dra11ed from an apartment 1et. a tenement on fire, ldllln1 six ~J1Udren and a woman, injurtn1 JJve otben and leaving 46 people t)omeless officials said. Ray Maloney, Jersey City fire director, said the blaze beaan on 'i' mattress ln a third-floor apart· pient. Maloney said Betty Prlc:tien, !_$, and ber children, Darcel, 8, 1ewana, 8, Tommy, 4, and Leon, l, were killed. They were found buddled to1ether in a fourth· floor apartment. In a closet of another apart- ment on the same floor of the building, firefighters found the bodies of Frances Reeves, lS, and ber sister, Charlene, 13_ One of the 1unmen walked out of the bar at 3:1.S a.m. PDT aller police repeat"1Jy shouted to blm over a bullhorn to "throw down your guns and come out with your bands up." After talking wllb the IW\· man, Sgt. William Presley, 31, volunteered to enter the bar and arrest the second gunman. Presley said be arrested him after a brief struggle. Police found a sawed-off shotgun and two ban<feun,s. Transit broke CHICAGO (AP ) -The Regional Transportation Authority bas gone broke and bus and train lines in the Chicago area are starling to shut down, threatening to lea'ie more than 1 million riders without service as state poUU· cians wrangle over a rescue plan. Cancer takes Polish cardinal Wyszynski hailed.as patriot; communist regime notes contributions WARSAW, Poland (AP) - Cardinal Stetan Wyaaynakl, wbo suided Poland'• Roman Cathollc Church tblou&h more than ao years of communlat rule and was a mentor of PoUtb·born Pope John Paul II, died here to- day of cancer. He waa 79 and bad been ll1 for about alx WMlta. The pope, ln a Rome boepital recoverlna from • May 13 as· aasaination attempt, waa told of tbe death of Wyuynskl by Vatican officials and asked to be left alone to pray, the Vatican said. He later sent a tele1ram to Poland saying he shared ln the "aaony and prayer" of all Poles. In death, Wyuyn1ki was bailed as a "patriot" by the communist regime that once confined him to house arrest. Church leaders and other Poles gathered to pay their la.st respects and file past the coffin al bis residence" where white and yellow papaJ nags and red and white Polish flags fluttered in a breeze. Priest.a and nuns flanked the silvery, metallic cof- fin , with Wyuynslli 's red cardinal's bat on top amid a hu1e bouquet of nowers. Many people broulht nowen and tided the cotffn aa they flied by . A dele1atlon of Solidarity workers from a Waraaw automobile factory joined the crowd, beartna a SoUdarlty banner with black mou.rnlnJ ribbons attached to it. Wyazyn1kt was a powerful voice for moderaUon ln Poland's labor crisis last summer and bu ad· vised Lech Walesa, leader of the independent union Solidarity. PAP, the official Polish news agency, eulogized him aa, "The great Polish patriot whose beacon was the motto that to know bow to unite and not break apart is the supreme wisdom, a man partlcularlv sensitive to the moral needS of society who saw the need of cooperation with the st.ate in the name of patriotic unity of the nation and its spiritual and material well- being. "The death . . . has cast into mourning millions of believers in Poland," PAP added. A communique read over W araaw Televllion said lea.den of the Episcopate would meet to- day to decide when and where Wyszynsld would be buried. At Vatican City, Vatican spokesman the Rev. Pierfranco Pastore said the funeral Mus was expected to be held Sunday or early Monday and that the pontiff instructed Cardinal Agostino Caaaroll, the No. 2 man at the Vatican as secretary of slate, to lead a Holy See delega- tion to the funeral. Vatican sources said the pon· tiff was informed of Wyszynslli's death by his Polish_ private secretary, the Rev. Stanislaw Dzi wisz. They also disclosed that when John Paul telephoned Wyszynsk:i on Monday, the pope gave his apostolic blessing at the end of their conversation, which lasted five minutes. VOICE STILLED Cardinal Wynyruki Executive -slain; police mystified .. Gunmen quit, hostages free •DETROIT (AP) -Two l\\nmen held as many as 18 tatrons hostage in a Detroit bar <for up to six hours after police tesponding to a silent alarm shot '• third robber as the gang tried , , ~ escape, police said. The RTA ran out of money Wednesday because of hlaher costs and declining sales lax rev- enue, which it uses to subsidize commuter railroads, buses and subways in six counties. TULSA, Okla. (AP) -Roger Wheeler, the millionaire chairman of Telex Corp., bad just finished a round of golf at an ex- clusive country club and was leaving in his car when someone shot him in the face at close range, killing hlm, officials say. about 60 yards away -either re- fused comment or were taken to police headquarters for question- ing. ·.· ... ,\ I' .. Mrn rnarn Margaret Thai~her cheered in Belfast BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP ) -Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was ap- plauded and cheered by sup- porters in the center of Belfast today after arriving on an unan- nounced visit to this violence· scarred British province. There were a few shouts or "murderer" from some girls. And a group of civil servants, among 530,000 in the country locked in a pay dispute with the government, held up protest placards. One civil servant was arrested. ......... The gunman, who police said wielded a long-barreled, large- caliber handgun, jumped into a car occupied by at least one other man and sped off, said police. Police and friends were baffled after the Wednesday shooting at Southern Hills Country Club. There was no reason to believe robbery was the motive, police said. Wheeler was alone in the car. Wheeler's wife, Patricia, was treated for shock at a Tulsa hospital The couple's four sons and one daughter no longer live at home. Wheeler was a former electro- chemical engineer who started his first business when he was 14. Telex, which makes computer terminals, tape decks and other electronic items, had 1980 sales or $186.49 million. Wheeler also owned seven com- panies dealing in resources rang- ing from oil to magnesium. D isqualified b e auty su e d MINEOLA , N.Y. (AP) Because Miss New York State "tarnished" a sponsor's reputa- tion by getting kicked out of the Miss USA pageant for wearing a padded bra, the company has sued her and pageant promoters for Sl million, according to court papers . Mrs. Thatcher, who refuses to grant demands from Irish na- tionalist hunger strikers for political status. was surrounded by a surging crowd of well- ;wishers as she walked through a ·.prosperous Belfast shopping .center. But most people in the crowd clapped and cheered. Armed policemen in plainclothes bad trouble getting Mrs. Thatcher through the crush of thousands of shoppers. She meets army and police chiefs this afternoon . LONDON GA6ETINGS -John L. Louis, Jr., new American ambassador to London, doffs topper to crowd outside Lon· don embassy after presenting credentials to Queen Elizabeth. At left is wife, Josephine, and at right, daughter, Kimberly. Wheeler, 55, reportedly had played a round of golf with a reg- ular foursome and was leaving the club. He was seated in his lux- ury ear in the country club park- ing lot. A car pulled up to block his car and then the gunmen struck, authoritiessaid. Club members who saw the s hooting -most of them youngsters at the swimming pool Future Craft Enterprises of Westbury also seeks a court or· der to stop the airing of the Miss New York-Miss New Jersey USA pageant on WOR -TV, scheduled for toniRht. ) ANTIQUES OF THE WORLD STEVEN-THOMAS ANTIQUES OVERSTOCKED SALE ON ALL MERCHANDISE . OVER $1,000,000 IN STOCK SLASHED " 20%' 40% WE MUST MAKE ROOM FOR INCOMING MERCHANDISE . 3 DAYS ·•lY PllCES BO.OW WllJLESME AND AUCTION BERS AND DESIGllEIS WRCOME Antiques Of De World -Stavan-Dams lntilllS 533 W. 19th (At tabor llVcl.) C.sta Mesa 541-3319:~Milf19.i' VON HEMERT'S INTERIORS IS WAREHOUSE CLEANING! ! ! 6th ANNUAL WAREHOUSE SALE YES, VON HEMERT'S IS HAVING ITS 6th ANNUAL WAREHOUSE SALE. RUTHLESSLY CLEARING OUT AND SLASHING PRICES ON FUR NISHINGS FOR EVERY ROOM IN YOUR HOME . OR•AT BUYSlll ONE-OF-A-KIND ITEMS, DISCONTINUED STYLES, AND SLIGHTLY SOILED OR DAMAGED GOODS , IN ALL OF THE QUALITY NAMES VON HE MERT IS FAMOUS FOR . CASH & CARRY -ALL SALES FINAL 2 DAYS ON.LY MAY30 &31 SAT & SUN ONLY 9:00 to 5:00 "'*" ~~, fJ.e~ -"~ - 1371 VILLAGE WAY (f°'"*'r W..._.. Rd.) IN COSTA MESA : . . . i \ . ··t :( . . •f i :.' ·: .. , .. • t :.'' · '-.. , '. ... . "-\ ,,; :~:· :.~i •l•1 ."'t 'I• .. . I ·.: ~ :' .. ;;;,·; >-.. .. , .. ·=-· .... ··., ,•• " .. .. '.· .., . . . ·.· .... · .. :: ·; .• ·,·~ '.} ·': '. :; .. .. Licence eyed • ID hospital LOS ANGEL.ES <AP> -Com- munity Hospital of the Valleys in Perris, where a string of mysterious deaths are being in· ve•tigated by state and local acencies, has agreed to sur- render its license and concede that ''good cause exists for the revocation,'' said a state of- ficial. "The revocation probably wiU take effect within a 60-day period," said James Lahana, a deputy attorney aeneral for the state Department of Health Services. In return. he said in a telephone interview, the OHS will stay its temporary license suspension, which closed the 36·bed hospital May 13 on the basis of dozens of alleged health and safety shortcomings. The hospital also filed for bankruptcy Reagan eyes vet protest LOS ANGELES <APl -Amid signs of growing White House concern, a diabetic Vietnam veteran, weakened and hospitalized after a four·day hunger s trike lo protest Veterans Administration policy, s aid he was eating again "for the sake of my wife and kiqs ." Meantime , President Reagan's spokesman Mark Weinberg said in Washington: ''The White House is watching the situation tlosely and we are concerned." Boyauxuded $8.6 million SAN JOSE CAP> A boy who lost his legs and an arm after touching an electric line over a freight train in Washington has been awarded almost $8.6 million, a lawyer says. Steven Throop was 13 when th~ accident occurred July 4. 1978. His lawyer, Richard Alex· ander. srud Wednesday the set- tlement won approval of Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Edward Panelli in the 3· year-old case against Conrail Hiker suspect arraignment set SANTA CRUZ <AP> -David Carpenter. a suspect in nine grisly trailside killings, faces ar- raignment today on charges he killed a youn g friend after meet- ing her to go car shopping. Santa Cruz County District At- torney Art Danner says he will seek the i:leath penalty for the 51 -year-old printer TERM ENDING -Sirhan 8 . Sirhan's prison sentence is s lated to end Sept. l, 1984. LA County DA John Van de Kamp is trying to extend the jail term of the slayer of Robert F . Kennedy in 1968. Robbins jury choices due SACRAMENTO CAP > Defense and prosecution at- torneys in state Sen. Alan Rob- bins' sex crimes trial expected lo s pend a third day today argu. ing preliminary motions behind closed doors. Deputy District Attorney Albert Locher and Michael Sands, one of Robbins' lawyers, said they hoped to complete the arguments today so jury selec- tion could begin Friday Cancer victim '6 going on 60' SAN CARLOS tAP) -Al the "He was 6 going on 60," said donor, that it wasn't her fault end. 6-year-old Allan Wilson. bis Patty O'Brien . a family friend. the treatment didn't work. bones ruined by cancer , could .. He just decided. 'I'm sick and "He told her she had no con- only crawl. But the precocious I'm going to do what I can to trot over whether he lived or ~ . Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thurtday, May 28, 1981 H/F Brown lauds oil ruling ] Governor pleased at halt of coastal lease sale LOS ANGELES CAP) -r Gov· ernor F.dmund G. Btown Jr. hu •·vowed lo stay in court ~as 1001 as necessary to protect the coast," and was pleased that his lawsull led to a jud1e's order lo temporarily halt the sale of 32 oil leases off the California coast, his office said. "We are pleased that the proc- ess has been stopped so the arguments on their merits can be heard," the governor's press secretary Cari Beauchamp, said Wednesday after U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer blocked the federal government from selling the 32 leases off the Cen- tral California coast. Brown and 19 local governments objected on environmental grounds tD the sale of the tracts covering 600,000 acres in the Santa Maria basin, north of Santa Barbara. The governor feels "the battle has been won but the war is stlll ahead o f u s," said Ms . Beauchamp. In her ruling, the judge chided Interior Secretary James Watt for using "loo narrow an in· terpretation" or federal law in excluding California from participating in pre-lease deal· ing with the oil companies. She said California's right to control development of the coast under the Coastal Zone Manage- ment Act ··would be lost forever" if it was exluded fron pre·lease arrangements. such as including developmental stipula· lions. She said she will issue a final ruling by the end of the summer. ·'There can be no doubt that a brief delay in the sale of those leases is in the public interest," she said in issuing the tem- porary injunction. "The delay will cause insignificant monetary injury to the U.S. l{OV· e rnment or to the potential leaseholders." Writer pact OK'd A two-day oll·lease auction in the southern sea otter and the progress was to continue today gray whale. with the sale of 81 tracts that The suit also noted that ~e were not contested in the swt, disputed tracts would provi~ said BLM spokesman Mike only eight percent of the t.otal til FergusinLoaAneeles. expected to come frqm all tfie Al the request of the U.S. tracts and contended the poten· Justice Department, the judae tlal for environmental harm ou · agreed that the U.S. Bureau of weighed possible benefits. Land Management could unseal "Friend of the court" bjne bids on the disputed tracts even supporting Brown's suit we though it could not award the filed by eight coastal ci\ies leases, to see if in fact anyone is 11 coastal counties in Calllorni bidding on them. They were the counties of H · Fergus said the federal gov-boldt, Mendocino, Sono1~ ernment will decide whether to Marin, San Francisco, Sa appeal after the judge Issues her Mateo, Santa Cruz, Montere 1 final decision on the oil-tract San Luis Obispo, Santa Barb a leases. and Santa Clara, and the citi! lq his suit, Brown contended of Bris bane, Carm el, L · Watt violated the federal En-Angeles, San Luis Obispo. San~ dangered Species Act because Barbara, Santa Cruz. San~t t_h_e_l_e_as_es_w_o_u_l_d_po_se_a_t_h_re_a_t_to __ M_o_n_ica and Seaside. 11 youngster found the strength to hve every moment.· " died, only the control to give LOS ANGELES CAP) -Strik· .,.., ....... comfort his sister, arrange his Allan decided for himself to him the gift," sajd his mother, ing writers overwhelmingly ap-FINAL TOAST -Casket bearing body of "Toas tmas t& own funeral and prepare a will. undergo a rare and dangerous Beth Wilson. proved an interim contract General" George Jessel is carried from chapel at Culver Ci• Friends and family members bone marrow transplant. hoping The disease was discovered agreement today with indepen-ty cemetery Wednesday following eulogy to entertainer who say young Wilson. who died Sun· to s tem the advance of the shortly after his third birthday. dent film and TV producers but died Sunday at 83. In attendance were Jimmy Stewart day after battling his illness for cancer. But when it failed and it At a party, he began walking rejected a "final offer" from the (left), Sammy Davis Jr. and Danny Thomas. At right is three years. was a remarkable was obvious he was dying, he strangely after playing on a major producers by an even Milton Berle followed by former Gov. Edmund (Pat> ch_il_d_. _____________ to_ld_h_i_s_s_is_t_e_r_._t_h_e_m_a_rr_o_w __ s_l_id_e_. __________ ~_g_r_e_a_te_r_m_a_rg_i_n_. _______ ~B=.'.'rown~~·--------------- Roger's complete nursery has a beautiful selection of bush and climbing roses ... over 500 plants --.~J In ~ varieties. You will find many of your favorites among these outstanding varieties. 2 gal. reg. 16.96 NOW '4.98 PETUNIAS Available In several colors to brighten your home this spring. 4'pot reg '1.09 NOW ' .79 BOSTON FERN A real Indoor charmer. Thi s hearty and popu!ar plant adds a special decorator touch al- most anywhere. Feed It regul- arly with Oxygen-Plus for full and lush beauty year round. G'pot reg. •10.95 NOW'8.95 THE NURSERY WITHIN THE GARDEN WE MAIL GIITS! Choose from an outstanding selection of trees. Plant a tree · to begin a family tradition that ~.-. ... will provide years of beauty and service. 5gal. reg. •12.00 NOW '8.99 I. -\~ PATIO & GALLERY • ' , Roger's Gallery displays an ~ exoellenl selection of patio ftJrniture and accessories de- signed to add extra pleasure to your summer relaxing and entertaining, and all available fOI' Immediate delivery. SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY BOUQUET A colorful array of fresh cut spring flowers, artlstlcally arr- anged with Roger's flalr. NOW '7.95 .,. r • 1~ ... • • ~ - -• 640-5800 ..,... -). ~ "'" • K • Ooeft• io• OQoly. 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KIF Orenge CoMt DAILY ptLOT/Thurtday, May 28, 1981 Beach parking ban poses new problems The Huntlniton Beach City Council bas proposed a radical solution to some of the traflic problems currently plM:1Dg Pacific Coast Highway wi the city limits: eliminate parking on both sides or the busy thoroughfare. The counc ii is asking Caltrans to impose this parking ban. According to ci~y officials, the Coastal Commission is not in· volved. Certainly there are some good arguments to support the PCH pa.ricing ban. Beachgoers interested in free parking often leave their ca.rs along the highway in a haphazard manner. Some vehicles a.re left partially on the roadway t reducing the width or an already narrow highway. • Drivers who pull out of these parking spaces into the 50-mpb traffic lanes pose another hazard. Finally, beacbgoers who leave their vehicles on the inland aide often dart recklessly across lhe highway to reach the sands. · City officials have the ,tatistics to back up their claims 11bout traffic hazards. Between ~each Boulevard and the Santa Ana Blver, 16 people have been killed in the past live years. SUll, a complete parking ban may be a drastic step that creates new problems to resolve old ones. On typical sunny sum· mer days, roadside parking apota along PCH often are all filled. These beachgoers will have to patronize the city and state beach lots, paying $2.50 and $2 respectively. But even these lots tend to reach capacity on a bot beach day. At a time when state officials are attempting to increase ac· \..eSsibility to the beacbfroot, the parking ban could prevent some from ertjoying the public ocean· front-. A more realistic solution might be to ban parking on one side of the highway. probably the inland side, to avoid some hazardous pedestrian crossings. Any ban should be accom· panied by plans for additional parking areas along the beach to accommodate displaced motorists. Enforcement may be the big- gest problem of all. Is the city really prepared to ticket and tow away the hundreds or beachgoers who will continue to park there no matter what the signs say? Programs merit support Two worthwhile organiza- tions have asked the Fountain Valley City Council for a share of the city's federal revenue shar· log allocation. They say they will have dif. ficulty continuing their Fountain Valley operations without the funds. YSP (Youth Service Pro- gram) lnc. has requested $7,303 for its crime diversion program, and $7, 786 for its restitution pro- gram. These services off er counsel· lng to young lawbreakers and runaways and to victims of child abuse, and arrange for young burglars, vandals and thiev• to work off their debts. TLC (Tender Loving Care> Feedback Foundation has re- quested $4,600 to pay for a part- time employee to coordinate its local food distribution program for elderly residents who have difficulty preparing meals for themselves. But City Comptroller Howard Stephens bas advised the council to use the entire $752,093 federal allotment for "general govern· ment purposes." He notes that the city's up- coming budget is about $700,000 short even if all the federal aid is used for municipal expenses. However, new fees for streetlighting and median main· tenance and some reduction in services such as tree trimming could reduce or meet this shortage. ln terms of Fountain Valley's $11 million city budget, the funds requested by YSP and TLC Feed· back are relatively modest, especially when viewed against the services returned. Certainly a city cannot sub- sidize every social service group in need of funds, and Fountain Valley officials in the past have been conservative with such al- locations. But city officials cannot limit their vision to police patrols and street sweeping, even in an era of tight finances. Fountain Valley officials should try to squeeze a few dollars out somewhere for these two or· ganizations. At the same time, the service groups should realize that cities will have fewer and fewer dollars for "extras,'' and should begin seeking alternative funding sources. Recycling grants help With state funds for almost all purposes in short supply, it was a pleasant surprise to learn that four Orange Coast com· munities had been awarded sub- s ta ntial grants from a $2. 7 million fund to increase recycling efforts. Officials of the state Solid Waste Management Board said the agency had rejected eight ap- plic atioos for every one it funded, but it was sufficiently impressed by local effort s to allocate $328,905 to be divided among Huntington Beach, Irvine, Costa Mesa and South Laguna. · The largest grant, $143,500, Y!'ent to Rainbow Disposal ol Hun· \ington Beach where recycling capacity at the Nichols Street plant will be stepped up from 100 to l,OOOtm.s of materials a month. 1be firm operates both drop- off services, where donors leave aucb items as bundled t . newspapers, and a buy-baclt service which pays donors for re· cyclables such as aluminum cans. Solag Disposal of South Laguna received $88,870 to fund a buy-back center in San Juan Capistrano and curb pickup services in south coast com· munities. Student recycling efforts won the grants in both Irvine and Costa Mesa. UC Irvine Associat- ed Students Inc. were given $52,060 for equipment and im· provements at their drop-off site on Jamboree Road . And the Orange Coast College 24-hour drop-off center at the school was granted $44,475 for improve-, men ts. Since the recycling can help both the environment and the economy, these grants would ap- pear to be money well spent. LM. Boyd/Socks started it l The players on Prtaceton '• flnt foot· pall team wore orange and black J.lriped IOCkl. Maybe you don't think P.t•t's algnificant. Bul lt ts. Quite ( fnillcant. Becauae of thole IOCks, the layers were nicknamed Ttsen, UM nt achool team wltb U\Y M>l"l ot lekname auch aa that. The Idea au1ht on. More teama now are called fl1era tban are e,a.Ued anytblq ehle. You may even be acquainted with a team known as tbe Ttaers. All becaute of those aoclta. Not everytbiq done by the old Cun of Rusala wu bad. Tbey made it 1 tradition alter 1 boUday dinner to call ln the cook for sped al recopiUoo wltb a toast and 1 round of applauae. Here'• totbe~k-clink! Clap, clap. Thom.s P. H•fty Pubtllh« Thomes KMYll Editor llarMt"a Kref ... ctt • ' Editorial P1199 Editor Cruise missile deep WASHINGTON -The Pentagon's cruise missile program is a classic ii· lustration of the cavalier attitude toward the taxpayers' money that characterizes so much of the naUon's defense spending. Here, as part of a continuing series on Defense Depart· ment extravagance, are the details of the fouled-up project: Already the cruise program is at least $13 million in the red this year. and the missiles are beset by engine malfunc· lions , according to a classified Pen· tagon document. Whal makes this so troubling is that the deficiencies arise from the defense contract system itself, which rarely re· quires contr actors to operate on a com- petitive basis. Poor performance and outlandish profits are built into the system. IN JUST THE past 12 months, de· fense contractors made "excessive prof· its" totaJing $80 million, according to the now defunct Renegotiations Board. In that same period, the Pentagon laid out $70 biUion for procurement of weapons and ser vi ces . Of that astronomicaJ sum, almost $46 billion, or 65 percent, went to contractors who wer e the only bidders for the job. Only 8 percent of aJI defense contracts were awarded as the result of advertising for bids. The cruise missile is intended to become the mai ns tay or the u .s. nuclear arsenal. Capable of being launched from land. sea or air, the mis· sile is small enough to be deployed in hard-to-spot locations . ..rel it can evade enemy radar and deliver a nuclear warhead 1,500 miles away. Of the nearly 30 companies involved in the cruise program. only one - G. -JA-CK-A-ID-IR-10-1 -~ f General Dynamics has given the Pentagon its main progress report for 1980. And General Dynamics . with a $2 billion chunk of the program, has charged the government $325,000 for s tatus reports it has never delivered. Yet a Pentagon spokesman insisted to my reporter Sharon Geitner he was ··n o t aware of a n y contract ir- regularities " DUPLICATION ABOUNDS. Vitro Labs and McDonnell Douglas, operating under broadly worded contract terms , have wound up doing essenUally the same computer work. Overcharges are unconscionable. One cruise contractor, for example, charged the taxpayers almost Sl million for a . . . .......... "'W •• • m red special data hst that should have cost about $40,000. Wh en confronted with this discrepancy, the company blandly blamed it on a "typographicaJ error." A relatively minor , but widespread, boondoggle results in the government paying twice for the same contract. This happens when an employee quits a defense contractor and forms his own one-man software company. He then charges his old employer or another company for the "right" to his contract at the going rate of $40,000 per con- tract. Tardiness is epidemic. Navy testing of launch·cont rol centers was stalled because the software was delivered six months late . In 1979, McDonnell Douglas admitted to other contractors in a private memo that it would have to "slip" (delay ) the schedule three months because it couldn't have the launch hardware ready. THE BASIC TROUBLE with the cruise program. as with most defense projects, is that cost.plus and sole- source contracts -vague on the gov- ernment's requirements and wide open on budgeUng -give contractors no in· cenlive to do the job right and on lime. In fact. the system tenc~res ir· responsibility by stretching out the length of a contract and increasing the profits as the cost goes up. Busing funds better spent on schools To the Editor: It was announced May 4, that Presi· dent Reagan was proposing to pay stu· dents wbo volunteer to be bused from either white to black areas and vice· versa, at lea.st one-half year's tuition, or the number or years they were bused, in tuition at a Missouri state institution. The price for this project, one which President Reagan most assuredly in· tends to be used across the nation, is $6 million. A bill taxpayers will obviously pick up. RATHER THAN throwing away this money on busea , gasoline, and "scbolarsblps," wby not use this large sum to significantly improve the quality of educaUon in the areas In question? Buses and guoline are commodities that do little to improve a child's mind: MAILBOX and the "scholarshJps" are something I completely oppose. Because they are to be used at state inltitutions, I am sure that there are financial aid programs for the "truly needy," one of Presl· dent's key catch phraaea. Rather, the $6 million could be used to bett~r our falling educatJonaJ systems. Despite the famous 19~ Supreme Court decision in the Brown vs Topeka Board of Education caae, separate can be equal tr sufficl~nt money la apent to create a proper learnina environment and to encouraae qualified people to become teachers. Teacben now are at the lower level or the jay scale in our society, while they bol one of t.be most crucial Jobe in 9UJ' country, the tralnint or future American voters and office holders. I can only hope that President Reagan will reaUae that *6 milllon can be spent much more wisely U\an be bas 'propoted. Taxpayer money must be spent to better sovernment services, not bribe lndlvtdual atudenta to equal racial quotaa. CHRISTOPHER K. LYNCH Gmleftd /or art To the Editor: Thank you Yel'J much for tbe co•· era1e you'•• Ntft 1ldn1 to All Rou.aban. Jt'I aboat UJJJ• we =': • ltW• at bl eo.t. ...... n. ba•• ~·UJ llllproved tbat area Of town. l''fl Und la CoMa 11 ... all m.J life aAd oar Famfl1 le{ped MW• "Goat Rlfl" .., ~ .......... allo ... t. eel m8QJ rellCI of Ollla II .... Bowel'I 1IUMWD, 8o .. a ""4len\ of Col&.a II ... ·I do ~ &MDII All fOr Ida ~trtba· Uoa to our elty'I ............ I b1i1e JOU pvt All mid olben like him the coverage they need to fight for their expressions of art. Thank you for helping in puWng a little art back into our city. C.S. OPP BoonJoggle To the Editor : I am totally shocked that the Reagan defense budget containing such incredi· ble boondoggles as the MX missile system was passed with only Mark Hatfield voling against. I j ust don't understand such a total commitment toward a stance of war. This was a black day for the country and the culmination of a cumulative lack of intelligence, courage and lnt~g rity, as well as a sign of the worst kmd of depravity existent in our government and the elected representatives. ANDY WING Unfair to judges To the Editor: Respondin~ to your May 11 editorial: How can a Superior Court judge pro· ceed through trial and (when the de· fendant has been found guilty) sentenc· ing when the defendant never appears before that court for trial? The statistics regarding only the Orange County Superior Court released by the Judges' Committee for Public Jn· formation and Judicial Education could only apply to th06e defendants who pro- ceed as rar as trial before this Superior Court bench. Perhaps tbe editor should enquire of the police departments as to reasons for arrests and of the pros· ecutor's offices as to charges actually filed for further statistics dealing with the number of those arrested and the disposition of each alleged perpetrator's case. The statement that the judges "chose to focus on ont limited set of statlstics . . . that made tbelr position appear more favorable" infers a biaa ln their Interpretation of tbe statistics. It seems to me that the Superior Court commit· tee could use only the statlstJca which refer to defendanll appeariftl before them. Moel penona arretled never pro- ceed as far as the Superior Court bench; of t.hose that do, the pro1ecutor preaenta a plea·bar1aln to the court u 1 "f•lt accompU" ln a lar1e percent.qe of tba.e cues. Jl ta unfortunate that I.be Superior Court J~ of lhla atate (a bench so I • II.el_...,_,..,._ .......... .,_,._. .. ~ .... .., •• fll ... "' ............. ,--. ....... ~ -::.;.:::· .. =.:-·,. ........ :: ,,.... -...... -":!...:: .. ... ..._.. ,_ .. --. ~~' ............... ~_, ........... ~ . ...... ................ ,~ ........ ~- ""~ ........ - highly regarded throughout the United States) are forced to defend themselves against what has become a continuous attack by the media. Paired with the cons titutionally guaranteed right of freedom of the press should be the responsibllity of the media to accurately report to tbe public. MARY DESROCHERS Voting reoord To the Editor: A letter to the editor (May 14) by Mr. SterHng E. Colthurst regarding my "no" vote on Assembly Bill 65. the so· called "item pricing" bill, s hould be answered. My pe rsona l preference is to see clearly the price on each item. Present law provides that local ordinances may be passed requiring such item pricing, as is currently done in the city of Seal Beach. The most vocal advocates for having the state require item pricing seem to have no faith in the effect of competition between markets. THEY ARGUE for the state to man· date the law in spite of present local controls . They admit that state- mandated item pricing most likely will m ean that consumers may be required to pay a cent or two extra on each item. Mr. Colthurst wonders whose in· terests I represent: he claims I showed contempt for the consumer. I am sorry he feels that way. In truth, my vote was tor those very people who cannot afford to pay that extra cent or two per item. I encourage aJJ constituents in the 73rd District to follow Mr. Colthurst's advice and keep a "close eye" on my voting preferences and the record. You will find that the votes represent the productive element in our society and also those who, because of their physical Inconveniences or handicaps, cannot be as productive as they would choose. NOLAN FRlZZELLE Perbapa one oi tb• rHIODI fw lite eac alatmc dlvortt rate la tbat fewer 1poUM1 tell their' matea u..,•r. ''W91tb tbetr wellbt ln sold" a.nymon. D.JI, ...... , .. .....,._ ....... .,, ......... .. ......... *" ........... _, ....... . ....,. .. .._.. ... ...., ... . . ...,.... 4 THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1911 llllTlllTll llll:ll/flllTlll lllllY OBITUARIES B~ LEGALS B~ Alaska's Mount McJUnley is 'most dangerous walk in the world' . . . BB .. • J11l-y told ~aia 'killed out of anger and hate' Deity ..... ltMI ..... 'KJLLEDOUTOF ANGER' Dr. Loui3 Alaia Tests show FV pupil proficiency Current proficiency test re· suits indicate most Fountain Valley School District youngsters have mastered their basic skills in reading, writing and mathematics by the end of the eighth grade, according to school district officials. "We have very few ~ids going on to high school who are not profic ient," said Cheryl Snowden, the district's director of staff services. The latest test results for the Fountain Valley district's 1,120 eighth graders disclosed that 97 percent are proficient in read· ing, 95 percent in math, 89 per· cent in language arts and 93 per· cent in writing. Dr. Snowden said the 97 per· cent proficiency level in reading means only 32 eighth grade Stu· dents have not yet mastered the minimum standards. Proficiency exams ad · ministered are to Fountain Valley students in grades five through eight. Fifth and sl.xth graders take tests developed by district teachers. Seventh and eighth graders take exams used by all elemeo· tary districts that feed into the Huntington Beach Union High School District. All Fountain Valley students wbo took the tests last year showed improvement during ln the current year's testing, Dr. Snowden said. The administrator said profi· ciency tests show district of· ficials where additional em· phasis is needed. Coast college trustees.get budget plan Coast Community Colleee Dis· trict trustees have received a preliminary budget outline for the 1981·82 fiscal year, UsUng $79 million in anticipated income an<t $90 million in funding re· quests from various college de· partments. Executive Vice Chancellor Correllan Thompson, who pre· pared the budeet. said the di.I· trict also expects to bave about '3.5 million in careyover funds from the current fiacal year. Thompson noted, however, that the fundlnl request.a sub- mitted by varloua colle1e de· partmenll probably will be pared down a bit durtn1 upcom· inc budcet.dlacuaaiona. He added that all of the di.I· trict'a financial esUmata are lar1ely rueuwork because atate lecialatora have not yet ap· proved all fundin1 alloc•Uona for the current ftacal year, nor a1reed on llnancet for the eom- lnc year. · He aaid dlatrict truateea must adopt a tentative buqet oa or before June 30, the end of t.be ftl.. cal year. Tbe ftnal budcet t. upeeted to be approved In A~ TIM o.t Commad7 ~ Diatrict t.nclUCS. Or••• Colilt Col ... ln Calta ..... GGidm WHt Coll••• la H•DUDftOa Beacb and CouUlne Coll .. •, wbleb la baHct la rouataiD Valley but on .... c...._ at lit.II ..,..,.._.. tbl diltrtct. -( The aamty retrial of convicted double murderer Dr. Louil Alala opened Wedneaday with a proa· ecutor once •lain ina'5Un&. that the Huntington Harbour 1ur1eon "killed out of aneer and bate" wben he fatally atabbed bi.I ex· wife and a Loni Beach lawyer last June. Deputy District Attorney Richard Farnell told a jury in Superior Court Judie Donald McCarlin's courtroom tbat Alaia, 50, wu fully conaciom al what be was doine wben be killed Margy Lou Alaia. 37, and Manin Tincher, 60, in tbe woman's barboratde home. Alaia wu convicted of two count.a of 1ecood-deeree murder by a different jury in late January. However', UJat panel deadlocked on the queatioa of sanity. reaulUnt ln a mistrial for that portion of the proceedinp. In their first appearance before the new jury Wednesday, defense lawyers contended that their client "nipped out'' under tbe burden of a variety of emcr tional, physical and financial pressures. Edward Georse, one ot two lawyers represent1n1 the de-fendan~1 said In open1n1 stat.a- ments mat Al ala was ln a state al temporary leeal in1anity wbeohe erabbed a kitchen knife and at· tacked bis ex-wile and Tincher. The orthopedic sureeon bad gone to the HunUneton Harbour home to discuss weekend custody rights ot bis two Y<>lml children. However, an ar1ument ensued in which Alaia was or· dered to leave the borne. Testimony durln1 the 1utlt phase of the trial indicated that the defendant 1rabbed a knife from a 'kitchen wall rack and stabbed Mrs. Alaia once in the abdomen and then attacked Tincher, who bad been seated in another room. Georse contended that Alaia suffered from a mental diseue and defect at the Ume of the kill· ings rendering him unable to ap- preciate the criminality of bis conduct. The defense lawyer claimed that hLs client was mentally Ul before, during and after the ~~ inaa. ..;,_ But Farnell told Jurors ~ Alaia knew exactly w~at be wit doln1 when he attacked tbe p •. Also present in the bome wf/l#l the two children, neither t!i whom wu attacked, be noted ..... ,,: If Alaia is judged to be s ..... he faces possible life impri.aoif:.· ment in state prison. If~ h judged to be insane, he could sent to a state mental instil for treatment. .. -DAVIDKUTZMAN/f... ~~: FV 1nayor backs fire reva1np Golfing complex opposed Proposals for an 18-hole 1oU course and hotel complex for the Huntington Beach Central Park appear to face unanimous op- position from City CoUncil mem· hers. . Alt.bough no of~icial a~tion bas been taken on the recommenda· lion by a private consultant, all seven council memben say they ,oppose the idea because it re· • portedly takes too much land away from the recreational coo· cept of the 297-acre park. The golf ·course would take up to 120 acres, according to the re· port by· Ultrasystems of Irvine. The analysis says a 200-room hotel with a conference cent.er could be successful only if a 1olf course a1ao were located in the park. Likewe, the golf course would only be successful with a nearby hotel, the report states. Ultruystems estimates. that a golf course would brin1 in $150 ,000 to the city annually while the hotel would net about $110,000 a year. "Although a golf course would preserve open space, ll's not the type of open space a laree number of people can use, said Mayor Ruth Finley. She noted that there i.!1ready are two 1olf courses in uie city. Central Park was created by a bond act in 1969. It is located west of Gothard Street between Edwards Street and Ellis and Slater avenues. For the past two years, the City Council bas been consider· ine some development ln tbe park's natural sellin1 lo generate money to fund main· tenance of the city's other 50 parks. Tbe Ultrasystema report a1JO recommends development al a six-field baseball and sports complex, a recreaUonal vehicle campground, a fishinl lake, an arcade and pina parlo«", a restaurant and a YMCA nm· nasium. The report also sue· gesu improving the exisline shooting range, adventure play· 1round. The development report U · sumes a proposed 75-acre ex· panslon of Central Park, which is estimated to cost about $15.9 million. City officiah say voters would have to approve a bond for much of this cost. NEST EOOI -Capt. Gregg Scbmehllng noticed a duck egg in a coil of electrical cord on a Balboa Bay Club dock where his yacht Capstan ls tied up. The next day be saw another egg and by Wednesday there were three. Female mallMd that has been laying Pair seized· in Huntington robbery try A Huntington Beach nan who peeked out a window and. al· legedly saw two armed men knockine at his doo,r called police instead of answering the knock. Officers arrested the pair, Robert J . Tarantino, 43, of Placentia, and Walter E. Hussy, 21, of El Monte, on suspicion ol attempted robbery. Tbe two re- mained in Huntin1ton 'Beach Jail today ln lieu of $25,000 bail Police said the men were ar·. rested outside the Geneva. Avenue home of Richard Mc Brian at 10:30 p.m. Tuesday. Police-said a revolver and an automatic pistol, plua a •yrtnae IUled with an unidenUfied fiuld were confiscated durina the ar· rest. Investigators have .not yet de· termined what valuables the 1unman may bave been aeekinl at the McBrian home. ~ ......... ..., ... #¥ ..... the eggs doesn't sit with them during the daytime. Schmehling thinks eges are warm enough without her. She spends her days swimming around Newport Harbor and beg· ging bread from the captain. But at night she comes back to keep her eggs warm. Clark praises U CI pact gesture 87 P&BDEUCK SCBOB•EBL .............. The txPl"MHcl willlnsneu al the Uniftl'lity ol California to develop a new lndlteat medical aervlca CGDtract "la a step ln the ri1bt direction," Ralph Clark, chairman of the Oraqe County Board ofSupervlaon, aald today. Clark aaid be was "ap- preciative" al Lb.e 1esture macle WedQelClay by UC Prt1ident David SUcm ln a ftve-pate l.u.r ouillnlnl tbe UC !i,;ta' poll· tloa ln a --·ltand diapuM OYlr an Hi•U.. C-ODtract bJ wMeb lbe walftnll1 pro.W. ID· aa-t medial c .. M die UC tnlae ll1dlcal Center ln Oranp. Sasaa propoMd ID tM ..._ tbat tbe current "f•• for aemce" COlltr.J.:i wler nMlll aenicee are tiO tM olillllJ OD an bldlYidual, e ... bJ ..... l baat., be substaJd,lallf modifted. li1ure Saxon aupported for a The UC pre:alclent propos.S lump aum·type contract . that a "lump sum" contract be Th• exiatinl contract between developtd by whleh Lb.e • eountf the university and tbe couaty each year would make a .alnale covertna medical eare for in· payment for treatment ol Jn. dl1enta wu ne1ot1ated ln 1'75. dlsenta at U.. medical center. Under tbe a1reemea~ tbe ml· The unlnralty would want versity routinely billl tbe coun-ty each time an lndl1ent -a about $14.S mllllon under auch a peraon without the meam of contract in ftleal l•t.a, Suon paylns bi• hoapltal: blll -11 '~an aald became ., nesotl•· treated at the medical cmt.r. tlona now ln Pl'OlnSI ~at be Pbyalclana employed by tbe would not IDdorN Suon'• pro-count)' review tbe bill• to poaal, or Alli otber ,Par1ieal• ntabUab ii tbe u.nlvenity pro. method ti Nlthlal ua. .. .,.. Tided tbl proper tnatment. Tbe over Lb.II niilUq cmtraet. cowatJ wW ~ only tbM parUae · ..... ,. ... ..... ......... ol 11111 wtdcb It CODllMn .... ~.. . ... ........ .,,.. -proprt.le Clan Mid .• .,,.. feet • • · n.~mtblml~ preetau tMir 1..wn to ,_ .,.. _., Jocked ln arllltndilm ............... " OHi' _.. U.U $11 IDWkill la . n. 1uperit8on1 elaalniaa . bOW .... tbl ~ c,e.: ........ Aki tbl .,....., ~ ltdered ......... ilMlt .,.,. eot ...... Wida tM tl4.I ..... bills an ............ . t.:t~ ,;_ ;;; Declares!n • services adequat~ By PIDL SNEIDERMAN '> Of .. ....,......... =· Fountain Valley officials the fire department reorg · • tion that prompted the resi•· tion of Fire Chief T<t• Feierabend will not affect PIO-. tection Je~els in the city. . "Fire ~ervice won't suffer~ all," Mayor Ben Nielsen s Wednesday. ·'The only chan are in management positio . There will be no difference the number of people on a ft.t.e truck when it arrives on tlie scene." The previous fire department management structure was a fire chief and three battalion chiefs. The new plan, approved by the City Council, called for the upgrading of two batt.alioo chiefs to the rank of auistallt chief and the elimination of the third battalion chief's position. In a prepared statement, the mayor said these changes "will streamline the management structure of the department and will enable the city to continue to meet its manpower obllga· lions under the Net Six agre&- ment despite budget constraints, and will result in a cost savinp to the city." N el Six is the mutual fire fiehting pact for the cities 9f Fountain Valley. Huntingt'On Beach, Westminster and Seal Beach. ~ The agreement requires that a ranking fire official (fire c~f. assistant fire chief or batt.al.bl chle() be on duty or on call al all times. · Feierabend said he was Ulfl. happy with the local reorganiu· tion, saying he would bave to work "intolerable" hours to help. cover for the missing position. The chief submitted bis rtt;. ignation May 19, but offered iiO withdraw it a week later. n.t council refused bis offer. ·~ Feierabend chareed tli(t Fountain Valley bas the lowtj& ratio of uniformed firefighi per thousand residents of any · ly in Orange County and lowest in California for a city J9 size. ::, "When you add in the peo. from Net Six, we're not rea!J' undentaffed," responded C1' cllman Marvin Adler. :~i Because of the Net Six aar4J menl, Fountain Vall' automatically draws sup from the nel1bborin1 ~em clUes when a fire call occurs. Of tbe reor1anilatio0, said, "It'• loin& to put a more load on the chief and a11lstant chiefs. They'll bave tp cover more often. But we'll UY"e the same number of men lire. We're not 1olne to c ooe lot.a on that.'• City penomael dlreetol' Ackerman aaid aome " ln1" may oceur wtt.b.ID tbe r of the tire department bee of the .Umlnatioa ol tM talion eblef'a poat. But of 1xi1Ua1 YacanalH firell1bt1ra wlll be lald beeaUM al the reorsamua beaald. I \ 1 i • { l l 1 a . .. . .. . . .. ... "' ...... •b ... ......... -i . .. ........ .. . .. . ' ...... .. . .. .. . . , ·~·.1 Lock up . the lane closers DETOURS fr DEADHEADS DEPI'. -Tha.e lawmakers up in Sacramento who have been &riPinl and turnina livid over the state highway department could do all our hapless motorists one little favor by passln1 a simple law. So far, our august salons have made a lot ol speeches about how they ought to chop off the highway chief, Adriana Gianturco. at her pursestrings by reducing her salary to zero. Other teeth-gnashings have happened. But blamed little ac· lion . Through all this, our ~ lawmakers have been making the usual mistake. They want • fk. b \ ~~p~tart taking action at the' _O_M_M_U_R_P_H_l_N_E,ti4~ FOR THE SAKE of our harried commuters 1who have .to use these highways, however. the Legislature would be a lot better off starting at the bot· tom -then working up. The prime example of this is when highway crews, known as Caltrans employees, all of a sudden decide, willy-nilly, to shut down some traffic lanes. When they do this, they leave the clear impression they couldn't give a tinker's damn what road conditions happen to be at the time. An acquaintance of mine, for example, was motoring up Pacific Coast Highway just awhile back when traffic came to a screeching halt and backed up parked cars from Santa Ana River Bridge at Huntington Beach to The Arches Overpass in Newport. WHEN THE MOTORISTS finally crept along and got to the river bridge, what did they find? Two lonesome Caltrans workers had shut down an entire lane so they could shovel a couple of small piles of gravel around. Then only yesterday. Caltrans notified the Newport Beach cops that they'd have to shut a downcoast lane on Coast Colt rans fOTeman bring hauled off to the slammer Highway at the Newport Bay Bridge for a bit of cable· stretching along about 9 a .m. That might not have been too bad because the worst of the rush would be over by that hour and traffic cops would be on the scene to help smooth out the traffic flow. TROUBLE WAS, the Caltrans crews decided to shut down the bridge lane earlier , at 8 :~ a .m. and they didn't bother to notify Newport traffic offi cers of the change to an earlier time. The result? Tr affic backed upcoast from the bridge all the way down Mariners Mile. It may have backed up all the way to Huntington Beach, for all we can tell. So that's why our legislators who want to lower the boom on Caltrans should actually start at the bottom. They should get these arbitrary and capricious detours and lane-closings under control. ONE WAY MIGHT BE to pass a new state statute that would decree. simply. that any time a Caltrans crew creates a major disruption in local traffic flow, the local cops are em· powered to arrest the work crews and throw them all in the local jail. Cool thinkers among us, particularly those lucky citizens who don't have to commute, mig}\t suggest, "My, my ! That would be terrible! Why that's bot-headed and reactionary ... " MAYBE SO. But it might cause a few of those highway people to think twice before they throw out all those orange closure cones and pop up their detour signs. They might get just a little more thoughtful before the)' start shutting down major traffic arteries during peak commuter rush hours. And tossing them all in the slammer wouldn't be any more reactionary than reducing poor Adriana's salary to a goose egg. HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM Mercury Savings Now Offers NEW 11Repo Plans."* : ·:· ~~ We ha•e several "Funds"" cwretdly ~-~~. avallableforawcoa-n f~'1" FOR CURRENT RATES •.. Call or visit your nearest Mercury office . . . . • • . • • :~ MERCURY SAVINGS and loan auociation •tilltlft .... Uk• fll'ISt Tutil 7812 Edinger !3021 La~e Center Or. 1095 Irvine Blvd. Hnt. Bch .. CA. 92~7 ' El Toro, CA. 92630 Tustin. CA. 92680 (714) 842·9333 (714) 770-2601 (714)832-7701 LaHallra/FllllrtH ·~·Ills ...... 1001 E. lms-rtal Hwy. 5611 E. La Pmma 8955 Vali.y View La Habra. CA 90831 Anaheim, CA 92807 Bu.na Park, CA. 90820 (714) 87().8700 14) 77t-7047 (714)821~ Thia obligation is not .a savings account or deposit and is 'hot ln9'1f'ed by tM Federal Savings and loan Insurance Corporation. ''Let the experU make beautiful hair happen" We •iwt•lallZA' m bt>11ul1(ul, natur11l-Jooklng h111r cll'l!ll(TI~. Cut11. rulor. IJt'Tm~. ~tyli-:< Wit &IMO gpt•c·111hw m y<11c what you wllnt and ho" you want tu look Ancl w ht'n 1l i·oml't! lo Jlt'nTIS. w I' Ullt' only the llnl'st-Zotott Salon Perms. A <·Urrl'nt f11vor1h• lb Zoto11 Warm and Gl'nlli-. for IUpt'rb rond1t1onmg and Jong·l&11t1111e body and lu11tre Call today Let Ull makt> buut1ful things happt"n to your hair. As tftfl thit ftlOn(h In !Huft of Cosmopollt.ln, ci.mour & V~ Mfftlon thit Ml .net teet'lvt 10%0FF ANY SERVICE lfor New Cuttomt'n Only) 16523 M.lgnoli• Wfttminsttr JG047 $89.50 For your graduate! Theres a perfect Pulsar Quartz watch at a perfect price. What cm~ld be o better woy to soy how much you rare than with o Pulsar Quartz watch? They re so accurate they approach perfect timekeeping And so convenient they never need w1nd1ng And they re all such greot values they II please Y.m/ 1ust as much Everyone will love a new Pulsar Quartz watch There ore olorm rhronogrophs and calculator alarm watches And slim dress and sports models for special people who appreciate dependable, carefree service. great t1mekeep1ng ond beautiful oppeoronce Pulsar .. Quartz Always a beat beyond. In technology. In value. Nc:AJ~"'~ ... 857 -0 166 14775 Jeffrey Road . I rvine t714) 842-6m-&48-0744 WALX~NS WUCOMf Any qv0rt1 wo1rh rnoy be ,~.,j '" lh1~ odvo:rt1~enwrH fh1s odvert1\emen1 ton bL: used SOtTte C..•lt! CH" pr1k1r~ ""'fit O"V \P()l t"l nit ·c> •o <JIH• "-'"'~ WE'RE CONCE OUT YOU -- " ~ --· DR. B<JRQESS urges you to be concerned about your dental well being. Come in for your initial consultation without obligation. We want you to know exactly what to expect before any work is begun. Our primary concern is to make you comfortable at a price that's affordable. TO FlND O<JT MORE, send for your FREE copy of "Concerned Dentistry For Your Family," or call Connie to arrange for your personal appointment (714) 846-0654 Max Burgess, D.D.S. "Concerned Dentistry For Your Family" 16141 Bolsa Chica Road Huntington Beach, CA 92649 ' llilyPUat l c a s s ss >£ 2 JCS 53 ,......._. Folk m&ger Joan Bein reflect& at Miami'• In· - tnnational Mrport on South American tour that hoa forced her to perform underground in 1everol stop~. Baez tour • proves point MIAMI CAP) -Singer Joan Bae.z said that her month-long concert lour so far has included under- ground performances in Chile, "total censorship" in Brazil and a less than warm welcome in Argen- tina. In an interview at Miami International Airport earlier this week on a stopover between Rio de Janeiro and Nicaragua, the 40-year-0ld singer said she had embarked on the tour knowing that her concert dates were unsettled, but she "wanted to go anyway." Despite cancellation or scheduled concerts in several cities in Argentina and Brazil earlier this month, Miss Baez sang anyway -in coffeehouses and churches , on the beaches and at colleges. ''I would sing in room after room of people, but I couldn't sing officially,'' said Miss Baez, a veteran protest singer who vigorously opposed the Vietnam war and whose hits include ''The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down." Miss Baez last year toured the Far East and spoke out against the communi5t-backed regimes in Vietnam and Cambodia. This tour began in Mexico, then moved on lo South America, where it was interrupted repeated- ly by government police who canceled concerts at the last minute, saying she didn't have the proper work papers. In Chile, she "went underground -in colleges and coffeehouses. They didn't stop me." In Argentina, 1981 Nobel Peace Prize winner Adolfo Perez Esquivel lln~ up cafes and little chapels where she was allowed lo sing. The Brazilian government's Division of Censorship and Public Entertainment claims the concerts were canceled because her promoters would not agree lo "a jet lo fly her around the country, a first-class ticket to the exterior, $12,000 per presentation and the condition that tickets cost no more than $1.15." The government also claimed that when Miss Baez was informed she couldn't make political statements, she said she ·'preferred not to sing." Johnny Econollly still on the job VISTA CAP> -Back when reporters couldn't hear over the noise of the presses, publisher M.Z. Remsburg a.sited a reader to call up the Vista Press when he httard a p0lice or frre siren. Well. publisher Remsburg is long dead now. But Johnny Economy, now 87, is still on the job. After lS years, hardly a day passes without this cryptic telephone call from the one-time Greek immigrant: . "The sirens are out! " Today the newspaper occupies a new plant next to the fire station. Its modem printing depart- ment is so quiet everybody in the building can bear the siren go by on the way to an accident or a fire. But right afterward will come Johnny Economy's call. It's one citizen's contribution lo the news. By GIGI'S ~ ~ ----I~ ,w @ ID s •• ., ~ fl"~ SP~CIAL I --~!. "t?!g coupon s3000 ~ ._ ......... .,... .. ~ only per cu1tomer .,.... -• fodah ..... .,.. '~ I e ......... e acrykl 846-5000 1 eo•& Boin Chica. Comer Boise Chica & Edinger · ..__.......__·c, .... __ .,......_._ .... _•_c, .... __ _ RED DEVIL SUPEI GLUE 39:GRAMS Bond.a rubber, plastic, metal, and most non -poroua material.a. ( Beqinning to think my bra.in falls into that catagory. ) DORO PERFECT MATCH VINYL REPAIR KIT 3~~ Fix tears in vinyl or leather. Complete kit comes with colon to match almost all howiehold vinyls. il ~ EVERYREADY mlm IJ~IJ ENERGIZER ~ I ~ 1 BATTERIES ~ ~ C, D , AA, AAA l ALL 1WIN PAK .J OR 9 VOLT If I hear someone say SINGLE PAK for the millionth time, YOUR CHOICE "you'll get a charo• out of th ..... I'm gonna 99 C rever-. his polarity. (Whoo, aren't we testy?) PAK ~~~· ~0 EMERSON CASABLANCA • ~ ._, J> / CEILING FAN Simulated wood grain blad .. in Chesterfield Brown or Antique White. 36" 88.88 52" 117.77 Five year warranty on the motor ( U you don't fly it too clOM to mountains.) DIGITAL 1· COMBllATION I LOCI 1eu CJ 12 44 II -:;'ll.911m8 Replac .. the keyswitch on garage door openen so you can open and clOM your door from the outside. Neat mounting. DUULITE STRAP FURNITURE I want to ... you •pending more time in on• of th .... You work too hardl In sand color with brown and tangerine accent.. CHAIR 5 POSITION CHAISE MURRAY BICYCLES 20'' BOYS' TU 69!1 A new BMX ( what...r that means). type bike, 20d.78" blue knobbi•, BMX type fork. Moto-Cr099 type bar, couter type brake, chrome (type?) finiah. 21" ND'S 10 SPEED TOUlllG IAJA 114!! Orange Coast DAILY PILOT (Thursday, May 28. 1981 G.E. INSIDE FROSTED LIGHT BULBS ../ CHOICE OF , 60, 75, OR 100 WATT ·27 4BULB PAK STANru .... I ····~. 0 .. ~ .!.C .... •;;c .. . ...... ., ~~. -.. NORELCO COOL WHITE FLUORESCENT 73 c TUBES 4 FT. . 8FT. I 9 7 Thia .hould be a nioe .. ...mp. (Hey, a guy t.olcl m. If J'O'& ~ au.re no oil or acid &om 70\ll' fin9en get. on tM hulh they last much ~-So ru wear glo.. and drop the !Nlb?) Choice of 80, 79, or 100 watt in tfte inoanct..c.nt. nuoc I I C•&t. they Men\ to lut forner. -- QUAKER STATE MOTOR OIL CLOSE-OUT! RANDI-Biii 30WT. 77~. TERRA COTrA RED 5!! i • , t 20/50 WT. 83~. Speaking of oil, my old girlfriend once oiled the tire• on my j"p because they aqu..ked on curve•. OLD TOWN USED ' Thia la real brick, only ANTIQUE WHITE it'• ~ inch thick, easy TAWNY BROWN to handle. It'• YOUR 677 PRESTONE II SUMMER COOLANT/ANTI-FREEZE 3!! --"""'""1rt Replenish the le,,.l. or clean jf.6ji..i..L;~~-, out your system and replace, get r.ady for hotter weather. Limit two to a customer, no dealer sales. 1W. MEGUIAR'S CAR CLEANER ~• Tiu. stuff i. !~ood because I ' am looking at my car w&JEed with l it. (An unaollcited testimonial?). ~I 2~~z. M.EGUIAR'S LIFETIME POLY SEALANT SYSTEM YOUR CHOICE 14 OZ. PASTE 597 16 OZ. LIQUID ALLISON AIR COOL CUSHION I ~~102 U..cl to have one in my '56 Ford Wagon u we climbed the Indio grade. No air conditioning. had one of them water cooler things. (Ah, what a memory ) . NICHOLSON 7 1/4 II SAW BLADES YOUR CHOICE • ALL PURPOSE COMBINATION OR •PLYWOOD BLADE Abnost coete u much 2•• to haft an old blade sharpened. (Oh, not EA. that much, .orry. ) 4xl PAITICLE IOAID ~.. 3.97 ~.. •.97 My brot.h•r-ln-law came to rialt lut ....... Doee he .. t? '"'-kid la. clo-lt· JOWWlf famln.. ( M, wife ftMPer .....t9 tb.e ad.a.) fireproof. CHOICE BOX weatherproof, and looks nnart. Covers about 5 sq. f .. t . THE BUTLER'S TABLE 37•• H.y, lookit this. Got a nice Wt-out Mrving tray and ahelf. Walnut finish, ea.ay to .... mble. 27d9.20 inch .. high. SYKES OAK PARQUET FLOOR TILE l~rr. Natural oak, light finish, til .. are 6YJz6YJ inch ... Limited auppli .. here, so corn• in early. ...... DEXOL CONTACT WEED KILLER I~ 5~. I like this idM. It knocks off the weed.a without lea...tng a poisonous reeidue which could hurt or kill your 1>9U. Jl;f.IDIDI 4'' COLOI 01 VllETDLD H /F Orange Coast DAILY PILOT (fhurtday, May 28. 1981 ..... , ,. , _. . '\ PUBUC NOTICE QUEENIE P UBUC NOTICE ---~----PUBIJC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE •uauc NOTJcB PtJBUC NOTICE POC:fl f ·-•Yta•lll Plc:TtTIOUS •UMMHI MAM8 ITATllM9MT , ... , ......... .--ia ..... ~ JUST LIKE HOM£ ..... IT&~MT TM...._..,._ ...... ....._. .. ; neu ••· 1(11..LY OlltaN, m Otto It~ • l\Alt~ A. au ... llOWnl IN'IHTIH .. TI. tl•PtclftlCllllM...,.,H ....... ..... ~ ... t VN••OWTM ,..O,.laTY MAN........-T. II• ,_Ml( C... ................... ,~ Alll· A, Gaw M9M. C..Jl•ftlo Nl7 K•llMn S¥M11 Cl••ll, 19J Otte Stfffl, ~ A, C:..lo M9U, C611•111o m11 Cl,.,...,. __ .... _,..._ '--D. lcNty, ......... Ile , Clrtlo, Mi.lltl119Hll ••o<ll, ( ... .._.. .. Otwl..WJ'llllw ...... , ~ ..... 11S1t1'141• llOMfl, ~ PUBLIC NOTICE -----------PU8LIC NOTICE WOTIC. IWVITll .. 110$ Notice I• N rolly given that IN ------... ,d "' Trw.t af Ille C..'1 C- PICTITIOU. •utlM•ll ""1nlty call ... Olt lrlct ol Oroit90 MNllC ITATa•MT C-ty, c;all-, wlll rec:olvo ....... T ... ,.._,,,. ~-aro .. 1111 Ill• Wt'-II • .. m., l'rMley, J-1t, ......_ •. • .. , ., "" ,.,.,.~ .. o-rt-• of COU"TYA"O IMO«S, lf'IU -I .. i. , ...... eltlfltl t.cated el I J70 A-.TllllllOl.CAftMt. Af•m• Avt nw t , Cu l• Mtte. MA"TIN A. CHIAVA"IO, nit (;alllomle,el...W.llfNaeldllkhwlll l'olrtMn, ..-.-.. CA "711 119 ,...,,kly opened 9M,.... ,., . Tllll -It ~tt411 ,., M lfl• dlv&Ouol .., ... Pwbll-0r.,.. Cfe•t Dolly Pltol,. _,, 14, 11, 2'. J-•. ltll t21M1 P UBLJC NOTICE --------------------------! ANNIE I.II CHIAVAIUO, Jnt ON• YEA .. LEASI 0 1' Tl:M· '•ll'fllan,~,CA -111. P O llA"Y l'ACll.IT ll!S F'Oll PUBLIC NOTICE Yen donated to poor Tiii• ....... " <~ !Ir .... CHILDllEH'S ce HTIER; O .. AHOE f lv1Welt l"'*"""6Wlfo). COAST COLLEGE WITH UP TO _,.ftA.CNw ... lo FOUll 141 O PTIONAL I YEAll NOTICI Of TllUSTl•'I SAi.i T.I. IM, Stl1H TOKYO (AP> -An a no n y m o u s d o no r left a bag c o ntaining $28,000 worth o f J apan e se yen in a te lephone booth at T o kyo R ailway Statio n w ith in· :-.truc t io ns the m o n ey be g i ven to th e poor. o ffic i als ~aid. MNoLMCHo¥W.. RENEWALS. Tlllt .....,_.. w• lllW wltll U.. All lllclt orw to lliJ In oc.<o~• c:-tY c-"0r-. C-Y ... _, .. ,,, Ille llicl Form l1Htf11Cllont Mid :116, 1•1. C_H._ end Speclllctl'-wllk h ~ 6 .......... I•• orw -Oft Ille end moy lie M<l4(H !ft 41Nc;Mlllla ............. t Ille oflko of ... PIW<-lftl "904\1 of ~ ..... CA.... Mid Coll• Olslrkt 11•tt.t. Eac:,11 blddler mwst WDITlll witll hit AMERICAN TITLE COMPANY Ol duly OPPOlnl•CI TruSIH under Ill• fofloWlft9 _,,_ -ot lrull WILL SELL AT PVILIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST llODfA FOR CASH (peyabla et 11,,,. of ••I• In lew1vl money ol Ille Unit.a Sletttl all rlQlll, Ullo and lnCoretl CO•W•Yed to -now neld by n undtr w ld OM<! of fru•t lft ,,. oroPerty rwr•in•tS.r Ott<rlbltd "T h is is n ot dirty m o n e y," s aid the note . foun d a lo ng wit h t h e m on e y by a cleanin g e m ployee. .. P le a se give it to t h e p,oor. Do not pass it o n to t h e politicians o r the ric h . • ....... Old o c..iMr'I clW<-. cortlllM <IM<ll, P_..I.,_. ar-. GMst o.lly Piiot, or t11-.-1 .,.... moot poy..,.. to "" Moy n . ~ •. II, It, 1"1 t~ orOlr of u. C:.0.'1 c:.nwn.inlty Collellt PUBLIC NOTICE Dl1lr lcl l oord ol Tr111lff• In on omo""t not lots .-flvo porconl U porc..,11 of lflt wm Old H • ...,.,.," tNI Ille lllddar wlll ontor Into tlW pro- TRUSTOR PAUL H HUFFMAN •ncl PAMELA HUF FMAN. llu\OOnd anci wife•• JOlnt Tenonll 8 E N EFICIA AY WILL IAM BOJAN, • m.,rlod fNln a• nit M>lo -.. e>e•••• pr-rly PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS •VMMllll MAMSITAT•MWT Tl\e follow! ... "°''°"' MO dol"9 ..,., ..... : THE MESA PINES, IJOO 0..011 Stroot, Suite 109, --1 IH<I\, CA nMO. J AY .U.HONEY, •U HorM r 111-• .....-n .. ell, CA nMO. WALl.Y KNUE, 2A71 .._ii Woy, C.lo ¥ev.. CA.,.._ Tllll -..!MU 11 <OflCl..Cled bY O fOMr••~ Wellyl(- Joy~y Tlllt llUtOINM w• fllod wllll , .. c:-tY Clorll • OrMllt C-.ly on -y "· , .. ,. ,., ... PllOll-Oronoe COOsl Dolly PllOC, ~y Jl,J-•._!t. 11.1 .. 1 2A1M1 PUBUC NOTICE PICTITIOUS •UMMIU MAM8 IT AT•MllWT TM ... _.,.. ...,_ It clelftl ...V. ,,... .. : llMH El.ECTlllC. IU Urd Strwot Ho. 1. ClllU M9t0, Collfomle 93IU1 ltowt #tkNel ........... 16$ Ur'll Streot, Ito. t, C:.to MHo, Collforftlo m v Tlllt -IS condll<:tod Oy Oft Ill+ dlvllluol. _-....Mk-I HOQOnd Tlllt •'°""'*" -fllod wltll tlW Cwnty Clerk of Or-"°""'Yon Moy 16, ""· US! THI DAILY PILOT °FAST RESULT .. SERVICE DIRECTORY For Result Service Call 642-5678 bt. JU PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS 9UllNIU WAM11 STATl,_.WT Tllo lollooofl"I __, II .... Dusi· ftfftH! DOO"S PLUS, U Eett,...ont, I N ino, Col lfonllo t27 M llon Cllffonl Welter, JI E•~-•. I rvlna, Collfornlo t2714 Tiii• ...,_. It COflductod llY en In· dlwldwel. "811 C. Wei'*' Tlll1 11-.nt •• llltd wltll ti. c ounty Clorll • 0r...-co-ty on Moy 2t, 1'91. PICTITIOUl•UlfM•U potod Conlre<I II Ult -It ower-WAMS ITAnlMIWT lo lllm. In Ille n.m of l•lluro lo Ofltor Tllo~....,_ -Oolnt IMitl· Into MKll conlrect, "'* proc-of Ille MU••: cl\oO wlll be lorloltod, or In Ille cne G L 0 • A L S y S T E M S of e llond, Ille lull IUfl'I tMreof w ill bo INTE"NATIONAl.. 41G Colle J-. lorf•lted towkl colleg1 dl'1rl<t. s.f!Clo,_,Collfwlllet1'n Ho bidder ,...y wllllelrew Ill• llld Dovtcl L. .......-,, 4111 Colle J-, for e pori.d ol forty•flvo l•J> ,...,. s..ic 1o,.,....,..,Co1.....,..ta11 ofl•r tllO dot• Ml for lllO -nlng Pewl ,rw.:la ,._.,, J'llll w-tllertol. laloftd, ~ -..Cll, Collfotftle Tllo loord ol Tfl,.IMI reMrvo1 ,.... lllO prlvllogil fll roJecll,. Olly -oll Tlll1 !Mlllnott la c-led oy a llld1 or to _I,.. .,y lrf091,1141r1ti.t or -··•~ lnlormelltlol In eny tlld or In lllO tlld· P•l'•-lll'eNoy dlft9. NORMAN E WATSON S.CrwlMY. Soordof T,..,....., Coest Community Cotleg1 Ol W tc I Tllll ltO-wM fli.d with -C-ty Cltr1! ef Or...-C-y on Moy "· "" "'*'-PwOlllhod Or...-Coest Dolly PllOC, llUyJl,J-•.11. ''· "" , ........ PUBLIC NOTICE PUblllhod Or11n9t COO•I Delly Piiot, Moy 21-Juno 4, , .. , 2~1 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE OF INTENT TO DEED REAL PROPERTY TO THE ST A TE PURSUANT TO SECTIONS Utt TMllOUOM »U, "IVIMUE ANO TAJlATION COOi, TMI NOTICE 01' INTINT TO OllD lllAL PllOPlllTY TO TME STATE IN AND l'Oll TMI COUNTY 01' OAANOI, STAT!! 0, CAL.,OllNIA, MAS ll!EN OIVIDEO AND DllT"llUTID TO VAltlOUI Nl!WSPAPEllS 0, G•NE llAL CIRCULATION PU•LllM•D -IN SAID COUNTY, ll'Oll PU•LICATION 01' A ll'OltTION TM•"IOI' IN IACH O' SAID MIWSPAP•llS. In 1t1l1 1111 IN loll-Ing •t>t><evl•· 11ona •r•UMC1: AP -.,...._,., Porol No. -N-r PAllCIE L NUM•ElllHO 5V5TEM •XPLANATION PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI IUllNllS MAM9 ITATIMI MT The lolltwl"O portoM or• dOl"9 ............ AALl:IGH HILLS HOSPITAL, UOI E. 1641\ 54,...., --t e.ac:I\, CA '2MI. ADVANCED HEALTH SYSTEMS. INC .. 17•'1 ~IQIOI ltood, lrvlno, CA9?7U. Tllla ~ 11 tondv<tod by • cor· porollon. ADVAN C EO HEALTH SYSTl!MS, INC. Fr .. L~. AMI. Se<. try Tiiis ............. -Ill.a wllll IM C-ty Clortt fll Or-County on Moy n , ,..,. Plut\6 ~llllal Or-COOll Dolly PllOI, Moy JI, J-•• 11, "· 1"1 1..-..1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUI •UllNllS NAMISTATUHMT Th• loll-Ing porl0ft1 oro doing b111l11e11 01 ANAHEIM BICYCLE CENTER. 2C2A E Uncoln, ._Im, CA 91I06 JAM ES FOOTE, 4t01 Gr,e.11 Al-Orlw , 5'1«• 19', Cor-. CA t 1110 PATRICIA L FOOTE, 4t01 Gr_, lllw r Orlvo, 59K• 19', C.,_., CA '1110 Tiii• Wll""l II CM d..ctod Oy lftdlvld.,.1• (Hu\Ooncl ~ Wife>. JernotFool• Petrl<le L Fool• Tlll1 t!Ml-1 wos 111.0 wllll Ille County Ci.+11 ol Or-county on Mey u , ""· Nwrt1a.._....,.,, •. ..7. Come-Ori..., Soll ... Nowpen9eec:ll,CA"'61 114JllA Pttan PuOllllMd Or-COO•I Dolly Piiot, Moy JI, J-4, 11, II, 1• 1 244Ml1 P UBLIC NOTICE PUHi.iC NOTICE A•<orcled Oeum1>1r '20, lt7t •• In •tr No. 77~ In *-!< ls.Ml, pego 1111 01 Ollie i•I Record• In .... Olll<e of .... FICTI flOUS BUSINESS Recorder of Or•"IO County, u lCI - NAMI STATEMENT I ol trust °"Krll>I\ IM 1011-1"9 pre> T ne loll-lft9 penon I• dolft9 !>vii 1>9'1 y nou •• Lol 14 of Tract 3'34, ••per map,.., DEE'S CLOWN CLEANERS, 1100 cord.eel In 8-I» poot> U ~ 14 ol 161" Slrffl, NtwPOf l S.e<h, Celllorl\l• M••u"•"""" Moll' '" ,,,. oHIGO ol 97..:1 11\e County Aocoreltr ol Htd Counl y Dee Elllebttll Snyder. •OOO 1011 ll1<t01la, eo.t• Mew Colll0tnle Ga•den (iro•• Boul•vord, Aol l>l, Ill • <tr"" eoor.u OI common Cit Wnlmlnslef Ca41l0<nl• 'lint 1111nellon I\ >hown •Oove no ••rr..,ly Tnls buM\Mt.t I\ t onou<ted bf' •n In h 91v~n ., to ih corno .. tef'\ei.\ or <0< dlvlauel re<tneu l OM Sf\yeltr The berwf1<1ary under ,.,d OHO of Tnl< 11e1ernon1 •a• lllod "'''" lllt I Trust, by '"'°" of • l><ee<n or dofevll Counly Clerk ol 0r .. oo County on Moy! •n Ille obll .. llon• aecurltd 1n.rk>y, u, 1ff1 nuelofore ne<ulea ana Cltll•••e<I 10 l'IUIU Ille under\lonta • ... rmen De< 1erellon PuOllsnecl Or-Coe•I Oally Pllot. 1 of O.loull ond Demand lor S.I•, •ncl Ma y u , 11, n , June 4, I'll• 2no..1 wrlt1e11 NOiiet of l><H<" •na ol ele<tlon IO U UU\ Ille Unde,.lgned IO .. II SOIO P UBLIC NOTICE pr-rly lo .. 1111v w ld obll9otlon1, •ncl ,,.., .. ,... the unoe,.lgned ceutod u ld notice of t><oe<n -of ele<tl!Hl to "' rocorOfCI F•-rr 3, 1'11 •• IMtr PICT I Tl OU~ IUSINESS I No. n u .., bcioll 1,.,., -1su. o1 Nit.NIE STATEMI NT >Old 0 111<1•1 AKord\ Tiie •ot•-·no per~ I\ dOing DU" S.ld .... Wiii ~ ,.,_ Dul .... ,_, M'',t!RL e BUlCHEA COHl A•C COYt:Mnt Of' • .,,.,..~. ••Pf"•\• Of Im p~~~!:::i:::.:s TOA. It~ Port Meroett. NeWC>Ort :~~~;.,~::;~'.'91011;;.; =~~ic::~1: TIM lollowl"I pa..-, I• 00!"9 !><Ill· 8 H <n, Colllornia tMO prln<tpel wm ol tlW nolohl ..cu"'" neu u l(ARL E BUTCHER, IU • Port by .. 10 DMCI OI T<1,.I, wltll 1ntere•I •~ PICTITIOUI •UllMllS SUNSl11NE MAINTENANCE, Ml Maro•••. N-I 8to<ll. Cellfo•n•• 1•n ... ., not• pt'O•IOfCI. ••hence•. II •nY. MAMa ITATIMaMT Lomber y Lon•, Leoune loec"• n..o under Ille terms of .. Id 0...0 or Tru~I, C lllO I 92651 Tiii• D<nlnti• '' condu<Nd br .,, In ltt•. cnorou end U P"ntU ot 1110 TN lol_.ftl ,..,_II -"I Du-'· e D~V~O CAM llON JOUVENAT, dMCluol TruJIM ond ol llle tru1h trfflecl bV "°"C:~~ CAllPET ''°" We1t1t••• U I Lombory L.llna, Loouno 8H <h, Kori E Sul~l\tr •••d DMCI of Tru•I Seid .... wlll lie • c e111om10ms1 Tnt1 •to•-1 w•• 111'° wlln Ille neld on Frldoy, June), 19t1 01 II 00 ...... Pl.-a PwlilllNd Oronoe CoH I Dolly Piiot, Pvlllllhod Orengo COO•t Dolly Piiot, Moy n . J-•. "·II, "'' UM-II. Por Portion Tn• A~--·s Mop Peruol Numoor when ulood 10 <Mtcrlbo pr-rty In lhl• 11•1. r•l•rs to Ille Allfftor'> map-· the mao poge or blo<k numoor In II• -end Ille lftdl•l-1 porul numOOr on tne moci pogo or within lhe block A perc•I numoer u lor eaomplo. .. .,....~ ... -Id _.,, ~ .. of Ille A1-·1 ~. 81«• 3'l (mei; pogo 3', Olock 3), -Porol S wlllll• tllal lllo<k n.. ,..."' referred lo an ovell•Olo tor ln-llon In uw office 01 llloAtlOS- Stt~t;.='s"":.":oc;."Em. '" s. T1111 OUSI""• Is c-tect Oy on In-~~_;1,• Cl..-k °' Or.,90 co11111y on Mty • m •I IN otf•ce or T o Sorvtu Corn v c1ugo Rood GlondOI• "'ttJOS dlvlduel. • peny, Bonk of Amcrl<• Tower, Sull• ':1111 ...... Ii c-.:Ctod bY.;, in. DAVID JOUVENAT FUIM4 I 110, On• City Bouto e rd Wut, Moy 21, Jvna 4, 11, II, 1'11 2Jt7 .. I. ----- PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUI •UllM•ll llAMa ITATIMICT TN fol_.,. --It ....... ""91· ...... ., UNIVE1t$1TY l'llE SCHOOL, M Ul\lwerally Drlv•, Col to M•te , Col llonllo tlflD c .. o1 Crt Twcllor, 109 CIHf Ortw. LogvM 9Nc:ll, Collfomlo ..SI Tlllt Ol.9inftt 11 ~led oy °" In,. dlvl-1. C.ol Coy Twclltt' Tiii• ,.....,,_. -llled wltll Ult c:-tY Clorll of Or...-C-y Ofl,.,,.., 26, lt:'l. Pl .... PlltlllMef OrMlll eo.A Dolly PllO(. Moy n ,J-4, 11, II, ltl1 2"WI PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUS 9UllMUS WAMll STATaMaMT TN lfll_."I ,..,._ It OOlftg Dull· PUBLIC NOTICE ,.CTITIOUSaUMMllS NAMll ITATaM&"T TM 1o1--..--ore cllolftl llolAI· ftfftot. APPLI l!DOPTl.U.L llESEAllCH, Att Collrlllo Str .. 1, Coalo Meto, Collforlllon.27 Ool-w. Sovlllo, 4'6 Cotwlllo Str'•l,GatoMeto,ColltarnloftU7 J olln .J. KllllMry, •nt 1..tvol1klt. • 11, LoMwold, Collfomlot0712 Powl Erle .....,..,, 220» Setlcoy, Coftoll• P~ CA ttJIM Tiii• Ollslnou 11 <OftCllKlod Oy • _.....1...,wnHp.. ~W.Sovlllo Tiiis ....,_ •• lllod wit!\ U. Cwmy CIHtl flf OrMllt ~-Moy 2t, ltll. ,,..., PutMllNd Or...-Coett Dolly PllOt. Moytt,J-•. "·ti. lt'1 2 ..... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE MU 01; PICTITIOUI 9UllMISI M<CltAV INTERNATIONAL, t.MI MAM8 ITATIM"T Klftll c-t, C.to -· Collfornla Tllo tollowlftl ,..,._ 11 ~ bllsl· .,.,. ....... , Robert M<Croy, 17M Pltuolr11 TAKIE IT Ol'F PllOOUCTS, as1 0r1 ... ,C:.UMeM1.Collt«fllot•M e 1rc11 StrHt, Newport aoecll, Tllla """"""6 11 <ondUc1od Oy en ""' Collforftle f3MO dlvklvol. Joflll J . LYoM, 2Jt Fltzwllll.,,, ..-t .IMCroy Lone, R_.....c "--Ylvtftlo 1t010 Tl\la ............. w• fllod •lttl IM Tllla .-•• fllod wit!\ the c-ty Cltf1I of 0r...-CeuM't on Moy c-ty Clerk of Or-C:-y on Mey tt, 1•1 ,., , .. ,. p,._ .. ,...., Pvtlll-OrMllt C..~ Dolly ... lte. .,....I.,_. Orengo CNsl Dolly ... lot, Moy 2t, .Jw. •, 11, 11. 1•1 2'11~1. Moy 2t, J-f, 11, II. 1•1 lftMI. DEATH NOTICES NOE J e ane tte Quir oz o f Cost a JOS EPH MANUEL NOE. M e s a . sut e r M argare t of N ewport Beach , passed G arn.a. S imi V a lley, C A s way Ma y 23, s urvived by Ser v ices will b e Friday , m oth er M a r y R. Noe of Los May 29 a t llAM a t Valva~y Angeles father J oseph Noe -Cem e te r y M a usole um .1n S . · M M I Whittle r . C A . McCormic k ' r . a Sl!lter . ury '.an r Mortua r y. Whittier . d irec· quez of M exi co. s is t er to r s . In heu of nowe rs t h e St McCOIMtaC MORTUARIES Laguna Beac l' 494 941 5 Laguna Hills 768·0933 San Juan Cap1~1rono 495 1776 'Fra n cis Cen te r , c /o S t . J oseph's Ch urc h , 203 San tee St .. Los Angeles. CA 90015. llATHS El.SEWHERE All pr_.y I> on lllO TowMIWP !>Gull end Rongo Wttl ol Son 8erMrOlno Sett eftd Merodlon NOTICE In purwon<o of lew, puOll< nollc• ls,,....., 01 .. 11 VMI, IHl Ille ht cley o4 July, 19'1, at tho nour ol 10 o'clock o.m., o! 111o1 dey, tlle ""°'"'-«'TH Collector· Tru 111ror ol llle County ol Or11n9t. •t lllt offk'e In IM CllV of Sent• AM, Stot• ol Colllornla, wlll -lo Ille Stet•, unlKt _, redaemod, or on lnstellmonc pion of r-...c>tloro Is lnlll•lod H prov._ by low prior IO S p.m Oft lllo lest l>vllnH• OIY of J wna, 1'91, '"" rMI Pf'-1Y ...,.._ .. , -.UI-.,_ Wlliell dote five or ~• "°" wlll flove elepMd from t .. CMot• of Ille Mio of told pro-perty to Ille Stoto TM •mouftt for -k ll in. -wlll be 1.-cl wlll bo tM tcMol emoun1 duo ror wlllcll It wos M>ld to Ille Stole, Mid emo...i bel,. wt lortl\ In dollort -cenu ~to "'° OOKrloUon ot Iha pr-rty. II"'° PfOClertY .. .,._ to Ille 51•1•, Ille rlgflt ol r-mll(ltft wlll tormll\ato .._ eny --"'°"' .. 1. or -con.,.yonc:o by Ille Stole. As provldM bY tow, Ille Slot• ltloll ,,..,. -tole •u-lty to rocol•• ell ronll, I•-. -prof Iii erluno In ony momff fl"Oftl '"° ~Y to..-10 Ille Stele. All lnlorrnotlon conornlng r-mpllon or tllO lnlllellon of en ln1~11mon1 pl•n ol •-mc>llon wlll, UllO'I roquott, be Nrnllllal Oy Robert L. Citron, Tu Collt <lor· Tr .. 1ur•r •nd Rectomptlon Olll<•r, 110 l'lnonce l ido .. 6l0 H. BroAclwey. (PO. 80• 1431), S...lo Ano, Celllornle n102. Doted tr.l a 12111 cley of Moy, 1'111 A0 8EAT L. CITRON TH Colloctor·Tr .. wror of Orengo County Stet• of Cotllornle Tllo Pf-'11fl to bo doO*d •lid wlljoel of INt nollC'• ••• lltueled In lllo County of er.,.., Slot• of Colllornle, ond POrtlcwlorly dH<rl-et follows. to wit PROPERTY SOl..D TO THE STATE IN THE YEAll '1t1• FOR THE TAX ES, ASSESSMENTS ANO OTHER CHARGES OF THE Fl$(.AL YEAA 1'1S-7•. SADOLEBACX VALLEY UtlRB> SO«>OI. Df sntlCT T"ll •~C-1 wti flleel wlln Ille Publl-Or.noe Cool! O•lly PolOI, Oraft9e, Colllorn1e dlvlclll•ljAME$ E. A08EllTS CounlY c1.o..-"' Or-County on Mev 7, If, JI, 21. "'I 1111·•· Al Ille wne of Ille lnlllel publlcellon II Ill\ Mo u n tt ol 11111 NOll<o. IN 10101 emount ol lhe C Tlll: ~.-i;C:, •M c..!:t "'on Mo Y ' Pllaa PUBLIC NOTICE ,unp•ld balen<• ol Ille obllg•llon -y._...~ -'f l'°cureel byllltebOvede1<rl-dM<lof ,., '"' Put>lllNCI OronQO Cool! DallY PllOI, tru•I """ ftll .... lecl '°'"· •• .,.., .... :me.:.::-=.·.:.. M_e~l~tl,J-•. "" 121 ... , N E w PO~,T~~:~~"! H,, I E 0 .,~o°':s::C:.:!':,!;':.~1no Old,.,.... .._..,..._.,CA_ PUBLIC NOTICE SCHOO\.DISTlllCT mt1 <ellC1U)'37~ 11•1tA I NMl<e l~•ld"'t 114111 Dale Moy•. 1'91 1'1.._,I NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lllOI -ERie.AN flTLE CO PwtHllNd Or-COO•I Dally Piiot, FICYITIOUS I USINEU the Bo•rd o! Educellon ol tne n wld r.u"ee Moy 21, J-4, II, It, 1''1 ,._7~1 NAME STATEMI NT NtwP0'1 Me .. Uni! .. O Sc,_I Ol>lrl<I I T 0. SERVICE.CO The tollowlno person I• Clotng 01 Ora119t County wlll receive >H ied I aQl'<ll l>Y•lnN• •• I bid• up lo 1 00 p M "" .,,. Siii Cloy o! Sy ~ .... N•l<t SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA PLANT I Jun•. 1991, el·~ olll<• ol H id School AUlllont St<rete;v BAOl(EAS, i.1& Orcllero St . Sentt Olitrttl, 1oultd •I IUI P1eunt10 J One City Blvd Wetl NOTICE OF DEATH OF Ano H•lglll1, CA 9'101 I Sit eel, CO\la Ma.• Calllornl•, et Or CA.,,.., Wiii iam Woll•r Plll•r, llS 11111 51., I wnlch lime WICI DIOI will ~ 1>ubllcly Ttli,l4I e.u-t• D 0 R 0 T H Y A N N E Seel Beech, CA 90h0 -neo •na re.a tor BRADY, AKA DOROTHY Thi> b<NM U 11 <onducleCI by an CUI STOCK PAPER M:u~~·~,.<>',;r Coe>I D•llr~:o~i .. a R .. D y A K A lndlvlduel All boOI •rt to ~ on eccoroanu wllh r • . "" • "" • Wllllem W Piiier 1c 0nd111ons 1 ntt r uc 11 orll, •no DOROTHY BRADY AND Tn11 11o1-1 ••• tllta wlln IN ~lllullon• wnl<h 0,. now on Ill• 111 OF PETITION TO AD· CountyClfrt.ofOr-C°""lyon M•Y tn. oll1ce of tllt Pv«n..lng Director MINISTER ESTATE NO. lt,1'111 01 lO•d Scn«I 01\lrl<I, IU I Pleuntta .. 10H""". PIUU1 StrMI c. ... 1.~w.co11rorn1e•1'11, NOTICE OF DEATH OF "" ..,. Publl!>t'ted Or.noe Coe•I Dell y Piiot, A Pt r•ormence Sona ma y be T 0 a I I h e i r s ' ...... 21, ,., J...-.. II, •'Ill n 1• 11 r•qulr•d •I Ille dl•e<•llon ol the M A R y E l l E N ben e f iciaries, c redi to r s 01s1r1c1 M c El WEE AND 0 F d I t edi f P UBLIC NOTICE No Booaor mo •lllld••w hk B•CI for P E T I T I 0 N T 0 A 0 · an c ont ngen er to rso • per1o<1 o1 '°''Y 11ve 10 1 O•Y• •II•• Do rothy An ne Brady, aka• tned•t•wllor111toPOn1no 1rwreo1 MINISTER E STATE NO. D o r o thy A . B r a dy, aka l'ICTITIOUS IUSINU S Tiit Bo.rd Of Edu<etlon ol Int A -108849. D t h B d d NAME ITAH MI NT Ne•C>Ort Mt< .. Unified School O•>trlcl T O a I I h e i r S , o r o Y ra Y a nb r t1efo11-1ngper1011 l>OOl"9 bu•I· ••H ••n111e r1on1tore1ec1•ny or •11 ben efic iaries, c r e d i t o r s pers ons Wh0 may e Mu oi · Bldl •no""' necnsarlly A<t•l>I Ille o therwise interest ed in the L E r IT e E ~ E w N. 1 s n 1o wt11 B1e1 e na 10 ... ••• •nY and co nting e nt c reditors o f w ill and/or esta te : M e<Artl\ur, • 13, Coil• Mu•, onlormellly or 1rroov1•r11y 1n •nv Sid M a ry Ellen M c Elw ee a n d A petition h as been filed Coll::,~~'!! WlnchHl•r, 1501 WH I rtCflVedNEWPOAT MESA UN I FIE D opteh~~~rs! .~~~s~ rn t~: b y M a rvare t Anne B rady Wllsfllre Aven ue Sanu An•. $(.HOOLDISTA•CT and Martha Ann Donovan co1uorn1097111o1 ofO•a,.coun•v will and/or estate : In the c: ....... rlo r Court of Tiii• llullnau I• <ondU<!led Oy on In· Colltomla A pe tit ion ha s been filed ~..... dlvlduol Oorotnr Ha•••• Fl\her, b y M a r g a r e t H 0 p e PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE tha t Margaret Anne B r ady Tiii• •l411-t w•• Ill.a will! .... Pur<N ll"O Dlrt<lor M c El w ee in th e Sup erio r O range County requesting SNr11'Y A w1nc11ttt•r lc P "' . and Martha Ann Donovan County Cle,. ol Or en90 Count) on M•r 11141160-)711 I Court of O r ang e County .._ appointed as per sonal 5• 1"1 PuDll•neo Oren .. Coe•t oaoiy,~!~0!: requ esting tha t M a rga ret .... FUUIJ Meyll,11, 1911 -~· M El be ' t lAGUNABEAOfOTY No ., -Sele No S27lU.-AP r e pres entat ive t o ad· Pu011"'8CI Orenoe Coet1DellyPllot, Hop e c w ee a ppo1n . No >s -s.1a No.1o•on,AP 1s.'°'H •.$10·71 ministe r the e state ofMoY7,i..n ,ll,t'llt 1111-11. PUBLIC NOTICE e d a s pe rsonal re presen · 6'HSl-21 1rormor1yo»->0Hw1,M.M FOUNTAIN VALLEY Dorothy Anne Bra dy, a kal --tative to administ e r t h e No.,. -So•• No. 2ou o>. AP OTY D o rot hy A . Bra d y , a k a P UBLIC NOTICE e s tate o f M a ry E l le n ...._..M • ttormoriyosw•i.m.M.M s u "1 11 1 0 A c 0 u 11 ' 0 ' M cElwee (unde r the In· No, 31 _ u 10 No. 10U 04, AP No. " Sol• Ho AP Dorothy Brady (under the -~-CALfPOllNIA, 1 1 . ...... MO (-rlyOj!-Jl).tJ), ..... 1 .. .011 ... $110 .. •ouu , Inde pendent Administra -,.CTITIOUS IUSINES$ COUNTY OP OllAHGI. d e p end e nt Adm n s tra t1on 1110 " S••• No H U •l. AP No. 10 -S••• No. •01210, AP tlon of Estates Act). The NAMl STATIMI NT "•· A·1~ of Estates A ct ) T he petl· .... t1MS (.._,ly OU·J~27l, '111.97 , ... UJ.12 U.014.22 rntltlon IS set for hear Inn ~.!,~•.,!~lowing per1on lo Going TONSO!LICLl'll~paLINl'TllEONPTllONllTY ti on IS Set for h earing in No Jt -Solt No. 101011, AP • ,. ~· ••• "' .. ~ D t N 3 t 700 Ci • ,... ... ,.161,.,.....1yoss-m..o>.M... SAN ••&u n Dept. No. 3 at 700 Civic THE VERTICAL, 1tn Monrovia ATPlllVATE SALE ep . o . a v 1c 40 s I H 10101' AP ~ c t Dri e w s t I the Ave ,CosteMeM,CA97U1 In lllt Mell•• OI IN E•l•le or Cent e r Driv e W est in the NO. -•• 0· • CAPl"9&1Ut\CITY en er v , e , n Stephen c Se·-· 1'53 Monrovl• WILL IAM w OE NN I N ·-· f s ' t 'A "'·•~·1S•tormor•you..m-6o.u..•o11 "'~ City o f San t a Ana Ave .. cos1eMno,CAttU1 w 1L L1AM DENN IN, .... B1LL C i ty 0 an a na , No. 41 -S•I• No. 207010· A No 11 -Solo Ho oo••. AP C allf-nla on June 2", 1981 T1111 Dullnau 11 c-uc1ed oy .., Califo rnia on J u ne 17, 1981 ..... 4M 4ttormorlyflu.m-62l, "'-" l11-14J.Oj .. .Joi "" .. f DEHN IN, 0oc .. ,..i l 9 30 Ho 42 Sal• No. 107104, AP No. 1i -Se•• NO. u o u . AP at 9 :30 A .M . lndlvldu:~ .... c So -Nollu II i:-reby olwn ...... •ubzt a : a .m . ,... .. ,..J2 llon'llef'ly oss-m.u1, s10 .u UM •..O. M4t.t2 I F YO U O BJECT to the Thi• •tot~t. we~ 111.a with "'" lo conllrmot on by lM court, on ,. I F YOU OBJECT to the .,:.:i,.:: ,1-;,.:,::1~ 0~:,J~~::~.a:P No. 1i -s.10 No. moso. AP gr anting of the petition, county c1er11 o1 0r.,... County..,, Moy !!i.::'~· ~~L~::1~'1~~·~~.':: !~~ g r ant ing of the pe tition, No. 44 -S••• No. 201i11. AP 6".0.t.011-1,. iu.m.o>i. '"·51 you s hould e ither appear "· , .. ,. ..11 •t prl•••• •et•, 10 1r.. lllOMst •nd you should eithe r a p p e a r ..... ,,-04 "°""°''" OSS-111-421, ..... RVl..m: OTY at the hearlnn and state P1'JAll bet I n•I bidder on Ill• term• end a t the he aring a nd s ta te No. o -So•• No. 2075 .. , AP I ~ "• Publl1neo 0ron .. cou tDellyP11o1, <ondlll0ftllle,..1no11or ,,,.nllan.a, •I' your o b 1'ectio n s or f ile 6'4-41._24, A" ..... 1 .. 2', AP t.44-41 .. 21 No. 14 _ Solo Ho •oott , AP YOU r Objections Or f lie Mey 21. 21. June 4, II, ltlt U 22-11 right, llllt, end lnltrHI of WILLIAM . , . i end A p u 4 .414.,. 11ormor1.., 4'1t-tMN •, tUJ written objection s w ith the w. DEHN IN, dt<••M<I. et 111o Cl•t• 01 writte n ob1e c tions w ith the m .u ... 11. MO.cw court befo re the he aring. PUBLIC NOTICE hl1 dut" ene1 011 r10111, 1111e, end c o u r t before the hearing. No. 46 _ S••• No 201$47, AP r&DlrTD&un UNIFIED Your appearanc,e m a y be 1n1er .. 1111ottMHtete h•s ecqulred In Y o ur a p pearance may be 0 •• ·~ ·21 41 CM ~ ., I~ •ddlll<Hl to lllol ol doc-I •• Ill• date • '"H~'.~j '~":;11: N~~2oeo'u.' AP In person or by your a t-s u P 1111o11 co u 11 T o,. 01 1111dH1t1,1n111ereotpr-r1y1oce1 in p e r son or by yo u r a t- .,.. it1-14 ,_1,0is-JoU.1t>. '"' tt SCt«>Ol DISTRICT torney. CALtl'OttNIA, 1n 111a county of oronoo. SI••• o torney. No 4e _ Sele No. 11'40t , AP No, 1J -Sele No. 1070'4, AP I F y 0 U A R E A Cellfornl•.~r1i.de1lollows I F y 0 U A R E A .,...1J1.U,l'3.04 ..so-a1.11,16... COUMTY O,OtlANOI He pro•••l y I• commonly CREDITOR 8 C t HAUOI LAWN-MT. OUVI Molluary • C.emetery Cremacory 162!> Gis1e1 Ave Cos1a Mesa 540.5554 NO 4t -Sol• t''I. 2u .... AP N•. ,. -Seit Ho. 1141 u . AP c RE 01 TOR o r a c ont-In "'° lo\9CW of ... Appllcollon ol referred lo •• un Sl•rr• Sl•n• or o n • MJNNET ONKA.J. M inn. m-IMOi.Mlt.ii l'1 m~r.Ull.u lngent creditor of the de-u u AHN H Lt... •"""-·-.OH· 1rv1no,eoi11orn1e. lngent c r edito r of t h e de · <AP> -FranCC$ 11.;ra•mer ceased, you must flle your TAMENIA IEAAINA CAMM~ Hor Tl\o .... ,. Wlll«t •• <11,,..,1 te•os. ceased, you must file you r .. .... ClllOTHIH lat.. MOADWAY MOITUAIY 110 Broadway C osta Mesa 642·9150 IAl Tl l•CHIOH IMffH I TVTHILL WISTCUN' CHAPIL 427 E 17th St Cotta Me'• e'8-9371 Greenman, 80, a pain ter NEWPORT BEAOf OTY SAVANNA lHFIED c lalm with the court or P•r*"•·:..O:::;,., ~::;:..,n:t':!:;.,(=:~:i0~::'~1!::;, cla im w ith t h e court or who s peclallud In portraits No so -Sol• No. u o n . AP SOl>Cl. DISTRICT present It to the personal 0110911 TOIMOWCAUll u um•nu 011d 111c11,...bronc• presen t It t o t.tie persona l o f s uch cele brtllt• as a c· <MMt.M>,tt.• representative apf:lnted ,.oaCllAM9• OPMAMI cor1101Mc1 1"., •II lf)ClusAvo dOod r e pre s e ntati ve a ppoin ted treas ... Marv P ickford and H•. SI -Sol• N•. 2 .. 2 ... AP Ho. 11 -S•I• No. 1Jt441, AP by t .. -court w1•0. n four OHTAMEHIA lEllAIHA CAMMElt tru". T"" pt-rty I• to lie told on by t h e Court w ithin four ,.. I OJM tl..01, llt ,00 07t 15147 ff It '"' m olMI SAAA ANH •ILL llo.,. llled O "H It" Ootl .. HC~ OS to Ullo. f th d t f Dolores Del Rio. died Sun· No. n -S••• No. uau . AP · • • months from the date of petition "'""' c-i tor ... °'*' •I· lld• °' °'"" ,,. 1"v11od for 1111 m o nths rom e a e o day . ..O•Ul-42,Ul.M •p ~aftNm.&(J( VAl.lfY first Issuance of letters as 1-1 ... petlti-.. (,_..Mr no-property trld m•lll 00 In wrlll~ •ftd firs t Issuance of lette r s a s FRANKFORT Ky. <AP> llMt>..oi..... UtlFIB>SOl>Ol he Probate Code o l c~~~=-.,.,_,,,.u1111tr-~";!;!~.!.'-.,~m~:':.!':..O:, t h e Pr9bate Cod e of I Ho. U -Sole Ho. U 1S7S. .. ~~ rrovlded In Section 700 of frOfll IAAA AHN •f LL Iv IAllA ANN mellof to Ille olllo of OOn•ld L, provid ed in Section 700 of -lllalc:ol• Pa~ sa. a SAN QENIJfft OTY DISTIK:T California. The time for lntuotted In .. mellM eforwolf • e oocll,ClllHomlo. C a l lfo rnra. T h e t i m e for public reJaUont Coordfn at OT t,-Nt . s• -Sele Nt . ms.o, AP Ho. 11 _ Sole Ho. nom, A,. flllng Clelms wlll not llX· ::ra ~ ~:.:=: ~ lol~I.:=: ::~: ~"c:;,=: f l 1 11ng c:almts rlll not ~~· for the State Department of i--r~ oaM •--1Y ~.._..1,M.n 141-ltt·tt,u.n plr• prior to four months ...,..MA. CllllHn!IO,tftJ-t•. •••· ,.ertcrM11, lfll ter,..o1 auc11 crot11t1 p re pr or o our f"On s EducaUon who bad a lont No. n -S.I• No, n 7on. AP Ho. n -So•• No. nun. AP from 1-...... Of t .... -ar· •• 10:• o.lft.. _.""" _.-. -.,. ec~ to "" _....,,.. -fro m t he date o f the hear· r .. 'MIMSl..,._lyott-1....,.1,Slt.11 1..-a.--, .. .,....,. ,,. ,,... .............. , "° • 1et c rt '°"' ot Ille I I ed bo c •reer u a n ews man or N•. 56 _ lot• N• uun , A,. " -1 -AP Ing noticed above. <-.II MY"'"...,..,..,.,_...,..... to 1 •""' °" . , no not c a v e . lhe Leltlntton Hera.Id and ..... 1,111..s u~~j,.::..u:·1• .... 7*411'· YOU MAY EXAMINE=.!:..~"_......,,.. .. ~=.'t~-K!ci"':":O~..::: YOU MAY EXAMINE The AalOt'fated Prat, died N•. Jt -,., ..... JSIO•. AP NI •• , -Sol• N•. 7*421t, A,. the file kept by the court. It .. ~......., "*. ~"' peld on...._..,_, • ..,'"',.,, .... t he file kept by the c ourt. Monday. ~!~~-:01. Ne J>Ws, AP '2M7145,Stt.• ap If you.,.. ,,. .. rest9d In th& tlll• erM ....... -......... T u tt, """· our•llnt Oftf If you are Inte r es ted In the Ne. et -Se•• Nt. 1n tn. .. 111 TMtl GAILY ,.,LOT, 01••• .. ir et melnt-.. """'"' .,_ Pl'Ofll•-e s ta t e you may flle a re ..._...,111., 6tt•2't<Ot,ll0.tt tstete, you l'YWIY flit • ,... ..,_...., dtc~ ,_..,.. .... 111 111111 on ln•urent • occo1eo11 It t11• ' • GRJ:SNWICH, Conn. CAP) ._ Dr. lterll•I w.,.._, • "'° a.s crrorta to ftalll f•ml• .. lM Third Worfd by WOl"ldnl OD \be de· v.lopmeat of hl1b·1leld 1ratn1, dted Tvttday of CUffl'. He Mned U edDlt C::: r fll tile lodl.t.U. llklll ID 1m. PAtADaNA <AP> -E...-. ._. Wlla-. 17, pabU11ter of TV Weell ........ clld w ........ , oluacer . . COSTA MESA OTY N•. ea -l •I• H•. 7•4f1•, AP que1t with the court to ,... c..cy et .... -, ....., ,... ._ owr<h•-ai.11 .. '""'.._ .,.., ... ques t with the court to re. •1w61.011tu0 A,. celve IPllCl•I notlc.e of the """"""'" __. ..,w •-.••If dote •• 111e (l•te of u cro•. celve special notice of th1 u~:tt:..-~•· "'· 470141' ~,. ,1:;.,.::,-.J.•1• No. 1••47i . Inventory of ettate assets ::.!~":..1T..:.::r'.:.f:..!: :!~'!'~:"1r~·-.~:!~':.!."'.:: Inve ntory of estate arid o f • "'· .. -'91• 10. •1u.s, A,. end of the J)9tltlons, ac:· ""• "'...,.,.. ..... ,....,. .. ,...., uuo 1n-oo•kY ~u "° e1 111t tne petition s, accounts anCI •1i•·H <,._..,,,...,.,.,,..,,,. CAPIS11AHO lllflED counts and reports .-.. '!t: ~."'"A ANN,,..," .. •f 1111 111uc11u•• ., report$ described In Sec· 1,,:~;.:,;-,.t'.' "'· OM,., "" SOl>Ol DISTRICf described In Section 1100.S !~:-"TH~i.;' :T.L~ °"'~~""" ,_,..... '"' ,1tM t I o n 1 2 0 0 . 5 o f th e No • .a -Sol• N•. 414JH, "" ., u 1 1 N• ,,,,.. A,. of the C.llfon'll• Prob.It• Dell_., ~ CM""°"" _. ,, ,..,_ iv '"_. ony tftd au .._ C alifornia Probate Code. ~..., ..... C""""'1Y 11M ... ), ... : .... ~ .. ~ ..... 11 c....-,., COdt. ... ...,; ,. ...... " ......... .,,.., .. _., flf • .,.., c0flflm114!1 E l l e N G . ••·.a -1e1e llf• • ....,.., o ,.,.....,.,,_.. Jelt• A . D.-c•a, At· •11tt I •1-. "~1t11W.U•ll'*Yot Mo 1.., WINTERBO TTOM, Al· !!!..":4' ... ,..,,_.., .. , . ..,,.:.~.:~~::.A" .. ·'".!!. ·c~·, ,•11 o.etf::":1':' ... ":w.-DIAHll O•NNIN,'' . torne y I t l •Wt 19762 -. •. ., ._ ........ ,...., ,.,. ••· •• _ .... •• .,,.., ,.,. ew....,. _,... ~ ,,., ,._..,.. · ~.-.. a..wtoaf M•c A r t h u r 8ou1e vard, 07,-. ,., ,..,_.., ,., . ...,, ,.,.,...._... ..,. •It• UH, Ne~ ~~ DOM•~~.:i=r lrvJ ne, California 9271 5 . ..._.,. "• • -1e1e .... "'"'· .. -..Cll,, CeN ...... a ; ueon1', a•...,•'-(714) IS1-1733. rti"e . ., -.... ,.. .... "" !~t:=:.t:.:" ....... ,..,_.Y ... Jiii, $i•':......,...... "'°""°"""'...... Pub41"*9 O r a nge Coast ~--.... ,....., ..,..... .. •. " -,. ...... "'"'· ,,.,. PubfltMd Ore19 Cots1 .,., ,... ..... u... ~.·~..... Delly Piiot May 21, 22, 28, ,.,•"' .............. "" •,.:.,~':;:..Ci191110etl't~ Delly Pl'°', May 21, 2'1 ,......0...-C'Mlto.lti,._ ,,_,....,or.,.c...t o.ir1 P'l1ot, 1981 • =• ,.., t..,_.. ,.,...,..,, .....,.,,..,.,.. _... une,,., 1'11 2AJO.t1 .... ,.,"'.,""".,"" ....i M•1•u 2.a1•1 WMt 2361·81 • • llily Pilat HI F THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1911 STOCKS C7 FEATURES CS ENTERTAINMENT C10 8,000! The Shoe, - who else? SeeC2 ,,., , ' . Most of the ·Angels bitter Players would like t~ see strike situation settled By EDZINTEL ................ Overheard in the Ansell clubbouM prior to, T uesday nl1ht'a same at Aaabelm Stadlum: "Well, there goes my fllhinl trip." juncUon that could atall the atrike date 30 daya. "Whal? I can't believe tbia!" Rick BurlelOD abouted in anaer u be wu banded a reviled Itinerary for thll weekend. 'lbat itinerary lilted departure liJDel in the event that an llth·bour settlement wu reached. as little as possible if and when a strike comes along. I guess there's a few thinga around the house I can get to. · That wu Steve Renko taJ.kin1 to fellow pltcher Andy Hualer and~ Renko can probably eat flab whenever be wants, the mena1e wu clear -thll bueball strike bvalneu la for those with thick lkinl and touab atomacba. The Anaell, due to play the adca10 White Sox in Cbfcaio Friday ni1bt, were olf today, awaltinc word from New Yon oo tbe meet· ins between the players· union and leasue ownen. "A few of the pyabavetalkedabout work· lnl out dwinl the strike but notbinC ii Ht. lt'a the first time I will have bad a summer v acatioa which wouldn't be bad." For the moat part, tbe players feel there' a little they can do about a ailuatioa they bave no control over. Still, moat ol tbe Ansela ap- pear somewhat bitter. With the undentandin1 -ol aorta -that they and the other 825 players in major lea1ue bueball would walk tbe line at mid· ni1ht tonipt, Angel players were prepartnc themselves for an extended vacaUoa. Por bow 100& wu uncertain, though there were plenty ol projections. Moel ran&ed from aevendaystotwoweeka. U an asreement la reached, or if the strike is put otf, tbe An1eta will depart for Chlca10 Friday mornlnc. And, of COW'N, Renko can for set about pan-fried trout. "I wu Soi.DJ to take off for four or five day a but what can I do now?" Burleson asked in fruatraUoo. "I want thia setUed and aett.led quickly," sald pitcher Geoff Zahn. "Wbatlt doea ii put a bad mart on baseball. With no coo.atruc- tlve headway made in a year'a time' the owners have forced ua to a trike.'' Then, Tuesday ni&bt, word trickled out that a federal agency was workin1 on an in· Dan Ford echoed his thoupta. "I'm Juat taking one day al a time on tbi1 thin1. Whatever happens, happens. I plan on doinc Zahn, a players' representative when be was with the Minnesota Twlna lut year, a aid he voted to strike then (when it was averted <See PIA YERS, Page CZ) Angels freeze up Toronto ices rubber game with 3-1 win Now it can be told. The threat ol a player strike bas been on the minds of certain Angels. "For the last nine or 10 days, there has been no enthusiasm on this club,'• Angela player representative Don Baylor said Wednesday night. "There hasn't been any spark. So we haven't played well and the fans have gotten on us whi ch just snowballed the effect.'• THE SNOWBALL bas turned into an avalanche as the An1el1 so obviously demonstrated Wed· nesday by dropping their second straight 1ame to the otherwtae hapless Toronto Blue Jaya, 3-1. before 21,167 unhappy fans. By midnight tonight, the Angels may be off the boot, at le,11t temporaril1, of tbta frustrating 1981 season. Or, they may have to loot tbemlel,.. 1D the mirTOr for another 30 daya in the caae cl a strike delay. Well, that'• one way of lookin1 al it. "Thlrty days may just prolon1 the agony," Baylor, who leas than two hours later was due to bop a flight te New York for an early morning meeting today with fellow player reps. "I just can't figure it out. When you're not <1010g things you should, everything add5 up. I know for a fact that the strike thing bas bothered us. It's been on my mind." FOR TIIE ANGELS, the Blue John Maatbm'JI Jays were supposed to be their saving grace. After dropping three lopsided games to the Chicago White Sox over the weekend, Manager Jim Frepi waa looking for a sweep over' Toronto that would settle the natives of Anaheim and owner Gene Autry as well. It started out that way as the Angels won, 2-1 Monday thanks This time Baker couldn't catch it ATLANTA (AP) -"It helps for the owner to call yO\t, but the home run helps more," aaid M ana1er Bobby Cox of tbe Atlanta Braves. After dropping seven of their previous eight gamu, the Braves overcame a 2-0 deficit Wednesday night and trimmed Ute Dod1ers 3-2 when rookie Terry Harper led off the nipth innins with a Ue-breaklnc home run, bls second of the season. Cox bad barely reached hia of. flee after the 1ame when owner Ted Turner telephoned his con· gratulations. "All victories are big when you're in a slump," Cox aaid. "I thoucht their left fielder had a chance to catch it." So did Harper. The Dodgers took a 2·0 lead in the third, scoring once when pitcher Tommy Bona knocked down a smash to the mound and then overthrew first into the dugout. 'lbe other run crossed on Steve Garvey's bloop single to center. Bjff Pocoroba's RBI single in the abrtb cut the lead to 2·1 and the Braves tied it in the ei&bth when Bruce Benedict 11n1Jed off Ron Cey's glove and reached second when Cey threw wildly past first. Claudell W asblnston later delivered a pinch-bit, ground-rule double to score Benedict. Dodger starter Jerry Reuta had a no-bitter goina Into the fifth when Chris Cbambliaa ended ll with a one-out atncle to left. to rookie pitcher Mike Witt's two- hit, eight-inning stint. But Fregosl 's plans were spoiled Tuesday as the Blue Jays got offensive in an 8-4 victory. "EDNESDAY, Ken Forsch was able to cool off the Blue Jays' offense but the guys behind him fell cold. The Angels collected just five hits on another rainy. dreary night. Toronto right-hander Dave Stieb (4-5) who has a losing re· cord despite a 3.00 ERA, found bis slider pitch just in time. "I've been l'lf\C>king for the slider all season but I t.hin.k it came back today," Stieb, a 23- year-old native of Santa Ana said. "I really didn't feel I bad my beat stuff the enUre game, but I got a few runs and good defense and todlaht it waa enough." IT WA.8 PLENTY enough for the An1eta, who dropped to three sames under .500 and remained 7 ~ games bebl.Dd Oakland. Forsch (S-3) absorbed bis second straight defeat altbou,gb be pitched bis fifth strai1bt com- plete game o! the year. one less than be totaled in 1980 at Houston. Now, barring a strike, the Angels are off to Chicago for a four· game set with the White Sox beginning Friday night. And they'll go there Rau-less after placing veteran left-bander Doug Rau on the 20-day disabled list to make room for the acquisi- Uons of Dave Frost and Fred Martinez. AS A MANAGEMENT ploy, Rau, by beinl on the disabled list, can pitch in Salt 1'a1te City and can be recalled after 20 days. He's joining John D' Acquisto. sent down earlier this week. In addition, the Angels were able to keep Witt, who was figured to be tabbed for the minors after abaky outinp re- cen tly. But bis performance Monday apparently saved him. The Blue Jays scored runs Oii Alfredo Grilftn's single in the third, John Mayberry's towering homer to rieht in the fourth and on a double play ball in the fifth. "Forsch did a fine job for us again," Fregoel aaid. "The pro- blem was hitting. Stieb threw some good pitches and bad pitches -none of which we could hit." F&EGOSJ, WHO opted not to employ a batUn1 instructor this season, said that the problem with (See ANGl:l.8, Pa ce CZ) * * * Baseball st rik e postpon ed? WASHINGTON (AP) - Baseball headed towards the first midseason strike in pro- fessional sports history today with a feder!ll agency preparing to try and stop it. The National Labor Relations Board was to seek a temporary restraining order that would keep professional baseball players from following through on their threat to strike over the free agent compensation dispute after tonight's games. The court action would have to take place at U.S. Distnct Court in New York since the original unfair labor practice charge that led to the NLRB decision to seek the order was filed there. By midmorning, no court papers bad been filed in the cue and an NLRB spokesman said oo action was likely before early afternoon. Meanwhile, both sides In the labor dispute were to resume negotiations in New York this af. ternoon. Later lo the day, the player representatives of the 26 major league teams were to meet and decide whether to go ahead with their strike threat. A court-ordered postponement could give the players a legal way around the deadline im- posed by the basic agreement reached last year when it was established that if the players ,did not strike by June 1 over the issue, they could not do so for the remainder of the life of the agreement. The NLRB, acting on the re- quest of its general coansel William A. Lubbers, said Wednesday night it would seek a temporary restraining order in U.S. DlstrictCourtinNewYortto postpone the walkout to allow time for filing and study of an in· junction request aimed at further delayinl( the strike. The Board said in a statement Wednesday night that it wanted to give further study to an unfair labor practice charge lodged against the club owners by the players association. The player group's complaint, charging the owners with not bargaining in good faith, is aimed at obtaining financial data from the club ownen. The players group maintains such data ls essential in their current ne1otiation1 on the. degree of compensation teama should re- ceive for losing free agents in the re-entry.draft. Lubbers declined to say whether the NIRB will ull: the jud1e to order the owners to re- lease their financial rues. ...,,... .................... Eduon High's Jon Butler seeka state bnth tonight at Cerrito•. Area track stars seek state berths By ROGER CARLSON Of .. ...., ......... NORWALK -The quest for a state championship begins tonight at Cerritos College aa the cream ol CIF Southern Section track and field athletes con- verge for the Masters meet, which qualifies the top five ln each cate1ory for the state pre- lims. Coast area, while four from the women's ranks claim such dis- tinction. Distance star Polly Plumer of University High'a 3-A cbami pions, along with hurdler deluxe Laura Mills and freshman Teresa Barrios and Laguna Beach starlet Rennie Durand, enter with championship creden- tials. The first running event gets Plumer. the defending state under way at 7 followin1 the champion in the 1,800 meten~ start of the field events al 6:30. won the CJF 3-A title with a Among the entries from the 4:48.&0 and is expected to qualify Orange Coast area are such for the state meet handily, • il standouts as Edison High dia-Mills in the 100-met~r burdl~ lance runner Jon Buller, Ocean Mills is the state leader with l View sprinter Rex Brown and 14.13 non-wind aided time. • Newport Harbor High •hot put-Mills is also entered in tbt ter Kevin Jefferies. high jump where she faces • The 3,200 features the favorite, tougher row to hoe, while B~ Buller and bis 9:10.21 in the 4-A rios (1,600 3-A winner id finals (be has done 8:5S and is 10:48.58) ia considered a shoo-lilt aeeklne to break into the 8:40s), Durand ia the 2-A recor'- University High 's Brad Meyer -bolder in the 800 with a 2: U .86. (9: 13.55), Corona del Mar's Whlle that quartet tOP• the Shawn Gallagher (9: 13.5S) and list several oU>en are bona 9 Fountain Valley's Bob Erickson threats to qualify for the ala (9:17.50). prelims which are at tbla aam Brown enters with times of site June 5. 10.63 and 21.40 in the 100 and 200 Among the standout.a: Fowi, meters. lain Valley's Bonnie McGUncbej Butler, who set a Southern in the 1,800 (5:01.73) and AJI, Section re(Wd in the 1,600 with a nabelle Villanueva ln the 3,200 4:06.75, is also expected to com-(10 :38.50); Costa Meaa'a Vicky vete in the four-lap ev.ent since Kelley in the 800 (2: 11.21); hia bit event · -the ·3,200 -University fretbman Annette comes first. Rosen in tbe sprinta (12.01 and Butler and Meyer are the only 2'.84) and Irvine's L7nnda CIF c.hampiooa entered in the Kelley In the hllb and lon1 men'a diviaioo from the Oranse Jumps. .. • •'I waa just bopin& Dutt)' Baker wouldn't jump up aod catch it," Harper said. "Lut year be caught one on me In Loi An1elea Juat like that." The homer came on a 2-0 pitch from Dodier· reliever St eve Howe. 4-2. It wu only the aeconcl m~or leacue homer yielded bJ Howe, ud hll first in 7~ in· nlna• •Ince Joe Mor1an of Houatcn bit one Jut June. Pirates take first step towards another state title , , # , "I WU just k1ncl ol 1lttha1 oa a faat ball," uid Harper, a hometown produci trom tbe sub- urb ol Douel•nWe. "I cu't believe tbat, .. eaJd Howe. ''Thole were the wont plteb• I've thrown tbl8 7eU' la that ~Uon. I aot behind 1..0 aad waat.ed to co awa)' ~ a faatball. But I 1ot It lmlcle, belb·buaoD ...... • "I Jut cllda't 1et Ute bAD wlMn I ...... It. aad M ll6t It out," ..W Howe. "I'• DOt a ,. ................. w pltfter .............. .... take, ....... ftiill kW1:· '' Tb• .. ..., •••t,~ "'• aau Ca•~ 1-~be HtWH U.. .,....... 1nu..--. I Sm i th's f iv e-hi tter, Bucs' dozen hits put Saddle back. away, 6-1 i n first round of tourney . ' . peatlnC u the atate cbamp6cm. Deaplte the fact Sadclleback could must• Jmt ftve bita olf &ml* (10-J), the Gaudm kept t.hinca ----fw lill lnDlnp, t.raillol l •l , OCC wasted little time la ...,. a ru n OD the board •• Ricta Amaral opeaed tbl 1ame wtt.b a walk. mo¥M to H~ond wben Gaucho 1tan.r Ben Am a1a bk Larry Lee, ud ... MOnd °" Regle M_,cnn...,'1 deiD ..... to eater. TIM Pk'atel made It MID tM MCGlld oe t.be Eli°' a double~ Dea Db ...... Lee. But Saddl ck ea .. Mn In ta.. Ualrd witb a nm wtu.o.t ._.. fl a lllt. la f.t -occ ....... _ ......... ..,.., ... _......,. .... .,.~ .. ..... ... ~CJ Id .... tMrd ... walll .... MC:GDd ud ..,.. to Wrd Wbft Db'I throw went in to t9ler RBI u..de for hia second bit ot tM° ni1bt. The Plrat.et alao sot a pair al doubt• from their No. t bitter, Dix. Wbl&e lie bats lMt la the OCC lineup, DI.a llnllbed .the HUGD u tbe No. 3 btUer in the Soulia Coe1t Conference with a .GI averap. MQM manaced to overlook UM two Pirate erron and Smith'• Mlk, cltlftl Mvtral lharp defeul•e pJ8.JI aad tlM tolld OCC bittinl wlakb ovenlaadond tbe m!ICUel. , lllNI P ct Coach Dick a.ta aald t.lte •eoaM wu hulcall' tbe .-ult of ··occ ....... u.. ball taard" .... Smltb ~·~··came." ''Ow IElda ,..,_ well ~ ud I &Mall lM1 :•H Ulelr-lupe wn·•a..u wl.iie ooc moft. u.t0 .......... , breebt Wta ,_.,._., C'4Mll4iilt ... , .. (._ PIUTa, Pap C4) ----~-------------------· ... ·---·----... ·--·----...... --------'"'lt'C ____ ._" .......... ----------- C2 Orange Coast D~IL Y PILOT /Thurtday. M ay 28, 1981 __ ..;.;.. __________________ ..,. Just another day for racing's No. I From AP dllpatcltel INGLEWOOD -Champion jockey E Bill ~aker bit the 8,000.winner plateau in the first race at Hollywood __ Park Wednesday and went on for three more winners, a second and" third In the nine-race program. ''WeJl, some days they come in bunches like this, what can I say? .. Shoemaker said. He bad Just woo the $53,500 Happy lasue Stakes for fillies and mares, ·the mile feature of the after· noon program. He won the first witb War Allied, the favorite, and also brought home Eagle Toast in the fifth and Shamgo in the seventh. The 49-year-old Shoemaker is the winningest jockey in history. On Oct. 7, 1970, he Shoemaker won bis 6,033rd race to sur· pass Johnny Lon~don 's mark which still is second best . Following the historic victory, he was welcomed into the jockey's room with a bucket of ice water thrown by fellow jockey Chris Mccarron. Quote of the day Veteran baseball player Richie Hebner, on today's stadiums: "l stand al the pitcher's mound in Philadelphia and I don't know if I'm in Pittsburgh, Cincin· nati, St. or Philly .. they all look alike." Rozelle adm its NFL a monopoly LOS ANGELES -National Foot· m ball League Commissioner Pete « •• Rozelle conceded Wednesday that his organization is "a natural monopoly" and so are all sports leagues. "I believe all professional sports leagues a re a natural monopoly," Rozelle said after he was confronted with a magazine interview in which he had made a similar statement. ·'The nature of team s ports. I feel. eventually forces one of the leagues to fold or its members to fold -except those who become part of the larger league," he said, giving as an example the merger of the American Football League into the NFL in 1966. Attorney Maxwell Rozelle Blecher, representing the Los Angeles Coliseum, pointed up the state· ments concerning· monopoly in an effort to pro- ve that the NFL is guilty of violating antitrust laws. "What you mean is that if you want pro· fessional football. the NFL is the only game in town ." Blecher said. .. As of 1980, we were the only professional football league in America, yes," Rozelle said of the vear the Oakland Raiders tried to move their franchise to Los Angeles and were blocked by the NF'L. Baseball today On this date in baseball in 1973: Montreal's Clyde Mashore tied a major league record with his second straight pinch-hit home run. On this date in 1956: Pittsburgh's Dale Long cracked a home run off Brooklyn's Carl Erskine, giving the Pirates a 3-2 victory and completing hls record streak or at least one homer in eight consecutive games. Today's birthdays: Houston infielder Rafael Landestoy is 28. Detroit outfielder Kirk Gibson is 24. LeFlore uses bat, glove over Sox Cbicace>'• a-Lenon drove lo Ill one nm and took away lwo with a greal catch Wectne.day aa the White Sox elahued a a.o American Leasue victory at Oakland . . . A baaes·loaded 1in1le by Teny Crowley ln th• ninth inn.loa 1ave BaJUmore a 8-5 victory over the New York Yankees and a sweep of their three·1ame series . . . Bea Os.U•le bit a two-run alngie and Cluu'Ue Moore had three hill and scored twice to lead Milwaukee to a S..l victory over Detroit . . . Mickey Bakller'• run-scoring sln&te In the ninth inning gave Min· nesota a 2·1 win over Texas, snapping a four-game losing streak . . . .Jim Rice belted two homers and Rick MWu and Dwtpt Evau one each LeFl«e as Boston rode a slx·run fourth inninC to a 10-5 triumph over Cleveland, snapping Bert Blylena•a six·game winning str eak . . . Former Costa Mesa Htgh and; Orange Coast College star Du Qw.IMaberry pltcbed to one batter and got his fifth save as Kansas City topped SeaWe. 8-5, behind WUJJe Aikens' three run homer . . . Oakland relief pitcher Bo McLaughlin, hit in the face by a line drive Tuesday, was an good cond1llon with no apparent damage to hls vision today . . . Yankee owner George StelJlbrenner says the Bill Kaakel umpiring crew, expeeting Kunkel, is partly responsible for the Yankee's most re· cent slide. Knepper fires fourth shutout Bob Kaepper recorded his fourth Ill shutout in five decisions and catcher Lala hjola drove home the winning run Wednesday night as Houston stopped San Diego, 1--0, to sweep its three-game series. Knepper scattered six hits and retired 15 pf the first 17 batters he faced . . . In other National League games Tony Pena's two-out single in the ninth scored Ma" Aluucler to give Pittsburgh a 3·2 win over the Chicago Cubs . . . Dave Kingman slugged a tie· breaking homer, his ninth or the season, and Pat Zachry tossed a six bitter to pace the New York Mets to a 3·1 vie· tory over Philadelphia . . . Cbris Speier smashed a run· scoring single and Tom \. Raines delivered a sacrifice Knepper fly in a twq-run seventh that carried Montreal to a 4·1 decision over St. Louis. Former University Hieh and Saddleback College star nm Wallach ignited the r ally with a si ngle on the first pitch f r om John Martin . . . Dave Colll.a1 scored a run and doubled home another as Cincinnati edged San Francisco, 3·2 . . . The Cubs have hired former major league short.stop and manager Alvia Dark to perform special assign- ments ... Dan Drieasea says be wants to be traded from Cincinnati and confirmed he was fined $100 by the Reds for missing a team night to Pittsburgh last week Ongais' condition remains stable Costa Mesa's Danny Ongais' con· II dition remained serious but stable Wednesday, four days after his race car crashed at the Indianapolis 500 . . . Jim· my Connors defeated Christophe Koger· Vaaselln, 6-1. 7·5. 3·6, 6·3 in the first round of the French Open . . . Former Ohio State football coach Woody Hayes was in satisfactory condi· tion at the school's 'hospital alter undergoing minor surgery to drain and treat an infection stem ming rrom an earlier operation . . . Julius Erving of the Philadelphia 76ers won the NBA 's MVP award . . . The Pick Six at HolJywood Park paid a single bettor $163,382.40 to 'one winning ticket . . . Michael Jerry West, 19, son of former Lakers coach Jerry West, is scheduled for a hearing in West Los Angeles Ju· ly 31 on a burglary charge . . . Jack McKln· ney of Indiana's Pacers bas been named the NBA's Coach of the Year ... A federal judge is urging the Big Ten Conference and University of Illinois quarterback Dave Wllaon to settle their differences out of court. Wilson, a former Fullerton College player, is being prevented from playing his senior season at Illinois by the Big Ten. Television,· radio TV: Dodgers atAtlanta,3p.m.,Channel 11. RADIO: Dodgers at Atlanta. 3 p.m., KMPC (710). ;Baseball standings NATIONAL LEA.GUE West Division W L Pct. GB Dodgen 31 13 . 705 - CinciMati 25 18 .581 5"'1 Houston 23 22 .511 8"'1 , San Francisco 23 23 .500 9 ' Atlanta 20 21 .488 9'1'z San Diego 17 28 .378 14"'1 East Division St. Louis 22 15 .595 - Philadelphia 25 18 .581 - Montreal 24 18 .571 '1'z Pittsburgh 18 18 .500 3"'1 New York 13 ~ .333 l· Chicago 9 30 .231 14 • 2 ···ac-. .................... , "''~a. Olk.a8le 2 llillofttreel4, .. ~1 Cln<llWWCI a. SM ,,_._ t H ... v..-J, ""'IMltlllN• 1 H-•t.S.OteeaO T ... .,.,._ ....... CV .......... •II .. At._. (II'. N ..... 24),11 S... ~raMltea CM\11-l·SI et CIMIMMI CUC.."41 11111~ CS..-WI M CNCale C~ 1.a1 °"''..,_~ .... AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L Pct. GB Oakland 30 18 .625 Chicago 24 16 .600 2 Texas 24 17 .585 2i,; Angels 22 25 .468 7"'1 Kansas City 13 24 .351 11'1'z Seattle 15 29 .341 13 Minnesota 13 29 .310 14 East Dlvlsloa Baltimore 27 14 .659 Cleveland 22 15 .595 3 Milwaukee 24 18 .571 3'1'z Boston 24 19 .558 4 New York 23 19 .548 4'1'z Detroit 21 22 .488 7 Toronto 14 31 .311 15 • 8 • r'•k- T-IOJ, ....... I Cllk991> J, 0.1.-d 0 eammon ~ . .._ Yotk s Botton 10, Ctew441ftd S Mllw..a• S, De4roll I Ml--.t,Te,...1 1( ...... City •• ,._, ... 'f'Mof'•--l>elralt l"""'Y HI et Mii•-!~I ._,.I Ml,__. Ct!ric-1-41 et TeUI C~ J.11." Oftty .-sc ....... From Page C1 From Page C1 ANGELS. • • PLAYERS' REACTIONS. • • hi11 hitters does not stem from poor coaching "l played on teams that d.Jdn't have batting instructors and we did alright," he said. Tbe loss was the firth in six games on the homestand and the Angels' seventh loss in the pa.st nine games. Brian Downing was beaned by a Stieb fastbaJI in the fourth ln· nlng, however, was released from the hospital aft~r X·rays. And the agony goes on. Maybe a strike is just what the doctor or· dered for the An((els. -By EdZl.ntel * AMO•L NOTRI General -~ lwde .. weal on llW• -tlOn "He'll u14'lllrn. IO oet ,...lor 1aeeue credit 1-ard his ...,.,Ion>. W.'ra c1o1,.. It for Oouo, llOC for u1. IC mey be • bleulne In dl'4ful• for lllm We'r• wllllfl9 to , .... • tem- ble 11e·11 c-becll . And on o·~: "W1M41 I was In S.n 01e9o, we Mf>I him..,. tor lhr" w..u end -n he came l>a<ll OD IN PeClret) he did e ._, jot>. I "°" lie f~ that -'".,_ dO I .... ....,. ..... Tiie Pitclllne ,..._ lion for tlllt -.ncr1 Mriff: OMft IMll on ""' dlly, Miu Witt on S.turoey -Ste.,. 11..ir. -Oo• PrMt In ~y·1 doubl ... heeder ... "'ost °" whet It's Ilk• to be beck In Ille blQllMs; "I .,,..,., ...,.,,1wc1 to 901 the cell. I •XOK• to come b«ll. e .. ry lime 1·w-O<ll l"w tell bet· t•r. My c-IVl'I r .. I 90°" llul I,.... It's - -n , .. 190°". I don't think It's lmpon.Mt for me to 90 nifte IMlnQS ._., time as II 11 to 901 • quality sill or .. ..., In " Fro" pl"Md slJl-c>lut In- ning• In Ills IHI st.ar1 e "'"" eoe> -IMI Hewell. •II-Ing just • pair 01 bul'tt singles end •not,,... IMIH hit •.. The Anoels er• belUng ,21$ In Mey, .JOO In uw pesJ 17 oames .• 11911 CMew 'olieitlMI Ms •tnd cerMr four·hll 11•me TueM)ey 111ght Dallas signs Adams Gordon Adams, the starting quarterback at USC last season and a product of Newport Harbor High, has signed as a free agent with the Qallas Cowboys. MONRO- MATIC ® •Amerlca'5 Best Selllng Shock Absorber.• in the last houris before deadline) and feels no differently this year. "In actuality, a strike i1 no more than walking ort a job when working conditions are not satisfactory. From the time that Andy Messersmith won his de· cislon over free aeency a few years ago, the owners have made it a point to not give in again. They feel a need to get a victory out of this. That's a 1><>9r way of re- aching equity. Now, the playen and owners are separated as never before.'' Zahn, like many other Angel playen, said they have made few if any plans for their free time in the event of a strike. ''I stay in shape all year,'' Zahn said. "There's not much you can do. I suppose the hitters might have an advantage over the pitchers in a long term layoff but really, no one benefits from this - not the players, not the owners, notthefans." Ah yes. The poor fans. They're the ones who stand to lose the most, perhaps, by having the form of entertainment they pay bard-earned m9ney to see swept right from under them. "I feel for the fan," HaBSler said. "It's their good money that we're fighting over. But it's bard for them to understand the whole situation. No one wants to strike, but it has to be resolved and the only way is to strike and get it over with." Ford concurred. "The fans will just have to try and undt:rstand. No ballplayer can perform if con· ~MONROE.Y RADIAL-MATIC ® •A Great Ride at a Great Price~ ~MONROE.? T~ soec1a1 P<ICes are so IOw rttev ¥e not valid lo conjUncriOn wtth anv otner couoon or ~ount offff • bigger bore • bigger on capacity • bigger piston ~MOHROE.Y' Ttlese 5peclal !)(ICM an so IOW tnev are not vald In contunctlOn with anv othflr coupon or ctsc ount Of rer , MONIOI nPLACllMINT WUIANTY dltloos ar~n't right. Tbl1 l1 a bual· ness. We 're strtldng for a Cood re- ason. Sometimes, I'm not even sure what that reason la but theri! has to be a rule book." Zahn feels that the fans have been misled in their thinking. ''Tt\e (ltllS.have been led to believe that the more you pay a player, tbe better be should play. Fans are experting performances. A lot bas been said about the hip salaries that we're greedy. But I don't believe that's true. We're just asking for somelhlng that we've always had." "Some w11l suffer," said Hassler. "We're not striking to hurt· anyone. But we have to think about U\e future of the ,up and coming players. Just like they stood up for us in 1967, we have to stand up for the players of 1990." There are those wbo fee.I that there won't be any kind of player strike. Like Angels Executive ·Vice President Buzzie Bavasl. He believes that if history repeats itself, a settlement will be re· ached sometime before midnight tonight. But the players all see it com- ing. .. Absolutely nothing bu been accomplished in a year's time so I don't see anything suddenly changing that,'· said Zahn. Asked what he had planned for this weekend, Zahn just shrugged his shoulders, "I don't know. Read a good book, I guess.'' If tn 60 csavs you don't agree that tour Monro·Mat1C,Monroe Rldat·Mattc or Magnum 60 Shock abSOrberS give you the t>est ride you ever had, Monroe Wiii rep1aee them wtt'h any comparablV prk:ed shOdes at no chlrge. Special IOW prtces PIUS lnStalatton IValabll at parttcl&>lttflg CAROUm servtc:e sutlons and garages. LOOIC for tht CARQUES"ttMoni'oe banner. IMPORT MITI AVAILMLI llf MOST ITOllS. BEACON AUTO PARTS AND MACHINE SHOP 410 M. ,Newport lt.cL Newport leach 548·1 I JJ ( AROUEST tll0 Right Pl.lCf; tc buy ,1uto p;irts • .. '· • • • t ~ .. ~ •• ~.' "' • , , • ' • , ~ . ' ; I ... ,. . .. .. ...... ·~....... .... . . . . -... -----. . .. .... .... .. ""' -. ...... . ..... I -· ' ' • .. • .. •• ..., -... • • "' I •• .. • .. -• • • • \ .1 • ., '. , • • .. • , • I • • .. • • .. ..... Hf f -~ ,,\\ , Airlines hit turbulence Robert L. Crandall, prealdent of American Airlines, ctisscroued the country th.la aprin&, talkln1 to employees of the airline ln CGO.le:renca held at nine locaUon.a: New York, Chlc110, Loe Aa1eles, San Franciaco, Hartford, Cincinnati, TuJaa, Dallu·Fort Worth (the airline's headquarters) and Bolton. Hil meaaqe, delivered in a one·bour preaentaUon, wu simple: "We're in trouble. We need your help to 1et out of It.·· After his presentation, Crandall, a c11arett.· smoking, no-nonsense execuUve who doesn't atand on a lot of airs, agreed to answer any and all queatlona from the troops. The entire American work force waa invited to attend these meetinga. More than S,000 did. American now employs 36,300 people, down s 000 from the peak reached in the middle of last year. ' It's no big secret airlines are loain1 a lot of money. Fuel costs are one reaaoo, resulting in higher fares, which in turn result in people deciding to stay home. Airline passenger traf· fie declined 5 ~ percent last 1~ year. the worst '\~ o downdraft in 'r /"'' t~e industry'slllTll llllRDZ ..4~ history. ~-High wage costs are another reason. American claims that "airline wages over the past 25 years have escalated more rapidly than those of virtually any other in· duslry and the average airline employee is now among the best paid in the United States." The only airline to make money consistently tn recent years has been Delta. And people at the other airlines are quick to tell you why : Delta la primarily non·union. About 60 percent of American's employees are represented by unions -and later this year contract.a are expiring with unions repreaenling American •1 pilots, flight engineers and fiilht attendants. So Bob Crandall's "President's Conferences" were especial· ly opportune. His main point to the employees was that they must become more productive ii American is to survive in the deregulated induatry we now have. He hammered away bard oo the need to do away with inflexible, poinlleu work rules. He told me, for example, that it makes no sense to bave an employee help load baggage on a plane but then be prohibited by work rules from pushing the plane away from the gate. Crandall is not looking for an angry confront&· lion. He has asked American employees to "walk the extra mile" and cooperate with management. He re· ports that the reaction of employees and union.s baa been positive, "We're engaged in civilized dialogue," he said, ''and we're gradually going to persuade pec). pie.'' American's president is sensitive to the issue of employee loyalty. Employees are, after all, the cor· nerstooe of the airline's advertising messa1e that "American is No. 1" because passengers, when polled, say they prefer American's service to that of other carriers. Crandall said that in the future he doesn't expect any airline merger to occur unless "employees have approved of it." ) STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT . D9J! JPJ!~ip, ~~~§.fl. a"9~ • NIEW YOlllC (API -s.ie., w.-. ,..ic. ~oc:'JM., ~ 17. , -net <"-al ttw mt..., mCKI ectlve a.-"..., .._ c-!:! • Hew York stock E•ct.enoe ,_, J10 1nc1 "5.15 ,,.,70 m .1• "3.•~• t .1 trHl"9 n•tlolMlfy at rMrt then it. 20 Tm •a.a G7.71 .,_.,.. .U.tl + t . ' &ttnAlrL 1'2,700 Ii t I IS Ult 107.Sl toe.u 106.'4 107.60+ 0.07 Aln Alrlln 7'0,j(IO 20V. + 1"' 6$ Slk JU. .. M .2' •1.4.! 31t7.4J+ J.D !!_.M Id 673,900 S7.,. + 1'4 1ndu1 • • . •• • • •• .. .. .. •,al.400 ...... ero Ml,j(IO :lt\lt " Tran . . .. . .. • . •. • .. . . . l 070 600 Gen MoW.,-. 616,200 ~ ~ '" Vtlll .. . . .. .. ••••.• •741'300 Stor09Tec:ll 607,000 U V• • 1 '5 Stk .. ... . ... ... .... .. • • uso'300 I ~~1n m:: ~m ! ~ . . := eow ~:= r,"" ~ r: WHAT S.TOCKS DID Wern L..emb 511,700 lJ'I\ .... NEW YORK (AP) M•y 27 p., Am S07,.JOO 5V. + 'I• Soft[ Corp 4'7,600 2A~ !2~ AOYanud ¥:Xec':~nc ~~ ~~ _ .;; Oe<llned T~ 52' 167 lfU 126 .. AMERICAN LEADERS Unchen91d TolAll lu,,., Hew 111(1111 New lows ......._! morni"I llafne Mn.oo, up $S.U. La•••: afternoon llxlno M1t.OO, .. su.u. Perle: CloM for llotkMy. Pr....,: cio.cr for 11011&oy. Z.ricll: C'-" for holfOey NaNy & "-: lonly dally ~) M7'.00, 11Pilt.U . ............ , (only df>lly ~I Ml't.00, .. •12.JS . • .......,., 1on1y CS.fly ""'°"'' l•bf'l(,ftM ..... "· "!l Sl2.7•. -.. -... ....... Orange Coast DAILY PILOT (Thuraday. May 28, 1981 Honesty i.s the best policy .•. Ask any woman I came out of a store the other d•y to aee my husband poised in front of our rental car wlth the hood up, staring at the motor. That scene wouldn't have choked me up ex· cept when you know that a mechanic once said to him, "You're losing a piston," and HE 1aid, "I don't follow ba:sketball that closely, but who is it?" So I Haid to him, "What's the matter with the car?" "Nothing's the matter," he said, slammine down the hood "So what are you doing staring in at the motor?'' "l thou&ht I was releaaina the brake and the hood went up instead. 1 bad to 1et out and pretend I released it on purpose." Aren't men siUy? Why can't they be booe11t like women? Ever see a tennis player mw a shot who didn't immediately atop the eame and tug at the strin.rs of the racket to make aure Your wedding picture ' - Mr and Mrs. Tolbert Tolbert-Oallziger Lisa Kaye Danziger of Costa Mesa. and Ran· dall Scott Tolbert of El Toro, were married May 9 at the Gazebo in Laguna Beach. The bride. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Danziger of Costa Mesa, was graduated from Estancia High School. She is employed al the Orange Coast Datly Pilot. The bridegroom, son of the Rev . and Mrs. Bill J. Tolbert of El Toro. is a graduate of Mission Vie· JO High School and Califonua Baptist College, Riverside. HolmRs-Tlwmpson Laura S. Thompson of Costa Mesa and James Holmes of Long Beach recently exchanged wed· ding vow~ in Long Beach The bride, daughter of Mrs . Norman P . Thompson of Costa Mesa, graduated from Costa Mes a High School and Cal State Fullerton. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norval Holmes of Desert Hot Springs, graduated Crom Che n ey High School aod Washington State University. Mrs. SadleT Sadl,er-Weisenburg Carolen M. Weisenburg of San Rafael and James R. Sadler of Corona del Mar have said their wedding vows in St. Michael & All Angels Church, Corona del Mar. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L.E. Weisenburg Jr. of San Rafael, is a graduate of San Rafael High School and the University of Ca lifomia, Berkeley. The bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett D. Sadler of Corona del Mar, was graduated from San Marino High School and the University of California, Irvine. Williams-fJOrton Tamara Williams of Chino and George L . Lorton Ill of Chino recently excbaneed wedding vows in F1eur de Lis Chapel, Hacienda Heights. The bride, daughter of Gail Morford and James Williams or Chino, graduated from Bonita High School. The bridegroom, son of George and Judith Lorton of Costa Mesa, graduated from Estancia High School, Costa Mesa. Leo: Keep passport in order Friday, May 29, 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 2l ·April 19>: Aggressiveness now pays dividends. Emphasis on new starts, fresh concepts, exciting romantic interlude. You'll be asked to make personal appearances. Initiate. action. Imprint style, highlight your own judg· ment, intuition. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): What had been an apparent loss will now be transformed into signifi· HOROSCOPE cant gain. Persons behind scenes are paving way for your personal progress. Leo, Aquarius natives figure prominently. Change of scenery tops aien· da. GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Family member exp r esses regret f o r recent e rror. Be magnanimous. Emphasis on friends, hopes, fulfill· ment of desires. Money comes from surprise source. You learn lesson of love. AquaMan figures prominently. CANCER (June 21-July 22): Foothold is gained on career advancement. Acquiesce to re· quest for revision of material. Discard outmoded methods, concepts. Welcome challenge, construc· tive criticism. Authority figure lends vaiuable sup· port. LEO (July 23-Aug . 22>: Be sure passport and other necessary travel documents are in order. Emphasize communication, correspondence and "foreign'" contacts. Broaden horizons. Aspirations are fulfilled if you realize "sky is the limit." VIRGO <Aug 23-Sept. 22): Imprint style. Lead Come up to the Top! rather than follow. You get money's worth by be· ing persistent. Dig beneath surface indications. Piece together subtle clues and you'll come up with "complete story." Gemini, Sagittarius and another Virgo play key roles. LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 22): Diplomacy highlights personal scenario. Means avoid at· tempting to force issues. U calm, patient you get what you want -and It is banded you on pro- verbial silver platter. Family member lends moral and financial support. SCORPIO (Oct . 23-Nov. 21): Don't ruab! Main- tain high stale of readiness, alertness. Define terms, be aware of bidden meanings. Someone is trying to tell you something. If perceptive, you open door to money and love. Pisces is in picture. SAGl1TARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Focus on exciting changes, rare opportunities and success in speculative ventures. Cancer, Capricorn and lbe number 8 figure prominently. Children, creativity ·and sensuality dominate provocative scenario. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Longstanding transaction nears completion. Empbaala on real property, basic needs. security and establishment of home base. Aries, Libra natives fieure prominenUy. One who appeared indifferent will now become an enthusiastic supporter. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Empba1111e variety, testing, satisfyina of curiosity. Stop mat· ing excuses for neglect of diet, proper nutrition. Res\Jess relative may be sincere but misinformed. Know it and heed your own counael. Surprise visit is on agenda. PISCES (Feb. 19·Marcb 20): Consolidate U · sets. Focus on personal possessions, protection of valuables and way to increase income potential. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius person filure prominenUy. You learn by teaching. One who aided you ln past will mate reappearance. CUJuJJ! ON YOUR FM RADIO DIAL I 88 90 '92 94 96 98 100 102 104 106 108 h~~G~u~m~~~nm~~m~~H~~i~~tmum~~~~ K w v E 20 YEARS OF THE NATION'S MOST POPULAR MUSIC ... . . . ARRANGED FOR THE SELECTIVE LISTENER Y" I th.ey were all there 1 • ,Ob, and don't forget the Academy Award perlormance of the golfer who po8itiona bia feet, checka hi11 wrists, nexea h1a knees and 11win1s and U)en when he m isses the ball pretenda be was only doin& a practice stroke. Th111 is not the flnt time I have seen him 10 lo elaborate meant to cover up a milt.Ake. I've seen him tum an ~thusiastic wave (to someone be thought he knew) into a hair pat, a neck massage, a fly s watter, a collar smoother. a label fixer, and once be tried to tell me be was winding bis watch. Another time be was talking to me and when l wandered away from him be asked • strange woman what we were having for din· ner. Instead of leveling with her, he whlapered. "If you don't want me to come over, just say so and I'll understand." The other night J waJked into a dining room and came face to race with a woman wearing a d.ress exactly like mine. We looked like ~tends. I wanted to throw a tablecloth over her and arrange four chain around her. I looked at her sweetly and smiled, "So, you bought the other one.·' My hus band growled ... Now, THAT'S honest!'' Nudit,Y not necessarily art DEAR ANN LANDERS: We live in Eau Claire, Wis. Our city bas a very active and suc· cessful men's physical fitness center at the YMCA. In this all-male atmosphere of steam baths, saunas, sun lamps, whirlpools, and showers after strenuous exercise, it follows that a great deal of nudity and sometimes coarse language is com- monplace. Frequently we wee fathers bringing their young daughters into this place. They walk freely lll lAIDIRS throu«hout the entire facility. I would say the little girls are between two and three years of age. As a person who goes there often I resent the invasion of my privacy. 1 also wonder if children that young might be affected by what they see and bear. I've complained to the Y, but they say there is nothing wrong with it. What do you say? -S. IN EAU CLAIRE Dear S.·: I aay tbere'11 plenty wron1 wltll It. Little g1rl.s don't beloat la the abower room1 of tbe YMCA, and I hope sometbin« ii don~ about tbe sltaat.loll soon. Wbea I lived la Eaa Claire, Z7 year1 •to, the Y manaiement waa e•ttlleat. Wllat bap· pened? I sugie1t tbey check witb PNria, DI. Tbe YMCA there ls oae of tbe best. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is for "Obsessed at 41 in Macon" and the woman wbo said you were wrong and bicked him up. She signed herself, "Bolstered in BUrllngton." The brouhaha was about the man wbo enjoyed taking pictures of his wife in the nude. He claimed be wanted them for when they are both older, so they would have a record of how beautifuJ she was. "Macon" insisted it was a wonderful bobby - something they could do together. You didn't think it was such a hot idea. My husband and 1 were married for 10 years. He, too, was into nude and strip-tease pbotog· rapby. Al first I thought it waa weird, but be con· vinced me it was "art." I was a small-town hick. 1··-·········1 I INSOMNIA I I MEDICAL RESEARCH I 1 TEAM NEEDS 1 I VOLUNTEERS I I -If you require more than 30 minutes I I to fall asleep, OR tota l less than 6 hrs. I I sleep per night, OR have three or more I I awakenings during the night with diffi-1 culty getting back to sleep, and are between 18-60 yrs. of age, you may I qualify for a sleep medication study. I Volunteers will receive a FREE brief What did I know? Taking provocative pictures of me in the nude was bis favorite sport. He had thousands -in various poses and positions. One day the rat walked out on me and our kids and took the pictures with him. The court ordered him to pay child support, which he didn't want to do, so he threatened to circulate the pictures and swear they were taken before we were married. I had to go through the county attorney to aet those pictures back. It was eirtremely embarrass· ing. So stick lo your guns, Annie. No woman should pose for pictures she would not like to see on Page 1 or her local newspaper. -TOO TRUSTING Dear T.T .: Than.ks for the back-up. I hope those camera butra (pardon tbe pa.a) wW take heed. . DEAR ANN LANDERS: A while back you told a woman whose husband was interested lo wife· swapping that you could understand bow the sex life of some couples who had been married for 18 years could go flat, but ihen you added, "It's no excuse for behaving like animals.'' On behalf of animals such as lions, Canadian geese, otters, cardinals and almost any variety of bitd except cowbirds, I object. They are purely monogamous and wouldn't dream of swapping mates. I believe you owe them an apology. NATURE LOVER IN ARIZONA. DEAJl LO\lER: OK, I apologbe. Feel better now? '!banks for wlslng me ap. Do yau feel awkward, aelf-conaciolu -IO'lwl11? Welcome to the club. There'• help for 11au an Ann Lon· ders' booklet, "The Key to Popularity." Send SO cents with yaur requeat and a long, 1tamped, 1elf.addreued "'velope to Ann Landers, P.O. Boz 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611. Correction Sorry, we gave a wrong number. The telephone number which was included with the "Wheel-A-Thon" announcement in the Daily Pilot last Friday was incorrect. Anyone wishing information on the event, which takes place Sunday at Orange Coast College, should telephone 996-3453. JOHN MULRUR M.D. Diplomat of the American Board of Family Practice is pleased To Annouce the Relocation of His Off ice to the Marguerite Medical Plaza 2871 Puerta Real #160 Mission Viejo, CA 92691 Day or Night (714) 495-9353 Practice Includes Newborn Care, Pediatrics, Internal Medicine, Off ice Gynecology Geriatrics. 11 physical examination, lab tests, EKG, II computerized EEG, chest x-ray, ~=~~===========~ I medicine and visits with a professional . . I I CALL (71 4) 752-7356 BET\\ftN 9 AM-5 PM •• MONDAY TifAU FRIDAY 1 ••••••••••••• 1 ALFREOO!s ~2 ~ We do ltall •.. FOR MEN AND WOMEN FOR WOMEN ONLY FocloCs ElectrOlvsts (Pettnonent no1r removol) eeute Spot Reducing Diel Programs Woxlng. . Eyetoah Tinting MoklHIP Nalls ... - manicures • pedicures • fullettes • ocrytlcs GIT ACQUAINTID OfflR 2°' "" any '°'°" Mfvlce ·-·-·------·-···········--···-·--..........___·····-·-··-··· (7M)MHllt 1610 PocllC c:o.t HlarMcN ,_ ...... ..._.,.cs..o1 . ~s~ ~~J(. GHR FOR DAD ... CUSTOM MONOGRAMMING A subtle statement of good taste. Your choice of styles on any shirt in our wide selection of 100% oxford or blended cotton shirts. Any Dad will love the personalized touch. Come in early. . Father's Day is June 21st. .I Licence eyed hospital • m LOS ANGELES (AP) -Com- munity Hospital of the Valleya ln Perris, where a s tring of mysterious deaths are belni ln· veatigated by state and local aaencies, has agreed to sur· render its license and concede that "lood cause exists for the revocaUon," said a state of- ficial. "The revocation probably will take effect within a 60-day period," said James Lahana, a deputy attorney general for the state Depariment of Health Services. In return, he said in a telephone interview, the DllS will stay its temporary license s uspension, which closed the 36-bed hospital May 13 on the basis of dozens of alleged health and safety shortcomings. The ho s pital also filed for bankruptcy. Reagan eyes vet prot,est LOS ANGELES (AP) -Amid signs of growing White House concern, a diabetic Vietnam veteran, weakened and hos pitalized after a four-day hunger stri k e to protest Veterans Administration policy, said he was eating again "for the sake of my wife and kids." Meantime . President Reagan's spokesman Mark Weinberg said in Washington: ''The White House Is watching the situatioo dosely and we are concerned." Boy ~d $8.6 million SAN JOSE <AP) -A boy who lost h.is legs and an arm after touching an electric line over a freight train ln Washington bas b een awarded almost $8 .6 million, a lawyer says. Steven Throop was 13 when the accident occurred July 4, 1978. His lawyer, Richard Alex- ander, said Wednesday the set- tlement won approval of Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Edward Panelli in the 3· year-old case against Conrail. Hiker suspect ~ientset SANTA CRUZ (AP) -David Carpenter, a suspect in nine grist~ trailside killings, faces ar- raignment today on chaq~es he killed a young friend after meet- ing her to go car shopping. Santa Cruz County District At· torney Art Danner says he will seek the death penalty for the 51-year-old printer. TERM ENDING -Sirhan B. Sirhan's prison sentence is slated to end Sept. 1, 1984. LA County DA John Van de Kamp is trying to extend the jail term of the slayer of Robert F . Kennedy in 1968. Robbins jury choices due S A C RAMENTO (AP ) Defense and prosecution at- torneys in state Sen. Alan Rob- bins' sex crimes trial expected to spend a th1rd day today argu- ing preliminary motions heh.ind closed doors. Deputy District Attorney Albert Locher and Michael Sands, one of Robbins' lawyers. said they hoped to complete the arguments today so jury selec- tion could begin Friday. Cancer victim '6 going on 60' SAN CARLOS <AP> -At the "He was 6 going on 60," said donor, that it wasn't her fault Orange Coast DAILY PILOT /Thursday, May 28, 1981 H /F Brown lauds oil ruling ] Governor pleased at halt of coastal lease sale LOS ANGELES (AP) -Gov· ernor F.dmund G. Brown Jr. bu "vowed to stay ln court as 1001 as necessary to protect the coast," and was pleased that hll lawsuit led to a Judie's order to temporarily halt the sale of 32 oil leases off the California coast bis office said. "We are pleased that the proc- ess has been stopped so the arguments on their merits can be heard," the eovemor's press secretary Carl Beauchamp, said Wednesday after U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer blocked the federal government from selllng the 32 leases off the Cen- tral California coast. Brown and 19 local governments objected on environmental grounds to the sale of the tracts covering 600,000 acres in the Sant'a Maria basin, north of Santa Barbara. The governor feels ·'the battle has been won but the war is still ahead or u s," s aid Ms . Beauchamp. In her ruling, the judge chided Interior Secretary James Watt for using ''too narrow an in· terpretation" or federal law in excluding California from participating in pre-lease deal· ing with the oil companies. She said California's right to control development or the coast under the Coastal Zone Manage- m e nt Ac t "would be lost forever" if it was exluded fron pre-lease arrangements, such as including developmental stipula- tions. ·•· She said she wiJI issue a final ruling by the end or the summer. "There can be no doubt that a brief delay in the sale of those leases Is in the public interest," s he said in issuing the tem- porary injunction. "The delay will cause insignificant monetary injury to the U.S. gov- ernment or to the potential leaseholders." A two-day oil-lease auction ln progress was to continue today with the sale of 81 tracts that were n.ot contested in the suit, said BLM spokesman Mike Fergus in Los Angeles. At the request of the U.S. Justice Department, the judge agreed that the U.S. Bureau ol Land Management could unseal bids on the disputed tracts even though It could not award the leases, to see if ln fact anyone Is biddlna on them. Fergus said the federal gov- ernment will decide whether to appeal after the judge issues her final decision on the oil-tract leases. In his suit, Brown contended Watt violated the federal En- dangered Species Act because the leases would pose a threat to " tbe southern sea otter and the gray whale. The suit also noted th11t i disputed tracts would provl only elaht percertt of the tot-1 I expected to come from all e tracts and contended the poten· tial for environmental harm ouk weighed possible benefits. "Friend or the court" brii supporting Brown's suit we filed by eight coastal cl\ies ' 11 coastal counties ln Caliromf They were the counties of Hu boldt. Mendocino, Sonom~ Marin, San Francisco, SA Mateo, Santa Cruz, Montere 1 San Luis Obispo, Santa Barba a and Santa Clara, and the c~ of Bris bane, Carmel, L Angeles, San Luis Obispo, S Barbara, Santa Cruz, San~ Monica and Seaside. •O end, 6-year-old Allan Wilson, his Patty O'Brien, a family friend. the treatment didn't work. Wri"te r p act OK'd bones ruined by cancer. could "He just decided. 'I'm sick and "He told h,er she had no con· only crawl. But the precocious I'm going to do what I can to trol over whether he lived or youngster found the strength to liye every moment.' " died, only the control to give LOS ANGELES (AP> -Strik· .,........, comfort his sister, arrange h.is Allan decided for himself to him the gift," said his mother, ing writers overwhelmingly ap-FINAL TOAST -Casket bearing body of "Toastmastei own funeral and prepare ll will. undergo a rare and dangerous Beth Wilson. proved an Interim contract General" George Jessel is carried from chapel at Culver Cit Friends and family members bone marrow transplant. hoping The disease ·was discovered agreement today with indepen· ty cemetery Wednesday following eulogy to entertainer who say young Wilson, who died Sun-to stem the advance of the shortly after his third birthday. dent film and TV producers but died Sunday at 83. In attendance were Jimmy Stewart day after battling his illness for cancer. But when it failed and it At a party, he began walking rejected a "final offer" from the (left), Sammy Davis Jr. and Danny Thomas . At right i~ three years, was a remarkab~ was obvious he was dying, be strangely after playing on a major producers by an even Milton Berle followed by former Gov. Edmund (Pat~ _c_h_il_d_·~~~~~~~~~~~-to_l_d~h_i_s_s_i_s_te_r_.~th_e~_m_a_r_r_o_w~_s_ll_'d_e_·~~~~~~~~~~....,--g-re_a_t_e_r~m-a_r_gi_·n_·~~~~~~~~Bro~wn'-"=·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~- DESIGN A BEAUTIFUL SUMMER ROSES AT ROGERS TREES Roger's complete nursery has a beautiful selection of bush and --...J climbing roses ... over 500 plants in ~ varieties. You will find many of ypur favorites among these outstanding varieties. 2 gal. reg. •6.98 NOW '4.98 PETUNIAS Avallable In several colors to brighten y9ur hOme this spring. 4' pot reg. '1.09 NOW •. 79 BOSTON FERN A real Indoor charmer. This hearty and popu!ar plant adds a special decorator touch al- most anywhere. Feed It regul- arly with Oxygen-Plus for full and lush beauty year round. 6'pot reg.•10.95 NOW'6.95 THE NURSERY WI'IHIN THE GARDEN Choose from an outstanding selection of trees. Plant a tree to begin a family tradition that WiiiLlll5 will provide years of beauty and service. Sgal. reg. '12.00 NOW '8.99 PATIO & GALLERY Roger's Gallery displays an """1'llA"Jr~tr. "~-....;.-<"i&;._ excellent selection of patio furniture and accessories de-- signed to add extra pleasure to your summer relaxing and entertaining, and all avallable for Immediate delM!fy. SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY BOUQ UET A colorful 81Tay of fresh CU1 spring flowers, artlstlcally arr- anged With Roger's flair. reg. '10.95 NOW '7 .95 WESTCLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY'S SHOE S8MCE BANK OF AMEIOCA CHARLES BAAR JEWElERS CROWN HAADWARE DICK VERl'O' SPORTSWEAR DR. LOJ B..DER op1omefri11 HAIRHANOLERS SAL~ H"WOA Y'S MEN'S Q.OTHlflG HICKORY FARMS specialty food items HUMPTY CXJMPTY chben's clothinq JEANO~ de1iCJ1'9f pnd be11er spott1W9Clr LA GALLE:RJ" •leC)OtlC• " fosnon M"RKET BASKET MES AMIES TEENS NANCY CXJN'll ANTIOJES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS PAPER UNLIMITED gifts Olid '1otionen SAV.QN DRUGS "J~=•Of VET A'S INTIMATE "'1fJAA.B.. WESTO.IFF Q.EANERS WESTCLIFF CatNERS 90urmet WOl9 ond collectibles WESTCUFF SHaS XAVIBl'S A.OUST , "• District rteeds help to survive financially Laguna Beach school trustees took a touah but firm position by voting to clme Allio Elementary School next month. The decision came oo a 4-1 vote (Ron Chilcote was oppoeed) following an emotional five-and· a-half-hour bearing a week aco. The board's action was an unpopular one with the more than D> wbo attended that meet· Ing -many or them Aliso school parents. It came despite proposals from tbe parents that money could be found elsewhere, and other avenues of revenue i:,U,ing or budget cuts shoufd be thoroughly explored before a school is cloeect. And tbe parents brou1bt background material with them to support their arguments. Among the options would be lpng-term lease of about ll acres in the Top of the World communi· b'; lease of district offices en Blumoot; sale or lease of a bOUlle on St. Ann's Drive owned by the district; use by private fl'OUP8 of portions of elementary scbool8; and le~ of classrooms at El Morro school to the state parks department. The parents even raised $11,000 in cash and obtaiae41 pledges for another $11,000 in an effort to keep Aliso open. But trustees, with the excep- tlon ol Ctallcote, 1.W clollna AU.lo would mean moaey to U.e cl1ttrict now wblle the other opU001 might prove to be tnf•Mlble, at the leut, and too far ln the future to help tbe flDancla.Uy 1trapped di1trict aext year. ee.ides, they 1ai4I, the ~ trict will be needinl tlM>M ft.mdl u wen as thole aaved by cloeln1 Aliso. The decision was diaappoint- inl to parents wbe 1pencl bun- dreda ol boun helpma out at Aliso school, either u •oh.mt.Mn, aides or partlcipatlna la ex- tracurricular evntl. Some ol the parent.I were stu· dents at the 3'-year-old campus themselves. That made tbe closure even more unpala~ble. But the dee41 baa heeft done, and, as one trult" said, "We have to be big at>Mrt lt," and loot to Ute tutu.re. No matter whleh ol tile other two elementary 1c•eols Aliso younpten will atten• next year, both are still Laguaa Beach schools. Neilhbor youtha will still be together, in moet cues, aad the move sboulc:ta't be that traumatic for anyone -parents included. The distrid i9 1tlll sound educatioeally .U need.I all the help tt can &et -more than ever before if it is to survive. Fee ruling justified ' Laguna Beach council mem- bers agreed it was a matter of in· convenience. Not to mention con- fusion and cost. The issue was in-lieu parking fees -those imposed on res- taurant operators who can't pro- vide enough parking for patrons. The city currently allows such restaurateurs to pay $1,D> into the parkin2 fund for each four seats allowed inside the premises. The plan is fair in that the city derives funds for public part. Ing areas, and restaurants in areas with scarce parking are not unduly penallz.ed. Problems arose when a restaurant operator uked the city to allow him to pay in-lieu parking fees in installments over a year and a half period. The council was about to agree to the delayed payment plan when questions about its feasibility arose. For instance, what would happen if the operator went out of bwiiness before the full fee was paid? And, suppose the operator took out a few chain duriq the slow period of the year. Would that mean the operator would not havetopayasmucb?. City officials arcued that there are not eeou11t ina,ectors to make sure operators are com- plyinl with the erdJ.Jlaace. They can't se around count· iag chairs, in other words. Nor can they force an operator to pey up the full a.mount should he 10 out of business er sell the en- terprise. The council voted last week to reject any future requests for time payments. It's just too much of a headache for a city staff that is already overloaded. Beach patrol scheduled The arrival of summer crowds inevitably creates prob· lems along Laguna's beaches. Fortunately most of the problems are minor ID nature -littering, sand fights, illegal alcohol con- sumption and the like. Notlliae that really calls for police action. The City Council believes that the Community Beaeh Patrol -made up or four persons hired especially for the July 4 to Sept. 15 beach season -should be able to discourage most in- fractions simply by its visibility. But jwit in case, the couneil bas agreed to amend tbe Municipal Code to allow the Beach Patrol to issue citations and make arrests if necessary. • Under the change, the patrol would not' have tbe authority to remove people from the beach after an arrest, but would be equipped with walkie-talkies so coatact could be made with reg- ular poJiceofficen. Grant.int the municipal code amendment will provide for bet- ter enforcemeat ol beach repla· tions and allow sworn police of. ftcers additional time to concen· trate on more important law enforcement tub. ln tome f revlous years a beach patro paid for from federal funda bu functioned suc- cessfully. This year tbe city will have to pay out about •.ooo for the service. But it could be money well spent. Opiniotts expressed in the space above are 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 Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa CA 92626. Phone (7U) 642-4321. ' L.M. Boyd/Socks started it Tbeplayeraon Princeton'sfinlfoot· ball team wore oran1e and black alriped socks. Maybe you don't th1nk tbat's signlflcant. But it ia. Quite •t1nificant. Because of lbOM aoclr.a, the lJlayers were nicknamed n1en, the first school team with any IOrt of • nlckname such as that. The taea cau1bt on. More t.eama now are called Ti1era than are called anytblnc elae. You may even be acquainted with a team known u the Tt•en· AU beca .. Of tboeeaocka. Q. Do 1Jon1, too, Ute catnip? A. That they do. So do ttcen. And leopards. J can't remember ever run· ORANGl! COAST I DailJ Pllllt ning across a good clear explanation of just what it is about catnip that turns cats on. Can you 1 Not everyt.blnc done by tbe old CUn of Ruaala wu bed. Tbe7 mede lt a traditJoll aft.er a boUday d"'9er to call in the cook for 1peelal reeoplU. with a tout and a round of applauee. Here'• tolhecoot-cllnkl Clap, clap. Certalnly your old 9llst«y teedter would be prOUd of 1ou, U JOU eould nametbeon.b two U.8. pr......., Wlllo • were bald. Qukk, 18,f John ~ Adams IDd Dwlfbt EiHllbower. T8'.,....P.Matey Pdbllthitf Tll ..... K•vH Editor Cruise missile deep in red WASHINGTON -The Pentagon's cruise missile program is a classic ii· lustration of the cavalier altitude toward the taxpayers' money that characterizes so much of the nation's defense spending. Here, as part of a continuing series on Defense Depart- ment extravagance. are the details of the fouled-up project: Already the cruise program is at least $13 million in the red this year. and the missiles are beset by engine malfunc- tions. according to a classified P en· tagon document. What makes this so troubling is that the deficiencies arise from the defense contract system itself, which rarely re· quires contractors lo operate on a com- petitive basis. Poor performance and outlandish profits are built into the system. IN JUST THE past 12 months. de· fense contractors made "excessive prof· its" totaling $80 million. according to ·the now defunct Renegotiations Board. In that same period, the Pentagon laid out $70 billion for procurement or weapons and ser vices. Of that astronomical sum, almost $46 billion, or 65 percent, went lo contractors who were the only bidders for the job. Only 8 ,percent of aJl defense contracts were awarded as the result of advertising for bids. The cruise missile is intended lo become the mains tay of the U.S . nuclear arsenal. Capable of being launched from land, sea or air, the mis- sile is s mall enough to be deployed in hard-lo-spot locations, ,yet it can evade e ne my radar and deliver a nuclear warhead 1.500 miles away. or the nearly 30 companies involved in the cruise program. only one - Q -JA-Cl-A-ID-IR-SD-1 -~ I General Dynamics -has given the Pentagon Its main progress report for 1980. And General Dynamics, with a S2 billion chunk of the program, has charged the government $325,000 for status reports it has never delivered. Yet a Pentagon spokesman insisted to my reporter Sharon Geitner he was ··not aware of any contract i r - regularities ... DUPLICATION ABOUNDS. Vitro Labs and McDonnell Douglas, operating under broadly worded contract terms, . have wound up doing essentiaJly the same computer work. Overct\arges are unconscionable. One cruise contractor, for example , charged the taxpayers almost $1 million for a special data hst that should have cost about $40.000. When confronted with this discrepancy, the company blandly blamed it on a "typographical error." A relatively minor, but widespread, boondoggle results in the government pay ing twice for the same contract. This happens when an employee quits a defense contractor and forms his own one-man software company. He then charges his old employer or another company for the "right" to his contract at the going rate of $40,000 per con- tract Tardiness is epidemic. Navy testing of launch-control centers was stalled because the software was delivered six months late. In 1979. McDonnell Douglas admitted to other contractors in a private memo that it would have to "slip" (delay) the schedule three months because it couldn't have the launch hardware ready. THE BASIC TROUBLE with the cruise program , as with most defense projects. is that cost-plus and sole· source contracts -vague on the gov- ernment's requirements and wide open on budgeting -give contractors no in· centive to do the job right and on time. In fact. the system encourages ir- responsibility by stretching out the length of a contract and increasing the profits as the cost goes up. Busing funds better spent on schools To the Editor: It was announced May 4, that Presi- dent Reagan was proposing to pay stu· dents who volunteer to be bused from either white to black areas and vice- versa, at least one-half year's tuition. or the number of years they were bused, in tuition at a Missouri state institution. The price for this project, one which President Reagan most assuredly in· tends to be used across the nation, la $6 million. A bill taxpayers will obviously pick up. RATHER TRAN throwing away this money on buses , gasoline, and "scholarships," wby not use this large sum to significantly improve the quality of education in the areas in question? Buses and gasoline are commodities that do little to im~rove a child's mind: MAILBOX and the "scholarships" are something I completely oppose. Because they are to be used at state institutions, I am sure that there are financial aid programs for the ''truly needy,·• one of Pres I· dent's key catch phrases. Rather. the $6 million· could be used to better our failing educational systems. Despite the famous 1954 Supreme Court decision in the Brown vs Topeka Board of Education case, separate can be equal if sufficient money ls spent to create a proper learning environment and to encourage qualified people to become teachers. Teachers now are at the lower level of the pay scale in our society, while they bold one of the most crucial jobs in our country, the training of future American voten and office holden. . I can only hope that President Reagan will realize that f6 rtillllon can be spent much more wtaely than be bu proposed. Taxpayer money muat be 1peat to better ~ovemmeat services, not bribe indlvtdual 1tudenu Lo equal ra~lal quotas. CHRISTOPHER K. LYNCH Grateful /or an To tbe Editor: ftank JOU very much fqr tbe C09• era1• you've been •lvlbl to All Bouban. It'• about time we-. ISnD a UtUe ut la Ccllta lleH. Tbe eeuJptvel laaH ....-Uy lmpiond tbat .,.., ol towD. 1'" llftd lia c.oeta 11... all my lll• aad our ra~ lilpeca ~ ··ao.t HW" __,.,._ wllm. We'"allOdout· Id • ., rene. fJI Cllla JI ... lo Bowa I .......... r11ld9M CllOl*m .... I do ..-.., tllaM All "' bll ccdlibo· ........... ~ ..... ,.. ... Al ......... Uk. .. him the coverage they need to fight for their expressions of art. Thank you for helping in putting a little art back into our city. C.S. OPP Vnf air to judges To the Editor: Responding to your May ll editorial: How can a Superior Court judge pro- ceed through trial and (when the de· fendant has been found guilty) sentenc- ing when the defendant never appears before that court for trial? The statistics regarding only the Orange County Superior Court released by the Judges' Committee for Public In· formation and Judicial Educatlon could only apply to those defendants who pro· ceed as far as tria.l before this Superior Court bench. Perhaps the editor should enquire of the police departments as lo reasons for arrests and of the pros- ecutor's offices as to charges actuaJI)' filed for further statistics dealing with the number of those arrested and the disposition of each alleged perpetrator's case. The statement that the judges "chose to focus on one limited set of statistics . . . that made their position appear more favorable" infers a bias in their interpretation of the statistics. It seems to me that the Superior Court commit- tee could use only the statistics which refer to defendants appearing before them. Most persons arrested never pro· ceed as far as the Superior Court bench; of those that do. the prosecutor presents a plea-bargain to the court as a "fait accompli'' in a large percentage of those cases. ll is unfortunate that the Superior Court judges of this state (a bench so highly regarded throughout tbe United Slates) are forced to defend themselves against what has become a continuous attack by the media. Paired with the constltutionally guaranteed right of freedom of the press should be the respooaibllllY of tbe media to accurately report to the public. MARY DESROCHERS To th• Editor: J am totally shocked that the Reaian defense budatet coatalnlng such incredJ~ ble boondo11le1 a• the MX mlaalle 1y1lem waa paMed wllh on\)' Mark This was a black day for the country and tbe culmination of a cumulative lack otfmtelligence, courage and integ- rity, as well as a sign of the worst kind of depravity existent in our government and the elected representatives. ANDYWLNG Teacher's vietv To the Ed.Jtor: Re the Superintendent Sancbis article on May 20. Can you really beUeve the public is so ignorant as to be taken in by the dribble Sanchis tossed out on May 20? First, who cares how many schools have been closed in the other districts? And, "re· ducing the number of combination classes ... "; don't feed the parents that! Take any class. Nine out of ten times the ability range is comparable to that of any combination class. Going directly lo the article: (3) "A full time principaJ ... " ha! IT'S TIME that elementary school principals taught a half day and secon· dary principals taught one or two periods. (4) "Portable classrooms ... additional teachers . . . " When would TOW or El Morro ever get increased enrollment? To the north and east of El Morro is a state park: to the south is ex· pensive housing. Over the bill from TOW would be pulled into El Toro schools. The only school to possibly gel future enrollment is Aliso. (5) So, E Morro is zoned for a park. Then by golly get state help and make this site into a terrific recr eational facility. TOW would also make a good recreational complex. One last point. All the smiling faces in the picture supporting ''a 10 percent boost" for schools. No doubt sucb addi· tional mooey will go for more games, toys, gadgets. How about money for a 1:15 ratio. Such a teacher/student ratio can foster a solid foundation in readin1, math, written/oral expression. MARCIA BARNETT Hatliekl wtln1 a1aln1t. • I Just don't uncter1tand 1uch a total Perbape one of tM reuooa for lb• eommltment ~ard a stance of war. ..ca1.unc divorce r• la tbat fewer lpc>UMI \ell their mat. • .._ "WOl"tb (w..,...._~.,...;.,...~,,.... .. ,~..... tbelr nllbt lD ,old" anymore. ..,. .. ,._.. ....... ~•r--.~-Dll ____ ..................... ~----• j = :~·::=:-'=.a"T..--~':' .. ~$ ......... ~":.:.~ .... _.., ............. _....... -....... _.... ........ ........ ,.._...-~.,., .....,. ..... = ~ ............. , ........... -.... ,, .... ,,., ...... .. ....., ....... , ....... ~------------... Diiiy Plllt THURSO .. Y, MAVll. 1911 OBITUARIES B~ LEGALS B~ Alaska's Moun~ M clUnley is 'most dangerous walk in the world' . . . BB 0 0 ~ Laguna to form treasurer study pane! A difference of opinion on bow (City Manager) Ken Frank and the city treasurer's operation (City Treasurer) Frances should be run has prompted the En 1 e l ha rd t on how the Lacuna Beach City Council to treasurer's operation can be run call for a "blue ribbon commit-effectively." tee" to study the problem. What it amounts to, Baslln Mayor Wayne Baglin, wbo ·says, is a "minimal amount of suueated the committee study dollars in the budget for clty Tuesday, wants the panel to be treasurer." formed by June 2 and to bring Mrs. Engelhardt, who was back its findin1s two weeks elected to her post a year a10 later. last April, says she needs a part- The problem, he says, is a time assistant to help her with "difference of opinion between her job. ~~~~~~___;~~~~~~~~~~- ............. Laguna volunteer• Scot1 Blueltdn and Karin WflmCJ'I feed hming to healthier of the 35 Ha Uon1. and harbor uall recupttating. at the Mammal Marine Cniter out Laguna CCJnflO" Rood. Sea lions rescued Laguna group has 'hands full' By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. 0Mtr NII I_,. Scott Bluestein jammed a nee· dle lnto his patient as Karin Wyman held the convulsing sea lion tightly in a blanket. "You have to work fast when they go into convulsions or ~·u lose them," Bluestein said as the two volunteers hooked up a sug- ar -based IV to the un - dernourished sea lion. The injection of Valium calmed the mammal, and Miss Wyman injected a syringe full of Vitamin B into the 2$-pound sea lion. "We save more than we lose," she said, shaking her head. "But we lose a lot." The Friends of the Sea Lion organization bas its hands full al the barn-like struc ture out Laguna Canyon Road where 33 sea lions and two harbor seals are tenants. "That's just about a record," says John Cunningham, a Laguna Beach High Sebo~ science teacher who heads the all-volunteer Marine Mammal Center, adjacent to the city's animal shelter at 204U2 Laguna Canyon Road. He says the lar1e number ol sick and injured animals are mostly inexperienced sea lion pups suffering the pitl..U. of in- dependence. Cunnlneham says the year-old pups have been oo thelr own for about ftve months, "and it's been tough going." There's competition for Voter apathy top£ of talk · Bud Lembke, owner of tbe Dana Point Beacon new1paper and loaa·Ume Oran1• Count1 polltlcal writer. wm be tb• speaker at a mMtlll1 of U.. La1ana Beacb Democr1Uc a. at 7:30 tcnllbt. LembU'1 topic wiU be publle apat.by towanl Or...,. CoaDly POUUa. 11M pubUc meetJac wlb be at lAlma Federal SaYIDp, •OC:etiiDA ... ... t dwindling supplies of food for one thing, and many of the pa- t i en ls suffer from lack of nourishment. Other factors that force many sea lions to beach themselves in· elude parasites, lung worms, hypoglycemia, pancrealllls. liver flukes, ulcers, and de· hydration. Some have been bit by boat propellers, and a number have been snagged. by fish hooks. "Last year we blamed the number of sick or Injured animals on winter storms, but we have just as many now, if not more. ·'The last couple or three weeks have been devastalin8," he said. "It's tax inc the backbone and fiber of our or- ganization." The 25 to 30 volunteers are mostly area high school students who arrive each afternoon to feed and treat the animals and clean the awimminl area and the barn. Moat ol the sea animals are 20 to 25 pounds underweight, Cun- ningham said, and one of the duties of the young volunteers la to force feed the weakest animab. And that can mean a palnfUl bite. "You learn to be pretty qui()[ around here," Mit1 Wyman lau1be4. She and Bluestein sport several puncture wounds and brulHI from put eneounten wltb tbe brown Callfarnla tea llon1, ' Wbil&-lbere ii no ahottap ol volunteers willlnl to work (kott and Karin put in •b or HVeD days a week Ill the eenter) tbeN l•. •hortac• ol fund.a. 11111 Wyman HY• lt COIU about '10.000 .u::" to mailltatn th• center, tbe 10-yeat· old or1aalutloa la laabltaally f altlq lbaft ol tbat man. ExpeDHI ran1e from food (tbe oraaDlHtlOD tr•Ckl la rroaea blrriai from San P.tro> to "Dtiblotic•. traqulllun, vitamlDllDdotbermedie.UC-. Frank contend• staff time already provided by the finance department should satisfy her needs. The elected treuurer hu the task of investing certain city money in lntere1t-bearln1 ac· counts, along with makin1 city deposits and monitoring city bonds. , Mrs. Enaelhardl baa asked for $18,19' in her budget request for salaries next year, which in· eludes a part-time account clerk who would receive $5,628. Frank wants lo keep the treasurer's department salary budget at $10,566 -Mra. En1elhardt's current salary. "They can't seem to reconcile their dilferences," Bailin said, adding the City Council "baa also slrugcted with the prob- lem." So now Bastin wants a fresh point of view, and he wants the results by the June 16 budget adoption. Mrs. Engelhardt ran for the e1~y treasurer's post at a time when the job paid $30 a month. She successfully argued last year that her salary should be the same as the elected City Council's-$150 a month. Lat,er, she pushed for, and re- ceived, $8.43 an hour for a 20· hour work week, along with the $150-a-month paycheck. Now Mrs. Engelhardt says she needs a part.time assistant to help her carry out her duties I The council agreed Tueada)lfft allow Mr1. Engelhardt ind '- city manager to each appoin\ member to the blue ribbon com:.. mittee. In addition, the Ci~ Council will appoint three otlMir members when the councJ. meets June 2. .1 ., "We want to come up with bit.:: partJal, finance-oriented ~ who can recommend what ~ staffing needs may or may .ftlit. b .. ·~· e . •. . .. ·,;.tJ Treasure Island owners scuttld;; 1~. latest condo development plan ~: To the owners of the Treasure Island Trailer Park in South L_,una, ill name may seem un- fortunate these days. After le ngth y and eoo- troversial bearings to win ap- prov al to develop the seaside park into two time-share coo- d om in i um structures, the owners have sent wol'd lo Orange County officials that they plan to scrap their latest proposal. The developers say that, far from producing a profitable treasure, the compromise plan to build up to SOO time-share units at the site isn't economically feasible. • Nevertheless, Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley issued a statement Wednesday saying he won't support any increase in units and, in fact, might still seek decreases. The Orange County Planning College eyes Aliso Sclwol /or classes Saddleback Comm unity Collete District officials are stud· ying the feasibility of le.a.sing classroomA and offices at the Aliso School in South Laguna, which will be closed at the end of the school year. The study of Aliso School was commissioned in a unanimous vote of the college Board of Trustees Tuesday. It was recom· mended by Trustee Larry W. Taylor, a Laguna Beach resident. The Laguna Beach Unified School OiBtrict board last week voted 4·1 to close the 34-year-old school to help make up a district budget deficit of more than $500,000 predicted for next year. In sucgestlng the study, Taylor said that a Laguna Beach resident riding the bus to eJther the Sad· dleback campus in Mission Viejo or Irvine must wait more than a half hour in Laguna HJlls to get a connecting bus. •'Thal same person can catch a bus in Laguna and go almost directly to Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa," Taylor said. "We probably are losing some attend- ance as a result." The college district has already made an arrangement with Laguna scbOol officials to take over instruction of upper level high school classes such as fourtb- yea r languages, science and mathematics. Laguna Beach Unified School District officials bad determined that such programs were no longer coet effective in light of the bud1etary limitations. Commission endorsed a plan re- cently that would allow two 10· story high rises with 440 units at present form "does not pencil out for them," and is no longer financially viable. 'I feel in my heart thaLit is. a good project. I think we can make it work.' the site along with a restaurant and 60 separate a partments where long·time trailer park residents could relocate. The plan represented com- promises engineered through Riley's offi ce between a group of deve lope r s represented by Bernard Syfan of Laguna Beach and the South Laguna Civic As· sociation The proposal was expected to be heard by the Board of Supervisors next Wednesday. Riley said In his letter that the applicants s ay the project in He said he will propose that the project should be returned to its planning stages until a new .. consensus project" is pro- duced. Syran said today that because the land value is more than $1 million an acre, the compromise plan was too risky since it cov- ered only 12 percent of the 27 acres . He said his group still hopes to convince Riley. the South Laguna neighbors and other Real potent bre~ 'Special' proves a hot item By STEVE MITCHELL Of .. ~,... .... The house special al the Saloon in Laguna Beach is a reg· islered drink call ed "P opo's Coffee," a blend of five liqueurs po ure d into coffee with a whipped cream topping. But the concoction that was in· advertenUy whipped up at the popular watering hole Wednes· day was enoueh to give even the hardiest drinker a hangover. Firemen arrived at the tavern at 446 South Coast Highway shortly after 3 p.m . when a bartender called lo complain of a noxious odor and s moking chemicals emitting from an al· tic area. Tbe firefighters , wearing breathing apparatus, began moving chemicals from the storaee area. Tbev susoect two or more of the chemicals co- ming I e d , producing the odoriferous elixir. And while they were unable to determine which products creal· ed the bubbling beverage, they listed the potential ingredients: Rust remover, pickles, toilet bowl cleaner, Drano, turpentine, O lympic stai n , con cret e adhesive, spackel, tile grout, and an unknown substance with paint brushes soaking in it. Bottoms up. supervisors that a project -m e mbers of the boar~ 540 time-share units plus apartments still offers the p ·c valuable benefits. Syfan's group initially a9ied for approval or 600 units. ~ "I feel in my heart that it a good project,'' he said. ·'I we can make it work." .. · Syfan said the project was r signed to offer maximum pu ~ access, view corridors and oe.n s pace, and he quesliontd whether the South Lag'Ma neighbors should be protecte4 'at the expense or other memberp or the public. r ; Riley said, however, that South Laguna's "low intensftt village atmosphere" might~ changed by the developm&it, which might set a precedent 'l'or a "Miami Beach syndrome." . -GLENN scotr Eight-iveek art workslwp. set in Niguel People interested in develOi>- ing thelr artistic abilities are in· vited to attend an eight-week drawing and painting workshop al Crown Valley Community Park in Laguna Niguel. Classes will begin June 29 an<i end Aug. 18. They will be held o~ Mondays a nd Tuesdays al i p.m., 2 p.m., and 3 p.m .. with~ limit of 12 students per class. ' The ree for the workshop is $45. Courses will deal with compoei· lional drawing and oil paintU\I of s till-life, archilectu At1 landscape and seascape. Vor more information call 831-7254~ .. Artifacts rescued at El Toro .. ... -: •. The Irvine Company halted the planting of orange trees Wednesday following an outcry of protest from archaeologists who claim the site east of EJ Toro Marine Corps Air Station is full of artifacts from a 6,000- year-old Indian village. Archeologist Marie Cottrell, said today s he and other archaeologists began protestln1 the terracing of the Tomato Springs area last week. Ms. Cottrell ls the president of Archeo logica l Resource Management Corp., a Garden Grove based organization. "We gave them adequate waminR to do something before we went public," she said. "I think the terracing has dis· turbed the site, but I don't th.ink it has destroyed iL" Company spokesman Jerry Collins called the terracing of the 6 to 8-acre site in the foothills north of the Lambert Reservoir ••an unfortunate oversight." All work on the historical site will be suspended until further study, Collins said. The terrac- ing was part of a 245-acre valen· cia orange planting plan that will continue on the area sur- rounding the Indian site. Ms . Cottrell said the site was the location of a major Indian trading and political center that dates back at least 6,000 yean. An archeological dig on OllJ)' 5 percent or the area two ~ ago resulted in the collectiOl@:Df more than 33,000 artifacts.·~· eluding arrowheads. beads ilDc trading goods. •: t t • Evidence unearthed at the M.e r eveals an ancient lifest~, where desert area Indi~ traded stone to be fashioned~ knives and other· lradija materials, said Ms . Cottrell. ;!1 :~1 Ms. Cottrell said a meeU;lla will be held today with I~• Company representatives, .. ty Environmental Manage~l A g e n c y o rt i c i a I a a :1u arcbeolo1ists lodiscuss the'? oftheslle. ·~ Clark praises UCI pact gesture·,,: By PaEDBUCK 8CBOEMEJIL -............. The expressed willln•neu ol the University of California to develop a new lndi&ent medical services contract "la a step in the rl1ht direction," Ralph Clark, chairman of the Ora.nae County Board of Supervtaors; said today. Clark uid he was "ap- preciative" ol the psture made Wedat1day by UC President David Suon In a ftve·pa1e letter out11n.lnt lbe UC~nll' pot!· t.lon ln a lon1·• 1 dlapute oHr .., exl.tta1 eontracf by ~hlch the uotvenlty proviclee ln- di1ent medical can at tbe UC lrvlae lhd,eal Center ln 0r ..... 8uaa propmed in the leU8r tbat tb• current ••fee for Hrvle.'' coatract. under wtdeb Mn'IC. are billed to tbe CCM1t1 OD an lndlYktuaJ, C~·bJ-aM basla, be 1ubltantially modifled. The UC president propoHd that a "lump sum" contract be· developed by wb1cb the count)' eacb year would make a '1nale payment for treatment of ln- disent.a at the medical cent.tr. The university would want about $14.5 million under 1ueb • contract ln ftlcaJ 1981-12, Suoa Hid. Clark sald becauae of neaotla· Uona now ln pro1reu that bt would not endone Saxon'• pro. po1al, or any other particular method ol NIOlvlnl tb• dltpute over tbie uilUu CODtract. "We're not beln1 bard.no .. • . • WW IN open to anyth.lns, '' Clark laid. "Tbe fact la J ap. precla&e t.beir Cetture to 1et aomltblna worked out." Tbe 1upervtaon' cbatrman. bowevw, nJd I.be county would DOt .,,.. wtUa I.be $14.5 mlWoa nrure Saxon supported for a lump sum-type contract. The exiltlnc contract between tbe university and the county coveriq medical care for in· diaenta wu neiotlated ln m~. Under tbe .,reement, the uni· YtTtlty routinely bills tbe eouD· t)' each time an lndiC•nt -a person without the· meua of payln1 h11 bOQltat: bill -LI treated at tbe medical c•ter. PbYticlanl employed by ibt county review tbe bill• to eatablilb ll tbe unlvenlty pro- vided the proper trf!&tment. 1be cou.nt1 wW pay oeb' that porUoD of a tJlU wbleb It eouiftrs ap. proprlate. Tbe c:CMmty IDd the Wli...tty are now locked ln arbltra&.kin oYe.r more tb.aD $11 mlWoa In bW*9 Ml'\'icel tbe eouat1 eoa- •ad•red ateaive. About 15,000 bUll ........ dilpded. =--~· Saxon claimed ln bis 1 tbal some action oo the en aue of tbe contract mu taken to atop what be ter "intolerable flnanciaJ drain ln1 Incurred by UCIMC." To underscore its d.elire ne1otlate the contract, the 1ent1 have placed the count notice that the exlltJ.ns eon wlll be terminated effl()Uve 1, 1185. 'lbat leaves both p with four years to reeohe dlttereDC'el. Tbe county already la e lnl other opt.loo.a ol handlln• dlf IDU, aucb .. CODtrl w tb private ho1plt throQlbout the eount1. COUIQpernmeotd curnat ftaeal year will a bout $12.5 milllaa far medical Mnieea to ... _. .. Prov.lllon of IUCb ca.re q\llredbJlaw. I .... DETOURS le DEADHEADS DEPT. -Those lawmakers up in Sacramento who have been griping and turning livid over the state highway department could do all our hapless motorists one little favor by passing a simple law. So far, our august solons have made a lot of speeches about bow they ought to chop off the highway chief, Adriana Gianturco, at her pursestrings by reducing her salary to zero. Other teeth-gnashings have happened. But blamed little ac· lion. Through a ll this, our lawmakers have been making the usual mistake. They want to start taking action at the top. FOR THE SAKE of our ~ b \ TOM MURPHINI -~<1 harried commuters who have to use these highways, however, the Legislature would be a lot better off starting at the bot- tom -then working up. The prime example of this is when highway crews, known as Caltrans employees, all of a sudden decide, willy-nilly, to shut down some traffic lanes. When they do this. they leave the clear impression they couldn't give a tinker's damn what road conditions happen to be at the time. An acquaintance of mine, for example, was motoring up Pacific Coast Highway just awhile back when traffic came to a screeching halt and backed up parked cars from Santa Ana River Bridge at Huntington Beach to The Arches Overpass in Newport. WHEN THE MOTORISTS finally crept along and got to lhe river bridge, what did they find? Two lonesome Caltrans workers had shut down an entire lane so they could shovel a couple of small piles of gravel around. Then only yesterday, Caltrans notified the Newport Beach cops that they'd have to shut a downcoast lane on Coast Highway ill the Newport Bay Bridge for a bit of cable- stretching along about 9 a.m. That might not have been too bad because the worst of the rush would be over by that hour and traffic cops would be on the scene to help smooth out the traffic flow. TROUBLE WAS, the Caltrans crews decided lo shut down the bridge lane earlier. at 8:30 a .m. and they didn't bother to notify Newport traffic officers of the change to an earlier time. The result? Traffic backed upcoast from the bridge all the way down Mariners Mil e. It may have backed up all the way to Huntington Beach, for all we can tell. So that's why our legislators who want to lower the boom on Caltrans should actually start at the bottom. They should get these arbitrary and capricious detours and lane-closings uncter control. ONE WAY MIGHT BE to pass a new state statute that would decree, simply, that any time a Caltrans crew creates a major dis ruption in local traffic flow , the local cops are em- powered to arrest the work crews and throw them all in the local jail. Cool thinkers among us, particularly those lucky citizens who don't have to commute, might suggest, "My, my! That would be terrible! Why that's hot-headed and reactionary ... " MAYBE SO. But it might cause a few of those highway people lo think twice before they throw out all those orange closure cones and pop up their detour signs. They might get just a little more thoughtful before they start shutting down major traffic arteries during peak commuter rush hours. And tossing them all in the slammer wouldn 't be any more reactionary than reducing poor Adriana's salary to a goose egg. Fountain Valley chief ;quits in budget tiff ~ In a dispute over reorganiza- tion of the city's fire depart· ment, Fountain Valley Fire Chief Tom Feierabend bas re· signed. Feierabend, 49. an lrvirre resi- dent. said the reorganization would have required him to work "intolerable" hours, and he predicted the changes will decrease the effectiveness of the local fire fighting service. "I felt I had to protect the fire department. and the only way J knew bow was lo put my job on the line," he said in an interview 'Wednesday. Feierabend said he submitted -tlis resignation, effective June 5, one week ago. He said he at- .iempted to withdraw it Tuesday with the hope of settling the dis- agreement, but said this offer was rejected by the City Coun- .cil. According to Feierabend, the council, which is facing a large budget s hortage. plans to :,liminale two battalion chief &M>silioos. ~ He said the chanie would have required him to work ~very other night and every 1otber weekend, which be 'described as "intolerable work- ·tng conditions." • Felerabend claimed the :J'eabuffilnt will reduce some ·turrent three·man en1loe com- panies to two-man untta. He aaid Fountain Valley, with :the elimination of two posltiona, ill have .U uniformed ireflttiters per thou111nd awl-entl. "It doesn't C) ve th• tervlce at the citizen• of Fountain • •~ll•Y .-.peel.'' • .. .,. oow have less manpower thouland than any oc.Mr dty u r •ii• In tb• slate,·· elerabelld 1tated. "We al•o .. the lowest ....... per Md lD Orut• C.0..'1. • .,..,, .................. QUITS VALLEY POST Fire Chief Feierabend hate to see him leave," said Councilman Eugene Van Duk. Van Dask disputed some of Feierabend's pr«llcllons. "I don't think.the reorganila- tion of the fire depratment la 10- ing to affect service at all,'' be said. "Certainly lt will have no effect on the quality of service Jiven to people." Felerabend Joined the Fouo- tal n Valley department four years ap u a batt.aUoo chief and wu named tire chief seven montbt later. Pruioualy, he spent 15 yean wltb th• Garden Grove Fire Department • He aaid today be I• uo1ure of bis fUWre plans. "I don't think cky 1ovemment ls the place for anyone to be right now," be taid. "I'm not really bitter. I bad a pa11lon for lbe llr• fl1btJn1 MrYlee. My ool)' datn WU to do tbe belt ;ob poutble. I feet whipped now. I feel drained." -PHIL. JNEIDgR.MAN ' ti;xuvators of the Boucher landfW cot an apparent discount Tuesday to clean up the Hwit· lnlfton Beach dump and move non-huardous materials into an Irvine landfill. Suptrvl1or Harrtett Wieder, whose 2nd Dtatrtct loclud• tht Boucher site, nld the county'a aid is merited to help saliafy a public health problem. paytnc about '3 mtlUon t.o ... move potentJally toxic oll drllltn1 rt· aldue left at the former dump site at Bolsa Chica Street and Warner Avenue. They have plans to build 224 condominiums on the 12.5 acres. The Orante County Board of Supervisors agreed to charge Mola Development Corp. about $36,500 -or $1.25 per ton -to deposit about 30,000 tons of material at the county-run Coyote Canyon landfill in Irvine. ''This effort is undoubtedly a pioneer one in that it will be a first·lime venture or the private and public sectors to resolve a potentially dangerous health hazard," she said. Mola officials say they are The $1.25 per ton figure Is the county's approximate expense to run the landfill. Officials in the county Solid Waste Manage- ment Department had suggested a charge up to $3.50 oer ton. or about $105,000, could be levied. f"" I F orgi( 's hardware shop shnlting down ~ Peg Forgit says she'll have one last appliance sale before closing her late husband's Newport Beach hardware store for the last time Saturday. · The widow of former Newport Beach city councilman Al Forgit says she reached a decision over the Memorial Day weekend to call it quits. The st.ore, opened in 1928 as Estuc Hardware and purchased by Forgit in 1953, is to be leased to a group of architects. '·It Just about makes me sick," Mrs. Forgit remarked. "It's like holding a wake in • there. "A lot of people feel it will be a loss to the community but. I don't know -time passes and we all get old. Things change." She says the remaining inven- tory in the shop is to be sold to A BC Lumber in Costa Mesa which is rebuilding its facilities destroyed in a fire last year. close up the brick shop near the Newport Pier Mrs. Forg1l said she'll con- tinue to live in lhe apartment above the shop. The hardware shop, a country· store-like collection of odds and ends, was once a noted gather· ing spot for Forgit 's city hall and fishing friends. The shop gained a separate reputation because Forgit was fond of placing newspaper ads for his store in local papers that criticized or poked fun at officials on everything from litter to park- ing problems. t-'org1t was elected to the Newport council in 1964. His wife ran twice for a council seal. los- ing both times, most recently to present Councilman Don Strauss. Mrs. Forgit said s he 's plan- ning no fanfare for Saturday's closing. O.Uy~l ... llMf"- peg Forgit, in doorway of vintage Newport Beach hardware store. plans to close shop for last time Saturday. • She said her husband, who died of a heart attack last Sep- tember. had been planning lo "We'll just close it up Satur- day evening as usual," she said. "and start taking an inventory on Sunday. That'll be it. .. Dis trict to f und facilities An agreement has been reached between the Irvine Ranch Water District and attorneys representing poor families who had challenged a $994 million bond authoriza· lion, it was announced. The settlement calls for the water district to create special assess- ment districts to fund se wer and w ater facilities in any area in which at least 10 percent or the units are designat- ed for low and moderate income people. Ip exchange, the plaintiffs represented by the Orange County Legal Aid Society agreed to drop an ap- pea I after the IRWD won the suit filed last September. The creation of assess- ment districts will allow landowners and de- velop~rs to pay for waler and sewage facilities through the sale of bonds that are re· paid over a 10-year- period, according to Art Korn, assistant general manager. Currently developers finance water and sewer projects either by hiring outside contractors or by paying the water dis· trict one lump sum for connection to an existing line. Korn said the advan- tage of an assessment district is that it will al· low developers to pay for their projects over a long period with low in- terest bond rates. "It's unofficially been o ur policy to support project.a that are finao· cially feasible," said Korn. "1b.ls settlement just formally puts it into our rules and regula- tions." A similar agreement was worked out with 1,000 units ln Northwood and a sewer treatment reciUty along the coast, accord.in1 t.o Korn. • • Dally Piiot e classifieds : workfor ¥OU.Call 642-5671 e forqukk e cash sates. • ' Huntington schools veto student activity fees High school s tudents won 't have to pay a fee to play sports, march in the band. or join drill or pep squads next year in the Huntington Beach Union High School District. The district trustees agreed without a vole Tuesday that the proposed S2S activity fee isn't needed for next year's budget. The school board requested that the proposal be brought back in January for reconsidera- tion. H instituted then, the fees wouldn't take effect until the 1982-83 school year at the earliest, say district officials. District officia ls estimaLe that the proposed fee could generate up to $170,000 annually . But Superintendent Frank "Jake" Abbott had recommended' that the revenue be put into a special account and not spent until the courts decide if such a fee is legal. Activity fees in the Santa Barbara School District have been challenged in court, ac- cording lo district officials. School Board President Helen Dille and trustees Zita Wessa and Brian Lake said it wouid be premature to make a decision before the matter is settled in court. The trustees questioned if the courts wouid make districts pay back the fees with interest if fees are found to be unconstitu- tional. Trustee Stephen Smith said he didn't believe the court appeaJ would be a problem and that he believed parents support the fee as a way to guarantee continued activity programs. He spoke in favor of the proposal. Trustee Doris Allen said she couldn't support a fee unless a program were in jeopardy of be- ing eliminated. She asked for a mail survey of parents whose children are involved In ac· ti vi lies earmarked for fees. She also sugge.sted increasing ticket prices for sporting events. All trustees expressed concern about growing costs of exlracur- r i cul ar activities, including replacement of band uniforms and transportation. Officials of the financially troubled district have cut $3.8 mHlion from next year's $42 million operating budget, includ- ing $300,000 from the sports pro- gram. District officials began con- sidering the fee last month after the Santa Barbara Superior Court upheld a similar fee in the Santa Barbara School District. But the State Department of Education a nd t he Santa Barbara PTA have appealed the court's decision on grounds that activity fees violate the constitu· tional guarantee of a free and equal education Two Orange County districts, Capistrano Unified and Laguna Beach Unified, charge activity fees currently. The Newport· Mesa Unified School District also is considering an activity fee for next year. The Huntington Beach district had proposed charging students $25 with a $50 maximum if they were involved in more than one fee activity. A family would be charged a maximum of $75 dollars if more than one child participated in fee activities, and lower-income stude nts would be able to do campus work instead of pay a fee. Laguna s taffer leaving Kay Keene. Laguna's person- nel director for the past four years, has accepted a job as as· sistant city manager for Vista in San Diego County. The 31-year-old management employee said she was among 200 applicants for the Vista post. Ms. Keene, who currently lives in Laguna Beach. will begin working part-time for both cities in June. and will begin full -time duties in Vista by the first of July. She said she will eventually move down to the city of 34,000. HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM Mercury Savin9s Now Offers NEW "Repo Pla".'s· 11* ~~ We ha•e several "Fmds"* clll'ftftffy available for our customen FOR Huntilltid Buell 7812 Edinger Hnt. Bch., CA. 82647 (714) 842-9333 MERCURY SAVINGS Lib flrest 23021 Leke Center Or. • El Toro. CA. 92630 (714) 770.2801 and loan auociahon Tustin 1095 lrvlnt Blvd. Tualln, CA. 92680 (714) 832-7701 la H•rilflllrtH a.n1Pn 1001 E. lmpeftal Hwy. LI H abre, CA. 80e3t (11') 170-8100 8965 Valley View Bu.na Paf'1(. CA 90820 (71') 821.fOOO *-Th'9 obllgatton ia not a Mvlngt account or deposit and Is not Insured by the Federal Savings and t.oan lneu,.nc. Corporation , .... Licence eyed • m hospital LOS ANGELES (AP> -Com· munlty Hospital of the Valleys in Perris, where a strine of mysterious deaths are being in· vestigated by state and local a11encies, bas agreed to sur· render its Jicense and co~cede that "good cause exists fOJ' the revocaf,ion," said a state of· ficlal. · , "The revocation probably will take effect within a tiO·day period," said James Labana, a deputy attorney general for the state Department of Health Services. In return, he sai d in a telephone interview, the OHS will stay its temporary license suspension, which closed the 36·bed hospital May 13 on the basis of dozens of alleged health and safety shortcomings. The hospi tal also fil ed for bankruptcy. Reagan eyes vet protest LOS ANGELES (AP> -A,,mid signs of growing White House concern, a diabetic Vietnam veteran , weakened and hospitalized after a four-day hun(#r strike to protest Veterans Administration policy, said he was eating again "for the sake of my wife and kids." Meantime , President Reagan's spokesman Mark Weinberg said in Wa shington: "The White House is watching the situation closely and we are concerned." Boy lltmr<hd $8.6 mi,llion SAN JOSE CAP) -A boy who lost his legs and an arm after touching an electric line over a freight train in Washington bas been awarded almost $8.6 million, a lawyer says. Steven Throop was 13 when the accident occurred July 4, 1978. His lawyer, Richard Alex· ander, said Wednesday the set- tlement won approval of Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Edward Panelli in the 3· year -old case against Conrail. Hiker suspect wrnignment set SANTA CRUZ (AP) -David Carpenter. a suspect in nine grisly trailside killings, faces ar- raignment today on charges he killed a young friend after meet· ing her to go car shopping. Santa Cruz County District At· torney Art Danner says he will seek the death penalty for the 51-year·old printer ' TEAM ENDING -Sirhan B. Sirhan's prison sentence is slated to end Sept. 1, 1984. LA County DA John Van de Kamp is trying to extend the jail term of the slayer of Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. Robbins jury choices due SAC RAMENTO (AP > Defens~ and prosecution at- torneys in state Sen. Alan Rob- bins' sex crimes trial expected to s pend a third day today argu- ing preliminary motions behind closed doors. Deputy District Attorney Albert Locher and Michael Sands, one of Robbins' lawyers, said they hoped to complete the arguments today so jury selec- tion could begin Friday. Cancer victim '6 gOing on 60' SAN CARLOS (A P> -At the end. 6·year-old Allan Wilson. his bones ruined by cancer, could only crawl. But the precocious youngster found the strength to comfort his sister, arrange his own funeral and prepare a will. .. He was 6 going on 60," said Patty O'Brien, a family friend. ''He just decided, 'I'm sick and I'm going to do what 1 can to live every moment.· " Allan decided for himself to undergo a rare and dangerous bone marrow transplant, hoping to s tem the advance of the cancer. But when it failed and it was obvious he was dying, he told his sister. the marrow donor, that it wasn't her fault the treatment didn't work. ''He told her she had no con- trol over whet.her he lived or died. only the control to give him the gift," said his mot.her, Beth Wilson. Friends and family members say young Wilson, who died Sun- day after battling his illness for three years, was a remarkable child. The disease was discovered shortly after his third birthday. At a party, be began walking strangely after playing on a slide. ~ ~ t. • ~rtf· DESIGN A BEAUTIFUL SUMMER ~~ ~ ROSES A T ROGERS. TREES -• Roger's complete nursery has a Choose from an outstanding beautiful selection of bush and THE NURSERY selection of trees. Plant a tree .,., .. ~.J climbing roses ... over 500 plants WfIH1N to begin a family tradition that in 30 varieties. You will find THEGARDEN wlll i;><ovideyearsofbeautyand many of your favorites among service. these outstanding varieties. 5gal. reg. 112.00 NOW '8.99 2gal. reg. •6.98 NOW '4.98 PETUNIAS Available In several colors to brighten your home this spring. 4'pot reg. '1.09 NOW ' .79 BOSTON FERN A real Indoor charmer. This hearty and popu!ar plant adds a special decorator touch al- most anywhere. Feed It regul- arly with Oxygen-Plus for full and lush beauty year round.1 ~ ---~-.Al.oo!!J~ 6'pot reg. •10.95 NOW'6.95 . ~· PATIO & GALLERY furniture and accessories de- signed to add extra pleasure to your summer relaxing and entertaining, and all available for Immediate delivery. SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY BOUQUET A colorful array of fresh cut spring flowers, artlstlcally arr- anged with Roger's flair. NOW '7.95 Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thul"lday, Mey 28, 1981 H/F Brown ·lnuth oil ruling J Governor pleased at halt of coastal lease sale LOS ANGELES <AP) -Gov· ernor Edmund G. Brown Jr. bu "vowed to stay in court as lone as necessary to protect the coa.t,' • and was pleased that bis· lawsuit led to a judge's order t.o temporarily halt the sale of 32 oil leases off the California coast his office said. •'We are pleased that the proc· ess bas been stopped so the arguments on their merits can be heard," the governor's press se~relary Cari Beauchamp. said Wednesday alter U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelzer blocked the federal government from selling the 32 leases off the Cen- tral California coast. Brown and 19 local governments objected on environmental grounds to the sale of tbe tracts covering 600,000 acres in the Santa Maria basin, north of Santa Barbara. The governor feels •'the batUe has been won but the war is .OU ahead of us," said Ms . Beauchamp. In her ruling, the judge chided Interior Secretary James Wirtt for using ·•too narrow an in· terpretation" or federal law in excluding CalifQrnia from participating in pre-lease deal· h1g with the oil companies. ' She said California's right to control development of the coast under the Coastal Zone Manage· ment Act "would be lost forever" if it was exluded fron pre-lease arrangements, such as including developmental stipula- tions. She said she will issue a final ruling by the end of the summer. "There can be no doubt that a brief delay in the sale of those leases is in the public interest,;• she said in issuing the tem· porary injunction. "The delay w i 11 c a u-s e i n s i g n i f i c ant monetary injury t.o the U.S. gov· ern ment or to the potential leaseholders." Write r p act OK'd LOS ANGELES (AP> -Strik- ing writers overwhelmingly ap- proved an interim contract agreement today with indepen- dent film and TV producers but rejected a "final offer" from the major producers by an even greater margin. I A tw~day oll-leue auction ln progreli was to continue tOday with the sale of 81 lracta that were not contested in the suit, said BLM spokesman Mike Fergus in Los Angeles. ihe southern sea otter and the gray whale. The suit also noted that the disputed tracts would provi only elpt percent of the total expected to come from aJJ tracts and contended the poten· tial for environmental harm out· weighed possible benefits. ~ Al the request of the U.S. Justice Department, the judge agreed th.at the U.S. Bureau of Land Management could unseal blda on the disputed tracts even though it could not award the leases, to see if in fact anyone is bidding on them. Fergus said the federal gov· ernment wiJI decide whether to appeal after the judge issues her final decision on the oil-tract leases. In his suit, Brown contended Watt violated the federal En· dangered Species Act because the leases would pose a threat to "Friend of the court" brt.0 supporting Brown's suit werl filed by eight coastal clues ~ 11 coastal counties in CallfornN They were the counUes of HWlf boldt, Mendocino, Sonoma, Marin, San Francisco. Safi Mateo, Santa Cruz, Montere)"f San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbati and Santa Clara. and the citie§ of Brisbane, Ca rm e l . L'i Angeles, San Luis Obispo, Santl Barbara, Santa Cruz, Sanil Monica and Seaside. ,if ... ..,...., F1NAL lOAST -Casket bearing body of "Toastmast~ Genera!" George Jessel is carried from chapel at Culver~ ty cemetery Wednesday following eulogy to entertainer w~ died Sunday at 83 . In attendance were Jirqmy Stewar.t Cleft). Sammy Davis Jr. and Danny Thomas. At right ~ Milton Berle followed by former Gov. Edmund (Pat} Brown. WESTCLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE BANK ~·Nll~A CHARLES BAAA JEWB.ERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VERf'.Oll ~TSWEAR OR. LOU ELDER oprometriit HAIRHANDlERS SALCN HALLIOA Y'S MEN'S CLOTHNG HICKORY FARMS specidty food items HUMPTY DUMPTY childrer\ s clothinq JEAN OAH.. designer ond better ipotts""90 .~':me~ MARKET BASKET Mes AMIES 1'E£Ns NANCY DUNN ANTI~ES NEWPORT 8Al.80A SAVINGS P APEft UNUMITEO qift\ ond storioNn SAV-CN DRUGS "~=90! VET A'S INTIMATE "'9AAa WESTO.IFf Q.EANQS WESTO.IFf Cau-8S gcM!Mt ware and colectilles WESTCUFf SHaS XAVIER'S FL~IST .. . j • I 0'9nge CoMt DAIL. Y PtlQl /fhuttday. May 28, 1111 Lack of recreation stirs youth problem The Irvine City Couneil bu endoned a sweepln1 Ht of rec- ommendationa aimed at dealln1 with a variety of youth problems in the growing community. Many of these problems re-- volve around juvenile deUnquen- cy and drug use. Whlle these problems are experienced everywhere, Irvine's lack of commercial recreational ac· ti vi ties for youth tends to magnify them. The recommendations came last week from the city's Youth Support Team, which wu formed la.st year by then-Irvine Mayor Art Ant.booy amid growing con- cern in the community about dif · ficulties facing the city's youth. The campaign seemed to ~trike a responsive chord in the business community, which com· plained that youths witla few places to go iJl a city generally lacking in commercial f adlltiea tiere "hanging out" ~ Irvine'• hlany neighborhood sbopplng centers. The Y.aut Support Team, eomposed of local clergy, police, businessmen and community {eaders, developed a set of rec- ommendations calling for the hiring of counselors and police of. ficers to be assiened to juveaile delinquency beats. Those recommendations and others carried a total price tag of SlU,131. Mlile Ul• Ctty Council endoned most ol tat ... reeom- meadatioal, it stofped lhort of allocattni any money. That will be considered at nest month'• bud1et bearin11. That la the proper time for their cmsideration, 1i.8ee the dty h• a multitude of.,. .. ,... •. ing fundiD.1 an4 eac• mutt be halaneed againat the otben. It is too early to aay wll.lcb of the recommendation• deMrve funding and which don't . However,. it can be tald that tllere just aree't ...,..,.. thl.qs fer younpten, to cto ta t.M city. There are ao M'fU.1 all•ya, roller skating rink•, ~,tuna ca1es or miniature 1olf ceunee. There is only one ciaema in the clty and that ia a I airly recent ad· di'tlon. C.-tainlY i1l a pl.....t eom· .,unity eueti aa lnille there IDWlt be roo'lll I or so mt of these f acillUes. 'nle Irvine Company 1hould do more to develop them and the city should do more to streamline the plannills process for commercial reueaUonal ven· tures. Meanwhile, perhaps the Youth s..,port Team cu pronde aome positive pro1rams that could ease aome very real w<>b- 1 ems confronting the city's youngsters. State aid for gifted A program of accelerated education for talented and gifted students will be offered next year at the Irvine Unified School Dis· trict despite a $3.5 million budget 4eficit. Irvine Unified School District trustees say the program can be continued since it's primarily {unded by $S7, 700 in state grant money. The program also draws some money from the district general fund, but trustees say this money would have to be spent anyway if participants were attendine conventional classes. What it means is about 180 elementary school children will continue to get enriched educa- tion on a full-time basis and another 1,500 students of all grade levels will get accelerated education on a part-time basis. There is concern about spendin1 money on special education at a time when the dis· trict is having trouble funding conventional education. Programs have a way of costing more than initial estimates and we hope this doesn't prove true in thU ease. Only recently trustees adopt· ed a $100.per-student school Mis fee. They are con1iderin1 an athletic fee Jlan as well. With such drutie revenue. 1atherinl methods in the worts, some parents will qu•tion fUnd. illg special educational procrams for select studeata. In the final analyns, there'• probably nothinc wron, with us· mg state grant money or a P"O: 1ram such M talented an4 lifted education. After all it's the lack ef that state and federal money that has put the sctloel dPtrict in such a tight financial predica· ment. Recycling_grants help With state funds for almost all purposes in short supply, it was a pleasant surprise to leam that four Orange Coast com- munities bad been awarded sub- st an ti al grants from a '2.7 million fund to increase recycling efforts. Officials of the state Solid Waste Management Board said the agency bad rejected eidlt ap- plications for every one it funded, but it was sufficiently impreued by local efforts to allocate $328,905 to be divided amon1 Huntington Beach, Irvine, C-Oeta Mesa and South Laguna. The largest grant, $143,!06, went to Rainbow Disposal of Hun· tington Beach where recyclin1 capacity at the Nichols Street plant will be stepped up from 100 U> l,OOOtons of materials a month. The firm operates both drop- off services, where donors leave such items as bundled • newspapers, and a buy-back service which pays donon for re- cyclables . such as aluminum cans. Solag Dispoaal of South La1una received •.m to fa a buy-back center in San Juan Capistrano and curb pickup services in south coast com· munities. Student recyclin1 effort. woo Uae granu in both Irvtae and Costa Mesa. UC Irvine Aaloclat- ed Students lac. were liTen $52,oeo for equipment and im- provements at their 4ro&>«f lite on Jamboree Road . Aad tile Oran1e Coast Colle1e M·heur 4rop-<Jft enter at tM 9cllil9I WM 1rantetl $44,4'5 for improTe· aeftts. Since the reeycllll• cm belp hotll the envirmant 1114 the ecOllOfta1, these armta we.N ap- pear to be money well l&JIM. 6pinions expressed In the space abOve are those of the Oally Piiot. Other views U · •ressed on this page are those of their authors a('d artists. Reader comment Is invlt· td. Address The Daily Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mew. CA 92•26. Phone 01•) ~2-02l. L.M. Boyd/Socks started it The playen on Princeton'• tlntfoot· ,s>all team wore oran1e and black •trtped aocu. Maybe you don't thlnk tbat'• sipfficant. But it ls. Quite tl1nlfkant. Becauaeottboleaockl, the ,.ayen were nicknamed Tt1era, t.h9 pnt ac,bool team witb uy . IC)l't Of •lcbame 1uch u that. The ldei eaupt ~.More t.eam1 DOW aN called '11en tban are called oythlq etae. , ORANGE COAST Daily Piiat You may even be a~uelAtlld Wttti a - team known u the Tt1en. All becMIM oltbotesoekl. .. ' i Cruise missile deep WASHINGTON -The Pentagon's cruise missile program is a classic ii· lustration of the cavalier attitude toward the taxpayers' money that characterizes so much or the nation's defense spending. Here. as part of a continuing series on Defense Depart· ment extravagance, are the details of the fouled-up project: Already the cruise program is at least $13 million in the red this year. and the missiles are beset by engine mallunc· lions, according to a classified Pen- tagon document. What makes this so troubling is that the deficiencies arise, from the defense contract system itself. which rarely re· quires contractors to operate on a com· petitive basis. Poor performance and outlandish profits are built into the system. IN JUST THE past 12 months, de· fense contractors made · 'excessive prof· its" totaling $80 million. according to the now defunct Renegotiations Board. In that same period. the Pentagon laid out $70 billion for procurement or weapons and services . or that astronomical s um. almost $48 billion. or 65 percent, went to contractors who were the only bidders for the job. Only 8 percent of all defense contracts were awarded as the result or advertising for bids . The cruise missile is intended to become the m ains tay of the U.S. nuclear arsenal. Capable or being launched Crom land , sea or air, the mi s- sile is small enough to be deployed in hard-to-spot locations, _yet it can evade enemy radar and deliver a nuclear warhead 1,500 miles a way. or the nearly 30 companies involved In the crulse program, only one G. -JA-CK-AN_D_ER-SD-N -~ • General Dynamics -has given the Pentagon its main progress report for 1980. And Gener al Dynamics, with a $2 billion chunk of the program, has charged the government $325,000 for status reports it has never delivered. Yet a Pentagon spokesman insisted to my reporter Sharon Geitner he was "n ot awar e o f any contract ir· regularities." DUPLICATION ABOUNDS. Vitro Labs and Mc Donnell Douglas, operating under broadly worded contract terms, have wound up doing essentially the same computer work. Overcharges are unconscionable. One cruise contractor, for example, charged the taxpayers almost Sl million for a • ID red special data list that should have cost about $40,000 Wh en confronted wi th this discrepancy, t he company blandly blamed it on a "typographical error." A relatively minor. but widespread, boondoggle results in the government paying twice for the same contract. This happens when an e mploye«r quits a defense contractor and forms his own one-man software company. He then char ges has old employer or another company for the ··right .. lo his contract at the going r ate Of $40.000 per COO· tract. Tardiness is epid emic. Navy testing or launch-control centers was stalled because the software was delivered six m onths late In 1979, McDonnell Douglas admitted to other contractors in a private memo that it would have to .. s li p" (delay> the s chedule three months because it couldn "l have the launch hardware ready THE BASIC TROUBLE with the cruise program. as with most defense projects. is that cest·plus and sole· source contracts vague on the gov- ernment's requirements and wide open on budgeting give contractors no in · centive to do tHe job right a nd on ti me. In fact, the system encourages ir· responsibility by stretching out the length or a contract and increasing the profits as the co~t goes up Busing funds better spent on schools To the Editor: It was announced May 4, that Presi· dent Reagan was proposing to pay stu· dents who volunteer to be bused from either white to black areas and vice- versa, at least one-half year's tuition, or the number or years they were bused, in tuition at a Missouri state institution. The price for this project, one which President Reagan most assuredly in· tends to be used across tbe nation, is $6 million. A bill taxpayers will obviously pick up. RATHER TRAN throwing away this money on buses, gasolin e, and "scholarships," why not use tbis large sum to significantly improve lbe quality of education in the areas in question? Buses and gasoline are commodities that do little to improve a child's mind ; MAILBOX and the "scholarships" are something l completely oppose. Because they are to be used at state institutions, l am sure that there are financial aid program• for the "truly needy," one of Pres!· dent's key catch phruett. Rather, the $6 million could be u.sed to betV.,r our failing educational systems. Despite the I amous 1954 Supreme Court decision in the Brown vs Topeka Board of Education case, separate can be equal if sufficient money la spent to create a proper learning environment and to encourage qualified people to become teachers. Teachers now are at the lower level QI the pay scale in our society, while tbey bold one ol lhe moet cruel al jobs tn our country, lbe traintnl of future Amettcan voters and office holders. I can only· hope that President Rea1an wm realize t.bat $8 m.ilUon can _,. 1pent much mote wlHly than be bu _,roposed. TaJCpayer money must be 1pent to better 1ovemment aervicH, not bribe indiVldu.al studenta to equal racial quous. . CHRISTOPHER K. LYNCH · Gmteful /or mi To Ute Editor: Thank you very IDUCb for \be COV· era1e you'v• been 1lvln1 to All llouban. It'• about lime we were Ii"° 1 Uttlt art ln Cotta Meta. The seulptw. uve sre•tb' improved that are• or town. I've lived ln Cotta Meta all my We and our famll) fa•ll*t Httle .. Goat Hill" wa1 back wbtll. We'Yt allodon•t· eel manJ relics ol Colta ..... to Bonn ......... So ... Naldelll of eo.t. .... l do .,...u, lUDl All for .... ~-· Uoa to our dlY• •~· I bope JGD 11" All aad ~ lib him the coverage they need to fight for their expressions or art. Thank you for helping in putting a little art back into our city. C.S. OPP Boondoggle To the Editor: I am totally shocked that the Reagan defense budget containing such incredi· ble boondoggles as the MX missile system was passed with only Mark Hatfield voting against. I just don't understand such a total commitment toward a stance of war. This was a black day for the country and the culmination of a cumulative lack of intelligence, courage and int~g rity. as well as a sign of the worst kind or depravity existent in our government and the elected representatives. ANDY WING Vnf air to judges To the Editor: Responding to your May 11 editorial: How can a Superior Court judge pro- ceed through trial and (when the de· fendant has been found guilty> senlenc· ing when the defendant never appears before that court for trial? The statistics r egarding only the Orange County Superior Court released by the Judges' Committee for Public In· fox;mation and Judicial Education could only apply to those defendants who pro· ceed as far as trial before this Superior Court bench. Perhaps the editor should enquire of the police departments as to reas,ons for arrests and of the pros· ecutor's offices as to chargea actuall}' filed for further statistics dealing with the number of those arrested and the disposition of each alleged perpetrator's case. The statement that the judges "cbose to focus on one limited set of statistics . . . that made their position appear more favorable" infers a bias In their interpretaUon of the statistics. It seems to me that. the Superior Court commit· tee could use onlf the statistics which refer to defendants afpearing before them. Moel persons arrested. never pro- c eed as far H tbe Superior Court bench; of thoee that do, the prwecutor presents a plea-barcatn to the court 11 a • · l..tlttra /rom reader• ore wtlcomt. Ttw right 10 condfn.ttr ltftera to /ii space or tlimlno.tt libel 11 reserved Ltttn• o/ JOO worda or lt11 will b( gi~n prtftrfmet. All ltlter• mwt mcludt lignaturt Giid matlfno acldr•u .but flame& rnc1J1 be wilhlwld Ol'I t1- qut1t ff 1u/flcltnt rta1on fa apportnt . POftrJI 11All raoe bf J*bUtllfd. l.,.fftff• mar bf tt'l~hon~ to 642...,. Nam1 Giid ~ n.umt>n of tfw coftlnbulor mu 1-gwfft for t>t'rtftcahon J*'JIONI "'fail accompli"' m a large percentage or those cases It is unfortunate that tbe Superior Court judges or this state (a bench so highly regarded throughout the United States) are forced to defend themselves against what has become a continuous attack by the media. Paired with the constitutionally guaranteed right of freedom of the press should be the responsibility or the media to accurately reporttothe public. · MARY DESROCHERS . Positive effect To the Editor: The recent "shouting match" which erupted in a meeting between county of· fi cials and residents of Santa Ana Heights had one positive effect. Some or the citizens came up with the idea that since the Irvine Company will be the chief beneficiary of the John Wayne Airport expansion and the citizenry the chief losers, the Irvine Company should be willing to make land exchanges with the residents of Santa Ana Heights. This proposal is eminently fair and reasona· ble for all parties concerned. THE IRVINE Company which has many hotels planned for Irvine, Newport, and the are a between Newport and Laguna needs an interns· tional airport to accommodate jumbo jets in order t.o fill its hotels and t.o prof- it from these business ventures. On the other hand, the residents of Santa Ana Height.s will reap no benefits from the airport expans1on: Indeed, the residents will suffer damages to their health and decreases in their property values. Therefore, Santa Ana Heights resi· dents should be given a choice of Irvine Company-owned property in a location that is equally distant from the ocean but that Is located away from the deafening noise of jumbo jets upon which the Irvine Company will depend In order to fatten its profits. BLANCHE de CASTILLA lllllY Ill I wonder what airport tbOM Ari,_• at· tomeya, employed by Newport Beacr. to cl0te down John Wayne Alrport. lancl at when they ny Ln weekly to Oran1e County? "' u .IL ...... , .. ,_.. _ _..... ............. ... -c....,.., , .... , ............ _,., ......... ... ............................ --·r"' ..., .... THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1911 Alaska's Mount McKinley is 'most dangerous walk in the world' . . . 88 OBITUARIES 84 LEGA LS 84 UCI wants medical fee pact with· 0C' rewritten By FREDERICK SCBOEMEID., Of ... ,,.. ........... The expressed willingness of the University of California to develop a new indigent medical services contract ''is a step in the right direction,'' Ralph Clark, chairman of the Orange County Board of Supervisors, said today. Clark said be was "ap- preciative" of the gesture made Wednesday by UC President David Saxon in a five-page letter outlining the UC Regents' posi- tion in a long·standing dispute over an existing contract by which the university provides in· digent medical care at the UC Irvine Medical Center in Orange. Saxon proposed in the letter that the current "fee for service" contract, under which services are billed to the county on an individual. case-by-case basis, be substantially modified. The UC president proposed that a "lump sum" contract be developed by which the county each year would make a single payment for treatment of in· digents at the medical center. The university would want about $14.5 million under such a contract in fi scal 1981-82 Saxon said. ' . Clark said because of nego~a- taons now in pro1resa that be would not endorse Saxon'• pro- posal, or any other particular method of resolvin1 the dl1pute over the existing contract. ''We 're not being bardnoee . . . we are open to anytblna • • Clark said. "The fact Is I aP. preciate their gesture to get something worked out." The supervisors' chairman, Condition now seen.as 'intolerable' however, said the county would not agree with the $14.S million figure Saxon supported for a lump sum-type contract. The existing contract between the university and the county covering medical care for in- digents was negotiated in 1975. Under the agreement, the uni· versity routinely bills the coun- ty each time an indigent -a person without the means of paying his hospital bill -is treated at the medical center. Physicians employed by the county review the bills to es tablish if the university pro- vided the proper treatment. The county will pay onJy that portion Qf a blll which it considers ap· proprlate. The county and the university are now locked In arbitration over more than $11 million in billed services the county con- sidered excessive. About 75 000 bills are being disputed. ' Saxon claimed in his letter that some action on the entire is· sue of the contract must be taken to stop what hf! termed an ''intolerable financial drain be- ini incurred by UCIMC." To underscore its desire to re- negotiate the contract, the re- gents have placed the county on notice that the existing contract will be terminated effective July 1, 1985. That leaves both parties with four years to resolve their differences. The county already Is explor- ing other options of handling in- digents, such as contracting with private ho s pital s throughout the county. County government during the current fiscal year will spend about $12.S million for providing medical services to indigents. Provision of such care is re· qui,ed by law. Reclaimed water rate hike sought Chambe r r ent goes up in Irvine ~ Anyone who drinks water in Irvine will be happy lo hear the new rate increases proposed by Irvine Ranch Water District of· ficials. But farmers and those usmg reclaimed water might have a hard time swallowing the new price hikes. The proposal unveiled Tues- day night calls for treated water or drinking water to remain at 41 cents per 100 cubic feet or $6.15 for the average monthly bill. But untreated and reclaimed water for agricultural irrigation will jump 11.8 percent , from $63.50 per acre foot to $71, if the plan is adopted June 22. Sewage rates are slated to go up 30 cents per month to $12.20. If the new rate plan is ap- proved, landscaping irrigation waler will rise S.8 percent from $102.50 per acre foot to $108.SO pe! acre foot. Reclaimed water is used ln University Park, Turtle Rock, Mason Park, Woodbridge and at UC Irvine. It is used only for landscaping purposes. A public hearing concerning the rate increase is scheduled June 15 at the Irvine Ranch Water District office. The rent's gone up, but the Irvine Chamber of Commerce is going to continue to lease space from the city. In a memo to the city council, Paul Brady, Jr .. assistant city manager, recommended that · the city sign a two-year lease with the chamber at 95 cents a square foot for the 750-square foot office located in City Hall. The origina) one-year contract signed in March 1980, caJled for 70 cents• square foot, the goint rate. But rents have increased to 95 cents a square foot for alJ clty aepartmenta, said Brady. The first contract sparked some controversy because most chambers maintain offices separate from their respective city, including Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Artifacts slowing planting of trees "The current lease has caused neither body any problems; and in fact the relationship has worked out quite well." said Brady. Chamber officials have agreed to the new terms. The Irvine Company halted the planting of orange trees Wednesday following an outcry of protest from archaeologists who claim the site east of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station is full of artifacts from a 6,000- year-old Indian village. Archeologist Marie Cottrell, said today she and other archaeologists began protesting the terracing of the Tomato Springs area last week. Ms. Cottrell is the president of Archeologlcal Resource Management Corp., a Garden Grove based organization. ·'We gave them adequate warning to do something before we went public," she said. "I think the terracing has dis· turbed the site, but I don't think It has destroyed It.'' Company spokesman Jerry Collins called the terracing of the 6 to 8-acre site in the foothills north of the Lambert Reservoir "an unfortunate overaitht." All work on the historical site HEADS VCI STUDENTS ICtdhfl L..,a S'°"fll will be suspended until further study, Collins said. The terrac- ing was part of a 245-acre valen· cla orange planting plan that will continue on the area sur· rounding the Indian site. Ms . Cottrell said the site was the location of a major Indian trading and political center that dates back at least 6,000 years. An archeological dig on only 5 percent of the area two years ago resulted in the collection of more than 33,000 artifacts. in- cluding arrowheads, beads and trading goods. .t;vidence unearthed at the site reveals an ancient lifestyle, where desert area Indians traded stone to be fashioned into knives and other trading materials, said Ms. Cottrell. Ms. Cottrell said a meeting will be held today with Irvine Company representatives, coun- ty Environmental Management Agency officials and archeologlsta to discuss the future of the site. First woman named UCI unit chief • Kalby Lynn Stan11, the flnt woman president of Auoclated Studenta at UC Irvine, wW take office June 15. County to le t lroine keep unused funds Orange County officials have agreed to let the city of Irvine keep $106,217 in unspent grant funds for a low-income project scheduled to begin next spring. In March 1980, the city al· located $226,000 in Community Development Block Grant Funds to Shapell Government Ho1JSing Inc. to construct the Harvard Manor, a low-income project in University Town Center. However, the company failed to spend $106,217 of the funds. Usually that money would , have to be returned to Housinl and Urban Development for use by another city in the county, ac- cording to Debby Linn of the city's Community Development ( Department. But the city was able to work I out an agreement to have the UD· j spent money used for the con- struction of another low income apartment complex in l North wood, bordered b y 1 Trabuco Road, Culver, Irvine, the San Diego Freeway and the future extension of Yale. Pottery sale setforOCC The Irvine resident la major-tn1 in eeonomlca and coml)Uter Oran1e Coast Collete 1tudentl 1clen ce. She 1raduated t'rom will Hll pottery nut Monday Univenlty Hlth School and bu tbroush Wednesday ln the patio been active in 1tudeat aovem-between OCC'• Admtnlatradon ment 1tnce entertn1 UCl. Butldinc and Student Center, a , Other offlcen are Jeffrey M · 1poknman 1ald. 1af, San Marlao, executive vice H o1ted by the colle«i•'• preatdeat· !!rte Dlller, a.-..... Ceramld DeJ)artment. tbe ul,e Beach, vice pre1ldeat for lld· la open \o elae public from to mtnlstratlve aervlcee, J amff a .m . to ' p.m. OD each ol tbe Harvey, Downey, vtee prtlidlat t hree d.QI. ot 1tudeM Mrvieet · ud ..... • Proeeedl will be ...a \o blN Rafael Jllnlna Jr.; Lakewood,. sunt ledufen f« tbe Cel"Mllla vice president ot aeademlc af· club. On tale will be •t.GDeware. faire. porcelain and raku ware. - Aaron Young works on his charcoal life drawing of model Anne Hauke. Irvine youngsters learned a lesson In holct- ing still as they took turns serving as a model while the rest of the class rendered charcoal sketches. Instructing the 10· to 12-year-olds in a spring drawing and painting class was Helen Seigel. In another area of the Irvine Arts and Crafts Center, 7-to 9-year-olds were making balloon animals, under the direction of Kate Weiss. The young craftsmen wrapped clay around balloons and then their c reations were fired. Arts and crafts classes are held in the center in Heritage Park, Irvine. Summer sessions will begin June 22, with registration being taken at an open house, scheduled at the center from 7 to 9 p.m. June 12. Alison Ascher, 7, uses tots of concentratfa while creating balloon animals. :! ·I . ( . DETOURS A DEADllEAD8 DEPT. -Thoee lawma.kera up in Sacramento who have been lriPiDI and turnln1 livid over the state highway department could do all our hapless motorists one little favor by paaslng a simple law. So far, our august solona have made a lot of speeobet about how they ought to chop off the highway chief, Adriana Gianturco, at her pursestrinp by reducing her salary to zero. Other teeth·gnashings have happened. But blamed little ac· tlon. Through all this, our lawmakers have been makjng the usual mistake. They want to start taking action at the top. FOR THE SAKE of our ~ mM MURPHINI ®-,, harried commuters who have to use these highways, however, the Legislature would be a lot better off startin& at the bot· tom -then working up. The prime example of this ls when highway crews, known as Caltrans employees, all of a sudden decid~. willy-nilly, to shut down some traffic lanes. When they do this, they leave the clear impression they couldn't give a tinker's damn what road conditions happen to be at the time. An acquaintance of mine, for example, was motoring up Pacific Coast Highway just awhile back when traffic came to a screeching halt and backed up parked cars from Santa Ana River Bridge at Huntington Beach to The Arches Overpass in Newport. WHEN THE MOTORISTS finally crept along and got to the river bridge, what did they find? Two lonesome Calt rans workers bad shut down an entire lane so they could shovel a couple of small piles of gravel around. Then only yesterday. Caltrans notifi'ed the Newport Beach cops that they'd have to shut a downcoast lane on Coast Highway at the Newport Bay Bridge for a bit of cable· stretching along about 9 a .m . That might not have been too bad because the worst of the rush would be over by that hour and traffic cops would be on the scene to help smooth out the traffic flow. TROUBLE WAS, the Caltrans crews decided to shut down the bridge lane earlier, at 8:30 a.m. and they didn't bother_ to notify Newport traffic officers of the change to an earlier time. The result? Traffic backed upcoast from the bridge all the way down Mariners Mile. It may have backed up all the way to Huntington Beach, for all we can tell. So that's why our legislators who want to lower the boom on Caltrans should actually start at the bottom. They should get these arbitrary and capricious detours and lane-closings un<ter control. ONE WAY MIGHT BE to pass a new stat e statute that wouJd decree, simply, t hat any time a Caltrans crew creates a major disruption in local traffic flow, the local cops are em· powered to arrest the work crews and throw them all in the local jail. Cool thinkers among us, particularly those lucky citizens who don't have to commute, might suggest, "My, my! That would be terrible! Why that's bot-beaded and reactionary ... " MAYBE SO. But it might cause a few of those highway people to think twice before they throw out all those orange closure cones and pop up their detour signs. They might get just a little more thoughtful before they start shutting down major traffic arteries during peak commuter rush hours. And tossing1.hem all in the slammer wouldo 't be any more reactionary than reducing poor Adriana's salary to a goose egg. Diatrict to fund facilities An agreement baa been reached between the Irvine Ranch Water Dlatrlct and attorneys representing poor famlllea wbo had .. ballenged a $994 million bond authoriza· ti on, it waa announced. today. The settlement calls for the water district to create special assess· ment districts to fund sewer and water facilities l.n any area in which at least 10 percent of the units are designat· ed for low and moder ate income people. In exchange , the plaintiffs represented by the Orange County Legal Aid Society agreed t.o drop an ap· peal after the IRWD won the suit filed last September. The creation of assess- ment districts will allow landowners and de- velopers to pay for water and se wage facilities through the sale of bonds that are re· paid over a lO·year- period, according to Art Korn, assistant general manager. Currently developers finance water and sewer projects either by hiring outside contractors or by paying the water dis- trict one lump sum for connection to an existing line. Korn said the advan- tage of an assessment district is that it will al- low developers to pay for their projects over a long period with low in- terest bond rates. "It's unofficially been our policy to support projects that are finan- cially feasible ," said Korn. "This settlement just formally puts it into our rules and regula· lions." A similar agreement was worked out with 1,000 units in Northwood and a sewer treatment facility along the coast, according to Korn. Vega s push LAS VEGAS (AP) A record $14.8 million advertising budget for the fiscal year 1981-82 has been approved by the Las Vegas Conven· lion an d Visitors Authority board o f directors. Pc t~ share dump costs ~ l!:x cavators of the Boucher Jandrill got an apparent discount ;ruesday to clean up the Hunt· blgton Beach dump and move ~on ·hazardous materials into an 1rvine landfill. The Orange County Board of Supervisors agreed to charge Mola Development Corp. about Irvine council OKs truck limit $36,500 -or $1.25 per ton to d eposit about 30,000 tons of material at the county-run Coyote Canyon landfill in Irvine. Supervisor Harriett Wieder, whose 2nd District includes the Boucher site, said the county's county's approximate expense to run the landfill. Officials in the county Solid Waste Manage- ment Department had suggested a charge up lo $3.SO oer ton. or about $105,000. could be levied. aid is merited to help satisfy a public health problem. Retirees wut "This effort is 1mdoubtedJy a L _ .~~· pioneer one in that it will be a to Trear OJJ icer first·time venture of the private The Orange Coast Division of . and public sectors to resolve a the California Retired Teachers potentially dangerous health Association will meet al noon The Irvine city council Tues-hazard," she said. June 10 in Clubho use 2 at day night approved a seven-ton Mola officials say they are Leisure World in Laguna Hills. 'limit on trucks traveling along paying about $3 to remove w. Kelly Adams, the newly qeronimo Way and Toledo Way potentially toxic oil drilling re· elected state president of the or- :after residents living in Lake sidue left at the former dump site ganization, will be the guest 'Forest complained about noise. at Bolsa Chica Street and Warner speaker. The restrictions will apply to Avenue. They have plans to build For reservations send $6 to truck traffic between Bake 22A condominiums on the 12.S Miss Ethel Pratt, 28132 Via .~arkway aod Lake Forest acres. Bonalde, Mission Viejo, 92675 Drive, who are traveling to the The $1.25 per ton figure is the before June 3. city's ind~trialcomplex.1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ !· .. ... i: i: !: . ;· NEEP SoM~ ~UICK CA6H? • HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM Mercary Savings Now Offers NEW "Repo Plans."* ~~ We ha•• several "fwtcll"• c: .. r...tty available for our c•tOIMn FOR CURRENT RATES ... Call or visit your nearest Mercury office. :,..... . ' • ' lllltllt.lucll 7812 Edinger Hnt Bch , CA. 92647 (714) 8424333 .. MERCURY SAVINGS Lab fnt 23021 L.au Center Dr. ' Et Toro. CA. tll30 (71 •) 770.2901 TIStil 1086 trvln• B!Vd. Tuttln, CA l29IO (714)132-7101 ~ o.i11r1i.1 .... - Peg Forgit. in doorway of vintage Newport Beach hardware store, plans to close shop /or last time Saturday. Forgi('s hardware shop shntting down Peg Forgit says she'Jl have one last appliance sale before closing h er late husband's Newport Beach hardware store for the last time Saturday. • The widow of former Newport Beach city councilman Al Forgit says she reached a decision over the Memorial Day weekend to call it quits. The store, opened in 1928 as Estuc Hardware and purchased by Forgit in 1953, is to be leased to a group of architects. ·'It 1ust about makes me sick," Mrs. Forgit remarked. "It's like holding a wake in there. "A lot of people feel it will be a loss to the community but, I don't know -time passes and we all get old. Things change." She says the remaining inven- tory in the shop is to be sold t.o ABC Lumber in Costa Mesa which is rebuilding its facilities destroyed in a fire last year. She said her husband, who died of a heart attack last Sep· tember, had been planning to close up the brick shop near the Newport Pier. Mrs. Forgit said she'll con- tinue to Live in the apartment above the shop. The hardware shop, a country· store-Like collection of odds and ends. was once a noted gather- ing spot for Forgit's city hall and fishing friends. The shop gained a separate ·reputation because Forgil was fond of placing newspaper ads for his store In local papers that criticized or poked fun at officials on everything from litter to park- ing problems. f'orgit was elected lo the Newport counciJ in 1964 . His wife ran twice for a council seat, los- ing both times. most recently to present Cou ncilm a n Don Strauss. Mrs. Forgit said she's plan· ning no fanfare for Saturday's closing. "We'll just close it up Satur· day evening as usual ," she said. "and start taking an inventory on Sunday. That'll be it." Irvine backs r ecycling d espite loss Despite the fact that the city's losing money in the program, . Irvine council members Tues- day night approved the ex· tension of a newspaper collec· lion program in Woodbridge. Last December the council sanctioned a voluntary curbside newspaper pick-up for recycling purposes. By April 30 the city had collected $340 worth of newspapers. Advertising costs, not including staff time, have run Sl,150. The council also voled t.o ex· tend the program to El Camino Real. Walnut and the Culverdale and Orangetree areas. Publicity costs are expected to run $1,SOO, according to city staff reports. Water seepage feared Irvine residents living in the Colony, College Park, Wood- bridge and the Indus trial Com plex West may be in for the same water seepage problems suffered by some Turtle Rock residents last year. accordlng to a Los Angeles geologist. G le n Brown , director of Geological Services for LeRoy Crandall and Associates. said in a phone interview Tuesday that future seepage problems in those areas may be worse than those in Turtle Rock LeRoy Crandall was hired last year to study the water seepage problems in Turtle Rock that in· eluded soggy ground, moisture in houses and garages, falling slopes and damaged vegetation. The city council agreed Tues- day night to finance a $7,000 study by the same firm to in- vestigate the seventy of the water seepage. In Turtle RO<'k the problem was brought on by excessive ir· rigatioo and rain water that became trapped in the bedrock, according to Brown. But the problem racing the a r ea bounded by the Santa An a Freeway, Cul ver Drive, Bonita Canyon and San Diego Creek is more complex. Brown said. Those areas are s uffering from a high ground water level within five feet or the surface. In the past, irrigation processes pumped water out of the ground. The problem has been in· tensified by homeowners' over- watering, Brown said. ·'This will probably be more severe than Turtle Rock," Brown said. "We don't know whether we have one, two or five years to react. That's why we need the study " So far waler seepage has been reported along the curbs adja- cent to Irvine City Hall. Fluor Corp. has also complained about water se.-ping into work areas and air conditioning ducts, Brown said. City officials solved Turtle Rock's problems by installing four drains along Sierra Canyon, Southern Wood , Turtle Rock Drive, and Culver Drive. Brown said it was too soon to predict how the new water seepage problems · could be solved. Bob St.orchheim, manager of inspection services for the city, said he hopes the study will head off any serious water damage. "We're hoping lo nip it in the bud," said Storchheim. "The study will enable us to analyze the severity of the problem." Officials from the Irvine Ranch Water District are advis· ing residents to water their yards sparingly. Twice a week for 10 minutes is usually sufficient. they say Olber suggestions from the Water District include : watering in the morning or evening to avoid evaporation. planting drought·resistant shrubbery and checking all hoses for leaks. '~'- KCA25 $95 XZ006S $105 JG-047 $89.50 For your graduate! Theres a perfect Pulsar Quartz watch at a perfect price. What could be o better way to soy how much you core than with b Pulsar Quam wotch? They re so accurate they approach pe<fect timekeeping. And so convenient they never need winding. And they're all such great values, they'll pleose y~ just as much Everyone will love a new Pulsor Quartz watch. There ore alarm chronographs and calculator alarm watc~. And slim dress and sports models for special people who appreciate dependable. carefree service. great timekeeping and beautiful oppeorance Pulsar• Quartz Always a beat beyond. In technology. In value. Nu~ .f4Wl'1J--' · ~::::"'111111• • m LOS ANGELES <AP> -Com· munity Hospital of the Valleys in Perris, where a s tring of mysterious deaths are being in· vestigated by state and local 'aencies, has agreed to sur· reoder it.a license and concede th•t ''good cause exi&ts for the revocation," said a state or- Cicfai. ''The revocation probably will take effect within a 60-day period,'~ said James Lahana, a deputy attorney general for the slate Department of Health Services. In return, he said in a telephone interview, the OHS will stay its temporary license s uspension. which closed the 36·bed hospital May 13 on the basis of dozens of alleged health and safety shortcomings. The hospital also filed for bankruptcy. Reagan eyes vet protest LOS ANGELES (AP) -Amid signs of growing White House concern, a diabetic VietnaPl veteran, weakened and hospitalized after a four-day hunge r strike to protest Veterans Administration policy, said he was eating again "for the sake of my wife and kids." M eanttme , President Reagan's spokesman Mark Weinberg 'aid in Washington: '"The White House is watching the situation closely and we ar"4! concerned." Boyauxuded $8.6 million SAN JOSE (AP> -A boy who lost his legs and an arm after touching an electric line over a freight train ln Washington has been awarded al most $8 .6 million, a lawyer says. Steven Throop was 13 when the accident occurred July 4, 1978. His lawyer, Richard Alex· ander, said Wednesday the set- tlement won approval of Sant.a Clara County Superior Court Judge Edward Panelli in the 3. year·old case agajnst Conrail. Hiker suspect arrai,gnmenl set SANTA CRUZ (AP) -David Carpenter, a suspect in nine grisly trailside killings, faces ar- raignment today on charges he killed a young friend after meet- ing her to go car shopping. Santa Cruz County District Al· torney Art Danner says he will seek the death penalty for the 51-year-old printer. TERM ENDING -Sirhan B. Sirhan's prison sentence is slated to end Sept. l, 1984. LA County DA John Van de Kamp is trying to extend the jail term of the slayer of Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. Robbins j ury choices due SACRAMENTO <AP> Defense and prosecution at- torneys in state Sen. Alan Rob- bins' sex crimes trial expected to spend a third day today argu· ing preliminary motions behind closed doors. Deputy District Attorney Albert Locher and Michael Sands, one or Robbins' lawyers, said they hoped to complete the arguments today so jury selec- tion could begin Friday. Cancer victim '6 going on 60' SAN CARLOS <AP > -At the "He was 6 going on 60,'' said donor, that it wasn't her faijll end, 6-year-old Allan Wilson, his Patty O'Brien, a family friend. the treatment didn't work. bones ruined by cancer, could "He just decided, Tm sick and "He told her she had no con· Orange Coaat DAILY PILOT/Thursday, May 28, 1981 H/F Brown···· lauds oil ruling ] Governor pleased at halt of coastal lease sale LOS ANGELES <AP) -Gov· ernor Edm~tl G. Brown Jr. bas "vow-S to stay in court as long as necessary to protect the coast," and was pleased that bis lawsuit led to a judge's order to temporarily halt tbe sale of 32 oil leases off the California coast his office said. "We are pleased that tbe proc- ess bas been stopped so the arguments on their merif! can be heard,'' the governor'• -;resa secretary Cari Beauchamp, said Wednesday after U.S. Dlllrict Judge Marlana Pfaelzer blocked the federal government from selling the 32 leases off the Cen- tral California coast. Brown and 19 local governments objected on environmental grounds to Lbe sale of the tracts covering 600,000 acres in the Santa Maria basin, north of Santa Barbara. The governor feels ''the batUe has been won but the war Is still a h ead of us ," said Ms. Beauchamp. In her ruling, the judge chided Interior. Secretary James Watt for using ''too narrow an in· terpretation" of federal law in excluding California from participating in pre-lease deal- ing with the oil companies. She said Califomill's right to control development of the coast under the Coastal Zone Manage- ment Act "would be lost forever" if it was exluded fron pre·lease arrangements, such as including developmental stipula· lions. She said she will issue a final ruling by the end of the summer. "There can be no doubt that a brief delay in the sale of tho6e leases is in the public interest," she said In issuing the tem· porary injunction. "The delay will cause insignificant monetary injury to the U.S. gov- ernment or to the potential leaseholders." Writer pact OK'd ' A two-day oll-leue •uction in pro1res1 was to continue today with the sale or 81 tracts that were not contested In tbe suit, said BLM spokesman Mike Fergus in Los Angeles. At the request of .the U.S. Justice Department, the judge agreed lhat the U.S . .Bureau of Land Management could unseal bids on the disputed tracts even though lt could not award the leases, tD see ii in fact anyone is bidding on them. Fergus said the federal gov- ernment will decide whether to appeal after the ju4g~ issues her final decision bn the oil-tract leases. ln his suit, Brown contended Watt violated the federal En· dangered Species Act because the leases would pose a threat to the southern sea otter and ~e gray wbale. The suit also noted thfll the disputed tracts would provldle only eight percent ol the total cjl expected to come from all tire tracts and contended the poten· tial for environmental harm out· weighed possible benefits. -' "Friend of the court" brief- s up porting Brown's suit were filed by .eight coastal cl•les add 11 coastal counties in C&tllfornial They were the counties of Hu,_. boldt, Mendoclno, Sonoma, Marin, San Francisco, Sab Mateo, Santa Cruz, Monter&.)'\I San Luis Obispo, Santa Barban and Santa Clara, and the cities of Bris bane. Ca rmel , LOI Angeles, San Luis Obispo, Sant'i Barbara, Santa Cruz, Sant• Monica and Seaside. iii ---.t; only crawl. But •he precocious I'm going to do what I can to trol over whether he lived or youngster found lhe strength to live every moment.' " died, only the control to give LOS ANGELES (AP} -Strik· .,..,~ comfort his sister, arrange his Allan decided for himself to him the gift," said his mother, ing writers overwhelmingly ap-FINAL TOAST -Casket bearing body of ''Toastmast own funeral and prepare a will. undergo a rare and dangerous Beth Wilson. proved an interim contract General" George Jessel is carried from chapel at Culver C~- Friends and family members bone marrow transplant. hoping The disease was discovered agreement today with in~pen-ty cemetery Wednesday following e ulogy to entertainer wh say young Wilson, who died Sun· to s tem the advance · of the shortly after his third birthday. dent film and TV producers but died Sunday at 83. In attendance were Jimmy Stewa day after battling his Illness for cancer. But when it failed and it At a party, he began wallcing rejected a "finil offer" from the (left), Sammy Davis Jr. and Danny Thomas. At right i4 three years, was a remarkable was obvious he was dying, he strangely a fter playing on a major producers by an even Milton Berle followed by former Gov. Edmund ( PaO _ch_i_ld_·~~~~~~~~-~~~-t_o_l_d~h_i s~s-is_t_e_r_._t_h_e~m~a-rr_o_w~~sl_l_de_.~~~~~~~~~~-.--g-r_e_a_te_r_m~a-rg_i_n_.~~~~~~~-==B=-"rown~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WE MAIL GIITS! DESIGN A BEAUTIFUL SUMMER ROSES AT ROGERS TREE'S Roger's complete nursery has a beautiful selection of bush and .J climbing roses ... over 500 plants In :l> varieties. You will find many of your favontes among these outstanding varieties. 2gal. reg. 16.98 NOW '4.98 PETUNIAS Available In several colors to brighten your home this spring .. 4' pot reg. 11.09 NOW '. 79 BOSTON FERN ' A real Indoor charmer. This hearty and popu!ar plant adds a special decofat°' touch al- most anywhere. Feed It regul- arly with Oxygen-Plus for full and lush beauty year round. 6•pot reg. '10.95 NOW'8 .95 THE NURSERY WrIHIN THE GARDEN Choose from an outstanding selection of trees. Plant a-tree to begin a family tradition that tiilJJI wUI provide years of beauty and service. 5gal. reg. '12.00 NOW '8.99 -t PATIO&GALLERY · l Roger's Gallery displays an ~ excellent selectlon of patio furniture and accessocles de· signed to add extra pleasure to your summer relax(ng and entertaining, and all available for Immediate delivery. SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAYBOUQUBT ., A colorful array of fresh cut spring flowef's, artlsttcally 8fl\ anged with Roger's flair. NOW '7.95 ..... ~ , ...... ,,. ~--~~·""""'"......_. . ......-----.. ~- ~--.,-...... ..._. ,,.,.,. • WESTCLIFF PLAZA ANTHONY'S SHOE ~VICE BANK OF.AMERICA CHARLES BAAA JEWaERS ' .. CROWN HARDWARE DICK VER~ ~TSWEAA DR. LOU 8.0ER Oplomelritl HAIRHANDl.ERS SALCN HALLIDA Y"S MEN'S 0.0THING HICKORY FARMS spetiolty food items H~MPTY DUMPTY c ildten·s dott.inq JEANDM de~r ond bener sportswear LAGALL~A eleqonce in CJthor, MARKEUASKET MES AMIES TEENS NANCY OU""' ANTIOJES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVlNGS PAPER UNLIMITED qifts ond stotionert $AV.ON DRUGS ~EEPER sportswear VET A'S INTIMATE !l'f'AAB.. WESTG.IFf Q.EN-85 WESTG.IFf CatNERS 90"""•' wore and collect& WESTCUFf SHaS XAVIER'S ROOST .. ". c I • Sales tax revenuea boost ,Mesa'3 income While most Ora.nae County cities are watclililt dollan ud keeping budget lncreuee for nqt fiscal year around the 5 perceet mark, Costa Mesa is adding et.n and hiking expenditures by about 15 percent. , The city is in the enviable poei· lion ~ relying little oo property taxes, once the mainstay ~ loe&l government operations throughout California. That was before Proposition 13 all but dried upthatfountainofwealthinup8. City Manager Fred Sonab&l and Finance Director Bob Oman predict city income will he up aear- ly 22 percent next year despite cuts ln allocations from the state. Most of the funds will come from 1 percent of all sales taxes :collected in Costa Mesa. · City Council memben and Chamber of Commerce leaden have done more than 1oout~Uteir way to entice industry.and com- aierce t.e Q>eta ..... llDN ltl 911- co..,..atJon Ma city la 119. The clty'a porUGa al..._ ta reven• 11 apedM to el• w tU,ll0,000 next ftacal 1••· 'l\lt'• $1.6 mlllioe mer..._ ....,.. ftleal period. Sonab .. pndt ...... .... wW alDc• .......... to Ceeta .... ae9' ,.._. -... trom the '3.38 million otttib year. Tbe sinS)e Jar ... t ,_....,tale area ieneraUai aalel tua for the eity and ita rMiienta 1-lcMllla eo..t Plua, cityetnclah Ide. The secon4 lar•"t ee-tributol' is "Awto aew:'· u.e ear dealerships llal•I Jfarbor loulevard. It's euy to cum the traft'ie and coe.-UoB lllat briBI IMtt- pers Md empleyMI from other communit.ie9int-Colta MNa. CoMlclerin• ~· citJ Hl'Viees U..y'NMllO&=:r~=to be oftertna \Min . Cost not sole issue . • Low-cost housing in Costa Mesa became an issue last week when the City Council approved a ·condominium P.roject squeezing J6 housing umts where only 12 normally should go. • A3 incentive U> builders, city -officials two years &fO approved a policy allowing builders to in- -crease housing density on in- dividuat 'tong, narrow and 41if- ficul\ buildin& lots if such Iota are joined. Purpose of the policy was lwo-fold: to encouraae new boos· ing to replace old and dilapidat· :ed, and to enhance living condi· lions by creating homes ~ better 'design surrounded by more OJteB space. · When Kramer-Like Co., Inc. took advantage of the lot- combination policy, city official.a expected a more imaginative project tho tile ene pr•e•tecl with small ilMli~-1 ~anll and houses .U ill a rew. Relyin1 en a compaay al'Okesman'a caa..UO. ~ IM.t cfesil!l would create ....... cost ~. the eeacll .,..... project a~el. •=., ~- liona by Mayer ArleM er. nou.mc ce9t ....... tM ta- s ae. sbe ••ltt. or.ea lpaee, ~uced ._ ... ancl ..... ..,elee- vlronment alwJuld be tlM crtMrta. Councilman 0.0 lbtJ. a. tioned for prejed afpNval aayway, but he c•eedM Ule lot- com bination policy should be studied to Me that it doel mere than replace ol4er ll•mee. He's right. AH be or semehedy el1e e.ant to do MMethin1 a~t k ~ the city's minimum lt•dards ce out the wi.ndew. Recycling grants help With state funds for almOlt all purposes in short supply, ll was a pleasant surprise to learn that four Orange Coast com- munities bad been awarded sub- s ta ntial grants from a $2. 7 million fund to increase recycllq efforts. Officials of the 1tate SeUd Waste Management Board said the agency had rejected eisht ap- plications for every one it funded, but it was sufficiently tmpreued by local efforts lo allocate $328,905 to be divlde4 amoag Huntington Beach, Irvine, Costa Mesa and South Laguna. The largest grant, $1'3,SOO, went to Rainbow Disposal of Hun- tington Beach where recyclin& capacity at the Nichols Street plant will be stepped up from 180 to 1,000tons of materials a month. The ftrm operates both d.rop- off services, where donors leave such items as bundled • newapapers, and a bur·'•ck serviee which pays •OMl'I fot re- c y c I ables 1ucll •• aluml••m eua. Solag Diape1al of Se•tl• La1una received •·"'to,_. a buy-b1cll ce•ter in ... J"8n Caplatrane aad cur' titcll•• 1er.vice1 in 1outh eo..t eem- munlti•. 9tUlllent recyella1...,..,. ~e lfUtl in hMll lntM •• Costa Mesa. ~ 1rvlae .a •1 iat· •41 lt"4eate Ille. •9N:.r•e• $52,819 for eq11i,... la- provelDftta at tllett C1"094ft lite on Jamboree ftoa•. AH the Oran1e Coast Cone1e 211-hour ctrop-off center at tile lct.ool wu grante41 $«,'75 for improve- ments. Since the rec1dln1 cm help both the envirouaent _.. the eeeaom.y, tlMM iranta would ap-pear to he GM>MY .. n .,.... Opinions expressed in the space abOve are those ot the Daily Piiot. 0th~ views ex· pressed on this page are those of their authcws and artists. Rea•r c~nt Is Invit- ed. Address The Daily Pilot, P .O. Box 1.560, Costa Mew, CA t'H1'. f'hene 1714) 642·43'21. L.M. J;loyd/Socla 1taried it The players on Princeton's first foot· ball team wore oran1e and black •triped socks. Maybe you doo't think that's significant. But it is. Quite Jignificant. Because of those socks, the players were nicknamed Ti1ers. tile fint school team with any sort of olckname such as that. Tbe idea eaugbt on. More teams now are called 2'l1ers than are called anytblna el.le. 'Vou may even be acquainted with a letam known as the Ti1en. All because of lhotesocks. Q. Do lions, too, like catnip? A. That they do. So do ti1er.. And Jeopard.a. I can't remember ever run· tlin1 acrou a 1ood clear explanation of tut what it is about cat.alp that tum.I ~•ti on. Can you? Q. l know tbe old K•tuclr)' rift., tr•re actually maM bf GtnlWl ••· rants ln Pennsylvania. But bow UM JUD come to be kDown u a KentucQ'1? A. Credit a sOlltwritet _,. that one. Aller the Btltt&e of New orteane in 1115, a hailed came out wta the lyrics: " . JattlMM M •61 wide awake ad •en't .... tII t:rtftee . . . For well be U.w wt.It "• we take, wttb our Kflltuek~ rift•." The ditty cau1ht on for awhile thtrt, md left behind It for ••neratten1 thereafter the mll909er. Q. Which .. UM •o,. ,...ar in Mexico, ~•r or tHtMMll! A. Soccer le untral Medco, baseball in ltOl'tlMwa Mn:ko. A tavern operater aame4-Bowancer ln mai eeat..., rr-c. cam• up wttb tM lmlllt , ... to Mnt bot aoup any time fll .. 1. IM • ....,. earlier .Nd ~ -. ll•llM ..... at fbat u ... oatJ. 'hi IMl -. •••called a,_...,"·•• rr..tl, a "rataurallt." ._. .... ., •• , plaee '°°" bera .. n... •..ta,*', wortd11ftnt10._........_ Cruise missile deep WASHINGTON -The Pentagon's cruise missile program Is a classic ii· lustralion of the cavalier attitude toward the taxpayers· money that characterizes so much of the nation's def$!nse spending. Here, as part of a continuing series on Defense Depart· ment extravagance, are the details of the fouled-up project: Already the cruise program is at least $13 million in the red this year. and the missiles are beset by engine malfunc- tions, according to a classified Pen- tagon document. What makes this so troubling is that the deficiencies arise from the defense contract system itsell, which rarely re- quires contractors to operate on a com· petitive basis. Poor performance and outlandish profits are built into the system. IN JlJST THE past 12 months. de· fense contractors made "excessive prof- its" totaling $80 million, according to the now defunct Renegotiations Board. In that same period. the Pentagon laid out $70 billion for procurement of weapons a nd services. or that astronomical sum, almost $48 billion, or 65 percent, went to contractors who were the only bidders for the job. Only 8 percent of all defense contracts were awarped as the result of advertising for bids. The cruise missile is intended to become the mainstay of the U S. nuclear arsenal. Capable of being launched from land, sea or air , the mis· sile is small enough to be deployed in hard-to-spot locations, yet it can evade enemy rad ar and deliver a nuclear warhead 1,500 miles away. or the nearly 30 companies involved in the cruise program, only one - G. -J1-c1-11-a-11-sa-1 -.,,~ e General Dynamics has given the Pentagon its main progress report for 1980. And General Dynamics, with a $2 billion chunk or the program, has charged the government $325,000 for status reports it has never delivered. Yet a Pentagon spokesman insisted to my reporter Sharon Geitner he was "not a wa re or any contrac t ir · regularities." DUPLICATION ABOUNDS. Vitro Labs and McDonnell Douglas. operating under broadly worded contract terms, have wound up doing essentially the same computer work. Overcharges are unconscionable. One cruise contractor. for example, charged the taxpayers a lmost SI million for a • ID red special data list that should have cost about $40.000. When confronted with this discrepuncy, the company blandly blamed it on a "typographical error:· A relatively minor. but widespread, boondoggle results in the government paying twice for the same contract. This happens when an employee quits a defense contractor and forms his own one·man softw are company. He then charges his old employer or another company for the "right" to his contract at the going rate or $40,000 per con· tract. Tardiness is epidemi c Navy testing of I aunch-control centers was stalled because the software was delivered six m onths I ate. In 1979. McDonnell Douglas admitted to other contractors in a private memo that it would have to ··slip" (delay > the schedule three m onths because it couldn·t have the launch hardware ready. THE BASIC TROUBLE with the cruise program, as with most defense projects. is that cost-plus and sole- source contr acts vague on the gov· ernmenl's requirements and wide open on budgeting -give contractors no in · centive to do the job right and on time. In fact, the system encourages ir· responsibility by stretching out the length or a contract and increasing the profits as the cost goes up. Busing funds better spent on schools To the Editor: It was announced May 4, that Pre.si· dent Reagan was proposing to pay stu- ... ts ·w1M> volunteer to be bused from either white to black areas and vice, versa. at least one-half year's tuition, or the number of years they were bused, in tuition at a Missouri state institution. The price for this projett, one which President Reagan most assuredly in- tends to be used across the naUon, is S6 mlllioo. A bill taxpayers will obviously' pick up. &ATBEll TRAN throwing away this m o ney on buses, gasoline, and '·scholarships," why not use this large sum to significantly improve the quality of education in the areas in question? Buses and gasoline are commodities that do little to improve a child's mind ; MAILBOX and the "scholarships" are something I completely oppose. Because they are to be used at state Institutions, I am sure that there are financiaJ aid Pf.Oframs for the "truly needy," one of Presi· dent's key catch phrases. Rather, the S6 million could be used to betur our faillnl educational systems. Despite the famou1 19.M Supreme Court decision in the Browa vs Topeka Board of Education case, separate can be equal if sufficient money is 1pent to create a proper learnln1 environment and to encoura1e quallfled people to become t.eacben. Teacben now are at \he lower level of the lay 1cale ln our society, while they hol one of the most crucial Jobe ln our country. the tr al.Dini of future American voten and offtce holden. I can only hope that President Reaau wW realize lbat ts mllUon can be lpent much more wlHly thaq ta. bat propoeed. Taxpa7tr money mwat be 1pent to better 1otemment •ervlcea, DOt bribe lnd.lvidual 1tudeatt to equal rectal quotas. CHIUSTOPHER· K. LYNCH him the coverage they need to tight for their expressions of art. Thank you for helping in putting a little art back into our city. C.S. OPP Insult a:11d injury To the E<Htor: Two recent letter s regarding the police "sweep" conducted at Orange Coast College, which resulted In the de- tention of large numbers of Costa Mesa High students, express dismay that the parents of those students failed to ap· plaud our crime fighters in their efforts to stamp out unauthorized lunch eating. These letters ignore some or all of the following considerations: 1. The schools claim that the sweep was a police operation against burglaries, and sho1Jld not have been conducted at OCC. 2 . The police claim they were cooperating with the schools in a war on truancy, as well.as burglary, and that the schools knew what the police in- teoded. 3. If burglars were the target. why was the trap set at lunch time, on the way to a popular snack shop? Do only thieves get hungry? 4. If It was truants the police were after, why stop students who, only minutes before, were in fact at school? Whose exodus from class, at the begin· ning of lunch period, clearly indicates exactly that willingness to follow school sch edules that is the opposite of truancy? 5. Since the sweep, as designed, clear- ly could catch neither burgla~ nor truant.a, but only students who might be flaunting school rules -not committing criminal acts -who in heaven's name could possibly have decided lbat police selzure and confinement was the ap- propriate remedy? My dauahter was among those atu· dents so seized and confined. She had my perm.iaslon to leave the school at lunch Ume; the necessary authorlzatlon had been alcned and turned lo, lo com- pliance with U1e school's request, at the start of the year. But lbe achool had not troubled it.self to wue her any pau, nor stv•n any wamtn.1 that aucb pa1ae1 wer. needed. So 1be was subjected to the bumlUatJon or arre.t ln front of ber friends, lra.n1port1tilon to the police station: the insult or badgering by surly oHicers. and the injury of two lost af. ternoon classes. -If she does not reel that she bas been betrayed by two major agencies or her c ommunity by the casua l in · c ompe t e nc y of her s c h oo l ad m inislrators, by the groundless belligerency of the police, and by the monumental stupidity of both-she is far more generous than l. DOUGLAS R TOOHEY· Positive effect To the Editor: The recent "shouting match" which erupted in a meeting between county of· ficials and residents or Santa Ana Heights had one posiliv~ effect.. Some of the citizens came up with the idea that since the Irvine Company will be the chief beneficiary or the John Wayne Airport expansion an-i the citizenry the chief losers, the Irvine Company should be willing to make land exch~nges wi~h the residents of Santa Ana Heights. This proposal is eminently fair and reasona- ble for all parties concerned. THE IRVINE Company which has many hotels planned for Irvine, Newport. and the area between Newport and Laguna needs an Interna- tional ain>ort to accommodate jumbo jets in order to fill Its hote ls and to prof- it from these business ventures. On the other hand, the residents of Santa Ana Heights will reap no benefits from the airport expansion: Indeed, the residents will suffer damages to their health and decreases in their property values. Therefore, Santa Ana Height.a resi· dents should be given a choice of Irvine Company-owned property ln a location that is equally distant from lbe ocean but that is located away from the deafening noise of jumbo jets upon which the Irvine Company will depend in order to fatten lte profits. BLANCHE de CASTILLA 111111 Ill I wonder what airport thole Ari.ION at· • torneys, employed by Newport Beacb to clot• down John Wayne Airport, lad at wbtn tbty fiy ln wteklJ to Oru1• County? D.H . ........ ------= ......... ·= _ _.,,..... ............ _, ..... .... ................ o.Mt .... ' THURSDAY, MAY 2:1, 1981 OBlTUARI ES 84 LEGALS 84 Alaska's Mount McKinley is 'most dangerous walk in the world' . . . 88 Bl!Jokstore Feplacement stirs own n By STEVE MAaBLE °' ................. A Corona del Mar ru1 merchant who promises to rid Newport Beach of its highly pro- tested adult bookstore by turn· ln1 the place into an office, bas run lnto his own group of pro- testers. Homeowners from Newport Heights complained this week that Said Shokrlan's plana to erect a tbree·atory office build· log on Pacific Coaat Hi1bway are as objecUonabf e, In their own way, as the Talk of the Town bookstore that now standa there. Shokrian, during a Tuesday cl· ty council session, revealed that he is buying the controversial bookstore near Mariner's Mlle for $250,000. But the sale of the bookstore, which has been closed for months, is contingent upon ap- proval of bis office plans, it was explained. Residents contend the office at 35 feet is too tall and will in· terfere with views from their bluff.top community. Several residents suggested NEST EGGS -Capt. Gregg Scbmehling noticed a duck egg in a coil of electrical cord on a Balboa Bay Club dock where his yacht Capstan is tied up. The next day he saw another egg and by Wednesday there were three. Female mallard that bas been laying Delly ..... ~.., P'Mrtdl O' ..... the eggs doesn't sit with them during the daytime. Schmehling thinks eggs are warm enoueb without her. She spenda per days swimming around Newport Harbor and beg- ging bread from the captain. But at night she comes back to keep her egga warm. Police hold Mesa teen in burglary Working with an interrogation report and fingerprints left at a crime scene, police are holding an 18-year-old Costa Mesan for suspicion or burglary. Arrested when he walked into Costa Mesa's police head· quarters late Wednesday was Patrick Pochatko of 2214 Rutgers Drive. Pochatko was first contacted at 3:30 a .m. Tuesday by officer Tom Pipes who stopped him in the Harbor Center s hopping complex at 2300 Harbor Blvd. Pipes filed a field interroga. tion report on the incident. Investigators , working to solve several burglaries occur· ring in the center recently said they later matched Pochat.ko's fingerprints with those left at the scene of a series of burglaries at the center on April 27. Investigator Dave Walker said he also is checking to see iJ Pochatko may have been in· vblved with the burglary of an electronics game a rcade in the center. The Flipper Fantasy, it was later learned, was burglarized of about $700 in caah the same mornln1 young Pochatko was stopped in the center by Officer Pipes. Artifacts slowing planting of trees the location of a major Indian trading and political center that dates back at least 6,000 years. that Sbokrlan la tryine to use the controversial sex emporium to his advantage. ·'To mix in the luue of the adult bookstore with this office is unfortunate," said Pat Strane. the Newport Heights homeowner president. .. It's muddled the is- sue." Althou1h spokesmen for Shokrian claird the office will not spoil views of the Ne•rt Harbor, residents said it would. They said it also will increase traffic in their area. Newport Coun cil woman Evelyn Hart said that ln order to 1et rid of the bookstore, she was wllliDI to consider giving Shotrian some "added building bonuaes." Councilman John Cox said the 'lw plans seemed fine to him. Ile said the area alon• Pacif~ Coast Highway needs tej~ven.t": lion. ._ In the end, the countil aeretiil to restrict Shokrian to a heleM- of 26 feet. The Corona del Mar rue merchant said he'll have to talk with his architect before "' decides whether to go ahelcl with his plans. ~ Mesa's Narmco plant torched by firebombs .•.. By JERRY CLAUSEN Of .. DMIYl'Mlll._.. Three Molotov cocktails were tossed into the trouble·plaeued Narmco Materials, Inc. plant in Costa Mesa late Wednesday, one of them exploding In flame. A plant supervisor, John 0 . Simmons, extinguished the blaze, police said, when he saw a bottle shatter on the roof of a build.in& and a blaze erupt near what offi cers described as a .. highly volatile area" where combustibles are stored. Police said a charTed but un· shattered bottle containing a gauze wick and possible kerosene residue was found on a tower roof at the plant's southeastcomer. No damage was reported. Officials said picketing mem· bers of the International A&· sociation of Machinists and Aerospace Workers marched near the plant's entrance at 600 Victoria St. when the exploding cocktail hit at about 8:30 p.m. About 125 of the union's mem· Coast college trustees get budget plan Coast Community College Dis· trict trustees have received a preliminary budget outline for the 1981-82 fiscal year, listing $79 million in anticipated income and $90 million in funding re· quests from various college de- partments. Executive Vice Chancellor Correllan Thompson, who pre· pared the budget, said the dis· trict also expects to have about $3.S million in carryover funds from the current ftacal year . Thompson noted, however , that the funding requests· sub- mitted by various college de· partments probably will be pared down a bit during upcom· ing budget discussions. He added that all of the dis· trict's financial estimates are largely euesswork because state legislators have not yet ap· proved all funding allocaUona for the current fiscal year, nor agreed on finances for the com· ing year. He said district trustees must adopt a tentative bud1et oo or before June 30, the end of the fl.I. cal year. The final budget is expected to be approved in Auaust. The Coast Community Colle1e District Includes Orange Cout College in Costa Mesa, Golden We st College in Huntincton Beach and Coastline College, which is based in Fountain Valley but offers cla11es at alt.ea throughout the district. hers walked out on strike May 7 when a three-year contract ex· pired at midnight, said Marion Swenson, Narmco industrial re- lations representative. The chemical firm, which pro· duces plastic aerospace parts, la in the process of moving some operations to a new Anaheim .site and employs about250. The firm, a subsidiary of the Celanese Corp., bas come under fire in recent years from res· idential area neighbors who have complained of odors. N armco was cited for creatin1 a nuisance last year by Orange County officials after neighbors complained of odors. Narmco at- torneys pleaded no contest in that case, and the firm was fined $500. Neighbors also have filed a s uit in fede r al cour't, Los Angeles, seeking damages for what they claim are an in- ordinate number of physical ill· nesses that may b.ave been caused by plant emjssions. An accidential explosion at the plant two years a10 killed Oft! workman and seriously inj~ another. A second unrelated ~ plosion a month later serio injured another worker. Union officials report that c!i rent oicketini has nothing to with potential dan1ers or he hazards at the plant. At issue, they and Narmco ficials agree, are wages. Narmco's last offer. mad~e· ; before the May 7 contr I> deadline, was rejected by mem hers, officials said. Subsequently, both parties have met once with a federal mediator regarding negotiati<ms over a new three-year contratt. Ms. Swenson said. l · Costa Mesa Fire Departmet officials were unavailable • comment today regarding ~ Molotov cocktail incidents. ... A spokesman for the fede,a,J Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco aH Firearms said his organization is aiding in the investigation but that he could not comment on the case. Newport Beach acts, to condemn oil wells In what they hope will be their fmal battle move, Newport Beach city officials have agreed to file condemnation action In court to take control of 16 oil wells outside city limits. The oil wells. located on unin- corporated county land outside Pleas entered in Newport man's slaying Two Rancho Mirage men have pleaded innocent in Riverside County Superior Court in Indio to murder charges stemming from the Aug. 1 death of former Newport Beach · resident Kim LeValley. A SUperior Court Jury trial in Indio was scheduled Tuesday for the pair oo July 17. Hid Richard Erwood, deputy district attorney !n Riverside County. 1'be suspects, Glen Godwin, 23, and Frank Soto Jr., 31, each are being held in Riverside County Jail in lieu of $250,000 bail, Erwood said. The defend· ants are expected to ask the court n8'Cl week for release on their own recognizance. A third suspect, Roy Dickey, 35, of Camp Verde, Ariz., baa not bee:i arraigned. West Newport, have been closed down since January because of an ownership dispute. Newport oilm an Robert Armstrong, who operated the wells for 12 years until his coo- tract ran out, has refused to tum the rigs over to the city. Armstrong's lawyers contend they have tried tQ negotiate new lease with the city for operation of the wells. which ~ rooted in city controllt}I tidelands of( the coast. .. To strengthen its position, ell) officials successfully asked tlie State Lands Commission to jQib them in the takeover process .• : City officials want control -tJf the wells and the rigs so they can bid out to an operator wbO offers the city th'-greatest ~ turn in oil revenues. 1 Armstrong bad been givi.Jlg the city a 12 percent cut of Ills profits. City leaders are hoptiii to get as much aa 50 percent. · ~ The condemnation action,;~ be filed in Orange Coun~ Superior Court, would give tie city permis.sion to condemn * five acres of unincorporaCjf land that the oil rigs sit on. t.•!\ Armstrong's lawyers alre have filed a lawsuit against city on the oil well matter • contend that the whole iasue '.1f1 be tied up in court for moot.ha." But Newport leaders su1a t the condemnation process be complete by July with oil duction resumed by late a mer. Access to the arcade -as well as the five firms burglarized on April 27 -was made through a ceiling, Walker said. The April burglaries resulted in losses of cuh and television and video recordine equipment, police noted. The Irvine Company halted the planting of orange 'trees Wednesday following an ou~ry of protest from archaeologists wbo claim the site east of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station ls full of artifacts trom a 6,000- year-old Indian village. Archeologist Marie Cottrell, said today abe and other archaeologists betan proteaim, the terracln1 of the Tomato Sprinp area las( week. Clark praises U CI pact gesture I Pochatko, who walked into the police staUon to ask why Walker bad left a calling card in bil door, i• befnt held in Costa Mesa Jail in lieu of $5,000 ball. Pottery sale set/orOCC Oranee Coal' Collet• studenta wlll sell potter)' next Monday throu1h Wednesda.y ln the JM!UO between OCC'a AdmlnlltraUon 8ullcll.QI and Student Center, a spokesman said. Hosted by lb• coll•••'• Ceramic. Dejartment, the sale II open to tlae public from 10 a.m. to t p.m. oa taelll ol tbe tbrtedaJI. ~ ,,....... ... be Uled to bin ~ l9dui'en for t.be Ceramic. cl•b. on Hie ri.I be ttoneware, porcelain and raku ware. Ms. Cottrell ls the president of Archeolo1ical Kesource Management Corp., a Garden Grove based or1anJ1•tlon. "We gave them adequate wamtnc to do somfthln1 before we went public," ab• said. "I think tbe terracin1 bas dis· turbed the site, but I don't think u has destroyed lt." Company spokesman Jerry Collins called the terraclnc ot the e to a.acre 1lte In lb• foothills north of tbe Lambert Reservoir ''an unfortunate oveni1bt. '' All work oa t.be biatorical lite will be ,..pended anW f\lrtMr' at.udy, QJWna Hid. The ....-.C· lite wu put ol • w.acN ~· ela o.nqe .,........ plan tbt will CCllltlDue oa UM ara ~ roulldlq tbe JidlU lite. .. •. CoUnU laid lM ilti ... •• ,,.. ... ,., ........ ~ • , ~ ... # , ---···· •• 87 FaEDEalCK SCHOEMEBL Of .. ...., ....... The expressed willlnpea of the Unlvenity of Calllornia to develop a new indi1ent medical tervlces contract "ls a step in the rl1ht direction," Ralph Clark, chairman oJ the Oranae County~Supervilon, said toda)'. Clark uid be wu .. ap· preclative" ol the aeature made Wednesday by UC Prealdent David Saxon In a flv'e·pa1e letter outlin.1Q& lbe UC R••enta' posJ. uon in • kJnSdin• dispute over an ex.ls contract by wb1ch tbe uni tJ provides m. d11eat medical cat• at the UC Irvine Kecllcal Center in Oraqe. Inoa propoMd ln the t.uer that tbe current u fee for .. rvle." caatract1 under -'ldl H"ICll an btuea to tile ~ oa asa lndh1dual, cue·b1-e .. basla, be substantially modlfled. Tbe UC prealdeat propoted that a "lump aum" contract be · developed by which the count)' each year would make a aiDal• payment for treatment ot ln- dl1enta at the medical cent«. Tbe university would want about Sl4.5 mllllon under such a contract in ftacal 1111-la, Suon said. Clark aaid because of usotta· 'lions now in proares1 that be would not eqdone Saxon'• pro- po11l, or MY other ~articular method ol r.olvln1 the d.llpute over the exJattni eoatract. ••we•re not l>ele1 barcbaoH· . . . n are open to a.QfW.,." Clark aaMt. ••n.e fact la I aP. preclate t.betr 1•tue to 1• aometadlll wofted out.'' Tbe supemaon' daah·= bowenr, aald tbe c:owatJ not a.,_ wttb the SH.I IDllllon fl1ure SUon aupporUd for a lump sum.type contract. The existbi1 contract b«ween the unlveralty and the county coverinl medical care f« in· dicenta was neaotiated In 1'75. Under the .,reement, the uni· Hrllty routinely bUll tlae COUD•' tr eedl ttme an indllal -a pe~aon without the meau of payht bll ho9pltal' blll -ii treated al the medical eeater. Pb71lciana employed b7 the county review th• bllla to establllb If the unlvenifi Pro- vided the .IJl'OPlf' Jna..tm• TIM county will ,.,111e17 .. t ,.U. of a W.U..ntell lt eoMiclen ... proprtate. The county and t.be uni~ are now locked • lll'tll~ onr man Ulan $11 mtlllaa la bWed W'ticel tbe COUDtJ tclD• 1tdered aceMlve. About 71,000 billl are belQc dilputed. \ DETOURS & DEADllEA.DS DEPr. -Those lawmakers up in Sacramento who have been gripln& and turnln1 livid over the state highway department could do all our hapless motorists one litUe ravor by passing a simple law. So far our august solon.s have made a lot of speeches about how' they ought to chop off the highway chief, Adriana Gianturco, at her pursestrings by reducing her salary to zero. Other teeth-gnashings have happened. But blamed little ac- tion. Through all this, our ~ lawmakers have been making the usual mistake. They want ":...~ ~· budg et a uster e Lacuna Beach Clty Council members will be ilven a "wish Ust" of municipal extras to mull, ju.st in case more cash comes to the city by budget time. The council met for an hour and a half Tuesday night to go over a pro- posed $7.12-million spending packaae. termed "austere .. by Ci- ty Manager Ken Frank. ~~P~tart taking action at tbe T _O_M_M_U_R_P_H_l_N_f ,fi4(i FOR THE SAKE of our harried commuters who have to use these highways, however, the Legislature would be a lot better off starting at the bot- tom -then working up. During the short session , Frank told the council the budget situa- tion may be more • austere than he pre· viously anticipated. The prime example or this is when highway crews, known as Caltrans employees, all of a sudden decide, willy-nilly, to shut down some traffic lanes. When they do this, they leave the clear impression they couldn't give a tinker's damn what road conditions happen to be at the time. An acquaintance of mine, for example, was motoring up Pacific Coast Highway just awhile back when traffic came to a screeching halt and backed up parked cars from Santa A~a River Bridge at Huntington Beach to The Arches Overpass m Newport. WHEN THE MOTORISl'S rinally crept along and got to the river bridge, what did they find? Two lonesome Caltrans workers had shut down an entire lane so they could shovel a couple or small piles of gravel around. Then only yesterday, Caltrans notified the Newport Beach cops that they'd have lo shut a downcoast lane on Coast Highway at the Newport Bay Bridge for a bit of cable- stretching along about 9 a.m. That might not have been too bad because the worst of the rush would be over by that hour and traffic cops would be on the scene to help smooth out the traffic flow. TROUBLE WAS, the Caltrans crews decided to shut down the bridge lane earlier, at 8:30 a.m . and they didn't bother to notify Newport traffic officers of the change to an earlier time. The result? Traffic backed upcoast from the bridge all the way down Mariners Mile. It may have backed up all the way to Huntington Beach, for all we can tell. So that's why our legislators who want to lower the boom on Caltrans should actually start at the bottom. They should get these arbitrary and capricious detours and lane-closings under control. ONE WAY MIGHT BE to pass a new state statute that would decree, simply, that any time a Caltrans crew creates a major disruption in local traffic flow, the local cops are em- powered to arrest the work crews and throw them all in the local jail. 11 Cool thinkers a mong us, particularly those lucky citizens who don't have to commute, might suggest, "My, my! That would be terrible! Why that's hot-headed and reactionary ... " MAYBE SO. But it might cause a few of those highway people to think twice before they throw out all those orange closure cones and pop up their detour signs. They might get just a little more thoughtful befor e they start shutting down major traffic arteries during peak commuter rush hours. And tossing them all in the slammer wouldn't be any more reactionary than reducing poor Adriana's salary to a goose egg. For one thing, projec- tions of a $471,000 loss in state bailout tunds next year has been elevated to an estimated $488,509. The proposed budget, up a~ut $467,000 over this y~r·s $6.65 million· document, does include some good news, such as expected saJes and pro- perty tax revenue in- creases, and Income from a new com - puterized parking ticket program. The council lauded the proposed budget, then agreed to list priorities for projects and equip· ment should more money be found in the budget. The council majority see~ed to agree one of the first priorities would be to restore a police in· vestigator position at a cost or $23 ,220. And restoration or a main- tenance worker ($8,000> also received high priority. Mayor Wayne Baglin s aid that with the in· crea se in crime, and the inc r ease in litter in Laguna Beach . both pos itions s hould be funded. The council also will consider a request from Ron Adams. Laguna's new fire chief, for about $10 .000 to improve "creature comforts" at the main fire station, as well as new fire hoses and nozzles. A word processor. costing about $14,000, was requested by City Clerk Verna Rollinger, as well as a promotion for her senior clerk to the position of deputy ci· ty clerk. The council is expect· ed to return June 16 with a completed priority list. pc to share dump costs ~ ' -:: Excavators of the Boucher tandfill got an apparent discount fuesday to clean up the Hunt- ington Beach dump and move :(lon ·hazardous materials into an lrvine land/ill. The Orange County Board or Supervisors agreed to charge Mol a Development Corp. about $36,500 -or $1.25 per ton -to deposit about 30,000 tons of material at the county-run Coyote Canyon landfill in Irvine. Supervisor Harriett Wieder. whose 2nd District includes the Boucher site, said the county's aid is merited to help satisfy a public health problem. "This effort is undoubtedly a pioneer one in that it will be a first time venture of the private and public sectors to resolve a potentially dangerous health hazard." she said. Mola officials say they are paying about S3 million to re· move potentially toxic oil drill· ing residue left at the former dump site at Bolsa Chica Street and Warner Avenue. They have plans to build 224 condominiums on the 12.5 acres. Mrs. Wieder said the privately financed excavation started five weeks ago will benefit Uie coun- ty and state, which otherwise would have to pay to remove the chemicals. The $1.25 per ton figure is the county's approximnte expense to run the landfill. Officials in the county Solid Waste Manage- ment Department had su~nsted a charge up to SJ.SO per ton or about $105,000, could be levied. The higher cost approximates charaeJS at Los Angeles County dumps for such hard-to-handle materials. Irvine backs recycling Despite the fact that the city's lOllnc money In the program, Irvine council memben Tues· d•f nl1bt approved tb e ell· tension of a newspaper collec- Uon pf'Ofl'am ln Woodbrid1e. Last December &be council 1anctJOCM,ld a voluntary curblllde newspaper plc:IMIJ> for recycllnc purpoMI. By Aprll 30 lhe ctty had collected $HO worth of new1papen. Advert11tn1 eotu, not fneludln1 atalf Ume, have nm t l ,l!D. Tile eoanClJ a1M voted to U• I.ad ._.,~am to SI Camino Real~ UMCa.lftl'dale Dlunmp1n9ant•.PablldtJ eom ... •~to nm 11.m, aeNr•., to dtt lt8ll nf!Oltl. HECKLING HAYDEN Audience members protest the appear ance of Tom Hayden at Golden West College Tuesday. Hayden, who DMty ............. ...,~ was one or the Chicago Seven. has conducted a few demonostrations of his own in his time Kidnap hoax admitted I rvine teen feared rmnishment, concocted story How could Irvine police have been Cooled by a 14-year.old girl who claimed she was kidnapped las t Wednesday by four men? Tuesday, the teen.ager ad- mitted to police that s he made up the story. She was afraid her parents would discover she had been drinking beer with some friends so s he decided to lie, police said. But as the week wore on, police said, the young girl's story began to unravel and they decided lo confront her in front of a high school counselor. Originally, the unidentified girl told police s he had been kid· napped by four men at the cor- ner or Northwood Terrace and Gold Rush and forced to ride around 20 minutes before being released unharmed. Last Thursday police released composite drawings of the four suspects wanted in connection with the crime. "A lot of times you may feel there's something wrong," ex- p lained Lt. Robert Lennert. ··But you have to investigate it as though it were a real crime." Instead of using an artist, police in Irvine use thousands or composite drawings to come up with a description of a suspect. First a chin is chosen from among hundreds of shapes and then the face is filled in with the features. The process may take two to Wate r saving plan told Mesa Consolidated Water Dis- trict officials e xpect to save about $18,750 in cash and about 1,875 acre-feet or well water this spring by participating in a speciaJ water program. District officials said this week that by making purchases or seasonally abundant water s tored in Colorado River basins, they'll not only save on vital well water but effect a cost sav- ings. The Colorado River water, re· suiting from melting snow and rainfall, is being imported by the district ror $55 an acre-foot, officials noted. It costs about $65 to pump an acre-foot of water from local wells, they add. three hours before the drawing is completed , explained Lt. Len- nert. "We're strictly at the person's mer cy," said Lt. Lennert. "It could have been someone she saw one lime. It could have looked like a teacher. As long as s he has some face in her mind." By Friday, police became sus· picious of t he girl's story after talkinji? with friends "When you're talking about rape and kidnap you don·t want to confront someone unless you're positive," said Lt Len· nert Police explained that the scratch marks the girl claimed to have suffered while fighting off her all eged attackers were received in a bicycle accident the day before. ·'The unfortunate thing about this is that she can ruin it for a lot or young girls who have been a ttacked.'· said Lt. Lennert. "Now there's going to be a lot of dis believers out there." Lt Lennert added that the ma· jority of assault r eports are true Forgit's hardware slwp shutting down The unidentified teen-ager will not be prosecuted for filing a false report because she's not an adult, Lennert said She is seeking counseling through the city's youth service program. he said. Peg Forgil says she'll have one last appliance sale before closing her late hus band's Newport Beach hardware store for the last time Saturday. The widow of former Newport Beach city councilman Al Forgit says she reached a decision over the Memorial Day week~qd lo call it quits. The store, opened in 1928 as Estuc Hardware and purchased by Forgit in 1953, is to be leased to a group of architects. "lt just about makes me sick," Mrs. Forgit remarked.· "It's like holding a wake in there. "A lot or people feel it will be a loss to the community but I don't know -lime passes and we all get old. Things change." She says the remaining inven- tory in the s hop is to be sold to ABC Lumber in Costa Mesa which is rebuilding its facilities destroyed in a fire last year. She said her husband, who died of a heart attack )ast Sep· tember. had been planning to close up the brick shop near the Newport Pier. Mrs. Forgit said she'll con· tinue to live in the apartment above the shop. The hardware shop, a country- store-like collection of odds and ends, was once a noted gather- ing spot for Forgit's city hall and fishing friends. The shop gained a separate reputation because Forgit was fond of placing newspaper ads for his store in local papers that criticized or poked fun at of· ficials on everything from litter to parking problems. Forgit was elected to the Newport council in 1964. His wife ran twice for a council seat, los· ing both times, most recenUy to present Coun cilma n Don Strauss. Mrs. Forgit said she's plan· ning no fanfare for Saturday's closing. "We'll just close it up Satur· day evening as usual," she said, ''and start taking an inventory on Sunday. That'll be it." His torical pane l seeks • • 1nte r v 1e ws The Laguna Beach Histoncal Society will be interviewing old· timers tonight in an effort to get a picture of the town before 1940. The interviews will begin at 7 p.m . at the historical offi ces al 790 South Coast Highway. Society president Margaret Roley said the information will be included in a survey or old buildings in Laguna Beach being conducted by the society and Kathy Les of the Environmental Coalition of Orange County. Specifically long.time resi· dents will be asked about their neighborhoods before 1940, as well as specific historical build· logs, wh en they were built, the architect's name. and previous owners. To contact the society, call the historical center at 494·9965. The ate r HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM • r eceives grant The Laguna Moulton Playhouse has received a $22,000 grant from the Harry G. Steele Founda- tion of NewPOrt Beach to purchase audio-visual television equipment. Ruth Schryver, dlrec- tor ol the development for the playhouse said the equipment will be used to prov\de self· improvement lnstruc· tlonaJ aid to actors and student.a. Tbe 59 -year -o l d playhouse oraantutton wm make edited lapea of plays performed on the Laguna Beach at.f e avallable to pubt c televlaion, u well u for review by act.ora. P layhouae director Dou• Row• aald tbe or-1wudon plus to tape lt1 curreat mualcal "Sbeaaadoab," aJoa l wlitl four Orii1aal com· ecliu t bb sum mer. Mercury Savings Now Offers NEW "Repo Plans."* ~~ W e have several .. Funds .. • clll'Teftffy ava ilable for ow cmtOIMn FOR H111tinitoa Bacll 781 2 Edinger Hnt. Bch., CA. 92647 (714) 842·9333 MERCURY SAVINGS Lake Forest 23021 Lake Center Or. El Toro, CA. 92630 (714) 770-2801 and loan auoetahon Tntil 1095 Irvine Blvd. Tustin, CA. 92680 (714) 832·7701 u Hal1r1/Flllrtlll AnMein Nils .. u M 1001 E lm~I Hwy. sen E. L• PellM 895~ Velley Vlft L• Hebre, CA. 90831 Anaheim, CA. 92907 Bu.na Perk. CA 90920 (714) 8To-8700 (714) n9-1041 (714)821.eGOO *Thia obligation 11 not a aavlnga account or deposit end ia not lnlUred by the Federal Savings and l..oan Insurance Corpor1tlon. v___.. ---------------. --- Licence eyed hospital • ID LOS ANGELES <AP> -Com· munity Hospital of the Valleya ln Perris, where a stripg of mysterious deaths are being in· veat lgated by state and local agencies, has agreed to sur- render its license and concede that "good cause exists for the revocation," said a state of· ficial. .. The revocation probably will lake effect within a 60-day period," said James Lahana, a deputy attorney general for the state Department of Health Services. In return, h e said in a telephone interview, the DHS will stay its temporary license suspension, which closed the 36-bed hospital May 13 on the bas is of dozens of alleged health and safety shortcomings. The ho spital also filed f or bankruptcy. Reagan eyes oot protest LOS ANGELES <AP) -Amid signs of growing White House concern. a diabetic Vietnam veteran. weakened and hos pitalized after a four-day hunger strike to protest Veterans Administration policy, said h e was eating again .. for the sake of my wife and kids." Meantime , President Reagan's spokesman Mark Weinberg said in Washington: "The White House is watching the situation closely and we are concerned.'' IJoY at«JIYhd $&6 million SAN JOSE (AP) -A boy who lost his legs and an arm after touching an electric line over a freight train in Washington has been awarded almost S8.6 million, a lawyer says. Steven Throop was 13 when the accident occurred July 4, 1978. His lawyer, Richard. Alex· ander, said Wednesday the set· llement won approval of Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Edward Panelli in the 3· year -old case against Conrail. Hiker suspect arraignme1it set SANTA CRUZ <AP) -David Carpenter, a s uspect in nine grisly trailside killings, faces ar- raignment today on charges he killed a young friend after meet- ing her to go car shopping. Santa Cruz County District At- torney Art Danner says he will seek the death penalty for the 51 -year-old printer. TERM ENDING -Sirhan B . Sirhan's prison sentence is slated to end Sept. l , 1984. LA County DA John Van de Kamp is trying to extend the jail term of the slayer of Robert F. Kennedy in 1968. Robbins jury choices due SACRAMENTO <AP> Defense and prosecution at- torneys in state Sen. Alan Rob- bins' sex crimes trial expected to spend a third day today argu- ing preliminary motions behind closed doors. Deputy District Attorney Albert Locher and Michael Sands, one of Robbins' lawyers, said they hoped to complete the arguments today so jury selec· tion co~d begin Friday. Cancer victim '6 going on 60' SAN CARLOS <AP> At the .. He was 6 going on 60," said donor, that it wasn't her fault end. 6-year-old Allan Wilson. his Patty O'Brien, a family friend. the treatment didn't work. bones ruined by cancer, •could "He just decided, 'I'm sick and "He told her she had no con· Orange Coast DAILY PILOT/Thursday, Mey 28, 1981 H /F Brown lauds oil ruling.] Governor pleased a t halt of coastal lease sale LOS ANGELES <AP) -Gov· ernor F.dmund G. Brown Jr. hu "vowed to stay ln court aa loot as necessary to protect the coBBt," and was pleaBed that his lawsuit led to a judge's order to temporarily bait the sale of 32 oil leases off the Californla coast his office said. "We are pleased tbat the proc· ess has been stopped so the argun1ent.s on their merits can be heard," the governor's press secretary Carl Beauchamp, sald Wednesday after U.S. District Judge Mariana Pfaelier blocked the federal government from selling the 32 leases off the Cen· tral California coast. Brown and 19 local governments objected on environmental grounds to the sale of the tracts covering 600,000 acres in the Santa Maria basin, north of Santa Barbara. The governor feels "the battle bas been won but the war ls still ahead of us.·· sa id Ms. Beauchamp. rn her ruling, the judge chided Interior Secretary James Watt for using "too narrow an in· terpretation" or federal law in excluding California from participating in pre-lease deal· ing with the oil companies. She said Californla 's right to control development of the coast under the Coastal Zone Manage- ment Ac t ''would be lost forever" tr it was exiuded fron pre-lease arrangements, such as including developmental stipula· lions. She said she will issue a final ruling by the end of the summer. ..There can be no doubt that a brief delay in the sale of those leases is in the public interest," she said in issuing the te1Q- porary injunction. ·'The delay will cause insignificant monetary injury to the U.S. gov- ernment or to the potential leaseholders.·· Write r pact OK'd A two-day oU-lea.se aucUOQ In progress was to continue today with the sale or 81 tracts that were not contested in the suit, said BLM spokesman Mike Fereus in Los Angeles. At the request of the U.S. Justice Department. the judge agreed that the U.S. Bureau ot Land Management could unseal bids on the disputed tracts even though it could not award the leases, to see lf in fact anyone Is bidding on them. Fergus said the federal gov- ernment will decide whether to appeal after the judge issues her final decision on the oil-tract leases. In hls suit, Brown contended Wall violated the federal En· dangered Species Act because tbe leases would pose a threat to \ the southern sea otter and the gray whale. The suit also noted that t disputed tracts would provl ooly el&ht percent of the total I expected to come from all Uie tracts and contended the poten· tial for environmental harm ou~ welehed possible benefits. ·•Friend of the court·· briedt supporting Brown's suit we~ rtled by eight coastal ci•les a 11 coastal counties in Californlill They were the counties of HutH boldt, Mendocino, Sonom8y Marin. San Francisco, Siff Mateo, Santa Crui, Montere~ San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbati and Santa Clara, and the citl~ of Brisbane. Ca rmel, L Angeles, San Luis Obispo, Sant Barbara, Santa Cruz, Sant Monica and Seaside 11 only crawl. But the precocious I'm going to do what I can to trol over whether he Jived or youngster found the strength to live every moment.'·· died, only the control to give LOS ANGELES (AP> -Strik· .,..~ comfort hi s sister, arrange his Allan decided for himself to him the girt," said his mother, ing writers overwhelmingly ap-FINAL TOAST -Casket bearing body of "Toastmaste11 own funeral and prepare a will. undergo a rare and dangerous Beth Wilson. proved an interim contract General" George Jessel is carried from chapel at Culver Ci, Friends and family members bone marrow transplant, hoping The disease was discovered agreement today with indepen-ty cemetery Wednesday following eulogy to entertainer whq say young Wilson. who died Sun· to stem the advance of the shortly after his third birthday. dent film and TV producers but died Sunday at 83. In attendance were Jimmy Stewa~ day after battling his illness for cancer. But when it failed and it At a party, he began walking rejected a "final offer" from the (left), Sammy Davis Jr. and Dan ny Thomas. At right ia three years, was a remarkable was obvious he was dying, he strangely after playing on a major producers by an even Milton Berle followed by former Gov. Edmund (Pat~ child. ~~~~~~~~~l_o_ld~h_i_s~s_i s_t_e_r_._t_h_e~m~ar_r_o_w~_s_l_id_e_·~~~~~~~~~~-""T""-g_r_e_a_te_r_m_a_r_g_in_.~~~~~~~~=B=rown~·~~~~~~~ DESIGN A BEAUTIFUL SUMMER ROSES AT ROGERS TREFS Roger's complete nursery has a beautiful selection of bush and ~ climbing roses ... over 500 plants in 30 varieties. You will find many of your favorites among these outstanding varieties. 2 gal. reg. 16.~ NOW '4.98 PETUNIAS Available in several colors to brighten your home this spring. 4"pot ret.11.09 NOW '.79 BOSTON FERN A real Indoor charmer. This hearty and popu'ar plant adds a special decorator touch al· most anywhere, Feed It regul- arly with Oxygen-Plus for full and lush beauty year round. 6" pot reg. •10.95 NOW '6.95 THE NURSERY WITHIN TIIEGARDEN Choose from an outstanding selection of trees. Plant a tree to begin a family tradition that t:::.-:;1:.ia will provide years of beauty and service. 5gal. r~. '12.00 NOW '8.99 -fir-PATIO & GALLERY • 1 , Roger's Gallery displays an ~ ~xcellent selection of patio furniture and accessorjes de- / signed to add extra pleasure ~""'"'"""""'-1''~~._, to your summer relaxing and entertaining, and all avallable fOI' Immediate delivery. SPECIAL MEMORIAL DAY BOUQ UET A colorluJ array of fresh cut spring ftowers, artlstlcalty arr- anged with Rogef1s flalr. NOW '7.95 I WESTCLIFF ' PLAZA ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE BANK OFAM~A CHARLES BARR JEWa.ERS CROWN HARDWARE DICK VERN0-1 ~TSWEAR DR. LOO El.DER optometril1 HAIRHANDl.ERS SAi.ON HALllDA Y'S MEN'S CLOTHll'l.G HICKORY FARMS specioliy food i1em1 HUMPTY DUMPTY chkh11's clo!+1inq JEAN DAH.. desiqner olld benet 'PO"S"""7 LA GALLERIA ele<)Once in foshioll MARKET 8ASl<ET MES AMIES TEENS NANCY DUNN ANTIQUES NEWPORT BALBOA SAVINGS PAPER UNLIMITED gifts ond 11oiioller\ SAVONDRUGS STOREKE~ IT<Xifiord tpOrtlWtOt VET A'S INTIMATE APPAAB. WESTCUFf CLEANERS WESTCUFf caues qoinne1 wore ond col.cl~ . . WESTCUFF sra5 XAVIEffS R.()ijST Quality in f cuhion and sirvtces w(th that personal toueh \ \ . -..................... -~ --- "-• N Sewer fee e•aential to avert dUmten No matter bow loocl tM rw· sons or bow critical UM ...... tbe rece11tly proposed aeww me fee in Newport •acb ii U.UlJ to be as popular as a m.lfral•e headache. Orange County Sankatton District directors are prepaeinl • $2.20 a month fee per b<NHMld to help pay for repairs dur1.ac coming years. Directors representine Newport are expected to make the fee official by July followMlg a public hearing. If directers are te '-• believed, the sewerage system la Newport is in less-than-adequate condition with some lines _., "paper thin" and some areas • lacking proper backup lilles in • case of ruptures. The ex ....... ..,.,,._ t. .. the ............ .. Ftbrtaary ,.._...,.••I r:o'= f.:-L:.: c::;: ~ .mrtn11 NJ tlll ~1111: •c.,... Ill•..-...._ a ,ro••~ .. .,.... TM mlltlMlbalUa fll .... .... Ntw)IOlt'I 1ytltem UM ... ea. ~tion are floomy . lite ._lltion people say. n.1 ct• wtdMMll PlnMdal help, tM <lmtct wilJ ~ave a f.t.T mllUea tsMt ~Y 1915. W'Mle tM MWV .. II•· tai.nly the UlrJMJfUlar ... -.i cle· tlraMe way to fO , ta. tmall mo.t.My I• may be a drM pnee to pay to ••ert db .... mud .. F9'>ruar)''1 . !Planning and po"*' Cruise missile deep . : The Newport Center n - • pansion battle baa produced the • expected fireworb. It .-, lau ·underscored some basic plllftll6n1 tissues in Newport Beadl. Planninl commissioners rec- ommended sweepin1 cb-.n in ·the Irvine Company'• ,,a. fw the center before shi..ms ~ .proposal to the City CoiaM1J f« final approval. Two major changes Ule com- missioners recommencted are: -Turnini OM of lM two planned high-rite office tewen into a condominium structure. -Deletin1 a plMlled 40&- . room hotel and replacins it wttll residential units, probably COD· dominiums. While the Irvine Company contends there is a need for office space in Newport Center, t.Jaere also is a aeed fer bmmiltt tn Newport Beach. Condomiaiu .. at the center doubtless would t.e expensive, but it also seems !lke- ly that some of the new jobe M> be created there will be top payiq. WASHINGTON -The Pentagon's ~ c.1te W. ~ cruise missile program is a classic il· ef "reverse fteW'' .... : Wffi lustration of the ca valier attitude e••M•••._ •• 1& .. et-toward the taxpayers' money that fice wwt .. llM'i'tal -r«w'n· characterizes so much of the nation's iaC in e,,aaiee ~ dwflnl defe!'se spendi.ng. Here, as part of a eoaumltU. ~ conbnulng senes on Defense Depart· . TIM ft--~· C 1$ ment extravagance, are the detaH• of _ •. the fouled-up project : arlmt"!' •a:F .. ~ . _Alread the cruis!f-rogram is a!_least penuutn.a fed, · •13 nu on Gillie r Chis year. and the MiHien'1 ...... .._ ~d M missiles are beset by engine malfunc· based oa tHtlitical tr.swrea tions, according to a classified Pen- ratlter tbu mea .. ,IMe C:,b-tagon document. lems. Hit.eh MW Mv..,._. a What makes this so troubling is that real political issue ha lfewport the deficiencies ~rise fro~ the defense ... ch cenlract system itself, which rarely re· To -•t .. ._ .a.-1-.-...-M-....-quires contractors to oper ate on a com -~ •-"-_...,._ petitive basis . Poor performance and 9er .... Ill trdit tlliet ...W re-oYtlandlsh profits are built into the IUlt fNlll a,..ion, * lntae system Compaay hed Jl~DMd t. ,., for JN JUST THE past 12 months, de· some SI million lll roM imipnwe· rense contractors made "excessive prof· ments. 9!0U11d tit• c .... aut its" totaling sso million. according to eonuru~t~en ahe ~d the now defunct Renegotiations Board. an addit.ieaal tu ltlllliol reed In that same period, the Pentagon •rojed before uy ... WW• laid out $70 billion for procurement of call Ille oecu,W, a ecm•lwt da.t weapons a nd services . o r that ha not ait well Willa b cem-astronomical sum, almost $46 billion, or puy 15 percent. went to contractors who '11te City ee..u, •tt. will were the only bidders for the job. Only 8 ha Ye the fiMJ ia• la·tll Al Ill ia percent of all defense contra~~ were , .!.:__~a awarded as the result of advertismg for 1or IGIDe mal'e su-~. bids. The cruise missile is intended to . become the mains tay of the U.S . nuclear arsenal. Capable of being launched from land. sea or air. the mis· sile is small enough lo be deployed in hard-to-spot locations, _yet it can evade enemy radar and deliver a nuclear warhead 1,500 miles away. Of the nearly 30 companies involved in the cruise program . only one - ~r -JIC-1-Al_l_lll_l_I -~ I General Dynamics has given the Pentagon its main progress report for 1980. And General Dyna mics, with a $2 billion chunk of the program. has ch arged the government $325,000 for status reports it has never delivered. Yet a Pentagon spokesman insisted to my reporter Sharon Geitner he was "not aware of any con tract ir· regularities." DUPLICATION ABOUNDS. Vitro Labs and McDonnell Douglas. operating under broadly worded contract terms. have wound up doing essentially the same computer work. Overcharges are unconscionable. One cruise contractor. for example, charged the ~axpayers almost Sl million for a • m red special data list that should have cost about $40,000. Wh en confronted with this d iscrepancy, the company blandly blamed it on a "typographical error " A relatively minor, but widespread. boondoggle results in the government payi ng twice for the same contract. This happens when an employee quits a defense contractor and forms his own one.man software company. He then charges his old employer or another company for the "right" to his contract at the going rate of $40,000 per con- tract. Tardiness is epidemic. Navy testing of launch·conti:ol centers was stalled because the software was delivered six m onths late In 1979, Mc Donnell Douglas admitted to other contractors in a private memo that it wou ld have to ··slip" <delay) the schedule three months because it couldn't have the launch hardware ready. THE BASIC TROUBLE with the cruise program, as with most defense projects, is that cost·plus and sole· source contracts -vague on the gov· ernment ·s requirements and wide open on budgeting give contractors no m· centive to do the job right and on time~ In fact. the system encourages ir· responsibil ity by stretching out the length of a contract and increasing the profits as the cost goes up 'Bridge/~ at laatf The headache that has ac· companied reconstruction wcrk on the Balboa Island bri4«e is just about over. Gftn retult.ed • lraffte ..... re- fuced le a •inlle i.ae en the hri4 ... llas in~ ., •i· HSI time& -like CllriltlMS 111• Easter. Busing funds better spent on schools Newport Beach city officials claim final work on the strueture will be finished up by June 13. June 13 is also the day t.Mt Balboa Island merchants plan a celebration in honor of the eom· pleted work. T ·shirts are beini printed and several merchants say they'll make speeches for the oc- casion. The merchants, without a doubt, have good reason for celebration. Bridge work, wMdl • lome tMrdlallU .... WW· rteci thlll ,_l'IMI' ...... II aJ9o mi1llt feel the ptnell •-• of the llnseri.ng ,,..;e.t. Workers, wlte 1'9rtM th M-t•1• re,atr Jo~ ta1t 1•er. beve reinfOft .. dle lllUre ltnc· ture u well M _...., a ...._feot sidewalk and Wkt petl oa ettber 1ide. In ease ••Jee• l•u.t to notice 4urina au .... e-... - ~ ........ pNttf eke. Opinions expressed in the space abow are these of tM Oaily Jlllllot. Ot"'4tr views ex· pressed on tnls page are those of thei r authors a~ artists. _..,. c~t ts invit· ,ed. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. 8H 1560, Cesta Mesa, CA 9t"6. "'OM (714) 642-4321. L.M. Boyd/Socb 1tart~· it The players on Princeton's first foot· ball team wore orange and black •striped socks . Maybe you don't-think , that's significant. But it is. Qulte significant. Bee a use of those socks, the •players were nicknamed Tigers, ttle ·first school team with any sort ef nickname such as that. The idea • caught on. More teams now are called ~Tigers than are called anything else. : You may even be acquai nted with a • team known as the Tigers. All because ; of those socks. Q. Do lions, too, like catnip? A. Thal they do. So do Ugers. And leopards. I can't remember ever run· nlng across a good clear explanatloa of just what It ls about catnip t.hat tuma cats on. Can you? 1 Q. I know the old Kentu.:ky rtnes were actually made by German lm· migrants in Pennaylvanla. But hew ;did the' IW' come to be known u a "Kentucky"? awake and wu1t't 1caretl of trtnes . . . FOT well he kllll'W •hllt aim we take, with our ltetltetelty rif\ea." The ditty caught on fOf' awlllll dllre, and left behin~ it fer fHeratiena thereafter the mitft09tef. Sir. do you dettet ywr ~s? The surveytders c1*8 tM out fl 18 America" men Meo. AtleMt .. owtof :.a. Pity. Not everythinJ ht~ tbee!M Cura ef RU81la WM bed. 1'bej f ;19 it a trd1tion after• blffday to «aJI LR the ceok for ..-clal reeepi• wttll a tout an4 a"*"" -t •::••-...... totheceok-diM! C1-..... Certainly yew el• llMorJ teecht wouhl be prou• ti JOU, If 1• eou.ld - name tlle Ol'I)' two U .I . ..,.... .. who were .beJd. Qllin, p! W ~ AdawmencU>witllt ... au. Q. WIW'1a"fl,_...,....? , /\. Credit a aoqwrtter wit.Ii U..t ~e. Aller the Battle of New OrlHI)• Jin 11~ a ballad came out wtt.b lbe ;Jyrlcs: " . Jackaoo lie wu wide ,.t p1..-rr.. dl9 GI t 1• 4. IAlef _ ....... ,,,,..5 ••tl'OfOllta• Ji••... . • ORANGE COAST lily. Pretty COibpC•I ...... . Their wlv• are aometl .. re~ te aa pceoa wi-.1. Ta1 .. K9"ll E•tw ............. ... ftcM1it , ........ ' i To the Editor: It was announcfd May 4, that Presi· dent lteagan was proposing to pay stu· dents who volunteer to be bused from either white to black areas and vice· versa, at least one-half year's tuition, or the number of yeara they were bused, In tuition at a Missouri state institution. The price for this project, one which President Reagan most assuredly in· tettds to be used across the nation, is $6 milUOB. A bill taxpayers will obviously pick up. RATHER TRAN throwing away this money on bus es, gasoline, and "scholarships," why not use this large sum to sipificanUy improve the quality of education in the areas in question? Buses and gasoline are commodities that do little to Improve a child's mind; MAILBOX aaul Ute "scholanhii»" are something I eompletely oppoee. Because they are to be used at stale institutions, I am sure that there are financial aid programs for the "truJy needy," one of Presi· dent's key catch phrases. l.atber, the $6 million could be used to MW!r our failing educational systems. Despite the famous ltM Supreme Court decision in the BroWft vs Topeka Board of Education case, separate can be e41ual if sufficient money is spent to create a proper learning environment and to encourage qualified people to become teachers. Teachers now are at the lower level of the pay acale ln our society, while they hold one of the most cruclal jobs in our country, the training of future American voters and office holders. I ,oaa only hope that President RHIM wiU realise that. million can be 1pent much more wisely than he baa proposed. Taxpayer money must be 1,e"t to better 1overnment services, DOt bribe individual students to equal racial quotu. CHRISTOPHER K . LYNCH To the r.dltor: Tllmk you very much few the coTJ erase you'vt been 1ivln1 to All 10\lllUm. It'• about Ume wt were alv.n a Uttle art in Colla Meaa. The eeulplurea Illa•• snaU1 Amproved that area ol tewa. l'H 11.-.cl la Colta Kela all tn.y life ... eiar t .. U, fMtped ..Wt .. Goat RW" .., beds w1tia. We've allo donat· lil1 ..., Nila If CIRa 11 ... to Bonn •••• lo• a nallWll ot COit.a 11 .. I ........... ,....._= Iii bla fODU'lbu· ......... dt7 .. •••"•· • J .... ~llftABDd ...... Uke .. him the coverage they need to fight for their expressions of art. Thank you for helping in putting a little art back into our city. C.S. OPP Boondoggle To the Editor: I am totally shocked that the Reagan defense budget containing such incredi· ble boondoggles as the MX missile system was passed with only Mark Hatfield voting against. I just don't understand such a total com mitment toward a stance of war. This was a black day for the country and the culmination of a cumulative lack or intelligence. courage and integ- rity. as well as a sign or the worst kind of depravity exi stent in our government and the elected representatives. ANDY WING Vnf air to judges To the Editor: Responding to your May 11 editorial: How can a Superior Court judge pro- ceed through trial and <when the de· rendant bas been found guilty) senlenc· ing when the defendant never appears before that court for trial? The statistics regarding onl y the Orange County Superior Court released by the Judges' Committee for Public In- formation and Judicial Education could only apply to those jlefendants who pro· ceed as fer as trial before this Superior Courl bench. Perhaps the editor should enquire or the police departments as lo reasons for arrests and of the pros· ecutor's offices as to charges actuall)' filed for further statistics deallng with the number of those arrested and the disposition of each alleged perpetrator's case. The statement that the judges "chose to focus on one limited set of statistics . . . t.hat made their position appear more favorable" infers a bias in their interpretation of the statisUcs. It seems to me that the Superior Court commit· tee could use only the statistics which r efer to defendama appearing before them. Most penona arrested never pro· ceed as far H the Superior Court bench: of those that do, the prosecutor presents a plea-bargain to the court as a • l.tllen from r~tr• ore wtlcomt. Tht nght to ~ ldttra to /fl fPOC' or tlimfn,ate hbtl 11 """'td lA1tn• of 300 worda or Ltsa will bf Qii>fft prtfn-tnc• All ltUt11 m"'1 Include ttpatuu and mcdUug oddrtu but nam11 mo~ bf Wtthhtld °" rt· qut11 if 31J/fkltnt rtoton I• opportnr Port'll "'u not bf J*bll•hed. lAlltr• mo~ be ttltplwMd to 642..Qf No.mt OJtd phorit numbf'r o/ IM conl rlb\l.lor m..n be gtOlft for oeri/lcot">fl purpoHt. "fail accompli" in a la rge percentage of those cases. It is unfortunate that the Superior Court judges or this state <a bench so highly regarded throughout the United States) are forced to defend themselves against what has become a continuous attack by the media. Paired with the cons litut1onally guaranteed right of freedom of the press should be the responsibility of the media to accurately reporttothepublic. · MARY DESROCHERS Positive effect To the Editor: The recent "shouting match" which erupted In a meeting between county of· ficials and residents of Santa Ana Heights had one positive effect. Some of the citizens came up with the idea that s ince the Irvine Company will be the chief beneficiary of the John Wayne Airport expansion and the citizenry the chief losers. the Irvine Company should be willing to make land exchanges with the residents of Santa Ana Heights. This proposal is eminently fair and reasona- ble for all parties concerned. THE IRVINE Company which has many hotels planned for Irvine. N e wporl, and the area between Newport and Laguna needs an interna· tional airport to accommodate jumbo jets in order to fill its hotels and to prof· it from these business ventures. On the other hand, the residents of Santa Ana Heights will reap no benefit.s from the airport expansion: Indeed, the residents will suffer damages lo their health and decreases in their prpperty values. Therefore, Santa Ana Heights resi· dents should be given a choice of Irvine Company-owned property in a location that is equally distant from the ocean but that is located away from the deafening noise of jumbo jets upon wbich the Irvine Company will depend ln order to fallen its profits. BLANCHE de CASTILLA CllllYCll I wonder wbat airport lbOH Ari..a at· tornt)'I, employed by Newport Beecb to close down Jobn Wayne Alrport, lad at when they fiy in weekly to Orantt Countyt D.H. ......, .. ~ .............. ..,~ ... --__..,~ .. -..... -.. ,, .. ,, .. ,,_,.. ....... .._. ......... , ...... . ..., .... THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1981 IUIBI Cllll OBITUARI ES 84 LEGALS 84 ~~·-·---.·-----·--:·~·~··~'w•~ ...... ·~ Alaska's Mount M cl{jnley is 'most dangerous walk in the world' . . . 88 Bookstore ·replacement stirs own I By STEVE MARBLE O( .. DM!y,... ..... A Corona del Mar rug merchant who promises to rid Newport Beach of its highly pro- tested adult bookJtore by turn- ing the place into an office. bas run into bis own group or pro- testers. Homeowners from Newport Heights complained this week that Said Sbokrian's plans to for $250,000. erect a three-story office build· But the sale of the bookstore, ing on Pacific Coast H1ahway which has been closed for are as objectionable, in their months, is contingent upon ap· own way, as the Talk of the...._ pr-Oval of bis office plans, it was Town bookstore that now atand.s explained. there. Residents contend the office at Shokrian, during a Tuesday cl· 35 feet is too tall and will in- ly council session, revealed that terfere with views from their be ls buying the controversial bluff-top community. bookstore near Mariner's Mile Several residents suggested NEST EGGS -Capt. Gregg Schmehling noticed a duck egg in a coil of electrical cord on a Balboa Bay Club dock where his yacht Capstan is tied up. The next day he saw another egg and by Wednesday there were t hree. Female mallard that has been laying Detty Nil ..... .., l"wtd!O'.,_. the eggs doesn't, sit with them during the daytime. Schmehling thinks eggs are warm enough without her. She spends her days swimming around Newport Harbor and beg- ging bread from the captain. But at night she comes back to keep her eggs warm. Poiice hold Mesa teen in burglary Working with an interrogation report and fingerprints left at a crime scene, police are holding an 18·year-old Costa Mesan for suspicion of burglary. Arrested when he walked into Costa Mesa's police head· quarters late Wednesday was Patrick Pochatko of 2214 Rutgers Drive. Pochatko was first contacted at 3:30 a.m. Tuesday by officer Tom Pipes who stopped him in the Harbor Center s hopping complex at 2300 Harbor Blvd. Pipes filed a field inlerroga· tion report on the incident. Investigators. working to solve several burglaries occur· ring in the center recently said they later matched Pocbatko's fingerprints with those left at the scene of a s eries of burglaries at the center on April 27. Investigator Dave Walker said he also Is checking to see if Pochatko may have been in· volved with the burglary or an electronics game arcade in the center. The Flipper Fantasy, it was lat.er learned, was burglarized of about $700 in cash the same morning young Pochatko was stopped ln the center by Officer Pipes. Art if acts slowing planting of trees the location of a major Indian trading and political center that dates back al least 6,000 years. that Sbokrian is trying lo use the controversial. sex emporium to his advantage. ·'To mix ln the issue of the adult bookstore with this office is unfortunate," said Pat Strana. the Newport Heights homeowner president. "It's muddied the is· sue." Alt.hou gh spokesmen for Shokrian cla1m the office wtll not spoil views of the Newport Harbor, residents said it would. They said it also will increase traffic in their area. Newport Counc ii woman Evelyn Hart sald that in order to aet rid of the bookstore. she was willing to consider givlne Shokrian some "added building bonuses." Councilman John Cox said the h plans seemed Cine to him. Me said the area a loni Pacific Coast Highway needs rejuveoa~ tion. 1 In the end, the count:il aartMd to restrict Shokrian lo a beilbt of 26 reet. The Corona del Mar rug merchant said he 'U have to talk with his architect before be decides whether to go aheitd with his plans. Mesa's Narmco plant torched by firebombs By JERRY CLAUSEN Of .. DeltJ .......... Three Molotov cocktails were tossed into the trouble·plagued Narmco Materials, Inc. plant in Costa Mesa late Wednesday, one of them exploding in name. A plant supervisor, John 0 . Sinun..llns, extineuish.ed lhe blaze, police said, when he saw a bottle shatter on the roof of a building and a blaze erupt near what officers described as "highly volatile area'.t~ combustibles are stored. Police said a charred but un· shattered bottle containing a gauze wick and possible kerosene residue was found on a tower roof at t he plant's southeast comer. Nodamagewas reported. Officials said picketing mem- bers of the International As· sociation of Machinists and Aerospace Workers marched near the plant's entrance at 600 Victoria St. when the exploding cocktail hit at about 8: 30 p.m. About 125 of the union's mem- Coast college tnistees get butl,get plan Coast Community College Dis- trict trustees bave received a preliminary budget outline for the 1981·82 fiscal year, listing $79 million in anticipated income and $90 million in funding re- quests from various college de· partments. Executive Vice Chancellor Correllan Thompson, who pre· pared the budget, said the dis· trict also expects to have about $3.5 million in carryover funds from the current fiscal year. Thompson noted, however, that the funding requests' sub- mitted by various college de- partments probably will be pared down a bit durlng upcom- ing budget discussions. He added that all of the dis· trict's financial estimates are largely guesswork because slate legislators have not yet ap· proved all funding allocations for the current fiscal year, nor agreed on finances for the com- ing year. He said district trustees must adopt a tentative budget on or before June 30, the end of the fis. cal year. The final budget is expected to be approved in August. The Coast Community College District includes Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, Golden West College in Huntington Beach and Coastline College, which is based in Fountain Valley but offers classes at sites throughout the district. bers walked out on strike May 7 when a three-year contract ex· pired at midnight, said Marlon Swenson. Narmco Industrial re· lations representative. The chemical firm, which pro- duces plastic aerospace parts, Is in the process or moving some Q.Perations to a new Anaheim .site andemptoysabout2~ The firm, a subsidiary of the Celanese Corp., has come under fire in recent years from res- idential area neighbors who have complained of odors. Narmco was cited for creating a nuisance last year by Orange County officials after neighbors complained of odors. Narmco al· torneys pleaded no contest in that case, and the firm was fined $500. Neighbors also have filed a s uit in federal court, Los Angeles, seeking damages ror what they claim are an in· ordinate number of physical Ill- nesses that may have been caused by plant emissions. An accidential explosion at the plant two years ago killed Qlle workman and seriously injux.d another . A second unrelated S· plosion a month later serioutly injured another worker. Union officials report that cw · rent oicketini has nothing to do with potential dangers or healfh hazards at the plant. At issue, they and Narmco Rf· ficials agree, are wages. (. Narmco's last offer. made!!t be fore the May 7 contr ·~t deadline, was rejected by members, officials said. Subsequently. both parties have met once with a federal mediator regarding negotiatiob.s over a new three·year contr~. Ms. Swenson said. Costa Mesa Fire Department ·officials were unavailable for comment today regarding t.be Molotov cocktail incidents. 1 A spokesman for the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco aad Firearms said his organization is aiding in the investigation.but that he could not comment on the case. Newport Beach acts to condemn oil wells In what they hooe will be their flnal battle move, Newport Beach city officials have agreed to file condemnation action In court to take control of 16 oil wells outside city limits. The oil wells, located on unin· corporated county land outaide Pleas entered in Newport man's slaying Two Rancho Mirage men have pleaded innocent in Riverside County Superior Court in Indio to murder charges stemming from the Aug. 1 death of former Newport Beach resident Kim Le Valley. A Superior Court jury trial in Indio waa scheduled Tuesday for the pair on July 17, said Richard Erwood, deputy district attorney in Riverside County. The suspects, Glen Godwin, 23, and Frank Soto Jr., 31, each are being held in Riverside County Jail in lieu of $250,000 bail, Erwood said. The defend- ants are expected to ask the court next week for release on their own r ecoanlzance. A third suspect, Roy Dickey, 35, of Camp Verde, Ariz .. bu not been arraigned. West Newport, have been closed down since January because of an ownership dispute. Newport oilman Robert Armstrong, who operated the wells for 12 years until his con- tract ran out, has refused to turn the rigs over to the city. Armstrong's lawyers contend they have tried to negotiate• a ne w lease with the city ror operation of the wells, which are rooted in c ity c onlrollt d tidelands off the coast. To strengthen Its position, c~y officials successfully asked the State Lands Commission to join them In the takeo\ler process. City officials want control of t he weUs and the rigs so they can bid out to an operator who offers the city thL greatest re· turn in oil revenues. Armstrong had been giv\Jl.g the city a 12 percent cut of JUS profits. City leaders are hoptng to get as much as 50 percent. The condemnation action, to be filed in Orange County Superior Court, would give the city permission to condemn the five acres of unincorporated land that the oil riis sit on. Armstrong's lawyers already have filed a lawsuit agaioat the city on the oil well matter and contend that the whole issue will be lied up in court for months. Access lo the arcade -as well as the five firms burglarized on April 27 -was made through a ceiling, Walker said . The April burglaries resulted in losses of cash and television and vidfiO recording equipment, police noted. The Irvine Company halted t he planting of orange trees Wednesday following an outcry of protest from archaeologist.s who claim the site east or El Toro Marine Corps Air Station ls full of artifacts from a 6,000- year-old Indian village. Archeolo(lst Marie Cottrell, said to day s he and o ther archaeologists beaan protestlng the terracing of the Tomato Sprinas area last week. But NewPOrt leaders suggest the condemnation process could. be complete by July with oil pro- duction resumed by late sy· mer. Clark praises U CI pact gesture · Pochatko, who walked into the police station to ask why Walker had ten a calling card ln his door, Is being held in Costa Mesa Jail in lieu of $5,000 ball. Pottery sai.e set/orOCC Oranae Coast College student.a will sell pottery next Monday , tbrouah Wednesday lo the patio between OCC'• AdmlnlatraUon 8ulldint and Student Center, a apok•man said. ffo1te d by tbe colleu'a Ceramlct DePartment, the 1ale 11 open to tbe public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m . on eacb ot the lbrHdays. .. Proce.dl Wlll be used to hire pett lectUi'ei'I for ~ Ceramics elub. On tale wm be stoneware. porcelain ud raku ware. Ms. Q>ttrell ls the president of Archeolo1tcal Keaource Management Corp., a Garden Grove based or1anlzation. "We gave them adequate warninl to do sometbina before we went public," she said. ''I tblnk the terracinl baa dll· turbed the aite, but I don't think It has destroyed it." Company spokesman Jerry Collins called the terracln1 ol the 8 to 8-acre alte in the foothll.la north ot the Lambert Re""°'1" "an unfortunate ovenl&bl." All .ork on lbe b1atorlcal alt. wUI be 1UIJ)ellditd uat:U f\lrther atudy, Colllm 1ald . The ten-ac· ln1 wu pa.rt ot 1 245-acre valee· eta orUll• plaiUna plan tlaat wlll continue Oil the .,.. lur'· roundlftl lbe Indian lite. 111. Cottrell aald tM lite wu By FREDERICK SCBOEllEBL °' .............. The expressed wUllncness of the University of CalifomJa to develop a new lndtaent medical aervlces contract "'-a step in the riabt direction," Ralph Clark, chairman of the Orance County Board of Supervl10re, aaid today. Clark aaid be was "ap· preciaUve" ol the 1e1ture made Wednesday by UC Prealdent David Sum ln a flve·paae letter outllnln& the UC Reaenta• poll· lion in a 1001·1tandln1 dlapute over an exl1Un1 contract by wblch the uahenll>' provldm in· d111nt aW!dkal care at lbe UC Irvine Medical Center In <>Tulle. loan propoled in UM )eU« that the current . "fee for 1mtee·• contract under wldcb Hrvleea an bllled to the comat1 on a• indlvtdaal, CU.l)J-etM basis, be s ubstantially modified. The UC president proposed that a "lump sum" contract be · developed by whlch the coun11 each year would make a stnaJe payment for treatment of in· dl&enta at the medical center. The university would want about $14.5 million under auch a contract ln ftlcal 11181-82, Saxon 1ald. Clark aaid because of neaotta· 'lions now in prosreaa that be would not endorse Suon 'a pro- posal, or MY other partJeular method ol reeolvlne Ute dbpute over the ullt1na contract. ''We're not l>eln1 bardaoh • . . .. .,.. open to aQYt.tdnl, •• Clark Aid. ''The fact la I ap. preclate lb.tr '"lure to 1et IOllletWq worUcl out .• ' Tbe 1upent10r1• cbal= bOweftl', Hid tbe count1 not acne w1u. u.. •H.1 mUBQn "1ure Sixoo IUl)ported for a • ' lump •um·type contract. The exiltlna contract between the unlvenlty and the county covertna medical care for ln· digenta wu negotiated in 1975. Under tbe aareement, tbe uni· veralty routinely bills lbe COUD· tJ each t.lme an lndi1ent -a peraon· without tbe mean.a of paylnc bl.I bolpital bill -ii treated at the medleal cat.tr. Phyaldam employed by the county review tbe bill• to establilb 11 the UDlftnlt1 pro- vided the poper treatmeat. Tbe count7 wW ,., oal1 t.Ut ,.U. of a blD wblda lt _ ...... .,.. proprlate. The count)' and tbe wllv...aty are DOW &OcUd l9 Wb6tndaa over mon tbaa '11 mlW. ID bUled Mrrieet tbe county ccm- •idered ace11lve. About 75,0UO bllla .,.. belnc disputed. Saxon claimed ln bis let that some action on the entire sue of the contract must taken to stop what be termed ·'intolerable financial drain ln1 incurred by UCIMC." To wldencor• ill desire to ne8otiate the contract, the 1enta have placed the county nottce that tbe exiltinl oontr wtll be termlnated effec~ve J 1, 1115. That leaves bot!l wltb four years to l'l90lft diff erencea. Tb• county altead1 ii ex ln• other opdoM ot bandli.nl dl,enta. 1ucb u coatractl w tb private lao1pH• tbrou~ lbe counb. c~ pemment durlnl cur1"91t fllcal year wlll about tu.S mllll• for .P1.MMl4 .. medical Hntcea to lndl ProvlllOD ol 1uoh care qulred by law. ·I _.._... ... -::-;.~-;:;." .... :r,. •• --: Orangt Coaat DAILY PILOT /Thuraday, May 28, 1981 -----------------------------------------------------------------------------D C/N ~ Lockup the lane closers DETOURS ~ DEADHEADS DEPT. -Those lawmakers up ln Sacramento who have been griping and turning livid over the state highway department could do all our hapless motorists one little favor by passing a simple law. So far, our august solons have made a lot of speeches about how they ought to chop off the highway chief, Adriana Gtanturco, at her pursestrings by reducing her salary to zero. Other teeth-gnashings have happened. But blamed little ac- tion. Throug h all this, our ~ lawmakers have been making the usual mis take . They want • "° /'a'\ ~~p~tart taking a~ion at the' _D_M_M_U_R_P_Hl_N_t~I, Laguna budget austere Laguna Beach City Council members will be given a "wish list" of municipal extras to mull, Just in case more cash comes lo the city by budget time. The cowiciJ met for an hour and a half Tue'kday night to go over a pro· posed $7 .12·mi)lion spend ing package , termed ·•austere" by Ci - ty Manager Ken Frank. During t h e s hort session, Frank told the council the budget sltua-FOR THE SAKE of our harried commuters who have t-0 use these highways, however, the Legislature would be a lot better off starting at the bot· tom -then working up. t io n may be more • austere t han he pre- viously anticipated. The prime example of this is when highway crews, known as Caltrans e mployees, all of a s udden decide, willy-nilly, to shut down some traffic lanes. When they do this, they leave the clear impression they couldn't give a tinker's damn what ·road conditions happen to be at the time. An acquaintance of mine, for example, was motoring up Pacific Coast Highway just awhile back wben traffic came to a screeching halt and backed up parked cars from Santa Ana River Bridge at Huntington Beach to The Arches Overpass in Newport. WHEN THE MOTORISTS finally crept along and got to the river bridge, what did they find? Two lonesome Caltrans · workers had shut down an entire Ian~ so they could shovel a couple of small piles of gravel around. Then only yesterday, Caltrans notified the Newport Beach cops that they'd have to shut a downcoast lane on Coast Highway at the Newport Bay Bridge for a bit of cable- stretching along about 9 a.m. That might not have been too bad because the worst of the rush would be over by that hour and traffic cops would be on t-he scene to help smooth out the traffic flow. TROUBLE WAS, the Caltrans crews decided to shut down the bridge lane earlier, at 8:30 a.m. and they didn't bother to notify Newport traffic officers of the change to an earlier time. The result? Traffic backed upcoast from the bridge all the way down Mariners Mile. It may have backed up all the way to Huntington Beach, for all we can tell. So that 's why our legislators who want to lower the boom on Caltrans should actually start at the bottom. They should get these arbitra r y and capricious detours and lane-closings un<ter control. For one thing, projec· lions or a $471,000 loss in state bailout funds next year has been elevated to an estimated $488,509. The proposed budget, up about $467,000 over this year's $6.65 million- document, does include some good news, such as expected sales and pro· perty tax revenue in- creas es, and incom e from a new com - puterized parking ticket program. The cowicil lauded the proposed budget, t hen agreed to list priorities for projects and equip- m en l s hould more money be found in the budget. The council majority seemed to agre# one of the fi rst priorities would be lo restore a police in- vestigator position at a cos t or $23 ,220. And restoration of a main- tenance worker ($8,000) al s o r e c e ived high priority. ONE WAY MIGHT BE to pass a new state statute that would decree, simply, that any time a Caltrans crew creates a major disruption in local traffic flow, the local cops are em- powered to arrest the work crews and throw them all in the local jail. Cool thinkers among us, particularly those lucky citizens who don't have to commute, might suggest, "My, my! That would be terrible ! Why that's hot-headed and reactionary ... " Mayor Wayne Baglin said that with the in· crease in crime, and the increase in litter in Laguna Be a c h , both pos itions s hould be funded. The council also will consider a request from Ron Adams, Laguna's new fire chief, for about $10 ,000 to improve "cr eature comforts" at the main fire station, as we ll as new fire hoses and nozzles. MAYBE SO. But it might cause a few of those highway people to think twice before they throw out all those orange closure cones and pop up their detour signs. They might get just a little more thoughtful before they start shutting down major traffic a rteries during peak commuter rush hours. And tossing them all in the slammer wouldn't be any more reactionary than reducing poor Adriana's salary to a goose egg. A word processor, costing about $14,000, was requested by City Clerk Verna Rollinger. as well as a promotion for her senior clerk to the position of deputy ci- ty clerk. The cowicil is expect- ed to return June 16 with a completed priority lis t OC to share dump costs Excavators of the Boucher landfill got an apparent discount Tuesday to clean up the Hwit· ington Beach dump and move non-hazardous materials into an Irvine landfill. The Orange County Board of Supervisors agreed to charge Mola Development Corp. about $36 ,500 -or $1.25 per ton -to deposit about 30 ,000 tons of material at the county -r un Coyote Canyon landfill in Irvine . Supervisor Ha rriett Wieder , whose 2nd District includes the Boucher site, said the county's aid is merited to help satisfy a public health problem. "This effort is undoubtedly a pioneer one in that it will be a first time venture of lbe private and public sectors to resolve a potentially daneerous health hazard," she said. Mola officials say they are paying about $3 million to re- move potentially toxic oil drill· ing residue left at the former dump site at Bolsa Chica Street and Warner Avenue. They bave plans to build 224 condominiums on the 12.5 acres. Mrs. Wieder said the privately Cinanced excavation started five weeks ago will benefit the coun· ty and state, which otherwise would have to pay to remove the che micals. The $1.25 per ton figure is the county's approximate expense to run the landfill. Officials in the county Solid Waste Manage- m ent Department had SUJlJlested a charge up Lo $3.50 per ton or about $105,000, could be levied. The higher cost approximates charges at Los Angeles County dumps for such hard-to-handle materials. Irvine backs recycling Despite the ract that the city's loaina money In the provam, Irvtne council members Tues· d17 nl1ht approved the ex- tension of a newspaper collec- tion procram ln Woodbridge. Latt December the council sancUoned a voluntary curblide newspaper plck-up for recycling purpoMS. 8y April 30 the ctty bad collected $3'0 worth of new1papen. Adverti1in1 c:o1ta1 not inchad.ln8 ttaff Umt, have run tl,llO. Tbe coandl alto voted to a · tnd the P'O)l'am to El Camino Jleal1. Walbut and tbe CuJventalt ud uraD1etne anu. Publicity coell are a~ to nm Sl.SOO, accontlq to dt,y ltalf reports. - ~ ..... ,......,..., ......... was one of the Chicago Seven. has conducted a few demonostrations of his own in his time. HECKLING HAYDEN -Audience members protest the appearance of Tom Hayden al Golden West College Tuesday. Hayden, who ~....;._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Kidnap hoax admitted Irvine teen feared punishment, concocted story How could Irvine police have been fooled by a 14-year-old girl who claimed she was kidnapped last Wednesday by four men? Tuesday. the teen -ager ad milled to police that she made up the story. She was afraid her parents would discover s he had been drinking beer with some friends so she decided lo lie. police said. Hut as the week wore on, police sa id, the young girl's story be~an to unravel and they decided to confront her in front of a high school counselor Originally, the unidentified girl told police she had been kid· napped by four men at the cor- ner of Northwood Terr ace and Gold Rush and forced to ride around :!<> minutes before being released unharmed. Last Thursday police released composite drawings pf the four suspects wanted in connection with the crime. "A lot of limes you may feel t here's something wrong," ex- plained Lt. Robert Lenner t. "But you have to investigate it as though it were a real crime." Ins tead of us ing a n artist, police in Irvine use thousands of composite drawings to come up with a description of 11 suspect. First a chin is chosen from among hundreds of s hapes and then the face is fill ed in with the feutures. The process may take two to 'Yater saving plan told Mesa Consolidated Water Dis- trict officials expect to save about $18,750 in cash and about 1,875 acre-feet of well water this s pring by participating in a speciaJ water progl'am. District offi cials said this week that by making purchases of seasonally abundant water stored in Colorado River basins, they'll not onJy save on vital well water but effect a cost sav- ings. The Colorado River water, re· suiting from melting snow and rainfall. is being imported by the district for $55 an acre-foot. officials noted. It costs about $65 to pump an acre-foot of water from local wells. they add. three hours before the drawing is completed. explained I .t. Len· nert·. "We're strictly al the person's mercy," said Lt. Lennert. "It could have been someone she saw one time. rt could have looked like a teacher . As long as she has some face in her mind." By Friday, police became sus- picious or the girl's story after talkin~ Wlth frie nds. "When you're talking about rape and kidnap you don't want to confront s om eone unless you're positive." said LL. Len- nert. P olice e xplained that the scratch marks the girl claimed to have suffered while fighting ' off her alleged attackers were received in a bicycle accident the day before. ''The unfortunate thing about this is that she can ruin it for a lot or young girls who have been attacked," s aid Lt. Lennert. "Now there's going to be a lot of disbelievers out there ." Lt. Lennert added that the ma- jority of assault reports are true Forgit's hardware slwp shnlting down The unidentified teen-ager will not be prosecuted for filing a false report because she's not an adult, Lennert said She is seeking counseling through the city's youth service program. he said. Peg Forgit says she'll have one last appliance sale before closing h er late hus b a nd's Newport Beach hardware store for the last time Saturday. The widow of former Newport Beach city councilman Al Forgit says she reached a decision over the Memorial Day weekef\d to call it quits. The store, opened in 1928 as Estuc Hardware and purchased by Forgit in 1953, is to be leased to a group of archJlects. "It jus t a bout makes me sick,'' Mrs. Forgit re marked. "It's like holding a wake in there. ·'A lot of people feel it will be a loss to the community but I don't know -time passes and we all get old. Things change ... She says the remaining inven· tory in the s hop is to be sold to ABC Lumber in Costa Mesa which is rebuilding its facilities destroyed in a fire last year. She said her husband, who died of a heart attack last Sep· lember, had been planning to close up the brick shop near the Newport Pier. Mrs . Forgit said she'll con- tinue to live in the apartment above the shop. The hardware shop, a cowitry· store-like collection of odds and ends , was once a noted gather· ing spot for Forgit's city hall and fishing friends. The shop gained a separate reputation bec ause Forgit wa's fond of placing newspaper ads for his store in local papers that criticized or poked fun at of- ficials on everything from litter lo parking problems. Forgi{ was elect ed to the Newport cowicil in 1964. His wife ran twice for a council seal, los- ing both times, most recently to pr esent Coun cilma n Don Strauss. Mrs. Forgit said she's plan- ning no fanfare for Saturday's closing. "We'll just close it up Satur· day evening as usual," she said. "and start taking an inventory on Sunday. That'll be it." -· -.-- Historical panel seeks interviews The Laguna Beach Historical Society will be interviewing old·. timers tonight in an effort to get a picture or the town before 1940. T he interviews will begin at 7 p.m . at the hi storical offices at 790 South Coast Highway. Society president Margaret Roley said the information will be included in a survey of old buildings in Laguna Beach beine conducted by the society and Kathy Les of the EnvironmentaJ Coalition of Orange County. Specifically long-time resi- dents will be asked about their neighborhoods before 1940, as well as s pecifi c historical build- ings. when they were built, the architect's name, iJnd previous owners. To contact the society, call the historical center at 494-9965. Theater HIGHER YIELD and SHORTER TERM • receives grant The Laguna Moult.on Playhouse bu received a $22,000 grant from the Harry G. Steele Found•· Lion of Newport Bea\!b to purchase a udio-visual television equipment. Ruth Schryver, direc- tor of the development for th~ playhouse said the equipment will be used to provide self· improvement lnttruc- tional aid to actora and student.a. The 59 ·year -old playhouse organlutlon will make edited tapn of plays performed on the Lasuna Beach al.age avallable to public te1evialoo, u well •• I or review by act.on. PlaybouH director Dout Rowe ta1d the or· 1aruaaUcn plan1 to tape Ill current mu1lcal ''Sbenandoab, •• aloni wltb four Ori-1nal com· edtea thl• a ummer. ; Mercury Savings Now Offers NEW 11Repo Plans. 11* We have several '"Funds'"• c .. rentty available for our c•tomen ~ ~~ · FOR CURRENT RATES ... Call or visit your nearest Mercury office. :~ MERCURY SAVINGS H111tiltt-Baell 7812 Edinger Hnt. Bch., CA. 82647 (714) 842-9333 lake Forest 23021 Lake c.nter Dr ' El Toro. CA. 92630 (7U)770-2e01 and loan auociatton Tntil 1095 Irvine Blvd, Tuattn. CA. 92680 (714) 832·770• ' . ll HM1111'111rtln • .. . Ills a.a M 1001 E. 1m.,.na1 Hwy. sen !. ~ Pldma -.~ V1ltey v.,. · ·1 I ~ l..1 Habra. CA. 90831 Anaheim, CA. 92807 Buena Part(. CA. 90l20 ,• i"I (714)&'704700 C71 4)'1n·7~7 (114)12H1000 , ... -ill'' 1,*Thl• obllgaUo,, 11 not a aavinga account or deposit and it not In~ by t~·ai P:.O.ral S.Vlnga and 1..oan lnturance Corporation r'-"i .... ' Orange Coast DAILY PILOl"/rhursday, May 28, 1981 N OMPO ITE TRAN ACTION OllOTATIO-U lll(~UO& '••OIJ ON, ... NIW Y0•1t. MIOWUT, ''""'(. , •• IOHON, 01 T•O•T ANO ''"(INNATI noo lllC:MolUHH AllfO •lflOHIO •Y TMI tfAIO AND lllfl'TltflT Dow Jones Final UP 1.12 > CLOSING FIGURE 994.25 Robert L. Crandall, president of American Alrtines, crisscrossed the country Utls spring, talltlng to employees of the airline ln co1'{erences held at nine locations: New York , Chicago, Los An11eles, San Francisco, Hartford. Cincinnati, Tulsa. Dallas-Fort Worth (the airline's headquarters) and Boston. His message, delivered in a one-hour presentation, was simple: "We're m trouble. We need your help lo get out of it. .• Alter his presentation, Crandall, a claarette· smoking, no-nonsense executive who doesn't stand on a lot of airs, agreed to answer any and all questions from the troops. The entire American work force was invited to attend these meetings. More than 6.ooo did. American now employs 36,300 people, down 5,000 from the peak reached in the middle of last year It's no big secret airlines are losing a lot of money. Fuel costs are one reason, resulting in higher fares. which in turn result in people deciding to stay home. Airline passenger traf- fic declined S ~ percent last I·~ year, the worst ·,' o downdraft in ~. 1 t~e industry's lllTDI lllUllJZ A "-1. h1story. ~ - -High wage t costs are another reason. American claims that "airline wages over the past 25 years have escalated more rapidly than those of virtually any other in· dustry and the average airline employee Is oow among the best paid in the United States.·· The only airline to make money consistently in recent years has been Delta. And people at the other airlines ace quick to tell you why: Delta is primarily non-union. About 60 percent of American's employees are represented by unions -and later this year contracts are expiring with unions representing American's pilots, flight engineers and flight attendants. So Bob Crandall's "President's Conferences" were especial- ly opportune. Kis main polnt to the employees was that they must become more productive if American j l r i is to survive in the deregulated µidustry we now have. He hammered away hard on the need to do away with Inflexible, pointless work rules. He told me, for example, that it makes no sense to have an employee help load baggage on a plane but then be "' prohibited by work rules from pushing the plane away from the gate. Crandall is not looking for an angry 'confronta· tion. He has asked American employees to "walk the extra mile" and cooperate with management. He re- ports that the reaction of employffS and unions has been positive. "We're engaged in civilized dialogue," he said, "and we're gradually going to persuade peo- ple." l I " American's president is sensitive to the issue of f employee loyalty. Employees are, after all. the cor- nerstone of the airline's advertising message that "American is No. l " because passengers, when l polled, say they prefer American's service to that of t other carriers. Crandall said that in the future he doesn't expect any airline merger to occur unless , "employees have approved of it." ' '------------------------------~~---! STOCKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT AMERICAN LEADERS UPS AND DOWNS SILVER Sit.,,., $10.720 per troy ounce, Hendy a. H•rm.., only CS.Uy quot• GOLD QUOTATIONS L .... : momillt flXl"Cj $ot7t 00. 1111 IJ ts l.•a41M; •"•'.._" tl81ne U 7•.oo. Ul) $12.U . f'Atle: CIOled I« llOllN't' ,.,~, c ......... holklay lwlcll: C-tor llOIMl•Y. M•M t a .,..,_, <only dlllly cauottl t-179.00, 11C1 $11.U. •..-.i: (Ofll\I o.11., .-1 $ot7'.00, .. 112.ll. 1..-..1 Conly 0.ll'f ~) tebrlullld ..... "· .... '12. 7'. • • • ' I I t ~ ~----------~----- Orange Coast DAILY PILOT(Thureday, May 2&, 1981 ' Honesty is the best policy ••• Ask any woman I rame out of a store the other day to aee my husband poised in front of our ,..ntal car with lhe bood up, starlni at the motor. That scene wouldn't have choked me up ex- cept when you know that a mechanic once said to hlm, "You're losing a piston," and HE said, "J don't follow basketball that closely. but who is ll ?" So I said to him, "What's the matter with the car ?" "Nothing's the matter," be said, slammini down the hood. "So what are you doing staring in at the motor ?" "I tboutht 1 waa rtltulna the brakt and the hood went up ln1t11d. I bad to 1et out and pretend I releued lt on purpo1t.'' Attn't men 1llly'P Why can't lbty be boneat Uke women? Ever Ht a tennlt player ml11 a shot who dldn't lmmedlately atop the tame and tug at the strtn.is of the racket to make aure Your wedding picture Mr. and Mrs • .Tol bert Tolbert-Danziger Lisa Kaye Danziger of Costa Mesa, and Ran· dall Scott Tolbert of El Toro, were married May 9 al the Gazebo in Laguna Beach. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M Danu ger or Costa Mesa. was graduated from Estancia High School. She is employed at the Orange Coast Daily Pilot. The bridegroom, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Bill J Tolbert of El Toro, is a graduate of Mission Vie· JO High School and California Baptist College, R1 vers1de Holnws-Thompson Laura S Thompson of Costa Mesa and James Holmes of Long Beach recently exchanged wed- ding vows in Long Beach. The bride. daughte r of Mrs. Norman P. Thompson of Costa Mesa, graduated from Costa Mes a High School a nd Cal State Fullerton. The hridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Norval Holmes of Desert Hot Springs, graduated from Cheney Hig h School and Washington State Uni vers1t} Mrs. Sadler Sadl,er-Weisenburg Carolen M. Weisenburg or San Rafael and James R. Sadler of Corona del Mar have said their wedding vows in St. Michael & All Angels Church, Corona del Mar. The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L.E. Weisenburg Jr. of San Rafael, is a graduate of San Rafael High School and the University of California, Berkeley. The brideiroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Everett D. Sadler of Corona del Mar, was graduated from San Marino High School and the University or California, Irvine. Willwams-Lorton Tamara Williams of Chino and George L. Lorton III of Chino recently exchanged wedding vows in Fleur de Lis Chapel, Hacienda Heights. The bride, daughter of Gail Morford and James Williams of Chino, graduated from Bonita High School. The bridegroom, son of Georghand Judith Lorton of Costa Mesa, graduated from Estancia High School, Costa Mesa. Leo: Keep pas sport in order I t'riday, May 2', 1981 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21·April 19): Aggressiveness now pays dividends. Emphasis on new starts, fresh concepts, exciting romantic interlude. You'll bt! asked to make personal appearances. Initiate action. Imprint style, highlight your own judg· ment, intuition. TAURUS (April 20-May 20): What had been an apparent k>ss will now be transformed into signifi· HOROSCOP E cant gain. Persons behind scenes are paving way for your personal progress. Leo, Aquarius natives fi gure prominently. Change of scenery tops agen· da . GEMINI (May 2l·June 20): Family member e xpres s e s r egr e t f or recent error. Be magnanimous . Emphasis on friends, hopes, fulfill· ment of desires. Money come§ from surprise source. You learn lesson or love. Aquarian figures prominently. CANCER <June 2l·July 22): Foothold is gained on career advancement. Acquiesce lo re· quest for revision of material. Discard outmoded methods, concepts . Welcome challenge, construe· live criticism. Authority figure lends valuable sup. port. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Be sure pusport and ~ other necessary travel dqcumenta are in order. Emphasize communication, correspondence and "foreign'' contacts. Broaden horizons. Aspirations are fulfiUed if you realize "sky is the limit." VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22): Imprint style. Lead Come up to the Topi rather than follow. You get money's worth by be· ing persistent. Dig beneath surface lndlcatiom. Piece together subtle clues and you'll come up with "complete story." Gemini, Sagittarius and another Virgo play key roles. LIBRA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22): Diplomacy highlights personal scenario. Means avotd at· tempting to force issues. lf calm, patient you get what you want -and it is banded you on pro- verbial silver platter. Family member lends moral and financial support. SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Don't ruab! Main- tain high state of readiness, alertness. Define terms, be aware of bidden meanings. Someone is trying to tell you something. If perceptive, you open door to money and love. Pisces ls lo picture. SAGrrrARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Focua on exciting changes, rare opportunities and success in speculative ventures. Cancer, Capricorn and the number 8 figure prominenUy. Children, creativity and sensuality dominate provocative scenario. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Longstanding transaction nears completion. Emphasis on real property, basic needs, security and establishment of home base. Aries, Libra natlvea figure prominently. One wbo appeared indifferent will oow become an enthusiastic supporter. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Empbasiae variety, testing, satisfying cl curiosity. Stop mak· ing excuses for neglect of diet, proper nutrition. Restless relative may be sincere but misinformed. Know it and heed your own counsel. Surprise visit is oo agenda. PISCES (Feb. 19-Marcb 20): Comolidate U · sets. Focua on personal possesslom, protection of valuables and way to increase income Potential. Cancer, Capricorn, Aquarius person figure promineotly. You learn by teacbine. One who aided you in put will make reappearance. ON YOUR FM RADIO DIAL 88 90 92 94 96 98 100 102 104 .106 108 h~!i~~1m~~mmmttoo~~~!~~1~m~Di Kw v E 20 YEARS OF THE NATION'S MOST POPULAR MUSIC ... .•. ARRANGED FOR THE SELECTIVE LISTENER y' they were all there? Oh, and don't forget the Academy Award performance of the golfer who positions hia feet, checks b.11 wrists. nexe1 h1I knees and swlnp and then when he misaes the ball pretends be waa only doing a practice stroke. Tb.is la not the first Ume I have seen him go to elaborate means to cover up a mlatake. I've seen him tum an enthusiastic wave (to someone he thought he knew) into a hair pat, a neck massage, a fiy swatter, a collar smoother, a label fixer, and once be tried to tell me be was winding hls watch. Another time he was talking to me and when I wandered away from him he asked a stran1e woman what we were having for dln· oer. Instead of leveling with her, he whispered, "If you don't want me to come over, juat 11.y so ~ and I'll understand." The other night I walked into a dining room and came face to face with a woman wearing a dress exactly like mine. We looked like bookends. I wanted to throw a tablecloth over her and arrange four chain around her. I • looked at her sweetly and smiled, ''So, you bought the other one." My husband growled , "Now, THAT'S honest!" Nudity rwt necessarily art DEAR ANN LANDERS: We live in Eau Claire, Wis. Our city bas a very active and suc- cessful men's physical fitness center at the YMCA . In this all·male atmosphere of steam baths, saunas, sun lamps, wbirlpoola, and showers after strenuous exercise, it follows that a great deal of nudity and sometimes coarae language ls com· monplace. Frequently we s ee fathers bringing their young daughters into this place. They walk freely ---.......:.Or----11•t1••1•• '·------ throughout the entire facility. I would say the little girls are between two and three years of age. As a person who goes there often I resent the invasion or my privacy. I also wonder if children that young migbl be affected by what they see and hear. I've complained to the Y, but they say there is nothing wrong with it. What do you say? -S. IN EAU CLAIRE Dear S.: I say tlren's plenty 1'TOlll wltlt it. Little girls don'& belong la tbe sbower rooma of the YMCA, and I bope somethlng la done aboa& the situation soon. When I lived la Eau ClaJre, f7 years ago, tbe Y management was escelleat. Wbat laap· pened? I su11est tbey cbeek with Peoria, Ill. Tbe YMCA there la one of &be belt. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This letter is for "Obsessed at 41 in Macon" and the woman who s aid you were wrong and backed him up. She signed herself, "Bolstered in Burlington.'' The brouhaha was about the man who enjoyed taking pictures of his wife in the nude. He claimed be wanted them for when they are both older, so they would have a record of how beautiful she was. "Macon" insisted it was a wonderful hobby - s omething they could do together. You didn't think it was such a hot idea. My husband and I were married for 10 years. He, too, was into oude and strip-tease pbotog· rrrpby. At first I thought it was weird, but be con· vinced me it was "art." I was a small-town hick. 1•······-····1 I INSOMNIA I I MEDICAL RESEARCH I 1 TEAM . NEEDS 1 I VOLUNTEERS I I -If you require more than 30 minutes I I to fall asleep, OR total less than 6 hrs. I I sleep per night, OR have three or more I I awakenings during the night with diffi-1 culty getting back to sleep, and are between 18-60 yrs. of age, you may I qualify for a sleep medication study. I Volunteers will receive a FREE brief What did I know? Taking provocative pictures of me in the nude was his favorite sport. He b•d thousands -in various poses and positions. One day the rat walked out on me and our kidJ and look the pictures with him. The court ordered him to pay child support, which be didn't want to do, so he threatened to circulate the pictures and swear they were taken before we were married. I bad to go through the county attorney to get those pictures back . It was extremely embarra~ ing. So stick to your guns, Annie. No womap should pose for pictures she would not like to see on Page l of he r local newspaper. -TOO TRUSTING Dear T.T .: Tbanks for the back·up. I hope tbose camera bulls <pardon &be pa.n) wUI take be ed. DEAR ANN LANDERS: A while back you told a woman whose hus band was interested in wlf,. swa pping that you could understand how the s~ life of some couples who had been married for ts years could go flat, but then you added. "It's oo excuse for behaving like animals ." On behalf of animals such as lions, Canadian geese, otters , cardinals and almost any variety of bitd except cowbirds, I object. They are purely monogamous and wouldn't dream of s wapping m ates. I believe you owe t~em an apology , - NATURE LOVER IN ARIZONA. DEAR LOVER: OK, I apologize. Feel better now? Thanks for wising me up. Do Jlotl f eel awkward, sel/-coruciotu -lonel11? Welcome to the club. There'a help /cw you m Arm Lan· dera' booklet, "The Key to PopuJonty." Send SO cent• with your requelt and a long, stamped, sel/-oddreHed envelope to Ann Landera, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611 W1Tectio11 Sorry, we gave a wrong number. The telephone number which was included with the "Wheel-A-Thon'' announcement in the Daily Pi.lot last Friday was incorrect. Anyone wishing information on the event, which takes pl ace Sunday al Orange Coast Col.lege. should telephone 99&-3453. JOHN MULRUR M.O. Diplomat of the American Board of Family Practice is pleased To Annouce the Relocation of His Off ice to the Marguerite Medical Plaza 2871 Puerta Real #160 Mission Viejo, CA 92691 Day or Night (714) 495-9353 Practice Includes Newborn Care, Pediatrics, Internal Medicine, Off ice Gynecology Geriatrics. 11 physical examination, lab tests, EKG, 11 computerized EEG, chest· x-ray, ~==============~ I medicine and visits with a professional. I I CALL (71 4) 752-7356 BETWEEN 9 AM-5 PM •• MONDAY ntAU FRIDAY 1 ••••••••• -•• 1 ALFRBO!s ~l!' ~ We do ltall ... FOR MEN ANO WOMEN FoclOls . ElectrOIVsll (Permanent l'IOlf removal} Nalls ... FOR WOMEN ONLY CeUte . . Spot Reducing Diet Programs WoxlrQ . Eyelosl'I Tlnllng Mok~ monlcur., • pedicures • Jullettea • ocrytlcs ·----·--... -······---..--··-··--···~--·······-·-·-·-----·' 1 en AC.UAINTID Ol'PIR ~off Ont tak>n ~ cm .,.,. FOR DAD ... CUSTOM MONOGRAMMING A subtle statement of good taste. Your choice 'of styles on any shirt in our wide selection of 100% oxford or blended cotton shirts. Any Dad will love the personalized touch. Come in early. Father's Day is June 21s~. \